The Weather i. Wt»th*r Burcw Fortcytt Colder (Drtaiij on Pago 1) VOL. 124 THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition NO. 239 ★ ★ ★ _^NTIAC, MICHIGAN, SAWRmY^ NOVEMBER 12, 10#6 36 PA(JES UNITe&'p°ft^ES5^f§TllN^“lONAL Space Walk Follows Eclipse Photograph By HOWARD BENEDICT AP Aerospace Writer CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. — The Gemini 12 astronauts, space-age astronomers seeking secrets of the universe, photographed a solar eclipse today, then opened a hatch for Edwin Aldrin Jr. to shoot clear pictures of the stars. Aldrin thrust the upper half of his body into the vacuum of space at 11:15 a.m. for a planned 2-hour, 20-minute session outside, a prelude to a two-hour space walk tomororw. Aldrin reported at the outset that he had a slight tendency to float up when the hatch was first opened, probably because of the escape of residual air and gases in the cabin. The moon, sun and stars occupied Aldrin and James A. Lovell Jr. during their second day in orbit. They were busy shutter-ougs as they zipped around the globe at 17,500 miles an hour. They woke up early to chase the moon across South America, snapping the first photos ever taken of a solar eclipse from above the distorting influence of the earth’s atmosphere. For 10 minutes they aimed three cameras as the new moon slipped steadily across the face of the sun, briefly blotting it out in a rare total eclipse that lasted seven or eight seconds. After capturing the solar spectacular on film, the astronauts turned to the star photography. First, and before standing up, Aldrin performed calesthenics for about 30 seconds, moving his hands back and forth from his lap to his helmet at the rate of about once a second. Heart, respiration and other readings were to be compared with those obtained from similar exercise on the ground. A major goal of the Gemini 12 flight—and Aldrin’s three excursions outside—is to learn how effectively man can work in space a problem that has buffaloed scientists. Alaska Vote in Doubt for Governor JUNEAU, Alaska (AP) -Gov. William A. Egan, saying the “picture has taken a dramatic turn,” last night ordered the state patrol to guard all ballots from Tuesday’s gen-’ eral election in Alaska. “There is more than a hope that the present administration wifi remain in Juneau,” said Egan, who last Wednesday conceded defeat to his Republican opponent, Walter J. Hickel, millionaire Anchorage hotel-man. Egan, Democratic chief executive since Alaska gained statehood in 1959, called for the police guard as unofficial returns from remote districts continued to close the gap between the two men. With 383 of Alaska’s 398 precincts reported, Hickel led Egan 30,996 to 29,771 today. Egan said he understood there are about 3,750 absentee ballots that will be counted Wednesday at the state’s four district election offices in Nome, Fairbanks, Anchorage and Juneau. * * it The official state canvass of other ballots starts the same day. “I am confident we will pick up several hundred votes,” Egan said, “and I am hopeful that the work of the bipartisan canvassing board will put us over the top.” The governor said the police guard would be maintained until the official ballot count is completed. He said he has invited Republicans to provide watchers at district election offices when the ballots are counted by official canvassing board members. Hickel, long active in Republican party affairs, made his first bid for office this year. He was out of the state today and could not be reached immediately for comment. In Toda/s Press Stabbing Cases Man arrested in Milwaukee terror—PAGE B-4. Gold Drain Nations in debt to U.S. are cutting supply — PAGE A-5. Italian Floods Victims facing added trouble—PAGE A-8. Astrology ...... . C-5 Bridge ............C-5 Church News . B-1—B-3 Crossword Puzzle . . C-13 Comics ............C-5 Editorials ........A-6 Education Series ..A-4 Home Section Cl—C-4 Markets ........... C4 Obituaries . ......C-7 Sports ........D-1—D-4 Theaters ..........A-8 TV-Radio Programs C-13 Wilson, Earl .....C-13 A LITTLE LEVITY—Astronauts James Lovell Jr. (left) and Edwin E. Aldrin wore tags as they entered Gemini 12 prior to their successful launch at Cape Kennedy yesterday afternoon. They wore May Drop Try to Rap U.S. AP Wirephoto the tags spelling out “The” and “End” until they entered the capsule. It was only the beginning for them, however, and today the pair are continuing complicated maneuvers. VC Gas Stymies Reds UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) — Word that the Communists have used nonlethal gas in Viet Nam may scuttle Soviet bloc efforts in/the United Nations to condemn the United States for chemical warfare. The Reds made no mention of a report the Viet Cong had lobbed tear-gas type grenades at U. S. troops when they brought up the issue of bad- Sentencing Set for Supervisor Convicted of Perjury l^efore Grand Juror Royal Oak Township Supervisor Edward L. Kennedy will be sentenced Nov. 22 for committing perjury before Oakland County’s Juror Philip Pratt. Kennedy, convicted by an Oakland County Circuit Court jury yesterday, could receive up to 15 years in prison for the offense. The jury deliberated less than one hour after hearing right days of testimony. Keijnedy had been accused of lying when he testified in June 1965 and last January that he had not accepted a bribe or that any other township officials had received an illegal payoff, ★ ★ ★ Judge Frederick C. Ziem released Kennedy on a $1,000 bond pending his sent§pce. Kennedyis term of office as supervisor expires in April. He did not seek reelectibn in the August primary election. teriological warfare yesterday in the General Assembly’s main political committee. Hungary’s Ambassador Ka-roly Csatorday, who introduced the resolution, charged that U.S. use of gases and chemicals in Vjet Nam was “on the fringe of genocide.” William C. Foster, chief U. S. disarmament negotiator, said Red allegations that the United States was using any kind of poison gas in Viet .Nam were “absolutely without foundation.” ★ ★ ★ Foster did not mention the reported Viet Cong gas attack either, but he emphasized that he would deal with the Communist charges in detail later in the debate. This roused speculation that the United States would give a full airing to the reported Communist switch to gas warfare. A U.S. spokesman said American troops had also found a cache of gas grenades among enemy arms and ammunition spotted in abandoned tunnels Thursday. He said they were not of U.S. manufacture. The gas in the grenades was described as nonpoisonous, but the disclosure could ruin the propaganda effect of the Soviet bloc resolution. Csatorday claimed tljat nonlethal gases can also take lives by increasing the incidence of disease. He added that the chemical effects of nonlethal gases aggravate eye and stomach disorders, cause bronchitis and increase the effect of tropical diseases. Five Persons Fatally Shot; leen Is Held Arizona Police Say Youth Shot at Heads of 7 Female Victims MESA, Ariz. (AP) — Five persons, including a mother and her daughter,. were shot to death today. Police are holding a 16-year-old boy who, they said, forced seven women and girls to lie on the floor of a beauty school as he shot them in the heads with a pistol. Police Capt. E. L. Cockrell identified the youth as Robert E. vS m i t h of Mesa. He was arrested at the scene, and witnesses said he was laughing as he was taken away in a police car. •- Authorities identified the victims as Joyce Sellers, 27, Mesa; her 3t(j-year-old daughter, Debra; Mary Margaret Olsen, Mesa; Glenda Carter, Mesa; and Carol Farmer, Williams Air Force Base. Mrs. Sellers’ three-month-old daughter, Tammy Lynn, was in critical Condition at Mesa South-side District Hospital. An employe of the school, Bonita'Sue Harris, was reported in serious condition. * * if Twu of the victims died on the floor, and the others died later at the hospital. N. Viet Downs 5 Yank Planes SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — Communist antiaircraft fire shot down five U.S. planes during raids over North Viet Nam yesterday in one of the heaviest days of American losses of the war. U. S. headquarters, reporting this today, said the pilot of one plane was rescued, but the six fliers aboard the other four aircraft are missing. Headquarters also announced that three American helicopters were shot down yesterday while supporting ground operations near the Plei Djereng Special Forces camp in the highlands close to the Cambodian border. In ground