the Weather / ^ O.S. w«*th«r, Buraiu For^atl , ] - .Flurries ■■■ „:L JOtfilli m Pas* 2) , VOL. 122 NO. 16 ★ ★ ★ ★ THE PONTIAC PRESS Ho/ne Edition PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 196^^24 PAGES ilTED PRESS INTERNATIONAL Soviet Union Vows Aid to Red Rebels in S.MietMam War HERBERT HOOVER Hoover Suffers Health Setback Hospital Room Saved for Former President NEW YORK (AP) - Former President Herbert Hoover has suffered a '‘serious setback” in health, a spokesman said today. A hospital room has been reserved for the 89-year-old former chief executive, vt4io resides in the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel. The family of the 31st president said last June that his a ±1 r\‘ strength had been ebbing from AUlflOr UlQS} anemia caused by intestinal ^ * V * j Wrofe Novel He had undergone surgerY _ • / the previous August .at Cphim- 'PoMiTitl Plcirf^' bia Presbyterian Medical Cen- ' i ter for removal of a cancerous RUMORS —^ThatTlispatch said it has been rumored U. S. Secretary of Defense Roberf S. McWanraTB would “soon go to Saigon and decide on what the United States government will do.” After referring to the possibility of an “extension” of the war, Tass today warned: “The Soviet people cannot remain indifferent to such developments.” _______* ■Jt 4 ________ Then came the pledge of Soviet support. SUPPORT DEMANDS Tass said the government and people of the Soviet Union support. demands of North Viet Nani and the Red-led Vietnamese National Liberation Front for withdrawal of U.S. armed forces from South Viet Nam. floor with a bullet wound in his stomach. Nesbitt. 15. of 179 Rundell is in serious condition at Pontiac General Hospital following the shooting in Vanderver’s apartment at 226*/4 Baldwin last Nesbitt is a ninth grader at Lincoln Junior High. Pontiac detectives Thopaas Mitchell and Robert Emery said their in- INACTIVE Hoover has been relatively inactive in recent months. One of his last public appearances was at a reception in May honoring MaJ. L. Gordon Cooper Jr., the astronaut, for his 22-orbit flight. Today doctors described Hoover’s condition as “fairly satisfactory.” They s^id: The present illness is diTe to bleeding from the right kidney, probably secondary to a kidney stone. RESPIRATORY INFECTION “The clinical picture has been complicated by a respiratory infection.” The statement iiisued by the doctors s^id the former president has been bedridden at his home Itj, the Waldorf Towers with fever for the past 48 hours. "Until this illness, his condition had been good for a person of nearly 90," they said. ous, author of the controversial novel, “Peyton Place,” died to-day at Boston’s Beth Israel Hospital. A spokesman for the hospital said death was caused by a chronic liver disease. The then-unknown wife of a small town New Hampshire teacher, leaped into national prominence overnight, by hei; frank portrayal of intimate details of village life in a New England community. Mrs. Metalious, 38, also war married to T. J. Martin, a La; conla, N. H., disc Jockey. FIRST HUSBAND 'The book for which she was principally noted—later brought out as a motion picture — was written while she and her first husband lived in Gilmanton, N. H. Mrs. Metalious wrote three other books after “Peyton Place.” They were "Return to Peyton Place,” “Tight White Coilar,” and her latest, “No Adam in Eden.” vealed that the shooting wasf' an accident. V a n d e rver,j however, was held overnight NESBITT in the county jail for further questioning. He is married. “It’s the same old story,” said Emery, “They removed the shell clip but forgot to eject the shell in the chamber.” ’The shooting occurred at 8:05 p.m. after Nesbitt and another friend, Melvin Jones, 17, of 150 Cadillac went to Vanderver’s apartment to return the keys to they borrowed. Here Are the Winners Editorial Quiz Puzzling? Hold everything! These four Tiger tkihftts to the first six people that solv^id tlie tiny puz/le on yesterday’s editorial page were claimed ----i»4aatJwJfE 6:3102 coujd at knowledge calls. Some were irritated at the fact they received a busy signal (Imo after time. But FE 6-3102 slaved faithfully and awiudcd the first correct .calls started long before the appointed hour at:d^ tlnucd after the deadline, but only p. m. to 0 p. m. rc|)Orts Were accepted. RECEIVER REMOVED Finally KE 5-3102 advised the phone company the receiver would be removed from the liook lb restore PCHCC, tranquility %nd calm. And here arc the winners: Clarke Kimball Walter Sodaway 1909 liongpolnte, Pontiac Barbara Frye 76 Mark. Pontiac Billy Stark 220 E. Iroquois, Pontiac Michael Gibson 5812 Pontiac Lake, Pontiac Martha Kiliiane ^ 2758 Hill & Dale, RochesteT Each will get four tickets to Tiger .games when the Heas()n opens, And. oil, yes. 'Tliat tiny square was the alphabet with every individual letter sliowing. REMOVED CLIP Police said Nesbitt picked up the rifle purchased by Vander-ver last week and removed the bullet clip. After he tossed the clip and the rifle on an overstuffed chair police were told, Vanderver reached for the rifle and asked if it was loaded. He told police he did not know where he was holding the rifle when it went off. Nesbitt was standing a foot away from Vanderver when the bullet tore through him. Before it was spent, the bullet continued through a partition, a metal clothes cabinet, another partition and imbedded itself in a wall of the three-room apartment. On the way to the hospital in the ambulance, Nesbitt told defective Emery, “Marv shot me, but it was an accident.” 1 More Jurors for Ruby Trial DALLA.S l/P) - Another iuror, the fifth, was sworn in today for Jack Ruby's murder trial. He Is Douglas J. .Sowell, 33, a jet airplane mechanic. The pace of choosing jurors stepped, np markedly with Sowell’s selection, For the first time, two jurors have been found on the .same day. Luther E. Dickerson, whp pre-ctjdBd Sowell in Tourt, also was accepted. BOTH BAITISTS Sowell has a wife and two children. He Is a Baptist, ns is Dickerson. He laid that hr finished high school in the Air Force and received his technical training there. Ruby’s lawyers questioned him at length when they dlscov. ered that S»»well served as a witness jn a “fitness case'/ while he was in toe Aty Forc^. ^members of t 504th Infantry. Another was affiliated with the Strike Command. IN FORMATION The jump involved some 1,500 men, about 60 to a plane. ’The aircraft flew in formations of three. Authorities said that? one of planes suddenly lost altitude and plunged into a group of parachutists. -it" * The dead and injured were taken to Womack Army Hospital. SCOOPS UP DEBRIS-A U.S, Coast Guard-man picks up bits of wreckage from an past-efri Airlines jetliner that crashed in L a k e Pontchartrain near New Orleans shortly after early mornipg takeoff today? 'There are no known survivors among 58 aboard. In Birminghqm AHmits Stabbing Girl ane Downed Shortlyifffii^ Dixie Takeoff Wreckage Spotted in Lake Pontchartrain Near New Orleans NEW ORLEANS — An Eastern- Air Lines foiir-engine jet carrying 58 persons on a flight from Mexico City to New -^ York disappeared minutes after takeoffjrom a New " tDrle'ans” stop today and crashed in Lake Pontchartrain. There were no signs of survivors. The Coast Guard said it recovered parts of the wreckage including seats, Pommunica-tion equipment and sound-proofing. Also recovered were clothing, luggage, and' what was deac_rih£d--a8_par4»—etrr: ’bodies- ~ Ea.stern said there were 51 passengers and a crew of sev^n. At least 32 of the passengers were making the through trip while at least 17 .boarddd in New Orleans. Fourteen were pass-riding Eastern employes. News Flash LANSING Un — A six-day week tor state police during March and a crackdown on drunken drivers were' ordered by Gov. George W. Romney t^ay as the first steps to be taken toward halting t h e growing slaughter on Michigan’s highways. By JIM DYGERT Fifteen year old Daniel Lov-aas, who authorities today said admitted the Jan. 24 knife slaying of Nancy Jean Jones in Birmingham, was found guilty of the killing in Oakland County Juvenile Court this afternoon. Probate Court Judge Nor-. man R. Barnard, after a three-hour hearing on the case, said the court .reached a finding that Daniel stabbed expect petition Judge Barnard said a petition was expected to be filed by the boy’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Lovaas Jr., of 1042 Sinith, Birmingham, asking that the boy be committed to a state hospital for mental treatment. Judge Barnard said his court had reserved the mat-■ter *l»e hoy’s mental re-sponsibility of the crime as well as the appropriate dis- MIAMI BEACH (iPI—;A wild-eyed Cassius Clay drew position of the case until a $2,500 fine for his bizarre shouting demonstration at the pre-noon weigh-in lor tonight's heavyweight titi6 fight agdinst champion Sonny Liston. ] ppohate Court’s mental health Clay, the poem-spouting Louisville Lip, weighed division, would take precedent in at 2IOV2 pounds, light-'»-------------------------i Cassius Fined $2,500 ior by defense attorneys for Daniel Lovass, agreed with psychologist John McBride that Daniel is psychotic. No witnesses other than the psychiatrists and the psychologist were called. ^ The iudee declined to sav to ^ *>y psycholo- wlSn thfboy midfthe admis- fiist McBride refers to an essay sion. the 14-yeaf-old girl after considering evidence presented by police and the defendant. Judge Barnard said, "Testimony indicated that the boy has admitted the crime.” he Wrote last fall in his 10th grade English class at Birmingham’s Seaholm High School. " SECRET IMPULSES The essay, written on an assigned topic dealing with "'secret impulses,” describes a fantasy scene in which the writer (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5j of Subversion Venezuela Target, OAS Group Claims The pltine was, due to arrive in Atlanta at 3:59 a.m., leave there at 4:36 a.m., arrive at Dulles Airport In Washington at jl,35 a.m., leave there at 6.20 a m. and arrive at Kennedy Airport in New York at 7:10 a.m. The Coast Guard said parts of the debris, Including insurance papers, were' definitely linked with at , least two passengers on the Eastern plane. ★ ★ ★ The spokesman said one of its helicopter pilots over the wreckage area reported there were Indications that the plane either exploded in the air or on impact. The debris was scattered over a wide area. The .spokesman said the site was about six miles south of the north shore of the lake, or (Continued oh Page 2, Col. 7) er than expected, and the champion at 218. Commission doctors, who ex-miined Jwth fighters, said Clay's pulse was racing at 120 beats a minute while Lis'ton’s registered a normal 80. Although warned by Chah'-man Morris Klein of th'' Abraliam Tauber of Pon- tone, “Don’t let everyone knowitiac and Dr. William E. Gordon tion. * * * ■ i WASHINGTON (UPIJ - JL. It could result in cortimit-1 hemispheric Investigating c o m-ment to Pontiac State Hospital, | milter has accused Communist the same qction taken in the | Cuba of actively promoting sub-lasl year - of 15-ycar-old j version tliroughout Latin Amer-icHi especially in beleaguered Venezuela. what a fool you arc.” I of Detroit, psychiatrists retained ■f:.- --------------------------- CHAI.LENGER RE-STRAINED - Clamor- ing Cassitis Clay, Itppy heiivyweight hopeful, is restrained by handler lirew Brown during . a typical Clay shouting session at olficlal t I weigli-in for loniglit's IhhiI wllli champion Sonny I.IhIoii (rightI. IJslon Hl)sorbed Clay':i iiLsults in steely slkilice, The accusation was mode before the Orgaiiization of American States (OASI yesterday by a special OAS factfinding committee comprised of the United States, Argentina, Costa Rica, Uruguay and Colombia. ; Venezuela told tile OAS council ot an “urgent need” for anj early ineeUng of hemispheric j foreign ministers to consider I po,ssihle economic and di|)lo-inatlc sanctions against I h e FI-1 del Castro regime. | .Sueli a conference was c x -liectcd to be called sometime m Mareli, GIVES REPORT Tile OAS eoiiiinittce. formed to i n V e ,s Cl g a I e Venezuelan cliarges of aggression against Cuha, reporter! today that the, Castro regime tiad supported a ptdk'V of Intoi vanltou m ricigli-1 boring re))ubllcs since it came to |Miwer 111 1959 i “This support of subversion, | which generally tgkes the ; form of iHilllh'ul aggression, lius had positive appUeatlon | In the Repuhlie of Veiie/.iiela. the p r I m u r y objeetlve In ('iiba’s policy ol expansion and ideological penetration In the j hemisphere." the eommlUee said. in support of its charges, the committee’s report included: more than KM) pages of docu-1 mollis mul other evideiu'o. A number ol pholograplis showed (('iintimie(l on Page 2, Col/1) i I Snow Flurries Expected Tonight Snow flurries will come and go tonight through tomorrow in the Pontiac area with temperatures turning colder. The U.S, Weather Bureau forecasts a low of 8 to IS tonight. Highs are expected to be in the 20s tomorrow. Sixteen was the lowest temperature in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. 'Tlie mercury had climbed to 39 by 2 p.m. In Today's Press Basketball St. Michael draws St. Frederick' in district basketball play - PAGE H. GOP Force Ohio governor wants northern states camp for convciiUon ~ PAGE 3. Sinatra Jr. Hock n’ rolJer claims lie bad prior knowledge . of kidnaping plol-PAGE 8. ^ Area News . 4 Astrology 17 llrldgr 17 Coinies 17 Editorials . i Markets 11 Obituaries 18 Sports 14-lS Theaters 8 TV & Radio Programs 23 Wilson. Earl 23 Women’s Pages 10-11 TWO Baker Ref uses to Talk WASHINGTON (J^-Desplte a .blunt warning that he was risk-Jng4icist»rJtebert G. Baker refused to^ testify_ today on his dutie as secretary to the Sen-. ate Democratic majority or the outside activities that enriched him while he held the post. One of the questions—to all of which Baker pleaded his constitutional right to avoid seif-incriminatioo—was whether he ever had sought to obtain gambling concessions in the Dominican Republic. Others de^ with a Washing- Thousands Boycott Schools in Chicago CHICAGO (Ji —A boycott aimed ai speeding up integration of Chicago's public Schools kept thousands of pupils away from their classes today, j The Coordinating Council of Cuba Accusi of Subversion (Continued From Page One) weapons that Crtbtf^ had tried to smuggle into Venezuela. The report said one arms shipment found on a Venezuelan beach had originated in Cuba and was secretly hidden in a . . remote area of the coast fo eventual use in overthrowinii the Venezuelan government. CAPITAL TAKE-OVER Pro-Castro terrorists had prepared a plan to take over Caracas, the capital of Venezuela, just before national elections , last Dec, 1, the committee said. Details ot the plan were said to have been spellOd out in documents found in the possession of Luis Eduardo Sanchez Ma-dero, a Venezuelan citizen. • The committee said Castro had followed a policy of aggression against Venezuela’s territorial integrity, political sovereignty and the stability of jier democratic Institutions. Regarding Cuba’s h e m i s-pheric operations, thc commit-tee s p e c i f-i c ally charged her with: • Distribution of prppagapda throughout Latin America; • Provision of funds to subversive elements in neighboring republics; • Training pro - Communist agents In sabotage and guerrilla operations, • Supplying! arms for move-—raTS-ntner if political -naitr version through force. / Community Organizations tCCCO), an alliance of civil rights groups, said information from 28 schools dmwed 23,712 of the 29,527 chUdren registered in them were absent. The board of.etetjifl_inade^ A warniiigT^^ ^iqg a dieck to be completed later in the day. ★ ★ ■ w ' A sampling by reporters brought out that, in some of the schools, the number of absentees was smaller than during thercity’s first boycott Oct. OUSTER DEMAND The boycott was aimed at backing up demands for ouster of the superintendent of schools, Benjamin C. Willis, and for a timetable of integration., — But this time, unlike Oct. 22, Negroes ^ere split, with one faction working against the boycott as a demonstration that would serve no purpose. Might Sell Network in Michigan DETROIT (AP) — The Boat’d of directors of Goodwill Stations,. Inc., announced Monday it Is recommending to stockholders the sale of all Goodwill stations assets' and operating properties to Capital Cities Broadcasting Corp. of New York. Goodwill Stations said the board, in a unanimous action, decided to recommend that the corporation be dissolved and an offer to purchase by Capital Cities be accepted. Terms were not divulged. Radio stations WJR of Detroit and W.IRT of Flint are Goodwill-operated. The company also operates WSAZ at Huntington, ton Insurance man’s gift of a hi-fi set to Lyndon B. Johnson before Johnson, heeame President, and purchase of $1,200 worth of television advertising time on aw:Austin, Tex., station controlled by the Johnson family. ^ Don Reynolds, the insurance man, testified earlier in the Senate Rules Committee’s investigation of Baker that Baker aided him in selling $200,000 of insurance on Johnson’s life, suggested the hi-fi gift and gave him understand the purchase of the, advertising time was expected. RECEIVED JOB / Baker, a one-time Senate pagCr^got his |i9,600-a-year job as secretary to the Senate Majority when Johns®*!, as a Texas senator, became majority^lead- be exposing himself to a citation for contempt of Congress came when the smiling but slightly nervous Baker refused to state what his duties were as majority secretary, a post he resigned under fire Oct. 7. Chairman B. Everett Jordan, D-N.C., read the specific language of the code on contempt, including the penalties of |1,900 fine or a year’s Imprisonment, or both. He asked if Baker wi.shed to change his unresponsive replies. Baker calmly-said he stood by his previous statements—that he refused to reply under his 5th Amendment right to avoid pos- i b l.e self-incrimination, an d under other constitutional guarantees. There was no explanation of question, put by Sen. Carl T. Curtis, R-Neb., concerning any role the one-time Senate pageboy might have played in “setting up gambling concessions outside the United States." ington and Charleston, W. Vs. The Weather Lakes, Library Eyed by Board Injunction Threatened in Waterford Twp. The Waterford Township Board last night, went over familiar ground on lake water levels and the planned ilibrary, but didn’t alter its position. Canvassers Appointed by City Commissioners DINNER PLANS—Mapping plans for the Oakland County Democratic party’s annual Phil Hart dinner, honoring the U.S._ senator-who once lived InJBjQomflekf Hills, are Harry AldGowamtleflT of Birmingham and Mr. and Mrs. Donovan Gilirtlore of Pohtiac “Township. McGOTvan-Js.,.4!€adinf-a~ blo<‘k the board’s actions, Sf'cterlin rebutted tliat "We |)lafn to harm no one and to lower no lake levels." 0 ★ * Renewal Df ifif controversy over the township library program brought on a sharp ex-chapgo between trustees John Coleman and l,oren Anderson. (’oleman charged that Anderson was ’’polltlcnlly moll- County Dems Plan Dinner for Sen. Hart- Oakland County Democratic CJiairman Sander M. Levin today announced April 4 as the date'for the annual Phil Hart dinner sponsored by county | Democrats. | The dinner, the seventh such annual event honoring U.S,^ Sen. Philip A. Hart, is scheduled for 6:30 p.m, at Hazel Park High School. Levin also announced the appointment of Mr. and Mrs. Donovan Gillmore of Pontiac Township as cochairmen of the dinner. ★ ★ ★ Hart’s residence was in Bloomfield Hills when he first won election to the U.S. Senate in 1958. His Michigan residence now is on Mackinac Island. Tickets for the dinner may be obtained from county Democratic party headquarters in Pontiac. Hoffa Rips Testimony of Informer Companion Seriously Hurt BoyKilledCrossingStreet A 10-year-old boy was killed after 8 p.m. on Hunter,, about and his companion seriously 1200 feet south ■ ♦ ; The Chamberlain Real Estate Co. wants to purchase the property for a parking area. The property is currently designated a public park. Craiibrook School in Bloomfield Hills has .named five of its seniors., to the National Cum Laude ^iety;- ------------- ! TTiey are Ted Baldwin of -UA3 HUIwood, Bloomfield Hills;~Ro6irt~1liBaS,_J2ft^^ UtAert W. OKSfibenr Jr;-erf -725 Vaughan, Bloomfield Hills; Gay Bramble of 18120 Magnolia, .Southfield; and Louis RaceoLKalamasoo, _________ —Memfeer^^ln the society is one of thiTigghestHhflBflM-Cran. brook awards. The society includes public and independent secondary schools in various parts of the country. The cdmnilssioh'also asked Fear 58 Dead in Plane Crash Mrs. Roy E. Wetzel Service for Mrs. Roy E, (Helma L.) Wetzel, 57, of 6194 Lahser, Bloomfield Tbwnship, jvillJbe 11 a m. tomorrow at Bell Chapel of the^VilliainJR., Hamilton Co., Birmingham. Bunaf will be in Dayton, Ohio. Mrs. Wetzel died Sunday after a lengthy illness' She had-been-Detroit- offiee---manager for Warner Brothers. Surviving besides her husband a sister, Mrs. L. J. Lucia ,of Birmingham. (Continued From Page One) some 20 miles north of New Orleans. It was about four miles eas|; of the 27-mile-long Lake chartrain causeway c( ing the north and soul' ' Eastern said ttoWB, flight 304, left New Q^ans; Interna-Sewer Bond Approved tional airporj^dfeaded for Atlan- Prasll told The Press he wanted to publicly reveal his record of six convictions on —............- , \ misdemeanors between 1945 TTOffr ;aS»ert«rioday-rthbt , campaign against me" and because "the important thing is truth.” absolute fObrica- Prasll said he paid fines for convictions tUi charges of failure to identify at the scene of an accident, disorderly, reckless driving, drunk and disorderly i and carrying a concealed, weu I repeating previous s that (he library NATIONAL WEATHER - Light snow ti forecast tonight for the Great i.akcs region eastward tlirough parts of the mid-Atlnntlc c^tUHtal region. Hie central Plains and northern portions of the Southern Plains. Ruin Is forecnst for northern |)ortions of lii(< soutli Atlanllr cossfal region and over the temaltulcr oi tiie southern Plains .Scutternd siH>wtirs ami snow flurries are exjHH’lod over nttrlhern |N>rtions of the Pacific noi thwos(. It will be colder over most of (he ryillon ft will he wurmcr over the north Atlantic coastal region and the Padife northwest. allegations program has not been properly plenned. "Tills should have been a hallot proposition ao mlllage could have been connected with It for year-to-year operation,” mid Anderson. e A * -Disagreeing, Seetarltn snld the temporary library facility at the GAl building and tha future Imllding program has been already aired by the board and in Ihe press. The Teamsters Union president, taking the stand in his own defense, said he talked with Edward Grady Partia on only two occasions during lloffa'i 1962 conspiracy trial In NashviUe. Partin, a local Teamsters official from Baton Rouge, La., the key prosecution witness on government charges that Hoffa tried to fix the Nashville Jury. Hoffa, wearing a dark blue suit and sporting a new haircu^ for the occa.sion, began tcstlj ing at mld-mornlng on the end day of the sixth w^ of his trial. RAPID ANSWERS He gave rapid-fM answers questlona from^4larry Berke, hia Chattanooga lawyer. He boasted he had built up the Teamsters Union to "the largest and best union in the world” -with 1.7 million members. He said Partin invited himself to Nashville, Just before tbe INI trial, to take care of Partin’s personal problems, which were pressing. "I had been worklpg with Pnrtln for months, trying to get him to straighten out his local and not run around the country,'!' snld Hoffn. "He came tliere (Naahvllle) primarily to plead that his local not be put under Iruateeshlp. I had no need, of Partin," Prasll said the las^harge "stemmed from ttyf large amounts of monejf I handled and collected wholesale clients when Imanaged a dry cleantng si MADE MISTAKE "I him a permit to keep the gun^ the store and made the ike of jaking it with day when I went out to pick up receipts. He added that ^‘I am not proud of the mistakes I have made along life's way. A person should learn to be a better person through their mistakes and I feel I have. "I stopped drinking and smoking and haven't been in any trouble for nearly lO years," he said. SUTTONS BAY (AP)-Voters In this Leelanau Ctounty community Monday approved 86-12 a $68,000 bond issue for a new sewage system. h * TagjPooch ia Car Tool In the rush to get reg- f Istered for all the elec- f tions this year, and get $ those 1964 auto license | plates, have you forgot-, y ten someone? y f QuitsasChief of MkHigan Comervation LANSING (AP) - Director Gerald Eddy today announced his expected resignation as head of the State Conservation De-’ partment and predicted “problems” for his successor. ★ ★ ★ Eddy, director of the depart- ta at 2j^a.m. (IPontiac jggj j ^ ^ J**® fJ"*” r • become head of thrSeology traffl^control tower radar nine i division * I change, Eddy said, will mtact with it. cut about $1,000 a year from PROBABLE HEIGHT his current pay of $17,600 as A veteran Eastern pilot said the jet probably reached a height of some 16,000 feet short-17 Bfterit-got-ovef-the laker-"— I..ake Pontchartrain is some 30 miles in diameter, with its southern shore along one side of New Orleans. Marshy land surrounds much of the lake, which has an average depth of abodt 15 feet. At the time tlie plane took off from New Orleans, the visibility was good. There was a light rain over the area. Winds were calm. Italy Surgeoni Strike for Fringe Benefits ROME — A new throe^liy strike of chief surgeons at Italian state hospitals began today. 1'he aurgeons, who struck for 48 hours last week, are demanding better pensions and retirement at 70 Instead of 65. r getting I B is next I Chances arc there's a ? couple thousand passed- h up pooches in town, ac- i cording to City Clerk Olga Barkeley. I The deadline for * a 1964 dog license Monday, and she’s only sold about 920 dog tags ^ * to date. * I That’s a good 700 be- j I hind the pace set at this^ time last year, when there | ,' was a total of 3,683 dog " i' licenses issued in Pon- ,* tier- ’ Licenses cost $2 and ;■ , dog owners must show ; proof their dogs have been immunized hgainst rabies for the coming year Iw'hu'e (hey <’nn I a license. After the dead-j line, licenses cost $3. | I For the convenience of ^ p dog owners, a clinic will be held Saturday at the i Oakland County Animal ■ t Sheller at whirh rnbie ' shots and licenses can t obtained. hies . j ,, i An Eastern spokesman said I tlic plane made routine checks I after takeoff and vanished from ! radar with no alarm given and no hint of trouble. FIRST MAJOR CRASH It was tlie first major crash involving an airliner taking off on a scheduled flight from New Orleans International Airport. A National Air Lines DC7B carrying 42 persons craslied into the Gulf of Mexico about 100 miles soutlieast of New Orleans on Nov. 16. 1989, en route from Tampa. Fla., to New Orleans and Dallas. * * it Portions of the wreckage and bits of 10 bodies were recovered. but efforts to find more failed. On June 12. 1962, the CAB .stamped the crash "cause unknown,” A Detroit co»iple iind their dmighter were aboard the jetliner. They were Carl aJ Byczynakl. Ills wife, Sophie, and tlieir daughter Joan, an Eastern liostess working out of Atlanta, Gh. HyezynskI was a weldetaat American Standard. ( Admits Slaying Girl ONLY FOUR I ^ “'Wh(Bn we held a public hear-11 ing. only four pereoni showerior to Nancy's alaylng. chief of the department but he won't have as many problems. Eddy said he knew that a jgaJority* of the seven-man Conservation CotnmlssIon' Ta'- ’ vored his resignation but denied that he resigned under pressure, saying it was his own choice. UNDER FIRE Eddy’s department has been under fire from a special committee named by Gov. Geo**ge W. Romney to Investigate the conservation policies., His resignation as director will •become effective April 3. Eddy said he sent a letter late Monrjay and then telegrams to members of tlie commission headed by Stanley Cain of Ann Arbor, chairman, announcing Ihe resignation. Tlie terse three-paragraph letter complained that the reorganization of the department was nOt going in the right direction. ★ * ★ Said Eddy; "The reorganization of the Department of Conservation in compliance with your directives to me t^ implement certain of the recommendations of the governor’s study committee is a complex task. Considerabla progress. In my opinion, has been made. However, it has become increasingly apparent that my concept of progress to date Is not in accordance with me thinking of some of you.” Ballots Ready for Absentees Absent voter ballots and np-plicnlions are now avniinble at the city clerk’s office on tho main floor of dty Hall. Anyone who will bo out «f town or unable to go to (he polls In (he city primary next Monday may obtain an nb-sent voter ballot by signing an application for one. Tbe applicntlons and ballots will be available until Sntor-dny nitornoon. The c I o r k ' i office^wlll be open from I a.m. to t p.H. flntnrday. Ti - ^t::'] Zi'- Jr t •’- ruis UAC I'UlLhS. 'l l, i^.bDA^, FEBKLAKV 2.5, ItHil; Ohio Governor Seeks to Start 3rd GOP Force WASHINGTON (AP) - Ohio Gov. James A. Rhodes was reported today to be backing efforts to organize a bloc of Northern tier states as a “third “ 'force” in the contesl for Ihe Re-publican presidential nomination. Rhodes was said by influential Republicans to be urging that f^io, Pennsylvania and New Jer^y delegations tg the . July San, Francisco convention To Check Assets of line up behind Gov. William W. efeller in the early balloting. ney is understood to have been a dear track for a favorite sbn tion might be in Scranton’s Scranton of Pennsylvania in a ! Whether Scranton would be' approached about the possibil-1 designation aimed at preventing' cornei'. * combined “favorite son” opera- i f^e ultimate bepeficiary of any; jjy adding his state. a GOP primary fight, Republi-1 Ohio, Pennsylvania and New tion. * ♦ * The, ambitious- undertaking-would be designed to weld the Northern industrial states into a cwivention bloc that would command enough votes to prevent the nomination of either Sen. Barry Goldwater, R - Ariz., or New York Gov. Nelson A. Rock- >«>. I**” «■ >*"'8 «PPr»ched «i J'™*'IS would serve as a rallying pomt • j for the e.arly maneuvering, pre-|^^ ^ ^ 4?^ suwaW“Wbuia-3rpefir-oirw- dklate, must _deci^_won^wnem vention developments. MAYBE MICHIGAN Plans for the formation of the bloc are not confined to Ohio, Pennsylvania and New Jersey. er he is going to run for re-election this year. If he does, bloc sponsors believe he might be willing to back Scranton. * ■*: ★ In Wisconsin, where Rep. John BBII3 __DET^O IT (iP» - Michigan Atty7~Getr'TranfcAleHey--tcKl^ named a special administrator to the Michigan assets of an alleged Chicago^policy wheel operator, in whose home police found almost $800,00d in cash. in,otate'puI administratorTwislippm administer the Mich^ii of William W a k e f i e Ld, also known as Laurence Wakefield, who died in-^cago^i’ebr^W.— A safe deposit box in Wakefield’s name, found in the National Bank of Detroit Safe Deposit Co., will be opened Wednesday in the presence of Feldman and representatives of the Federal fiareau of Internal Revenuej^Syne (Detroit) County Treasurer’s Office and the C^EW County (111) Public^ Ad-^,4mnistrator’s Office. Kelley said he had been informed that federal agents had placed a lien upon any of Wakefield’s assets found in Michigan. * ★ ★ The hoard was discovered by police after Wakefield, M, suffered a fatal heart attack at his South Side Chicago horhe., Final Break in Ties Near in Albania-RiiaiaM Midiigan Gpv. George Rom-1W. Byrnes now appears to have : K Urges End ‘ fo Arms Race Boole ^ If Charles H. Percy should win the GOP nominatibn“ fof governor of Illinois, “third force” supporters hope he might help swing some of that state’s delegates their way, even if Goldwater wins, the Apri] 14 non - binding , preferentiaf primary there. - ‘ SCRANTON RELUCTANT Scranton has been reluctant to 1 Wyoming.