wrnmm * * * - -Vi. , Beginning Thursday, a bus 1H||'1''' wi" leave South Sanford at Ir-Win at im each morning, ar-SIBPPffy r,vln* #t t*1® 8ch°o1 #t ItM. The |W||i|Mt ■ retom departfrom the $ high school JUit after the S:W WHMKm dismissal. OtttQ, N. Y. (AP) ~ Five children milsing in rugged Adirondack woods. since, late Monday were found safe and In good condition today, police Bl "WUB wwiu|iii iw ivu riuwr, fi 9, Dgnlel Graves, t, Deborah ll Graves, 6, Theresa Besemer, 8, B and Joseph-Bessmer, 7,...'. PARADE PARTICIPANTS - Marchers in Detroit’s Labor Italy | parade, carry j placards while ^walking. down Woodward Avenue. Tliey gathered at Cadillac Square for an AKL’CiO- sponsored —u_J ther observed; “I leave here tired but more hopeful than when I came in; We agreed that i could do more productive | work with a fresh, start tomor- Labor Day rally id Detroit’s Cadillac Square, that “a mile separates where we are and where management is.” CSnrystar was selected as the —^We wanted-to-have a fresh outlook on this last day because there may he a long haul ahead,’’ commented ope of the Chrysler bargaihei’s. Three years ago, when GM was the strike target, announcement of an agreement came at 4 e.m., just six hours before the deadline. Earlier, Reuther said at a He told an estimated 100,000 persons that when trer left the rally he would be ready bargain around the clock for two days” if necessary to reach an agreement, Reuther , preceded ■President Johnson at the speakers plat- Schools Open Tomorrow S°ys Many in Pontiac and Waterford form and then rode out to the airport with 'himjw More than 15,000 pupils in the Public school elementary pu-Waterford Township school sys- PUs in Pontiac return to clasa-tem will return to the classroom twnorrow Mschools open tomorrow, Thursday and Frl- ThS UAW chieftain said he told ' Johnson that the two sides in negotiations are “quite a way apart and have real problems.” ^But^euther added that he Ras great hope and has seen other situations “that looked just as unpromising.” Says President Is Responsible for Arms Use 100,000 Turn Out in Detroit at Rally Held by AFL-CIO DETROIT UP) —President Johnson has taken sharp exception to Sen. Goldwater’s view that some nuclear weapons are conventional in character and could be turned over to North Atlantic Treaty Organization control. Addressing a Labor Day rally sponsored by the MMM " WORD FROM WALTER- President Johnson scans the crowd in Detroit’s Cadillac Square as he listens to United Auto Worker! President Walter Reuther. The labor leader, whose union fs involved iOey contract negotiations, shared a prominent position on the platform with other state Democrats during the President’s Labor Day address yesterday.. A teaching staff of nearly 660 ing sessions only, will be on hand to greet them. Juntor and Mnlor There will be a total ef some 527 new faces on both sides. , Of the staff, about 127 are new teachers to the Waterford School System. The anticipated enrollment calls for about 400 new pu- LANSING (AP) — There are for the 1964-05 school term. ' Imposter nursespractic- Students in grades 1-0 begin fog in Michigan, Atty. Gen. the reopening of schools tdmor- Frank Kelley charged today, row ami Thursday with morn- * * ★ pile who did not attend a Pon-tia public school last year, report Thursday for a day of or-ientatioa. The same holds true for all 7th and 10th grade pupil*. Kelley raid that since July 1 there have been eight cases started against imposters, frauds and illegal practices by women who pose as registered and licensed nurses. Dora's Winds Aim at Florida Blasts Administration AFL-CIO, Johnson raid “there is no such thing as a conventional nuclear weapon.” He said that “no president of the United States caa divest himself of the responsibility” for deciding when or if to use such weapons. CoastaI Residents Advised to Evacuate Barry ’ on Regular full-day classes tot; P *• * 1 L elementary and secondary , * * schools begin Friday. Klnder- Students in senior high school garten pupils begin regular ses-as well as junior high 7th grad- sion* on Monday, ers will attend classes tomor- ,, Based upon what he termed “these shocking facts” and queries ho made In the ease See Story, Page 10 JUNIOR HIG H The remaining junior high students will return to the classroom Thursday. Elementary school pupils, pins those attending 7th grade classes In elementary school buildings, will go back Friday. Despite some incomplete construction work, all buildings will be ready for occupancy this week. Pontiac are* pirochiat schools got under-way today with full class schedules, according to the archdiocese of Detroit. of a Livonia mag who operated for four years as a dector without a license. “There should be an immedi-„ 1 , ate transfusion of public support St. Trinity Lutheran 8 c h 0 01 and concern for state agencies pupils also began school today, regulating the healing arts," Emmanuel Christian School Kelly said, pupils, meantime, have until Thursday to register. All classes except kindergarten begin Friday at Emmanuel Christian. Kindergarten classes begin Monday. Kelley called a meeting in his office Friday to review tlta. taw enforcement problems and procedures of the agencies regulating doctors and nurses. . Pontiac public school officials NO LICENSE w w ..w . expect 4 total elementary e.n- Kelley’s concerts started when Innovations marking the start rollment of 13,385, a drop of 114 Thomas M. Novak, who oper- MIAMI, Fla. (AP)—Hurricane Dora, a monster packing winds of 125 mites an hour, pounded relentlessly toward Florida’s well-populated midsection today. Ahead «Umr* she swept the Atlantic wMjftglpg tides-crashing Wives and hu|e swells that threatened to slam ashore lata tonight and tomorrow. Residents in low-lying areas along 280 miles of coast in Florida,. Georgia and South' Carolina were advised to evacuate. Tides 10 feet above normal were forecast. The Weather Bureau said hurricane-force winds could began moaning along the shore ' ' " ' Melbourne, Fla., PHOENIX, Ari?. (APj — Sen. today by charging that the Barry Gold water launched his Johnson administration “in first presidential campaign tour effect promises to regiment our people at home and has demonstrated that It will wreck our alliances'abroad.” income (axes, linked with a drive to reduce or at least hold the line on federal expenditures. Goldwater, the Republican presidential candidate,, told the Veterans of Foreign Wars convention in Cleveland on Aug. 25 that he thought a way shbuld be found to give NATO its own stockpile of1 small, tactical nuclear weapons for use on the battlefield—arms which he said could be termed “conventional nuclear weapons.” * A 25 per cent, dive-year tax Alt'jm$>sal in his pocket, the Republican presidential norifl-nee set out from Phoenix on a campaign journey that will „ cover U cities in seven states. San Diego is hjs first stop. He believes it can be financed out of increased ‘tax revenues produced by economic expansion—and that at tfte same time, a Republican administration could balance the budget and make payments against the natfonaldebt. In a specchat Los Angeles tonight,' Goldwater will sped out the details of his tax cut program—Already sketched by RIPS JOHNSON Goldwater’s tour, opening statement said - Johnson “lists prosperity, justice'-and peace as the three parts of his pledge to the Aihericah people. But not freedom.” The Arizona senator envisions a 5 per cent annual reduction in both Individual and corporate Just south of the nation’s space center at Cape Kennedy, to Brunswick, Ga. Good Old Summertime of. classes in the Waterford sys- over 1983-64. tern will be the new data-proc- INCREASE OF 285 easing Instruction program and Secondary school enrollment the start of community-school is expected to reach 8437 this activities torn, an increase of 295. Most MATwntAiii rwrirn of the increase will come in the MATERIALS CENTER six junior high schools. Soon .fter th. school y«r 1*- Tfe util Julor high enroll-glns, the school system will re- m . n I wa, ,.7n In 1MI • M, locate its materials center from while It is projected for 4,959 - the Perrtlaa “ Lake Road to a newly renovat- ated out of a Detroit office, was charged as a practioner without a license. The Wayne County prosecutor's office today sought a warrant charging Novak with practicing medicine without a Dozens of cities and towns along the coast began buttoning up, for Dora had a striking area 450 miles across — bigger than all New England. Mercury to Hit 80s for Week Kelley said there only is one investigator tp police the 48,202 licensed nurses in'Michigan. . . . I Total enrollment is estimated Because of the “fantastic” Waterford flt 22,222 by the fourth Friday case load, Kelley raid, thTrele Township High School site. q( the new school year. investigator must work oil com- ; IM . Because of a boundary line plaints only. The materials center will be change between the two high r i thq focal point for expanded as-'achools, a but run has been sistance to both elementary and addfld for Pontta„ Northern secondary school teachers. jj|g|, School. . Hurricane winds of 75 m.p.h. or more extended outward 150 miles to the north of Dora’s calm eye and .85 miles to the south. Gales extended 350 miles north,, 150 south. WATCH POSTED A hurricane watch with gale warnings was posted from Palm (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Good-old summertime temperatures with highs in the 80s it the - weatherman's forecast for the next five days. The lows will be near 65. Temperatures will average seven degrees above the normal with high tomorrow 83 to 90. Rainfall will total about one to twortentbs of an Inch < wifo showeri likely near the weekend. Rain In the Pontiac area measured .05 of an inch yesterday,.'.', l .... ' ■’ -... .. . Winds will continue southwesterly at 8 to 18 miles per hour. r Temperatures in downtown Poritiac climbed from a low of 68 at 6 a.m. to 91 ai 2 p.m.. - , The President, in a Labor Day speech at Detroit, talked of “three of the goals which are the basis of unity — the goals of prosperity, justice and pehce.” “He should know,” Goldwater said, “and the American people should remember, that there have been prosperous slaves, that Justice can be found in a prison and that tyranny can bring peace to anyone who will surrender.”*....... -• ------— At present, NATO’s nuclear arms are under American control and could be used only by order of the President.. SIZE OF CROWD Johnson, who was seen by 100,000 people, according to police estimates, during his five-hour trip to Detroit, dwelt on the horrors of nuclear war. Hie first nuclear exchange would kill 100 million Americans and more than 100 million Russians, ho said. “And when it was over our great cities would be in ashes and our fields would be barren and our industry would be destroyed and our American dreams would be vanished,” Johnson said. ‘■Without freedom,” he added, “unity is nothing more than conformity.” ----- WEAK OR STRONG? Goldwater said Johnson’s speech “emphasizes the choice that Americans face in this, election—the choice between conformity or freedom at home and the choice between weakness or strength aboard.” Raising his voice to a shout, Johnson said, “As long as I am president, I will bend every effort to make sure' that that day never comes.” Noting ttult no nation has “loosed the atom against anoth-(Continued on Pago 2, Col, 4) Romney Sits Amid Dems at Detroit Rally Lost Children Found Okay Traffic Deaths Exceed 500 By The Associated Press, Deaths on the nation’s highways and streets over the long labor Day weekend rose past the 500 mark today, but the National Safety Council said the number of fatalities would not approach record iigures. At the latest' cdunt, traffic fatalities across the United States numbered 523. Eighteen persons wire killed in boating accidents and SAothiis Howard Pyle, president of the safety council, credited cautious driving ou the part of homeward-bound motorists with keeping the death toll behind last year’s record of 557 lives. Michigan paid a price of 21 dead in automobile traffic and two in boating mishaps for Its celebration of the Labor Day weekend. DETROIT (AP) - Republican Gov. George Romney — who once earned the nickname “Lonesome George” for showing up uninvited at a union rally in Detroit — was lonesome again yesterday. ...With the exception sf M?. wife, Lenore, Romney was the. only Republican visible on a speakers platform that held the elite of Michigan Democratic officialdom for President Johnson’s Labor Day address. The crowd, estimated by police at 100,000, was heavily dominated by workers and union members, many of them waving signs supporting John-son’s presidential candidacy. Romney rat straight-faced and apparently calm through salvo after salvo fired by Democrats and labor leaders at the Republican party, the GOP-dominated legislature and Republican presidential nominee Barry Goldwater. With Romnejf on the platform were Democratic Congressman-at-large Nell Staebler, Romney’s opponent In the gubernatorial race in November; former Gov. G. Mennen Williams, now .assistant secretary of state (Continued on Page V Coi^A) TWO 1 THE PON'JffAQ TUESDAY, SEPTEI^BEE 8; 1964 : Cloture Petition Filed in Senate ' WASHINGTON (It—Seventeen 1 senators joined today In Png ’ a petition to shut off debate in , - the Senate bsttleover the Su-; {Hme Court’s legislative xeaft * portionment decision. J The fight over tlus issue is ♦ the cjhief stumbling block to ad-' journment of Congress. Hie petition to invoke the antifilibuster rule was sub- „ mltted by Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois fhortly after the Senate convened at the end of a Labor Day recess. 1 Under the rules,1 the petition „ Will come to a vote one hour after the Senate meets on ’ Thursday. * *. ★ ★ The move, requiring a twh- • thirds majority of senators vot- Is on Agenda Official to Report on Waterford Request Pollution of Crystal Lake is ? slated for discussion at tonight’s f meeting of the Pontiac City (/Commission. [ City Engineer Joseph E. Neip-*llng will report on a request 5 from 'Waterford Township for j proper sewage, facilities to help | stop pollution of the lake on the * southwest side of the city. t Neipllng said that the town-» ship’s request is for sanitary i sewers in the remaining un-\ sewered areas of the west end * drain. » The area covered, said Neip-, ‘ ling, is south of Elisabeth Lake \ Road to two blocks south of » Huron, extending west of Tele-‘ graph for about three blocks. .'