Ttf Wtjthr THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition VOL. 128 NO. 198 ★ ★ # ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. SATURB^AY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1965 -82 PAGES Pontiac Area UF Goal for 1965 Is $875,000 Mystery Youth Is Identified as Troy Resident No Information os to Why Mute Boy Was Left at Miami Airport EARPUL FROM RUSSIA-Arthur Ck>ldberg, U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, hears Russian Foreign Minister Andrei Oromyko denounce U.S. military presence in Viet Nam. Gromkyo dennanded a military with^awal from that Southeast Asian nation. MIAMI. Fla. (A^An official of the Dade County Juvenile Court today identified a silent teen-aged boy found alone last Wednesday at Miami International Airport as Richard Bruce Thorne, 16, of Troy, Mich, Intake Director Barron Shields of the Juvenile Court said he had identified Richard through conversations with relatives and neighbors. He said the boy’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Victor A. Thome _ Drive Begins Ford Says LBJ on Oct. 14 for Runs Viet War Record Total Congressman Gerald Ford told Oakland County Republicans today that neither Congress nor the public are being adequately informed about the nation’s involvement in Viet Nam and that “President Johnson is running the war.” The House minority leader made his remarks in speech at the annual Campaign Is Termed Reflection of Need, Community Growth F. JAMES McDonald Top-Echelon Post Filled at Pontiac GOP ox roast at the Ivory Farm in White Lake Township. “Under present circnm-stances,” said Ford, “Congress is being bypassed as far as any effective participation > or decision - making is concerned.” Found Guilty in Coed Killing The Pontiac Area United Fund goal for 1965 has been set at $875,000, it was announced today. Calvin J. Werner, this year’s general campaign chairman, said the goal is seven per cent higher than last year, reflecting the growth of the community and its needs. CALVIN J. WERNER Question of Sealing China on Record U.N. Agenda UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (UPD-The General Assembly eAded its first Week 6y agreeing without dissent to debate the question of seating Red China and adopting a record 105-item agenda. The 117-member body also had before it today the policy statements of both the United States and ______________ the Soviet Union, with both powers presenting sweeping nuclear disarmament proposals. The General Assembly yesterday adopted, despite Soviet objections, an Irish proposal to discuss the authorization and financing of peace-keeping oper-Pontiac area residents really ations. of 2435 Dalesfort, Troy, had left by car for Florida. ’There was no Immediate information on why the boy was alone at the airport. Meanwhile, a hopeful Texas mother who flew here on the chance that Richard might be her son, missing since Sept. 1, saw the airport waif and turned from him in tears. “Tbat’a not him," wept Mrs. Teno Elliott after one glance. She walked away crying. Her boy, Kenneth Elliott Jr., 18, disappeared after registering at Arlington State Ccrilege. “There are a lot of things to be investigated,” Shields A major, new executive post — works manager of Pontiac Motor Division - be filled by F. James McDonald, general manager of the G e n e r a 1 Motors Corp. Hydra-Matic Division in Ypsilanti. Establishment of the new post and McDonald’s appointment will be effective Friday. The new post and appoint-moat were announced today John Z. DeLorenn, a GM vIco preaktent and general num* ager of Pontiac Motor Di- “ President Johnson is running the war. I sincerely hope his decisions are right because the situation is very serious.” Ford, who arrived in Michigan early today from Wash- Werner, a General Motors Lite Term Mandatory corp. vice president and gen-. , _ J eral manager of CMC Track in 1 st-Degree Murder Kenneth R. Cooke of Lum was found guilty of first-degree All Quiet on Kashmir War Front NEW DELHI, India - The & Coach Division, set the INS UF drive kickoff for Oct. 14. The campaign will run through Nov. 4. ^_______^ ____________ “This is the largest goal in _________________ _____ of a 22-year-old Oxford Town- our history and it represents a india-Pakistan cease-fire 1.^ ship coed. Barbara K. Hodges, real challenge to the civic spirit reported quiet today after « RmnmfiPiH nn Oakland County Circuit and responsibility of each indi- both countries accused each oth- man Wilhm S. Broomfield on ^yuai and group, Werner said. j violating the tw(Mlay-old hand for the event. ^ ^be verdict * * ★ truce. “Our best course Ues in a hi- .. ^ partisan approach to foreign policy,” said Ford. ington was keynote ^akera^ ington, was Keynote speaKcr at ^ Oxford Town- the public outing, with Gov. George Romney and Congress- “This does not mean, however, that the opposition party may not offer proposals to the administration nor criticize administration action.” Weather Puts Chip on Already Cold Shoulders He would make no further comment on the case. McDonald has been general manager of the Hydra-Matic Division since Dec. 1,1963. In his new position, McDonald will be responsible for management of all manufacturing operations in Pontiac plants. Theie responiibUlties will Ford said that “well-foonded criticism helps the nation steer a surer and steadier course in foreign policy and to attain obj^ctivet without unnecessary lots or delay.” after deliberating three hours, through its 55 agencies, served ported no major incidents from The 28-year-old unemployed 30,000 families — more than midnight yesterday to midday factory worker showed no three out of every five persons today along the cease-fire line, emotion when Jury foreman in the Pontiac area,” Werner where skirmishing and jockey- Walter F. Tuck of Novi an- said. ing for a few more yards of nounced the decision shortly pULL CAPACITY ground had been under way Ittr I fM. ...^ a«. 55 ^iCKle, ^ In being found guilty of the operating at their full capacities June 23 shooting Cooke will throughout the coming year,” he got a cold shoulder from the ‘Old Gal’ last night as tempera- The assembly also agreed « A X. mi^orSw* •>*••** ^ Communist Chl-tures dropped to the mid-forties. of Tibet after Tonight and tomorrow won’t employing lor the flrst time be much different, according to the weatherman. Toni^fo lew b predicted between » and 48. Itll be ■nnny and cool tomorrow with the high poisihly reaching onlyN. Today, the Weather Bureau called for a high of 66 under new voting machines Installed on either side of the president’s 1 Young Richard showed signs of nervousness after the brief encounter with Mrs. Elliott and was turned over to a child psychologist, Dr. David Rothen-berg. Police at ’Troy said Richard has been mute after an automobile accident two years ago. However, a relative by marriage. Mrs. Gertrude Willis, blamed Richard’s silence on an iUness in early childhood. Mrs. Paula Willis, 21, one of The question of Tibet was put on the agenda by 41-46 vote, with M abstentions. Richard’s three siste^and the of Mrs. Ger- snnny skies. Monday’s outlook har Sbtylla urged the assembly is partly sunny and continued to vote down the item. He * w * termed it a U.S. attempt to dl- . J vert world public opinion from The ow before 6 a.m. today vlL B 44. The mfcrcury was up to ^-S- policy in Viet Nam. daughter-in-law trude Willis, said she understood fh>m conversations with her mdther that Richard was to Albanian Foreign Minister Be- be placed in an institution “in the South” on the advice of a doctor. sembiy of Pontiac passenger cars, plamiing and direction of the division’s expansion p r o-gramt, production schedding, purchasing, reliability and quality control. A native of Saginaw, McDonald graduated from General Motors Institute in the class of 1944. /He spent his senior college year at Yale University in the V-12 Navy program. He became manager of the Defiance, Ohio, plant of Central Foundry Division in 1955, and was works manager at Detroit Transmission Division (now known as Hydra-Matic) from Dec. 1, 1956, until his appointment as general manager. automatically spend the rest noted, “this one fund-raising ef- Pakistan iccnsed India of of his life in prison. fort, which is the largest char- laying down an artillery bnr- * ★ ★ itable event of the year, must rage last night 12 miles from Circuit Judge Frederick C, njeet its goal. Lahore, PaUitan’s second Ziem, who presided during the that the '“y* ■“* twoUrt«l. noon recess. residentlaUnd advance gifts. ^ Pakistani government U« . M , uran«. ponn. , Belore the ^ Uk Mn®l.l dielUon UX' SnirreeSliSJTfut «>'««*"■ Seuld sUy fn Iheir IrenHine ^ ^ "7""'““ £e£’beSS >«> « PenlleeKU,. unUl U» Unltel N- " ^5 P. .U, he.. ttenecrets slid hLne the V under tUale In. a kllUng enuned >"*« r"vZ'’^fl5*^l.l'lSn publican party, we will belong during the commission of a rob- chairman. fk L toamyth-aghost of aparty.”\bery is also murder in the * * * , •„ v ®i \irst decree The women 8 campaign will in Kashmir—an integral part of Many Americans, said Ford, T ‘ _____ be headed by Mrs. William G. the formula for settlement de- are dissatisfied with both ADMITTED BEJATING Wright. manded by Pakistan, political parties at present. Cooke, who is divorced, ad- “There.is a sense of frustra- miAed to Sheriff’s detectives ti(» and despair among those that he beat Miss Hodges of who feel this way. This sense of 545 Second with a pistol while dissatisfaction offers the Repub- robbing her of $1.35. lican party a worthy challenge He said he didn’t recall and a great opportunity to prove shooting the Central Michigan State Job to County Man An Oakland County resident, from his position as supervisor CIIIU a upin/ihuiuv 8nUOUn|( IDC VCUITBl mihtuigau - , lU _________ our piditical philosophy is best University junior, but remem- Arthur W. Saltzman of Frank- t"® management education for America.” bered bearing a muffled shot lin, has been appointed director s«®Aon s education and training while striking her in the head ^f the Office of Economic Op-with n pistol. portunity for Michigan by Gov. Miss Hodges, a friend of j^omney. He listed what he believes are six major issues. department. He will S ties Oct. 1. The Office of Eco- Cooka’s for several years, was spending; the crumbling of state and city governments in .Qn the witness stand Thurs-an era of growing Potornac u„gi,ie ^ ex- paternalism and tak^ver; the pjgj^ ^j,y remember haunting image of inftetion; the everything before and after the frightening costs of the alleged gkootlng. but not the shooUng Great Society: and the lack of ttg^y liaison between the executive and administrative branches in BASED ON INSANITY considering the crucial Viet Austin, who based his defense Nam war, with the White House on insanity, brought out during running the conflict.” the trial Uiat C^ke suffered In ■ preu conference at ®P»®P»y that he may have "!r ISL" Xullel from . ^.Ilber phrlol. t..,, Saltzman, 30630 Woodside, is a former economics teacher at Syracuse and Wayne State uni- Ihe Ivory Farm moments before the formal iwogram. Ford said he was hopi^ that in the next election Repnbli-m’s I seizure. Miss Hodge was killed on Dnnlap Road in Oxford Township after the had given Coeke a ride. I bly wiU have to discuss the I substance of the quaatlon of au-I thoriiing and financing peace-I keeping operaUou. IDENTIFIED A8 TROY Oounty, Fla., today Idotitified Miami Intamational Airport, i Tray, who poUca say haa been BOY -4^ Authorities in Dade this tean-ager, found alone at as Richard Bruce Thoma, II, of mute since a 1963 auto accid^. Cooke first blamed an un-He said the GOP could win Identified hitchhiker with the SO new seats in the House “and murder, if the administration makes any Later he broke down and con-bad policy moves before then, fessed the robbery when de-it could ran as high as 45 or 60 tectives took him back to the seats.” sc^ne of the crime. versities. He currently serves on the executive board of the Industrial Relations Research Association and is a member of tlm Human Relations Committee of tha Oakland County Board of Super- ARTHURW. SALTZMAN ACTIVE IN POUnCS He has been active in Midit-gan politics since ION and waa Oakland County chairman of tha Romney Vohinteera. Married and the fathar af thrae dilkiren. Saltzman aac-,o6edt Dr. Albart W. Brown, wl» ^resigned to becoma praaidanf of tha State Unhranlty Cnllap, Brockport, N.Y. I V ■:! THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 25, 1965 Soolh Viei Troops Retake Coastal Province Outpost SAIGON, SoOtti Viet Nan (AP) Soutli >^tnameee post overrun by Communist goenfllas in « btg assault two dnys afo, a U.S. military spokaanan said today. The Communists stormed outpost Thursday hi the central Pilot Program Given Funds Mental Health Unit Allocates Its Share Oakland County’s Community Mental Health Services Board yesterday appropriated 156,500 as its share in a pilot program to aid the meiitally retarded. The board will administer the program which it will conduct jointly with the Oakland County Board of Education. Tstal cMt W the program lor some 40 trahnble and •ver age U wfll be 6121,511, The county school system presently provides training for, trainable and severely retarded children 6 to 13. ♦ ★ ★ A center for the new training program has not yet been designated. OTHER SERVICES Besides services for the retarded youngsters, counselling, casework therapy and group therapy will also be available to their parents. Resolto ef the pilot program sioa of this type training is Proposed by Dr. Robert E. Walden, psychiatrist-director of the Mental Health Services Board, the program’s philosophy Standftrd Wallace, president of the Oakland Association for Retarded Children, and Mrs. Ann Zuzicb, education director of the organization, suggested that the school system administer the program since it is an educational function. VOICE OmCERN They also eapresaed concern that the program is planned for a single center. Both, however, expressed appreciation that a program was set in motion as the purpose of their association is to i^mote the advancement of the welfare of the mentally retarded. coastal province of Binh IMnh, about 300 miles northeast of Saigon. The Viet Cong launched a regimental-sized assault north of Qui Nhon against a government force. ★ ★ * The government forces met no resistance Friday when they retook the outpost, the spokesman said. ^ Vietnamese sources reported 600 Communist guerrillas were killed in the fighting although only 70 bodies were counted today. They said 500 of the dead were victims of air strikes, U.S. military authorities have not confirmed the figure. REMOVING DE/D One unconfirmed report from the scene said the Viet Cong were attempting to reii their dead. Other reports said 170 bodies of Viet Cong were lying in the open. The heaviest fighting raged near the district town of Bong Son. No further contact was reported. * ★ ★ Viet Cong in undetermined strength penetrated a hamlet 10 miles southwest of Saigon and blew up a school, a health clinic and an outpost. One civilian was killed and eight were wounded. The guerrillas escaped. * * it The Communists continued to probe the defense perimeters of the U.S. Army’s 101st Airborne Brigade and 1st Cavalry Division near An Khe in the central highlands, 250 miles northeast of Saigon. CASUALTIES UGHT The guerrillas reportedly opened up with mortars and small arms fire on the lOlat and inflicted light casualties. Elements of the 1st Infantry Division on patrol about X miles north of Saigon blasted several enemy fortifications in a sweep of tunnels and caves. WWW The infantrymen captured several Viet Cong documents, than 1,000 pounds of rice and one guerrilla. Ei|^ty-two U.S. planes blasted Communist military targets in North Viet Nam Friday. PLANE DOWNED An P4C Phantom on a strike at the Vinh Lbih barracfca, five miles north of the herder with South Viet Nam, was downed by enemy fire, but its two crewmen ejected and were rescued at Other U.S. planes showered a dllion leaflets on Haiphong, North Viet Nam’s nudn seaport, and giant B52 bombers kept hammering at suspected Communist hideouts in South Viet Nam. The Weather FaU U.S. Weather Bareaa Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY-Moitly saaay i warmer today, Ugh SI ta 15. Variable chadiaeM taraiag colder toaight, with a chaace of a few showen aorth par-tioBO. Low 36 to «. Saaay aid cooler Soaday, Ugh 52 to II. West to soathwest wiadt 5 to 16 milea lUt morainf partly nnuiy aad cool. run to PwOtoc M » MllwMkM ^ M 4( Nmi Ortowtt O • Travtrw C. SS 4t Omaha «1 . Atouquarqwa n 54 ehoanix IM < “ - eittiburgh NATIONAL PORBCART-Sbowers are expected toni^t in Florida, the lower Lakes and upper New England, with thun-dNNiPwers along part of the Gulf Oonat, rain mixed with anew in (he upper Lekea and showwa wMi none mom in dw MrilMm RncUef. It win be ooolor hi moot ef (ha eastam hUfIr the Mtei and wanmr from the eentral Roddea to Auto Crushes Waterford Boy A Waterford Towhoi# teen-.ggN* was crushed to death early MERCURY PARK LANE-Top^of the 1966 equipment a new tlO^ubi&fnch,' 339-horse-Mercury line, the Park Lane lists a ‘ ' power, VI engine. The new Mercurys were introduced today by Ford Motor Co. Sign-Up Pace Displeases LBJ Tabs Aide to Speed Registration in South WASHINGTON (AP) - A federal civil rights official said today he will head South soon with a mandate from President Johnson — in an effort to speed the pace of Negro voter registration. Wiley H. Branton, 41, who helped map the President’s shakeup of federal civil rights agencies, said Johnson is not satisfied with the pace of Negro registration so far. He said Johnson asked him to go to work for full, swift implementation of the Negro voting rights law which took effect Aug. 5. At the Justice Department, officials said Johnson has expressed no dissatisfaction with the way the new law is being enforced. ENCOURAGEMENT But some of the plans Branton sketched in an interview do not deal directly with enforcement of the law. The Negro attorney said he will seek to encourage people to turn out for registration, and talk with local officials in an effort to overcome resistance to Negro voting. As he signed the bill wiping out voter literacy tests and authorizing federal registration in much of the South, Johnson addressed a message to American “You must register. You must vote. And you must learn so your choice advances your interest and the interest of the nation.’’ it it it Branton joined the administration five months ago as exec-secretary of the President’s Council on Equal 0|qx>r-tunity. Under the reorganization of civil rights assignments, announced Friday by the President, he will become a special assistant to Atty. Gen. Nicholas Katzenbach. The council is to be abolished. The White House said Friday Branton will be responsible for overseeing newly assigned Justice Department responsibilities in the dvil righU field. PRIME REASON Branton said Johnson asked him to go to work on Negro voter re^strathm. “That’s his prime reason for asking me to go over there,’’ he said. “I expect to spend a great deal of time in the South in the next several weeks.” Jail Ex-Area Man for Arson A former Waterford Township resident, who reportedly admitted setting fires in 13 cities, was sentenced yesterday in Minneapolis, Minn., to 15 years in prison for arson. Joaeph F. Neussendorfer, 22, who resided at 2432 Denby until mid-1964, was arrested in February in connection with several fires in Minneapolis and St. Paul. The fires caused an esfimated 1750,000 in damages. Nensscadorfer, an ex-Air Farce fire fighter, wu qooted as IcUiag aathorUies he also set fires ia Boston, Philadel-I, D.C., New cities. No one was hurt in the fires. Neussendorfer pleaded guilty to setting the fires in the Twin Cities ai^ when he appeared In Hennepin County Diirtrict Court on Sept. 10. Blame $3,000 Fire on Electric Clock MIDDLETOWN, Ohio (AP) -The electric clock at the home of Delbert Hopkins had a I3.0M ^Mrt Friday. Firemen who put out a fire in Hopkin’s home biamed the short circuit as the cause and iati-mated the loss. ^ New Mercury Sports Changes in Styling The 1906 Mercury has been given styling changes, a new two-door hardtop roofline, new engines, a sporty S-55 aeries and an exuded list of luxury options, it was announced today by Ford Motor Co. “We are continuing Mercury in the Lincoln Continental tradition with styling changes plus luxury car standards,” said Paul F. Lorenz, vice president and general manager of the Lin-coln-Mercury Division. ' The 1000 Mercury nuiy be seen Oct. 1 at the followiiif Kaverley Mercury, 420 Main, Rochester; Lloyd Motors, 1250 Oakland; and Bob Borst, 520 S. Woodward, Birmingham. ★ w w The Mercury features a fresh front end appearance, with new 'Cover Up' Messages Get Jeers hood, fenders, bumper, grille and lights. Rear appearance is changed with new tail lamp which increase the ow-all length by two inches, to 220 inches. Two-door hardtops have a new roofline with a concave lack blending into the rear deck. NEW FEATURES Other new styling features are revised side ornamentation; new instrument cluster, facing and trim. Mercary’t big change far a new flO^nbic-iiich engine, an optional 420-cnbic-inch ea-gine, and two 3lh«nbic-inch Mercury also has a new offering in the S55 tw(Hloor hardtop or convertible, sport models with bucket seats and console, special ornamentation, and the new 428-cubic-inch engine with dual exhausts. ★ * ★ Extra values for 1966 include new optional disc brakes, cornering lights, and a stereo tape system. In addition. Mercury station wagons have as standard equipment a dual - action tailgate which opens either from top to bottom or from the side to provide improved third seat apeess or greater flexibility fw loading. SAN FRANaSCO (UPI) -“Jesus saveti” the Salvation Army soldiers sang at a massive street rally called to protest bare bosom entertainment at “topless” nightclube in the gaudy entertainment center of North Beach. “Take it off,” chanted the crowd of several thousand, aiming their barbs at Salvation Army women and girls, their' An estimated $5,532 was reblue tunics buttoned tightly to ported missing early this mom-the neck. | ing after forced entry into Aad while (be Army’s Ctta- * " band aad timbrel brigwle to the Oakland County - - sot with a rasing f«herlfr* department. Break-In at Tavern Nets $5,532 in City cboms of “The OM Ragged eras,” straiM of “A Pretty Girl If Like ■ Melody” drifted down the street from a crowded aigbtclnb. The implausible scene, played last night in the heart of an area wracked by controversy, marked the latest skirmish ip the battle of the bosom. ♦ ★ ★ It’s a battle which the topless dubs have porarily in the courts, and which the Salvation Army has vowed to fight until the last breast is STREET MEETING Police said more than 2,000 persons turned out to witness the Army’s street meeting with its demands that bare-bosomed dancers start using t(^. “The city most repia its grip OB standards of responal-bility,” speaker after t|^er “You’d make a beautiful 'playmate of the month’,” shouted a sailor at a pretty tambourine player In the second row. The 100 members of the Army just thumped harder, harder and sang more lustily. ★ ★ w Protesting “any un-Christian behavior anywheiw that might lead to moral breakdown,” the Army said it would soon invade the tofdess nightclubs and distribute tracts titled, “What Does Your Own Conscience Say?” BUSINESS BOOM The nightclubs, seeing an opportunity to drum up business in the dispute, placed dancers in front of the crowd to display their anatomy. The topless shows were ruled legal eaiiy this year when a municipal court judge said they were not in conflict witi) con-temporary community But, tha Salvation Army pointed out it was instmmsajM^ years ago in forcing a wholesale cleanup o( the notorious BsriMry Coast, a section located just block a from the current ana of oontroveny in North Mrs. Rachel Manz, owner of Chuck’s Shack, 20 Opdyke, told officers a triple-padlocked door was broken open and a safe pried apart sometime between 3and6;30a.m. w ★ ★ The missing money was in silver, paper currency and diedcs, | she reported. Officers are investigating the Michael VoU, 16, of 5104 Tangent. He died of chest injuries and internal hemorrtiaglng. The accident occarred at 7:50 a.m. on the shonlder af the nad in front of the boy’s borne, according to Watolerd Police said VoU had bought the car two and a half weeks ago, and apparently was repairing the transmission Unkage on a floor shift he had InstaUed. The youth had been warned by his parents about working under the car with a bumper jack, according to poUce. Olds Chief Cites Output, Job Records MILFORD ^ New records in production and employment have been chalked up by Olds-mobUe during the 1065 model year, and in the calendar year it is highly likely the division will set a new sales record, it was announced yesterday by Harold N. Metzel, Ohlsinobile’s general manger and a vice president of General Motors. “The year 1065,” he said, “has been a very good year for Olds-mobile, its dealers and its employes. “Except for themedel School officials weekly tabs on the number of students until next Friday, the official fourth Friday for counting. Tbe state does not provide aid for stadeats .Hw enroD after the fourth Friday of the school year. The Bloomfield Hills enrollment, so far, has jumped to 6.-842, marking a l,0504tud^ increase since this time last year, it it it In Birmingham, the increase is oa, for a tentative total of 10,001. SECONDARY LEVEL Birmingham officials noted the impact of expanding enroU-ments is evident at the secondary level. Groves High Schoel, de- ptoyment has averaged better Prednettoa af 1015 model Olds-mobilee was alse the best ia oar history, at 5K,0N Baits. “Saleswise,” Metzel continued, “a strong first nine months, combined with an expected farther increase in sales volunne in the final quarter, should enable us to beat our prevtoui record of 0d0,000 cars sold in 1055. Metzel, addressing newsmen attending OMsmobUe’s 1966 model national press preview, predicted first year sales of tbe front-wheel drive Toronado would exceed 60,000. Poison Mushrooms Fatal to n in Italy ROME m — A rising toll from poisonous mushrooms, with 11 persons dead and more than 30 hospitalized, alarmed ItaUan officials today. In several cities, health authorities warned that m rooms gathered in the countryside should not be eaten. Birmingham Area Hew% Latest Count Figures Show Enrollment Gain The unofficial enreOment tallies are in for Birmingham and Bloomfield Hills public schools and, as expected, they are higher than projected. lor High are 706 t^iis year, compart to 524 last year. Much of the jump at East Hills reflects changes in the boundaries for the school’s service area. as eBroHmeBt ef 2,6N this year. Flgare for 106445 was 1,610. Seahohn High School, with a LOOOetudent capacity, has 1,040 students compved to 1,619 last year. it it it Hardest hit is Berkshire Junior High School, designed for 1,000 students. It had 1,206 students last year and now has 1,818. NEAR CAPACITY Bamum and Derby junior high schools are very close to capacity. Bamum, with rooin fen- 820, has an enrollment of 709. Derby can handle 1,000 and now has 071. When the new Covington Junior High School, expected to open in September of 1066, is completed, the crucial situation at Bsrkshire will be relieved. * ★ * All classrooms in the elementary schools are filled. PLANNING mCE A new high school for Bloomfield HUb stodenU now is in the planning stages. Delayed by coart aetioa ea the site, sehsei officials as longer expect to have (he bbR ready (or the 166647 schoel year. Meanwhile, tbe existing hif^ school, buUt for 1,200 students, is housing 1,217. The enrollmeot there last year was 1,157. it * it Each of tbe district’s junior high schools has a OOO^tudent capacity. AT JUNIOR HIGH Now attending Btoomfield HUls Junior High are 054 youngsters, compared to 000 last year. The figures for East Hills Jun- DOROTHY MALONE Report Slight Improvement for TV Actress HOLLYWOOD to II. Slight irregulars of famous brand name. —Drug Dept. FREE Pat Broth With 'OSTER' Electric Dog Clippers $29.95 Value Electric clippers to clip pets coats at home. Complete with instructions and Free brush.-$1 holds in layaway. —Sundry Dept. Talcraft* Distinctivw Plastic Chip ’n Dip Sets &G9* 'Hostess' chip and dip set with large chip bowl, smaller dip bowl and brass finish holder. Limit 2. —2nd Floor ’BUT Roll-on Deodorant 98c Si»e 59< ’Playtox’ Living Gloves $1.39 volue—with free extra right hand glove. For oil housework. —Drug Dept. A Low Priced Second Shaver ‘jfORELCO’r Razor , $14.95 Value White Enamel Hardwood Choice of’SHOrcRAFT* Your Choice Pontiac and ta moka it warth 1 and wanted Hams and cut th# prices a the right te limit quantities and all Extra forge ilze ter men's ond woman's use. Limit 2 par parson. —Cosmetics 10« A truly cordless shaver — use it anywhere. Operates on-botlerys with power to spore for close shoves. In handy trovel pouch. —Sundry Dept. Toilet Seat Sets Easy to instoll on any standard bowl — complete with hinges. Hardwood seat and lid cover in white enamel finish. Limit 2. -2nd Floor Electric Drill or Jig-Saw I TV Lap or As shotfm—I6x22-lnch king I size metal troy b decorated. Many uses In the home. Limit 4. -2nd Flew IL.. ..I . . el ttroot SIMMSifl, tPloorttf Mwlcolki Sit THE PONTIAC PRESS SATVRDAY, SEPTEMBER S. U05 *te^i mk y^rtaSTSi Mwor National Self-Interest Transcends Idealism Jaycee Prison Chapter a Break for Inmates Maintaining half a century’s reputation for originality and social betterment endeavors, the Junior Chamber of Commerce recently installed a Jaycee chapter at Verbal Orchids to- A. Of 2100 Woodward; 00th birthday. Mrs. MaMe Thorpe of Birmingham; OSth birthday. BertStoweB of 124 Norton; tSrd birthday. Mr. and Mn. Andrew McKerrow of 100 Miami; 53rd wedding anniversary. Mn. Percy C. Kinf of 0020 Williams Lake Road; 04th birthday. Charles E. Cooke of Holly: 05th birthday. Ernest Bowker of Auburn Heights; 81st birthday. Mn. George Lindsey of Rochester; 85th birthday. Mr.andMn.M.A.TeiTy of 1411 Eason; 53rd wedding anniversary. lir. ad Mn. Robert B. Wben Of UOPnslon; 58th wedding anniversary. Mn. EUa Conway of I Edna; 81st birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Ifeayer of If FToot; Slrd wedding anniversary. Kilby Prison in Montgomery, Ala- in the affairs of men and nations, the rrte played by the inscrutable hand of fate more often than not far outweighs the designs and deliberations of the world’s shakers and movers. A case in point was the anomaly presented when Soviet Russia and the United States stood together in the United Nations Security Council on the cease-fire resolution directed at India and Pakistan. ★ ★ ★ Not only did it mark the first instance of international concord between the two countries in a long sequence of minor-to-criti-cal issues, but it in effect isolated Red China — currently contending with the Soviets for leadership of global communism. The question then arises as to why Russia turned away from its nominal ally. The basic reason undoubtedly is that any large-scale war would, because of inevitable involvement, cost the Soviet Union a good deal of money that is sorely needed in the domestic economic crises it faces. To be realistic, there is no doubt that the Kremlin would not have been averse to letting India and Pakistan fight it out. But the moment Red China issued its chilling ultimatum to India, threatening armed intervention against that country, the danger of an enlarged war unquestionably gave Moscow fits—leading to a hasty reappraisal of the embattled climate of the Indian subcontinent. ★ ★ ★ If the Soviet Union stands firm in the Security Council position it took and a major Aslan-Indian conflict is averted, there likely would evolve a more friendly feeling between Russia and the United States as well as the countries of Western Europe. Better relations with the West means more trade, which the Soviets need to improve their economic position at home. Thus it could wen be that in serving its nationalist sdf interest, the Russians open the door of conciliation to the long-unanswered knocks of the democracies. MIM E. Iroquois; tttd birthday. Mr.sn|Mn.E.E.Bk*sp Social Explosion Is Widespread By JAMES MARLOW AP News Analyit WASHINGTON - Anyone bom in the past 25 yean probably takes the American social revolution for granted. He grew up with it and in his lifetime it was always there and always, altbou^ slowly, going on. Yet, what has happened just this year in Washington would have been revolution began, the country In a depression. es the American ed. He grew up I President Herbert MARLOW Hoover will probably always be a symbol of the moment in history when the old attitudes came up against the new necessities of American life, and the old melted away. np to that time to sm grovemment resources to fight economic disaster, but he couldn’t shake off the philooophy of the era ia which he grew np and ail the eras before it I^esident Grover Cleveland in 1887 had expressed the philosophy that was prevalent through most of American history. “The lesson should be constantly enforced that, though the people support the government, the government should not support the people.” NEW ERA BEGAN The new era began in earnest in 1935 with the passage of the Social Security Act, which was the foot In the door for all that followed, and the Labor Relations Act compelling employers to bargain with unions of their employes. nose measares of President FVaak-lia D. Roosevelt were expanded under Presideats Harry 8. TTaman, Dwight D. Eiseiihower, aid Johi F. Keanedy. But the steps taken this year under President Johnson and a heavily Democratic Congress show how far the nation has gone down the road of federal responsibility in many fields. ★ ★ ★ Congress not only broadened health and welfare programs but for the first time provided for medical care for people 65 and Mder through Social Security. MOVE INTO STATES And the new civil rights law lets the government move into the states to protect citlaens’ voting rights in a way never attempted before, such as tearing up voting tests under certain conditions. At the same time ibore and more power Is being centralised In Washington, less in the states. IMs Is • matter of concern to many. But they can’t have it both ways. The POWER of FAITH lyWOODI ISHMAfL Voice of the People: ’This is the fourth such action taken by the international organization that boasts a membership of 320,000. ★ ★ ★ The president of the new 37-member club asserts that he has never in his yean behind bars seen anything that has stimulated interest among young inmates as has the Jaycee group. He is serving a six-year term for burglary, while the sentences of thd other officials range from 13 months to 35 years. Commenting on the prison-based chapter, the secretary of the Capital City Jtinior Chamber of Commerce said “this type of thing has tremendous rehabilitation benefits.” The Kilby Jaycees already have in mind several projects aimed at improving prison life educationally and culturally. ★ ★ ★ We salute the Jaycees on their step into an area that has traditionally been isolated from lay penetration. It just might be that they have evolved a significant medium in society’s unremitting campaign to reform and reclaim the growing segment of its criminal element. *Motherspf Servicemen Skoiiid Be Given Credit Let’s give credit in r i g h t £ b 1 places. My prayeTs and heartfelt thanks go out to mothers of service boys and girls. Where or how they get the courage and strength to go on is a miracle. To these, God has given a promise that someday we shall have peace and rest. AN EX-ONE MRS. LUCILLE BROWN 4610 UNWOOD / ^Mudslinging Doesn’t Help Solve Problem’ EvidenUy VOP writer Dale Feet doesn’t beUeye action sp^ louder than words. Where is his assist^ “j® P«>Pl* ^ Lake Orion? Ours is not a poUUcal battie, it la to save the taxpayers money and give them a government for ail the people, not a select few. ★ ★ ★ Why aU the mndsitoging at Congreasmaa Famm and Senator O’Brlea, Dale Feet? It shows yow lack of bitarest to all people regardless of party. Party affiliations wore not questhmed by Congressnum Famoai or by any of no group ★ ★ ★ Why didn’t our councilmen testify? We voters were not afraid to testify under oath. MRS. ARTHUR PAGEL LAKE ORION Disagrees With Comment on United Nations I cannot agree with Mr. Lenger that the U.N. in an ineffectiva world body. Since its inception, the U.N. has allowed taltoover of almost all of Europe and Asia, and is looking in the other direction regarding the Americas. “Oklahoma Cmr Extends City Limits by Anne:dng Moon.”->Head-llne. All right, Loa Angeles—it’s your move. The Rev. John Eliot was one of very few Massachusetts Bay colonists who recognized an obligation to bring the word of God to the Indians. He established an Indian Mission on the Charles River and learned the Algonquin language so he could preach and teach them. But to John Eliot this was not enough, for he felt that they should read the Bible themselves to get the full benefit of his message and understand his devout faith. Besides his regular acUvities, he added the project of translating the Bible for the Indians. For ten long years he worked on his dedicated task for those to whom he had become a spiritual father. . John Eliot’s Algonquin translation, Up-Biblum, was published in 1663, thus becoming the first Bible printed in this country. From the end of World War II the Russian Communist spread has been about 7,000 persons per hour. I wouldn’t say that an organization set up to help spread peace, sudi M the U.N., has been a total loss. Peace as defined in the Russian dictionary equals no resistance. Is there any true resistance to the siwead of Russian peace — on their terms? JOHN P. BURNS BIRMINGHAM Discusses Meeting at White Lake Township “Adlai Stkvknson said that by the year 2000 we’ll know whether the world will conthme.” We may well know before then—but only momentarily. Days of All Faiths: I, too, attended the meeting on the sewer and water program in White Lake Township and agree with the seven who signed a recent Voice of the People letter. A great deal of intrest was shown in the subject, but mainly as to cost and necessity rather than desire for the sewers and water. After listening to conunents around the township, I agree the majority seem to be against it. This meeting, like most White Lake Township meetings, i Observance of the High Holidays adjourned before the people were satisfied. ALSO THERE By DR. HOWARD V. HARPER Now come the Iflgh Holidays, that solemn ten-day period, known as the Days of Awe. The season begins at sundown Monday with Rosh Hashonah, the Jewish New Year, and ends with Yom Kippur, on October 6. According to Jewish lore, Rosh Hashonah is the anniversary of Creation. The world began exactly 5726 years ago today. Tte Jewish community is quiet and serious now. The High Holidays are not without joy, but there is none of the hilarity that is found in other New Year’s high jinks. This is a time of self-examination and repentance. or three years. Every two years would be too often; every three would not be often enough. So Jewish leap years are sometimes two years apart, sometimes three. When necessary, they insert a second month of Adar immediately following the regular Adar, which falls in the winter season. verting state. to its natural desert 'The Better Half Because of this variation, Tishrl 1st can come any time from September 5 to October 5. Among the Orthodox and friendly man, and life covid have gone along peacefnlly and constmctively nnder his leadership. But in every occn-pled conniry there are Mwayi hotheads, ^ it was a gronp that murdered Gedaliah. The assassins got away, and the little remnant took the pnaish-ment Many were pat to death; the rest were exiled. Jndah became a desert, the abode of wild beasto. Every man’s record pastes before the semtiny ef Almighty God. And whose life can stand inch a review? Man has, by God’s mercy, ten days to square accoonts, to restitution wrongs be has done, i is observed for two days. Reform Jews keep only one day. THE FAST OF GEDALIAH On the third day of *11810:1 the Jewish calendar commemorates the assassination of a man named Gedaliah, who was appointed Governor of Judah by the Babylonian King Nebuchadnezzar at the tinoe when nearly all the Jews were carried off The day is a day of fasting and mourning. Although it has historical significance, its relation to history is almost forgotten because it happens to fail within the High HoUdays. “Mrs. Baker? When Martin gets home have kirn call bm —I’ve jntt teamed there are some flaws in that story Washington Notebook: into exiJe by that powerful monarch. and at the end, he hopes, have hh name written in the Book of Life for another year. THE JEWISH CALENDAR Monday is the first day of the month of Tlshri. The Jewish year Is made up of twelve hmar months, which means that normally it falls eleven days short of our more nearly accurate solar year, and so requires considerably more adjustment and tinkering. Our regular calendar can maintain a reasonabte precision by adding one extra day every four years. The king, with a view to keeping the route between his country and Egypt open, had left a handful of Jews in their homeland. There were only about a thousand of them, including wives and children. Their job was simply to cultivate the soil and keep the region from re- Stretch for View of Stretch Gown The Almanac The Jewish calendar requires a whole extra month every two SmUeg A Storrs, Conn., high school student was dismissed for wearing a beard. That’s losing out by a whisker. By United Pren Intematioaal Today is Saturday, Sept. 25, the 288th day of 1965 with 97 to follow. The moon is approaching its first quarter. The morning star Is Jupiter. The evening stars are Veaas, Mars aad Satara. Mom knows exaetijr what In 1513, the Spanish explorer Balboa crossed the Isthmus of Panama and became the first European to see the Padfle Ocean. ake days. They’re piayiag “Ring Amaad the Bathtub.” No, Virginia, “frugality” has nothing to do wllh that dance. and lot to make a home. The driver who takes “one for the road” seldom realizes that it’s often the road to the hospital. In 1789, the first Congress of the United States met in New York and adopted IS amendments to the ConstitutlM, 10 of which were raUfted and became known as the Bill of Rights. In 1921, the Ford Motor Co. pat its workers on an 8-hoar day and a May week. ★ * ★ In 1969. the prime minister of Ciiyion was stot by and died tiie next day. By WASHINGTON STAFF WASHINGTON (NEA)-That the Agriculture Department is no longer an agency catering exclusively to farmers was well emphasized by the department’s latest publication^ —a hard-cover] book called! “C onsumers' All.” ' Packed into its 496 pages are thousands of worth-white suggestions related to everyday living. (Congressmen and senators have copies of the book for free distribution.) One section deals with the stretch fabrics recently developed by the department’s scientists. At a redeption anno u n c i n g publication of the book, a pretty young model showed off a dress made of stretch cotton. Freeman had his view partially screened by a crowd. His remarks went like this: “We have a young lady . . . I think ... Where is she? She’s dressed . . . according to the script I think she’s dressed. I can’t see her. Dope, I didn’t mean that the way it sounded. 