-Utalu-Idaho and Mon-i concede that he would become tana in this connection, available* for the pre^ential -The: Goldwatar and Rockefel-.nomination: However,-liis sup- ler camps have been viewing porters are said to be going this independent move wit' votes toward the 655 needed by any candidate tO' win the nom^ ination. Michigan's S_and Wisi^ consin’s 30 would -bring the total I to a formidable 240l plus any of i Illinois’ 58 that might be added. I Sponsors think "that if they j can get the “third force” movc f rolling they can^at^act unde-1 cidetf delegatibris from some; other states with GOP govern-1 ors. They mention Colorado, i this Could Be YOU... and It Will Be When You Shop'* SIMMS You will be just as jubilant as t ■fellow wiven you shop Simms a see how much you con save. V save money because of our t overhead. No landlords to pay 1 Vent-lo--—. -We- own^oS-^lding:. -.■ 'VC; / jNo',xo^jymf-shoi^es7=^We“1v^^ free’Toyawpy, nd fciricy fixtures*-.— Just simple displays. Ail whjch _ soves you money... Listed below ore some items on sale tomorrow,-Wednesday, only — 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. Come in tomof-£:iw:aRyCT)r" how much you fniisriveCi— —.- ......... 2nd FliNir HARDWARE DISCOUNTS MoscolwttJPrt seizure of Soviet Emhassv-hnilrf. ings in Tirana is expected to ieave Moscow noAthoice but to make a final break with it?, former ally, diplomatic sources ^aid today. belligerent little Balkan country, Communist China’s inyEamipim sateffitei^eEreF^ theilve S^et Embassy builck ' ings last Thursday. Russia, disclosing the seizure in the government nlwspaper niz-vestia yesterday, said it had been protested as an “unpre-cedently outrageous act.” Moscow and Tirana suspended relations in 1961 after the Albanians sided with Peking in the Sino-Soviet ideological dispute. Both ambassadors were recailed but embassies w maintained fti each capital- Albanians An-ijastHEuTOpean diplomat said^at ^itb China behind thepirit is not surprisingAhat have acted"lvitlf such impunity. Albania got new support for its anti-Soviet stand m recent weeks with the^,.yistt of Communist ChjneSTe Premier Chou .En-JfFcfiCwas,=hisj«ity'St^=^ Eufbpe during his swing around Africa. -Plan Smoking Confab EAST LANSING (AP) - William L, Evans, 19, of East Lansing, a sophomore at Michigan State U n i V e r s i t y has been named to a 10-member committee to plan a national conference on “Smoking and Youth”, MSU has announced. MOSCOW ®- Soviet Pre-mier ^Khrushchev says in a preface to a boofc-that if arms “ spending could stop the planet would be a flourishing garden and the Soviet Union would have the brightest garden of them all. 'if ★ :. Thei«’^aw~’was^tten for a book being-published in Italy by Giulio Einaudi, Turin publisher, containing flie major fordgh policy declarations of the Soviet leSderr— “For the first time in history,” the preface said, “mankind is in a position to prevent war altogether.” -along-with^The “efforts-'to d^ velop the tier bloc. Sen. Clifford P. Case, R-N.J., has indicated ' ‘ “cern. If it is even partMly^ cessful, it could mitigate either candidate’s success in the presi- Mbre United States soldiers died of disease than were killed in the Spanish-American War. JEWELRY -------------------—............._________ Ponlioc'i Oldest Insurooce Agency THATCHER, PATTERSON & WERNET 711 Cemmunity National Bank Bldg. PE 2-9224 Woman Professor Dies SOUTH SUDBURY, Mass. (AP)—Miss Ada Roberta Hall, 73, for 25 years professor of physiology at Wellesley College, died Monday. She became professor emeritus upon her retirement, for health reasons, in 1955. Russia Praises Ceylon MOSCOW (AP)-The Soviet government published a note; Monday night praising Ceylon for barring nuclear ships and planes from its ports and landing fields. Izvestia said the Albanians recalled the last of their oF ficials from Moscow last T5e-cember. Moscow maintained a slender link with Albania through Communist Czechoslovakia’s foreign office. RETAUA'nON But since the Albanian seizure of the Soviet buildings, ^iplo-3 said, Moscow' probably will retaliate by taking over the Albanian Embassy here, thus cutting the last diplomatic ties. There were indications that Soviet officials were reluctant to make a fingl break, despite Albania’s vociferous attacks on Premier Khrushchev and his policies of peaceful coexistence with the West, which Albania and the Chinese oppose. One Soviet political commentator whodid hot want to be identified said there is g widely held view here that Albania is only being, used gs a screen for Peking’s attacks. * '*‘TfieTiands“a'fe of Tirana but the voice is the voice of Peking,” he said. TEEMING CITY—A film trip to the British colony of Hong Kong, with Its millions packed Into a small enclave on the coast of Red China, will be presented at tonight's Pontiac Kiwanis Club travel and adventure scries by lecturer Karl Robinson. The show begins at 8 p.fn. at Central High School auditorium. ' laeloiy RamuMnlotlM Hm* ^yEDNESDAY—1 »o 3 P.M, REMINGTON SERVICE Bring your golf game down in the 70’s... (degrees, that is) takea Delta Jet toFlonda people do! (From Detroit) \, L(i]ui#:Has^Thta-P^ rush Door Mata 75c-value-—Uot dipped poll with bale handle. Full 10-quart capacity.' Limit 2 perl c u stomef. _______ With Strong Wire Center Plastic Clothesline 100-FEET Regular $1.00 value Strong and' durable wire center In pjaslic covered line. Won't jog or jlretch, Limit 300 feet. i2nd Floor HOUSEWARES DISCOUNTS, Heavy Quace STAINLESS STEEL 6-QT. DUTCH OVEN $5.9S Value For top of stova. cooking — Soups, stewing or sfeoming. Polished finish with bokellte side handles. Complete with 6-Quart Heavy Guage Stainless Steel tIDi Mixing Bowls |ee Regular $3.00 lellar-Mix, | Olid store foods In polished iloinloss sleel t SOFA, TWO CHAIRS, OTTOAAAN 4 Placaa Total Value $429 95 ODDS t ENDS SALE Vinyl Self Stick Shelf Paper Odd lots left group of eosy-cleon self slick shell poper, loti ol some little of m SIMMS DISCOUNT BASEMENT a f/ Custom make to your order. . . Hand crafted sofa with solid oil walnut dradle front base, arms and solid walnut legs. Textured decorator stripe or accenting plain fabrics. Your choice of twelve different patterns and decorator colors. 2>arm bolsters, 5 foam toss pillows. HIS high back swivel rocker and recliner. HER high back swivel rocker and recliner and matching ottoman covered in washable Naugahyde. Total value $429.95. 4 pieces $369. 90 days cash or up to 3,6 months to pay.. YARD GOODS Par Yard Valuts to 89c —Fobrics lor tvery lawing n«*d. Assorted pcitlerni and color! ........ .'.TT.ry.".'..'.... SEWING THREADS-Ea. Assorted colors, SOOjyard spools.... ,7, >.... tt;. __ Quality ZIPPERS-Ea. 4-5-6-7-8-9-10 Inch lengths. Limited color assortment... Package 200 Anacin Tablets Regular $2 19 value-for fast, lost relief ol poiK due to headaches, colds, riiuitle cu Personna Razor Bladei 69c value-Package o)\5 double edge smlnleis steel blades tor more shelves, more comtort and fonvdH'iniicn. 12'/s-oz. Bottle JergensLetioi $1.00 volue —world's most iiopiiir l ond lotion, for chapped or detergent V.xitvri i)vnlgn ami llevarnliHa Service at No Extra Ctnt , Bloomfield Hills'-2600 Woodward rlMlt.*?(M*#m*Netthl«nd M3.Z933 i Lincoln Park —2160 Fort St. eioCKfooMsouTHFiuorDuaaaoo East |»id«—34150 Gratiot At I4W Mill no ' 791-1300' 3 Stores open 10 a m--9 p.irl. Wed., Thun , Fri„ Sat. ooi | till 5 p.m. -BBilKllB-a ^umllure SAVE On FRESH TOBACCOS Pucket of 100 CIGARi MI0 lYou ejet 100 famous Emerson 6c ( ^ cigors in a r«-,jsab!..' riakHc buckel. which can,be used ttS a water poll, diaper pail, painf paH, etc. With han-| die and cover.-- - * 9S North . Saginow Street ybuR « I1K POXTIAC/PRESS, TT ESDAV. FEHRrARV 2.). lOfi^ Oxford Village Vote Shows Sewer Plan Not Favored OXFORD-“We got beat.” Village President Allen E. >'alentine used these words today to say that almo_sL two-thirds of the 366 residents who walked up the village hall sta^vdted against the proposed Oxford sewage svstejn rin y^esterday’s . advisory elec- it's unfortunate that more peo- “ pie didn’t get out," Valentine said, noting that yesterday's weather should-have-promoted a heavier turnout. Of the 366 who cast ballots. 144 voted for the villagewide “With a l,)00-,vote [Kitential .system,'while'221 indicated they' weren’t in favor of the proposal. Chie of the votes was ruled* invalid. The sewcRs would cost the typical home owner an average annual fee estimated at $12,T50 for' 12 years and 678 for the next 18—Arming at thtsr — figure the coutjcil used an as-^ spssed valuation of $3,000. , v handle sewage for 12 to the council sponsored yesterday's advisory election because of the magnitude of the project. PREUMINARY PLANS Total cost of the construction project is estimated at years. Ultimate plans call for the waste' to be piped into a Preliminary plans for the sewers, submitted by consulting engineers Johnson & Anderson of Watdrford Township, have .al- county system.____ _Juspray.4rrigation plant wontd "TTOfouglj no vote is necessary At a public hearing last month, a panel of professionals told 200 of the village residents why the privies, cess-- pools and - septie-taiitr here- ^ have “got to go.” Louis Schimmel, director of the Michigan Municipal Advisory Council, pointed out that ■ ^ " “never going to get any cheaper.'” Council is scheduled to review the election results at tonight’s regular meeting. ■ — - — i^lentine said the council will' probably either make the final, decision tonight«br. postpone the matter until the new council is. ■^elected in the March S'liaffap"] mg. Rochester Woe by Businessmen R0CHB:STER—The Village Council last night con-i cerUrated on the problem ofdowntowh parking, as, merchants answei^d- Courtcilfnafl J«hn~ OllonnelTsi, question, "What can we do to get Rochester off the ground' ft-were-4n-viVeOb last night’s ses- r:_ More thanH ★ ★ Council Eyes f^jec+Maps j the situation, which council ,k-Urban Renewal Step * corded and promised to consld- Closer in Rochester j^CHESTER - The Village council laSnight moved other step closer to the proposed milllon-dollar urban renewal project here. Councllmen for the first time were shown maps of the proposed changes in the southeast area of the village, where the industrial park would be established. Last night they also reviewed a .sample of the resolution which will be used lo apply for the grant. Avraifs Word of Gf/zens' Un/f Utica Board Delays School Cuts UTICA — Members of the Uti-* Community Schoof^bai^aFe going to wait until March 9 to decide where they must make cutbacks in the district’s educational program. lie- board—had-hoped to be able to make the decision at last night's regular meeting. these facilities, the board Is i results Atkinson also said that now studying where to make I about 60 professional school per-the cutbacks. ' sonnel would have to\be're- ' Although it- IS not definite: leased. which' students will have the ! * * * limited programs, it is certain I Regardless which of the pro-Hrar’;1tni'Rli'eds of sludeiits wHfrr fnrHino In Sphrml,.ii...i« imiI iiwto id council would set up a public ' mending plans tor surely and :‘‘ hearing on tlie Issue This would sanitation; pro|M)sitig (lowr-lake place sometime this sum- jhiIs and tree locations; and pr ' Dior moling public interest in dies Allliough the fhilil figure on ing up the village the cost of the project Is not * * * determined as yet, it Is expected 'Hie commission will also s to he In the neighliorhoiH'l of [lei vise tlie annual Spring clea Jl nilllion , iip-paliiluptlxiip activities. pirates. It is around this ml.s^-. iinderslanding' llial the plot ('enters and expands with humor and-iiitriguc. New S. Lyon High School Could Be Pul on Ballot MII.FORl) '(immunity Hospital memhors hijive intofm will travel, The (llrcetoyif to speak tOy-groppir'^i^ted in (he 62^inillion facIlKv SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP--A vacant barn Jjuj'ne^ to t h e ground last night while firemen Irom two depayttrtents/Worked to eonfipc^' thy;- fn iMe north side /Hoad just east e was owned by Jr. of Orchard cslimalcd its value y jr.-KNI, noting it' had xjust ecu converted to hoipre cat-, SOl'I'll l,y'()N^ Till' possi- nalures fell ahmil 501) slior STAGE l‘IU)Dl'CTIO\ inlilv o| a third proposition o)n H'*’(piota. Rarllell said, ’ Professors Fred Alexander "'e April It special school , and Paul Downey are direid ing ballot here is being weiglied by "* "•’•‘•■'I recognize the re-tlie board of cduciilion. quest. It must place on the ballql Trustees are not required to ; $[ Lake Qrion ^ while Boh Ulghton' of J^onliM and Burniq/de Groatdf Lqf seiited^ests. ^ ,A'Te('epli()B in 1j«fMeLliildi.stx /t’hui'ch House fijHowed the rit^s. Traffic Has Killed 260 Milford, (he bed _^;^fy would serve ijuM', Hig,hland, While ommeree, Novi and ^ , Towu.ship.s in Oakland .’oufuy and (!reen Oak, Brighton and Hartland in Livingston. ★1 A additions to present facilities, i OrgHiiizallons interested in The petition asking for this elec-' olilaining a speaker should con-tlon required and had fewer slg-j*“<'t Hie ho,spltal fund drive of-natures - 266. j flee at 447 N, Main, Also expected to appear on .School Vsiipl. Frank Barllell fJP«*Hal ballot.ls an opera- Federal meat inspectors of said a petition requesting an- n’iH«Ke request. The H>e U.b Department of Agro Davisbui'g firemen, were assisted by those from While Lake Township in fighting the lii;e,ol iindelernijned origin. proposal on the ballot, whleJi Is eertiiln to have one building progriiin and an operational mllluge Issue. I Imlay City Concert Set ! IMLAY CITY -- The Urusa- j ders quartet of Detroit will present a suOred concert at I h e Imlay City Church of the Niiz-i arene Sunday at 7:30 p.m. The church Is at 652(4 Weyer. I EAST LANSING (APt--Traffic accidents have killed 260 per-.s6ns in Michigan so iar this yeat', pmvisional figures c o m-|)iled by stale police showjed today. The highway death loll at this (late last year was 188. PONTIAC MAU OPTICAL CENTER other election on the high scIkkiI delealed m January did not ear-I'v sufficient signatures, With modilii'iition. the high .school proposal could have lieen placed on Ihe ballot by 5)1 per cent ol Ihe registered voters, SHORT OF qCOI'A The pi'lilion With some IHHl ,slg- bonrd now Is reviewing its biidg- culture provide ‘ continuous .suet to determine Ihe neees.sary pervlsion in about l.6tM) packing ammmi | and piocesslng plants.. HN.flilTHlWKIDf Learning Rote to Be Aired [ Colder Wlathor and \ > Wintar U Iwall j Whan Your Homo It L HtatadWlthSholl , Vwtiitt er»’1t riwi* IM.M CHS ,IA5 ( EE .‘.EltVEY VlcinlM'is of Ihe Clarksloii Aren .liinloi Chamhei ol Coin merce (from letu liorilon ,S|^»elhnng. Terry Iliomns and Roherl .lone*, dinni** Ihe .lay (rr*,' Clll/i-tl't. Allilmie .Siii yey now In prog I'lUzen I 1 A gut'.'lloiiiialie de.signed to pin|ioinl on Mirlons Imlepenileiu e ties Mild wrvice'i b bring dls' jrlbiiti'd In Hie .liiivcees lirsulls o( llyr .'.in vi'\ vmII In' iimilr piililn . ,1 ,/ , I COMMERCE TOWNSHIP I,earning dlllerences helween normal and leltii'ded chllilieii will he disemwed al liimnirow nighCs meeling iil Ihe S|ieetal Parent Unit ha Retarded Chll dren (SPliRi S|M*ak(*r nl Clifford H Smart .hinior High .sVhm)| will lie Dr, Walt Wolirnherger 'I’lvnioiilli Slate Home luul Training Schmil I eseanher The mrrling will hr lirld al « Joit dial n 2 8343 . , our courtaout drivart will fill your lual oil tank wflth^ShoH, tfw owo furpdea oil doiignod to gWo your homo warmth and comfort ovon in tha coldait Wintar waathar. 5001 PADDOCK It PONllAC MiCH { I Room .101. ■j,l' ■ ■ ; :;:;r \ ■ • :’J-..' ^ .:; 'V^ ' ■' ■;► ll' I' THE PONTlAd ITiKSS TUESDAY. FEBRUARY ?5. 1964 Henry Bellmon, elected in t to be elected governor of Okla-1962, was the first Republican | homa. The Dollars You Save on Your HOME, CAR, _ jjrJUSiNESS-INSURANCE Becomes.a,Nesf.lgg__ for Your Other Needs. HEMPSTEAD insurance 368 W. Huron Ph. FE^284 By United Press International A bomb exploded in the yard of a Negro family at Prin^ss Anne, Md., late last night JiUT ni*g^ cross Wazed^ i^^ darkness near the predominantly Negro college town bestirred earlier by its jsecond wave of Bomb, Fiery Cross Mark Race Strife in MaryTand aeiai demonstrations in 48 hours. No one was Injured In the explosion In the front yard of Leon Gates, a clerk-at Maryland StatatMeger— Negro students had earlier agreed to a 48-hour truce in demonstrations and the incidents threatened to tear the agreement apart. •k ★, * The flaming cross was extinguished and police took it to Baltimore to run tests on it. iro~deinonstrators, rfu^ ioiLltuuto Joim4Vilson and 4he Rev. Addison Cash, a Baptist preacher studying at the college, later surrendered and were released in $100 bond each.^ LAST SATURDAY It was the second round of violence that has struck Prin-i»iss Anne Last Saturday, vk>- Advannement lence broke out when some 300 students from the state college -demonstrated -ia the- business, district. One ^Tent was liitteB by' a police dog and a police captain was struck in the head. A white man was disarmed. The cross - burning and explosion came after Negro stu- streets, struggled with the owner of an all-wbite restaurant and then retreated to their campus state police cars to prevent the arrest of two demonstrators. OTHER AREAS Other racial developments: : NEW YORK - Dr. James E. Allen Jr., the state commissioner of education, said that he has directed a special three-man committee to study integration and school improvemoit as ins^arable goals for the New York City school system. BOSTON - Officials for the National Association for f h e of Colored has announced that its executive secretary, Roy Wilkins, will lead a ^‘Silent march” on city hall tomcOTOw as parTof a civil rights boycott on Boston’s pub-lic schools. WAITERS guarantees every item at least 1/3 off! Each ^tem is YeAueed a mfniifitim of l/3^froTirtliej^ee it ^nras in our stockJbefon^tliis clearance! Charge The -bill pr7 2 pr. Ladies’ Mid-Arm Kid Gloves, Size 6, Were 12.00, Then 5.34 3.56 Assorted Costume Jewelry Was 1.00-2.00, Now.............67 Spring-Colored Bead Necklaces & Earrings, Were 1.50,Now. 1.00 MEN'S WEAR—Street Floor 2 Dacron and CoUon Rohes W ere 12.98, Then 8.63, Now ..'.... 5.77 2 Drion & Vi ool Rohes Were 15:98, Then 10.6,5, Now............. 7,10 18 While it Colored Dress Shirts Were 3.99-5.W, Now............. 2.66 !3 Vinyl Gloves Were 1.9*),Then 1.69, Now ..................... ...U:l il I'hernial Underwear, Shirts & Drawers Were 1.99, Then 1.69 1.13 11 Long-Sleeve Sport Shirts W ere 3.*)*), Then 1.6/, Now........ I.l 1 5 Uong-SIeeve Han-Lon Shirts Were 5.99, Then 4.00,Now...... 2.(>7 4 Sliort-Sleeve llan-Lon Sliirt A Sock .Sets Were 11.93,Now.... i.'>7 7 Turltcneck Knit Shins Were 1.9*),Tlien Wr, JSow...................<>6 4 W'ool and W'ool Hlend Sweaters were lo 11.95, Then :l.6.5. Now 2.44 2 py. Men’s Stretch Ski I’anis W ere 19.‘)5, I lieu 13.30, Now .... 8.9.1 18 Men’s Winter Jackets Were 1').95, Then L5.88, Now............. 10..59 2 Men’s W inter Jackets W ere 3.5.00..39.')3, Tlien 2.5.88, Now .. . 17.26 -------------------------------------------------------------....JJ-Jh-, CHILDREN'S VALUES—Second Floor 25 pr. Children’s National Adv. Shoes Were to 6.99, Now.....3.66 ypiMO Tfieiiaara^ 12AIo. W*ere 4.00. Now......2.00 Red Flannel Sleepers Sizes 2 and 3 Only Were 3.50, Now ... 2.00 „ 6x; Were 4.99; Nivi'....... . 2.07 4 Infants’ Pram Suiu, Broken sizes. Were 10.99, Now....Vb OFF 4 Cordnroy Sport Jackets Sizes 4,6,7, Were 7.99, Now...... Vl^FF 3 Orton Plitsh Coats' Assorted Infants Sizes, Were 14.99.V* OFF B'oys’lSport Shirts, Broken STzes, Were 3.98,' Now .. Girls’ Nylon Stretch Slaefcs,^Were 3.99, Now............... FOUNDATIONS, LINGERIE—Second Floor Flannel Pajamas and Gowna Were 5.00, Now............... 2.00 Cardigan Ski Pajamas, Broken Siaet, Were 6.00, Now........ 3.00 Broadcloth Contour Strapless Bra. 32 B, C-.36 B, C, Were 8.95 .. 5.00 Famons Make Colton Bras. Broken Sizes, Were 13 10 3.9.5, Now 2.00 Famous Make Foundations. Broken Sizes, Were 5.95 to 18.50 Vk OFF Famous Make Nylon Tricot Gowns, Broken Sizes...........Vi OFF Assortment of Sleepiyear. Broken Sizes.................Vi OFF HOUSEWARES, CHINA, ETC.—Lower Level FABRICS, LINENS—Fourfh Floor lOVi yds; Aniel Jersey Were 1.9'), Now.........................87 yd. 2.3611 yds. Randmii 'I'weed Rayon A Acetate Were 1.69. Then 67c .‘U y»l. 34 yds. Frieze Jacquard Rayon A Acetate Were 2.99, Ilieii 1.97, Now...........................................87 yd. 14 yds. Ahhy Flannel Were 1.9*), Now...........................87 yd. 19ydi. ArneU.5.lii.ssideWere 1.4').Then 67c, Now.......... .44yd, 34 yds. Assorted Cottons Were to I.OO.N'ow.....................ttyil, !)2 yils. Printed Colton Outing Flannel Were 49c,Now............24yd. 18 yds. Printed Rayon A Acetate Were 1,4'», Then 67c, Nok . .14 yd. 10 yds. IViiitcd Rayon A Acetate Were I.')9,Tlirii 67«,N«w. ,14 yd. *)7 yds. Formal Fabrics Were 1.49.Thei>47c,Now.................:i2yd. 12 yds. Brown Chiffon V rivet Were 2.W. Now................. l.')7 yd. 15 Hath MaMlegal ........Were .3.98, Now.................... I.')7 6 Hand Towels. Regal Rose, Were 1.2*). Now.....................67 1 64x102” Linen Cloili Set Was 16.')8, Then 8.**?,Now...... 6.'»7 4 50x68” l.inen Cloth Sets Were 7.')*', then 4.97, Now.... 2.27 2 .52x52” Linen Clolli Sets Were 2.98,Then 1.47, Now.......97 1 64x104” Linen CIolli Set Was 7.98. Tlien :i.97. Now...... 2.6l 3 fi0x')O” Rayon Cloth Were 3.')8, Then Now................ I..6 2 .52X.52” Flocked cloth Were 3,*)*), Tlien 1.32, Now.........87 2 60x*)0” F'loclied Cloth U ere 6,*)*), Then 1**7, Now..... I ..7 2 131x108” M..ckc.l ( loll. « ere 8.9*). Then 2.64. Now.... 171 4 .52x52” Print l .inen Cloth W ere 3.**8, Now........... 2.(i»7-N6XT'.■^;"r7T^^^^ 5 Andirons all Brass, W ere 7.****, Now................... 4 Aniliroiis, All Brass, W' ere ').'*'), Now.............. 6 Teakwoo.1 Relish Dislies, W ere 5.'*8, Now . .. . i.... 4 Ft»yt eiiee PlastltrDishes, Service forOrWeTxr lOdWs .,.. . I Set Blue Danube Dislies Serv iee for 8, W as .32.95, Now .. 2 Fiireka Bavarian Serviee for 12, W ere 68.00, Now........ 1 l4-lto.C17slalPnn.T1 Bowl .Set, Was 17.181. Now........ 2 InsulatedClasses Sets, Service for 12, Were 10.00...... 50 'J‘ero|Mi. Insulated Tiimlilers, Were :)4e. Now......... .3 Blue Damilie Coftoe Pols. Were 3.'*9, Now............. 4 Blue Damilie Candle Holders, Were 3.3.3, Now........... 3 Blue Daiiuhe Mugs, W ere 3..3.3, Now................... 6 Pill Up I.amps (Rase Only) Were 4.*»8, Now............. 2 Brass Stick Table Lamps, Were 21.95. Now................ 6 Cobra Pin Up l ights. W ere 2.****, Now '............... I Set of iSiiaok Trays, W ere 3.52, Now.................. .30” Round Nylon Rugs, Waslinhle. Were .3.**lf, No. 27x48” Ohiotig Nylon Rugs, Wasl.alile, Were 6.'*H, :l6x(3t”^ Oblong Nvjon Rugs. W a-hahle. W ere I2.'« 36x(3r Ravon Rug-. W ashahle, We.e 8.'*|l, Now . , 21x36” Dlilong N.lon Rugs, Wa.lial.le, We.e :l.<*8, .......... 1*0.(able Vaenum Cleane. , W a. l*(,'*5. , Hoover l.iiiniil Rug ''toniipoo. W ere 1.18, Now . . . 5. Tube l al.le Ra.l.o, W as 18 **5, Now............ . .. (, F. Trausislor Radio. Wa. 2'*,')5, Now , . ........... Ml Rias. T V Stand. W a. Ml,'*8. Now.................... Men', Valet Hark., ( o.iverl« I ;u«e. ...... J suiters Hike-, Ligl.lwrigl.t moi ..3.88 .2.66 ... 88e ...2:22 .., 2.02 ...1.66 ... 44c ... .3.88 ...88c ... 2.02 .,..44« ...66c ...,66c ...66c ,.. 3.37 ... 3;ic ....1.44 . . . 1. H .. 10.44 .,21.22 *. 44.00 ..11.00 ... 6.44 ... l7o ... 2.88 .. I k3:l ...L«8 k.')l>all a e 4.'***. No. .lane, W a We . Go I l, Tl.en 4.')7.N..w . 2 iNifa (i.ivers W ere III.***), Then 4.97, Niiw .. 20 Valan.'ei W'ere l.*W, Then 97c, Now.................. 17 Valam es W ere 2.'*9. Than 1,32, Nnw................ I Valance ^ as .l,')**, l l.ei. 1,97. Nnw............. 6 C.iilali.s Were 2,'***. The*. 1.32 Now H l .ltlaili. W e.'e if***. Then l.•♦7, ^..w........... H I urtail.s W ere f*9. j'l.l-.i 2.64, Now .irlaiii,W as ,1 I'*, Then 13 -til! Case. W as 5,'*ll, Now........... 2 I M ess I ornis. W e. e 6 **6. Then ;;.U7, Now . . , 11 Foam Hair Roller., Were l.iMt. Then 2.'.e, N.i 5 Shelf Bags, W ere .l.'***, Tl.e.l 2.W., Now.............. L! Air Saiilllsers, W ere L.i9, Now........................ 22 Bnille. of Fa.y W ad., W eie I ;;.i, 'Then 2.5e I l .ollag 1 Ninon BumellGiq. Lo 7 xliKwer I iirlailis W ere 2 Shower! ...lain. Were hen 2, Spray c.aus ofJNo Mil. lew. Were 1.8'*, The). 4.l<, Now . . . t ap. of "Mr D" 1 m..i , We.e 1 711, II Ue. Now .... llv 1 alls .d Be.l, s,,,,,,. M .re 1911. Ihen (Uie. Now , . 'hoe l a. e., 'Ae.e MU , Then 0 , Now’ 1 lo'sel Ire.lme,.. We,' e i tNI. Now : . . . , ,;Srrtr Sanitary B,i.l-. We.e 1.8'*. Now . .-I . l.Jft t ard t:a uniinportnnt aretm that have loomed large in the moaaic of intrrniitionni interplay, (’yptrus is hlcHseil or ciirNed with great strategic \nlue in the continuing conflict between Eiwt and Went. Two allied nalion.s — friends of tlie U.S.—are (llrcctly involved in the strife engulling the Island, They are Turkey and Greece, both repre .senllng tlie plllurs in' NATO's Southeast Europe and the major bulwarks against Soviet penetration ilito the Mediterranean ★ ★ ★ Tlie.se two nations stand on op-po.sile slde.s In llie Cyprus conflict, line slemmlii|i! mainly Ironi dlsaffec non belwecn Ihr two iiHtlonalltte.s over equitable rcpre.srntaMon in the l.slands govi'rnmenlHl and social nreii.s The Greeks on Cyprus mil number I be Turks l ive In one. Turkey naturally liacka Ha iNland nilnorlly and iippiirmlly - W4mld puHli its Muppdi t to armed Inlervciiilon. . (ireece aides with lla Creek eompairiolN, Ibougli rautioiiH niMMit giving piibllr backing to an earlier demand from Creek Cyprlol eslreinlata for Enoala. the Isliimrs union wilh (he Creek mainland. ★ dr ★ The Cypi'ti.s nisi.s ixmes a deadly Unriid t" Die ,sf I uleglrally vllal Roulltem Hunk vf llie NorIb Allatdic TreatyOigiinl/allon.On which the (fUrmlli'^ lias louknl wllli y.rcal ini'. points that puzzle Americans and probably Vietnamese, too. Why haven’t the latter done more to win? Can they ever do better? Is this country, just going to go on rocking along with them? Will it finally give up and pull out? Or will it try to step up the war? South Viet Nam has had three governments since October but the sltuadon is worse now than befpre...... TWO STATEMENTS Last Jan. 27 Secretary of Detense Robert S. McNamara told Congress the situation was “grave.” Tlie next day he saiej “I am encouraged by the progress of the post two weeks” Last week Congress' released more of what he sold: that even If the war docs not go well we should still wlth-■ Jraiii mniL American tnwPS by HW5- He said the Vietnamese had tlie primary responsibility for winning the war. Over (he weekend one report from Washington said there was division between the Defense Department and the Slate Depart nient on what to do II said .some .Stalefiepartmenl officials fell McNamara’s statement on pulling out was bud public relations because it might encourage the Communists. Also last week Sen. Mike Mansfield of Montana, the DemocraUs’ Senate leader, applauded McNamara’s pullout idea and urged coiKsideratlon of French President Charles deGaulle’s proposal to neutralize Viet Nam Nentrall/iitloii has hazards, loo. U could he liilerpreled simply as an American lace-savliig device for pull-Ing oul of a tough situation. Neulrallza-llon, once the Americans were gone, might open Ihr door for a Commiinlsl lake-over of all Viet Nam. Previously he had seemed to dismiss dr (Imille's neulrallzHlion Idea, but at another lime he said he would look with .symuathy on iieulrallzalion of all Vlel Nam, North and South. ■niULY A l*U7.7.I.E Hut Johnson added something else which WHS truly a puzzle INiliiUng lo those "outside enemies” who direet “lerror and vlolrnee” ugitliisl Smilli Vlel Niiiu, he said they ' eould do well lo remember that (his type oi aggression Is a deeply danger mis gaiine.” Pol Ihls IS exactly llic kind ul aggression Ihc North \'lclnaincse beds have lieen using liii years, except that recently Ihey began assasstnnliHg Americans. Iimi Was Jphnson Ittnllng at slcppiog u|r I he war against North Vicl Nam In Mime way, say Itirongh-Hmtttr VtefmMW'ae^-gneefHiii attacks on If’ Or what" If the United iSlatcs look part In a direct nllack. it might mean war wllli He It snlllMvl SKilioiv^ly lit lit* tit# lot tSOMllll tllllCfl, ttl (til lOtBl MBWt eHlIleil In Svit tifiv-iititjtiit 8t trtwli «t sll AP it»»(» dispalcliM. •* *>r mtilliid In Otihund. Otntnw*. I Iv Iny-liiM Mntnmh. I ao«i niul Wnthlrnnw Cuonliix A strong public reaction is needed immediately to establish a lasting zoning line between residential and commercial properties. The residence at 17 Waldo will be removed if rezoning is approved by the Planning Commission Friday; Feb. 28, and replaced with a parking lot. Business on our main streets is probably necessary, but property rights and values of residents must be protected. 2.3 Walcjo John Andrews An increasing nill^er of business establishments, professional offices and parking lots are being placed In residential areas lo the alarm of many local citizens. This Invasion of business in residential streets represents 1 an Infringement upon properly owners. It reduces residential privacy and property values, creates additional safety and traffic hazards and promotes the advantage of apartment living and eliminates the values an Individual liome owner seeks. ★ ★ ★ This Nltuatlim poses a problem which must be dealt with today by our present Planning Commission and by all future commissions. It is (heir hands that protect the residents. 201 Navajo A. H. Stauffuchcr Tells About ‘30-Up (3iib’ at YMUA Tlie ":ifl-Up Club” at the YMCA will do it.s utmost to furni.sh clouii cntcrlalnmcnl to lielp lonely people get back In circulation. There arc six YMCA.s s|ionsoring thi.s program In the ,Smitli-caslcrn men mid llierc Is dmicing and lunch every Friday night. Also, our thunks to The Press mid Mrs. Odell for the write-up. F, L, Clark, Chairman “,30-Up Club” BusinesHitien Favor Packaginir ( haiijfes One seelion of the “(’onsnrner protection " progriim requested by I'rcsident l.yiuhm .loliiismi will he strongly siqiporled by the nation s lnde)iendenl business proprietors. Independent entrepreneurs have voted 79 per cent in fuvtir of the “truth in packaging htll" introduced by Sen, Fdilllp Hart of Michigan. Mosf packaging elimiges are merely “glmmleks" sileh as special packs airrying the legend “10 rents off’ In most eases thf Adiilis ('ritidze So Much Why do adults crlllcizr" If they don't like what wc wear. Wliy hsik',’ l( (hey don't like our music, why listeiT’ Wc will t.lo|i couiplainhiK (I they will slop criticizing Arc wc so terrible Hull (hey have lo write in mid try lo convince others tliat wc me so had" .Sure, some of us go a liiilr bli Phi im . Iml don t vim adiilli think von do when you crlllcize'' HIsllkes Criticism I ' THE ,i^O:^tlAC PRESS. Tt ESDaV. FEBRUARY 2I 1964 SEVEX _' • __OB.(i« avarag® cue suicide Is conaaitted and eight attempts at suicide are made in the United States every 30 minutes. MOSCOW (UPD-A gas ex-plosion in a northern Urals mine shaft at Vorkuta has killed sev< era! Soviet miners, Pravda reported today in a rare disclosur^ of an internal tragedy. 