■rtr-'rr. Ah agreement in 1935, re-v drafted in 1958, allowed town-1 ship residents in this area to / connect into storm drains to get k rid of sewage. . ‘ RESULT OF THIS f : A result of this has been pol- «lution of Crystal Lake. Other business on tonight’s agenda includes a report on a junk yard problem and tabula- * tlon of bids for improvements ' in a portion of the R20 urban - renewal project. » The city has been pondering legal action against operators of ' the scrap yard, owned by Sam Allen & Son, Inc. ‘ ir ★ ★ ' Nearby residents have object-‘ ed to the noise, dust and odors . coming from the junk yard. ing, is designed to limit further debate by a group of liberal Democrats against a legislature apportionment rider to the pending $3.3-billion..foreign aid bill. CHIEF SPONSOR Dirksen is chief sponsor of. the rider, aimed at delaying for a year or more Supreme Court-ordered reapportionment of seats in both houses of state legislatures on a population basis. He wants to gain time to seek adoption of a constitutional amendment that would permit states to apportion. seats in one branch of their legislatures on a basis other Joining him in filing the clo^ ture petition were two Democratic .senators and 14 Republican senators. The total of IT was one more than is required by me'Tules. v" W .. W ★ One of the Democratic signers was Sen. James 0. Eastland of Mississippi, who long has bathed against use of the debate-limitation rule to-halt filibusters against civil rights measures. SMASH FILIBUSTER Earlier this year, for the first time in history, the Senate put the rule into effect to smash a Southern filibuster against the civil rights bill that was written into law after a months-long struggle. Dirksen conceded that the effort to muster a two-thirds majority to curb debate on the reapportionment issue might faff. Senate Democratic le ader Mike Mansfield of Montana said it appeared “very doubtful” that the cloture rule would be invoked, limiting each senator’s speaking time to one hour. In addition to Dirksen and Eastland, senators signing the cloture petition were:, A. S. Mike Monroney, D-Okla., and Republicans Gordon Allott, tSsto., Wallace F. Bennett, Utah, Frank Carlson, Kan., John Sherman Cooper, Ky., Norris Cotton, N.H., Carl T. Curtis, Neb., Hiram Fong, Hawaii, Bourke B. Hlckenlooper, Iowa, Roman L. Hruska, Neb., Lon B. Jordan, Idaho, E. L. Mechem, N.M., Jack Miller, Iowa, James B. Pearson, Kan., and Leverett Saltonstall, Mass. Nixon's Famous Dog, Checkers, Is, Dead NEW YORK W4-“Checkers,” former vice' president Richard M. Nixon’s famous dog, is dead. The black and white cocker spaniel, who gained national attention in a telecast by Nixon in 1952, was 12 years old. She was under a veterinarian’s care when she died Sunday. The Weather Full U. S. Weather Bureau Report, PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Fair and warm today, high 84 to 90. Chance of a few showers or thundershowers mostly north tonight or Wednesday. Little temperature change, low tonight 65 to 72, high Wednesday 83 to 90. Winds mostly southwesterly 8 to 18 miles. Thursday outlook: Mostly fair .and lEscsnabs 69 61 Jacksonville w ,6 or Rapidi ii (i Kernel City »e . )e | Movghton ,, 65 6* Le» Arjoelea 77 SI M ! Man,nolle . -tt t« Miami Orach S4 74 NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers and thundershowers " are expectacNo spread from the northern Rockies-to the upper ■ Lakes area tonight. Some showers are also expected from the upper Lakes into the central Plains. Temperaturas are expected to be pooler from the Pacific, northwest Into the upper Mississippi Valley. MARSHALING SUPPORT - Directly from his appearance with President Johnson in Detroit yesterday morning, Gov. Romney went to Romeo to act as grand marshal of the gala floral parade, highlight of the annual Peach Festival celebration. He walked the entire length of the parade route, waving to thousands of well-wishers and shaking hands with scores who ran into Main Street to greet “We are only halfway tack to external balance,” Dillon said. “We Cannot relax — nor do we intend to.” MORE RESOURCES _] Dillon tald the other govern nors of the International Monetary Fund at their annual conference that international trade should be promoted by expansion of the hind’s resources with increases in the reserve quotas of member nations. “Such increases,” he ’seem clearly appropriate in view of the conclusion that toe htat decade is likely to seSTa steady rise in the demand for international liquidity.” West Germany is the biggest Western trader with East |Ger-many. Total-trade both ways achieve German reunification, Rudy Sternberg of the Dominions Export Co.,- London, says his company is doing $8 million worth of business with Bast Germany add $37 million worth with other East European countries.. His exports include American tractors toWast Germany, although these numberfewer than 100 a year. -SHAVE PRICE The British buy most of East German potash exports, about 6 Drayson said the quality of East German potash is exactly the same as West German potash since bbto countries are mining it faun toe same fields. the Soviet Union’s satellite countries, toe UJSB.R. does hot dominate toe displays. The city’s fail fair is a consumer goods display: Soyiet goods definitely have improved inltta-two years, hut in style and HuUMIIoil warned thaLJUta : increases are too large, they will only tend to promote the flow of funds to a few industrialised countries, especially those in Western Europe. He urged that countries with irpUises. of payments ’ref them by boosting imports and; by “increasing the level and quality of their assistance programs,” * U.S. ADVANCE Dillon reported the United States economy is expanding in the “longest, strongest and best balanced advance of any peace-thne period in this country,” During the past fiscal year, Dillon sqid, the rate of arc of U.S. industrial production— and the economy as a whole— wad more than 8 per cent hi real terms. He sakl the gross national product increased more than $40 billion. , , j Karl Blessing, president of West Germany's Deutsche Bundesbank, criticized “creeping inflation” in the developing nations “and in some, of our neighbor countries.” He praised the United States for “more or less stabilizing its cost and price level over the last years.” YOUR MONEY MIYS MORI ON tlMpfknd FLOOR I - SHOP TONITEand WEDNESDAY - | ■ 41 HO PCRAFT 3/8-INOH I Electric Drill (•pworful 3/8 Inch drill with geared chuck) | 2Hw>»(NWOior davolopea ■ 1000 rpm. With 3-7^^ Conductor cord. tlmlfTT ' Fireplace Ensemble with Ifplf VT ' T; ,^V 4,1 "’.Xfefe; POXtlAC PKESS. ItDESDAY, ,gypTfeinm«''fc/li ThpusandsLine R oral Parade Climaxes Festival PICTURES AND STORY BY LEE OLSON *n| ROMEO—After a rainy start yealmlay, the Peach Festival profram reached a bright, col orful climax with the gala floral parade in the afternoon. Thousands of spectators lined the entire length of the parade route to watch the floats, beauty gueens, bands and costumed marchers pass in review. 1 Right behind the color guard, Gov. Romney walked at his nsnai brisk pace—waving to all and stopping occasionally to shake hands with well-wishers. t Romney was grand marshal Of the popular event. There were over 70 entries bom all over southeastern Michigan and Ontario in the parade, including, some IS floats competing for cash prizes.for workmanship, origi- nality and beauty, FIRSTPRIZE The Algonac Lions won first prize with .their entry, featuring a gold map of Michigan on a blue background titled "Water Wonderland.’1 - The RMoot high-ship with ‘ hoistable mainsail, the Santa Maria, placed secoad. It was entered by the Knights of Columbus, Detroit. Third-place honors went to the First 1$ethod 1st Church of Romeo.' It marked the 140th anniversary of the church With mbers, in Old fashioned dress, eondueting-an old-thaeJ, in step, was provided by some church service. Placing fourth and fifth were the North Hill Industries float from Romeo and the Seventh Day Adventist Church entry from Oxford, respectively. DRILL TEAM A uniformed men’s precision drill team from Maraccl Temple, Detroit, was givfin the nod as best' marching iinlt in the parade. Clowns from' Roseville cavorting down d>e street with a funny car were the best novelty group. Second-place winner was the Avondale Fire Department with its old fire engine and costumed firefighters; ~~ —~"— Music to keep the marchers * ^ JJjj 10 area high school bands, a Scottish Kiltie band from Wal-laceburg and the Detroit Edison Go. rolUope. PARADE JUDGES Parade judges wehe Laurence ’Kaiser, art teacher at Armada High School, Armada; Eleen Auvil, Romeo textile craftsman and' weaver; and Don Geismar, newcomer-tp Romeo from.-New Jersey. - > The children’s parade in the morning did not fare as well — weatherwise — as the after-aoha floral parade. ’ • The earlier, event Was three-fourths of the way through when the heavens opened and % poured, sending- paraders and spectators alike, scurrying for cover. But before, the deluge the judges had most of their work done, picking prize-winners in four categories, large small floats, walking groups and single, entries. LARGE. FLOATS First place in the large float division went to the Washington Girl Scouts for their entry with the symbolic title of “Growing Up Trees." • „ . Nine local families collaborated on the second-prise float depicting a mock political election for "Goldbrick and John water.” They were the DembowsUs, McNeils, Ar-brons, Wests, Gamelins, McLeans, Markeys, Davidsons and Kasuris. ® awarded to alker for their entry, “A Woman’s Right to Vote,” SINGLE ENTRIES "Wrong-Way Corrigan,” portrayed, by 10-year-okl Mark Engle, son of Mr. and Mrs.: Louis Engle, 114 First, Was picked best among the single, entries. Theme ef the most outstanding entry lathe walking group division was “Freedom of Worship.” The Ray Hicks and James Crary children were pUgrini en route to church followed by Indians, portrayed and Brad Washburne; * BEST FLOAT -* Judged the best float in also drew "ohs and ahs” from the crowds at ; the afternoon floral parade in Romeo Was the the Utica Lions 4th of .July parade in which | Algonac Lions entry, featuring a large gold v it was picked the top service club float, map of Michigan on a blue background. It The Hidden Valley subdivision entry, "Pursuit of Happiness,” placed third and the Cub Scouts and Boy Scouts of J’ack. and Troop 87 w?re fourth. Top honor! in the small float Children’s parade judges were Mrs. H. Paul Swayze of Meta-molra, George F, Roberts of Utica,' Lions District governor; and Laurence Kaiser, who also served in the same capacity for the floral parade. Not all of the festival parades were held an Labor Day. A part of the program Sunday evening, after the coronation of the 1964 Peach Quran Pamela Gumming, was the humorous Mummer’s Parade. ‘CONVENTION’ SCENE — One of the most outstanding floats in the Romeo Peach Festival’s children's parade yesterday morning represented “Freedom of Choice” with a mock political convention. Second-place i ner in the large float division, it was the operative effort of nine Romeo families. LAMPOON EVENTS It draw over 40 entries, all of them comic, satirical or lampooning somedocal activity or First prize in the float division went to the Romeo State Police post for its entry depicting the Peach Queen of 1932. Best walking group was a clown band, whose members are yet to be identified. i The three-day festival closed last night with a spectacular fireworks display at the Lions Community Field. - Lutheran M Honored b WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP - Rev. A. Karl Boehmke will be guest of honor at morning worship services, of th Lutheran Church of the Shepherd King Sunday. > A guest speaker will take Rev. Boehmke’s pulpit ah the pastor celebrates his 20th anniversary in the Lutheran ministry. A S p.m. social hour in the. fellowship hall of the church will highlight the occasion. * Rev. Boehmke come to the in. 1956 to establish a new ud congregation. He held worship services at the Ward 4. Eagle Elementary School until t h church was built at Middle Belt and Maple in 1958. REV. A. K. BOEHMKE Auxiliary Sets Annual Drive Almont Hospital Unit $eeks New Members ALMONT — The annual mem bershlp drive of the Women's Auxiliary of the Community Hospital will begin Sept. 15. In addition to his duties as .pastor of the church, he serves as chaplain in the Air Force Reserve at Selfridge Air Base, holding the rank of major. Rev. Boehmke is a 1944 graduate of Concordia Cojlegiate Institute in Bronxvllle, N.Y. He also holds a master of sacred theology degree from Yale Uni-, yersity. During the Korean conflict, Rev, Boehmke wasst^tioned.at Westovver Air. Force Base In Massachusetts and saw brief overseas duty as temporary chaplain to the Azores. He and his wife LaVerne have two daughters and a son. CHURCH WINNER—The 140th anniversary < of the First Methodist Church of Romeo provided inspiration for this float that placed, third in the afternoon, floral parade. All of the furniture on. the float was antique, and all of the church members wore old-fashioned TOPS IN MORNING—The Washington Girl Scouts designed and made* this predominately green and gold float with the symbolic title, “Growing Up Trees.’’ It was the'first-place winner in the large float .division in the children’s parade, which had as its theme, “Land of the Free.” -> PTA to Sponsor MeeFoirTop‘M,"ionGa*» DETROIT (AP) - The 115th AVON TOWNSHIP — The.' the school district and members j Michigan State Fair ended Stile’s School PTA. will sponsor of the school board will be intro- , . „ . ., . j? a get-acquainted meeting .Sept, duced at the meeting, beginning \ ^ run Monday wh,ch J. 17 at the school, with new teach- i at 8 p.m, I went over tee «* ml,lion mai* ers, parents and school officials | Parents also will have an oj> I in attendance for the third in the spotlight. f portunity to meet new parents J straight year and chalked up The administrative officers of«and new teachers. ' about a 175,000 profit. Noted Neurosurgeon Set to Give Almont Lecture ALMONT — A noted authority in the field of neurosurgery will deliver the fourth annual Bishop Lecture at Community Hospital Sept, 16 at 7 p. m. Hie lecturer Will be Dr. E. Stephens Gurdjian, chief of staff at Grace Hospital, head of Wayne State Neurological Services at Grace and Receiving Hospitals, Detroit. Dr. Gurdjian also is bead of the department of neurological surgery at Wayne State College of Medicine. He has written four textbooks and over 200 papers dealing with problems in Jiis field- A graduate of the University of Michigan Medical School, Dr. Gurdjian completed his internship and residency at the University Hospital. He has practiced medicine in Detroit for more than 30 years and is a member of numerous medical societies. . His subject Sep^i6 will be the "Management of Cerebral Vascular Diseases.” Teen-Agers Set Leukemia March to Raise Funds LAKE -Over 70 Union Lake area teenagers Will march against leukemia Sunday afternoon in a three-hour fundraising effort. The canvassers will be knocking on doors to collect funds for Aiding Leukemia Stricken Children (ALSAC), founded by Danny Thomas to support the Aide Research Hospital: in Memphis, Tenn. The march against the disease, which strikes mostly teenagers, will be conducted train 1 to 4 p.m. Delores Benyo of 311 Havana, a Walled Lake High School junior, is chairman of the focal drive. The kickoff date was set at the last meeting of the executive board of the organization. Proceeds from the funds will be used for two more nursing scholarships and for equip- -JBSSyi: JBure.-, addition to the hospital A practical nurse scholarship and a registered nurse scholar ship will be awarded next year. - Prospective applicants may obtain application forms from their local school principals of at the hospital. ATTENDING SCHOOLS At present, four girls from the i Almont area are attending school s leading to registered nursing, while one is attending • school for practical nurses. — -Miss Barbara Steinbrinkof Armada, who received a scholarship in 1963, recently graduated from the School of Prac* » Nursing at 81 Joseph's itel, Mount Clemens, and is nj^ meriting in n that hospital. WKC 108 N. SAGINAW FINE WKC VWCHES al SPECIAL SWINGS MENS: Waterproof, shockproof, aftt-magnetic, sweep second hand, expansion band. Stainless steel back. 