'That’s stretch cotton.” enlisted man the best ]dece of roast beef.” On the Washington cocktail-buffet circuit, success is chalked up by the number of high administration offidala with whom you can prove you’re on a “first Former Postmaster General Many civic leaders around the countiy are now pointing to tha Negro uprising in the district of Los Angetei as an exanq>te of what mi|^ have happened In their dtias if It were not for the fast implementation of President Johnson’s anUpdverty program. Says one: “The Office of Economic Opportunity ought to put out another TV show to seD their program. They could call It, ‘It’s Watts “ Baby!’ ” Presenting the model to such guests as Ldtiy Bird Johnson, Assistant Secretary of Labor Esther Peterson and Sen. Maurice Ntuberger, DOrt., Agriculture Secretary Orville J. Edward Day recalls one party where the hostess played this game itith Sargent l^ver shortly after he had been appointed director of the Peace Corps. FoUowiqg Shriver in the buffet line was • retired brigadier general, who Ustenad to the gushing! of the hostess with a horrified look on his face. When Shriver moved on, the lady noticed the general and inquired anxiously: “Is something wrong, gm-eral?” Replied tite crusty old fellow testily: “You just gave that When Rap. Ben Raifel, R-8. D., teamed that a few Arlington, 8. D., farmers netted an easy $200 an acre by raising cucumbers for a nearby Minnesota pickling plant, he coined this tongue-twister: ”If Arlington producers produce pickles profitably, probably plenty of prospective pickla producers can produce picklaa permanently.” i THE PONtlAC PRBS^, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 196J FIVE nienarelttoiMo-tearthfur-l Cnn>In. a fhw panfiBh, are nacaa In Am Plttaborgh ateel- atao called Bachelor, New light, producing eemidg. I Bridge Perch and John Demon. at a popular iSrIce Mofntf/eeirtf Top Groin Cowhide MULTIPOOKIT CASK by f Only $M.M NotUno could be OiMr. FinMt top grain, full weight cowUda ... dduaa conatruction faoturaa . . . dla-tinotiva dadgn . . . auparb craftamdnaUp . . . lonirioua oelora ... all combine to make a genuine leather caae by Smoo tho very beet value you can buy. Yet you pay leaa for a Sruoo caae. See our oomiiate aaleetion today. Hlfimadeot HtHral PtigHag I Offiw Sappiy 17 WEST UWIENCE PONTUC Open Friday Evenings Til 9 P.M. FE 2-0135 Senior at PCH Teen of Week State Insurance Laws Studied LANSING (AP)-A taak force of experts Is studying state In* aurance laws, and a Senate committee edll study the out-side activities of the state insurance ctnmnissiooer, says Sen. Bernard O’Brien, D-Detroit. Both probes, he said, may result in revisions. O’Brien, chairman of the Senate Insurance Committee, said be has asked experts at seven state universities to study the entire Michigan insurance code and reewnnoend changes, if needed, early next year. State Insurance Commissioner Allen Mayerson will be asked to appear before his committee next week to answer questions on his connections with private insurance firms. Mayerson has acknowledged he serves on a consulting basis with an eastern Insurance Arm which writes no insurance in Michigan. O’Brien said Mayerson serves as an actuary for a New York insurance company, adding that it conflicts with a state law prohibiting the cwnmiaskmer from being “a stodiholda'.. .or directly or indirectly connected with the management or affairs of any insurer...” A METHOD OF PAYINO YOUR BILLS BASED OH YOUR ABILin TO PAY! ONE PLACE TO PAY! :^SEE Michigar Credit CouRsellors 701 Fentiac State lank lldf. Phoae FE I4M56 Our llth Year » mttm I—am w nm mwm am. mma ^ ~ m erwa Cmiiiairi - weaie* ammMIm w < a. Mimmi, omiUr . . . Ucaby emmt mt Opar Wearing the first teenof-tho-week crown fw the ISN&ee season is Kay Madsen, a senior at Pontiac Central High School. Daughter of Mr. and Ml Kenneth Madsen, 254 Pioneer, Kay is president of the student council, head of ttie girls’ tennis team and sports editor of the Quiver. During the past snmni she attended Giris’ State. Previous positions of responsibility held Kay include the general chairmanship of the Junior prom. For two years each, she was president of her homeroom and gym assistant. The law makes no geographical limitations, the senator s^. ‘”1116 Senate and the standing committee on insurance have been overly patient with the commissioner — waiting fw him to make his final declsion-as to whether he wants to continue in a state post or in private industry,” he said. REPORT nNDINGS The committee, he said, will ask Mayerson to announce his decision and “will report its findings to the chairman He.i NEW Vaiiabla SPEED UnkaiDBekm' 3^0^^ DRIU (Squf0M0 Your Sprrd) 0R.P.M.to1^R.P.M. a quality product ALSO K* AVAIUBU AT SLIOHUY U3WR COST KEEGO HOWL NO. 1 1441 Orelntd Uk* Rd. PH. 1824Nt ‘PRE-VENT’thiu-the-wall gas heater IDFAI enclosed purches or breezenvays, recrca iiPKHL tjgq apartments, cottages, etc. •TU (bM hr aH iiMdi. iMT «M(, M RM* a. f 1 .U «mU^ Op««tan «. ad Chandler Heating Co. 5480 HIGHLAND RD., PONTIAC AAlle East oE Pontiac Airooit SorvIco-OR 3-5632 UjnRDS DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Outfi$dot(Co» IMS S. Selina SI. mqihuy OHLY Kroehler WOOD WING SWIVEL ROCKER REG. 79.95 Relax on luxurious reversible foam rubber cushions. 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HURON Open HU 1 - Sat. til T - FE 4-2 525 "A HEAP 0’ GLEAHIHG FOR A WEE BIT 0’MONEY” CASH A CARRY VillIHlIMdilTIiliTn SHIRTS LAUNDERED Monday • TMoiday • Wcdnatday Wnk Dry Cloonint Order •< $1.11 or More 120^ hlrtt ilHIl ^j^aaoh VALUABLE COlJI’ON ; MON., TUEt., WED. ONLY WITH COUPON : a LADIES'PUIN SKIRn I I aMEN’SPANTS y I I Dry Claanad and Prossad (Rg Jr a ■caaaBBMMMonaoaiaiWiMMaiMiaiMaiBm IIIID Ail ECON-O-DRY GLEANERS nUIIUIl AND SHIRT LAUNDRY 944 WEST HURON ST. Opan Daily T a.m. ta • p.*., Sat. I a.m. ta • p.m. New HOOVER Portable rwlth avaiyttltn...INSIDE SERVlOE REBUILT Open Sunday* *til 2 PM. BARNES i HARBRAVES Hardware 742 W. Huron St. PARR FRK FES-9101 BUSTER BROWN CLOTHING FOR CHILDREN BLUE BELL WEARING APPAREL FOR fflE ENTIRE FAMILY W« Carry a Complete Lina of School Needs . . .Paper, Pancili, Notebooks, Etc. Art E234-Washable Colors COATS and CLARK’S RED HEART KNiniNG WORSTEDI 100% Virgin Wool- ^ ^ Mothproof-Tonglo W ntC Proof-Roady to Knit A | | -Pull Out Skoin ■ ^ UHAN’S VARIETY STORE' 1475 Baldwin Ave. at Walton FE 4-3348 Opan Doily 9 A.M. to 9 P.M., Sunday 10 A.M. to 6 P.M. SEASON-END SALE! Cover Your Home BAHD OR l,Nt SO. FI. of tlDINC *349 COMPLETELY INSTALLED • NO MONEY DOWN • T YEARS TO PAY Cailnow FE 2-2660 GIANT BUILDING MdSimYOa. 2an WOODWARD iVE. DRAYTON PLAINS 5010 Dixie Hwy.-Open Sunday 12-6 SUNDAY ONLY Ladiat Rayon Scarf Rwg. 67e 2 for ^jOO Thwrmo m Elactrle Blanket I Blankalt Rwfl.5.67 P Reg. 10.99 ‘A" »8" ^ of Oompliti Dinntr Tuifcey, Fish All Far Hamburger #,« |||| Staakor V | Uw Shrimp. I Includes Soup, Dessert A Drink GLENWOOD PLAZA MONDAY-TUESDAY^WEDNESDAY ONLY SEPT. 27,28 and 29, 1995 Dufy (MUFFLERS Instollsd Free by Factory TraMsd Mechanics NO MONEY DOWN 19SS-64 Chovrelats ...11.9S 1959- 64 Chrysler (sxcspt Imperial) ...14.S0 1940-63 Comet .....I.9S ,1959-64 Dodge ......14.25 1960- 61 Dodge Dart . .14.25 1962-64 Dodge Dart . .11.25 1955-64 Ford.......11.50 1960- 64 Falcon ...5.95 1955-64 Marcury....14.95 1961- 64 Oldsmobllo F-55 ......15.95 1955- 64 Plymouth ....1U 1960-64 Pontiac (except 421 HO engine) ...14.25 1956- 61 Rambler .....13.50 1960-64 Valiant ....7.95 Mufflers for all other cars at similar low i;' DRAYTON PLAINS STORE ONLY 'CHARGE irM KKFSGE’5 V prices HERE IS A SUPER VALUE For This Week Only W« Are Offering SUPER KEM-TONE CEILING WHITE FOR ONLY ms DEcatCrron COLORS $R48 mWONLY............ ■loal. HANNA'S SATIN SHEEN FLAT WALL PAINT INOnnOS.f Hur.'. new b«auty ^ iHrilMbllillll *• proneunead that air ........*1—til 095 ^ fal. DuPONT LUCITE INTERIOR Ceiling White Only ^UST WALTl.. JUST EAST OF BALDWIN AVI: FR 44142 OaaaMdoy9AJM.taaP.AA. M.QitfSLWMhdnL* AJA «•.* 0 yLStAlU fffWW-'' RIGHT THE PONTIAC PREI^S; SAtURDAt, SEPTEMBER 25, 106g Board Id Hear Rre Marshal $Mb Amendmwtt to Wotorford Ordinance The Weterford To diip Bound is expected to take action Monday i^t on a request of Fire Marshal Russell See, camng for an amendment to an existing fire ordinance. Hie amendments, previously taUed, would require public es-tablidnnmts to install an automatic, dry, chemical-fixed ex-tinguiAing system in ducts or hoods fixed near any cooking appliance. See is expected to quote the cost of this equipment at the board meeting. Also on the agenda Monday night is a request of Police Chief William Stokes seeking permission to purchase 20 ri(4 helmets at |S7 apiece for full-time patrolmen. ★ * ♦ In other business, the board will consider rescinding an an-ordinance which would place the recreation board under township authority and the community scbocd program under sole jurisdiction the school system. EQUAL BASIS The recreation board and Community school program are currently financed on an equal basis b^ the township and school system. The move is urged by the Public School Employees Retirement Fimd Board and Social Security Flmd. They point out that recreation boards sup ported by both a township and school district should definitely determine responsibility for their employes to one organization. ★ w ★ Also, in order for employes to be on the school district payroll they m u s t be directly responsible to the school board and not the recreation board. WASHINGTON (AP) - PraM-dent Johnson’s history-inaking plan to end the quarrel over tim Panama Canal by making Panama a partner in the enterprise, ^)peared today to have found general ^>proval in Con-ress. Democratic leaders in the buse and Senate hailed the idea, and Sen. George D. Aiken, RrVt, said, “lUngs wiU be much more harmonious if Panama itself becomes a partner in the canal." Hbwevm-, R^. Leonor K. Sul- Warren Council Gets Request for Income Tax WARREN (AP) - This Detroit suburb FViday became the latest Michigan city to explore a local income tax as Mayor William A. Shaw asked the (3ty Council to enact a 1 per cent income tax to take effect Jan. 1. The tax, similar to those now in effect in Detroit, Hamtramck and several outstate communities, would place a 1 per cent tax on residents and one-half per cent on nonresidents who work in Warren. A petition signed by 3,000 residents could force a referendum on the issue, Shaw said. %aw said it would raise an estimated $2 million annually and help offset, what he termed, a H00,000 a year loss caused by new exemptions and depredation schedules on industrial equifunent. U.S.-Panama Partnership on Canal Well-Received Bvan, IXMa, chairman of a House subcommittee on Panama Canal affairs, called joint management "one of tbq most foolish, unnecessary and saddest things which could be done.” She sMd It would not benefit Panama’s Impoveridied masses, and would help only the government in power there and "the privileged families whi(A But even Mrs. Sullivan conceded that, in recoit weeks, she had had no success in ef- forts to halt the partnership ap- Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield saidin a brief q>eecb: "jieasonable mei have sought reasonable solutions and they have found them.” The areas of agreement reached so far, Mansfield said, “are a true of justice and fair play.’ ★ ★ ★ House Democratic Leader Carl Albert called the agree- ment "eloquent proof of friendship and g^ will” Johnson announced the dan Fridi^ bstae flying te Ills as ranch for the weekend. He did not Indicate when a treaty may be ready for submission to the Senate for ratificatton. This could take some months, although agreement on basic issues seems well advanced. LIVELY DEBATE? When the treaty gets to the Senate, congressional sources said, there may be some lively debate, as there was when the IMS treaty with Panama was amended in 19». In addition to oflering Panama a share "in the administration, management and operations of the canal,” Johnson said the disputed IMS treaty, iHiidi first established U.S. con-trd of the cMml, vtould be scrapped, ani a new treaty drafted vrbich '’will effectively recognise Panama’s sovereignty ovtt the area of the present Canal Zone.” JOFS SURPLUS Will Be aotffd Monday and Tilesdoy (S«p». 27 and 28)‘ far Re«b Hashonah (kwUk New Year) BUY, SELL, TRADE. USE PONTIAC Pi^ WANT ADS. IVIan off the Quarter MATMid V. Peusall Whsn a nan doea an out-atoadiiir Job of beliniia people with aomethiac as importsat as dspeadsUe plsaaina for the fotoro soeuri^ of their fBBsUios, Life «f VurgiaU be-Usvss he should bo reeor-atosd. Bore is a aasn whoso tkeronrh trsiaing, skill sad Mcpsrisaeo ia plsaainc have BUMS hha bis aesacy’s lesd-iag rsprescatsthrs in the past S months. Shouldn’t your plans for your towily’s security be re-viewadT Lua of Virginia bs-lisvss that this man is •Vrijj^ps^ offwym^^ bast poimie MiniCT omcE 1080 W. Howard S». SPARTAN THE FAMILY DEPARTMENT STOtl YOU CAN COUNT ON FOR SAVIINS! LYDIA OREY f FACIAL ; TISSUES 1 1 FAMILY SIZE j SPARTAN i TOOTHPASTE HEAD AND SHOULDERS SHAMPOO NUF POUSD Plastic Contaliwr lOBBY PINS (S SHARP SAVINGS ON FAMOUS SHEFFIELD KNIVES a BUTCHER KNIVES • CARVING KNIVES a HAM KNIVES • MANY MOREI All tha most wanted stylst - such packayud ImhmIImSu P^ittovs Sffueffflslul FffssI plate yoiir needs now at tremsndeus tmlnasi >PAIR QUILTED SHOE BAG VAtBli SET OF I PLASTIC DRESS HANGERS i h FAMIL Y DEPARTMENT STORE'-. SHOr SPABTAM 9:30 A.K. TO 10 P.M. DAET :.. SUMDAT 12 MOON TO 10 P.M. ^ritf of Dixie Highway aad Telegraph Road^lR PONtlACj TUB IMJNTIAC PKKS8, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1965 NINE QUESTION: How did they build the pyramWa? ★ ★ ★ ANSWER: The purpose of an ancient Egyptian pyramid was to serve as a royal tomb. Since the Egyptians thought that life after death demanded that their renudns be preserved, rulers built pyramids to preserve their bodies forever. Robbers broke into some of them to get treasurers buried with the rulers, so the pyramids did not fulfill their function as planned. These mouments, however, are as impressive and awe-inspiring as any structures made by men. The secret of how they were built is not exactly known, but our pic-tore shows a method which many experts think may have been used. The “Great Pyramid,” near Cairo, was built of limestone blocks each weighing 2V& tons. It is recorded that 100,000 slaves worked for 20 years to build it. According to the theory shown in the picture, layers of these blocks were laid down, each layer slightly smaller than the one below (shown in black in No. 2.) To carry the blocks up, a ramp was built around them (1) which spiralled around the structure, both ramp and inner structure being built as the pyramid rose op. Ckws of slaves pulled the blocks up the ramp on sledges. Logs were embedded in the ramp to lessen the friction. When the top was reached, the ramp was removed as the workers came down, and the steps of the layers were filled in at the same time. ★ ★ ★ FOR YOU TO DO: Draw a triangle with two equal sides. You can check this with a ruier or piece of paper. Now put a little plam tree besides your pyramid. (k>lor the pyramid gold, the sand light yellow and the tree green. 'MEN'S, BOYS' INSUUUTED 12" RUBBER HUNTING PACS Compare at 4.99 Sunday Only! Insulated 12" hunting pace boast a warm fleece lining and lace up front. Sturdily made with steel shank and cleated soles to stand up under the roughest wear. Olive drab. Men’s, boys* sixes. Wants Piranha Fish Banned From Georgia ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) - The flesh-eating piranha flsh from South America win be officially unwelcome in Georgia if Atty. Gen. Arthur Bolton gets his way. Bolton said he wants the next General Assembly to ban the piranha, which pet stores may now sell legaUy. Bolton wrote State Game and Fish Director Rosser Malonci he favored a law prohibiting “importation, transportation, sale and use of The Escorical is an enormous building near Madrid, Spain. It it is the finest example of Span-Ish Renaissance architecture and comUnes a church, convent and palace. It Is a burial place for tamer kings of Spain. \ > If You Don*t Know, CARPET Know Your Corpat Oeoltr, Call George Tailored For Perfect Fit WOMEN'S LONG-SLEEVE COTTON KNIT POLOS Compare at 1.68 Wear in or out! Turtle-neck polos in fine 100% cotton knit. Choice of blue, pink, maize, black or white; S-M-L. 8mm FILM REEL AND CAN COMBINATION Charge It Sunday Only! GEORGE TUSON Mgr. of Carpet Dept. ELLIOTT’S Furniture Co. 53M-MM Dixie Hwy. OR S-1221 If you could know just one thing aboMtfMmhisky, we would ^iMlito be this: Store home movies safely ... protected from dust and moisture. These top-quality Compco reels and cans hold 200 ft. each of sUndard 8mm film. Shop Kmart for all photo supplies and charge it. Size» 4-8, S-L BOYS' SWEAT- SHIRTS TS^ Our Reg.99c Sunday Only! Crew-neck sweatshirts of heavyweight fleece. White,grey,colors. TWO-POUND BREAK-UP BAR OF LUSCIOUS CHOCOLATE se Compare at 1.27 Sunday Only! This big two-pound bar of party-sweet milk chocolate makes a tempting treat for parties and snacks. At Kmart, you’ll find a wide election of deliciously fresh candy. Charge It. Easy to reach . . . easy to park . . . fun to shop! ITHASTH OFSCOli;] SMOOTI OFBOUl HTNESS THE ACTION 34 PC. MELAMINE DINNERWARE PLASTIC LAUNDRY BASKETS 50-FT. HEAVY DUTY EXTENSION CORD Reg. 10.88 9.8$ Reg. 67c 46^ Meladnr Melamine dinnerware—gnaranteed break and chip resistant service for 8, includes serving )ieces available In assorted patterns. Charge it at ' mart 50-ft length, 18 gauge flatline yellow cord — UL approved. PlasUe laundry basket with sturdy side handles. Assorted colors. Unod, Vinyl TABLE COVER with LACE PAHERN EFFECT Our Reg. 2.73 Sunday Only! 54x72" lace-look vinyl table cover with new-process lining that prevents tearing. May be wiped clean or machine washable. Scalloped edges. White on white, white on beige, white on pink. SAVE ON FINE-QUALITY CERAMIC TURKEY PLATTER Compare SunMyO Only! nt This Imutlftally dMigned cenimie turkey platter is Bolorful < tastefully decorated with large, eolorful turkey in center. Platter measures 18Vkxl34k". Shop Kmart and Charge It! 32» Walker Doll PENELOPE I WITH HER I POODLE I Our Reg. 7.96 Vinyl body, rooted hair. Cute lace-trimmed velveteen dress. 14" white plushy poodle. AUTO SEAT HEAD-REST FOR EXTRA DRIVING COMFORT OwReg.S.97 .Sunday Only! 197 LimUI For assured comfort and safety while driving! Head rest features four-way a^fustmeut . . . up, down, for^ ward and backward. It also helps prevent the danger fo whiplash. Choice of colors. Jnst Charge It. NiNiT. nos ou nmr. atsou enuus miuy. GLENWOOD PLAZA . . . North Perry Street at Glenwood TEN THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 25. 1065 Cocoa Farmers of Nigeria Talk M le Sdi«ol Special Sept. 28th-29th PERMANENTS Reg. <25.00 .. Special $15.00 J Reg. <17.50 . .. Special $12.50 FREE Hair Cut with Shampoo and Set vL—< Personalized Hairstyling ' ANNA-MARIE HAIR FASHIONS .’(860 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. 332-5052 C.loied Monday, Tuo§.-W'ed.-Fri. 9 till 5. . Sat. 9 till 3, Thun. Eve hy Appointment on Parents' Anniversary Patricia Maureen Croasdell and Daniel Eugoie Mirovsky exchanged vows today in St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church where her parents were wed 28 years ago today. A reception in the Italian-American Gub followed the nuptial Mass offered by Rev. T. E. McGrath who extended a Papal blessing to the couple. ♦ -'W- The newlyweds’ parents are the Robert C. Croasdells of Russell Street and the James Mirovskys of Joslyn Road. The bride’s Empire gown of white peau satin featured a detachable chapel train edged with re-embroidered Alencon lace and worn with illusion veil. She carried white orchids, ivy and Stephanotis. Zora Zdunic was honor maid, along with bridesmaids, Patricia Scully, Barbara Felice, Sue Ann Guibord and Karen Phillips. Leroy Mirovsky was his brother’s best man and Jerry Mirovsky ushered with Dean LaBarge, Robert and John Croasdell, Phillip Bridger and Jack Schatz. NEW YORK HUP After a wedding trip to New York Gty, the couple will reside on West Walton Boulevard. Important Notice ■glQt somelhinj' i§ happening WIQQS PONTIAC .STORE jjgr Be Mure to see our full page ud in MONDAY’S PONTIAC PRESS SEPT. 27 By JANET WELL Food Editor, The Pontiac Press Six days of hearing about food, tasting new products and a great variety of other dishes and talking i^p with fellow food ediUna ended FYiday afternoon. The most.exciting pa r t of the morning was meeting and talking with 17 cocoa farmers from Nigeria. The Nigerian ambassador, scheduled to be with the group, bad business at the U.N. and had to cancel his trip to Chicago. it h it But Mr. V. Adegoroye, the head of the Administration Division of the Ministry of External Affairs, Lagos, Nigeria, accompanied the men; he is also a delegate to the U.N. General Assembly. HANDSOME LOT Dressed in their handsome handwoven robes and wearing colorful caps (one was gold cloth), the cocoa farmers presented an imposing picture. Visits Daughter Mrs. Elnore Keys of .Lansing has been in Pontiac visiting her son-in-law and daughter Bishop and Mrs. C. J. Johnson of Walnut Street. Bishop Johnson pastors the Church of God in Christ. w O« m n Auxiliary Meeting | There will be a meeting of the Women’s Auxiliary to the | Pontiac General Hospital on ^ Tuesday at 12:45 p.m. in the Ottawa Drive home of Mrs. C. T. Ekelund. ' I They are currently m a goodwill tour of the United States. ★ w ★ Many (d the men are chiefs in their villages. As such they wore long golden drains with gold badges at the aid. One told me he is also a local judge, but he assured me he is not a lawyer. Less dramatic, but also interesting were the other demonstrations during the morning pre-session. PLASTIC PETALS At the Realemon Brunch the table centerpieces were interesting — many petaled flowers made from empty plastic lemon squeeze containers. The John Oster pecgile who make blenders were showing how to shred and color fresh coconut in a blender. TTiey used a teasponful of flavored gelatin with each half-cup of shredded coconut pieces, w ★ ★ Bread sticks with a coating of sesame seed are now io»die market. Prince Macaroni Mfg. Company also gave us samples of cheesecake made with noodles. It’s delicious. MET A PIE MAN We met a pie man who might have stepped right out of Mother Gom. He held court in the old fashioned country fair sponsored by the Pie Filling Institute. Most of the hosts were Michigan men active in the fruit growing and processing fields. Lots of good recipes here. At luncheon with Durkee Famous Foods we had great fun tasting many of flieir new seasoning blends. One food editor from Chicago was sorinkling them on hw buttered roll. Everything but the coffee was dusted with one or another of the seasonings. They make for Interesting eating. wee The Coffee Information Service, the Roquefort Association and Foods from France, Inc. combined to give us a grand finale. Again it was a tasting session. BOSTON NEXT Next year the conference will be in Boston and all the food editors are anticipating some good New England eat- AU kinds of dgUghtful goodies came out of these ggily wrapped pMkages at Pontiac State Hospital’s first baby shower this week. At left, Mrs. John Bailey of Princeton Avenue, holds up one of the handmade articles to be placed in the For State Hospital Mothers surgical department for births occurring at the hospital. In the foreground Mrs. Wayne Smith of Sylvan Village, hands surgical nurse Mrs. Harry Keif, R.N., of Silver Birch Road, another surprise to open. Volunteers Stage Shower By JEANNE NELSON The blues predominated at Pontiac State Hospital Thursday afternoon. Not the sad ones but the delicate pastel hues associated with the cherub set. Reason for the colorful overtones was an honest-to-good-ness baby shower. About ten times a year a birth takes place in the surgical section by a patient confined to the institution and the department was down to its shirt. Uterally. VOLUNTEERS With the help of Mrs. Wayne Smith, head of volunteers, surgical nurse Mrs. Harry Keif, R.N., and Mrs. John Bailey, Feted at Shower Mrs. Donald Duffy and Vivienne Hutchings honored their sister, Mrs. James B. Knapp of Sylvan Lake at a recent nursery shower in the home of Mrs. John Davies on Coleman Street. Foot in the Door Can Be Step in Right Direction DEAR ABBY: Maybe you can help me with a problem. When a salesman comes to my door and - I Ye« we cen re-, !olor your wife. Anne will an-'»wer your fashion needs. With our newWigJigBlock we can liglilen, darken, frost or streak your win or Poslicho without problem. We invite you to stop in for a complimentary consul- rayton Wig DistributorB 4713 Dixie Hwy, Drayton Plains OpestiN'nil.beegilM. 6734)712 21 Yean Exiierienre any I should say so firmly. But you know how some of these characters are. If they ever get their foot in the door, you can never get rid of them. What do you say? ANNI-BELL DEAR ANNI: I say your husband must be a salesman. * * * DEAR ABBY: I am a grown (?) woman who made a donk^ out of herself at a party recently. I drank too much and air^ my husband’s and my personal problems in an argument with him. He wants me to leave him because he feels we are ruined socially. I am sorry and have told him so a dozen times. I have begged and cried and pleaded, but he won’t even listen to me. I would like our friends to know that I can behave properly. But most of all I want my husband to be proud of me. What can I do, Abby? I am'now g teetotaler. SORRY DEAR SORRY: One swallow does not make a summer. Neither should one unfortunate scene destroy a marriage. If you are now a teetotaler and sincerely want to show your friends that you can behave properly, you deserve another chanw. ■ (}uit groveling and (apolo- gizing. Act' like a lady and hope your husband has the grace to forgive and forget. ♦ * w For Abby’s booklet, “How to Have a Lovely Wedding,’’ send 50 cents to Abby, care of The Pontiac Press. Sisterhood Tea Opens Season A tea hour preceded the opening meeting of the Sisterhood of Temple Beth Jacob Tuesday in the temple. Hostesses for the event were Mrs. Ben Swimmer, Mrs. Abe Za-mek and Mrs. Grarles Gxl-mately |1SO,000 ftn- the orchestra. EDWARDIAN MOOD The 65-year-old Symphony Hall was transfcumed into a magniflcent al fresco dining and dancing ballroom, decorated with Edwardian grace. The lovely widow, her long dr at her bare I shoulders, wore an American-made dress by French design«^| Jean Patou, I She danced the Blue Danube and a few other waltzes at the beginning of a twoeet dance card played by Boston’s celebrated Boston Pq» Orchestra led by conductor Fiedler. Her partners were gentlemen of Boston chosen by the symphoqy committee — with the permission of each man’s wife. At her table in Henry Cabot’s 91,000 box, Mrs. Kennedy talked to her host at her left and sym- See Bright Fu^re for Peru's Economy WASHINGTON (AP)-Peru’s economic future is bright and business opportunities there are abundant, die U.S. Department of Conunerce says in a rqwrt. A U.S. trade mission spent a month bi Peru, visiting and studyfaig the South American republic’s economic lUe. phony conductor Erich Leins-dorf on her ri^. , Sie sdklom had an opportunity to talk with Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Masa., the late president’s brother, seated across from her, or ho* vibrant mother-in-law, Mrs. Joseph P. Kennedy, a few seats away. I At one point, Mrs. Kennedy caught a yawn and, at another, whispei^ to the Harvard and Yale boys dressed in Edwardian costumes who were stationed at the box. Historic names were abundant around her, among them Cabots, Saltonstalls, Huimew-ells, Calderwoods, Bottomleys, Bradleys and a Cutler, to name a few. I The guests paid $1,000 for a ,box or $150 for a lobster and veal dinner at a table in the I vast ballroom. The ladies wore elegant and expensive, but hardly flamboyant, i^wns with a strand of pearls or a diamond pin or two. After Mrs. Kennedy begged to be excused, the men collapsed their top hats, the ladies clutched their chinchillas and everybody went home. 2 WEEKS ONLY Storting Monday, Soptombor 27th Thru Saturday, Octobor 9th. SxZPoniuuT Of Your Child Only ssn Choicsrllf Several Group Pioturos Slightly Highor • Non-Glare Electronic Lights o No Appointment Necessary • No Sundays Make il a dot* and coma in to too ut. You'll be glad you did. FAMILY HUDDLE — Mrs. John F. Kennedy confers with her hrother-in-law. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, during the $l,000-a-box benefit ball last night at Symphony Hall in Boston. It was the young widow’s first social appearance in the home city of her husband since his death 22 months ago. The ball celebrated the 85th birthday of the Boston Symphony Orchestra. Current Books “YES I CAN.’’ By Sammy I help of his ghosts puts on a dis-Davis Jr. with Jane and Burt play of total recall that is for-Boyar. Farrar, Straus & Giroux, midable and intriguing.’ $6.95. I The candor is extravagant and Halfway through this tape-1 the chapters are expert as a style 500-pager, the tense little Davis show. The narrative is song-and-dance star tells of rounded with a bunch of pictures near-suicide: but unfortunately lacks index. “I had a mental picutre of the whole world split in half, with me standing in the mid- glaring at me and the whites I on the other side, langtaing. I “What do I have to accomplish before I can walk on both sides of the world in peace? In dignity?” “THE DEACON WORE SPATS,” by John T. Stewart Holt, Rinehart & Winston $4.95. A lively, witty, delightfully riead-able review of 20th century Christianity by the former religion editor of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. It’s full of anecdotes about I bmsh-arbor revival meetings, niere you have the" gist of un-counted, headlong incidents as Sammy runs with helter-skelter | ^efchers from Billy ambivalence from Harlem birth to happy-ending wedlock with The anecdotes are merely the May Britt. seasoning for a competent and FROM AGE 3 A trouper from age 3, battling for dignity in uniform, chasing chicks and fame, Davis with the highly informative appraisal of the major religious trends of the past 65 years. Stewart is both a first-rate newspaperman and. an ordained Methodist minister, and is well qualified to tell this story. Serving Michigan Since 1890 ... aums tHrm I “HOW FAR TO BETHLEHEM?” By Norah LofU. Doubleday. $4.95. I A highly imaginative sotry of I Three Wise Men who followed I the star to Bethlehem, this moving novei gives an unusual interpretation to an age-old theme. Miss Lofts has assumed tbat Melchior, Gaspcur and Balthazar were thoroughly mortal men; not kings, nor very wise, nor inspired from on hi^. They were unwittingly actors in a great drama they did not understand; mundanely motivated, God’s unanointed tools. Paid 151 censucutiv* sumi-onnual dividundsi 75 ^ W. HURON Fadoral Homo Loon Bank Syttom ic PONTIAC 'h 838-7127 i ■ '♦I*® 'wv , r , '■ 3721S SOUTHFilLD RD., UVhRUP ViLUOi TILEPHONI IL 6-7770 In part, this is a sensitive story of Mary, Joseph and the Child, but its narrative is keyed to the three who make the journey. Miss Lofts, noted for her novels on English historical subjects, has devoted her admirable talents here to a prime Biblical theme, turning legend and mystique into flesh-and-blood realism, illuminated by the universal, timeless aspirations of mortal hope. Shades of Long Ago; Arrow With a Gripe LANDER, Wyo. (UPI) - It could have been the Indian wars all over again except the arrow shot into the door of the state highway department office here contained a note instead of fire. The note read: “You ain’t getting paid for laying around, so get the streets fixed.” It was sig^, “Need New Shocks.” Thoughtful Employer LEICESTER, England (UPI) — The city’s garbage trucks are to be equipped with water heaters so-the crews can wash their hente and brew tea during work SPECIAL NOTICE! WKC’S INVEOTORY ROmD-EP SALE Ras Reen Carried Over to MONDAY ONLY! SIOOAOO WORTH OF TV • STEREO • PHONOS RADIOS • REFRIGERATORS • WASHERS-DRYERS RANGES • FREEZERS • RISC. APPLIANGES • LIVING ROOMS • BEDROOMS • DINING ROOMS • BEDDING LAMPS • TABLES • GIFTWARE • JEWELERY ALL SALE PRICED OPEN MONDAY 9:30 LM. to 9 P.M. PARK FREE IN WKC'S LOT AT REAR or STORE MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY GRADUATE EXTENSION CENTER 366 S. Foundofion Holl Ookland University Rochester FALL QUARTER 1965 BIRMINGHAM NON-CeeOIT SCHOOL LUNCH MANAGERS ~ ~ )l ».m., b««lmilna Octobw S SPECIAL METHODS AND MATERIALS OP TEACHINO — JUNIOE HlOH AND SECONDARY MATHEMATICS Thuradayt, MS p.m ST. CLAIR SHORES BO SM (I) TEACHINO AND THE ADMINISTRATIVE LEADBESHIP WORKSHOP IN EDUCATION; MODERN ELEMENTARY MATHEMATICS WARREN BO IJ7A (I) SUPBEVISION OP STUDENT TEACHING WiOisiSiys, S-7 p.m., btflmiliHi Ocisbsr S REGISTRATION: Abovs lecalioni at tint clast tastioRS or daily at MSU Gradiiata Ixtansion Cantar, 366 S. Foundation Hall, Oakland Univarslty OAKLAND UNIVERSITY ENG SSi (S) AMERICAN LITERATURE - EEALISM AND NATURALISM HST SM (1) AMERICAN CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION Thwsaayt. 7-lt p.m., kaginniiia OcIsOtr 7 SPH 471 IS) SPEECH COERBCTION POR TEACHERS Thurtatys, 7-lt p.m., bs«lnnliifl Octsasr 7 BO Itt (I) CRUCIAL ISSUES IN EDUCATION MS p. - GROWTH, DEVELOP- D tut (3) PRINCIPLES OP GUIDANCE AND PERSONNEL SERVICES 4 INDIVIDUAL ANALYSIS ED ns IS) PRINCIPLES OP CURRICULUM IMPROVEMENT CURRICULUM CONSTRUCTION IN INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION Twtdsyt, 7-lt p.m., bstinnino Octsbsr I COORDINATION IN OCCUPATIONAL TRAINING PROGRAMS ED l»R (3) POUNDATIONS OP BUSINESS AND DISTRIBUTIVE EDUCATION Wsdnstdiyt, 7-lt p.m., bPBlnnlnf Oclobtr 4 RD S3SA (3) SPECIAL METHODS AND MATERIALS OP TEACHINO - SCIENCE Ws4Nwtaays, 4-7 p.m., bSB>nnbifl Octobsr 4 RD I34A (S) SPECIAL METHODS AND IMATEEIALS OP TEACHINO - SOCIAL STUDIES ED S3SA (3) SPECIAL METHODS AND MATERIALS IN TEACHINO - TRAPPIC SAFETY TiMtEtyt, 7-11 p.m., BSBinnInfl OrtsBir S RD S31A IS) AUDIO-VISUAL MATERIALS IN INSTRUCTION Tust4Mvt. 7-lt p.m., btflnnlna OctsBsr S ED tSM (31 ADMINISTRATION OP EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS BO SMB (3) ADMINISTBATION OP EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS — SECONDARY SCHOOL ADMINISTRATION Wtdiwtdavt, 7-lt p.m., bsalmilna Ocltbtr 4 BO U7 (3) BDUCATIONAL RBSBARCN TtSPBtyt, 7-lt p.m., iMglimUig OcttiMr 11 RD Itl (31 SBMINARI IN BOUCATION — VOCATIONAL BDUCATION Tuttatyt. 4i3ta;3t p.m., hMlIimInt Octabtr S ■0 til (3) SEMINARS IN EDUCATION - SCHOOL PERSONNEL HPR Ml (3) CURRENT PROBLEMS IN PHYSICAL EDUCATION IOC 411 (I) SEMINAR ON RECENT ADVANCES IN SCIENCE AND MATHEMATICS (NATURAL SCiaNCB SEMINAR II) Ptur ilftnitlt stluratyt arraiiBta, kathmliiB OcItBtr 3S^ OBOORAPHY OP MICNIOAN PLS 4tl II) MICNIOAN GOVERNMENT Wtanttapyt, 7-lt p.m., Btflnnlnf Odtktr t PSY S37 (3) PERSONALITY - DYNAMIC THEORIES PSY 4M (I) TRAININO AND SUPERVISINO Thurtaayi, 7-11 p-m., BpbI—l»B Oct SOC/BO SOCIOLOOY OP BDUCATION Thuraatyt. 7-lS p.m. hCBlMilnB Oclsttr 7 RIOISTRATIONi Wadnapday aad ThuradBy, Saftambar 29 and 30, MSI Cantar, 366 S. Faundation Hall, Oakland Unj^rtlty for further informationl MSU 8RADUATE EXTENSION CENTER 366 $.. Foundation Ttolly Ooklond UniveroHy 330-7211, Ixt. 2223 iSVKtVK THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAy, SEPTEMBER 25. 1965 By ROBERT BERRELLEZ SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic (AP) — Hope and resentment are the p^lem children of the Dtmunican revolution. Too much hi both could hurt a difficult and costly reconstruction job vhich this once prosperous, now bankrupt little country can hardly handle alone. ♦ w ★ Dominicans and foreigners who share this impression say these post-revolution factors will be accentuated by the return of ex-President Juan Bosch from his exile in Puerto Rico. The author-raconteur who governed only seven months in 1963 is due back today, second anniversary of the coup that ousted him and led to the violent upheaval. ROSY HOPES To many partisians Bosch embodies the rosiest revolutionary hopes. To his enemies he means undiluted disaster. Even among some of the expresident’s allies there are twinges apprehension that he may return with an overdeveloped sense of bitterness and vengeance, products of his belief that both his 1963 ouster and the U.S. armed intervention in SHOP SUNDAY April were engineered in Wash-ii^n, with local connivance, to deprive him of power. ★ * ★ Bosch has spoken scathingly of Amo-ican p^ormance in the Santo Domingo revolt. ‘‘The United States will pay a high price for this blunder, and, in my opinion, it will be paid within our time," he wrote in the New Republic in July. BREEDING GROUND “When democratic nationalism is thwarted or strangled, it becomes a breeding ground for communism. I am certain the use ('osits .No at S<-ai - Miiit lliiiirv Be Smart, Be Thrifty—Monday and Every Day! Yon Can Be Sure of Extra Savings at Sears! No Phone Orders, C.O.D.’s or Deliveries^ ‘ MlllllliH Hllli'Mlill. I n. iiiiil Siiliinliii MONDAY ONLY tots* combed cotton Polo Shirts on Sale Monday 89c Shirts 67s just say, **Charge It** at Sears! Mfr*s Qoae-Ont! Men*« Dreaa Shoe* L«, d—«l p.k. d>im .idi SJe-PricedlPartel Percale Shwto tii^ neek s^ s^alders to kMp $3.09 FaU flat or Fitted.....2.71 Reg. $2.79 Many styles to choose from in sUpons and * ’ .......... ■ I1.S9PUIoweases...........pr. 1.47 ^51 - - ■ - - Combed cotton perado in S delicate pai-teb. 180 threads per iqnere inch. Mt fit Fully washable. I Choose from popular Fall colors I in solids and paUems. In sizes JLStodx. InfanU’Dept., Main Floor oxfinds, indiiding popnlar Oinkers. Choice $9:99 MONDAY ONLY ofhkcLhrownin'aimeTH'U. /f 97 WOMEN'S $7.99 Caanala... ^.pr. 2.97 ^ rhasgsll MONDAY ONLY Save Monday on Galvanized 20Price Sale! Wool Doable Knita For snits, dresses and aportswearl Sava Reg. $5.98 tl99 a yard on 100% wool donble knits in lovely Fall colors. Easy to aaw and a *^77 dream to wear. Monday oidyl mm yard YardCood$,Sear$ Main Floor MONDAY ONLY! Your Qioice of Life-Like CENTERPIECES 9S $12.98 Cbargolt lifoJika flowfnofwashahU petal - smooth plasde nro-aevTO •ommer's ehann. Dnw matia arianiaaunts la laia-bowcr see a woman buying be^ self new shoes? She tries them on in a rather gingerly, critical fadiion, walks in them at length in a “show-me” sort of way, and then examines the workmanship inside and out. When a woman is sold on a pair of shoes, she is really sold! A woman buying a house is something else again. Not knowing exactly what to look for, she’s inclined to leave the whole thing up to her husband, and then feel miffed if the house doesn’t live up to her expectations. Jean Kinkead, women’s cm-sattaat to the Travel®™ In-saraace Companies, offers a checklist for hoase^nnt-ing wives. “Because a house is the largest investment most families ever make," she remids us, “K you’ve a friend knowledgeable in nicfa matters, be sure to take him along. If not, you might want to pay a reputable local contractor a small fee to size them up for you.’’ SOUND ROOF Be sure the roof is sound. If it’s shingled and over twenty years old, you may have to replace it Be sure the roof is sound. If it’s shingled and over twenty years old, you may have to replace it Go over the outside covering - known as Oe sidiag. ChM!k far srild, tight window Open and dope windows. = 126“ McMABB SAW SERVICE 1345 Mdwin FE 2-6312 Bloomfield To^^nhouse Apartments $t3 PEI MONTH Models at 16 Draglas St. Pontiac, Mich. Check attic rafters for dry-rot and, if possible, examine insulation. Cbedc an stairs and floors for sturdiness. And whUe you’re at it, chedE die number of donets. Chedt the plumUng by turning on sevend faucets, then flushing the tdlet, in order to test wator {Hcssure. Ideally, the pipes should be copper. Be sure the electrical system is adequate for your household eqdpment Check, too, to be sure there are sufficient ontlets and safe wiring. In the cellar, check walls for dryness. Look at the foundation. Examine the ceiling posts and crossbeams for hardbess. If the wood crumbles, suspect termites. ★ ★ ★ Look at the heating system and pipe insulation, and ask what the owner pays annually for fuel. As the future lady of the house, you’ll want to look into the availability of these serv-icesrwater, electridty, gas, telephone, sewers, mail delivery, street lights and garbage collection. It is assumed that you will have looked into the neighborhood and the school system to begin with! Ploy It Cool With Dust in Curtains Screens will keep out bugs — but not dirt and soot What’s most exposed to incoming soil? Curtains, of course. If you wait until late fail to wash them all, the dust may have discolored your pretty curtains, and the cleani^ job will be tougher. Make it easier on yourself to time. A pre-soak in cool water for 10-15 minutes will loosen dust. The task is further simplified by adding bleach to the wash-load — whether for cotton or man- SHARED BEDROOM - Qever dividers sqiarate beds and give each boy a place fu* displaying equipment, school mementoes and the like. Ad^g to the comfortable aiqiear- ance (d the room are the woodgrained walls and the carpeted floor. The dividers are removable to meet changing o»Klitions. Country Auctions Feather First Nest Homes Need Storage Area DIXIE GARAGES WE GUARANTEE TO SAVE YOU MONEY! “On 2 BIDS n« BTMATIS NO PAYM«T 'TH 1964 AU TYPiS OF MODiRNIZATIONI DIXIE GARAGE CONSTRUCTION H44 HIOHUNO ROAD (M-il) EAST OF AIRPORT RD. CALL OR 4-0371 Planning for efficient storage in your home helps to acquire the uncluttered look that is desired in modem homes. Perhaps you can throw away, or give away, seldom used items. List items to be stored. Then provide storage in the areas where they are used such as sleeping, bath, kitchen, utility, and living. When Herns are stored in the areas where used, you can im- Provide more efficient storage inekaets, cabinets, dravrers and shelves by using step shelves, flies, or drawer dividers. As a guide to improved stw-age. The Pennsylvania State University offers a home study course “Improving House and Grounds." IMPROVE HOME Other topics discussed in the course are ideas for making es noore livable and grounds more attractive. Floor plans of Get a copy of the course “Improving House and Grounds” by sending |1.7S to Correspondence Courses, 202 Agricultural Education Building, University Park, Pennsylvania 16802. Make check or money order payable to The Pennsylvania State University. By VIVIAN BROWN AP Newsfeatnres Writer Young married people can feather their flrst nests at country auctions. Cheap, too. It’s the ideal way to have an interesting first home on a limited budget Typical wares usually in-clute outdoor and indoor furniture, tools, equipment, fabrics, pottery, g i a s s, cooking equipment, china. A g • • d sturdy ladder, far example, is a good sturdy ladder. If one caa get H far II per cent of what U costs new, why not An old^ashioned idea that put many young couples in debt for decades was that the first home must shine like Christmas tinsel with everything new. Nowadays, one takes time to make wise purchases, trying to get as much value as possible for the dollar, A list of things needed and a preview of what’s for sale will keep one from being sidetracked to bargains that may wind up in the basement. Anything bought should be in good condHhm. There’s always enough to do In a new home wHhont trying to rebuild everything you buy. Men are the biggest deterrents to women’s eqjoyment of auction, unless persuaded at the outset that there are a few good buys with man4ippeal. Spot an eagle quickly or a few decoys or a weathervane, old musket or a sword to corral place equipment, too — fenders, andirons, bellows, cranes and so on. At any country aaetion wHh a good supply, you should see at least 16 th^ that you have At just about any summer auction in New England for in-K, someone will hold up a cranberry picker and say, “Now what can you do with this?” Wen, these can make good investments. Dress designer Panliiie Trigere nses one on a wan of her homw to hoM magasiaes. Or use it to bold yam. There are lots of uses for good old things: Washboard racks can be used as tray stands. Footstoves may be electrified and used on the wall. Woven and quilted coverlets are useful for just that — beds. In bad coition, a woven coverlet is still usable to cover a chair or settee, discarding the bad portions. Old picture frames can jazz up a wall until yon get some Choose a deep firame, pt shelf in it, and place a ■ bowl of real or artlfldal flowers in it. Old sugar bowls, minus tops, serve welt as flower bowls. Large wash stands are ideally used as planters. in wash stand sets i far flowers. Set la a ssesli of whro these nmy be saspeaded from the cefifag to hold plants. Enormous wrought iron cauldrons, brass or copper pots can be filled with pots of flowers and used to deconte the lawn. Extra Space Under Eaves Anyone lucky enough to have an attic should take full advantage of it. In today’s smaller homes, an attic can make the difference between cramped quarters and space for everyone to have his own bedroom. In fact, it’s so easy for anyone handy with simple tools to finish an attic himself that many builders leave this area unfinished with the idea that the owner will later make it livable. After partitioning for this the ffaoriug shmdd he seleet-ed. Vinyl asbestM tile is suggested for the “doJ6yonrseU-er" as this material is easy to handle and is actually recommended for owner ' tion. When choosing odonT for resilient tiles, keep in mind that this long wearing surface will probably be down for many years so muted tones are usually beat, eqiedally if it is expected that different people will be occupying the rooms over the next few years. A teenage girl may enjoy a shoeUng pink floor, but several years from now her brother may be too embarrassed to move into the room. One of an attic’s greatest assets is the quiet it offers for both sleeping and studying. Therefore, when planning rooms there, try to provide for multifunction areas if possible. A sewing comer may be greatly appreciated Iqr a daughter, or a hoWby bench by a son^ Crewel or other embroidered If these do no fit exactly, frame them in a border of linen or other fabric. People didn’t throw things away in the