action, the Viet Cong unleashed heavy mortar attacks last night and today on three American command posts in the Tay Ninh sector, where fighting has flared for the last nine days. In two attacks, the Communists sent 75 to 80 rounds mortar fire into the adjoining camps of the U. S. 25th Infantry Division and the 196th Light Infantry Brigade, located four miles west of Tay Ninh City. COMMAND POST In another attack early today, the Viet Cong unloaded another mortar bombardment on the 1st Infantry Division command post 17 miles east of Tay Ninh near Dau Tieng. Pontiac l>rtu Photo A brighter KETTERING — Mrs. Virginia Ross of the Waterford Township Board of Education and Waterford Kettering High School’s head football coach, James Larkin, inspect Kettering’s new $20,000 football field lights which were used for the first time last night as the Captains defeated archrival WTHS, 20-6. AF Probes 2nd Crash of Radar Picket Plane OTIS AIR FORCE BASE, Mass. (^)—A crack team pf Air Force investigators began a probe today of the second crash in 16 months of a radar picket plane in the Atlantic. The search resumed at dawn for the 19 men who were aboard the giant Constellation when it went down early yesterday 125 miles » ____________ southeast 0 f Nantucket Island. Col. James Lyle, commander of the 551st Early Warning and Control Wing to which the plane was attached, said of the search, “I have hope. Until I receive word that there is no hope, I wonlt give up.” All but one of the men aboard were married and their families included 40 children. The plane was an EC121H, one of the fleet of modified Lockheed Constellations that have been on picket patrols for over 10 years high over the Atlantic. They are part of the nation’s radar defense network. Merit System's Trial Is Over Program to Continue With Voters' Blessing The aircraft commander was Maj. Robert A. Baird, 44, of Payson, Utah, father of eight children and a Mormon Church leader in the Cape Cod area in his offduty hours. The New Bedford fishing boat Stephen R reported seeing the plane flying low in fog and rain squalls, bank steeply to the right, and plunge cartwheeling into the water with a fiery explosion at 1:30 a.m. The boat reported seeing no parachutes. No distress call was received from the aircraft. The Stephen R and another New Bedford fishing boat. Terra Nova, picked up s-me of the debris. S. V/ef Rangers Attack Green Beret Club SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — South Vietnamese rangers today assaulted a U.S. Special Forces building at Hon Quan, 70 miles north of Saigon, and two Americans were wounded, reliable sources said. Tempers flared, informants said, after trouble had been building up between allied military men in the area over several days. These sources said the rangers used two armored personnel carriers to knock down part of a wall at the recreation club used by the members of the Green Beret team stationed at Hon Quan, then fired into the building with automatic weapons. No other details were immedi- ately available. The U.S. military command in Saigon said it had no information on the incident. About 70 Americans are stationed in the Hon Quan rubber plantation country north of Sai- Weather in a Rut-Rain or Snow _ There’s a chance of a little rain or snow flurries but no i m p q_r t a n t, changes in the weather Over the weekend. Temperatures wilt continue on the chilly side. H e r e is the 0 f f i c i a 1 U.S. Weather Bureau forecast: ★ ★ ★ TODAY — Variable c 10 u d i-ness with chance of brief showers or possibly snow flurries. High 3^ to 42. Partly cloudy and colder tonight. Low 22 to 30. Southwest winds at 8 to 15 miles per hour becoming west to northwesterly 12 to 18 miles this afternoon and diminishing tonight. SUNDAY—Partly cloudy with little temperature change, s M 0 N D A Y — Partly sunny with otherwise little change. There are some 35 Special Forces men, 35 U.S. Air Force men personnel and about eight civilians. ^ Troops of the U.Si 1st Division normally are based in the area; but were moved a few days ago to join Operation Attleboro in Tay Ninh Province. There have been reports of friction between some Vietnamese rangers and American troops in the region in the past few weeks. * * ★ One account said an American soldier had been killed in a club there recently, and that a Vietnamese soldier had been beaten up in retaliation. One of the two proposals approved 'Tuesday by ■ Oakland County voters already was in effect on a trial basis while the other won’t be activated fully until next year. The merit system, or civil service program for county employes, was approved by nearly a 2 to 1 margin in the election. In effect on a trial basis since last April when it was approved by the County Board of Supervisors, the merit system will be continued as a formal county personnel program that has the blessings of the voters. Purpose of the merit system is to assure that selection, remuneration and treatment of county employes is based on merit. Specified in the system are competitive examinations for employe prospects and an appeals procedure for county personnel who feel they were disciplined or discharged without sufficient reason. SEEN AS ASSET County personnel director John Witherup views the merit system, drafted by the personnel policies committee of the County Board of Supervisors, as a definite asset in employe recruitment, due to the job protection factor" The other county-wide election issue was for establishment of a network of some 15 to 20 county parks through a five-year tax levy of a quar-tri-mill. This proposal was authorized by a narrow margin, 92,223 to 87,739. The 10-member parks and rec- ' reation commission, established by the board of supervisors, is expected to meet before the end of this month to begin planning the park development program. Though tax funds will not be available until next year, work can proceed iin.mediately on a search for suitable park sites. TllK PUM IAC PRESS, SATLKDAY, NQVEMBER.12, 1966 U,S, Eying Red Chinas Inner Struggle WASHINGTON (AP) — U.SJtary jwlicy and disagreements much disagreement, that the officials are watching closely | on basic eranomic poUcy. j party Central Committee was for the outcome of what nowf Debate within the Chinese unable to reach a consensus, app^fs to be a bitter struggle!Communist party is not new,! t within Communist China’s hier-iexperts here say. Hie leader-j According to this view, Mao archy. ship, drawn from persons who then created the Red Guard to State Department authorities have been comrades in arms' for stir up the so-called great cul-say it is evident that strong 30 years', has permitted this re- tural revolution and at the same posiUoh Has devTfoj^ to ’ time provide a sHak^ in the policies of Chairman Mao Tse- But these experts add that leadership, tung; party leaders always had been r * * ± , * * * able to reach a.consensus —I Official sources here take the For months tnere has been an,until last spring. At that time,view that opposition elements Internal questioning of Mao’s j the issues became so varied and within the Chinese Communist foreign policy, a debate on mill- iextensive, and there was not party have been strong enough to resist Mao, even with the added impact of the R«1 Guard. What now has developed, it ap-; pears here- is an impasse in which the party has been able to counter every blow dealt by Mao and the more extremist segment of the leadership. Mao has been telling visitors for someyears that he was^ worried that the next generation was drifting away from Maoism. He said he fdt revolutionary zeal could come only jfrota revolutiiMiary warfare, jaml when the situation did not provide such warfare, some: means of inducing it had to be 'found. ' I'-’ * * The Red Guard consequently, has been used as a weapon to ! revive revolutionary zeal. ^ Amwig the leaders of the resistance to Maov - irtfwmed sources here cimsido’ Liu Shao-chi, chief of state and former heir apparent to Mao, as one of the most prominent. News Briefs at a Glance PROPOSED EXPANSION OF TELEGRAPH RD. tU.S24) S. CITY LIMITS OF BINGHAM FARMS N. TO ORCHARD LAKE RD., OAKLAND CO. LBJ Settles Down for Quiet Weekend SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP) -President Johnson promised to have a qiiiet weekend at his Texas ranch after a flurry of conferences with key advisers on topics ranging from the new budget and his State of the Union message to reports on possible peace moves. His latest visitor FYiday was roving Ambassador W. Averell Harriman, back from an 11-nation