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JN DRAYTON PLAINS 4474 Dixie Highway....'.,, ....OR 2-1207 & £ .£5 PONTIAC yit|iiS^rTUESDAY, SBPT-E>IBER 8, 1904 rd on Whot fo Do With Stranded Workers “We’re trying to contact MB-Itr somehow. For some reason we can't locate him.” Meantime, the workers were Being cared for through the generosity of townspeople, especial-, ly m e m b e r s of St. Margaret Mary Roman Catholic Church. They are being fed through EDMORE (UPI) - Epmore village leaders today awaited| word frbm Gov. George Romney and federal officials in the case of 430 migrant workers stranded hem When a pickle plant closed down without paying their wages. \ The' workers are. from Puerto Since then, they have had their sights set on today. But town officials have been Unable to contact company owner Isaac Miller of Buffalo, N.Y. Red Radio in fh# Way DURBAN, South Africa (UPI) —Dm cold war chilled the Antarctic today. EXPECT PAY “They (the workers) still expect to be paid tomorrow,” Ed-more Mayor Charles Mox said yesterday. “At the moment we here said, a chess mold) being played by radio between a South African Antarctic outpost and Radio Nederfend had to be Fashion News For Fall. . . Crepe Sheath Slim and chic In black acetate rayon craps with tausl trim belt. Sheath has short sleeves with high scoop neck. Fringe trim belt. Sizes 12-20, 14 Vi-22 V*. School Desegregation Uneventful MAJOR BURDEN DOeiON WOIV LIVING Resdy st • montent’s / notice, Toni Todd's double’ larit ihirt-sheeth with covered buttons. Very some, indeed, and stays that way because it's of shapeholding, hand-washable Travel Knit of "Orion". Kelly ' groan, Mack, rod, beige, royal blue. 10-20; 12K-22M. By United Press International Authorities continued an investigation today into three mysterious explosions in Southwest Mississippi. Elsewhere over the South, calmness Cannot Agree on Action Against Israel ALEXANDRIA, Egypt UB -The Arab summit conference appeared deadlocked today over ambitious And'costly military (dans against Israel. After fodr days of discussions, Arab leaders couldn’t agree on financing new armaments or on a unified military posture which would permit movement of troops from one Arab state to another. ' Before the 13 Arab states were five proposals submitted by Syria, Iraq, Lebanoa, Jordan and the United Arab Republic. The proposal from U.A.R. President Gamal Abdel Nasser was submitted last as a compromise effort. ★ ★ * The crux of the proposals, Authoritative sources indicated, was a buildup in the armed forces of Syria, Lebanon and Jordan, which along with the U.A.R. am the Arab states, bordering Israel. J reigned and school integration resumed without a hitch. 'Clvilrights workers said the explosions Involved , property owned by Negroes but apparently had nothing to do with school integration. The FBI Joined in the investigation to see if there were mur vioiatiwii of federal law. There were, no Injuries and damages were relatively minor to a grocery at Summit, a barbecue pit at Magnolia and at the home of a brick-mason who lives at Summit. Integration of the only public school at Tuskegee, Ala., went off yesterday without any signs of violence when 14 NegroesMt-tended high school classes with 89 whites. Last year, tn (he original desegregation action of Tuskegee schools, state troopers under the orders of Gov. George Wallace ringed the school and kept out 13 Negroes who had been ordered admitted. CXIMPUCTTBOYGOTT When the Negroes were finally admitted, whites staged such a complete boycott that state school officials ordered the school closed. Elsewhere: • Flint, Mich. About SO police officers were called out last night to control a gang of 300 Negro youths after the windshield of a police cruiser was broken by a rock. No arrests were made and police were un- able to give a reason for the sudden disturbance, • Farmvilfe, Va —Prince Edward County reopens its public schools today with token Integration afteh a five-year lapse and 13 years of legal maneuvering. • Montgomery, Ala. ■— Eight Nqgro students were scheduled to enter three desegregated schools here today to bring to seven tpe number ,of school systems desegregated in Alabama. • Canton, Miss. — Nineteen Negro students planned to make appearances today at the all-white, junior-senior high school here in an effort to desegregate classes. • WiiUamston, S. C. — A Negro brother and sister desegregated Palmetto High School yesterday, ending scheduled lowering of racial bars in South Carolina public schools for the year. There were no incidents and few spectators. Soys Smoking ti Risk for Pregnant Women OXFORD, England (UPI) -Mothers who smoke during pregnancy have smaller babies and double the risk of a premature birth, Scottish Prof. Sir Dugald Baird told a medical conference yesterday. ,He said babies bom to smoking mothers average six ounces smaller than those bom to non-smokers. INTRODUCING. EXCLUSIVELY AT WAITE'S IN PONTIAC 13.99 SOFA, CHAIR and OTTOMAN LET HER RIP - Mrs. Meredith R. Stanley, wife of A 1st Training Regiment officer, rears back to throw a Mummy grenade during a ladies day tour of Ft. Gordons Ga. The .FASHION'S GREAT LOOK..'. *■ LITTLE HEELS The latest look in fall fashion is little heels. Shop Waite's for the finest selection df all the latest falJ fashions. . Exqujsite Handbags to match. ■ Total Value $429.95 *347 It was evident that efforts are under way to make thpae na-1 tions shoulder the major burden of any confrontation of Israle. This would require stationing outside troops, from Egypt or Iraq most Ukely, la Lebanon and Jordan, ■ move which arouses the enthusiasm of neither country. Lebanese President Charles Helou, the only Christian leader among the Arab Moslems, has refused. Jordan’s King Hussein appears willing to go along only under conditions. ★ ★ * Syria's Amin A1 Hafez, whose shaky domestic position pushes him to extremes on the Israeli Ime, hai prophshii for Immediate action against Israel. Egyptian Gen. Aly Aly Amer, 'Commander of the Joint Arab defense' headquarters, is understood to have accused Hafez of attempting only to confuse the Issues. REA88E88 PLANS Amer’s blunt military report outlining Arab weaknesses and the coat to remedy them, forced the Arab leaden to make a realistic reassessment of t he If fact that the grenade isn’t “live'' doesn’t atop instructor Sgt. Marion'C- McManus from attempting to get out of the way before Mrs, Stanley lets it fly. private donations and welfare funds. Monday night, they watched programs on a television set loaned to them by a townsman. It is the custom in Baghdad to offer to pay the fare of a friend or acquaintance who boards the bus with you. Shop Tonite Until 9 P.M. Custom mods to your order ., . Hand crafted sofa wltK solid oil walnut cradle fronjt base, arms arid solid walnut legs! Textured decprbTofIsffIpe of accenting plain fabrics. Yoarcholcu of twelve different patterns and decordtdr colors. 2-arm bolsters, 5 foam toss pillows. Original MASTER Choir. I( swivels, racks and Reclines; and matching Ottoman covered in washable Naugahyde. ‘ Choice of 8 beautiful' colors. Total value of $429,95. 3 pieces now $347. 90 days cash or up to 3d months to poy. Expert Design and Decorating Service at No Extra Cost TONI TODD only the look i« expensive V Vpice of the People: PONTIAC PRESS BK11I IT v I" ’ Pontiac, I Wrinder it ban Prove Statement I read with interest most of the letters written to you. and agree with some, hut I would like to ask “Disgusted” if he can .prove the Presidents use tax jnoney io help keep up their private homes. ;< “Disgusted” would probably ehebi |fe, Fttd- $Pi%0m hour, I think we are doing all right is we are. DISGUST©) WITH SOME * Changed on Educational Scene =irixc Things have changed a bit since, • the little red schoojhouse was the ‘ foundation of the Nations educational system. Changed too, numerically, is the huge Increment of American youth now taxing the country’s schools. the European nations is that the boom so long enjoyed by tho continent Is slowing down. Went European businessmen are boat-ing the bushes for new market outlets to replace sagging busi- . ness at home. And in the East, the Japanese have shifted their trade gaze ’from America, her top customer, to the nearby potential of the Red Chinese Inculcating the upgraded 3-R’s in the mentality of our young Citizenry has indeed assumed gigantic proportions. S. ★ For the ensuing year, the classroom iuidiMBt is pegged at 52.9 million Stadente — one-fourth tho country’s population. Last year’s education bill Was ah estimated $33.7 billion, representing 5.8 per cent of tha U* S. gross national product. Tha National Education Assn, estimates that 210,000 flaw taadhars will be needed this fall to take care of growth and replacement needs. Although therels currently a serious Shortage of teachers, the U.8. Long-range statesmanship and enlightened economic philosophy have little chance, it would seem, when tossed into the ring against the powerful forces of political expedience and commercial opportunism. U.S. Studying Bomber Proposal : ....."'f,> So Who Gets Custody Of The Kids? David Lawrence Says: By ELTON C. FAY WASHINGTON (*> - The long-considered Air Force proposal for development of a , new design of manned bomber now 4s being scrutinized by the defense secretary’s tech-Dept, of Labor sees a breakthrough, nical and budgetary advisers. mwT , 8 ’ a Defense Department spokesman said beginning next year. the plan was delivered to Secretary Robert k S. McNamara’s office a few days ago. As a result of tlie drop in the birth rate after 1947 and aa increase in the number of teacher trainee graduates, there is n surplus of available high school teachers projected for 1975 with only n small deficit of teachers for the elementary grades. The brightness of America’s future cut be equated with the intellectual development of its growing strategic" 'Aircraft generation. It is encouraging to sense the sturdiness of the Nation’! educational structure. Speed of Cheetahs like Road Cheaters The Encyclopaedia Britannica says the cheetah often attains a speed Of 70 miles an hour. This ip no news to anyone who travels streets and highways on which the legal speed limit is below that figure. The surprising thing is that the stmt^c needs' E. B. would misspell cheater. Or has it given lexicographic sanction to the Southern dialect? bomber with capabilities entirely different from either the B52 or the B70 a plane flying great distances but going in toward, target at extremely low level instead of the very high level of the B52. ESCAPE RADAR The purpose of this penetration technique would be to escape the searching fingers of radar and thus make mom difficult the tracking and interception of the plane by fighters or missiles. The question of whether there will be a new family of manned bomber type* has evolved into one of the major issues between Republican presidential nominee Barry Gold water and the Johnson administration. The Arizona senator and the administration, inth both the White House and Penta-gon participating, disagree widely on future Not in Best Interest to Trade With Reds If Nikita Khrushchev ever succeeds In “burying the West” and Its free enterprise system, the democracies may well have dug their own grave. ★ ★ ★ At a time when the Communist economic structure is showing cracks in many areas and threaten-. Ing to topple of its own weight, Western nations are shoring it up by their avidity for trade with the Red realm. TWiniy Cf America’* closest eiliea are disregarding the pact once agreed upon regulating ... trade with Russia and its satellites and rushing in to capture a share of the vast Communist market. Moreover, they are bidding for it pretty much on the' buyer’s terms. Whpre East-West trade deals inltial-' ly were conducted on a five-year pay plan, competition has loosened settlement requirements to 10, 12 and even 15 years. ★ ie ★ As an International trade expert Warned iri Geneva: “Soon, competitive pressure will bring 20-year , Joans. In the end, the Communists, not the West, wll| be the big beneficiaries of this wild scramble.” Maneuvers of Goldwater asserts that under the present administration “We face the prospect of going into the decade of the 1970s without a single new manned bomber. We face the prapebt of going Into that decade with fl worn and obsolete force composed only of those leftover planes still able to fly.” NEW SYSTEMS He says, too, that: “There has not been introduced into our weapons system one new strategic system in the last four years. Under our present defense leadership, with its utter disregard for new weapons, our deliverable nuclear capacity may be cut down by 90 per cent,in the next decade.” Goldwater bases his 90 per cent cut in capacity to deliver nuclear weapons on what he says would be elimination of all but a few bombers. The total nuclear power that could be delivered would rest then only on the Air Force and Navy missiles, the Minuteman and the Polaris, Goldwater says. He adds that the Atlas and Titan —■ the big ICBMa of the Air Force — apparently are “to be phased out.” He estimated a B52 can deliver up to 48 megatons, whereas a Minuteman or Polaris warhead has a yield of less than one megaton. The Pcnbuton diallenges Goldwater both on the bomber and megatonnage points.----- The Pentagon’s tally for missiles In operational readiness today includes more thari 600 Minutemen rockets, -104 Titans, 126 Atlas and 256 Polaris in 16 submarines on station. Verbal Orchids to - Mrs. Ira A. HaddrOI of 179 E. Iroquois;,86th birthday. Mrs. Martha Kitchen of Rochester; 89th birthday. of Oxford; 91st birthday. Mrs. Nora Vanderworp oil 114 Henry Clay; 62nd birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Preston Stone of Holly; 56th wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Harvsy Nique of Oxford; golden wedding anniversary. /Lash’ Votes Could Decide Victor It represents the latest effort of the Afar Force to keep manned strategic weapon carriers tothe irsenal beyond the early 1970s when Hie present BS2 heavy bombers will have reached aeronautical old age. The original B70 heavy bomber project has been whittled down tinder both the Republican and Democratic administrations to present a program for building two test aircraft instead of the once planned fleet. ★ . ★ * The new proposal for an Advanced Manned WASHINGTON - Whether it’s called a “backlash” or a “frontlash,” there’s a protest vote coming in both parties in the presidential election. It __could mean a “cross - over” on a larger scale perhaps than the coun try has wit nessed in half i century. No public-| opinion poll can _ measure ahead LAWRENCE of time the extent of this vote —a future state of mind on elec-‘ tion day. For It is in the main silent at this time, and most often is listed under the heading of “undecided." Yet it probably constitutes today a percentage big enough to swing the election either way. ' ★ ★ ★ What is of tjie utmost political significance is just where the “cross-over” vote already appears likely to be consequential. New York state, for instance— which went Democratic in the 1960 presidential election — is carried by the Democrats whenever the majority in New York City is big enough to offset the Republican majorities in the rest of the state. When something happens, however, to reduce the Democratic vote in New York City, tt means a Republican victory for the presidential candidate In tho over-all vote of the empire state. The same rule applies with respect to most of the big cities in other states. What happens in them could affect particularly {he electoral votes of Illihois, Michigan, Ohio, New Jersey, Missouri and Pennsylvania, and these, together with New York, constitute a bloc of 174 votes in the electoral college. S in c e there are at least 96 electoral votes in the south, southwest and middle west which the Republican candidate, with the protest vote behind him, might carry, this could furnish the 270 total needed, to win the election. * * * The protesting voters do not object to the principle of civil rights or of equal rights for all. They feel, however, they are being denied their own civil rights, among them the right to protection of life and property. The street demonstrations, the riots, The looting aridWerisIng crime wave, all serve to Intensify growing apprehensions for the safety of the American family— an unparalleled circumstance in the history of the United " States. . •............ I NATIONAL PROTEST Thera may not be a local election this year In Which the voter can express himself, so It’s natural for the protest to crop out in state and national elections. In Detroit, which is heavily Democratic, the citizens, In an election a few days ago, gave a majority of their votes for an ordinance which would, in effect, permit racial discrimination by home owners in the selling of their houses. California voters will participate in a, referendum on the same housing issue In November. The protest movement is growing. Republicans will lose Votes, too, on various Issues but whether the “cross-over" vote will be a net gain or' a net loss to the Republicans Is a key point which public-opinion polls do not cover,since they are usually not conducted within each state as a unit. It’s a curious campaign which the nation faces, and there’s little basis for the talk about landslides. (CnwriaM, MM* MMr VM H*r*M Trlbuna Synikatt, UK.) Disagrees With. ‘American’ dh Mistakes I noted with interest the article signed by “American” in * recent issue pointing up Democratic ^. . ... ' ft “ft ' ftt \ Vly Who was is command ol the Allied forces at tka flaw el Russia’s entry lata Berlin? As I recall, it was are here, Dwight Eisenhower, and who ordered Genera! Patton to halt from marching right on la? Who halted the Allied troops from marching in and taking over the Suez Canal, Which would have eliminated all the Mideast troubles we have had since? It tye* Eisenhower. ★ : \ft: ★” Who developed the Bay of Pigs invasion? Again, Eisenhower. True, it was executed within a couple of months after he retired from office, but the responsibility must still remain his baby. Who got us involved In the South Viet Nam wart Again, toe records indicate that It originally commenced daring . the regime of Eisenhower. What Arm policy Hd he advocate . at the time to end NT . , As to FDR and the Yalta agreement, as I recall it, another prominent and forceful figure who insisted upon ,sama was Churchill. ★ dr , ft Perhaps if Goldwater is elected president, he will then organize all the backbone heroes and Wipe Russia, China and Castro off the map — which, God forbid, they do not first inflict upon us . . , '' x HARRY H. MEAD MILFORD Bob Considine Asks: What Next? A Bullfight in Flight Over Bangkok? of Walled Lake; (3rd wedding anniversary. NEW YORK - Will United Air Lines bring back vaudeville, at 90,000 feet? That’s what’s bugging Trans World Airlines, American Airlines, Northwest, Continental and , all the others that fly any dls-tance at all. Vaudeville’s about all that’s left. Lester Allen over Omaha? Trixie Friganza over Allentown? Fred Keating into considine San Francisco? And how’s W. C. Fields going to juggle thdse cigar boxes on the let-down Into Los Angeles. What’s that Japanese team than spun the plates on slender rods gqing to do about the. turbulence approaching Seattle? Whefe’s Ed Sullivan? Air travelers once were content with air travel. They’d climb into a Ford Tri-Motor, a three-engined Fokker or Stinson, then the DC-2, DC-3 and all the way up the line to the" jet age, and the sheer miracle of flight was enough. (“Good afternoon, folks, this is Capt. Heinrich Von Wolfgang speaking from the flight deck, We are now passing over Osawat-tomle, which is obscured’ by an overcast.”) The air lines junked the box lunches and went Into the restaurant and booze buslnesta. {You’re booked to fly bn our airline on Feb. 4, 19% sir, Would you hfave steak or lob-Iter for your lunch?) The great carts of goodies roll down the aisles now, groaning boards that would have triggered Nero’s taste buds into volcanic action. We met a lady not long ago on a $6,000,000 jet who was complaining about the dressing on her free salad, as we tooled along, at near the spaed of sound. ______ '____________ ★ * * Since turning on the movie projector on long flights, TWA’s business has boomed. It has shown an increase every month ' for the past 20 months. Last mbnth was the biggest month the air line has had in its history, 45 per cent up from August of 1963, some 8.2 per cent higher than July of this year, it flies (and diows movies) to 4,M0 pan-pie a day packaged in 80 jetliners op air routes ovpr tour continents and an ocean. Bob Six at Continental Airlines has got something cooking, too. United? Northwest? Eastern? We’ll see. Maybe some of the feeder lines will wind up showing shorts. Maybe when the supersonic jobs come along; we’ll just see slides—as we get hypodermic needle martini, pill (lobster pills on Fridays), and coffee lozenges. 1 ★ 6-6 That whirring sound you bear Is Wilbur and Orville Wright. (DhtrSWM by Kbit Future* Syndic*!*) Letteriias ‘Shades of Barry’ Shades of Barry Goldwater! A recent VOP letter writer has to be U4ding. He must have gotten his knowledge about Pqter and Paul from a different Book than I did, or else be didn’t read tha rest of the Book! May our paths never cron with me being in need. Slavery? Are you sure? MRS. JOBIE RIHARB WATERFORD TOWNSHIP ‘Country Must Be Firm With Castro* When our founding fathers signed our Declaration of Independence, Benjamin Franklin made the famous, remark: “Wa must all hang together, or assuredly wa shall all hang asparately.” Today, it Is Venezuela which is under attack. Is there any one of us who can pay with assurance, "It cannot be my country tomorrow?” X •*, * » .............- ........ go let us say to our brothers In Venezuela, Its | and its brave people, “Wo are with you to fall solidarity and will act With yon to Insnre the safety af your democracy.” ★ * * And let us say to the Castro regime, “Vour interference in the affairs of other countries in this hemisphere must stop, and stop now.” This is the basis on which the attitude of the United States will rest. CUBAN STUDENT DIRECTORATE MIAMI, FLA- In Washington: Mississippi’s Politics Mixed Up By BRUCE BIOSSAT " WASHINGTON (NEA) - Currents of anger and frustration are now coursing through Mississippi more furl out ly than ever. But, It isn’t af a 11 clear what effect this'may have on the tional scene. Though the I currents are1 not new, they BIOSSAT are being fed by fresh sources. In Biloxi, the first measurable public school desegregation in toe state Is occurring. — peacefully so far. Soon there will he more of It In Jackson. • Gov. Paul Johnson poshed a private school tuition grant system through the legislature, but Its top annual award of |168 is hardly adequate for Missistipplpupiis,-—---------- The pressing ^efforts of an organization called Mlssissippians for Public Education, comprised mostly of women, underscores the state’s continuing need of its public schools. . WX..." If the governor seeks some diversion of his constituents from a degree of racial change many never expected, possibly he can find it In the political confusion boiling la, bis state since the Democratic convention at Atlantic City. But herd, too, the anguish of Mtoslsslppiuft has risen sharply. They have been thrust Into new Isolation. Back (in their home setting, Democratic delegates and others who made the trip north are smarting both frOm what they vlew as “new bumUia-lions” heaped upon the state, and the galling fact teat, except for Alabama, ao southern state gave them genalne sup- All but fou» of the delegates refused to sign loyalty oaths and thus were barred from the convention floor. Some swiftly packed their bags and went to the New York World’s Pair. Though their alienation was thus heightened, these people appeared at Atlantic City to have a sense of “living apart.” Thoy oven nsade johes to try to torn this feeling to good use In strange settings. One Mississippian tells of how, traveling north by air, he confounded the plane’s stewardess by asking for “hot biscuits and syrup.” He laughed when he dis-covered, as he expected, that tfili Mississippi staple was unfa-miUartoher. .★ _ it Yet these greatly angered folk are puzzled today as to how to give proper vent to their pent-up annoyance. Mora of them than ever may now be ready to vote for Republican Sen. Barry Goldwater for president this November. Nev-ertheless, It may not be possible ■tor them to do this under either a Democratic or aq Independent label, as many plainly Would like to do. g M M presidential electors pledged to the Johnson-Humphrey ticket. The convention earlier promised this by resohtttoa. ^ pnwpi^M sened. One of these is a new legislative act that would allow two Democratic elector slates — one for Goldwater—to be placed on the ballot. Another Is to put on .an independent slate by petition of 1,000 voters. A third possibility 1$ to name as Democratic debtors the same persons chosen by the GOP as Goldwater electors. But Republican leaders have shot down this Idea, with the dec-toll involved saying they would refuse to serve the Democratic In dl this, Governor Johnson finds It hard to chart a satisfying path. Segregationists, infuriated at developments, have pulled him back from the relative moderation he has shown through much of 1964 toward the strongerstsner he todr ln hls 1963 campaign. .. A , Still, with Senators Eastland and Stands having some ties to President Johnson, the governor hesitates to widen the Mississippi breach too far. So state voters may wlrd ipi Democrats, a iuspended; Mi conveatioq Sept t, seem to Ite heading for i chateau! sevea e GOP line rr critic label. How Uttla this appeals to some segregationists may be gauged from their suggestion that leaders disrupt old voting habits hT naming an all-Negro elector data under the JohnsCn-Hum-phrey banner. The Man died quickly. iim fejawg* few* Those Some They Fracture Him Beauty SpeaaNcQm ; Dorothy Gray '"1 medical frtemf had been telling me that i man of my'^^oU^ somersaults must have a screw loose. But I just kept rolling ‘’em first thing every morning,, until I reached 83. Then one fine morning I thought I heard something ago, l taunted myself into having another try at it. 'C*5 ;;1 went over as well as ever and Up on my feet — but dizzily fell hack heavily on the floor jnd broke my back. -Technically I sustained a frac- bra. fin lucky to be able to sit Ob, oh, I thought, it has hap* penedatlast. * I'm quite serious about it. You see, on account of my deafness, I can’t tell where a $1 price Dry Skin Cleanser 0: Salon ColdCream 12 oz., regularly $5, now$2— Dry Skin Cleanser, “dews” your complexion with moisture as it cleanses thoroughly. Doublerich formula sinks'swiftly into the skin to remove mshe-ap, to freshen and soften. Sflop Cold Cream, special formula contains gentle emollients to make your akin scrupulously dean. Enjoy a fnaher, purer, mom radiant complexion at these special savings. who sends me M cento and a seif-addressed, stamped envelope for it. As I say in the pdtnphlet, I do not advise, prescribe or even recommend somersaults (for-ward roils) for you or for any Rough Only USE IT FOB • Bedroom • Family Room • Kitchen • Utility Room • Dining Room • Extra Storage individual specifically. If you roll ’em at all you must,do so at your own peril. • But notwithstanding my broken back, I believe my SO years of daily somersaulting has contributed a great deal to the good health ! enjoy today. Exterior Completely finished With Windows and Doors For As Little As A|||C| There was no aftereffect of the crack, so 1 concluded it must have been some noise from outside. But I was concerned about it and decided tp quite rolling somersaults. I didn’t do another for several months. Yet each morning I got out of bed determined to roll ~ got into position, and then cMeK-ened — I was afraid to gpbver. PAINFUL EVENTt^^ After 50 years of it this was painful to ackpotvledge. T"~t had taken my ability to roll somersaults (forward roils, that is) as the best evidence that my arteries, joints, et cetera were still extraordinarily supple and elastic, that my anatomical age was about half that of most men of my chronological age. However, the thought rankled. BOYD’ SHORT SLEEVE ACRILAT ACRYLIC KNITS •lag# 6 Jo 18, any 3**5 Strong; shrieked slitant-7.....os. Acrilan® acrylic’s knit-to-fit perfectly . . * with fashion collar and button placket.' Machine wash! Wrinkles vanish in a wink with fust a lick of the iron. New bright fall colors, too. Scoop-up all his favorites! FINISHED Exterior and Interior Completed With Heat, Electric, Drywall, Flooring For At Little As NO PAYMENTS UNTIL DECEMBER m CONSTRUCTION CO. 131 N. PERRY "TDowjfc.&jQJOute Q MV BY CHICK A great aid to the student away at collogo it a chocking account of their very own ... It’s the smart and modern way of doing business. .. It's far safer than carrying cash and it's easy to koop their budgot accurate each month with their cancelled checks . . . Cost lets than money order*, too. * National I Bank -4 A OFFICES-Downtown Pontiac ... W. Huron ... N. Parry ... Koage Harbor... Walled Lake... Union Lake. ... Lake Orion ... Waterford . ;‘V Woodward ... County Center... Romeo ... Mall... Rochester. University and Bloomfield Hills. Member' Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Pilot, 3 Japanese Die in Air Crashes back to school special BAKER HANSEN INSURANCE A absentia and convicted of un- BOLZANO, Italy (AD) dermlning the sovereignty of Police and' Alpine troops vir- the Italian state by trying to tHHly sealed off Italy's South return the South Tyrol region to Tyrol region today trying to Austria. Amplatz was sentenced intercept a terrorist leader to 25 years 6 months and Kioto believed wounded and trying to to 18 years 2 months, escape into Austria. . j The incident came as Italian Georg Klotz, 45. was believed Foreign Minister Giuseppe wounded in a gun battle thatjSaragat and Austrian Foreign killed Alois Amplatz, 38. another Minister Bruno Krelsky con-terrorist leader who fled with | ferred in Geneva on the South TOKYO (AP)-TwoU.S. jet fighter planes crashed southwest of TidwomdayHdiangeoc pilot and three Japanese factory workers. An F8 Navy Crusader piloted by Lt. R. C. Schoeder, Rochester, Minn., crashed while taking oR from Atsugi Naval Station about 40 miles southwest of Tokyo. It plowed into a stiiail factory, killing three workers and injuring four other Japan- LONDON (AP) — lhe Soviet Union, in Its biggest purchase to dais' in Britain, has signed a contract for a synthetic fiber factory valued at <84 million. To finance the deal, Britain’s Midland Bank and the Insurance Export Finance Co., will supply |87 million oh a 15-year loan guaranteed by the British government. The United States appealed today against the INSURANCE ■ALL FORMS— Douglas, a 43-year-old Briton, was convicted of theft forgery and fraudulent accounting while employed by a prison farm. He was sentenced to 24 strokes of the cairn and 33 months in jail. in a statement he had aimed his plane at an open area surround-efty trees and did not realise there was a factory beyond. U.