1 , .'Vorkuta was a Stalin-era forced labor camp. The disclosure came in a mes-^sage of conMences printed, on the Communist party organ’s front page from the central Reveal Mine Deaths in Soviet News Item -Junior EcfTtors Quiz pn- versity of Michigan has fallen from fourth to 20th place'in faculty salary schedules among the nation’s institutions^.of.,.higher- _ teaming; stale legislators were told Monday. ■ ■ Roger W. Heyns, University vice president, so testified at a hearing on Gov. George W. Romney’s proposed new state budget for 1964-65. ^ QUESTION: Wfiy"is the Boston Tea Tartjr'so famous? “ ANSWER: The British decision, in 1763, to maintain a standing army in the American colonies and support tt by TRASHEB ABROAD “ “ '—iaxing_the American people, was the first great cause of American resentment which later led to the Revolutionary War. _ , ’ ThelSenate Approprratlohs a PONTIAC BUSINESS INSTITUTE 18 W. ^..awrence St. FE 3-7028 -RMIME&JIELICATESSEN AT NYE DAIRY Kothar Corned Beef SPECIAL LUNCHEON EVERYDAY CompUl* Corty-Oul Stniic* House Ways and Means Com-mittees heafd testimony here on U. of M.’s finances. Romney has recommended an appropriation of $44,086,139 for the University, an increase of $5.86 million over the present budget. NATIONAL LEVEL Heyns said ihe U, of M. fell from fourth place in 1958 to 20th place in 1963 in faculty salary schedules for the nation’s schools. A result, he said, has been the loss of able faculty members who have accepted Jiigher paying posts at other schpols. He said faculty turnover has in- "SO UPSET BY CHANGE-OF-LIFE I SCREAMED AT MY HUSBAND r Suffocating heat wavce alternating with nervous, clammy feeUujgs-accompaniea often by I Heyns cited one college of the 1 University as an example. He I said this college over a three-month period lost twice as many faculty members as it did in the same period a year earlier. The legislators were informed that bids are to be let Tuesday for the $1.75 million laboratory of the National Aeronautics and BpacF Admlnlstratipn. The laboratory is to be constructed on the North Campus. __Wjlb^^ Pierpont, U. of M. vice pr e s rFFfi'UrdPlThaTH'tr committee and the council of ^ ministers. j MESSAGE ADDRESSED It was addressed to workers and technicians of the “Kapital” eNo. 1 The message referred simply to an explosion of methane I gas which resulted in the 1 death “of the dear human i lives, of comrades of your glorious working collective.’’ The three;paragraph message, which said help would' be “accorded to surviving families, made - no mention of the- date of the accident or the number of miners who were killed ..— ~-Mr- ~ The Soviet press usually avoids i>ublishing notices ot such work tragedies although Soviet air crashes are sometimes recorded when aboard. ....... tax Tips (EDITOR ’S NOTE? The. foUotving income fox tn-I iormatim is supplied by the lntemal Revenue Serv-public service. I QUESTTOff: During 1963 I worked for two employers and had $300.00 of social security taxes withheld from my wages. What should I do? ANSWER: Enter the excess over $174 in the ih-cfflne tax withheld column German Sociologisf Sunday. B.®gatraes- ser. who had been troubled by Dies After Illness a weak heart, fhad been Iccfur- . : FREIBURG. Germanv lAPi science'and s owed him #1,200. He denied die money was tp finance a kidnaping and ttot he know of any such plan. He was excused as a wi^ess. In the afternoon. Asst, U..S. Atty. Thomas R. Sheridan recalled him, saying, “I understand you want to make an amendment to your testimony,’’. Torrence said: ‘‘Yes, I do. I-’m afraid I made, up some stories. I did know about the so-called kidnaidhg some money and I g in his first appearance Torrence, >23, known for his hit record ‘’Surf City,’’ said he had considered K e e n a n his best -jzfr^d" ter-sbciparsZ LENT HIM MONEY He said he had lent him money ‘‘so he could eat — He CMUKEEGO ^They Are Ordinary^ Hayley Mills Explains Beatles By BOB THOMAS ~APlHovle-Teievtelon Wrttei HOLLYWOOD - At last we have someone to explaih the Beatles —Hayley-MHlSi-----— ‘‘They’re simply marvelous,” Hayley enthused, sharing the opinion of her sister t e e n-pgers in Britain and the United States. Yes, but why are they simply marvelous? ‘‘They just are, that’s all.” THOMAS she replied. ‘‘I guess they ap- ROBcminitciiiiin FRancenuveii pmsuiLtyan IMIIORMW^ man HURON n NEXT wJe.2 pal' to the mass of girls^lsc:^ TMUse they are ordinary. 'They are not very good looking. They are not very good musicians. Yet they manage to nianufac-ture a group sound that is rqther appealing. ★ ★ ★ “A year ago nobody knew who they were-or cared. Now they have made so much money I don’t suppose they’d ever have to work again. Yet they have taken the whole thing'with good I humor and they havenH lost the I common touch. ‘‘You know what their ambition is? One of them wants run a garage. You know that common blood still pulses in their veins. 'That’s why .young at-y ★ RESTAURANT ★ Drlijihllul! For Yniir lliilnj! I’lmrc! Alwayt flttp food — Cfilneae, CawlonMa, Amnrlean I FREE! i l^hutemen Fired From California Base VANDENBEMlOR^^TroWE BASE, Calif. (AP)—’fW Min-uteman intercontinental ballistic missiles were launched Monday from this West Coast base in what Air Force spokesmen described as routine firings. * ★ _ S’ The shots bring to 32 the total number fired froin this missile center.,, . ' tktyooi qnt^t rfe^d. Ijettar afain fast... «4qr oelayr DeWItt's L^Pllls^ LF.^7-Dist: Judge wauam G. East said gravely: ‘Tm conscious of the fact that I’ve had perjury committed in this CTurt-ioonr~T"'ahr^^efaleIy coii-cerneTTy ir "TTie natterTnof course, will Have to be dealt with.” Post Changes Name WARREN (API — The former state police Center Line post i# now officially designate the Warren post. The post originally was located In Center Line but later was" ranvetf to llfarren. ^ndiences^Hke them. ThaV-and^ -Ihe hairdos ”_________ Amsler, 23, and John Irwhi, A2, are c h a r g e d vnth^^^ M Sinatra Jr. Dec. 8 from Lake " Tahoe and releasing the 20-year old singer here three days later after receiving $240,000 ransom from the elder Sinatra. The defense has claimed it was a publicity hoax. Seek Federal Grant for Smoking Study CHARLESTON, W. Va. (AP) —West Virginia’s official joint committee on smoking education says it will seek a federal grant to pay for its own private study of what causes people to ___________________ I FRESH NFW ATMOSPIIFRF FOR I'l.FASAVr HIM V; \i.momh;oomi>s1 lilll lllllitijlllll I 11^ liikl'-oiil onlcf. Family and Friandx ,'IIUU,lllaa: ..I 1070 W. Huron KK S-Z97.t TRAVERSE CITY (AP) . , PlaiKS for an all faithls chapel on paigns neea auuiuonai oasic in-1 ® tr"thlnk"^more Traverse City If fhe, .re .0 bring my™" | “f, "“S" results. I formance. I’ve got tq--and lierci J |js daddy talking — find good "You can’t treat a patient character roles during this time without a good diagnosis,” he when I'm not ready to play The $321,0(K) structure is to be IMROLL.. 111llt'xf lilJ Ki ni-Irr whiterwre-Tirr Wtttt oipriitti*:* I Ullil I . paramount beauty school state Health Director N H. Dyer, cochairman of the eom^> mittee, said antismoking cam-j paigns need additional basic ' BEATLES BUG HER ^layley but shfr’d^like to.-Qnly one thing bugs her about them: the shrieking females they attract. “I think those silly girls are absolutely revolting,” shq said. Hayley was in town to do a Danny Kaye television show with her father, John Mills, and to.talk about “The Chalk Garden,” which she also made with her father, plus Deborah Kerr, and Dame Edith Evans. ★ ★ ★ ‘‘It was a challenge,” she said ‘‘because ever had a chance to really be nasty in a film. I’m usualty so sunshiny that* it gets sickening. In ‘The Chalk Garden’ I could really be bad and—I suppose I shouldn’t admit this—it seemed to come easy to me.' 'The film, made in England by Universal, marked Hayley’ first American movie away from Walt Disney. She has made five for Disney, from “Pollyanna” to the unreleased "Moonspinners,” and has one more to go under her contract. ‘ I’m extremely grateful to Mr. DLsney for helping me over a perilous time in my career,” ‘sRe rem^Hr'"''*^^ aren't many parts when you're m) longer a child but not yet a woman, W^efems-Shrimp Boat KEY WEST, Fla. (AP) -shrimp boat stolen from Key West by an American who defected to Fidel Castro was back day. Its owner, Charles Griffin of Savannah, Ga., brought it from Havana Monday night. YOU TOO CAN HAVE A TOP QUALITY ----iSIMHi Oat or Oil I FURNACE With the Wondarful Bfeitd Installed fay Dependafale GOODWILL 3401 W. Huron Just 1M«f of EttrotohJok* The 25-foot Johnny Reb was anchored off K^. West pending immigration and customs rou- COMPENSA'nON * The ‘American who sought Cuban asylum, Dennis Kirby, 22, a California .sailor, had said he was dissatisfied with Amen-1 can life and wanted to compen-1 sate Cuba for the seizure of four! Cuban trawlers near Key West. The trawlers returned tp, Havana last Thur.sday. L&iuit---- ski mH«Ml fin stip, 'gtii m llw beffet (0f lit! wifi Conmm Pmt ntfanl its smiet'.* Traverse City Chapel Is on Drawing Board rchilect Gordon Corn-veil for construction bids. Burglar Is Polite: Left a Thank-You Note TREN'1X)N, N..I. (AP) bur,l.r »h. .,«.k llH,u.,a„ls "t ’’S' dollars in cash and merchan- . M«rriage. she disc from the Hurley-Tobin department store left this note: leading ladies.” financed by a public fund drive NOT LONG ® I. u 1 «« •1'6 39-county service area of 1 nnKn which lias somc will be 18 on April 18. and she „„ lenis continues to blossom into a love-1 ly, lively young lady. Despite ]lier advanced age, she has no Store officials discovered the burglary Monday when they came to work. she said. “Out of the question. Wouldn’t think of it until I’m 25 pr 26. ^^THum Wd^daddy^^^^ dorstandlng; they don’t hold me by a tight leash. I have my own key and .soon I’ll learn to' drive and have my own car. My parents give me perfect freedom and besides. I like them. So why .sluHild 1 move out?” Watch for KING OPTICAL CO. OPENING MONDAY, MARCH 2 VrU'f ClmneH' 28 N. SAGINAW ST„ RM. 706 SII SATURDAY'S PONTIAC PRESS —7"^ . L. ■ —, . ■ • \ . The^eputy'^ Stirs^ohtroversy in U.S, NEW YORK iJ^-A play that accuses th^ late Pope Pius XII {of failing to speak out against Hitler’s mass murder of Jews has stirred controversy ^ here even before its opening. Daring its European presen-tatim, spectators teap^ «»to . the stage to attack tte actors. The play’s German author, Rolf Hochhu_^vrtigjHasja_teent age member of Hitler’s Youth Corps, arrived yesterday for the i evidence of Nazi atrocities and Broadway opening tomorrow I pleads with him to issue a Papal night. {denunciation. He said he hopes his drama, I Pope Pius is depicted as re^^ ■The Deputy," is received Tplying: “A diplomat must see^ ■mwe factually and less emo-fa great deal - and say n()lh-, public not to prejudge the tionally’’ than it was overseas. Pope Paul VI has labelet^ the play an unjust attack on Pope Pius, who died in 1958. Pope Paul said his predecessor was well known for “his compassion for human suffering, his courage and his gentleness of heart.’*’ ing.’’ - ' ; play- He then reaajns. in the script.! They said of the drama’s Eu-that Hitler is a necessary bar-! ropean reception: rier between. Soviet Communism j “This sort of thing must not and Ihe ' Christian West, and i happen in our Democratic so-. the ^ay; a young "Jesuit priest confronts the pontiff with Snowjtorm ipilWes Critical Burns ■^OfT tjVU^uJliST “PO" churches and convents sheltering Jewish refugees. j^ofLAccidenf' “We must let him have a pardon so long as he is useful in the East.”, ciety.” FAIR HEARING Keating. Roman Catholic publisher and editor Of Ramparts Magazine. , Hochhuth. 33. a publishing house proofreader; says the title of his drama at the Brooks Atkinson Theater is a-reference : to the Pope’s position as Jesus Christ’s deputy on earth. AND TRUCKS WANTED -HIdHEST PRICES PAID— » We Pick Up FE 2-0200 ■ ponti*c-sCrap I The 10 formed a committee 4^^ ______ -ie that “The Deputy’’ gets “a, The priest, crushed by theifair hearing,’’ but noted in a* Pope’s refusal, pins a star of j statement: David on m : “This effort of ours is in no ceptsarrest an^egthasajew.i endorsement of the ^ ^ 1 play, nor can it be construed ■ Defenders of Pope Pius have i a,'a criticism. We have Jio argued that a papal denuncia-1 opinion one way or the other tion of Hitler might have result-1'for the very reason that we ed in the Nazis stepping up their I have not yet seen the play.’’ program under which 6 million Jews were annihilated. The committee’s formation as -announced" by Edward" Si. Blizzard Conditions Strand Motorists MORE RUIN If Pius XII had done wbat _ reprda3iesTnnv^r An elderly I noF doing,’’ Pope Paul has writhe would have been guilty HONOLULU iJfi . ... Buddhist priest severely burned | ten, I on the lawn beside his temple j of letting loose more ruin . 7"" SlTnday was" Hie victim of an i tfie world.’’ A winter aoddent.” ‘ Honolulu police investigators. DENVER (AP) :ard . "the northern Rockies early to— . “ , . day, —€0®amf=the=mountaia&= ==:^ttlcers have been^jnab^^ - ° . .. 4^ 4k.A Dai; Kolmn Hwith heavy snow and creating highway havoc. Snowfall was general but light across the plains where winds cut visibility to near zero. Hundreds of motorists were stranded by deep snowdrift^ BAKER and HANSEN Insurance Company INSURANa -all forms- HOME OWNERS PACKAGE POLICY A SPECIALTY Phono FE 4-1568 T14 COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK BLDG. PONTIAC ho, Montana, Wyoming, and Colorado. Roads in northern Wyo-I migg were closed. 1 A rnotorist near ^ Helena, Mont., died when he tried to make it to shelter after his Jeep I had stuck in the snow. I SNOWDRIFTS i In eastern Idaho, snowdrifts near the National Reactor Test-, j ing Station at Idaho Falls j “re. I stranded 40 buses, 160 cars and j 1,600 employes Monday. Three to four-foot drifts to question the Rev. Kakuo Okimura, 78, who is in critical condition in a Honolulu hos-' pital with first, second and third degree hufhs^ c^^^^ his body from the waist down. __But the priest reportedly told his ToclbF he 1iFd"poared“Some advance of-the premier , - 10..theologians, editors and authors of the Protestant, Ro-man Catholic and Jewish faiths issued an appeal for the Woteh for 1CTNG OPTICAL CO. —OfEKtHG Monday; ^ “Wowip of One Price Glo^se^P-r SAG I HAW ' RM. 706 PONTIAC PRESS and blizzard conditions in Wa- -gasohne-^-over-^ some religious parapjiernalia and the flames blew back at him when he struck a~ match. Okimura was wearing a loose, flowing kimono. Relatives who found him some six hours after the incident said it is the practice in their particular sect to dispose, of worn rcbes and religious articles by The equivalent of 400 pounds of paper per person is used, each I encountered by motorists near | year in this country, j Powell,- ' Wyo. Schools closed " * “ {early. i The fierce winds, reaching 50 ! i miles an hour, raked northern | I Wyoming and part.s of North! Dakota. ! Twenty cars were involved in five wrecks on a single hill north of Buffalo, Wyo., but no i j one was reported injured, j WORKERS STRANDED The Atomic Energy Commission worker? were stranded in Idaho for more than seven hours when U.S. 20 was cut off between Idaho Falls and the AEC’s reactor testing station. Snowplows brought the first SPECIAL SALE Porter-Cable 508 Saws 150 Regular Price $145.00 $11 Qj Now Only I IV SUPPLY LIMITED GLENN WING POWER TOOLS 1437 South Woodward Ayo. Five Blockii North of 14-h4ilo Road BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-0444 Need a Room? Don’t Wait! - BUY" NOW AND SAVE ON LABOR AND MATERIALS BEFORE SPRING! ONLY THE LOOK 1$ EXPENSIVE g^JMirSpace to Your Home for as little as • Free Planning • Free Estimates Priced to Make It Worth Your Whilt Diol diroct with tho hvlld get quality work. Your monoy gi Into your job, not your ovorhoa< No Cash Down! 7 Yrt. lo Pay! No Payments'til May CALL NOW FE 3-7833 Act Now Dir DEAD CONSTRUCTION CO. DIU DUK 739 N. Perry St. VOTE FOR Jack F. Prasil District 6 group to their horties in Idaho i Falls early today. None of the ! gioup was reported injured oi ' in danger. : ★ * ★ I An elementary scIkhiI bus 1 from New Swedan, near Idaho 1 Falls, was stranded with ‘25 ! children in snowdrifts five miles from New Swedan. The young-si ers stayed the night in a farm-! house. ^ I)ay.s in Ihe Yukon Terrilory lengthen to 20 hours from June EVERY WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY ENJOY UOIUARD oumon'j ______i':_____ AU YN CM »T WONDERFUL BONELESS FILLETS fried to a crisp golden brown $1.00 Fiwiith Fried Potatees • Cole SLiw Tarlarn Saute • RoHo and Butter CHILD'S PORTION ... 65* 3650 j®‘"» Phono lor Appoinimonl. FE! 5-5260. FE 5-0522. ms OFFER ESDS MARCH 20 Vinil ALiniUr 1* AUIN.A m«l VALKM INK HKl'AULT III 1'lieir New Loealioii |^LBE11T’S» riiope 674-0501 IIAtU .sni.I.STS Hciill'ice Mniuiina Jack Doiikci'brook Slilll Itlltll mill FASIIHI^!i /. WAI.TON lll.vn. MODERN HAIR STYLINQ REQUIRES A PERMANENT THAT LASTS! Our ttcrol !• a pormanont Ihol givoi your hair body wllhoul curl for tOfl, grocoful llnoi, yol firm (upport (or groolor ilylirrg froodom. SPEOIAL OFFER! Ftrmtntnl «19 cn ForlWriri BEAUrr SHOP '**r 1 Wti( Uwrthet • UpiUlri FE 2-4959 last week! Annual Pre-Season CUSTOM TAILORED Have I’rm Seen ihtr If'orktnanship? Wo carry only qiKillly fdbrks rind lor over 20 y«ar.vhavB been making th« I'est of slipcoveis . . adding yeors of jorvice to your (urniluie and rjiving It the uphotslered look. f ^ COTTONS Ivory Colton Pilnt Or Solid In Our Stook . . . Over d,000 Yaidj REDUCED 10% to 40% labor. . . Price Reduced COMPLETE CHAIR......as low ai $34 COMPLE IE SOLA......as low os $54 Prices Inriiifte tribtle,_i' Molls I Open Mondoy and fridoy Nights 1666 S. TELEGRAPH FF 4-0516 Jutil Igulh *f Oitiultd I ok» Rood It “ \JsJt\J MRS^ D. P. WHEATLEY i Christina Villor Conducts Tour of Montevideo Christina Villar, exchange student from- Montevideo, Uruguay, spoke before Alpha Alpha chapter of Epsilon Sigma Gamma ^rorily recently in the '300 LoungX.’ / She told of the traditions of her people and showed p i c-Uires of her family and points of interest in Uruguay. AAA Mrs. Anthony Grand and Mrs. Edward Hummel,^as ctv hostesses used a patriotic theme for their refreshment tabic. Mrs. Donald Neal was a guest. * A A A cooperative dinner was served to members and hus-bands, Saturday, in the Clnrkston home of Mr. and Mrs. A. ,1. Lalozns, following a bowling parly. Officer Named Mrs. Fraser E. Pomeroy of^ Hirmlngham wrts elected .sec-, ond vice cliairman of Tlie Planned Parenihood l,eague at lbs recent iiniuial Inndieon In Hie Grosse Poinle War Me morlal. / Large black buttons dot the yellow gabardine coat, designed by Lanvin. Model wears a small porcupine hat in black—like buttons, gloves and shoes. You Missed Their Visit? Drop a Line By The Emily Post Institute Q: Last Saturday while my husband and 1 were out, former neighbors paid us a visit. We found their visiting card in our mailbox. Am I expected to make some acknowledgement? A: Yes. You should either telephone or write a short note to tell them how sorry you arc to have missed seeing them. It would also be gracious to invite them to come again, naming a specified date. Q: Our church is not very large. It is not unusual in this community for neighbors to go to a church wedding even though not invited, and I’m afraid if this happens at my (iaiighter's wedding, some 'if \ilie invited guests will liave to k^and. „ Is there a polite way to keep oul uninvited guests? A: Enclose cards of admission to the church in with tlie invitations, reading: Please prettent this card St. Joiin’s Cluirch Saturday, the seventh of April. Have an attendant at the door ask all comers to show tlieir cards. Q: During my two-week visit witli my sister in another city, several of her friends entertained me in their houses and were most cordial. Sliould I write notes of thanks to them? A: You were invited to llieir houses as a courtesy lo, your sister and it Is not neces-•sai-y to write thank.s to them, but if you would like lo, you may certainly do so. Tlie clotlies of the bride and groom as well as tliosc of llieir weddlng\ attendants arc described in the new Emily Post institute b 0 0 k 1 c t entitled, "Clothftts of the Bridal Party." To obtain a copy,' send 10 ' ('('Ills in coin and a self addressed, stamped env('|o|)e lo Emily Post Inslilule, in eari! of Till' I’oiilliu; Pi'c.ss. This evening ensemble of a long sheath in —bnght raspberry silk,- featuring m. embwidered_ bodice and a huge cape, is from the spring collection oj Paris d^si^er JacqueY Heim, Shoes are the same raspberry. .. Moving Over for 2 Is Polite, Even This pink and tangerine tweed coat worn with a pink surah frock ■ ■ - wiHr^ar tangerine^ belt is -from the spring collec-tibn of - designer - Gwy^ Laroche of Paris. People Profifable By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABYY: I chuckled when I read the pros and cons of asking a stranger^ to move over a seat at a lunch counter. looking young men came in.-and couldn't find two seats together, but tliere was a vacant seat on either side of me. AAA I offered to move, but the taller one said, with a grin, “No, just sit where you are. I'd much rather talk to you than him anyway." He wasn’t fresh, just refreshing. To make a long story short, that is how I met the mail.who later became my luisbnnd and llie father of my six lovely children. ! • "GLAD I MOVED" A A A DEAR GLAD: Congratulations. I as.sumc, now that you arc settled dowii, llial was your last move. DEAR ABBY; My husband passed away ten years ago, and every Clirislmas since lliCii 1 have been pre.sentcd with a turkey by his employer. 1 was oul of town wlicn the turkey was delivered. Mater learned from a nylglibor Hint another neighbor consented to keep it for me until I returned. AAA I have been home since De-. cember 21st, and I haven’t seen hide nor hair of the turkey. What should I do? TAKES ALL KINDS . DEAR TAKES: Have you , seen hide nor hair of your neighbor? If not, it's time you went over there and talked turkey. Perhaps she stored it in her freezer and forgot about it. ^ DEAR ABBY: Every time i I give my wife a gift for St. Valentine’s Day she takes | it back and exchanges it. i I suppose I shouldn’t complain because at least this OU Teacher Will Sing way she ends up with something she likes fdr the money, but it takes all the sentiment out of it. BERNIE A A A __ ^ DEAR BERNIE: Sentiment," shmentiment! Give her something you made yourself. Like money. Hate to write letters? Send one dollar to ABBY, in care of The Pontiac Press for Abby’s new booklet, “HOW TO WRITE LETTERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS.” ESSTER doesn’t stop: with Sunday when they’rewearrng ^diuards shoes Their Easter good looks go on ' through spring and siunmer. So very right for yoiithjul fashion ... with a fit that does the most for growing feet. They’re built to last... and priced to please. Junior Boofery 1060 W. Huron .iSt-OTiS (Hnm CmAw, Nu> le CMim Qty) Shop »h1I.v 9::t0 till 6 Mon. and Kri. (ill 9 Hair Styling SPECIALISTS complete services for the entire family! Qiiallly Ti'aininK by Lope/ ISt'mily S(‘liool tVnlluti lllvd. Ill OUle llwy. Drayton I*laln.')( OU :M)222 PEO Sisterhood Hears Recording A liiiM' recording of mi organ r('cllal was piTsciilcfl at the Monday mcellMg of cliapler CL. PEO SlsIorlaMKl. Organisl wa.s Mrs. Nelda Sink Guli.se u chapter memlier now living in Long l.sland. Mr.s. (iei)ige PiilMam opened lier West lro(|nol.s Itoad liome for the group, Coho.sle,sH in Concert AriasMrom "Carmen," Schumann’s "Frauenliebe und Leben," and “Folk Songs of llie Hebrides" will highlight the 8:15 p.m. Friday vocal concert presented by Alice Engram, mez'zo soprano. AAA Held in (lie Intramural Building’s Lillie Theater at Oakland University, the concert is open to the public. ^ Miss Engrain, a Birmingham resident, teaclics vocal music at OU. if It it ’ She ha.H appeared with the New York City Center. Philadelphia I.a Seala. and Phil-aitelphia Civic opera coin-panle.s. . Itoliert I'aeko, instrucloi' of music at OU will accompany tier on I lie piano. Admission is 50 cents for .sludonls, $1 for oilier,s. ’V BEAUTY SHOP ;.'> . liiii'oii. Hiker BiiildiiiK ~ I i. 3-7186 ALICE ENtlHAM PRIZE WINNING COTTAGE CHEESE GRADE A MILK NYE DAIRY (A4v«rllMm*nt) B/U4t^441^ Up Bol^ HINTS OOIUCUD BY MRS. DAN GERniR. MOlHtR OF 9 N P wrt.s Mrs. (iloim Griffin. 1 A NEW/ / . REDUCE EAT and LOSE UP TO 6 LBS. A WEEK n vV t( Uisn ms ('uwdstsd mid liquid toed nq>|)lmiianl. mid titsis lass InclMdlMg tapsulas sulird to yeu indIvidi'Slly by lie. bhysirisn. M. 6. Na Rss bou t dial lust ^ tall As ikauimuls hava dona,.. lj\ MEDIC-WAY 335-9205 t orrtres in oakianp and WAVist COUNTIII- ONB IN MINACLB MUR a Don I Throw It /(way . . . ■ rebuild IT: TODAY! : Our tsperti will raiferenAweemfoft, M higher qualify Info your proionf maf- M ‘ 'Guaranteed in Writing 7 Years OXFORD MAHRESS CO. : 1 North Parry St., Pontiac FE 2-1711 ■ SERVING THE PONTIAC; AREA OVER 41 YEARS a , BBBaBBaBaBBaaaMBBaaaaaaaaaaai When your baby begins to creep he m*y rebel • bit »t ; the playpen bill L iheio will Alill be (Imes when you'll want baby to May pul. I low to keep your wool ibout happy after he’» had a taste of freedom? Iliese lips may be helpful; • Time element. If you renerve pen limes for baby’s most con-icnlcd Ilmen, he probably won’t reient it, • Tey trickery. A few different toys for each session help keep baby’s "housing development" an Interesting place lo come home lo. A covered aauoepan with a Oerher Teething RlacuU inside edds • nice aurpriae. • Foslllon ceunta. Ry placing Ihe pen where baby can watch your comings ami goinga, he woii’i feel nijlci'ied. Meet e( Ihe mutter. A baby with crawl privileges needs protein to help develop those muscles he's using more and more, tierber Strained Meal a provide V protein galore In Ihe smoothest form that evgr lutninuncd up a htby'i smile. Made from special culs selected by Armour, these (tualily meals are low in fat for easy digestibility . . . great on Iriie-meal flavors for ready acceplabiliiy. 'i varieties... 5 lunior meals for lots with Icclh. Safely measures lor fourwalkcrs. Creepers make a beeline for hi Ighi objects so be sure . lo scan the fliarr I for pins, hullons, I etc. Iron and toaster cords should not he left I a-dangle. Moor I fans or heaters ^ ere a hazard. iunny-tide ugl for creepera, lap-•iltera or high-chaIr heroea and heroines. Oerher Strained l!gg i Yolki are bright | as a splash of smi shine . . , have a (lellcaie,, fresh- , egg flavor and ' creamy, custard _____________ like lesiure ihi|i's hard to bent for downright delighiful eating. As for nourishment. Oerher I gg Yolks are high In vitamin A. iich In iron and • giard soime of pio-lefn Oeihfi Oal.y | l‘remoni, Michigan. • ‘Ij' tHE PONTIAC PRESS. TtLESIjAy^W,B|^UARY 25. imi Stylette Beauty Sbop Now Under New * " "Management-Permanent — Reg. $10.00 Special Thu .. Week Only $goo Macie JTemtyson 18 E. Rutger* St. FE 4-5522 HOOVER Constellation ... Hi# claanar thot wolki on air! Full 1-H. P. Motor with oil attachments |50 CLOSE-OUT *39' Good Houiokoopin§ Shop of Pontiac 51 Wen Huron fi 4-1555 Jjiizz Musician Likes ^curing Out of Cities The James_ O^ God’ bolds of Mgevale Street have announced the engagement oj their daughter Dianne Lynn to Richard James VaU lad, son of the Ervin E. Vallads of Pom’pey Street. An August wedding is planned. By JEANMARIE ELKINS ^ People were lined up waiting for seats in the restaurant Sunday ^ternooru: .When he-walked’ in, nearly everyone turned for a aecond look^______ There couldn’t have been five -people who knew they were looMng at Herfaie.Mann. THs Is the effect he has cm those who'don’t even know him. One of the leading interpreters of Latin and Afr^ rhythms, the progressive ja» PTA's ^PERSON JUNIOR HIGH The second annual family dinner will be held from 6 to 8 p.m. Friday in the school cafeteria. “The Family and the Community’’ will be portrayed in skits, a movie, and music. Mrs. Margaret Peters, school district food coordinator, will e X p I a i n the philosophy behind the student lunch program. _ i ' Mrs. James N. Fowlkes is chairman of the affair. ST. MICHAEL A panel discussion by high school students will be featured at the 8 p.m. meeting tonight in the school auditorium. Under the direction of Earl Le Tissier, the group will discuss “Why Should a Catholic Graduate be Different?” ACCEPTED BY MANY! Model of Alcw Niniatnre lleariogAidGiven 4- m»*t -uBMiae. fri!« offer at ^prciil intereil lo «ho*e uho liaar but