tour with hopes “something may come” of forthcoming British-Soviet talks on Viet Nam. w ★ ★ Harriman termed a scheduled Nov. 21-23 meeting of British Foreign Secretary George Brown and Soviet leaders “the most promising” of Inniatives many nations are undertaking in an effort to launch peace moves. Tbe British and Russians are cochairmen of the 1954 Geneva Conference that partitioned Viet Nam. j IMPORTANT EVENTS ■ Harriman said: “The meeting! of these two governments is a very important event. We are hopeful that something may come of it. It is impossible to predict, but at least the Soviet Union has considerable in-i fluence in Hanoi.” Johnson joined Harriman in! another of a series of front lawn news conferences at his ranch. It was his sixth meeting with reporters since he came here last Friday to rest before surgery to remove a throat polyp and repair an incision hernia. AI date for the surgery has not been announced. i Robber Indicted in 2nd Holdup New City Editor j Is Announced at Pontiac Press AP wiraphoto WIDOWED TWICE BY WAR-Mrs. Bernard Kistler, 26, is shown early last year with her first son, William Jr., as she learned her husband. Army 1st Lt. William T. Reach, had been killed in Viet Nam. Yesterday, just one hour after giving birth to her second son, she learned that her second husband, also an Army lieutenant, had been killed in a Viet Cong attack. Doctors at Meadville City Hospital in Pennsylvania said today Mrs. Kistler was coming out of the shock of the news. Jerry T. Robbins, telegraph editor of The Pontiac Press, lhas been named city editor, it was announced today by Editor John W. Fitz-’' “ Residents Back A Pontiac man. now serving a 15-year prison term for a bankj ^ W^rliiR-^vw robbery in Bloomfield Township, ^ was ohe of two men indicted brined The|" yesterday by a federal grand jury for a holdup in Warren, Ohio. Charged by a grand jury in Cleveland with the $68,621 robbery of the Union Savings Trust Co. were Rentz Nicholson, 32, formerly of 175 V i c t o r y, and Ernest Holt, 33, of Cleveland. Nicholson is in the federal penitentiary at Terre Haute, Ind., on a conviction of robbing the Pontiac State Bank, branch at 970 W. Long Lake on Dec. 17, 1965. He and Holt are accused of robbing the Warren savings company on Sept. 2,1965. Nicholson was captured within five nninutes after the Pontiac State Bank robbery. Police found $21,258 taken in the robbery in his car. , Gas Threat Ends in Homer HOMER (AP)—The residents __________of this little community were Press in Octo-C"' ^■^^■iback in their homes today, a$-ber, 1964, as sured by experts that the threat sistant tele-'^ !■■■■ of deadly phosgene gas had graph editor. ROBBINS 'ended. He became telegraph editor in' * * -k June. < But at least a few still glanced A *• A A.I ru 1 nervously at two black railroad, A native of Battle fteek, Robbins graduated from Mich- I ^lock-long he^p ' Dealing Covers Rejected Pact MOUNT CLEMENS (IP) - A Communications Workers of ! America Union representative 1 said here yesterday that negotiations have gotten under way between the union and Michigan Bell Telephone Co. on the contract CWA members rejected last month. The International CWA agreed to the contract in New York, 1 but the CWA in Michigan, which lhas 17,000 members turned it down in local ratification votes. ! The member, who asked I that he not be identified, said that negotiations began Monday, with the union asking for four primary contract changes. They are: • An agency shop, which would require all Michigan Be^l employes to pay sums equal to union dues even if the employe is not a union member. • A clause change to, allow reopening of the contract for negotiations after 12 months, instead of the present 18 months. • Improved hospitalization benefits, with larger company contributions to the hospitalization program. • Working condition changes, particularly in raising the Pontiac workers from Class H to Class I status. ‘NOPROGRESS’ A company spokesman, not a ing, which caused a spectacular explosion and fire and tlweat-ened to convert two carloads of vinyl chloride into nauseating member of the bargaining team. said no progress had been made and potentially fatal phosgene brought evacuation of most of i in the negotiations. Homer’s 1,600 residents. No in-! juries were reported. GRAND RAPIDS (UPI)-City Clerk R. Stanton Kilpatrick, who also is chairman of the I Michigan Municipal League’s ! election committee, said yes-[terday that the counting of ab-; jsentee ballots should be start led earlier to assure speedy re-tuHis em election days. Under I the present laws, processing of absentee ballots starts at 4 p.m. election day. HOUGHTON m - First-degree murder charges against a former Houghton couple were dropped yesterday. TTie couple, William and Hilja Jutila, had been accused of killing their 6-year-old adopted son, Markku. VILLANOVA, Pa. (UPI) -Tbe. operator of a service station here said yesterday his 19-year-oId grandson and another youth robbed him of $87 at gunpoint. Roy, Yoder, 63, Philadelphia, told police Louis Yoder, Philadelphia, and the other boy talked to him for about a half-bour before the grandson pull^ the gun. JEFFERSONVILLE, Ind. UP^-Julia Pauli, 72, of Muskegon, Mich., was killed yesterday when a car driven by her 77-year-old husband, Glenn, went out of control and crashed into an enbankment on Interstate 65 near here. EAST LANSING (JFl - Just ibou| everybody is included in next week. It’s falm-city week, says the Michigan State University Cooperative extension Service. Across the state, farm groups, civic, women’s and conservation clubs, youth groups and chambers of commerce are planning meetings aimed at emphasizing the close ties between urban and farm interests in Michigan, said George S. McIntyre, acting director of the service, CHICKASHA, Okla. U>) -U.S. Rep. Jed Johnson Jr., 26, a Democrat, lost his draft exemption in the 1966 general election when he was defeated for reelection. igan State University, was sports editor and later telegraph editor at the Midland Daily News prior to coming to Pontiac. j He is married, and the father of two daughters. Former City Editor Dick Saunders will take up duties as-i sisting Editor Fitzgerald and Managing Editor Harry J. Reed upon his return following a heart attack suffered in September. Col. Fredrick Davids, State! what used to be paft of rNew!f°^'^® ‘li^^ctor, called an end to York Central train. evacuation at 5:30 pm. Fri- A train wreck Friday morn-1 ««er bemg assur^ by NYC General Manager William Salt-' . C and Homer, Fire Chief Bruce I! Gregg that the danger to the ’' community had passed. | ANN ARBOR (J) - Mrs. Susan D. Lake, 25, of Ann Arbor |died at St. Joseph Mercy Hospi-I A>1 yesterday shortly after she J fxUCJvJ /VllSnCipS was injured in a two-car crash ' jlO miles west of Ann Arbor in BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -Plans to narrow the intersection at Maple and Telegraph drew several protests from persons attending a State Highway Department hearing at Bloomfield Hills School Thursday night. ★ ★ ★ The hearing was held to explain plans to widen Telegraph from the southern limits of Bingham Farms north to Orchard Lake Road, a distance of about 8.4 miles. Engineering plans call for increasing the width of Telegraph right-of-way from 150 to 204 feet, with the exception of the Maple intersection, wUch would be Increased to only 169 feet. Hi^way Department officials said the Maple and Lbmg Lake intersections were scheduled for work in 1968 but that no timetable had been set for the remainder. At the hearing. Township Su- in City Fewer Last Month Washtenaw County. The Weather City Woman Is Swindled Out of $500 A 54 - year - old Pontiac woman told city police |l * * * yesterday she was swin- Twenty-five cars of a train died out of $500 which she bound from Elkhart, Ind., to gave to two other women i I Detroit plunged off the track Salter said he could not esti-|showed a decline last month mate the cost of the damage, k^’^^’P^red to September, accord-and he declined to speculate on j ing to Pontiac Police Depart-the cause of the wreck. “Wei ™®nt figures, have some ideas,” he said, “but A total of 110 mishaps was I we’d rather clear some of the reported for October, nine less ! wreckage away and take a clos- than the September count of 119. HARTFORD, Conn. (J)—Protestant and Jewish oganizations have joined a project of the ^ Roman Catholic Archdiocese of J^affic^acctoents in Pontiac [Hartford aimed at eliminating discrimination in employment er look.” Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report ! PONTIAC AND VICINITY-Variable cloudiness with chance of few brief showers or possibly a few snow flurries today. High 36 to 42. Partly cloudy and colder tonight. Low 22 to 30. Sunday! partly cloudy with no important temperature changes. High 38 ^ to 44. Southwest winds 8 to 14 miles per hour becoming west to northwesterly 12 to 18 miles this afternoon and diminishing tonight. Outlook for Monday: Partly sunny with otherwise little change. Precipitation probabilities in per cent: Today 20, To-i night 10, Sunday 10. ' ' . (as recorded downtown) Higihest temperature ,.......... Lowest , temperature ............ Mean temperature Weather: Dismal, few sprinkles Friday's Temperature Chart n rises Sunday Downtown 3*' Houghton ..,40 Lansing . 42 Marquette . 43 Muskegon .Pellston I 31 Fort \ 9 24 Jacksonville S3 i 1 37 Kansas City 62 I D 16 Los Angeles 69 ; 9 36 Miami Beach 80 I 4 23 MUweuKee 44 : 2 36 t)»w Orleans 81 i hast and Lowest Temperatures Denvi This Date In 94 Years Detro to invest for her. Myrtle G o r d o n of 510 I Arthur said she was pay- ' ing a bill in a store when she b e c a m e engaged in conversation with a worn- ; an who told her she had ' $2,800 in her purse. Another w o m a n offered to invest the $2,- ! 800. The Gordon woman was told she too could . invest her m o n e y and “ L get much more in iie-37 |) turn. She agreed. The wornen then took a 4, taxicab to the victim's “ house where she got $375 i 55 and a $125 check. ★ ★ ★ After returning to the ) bank building, the victim [ gave the money and check I to the pair to invest for ! her and took a taxicab i home. i and piled up in an incredible •' tangle beside four elevated storage tanks, two filled with gaso-piline and two with diesel fuel. EXPLOSION I The wreck caused an explo-ision which split open one of the gasoline tanks and set the gasoline and most of the cars The city’s first traffic fatality since July, however, boosted the death toll for 1966 to nine. With no deaths recorded yet this month, the 1966 count is six short of the 15 reported last year. The number of injuries in October dropped, along with the accident figure. A total of 187 persons were injured last month as against 203^ October 1965. A breakdown of the injury figures showed that 80,‘or about i ablaze in a roaring fire which per cent of the total 187 were [sent twin columns of black and I white smoke high above the south-central Michigan town. ★ * ★ I Railroad technical men rec-lommended evacuation of the rarea, fearing the fire’s heat 11 might convert the chemicals in' I the tank cars to phosgene. j . State officials led by Lt. Gov. : I William Milliken, slogged through the muddy danger area and talked wtih Salter and oth-siers while standing near the ! still-burning cars. incurred by drivers, passengers and pedestrians between 15 and 24 years old. The worst accident comer in the city for October was the intersection of East Boulevard and Auburn Avenue. Seven mishaps occurred there, compared to six at the corner of Joslyn Avenue and Montcalm Street. Plastic Eyed for Pipes Former City Man Aide to Romney The Waterford Township Board Monday night wiill con-'sider an amendment to the township water supply system ordinance which wDuld allow the use of a money-saving polyethylene Former Pontiac resident Rich-Kenneth Squiers said plastic tub-E. Whitmer, 26 has been ing is about one-third less expensive than copper piping, which often is difficulLto obtain! * ★ “ ^quiers estimates the township plastic tubing for connections , ,0 000 tePt of from water mains to households. to 20,000 feet of The amendment was previous- ly introduced by the board at' other business Monday, the its Sept. 26 meeting. ^>0^^ discuss suggested transferred from the Staff Department of Commerce to Gov. George Romney’s staff. Whitmer, son of Pontiac Schools Supt. Dr. Dana P. Whitmer, is a 1958 graduate of Pontiac HiftT'SdHjol and holds a bacheluH^ de( Michigi NATIONAL WEATHER — Snow will fall tonight in the lower Great Lakes region, northern Plateau and northern Rockies. Showers are fweeast in much of the eastern half of the nation, central Pacific Coast and Great Basin. Use of the plastic tubing in communities was okayed by tbe state health depiirtment and state plumbing board last June. traffic regulations for Oakland Community College’s Highland Lakes Campus district. College officials and nearby residents reportedly are anxious to make driving safer in the Township Utilities Manager [immediate area. against members of racial, religious and ethnic minority groups. NASHVILLE, Tenn. UP) -William R. Anderson, first commanding officer of the nuclear submarine Nautilus and now a Democratic congressman from Tennessee, has asked for an investigation of U.S. naval shipbuilding. HART UP) - Five Rothbury men received sentences from Justice of the Peace Harry Lynch for commercial deer poaching after they were apprehended yesterday in nearby Rothbury. Four of the men received maximum fines of $100 and were sentenged to 60 days in jail. The fifth man was sentenced to $50 and five days. ALMA (JFl — General Telephone Co. said yesterday it will spend a record $5.6 million for improvements in this central Michigan service area next year. The area extends from northeast of Grand Rapids to Mount Pleasant to west of Flint and north of Lansing. DETROIT (JL-Mrs. Dolores Mack, 38, of Garden City died yesterday in Wayne County General Hospital from injuries sustained in a two-car collision Thursday. BUENOS AIRES (UPI)-The Motor Car Manufacturers Association yesterday report^ Argentine production in the first 10 months of 1966 at 146,414 units. The figure represented 10.4 per cent decline in production compared with the first 10 from Western [Months of the year preceding. ■sity. ] ,----- BOSTON UFI — The name of He h^ served as an execu-listant to State Commerce Director Robert J. McIntosh since January, shortly after earning his law de^ee from the University of Michigan. the Mystic River Bridge is to be changed to the Maurice J. Tobin Memorial Bridge in honor of the onetime mayor of Boston, gov; emor of Massachusetts and U.S’. secretary ofjqbor, who died in 1953. I PROPOSED U.S. 24 EXPANSION = EXISTING TRUNKLINES Birmingham Area News Maple-Telegraph Plan Protested at Hearing pervisor Homer Case pointed out the Maple - Telegraph intersection is a dangerous one and that it should be made wider rather than narrower. FUNDS SAVED “We have saved more than $1% million in the past few months for the State Highway Department in requiring commercial, office and multiple developers to maintain the 204-foot-width right of way,” he said. The oidy explanation given for reducing the right of way, he said, is that it would save nearly a half million dollars. “What is money compared to saving a life,” he asked? He pointed out that the Intersection is recognized as “one of tile most dangerous in the state.” Case said he and other members of the community will continue to fight the proposed plan as it stands. BABY MISSING—Police and hospital officials^ Confer in the nursery today at Colorado General Hospital in Denver where a 1-day-old baby was reported missing. Officers said the nurse had stepped out of the nursery for supplies. A hospital spokesman said she was gone only five minutes. Day-Old Baby Taken at Denver Hospital DENVER, Colo. (AP)' one-day-old baby boy was re-1 ported missing early today from nursery at Colorado General! Hospital. j Police said the child was taken from a room on the fourth floor of the hospital, a unit of the University of Colorado Medical Center, between 1:25 and 1:30 a.m. The boy was wearing a white hospital shirt and was wrapped in a white hospital blanket bearing a “U-C Med Center” marking. Officers said the nurse had stepped* out of the nursery to go across the hall toget supplies. A hospital spokesman said she was gone only five minutes. Police and hospital authorities withheld the name of the moth- The baby was described as h. inches long and wei^ng nine pounds, 13 ounces. He has brown hair and blue eyes and a blue hospital band on his wrist. Denver police combed the hospital for clues and also checked cab companies, bus terminals, the train station and airport on whether anyone had been seen with the baby. Sheppard Trial Told of Bloody Print CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) - A former suburban police sergeant testified at Samuel H. Sheppard’s murder trial today that he saw what appeared to be a bloody fingerprint on a stairway-banister near the bedroom where Marilyn Sheppard was slain. Jay H. Hubach, who was a Bay Village police sergeant at the time of Marilyn’s bludgeoning July 4,1954, THE PONTIAC P^ESS. SATURDAY, NQVExMBER 1|,_1966 A—3 color me any color you want,.. SIMMS unfinished furniture at much lower prices feature item; deacon’s storage bench • as shown • smoothly sanded pine • pre-dried to resist warping • 42x16x28 inches. • Store linens, blankets, toys etc. • finish any color you wish. k 2188 feature item: 10-drawer chests • choice pine* pre-dried to resist warping • Jumbo 15x52x36 inches • Plenty of room for his ond her 33" open tonite 'til 9 p.m. Monday open 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Hey Look SIAAMS is OPEN LATE TONitE t MONDAY HOURS 9 a.m. to 10 ^.m. 