• KWMICA sink COUNHR • 100 AMR lucnic SiltVICt • HHMHASS INSULATION TRI4.BVIL • Not Hastily Contrived Afterthought Home Office Can Be Convenient For day-tiHley I tasks and seasonal honaeclaan» ing {Hvjects, noddng contrilMlaa more to saidtatioo than pleiity of hot water Aram an adequate-hr sised water beater. Tkt VALUMHT Irntt pdfowiiiiil Um9 or Smil Uovie Hot 0 Sholl j Not 0 PTG‘P°^ ■’‘''■"•'•'"'‘'t/c.BricVF....... Copper Ptumbing Hoot, #tc. , Thtt Home Of Yotirtt DieoiiisI 3 BfOROOM RANCH BUILT ON YOUR LOT HmeA phone OR 40319 6100 DIXIE HWY., Waterford, Michigan An office away from tiie office -> or for those who work exclusively at home — need not be a bastily-ctmtrived afterthought. inth a little planning, a home office can be comfortable and convenient, and can contribute to the de^ of the home as Carpeting, for exAmple, can play a major role in coordinating a w^ing area with a living area. Nowadays, a wall-to-waH instanatloa is no longer a lonry; It’s a Carpets made with man-made fibers such as acrylic fiber are soil resistant and easy to clean, and furnish all-importot sound-absorbing qualities as well. So start as you would decorate any living room ~ with the carpet — and carry the idea one step further. Thb one step further? A carpeted room divider! On the office side, it’s a waist-high bank of file cabinets; on the lining room side, it’s an elegant, colorful “tie-in” with the carpet used on the floor. The fav serves as a show- knacks, or other accessories. The carpeted divider not only disguises its fnnctional. asjpect, but serves as an attractive fnmishiag it its own ri^t. A well-placed area rug, too, can divide an office area from a living area, yet, by coordinating its col(w and texture with the living room carpet, can at the same time tie the two areas together. It can even be the same carpet: wall-to-wall for living room; cut, bound, and fringed for office. Even the smaUest family needs space for paper work. A desk is essential, bat it need not be of the standard knee- sndi as a hunt table, make handsome desks. A library table with a miniature cbest of drawers on top fOr papers is efficient — and decorative. If space is needed for storing papers, deep-drawered chests make admirable file cabinets. Old-fashioned trunks, especially the “wardrobe trunks” can also be converted for storing papers. Brought down from the attic for day-toHlay use, they can be painted in brif^t colors. Ordinary file cabinets, bought second-hand, can also be painted and used decoratively and efficientlv in the family room tape, unusual jars to hold pen- j dls, gay felt typwriter covers will keep the home work area from looking too business-like. | n5«400 C«n ME 4-9S31 OPEN SUNDAY 2 TO 5 1190 FulUr TODAY'S BARGAIN - Tri-L*v*l only 5 y«art old. LoigG comor let, beautifully landtcaped. Wonderful city lecetiei« dote to Northern Hi. 3 bedroom*, 1 Vt bath*, fireplace, family-room and evertiie 2-car garage. Price reduced $1,000 with best of term*. Jotlyn to Cdumbia, right to Fulier. BATEMAN Realty Co. PONTIAC FE S-1161 377 S. Telegraph ROCHESTER OL 1-S51S 730 S. Rechetter Rood for filing. p | Lamps and accessories used | on a desk can be chosen for the _ decorative value as well as use- I fiiInMe " Such small items as pretty ceramic holders for cellt^hane DOUBLE DUTY—The home office can be an integral part of the room in which it exists. Here, the unifying influence is the carpet, a lovely tracery-patterned fiber. This luxurious carpet is used wall-to-wall throughout the entire area, and reappears as a distinctive ac- cent on the double-duty file cabinet/room divider. Used in this manner, the easy-to-care-for carpet serves as a b^utiful background to the decor in both living and working areas of the room. MODEL OPEN 2341 Pentiae Trail nwin mm A iMMnn IK PRONE B24-4BI1 *10,950 On Your Lot or Plus Your Lot • Lirtil-a. • Dll. a*. KH. • OipHr PhmMpg OPTIONAL • Lirgi Ltl F.NA. and CONVEIITIONAL MORTOAOES PHONE 363-7000 Frank Marotta &Assoc’s I1M UNION UKE RD. UNION UKE Automatic dishwashers clean dishes, utensils, pots and pans better, wlUi water far hotter than human hands could possibly stand. New Booklet Is Available A new 16-page booklet about lightning protection, written pri-marilv for homeowners is available from the Lightning Protection Institute, Chicago. Requirements for proper lightning protection are described. So are the role of TV antennas, personal safety rule& and modem “bullWn” lightriuig conductor systems. There are a dozen other chapters about nature’s worst destroyer and protection against it. Dlustrations show the four points where bolts struck houses damaged or destroyed bv lightning over a two-year study period. The six parts of a proper lightning protection system are listed. . Among the most important sections of the booklet, the Institute says, is a page describing the “Master Label” lightning protection inspection program of Underwirters Laboratories, Inc. lightning protection system you obtain a proper one. Single coides of “Lightning Protection G^e” are free. Send a postcard to: Lightning Protection Institute, 2 Nwth Riverside Plaza, Chicago, Illinois Homemaker Prefers Decorated Baths Years ago, the bathroom had to look as white and surgical as an operating room. Now fixtures come in noany colors. This enables the creative homemaker to decorate her bathroom as imaginatively as the rest of the bouse. OPEN SAT. A SUN. 24 PM. Immediate Occupancy BEDROOM NOME M3,950 FAVORABLE TERMS 1112 Highland Rd. (MOO) ALUMINUM SALE UMMOI 9NM! 354 COVER YOUR e 1 ENTIRE HOME... # (All Brands) Bosed on 6-Room Home 22x24x8 COMPLETELY INSTALLED PATIOS and CARPORTS. *99 MSTALLED PRKE 13-TRACK ALUM. I STORM WINDOWS.... *9 BASED ON A MINIMUM OF S WINDOWS! • LIMITED TIME ONLY • NO MONEY DOWN! j TODAY FE 44418 ■ vAiiiE roHcniirTifMi ro. eaais wofl ' VALUE CONSTRUaiON CO. 24 HOUR SERVia 24315 WOODWARD AVL In tiling a room include floor of closets to match, udiich carries out the decorative effect of entire room. Many homeowners do not know that the familiar “U-L” — whose labels you’ll find on high-quality electrical appliances tuid cords —has a division whose sole purpose is to check the quality of lightning protection systems. The booklet describes this nonprofit service and how to use it to assure that if you buy a ALUAAINUM SIDING FREE ESTIMATES! SAVOIE INSULATION CO. 6561 DIXII HWY. OR 3-3619 Just a few sites left in Beautiful ClARKSTON GARDENS Mmtiiu Ini Foliac Dixie Hwy. (US-IO) to M-15, turn right 1 mile to Waldon Rd., right 1 mile to models or 1-75 , thru Clarkston. Left at Waldon Rd. off Main St. “An Urban Community** WALDON ROAD AT ALMOND LANE Pre-Season Prices on YEAR-ROUND ENCLOSURES SAVE MOO or MORE on Moinfenonca FREE •ALCOA •KAISEB • RETNOLDS ALUNINUN ^ S1DIN6 (Wf ceng mrytURf. m palRthif Im a UieliBttftlwhMM) ★ AWNINGS (iU tTVM) lor Wiidowi Ar STORM WINDOWS aid DOORS ★ SLIDING DOOlWAUS - Prim w Stona NO MONEY DOWN 5 YEARS TO PAY dUSS AND SCREEN REPAIRS ALL AWNING 919 ORCHARD LAKE AVE. — PONTIAC ACT NOW BEFORE ITS TOO LATE! 1,S50 SQ. FT. of Living Area MINIMUM DOWN Payment 1890 We Trade Homes - Will Build on Your Property! Built A Sold by ARISTOCRAT BUILDING CO. i( Spaeious Family Room With Fireplace* if Large Kitchen and Dining Area 1 and Vh Batha ^2-CorAtUehed Brick Garage A^.Fnll Basement ★ Goa Heat it Lota 115x150 ~ if Commanlty Water MANY ADDITIONAL FEATUBBS WALDON RD. at ALMOND LANBi Opaa DoUy 12 to 7, Soadsy ;S J BIXTKt^N THE l*ONTlAC PRESS, SATURDAy, SEPTEMBER 25, X$65 Transactions on This Week's Markets Law Lwl Ch«. —A— AkKut 1J2f 12 4M 4I^+ % AlAott Ub I 314 43 285 18V* 17'/* — - 510 41'* 311* pt3.50 Dr4lMpri.il ; Dp 4.15pf2.07 DuqLt Wt 2 31 7?* 71* 7% .. > 32?* : lira w* ti)* 5q'"3'.75pf'l.87 Dura Cp .50a ar «./] « aa — an DWGCIo 40p 25 131* 13V* 13V* . 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LIttonIn 1.B7t 750 IIM* 1IIV* 1150*+ V* LIvIngsO .431 xl05 5V4 Jl* Ji* ■ LockhdAIre 2 533 55 520* 530*— IV* Loews That 387 23'/* M'A 23'/*+ 3 Lanes Cam i 282 15'4 100* 1014— V* LoneSGa I l4 315 25’* 25 25 - H Long Isl LI I 58 34'* 33H 330*— ?* Loral Carp 175 8’* 8'-4 *V*— 0* Lorrilard 3 50 153 47 4514 4514- LuckySIr 1 40 . 45 3714 350* -■ It 8 183 551* 50 l'/4— IV* 5B 35V* 35 BklynUO IJO 05 „ - _jn* p? - 25V*+ 214 DaycaCp .5 -. 4314.A 15* D,' ; 412 47?b 4314 4715+ 21* DPl pIB 3. 51 4 3?* 4 + >4 OPL pIC 3. 45 43 411* 410*- IV* Peer* 1.40* W5 53 15 5I'4+ 2V* Kt Hud .5 35'*+ 04 Dal PL 1.5 3 20 + IV* IW 1.50 Xl52 MO* S5H 27 - I In* 1 04 ^ 47 500*+ 3V4 Ca JO 1745 ^ 10H 15V*+ H tta "3 is liiil s Par IJO 1 so 3SV* 35V*- V* KHHI IJO 105 240* 230* 3314- V* Dent tup la DanRIoGW I DaSoloCh .50 OatEdls 1.30 M ilael JO 5* Vllbiss 2 Oiam Aik 1 DIamlnll ’ “ —1>— 103 21'* 27V* 21'* 1 ' ^52 4^'- 42VS 421*- 117 21^ M'/i 210*^ I 40 Ja'/> 35'* 3514 ............ 'lia-l ... 43'* 420* 437*+ 1' 135 30 2814 3514+ ' 37 551* 58'* 55’*+ 1' 212 104'* 55’/s 1*30*+ 1' 25 28H 277* 28V* + ' (20 13'* I ______ „. 257 32V* M'/4 30".- 1'A —M— Mack Truck* 381 370* 35'* 35'*- 14 MacyRH 1.20 74 55’* 54'* 540*- 11* ^grnSlap®*; *1? / i*en«vox I 42M MVj i v«r«thn 2.ID 409 64H t lir Mill 1 25 71 3SH 3 I .ft: 'A I 55'*+ 4'* 1 53'*+ 3H 45 MV* 15’* 15’/»- 14 *171 37’* 37 37V*+ '* 153 15V* 14'* 141*- 1* 1 52V* 510* 510*- 0* 30?* 37>* M?*+ DIanaStr .471 141 15V* 14’* 15'/4- V* OleboM .40 14 33'A 32H UO*- ?* .A ^ JtGiargla DInarsCi gin..' A8*r^ la Mar^ap .aog MGM I SO MinnMM UO >58° M a*’* a505+ m 358 aai4 43'/> 44'*— V* 111! 421* 41'* 41'/4+ V4 s ^ ^ S*+ X as Hxirra 5 Kan Tax 383 1)14 10H lOO*- < ■ X341S 410* 3704 ai'A+ 37* Det*?H’’.7c” ?3? 8o4 H ^ ° m I'f .a sa-sx sfiira s r i z »u'it DomFd I atg 143 1544 341* 3SV5+ Ok Ponnilay .Mb 15« IV* 40* 5 bougAir .Mb % ^ X lig RX c HXt Xiter^rM' Ssr’xl&tfiH 35 31’* iT'-* 2114+ 1 85 15V* 18’* 250*+ 1 511 550* 52 550*+ M 45 44|* 4114 43 - ' 503 74V* 7015 *8V*+ 3! 155 15V* Ml* M4*- 1 435 47'A 45V* 410*- 1 45 14V* 134* 14 + 1 30 41 4iw 4B'*- V NatCan aOb t 14?* 84'* 14'* sjO 72'* M?* 21V*- ii r sx SX+? 128 40 100* 35'*+ 455 11 32 12'/*- —N— 424 103'* 5# 55'/s- <* ^ sx g;;: Sv*+’v* 4M |I0* 74'* 510*+ $ 177 lo 04'* I405- 05 Sx sx r- ’* a JRS 17V* ITvfc H mMfg 1 foil flO Safeway St 1 503 330* 31V* 33 — H StJasLd 2.50 142 41V* 4514 4714+ ?* SL SanF 1.50 187 38'/4 37 38'*+ 1 StRaoP 1.40b 353 350* 34'A 35V* SanDImp .451 — ■" — “ Schenley la Schering 1.80 Schick n m t a'* SCMCorp .Ml 15873 431* 33V* 41W+1015 ScottPae .50 835 380s 35V* 3514— 14 Seab AL 1.50 184 42H 41'* 4204+ 1* SearIGD 1 30 317 521* 50 MV*— '* Sears Do* i 1S47 aau /uiJ av/l— n* Servel ..... .jii ______■* .510 - .... .... .... SharWm I.M 144 57Vi S5',4 57 . Sinclair 2 15M 55'* 5114 530*+ 2 SlnoerCo 3.M 452 540* 51V4 5115— 2*— I St Psekagtog 437 in* 10V* 10V*— ?* StanWar I.SO 55 3414 3314 34 — '* ttluffCh IJO 305 SIV* 451* 451*- 2V* IterlDrug .75 135 33V* 32V* 32'*- ** SttvenUP 3 255 58V* 5514 57'*+ 5* Sludabakar 151 15V* 18% 1814+ v* tan on lb 50 5514 54 54'*— 1'* Sunrty 1.40 2837 35V4 31 34%+ IV* Swift Co 2 307 45% 47% 4714— 1 —T— Tampa El .31 213 37% 3514 27%+ % Tann On 1b 402 21V* 23V* 23% Ttxsoo 1.40 544 83% N'* B1%- % TexEutT .50 304 MV4 M M - V* TexGSul JO 2575 73 55V* 71<*+ 1?* ----- ■ - —........... ‘ "I + r Thiokol .57* TIdewit Oil 1 Timk RB 1.M Trans W Air Trsnsam JOb - _ . Transftron 1225 7'* TrIConI 1.1M x112 50V* 45% 45?*+ % Tw*n) C .Mb 255 28% 27'* 27V*- 1'* —u— Ul 5JS 5JI urvyivs rimo zl.2S 23JI 21J4 Eaton I. H Bal 13.27 11.14 11J4 11.33 Eaton II H Stk iaj2 I5J5 15Jt MJ3 Employ Gr 34.55 24J2 14J5 24J0 Enargy Fd 25.71 S5J5 1SJ5 35J4 Equity Fund 10J5 10J4 10J5 lOJS Faderit Gr Fd 12.M 12.1S 12JI 11.17 Fidelity Cap 13.55 13.55 13.55 I3J7 Fidelity Fund 15.12 15.03 15.H 15J) Fid Trend Fd 23.M 23J3 23.H 23J5 Fid Mut Inv Co 10.11 10.07 10.05 10.05 2J4 3J5 2J4 ._ 7.II 7.25 7.17 1.35 1.15 IJ7 1.37 STOCKS CONTINUE GAINS-For the fifth imek In a row, the Associated Press average 6t 00 stocks moved hi^ior, closing at 343.2 from 340.9 a week earlier. The wedcly volume was the largest since July, 1933. Led by livestock, the commodity index declined this week to 171.6 from 172.3 in the preceding period. Stock Mart Volume Highest in 32 Years Foursquare Fd 12.31 1 Un Tank 2 Un AW. UO 713 I 710 I + 1% us Indus! us Linas 3b griKS'2’5 ... ... B%+ .. 1131 15 13% 14V*+ 1 471 35% 34% 35 — % 3M 31% 37% M%+ 1'* 75 31% 3IV* 12%+ % 325 M'* 55% 57'*- % 355 15?k 14% 14%+ '* 102 14% J214 33 - 1’* 143 44 4) 44 + 3% 135 54'* 51% 53'*- '* 237 IH ........... • ■■ 4'* 4'* - 1% UnMatch M S3S 17% 15V* 17 - OnIvOPd 1 M 3M 54 51V* 52'*+ 1 UPlohn 1 M 155 55% 55'* 55'*- V* —V— Vanad Cp It 115 24% 2J% 23%- ’* Varlan As 1300 34% 21'* 24'*+ 2'* VatCOMt I N M 41% 40 40%+ % VandoCo 40 1134 12 35 31%+ 1?* VtEIPw I.M 100 47% 45?* 47%+ % —WX-Y-Z-. Walworth Co 42 7'* 7V* 7'*+ '* WarnPIct .50 13B 15V* 14% 15 WarnLtm .50 144 40% 35'* 40%+ IV* WnAIrLin .M 755 33% 11% 33V*+ % WnBanc 1.10 135 S7V* 35V5 15**- '* WnInMd I.4B M 44V* 43% 44%+ 1<* WUnTal I 40 x5T7 43% 41 41?*— 1'* WntoEl I.M 1304 5’'* 55?* 57 + % Wtvarhr 1 M 342 45 42% 43 — I’* -Cp I.M 254 43'* 40% 42 + r* M 1.40 IM 33'* 32 13 + % n Co I M 45% 45 45'*— I 31* 1.12 75 40 35'* 35**- % ---jorth 1 Ml M% 27% 27%— % Worthtogtn I 354 31 30% 31%+ 1% Xrox dp .70 1103 114% 157% 173V5-11% ig,3X a%,S^:^ CtpyrtgMad by Tlw Atatclalad PrtM mi WIEKLV N V 5TOC KMLES ilal tor waM 40,533,511 Mk ago 1S,147,5M «r 50 M.S55.200 ug.'g?,'g? Z—Salas In full. IJnlast otharwlaa noted, rain of dlvl-nds In tha torageing lab'a art annual ibu'wmants basad on Ih* artuastqrl —'------al daclarattonjlgiel- “ .... .. a—Paid last yar durtftt m*. ntlmatad --------- -IvldinJ ar ax.^strlbu- dato. g—Oacitrad or paid so far this h-baclartd ar^ aftor atadi divi-—I or apm up. k—Oadarad or paM this ynr, an accumuiativa uaua artih dlvl. dands in arraari. n—New laaua. p—Paid thia year, divWand amltlad/ dafarrd or to actlan taken af.taaf dIvWimd maatlno. r-Oaclarad or aald In im plus akM JIvIdand. l-PaM bi tibefc dwing 1554, ttfjmattd cash valut on ax-dtvwm or n Grth Pd K-2 HI4Jr cm 5-1 Inco SIk $-2 Growth 5-3 LoPr Cm S-4 Khlckrbck Gr F Laurd Fund Laxngtn Inc Tr Lift Ins Inv Life Ins Stk Loom Say Can Loom Say Mut 2.8f 2.77 2.71 2.75 MO M5 M5 Ml 1.22 1.04 tJ3 MS 5.25 5.05 5J5 5.N 1SJ3 1SJ4 1SJ0 I5J1 25.55 15.45 38.55 3_______ 5.71 5.74 5.75 5.73 >os 5.51 8.50 8.50 MO a 10.15 M.15 10.15 11.18 I 7.52 7.85 7.51 7.50 I0J5 10J7 10.51 10J7 ( Fd 7,03 5.55 7J1 5.55 n 11.25 13.11 13.23 11.05 8.53 8.25 8J5 IJO 5.74 5.70 5.7S 5.71 Rll 11J5 13JI 12.05 3B.21 37.51 31.01 M.03 33.M 22J7 32.N SJl 15.55 15.17 15.50 I5J4 mds; 34J5 24J4 24J4- 34.15 14JS 14J3 24J4 24J4 1 17.51 17.50 17.51 17.50 10.75 10.75 10.75 10.75 5J0 5.77 5.73 5.7B 5.M 5.54 5.51 5J1 34.44 24JS 14J3 B4J1 I4J1 14.75 14.77 14.77 M.35 M.11 10J5 M.05 5.55 5.15 5.51 •*' 14J5 14J4 14.44 —, 7JS 7JI 7J4 7J3 I. 1S Ml 1.14 7.54 11.13 11.00 11.13 IMP IM5 IM4 10J4 10.71 1.54 MO 1.53 8.77 5.74 5.55 5.74 5J5 n.31 31.55 31.55 S.M I7J4 17.13 17.18 17.15 10.H 10.23 10.15 10J5 II. M 10.00 IMS 11.01 12.57 I2J3 11.57 12.54 ISM 11.50 11.55 1IJI 5.71 5.57 5J5 SJ7 11.31 11.14 11.10 11.11 15.05 ISJI 15.03 15.55 NEW YORK (AP) - Volume on the stock market this week soared to its highest level in 32 years as the strong advance since Labor Day reached a so-called climax—perhaps one (rf a series of climaxes, according to stock analysts. The week’s turnover was 40,933,918 shares, compared to 35,147,620 the week before. This was the largest for any week since the one ended July 22, 1933 when 42,329,033 shares changed hands. * ★ ★ The week’s trading total, however, was not so much greater than in the week ended June 2, 1962 when 40,563,230 shares changed hands. This was the famous Memorial Day week featured by the “BUu^ Monday” decline of May 28. That week’s volume was the more remarkable because it contained only four trading days, cut short by the Memorial Day holiday. ’This week’s biggest session was ’Thursday’s when 10 million shares changed hands in what analysts caHed a buying climax or “blowoff” to the strong post-Labor Day rally. It was tte second 10 - i^llion - share day this year and was the seventh biggest volume day in the history of the New York Stock Exchange. The week was highlighted by N*tlon-WWt S*c 2J7 3JI l'.50 Ont Winitm St Opponbtlm Pd P#nn Sq P»opl*s $*c Phil* Pd Pin# 5lre«t Plondtr Fund Prlet, TR Orth Provldont Fd Purlton Fund fJ3 fJ5 fJl 5.55 ».U I.M 8.53 l.» 10.77 10.73 10.n 10.73 11.51 lUI 11.50 11.05 11J4 tUI 11.55 11.M 1BJI 11.45 IMS 11.41 15.27 15.15 15.27 15.17 M.00 15 J5 M.M 1*>« 22.05 21.71 22.05 3 5.51 5.48 5.53 14JB 11.N 14.01 . 12.41 I3J} 12.47 1 11.01 10.54 11.M 1 NEW YORK (AF) - FeHawbig to g record of ithetod tiockt fridod Ihto wdtk on thd Amtrlcan Stock UtXhmti. |- ttw IndMduM spin tor «w wpMi wnk'8 high, tow and ctoslng prtcdi ttw not diMM from totl mdk't (^HtajhUw CloM cm; Asroldl JBi 157 S% M 33V5+ % A(5x Mdgdth .Mr TT 11% M% 11%+1 heavy buying of glamour issues in the color televisioa, electronics, airline, aerospace and emn-puter businesses, but with com-Iparative neglect of the wheel horses of the stock market in heavy industry. Of 1,554 issues traded this week, 729 fell and 655 rose. ★ ★ ♦ The Associated Press Average of 60 stocky however, advanced 2.3 to 3fi.2 for its fifth strait weekly advance. Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index, which represents some 85 per cent of the stodcs listed on the New York Stock Exdiange, dipped .03 to 00.02 STILL IRREGULAR On the basis of such statistics, the market’s performance would have to be called irregular, even though 19 of the 20 most active sto^ advanced. These included such astonishing advances as 10% points by SCM Corp. on over 1.5 million shares, making it most active; 9* points by KLM Airlines, and 7% by Addressograph. It * it The week’s volume was net too far away from the all-time record breaker of 48,499,540 shares traded during the week ended Nov. 2, 1929. This was during the moat dramatic phase of the famous 1929 crash. 'Die five noost active issues on the New York Stock Exchange were: SCM Corp., up 10% at 41% on 1,507,300 shares; Radio Corp., up 3% at 43%; Pan American World Airways, up 2% at SOVa; Magnavox, up 4V4 at OOVo; and Pan American Sulphur, up % at 20%. ArkLsGPS U5 .15 144 ^ m 1% Ti* 1 f)B^1-)5 4)8b+l% II B O 137 Attoi Cp w( 111 7 13-15 %+M5 BartWi Eng 57 >1 15% M%-?* Brsx Trse JB 3355 TIB 5% TIM " Brit Ftl Jig 217 7BB7S-15 7%+ tolWwn Co A 15B 13 11% 11% .. Campb Cftlb 3M 4% 4% 4%- Can to Ftl IBI1-15 3 I ... 10.45 MJO 10J2 10J5 15.55 15J5 15.55 15.4B 1UB 11.21 11.27 11.17 7,84 7.81 7.BJ 7J5 4.7B 4JI 4JB 4J7 13.55 11J7 11.55 11J4 12.17 12.52 12.17 I2J0 S5C Equity Sotoctod Amtr Mwrtbl Tr Boa Mioro* Am ind Sovtrolon Inv Itoto St Inv Moln Ro Botonc? Stock Inti ItorUng Inv Tolovlwi Eloct Tomp Oft) ^ 11.73 lUt 11.71 11.5 lUI IIJ5 11.75 1UI 18.25 11.14 M.S 11.05 5.71 5J2 5J4 5.54 42J7 S.75 41J3 42.73 Con Mim Ul 31 43% 43 «*+ % Ctrywl RNy JM 344 1% 3% 3%- % Croolo F MBO n 41?k 41 41%- % Ooto Cent M7 11% 15% 171B-1% EquttvCp .15f lit 3% 3% 3?b- % Fargo OHt 151 1% 3% 3 7-15 Ftlint Oil .135 75 5% •% Mb-^ Fly Tg^ IM 31.. IM 3B +1. Pan Flywd^ OoMftoM Ot Bai Fol OuH 31 Ld 13.53 I3JI IIJO V ITOI rvno 13.35 13.34 I3JI T Hto Cam Inc 1.77 1.74 1.75 i UpNtd FiiiMti Accufflvlonvo MJ7 MS M.M MS I. 41 IS 1.40 5.35 IS 5J4 IS 5.S II. 35 nil 11.33 11.15 I3J5 I2S 13.45 i3J3 ISJI IIS 15.41 15.41 5.51 as 5.51 5.N . .., I4S 14Jl 14Jl 11.35 IB M M.33 M.15 — 1% 3N 3 1?b -*!. L. ■“ \iiim O)tp~ 33 'i% 1% 'ii% Ktliar imf 10M 5% 1% f?kf % Mockty Air 571 1% I M+ % McCw wf — "* “• “ MIcti Sugar .Mg '|4 1% '4% '4%+ % AXolybdon IS M% 358* MBb-% H*w Ft M“ Faneif Ft) . . RIC OroM IN 3% 1 3% . Surry Etbl 222 17H 15% |5li- % IM W Air 3344 10% 5 1f%f1 lignal OU A la 451 37% 37 37%4' % Iparry Rwt ims I «f% Syntax Cp Jit 3M3 IM IM% Ilf +7 Ttdmlcal .75 4« 13% 17 I7%- % Control S ‘ " 5SUN ai.’ir S WEIK W 3TOCKI 'kNB aONM But(iier Hogs Close Lower CHICAGO (AP)-'iha largest butcher hog supply in almost five months weakened the market this ireek and prices declined on three successive days after Tuesday, closing 29 to mostly 90 cents lower. The setbacks were broad as offerinp Increased and the top price on Friday had slipped to 123.40, paid very sparingly, compared with 124.40 on Tuesday, the week’s top. ♦ * ♦ The week’s run of 29,900 was up 4,900 from last week. On Friday, the offerings of T,000 head were the heaviest since May 7. ) liie averaga price of all bar-rows and gilts for tha weak was rHui m.'io m. no.. 'UA. BOND AVSBASSI KSIIili estimated at coomared with m.l4 last mi* a^6.81 a year ago, STEER PRICES Steor prieea avaragsd 929.90 for the week, down 19 cents from last week but up fl.l4 from a year ago. Tha market for spring slaugh-tsr lambs was hms^ 21 cants Treasury Bond Slide l^esumes Credit Noticwably Tighter During Week NEW YORK (AP) - U.S. Trieasury bond prices resumed their long down^e dUrii\g the past week. Municipal bond prices also were lower, while corporate bond prices were mixed. The Treasury bond decline means that prices of the government securities went down in seven of the eight past aiecks. It it it The trend resumed during the past week when the government announced it Brill be going to toe market {dace for some |7 billion by the end of 1905. The money will be raised through tdx-an-tidpation bills. The financing plans touched off speculation among some investors about the possibili^ at inflation. Oedit was noticeably tighter during the past week with interest rates edging up In several areas. During the past week all but one of the 40 bond issues declined in price. The losses ranged as high as 22-32nds on the 3s of 1995. The closely watched 4V4S of 199^ ended the week at a yield of 4.3 per cent. Corporate bond volume during the week rras a heavy 976.79 million. Volume for the year passed the $2 bUUon mark on Thursday. Of 490 issues traded, 107 advanced In price, 195 declined and 100 were unchanged. Most of the highly rated issues held unchanged. On the municipal market, prices declined for the fifth consecutive week. Dealers rated the decline as the sharpest since early 1904. Yields on highly rated tax-exempt issues now stand at about 3.20 per cent, compared to a level of about 3.36 per cent the previous wedc. Grain Mart Keeps Watch on Weather CHICAGO (AP) - The grain futures market reacted mainly to weather again this wedc orith periods of both strength and weakness and it finished in a mixed range. Wheat, rye and soybeans held on to moderate gains after having been fairly well wrung out by profit cashers on the final two days. Corn and oats were mostly weak. At the end of the week, a little concern was apparent in the com trade over a threat of frost but dealers seemed not greatly impressed. They seemed inclined to believe that most of the crop now has matured and that any damage likely would be minor. WHEAT HIGHER Wheat maintained its firmness on continued belief that export business eventually will include substantial boMtingg to Russia. Wheat finished toe week %-l% cents a bushel higher than a week ago, December 9L91-«iVi; com V5-% lower, December 91.11; oaU, %-l% lower, December 66% cents; rya %-2% higher, December 91J3; soybeans %•!% higher, November 92.48V4-%. NY Police Brace for Johnson, Pope NEW YORK (AP) - Pobce officials have called on ail toe city’s 26,000 policemen to be m duty (or the visits of Pope Paul VI and President Johnson next Police (fonunissioner Vincent Broderick Friday ordered days off canceled on Oct. 2, when President Johnson arrives in the city, and on the following day* when the Pope arrives. * ★ w The commissioner also asked that police force members on vacation those two days raturn voluntarily (or duty. Ford AAotor Co. Entors Gordon Tractor AAarktt BIRMINQHAM UB Ford Motor Co. sMd yeotorday H sHfi onter the 9100 - milUon- a • year market for garden tracton aftd equipinont. Thd firm introduced 91 and 10>boroapower modais with at-tachmants (or mowing, plowing ■nd culttvattng^iuid mow blow-taf. ■ 1 tllE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1965 SEWNtBEH Exchange Student Program Young People Visit Faraway Lands To hundreds of American high school boys and girls the sununo- months brought a new concept of the culture and cus-t(»ns (d peq>les of other countries. And it is all because (rf the American Field Service and Youth for Understanding programs. Priscilla Read of Bloomfield Hills, Cicely Guenther of Birmingham Candace Turner of Union Lake are among many fr:m the Pontiac area who spent the summer visiting families in faraway lands. “The greatest rewards for an American Field Service student ccane from living with and knowing, peqile of another country. My family in Elgypt was a large one. While sharing their home and friends, I learoed to love and admire the people o^ the Nile, sSid Priscilla, a member (rf Christ Qiurch Cranbrook youth group. minister, always Moslem. Every government' position is labeled, so as to keep ah equal balance of the two religions in the government. “An Arab custom which impressed me was the visiting habit, guests may come anytime,” said Cicely. “The wife always prepares more than enough food for her own family, just in case neighbors, relatives or her husband’s business associates should drop in. was done, and we had it for supper. “The food was rich. Finns eat a great many sausages and fish along with potatoes and dairy products. “Most of the churches I saw in Finland were modern. The old ones were bombed during the war. “She said she went to a Finnish wedding and the service was solemn and simple. Everyone danced at the reception which followed. The people were friendly and dressed as most Europeans and Americans. Occasionally Candace met a Laplander from the northc.n part of the country. who dressed in heavy boots and warm reindeer leather Jacket and cap. Priscilla, Cicely and Candace found on their travels abroad customs, food and language of peoples in other parts of the world may be different but kindness is universal. It is found everywhere. “I visited Moslem villagq^ Bedouin tents, and elegant resorts, yet this same gracious spirit remained the same. This is a custom I hope to retain for it helps to build closer relationships among friends and family.” “Egyptians show their affection much more easily and more often than Americans. Handshakes and a kiss on both cheeks are customs observed with warmth, and it is neither strange nor embarrassing to see boys holding each other’s hands or girls doing likewise,” she added. Cicely closed her remarks with, “This past summer was the most enriching and rewarding one of my life. I believe the only real way to increase international understanding is for people to live and talk to- FINLAND “The family I stayed with in Finland lived in an apartment one block from the Gulf of Finland on a suburban island of Helsinki. Only about eight per cent of Egypt’s people are Christian, most of them belong to the Coptic Church with its head in Cairo, she said. GIFTS FROM EGYPT-Gowned in a red and green printed cotton, the dress of Egyptian peasant women, is Priscila Read, ITS E. Hickory Grove, Bloomfield Hills, as she shows brother and sister Jamie and Mandy, -eantlic PrtM by Id VMiddrMrp articles brought back from Egypt this summer. The dark red tarbush (hat) on Mandy is worn by men of the farm. Cbouw«c Stvleu.......74»PJyl WuaMlrtWnl)........7«0PJI4, awdbPhonuSSSeOW 27 S. S _ Dowittown Ponliac Porrtiec Mall BIRMINGHAM UNITARIAN CHURCH Robert Marshall, Minister "A TIME OF JUDGMENT" Rosh Hashanah 940 and MOO WenMp SmvIoh 940 Mnwy Ihreugh dill Grtide IldiONsnMy Sireu^ m Orada FIRST FREE METHODIST CHURCH 501 Mt. Clemens Street SUNDAY SCHOOL 10 AM MORNING WORSHIP 11 AM-EVENING SERVk,E 7 PJA Pastor C W. Koumur FIRST UNITED MISSIONARY CHURCH 149 North East Blvd. FE 4-1811 Rev. Kenneth L Pennell 3609 Lorena Rd. 10-00 AM. Sunday School 11:00 AM. Morning Worship YOUTH FEUOWSHIP__6.-00 PM 7:00 P.M. Evening Worship FIRST GENERAL BAPTIST CHURCH 249 Baldwin Av«. Sunday School 9i45 A.M. Worship 11 o.m. Young Puoplu 6 p.m. , Evaning Survicu 7 p.m. W. Blond, Po«or <734209 ni«J afti&t • SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:30 a m • MORNING SERVICE 10:45 am • CKLW BROADCAST 11:00 a m • CJSP BROADCAST 4:00 p m • YOUTH FELLOWSHIP 5:45 p m • EVENING SERVICE 7:00 p m • MID-WEEK PRAYER SERVICE-Wednesday 7:00 p m • WBFG-FM Saturday 6:15 p m Cku/tcl OAKLAND and SAGINAW R«v. Robart Shelton • Pastor Rev. Richard L. minista* of Christisn education, flfieak on ”A Faith To Be Taught” at » and 10:45 a.m. services tomorrow at Coitral Methodist Church. There will be recognition and dedication of diurdi school wwiiers also at these services and an offering received for the work of Christian education in the conference. During Christiaa Education Week elmrdi schotd teadiers will visit in the homes of Aeir Methodists Dedicate Church Workers A Pontiac area school of churdimanship is being held at Central Methodist fornix consecutive weeks. Class# b( Monday. ★ ★ ★ An afternoon and evening <4 training for Methodist comnds-sion chairmen and other church leaders is set fin* Tuesday. Classes will convene at Oak Park Methodist Church, Flint, from 1:30 to 9 p.m. Dinner is scheduled for 6:15 p.m. Those who cannot attend the afternoon seasion are invited to join the group for dinner and the evening program. Bishop Dwight E. Loder will give the closing meditation. KEEGO HARBOR A promotion and consecration ceremony is slated for TYinity Methodist Church of Keego Harbor at the 10 a.m. worship service tomorrow. The church school will present certificates of prmnotion to pupils. Each one who is promoted the Burt School, 118 Winding,. Waterford Townsh^. SILVERCREST Mrs. Gordon Shelton pf First Baptist Church will be ^est soloist tomorrow morning at Sil-vercrest Baptist Oiurch. The choir will sing “My Savior First of All.” Fern and Linda Davis will present musical numbers on the guitar and sing duets at the evening wwship hour. Teacher training classes are held Wednesday evenings. WATERFORD TOWNSHIP Rev. Ronald Thompson, pastor, will preach on the topic, “A Miracle,” for the 10:30 a.m. worship hour at Trinity Metho-odist Church, Waterfwd Township, tomorrow. to the Jimikar department be presented with a revised Bible. A consecration ceremony for the teachers and officers is scheduled to follow presentations. ★ ★ ★ The pastor, Forrest Pierce, will give a amnon on “Have Faith To Do” at the 11:15 ajn. church school service. There will be a special Rally Day offering. FIRST METHODIST Christian EducaUon Week wiU begin with Rally Day observed throu^out the Sunday School UmioiTOw at First Methodist Church. Pastor Qyde E. Smith will preach on “And Gladly Teach.” He will honor the teachers and counselor at the 11 a.m. worship service'tqr awarding them certified teaching cards. ^ ★ Friday ia the date for the Methodift Men’s at 6:» p.m. After the an installation of officers be held and the program will include a speaker from Akeho-Ucs Anonymous. COVENANT Speaking at the 7 p.m. service tomorrow at Covenant Baptist Church wlU be Mrs. Hector At the service Roger Hasler, fifth and sixth grade teadmr, will i»esent Bibles to the sixth graders who will be going into the sevoith grade. it ★ / ★ The Methodist Youth Fellow-dilp will meet from 5:30 to 7 p.m. tomorrow. Small groiq> Bible discussions are planned for 7:30 p.m. at the homes of menfoers. MARIMONT Young people and Uielr friends cd Mm-imont Baptist Church will spcmsor a “fifth quarter” tonight following the Pontiac Northern High School football game. The group will gather at the regular meeting place at the church for refreshments and games. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Crichton and Mr. and Mrs. Robot Gav^ will be hosts. There will be a singq^tiM for young people at the hoae of Mr. and Mrs. Jade Dougflas fdlowing evening ivorship to- h youth elected Bob Hadtb la the aacood Uaastni that m mortda an eapaUs of: iaasing flmt pooay eanaol bay. — Isaak Walton — llil Cwnptoat Angler. Junior h Criditon Jr. president for the next six months. Christine Stewart was named vice' president; Debbie Tabor, secretary; and Betty TnuUuns, treasurer. Baptist Ministers Meet Baptist ministers of Pontiac met at Friendship Baptist Church this week to make plans, for an association of the denomination’s ministers of the city. GATHER VEGETABLES—Mrs. L. Tracey ’Thomas (left), 601 Koiilworth; Mrs. Walter Young, 656 Fourfii; and Brett Geiger, 820 Mount Clemena, the pastor’s son, gather vegetables from Mrs. Thomas’ garden. The cab- bage, cucumbers, peppers, tomatoes, eggplant and com will decorate the diancel area of North East Community Church for the annual Harvest Home Festival tomorrow. AUBURN HElbHli FREE METHODIST .....1000 AM. MMSAM. immmo woaww..... yySNSSOAT WAVai...7J0.PM, Chrisfs Church of Light NON«a4DMMATIONAL totoslalwSctwoLWatwfeni Cor. Porey King clind Horpor St Suadoy School 9«45 AA6. Worship ... 11>(W AM. Row. Eloaner M. 01ML OR 347)0 Rov. Gorald R. Monroo OR 3-7630 Covert Methodists to Build it * it Sons Kenneth, Paul, David, Timothy, Stephra and John McMillan will sing gospel songs. llfrs. McMillan’s mother, Mrs. Leone Reed, will play musical cowbeDs. The congregation worships in BLOOMFIELD HILLS BAPTIST CHURCH 3600 Telegraph Rood 10 AJA Sunday School 11 AJA Morning Worship 6 PM Evening Service Wednesday, 7:30 PM Prayer Meeting Church Phonei 647-3851 jotto^ 'ZJU05I iiuig -JQ eoods Buppoj ejduiy ONiiaiw yaiMom Vfd OVi - XopsuupuM •0N0138 OHM 314034 HDSnHD 3HL. ■uouu»s d!H*J°M Buiujoyy -wv 00'11 iu6v IIV 40},, |oo»ps tpjmQ -w v 9k'6 jeejjS uojfiH ttoM i}34mi3 jtijdog Auoi^isg i40VnH3 1SI14VS NVDISIWV NV. Thirty-four years ago the Covert Methodist Church was btdlt in Waterford TUwnshtp with women of the congregation working diligently to support it. Today a new sign stands on the property announcing a new church will be built near the old Women of the church organized into a Woman’s Society for Christian Service 25 years ago. The group is now celebrating its silver anniversary. Pastor Elmer Snyder who began his ministry a quarter of a century ago will preadi at services. Babies will be baptized. Women will usher, serve as lay readers and a Women’s Quartet will sing. Teseken of the Chareh Sekool wUI be fawtolled and children will congregate in the sanctuary ftv ■ Rally Day program before going to da^. At 2:30 p.m. members of both Youth Fellowship groups will meet at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hall for a weiner roast. A period of worship will follow with the Senior High Fellowship In charge. it it * I Officers of the church will at-tend the quarterly conference of the Flint District in Oak Park Methodist (Hiurch, Flint Tuesday. it it -k A smorgasbord dinner will be served by the WSCS at 5 p.m. Saturday. PINE HILL To promote a better understanding of Judaeo - Christian heritage Rev. Harry Clark will speak on “Judaism” at Pine Hill Congregational Church tomorrow. Church School and worship are held at 10:30 a.m. The choir under the direction of Bernard Ernst will sing. ★ ★ A Mrs. Tim Hoffman, chairman of the November bazaar known ai “Mayflower Mart” annonnees plans are under Way. MOVED TO NEW LOCATION BETHANY CHURCH of GOD 2639 KuMiBd..jMt off W8low SUNDAYSCHOOl..........9 AM MORNING WORSHIP.... 10 AM SINOSPIRATION.......3i30 PM Paaor, DON OMSTKI tor Twwpo/ioileu CoS 473-OSOt CHRISTIAN PSYCHIC SCIENCE CHURCH 12 Warren St. SpMkw^ 7<30 PM Mr. H. Drake SSuw Too, WudMiSay 740 PM MARIMONT BAPTIST CHURCH 68 W. WoHon fE 2-7239 Morning Services 8-.30 and 11 ''A.M. "9F DEATH AND DISHONOR" Sunday School for All Ages — 9i45 A.M. Youth Services — 6:30 P.M. Evening Services — 7:30 P.M. "THE MAN BORN BLIND" Pastor Somur» ProocKing of All Sarvlcui All Saints Episcopal Church Williams St. ot W. Pike St. THE REV. C. GEORGE WIDDIFIELD Rector 8:00 A.M. — Holy Communion 9:15 A.M. Morning Proyar Holy Baptism and Sermon by the Rector. Church School 11 lOO A.M. — Morning Prayer pnd Sermon by the Rector. Church School CHRISTIAN SCIENCE Subject for Sundayi REALITY i Sunday Services and Sunday School.. 1 liOO A.M. - p Wednesday Evening Service.... 8i00 P.M.| ^ Reading Room — 14 W. Huron i Open Daily 11:00 A. M. to 5i00 P. M. I Monday thru Saturday I FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST Lawrence and Williams St. — Pontiac SUNDAY 9,45 A. M. Radio Slotlon CiaW 8001a: First Congregational Church I. Heren end. Mill ft. . Rev. Malcolm K. Burton, Minister end Sendey Scheel CAsrs* 0/ tSe kayftatur PI/fries First Baptist Church Walnut at fourth ROCHESTER SUNDAY SCHOOL.....................10:00 AM MORNING WORSHIP..............- • - -*. 11.00 AM EVENING SERVICE.......................7.00 PM PASTOR OLSEN, speaking at both services WEDNESDAY PRAYER MEETING...........7.30 PM Rev. Donald K. Olwn, Pastor CENTRAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH 347 N. Saginaw St. 945 am. - BMe School 6 p.m.Yo>4ti Mooting—7 am. Gospel Hour "A Friendly Chnrch in the Htert of Pentioc PradoMng rim Word of God" COLUMBIA AVENUE BAPTIST CHURCH 64 W. Columbia Ave.-FE 5-9960 Sunday School..........9.45 A.M. Morning Worship..11:00 A.M. Training Union.........6:30 PM Evening Worship........7:30 PM Midweek Service (Wed.).. 7:45 P.M. Corroll Hubbs, Music Director ^Lut njjtlied ^PatUeoi£aL CLixJi ITS GREW STREET FE5-7449 Morning WersMp 1140 AM. Sunday School 1040 AJ4 EvnningWankIp......................7.30 PJA Tuesday BMe Study.......................7.30 PM.' Thursday YoMwhseple.................7.30 PM Itov. I. Sstera FMor FI 4439S Itov. K G ii*ma AW., FIRST NAZARENE 60 STATE STREET Sunday School-9.45 AM Mombig Worship. .114)0 AM Youth Fellowship 6.00 PM Evongellsfle Service 74)0 PM AMSetmon. nHE HIGH COST OF WAR" PM Sermon. "BUILDING FOR ETERNITY" John Burton, Minister of Music Spiritualist Church of the Good Samaritan 4780 Hillcrest Dr. . Wertettord, Mich. Sendee 74>0 PM - Rev. Bessie Howard of Toledo OR 3-2974 FE 2-9824 Living Successfully whh Olhen, Read Romans XI HEAR . .. JIMMY SWAGGART ONE OF THE NATION'S LEADING EVANGELISTS OF THE ASSEMBLIES OF GOD Jimmy Swaggart SUNDAY 1 liOO AM.~7i00 PJW TUESDAY THROUGH FRIDAY-7.30 PJVL Everyone Welcome Eech Evening 9.45 Great Sunday School Roily ClosteB for Evry Age .,. FIRST ASSEMBLY of GOD . 210 hj. PERRY at WIDETRACK PASTOR ARNOLD Q. HASHMAN FE 4^301 FE 4-3282 THE PONTIAC niKSS. SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 23. 1965 I ninetp:en United Presbyterian Churches AUBURN HEIGHTS 8436 Mnwry Stratf MO AM - SuMloy School II AM - MominsWoi^ DRAYTON DomI* O.JPuMk, Am. BIblo School... A45 AM Mornlno Worship.....II Yemh Oroupi.........ihSO PM. WwlMsdeyPtaymimd Study Hour..........7i30PM OAKUND AVENUE (404 Oakland at Cadillac FE 5^246) !' TlModor«lt.Allobach.Mlnlilor Ponoflogoi 300 Ottawa Dr. FE2-IS55 Audroy Llmhoman, Youth DIrtclor Rut Sunday School... 9.00 AM Morning Woiihlp .., .10.00 AM Socond Sunday School 11.20 AM Youth MIewihIpn.....a,45"AM Evoning Worship.....7KX) PM Wod.ProyorM»g.......7.00 PM WATERFORD Lokoland 7325 Mocmloy Lake Rd. toy F. Lambort, Pastor Sunday School...... 9.‘bo AM Worship...........10.45 AM Sunday School......1045 AM. (2nd Sossion) ■ .........6PM. CHURCH OF ATONEMENT 3535 Clintonvtilo Rd. Wotorford Twp. Church School 9.30 AM. Hour of Worship 10.45 AM. Croo M. Clark. Poster Hie rung of a ladder was never meant to rest upon, but only to h(M a man’s foot long mough to enable him to put the other higher.-Tbomas Henry Huxley. Oakland Ave, Church to Build LUTHERAN CHURCHES MISSOURI SYNOD Cross of Christ i 11(X) lono Pino at Toltgroph 5 Bleemtlold Hills % g aurch School ot 9,45 AM | g SorvicM of Wo.^n 8.30 and 11 AM. I-:; JI«o. D. B. nmllm/r, Patior ij; « Phdno 646.6832 3 I St. Stephen Soihobow ot Kompf g: Bale fronsoH, Pntlar g: Church Sorvicos . . 8.00 AM ; :g Sunday School .... 9.15 A.M : auichSorvleos.....l0.30AM i St. Trinity otJouio 11 (EoftSido) Balph C. Claat, Patter S Sondoy School .... 9.45 AJA S Rrst Sorvico........8.30 A.M ?; Socond Sorvic......... A.M. St. Paul i I Joslyn ot Third g: (North Sido) g Bee, Maarier Shaekrtt g: lundoy School. , 9.05 AM Sorvicw . .. 8d)0 S 10.45 AM gj PEACE g: 5825 Highland Kiehard B. Fruchl, Patter J |g Sunday School . . . 9.00 AM. : gl Worship Sorvico ... 10.30 AM. j: Grace : Church Sorvico . . . 