  • not undmianrl wonl» ha* .in*l h««n annoiincad liy Clrarlon*. A Iroa-lifr, aciiial >iie replica of ihc *niallcfil Cleartona evgg mad* will b« given ahiinlulely fVee in addition to a fra* hearing leal lo anyone anawering lliii adver-iiaemenl.-WMr-l«*l il wllhoul coal or oblliia'ion of any kinil. h’a yoora to k"*p. fr***- Th" da* of ihia CI**rtoi|ie i* only on* of It* many fealiire*. Il weigh* le*i than a third of an ounce and il’* all al,car level, in one unit. No wire* lead from body lo head. Here I* Iriily new hop* for Ilf* hard of hfiaring. Th*"e model* ar* fro* while ihe limited Mipply la*l*, *o we *ng-geil yon call or writ* fur yoni» now. Again, we repeal, there i« no cu*l and certainly no obligation. Iittar Htaring Strvlct IUH.gagle*o..ai<.ll4-IHI Women Hear Local Candidate Dr. Lynn D. Allen Jr., candidate for Michigan State Senate, spoke at the Monday meeting df the Pimttac Republic Women’s Club./ The meeting wa|s held at the West Iroquois Road home of Mrs. Grant Furgerson and refreshments were served by Mrs. Thomas Hollis, Mrs. Daniel TriWurphy Jr," Mrr Joseph Bensdn and Mrs. Robert Smith. Crevices Collect Vestiges of Dirt Plastic upholstery with a textured surface — such as matelasse or cone designs — I .should be scrubbed occasionally with a well-lathered soft brush lo coax any vestiges of soil from the crevices. When this kind of elegance is sudsable, it is also economical. Club Has Dinner The monthly cooperative jlfflner of the Golden Age Club will be held at 6:.*)0 p.m. Friday In the CAl Building. last longer . Exp0n$lve »hi and wittier $port»uimar with the rieie $ynih9tlc Jlhrre rnt/ulre the nioat Infinite rare of Vnther A Son pro-ftmlonal dry-cleaning procettei, lloautlM MWfoter$ retain their hrlUianey and elretch garments are all MUfotely praaeeeedfor cleaning and italn Pickup auH Delivery .Service FaJdm S-^oiv cIeainers rkere Ouallty Coun f» 941 Joilyn Avenue l•Ki•A424 ........................ Class of '49 Plans Reunion Pontiac Central High School January, June, and summer 1949 graduates held their first reunion committee meeting at the home of Mr. and Mr s. John Kennedy of Silver Sands The committee is planning a reunion “dlhireTdance^^^ Elks Temple on June 13. CochairmetF of -the committee are Edward Avadenka and them are Mr. and Mrs. Kennedy, Mrs. WmitrTta Zaroff and Mrs. John Millmind. All 1949 graduates are urged to contact either ^rs. Eugene Bone or Mrs. Millmine. Pretty Helpers Ease Drudgery When it comes to cleaning ^ids, tt’s gootf psychology to splurge a little on a few pretty helpers. Choosing sponges and mops to fit the color scheme will brighten the spirit of homemakers as well as the surfaces being washed. flutist and his sextet per- i formed at Sunday’s “Wing j Ding,” sponsored by the sen- i ioF- class of Oakland ’Uiuvers-“ity. ■ I GRASSROOTS- - j Mann believes “you j can’t get to the public by‘i)laji—f ing major cities alone.” He’s j 'often amazed to find followers i “in the most unlikely small towns who seem to have collected every one of my records.” ..__—it— .......★.... ' “College audiences are bet-ter.” according to Mann who prefeTs them to plying in supper clubs where he has to compete with liquor, rattling (Ushes and a constant undercurrent of talk. Before and after his per-formahee at OU he mingled with the crowd and talked to students. He completely charmed three small girls 7who shyly asked for his auto-jgra^ TOWTOOSir another^hrternatiaial Cbncert tour this summer, he will meet his wife And spend some tUne on the PYench Rivl Ideally, he would llke to he able to work six months out of a year and be off for six months. A ★ A With an outstanding sense of humor and a genuine interest in people, he draws a following wheUieral^^O^^^ or in Africa. There he and his group performed to audiences in 15 countries as part of the International Cultural Exchange"^ Program. He is an Impressive figure, on stage and off. Enough so to make people stop, take a second look and ask themselves, “I wonder who THAT is?” MRS. T. L. FARMER Retatlves Share News A son, Alan David, was bom Feb. 2 to Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Vliet (Sue Ann Brs»d) of Alma In the Gratiot Conununity Hospital. Alma. Grandparents are the John H. Braids of West Iroquois Katherine Helen Harkless was born Feb, 15 to Mr. and ley. Grandparents are Dr. and Mrs. George'A. Harkless of West Walton Boulevard- Washobility Wins Reporter's Esteem Reports from abroad state that at least one export besides money is held in high esteem! AndnSsT^x^ is washability. World-travelers know that the minute they step into some shops abroad, foreign salespeople boast that their merchandise is washable — a sure sales-elincher! AMfi's Your Spring Ensemble. Our week-ender could bo your one and only costume now through summer. The coah cotton checks In white with block, red or brown. The dressi linon-y rayon in pure white. 6 to 16,. 7 to 17, H5 iitXwxitUifi/ Frottod Patent Iced with flatted calf. $1995 Avotlobl* In tiock Pofent, llu# Potent, Mid heel. 5 to 10, AAAA to B wldtki. HURON at miORAPH \ Combination of ^'prvice RrniiUrlv Price*! at $13.00 for FASHION CtT CUMIITIONINf, SHAMPOO SLPERBSAI.ON CREAM RINSE COLOR RINSE - i '■ff ■ ■■ rr -■ ■ —I ' ■ “ D \A/" Mop® lhan 4w jet planes are fin this (fountry. Last y^ar they l3riCi0 W0QTS 1 lo operation by private carriers i logged ovct a billion miles. Short Gown of Nylon At home on Phillips Drive are the Terry Lee Farmers (Caroyln , Pruett) who were wed recently in .a chapel ceremony in Central Method-.! ist Church. , Daughter of Basil Pruett'of Auburn Road, and the late Mrs. Pruett, the bride chose a street-length dress of white embroidered nylon*'Over taffeta. She wore a short veil of illusion with a crystal tiara and held a cascade arrangement of pink and white carnations. * w ★ Katliy Kakasenkb, the~ bride's only attendant, appeared in petal pink chiffon and white veiled headpiece. Her corsage was pink-tipped -4Kjiite carnations. The bridegroom, son of the Basiel R. Judds of Phillips Drive, had James Webb for best man. _ After the reception in Waltz Hall, the couple left for a brief^ honeymoon.' 7 Dance Club Holds Leap-Year Frolic A "Leap Year Froljc” will be held by the Westemaires Square Dance Club from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday in the CAI building. Callers Norman Hill, Edwin Farr, Charles Futrell, Jim TTiompson and Ralph Price wilLguide the dance which is open to the public. Extraordinary .Special Reg. *25 m]mm NOW $1030 ONLY . No Appointment Needed! PHONICS-READING CLINIC This cute little platform rocker is equally at home In living room, family room, bedroom, or deni Upholstered in corduroy, with reversible cushion. Choice of antique block or solem maple, with cover in red, gold, avocado, or beige Add the warmth and charm of Early American decor lo your home with these WIPITER SALE SPECIALS Your j Choice! PLATFORM ROCKER with corduroy cushions or BOSTON ROCKER with colonial print cushions sole ^^^15 reg. $49’5 ______I Boston rocker, custom crolted o( solid rock maple In solem finish with choTce of gold olive, or beige print cushioris —• or lq,anti<}ye block with red print culhlont. Seat cushions re-vnrtlble lor long weorl Authentic Raplico of Charming Antique MILK GLASS LAMP *15 A lomp ihoi's perfect (or Early American decor, with Its milk glass ihode ond base . . . gleaming tulld brass fittings . , and crystal font In choke ol amber, blue, oi ruby. 3 way sikitch Stands 20V4'' high, 24 WEST HURON ★ 4080 TELEGRAPH In Oewnlewn 8ont,d< . n 4-1234 Open Mondoy end fridov 'ul Ai Long lelie Rood 644 7370 OfMin Mon. rkvf*, end tfj 'nt * I } ■jrWELVE THE FQNTIA(? PRESS, TUESDA,y> FEBRUARY 25, Courts Have Been Okaying Books Banned for Years {EDITOR’S NOTE: Thisis_the second artate in a five-part series on pornography in the United States written by UPI revorter Harry Ferguson.) they were living in sin because they weren’t married. By HARRV FERpUSON WASHINGTOhrtUPI) - During a daate on a cens0,000 Wliy • (III! c*ily de«lmVf oI dciivlly-ool rnoiis)* vlg- oroui dally exm l-e. lodav, oiii thildirn rMs all the hazanli of e«iy livioR kiKlU now, In (ail, onc-ihird ol llu*m air iMial)l«? lo.paM ilniplfl piiy*Kai adiirvriwnl llial * wliy ll’» «o ImpiHUnt (or all yoonKOrfi to parlli i|)au< In vlRoiou» pxpm Ixe (or at IraM IS mlmiiex (lining railt xpnool.dav. 1o lp*'n i Iraxlr (Hoe«iu-.saw-an thing— could ~ thought they were highly com- perhaps more -----tacking giuups aiTdlhe force of -wnaf had_been-cflJleri Pha.Sfi II the aUack.___________________________ _Jn_guerrilla-war-doctrine; ■ “O'—Since you were out there a pattern appears to have developed, with .Viet Cong Communist terrorist attacks aimed directly at the Americans for the first tinrt; How do you see the si^ificance of this? Do you think it is a concerted cam-paign? And, if so, what could be their motive?, HAIWSSING YANKS A—I could only hazard a guess that perhaps the Viet Cong feel that bringing this sort of attack home to the Ameri- * cans who are stationed “gomnay be a means of harass- the Vietnamese' are going to ing and disouraging them. have to do. They are going to Q—Before we wind up^ the sub- have to make up their own ject of Viet Nam, do yon have---mind* and garage their.own ef- any thoughts — ba.sed on your forts to ridding—their—eeun- -ewft—personal-“gpprarsal ^out try of the Viet Cong and the there and what you’ve seen in Communist threat. the reports—about what might need to be dope that perhaps isn’t being done either by ourselves or the Vietnamese? ★ ♦ * - . A—As I pointed out at the beginning of our discussion, in my—opinion-th^-have-alhthe-means necessary to .bring this campaign to a successful close. I believe we have highly qualified people in South Viet Nam advising the Vietnamese, that they have a soune considered by the court.” LACK JURISDICTION The GOP brief contended the court lacks jurisdiction to consider any quesjion other than gressmpti Would Be Out requirements. Democrats filed their written answer to the Republican plan last Friday. Oral arguments on all four plans — three Deihocratic and one GOP — vyitl be held March present drsIHcting deprives j larger centers of population Trom a fair deal in elections. Court Monday to throw w year’s election of Midilian’s 191 Attorney Theodore congressmen, charging the counsel for Michigan AFL-CIO state’s congres^kin^Bl apportion- president August Scholle in a ment is, unconstitutional. jedrrent federal court case The aqtem was brought in a I against Michigan’s state legislative districting, represents which plan “complies most ac- requ kins and Jacobs, aimed at a dis- Michigan’^ Supreme Court has tricting plan adopted in 1963,1 the job of setting up the state's 1 lie wu. 1.1,;. oa followed upon the U-, S. Su-1 legislative dlstrfqts after failure pivotar” the question Court’is decision of jast! of a blpajHsan stale commls- week holdihg that the Slatie of 'sions to do this. Georgia’s congerssional di^lricl-.i ' ♦ * ing violates the Constitution. J In Monday’s action Calkins tiffs say the setup dlscrtmin-The Calkins-Jacobs case is and Jacobs .laid that under | ates between groups within both based on the “one man, one Mlchlgah’s present* congresslon-i classifications, including Wayne vote” principle claiming that' al apportionment they would be I County districts. Tax Cut OK Is Due Soon forth the 19 congressional districts.. The suit calls them “arbitrary, capricious and irrational.” Besides declaring that urban voters are disadvantaged against rural voters, the plain- May Reach President Today or Tomorrow WASHINGTON (J^-The big-gt>sl Ijiy piif In history, |11 .S hil. lidh, should be ready for President Johnson’s signature by nightfall today or tomorrow. Congress is expected to complete final action on (he measure by then. Thus If all goes smoothly—and there are | no snags In sight—millions of | Americans will be feelhifflre ‘ reductions on their first or second pay day In March. First to lake final action on j the compromise version of the legislation worked out by $en-| ate and House conferees wllLJbftl. the House. And If it acts In time, Ihe Senate may also pass ' It today, or 'by tomorrow atj least. Then flif that will 'be Medi*d; (o make the reductions law will j be a stroke of Johnson's pen. | (lie across-the-board slash In In-1 eumo tax rates (or. Individuals and cor|x)ratlona, would mean almost a 20 per cent average cu( In Individual taxes. About two-Uilrds of the reduction wrmid ap-Rly to tills .year’s Income. New and lower wlthboldlng rates apply to pU wages and | salaries paid beginning eight days after Johnson signs the | bill. I The Treasury estimates (best* wll) boost'lake home pay a total of |900 million a xnunlh. i DAWil DOJiVTS 804 NORTB perry Pontiac, Michigair Phone 334-9041 Every Siinrinr Everywhere lIlOTOrS;. wooz.;, 7-TRV'b^^^ VARIETIES ' Our Shorto^ioO Ib .1,00% Puro Vogotablo • pur JolhoB Airo Pbclcoci to Our Spocifications IWWW BOWlS .'' ■■ I' •J' ■ J ; .1- - JHE PONTIAC PyESg, TUESDAY.'XEBRUARY 25, 1964 HERE’S ...... ^ _ pitchers Robin Roberts tsecond from left) and _japeniiuu>l-Baltifflere^8-sprinrcampTh~H^^ -_____Pappas irightr~confer with manager Fla., yesterday. Pitcher Harvey Haddix (left) Hank Bauer on their pitching grips at the looks on. Kentucky Upset by Alabama By, The Associated Press - One sltpIsas^sTMichig^ its challenging spot in theAssociated Press inajorcoil^basket-ballpoU. Michigan dropped from second place to third in the voting after the Wolverines lost their third game in 21 last week. Minnesota won that game 89-75, also lower- the poll with 358_points com^______Kentu^V 6B-69 loss to Alff^ Ing Michigan’s standing ia^^ 4he^4atest poll, being named at Bie Ten Conference. » the top on 38 of the 42 ballots cast. Their total points Kentucky leap-frogged over Michigan to take second place in “ed «dthT3Ichigan’s 332. Meanwhile, rolling merrily to its undefeated season in history, UCLA maintained its grip on first place for the eighth straight week. 38 FIRST PLACES The Bruins grabbed monopoly on first-place votes in placed them well ahead of second-ranked Kentucky. HEAVY4)UTY NEW TREAD^ FULL ROAD HAZARD GUARANTEE $|T90 , 6.80x18 ^ 0 M m tube i 8.60x18 W ^ MM or h'TOxio ■■ f tubeless plus tax anti relrvaiiabla eating I WHITEWALLS *1 EXTRA BLACK $11.11 WHITE SI2.60 bama last night came after the poll was taken. The voting was based on -games through last Saturday. UCLA’s vote-getting power was based on 22 games won. The Bruins were named second on the other four ballots, marking the first time they have been given all first and second-place votes. first place votes and Michigan one. Oregon State, ranked sixth, was given the other one. Duke held foufth place despite its loss last w^k to Wake Forest. Wichita moved up a spot to fifth, displacing Villanova, whose defeat by St. Joseph's | sent the Wildcats reeling to | eighth. Davidson also rose one notch to seventh. Odds 7-1 on Liston; Few Takers Winner MIAMI BEACH, Ela, (AP)-i Heavyweight champion Sonny Liston, the brooding KO artist, is an overwhelming 7-1 favorite —with virtually no betting •— to burst the_ fabulous bubblc-of 4l» brash bard from Louisville, Cassius Gay, tonight. Most observers predict the lights will go out for the boastful, poem-spouting challenger within - minutes', perhaps sw-, ' i, after the sch^uled 10 p.m. EIST opening gong in Miami Beach’s ........... ~ many are. convinced this old mark will be broken. ‘OVER SOON’ “I won’t be trying for a rec-OTd,_ but E am for a guiefe-knodK Liston said. “It will be over as soon as I catch him,” Sudden, demolition has become the theme of Liston’s awesome fists. He has knocked out his last ihree o^wnents AlberTWest-' phal of Germany and former th tleholder Floyd Patterson*, twice —in the first round, ui ‘ The-fastestlChdcRbut on record in a heavyweight championship is one minute, 28 seconds, scored by Tommy Burns over Jem Roach March 17, 1908, and “I’ll outbox him in seven rounds and knock him out in the eighth,’’ be insisted, adding his favorite p«tic twist: “I’m jwe-dicting eight—to—preve^ I’m great." NO DENT His never-ending spiel of "I’m the king-T-Pm the greatest’’ has failed to make a dent however, on boxing fans, who„must shell out on a scale of $20 to $250 for one of the 18,000 seats. Indications were that they would stay _3he-22=yeat4dd-ClayrwlKrsays' he “floats like a butterfly and stings like a bee,” refused right up to the zero hour to assume the role of a man waiting for the modem guillotine. NeSd^ $800,000 to break even on the venture, promoter Bill MacDonald, the self-made Miami millionaire, said sales had reached only $^,000 and that only a last minute rush for the ticket windows could save him from a flnancial batij. Meanvidiile, a vast closed circuit television network, covering 269 theaters and arenas in the United States and Canada, is. expected to gross between $4 and $5 million, assuring both fighters a handsome pay day-. If the over-all figure reaches $5 miUioB;^-fci8toff, vrtio atsbhas a half-share in the parent promotional setup, stands to earn $1,360,000. Clay could draw 000, norBaer for a young/man cation and will be broadcast na-,tionally by the American Broadr casting Company. - —-— A victory for the Louisville^ Lip—regarded as something m the miracle category —would provide one of the upsets of the century anti one the most^is-tounding success stories in sports history._______ ■'CassiusTckSowledges fliat be" patterned his publicity cam-..cu.. paign after that of the late ^“[wrestler, florgemis Gwrgp and-—---—Istarted “throwing the jive’’—as . whoJsas-aB-amatetir four-years ago on Uncle Sam’s 01yny>ic boxing team and whg has literally gabbed himself to the threshold of the sports greatest prize. The bout will be televised to Europe via satellite communi- Now he has banged his cane against the ground and repeated “I am the greatest” soften---- that he seems to believe himself that he is unbeatable-the golden^boxiLfliejing^— New Ski Champion Eyes Disfance^grk V Drawings Place Rivals in 3rd Clash ISHPEMING, Mich. (AP) -John Balfanz of Minneapolis, newly crowned national ski jumping champion, sets out this weekend to capture the U.S. distance record at the huge Pine Mountain Hill ip nearby Iron Mountain, Mich. , NOSE BENDER-Dick Shomer (left), Kenosha, Wis., Kentucky received two firST Golden Glover, gets his face flattened by Reuben Peters, Bnifiigs, Mont , in their 118-poupd bout last night in the national tournament at Louisville, Ky. Peters won a decision. 'This is one of his goals and he fades rugged competition in trying to top the American mark of 322 feet, hoisted last year at Steamboat Springs, Colo., by Gene Kotlarek of IHi-luth. Kotlarek was dethroned as na- DePaul maintained its ninth position, but Drake, beaten by Cincinnati, Jfell from the Top Ten altogether, Loyola of Chi-1, No. 1 early in the season, retu|rned to the select list as Drake’s replacement in lOth. lakeland. Fla. (AP) -After ten days of observing the rookies and some of the newer members of the team, Detroit Th« Top T#fi, with flrif ploco Tviva III I t* irfnthfsoB. Biniiot) | MaiiiEiger Charlie Dressen I has already reached one conclu- u 0 41* I sion—the club apparently picked II 3 3MI up at least one good pitcher 19 8ot Ed Rakow from J3 3 195 j Kansas City. Dressen mentioned Rakow flnst Monday when asked to .some of the players who have impressed him during the first week or .so of the Tigers’ early camp, “He’s been looking real good,” said the always smiling manager as he prepared for a round of golf after the day’s workout. Tigers Manager Happy With Rakow tional champion Monday at Suicide Hill by Balfanz. ’The 23-year-old rider, who finished a disappointing 41st in the recent Winter Olympics at Innsbruck, Austria, had leaps of 235 and 231 feet and 220.6 form points m winning the national title. CLOSE SECOND Kotlarek was a close second with 230 and 235 feet leaps for 219.0 points. Rakow and pitcher Dave Wlckersliam were acquired a-long with second baseman .Jerry Lumpe in the trade which sent Rocky Colavito to Kansas City. FANNED THREE Rakow pitched two Innings Sunday as the farmhands battled to an 8-8 Inter-squad game tie and he struck oUl three batters. While Rakow’s name was the first mentioned by tile Detroit skipper, two rookie pitchers also had caught Ills eye. the cool side for the past couple of days but got into the comfortable high 50s Monday and the rush for the links was on. LARY SIGNED General ' Manager James A. Campbell announced Monday that pitcher Frank Lary had signed his 1964 contract. Lary, who voluntarily joined the Tigers’ minor league team in Knoxville, tenn., last season in an attempt to work a sore arm back Into'shape, has been working every day — indoors when the weather gets cold. Camp observers say the righthander looks as sharp as ever. The signing of Lary left only two players out of the fold for the coming season — pitchers Hank Aguirre and Terry Fox. , who found fault in the fact that the Tigers failed twice in rundown plays in Sunday’s game after five extensive drills on the maneuver, has scheduled another such contest Wednesday and again Saturday and Sunday. The remaining pitchers and catchers among the Tigers’ regulars are due to report Saturday with the rest of the squad coming in next Wednesday. Will Sign Wednesday Finley, KC Appear Set Fritz Fislier, the Adrian native who pla.vcd nl Michigan, and Joe .S|wrmn. the former Ohio Stale athlete, both worked Imprewiively in Sunday's contest and are expected to see thorc action. Tcttiperatures have been on KANSAS CITY (AP)-^Charles 0. Finley says he’s ready to sign a four-year .stadium lease for his Athletics Wcdne.sday, city officials pledge their support to the club and Councilman John Maguire wants to end Itis feud witli Finley. This would appear to lift the clouds from the troubled A’s franchise, coming on the heels of an American league vote authorizing a meeting to conutder ousting Finley from the league. Pat Friday, A's general man-ager, reported a flood of tele-piionu Inquiries about season tickets Monday after Finley’s acceptance Sunday night. Friday said an extensive sales drive Is being urganized. But reservations jverc ex-pressc'd in Honie 3) I. SlJ it. Mietta OM) T, utKifr ujy) , , 10. Rudyard (10-a) Clau C Pairings Being| Made for Tourney Action at Other Sites Pontiac Northern will play Lake Orion next Tuesday in the opening Class A district tournament game at Pontiac Northern. Pontiac Central will play the winner on Thursday. Waterford drew Bloomfield’ Hills for the Wednesday contest with the winner moving into Saturday’s title game. St. Michael and St. Frederick will play the rubber game oL the city parochial championship in the opening round of the Class C district basketball tournament March. 4, at Pontiac Central. Orchard Lake St. Maiy drew Northville as its first round opponent in Class B at PCH and West Bloomfield came up with a first round bye. Pontiac Central and Northern will be at PNH along with Waterford, Lake Orion and Bloomfield Ilillsy Kettering, which has a date at Waterford fonight, will play le Grand Blanc district with Clarkston, Milford, Howell and the host school. Walled 'Lake will join North Farmington, Bedford Union nnil Thurston a| Farmington. Oxford’s ‘B’ list Includes Im-lay City, Romeo, Avondale and Royal Oak Shrine. TWO CLASSES Utica, Mt. Clemens, Troy and L’Anse Creuse will compete at t^hester in ‘A’ while powerful Port Huron St. Stephens paces a ‘0’ field that includes Emmanuel Christian and Dryden. The three Birmingham BchoolK, two from Royal Oak and Berkley wlU be ut Sea-holm. St. Michael and St, Frederick split during the regular season, 'rhe 5 ‘ winner of the March 4 clasii will play Ortonvllle which drew a bye. The vittor in this bracket will go against cither Country' Day, Waterford OLL or F’arminglon OI^S. Cpunlry Day and Our Lady of the I.akes play the same night as the Mikemen-b'reds’ tussle. Sorrows drew the bye. Hockey Set Tonight 1. Otau* Point* P. P*ul (1 7. Otilwi (U-0) 3. DtlroH tl. Ch*rlM (l}.^) Action In the Waterford Town-iurnloomj'il^'chamber’s team sfilp Junior Ice Hockey Uague of 400 ticket sellers until Finley | Is planned for tonight at the gives assurance no law suit will North Side Community Club be nied. » rink with two games on tap. Asked about Krakaucr’s The Spartans - Lotus Lake lews, Finley told The Assodaf- Wings’ Junior division iPatch is e«| Press from his Chicago In- set for 7,; 15 p.m, and It will be surance office: foll()w»*d by an 8:30 nightcap bo- ‘f want to plav ball. Joe Cro- tween the Mountain View Rang-nln (Amerlcam liegtie piesl- .ers’ Intermediate champions deni) wants to play bull, the and the Draylon M«Tchnnt.-i. ' Akr*A-P*lr||r«v« AddlMo ((*)) iis)tMoh Ch It PiiMfflt Tile PCH aetlon will open next Tuesday with Class B games iMilween OLSM and Northville, and Clurencevllle and South l.y-on. Lutheran West will play (he (Jarencevtlle-South Lyon Winner lietdd H*«Vt 03-1) M while West Bloomfield will tangle with the victor In the other Tuesday contest. $»uH IN. W«rN Ur*lta (IM) r. W*)i*ll*M (I) 3) I. H*w H4v*n Ol-I) .. Chrlillan 02-3) Ctou o im, Racord Poll Poln’ii t Huron It. INphOn 05-01 3. Briltan-VKOA 05 1) 4 Cornov (I**) : fLToi'iV’ 1 Ulii«mlngd4l« 04 1) I. Min 0531 * loginiv* St. JOMiph I 10 PiOitord Otii V , W \ -li 'Ilic Class H semifinal ut I’Cll will be rhursday and thej ’C” ort Friday.' Championship j^nmes in both classes will be .Saturdny. V' ' I’HE PONTIAC 2 Township Fives Ousted City Rec Quintets Upset Three city recreation basket- Township teams fell by the way-ball games ended in upsets^fon-- -side__in_those playoffs, day night whUe two Waterford Cdrr’s F^el mid Oll upsetrde- —Coitus twk^ a 20-13 f i r s t ZENITH FM/AM , Table Radio I fending city champion South-^west--CjS!Ununity Club, 74-69, and the BaSelbFs"“^Oob- misprised White Lake Pharmacy, 73-70, in American League play. TTie city Class D circuit saw Nc^polpui dEE romp past the j quality made • and atatie free. Eidoy really ; pleaunt Uetenitig all day ... I everydayl <3995 Priced Prom |TTie^----------------- : Good Hoosekeeping Shop f of Phutiac jSIWeatHurau FE4-1S5S Township Class A titlist cer Floor Covering knocked Lakeland Pharmacy out of the playoffs, 64-56, and Bill’s Towing Service fell from the “B” eliminations at the hands Pf ^ ^ilka^HeatingrTf^ Lester Hardiman hit 23 points and McKinley dones 17 to pace FAULTY TIMNSMISSIONS repaired miABLI iFransmissioitl Periy J^r4-0701 Fhisli HICN SML AT HOME —IN YOUR SPARE TIME AS LOW AS ^ ^ aOO ■ , MONTH SEND FOR $ i FREE BOOKLET Corr’: past Southwest. Fred. Davis had 22 for the losers. quaiim* T^ mfit ttmrBotidmest team didn’t have enough depth tp^ovCTcome the deficit. ' LOSE LEAD WUUe Ratliff’s 30 led the J^chi^ai3sLJvict«yr-41»^ dosing White Lake quintet had Chuck Sdpxii^erjM) and Bob Troesch (23) forming X^ PRESS. TLESDAY, F]|bRUARV Local Families Cheer Tankers ■ 3 Area Swimmers in M-OSU Meet ■ -dliere ‘ was- a reunt0ft=of=lo€al= swim families in C 01 u m b u s, Ohio, last weekend when Uni- FI FT.E EX Zilka advanced in the losers’ bracket of the B double elimination as Paul Harding hit 16 points in a winnltig causa Game honors went to Bill’s 'rowing’s Joe Umphrey with 23. —A..119J last quarter nuttmrst carried St. Luke’s to iS surprise j;!D;;LJKinJ)ver-New-Hoper^^ Neopolitan Club, meanwhile, scored 20 points or better in Spencer led ialt die way in qualifying to meet Five R’s Ooostfiictioii for the township A playoff crown. John Herrington’s 18 and Bill Gapczyn-ski*s l7 tWHadithe winners. Lakeland had 16 points from Dale Fussman. FIGHT RESULTS NCHESTER, Eng. (UPl) - Henry ^en heavyweight title. PARIS (UPl) — Ramon Casal, Spain, outpointed Alphont- ■ •--------- ffafdfn^fars---- Yep, Pistons Beal Celts DETROIT (UPl) - Reggie Harding picked quite a night to play the greatest game of his short National Basketball Association career. Harding,The^s^n • foot onetime problem rookie, jammed ^3 points and grabbed 19 re-bounde Monday night to d'Bffdl the Detroit Pistons to a surprising 115-113 victory over the slumping BostoffCeltics. dt wasr Detroit’s, first victory over Boston in 13 gamejs and cut the defending World Champions’ lead in the Eastern Division to one-half game oyer idle Cincinnati. TheOeltics suffered their third straight loss. It takes quite a memory to remember the last time Detroit beat Boston — Jan. 21, 1962. The Celts scored the first 14 points in the game, 11 of them by Tommy HeinsOhn, and for awhile the 3,199 patrons at Coho Arena sensed a runaway. But Detroit surged back and closed the gap, leading at the half, 54-53. Heinsohn scored 27 points for game honors. Don Ohl and Ray Scott contributed 22 a n d 18 points to the Piston attack, re-spectivi ■ The pme was the 0 n 1 y 6h¥ scheduled mJhe NBA Monday night. Tonight’s action includes St. Louis vs. Philadelphia at New York, Boston at New York and Cincinnati at San Francisco. Detroit is idle until Wednesday night when they host the 76’ers. 11 5-5 27 Dully 5 « a, \ 2 Moweir Sanders 6 6>8 18 Ohl ’5 55 13 it . -.'sonal louls — Boston, Havllcok 3, Heinsohn 4, K. Jones 3, Loscufoll; Ram--- 3, Russell 3, Sanders 4. Detroit ----Forry 3, Harding 4, Howell 5, I, Morelond 2, Ohl 3, Scott 4- soy 3, Rus Butcher 2, F A 3047 t^ pefformance enabled Crake Motor Sales to take six points from the league leading Wolverine Entertainers last week In the Wednesday Night Hurcm Bowl “A” Leagu6i, beth Lake Pharmacy tcam^who j rolled 200—520 totals. The Stemmer’s Catering team lead grew to six and a half points last Tuesday In Hilltop Ron Slacks had 279-^6-708 j Bowling’s Rebels Lea^e: to lead the surprise win, and ■ See the New 1964 * Cheyrolets I Pontiacs • Buicks • . the Only Showroom In Oakland County Whe^e Yon Can ■>;eeAUTlireo ■ ■■ »HOMER HIGHT * I MOTORS, ING. \ • 160 S. WashinRlon St. ” I Oxford 0.4 8-2328 I versitv of MichicaiL swimmers-—^GeoFge~Rudwitt--hit7 I were left with'an eight -I lead on the field. Former Pontiac Central swimmers Bruce Norvell and Ben Donaldson helped the Buckeyes with nine-i^ts be-^ -tween'-ftem^fflHFJefrT/ong-streth of Clarkston aided the Wolverines with three points. The meet Was closer than the score indicated as s e v e r a 1 events went down to the wire. Donaldson set a pool, meet and varsity record in winning the 200 freestyle in 1; 48.2. Donaldson also took second in the 500 freestyle in a time of 5:10.9. Michigan’s Bill Farley; a’sopho-more from Los Angeles, won the event in dual meet record time of 4:58.0. Norvell was third In the 200 breaststroke in ±21£.—TheP' faihilies of Donaldson, Norvell and Longstreth were all in attendance at the meet. fitis Trenail that sep- I HiexHive^squads; “j The 300 Bowl Pontiac Motor , Inter-Office loop last week post-* ed 251—613 totals for Andy Heimbring, and 234—601 highs for Cadle,Burrell. John Dura hit 231. -_________ ★ ★ ★ Diane Hackmuth’s first 200, a Ml, and a 200 - 514 duo by Elsie Clark led the Ladies Clas- , sic at “300.” Wonderland Lanes reported II 4s foi^Jim Ttnsoir and Don Ogg, a 518 for Beverly Rose and a 516 for Betty Raglin in the Wednesday Night Plasa Mixed League. The Ladies Classic circuit had 504 by Janet Pooley, a 500 by ' Maddie Gannon, and a 201 by Lett Dreen. Joe Slanga’s 221 led the Wonderland House League, and George Cavenee had 208-2ii._....._______________ Last Wednesday’s Airway Lanes First League was paced by Judy Nichols of the Eliza- -DMSiTAeMir^ K mmm TIRE PRICES -BRANDHEW^ 4-Phf 7.50x14 RATING TUBELESS BRAHDNEW Tubeless Whitewalls FULL ROAD HAZARD T.50xl4-8.00x14 GUARANTEE! • • • • 9-00x14 FREE MOUNTING!__4 '37^^ Factory Remold$ NoRecappabl*Tir*N**d*5 OPEM M0N.»THBU fHI. 8 to 9 - SAT. 8 to 6 ^ CLOSED SUNDAY UNITED TIRE SERVICE “WHERE PRICES ARE DISCOUNTEO-NOT CHIALITr’ 1007 Baldwii« Ave. 3 MINUTES FROM DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Michigan will be host to the powerful Hoosiers jf Indiana, Thursday afternoon at 4:00 p.m. NHL Standings Montreal ..........31 16 II 73 1*0 11 Chicago ...........31 « ll 73 l<4 13 Toronto ........... 26 21 10 62 150 W Detroit ..... ..... 24 24 10 56 144 11 Mew Tforl^^TT—.- ITTT » 46 162 H ■ ■ ........14 35 10 36 137 17 MOHDAY'S RCSULTS las scheduled mceiBmci usr^Dm 5. Wharram, Chicago .. 6. Goyatte, New York 7. Gilbert, New York . .1. Howe, Detroit ...... 9. Oliver, Boston ______ -W;-Henry, New York ,, , . , 35 36 72 33 46 69 16 45 61 ,32 28 60 .21 36 57 MIDAS means it... your next MUFFLER will be the last one you jayiot! • Midas Mufflers guaranteed in writing for as long as you own your car*... in over 400 Midas Shops. COAST-TO-COAST, United States and Canada • Fre« installation by experts in 15 MINUTES! • We also install guaranteed Midas SHOCK ABSORBERS Budget Plan available. ______ * Replaced if neceiidry lor a S3.S0 *eivice cAarqa 435 SOUTH SAGINAW • FI 2-1010 When YOU can hear your muffler, see your'Midas Man! 30% I OFF* ONLY I GOODYEAR | I TIRES HAVE I TUFSYN RUBBER B GOOD USED TIRES - whitewalls, blaekwalls, most sixes. First come, first served . . . . as loW as • NEW TREADS - retreads on sound bodies or your own tires. Special, this time only .... as low as • Tufsyn Tire Special , All-Weather 42 with 3-T Ny-k Ion. New “No-Limit” Oueran-1 tee. 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SIZE SALE PRICE Discontinued awkm •Satety 2^:;: All-Weather 76o,is 820*15 $18.34 $2092 $23.92 $26.32 $26.32 $30.91 Discontinued $16.92 All-Weather IZ* $16.92 $10.03 ^CO goodAe/hi GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE 30 S. Cass FE 5-6123 Open Friday 'til 9 CITY TIRE 508 N. Perry FI 8-0900' Open Friday 'til 9 3 FAVORITES AT PRICES YOU CANT IGNORE! 1964 Buick <se ™re than a ^^ I (lainsandlosses of key stocks! ««i ranged Trom fractions to a pofttl ‘ ' Mohasco, McGraw-Hill and Con- tinental Air Lines gained fractions. V . International Harvester, re-: spending again to a hiked dividend and goM earnings, tacked on about 2 points. Caterpillar rose more than a point. Kenne-cott rose about 2. Anaconda and Americart Smelting added frac-tions. Pfficial Downgrades ^Wins on“Race Track ■ is Squesh, Butlernui, ■ I Farm implements, bpilding ;5J materials and some coppers ad-vanced. Ralls ‘ gave up their leadership of yesterday and displayed a mixed pattern. * Steels remauied fairly steady. Rubbers and utilities declined. ENCOURAGING NEWS Business news remained fair-^ ly encouraging The Associated Press average, . .. . , 1 Despite Chr\sler:s impressive :^^mgomeTy-W^d trac growing at the Daytona 500 tiorti. .Sears, Ri^buck sloped ^3^ 3 more than a jwint. Polaroid lost ^,3, ^^3 j. High Voltage Engineering tion Jj,! consiLed a sec- about a point. Texaco-was Tip’^i at 75 on a block of 9,500 Shares. Prices were irregularly higher in moderately active trading oh the American .Stock "Ek-change. True Temper rose more than 2. Fractional gainers in-~ eluded Magellan Petroleum, 1 son, 995 Glenhurst, Birmingham, Johns-Manville and L'.S, Gyp-'Kaig^r Industries,zTextron war- told a meeting of mechanical also were fractional rants. and automotive engineers in ondary activity. His remarks shed light on the company’s official attitude following Sunday’s race in Daytona, Fla,, where Plymouth swept the first three places. Vice" President Robert Ander^ NEW THEATER - ArtisCs sketch of a unique two-auditorium'jhflvieJ house to -be built in Bloomfield Township whs released today by the Redstone theater chain. The firm says construction wifi begin this spring on a site facing Telegraph in the vicinity of Bloom- field Miracle Mile shopping center.Jteportedly-the first indoor theater built in Oakland County in, 20 years. It will offer "combined* seating for 1,9(X) and latest projection equipment. Tax Cut Booster SxKiTingSffsSet fo Sail j«!of 60 .stocks at noon was un-jgainers, -y , liso changed at 296,4, its latest, clos- j New York Central and Penn- ] U.S. Government bonds ’“ling high. Industrials rose .5,'sylvania Railroad eased follow-1mo.stly unchanged. 4Bfii*„ro.iked.; Ritt^J^fgh that developing carsj EDITOR’S NOTE: Is the eco-| false hopes of a soaring decade clothe.s -.... - ... - iession.,. Iw"* '““'r* and the medical pro- Pouitry and Eggs il Otirolt lor No. 1 quoMly II' « II-IW IlgM typo hont •.♦j RoosteVi ovor 5 lbs, 23-J4,' Brolltrt .----------..-I—, BorroO . ood fryoTk 3- R^^ir-ar' The New York Stock Exchange A second reason for optimism is that demand for goods has been catching up with industrial capacity to produce. Surplus facilities_buUt in the late ‘We do feeLaure aLChrvsler, with traditional emphasis on en-1 3^ jg^.