& Ambassador Edwin 0. Reischauer called on Vice Foreign Minister Taklo Oda to extend condolences. HOUR EARLIER About an hour earlier arrAir Force F105 crashed on the banks of the Sagami River near the Atsugi station. The body of JAKARTA;, Indonesia (AP) -President Sukarno said Monday night Em ;Egiiiieihm.1*‘l8Sia are the plUara of the Indonesian revolution." CHICAGO (AP)—An electronic nose more sensitive than a bloodhound’s is being developed -to sniff out bombs Ranted aboard airliners. The project conducted by the Illinois Institute of Technology Research Institute Was made possible by a $39,000 grant from the Federal Aviation Agency. “but we are trying to make it practical. HO YEARS AWAY “We 'are not yet at the stage* where we can visualize a complete piece of equipment," c r e a m s; deodorants, lighter fluids, or anything a passenger might carry. “Speed is highly important. The nose must survey the contents of the aircraft and decide whether there is a bomb bboard to a few minutes..’’ If 120 passengers ami their luggage must be examined {■separately and it took only a minute for each, Dravnieks said, the process would take two hours. Drawnieks said. “That is about or 10 years awayi" -— Dravnieks said he would report his findings to the FAA in December. . OFFER GOOD WED. THRU. SAT., SEPT. T 2 l23NrHi SaginiwSl The FAA has wrestler with the problem of aerial sabotage since Novi 1, 1965, when a time bomb destroyed an airliner in flight new Longmont, Colo,, killing 44 persons. In all, the F* AA estimates 191 persons have been killed by criminally placed bombs. BACK-TO-SCHOOL Savings Sfae Repaid Ipecljfe The electronic nose would operate on much the same principle as a human owe. A complex field of electrical detectors actutely sensitive to tiny amounts of vapor emitted by explosives would serve as olfactory nerves. An alarm, a bell or, light, would act as a brain. When molecules of an explosive material such a dynamite are detected, the disturbance sittin: pretty With Big Savings on This The feasibility of building an •electronic bomb detecting device “looks good,” research director Dr. Andrew Dravnieks, 52, said In an interview Monday, Foom cushion, foam back, deep seat, hi-back r comfort. Heavy, durable woven tapestry. Rchly finished hardwood gooseneck arms. Soothing Rocker Action. ----- LINGERING ODOR Under controlled laboratory conditions, Dravnieks said, the lingering odor of dynamite can be detected in a box three weeks after the explosive has been removed. The problem now, he said, is making the node 42 north Saginaw street" discriminate between' odors of explosives and those of harmless substances. “We could make a machine now," Dravnieks said, “but there would be a lot of false alarms. Right now researchers Going Away TO COLLEGE? AGANA, Guam (AP) - Military and civilian authorities in Guam are searching for two Japanese World War II holdouts In an area where fresh footprints were discovered Monday. Officials said the pair are still hiding in the jungles 20 years aftei* recapture of Guam by the Americans. ★ * * Guam police said, however, that the prints could have been made by farmers living within a half mile of the area. Id m write o theft policy , to cover both porent and students at home, traveling, and at college — you'll' be surprised at the Ibw rates! are exposing the machines to a seemingly endless list of GET tn. PHYSIQUE or FIGURE » YOU DESKS AT HOLIDAY HEALTH CLUB” ’ SUMMER SPECIAL! Searchers have distributed leaflets to Japanese urging war stragglers to come out of hiding. Police in Guam believe the bearded 'and bedraggled soldiers are hiding in the jungles where the Japanese made their last stand. NOW AT OUR NEW LOCATION 1GB Elizabeth Lake Road COURSI BASIS i (Rig. $20 Per MonthL CALL 334-0529 NEW FACILITIES INCLUDE Firming Machines •S Placa* Specialized They're now o two-bathroom family . . . thanks to POOLE LUMBER We added a second bathroom ro their hope . . . took1 core of the complete job from plans tp labor. We can do the same for you! 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Lawrence St. 33241241 Man C—jertWeartag FALSE TEETH P! o telephone solicitors... wo DO have the finest ih quality home heating. Ask about the fqmous . . . | SEE WHAT YOU ARE BUYIRG! Inspect all of the models In our ihotcroom . . | . 3401 W. HURON CwtWftt of ills. Ik. Rrf. FC 8 048 if he hadn’t succumbed to un- doctor’s liability insurance—the routine policies dll doctors take out to protect themselves from malpractice suits filed by disgruntled patients. '' \f \ '* A, ' That led to a check and a bombshell announcement Tfeirs. his story with the detachment day by Atty. Gen. Frank J. Kelley that Novak was a phony. MADE CONFESSION Novak confessed before the Michigan State Board of Jtegis-tration and Medicine and wept into hiding with his wife and two children. The Wayne County prosecutor’s office was flooded ky calls from worried Novak pa* tients. A charge of practicing medicine with ant a license was prepared for filing on Tuesday. Still, it was hard to find people who had a bad word to say egainstthe gangling young man who put an “MJD.” after his name. 'k If 29-year-old Thomas M. No-vak is a con man, he certainly hits the ability to, inspire confidence. HIS NURSE To his own nurse, widow of a doctor herself, Novak is "a very wonderful person . . . quicktempered but very decisive when he made a decision.’* "He reminded me of when first met my husband,” the said. “He Iras young and brilliant.’’ ‘ To Father Joseph Byrne of St. Brigid’s parish, close by the "doctor’s” office, Novak was “a man of consideration,” a man who took the time to share his patients’ problems and to show them he cared, a map with a warm bedside manner. ★ k 'Just to show you what kind man .he was, he gave the medical examinations this year to all the grade school children and the high school football team at St. Brigid’s, Father Byrne said. "He wasn’t asked to. He volunteered." To Richard T. Shute, an industrial equipment salesman who lives across the street from Novak in suburban Livonia, his neighbor was a friendly fellow who always waved when he came home from work and was constantly going out on house calls, no matter what the hour. "You don’t get too many doctors like that," Shute said. Cte’s wife, Dorothy, re-that one of Novak’s little girls gashed her cheek while playing in the Shutes’ yard last summer. "Her father sewed her up right there in the house," Mrs. Shute said. “He gave her three stitches and she was out playing again right afterward. Her mother said ‘It’s convenient to pave a doctor in the house.’" * ★ ■ ★ The Shutes heard Novak driving off with his family in one of their two cars at 6:30 Friday morning. He hasn’t been seen since along Oakview Street in' Livonia or in the neighborhood of Schoolcraft and Wyoming in the working class neighborhood of northwest Detroit where he had his office. EANTASHCXASE________________1 Kelley told of what was officially known of what he called "one of the molt fantastic cases of deception in Michlgan ifls-tory.” His account was based on Novak’s almost completely dispassionate appearance Thursday before the Board of Registration. Novak never quibbled over his guilt, KeDey said, and told of a medical case history. To all appearances, Kelley said, Novak became an impostor almost as soon as he got out of high school. His parents, Mr. and Mrs, Michael Novak, sent him to the University of Michigan, but he didn’t enroll. Instead, for three years, he U. of M. Dorms Packing 'em In ANN Arbor (AP) -/An enrollment of more than 29,000 students—400 more tjhan expected-—-has squeezed some University of Michigan dormitory residents into temporary quarters in libraries, study hails and recreation rooms. The extra students are slowly being reassigned As rooms become vacant or “doubled up" lit rooms meant to hold fewer residents, the university said. A strike at the Arm which supplies most of the school’s residence hall furniture has hindered the "doubling up" process. Planes Collide 4n Indiana; 11 Aboard Unhurt 'O BROWNSBURG, Ind. (AP)-Two airplanes collided Monday as one took off and the other was landing at Speedway Airport two miles southeast of here, but 11 persons aboard escaped injury. Sheriff MerlFunk said la single engine plane piloted by Jay Williams, 49, Clermont, was taking off when a twin-engine plane piloted by Clifford Pfiffer, 42, Adrian, Midi., landed on top of toe smaller craft. * * ★ Both planes tumbled into a cornfield, but were not damaged seriously. Funk said there were seven persons aboard the larger plane and four in the other. Crash Bodies Found in Wyoming Mountains DOUGLAS, Wyo. (AP)-The bodies of two airmen, one of them from Michigan, were recovered Monday from the wreckage of a four-wheel drive vehicle which plunged over a mountain embankment 32 miles southwest of here. The victims were identified as Staff Sgt. Dirk Honeycutt, 32, of Leavenworth, Kan., and Airman 2.C. Dale Patacky, 23, of Alger, Mich. Eleven million Americans over 22 years of age have less than a sixth grade education, Rep. Adam C. Powell of New York disclosed recent 1 y in speaking , tor antipovarty- logia-latlon in toe House of Representatives. Bay Winter Protection NOW AT SPE0IAL SAVINGS! Utility Building and Outdoor^ Cabinet bought books and dropped into he (eft m"W~ Novak told his parents he had decided to become « doctor and they sent him to Johns Hopkins Medical School in Baltimore. Again he neglected to enroll,' but he apparently dipped into medical toe. After a year he came back to Detroit and dropped in on chutes at Wayne State Medical College. Occasionally, he would sUp into a white coat mid took to on surgical procedures at Detroit Receiving Hospital and Herman Keifer Hospital. In his statement, Novak said “All of this time my wife was unaware of my methods or what I was doing. She was upder the impreSsion I was a full-time student at Wayne University.’■ In June, i960, Novak felt he was ready to go into practice. There was nothtog to it. With his family's help, ho bought the practice of a deceased physi-daw, Dr. Edgar A. Bicknell. ALL EQUIPMENT ~S /, C? This entitled him to the doctor’s office aad all the paraphernalia that went with it—lab-oratory equipment, medical books, and subscriptions to sd-entitle journals. AH he lacked was a medical degree to hang els the wail, lie dkhi’t need it. The young "doctor” announced he was an expert in internal medicine, specialising in nutters of the heart and lungs, and According to his own accounting, he banked $15,000 in his first year of practice, $30,000 in both 1961 and 1962, $40,000 last year, and $35,000 before the board blew the whistle on him this year. •k ■ k k . There were some drawbacks to practicing medicine without a license, He couldn’t use hospital facilities and lu didn’t dare to attempt surgery. NO PROBLEM This wax no' big problem for Novak. He jaid he made house calls for two doctors who, in turnvWould admit his patients to hospitals or perform surgery When necessary. Other patients were referred to specialists. A long-time Novak patient, Mrs. Janies Young, commented "That’s being a good doctor, referring yon to another doctor instead of taking your money continuously.” Whether he not be operates, a doctor has to make out prescriptions. This requires a narcotics license. Novak had the answer. He dreamed up a nqmber—• 7117—and scribbled it on his prescriptions. They were* always filled. k k k David H. Safier, who runs the drugstore across the street from Novak’s office, said most of bis customers who received prescriptions from the "doctor” were pleased with his care. best Doctor ’Most of them said he was the best doctor they ever had,” Safier said. In fact, Safier said, not many of Novak’s patients brought in prescriptions. "I understand he gave most of them shots," ha said. ..“Most young doctors would be delighted to match the practice of a Novak. Thera were a few months of modest beginnings when he set ap offices in his basement. An early patient recalls “I wondered about him at first because his sterilization equipment was dirty.” Then, three years ago, he moved into small medical budding beside a gasoline station at Schoolcraft and Wyoming where a dentist and a doctor also had offices. k k k At Mel’s Bar, down the street, a customer recalled “the place was always packed." Although Novak’s income Came from $5 ? 473-4911 STOR-ALL PRODUCTS, INC.’ZZ _ iiimmiiiiiji Narva Deafness Gas Os HilptA Nerve deafntin is the principal epuse of hearing Impairment. There is no treatment or .surgical operation that will cut*, Nerve. Deafness. People that soy' "I can hear but can't understand" usually suffer from nerve d e a f n e s s. We havf available a brochure telling the inside etory of nerve deafness. Write; to The t Press, Bax Na |3. ' ■ office calls and $10 home calls, it added up nun. NEW HOUSE Two years ago, be moved Into the $24,000, four-bedroom house in Livonia. The neighbors regarded him as a little reserved but the very model of a dedicated young physician. He joined a country dob .and took to playing golf every Wednesday. His girls, aged g and 5, were enrolled in the MaryknoH. Roman Catholic school nearby. . "He just looked like # doctor,” neighbor Shute said. "Thin wrists and surgeon’s fingers, tiff was 6-4, hilt to thito you Were almost sorry for him. He tpld me he was ,sounmechanical he couldn’t hang a picture." k ..k k-If authorities knew today, where Novak was hiding, they weren’t telling. Officially, the charge of misrepresentation which is planned for him is only a misdemeanor. TOP SENTENCE The maximum sentence is six months in jail and a $200 fine. I Novak could be in jjeepey-trouble, however.' Federal authorities have been called in .16 investigate possible violation of the narcotics laws. Although most of Novak’s patients appeared to have been satisfied, some weren’t. Some died. Stunning malpractice suite could be filed. A k k Novak knew what might be coming when he answered KeL ley’s summons to come to Lansing Thursday. “I’m ready to pay my penalty,” he said. "Whet is the penalty? How long wilTTbe in jtol? nh ■ "I just ask one tbimf^don’t send the police car out to my e. I’ll come in whenever yeu say.” Give Your Children | PI ANO LESSONS Special Offer, Brand New SPINET PIANOS TO RENT With Option To Buy Ohty ~ Month 8 PRIVATE LESSONS INCLUDED FREE! Yon me* welcome Uusomnlnand jbcumjonir ararica! needs with war ef our stair al Gallagher Music. OUR 32nd YEAR "IFAere Musle it Oor Business** aces leC.Htuvaet. rse-ose* Open Mon. and Frl. ’Ill 9 P.M. Want Oak, 1224 N. fmM’ MBs 4 Mf-SSM Open Evening* ’ill 9 P.M. Sat. ’til 5:30 REDUCE 1 EAT and LOU if OP 10 6 LBS. A WEEK CAPSULES! Easter to take and more effective than the powdered and liquid food supplement, and costs lass including Capsules suited to you INDIVIDUALLY by Lte. Physician, M.D. No Gastritis or irregularity with Medic-Way cape. DON'T DIET —JUST EAT! As thousands have done, you can lose 5, 50 or 100 lbs. arid KEEP, IT OFF! MEDIC-WAY. MEDIC-WAY 3321206 1 ELEVEK jEM•TtfESDAY> '^SIHTEhMeR 8,1964 I John Jarman, DOkla., died Will finter Hospital I1*®00"*1 <**?