9.00 AM. gl I Sunday School . . . 9.00 AM S : Church Sorvico . . 11.00 A.M. $: '< Sunday School . . 11.00 A.M. g; ; "The Lulhoron Hour" over : CKLW I2-.30 P.M^Evory Sundoy ig I Building plans for the new I Christian education building at I Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Church will be reveal^ , at the FamUy FeUowship Kickoff Binner Friday in the Community Activities Inc. Building, Waterfoni Township. The time is 6:30 p.m. I Mrs. Noble Meredith or t h e , church office will take dinner reservations. i William D. Bowes is general chairman and toastmaster. I Other cbainnen Include Wallace Knowles, Don. Shaw, Br-nal Lloyd and Bmce Brede. Mrs. Andrew Creswell whose late husband was a former pastor, will give the invocation and I Pastor Theodore R. Allebach will bring greetings. Brief testimonies on “We Believe — Therefore We Build’’ will be presented by Circuit Court Judge Frederick C. Ziem, chairman of the congregation: Mrs. Wayne Good, superintendent of junior high department; and Paulette Meredith, treasurer of Builders Youth Fellowship. Guest soloist will be Mrs Paul Gehman. Principal speaker for the evening will be the Rev. Fred Remich, execodve director of Missionary Internship Inc. Thomas Mackie, chairman of the building committee, will introduce representatives of Evangelical Church Building Corp. Members will receive a brochure of the new plans. AUBURN HEIGHTS U.P. Superintendents of departments and other leaders working in the Sunday School of the United Presbyterian Church, Auburn Heights will be recognised at the 11 a.m. service to- to plan the retreat to Charlevoix scheduled next week. Dr. George Carver, |npe^ iatepdent of Walled Lake Coa-sMMated Sehoels, will be guest speaker at a di^er honoring volunteer Christian ed-ncathin workers Wednesday. The evening will close with a service of dedication and Holy Communion in the sanctuary. MACEDONIA Rev. G. D. Jones of Saginaw will be preaching at the revival Monday through Wednesday at Macedonia Baptist Church. Services begin at 7:30 p.m. Bishop C. J. Johnson of Johnson Temple will speak at the 3:30 p.m. program tomorrow. I At 7 p.m. Dr. John B. Falconer, pastor of Providence Mis-I sionary Baptist Church in Monrovia, Liberia, West Africa will be guest speaker. The public is invited Pastor L. R. Miner said. NEW HOPE The State Rally is scheduled for New Hope Baptist Church, ^ Bloomfield at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow. The program will consist of musical numbers with donations used to benefit the building fund. Rev. W. L. Cohen, associate pastor, will speak. Or. Piper has conducted more than 500 revival campaigns since entering the work of fulltime evangelism in 1942. Refreshments will follow in the basement area. In charge of arrangements are Mrs. Lucile Cohen, and Mrs. Bernice Hill. Rev. Jesse Long is pastor. ANTIOCH Starting to preach at the age of 15, Dr. Piper was known In his home town of Reading, Pa., as the boy preacher. As a high school student he was featured weekly on a local radio station as a Gospel singer. The SALVATION ARMY 29 W. LAWRENCE STREET Sunday School 9:45 A M.-Young Pooplei Legion 6 P.M. Morning Worlhip 11 A.M. — Evongolistic Meeting 7:00 P.M. Toesdoy Prayer and Praise Meeting 7:00 P.M. Major end Mrs. John Grindle Ceed Mutic-Singiag-Trut te the Werd Preechiag God Meets With Us-You, Too, Are Invited Guests.at 3:30 Service The Women’s Auxiliary of An-1 tioch Baptist (Tiurch will pre-; i I sent a Gospel Rally entitled;, , “The Seven Seals" at 4 p.m. | The First FIRST PRESBYTLRIAN CHURCH A Downtown ChurclT Huron at Woyne, Pontiac SERVICES 9:30 and 11 A.M. Worship and Church School Pastor . . Rev. Golen E. Hershey . . Rev, Richard Reynolds Assistant . APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF CHRI^ < 458 CENTRAL Solurdoy Young People......7:30 P.M. Sunday School ond V9or»hip 10,00 A M. Sundoy Evnning Services . . , 7J0P.M. Tues. and Thurs. Services . .. 7.30 P.M. Church Phene FE 5-8361 , Siihop L. A. fartm Patter's Phone 852-2382 CHURCH OF THE SPIRITUAL FELLOWSHIP Molto Temple 2024 Pontioc Rood ' Sunday Service 7:30 P.M. Rev. C. W. Ware Oct. 3rd — Guest Speaker Oct. 14th — Open Forum FRIENDSHIP Rev. and Mrs. Eddie A. iMc-Donald, 223 Osmun are opming their home today for sale of barbecue dinners. ' Th^re will be a box supper i at Friendship Baptist Church I Williams at Lorraine at 7:30 tonight. j Women will be in charge of I services tomorrow in celebrating Women’s Day. Sunday School is at 9:30 a.m. Mrs. Hester Threets will speak at 11 a m. on “The Need of Christian Women in a Perishing World” Mrs. Robbie White will speak at 3 :30 pin. CTiairman of the day is Mrs. Alfred McClellan. Rev. Alvin Hawkins is pastor. The pastor and congregation of Holy Ghost Temple, Detroit ! will be guests of New Jerusalem Missionary Baptist Church, 429 I Central, for the 3:30 service to-I tomorrow. Participating be I ministers from Pontiac and De- j troit. ' Refreshments will be served in the dining room following the service. Mrs. D. M. Vinson Is^ president of the auxiliary. SUNNYVALE Evangelistic meetings beginning tomorrow at Sunnyvale Chapel, 5311 Pontiac Lake, Waterford' Township will continue through Oct. 3 with Dr. j Bill Piper of Greenville, S. C., the preacher. GOSPEL MEETING to be conducted by EVANGELIST M. LYNWOOD SMITH ol Wessen, Muss. ui CHURCH OF CHRIST 87 Liiloyette Street, Ponticic SEPTEMBER 27 thru OCTOBER 3 Lord's Day......-. . . 10:30 A.M. Lord's Day Eve......7:00 P.M. Nightly.............7;30 P.M. We Have Moved :¥ SILVERCREST BAPTIST CHURCH 1379 Mt. Clemens St. .’562 D'.lr 2 BioUs N ol 5iIv.t 1,,... K.i We invite you to visit Dr John Hunter P,r>nn U 45 6 M 5. S ., ,,, Sunday School 9:30 A M. " Vm'iXWC ' U'.Uv ■ Morning Worship 10:30 A.M. :v Evening Service 7 P.M. Wed. Eveniii.|: '■ : for Trotuportoiioti Coll 334-1782 •: Rev. Ottii 1. Burgher, Pajtor SPECIAL Suridoy Night Singing Red Ellis and the Country Gospel Singers | SUNDAY, SEPT. 26 f 7:30 P.M. PASTOR AL HILL MT. ZION GENERAL BAPTIST CHURCH 33(X) Ludwig Road 3’/2 Miles NorU of t)*tord OXFORD, MICHIGAN., On Old M-2 These include Mrs. Wayne Lidgard, Mrs. Stuart Hamm, Mrs. Dale Lovett, Shelby Lock-amy, Wayne Lidgard Mrs. Leonard Hebei, Thomas Shearer and Ronald ^low. The Crusader and Chapel choirs under the direction of Mrs. M. L. Patrick will sing Handel’s “Thanks Be to Thee.” WESLEYAN METHODIST CHURCH Lynn \/ Sunday School . 10.00 A.M. Morning Worship Wesleyan Youth Evening Service Aisle centered lermoat tthlek trill help te tolte lev. J. L OeNett, PoDor pertemel preHemt. CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN 46 N. Roselown, North of Eoif Pike S.S. 10:00 A.M. Richard Durnbough, Supt. 11:00 A.M. "Chilriren'i Promotion Doy ond Injiallotlon" Worthip 7i00 P.M. "At th* End and a Now Bogirining" Leonard W. Blackwell, Pastor 332-2412 "central METHODIST"’.' ?882 Highland Rd. MILTON H. BANK, Pastor Morning Worship ' 9,00 AM. and 10:45 A.M. Chriitlon Education Sunday "A Folrtt te bo Tought" Rtv, Clotnoni, tpooklng Broadcast on WPON 1460 -- 1L15 A.M. Church Schpol 9i 15-10:55 Amplo Porking SuporviMd .... FIRST METHODIST CHURCH Francis Gazette, Mr. Salow and Pastor F. William Palmer will represent the congregation at Detroit Presbytery Tuesday in Livonia. A banquet is set for 6:30 p.m. Thursday for Sunday School leaders. Rev. Gordon G. Talbot, chairman of Christian education at Detroit Bible College, will be guest speaker. Rev. Mr. Talbot has contributed .many articles to church magazines. He is a member of j the research commission in Christian education of the Na-Itional Sunday School Assod-I ation. CHRISTIAN SCTENCE Speaking in the First Church : of Christ, Scientist, 164 W. Law-irence, Oct. 2 will be Josephine ' H. Carver, a recognized prac-I titioner and teacher of Christian I Science. The time is 8 p.m. Mrs. Carver has been active in the Christian Science healing . ministry for many years, is now I on' tour as a member of the | ; board of lectureship of FTr 11 Church of Science in Boston, I Mass. I A graduate of Occidental College, she also holds a degree from Columbia University. The i public is invited. i I ORCHARD LAKE ' I Orchard Lake Community , Church, Presbyterian, will ob-j serve Christian Education tomorrow. The Chancel Choir dl-' rected by John Tousley will sing j “Hear Me 0 Lord” at 11 a.m. I Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hadley i I will get together with the Se-| nior High Fellowship at 6 p.m.! BALDWIN CHAPEL 0RGA^ Simple as ABC* See and hear for yourself, a chapel organ on which a pianiat can immediately play ... on the manuals if you wish to... a full range of organ sounds, including pedal tones. Traditional church voices. Petits con-aole. Tri-Choral speaker system. Ask for specifications. * Baldwin's exclusive Automatic Bass Control, which lets you play pedal tones with your hands—no foot work necassaryl, CALBI MUSIC COMPANY 111 N. Saginaw FE 54022 puRposr Everyone does. It’s spiritual, it’s demanding, exerting, and it's invariably good ... It brings new discoveries of what God is, and what man really is—finding fulfillment in a life directed by divine Love. Hear this one-hour lecture "You Have a Purpose” by JOSEPHINE H. CARVER. C.S.B., of The Christian Science Board of Lectureship. MinSdeiice lecture SATURDAY, OCTOBER 2 at 8 p.m. in FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 164 West Lawrwnc* Str«*t-Pontiac ADMISSION FREE • EVERYONE IS WELCOME EMMANUEL BAPTIST CHURCH 645 S. Telegraph (Near Orchard Loke Rd.) imenlal. IndepondonI, Bibl* Believmg Boptut CKurch BIBLE SCHOOL 10 A.M. Departmentalized. Sunday ' School lor All Ages with NO literature but the Bible. HEAR DR. TOM MALONE leach the word ol God verse by verse m the large Auditorium Bible Class, broadcast on WPON 10; 15-10:45 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP SERVICE 11:00 A.M. EVANGELISTIC SERVICE REV. ORVILLE DEVAEY 7:00 P.M. BUS Transportation CALL FE 2-8328 PRAYER MEETING— JOYCE MALONE, MUSIC WED., 7:30 P.M. MUSIC fo BLESS the HEART 7:00 P.M. GOSPEL FAVORITES AND REQUESTED FAVORITES CHOIR Under the Direction of Joyce Malpne South Soginaw, at Judion — Clyde E. Smith, Pastor •Sunday Services 8:30 A.M. ond 11:00 A.M. "AND GLADLY TEACH" Clyde E. Smith, preaching Church School 9:45 A.M. M.Y:F. 6:15 P.M. Wed. 7:30 P.M. Bible Study Poiil, The Apoirte s , ST. PAUL METHODIST 165 E. Square loli'e Rd., Bloomneld Hills - FE 2.37f|2 end FE 14233 Morning Worship 9.30 and t0i45 HE WILL DO THE REST ■ Church School 9.30 A.M. Methodist Youth Fellowship 6 PM. I Ample Parking - ELMWOOD METHODIST Oront at Auburn Ave, Sunday School Id o.m. Worship Sr45 t Ills e-m. Evening Worship 7 p m. , Prayer Wed. 7 p.m. ALDERSGATE ■ METH 1ETHODIST IStoSoMwln PI 5-7797 Worship 9.45 a,m. Church School 11 a0. Eve. Worship 7 p.m. f. 7.30 pit). THE MISSIONARY ALLIANCE CHURCH 19 6 5 220 N. Cass Lakp Rd. M-59 G. J. BERSCHE, PASTOR Pontiac, Michigan R. D. PORTER, PASTOR THE ,34th ANNUAL BIBLE AND MISSIONARY CONFERENCE • An Intornatlonal Minialfy • A World-Wide Fellowship CLOSING SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 26 9:45 A.M. - SUNDAY SCHOOL 11:00 A.M. - WORSHIP SERVICE 7t00 P.M. CLOSING SERVICE with FINAL PLEDGE OFFERING TWENTY THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER IM5 57 N.Y. Counties Get Free Meosiet Vaccine ALBANY N.Y. (AP) ~ Tlie State Healfli Department says It has allocated 38S,717 free doaes of measles vaccine to S7 counties and seven cities tfarou^HWt the state. * * * The vacdne was purchased by the state from a im.OOO appropriation to provide free vaccine to protect preschool children against measles. Spanish Unit Finishes U.S. Missile School HUNTSVILLS. Ala - The first Spanish missile unit to be trained at the UJS. Army ordnance guided missile school has been graduated. ^ • Commanded by Capt. Jose Sese of Madrid, the Spanish army unit of 43 officers and enlisted men has spent a year here learning how to maintain the Hawk air defense missile system. 'Bonanza No Longer Challenge- Bhcker Fii%t Joint Sosiion of Mission Units Sst Protestant, Anglican imd Orthodox churchea wiU be bald Here Oct. «. 1 LOOK WHAT’S UNDER THE THOM AS ORANGE ROOF! Served Every Saturday, ^unday, Monday and Tuesday » — COMPLETE DINNER INCLUDES 4 pieces of Golden Fried, Juicy Tender Chicken French Fried Potatoes Cole Slaw Roll and Butter Coffee, Tea or Milk Choice of Howard Johnson's 28 Famous Ice Creams or Sherbets S£/t]/£D 11:30 AM TO CLOSING 4louiARDjoiinion'{ 3650 DIXIE HWY. at Drayton Plains HOME OF THE SPECIALS UST 4 DATS! DON'T MISS IT! /QQI2iQ[3 SpsmiSMAg /VpnfwiTUgf STARTS WEDNESDAY SEPT. 29th H*s Worth A Trip To Dotroit to By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-Television Writer HOLLYWOOD Dan Block-er had been rassling a horse all morning, and his usual sunny mood was beclouded. “I was supposed to keep the critter from getting up,” he related, “and horses don’t like I to lay down for[ long. It hurts' ’em. Well, this horse kept tryin’ to get up and they kept yellin’ to me: ‘Hold him down,,Dan.’ “I’m tellin’ you, when a horse wants to get up, you could tie him to a fire hydrant and he’d pull it out of the sidewalk.” Dan had collapsed into a Community Theaters .jt.-Tuei.: "Joy In th# MornlnB." I Richard Chamberlain, color; "The Satan ~ ," Gaorga Maharls. color. arts Wed.: "Shenandoah," Jamei ....»art, color; "The Outlaw U Coming," The Threo Stooget. MILFORD booth of his daily lunching. of otheni^*1Eadi tinie he inakes place, a bar and grill near U show he collecU $10,000. Paramount studios^ where hbat’s big money for a onetime spirits he ordered a tall glass of schoolteacher, and he s the first buttermilk. You read me right: to admit it. Buttermilk. i But he also claims he is not FAMILY MAN overpaid. ^ ^ ^ The outslzed — 6-feet-4, 260 “and 1 got a lo| of people depien- • More than 500 delegates from NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -The first Joint national gather- on me, for their Uvtn’, L ing of mlasionary and overseas M foreign missions boards and ain't about to quit.” I relief leaders of. America’s' agencies are expected to attend. “I’m getting $10,000 for week’s work, and I mean it’s work,” said Dan. “Dean h’ gets $15,000 for one afternoon a , week. I’d be glad to compare ‘Bonanza’s’ rating tvifh his and see which is the better buy for NBC.” Despite his discontent, Dan I it fulfills my soul’s need to ex" i reiterates that he has no inten-1 press myself. ' t*®” to flee the Ponderosa, as | “Sure, it’s an added kick if, you have a role you can bring | some creativity to. I had that in I the first two years of ‘Bonanz^.’: but it’s different now. pounds— Texan is a conscientious actor and family man.' Those are two reasons why he expects to slick with “Bonanza” although the series no longer challenges him. “I’m a professional,” he explained. “I treat acting as a darned good living, not because did Pemell Roberts. ■k -k K I “I got a contract,” said Dan, Marriage Licenses I ‘;When you’ve done the saii« „ ^ ' part tor seven years, there’s saggeH. Rochaswr nothing niw you can add. By gr^suSiayriifmiSTT. s that time you’ve catalogued all your reactions: you just reach Lji']r^rk*?“Dr»ytwmaTn»'’**'"* into the file and pull out what’s Fhinip eri^, laoo Tayior, UNION UU(I at NAOOENTY NO. EM S-MI1 TONIQHT AND SUNDAY ALL CO PBOQRAM AlAM OilON OKMOI C. SCOTT JfANNI MORiAU OMAR SHARIF EVERYTHING HAPPENS IN.. SHiRUY^uiN' MG-M«a«>WIIMI0l(0E(»UNWNDf1ll)0UCn0N needed. Johnsofl, 13*1 Vina _ , Drayton Plain* a l, Wat*rtor

M PONTUC’S POPUUB THEATRCl Week Oayti Cent. II *.eL t* IIM Saadeyi 0**1. tl t.n. N It pj*. _ “"”“$RiWfART[7Ne'VpTlR “ MlrotltMile* t M TMATII StgTN UltBBAPM AT «R7 pont r jg» gmi N iOkCl I BIDCI NO micotni oo. mhi west of DIXH ano\ featuring LORNA MAITLAND -and- CEORCE PIPPARD ELIZABETH ASHLEY Gerald W. Kemp, Walled Lake and Frelda J. Been, Walled Lake Jamet 0. Cbrlety, Chicago. III. and . Carotvn J. Wharton, Bkiomflald Hlllt John R. Gillette. Royal Oak end Diane | M. Wengren, Birmingham Arthur D. Fetter Jr., Rochttter end Jean E. Ellloa, Rochester k'ormen Henry, SIS Arthur and M; amt Elleanore Thompton, Bloomfield Steven Strnt, Ferndal* and Lym Louicn, SdulhflcM Kirby Meagher, 3715 Ontgdn end Jan* Shell Ml $. Jotephin* Pnv Luna, 3450 Otter Beach end Joa Devidton, 147 N. Josephine James Morton, Atmnnte, Ontario an Jes'le McFarland. Snulhfleld Jack Welch. 3400 Silva- Lek* am BeFe Werterby, East Lansing Richard Lae, Union Lake and Nine Jansen, Orchard Lake --------- .. minghar.. I, Farmingtrn and Rachal VTiison. rerrmngton Paul Heady Jr, Lincoln Park and . Mary Mercer, 3144 Elizabeth Lake Larry Smith, 43*7 Hatchary and LMda Bthk. 4437 Harrialt Richard McKarrachar, Farmington and Nancy Gllbeau, Farmington Jererna CMebws. Auburn Helghtt and Patricia Sugdtn, 115 Samlnole Jesse Stephm, 44 Orton and Roberta Watts, Detroit James Oelao, 24 Cooley and Marla Dean, 735 Alberta I Ends Tonight | ALAIN OELON'ANNMARGRET VANH^-JACK PALANCE ^Oncealbisf I PLUS JOHRWATIIE STEWUTIMMER ERK inwr— FJliBIU SUN. & MON. A STARTLING ^ GUSTY MOVIE! -N.Y. WORLD TIUORAM puTUMaAT. “EVERYTHING YOU "i,ia*ii HOPE FOR BUT RARELY FIND IN A FILM!' - Ntw York Htrold Tribunt ‘ PACKED WITH ACTION FROM 0E6INNIN6T0END.%:;!LrN^wT “ONE OF THE FINEST ACTION PICTURES YOU WILL EVER SEE...ITS ALL-STAR AUTHEWAV.VHg(«aHopp.r laurencew DiiKBOGarae jouecHnsiie DEVASTATING! BLISTERING! SLASHING!' —New York Timet IRRESISTIBLEI* — TimeMagezine ELIZABETH T/WLDR RICHARD BURION EVAMARESNNT HURON In Harm sway they went. The men. The women. The lovers fora night. The lovers for keeps. The strong. The weak. They went, as they were, in Harm’s wav. “A ROUSINfi EAR-AND-EYESHATTERINfi ENTERTAINMENT.' “FAST-M0VIN6 ENTERTAINMENT... INTERLOCKINB TALES OF VICE, VALOR AND VICTORY lNTHEPACIFIC."-t7A4rA* JOHN WAYNE lURK DOUGLAS PATRICIA NEAl PAUU PRENTISS BRANDON deWILDE JilL HAWORTH DANA ANDREWS & HENRY FONDA • PRESTON FOSTER ■ PHILIP CAREY • MERRY ANDERS JOHN HOYTI >2iaKEEGO| LOVE IS MORE THAN A GOODNIGHT KISS Chamberuin YWnEMiMIBIX Kdy.£ 7.;Evis-KEM{Y0NS Sat. and Sun. "THE NOUNDERS'’ at 1ieO-Ei15-9iM *MN HARMS WAY*' at 2i2B4i41-11ieS UTCIYWIHE! MisninO^ MKiHiidniiiiniii iMH. KH Defense Sharp in 19-0 Triumph; Waterford Loses, 12-7 in SVC . , By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sporti Editor, Pontiac Preu Pontiac Central conceded size to Midland last bight but the Chiefs displayed dazzling speed, with great defensive pursuit to whip the Chernies, 19-0, ^fore 3,000 fans at Wisner Stadium. It’s been a long time, in fact since 1949, that anyone can recall Pontiac Central sitting atop the Saginaw Valley Conference standings with a 2-0 mark, and it was the first win over Midland in five tries, all during coach Paul Delleba’s era. •In the first half, both teams were sharp defensively,, but in the second half, the bigger Midland line tired as the Chernies’" offense was unable to control the ball long enough to give the defensive unit breathing time. The first quarter had no offense ais both teams engaged in ■B battle of punts. Clarkston... Northville... Holly .. Milford. .13 . 7 Avondale ....12 Lake Orion... 6 Bloomfield ...26 W. Bloomfield 0 Walled lake .19 Berkley......8 : Midland missed a golden op-.portunity in the final two min- « 'W '■ ; T ' j Mt Clemens 11 'Boots Seaholm HOLD ON THERE - Midland’s Larry Wazny stands to lose his pants if he goes any farther as Pontiac Central’s Dan Irwin (64) holds on to bring him down. Moving in to help on the play is Ken Seay (U). Pontiac Central whipped the Chernies, IM, with a sparkling defensive game. Birmingham Seaholm ‘kicked’ one away last night. ’The Maples, trailing 14-7 late in the fourth quarter, came up with a touchdown but missed Uie »tra point in dropping a 14-13 decision to Mount Gemens. Feradaie, again sl^owing its gridiron muscles, ponneed on Hamtramck and emerged with a 33-7 victory, and Royal Oak Kimball made it two wins in a row with a 36-13 victory over Mount Gemens won the first half easily, scoring in each of the flrst two period for a 14-0 halftime lead. w w w Bob Harvey scored on a two-yard plunge and again on a 27- Oxford Falls; Romeo Winner second period.............^ ‘ With Bennia WHliama and Kah Seay Mtting for short yardagq the Chiefs punched their way to the twb from where Walter Horton dove ovW for thelouchdoum. Jerry Murpl^’s kick jupt cleared the bar to make it i-9, with 1:30 left in tbe half. RBCOV^nlMBLE Two p la yd'after the second half kickoff, Seay' recovered a tumble on the Midland 25 and |ix plays later, Horton went 11 yards to make it 136 as Mur-My’s try went wide. : w ♦ * With 4:03 left in (he third teas successful by inehes. It Iras 4th down on their own 32 With me yard to go. The PCH defense converged on Larry . Wasny but be made the flrst down by Inchen ibe first for Midlqnd in the game. Oa ths next series of plays. Tom Messer raa a punt ami made H a fbut down on the Midland 4l as the quirter ended. 'ttis ended the offensive ac-flvtty for Midland as Anderson Again got off a bad punt, going Only 13 yards out of bounds on 9ie N. From here PCH got to tee Midland 27 and lost the ball •n downs but then a fumble Was recovered by Art Wiggins on the Chemic 32. w a ♦ Horton hit for 13, Seay for fbur, Horton for six and Seay Went over for the TD from the one to make it 196 with 4:15 left to play. T In the final minute Bruce Tur- f bulled bis way for 34 yards three plays as time ran out on the Midland 27. Tackle Tom Jenkins was a Standout both ways for PCH, with guard LeRoy Jackson on offense; Shorter, Wiggins, Seay spearheading the defense. ' la the first haU Midland had . ;mtens4 yards lushiag aad ‘, au|y three passing sad netted .•euiy U total lor (he game. *ne Chiefs failed to eonuect ^ aa a pass but bad lae i (\attadt gaiag for 177 if IN of which came la As sac-risadhalf. It |ras a good hnwhaosad ^ South lyon 6-0 Victor ^ SMh Lyon evened Us record ’IMt M last n^t with a M vlc-‘ ttoj^^Lut&inWist. ^ Don Icbwart seorsd for ths JMmwrsdnaSI-yanlpail. *■, Flint Eleven Rallies Over Wildcats, 18-16 A threateuchdown surge in Uie third quarter carried Flint St. Michael to an 18-16 victory .aver Oxford’s Wildcats. It was the secmid loss of the season for the Wildcats and new coach Geiyy NeidUager. They dropped al96decisionto Clarkston last week. We were IN per cent bot- watebod the Wildcato lead (or most of the ball game. Mike Lantry booted a 31-yard field goal in the first period to send the Wildcats ahead 36, but St. Michael broke loose in the third quarter. ♦ * w Ralph Proctor s t a r t e d the raUy for the winners with a 55-yard run. Mike Wards tallied moments later on a one-yard dive and Steven Manville reaebed paydirt on a 25-yard smint. CUT LEAD Down 136, the Wildcato cut the lead to 116 on ’Tom Hoard’s 65-yard kickoff return late in the. third stanza. WWW Hie ’Cats’ final tally came midway in the fourth on a 17-yard pam from Rick Fox to Roger Miller. FIrtt Oowni FkMkM .. FIrtI FiMinM Yard! RiMhlnd-FfuIng Avaraoa '^Koaii SI.MSIJ I I ,^Y. ».M-Frte»on U . AL-WarOt 1 ran (ran (aiM ^Smsi. AAI I I IS* U Plttoni^ Rally Short in 110-107 Stetback BVAN8VILLB, Iqd. (AP) -The Baltimore Bullets lost a U* point third quarter lead la their Friday alght, but rallted in the fourth qunrter and dafe Pstroit Pistons 110607. WWW, Dave DsBusschare, Detroit’s playing epaoh, played only tbs fourth Quarter bqt scorad If pointe. Qua JobqhMi of Balti-mora %as U|A wMt 37, (Ivs In llib last N stcondi. Utica, Lapeer Also Score Grid Shutouts Romeo chalked up its second shutout of the season last night and Utica scored twice in the last two minutes of the game in picking up Us second win of the ’65 campidgn. In another game, Lapeer blanked Port Huron Northern, 206. Romeo’s Bulldogs pinned a 126 setback on Chippewa Valley aad Utica’s Chieftains ambushed a visltteg Warren Lla-celn eleven, 136. ’The Bulldogs, who blanked^ Richmond In their opener last{ week, 206, tallied twice in the I fourth period to break up a defensive battle with the Chippewa' LEADS ROMEO—Buzz l^e scored both touchdowns, one on a 47-yard run, as Romeo downed CSiippewa Valley, 126. yard run for Mount Clemens and Jim Dockery added both extra points. STORM BACK 1 Seaholm stormed back. Bill I Kennedy plunged over from one-I yard out in the third and Art Kale booted the point. 1 WWW Chris Charlton pulled the Ma-I pies within one point, 14-13, with I a 19-yard scamper in the fourth but the defense broke through to block Kale’s kick. Femdale, rebounding from a 76 loss to Royal Oak Don-dero last week, scored aU of its points in the first half. Joe Haslitt was the sparkplug I in the Femdale attack. He , scored three touchdowns on runs of 28) 18 and 25 yards. WWW Ken Luxton tallied on a 29-yard run and Terry Myers plunged a foot for the other. Ike Blessitt scored for Hamtramck on a 70-yard pass from Mike Milewski. BIG PLAY A seldom-used quarterback provided Kimball with the big play in the win over Roseville. C^s Ripmaster entered the game in the third quarter with the score tied at 13-13. On his only play, he floated a long pass to John Gabler who gathered it in to complete an M-yard pass-run touchdown play. WWW Gabler scored the first Kim-b a 11 touchdown in the first quarter on a six-yard run off tackle, and Eric Sorenson passed 15 yards to Darby Stewart for the other Knight score. Simmons Paces Southfield II Past Skippers Walled Lake Triumphs Over Berkley, 19-8; Farmington Wins By DON VOGEL Waterford’s Skippers found out last nivht why Ted Simmons of Southfield is considered one of the best halfbacks in the county. The 180-pound junior ran and. passed the Blue Jays to a 12-7 victory before 1,200 fans at Waterford. WWW Walled Lake picked up its first victory of the season with 196 win over Berkley and Farmington slipped past Plymouth, 14-2. Simmons tried only one pass, but it wrecked the Skippers’ bid for a second straight victory and led to Southfield’s SWARMED OVER — Pontiac Cantral’s Ken Seay has dark Jeraeys of Midland swarming all over him in the first half last night. Greg Gampton (19) hits him high, Dave Burch hits him in the middle and Dean Mercer (M) has the legs. Bill Smith (77) would like to help out but can’t find tackling room. No. 1 Bay City Eleven Routs Flint Central Powerful Bay C11 y Central, the fltate’s No. 1 dais A high school football team stayed hi a first place tie with Pontiac Central in the Saginaw Valley by routing Flint Central 32-19 last night. ' Another league contest taw Flint Northern edge Saginaw, 14-2. After Flint Central scorad on a 46'yaad pass from Rod Jones to Jim HogM to go ahead 66, Day Gty started to rqll. Tana KeBMdl laeaked two and OM jrarAh IN MIDer and RoDla went Ivae yards aadi te BNka It M-12 after thraa Nriods. Flint ONN’i Laa Fattaa raa ft yafp latha aae- Tbm Oabom niada H 33-12 on a 13-yard run and FC scored last when G«rga Mayas picked up a Aunble and went 91 yards with It. Saglna^ led 66 at the half after a ona yard TD by Clayton Bland. Nortnern got both TDa In the third quarter on a 3-yard-er by Roy Giattman and a 36-yarder by Tony Sntith, with John Cross getting the Important kicks. Brian Forbes ran 63 yards for Saginaw’s other tally. Top Sofded Nottor UpMt in Tournament LOS ANGELES (AP) - Puerto Rico’s Charles Paaarell upset topaeeded Roy Emerson In the men’s singles quarter-finals of Tournament Friday, 66, 64. In another quarter-flnal match UCLA’s Arthur Ashe came from' behind to defeat Mary Riesaen of Northwestern University, 16,16 and 6-2. w w w Emerson^ the Wimbledon champion »d ragarded as the worlds ten — really in the It was speedster Buzz Lee who sparked the Bulldogs. He picked up the first touchdown on an eight-yard run and added the second moments later on a 47-yard dash. SPARKS DEFENSE Sparking the Romeo defense were ends Bob Rowley and Mike Thorman, middle guard Terry Richardson snd lineback-' er Tom Walker. With to than two minutes remaining, quarterback Tom Orlowski fired a 14-yard pass to Jim JUek to give Utica a 66 lead and Orlowski ran 15 yards for another touchdown with less than a minute left to ice the victory. Halfback Denny Sweet ■cared on a three-yard plunge in the (ipeBiBg period to send iMfeer’i Paattaers in front 76. Pat McKenna added the second score on a one-yard dive in the third and Howard Rowden went over from three yards out later In the third to wind up the Groves' QuarterbacI Paces CrmebackWi Racing Champ Injuiwd TORONTO (AP) ~ Britain’s John Surtees, the 1964 world champion auto driver, cracked up in practice i|dn Friday and aufferM a fractured apine, frao turad paivto and poaaible bitor- Cranbrook gave Birmingham Groves a rough time but could not contain quarterback Mike Rafferty and the Falcons rallied fcN* a 19-13 victory in their home opener last night. ★ ★ ★ ’The Ganes were making their season debut and took a 13-13 intermissioh advantage after Groves had marched down the field following the opening kickoff. ★ ★ ★ Another Northwest Suburban Activities Association team, Oak Park, wasn’t as fortunate in its home debut. The Redskins were a 25-12 afternoon victim of Madison Heights Lamphere. w * ★ All other NWSAA entrants are in action today. League play will begin next week. Mark Christianson’s one-yard plunge gave Groves a 66 lead the first time It had the the ensuing kickoff and drove for the equalizer. Dick McCurdy ran the final eight yards early in the second period. The Falcons regained the lead on Rob GmilUe’s abort plunge; but Ted Lowrle’s 13-yard scoring pass to John Pavloff was followed by the latter’s PAT boot for Cranbrook. • Sr * Or Rafferty, whose passing ao-counted for 62 yards in the game, did some fine running all eveni^ when pressured by the Ganbrook line; and he directed Groves to the winning in the third quarter. Bob WoUe yards and Rafferty scooted over with the key Oak Park coqlidn’t contain Lamphere’s outside running attack and fell behind, 196 in the first half. East Detroit Easy Winner Powerful East Detroit rang up it|„,,second shutout of the season last night, a 286 verdict over River Rouge. The Shamrocks blanked Berkley in their opener last week, w * ★ Mickey Frabott scored twice on runs of two and 69 yards. John Gemens scored on a three-yard run and Wayne Kent went over on a four-yard dive. Walled Lake Wins He took a handoff from quarterback Terry Thompson, started to his right as if to run end and then stopped to fire across the field to Thompson who had slipped down the left sideline. The play covered 28 yards and put Southfield on the Waterford 16. ’Two plays later halfback Tom Bastable pounded over left tackle for the final six yards with 2:17 to play. Displaying good straightaway power through the line and brilliant broken field running in the sec(Hidary, Simmons riddled the Waterford defense for 134 yards on carries. END SWEEP He scored the game’s first touchdown in the second quarter on a 39-yard sweep around right end. Simmons setup the TD by intercepting a pass and returning to the Waterford 33. ’Ttaunp-son was thrown twice before Simmons broke loose. * * it The Skippers moved the ball well until they crossed the Southfield 35 and then the driyes bogged down. Dave Roe-and Phil Rogers paced running attack with sopho-lore guard Greg Ballard d<»ng some outstanding blocking. Waterford’s touchdown was triggered by Dkk McDowell who Intercepted a pass in the third period and raced 44 yards to die Sonthfield 35. Rogers gained 23 yards in the drive that was climaxed by quarterback Rick Ziem sneak-ipg over from the two. Dave Farris booted the extra point and this looked lik? it was going to be the difference in the game until the Skippers lost possession of the ball with four minutes to play in the fourth period. ★ ★ w They had third and inches on the Southifeld 46, but a back-field in motion penalty set them back five and a fumble on the next play turned the ball over to Swthfield. Dave Brackett came up with the ball and Simmons hit Thompson on the first play to start the winning rally. VIKINGS WIN Defensive tackle Rick King of Walled Lake started the Vikings to victory in the first period by stealing a handoff from the Berkley quarterback and racing 48 yania for a touchdown. Steve Fogle s^nted N yards in the aocond ptf iod With a punt and Dennis Fitzgerald ran ovar from the five to cap • 66-yard march In the fourth quarter. THK t*ONTlAC t y Holly, Wolves Pull Surprises Troy, Madison, Fitz Victors Avon 'Double Teams' Orion Barons Gain F i r S11 The twcniuarterback system enabled Avondale to join Troy, Win Over Lakers By FLETCHER SPEARS The bad thing about a winning stieak U that sooner or later someone bigger and better comes along and stops it. It happmed to West Bloomfield’s Laken last night as they tasted defeat for the first time in the nine-game series wiUi|^ Bloomfield Hills. 8ino,i»-H. Madison and Clawson with Oakland A League opening-night triumphs Friday. The Yellow Jackets broke a 64 struggle with Lake Orion on a fourth-quarter 71-yard drive for a l^6 decision. , Madison was a 21*7 winner over Rochester, Warren Fits-gerald dumped Clawson, 28-lS, Trw t^led Warren Cou- The Blili eleven, deflaUely tiding six-pointer a f t e r step-piag Orion’s Dragons oa a fonrth-aad-two drive off tackle one yard shy of a key first down. The Yellow Jackefo’ coach Dick Bye then altenuited quarterbacks Bob Burt and Archie Anderson (who ran the team most of the grae). Burt promptly tossed 40 yards to Bob Coronado. Throe plays later tte ball was oa the Lake Orion 2S with a fonrth dawn-and-four facing Avondale. Burt ngain passed the first half wift each losing possible scores. The offensive blocking picked up in the second half and both moved well, though inconsistently. Good to Coronado, this time for 11 passing attacks by either could yards and the first down. | ^ave controlled the tUt. Anderson then directed threO other GAMES running plays for the touchdown. A 13-yard burst by Rich Grattop to the one set up Anderson for the winning plunge. defense in blanking the Lnkcrs,2M. It was never close. ♦ * * In, other Wayne - Oakland League openers, Clarkston post- 01' Safeh Ready j to Throw Ball at KC Tonight ______________ _____ KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) . ed a mild upset in downing i -Come one, come all. See ol’ | NorUnrille, 7-0, Hrily ^ked j Sateh throw the hail! i Milford, 13-7, and aarenceville' downed Brighton, 2(1-13. ‘NOT BAD’ “We weren’t really that bad," • said Lakers coach Art Paddy, whose team was hampered by injuries. Quarterback Greg HepinsUll was injured on the first play | .. from scrimmage and journeyed to the hospital, and teammate Clarence Vick also made the ,Jio8pital trip with a That’s the cry today in Kansas City where Leroy (Satchel) Paige will staH tonight for the AAietics against the Boston Red Sox. ★ ♦ * And, if ol’ Satch has any pregame plan for the Red Sox, it’s as much of a secret as ruptured spleen. “WMhotst HepInstaB ear offense was ragifod,’’ Paddy eoatinaed. “He’s the only real passer ore have and he’s the “Why say anythin’, why they’d (the Red Sox) just lay back and wait for it,” Satch explains calmly. “These kids nowadays may have 21 more pitches than I do, bat I can get it aver. “My fast baU is stUl pitch,” he says. Defonsive end Ken Black puti What abont the famed Paige the Banins on the scoreboard •‘hesitatlen” pitch? early when he caught Bays in' ★ a a the endsone for a safety, and “Now I ain’t going to say he picked off a Bays’ pass in nothing about that, they (the | the fourth period and rambled Red Sox) may be lookin’ for 47 yards for a touchdown. it” > u KEEPER PLAY Dryd0n Wins, 20-14 houn scared on an 18-yard keep- ----------------------------- er play, sophomore Greg Roche phinged over from two yards out and Dick Kraats sprinted M yards for a fourth-period score. ★ a ♦ The victory was the second in row for the Barons, ****'’ Last year’s co-champs — ury-1 den and Anchor Bay — coo- LEAD Clarkston gained tu second tinned their winning ways last! win in a raw when defensive night as the league opened the Rochester couldn’t control the dnahjng runs of Msdlson’s Jerry Dash, who collected 122 yards in 18 trips with the ball, u * • (Juarterback Jim Bowman put Mistekes hurt both teams in wltti a two-yard plunge in the first period, but . Rochester trimmed the lead to 7-8 on a 12-yard sprint by-Ok* ' Jarvis. I Dash made it 14- with a flve-I yaixi run in the third and Bow-' man closed the scoring with a ; 35-yard scamper In the final frame. ’Troy picked ap its second win and first in league com- . I peUtion while starting defense I of the 0-A title. ' SoplHHnore quarterback Gary Griffith raced 40 yards for a TD in the second quarter and halfbadc PhQ Keelin scored on' a 10-yard spring In the third for a 13-0 Troy lead. * ♦ * Gary Derrigan, who sparked Troy to a win over Pontiac Northern last week, added the final Colt score on a four-yard dive in the fourth period. Cousino’s points came in the BRONCO GALLOPS - Rookie Wendell Hayes slashes off tackle from the six-yard Bne In the third quarter to score against tiw Boston Patriots in a American Football League game last night. Cookie Gilchrist (2) of tlfo Broncos moves in to block Boston’s Tom Addison (B). Danver won, 27-l|L PNH at Home Tonighf 'Title Game Early for St. Mike-WOLL New Flint 11 Foes Hold Opening 35-0 Win wjusinox puuiia wLofwa^cloMrittis^ ^ P°"‘‘hc Northern makes Its .fourth on a 80-yard pass from plonship ga^ but tbw s one school was closed this weex, .. regular Al Patrick to his brother Bffl, in the making In the Macomb no CHALLENGER appearance^S a and a four-yard run by Mario Catholic League. ^ ^ gpe tough Flint Northwestern fobt- Contrara. The ‘title’ game comra ^^jy^red strong enough to ball team at 8 p.m. tonight un- ♦ e ★ row when Waterford Our L^ challenge WOLL or St. Mlkp. der the lights at Wlsner Sta- FitzgeraM’s Spartans, the|Of Lakes plays h his third on a Sl-yard dash around left end. Patriot. Lo» Third JK. SS in AFL Cont».t ^ ^ Denver Routs Boston, 27-10 rtrtt OowiH RmMnt Flnt Doimii PMtkM Pint Downs NnaRMs Vorsi RuMng • RassHii Almont puriied to the C^pac BOSTON (API - The Denver ^ two-yard line twice but coulta’t ‘j Broncos unleashed a bruising' ............ • second half ground attack pow- rr^w’LrSee®^“^ Ne; BawZ; Etil Genesee scored 18 points ip missed point made It 74, oSJIm*«*'*Mary’^ the third period and went on With three minutes left, iSSTst WUi^» i to whip OrtonvlIIe, 884, in a lay recovered a fumble on the “ , i Suburban C game last night. Deckerville 18 and an eight The winners led only 84 at yard pass from Bill Hoeksma ^ S£'JJ the half, but displayed a strong to John Donovan netted the TD. J : passing attack In the last half. Schonfsid ran the point. _______________!*■ : For the second straight game Declurville marefa^ 88 yards P*"* 8^- Benedict (2.11). g.. 11 J r\ i*cUe Jer^ Ashby was a on short pases but in the final jlX liVdrOS l\dC6 standout for OrtonvlBe. second, Schonfeld intercepted a KAlee HnvrilS JIA iifUiUJ ixuvgp It was the second straight pass thrown from the 17 to end /YII55 nU/n/e Cutout suffered by the Black the threat and presbrve Ihe ' , in 1dno6 RBOdttd h^._______________________ wgine of victory. ^ LbqcIs LPGA I ton at Waterford KaMerlng, Bedford Union at LWdnia Franklin and .Oxinlry Day ol Worryn Woods, all at 2.o*clock. JohAMn t Zlirlty Pun*, mtt hmsm tCORIM RtAVf SM-eUcK iKki* S«y> >A SM-^:«WiwHCk*ri-Golti Meet in Weitern Division MHwoukte Bottlo Trail by Only One Gam# Dodgers Close Gap on Giants By United Preti iBterMtioiuil | World Series hero carried a ' llie Los Angeles Dodgers are S-2 lead into the eighth ionthg i Ron Perranoski, who relieved iS-hit attack. Cloninger struck I Claude Osteen In the eighth in*, out five and walked four hut ning, held the Cardinals to one rarely was In trouble, hit in the last two innings to The Giants, Dodgers and Cin-receive credit for his sixth win cinnati Reds — the latter now of the season. The loss was Gib- three games behind San Fran- I . . iteiiet pncner na. woooe«..cs ^ i I The standings say they’re one intentionally walked Loo John- ♦ w w the Giants playing the Braves, Petformam^^of gaine beM^ -^and even tte, to fill the bases but then Mack Jones smashed his 30th the Dat^t Liow in ^i^ing Dodgers better beUevM 3, ^ center to homer of the season and Ty the Los Anwles Rams, m, last cai^ they do pay off on arith- ^,1^^ the runs that put the Cline and Hank Aaron had three giants “d Sunday in Tiger Stadium a^ar- j metic on t^ final day in front to stay. hits each to lead the Braves’ P‘^ ‘S dST .1 f ently basn t convinced the odds- home while the Reds have their " ‘ --------last nine games on the road. one game behind the San Fran- { ci|co Giants or six days ahead of them depending upon how, I you view the NaUonal League race. but Dodgers were on first and third when Willie Davis and Ron Fairly led off the frame with singles. Relief pitcher Hal Woodeshick ' makeri. But the Dodgers also are six The Uons are figured to be days ahead — and the Giants seven- "to 10-polnt underdogs at better believe that, too, because Metropolitan Stadium In Minne- Los Angeles Manager W|ilt Al-aoolio-St. Paul where they face ston doesn’t fool around when the oncn-booton Minnesota Vik- he sets a pennant time table. Major League Averages Inga tomorrow. “I hope they heep ns as ,.ia every gam will be ranking a “homecom-appaamnee to the stadi-nra whm he served as as* sHtant for fonr vears before teking the head job at Detroit ’“"Tusinsj! asiit- CkWa OATTIMO CtOB MAT^AL __________ CLUB SATTINO p •pp.i.nw JLUS AO a H hK Hvi ra. AS a H HO BSI Pet. CInOnrMtl S3M 7*1 144$ 174 74* .27$ $232 743 1331 141 M3 .2$4 Plftlbursti .. $4M 4$2........ ____ 44* 1334 1$l <4* .2$3 Milwaukee $173 431 1317 1$0 5*1 .W PtilleOelMi $2M 40* 12W 11$ $53 .344 Lowlj ___ _ _ _ _ ______ $113 $4$ 1241 10* $24 J43 i*n PrtnclK* $IW M 1343 14* $M .2$i $127 $13 • - 4M .240 ChICAeo $4$ J44 Houtton .23$ N#w York siiw ii«r i«o .230 INOIVIPUAL OATTINO '"* “ ------ 4t Saltl PI*Y*r CM . CleOMnl* * *7 .321 /----- 74 J14 Mavi I - “I Wllllen_______ 1 a*M CIn Back on Sept. 7, following two straight losses to the Giants, Alston said he’d be happy if the Dodgers were able to climb to within one game of the leaders by this last ’Thnrsday of the season. The Dodgers have bounced back even faster than Alston weiwnoiw^ this season. I figured and have sliced thel^j^ Psyclmlogically everything fa-1 onc^imposing f^^^^ « -t. .* vors the VIWms rinice the sports ^ gsme six dsys Robmion s«i «• ^ JJ SSd ta ; “■•Ite ttam AhWn tadit *»ed «»««„“ g « 1 Is keyed to a peak due to the duL . „ , baseball Twins’who could dneh ^$« ri '2 » the American League title over *2!!^“** f**! 5 m ” the weekend "*8ht when the Dodgers rallied $» ♦* i3 2* *0 beat the St. Louis Cardinals | » » MINNESOTA STIRRED UP 4-8 and the Giants bowed to the m wo S 134 21 The enthusiasm could, brush Milwaukee Braves 8-2. jJUS'sin"'" Si io ” off onto the football field and; The victory extended the Fr«i^ JS « IS li .. ........... have the Vikings out to match Dodgers' winning streak to sev- D«n*lcr o5 3h 4* w 14 n '.m 0^ ul their pro tennants In the battle 1 cn games - their longest since 1 gfSJ’roif’chi n» « IS 17 ” S$ ssnio cw for crowd appeal. I the pennant-winning season of:|w™«"'Ii“ S is m > S JohSonTil * * * ' 1988 — while the loss was the SSp-nru jtc $« « >2 * f -gl eftSiiS?’'LA' It wIU be a day of orudal Giants’third in a row. , SiSlSS! V* *12 “ « j u 'm «ec.rv.r «l gaiiM in both divisions of the pgoM BEHIND The Green Bay Packers and *?