'til 10 p. Me STUDY POLLUTION—Two Pontiac city employes, among some 120 industry anid government representatives at an Oakland University conference on air pollution, chat with keynote speaker Dr. Allen D. Brandt (center), manager of Industrial health engineering for Bethlehem Steel Corp. At Uie conference Wednesday and Thursday were James A. Rothschild (left), Pontiac Health Department sanitarian, and Robert M, Gerds, of the city’s building inspection department. Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac Win A Turkey At SIMMS absolutely FREE 50 Birds Given Away No purchase necessary — just ask for your free turkey tickets in any dept. Adults over 18 only. Simms employees and rriembers of their families ore not digible. Drawings stort Mon., Nov. 1 4th. Specials for Saturday and Monday-Only at Simms Westclox Luminous Dial Travel Alarm Clock Westclox Baby Ben Wind-Up Alarm Clock PAPER WORK INCREASING? Speed Posting and Reference with VICTOR VISIBli RiCORDS Save hours every day. Fjlnd facts faster and main|sdo a control of out-oMine condi- ^ tions impossible with blind-filed records. .Let us show you how you'can keep your records up-to-date in half the tltne hy use of visible margins and signals. No mat- ter what your requiremenu, there’s a Victor Visible System for eVery business need. , CHILDREN OUTGROWN SKIS, SLEDS, TOBOGGANS? SELL I IT WITH A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. EASY TO USE. JUST PHONE 332-8181. GENERAL PRINTING & OFFICE SUPPLY PHONE 335-8261 17 West Lawrence PONTIAC, MICH. Proposals Get Farm Unit OK j EAST LANSING (AP)-'Trhde I I with Communist bloc nations, * food for the worldV hungry, more migrant latoY; and keeping the U.S. Suprtoe Court out I of the legi^ative ar eas were among re^dlutions approved-some Mi^th reservations — by the Michigan Farm Bureau Friday. At its annual convention, the (55,000-m ember organization passed state resolutions calling for amendments to the Workmen’s Compensation Act — or ipassage of a new one — that [Would make such insurance [practical for farmers; for prop-[erty tax exemptions on sea-|sonal labor housing that is used [rent-free and which serves no iother purpose; and commend-|ing the Legislature for postponing the effect of the state Tnini-[mum wage law. The Legislature delayed its effect on piecework harvest laborers until it could determine the relationship between -piecework pay scales and the hourly minimum required in the law. National-issue resolutions will be passed on to the national Farm Bureau for action at its [convention in Las Vegas next month. £dable, famous Baby Ben alarm clock in or ivory case. With loud or soft alarm, h round style. Baby Ben, Luminous Dial........6.44 Sundries —Main Floor CHOCKS With Iron Chewable Vitamins |89 Bottle of 60s. Chewable vitamins |: for children, contains iron. Made by Allies Lab. Builds resistance to common colds. Drugs —Main Floor Early American Kerosene Lamp 4 Colors f. 595 With handsome sliding shutter front. Easel bock. Your choice of black or ivory case. Non-break-oble case.' $5.98 Ingraham travel alarm.........3.19 Sundries —Main Floor Big Family Size CREST Tooth Paste 63’ Good tasting Crest proved effective against cavities in homes like yours.. Be Cl one tooth paste family. Drugs —Main Floor 50-Pc. Tableware Set / Deluxe—Stainless Old fashioned kerosene lamp complete with wick and burner. Your choice of 4 assorted colors. Ideal for the cottage or emergencies. Full 18-in. high. Housewares-2nd Floor Which Plan Is For You? •10,000 SAVINGS ^0 CERTIFICATES Earn the rate of 5V4% when held for a period of 12 months. •5,000 SAVINGS CERTIFICATES Earn the rate of 5% when held for a period of 9 months. •2,500 SAVINGS 0 CERTIFICATES Earn the rate of 4%% when held for a period of 6 months. PASSBOOK SAVINGS The rate of 4V4% is compounded and paid quarterly; which gives an annual yield of 4.318, a high rate of return paid on regular insured passbook savings. All Accounts Receive accidental LIFE INSURANCE PROTECTION up to $10,000 at no additional cost! 761 W. HURON STREET DOWNTOWN PONTIAC - CLARKSTON DRAYTON PUINS-ROCHESTER-WALLEDUKE UKE ORION - MILFORD 1 ^4syV For Professional Results ‘SHOPCRAFT’ Electric Jig Saw 1000 |P Cuts anything from metal to leather. 2.1 amps, 2650 strokes per minute. Cuts up to 2" wood. I Model No. 9581. Hardware —2nd Floor Men's 100% Acrylic Pile Sports Jackets Plush 100% acrylic pile jocket with cotton backing. Colorful tri rale at Pontiac, Mtchigan. Mambar of ABC Arriving at a valley town called Los Banos, Republican gubernatorial nominee Ronald Reagan, his staff and accompanying newsmen piled aboard what was undoubtedly the most decrepit bus ever pressed into campaign service. It looked like a migrant workers’ bus that had long outlived its usefulness. The actor-nominee accepted the rickety ride as if he weM gliding along in a transcontinental luxuty liner. ’The bus was promptly dubbed ,^ “the tomato pickers’ special.” As a matter of fact. Reacts chartered plane was no /glKiming giant' of the jet age. It was a poky DC-3 labeled “The ’Turkey,” since the word was it had once been used by a b u s y farmer to transport ^^jfkeyr^markeL ' / ■ A THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 12. 1966 LAST 2 DAYS! m. and MON. FEDERAL DAYS ^ _ ) Llmitt4 quantitiM ... an mI« whila rhay lo4 BOTH STORES OPEN SUNDAY NOON to 6-OPEH MOMDAY 9:30 8. m. to 9:30 B. m. Textured acetate knits, bonded Orion® acrylics, rayon crepes, wools, 1, 2, 3-pc. In jr., misses', half-sizes. SLACK OUTFITS Girls’ and fois’ reg. 3.99 slack set sale 2.97 Print, solid novelty tops over matching slim cotton corduroy slacks. Perfect for chilly days, playtime. Sizes 3-6x, 7-14. Blanket wool plaids, wool meltons, vinyl suedes, acrylic pile. Many styles, colors, sizes 6-16. Linings: acrylic pile; wool plaid, reprocessed wool/olher fiber in-terhnings. GIRLS' COATS Regular 14.99-16.99 winter coat special 1288 1088 Size! 4-6x Sizes 7-14 Choose from cotton corduroys, wool / nylon poodles, wool tweeds, plaids. Some acrylic pile lined for extra warmth. Sewn-ln stirrups, curtain waist. Zephyr* zipper, hook eye. Rayon/nylon blend. Short 8^ 16, med. 8-18, tall 12-18. CURTAIN SPECIAL Carefree and colorful washable tiers, now 1.44 60x30" or 60x36" pf. 100% rayon needs only touch-up Ironing. Assorted patterns. Mo,chine vaionca, 84c ae. Pull slips, petticoats, gowns, baby doll pj's, dusters of 100% nylon tricot, rayon/ cotton blends. 32-40, S-M-L. COMFORT SPECIAL 9.99 after this saie pure luxury fabrics 7.88 White nylon lace trim on solid ground. Estron® acetate fill. Lightweight. 72x84" size. Camferter cover .2.99 M Mil MISSES’ K Hi 5.99-7.99 mm Jm skirt buy 1 ^ 3.97 pi 1*1' Famous makerl 100% S\ 1 i woolflannels,tweeds. )-* H Solids, plaids, check, herringbones 6-1D. A ft CIRLS’ 1.99-2.26 COZY frJM\ SLEEPWEAR liil 1-66 l i If '\\tf Cotton flannel pj's, 1 1'\lf • rn flowns with special. IJ-Im M trims, smocking, em-broideries. 4-14. j? B LADIES’ ^ ;( LINGERIE AT LOW PRICE ®'f') VmIf/ V ^ Avisco® rayon gowns, Wr’' [ ’ slips, petticoats, pet-I 1 ? tipanti. White, pas-1 1/ • S-M-L. 32-40. ^ HALF-DFF! M H CHRISTMAS CARDS, 26 w f REC. S1,$2 1 I SWINGING M U EARRINGS @4 69‘-99‘ 41‘42 way-out hoops, loops, tiers, geometries, baubles ond bubbles. Light. 45 PIECE (Smk. melmag 'Wm SET, NOW Service for 8. Break-resistant Mel mac* Melamine by Prolon. In 3 patterns. Sold 3 pr. 99c only First qualityl Crystal - clear, run-resistant mesh for longer wear. T a n t o n e, beigetone. Sizes 9-11, medium length. Sold in 3 pr. only RUGS OR RUNNERS Hi-lo looped cotton pile washable rugs 1.77 Decorator-color cotton pile. Choose 30x50" area rug or 24x60" runner. Washable On safe non-skid latex back. PERMANENT PRESS SHIRTS Men’s regular 3.99 sport or dress shirts, save 1.22 2.77 Never Iron shirts againl Permanent press blend of 65% polyester end 35% cotton. Dress shirts, reg. or snap-tab collar, 14'/2-17. Plaid, solid sport shirts In sizes S-M-L-XL. REG, 16.99 ‘CHICAGO’ ARROW Men’s, women’s, child’s roller skate| Reg. 15.99. For indoor rink. Plostic wheels. Men's, boys' black, 1-12. Girls', women's white, 1-10. 