*? 4 Wednesday for treatment TOKYO (AP) -Premier noncancm throat eond Hayato Ikeda, 65, will enter the this office announced today. IUYTM AUTOMATIC WASHER • Warm and Hot Tomporatvfe Control O Water saving feature • Perforated tills for cleaner That’s the result of a composite look at tfM( SO girls, representing ail the states, who are trying to become Miss America ilHh The composite contestant stands a ludr taller than 5-foot-6 computed with the 5-5 of previous winners and is 19% years old compared with 10 yean. LARGER MEASURES Her bust-waist-hips measure-meats’ run 35%-23-35%, compared to the 34 8/0-24-34 2/5 aver- guards against rust • Porcelain tub, top and lid • Virtually indestructible pump • Rustproof lid hlngaa. ~ Min Amsrlcat. ■ - - -Former titleholders averaged 123% pounds. The composite of the current group 18 on the shy sideofUOpwinds. .... -rfbt Elizabeth Emerson of Durham. Youngest is . Miss Maine, Ellen Warren of Kenne* bunk, who was ULAug. 19. ..-wf‘ Sr^W’l The contestant with the lar- Let Our Attendant Park Your Car Free in |x|liyg>j|Private Lot'at Rear of Stgrel OPEN TUESDAY, THURSDAY AND FRipAY NIGHT TIL 9 DANISH MODERN DINING ERSEMBLE Solid weed, walnut finish round oxtonslen and 4 Id PftOH matching chairs wMtl nylon soots. | QJp COMPLETELY CARPET 2 ROOMS Early America DWif Room Table WWW 4 booutlful motsMae chairs. || ilAftR Solid wood. Jftipte neWi: Knnka tan* ▼| fftemwuB. FjorOi k beautiful s«&rbwicMng choir, 2 end tobies, eeffee OPEN 10 Till 9 WEEKDAYS SUNDAYS 12 Till 6 108 NORTH SAGINAW TWELVE /•: )THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8,1964 Khanh Is Still Key Power in Viet Triumvirafe SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP> — Maj. Geo. Duong Van Minh has agreed to set up ma-chinery for creating a new government for South Viet Nam, but Premier Nguyen Khanh retains chief power as premier. Minh Witt draft plans fdr selection of the provisional council which will create the / .new government. His plans must be approved by Khanh and Lt. Gen. nan Thien Khiem, who with Minh servev as ast who with Minh serve as a steering committee for South Viet Nam. I • Khanh announced Saturday that the triumvirate would appoint a national convention to Be modern with draft a' new constitution and set up the election of a general assembly. . The Government Information : Ministry also announced that ■Minh has been named of - the “provisional /£j|fOVlR WITH ST BACKACHE lief. DeWitt’i Pill* help you (Heighten up without those stabbing pains iu back, joints and muscles — even help your body dear up the cause. Dewitt’* Fills bring fast relief. DeWltt's ___Pills_____ PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL CENTER EBHflBna2I Open Evening, Hi 840 RM. 682 1113 “SO NERVOUS from Hot Flashes I BURST INTO TEARS" armed forces. FAVOR MINH This title which presumably would make him chief of state, appeared to be a concession to the Buddhists who favored Minh over Khanh. The border feud between South Viet Nam and Cambodia flared again as Vietnamese Army officers charged that Cambodian planes, patrol boats and artillery are supporting the Communist Viet Cong along the frontier. ★' ★ . ★ Theoffleerssaid eitfitCambodian patrol craft 800 yards Russia Honors American Red MOSCOW (AP) - The bustling center of Moscow cam# to a standstill today as thousands of Muscovites honored the dead American Communist leader Elizabeth Gurley Flynn. The ashps of- the chairman of the American Communist party, who died at 74 in Moscow Saturday, were taken on a flowerdecked bier to Red Square for the funeral tribute from Soviet leaders and people. ★ * - —A The center of the city was sealed off as a long column of marchers moved from the Hall of Columns, where the body had lain in state, to the square. Premier Khrushchev’s wife, Nina, was a member of the last guard of honor at the Hall of Columns. (WWW' The urn of ashes was placed on a dais before Lenin’s tomb. Speakers praised Mrs. Flynn as a lifelong fighter for “democracy and socialism" and a great friend of the Soviet Union. The body was cremated Monday. Moscow sources said the ashes will be flown to the United States for burial in the Waldheim Cemetery in Chicago. inside Vietnamese ferHtory. on a tributary of the Mekong River Bred on government troops toirnttig* Vlirt Cong gagrrillM Saturday. ■ • 'SfePi, They charged that Cambodian mortars shelled Vtoh Xuyen Village, killing two Vietnamese soldiers and two civilians, and that two MIG fighters■. with Cambodian markings fired on Vietnamese warplanes. VEETPLANEB ' Cambodia cotpitored charges that South Vietnamese forces attacked the Cambodian village of Koh Rojcar Sunday and that Vietnamese planes attacked Koh Rokar and the Cambodian post of Kaain Sam’ bar Krom. The-Cambodian Defense Department claimed today that South Viet Nam is reinforcing positions: near the Cambodian frontier. . ■ V—1 A communique said * about ware stationed 200 yards from - the frontier in the Ekeyveng district on the Mekong ftlver. The communique said three Vietnamese planes, violated Cambodian territory two times Monday. f : Suffocating. heat waves, nervous, clammy feelings, restless irritability—aO are well known to women suffering the distress of functionally-caused change-of-life! If you are now going through the “change” here’s wondarful news for you. In doctor’s tests, Lydia E. Pinkham Tablets relieved such distress for woman after woman. I Act through sympathetic asms* system to rtlisvt distress sf "ksst wavs*” I Divorces Gertruds from Nathan J. Falne S. LaVorne from Don,Id I. Fit' ' Robt. from Shirley A. Riddle Phylllt V. from Daniel hSm Eleanor from Victor A Behind many "For Sale" signs there is a sad storyt A family borrowed more than they could afford to . pay for a home or payments and Interest rates were too high: the home had to be sold . . . often at a loss’. This tragedy could often b,e avoided If the families Would seek, help from a home loan specialist . . . such as our Association. We work, with you t6 arrangi - f<}r a tponj that's as easy tp handle ps monthly jrent$. 75 West Huron ■Established 1890 FE 4-0561 QU870MIR PARKING IN RKAR OF BUILDING TH* POKTlic f BESS. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER'& 1M* Sorority Planning Annual Tea His Li$$ Are -15 Years Old but Still Can Be Trouble is wrong, but I am discreet and manage to. see him without disrupting his family life. Lately he has been talking about divorcing his wife and marrying me. .Nothing would make me happier than to be his wife, but the last thing I want to do is break up his wife is 65? Will divorce then be any easier on his wife? Face if. The “only man you've ever loved''' belongs to somebody else. And did when you met him. Match your discretion with deoency, and get out of his life. - . The CM Omega Alumnae of the North Suburban area are welcome to attend the annual tea Sept, it; North Suburban Alumnae chapter of Chi Omega schedules the tea froib 2 to 4 p.m. in the Southfield home of Mrs. Donald ft. Dewenter.___________ Chairman' of, the affair Is Mrs. Oliver M. Strong Jr. of Sodon Lake Road. She will be assisted by Mifti. Donald M. Smith and Mrs. Leonard Fons of Southfield. Reservations may be made by contactbig Mrs, Strong or Mrs. Fons. \ ’ W, * Prospective members may receive further information by contacting Mrs. Donald E. Schoenals of Southfield. Purdue Grads Are Invited to a'Fun Fes? The Women of Purdue University Chib, Detroit area, have extended an invitation to all Purdue students to attend a “fun feat” Wednesday at the Franklin Nome of Mr. ahd Mrs. Robert Wlnkel. Sr w ' * All guests who play a banjo or guitar may bring their instruments for a hootenanny sing-along following the buffet. ‘ * » . . .. * . This event is sponsored, annually by the executive committee. Officers and'chairmen for 196445 include Mrs. Eugene Hill, president; Mrs. Will Oliver, vicy president; Mrs. George Kentis, secretary; and Mrs. Dana' Pellman, treasur- Chairmen include Mrs. Gordon Bryant, Mrs. Charles Heiney, Mbs. Howard Baldwin, Mrs. Robert Keljy, Mrs. Elgin Waldron, and Mrs. Kenneth Kimmel. ★ w 'w Reservations may be majde by calling Mrs. Oliver of Southfield; Mrs- Kentis of Birmingham,, or Mrs. Kelly of Detroit today. ~ By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: Fifteen years ago, when I was 20, I was very fond of a 24-year-old roan - about - town who gave me a big rush. Then I d i s-MgfWW covered that||r^“^ he was telling^ outrageous Ues| a b o u t me inlL order to buildP his reputation | as a l a dy-f killer. ! I dropped! him immedl- ABBY ately, and have had no contact with him since. I am now happily married and have a lovely home and family. My mother wrote that this old boyfriend had visited my borne town, And be telephoned her asking for my address. He said he travels a lot and wanted to see me again to talk over old; times. My moth- He has a compatible relationship with his wifeubut he doesn’t love her. He is ,just staying with her because Of the children. He Is well'able to support two families. How can I convince him that divorce Would be> unfair to his family? He is 20 years older than I, but sometimes I feel like his mother. He’s the only man I’ve ever loved and I don’t want to lose him. WILLING TO WAIT CONFIDENTIAL TO B. W. AT WAVI IN DAYTON: A.llt-tie birdie (all right, Reed ^Sherman) reported that you are now the original T HIN MAN! Congratulations, Handsome.-How did you do it? Problems? Write to ABBY, in Care of The Pontiac Press. For a personal reply, enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. This special 42-foot van, designed Chrysler Corpis the Artmobile of The Detroit Institute of Arts. Some readers may have seen it at the State Fair. Traveling throughout metro- politan Detroit, the air conditioned van takes art exhibits to the people. Local residents mil be able to see it next week in Birmingham. DEAR WILLING: To wait for what? Until his children er innocently gave it to him. * are grown and gone, And his How should I handle him if he calls me? Should I discuss it with my husband in case he " should call? I definitely want no more to do with this man. UPSET DEAR UPSET: Don’t discuss it with your husband. He might wonder why you are so upset over a lot of 15-year-old lies. If Mr. Lady-killer calls, tell him you are hap-' pUy married and would rather not see him, so please not to call again. DEAR ABBY: I am a 16-year-old girl who needs a straight answer. Exactly, what is wrong with failing asleep with a boy if you have all your clothes on? Please don’t say it's just not “right” as that is no answer. Thank you. WANT TO KNOW , * W * DEAR WANTS: There’s a time for entertaining a boy and a time for sleeping. When it’s time to sleep, it’s time to bid the boy farewell. That way you won’t have to wonder if something was said or done — or if you only dreamed 1$. DEAR ABBY: I am involved with a married man In his 40’s. We love each other, Abby. I know our relationship Hate to write letters? Send one dollar to Abby, in care of The P o n t i a c Press for Abby’s b o o k 1 e t, “How To Write Letters For All Occasions.” . Artmobile to Visit Wear Wrap if Dress Is Bloomfield Hills Folk Spend Time Traveling By SIGNE KARLSTROM Mrs. Robert,C. VanderKloot with daughter Karen and son Jim left Saturday for New York. Karen has accepted the asm of the seminar’s work, w w w > Mr. and Mrs. Edgerly W. Austin who recently moved to their new home on Warwick have as their houseguests Mr. position of director of alum- anq Mrs. E. L. Harney of nae relations and the promo- Evanston, HI. Mrs. Harney tion of the new Art School at her Alma Mater, Bennett College; ★ w * Jim who last year was at Chauncy Hall in Boston win begin his freshman year at Lehigh University tomorrow. ITALIAN TRIP This summer Karen spent three weeks in Italy with the Etruscan Seminar upder the sponsorship of The Detroit Institute of Arts with William Bostick as tour leader. The group stayed at the Ferdinand Onelli castle in Siena, Italy which is also the childhood home of Mrs. Paul Bowers. Karen speaks with enthusi- Outstcmding Area Teen 4-H Member Lea (This eighth and final in a number of articles on outstanding area teen-agers concerns Marvin McLachlan, 17-yearold son of Mr. and Mrs. Carlyle McLachlan of 12S4 South Lapeer 'Road, Lake Orion.) . By JEANMARIE ELJUNS “Such a nice yhung man. So quiet and pome.’* •*.’ You might imagine two discussing a member of ihe “younger generation.” They could well be talking about Marvin McLachlan. * They Would be right, for Marvin is quiet until you get to know him. Quiet almost to the point of being a little bashful. • But'thb" 17 - year - old* son of Mir. and Mrs. Carlyle Me-Lachlan leads an active life. Marvin hap been a member Working on things electrical comes naturally tor Marvin McLachlan of Lake Orion. An award in the electrical field toas one of two Marvin won while a member of the East Orion 4-1^ Club. The 17-year-old Lake -Orton High School graduate has been active not only m14-H,t but- in* church and school groups and plans, on a career in bhmtrm- of the East Orion 4-H club for over 7 years and has won awards in automotive and electrical fields. He has also worked in conservation, gardening, p h o t o-graphy, Junior leadership and gun safety. A Maine citizenship trip and a 4 - H Washington D C. trip can also be listed among his activities. He was on the planning com-m 111 e e for the leadership school in Detroit and was chosen to represent Oakland C o u n t y at the state service club in Lansing. Marvin worked on the float Committee in his club for the 4-H fair and was a contestant In this year’s 4-H king fcnd queen congest. 