‘^**!^ cSSiy^KC sos Baltimore Colts battle in Mil- behind m is their ?2?4iS"au. S? waukee for a showdown in the <*«y "‘«bt to pull o«‘the''^^y c«i^i>w 441 Western Division, and the aeve- when rookie J««man S$ land Biwns could dampen the »>«" % hopes of the St. Louis C^l-' « nauTupset victims of the Eagles *"Jhe eighth imnng. ^ ____ J, Arrows Hope to Pad Lead Pontiac Pro Eioven ! Winnipeg BomliM Poe MONTREAL (AP) - The Winnipeg Blue Bmnbera moved into a first place tie witli the Calgary Stampeders in the Western Conference of the Canadian Football Llafiw by defeating the Montreal Ai-ouettes 14-8 Friday night. CAtOLINa, SAL. 34.9 LOW COST CAR LOANS! j CERTIFIED I j COMFORT j : IT’S WONDERFUL \ 1244 7$ $2$ .24$ »T4 014 1144 131 $70 .340 $1*7 $42 1234 *$4*4 .234 at Milan Tonight ___ 'Hie Pontiac Arrows take to Ath $42 11 II* t*'e '■oad tonight for the first ni in IS 5 iM iw tt”’e this season, and they are a cm *17 14* 1*4 » in .’314 two-touchdown favorite to pin a „ ‘.3*4 i=Too<< iii, »* 7* IW II 10 ii* setback on Milan. 'S .13 §S&'l?w. ?£ .1 m I'J *1 :25 The game starts at 8 p.m. at *U S £ n IJT !? £! ‘he Milan field, located at Milan H ^ If 21 M 75 IS ’a 5 ^ S'-t’ool on North Street. g«lllfllon CVl $47 IM 143 31 IW 1*1 !3 3 !S n 5 ;S! S 3 t S SJ S R !S S ! ;S5 NERVOUS OBSERVER - Pontiac Arrows’ coach Lyle Wells (left) is a nervous overseer while the Arrows are in action. He chain-smokes to keep the tension in check. At right is his assistant, Walter Kowalczyk, former All-America at Michigan State University. 2 It maans courtaous driv- b ■ art, matarad dalivary | 2 racaipti, automatic ra- ■ ■ fills and protaction for | 2 your tank with Shall's ■ I Sonitor Additiva. ■ m OMir'Iion SF The Arrows are leading the Midwestern Football League with a mark of 84, follawed by Lanstag (M), Milan (1-1), Dayton (1-2) and FHnt (8-2). liger Fete Is Dampened jVmm''! I 590 S. Paddock St. FE 2-8343 g S IS -i S 9 iW . 4W 131 173 17 n .JW LA S 2 IS S Si l52‘;r4.'=’’L CM 7s iu 11 S3 .345 Asp'mooto Htn St 77 IS 30 n M 441 74 114 1* n :m g e IS .s: 41* 3* 10* It $4 .241 ------ From Our News Wires | seven innings for Detoit. He was * DETROIT - The Detroit Ti-; lifted for a pinch-hitter. ■ gers had a big celebration last McDoweU picked up his 16th ■ „ , , _ "ight. but the aeveland Indians the campaign. He struck out 2 SJ A second game on tonight’s ate the frosting off the cake. ^un his league leading S ■f* schedule finds Flint invading * a * total to 306. ■ w Dayton. Detroit played Its 10,000th, The 11 g e r s and Cleveland !■ * * * American Uague game a n d' meet this afternoon with Denny ■" _________________________ - M .4. » 4* 273 Arrows, led by quarter- feted the occasion with appropri- McLain slated to face Jack BUY. SELL, ’TRADE. USE «$ 71 II* 27 IM .'iTi back Karl Sweetan, survived a ate pre-game ceremonies. Also Kralik PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS. M » IW '$ » aw scare last Saturday in edging a included In the crowd of 12,564 444 41 12* ■ - - ^ 24 Hr. Bumtr and Kmp Fill Sarviet a 5 was the one-millionth fan of the season and this was duly noted. C*HI^ Phi $47 *0 l$S 31 ♦* xrttev tatUe Vt The GlanU, meanwhile, were jgjHh 4w $2 last weeK, when tney name ai ri«n. m w i Geveland. In held to four hits by Tony Cion- Lump* ow " ■ - who breezed to his 28rd &*“ 44$ 34 14$ $ 12 .144 KrwMPMl NY 4** 44 Joim Mil 471 $7 J$4 Siwb Htn in - — Moroan — Bolllfio "'’SLp immea Sundav ' have,''‘®‘®®y « **®*”*^ * ailS^Yllin'^NY m 3 S I I aiy*r 51L 511 I a*ll*y Pgh 4M I OrMt StL $M !Si Philadelphia, and Pittsburgh at ™"» J|S _ „ _ San Francisco. j Bab Gibson, St. Lonls’ 1184 ; c*i m « j“ >} ----------------------------------------------------S%7'| Soman* Chi »} 17 « Jj ____ MMaf^Ml g ;S! Irish, Georgia Seeking to Prove a Grid Point I AlllM*<'T«ln ; Htntan CM KC Si 42 ]12 $ Uwii'NY” X u |44 McMIlan NY S 44 JS Chrli'phar NY 413 44 J4$ Park*r LA $17 S .144 Nallar IF m 44 .241 Gagllano SIL 341 34 J44 art— — •gj sharp Dayton squad, 21-19. ,44 141 ?i a iw TD passes Sweetan tossed three TD pass- » * * es anrl booted three extra points But those pesky Indians put a M in sparking the victory. dpmper on everything by grab- 3* '.2w Milan has shown a lot of im- bing a 3-2 victory in 10 Innings. n .tti provement and last week battled i„ deciding Inning, Max g » defending champion Lansing 37 -iM down to the wire in dropping a n iai 13-10 decision, u g{ . Former Pontiac quarterback g fS Mike Brown is now with the 44 !iw Milan squad. 1 12 ' 27 *1 2 2 ;I2 ’Ri; 7$ 13 4* 14 By UaUed Press lateraallaul Notre Dame's Fighting Irish and the Georgia BuUdogs Saturday begin their season-long task of p r 0 V i h g their Impressive opening vlctoriee were no flukes. The Fighting Irish^ who showed no effects of the ab-Unce of All-Americans JoiM Iluarte and Jack Snow in the •PAY'A- PUIrturgA . PUIrturgA ...., H V opening 48-8 triumph over Call- Jg|2!5'*c5r' w fomia, might have their hands full against Purdue, which has its own aspirations for a Big Ten title and national recognition. n J3I WMdatMcIi «L *4 " 411 «MS*m Pgh 114 U. . „ —311 Rocket Car'Slow' in Speed Test Run Alvis bounced a singled off the leg of Tiger reliever Oran-do Pena, reached third on a ' sacrifice And iafield out, and scored on pinch-hitter CMco Salmon's single. The 'Dgers,missed a chance to beat the Tribes’ ace lefty, Sam McDowell. In the eighth^ when Mickey Stanley reached second on an error and moved to third on a Don Wert’s infield The Bulldogs, who pulled a dour-die play out of their bag of tricks to stun defending national champion Alabama 18-17 in the waning minutes of their , opener, might need another sur-pdse to bMt veteran-laden Vanderbilt. __ J,, BONNEVILLE SALT FLATS, grounder. u i i 2^ ^ * 2 ^ in i” £ iS * ‘ *** *'®*‘*‘* "*** "'®®* ^®‘™ fanned and » M logp SF^ ' m iw $4 iS i| 4 ijt gine power to break the sound Don Demeter popped out to end 2 m BiRiSg iSS* in M$ “ 3 I tfi barrier in his rocket racer. the threat. » 'Si tSSL^ OTio'nlfiHil 2« Wlngfopt Express, with; Joe Sparma pitched the first 44 .317 gjYjjtoi* u M 263 M IN 1112 2.*$ 15,000 pounds of thrust, got close ” ina OKwon ML *4144II11 xS to the 500 mile-an-hour mark clbvblano^ ^ ’n 74 w 2 * I lit during a teat run on these west- otvtiiiio c(*i '2"2l si*hi*y ci * Volt 3IS"* !ii!^* iili ‘ M an 20$ 1$'m I114 iii * * * Whmiaid IS 4 * • 0 Honan H 3*1* i 4L®“* ! 12 13 Z* !3!? !• the speed of sound — about 725 akm c j i 1 i oytar •• i 1 i 0 3.43 ^ ..............i Davli Bh 110 4 Kalino oh 1 la a Friday night major three tonchdowns iq the foorfli period to defeat aachmati 21-4. WUhalm CM Wot%''g1m *Mln '7$ $i 37 $4 il > 2iM jjihnm »;»»*! Si u’s's’s'iiai ass, 13* 11$ 41 17 1$ 7 i.43 WMhbvr.. . 173 127 42 171 1$ I 2.4$ Koonct Chi 2M1M 47 11111 I !.» Sill* CM . ** IM 11 $1 7 $ im Bloi'gamo 171 141 7$ 1« II14 3.|4 Bruc* Hfn 275 23* 77 141 » I 2.$* Horbtrt Ph __ iSlS S'Pji'l H! KkShjA^ Phi '*7i« 5 Horlon Chl ..3W1*! Mil 11* IM 47 142 1$ i iji f LA ^Ii*m 31 tt * 4 m 130.71 m.p.h. world land speed. ' ^•1- !« |» » '* J ^ ‘»?‘b* i Toioit n or^MiMipMo af PHMHir* (Vool* 17-H) 41 CWe*S4| m 4* LM AhSlWt !&«■ la „ McNifty Rr! IRR Brigham ‘Young’s Virgil Car-1 N*»miM c*i w— • ter hit and Phil Odle with three ^ m s. j; s i g TD paaaes for a 314 victory |w*T m|g g,g,• J Sownb* NY , III 1f$ Ig tM .tl 14 i 41 M.n la fSKS M» toarmo p 2 0 4 ' Thomat ph 14 4 G^gown pi* ^ 11 I 21 ♦ 175 er. Art, in a Jet-powered car last ^ “ijrrSStl 14 14 3.74 year. ' E—AIvI* l. DP-Cltv4land -- 14 i? 5 *7 in Driver Bob Tatroe, 28, of ^»!!cll•h^^Mva’l on"! Gruad Rapids, Mich., said the ,p iJi iTiraonh Chi ’ lii in »ii$ i4 u iJi air sneed in^cator read 485' ii'??!!''*'' t iM FlKhor MU . 112 113 34 7$ 7 I 3.M unutawr nmu w mcMoImm 1 H 44 43 114 * I i.«4 m.p.h. at one time. 1 Jgjjp'* ’ anSoMSfyiis The car would have had to be “ m ii( 4* i£ ! » in traveling close to 500 m.p.h. at sIS s'a'll is p;«"? *“1”«•*'««'°< {g IS ,£ S ,i ^ ^ m.p.h., starting CUSTOM CONSTRUCTION ■ BIG BEAR CONSTRUCTION; 14 1113 1S7 McCool CM FE 3-7833 j!l1 2.*l Fhhor NY _____U 7 2.*4 Parry SP 71 m 14 * 302 JMkion Chl *1 in I4 14 3.14 OlwtU Htn 141 142 IS 14 3.1$ Jay CM BA sat SB «« i^Ia^.^ mlf 739 NORTH PERRY UmmmMmmmmmmmMmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmi I MU 113 143 34 71 i'!i over Kansas State. ^ 'The BoHermakera have a ver-Isatiie attack, a reputation for pulling off upeete andva home field advantage, (ilaasy quarterback Bob Grieac, halfback Gordon Tater and fullback Randy MinnMlt' plus a powerful line might be what’s needed to shave _ down Notre Dame’s 4%-polnt advantage. Georgia coach Vince Dooley will know better after Saturday If ha,Has succeeded in bringing the Bulldogs back to the promi-nanct they enjoyed under con-troverHal Wally Butts. '5!S s|'fi is 234 214 41 aft 13 T ' “ wdDa > ! ^ I } ] IT! NRitH P»rfy Your Convonhnt B.F.6000RICH STORE Ponlioc FE 2-0121 179 I// •! BF V 11 O./m .......I II 112 10 11 2.H . W 204 n II* 12 14 4.11 ... m 111 4$ n I $ 4.4$ KC 17* 17$ II IN * I 4.12 $ SM Iff IN IN 141 I117 4.14 n *4 33 n 4 11 4.14 imi* *1 N 412 4.4$ '1$ 1*3 4$ 113 * 17 m » IN N 11$ 114 ______ ^*1 . 114 III 3* 42 $ 1} 4,n Krallck Cl* . N IN » 23 1 14 4.n Bouton NY IN 111 S» N 4 15 4M Ortag* Wit ...171174 M M It 1$ 4.M j WASHDAY'S EASli R WITH a w#a ## #r##’ t;^x»XrTUSU (Krallck MN 4l DMralf (Me>, 7-II) ft Xm«m laBTs TOKO SALES, INC. UL3-53S3 •Ff iMt Mmm Naar Jaha R AUmATIC WASHER • airMi » mMR Iggg HMhi Aa Low as $2.50 per week ^ AUTOMATIC HECniC DRYBR • StSSig,**W4SW • SyyyiBswltS-NkBS • SNogghsmiem As Low as $2.25 per week. SATURDAY NIGHT l:N (S) Movk: “Ghost of the China Sea” (4) College Footi>aU: Iowa vs. Oregon State (7) Wide World of Sports (9) Sfrtngin’ Time 4:U (4) News, Weather, Sports 4:11 (2) Grand Oltf Opry (7) Wyatt Earp (50) Movie: “Mr. Wong in Chinatown” (10») Boris Karloff 4:41 (4) Great Montents in Mu- 7:41 SIC I (2) Death Valley Days (4) At the Zoo (7) ABC Scope (9) Movie: “The C>ommand” (1953) Guy Madison, Joan Weldon 7:94 (2) Jackie Gleason (4) (Cdor) Flipper (7) Shindig 8:49 (4) I Dream of Jeannie (7) King Family (SO) Hl^ School Football 8:30 (2) Trials of O’Brien (4) (Color) Get Smart (7) (Color) Lawrence Welk 9:00 (4) (Color) Movie: “The Time Machine” (1960) Rod Taylor, Yvette Miinieux, Alan Young, Sebastian Cabot (9) Movie: “Orders Are Orders" 9:30 (2) Loner (7) (Color) Hollywood Palace 10:00 (2) Gnnsmoke (90) Horse Racing 10:30 (7) (Color) World Adven> tore (9) Juliette (50) U. of M. Band 10:W (50) College Pregame U:00 (2) (4) (7) (9) News, Weather, Sports (50) College FootbaU: California vs. Michigan 11:10 (9) Nightcap 11:24 (2) Movies: 1. (Color) “Violent Saturday” (1955) Victor Mature. 1 “Interns (kn’t Take Money” (1937) Television Features Lions Travel to Minnesota By United Press International ABC SCOPE, 7:00 p.m. (7) Report on ^ handicapped thalidomide children. BBA1LES, 5:00 p.m. (9) In “Big Night Out,” the Beatles sing some of their favorites; in second segment, Paul Revere and the Raiders and Leslie Gore are guests. TRIALS OF O’BRIEN, 8:30 p.m. (2) O’Brien wins contract of boxer who’s spent more time in jail than in ring. TELEPHONE HOUR, 6:30 p.m. (4) Ginger Rogers hosts t salute to composer _____ Jerune Kern with Ella Fitsgerakl, Roberta ” Peters, Earl Wrightson. LONER, 9:30 p.m. (2) Program’s non- ----- violoit approach, whidi resulted in writeiV VOYAGE, 7:00 p. m. (7) Chinese plot to ■ netwwk controversy, is best illustrated to start war between U.S. and U.S.S.R. this segment about gunfi^ter-tumed-ministei* hinges upon turning Nelson Into human time who refuses to defend himself vriien attacked \ bomb before visit to Russia, by brother of two of his victims. \ ----- SUNDAY FACE THE NA’nON, 12:30 p.m. (2V Undersecretary of State George W. Ball Is interviewed. MONDAY FRACTURED PHRASES, 10:00 a. m. (4) I James hosts game show challenging itestants to untangle phonetically written Pro FOOTBALL, 2:15 p.m. (2) Lions vs. Vjkings at Bloomington, Minn. ISSUES AND ANSWERS, 3:00 p.m. (7> Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey is flrst guest of new season. MEET THE PRESS, 4:00 p. m. (4) Last of day’s interviews of high-ranking U.S. officials is with U.S. envoy to the United NatioM Arthur Goldberg. STAR, 11:00 a.m. (4) Week-about New Englander. BAY, 11:30 a.m. (4) Story ; POST\pFFICE, 12:30 p. m. (4) Contestants identily authors by their writing; host is Don Mot' NEVER too YOUNG, 4:00 p.m. (7) Drama deals With problenu of today’s teens. (7) Movies: 1. (Color) “Never Steal Anything &nall” (1959) 2. “Phantom Lady” (1944) 11:39 (4) Johnny Carson U:39 (9) Widow on the World , 1:49 (4) Thin Man ^ 1:30 (4) News, Weather 3:40 (2) News, Weather (7) All-Night Programs SUNDAY MORNING 4:39 (7) Some Heroical Spirits 1 I 4:( 4:44 (2) Accent 7:44 (2) Look Up and Live (7) Rural Newsreel 7:24 (4) News 7:99 (2) Gospel’Time (4) Country Living (7) Water Wonderland 8:99 (2) This Is the life ’ (4) Industry on Parade (7) Insight 8:15 (4) Daycy and Goliath (9) Sacred Heart 8:30 (2) Temple Baptist Church (4) Frontiers of Faith V (7) Understanding On-World ) Film Feature I (k) Mass for Shut-Ins K Church at the Cross- —^Weekend Radio Programs- WJW760) wxrgl 270) CKIWCIOO) WWJ(050) WCA»(1130) WOOWd 400) WJ0K(1500) WHFI-fM(04.7) «tW-WJR. Nwm, Spwta WHPi, wtMMC nr wMinw WPON-Oan Honrard ttaw tt4f-CKLW, Mm. rmotic «AYZ. s»om Tssa-CKLW, Ron KnowMi WCAR, Ron “— CKLW, Soughov TabornKM WJBK, Avo Mario Hour WPOR. ------------- WCAR, I, $UA^ SoronM Tha ChurOi To UR, Nowt, Roflac .........1, Mooit WXYZ. Morning Choralo CKLW, Your WoroNIp How WJBK, Mutk WiMi 9^1 WCAR, Lift lor LhrlnB WTON, St. MnYf Clwrcn WHR, Ntwi, Bunbav Bool l;SS-WXYZ. ttomantt of WCAR, Back to God ttoo CKLW, Ravival Hour WJR, Rontro Vallay WNPl, Rallgkwt Nowt t:lB-WJR, Nowt CKLW, Botlmda Tomptg WCAR, Muijc tor Sundn WPON, Protoolani Hour WJBK, Volco ft Churdl WHFI, Nowt, Lndw Boot t!»-WJR, Muilc WXYZ, OatroH Call Baard ^LW,'tS^cK^ WJiK, Wortd tomorrow WPON, Rallglon In Nowt t>4S-CKLW, Oirlotlan Set- -----Mwi, Ri CKLW, Radio t--------- WJBiL Pratootant Hour WPON. Tho Chrlctopnort WXYZ, Marc Avory, MuiM ItilS-WPON, Emmanuol Bap WWJ, Nowt. SCDUlt WHFi, McLaodnIIIO, USA llr«-^JR, ■■ n^Yaffr- .... Ohim Sorvlca^ WPON, Rallglow MuNC CKLW. WHFI, nawi, aunuav WXYZ, Mutk. Nowt ItiM-WWj, ,Nawi. Nawtiouto CKLW. Lutlwran Haur WPON, Sunday Edition IlilS-WPON Oakland CKLW, _ _____ WHFI, Nowt, Haalll) Forum liW-WPON, Sunday Saran- WXYZ, Oavt Prineo 1:1S-WJR, Nawt, k WWJ, Nawt. Scitnea WXYZ, Nawt, Mutk CKLW. Frank and imaol WJBj^Naws Atoign. WCAR. Nawt. Mutk WPON, —--------- CKLW. Wmgi ot Haallnp WWJ, Moot «tw Prato WXYZ. Mutk, Iportt CKLW. Churdl dt Gw WJB^ Naw% WCArT^I^ Canmdor TiIS-wP6n. TaaclMr Raport CkLW. etinoaiar Bapil WJR, Tha Lana Rangtr WPON, Youth Forum CKLW, Vako at JimaHn »itS-CKLW, Grotaa PoMt WJR, Nawt, N PilS-WJB^^ S WXYZ, wayna Stala CKLW. BWIa Study Foot tha Nation tSitS-WWj, Nowt, Catholk WJBK. Nawt. Concart WJR, Nawt. Mutk ISilS-wjR. Rallglon I CKLW, Amarkan Lulharan WXYZ, Currant lIttP-WJR. Nawt. Iportt CKLP^^irch at Lon WXYZ. loouta and Ai WCAR, J---------- CKLW, Farm Nawt WJBK, Nawt WCAR, Nawt. Sandtrt WPON, Nawt. Arlnna Wi WPON, Nawt, Bob Lturanca TilP-WHFi, Abnanti Nawt WJR, Nawt, Mutk SilB^JR. Nawv -wJbk, BdbTat SilB-WJR, Mutk Hag WllS-WJR, Nawt. Mutk wS^’B^Mt*;!} CKLW, joa Van WJBK, Nawt. Bob Layno WJR. Nawt. Oadtray WJR. Nawt, Farm WWJ Mutk lilS-WWJ, Nawt, Mu CKLW, Nawt. Mutk WJR.------ WJR. Nawt tiSS-WJR, GutN IiW-WPON. Nawt. Ran KnloM WWJ, Nawt. Sfflphttit, M liN-WCAR, Jot B ! Same Addreut tSKm. ONE CONTRACTOR • ONE JOB • ONE PRICE I -,r. , a family Roomi a Rer Roomi a Kilf l\cn>, and Bufli Rcmodelim **Over 26 Yean of Experience At Your Service,** EC fl.qoci . I IREF ESTIMAIES I L II WfciVl. 328 N. Perry. PONTIAC I (7) Wally, Lippy and To (9) Orto Roberts 9:98 (2) WithXThis Ring (4) Bosotlw(3own (7) Voyagem Adventure (9) CathedrA^of Tomorrow \ 9:44 (2) To Dwell’ 19:49 (2) Let’s See (7) Annie Oakley 14:39 (2) Faith for TodayX (7) Beany and Cecil \ (9) Herald of Truth " 11:49 (2) Movie (4) House Detective (7) Bullwinkle (9) Pinocchio 11:39 (7) Discovery ’65 (9) Movie: “LitUe Colonel” (1935) (4) Walt Disney (56) Chicago Symphoiqr 8:49 (2) (Color) Ed Sullivan (7) (Color) FBI 8:29 (50) F00 tball Pregame Show 8:30 (4) (Color) Branded (50) Football: California vs. Michigan 9:00 (2) Perry Mason (4) (Color) Bonanza (7) (Coha*) Movie: “Anastasia” (1956) iRgrld Bergman, Yui Bremer, Helen Hayes, Akim Tami-roff. 9:30 (9) Pierre Berton 10:00 (2) Candid Camera (4) (Color) Wackiest Ship 10:30 (2) What’s My line lltl0(2) (4) (7) (9) News, Weather, Sports 11:19 (9) Around Town 9:19 (56) Understanding Num- 9:30 (2) Dick Van Dyke (SO) Occupational Planning 9:95 (4) News (56) Spanish Lesson 10:00 (2) I Love Lucy (4) Fractured Phrases (9) Vacation Time 19:19 (50) Rhyme Timo 10:11 (50) Science Is Every- 10:24 (4) News 10:31 (2) McCoys (4) Concentration (7) Girl Talk 10:34 (56) French Lesson 10:50 (56) Spanish Lesson U:I0 (2) Divorce Court (d) Morning Star (7) Young Set (9) Film Feature 11:25 (2) Movie: “Let No Man 11:21 (50) What’s New Write My Epitaph” (1960) 11:30 (4) Paradise Bay (7) Movie: “Only The (9) Across Canada Best” (1951) Susan Hayward, Dan Dailey. 11:39 (4) Surfside 6 (9) Movie: “The UnfaiOi-fuls” (1962) May Britt. MONDAY MORNING 1:15 (2) On the Farm Scene 8:28 (2) News 1:25 (2) Sunrise Semester 8:31 (4) Classroom (7) Funews 8:55 (2) Editorial, News 7:18 (4) Today (7) Johnny Ginger 7:86 (2) News 7:39 (2) Happyland 8:19 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Big Theater 9:39 (7) Movie: “Torch Song” (1953) Joan Oawford. 8:49 (56) Great Books 8:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 9:19 (2) Andy Griffith (4) Living AFTERNOON 12:99 (2) Love of Life (4) Jeopardy (7) Donna Reed (9) Forest Rangers (50) Dickory Doc 12:25 (2) News 12:10 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Post Office (7) Father Knows Best (9) Take 30 12:85 (56) Spanish Lesson 12:45 (2) Guiding Light 12:91 (56) Understanding Num- 1:15 (4) News (50) World History 1:81(2) A> the World Turns (4) Let’s Make 8 Deal l:il (4) News (56) Adventures in todence 2:88 (2) Password (4) Moment of TTuth ' (7) Nurses 2:28 (56) Occupational Planning 2:88 (2) House Party U) Doctors (7) A Time for Us (SO) Love That Bob 2:90 (56) Spanish Lesson 2:15 (7) News 1:00 (2) io TeU the Truth (4) Another World (7) General Hospital (50) Topper 12:55 (4) News 1:00 (2) Scene 2 (4) Match Game (7) Ben (^y (0) Movie: “The Oklahoma Kid” (1999) James Cagney, Huniphrey Bogart (50) Movie 1:10 (56) French Lesson MUSIC IN THE AIR SUNDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (4) U of M Presents (7) Championship Bowling (50) Profiles 12:80 (2)FacetheNaUon (4) Rosh Hashonah (SO) Recital Hall 1:00 (2) Anuteur Hour (4) Pro Football (7) Movie: “The Last Wagon” (I960) Richard Widmark, Nick Adams (9) Movie: “(^hamp for a Day” (1953) Alex Nicol (SO) Gospel Jubilee 1:M (2) Great Momenta in Mu-• sic 1:45 (2) Voice of the Fans 2:09 (2) Pro press Box (50) Islands in the Sun 2:15 (2) Pro Football 2:30 (50) American West 3:00 (7) Issues and Answers (50) Wanderlust 3:30 (7) Gub 1270 (9) Movie: “Gorgo” (1901) Bill Travers, William Syl- r r" r r TT rr !?“ 13 14 If" 18 17 nq HIT to 8T zr zr sr ir sr JT Hs? JT" r a 18 p HT 81 U 'V 84 u \ 87 S3 sr \ B5 31 1 Stringed instrunte^ 5 “—Boat to Chlna^, 9 “Tiger- 12 Woodwind instrument \ 13 Go by aircraft \ 14 Compass pidnt ^ 15 Courier 17 Social insect n Puff up 19 Chemical sugars 21 Bedstead part 23 Streets (ab.) 24 Shade tree 27 Excuse 29 Scottish philosopher 32 Spouted table vessel 34 Looked obliquely 36 Landed proptoty 37 Conceded 38 Pace 39 ^ed course 41’%h08t Riders in the 42 Legal point 44 Game fish 46 Handsomest 49 Angry 53 Miss Gardner 54 One who makee a repeat performance 31 Whirlpool 33 Writer’s requirement 35 Woman adviser 40 Singing groupe 43 Do service 45 (Chemical sutotance 46 Renown S Asseverate .Soothsayer It westerly Aleutian is- (50) Holiday 4:01 (4) Meet the Press (7) Range Rider (90) Colorful World 4:31 (4) International Zone (7) Cartoon Pun (SO) All-Star Golf isOI(2) Movie: "The Band- ____________________ landers” (1060) AI a n' 56 Mr. Torme Ladd, Ernest Borgnine 157 Refuse to approve (4) Survival 158 Followers (7) Movie: “The Stratton | 59 Bitter vetch Story” (1949) James Ste- 60 Formerly wart, June Allyson I 61 Unclothed (9) (Special) Beatles | 5:99 (4) GE College Bowl ! (50) Conservation Special i:4i (50) College Pre-Game Show SUNDAY EVENING 8:10 (4) News (9) Route 00 (80) College Football (56) Musicale f:lf (4) News 1:18 (4) (Color) BeU Tele- DOWN 1 “—on the Range” 2 Son of Adam 3 MissBonheur 5 “I Left My Heart in — (96) Mythology 7:88 (2) (CXilor) Lassie (7) (Cirior) Voyage (8) Movie; “The Quiet Man” (1982) John Wayne (56) Aitnnomy 7:18 (2) (Color) My Favonte Martian 7 Soviet city 8 Articulate aounds 9 Reetoree confideno 10 Feminine name 11 Obtains 10 Conger trap 20 Additional 22 Chaitoe . 24 Summers (Fr.jt 25 For fear that 26 Fabrlcf 2tWIn^ 30 Mild of temper Looking/For A Change? © 3:29 (2) News 3:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) You Don’t Say (7) Young Marrleds ^ , (9) Swln^’ Time (SO) Captain Detroit 4:10 (2) Secret Storm (4) Bozo the Clown (7) Never Too Young 4:30 (2) Mike Douglas (7) Where the Action Is (9) Fun House (50) Wells Fargo 4:55 (4) Eliot’s Almanac 1:00 (4) George Pierrot (7) Movie: “It Came From Outer Space” (1953) Rich*. afd Carlson (50) Lloyd Thaxton (56) Frendi Gief ' 5:30 (56) What’s New 5:55 (4) Here’s Card Duvall IMPROVE YOUR HOME DEAL DIRECT '^'VuiLDER FREE PLANS and ESTIMATES-NO CHARGE KITCHEN CABINETS )-Ft. Kitchen SOCC COMPLETE CALL FE 841173 Open Daily and Sun. CALL DAY OR NIGHT 5-Ft. Kitchen SOCC COMPLETE &Qi] 7-Ft. Kitchen $OQC complete INCLUDES Upper o Lower Cobmeti, Coun TopJ, Sink with Fauci ★ ADDITIONS ★ HMUT BOOMS uoMmuM siDns BEC. BOOHS BOOFING—SlomC WOODFIELD CONSTRUCTION . YY.-^ COME TO YOU/ WITH FREE ESTIMATE AND PLANS—NO CHARGE 15 IV. UWRENCE CALL FE 8-8173 ONE CONTRACTOR FOR EVERYTHING • ART FOAM 7Qe all color, - w • STANDARD CAKE 16; Dwcorftting Tubws ... ENROLL NOW ... FOR CAKE DECORATINQ CLASSES! |y^[wiMDciiS]s^ ----^MOAKLAIW FE 8-3181 DOOR HOOD HP ^111 ^Uptetevan III ^YpmtoPay PERWINDW Minimum 4 WImImm X WWIOI |u«r ilM, amgi giMnl bMkllkk. aum MikK{ii*99 •26“ w. MODMHIMTION bJ&SU. FamNy Naeiee • XltelieiM C.WKB8N 1032 W«it Huron Str««t IFE 4.2597 I M«u»Hi.Cbuii*.»u>Cwwwk. 81l^||iU V/t COMPANY in PnmUpr A 9t I , MY»H1 lYlPKONIi MA4-10I1 'J THE PONTIAC PRESS. SAiUKi>Ay, SEPTEMBER 25, 1965 TWKNTy-FJ VK Jacoby on Bridge JACOBY By JACOBY A SON iSMith kx>ked over dummy and w|| not particularly pleased #ith what he saw. The spade lead had attacked h 1! where he w) weakest and he needed three club trickk to make his contract. He led dummy's deuce of clubs and was so delighted when East played the ace that he forgot to drop hia ten spot. East led his second spadd! Sooth was back in dummy and led another club. East played the Jack and Sooth was in with the king. If only he had dropped that ten spot he would have Jteen able to fl-nesse against West’s nine spot hot now he was helpless. That is he was almost helpless. He laid down his ace of AAK YJlOt ♦ 0843 ♦ Q872 AQ1063 ¥763 ♦ KJ ♦ 9843 sotrra (D) A J93 ¥-AKQ ♦ A792 AKlOi IN.T. Pass 3N.T. E’ass Pass Openiaa lead—A 2. BAST A 87 84 ¥0848 ♦ Q106 AAJ Sooth’s faflore to drop die ten of eloba was a very eare-' I play. When East rose h the ace of clubs be marked hlqiself with either the singletoa ace or his actual hoiding. If that ace were sin-' ton South was going to have real trout three club trkks. West’s failure to drop the king of diamonds was Just as care-ien. It diouM have been obvious to him that South would have tried a diamond finesse if he had held the ace and queen So that he could afford to drop the king with perfect safety. Q—Hie blddinc has been: South West North Bast Pam 1¥ Pam \XN.T. Pass 3¥ Pass 314.T. Pam 4« Pam 4 ¥ Pam 4 N.T. Pam S¥ Pam 6A Pnm T You, South, hold: AK3S7¥A8 AKQ8 AA984 What do you do? A—Pass. Tour partner has elearly shown lour clubs and plaeod the aantraet. Aoeopt his TOOArS QUESTION Instead of biddinf three hearts your partner bide three spades over your two no-tnunp. What do you do now? The oldest settlement in thei Louisiana Purchase is Natchitoches, U. (1714): I By SYONIY OMARS Per Seamy sma maa csatrsta kii i You are cm Ake an snort. •Iwli. Read « * confManco. Em- diamonds and West was careless in turn. He dropped his jpck of diamonds. Now South cashed three top hearts and the ten of clubs, then played a spade. Weat took his queen and ten of spades and king of clubs but was finally forced to give dummy the last trick with the nine of clubs. r. > % mestage. Tepdancy It to tcattar (orcat. Ovarcoma III You con sol' ' ' ralatlvot. Show that you i PISCES (Fob. It to Mar. 201: Chock potwttlont. Bo wary. Coratotinaao o load to lou. You novo chance to t eoopofstlvo. BERRY’S WORI,D By Jim Btrrv S (Apr. » to Ahoy 20): Coro-mf con turn mattori your way. - J»!*»'>ado poitotslolu, oftorti. « ovoid ocsttorlnB tercet. Bo thor-Sm what you moon . . . mam YOU say. MINI (AAay 2t to Juno 201s Good ■unar atpad hlglillghtt hopet, withat. AW.by ana you halpod In pail Indicated. Surprlw Boniarlng pettIMt. DItploy ch^. Ovarcoma totWoncy to bo Ir- tANCIR (Juno 21 to July 22): Humility, 0 virtue. Avoid Impulta to hurt the ■ -(rv#^ Bo Indoperjdmt, but not ‘if uhIieMn^ bala'nc? awr""" mainoot rotult In tall-BE SENSIBLEI IRQO (Aug. 22 to Sopl. 221: Com I point to gain throuBh plonmring IF MONDAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY ... you ore often accused ol boln prodical. In actuality, you ora i OBNERAL TENDENCIRS; Cycle high for ARIES, TAURUS. Special word to SCORPIO: Keep rooohitlont eonco work, hnlth, rocroatim. { (Copyrlglit IMS, Oantrol Fmturot Carp.) oAg you uiptr pri • oolWtv. Period « £ Oat at 1 Ihorrwwr Eaerclie caution. Rmllta bjjhjd^tha »emaa.'~valualji^ovm^^ SCPRRW met. 23 to Nov. 211: Avoid nvm who make promitot which can't be kajA Envy paint you nothtng. Be dlplo-milfc. mutiput. Chanflpt awy be ppcav o» aid It tincara it from on# who cm bp Irvttad. ,Mg!TT^IUI (Nav. 22 to Dec. 21): CoMBlimants, fina oftart llkaly. A Nma itXpRi^riM. RmHia^at^: Ov^ CAPRIC^N (Oac 22 to Jm. It): Avald owarly paaiatilva alllluda, aettont. S)^ Bsnaraally. OMir partmt require extra ccnoHtorptlm. Outcemo of ma|or to axpylmant, to road and M to Fab. II): Beat IR SUNDAY IS ' hapay In Nw paat . kindnatt. ♦BNIRAL TINOBNCIBS: Cycle hMi toF ARIRt. tAURUI. Special word to LIBRA; Contraclt, tpaclal papart ra- —........ burtf of t.. cyglo lo hiph. Thoro li of. opportunhy. Good newt cot parignsl jmlact duo. Kay It of hianor. diva chaar to ethort. Taurus (Apr. m to May 20): ■JoiYt rock n oftortt, ^lactt “Look (-BOARDING HOtSE • ItSS ky NEA, lac. ' -) ANOTHER Mondrian!’ OUT OUR WAV IMN b«lor» Bt*rflf>9 m __________ now wHh piopturo. Voir (uctomont' lt tmp." ypu pro oWo to put finpor m vHW pointo, Caroar inay 0ol odolttonai ^to (July IS to Aup. 22): Oood It otpdcl gneauraptg travel, StHIng ( yiMf acroao. RscomHlm or pott tofts due. Study pmri. Think bo . you act ... ksy It eaultm, maiyolt. Vtloo (Aup. n to topt. 32): Atoupt B#*%Sly*^ *Sprlta®*cwJM(t!*wdlrt: Ham tpcto an flto. Thm you------- ca^ «W Buard. Otvo siti ifrial accounts. . UitRA (Sapt. » to Oct. a): No tima to goat auparflclal ludimantt. Dip deep tor Botk Intormatton. Appllat eipaclally •0 aartnorohto prspotalt, contraclt. Ri^ aaTwaaN thrlinrs. ICORRIO (Oct. a to Nov. 21); Bo •ura of diraettont, mottapM. Toko c -lurlim lowrndyt. Mieht bo wito to »i clolB to homo bsta, Hmdis dalallt por-•oaaliy. Build tolM timdotim. SMITTARIUS (Nov. a to Doc. 21); »op poromt, opportunttloo hi roalltllc "*L Tandofiey oxltli toward docMIon. Appifot otpoclolly whore . —Intoroiti ontof pteturo. LET 2^ RULBI Tricorn ,(Dk. a to Jm. it): ---iHuiy. t# r‘ - ______I duo from TAURUS ^ DONALD DUCK By Walt Dteney BEN CASEY THE BERRYS ' WELL, RAMON 16 CONSISTENT, IR F NOTHIKKS aSE.HE PULUO OFF THEIR F ■reSCUf ON HIS OWN. ANP DOOOKD > HWSELFONHISOWN.IJUSTHOPE k HE PION’T (XlMPtETEiy RUN HwySEtF., LIKE A GOLF BALL f THAT H(X)KS AND 1 A BC VLIISIG BALL r' '-;THATD0ESNT. Carl Grultcrl DRIFT MARLO By Dr. I. M. Levitt. Tom Cooke and Phil Evaiu Mitch ^LTON, man's FIRST COURIER TO OUTER SPACE,.. BORNE OF ALL FAITHS, ALL COLORS, ALL NATIONALITIES... OFFSPRING OF ALL MEN OF SCIENCE WHO FATHERED TODAy'S SWCE-AGE TECHNaOCy/ , BUT CAN M£SURy/yE jjl ON THE MOON? y' ^ HECK NO, BOY, THERE \ THERE'S NOT ^ ISN'T? j EVEN A GOOD '■ /sTAtJD n- By V. T. Hamlin CAPTAIN EASY Ry Leslie Tamer EEK & MEEK By Howie Schneid /^VtXl'RE NCir'^ ( HEAVY ENOUGH \ XJDBE MKJtiiMlJ ( OKAV.FATSO,^ O0H y • X By Ernie Bushmiller OH, AUNT FRITZI— ' LCX>K By Charles Kuha 1AVKNTY-SIX THE PONTIAC PRESS, SAIURDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1966 ImptoyMiMnt ProQroiii for tovrbon W Water 1NDIAIIM>OUS, Ind. (AP) -~ ~ m Pi*»c Swvke hM ipprored a pro- JhaJbito Pi^ Sarvke aMrOf to iam ms^ worth of waienPorU revenue bonds and rate ateer rates to finance a ■indcr system im- provement {Kogram. In its pett-tion the town had said the water had a reddish color. Balloons Got Airing TEMPE, Arts. (AP) - A bundle of yellow balkxms released^ last Saturday at the Arixona State Unlversity-ftlgham Young football game has turned op 1,300 miles away. A farmer at Minot, N.D., reported they floated to earth on his land. We Will Be CLOSED MONDAY September 27th Jewish Holidoy OPEIW TUESDAY Sept. 28th as Usual MAY’S -Downtown Pontiac- 18 & 20 N; SAGINAW New Premier Wins Victory of Confidence Greece Crisis Sparks-Griffin FUNERAL HOME **ThoMif^tful Service** Phooe re s-stss SHIFT YOUR VIEW Propir who have lived iheir three ecorc i chlrflj M retirement and wajra to keep mentailjr alert and phyvicallr nt. Maet at their Hvce kae been apenl hi creative indeaTor aronnd a hard core of work to bajr thinipi their familica wanted,-now, anddenly, Ihajrara at ioaaa endi, with a nahpolo ia OM hand and Madera Matnritr mapaaine ia the other. J.L.VOOBHEES What to do with time ia the iaaao! _________„ aU of their Hvaai thiaca frata pidaea of Pach, ip tha aaeieat art at eaaiap _____- earh taak la aew aad eaehiap. Tbaaa paapla refaaed to ha paahed ia the baekwaten . . ----- ----------L.__ , ad kaa check develaped a facUitr tor c< Shift jraar aiphu fraai What Yaa Know to what yoa ^a Kaaw. Be aaealall7 aler* fh| read, diiak and Do, Do, Do. VOORHEES.S1PLE FUNERAL HOME 268 North Pen7Su«et PhoM FE 2-SS7S ATHENS, Gr^ (AP) -Premier Stephanos Stephano-poulos won a vote oCc^idence in Parliament today, ending Greece’s worst government crisis in nearly 20 years. Parliament voted in the 21-member coalition 1S2-148 after a tumultuous debate. * k ♦ It was the first government to receive a parliamentary mandate since King ConsUntine fired (jecHge Papandreou from the premiership July 15. They disagreed over control of the armed forces. Two other governments installed by tha king were voted down when it came to the mandatory confidence test. RADICAL UNION Stephanopoulos, 66, a bachelor economist, is a dissident member of Papandreou’s Onter Union party. He won the support of the National Radical Union’s 99 I deputies, plus 8 of the Progressive party and 44 other dissident Center Union meinbers. Papandreou’s original majority of 171 was reduced to 126 as the crisis wore on and members defected. Those remaining loyal to the 77-year-oW former pre-I mier and 22 deputies of the pro-ICkimmuhist United Democratic I Left voted against the new government. k ★ ★ Immediately after the vote, groups of Papandreou backers I gathered outside Parliament chanting the name of their chief and shouting ‘‘Shame!” at I members of the new government. FYom his home, Papandreou vowed to keep up his ‘‘unrelenting struggle” and predicted the new Cabinet would 'soon cd-lapse. PEACE AND ORDER Stephanopoulos said his government’s main aim was “to restore peace and order.” . His confidence vote was a big victory for the king and a bitU;r blow to Papandreou. An anti-monarchist mood developed during the crisis as Papandreou’s supporters took to the streets. One person was killed and hundreds were injured in some of Greece’s worst postwar riots. Papandreou demanded that the king recall him or set new national elections. The 25-year-oid monarch refused. Kim Novak Sees No Easing of Screen's Stripfeasing By EARL WILSON LONDON — Kim Novak, the bride, has not turned into a prim Kim. Curvy Kim, me of the first of America’s beautifully-built beauties to do nude boudoir scenes, made it sparklingly clear in an interview here that she doubts there’s any ml revolt back home against playfully spicy stripteasing m the screen ... and if there Is a trend i^ainst sexy subjects, the unprim Kim prophesies it won’t last. “I don’t think things like thnt ever V go ont of style,” were her exnct words, nttercd with a characteristic breathy little __________ lan^. WILSm “I wouldn’t want not to play these roles. They Ye fna ... Ne, I don’t think that would ever be.” Kim, married since March IS to British star Richard John-sm, whom she fell in love with while doing some of those love scenes in “Moll Flanders” here in jollie old England, bounced around beside me m a couch in her rented house In South Kensington as we talked. She wore a toque sweater which matched her hair, and though it was a loose-type sweater, it looked snug on her. “But in your new picture” — titled “13,” opposite Navid Niven — “you’re not doing bedroom material?” I said. ★ ★ ★ “No, but” — Kim laughed breathily again “there’s one scene where I’m on the roof about to fall off, and the camera's on the ground ... and I was wondering, frankly about the camera angle on that!” “It’s not that the bridegroom objects?” “Oh, NO!! It’s oar jobs to do what the pktnre calls for.” Kim then patiently explained that the sexy “Kiss Me, Stnpid” didn’t work oat well, and that “Moll Flanders,” while doing well in England, suffered somewhat in flie U.S. “becaose they tried to ease H a Httie with a eat verste and yeta can’t do that Yen’ve got tn go all the way.” THE WEEKEND WINDUP ... Shirley MacLaine, posing for a fashim magazine, ttumed down the gowns of Paris’ most expensive designers, wore a $40 item she’s bought herself in Hollyvrood . . . Laurence Harvey’U make a bundle with “Darling”—he owns 10% . . . Beatle John Lennon’s building, a house in Corsica, with ixivate beach. Frank Sinatra’s salary, for a cameo role in “The Oscar,” goes to Mexican orphans ... Otto Preminger signed Carol Lynley (of his “Bunny Lake Is Missing”) to two more pictures . . . AIu Shermaa’O appear in S. Africa this Christmas . . . Scherry and Bill Harrah of Lake Tahoe, named their son John Adam. ★ ★ ★ WISH I’D SAID THAT: When a small boy has nothing in his pockets, he’s probably in his pajamas. EARL’S PEARLS: A gal explained why comparaUvely few females play golf; “We women have more important things to lie about.” Leonard L. Levinson’s book, “Webster’s Unafraid Dictionary,” will carry this definition: “Americans — People who act like Texans when they’re in Europe.” . . . That’s earl, brother. Death Claims Locallfigineer Alton E. Yoloim of 160 Cherokee, a consulting engineer, died yest^y after a long illness. Service will be 2 p. m. Monday at Sparks-Griffin Chapel yth burial in Grand Lawn Cemetery, Detroit. Mr. Yoknm Is survived by his wUe, Verona; a daughter, Mrs. Charles Yaackb of Boston, Mass.; a son, Robert of A graduate of the University of Michigan, he maintained engineering offices in Detroit before retiring in 1961.' k A k He was structural engineer for Olympia Stadium, Fox Theater Building, United Artists Building, and Henry and Edsel Ford Audljorium in Detroit and Kirk in the Hills, Bloomfield Township. k k k A member of Central Method dist CSiurch, be also belonged to the Michigan Society o( Professional Engineers, the American Concrete Institute and was an honorary member of the American Institute of Archi-t^ts, Detroit chapter. Reinstated Marine Has Pay Coming WASHINGTON (UPI) - M. Sgt. Carl H. Buck is back in the Marine Ctorps, but there is still a matter of 13 years back pay. Buck warmly thanked President Johnson yesterday for a pardon that cleared hiin of a conviction which resulted in a bad conduct discharge from the Marines in 1952. And BOW that he has been Deaths in Pontiac Area The world Meteorological Organization has designated Washington, D.C., Mosco^ and Melbourne as the centers of its projected World Weather Watch. They are to be supplemented by a number of re^onal centers. Break Off Negotiations Constitution in in Wyandotte Strike WASHINGTON (AP) - Negotiations in the 143-day old Wyandotte (2iemical C!o. strike broke off Friday with no new date set for resumption of talks, federal mediators said. (Company officials and representatives of Local 7-627 of the Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers union had been meet-j Ing in Washington since Wednes-' day at the request of William E. Simkin, director of the Fed-1 eral Mediation and Conciliation i FREE FUN FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY THE PONTIAC AREA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE ond the OAKLAND COUNTY FIREMEN Will Sponsor the FIRE FIGHTERS FESTIVAL mSREI STMin ItTOUl 7,19ts, 1M M. FIREWORKS! CLOWNS! OALLOONSI OANDSI PLAN NOWTO TAKE A GROUP FOR A GALA EVENING WITH YOUR FIRE FIGHTERS THERE 15 NO CHARGE PMIIk Area Gb»ber of dominerce Lodge Calendar Pontiac Chapter No. 228, OES, Advanced Officer’s Night, Monday, Sept. 27. Harvest Home Dinner at 6:36 p.m. Memorial, 7:30 p.m. Initiation at 8 p.m. Officers’ practice Sunday, Sept. 26, at 2:30 p.m. at 18% E. Lawrence St. Edith M. (toons. Sec. Troubled Aden Is Suspended LONDON (AP) - The British government suspended the constitution at the troubled Aden Protectorate today and placed it under the sole authority of the British high cfunmissioner. The protectorate has been the scene of political upheaval for months and there have been a nuipber of murders and bombings. The decision to suspend the constitution was announced frrnn I*riine Minister Handd Wilson’s official residence. The statement added that it is still the British government’s “unaltered aim” to give the protectorate independence not later than 1968, as announced by Colonial Secretarv Anthony Greenwood on Aug. 7. Until today Aden had been governed by a Council of Ministers and a Legislative Council j under the high commissioners supervision. was the problem af back pay. No one seems to knew h«m much. Bat all agreed it wooM be considerable. Buck was convicted of stealing a box of chevrons. But his insistence that the charge was false came to the attention of Elen. Paul H. Douglas, D-Ill., and his aide, Howard Shuman, k ★ , k For nine years they investigated the case, turaing up evL deuce that resulted in the pardon. Buck, a 22-year Marine veter-jan, who operates a small restaurant in Seattle, Wash., Urid President Johnson. “I’m proud to be an American and I’ proud to be a Marine.” He said, “I don’t believe that anywhere else in the world would an enlisted man be treated this way.” MRS. SANFORD MOTT | Service tor former Pontiac resident Mrs. SMtord (Louise S.) MoU, 71, of Clare wlU be| 16 a.m. Monday at the St. Johnj Lutheran C3uirdi, Oare, with burial there in the Cherry Grovel Cemetery. Mrs. Mott died Wednesday. Surviving are two sons, Harold of Pontiac and Donovan of Tulsa, (Bda.; riz grandchildren; and a great-grandchild. . MRS. CARLTON K. WDL Mrs. Carlton K. (Beth L) Wix, 43, of 2988 W. Huron, Waterford Township, died yesterday after a long Illness. Her body is at the Donelson-Johns I Funeral Home. Surviving are her husband; her father. Hirum G. Sibley vf Pontiac; a daughter Mrs. AUtoit Boyce of Baltimore, Md.; five grandchildren; a sister, and a brother. SAMUEL E.AUBUCHON | i OXFORD TOWNSHIP-Sam-ue! E. AuBuchon, 79, of 1940 Lakeville, Oxford Township died this morning following a long Illness. I His body is at the Flumerfelt! Funeral Home. I Mr. AuBuchon was a iiiember ; of St. Joseph Catholic Church, Lake Orion. Surviving are his wife, Alice, at home; one son, L. S. Au-I Buchon of University City, Mo.; one daughter, Mrs. Thais Re-I tell of Oxford Township; three 1 brothers; two sisters; five : grandchildren; and four great granddiildren. MRS. GEORGE HANNER ALMONT — Service for Mrs. (toorge (Ebneretta) Hanner, 87, of 733 W. St. Clair wUI be 2:38 p. m.' Monday at Muir Brothers Funeral Home, Almont, witti burial in Imlay aty Township (tometery, Imlay City. I Mrs. Hanner died yesterday after an extended illness. I She was a member of the First Ctongregational Ctourch of I Almont and the Webster Community (Hub. ' Surviving are three sons. Ctoorge, Elmer and John, all of Lapeer; three daughters, Mrs. Gertrude Matthews, Margaret I and Virginia Hanner, all of Al-' nrant; seven grandchildren; and nine great-grandchildren. BRUCE R. JOHNSON INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP — Service for Bruce R. I Johnson,-24, 4788 Lakeview, will be 11 a.m. Monday at Dryer Funeral Home with burial in Lakeside (tometery, Holly. Mr. Johnson died Thursday of injuries suffered in a traffic accident. I Surviving are his wife, Judith, two sons, James A. and Robert B., and a daughter, Elizabeth A., all at home. Also surviving are his mother, Mrs. Helen Johnson Foley of Holly; and two sisters Mrs. Robert Grooters and Mm. Gte Butts, of Holly. SISTER MARY M. JOSEPH ROCHESTER -r Service for former Rochester resident Sisr ter Mary Martha Joseph (Eva M. Basch) of Houston, Tex., will be H) a.ip- Monday in St. Philip’s Episcopal (tourch with cremation at White (^pel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Her body-Is at the Plxley Funeral Home. Sister Mary, 70, TerUary of the Order of St. Francis, died Wednesday in Texas. The family suggests any memorials be made to the building fund of St. Philip’s diurch. Dial 332-8181 Pontioc Press Wont Ads ADveRTuaas . ADS aeCBIVUD SY S S.M. WILL rUSLISHlO TNB POLLOWINO OA^,^ ^ _ isr* .................. .jJmSHon 5"‘SS wror Is modttM Ihrt Urn*. » wilt bt siiurntd llw •4 to csrrKt. “ - Service Set \ for Ex-Troy Commissioner Poatiac Consumers CO-OP rprr Hearing Aid lIlEiL Consultation Servicel DO YOU HEAR BUT NOT UNDERSTAND? 