11 84 MEN’S UNDERWEAR Waldorf brand, 100% combed cotton Regular 3 pcs. 2.391 T-jA ^ mm shirts, briefs, A-shirts."J ^ HH Sizes S-XL. Boxer shorts. * Sizes 30-42. BOYS’ 2.69 SKI PJ’S Cuddly warm, all cotton pak® knit Warm ski stylel Cotton ^ knit stripe crew top, knil^ K B cuffs on pants. Sizes 6-18. I M Stock up at savingsl ® M ■ OPEN 9:30 AM. TO 9:30 P.M. Open Sunday,, noon to 6 p.m DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PUINS V , A—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 12, 1966 Flood Victims Due More Woe FW)RENCE(AP) in a food line a Florentine looked at the others waiting with him and said: "The worst is yet to come. The hunger, the real misery will 1.% ?, 'diamond I" rl’M’V HMj! TiimmiiiiiiiiiiiiililllllllT Standing!start at the end of the month,^of vegetables, bread and tinned] trying to reach villages still iso-when no pajtcheck comes in fori meat, a chill wind swept Flo-:lated by the disastrous floods most people and we begin to'rence’s Plazzo Vecchio, land landslides eight days feel the cold.” Italy’s mountainous north-and more stormy weather was As Giulio peva-Grimaldi, 40, east, snow and rain already j today, waited for. his evening package i hampered rescue workers .SHARE ORANGE .Ceva-GrimaMi and his wife. Giuliana, who lost everything when the floods hit, shared an orange for breakfast this morning and ate soup for lunch at jone of the pubUc kitchens set up by the Florence City Council. “We re lucky we have no children to see and feel this,” said Ceva-Grimaldi a dealer in sec-Eiond-hand items whose ground ' floor shop and apartment were ruined when the floodwaters surged almost to second-floor ^SANTftir S| windows. He and his wife have been living since in a boarding house, on credit. He pulled 600 lire (96 cents) from his pocket and said , /^y^TtcHHlCOlOA' m that was all he had left. g.nriy UHn RAnilrl KIM NOVAK^ lire ($200) a month from his tiny RlYWilKTUN 2+business.” I’ll get a peddler’s ■INW Wn . J around selling from that,” he said. “It’s not so bad for me because I’m used to working for myself. It’s worse and will get worse for those who work for others.” The floods came a few days after employes got their October paychecks. Those whose places of work were wiped out cannot count on-another check w^nsHT SEA OF MUD Two-thirds of this city of 450,-000 was stricken by the flood and the sea of oil-coated mud it left behind. About 150,000 tost their homes and an estimated 200 persons were killed. The flood also wreaked incalculable and irreparable damage to Florence’s art treasures. A Vatican expert said 20 per cent of all ancient manuscripts and 50 per. cent of the old, illuminated books in Florence were destroyed. -=K-----PLUS- / ^RIDE the 1LD SURF IlilllllllllllllllllliUUJJJiuJJAJJU VALUABLE COUPON FREE Beverage with every Pizza 1 beverage with 8” Pizza 3 beverages with 14’’Pizza Open Sunday thru Thurs., 4-12 P.M. Fri. and Sat. 4 P.M. - 2 A.M. Pizza iBH 4708 WEST WALTON One Block East of Dixit Highway CALL 673-3446 AND ORDER PIZZA AHEAD The Rev. Mario Pinzuti. director of the Vatican institute made that report after a visit! 'that’s the statistical average here. He estimated it would I Republicans and 14 Republicans run slightly older, DOUBLE WALL Bowl Shaped Tub... MONDAY ONLY SPECIAL! WRINGER WASHER Double wall tub keeps water hot longer - and it's bowl shaped to treat clothes gently. Has deluxe adjustable safety wringer, aluminum agitator, welded steel chassis. Carries maximum washer $ 97 No Money Down - 2.00 WEEKLY STAR IN NEW FILM-Italy’s Sophia Loren, star of the 1960s, and Mexican-born Dolores del Rio (right), glamor girl of the 20s and 30s, perform in “Happily Ever After,” being Lawyer, Joiner, Wed ... • New Faces In D C. WASHINGTON (AP) - Pick a new congressman-elect any new congressman-elect, and the chances are you will be looking at a middle-aged lawyer, married and a joiner of organizations, Another two-career Democrat is Peter Kyros of Maine, an Annapolis graduate who switched to law after 10 years’ naval service. * The age of the newcomers averages out a bit under 44. The take three to six months to recover items still worth saving from Florence’s archives and libraries and said complete restoration work could take from 10 to 15 years. Elsewhere, rain pelted much of the peninsula, causing some cases of new flooding. Whistling winds and high tides hit sea coasts from Sicily to the northern Adriatic. NEW PERIL Although the Po River continued to fall, high tides in the Adriatic and a strong wind threatened to bring new floods to its delta south of Venice. Authorities ordered evacuation of several villages near dikes whose stability was in doubt. Waves and high winds sank a 19-ton fishing boat at Chioggia, across the lagoon from Venice. Its five crew members swam to safety. Fog hung over the Alpine province of Belluno, and the Fiorentina torrent flooded low-lying sections of the town of Caprile, with 500 inhabitants, A tributary of the Arno River rose menacingly after six hours of rain, causing fears of another flood in Montevarchi, a city of 11,000 inhabitants south of Florence. Democrats who will start House service in January — or resume it after an interruption. ★ ★ ★ But the 73 new faces show plenty of variety when looked at individually. The Republicans, for example, have an Alaska homesteader, Rep.-elect Howard W. Pollock, who now practices law but relaxes by pursuing octopus and a big game. Another new GOP member is former Olympic decathlon champion Robert Bruce Mathias of California, who now operates a boys’ camp. NEW DBMS Among the incoming Democrats is a former newspaper publisher, David Pryor of Arkansas, who switched private careers after starting his public one. Pryor went to law school while serving in the state legislature and was a practicing attorney when he was elected to Congress. Motion/ Boof “EUZABETHTAYlDRs paulnewmanN .. BURLIVES' __________ 1:20, 5:00,1:30 ONLY LIZ COULD ________ PLAYTHESE WOMEN!— ' EUZABETH TAYLOR ^ \ lAURENCE HARVEY 5 EDDIE FISHER / .JOHNffHARA'S ^BinreRFliLD 8 ESiaKEECO 3:00,0:40, 10:00 UNION LAKE AT HAGGERTY RD. EARLY BIRD SHOW SUNDAY STARTS at 6:30 P.M. FREE IN CAR HEATERS For Your Complete Comfort while the Democratic average is 41. But the Republicans have the youngest member, as well as the oldest — William A. Steiger of Wisconsin, 28, and William Henry Harrison of Wyoming, 70 who is resuming a congressional career that began in 1951 and was twice interrupted. NO EXCEPTION The class of 1967 is no Exception to the rule that the law is the preferred route to public office in the United States. Of the 73 new members, are attorneys, including 10 of the 14 Democrats. Businessmen make up the next largest category, 17, and there are nine farmers, including several businessmen who list themselves also as farmers. The new class also offers four bankers, two college professors, an ordained clergyman, a retired state police officer, a nurseryman and an editor. Columbia Piclures Presents JERRYLEWIS JANETUBOH zHCH] p (A JERRY LEWS PRODUCTION) . COLUMBI'ACOLOR A wmIow’s mite was a mighty help, indeed. In the 193U’s, an educational organization in western New York was saved by an elderly widow's live dollars. The news of her gift, one she could ill afford, spurred a philanthropic fellow-townsman to say, ‘Tin not sure I’ve done my share.” He then increased his already (generous gift by $35,000. Few of us can save a college. But almost everyone of us. by doing his share, can help keep one going. ^ is Give to the college of your choice, - CO-FEATURE- The New Giant of Western Adventure! mDEBEVOiai WHGERNCE CHUCK ^CONNORS COLUMBIACOLOR Nowiyiiti^g: ^ SAT.10:4SA.M.to1i04P.M. I C Uniltr I The PontioclPress CnSTAGinillT SHnUDW” KIRK JS/JUBUHS .fuiiA smmssiALiELis-LmERmm -an8 MO SPECIAL APPEAmOES BY ^ rHANKSINATEA YULBEYNNER JOmWAYNE SHEAR SHOCK THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 12. 