1 At hif church Marvin . Is a member of the Methodist outh Fellowship and fhe ush-ers’ team. A graduate of Lake Orion High School, he has been a student council representative and manager of the wrestling warn. . At one time Marvin raised sheep to show at the 4-H fair and, With his brother, sold market lambs.' While holding down a part Hme summer job, Marvin la making plans for his career. He would like to go Into butchering and Is hoping for an ap-gronUceahtp. * “Such a like young man. So quiet and polMe.” Theta art many more outstanding area teen-agers like Marvin and those who have been featuM In this series. “ Isn’t it ,a b o u t time we ttonpad looking only for the bad teen-ager? . .. , and Mrs. Austin are sisters and yesterday there was a birthday celebration for Mrs. Harney. On Sept. 11, Mr. Austin’s brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. P. L. Austin of Florida, will come for a few days. it W W The following weekend, Mrs. Everett Schultheis of Buchanan, Mich, arrives for an extended visit. Mrs. Schultheis Was A former neighbor of the Austins when they both resided on Bradway Boulevard. BACK TO ANN ARBOR Dr. and Mrs. John A, Ingold have returned .to Ann Arbor where Dr. Ingold has rejoined the University Hospital after spending three years at the Stanford Medical Center; ' w w._ ★ • Mr. and Mrs. Charles T. Van Dusen and their family will soon be in their new home in Hartford, Conn, after spending the summer at their cottage at Beach Haven Park, New Jersey. The Artmobile from the Detroit Institute of Arts will make two stops in the area .pext week. Sept. 16 at 8 p.m., the public is invited to the Birmingham Country Club. The Art-mobile will be on display 1 there at the annual Atlantis Society fall meeting for members and interested guests. . W it W Highlight of this open meeting will be moyies of spring touring and skiing in Europe. Ralph Gateinger will show movies of last year’s trip and reveal plans for this year’s, tour. INTOWN Sept. 17, the Artmobile will be parked behind Krqsge’s in Birmingham and again will be open to the public at no charge from 10 a.m. until 6 p.m. * * ★ As the first i exhibition for the Atlantis Society, the Art Institute has assembled a collection’. to represent our “American Heritage—People and Places.” w w W Works tanging from the eighteenth century to the pres-' ent day by such famous artists as John Singleton Copley, Thomas Eakins, Winslow Homer and Ben Shahn have been selected to portray our country and the people in It. TWO VIEWS The visitor to the Artmobile will have a chance to see rural America as well as the urban view from the early nineteenth century to the present. Choice selections .irom the Institute’s collection represent some of the highest quality among Detroit’s American holdings. Willis F, Woods, director of the Institute, states, “The most detailed attention has been given in study and preparation to make this exhibit the best of its kind ih the nation.” Indian Weavers Make Bright, New Patterns Freezer Bag Ties Cut‘plastic bags info strips and use for tying bags Of food in borne freezer. Prevent Staining it Put an extra muslin cover over your ironing board when ironing articles that will fade and you’ll prevent the ironing board cover from staining. In Montego Bay, Jamaica Couple Honeymooning Off on a honemoon at Montego Bay, Jamaica, are Lt. Dennis Robert Hoover and his bride (Judy Ann Wang-berg) who were wed Saturday in the First Methodist Church, Birmingham. Daughter of the Gordon , Wangbergs ,of Birmingham, the bride appeared in a sheath gown and train of white peau desole. . BOUFFANT VEIL' A bouffant illusion veil and bouquet of white roses /completed her ensemble. With Nancy Hohmeyer of South Bend, Ind., honor maid, were bridesmaids^ Carole MacMillan arid Joan Allen, both of Mt. Clemens. f/-■ it it it John (Hoover attended his. brother as best man. Their parents aro-Dr. and Mrs. Robert Hoover of Poncha Springs, Colo. Seating guests were George'Baker, Lancaster, Pa. and Karl Rueck, New Hyde Park, N.Y. A reception id Greenfield's Cranbrook Room followed the . ceremony performed by Rev. A. F. Runkel. . w w w The bride attended Central Michigan University and her husband is art alumnus of Colorado State University. They will live at Fort Dix, N. J. where he is statfondfi. MRS. D, ft. HOOVER (AP) — A long rectangular shape colored green, artistic-' ally designed with numbers and pictures of presidents and lovingly referred to as the Yankee dollar has’become a stirring inspiration to Indian textile weavers. W W It has done more to stimulate new design ideas for traditional handloomed textiles than beautiful sunsets, snowpeaked mountains, or babbling brooks. ★ it W For centuries Indian weavers were content to bend over their looms threading the same muted yams in and out to accomplish the dark plaid patterns which Americans know so well. ★ w ★ ■, Eager to shed their drab, conservative attire for livelier garments and yet too shv to dp so, the American male a few years ago found the madras jacket the perfect compromise. Gaudy sometimes, but classical. BLEEDING QUALITY Enchanted by the bleeding quality of the Indian dyes, American women Insisted on madras cloth for sportswear at first, then dven ruffled It up and draped it around themselves for dressy occasions. Naturally, that suddenly added up to a lot of madras money to India, and this was not at all distasteful to the Indian textile workers. ★ * * But a new generation of educated, well-traveled Indian women rightfully began to fret about the monotony of the same traditional patterns. ★ * W To keep America madras happy and the rest of the Western world as well, these sharp young misses packed up their saris and studied textile designs In well known art- schools around the world.. MODERN PATTERNS . Back home again, they are teaching Indian weavers to create modem patterns, in the old handcrafted way, Now. madras come in geometric*; shadings and variegation. Colors hitherto strangers are partners in patterns. All are bids for that pretty, green fashion dollar for now and for years to come. "4 . W it But old bleeding techniques have not been sacrificed. Properly washed, the modern patterns also develop dlmen-. sion. it it - .it What is proper washing? . Manufacturers recommend that articles, including those | bonded to a lining, be washed separately from other garments in mild soap and warm (never hot) water. ★ ★ w Madras should be washed quickly and hung up to dry without wringing or twisting it. Low Cut ' By The Emily Post Institute. Q: My granddaughter is going to be married at an evening wedding. Her mother la wearing a long evening dress, sleeveless and rather lows cut. When I asked her what kind of wrap she was going to wear over It, she said the mothers do not wear wraps In church and that she wasn’t going to wear one. ★ ★ w Considering the type of dress she is wearing, I think It will be in very bad taste for her not to wear something over her shoulders In, church. What is your opinion on this? it it it A: Ordinarily, the mothers do not wear wraps over their dresses to church. But if the bride's mother’! dress ' is low cut, you are some-her Q: Isn’t it to very bad taste for a girl who has had a child out of wedlock, to be married in white? Is not white a sign of purity? My friend says it is permissible as long as she does not wear a veil. ★ w i w. A: It is permissible for her, just as it is for a widow at her second marriage, to wear a white street length dresa and hat. ' , She cannot, of course, wear a typical bridal dress nor a bridal veil. Q: My husband and I have just, received a printed announcement from my niece’s husband of the opening of a , medical office. Does this require any acknowledgment? * * * A: A printed form announcing the opening of a medical office requires no acknowledgment. If you wish, lt would be a nice gesture on your part to send him a message wishing him success in his new office. Club Calendar (EDITOR’S NOTE: Starting today, the Pontiac Press women's pages will feature a calendar of events for .area club news. It willjierve to notify members of meetings and16 remind ■ readers of special events as they happen.) WEDNESDAY: American Association of Retired Persons; 1:30 p.m.; Community Services Building; business meeting and speaker on school mlllage. Twin Mothers Club of Oakland County; 8 p.m.; conference room of the 300 Bowl; all mothers of twins welcome; for information call Mrs. E. V. Cesaro, Walled Lake. Pontiac Society of Medical Technologists; 8 p.m.; McCauley School of Nursing auditorium, St. Joseph Hospital; lecture by Dr. Joseph Juliar, "Platelets and Where Do They Come From." Open to all technologists. WWW THURSDAY: ^ Webford Club; 12:30 p.m.; cooperative luncheon at home df | Mrs. Milton Reddeman, Oxbow Lake. W W . W 1 FRIDAY: j Barnard College Club of Detroit; 8 p.m.; home of Mrs. Howard Beer of Birmingham; plans to be formulated for j 75th anniversary of founding of college. % fff' ^qcttjb|:n • -% \ f\ iHjiAb j SEPTBftlifek Losses to American industries | .annually,. * speaker recently < through embezzlement and | told the American Bar Associa-other bauds exceeds $1 billion | that at “its annual conference. * Special Sale LIPSTICK *1.50 size specially packaged to make it available at 75c I V^/ plus t F plus lax* limited time only' v 5 high fashion shades-" ” Bermuda-True Red Tahiti-Bright Coral Bon Voyage -* Blue Red and New Waikiki-Bright Pink New Granada-Rose Coral "5 ca/yvck/ PERSY PHARMACY1 i PRESCRIPTIONS — professionally perfect , PROPERLY PRICED 1211 BALDWIN 689 E. BLVD. Near DDLUMBIA AT PERRY FE 2-7011 FE 3-1152 '0 H yROR SB u R S’ New Manager's Special! 8"xl0” PORTRAIT Por I Way Bel KENDALE’S . . Photographers 45 W. Huron St. Opposite Pontiac Press Phone for Appointment, FE 5*3260, FE 5*0322 THIS OFFER ENDS SEPT. 26 A PRMMOML CAREER ENROLL TODAY I | Pall Classes l Starting SEPT. 1st and SEPT. 8th Permanent Wave Specialists! We are pleased to announce that JOSEPHINE HENRY is now on our staff f’S REA >A»Ws 11 \JFREE P. ARKING W. Huron, Klker Bldg., FK 3-7180 Karen Bailey, daughter of-the Stdnley-BaH eys of Ann Maria Drive? Avon, Towns hip, was -graduated Thursday from the Harper Hos-pital School of Nursing in Detroit. She has accepted a position on tfie hospital staff. . Plans Are Being Mode for Workshop Series Mrs, Warren Wood opened her Orchard HiU Drive recently for a board meeting of the Osage Bnmch of thi Womafl’s National Faip &nd Garden Association. Plaha were formulated for the coming, year. ™ w vfe/? New president, MW. Ffed Trickey, conducted the meeting. Board members include Mrs- Norman McClure, first Pantition, second vlee president- Mrs. Lawrence Hoffstet-ter, recording secretary; Mrs. Charles HoWson, corresponding secretary; and MW. William Nienhuis, treasurer. Ar ^ '/A Osage Brahch held its first meeting Friday at the Birmingham home of Mr*. Elmer K«stiey.BamBridges,headof greenhouse therapy at the Pontiac State Hospital was in-troducted by Mrs. McClure, program chairman. , Mr. Bridges showed slides of the greenhouse and the work being done there. Last yearf 660 was contributed by the group to this program. * | * | W , Osage members Mrs: E. A. Linder, Mrs. N. D. Reiss, Mrs. McClure and Mrs. A. C. Macintosh participate Tuesday mornings at the hospital in the therapy program. 4_______a \ ‘ '*'■ Mrs. Joseph Dworski, flower show chairman, announced that plans were being made for a series of workshops for the members at the Birmingham Community House. ■ ★ • W w The first workshop wi}k be Nov, A> from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. It will be conducted by Mrs. McClure and will be on "The Art of Making Cor* Right One, Right Slant Words Move the WorH Mm DR. CRANE By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE T-460;. A1 Strom is a member of the Bible Class which I have taught for SO years at the, Chicago Temple. “Dr. Crane,” he said, “wherryou reduce psychology to its simplest definition, isn’t it o h i e f ly proper words in proper places?” E s sential-ly A1 is ‘ cor-rect, though the appeals that sway people are not limited only to spoken and p r i n t e d words. They also involve smiles, plus various symbols such as money, musical notes and other stimuli that arouse our basic interests. But proper words in proper places can move the world. For example, A1 gave me this humorous contrast: If you were to tell a woman she had a face that would stop a clock, she’d be indignant, wouldn’t she? But suppose you romantically say, “When I look into your eyes, time stands still!” She would relish the latter statement as a deep compliment. ’ * .★ ★ ★ Yet both of them utter practically the same idea, don’t they? But what a whale of a difference in the slanting of that same idea! The manager of a shoe store was enrolled in one of my evening courses at, Northwestern University 011 “Sales and Advertising Psychology." He gave the Class a pertinent case. HOT A FTERNOON He said an obese woman entered his shoe store on a hot afternoon. The clerk opened literally dozens of shoe boxes, trying to fit her. In his final frustration, he blurted out, “Madame, the reason I can’t fit you is the fact one of your feet is bigger than the other!” Well, you may guess what resulted, for she gave that salesman a seyere scolding. And as she stomped out of the shop, she stopped at the door to add some more invective to the manager. But he smiled and said, “Why, Madame, I’m positive that I can find exactly what will suit you.” HIGHER PRICE , He mollified her enough to get her seated. Then he selected shoes about $5 higher in price. And when he had her fitted, he said, with a smile: “Why Madame, the only trouble is that one of your feet is SMALLER than the other." , She smiled delightedly and thought the manager was wonderful. But he had polhted out the very same idea as his employe, .except he had phrased it in 9 positive or complimentary fashion. The clerk had angrily told her “One of your feet’s big-ger’h the other.” * A ★ (Always writ* to Or. Crarw tn cor* of The Pontiac Press, inclosing a long stamped, addressed envelope and 20 cant* to cover typing and printing costs whan you sand tor one —1 booklets.) MULKEYTRACY .fp- A church reception followed the Saturday vows of Patricia Aim Tracy and James Frank-lyn Mulkey in the Calvary 1Bapfist Church. Rev. Henry Wrobbel performed the candlelight service. With a gown and train of Chantilly Idee and peau de soie, the bride wore an illusion veil with lace and crystal tiara, Sandra Johnson, Mrs. Ralph BattishM, Mrs. Edwin Moore, Karen PulUns?. William Puddy( Dan B. Swift Jr., James France and Ralph Battishill attended the couple presently honeymooning in Canada. Parents of the newlyweds are• the H. A. Tracys of Savoy Drive and the Riley M Point, (kr. JTAYWRJj'lNEMAN Audrey Helene Ginemanand Joe TayUflr of LaPorte, lnd. were wed at a nuptial Mass Saturday in St. Patrick’s Church, Union Lake. Their parents are the Frank A. Gbietnans of Buckskin Drive, Commerce Township, and the Robert Taylors of lAPorte. ‘ Gowned in white Chantilly lace and silk organza over taffeta, the bride carried her mother’s bridal rosary in her bouguet of white carnations and red roses. Attendants were Mrs. Charles Gamalski, Mary Taylor, Marilyn Leuxm-dowski and Theresa Hotter; ..Clyde Luce, Frank and Robert .. Ginman and Michael Taylor. WELLS-HENREtTt Kathleen Joy Heriretty chose white peau taffeta gown for her recent vows to Alan Willard Wells in St. Michael’s Church. Atthcon lace accepted the bodice and Watteau train. „ Their parents are the Lyle K. Henrettys of Third Avenue and Mr. and Mrs. WiUaMWeUsof , Mary ‘ Stif Street, tndepehd- i ence Township, Attendant* were Sandra Reeves, Port ’ Wayne, lnd. and Florence Henretty; Lyle and George Henretty, Clift; Irwin and Thomas Wells. The bride was graduated from Bor gees School of Nursing, Kalamazoo. Her husband attends Michigan Technological University in " Houghton. 