Th0 W»ath9r UJ. WMtkM- tHrlM Pi TflE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition VOL. 128 NO. 249 -V ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1965-24 PAGES Reports 'Hospital Official Doctor Put Ether Into Bottle Before Deaths Bolster Guard as Prison Rio! Probe Begins Illinois Warden Says Outbreak Caused by 4 ^Unstable' Inmates . CHESTER, 111. m —Extra guards patrolled Menard State Penitentiary today as authorities investigated the brief but savage riot yesterday in which eight guards were stabbed, three of them fatally. Officials said excuses given by inmates do not Justify the outbreak, and ^at the conspirators apparently were more interested in publicity. Five guards who were ■tabbed, and a sixth wbo was burned by a bottle of flaming fluid, were reported today bi fair to satisfactory codditkm. “Things are back to normal,’’ the prison’s warden said. “We have extra guards only as a precaution. ★ ★ ★ “’This thing was caused by four men with unstable minds and was completely unnecessary.” ‘SPONTANEOUS’ WiUiam Wallace of a guard who was cut on the cheek, called the dining hall incident spontaneous. He said there was trouhle with no advance notice. ’The rioters scuffled with guards only a few t Then they sealed themselves in a kitchen for four hours. ★ ★ w A guard said the quartet “tried to make a big thing out of something that was Just stupid.” Press to Sport Two Specials Two big sports specials are coming your way this holiday weekend. Tomorrow, the annual high ■cbool basketball, swimming with forecasts, pictures and an inside look of the INS-M winter sports teams will appear in ’The Press. Saturday, the Press’ annual All-Oakland County Football Teams, will be featured In the Football Green. In Today's Press M Plan City orders contracts signed - PAGE 18. '2 Chinas' U. S. is reportedly considering policy change — PAGE 24. Latin Talks Rusk says broad consensus has emerged on inter-American future — PAGE I. Area News ............4 .....M .......II de.....2S fomics ............II Ekiltorials ........I Markets .............17 .......II .....U-U ....... I TV 4k Radio Programs 21 WUson, Earl.......U Women’s Pages....M-U ‘LET’S NOT LOSE OUR HEADS!’ - hatchet, however, when they had the chance. .These hen turkeys hadn’t been invited out for They’ll be guests of honor tomorrow, but ’Thanksgiving dinner yet when this picture they’ll be too stuffed to enjoy themselves, was taken. They should have buried the (See story. Page 2). California Due a New Storm At Least 12 Dead in Floods, Mud $|ides LOS ANGELES (AP) - Saturated Southern Califomla, plagued by flash floods in wMch at least 12 persons have died, braced today for a fresh storm expected to bring heavy down- Rescue workers and cleanup crews feared new mud slides and torrents of water tonight and hoped for a respite tomorrow, when only light rains were predicted. iB the heaviest. November rains ever recorded la Sonth-era California, flash floods in desert areas raked cars off highways and into washes and residents of hlllstde areas fought ooztaig mud as it in- The desert resort of Palm Springs, a winter mecca for smog-tiied Los Angeles residents, was virtually isolated and cut in half by a flood that rushed down from the !$an Jacinto Mountains. woo Witnesses said three persons were carried away in their cars and a man wadi^ out to help was swept away in the torrent. Only one body was found; the 's presumably draw authorities said. Floods hit other areas in San Bernardino County between Los Angeles and San Bernardino, M miles east. At rocky Cucamonga, Wash, a roaring flash flood caught a dozen cars dnd swept them half a block, tumbling over and over, some with their lights ■ burning. Police Half Holdup at Pontiac Drugstore Three Pontiac policemen last night broke up a holdup in progress at an e^ side drugstojre, apprehrad-iag two men, one of wiiom carried a 410?gauge shot-g«n. Charged with armed robbery are Floyd Newburn, 24, of 256 Rockwell and Homer Gilder, 25, of 114 Wan. They are held at^ Oakland County Jail, awaiting arraignment to- day. ’The two had taken $712 from a cash register, a clerk and a »• ■! ' fy—wrtir* DEAD AT n - Belgium’s Dowager Queen Elisabeth, 89, a heroine in two world wars and one of Europe’s leading patronesses of the arts, died last night in Brussels of a heart attack. Grandmother of the reigning monarch, the queen suffered an earlier attack Nov. 4. customer at the Schllct Pharmacy at 660 Auburn, moments before patrolmen Stanley D. Helgemo, Oscar K. Kissinger and Raymond V. Solwold burst into the store about 10 p.m., police said. Kissinger said a suspicious car report on RnsseR St led the patrolmen to tiie drug store. In the store at the time were Leonard H. Schllct of 3009 Old Orchard, the owner; Schllct’! wife; clerks Glenn George, 17, of 106 Rosetta, and Linda Teas-dale, 19, 296 Chenylawn, Pontiac Township; and an unidentified youngster. Mrs. Schllct told police she was on the phone when the bandits entered. RIPPED CORD Newburn, pointing the s h o t-gun, ripped the phone cord from the wall and said she “might get hurt,” according to Mrs. Schllct. Kissinger entered the front door and met Gilder, j Solwold then came in and spotted Newburn at the rear. New-buiT. turned and ran, stutqbling, according to Solwold, before disappearing into a baseilient stairway. Solwold got an automatic rifle from the patrol car and returned to the store while Kissinger held a revolver on Gilder. Yank Losses in Viet War Hit New High 240 Die In Actian Last Week; Enemy Dead Listed at 2,262 It's Mistaken for Surital SAIGON, South Viet Nam iff) — The battle of the la Drang Valley pushed American casualties in Viet Nam last week to 240 killed in action, the U.S. military announced today. It was nearly three times the highest total announced for any previous week. The U. S. Command also reported 470 Americans were wounded during the week ending at midnight Nov. 20 and C were missing in action. A record number of Communist casualties also was reported - 2,262 dead and 136 captured. South Vietnamese forces reported 357 dead and 817 wounded, more than double the previous week. Tlie report today brought the tQtal of U. S. casualties reported in nearly five years of fighting in Viet Nam to about 1,300 dead aiid about 6,000 wounded, w ★ * Half the dead and a third of the wounded were cut down in the past three months as U. S. combat troops, who began arriving in Viet Nam ip February, took a bigger and bigger part in the war. Before February, the American role in Viet Nam was an advisory one, coupled with providing helicopter and other air support for South Vietnamese nits. The highest previous total of American casualties was ported for the week ending Nov. 13. It was 86 kiUed and 230 wounded. The week before the was 70 killed and 237 wounded. ’The average for the Korean war was about 210 American battle dead per week, although at times the number was far higher. By DICK SAUNDERS City Editor, The Pontiac Press A doctor at Pontiac Osteo-apathic Hospital poured ether into a bottle prior to the mystery deaths of three surgery patients last week, a hospital spokesman revealed today. The ether was later mistaken for another drug and injected into the patients, resulting in their deaths. Hospital Administrator Harry H. Whitlow said today that an administrative investigation of the deaths dis- closed that “a doctor drained ether into a bottle” prior to operations Thursday and Friday which resulted in the fatalities. Whitlow could give no reason for pouring the ether into a bottle other than “presumably to dispose of it.” * w ★ The administrator said it hasn’t been determined why the bottle had not been disposed of. It was apparently left in the operating room and later mistaken for a Surital solution by Pontiac Area Thanksgiving Will Be Chilly ’Thanksgiving Day will arrive with partly sunny skies and little change In temperature, the high 37 to 42. There’s a chance of a few occasional showers with lows of 35 to 40 tonight. The forecast for Friday is more of the same — partly cloudy and continued coM. The low reading in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. was 29. The 2 p.m. recording was 45. Top Auditor Replies to Bronson Oakland County’s department heads should not expect to conduct a Utopian operation on limited tax dollars, Daniel T. Murphy, chairman of the County Board of Auditors, said today. Replying to a recent Pontiac Press stoi7 hi which County Prosecutor S. Jerome Bronson detailed budget problems of his office, Murphy said that all 37 county departments are asking for more financial help and aU jould use more operating funds. “The responsibility of qiy o^ flee Is. to ^ve adequate service to cooaty resideBto as ece- pliyaaid. Murphy points made by Bronson who had sought $50,000 in the 1966 budget to hire eight more people but was allowed Just one new employe, a stenographer, in the new bqdget. ★ w ★ “At the conclusion of budget hearings in committee, the pros-was offered a new assistant prosecutor but, instead, chose to have a stenographer,” Murphy said. ‘OUTSTANDING OFFICE’ "From the first day he took office, he has requested more staff. His predecessor ran an outstanding office and It doesn’t seem to foUosr that from December 1964 until January 1966 crime or population rose to the extent that more staff was needed.” Murphy said he agreed that it was not the responsibility of the prosecutor to search for operating funds. “But it is his responsibility to administer his department economically and make use of the available talent for the benefit of the taxpayer.” WWW Referring to ^Bronson’s suggestion that the county borrow for capital improvements rather than paying cash, Murphy said that whether borrowing is the best method is a debatable to-ue. “But I challenge the praueou tor to show me where the county has uiwd operating revenues for building. “The proposed new court- plate the use of operating rev- “Present laws permit the use of one tenth of a mill per year (about $250,000) for building and construction. The county has n e y e r used this law to the full extent. No operating tax'Wney has been projected for construction use since I took office in January 1964.” Murphy said also that he chal (Ckmtinued on Page 3, Col 1) another anesthetist. Whitlow explained. AGAINST RULES “It is strictly against hospital rules and regulations to pour ether into bottles,”, he added. Ether normally is stored in cans. Hospital authorities said the ether in a clear bottle would resemble a Suritol solution. The latter solution injected into patients serves as a sedative prior to surgery. Ether injected directly into the bloodstream is lethal. ★ * * Whitlow said he would not disclose the names of doctors involved until the investigation by state and federal authorities and local law enforcement agencies was completed. ALL INFORMATION “We have turned over all information to the prosecutor's office,” he concluded, The doctor, reportedly seen by other staff members pouring ether into the bottle, was one of two being questioned today by the prosecutor’s office. It was confirmed yesterday by Oakland County ITosecutor S. Jerome Bronson that ether was the cause of death for two children and a mother of two. ★ ★ ★ The meeting with the two doctors, was called this morning in an effort to find out who was responsible. The victims were Kimberly Ann Bruneel, 8, 2599 Ivanhoe, West Bloomfield ToWnship; William M. Ketchum, 12, 250 W. Webster, Ferndale; and Mrs. (Continued on Page 2, Coi. 8) EVIDENCE — Ether rather than another mixed anesthetic was found in this bottle during the investigation into the deaths of three patients at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital. Investigators say the injection of ether is to blame for the deaths. Set OH Vast Changes Ether Was 1st Anesthetic Distinguished by its powerful characteristic odor, ether could outrank penicillin in the history of medicine. The colorless, volatile, highly inflammable liquid can be credited with taking much of the pain out of medical treatment. In addition, as the first cona-mon anesthetic, ether opened vast new areas of treatment. Notably, it made surgery possible in cases where doctors previously could not operate for the lack of an anesthetic. The use of ether as an anesthetic predates the Civil War, although it was discovered in urope in the 13th century, w ♦ w A dentist and an M.D. both claim credit for first using the sweetish-tasting drug as an anesthetic. The years 1841-42 are the earliest dates for such use here. COMMON USE However, by the time of the CMl War in the early ll80’s, )ther was in common use. Ether ts still used today, al-thongh other drags are oMre I. It trsqaeatly to ad- Formed by the action of sulphuric acid on alcohol, ether, until the later discovery of vaporizers, was used by the so-called “open drop” technique. ★ ★ ★ This merely consisted of letting a few drops fall on a gauze covering the patient’s nose and mouth. DECOMPOSES Shipped in copper-line^ cans, ether decomposes—turning yellow — upon contact with air or ght. Ingested, limited amounts of ether have the same effect on the body as alcohol, noted for its anesthetic qualities. ’Thus, in the 19th century ether parties were held in Europe. ’These went out of fashion and the ether addict is rare today. ★ a 4 Ether has three self-limiting factors that have seen other replace its role in medicine. Essentially, there is a protongsd recovery period from Roche to Talk at Elks Lodge Dec. 2 Lunch General Motors President James M. Roche will speak at a noon luncheon Dec. 2 at the Elks Lodge of Pontiac, 114 Orchard Lake, it was announced today. In charge of arrangements are Carleton C. Patterson Jr. a local insurance man with offices at 711 Ck>mmunity National Bank Building and Fred J. Poole of Poole Lumber Co., 151 Oakland. Tickets are $2 each. A limited number went on sale today at Dickinson’s Downtown Store, 31 N. Saginaw; Osmun’s Town & Country Store at the Tel-Huron Shopping Center; Penney’s at Miracle Mile; and Hughes-Hatcher-Suffrin at the Pontiac Mall. This will be one of Roche’s rare imblic appearances since becoming president of GM last June. Service clubs wishing to attend may obtain tickets by contacting ei t h e r Patterson or Poole. ministered ty yaoag slildMa#i. baafy dooes, ether tends to make patients ill for awhile and It is highly flanunable. Press Planning Single, Early Haliday Edition The Pontiac Press will publish a single, early edition tomorrow, so that employes may spend as much of the holiday with their families as possible. Normal editions will be resumed Friday. 9NlddOH$ TWO THE POKTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, yoVEMBER 24, im 'Great Society Hits at Private Programs LOS ANGELES (AP)-Gov. George Romney said Tuesday night that the Great Society government ii intruding on independent, voluntary programs which are better than government programs. In remaiia at a testimoniid dinner for Dr. Gaylord Parkin-s(H), Romney charged that “the record of big government is a record of failure.” . * ★ ★ This, he said, gives the Republican Party the chance to offer what he called a superior program emphasizing independent, voluntary cooperative action—not government action. He said the Great Society is “out roaming the countryside looking for ways to expand its activities. It’s moving in and taking over sound voluntary programs, like the community school program and the Head Start program, of the I' ' Foundation in Flint, Mich.’ MEETS HUMAN NEEDS But, said the Michigan governor, independent programs And War Declaration Romney Eyes U.S. Viet Role DETROIT (AP) - Michigan Gov. George Ronmey said Tuesday the United States should not assume an “offensive role” in Viet Nam “without complying with our constitutional procedure.” Romney implied in a pre-ceeding paragraph in a letter to president and editor John S. Knight of the Detroit Free Press that by this he meant declaration d war by Congress. Romney, recently returned from South Viet Nam, also said the American people should have “more information and more truth” about Viet Nam. Romney referred in the letter to a conversation he said he had with Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge in Saigon. Ruler of Kuwait Dies Following a Heart Attack DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) -Kuwait’s ruler, Shiekh Abdullah As Salim As Sabah, died today, Kuwait radio announced. Death followed a heart attack suffered late last month, the Crown Prince Sheikh Sabah El Salem El Sabah, a younger brother, was proclaimed ruler of the oil sheikhdom by the Council of Ministers, it said. “As I left Saigon,” Romney wrote, “I told Ambassador Lodge that it was my view that any future change in the character of our present defensive military effort supporting the South Vietnamese should occur only if there is a congressional declaration of war as required by the Constitution. ‘So far we have moved from an advisory role to a special forces role, to a military-target-only air bombing role, to a land support role-but we should not assume an offensive role without complying with our constitution larocedure.” ★ ★ ★ Romney wrote Knight in response to editorial cpUcants by Dec. 1, it was announced today. James McNeely, OEO enecu-tive director, said that Interview oommltteea have been established to select personnel for the organisation’s community action centers slated for occupancy Dec. 1. the end this month win be beHJor processing as additional loET open up, McNeely Tbrry, Valley Woods and Westchester elementary schools. Scheduled for Tuesday and Dec. 7 and 9 are Baldwin, Bev-erty, Bloomfield Village, FVank-lin. Meadow Lake, Midvale, Walnut Lake and Greenfield 'Doctor Poured Ether in Bottle' (Continued From Page One) Gerald Covington, 24, of 436 TIME OF DEATHS The giri died Thursday and the other two Friday. The prosecutor’s office, how-ver, did not lean of the when a newspaper reporter telephoned ask^ for infCrma- and David Pence, the hospital’s attorney, denied they tried to conceal the mysterious nature of the deaths. The three victims died within 24 hours of each other after being given the same anesthesia before routine operations. FIVE GOT INJECTIONS Bronson said that five patients received injections from the bottle containing the ether, the first suffering no serious effect, and that there was enough in tlie flask to be given to at . least seven persons. The second patient who received the InjwtioB has been listed in serioas cenditieB but today was reported to be satisfactory. Ether was found in a sealed bottle supposed to contain only the drug Surital and distilled water, according to investigators. ★ ♦ ♦ The drug, found to be safe by the Food aixl Drug Administration, is an anesthetic. LABELED ‘WATER’ Pontiac police said the bottle from which the lethal dose was taken was labeled “water.” They had theorised that someone apparently added ether to a hottle of distilled water and left it with other bottles of water to be used The manufacturer of the Surital, Parke-Davis A Co., said the drug would not mix with ether, and thus some of the solution in the bottle must have been water. ★ a a For this reason, the first patients to be injected with the solution might have received little ether, but as the level each succeeding patient would have received more. MISSED INJECTION Another patient reportedly missed receiving an injection from the bottle when a doctor about to proceed with an operation asked for a new mixture, according to Bronson. Death certificates filed with the city of Pontiac made no mention of the anesthetic, but County Health Director Dr. Bernard Berman explained that it “was because we didn’t know then what caused the deaths.” A Food and Drug Administration investigator who attended an autopsy on one of the victims said, “It (ether) was so present you could smell it” 'Money Stress Led Teen to Killing Spree' SUNBURY, Pa. (AP) - State police said today a 17-year-old who admitted shooting his parents and setting a house on fire that killed seven of his brothers and sisters was under heavy financial pressure because of an automobile accident a month 80. C^. John C. Grey laid Ha^ Id Bordner ' ' old „ _______ ment of guilt Tuesday fr^ his hospital bed, saying that he wanted to collect inmanoe to pay off debto. 'Most of his worries stemmed from debts resulting from that -teident,” Grey said. Coroner Henry Ulrich quoted ordnor as saying: “I wanted to pay nty bills. I thought it would be better this way.” ^ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1965 THREE County Auditor Board Chairman Replies to Bronson (Continued From Page One) lenges the prosecutor’s c r 1 m > increase figures (about 20 |nv cent per year). not INDICATED “The court docket and other records of the county do not indicate a great increase. The number of cases going to trial has not risen and the number of warrants issued is in no way an indication of a true workload.” Murphy said that even if there were more crime, it would not necessarily follow that more money would solve the problem. “The board of supervisors and board of auditors have heard of no instances in which persons awaiting trail are languishing in jail, enduring and unduly delay,” he said. ★ ♦ ★ He added that the sheriff’s department and county police departments, which are the chief law enforcement agencies in the county, have made no complaints to his knowledge to indicate that the county was not doing what is necessary to co-0 p e r a t e in law enforcement through financing departments concerned with crime. REPUES TO COMPLAINT Replying to the prosecutor's complaint that his office ha& only one investigator, Murphy said that this has always been the case because investigation is done by local police and the sheriffs departments. The board of auditor’s chairman said that in granting one new position to the prosecn-tor’s office, the board of supervisors most have been impressed that some help was needed in this aren consider-ing that just IS new positions Rites for Naturalist MESA, Ariz. (AP) — Funeral service was to be held here today for Walter Hastings, 79. Hastings, a pioneer wildlife photographer and naturalist, was a native of Traverse Qty, Mich. Hastings died here Monday. were granted after requests from all 37 ' “There are other departments that need help badly,” Murphy He cited the social welfare, health, juvenile and veterans af- fairs departments as much in need of more help. “As an example,” Murphy said. “Oakland County is short 20 public hearth nurses based on the national standard. ANOTHER EXAMPLE Another example is the pro- tective service function of the Juvenile Court which should have double its present staff of workers who counsel minors in trouble in an effort to keep youths from ultimately becoming criminals.” Mnrphy faid that the work- load standards of the prosecutor’s office as established by the proseentor “may not be as efficient as could be.” He added that all county employes have the same extreme devotion to duty as personnel in the prosecutor’s office. Murphy also took issue with Bronson’s allegation of a lack of proper office facilities. "When the prosecutor complains about library facilities, he is begging an issue,” Murphy said. “His office is on the fifth floor of the court tower and .taxpayer is getting his money’s the only other facility on that worth.' floor is the second most com- | "I do not believe that eon-plete law library In the state.” jtinual harassment through the Murphy added that he felt that all county departments are struggling to do a job under limited finances and that the news media is going to accomplish any more than available funds are going to make possible,” he ^aid. FIRE FIGHTERS HONORED - Robert Allen, president of the Waterford Township Fire Fighters Association, holds a plaque that Township Supervisor Dorothy Olwn (left) presented last night in honor of the group’s outstanding services to the community. The association recently gave a 39,000 truck to the township fire department. Neal Freed on Bail to Await Sentencing INDIO, CaUf. (UPI) - Former actor Tom Neal, 51, who faces sentencing Dec. 7 for involuntary manslaughter in the shooting death of his wife, Gail, 29, was freed from jail yesterday on 32,750 bail. * h -k Neal was convicted by a jury last Thursday. Superior Judge Hilton McCabe could sentence Neal to prison for up to 10 years for the death of Mrs. Neal ast April 1 in the couple’s Palm Siwin^ home. A family fight and a p h o n call from Pontiac police to the Oakland County Sheriff’s Department led to the conviction yesterday of three men on charges of breaking and entering. ★ ★ ★ The three, apprehended by sheriff’s detective Raymond A. Biils, are Russell Pennell, 21, 'OS'.,. Alt I $8HI Skm Ri afiltN tint delims tin taste aMH’leatiqrlnt.’ Try new tockit Strike FHters Family Feud Pays Off; Defectives Nab Trio Prospect; James Ivey, 23, 37tM Elizabeth Lake, Waterford Township; and Daniel Gary, 17, of 72 Murphy. Pennell was fined 3M and 37 costs, and Ivey and Gary 328 and |7 costs by Independence Township Justice William H. Stamp. Bills said the sheriff’s department was tipped to the case by Pontiac patrolman Billy H a r-graves, who became suspicious while taking an assault and battery complaint from Pennell’! wife. Hargraves said Mrs. PenneU alleged her husband beat her after the two argued over "things” Pennell was bringing home without explanation. PROMPTS CHECK A call to Sheriff’s Capt. Leo Hazen prompted a check of larceny reports and produced slm-i lari ties between Pennell’s "things” and a list of items missing in an Ortonville cottage break-in. Among the “things” found by Bills in searching Pennell’s home: A pair of inounted steer horns; an outdoor stove; a pair of rubber boots; two axes and a hatchet; a five-pound sledge, a pink-striped blanket and seven other items. Biils said the three admitted taking the goods Nov. 13. The offense, as a larceny punishable by as much as ten years imprisonment, was reduced to the breaking and entering charge at the request of ' owner of the cottage. ^ Detroit Hearing Set on Consumer Laws LANSING (AP) - The House Judiciary Subcommittee on Consumer Protection will hold a hearing in Detroit Tuesday to collect suggestions on strengthening consumer protection laws. Discussions of interest rates and contracts signed by consumers be featured. Sen. Philip Hart, D-Mich., a frequent campaigner for consumer protection measures, will attend the session. New Peilens for rusty water problems If you hovo a wator aoftanar and ruaty watar, ( ask your dealer for Morion Peilens. Like Morton Salt Pellets, new Peilens recharge water softeners. In addition, Peilens wash iron from your softener. They end Iron stains and rust clogging throughout your home and farm. Peilens are patented; proved more effective by Independent laboratory test. Available from your favorite water softener salt supplier. JUllUt KESSin eOMMSV.UWIKIICtttlM. INDIANA. BLENDCO WHISKEY. It PNOOF. TJtiR 6NAIN NEUTHAL SHNITS (5)why is Kessler head and shoulders above the rest?(Jy Kessler the Smooth As Silk whiskey. Full 86 proof FOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1965 To Form Study Unit for Cityhood Drive FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP--A fact-finding committee will be organized to work on the proposed conversion of Farmington Township to a city. The Township Board is expected to name memb^ to the committee shortly as the second step in its incorporation drive. / The board earlier mis month filed with the county incorporation petitions /bearing more than 4N signatures. The proposal yfiW be considered by the boui^aries committee of the Oakland County Board of Supervi^rs. / If sanctioned by the board of supervisors, tne township would hold an election on the proposal. / TO STUDY/ADVANTAGES Purpose/of the committee will be to “s^y the advantages of incorporation and get informa- tion together for the voters,’' according to Township Clerk Floyd A. Cairns. He said board members will hold a conference on the mat- ter before their next formal meeting Dec. 12. The committee's membershif will include Township Board members, representatives of the township planning board persons from various parts of the township, Cairns said. ★ ♦ ★ Township engineers at Pate, Him and Bogue of Detroit and planning consultants at Vilican- P/esentation of Press Trophy /ill Highlight Dairy Banquet /The -annual Oakland County Dairy Banquet will be held Dec. 7 at the First Congregational Church, Huron and Mill streets, Pontiac. Highlight of the event will be / presentation by The Pontiac ' Press of a trophy to the Oakland County Dairy Farmer of the Year. Certificates will also be pre- Dairy Surplus Decline Cited by Economist EAST LANSING (AP)-Dairy sun^ses have dropped sharply within the past three years and now are at levels the federal government considers manage-'able, an agricultural economist says. Dr. John Ferris of Michigan State University’s Cooperative Extension Service said butter in Government storage has dropped from 347 million to 72 million pounds since 1962. He added that the amount of nonfat dry milk in storage dropped from S72 million to 172 million pounds and cheese from IM million to 2 mUlion pounds. The decline in surpluses re-' suited from milk production be-| low expectations and rising demand in both domestic and export markets, he said. * * * Ferris said the new U.S. farm law indicates the government will be able to buy dairy products at market prices to meet the requirements of donation programs when products in government storage are inadequate. 'Hiis shifts the emphasis in the buying policy from renwv-ing surpluses to developing domestic and foreign donation programs, he said. sented to the outstanding dairyman in each county Dairy Herd Improvement Association (DHIA). .Tickets for the banquet are available from the supervisors and officers of the three county DHIA’s and at the Cooperative Extension Service Office, 155 ' Saginaw. * * * County Agriculture Agent Jay Poffenberger urged those planning to attend to make arrangements for tickets ^y Saturday so reservations can made by Dec. 1. DAIRYMEN INVITED Anyone involved or interested in dairying is invited to attend the banquet, Poffenberger said. The dinner will be prepared and served by the ladies of the First Congregational Church. Leman and Associates of South-field have agreed to work on the committee. Cairn said. RESPONSE TO RUMORS Officials here began the incorporation drive in response to rumors that the City of Farmington would attempt to annex the portion of the township which includes its industrial development. A proposal to annex some 560 acres of the township to the city was on a Nov. 2 ballot. While it was defeated by the township residents affected. In other action at their Monday meeting. Township Board members approved retoning from residential to general business a four-acre parcel of property adjacent to the Flamingo Trailer Court. ★ Rezoning for the parcel, on the east side of Middle Belt just nOTth of Nine Mile, was request- ed by Thomas Cox, who also owns the trailer court. APPEALED ACTION Last year he was denied a permit to expand the trailer court on the four-acre parcel and he appealed the matter in Oakland County Circuit Court. The township, which does not pennit trailer park devel- was upheld by the court. ’Trailer parks are allowed in business zones if a permit is issued by the zoning board of appeals. ★ * Hr Township Board members Monday night also authorized Cairns and ’Trustee Thomas Duke to investigate the possible purchase of an auxiliary unit to supply electricity to the police department in toe event of a blackout. Cairns noted that the township fire trucks carry portable electrical equipment which could be utilized by the police department but that the latter I should have its own standby For Parents, Teachers Conference Dates Set WALLED LAKE - Parent-teacher conferences in the Walled Lake schools are being scheduled for Nov. 30, Dec. 2 and Dec. 7. Attempting to meet with all parents of the children in their classes, teachers are setting up 130-minute conferences. Parents will be informed of their appointment times. Chil'dren in first through sixth grades will be dismissed at 11:30 a.m. on the three dates and neither morning nor afternoon kindergarten classes will meet. ★ ★ * Nina M. Kropidloski, elementary consultant, said the conferences can be “the best and most effective form of communication with parents.’’ IMPORTANT PART The conferences have been an important and integral part of the total reporting-to-parehts program in the Walled Lake schools for the last several years,” she said. Walled Lake and Qifford H. Smart junior high ychools in the Walled Uke School District wiU hold parent-teacher conferences Dec. 2. , Appointments for the talks at Walled Lake Junior High must be made this week by telephoning the school office. They wHI be held from 7:36 to 9:36 p.m. Dec. 2. Parents of students attending Clifford H. Smart Junior High School can telephone that office next week for appointments. ★ ★ * The program there will be held at 8:30 p.m.. with a short business session preceding the conferences. School Outlook Is Reviewed West IBIoomfield Twp. to Send 8,000 Pupils WALLED LAKE-When West Bloomfield Township peaches its population peak, it will be sending some 8,000 youngsters to Walled Lake schools. The enrollment for the entire district now is slightly under 7,500. The 16.5 square miles of West Bloomfield Township in the district constitute about 21 per cent of the school system’s land area. Walled Lake School District is one of seven serving the township. Henry Moses, Township Planning Commission chairman, discussed the population and enrollment projections with school board members this week. MASTER PLAN He reviewed the township’s master plan prepared by Vili-can-Leman and Associates of Southfield. The plan indicates the township will reach its population peak of 42,060 to 50,000 persons hy 1980 or sooner. Moses said the planning commission is trying to build the township around its educational systems and is encouraging the purchase of large school sites also can be used for recreational purposes. ’The Walled Lake School Board holding an option on one such site — a 75-acre parcel south of Maple between Halstead and Drake. LAND USE If the property is purchased, it will be used for a high school and elementary unit, according to Schools Supt. George Gar-ver. In other action this week, the board of education awarded acontraetto Security Fence Co. of Waterford Township for installation of chain link fences at Glengary Elementary School and the Board of Education bnpng. The firm’s $4,055 bid was the lowest of three. The board also appointed Max Burt director bf instruction for the district and Lloyd Antieau principal of ComnMrce Elementary School, i Farmington . Forum Topic Is Narcotics FARMINGTON - NarcoUcs will be the topic Tuesday when the Farmington Forum begins its second season. Dr. Herbert Raskin, Detroit psychiatrist and a member of the Wpyne State University faculty, will be the main speaker. The program will begin at 8 p.m. in the community room of the Farmington Savings and .__ _______rW..kaa.,l READY FOR BAZAAR - Handmade Christmas gifts will be featured at the annual Christmas bazaar to be held Dec. 4 and 5 by the women (d St. Anne’s Church, Orton-' ville. ’The event is scheduled for the Parish Hall from noon to 6 p.m. ’There will be a bake sale Dec. 4 and a chicken dinner on Dec. 5. Looking over some of the items to be sold are Mrs. Hoten Kesler (left) of 476 E. Glass and Mrs. David Jaris of 526 E. Glass, both of Brandon Township. Pool Hours Set for Community FARMING’PON TOWNSHIP-Community swimming periods have been established for the new pool at Garenceville High School, 20155 Middle Belt. ★ * ★ Adults and students are charged nominal fees. Open swimming sessions are from 7 to 8 p.m. and 8 to 9 p.m. Monday, Wednesday and AVON TOWNSHIP - "Inherit the Wind” will be the opening production of the Avon Players in their new playhouse, now nearing completion on Washington Road. Oie pool is reserved for adult instructions during the same hours Tuesday. w ★ * Two Friday night swimming sessions will be held during those hours this week only. OPEN SWIMMING The Friday night open swfan-ming sessions will resume after March 18,1966. * -k * Saturday open swimming sessions are from 6 to 7 p.m. and from 8 to 9 p.m. Family recreational swimming is scheduled for 2 to 6 p.m. Sundays. Avon Players Ready Season's Inaugural Secretary Unit Is Recognized TROY—The board of education last night recognized the Troy Educational Secretaries Association as sole bargaining agent for the district’s secretaries. Schools Supt. Rex B. Smith said the district’s 21 signed authorization cards recognizing this group as representatives. ★ ★ ★ In other action, the board accepted a number of low bids on various projects. Because of the Christmas holidays, the Dec. 28- board meeting has been canceled. The play, based on the 1925 Scopes "monkey” trial, wHI be presented Dec. 3, 4, 9 ,10 and 11 with curtain time at 8:30 p.m. Directing the play is Richard McGowan, with Clafar Ma-goon as producer. Mrs, James Jackson is serving as assistant director and Paul Stratton Jr. will be set designer. Heading the cast of 48 will be Vic Zink and Tom King, portraying the roles of William Jennings Bryan and Clarence Dar-row, who clashed on the subject of evolution at the trial. * ★ * All seawn ticket holders will receive thieir performance reser-.................a ■week. Ad- vance mail orders will also be accepted if sent to Avon Players, Box 332, Rochester. ★ ★ * (Mneral admission tickets will be available at the Village Box Office. 