1$ THERE REALLY A DIFFERERCE? Yet . . . there it o big difference between heoring and undertfonding. AAr. Roy Hef-fren, Pontiac Co-op tpeciofitt in the fitting and torvicing of Hearing Aidt, will help you with your hiring profalemt. If you ore having difficulty hearing and undorttonding convertotion ... you owe it to yewrtolf ond family to find out how you may bnprovo your hearing and underttond-ing. Inquire obovt our Cuctom Fitted TONi-AAASTER Reliance "Hear Program". ASK ABOUT CO-OPS MONEY BACK OUARANTEE SAVE 30 to «% CaN T«day for on Appointmont #SS3-YIT1 CREDIT UNION FINANCIN(3 PONTIAC CONSUMERS CO-OP OPflCAL HIT I. mEOMm so. - iimiti Service for a formef Troy ty commissioner, Stanley R. j smith, 87, will be 1:38 p.m. Mon-' day at the Price Funeral Home, Tr^, with burial in White Chap^ el Memorial (tometery. Mr. Smith, a farmer who held the city post from 1968 to 1961, died at home ysterday. He was a member of the Aahara Farm Bareaa, Avsa Surviving are his wife, Olive; one son, Elmes R. Smith of Sil-verwood, two stepsons, Hubert C. Osborneof Lansing and George A. Osborne of Troy; and onedaugbter, Mrs. Marvin Moore of Troy. k k k Also surviving are three sis-iters, Mrs. Dorothy Willson of I Royal Oak, Mrs. Fkwence Car-' penter of Troy and Mrs. Paul Reese of Glendale, Mo.; one brother, George L. Smith of Oxford Township; and 14 grand-I children. Rusk Due to Meet Foreign Ministers WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary of State Dean Rusk flies to New York Sunday for an intensive seriea of meetings with the dozens of foreign ministers expected to attend the U.N. General Assembly fall session. k k k The State Department said Frl^ Rusk will give a dinner for Foreign Minister Maurice (}wve de Murville of France Monday and may also see Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko the same day. Rusk expects to remain in New York for two weeks. ______________ ! ADvaaTisaMSNT son side ProMMto will b* rucOvgd wmi l:M ' Twa by Mw SMr0 of MOucotItn. CIgrt- ' oloo CwnmuAltv Scbooto, Ctor^lm, AAkhtaoAy for tho cooftri^kM of to AdSitoTlo ■OMI* win b« rMd thud at llw oMIiw SSXw High school, MH Woldon RomT CMrkoton. MIcMoan. A Iwonly^lvo donor dopMit wHIbo roquirod lor ooeh ool o« cohlr^ dotu-monfi. Rdlund of dodoolf bo mod* by fh# ArehHtel If doeumwilf oro ro-, Iwrnod In good condHIon wIIMn ton dovt! •flor Nefico of Aword. Death Notices MOTT, S■l>TSMSeR U IHI, LOUISE S. Ctoro, MkMgtn, fermorly of Ponfloci ago 71; door mellwr of Donovan and HaroW Molt; ttoo Lvthoran Church. Cloro. Inlarmonf In Charry Orovo Comolory. Mrt. /Mott will Na In oftM al tha SMphtno Punaral Homo CIOM, Michigan. . X wixV sipfiMifea re iwi IgH L.. Ml W. Huron. WtUriStd jf Carhon K. Wlx; balovad dough-lor of Hiram a. SIbIty; boor molh-- of Mr*. Albort Boyco; door fothtr of Mrt. Chariot YtncKh « tawtn grtn__________ _______ vkt will b* hold Monday, Si..____ tow *7, af > pm, af fho Sparkf Orlffin Funaral Homo with Dr. fombtr is, IHI. H* had a--------- loving. coutint Frnnfc mid tihoo. "AVON CALLINO"-FOR SSRVICI In YOU homo. Ft 4.4M.____ MICHIOAN CREDIT Notice to Contractors Orond Trunk Waityrn Rallwty ComMny roquirM cbarlng and griMng of an arm af anvoxl-mataly 4 acras at It* yard toettad aeulh of Waitan aivd. and watf af may^'*5l.a*"*; IS? £ of grtogo and Sfructu't Engl. m»r, T. F. Jacob* at IJl w. ifa- Mfehigtn ar Talapfion* MS-IStS - Clarfctlon, Michigan ■ ■ ‘ Us, Marine Exontrated for T*ar Gai Order i SAIGON. South Viet Nam (AP) -> A U.S. Marine officer who directed bis troops to use tear gas during a military operation early this month has been exonerated, Gen. William C. , e. vwiiEsvrw I .Wratt, Michigan. I N* grofMil wiw tu aumUtyd ui trador fall* la 1 Stpardl* bid* IwIN b* rtcalvad ( I I Westmoneland, commander of jU.8. forces in Viet Nam, de-i cUned to give sny details or dis- L cuss further ths Incident invdv->tng U. (tol. Uon N. Utter of I iFaUbrook, Calif., a Marins hot-1 Italioa commander. | • ^ Th* aeard *f chtXOdrtuhH, MIcMgan. any tr all bMt ilchiMn < !xl. «7._________ Notice to Contractors lam Rail. I •pproMh s TctoMi T^ Ortnd Trunk Wttitm Rail. m* FredOi*l at Itowl-Ih* lucctMlul can. gn coniraci and fIM 1 wtthin tdn dtya tflir by Ihd Ownar ar mgany an ^liaiilnjj^* UrmSSw! Latw*and ha fuN amaunl Jl Iha a dMitddl Codraeldr yaur naadt, daMllS. ^ BOX REPLHSS At M tt.m. today there were replies M Tbt Press Office la the toh lowing boxes: li II. U, M. 81. H. THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATtJRDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1965 COATS , Huptoon PUMIHAl. HOMI ..asa’C-"'*»%■ D. E. Pursley ^pArks^riffin .FUNK».At-..HOM«. Voorhees-Siple , Co! AMBITIOOS mON, ages 21-45, -------—-----------^ ^ r^hoTitofls;: . 54 South Can Laka Road otart workina f--- Tf ^TCKfR! guarantoad y mr-oM firm Ratiramant | HOUSE PLANS DRAWN SIS. ___AsphelfPenfhif________ ASPHALT PAVING Tog Asphalt Paving RaaWantlal B OrMnarclal ________FE S-1W DRIVEWAY SPECIALIST, FE * ASPHALT PAVING CO N aur bid Erst, froa tatlfflatoi I dlrwwayo and aahalt laai L REPAIR 42»1« AND CEMENT LOTS AT BEAUTIFUL WALTERS Uka tor Mack laytog or eary-*— labor or malarlalo. 4n-»00 SYLVAN 41 BeRdliii RUderHl^Mi 1-STOP BUIL0IN4 SERVICE, FREE plannInB, ilato llcanaad, mambar Pontiac Chambar ot Commorco. SCAR OARAGES, 22'xk', MTS. Ci- ■0 rough' In houiM. Fraa ootF atoa. sitringllold Building Co., A 5-2121._____________________ Prop Eotlmatot UR 4-ISH CARPENTRY^ANJ^^EPAIR WORK CREATE A BEAUTIFUL FAmIlY room wNh glau iNdlns ^— an your —^ ‘ kitchano i *'?tltlTl*Jl fiMMlwy"'”** Atl6 iifAili fNtBRIOR"lMli ISa* KITCHENS. fTbiSs ^ *’‘^'**''** R. R. Malvin B Son. PONTIAC FENCE CO. I Dixlo Hwy.______OR salts BRYAN F. FENCH CO. —“at troaly ptyon, FE S4t73 D GM SERVICI CLEANING, MOREY^ JeEHerM Seryto CLEANING 1-A SOD, PEATMOSS TOP SOU ' SOIL gravoL ID OR ™. ■ -■M..T, w. .v^raoi h^. FrM aatImiM. No sSui'_________ COMPLETE totao. No ffionay .andicaping. FE i>Nbs -------- -------j, dliclr Into grading, back hoa and loading, ratolnlnjji TONY'S COA Ing, Marlon laid or doll.. nil. 4S2-471S. TALBOn LUMBER Glaaa toatanad In dowo. Compiato I lOg Oakland Ava. Mevliif wMl Sterege SMITH MOVING CO. orating. Al work. OR 4-2IH. PAINTING, PAPERING, CAULK —n. ratoa. Tair ........ - >I,S*CS22. Plot Teili Ajl I^WING AND REPA^^I^^ WiBGAND PIANO TUNING . aW^SK8'p'I?LY wtottd^^aMacanwto^ WALLPAPER STEAMER oandaro, fumaca___________ Fual S Paint 424 orchard Ik. Aua. FE sans PRIVATE roada • 342-22M. ATTENTION STUDENTS We have tome openings for high school or college students to work each afternoon approximately 5 hours starting at 12:30 p.m. Must be 16 to 19 years of age. Apply in person to BERT FALKNER CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT THE PONTIAC PRESS PAepeiny- «miph a Oakland * .jaap, Inquira 1 ,.-8it«U."ggL.'a %'STS', JSS Ford. 410 Oakland Avo„ BIO CHEMIST (CLINICAL) '’S5!'!'Hoapital FRONT END AND BRAKE MECHANIC Eaparlancad John Goan front mufflw.VMa, 44W4wur woak Ion, no nlghta. Ap^ In p> Cartor Tiro go., STB S. Sagini raj cK*® Ray O'—--------- ISM Pontiac Ld. Rd. OR4-2Sa_________ Furniture Salesman I cwr^tatl ____, .Mrformance l. [ promotion opportunl-or appototmant, FE 3- Furnace Installer Exp. Service Man For goo and^MI.^M M. A. Banion FURNITURE UPHOLSTERER AND FINISHER, PERMANENT. LIBERA. PAY. PH. FE 3-7114. GAS APPLIANCE INSTALLER AND LIANCR INSTALI rrcES pay, toeantlva oon. 2» W ( Orton._________________ GAS STATION ATTENDANT, FULL GAS STATION ATTENDANT, partancad, i— local ralarsn General Construction Help Required . 104S or raply M., Waltod Laka, MIc r Co., 2110 W. Mapla Rc FULL O^AR^JME GRILL MEN- Day and avaning ahiftt. A)m part timt. waakand work. Top wagot. tree maalt, iKMpItalliatlen, Ufa In- I or DIxIa Highway and g.7js>"aS!s.rmr,s;!; WARDEN REALTY 3414 W. Huron, Pontiac SII-71S7 »*in5'fij!s:.?rrpr' "••• STEAO^^. •vM K!*- Rotunda Country 3230 Pina Laka Rd., Orchard c^eNWfcS, hikOrt in fcocH-WM>ieNS, FULL AND PART f.'?!?®' oldTnew ! Children's Supervisor $4,700 TO $5,600 n«» wlw poioaaoao tba ability to odunoal, control and bwtruct chll- S5ilSSa,agro':nd*'lL°vS OAKLAND CO. COURTHOUSE mrsonnel division 12M N. TalMraph Rd. eOOPINO AND REPAIR. 4SB47W, OL 1-4441 "OOFS^EW, REPAIR qiiMJ ilwwl rtlMi timmi VIVMI'Uin Tree TrlewJt $«n4ce ^if"y'kiJd^SSSiS'""" kxPERT TREE SERVICE. tefiR. Loket Tree Co., Trimming HAULING, AND RUBBitH. hAME your prico. Any timo. FE l3l»“ Light Tfuckli^^mto Hauling lIgHT *''*^^'^^'^yANO HAULING L'OHJ. and i«avy^ trucking, ^;^flll dirt, grading and gray. 1- -- - - front-and loading. PE 24NB3. *-*P*^ . (hauling, GA^ggS ANg Treck Rental Tnicks to Rent ‘’"’fisa-T.jffiSi — ^ AND BGUIPMNT Dump trucka - Saml-Trallaro Pontiac Form and Industrial Tractor Co. CIVIL ENGINEER CITY OF TROY „ S7M0 to W JOB blLlViRY HELP'WANTfcO, WORK avaniw and waokondo. Mutt hava WhJWV Chkkan Dallght, 13B2 besiGNBRs, Uyout men, bE- mftSO Warran or _______224-3447, Orydon Diners and detaIlers Bria£- DRIVER 4 lumbar v--. . Laka Ro Union Laka. DESIGNERS For tooll and apadal n lo?kSt ENOINHRmg^»RVICE D78iiUkdRS^7bR”?^^^ CAST W. MktilBan, 4BB-28I4. Designers Detailers BODY WELDING FIXTURES MACHINING FIXTURES AND GAGES PARAMOUNT ENGINEERING CO. 320BB STEPHENSON HWY. MADISON HEIGHTS JACK FRIEND_ JO BB751 DISHWASH^.^ OAYST^itMY. 1^. 'Apply In poraen only. How-nd Johnton't. S4SB Dixlo Hwy., DESIotfERS DETAILERS Wa naad you tor dlvorallM work at IBIS GoH Driva, naar^chard ■ ““ Rd. and Tatograph. DRIVER, SALESMAN for attabllihad bakary roulat, all company ownad routot, 5 DAY WEik A)SfERIBNCBD'~WOOL pRlififlT. prmananf^wotk. ' GROCERY ROUTE SALESMAN fMp Weate^ Male 6 »AN_^POR PACKAGINB Kho'tK^i^^wwiot MAN TO SERVICE Ettobllahad houao to houat , ^.*Vtto«i Fe'^Wtor mu **u aLl!!u**iMMMiyi jnjj^qMrton^fwnMadf^S^^ MECHANIC FOR DETACHED UNIt rapalr of gonaratort, atarloro and carburtfart. CommIulon. Stata ax-giHa^ In raply to Pontiac Proaa f6r iNSibE woek, oVEIt II, alao for Iron rallliKi and con-crala atop Inttallatlon. Concrato Stap Co. 4417 Highland Road, acroaa from Pontiac Airport. OR M. C MFG. CO. 1IB Indlanwood Rd. il oww^lty NEW OR USED CAR SALESMAN, for lull or part tbna aaloa, contact Howard DIatial, Salaa Man-----««3-3^- L CLERK, NIGHTS, FULL OR tima, axcaltont opMrIunIty tor go itudant. FE MIM._________ OPENING NOW AVAILABLE TO join agoroaalva aatabllihad raal aa-tata offica. Mambar PontiK Multl-pia Lilting Sarvica. Inquira Warran Stout. Raaltor, 14S0 N. Opdyka Rd., Pontiac. FE 5-1I4S.___________ bPTICjnr~DISPENSER-BlNCHMAN, axparlancad. Top wagaa and bana- llts, axcaltont y—--------— Apply Johniton . —I Company, Datrolt, Mlwigan L TltAIN. ORbERLIES, _____ ___________EM 3-4121.__________ PAINTERS NEEDEb, EXPERI- He^ WwrtesI Mole ■kb HfMki — IMIp iVwMIMI MaiG IT oH ahlfla. Broat ICO. Apply In paraon. COUNTRY KITI Student Opportunity An exceptional opportunity for high school or college students to earn money while attending school is available for two young men. This work is during the afternoon, itart-ing around 12:30 p.m., on a part-time basis and for a local company. Please reply giving a brief resume of yourself to Box No. 66, The Pontiac Press. Help Wairted Peoiate EXPERIINCBD BEAUTY OP-aratort a^ toHbwIng. Oiw to managa. OR 4-17S5 or FE 5^11. ATTENTION SWITCHMEN , Minimum halght S'4“, vialanm* Apply In parson, Mon. or^u« I a.m. to 3 p.m. Yard ottlci Johnson Avo. and Railroad. GRAND TRUNK WESTERN RAILROAD An oquol opportunity omployar_ TAM O'SHANTER COUNTRY CLUB TELEVISION Technicians RCA woman alona. Family of 4. No cooking or laundry. S54 watk. Ml 4-4714. attention RN's and LPN' Opanings. Educational banafit Salartoi compatitiva with srsa ho pitalt. Call 3M-71S' ” * * PART TIME PART TIME OR FULL WITH A B A.M. UNTIL 2 P.M., ' Bloomflald Gourmat Long Laka Road. PERMANENT PART-TIME Would tSO wsokly clots tha gai balwaan Inconta and outgo? A flax Ibis 20 hourt waakly. Phona OR PIN SETTERS Full- or part-tima. Apply ... ___ •bn, All Star Lanai, It North Perry. FE 5-7422. PIZZA HELPER __________OL ^3751. PLASTIC'S MANUFACtURER HAS opaningt tor 3 tabricotort with thop axperlanca. Aga 35-45, axcal-Mnf fringa banatiti, (AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER) Call Mr. Houlahan, Ml 7-12p3. AAANAOtR FOR DRY SM 14-44. Orocary and drug expo-rtonco prafarrod. EttoMtohod territory. Tnli to a chaUanglng opportunity, bated on capabhitlat ot lototmon. Salary BIBB par wook plus commiMlon. Truck fumlihad, hoipHolliatlon, plus Ufa Inauranco. vacation. For Intorvlaw contact Mr. Novak, woodward 1-43B1._______________ gprth^o 1700 W. Mapw, Troy, Mich.' 4444333 9-1155. PONTIAC AREA HANDYMAN FOR HEATING FUR-Mca and air conditioning Inatal-latlon work. Should havo tonw ax-parlanca. 3101 Orchard Laka Rd. M2-3IOO. Haro la a part-llnw lob to aupplo-mant your family Income, work to boura a wtak on your own time, collecting amall tnonthly ac-counts on •sftbllshod routes for IBM Mochine Operator Exparlancad on 407, 403. 519 and 005, able to wire boardt. Apply In poraon to Poraomwl Dopt. of Pontiac Gonorol Hoopltol. an old company. Earn minimum 0150 par month, mutt hava a car, need only 2 pioola, coil Mr. (Salln-ta. 9414147, Dolrolt. PONTIAC'S NEWEST SPORTS CAR IF YOU LIKE MUSIC AND HAVE A WAY WITH PEOPLE raproMntatlva of tha w oit and moat highly rss tic itora chain., Foatu ___^^Htolvo*V»Ichitoi.'^Yoo 'do r havo to p’“--------■■■*-------- GRINNELL'S PONTIAC AAALL BRANCH IBM SYSTEMS MAN Ambltloui, parionabto young man, axparlancid In accounting and data Enmladge ^— **—* ""— ' araltair'?!bl*lty*to*d«^^ tucMufulK with tha public eaiantlal. To work with local govonunontal data proc-ottlng divtolm In dovoloping a prp gram of IBM ayatoma with olhtr portonco and govommontat background. Sand comptoto roaumo and fiaeProM Bw tST* INDUSTRIAL JOBS Farndola. Equal opportunity t Jib BORE OPERATORS, SURFACE grindora, ahapar honda and milling mochlM oporatora. Day and night , ahift. Bxpaiioncod o n d tralnaat. /Frtngo bonaflta. Apply Future Prod-uefa Tool Corp., m North R ‘ Licensed pluaaber for part- tlma amptoymont. Contract with tha City of Pontiac. Contact Joaoph R. Nalpllng, City Englnoor. PE 3-7131. ;INoTYPB OPiRATOR, UNION, MACHINE OPERATORS EXPERIENCED ON ALL MACHINES. STEADY EMPLOYMENT - HAWK TOOL AND BNGINBER-ING, CLARKSTON, MICH. __ MACHINISTS ______rrA'-. MILLING SURFACE GRINDING wavN a^ Wnge'bpwtlt^'*'' Apply at VALENITE METALS __Equo?SpyRR!yonwIoYar__ Management Trainee Wo aro In naod ot 3 young man to train In Datrolt tor oM rallabla ^pany. Comptoto oxponaat and hotel oceommodotlons will be paid whila In tralnlfiB. Excollant afirt-Ing Mtory for In'— " "tr-WO - - It Important, PE ^S3t5. oyrioncod doHrod. PE S^. ' MAN FOR PART TIME JANITOR Unto^ Laka. i A4AN WANTED FOR FULL-TIME golf courao malntonanco it privato PLANT ........ cltanlng plant, claanar and ipottsr. Apply 24 Eatt Horen. Fg 4-2450. PLANT SUPERINTENDENT WITH f productlOT, i 4^143, Ext. 1, POLICE CADETS CITY OF TROY S4.400 to 45,200 Wonderful opportunity tor high school graduate ■- ■ ..... 17, must ba 5 ft. t In. Rd., Troy, Mich. MU In jNraon, < ir Co.. BOB 0 PORTER FOR NEW SPORTS CAR “■■** bo willing to--" . Apply In pt---------- Importod Car Co., BtB six days o Grimaldi I Oakland Av PORTER; FOR USED CAR lei. No axportoneo nocossary, lust wllllngnosa to follow dl-roctlons. Soo Used Cor man-agor at VILLAGE RAAA-BLER, 444 S. Woodward Ava. Mazurak Marina, 245 S. Blvd, East. tottor proas and papor cutter, Itlho and strippor. Terms c, Ing upon exptrlanca. Ir pjkr bononts. Call oo QUALITY COSTSbL TRAINEE, •mTSITi, " .........-— RETIREES LOOKING FOR INTRR-tatlng parMIma woi^ " stars. No tolling a.,.....,., affejasvaxji*"- by the aquaro only. I5H45B. ROUTE SALESMAN Naodad due to oxpontlon Papal-Cola Co., t4B Foothor atone, Pontiac, Mich. For In tarvlow Phono 3343514. PLY IN PERSON AT ROCHES-* - “ " • 0 L CORP., 407 ROCHESTER - salBs aaanagers SALESMAN an to toll iftonoraj^flo SERVICE MANAGER Mon exporlonctd In tarvicing ap-pllaneoa. Muit ba able to direct —- tarvlco crew. Over 25. Service Man axparlancad. Apply 3017 N. '’I!!?!"" to SINCERE .... Bi'i.'iioo' _ _ _ __ pramiumt, bonuttt. Apply 2397 Blliabath Lake Rood, t tell Steady woRk for ambitious, —abto man 1MB. An axcollont op- rW!.8B«,«S irejsiX’asr: tf, p¥ 3-71G tor opoelntmont. STOCKMEN “D" FOOD STORES benaflta I You can earn at much pay par weak, pi----- nlnot. Excallant ... iludlng paid vacatloni ana wgni nolldayt, paid tick '--- tree hotpltallzatlon and ti Iniurance for you and yoi pendantt and free Ufa Int and a moderat RCA otfart a a PrX^ool?.” plon and a tn.. ......., --------- Including color Telavltlon. For par-tonal Interview batwaan II a.m. • 4 p.m. call at 3711 Elliabath Laka Road, or ghona tor an appolntmont, FE s^iii; (An Equal Opportunity Employer) provided tultlonal program. AUTOMOTIVE EXECUTIVB WANTS axparlancad ganer-Ironing woman, 3 Bloomflal" llttlng^ vj BABY SITTER WANTED. WET ........ “1^. J______ _ LIGHT HOUfE- Kt ratiramant plan. Apply m 9-5 p.m. dally FIrostm M W. tfuron, Pontiac Mich. TIRED OF THE CITY? THE BIG PLANT? NO OPPORTUNITY? A growing company located in the Mid Thumb area is in need of qualified personnel to fill positions created by an increase in plant production. Company paid Blue Cross and Life Insurance: PROCESS ENGINEER TIME STUDY ENGINEER MATERIAL CONTROL MGR. ASSIST. QUALITY CONTROL MGR. MATERIAL HANDLING FOREMAN Please send inquires to Box 129, Lapeer, Michigan BABY SITTER TO LIVE tchool aga child. PE 4KI433. BABY SITTER TO LIVE IN _____________PE 4G14B___________ BABY SITTER, 1:30 TO 4 P Call attar 4. OR »4734. BABY SITTER AND LIGHT BABY SITTER WANTED, AFTER- nooni, 2 children, 474-3544._ BABY SITTER, APhrERNOONS - BAKERY SALESWOMEN, PUL S days, iM aval, or S — BtkBry, 134 W. 14 M wn. Ml 4-7114. BARMAID, V apply Whih MlchW- TOP COMPANY IN THE LUBRICA-tlon bualnatt hoi • taw opanlngi avallabla In thto area for BO-gottori ........................... 1 auto. No 0 m^l auto, dy Income, l Dopt. 9-K- cM L*'Srow!lto Sgoll, RoolenoT MonoMr, ■I, P. 0. Box 392, Oanat, potro- ---- ---------- ..... ..^.rlenco, knowli^ ' ----------- ary and th tut. Wo t_____ account whan ________.... ... aonal Intorvlaw write quollficotlona. TRAINEE - GRILL 4MN. IB-25, neat, willing, apply ^poroon. E^llas Broo. Big Boy Driva Im, 20 S. Tolograph and 3490 I------- •-ow im wwiaig* nw young man totoroolid In toomlng i^achl^trM^^^j^ ba high loam, ftaody omploymont with good wagaa and fringe bonaflta. VALENITE f^TALS TREE TRIMMER iry, under 30. 0< MO^Salt' Porf B momlnga B a.m. 5099 W. AAoplo. tRUCK MECHANIC TWO USED CAR PORTERS. MUST ‘"' T driver'a llctnaoa and witling work. Superior Rambler, sn I SERVICEAAAN, FULL OR PART Wanted Dye Makers, Tool Makers, Machinists Apply in Person Holly Tool & Alteration Womon Part-timo pooitlM now aeon. Mini — wqwrlanead. 3040 o« Ml. We Will Train You tr all are^ twnM man la Box 35, PontiK nraaa. train. '---- , Praaa. Box 19.___________________ GENERAL OFICE CLARICAL EM-ptoyooa. apply IIS AAaIn St. RBChaa- tar, MlOileon._______________ GENERAL HOUBC WORK, LIVE ~wn room, eood wflh ^Bdran, gecd pay, S doya. Ml 7-4750. GIRL TO WORK COUNTER AND ahIppInB, muat hava high achool tdu^tlon, 4129 Highland Road, GIRLS TP DO LIGHT TELIPHONE HAIR STYLIST WITH IXPERI-we.^^arontood wage, Phlllp't. Leva money, leva lowalry? Enjoy bothi Show one of the n-“— No. 1 llnaa. KIMBERLEE JEWELS Highest commlaatens, no I....... manta, no ooltoctliw or dollvoring. Coll botwoon hi. ft 12324. Alterations Lody Wool Pressor l„ Droyfen Plolna._______ —•••I for moth-t and rollabto. HOUSEKEEPER FOR 4 MOTHER-lati chlktran. live In. 334-9955. HOUSEKEEPER TO LIVE IN, PRI-vati room. 3 chltdron undor Khool aga. 493-1747 days._______ HOUSEKEEPER TO LIVE IN, 1 child. 44 W. Bovorly._____ HOUSEKdEPER, lIvE IN. TAKE PLEASANT HOME TO LIVE IN HOUSEKEEPER-BABY SITTER, kochaitar aru. «um transportttlon, adlustobto. OL JANITORIAL SERVICE FROM Rochtattr oraa, 40 yrs. old. FE 4-5449. botoro 3._______________ KITCHEN HELP KITCHEN HELPER, NIGHTS S-ll, —- woman, good wages, Har-:olonlal Housa. 5094 Dixie Votortord._______________ LOUNGE WAITRESSES, NEAT AP- paorlng, axporlanco not nr----- coll oftor 4 p.m. 474-0434. LITTLB DUTCH TREAT rVstXu-ront, opening soon, nooda waltrau, COOK and porter. Good wages. Apply In parson. 3395 Orchard Laka MARRIED WOMAN PART-TIME Ftoxlblo 15 hours or more weakly. Avarogo S1.90 up hourty mar hento with Alla 4IHfaor«M company. -Salai oKPortonco net hioataarv but use of car Importont. OR 3-BS4S Of 4S4B743 tor homo Intorvlow. MEDICAL OFFICE ASSISTANT, EX-parloncod desirable, Drayton Plains arte. OR 4-13B0_____________ (EOlCAL ASSISTANT. ShND RES-umo to Pontiac Proas Bex 43. MIDDLE-AGED OR BLbElfLY womon to stay nlghta with 11-yaar-okt girl, days fraa, more tor home than wages. PE 4B429 attar 4 p.m._________ NEAT, RELIABLE btfbhT-OlfDER cook, pizza maker, curb. Good wagaa, axcailanf condBlon, Frost Top Driva-ln. SUB W. Huron St., FE 04431. NURSES A BABY SITTER WANTED TO LIVE In, more lor homo than 425-1749.__________________________ NURSEb' AIDBi. SOMl ekbERi- 444S43ey«l3a77. *”*' NURSES Al Coll 33^421 BOOKKEEPER, EXPERIENCED, mature, abN to accept raipontlbl-lltv. Work any 3 days. ^tlac. Personnel. 543-4900, BOOKKEEPER - TYPIST. OFFICE locatad In Bloomflold HIM ~ callant working conditions, to Pontiac Prast, Box 4S. BOOKKEbPBR. FULL YlME, EX-calloni salary and hours, oxptrF ones nacaaaory. 34S-7I2B balwsan 0-5 p.m. CASHIER, FOR NIGHT SHIFT, Challenging j66 Fdft VbuHb lady with gonoral Kneiirtodpa of eftico pfocoduroVjO 44144, Ext. 3. COOK, EXPERIENCED, DAYS. A^ k Ricky's, 119 Wood- CURB GIRLS FOR DAY AND night shift. Apply In poraor Blue Star Drivo-ln, Opdyk irSST at3vlh**'ww* ^refl..... 1 aalory rsqulramanta to Pon- Dinninej Room Waitresses If you leva chlktran and gsnulnoly onloy working — will train -'IK'” WOODWARD AT SQUARE LK. RD. DO YOU WANT TO WORK! Michigan Christian Feed torvica nooda salad lady and ovanlng cook combination. Hours from 9:30 ■ 4 P.m« muat ba willing to oltomsto Sot. and Sun. Wagae depend on rlanco and afficlancy, Contact Frldlty, 4S1-4311. DRUG AND COSMEtIC SALES, experkm^, ratorancaa, poraenablo. ORIJG AND i:OSMETIC CLERK. part time. Russ's Ceuniry — 4300 Elizoboth Uka Road. DRUG CLERK, Experienced ' 10, raf« full or hlon Lake Drvg> Executive Secretary Oakland University n unusual eponlng la avallabla .... „.th all of socrolarlat skills to top univar position It has a ml K5ed*?Ii' l(Kludas''paid'5tlnHrianL paU’’*' callop and paid skk loove. For i oppolntmanf for an Intorvlaw call OAKLAND UNIVERSITY PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT ROCHESTER, MICH. 33B-72U EXPERIENCED GIRL YO DO IRON-Ing one day a weak, need hava trantportatlon, 43Kff13. EXPERIENCED WOOL^RESSER, work. Top wagta. 4---- Walkara CItanara, Loka Orion. experienced waitress and kitohan hato. Apply In paraon. -Carriaa OrWin, 10471 Van Dyke, tranaportatlon, ISO. 0204.. . .1T E f 4 4 jr^l^cooklng, port-time days. OR ^S5» 6ai (mdav Chlldran. PE ^7e19.___________ ---------....&. WORK . mature clerk. 4824411. FIhgar'i Pontiac M-‘‘ ilDB AND HOUttKIEP-paraon. Rosa Lana Noma, 141 Auburn, PART TIME We are accepting applications for women to work occasionally during the afternoon. This work is for a downtown concern and no experience necessory. If you have afternoons free and are looking for some occasional work,^ please reply givina a brief resume of yourself and age to Box 67, The Pontiac Press. REGISTERED Professional Nurses AND UCENSED Practical Nurses RN'S FUU-TIME MINIMUM 5450 PtR MONTH PART-TIME nM PER HOUR SUPERVISING NURSE BSOB PER MONTH Shift Differential EVENING ^ND N^IOI^ DUTY WEEK-END'differential os PER WEEIMINO PN'S FULL-TIME MINIMUM B3I7JS PER MOtaH SHIFT DIFFERENTIAL PONTIAC GENERAL HOSPITAL :ELIABLE baby sitter, CALL To o.m. 1 p.m. OR 3-IB43._____ RELIABLE WOAAAN, LIVE IN -AAora tor homo than woBia. 474- R^jA^ aa!£l“tlj jTlUi.!*,!?* SALESLADY ■ FOR COSMETICS *pir%.'K5!r«Vc's;^ ura, Lahaor and Mipla Ml. 447- 5ALB8LADY FOR WALLPJ Mortlold P Inforvww. SALESUDIES fjMSs 55*.,.. TWKNTY-EIOHT THE PONTIAC PtlESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 85, 1963 SHST MUSIC SAUS GWL rmmt mm « >T«MOMU#Mni. MATun WOM-)M wik aino* mamitmot, cM Hr ■IlHkWlHi «i>m._______ STENOGRAPHER-RECEPTIONIST Mot pimnaM* young latfy ihbh iSmimi wmi Itw puHk. Mvt a mMiTMim typino ^ -4» ppnv tfntlhand an« olMr dar-tcal ddis ara aMnttat. kiting aalarv raaoa, MM • tSM. in sn ' TBiTYPE OPERATORS $4,000-$4,800 mo M. telagraph Rd, Waitress, full time, evIning Waitri^sses and short order cooki, apMy in pamn. 300 Bowk WAITRESS WANTED, I WAITRESS, EXPERIENCED <^D DIxN. WAITRESSES & BARTENDERS aitI^ ov^ 10, ixPEkl- WAITRESSES Dining Room and Curb Full or part-tlma. Paid vacatloni. Hoi^lllutlon. LwKh hour r-' food allowance. Apply In pen BIG BOY RESTAURANT WAITRESS EXPERIENCED, WANTED HOUSEKEEPER, HOLLY, WOMAN TO HELP CARE FOR I valid panWaman, other help, afti noena or Bva In. FE BMat. WOMAN FOR KITCHEN. APPLY bib Boy Drive In,-------' Hwy., between 3-i pjn. WOAIIAN OVER 10 FOR OEVERSI- adueatlon and family iltuatlon to Post Office Bex HI Pontiac. WOMAN FOE GENiSRAL OFFICE WOMAN TO ^/^IST WITH LIGHT Ironhio, 1 13:10, SI a WOMAN TO DO LIGHT HOUSE-work, 1 or 1 dai“ - -— 1-1011 aflar 3 pin. WOMAN TO CARE FOR 1 SCHOOL children. Mere tar ne^ homr---- wagaa. 1 ddld walcenia. »------ WOMAN f6r BABY-SITTING AND housework In my homo, HHMI WOMAN FOR GENERAL HOUSE-work, Man., Wad^ FrI. 11 a - ^ 7 pin. SN. Musi have own WORKING COUPLE WANTS OLD-n wapss, I A MMIB YOUNG LADY WANTED WITH EX- YOUNG WOMAN TO WORK IN DRY claantno plant. WHI train, w"^ “ Claanari, Lake Orion. VoUNCmV td O^i FOR CHl^ Sgf£5s5''^ iMp w«rtEt7«7. Wa WANTED: A CHURCH HOUSE OR building la rant ter Church aarv-Icct. Full time. Call col Wet CE 7-5501 (Flint). BOTSFORD REALTY an hamaa — I acreage, tar quM MULTIPLE LlSTI CASH * HOURS LAND CONTRACTS - HOMES EQUITIES ... WRIGHT 112 OAKLAND AVE. FE 24141 y«AVi5g;^*E*i58?*^R“Ts-- W. H. BASS REALTOR’^pi^'J^'lo’^'ttlLDBR HAVE BUYERS FOR ANY KINO gauTg Kaiy^ ! • "■ HELP-HELP-HELP! WARDEN REALTY 333-7157 Butinats Is axcaptlanally goo head houaaa, ineomat, comm____ property and vacant proparty to tell. Tell avaryana you know to sea WARDEN REALTY If tfiay want to tall fast. "FREE" accurate astimata .. da^t Mlling price, "NO 0BLI6A- NEEO A MEOROOM basement and garage. Large In or around tna Clarkston Wilt pay $11,000 to tSOdlOO. Eltela, FE 4-170t. RAY O'NEIL REALTOR 3520 Pontiac Lk. Rd. OR 4-2222 or FE t-l70t NOTICE! If you have acreage parcels tar tale — small or large — we have ^''’vacant lots wanted 1 Pontiac we pay more. Immadl-le dosing, REAL VALUE REAL-Y. 026-9575. Mr. Davit._______________ LARGE ROOM APARTMENT, private bath, near Sdwolhouia Lake, lie deposit. 673-0115 atler 5." -BEDROOM, LIVING ROOM, OIN-Ino^gnj^lldwB, shower. A" " 2-ROOM APARTMENT. PRIVATE ROOMS, SINGLE PERSON, til 111 E. Howard. 521-1551.__________ ro6ms on bus line, private bath. FE MW4. 3-ROOM UPPER 3-ROOM WITH BATH, MODERN, bptchelor, clote-ln, dean, quite, -------------------------------------- ROOMS AND BATH, CLEAN, fireplace, coupla only, M7JI In-—--------- FE 5-tOM. ROOMS AND BATH, CHILD walcoma, tllJO per week wHh a $100 deposit. Inquire at 173 Bald-wln. Call MB^. ROOAAS AND BATH WITH TWO badreoms, dilW walcema, SIS pdr weak with tlOO dapaalt. Inquiro at 271 Baldwin Ava., call llt^. S ROOMS AND BATH AND GA- COZY ^ROOM, PRIVATE EN- MOOERN 3 ROOMS AND BATH, Diking adu E 5-1072. I- Aportneiits, Onfumishad 31 2-BEDROOM, UPPER, PONTIAC, utimtes fumithad. avallabta Or^ bar 1, OR 4-IUt. 2-BEOROOM LOWER, GARAGE 2 ROOMS AND BATH, UPPER, dote In. ref. FE 2-7425. 1 ROOMS, BATH, GARAGE. WORK-adults only. No drinking. 403- 1 ROOMS AND BATH, ALL UTILI-llas and soma fumitura fumithad. SM per weak wHh a ITS dapaslt. Inquire at m Baldwin Ava., call AND >-r66m, close in, adults, tw drinkart. FE 2-4441._ 0 W E R 4-ROOM AND BATH, MODERN 4 ROOMS AND BATH, adults, Drayton Plaint, altar 4, OR >0141.____________________ NEW APARTMENTS ON PONTIAC WANTED - DIRT LOADER, CON-vayor type to axcavala bar- mant. 471-llfl.____________ WANTED—POWER MEAT SAW. Itnt Howtet, l«niith«d 39 I LAKE ORION, MODERN LAKd FRONT - FULL COUPLE WANTS 5- OR 4-ROOM URGENTLY NiEDED - 4-ROOM house, will glva ewnarthip cr~~ best retarances. LaasaT 471-1447. YOUNG COUPLE WITH CHILb' ----------------------------------- YOONG COUPLd, WHITt SMAtl hotnt, near or In Pontiac. 721-4344. SIww Uvioj ftfcortgfi 33 A SOBER tSMI-RETIRED SALES- GIRL WISHES TO SHARE HOME. 1 dilld walcoma. FE 1-5054. WORKING GIRL TO SHARE Ml 1 TO 50 NOMEt, LOTS, ACREAGE PAR- Dally til $ MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ALL CASH FH* AMI 61 EOUITV All bgmaa anywfiars, even If bi Mndln paymanta. No llstlne, n Sly^tTRo'iTVX' mSSSi WHITE LAKE. 1 baths, decorated 2-BEDROOM BRICK IN WASHING-lon Park, SI50 per month plu FE 5-1311 after 5:10 weal mornings. Sat, and tun.__ 1-BEDROOM, NEAR MALL, heat, garage, oi^r, 471-2711. l-BEDRC>OM HhOUSE^ON TASAAA. nil SI., wllh garage. ------- to handy men urMti _____ Box 41, PonllK Press. 1-BEORORAYI^ B4214. BOULEVARD HEIGHTS Applleetiont now being acceded Contact Ratident AAanagar BURWm, ) — ......■— Contad Mr. Ralph, Ft F7I41. __________ LAROE OLDEli HOME FOR LEASE available Od. 1, 214-1451. Mwitliif fccomodllGiit 41-jl DEER HUNTERS: 40 ACRES, PRI-vela land. Desi deer country. Lerga cabin. Heat and IkM turn. ‘‘-■ saasoo only. OR 1^5. lady. Kltdian use. 11S42 MATlfdfeO WOMAN OR MAN, data In. FE 24M4. AgOM FOR SINdLI MAN, I4-"------ SLBEFINO ROOM FOR MAN JS^'men*?^ ^ HEAR FOH^AC ----■"d.Fi‘“"“ MEN OH^ I fill ROOMED BOARD FOR FAieffeRY WIDE TRACK DRIVE WEST, NEAR Huron SIraat. Approximately 1,-000 aq. ft. — will dlvMt. Immad-lata occupancy. Call Laslla R. Tripp, Raaller, FE 50141.__________ Rtnt Biiriiitst Pr»f rty 47-A UILOING month, < SEE THIS -room ranr"- lialSlSIi SlfTin."- ^BEDROOM, BASEMENT, CAR- .. all heat. 24 Cllva ______ Lk. Rd., opposlta Country Ckib. 07,250, 02,775 402^ ^ ----------' 2-BEDROOM HOME Nice thadad tot, lOO’xIlS', 2-car garage, lake privllagaa, good Eaadt. 010AOO - 10 par cant down. 2 BEDROOAAS Possible 1 wllh basament, lol ISITx-150* on Macklop, needs soma work. 04.000 with 01JOO down. FLATTLEY REALTY ground. EL 4-2740. 1-BEDROOM BRICK, ALUMINUM siding hanw. carptOad. tancad, batamdnf, near Pont!^ FE BS7S4 attar 1 pjn. 1-BEDROOM BRICK GOOD CON-""■-in Harrington Hill, Pontiac OIX-tarmi. FHA or land contrad. ■ -no Tn-OITO.______________ 1-BEDROOM BRICK, FULL BASE- BEDROOIAS, GARAGE, LARGE l-BEDROOM BRICK RANCH HOME With aquipmant. ( >ly, Mldilgan. US; 1-BEDROOM COLONIAL BRICK, IN Seminole Hills. 'Iraplaca, basamant,- 1-car garaBa. FE Ism.______ ROOMS AND BATH, BASEMEN, I. 0450 down I. lS7442. UUHWU m iwrvn. kwo otmo7tp pww lSS'S5Sr<5Si."!S"£ of 040 par r Sate Iteawi Sate Hiawi FALL BARGAINS t IW04 t lwe4adro|m ralli--— r^^gGsTfsarbamoA "KtRTHE PRiCE THAr« RIGHT" C. SCHUETT, Realtor ________________________JS% car aflachad Mraga. FIraplaoa, carpating, on large pratonionaj-ly^jSjidicapad lal. By awnar. WO HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty 4 BEDROOMS, t ACRES assffidf'^s-X'af's ■ firaplacas, 1 acrai o* *-Ing distance to Unlan expanslen ream, evorsliad Everett Cummings, Realtor 2501 UNION LAKE ROAD paymwit. Pr DOROTHY SNYDER LAVENDER REALTOR USA Brakar. 471-77tl. HIITER TWO-BEDROOAL FAMILY ROOM, firaplaca, IVk<«r garaga, all now bathroom, lol 40'x&'. 14400, STSO dowfk ON ■ montlb land cantrad. 0120415. toatyras. Only $17,:. _ r L^^PLETON, Realtor large family room, full Id attacfiaa 2-car ga-I 3-room apt. Call — OPEN tUN-IMMEOIATE POSSESSION. Bloem- bullt-lns. Lovely rear v or woods and laka. 4 badroomi bathA 2Vf-car garage. HI-FI < Intercom. Walkout basamant. 4-5474 or 451-1511.______________________ You will laka great prlda In awning IMt excapHo^ homo. 017,7M Includes kltdian and laundry ap- RCiOM TO ROAM! 250 X 4N II. lef wllli lelt of trees. Rambling ranch wNti eya-Mtdilne landscaping. Hama lendt Itself tor expansion If you want It larger than Its prasant 77 ft. by 27 ft. Will trade tor a butinaas witb If" "^jKTolmbERSkL ETTATl Mixed Neighborhood NO CLOSING COSTS Brewer Real Estate WM. B. MITCHELL. I E. Huron FE 4SII1 Evaa. Mr. Gragery FE 24117 $9990 FULLY INSULATED, Oal-Mar lln-Ishad cebinefs. No money down. YOUNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER-BILT RUSSELL YOUNO.^ W. HURON ARE YOU INTERESTED IN A BIR-. . _ . wHtiln wtelktoM I Torry Publtc St. ,.._1_______________ ATTENTION: ALL SKIPPERS Dock your baal right In your bw PrSi ^ to accaaa to Sylvan, Oltar ar Cait LakaA Evanlnga you can r lax to the gsntto crackling of log fire In the picturesque skx _ fireplace. There ere three raome, ll'xIf'O" Bvlno room. Tha Hvlne room, dining room and — bedroom are knotty pMa pan BARGAIN I Close to Fisher Body latow — Xar ga- Cass Sylvon Loke Area IMMEDIATE CASH FOR HOUSES, FARMS, ACREAOE, LAND CONTRACTS, EQUITIES. WRIGHT REALTY 139 Oteklmd Avte. Fg M141 Ivw. fty S PK H9W BIRMINGHAM beautiful Chalmslelgh. Complete second kHdian on tower level ad-MnbM huge recreation r— bar. The fInMt In datalto taste. Three badraemA t rooms, dining ream and Ciudad patia an ridge. t»4S0. WEIR, MANUa, SNYDER & RANKE !7I S. Woodward, Blrmlnghafn 4A4M0 PHONES 544-2123 C. SCHUEH FE 3-7088 BY OWNER, MEDROOM BRICk, TWeer gerege, mIxidTpl SB4IB. ■Y OWNER, If^EOIATE P CURKStON 5r^furc.rSlS.W*c.r Clarkston Reol btote 5454 $■ MBin____MA Ml ^HNcIwtV NoHirWiSi'luRY swr artSB' .i ■ MODEL OPEN AFTERNOONS AND SUNDAY WESTOWN REALTY 545 Bloamfleld Near Luther FE S-2741 eftemoone. LI 24477 Evoa _______FIRST IN VALUE n right at Oton-lary »., len lo u» Arbotat Re— AIMER ICANA HOMES NBW ' iBEDROOM 'HdMT .—fireplace, ' hot water heat, _ n, large 1-car gi-lel. Only tl44Sr Silver Lake Const. Co. WE TRADE hewnee Lena_________4727531 NO MONEY OOWNI Largt tai piMtor, 1 bntol ek TUCKER REALTY NORTH SIDE 774 per month torimiee Inturanca. Sharp BEUIREHOME BUILDERS 545 Bloomfield Near Lulhar FB 22741 1:10 TO 5 PJM. EVENINOt. LI 27227 OFF W. WALYON Lftfftfd In pood nolphbofhood# badroams bridwroto rancher, a plod nvlng room and hall, oi lloerA gas heat, family room, i tachad garage. Made 1m drhi large tondscapad lot wlfli trai tancad yard. This home to In k CLARENCE C. RIDGEWAY REALTOR MULTIPLE LI8TINO SERVICE panorsm Hama al tog raon ptoca, n MA Incl Ic view of country • tars large comMnaflon 1 - dining room with I lodam kitchen with bu... vding rafrigaratlan, family _______ih firaplaca, 1 balhA larid- C. A, WEBSTER, Reoltor «Y 2-2271________________OA 22515 Pioneer-Voorheis 2711 PINE HEIC------- 2BEDR00M BRICK, 2CAR OA .•ssst. ----- SYLVAN ------------- wall carpallnB, ____ ahSn. '1Swiiw**aBd**wnJens.'*% tor S14M dawn, S77 par nto. - HMR?lla'TON HILLS — MA new wsIMowaN 2W^ BStaM, awim.—., raerMtIon room wHh bar, affica In basamant. $t$M. oIhbr HOMIS 1 PLEASANT DALE a-tociSi Sstf Sk* RORABAUGH ■.■war" "»»«.»"• »*- 49 Site Hwwei SECRET AGENT 007 Term or Iradt. i. I JOLU Iteoity •lai 4424112 hill < ILViR I " ... bMomont h« IwSmh Trviy pour homo In fnu cow C------------------ RENTING $59 Mo. Including taxat and htoumnen $10 Deposit WITH APPLICATION ABIOROOM HOMI . LARoS^ININB ARIA WIU, ACCIPT ALL APPLICA-TIOTU PROM ANY WORKIRS, WIDOWS OR DIVORCIfS. For Imnudiats Action Coll FE 5-3676 626-9575 IN DAILf AND SAT. AND* RIAL VALUI RIALTY Waterford Hill OPEN SATURDAY AND SUNDAY 2S BALMORAL TIRRACI NEW 1965 MODEL ______________^fcyea. FI 2:7444 WATERFORD TOWNSHfP LAKE FRONT DIXIE H40 OPEN SUN., 2-5 P.M. kick Salary atda oat an BhUST d, new carpallna. C piaialy radaooraiad. llvina r Wx14W'L Ojk ^r^to DJxto Vk block WEAVER AT ROCHESTER bsaatnant, l-car garaga, near ~'ng cantor and but. 114(0 ilancd I7S par manlh land CUkRKSTON. Nice Sraom walFlo-wall camel In llvbiB and halL gat hoi walar large lot. near tchooto. Only ItD. Tanna. I ACRES. MS4 Rd. Ideal tor ■_____ cash, S4I4S7. Terms. lESIOINTIAL LOT. Nor in at Rochattor, real scanto. Only S740B. [ANOALL MACH. lOBtoot raaMsn-Hal tot. Only 71407. Ttrmt. INOIANWOOD SHORES NO. |L to MILTON WEAVER INC.. M^TOR slhaVlIlM----- . Univamty_____ WHY WAIT? dining all off living roam, gleaming oak flasn. oemfy all haal, iMrkllng dacar, SltoTBT. Absul SHT. Nm, 75747 month phis taxat and Inturanca. HAOSTRQM REALTOR, 4770 W. HURON, OR ATM. EVE- HAYDEN 3 Bedroom Tri-Level $12,900 Gat Heat Attechad Ov . IW Baihe Family Ream Over 1450 tq.tt.ol UvtaB Area THE ECON-O-TRI 1 Badroama Let Includ AT $11,000 Family Roam Attachtd Gara Vvill dupileato an ynur Mi OFFICE OPEN f to I:* J. C HAYDEN, Realtor .... W751 Hlghllind Rd. (M57l TAYLOR MODEL OPEN DAILY 6 to 9 SAT. and SUN. 1 to 6 PRICES START AT $11,700 LOON LAKE PRIVILEGES Only ana year aM, beautiful n lace brim ranch, 2 badroama. bathe, MR-Int, mutlc ayttom, u. --------- r, gamage dle- el caipalln, and lat Ihw. tdt, inm WATERFORD TOWNSHIP BdautilM 44adraom trHaval, IW Mbs, bullHn even and range wHh hoed. Loade of built-in ctoatto, large living room and dlnbig room. ExcalM qondtttan. Oarage, ih- il, 71470 worth I S^A’.'-Sa PriM at toat rage, tow lanaa. 711470. CEDAR ISLAND LAKE Lovely all brick, 2 hadreema. baliM, nica kllthan, toada of_ neiA tiaintota alaal sink, range, washer and drybr hi ufuity, Uor ^ajja, lake frontage en two ildet. UNION LAKE Ctoee to Highland Camput. f btd-rooms, torga attic 7w tjtoanilan, large Hvm ream wtth flfepleca. Xsiaj^rSdiwa at 7174(7. CURKSTON AREA 6916 WILLIAMS LK. RD. Open Sot. ond Sun. 2 to 6 ) bedroom ranch. Large acrttntd NORTH PONTIAC letdym hy»„-.^-- mnTWriSlM tenm$! aTSSl TRADES ACCEPTH) NEAR WALLED UKE A nice Sbadroom ranch with It-tachad 2-car garaga, dauT'-larM kllchan with mt of o A goad buy of tl,1t( phn ‘^WARDEN REALTY 04 w. Hufpn, Panllic — OPEN 3 Models 2 TO I P4». DAILY TRI-LEVEL—RANCH-COLONIAL Priced from IlLffO phis lot ■ goad werkmwithla. Thw can be bou^ for only 17 par cant down. Drlvn out Mli to WINIama Lal-Road, turn righi ana mlla to C GIROUX REAL ESTATE .. 511 Highland Rd. (MSf)_4»-7S RHODES “ JUDAH LAKE ESTATES. NIca LAZENBY DON'T Miss IsTtioar. Atop hm ? toy.jw ^y.r\*&d1f«.ir?Sr- THII ONE WON'T LAST. ROY LAZENBY. Realtor B7S DMIa Mwy. OR 4«(1 Muitlpto Listing (arvica iRwm WEST SIDE SUBURBAN racraatlan ream. Bear gVMO. an lavaly landtcaptd tof. IMato ap-pointmant to tta this hama todsyl LINDA VISTA Thraa4iadroem ranch. Large . ar"axM"cSSl».'?.^ I Unlvmlty. arga ui^ John K. Irwin HiAUtlRt »3 W. Huron-SInca 1715 Val-U-Way Government Representotive Brown ESTABLISHED SINCE 1737 SELL OR TRADE - Cuto w wall eanslnielad twotodreem hu galow with avtr Vk^cre el M Ideal tor lha rafiraa who llto-to garden. Oil AC furn«», atomF num ttormt, toll bath, 11^ |inigA^^lctd at only (7,75( — DRAYTON WOODS - Cholca lecs-tlen wllh - —" -- br^ LIST WITH US - Wa buy, . L H. BROWN, Realtor ALBERT J. RHODES, Broker I FE 22K7 2SS W. Walton FE 2^17' MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE INCOME CLOSE TO DOWNTOWN ________^_______lel,'*SSS?! PRICED AT ONLY (IlMS -TERMS. _______wnsTt, I — Torma. CALL FOR AP-IINTMENT. SMITH 6c WIDEMAN FE 4-4526 REALTORS 411W. MUROM «T. GAYLORD LAKE SIDE HOME - Large Hying -- baaullSyl tong. Call ua maft- —---------— key. Call M' 23(21 ar FE 27473. Large bulMIng toto. tSToSW. Alta tof WxITP. Theta are en Mam- ANNETT oma In vary goad OSS to downtown I. Living rot-I and kitchan ull basamant, | a. 1(400, larmt North Areo Ronch Large lol wmt an paved straaf. Ltolng ram 15^15'. large kllchan adlh --------- ra^ balh, waf Maalar High baiammf wHh gm FA heal. Large racraallen tgaoe. Price riductd to (114(0^ S40( 3-Fomily Income ssa“,*w?'ia par year k 3 balht. h haal. only I Oxford Areo fRJSaSTT MS ji: and raalaurant. Approx. 41. It. el land. Only open Bvoninga ana mmvis FE 8-0466 MILLER OPEN SUNDAY ' 3 TO 6 mare. Priced to imwf M af ^ ~ $SS3 Laka Rd. Mrs. Bargstram, hoaltti. j'.jrTiismss 5 contract. ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES 2bsd- AARON BAUGHEY, Realtor FB24MS m W. HURON OPeM ( TO 7 ........ -Jth plan!? el cupboards dining alL tondscapad lol, carpal^ gat heat, data to scheolt. 7450 to move In, 1(1 pa me. WASHINGTON JR. HIGH It rimi acroia .the slraal from this wadroom ahim. sMad ranch hems, carptlad HvIng ream, dining ream, Tvk balhs, sun perm, nica racraatlan roam In lha baitmant, gas haal, garaga. FuH prica, 717,-Mh farms. ^ WEST BLOOMFIELD room runcn iioiyw wim wiirn carport, spactout tot and paved str^. Psy onY *1^50 and ttsuma merfgioa. NO CLOSING List Here-All Cash for Your Home! \ R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 ARRO WE eUlLD-WE TRADE PRICE KKUCED TO S1S4S7 on Ihl wall carpefing In living room dtolng room and haH, famll ----wall an down tiairt to tachad^twrpga, ' blacktop straaf. data to acheolt and ibopplno. SIS,7S2-Tarmt. EXCLUSIVE AREA. Sharp 7-reem brim ranm with linear garaga. 11' Nvlng ream with firaplaca and carpaling, tiato satrana and hearth, maator btdream with ca-rande MM Vtobalh, ptoa 1 full caramie baths, II' toiMly roam wHh brim wall and firapf— All copper piuntolng. Puth-n atoctrlcal. Hal wator all 1 la latHito tovahr THREE-FAMILY INCOME. Caffi-pltlaly lumlihad, fuN batamani, gat Iwal, Bear garaga, paved strati, waking dtoianca to doiyn-town. Each spartmant raiding tor S25 par warn. tltlSD. Tarim. CLARKSTON AREA, wactout HI svalltbto bi beautiful Oratn Acrat ovartoming Otar Lake,, privala Sail FE 5-35B4 Ted McCullough Sr„ Rooltor 5141 Can Bnsabalh Read Call MY fllil ar PE 27471 UYRENCE W. GAYLORD ■raad^ and Flint M. MY 22» ar FE 27773 Laka Orton, Michigan NICHOLIE Evaa. Call Mr. Catiall PE 27271 GILES eAVItBURO, 2reem,. Betory farm dSS mJm!^8um$*eB& cSaaT vattSuto, am ftotrt. Maw oN tjtr- ki’Tat to!' NEAR GENERAL HOSPITAL. Slx-raatn home, I badroama, hard-weed fleers, ptoslTrad sralto. gas heat, aluminum aiding, garsgt. Pull prica 71I47S. LAKE ORION Bbtdroam ranch, In. franca cletri, harihiaead fiaorA coraatad 11^ room. 11x10 fanv Hy klfchtn. Gw haal, wafer haal- GILES KSLTV CO. 'BUD' Fur the Thrifty Ctoan, iiaal ibadrea brickh._ In hnidy l^ iMa tocafitn, near bus and tcheatoi wllh taw tss'srmntrtsi ITW dawiUmmadtoto pattattMB. O'NEIL MODELS OFEN SUNDAY 1 to f Westridge of Woterford FOLLOW THB CROWD TO WESTRIDGE to tm tlto tour tNquItltoly fumithtd modals. PrlcTs range from 7174(7 tor a Ihrtwbtdream ranch with an attachtd lwo Sm(cimSS'SS&‘ WilT IIM ^ llcifPM, >Mr Qprtgi. H.0M iom on land contract, immadl- bait $101 riSSUrtiiTasras Mat, hardtMod f BS'S.'SS hbminotqn hills with patio. Both hava nica, --------- ■—-tllvIlY *--' Only S-. «wwt ’ tleainB ploa coMi. ' Many othar homaa w chooM from, Incliid- CALL ABOUND THB CLOCK INCLUOINO SUNDAYS SAUNDERS A WYATT REALTY CO. 14 Auburn Avo. Pontiac, Mtehlgan OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 P.M. II baaamant, Kk garaga _______I prlvUagaa on baawtlAl Sylvan Laka. PoaalMa IS doy poa-MUlon on thia. Oolng lor StS,300 E* TRaK. vamau and right to Avondala. OPEN SUNDAY 2-S P.M. KINZLER NEW BMOC COtONIAL Thit • m - p—1l« rSr&SvSJra^ Mtchon yh8i_ MWHypv^ r^w LY*"'. iwraiy room darfol vahw. SSM6 down plua coats. CHARM LAKE FRONT Unim S-badroom honw naar Clarkaton. Modal kHchan, 2S' llv- fiTw: I. Now too larga for . ..n.,. tl7,sss with Is par town piwa costa. OTTER HILLS Dr's own homo. Has avory-to bo doalrod. 7>raom, I'A- privllogw to Ottar and SyL Lakoa. To Inciwdo washor, •**'**■ **•-*»• '• par cant down plua coats. JOHN KINZLER. Realtor .ms DIxlo Hwy. S74-2S35 .. ... Rackara Stora Multipla Llatl^ Sarvica dim S4 , AFTER HOURS CALK OPEN HOUSE SUN. 1-5 P.M. 2634 SHAWNEE LANE Schoolhouse Lake Front SIx-rooma t btethSd fttMhtd tbtdi In antiqua « aundack wl QPEN-431 MOORE LIKE THE UNUSUAL! Tlwn you The —- --- r privacy. Full baaamant, gat t ____„j Css down on new FHA. Mt. < > Bay, toft te Maurer, right to Moora, H I, clota to It. Btna- OPEN-1190 FULLER ly*! bargain with tar la E. Columbia, rlghl ____________garage. Larga corner _ cloia to Madtion Junior and Nertham High ad with tarma you can afford. Saa tM pictura Ad. , .. .... .... .. _______________________ TM prka I right and farms lha bast. Maka youraoH a daal. Talagraph Rd. I Pontiac Laka Rd., lalt to Watkins Laka Rd., right to proparty. OPEN-53033 AULGUfI ROCHESTER AND UTICA. AREA. Extra sharp Hfadroom brick rancher with 3-car attached garaga, tVi ceramic th* Wh», Florida driving I Irani homo and prkad to lalL All rsstonabto oftara will be canaldared with aukk pottaaaton. Auburn M. to Doquindro, laff to Avon Rd., right to M MIto Rd., right te Aulgur. Follow Opr OPEN-213 W. SHEFFIELD A DOLL HOUSE wHh aluminum awnlngi and aJdlng, il nlcthr landfcapad. Carpeting, drapaa, and kllcl^ ri Prka It rMkulouilv low avlth approximately SIJMO dewi ShafflaM, toft te praparty. NEW MODELS YOUR CHOICE OF S modal homaa: Ra^, WmW and TrU^la In J diftarant tocatlana frem^Jjl^ liSdStiv’prCed ULTRa' hOMES SUB.