^ gineering and our long record! of automotive innovation, it is to our advantage to make a re- its stimulation spectable showing in competi-1 of spending by tive events.” \ consumers and corpora t i 0 n s ^nd rely also on i He said Chrysler does not\ I look on racing as the most ef-! fective test for not^mal passenger car use. He said develop-II ing high performance cars ' I calls for different skills, and outlook. ,, Anderson stated there is a '• growing mark^et for specially de-^ j signed cars arid equipment built w for competition, ‘‘and we like ,,,; the public to know Chrysler can 'J' supply the winners.” Looking at regular .sales. An-der.son said the compact car boom was not a buyer's search for economy, but simply a demand to diversity the number of models and types available. Prices on Firm Side in Grain Trading Prices , vj I turned mostly toward the firm ^ire & Rubber shares. side today in early grain futures transactions on the Board of Trade. of a cent or more on fairly active buying which dealers said appeared to be largely short covering after the broad .set-bricks of recent sessions than at the start of the 1%0 First, the population growth , : ‘ Automobile men argue about sixties' chances ofuhat supposed to furnish j the value of racing in terms ofj *®®””®' “ discussed in thus, sec-, tj,g bang jg showing up where i its effect on sales of convention- ! of five articles on the dec- \ it counts. For the next several ' lal cars and no one has come Dawson, AP bust-1 years the big increase will be 11 I up with a definitive measure of! analyst.) I in the 20-30 age group. In other | ! tlTat valpe,” said Anderson, who; — words, today’s young people ^ ‘ id>)ritohLqw uitciir’s 'he corporation’s director of! ^^ SAM DAWSON will reach an age to earn their[°hsolete^ Ja Vwi product—j AP Biislness News Analyst oWn money, iparry, and hkve | ^^hiwal^ ^i^roi^^ T M'i - AIRS RECORD ....... - • ■■ ™ » NEW YORK - The federal babies. Today there are 23 6;»''e;being disgaced • jtax cut is billed by its sponsors million in the 20-30 group; , by l . . , as lust Hie thing to get theBix; , WOTRere will be 30.8 million, j Pr<^uction howevdr, that foy a companv ties to soaring ....... Hto basic sound-11^ enough i |gencies, but no longer a drag. - f REAL BOOSl j surplus for flexibility and emer- This additional 7.2 million, if i This shows in the increase in properly trained in industrial j industrial output, rise in the techniques and skills their | factory work-vyeek^rease in parents may not know, can give j new orders---aboveaII, Tff-the-- a real boost to the economy, | spurt in corporate profits, both in production and con- especially in recent months. BUSINESS CAUTION A third plus point is businOss caution. It made the last four years sedate. It also sidestepped the excesses that have sumption. But noj one minimizes the task of training them. family ness; In many " " j formations should be just respects t h e DAWSON ahead — good news for home economy is healthier today than builders and furnishers, mak-at the start of the 1960s when 1 ers of appliances and children’s upset other economic upswings. Inventories are mostly in trim order, rising only moderately since I960, and .scarcely at all ttk ^ increased sales. * Business spending has been more for updating plants than |l|for over enthusiastic expansion. :ij|!' In , the la.st four years the de-i ceptive glow of prosperity from B, R,K.KR R .SRKAR N„. V,„K C,„ , su«,e« also hta Ql "I have just inherited | that you consult a lawyer as tol^^aye^ ^lose to the rise in out-tock from my deceased | the probate steps you must take j put .per man hour of labor. Succes$fuhfhve$tfri6 * grandfather. These are pre- | to realize your inheritance, lerred and common shares of ' the Carlisle Tire Co., and are dated Aug. 16, 1920. Could you tell me whether these stocks have any value and if so, how I could realize ItT' R. N. - think that if you examine certificates more closely yoh see that what you have are If that is so, the company still InVxistence but changed its name toV'arlisle Corp., in 1948. , , , , , , , The common is traded on the Old crop wheat posted gams j York Stock Exchange at « „»n( .V.....,, 13 J fjgj 3,, record of any preferred stock outstand- ing, so I presume this issue must have been redeemed.' I siiggesl that you write for Wheat was 'h to 1% bents a 1 further Information lo the transbushel higher, after about an f^r agent for tlie common- hour Mflrnh niVi- qovtu>qna ___________.'..i ■ Ql “We read ‘lasers’ that I have become very much interested. Could you recommend any companies in this field .that I could buy for future growfli?” T. H. (Union leaders are claiming this productivity actually has much about outpaced Hie pay gains.) Competition has 'kept price lioosts modest. And businessmen are , feeling better about ‘‘the climate in Washington" the government attitude towards management A) There is little doubt that and ' labor. The feeling isn’t lasers -- or controlled light unanimous but most seem more beams — are ultimately going 1 in the mood now to step up act-to play a big role in many ivities. Poll?! taken last month fields, such as medicine, com- show a marked increase in the munication, and defense. A great many companies are involved in laser research, but many of them are so big that wHat they accomplish In lasers may be relatively unimportant to their earnings as a whole for years to come. If you are In a position to as- hour, March $2.17%; soybeans chemical Bank New York Trust, sume some market risk by pur; 'i to I'4 higher. March W.634i; j corn unchanged to ‘3 higlicr,! March 1.I6''4; oats •'! higher lo 'r lower', March 66'4 cents: rye '4 to I'l higher, March |1..18'3. Business Notes chasing a rather volatile ls.sue. ; I think .your best bet would be I Perkin-Elmer, listed on the Big Former Birmingham resident Coy ('. Ekiuhd has been elected senior agency vice president of Equitable Life Assurance So-c i e t y of the KKLUND United States, I in New York. E k I II n d I headed the l)e-I. tfoit agency office before go- II n g to the 1 Society’s New I York office In I 1959 as V i c c president Board, This is a good company with a record of strong growth in recent years. I believe that— relative to its size — It is the company mo.st heavily involved In lasers, and 1 suggest Its purchase to you, ((Copyright 1964) Bank Executive money that business plans to spend this year on expansion over the intentions expressed only last fall. CONFIDENT MOOD Their customers are In a confident mood, too. For the majority, the Sixties so far have seen a slow advance in stand-ard.s of living. Most consumers expect this to continue If H/ey aren’t spending wild- ly, they aren’t scrimping either. Retail ^ales have hit new highs. Auto aM appliance saic.s are strong. The consumer base for economic ^wth is sound, too. Tomorrow: Problems, lems, problems. ‘ prob- News in Bfie FlmHarl Several items from three c\r8 ciectea rresiaenr ^275' of Credit Bureau Stuart E. Whitfield, vice president at Pontiac State Bank, assistant to the iireside^. ^ V lives hi New Cnnnmi, Huron, Waterford Township,\ were reported stolen yesterday. I.08S Is undetermined. Ho now Conn His inircnts, Mr iuhI Mrs N A Eklund. live »t 115 Hio ringtoM. Bloomfield Township. Fllzpnirick’s Pharmac.v, In n , move to consolidate operations. , has aniiouncod that Ita original outlet In the Rlker Building on Huron Street will be closed March I. Dick Fitzpatrick, firm manager, said files and other lerv-tcea of the downtown unit will be transfered to the FItipatrIck Pharmacy In the medical center at I860 Woodward. of Pontiac Credit Bureau. Inc, Whitfield replaces Charles II, rnnipklns who stepped down after 32 years of service III the lop post. Tompkins was elected to (he Roard of dl- Several cases of shainpoo, hair cream, hand lotion ami mouth wash were .stolen In a break-in' at the .Simms Brothers Warehouse, :14 Osmim, It was reported to Poidlac poli:’c la.st night. Francis F. Miller was reelected executive vice president and Floyd E. Miller wea returned as secretary, while William E. Casliln was elected treasurer, ‘ Victor nacoa, 77, of 2,7 (irah-dle reported fo Pontiac police yesterday that miscellaneous ttema and, tools valued at 935 were stolen from his garage li in(iuna “ manlal procaaaaa. You could coma acrm :: now find plaaiura In BXPLORINO. pon't ha atrald to Invaatloata. Ba ....... critic. Atland unuaua! thaatrlcf tion. Volunlaar In "oft baat" community '*™ioRPIO (Oct. W-Nov. 21); On* (aa»on, Haad It. Don't blind V progra,,. opbnriunlly. Day whai ■ advama anplratlona. Taka m "’sAOItTaRIUS (Nov, M Dae. 2Mj ‘ * - ■‘■“'3Rf ln"’’chiltilna "c porinm frim YOU t>iVi thOfO torta. But don't (all victim to (lallary. la not lima Ni. airapt h..rrt.n, pro^Taa'a* iatlo?a.^%hop-;».r ^jha^ H«m. Sflt-doubt onw .a^.. owauitluai action. MVAHS ttoo DOINOa K#v li W t «a,n.t BNelt'S'^ ' rthvVa/a mat JiJ, *’*'*»I™" /KwyrisfifW. iaStaaai’Voatw^ Cttp. EIGHTEEN Hopes to Break Qeadlock THE PONTIAC PRESS, TI ESDAY/EEBRUARY-^tM4- Waterford Has U.N. Sets More Cyprus Talks Music Winners UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. of continuing bitter hostility be-. force for the troubled east Med- (API—The U.N. Security Council scheduled 1 more Cyprus de-i4ot ^najority a^ Turkish^ bate today as its six nonpermanent members sought to break the deadlock and Cypriot President Makarjos threatened to seek a special session of the ' Cieneral Assembly. The afternoon councif meeting i called to evaluate Secre- tary-General U Thant’s private peacemaking efforts in the face tween the island’s Greek Cypr | iterranean island. Cypriot minority. nonpermanent council members met Monday night and The ,council president, Carlos seek a compromise. j Vk j .. .. Tho CIV ortf» RaiIvio Rrovil Alfredo Bernardcs of said there was no evidence Thant had been able to reach agreement with Cyprus, Britain, Turkey and Greece in a vreek of talks on his proposals, which in-clude an international peace Deaths in Pontiac Area I" JT: The six are Bolivia, Brazil, Czechoslovakia, the Ivory Coast, Morocco and Norway. COMPROMISE Moroccab delegate Ahmed Balafrej was expected to put forward a compromise proposal in an address to the council. There was no Indication how it would deal with, the^ main jssut .flitting the five permanent ^Uhcll rnembers •— the United States, Britain, the Soviet Union, France and . Nationalist China., That obstacle' is the Greece Cypriot government’s demand that any Security Council resolution on Cyprus guarantee the Pupils Score High at bistrict Festival .Several Waterford Township T o • .tu i secondary school musicians rein Paris.the “iuperior” and “excel- of Europe urged ds foreign min-1 ,^nt” ratings in the re lc4ai*o VinU an nnna«>MAnnir oac_ ^ Uon to his government’s. view-1 point. The Cypriot leader is reported dissatisfied witlv nation-1 alist China’s stand with the. Western powers on the Security! Council. Salesman's Slaying Is Texas Mystery isters to hold an emergency session to discuss whether the council should provide a peace- keeping force for Cyprus if U.N. efforts fail. Britain, Greece, Turkey and Cyprus are members of the council. : Reports from IstanM^ Turkey, said alx more warships Kettering have joined the 17-vessel Turk- “ KENNETH L. DUNCAN [will be 9 am. Thursday at St. Service for Kenneth L. Dun- Elizabeth Chapel, Briar Bank, can, 4-year-old son of Mr. and | Blooirtleld Hills. Burial win ^ ^ u.c Mrs. Willie Duncan, will be Ij^w in Holy Sepulchre Ceme-, T--pvm. Saturday^ mllMacedonlB—’TOTlal mtegrityr-^Ffae- United-Baptist Church with burial inT^A former”^mfleld Hills res^g^ gnj Britain have opposed i Oak Hill Cemetery. His body is j died yester- at Frank Carruthers Funeral after a long illness. Her j -phe soviet jjnion has sup-| body will be at the Manley-Bai-1 ported the Cypriot government, ley f uneral Home, Birming- ^rhich wants such a guarantee Jiam, until 8 a.m. Thursday. ■ - . ish task force which has been standing by in the southern port of Iskenderun since the Cyprus crisis flared in late December. Michigan School Band and Orchestra Association District 4 Festival. Rated superior, the rating, in the competition at Kimball High School, Royal Oak, ere a saxophone quartet Home. Kenne4h was killed Saturday . -When he was dragged by onfe . car and then run over bv another vehicle. Neither vehicle stopped. Surviving besides his parents are brothers and sister, Willie Louis, Stephanie and Remert, all at home; and grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. Wally Harris, and Mr. and Mrs. Nathaniel Allen, MACLAYW.GUMM Service for Maclay W. Gumin, 71, of 1479 Glenwood, Sylvan Lake will be 11 a.m. Thursday at Donelson - Johns Funeral Home. Mr. GumnL j retired em of Pontiac Motor iOivision, died yesterday after an illness of several weeks. Surviving besides his wife, Leona M.. are a daughter, Mrs. Willie Graham of North Bonneville. Wash., a brother and three sisteSrs. THOMAS W. MARTIN Requiem Mass will be offered at 10 a.m. Thursday in St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church for Thomas W. Martin, 58, of 562 S. Paddock with burial in Mount Hope Cemetery. The Rosary will be recited at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. Mr. Martin, a retired employe of Pontiac Motor Division, died yesterday after a long'ill-ness. He was a member of St. Vincent de Paul Church. r,- , , to ovemSe the 1960 treaty giv- ^F~y»ter, ihgBritalnTGi’eece and TufkeyT Mrs. Wayne-Hipkle^ Hn lo Lake, and a sister. FRANK LEVICK AVON TOWNSHIP - Serv-ice for Frank Levick, 80, of 932 Wilcox will be 2:30 p.m. tomorrow at Pixley Memorial Chapel, Rochester. Burial will follow in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Levick, a retired auditor for The Detroit News, died yesterday after a pirolonged ilL ness. .Surviving are his wife, Olive; two daughters, Mrs, James Dunn Jr. of Orchard Lake and Mrs. Charles Leith of Redford Township; a son, John C. of Rochester; and six grandchildren. MRS. ALBERT MENSCHING , IMLAY CITY - Service for former reisident Mrs. Albert Men.sching, 74, of Detroit will be 10:30 a.m. tomorrow at Muir Brothers Funeral Home. Burial will follow in Imlay Township Cemetery. Mrs. Mensching died Friday after a brief illness. Surviving besides her hu.sband I a sister. ROBERT E. MILLER ROCHESTER ~ Service for Robert t. Miller, 24, of 516 Hen.shaw will be 1:30 p.m. to- No Clue Yet in Hit-Run Death of Boy composed of Richard Lawrence, Linda Elliott, Kirt Zue-lich and Jerry Schemel. Sandra Gobi cornet, and Don DeBeauclair, trumpet, were Kettering musicians who earned excellent ratings. C r a r y Junior High School earned three superior ratings. CLARINKT TRIO ar dbguarantOTSh-oL-its -independence, the right to intervene militarily to prevent any change in the Cypriot constitution. Archbishop Makarios, a Greek Cypriot, obviously was most* concerned about Turkish intervention in demanding council guarantees. Turkey has threatened to move to protect the lives and minority rights of the Turkish Cypriots, outnumbered 4 to 1 by the islanders of Greek descent. \ to one man yesterday In connection with the death of Kenneth H. Duncan, son of Mrs. Hattie Duncan, 330 Franklin,” but the results were inconclusive, according to police. Several tips have been received on the two cars seen in . , .. the Bagley-Wesson area Imme- Informants in Nicosia said after the toy was killed Makarios may ask for a special none has provided General Assembly session be- any additional information, cause he fee s nonal gned AfrM The vounaster was kil can and Asian nations would! I These included the clarinet trio of Earl Hall,‘Nancy Ruelle J and Dan Arnold; Pam Best, piano solo; and Nancy Greve, cor-I net solo. Excellent ratings were earned r i ,V uu i by Waterford Township their Investigation into the hit-ig^j^^^j musicians Kay Sirlin and run death of a 4-vear-old boy, cgrol Meyer, both for flute so-but said so far they have been unable to find a wtoess to the I pierce Junior High School did Saturday accident. | not enter the competition. A He detector test was given NONALIGNED BACKING The youngster was killed shortly before 8 p.m. He was back his plea for guaranteed n-jgg (eel by one car and dependence and territorial in- ^ tegrity and push It hrough des- ^.fther stepped, pite Western opposition. The sources said Makarios CARS WERE SEEN also is considering shifting his The eprs seen speeding away foreign policy to an anti-Weat- from the intersection were deem stance — including possible | scribed as a red or maroon 1962 recognition of Red China—be-1 or 1964 Pontiac and a grey 1^63 cause of the U.S.-British opposi-1 or 1964 Mercury. Pair Stands Mute inAvon Burglary Two Mount Clemens men charged with burglarizing an Avon Township firm a year ago stood mute yesterday before Oakland County Circuit Court Judge Philip Pratt. TTioihas Gobble, 23, and Michael Berger, 21, were ordered to .stand trial. They are accused of taking some $5,000 worth of equipment from DRD Manufacturing Co., 808 S. Rochester, on Feb. 2, 1963, and hauling thC equipment away in a truck. Gobble and Berger are free on $1,000 bond each pending trial, lor which no date was set. FORT WORTH (UPI) - Police had no dues today in the italdus gangland-sI^ ing of Jack Goldfield, 50, of Far Rockaway, Long Island, N.V. Goldfield, « traveling sales- 4rial Ordered in Car Death Man Standi Mute; 3 Died in Mishap Charged with involuntary manslaughter in the auto crash death of a Praitiac woman, Samuel Funderburk, 32, of 28 Whit-field yesterday stood mute at his Circuit Court Judge Philip Pratt to stand trial. No trial date was set, however. Funderburk is free on $3,0M bond. He is accused In the death of Mrs. Arden Bigham, 31, of 490 Emerson, driver of a station wagon that collided head-on Feb! 6 with a pickup truck driven by Funderburk on Walton in Avon Township............. ★ ★ Two others also died, of injuries suffered in the accident. OTHERS DIED They were Elaine M. All®"> 25, of 296 First, a passenger in Mrs. Bigham’s station wagon, and Charles Waltman, 51, of 2215 E. Walton, Pontiac Town-ship. Waltman, who owned the truck and was riding with Funderburk, died Saturday, 16 days after the accident. Survivingarehlswife, Helen; I morrow'at Moore Chapel of nine sops, Michael of Waterford Township, Robert of Waterford, Wilbert in Germany, Tliomas W. Jr., John, James, Harold, Hoii-ald and Alfred, all of Pontiac; 17 grandchildren; and a sister Mrs. Ceciia Rogers of Pontiac. Also surviving are three brothers, Michael, John and Wilbert, all of Pontiac. JAMES WOOD Service for James Wood, 78, of 2647 Hallman, Waterford Township, will be 1:30 p. m. Tliursday at the Huntoon Funeral Home with burial in tlie Crescent Hills Cemetery. Mr. Wood, a retired carpenter. died yesterday after tliree-year Illness. Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home, Auburn Heights. Burial will follow in Mount Avon Cemetery. Mr Miller, a machine opeta-tor at Rochester Manilfactur-inglCo., was killed wlien struck by a falling tree limb as he was pruning at his father’s home in Troy Sunday. Surviving are his wife, Christine; his parents, Howard Miller of Troy and Mrs. Hosanne Wright of Oklahoma; a daughter, Lori Lynn, at home; his stepmother, Mrs Howard Miller of lYoy; a sister, Mrs. ' .Carol Nicks of Auburn Heights; and a brother, Steven Miller, ht the U.S. Mafine Corps. Also surviving are a half sister. Ginger L. Miller, a half Surviving are his wife, Lora | brother. Dale Miller, and a A ; a stepson, William Hall of I ,tepsi.sler, Nancy Snook, all of Ponjiac; and a brother. Trov. t I.ARENCK L. ABERNETllY I Mrs, ADOI.PII W. SCllUl Te/ TROY- Service for b'TICA - Service for Mrs. ] . Atemethy, 73, of 6745 NOr- ,, w. (Jovssie M.) Schulte, ton. will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at ,,,, the Price Futieral Home. Burial I " J'" i,-. i a m. tomorrow at Nixon lu- neral Chapel, Lincoln Park ! Burial will follow in the J^'ern- Mulfiple Housing Planned City to Decide R20 Land-Sale The City Commission will be asked to approve the sale of 194,688 square feet of urban renewal land to (!3iarles L. l,angs of Waterford Township at tonight’s commission meeting. The land is located on the north and south sides of E. Pike at Douglas. It lies in the urban renewal area for which laings is Ahmed exclusive re-developer, under an agreement approved by city officials last summer. Lang,s plans to build a 6.5-unit town house type multiple housing development on the site. Estimated cost of the project is $750,000. , He has offered $49,500 for the property at 30 cents per square foot. The reuse appraisals on< sioners will get a/Yeport from the land were $^8,000 and $49, .500, according to renewal officials. CAN’T PAY MORE They said that Langs could not pay any more for the land and still get Federal' Housing Administration financing for the project. It is to be financed under the relatively new 221-d3 program which provides for FHA insurance of below-raarket interest rate mortgages. The sale agreement was deferred last week pending the arrival of necessary urbi^n renewal documents from Chicago. In other business, commis- Fight Over Parking Lot Tax Ends as Bolh Sides Agree the City Planning Commission recommending that a request to rename Oakland Park to John F. Kennedy Park be denied FUTURE PARK Planners recommend the late president’s nanie be given to a proposed future park development on Galloway Lake property. Up for a second reading and final adoption is an ordinance to require tap-in fees for new sewer lines being connected to trunk sewers and for existing lines which are transferred to connect with new trunkline facilities. Pas.sage oV the ordinance lias been delayed twice In recent weeks at the request of commi.s-sioners. niorial Cemetery. Mr. Abernethy, a retired Also up for adoption is an o(*dinance to require insurance policies rather than bonds covering people working on projects where it is nccssary to open. An expected court battle be-1 .Slolorow operated a pi jvnte tween Pontiac ami parking lot parking lot list year under a ! OTHER LAND posher for The Birmingham Ec- j ^ SaturdaYionerator Sam L^Stob^^^^^^^ ! previous lease with the county.; Resolutions to call for bids on centric, died Sunday after an h,it nntlwl m.i hetnre the Dec. 31 I „o„ __ .. r«i..«Ki. illness of several months. ;afler a brief Illness. He'was a member of Local; Surviving besides her husband No. 18, Detroit 'Typographical are two sons, A. LcRoy Meisel Union. jof Lincoln Park'and Paul E. Surviving are his wife. Clara! Meisel of Dearborn; a step and two sisters. (laughter, Mrs, Leonard Hopiska of M Tower died yesterday after a long Illness, lie was a lormer employe of ihe Oakland County Road Comirflssion Surviving are his wile. Edith: Gordon and Loreii, wln.s Ihe lease both of liavisburg;! three daugh stolorow said lers, Mrs. Leone Stanahach ot Drayton F'laln.s, Mrs Olga Alhcr ol Linden and Mrs Carol MRS. GEORfiE INMAN Hoheils ol Davishurg. a broth UNION LAKE - Requiem er, I rmik of Orloiiville, and Mass for Mrs ileorge (Frrince.s thine .visler.s and IJ'ginndchll /y.\ Inman, 77. of 708 Ravonna i liren. but pulled out before the Dec. 31 city owned land at Columbia ; tax dute. Whoever occupied the and Highwood and approve a prcmi.ses Dec. 31 would have contract for appraisals on Irre-beeii subject to taxes. inovkhle fixtures in urban re- * * * n'ewal properties are also up for Since Stolorow pulk'd out, thC/aclion. •hat Most of the 15-ltem agenda Moiorow nan assco mp court , , , c- of planning commission to halt the county’s bid-taking ^ concerning on a lease for the old court- ^ »"ey ''«< «• hoiKse site In downtown Pontiac ! ,, , ,, ,, ^ . ....... ear "I'm still puzzled as to ofownershlpforanSDMIicen.se Whv they brought this 8uit,’' ntl022 Haldwinwlllalsobeslat-,,,,,, i , Ewart said. , t>d for action. He claimed he could not com- / , pete in the bidding on a fair basis unless he knew If Ihe properly were lo 1h* taxi'd. NO TAXATION But City Attorney William A khvnrt said state law prevented Ihe city from taxing the properly this year regardless of who Man Pleads Guilty io Farmington Theft Leslie Gingell, a 53-year-old unemployed tool and die maker from N 0 r t h V i 11 e„ yesterday pleaded guilty to unarmed robbery of a downtown Farming-ton Sanders store. Gingell previously had stood mute to qn armed robbery for Products by Nibur, a Nw York firm, came to Fort Worth Saturday to tee about a job wifli Soufliwestern Petroleum Co. His bullet - riddled ’My was found Sunday. afternoon bushy ravine near a site police call -the^^nderworld. grave-3iapd^’ becauseThe Jbodies many police characters h been dumped there; Goldfield has been shot six times in thwack. ^ * ★ * One of his pants pockets was turned inside out. His wallet, containing $910, still was in an-r pocket. An autopsy report Indicated Goldfield had been kill^ shortly before midnight Saturday night. CAR FOUND Circuit Court aniiproenir" __ ^ u . tound orC^ vacant lof about____ Funderburk was ordered^., jniles-lrom wher¥ his body was discovered. ' Both windows on the driver’s side had been shattered by bullets pistol. One of the bullets was found in the door frame. Goldfield’s suitcase, contain-n g shoes, jewelry samples, cloUiing and business cards, was on the rear seat. The dead man’s watch also was in the Golfield’s son, Michael, 30, flew in but could shed no light on the case. ★ *. ★ “He was a happy-go-lucky guy,’’ he said, “I don’t know why anyone would do this to him.’!--...-..-^.1....__...._ State Is Sued by Areb Firm Gravel Miners Say Bridge Ruined Work " Operators of a Waterford Township gravel mining company yesterday sued the state of Michigan for $1.5 million, claiming that^ bridge construc-tion for fte 1-75 freeway at the Clinton River ruined their T&n^ ing operations. The suit was filed in Oakland County Circuit Court by David H, Wilkinson and Jay ; D. Wilkinson, owners of Wilkinson Sand & Gravel, 2284 Auburn. . The Wilkinsons claim that work done to install the freeway’s bridge over the Clinton River interferred with the see-River interferred with the seep-and flow of underground water and caused contaminated their mining areas. ★ ★ ★ The suiUcharges Ihit most of the gravel operations have been rendered useless despite the Wilkinsons’^ repeated-warnings-^ workmen and supervisors at the scene. NEEDED WATER It says the mining operations depend upon the proper level of clear, uncontaminated water two ponds on the property so that hydraulic suction machinery operated from a floating barge can work properly. ★ ★ ' ★ Also, named as defendants were State Highway Commissioner John C. Mackie and the Canonie Construction Co. ot South Haven. charge and was awi but returned to court yesterday to enter a guilty plea to the lesser charge belore Circuit Judge Philip Pratt. Judge Pratt set sentencing for March 17. The armed robbery charge is being held in abeyance by the prosecutor’s office pending GingelTs sentencing. ★ * * Gingell was accused of taking $165 from the store at 23310 Farmington in a Jan. 20 holdup. Trial Ordered for Avon Man An Avon Township man yesterday stood mute in Circuit Court to a charge of freaking and entering Pankey’s Hangar Grill, 6128 M59, Feb. 7. , * ★ * William A. Monett. 42, of 2862 Churchill appeared before Judge Philip Pratt, who ordered the defendant to stand trial. Monett was remanded to the county jail to await trial when he could not furnish $5,000 bond. No trial date was set. SERVING PONTIAC SINCE 1927 Established in 1927 and now Pontiac's largest in volume and physical facilities. Our stand-ord service includes many of the features' fou^ only at Sparks-Griffin. Color pictures of each floral cfTronge^ents is one such item. It costs no more, and oftten less, to hove the finest! Oulilandinf la Ponlioc tor Sorvtco and Faelllllag 46 wrilioms Street 2-5841 FOR ACCURATE QUOTATIONS AND FAST SERVICE GALL FE 2-9117 Ob EVFNING APPOINTMENTS ARRANGED AT YOUR CONVENIENCE "Pnntlnr'n Olilenl lnrt>»linrnl Firm" 818 COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK BLDG the city plunned to levy taxes only II It (lid not get the lease. 1'he ! I'll) offered the county $5tMt a month rent In order to |Hit ; metered parking on the lot. j i 'l^e I'oiinty decided to put the j lease up lor bidding. I Get GOLD BELL STAMPS With Marathon Fuel Oil CLARKE OIL CO. Sinrr FE 2-9181 YotrAre^rdicrlly tnvifedIV Attend A Series Of STOCK MARKET CLASSES h«ld at GOODBODY & CO. 115 BROWN STRICT at PIERCE in BIRMINOHAM COMMON KTOCKIH-BONn.S-MntlAL FUNDS-JtKCUHm ANALYSIS - HOW TO INVEST DATES: AAarch 4, 11 & 18 at 7:39 p.m.-9 p.m. NO AbA/llSSION FEE: For R«t«rvations, Coll 647-3300 ____ ___________ THK I'DXrlAC l-ll'KSS.,TrK.Sl).^Y Pontiac Dem Club ; '64 Officers Ele^' w Death Notices IiHelp Wanted Muk F K 25; Kffi4e - ,______ 6 Help Wanted Female 7 H I Cenvalescent-Nuriing i ad*. beloved son of WilHe a jSMALL FEMAtE BEAGLE LOST NEJQ $7 QOO-UP'? ! F*b. 16 near.'Daviiburo. no collar.! ■sciu.a'.vvv ur . Reward. OR 6 neariOavist d. OR 3-4877: , I ;'STRAYED FROM DEWEY STRilt-,' ;X^ptWTeR---GtRC men ™_a'nes5 essential; Sleady;, borne, Cleaners. ''53V*S;'''woodwaiu’'*ll*r-.asrsMb mioaham. . * i CLEANjNG~W0MA'N7 21 JfparfmentS‘Furnls|i|M Allen Pilkinton of 57 E. Hop-| kins has been elected 1964 pres-| ident of the Pontiac Democratic! Club. “ I Other hew officers are Frank! Hicks of 4M^Second„.first vice! president; Cwdie Itoeimof U32 Cloverlawn, second vice president; Donald Squires of Pontiatf, recording secretary; Mrs. A. Higgins of 6135 CUntonville, Ini dependence Township, corre ^ spending secretary; and Mrs. itlleiT-PllkfirtOH' of "57 E. Hopkins, treasurer. 'Boy Governor' of Michigan to End Public Work A N LANSING (AP) - Wilber M. Brucker, Michigan’s “boy^ governor” at age 36, says he is approaching 70 and is about to retire from public service. i “This is my last assignment T FAST R and Mrs. . natnanial A survived by tour aunts a Funeraf sarvie* vjill be -*-"k Carru^rs FufSra' ka™* mursday^February 37. K, FEBRUARY p, 1 ^noton Dr - CURB HOSTESS~WANTID, PERSONALITY established WATKINS ROUTE, CARE OF ELDERLY LADIES ..—.4.. -----— average. FE ^3053.. Vate home 2330 Hummer ----^ ....'------ Noad"-H A 7-36*3. ’ - . VACANCY FOR MEN AND .WOMEN Slate approved- Phone 6#3-S142. Moyjhig pnd Trucking 22 “~fARN MORE IN 1964 Openingi available tor 6 womi I-. light HOUSEKEEPING ROOM e tor I. FE A0122. 51 Pine St. “ONE BEDROOM -- NEI^FUiSH ' I well DRESSED MEN, PART-1 full time, use of car necessi ' SIS per evening, commission. i AUTO SALESMAN WANTED However Cracker Bamel DrlJ^.n, 30S1 Ut,: _!on_LakeJ!d. at Thomas Rd.-673-1265, dental ASS i_5 T A N f'Ti I G H *240 per month. Salary plus bonus and Incentive. Handicap no barrier. Our lucrative season is now starting. Get on the BIG MONEY WAGON NOW! Apply 10 W, Hu- FONTAINEBLEAU apartments FE MOM 1-A MOVING SERVICE. REASON- ' : ' ----- ajes^E 5-3^, FE 2-»w. _ Anartments-UnfumlfhBd ' j,\a week. Morey's Golf ahd Gountr ’ :| ___________________________________________________________ R-iver, Novi. FI t-^00. - ; JNINO ^NS/ECTOR, tiac's hottest dealer a large stock of new anci cars.-If you are experienced, , and conscienttobs w^ can use °you | to complete our small S-man sales j force. Demonstrator furnished.i-y=-a;vs=:— Stop In and let me show you whatEVENING! our present salesmen earn. work, high Khoof graduate wlth[ •-v • ■ m’v-— .PAUL NEWMAN'S | some chemistry and mathematics.; AND STCKK BOY, 5 SPARTAN DODGE i Ct bJ'' 1"“ otl m1 4V72?'’to 211 5. Saginaw __FE 8-4541 .Bob's Van Service urn* to Pontiac Rrm'-Borsa'. , a. MOVING AND STORAGE enta'l AssisTAfirRECEPTioN- Soles Htlp, Molf-Feniole 8-A r^e«onable^r^ates .....-Mionr!?'' nm^rntn'Vv'nkf" RAVPR Fill T TIME^R HOSPh OB < ...--j^d. 626-3*15. 3 tal work. Salary open. Write ‘FE^M3M°'^ Painting & Decorating ___________M MONTH. 33B6351, ON BALdWlN, ■no. 334-5237. BATH, 1ST, FL05r, , 'Wbodwargi^MrTl^r''' LIFE INSURANCE SALES Casualty Agency wants t 23 - ..... u'ppeC VflfY 1l900d location. FE 6-2IH 44'gREEN~STREET floor, Children welcome. Hand fli Ndwly dacordted. *50 i. . G. Hempstead, Realtor. AFTER 6 P.M. i After l**you quallt r. Start Immediate-; I caff Mr. PART - TIME” p.m., four evenings per; guaranteed monthly,, Ify. For information, --------- 5-M43, 5-p.mr--- intormatlon call Mr. Green i PORTER, 6 NIGHTS A WEEK. AP-ihavanne, Mrs. Lola! tonight only. ply Wednesday 1-5 p.m. ONLY. Smith," Mrs'. Delores Alley and! OR 3-0922________5-7 p - ■ -......- - ■ '’Teld‘'TTr.d8rFtbr"27*!lt: $120 TO 130 WEEKLY .. .... r,...i«,n.iohns. ... EXPERIBNCt EXPERtENCED painting At . - a papering, free estimates. 682-07/. 3ae W Huron FE'A8M4’ ’ hIgh*com"rms5lSti!''ui;il(n^^^^^^ iR^iw?' / SB^AN^EW^AFARTATENt^ NOW ified leidi. Reply Pontlec “ lady-Tnteri6r--decorator ........ . ______________mr^rx^T-^ Papering. FE 8-0343. - ah llpapei^-r e m o V e^d 11 a m. el the Donelson-Johns i Funeral Home. (Suggests visiting i hours 3 to 5 p.m. and 7 to * p.m.l) martin, PEBRUARY ^i»*4 ■ THOMAS W. SR., S82 'THOMAS W. SR., S82 South Ped-i ---k; age 58; beloved husband oj| NECESSARY ■ personally train all men cepted lor this non-seasonal JaTf Robert," Wll^rt, Harold, j "Affred Martin; brother ot Mrs. Cecila Michael, John and WMbei also survived by 17 gran Recitation of the Rosary AREA STEEL in public service,” Brucker, a llepubiican, said in an inter view about his cochairman- ; ship of Michigan’s 1964 legislative apportionment com- E to held FABRICATING, ______ . . elding . for^manlREAL ESTATE! with experience In ordinance In-! -------- — spectlon and quality control proce-; Morey's Gelt and Country -Oli 2280 Union Lake Rd. ____ • "' SALESMEN WltH~0' P E minds ; REAL ESTATE SALESMEN'need-! ed by estcbliehed Real -Estate Firm. Call FE M446 - Day i Call JFE 5-4846 - Night JOHN K. IRWIN & SONS Since 1925 ___ ________ ADVANCE TO commercial and business oppor ‘— Big commissions, best j TpI->Vision-Radio Service 24 .......HAVE r conditioned,'m______ ___________ refrigerators, .garbage disposal, formica Cupboard*; built In Chine/ wrarpqi—Window ' ‘ D TELEVISION appearing, apply in person only Nationally known company js In- you SHOP at managers office, II a.m. to! teretted In e*f«enable inon, 21-55, Trained Service Men, Rea 4 p.m , Ponttaf -and AMracl*-Mlle;__wlth sales exaiutive ability. Rapid; prices. Free Tube Testing. Drive-In Theatres. i advaneeiinent, -Company benefits. Montgomery Ward Pontia EXCEPTIONAT'6"pT'rR'TUNTf?'I ' ir capable woman w itions wrin opnus »«■!;*• 7 . • .- - e qualifications. Ron- TranSDOrtntiott EXPERIENCED BEAUTICIAN, GUA- ’ M & m"‘motor sales te Road, n rrght on Cass Lake Road to; ■phe Fontaioetleau ’ Apartments OPEN * to ♦ , FE 5-0936 -FE 8-8092 sales aids, a leader i I . Call fi Partridge fi . experienced WAITRESS VilLER, 'intery.^ (Suggested^ ■FEBRUARY" IRE JOB OPPORTUNITIES F N APPLICANTS.) Ml 6-3663 E E TRANSPORTATION , CONCORD PLACE LUXURY APARTMENT*. BLOOMFIELD HILLS ADDRESS , Immediate Occupancy Roch- BUSINESS OF YOUR-OWN -Money making^sales field ROBERT E., 516 Renshav ester, Michigan; age 26;, “ husban^^of^Ch^isHne^ MllfeV ' Mrs. Rosanna °Wrlqbt; b«lovebj°^tonMd Only. Plenty' qteo-son of Mrs. 'Howaro Artiiierr, i*A>irita p»4* r father of Lori Reply In confidence Por ___Box 17 ■ ______ bITmPER and PAINTER, Plenty of floor I D EXPERIENCED WAITRESS, FOR fc-—counte]i_lym-LOff_ee shop, openings I, j . afternoons _jnd mid'nMrsZZBITCs,:: ' w, -T^eRraph,at^.aglejid. U5 _M i- i EXPERIENCED • HOUSEKEEPER WANTED RIDE: ! '' NIcholie, for country h SHAFER WOMEN 26 Children invited.. N Shopping, roc-eeiion Chrysler Freeway. mile to Brucker, secretary of the Army under President Dwight D. Eisenhower from 1955 to 1961, said, “I owe a few years | to my family, my professional! life and my law practice” in I Detroit. u •« '"^2?ol^Nicksl ^'ntr'wSlae°'Auto-*B^^ t-iS-d Steven AMM.r; Snook. l''‘30%'^n'“";rthV M^re'-CheMl of, the Sparks-Griffin Funeral .Home, '/'I?,....!; inlermenT , Rochester, Dish machine operator, ov . . Full time,. Biff's, Telegrap FOR CAR-Hoe. NIGHTS,!' Mdple (15 Mile Rd.). .be neat and 18 or over. [ SALESMEN WANTED wages and tips. Apply ati Safesmen naeded tor nbw an. y Drive-ln, Telegraph ati houses. Wipe awake man win to make above average Exprelenced full time men on DON WHITE, ING. E-OIRL OFFICE, bookkeepir !oS' |i”“****'*|*[ .*^°°*|* Dance Fight Brings Trial L .„j, .1,-, Hallman, Watertordj (nsh^p;^ag»_78;^bejovrt ji"‘h»nrt I ol Lord Aiken Wood; lather ot Wllllarn Hall: ^ er of John Wood. Funeral service 16 SOUTH CASS I February ‘ - - I the Huntopn URGENTLY NEEDED *5 RH Positive S7 and *10 RH Negative DETROIT BLOOD SERVICE T Funeral' HorneFTnL’- i'irf*^ Crescent Hills Cemetery. I qested visitinp hours 3 to Circuit Court trial was or-i dered yesterday for Claudell' Turner, 29, of 439 Mc-| Neill on a felonious a s s a uTt] charge stemming from a Jan. 25 fight at a Pontiac Armory' dance. Turner stood mute atiris^Trrt" s WE WISH TO EXTEND OUR heartfelt thanki-and for the many acts oF Klndness-oml the expressions qj symfibtby , ex-. ... .... relatives, CAB I N EJTiiMA K E R WIIM -E X PMI-ence in formica and finishing. Good position with future. Ml 4-8220, extension 10. CaRETAKUR for 14 APARTMENT BUILDING. Must be married "" wife willing to help with taking. Only retired people 4'" and Sherrtian Funeral , and Mrs.-AAelyin Grandchildren. _ ____ .... charge Including coolTing and laundry. Own trans. helpful, i must like children. Submit resurne, I qualifIcaltonS and phone no. to ! Suita 3-F, 35 5. Johnson, Pontiac. IFA_S'Hi6N;TWO:TWENTY STUDIOS! 1 I need Tielp, Busy seawn. Ar* yoot SECRETARY, SHORTHAND, -die.; - attractive, poised and over 25?, taphone, typlng.--Ftot)re--work-,--*lia;--g^pg^*[^* W"®**® I Free training. Earn up to *50 peri weekly : Bp *•,*•*•■--1 I week for a 10 hour weak. Full or! AUCTION SALE EVERY SATUR- part lime. For Interview call 682- s/icki day at Blue Bird Auction. We'll, i 1814, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. and 6 p.m. buy turnllure, tool* and appliances., • to * P-b7-- Tv*». wed, and Thurs. ^ , OR 3-6*67 or MEIrose 7-519*.. FULL OR PART TIME OPE'NING! nrntonitons ■ CASH FOR YOUR "FURNITURE, - ________ for housewives as sales people for ! *25?' ®’**'*’ Promoiions, appliances, misc. Items, Or lyt us ------- ------ — lourneyman.i sarah Coventry, No Investment . or j SSor.PAMiwFP .rmimtlnn hack »•" '* tor you. Halls Auction, MY RoyaJ-Oek TmI 8, _Machlne_Co.,! deliveries. Call Sally, MA 4-2S07. ! growd'to do da'ta"roc^^^^^^^^ .vi«7l or my OR 0FRCE"0RDER d"ESK, a'nDI foreman, machine rebuilding, ---- ------parienee. TbI*'l«b needs a -tl' 2 FURNISHED MODElT^ OPEN FOR YOUR INSPECTION DAILY AND SUNDAY 12 TO /j • RENTALS FROM $150 ' Located at Square Lake i -Dpdv ke—Road*- --OrIva out- WJ ward to Square Lake Rd. than > to Opdyko Ro'6d. Wa wlll^ba w 28*1 Dixie Hwy. STEEL RULE GUIDE LEADER wanted, must be lournevman. i •al Oak Tool *> Mash Stephens Hwy., RoyaI THREAD grinder OFIERATORS ! I. O. and 0. 0. Grinder Operators! - Fully -'------------ ---- 2 FUR'NrTURB ANb A CALL FE2-*eil or MI4.65W GREATER BLOOMFIELD REAL ^^ATE CO, r ’to 3 p T POWt44Ce- — . Writ# f siMvt •nglnei 1--.SMO.P. LET { ’ FOR 2677 ORCHARb EXAMINER^ i)TPERI- Company. Interviews confidential. Midwest Title Company, Inc., 1404 Guardian Bldg.. Detr '^ ™ $1.25 per hour. Apply -- .>p»y; ______ _________» Pontiac State! k Building, Room No. 615 or SHAFER DROOM mE ___I. 5 Hqlcontb. C______ NORTH SIDE.. 3" ROOMS AnB ale entranc#, baby wel-5 per month Including Deposit required. Fs Pontiac Press. TRUCK DRIVER FUEL OIL FULL OR PART-TIME " 22726 Woodward Ferndole LI 4-4400 r O^ ’COMMUNTTY-MUk. I lUN. UA a-2681. Wanted Miscellaneous 30 USED OFFICE FURNITURE, FILES portab.e typewrilar and other ' ' ' '^“UEBN IN EVERY DETAIL ness machines, OR. 3-*767 o CAB DRIVERS WANTED. 2 CARPENTERS eded Immedlatbly. Call LI 8-1 atY OF PONfiAC” ■ 8, c Fodb cb: 1_________f?J;0638_ ___ _ , ■ ;TIRED of CAtJVASSINGr would' tiac Office. SI.25 per hour. Applyi___ ____ ing,'''RoS^'NT"*'**“to%®b.m:! EVELYN EDWARDS and 10 to 12 noon, Monday. , . ■ _ hrl"Tor~lTght'"'hous1w5r < doctor's RECEPTIONIST *323 Wanted to Rent Free transportation. Reply to Box' ------------ ''' The Pontiac Press.______, TELEPHONE FE 4-0504 MODERN iN EVERY DETAIL Jits qnly_ FI »a»1t _ L - . Roo'^s and BaTh. "vVANTED EXER'CYCIE Tb sVjto OR 4-MJ4 OR OR 3 2M2 t/'Serator, ret. FBJ-44M.--- ANTED ALL "types OF VEND Rent Houses, Unfurnishtd 40 raignment before Circuit Court Judge Philip Pratt. | He is accused of assaulting i two men with a knife. | No trial date was set), Turner is free on $100 personal bond. ! __________clerk-typist Salary ,*3,561-»6,318 Graduation from high school i Fife Hall for Allegan ALLEGAN fAP) - The City Council Monday approved con-i slruction of a new fire hall to' replace the pre.sent 76-year-old firehouse. It will be built in a I residential neighborhood of colonial-type construction to blend in with the homes. Marine Steward Dies Hancock (api - Aiex, Rivette, 53, who was widely i known on the Great Lakes as a; steward of Wilson Marine Transit Co,, died Sunday in St. Joseph Medical Center. He had seryed 30 years with the company. | USE PRESS w appolnimeni grill AND COUNTER GIRL FOR 24' ! basis only'?" Call OR 3 1266. , . morning shift. 333-944*.. ' ' ~ " , ln*t_rwtlon*.$ehool* I Long program, all trir-- ■— l -Schauer Tool and Oi i Cole Stw_Blrmlngham. WANTED, 0 M E 2 BEDROOM, garage, LAKE 32 prlvllegas, *85. FE 4-6507. _ 3 BEOROOM. GARAGE, OIL HIaT P,,D _338-6447. _ rt' 2-BeOROOM, L A R 0 E "TfvTRci FE 4-«400._ Announcements GET OUT OF DEBT ON 3 I PLAN ______________ Crty Hall! 35"s. Parke. IWANTED-FARM HELPT ABLE TO 3Rrv"i"R----Mpr^STABUSH-lbl route, over 21; Collins Cleaners, WANTED: RETIRED ... 650 Woodward St., Rochester. OL gen-—' - — '• .... I bui must! ins.TrQCTOR wanted. GIRL 2-2851. leral office w MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELbRS Detailers Designers y. EM 3- LADY FOR BABY SITTING,'LIGHT j housework. FE 2-6014 attar 6 p.m.j MOfEL "cleaning, i WANTED; ‘iXPERrEN(;ED lau'ndr'ess-m'Ost "Tie e'xcIl IBM TRAINING Latrn IBM, Keypunch or ma-i china oparatlon and wiring. 4 waak coursas ayalltbla. Approvad byi Michigan Stata Board at Bduca- _ . tton. Fraa pitcamant assiitanca.! frsVS1lAsferTlT*E^^*"'^'' W-i)***! 62 E. Nina Ml|a, Haial Park S47-I303 BBDROblviS, REFERENCfS Akfb deposit required. FE 4-370t. room's AND BASEA6BNT, biL viiini.y, Okj-IOYS . , heat. Apply lO^ Wat^y. '____ OPPORTUNITY OF OPTION 5 ROOMsT BATH, GAS HiA?n»ib oy. 3' or 4-bedroom home, utldtle* $67, 129 8. 6dUh. , neni, Clarkslon school area. ;jj5 pe'n'MONTa NORfH PARt 0^ y"’ ___ r Pontiac near * k Bidq ontlac's oldest and largest buc isistance' company. Pay Off Your Bills - without a loan — Payments low as $10 week. Pressroom automation equipment. 58 hours. Long program ’ LOCAL p-RY cleaner NEEDS J several women to work In adver-'I rising dapartmant. Must have good ■| speaking voice. Guaranteed salary, n Day and evenino work available, ■j FE 57156. R CONDITIONING REFRIG. .Iliad‘instilute, Chl^Mgo, Home or Office Appointments. City Adjustment Service 32 W- Huron FE 5-9281 Licensed^nd Bonded ^^*1* PLANS ........... BE SURE Shalin Engineering Co. 0 W. Maple :SK CLERkriX ierred, neat apf barrier. ;^ply Ir MAJESTIC DINER A good, last and rail EMI DIES training ir'^ 16833 Live 340 S. Mlchigat 'Ir'uck "oitiv i CELS FARMS, BUSINEi Warren Stout, Realtor S50-N Opdyke Rd TE 5-81 ' ■ Dally till 8 MCILIIPI E 1 iSTING SERVICE 11 dTe" ..._____makers; exper d. Apply Sujwrlor ' ' BE THRIFTY. Interview i cost. 332-3069, 887-5462. __ TRY D1a6S"X T)kSLEtS no DRUG STbRE WORK, rn Hejghti RE ?s,Vdl-U-Way: REALTY NEEDS S LESMAN. A ^artie formula, onlv ””WATklNS’ PRODUCTS VIII deliver or mail anywhe Irders of *5 or more posli ree, Clarence H. Smith, 150 Excellent Opportunity ^nATE OF W[CHIG Juv*enlie "Division"’* N To Florence Merlin, mother of seld minor child. Petlllon having bean tl.led Jn ttos ...a present whereabouts ^ m^lher^^ol _^iald ‘ ■'— ol''’Ml’chlgan!* vou"'Va**’Ro*ra^y nofllled that the hearing on said petlllon will be held at the Court House. Oaklend County Service Center, In the City, ol Pontiac In sr'" -------- - 3 said County, on ti T ' -BOX REPLIES-! 3. «. 10, 11, 12. 13, 18. ! 25, 63, 90, 92, 98. 100, I 108, 111. 115. Funeral Directors akfl hearing, /t II being Imoracllcal to make service hereof, this summons ar shall be served by publication ol one week previous to said he The Pontlec Press, a newspaper end circulated In said county. Witness, the Honorable, Norii.,,n ^ fC'^t-priif.? in**.ei3"*coSn“,";:'tb'^ '’*^?^al?'’''^f61.M^S' r'BARNARD, '• DELPH/rB«’*l 'prfntedi A COATS . FUNERAL HOME DR)^TON PLAINS OR 3-7757 C.J. GbOH^RDT FUN"ERAL HOME •Keeqo HarBbr. Pb. 682-0200 DONELSON-JOHNS FUNERAL HOME _ "Oeslgr ' ' - ' " For career sales representative for a large compony. Specializing in an everyday necessity. Eornings limited only by your own ability.|„ocheste Thorough training program'young at company's expense. Age: '’’"*** 25 years or OVER. Car nec-essary. Contact FE 8-0438 . . . Pontiac. ELblk'lT'MAN OF COUPLE f'OR lanlior work, night*. Steady employment. Town 8i Country Inn, "ENTIRE" STAFF ‘ DICK VALUET, BORING MILL OPERATOR DeVLElG OR LUCAS LONG RANGE PROGRAM 53 HOUR WEEK AFTERNOON SHIFT truck- Work Wanted Male ass. x-iv p.,n. shift. I-----------. ...... 'f^E 5-5283**"’''*’'* HUSKY WANTS WORK OF L....TECHNOLOGISTS,,I ^f'jobs' e*lw^d*[ob*"uL*2'3*584°^ •'^I' ebY Te wbuLb Liki FULL time nd Section Head*. Be-, ..g. 8..^ nr tull nr ^nrr tim# .rv*4onn 4 B I I SUPPLIES, 739 a Good Housekeeping Shop ....Ol Pontiac 51,. W. Huron Street TIME GAS STATION AT ONLY « expected. Reply Pontie - OX )07. family iNcomE- ^r"s‘, crk^si Over ____ MAKES ” ‘ siLK' PRESSERS ''ifsrci.".;.!”*!! r.ki.,rViicTjK ■ SHAMPOO OIRC And MAi6, for p*one*FE *3*rL *' s"*: w';:;To' Fr'i^K-iurr;. -^n-o'wT's.-s,'! vs.ro rd work and 2 chlldrtn, call alter Electric Co. FE 5-1431. wANT'ib li?bi.e wbfJiAN 21 -fo Bookkeeplni * tax#* 16 JO ei driving compenion tor lady "*■ >0 tour the UhllM Stite* end BOOKKEiPINO, INCOME I AX '®". Mexico. Mull be able lo lurnlili service, reeioneble. Call 338-6225 no uncto relertncai. MA 5 7571, ' ........■ •... ..... i« WAITRESSES CURB GIRLS II nr ov«r. Full, or port AMI* furnithod. vocation Y prof** 2 ROOMS 'ANp BAH 43 NORTON ROOM6, SMALL BABY SPACI g mtdicAl group. Sp«c«, I ikfonitl building on land Salt IIoumT*"’' 2 ROOM AND J ROOM, NEAP downtown Apply 2J3S Dixie Hwy. V ROOMS, private entrance Raeburn SI FE 5 0494 2ROO'm upper, outside (iiv bedroom, au modern. eHat2''t6,!l50 67v9252’’*'^ * **'"* IIEORUOM, NICE. KITCHEk. 12 White Lake Twp., Oakland Coui Michigan, containing 20 acree ioc« In Nnrihwatt orM Of WHHoms L Rd. and Gale Rd. behind 81M 0 Ih a list 01 the proposed chenges! ' at the ottice ol toe townsF p , l .nwy. be Ixemlned By those | CHARLEI HARRIS I “'•"•J.tto’Sl.' Pebruery IS ei , cell f'^ 4.4500. Dreylon Plains ;.,BABV$iTTER, LIVE IN, WEEK round, Michigan! ends oft-OR J-J23*. wfLriAW WHO CALirb say. '‘Vel ^^nf’’anT^ti«°' « ;:*ale‘'’?or -H ^‘le'/ASE. " *E'Vl98f"'’'' J|"3orrak7”^r*c^ ® nil ^'rVn*,S,'r *.1^ 7.1' lost and Found 5 vrew" bm * m* grinder hani; rOUNO- FOODUE PUPPY VICIN- end ID. 58hour — ily ol Sashebaw Rd February 20, 1692 Rmheiler Rd.-Troy OR 3-3/20. good HESIOENtlAL ROUGH f-FR | ............. ..... ....' a Drttsmakini * Toiloring 17 upper,'fe ^...................... .....J booms, DRESSMAKING, TAILORING AND! n1»hed, oti • Iteretloni. Mrs. BodtII. PE 4 90.53. j bfoROOx .E'kPERiENCEO" BUSHELMAN IN Woodtnil ,hol***le end retell tewing UlTS, NO DRINkFR.S, 2 1528. evlRYTHINO i UR tfOROOM, BASEMENf, REC"HI'A-i)|.|0;well car^^ng. r.ige O'l Baldwin, FE>584/. J1EDROOM5, 0A$ PURNA^E, with recreation room near Olen-wnod vruppinq Canler, »8,;50 with - 13413 K FP. 2 0e/r 2)5F0R0GM, 241 CLIFFbRb VVltM :] ROOMS. BATH. MlObl.EAoFD m wiMm.rt eilre lot low down couple. Jl Green 81, FF 5 8667 paynrenl FM 3-6044, efier 4 19 I ROOM APA'RTMEN'T, *60 AN LI 1HFDRO066 BPiCK RANCH arid Opdyke |2 day, light t "wAfJTrO at) keeping PP 8'616'< week. Apply al |iaR MAID, STEADY, DAYS r^'ociii^’^ar ver^ Lak. Rd., 9 till noon or 2 toj„j,„, TOK StEVltB WAlfrtESS, miOIEVE^^^^^ higher, long form,3 iASbE"dOOMS clean, warm' I WA|TRE8S '~'WAii'fB"Br" ixPBRi Oro’rg**'*l y*tF ' NeV'tol^' Adulli*"'M'’''NorMr!, “')= E i Hw:" M^ 5"XV.’k tor*'joe"'’''*^CCURATE ' BXPFRIFNCEb w. R, BOHN .... ............. OPiN «e$S, DAY 5Hlf»T 1. L ' ■ )n, .RFOROOMV CORNfR LOte ' no’fh Mda, bv own#r, dfO Omar. mint.'J BEDROOM BRICK. PULL BAS'E- 42 E in peripn, Lou's Coney l»i»nd, I xB/r Dixie Hwy 673 *983. iWAITRBtS RIOMfS, 'PART-TIME. OR YEAR Ph 334 2)1) mIl'TON tax SERVICE . j-3332, 1424 Alhl, Ponlla< iNdOA/if TAX ilEVlCI 11 D wEi Road, on March 3rd Mbndey er.-loth. 1964, from '^uesJay, IS* lu T A V bTlx'k Cll > I5.1\2()^| J7-, H E_ Di.a7p..r.d Peb^-TtwaT?. -ORILLMEN WAN fTb:"iXPlRI- ^tlS"^«.?, i ?irm,'ar,'Td':nTCf;,.t?i'i*slt';S. pleaie" call 3340118. RKelvadj JPPlj; ‘L^'fluton w'oixlJ' HwJ wrong addreiy | ?[»P^ ""m, Rd '■°otof^^l^ etoler INSTgUC IOR' WANTED Tb A8|i|T tain,"'ft S-SMI. Reward. • S',"*'* "•*'"’ Jiiii’t' "e^^K on. Vlclnlly ot Perkdale,en0 Bald i,,i„irm proaram with en oppof win. PE 4 2409. ^ lunlly to mekt H50 e wtek or LOST"rTimf5l6mfb BABSETT better 682-tost, ''''' NATl6NAir"COlPORATlON H AS tan RewexH PB 4.5141 Immediate i»#nino Tor 2 good men, if you quollfy. Opportunity U(yn $100 to 1150 por ‘ ....... appointment. Fi \\\, Pontiac Mali. 603-0430 COUNTER CAFETERIA LADIES AlfRi|S ANb endv^bektond 3481 ---,^cc'uraTI '.blPE'NbAELE, Rood. , , ebbk VbR'wkEk. KBYI B NACKERMAN County Boat Club. Pt 13171 ■ KfTT REAL IS attached oA und Nr. OM.C,, I. •29/0 Lonotraa, SALAD WOMEN BAKER'S HELPER Pleasant working conditioni. HA'i'Tax 'RE/TorTT prB rH, iHil.ft lA I73''*|a^d^.' WOMlEN ''- IllN ta'siLLtNO Jo HVy'warJ.*^ F7W *'**’ *'"* '* Mto, ) BEDROOM BRi' bolllft Watkins vanilla KB 2.3053 . ACCbllNflNO, *11 per' wk„ oius own ufimies, I WOMAN, AOEI ;K).40. p6« LIOHT notffrv »V eP0«Wm»nl. » PoMey.; mile-.oU Dixie Mwy 4*0s While. ''"'"J 4023 i ROOM* , reg. meditellor cell OR 3 0551 fwodd. on Peb 22. bleck fe Keegle pup 682 03*8 LfeMALE ' hT'KlNbCiE, year old. ere# of Heiel P 2 0382 <1 live In nr own iranxuorteti...... rorm, .no me,., .no onie, uene- , •*'?!,jFto .'_. INfbMI TAX, I06kXI|PiN6 tits lurnlthed Aooly Greenfield's fOUNO WOIaAn rOE otNERAl Nolery K. Hetchier IJ end *3 evg .nOO/iAi ‘ S:iion%rni' tJkV a?.T ,59i Second . fe s-aefb * Adulf femlly MA 6 559 beoroSm BRifxr sasim'isy; Highland*’^RsMlei.*’^ 3-9068** ” ' iORObM. BRiCk, FUCr lASf-..... - - PE 52129 Iffet 5 icxrnuLri’At*' rk Baldwin Hign ............. jn Lend Contract fM^^ 6/0.1. hac kett real bs- bedroom, i aEoI i'ATTNd "AA-■ ....... ‘-Jkcesf........ • COUNTER ANb All AROUND! lerson tor dry r natiOnall'V known bi , MA 6 7207. 6570 Telegraph ' HbId Wanttd I ^!CURE 0taL*; ti OR bvfft most "*''’ ■ *• .':;! S)i.Thou*« leli'Di.Wy’wj music teachers iperlentei terlord. i ui repulebl*, wed fslebilshod OUNTFR"TtlR) , BOB * CONIJY musll selewl Age, experience end jj-.lend. 7.7 N Perry, day ni, siln .MShutiienl. Reply Pontlec Prgss ^ INCOME TAX H & R BLOCK CO. |. Huron It, dwin ikvanua Pnona' JJ#* IDEAL LIVING bookcosT In living r« Is ot tiosol*. *e.T»M Include* tMcytolng, ^,Ti. , pBibRObMV I' > LBAtHT'TiTCOiSl. *2.000 down, wechel. Ft S-0868. ” W ^“1 to. Rnlrance. Stovf.^^relrli 1 ovtiy grounds. rUrst t( To Buy, Rent, SeII ' or Trode , Us* Pontiac Prts* WANT AOS “1-; I'UENTY THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1964 Hwwm _____________________ . $14,950. Nelson BMg., Co. a and 4 - BBOROO/tt. MODELS, -.lull bMeOnenl, like prlvlle^ ...MO fe $14,950. Teke BHiebelh rflSlja.'iT^l *v!mi BLDO, CO., OR M191 .IriBEbROOM, J BATH, GAS HEAT, -.BoreBO. close In. FE ' 5 ROOMS, GARAGE, GAS HEAT. . Neer Lincoln Jr. FE A1077. 5 ROOMS t ROOMS, ENCLOSED FRONT RBireli. By owner. Nr. Si. Michaels ..Church and Pontiac Plant. $7 — Immediate oossesslon. for app mant ieall FE 4-ai$ after 5.^. . . Fourth V.' oW Joilyn. J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor EM 3-6604 10751 HiBhIand R4.4M5 DRAYTON PLAINS ___troom home with IIvIib and kitchen tor only $4,9M. MM down, $45 per month. Floor furnace, large lot, quiet street. K. G. HEMPSTEAD, REALTOR 340 W. Huron St. FE 4-BM4 asesjowsN Gl $6,^ $52 MO. Williams lake prlvIloBes, nice Bedroom, large lot and dandy li privileges. Why rent? 1 L. DAILY REALTY EM 3-7114 W. H. BASS : RAY O'NEIL, Realtor «J0 TONTIAC LAKE ROAD SUNDAY 1 TO 4 Saturday Evening Attar 4, Call FE 5-4419 MLS PE 3-7103 -Associate NO MONEY DOWN Mixed Neighborhoods Land Contract, VA, FHA ASSOCIATE BROKERS BIRMINGHAAf, S-SdblS60M, DIN-Ing room, anelotad porch, carpet-InB partially finished second floor, Calcinator b*> heat. Holy Name Parish. E. W. Kurth, Realtor. Ml 4-7474. ydEJtowet better THAN NEW ,3-bedroom brick ranch, »' country kitchan; laroa tile basement. • Carpet, drapes, storms and scheensi Trees line fenced yard; wired IVi-car garage with drain. Near schools end shopping centers. $1,500 takes over my G.l. II R M I N G H A M, ATTRACTIVE home with apartment, private en-trance, $13,500. Ownar UL 3-1799. BY OWNER ^bedrewrrlnvir^lrwa to' finished up. Knotty, plna'^ kitchen! breezeway, attached garage, corner lot. Permestone to belt. Close to grad# sc^l. $0,300, $300 -ftS.04 -wdnth plus, tax and ■ I --- HAGSTROM REALTOR, ....urc- "" '"" - ---- 403-4035. {•Huron, OR 4-0350, evenings, ci EAST ______ G.l. Only siw moves you Kl A nice 3-bedroom home, with spac< , for 3 additional bedrooms up.'Fully insulated. Has separate dining room with custom china cabinets; - ■■ flp-t^ condition throughout. I _ ___ -day^ Call - for-, ap^tment,^ «raharh, FF ----- RAY O'NEIL, Realtor 3530 PONTIAC LK. RD. SUN. I Saturday avanlngs attar o ca . FE 5-4419 MLS FE 3-7103 HUNTOON LAKE 3-badroom with room for 4, living room, dining room, ... porch, 3 fireplaces, room, 3-car garage. $31,900, "HILLTOP REALTY___________473-5334 nning-ttshlng or lan Lsko at h fullest this summer In this room, newly decorated homi short walk from lake. Large room, family kitchen, utility $0x183' l^t, $350 now, O*-"" plus tax and Ins. Call to hesitate, you may be too I HAGSTROM REALTOR 1.99 r Mixed Neighborhood 3-Bedroom Full bisemant Many locations Nbthing Down-$62 Mo. Model - 37 N.E. Blvd. Sale Houses 49 LAKE PRIVILEGES, 4 ROOMS, gas heel, ho) water, sawers, at-- tached garagk. Keago Harbor — $4,950 full price. Al Pauly, Realtor 4514 -Dixie, Rear OR 3-3$00 Eves,, FE 3-3-7444 "Mixed ' Neighborhood' No down payment . ' No mortgage cost WESTOWN REALTY 404 Irwin oft East BlVd. FE 8-3743 afternoons. LI 2-4477 Eves. MOVE IN NOW FROM $69.50 MONTHLY Excluding Texes end Insurances ZERO D^N OR TRADE Id Corf^ct - ^^odel Open Daily, Sundoy 325 WEST YALE 3 Blocks West of Baldwin MICHAEL'S REALTY WE 3-4300 333-7555 UN 3-3353 SUBURBAN 3-bedroom, breezeway, garage, over one acre of fruit, berries and grapes. . Tractor, deep ireaze and cooking stove goes. Gas heat, aluminum storms and screens. $7,950 full price. PAUL JONES REALTY JE J-OSSO- VERY NICE BRICK ' 3 bedrooms, (carpeted), living room (carpeted), dining room, nice kitchen, gas heat, 3-car garage. Lot 119 X 233. Owner trens- • tarred^ ONL¥-$I0k90a-wlth~$U00-- down. Newingham UL Suit Hohsbs HIITER WEST SUB - . ----- ■‘“e-carpeted living ____ .... mneht, close tP shopping can-take privileges. $11,508, terms. OVERLOOKING LAKE - This CLARK COUNTRY HOME. 5 ACRES. LAKE PRIVILEGES. Modern 3-bedroom 3 fireplaces, basement SACRIFICE PRICE- $11,38 fortable 3-bedroom rand nearly 1,000 fr - ' " - New ‘ 3-Bedroom Full Basement Nothing Down-$62 Mo. ■Gas heat — hardwood floors Modet: 40 E. Brooklyn 3 biks. N. of Walton off Baldwin NO DOWN payment NO MORTGAGE COST NO PAYMENT FIRST MONTH Full basement ’ » kitchen and f Blaf^ Open BELAIRE HOME BUILDERS FE 0-3763, t:30 to S p.m. EVENINGS AFTER 7i LI 3-7337 ' room, brick I Kinney 5 dally Plusttring SbivIcb ALUMINUM STORM WINDOWS doors. Installed now at lowest prlees by Superior, Cell FE 4-3177 SUPPLIES, range. Pn Arqiery 0 SERVICE. INDOOR I Inst. Straight i---- nHr. 71 N. Reddi Ar^Htcturul Drawing^ ND REMODI $, 343-6500. AspbuH Pwrtiijt NOW FOR THAT SPRING KAR-LIFE BATTERY CO. Oentretors-RNUIalors—Starters BotteriBs $5.95’ Exchange _____leuufy SpBclullst CAROLYN NILSON. PACE SPE-clallit. Stockholm preduale. Face-— —.——J Carolyn Nllson KAR OARAOE, $099 lel. OH Doors, Concrete Floors Addllhmi, House Ralslnk KUL ORAVE$ CONTRACriNO I Bstimetei____ OR 4-1511 nbino and elecirical. I materials. Oulnni Consirucllon ... . ____ "*■ VbblRWllAtibN------------- FHA farms. No down payment Bernard Construction Co^ 3n-S733 REMODEL YOUR HOME TumhX' '* ricel, etc. NEY DOWN Drivers' Training FREE ESTIMATES ON 7 ClARL L. BILLS SR., FLOOR S 'ing. FE 3-5709.__________ IbHlTlfAYLbR, FL6M~TAVlNb iB end tlnlehlno. FE 5-0593. AUTOMATIC OARAGE DOOR OPERATORS WOOD-OARAOE DOORS-METAL SALES SERVICE Resldenliai Commercial TEMCRAFT OVERHEAD DOOR 400 Oakland ___________335-3350 Henting Service oil HEAT SUPPLY, 73 N. SHIR-ley. FE 1-3941. Ponllac's nnly authorized Sundsfrand endJWebfter oil pump^ rebullditij itellon. ____Income Tnx Service ^ t YEARS TAX EXPERIENCE. William J. Sourlall, 673-0074 _ ALL ‘WORKINO PEOPLES^TAkES. $3 and up. 3. Schjmke. OR 3-3943. rN'YaUR HOME OR OP^^^ CALL FOR APPOINTMENT. 603.3247 ______^Licensed Bulldeirt NEIDRICK BUILDING SERVICE -Home, Oarage, Cabinets, Additions. TERAtS. FE 4-6909.____________ bne paymeiil up to 70 yeen t<< rwy.^ Cell now tor tree plennino John J. Vermett & Son _________332-2982 , Carpentry All KINDI OP CARPENTRY Corpet SCHWEITXSR CARPET SERVICE, __________Cement Werk .___________ CBMnNT WORK, COMMIRCIAL or resldentlei, ipeelel Winter price, OR 3-4173 or OR S-9400. ALTBRATIONS ALL TYPil, KNIT dreMM, leather coatl, ON 3-7191. , --------t)D'isl-m'R'iW«'------- Allerallont and custom sewing, TALBOTT LUMBER dpws. Caipplete butidino sarVlcek 075 Oak land Ave._FE 4-4595 Maintenance Service ' A & B MAINTENANCE Residential -^Commercial Complete janiloriai service Floors - Windows ■ Walls - Carpets lee Esllmetes • F-E V4731 ^^oving and Storage COAST WiDI VAN LINES MITH MOVING FE 4-4164 Painting and Decorating iaa' pain lino. 34 yi ....Era# 473 0.334. YALL-WAiHlW&'"^"'"'ttiW6r''1»ff-pilri. R44iontbl4 prices, PB 5 3403 otter 5,_______ “Jeannie is the patient type. She’s teaching her parakeet howFto speak in pig Latin! ” Mixed ATecr HERRINGTON HILLS, br ranchette, vacant. See any t 4 bedrooms. Carpeted living r< butit-ln range and oven, basen a imatl down payment wilt n you In. , I CRAWFORD ST. a nice home large tamlly , 6r' easily -- to Income. B large roomi basement, gas heat, gar price, 19,00(1, terms. Alumlnuttt.4lde Upholstering EAKLES CUSTOM UPHOLSTERING |4^^^ Burlalph, Union Lake. ' EM YHOaAAS uPHSCSTSliTNo 4499 W. WALTON ftLVP. FE 5-8888 MEiER A"dLSON' dPHOliTiRING -T7893 Free Bstlmelei FB 8-1854 Wail Cleaners llOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS^ , ^ DAVID HART WINDOW CLBANING. WIndowa, lloort. walls. Fully In- _jured. J34W3...... ...... ~ Wo»d>Ceke>Cefri*Fuel CANNEL COAL- THE IDEAL FIRB-wood lufi. seasoned wood Mth tor lurnete or fireplace, OAKLAND gUi^L FAINT, 45 Thomas St.. Pontiac Township SQUIRREL RD. Very clean and sharp 1954 i room ranch, attached garage, arete dining room, oil FA ____ 110x387 lot. Total taxes 1175. Lo-coted iMf^north of 2(7 Mile (South Blvd.) on Squirrel Rd. Only 112,300. 0. E. McLeod & Co. __________, OW-tOOl OPEN DAILY 3 to 6 SHAWNEE LANE - NEW COLONIAL. Live In luxury In a nice 2700 square fool Colonial with 4 bedrooms, 3W baths, formal dlho lino room, large living room, finished besenrfent, bullt-fn oven and range, laundry room on main floor. Femlly room, community water and a 3V!i-car garage with a large landscaped lot near the lake. — Drive out to Jeyno Heights. 2915 Shawnee Lane. We'll be happy to talk trade. Your host, Mr. Tony Elsala. Altar 6 call FE 4-1706. RAY O'NEIL, Realtor 1530 PONTIAC LK. RD. OPEN 9 to 9 FE 3-7103 M.L.S. FB ,4-1704 R6eH¥sfir'^ CUtr*ANb s-room bungalow on almost 3 acres with tiny stream across back. Only 111,400. lx Realty UL 2 3131 UL 3 5375 Vy'lLLARD STrIET A’f~j¥SSlET 3 bedrooms, glassed In porch, gas heat,, storms, carpets, drapes, fm-medlate occupancy. 04,500, terms, 625 2607 attar 5. _ ___ UNION LAKE Neat 2*bedroon>s knotty pine Interiors tNttween 2 lakes. t7s200 — HILLTOP RgALTY SAUNDERS & WYATT REALTY AUBURN_________FE 3-7061 spring special Located neer Clarkston thie brick YOUNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER BUILT RUSSELL YOUNG, 53W W. HURON WILL BUILD YOU A NEW HC and move you Ip by May NELSON BLDG., CO. OR W191 PONTIAC — 4 unit Income pn in good rental area—tumli parkfng In rear^rPresent g rental $340 per month-fias l ard of good tennancy—Ideal tor man and wife operation = $15,500 -wllLeccept-traaedm...... BRICK 3-BEDROOM - fi ■ sement—finished r garage—large ndsceped—In got I miles W. of JAMES A. TAYLOR, Realtor REAL ESTATE - INSURANCE 7732 Highland Rd. (M59) OR 4-0306 Evenlngt EM 3-7546 UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE 8645 Dixit, Clarkston 5-2415________Eves. 635-1453 New 3 Bedroom Nothihg Down-S62 Mo. (5as heat—hardwood floors Model; 37 N. E. Blvd. (Bet. Michigan and Pike Sis.) ' Model Open 13-7 Leslie Bldg. Co. IN NORTH PONTIAC , NOTHING DOWN New 3-Bedroom Home $55 MONTH Excluding taxes and Insurance EVERYONE QUALIFIES WIDOWS, Divorcees EVEN persons WITH A CREDIT PROBLEM FEATURING; WALL-TO-WILL^C^RPETING PERMANENT HOT WATER FURNITURE FINISHED CABINETS ALUMINUM WINDOWS SEPARATE DINING ROOM CALL ANYTIME DAILY, SATURDAY end SUNDAY 636-9575 HAYDEN 3-Bedroom Tri-level $10,500 . 10 PER CENT DOWN IW-cer garage Family Room ■ 'ncluded Gas heat $11,900 10 Per Cent Down . ... besemenl Ga IVa-cer garage 03 f J. C. HAYDEN Realtor DON WHITE, INC. I Dixie Hwy. OR t Atler |l)|' cellJjlE 4-5039 ! " Tlli-llVEL ■ ' Kettering High Area bedrooms, built In kitchen, y room, carpetino, garaga, te ird. pavad street. $14.9.50. ■LTOP REALTY 473-5334 SOUTH BLVD. AREA ' • CITY OF PONTIAC Cheaper Than Rent! $50 MOVES YOU IN NO OTHER COSTS NEW 3-BEDROOM HOME - ONLY $55 tVERYONE QUALIFIES WIDOWS, DIVORCEES EVEN PERSONS WITH CREDIT PROBLEMS FREE aARPETING I CALL ANYTIME,- ANY OA\ REAL VALUE_____436 ,! IRWIN WEST SUBURBAN ~ Extra li 3101 W. HURON Evenings call FE 5-5144 oi - Multiple Listing Sai --WKT-SUBtJRBAr" TIMES CLARKSTON AREA Lake privilege with this neat clean 3-bedroom rancher with paneled family room and fireplace. BRICK RANCH In Waterford area, nea; 24, carpeted living room rooms and basement ... _____ Marble sills, water-softener a beautiful wide _________ acre site. 3 bedrooms, living m with fireplace, dining room, del kitchen, family room and ited porch, good carpeting, drap-!s and many extras. Too large present owner. TIMES REALTY 5219 DIXIE^HWY. ^ ML| 474-0394 ANNETT Auburn Heights 100 X 200 n. lot on Aubui and bath home, 3-car garage, flowers. Only "siO.oSo, h Bloomfield Township NORTH SIDE a at a07 East Beverly. Lpslie R. Tripp, Realtor . 75 west Huron Street 1 (EveKjngs FE 4-4278) WEST SUBURBAN ir Scott Lak« 3 bedroom ■..... YfUSi SYLVAN VILLAGE INCOME OVERLOOKING SYLVAN LK. AAake an appointment to see'TWs beautiful 3 - bedroom home. V/2 baths; tastefully appointed. IMMEDIATE OCCUPANQY-WEST SIDE . six-room family home with tVi baths, all large rooms, 3 bedrooms . end bath up. Three rooms and half bath doWn, screened porch, full l)asement, ^s heat, 3-car garaga. $15,900. - John K. Irwin WATERFORD AREA, . ______________ tri-level as bright as the morning ------------- carpeted i WILLIAMS LAKE an value-'ln a 2-bedrpom .....---, homa. It up to the minute Kltihen wlthmilog area, party tun basement rec. room, built-in bar and stools, IW car garage. Choice lake privileges picture peHect In every dotetl. $l,-DK> down plus closing costs. INVESTORS, city. East side. 10 * ■ ;?™al price. Mart. FE 2-0263 MILLER REALTY- - PLUS MORTGAGE full basement, tile bath, lViac». Bullt-ln washer, dryer, oven and range. Large fireplace, one tiled bath and one V7 bath. Completely carpeted. Many other extras. A custom built home with beat of materials and workmanship. School but at door. Only 15 mlnulot from Pontiac city limits. WE TRADE. LIST WITH US - We accept trades and In this way many sales result that would not otherwise. Open 8:30 a.m.vto 9 p.m. Multiple Listing Service. 1. H. BROWN, Realtor 509 Elizabeth Lake Road Ph. FE 4-3564 or FE 2-4810 CITY WEST GI-0 DOWN 7-room home featuring 3 larga’bt PONTIAC NORTHERN See this 5-room bungalow with full basement, new .furnace, 1,» -OMU out. ' for privacy end beau^. Heges, $17,308 terms. Near Watkins Lake Economy plus. 3 - bedre older home, 2 Ion, huge Ims, umr pletely landtcaped, lake privileges. 