100 E. University, Rochester, Dec. 1 to 3, 9 and 10 from 10 a.m. to noon and from 3 to 5 p.m. gAmu WUIIUIU^, was V. Lake, just north of Grand River. Raskin will deal with the subject from several viewpoints in a speech entitled "Dope: Medical or Legal Problem?” . Following the speech, Raskin will be questioned by a three-member panel. PANEL MEMBERS Participating on it will be Maurice Foltz, Farmington police chief; Rev. Robert Sawyer, assistant pastor of the First Presbyterian Church of Farmington; and Richard M. Parrea of NorthvlUe, former teacher and psycholo^t with the Farmington Public Schools. ♦ ♦ ★ Lee Peel, Farmington High School journalism teacher, will be moderator. Tickets are available at the Book Corner, Inc., 33173 Grand River. Teachers Seeking Salary Increase IMLAY CITY - A salary increase of $500 has been requested from the board of education by the district’s teachers. The request was made by the salary schedule committee of the Imlay City Teachers Gub, which maintains that toe district has been helped financially by increased state aid and an increase in the number of students. Teachers now start wUfe a base salary of $4386. Board members and representatives of the salary schedule committee will meet Deq. 1< to discuss the request. Tbe Imlay Gty Federation of Teachers, a chapter of the Michigan Federate of Teach* ers, has been formed by a group of 16 teachers. Chicago Trip a Reward 3 Teens to Attend 4^H Club Congress Two Romeo youngsters andboy in Macomb County last one from Almont will attend the year, Falker plans to study vet-National 4-H Club Congress in erinary medicine at Michigan Chicago next week as a reward State University. He is the son for their outstanding 4-H work. Mary Lu Baker, 17, and Howard Falker, 18. both of Romeo, and David Van Dyke. 17. of Almont will be among the 1,500 delegates attending the 44to annual Congress Sunday through Thursday. Miss Baker, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edmund R. Baker Sr. of 166 Tillson, has won »rs for her home ing the state award given by theS&HFoundation, Inc. £he also attended the 4-H Citizenship Short Course in Washington, D.C. * * * Falker’s trip will be sponsored by Arcadian Products Department of Allied Chemical Corp. for his work in field crops. OUTSTANDING BOY Named the outstanding 4 H DAVID VAN DYKE of Mr. and Mrs. Howard R. Fal-ji ker of 72730 McKay. * * k Van Dyke, son of Mr. Mrs. ‘Allyn Van Dyke of 6620 Dryden, took his honors in swine projects. ★ * ★ A six-year 4-H member, be has raised 455 pigs since 1660. Also a citizenship short course graduate, he will be sponaored by the Moorman Manufactiving Co. Golden Age Club Will Meet Dec. 2 for Lunch TROY - The Golden Age Gub of Troy will meet at noon Dec. 2 at the church for a cooperative luncheon. It * * Any resident of the community over 50 years old or retired is invited to attend the club meeting. Remember When Were A Child . You How exciting the thought of Santa’s arrival! Everything seemed touched with magic and you were filled with a special glow of anticipation. Such Excitement Still Exists When You Have A CHRISTMAS CLUB CHECK to cover all your Christmas Shopping OPEN YOUR 1966 CHRISTMAS CLUB TODAY 761 W. HURON STREET DOWNTOWN PONTIAC - CLARKSTON - DRAYTON PLAINS ROCHESTER - WALLED LAXE - LAKE ORION ~ MILFORD 5-' % THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAV, NOVEMBER 2i, 19(5') FIVE Red Wing Boss Target of Suit Tycoon's Son Claims . Wife's Love Alienated WAUKEGAN, 111. (AP) -Bruce Norris, grain magnate and president of the Detroit Red Wings professional hockey club, has been sued for $2 million for alienation of affections. The suit was brought by Michael Butler, son of Paul Butler, millionaire .sportsman, in behalf of himself and the Butler’s 22 - month - old Adam. The suit was filed in Circuit Court Oct. 26 but was impounded and suppressed by chief Judge Glenn K. Seidenfeld at the request of Butler’s lawyers, Yager Cantell and William B. Sampson. ★ ★ w Sampson said the suppression was obtained because of Butler’s wish to avoid any publicity. ’The judge said he felt it was in “the best interests of all parties’’ to suppress the complaint because of the nature of the charges. The Chicago Daily News said that when Mrs. Butler was reached in her New York apartment she was indignant. The Daily News reported that Mrs. Butler said she and Norris are friends and that she plans to marry him when legally free to do so. The newspaper added that she said she has an annulment suit pending in New York and is suing for child support. Mrs. Butler is the former Mrs. Edward Hand. She and Butler married in DecemW 1962. Norris’ third wife, Patricia Anne, obtained a $2 million settlement in a divorce suit a year ago. Butler, who will be 39 Friday, is vice president of Butler Co., which has holdings in paper manufacturing, aviation real estate. ARMED’ FOR THE OCCASION - an M60 tank with a bulldozer blade on the front pitches in to plow snow from a road near U.S. headquarters in Berlin iast night. Berlin got 10 inches of snow this week, the worst November snowfall in 73 years. Insurance Rate' I Cut Approved LANSING (AP) — A more than $1 million reduction' in premiums paid into their group insurance plan by some 28,000 state workers has been approved by the Civil Service Commission. The commission said the rate schedule, effective next July 1, will reduce contributions by employes under 65 by 23 to 50 per cent and by 51 to 59 per cent for employes and retirees 65 and over. The commission-sponsored plan, underwritten by Aetna Life Insurance Co., grossed $6.59 miliion in premiums during the poiicy year ending last July 1, the commission said. Claims and operating costs amounted to $5.63 million and there was a $966,000 operating surplus. liiis amount, added to previous resei-ve and interest, has resulted in an accumulated reserve of $2.99 million, allowing the reductions, said State Personnel Director Franklin DeWald. j struck by a car on a Saginaw street, police said. Proper commercial canningl Saginaw Boy Killed I methods cause relatively little! nutrient loss to vegetables or SAGINAW (APi — Archie! ifruits, according to the Agricul- Sims, 5, of Saginaw was kjlled The first cathode ray tube was ture Department. Tuesday night when he was devised and built in 1897. SAVIN6S •» SKMTES Burtons Seen From Kitchen Cooking for Liz Not 'Spicy' YPSILANTI (AP) - If you want to get a first hand glimpse into the private lives of celebrities, you might well take up the culinary art. Mrs. Robert Hodesh of Ann Arbor is a culinary expert and her skill gave her the chance to live with Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton for a week. ★ ★ * Mrs. Hodesh says she became cook for the Burtons for a week during the filming of the movie, ‘Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?’’ in Northampton, *' this summer. SHOW HQUMS 11 A.M. to 11 P.M. DETROIT/COBO AUTO / HALL SHOW /N0V.27-DEC5 ''HOLIDAY BILLS?'* She discovered the Burtons ‘adored potatoes in every shape or form.’’ ANSWERED AD Hdl* “inside” look at the two movie stars began when Mrs. Hodesh answered a newspaper advertisement and was hired as a cook for Ernest Lehman, producer of the movie. Mrs. Hodesh said she was in Northampton visiting relatives and decided “the only way to get close to people like the Burtons and the others on the picture was to work for them. * ★ * •' “They had to be fed, so the only way was as a cook. “I answered the ad and made an appointment to be interviewed. The Burtons had hired a cook the day before,” she said. “They offered me a job as housekeeper but I refused. So, they knew 1 wasn’t overly interested in intruding in the hoMsehold. WAS SWITCHED “The next day I was asked to be cook for the producer, Lehman. After three weeks with Lehman, I was switched to the Burton household,” said Mrs. Hodesh, a housewife and former Democratic candidate for the I Michigan Legislature. ' “I’m sure you can’t believe 90 per cent of what you read about these people,” she said. “I never heard the name Taylor. It was always Elizabeth Burton, never Liz. She called herself Elizabeth Burton, and everyone' else did too.” ★ ★ w “From everything I heard and saw, the Burtons are completely compatible people, both intellectually and in temperament. “They indulge in a lot ol torseplay,” Mrs. Hodesh said. “The atmosphere of the house is happy with a capital ‘H. There are just no tensions.” WEEKLY SALARY Saivy was $100 a week with time and a half for overtime and double on Sundays, Mrs. Hodesh said. “It all came to about $200 a week, and I was given permission to call Ann Arbor on their phone nightly.’ She describes Burton as “tl most attractive man I have ever seen...without being handsome. He has very, very pale just over five feet tall. She has very startling and beautiful coloring, pink skin, black hair and lots of dark eyelashes,’ Mrs, Hodesh said. RESIDENCE GUARDED Police guarded the Burton residence 24 hours a day and “Burton used to drink I the guards and drivers,” Mrs. Hodesh said. Burton “always had a friendly word for them. To them Burton was a hero. It was perfectly obvious that he was a man \ ‘ knew about working people.’’ Mrs. Hodesh said the only party at the house was, to her knowledge, one in which Burtons, his valet, wife and his makeup man spent the day drinking beer and playing pool and pirig pong.” Burton “is crazy about baseball and knows quite a bit about it...famous plays, averages and all that stufL” she said. Lehman also was “fond of the game’ and talked about it with Burton She said “the one distinguished guest of the household’ was Archibald MacLeish, poet and former head of the Library of Congress, who resides in Northampton. Head Trooper Named for Romney Security LANSING (AP)-State Police 'Trooper Jay Kennedy has been named officer in charge of the four-man security detail in the' office of Gov. George Romney. Kennedy replaces Trooper Richard Coleman, who resigned effective Nov. 27 to enter private business. Troopers Neil Bykerk and Warren Hutchinson will re-with the detail and a new trooper replacement will be named soon, the executive office said. PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL CENTER OHII twwliip nil till SM-I11I FALSEliETH That Loosen Need Not Embarrass t eour. OheciM •’plat '. Get FASXnnt a ”Not me! I shop with cash...cash from AasociatflS. Savw time and trouble... and means I can start the new year with a clean slate. Yea, air, I can get the money I need for any worthwhile purpose. Associates will even arrange extra cai^ so I can take advantage of the January sales. Holiday bills? Not met Sea Associates! Hiat’s the answer!” A nmmalmm Han ASSOCIATES CONtUMlR FINANCE CO. OfMistSNardqfliNfsrsChrMiiitt , IN PONTIAC *•4 Oakland Avemi*.............FI2*0114 Jit9 North Telofraph Rood.....6I2«2000 itlae MaH Shopping Con M DRAYTON KAMI 4474 Dbdo Highway..*.........^OR 3*1207 blue eyes, leathery face and a resonant, beautiful voice like a musical instrument. WWW “He wore a sport jacket and slacks around the house, had his hair long and looked kind of seedy, but that’s because he was playing the role of a college professor who was a failure,” she said. Elizabeth is a small woman. Abel Blames Mansfield for 14B Defeat DETROIT (AP)-United Steel Workers President I. W. Abel said Tuesday that Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield was largely responsible for failure to repeal the right-to-work clause of the Taft-Hartley Law. WWW Abel, here to help dedicate a high school named after former Steelworkers’ president Philip Murray, said faiiure to repeal section 14B “should be placed his (Mansfield’s) door, rather than anybody else’s.” WWW The union leader said he was satisfied with President Johnson’s actions in the case this fall “considering his illness and his operation.” Abel hdded he expected more of the President when Congress reassembles in January. WWW Organized labor recently has blamed Senate Republicans for failure to repeal Section MB after the House struck down the clause. A total of 18 stages have right-to-wwk laws. MC\i/l TdndLOSE TO 6 LBS. A WEEK CAPSULES! Easitr to tako and muia cffactiva than thd powdarod and liquid food suralement, and coats Ian including Capsulas suitad to you INDIVIDUALLY by Lie. Physician, M.D No Gastritii or Irragularity with Medic-Way caps. DON'T DlEf —JUST EAT! As thousands have dune, you can lose 5, 50 or 100 lbs. and KEEP I! OFF! MEDIC-WAY MEDIC-WAY 335-9205 hi OaktoM MK WayM CmniIIm - Om hi MlrMM Mas You’re hardly aware when you’re taking a shot of Soft Whiskey. There’s a silencer on it. Don’t be fooled by Soft Whiskey With Soft Whiskey, you’ll never know anything hit you. Soft Whiskey is very gentle goiQg down. It swallows real easy. But don’t try to be a hero. Soft Whiskey’s got plenty of what it takes. It’s 86 proof and does just exactly what any other 86 proof does. It just does it softer. Now there’s not very much we can tell you about how we soften SoftWhiskey except that we do some Calvert Extra of our distilling in small batches instead of large ones.The rest will have to remain our secret You see, it took years and years ’ and thousands and thousands of experiments for us to come up with a Soft Whiskey. And other distillers have been trying to come up with a Soft Whiskey for a long time now. That’s really all we can let you in on. Let’s face it.wewouldn’twantother distillers cutting in on our territory. $1085 $452 $285 Incluh.. All Taxn BLENPEO WHISKEY • B6 PROOF • 65% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS © 1965 CALVERT DI$T. CO.. N.Y.C. THE PONTIAC PRESS 41 Wait Horon Street Pontile, Itfichigin WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 24, 1965 haiold a. pmonALD • rmldMit Ukd Vlc« PmldtBt uid Sdltor CIrcuIkUOB Manager Beeretary and Adrcrtiiiad E Will War on Poverty Prove Pyrrhic Victory? The Press would be the last to look with disfavor on any workable, practical plan to alleviate want or distress among the community citizenry or to provide means for individual betterment. But we have serious doubta as to the efficacy of the programs envisioned by the Office of Economic Opportunity (OEO) to which Pontiac by City Commission actipn recently committed itself. In doing so, the municipality joined the County in adoption of the Federal program. ★ ★ ★ Until or unless this phase of the Great Society concept assumes concrete dimensions with practical administration, we are fearful that it is likely to become just another bureaucratic appendage of the Federal government, with results more hypothetical than real. If the national concept of assistance to the disadvantaged is soimd, state and local agencies should either expand accordingly their own related programs or discontinue those that complement the national blueprint — with hoped-for economies from such action. ★ ★ ★ It is the inevitable duplication of objectives and waste of taxpayers’ dollars to which we strongly take exception. Participation in the OEO program obligates local governments to assume 10 per cent of the cost of the social projects programmed by the Federal agency. ★ ★ ★ But never forget that the 90 per cent of project cost the Federal government so magnanimously underwrites is YOUR dollars. They were first taken from you in the form of taxation in order to be returned much diminished to their source in the form of grants and Federal aid. That our misgivings are by no means a lone voice crying out in the wilderness of government extravagance, hear the words of Republi-caii Sen. Milward L. Simpson of Wyoming: “National poverty headquarters plans a staff of 1,050 as a starter which makes it appear that the War on Poverty takes the form of mass Federal employment at sky-high wagds. “The Office of Economic Opportunity will have a Director at $30,-000 a year; a Deputy Director at $28,500; three assistants at $27,000; nine other assistants at $24,500; 11 more at $21,445; and another 20 at $18,535 each.” Locally, the county setup will be staffed by an executive director at $12,000 a year, one $10,000-a-year project director for each of the two ' community project centers in Pontiac and Royal Oak and a force of 200 workers at an annual payroll of $730,594. Sen. John J. Williams, R-Del., aptly epitomized the mushrooming trend-of Federal involvement in social programs when, during its closing hours, he urged Congress to close up shop and go home. “We’ve done enough TO. the American people,” said the senator. Note that he said “to,” not “for.” ★ ★ ★ Since during its 42-week session Congress voted to spend $119 billion of taxpayers' money, we think the senator was right on target. Federal, state and local expenditures for social welfare were under $6 billion In 1945; for the year end- ^ ed last June 30, with the Countiy eii-' j (vying unprecedented prosperity with record employment, they were $47 billion. ★ ★ ★ Where is the stopping point? How much can the American people pay for? What do you think? Stray Satellite Flies an Unscheduled Orbit The United States has added another satellite to the list of those still orbiting the earth. What makes this one worthy of note is that it was launched vs^iy back on March 17, 1958. It happens to be a foot-long strap which connected Vanguard I, this Country’s second satellite, with its third-stage rocket. Improvements in the sensitivity of tracking instruments led to its discovery by the Naval Space Surveillance System. The hunk of metal is now officially catalogued as 1958 Alpha 3. MARLOW Verbal Orchids to- Mr. ud Mrs. Fred Fiik of 201 Seminole; 68th wedding anniversary. Mrs. IsabeUe Schatte of 1200 N. Telegraph; 92nd birthday. George E. Goddard • of Birmingham; 81st birthday. Willard Stocker of Dryden; 90th birthday. J. B. Hubert of Birmingham; 85th birthday. Mr. and Mn. iVilliam Jobusoi of Milford; 54th wedding anniversary. Voice of the People; WHY 00 HWH SCHOOL KIPS HAVE TO WORK LIKE MAD TO get INTO A college— Our Mid-Term Quiz Dovid Lowrence Soys: U.S. Silent on Rhodesia Curbs LBJ Stands Out in This Century By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON - President Johnson, now starting his third White House year, is different from any of his predecessors in this century with its brilliant examples of how to run the presidency, and bow not to. While Theodore Roosevelt and Willisun Howard Taft were both conservatives, Roosevelt, his batteries always charged, was conscious of changing needs and sought to meet some of them. Like Woodrow Wilson later, he tried to provide new ideals. WUson, idealtetk and liberal but only up to a point, never learned the president is not a private person. He isolated bimself and became remote. More a prophet t h a n a statesman, one commentator said. In dealing with Congress, despite all he wrote on government, Wilson was an amateur compared with someone like Johnson. And he paid for it dearly. Warren G. Hgrding was the best example of how not to be a president, while Calvin (Toolidge showed few words can mean few ideas. AN ACTIVE MIND Franklin D. Roosevelt’s presidency demonstrated there can be more action in the mind than the biceps. A paralytic in a wheelchair throughout his presidency, he changed the spirit and direction his country. He revealed how a politician who can create a father image of himself, based on performance, is unbeatable. Harry S. Truman, po intellectual, was proof that a man can be a great president without a Ph. D. He didn’t have learning, he had judgment. He didn’t have charm, he had guts. ★ ★ ★ Dwight D. Eisenhower’s eight years in office win not put him among the great or even the near-great presidents. JUDGMENT NEVER CAME John F. Kennedy’s presidency can never be fully appraised since the final judgment would have had to rest with the future which, for him, never came. Johnson has some of Tbeodore Roosevelt’s bounce, some of Taft’s concern wjidi the machinery of government, and none of tbeir conservatism. He speaks in the hUralistic terms of WOsoil, bnt drawn, Johnson is anything bat. More than any president in this country he is a master politician — so far — .(n obtaining what he wants. And, more than any of the others, politics and the presidency are so much his total life he works at them almost 24 hours a day. authorization would be given to pass judgment upon the internal policies of any country and to set up yardsticks to determine whether any government is or is not truly representative of the wishes of the people. * ★ ★ In the case of Rhodesia, Washington is doubtless motivated by a desire to please the British government. But even more it seeks to curry favor with the large number of Negro voters in this country whose piejudices are easily aroused by the statement that Negroes in Rhodesia are being victimized by a white minority. NEGRO FEELINGS In Rhodesia itaelf, however, there are many Negroes who feel that the future economic welfare of their country is linked to the opportunities of the whites WASHINGTON - Unprecedented things are happening today in the conduct of the government of the United State — but most people aren’t paying any attention to it, tives of both parties in Con-gress are strangely • s i-lent. • Nowhere i n t h e Constitu-tion, for in-| stance, president given I the right to de-l cide for him- LAWRENCE self with what countries trade shall be conducted or what tariff duties shall be imposed — unless Congress specifically authorizes such broad powers by legislation. Yet over the past weekend, the United SUtes voted in the Seenrity Council of the U. N. to call on Britain to “quell” the rebelUon in Rhodesia. Then Ambassador Goldberg announced various economic measures decided upon by this government to carry out the purposes of the resolution. He declared that steps will be taken to tighten the economic squeeze on the Rhodesian secessionists yoRK — The Great Boeing and Lockheed are go- and said that President Johnson Blackout will take its place with ing ahead with plana to build had canceled Rhodesia’s 1965 the Great Blizzard of’88. 230 passenger supersonic air- qu«a ot l.a» tons ^ ^11 >» ^ to direct the development of the nation’s resources. The truth of the matter is that the Rhodesian question is being handled here as a political issue. Fear of the Negro vote in this country is what is influencing not only the executive branch of the government but . also many members of Congress who are keepfaig qniet as Washington tries to tell the people of another country wbat kind of government they must have. To use the economic power of the United States to meddle in the political affain of a country in another hemisphere is unprecedented. The acquiescence of many people in a policy which reveals an avowed purpose to intervene in the internal affairs of Rhodesia is inexplicable. Bob Considine Says: ‘Great Blackout’ Stories Will Be Handed Down a shipment which already was ... on the high seas en route to 1“ America. /grandchildr e n * * * with what they Goldberg added; •«* h ® “The President has suspended „ J*""*®® Rhodesia’s sugar quota for 1965 and has directed that this ship-ment will not be accepted. We * * will continue to consider urgent- * I, any o.h« aep. which will €iii3ur6 th&t no scUon is tsken • « n • » L fy^NoinfMP to assist the illegal regime in Salisbury, Rhodesia. “•e U. S and Canada. "The writing Is on the wall. ®"‘“ “JL The misguided rebels in South- " ren^efutaefa «iO^ »t em Rhodesia would do well to ** ■ ?** heed the voice of^the councU and the voice of the vast ma- Station when the lights jority of the nations of the went out, with no possible way world ’’ ^ geWat to his home in dark- AwvwARfk pnsmnw *** C*"**^™* and no hope of AWKWARD POSITION finding a hotel room In town. If the principle is accepted that the executive branch has 815,000,000. We will aU live to see a day when a person can have lunch in New York and then fly to California for breakfast. * * ★ It wlU be a technological breakthrough, but what will it do to digestion? Readers State Opinions on Supreme Court Rule 1 was interested in the report of the meetingi of Waterford Township dergymen and Dr, Don 0. Tatroe, superintendent of Waterford Township schools, in which it is again affirmed that the recent Supreme Court ruling prohibits prayer, Bible reading and other devotional activities in public schools. ★ ★ ★ As we obMrve Thanksgiving Day, let us remember the ragrims and Puritans who came to a wild ipiiii and suffered privation and death of almost all their band in order to worship as they pleased. We've come a long way since that time —^bnt which way? Now, kindergarten children are not aUowed to bow their heads and say a simple grace before lunch, and the lovely Christmas pageants are being dropped in all schools for fear of “offending some religious group.’* Have we ever thought we are certainly offending God Himself? Let’s all sing “God Bles^ Ameri<:a,” and continue to cater to the atheists who are behind this whole movement. MRS. FREDERIC TANK ROMEO In regard to your recent editorial on the Supreme Co^’i ruling in favor of protecting the Communists who wish to bury us, may I suggest that you and all other red-blooded American papers print a petition page to impeach Earl Warren or the ■ whole Supreme Court. These petitions could be added to the ones the John Birch Society has been collecting. ★ ★ ★ We Americans are giving to our government the power to enforce on us whatever forms of evil that those in power desire. When the day comes, which may be even befpre 1970, the data long ago established for our conversion to communism through socialism, I for one want it known that I opposed this take-over of our American way of life. RUTH W. PEW BLOOMFIELD HILLS Many of the Supreme Court decisions in recent years have given every indication of sympathy for the pll^t of the Communist in America. This last one is no different. Thanks to the Court, my child can no longer say a prayer of thanks over his cookies and milk at kindergarten; my tax dollars support teachers and pnrfessors who might conceivably teach my children socialistic and communistic theories; and the Communists who have sworn to overthrow our government can now go about doing so without fear of prosecution. ★ ★ ★ Why Viet Nam? Why Korea? One hundred years ago Abraham Lfaxxdn said this great nation of ours could only ba taken over from within. The Supreme Court has now given the Communists a free hand to do Just that. Anyone for impeachment? I am. A MOTHER It is a real privilege to live in a country such as America where no one can be discriminated against. Our lawmakers are doing a good job in reviaing some of our old traditions to protect individual ri^ts. They should be praised. ♦ w ♦ We should not complain about giving up prayer in the school, if chibs are banned on the basis of having religious overtones, or because we will not have the traditional baccalaureate services for graduating classes. There may be one who would feel discriminated against because he does not believe in God or Jesus Christ. My concern is the others who still have not been protected or given equal rights. ♦ ★ ★ I believe the lawmakers ought to complete their duty by banning all religious days as holidays or give equal tiine to all religious sects and nonreligious groups. God’s name-may still be used in school if it is used in vain. Just remember you must not use it in prayer! JOHANNA KELLER A WATERFORD TOWNSHIP TEACHER ^Disagree With Letter on Lindnay Victory’ In answer to Mr. Burt’s letter, I fail to see how John Lindsay’s victory in New York City can be an important lesson to Republicans to follow his leftlat leanings. I would like to remind Mr. Burt that Lindsay did not even run as a Republican. I would call him a maverick and he sounds like a left-winger who might even out-wing the left wing Democrats. If that is what it takes to get elected as a Republican, count me out-along with thousands of other conservatives. CONSERVATIVE REPUBLICAN Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Empty Pulpit! The Hillsdale News The diurch-buUding boom in America continues apace, membership roils grow, money is not lacking, yet nearly all faiths UU.V uii: ««:uuvs uri.iH;n Wandering around the termln- and denominations report a absolute power in international Sworsening shortage of spiritual 4keh niatn Mteiwvlei lUmM OUt 10 D6 tOC ZOtO CtSOr UgrifTf of the Constitution th!t Congress ‘ " ‘ ‘ * b*i£ empty pulpH” U one shall have the power to “regu- the greatest crises to face the late commerce^ with foreim H ^ ^ church in 1900 years, wys the l»ISon."X u«Unfl«lSt.S !», . bqd- R„. o, itooa w. wUl again and again find itself «> the train. .^ing dean of the Graduate in an awkward position with re- ♦ ★ w School of Theology of OberHn spect to policies pursued inter- “Sure, but we ain’t going any- College, nally by various countries in where,” the man aald. ♦ ★ ♦ the world. “That doesn’t make any dif- 1W ecommiie weapon ca. terence,” our man snapped, be a powerfal ooe. and Con- BOUGHT A TICKET gress nnqnestionnbly wonid So he bought the ticket and grant nnihority when an em- bedroom, sauntered up to the ________________ barge wonid proi^ had a few piertinis and ^ “"*.**!?* the interests of the United « flne steak dinner, wended his ^ Steles, way back to his car, had a flne It is unlikely, however, that got off In the ------------------------------- morning, and the railroad apologized and gave him his money back. be paints out that wUls they have been bnilding nisw chnrcbes and meeting henset by the hnadreds eaeh year, at of Smiles caaso of tUs: otters are being forced to clone completely. The dean’s own school is sees the minister “as one who tells rather than does, as one who has to cater to small minds which consider religion a venture in charity rather than as a force in an atomic age.” Yet there is no lack of Interest in religion among young ^ple, from whom tomorrow’s ministers, priests, and rabbis must be recruited. In fact, there is an upsurge, according to another commentator. a ★ ★ “The average college stn-dent who takes courses in religion todny ii amazingly ap-preciativa of religions valnes,” says Dr. Holland t, ehairmaa of the •f religion at Western Reserve UniversHy. But he “Is not interested in heaven and an afterlife, h> the abstruse theologies that have emanated from book aad pnipit.” Today’s stndoat Is approheatlve of the fntare of progress or deeply i in the crises of our day. In Dr. Fildey’s opinion, tha key to the solution of the minister shortage “will have to be found in churches which will allow ministers the freedom to speak on ail issues and which will make It financially possible for the best young people to get the training possible for their ministry.” Loyalty... The Danbury (Cmn.) Nevn-Times When on English professor asked his class of fournatism students how many were familiar with Shakespeare’s works, a voice from the back row boomed, "I love Shakespeare. I read his stuff as fast as it comes Alcebolitm isagrowing problem in Rnssta. Co m m n-aists on the roeks with vndka? Life would be a lot if we could jiBt after lit years of existence, ^ A A * OutK>f-(own editorialist was sympathizing recently with the plight of New York City. One" of the reasons f(w this “The biggest city In the world paradox, according to Dr. Fil-rao out of two baalc commodi- dey, it that tha image of the ties this year — watar and else- typical pasto’ la unexciting to tricity.” young people. ... and Democrata. This activitiatlc generation remsung ins worm nionf better patterns of understaad- WWW' However, he veert away from church and synagogue because he feels these institutions are living in quiet backwaters, withdrawn from the world. Tjhey are not in the vanguard Rules U-M Must Hold Union Talks LANSING (AP)-The Univer-sity of Michigan Board of Regents must meet and confer with unions representing university employes, Atty. Gen. Prank Kelley ruled Tuesday. Recent changes in the Hutchinson Act, which spells out rights of public employes, gives them the right to select exclusive bargaining agents “for the purpose of meeting and conferring with respect to wages, hours and other terms and conditions of employment with the regents,” Kelley said. ★ ★ • ★ The ruling was in answer to a query from Rep. Robert Dingwell, D-Lansing, former educational representative for the Michigan AFL-CIO. It followed a U-M refusal to meet with the State Labor THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 196.5 SEVEN Board on i^uests by three unions to represent certain U-M employes. ■k -k h The Hutchinson Act, which prohibits strikes by public m-ployes, was amended by the legislature this year to grant them the right to organize and bargain collectively. EMPLOYE FORUM Hie Labor Mediation Board, Kelley said, “has the power ' determine the collective bar- gaining unit,” and to serve as ' a forum for public employes. U-M officials refu^ to appear at an Oct. 4 hearing called by the mediation board on representation petitions by the Teamsters, the International Union of Operating Engineers and the Washtenaw County Building and Construction lYades Council. The petitions would affect a total of 344 university employes. ★ ★ w Robert Blackwell, executive secretary of the mediation! board, said he had received a' letter from U-M officials claiming the amended Hutchinson Act did not apply to the university. By McNamara Wilson Due Quiz on N-Role I To raise the nap on corduroy if it is crushed, stand a steam iron on end and hold the wrong side of the fabric as near as possible to the bottom of the 'iron,' WASHINGTON fUPI) - De-| liance’s nuclear defense strat-fense Secretary Robert S. Me-, «*y- Namara is expected to ask| One way of achieving this Prln» MlniiMr ItooW Wlbool”"^ this whelto. n., iw.