'Antique' Fur Used for Hats * NEW YORR W - Used fur coats are being bought by a firm here. ★ dr The designer makes them Inlp fur hats shaped like shaggy tea cozies, or into shaggy hoods, babushkas and toques. The seconl-hand fur use for these items is referred to as “antique.” Needlework Kit Pretties for Babies Religious Art Exhibit Set for SacreclMeari, More than 250 artists have accepted invitations to s h 0 w their work at the 4th Biennial National Religious Art Exhibition Oct. 8 through 25 in the galleries of Sacred Heart Seminary, Detroit. i Frederick Colombo, Detroit I attorney and civic leader, is general chairman of the event. Pointing out that some 400 pieces of painting, sculpture^ mosaic, glass and rpetalcraft will be shown, Colotpbo states | that the Michigan Show has I become “the largest religious First see your forprecise prescription-filling in ^dutards see US PIDIC SHOES Don’t misunderstand us—-we’re shoe fitters, not doctors. We don’t claim to prescribe Pedic shoes for your child’s foot problems. But we do assert, proudly, that we will fill your doctor's prescription with complete accuracy. See your doctor . , . see us, for fduiardi Pedic Shoes. MM \.ewi$ Junior Boofeiy 1060 W. Huron 334-0725 (Huron Centre, lSe*t to China City) Shop Daily 9;30 till 6, Mon. and Frt. till 9 art exhibition on a continuing basis in the nation, ranking among the highest for c,a s h prizes awarded.” TOP NAMES Artists from all sections of the country will eflter works. Included are such names as William Congdon, Zpltan Sc-peshy, Fred Nagler, Jack Za-jac, Jean Chariot and Yoko Wong. The Rev. Frs. William D. Davidson and Edward Farrell, cordirectors of the show, announced the jurors to select the prize winning entries, wee They include Willis Woods, director of the Detroit Institute of Arts; Vincent McNas-py, nationally known art critic; and Malcolm Lein, directorat the St. Paul. MJnn., Art Center. Prizes totaling $3,000 will be awarded. If you want to please a proud parent, embroider one, or all of these exquisite baby needs. The sacque, kimona aiRl*T>aIr of bibs come each as a separate kit. All are completely finished gxcept for the embroidery and ribbon ties. They are made of) washable, pure white, 100 per cent cotton pique lined with , soft white cotton flannel and bound with white satin. The delightful bunny is stamped on the fabric to be embroidered In shades of pink, blue and greeh and there is a fluffy white pompon for the bunny tail. Each kit also includes a length of white satin ribbon for ties. These could nof be simpler, lovelier or more acceptable. Make them for,baby showers, birthday or Christmas gifts or to sell for your church bazaar, e e e To obtain Needlework Kits °2A-B- and C, fill out coupon below and send It with a check or money order for each kit desired to Needlework Kit Service at address given. (Allow four weeks for delivery.) Swimming and Tennis at This Collegiate Party The Birmingham Wellesley Club will again sponsor a beach party and picnic for Eastern college unider-graduates who live In Oakland' County and northwest Detroit., Mrs. Eric Goullaud of Royal Oak, club president, Is chairman for the Thursday affair flrom 2:00 to 5:00 p.m. at Orchard Lake Country Club. During the past five years, students from the following colleges have participated, some as guests of the alumni groups: Amherst, Bernard, Bowdoin, 'Bradford, Brown, Bryn Mawr, Colgate, Connecticut, Cornell, Dartmouth, Gou-cher, Harvard, Middlebury, Massachusetts lI|>s^l^u^e of Technology, Mt. Holyoke, Pembroke, Princeton, Rad-cliffe, Skidmore, Smith, Swarthmore, Tufts, Vassar, Wellesley, Wheaton, Williams and Yale. Mrs. F. K. Plumb ami Mrs. Rodman Turner, both of Birmingham, are taking reservations through today. tee is Mrs. James Fairchild III of Birmingham. 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Yon Can Afford To Bo in Style at these wonderful ~ SAVINGS I have had to pay his personal bills. I have the slips'bn these payments in case he can pay them later. His father Says he should pey them. - Is $20 a week too much for his living at home? Do you think he should pay the blUs that are really his? Can you help us solve this problem? Mrs. A- S., Scranton, Pa. THRIFT DEPT. specials Dear Mrs. S.: That’s a pretty stbep price for room and board on, his earnings. Assuming a 40-hour week, his take-home pay would be about $44.' With overtime, it might be considerably more some weeks. But his expenses must logically be geared to the lean weeks, not the fat ;f;T. v.‘i# ! ): ■ FIFTEEN' HAIR laSd* SHAPING X SHAMPOO 175* AND set Thrift-Dopt PHesa nighdyHisher On Friday and Benrday Open Late f and Thursday 1 Prices 'Open SMI, Sat SMS Prices Slightly Higher Friday and Saturday donnelL’8 1 ----By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Food Editor Here’s a good dessert tor that next dub meeting. One recipe baked in an 1x8x2 pan will serve nine people easily. M r s. Reuben Redmond, our cook of the day. loves to bake , and do oak* decorating. Although she has five children and a full-time Job, she finds timt to sew and knit. APPLE DAT* SQUARES Mrs. Reuben Redmond 1H sticks margarine $4 cup sugar i«n 1% imps flour 1 teaspoon soda % teaspoon salt 2 cups finely chopped ap- i® - M 1 cup finely chopped dates 1 teaspoon cinnamon % dip chopped nuts (optional) Craam margarine with sugar and egg; beat well. 81ft dry ingredients and add creamed mixture. Stir in bait and nuts. Pour into greased 8x8x2 pan. Baka 30 minutes. Cut in squares to servo. Garnish .... M un, if da- SPENCER-B1RGE On a Pennsylvania honey-moon ore the Larry L. Spencer* (Judith Am Birge), toed, Saturday before Rev. Robert Rotten, in Faith Baptist Church. Their parents are the John Birges of Kohler Drive and the Lawrence Spencers of Oakvista Drive, Independence Toumhip. A mantilla-type veil complemented the bride’s gem and cathedral train of Chantilly lace over white taffeta. Attendants, were Mrs. Richard Oliver, Mrs. Douglas Schtutow, Linda Spencer, Jacqueline Birge; Orville Colts, Richard Oliver, John Birge Jr. and Robert Benjamin Jr. Reception was in the Waterford Fire Fighters Association Cardigan Necks Are Good on Coats When making a coat, consider making a straight box coat or flared coat with a cardigan neck. There’s no collar to make and vary little fitting to do. Make it in a medium weight tweed. This fabric doesn’t show mistakes and Is easy to handle. BEAUTY For You and Yottr Admirers IT’S ANDRE’S *naturally99 curly permanent $750 complete with cutting and styling Extraordinary Special Reg. $ 25 PERMANENT NOW e*i ftCA ONLY «5X2 ANDRES Shampoo and aet 11N. Saginaw St. No' A ppointment Needed ! Beauty Salon PHONE FE 5-9257 iJoStPH/NE loWMAM There are many different opinions about whether a woman should teU her real age. Does it reflect an ojder or a younger outlook when she tells a little white lie and pushes her age back a few years? I do not know why women have such a persistent and avid interest in the ages of their contemporaries, but they do have. I am sure that yon hoar remarks such Si the following many, many times. HOW old IS she?” “Well, after aU, she was in college when I was in high school.” “She’ll never see M again!” “She doesn’t look that old.’’ This Is the one I like best! “How long have yon known, Sue?’’ “I’ve known her since we were the same age.” There are two ways of looking at the subject. Who was it who said, “Never trust a woman who will tell you- her real age. If she’ll tell you that, she’ll tell you anything?” I think that many women dislike telling their age because they are keenly aware of the age consciousness of others. They may be having a fine time with people much younger or older than they are, with feeling of age . gap on either side. I think It m perfectly legitimate for a woman who has a youthful spirit, and rfeally looks years younger than she Is, to subtract a few years from her age. Of course she will probably “NOW OPEN” GRAY’S FURNITURE WAREHOUSE PHONE 338-0851 DRIVE OUT A LITTLE-AND SAVE A LOT. HONEST DISCOUNTS BUNK BEDS MATTRESSES LIVING ROOM SUITES BEDROOM SUITES DINING ROOM SUITES DINETTE SETS OCCASIONAL CHAIRS J m m . Fokmerly a Roller Rink not got away with it because there will always be someone who “knew her when.”^H However, I think that her dishonesty often reflects a youthful attitude. - ★—it—■ ■ On the other hand no woman seems older than the one who is frantically trying to appear years younger than she is. She betrays herself.In many ways: Too much makeup, synthetic pep, and junior miss style. The woman withji truly voung out-, look does nofdo this. ! It seems such a dreary attitude to measure age In years rather than in personality, flexibility, outlook and physical condition. Today the deadline for aging can be delayed for yean aad, years by adhering to • dally routine which Is based on p r e s e n t*day scientific know-how concerning beauty and health care. ■ The most vibrant thing to do would be to just forget all about age, ours and that of others. However, this is Impossible because of the age consciousness which is reflected in remarks such as those I have mentioned.1 I think 8H to 8M a i would bo a fairer sum to chargt for room and board. You want your son to learn to manage hit own Income, so give him chance to pay his own bills. Why not be generous About those payments you’ve already made and just write them off? In fact, if you’re financially able, why not help him get a newer ear? From what you tell me, the one ho has now Is just looking for a good wrack. * t * (You dn write to Mary Fee-ley In care of The Pontiae Press. Shs will answer questions of widest Interest in her colli.) , Add Yeors to Life Treat outdoor furniture with a wood preservative to add years to its life. Avon-Troy Caipet Sales. Cleaners JxeumodeA Aate,... ♦DEPENDABLE* SEAMLESS These wonder-wearing nylons with Miracle No-Bind TopsI p&MOlMUl/ir ALLEN-RAMSEY ■ -The-First, Christian Church was the setting for the recent vows of Yvonne R. Ramsey and Ronald G. 'Allen. Floor-length white , Rochelle lace over taffeta with back Here was worn by the daughter of the Albert [f, Ramteyt of HaUman Street. She carried white cmaHone'md rotes. Madelene Carter attended as honor maid with Airman 2.0. Kenneth R. Brown at best man. Ushering at the evening rite, performed by Rev. Jack SrC. Clark, were Robert Earnest and David R. Brooks. The newlyweds left fora honeymoon along Lake Michigan after thjrir church reception, Parents of the bridegroom are Mrs. Richard Corby of Williams Lake Road and Marvin F. Allen of No “ Street. A Tray Lamp Saves Space NEW YORK (UPI) — Good for room areas where a table takes up too much space: the tray lamp. . This lamp, surging to now popularity in recent months, combines features of the floor, table and pole lamp. The typical tray Hinds about 4 to 4% feet high, has a compact floor bass, rad a tray mounted at chairslda height on the upright shaft. *Wto* farailur. mad Quality Carpailmg Slam, I9S4" 5190-5400 DIXIE HWY. OR 3-1225 QPIN FRIDAY TIL 9 EASY BUDGET TERMS SM«Am CaManwr. Call JJ4-0MI-Iff M charm Arthur Godfrey says: “Here’s real energy for people on the go!* Kretschmer Wheat Germ gives you 30 nutrients believed beneficial to «ood health. Stamina and vigor—more all-around nutrition than any other natural cent!. It alio acta as a “spark plug" to help the body use other high-energy foods more fully. Oet a jar of Kretschmer Wheat Germ today, plain or Sugar *N Honey. Delicious as a cereal or added to other cereals. UM to Arthur Godfrey. CBS Radio Network whifit i£fcJL OhL jMofjAj! STERLING BEAUTY SCHOOL H DRAYTON PLAINS IS EXPANDING ENROLL NOW • ih* li.Hirr rnln dft'iHM hopmaaiaa ,>•,>»« “LOOK WHAT YOU GET AT $T0WHG” Mirhlgan ram,,1.1. mhoOl Of Baaaly Collar. • Ail working equipment Of the time you (tort. • No manikin to buy tchool furnl,hei them. • free parking — friendly dtmoiphertt. - • faty monthly payment plan.' • Advance training FREE tor all beginner* • Uniform curriculum [, / • Permanent »taff of instructor* • Helene Curti* professional vnuol education . PLUS Supervision aJ all training by the famous instructor ; LOPEZ ' (Originator of the professional halrstyllng contest for prhm money In Michigan) For /briber Information writ, or call STERLING BEAUTY SCHOOL 4023 Dixie hwy DRAYTON PLAINS, MICH 48020 OR 3-0222 AJmCs 852-2444 77* 82 N. Saginaw St. Moth IRe PLOO* COVSRfNCS • DRAPERIES BEDSPREADS • SUP COVERS . and easy feeling of wearing oply one. Clever design, crisp contrast, end as casually cor-rect with a straight Garland ikirt as It I* with oyr slim Garland pants. RUGGLESPUN SWEATER ......*13 PANTS _____*11 cobbbks,kt California Cobblers soft little shoe With an amusing fashion * look that goes with all tho new toll casuals. To make It fwkt as much fun, it comes In Black with Beige Kid or Green Suede. Size! 5 to 10 AAA to B widths HURON at TELEGRAPH THE PONTIAC PRESB, TUJBgDAY. SEPTEMBER 8, 1964 f MOBILHEAT COLDPROOF Heating Oil Our office is in constant touch with our courteous drivers ... should you need fuel oil immediately we contact one of our fleet of GMC trucks via radio phone and dispatch it to your home. However, it is better to place your order in advance and use GEE'S MODERN "KEEP-FULL" SERVICE. For over 39 years Pontiac and Oakland County residents hove depended on Gee for Warmth, Comfort, Cleanliness and Economy ... May we add your name to 6u’r ever-growing list of satisfied customers? Dial FE 5-8181. No Matter Where You Live ... You, too can enjoy Complete Heating Satisfaction! Gee’* fleet of now, modern GMC frvckt, motor equipped for accuracy and radio dispatched to give ovon quicker service, deliver cleaner b6ming fuel oil In Pontiac, Drayton Plains, Waterford, %Clarkston, Orion, Oxford, Rochester, Auburn Heights, BlaomfieldeHills, Kongo Harbor, Walled take and the surrounding orea. We would like to stop at your home. ^oar, c';Zn°n'i'ol THErtfe IS NO SUOSTITUTE FOR QUALITY . . . QUALITY OF THE PRODUCT ... QUALITY IN THE SERVICE ... FOR IN REALITY, “IT’S THE SERVICE AFTER THE SALE THAT REALLY COUNTS . . .” YOU CAN DEPEND ON GEE! The dependability of your fuel dealer is the essence in COMPLETE HEATING SATISFACTION . . . The fir's! factor is to have the fuel of your choice available when you need it. This is where the dependability of Gee really counts) Gee's automatic service assures you of always plenty of better quality New Mobilheat fuel oil regardless of the weather, as through our modern "Degree Day" method we know )ust how much fuel oil you need to keep your home warm and comfortable. Before your present supply is exhausted your fuel'tank is refilled with this better quality fuel oil which has made Gee one. of the foremost fuel distributors in this area. -.. Now is the time to switeh to Complete Heating Satisfaction ... NOW IS THE TIME TO SWITCH TO GEE . . DIAL FE 8-8181 Yes! We give. Holden Red Trading Stamps! it IF YOU DON'T KNOW FUEL . . . KNOW YOUR 1 FUEL DEALER” E PONTIAC PRESS TOMPAY. SgPTKMBEtt £ imT j-OKflACSjaiCHTGAN. t/.S. Copters P.PngMachine Gun in Frustrating *mmmm golese army fighting Communist-supported rebels. More than l.OOO.South Africans are reported to have volunteered. Trying io Put Off Leopoldville Second Congo Rebel Group on Move (AP) — Rebels In the northern Congo have proclaimed a “Peopled Republic” In Stanleyville and are pushing toward Coqull-hatville. They may try to liftjt up . with insurgent forces in Kwilu Province. •" The rebel radio in Stanleyvilje said Christopbe Gbenye, a former .vice premier ;