2-car garage, gas utilities. Excellent buy at $8,500. Rolfe H. Smith, Realtor 244 S. Telegraph FE 3-7848 _______________FE 3-7303 -ARRO Wa Build - Wa Trade FENCE^ARD-ter tha^lddles^and a garden. Large 2-car garage, * bedrooms, knotty pine walls I living room, plenty of eating spat In kitchen. $10,500, terms. VROOM RANCH with brick front; carpeting, rec. room, sliding glau doors to patio. Plenty of cupboards 3-BEDROOM RANCH In excellent bedrooms, oil heat, storms and screens, water Mftener, lake privileges. Priced to sell at $8,950. GAS HEAT, to ub. $8,990 te PHONE 682-2211 TRADE Deluxe Location and you won't tint homo than this one a large living room rock flreplece, a me; room complete with I Is a full basement wl recreation room, and 'rage. Elizabeth Lake for 814,800. Lokefront You'll love this •Itreetlve' 4-room home with the living room ovr~ looking the lake. Hat full dinli room, garage and basement. L cated In Lake Orion In a nice ; eluded area. Yours for $10,300 pi cost^WIII trade. Judson Street garage elghborix Frushour Struble 3930 Elizabeth Lake Road Realtors MLS FE 8-4025 . FE 4-8941 JOHNSON SILVER LAKE PRIVILEGES 8-room fanegd yard, 2, acres, 2-car i taehed garaga, automatic do r opener, all appliances Included. 2-FAMILY BRICK, 4 rooms ea with fireplace In each apartmei Each apartment hds the same nui bar and size of rooms. Low dov payment with land contract on b< H)0 TO $300 DOWN, newly de< rated homes. Will tell on land co tract at 5Vt Interest. After 4 call Clark Wheaton FE 4-52 A. JOHNSON & SONS Sale Houses Val-U-Way Waterford Township Itself. Price? Only 510,500. As little as $250 to move In. Pontiac Northern Area Oft Joslyn - Folksi This Is • nice compact home. It hei a brick front and 4 carport whirt makes It look quite large end rich. Very ul;.n found In homes costing m u e h more. A real good value for only $9,150. You can pay _as little as $300 down or trade In your old home. R. J. (Dick) VALUET Realtor FE 4-3531 O'NEIL MODEL OPEN lOjo 6 4260 LEDGESTONE You can sea Our Lady df the Lakes Church and School from this Beauty Rite model. Three-bedroom brick ranch with an^afc r jached- -2Vi-eer-femlly room, sunken living room, sunken kitchen" and pantry are some- -o» the fine features of this beautiful home. You are Invited to Inspect its fine workmanship and quality, -Drive- out-DixIe_HJghway to Wa-terford Post Office, turn left on Ledgestone. Only $21,900 to duplicate. LET'S TALK TRADE. TRADING IS TERRIFIC SYLVAN SHORES LAKiFRDN' You who went To stay close li mt«ln m F«d*r«l ohon* numbc c’olo•^?.^: - Pridefully matntalna d by one-owner. and It now In an estate and must be sold. Warm lovely living -room, full dining room, ample kitchen, half bath and a beagtiful lakefront porch, down. 4 elegant bedrooms and 2 full baths on itia second floor, plus* 2 extra r on the thirdi In^JttAibr------- -6tHI-another'"tfool and ____________ rooms lavishly carpeted, attached . _____. plastered). Drat- ..™..y reduced to close an estate. By appointment anytime. YOUR TIMING 1 IS RIGHT — If* YOU BUY NOW. Drive out today for a scenic tour of beautiful "Christian Hills" In the heart of Avon Toufnahin. i92.M0 is th« Dries Of this Ing 3-bedroom rench-c, ..I,., ci.a large 2Vi-car attached garage. Check these exciting features; 1 ecre lot, expertly landscaped. Large living room, dining room, (new well to wall carpeting last Christmas), modem bright kitchen with plenty . ■ cupboards. Ceramic beths. SO* tly room,- fireplace. A lovely le In a prestige neighborhood, - Oakland University. Make -------- — If topgy. DRAYTON WOODS, , ranch, featuring all built In gat appliances, wet plaster walls, oak floors, full ceramic bath, carpeted ...... ..........sliding dor-wal to rear patio. Anchor fenced rear yard, attached 2-car garaga, Tha -■*"* ------ on the street at only ■ ■ —ihclng avall- Best of financing 'BUD' Room to Breathe this gey. Inviting ^bedroom i;nds, attached 2 and dining, "L", streamlined kitchen, utility room and Ui-tar garaM. 10x150' lot. lake privileges. A^lng 110.400 with lOoi, down t>lus closing cgtli. “j IMMEDIATE POSSESSION I 1500 down Only t years old. four room, t bestroom bungel.iw with utility room, oil .forced elr "Bud” Nicholie, Realtor 49 Mt. Clemens 5t. FE 5-1201 After 6 P.M, FE 2-3370 BATEMAN ' Trade THE BATEMAN WAY WE GUARANTEE SALE OF YOUR PRESENT^HOME West Side 3 BEDROOMS) all on one floor al lust $1,500. down and no murt-gaga costs with IMMEDIATE POSSESSION. The whole tamlly will an|oy tha finished recreation room/ wall-to-wall carpeting, softener, gerage and outside patio makes this complete. City bus lust ■round the corner. Only $11,700. so call today. DON'T BE DIS- Ottawa Drive 5 BEDROOMS) brick ranchitr wl basement and attached 2-car ( rage. Apprnximataly II years o Large nicely landscaped lot KTo Work tome carpeting, gas heal and cunvenlant lo linnilac Motors. Fencad yard with ilhaded trees and outdoor tlreplaca, (lose lo Northarn High and Madison Jr. $9,450. Mint Only $.100. down plus closing costs on new FHA morl-gaga. CA\l TODAY. trading (8 EA4Y Clinton River iANAL TO CASS LAKE) el rear ' ol this cozy ^bedroom In nicely wooded area lull louih ol Cits-■ Miabelh Road. Bulll In 1955, extra nice kitchen with gas range' Included., Now vacant and Immediate posttlislon, Yours lor Just 14,85(1. 1 only t r NfCHOLIt' HAI 1$ w. Huron $1. THE MODERN WAY Furnished Models able. Call TODAY. GET THE JUMP ON SPRING 5UYERS ... Lovely 3-bedroom ranch with family room or can be the 3rd bedroom. Large carpeted living room. Formica cupboards In this spacious kitchen, large dining area. II toot vanity and mirror In bath. Summer kitchen In divided besement. Large 2-car garage. Lot 100 x 225 priced at 117,900. 10 per cent down, plui living room, dining room, fernll kitchen, utility room, everything for a large family, 2-car garage. Workshop for part time business. Bonus — 3-room aperlment tor Inlaws or.Income. Priced at 113,500. — — -------- Closing costs paid or n brinr ------------ RAY O'NEIL, Realtor 3520 PONTIAC LK. RD. OPEN M FE 3-7103 M.L.S. OR 3-403S DORRIS WATER SPORTS LOVERS, prelentl-out tri-level home located aerose the street from sparkling send beach on Lotus Lake. 3 bedrooms, l>/> baths, sparkling tamlly room with fireplace, 3-ciir garage end expertly landscaped lot. FIELDSTONE CAPE COD, Story and half designed for large femlly comtorl, sparkling lamlly kitchan, 14x14' living room with real stone flreplece, screened front porch, covered back porch, 10x48' garage end blacktop drive. $15,900. MAKE AN OFFER, on this ettreOi live 3-bedroom bungalow on Bew erly street, new carpeting, sharp kitchen with paneled walnscote end bulll-ln electric range, gas heal and alum, storms. honeymoon special or axcalleni —-------- . u-j---------■-••ngaJ yard. $8,908, $70 tnonih Including taxes and Insurance. DORRIS 8. SON, REALTORS 534 Dixl* Hwy. OR 4-0314 MULTIPLE LISTINO SERVICE GAYLORD DUTCH'OIRL CLEAN -Sparkling 3-bedroom end flreplece home with peneled kllchen end ell ^Ine Ikxirs.^ A beeulliul year arounif This colonial lypa '.homd 3"&31*°'^‘ DESIRE 1 RETIRE? * man raiax In this 2 badroom bungalow type home in the Orion aree. Anchor tanca surrounds tha properly with a canal leading to long Lake. Arllslan well, oil heat, stove end retrigerelor Included, li,-500 down. Call FB 8-9693 or MY LAWRENCE W. GAYLORD W. Flint 81. Lake Orion PB 8-9693 or MY 3-0831 KENT CLARKSTON - Rambling old fash-‘"‘“T on Idtoe corner parcel, m„ m bethi, full btinl,, wso barn 18x38. $34,5og, i LAKE ORION. Lerge^ome er!& store Im I bulWInq •dloinlnq l« m«inr bu»ln«iit on l«rp« Wt. laOtOOOy lormi. ■lous. *"PtirI?lh to i^9."'^t/*m'X)lit#'*oppo'v^^ "iih V, TRADING IS OUR BLKIktSS ■erg I C bedrm: rgAeb >ome;, ttltd bein. lull b«mi„ wll« rsSit •?«,, pane end gatagF, $17,100, *'• f^loytl Kenf,,lpc.,’keoltpf'l l300 Dixie HWy 'WTelegreiK ' ' FE 3-0133 or MA 5 1/44 I THE FOMIAC' IM(ESS. Tl hisDAV, EEBKrARV >.». 19»U •I,, r\V EX'JrU\E NEW HOMES,. Full Basement . - $00 DOWN $68 per Mo. (across from Northarn High) OPEN 10-8 DAILY SPOTLITE BLDG. CO. 51 Bwsliieti OpperftinWts_____59, CARNIVAL , RESTAURANT i.i, wvai" CtH'c S7 W k' fo Porv, LAKE-LIVING. EXCELLENT LOTS,(SHORT' ORDER Privaf# sand beach. Swim, boat-i Sid's Grill, 07 W. Huron. ^0 buy-sell-trade ftLOCK BROS., FE 4>4S0». i ^ bowling, r«tauf By Dick Turner i HHi, TV t iRrtloi 46 For Sole MiKellaneeus' 67 Pets-Hunting P^s 1 KNIGHT 50 WATT TRANSMITTER' STEEL GOLF LDCKEJfS, MX31X60, I and crystal, $20. FE 5-?W. i cat) b» locKed, smoke •dathaga only; MAGNAVOX STEREOf' UPPER LONG LAKE - large 1 eery, laundry, sporting goods, corner wooded canal lot. UN;- motel, apt. buiiging, or any other >413». 1 type of going business or eommer- --------------------------------:---- clal location, we have many In-. _____ tarxwn Brasoacts^ afid‘-BmBames KALKASKA 5-ACRE CAMP SITE, I wooded, $S95 wtth $25 down afidl $10 par month. Adams Rdalty, FE; tcrested prospects _ immediately available. OR SELL). For details I KAMPSEN REALTY ■ (Commercial Ofticel W. Huron St. Water Safteners Choice investment, I .. ™. Drive-ln restaurant. Franchise In Pontiac area. Contact Dog 'n' Suds National Headquar-« ters. Box, 506, Champaign, Illinois or phone 356-7206. . • SERVICE STATION FOR LEASE, M-AUTOMATIC WATER SOFT- | ler, like new. Must see to ap- ! •eclate. OL 1-QWI. MIXED 219 S. MARSHALL ST. NOTHING DOWN GAGE COSTS RENT FREE _______ ROOM MODERN HOME ... CELLENT NEIGHBORHOOD --■'■•"T HAVE GOOD CREDIT TO of Pontiac -...... amoum of capital required, training available. Phone 1 - NO MORT- I , ''bE^U'PFUl'^S*-I' A sloping Iqf for*\ri-level home on HOME IN EX- ; paved road with exceilew drain- QUALIFY. LADD'S, INC. ! rsDCAsa LiAlicc "■ 3835 Lapeer Rd; (Perry M24)‘ DREAM -HOUSE | fE S-»291 or or 3-1231 after 7:30 BEDROOM HOME i- GARAGE 1 Open Sunday 12 to ' excellent NEIGHBOR- i ------------------- STRAIGHT ' BAR Lake area, no. food, round business. $45,000 WILL TRADE WARDEN REALTY ideal for storage, section of 4 ‘ --1 of 6, $♦. C-" 682-2M5 POODLES, flSh. Crane's Auburn.. L)L" 79 Hou$etrail*rs _ ^ SHORTS MOBILE HOMES-'- -------- SALVATION ARMY IPHILCO'TV MAHOeSANY CABINET Excellent condition, $50. 685-2404-SPECIAL OFFER .: (LIMITED TIME ONLY-FREE with ! every TV purchased, one 20piece lit of Metmac dinnerwara. Prices ! start at m.n. I I---r. F. SO06m€H-STORE-------L- iin_N^2L*I^ _ _ FE_ 2-0121 i A ! UPlF(3iTT'7Pi^cTic'B “piano, 840, .... SALV......... RED SHIELD STORE -TTTj"w^.“TAWRENCe^yr— Everything to meet your needs, Cldthing, Furniture, Appliances. " TALBOTT LUMBER . - 2.2m suppflb^_ _ ■AKC TOY 'b“lACK P<500LE, . _ , ver background, stqd service, OR , ... ______________________TUfred and hitches Instalted. Complete tine qt parts and bottle gas. ." ' ' wanted Clean Trailers . AKC “OACHSH UN PUPPIES, F 2-088$ 0 DOlffi, AKC DACHSHUND PUPS JAHEIMS KENNELS FE 8-2538. ______________iPANfEL PUR pies, male Beautltully EXPERt MOBtLE HOME -------- — '— —timates. Aiso j»ft$ ..... ...i. Bob Hutctfffiidn, Home S.l.s...lnc 4mJ^ 1 accessories. I biit Home Sales, — HWV., Drayton Plains,, OR S-120 condition; wnirlpoel 1 I range, 4 years old, $50. 8848 s 1 vena. Union Lake. EM 3-7505. I VANITY"AN]I>“ HANp__BASrN SET i STUD.~COLUf, 2 CHOWS, '5,' _ ( terriers. 3 poodles. NA_7-^l. BlAUfTFUl SABLE COLME, “$ ^ months, blue ribbon winner. 332- j 154$ after 4 p.m.. Must sacrifice^ i BEAGLES AKC; SACRIFICE PRICE ROYAL WAT'iir«JFTWER 'for ' w“EDbrN(S"“ANNOUNCEMEkTS AT . OR 3-7324 _ __ _ sale, $80. Call FE 4-856$. | discount prices. Forbes Printing BOXERS, 830, BEAGLES; 115, WATER, SOFTENER rental, “On- 1 Slat* ‘ Mu'Tts *TM >767 or Ml 7-2444. t-'■--NO MONET^OWN ..... WATiR~l0FfEN>lFs‘'- 'FULTY i wiimt^^pFT^Op'^FF 11112 J Jfil- M fOfKFR POODLE MIXED 5 Oxford -Trailer Sales t South of Lake Orion 0 Parkhijrst Trailer Soles ., FINEST IN MOBILE LIVING 15 TO Hand Tooli-Machinery cocker they last, Call,M3-2^1. . | COMPLETE SET OF MECHANICS' : Jwidren. Foi^ale MisMljanmi_^^7 , p.m. HonSdstead Orchards, 5460 Orchard Lake Road. POUSHERi" 2 5381 ; Marathon. 335-3365. 125 Oakland. I COMPLETE POODLE GROdMING. TO HIGH'BIOOER: 1 ^ABLE SAW, i Also_other_breeds 67M604. 1 wing cut-off saw, 1 DeWalt ra- oaCHSHUND,' ’MALE, "’,5 YEARS dial, miscellaneous blades. 387 N. ' eid AKC. loves kids, nousebroken. Cass. Ognaldson Lumber Co.. FE| ,,®^,'OR3.$2W .. .. . ■ german shepherd,' female Comarai - Sarvlca 70 fe 81373 ----------------- . i QOQO donkey for riding and ; COMPLETE POLAROID. MODEL ............... " > Country Cousin. MY__2-4411j^_.j DETROITER Al« PONTIAC' '63 Model Uearance- All must go regardless of cast. 51x18 DETROITER ........ $3,7$* 54x10 PONTIAC .......... $3,$$5 '54x10 20 FT. EXPANO .... 85,4$* 10 Land Camara oi 'Ddft’florpr, Liaa, mis is ineTiinroi me wiien i m orchaV _ supposed to be forming my permanent opinion of you! ” , < ^ TRAiLiR, i'$48 je^p. new ' compartm«r>ted c . Good v« ■ t poobue *PUPsT akc, io weeks, > 1 ! mWMatu?rand toysl'^l75.%n^’02«"^* 1 RARE OPPORTUNITY Bob Hutchinson MOBILE HOMES iixle Highway OR Sale Household Goods 65 Musical Goods 71 with bench _ . ..... ........... OR 3-3053. _____ DRAPES - TRAVERSE, CUSTOM' --- Ilka new; 1 pr. 66 m » 77 in, 1T4 Tn."x 77 In.; 100,000 BTU ROUND OAK HORI-loptal oil turnace — Exc. condition MA 5-1501. ASH Salas. I champlonsi -CLOSEOUTS- undarcoatlng p.ump, owall 8 mm came pcataetof. Pe 8-0425 vr (MS ,, easy spinners, i Solo Clothina 64 speed queen wringer I RCA Whiflpool automatic cMAAAApR i llvared, Ihstallar' \ FHgldalre refrlgar ANCHOR FENCES MONEY DOWN----- . ___-small’ amounri BEEF AND PORK-HALfEHANG $20. 674-1146. ( quarters, hppdyka Mkt. FE 5-7$4l; end" OF The "MONTH ■ I Bottle TJos installation" 1 Norge''' Easy spinners, new . 100-pound cylinder.. i Mulpm^^^. .^aat Plalqs Gas IS bABY BicT-AND ChIstT'gIRL'S site * clothes. Good...condition. ... suit j ale. Size 40. Excellent condi- I Price, $20. Phone Ml 4-4760, i 624-2272.______ _________________ $218 bathroom fixtures', oil an~d $l/a flds I PRINCESS chord organ, I Dutch Clip Male started"”^:^ r^nth ojd. OA 8-2536. __ English Sa"-' BLOND LEONARb'SPINEf PIANO, i temational Ilka new, $350. 335-5405. ! ^ HAMMOND 'spinet ORGAN,'lIKE f.5 vVia new. $6»5. MR, Cavaitf, 6824 w, : Dartmora, Bt.rmlngham, Ml 6-6000. oC SERVICE, WfHITE TOY; BLACK down, $20 month, blacK Gas, taka on property. BROS. CORP., OR 3-l*$5. J WANT TO iELL YOUR lo _^:aU—A4f..-Buyer-at..r ' s, Pontiac Mall. 682-0422. ' MALES, $4.$S. > BLOCH new” adul'T’spaceV miniature, OA 8-33$7. WHITE MICE AND SUPPILES. ALL , Pet Shop, U y ... Illams. FE 4-6433. ______Lj? fHi praKi imingi. ' NEW RRESTONrE NYL^ TRUCK TIRES - ...........118.25 a Rd./ GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP OF PONTIAC" Bromar 3' vv. numn si. _ FE 4-1.555 and ® APARTMENT GAS RANGE, $15, : freezER UPRIGHTTlAST YEARS nice platform rocker $i i Realtors, 852-1 MICHAEL'S REALTY lome Is located irea. Ideal for chli-,n-up$. Only $21,800, . Large lot, borders bn Paint Craik. $1,500. Lot 65 X 250' near MUSO. $700. Lake lots and acreage, call Information today. List with ui, bus- CRAWFORD AGENCY W. WALTON FE 8-2 60$ EAST FLINT SGHRAM 'tn 11,200 "will move y< 5 kitchen - .dinette, ful gas heat witl ** -ea. Prke(| at Big T move Into. Will duplicate on yo( . $2,500 castr. TaIefront CASH^ FOJ^ welt, 4540 Dixie Hwy. large lake In Walerlord T surrounded by nice homes ft. lot $6,750, TERMS. Brewer Real Estate CASH Eves. 646-5104 " NO DOWN PAYMlFff 1 restricted sub-divl-too X )$0', t block from 10 and 1-75. MA 5-5811. ______ jrtgages. Don't lose that home. lalT mortgages available. Call 13 Cass-Ellzabath Road 61 BUCKNER 140 ACRES WITH LAKE FRONT, good bldgs. A. Sanders, OA 8-2013. P'DERN COUNTRY HOME 5 nice bedropms, 2-car garage and FINANCE COMPANY WHERE you CAN_____ BORROW UP TO $1,000 OFFICES IN ... Pontiac—Drayton Plalns—Utica Walled Laka-B—" LOANS TO $1,000 C. PANGUS, Realtor I small"“farm, 8-room house,; 34x acre, 40x100 quonset, other 1 I buildings. Clarkston near 1-75. i ....... i 202 OAKLAND LOAN CO. Bldg. kitchen, and bath peting. full basen also garage. newly Yemodeled wall-lo-isiall roams, oak privlibgei 0 trade for a 2-3 acres. Ea IVAN W. SCHRAM a Cass Lake. V _ 3-bedroom house » East of Pontiac. Sale Business Property 2 STORES EXCELL LOANS TO $1,000. To consolidate bills Into monthly payment. Quick serv with courteous axporlancad ci s¥nors_. CTedlt llfe^lnsur^ce a\^- . $5, washer $2$, bedrooms or, living rooms $2$, clean guaranteed BARGAINS IN f1*(:T(3RY SECONDS ; 4-pc. sectional foam cushion F luorescent, 3$3 Orchsr I rooms of furniture and-appliances i onlY $3.50 week ! t TERMS -;^^ BUY~SELL-TRADE j f.E. ' ELECTRIC. ’"'fbASTER, Sunbeam electric can openei 2 matching Rembrandt lamps also girl's clothing, size 12-14 after 6 p^, FE J-6757, 'KENMORE ELECTRIC DRYER rdware, elec, suoplles; crock ; I mn« and fittings. Lowe 1 Paint; , SupAf K6m1bh* ; HEIGHTS Supply 1 2685 Lapeer Rd. FE 4 5431 ! icratched,: BEAUTY SHOP" BOOTH FOR SALE. I ■Michigan; Call ^ 5-8000 or UI^W254. _ ANNUAL SALE, SAVE UP TO $1 CIRCII 'FLuoRrsrt^^^^ GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. BAB AUCTION SALES EVERY FRIDAY 7:30 P EVERY SATURDAY 7:30 P EVERY SUNDAY 2:00 P Sporting Goods-All Types Door Prizes Every Auction s Tax and Racappabla Tire Hr. Service on Recapping 6.00x16 Thru 11,00x20 ■-CALL Dick Curran ' MAGNAVOX' Consignments V >t2"l Auto Sorvico 1 Mlch- loan Fluoraicant, 323 Orchard ■’"icOMPLETE STOCK OF PlPf 4 4 EVERY MONDAY OR 3 Johnson or Oakland to N. Cass 2 STUDIO COUCHES, LIKE NEW. Strombeckar road racing set. 363- !-PIECE ROsF LTviNG"fe06M SiT, good condition $50. FE 8-8856, alter 5 chali Singer portable HoC^s OF fOrniturS -o>i/-»a «n saM. i-z Terms. J & L Dixie Hwy. 673-1431, anytime.____________________ 3 R00Mr’5F“BRANt> NEW FUR-nlturer living room, bedroom end KELVINATOR WASHER Electric dryer, like new. Matched — Solid Oek pining Room 85$.5D ............. $1$.50 portable typewriter ...... ixeccnl console ...... Singer-console auto, zig-zi -CoMolejJiDnl-organ . .. Curt's Appence vinruui; LAVATORIES 'COMPLETE' '$24,50 value, $I4.$5, alsb bathtubs, tol 1 nc: iron lor drains Plastic, copper i and galv. for water. Black tor gas { Montcalm Supply, 156 W, Mont | calm. FE 5-4712. ^ ^ ^ ‘ CASH^nP^CARRY ; 4x7"-Pre finished Birch sec . $3.$5 DRAYTON PLYWOOD Dixie Hwy; OR 3-8$l2 -----—--------- . HURON '■ t'r'ea -Lowery 5 27th, 10 • larkston RO :tion Sale. 7,05 crankshaft grinding in TF car. Cylinder^ reborad. Zuck. M -■--1 Shop, 23 Hood, .fhdiia f 2 2560, 83 1 REGISTERI Priced lor clearance. 5 PORTABLi^STIREOPHOInIC fttC 13650 ord player with stand. ISO. Call after 6 p.m. FE 5-536$. I. 2 due soon. Holly ME MiLEY'S'RIDING SCHOOL CUSTOM CABINETS VANITIES FORMICA TOPS INSTALL THEM YOURSELF PONTIAC KITCHEN specialties ORCHARD LAKE RD. 334 631 values, WIN BiEO; LIVINO ROfiM kitchen set, hill tree, fables.jnlsce^ileneous. OR 3-$644 . oijcouNfS NOW ON TYpfWftit IB L E TV ti5. ers; adding machinae, desks. . .... Appliance. EM 3-1 chairs, files, mimeographs, etc, new and used. Forbes Printing and AO wringer washer, Office Supply, 4500 Dir* " RENT A NEW GRINNELL PIANO V8 ENGINE " ' " " OVERHAUL $85.00 ' This Includes rings, rod badCIngv grind valves, fit pint, Daglaiw cylinder walls, gaskets, ell and tabor. Also factory rebuilt anginaa gi»r- lometic transmission rebuilt 824.$S plus parts. Open 7 days 8-lr (raa i K ENGINE REBUFLDEW^ 14 ; 28725 JOHN R 892-2477 bushels shell corn, TIM Motorcyclof Ihy hay,, straw. Call 2-2400. i ----■"''7''''—' BALES“dF“filTxl6 HAV WILL ' 1*57 ZUNOAPP 250CC, I •II by bale or ton. Call 338-3645, i .....* — ALFALFA, 'TIMOTHY HAY , JUMPING, DRESSAGE oups welcome ■ ANY AGE !?NE( HORSES TRAINED Box Stalls, roll . Hoy-GroiiHP^ 5. 2037 welnut, Pontiac^, uslc laitons Included ...1 WILLIAMS LAKE RD. baled first'an6 sec6no'c ling of alfalfa MOtOROLAl “■ LARGE DINING Sfef, $59.50. Duo-Therm oil healer, $l$. 220-gellon oil tank, $10. 5-plece dinette, $14.50. Smell record player, $5. Vanity with mirror, $$. Hideaway ^ _________ ______________ • bed, portable relrigerator, oak din i round tub 57 E FaIrmounI, 6 to next to Pontiac . ing table, table lamps, .gas and I 9 p,m. only. i 3-$767 or Ml 7-2444. xIfH"''’!Lin2r‘'.nT^n®.^T°o7'ome? I FREEZER, TWIN | 00 YOU "WANT "'Td'DO Zlo 7AC 6nd springs, and loads or oiner , maMress, springs UL J-5417 > sawing? Wa hava a Slngar Swing merctiandlse. | sewing maettine, - ’ - Pearson's Furniture I $2.00 per-week Grinnell's CUTTING ALFALFA, .L FtBW 1964 HON^aJ V ctrlc starter — 225 mp.g, • L NEW 1964 TRIUMPHS rld's spaed record hold^ : __ ..own peymani — easy taemc ANDERSON SALES B SERvrCE WHEAf sf'RAW $42 J05L YN COR. MAN5FI ELD STOUTS Best Buys Today > u tibia. Stop In or phona FE 5r812t>.. 'apartmenVs''*o^nly.. I HOME & AUTO LOAN CO. $4,000 DOWN PAYMENT / N. Perry St. FE 5-$l21 interested parties $to5 Dally. Set. $ to I noonWp’m!”I TEAGUE FINANCE CO. M souar*eTf(5ot BujLDiNo,!202 N. MAIN ■' I ROCHESTER . ROMEO 214 E. ST. CLAIR of retrigerafbr toot freezer so ot Pontiac City B4I squart ice, 168 s , 3- blocks aa II Terms, f E (Commercial BLDG. Very good condition sulteble tor meny uses, 76x80 ft. with 12 end 14 ft. ceilings, 2 ottlces, gas heat, OL < fronting on Cass Ave„ RR front-1 PL . Annett In?. Reoltors Whita LakB Area, sharp 3 bedroom 2 level ranch home, elumlnum exterior with atleched 2 car garage. Features 2 fireplaces, 2 baths, walk Open_ Evenings and Sunday 1-4 ....DOWNTOWN AREA Brick building. Approximately 5 square feat. Suitable for re business, retail or storage. Lots parking space. Brewer Real Estato . WHEN YOU NEED $25 to $1,090 ve will be glad to help you. STATE FINANCE CO. soe Pontiac Slate Bank Bldg. FE 4-1574 TILt, tBMBNI, M»IM FUK BATHTUB AREA 8$.$5 ASPHALT TILE (RANDOM) 4c ea, THE FLOOR SHOP 2255 ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD stock. We also specialize In ca and furniture cleaning. We trade ins. Avon Troy (tarpel Si 1650 E. Auburn Rd., Roche! past John R. 852-2444 inholes, monograms. a|i •nts of $5.25 or full price of ; . 10 year guarantee In writ ; Michigan Nicchl-Elne. FE WAY REINFORCING Wi»E DOWNTOWN STORE,. FE 3 716$ APPLES.SALESRI USED PIANOS 613-0422 - ORGANS R N.EW LOCATION I INCH OSBd'tV. 'iSS'." WALtON I TV, FE 2-2257. Open $■$., 515 E. Walton, corner of Joslyn. '"ward electric' RANGE, ----- JtMM; '■'.dRIVE-! 2 II ' II I..55.......— - i Orchard Lake Rd. Farm Equlpmant 87 (attention TO OUR FARMER , 267$ j 12 2$20. 'Refrigera- __________________ $6^ FE 8-1591. ABOUT “ anythi'ng jrdy'“^wANT FOUND A A/eTl SALES. , .>ur*nXr.'’''’.nS kinds NEW AND ; FE 4 Eves. LOANS j MODERN BUILDING. GOOD L> Horse Form D«luxf 3 bedroom custom ranch home In hills west of Rochester, with scenic 5 acre percel. Car-•paled living room, llreplece, sep----‘a dining area, cuifom , It. with 2,000 sq, II eulra slof shed. 682-2145, ) PROF'ESS'ION'a'l....BUILDING, , r, szs lu ii.uuu community loan CO D E. LAWRENCE FE 8 041 MONEY TO LOAN L OA NS real bargains. We buy, and look 8ren"’Li_________ 24 MONTHS 4 miles E, of Pontiac or I mue E. ot Auburn Height! on Aubur M5$, UL 2-3300. A CABINET MODEL SINGER SE ing^rnacnme, ujsiKt. Dial ''0 z«9t slilches including buttonholing BEDROOM OUTFITTING CO. 4470 DIXIE i:WY. DRAYTON PLAINS-673-9441 .irIplacE PUfiL r'lREQUETS, 15 LB. BAG • 4.5( PACKAGE COAL, 6 PKC. - 81.1 PINE COMBINATION DOORS COMPLETE WITH SCREEN AND STORM 1 30"x80" OR 36"X80" - 113.95 AND TAKE ADVANT I WOOD STORM SASH NEW, $3.9 AGB OF OUR SPECIAL LOW BLAYLOCK COAL I. SUPPLY C( LOW PRICES BEDROOM’SfcTS , || Orchard Lake Ave. FE'3 7I0I LIVING ROOM SETS--DINETTE SETS - BUNK BEDS SPRINGS > 0*? A”?,'. AND MATTRESStS-LAMPS AND' TABLES - HEADBOARDS, BED . _ . 1. J ........... ilallatlon GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. , OPEN EVERY MDN. and FRI NIOHT , E hIjRON ' .FF 4-051 WEEKEND SPECIAL all'WAVS A BerTER'DiAL"" BOATS-MOTORS MERCURY* SCOTT McCULLPUOH Trailers Marina Accasidl'll* CRUISE-OUT B---------- 1 4482 Chris Craft ■ VISIT i 8. Thomoion'i. . hone‘'F^ M24l’. with n I960! $25 to $1000 isured Payment Plan attached 2 ^ fjp, 23,750 E. W. Kurfh, , Realtor. sATV6rLi5rsE,-APPRdx^^^^ ly 22,000 sq. It. brick, loading dqck, Ft hoist, gas heat, parking, fenced, 10,000 iq. ft. c.............. tachad. Phone M2 Priced Drpyton Cozy 5 room c galow with Blai Moors, baiemani alaca baths, oil fort t, wlfh^tarr Warren Stout, Realtor 450 N. Opdyke Rd. Ph, FE 5-$l6 MUl.Tl’pLE UStINO SERVICE Income Propert]!' ________ I ARGF HOME Luke Property ^ $ ROOMS, SLEEPS « bills With only • "Its and month or'’lull price Of $48.60 in NecchFEIne. fI'*8 4521 APARTMENT SIZED REFRIGERA tor, OR 3-2333 eller 12. ___ apartment size ELECTRIC GE'relrigerator Auto., walher, rehulll. « \,CASH ■' :!Lo^s to $3,000 your bills , No cloilni f Accepn At'TRXCTIVE CANA'i; F RON I home at Williams l eke. 2 bed ropmi, welk-ln ba»emenl, o«;;*9J' fishing boat end motor. $12,500. with lermi. Discount tor ceih. to _ .... •, Call anytime. Big Ht Conair'uilion Co. FE 3-7833, QUICK CASH LOANS UP TO $3,000 CRUMP ELECTRIC 3665 AUBURN FE 4 357 A barcTaTn - 83'(id PER week BRAND NEW FURNITURE =iOOMS $319 •«SBn-;A«T'.zrii* batutllgl veer round hom^ i55 lake tronleee, 5 roeMiVaaS *' cell evtninei sit-sre. ^ _____ FOR SPECIAL SERVICE AND I formation on ell like property ci 6ur ofttee. real nice, was $1395, now $495. WIEGAND MUSIC CO., 469 Elizabeth Loke Road, FE 2-4924. Piano tun- ftPD WMI. i . I ^ ----------- MAT- "formica counter tops m 9"^ organ repair. TI»ESSES....... I expert inslelletlon ' WB w6u'l6' LIKE tO BUY OR PLUSH WOOL CARtniT, PURPLE,' Fret eslli^let Fast SSrvIca | TRADE YOUR USED PIANO will sell by yard, good buy, 2820| sheet Formica, meleli, cementi lor i FOR A GOOD DEAL (lALL Mr. Pine Lake Rd. Do It-Yoursell Cuilomeri ,.R i Sleltens, FE 3-71M, .Grin- refrigerator, 125,7'EI.FCTRIC 1 kitchen INTERIORS Inelli Downtown, stove, 835) 21" TV, 825; walher, 3127 W, HURON FE 8 8813 [ ODINNFU'C HOWNTOWN 125, retrlgeralor with lop Ireezer, bxtra' HEAT FOR rHAr OflLb ! UKIINNtU b UUWNIUWN $4$: gas Hove, $25. V, Harris,, room gas llred baseboard Ills ONLY FE .5-2766, under windows, $120. Thompsons, USED REFRIGERATOR, $30, 26" WON 7005 M 5$,wait. ................. , GRAND VOSS V545 der horse, $10, Baby strollet, li fURNHURE, MISCELLANEdUS, GRAND STARR $J$5 FE 4-6402. ladles glolhing 1AII, mink lackel. I GRAND HARRINTON $495 REESTABLISH your C R E 0 I t i stole, Persian lamb coal MA 4 3 781 GRAND KIMBAI I $ $9 IJeeV lor *ou?®7ome?’’Furnll'''’e''^ El ECTRlC' CASH i “pom" $4$’oo Mdi'''Otm "cVroellng a’nd appMent'es. t\o" down* (^Se'ni'acAnV iff'%" 3 Wsi'’’"’*"'' ' *'* condition, only $99 00 *"nirVm, 'Fo&.^'’*3fl5 dusty CONCRET^ FLOORS OrirmpH's le Hwy , cor. ol Telegrami / Use Liquid Floor Merdener \w4lHUJdl O Simple Inexpensive Downtown Store 27 $ Seglnew Ice Builders Supply FE 5-8184,. - “ IR SALE ROOFERS TAR" KfT 'Pey oil account In 9 months! lie good condlllon $200. 903 par mo. or $43 cash balmce. Dearborn 4t. Howell, Phone No. I Univeriet Compeny. FE 4 09/S j qaS FURNACE, US'i'O. LIKl'tliw, SIMMONS HIDEA-BED, /BAR,; Call FE 2-7164. electric Itosro. FE ATOM /. oAS' rNCINE'RATOR,'VERY' Gftdb SPEED QUefN WRING#K $35. '62! condlllon. 112-LO P3372. Norge Timeline, sudiiver, SiS- Ho’t WATih BXsEBOARb $PE-j clel $1.39 par It. Thompion, 7005 .. . MONTH BUYI/J ROOMS ofI MOVING SALE furniture - cyiliti of; rims $3.50, Della Faucet 3 ....... " * ■■■ ■" ,49, American made kitchen 16 49 21 s ^32"__slnk $10 00, t.oTece’ bedr^ ............... ................ .... ......."cornplere "$62(40. Stainless 0 QUONsEtV EASY'TO MOVE, )0q. 625-2943. ORf BOATS 'and used TRACfORS; is F iln saws. Evans Equlpmant. 625- r. C»vail ar custom sk J, 115 h.p. lj5"'FIRSt A“Nb“SAV#'. "j'Sh'S [ T. Chrl* Craft custom 1, T$i hvO. ERE HARTLAND AREA ! 17 F WE Phona HARTLAND 2511 h T Chrl* Craft super sport, 210 USED TRACTORS „ y Ti C/irli CreM super sport;- 211 Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke WARDS RIDING TRACTOR, All allachmenli, 7'z hp, FE $ 0425 o 682-2015 ' WANTEO: FORD TR'ACfO'* MAZUREK MARINE SALES Cliff Dreyer's Gun and Sportis Renter Tfl^Hieib. SINGER SLANT NBBDLE OELUXC/ —machine, ZIg Zegger ' Ilk. new J«^6_ FLORIDA BOUND? RENT A Trumpet, Cornet, Trombone, Flute, Clarinet, Violin or Snare Drum Kit op camper^ORTH ^^TO and TRAILER SALE$ LONE STAR BOATS Arriving Dally tor four Inspactlonll ' USED OUTBOARDS Many Models end Make# ' In ilp-top Condition. AIRSTREA*! LlftFTWfEIOHt TRAVEL TRAILERS Since 1932. Our-------- ‘" See them and i double; ; t with I ' chopping bl EZ TERMS, UTTI • Open -----dwin $18, NEW apt; t.70 '*! BEDROOM BARGAINS ?rafl7r' iiviii'g Room Borgdins I'ap'roblM, marching coatee liliie* ■mica ^lo^ labia^^^i^^bookc ’* '""wTman"' FURNITURE CO. $5.00 A MONTH All monies apply if you buy NLIMITED RENTAL PRIVII EOES Grinnell's d PiH a damonstra ... ______ir Trailer Salas, JW$ I. Huron (plan Io loin one ot (ally Byam'a exciting caravans), CFNTURY TRAVELMASTIR MUSTANG • SAGE top and Inspact our lalt-fonlained MO Holly Rd , Holly ME 6-47' —Optn Dally and Sunday*— , EVINRU0T'MOf0ir~ Boats and Accataonas wood, Aluminum, FlbragUr DAWSON'S SALES . (VINYL LINOLEUM 41 plastic wall tile -- B8G TILE OUTLET, 1075 W "wRIN'GER WARHeR $: D & J CABINET SHOP ™>1« ' AFTep 6*^P NL 363 1343 ! DOWNTOWN STORE DELUXE SEWING MA I PONTIAC MALI uiine. Zig Zaqgei In walnul rabi , Q||l,, - ' net Takji over payments ot 16 monlh "tomp.nr!' FE i I 8TEEI DESK, CHAIR, EASY BANK RATES TOM STACHLER AUTO AND MOBILE SALES Open Tues., W«I,. Thurs. . Mon, and FrI:, 9 To 9, Clotad Sunday ; 3091 W. Huron SI. Call J33-492« DUE TO EXTENUAtlNO CIRCUM NEbt '" ORNAMENTAL IRON PORCH AND R ,.eo ,admits JR.-rrliVl*"® ' Jacobsen Trailer Sales 5690 WILLIAMS IK RO OPEN ALL WEEK I Trailer will be haate ' jElfeOAtS ■ REAL GOERS MICHIGAN T'JRBOCRAFT 2527 DIXIE HWY. OR 4-0308 “ JOHNSON sale's -'ttRVFfr:' FSo“.*J’Hitc5;;,"rd.c«» OWrN^'MAlllFlll^'lUPPLY 196 Orchard I k, Ava FE l80« OPEN ALL WEEK ’ NEW H DORSBTTS AND ThDmPSZTIW H«f# Now on Display JOHNSON MOTORS #r " OODYEAR STORE YWOOD DISTRlKutORS APTBR I OR 1-7000 Templeton PARTY STORE wa give you the ti caih. Thera Is not a appraisal, surve YOU a iite oribsiracl! • trM credit MORE BIG BARGAINS ■ triple Itundli lock, tomnloh Irunille pnd - beds, 1.5 slylM in fort* Mtnnlete with meltresi Also all size bunk ____ 'Chrome" dlnelia* 9 plate sell, 126,95 up IV'S \ , $1*95 AND Ur SWEET'S TRADiO 8. APPIIANCB 622 W. HurohcSI. J36-16/7 wl~TA'ki' ''mbi-iW.' nm. y -----Furnl6hlrt||ii, ".... NC BARGAINS FRee, ig liiilal, $l8 95i JO gallon *’slalls*'w'llh’'' Ir!^' |32,'9V FOPO^ W0Q0^DE|K, ^ p r I ("a *' "at OEn'eRAI* PRINTING AND OFFICE 8UPPI Y, equipment In very ifflprovemSnis wy. .ae and laik ii ov«r without obllgaiion. *-'7*goiM Condition | VOSS AND BUCKNERg INC. of IM.OOO plus! ---------- --------- - chHtt of drtwtri fMm IMCK ruo« I hlppp nylon ruo. mor# WEStINOHOOlf WASHElt i dryer, stack twinty ideal toi bile homa ot apartment 8600 selling for 1100. Ft A^S8. WYMAfj'S \ USED lARGAIN STOilf At OUR II W PlKR $TORB’(3 5 IK. ’dinette sal. »" aiKtrIc ranqa API. size o«s tieva lly Hall and Paddock * d'uimTTUMl. "LAllSi < iZonf^ aiJoVr'irwail D threiidad. SAVE PLUMBING CO.. ). 172 8. SaglnawT Fe 5-2100. r,' PRb'CTOR tOAtree.' bORMlYCR Polarot FOOT ALL GLi$,l8 GUNS "C. 0. BALES REALTOR 1210 COMMERCE RO. Ff lake ORlpN K. L. Templeton, Realtor 2339 Orch^ Lake Road 6820901 DAIRY QUEEN I skalront . Ironlao*" »»nd boltom, sneoao it£kVo*5.?::.*V£r mi’!' u»''N.'^OR«'ii'>* ■ MICHIGAN 1955 HYDRAMATIC FONTIAC FOR wnal hava you FE 5-1068.., 1963 CORVFTrr'-joUPF, wrackad, (redaboal Off 36 3 7905 FRIOIDAIR'F AUTOIi^AtlC WAMI ■prKE '$fORB^(3N. Y t'yAMwRItI'C "SSS.-bt ^ \\ iua ,'"i H 6 w IA COLONIAL AuFFnTUIl. L«OE i Jwran'faad a'lioirT^wisher $39,95 Michigan Flimrascani, 393 Or ........., - - - Mthllv'’'Homa'* ^rnfshlng*!. 21*5 suHi 5ay|”l(or 5o'TrgDircRCFriu«_7^*^^^ .... di oueyr’ wb” WHAT WE upboUtf^ry cl«»nlnp with plu# -rndr.:rc;r^;'‘ •’ ^r'*.Snd**Sr-.v!,*^7r;,’r. Antiquei , , M-* OFFiCf CHAIRS rptapMon lag chalri All ar FANS, CREES, FRANKLINS AND pREAMLINES ' S'VOATS FONTIAC MAI l^BOAT^WOW Pout A. Young, 4n.(L_ Holly travel Couch ONnAt MALI BOAT SM’OW ■ SPRING LAYAWAY tye tgulptweiit ll'y TO 13 FC showcaia. MU 6- Right Car nobago F Trallblati ilatar Travel ftallari. F. e. HOWLAND >55 Dlxla Hwy. OR 31456 r R At lie "lAL'el' A¥B"'R INT AL , New Used 3200 I. Rochaslar Rd. 74 OOODELL BUY - sell trade pair. Burr-Shall, Talagraph Edha Avt. Pif ^4701. Business Sales, Inc. JOHN I ANDMEJSIR, BROKFR ouarantEfD usIB 'iWeiPFRS, . WE BUV SEll TRADi I to Plob 0 low*Cost Pres'i CLASSIFIED ADI Just Diul FE 2 8181 . .».v Ut Us Help You Save vIRinI feufK tImRErs BOATS -MOTORS-TRAIIERS DOCKS Discount oricee still in afld«> Boat Show Pontiac Mall Mar. 1*7 HotTTngtamJoot Worla 'YOUR EVINRUDB, OEAL#1»" 9 5 Talagraph 53M0.$3 LFBi. Molly ME lOBi A 'rtRb, ISHFD, boo ‘ Earnas-Maulravas Hdwa. , ..... OuMertly 16 irr '42 A Huron .ntiques, 10345 blk somEoH'#' ilfKrtJii L 'XAA I HAI ............. 5u" oanlal 4 talas tor. all your reni, 'vTai’eanV «n'*pmaMl, V.t 4 ttfi), Woed-Caul-Ceke-ruEl f*m!