-, i.kB« /.Anaiiinn. liritain ^.S. officiols sald the United Brtuin are in agree. de^BKie^neJL., jr,nS'„rrrelTnS number of states and other or-jganizations having independent Official sources said todays that this was the principal pur- ____ - ui I This formula Is part of the NATO defense ministers. HUGE LOAD - One of the largest freight shipments ever to be transported in the United States, this petroleum isoKU'ack-ing tower — 119 feet long and weighing U million pounds — moved through the L & N railroad yards in Latonia, Ky., yesterday en route to the Standard Oil of Ohio plant in Toledo, Ohio. Built in Alabama, it was carried on two l^axle flat cars. The Paris conference has been called to discuss how the nonnuclear NATO powers can be given more say in the Al- to the Geneva Disarmament Conference. Thus, a joint NATO nuclear force can only be created if one of the three existing nuclear powers who are members of Uie Alliance agrees to abandon its national nuclear deterrent. . France already has given notice that she is opposed to a joint nuclear force and that she will keep her own independent nuclear force. The United States is willing to contribute to a joint nuclear force, but wants to maintain part of its independent nuclear iCapablity because of its worldwide defense commitments. U.S. officilas said this leaves Britain as the only potential candidate for putting all her nuclear weapons into a j o ' nuclear “pool.” DON'T BUT ANY NEW Of USED CAR UNTIL YOU SEE ME! MAYNARD KING Beattie Motoi Sales 5806 Dixie Highway OR 3-1291 LBJ Turns Sights to World Problems It has been estimated that seven of 10 diabetics die of heart disease. JOHNSON erry, Tex. (AP) — President Johnson, busy at shaping fresh domestic grams, is laying the ground-for broadened attention next year to world problems. Because Viet Nam has demanded so much concentration on his part, Johnson has not had the time in the last few months to grapple in depth with the threat of the weakening of the North Atlantic Treaty Oiganiza-tion posed by French President Charles de Gaulle’s nationalistic policies. WWW While there can be no presidential relaxation of supervision of the Viet Nam effort, on the basis of the massive legislative program passed by the first session of Congress it appears the President may be able to relegate some domestic issues to lower priorities. The signs now point to a determined effort by the President in 1966 toward recementing Western Europe’s defenses, improving East-West relations and halting the quarreling between India and Pakistan. The White House announcement Tuesday that Johnson will meet with British Prime Minister Harold Wilson Dec. 17, following a Dec. ^3 conference with West German Chancellor Ludwig Erhard, put European problems at the top of the list in lis ground laying period. Press secretary Bill D. Moyers had only a “can’t say” to reports in Washington diplomatic drees that India’s Prime president Lai Bahadur Shastri might come to this country about the third week in January and President Mohammed Ayub Khan of Pakistan about i^-December. * k k Moyers made it clear that the two leaders are welcome but the timing of their visits is largely up to them. It was evident that the meeting place for conferences with Erhard and Wilson will depend on whether Johnson wishes to leave the Texas climate, which he finds so bracing, to return to Washington. Moyers said Johnson’s physi-cal activity Tuesday was not strenuous. But he said the President found the climate and the relaxation at the LBJ Ranch helpful toward regaining full strength after his gallbladder-kidney stone operation of Oct. 8. ★ ★ ★ Wilson said in London Tuesday that he will discuss terms and conditions for a general Viet Nam peace settlement his meeting with Johnson. While this was expected, the White House obviously had only lean ho|ws that any meaningful negotiations with Hanoi and the Viet Cong would develop soon. ★ ★ * North Viet Nam’s President Ho Chi Minh was quoted Tuesday as saying that U. S. troops would have to be withdrawn from South Viet Nam before any negotiations could start. Johnson has said many times that the United States will withdraw. State and local governments employed 334,400 persons for police protection purposes last year. The payroll amounted to more than $168.6 million. Let Schenley Reserve reflect your gift for giving “the be$t of spirits.” Schenley— the season’s most tasteful gift-comes to you in the magnificent Starlight Decanter. Together, they are the brightest note of good cheer for the holiday season. Starlight Decanter beautifully gift wrapped with our complimenti. EIGHT THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 24, 1963 Meg, Tony 'Swinginesf' at Own Farewell Parly NEW YORK (AP) - No one kept pace with the Antony Arm-strong>Ioneses at their own farewell party, not the 40 chefs, not the 211 other guests and not the grocery delivery boy. Princess Margai-et and, her last stop on their 20Hdkro rinmrkoism Am ____ letters campaign to our GIs in Viet Nam has done its job. A Defense Department spokesman today suggested a . halt to the spontaneous flood of mitt and packages going to unnamed GIs in Viet Nam. The Pontiac Press and its readers aided the rive. At the same time the spokesman outlined plans for an even more effective program of public support. Good Break, That Is No. 35 Made Matthau a Star been marvelous, and the men know without question that the American people are behind them all the way. “Unfortunately, however, t ton of cookies leaving here too often is a ton of crumbs when it gets to the troops. And gifts of winter clothing serve no useful purpose in the tropics.” Clogs in the normal mail caused by the avalanche of letters and packages have been avoided by using Air National I ued.) Guard transport planes to carry the extra loads. CONTINUE LETTERS The Pentagon spokesman, however, urged persons with relatives and friends serving in Viet Nam to continue sending letters and parcels to named ad-i dresses. write directly to the commanding officer of one of the units. From the commanding officer they wfH learn exactly what the unit needs. Requests may range from cunly to cash lor locally for civic action projects. “Civic action” is the term used for the work GIs do Vietnamese villages when they are not engaged in fighting the Viet Cong. ’They include digging wells, building schoolhouses and first aid stations and a full array of community-service construction projects. (Mail sent in care of NEA correspondent Tom Tlede or Col. Theodore Koepke, senior military chaplain in South Viet Nam, has been delivered. In view of the Defense Department’s new plans, it is suggested that furtoer mail to TTede and Col. Koepke be discontin- Chrysler Chief Named to Post Dormcin's Old Mill TAVERN Serving INTERNATIONAL BUFFET Every Friday from 5 ’til 9:30 P.M. Call for Retervationt By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-Televishm Writer HOLLYWOOD - “They say that- all you need in show biz is one good break,” growled Walter Matthau. “I’ve had 35." Hie first 34 made him one of the most serviceable character actors in plays, Filins and television. The 35th seems to have made him a star. The one big break of Mat-career was “The Odd uple,” the Neal Simon THOMAS comedy which exploded Broadway late last season. The )lay in which Matthau and Art Carney costarred as wildly incompatible apartment mates whose wives had left them, sparked what appeared to be a Walter Idatthau appreciation drive. Don’t ask me to explain it,” said the actor. 'Tve starred in television series in the wakfe of plays, and nothing like this happened before. Everything seemed to fall in place. Even without having a personal press agent, the publicity poured in." FOUR STARRING ROLES For Matthau, the harvest of “The Odd Couple” was four movie scripts with starring roles. I sent them all back,” he said. “’Then Billy Wilder said he wanted me for a picture, but he hadn’t written it yet. I said I’d do it.” The Wilder film turned out to be “The Fortune Cookie,” for which Matthau took a leave of absence from “The Odd Couple.” He plays Jack Lemmon’s brother-in-law, an opportuidst lawy'er who makes the most of a injury Lemmon while photographing a Cleveland Browns football game. “The Odd Couple.” “I could no doubt make about five billion dollars if I one,” he observed, “but would mean doing piecework. That’s why I left the factory; to get away from piecework.” Farther, he revealed plans to .pinke It possible for groups wanting to help to “adopt” specific U.S. fighting nnits. He said: “The groups — churches, civic clubs, schools and others then can supply items to known units and be sure their efforts are going to the right place. Interested groups should write: Community Affairs Branch, Department of Defense, Washington, D. C. Secretary of the Treasury Henry H. Fowler today named Lynn A. Townsend chairman of the U.S. Industrial payroll Savings Committee for 1966. Townsend, president of Chrysler Corp., lives at 5991 Orchard I Bend, Bloomfield Hills. I ★ ★ ★ He heads a committee of outstanding industrial leaders! from 23 key market areak. The committee will spearhead the drive for increased employe participation in the payroll sav-j ^ZZaKEEGO SaNDRSDEE Boes/DanN DoaiPOlCONNOR •m They will be sent a list ofjings plan for the purchase of: It was an electroplating factory on Long Island, and he was employed to dip handbag frames, wearing sneakers so be . i - - wouldn’t get electrocuted. Mat- typical units and their APO ad-IU.S. Savings Bonds during thau felt there were greater challenges for him, especially after appearing in every settlement-house play he could find. fbellNG TKCHNICOLOII* i lUMDaON JWNIH VMIIEFIIN MMIM Incealhief -ahnfs a targtt. tar attkar akk at tka kwt • • MATINEE • • Thursday, Sat., Sunday Doors Opon 1:00 PJM. f/! ira cle M i le?HT/T-BijSEll Matthau is a native New I Yorker, a shambling man of 421 years, with a leathery, sardonic J voice. He talked himself into roles in j summer stock, television and f Broadway plays, starring early as 1951 in “Tndlight | Walk.” But he had to wait I 1965 to score in “The Odd Cou- I pic.” WED. "WHAT'S NEW PUSSYCAT?" Patir SELLERS, P«t*rOTOOLE Bagint Tonight! HOUDAY ENTERTAINMENT! Guaranteed Fun for the Mature Discriminating Moviegoer! pi'”,'^‘COMEDY HAS A NEW FREEDOM! It swells with joy, zest, delight in the world! A great film! Moviegoers can re joise now!" - Nswswssk Magailna THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAV. XOvEMBKR 24, 19«5 MXK 'Broad Consensus' Is Cited by Rusk in Inter-American Talks RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) Secretary of State Dean Rukk said today he hag found among hetniiphm foreign ministers “a broad corisensug on the de- List Shooting as Accidental Walled Lake Woman Remains Satisfactory The near-fatal shooting Monday night of a Walled Lake woman WM tentatively termed accidenti^ yesterday after hearing t^octed by Oakland County Juvenile authorities, w ♦ ★ Fifteen-year-old Robert Lori-on, who told Oakland County Sheriffs deputies he shot his 43-year-old mother while “fooling-ly” pointing a gun at her, was released to the custody of his father, Walter. Mrs. Lorion is listed in lat-hfactery condition in the intensive care nnlt at Pontiac Gen- She was shot in the face with a single shot from a 22-caliber rifle in the Lorion home at 1016 Pontiac Itail. WWW Juvenile Court Director James W. Hunt said final disposition of the case would be made after an investigation by Oakland County Sheriffs detectives completed. Former Official of UAW Begins Term in Prison TOLEDO, Ohio (AP)-Richard T. Gosser, a former United Auto Workers official convicted of conspiracy to defraud the government in a tax case, went to prison Tuesday. Gosser, a former Intemational vice pr^ent of the surrendered to a U. S. marshal here and then was taken to a federal penitentiary at Terre Haute, Ind. a ♦ ★ He was sentenced to begin a three-year term imposed in 1963. The U. S. Supreme Court recently refused a second time to hear his appeal and local authorities were notified Gosser should be taken into custody to begin his prison term. He had asked probation or a reduced sentence on grounds of ill health, but U. S. District Judge Prank Kloeb denied that motion Monday. Tats Rtporh New Pact Between Russia, Cuba MOSCOW (UPI) - The Soviet Union and Cuba signed a new agreement for technological cooperation last^ night, the official Tass news 'agency reported. The pact was announced in conjunction with the Moscow trip by Raul Castro, Cuban Deputy premier and defense minister. He was tbe guest of honor last night at a Kiremlin dinner hosted by the Central Committee of the Soviet Communist party. dre to strengthen, rather than weaken, the inter-American system." “There were some differences about details of procedure but a broad consensus has emerged," Rusk told a reporter as he prepared to leave the special I n t e r-AmerIcan Conference here. * ★ w Rusk scheduled a two-hour stop at Asuncion to call on Paraguay’s President Alfredo Stro-essner before flying back to Washington tonight. Herein Rio, Rusk and 18 Latin America foreign ministers have been discussing ways to update the hemisphere system to meet hanging political and economic needs. TTie two-week conference is to end Nov. ‘IMPORTANT RESULTS’ Rusk said he expects the conference to conclude “with important results” even though proposals requiring amendment of the charter of the Organization of American States cannot be enacted until a follow-up conference empowered to make charter changes. * * w Rusk said he particularly welcomes what he termed general agreement that a foreign ministers’ meeting should be held once a year instead of at five-yeai intervals as now specified in the OAS charter. * ★ * The highlight of Rusk’s week here was his presentation of the U.S. position Monday — including a pledge by President Johnson of willingness to continue U.S. aid after the present Al- liance for Progress ends in 1971, and a call on the American republics to consider earmarking forces for volunteer international use in emergencies. TAKES OVER With Rusk's departure, roving Ambassador W. Averell Harri-man takes over as chief of the U.S. delegation. With general speech-making sessions finished, the conference started committee work to prepare recommendations. Argentina was circulating a proposed five-point “Act of Rio de Janeiro” calling for OAS reforms. There were prospects of considerable support from the delegates. ♦ ♦ ♦ Rusk and the foreign ministers of Argentina, Brazil and Mexico were said to have gone over the draft informally. It recommends that an OAS committee be named to draft charter revisions along these lines; ‘Hold foreign ministers’ meetings annually. 2. Continue the present system of consultative meetings of ministers to deal .with urgent problems. Raise the economic and social council and the cultural council, presently advisory bodies, to a par with the OAS Political Council. 4. Maintain the Pan American Union secretary general and staff as the permanent staff for the OAS. 5. Include provisions adopted last year for admission of new members to the OAS. w ★ ★ The Argentine draft, which is subject to change in conference committees, does not provide for a peace force or spell out what nirther powers nilght be given to the OAS. TRUCK DRIVER KILLED - William L. Basham, a Berrien County truck driver, was killed and nine train passengers injured when a New York Central passenger train hit his truck loaded with sand yesterday afternoon, west of Galien. The train was derailed, and a quarter-mile of track was torn up. Train-Truck Crash Kills 1, Hurts 9 GALIEN (AP) -Thi New York Central’s Chicago-bound “Michigan” passenger train smashed a small truck to pieces Tuesday, killing its driver. Nine' train passengers were hurt. The train, carrying 200 persons, many of them on early, Thanksgiving Day holiday trips,! was derailed and tore up an estimated quarter-mile of track. Eight of the injured were women. William L. Basham, truck driver employed by the Berrien County Road Commission, lost' his life. JOHN A. DAVIS Liquor Inspector Named by Sheriff Stennis Is Listed Very Good After Minor Surgery WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sen. John C. Stennis, D-Miss., w»« reported in “very good” conoi-tion today following surgery for removal of a nonmalignant kidney cyst at Walter Reed Army Medical Center. The operation yesterday was described as routine. His doctors said the 64-year-old senator probably would be released from the hospital in about 10 days His office quoted doctors as saying his condition whs ^ very good.” Stennis entered the ho.s-pital after the cyst was discovered during his annual physical examination He plans to return to Mississippi after 'a normal period of convalescence” Hunter Found Dead Freshman Senators—8 (EDITOR’S NOTE-This is the eighth in a 10-part series on freshmen senators. Sen. Donald S. Russell of South Carolina is the subject.) By STEVEN GERSTEL SMASHED IN HALF Witnesses said Basham’s ’ LUTHER (AP) — Henry Kiiy truck, loaded with sand, was , . . ^ „ "s, 64, a deer hunter from Hoi ■•sliced in half at the Impact. ^ ^ was found dead in Lake The mishap, second within veteran of the Oakland County Countv near here Tuesday. Au-about a year for an NYC pas- Sheriff s Department, has been thorities said he apparently senger train in this general named liquor inspector for the a heart attack, area, took place at a marked detective bureau, rural road crossing two miles w ★ ★ est of here. The appointment was made by Train passengers Included Sheriff Frank W. Irons, coeds on holiday from the Uni- Davis succeeds the late Roy; vefsity of Michigan. W. Hartwick, who died last moving Irom wilhln Iho fr.me. n.U»»i »Un| rights Is,. M work of ririotly domestic mst-'considered the proposed me., racks at the impact. S.Carolinian's Political Arnbilions Soar' ters into problems of world pol- ure discriminatory and aimed ‘ icy and leadership. strictly at the South. WASHINGTON - UnUl a few years ago, Donald S. Russell says, “1 never had much in the way of political aspirations.” That situation changed dramatically in 1962 when Russell was elected governor of South Carolina. Since then, Russell has made it clear he is in politics to stay. Last April he resigned his governorship and had himself appointed to succeed the late Olin D. Johnston as U.S. Senator. Russell's brief career in politics — only about four years •— cloaks a deep interest in public affairs and a lifetime filled with public service. * ★ w The South Carolinian has the credentials of government service which many of his senior colleagues in the Senate would find hard to match. LEFT LAW PRACTICE Just after Pearl Harbor, Russell left his law practice to serve in the War Department. Before the war ended, he had become assistant to tbe director of economic stahiliza-tion and served as an Army major assigned to the Supreme Headquarters of the Allied Forces. After the war, Russell was deputy director of the Office of War Mobilization and Reconversion. He later served as assistant secretary of state for admin-' istration. Hr W * Russell’s succession to the Senate Is his first venture into; the legislative field and he has found some differences. CHIEF DIFFERENCE “The principal difference is that, in large part, we are engaged In legislation where we establish policy but are not given the task of implementing,” he said. “It broadens your horizons . .; On the racial issue, Russell iS'ss^Mlrs'lid"”^'''''' t sobers you, too, he said, feels that the people of his state * * ★ ■ronchi*i Mo»m« or lroi>ohuig, You realize how big these | “believe in law and order and she was only slichtlv hurt Foblems are and how they muj do not believe in violence.’’ and was not among the nine be squared with domestic prob- ^ ^iles hospital. i “’They want to be fair,” he Fireman Walt Dickeson, 51, of >SfcmAoo'?druftf.t?i!Jnt Kfp NEW BREED |said. “But many of the things Niles said the force of the im-i Russell, now 59, came to the are being done..................... ' BRONCHITIS ‘I gUKs a suitcase hit me on Moriling COUgh it Now Available it OFFICE SPACE it air-conditionod it 600 sq. ft , heoted, elevotor, jonilor-jervice, private parking, convenient parking for customers, lorge window areas. Will Decoroie lor tei.nr.tl 75 W. HURON ST. at Wide Track Drive Call 338-7127 South Cdrolina governorship labeled as one of the new breed of Southern governors — younger, more moderate, more progressive. His first major test as a Senator came on the voting rights bill. He joined his coi-leagues in voting against it hut his major speech in opposition — by its content and delivery — briefly broke the monotony of the filibuster. Russell has not changed hi) mind about that bill. He said he would not have opposed _______1 a vindictive Pa®t knocked a cigarette lighter feeling and not done in a way from his pocket. He said truck to help US move forward. wreckage barely missed strik-“The vast part of the people .. . .. want to be law-abiding,” Russell Dic*eso" said he was on the said. He added they do not like '^»'ich the civil rights law and will «as approach- ‘oppose the laws as long as ^ , ... they legally can . . . then they ‘‘■'iver never looked will abide by them.” (T.m.rr.wi S.«. P..I F.»«ln M Art- *“‘1‘'‘'Pt ngh On COmmg.’ "•■) The two diesel-powered en- gines and seven coaches, a pull-The Lincoln penny was issued man and the baggage car left in August, 1909. During the first the tracks. The leading diesel SO years it was in circulation, was damaged. The baggage car more than 30 billion coins were overturned. No one was inside struck by the U. S. Mint. it, however. i JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS WANTED HIGHEST PRICES PAID -We Pick Up FE 2-0200 note, Russell conceded (here is “a tremendous amount of exhilaration” in the implementation duties of a governor. Russell said he epjoyed the latitude the Senate gives him in EXTRAORDINARY! k Extraordinary in selection; extraordinary ^ n style; extraordinary in fit... that's CUS-N ^ TC)M-TAILORED CLOTHiNG from HAR-' ^ WOOD. Hundreds of style variations offer ^ , a suit tailored just the way you wanh it. ^ Hundreds of fabrics ^ive you a fantastic ^ . choice of weoves, patterns 6nd colors. The ^ ^ extraordinary man finds the answer to/' , his clothing needs at Harwoods. TUXEDO RENTALS "Aflsr-Sli' formol OormonN IttsfuiooB CLOTHIERS - TAILORS -'^UNIEOEMS 906. W. HURON AT TELEORAPH, PONTIAC FRIDAY, NOV. 26-10A.M. IF YOU ARE A MEMBER OF ANY UNION, THIS SALE IS FOR YOU! SPECIALS FOR FRI.6 SAT. ONLY MsttsI BABY FIRST STEP Th« firtt and only doll walk oil by hortolfl Sho con wl on any Uvol lurfoco, ovon e most mgi and corpatt . . . and not jw(t 0 faw ttapt, but cltor ocroti tha rootnl BABY FIRST STEPS walking motion ii bottary pewored and controllod by a hiddan twitch on hor bock. Sh« hot rootod tynthotic hair, oyot that epan and clot#. Baauti- FREE 1966 MUSTANG To Some Lucky Person in AAichigan. Nothing to Buy. Register at UNION TOY STORE. ‘ TONKA TRUCKS Your Choice 3 • ‘JIEF COMMANDER • 16 Curvad Track, 3 Straight Traeki. • 1 Stooring Tatt with Sign • Shock Abtorbor Tait with Sign • 1 Poir of "Y" Swilchat • 3 Chottit Convortlon Pint • Inttruction Manual All sy$t«mt rwad "Go!" Filled with power-packed fun ELECTRIC DRAWING SET Barbie I Skipper way to dnign and ■rbla and Skippar 40 pine* hiikion dailgnar $ 2»9 wi $999 WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES UNION TOY STORE 74 N. SAGINAW DOWNTOWN PONTIAC :ex THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER U, 1965 MRS. TOMMY LEE McKENZIE To Live in Paw Paw T. L. McKenzies Wed The Tommy Lee McKenzies (Nancy Sue Tynan) left for a brief honeymoon and their future home in Paw Paw after recent vows in Our Lady of the Lakes (Catholic* Church. Their parents are the Edward G. Tynans of Adlake Drive and the Kenneth L. McKenzies of Paw Paw. PRINCESS UNES Alencon lace accented the bride’s princess-line gown of white peau de soie styled with Watteau panel and chapel sweep Mrs. William Lemer attended her sister as matron honor, with Sandra Briney and Darlene McKenzie, as bridesmaids. The bridegro(«n had Marlin G. Boothby for his best man. Kenneth Gamm and Fred Dunlap were ushers. Scott McCandlin carried the rings for the noon ceremony performed by Rev. Donald Kaiser. the couple greeted guests in the First Federal Savings 11 always have the "pcessary triangle of fabric at the aide seam and it will always be exactly the right size-with no guesswork. ★ ★ ★ Dear Eunice Fanner: My husband asked me to write to yon and ask yon how to sew on a coat button that “hangs.” Mrs. R. T. Dear Mrs. R. T.: First may I tell you how delightfully and accurately you expressed the way a button should be sewn to a garment. What your husband is referring to is the shank that is necessary to teep the button from being sewn too close to the coat itself and not leaving enough room to be buttoned. If you gals would learn to sew on a button that “hangs,” you wouldn’t have to replace so many. When you are sewing on a button, begin with a double thread and make a tiny stitch on the right side of the garment at the exact spot the button will be sewn. When thrCad is secure, hold button away from gannent and thread needle through a bole in the button. Next, t*ke a stitch almost clear throuf^ the coat, etc. The distance between the button and the coat wlD depend on the thickness of the garment. For a topcoat leave about to % inch. You wUl be sewing through the button and then throu^ the coat fabric in two separate operations. When you have done this 4 or 5 times, hold the button away from fabric and twlat the thread counter-dockwiae around loose thread which will form the shank of the button. Complete by fastening the thread through the shank. The best part of it is that you will merely see a small indentation and at the most, a tiny stitch on the wrong side of the fabric. After the lower button is sewed on, button the coat before placing the second in position, etc., until they are all lewed on. Sore Feet Very Often Our Fault The busy winter season keeps us fast, frantic and forever on our feet, especially the ladies. It’s a woman’s whirl—what with holiday entertaining, Christmas shopping, rounds of visits, in addition to daily housework, marketing and other chores. .... joy and gladness shall be found therein, thanksgiving, and the voice of melody.” (Isaiah 51:31 SELF-INDUCED No wonder, reports the American Foot Care Institute, that the great majority of patients in any podiatrist’s office is women. Not only is women’s footwork never done, but often her foot troubles are self-induced. The agony of bunions, blisters and corns is largely due to the shoes she wears, plus lack of proper foot care. Dr. Benjamin Kauth, prominent podiatrist and director of the American Foot Care Institute, offers the following advice in avoiding the wintertime woes of pinched and pain-wracked feet: While doing housework, wear shoes with supple leather uppers and sturdy flexible leather soles. Never wear flimsy slippers w broken-down pumps that offer neither support nor safety. Plastic, canvas and rubber playshoes are no better—they give no support and traf> unhealthy perspiration inside the shoe. A leather shoe “breathes” through the natural pores of the leather, keeping your foot dry and comfortable. LEATHER AGAIN Dress and casual footwear (including boots) for long shopping tours, evenings out and other occasions should follow the same rule: leather is best. Mid heels are recommended and—fortunately— are currently very much in fashion. When, shoe shopping, buy footwear that fits. Good fit means your toes are comfortable, not cramped, so that blood circulates properly and tender nerves and muscles aren’t squeezed. Shoes should fit snugly around the heels, otherwise they will slide up and down and raise blistere. Don’t neglect your feet. Examine them frequently, especially if you suffer from circulatory or other chronic ailments. Beware, however, of self-treatment. Corns, calluses and blisters should respond to a change of shoe or stocking size—or style. If not, see a qualified podiatrist. “Bathroom surgery’! is dangerous and expensive. Change your shoes and stockings often. It’s a wise woman who doesn’t wear the same pair of shoes two days in succession. ANNUAL CLEARANCE SALE WEDDmO GOWNS Latest Styles — Laces — Satins — ■ Velvets Peaus PRICES REDUCED UP TO 50^0 Open Monday and Friday Til 9 P.M. BRIDAL SALON 55 W. Huron Riker Bldg. THANKSGIVING SERVICE 11 A. M. Thursday, November 25 First Church of Christ, Scientist 164 West Lawrence Street, Pontiac We welcome you to our special service of hymns, Scriptural reading, prayer, a lesson-Serman an “Thanksgiving" and appropriate testimonies from the congregation. 'tjdimsk haus OPEN 10-7 DAILY (Clowd Tune.) SUNDAYS 10-2 4260 Walton Blvd. OR 3-1880 Hearns Floor Coveriog Opeiiig Special FREE F RE E HOOVER VACUllM tr.S.9? With The Purchase of Carpeting Off»r CooH Nov. 15th thru Ore. Z5, J 965 • FInl 0>alil7 Oiilr • NaliaMlU known Bn l.«IW OVKI^HEAD 8AVE.S YOU MOINKY Wkr Par Mon . . . Call Fnr A|,|M>inlnn-nl J4eatn^ 3loo\ Coveting diamond splendor... for her to treasure n Omega diamond-aet watch ii one of the mnit magnificent treasures a woman can own. Every diamond is individually inspected for color, cut, clarity and brilliance. The high-precision Omega movement... checked at 1497 manufacturing stages...is one of the most accurate in the world. Models from $125 to over $1000 F.T.I. Redmond’s Jewelry - 81 N. Saginaw St Fre« Parkinit in Rear of Store Ath lor /rta Om«g« Slyia Brochure . TWELVE THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 24, 196g musm Military Draft Topic for Discussion Around the World LONDON UP— From Moscow| to Jerusalem to Saigon, young! men face the same problem that provokes discussion in the I United States - the military draft. Conscription is more the rule than the exception in a deeply divided world, a survey shows. Britain, Canada, India and Pakistan are among the few big countries that rely solely on voluntary enlistments. Quarreling India and Pakistan lack officers or equipment to handle the hundreds of thousands who would enlist if ' they could. Israel, surrounded by hostile Arab countries, drafts both men and women. In Mexico, training is on a Sunday-only basis. The United States draws from men in the 19-26 age group, with, selective service to furnish 36,-450 men this month to the Army, Navy and Marines. That’s the highest call since the end of the Korean War, and some states expect to start Inducting childless iharried men to fill their December quotas. Washington plans to strengthen the military forces by 340,000 men for a total of about 3 million. years, depending on the Imanch to which they are assigned. How does the U.S. tion policy compare with of other countries? Tougher than some, more lenient than others, the following survey of representative countries indicates: * ★ ★ SOVIET UNION - Strict universal military training calls for induction of all youths 17 and 18 who have completed secondary school. DRAFT LEVEL When they reach 19, they’re drafted even if they have not finished secondary schoQl, but college students are exempt. Draftees must serve two to five BRITAIN - W universal military training nor a conscription system, Britain took its last draftees in IM. Since then, the regular army has been below strength. It is now 15,000 under the goal of 181,000 men, Britain’s territorial Army is the reserve force, composed entirely of volunteers, mostly former servicemen. W A ^A« EAST - South Vietnamese youths face three years of military-service under a draft law that covers all men 18-35. The Women’s Army Corps is voluntary. NO CONSCRIPTION , In INDIA and PAKISTAN, food, uniforms and housing made military service such a privilege, there is no need for conscription. sions to induct physicians and engineers for two years. Some students, particularly In technical fields, arc required to join the National Cadet Corps. Pakistan maintains irregular military groups such as the Mu-jahids, units of farm and village warriors. Japan’s self-defense force of 245,000 men is voluntary, and conscription is virtually outlawed since the national constitution bars war as an instrument of national policy. BOTTOMLESS POOL RED CHINA has a bbttom-less pool of manpower to draw upon. Its selected standing military force is estimated at 3.5 million men and available stan-by militia is estimated at 20 to 30 million men and women. NATIONALIST CHINA (on Formosa) has much the same draft system as the United States. Everyone is snhject to callup at 18 but college sto-denta get doferments and can DOWN UNDER - Australia and New Zealand are gradually boosting their military training programs. Australia, with troops fighting guerrillas in Southeast Asia, will draft 4,200 men for two years of military service this year. NEW ZEALAND has a national military training program, but only about a fifth H the eligible youths are summoned into the Territorial force. Some 3,000 New Zealanders are inducted per year, out of an estimated 15,000 who are eligible, to maintain the force at 10,000 men. MIDEAST - Tiny Israel has possibly the most sweeping military training programs. It requires military training for men and unmarried women 18-M. Men serve 20 months, women 20. Men 27-21 rnnst serve 24 nienths. After completing their terms, the men remain in foe reserves until they are 49, childless women to the age of 34. As reservists, the men report for 31 days of training a year until they are 40 and then 14 days annually until they reach 49. IvaeTs youth corps, Gadna, for boys and girls 14-18, is the joint responsibility of the army and education ministry. Nahal, another youth group, combines army duty with agricultural work in new settlements. All Egyptian youths are subject to conscription when they reach 18, and youth groups provide military drill for girls who volunteer. WESTERN EUROPE -France, Germany and Italy all use military training to ■ r regular forces. ’The West German youth Is 11-ahle for 18 months of duty when he reaches 18, and nearly all of those eligihio are being taken now since the birth rate was down after World War n. FRANCE has universal military training with youths at 19 subject to 18 months’ active duty, plus 3^ years of availability plus 12 years in the active reserves. ITALY has had the draft since 1870 and the present law makes males eligible for induction at 20 and subject to recall Until they are 45. Men taken in the army or air force serve 151 months: the navy term is 24. I LATIN AMERICA - Mexico’s Sunday — only training program for youths may be expanded, but not because any-worried about war. Those favoring a plan that would draft soipe youths into the army for ode year argue that it would curb juvenile delinquency, teach patriotism and Bteracy, and re-lieve unemployment A lottery system draws 80,000 Argentine youths into unUorm each year, with army and air force draftees serving a year and navy conscripts two y*^*-Brazilian males register at 16 and are subject to call two years PERSONALIZE YOUR GIFTS IN GOLD STAMPING • Napkins • Convention Guest Tugs • Gift Ribbon Gold Embossed Names on • Bibles • Books • Leather Goods CHRISTIAN literature SALES 55 Oakland Ave. FE 4-9591 HOW DO YOU SCOREwe. COMPARE YOUR PREDICTIONS WITH AS HE FORECASTS THE OUTCOME OF THIS WEEK’S FOOTBALL CLASSICS! Brought to You by the Folloidng Quality Pontiac Area Business Firms: JOE HARRIS Acclaimed ByAmerica'a Most Famous Sporting Authorities t RECREATION ROOMS Deal Direct With Builder! PAV-WAY SKILLED CRAFTSMEN Invif* You To Soo A Largo Soloction Of Plant and Dotignt SATISFACTION BUARANTEED Everything In Modernization NO JOB TOO BIQ OR TOO SMALL! PAY-WAY Ctmtetiofb Compeuy M345M FE2.«2t FHA TERMS FULLY INSURED HEAVY DUTY NEW TREAI Plus Tux And Knrxadahlr Casin TUBE or TUBELESS WHITEWALLS $1 EXTRA 12 MONTH TERMS 30 DAY CHARGE NEW WHEELS 50% OFF MOTOR MART SAFETY CENTER UtEartMotitcalm_______PtMTIAC__________Ftt-TtW CorLeosIng Plon WE PAY maintenance license plates liability insurance collision insurance comprehensive insurance fire and theft .insurance property damage insurance lubrication emergency repairs towing depreciation interest replacement car new tires snow tires anti-freexe batteries________________ * ANY MAKE * ANY MODEL [■ YOU pay] ' ' I ---------1 CAR lEASING OLIVER 210 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 2-9101 BUICK TNANKSfiRlMG DAY whraHoitaiwi Atohema State HveknoU Prethytortan...... . 27 : SeeWi CorelitM State .. .14-I’ TeimesteeStata......... 4S ? 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DOWNTOWN PONTIAC'S FABULOUS NEW LOUNGE fiicktoili MIXED THE WAY YOU LIKE 'EMI After work or shopping stop in for relaxing Cocktails and enjoy our luxurio atmosphere... Where Good Friends Get Togetherl BUSINESSMEN'S and WOMEN'S LUNCHEONS The famous Cholet Sandwiches we serve for lunches ore ovoiloble oil day and evenings 9i30 A.M. thru 1 lOO A.M., ot our regular moderote prices! OPEN THAMKSQlVINa ... REOUUR HOURS Open Daily Except Sunday 9 A.M. thru 2 AM. 1 I 79 N. Saginaw 333-9145 May We SERVE You! Wh«n You Nood MONEY H«lp Is As N«ar Ac YOUR TELEPHONEI Call In Your ApplleatioH Todstyt FE 8-4022 S THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MK IIIOA.N WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 19«5 THIRTEEN Black Hawks Turn Back Floundering Wings Chicago Squad Posts 3-2 Win on Detroit Ice Winners Score Three Times in 2nd; Howe Still After 600th DETROIT (AP) - A continuing problem at defense and a lack of firepower have prevented the Detroit Red Wings from moving into a contending position in the National Hockey League. Chicago, bunching all its goals In the second period — two of them in a 29-second span, edged the defending regular season champions 3-2 in the only game played Tuesday night. ★ ★ * “We seem to find more ways to lose games,’’ said Gordie Howe, who failed for the fourth straight game to notch his 600th regular season goal. The Black Hawks, playing without leading scorer Bobby Hull, got but 17 shots on the De-^ troit net, seven fewer than the Red Wings sent at Glenn Hail. Red Hay’s tally at 11:06 of the second period, while the Black Hawks were playing short, proved to be the winning goal. Fred Stanfield and Phil Esposito scored near the six-minute mark and Ab McDonald connected for the Red Wings a little later. CLOSED DOOR Alex Delvecchio made close again when he scored seconds into the final period^ but the Black Hawks allowed Detroit but five more shots after that. Andy Bathgate earned an sist on Delvecchio’s goal, giving him 800 points in his NHL career. His S06 assists is saooiid only to Howe’s 772. Bathgate needs five goals to reach the 800 mark. Manager-Coach Sid Abel admitted vrtien he traded Marcel Pronovost to Toronto earlier this year to get Bathgate that the move created a pi^lem at defense. The problem still exists with Abel shifting players back and forth from the minors in hopes of finding help in the Red Wings’ system. Bob Wall, brought up from Pittsburgh for the game, will return to that club and Gary Bergman, who started with the Red Wings but was sent to Memphis Nov. 12, will be recalled, Abel said. Keg Deadline Nears in City Tournament Time is running out for bowl-or better, or those who hit at ers who want to U^ke part in|least 618 actual in the qualify- the first qualifying day of Pontiac Open City Bowling championship, sponsored by the city recreation department. Deadline for Sunday’s qualify- . - , .