1966 pJunior Editors Quiz on— I SEEING EYE DQRC A—9 Area funeral directors and clergymen will gather at Oakland University Tuesday to discuss how toey can better meet the psychological needs of the bereaved. JDr. Edgar N. Jackson of Corinth, Vt., will\ deliver the main address. As A ^tor, author and lecturer, Jj|i±son has specialized in the study of grief and bereavement/ His eiAt books ioclnde “For the Llv^g,” “Yon and Your Chief,” /“Understanding Grief” and “Telling a Child About /beath.” Moderator for the program will b^ Robert C. Slater, profes-ind director of mortuary QUESTION: If dogs are color blind, how can a Seeing Eye dog understand traffic signals? / , ★ ★ ★ / ANSWER: It seems remarkable that an animal could be trained to guide a blind person through busy city street^. Seeing Eye dogs, which are mostly of the German She^ herd breed, have a special training center devoted to th^ near Morristown, N.J. Here they learn to obey their blmd owners and to watch out constantly for their welfare. / They act, literally, as their master’s eyes. Such d. Mo FE 2-0294 2203 .S. Tcl<-cra|>h MI 6-4; Open FridV Til 9 i'E 2-8391 Opi-n Fridav Lodge Named Head of Commerce Panel i Pontiac’s senator - elect, L. | committees, public ntilifles, Harvey Lodge, has been named] insurance and Uquor control chairman of a newly formed j He also was named vice chair committee in the GOP-controllediman the judiciary committee Senate jand a member of the now com ★ ★ ★ ibined conservation and tourist As a result of Tuesday’s elec-1 industry committee, tion, Republicans now hold a ★ ★ ---- ' ' ~ Lodge is one of fliree former prosecuting attorneys serving the judiciary committee. NAMED CHAIRMAN Sen -elect George W. Kuhn of West Bloomfield was named 20-18 advantage over the Democrats in the Senate. Lodge, 64, of 6610 Long-worth, Waterford Township, was appointed to head the commerce committee, which will comprise three present : chairman of the corporations committee, and Sen. Robert Huber was named head of the municipalities committee. Except for the appropriations committee which will remain with seven members, other committees were reduced from seven to five members during a preliminary organizational meeting in Lansing Thursday. The senators will be sworn into office Jan. 1, and the new session of the Legislature will beginJan.il. State Sen. Emil Lockwood, R-St. Louis, will become majority leader. Sen. Raymond Dzendzel, iD-Detroit, held the position when ! Democrats were in control, i Other Republican assignments Jadud^:_____________________ • President pro tern: I Thomas Schweigert of Petos-key. • Assistant president pro tern: Gilbert Bursley of Ann Arbor. • Majority floor leader: Robert VanderLaan of Grand Rapids. • Assistant majority leader: Charles Zollar of Benton Hartxir. • GOP whip: Milton Zaag-man of Grand Rapids. LINDA EMSLEY Teen of Week Is Ninth Grader at Washington Washington Junior High School ninth grader Linda Emsley is this week's Teen of the Week. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Emsley, 1886 Woodland, Sylvan Lake. In addition to maintaining an A average in her studies, Linda is active on the staffs I of the school newspaper and I yearbook. She also has served I her school as a hall guard and member of the Student Council. School Official in Federal Post NEED WORK? USE PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS. LOW IN COST. FAST IN ACTION. PHONE 332-8181! Are You Tired Of Inconveniencing Your Wife and Wasting Time Effective Nov. 14 LV. PONTIAC ARR. METRO LV. METRO ARR. PONTIAC 7:00 A.M. 7:20 A.M. 8:00 A.M. 8:23 A.M. 6:30 A.M. ^ 7:50 A.M. 10:00 A.M. 10:20 A.M. 8:30 A.M. 8:53 A.M. 12:30 P.M. 12:53 P.M. 1:00 P.M. 1:20 P.M. 1:30 P.M. 1:50 P.M. 2:27 P.M. 2:50 P.M. 4:30 P.M. 4:50 P.M. 4:00 P.M. 4:20 P.M. ^ 8:30 P.M. 8:53 P.M. SUNDAYS Effective Nov. 13 LV. PONTIAC ARR. METRO LV. METRO ARR. PONTIAC 1:30 2:35 3:00 3:20 3:25 4:35 5:00 5:20 3:25 4:35 5:00 aizu *~^tDndiiril yVlRWAYS For fletervations Call 674-0497 or Your Travel Agent Dr. David Soule, director of vocational education for Oakland Schools, has been named to serve as an educational consultant to the President’s Commission on Manpower. Soule’s first assignment this Outside school, she finds time week was to review a pilot pro-for ice skating and bowling and gram in Jackson, Miss., which is a member of the Rae-Vens was established cooperatively Drill Team. by the Department of Health, After high school, Linda plans Education and Welfare, the De-to attend college to obtain a partment of Labor and the Of-liberal arts degree. If ice of Economic Opportunity. FIS Economy-Line MUFFLER INSTALLED FREE by factory trainoci muffler tpeclallilc. y99 TISK CaitiuK/ OVERHAUL BAHERIES Stif Adjuiting Brakas $4 More 090 IXC HANOI 1949-34 CkonroltiA HIRE'S WHAT WE OOi 1. Rilliie oil four wliooli with bonded lining., 3. Torn Iho drum, end ore grind lining, on all four whooii. 3. Chock all four wh.ol eyilndor. • Dodgoi, Mynouthc, and Ramblor* l9Se>S3 ChivreloSCbrytlor, Flymedlb, Fenllac, Ramblor, ttudobokor 12.90 1955- 6S Volkfwagon 13.21 1956- 6S Ford and Morevry 13.90 4. Blood, fluih and rofill hydraulic iy.lim. with opprovod SAE fluid. 9. Cloon, in.pocf, ond Mrofully ropock front whoot boorlngi. «. Adiuit brakM on all four whooli, hand broko. podal clooronco. 19SS-62 luick . 1C:2I 19S7-A4 Cadillac It.31 19S4-** Old.mabila 16.31 BE PREPARED FOR " WINTER WITH THESE AUTOACCESSORY L W.E RESUVI THI.RIGHT to UMIt Purmanuntlypo PRESTONE ANTI-FREEZE manant anti-freeze that prevent* rust and corretion . . . will net evaporate or boil away. Protect* < " metal*, including o' GLENWOOB PLAZA • North Perry Street Corner Glenwood SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1966 SPBCiAI^RICES FOR THIS SUNDAY ONLY ~ NOON TO 7 P,M . WHILE QUANTITIES LAST Specially Pricedfor SavingB... 30” WICKER STOOL FOR KITCHEN .. BAR Sunday Only Compare at 3^^ Ideal for the rec. room or family kitchen. 30” high ... atoola are cool wicker with a natural finish that’s right with every color. Under braced for strength. Limit 4 to a customer. “TEEN AGE” SLUMBER BAG 177 Ideal for Record Party, Slumber Parties, Rec. Room and etc. Compare at Sunday Only Sunday Only 2-TIER WOODEN SPICE RACK AND 12 SPICE JARS Our Reg. 3.44 Charge It Wall - style cherrywood rack with quaint glass apothecary jars to keep spices in easy reach. $; Men’s and Women’s Styles In | | VINYL GLOVES FOR I i WARM WINTER WEAR I I Our Reg. 1.22 || Sunday Only AAen's gloves are tlip-ons with cotton knit four-chettes... ore in block only. Women's, in many colors . . hove cotton , knit fourchettes, cuffs. All ore lined in rayon pile. S-AA-L Charge It. ^ -'a' V » PLASTIC GARBAGE CAN ON WHEELS Our Reg. 6.66 Sunday Only Plaids, Solids, Checks BOYS’ FLANNELEHE SPORT SHIRTS Crochet Stitched Trim LAOIES’ LACE SLEEVELESS SHELLS Large 22-gaUon plastic trash can mounted on wheels. No more heavy lifting. Easy to roll about Charge it Limit Sunday Only pi » Chars[( Our Reg. 1.97 Sunday Only Charge It ps * Charge It Extra warm, cotton flannel sport shirts in your choice of regular or button-down collars. See plaids, solid colors and gay checks. Full Sanforized® and machine washable. Sizes 3 to 16. 100% virgin acrylic with crochet stitched trim at neckline, armhole, waistband. Nylon zipper back. Guaranteed hand washable. White, pink, blue, maize, beige, mint, and two-tones. S-M-L. Sunday Only 25 CHRISTMAS CARDS IN BDX> MANY DESIGNS' Our Reg. 77c lAssortment includes [boxes with a variety of designs and boxes that ,are all one-design. Buy now, save! Sunday Only ANSCO PAK I BLACK AND I WHITE FILM I Our Reg. 44c 37^ I Charge It S Quality No. 126 Black | and White film in instant i-i: loading cartridge for all instant loading cameras. Sunday Only RUGGED HUNT DR WDRK BDOT FDR MEN Our Reg. 13.86 ie.ee Charge It Insulated 8” high boot:;!; with retanned leather S uppers. Moc toe, corkS sole and heel. Teal. ?: 7-12. 5 Ask for a Kmart Credit Application and Just Say ^‘Charge It”! mt Pietund EAABOSSED TURKEY PLAHER FOR YOUR HOUDAY TABLE 16-Piece Ironstone Dinner-ware Starter Set Serves 4 Compare at 1,59 Sunday Only eef Our Reg. 5,88 Sunday Only see WARMLY INSULATED TROOPER CAPS AND NYLON SKI CAPS FISK VINYL FLOOR AAATS PROTEQ CAR'S INTERIOR Ducount Price Charge It lie Our Reg, 4.97-5.97 Sunday Only 3.e7 same. naUer is 18V4xl3%” size. Limited quantities. None sold as 4 matching coffee mugs. Limit 1 set to customer. Chaiye It. to dealers. Shop Kmart for big. big savings ... charge it sale now at Kmart Charge it GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD A—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1966 Women By JfiANNE IVELSON Oakland University's Continuum Center for Women, now a year old, is a refreshing change in a world filled with fanatical-like emphasis on youthfulness. Streamlin^, both functionally and structurally, it can take its place with justifiable pride in the ranks of the few other such programs in the nation. The element Ihal seems to set it apart is its flexibility. This is confirmed by its success in combining the enthusiasm of youth and .the disenchantment of age and still managing to come up with some rather exciting answers to maturity. If fact and truth about maturity would be yours, you will find realistic answers in the Center s testing and counseling program, 'Investigation Into Identity." , But there are a few questions you should ask yoursdf before ypur enthusiasm for this quest wanes. C.