^ro^ t)ump«r« LOWRY IM >ML_____- - Housetrullars .6X10, 1963 WOLVEI in Oti is now loia Al '$ LANDSCAPING WOOD,OF Al I ' rE^’'6ni**nr’F'i^4-O.I58'*'** " SKTiWI'D riPfPiACB w(!»6. , oiTo, •■'i'bVmWm''' HOUGH! T Ai'inrSA TONY'S MARINE U «#if M UISLOUNT I L.aka, G'aiiavw and Airow-ttaM ,n J" hna*"‘l!Iid '|»63 BVltXla )IV Open 9 Io 7 p.rt), ■J{a|l I \VKM'V-T\\ () Boots—Accessories 97' Auto Ihsuronce --•we-'Vmr beat !■ KaPs BoM8 - Motori, Wonted Cdrs-Trucks AVERILL'S too late models THE PONTIAC^l*UESS TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1964 V and Used Cars 106 MARMADUKE I 1956 ■ BUICK O DOOR HARDTOP, new lire$^ good transp. 332 <639. By Anderson & Lecming|New ond t BIRMINGHAM, W WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC PE a-9878 0020 Dixie PE 6-6896 - , Mi;>0cle Mile P ■ ■ _ -1 I Next to Pontiac ^lale B( ■ ■ 6UI0 SALES / tiroughout. Sacr:flce at $2,400. ARE 'YOU BTIYINQ^ NEW OR CQUHTEJ CAR? WE WILL but YOUR LATE--MODEL tnoKw JTESY 1104 Bora win Ave, ^5-5900 W^'need cars /Top dollar for GOOD CLEAN CARS MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES 631 OAKLAND AVE. 1963 CADILLAC COUPE Electric windows, radio and t er, f^:,actual miles. ra/ETTE-^01 wfeettea. trade boat or? 363 W60'SIAACA, “gOOD"SHAPE Elizabeth Lake Rd. after 4 1963 VW, RED SEDAN. LOW / JEROME Motor Sales PE 4 4547 $25 MORE high grade|.«srt e —. 1950 RENAULT —This car-Triln perfecL t____ condition, real good second a 280 S. SAGINAW I t FE 8-0488 _ I - 1950 CHEVY, GOO^'COjraiTJQNj-- f^CIs^^ohnson RAMBLER-PONTIAC . 5 CHEVY 6, VERY NKE7~f1! ■7542. H. Riggins, dealer. / - " iZoSoE MERCURY METEOR. ' 'ard shift/ redid, neaier, dark Blue finish. Cleap-... town. Only $1396. Easy PATTERSON CHEVROLET ......."ODWAR- ----- 6.ii735. 1955 PLYMOUTH, \oOOD RU ning condition, good tires. $11 rNew and Died Cm 1M J PONTIAC CATALINA 4-DOOR WOODWARD AVE., MERCURY 2-OOOR SEDAN - -"'1 MB heater_ and/in, Full price $397, week- LUCKY AUTO SALES "Pentlac'i Discount Lot" 193 S. SagBtow FE 1951 PONTIAC. IMJWNER. EXCEL-lent condition. OR 3-1221, Before jwer steering and Brakes. Exlra larp car throughout,' old car >wnl Haupf Pontiac, Clarkston, iA.i-S'“ i960 RAMBLER WAGON, RADIO, heater, autoipatlc, good, clean car “'NoPLES'AUTO SALES FE 2-2351 1963 <;RAND PRIX, ALUMINUM Wheels, while VTnyl fopi" Midnight Blue bottom. 6,000 ml., 1 ownir. Rambler Classic ^^^oor with standard factory 1963 TEMPEST. MIQNJGHT BLUE, sal nice throughout! McAUUFFE FORD^ 1963 TEMPEST 2-DOOR 326 V-0, Standard Shift, SI,695. 651-0349. 1963 PONTIAC CATALINA SPORTS SUPERIOR RAMBER- ... Oakland. FE 5-4101 mercUry, R Oakland Ave. \fE 8-4079 __________ ...) PONTIAC 2 - DOOR. ( cleani 482-1490. .. . . ALINA SPORTS 2-ton'e, hydi'a., douBM real sharp, $2,295. 3^3^1627.. DOOR, OOU-$1045. DON'S, 677 S. Orion. MY 2-2041. . 1963 PONTIAC LeMANS Sports Coupe, with the 326 V-$ ... . gine, "bucket seats, real sharp, with nocturne finish, with mdtchlng In-“--'-T, $24)9$. 550 OAKLAND. AVE. ^—r— 2-d6or hardtSp heater, power steering, -— Haskins Chevrolet, 5» PONTIAC, CATALINA, HAS automatic transmission, radio and heater. 0 cylinder engine, whitewall tires and full author-—" liquidation price of $697, ,TE STORAGE COMPANY, ' South Blvd. at Auburn, Russ Johnson auto., radio Chevrolet. m, Haskin* RAMBLER AMERICAN P ESTATE 1962 RAMBLER CLASSIC, j • SharPr ' IIIPAAI 4-DOOR, HARDTOP, brake 6-way seat and a ir Is like new! $1295. . M&M Motor Soles VILLAGE RAMBLER 1955 CHEVY" "4 - DOC**'' STATION Cars If I don’t show him the way home^ we’ll be out here all night!”/ —-------------:--------------- .........J gla»6r. eafetyT-sef______ ipeed control, U.S. Royal Master iremium tires, beautiful Glacier BILL SPENCE VILLAGE- Standard, and automatics^ several to- choose from, $5f5r ^ down. _—-- LVIEfS^II Chrysler-Plymoufh-Rambler-Ji I New onf Used Conr^^ 106 iS CHRYSLER 2-DOOR HARDTOP rtar [int flke ngw. This Is oni you look and look foCr. AUBURN MOTOR SALES 556 AUBURN, PONTIAC RAMBLER Ml 6-3900 RAMBLER Ml 6-3900' HOME OF THE TOTAL VALUE 0 OLDS 88, HOLIDAY, 4-Oo6R. windows, tinted glass, n 1958 CHEVROLET VB, 2-DOOR - T, le condition. 652-9461. Ellsworth LUCKY AUTO SALES "Pontiac's Discount Lot" 13 S, Saglna 1962 CHEVY IMPALA CONVERTI- ble, 327 cu. In. Standard tr- Sion. $1,795. ££.5-3033. ZCHEVY BEL AIR 6, ’ 4-DOOR, | tr steering and brakes, real ! Call Mr. Johnson, Haskins Chevrolet, MA 5-5071._____________ 185 S. Jessie St. > 196(1 p6nTIAC CATALINA COUPE, ____ hydra., extra clean. OR 3-3556,_ , ^9^^ RAMBLER AMBASSADOR 9- 1960 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE ! passenger wagon with V8 /engine 4-DOOR HARDTOP, POWER ALL automatic,, transmission^ -------- 666 $. WOODWARD. BIRMINGHAM HOME OF TJjJI^TOTAL VALUE 1959 STUDEBAKErGdOOR HARO-top, good shape, $295. Save Auto. FE 5-.'— id windows. This or r steering, , 4-DOOR HOLIDAY. $1,495. '^u^T<5hhsoh .AUTa-SAtf$------ 6577 Dixie Hw/, MA 5-1400- ALWAYS "buying A'ND'PAYiNG MORE FOR GOOD CLEAN CARS. ASK FOR BERNIE AT-' BmMWGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH INC. — " ..... ■ Ml 7J2U DEAL _ OLIVER RENAULT Are you looking tor a cai gTva-y^^ To 40 rfl’"‘ ' t Is the a -LiQYDS- BUYING 0 Down on above car low low payments - DLIVER RENAULT Good Clean Cars 2023 Dixie Hwy. We pay more because > we sell more ___ FJE 2-9131____________ ■$ FOR CUEAN CARS OR - _ _FE 4-1502 vw BUS OR ca'mperVvery condition. Like new. Full SURPLUS MOTORS 171S. Saginaw _ FE 8-40: 1961 VW STATION WAGON, WIT 1958 CHEVY, 6, 2-DOOR, RADIO,!- 1960 DODGE 9-PASSENGER PIO-ser-.StaUort-WaMin, V8 automali-ower steering. Extra sharp. LUCKY AUTO SALES window defroster, lew, must see ... 682-2T50 after 5 RAMBLER-PONTIAC Lake Orion MY 3-6266 ......... ................. 1962 CHEVROLET _______________________________ to sell. I Bel Air 4-door, V-8, automatic frans- 1955 FbR.O,_$125 PEOPLES AUTO SALES - - - - 6JLXlAiaAN©------- F^ 2-23511 VAN CAMP CHEVY 1958 CHEVROLET 2'-D06RTwffH"'4l MIMord _ ___________MU A-1025 I TRADE FOR nd heater, tun price $397, week-r payments 83.16 and no money king Aufo Sales .. CHEVROLET IMPALA 4-DOOR hardtop,^ Vj8 engine, - ‘- 1962 FALCON DELUXE wagon econollne, 23,000 ml. tr, 81,600 cash. 940$ E. Con Rd. EM 3-4030. cared lor. Sam Warwick 682-6393. 962 0"LDS F-85 "CUTLASS"C0U"RE," has consul controlled hydramallc '-ansmisslon, ------ 196i' PONTIAC 2-DOGR. price. No money down. _LU£KYL^UI0-$AUS- /'Pontiac's Discount Lot" 193 S. Saginaw____________FE 4-2214 1961 TEMPEST STATION WAGON. All extras including chrome luggage/ rack. A-1 condition. Original owner; OR 3-4300. ,________ 1961 PONTIAC STATION WAGOM. RAMBIERS-RAMBLERS Under the ' Flashing SATELLITF _ r 1964 Ramblers before March 1. SPECIAL BONUS PROGRAM YOU CAN SAVE AUCTION -SPECIALS^ MUSl-BE -SOLD- AT NEAR Wholesale Prices 3275 W FE 8-4088 1958 CHEVY, STICK. MOfOR OVER-hauled. Clean. NA 7-2294, before 3. 1W8 CHEVY 2-bOOR" HARDTOP -Sharp, $450: OR 3-5073. 1959 CHEVY 6 2 -'DOOR, "VERY nice. FE 3-7542. H. Riggins, deal- condlllon 1___ .. ______ - best offer, call Mr. Larso/ 3, FE 8-6041, or FE 5-2709. 1963 CFtEVROLET BISCAYNi'"k-door sedan, low mileage, 1 only. $1,78i BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymoulh ' Wooiawarg ' W ' brakes and steering i access. $1,500. OR 3-6083. ; iwli LeMANS, BUCKET SEATS, i)tomatler-M,29t,-OR^-3.9670.------- PONTIAC TEMPEST LeMANS fconyertible. Bucket 8 -‘- —-------- ROSE RAMBLER 8145 Commerce, Union Lake EM 3-4155 c, radio, htSaTer, whitewalls,- Wlfh rodWerlor.Only Spring? terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET .j , ^ A ......WHY- WAIT? You Pay Nothing fo/ Parts and Labor 1 "Gold Crest" Guarantee! GLENN'S fB iJ-7371 Huron FE 4-1797 Junk Cari- -Trucks 101A 1 TO 10 JUNI wanted. OR K CARS AN 3-2938. D TRUCKS 1 OR^ jUni frsy tow an K^G^RS^AN D TRUCKS 2m66. JUMN MCAUUhht FORD 630 Oakland Ave. FE 5 4101 HOW WOODWARD A IDS SUPER 88 COUPE, latlc transmission, radloi ', whItevYalls; povyer steering Marvel Motors 251 Oakland Ave. ALWAYS BUYING ' I I JUNK CARS - FREE - -T=GP-«-eAtt - FE- 5-8142 gAM ALLEN 8, SON INC Ui^ Auto-Trucli Parts' 102 NEW OWNER heavy'trucks CARS PONTIAC "spring FE 5 5092 New and Used Trucks DO YOU KNOW THE AGE OF OUR USED VW's? WE TELL . YOU! 1959 CHEVROLfeT STATION WAGON, RADIO, HEATER. AUTO. TRANSMISSION, WHITEWALL TIRES. Absolutely no money DOWN. Peymenis of $6.95 — week. See Mr. Parks at Hei Turner Ford, Ml 4l75<»: i96rcbRv"i"ff"i', fA"l?E bvER-pAY- -^nfs. 673-5769. ___ CHEVV ' STATION WATON, Cordovan finish. Only $1795. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1000 S. WOODWARD f -_B^MI NGHAM//_^^4-2TO_ Delivered mi?riUt0F$ALES "Pontiac's Discount Lot" 193 S. Saginaw FE 4-2 ■'ford galaxIe, good "CON- trade. $150 down, $56.52 per m Patterson 162 TEMPEST CUSTOM WAGON, automatic. $1,495, FE 4-4018. m2 TEMPEST LeMANS radio, heater, and automatic trai»s-mission, whitewalls, buckel/deats, PON' ET, 1963 10 FbRD FAIRLANI”« with 6 cyl. engine, i adlo, heater whitewalls NEW 1964 PLYMOUTH-VALIANT $1754 Patterson . Johnson, Haskins Chevrolet. mi CHEVROLET SPORT HARDTOP, V-8, AUTO TRANSMISSION, RADIO, HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, .payments of 811.7' Healer-delrosler, shield wipers, dua rectlonal signals, fi Chrysler-Plymoulh king Auto Sales WE* BELIEVE We Have the Sharpest Late Models— —Come out to our largo lot— Hilltop Auto Sales ,2 Oakland Ave, ____FE 4/W ' THEN ONLY EIGHT MILES TO ROCHESTEJT— FOR A BETTER DEAL Fully Reconditioned -SPECIAL- cy*l^er Engine, front Seeing Is believing horsepower 6-> Turner Ford. Ml 4-7500. 61 "CHEvV “convertible, 4-speed, $1,675^ 332-747^ . 31 CHEVROLET BEL AIR 2-ObOR sedan. V8 - OAKLAND ar, whitewalls, extra clean throughout! $495. JEROME FERGUSON, Rochester FORD Dealer ''' I960 THUNOERBiRD, EXCELLENT condition, .must sell. Private — er. Call 673 8696 alter 5: '8 engine, Powerglld, ___ ___ler, whitewalls: Light finish. Only $1,395. Easy I PATTERSON CHEVROLET 1955 CH"RYSLER NEW YORKER 4-door. Newly rebuilt transmission, new muffler, good tires, power steering and brakes. $200. 682-1894. 1960 FORD SEDAN/'^DIO, HEATER, A U T O.^TRANSMISSION, POWER STORING, POWER BRAKES, ^HITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, of $5.88 per week. S )ld Turner For of $7.95 , at Harojd Ji^er Ford. _ FORD" GALAXIE, 4-bbbR SE-stearlng, cru^se-o-malic 9405 E. Commerce 1962 ford" FArRLAT/TET'MO” Wi V8 engir $1595. JEROME FERGUSON Rochester FORD Dealer, 0... 1962 FORD FAIRLA^E 500 engini mission, tutone chestnut, ------- - $1,495. JEROME FERGUSON, Rochester FOJPO Dealer, OL ' 1963 FALCON SPRIlit ~2 -___________ ...........eriglne, 4-speed trans- iroughouir extra . .7,195. JEROME FERGU-Rochesler FORD Dealer, OL GALAXIE WT-DOOR .. .th radio, heater, V * — Butomatic transmission. Only $2,295, JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 630 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 _ 19(i3'i “ FaTrlANE.SOUTRE “STA- I. Showroom r _ • _ 1950 HUbsON? GOOD RIJliNING condlllon. Call 335-03l5,_ I9,iy MERCURY 4’DObR. MEtHAN- ----- - led. $595 . 2332 Fordhani, rbor. 682-1436 alter 6 p.m. MERCURY, 2-"bbbR7 EXCEL-t condition, gopd rubber, auto. 62^9590. REALLY PRICED LOW! Plymouth hardtop' .. PLENTY OTHERS FROM $35 TO $2295 ECONOMY USED CARS OLIVER BUICK ^0 Matf«r Whot lli« t 'f|»ed, a Press Want Ad Always Avoilablo lo ^elp You Fulfill It - i3 BUICK Skylaf .1 PONTIAC Cal Every used car offered for|i96iFONiiAc cai retail to the public is ai„4j ,,gicK Lesab bonofide 1-owner, low mile-i age, sharp car. 1 year parts, and labor worronty. BUICK leS BUICK Special, » 1968 CORVAIR We Hoyd Just About Every 1964. MODEL OLDSMOBILE 1963 CHEVY Converllbl 1962 BUICK Wagon 1962 BUICK Conveillhli 1962 BUICK Hardtop 1962 BUICK Invicia 1962 BUICK 2-door . 1962 PONT lAC 2 oor I962 BUICK Elecira $2495 I960 RAMBLER 4 $23951 $2;rtl II Eleclr 5|l960 PONTIAC Calallna 4 si 1962 leSabre 4door, autc $2295,1962 SPECIAL 2-door, tul rblop rc'iZl- '88"s "F-85 "s ;■ IMMEDIATE DELIVERY WU Are Never 1968 COUPE I960 ELECIRA 1960 ElECIRA «ooo I960 ELECIRA 2do0t ! I960 BUICK 2 door Haidiop $lS$ 1963 CHEVY Impala 2-(foor $1695 $2395|I96I CHEVY Bel Air, 4door $I495[ 1962 SKYLARK herdlop, auK $1495!/ » r $129511960 BUICK LeSabre 2 door $10951II - II ENGLISH F 1957 e.UICK, Sharp Under'sold ,, Houghten & S911 521 M^ln 'll.'’ OLIVER FISCHER BUIGK DL I 9761 I Blrmihgllafi , I ’•7i" LET'S GET ACQUAINTED BE HAPPY WITH VILLAGE RAMBLER FABULOUS BELOW COST DEAISI BRAND NEW 1963 TOP OF THE LINE RAMBLER Ambassador V-8 Power steering, power brakes, radio, healer. Individual reclining chrome wheel caps. LIGHT PACKAGE (back-up llghls. courtasy, trunk, glova cpmparlmeni, Ironi and tear . VISIBILITY GROUP (variable speed "wipers, ^shers. 1961 PONTIAC Bonneville Vista Patterson Chyrsler-Plymouth 1001 N. «,-.M ROCHESTER 959 PONTIAC CATALINA, , hardtop, rpdio, healer, ab power steering and brake VILLAGE RAMBLER lerlng', whitewall $1,795 PONTIAC retail STORE 65 Mt. Clemens St. FE 3-7954 Ml 6-3900 666 S. W00DW/«)R0, BIRMINGHAM -'AE OS THE —.............. 5 TOTAL VALUE Transportation Specials 1959 Rambler 4-Door Patterson m2 PLYMOUTH "FURY V-8," 1955 Ford Hardtop handing car equipped 1957" Ford Wagon 1958 Plymouth 2-Door $1,788 Includes a one-year v guarantee. BIRMINGHAM ■Plymouth 1959 Ford Wagon 912 8. Woodward UP TO $5 A MILE •UR SAVINGS BY DRIVING TO "THE BIG LOT" STARK* HICKEY FORD 14 Mile Rd. E. of Woodward 588-6010 . Mechanic and Bodyman BOB BORST WAGON SALE 1959 Ford Fairlone ) V8 engine, 4-door, cruliamatic msminlon, needa tranimlsslOhj 1961 Chevy Biscayne 1960 CHEVY Kingswood 9 passenger, V-8 enpine, eiilomnllc Transmission, power steering end brakes, radio, healer, laclory air conditioning, lull price $1395 1959 Chevy Wagon loor, 6'Cyl. standard shill, ne idy and molor^^^alr. BEATTIE 1961 COMET 4-Door Wagon, automatic transmission, ra---------------------owner, only .„. FbRD dealer Since 1938" ON DIXIE HWY, IN WATERFORD AT THB STOPLIGHT 18 CHEVY V 13 BUICK Special ... 12 STARCHIEF 4-dopr 1963 ELECTRA "225" 1958 BONNEVILLE 2-door .... $ 995 1961 BONNEVILLE 4-door ... $1895 1961 LINCOLN 4-door .... $2395 1962 CATALINA convertible ... $2895 CHEVY red convertibt 1962 T-BIRD-hardtop.. ....... CHEVretscayna 4-door 1963V, Comet fast back MERCURY station wagon BUICK hardtop 1961 PONTIAC Starchier OLDS 4-door hardtop 1962 PONTIAC 2-door hardtop. , FORD Galaxia coupa i 1962 MERCURY 2-dopr hardtop 1961 COMET 2-door stick 1961 CHEVY Impala coupa MERCURY 2-door hardtop FORD Starllnar 1968 PONTIAC Bonnavllla No Vtalflng Immediate Delivery SHELTON LLOYD PONTIAC-BUICK 223 N. Main OL 1-8133 ROCHESTER, MICH. LINCOLN-MERCURY 232 S. Saginaw St, SUBURBAN OLDS "Birmingham Trades" 100% WRITTEN GUARANTEE Every Car Listed Carries This Guarantee. Take the Guesswork Out of Buying. Get One of Oor Certified Used Cars! '62 CUTLASS Convertibles Hardlops, and F-95s 4-door, all 1961 PONTIAC Starcheif 4 Door hardtop, all power, Only 1962 OLDS 98 Holidoy iedan, 4 way power, Only $2845. 1962 BUICK Electro ^U63^STARFIRE-Coupe 1960 OLDS 98 Coupe All Power, One Owner I 1961 CADILLAC Convert. Like New All the Wayl 1962 OLDS Convertible "BB" t to choose trom, all power Only $2895. 1963 OLDS 88 COUPES Ml power, like new, Irom $2395. 1962 OLDS "98" 4-Door conditioning. 1963 OLDS 98 1963 STARFIRE with all the goodlasi Impeci condlllon. Burgundy finish. See BOB YATES or BOB MARTIN ‘ 565 S. Woodward Ave. BIRMINGHAM MI 4-4485 ,1... one . 1959 FORD Country 'onC- automallc, r, $895 i. Only $1595 1960 PONTIAC Catalino 4-pass*ng mission. $1,998.90 CLASSICS ....$1,597.27 AMERICAN ....$1,499.86= ■ month factory warranty. 666 S. WbODWARD BIRMtNOHAM VILLAGE RAMBLER / Ml 6 3900 WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM lE OP’-tHE TOTAL VALUE __________■ steering and bi rp, one owner. Only - $1395 1960 OLDS 88 f pAi»«ng»f, wifh Automutlc frini* $1595 1962 FORD Falcon transmission, radio, I '"ii?9r One Year Warranty ' BOB BORST - ABSOLUTELY-NO MONEY DOWN SPOT DELIVERY-JUST MAKE PAYMENTS Cor 1^57 FORD WAGON , Price A Week Car Price A Week ,$297 $2.35 1957 CHEVY $297 $2.35 ,$397 $3.14 1958 NASH $397 $3.14 $497 $3.92 1960 FORD .....$497 $3.92 $597 $4.72 ' 1959 RAMBLER ... $597 $4.72 IN PERSON OR BY PHONE LIQUIDATION LOT 60 S. TELEGRAPH FE 8-9661 ACROSS FROM TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER THE F^ONTIAO TI ESDAY,. FEBRUARY 25, —Television Programs— Programs furnishecl by stations listod tn this column am subject to change without notice. ehdnwl 2-WJBK-TV Choniml 4~WWJ-TV Ciicinii«l 7-.WXYZ-TV Chonnd 9-CKlW-TV ChannsI 56-WTUS TONIGHT 6:00 (2) (4) News, Weather, - Sports . (7) Movie: “Cat Girl." (In i^ogress) (9) Capt. Jolly and Pop-eye (56) American Economy 6:25 (7) Weather,^News, Sports _ilJ(M2M4)-^feHonat-Ne^— (9) Tombstone Territory 7:00 (2) Hennesey (4) (Color) -(7) Rifleman (9) Bat (56) French Through TV 7:30 (2) Twilight Zone -----iAl^KEFTNovak (7) (Combat (9) Movie: “Wallflower. loyc^ Reynolds, Edward Arnold (56) International Maga- Z3IS44nC9oFF^^onTSay (7) McHale’s Navy 9:00 (2) Petticoat Junction (4) Richarl Boone (7) (Color) Greatest Show (9) It Is Written 9:30 (2) Jack Benny ______ (9) Front Page (Jiallengfe 10:00 (2) Garry Moore (4) (Color) Telephone Hour (7) Fugitive (9) News Magazine ■ 10:30 (9) Quest 11:00 (2) (.4) (7) (9) News, Weather, Sports 11:25 (9) LucIq' Score ____ 11:30 (2) Steve Allen (4) (Color) Johnny Carson (7) Movie: “The Gene Krupa Story.” (1960) Sal Mineo, Susan Kohner (9) Movie: “Gladiator of Rome.” (1961) Wandisa Guida 1:00 (2) Peter Gunn (4) Best of Groucho 1:15 (7) After Hours WEDNESDAY MORNING 6:15 (2) Meditations 6:20 (2) On the Farm Front 6:25 (2) News 6:30 (2) Sunrise Semester (4) Classroom (7) Funews 7:00 (2) News (4) Today (7) Johnny Ginger 7:10 (2) Fun Parade ♦ 7:45 (2) King and Odie 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Big Show 8:30 (7) Movie: “Chad Han- TV Features New Leaders of West COMBAT, 7:30 p. m. (7) German captain, once a professional hunter, stalks Saunders (Vic Morrow) like an Animal;;----—— - RED SKELTON,'8:00 p. m. (2)^ Nervous Don Knotts ■guests as “Steady Fingers” Ferguson, the world’s mo?t precise diamond cutter. McHALE’S NAVY, 8:30 p. m. (7) Pretty French girl (Susan Silo) stows away on 1^3, and the crew is charged I with kidnaping. NEWS MAGAZINE, 10:00 p. m. (9) Report on new leaders of the WestenLworldv-with Canada’s Lester Pearson asj BILL KENNEDY SHOWTIME, 1:00 p. m. (9) Danielle 4 ^ Darrieux, Jean Marais, Kislii Keiko star in “l^hoon Over ' Nagasaki,” story of French engineer who falls in love with Japanese girl, only to have ex-sweetheart enter picture. I Japai na.” (1940) Henry Fonda, Dorothy Lamour, Linda Darnell 8:45 (56) English V 8:50 (9) Warm-Up 8:55 (9) laofgffirs ^^Merry-(iO-Round 9:00 (2) Movie:JlAtt-Women jjave Secrets.^’ (1939) Jeanne Cagney (4) Living (9) Kiddy Korner Kar-toons 9:10 (56) All Aboard for Reading 9:30 (9) Jack La Lanne 9:35 (56) Numerically So 10:00 (4) Say When (9) National School (56) Spanish Lesson 10:15 (7) News (56) Elementary Math 10:25 (4) News 10:30 (2) I Love Lucy (4), (Color) Word Word (7) Girl Talk (9) Chez Helene 10:41 (56) French Lesson 10:45 (9) Nursery School Time 10:55 (56) Spanish Lesson. (2) Real McCoys ~(A) (Concentration (7) Price Is Right (9) Romper Room 11:10 (56) Let’s Read 11:25 (56) For Doctors Only for 1 r- 3 r" 5 6 7 r“ r] io r 12 13 14 15 16 19 20 21 22 23 24 ■ rM 29 30' 31 32 33 r ■jptr 35 36 36 ■ 4, 42 4^ 45 46 47 r 50 8T si 54 56 5^ bb 59 66 it 25 ACROSS 1 --—d potatoes 5 Done with bread or pie 9 Provided with food 12 Verbal 13 Italian stream 14 Fruit drink 15 Labored 17 F’ood container 18 Penetrate 19 One is used to C(X)k. foodstuff 21 knocks 23 Name (Fr.) 24 Vehicle 27 Wooed 29 Tie 32 Number 34 Lecturer 36 Forbear 37 Cylindrical 38 Small shields 39 Blow with open hand 41 Stitch 42 Ship’s record 44 Malt brews 46 Reconnaissance detachments 49 Garret 53 Mohammed’s lon-ln-law 54 Repay in kind 56 Masculine nlcknanne 57 Always 58 Lustful gaze 59 One of the “Little Women” 60 Lateral part 61 Otherwise DOWN 1 Opiate (slang) 2 Metal ■■■ d> \ 3 Bias 4 Senior ^ 5 Dairy — 6 Awaken 7 Boy’s name 8 Dyestuff 9 Descendants of Fatima 10 fiedact 11 Gainsay 16 Expunges 20 Having lobes 22 Boats of a sort 24 Surrender 25 Fish sauce 20 Terminating 28 Perlaining to dower 30 Memorandum 31 Sketched 33 Disguise 35 Rescind 40 Elndured 43 PiercM 45 Steps over a fence 46 Date — 47 Nautical term 48 Son of Jacob (Bib.) 50 Oriental weight 51 Followers 52 Bird bill protuberance 35 Exist 11:30 (2) Pete and Gladys (4) (Color) Missing Links (7) Object Is 11:55 (56) Arithmetic for Teachers WEDNESDAY AFTERNO(»I 12:00 (2) Love of Life (4) (Color) Your First Impression (7) Seven Keys (9) Take 30 12:25 f2) News 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) (Color) Truth or Consequences (7 Father Knows Best (9) People in Conflict 12:35 (56) Spanish Lesson 12:45 (2) Guiding Light 12:50 (56) Reading lesson 1:00 (2) Star Performance (4) Conversation Piece ' (7) Ernie Ford (9) Movie: “Typhoon Over Nagasaki.” (1959) 43anieUe Danrloux, Jean . Marais, Kishi Keiko 1:10 (56) French Lesson 1:80 j[2) As the World Tiirns (4) Make Room for Daddy (7) Hollywood Theater 2:00 (2) Password (4) Let’s Make a Deal (56) World In Focus 2:25 (4) News ^ (56) Adventures in Science 2:30 (2) Hennesey (4) Doctors (7) Day in Court 2:35 (56) Numerically So-2:55 (7) News 8:00 (2) To Tell the Truth (4) Loretta Young (7) Genial Hospital (56) Spanish Lesson 3:15 (9) News 3:25 (2)' News 3:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) (Color) You Don’t Say (7) Queen for a Day (9) Friendly Giant (56) Memo to Teachers 3:45 (9) Mistcrogers 4:00 (2) SeCTet Storm (4) Match Game (7) Trailmaster (9) Razzle Dazzle (56) Teachcrama 4:25 (4) News 4:30 (2) Bowery Boys (4) Mickey Mouse Club (9) Hercuhs OnerOver Tleo^tra Tom Jone§ Tops Oscar Nominations best actress category—anybody can win. ’They are: Rachel (Mrs, Rex Htarrison) Roberts irt “The Sporting Life;” Patricia Neal for *T»«lf^-Lesli€-^aronJf^ ‘•■Ibe L-Shaped Room;” Shirley son of the actor whom Stanislavsky called the breatest, made his major acting debut as the crusty old jcaWiinal archbishop of BDston\in “The Cilirdi-nal." Walter Huston. John’s ’alRS^"coiiTdnThave playe ' the' Borneo jungles. UBITI o66$ ; Included were 33 miles of The other best movies nomi- highway in Oakland County, nated _ were . “Cleopatra,!! * “America. America,” “How the West Was Won” and “Lilies of the Field.” Many in town believe “Tom Jones” is the best movie made since Orson Weile-s “Citizen Kane.” If will be tough to beat. sme 200 anti- , stand a chance in the support: Malaysiui guerrillas on the j jng actfess category. In-modem Matayslau side of the border, j memory, no picture lias ever Malaysik said the a i r,d r o p! bad three actresses in the same Mackie said Mlchigau now has 7,615 miles, or nearly 88 per cent of its highways "frost free” so that they don’t require reduced truck loads restrictions during spring months. "rhe routes are shown in a new all-season highway map available now nt all rhighway departmem,,nffiggs and areigh” Negro star H sleeper of the year. No Ne^ actor ever has won the top acting Oscar. BEST ACTRESS As to the nominees for the French 'In' in Hollywood as Movie Stars Talk It Up A Canberra jet bomber also: was on standby duty in Malaysian Borneo, WARNS INDONESIA , Indonesia, wl^ich has vowed to; crush thnMaihysian-federation^i said it would go ahead with the ! airdrop but didn’t ijay when. Chief minister Dmald Stephens of Sabah State warned that any Indonesian plane that tried it would be shot down. The Malaysian mission to the United NatiMs handed Secretary-General U Thant new charges of border vlola-tioas by Indonesia, but It did not ask for U.N. action at this time. Indonesia Top Record in Congress stations. ★ * ★ f The 1964 Truck Operators’ Map, showing all Class A and B truck routes also is available. OAKLAND ADDITION Added to the all-seasons net-^ work in Oakland County were sbven miles of M15 north from iCIarkston (and continuing in i Genesse Coubty to Davison), I-! 75 Business Loop for half a ! mile from Square Lake Road to-i-75; 1-696, eight miles be- WASHINGTON (AP) - Rep. Carl Albert, House Democratic leader, predicted today Congress would adjourn in midsummer "with one of the best records of any Congress in history.” "We should be able to finish all of our work and get out of here before the political campaigns get under way in expected to tween 1-96 and Northwestern Highway; and 18 miles of 1-75 from M24 south to ll((i-Mile Road. Deleted from the all-seasons network In the county were MX18 (ram Wixom to Pontiac, 18 mllee, and old M24 (Op-dyke Rond) on the east side o( Pontiac, five miles. Altogether 85 miles of higli-ways throughout the state were September,” the Oklahoman i removed from the all-season i said in an interview. ^ network for a net increase of ' turn down a Malaysian request "As far a By EARL WILSON BEVERLY HILLS-Hollywood and Beverly Hills are on a French binge . . . movie stars are talking French In their native Ohio, Iowa and Michigan accents . . . Professor Berlitz had better hurry right out here. It started with a new "Le Bistro restaurant . . was followed by a real great one, “Le Petit Moulin,” out on Montana Avenue in Santa Monica . . . why, even a Buckeye like me gets to ordering “steak an poivre’ instead of a T-bone. It was as noticeable this trip as L.A.’i warm weather. _____ Johnny Carson was lying on a beach chair enforcement of the at the Beverly Hills pool getting as brown ss | cease-fire, a nut (which he is). A guy in swim trunk.s ★ * ★ asked him: Reports from I ndo nesTa, Tv,; “You heard about the snowstorm in New York?” where Pre.sidents Sukarno and'™- on the president’s! “Yeah, but do tell us all the wonderful details!” Dio.sdado Macapagal of the J ^g.sk by the end of this week. '"-'o ''-J »«—» I was amazed at how confiding it is doing a TV special, j Philippines are discussing the' ' _ . „ Danny Kaye has his own little house, or apartment, in CBS TV Malaysia crisis, said the two j timliabm'. City, and practically lives there, like a lifer. ' leaders had agreed to di.sj)ense *" ■ s (he Hou.se itself is jgo miles. , for a new urgent meeting of the i «>"^’erned,” Albert said ‘nve ------------------ ; Indonesian. Malaysia.: a.ul Phil-1 *'! I I ipplne foreign ministers to seek j | Teacher Dies in Ohio j.gj^T. Ohio (AP)-Dr. OUve ; 116.9 - billion m.lfitary Procur^ Woodruff. 58. head of the dement measure, T^^ tax billj ,„«v«v«.v .......................... ..V.V. _____...... Albert noted that a timetable It’s probably this worldwide TV that’s internationalizing L A. ■ with further ministerial talks in j announced by llie Appro^ia-On the “noon plane” coming out were Yul Brynner, Tony Curtis j favor of a summit meeting with | Committee calls for wal and wife Christine Kaufman, Alan Sherman Just back from Eng- j Malaysian Prime Minister Tun-! House action ,on all immey oHls land, Skitch Henderson, Louis Nye, and Raymond Loewy. ! ku Abdul Rahman. j before ibe *?nd of the fiscal year Oh, they all aren’t eating French. To me the great restaurant ' * * ★ 11 on June 30. Tlie first pill is aue here will ever be Dave Cliasen’s. ■A ★ But Malaysia’s Deputy Prime to reach the House floor late lectori this aavlmr ! consideration of ap- ★ Minister Tun Abdul Razak re-! :THE MIDNIGHT EARL IN NEW YORK . . . . I Alao Jay Lcrner and his Fair Lady, Mlchellne. arc swing | until we have a ministerial | I lawyer.s ... So are Matty Fox and former Miss America Yolanda i pjrgt vve should make i congressional wssiiw which did 5:M (4) (Color) George Pierrot: Betbeie . . , RIngo of The Bi^atles has been phoning Marlene c^a.se-fire effective.” (7) Movie: “20 Million .................................... Miles to Earth.” (1957) William Hopper. Juan Taylor (9) l>arry and Jerry i:15 (56) Friendly Giant 1:30 (56) What’s New 5:45 (0) Rocky and Friends 5:55 (2) Weather (4) Carol Duvrll Aaswer to PrevhHis I’utsle OK School Mill Tax Klaire, captain of the gals at the Peppermint Lounge, from Miami Beach . . . Tony Bennett was given a Cadlllac statioii wagon by lialin Casino Owner Dave Mschof as thanks for his record-breaking engagement . . . Norm Crosby, the comic with the hearing aid, has two Garry Moore and two Jimmy Dean TV spots coming up . . . Tom Dewey stood up and cheered Carol Channing at “Hello, Dolly!” His TODAY’S BEST LAUGH. Henry Stampler suspects his laun-I dryman is trying a little too hard to please him; even his liand-!; kerchleLs come back with liuttons sewed on. WISH ri) SAID THAT: Ben McElveen-suggests someone , start a rock ’n’ .oil group called The DDTs-^)ur answer to The i Beatles. I REMEMHEKEI) QUOTE: “The thing that really worries the j ivirs."john F. Kennedy i |)essimlsf is the Ihoughl that the optimist may be rlgl.l" * KARL’S PEARLS; Dave Barry tells of ............... Expect LBJ to Use Jackie as Art Expert ‘‘We are going to keep busy from here on In. ” Albert said, “and handle these bills as rapidly as the legislative cummitfoes can get them out” Albert noted that mo^ members of the House, well us many senators, will/bc seeking reelectlon next November, since 1948, died Monday after a brief illness. Dr. Woodruff, who also had taught at Lynchburg (Va.) College, Cornell University and Ohio State University, was born in Waterbury, Conn. TRAVERSE CITY (Al 3.5 mill tax propo.sal was ap-j gpi^ a|„ng very well: “Twice-a week they go out to dinner. i)„,,t reported today, proved Monday by Traverse ^ „„(i „ ,.nfp ijp Tueadavs and Thursdays, she gws City School District voters. The Mondays and Wednesdays” That’s earl, brother, vote was 1,845 to 1,727. > (TH. mrh »vneio»», me.i ........... "! ’ Ratdio Programs- WJW(7eO) WXYZd 270) CKiWteOO) WWJ(»50) WCAWl 130) WKHRieeo) II m w4y't"iCi**ir»l«r WHS IT Mutk lor MorMrnt tll^ WWi. J IfertiTT^ TiH-WWJ, Nowi, tmph. ffirra,-, WfAS. hayd Ctrmtv wJn, nmm TifJ—weON, Son Johnnon ’S/wJ, VheM Oomion MS-jOyw, Tom Cloy jifeij'lE'cKS' Itoolt leont, i, Nowii, HoMrIi VI. wolf, r «ik! nSy,T.' CAMPAIGNING WASHINGTON i.ll—President i “Tliey want to get finished so Johnson is expected to name | they can get home and do some ' spe-i campaigning,” he said. “They ; lul consultant on the arts at |also want to compile a record' Hollywood mipic! u,,, white Mouse, the Washing-, on which they can seek r.’elec-tion. I think the record will be i The Post said Mrs. Kennedy, widow of the late president, would be named to sue-reed August Heeksrher as part of the President's plan to appoint SO women to top government positions. Word of the Ifopcndlng ap-j polntment leaked oiit at a party following last nbihl’s opening here of the play “A Man (urj force it tlu'at.^, All Seasons," the Post said. ' DISTRICT Vote for and Elect WELLBAUM Quallfiod )>y Rtudy «( Municipal Oovamman. polkiot and procadurai. An ind«-pandsnt, fr«« from loction-olilm IMI Represent YOU! WJBKd 500) WHri-rM(y4.7) IliM CKLW, Myrttt (.•MiMI IliN vyJS. NiSHL Oodfrfy WXVZ, Pwt wSrt«r, M«»le, Nswt J WCAS, N«W«. S M«rlyn WIONBIO*y ASTSSNOON a most favorable oito. 1 think it | will be one of the best record#, : of any Congress In history.” | Albert conceded that the civil rights bill Is far from l^esktent Johnson's desk, but said he believes it will get there eventually. The bill fates a Southern filibuster In the Senate but its supporters belie,ve they f oiZwi fllS—WJR. incimi* !•« WXVZ, er«-Elaiit tiMcl«l Ri4l-WJR, Topic lOiOO-WJR. KoirWtoKoM • WXVr, llufonCloy Elol't llilO-WWJ, world Nowi WJftK, >.....,.... WCAR, N«wt, Shyrid. WPON, N«wi, Arl(. Wttion «iM-WJR, Miiilc Holl WJBK, N»w», Avery WPON, Oolo TIno Show TiM- WHSI, Nirwt. Rou fiJA^WCAR, N»wt, ,»h#rld( I liM WJOK, Nowi.'Avory *i«» WRON, Nowi. OUon I. Tile parly was given by Roger Stevens, chairman of the Noted Ph)fiician Dies Close'Outs on 1963 • T\Pi • Storeo’s • Rangel • Refrigerators FI 4-2528 818 W. Hurpw 'ILIOTRIC COMPANY WPON, N*wi, WCAR, Now*. Ihri ilward of trustees of the John WASHINGTON (AP)-Dr. J ' F. Kennedy cehfor for the Per- Rreckenridge Bayne. 83. forming Arts. ’ , Wa.shjngton physician who There had been reports Sto-1 helped to save Romania from . vens would be nabed to the po- i a typhus epidemic during the sillon, hut the Post said PresI- j German (K’cupatlon in World I SONOTONE dent Johnsdn, after considering War I. died Sunday of a stroke. | 39 |. Comall FE 2-1325 Stevens, had, swltclfcd tol Mrs. lie practiced me