- ing round is tomorrow at mid-|da^D^ 5, at the two sites, night. All entries must be turned RED WING TALUES - Detroit left wing Ab McDonald (center) snaps the puck past Chicago Black Hawks goalie Glenn Hall in the second period of action last night at Detroit Olympia for the Red Wings first score. Al> PhololfX Defenseman Doug Jarrett (20) arrived too late to aid Hall, but the Windy City goalie didn’t need much as Chicago posted a 3-2 victory. Heisman Trophy Won by Garrett of Southern Cal Royal Oak and Birmingham split last night as the two cities’ four public schools opened their basketball seasons. Dondero withstood a late Birmingham Seahoim drive for a 6941 triumph in Royal Oak. Kimball, meanwhile, withered in the last quarter and fell 47-42 k Birmingham Groves. * * * In attird county game, Clawson’s Tim Robson scored 29 points askw Trojans romped to an 81-62 Wfai over Madison Uaigbta Lamphera in the opener for both. Roseville polled away in the middle periods to surprise Dearborn Fordson, 61-SI, despite 26 points by the loser’s Guy DelGiodlce. Gene O’NeU hit six for six from the field in the second and third periods as the Wildcats ran up a 44-30 edge. * 0 0 Other Roseville starters in double figures were Bemie Aude and Mike Hoover, 11 each, and Dennis Wise, 10. Bruce Aman added nine. TRAIUNQ Groves trailed Kimball, 39-34, after three quarters. Lane Brown, a 6-6 forward, tipped in go-ahead basket for the Falcons with three minutes to LOS ANGELES (A - When it was announced that Southern California halfback Mike Garrett had won Ih< Award, USC Athletic Director Jess Hill said: “He is one of| the finest gen-| tlemen ever to play at USC.’’ Garrett, named Tuesday as the season’s best coHegej football player, has been a team leader since his high GARRETT school days at Roosevelt in Los Angeles and has won the respect of teamma alike. This season Garrett’s yardage 1,328 on 243 carries — is g enough to lead major coll rusherp, and he has one game remaining, a home contest Saturday against Wyoming. Wolverines' Varsity '5' Routs Freshmen Team ANN ARBOR (AP) - Mlchl- downed the Wolverine freshmen 108410 Tuesday night fai their annual tilt. Oliver Darden, Wolverine captain and forward, led all scorers with 26 points, but smooth-working freshman, Dennis Stewart, of Steelton, Pa., was second in scoring with 21 points. Casde Russell wu third with 19. Groves, Dondero Win Openers turnee Roger Peltz scored 18 but had Utdc bdp. Bob Sherwin sparked Dondero » a 12-point lead and then closed strong with sharp foul-ihooting after Seahoim rallied to only a four-point deficit with two minutes remaining. The 641 Dondero center had 14 of his 27 poinU in the last period, including 8 of 9 free throws. He aim cleared 17 rebounds, incinding 9 on of- ing rounds. There are no post entries in the tournament. Those who fail to qualify this Sunday will have only one more chance to re-enter for the final qualifying Sun- PxnllK Prnt Plwlo Squads will begin at 10 a m.! into eilherTthliuaUfidng^ Huron Bowl or 300 Bowl. |and 15 minutes. Some squads Entry blanks are available at most area establishments. The goal for qnalifying is “601’’ and this inchides handi- . are limited in numbers. HIGH-HANDED BATTI.E - George Sawicki (left) of Orchard Lake St. Mary tries to slip ball from underneath the grasps of teammate Joe Wojtys (right* and Waterford Our Lady- of Lakes’ Randy Wise, but officials ruled a jump ball. For details of last night’s opening game between two schools, see Page 14. fense. The Oaks held a 58-35 backboard edge. In all, Dondero tallied on 15 of 17 free throws in the final eight minutes. Seahoim had four players in twin figures led by Phil Lyman’s 16, but mistakes and fouls hurt the Maples, w ★ ★ Groves and Seahoim will collide in their annual meeting Friday night; while Dondero and Kimball’s first meeting will be a week from Friday. better can consider themselves halfway to the finals. They will enter the semifinal round Sunday morning, Dec. 12, at Huron BovH, and 10 per cent or better of the total number of bowlers in the tournament will then go into the afternoon finals that day at 300 Bowl. ★ ★ ★ This is a fine opportunity for bowlers of all averages and handicaps to shoot for the many cash prizes starting with an $800 guaranteed top prize. EASY QUALIFYING As example, a bowler with a 140 average needs only to pick up 55 pins in his three games to qualify. With his three-game average of 420 pins he receives 126 pins handicap. The same advantage applies to the 150-160 or 170 average bowler. * ★ * The high average bowlers will have a good chance in the handicap part of the tournament and also gain an invitation to the Actual’s Invitational, which will admit bowlers with 189 averages Colts, Lions in Turkey Day Clash League-leading Baltimore, riding on the crest of an eight-game winning streak, can take a giant step toward another Western Conference title against the injury-riddled Detroit Lions Thursday. It marks the first Thanksgiving Day battle ever for the Colts, who can mathematically eliminate all teams but Green Bay and Chicago with a win or a tie against the Lions. The game is the 26th holiday tussel for the Lions, who held a slim 13-11-1 edge and will start at 12:15 p. m. The previous games have attracted 982,938 fans and the Lions will honor the one millionth (an to attend the Turkey Day classic. Lions’ coach Harry Gilmer said Sunday his team and the Colts were on even terms regarding readiness for the game. We’re in the same boat,’’ Gilmer said. “We both have but two days to get ready. Halfbacks Joe Don Looney and Tommy Watkins and defensive back Wayne Rasmussen are doubtful starters for Detroit. Looney hasn’t fully recovered from a concussion suffered two weeks ago and Watkins tained a knee injury against the Bears last Sunday in addition to aggravating a foot injury. Rasmussen, one of the league leaders in pass interceptions, has been sidelined by an ankle injury. 'The Colts clobbered the Lions 1-7 more than six weeks ago for one of the most one-sided losses suffered by the Lions in a 5-5 season. Milt Plum is expected to start at quarterback for the Lions. Amos Marsh and Nick Pietro-sante will probably join Plum in the backfield with Pdt Stud-still continuing as the flanker back in place of Terry Barr, who has been sidelined for the season. They pulled away then for an upset triumph. Mike Rafferty hit 10 field goals for 20 points and game honors. Kimball’s All-County re- w 0 0-1 0 WMt'm'd 1 l-IO 14 1 M 3 RMtr 0 04 0 4 7 24 It tlMWon 2 1-2 S 2 t4 12 Shtrwln I 11-13 27 - 1 44 12 Voungbl'd • • - - I 1 I 04 2 Tololt 22 17-27 41 Tdttll SCORI BY OUARTiki - —— jn 11 II 2 2-2 21 27-30 \nsssf. ____'ll 14 II I4-47 STATMTICI S (47) RO KIMBALL 142) 70 RT TR RO RT TR 2 1-1 S Rtdt 4 4-7 10 f KtniMr 1 X Is 44 20 I 04 4 Slrttn 2 1-2 5 0 45 4 2 1-1 5 Totals 20 7-11 47 TSItll I3l2-ir41 SCORR BY OUARTBRS Irovot ................ II 13 0 15-47 U"l»#ll 11 14 to 5-42 NHL Standings ..._r I! i)! S f N«* .York ..... 4 S 4 12 2 2 ChlcoBO 3, SSrSu 2 .. . ■ fodar’* OoiBM Lions Sign Star Back DETROIT (AP) - Bruce Mc-Lenna, 34, star Hillsdale College halfback, was signed to a 1966 prpfeasfoiial contract Tuesday by the Detroit Lions of the Na> ■Umiseaf Ptbroonm* Annual Pre-HoliilaY Sale ( SAVE 10 TO 40% ON TOP QUALITY, FINE BEDROOM FURNITIIREl I Such Famous Nomos or BroyhitY, Thomasviilo, Lono Codor Chosta, I Bossoif, Sooiy and Simmons Hid«*A4kMlis. LAST WEEK OF SALE! Broyhill Girls White set . . . For-mica Tops . . . Save now during our sale..................... .......... Uii Spanish Elegance in Pecan ... 3 ^ Piece as shown. . . . Reg- 439.00 379“ Tom Sawyer Set . . Boys .. . Trundle Bed . p ■ •I li" ^ ■ ; BASSETT . . . Triple Dresser, Mirror, Chest and Bed ... Oil Walnut, Regular 269.00, Sale.......... 199" SHERRILL Finev Italian Burnished Cherry ... All 4 Pieces Regular 509.00, Sale................ 399' 00 SOLID CHERRY Triple Dresser, Mirror, Chest and Bed . . . Floor IQQOO Sample. Regular $279 .............. lUw Visit our Yoqng America Model Rooms, set up entirely for the younger set from 3 to 23. louse of JBebroonni 1662 S. TELEGRAPH • PONTIAC Daily 9 to 5:30 — Evenings —Mon., Thurs., Fri. 'til 9 Tarmt AvailabI* N*ar Orchard Lak* Rd. Phon* 334-4593 House of name brond quality bedroom furniture. FOURTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 24. 1965 I SAY THERE!-Orchard Lake St. Mary center Joe Wojtys (43) appears amazed at the prospect of facing an apparently basketball-headed opponent. Actually, the foe is Tom Sirbaugh of the Waterford Our L a d y of Lakes quintet and he is grabbing a first half rebound last night. Name 'B' All-Staters; Holly Star on 2nd Unit By Ihe Associated Press A fast, versatile backfleld operating bdiind a massive line averaging almost 207 pounds per man is the tradenuu-k of the 1965 Michigan Class B All-State football team announced by The Associated Press today. ★ ★ * Bill Plochocki of South Haven, John Powers of Class B champion Jackson St. John, Bob Miltonburger of Grosse He and Greg Hacias of Detroit " Eaglet Five Off to Fast Start By JERE CRAIG The Eaglets of Orchard Lake St. Mary cushioned an uncomfortable first-half perch with a 30-point third period pillow for a 72-49 win over Watford Our Lady of Lakes Tuesday night. The scrappy, but o v e r-matched Laker squad hustled in the first half and only trailed 29-24 at intermission after being down three times by 10 points. OL St. Mary came out early during the break to get some extra shooting practice and it! KrogulecM had 11 for 20 paid off handsomely. Paced by fore missing his final four tries (fonnie Krogulecki and J o h n'in the last quarter. Stepien a^ scored from the outside, al- Stepien, the visitors hit a sizzling 14 of 21 shots to grab a 59-32 edge in the next ^t be-buting Krogulecki — who popped high arching Jump shots in midseason form from 29-25 feet six times in the quarter^ had 12 in the quarter. He tied fellow cocaptain Stepien with 22 points total. although not as effectively. Carl Matielle’s six first peaiod points and Tom Sirbaugh’s seven in the second kept the home team close until the point barrage. Matzelie led all scorers with 23. The winners ontshot WOLL, 8945, from the floor atlhough only outreboundlng it, 59-51. The poised OLSM starting five Q Why do knowledgeable o people stay with Imperial? A Someday, someone may make a better whiskey. As of today, nobody has. ^ Me/nAer 0/ice M: Td be lost without the Auto Club!” Yes, the Auto Club—with its maps pnd guides for freeway tripe and byway rides —is for people who want to know where they are going. You can know where to go. You can travel with confidence. You can LEAD THE WAY. You can join the Auto Club. You can do it today! AUTOMOBILE CLUB OF MICHIGAN FE 5-4171 76 Williomt St. H. E. HiMRiann, Mgr. in basketball after an unbeaten grid season, was displeased by the Lakers’ offense. WATUrOOLMW; issssa 1« s S: I M ! ........ 0 ShaughV I ** * 0 SIrtMugh 3 0 McCullodiS SnprikI 0 (Ml 04 2 3-7 ♦ ____ . , . . ___________^2 2 TtwkjbV 0 04 0 Mttatllo 11 14 » 4 0-10 Chtoooll 0 00 0 2 04 4 BrmtOMi 0 01 0 II 04 22 Adtmi 1 04 2 ________ 0 04 0 Coxen I 1-2 3 Krooul'W 11 “ “ --------- ■ It 32 0-13 n TWOll N f-13 43 tCOUa UY eUARTERS ----- 1$ 14 31 13-72 the ball without a shot) in the first three periods. Meanwhile, the Lakers lost the ball nine times during the same spell. Both teams used reserves extensively in the last period. The OLSM first string had a 63-34 lead when it left the game. Coach John Rakoczy of the winners was disappointed in his defense while Mike Boyd, de- Rose Bowl Beckoning MSU Alumni, Students Michigan State students and alumni interested in making the Rose Bowl trip should ciHitact Lew Wrenn, past president of the Oakland County MSU chapter at MI 7-0103. A special charier flight will leave December 28th and from Las Vegas, January 4th. I. Mary .. M OLL Tommy Tuttle Leads Pro Keglers'Meet DEniOIT (AFO - Tonuny Tuttle of Rural Hall, N.C., runner-up until Tuesday In the |65,-■■■ Professional Bowlers Association Tournament, took over le lead today. Tuttle moved into the top spot after the second day of the tourney, racking up a total of 5,287 after four rounds, or 24 games. L*Klnn, a country club and golf; gan’s first legal turkev season course, motel, dude ranch, a! since 1897 should have a lot cluster of cottages, a general more respect for the game-get- store, theater, gasoline station, I ting talents of their pioneering airport and lakes for fishing and I forefathers. swimming. Out of this small contingent a modern day vacationer’s of turkey shooters who combed | yen to go, go and keep going the woods and thickets of Al- |s blamed in part for Blaney legan (^unty for nine days. Park’s closing, only 82 were successful in getting birds. LAST 3 NI6HTS No Racing Thunday—Nov. 25 NIGHT RACING I "A different kind of vacation-ler, taxes and no profits make Even am’ong ihesetocky fewj^jj?^ible for us to continue ?ia “of 1 «hen he became 318, most of the seasons hunt-'. will undoubtedly concede that the wild turkey is the hardest of all feathered game to put' in the bag. 9 Paces Nightly Pam or Shine through November 27 JACKSON HARNESS RACEWAY JACKSON, MICHIGAN Adm.,„on$IOO 8 30 Poll Just how fast these already-spooky birds wised up to the ways of the banters is shown by the day-by-day kill gtatis-tics. Opening day saw 52 turkeys taken. After that, the huntin( got tougher as the tally dropped to 9 the second day, and then each day has to offer. 2, 3, 2, 4, 3, 5 and 2 for the *.m. Solunar Tables ’The schedule of Solunar Periods, as printed below, has been taken from John Alden Knight’s Solunar Tables. Plan your days so that you will be fishing in good territory or hunting in cover during these times, if you wish to find the best sport that Quail Hunting Pressure Light; Game Bags, Too Anyone who thought this year’s quail hunt in 15 southern counties might hurt Michigan’s bobwhite populations was worrying for nothing, according to the Conservation Department. During the Nov. 11-15 -season, this state’s first open quail hunt since 1911, it appeared clear that shotgunners didn’t come close to putting a dent in the birds’ breeding population. ★ ★ ★ As a matter of fact, it’s safe to say there were a lot more quail to hunt than hunters to hunt them. Department game men reported very light gun pressure on these popular little birds in the 15 quail shooting counties which included St. Joseph, Branch, Hillsdale, Lenawee, Monroe, Wayne, Washtenaw, Jackson, Calhoun, Kalamazoo, Eaton, Ingram, Oakland, Macomb and St. Clair. However, for the few banters that were afield, shooting success was not too bad. Among 111 sportsmen contacted the first day, kill totaled 59 birds. ’Their efforts figured out to about one bird for every two hunters or nearly 20 quail per 100 hours of hunting. Both of these statistics slightly outshine the success of this year’s pheasant khooters on opening day. Bag checks during the Nov. 11 opener indicate that quail hunting was best in eastern Jackson and Washtenaw coun-' ties and to western Wayne county. Mack Calls Deer Probe fs FREE MOUNTING 1^1:00x14? for legislator Raps Department Figures LANSING (Un)-State Sen. Joseph S. Mack, D-Ironwood,, has accused the' Conservation Department of trying to cover up the real reasons for a decline to the Upper Peninsula deer population. Mack, chairman of the Senate Conservation Appropriations Committee, called e ' that 30,000 deer died last winter in the northern half of the Upper Peninsula “preposterous and without foundation. ★ AW "In my judgment, the statement of 30,000 deer wiped opt to only a portion of the U. P. by winter kill is only a wei' hide the real killer ‘the doe license sales’," Mack charged. Mack said his committee JIGGER k vo«r anmert fff XS. Protect yonrtelf from Faticue and Possible Heart Attack! Fdr infemiMion Oalli 682-2787 2 OAKUUD JIGGER SALES 4 SERVICE ■ ■■■■■■■■■BasBAaauBaSaaaBaBBaaB would begin an inunediate investigation into both the impact of permitting hunters to take female deer and the accuracy of the estimated winter deer deaths. He demanded the department produce records to support the winter kill figure. William J. Mullendorc, tofor-nution,officer for the Conservation Department, said the 30,-estimate included deer deaths from all causes— ing disease, starvation, the weather, predators and highway accidents, i He said the 1964-85 death es-j timate was between 10,000 and 15,000 deer higher tlmn^he number that die during a normal winter. He blamed an unusually long winter and heavy snows for at least part of the in- THREEDAYS , Mack said his decision for full-scale investigation was made after reading of the death estimate and reports that "only _ 1,364 deer kilM’’ were taken! ■ back across the Mackinac ■ Bridge in the first three days of the season that began Saturday. ' Muliendure discounted the. possibility of “an emergency situation” affecting the Upp^ Peninsula deer herd. j He added, all Indications now are there “will be a normal deer season” in the Northern U. P. ' Mack, an opponent of the doe license sales, said, “the time ie for us to find once and for all whether the Conservation Department uses fact or fiction or ‘guess estimates’ as the basis for its operations." Coho Salmon Release Set Platte, Bear Systems to Be Stocked Three northern streams have been selected by the Conservation Department to receive about 750,000 coho (silver) salmon next spring. The schedule calls for 250,000 fo the ^ inch cohos to go into the Platte River near Honor to Benzie County, 300.000 into Bear Creek near Bear Lake in Manistee County and 200,000 in the Big Huron River northeast of L’Anse in Baraga County. ’These fish, descendants of the ocean-going Pacific Coast salmon, are expected to migrate downstream into lakes Michigan and Superior, grow to maturity, and return to spawn in the streams where they are to be planted. Department fisheries specialists look for some of the faster-growing planters to attempt migrating back to their release sites next fall. Results of the coho program will be known better in the fall of 1967 when the first general spawning runs are expected. In selecting the three northern streams for initial releases, the department leaned heavily on the advice of western coho experts to direct first efforts in waters which have good steel-head runs. season. EVENLY DIVIDED For one thing, the kill was evenly divided between male and female birds, including 41 gobblers and 41 hens. The same 41-41 split was recorded between adult and immature turkeys. * w ★ Biggest turkey was a 20-pound tom taken by Fred Nelson of Allegan. Average weight of all toms was 16 pounds 5 ounces. Adult hens averaged about half .that much. . Another question for the future is if and when other flocks of Michigan turkeys will be open to hunting. Department game chief Harry D. Ruhl has indicated that the Beaver Island flock may be the next to come under gun. ’The island’s residents apparently favor such an 1:30 3:4S *:40 3:40 12:33 4:30 BOWLING TOGETHERNESS AT ROCHESTER LANES 430 Main St,, Rochester, keeps a family happy, active and healthy. Children 18 y e a r s old and under, 25c a-line. Adults 3 games $1 00. 4th'game free. League openings avoilable. OL 6-9341 \TheBESTIn iTAXIDERMYAtA and the birds there seem well -enough established to stand it. I Other large flocks are locat-1 ed in the Lake-Newaygo County ■ area, in Oscoda County and the ! northern part of Ogemaw | County. ,1 Consideration will also be ik given for allowing limited hunt- ■ IIFFR HFAIIC Ing in these areas-perhaps to 5 "BUyd .......................... s '30i.*35 Find Us Fast In Your TAXIDERMY JIM ERVIN 'Highett Quality Most aaoMnaMB Rolsi In Pmgmm Th# Arao * This Is Our Lino Of Accossories For Door! • Deer Head Mounted • Deer Foot Gun Rock • Antlers Mounted e Deer Foot Mounted on a Deer Foot Tharinometer Ploques a Deer Foot Paperweight • Deer Foot Ashtray a Bucktoil Thermometer Buckskin Tanning, Moccasins, Jackets, Gloves, etc. 2080 Commonwealth Off Pontiac Rood Between Perry A Opdyke FE 5>8663 Reasonable Price! the next year or two. Annual Banquet Dec. 4 The annual banquet and meeting of the Pioneer Coon Hunters* Club will be Dec. 4 at 7 p.m. at the Oakland County Sportsmen’s Club. Mato dish for the banquet will be raccoon. Tickets are available from club officers. SMOTC Trial ■ a Nock Mounts... $30 ! a Full Shouldar Mounts.. $35 g a Antlar Mounts ....... $10 '■ • Ducks, Partridgo.$20 Set on Sundo/j! ■ BILL HUFFMAN The Southern Michigan Obedi-|! ence Training Gub’s licensed g trial will be Sunday at the De-1 troit Artillery Armory. Judges for the obedience show which gets under way at 9 a.m. will be Jake Giacomelli, Mrs. Donald Carson, Robert Self and Dr. J. W. Dixon. I Novice, open and utility classes will be judges. ’The trial is run in conjunction with the Motor City specialty clubs’ show which will start at the same time. iBBiB FEI.44S5 "All I said was; Show me a filter that delivers the taste and I'll eat my hat." VjRY NEW LUCKY STRIKE FILTERS WE WILL OVERHAUL YOUR ENGINE Special Low Price! 6 Cyl.............’95“ y-8's_____________ ’115“ This includms . . . Rings, Rod B«or-> ings, Maih Bworing, Grind Volvms, Fit Pins, Doglozm Cylinder Walls, Caskets, Oil and Labor! Qko^TFAOrm STANDARD ENGINE REDUILDERS 696 AUBURN RD. • 338-9671-338-96T2 SIXTEEN THE l*ONTIAC PRESIj WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1965 Jacoby on Bridge Notn u 47 VA ♦ AKJ9654 «K1092 WEST BAST (Not ihown) (Not shown) SOUTH (D) AA6S HK4 ♦ Q10«3 4AJ65 Eatt-'^est vulnerable SmUi West North East 14 Pass 2 4 Pass 3 4 Pass 3 4 Pass 3 N.T. Pass 4 A Pass 4 A Pass 6 N.T. Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—A Q ! as safely as possible for it and forget atiout overtricks. Here is a hand from the finals of the 1935 Open Pairs that really illustrates this.” Jim: “Isn’t that the one where yon and the late Eddie Hymes won in spite of the fact that yon played the final rounds with a high fever?” Oswald: “<2uite so. It was really a remarkable exhibition. Now, let’s see if you can figure J make mnch difference if I made six or seven no>tmmp; so I decided to dock the first spade in order to help me decide how to play the clubs later on. “)[ took the second spade and started to run off diamonds. I could not understand why I was being squeezed until trick nine when I saw that I has ail the rest of the tricks in aces and kings. My play was lo-thunp and the lost omr-I trick did not even cost us li I a match point.” Q—The Udding has been: West North Bast Sontl 3 4 Past 7 You, South, are not vulnerable and hold: 4KS9 4AQ7 4KIS44K19t What do you do? t :S‘ about this hand that I played ' at six no-trump?” , BERRY'S WORI.D ____________________ Jim: “1 see you had seven Jim starts his discussion by ^“7™* ^ T! asking his father to give a handjhearts and two clubs in top from his own experience to lustrate the theory of play in dupUcate I go down, did you?’ Oswald: “Thej Oswald: “No, but I sure I Kay Silodor,^ mlsplayed the hand. Even at Karpin Com- the age of 33 a headache it a plete Book of. headache and a fever is a D u pJicate fever and when I looked at Bridge points dummy, 1 could only count lout that when' to eleven top tricks. It aliA I you reach an was evident that the field ^exceptional oon-| would be playing the hand at tract you should diamonds and it would not .." ^ ♦ 6 VOUR-6ELE, MA30R.'OR AREN’T YOU WORRIED ABOOT LANDING IN THE OVEN IN place OF THE BIRD ? To Try Lieulonant as Viet Protester EL PASO. Tex, (AP) - A L general court-martial has been I ordered for an Army lieuenant | arrested after an anti-Viet Nam war demonstraion in El Paso Nov. 6. * tt tt Lt. Henry Howe Jr., stationed at Ft. Bliss here, was charged with violating three sections of the Uniform Ckide of Military Justice. The court-martial has been tentatively scheduled for Dec. 13. OUT OUR WAY Howe, from Boulder, allegedly was one of a grouf demonstrators protesting U. involvement in Viet Nam. Colo. Dies in Viet Action WASHINGTON JAPl-Spec. 4 William J. Taylor, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Taylor. East Jordan. Mich,, was killed in action in Viet Nam, the Defense Department announced Tuesday. DONALD DUCK By Walt I IM G(DIN<3 TO. POP VOlTY (?13MT ON THE SNOUT .' j A SENTLEMANI S / (ncvei? hit® another I > gentleAAAN \ Q WEARING GLASSPS' ) vou MEAN : CAN'T HItA you BECAUSE VOU'RE J -------------.p ^ TALES OF THE GREEN \)ERETS By Robin Moora I VffTHTHClMmP ttOULBP (XXNH, ' Mwie-'HowaiN \ m istt. A j4iy-4.0AP mOM A ^ 90imCU00O^*- purta«r*s spade s4t Tra sh—M far far bIud trieks.ntiwr thus Uk 19. TODAY’S QUESTION Again your partner opens i nonvulnerable three spade bid. This time you hold: 4Kit 4AKQ99 43 49S4X What do you do? By Jim Berry HfUJZM^/ALI. WAMT-»ygHN OONSlDNaSP gViRySRMK/ evexyimsrBjMP BEN CASEY ( IJU6T WANT VOU TO KNOW I / UNPBISlAN[>WHArHAPPENa> yESTBRCAy. MJT WH/MD VOU Oai/ . 10 DR.CA6Ey THAT YOU WEREA THE BERRYS By Carl Grabiii DRIFT MARLO By Dr. I. M. Lavitt. Tom Cooke and Phil Eyana L FLIGHTS/ .ALLEY OOP By y. T. Hamlin CAPTAIN EASY Ry Leslie Tamer EEK & MEEK By Howie Schneider QieV, EEl^ ( I 60T THE football. ] 1 urs KICK sowe / THROU/^ ( SOME R3P FLIff f 1 i[ r^AH?j \ per Fu$s! J (p . iLf /AJy By Ernie Bushmiller jGR^NDMA WSLL, DURINd TNK CUMMBW.WITH THB ICE CREAM VENDOR COMIN6 »Y RAILV., -ir“ 1^ Charlaa Kuhn THE PONTIAC PllESS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 24. 1965 SEVENTEEN For Consumers, U. S. m, :}. The Mowing are top prices ' covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Monday. Produce PRUin ApplM, Dpiicloul, Gplden. bu. t4.00 App^ De'lclous, Rtd, bu. 4.N Appin, Jonpthtn, bu. J.75 Appitt, MKintoth, itrly, bu. J.75 Appm, NortHtm Spy, bu .......... 4.00 Appm, ckMr, Aflat. CAM ......... 2.75 VReSTABLSt Boali. toppM, bu................ 2.00 CabbtflO, Curly, bu.............. (jO Cabbapa, rad, bu.................. UO Cabbaw Spreuta, bu............ 1.25 cabtafla, Sid., bu. l.00 Carroll, callo pak ............. 1.50 Calary, Rool, at................ 1.S0 Horiaradifh, pk. btkl........... 3.75 koWra^dJjKhi. . ijo aakl. dl. bc2it. 2.00 Onkmi, dry, 50-lb. bap ......... 1.40 Panlay, Curly, di. bcbi............00 Parilay, root, di. bcbs......... 1.25 I Parmlpa, Callo Pak, di.......... 2.00 51.25 Marf Shows Preholiday Rise NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market churned higher in heavy trading early this afternoon. Aerospace defense issues, airlines and selected electronics moved ahead sharply in's resumption of yesterday’s rally. ★ ★ ★ J There was considerable lagging among some influential blue chips, however. Du Pont dropped more than 2 and General Electric 1. Special situations ; volved trading interest, some with multipoint gains. STEELS MOVE UP Steels rose fractionally, and rails moved nicely ahead balance but Big Three motors were all down. The net result was a slight gain on balance. * ★ * The Associated Press average of 60 stocks rose .3 to 352.8 with industrials off .8, rails up 1.4 and utilities off .1. The Dow Jones industrial average at noon was off .28 at 948.66, dampened by the sharp in some key stocks. Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index, though, was ahead .04 at 91.82, giving a broader representation of the overall market. HEAVY TRADING Prices were generally higher in heavy trading on the American Stock Exchange. Up about 3 were American Book and O’Ok-iep Copper. Gains of 2 or more were made by Elco and Syntex. Corporate bonds were n^^^stly unchanged in light trading. U.S. Treasury bonds rose. College Coed Sets Self Afire 'Personal Reasons'; Near Death in East Spending Plans Up Ihe New York Stock Exchange By SAM DAWSON I economy where the effect is increases, seem to be working AP Business News Analyst j most quickly felt - at the retail on consumer psychology. The _ , _ . level. Commerce Department reports NEW YORK—Both consumers lanMirv survey of consumer planning and the government are step- POURING MONEY ping up spending plans and tek-1 The U.S. Treasury also is now p,g convinced their incomes “■ ~ pouring money >uto the econo-^^ould rise than were found in a my at a faster rate than it s tak- j^, sampling, ing it out. Earlier in the year the unexpected rise m tax col- EXPECT lu BUY lections kept the Treasury’s This apparently led more to cash books in the black. This say this October they expected fall they’re moving back into to buy new cars, appliances, the red. television sets, and other house- This means that government hold big ticket items than were money is going to industry for found with such intentions goods and services, and to the cither in July or a year ago. states, institutions and individ-. Increased government spend-uals faster than the Treasury is ing comes from many sides. A spokesman for Memorial i off. Economy pushers began to genjng „,oney back through tax'The biggest boost is for the Hospital said that Patricia Arinjiook around, for something else collections at this season of the'items needed to outfit and main-Conway, a junior majoring injwith which to keep the pace yga, -yhis outpouring is classi-jtain a growing military force in elementary education, suffered,from slackening. fjej as a spur to the economy, [viet Nam. How much of a boost second and third-degree bums! ♦ ♦ ★ w * w this will give the economy isn’t on the upper part of her body.I Now things are changing Industry also is doing its bit in clear yet. Most observers now They described her condition as again. making everything bigger and are guessing defense spending extremely grave. j intentions of buying big ticket better. Its expansion plans grow will be $5 billion more next year * * * items are reported considerably steadily. Its high rate of opera- than this. Some congressional “I did it because I love my more widespread among’ the tions makes larger markets for leaders have said it would go ing over the role of econ-omy-nudger that tax cuts played in months past. I This helps lift WEST CHESTER, Pa. (AP) some of the — An attractive 22-year-old!Worry that was West Chester State College coed felt earlier was reported near death today when the effects after setting her gasoline-of the tax cuts drenched clothes afire Tuesday, were wearing jC^," doctors and school offi- public this fall than a yejr^oSraw materials, more jobs, more much higher than that, cials quoted her as saying. “I or even earlier this yeiirTms sales, more profits - NEW YORK (API-J let-—' —-York —A— lalat (Ml.) HMi L« _ - 1 23 40(i 3*1 - -- ABC Con .50 17 23V% 23 l.«lACF Ind I.M ...... "■ I 1.20 Nal] Ji Law UN C( I (IH ___r I PubIkInd .341 —— Pullman 2.40 Gan Clfl 1 GtnDynam I Gen Elec 2.60 Gen Fdt 2.20 EKerelea bleached Poultry and Eggs DBTROIT Poultry AmCvan 5 30 DETRqiT (AP)^Prlcai paM par pound iji ir No. 1 llvo poullry; heavy ly^ »«A^ Enka I >■22; roaatari ha^ type ilui brollari A^pp^w 1 ■aal «a>aa«4k« 11^ 1A.4A. llaaiaBir!.' J ‘ ” Air Rtd 2.50 ' M AlllodC l.t0b > Allied Slri 3 1.SJ AllliChal .75 500 Alum Lid .50 1.75 Alcoa 1.40 Amerada 2.00 ArnAlrim 1.35 A Botch 50e lAm Brk 3.80 AmBdctt 1.M Can 2 Whltai 15-301 -------— ,------------- lurkayt heavy •wounfl hane 27W-2IW1 turkayi heavy lypti . younfl tome 23-34. ORTROIT 1005 DETROIT (AP)-EbI -------- CHICAOO RUTTRR, ROBS NOON MHBRICAN NEW YORK (API - F--------- ------‘-d eloefc frani .... -. ___________franiactloni « American Hock Exchtnflt ' STlNWh lOlamAlk 3.2( lOlam Aik w iKirtwiS”*! ir Cam ..... .Worrii iidktiy VanCtmp' Cwnp.Jg“T ID AVRRAOII Ttw AtiKlaltd I. UHl. Lail Chf. 40W -f W 23W -f Vk , „'/4 44'/l — 'A -- ...- - - 71 42'/4 41H 42 + '/e 107 75'A 73W 73W 41 71H 45'A 70 -1W GPubSve .31fl 51 47 44V4 47 GPubUI 1.40 2 04W 04W I4W - W GTel El U2 47 31H 31H 31'/> + 'A S«nTlre M 43 20'A 27'/i 20'/4 ■¥ GaPacIfIc lb 50 47W 44’A 44'/i ! gerterPd .50 43 70 45% -I- % GettyOII lOfl 51 57H 57% 57% + % Gillette 1.30a 31 25% 25 “* I 45% 45= 33 53% 53 72 30% 20% 30=4 - 12 4% 4% . 12 37% 37% 37% + I 35%-flWiRoaOinfl Co did it because of thing.” She said that it had nothing to do with the world situation or Viet Nam, referring to recent! cases of suicide by immolation! % in protest against government nolicies. Business Notes %-%!Goodrch 2.20 . ........typo i Iryore 3-4 Ibi., Whilot ..- ■ 24; goete 35-30; turkoyt hoovy typo AmHMp'TS 11 17% 17% 17% . _______ 25 43% 43% 43% - % G1A8.P I. 4 38% 38% 38% “ 4 18% 18% 18V> 35 81 80% 81 -F 8 38% 38% 38%- ....... 30-33; chocki 34-31. n TBT 2.30 ..........._________ .... n Tob 1.70 CHICAOO (AP) - ChkOflO Morcontllo 1 80o Exchongo—fluttor itoady; wholesalt boy AMP Inc .SO Ing prlcai unchangad; 53 Kore AA 42; Ampax Cp 52 A 43; 50 B 42%; 85 C 41; cart Amph Corp I 50 B 43; 15 C 43. Eggt Heady; wholaMla buying prices MkenCh 03p unc-angad; 70 per cent or belter o-rde *mico8t 3 A Whites 44%; mixsd 44; mediums 35%; Armour 1.40b standords 37; dlrtlos unquoted; chocks 31 CMICAOO POULTRY CHICAGO (AP) - (USDA) - Live .poultry; ■■ ■ ------ ------- - chtr^ tpociol I 15 47% 47% 47% -f % GulfMO 3.20O 54 5 8’/4 5 + %'Gulf oil 3 5 53 53 53 - % Gulf S Ut .72 1 54% 54% 54% -F, % 25 5% 5% 5% .-F % 14 43?1| 43% 43% -F % Halllborl 1.50 35 15% 15% 15% ■ “ 307 43% 42% 42«S Avu_ I Prod I d White Rock ...... ....... ___, ,._Bs 18-t8%; young hen turkeys 21-25; young tom turkdfrs 22-24%; -- 30-31. Livestock 7B8TOCK --- "Ott_ la lofU^^ '"vtolors 25; not enough tolot la tost "itiMp 25; not ono^ to loti |RoSThi ’|% Hogs 25; not enough to tost ewt***- gjjjuij i," CNICAOO LIVR8TOCK , ifcSi ni "^.‘nio 23«;’L”w"'lo2rind lou clilco oM prime 1,100-1,300 lb. gSS.f 40® tioort 27.00.27.75; choke l.l«Fl,325 im , koo.27.00; choice 500-1,100 Ita. 25./V "““VO AOb 24.75; mixed flood end choice 25.25-24 35;' , good 34.25-25.B; wvortl lolt high choke Bvrooght I end prime 50(F1,050 lb. ilouflhier hellers 25.50.M.75; choice OOO-I.OSO lb. 24.50-25.50. , Sheep 200; low lots choice etrt prlrno « PKk M , 50-105 lb. wooloO slaughter J5 »- cIm?RL 'Se 1J5J0; mixed good end choke 00-100 ibs. cempRL.45j * J3.00.24J0; culrio good woolod sloughlor ^ M >os 4.0MJO, mostly 5.50-0.00. iCdSp^ I 5(lo -------------------------------- CeroP LI ’l.l4 . Carrier 1.30 • American Slocks 22 35% 38% 38% - % HeclaMng 1 31% 31% 31% + % Here Pdr .« 7 44% 44% 44Vj Hertz 1.20 40 24 23% 24 + % HewPeck .20 87 34% 33% 32% +1% Holt Electron 70 02% 80% 83% Fl% HoliO Inn .40 5 10% 10% 10% HollySug 1.80 34 48% 48% 48% + % Homesik 1.40 35 35'/j 35 35% + % Honeywl 1.10 23 54% 54 54% - 'A Hook Ch 1.30 22 52% 52% 53% -F % House F 1.80 20 55% 54% 55% — 'A I Howe SO .40 30 33% 33 32! Inland 5 Rexall 30b + % Reyn Met .75 J 40% 40% 4u% - % Reyn Tob 2 18 35% 35 35 + % RheemM 1.20 52 41% 40% 40%-% RIchfOII 1.10 1 12% 12% 12% - % Rohr Corp 1 11 54 55% 54 - % RoyCCola .40 14 45% 45H 45% iRoyDut 1.05g 17 54% 53% 54% + % RyderSy .40g 14 24% 24 24% -F % S r r }-> “ ',is as „ J2 212Y% 43 48% 47% 47% 1 44% 44% 44% - 34 57t/i 57'A 57% - % ' TO —H— s^rpa^r 2 43% 43% 43% + % Saab AL 1.8 ,p 5 50% 50% 50% -F % Saarl GO 1.3 -Co «~4o' 43 40% 3*% 37% -1% Sorv; - % ShallTra 84g 5 15% 15% l5% + %SherV 41% + % Socony 3.80a 1 48% - % SoPRSufl lo 49 + % SouCalE 1.35 -% South Pac 1.50 South Ry 3.10 . ......... Sperry Rand 351 18% 18% c—___lr\ 1 xn 11 71 TU/. % StBrands 2.40 %|$td Kollsman vy StOilCal 3.50 I 42% 41% 41% - %i|n(BosAAch 4 4 38% 38% 38% - % int Harv 1.50 4 44'A 44 44 + % intMlnar 1.30 17 74% 74% 74%-F2%, Int Nick 180d 7 47% 47% 47% + % inti Packart 127 28% W% 17% + % Int Pap l.2Qa 48 15% 35 35%-%'Int T8,T 1.20 M 70 a% 70 +2 jlTECktB .Mb 21 1% 1% 1% - % 104 37% 34% 34% -F % 3 38% 38% 38% JohnMan 3.30 44 133 131% 111%-Fl% JonLogan .H 40 41% 40% 40% - % Jonas L 2.70 13 44% 44 44% -F % Joy MIfl 2 3 45% 45% 45% 14 83% 73% 73% -F %' , „ 125 7% 7% 7% - %|R4l7«t/' 72 41% 41 41% SA 25 20 17% 17% - % Kennecott 5 IV 20% 2» 2S'A T %'!5*"’CCd 2.M 7 20% 17% 20% -F %: 15 42% 42% 42% - % J 45 41% 41% 41% - % ROPP*” 7-* 28 28 - % 23% 24 - % ■ LaarSleg .40 23 17% 17% 17% - % SqukreO 1.40 5 44% 44% 44% + %,5I»'«V J-35, 13 53% 53 53% ' 31 43% 43'A 43% 34% 3MA 3^ + %'stO)iln lTld#w^ Oil u* Z'/‘ 2?