-Opan SAT. and SUN. 2-S p.m. M-S» to toppino of stroat. Will raepan soon. sTRADING IS OUR. BUSINESS PLENTY OF ROOM la S-reem, IW-ate^. .. --- ---- - “»*“ -tua larga racraailao room, 3 tarma. Saa you lhart Sunday, Mr. HIggInt, aaleaman. RatMtnoa ptioM 4S3-34^ rapra-aanllng Clark Real Eatafto Pontiac. >1 3-7SSS. orRECriONS: Taka Talagraph to watt al lg»#ra^LW^M.^^to OPiN SUNDAY 1-5 sswalff B LAKE COLONY w ranai at a real ba in the main Hoar, Oiia or tiw batl ^ (a^lJKyJS^ WATERFORD REALTY BROOCK Bv Didk Tnrncr Sate Baeliiesi Pripwty 57 S-PAMILY APARTMENT HOUSE tetefklni Igffp coftcrwfft shop in a tfownlown nrtn. FE *43647 24-uNE Dowling ANYONE INTERESTED I IMIr own boas with • am ns andhW4.htTJiaiaa3.iw Business Soles, Inc. JOHN LANDMESSER, BROKER 11373 S. Telegraph__PE 4-13S3 "Ob, just the usual, Herb! Janie is washing her hair. Helen is putting hers in curlers and I’m trying to keep calm about the mess the world’s in.’’ ural gaa, beach. Brea. OR 3-13W. FE 4-4307. a. 3344333 51-A Larga 1734 bam. Approx. 15 acrea. On river. Bait d view. Hunting, tlihing and iporti area. St,SSo. $1400 down, ISO month. 402-3472 1 Mio. FE 5-7361. RIVER - FRONT LOT. trot, $1,773, S30 down, • — h Broa., OR 3-1375. MICHIGAN TAX LAND Oakland, Macomb, Tt. Clair coun-tlaa, ate. Mkhlgin Tax Land Sar- vlca, Cadillac. Michigan._____ IBW COTTAGE AND WOODED LOT. Full prka ““ down. Privafo lai---- - . - . laka. Flahlng and. boating. Daor 27**^ l-75rF^^a*t"SarrlMi3si S."b^£i’i*hloTJI}lS;.’SJ?RTH. ERN DEVELOPMENT CO., HARRISON. Opan 7 ......... .... (AAambar of the C « ChamMr of Com- Lots—Acrtage '/3-ACRE lots llacktopped itraat — laka prlvl-egat, $25.00 down alarti your daal. ah lor homaa - Irado-lna accoptod WRIGHT REALTY FE 34141 ”Em*!*atto*7 FE 5-tS71 17 ACRES Vk wooded. TM lacludad « hava baa- ■ $11,000 wi------ Clorkstoft Reol Estote 1 gently ir Iwraa Lets-Acreags «d. 17,700. FE 2 154' NOW I I now. Time to get me ownarihip, SIO at building alto bakw: WxSU' - Croawell St. mx3*7‘ — Tull Dr. >117' - Ellubeth Shoraa HAGSTROM REALTOR W. HURON _____ EVENINGSJ03-0435 _ OXFORD _AREA, J74 ACRES, I ».3133 PLEASANT COUNTRY 3 ROLLING WOODED ACRES, mllM north ol aarkaton, ovtr loot d road frontaga. $4,300. Tar ACRES of hllla and wooda witl ■pringi lor nice pond. 4 mlnutoa .. 1-73 and Clarkaton. $7,500, $3,000 posed expressway. cank, approxi rth ot Oxfort I the new pro $4,730, 1100 Hadley. S3,too. Terms. C. PANGUS, Realtor M-15 Orlonvllla Call Collect HA 7 3013 PLEASANT LAKE ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD OMMEECIAL LOT, StfOO. 100 foot Irontaga on Williams Laka Rd 13P deep. Call avantnga, OR 3-3047. Oggorhmhlei 59 MoMy tf Uot 81 (Lkyaad SSeiy! Aytoof) ,. Dm ot Mkhlgan't meat beautiful alltyt. Vary valuable property and a real profit maker. Has bar and raataursni. Priced at $273,000 with dating area. A terrific small In-vaitmant opportunity. 310,000 do«ni and a 30 per cant return on your Invaatmant attar paymants. Call PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE ment raqulrad to gat In In^ builMta. For Jnformotlon call E 3-3773 betwaan 11-4. Sacrifical Easy te MICHIGAN Class "C" Liquor Bar rentory. Doing located ----- terrific _________ ____ erlocMn Musk Camp, lou ■via City. PAUL JONES, Realty ____W. Huron_____ _FE 4-0350 DESIRABLE SERVICE STATION location In Rochester tree. 1‘ Inveatment. Paid training and nanclal aaalatancs to those < quality. OL M177. Attar 7 p. LI 3-3440. Fully Automatic Coin-Op Car Wash The mojf amaiing car west systam yet I It had to hopper Inaurod Psymmt Ploti BAXTER Ol LIVINOSTONE 401 Pontto?Slsra%ink Eulld FE 4-1538-9 NEED CASH "BACK TO-SCHOOL" EXPENSES AND BILL CONSOLIDATION? BORROW UP TO $1,000 34 months to pay BUCKNER >37 CHEVY WAOON, 17" ZENITH TV, larga ell haator, swap or sell. OL T-0343.__________ Fst PLYMOUTH. 1733 PORP, I7S3 tall parti or swap. "" POLAROID CAMERA FOR ALU-mlnum or fIMrgIta beat. Original coal of camori and aquipmani, t30e. OR 30147. 4437 WIndtOtO, Watorterd. _________ RIFLE, OLD MOTOR OR fRAILER, dog. 474-2345 otter SHARP 1743 CADILLAC 3000E gun for pkkup or leap. 2370 wih IlamaJ-k^Rdj;^ attar S p.m._ UPRIOHT FREEZER, LIKE NEW, Salt Clothing COATS, SUITES, DRESSES, LIKE new, alia U FE 24034.________ SORRY, NO MORE CONSION-mants accaptad until Oct. 1. Our in« wnivf. «na ovyi rl unity Shob SL Jama , 3SS W. Maple, Blrmlng-:ioaad Men, and Wad. Sola HeusEheM Goode l-ORIVE THRU AUTOMATIC CAR WASH INC., 707 Federal Ava. Saginaw, Michigan, INVESTORS Now available a home larvka Iranchlia, S2,SOO. Complete Investment. Unlimited potential, axcel- BOWMAN SUMMERS SALES CO. New Horizons In Real Estate MEETING THE CHALLENGE OF TOMORROW Real Estate Electronically" 1 BIG PRICE SMASH Factory Closeouts BRAND NEW 3 ROOM OUTFITS Look What You Get for: $317.00 $2.88 WKLY. NO MONEY DOWN Large double drtattr, — large ......... FormIca-lM ........ _.jlra. INCLL____________ FREE THIS WEEK BaauIHul T'xIS' living room rug. Nice 7'xl2' kltchan 33pleca sat of dia Partridge Real Estate has been Chosen as the exclusive company In Michigan to represent Salectroo-Ic Really Service, ■" ------------- marketing Real Estate da. It Is an amazing service wherein buyert PONTIAC 20 MINUTES. PRIVATE lake. No motors allowed. 30'xlSO' lot. S47S, $10 down, $10 month. Cleared or wooded lots. Bloch Bros. OR 3-1275 or FE 44$07. WATERFORD HILL MANOR DON WHITE, INC. Sub. $1,300. 332-7771 after 4: OWNER; MUST SACRIFICE, GRO- 573 Acres—River Front n— at th. ,noat otficlont and I cattle operations WARREN STOUT, Realtor tse N. Opdyka Rd. “ -------- 160 ACRES NORTHEAST OF LAPEER Largo 10-room house. 40x44 I mont. Easy terms. WILL DIVIDE. CALL FOR DETAILS. CLARKSTON AREA lot, lOO'xISO'. Idaol lor hoi walk-out basomont. PERRY PARK Nkalv landscaped lot, SirxISS SMITH-WIDEMAN, Realty CANAL LOT NO. 200. EXCLUSIVE area In Ukawoad Vlllm. S0'x174' -Util. Mutt aall, 1st d,S00 cash. OL 3S34S.____________________ CANAL LOTS Choke building sltaa - 40x147. jllding sltaa ___with Sylvan Ll JACK LOVELAND COUNTRY ESTATES CLOSE-IN Large building altaa tocatad In i axcallant community among th hills on winding pavad dridt. E callant drainage. Northaaat Pp tiac, cloia to I-7S. Low at $2,4; M alactrically oparatad faad-tytlam, strictly a i-man oper-I. Truly a profitable bus'------ Sale Land Contracts Annett Inc. Realtors E. Huron St. FE BO Open Evaninga and Sundays 1-4 HOLLY SMALL CLEAN Underwood Real Estate $443 Dixie Hwy., Clarkaton 423-2413 Evat. and Sun. 423-1433 HORSE-FARM .... axarcita paddixkt ai >/k mile of road frontage, quarter mile track. $33,300. 20-ACRE FARM «~t"" Bbadroom •>«"» «n b living ri klfmni •crot V with I 1 dan. 2 rolling t trull treat. 117,500. Terms available. . PANGUS, Realtor IS Orlonvllla Call CoHact NA 7 2113 SMITH KENT ESTABLISHED IN 1714 10 ACRES NEAR VANDERBILT — 30'x34' ■w iM It ahap. Slim - NORTH OF PONtlAC — j on preparty that wauM maka laka. S20,m. Tarma. 40 ACRES N^AR 1-75 200-ACRE FARM AND ESTATE Located near Clarkaton off Chrys lar Frttway, 2 private lakes, brkl. 7.badroam, 5-bath homt In axcal-Itnl condition w 11 h 30' paneled living room, eo tlrapTacos, 2 awl Bear garage. Ar mani at $li0,000. ROLFE H. SMITH, Realtor 344 s. Talagraph ------- EVES. r~ — Sale BvriiMO Property 57 447BI0 DIXIE HWY., WATERFORD Inc., $375 par month, prka, $33,-ue to tattle aatato. Elmer E. ;. 451-1710. Purtloy. executor. Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor «i»'3n uW,' Tiv bwlW" - ^ Halghla. Pf AMST L06n lake FRONt Commercial IIS ft. an U.i vary good location for many was such ai motel, boat aataa, nwtltola Annett Irtc. Reoltors of IBM punch-card aloctronk aqulp-mont. Somewhere In our groat ■>»-tion, there Is a buyer tooklng your type business or soma. —...................-.TJ. ness you « k of Raalti lasiring to y or busl- erty with Partridge. Thli It why buyert are flocking to Portrldga Real Estato tor the boat lalactlont and deals of their Ufa. MEM. PARTRIDGE A ASSOC. INC. OFFICES THRUOUT MICHIGAN INTERNATIONAL TRADERS CLUB COAST-TO-COAST TRADES -------- ---------- FE A3SSI a. Will a STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS r naadad. Saa u Warren Stout, Realtor so N. Opdyka Rd. FE 3-1145 Opan Evaa. 'Ill I p.m. ACTION your land contract, large or - _ll, call Mr. Hllter, FE foi77. Broker, 3773 Elliabeth Laka Road. LAND CONTRACT, $300J)ISCOUNT ____________433-4584___________ .AND CONTRACT: Sold January 1741 for $30,000. Balance due $11,-230. Paymants $130. par month 4 per cant Intornt. Will discount Xl.* Invotimant. Ask tor Ray Wantad C^mts-Ml^ m CA$H FOR LAND CONTRACT! H. J. Van '"•» J“1 ni.u u—. OR 3-1335. 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently wanted. Sat ut batora Warren Stout, Realtor » N. Opdyka Rd. FE MI43 Open Evai. * - ~ CASH For your equity or land contracts. Don't lota that home, tmtilesi pottibla ditcountf. Call tOMISO. Atk for Tad McCullough $r. ARRO REALTY 3143 Caas-Elliabath Lake Rood NEED LAND CONTRACT3. SMALL discounts. Earl Garrtlt. EM 3-2311, EMpIre 3-4084. ______________ QUICK CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS Clark Real Estate. FE 3-7ni, Ret. FE 4.41a '--- SEASONED LAND CONTRACTS tall. CAPITOL SAVINGS S. LOAh ASSN- 75 W. Huron. PE S-7137. eney to (Llconsi Lendor) LOANS TO $1,000 FE 2-9026 la lha number to call. OAKLAND LOAN CO. 303 Pontiac Slato Bank BWg. 7:30 to 5:30 - Sat. 7:30 to T. countalort. —------ ------ jvallabia — St«B In or phone PE S4I31. HOME & AUTO LOAN CO. 7 N. Parry St. ' PE $4131 7 to S dally. Sat. 7 te 13_ LOANS COMA^nI^*l8Sn CO. BARGAIN BASEMENT .... rofrlg- cross-top Irtanr, -- Good kitchen range ........ $37.00 cocktail tabla. Ml 4-3S7! DRAPES, IRONER, MANY USEPUL artkies. PE S4S37. 74 Onlada. DREXEL, TODAY'S LIVItid COL^ dtotoy^apk rining'alt:"iKflng, S7ff*iw-3454:~ ELECTRIC Stoi^, KELViMaTOR; ELECTRIC STOVE ___________FE 3-3IW ELECTRIC STOVE WITH 6TTA GOOD WORKING REFRIGERATOR $23. Oat ttove, $33. Wtshar, 123. Hot witor hooter, $23. FE 5-2744. Holds 341 lbs. All fast Irtata tholvat Bonus storage door FRETTER'S WAREHOUSE OUTLET HAMILTON GAS DRYER. S ElocIrk range. SSO. AAaytag or wathar, $30. All axetito HOTPOINT AUTOMATIC WASHER. reasonable. FE t-4433.__ REFRIGERATOR, KELVINATOR ------------ S23. Whirlpeot washer, $20, lx.... ... 00^ condition. FE 2-5703 attar 5. KENMORE AUTOMATIC WASHER, suds saver. $23. 3334371. KIRBY VACUUMS I io to 20 p MATCHING DRAPES FOR TW pkturo windows. One 174"xl4", 01 for'xS4". $43. Hamilton Gas dryi AAAYTAG WRINGER WASHER ■ Ktnmora auto. wa«*wr. mm. oull - mitc. 3324111. REFRIGERATOR, S2S REFRIGERATOR, $2S. DRYER, SU. ..... „Mli.5'rr.__________ V. Harrit, FE S-3744.____ ROLLAWAY BED, SIS: KENMORE Ironar, S2S. FE $■ Singer Dial-A-Matic ZIO ZAO SEWING AAACHINE EmbroMara, appllquat, bultonholafc ate. — late model, school trado-ln —new machine guarantaa. Tarma of $4 par month or $37 ctah. Unl- vortal Co. FE 447BS._______ SINGER PORTABLE, S17.30. tlG- LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE II Baldwin at Walton, PE 24142 FlrsMrtffk 1^ >-75 Open Evoa." M Parking 7-4at. TH 4 1 GOOD GAS DRYER, $37.00, refrigerator, $37, 3 - piece rooms, $27, hMoabods, dnaaart, choata, bads, dlntftas. Everything at bargain prkat. Little Jea*! —- “ildwln at Wl gain D FE 24 1 MORE TIME BRAND NEW FURNITURE 3-ROOM OUTFITS $278 (Good) $2.50 Weekly $378 (Better) $3.00 Wnkly $478 (Best) $4.00 V.’:ekly NEW LIVING ROOM BAROAIN$ . Place (brand new) IMng ream: 2-placa living room lulta, twa ttap PEAR$ON'$ FURNITURE E. Pika FE 4-7SSI Betwaan Paddock and City Han GOOD RUNNING REFRIOERA-teri, $15 and $20. 474-2S44. 2-PIECE SECTIONAL DAVENPORT, newly rau^latartd In b Ion, $400. 4S2-5474. hogany dining room chi point 14* Ireaitr, exc garden teeli. FE M71$.___________ 4-PIECE LIVING ROOM 6UTPit, 3 bronM and tablaa. OR 3-7SI5 4 p.m. 4-YEAR BABY ^RIB AND MAT- ^PIECe DINETTE SET, $230, OR-Iglnal price, S7S0, 741 Cameron, FE 3-5442._____________________ 7-PIECE DINING ROOM SUitt. FE S4751, attar 4 er w 9x12 Linoleum Rugs . Celling tile vinyl A-—-— Inlaid tile “loor ShL_ ________ Across From the Mall" PHILCO TV, GOOD CONDI-•• - 5.tyoa after 4. range, I 3324317.______________________ O-IN. GAS STOVE. GOOD CONbl- steal top, axcallant 1965 Nelco Zig-Zag Sawing machlna In -------- . owniidj^Haa built-in m' old. Pay balance 'at 1540 menthly. Guaranteed. Rkhman Bret. Bowing Canter, 33S41$1. $39.00 Cosh Price A Necchi Zig-Zag E^ulpppd^--------- - hama and fancy atlldiaa ' Gusranlaad. RIchman Broa. Sawing Canter, 33S42B3. Pontlac'-ONLY authorliad Ntcchl dealer. $54.82 Cosh Price A SINGER Cablnat Jancy atftehm’ainipiy'by buytr to MJ2 mmithly. Call'lilctH m«n Bit- “— $29.81 Cosh Price AUTOAAATIC washer ■ AUTOMATIC ZIG ZAG sewing machine reposseubd 174S "Paihion Dial" medal - In manta of $$J$ par meniti far $ montha er $44 cash balance. Still -------------- unlvaraal Ca. PE _____________ _______ LarM email alia (round, drap-laaf,____ imm ■■■ ‘jr.si i.%r- SINGER DIAL-A-STITCH $54.18 Cash Price SMALL FRIOIOAIR^ WRINGIS FRIOlbAIRE dining tulto, IlK. Phone 3 $20 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS 0 FURNITURE - Canalata of: Select llvine room sr“- tabtot. I oeektall tabla and 2 labia Innartprlng mattrtat and box S-placa dtnafta let, 4 chroma chain, 7W^ ,‘*SciIS»:A'iil!?Sr' ’ WYMAN FURNITURE CO. 17 E. HURON FE 44N1 IS W. PIKE __________FE M150 STEEL BED FRAME AND PADDED haadbeard, $13. FE 44472. STUDIO COUCH OPENS UP TO maka 2 Iwint. bahton and apraad Includad. I2B. $34-20$7._____ BED COMPLETE, S«i f6R--------— 3-2714. I, alia 7BI, $35. EM y TV SET, $23, REFRI gat tto * — ■' Knk bi UNITED RIOERA1 ___'fB 5«4t. RVE*f~Ufir6HT WHIRLPOOL DELUXE REFRIO- WYMAN'S USED BARGAIN STORE At Our 1$ W. Pika Start Only Knaa Hole Desk ..........SI7.7S 2-pc. living room lulls .$27.75 . ratrlgarafor ... I».7S Your Credit li Good at Wyman's EASY TERMS__________FE !215B WALNUT CRIB AND MATtRESS. ..-INCH USED TV ........... $27 Walton TV FE MtS7 Open ' 5tS E. Walton, earoar at Jaslyn STEREO, RADIO, AM-FM atlon, tiSS. 21" cotorad 1330. Call FE uiad black and wM< _____________Dalby TV. FE 47102. DX 40 XMTR A.._ .. racalvar. FE 44470. CARTRIDGES. P STOCK. JOHNSON TV - FE 04347 45 E. WALTON NEAR BALDWIN 0-TWO CITIZEN BAND RADIOS RCA - YOUR Wlpi WANTS tHB loaf a little hi yaur mra tbna Ordar^your 'ilumlnuiiyUiffr^ and avaryona will ba happy. In-- ---------------- tarma, no money down. FE $454$ Jaa Vallaly OL 14HB 1 FAIR Hlh* YkAMilWdA WALK. It talkla, all new battarlat. S4B. i PaIR roller klNK SKATES rt»z»$^o.“xXTJSr compartment kltchan link and inha- Ing tnucat. ntM. UL >t$l7. ix4 douoLas piit, 4W#o6t tongitw. SilBMly y -" “ prtoa. S HYD^LIC CMiii^Of 6MAIAI. 2 WlilkL TtUiLkA, $k»i TORO ZS^rSiSSk.* ^ 1 THIRTY THE FOyTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEIIUjER 25, 1965 **nr*u AKC ■iA«LR. IliOliTBRfO ____L atm>o6m wxTunes. oil a# Irtcal onagHao. Crock, ooH. c gTTwt. Iiaar Kwn-ToM tUPM-Y _ tth Gos Installation CASH AMOCSSfY “ DRAYTON PLYWOOD C8NTAUR TRACTOR WITN, -----•“» gtnaratars. U" rtoonvkyert. CLEARANCf OF OSM 7— GUITARS GUITARS dUlTARS Flal Mpa. claaaica, and olacfrica. Larw alack el an lypaa of guHarx ‘"*"*^RIS MUSIC .creaa bamSawSron* "*FE M547 l^stEr spinet bl6nd piano. MUSIC CENTER I’lANO^ 10 PER CENT OVER COST 1335 UNION LAKE RD. ------- PIANO, WALNUT SPINET, LIKE naw, pay imall dollvary charga, phA up paymanl 333 par mo. Cm ba aaan Mc^. Coll Credit Mon- APACHE FACTORY HOMETOWN DEALER 8ILL COLLER I MILE EAST OF LAPEER ___________ON MSI _________ BOWS, ARROWS, SUPPLIES Oana'a Archary, 714 W. Huron BOW HUNTERS, COMPLETE LlRi Of hunHng aupellaa, Banka Archary Salaa, 24 MWilgan Ava. FE 54344. CLOSE-OUT SPECIAL . apara lira, boltia gaa, a FLUFFY PERI^ SHEPHERD PUFPIES, I woaka old. OL SS334. __________ _______ culP pbig. OR SetSB. ____ POODLE CLIPPINP AND PR66m Mg, any alyla, ISMStO. «io6CBPuF%"iwiTE"m$.~n waaka old. AKC. l-S4r-33B. POOOlEs, t LOVELY BLACK PUPS AKC. 325. Alao atud. 54t-T5M. PUPPIES, TOY TO MINI DASCH-ahund, aired by 414-lb. toy. 353- EUPS. |3. MOTHER PART BEAPLE and aoltar. 432-4542, attar 5. REGISTERED FEMALE POODlE, whlta, aprlcet. FE 2-f3IL REPISTEREO ENGLISH SETTER Pupa 7 momha oW. OR 44WI. dayk OR 3-1334 nigtita. REGIStEREb WHITE PEKINPiSS pupplaa, 2. FE 44013._____ REGISTERED CHIHUAHUA AND Toy Fox torriara pupplaa. ' hua and toy Fox torrlar aarvka. FE H437.________ Ona Guns—Guns—Guns jt Iha moat camplato llna of guna M Oakland Counlyl *;r‘3S5iXS-?5KMy"' REMINGTON WINCHESTER-COLT PISFOLS “wl oTAlL^IPwir" ^le^SSIZtI^pW cuff*“dreyer's Gun and Sport Cantor BIO Holly Rd., Hotly ME 44771 -Open Dally and Sundaya- Burr-Shatl, 375 S. Tatagraph LEFT HANDED GOLF CLUBS — , NOW OPEN SULLIVAN'S /WOOERN TRAILER PARK with room, board tor huntara. I catad 14 ndla aaat ol Lawlati Mkh. M County Rt. 412._______ iwoy 021 OAKLAND_______FE JM034 SILVER POODLE, 3 MONTHS OLD’, •hatx. 175. FE 55457. SPRINGEiTSMNIEL, PUPS AKC, atud aanrica. Pupplaa. FE 43733. WILL FURNISH GOOD HOME AND 4 inoniha hunting on ahootlng — aarva tor wall-Tralnad bird Holly. MB 44412. Pet Sepidies-Service 79-A POODLE GROOMING AND TRIM--iMg In my homo. Alao dark aprl-rt toy atud. 1343 E. Laka Dr„ By KaU Ooaiui If there’s any justice, that little Kathy Chester will baby-sit a child of mine sonaedayl" wood daluxa campar with 44" -cabovar bad, oomplalalv aqulppad Including LP g POOL TABLE, 34 SIZE WITH awlpmant, IBco now, 3150. FI 'UMP GUN, 12 GAUGE STEPHENI ------i®»L. SCUBA DIVING OUtFIT, MUST iall-40H3te._________________ WE ARB HOW ACCEPTING GUNS, lUCTl'ON sales, 705 W. Claika-- Rd.. Lake Orion. MY W371, "black DIRT, TOP SOlL, and. read gravel, bulldarx. la. FE >4030._____________ DIRT. . FILU GRAVEU BALLARD - SAND GRAVEL Caii oit' sS^I^______________Clarkaton CHOICE BLACK DIRT, 4 YARDS 311 Choke tap will, 7 yarda 315. Pallvarad. FE 50351. FALL SPECIAL OH BLACK DIRT, 31JS par yard. DoNvarad M Rech- EXTRA SPKIAL AUCTION SUNDAY, SEPT. 26, 2 P.M. Truck Joitoa of naw and uaad tur nitura and appllancaa and olhai artlcloa too numaroua to mention City. Story^ Public Auction MON. OCT. 4, 1345 11:30 A.M. E.S.T. By Ordor of Iha B<^ el Olroctora DEPARTMENT STbRE FIXTURES OF GEORGE'S NEWPORTS DEPARTMENT STORE 74 North Saginaw St. at Huron 20,000 SQUARE-FOOT AREA -COMPLETELY AlOOERN Conalaling of: llluminatod Mahe. any wall caaai, dlaplay caaaa, glaaa ahow caaaa, carpeting, rack! ale. Worthing^ 43 H.P. Air candl-tlonara. Sola, FUbig Coblnali, f-trk Irena, Stool Snalvbig, Mai Machina, Time Clock and Racka, Drapai. Papar Cuttara, chandlae Bexea and Baga, Ad aograph. Radio, PuWk AdL— Syatom, Cradtt File, Doaki, Chaira, Sofav Tablaa, SIgna, ok. Inapactlon: Beginning at 3:30 morning of aala. HURRY, HURRY, GET WINTER iAilD GRAVEL, FILL AND Tol- aell dallvarad. 3512544. ____ SAND. GRAVEL. TOP SOIL, BLACK DIRT, AND gradMe. raaaenabla. OR 41344. TOPSOIL BLACK DIRT. FILL gravol. Clarkaton. MA H223. I, waahad atona. Dal. 4334710. JIM'S OUTLET Cor. Halctiarv and Airport Rda. OR 40013 OpM Ff LIVING ROOM SUITE - g60D NEW BATHTUBI, OtLORED, IR- OIL tANK, 3« GALLON, BRYANT burnar, flltlnga goad candWIon “»-oom claanar 320, twin I. Call after 5. FE 44445. ONE OF THE BEST MkSEBOARD daala In town. Hoi water baaa-baard, heat avith ancloaura and damper, BUS par ft. G. A. Thamp- ORGASONIC BALDWIN ORG^ Elgin eidboard motor. FEJ-7401 PLYWOOD «V» 3 4.35 Barniub ancloaura S 13.33 O' glaaa alMIng to doert 3I23J0 2V"x4V" Mahogany ' r4"x4‘0" MahogMy 4' Plata glaw alidlng 4'V{^ Plata glaaa alk riding door S73.3S jnp ibor 3 17 J3 No. 3 common nalla, 13 H IT 321.35 1. 3 4.35 _____________ 01.35 3'3"x3V" Alum. aHdk« window 314.35 5'B"X4V" Alum. tlMtog window 022.35 3V"X4V" Alum, eliding window 333.35 Burmeister's seldom used trade-ins Jack Hagan Music Center tk at only A MORRIS •fuSrS: TIRED OF SHOPPING FOR ORGANST WHY NOT COfME TO GALLAGHER'S $435 - 3535 - 3035 -3 - 33,435 - tuts BUY NOW AND SAVE Ul^RIOHT PIANO. S40l RE^D^ mirror, $175; Itoby ^______ UPRIGHT PIANO II USTO THbMAt tPlllRt. ft padalA no mo^ down, $1343 PW nwM. BETTERLY MUSIC, USEb WURLITZER tpINlt. WAL-311.75 par mSlfh."'?STTERLY GUITAR LESSONS DRUM LESSONS Sbowl link, S24$i Lout.. UMi tuba, $10 and up. Ploa cuf ond 4*;kir^ POOL TABLE, SLATE TAA 317j ------ . .. AUTOIMAYR Ofto Igeljwiat 72 ELECTRIC MIMEOGRAPH, $135; ...... 1 ELECTRIC CHECK OUT, to- lOOT BEER BaArIl Ri CA^AM box, Odaar raacMn qtelar, grill atand and aoceaa., Mk, tiaelt, Soeltaman ko mokor, etc. 2111 Op- 1, 1343 BEAR BOW PLUS 4 MICRO pflto arrawa, 1440700, 12 GAUbi BROWNiWg Ai/fdiMT-k. Floaca Ibiad CMO. Uka aaw. 0100. FE nm ff~56<*wiNci I wSReiKeWeer FIREPLACE WOOD $12 A CORD. Detroit 34. Mkhlgan STAN PERKINS, AUCTIONEER Central Mkhlgan'i Moat OapandaW ______Phone: Swarti CraMi__ “Save Two Dotes for Oxford Community Auction" Sot. Oct. 2 at 1 pjn. Wed. Oct. 4 at 4:30 p.m. Hey-GrEiR—Feed RINGNECK PHEASANTS. ^Igup"- __________ Raeaa and Draw-tlta hltchaa. HOWLAND SALES an^ RBHTAU 345 DIxIa Hwy. ^ OR 3-1454 Open 3 ajtl. *1113 PJti. BOOTH CAMPER Aluminum covert and compart ' g?(..CT5gg^ Close-Out Streamline • for 1965 24', 26' Modeis NOW ON DISPUY -ThaTwto^Mjdy- PPLES, 31JB A BUSHEL PICK your own, bring contalnart. S344 Elllt Rd., Clarkaton.____________ APPLES - MacINTOSH, JOHA- APPLES, P16 K YOUR OWN, Johnalhan, Gratningt, GoMan Doll-clout. Orr't, Lotat Lana, eft^y AT MIDDLE! Pradmare I S-IW1. >LETON'S ORCHA applee, Barllalt BOB 8. BILL'S PRODUCE SPECIALS NEW MICHIGAN POTATOES 50 Lbs., $1.39 ♦ Applet, pack batkal, 43ci tama-toea. $1.13 pack; honria-grown com, 43c-a-doi.; Wonder bread, 5 for 33c; 3to-gal. cartant milk, 3145; aquath, 3 tor 3Sc; orangaa, 3 dn„ $1.33. Bob and Bllt'e Produce, 7405 Highland Rd. 1 mlla waat of Airport Rd., eppoalto M53 Ploia. I Vumlohlnga i rd Community A Wad. Oct. 4 at 4:30 pjn. ANNUAL GUN AUCTION. FIraarmt both modem and ontlqua, plut apertlng LSSTo* COPLAND AND GREENING AP- DONUTS,______________ iwi pa, toid aura vogelalba ahart-anlng, fraah llltarad cidar, quality applee, whoMtala and retail. Dlohl'a Orchard and Cider Mill, 1473 Ranch Rood, 4 mllaa aouth ol * oH MlWord Rd. 437-4B31._______ MacINTOSH APPLES, 33 BUSHEL. M30 Coolav Lake Rood PEARS, PL^^ APPLES, SWEit SEASONED FIREPLACE WOOD - 2 BEAGLE HOUNDS, ONLY ONE trabiad. FE 44254.______ BbROER'^LlES, 13 MbHtHl, ?23t:. ‘ d ’dOBt: JAHEIMS. FE F353B. POODLE TRIMMING-tHAAA-POPING. $3 AND UP. 435-3375. SATURDAY, 6 P.M. lALL'S AUCTION SALES, 70S Clarkaton Rd.. Lake Orion. I — complela, meHe^^drauwr^ODiKh. tog'mom'^Sd, unlbiSlitd'^ arrlngar waaher, rafrigeratori atovea, uaad color TV, 1333 ttotlon wagon. Uaad Itamt I.. ... marout to mantlon. Comlgnmanta acceplad dally. Jack W. ----- or and auctions. M3 POTATOES. WINDY KNOLL .... Stony Creek Rd. Lake Orion. 433- 5334, Dealort walcomo.___ TOMATOES, YOU PICK. 0340 A AKC MALE ENGLISH BULL, FINE AKC REGISTERED BRITTANY tpanlal pum,_33$^1-40W775._ AKC POODLE, BLACK, MALE. 334- Sarvka. IMATOOD'S. 3327133. AKC REGISTERED BEAGLES, EM F4443 after 5:30. AKC BRITTANY PUPS, 3 WEEKS, champlen ttock, sao. OA F2737._ Special Auction Sale Starts 2 P.M. Saturday 2 TO 4 PM. AND 7 TO CLOSING RAILROAD SALVAGE, INSUR ANCE STOCK, GROCERIES HOUSEWARES, FURNITURE, TOOLS, STOVES, COUCHES, DRESSERS BEDS, CHAIRS, CLOTHES, DOORS, WINDOWS, SASH, STORM WINDOWS, f LUMBER, 2X4, NEW AND USED. B & B AUCTION 5333 Dixie Hwy._____OR S2717 AKC BRITTANY PUPS, $25 - $30. ___________FE 54433.______ AKC colliE pups, 4 wliia champlent, theta. OR 4-IM. iU^^ACHSHUND PUPPIES, St05 degl. ESTBi-y IMS, FE- .... .. IflSETTTwTmBSB. FE A4433. HamtWri and tugpllat. AjcrTfioisTERi5~riT5TT, ■lAS$BT">“UP?iiS7’4~WilK^ AKC Qualify Braadtog. 337-4432. BEAUTIFUL 'ELUFFY KITTENS, ---------47H213. BRITTANY PUP, 4 MONTHS OLD AKC. call MA 4-7347._____ BIRD DOGS. EXCELLENT BRE'ED-Ina tomolat, l-lto-3 yrt. Sail or FE 4-5743. _ CANINE COUNTRY CLUB SUNDAY, 2 P.M. CLEANOUT SALE. HAU'S AUC TION SALES, 305 W- Clarfcaton Rd. Laka Orion. Grocarlet of oil Mndt, lartalt, taraatora, toyt, iHure, kitciv Id countara, —__________ —... of ponallto. NEW: 3gc. bidreom lultoa, box matchiM chair, lompa of all klndi. Early Amarkan fumllura, coffee and and tablaa. twival and platform roefcart - Rafreahmantt on pram-itat. Jock W. Hall, owner and auc-tlonaar - MY 3-1371, MY 34141. WE ARE ffbW ACCErriNG GUNS ammunition and apertlng gooda or eentignmani or wM buy ter oui big gun auction an wadnotdoy, f p.m.. October IS 1341. HALL'l AUCTION SALES TBS W. Clarba ton Rd., Laka Orion. MY 3-1371. MY 34141._____________________ PlyH-Tiy»SlMwbe tl-A 1,000 CHOICE BVERGRREIfS varlaliat, mutt ba toM, dlgjfeur choke. 3340 each. Potor't Ever-graan Gardont. Milford, Midi, at Frotfy't. EVERGREI I. aatl of A CAMPING SITES McFaef^oMfS ii3f*MiS^o5iot ELLSWORTH AlfTb & TRAILER SALES Open Sundoys at 1 p.m. Sea Itw all Tawat Bravot, Holly and Cartair 14 to 30 n. Wo alto have rtntalt. 4577 Olxia Hwy. FOR RENT; . ----jrine 'Oft. compart i '41 6AK pkkupt. $103 weak ai "sCOTT r'STaL service 134 W. 1 317 AMdiigon Ava. PIONEER CAMPER SALES NEW MbOfi '^LDING CAMP NOW ON DISPLAY )UC - YUKON OELTA-ES LINE-TROTWOOD Now It tlk trailer tor ttio hinitbig aaaaon fall vacation. JACOBSON TRAI^R SALES B RENTAL im Wllllamt Laka Rd. OR S5301 Tnii^ Playmate Conttructod and. Rpilatad Otrang Wmhd CwTrada 1354 mobile CRUISER, rxll', bedroom. FE M537.___________ 1353 MAELitTB, 10T«0'. R BED- roomt, m balht. 334414S_____ 1340 DETROITER, rxS4', iMBL-lont oondttlon. Walton Trallar Park, ava will be your IS Su^ $nwnM HURRY! ?!};:: ttsTmSSiWw: YB^^tava I-, S or Sbodrm yIs' aN MtoaSwIarMn^ mtal or axcoad the rigid Blue B^ Standardt tor haaTbig. piumblng and alactrical ayttomt. You now **^bI SSir'unijrr ----------- Hwy»a DriytOH Pwm$. Parkhurst Troiler Sales 3INEST IN MOBILE LIVING 15 M 40 «. Featuring Now r— Buddy and Nemadt. Locotod hall way batwoan < Oxford on M34, nixt 1 Country Ceutin. MY S441I. BI6I BI6I SAVINGSI UP TO 309i OFF ON 1965 MODELS NOW IN STOCKI PONTIAC'S ONLY MERCURY MERCRUISER DEALER FOX SNOWMOBILES NIMROD CAMP TRAILERS Marbw and SporlliiBOoedt CRUISE OUT, INC. E. Walton — OWEN^'nSS»l»PPLY 4 Orchard Laka “ " OPEN 7 DAYS-^9 to 9 SEE THE NEW 1344 MODELS FREE ffiuVE?Y-FRB^SBT-UI WE GUARANTEE A PARKING SPACE. Largo i —--------— miOLAND TRAILER SALES 2257 DIXia Hwy. 3304772 ana bkidi north of Tatograpb Oxford Troiler Sales 1344 MODELS, IS to 40 ft„ S-IO-13-33 I travel unity. Alae good i lift. Wa guarantoa tepnor tp Wa hove no glmmlckt. Jutf yaart of good marchanditing 1400 aatlilM cuttomert. Open 3-3, eloiad Sunday trallart, FE 54301. Rent Tri^ Space ____________ DON'T RENT, BUY, PONTIAC 33 min. 45'xl30' lot, Maefctappad, gaa, camplato aalup. $40 manNi. OR 3-I2W.__________________________ CLOSE-OUT SALE OF 19oSs LONE STARS-GLASSTONS and MFG BOATS tolneR roe^fw'eur''new thowroom — now hi eontlrudlenl Cliff Dreyer Gun and Seorit Canter I5»3 Hally Rd.. Hdly MR 44771 -Open Dally and Sundai^ CORRECT CRAFT FIbarglat In boar- ~ prlcadfrom 02435. lhaaa quality boata oi OAKUND MARINE "'Varyyo.sun.'tiH?.!^.^”' DAWSON'S SPECIALS-END47F-SEASON CLEARANCEI! 23 par cant ditcount an all II— flbi''Tt* *ouibMi7*^'\wMl7 outboard mod ' ------ Mlrro Croft alt....------ clal prkot on Grumman conoot and KayoO pontoon ralh. Taka M33 to W. Highland. RlWif on HIdwry RMgo Rd. to Damoda Rd. lift and follow aignt to OAW-$ON'$ SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE. Phono MAbi 3-2173,____ DON'T TAKE CHANCES We Don't! Inside—ST ORAGE-Outside Ba raa$r*^’Eariylpflng HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS "Your R\ 13N S. To'-- frEe H. Motert, Lake Orhin. WE BUY Late Model Cars TOP PRICES CASH WAITING Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 siTciSfsas 1 OR IE J U M K caEs - trU6EI Irw tow onythno. FE 42444. —all Kk cAi«---------- - bAtrWRilA' iC % rani Used Aete-Track Ports 1U2 2 CORVETTE MARDTOPS, 1 PIT| . 13141^ J. lilt J343-I34I. Rbil't, * r STEP'SIDE BOX ^F 6hEvY to-ton truck. Maka aftor. Call 40. ifr*^EL’'iArt,'66u*LI i whaolor rail chotiM, auRobla tor apofta tar. 2541 Judab Rd.__ 313 raNTIAC ENGINB, STANDARD trona. wHh lloor ahlll ---- tor, 3153, PB 54433. '353 FORD MOTOR A— .. malic trana. 340. FE 54371. CHEVY CHROME \mElLS, COM-Plata, 375. A-l. 133 OtomuoA CHEVROLET PARTS. *Et 6F 4 chromprtvariad 14" wbasto. 1345 Alum. hjglHl34 manHlto and Hally Quad, m Cartar Alum, tour borral Sun 5 Grand taA. Rtatendkia. Exc. cenditlen. «a^7B CHEVY • PORO-COMiY t2r''ina5n.;?!:."‘oS low pricid. 53MII7. OLDS 1351 MOTOR PITS t3S4l344l 1353 Pord V-l, 1351 4cyllndtr mo- -tort. Complato front md tor 1357 OMa. 1357 Bukk and Pontldc mo-tort. LEE ___________________PE S-8344 NO equipment f6r a f. PES^— RAC PICKUPS, 375 EACH, 4IM m, Oraytam^ Plantjan. Model Truck CloseOut $avs $400 to $500 on All Remaining Roncheros-Econo-Vans Jahn McAuHffa Pard 1344 TRIUMPH TR4, GOOD CON- 1344 HONDA 353 ICRAMGLER 1344 YAMAHA 33, LIKE NEW. STti er beat eltor. 343-7334.________ 1344 HONDA 333CC, CALL EEFORE 3. FE 45133. ' riSIT THE BENEDICTINE OR-chardt. Apptat, cidar, peart. Lo-catod al llw Graan Bam at Laka Gaorga Rd., and Slonay Crddk Rd. 12 mllat north of Pontiac. Applat. par buehoL S3. RED TAG SALE ALL PRICES SLASHED FOR END OF SEASON Out They Go CENTURY-SAGE GARWAY-TRAVELMASTER CC, LIKE NEW -4,000 miioa, uxtroa. PE S4B41, 4* 1341'HONDA I5i 1JSS~MITES~ WANTED. IXB4 HERCULES ENGINE FOR BULL DOHR. MUST BE IN GOOD CONDITION. CALL 626-2621 EVE-NINGS, 7-9 P.M. SELLING camping TRAILERS NIMROD NOW ON DISPLAY IMMEDIATE OELIVttY CRUISE OUT, INC CULLY 1SIVX71V IWO dlnotM, 003 Wto Otoe ref. Jacka. Wai $im UOM, SI,73S. CULLY lOMKra" aWa dkiatta, all naw tor 1344. tSwoll aroaturo wo-tar, all taNkontotnadr Woa StS3S NOW 32,11#. Holly Trovtl Cooch, Inc. *”* *■- Nelly IHE 44771 and ilaapdrd, Naw and utod 3335 up. Alao romoto. Jacka, Intoicema, We Proudly Introduce for the First Time in Thh Area BOLES AERO A Most Luxorious Travel Trailer Aircraft Construction BOLES AERO For PeoplR Who Love Corovoning-Wont Luxury DISFLAVEO NOW AT JACOBSON °^W.OR3-H34. - HONDA 33 FOR 3ALE. TAxd OvIM paymaMt. UL MB34._ K & W CYCLE YAMAHA SUZUKI omega and WHITE BIG BAD BULTACO LIL' INDIAN MINI BIKES CUSTOM COLOR 333 W. MONTCALM SUZUKI 337 • UL|^ TRIUMPH 1341, 413 Cd. NiUSt IlLL _____Ml 43710 You Meet the Nicest People On A HONDA WORLD'S LARGEST SELLER MOTORcmSa' W STOCK PRICES START AT $215, F.O.B. A^MHWl^WIAaoVT TEAIL- 14* lAPtTRAKi Wlt'M~gdiiiiviyf- SSbl iSl kMaaimvG G. aia^ Inside Boot Storage MOTOR REPAIR ■OAT REPINISHING-EEPAIR Aak for EARL ar DALE Wide Track Auto Croft 1313 W. WWa Track PE I-13II OWENS ■ CRUISERS Models on Display 24' to 42' TRADE NOW PALL DISCOUNTS WALT MAZUREK'S LAKE & SEA MARINA Woodward at t Blvd. PB 43537 PINTER'S STARCRtFT 1334 BOATS ON DISPLAYI Tra4t Naw - Wa Pkiam 1373 ppdyiis ppan Tuat. Tburt. Itll (l-75al Oaktoiad Univartlly ExH) SAILBOAT 17-POOT PLEET WIND (Jr. LWrinbig) Trallar. 3713. 333- MILBOAT, ir PIEEROLAI, 6 ****' * 1353 CHEVY PICKUP, RUNS OODO. 3125. 343-7M3. fm'PoKb'T-ttT BUMP, T is I Vb. box, V3 angina, Aapstd trbnamla-alan, 3-tpasd axia. Goad rubbofV ^a citani Sava. JEROME FORD, Rodiattor FORD Oaalar, OL l-fTII.______________________ 1355 Ib-TON OMC ^ickUF. E~ nau^ ovartiutod, tif*. Ci 1355 INTERNATIONAL k-173 STAKE - "14 OMC alaka, both In a 1357 OOOOe V-3, M-tON PiCKUT, good ccndHIen. 3143341._____ : I3ia INTiRNAtidNAL Fl(kUF -'*-td cendWIon, 1430. m Ml. CMm- DM You Knowt VILLAGE RAMBLER Ftyt mere tor ANY maka utid « CnM lor ApgraiMl. 444 3. Woodward EXTRA EXTRA Dollors Poid FOR THAT EXTRA Shorp Car "Cbd^ Iha rMt, than gal ba beat" tl Averill HELP! Wa need 300 than Cadllltet, Fon-llact, OMa and Bukka tor eul^ •tala market. Top dellar ptM. MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 1104 Baldwin Avd. FaM for 1353-1345 tan VAN'S AUTO SALES •-WH uanu (-Ana GLENN'S daiWiL 4tl OAKUlNDi^NUB W43 WW \b-t6*i Pick UP, cuttom cab, now "— —- —■" llan. 3434434. 1343 F 0 R D BCONOLiNE B U S -Goad abaat. OR 34473. 1313 FORD F-153 34TDN PltKIg, ar tpaclal), V3 tngins, automalk, radle, hsator. Low mllaaiia. Ford Company TruckI Sava. JEROME. FORD, Rachatlar FORD Dealer, OL 1-3711. Hai omC >i(i¥0it 4UW6M m. 1964 Ford l^ickup Superior Rambler 530 Oakland Ava._FE 54431 i3a~efliw vaw, "wvLiNbi* paaatngtr aaat, 3jN0 mllaa, iNw naw liiiavihevtl 51,535. JEROME FORD, Rochattor FORD Oaalar, OL 1-3711._______ Jx'i,ssr ifts AVAILABLE -4rand Naw- 1966 GMC ss lighS." $1845 GMC K THE l»ONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1965 W Mtw Mrf Ui^ Cm It Ntw wrf llM< Cm 1M Nmv Mi IM On 1MMARMABUKE FISCHER BUICK 544 S. Woodward 647 5600 Repossession yy BUICK Hardtop. Miwt llqHl- Attention Plumbtri-ElKtricioni . ond TV Rtpolr Mon 1963 Ford F-2S0 %*Ton - ”‘$1295 BEATTIE lAJ iVlV'llMraV RMvWV IW ^UTO INSURANCE nRMS AVAIUBLE •TOP IN TODAY Andonon 5 Auociatos FE 4^535 1044 Jotlyn WUMMEH AGENCY ON 0U( "mSw *bI1 lUICK I..... .. ..... hardtop, olrKiondltlOMd, 1 owner, Attentionl 1962 Chevy Bol Air 4-Door t poownpor wMon, arctic whito tln-lan, radto, haator, powarpIMa, , $1195 ilfICA Ay* Cr^Mt Mmmm i ** lala" &.^'3SSL tSIHd oW Ilka a good uaad car. lura apol dallvary. FE 37863 sris! VAN CAMP CHEVY MILFOND _____________MU 410 wB~Tiivniiftr- LiKB*ir■» Chroma whaala. W,»S. OL MM. 1*^ CADILLAC HBAilKlir 00 AM-tol^. Naw llraa. Makaa Maal atatlon wagon. 33$-»»._____ iM CADILLAC, OXCBLLONT CON- _______^3-1291___________ Ipy CHlW IMFALA dONVIRT-Ma, maroon with Mack trim, I ownar, low ml„ axcallant pondl* tion, WIW. FI MB«7._____ t COR VAIN MONZA I MTOMATIC TRANh-lON, RADIO AND TER, WHITEWALL $, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Faymanta 0^ M.tl par waak. CALL STharold turn^Ir ford Ml Arm. . ____Tport harS - ------i', s'iiMA Pvt. •> Ittt CHEVY ItitPALA CONVEIlTi-I bla, V4. whitowalla. f14». FE ^ ^__________ is; 1962 CHEVY II H^^!?ta&i,'?arwr!a thia car It almoat Ilka naw with Nnr Md Utod Cm 111 mi MERCI aharpl**nl RochaHar ;m. jeromeforK- FORP Paator, OL lATIt $197 SPECIALS II la choeaa tram, axcaltont Irana-partatton, your ctiMea tor no monay down, waakiy paymanto only lur. Wa handia and ar^ rat^^all financino. Call Mr. 84071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM Jutt oait ot Oakland im^coMET'iooOR, sa acVl-h^, automatic huckat aaata, r» dia, haator. axtra claan, only tIOOS. J^te^^^ochawar FORD i*« COMET Ab66i7~powSIr Mick, laulham Indiana car, "to*. « E. Bay mt ^RCURY MONTCLAIR /MA-raudar, ).door hardtop, dauMa paw- Itsii 'mi 9lDS. . A-j^^CONPITION. LOOKI THIRTY-ONE iMdUMdCm IMNEwndUMdCOT 1W BARRACUDA V4 BNOINE, , m mltoc Iota at axtraa. ExcaP ^ oondmon. Taka o*ar payr- mrm or FE MBPS. I PlymoMha, Domwa - I1f.w up INI and im Pantlaca - Baroalna ■.......... Cara PM - • ^ biKTIwy. W COUM IPSr PONTIAC IMP CATALINA PONTIAC CON-vartnia, naw tlraa, naw lop. Call aftor S, MA AMU. ___________ MUST SELL. INS PONTlAC CATA- takaa. FE Bdrra attar L lm pontiaT^da^ INO bonTievillr convertible, Away pawar,---- ------- FE I^.WI .OAKWND MOTEU CADILUCS Larpa Salacllen Alwayt On DItplay WILSON Pontiac-Codilloc . I block aauth of IS Mila Birmingham *" ' 1964 Chevy Biscoyne 2-Door wHh arctic wtilta finith, radio, haal ar, aniy— $1595 BEATTIE "You knocked, I presume?" Now EHd UsmI Cm 106 NEED A SECOND CART IMP FORD naw motor, good running eon-.ITMPtS. ITM FORD, AUTOMATIC, ACYLIN- ■—r, OR t-aw._____________ TRANSPORTATION, ItSt I, VI, avtov naw baitary and 1 , sas, Pi P414S attar S;S0. I. Attar 1 pjn„ as- < Ty, SS1-O0W. ________________ and S3.M par a IH2 CHEVY 11 CONVBRTIBLi, .tX-I caiiant ahapa, naw tlraa, brakaa, ' muWlar, boat ottor. SSAdTII. ' ITM CORVAtR MONZA ADOOR. i ItPT FORD GALAXIE TWO-DOOR hardtop, pawar ataarlng and powar brakaa. Oood condition. Con bo toon iftor S p.m. 32SI. 31i» Brook-nool. Union Liko. SSAfsn._ Repossession INO ENOLIIH FORD ANOLIA, N. monay down. III par month. OAKLAND CHRYSLER-FLYMOUTH m Oakland Aua. ----- M vw.'ifitwTiRRt. kAblp~AHB » heator, ancailant cant. $HB. FE iUlW(l>6^;ilA6i0; WHtT». walla. Ooad candttlan. Mual aall. STA3SIB.______________________ Ins AkiitiM44iAi,dY, model mo Mark II. radto, hddW, whito tMa walla, udra who ' ------------ PMmliaa.OL FE 84071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM CADILLAC s4DAN~DBVlLLi. '^toor hardtop, lull power, at—‘ n condition, PW5. 315-3314. SSS^I INS CORVAIR, OOOD AOttMiMO 1 wdltlon, SSS-SiM, OR WISO. 1962 Chevy Impolo door hordtop, vi otandard Nana- f ilulon, haatar, r-"" ' CHEVY 1PM IMPALA POUR«OOR hardtop, too h-p., powar, tintad ^IN*,,^PM radio, privato, Sl,t00 INO T-BIRD I j. INO FORD STATION WAGON A PASSENGER MODEL, AUTOIMATIC • waaw waa ias »mw VMWimil WW. alCKVIVIB 1961 Chevy Wagon forcl Roenaaiar pord oaaiar. Str- Crissmon Chevrolet (On Top of South Hill) ROCHESTER____________OL AT7S1 IfSZ CHEVROLET BIBCAYNE A tt>5 t...... .... DODGE, Birmingham. » mllet. Ml AW11._________ POWER STEERING, VERY CLEAN, A GOOD DRIVER, $4T5. VILLAGE RAMBLER, 444 S. WOODWARD “ BIRMINGHAM. Ml ASNO. AlWrar*OL*l- oKlandchryiler-plymouth yi4 0--- ■ ----- Strvici on Ail Imports I PACrORY TRAINED MECHANICS PARTS POR ANY POREION CAR Aulhertasd Daalar tor MG, : hutlln Haaly, iwitdam. Plat, Morgan ’ Aik Per At - PE AfZII Grimaldi Imported Cor Co. •r, aharp. Only ISTmi tctm** 1T43~ IMPALA ADOOR HAROTAK all axtraa, vary clean. Boat oHar over Sim. 4PS-14SS.________ CORVETTE INI. CONVBRTIBLE- Itai CHEVY s, station wagon. —■am_____________ ■ I CONVERTIBLE, HARDTOP WITH I; INO FORD ADOOR GALAXIE, RA- INS FALCON, DAAAAGED BACK ■ and. MSmi._______________ INO FORD AaNCH WAGON. STICK, sassra Superior Rambler I Oakland Ava. FI 5A42I! - .... )n your naw or uaad P *^KEEG0 PONTIAC SALES & SERVICE 682-3400 CREDI’T'chevrolets 1959 CHEVROLETS I Air Adoor tadan. Coral and ry llnith, Vd, powarglldt I Ml 1960 CHEVROLETS I Air Adoor aadan. LMil groan ih matching trim, ^Iwdar, ontoWS,' NORTHW PATTERSON ROCHESTER Chrysler—Plymouth Imperial-Valiant W1 N. Main ru !-•«“ INI CHRYSLER •harp# CAOILLACp MOOftd HARDTO^d Orj^CH-RYrER*!i>LrhM- ------ yiis L 4U- 714 Oakland Aya,___________________ CADILLAC, 1N4 AOOOR HARDTOP, ------------Id, Away aaat, I radio, am HI DODGE STATION WAGON, A INI DODGE 44B STATION WAGON. VS, automat tc, t iRTHWOOD AUTO SALES ___________FE AW3P MUST DISPOSE OF INI FALCON INI FALCON ADOOR SEDAN WITH STICK SHIFT TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Paymantt only SS.ys ptr weak. CALL CREDIT MGR Mr. Parka at HAROLD TURNER FORD. ___Ml Aim. _ INI FALCON WAGON, OWNER - Geed motor, S3S0. FE nm.____ INI FALCON ADOOR WAGON, Automatic, S4N or beat ottor. 447- MM. _______________ INI FOkO, BAD MOTOR, SHA4^ S32S. ia» Ford, bad motor, I body, S75. OA S-31SA Pot with S1SS doaan. f Volkswagen Center GLENN'S Sr bitortor. Mack top, V-l, INS CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE, FULL POWER, FACTORY AIR-CONOITIONINO, WHITE WITH BLACK INTERIOR. L. C. Willioms, Salesman 1961 CHEVROLETS Nomad tiallon wagon. Botga Iona finlih, V-l, automatic, p ataarlng ........... I 1962 CHEVROLETS IfjB DOW^^^^NCER DODGe!'^ Birmingham; im DODGE DART OT, BUClOtt Only tats. Rodiaator F It cand. .. SIAN ksi CHEVY, Ai^R, m. im w flh- Ford, Sdear. SIM. Call attor 4 pan. . ItSS CHEVV, ltS7 ENGINE, OOOD tranap., batl attor, Tm Hai^g KESSLER'S DODGE CARS AND TRUCKS Salaa and Sarvioa SQUIRE APASSENGER STATION WAOOI^ WITH FULL POWER, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, R A DIO and HEATER, WHITE-WALL TIRES, ABSOLU” LY NO MONEY DOWN, F CALL CRfeoTr* hSgR.'*'-... grFV6.iKrj«8£^“"''- l«41 FORD'CONVERTIBLE - NO Rd. naar Union Laka. Sal. attor- olWa, I Ml Ad Imto apart aodton. Block wllh m JmrtS’ 'T?"^'s1!S5 itsr tHM^Y HMbrdK U Aut6. 1963 CHEVROLETS polo apert < h matching INI vw tunreel with bonutHul mhiN fbilih. RoBlo, whNowoll tlraa S fN Aujtobahn Motors, Inc. AUTHORIZED VW DEALER Vb mllo north ot Mlraclo MIM 174S S. Totogrogh FE P4W SPORTS CARS GALORE ptSTSTgaNtoetjeTot IMMED'lATB'^DeUVERY Aulherliod Dotlor Grimaldi Imported Cor Co. BN Qpklond Avo. _n _____ ______ hooter, SISS. OA HSS4, F. Flenlpan._____ SSO SFECIAU l«57 CHEVY WITH ttSS MOTOR, S-apa«4 floor ahm,__g^ fllS Oarland. 4SHm. IN - baSSI^auto. „ ■ »M CORVETTE, TWO TOP*. iX- »St CORVkTTE 127 CUBlO INCH, Aapaad, 4M paal-traellen. ■--* -* W tHtvr'gf stMW;i 6W»lf. Tol-Huron Auto I. Huron_______FE SM7I Repossession 1N3 DODGE "MO" Full power, |uat ralaaaad (or public aow. No M ntidadi Payrnwita of |uat S1147 woikly. Call Mr. Caah at I3P4SH. '1964 DODGE A aptondld Dart Adoor aodon. Aulo-mnlc tranamlulon, radio, hoator. II,IN mllot. Full remaining flva-yaar S0,000 mile factory warranty. SI45JS down or your DECENT old-ar car. SS2.40 a month. BIRMINGHAM Chrysler—Plynwuth .14 S. Woodward Ml 7-«14 , 1(45 bOTO^^OHyb^ FULL ROW- 1. HUNTER GOOGE, Blrmlng- 1964 CHEVROLETS fTivw. prionT rwQ iirv I Ifittrlof and whlta Wttf ^ Mow uuj Und Cm WM BUICK ADOOR, GOOD I_____ IM. INI Ruby Mt Craeka Rd., batwoan Auburn and Se. ilvil. TtiS iUICK CBNtURY, GOdb ---------a llraa, OR »sfa. 1(M CORVAIR Ursa, bi sru*__________ _____ "WaTTulcTc I® WI FINANCI BANK RATES. LUCKY AUTO' MUST DISPOSE OF tM iUICk ilac- ---r- — --- Shop Sunday Buy Moneday OLIVER BUICK 71 mlMa par oallen. radio, haator, automatic, no ryal, .. eooa cart. Haw ifcttMMSL^Irla --laf at Cam- , att Stoath-rSpjn. IN* CrtlvY'dSH^fctllLi, YEL-tow with groan top, car runa axcallant. FuTi priea si SIH wHh no Slallen wagon wllh tlkk ahltt, radio ondhootor. only S4.M down and UM ptr mak. wo handle and orrsnM all tmanclng. Call Mr. Dan ah FE 84071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM Just aoat at Oakland 1961 Chevy Biscoyne 2-Door wHh arctic whito fkilah, aconom 4-mllndar snilnt, ram, haatoi ■■$795 BEATTIE ON DIXIE 4 1965 CHEVROLETS Impel* canvarllM*. Storra tan matching trim and lop. S17 an PowarglMa, powar *to*rlng,„p brakaa, radio, haator, uMItk CORVAIRS INI Cervair IM aodon. Light tor-quolaa finlah. Foworglldo, radio, haator, whitowoll tiro* ... S 7(1 1N4 ipMar Convortlblo. Sllvor fln-tsh with Mack trim, Turbo-chorgad, Atpadd, radio, hoator, whitowall llrM ......... Sldfl INS Coras hardtop. Glador 140 anglrw, Aapaad, ra^ h iy*x Neva station wagon. Autumn geld wllh matching trim, a-eylbi-oor, Fewarglldo, (wwor stoarliig, -radio, haotar and^ iharg SIAM f INI Novo convortlblo. Agua finlah wllh motohlng trim ond whito SiSwi CORVEHES Cenvwllbto with two toga. Turquolao and ailvsr Hnlsh, S-agsdd, radio, haator, whitowalla ’ SIAM 1^ Hardtop. While flntoh with oopauw raoi*, naarar. amn^ PATTERSON CNEVROUT CO. itS4 4. WBidWPrd Aw. Ml •IRMIIIGMAM RUSS lOHNSON Pontioc-Rombler USED CAR STRIP l*MPORD Adoor ... SI 1N4 PONTIAC Hardtop . S7.3 KM CHEVY »doot ... SI IN4 PONTIAC Cotollna Adoor St4(S 1(44 RENAULT Adr. aadan KM JEEP fickup . K41 PONTIAC Hardtop . PONTIAC Hardtop . S7,KJ 1*41 PORD Oalaxi* T-doof ’jO* K43 PORD OalaxI* Sdoer ... SI.TM K41PORD Palrlan* IM .... Sl.StS 1(43 CHEVY BIscayn* Adoor SUMS K47 RAMBLER Adoor .... S1ASS K4S PONTIAC Catalina . tIAfS RUSS JOHNSON Pontlac-Rambiar MM In Laka Orion MY 3-6266 1(43 Ford Oalaxfa 7-door with automitic Irantmltalon, radio, heator, powar ataarlng, will b* aoW tor bslanc* du* of (744.M Bwod^t * 10 r • ® a ■'state wide AUTO 3400 Elizabeth Lake Rd. Just fast ot Cass Lsk* Road 1N7 FORD GALAXIE SMXL, 3N angina, auto., double powar, Kir's Boats and Motors, 404 W. Clarka-ton Rd., Lako Orion. MY H400. 1962 Ford Golaxie 2-Ooor Sadan, with a blue finish, VI angina, radio, hoator, automatic Irana mlaslon,pow*rat**rlnB,only— $995 BEATTIE FALCON DELUXE, INI ADOOR, auto., plus snow tlraa, no rust. S7I5. 44AS777.___________ M' FALCON ADOOR A^YLINDEA, altek shift, radio, haator, axtra clean. IKS. JEROME-FERGUSON Inc^^Rochastor FORD Daalar. OL NEED TRANSPORTATION? n tranaperlatlan cars to choos* from, 1H7 through 1N3, prierd from 147. W# hav# a ear to fit your noM. No money down, small weakly paymanto, cradli SnT’r'tiS'nc'KS!’