* 2,. + ^iTIm r“ 1.70a Trans ..... and more personal means that the consumers will borrowing. But government spending on be pouring more money info the The job increase, and wage civilian projects is rising, too. Many "Great Society” programs already launched by * # Congress call for mounting ex- J J w w $ penditures as they get under * Successful s' One big drain on the U.S. Treasury in recent weeks was w /am»/^*f S poured out in re- in VSSliny troactive Social Security pay-$ $ $ S fut’ut hikes. But the Treasury will have a reverse problem By ROGER E. SPEAR ufler the first (if the year. While (Q) “I would like to invest $5,000. I am single and ant vice president of the Nation- i employed. In addition to sav-al Bank of Detroit and returned ings I have American Tele-to Ford in 1964 as market plan-1 phone; Commonwealth Edl-ning and analysis manager of son; Northern Illinois Gas; the tractor division. American Can; Vulcan Ma- terials; Sears. Roebuck and billion next year. 4 “5% 's'A ‘s'A-i-'A...- ■—--------—-------i v^naries ivi. reiersoii, .)»du lulernational Harvester. injo BOTH I 45% 45% 45% - % part-time job as a student us- m „ i „ „ j Bloomfield insur- 'i 54% 54®% ”% 1 % sislant to a West Chester dean. Township, has been promoted “l* m 5*7% 5?% tr - % He said his daughter had oc-. c»aff encineer at Chevrolet “"y comments on spendable income of the work- il £ S I: . : bu. W.S »«. my bit A imcbir- B. 0. ers and .h. gmsi « ^ “ ’* ^ ous about anyone as far as he vehicle design. ' *' mvooiioni employer, wnat this wriii do His field will be special equipment and military project design, regular production option approvals and activities John’ J. L. Johnson, 203 S. M 40% 4M 40% + %‘pfpsonai REASONS’ Williamsbury. Bluoratield Hills, 50 4*2^ J?% + % State police at nearby Exton has been named general mar- 25 45 44% 44% - % ApW (Fe Phocnixville. Pa., girl keting manager. Ford Tractor ?7 74% 74% 74% - % told them she had bought the Division. He has been market 73 “5% 24% ”% + %can of gasoline last Sunday.;planning and.analysis manager )?7 w% 17% 11% + % They said she gave no indlca- for the division since May 1964. —S—• lion, other than “personal rea- Johnson joined Ford in 1950. 18 47% “% 49% + % '^*'y s*’® herself He left in 1962 to become assist-j 3 44% 44% 44% -F %'afire G 34% 34 34'A -F % , 1 . .f? -Zy* .Zy* -Zy* t '*\ Her father, Joseph, told news- ’% men he knew of nothing that ......... ,. . % would lead her to such an act. 77 55% 47^ 555% +1% He described his daughter as 87 44% 45% 44*® ^ % ® duiet girl who spent most of 7?. t her time at her studies or at hek- Charles M. Peterson, .3960 regular Social Security payments will'stay higher. Treasury collections will rise. Both the workers and the employer will be paying in more — the year’s collection by the Treasury for this pension and insurance plan is expected to rise by 13 41% 41% 41% knew. 55'% - %| Fellow students said they +'% knew of no reason why she 75% -F % ^ould want to harm herself. 5 4)'% 41 41'% +% i J aupruvais an 7 74% 73% 73% - '4 They described her as quiet andl ,7" _ „~;i„„ » 7G8 23% 24% + % y, . , . other similar 5 82% I 30 77% 77% 77% 4 21 G% 40% 48% 4 73 82% 82'% 82'% - v4 I 44% 44% 44% 4 % 131 12% 11% 11% - ’% I 27% 37% 37% 4 %, 37 47% 47 47 -F %' 33 34'A 34 34 - 'A 15 42% 42% 42'% 4 % 11 23 22% 22% - % I 43% 43% 43% 4 % 55 32% 32% 32% 4 % 20 G'% 47% M'% - 'A -T- 4 27% 27% 27% 4 'A 52 23% 23'% 23% 4 '% x5l 77% 77% 77% 4 'A 17 21% 21% 21% M 72% 71% 71% - % 34 174% 175 174'% 42% 8 24'A 23% 24'A 4 24 84 84% 84 -t-7'/, 325 20% 17% 20'% 4 % reserved and a good student. | gineering fields. specialized ep- Aircraft Pact Goes to Strikers ,, . CarroCp 1.40 ChatnpSpk 2o ^ Chocktr A4ol _____ _ ArkLoOAV 1.34 4 fl ^ 4 % 2 A « S' * +’•’* CIT Fin 1.40 Attd Oil li O 26 4% 4Vb 4Vb iCIIIfsSvc 150 £"** T?J« 't JU. 7tk 7H - >% CIOVEMII 1.44 Sr" PH 31^4111-14 8 1114111-14 Cota^Po) M® Brown Co .60 9 13V% U 13 — Mi ' u Compb Chib 47 6 7*16 6’A 6*A -- ]4 | ' Con So Pot 81 8 8 +'•'* Col Gi»l.28 Clnorj^* " - 4 4 3% 4 4 % |5X«4(J!S ii £ 40^ - % iM. 1.M Forgo $!• 34 8% 2 744 8% 41-14 , jj Gon DOVOI 11 4% 4'A £7 4% c,n 2.40 Gon Plvwd 15 10'% 10 10% 4 % rMt ins 9 M Giant Yol .400 12 )3'% II 13J* - W;cqnf 01* L40 OoWlold , 8 1% 1% 1% . Control Dole 01 Bob PH 0 2 2 2 - % corn Pd^l.30 OuK It Ld 13 H% W ^ — % CoxBdcai .40 HoornorBoxoo .55 ' 88% - % CrowCol 1.3H Hyeon Mfg 3 l» 18% 1^ 4 % crown Cork lirom Coro 5 'J* '}* JJ* Crown Ztll 2 Kolur Ind ^ f* P* iCruc Sll 1.20 Mtekoy Air 8 7 7 7 CudHiy Pk McCrary wt 15 4% ^ 4% CurtU PuB Mood John .48 40 84% J»7 24 4 % Curt Wr I Mich luoor -log 1 £7 £7 J% 4 % OonRIv 1.30b MolybJen 15 44'% 4M7 44 + % p.yeoCp .40b New Pk Mng 10 4% 4 , Dooro U40o ---------- . .n. ir% Ilk ooltn Air 2 ' 10 34 1 20'.- ----- 20 34% 34% 34Vi 4 % 4 27% 27% 27'% - 7F I 45 44% 44% - '4 5 51 50% 51 4 ’/, 9 40% 48% 48'% 4 % 48 11% 17% 11 4 41 14 21% 21% 21% 4 N 13 50 H'% 47% - '-i. 71 M% 77% N 41% 41 3I'A 37% 37% 41% 57 47 48% “ ■ ■' 47 37% 31% ...- . -- x24 30% 20% 30% 4 '% LohPorCom 1 - ; Leh Val Ind 33 4 LOFGIt 2.M0 " LIbbMcN .5S( LiggHtliM 5 Lionel Corp Llttonln 3.I3( LIvIngoO .43f LockhdAIre 2 Lorn} Com 1 LonoSOs 1.12 Long Itl Lt I Lorlllard 2.50 Fad Mog I N LuckyStr ’ “ „ _ 30% 38%-'*! Transom .800 _|Transitron 8! 84% 83% 8£A4%TrtCont^l.l3j Carbide 3 5 57% I 48'% ; X % WASHINGTON (AP) + % tiators hammered out 23 15% I5'% 15% 4 Lukent StI I MacyRH 1.40 MadFd 1.IM MagmoC 2.40 ir MW 1.25 New Sbd w^Air 4 ii% ii% ii% - IlgnolOIIA I 42 27% 27% 87% . lOanRtoOW I un CoHral .30 21 4 G'% 43'A G'A 4 15% 15 15% 4 '% 4 71% 7I'% 71% 11 42% 41% 42% 41% 33 J4'A 24 34% ' 174 51'% 51% 53 33 31% 31% 31% 17 43% 41% 43 2 41% '4I'% 41% 14 11% 80% 11% 44 34% 24% 24% 48 50% 47% 50 47 41'% 40% 4047 . II 30% 30 N'A 4 '%'MayD$tr 1.50 2 3447 34% 2447 4 % McCall .40b I 3547 35% 35% iMcOonA .40b 4 27% 27% 27% 4 %lMeKosi 1.70 14 54% 5447 54% ^ % Mtad Cp 1.70 30 37% 38% 37% 4 %, Merck la 13 4347 42 42 - % MorChap 400 35 34 33% 34 4 % MGM 1.50 7 71% 77% 71% 4 % MW SUI 1.24 14 51 57% SI 4 %|MlnarChom I II 34% 34% 34% 4 'A MInnMM 1.10 171 45 44% 45 41% AAo Kon T7x 14 41% 41% 41% 4 % Mohoseo .N li 40 47% 47%-'% Montan 1.40b 31 72% 72% 72% 4 %!»*~«mii 1 xa 134 37'% 31% 31% - %> 41 50% 50'A 50% 4 '%: 30 34% 35% 34'A 4 'A, iviaioroio J5 30% 31% 3I'% MtSt TT 31 47% G 47% 41%: 4 51% 51% 51% - 'A . II 24% 24 24 4 'A M*' ^'tl 14 4% 4% 4% - % Not Blic 115 22'A 2'% 22% 4 'i SS I 'isr 11 54% S4'A 54% 4 I 1 13% 13% 13% 4 ' 11 74'A 74 74'A 34 S'A 5'/7 5% 33 121 1?r% 138% 41 31 10% WA 10'A 4 ' 71 U% 40 40% 4 = 57 17 14% 14% 20 24% 24% 24% 4 ' II 34 33% 34 13 45'A 45'% 45'A — '% 3 37% 37'% 37% -17 4 40% 40'A 40'A - % 22 33 32% 32% " —M— 24 43'% 42% 43'% 1 54% 54% 54% 21 23% 23% 23'% - % 5 53% 53% 53% 4 % 131 11% 10 11% 41% 23 54% 54*A 54% ' 5 31 31 “ 144 14% w'A 14% 4 % posed strike settlement early ,5 Sli -k »today to resume production of 44 m ra% 72% 4 'A spacecraft and war planes at —I— McDonnell Aircraft Corp., then uSoHCH l.lo » "a 50% ir* X % rushed back to St. Louis to seek ' ' “ 4 S% M% M% 4 %, approval from dissent-torn Acme Auto Parts of Pontiac was recently awarded a certificate of merit for its participation in the fourth annual beautification contest sponsored by the National Auto and Truck Wreckers Association. Each year these awards are presented to member firms [which have made the greatest! „ I improvement in the appearance I curve. Nego-|of jijgjp place of business. ^ do not advise insurance pro- ______ stocks at present because they You have an excellent list of stocks, almost equally divided between growth and income issues. American Can has shown little earnings expansion for many years, but the yield is good and share net in 1965 should be the best in a decade. Vulcan produces building materials — a pretty competitive business — but earnings have been rising in recent years. The yield here is good and on this basis the stock may tained. Harvester is one of the world’s great enterprises. 'The stock is cyclical but the chart shows a generally upward UnItAirc 1.40 UGatCp 1.70 Unit MM 1.20 USBorax .Ms USGypsm 3a ’Jg USPlytwd 1.40 US Rub 3.20 US Smell US Steel 2 Unit Whelan UnAAatch .50 UnIvOPd 1.20 2 1% 0% 0% - ' X7 2017 30'A 30'A 4 17 G% 43'A 43% 4 x35 ll'A 1747 ll'A 4 1 33% 33% 33% 2 47% 47'% 47'% 7 70'A W% 47% - 37 35% 34% 3447 4 '•« 47% 47V7 47% 4 S'A 4% 4% - 34 11% 1 53 t I 40'A ( I 24'/7 24% 34'% 7 42'% 42'A 42% - ' I 53% 52% 53% 4 ’ r 31% 3147 31% 4 = 71 M% 44 44% 4 I 3 10'A 10'A lO'A 17 35% 25% 35% 4 1 44 10% SO H% 4 1 x3 37% 30% 30% 3 37% 37% 37% 75 33 32% 32% - % 37 145 142'A 143'A 42 31 34 34 26 4 I _N — % 4 % 33 G7% 37% 4 14% ■ — —D— Tea .H berry JJ IngEI 1.30 zinc la CluHt P.JKSy'^'g . -3.7 13-32 w £XT£ u o" 12-4'* 12-n’ E»7* Air Lin 441 ”ii,7 " .12 EortOF 2.471 1^10 1-1 EKodok I.400 XI 03A» 03 03 — % 3 M 33 33 -no 4 55 55 55 31 31 37% 38% - % Norflk Wit 40 43 81% 70% 71'A 4I'A SA /Wlj 2.00 'i gJi us •* 237% 234% 234% -l'^, "*"** *''* “ *— 33'A 33% ' 37 73% 73 73% 4 14 05% 05% 15% - 15 30'% 30'A 30% 4 1 32'A 32'A 32'A - 13 7'% 7'A 7'% 4 17 35% 35% 35% - 41 41% 40'A 48% . 17 54% 54% 54%- 7 51% 15% 15% 7 17'% 17% 17'% 4 7 27'A 27 27 4 15 44% 44% 44% 44 70'% 47 70'% 4 24 24% 24% 24%- 5 W7% 127% 127% 4 »7 42% 42'A 43 42% 7 40% 40 40 ■■ -- 54% 55 31 57% 54% 57'A 41'% 25 47% 47% 47% 4 % _v— I 34% 34% 24% 4 'A 147 2I'% 37'A 27'% — '% Vendo Co .50 7 33% 33% 33% VoEIPior 1.20 x34 47% 47% 47'% 4 % _W.X-Y-Z^ WomPICI .50 12 14% 14 WarnLsm .70 75 43% 41% 41'% WnAIrLIn .10 125 41% 41 41'% . - WnBanc 1.10 44 34% 33% 341% 91% 4. V, A Pac Ltg 3 53% 53 Machinists Union members. Ratification of the proposed contract hangs on the vote of 17.000 striking members of the AFL-CIO International Association of Machinists. They meet at noon today. Union Vice President Eugene Glover declined to predict whether the strikers would accept the contract proposal and resume work on Gemini space dapsules and Phantom jet fighter planes for the war in Viet Nam. WOULD HESITATE “Even the good Lord above would be hesitant to predict what people will do,” said Chief Union Steward Thomas Stipes. Company Vice President Robert Krone said he hoped for overwhelming approval. But leaders of the dissident faction in St. Louis claimed the support of 12,(XX) of the strikers in opposing Glover’s negotiating lam. However, the rebel group canceled a scheduled mass protest meeting scheduled lor an hour after the noon ratification vote. Candace L. Hughes, daughter have fallen out of favor with , .. . .. ’ ® investors and in general have of Mr. and Mrs. Leslie W. behaved badly. I would add Hughes, 4905 Pelletier, Orchard General Telephone & Electric to the growth section of your list, which comprises your remaining stocks on which I have not commented. ' (Copyright, 1965) Lake 'has earned ^ her flight hostess wings, following completion o f the Trans World Airlines’ training course at Kansas City, Mo. She 3 35% 25% 7 8% 8% 44 31% 38 18 44 43 4 23% 33% 35 127% 134% 134% 4 % "O octlon token at,iMj . •... ..... .... .. r—Ooclarod or paid In ».•»> dividend. t-Pold In Block during eotlmated cuh value on axGlvIdond < ,, diatrlbutlon data; —-U-— i—SoloB In lull. ...... 33 37 34% 37 - % cld—Colled. x-Ek dividend. y-Ex Dlvl- :har 10 37% 37 27% bond ond talas In lull. x-dla-Ex dlitr ' ' 30 57% 57% 57% HO"- xr-Ex„ rlflhti. xw-WI1t»yl « I 57 54% 54% - 'A rontt. ww-WIth worronti. wd—Whan .. 8 r ij;; 35 H 48% G 4I'A —r—” Act, or -------- 37 37% 37% 37% - % — Stocks of Local Interest FIgurti alter decimal points are eighths OVER THR counter STOCKS News in Brief Norman Zeuner of 916 Middle, ; Highland Township, reported to _____HUGHES i Oakland County Sheriff’s depu- rentiy ^signed to TWA’s Star ties the theft yesterday of some Stream jet fleet, based in Chi-^00 troui his home, cago. ; aitter’s Farm Market, 3225 W. Huron St. Hand-picked ap-Tom Bateman, president of pies, Macintosh, Jonathans, Bateman Realty, 377 S. Tele-jsnows, Northern Spys and Degraph, Pontiac, was elected a ncious. Winter squash, sweet member of the exchange coun-Uider, potatoes. New crop raw cil of the International Traders jpeanuts, pecans, walnuts and Club at the recently held 58thjchestnuts. Christmas trees, annual convention of the Nation-!grave blankets and cedar rop- al Association of Real Estatejjng Groceries, beer and liquor, tomers, Jones said: “It’s a de-Boards. Open Thanksgiving. FE 8-391 l.jHnite advantage. Now the people —adv iu the Clarkston area will be of- Rummage sale Fri. 3-6, Sat! 8-6. Crary Jr. High, corner of Cass Lake and M59. Purpose; Trip to Mexico. —adv. to the economy is debatable. But rising incomes in general, increas^ industrial production sales, and government spending in many fields are expected to combine to give the economy that extra nudge that government planners say it will need. If hot, there’s always a chance tfie government will turn again to a tax cut. Stockholders Okay Merger State Banking Aide, U. S. Agency Must Act The proposed merger of Clarkston State Bank with Pontiac State Bank was approved yesterday by stockholders of both institutions at separate meetings. ’The board of directors at each bank previously had okayed the merger for which negotiations began six months ago. ’The joint announcement was made today by Robert L. Jones, executive vice president and cashier of Clarkston State Bank, and Milo J. Cross, chairman of the board of directors at Pontiac State Bank. Tt is hoped the merger will be finalized before the end of the year,” stated Jones. ★ ★ ★ Asked about its effect on cus- Fred Delano, 960 Dedharn Court, Birmingham, has been appointed Detroit arb correspondent for Comtel, a worldwide business and financial news service operated by Reut-Ltd. Delano is associated with Car-Ad Advehising Co., 527 Ridgedale, Birmingham. Vyilliam T. Gossett, 420 Good-hue, Bloomfield Hills, is one of Declare Extra B ,T 38% 4 % Pac _____ 83% -1% PacTBT 1.20 31% 4 % Pan Am .40 PonhEP 1.G -iromP- ■ -irkoDi . j»b Ct-% 4 % Ponn Dixie I % _ % Penney I “ ■ % PoP'rU 35 7% 7% 10 34% 24% 403 4) 34% 4 or iMurmts ou n. fn—Foreign I r roealverthip or ir the Bankruptcy nod by such ~““-uo suDloH I x4 30% 30% 31% 4 44% 44% 44% - % 34 37% 37% 37% - % 5 G% 40 G - % 73 13% 13% 13% - % Treasury Position Hod Truck ........... Englnaorlng ....... IS Utilities Class A r Co. 18% 18% - % Ponnoy l.50o IN 47% 47% 47% 4 % 70 70 4 % Po PwLt 1.G 1 34% 34% 34% - % 44'4 44'4 4% Penn RR lo '• ‘ 33% 33'A Ponnioll 1.G 41% G% 41% PoPilCo 1.40 43% G% - % PInorC I.3U 81 31% 30% 8'% 4 . „.J 51% 0 31% ll'A 4 74% 74% 33 70% 70% 10 71% 71 Dotrex Chemical »lonsor -Satrah Icripio Atehr Corp. m Yyandqtta Chemical * MUTUAL FUND! “kttlllaled Fund „ Chemical Fund markup,'markMwn or|[)efender Association as its conference in Scottsdale, Ariz. ' According to Gossett’s citation, he “must be credited with a major role in shaping and directing the course of organized Legal Aid and Defender work for more than a, decade.” Bid Asktd . 4.4 4.7 .14.3 14.7 ..11.4 17.2 .30.2 10.4 .. 13.2 13.0 .. 4.4 5.3 14.4 17.3 1.3 SUBJECT TO APPROVAL The merger agreement is subject to approval by the commissioner of banking of the State of Michigan and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Firm Diviuonci Clarkston bank has been independent since its found-A year-end extra cash div- *" tie Insurance Corp. at a board mounting problems faced by of directors meeting in Rich- the bdnk as reasons for the pro-mond, Va. posed merger. Layers Title has a local office According to Cross, the Clark- Joseph E. Smith Jr., 668 Ard-M* 8'-‘ moor. Bloomfield Township, has ■Id Asked been appointed vice president at 31 Oakland. The extra dividend was in addition to the regular quarterly cash .dividend of 35 cents per share. The total cash dividend iff the year is $1.60 per share for a total o| $1,658,400 paid to stockholders in 1965. ston State Bank would be Pontiac State Bank’s ninth branch. Winkelman Reports Record Sale$, Profit$ 71.5 71.8 Fora DHr .1 71.1 74.1 Fraopt 5 1.1 70.1 Tl-fFruahCB 1J 5 G% 48% m 18 77 8% 77 ..... r 31% 11% 31% Phil issaasrix?!;! 7 18% 18% 18% 4 % Pit 41 PhllMor 3.40 Balancu— 8 4,144,147JG.08 8 4,5SM01 J13.78 ^ ............... *’ H,m7063n8i3“'’' 40,710,814,578.18 J 51’A 51% - % WIthdrowils FIk»I Year- Koysfoiw Oi’O'k’h K-3 74 74 41 54J00,7GJ17.27 G477J47,375.37 M«m. Invoslors OroiHh 57% 57% 4 % X—Total Debt- Wo«t. Invostors Trust . 47 47 -%; 3)l,345,8G,771.0i H7,457,044,777.05 Putnom Grovirth 4 71% 71'A 71% Gold Assets- Ttlovislon Elocti 13 14% 14'A 14% 4 %< I3,114,377,1G.74 15,441,007,834.14 Nolllngton Fund 14 1)3% 132% 113% 43%iX-lncludos S381,1G,I75.44 doM nH sub-Windsor Fund 28 70% 70% 70% - %l|»-------------------------- ' ----------------------------- “ • u 17% 4 > 51% - .. 74 41 114 ToNvIslon Electronics 10.17 11.11 10.01 10.74 7.05 7.70 10.04 11.11 xll.17 17.84 .. 11.40 I2.G 7.40 10.55 15.11 14.70 .10.37 17.77 Cell-0 Computer Products Corp. ®o innus. Smith has been responsible for ^ the development of the compu-ter memory systems produced g Bonos by Ex-Cell-0 and its subsidia-|i® ^fno Sr^*e rles since 1958. l|o Ynousiriois'*'' According to a statement issued by Winkleman Brothers 744.44 0 78 the firm’s sales and eam-lujiioia* months 334.7140.841 ended Oct. 30 were the best in 87.74 its history. 7o;S Sales increased 9.4 per cent 72.35^o:mI and earnings 8.3 per cent. EIGHTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1965 Tax Bill Collection Date Changed Order R44 Contracts Signed City Affah Paper work concerned with the collection of taxes, revision of the city’s R44 urban renewal plan and weed control was approved last night by the City Commission. ,^ Contracts for the implements-j * '’'“" date for the collection of county isessments for the cutting of were ordered signed. dead-Leeds on vacant lots. Previously reported, the re- line was changed from Jan. vised R44 plan Increased the ItoFeb. 16. INSPECTS LOTS city’s federal grant by more ' ^ > | Each year the city inspects than half a million dollars, a public hearing was set last, vacant lots, orders the owners , The project’s completion date night for Dec. 7 on special as- to cut them and then the city was also changed to March -------------- 31.1N7. has them cut If the property owner does not do so. Property owners are then assessed the cost of cnttiBg their lots. This year the city cut 726 lots, while property owners cut 309 lots after the city had first ordered them cut. About 68 per cent of the vacant lots in the city were cut. by their owners this year. City Commissioners in other business last night changed the, I. Ordered thet on December 7, IMS, ai n a.m., In the Probate Courtroom. Pontiac, Michigan a hearing b« held on the petition of Haiel Catherine Lane lor appointment of a guardian tor the purpo»e ot conaentlng to the adoption if Oakland, n Concern- Juvenile Divlaion in the Mafter of l Ing Kimberly Kay a Arnold, minor.. Cat To Ann Allen aki Court alleging that Mid children -------- within the provision, of Chapter 71]A of the Compiled Law. ot teat at amen— In that the present whereabouts of luriullction of this Court. In the Name ot the People of IhOj Slate of Michigan, You are hereby noli-, fled that the hearing on uid petition will be held at the Court House, Oakland County Service Center, In the City of Pontiac In said County, bn the 2nd day of December A.D. IMS, of 10:30 o'clock In the lorenoon, and you are hereby commanded to appear personally at said ■hearing, at which time temporary or permanent severance of all parental rights will be considered. It being Impractical to make personal service hereof, this summons and notice shall be served by publication of a copy HARRY B. AUSTIN GMC Truck Retiree Dies city of Pontiac In said County this Ibth Say of November. A.D. IMS. , (Seal) NORMAN R. BARNARD 81 la true copy! Judge ot Probal DELPHA A. BOUGINE Harry B. Austin, retired sistant cashier and accounts payable supervisor at GMC Truck & Coach Division, died yesterday after a long illness. He Exam Slated in Stolen Car Case in Area Oakland County Sheriff’s Deputy Gregory J. Putman took a report yesterday morning from an Avon Township man who said he had been robbed of his the night before by a man who apparently had a gun. About one hour later, Putman spotted a car answering the description of the missing vehicle at Auburn and Rochester. He apprehended the driver of the car — 4^year-old Earl F. Harvey, of 1M9 Truwood, Avon Township — who admitted taking the automobile and changing the license plates on the vehicle. Harvey was identified by Arthur Quick of 2931 VVoodelm as the man who took the car Monday night. Quick said Harvey jumped into the auto, forced him out of the driver’s seat by jabbing “something” in his ribs, and then took the car. Arraigned yesterday before In still other business last night, the commission received notice that the Pontiac Police Officers Association has been designated bargaining agent for policemen. An election was held earlier this month. CONTINUE MEMBERSHIP The city’s membership in the National League of Cities will be continued through 1966 as • result of action last night. The commission directed that the 1966 dues of $450 be paid. ★ ★ ★ The easterly portion of an alley parallel to Auburn between Marshall and East Boulevard was vacated by commission action last night. Avon Township Justice Luther Service will be 11 a m. FridaylC- Green, Harvey demanded ex-j^Jv^il; ImZ at Sparks-Griffin Chapel with amination on a charge of un-November 2S, IMS burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. armed robbery. Examination b.5;*J^r?"Mr^'5.:"i*ouV if" o-'kiriJ: Surviviug are his wife, Eliz- fh, Peflfloo concern-i J"!*" Ing Debora Jean, Jeanette Denise and Lake 0 f I 0 D and SiUart 01 c«5rNo"m7"* ! Bloomfield Hills; and two sis- J’ “‘"l ters, Misses Eva and Ella Au- was set for Dec. 3. OAssro urnmm Driverless Car Rams Into Home;i Girl Is Injured FORT SCOTT, Kan. A driverless car crashed into the living room of a house Tuesday night, knocking Nancy Ann Cox, 15, off the divan. She was treated for knee and ankle injuries. « ★ w The car had been parked and was struck by another car involved in a collision at an intersection about 100 feet from the Cox home. Police estimated damage to Harvey is held at the Oakland I the house at 31.000 and to the County Jail on $500 bond. 'cars at $1,075. minor children. filed injhu cwii j stin, both Of Pontlac. Austin of 201 E. Iroquois was ■ children l> un- « 'assistant chief clerk in the MRS. WIIXIAM A. CULLEN known end teld children ere dependent eral Superintendent's office of. i2SrchISre;“?Lid’'be’^ JlSr’{iS'American Express Co., Detroit,! „ . luriidiction of fhii Court. 'iij the early 1900s He was travel-' Requiem Mass for Mrs. Wil- In the Nettie of the People of the Stetej. , , ,_____fC’othflrm,, 1 of Michigan. You ere hereby notified Ulg a U d I t 0 r fOr the Company] held el the Court Houte, Oeklend County cember, A.D. IMS, i u, -..V (Catherine P.) Cullen, 85, J^lfrom 1905 to 1912 when he came '' am. Friday at St. Benedict Catholic Church, with burial in *.Un irvJGMC T„»k It being Impracticel t< *«f eT-tTenuilCoach Division from 1913 to 1949! _,i when he retired. morrow at Sparks-Griffin Fu-„ neral Home. Mrs. Cullen died yesterday two sons, Clare of Imlay City and Clayton of Mount Clemens;' a daughter, Mrs. Veva Wilbur j of Rochester; two stepsons, Julian Rutherford of Elk Rapids I and Versal Rutherford of Mid-! land; two stepdaughti^rs, Mrs.: Margaret O’Dell of Kewadin and Mrs. Julia Basco of Mancelona; ] a brother; four grandchildren; and 14 great-grandchildren. Ill be lerved by publication of a copy j, AUSUn WaS a __________________ —• / f Pontiac pre*», ■ nowpaper mpm^r oC Fifsl Prcsbvtcruin ^ lofig illncss. Shc was a WILLIAM ELI TEETERS ’ ™*d I" -Id c-ty _ 7lchmTaS its^M^^^^^^^^ WALLED LAKE - Service, thi? 10th had served on various c i v i c of Catholic Women for william Eli Teeters, 76, of I and the Altar Society. |627 E. Walled Lake will be 11 Surviving are two daughters, a.m. Friday at Richardson-Bird I Mrs. Hardy Terrien of Union | Funeral Home. Burial will be Lake and Mrs. Frank Secoy of in Walled Lake Cemetery. Pontiac; two sons, Edmund in| Mr. Teeters died Monday. He " (sooi) NORMAN 'r** BARNARD icommittces sfkl commissioiis. I truo copy! ’ ' - - - — Juvcnilo Dlvlilonl November 24. IMS NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE Notice It hereby given by the under-tigned that on 24 November. 1045 at 10:00 a m. at 154 W Huron, Pontiac, Oakland County, Michigan, public tale of a 1044 Chevrolet Impale bearing terlal number 4I047F 27372I will be held, for ca^h fo the highetl bidder Intpection Oakland County, i e at above addrett. Defroif Jury jt' J ‘ff/iCalifornia and Patrick of Pon-lwas a retired painter aiid in- T/nOS OnGriTT S tiac; and eight grandchildren, jterior decorator. Aide Guilty NOTICES Cord of Thanks ............ 1 In MaiQoriom ............... 2 Announcamants.............. 3 Florists .................3-A Funsral Dinctors ...........4 Cemttsry Lots.............4-A Psrsonols .............. 4-B Lost ond Found..............5 EMPLOYMENT Holp Wanted Mole...........6 Help Wanted Female......... 7 Help Wanted M. or F._______8 Soles Help, Male-Female...8-A Employment Agencies........0 Employment Information ...9-A Instructions-Schools.......10 Work Wanted Mole ..........11 Work Wanted Female......12 Wortc Wanted Couples —12-A SERVICES OFFERED Building Services-Supplies... 13 Veterinary.................14 Business Service ..........15 Bookkeeping and Taxes......16 Credit Advisors .........16-A Dressmaking and Tailoring..17 Gardening .................18 Landscaping .............18-A Garden Plowing...........18-B Income Tax Service.........19 Laundry Service ...........20 Convalescent-Nursing ......21 Moving and Trucking........22 Painting and Decorating....23 Television-Radio Service...24 Upholstering.............24-A Transportation ............25 Insurance..................26 Deer Processing............27 ♦ WANTED Wanted Children to Board..28 Wanted Household Goods...29 Wanted Miscellaneous.......30 Wanted Money ..............31 Wanted to Rent.............32 Shore Living Quarters......33 Wanted Real Estote.........36 RENTALS OFFERED Aportments-Furnished.......37 Apartments-Unfurnished ... 38 Rent Houses, Furnished____39 Rent Houses, Unfurnished.. .40 Property Monogement______40-A Rent Lake Cottages........41 Hunting Accommodations 41-A Rent Rooms........ ........42 Rooms With Board..........43 Rent Farm Property........44 Hotel-Motel Rooms .........45 Rent Stores................46 Rent Office Spoce..........47 Rent Business Property.. .47-A Rent Miscellaneous.........48 REAL ESTATE Sale Houses ...............4Y Income Property............SO Loke Property..............51 Northern Property .......51-A Resort Property ...........52 Suburban Property..........53 Lots—Acreage ..............54 Sole Farms ................56 Sale Business Property_____57 Sole or Exchange...........58 FINANCIAL Business Opportunities....39 Sale Land Contracts.......60 Wanted Contracts-Mtges...60-A Money to Lend..............61 Mortgage Loans ............62 MERCHANDISE Surviving are his wife, Sarah; FRANK RUDLAFF a son, William E. Jr. of Walled' Service for Frank Rudlaff, 77,[Lake; and a brother, of 85 Hammond will be 11 a.m. WHEATON DETROIT (API - Wayne All Saints Episcopal _ __ _ . _ tafL96i * Kitetikol bm lr;;'’'’pon"lrc County Deputy Sheriff John p. ^urch with burial in Ottawa Bommarito. son of Undersheriff Cemetery, Independence ‘ James Bommarito, Tuesday township, by the Voorhees-Siple NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE f^und guilty on a charge of r2rNo’vX7i,’4^ omitting duty for a reward. W. Rudlaff, a retired inspec- --------- A Wayne County Circuit Court Pontiac Motor Diviston, • siarfir^ Coupe tearing Jury returned the verdict after yesterday after a long ill- Oaklsnd County, MicMgon, the storage. Date: November 23, 1W5 Pontiac Co>Op Faderal. Cn IM W. Hurot. . . By KENNETH TOPPER Investors Service Center • liSTED SECURITIES • UNLISTED SECURITIES • MUTUAL FUNDS • TAX EXEMPT BONpS • CORPORATE BONDS • SYSTEMATIC INVESTMENT PLANS • PORTFOLIO REVIEW AND ANALYSIS Com* in today or phone BIRMINGHAM - Service for former resident Mrs. Harry W. (Genevieve) Wheaton, 52, of Oak Park will be 3 p.m. Friday at Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co. Burial will be in Roseland Park Cemetery, Berkley. Saints Church. ^l^s. Wheaton died yesterday Judge Victor J. Baum sched- S u r v i v i n g are his w i f ^ uled sentencing for Jan. 5. The Bertha; three sons, John L. of A private pwiw teacher ste mpximiim sentence for the mis- Plymolith and Frank and Claire ® member of the First 24,^iM5 demeanor charge is six, months S, both of Pontiac; a sister; in jail and a 1250 fine. "‘"e grandchildren; and two Sheriff Peter Buback said great-grandchildren. Bommarito automatically will nvrv AOiw be dismissed from the force in rLOYD G. ABATT view of the sentence. BIRMINGHAM — Service for WAS CHARGED p°«y‘' ^ Abatt, 45, of 31M1 „ .. L J Evergreen was to be 3 p.m, to- The younger Bommarito had jay at Bel! Chapel of the Wil-been charged with accepting „an, r. Hamilton Co. Burial will $100 l^rom Lyle Kirby, co-owner be Friday in Canton, Ohio. H Abatt (Jied Monday after ?. mLrUr24'’allPEedlv had “ An underwriter JOHN C. WESTERBY failrrS the 5f to BRANDON TOWNSHIP - Liou'-r Control Commission lor be was a Service for John C. Westerby, seliinv beer to a minor member of the First Presby-go, of 1215 Ortonville will be 2 su ing Deer to a minor. ^ sicale. Surviving are a daughter, Susan, at home; a aon, John W. of Orchard Lake; her mother, Mrs. Warren Upper of Oak Park; and three sisters, Mrs. George Donaldson of Franklin, Mrs. D. W. Main of Jackson and Mrs. Robert Rich of Lansing. Defense attorney Roman ., . . ; Gribbs_said he would recom- derwriters Association, and New mend Bommarito seek a review in the Court of Appeals. Brookdale Cemetery Probe to Continue Surviving are his wife, Cor-rine; two daughters, Cynthia and Julie, and a son, Floyd Gn all at home; his mother Mrs. E. H. Abookire of Cleveland, Ohio; a sister;.and a brother. ELSTON C. McCLURE Walling. 2 North Saginaw Ponliot, Michigon Phone FE 2-9274 man Funeral Home, Ortonville. Burial will be in Ortonville Cemetery. Masonic memorial service will be 8 p.m. tomorrow at the funeral home. Mr. Westerby died yesterday after a long illness. A j-etired employe of Pontiatf Motor Division, he was a life member of OrtonvlUe Lodge 339, F&AM. LANSING (AP)-The Senate Corporations Committee an- ROCHESTER — Service for Surviving are his wife, Irene; no'inced Tuesday it will conduct former resident Eiston C. Me- five daughters, Mrs, Bernice L4*rt*hen & (>0. ®"®'ber hearing Friday at De-Clure, 93, of Elk Rapids will Westrate of, Grandville, Mrs. trbit in the continuing probe of be 1:30 p.m. Friday at Muir Lucille Saunders and Lynn the Brookdale Cemetery Asso^ Brothers Funeral Home, Imlay Westerby, both of Ortonville, elation of Ljvonia. City. Burial will be in Mount Mrs. Beatrice Solley of Clarks- Senate Majority Leader Ray- Vernon Cemetery. |ton and Mrs. Dorothea Feen- mond Dzendzel. D-Detroit, com-, A retired ^ r m e r, Mr. Mc-istra of HudsonviUe;. two sons, mittee chairman, said the hear-jClure died'^yesterday after aiBenjamin and Ivan, of Or-ingwill be held in the Detroit long illness. tonville; 24 grandchildren; and • City-Countv Building: Surviving are his wife, Jane; four great grandchildren. Swaps ....63 Sale Clothing ....64 Sole Household Goods . ...65 I Antiques ..65-A 1 Hi-Fi, TV & Radios .... ....66 Water Softeners ..66-A For Sale Miscellaneous . ... 67 Christmas Trees ..67-A Christmos Gifts ..67-B Hand Tools-Mochinery, ....68 Do It Yburstif ....69 Cameras-Service j*.... ....70 Musical Goods ....71 Music Lessons ..71-A Office Equipment ....72 Store Equipment ....73 Sporting Goods ....74 Fishing Supplies-Baits . ....75 Sand—Gravel—Dirt .... ....76 Wood-Cool-Coke-FutI ....77 Pets-Hunting Dogs ... ....79 Pet Supplies-Service ... ..79-A Auction Salas ....80 Nurseries ....81 Plonts-Trces-Shrubs .. ..81-A Hobbits ond Supplies .. ....82 FARM MERCHANDISE Livestock Meots Hay-Grain-Ftld ....84 Poultry 1 Form Produce ....86 Form Equii^mant ....87 AUTOMOTIVE Travel Trailers ....88 Housetroilcrs ....89 Rent Trailer Space ... 90 Commercial Trailers.... Auto Accessories ....91 Tires-Auto-Truck ....92 Auto Service Motor Sfooters Motorcycles ....95 Bicycles ....96 Boots—Accessorial ...^ ....97 Airplanes ....99 Waitted Cari-Trucks .,.. ...101 Junk’Cors-Trucks .101-A Used Auto-Truck Parts . ...102 New and Used Trucks ... ...103 Auto-AAorine insurance ! ...104 Foreign Cors ...105 New ond Used Cors .... ...106 SPECIAL NOTJCE PONTIAC PBSU Classified Deadlines Du* to Early THANKSGIVING DAY EDITION For Wtdnesdoy's Edition Ragutor S p.m. WV Contract 1J noon tl/2J Dliplay 12 noon 11/22 For Thursday's Edition Ragular 12 noon 11/24 Contract 12 noon 11/22 Dliptoy >2 noon 11/23 For Friday's Edition Rosulor 12 noon 11/24 Controct 12 noon 11/24 Dliptoy 12 noon 11/24 For Saturday's Edition Dliptoy 12 noon 11/24 CANCELLATIONS For Thursday's Edition Noon, Nov. 24th For Friday's Edition 9 o.m., Nov. 26th Death Notices Auitlni _____ _________ - Sluort, Evo and Elio Auitln. Fu-norol itrvico will Da hoM Friday. Novombar 24. at II *.m. at in* SparKi-GrI"'- '--------‘ --------- I Patrick Cullan; Racitillon of 111* Parlili Rotary will 0* at I p.m. Thursday ovo--nlng at Iht Spark|.Grimn Funoral HOOM. Funoral larvlco will bo hold Friday. Novombar 24 at l« a.m. at St. Bonodkl'i Catholic Church, initrmant in Ml. Hopo Camtitry. Mri. Cullan will Ito In data at tlw Sparkt-GrINIn Funaral il Church with Rtv. c. oaorg* WMdlttoM olfictoling Intarment In Ottawa Park Ctmtiary. Mr. Rudlaff will Ito In ttito at th* Voorhaat-SIpto Funeral Home. (Suggettad vtottlng hours 3 to 5 p.m. and 7 to 7 p.m.) SOWINSKI, NoVIemBER 21, 1045, FREDERICK, 1222 Sharp Drlv*. Lak* Orion; ag* 45; batovad ta-thar ot Mrt. Harry W. (Euganto) Spencer, Mrt. Sam l/Utoto) Roth. Leonard A. and Frederick 0. Sow-Inikl; dear brolhar ot Frank and Jamat CIchy; alto turvivad by tlx grandchildran and ant groat-grandchild. Funaral tarvict will b* held Friday, Movambar 24, at 10:30 a.m. at St. Jotaph Church, intarmant In the St. Jotaph taction ot East Lawn Camaltry, Lakt Orion. Mr. Sowintkl will Ito In TEETERS, NOVEMBER 33, lltS. WILLIAM ELI, 427 E. Walled Lakt OrIvt, Walled Lakt; agt 74; be-lovtd huiband of Sarah Teatari; (Mar fathar of William E. Taatari Jr.; dear brolhar of Gaorgt Tte-tart. Funeral lervlct will ba hold -............r 24, at 11 at Iht RIchardton-BIrd Funaral Hama, Walled Lake, with Rav. oWIclatlng. Intarmant I Lak* Camatery. Mr. Bamice Wattratt. Irict loltoy, Mrt. Dorthat Fean-dra, Banitmln, Lynn and Ivan -------------- turvivad by 24 d tour grtat-grand-lie Mamarlal ttr-vkt will be hold Novombar 23 at 1 pm. at lha c. F. Sharihan Pu-naral Hama, Ortonvill*. Funaral tarvic* will b* held Friday, No-vambar 24, at 2 pm. at Ih* funaral horn* with Rav. Roy RotruN ot- Cor4 af Tbaoil cant barttvamanl In Ih* lots ot our tovtd one. Spaclal thankt la the Voarhaat-SImpw Funaral Hama, tht ptilbatrart and to Rav. Edmond watkint tor hit camfertlng The timlly at Jamat Baylay. I WISH TO THANK MY NEIGHSPai ■nd triandt, the Dorcat Clatt of th* Oakland Ava. , Pratbyttrltn Church, lha Red Crptt voluntoart at GantrtI HatPital and Iht Rav. IN LOVING MEAAORY OF LINDA Lao Schram who patted away Nov. 24, 1040. daughter, 0 fathar. Sadly mliiad by titter, brolhar are______________ iW LOVING MEMORY OF 0 U R dear ion Ray Branchaau Jr., who wai klltod Novombar 34, IM3. Wa do not naad a ipactol day to bring you to our mindt. For thi day wt do not think af you It vtry hard to find; II all thli world ware ouri to give wt'd give It, Vat, and mart, to tat lha taco of eSmt tmllinTthraugh the dear. Frtondi may think Iht wound It gut Ihty to ntti* know tht terraw, That It in our haarta concaaltd. Sadly mlitad by Mem and Dad. to 11 a.m. and 4 to I p.m. LQM .W$I.OKT, .t A 4 4 L V W|tM Dtx-A'DiCf owy “ etnn t timmi Dnm* BAND OF PONTIAC Mualc tar all aecaatona, w*d4„..., (Mgr.) O.ug BOX REPL^Ed A( 19 a.m. today there were replica at The Press Office la the fol-lowiBg hoxet: II, », M, 42, a, 46, U, SI, ft, H, 96. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY WITH SUNOCO -FlfuncUl ■^xteMtnt nItHM tte lac. Ch^ Jaimt L. Newkt at Ml S4474 days, Evanlngt 3»2S24 CARETAKER FOR JS-ONIT APANJ-menl In Pontiac, ptaaia ttat* age, marital tlatua, pravloua tx-parlanc* and latory raqulramanlt. AH rwitot canHdanttol Pontiac Pratt Sex M.__________ carpenteS inocjh I l b Ira* rant to repair hout*. can* Rantalt ___________f~ cahAenYirs W^tb6, laatt 3 yaart txp., 4I2-2257, UL 2- 1712._____________- CAR washers, dryers, DRtV- art. Full- and p*rt-tlm*. 147 W. Huron.___________ ___________ CLERK FOR LIQUOR STORE, lull or parllma, ago no ttorriar. Bloomflald Gourmet Shoe, lOti w. Long Lake Rd„ BloemflaH Hll t^ COLLISION MAN WANTED, tW® opportunity, high wtgat. MonIcnim Collltlon, FE 5-1144.____________ COMBOS ATTENTION 3- 3M7, or 4734450. Unloo and become aggrestivc growing company. Our amptoyat know ot Ihli ad. For In-tarvlew writo Pentlic Pratt Bex 44. COUNTER SUPPLY MEN Portart, lull lima, pot wajha/, part tima, maali ind onlformt furniBtedy paid vacatlpoi and in-Buranca. apply Graantlaids Fas* 1au?«t; ml Hunfar, Blrming- DESIGNERS FOR SPtCTwT MACHINES Growing company rtcognliad late* of a loam. Top waott Clyde Englnaarlng uivniun, ..W W. Mapto, Troy. 444-1333. _____________ DESlGNlSTTbETAILERS. APPLY at 1015 Gall Dr., near Orchard Lake Rd. and Tatogrtph.__________ DISTRIBUTOR TRAINEE Man to train to taka over whol» tale dlilrlbutorthlp tor torga wall-known company. Salary plut Mm-mittlant whlto In training. Futyn at >10,000 par year and up. Call 332-3013 I to 10 a.m. or 4 to 0 p.m. DRAFTSMAN TO PREPARE SHOP drawlngtand txtruiion design aluminum windows tnd curtain-wall. Parmanant Mtortod potitlon with rapidly rowing company ■xparlanca In mil ipaclllc Hold iMCatiary. Saliry eommaniuraW tmtUh teokrf Ahllltv. Con- DRIVERS UNITED PARCEL SERVICE I aparingi lor taatanal /try drivart. laatt 31 ytari of tga and hava a oood driving racord, you could quality. AppHcattont being accepted dally 6061 CICOTTE Datrolt 2nd bik. W. ot Warran-Llvarnelt fLedTIUCIAN WANTED. FE~I 3477 attar > p.m. ____________ ESTIMATOR itampinu and rtliN rapoitllne directly J Parioni Crp., 3727 W Rd., Royal Oak._______________ EXPERIENCED REAL BITAYE talaaman, llcantad tor iw and uiad hamat, mamBrt MLS. Call FE 54471 tor appointmani, Ivan In labricatlon TOP WAGES AND OVERTIME plui these fringe bintlitt: Inturence-Blue Crott Sick benelltt end IHe Insurance liberal vacatlan pralltt sharing plan AdvancamanI Aare Space Wrk McGREGOR MANUFACTURING 3715 W. Maple Ed., Tmy___________________Ml 4-2540 FOREMAN Immadlata aptningt tor aggrettiva producllon toraman naadad by local automotivt ilimpine plant. Salary bated on axptrlanct. Sand ratumt or apply In paraon./Par-aont Corp., 3737 W. 14 Mila Rd., Royal Oak.__________________ FULL TIME MAN FOR GENERAL attambly work. Machint shop tx-parlanca prtitrrad. Jordan 4-4145. CAS STATION MECHANIC, TOP GRILL COOK, FULL TIME ( part time. ENCORE RESTAURANT _________Miracle Mila_____ Good Future lactlna ai......________________ tchooilng, group campantatton. Ilia Iniuranca, ratlrament plant, da-pandabla car nacattary, paid vacation, NO LAV-OFPSl Potantlal opportunity 33B4540 tel ............. i:X ie;X Monday, Wed, and Fri. GRILL MEN Day tnd canine thlltt. Aloe pnrf lima wtakand work. Tep'waggi, fraa maalt, hotpHalliatlon, IHalm turanca, mM vKatlan. Apply In PW*«",.l«|lwaan ^n^ S pm. at ana on Social SKurlly. It activa pofmrntnl^'E^?^ **’*"* **'' HETpIRS-WELDERS Paid vacallont and holldtyt t Paid haaHh and lilt Inturanca Paragon Bridge & Steel Co. 44000 Grand Rlvr-Nevl _ HufKV lOY TO WORk ON SCRAP » Frankion, Rocltotlar. gai ;g‘4.?}r'” - "■ JANltOR-PORTER tdltlt opanlnga Tar ilanllaw wailwri. llrmHigtiam. Is iki MANPOWER LABORERS SL----- *;"A“riKg7riMr lima. PI 24144. nil or pari AND PINANCB COMPANY .. .yaking tor tht right yawng man toraVC bLJlaMjji^ rrTiiSiqpw It matt Important quamicatlon. I^toyai laving* plan aM alhar THE POXTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, ^96.^ MACHINISTS wn^-*>yn.^^i)PP>y Co., m W. MACHINE OPERATORS Good mochonlcil iMIlty, oppc nltv tor odvoncofiMnl, tap CB 4-43B2. HELP POLIO PATidNT, LIVE IN, --------------- 424-1*72. KITCHEN p.m. Airway Lanes. 4744M24. MANICURIST WANTED, *0 P E R OHit commission. Philips Beauty Salon. 332-*27*. (teed. Free ;epted lor male end lema'ie help.j person only Donut Can-1 Rutingu Samira Saginaw. 1-3 p m. Set. i * ""ICB rnnilaa in u..,. . —“'l»C*^ - f m*l*l''DetroTr'T%’"7V273. 4S2-0435T BANK TELLERS, EXPERIENCED! only. Good opportunity. Fast grow- Phono"FE'4-3Hl ' Ing organisation. Salary commen-i -------------—,----------- sureie with experience. Apply In DresimaMng t Tailoring 17 person. Birmingham-Bloomlleld! • Benk^ 1040 E, Maple Rd., Blr.|ORESSMAKINO, TAILORING AND jnlr^am. elleratlons. Mrs. Bodeli FE *-*053. BLOOD DONORS ‘Lan4icaprag IS-a' URGENTLY NEEDED |. RH Positive t4.00i RH Neg. *7,00, SIO.OO - *12.00 —- DETROIT BLOOD SERVICE ConVfl In Pontlec FE A**47 1342 Wide Track Dr., w 3-BEDROOM RANCH A nice Commerce Township ranch with elteched 2-car garage, double lot, large kitchen, new gas lurnece. A good buy ol 111,000 on terms. » H^^WMERT-WAI-TrNG-F^^Rl 34 W'^H^r^?^^'on^!.“''^33 .sy lake front homes In 25 to 50 Pot"« 333-7157 thousand. Good neighborhoods re-H-BEDROOM ON RAYBURN ST. quired, good beach tor water ski. Suitable tor two lamilies, move in Ing and swimming. Or good lake I immedletejy. $1000 down OR 3-*430, wXrT.:?;, "E“M‘’'3"?to,."*" 4-h'realTstate^' ■ Roy O'Nell Realtor 11.100 down -■ moves you Into this 3520 Pontloe Lk. Rd. ? room ranch home - 2 extra EM 3-7*41 or OR 4-2222 '"fO* bedrooms - family sited !---- ~iiK-r7r^ r--------------- kitchen - alum, and slona - NOTICE! 1 I ACRE lot - Just i*,*oo. It you have acreage porcals tori,,., „ I sale — smell or torgo - wo hove ^wy. OR 4-22*4 the ‘•livers, call us lodoyl 1 . 5-_FE ±**41, OR 3-23*^ MATURE WOMAN TO CARE FOR| . ., * o.m S J p.nv-7^.m " FLORIST, EXPERIENCED, PER ______________-______ msnen,. Holtn.gle Flowers-Ek »°Jj^^CROFT NURSING HOMES QUICK CASH ACedUNfANTS" TO PREPARE^IN. Moving OmI Trucking 22 vy/BUY^°s‘ELL”°T*RAOE and list iSTh r* B'toc“i;"c:u *2* Sf huro"n*fe two'-'' ■ or pon Time. m. r. Block cu. 2 MOVING r FE ^4113 WHAT HAVE YOU ’ KAISfR, ALCOA ALUMINUM lib- ArchHactnrnl Drawing new HOUSI and naMOOELING AND CIMENT 1-STOP BUILDING SERVICE, f------- planning, ital* llcenaod, member Pontiac Chtmbor of Commorc*. 2-CAB CARAOES. 20'x2«', t07S. WE build any tli*. -------— Free eellmel*. 2-CAR OARAOS, I0«* ADDITIONS to Ahim. windowi, door*, ekfln ORAVBS CONTRACTING e Eitfr • “ -■ ny^iyclalty. S CARPENJRY, ^ NEW REPAIR INTERIOR FINISH, KITCHENS, BASEMENT PLOO^ RECAPPED or repleeed, PE 4-1174 (doyt). Ctmant and Block Work Oulnn'4 Constrweltan Co, _ PE 4-7477__________EvdO. FE M12I FIREPLACES, BRICK, BLOCK. CB-M^work. Call oft*'' * ^B Ciraiiilc TMi^ DRAYTON FENCE CO. mt Addlo ». 4744 PONTIAC FENCE CO. LEONARD'S FLOOR SERVICE ROOFS: NEW. REPAIR Oenerel Meinfenance 402-4440 SEA R 0 0 F I N O, COMPSUTTELY TALBOTT LUMBER Olass Inttollod In doors one daws. Compfofo building lorvlct. 1025 Oakland Avo,______FE ^Mavini^and Storn^ . INTERIOR AND EXtlRlOR painting, fra* **r— ^rantoad. Reason* AAA FAINTING AND -Td axtori 2-35S7. one*, FE S-4401. FAINTING, PAPfklNO, — -- —jg 10 yaari In Ponllac, FE >#24 ■1, FLATERINO, NEW AND pair. FE 2-7*04. PLASTER ikO, EXPERT PATCH ir Lako-TolOBraph DIXIE A' of Huron. BROWNIES HARDWARE FLOOR SANDERS - POLISHERS WALL PAPER STEAMERS RUO CLEANER — POWER SAWS *32 Joilyn . 0^ Sun. FE A4I0S 50 FREE BICYCLES Mothers, would you like to got boaullfui now Schwinn bicycit fc your children for Christmas? A MIDDLE-AGED WOMAN FOR GEN- IS home. FE 5-1042. you n«v« TO oo IS wii 49 ooniti or vanilla and 45 cam of papaar to your fritndt and ralatlvas. Call 332-3053. BABY SITTCR WANTED MONDAY thru Friday 1 to 4, FE 4-0487. aped chlldran. Call aftar'4 p.m. only. UL 2-3618. Netdad at onct to handle Christmas v/reath orders. FE 8-9005. MODERN NURSING HOME IN Southfield needs experienced housekeepers, excellent advancement op- CAB DRIVERS WANTED* MEN OR women, 25 or older. FE 3-0205. BABY SITTER WANTED SASHA-b*w-M*yb** read area, 125 a week, 473-7407. portunltiet. Transportation nocos-sary. Call Mrs. Selia. 444-102*. MOTHER'S H E L P E R, STAY 3 C(X>K$ WANTED Eatmore Restaurant, *21 W. Huron St. COOK BABY BITTER* 5 DAYS* AFTER-nooBt* 338-1116 aaav «ittkd rn i iwd im. ulMu. n^ts, own roum, no cooking. Ml Days — experienced — good pay— Blue Cross available — Apply Ricky's. II* Woodward. BAKER r»"SSi., J ■IdsaomkEt^ldl UUiw Km. Mas * AFTERNOON AND Clorkston Real Estate ROOM FOR RETIRED ALERT|5*54 S. Main MA 5-5021 ' LM’L' ..,''*5?"'^'' 'f'l'tord-nighland ' NEED 200 LISTINGS Saunders fc Wyatt____FE 3-7041 WALLPAPER STEAMER -I NEW, REROOFS - REPAIRS QuarantMd. M yoor* txperltnct. D. Cuihlng* FE S^lp 0ay or Trig Trimming Sa^cp IBL TREE TRIMMING, REMOV oL^^Fra* astlmali, FE $-444*, 47t Lakes Tree Co., Trimming” GENERAL TRUCKING AND EXCA-•'•flng, top toll, fill dirt, ean" ival, backho* work, samI hir*. No fUi», OA 0-ll4t. TRUCK HAULING, LAWN. OA- ____Tra^Boiital^ Trucks to Rent VTan ^upt IW-Ton *f TRUCKS - TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks - Soml-Traltori Pontiac Form and Industrial Tractor Co. 125 S. WOODWARD PE AMI FE A144I Open Dally liifludlnfl Sunday BLdOMFIBLO WALL CLEANERS “'—1 and windows. Raot. in euarantaad. FE 2-10I1. Wall DHHhf lift—, -!-J -- wigs mm nasrpsacoB flOS S3*.*S TO SNO, HAIRPIBCES and ay* lash**, all hurrm ' •rival* ibawlne, call FE fr^ 4 p.m. - to 0'p.m. Hoc WOODWARD AT SQUARE LAKE BAKERY SALES nmedlal* position open for port-time soles girls, high school grtd- PLEASANT WOMAN TO CARE FOR Ayear-oM, '/> days, own cor, —" I wages. 44A4522.________ PROFESSIONAL PHONE SOLICITORS : per hour plus bonus tor 40 Ilngloti y Mar] raph, I ---------- ...» to 1---------; Tuas., and Wed. Ocl. 24 and 27. Wrlglay Market 4S S. Taiagraph, Pontiac ■ 'tw 12:» to----------- a.,. ,.0 exparlenc* nacaesary, rain. Utica ara*. For appoint-^il 7?t-2154. BARMAID - WAITRESS, El BE FIRST Alert lady - new party prMr* Full fim* damonstraflng Wafk Products. For further details, c pleasant girl tor Intarastlng general offic* work, own transporla lion nacassary. Co-workars a r i awar* ol this ad. Foiltlon parm* nant to right person, i)oad start-Ing wages, axcallant future. Be caul* we ere so busy, rtquoit youi lottor stating *11 particulars and wi will reasonably -------- to, all quelllled p,--------------- —.....— married » car and experience In -- ----- --'ling, y lost be CASHIER For dining room with 1-------- porlonco. NIglit thHt. Apply at Big Boy Roetourant, » S. Ttlograph. CASHIER-TYPIST Frtftr axparlanc* In ganeral attic* work. Muet bo noat, aggressive and accurato, also *b1* to work iomo tvos. Furnllurt Store Offlct. Fhon* FE 2-4231 for - SHORT ORDER CWK, EXPERl -----------"'2m SLEEVER, FOLDER FOR CABINET unit, fir--'...— M2-2340. CHAIRSlOE DENTAL ASSISTANT, .tingle and willing to toam, axparlanc* pratarrod ■—* —........... iportatlon nacassary. San to Pontiac Bex Ne. 33. COOK, SHORT ORDER, OVER II, m.-4 p.m. Excallant pay. Flad CHECKROOM GIRL CURB WAITRESS. SUPER C - Ihitts. FE 2-4*51. NOABLE HOUSiKCTPii Dining Room Waitresses It you lov* chlldran and ganulnaly antoy working with th* public w* will train you tor a dining room waltrosi. The rawardt *r* many, Including good aamlngt, lomatlmai doubi* That of boring, routine office lobt. Day and night shift avallabto, Insumac* banaflti, paid vdcetton. Appl^^ln^Nrton only. WOODWARD AT SQUARE LK. RD. DINING ROOM WAITRESS ...... AT 13 MILE ROYAL OAK b^NTAL AUi^Nt - kEeCF- tlonlst dasirad. Prater ---- dlv'dusl. Typing, somi Ing natoad Exparlanc*............ callon pratarrod, but willing to fra'n. Stato ago, axpar'-*'-cation, marltaT status. GRUO clerk, EXPERIENCED OR will train. II yaars or oMor. Full I. Union Lake Drugs. ampimmant. AMly In ..wn and Country Inn -S. Tatorapti. solicitors to work from our oil Apply room 705, Pontiac St< Bldg., bat. *-l2 noon only, W RECORD AND SHEET MUSIC SALESGIRL 5g* of music holptul. Hours o’HnlSf .......... ■ HELP wanted, OPENINGS 0(1 aftormpn and midnight shift, r— rrs, assembitrs, matorlal handl ganarri maintenahe* lanitors, milrons. Sylvan Gian, 115 S. A St„ Rochester, Registered Professional Licensed Practical Nurses duty, S4 per shift, Waak-end dl faranllal S5 per week-end. PN's full time, minimum I327.J per mo. Shltt dlfterentlal evening and night duty S2 per shltt. Apply-Personnel Dept. PONTIAC GENERAL HOSPITAL DEER PROCESSING , ReslVurenl, NESTER'S MARKET Keego Harbor. ______^ , 54x0 COOLEY LAKE ROAD SHORT ORDER COOK, WAITRESS,!_________________442-3031 ________ . . „ . DEER PROCESSING, SKINNED, REGIONAL MANAGER Wanted GROCERY CASHIERS GROCERY CLERKS MEAT WRAPPED For Immtdioto Intarvlew send r , Spiegel's Growing With Pontioc _j* to growth ind Splogols will bo opening eng lalet attic* In th* In Pontiac. If you havi txperlenc* In crodlk or _ _ and It you art Intaroetod In growth potantlnl thli could bo th* lob ‘-' you. For Intorvlaw contact Mr. Charlat, FE 2-*224. Spiegel's STOCK-MARKER «* 11-a, high Khool graduatt larmanant tull-tim* work. BLOOMFIELD FASHION SHOP 245 W. Mapto ------ srxngurgfiytrggTn.. WAITRkSS FOR SMALL RESTAU- —........—S a.m.-2 p. no Sunday!. Call 4744*14. WAITftlsr VyAHtED -PbA hIbHt WAITRESSES Dining Room and Curb Full or part-tim*. Paid vacaltont. HewHIIItatlon. Lunch hour *n< BI6*'wrREs7AuilANT"" Tatooraph B Huron or Dixie Hwy. B SHvar Lek* Rd. waitIIhEs 'for 6aV night. ahitta, heapltallr- vacation, bonua Mn, 1 Apply In pa-...■- Drlv*-ln, eai OP4yk* Rd. COOK, SHORT ORDER, FULL ■'-ne or pert time, paid b*nr'“ ENCORE RESTAURANT Miracle Mile ....................... ULj 2-3*** or 42S-35IS._________ BOB'S VAN SERVICE MOVING AND STORAGE FREE ESTIMATES I ROBERT TOMPKINS EM 3-7I2II: r east of city 40 FEET ON WILLIAMS LK. A1 Pauly 4514 Dixie. Rear OR 3-3100 _Eves. OR 3-72*3 154 MENOmTNEE, 3-BEbR'O^M basement and garage. KEN'S KARTAGE M«v« 1 to 7 Items ■-"-I, 412-1331. Painting t Dacoratiog 23 DETROIT NEWS MOTOR ROUTE driver. Whit* Lek* Townahip area. FE 24*21 or 334-52n.______ DRUG CLERkS. FULL TIME >. Start Immediately. . rian. S*v-On Drug*, 4 EXPERIENCED BAR T E N [ wanted, ref. required. 244 2437. EXPERIENCED NIGHT COOK, NO encas walarrad. Reply to Pontiac PAINTING, PAPERING ________Tupper. OR 3-7041______ QUALITY WORK ASSURED, PAIN I-paparing, wall washing. 473- “25 Traniportation Laboratory Technologists Immedlat* opanings for ASCP technolMlits. APPLY PERSONNEL DEPT. PONTIAC GENERAL HOSPITAL W. H. BASS "Specialliing -TOR FE 3- 3-7210 BUILDER VACANT LOTS AND HOUSES Wanted In Pontiac and Watorfo... Immedlat* dosing. REAL VALUE REALTY, 424-*57i, MY. Davli. We Need Listings CLARENCE RIDGEWAY TOM REAGANp REALTOR 2251 N/ Opdykk_______________332>=onoONS 1-5 LAWRENCE W. GAYLORD Broadway and Flint Lake Orion MY 2-2821 or FE FfW3 homes, excellent location, ___n you call. 40 ACRES at Balding, Michigan on M44. Buildings In poor condition. Located on Flat River. Make an otter, all will be considered. Owner anxious to sell. ALBERT J. RHODES, Broker FE 1-2306 251 W. Walton FE 54712 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE HBOBaB________W STOUTS Best Buys Tociay Lake Front Income I DelighHul 6-room apartnnant oni first lloof, plus 5-room modern apartment up, basement, gas heat, fireplace, sun porch, alumF num exterior, 55'xl2V lot, boat dock. path). Offered at only S23,-500 with terms. Dual Purpose Ideal for home and business. Large 6-room home with plas- IRWIN NEAR PONTIAC HIGH If you would like to stay In the city of Pontiac and you have a large family, this home is for you, Nice living room, full sized dining room, kitchen, one bedroom plus EAST SIDE I?s*ts ttSThorlle for**a Tar« or to use as a two family. cel on M24, near 1-75 Interchange, zoned C-1 for commercial use. Priced to t— -* — with terms. r SI5.M0 John K. Irwin ^NOONS 1*5 I « V T *r T we^^owTrealty NICHOLIE'!!; MIXED SUBS. .........- ... LEWIS REALTY - FE F3366 MUST SACRIFICE. 3-BEDROOM I ------ In Clarkston. Finished br - ' I HERRINGTON HILLS CLARK 3 Bedrooms LocaM on step-sa^ln|i ..jum storms 60'xl50' lol. Yours tor only 510,500 with terms. WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 54165 Open Eves 'til I p.m. Multiple Listing Service ARRO WE BUILD-WE TRADE "Thanksgiving Special SHARP 2-BEDROOM bungalow with oak floors, full basement, gas heat, 2-car garage, corner lol. privllegr* “■* —* private ISO. Tei LaOUE LAKE - FRONT LOT ON PONTIAC LAKE-40X132' 53500 SHERMAN DR. — LAKE VIEW OF ELIZABETH LAKE 117x156' 51705 CANAL LOTS Choke bulldlng^ sHas - 60x147. Connacted with Vhran Lake. JACK LOVELAND 2110 Cats Lake Rd. ________t 601-1255 JATNO HEIGHTS ^ LaM and Inside Ms, one of Oakland Coui^t moat beautnul areas. 4 Mtural Idket, dtv water, ges, will build to I from f foot. Ten build your Silver Lake Const. Co. 2000 Shawnee Lane 6734531 HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty ZONED CDMMERCIAL 3-acre corner, 640' road frontage. Only 515,500. PRIME LOCATION Union Lake Village, large commer-clel parcel, near Post OIfko, bonk, etc. Less than 5200 par toot. Everett Cummings, Realtor 2553 UNION LAKE ROAD EM 3-3200________________343-7111 H I (p H L A N D-MILFORD AREA “Confound these pens! They write on butter... underwater ... and then conk out on a tablecloth!’’ Sale Haatcs I, 2-cer garage, carpeting, e th closing costs down. NO MONEY OOWNI Tuckor Roolty NEW AiZAO FE 4-1545 ............. ...... ‘ lust decoratod end FE 4-l545{ location. basement, garage, sewer, w and gas. Asking prke 533.M0. Sale Houiat HI-HILL VILlAGE Select building sites with e country living style. A ‘ ------ rolling community ............ pivtd siraets, Idoatly locetod, closo to expressway end e few minutes from the center of Pontiac. Estate size parcels, low as 52,700 — 5300 down. LADD'S, INC. 3305 Lopaer Rd. 1 FE 5-92t1 or OR M231 offer 7.„ ----- Open Dally 104 Sunday 124 REPOSSESSED LOTS, HIGHLANO-49 Milford area. Vi- to ' TmNm AbdMr KMiMnrM CAB SERVICE Small cab company In growing community of Oxford and Lake Orion. All parmHt. Compidia radio etatlon with 2 rtcdivtra. Last mar's Income 110400 on I cab. Easy terms. STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES 661 S. Lapeer ILL SWAP FOR LATE * Salt ClEthiRf HURON COUNTY HARDWARE Full line hardware Including and real etlata with living lari for only 111500 -down. WARDEN REALTY ,e ,6nwil MAURiOSWT. 1 “““ 335-65W •fff ^ .iT~ MEN'S CLOTHING, A ■‘16, Porilen lamb It suits, silk,, brocade, .wool, co*^ I dresses. Exc. condition. 646- TUXEOO, QUALITY MATERIAL ICE CREAM PARLOR, BUSINESS, equipment, building (1600 tq. ft.) and property. (50x1200). Excellent locatlen m Investment. iMMO. 0175 Commerce Rd., Union Lake. 3634143. LAKEVIEW MARKET WALLED LAKE Fully oqulppod grKory and SDM Ikonse. Now onToylng good busi ness. Wonderful opporfunify f oi butcher. Ottered for 510.500—terms. Owner's III health reason lor —" PARTRIDGE “IS THE BIRD TO SEE" more then-your g price. Thi wilding COM this rucreth business your ANNETT KAMPSEN ■i Bloch Broi. OR 3-139$. NEW APARTMENTS built this year. 4-unll, 24 apartment house. Has kp 157 X 454 ft. zoned for n .IZABE7H LAKE FRONT SOUTH SIDE "2-cer'"osrim NlaHv’ lenSi bedrooms all on costs down and low moi Closed Thanksgiving 682-2211 , Realtor Catch Any Deer? NO? Then en this IS a 20' seeped. Perfect beech, down payment. Elwoed Realty 6624035 402-2410' Oaklond University Area room 13x17, lot SOxtSOMake '^IvF leges and Clarkston schools. 57.-: ice and carpeting, g. Phone OL 14503 lor details. FRANK SHEPARD 435 Mein 51., Rochtsler ORION TOWNSHIP |i3 Reel nkc 2-bedroom home. 55.650. 51,650 down. Balance on land con- HUMPHRIES REALTY Fo'r^» Oxford ______________OA 5-2417 ^ screms, 2-cai Meant Call tor details WE NEED LISTING AND WOULD vacani. can tor oeiaiis. ^ppopriATF vniias r*i i us. Eves. Cell MR. CASTELL FE 2-7273 "3T0I W. ifurdn FE 37iM PONTIAC LAKE FRONT —-It, immediate possessk , I. 2 lots, total 125' lokt front-only 510,500 -------"■ ,*l 105'x340'. _____ *- PRICED AT CALL TODAY I storms and )orage, large lot, and fruit trees. 512,500, TERMS. MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE KINZLER Buzz Bateman SAYS TRADE h itone firtpiacty 1st Frul ***?ARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE acres with modern older home,| raVifVu- ■ms. 10 acres with new home, SEND FOR FREE CATALOG ?“ WOLFE 620-31351 TOOL & DIE Rochester Rd. Lakeville I 5150,000 volume. Building end bui -----------------------ness. Only 517,000 down. SMITH ' MICHIGAN Business Sales, Inc. CO krozc JOHM LANDMESSERa BROKER 573 S. Tetegrapt)________FE 4-1512 Si^Haaf^oIdJ^i^ J5 1 Big "Beats 'Em All" Anniversary Special 58 PIECES BRAND NEW FURNITURE $297.00 roomy chest. Sorts box iprlnfl end mettross, 2 boudoir lames, eirt 2 bed pillows., Lwg weflno Wgn sofa end melchlng chair I" choice of cokri, 2 end tabloi, c»Hw *«• ble, 2 large table lamps. In demr-ralor colors, end 2 throw pillows, Formke top dinotte Irtk with leivos end 4 matching chi ri. 5 by 12 rug, end 32-plece set ol dishes. 7,000 SQ. FT. OTHER FINE FURNITURE, STOVES, «EFRIGERAT0RS, TV's, AND RUGS AT LIKE SAVINGS. Ve taka trade-ins ^ ^ Free Oellvary LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE 1441 Baldwin at Walton, FE 2-6142 First traffic light south of L7S A'— of Fret Parklno * 3PIECE BEDROOM, 555; ELEC-trlc and gas stoves, 515 fo 5N, re-Irlgeretor 525 and up, used Zenith •nr (excellant) 555, living rooms 534, 7-ploce dining room tulle, 545, 54>lece dinette set, 514, wringer washer, 535, odd beds. dresMri and chests. Everything ef bemein prices. Little Joe's Bargain 0^., 1440 Baldwin at Walton. FE 2-4142. trees. 511400. Terms. shw. Herdw^ Ikws thwohout g,veiopmenl end plastered wells. All on o „!. pa mar 1-71 oortl lovely 5l‘x135 lot. PRICE RE- OUCED TO iiy.tm with S1.6M Wroxinwioiy i.iw !D TO 517,550 with 51, West Si(ie Brick ^ " First time ottered, one floor EoSy DoeS It I home on corner lot near Tel-; -fhli brand nev Huron. 5 good-slio rooms, llv-i "" log room (12'xl5'l with natural llreplace, ceramic bath. Basement, FA oil heat. 2-cer garage. 51500 down. one to make e good li -......... meni on ■ portlelly « . ____ 1.100 tool . „ Terms evallable. Cell for So EASY to keep up - It's brick te ^SY^to gM to town .... iSr u‘ irtgaga and wi.......... u. (Jh, yes — If li you. Oh, yes — It has mree bedrooms, elr conditioning, ol- _ ^ techod gersge, closo^ln roar -----------—-------- r’^'inTcuto'S “ ' “ That Country FBaling Pontiac and Flint adlacant ..... wood Racreatlon arto In Grove-land Twp. 511,500. Terms evalleMe. ROLFE H. SMITH, Realtor 244 S. Teh^re|di^_______ „ I Call us It you b that you don't went or you ww like to exebango up to lari proportlos. BATEMAN 1 MORE IIME BRAND NEW FURNITURE 3-ROOM nUiFirS $278 (Good) $2.50 Weekly $378 (Better) $3.00 Wwkly i$478 (Best) $4.00 V.'.jkly 2-ploco living room suhe, two step tables, matching coffee table, two -"nretor lamps, ell tor 510f. Only Elws'fDROOM BARGAINS CARE FOR I COMPACTS? No wasted space, leetures a large living room, coved ceilings, lire-piece, vestibule entrance and clos-el. Youngitovm kitchen. Large bedroom, double sliding door closet. Full basement. Awnings. Aluminum I storms and screens. (Tyclone fenced! yard - well landscaped. Beautllul lake and park view, also toko privileges ONLY 55.550. TERMS. SMITH (S WIDEMAN „ REALTORS FE 4-4526 EVENINGS OR 34»' ' | 412 W. HURON ST. ----fHisr---------- ------------------- II, 14 - foot dl g room, 2 or 3 bedrooms, garage. 113,550, 1400i Rapids. Full prica fi )r Is moving to Grand n Plus THE TURKEY MAY BE YOURS BUT, IS THE HOME? Think about this when you sit! down to enloy your Thanksgiving dinner. Then call to see this comfy | 3-badroom ranch on 50x120' slte.i has trees end tW-cer garage, out! near White Lake. 51,550 takes cash or substantial down. HAGSTROM ' REALTOR I 4500 W. HURON OR 44351 n to only I Gl veteran plus small costs. HOME AND BUSINESS '‘nz; Small ranch honr>e with full bast- •• ment and oat heat. Attached 14x-21 commercial bgiktl UP area at 2551 " ‘ dittoning. 2-cer attechM'hull'Give Me SoiTie Glitter “e*nS**S? hXU: for Christmas! ' ..........ns. I have e kitchen, living r 20 ACRES, wooded end hi S Mpresswey, |7,500, 20 $^1, CeatrOCtS storaM si 120,500, m llding in a Walton. V jpg WE WILL TRADE could'we' say except that you Reolturs 28 E. Huron St. - - - Evenings end Sundays 1-4 ling end venic somr IS northwest of Clorks- GILES ?■ AUBURN HEIGHTS AREA - Mo orn 6-room home. Family size., I kitchen^ 4 bedrooms, partial bes^ | vacant. A _______________________ ment. 55,000 down on land contract. Don't delay. JOHN KINZLER, Reoltor 215 Dixie Hwy. 674-1235 Across from Packers Store lumple LIstIno Service Open 54 clous kllchen i ______d setting. e fireplace, spa-I 2-car garage, de of town with nd only 510,500 WEST SUBURBAN of extras. Nker then landscaped end Anchor-f-------- with blacktop straefs. Priced :i-i.«xi rinvm and sellert will g costs. CALL FE 8-0466 very clean, I will provide y with many years of napplrx If you hove 51,300 to pul dov My full price is 5I15O0 end • -| ' a. FE 6-7161, Jack Ralph. ty 2 lots. Tormt or prict tU.500. OF CITY 4-room burtootow. tor couple. 15' llvlr»g room, heat, storms and screens, SO'xISO' lots two lots wood- WATKINS LAKE / Attractive 34edroom frame home, large living room with natural cuf-| stone fIrcpToct. Basomont, gas heat eu, price u.vw. . and 2-cer garage. Excellent neighborhood. Walking distance to grMe BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP. Spi school. Good hooch end a good buy, fench, 2 bedrooms plus r ef 516.500 with 52,500 doWn. reetton room, Sislock & Kent, Inc. 1305 Pontiac Stole Bank Bldg-336 5254___________________335 5255 batamont, 2 fireplaces, complcla-ly carpeted throughout, drapes, knotty pine Veezi 2-cer garage, price 511,550. Waterford' ""aolEr" 1 THANKSGIVING DAY WE ARE THANKFUL OL 1-B5H SCHRAM Now Doing Custom Building On Availoble Building Sites! Your Plons or Ours. Custom Builders Thinking of» Selling? WANT CASH? W» will oel It tor you-glvd us a try. Cell LM Kerr, Rachel Levely, Emery Butler, Jo Suit, Dave Bradley, Lao Kampien, or Hilda Stewart. 11071 West Huron St. MLS FE 64W1 I Attar I pjn. cell GEORGE IRWIN PONTIAC REALTOR ROCHESTER Distinguished home In beautHul|FE I-7I4I MLS OL I4SII Twin Lakes Village, Ibedroom 377 S. Telegreph 730 Rochester Rd. brick ranch, paneled family room' ----------------------------------------- with llroploce, beoutltul Formica I kitchen with ell built-in appliances. ' ceramic bath corner tub end ceramic si er, lull tiled basement, largi car etteched garage, custom 2' "BUD" wide trout stream, 5300 fx 47 ROLLING ACRES with nka 3-bedroom home, living room, dbikig room, modom kllchon, lull bath and basement. Also featuree 1 car oarage, bam and 2470 feat dInliM ri •nd*screeos su"ifed"'end"^eh4«de trees. 5I4.SM C. PANGUS, Realtor 430 MIS Ortoi Cell Collect NA 7-2115 .....jing I____ room. Glossed-ln front porch. Has tonced yard. Hom li 1 TO so LAND CONTRACTS Urgently wanted. See us befoi you deal. WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. OpdYke Rd. FE S4I65 Open Eva ------------ PEARSON'S FURNITURE 0 E. Pike FE 4-7MI Between Paddock end City Hen Open 66on. end FrI. 'til 5 pjti. GREEN LIVING ROOM CHAIRS' ’ —......-(In size mattress, AaiON On your land contract, lerge or amen, call Mr. HIKar, FE 24175. groker, CT2 tliyeWi Lake RoeA centrec's, equity, 17,211, discount S pe- cent. WM. a MITCHELL, Sales IWar. BREWER REAL ESTATE 4 E. Huron FE 4-5111 ---- •• Orogery, FE 15215 9x12 Linoleum Rugs . $3.89 WATERFORD HILL MANOR WARREN STOUT, Realtor 14S0 N. Opdyko Rd. FE S4I6S Qpon Evas, 'til 6 p.m. WEAVER multiple listing SERVICE carpeting, family room, paved drive, lerge pa terms. MILTON WEAVER INC., REALTOR In the Village of Rochester 116 W. Unlverslly 6S14I4I Frushour lio. 52i,ggg. Struble' TAYLOR TRADES NICE BUNGALOW toceted In quiet, well-kept section of Pontiac, Includes 2 bedrooms down «nr* Mr am 2 ACRES WITH NICE, 6-ROOM HOME, lust 6 miles ndrth of Pontiac, Kf llvlng room. With brick fireplace. IW-story suburban home near Cres-I cent Lake, 2 nice sized bedrooms down end room tor 2 more oni second floor, specious living room, large kitchen, lull basement,' breezeway end attached 2-cer ge-; rage, large l36'xl1S' It. lot, privileges on crescent Lake, lust SIS,-' 500. terms. WITH ALL THE TRIMMINGS buy this lovely Vllllems • , -.1 and 2-cer garage; res cerpefed living noom, igt, rr.v.» b.x'v.'iyto! .kds„»' 521,500. D West Bloomfield List With Schram and Call the Van REALTOR-MLS FE 54471 ROOMS Oi= FURNltORE, 5260. M. C. Ljpperd. FE 5-7532. _ stored arm chairs, 550 6 " elV condlllenert In itock U T 0 M A T I C WASHER, 535; domes dryer, 525. 332-4267. BREAKFAST. LIVING AND'IBED-room furniture, plut rugs, sell complete. 1664-7344 etter 6 p.m. BRONZE OR CHROME DINETTB Mie, BRAND NEW. Large and tmall tlza (round, drop-leaf, rec-tenguler) toblat In 1 5 and 7 pc seti. 524.5rand up. PEARSON'S FURNITURE carpeting, full betement, 2Vy-cer garage. Situated on 6 largo tot In e dotirable location. Locelod noar shopping conter. Has gos hoot and aluminum storms end screens — Price, 514,500 with 10 per cent betement and 2Vi-cer gen complete, lawn sprinkling ..... with water furnished by sprii ted pond. 514,500 wim 57,000 equity or trade In your presi home. CALL TODAY. loceted at oaks ___________Ing _ .. IlS'ilsy lol, 3 bedrooms, 2-car ottochod oe-' X used as income, price net peon reduced tor Immediate sale, 522,500. WATERFORD REALTY D. Bryson, Realtor OR 3-1273 .... "-n Welt B"- IMno room place, dandy kitchen,-- ly room with 2nd llreplace, bams, get heat, 2ALL^|»UR^^ C P.M R U * t E, November Specials ye^irtweti caoir-Ipovti llbton . ....... lbs., dallvarad IB rr'-‘----•— Irol, dui cone speaker '$ 34.55 Hoovtr upriglil, new t 45.55 0(1^ uprlghl frtezer, lAlool, 344 --------- l(63^ IWoot, freezer GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SI ©'•--•WCE HEATER, TWO FOfS, tie an irooar wr- -— “• 3, OR 3 RICHMAN BROTHERS SEWING CENTER NECCHI IBWINO MACHINE •I HOLDS 'Til CHRIITMAt THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDXESDAV. NOVEMBER 24. 19(5.5 TWENTY-ONE ONCI MAIN tLICTIIIC AND'OAS itavM end r«frlg«rator( and now naw and ralact 0x12 llnolauma, TV'fc badi, and maiw mora '— at Stonay'o, in N. Cau at Track, Ft 4-1730. ^ARtS FOR washers, DRYERS, vacuumi and rafrigaratori. Alao XIr In our (hop. Michigan ha-ICO Co., 3212 DIxIa Hwy. m- Ftr Soto MiictNaiMOoi 67 4uHR~iI2t ~4Kii~lR5UAii5EA !^ttw^and box tprbiga, 1 yr. ROl,L,A-WAY BED, M SIZE, CL#AN, SINGEli AUtOMATIC )lal dMlgn inodal In coMnal, r .wnad. WHh front-loading boH Do dnlgna, buttonholaa, blind hi by dlallno, avorythlng b- ‘ SPECIAL no A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OF FURNITURE ~ Conalata of: rxlt* rug---------- WYMAN FURNITURE CO. isi.^Fyicr !H2.2.so SINGER ■ZAO SEWING MACHINE CABINET MODEL or paymonta of S* per ^nth. Guarantaod. Unlvarial Co. FE 4-0901 TV SET, S2S, REFRIGERATOR, I3S; jM iySrsss, •” bunk boda, in lac. FE S-2764. USED REFRIGERATOR S39.95, I Hwy. OR 3-9747. Wo NEW SPINET PIANO, WALNUT -----iporary with bonch, S491 BETTERLY MUSIC, “ Pttt-Mttirtiii| Do|s 79 TIZZY idlng. Ii..... _ ...___ _______m Supply, ISO' 0-479t. ri. FE t-4712._________' ---------- »4r cent TO DOG HOUSTS, INSUCatED TABLES, 4S0( sTVy^*'"* * 'A-JOB/VfELL DONE FEEL-i/Mrpota with Bluo Lua-Ealeolrlc ahanmaoor, SI. ' 41 E. Walton. InB" cloa^ tro. Ronr Ea Huda^ Hai kevtxiard, SS9S. Gulbranitn lull all. ...... A VINOS C.l FI OOR MODELS AND OTHER TRADE-INS Jack Hagan Music Canter ako Road / For the Finest in Top-Quality Merchandise Shop MONTGOMERY WARD PONTIAC MALL FOR SALE: HOUSEHOLD FUR-_.... loola, atove and retrlaer- _________0203. Milford.________ ENCYCtOPEplAS .I.944..20 VOLS., SALE ______ ahelv enclosure; 0x7 and YCLOPEDIAS 1944 20 1 It BMP aell 03S. S43-3SI3._ FACTORY CLOSE OUT storage shed. If' Ing, garl--— ?«•;! CTy'*?, ' Items. Exerything dre FOR DUSTY CONCRETE FLOORS ■ • ...... loner _______________FE 10104 GAS FLOOR FURNACE, SOTOOO BTU; slock of used lumber, (2x4 and 2x4) 0 to IS It. lengths, l^-ton Chevy pickup; alter 5 p.m., 05 Willard St._____ , GO KART, WEST BEND ENGINE, ..... --. — 1. In- GARAGE DOORS «l one piece, sectional, woi 1 flberglaa. Factory rolocta OME KNITTING MACHINES, Knit King and Paasap with In-structlona. 549-1770.___________ jalousie windows all sizes SI, Kroons SI, 3 doors, '*'* — Died elKtrlc rango Used TVs Sweet's Radio I, Appliance In 3040 SI 1-2400. ntWr 44 not* irgan, %\.m CANINE COUNTRY CLUB INTRODUCING CANINE PHOTOGRAPHY BY APPOINTMENT 525 E. S. Boulevard, Rochester. Clean, comforlabla, convanlent, bathing, grooming, boarding, healed facllllTes. 9 to 4 dally. 052- 4740 451 0000._______________ :OLLIE PUPS, AKO, iABLE AND wSile S45-S40 335-7229._______ DACHSHUND, RED _____ MA 4-1405____________i FAWN MALE PEKINGESE RADIO AND MUSIC Now In stock . . . MOSRITE VENTURE GUITARS Usad by tha tabulous Ventui..., Alao Fendor elKtrlc guitars and| ampllliera. Microphones and public address systems. j PERSONALIZED GRriOMING SUPPLIES Christmas SpKial TOY STUD SERVICE Dual pickup elKtrlc guitars, only RIVER BEND POODLES . cam rsivic Town and Country Rai 4700 W. Walton Blvd., I 474-0151 uSed LOWREY SPIL_. ........ 2 manuals, walnut, 0350. LEW 5010 DIXIE highway Music ___ WATERFORD-OR 3-OW _ \ Plains part COLliE MATI PUP. s 'MOS. BETTERLY MUSIC. Ml 4- USED PIANO SPECIALS APARTMENT SIZE UPRIGHT hogany fnnish $175 RESTYLED AND REBUILT PIANO “!_'pUGS, AKC. SHOTS, CHAMPION sired, 0 w«k^ld._«L;0994. _ REGISTERED CHIHUAHUA AND i Toy Fox terrier puppies. Chlhua-| hua and Tpy Fox terrier stud] service. FE 2-1497._________ SIAMESE KITTENS, FEMALES, $15 I Also Siamese cat, female, $10.! Phone 420-3241._______________; SQUIRREL MONKEY AND CAGE, $35. FE 0-0193._________________ ST. BERNARD. MALE, 5 MONTHS, By Kate Osanni Wanted Can-Tracks BUYING SHARP CARS BUD A4ANSFIELD USED CARS 1501 Baldwin, 2 bIKks N. of Walton FE 2-2041 California Buyers 101 New and Used Trucks 103 New and Used Con 106 GMC 1959 BUICK HARDTOP, $399. FULL price, no cash needed. Opdyke Motors, 2230 Pontiac Rd. at Opdyka ■ cn a-on-iv EXTRA EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAT EXTRA Shorp Cor "ChKk the rest, then get the best" at Averill FACTORY BRANCH Htw and Used trucks iFe_5-»485 ____ 675 Oakland 'JEEP 4-VVHEEL' drive pickup. Runs oood, 1335. 170 N. Opdvk«r< — manager. MUST DISPOSE OF 194r ECONO- SPARTAN ONLY SPECIALS RED I960 BUICK INVtCTA Call McAuiiitc. _ ___ New ■ 1966 FORD I F-lOO Pickup ! 240 Cl 4-cvlinder engine, oil niter,! washers, fresh air healer and de- AUTO SALES fA 9-9B7S 2020 DIxIa__^E 4-4494 Did You Know? VILLAGE RAMBLER ! tor ANY make used car.! Ml 4-3904 217 W $1795 AVE.) FE 8'453l. vertlb'e, 1963 BUICK SPECIAL CON-VERTIBLE WITH AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RA-DIO AND HEATER AND WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Assume weekly payments of $8.92. CALL CREDIT mgr. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD. 4-7SOO Call for Ai HELP! E ofjOakland A\ Auto-Marine insurance 104 AUTO INSURANCE TERMS AVAILABLE i STOP IN TODAY Anderson & Associates 1044 Joslyn GRINNELL UPRIGHT d sorvico. Pupplos. FE 4-S793. AMcticm Snles_____________80 CLOSE-OUT. ALL NEW AND USED 1945 4-FOOT CAMPER, CABOVER IMMEDIATE POSSESSION, 1942 FORD Pickup, outomatlc, dt ---- • - luxe cab, all lor SI495. JERQM FORD, RKhoster FORD Dtalor OL 1-9711.__________________ BUSH AND LAND GRAND PIANO 9-9, 7 - ----- ------ - prices before you buy. HALL'S AUCTION SALES 70S W. Clarkston Rd., Loko prion Ml MY 3-1871 MY 3-4141 {mImI JIM'S OUTLET NOW LOCATED 334-5477 2M1 DIXIE HWY., 2 DOORS WASHER S2S. GAS STOVl, M5. RE-'SOUTH OF PONTIAC DRIVE-iN.i*^ *' **•'"'’* Irlgerotor with top trKlor, 149., .11 TU MX KImrtrIr .lnu.,1 u-------- -w.------ , ^ dllp.Oy______________ ,;30 P.M. «vo S200| ic;,«day'' '. p;!X: *Tn°r-Mon«°Jonv* OKr"p?ll1rEl7r‘5"AK^ ' TO CHOOSE FROM | we Buy-Sell-Trado, Retail 7 days 1 Consignments Welcome LOW, EASY TERMS > bIb AUCTION I 5049 Dixie Hwy._______^R 3-2717 Grinnell's (Downtown) Dryer, 43S. TV, $3*. Electric st S31 V. Horrii. PE S-2744. WYMAN'S USED BARGAIN STORE At pur II W. Pike Store Only Odd living rpom tablet From S 495 Occoilonri ehoirt .. From S 4.95 3-stwM bookcaio S 9.95 2-k. living room suite S29.95 Apt. ilM 90S stove S34.95 Guor. olK. washer .........S59.95 Guor. olK. rotngorotor S59.9S Your-Crodit Is Good at Wym--'-EASY TERMS______________FE ; 2-2150 65-A 2 FINISHED WASHSTANDS, OR-gon, Lincoln rKkK, hall tree, drop leaf tobies, 1 pair finished bwoom choirs. Y-Knot Antlquos, —" Holly. V, -...... ME 7-51 Toys, household Items, books (highest quality). All 40 per cent ott reg. price. FE 4-0205. Open 10-10 p.m. LaAG^E SELECTION OF CHRISt-mot gifts. Layaways. Liberal Bill's Outpost, 3245 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-9474. LAVATORIES COMPLETE , 524.50 value SI4.95; also bathtubs, toilets, shower stalls. Irrogultrs, terrltlc values. Michigan Fluore----‘ — Orchard Lake. FE 4-9442._____ MEN'S STETSON, CHAMP AND -------- .... .. oir'Rookios buiiet,''33^. 67m........ Lake Orion. Open 9-9. DiKOunt and Salvage Cmtar. NEW AND USED~GAr AND"Oir furnaces. 23 years axp. Immadlata Installation. Vary raasonable. A 0, H Sales, MA ItijOl or MA 5-1001. dlL_ BURNERS, pOAL HEAtps. Taylor's Office Equipment 72 LARGOMARSINO TOTALIA PRINT ractlon, inultipllcatlon and dl vision, S400. Harold Turner, Inc. 444 S. Woodward Ave., BIrmIng, OIL SPACE HEATER lroom-S20 ........ (to Milo Rd.) at Llvai nols Rd. In Troy. Dally Door priio No odmiotlon fee. Closod Thanks giving Day.________________________ WOOD OR COAL COOK STOVE, rockK, M. C. LIppord, PE 5,7932. Call OR 4-1817 after 4 p.m._ ONE OF THE BEST BASEBOARD A T I 0 SCREEN AND STORM HW, TV g KoJIof 66 19" ZENITH TV, 5p00_ COHOI- Jo'HNsdN' 'tv” ' ' FE 1-4549 ^ 44 E WALTON MUAR BALDWIN ALL NEW 2T' COLORED TV'S, IM-mtdlata dallvary. Also utad bl^ _____________ _________ S19.95/ showK ttalli with trim $34.Mi Mxiwl sink, S2.9SI Lavs., 42.45i tubs, SIO and up. Pipe cut and thrtodod. SAVE PLUMBING CO„ 141 Baldwin. FE 4-1514.________ lECREATION ROOM BAR, CUS-tom-mada by axparlancad carpenter al your homo, mahogony paneled In front, formica 6Sl VAitt, 4200, naw ■nwiswlck ate book, lift, pool table, S7S, now and Ftahart al big dls- S1I77 I. Talgraph, MIrKta tapping Cantor, 333-r kUMittiT^L TAtLi; “TlaTI CASH AND CAARY £!8S«XSS 8:8 THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE no W. LAWRENCE ST. Everything lo moat your nMds __Clothing, Furnllure, Appliances USED GAS AND OIL FURNACES. Chandler Heating, OR 3 S432. Oirittmai True 67-A CHOICE SCOTCH PINE, RED PINE and spruce. Plantation grown. Ed Walsh Traa Farm, 4 mllas east d Cadillac. Phone Lake City 3-2023. pTck YbUR TREE ON THE STUMP -Bring the whole lamlly. Tag IrN now, cut later, SI.OO and UP. Alto bundles of pine bc -'-- j 12 miles north of PontiK, 'A .. north of I-7S IntersKtlon. Cedar Lane Christmas Tree Farm, 1970 Dixie H^, IM 11922^_________ OiriBlmai eifti 671 3 PAIR OF CHILDREN'S ICE tkatas and 1 woman’s. FE 5 SLOT RACING TRACK, 40-11 tones, 1/32 or t/25. Hobby end copper strip. 335-8925._____ Hand Teols-Machlnary 61 8'^"WARDS -ABLE SAW, JXCEL-lanl condition S41 floor trwdel driH pttst, (air condition S3S. OR 4-2100 1-A PIANO tuning-repair FINE UPRIGHTS FOR SALE___ PIANOS WANTED. R. King, 33S9II0I ATTENTION DRUMMERS' SpKial prices on all salt In CLAIRNET, IVETTI^j^SCHAEFFES 331,4733 attar 5. '____^ Close Out Sale MORRIS MUSIC ,4,.T.toyr.phRd • ~Tt Tel-Hpron FB LOWERY ORGANS WANTED GOOD CORNET Junior high band student wants to buy cornet. Must be In ex-cfllanl condition. No lunk please. Music Idibons 71 *A ACCORDION GUITAR LESSONS. le HHirloomt “ * “1/ noiiy ___________ Thur»day PERKINS SALE SERVICE t. 635-9400 Sj^ng^^oo^ BOWS, ARROWS, SUPPLIES Gena's Archa^,_71^. Huron BOV'S HOCKEY GOALIE EQUIP"- —' Lag pads, glovas, f---------- SIO each. Ml 4-4370. GUNS . BUY - SELL ■ TRADE Burr-Shell, 37S S. Tatograph_ OOOD USED SHOTGUNS AND Rl-Ban't Loon Office, tS N. —,lnaw. FE 4-SI4I._____________ GUNS, 6uMb. GuMt - WE EUV, or frada. Try before you buyl 23 caliber. Wa tPKiallia in scope BauKh and Lomb. Bush low as 529.94. Gun repair, "man XL 12 chain taw, SI the Tote Goto that goat where! Alto the Falarit six alar (2 models, tha Musti Colt) 10 and l4'/y h.p cm ar's Sport Canter, 1S2tO K Rd., Holly. ME 4-4771. BLACK ANGUS CATTLE, PURE- ----!. Ellaanmara and Gammer ding. Wa are reducing our I. Coma and pick out a taw ----- nice 4-H steer calvaS. I Brando and Son's, 4304 r Rd., Grand Blanc. "" ■----- ••• 4-3920. HORSES, SADDLES A Inquire al Gro----- 5200 Grange H 40 YOUNG HEAVY ROOSTERS AND Sand-Gravtl—Dirt S12. Choice top soli, 7 yen Dal, gravel, tlTT FE S-9«t._ GOOD DRIVEWAY GRAVEL yards tor SIO. Del. FE 4-4500. IMPASSABLE DRIVEWAYS CAM be most disturbing. Last spring, many had this problem and can have It again. Mud was deep tampers were short, welght-re, strlctlans were in force. Why tot this happen again. Repair "■— driveways before the IrKie II we — — ............ 3-I93S. 4 cell us. OR ALL GRAVEL AND DIRT ana grioma PONTIAC LAi^~8UILDERS SUP- 6'fsto SAND, GRAVEL, FIll DIRT, TOP sell, biKk dirt. Bulktoilng, a»ea-vatlng. OR 3-StSO._______________ - I - l^R - OLD MINIATURE Kidlet; 1 ipeyed tomato, S2Si 1 ala, S40. Papers. 473-2421 ottor 11-MONTH-OLD BOXER FOR SALE. Cheap. 412-1793. -1 bobb'LEI’EiMNilifA, iHAM- >-l DACHSHUND PUP8, TEEmS. stud dogt. JAHEIMS FB T253I. ILL PET SHOP, 55 WILLIAMS. FE 4-4433. Canary tlngaft._ Icc TOY POODLtS, APRICOT, 4 weaKi. FE t-499). ----------- WEEKS TO meniht old._____ ---- reaming. 474-0215 er 473-3743. : POODLE F ______PUPS, BLACK AND silver, mlnlilura and toy, S40 and up. 425-2943._________ AkC kE6ijTlllS”6MA EM 3-444S AKC BEaOlI RUkNiitO __________425-2(75 _ C CHRISTMAS F^005LfS, . eurtfi St., Penttoc.____ akc'Bachshun6 puppies, STUb dogs. ESTELHBIMS, FE 2-0019. Alee PDMERJNiAk MALE, MUST I. h. m.!*xc chihuahua puppies, stud service. IMATODD'S. 33^71J9. u buy^Prkat baghT af AKCTlAttk, ApftiCOT MALE POD- ba^ra you 1491.-No menay down till Feb. I GALLAGHER MUSIC CD. II t. HURON FE 4-8S44 'bloodirnat, S35. ...........'MOViNO' I Christmas. 4»-3 - -43.****“' *’'* __ BEADLES, AkrWPS, CHAMPION SBOBb HAMLIN PIAitS) ebii-sola modal, txcallani condition, priced to Mil. LEW BETTERLY MUSIC. Ml 49002. ^lldren, May-Will fSxErs--------- puppy now lor C idarful gift lor your ...... EifAUtnHjL""Al000 I cylinder, power steering, bi ; BIRMINGHAM d?.rn,n•^.^T:9r■.ur s;ice“'' CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH I mora to choose from 914 S. Woodward Ave. Ml 7 3214, Dwa.wwUU.. >44 VOLKSWAGEN, BLUE, RADIO, heetor. Excellent condition. FE Birmingham'*^”*'”**'* CASS 1965 V' 1964 G I C K LESABRE 4-D OOR FOR RENT; 2 Wolverine 'O^tt. campers c '6S GMC pickups. $100 weak ar “scon RENTAL SERVICE 194 W. V HOBO MANFACTURING SALES CO. Pickup campers, supplies and accessories. Do it yoursall. 1495. I GRAY QUARTER HORSE, black l»rw- 1 hav horia. 1 hi 2 BLACK ANGUS YEARLINGS, pring tho .. Jaap Wiing, I. For only S35 lea, S«5 to non-rag. Bo son. platai 434) 34 M' WOLVERINE TRUCK CAMPERS NOW ON DISPLAY FROLIC - YUKON OELTA- .. . vacation. JACOBSON TRAILER SALES B RENTALS Wlllfams 1 PIONEER CAMPER SALES Pickup campers by Travel Quasi.. Overland, O'vanca. Concord tralt- ars. Merit fibaralass true*- - 3348 W..Huron, FE ^^949■ NEW! TRAIL BIKES $295 SPECIAL!! CLOSE-OUT ON ALL 1965 i TRIUMPHS LOW DOWN PAYMENTS EASY TERMS ANDERSON SALES A SERVICE i 1445 S. Telegraph FE J-7182 Open Eves, 'til 8, Sat. ‘til 5 SUZUKI CYCLES 58CC-2SbCC. RUPP „ MlnIbIkes as low as S139.95. Taka M59 lo W. Highland. Right on Hickory Ridge Rd. to Demode Rd.: Left and follow signs to DAW- -SON'S SALES AT TtPSICO LAKE. ' -le MAIn 9-2179. TeW: ta^torTxIalir morons'" $99 l'r'o,d''^$?;95^3?ll^f4r^*' ‘ can install. Terms. Other makes --------- ----CLEAN GOOD HILLMAN SEDAN. C"hEVY~MAL-1 offer over ^2^ FE 24145. Complete Soles ----- Terms .... orlcad. 537-HV7 hISders for ----------- 32\0 451-4381. \ _ New and Uud Trucks 103 1953 CHEVY, 34-TON, $78. 334-0284. i 455 Inglewood._____________ ! 1954 FORD'D-TON truck. S250.1 UL 3-3993. \ 1954 FORD W-t6n PICKUP. S350. 1 FE 4to448 I SUSUKI .J FORD F-350 STAKE, \y-8, tpaad, hMtar, 750x15 6-ply tir . .... ..... —^.A.„ „,095. Parts and Service FOR ALL IMPORTS Exclusive dealer lor BMC. Sunbeam, Flat. Morgan Parts and Servlet now open Grimaldi Imported Car Co. 8 Oakland Ave._ 3384218 I A T 1961 4 DOOR, R ^ CO N D excellent condition. OA 8-3071. ._ paIlcon ranchEro Pick-up, a nlCa unit—ready to go a‘ S595. PATTERSON CHEVROLE' yr. - 12,080 ml. Warran SUZUKI HUSTLER 250 CC - 4 speed NOW ON DISPLAY TUKO SALES, INC. __________________________ |l27 E. Auburn Raebastor Uj^2j?»3, CHEVY^PICKUP. ^ 12-2094. CADILLAC ELDORADO," 1957, AIR, lull power._FE 4-0380._ 1958 CADILLAC COUPE DeViLLE, . solid black, lull power, tha right kind ol car. SI.095. JEROME FORD, Rochester FORD Dealer. ' 0L_1-971K_^ ___ fw cadillac'4-6'(36r, extra -‘-arp. S995. MAZUREK MOTOR SALES _dward -alj. Blvd. _ F5JF9587 MUST SELL REPOSSES'SION, 1942 CADILLAC DeVILLE. NO S NEEDED AND-NO PAYMENTS TIL '44 CALL MR. BURKE AT 338-4528, SPARTAN.____________ LLOYD'S SALE Continues telescoping, bumpers, I a d d < racks. Lowry Camper Sales, S. Hoipttai Road, ■ EM 3-3441._____________ SUZUKI Kowosaki-White Big Bod Bultoco Von Teck—Dart Lil' Indian Mini Bikes CUSTOM COLOR ,|234 W. MONTCALM tires, (2 snow), I Otter abava $788. 41 11942 FORD PICKUP, REAL NICEj ' - perlecf caitof—• —"A 4-2175 Private party, A WE CARRY THE COMPLETE LINE OF THE FOLLOWING Streamlines-Kemskills Fronklins-Fans-Crees and Monitors Boats—Aicessoriat 1944 MERCURY 1888, EXCELLENT -Tditlan, $858. MY 3-2S44. JOHNSON MOTORS AND MO Holly Travel Coach, Inc. 15310 Holly Rd. Holly ME 44771 —Open Dally and Sundays— HousatiailEra 89 GEORGE CROSBY'S Dixie Tractor & Equip. Co. OLIVER - ONE OF THE FINEST IN FARM AND INDUSTRIAL EPUIPMENT SALES AND SERVICE. Also replacemanf parts and Ice for all Ford, Masiay-Fai and all other tractors. Hydraulic pumps, valves, hosi cylinders lor all Industrial use (1 block S. at Walton B 1-33SI________or_________ THE LARGEST "REAL" sarvlea star# In r'-"'— ----- Ice-box and .... SI.391. Alta 8'4", 51,095. TAR CAMPER MFG. CO. 1110 Auburn Rd.___________ 8S2-3334 A FIRST IN THIS AREA NOW ON DISPLAY ALIO 23-tt. tandem axle fully salf-contalnad BRAND NEW MONOMATIC ytodVto!chimtol!l as utad In large aircraft AT COLONIAL 'Never Knowingly Undersold" All 1944 Models on Display In Every Price Range At Winter Dlicaunts ('/k Mile South of Waterford) OPEN 7 DAYS DETROJTER-PONTIAC CHIEF Top Irada aHawanca on your prasant mobile home. Yes, all Datroltor products meat’ plumblni^ and •leal sys-qambla. prices. 10 per cant down. BOB HUTCHINSON i/____ 01 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-1202 _______Drayton f loins / OPEN 7 DAYS-9 to see THE NEW 1944 MODELS new on dliRlav All mobito hwnaa an a discount ipaclal BOOTH CAMPER covtrt and campers tor, ________rf' CAMPERS” WE OUARANTEBA PARKING WlTOtobago Wl^baw SPACE. Pnoanlx PhoanTx Large selection of 12' wMai. .Y PARK, CHAMPION Pickup covert. Wa 4011 snd Inttall Raata snd Driw-IItt hitchat. HOWLAND SALES and RENTALf ]14S Dixie Hwy. OR Vl4 Opan 9 a.m. 'til 9 p.m. _HOLLY PARK, CHAMPION PARK 1^0 AND PAIIK ESTATES Law ovarhaad — aavs raaT money Midland trailer sales Bicyclss 1942 OMC PICK-UP IN GOOD CON- difions naw 0aint. 1975. King Bross FE 4-0734.__________________ 1943 60DGE Vi-TON PICKUP, RA dio and haafar, a sharp truck $1r095. FE 44513 Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth 1724 Oakland Ava. 33241S0 98 1943 JEEP GLADIATOR PICKUP, , SIO UP. BOYS' -'til Christmas, 33S- 1943 CORVAN PANEL, EXTRA —nn, S495. JEROME FORD -hatter FORD Dealer, OL 14711. 1943 FORD F-3S0 STAKE, WITH 4- >r storage at Tony's Marina. ATTENTION - FREE STORAGE With complato rafinith |ob. Custom wood work and fiberglat specialties. Complato boat service. Pay next summer. Pickup and dallvar- drlva marclal mud and snow Tires. 7' Western swnoplow. 343-7794 alter 5 p.m.___________ 1943 VW PANEL, 1 I bankrupt. In receivership, had a repossession or lust credit problems In general? We can give you Immadlata delivery.' Credit no problem, wa finance. Coll Mr. Dan at FE 8-407-Approval by phone. FE 8-4071 Capitol Auto MflLSON CADILLAC Of BIRMINGHAM Ml Mi 4-1930 BIGI BIG! SAVINGS! UP TO 30% OFF ON 1965 MODELS NOW IN STOCK! PONTIAC'S ONLY MERCURY mercruiser dealer FOX SNOWMOBILES NIMROD CAMP TRAILERS CLOSEOUT Bia Canoas wk Lawnboy mowert OWEN'S AAARINE SUPPLY 1 Orchard Laka FE ^80^0 1964 ^-TON PICKUP, RADIO AND haater, sfandard shiff, $1,595. Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth 24 Oakland Ave. ■ 332-9158 FAMILY CHRISTMAS IDEAS EVINRUDE 3 horse foldup motor SKEETER snowmobile. HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS "Your Evinrude Dealer" 1899 S. Talagrapb Rd. 332-1833 . _____ Kayot ___________ ____ rude motors, Pamcatrallars. Taka MS9 to W. Highland, right on Hickory Ridge Road to Demode Rood, Inside Boat, Storage MOTOR REPAIR BOAT REFINISHING-REPAIR Ask lor EARL or DALE Wide Track Auto Craft 18 W. Wide Track FE 5-1311 OUR NEW INSIDE SHOWROOM IS COMPLETE - All '44 n n stock - LONE STAR, I GLASSTRON Bf^ATS. MFG Wa are dealing now — up to 138 days batora first payments. It you are looking for WINTER PRICES — Stop In now — wa have tow '45 Marcuryt, 3.9 rag. K NOW ONLY $159.95. Stop In Clltl Orayar Marina DIv. 1S2lo| Holly Rd., Holly, call ME 4477) for any help you may 1964 Forci F-100 '/z-Ton Styleside pickup, with a green finish, radio heater, 8-ft. slylasida box. Only— $1595 BEATTIE OR 3-1291 1944 FORD ECONOVAN, REASON-..........ir 4 p.m. OL 1-8255. 1959 BUICK INVICTA 1964 Forci F-100 ’/2-Ton Styleside Pickup with a black and while finish, V-l angina, radio, heater, and a 8-ft. box. $1595 BEATTIE COME TO THE PONTIAC RETAIL STORE WHERE YOU EXPECT MORE ... AND GET IT! 100 Top quality, one-owner new car trades to choose from 65 Mt. Clemens at wide Track FE 3-7954 OLIVER BUICK Home of Double Checked Used Cars 1945 BUICK Special convertible deluxe, V-a automatic, radio, htal-ar, power steering, brakes $2,295 1945 OLDS Dynamic SI 4714 S. Woodward________Ml 7-3214 t1,475 5 Pontiac GTO coupe. Red finish. CHEVY II 1743 Chevy II Super Sport. 3-door I hMljT'whllelMlN'MWs"***'® Chevrolet 2-door. M healer, whitewalls. tl,275. Ifinish, VO engine, eulm 1743 Chevy II Nova, 2-door herd-ilH.'!*'?!;;..'”**' top, radio and healer, vrhlfi------ standard transmission. 11,075. _______ TORQUEFLITE POWER. AND FACTORY WARRANTY FOR YOUR PROTECTION. FULL PRICE 11477. ISS OAKLAND AVE. ('/. MILE NORTH OF CASS AVE.) FE S-4528. PATTERSON CHEVROLET Autobahn Motors, Inc. iALER le MIk » I AUTHORIZED VW DEALER 1> mile north of Miracle M"-1745 S. Telegraph 1964 CHRYSLER "300” Convertible, 50,000 mile warrant power steering and brakes, buck seals, braufitui blue with matchii interior, e real line car. $2088 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH Cell Mr. Brown. Pontiac Rd. of Opdyke. FE t-7737. 1740 FORD, 4-DCX3R. P O W E ‘ -Ing and brakes, eutometl-. . No monoy down. Coll Mr. Estate Storage ments of S5.72. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks st: HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500 MUST SELL REPOSSESSION, 1 T-B1RD WITH FULL POWER, NO $ NEEDED AND WE WILL ESTABLISH BANK CREDIT FOR YOU WITH MINIMUM REQUIREMENTS. CALL MR. BURKE AT 33S-452S. SPARTAN._______________ 1742 FORD GALAXIE 500 CONVERT-IMe. V-t autometic, power steering, whitewalls, radio and haater,. $1075. PATTERSON CHEVROLET SON CHEVROLET CO., 1104 S. By Anderaon and Loeming Ntw -6 Uwd Cm 'tm 1«S7 BONNEVILLE 44KX>R VISTA. MiSy** CLEAN 1741 TEMPEST, 4«OOR, autometl& new tires enC ‘-“— S4IS. 744-3275 after 4 p.m. 1741 BONNEVILLE. AUTOMATIC, full powtr, exccilant condition. 3-door. FI 4-5741. “Oh, (^! I think we’ve just bought a $4 steak!” 1703 FORD, tiso. Haw and Used Can 106 1743. COMET 3JXX)R WAGON, shirpl ________ ir FORD Oaalar 1743 MERCURY COMET 4-DOOR, radio and hotter, lutomotlc, don't miss at SlOO down, S43 par month Ookland Chrysler-Plymouth 1743 RED AND WHITE MERCURY S-55 with bucket seels. Can be seen at Casoro's Strvice. 1715 Pon •lac Trail and Decksr Rd. Wallad Laka Arta. 343-4107, or 424- 7351. 1963 MERCURY Mooatery custom 2-door hardtop SPARTAN ONLY SPECIALS 1744 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN, "353" ENGINE* CRUIS-0-MATIC, POWER. SOFT WHITE WITH RED INTERIOR. FULL PRICE S1577. 155 OAKLAND AVE. CA MILE NORTH OF CASS AVE.) FE S-452S.___________________ 1744 T-BIRD LANDAU FULL POW- brakos, air condition, factory exec. Official c , FM r JEROME ^ORD Rochester FORD Peeler. OL I-97II. __________ FORD GALAXIE DELUXE accessorlet, oulomelic V-A 1743 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE door hordlop, double power. $1,475 full price, S5 down. CREDIT NO PROBLEM. WE FINANCE BANK NOCIMSIer FQPD Dealer. OL 1-7711. v w t rmy-s. rt54 OLDS 4 -DOOR HARDTOP, TTJCKY AUTO power steering, euto. 1150, cell; •L-'Ai 1 444-3375. _________________‘ 1740 W. Wld# Track 1750 OLDS ^DOOR HARDTOP, 177. : FE 4-I004 or FE 3-7S54 „.... ---- -------------- BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE, I7S7 OLDS 4-DOOR HARDTOP, or 434-1587. er equipment, automatic trens-mltsion. radios, all hivt Iwilar whitewall tires, prietd as low i 11,287 with S47 or old cor dow and monthly payments of 147.00. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE._ BIRMINGHAM____Ml 4-7508 1745 FORD LTD, 4-DOOR, FULL powtr and alr-condltlonlng, 13,350, 2134 Kraiaga Cl., Union Lake. 343-7315.________ LLOYD'S SALE Continues 1965 FORD "GT" 5, bucket seels, rtdlik iltewalls. $1395 Lloyd MOTORS 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 1745 FALCON SPRINt (±OUP£ 217 tngint, 4-apaad transmlnlon, radio, buckote, 4,000 mllet. Ntw can-dmoni savel JEROME FORD, Rechestor FORD Doolor, OL 1-771). 1745 T-BIRD, 3,000 ACTUAL MILES, 4-2735. CHEVY-FORO-PLYAAOUTH. CRlOlt problams? — Will finenct. TIC Carp. Mr. Snow, Ml 4-5500, MUST DISPOSE OF 1745 AAUSTANG — Tionay down, ptVmtnli of on"--13 weakly. Call Mr. Murphy 1101. McAulllfa.____________ 1743 FORD GALAXIE 3 tomatlc, A-l, pricad l 3-7744.___________________ POWER EQUIP- TIRE5, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Astuma Weekly payments of 88.73. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks St HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. FALCON DELUXE, 4-DOOR, BIG SURPRISE WAIT AND SEE Pontiac Retail Store PATTERSON ROCHESTER Chrysler-Plymouth Imperial-Valiant 1001 N. Main_____OL 1-0S50 PONTIAC-RAM^R-BUICK creo-It problamt? - Will llnanca. TIC Corp. Mr. Snow, Ml 4-5500. 1744 CHRYSLER "304," 3-DOOR hardtop, sharp blacK llnith, while buck^^s, 8100 down, 173.14 par Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth 724 Oakland Ave.__332-7150 SPARTAN ONLY SPECIALS 1741 LANLER SEDAN WITH SLANT : SIX STANDARD TRANSMISSION. GLOWING RED AND WHITE FINISH AND FULL PRICE SS77. tSS OAKLAND AVE. ('(> MILE NORTH OF CASS AVE.) FE 0-4521. 15 DEMOS 1962 FORD Galaxie "500" XL 2-door hardtop, healer, radio, whilewells, VS autometic transmission, color — Turquoise, only - SPARTAN ONLY SPECIALS 1743 FAIRLANE 500 SEDAN WITH VI, AUTO.. DEEP TREAD WHITEWALLS AND ARCTIC WHITE FISHISH. FULL.,PRICE 1077. 155 OAKLAND AVE. (V< MILE ............- I FE 0-4520. 1743 THUNDERBIRD hardtop, one owner, sharp, lul price, tl.575. Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth 724 Oakland Ave. ______332,7)88 1963 FALCON Stellon wagon, slick tronsmlsilon, radio, hooter. Full price 8477. Thenskgiving special: No money INTERNATIONAL quick lale. CALL Al New Ua#6 Cm SHARP 174# LEAUNS, 12X100 MILES. Me power, extras, 4200 mllos, Str eio. FE 4d413 or 4824IS4. 1965 PONTIAI Phis 3 oonvorttbis, dtti 1961 TEMPEST No Money Down , We Finance FULL PRICE $297 Tel-A-Huron AUTO SALES 60 S. Telegraph FE 8-9661 174. STARCHIEF, HARDTOP, NO rust, sowsr, low mlleigo. OR S4)725. I74S LkAAANS HARDTOP, DOUBLE ------ -------- d transmission, extra c 1962 PONTIACS HAROLD TURNER BIRMINGHAM 1743 PONTIAC LoMANS, ^D O 0 hardtoo, 4-speed, radio and haatc.. whllewallt, reel clean, 8075. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1104 S. Woodward Ave., Birmingham Ml 4-2735.________________________ 1742 PONTIAC 4-DOOR CATALINA, power steering end brakes, sharp. •’,375. WE TRADE-BANK RATES MAZUREK MOTOR SALES Woodwsrd at S. Blvd. FE 47507 New end Uie6 Cm_______10* $3195 Homer Hight PONTIAOemKlcHBVROLET •rtftop w m«tk 1965 PONTIAC HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM ____Ml 4-7500 1960 Rambler 2-door, stick transmission, radio, hoatar, oxcollent aepnomy. Holl-doy special: S3 down and weekly payments of S3. Wo hondlo and arrangt oil tinincing. Co" Mr. Don at: FE 8-4071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM Just oast of Osklond 1741 RAMBLER ^D room now, laclory worrtniy. $2995 HASKINS CHEVY MA 5-2404 1757 PLYMOUTH '*17 ClMvroItt, Sdr. hardtop ... $145 Plenty of others. 4 ---- -. ----- ..eJrucks ECONOMY CARS 2335 DIXIE HWY 1757 PLYMOUTH, CLEAN, 877 ' NORTHWOOD Auto Selot FE S7237 CA MILE NORTI AVE.) FE S-452S. 1744 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE VIS-■ ■— ------------------ otors, 2230 FE 07237, 1757 PLYMOUTH, GOOD RUNNING condlllon. 8150. 434-2744. ______________^ "ExceL- „„ condition. FE 5-2t24. 1744 PONTIAC 2-OOOR CATALINA, Estate Storage 107 S. Eos) I like now, full prko 11,073. JE-ROME-FERGUSON, FORD, Roch-ostor FORD Potior, OL 1-0711. 1744 PLYAAOUTH SPORTS fORY ^ LLOYD'S SALE Continues 1963 LINCOLN ull power. Burgundy. $100 DOWN Lloyd MOTORS 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 1757 MERCURY. GOOD SHAPE. Bring $75 and plates. OR 4-3777. choice, $1,075. Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth 724 Ookland Ave._________33MIS0 S175, FE 4-1037 after 5. I COMET DELUXE 2-DOOR, RA-dlo end hooter, autometic. s —‘ mile maker, full price, 8475. Ookland Chrysler-Plymo 724 Oeklond Ave.__________H 1957 PONTIAC rdlop, Sterchlef. _______ ------ilsslon, excellent condition, no rust. See this one. Only S5 down and weakly poymonte of S5. Wt handle end arrange r" Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM Jut) lest of Oeklend I7S7 PONTIAC. 6000 TBANSRbA-totlen car, 8188, MY 3-1541._ 1743 COMET SEDAN WITH AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, ----- - H E A T K ‘ TIRES, MONEY ............ Weekly pmments of 17.75. call CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parke at HAROLD TURN-FORD, Ml 4-7588. AT WIDE TRACK DIAL; FE 3-7954 for Immediate Delivery Cnnitol AlltO Cv^ry one priced LOW. LOW, LOW V-zV-ipi Hunter Dodge, 5. Hunter Blvd, qia \ai MnUTTAIM Blrmlnghem. near 15 MHe Rd. Ml OlZ W. MUNILALM 7-Wii. Just Best ot Oaklend MMMMMSMf IF YOU ARE HAVING TROUBLE GETTING YOUR CREDIT RE-ESTABLISHED - NOW YOU CAN TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE IT'S NEW EEE(d IPME MEMm® ALL YOU NEED IS A STEADY JOB. $5.00 DOWN PAYMENT AND A DESIRE TO HELP YOURSELF WAIT AND SEE CALL MR. WHITE: FE 8-4088 Pontiac Retail Store EM® MW® mm AT WIDE TRACK DIAL. FE 3-7954 JNCOHrOflAIEO see Os FIRSt BOB BORST LINCOLNWMiRCUft' 10 S. Woodward Sin MI 64538 1742 MERCURY COLONY PARK 7 PASSENOiR STATION WAGON, POWER EOUIPT, AUTOMATIC, RADIO AND HEATER, WHITE-WALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, AS-UME WEEKLY PAYMENTS OF S7.8S. CALL CREDIT MGR., Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7180. 1965 MUSTANGS 5 to Choose From HARDTOPS - CONVERTIBLES Soma havt power and As Low as $59 Down As Low as $59 Mo. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. WILL ACCEPT GUNS, BOATS, MOTORS Sunshine from a Beanafv Echo tram a sleembaat whlslla Exhaust lumss from an aulbeerd malor or, tlmAI anything movabla AS PART DOWN • PAYMENT ON ANY NEW OR USED CARI BILL SPENCE 1744 PONTIAC —........ 2 - ODOR HARDTOP, HY-DRAMATIC, POWER STEERING, SHINING WHITE . SS5 OAKLAND AVE. MILE NORTH OP CASS E.) FE S-452S. marine. 14,888 mllet. tr. Good condlllon. . Private v 1. S1,775. 1744 TEMPEST LeMAMS, V-l AUTO. a888. Ilka new, SI408. FE 2-225S. NEW-CAR TRADE-INS Y MORE TO CHOOSE FROM Village Rombler 47 E. Maple St Llvamol DON'S USED CARS SMALL AD-BIG LOT 58 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM 14 Impala convertible, 327, euto. 14 F-85 2-dr. Cutlets, 1743 Ford wagon, auto. I, 1741 Fontlec Mr., double power, ex- 677 S. LAPEER RD. Lake Orlen MY 2-2041 Pontiacs Pontiacs Pontiacs 1964 Hardtop $2095 1964 Hardtop $2095 1963 Bonneville Hardtop $1895 1963 Starchief Visto $1895 1963 Cotalina Hardtop $1695 1963 Venture Hardtop $1795 1963 Sedan $1495 1963 Sedan $1495 1962 Bonneville Vista $1395 1962 Catolina Hardtop $1195 1962 Catalina Convertible $1195 RUSS lOHNSON 1964 PONTIAC Coupe Sports, 2 plus 2, sutamatic. pc tistring and brakes. $1985 HASKINS CHEVY *** 174S PONTIAC CATALINA CONVIR- 1745 CATXlINA HARDTOP. VeH- 1965 PONTIAC Full pries $2,475, with S18R dl or trade. STATE WIDE AUTO OUTLET 3488 Elliabalh Ltks Read FE 8-7137 GO!! HAUPT PONTIAC 1743 PONTIAC Starehlaf Adoer au tomatlc, power tlearlng, brakat Itf dawn. 1741 CHEVY wagon, V4, avtoRMlk. power iteering, I# dawn. 1744 PONTIAC CettlliM, 3-deor Hard-powar tlaarhig, brakat, k, burgundy linlih. 177 6673 Dixie Hwy. Chrytler-Flymoulh-Vellanl Rembltr-Jtep 1743 BONNEVILLE 24oor hardte 744 CHIVY eiTcayne 3-door ttick V-l, only 177 daim. Ml BUICK LtSabre 2-daor Herd-lop, eutomatic, VI, radio, Ir---nlct carl 177 Down. STREET 5 S-2435 CLARKSTON DON'T MISS IT WAIT AND SEE Pontiac Retail Store AT WIDE TRACK DIALi FE 3-7954 TIME IS NEAR! WAIT AND SEir Pontiac Retail Store AT WIDE TRACK DIAL: FE 3-7954 wwMBM mm ONLY AUTHORIZED OLDS DEALER IN THIS AREA Year-End Clearance Sale 100% Written Guarantee Every car titled cerriei this guerentee. Take the gueetwork out of buying Used Carti Credit No Problemi 1962 PONTIAC Bonneville 4-Door Hardtop, Power Steering, Brakes, Windows. Only 31,000 Milei...................... $1495 1963 OLDS "98" 4-Door with Power. A Real Boy ot ..................................$1995 1963 OLDS "88" 4-Door, Power Steering and Brokes ...................................$1495 1964 OLDS Starfire Cdope, Full Power....... $2495 1961 OLDS F-85,4-Door, Almost Like New, Automatic, Rodio ond Heater ................. $1095 1964 OLDS F-85 Coupe, Automatic, Radio and Heater, Whitewalls, Special ot .........$1595 1965 OLDS Vista Cruiser 9-Passenger Station Wagon ....................................$2795 1963 BUICK Riviera Coupe, Full Power, Foctory Air Conditioning, Almost New ..............$ay« 1964 RAMBLER Classic "770" 4-Door Station Wagon, Automatic ond Heater, White- •wolls. Almost Like New ...................$1495 1963 BUICK Skylark Hordtop, V-8, Automatic, Power Steering and Brakes ............$149$ ORIGINATOR OF 2-YEAR WARRANTY 635 S. Woodward Ave. Birmingham 647-5111 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1965 TWENTY-THREE Television Features Thanksgiving Day Parades By United Pren Intenutloiial FRANK StNAlRA, 9:00 pjn. (4) One-man show features all of Sanatra musical DICK VAN DYKE, 9:30 p.m. (2) In flashback to his Army days, Rob recalis how he toor WJa."SSwi. llilS-WCAR, Mtdlcal Joumat iViSiw5r*muSIc "T d ♦■.OWW-tF. voig.x.Aer N WCAR, Ntwt, OalMlI CKLW, Nawt, Slid OavlM weoH^jww Amons SlIS-WJR, MUMC Hall WHPI, Nam. Almanac WJR, Nawt, Minic Hall StSS-W^, Nam. S. Om wjBK. Nawi. Bdtt. ttOO-WJR. Ham Open Ha WCAR. Jack tandari tiSS-CKLW, Nam, Jaa ' llita-WJR, Paalball Ran Para lliM-WJR, Dalrall Liana, Baltlmara Callt Paalball WWJ, Nam Muak WXYZ, Nawt, Made Iiia-CKLW, Tiawi, 0i Shalar WHPI, Sncoia WWJ, Nawt, Mutle IjWj^PON, Ntwi Ran MM, Nm, Sacmlla diW-WPON, Mutual r GENIAL INSULTS Follower Winglike part Static no delivery (ab.) Request payment Emmet On the ocean Stripling Do wrong Feminine appellation Granted Minwal rock Heavy rod Cut of meat Force Upper limb Clangor Definite article Hawaiian wreath Flame Roman bronze Feminine name Birds of prey Face an embankment (en-gin.) Legal right Father Membranous pouch DOWN Redskin Demented Pharmacy wares Soiled Shoemaker’s tool Lukewarmly Roman dictator Italian painter’s first name Mineral siting Most cuts of veal have tooi little fat for satisfactory broil-1 ing. Large cuts usually are best when roasted slowly, according to the Agriculture Department. Thin cuts should be pan fried or braised. 10 Ceremonial code 11 Vegetable 13 Minister to 16 Yards (ab.) 22 Spread for drying, as hay 24 Blackened 25 Air (comb, form) 28 Unit of reluctance 30 Reverend (ab.) 31 Professional pursuit 32 Decked with fur of a sort 34 “----and chain” 36 Mountain in Crete 38 Sloping type 39 “Scandal — ” 42 Approaches , 44 Worm 46 Engendered 47 Permit 50 Eggs 52 Tibetan gazelle Answer to Previous Puzzle Johnson Hails Fitness Report Cites Laudable Gains in Promoting Goals JOHNSON CITY, Tex. (UPI) —President Johnson hailed a national physical fitness report yesterday and said it show “Our abundance is not producing apathy, and our leisure has not led to lethargy.” The Chief Executive made public a report from the President’s Council on Physical Fitness which said “remarkable progress” had been achieved in promoting its goals. Baseball star Stan Musial, consultant to the Presiden|.^on physical fitness, reported oat tests administered to thousands of school children last year showed that today’s “average” boy or girl is as strong and skilled as the “superior” youngster of only five years ago. “The struggles to preserve freedom and the advance human hopes and aspirations will not he won by nations whose citizens let themselves grow soft and weak,” Johnson said in his statement. “More and more,” he added, “we are coming to recognize that physical fitness in the young is the best insurance against infirmity and enforced idleness in old age.” REPORT Musial reported: • 21 states have strengthened their school physical education requirements. • 44 per cent of the ..schools have increased the tiihe devoted to vigorous games and exercise. ★ ★ ★ • The number of health and (diysical education specialists employed by schools has increased 26.3 per cent. • 36 states’ local schools have established adult fitness programs. • Private business has stepped up spending for employee recreation programs to more than $1 billion a year. Says Her Museum Statue Form of Mistaken Identity By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — Bette Davis has had her lawyer serve angry notice on the new Museum of Famous People that it’s got to remove a plastic statue of her “because it doesn’t resemble me or anybody I know” — or face a whopping suit for invasion of privacy. “There are statues supposed to be of Clark Gable' in miliary uniform, Helen Hayes, and me,” says Bette. ‘When they asked me to stand in front of my statue for a posed picture, I didn’t Skin Divers Get New Breathing, Apparatus BALTIMORE, Md. (AP) -Westinghouse Electric Corp. said today it is developing underwater breathing apparatus to provide new mhrtures of reusable air for skin divers. Officials at the firm’s Defense and Space Center said the air mixtures would allow skin divers to submerge to record depths. GRAND OLE OPRY Fonttac Armeiy Sat.DMwmb«r4,1965 3 ilg Shews 3-A-9 PM. FERUNlUISKY I and Hit H«sli Puppy land I 4119 Dixis Nwy., Drayton 942 N. Parry I TITS ITANDMO IIRVIOK ' 1411 0-------- NOW UHF ANTENNA Installed $29.95 CWTFT'^ *adio a • niiLl • APPLIANCR Free Planning Free Estimates BIG BEAR i CONSTRUCTION COMPANY FE 3-7833 Operator On Duty 24 Hours Daily know which one to stand in front of.” Stuart Scheftel, head of the new museum, told Atty. Harold L. Schiff he’d try to “make wif^N Statue more attractive.” Removing it will be difficult. Scheftel is trying to halt publication of photographs of the statue to appease Bette, who is a good fri^ o( his wife, actress Geraldine Fitzgerald. The statue is part of a scene supposed to represent World j War H’s Stage Door Canteen on Broadway. 'I never had anything to do with the Stage Door Canteen —but with the Hollywood Canteen,” says Bette. “That statue of Gable — well — somebody told me it was Gable. That’s how I knew.” I Mrs. Fiorello LaGuardia is reported to be fond of the statue of her late husband. Alexander Hamilton and Aaron Burr, who are also depicted, have not lodged any protests, either. ★ ★ ★ Monique Van Vooren phoned, “Don’t feel bad not being invited to the kitchen party for Princess Margaret, Earl. I’m giving a party for Brigitte Bardot abont Dec. 8, and you’re already invited. And we won’t invite Sharman Douglas.” ★ ★ ★ THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . . Football exec Joe Foss and Paul Scr^vaae showed off their physical condition at a bistro by doing push-ups. (I wanted'to try, too, but was persuaded not to) . . . Jimmy Dean TV-taped his show as Carnegie Hall, a black-tie affair with Jimmy wearing a dinner jacket—and black patent leather boots. Actor Michael Parks’ gift from producer Leonard Lightstone for his work in “The Idol” was-a motorcycle ... A Broadway personality and his vrife are battling: she was offered a TV series, he won’t let her move to Hollywood for it. . . There’ll be a line “Brigitte Bardot bikinis.” •k -k -k REMEMBERED QUOTE: “If you’re told there are two bU-lion stars in the universe, you believe it. But if a sign says 'Fresh Paint’ you make a personal investigation.”—Quote. EARL’S PEARLS: ’Things are so hectic nowadays that people don’t even repent at leisure.—Arnold Glasow. Irving Wallace, author of “Tlie Sunday Gentleman,” told Oscar Levant he considered him the wittiest man alive. “Irving,” groaned Levant, “—you call this living?” . . . Tliat’s earl. (TSu Hall lynSkalt, lac.) UNIOH TOY STORE 14 N. SAGINAW DOWNTOWN PONTIAC ^ "PIED PIPER ^ OF HAMLIN" THURSDAY, NOV. 25 WXYZ Channel 7 10 A.M. to 11:30 P.M. IMPROVE YOUR HOME g DEAL DIRECT FREE PLANS and ESTIMATES-NO CHARGE CABINETS 5-Ft. Kitchen $OC(] COMPLETE 7-Ft. Kitchen $OQC COMPLETE CXiZ INCLUDES: UoDor c CALL FEB-8173 Open Daily and Sun. CALL DAY OR NIGHT ★ ADDITIONS tAt FAMILY ROOMS ALUMINUM SIDING REC. ROOMS ROOFING-SIDING J WILL COME TO YOU WITH FREE ESTIMATE AND PUNS—NO CHARGE 15 W. UWRENq WOODFIELD CONSTRUCTION ONE CONTRACTOR FOR EVERYTHING TWENTY-FOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS, ^ WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1965 Student Loses MSU Ruling Faculty Unit Decides After 9-Hour Hearing EAST LANSING r- A faculty committee decided unanimously Tuesday that Michigan State University officials acted properly in denying slon to a former graduate student. nie Faculty Committee Student Affairs held a nine-hour hearing for the former student, Paul M. Schiff. on orders from U.S. District Court at Grand Rapids, which still has jurisdiction in the case. Scdiiff, a 23-year-old history student from New Rochelle, N.Y,, said he planned to return to coitrt to a^ for a decision on “whether exercise of First Amendment freedoms is grounds for expulsion.’’ Schiff filed suit in the court earlier this fall, contending he was denied readmission to MSU because he led a campus organization that frequently criticized the MSU administration and staged several demonstrations. COURT ACTS The court instructed Schiff and the university to try again to resolve their differences. The faculty committee said it found Schiff violated MSU regulations, “with which he was well familiar,” and had engaged in an “open, defiant and deliberate course of discrediting conduct.” The regulations prohibited door-to-door distribution of printed matter in dormitories. The publication in question was “Logos,” which was put out by the Committee for Student Rights. Schiff said he knew the Faculty Committee on Student Affairs had recommended such regulations, but he thought they had not become binding. He also denied he had acted to discredit MSU, saying his purpose was to bring credit to the university. FAMILY AFFAIR — Mrs. Ramon Borland (right) stands next to sbc of her seven children at a Seattle hospital after the sextet underwent tonsillectomies this week. Bever- ly Ramon, 4, was the only Borland child to escape the tonsil operation. Seated (from left) are Pamela, 7; Daryle, 2; Tony, 9; Thomas, 12; Irene, 5, and Linda, 16. 