-c.ri;^ Dan at! FE 84071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM Juit Eaat ot Oakland T-BIRD mdaau hardtop Tra ^JlSl.1._ car. S17( or aW cu. __ manta only SK.tS par walk. l,t-J INI T-BIRD, mllaa, prlvatr WYTOK HAROLD TURNER ford, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVB. JRMJNWAM___Ml A78M MUST DISPOiE OP IM FORD Conuartlbto. No monay gawn, Mw-manta at only MJ3 waakiy. CM Mr. Murphy at 3IM10I McAuIWq. MU PBM4. lMki KM Thuimrbird. Mt7 toll pric*. %‘Iin){r LUCKY AUTO W. WjdaTtwJ^ j LUCKY AUTO New er3 Used Cm 106 fb_±^"1^ 1964 Falcon VI Mustang angina, naw-car wi ranty, only SU4H. Superior Rambler so Oakland Av*;_ tEPO$SE$Sl6tA-1N4 FORD WITn !?A7":sa;to*si. FE 8A101. McAulWt*._ ’ REPOSSESSION - INS OLDSMO-bll* hardtop, no money down, pay-manta at I7J7 aaaakfy. Call Mr. ------------e 54101. McAullfto. 1960 OLDS I Adoor hardtop wllh radio an haatar, powar brakaa, pewi ataarlng. Mack finish with ra Inttrlor, onaownar, driv* geed. BILL SMITH USED CARS 462 N. Perry FE 44241 HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. ’ BIRMINGHAM_Ml A7SM 1445 MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE -showroom condition, V-S «rlth- Oldsmobiles *suliuwAN“" oms’' 83 W. Weodward 447-1111 INI SUPER 00 ADOOR HARDTOP lew mlliaga, vary sharp. MA A7414 N1 STARFIRE CONVERTIBLE, vy^geed eondltlan, saso. FE MUST DlfPOSe OF 1*47 OLDS "N" Coup*. No manay down, pay—‘ of MJ3 waakiy. Call Mr. M at S7S4I01. McAullfto.__________ IMS MUSTANG, FROM CALIFOR-nis. Rad eonvartibl* wir top, 7M CruisoO-MatIc wl top. Boat ottor. OR M04A_______ INS^ FORD ^OOOR^ V4,_AUT0- INS MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE, (I straight slkk. Hits fuirprlca, t$ NO PROBLEM, ___(HK RATES. LUCKY AUTO TAKE OVER FAYMI 1IKS?S K43 N OLD'S, ALL POWaR. SI7M ')pdyka Hardwar*____PE S44N N3 OLDS CO NVERTIBLE, toodad, rNl sharp, prlvata, ownar. 47AII44. __________ COM' 'N AND TEST DRIVE THE "HOT" AA7 lEROME OLDS-CADILLAC K43 OLmImS ADOOR, ^station ww. Apaaiat^r, VI, powar OA?LA'l}b'!HiiYSLER-PLYMOUTH 774 Oakland Ava.______^ISO OLD^ I^HARDTOP, DjYNAMIC M d*lux*'***cw*i!'^ original' owner! S7,7t5. Call 33A7344._ hardtop, automatic, powar brakaa and ataarlng. S7,ttS. 3304344. 1N4 OLDS F-aS STATION WAGON powar. SUMO. FE M44i.____ BY OWNER, K4S OLDS AOOOR Pretty Ponies 1965 Mustangs 7 USED MUSTANGS TO CHOOSE FROM CONVERTIBLES HARDTOPS 2 Plus 2'$ FULL EQUIPMENT As Low As $79 Down HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml A7SS0 MUST SELL, INS MUSTANG CON-vartlbla, 3M cu. In« SIS h.p., A spaed, many ox*--'-- feSOO. 345dm. ’ aoSl'^' (SS PLYMOUTH APASSENGER wagon Sport Suburban, whitowalla, tuir powar, tinted gl*- ^ * ton* rad and white, lira*. S7SIL OR 3-7»0l._____ km~PEym5uth wagon, feCit ------—“ FK ^7*43 br" — KM PLYMOUTH STATION Wi V-l. auto, $100. 143-7175. _ ItM PLY*40UfH^4>OOR, t 1*40 VALIANT S4700R « '"»r shut, radio, haatar, wr Ills, only-$1*r WE FINANCE King Auto l*4S GALAXIE SOS. ADOOR, V-S, auto., power ataarlng and bralM*, radio, whitowall*. privato. ISS-HS4. «l haator, vs, powar stoar-■■•v, v,,J toll price. OAKUNO CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 774 Oakland Aua._______T^tSS CONVERTIBLE 1*43 RED PLYM-‘ ndltlon, SUMO. OR 1966 JEEPS WAOONS-TRUCKS-UHIVRRSALS Ready Per Immadlat* Dallvary As Pontiac's now and only JEEP daalar, w* Invito you to atop In to as* and drive Ih* naw JEEP f .TV BY OWNER, 1*4S SPORTS FURY 3S3, 3-ip**d, axcallant condition, call OR 507*3 or 335-90M. t*43 VALIANT SIONEt 3M CON- jr' Superior Rambler LYMOUT^ FURY k VI, automatic, f ■tie trana-lar, whlto- Prlvato. 332-4M7. SEE US PIR$T BOB BORST LINCOLN-MBRCURY no S. Woodward Blrmlnghai MI 6-4538 K(0 MERCURY MONTErXY GOOD HAROLD TURNER tar S p.m. MA 5S441. K45 VALIANT STATION WAGON, A Ss-'w INI comet JTATION WAGON — t43.W par monttk Standard sMtl, Acylindar, ktoal sac- OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ond car, easy an oa*. Only SM — ------ dawn, S4J0 ptr araak. HUNTER DODGE, Birmingham, Ml 7-0(55. K41 MERCURY CLUB COUPE WITH FULL POWER, AUTOIMATIC TRANS-. MISSION, RADIO AND HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Paymants only S7.S4 par waak. CALL CREDIT /MGR. Mr. Parka AT: HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml A7SM. K4S BARRACUDA angina, autonwilc. .— rad vinyl trim. 45 mil**,__________ condHIonI JEROME FORD, Roch-aator FORD Daalar. OL 1-(71l. Autobahn Specials INI Dodge Meor. Baautllul li whito finlah. automatic tn mlialen, radio, naw tlm S 1N3 Pontiac Catalina cenvartibia. Sunset rad finlah, toll pea*ar, automatic transmission .. SI.44S 1N3 Plymouth Sport Fury Coupe. Pull pawar, OaWan Cammande angina, axcolltnl ctndmM ll,M Autobahn Motors, Inc. AUTHORIZED vWoBALIR * COME TO THE PONTIAC RETAIL STORE WHERE YOU EXPECT MORE ... AND GET ITI 100 Top quolity. One-owner, new cor trades to choose from 65 Mt. Clemens at WMe Track FE 3-7954 1960 PONTIAC itallna aadan with automatic tram mission, radto and haatar, whiti wall tlraa. 14.00 down and SAl par waak. W* handle and ii rang* all financing. Call Mi Dan *1: FE 84071 Capitol Auto INO PONTIAC CATALItiA, 3-OOOR, SS3S. PE 3-3307.________________ RBPOSSBUION — INI PONTIAC Na manay down, — ........ ttJOt araokly- Call Maaen, ot PE BdlOU McAulItta. Repossession ITIAC Bonnaviria hardtop, t iweoN^iuAseeo* nmuu PATTEI^. CHEVR< Ml O-TTTsT^ W. MA S-TaN.' aaaad, pealtrai die. St,m. 407-IN4 PONTIAC C trijpovnw, ^4^ BONNEVILLE SDOOR, ^ULL pawy^laan. 7AOOO mile*. StTSS. tras. all ps PE 7-37S1. V-l, stick." pawar i ------■ TiUJat. paymants only siAtS par waak. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml ATTN clSan in* grand prix, power. S7.350. PI A747I attar 5. SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK ISS Roehaalar Road _____4S1-WII____ I PONTIAC AOOOR HARDTOP, Dubl* pawar, S7.10B. 473K770. _ K44 CATALINA CONVERTIBLE, 1961 PONTIAC No Money Down We Finance --FULL PRICE $997 Tel-A-Huron AUTO SALES 60 S. Telegraph ______FE 8-9661 __ INI PONTIAC STARCHifF FOUR-door hardtop with toll powar, radio, haatar. In axcallant condition, only Ot.OO par wr ' NORTHWOOD AUTO I ______ FE 0-fXH 1N4 GTO HAROTOF, FOUR-SPEED, radio. IIJIM miles. S1.KS will ac-capt trade. 478-MW. INS MAYFAIR MAIZE, LaMANS with black cordovan top. V4 3M. GM axacuttva car. OR A4M7. K4S TEMPEST, ADOOR, ACYLIN-dar, axcallant. 01050. 47A7S4*. INS TEMPkST COUPE. ------------ pawar, 7,4u ....... StTOk 47A7S44 attor 4 p.m. INI BONNiVILLi, ALL POWER, i new tlraa. FE 4-4443. ' INI PONTIAC, ADOOR, HAROTOF, Vantura, beautiful 7-ton* finish, STICK VS, axcallant running ca-dltlon, no monay down. tfjO waak. Call Mr. Brown. ESTATE STORAGE K4S BONNEVILLE 4 top, t7,N0. FE SAW! ■47 PONTIAC bONNiVILLi. slick, trl-poivar, Kir’s Boats and Motors. 4UW. Clarfcaton Rd» r Orlen, MY A140B. GO!! HAUPT PONTIAC and Check Our Special Prices for Monday Only on All Used Cars Haupt Pontiac On N. Main Straat . INS LEMANS CONVERTIBLE - EXCEPTIONAL 1N7 PONTIAC CAT- --- apart coupe, c| -- - '.Ti;IM. 34A74I4. WARD, BIRMINGHAM, * T>962 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE power brakaa, powar at* sparkling rad finish. GET THIS SHARP LOW-MILEAGE CAR TODAY FOR $1295 BILL SMITH 642 N. Perry FE 44241 K4S BONNEVILLE AOOOR HARi-top. Feirar brakaa, ataarlng, pto* — — — Call SSA787* K47 PONTIAC, .ORANp PRIX, t{!&.^AWar*?y Ktar S pjt TIAC Ok1 sussB. as RAND'' i>RI) ONLY S37S. HERE IS JUST THE IDEAL SECOND CAR. SAVE. VILLAGE RAMBLER, 444 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINOHAM. mMti only S7.77 par w*i CALL CREDIT MOR., h Parks at HAROLD TURNI FORD, Ml 4-7SW, LUCKY AUTO Repossessed Cars OR 3-1221 ASK FOR BRUCE OR BIU _____Buckner Finance INI NASH RAMBLER, EXCELLENT - door. tSlO. 4SA3BK._ K47 RAMBLER AMBRICAli. SION, RADIO AND HEATER, WAS A MUNICIPLE CAR AND IS VER'' CLEAN, BLUE FINISH, MAKE U k BUYING OFFER. VILLA6L RAMBLER, 444 S. WOODWARD AVI., BIRMINOHAM. —----- si 1962 Rambler 1N3 FDNTIAC ORAND PRIX coup*. Bright rod with matching Intorlor. Hydramalk, power slatr-Ing and brakaa, radio, haatar, whitewalls. Extra clean. Special at St.NS. FATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1104 S. WOODWARCU 4-773S. Superior Rambler 1*41 PONTIAC CATALINA, DOUBLE EX' n'.roT ■ FE 13443.____________ RBPOSSEttlON - DON'S USED CARS SMALL AD-BIG LOT ao CARS TO CHOOSE FROM 13 Pontiac Con vartlbla, doubt* pai H K^XL** coSwarl^, daub 1*47 Inmla eonvartibl*, ilkk S. 1*47 F-U eonvartibl*, auto. S. 1*43 Ford Country Sadan. INI Clwvy stick 4, wagon. ■“1 Tampaat custom, illck S, wagon. I Pontiac AdDor. I Valiant, auto. 677 S. LAPEER RD. Lake Orion MY 2-2041 LOOKI 1*47 Ortnd Prix. S1KS toll prIc* SS down. CREDIT NO PROBLEM WE PINANCE BANK RATES. LUCKY AUTO 1963 PONTIAC II* cofivartlbto wHh toll g* automatic tranamtastM i and haator, wMtowall Hri dl* am.------- S« or eW cat only S13.M par HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC _______ RAMBLER Wagon, no monay down, paymanto at J07 waakiy. Call Mr. Mason, at M Sdieu McAulWta._ 1965 RAMBLER envartibl* wNh power ataarlng, automatic transmission, radio and haatar, whitowall tlraa. naw car warranty, |4*.W or oM car down, paymants only Sia.tS par waak. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. _ BIRMINGHAM___Ml ATMS RAMBLER l*4S V-l Station Wagon. Automallc, tim off naw car prk* . .S7,K5 VW 1*44 Special oHar .SU7»S ROSE RAMBLER "‘•agga."” WILL ACCEPT GUNS, lOSTS, MOTOaS er. aSle!lYto?ww*la AS PART DOWN PAYMEHT ON ANY NEW or USED URI BILL SPENCE 6678 Dixit Hwy. - - - mvtiiiii THliTY^TWO THE l*ONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1965 *^Canada's Version of Peace Corps Currently Has 318 Volunteers in 22 Countries m - fcnIoB of the Peace Corpe, started (our yean ago. has 111 vohBteers in 22 counties of Asia, Africa and South Ameri-ea. Galled the Canadian University Service Overseas — CUSO-> the prividdy administered or- ganizatioa hopes eventually to hsve 1,000 young people working in developing countries. ★ ★ ★ Until this year, CUSO has relied almost totally on |»-ivate sources for its finances. The Canadian government gave $500,000 toward the project this year to supplement $250,000 already raised. The government indicated It will continue to contribute to CUSO despite the fact that it is planning a similar organization of Young Canadians. “I’m sure we wUl be putting 500 workers a year into the field within a year w two," says CUSO’s secretary, William Mc-Whinney. “On a twoyear assignment basis, that will give us 1,000 before very long." Interested candidates are screened first by volunteer committees at 33 Canadian universities and then put through a final examination by a natlonH committee at CUSO headquarters in Ottawa. ★ * ★ Those accepted 200 out of more than 300 this year-under-go extensive training first in Canadk and then in the country of destination. Ihe Stress is on although this year’s mrientatian program includes a seminar in community develop- Recipient countries pay the salaries of volunteers on a local-equivalent basis and the have the final say in accepting a vol- unteer for any specific assignment. The failure rate is less than 5 per cent. w ★ ★ CUSO pays the bill for orientation, transportotion.^ 1 n s u ^ ance, some allowances and central administration. McWhinney says it works out to $1,500 to $3,000 per volunteer, compered ] with the $lS,0004i-member cost ] of the U. S. Peace Corps. Alaska has tiie largest sur-1 plus of men over women of all 1 the states. wHb a ratio of ST I per cent male to 43 per cent I ^ Oil Can Count on Us...QuaIit> Costs No Aloi-o at Soars ^NO MONEY DOWN on Anything You Buy on Credit MUM)\^ (»M.^ boys’ colorful cotton flannel Sport Shirts 4 *5 regularly $1.59 Wintei^warm cotton flannel in wonderfnl selection of bridit colon, patterni. Sisea 6-16. Boys’ Sizes 6 to 12 in. Dbl.-Knee Corduroys . . . 2/IS Boyt' Wear, Main Floor Look For Sears Other ‘*Thriltys'* in 1st Section OM cotton All-Weather men’s Coats 944 reg. $11.98 Charge It Rain or shine, you’ll look & feel your best in one of our all-weather eoats! ’Wailuible cotton fabric with lightweight lining. Choice of 4 colors in sizes 36 to 46. MONDV^ OM.^ no pbone orders, C.OeD.’s or deliveries* 'except large items auede or leather! women’s jackets Charge It j Genuine pain or suede leather in misses* siset and choice of 4 colors. They’re windproof, warm and comfortable. See the similar styles at Sears. |ll'll !l III .’i: FURNACE FILTERS, Throw-away Type Foe wann*sir heating syttenit. Ad- MON. ONLY hesive4reated fiber glau trspa duat ^ -m —a and dirt Stock op on sises 10x20x1", I <4 15x20x1", 16x20x1", 20z20xl", V or29ecach Charge It HandY AJaminnm ToasteivBroiler Sale! Toaat sandwiches, broil bamhnrgert, *®f* 9S.69 snacks right at the table. SOOwaU. Easy to 09 clean. Hurry in Monday . . . qnantitiei are limited! A PONTIAC ONLY special! ^ Electrical Department, Malm Baeement Charge It Ifir’s. Close-Out! Cambric Shades Cambric cloth keeps out heat and cold, Reg. $4.49 proteeU fnmidiingi. Room darkening -f Qw shades are vinyl coated. 3714, 4314, 4914 I ” Charge It inches x 5 or 6 ft. White & colors. DraperyiShade Dept., Main Floor MonduYl Men’s Socks in Choice of Styles Chooso fitwm new faneias and ribs in the latest pattaana and eolatu. Wide assoftmem M Oc of fafariea in impnlar arcieh typo hoaew ilLJn or 4 pr- T.S0 Charge ft Stoek up Moiiday, aave! Jfen’a Fnrwfafciwgs, Mmbt Fiear Monday! Fnll Lace Insnlated'Pses An-mUmr exterior, foam mbber inanl- 00 adan. Rubberised felt midsole. Keepa * * *^ feet warm and dry! Full siaes 6 to 12. Hurry In Monday, taval Open at 9 a.in. Sporttag Caada, Perry Su Baeemtemt Scrubber-Polishers Handaome Oyster White Finish •17 Joat any, **CHAR6E FT* at Sears Powerful enondi to briskly polish an your hard-etufiBeefloon. Semb, wax, polish with eombiiialion plaatie-backed bnuhea. Buff a high anine wi^ frit mda. High impact Cyeoke plasde hood. Heavy-duty motor. Roimd enameled handle; oiMtff switch on base. Snap4p this one4ime buy Monday! VatmmmDepartmem»,SmarrMaiHVloer lil ') MONDAY OM.N-9 lil •> Reversible Nylon Oval Braid Rngs 100% nylon snifsee is durable, easy to clean, adds warmth and charm. X1 noo Rich mdlow eolora in SlkxllVhdt aisa. 27x48", Reg. $6^9 .. 8.99 48x68", Reg.^ 14,49 .. 9.99 Fleer Cerertepi • 8ear$ eeeemdtie^ Waterproofing Basement Wall Paint, Ready-mixed 576 t-P2.88 gal. Kenmor^vWashers With Self-Cleaning Filter Open-End, Combination Craftsman Wrenches Regular $3.98 gal. 5 colors pins white In 2-gaI. PaU •188 Jnst say, **CHARGE TP* at Sears No messy mixing and no need to wet down wall* first... just open the can and begin. Use even over uncured concrete, notoets and beautifies in one application. Save $2.20! 4-Ineh Nylon Brush, Regular 18.98.................2.66 Paint Departmera, Main Batemenl Was Priced at $279.95 Monday Only Special NO MONEY DOWN, 1st Payment Feb. lit, 1966 Exclusive filter cleans itself, yonr hands never touch Itl Three-cycle timer gives you safe washing for all faMes. Super Roto-Swirl agitator, bleach dispenser, off-balanee switch. See it, buy it Mondsy and aavb 191.95. Appliance Department, Malm Baaement YOUR CHOICE...... Reg. $9.99 R $12.49 799 Modern-Style Recliner with Built-In Ottoman Jnat Sst, *HMARGE rr* nt Sesra Regnlnriy at $189,951 ,taa, black $ 88 Nineiw. opon-ondior KVpleeo combination wreneh sets. Drop forged, heat treated, hardened for strength and rests-Unce to wear. Open-end sizes 1/4x5/16 to 11/16x11/8. Combination 3/8 to 1 inch openings. Save up to $450! HatrdriareDepaulmettt, Main Floar NO MONEY DOWN on Soars Eaay Payment Pina Attraethro vinyl-covered recliner has urethane *vani rrf’**' in seat, deep-tnfted pillow bock. Three- from nprifht to full reclining. Save Mon^l FttrnUnraDapartmmrtt,Seeagdn^r '’ali^rfai'lion ;LniaranIeofl or your jiionoy Uk L’ SIyARS Mow Mlow II rmil i.H* I’I I I .■ 1171 K. X.i U.t. WMHitr ■WMU PorMatl Suimy, Cooler THE PONTIAC PRESS VOL. 123 No. 198 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. SATURDAY, SEPTK.MBKR 2.5. 19(i.5 -32 1»AGES Pontiac Area UF Goal for 1965 Is $875,000 LBJ Running War in Viet, Ford Claims Congressman Says Public and Congress Not Getting all Facts «P PhMalax EARFUL FROM RUSSIA-Arthur Goldberg, U.S. ambassador to the .U/iited Nations, hears Russian Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko denounce U.S. military presence in Viet Nam. Gromkyo demanded a military withdrawal from that Southeast Asian nation. (kieslion of Seating China on Itecord U.N. Agenda Congressman Gerald Ford told Oakland County Republicans today that neither Congress nor the public are being adequately informed about the nation’s involvement in Viet Nam and that “President Johnson is running the war.” The House minority leader made his remarks in a speech at the annual GOP ox roast at the Ivory Farm in White Lake Township. “Under present circumstances,” said Ford, “Congress Is being bypassed as far as any effective participation or decision - making is con- I Record Drive Mystery Youth Opens Oct. 14, Troy Resident Runs to Nov. 4 F. JAMES McDONAI.D Top-Echelon Post Filled at Pontiac MIAMI, Fla. (i'P)—An official of the Dade County Juvenile Court today identified a silent teen-aged boy found alone last Wednesday at Miami International Airport as Ridhard Bruce Thorne, 16, of, Troy, Mich. Intake Director Barron Shields of the Juvenile Court said he had identified Richard through conversations with relatives and neighbors. He said the boy’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Victor A. Thorne of 2435 Dalesfort, Troy, had left by car for Florida. There was no immediate information on why the boy was alone at the airport. Meanwhile, a hopeful Texas mother who flew here on the chance that Richard might be her son, missing since Sept. 1, saw ____:____ Campaign is Termed a Reflector of Need. Community Growth UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (UPD—The General Assembly end^d its first week by agreeing without dissent to debate the question of seating Red China and adopting a record 105-item agenda. The 117-member body also had before it today the policy statements of both the United States and -------- the Soviet Union, with both powers presenting JohnSOn-Bocked sleeping nuclear disarm- Poverty Fund Bill af"ent proposals. ' The General Assembly yester- Gefs Senate OK day adopted, despite Soviet ob- WASHINGTON (AP) - The Selite has overridden Republl- authorization and fi- can objections and sent Presi- "ancing of peace-keeping oper-dent Jenson a bill authorizing ations. 11,785,000,000 to combat poverty. attembly also agreed Despite strong GOP criticism debate the Communist Chl-and doubts about the program after voiced by some employing for the first Ume Cempess made available $285 million more than Johnson re- „ quCTled dent’s podium. Actually, the antipoverty money will be supplied later in The question of Tibet was put a separate appropriations bill, on the agenda by 41-26 vote, Included are funds to help a with 46 abstentions, wide variety of community ac- ★ * * tion projects originating with local organizations, to send un- Albanian Foreign Minister Be-empioyed youths to Job camps, har Shtylla urged the assembly to provide Jobs in a neighbor- to vote down the Item. He hood program for youths who ^ g t yj. remain at home and to furnish , ,. ., work on conservation projects P^hhe opinion from to adults who have been seeking policy in Viet Nam. employment for a long time. ABSTAINERS The abstainers included a 11 Communist members plus IfYance, the Scandinavian coun-^(||tries and Afro-Asians. ’ I There was no vote on the Item adopting the Irish peace-’^keeping proposal. The item iwas included in a general topic providing for a comprehen-^ slve review of all U.N. peace-I keeping operations. f Soviet Ambassador Nikolai l^'edorenko said the Soviet Union objected to the proposal be-ise it would “undermine the irers of the Security Council d of the maintenance of peace d security.” “President Johnson is running the war. 1 sincerely hope his decisions are right because the situation is very serious/’ Ford, who arrived in Michigan early today from Washington, was keynote speaker at the public outing, with Gov. George Romney and Congressman William S. Broomfield on hand for the event. BIPARTISAN PATH “Our best course lies in a bipartisan approach to foreign policy,” said Ford. “This does not mean, however, that the opposition party may not offer proposals to the administration nor criticize administration action.” Ford said that “well founded criticism helps the nation steer a surer and steadier course in foreign policy and to attain objectives without unnecessary loss or delay.” Ford noted he supports the president’s firmness against Communist aggression in “Southeast Asia or elsewhere.” Early in his speech. Ford said, “In Congress in too many states a lopsided majority on the Democrat side has created a lV4-party government.” the airport waif and turned from him in tears.’ “That’s not him,” wept Mrs. Teno Elliott after one glance. She walked away crying. Her A major, new executive post boy, Kenneth Elliott Jr., 18, dis-works manager of Pontiac appeared after registering at Motor Division — will be filled . , o. . by F. James McDonald, gen- Arl'ngton State College, eral manager of the G e n e r a 1 “There are a lot of things Motors Corp. Hydra-Matic D i- to be investigated,” Shields vision in Ypsilanti. said. Establishment of the new post ^^uld make no further and McDonald’s appointment will be effective Friday. Found Guilty in Coed Killing Life Term Mandatory in Ist-Degree Murder comment on the case. Kenneth R. Cooke of Lum was found guilty of first-degree The new nest and apooint- ^ ^ murder yesterday in the killing ment were announced ^ay Richard showed signs ^ 22-year-old Oxford Town- John Z, DeLoreaa, a GM vice of nervousness after the brief ship coed, Barbara K. Hodges, president and general man- encounter with Mrs. Elliott and An Oakland County Circuit ager of Pontiac Motor Di- was turned over to a child Court Jury of seven women and '’***®®- psychologist. Dr. David Rothen- McDonald has been general berg, manager of the Hydra-Matid DI- ★ ★ ★ vision since Dec. 1,1963. Police at Troy said Richard In his new position, McDonald . . ^ will be respoiisible tor manage- ment of all manufacturing oper- mobile accident two years ago. ations In Pontiac plants. However, a relative by mar- These responsibiUties will nage. Mrs. Gertrude Willis, include manufacture and as- blamed Richard’s silence on an sembly of Pontiac passenger jUr.ess in early childhood, cars, planning and direction of it * it purchasing, reliability and Morris said authorities there quality control. identified young Ricky from a A native of Saginaw, McDon- newspaper picture, aid graduated from General Mo- * * * tors Institute in the class of 1944. ^ Detroit woman who flew He spent his senior college Miami Tuesday on an Eastern year at Yale University in the Airljnes flight from Willow Run V-12 Navy program. ................. five men returned the verdict against the Lapeer County man after deliberating three hours. The 26-year-old unemployed factory worker show^ no emotion when jury forman Walter F. Tuck of Novi announced the decision shortly after 2 p.m. In being found guilty of the June 23 shooting Cooke will automatically spend the rest of his life in prison. The Pontiac Area United Fund goal for 1965 has been set at $875,000, it was announced today. Calvin J. Werner, this year's general campaign chairman, said the goal is seven per cent higher than last year, reflecting the growth of the community and its needs. Werner, a General Motors Corp.‘vice president and general manager of CMC Truck & Coach Division, set the 1965 UF drive kickoff for Oct. 14. The campaign will run through Nov. 4. “This is the largest goal in our history and it represents a real challenge to the civic spirit and responsibility of each individual and group,” Werner said. “Last year, the United Fund, through its 55 agencies, served 30,000 families — more than three out of every five persons in the Pontiac area,” Werner said. FULL CAPACITY “To keep these 55 agencies operating at their full capacities throughout the coming year,” he noted, "this one fund-raising effort, which is the largest charitable event of the year, must meet its goal. “I feel confident that t h e people of this area do care and this goal will be met.” The 1965 campaign, which is the 18th for the Pontiac area, will cover Brandon, Oxford, Independence, Orion, Pontiac and Waterford townships as well as the city. CALVIN J. WERNER All Quiet on Kashmir War Front Circuit Judge Frederick C. Ziem, who presided during the two-day trial, will officially pronounce sentence on Oct. 26 at 9 a.m. - JUDGE WAITED Assistant Prosecutor Patrick ' AiSrt ;ent to the Juven^^^^ ^'iver and Defense Attorney J. - . J . Conner Austin rested their cases He became manager of t h e home yesterday and identified . ,, i j „ Ddto.Ohto, plant rftoltr.! Richard as the «« who made viinL “Let’s accept this fact,” he said. “Instead of bemoaning our fate let’s get to work build--ing a record as a unified politi-cai party—one Republican party —one family of Republicans.” Ford said there was no other choice. “Unless we leave the splintering and the selfish go-ing-it alone by segments to the Democrats and become the Republican party, we will belong to a myth—a ghost of a party.” Foundry Division in 1955, and the trip, was works manager at Detroit BAGGAGE Transmission Division (now r,. .. . ^ , known as Hydra-Matic) from She said he got on the plane Dec. 1. 1956, until his appoint- astiwkyr^-haired woman ment as general manager who bought tickets at the counter just before flight time- and ------------------- carried no baggage. aem waited until yesterday morning, however, to instruct the jury. The verdict was reached less than a half-hour after the Jury had returned from a The drive is divided into four major collection divisions: industrial, commercial, wofnen’s residential and advance gifts. Heading the Industrial division will be Thomas F. Wiethorn, plant manager of Pontiac Fisher Body. James P. Dickerson will be in charge of the commercial division, and Bruce J. Annett, a Pontiac realtor, is advance gifts chairman. The women’s campaign will be headed by Mrs. William G. Wright. The Indians accused the Pakistanis last night of violating the cease-fire in the Ferozeo-pore and Sialkot sectors. Both countries threatened to retaliate. F6r the moment, India and Pakistan were dragging their feet on the United Nations call tor both governments to withdraw their troops to positions they occupied before Aug. 5, when the fighting started. SOLUTION FIRST A Pakistani government spokesman announced in Rawal-pindi that Pakistani troops would stay in their front-line postitions until the United Nations agreed on means of solving the dispute with In^iia over ownership of the Himalayan state of Kashmir. Old Gal's Cruel to Be So Cool It was the U.S. insistence — iince withdrawn — at the offset if the 19th General Assembly ‘ Russia, Prance and 10 oth-nations pay up peace-keeping laments or lose their vote led to a “do-nothing” ses- Pontiac area residents really got a cold shoulder from the ‘Old Gal’ last night as temperatures dropped to the mid-forties. Tonight and tomorrow won’t be much different, according to the weatherman. Tonight’s low is predicted between 31 and 46. Itll be the high possibly only M. reaching With the thorny item now on agenda It was believed by diplomats that the assem-rill have to discuss the ibs^nce of the question of au-Ifiorpng and financing peace-[eeping operations. Today, the weather called for a high of sunny skies. Monday' is partly sunny and cool. The low before 8 a. was 44. The mercury 60 by 1 p.m. .. bureau 66 under ’s outlook continued Before the afternoon session began, Ziem, on the request of the Jury, reexpfained the difference between first- and second-degree murder. New Poverty Chief Named .m. today was up to IDENTIHED AS TROY BOY - Authorities In Dade County, Fla., today identified this teen-ager, found alone at Miami International Airport, as Ricky Thorne, 16, of troy, who poUce say has been mute since a 1963 auto accident. He pointed out that the former is premeditated, but that under state law a killing caused during the commission of a robbery is also murder in the first degree. ADMITTED, BEATING Cooke, who is divorced, admitted to Sheriff’s detectives that he beat Miss Hodges of 545 Second with a pistol while robbing her of $1.35. He said he didn’t recall shooting the Central Michigan University Junior, but remembered hearing a muffled shot while striking her in the head with a pistol. Miss Hodges, a friend of Cooke’s for several years, was shot once in the head with a bullet from a 22-caliber pistol. On the witness stand Thursday Cooke was unable to explain' why he could remember everything before and after the shooting, but not th^ shooting itself. BASED ON INSANITY Austin, who based his defense on insanity, brought out during the trial that Cooker suffered epilepsy and that he may have had a seizure. State Job to County Man An Oakland (tounty resident, Arthur W. Saltzman of Franklin, has been appointed director of the Office of Economic Opportunity for Michigan by Gov. Romney. Saltzman, an employe of the Ford Motor Co. since 1953, has been granted a leave of absence from his position as supervisor of the management education section's education and training department. He will assume his new duties Oct. 1. The Office of Economic Opportunity has the responsibility for carrying out the state’s role in the poverty programs in Michigan. Saltzman, 30630 Woodside, is a former economics teacher at Syracuse and Wayne State universities. He currently serves on the executive board of the Industrial Relations Research Association and is a member of the Human Relations Committee of the Oakland County Board of Supervisors. ARTHUR W. SALTZMAN NEW DELHI, India - The India-Pakistan cease-fire line was reported quiet today after both countries accused each other of violating the two-day-old truce. India’s Defense Ministry reported no- major incidents from midnight yesterday to midday today along the cease-fire line, where skirmishing and Jockeying for a few more yards of ground had been under way since the “halt firing” order went into effect at dawn Thursday. Pakistan accused India of laying down an artillery barrage last night 12 miles from Lahore, Pakistan’s second largest city, and moving forward in three truce line areas. ACTIVE IN POLITICS He has been active in MichU gan politics since 1950 and wu Oakland County chairman of the Rcmmey Volunteers. Married and the father of three children, Saltzman succeeds Dr. Albert W. Brown,*who resigned to become iiraaidiat of the State University CoDage, Brockport, N.Y. t 2 mu THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 2^, 1965 South Vieilfoops Retake Coastat Province Outpost SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP). — South Vietnamese forces have recaptured an outpost overrun by Communist guerrillas in a big assault two days ago. a U.S. military sp^esman said today. IV Comimmists stormed the out|mt Thursday in the central coastal province of Binh Dinh, about 300 miles northeast of Saigon. The Viet Cong then launched a reginvental-sized assault north of Qui Nhon against a government force. The government forces met no resistance Friday when they retook the outpost, the spokesman said. Vietnamese' sources reported | 600 Communist guerrillas werej killed in the fighting although only 70 bodies were counted today. They said 500 of the dead were victims of air strikes. U.S. military authorities have not i confirmed the figure. Mmtal Health U n 11 j removing de/d One unconfirmed report from I the scene said the Viet Cong were attempting to remove their dead. Other reports said 170 bodies of Viet Cong were lying in the open. The heaviest fighting raged near the district town of Bong Son. No further contact was reported. Pilot Pfogram Given Funds Allocates Its Share MERCURY PARK LANE-Top of the 1966 equipment a new 410-cubic-lnch, 33(MH>rse-Mercury line, the Park Lane lists as standard power, V8 engine. The new Mercurys were introduced today by Ford Motor Co. Oakland County’s Community Mental Health Services Board yesterday appropriated $56,500 as its share in a pilot program to aid the mentally retarded. The board will administer the program which it will conduct jointly with the Oakland County Board of Education. Total cost of the for some 40 severely retarded youngsters over age 13 will be $111,511, with the school system paying $70,000. The county school system presently provides training for trainable and severely retarded children 6 to 13. A center for the new training program has not yet been designated. OTHER SERVICES Besides services for the retarded youngsters, counselling, casework therapy and group therapy will also be available to their parents. Results of the pilot program will determine whether expansion of this type training is warranted. I by Dr. Robert E. Walden, psychiatrist-director of the Mental Health Services Board, the program’s philosophy met some opposition yesterday. * w ♦ Standford Wallace, president of the OaM^ Association for Retarded Children, and Mrs. Ann Zuzich, education director of the organization, suggested that the school system administer the program since it is an educational function. VOICE CONCERN . They also expressed concern that the program is planned for i single center. | Viet Cong in undetermined strength penetrated a hamlet 10 miles southwest of Sa^on and blew up a school, a health clinic and an outpost. One civilian was killed and eight were wounded. The guerrillas escaped. The Communists continued to probe the defense perimeters of the U;S. Army’s 101st Airborne Brigade and 1st Cavalry Division near An Khe in the central highlands, 250 miles northeast of Saigon. CASUALTIES UGHT The guerrillas reportedly opened up with mortars and small arms fire on the 101st and inflicted light casualties. Elements of the 1st Infantry Division on patrol about 35 miles north of Saigon blasted several enemy fortifications in a sweep of tunnels and caves. ^ * w ♦ The infantrymen captured several Viet Cong documents, more than 1,000 pounds of rice and one guerrilla. Eighty-two U.S. planes blasted Communist military targets in North Viet Nam Friday. PLANE DOWNED An F4C Phantom on a strike at the Vinh Linh barracks, five miles north of the border with South Viet Nam, was downed by enemy fire, but its two crewmen eject^ and were rescued at sea. Other U.S. planes showered a however, expressed ap- million leaflets on Haiphong, North Viet Nam’s main seaport, and giant B52 bombers kept hammering at suspected Communist hideouts in South Viet Nam. preciation that a program was set in motion as the purpose of their association is to promote the advancement of the welfare of the mentally retarded. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—MosUy sunny and slighUy warmer today, high 58 to 65. Variable cloudiness turning colder tonight, with a chance of a few showers north portions. Low 38 to 46. Sunny and cooler Sunday, high 52 to 60. West to southwest winds 5 to 10 miles this morning increasing to northwest to north tonight. Monday outlook: partly sunny and cool. Ttdsr In Ponlinc Ont Yur Ag» In Pontltc Sign-Up Pace Displeases LBJ Tabs Aide to Speed Registration in South WASHINGTON (AP) - A federal civil rights official said today he will head South soon — with a mandate from President Johnson — in an effort to speed the pace of Negro voter registration. Wiley H. Branton, 41, who helped map the President’s shakeup of federal civil rights agencies, said Johnson is not satisfied with the pace of Negro registration so far. He said Johnson asked him to go to work for full, swift implementation of the Negro voting rights law which took effect Aug. 5. At the Justice Department, officials ^id Johnson has expressed no dissatisfaction with the way the new law is being enforced. ENCOURAGEMENT But some of the plans Branton sketched in an interview do not deal directly with enforcement of the law. The Negro attorney said he will seek to encourage people to turn out for registration, and talk with local officials in an effort to overcome resistance to Negro voting. As he signed the bill wiping out voter literacy tests and authorizing federal registration in much of the South, Johnson addressed a message to American Negroes; “You must renter. You must vote. And you must learn so your choice advances your interest and the interest of the nation." Branton joined the administration five months ago as executive secretary of the President’s Council on Equal Opportunity. Under the reorganization of civil rights assignments, announced Friday by the President, he will become a special assistant to Atty. Gen. Nicholas Katzenbach. The council is to be abolished. The White House said Friday Branton will be responsible for overseeing newly assigned Justice Department responsibilities .in the civil rights field. I PRIME REASON I Branton said Johnson asked him to go to work on Negro vot-! er registration. “That’s his I prime reason for asking me to go over there,” he said. “I ex-, pect to spend a great deal of time in the South in the next 1 several weeks." New Mercury Sports Changes in Styling Werther: Mostly c 4 Lowosi Tomporolurti FrMoy't TomFtroturo CNort DosMiiown Tomporolurti KOtlorod ; Ddrol Jail Ex-Area Man for Arson A former Waterford Township resident, who reportedly admitted setting fires in 13 cities, was sentenced yesterday in Minneapolis, Minn., to 15 years in prison for arson. Joseph F. Neussendorfer, 22, who resided at 2432 Denby until mid-1964. was arrest^ in February in connection with several fires in Minneapolis and St. Paul. I The fires caused an estimated $750.(XK) in damages. Neussendorfer, an ez-Air Force fire fighter, was quoted as telling authorities be also set fires in Boston, Philadel-j phia, Washington, D.C., New I Orleans and other cities. No one was hurt in the fires. Neussendorfer pleaded guilty to setting the fires in the Twin j Cities area when he appeared in Hennepin County District ’ Court on Sept. 10. The 1966 Mercury has b e e n given stylii^ changes, a new two-door hardtop roofline, new engines, a sporty S-55 series and an extended list of luxury options, it was announced today by Ford Motor Co. "We are continuing Mercury in the Lincoln ContinenUil tradition with styling changes plus ■luxury car standards,” said Paul F. Lorenz, vice president and general manager of the Lin-coln-Mercury Division. The 1966 Mercury may be seen Oct. 1 at the following area dealer showrooms: Kaveriey-Mercury, 420 Main, Rochester; Lloyd Motors, 1250 Oakland; and Bob Borst, 520 S. Woodward, Birmingham. ★ ★ ★ The Mercury features a fresh front end appearance, with new 'Cover Up' Messages Get Jeers hood, fenders, bumper, grille and lights. Rear appearance is changed with new tail lamp assemblies and rear bumper arms which increase the over-all length by two inches, to 220 inches. Two-door hardtops have a new roofline with a concave fastback blending into the rear deck. NEW FEATURES Other new styling features are revised side ornamentation; new instrument cluster, facing and trim. Mercury’s big change for a new 410-cnbic-inch engtaie, an optional 428-cnbic-inch engine, and two 396-cnbic-inch Mercury also has a new offering in the S55 twoyear-oij Academy Award-winning actress spent 10 hours in heart-lung surgery Thursday night. During the marathon operation, doctors said her heart stopped and “she was near death innumerable times. her heart stopped and “she was near death innumerable times. * a ★ “But I think she wiU m&e it. We have removed the clots from r lungs and I’m optimistic,” J her doctor, who asked not Ml be identified. She was sUII on the hospRal’s critical list. But Miss Malone is awake part of the time, responds to her name and shakes her head yes or no in response to questions, a hospital spokesman said. VESSELS PLUGGED Blood clots in Miss Malone’s legs broke earlier this week, plugging vessels carrying blood from the right side of her heart to her lungs, doctors said. Then her heart began to swell and her circulation faltered. * * « An eight-man team of physicians wheeled her into surgery at 6 p.m. Thursday. It was nearly dawn Friday when they finished. As doctors began to open her heart, she suffered a cardiac arrest and was kept alive with a heart-lung machine. Miss Malone, star of the “Peyton Place” television series, won the 1956 Academy Award for best supporting actress for her role in “Written on the wind.” Dodge Presents Its Top-of-the-Line Car Dodge Division today unVeiled i nie (foronet 440 series has a | ity of accidental opening of the its top-of-the-line car, the Coro- 'two-door hardtop, convertible,, door when the car Is in motion, net, for 1966 and estimated some: four-door sedan, six-passenger i ■ipr'app spapp 300,000 of the series would be | station wagon and nine-passen- , ® ^ I The Coronet’s usable luggage I space has been increased to produced in the coming model ger wagon. year. ‘The Coronet is a family size car,” said Byron Nichols, Dodge general manager, “and it is in the price range most people can afford.” The Coronet goes on sale Sept. 30 at the following area Spartan Dodge Inc., 855 Oak-md; Patterson of Rochester-223 N. Main, Rochester, Hunter Dodge, 339 S. Hunter, Birmingham; and Kessler’s Dodge, 10 N. Washington, Oxford. In the economical Coronet series, there are a two^loor and a four-door sedan. In the (foronet I STANDARD ENGINES The standard power plants are a 225-cubic-inch six and a 273-cubic-inch V8. Optional engines, all V$s are: 313cubic-inch with single two-barrel carboretion; Ml-cubic-inch, single two-barrel; 38S-cnbic-inch, single four-barrel; and 426-cnbic-liich, dual four-barrel. The Coronet 500 four-door sedan will have doth-and-vinyl upholstery patterned to give the “bench” seats a bucket-seat appearance. 0 * * A new inside door handle, flush with the armrests, is designed to minimize the posslbil- more than 19 cubic feet An ex: tra low trunk sill eases loading chores. Two slons ace available, one tor six-cylinder models and the other for V8s. There arq two manual transmissions — the standard three-speed column-mounted , unit and a companion (loor-mounted fou& speed with an all-new ^t mechanisni. The shift pattern features a "lockout” in reverse which is released by a trlggcr-like handle just below the shift knob, providing easier shifting into forward gears without fear of slipping into reverse. Police Probing $500 Holdup of Local Drugstore Pontiac police are investigating the holdup of a downtown drugstore yesterday afternoon by two men, one of whom was described as wielding a long butcher knife. * ★ ★ V Mrs. Harry Beasley, 67, of 45 W. Beverley, a clerk, told police two men came into Cole’s Cut Rate, 501 S. Saginaw, and ordered her to the «back of the store. The men then rifled cash registers at the front ai)d rear of the store and fled. Manager William H. Millar said at least $500 was taken. Thief Poor in Addition SEATTLE, Wash. (AP) - A thief with a cdnscienca and some difficulty in counting has turned up In Seattle. Ust week, the Colonel Theater wu robbed and the cashier said she turiiqd over $90 to the thief. w. ie ♦ Friday, the theater received an envelope. In It was $99 and this note: “Here’s the $99 I unjustly took from you. I am very ,