3rd Marine in Court-Martial PARRIS ISLAND, S.C. (UPI) —A third Marine Corps drill instructor (DI) faces court-martial today on charges of mistreating recruits at this training depot. Two other DIs have been acquitted of similar charges. ★ ★ ★ Cpl. Jerry W. Nelson, 22, of Alva, Ky., is the last of three noncommissioned officers to be tried on charges of slapping, punching and choking a group of seven recruits, all enlisted from the mill town of Great Falls, S.C. Staff Sgt. Clyde E. ComeU-son, 29, of Cocoa Beach, Fla., chief instmctor of recrait iria- by the commanding general of the Marine post. Stewart is a Ne^. All of the complaining recruits are white. RECALLS McKEON TRIAL The trials recalled the court-martial of Staff Sgt. Matthew McKeon in 1956. McKeon had marched 78 recruits into swamp at night to teach them discipline, and six of them week. Sgt RonaM A. Stewart, 24, of Parfcesbnrg, Pa., who was acquitted yesterday, and Nelson were his assistants. However, the status of Cor-nelison and Stewart *as drill instructors remains to be decided ments with a general statement of the aims of boot training. MUST BE YELLING ‘We’re not petting these boys,” he said. “We are disciplining them. We are taking a grab bag of civilians and trying to make them Marines. There has got to be a certain amount of yelling and of correcting.” drowned in Ribbon Creek. He was convicted and removed from recruit training. Strict Marine regulations prohibit touching recruits except in the line of duty, such as for strai^tening equipment. The regulations were imposed upon the traditionally harsh DIs after the court-martial of McKeon. * ★ w Capt. Leland Booth, defense counsel for Stewart and Cor-nelison, summed up his argu- N0W!’66 Cheyyll Chevrolet Ckat n Nota S3 Coupe— new from rakiek roof line to BtraMniidcet aeaU If s got all-new styling-^ If this one makes other thrift cars seem There was no letup under the hood, plain by comparison, that’s exactly either, with V8’s now available with up according to plan. Our first move was to give it a clean-carved new shape. Then new Body by Fisher interiors. And then a flock of new standard aafetv features, like padded it pand and back-up lights. to 350 hp. As you can see, the day of the nlain-i Jane thrift car is over. And the aay of, the thrift car you can be proud of is now in full swing at your dealer’s. See the new '66 Chevrolet, Chevelle, Chevy n, Corvair and Corvette at your dealer’s U.S. Said Eying China Policy UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) - U. S. officials are reliably reported to be taking a careful lode at the possibility of switching to a “two-Chim policy because of the growing movement to seat Red Oiina to the United Nations. One authoritative U. S. source has suggested that an alternative will have to be found by next fall to the 16-year-old policy of trying to keep the door shut to Peking. ’This source added that the seating of both Red China and the Nationalists might be the only practical course for the United States. It is generally conceded at the United Nations that the Chinese Communists have been barred for the last time. The General Assembly voted 47-47 on the question last week and the pro-Peking trend is expected to continue. It is also doubtful if the United States will be able to win enough support next year to require that Red China’s supporters muster a two-thirds majority to get Peking admitted. WHAT TO DO The question now is no longer how to keep the Peking government out, diplomats say, but what to do abwt the Nationalist government which rules 12 million people on Formosa. Some delegates have been trying to launch a two-Chinas movement for several years but without success. The idea is that the Peking government, representing huge mainland would be given the’seat now held by the Nationalists and that Formosa would be admitted as a new member. The main (tostacles so far have been the substantial (^>po-sition to seating Peking and the rejection of the two-Chinas concept by both Peking and Taipei. Peking claims Formosa is part ol China and cannot be considered a separate country. The U. S. has only 13 major passenger ships in world service at the present time.__________ Big shots go for Carstairs. The real test of whiskey is to drink it neat. No ke. No water. No soda. No nothing. If it isn’t gentle, agreeable, pleasant to taste, it isn’t great whiskey. If it isn’t, it certainly isn’t Carstairs. S3.9S $2.52 SPARTAN a wtaiJiM SAUl ® -- fMMOUSMMKCK'S Him reiueiTr HruK not just ®*“^^^o^*'snow*t»b Smo CHECK THESE AMAZING SAVINGS!! 2 ” ir 14 ratals TriMTyp* alMk IIMW 7ltal4 1 sitaia 1 77Sil4 T SHil4 T PRICES PLUS TAX. OTHER SIZES AND TYPES AT SIMILAR SAVINGS. OUAMIITEED FOR 18 MONTHS Titwt or* guaranteed against any and all rood hoxords for the number •f menthe indicated, prorated at sal# price. Every tirg ie guaranteed against failures and defects in workmanship and malarial. THE PONTIAC PRE m VOL. 123 \ NO. 249 ★ ★ ^ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1965—24 PAGES Ethe^ Fixed as Cause Quii 2 Dodors in Hospital Deaths Report Gripes Caused Bloody Riot at Prison 3 Guards Are Killed In Illinois Outbreak- Investigation Begun CHESTER, HI. m — Minor complains about prison conditions apparently caused the bloody four-hour convict riot at Menard State Prison last night in which three guards were killed and six others injured. Illinois Public Safety Director Ross Randolph, a former Menard warden who went to the prison to talk convicts into releasing three guard hostages and surrendering, started an investigation into the cause of the riot. He said four “madmen” convicts had instigated the uprising, making knives out of steel bars and throwing a fire bomb into a guard cage in the dining hall at dinner. .They said they wanted better food, more radios and morej recreation. ★ ★ ★ The four convicts were talked into a submissim by Randolph and Menard Warden Max Frye as 300 guards and state troopers surrounded the prison kitchen in which the rioters had barricaded themselves with three guard hostages. RELEASED HOSTAGE The ringleaders permitted a doctor to give one guard, Tom Gross, 52, of Chester, HI., a blood transfusion through prison bars. Then they released Gross when his condition became obviously serious. Gross had been stabb^. LET’S NOT LOSE OUR HEADS!’ -These hen turkeys hadn’t been invited out for Thanksgiving dinner yet when this picture was taken. They should have buried the hat- chet, however, when they had the i They’ll be guests of honor tomorrow^ they’ll be too stuffed to enjoy themselVj (See story. Page 2). LOS ANGELES (AP) » Saturated Southern California, plagued by flash floods in which at least 12 persons have died, braced today for a fresh storhi expected to bring heavy downpours. Rescue workers and cleanup crews feared new mud slides and torrents of water tonight and hoped for a respite tomorrow, when only light rains were predicted. Press to Sport Two Specials Two big sports specials are coming your way this holiday weekend. Tomorrow, the annual high school baiketbnii, swimming and wrestling section, filled with forecasts, pictures and an inside look of the 1965-M winter sports teams will appear In liie Press. Saturday, the Press’ annual All-Oakland County Football Teams, will be featured in the Football Green. In Today's Press K44 Plan City orders contracts signed — PAGE IS. '2 Chinas' U. S. is reportedly considering policy change — PAGE 24. Latin Talks Rusk says broad consensus has emerged on inter-American future — PAGE 9. Area News ........... 4 Astrology II Bridge ..............II Crossword Puzzle.....23 Comics ..............II Editorials ...........I Markets 17 Obituaries II Sports 13-11 liieaters ............3 TV k Radio Programs 23 Wnsoo, Earl .........23 Women’s Pages....11-11 Califomia Due a New Storm At Least 12 Dead in Floods, Mud Slides In the heaviest November rains ever recorded in Southern California, flash floods in desert areas raked cars off highways and Into washes and residents of hillside areas fought oozing mud as it inundated homes and yards. The desert resort of Pain Springs, a winter mecca for smog-tired Los Angeles residents, was virtually isolated and cut in half by a flood that rushed down from the San Jacinto Mountains. w ★ ★ Witnesses said three persons were carried away in their cars and a man wading out to help utgs swept away in the torrent. Only one body was found; the presumably drowned, authorities said. Floods hit other areas in San Bernardino County between Los Angeles and San Bernardino, 60 miles east. At rocky Cucamonga, Wash, a roaring flash flood caught a dozen cars and swept them half a block, tumbling over and over, some with their lights still burning. Police Half Holdup at Pontiac Drugstore Three Pontiac policemen last night broke up a holdup in progress at an east side drugstone, apprehending two men, one of whom carried a 410-gauge shotgun. Charged with armed robbery are Floyd Newburn, 24, of 256 Rockwell and Homer Gilder, 25, of 114 Wall. They are held at»" Oakland County Jail, awaiting arraignment today. Yank Losses in Viet War Hit New High 240 Die in. Action Last Week; Enemy Dead Listed at 2,262 SAIGON, South Viet Nam (J’l — The battle of the la Drang Valley pushed American casualties in Viet Nam last week to 240 killed in action, the U.S. military announced today. It was nearly three times the highest total announced for any previous week. The U. S. Command also reported 470 Americans were wounded during the week ending at midnight Nov. 20 and C were missing in action. A record number of Com-punist casualties also was re-- 2,212 dead and 131 d. South Vietnamese reported 357 dead and The two had taken $712 from a cash register, a clerk and a DEAD AT 89 — Belgium’s Dowager Queen Elisabeth, 89, a heroine in two world wars and one of Europe’s leading patronesses of the arts, died last night in Brussels of a heart attack. Grandmother of the reigning monarch, the queen suffered an earlier attack Nov. 4. customer at the Schlict Pharmacy at 660 Auburn, moments before patrolmen Stanley D. Helgemo, Oscar K. Kissinger and Raymond V. Solwold burst into the store about 10 p.m., police said. Kissinger said a suspicious car report on Russell led the patrolmen to the drug store. In the store at the time were Leonard H Schlict of 3009 Old Orchard, the owner; Schlict’ wife; clerks Glenn George, 17, of 106 Rosetta, and Linda Teas-dalc, 19, 296 Cherrylawn, Pon-tiac..Township; and an unidentified youngster. Mrs. Schlict told police she was on the phone when the bandits entered. RIPPED CORD Newburn, pointing the s h o t-gun, ripped the phone cord from the wall and said she "might get hurt,” according to Mrs. Schlict. Kissinger entered the front door and met Gilder. Solwold then came in and spotted Newburn at the rear. New-buiT. turned and ran, stumbling, according to Solwold, before disappearing into a basement stairway. Solwold got an automatic rifle from the patrol car and returned to the store while Kissin^]held a revolver on Gilder. Two doctors were being questioned today by prosecutor’s office to determine how fatal dos-of ether rather than another anesthetic were injected into three surgery patients at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospial. It was confirmed yesterday by Oakland County Prosecutor S. Jerome Bronson that ether was the cause of death for two chiT-dren and a mother of two. Circumstances surrounding the tragic mix-up, however, still remain a mystery. The meeting with the two doctors, who were not identified by authorities, was called this morning in an effort to find out who was responsible. The victims were Kimberly ble the j s week. The repoh today brought the total of U. S. casualties reported in nearly fiveyears of fighting in Viet Nam to a^ut 1,300 dead and about 6,000 * Half the dead and^^ third of the wounded were cuV, down in the past three months a^ U. S. combat troops, who riving in Viet Nam in Fel took a bigger and bigger the war. Before February, the American role in Viet Nam was an advisory one, coupled with providing helicopter and other air support for South Vietnamese units. The highest previous total of American casualties was reported for the week ending 13. It was 86 killed and 230 wounded. The week before the total was 70 killed hnd 237 wounded. The average for the Korean war was about 210 American battle dead per week, although at times the number was far higher. Pontiac Area Thanksgiving Will Be Chilly ’Thanksgiving Day will arrive with partly sunny skies and little change in temperature, the high 37 to 42. There’s a chance of a few occasional showers with lows 35 to 40 tonight. ’The forecast for Friday is more of the same — par ' cloudy and continued cold. The low reading in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. was 29. The 1 p.m. recording was 45. Ann Bruneel. 8. 2599 lvanhoe,| The three victims died within West Bloomfield Township; Wil-i24 hours of each other after be-liam M. Ketchum. 12 . 250 W.i!"8 ^^me anesthesia Webster, FerndalC; and Mrs.“P«^aUons. Gerald Covington, 24, of 436 FIVE GOT INJECTIONS Rowland. Bronson said that five pa- TIME OF DEATHS ilients received injections from The girl died Thursday andi**^® *^“*^*® containing the ether, the other two Friday. ’ ‘li® “rst suffering no serious ef-, fed, and that there was enough The prosecutor’s office, how- lj„ the flask to be given to at ever, did not learn of the j i^ast seven persons, deaths until Monday afternoon when a newspaper reporter j ’•’''® s®®“™* P®‘'®"‘ '»*'® '■®-telephoned asking for informa- ®®'''®‘> ‘he injection has been I listed in serious condition but I today was reported to be sat-Harry H. Whitlow, hospital jsfactory. administrator, and David Pence, , j • , j the hospital’s attorney, denied’ ^ m a sealed they tried to conceal the myste- ‘’°“>®, ® rious nature of the deaths. l‘»’® drug Suntal and distilled water, according to investiga- tors. The drug, found to be safe by Food and Drug Administration officials, is an anesthetic. LABELED WATER’ Pontiac police said the bottle from which the lethel dose was taken was labeled “water.” They said that someone apparently added ether to a bottle of distilled water and left it with other bottles of water to be used for mixing anesthetics. The manufacturer of the Suri-tal, Parke-Davis'& Co., said the drug would not mix with ether, and thus some of the solution in the bottle must have been water. ★ ★ ★ For this reason, the first patients to be injected with the solution would have received little ether, but as the level dropped, each succeeding patient would have received more. MISSED INJECTION Another patient reportedly missed receiving an injection from the bottle when a doctor about to proceed with an operation asked for a new mixture, according to Bronson. Death certificates filed with the city of Pontiac made no mention of the anestetic, but County Health Director Bernard Berman explained that it “was because we didn’t know then what caused the deaths.” A Food and Drug Administration investigator who attended an autopsy on one of the victims said, “It (ether) was so present you could smell it.” Ponlltc Pr««i Photo EVIDENCE — ^ther rather than another mixed anesthetic was found in thikbottle during the investigation into the deaths of three patiew at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital. Investigators say the injection of ether is to blame for the deaths. Set Off Vast Changes Ether Was 1 si AnesWic Distinguished by its powerful characteristic odor, ether could outrank penicillin in the history of medicine. The colorless, volatile, highly inflammable liquid can be credited with tak-‘ ing much of the pain out of medical treatment. Top Auditor Replies to Brorison Oakland County’s department heads should not expect to conduct a Utopian operation on limited tax dollars, Daniel T. Murphy, chairman of the County Board 6f’Auditors, said today.' Replying to a recent Pontiac Press story In which County Prosecutor S. Jerome Bronson detailed budget problems of his office, Murphy said that all 37 county departments are asking for more flnancial help and all could use more operating funds. “The responilbility of my office is to give adequate service to cmmty residents as ec»> phyiaM. Murphy questioned several ■V ^ points made by Bronson who had sought 850,000 in the 1966 budget to hire eight more people but was allowed just one new employe, a stenographer, in the new budget. ♦ ★ # “At the conclusion of budget hearings in committee, the pros-iecutor was offered a new assistant prosecutor but, instead, chose to have a stenographer,” Murphy said. ^ ‘OUTSTANDING OFnCE’ “From the first day he took office, he has requested more staff. His predecessor ran an outstanding offlee and it doesn’t seem to follow that from December 1964 until January 1965 crime or population rose to the extent that more staff was needed.” Murphy-'said he agreed that it was noLtfae responsibility of the prosecutor to search for operating funds. “But it is his responsibility to administer his department economically and make use of the available talent for the benefit of the taxpayer.” * -k -k Referring to Bronson’s suggestion that the county borrow for capital improvements rather than paying cash, Murphy said that whether borrowing is the best method is a debatable Is-ue. “But I challenge the prosecu- tor to show me where the county has used operating revenues for building. “The proposed new courthouse wing does not contemplate the use of operating revenues. “Present laws permit the use of one tenth of a mill per year (about $250,000) for building and maintenance purposes and full building construction. The county has never used this law to the full extent. No operating tax money has been projected for construction use since I took office in January 1964.” Mufph^ said also that he chal (Continued on Page 3, Col. 1) In addition, as the first common anesthetic, ether opened vast new areas of treatment. Notably, it made surgery possible in cases where doctors previously could not operate for the lack of an anesthetic. The use of ether as an anesthetic predates the Civil War, although it was discovered in Europe in the 13th century. * * * A dentist and an M.D. both claim credit for first using the hot, sweetish4asting drug as an anesthetic. The years 1841-are the earliest dates for such use here. COMMON USE However, by the time of the Civil War in the early 1880’s, ether was in common use. Ether is still used today, although other drugs are more common. It frequently is ad- Formed by the action of sulphuric acid on alcohol, ether, until the later discovery of vaporizers, was used by the so-called open “drop” technique, •e ★ ♦ This merely consisted of letting a few drops fail on a gauze covering the patient’s nose and mouth. Shipped in copper-lined cans, ether decomposes—turning yellow — upon contact with air or light. Ingested, limited amounts of ether have the same effect on the body as alcohol, noted for its anesthetic qualities. Thus, in the 19th century ether parties were held in Europe. These went out of fashion and the ether addict is rare today. Ether has three self-lii factors that have seen other drugs replace its role in medicine. Essentially, there is a prolonged recovery period from heavy doses, ether tends to make patients ill for awhile and it is highly flammable. Roche to Talk at Elks Lodge Dec. 2 Lunch General Motors President James M. Roche will speak at a noon luncheon Dec. 2 at the Elks Lodge of Pontiac, 114 Orchard Lake, it was announced today. In charge of arrangements are Carleton C. Patterson Jr. a local insurance man with offices at 711 Community National Bank Building and Fred J. Poole of Poole Lumber Co., 151 Oakland. Tickets are $2 each. A limited number went on sale today at Dickinson’s Downtown Store, 31 N. Saginaw; Osman’s Town & Country Store at the Tel-Huron Shopping Center; Penney’s at Miracle Mile; and Hughes-Hatcher-Suffrin at the Pontiac Mall. This will be one of Roche’s rare public appearances since becoming president of GM last June. Service clubs wishing to attend may obtain tickets by contacting either Patterson or Poole. A THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 24, 1965 reat Society Hits at Private Programs LOS ANGELES (AP)-Gov. George Romney said Tuesday night that the Great Society government is intruding on independent, voluntary programs which are better than ment programs. In ranarks at a testimonial dinner for Dr. Gaylord Parkinson, Romney charged that “the rec^ of big government is a record of failure." * * * This, he said, gives the Republican Party the chance to offer what he called a superior program emphasizing independent, voluntary cooperative action—not government action. He said the Great Society is “out roaming the countryside looking for ways to expand its activities. It’s moving in and taking over sound voluntary programs, like the community school program and the Head Start program of the Mott Foundation in Flint, Mich.” MEETS HUMAN NEEDS But, said the Michigan gov- ernor, independent programs ‘can meet many huidan needs better than government can.” Examples of big government failure, he said, are urban renewal and federal farm pw-grams. w ★ * The urban renewal program ‘hurt the very people it was supposed to help,” Romney said. “Slums were tom down, but the low-income families who were thrown out had no better place to go.” He said farm price subsidies 'are subsidies for the rich. Eighty per cent of federal price support goes to farmers who earn more than $9,500 a year." PERMITS DIVERSITY Romney said the independent sector “permits diversity and flexibility in problem solving. ★ ★ ★ “Governmental programs, particularly at the federal level, are notoriously rigid and impersonal,” he added. The independent sector has ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ And War Declaration Romney Eyes U.S. Viet Role more freedom for experimentation, Ronmey said. ★ * ★ 'It may not be as tidy as federal program neatly wrapped up in red tape, but it gets results,” the governor said. Romney said the independent sector is more effective in the long run in solving human problems because “voluntary action requires the personal involvement which is essential if we really want to help others.... HANDOUTS DEGRADING Programs in the independent sector develop personal capacity and character,” he added. “Those who jun in voluntary efforts to help the needy become better pec^le by so doing. Handouts, although sonietimes necessary and always well-intentioned, are degrading to the human spirit. “One of our greatest threats comes from those who have a fervent but false desire to help the unfortunate by making them dependent on government. The next easy step is their enslavement.” DETROIT (AP) - Michigan Gov. George Romney said Tuesday the United Stotes should not assume an “offensive role” in Viet Nam “without complying with our constitutional procedure.” Rmnney implied in a pre-ceeding paragraph in a letter to president and editor John S. Knight of the Detroit Free Press that by this he meant a declaration of war by Congress. Romney, recently returned fnxn South Viet Nam, also said the American people should have “more information and more truth” about Viet Nam. Romney referred in the letter to a conversation he said be had with Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge In Saigon. DECLARATHM4 OF WAR? “As I left Saigon,” Romney wrote, “I fold Ambassador Lodge that it was my view that any future’change in the character of our present defensive military effort supporting the South Vietnamese sluiuld occur only if there is a congresskmal declaration of war as required by the Constitution. “So far we have moved from an advisory role to a special forces role, to a military-target-only air bombing role, to a land support role-but we should not assume an offensive role with- out complying with our constitution procedure.” ★ ★ w Romney wrote Knight in respimse to edihuial comments by the Free Press president and editor over Romney’s speech on Viet Nam upon his return home. He and nine other goveraoTB made the Viet Nam visit. The letter was published in the Wednesday editions of the Free Press, a morning newspaper. SUPPORTS PRESENT POUCY Michigan’s Republican chief executive, considered a possibility for the GOP presidential nondnadoB in Ifitt, reiterated his support of present U. S. policy in Viet Nam as a protection against “Conununist At the same time he said 'there is need for more information and imkre truth about Viet Nam.” WWW “Past reports,” Romney said, "have been overly optimistic; vital information has been withheld, and actions have been taken without adequate previous congressional consideration and public dialogue. This is'one reason Americans are not as well informed as they should be.” The Weather Fall U.S. Weather Borean Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Partly dondy and a little wanner today, highs 43 to H. Goody and not so cold tonight with occasional rain. Lows 3$ to M. Cloudy and colder with rain oocationally mixed with snow in the northern portions Tbarsday. Highs 37 to 43. Variable winds at I to 13 miles this morning becoming southeast 3 to 15 miles this afternoon and increasing to II to 39 miles tonight. Outlook for Friday: Partly cloudy and cold. MMSt twn^ituri pracadinp S SJii.; t s' •Jn.: Wind Vtlocity * m.p.h. dlon: Vari«bl« m MU WMnuMy •• S:SS ojn. m rlM* Thvriday •) 40 n jKkMnvIlIc ( 38 2f Kanut City i “ 27 Lot Angalat i Goodfellows to Sell Papers on Saturday The Pontiac Metropolitan Gub has scheduled its 1965 Goodfel-low newspaper sale earlier than in previous years Robert Koch, Pontiac Hreman heading the sale, said police, fire and postal employes will take to the streets with special editions of The Pontiac Press Saturday. “That’s supposed to be the biggest Saturday for merchants between Thanksgiving and Christmas,” Koch said, “We’re hoping for a $3,000 sale.” Proceeds from the drive are directed through the Salvation Army to provide Christmas food baskets and fill other welfare 42|Hou8Mon 34 22 AlbuqiMrqM 70 4 TV Debut Set for Lady Bird Thanksgiving WASHINGTON (UPI) - Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson, following in the footsteps of her predecessor, Mrs. John F. Kennedy, makes her debut as a television star tomorrow on a special hour-long color program. Mrs. Kennedy’s program was a guided tour of the redecorated White House; Mrs. Johnson’s will be a tour of the nation’s capital “on behalf of a more beautiful America.” The first lady’s Thanksgiving Day program, filmed this snmmer, will be shown by the American Broadcasting Co. at 10 p.m. EST. Historic sites to be covered by the program include an early morning visit to Mt. Vernon, George Washington’s home on the Potomac, 12 ‘miles southeast of Washington, a landmark Mrs. Johnson visited many times as a congressional wife directing constituents’ tours of the capital. WWW Also tVmed was a stop at the Lincoln Memorial in early evening, the Capitol at the height of the summer tourist season, the Jefferson Memorial, and the south lawn of the White House, more formally known as “the President’s park.” I PIttiburgh 42 35 .» .J St. Loult 47 44 42 32 Salt L*kt C. 41 50 44 37 $, Funclics “ ■■ 44 24 $. S. Marlt 44 30 S«iltl« ' \ AP PMtMn NATIONAL WEATHER — Rain and shoWers are ex-puctod Id the northeast quarter of the nation tonight and food) the Pacific Const into the Rockies. Snow is predicted in the Lakes area and upper Mississippi Valley. It will be colder In the north central area and warmer in the Gulf states. Snake Says I No Soap! ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) -Atlanta police are seeking a 6t4 foot python. Detective L.C. (Chatham said the owner, Lena Dalon, told him Tuesday the brown and cream python was left in a bathtub__ the door to the bathroom was losed. A short time later, she said, the snake disappeareid. 2 Quakei Jolt Alaska ANCHORAGE, Alaska W) -Little or no damage was reported from two earthquakes which shook parts of Alaska last night. STUB 5 PAGE 2 - RATES ARE PETITION PLEA — At yesterday’s mating of Oakland University’s “Committee for 685,” Mrs. Alfred G. Wilson presented a duplicate copy of petitions signed by 3,122 individuals to Sen. Carl W, O’Brien, D-Pon- tiac. The petitions seek the reinstatement and passage of Senate Bill 685, a $1.2 million supplemental appropriation bill designed to ease increased enrollment costs at ei^t state colleges. BIRMINGHAM—There may not be any snow on the slopes, but area ^ers need not let any grass grow under their feet. Veteran ski enthusiasts and beginners alike can get in the mood for the upcoming season at the third annual Ski Fair Sunday at the Community House, Bates and Townsend. The show will have everything a sU boff coaM hmg for — except a snow-covered slope. There will be pictures, though, along with ideas on what to wear and what to take on ski trips. ★ w w The event is scheduled for 1:90 to 9 p. m. SOUND FILMS Continuous color sound films will be shown throughout the fair. There also will be informal modeling of sU outfits to demonstrate the latest fashions for the skier, whether he be oat in the brisk winter weather or Pilgrims Were Swingers, Not Slicks, Prof Claims It may be hard to imagine beer being served with the first Thanksgiving dinner 344 years ago, but it probably was, according to Dr. E. Brooks Smith of 507 Lakeview, Birmingham. The Pilgrim Fathers were not the sanctimonious sticks t h a children down through the ages have been led to believe, according to Smith, who is chairman of the elementary education department in the college of education at Wayne State University. Smith is the coauthor of two ’Thanksgiviog best-sellen for children which cast new light on the popular image of the English colonUto. In the books, “Pilgrim Courage” and “The Con^g of the Pilgrims,” (Little, Brown and Co.) Smith says the misconceptions of the Pilgrims as dour persons have been foisted on children by authors of textbooks and tepchers who have never questioned the “stuffed shirt” myth of the Pilgrim Fathers. w ★ ■ * The myth, he says, was concocted by some of the Pilgrims’ Victorian - minded descendants in the 19th century and perpetuated by sentimental writers and painters of the time. REAL SWINGERS Smith bases his picture of the Pilgrims as “swingers” on “History of Plimouth Plantation,” by William Bradford, flrst governor of Plymouth Chlony. The governor’s first - hand account of the harvest feast and celebrations held in the (all of 1121 was rediscovered late in the llth century. Since then scholars have been busy destroying the sentimental myth and providing the historical base for an epic story of a courageous and dedicated people building the foundations of America. ★ ♦ ★ Gov. Bradford tells of the Pil-grinu drinking beer brought over on the Mayflower and playing shooting games with the Indians. SCUTTLES THEORY Smith’s research also scuttles the accepted theory that the first colonists lived in log cabins. “In fact,” he says, “they built claplMard houses with thatched roofs similar to those they knew in En|d*ixl-“It was the Scandinavian colonists who brought the log cabin design with them.” ★ w ★ Smith and other modern writers for children are now using the original accounts to ccnivey to the younger generation the true heroic story of the sturdy folk who landed on the barren shores of Cape Cod nearly 350 years ago. BUILT REPUCAS Plimouth Plantation, Inc., Plymouth, Mass., which has built replicas of the Mayflower and the village, cooperated with Dr. Smith and his colleague. Prof. Robert Meredith, of Wheelock (Allege, Boston, in preparing the original accounts for children’s edition of “Pilgrim Courage.” ^ ‘"rhe myth built on misconceptions is being replaced by the true heroic drama,” says Dr. Smith. “The Pilgrims were a hardy lot of robust Elizabeth- “Indeed, they were devoted to their religious convictions and did spend Sunday in their fine coats and hats as day-long church services, but they enjoyed life and made the most of It in an adventure similar to that which will face the first inhabitants on the moon.’ Blast in French Mine Kills at Least 6 Men ALBI, France (DTO—An explosion 780 feet below ground today ripped through a pit in the Carmaux coal field in southern France. A union official said the blast and a resulting fire killed at least six miners and that six others were missing and feared dead. Over 300 students, faculty and guests jammed Oakland University’s Gold Room yesterday urging the rejuvenation of Senate Bill 685. Mrs. Alfred G. Wilson, first lady of Oakland University, presented duplicate copies of petitions signed by 3,122 students, faculty members and community leaders, to each of the eight Oakland Clounty legislators attending. SparkedbyOU stadents, Martin Reisig, Bruce Chadwick and Thonus Voigy, the “committee for $85” cirenlat- Pontiac Sets Mark for 10-Day Period For the fourth consecutive 10-day sales period since the introduction of the 1966 models, Pontiac Motor Division sales were at an all-time high. General Sales Manager E. R. Petten^l announced today that Pontiac and Tempest sales from Nov. 11-20 totaldi 27,866 units. WWW This surpassed by 19 per cent the previous record of 23,399 cars set>in the same period two years ago and is 37 per cent ' m sales in the same 10k ‘ Aircraft Pact Goes to Strikers pie convinced their incomes would rise than were found in a July opinion sampling. EXPECT TO BUY This apparently led more to say this (jctober they expected to buy new cars, appliances, television sets, and other household big ticket items than were found with such intentions either in July or a year ago. Increased government spending comes from many sides. The biggest boost is for the items needed to outfit and maintain a growing military force in Viet Nam. How much of a boost this will give the economy isn’t clear yet. Most observers now are guessing deffcnse spending will $5 billion more next year than this. Some congressional leaders have said it would go much higher ^han that. But government spending on civilian projects is rising, too. Many “Great Society” programs already launched by Congress call for mounting ex-as they get under idil way. $ # , \ % Treasury in recent weeks was Cl i if ’“"’P poured out in re- # OUCCffSSTUi $ jtroactive Social Security pay-iment hikes. But the Treasury ^ S have a reverse problem inY^STiny iafter the first of the year. While $ ^ « $ regular Social Security pay- Iments will stay higher, Treas-By ROGER E. SPEAR |ury .collections will rise. Both ^ [the workers and the employer (Q) “I would like to in- will be paying in more — the vest $5,000. I am single and iyear’s collection by the Treas- employed. In addition ings I have American Telephone; Commonwealth Edison; Northern Illinois Gas; American Can; Vulcan Materials; Sears, Roebuck and Intemationai Harvester. What do you think of insurance stocks at present hnd do you have any comments on my list of stocks?” B. G. ury for this pension and insurance plan is expected to rise by $5 billion next year. CUT INTO BOTH This will cut into both the spendable income of the workers and the gross earnings of the employer. What this will do to the economy is debatable. But rising incomes in general, increased industrial production and activities other similar specialized en- ^ WASHINGTON (AP) - Nego-iT"j tiators hammered out a proposed strike settlement early today to resume production of war planes at J M'/» w/* I fivkiwHh or poymcntt not desig-; McDonnell Aircraft Corp., then 5 MH 5JH T rushed back to St. Louis to seek J!** ’'*:r.tr7.'l« -Dcclored or p« ---------Jividend. o—Paid ro«>.i Ratification of the proposed "thili contract hangs on the vote of “this 17,000 striking members of the r;,T7e%7rrN«;*T.«.’''',;L?lrid AFL-cio int^^^^ iL tiS of Machinists. They meet |d...ribu.jon--d.„ - - “-[ Union Vice President ! z-saiei In full. Glover declined to predict 5!S^^7duiribil whether the strikers would ac-'“-*'^--’**- |cept the contract proposal and resume work on Gemini space !!> !!> 1!> ■ thJ*BViJfr5pt?{i capsules and Phantom jet fight- ^uritiet oMumad co^ er planes'for the war in Viet fn-PoraIgn luua zublact to In- .. Acme Auto Parts of Pontiac was recently awarded a certificate of merit for its participation in the fourth annual beautification contest^^ sponsored by the National Auto and Truck Wreckefs Association. Each year these awards are presented to member firms which have made the greatest improvement in the appearance of their place of business. again to a tax cut. Stockholders Okay Merger Nam. ; WOULD HESITATE “Even the good Lord above i would be hesitant to Rfedict Candace L. Hughes, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leslie W. Hughes, 4905 Pelletier, Orchard Lake has earned her flight hostess wings, following completion o f the Trans World Airlines’ training course at Kansas City, State Banking Aide, U. S. Agency Must Act The proposed merger of Swhat people will do,” said poll- Union Steward Thomas Stipes. Company Vice President Rob- *Yt#v. II, i»M crl Krone said he hoped for I Bateman Realty, 377 S. Tele-1,ni.032,317.71 overwhelming approval. Igraph, Pontiac, was elected member of the exchange council of the Intemationai ’Traders Club at the recently held 58th annual convention of the National Association d Real Estate But leaders of the dissident faction in St. Louis claimed the support of 12,000 of the strikers in opposing Glover’s negotiating team. However, the rebel group canceled a scheduled mass protest !«,.«/ fni.racf meeting scheduled for an hour Stocks ot Local Interest ratification vote. "We members have no alter-native but to hear the Propos-j - , ,i.r.g..i,r pr^. of wro,i. ai,” said Bruce McArthy, Fred Delano, 960 Dedham Court, Birmingham, -Jias been appointed Detroit area corres-|P