\.\ YOU CHANGE? Are you, for instance, ready to let loose of familiar and comfortable fantasies about yourself and others? Are you willing to chip away at an elaborate facade that has taken years to build? Will you be able to face the death of certain ideologies carried over from childhood? In fact, can you bear the knowledge of discovering YOU? * * * T^he program, now in its second year, consists of a battery of tests in the areas of academics, personality, values, aptitudes, and interests, both academically and vocationally. The tests are taken twice weekly for four consecutive weeks. Following this, there is an on canipus group discussion period Idsting two hours. Next comes consultation with a psychologist who explains the meaning of the test evaluations Test Score on Hostess Know-How By ELIZABETH L. POST Many of us are not sure just exactly what is the right thing to do when we are entertaining. Test your score as a charming hostess by giving yourself five points for each question to which you answer “yes.” Sixty to 75 rates you as an expert entertainer; 40 to 45 as average, and if you score below 40, run right to the nearest bookstore for a copy of “Etiquette.” * ★ * • When you have a dinner party, do you try to invite couples who are, not all in the same “group”? • Do you urge your guests to start eating before everyone is served? • Do you and your husband go to the door to greet every guest? • Do you offer caffein-free coffee as well as regular coffee after dinner? • When you hire a waitress for the evening, do you insist that she serve the lady guest of honor first? • Do you refuse to allow your guests to wash the dishes? • When you invite friends by telephone, do you tell them what sort of an occasion it will be so that they will know how formally to dress? • If you have no help, do you plan your menu so that most of the meal can be prepared in advance? • When giving a buffet dinner, do you have a seat available for every guest? • Whether you smoke or not, do you have plenty of ash trays and cigarettes in evidence? • Do you make sure that none of your pests is ever left without someone to talk to? • Do you urge your pestS to stay a little longer when they mention that it’s getting late? • Do you have plenty of pest towels, fresh soap, and tissues in the bathroom that the guests will use? • Do you empty ash trays and remove used glasses from the living room (or see that a maid does it) while your pests are dining? ★ ★ ★ How and when to introduce people puzzles many. The booklet “Introductions” gives helpful information on this subject. To get a copy, send a dime and a stamp^, self-addressed envelope to Elizabeth L. Post, In care of The Pomiac Pr®s. Find Selves in New Center [*WomenV Sedgo individually and makes recom- Naturally, there are some here is Uiat they are “not on n . k , . - rr„,na„fmnc nrnmsn u,hn nnmawifh nnroBU trial.” L.IIA O ■ 4-^ , mendations. From these, the advisers in employment, volunteering and education are able to assist in a realistic and practical man- For the center which helps women aiseover teir talents, interests and aptitudes completes the cycle with real solutions. women who come with unreal-istic notions about themselves and their abilities. But even this kind of disappointment is tempered by the proof that there are certain areas in which they can qualify, even excel. Most of the women entering the program approach it with at least some depee of anxiety. The thing they must remember The center, a bustling area most of. the time, has soniehow managed to keep the feeling of informality always present. Perhaps the always filled coffee pot has something to do wite it or the willingness of the staff to talk, advise and just listen, has much to do with it. Will you look at that! Another success story unfolds at the Continuum Center for Women, Oakland University. Looking mighty pleased with the follow up report on one registrant’s record are from left, Mrs. Priscilla Jackson, director of the center; Helen Zdeba, employment adviser; Elizabeth Wright, volunteer adviser; and Mrs. Eleanor Driver, orientation interviewer. A Others Profit by Your Knack of Sympathetic Listening ABBY Bv ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: My problem is people who tell me their troubles and ask for advice. Everyone I know has con-^ fided some sort? of mess to me— money troubles, \ neighbor! troubles, children troubles,’ husband, sex, household, and every other kind i of trouble, until I I’ve had it to the teeth. These people are my friends and relatives, so I can’t very well avoid them or they’d be hurt. I am glad if I can help, but it’s gotten to the point where my husband comes home, takes one look at me and says, “Well, what happened now — and to whom?” I have my problems, too, but I don’t burden anyone else with them. Well, I guess it’s gone full-circle and now I’m telling YOU my troubles. What is your advice? TIRED OF TROUBLES DEAR TIRED: Look at it this way, most people who tell their Honor Week for Nurses Nov. 14, through 18 has been designated as Michigan NUrses’ Week. Nurses at Pontiac General hospital will be guests of the Women’s Auxiliary at a tea Monday in Holiday Inn. ★ ★ ★ Hostesses for the 2-5 p.m. event will be Mesdames: Fred Fuller; Charles Crawford; William J. Dean, Merrell Petrie; Floyd Compton and Charles Barrett. General chairmap, Mrs. Glenn Sanford, will be assisted by Mrs. Charles Galloway. LUNCHldbN A second event during this week is the annual awards luncheon for adult volunteers Wednesday noon at the Elks Temple. ★ ★ ★ Five Volunteers will receive awards for 2000 hours or more of service. Ninety-three individuals will be recognized for over 52,000 hours of volunteering. Aleck Capsalis, chairman oh the board,, of trustees will speak.T troubles to others don’t want advice—they just want someone to listen to them. A sympathetic ear provides therapy for the troubled one, so consider yourself blessed to be able to perform that useful service. ★ ★ ★ DEAR ABBY: I told this lady that I wasn’t the marrying kind on our first date, but she said she didn’t have anything going for her at the moment and was only out for a good time, so I could hardly run her off. Well, one thing led to another and now I can’t get rid of her. » She hangs around where I work, bringing me hot lunches every day. And when the quitting-time whistle blows, there she is out in front with her car all shined up, waiting to give me a lift home. * * ★ But she doesn’t take me to MY home, she takes me to HERS, where she has supper all cooked and waiting. Then she lets me relax while she just plays the guitar and sings love songs in my ear. Should I weaken? OVER FORTY DEAR OVER: How old is the car? * ★ * DEAR ABBY: Every once in a while you permit a reader to air his pet peeve in your column. May I? Nothing makes me angrier than to pay good money for a sitter to care for our children, so that my husband and I may go out without them, only to find that we are pestered for a whole evening by the children of parents who are too tight to hire a sitter. Thank you. OFF MY CHEST * ★ * How has the world been treating you? Unload your problems on Dear Abby, in care of The Their Donation Is Commended A letter thanking the R h o Chapter of Alpha Delta Kappa Sorority was read during the Thursday evening meeting of the group. In the letter, Mrs. Dorothy Wood, directors of Compiun-/ ity Relations and Voluhteer Services thanked the chapter for furnishing a room at Pontiac General Hospital. ★ ★ ★ A discussion of the Alpha Teacher Education Program was led by Mrs. E. Cleo Wiley "andMrs. MeMn Boersma. ■ Pontiac Press. For a personal, unpublished reply, inclose a self-addressed, stamped envelope. For Abby’s booklet, “How to I Have a Lovely Wedding,” send $1 to Abby, in care of The Pontiac Press. Follows Rite Vows were taken by Lorae Yvonne Bonneau and Airman Basic Robert James Hempton, today in St. Benedict’s Catholic Church. Reception followed in Rotimda Country Inn. ★ ★ ★ The Raymond 3. Bonneaus, Cass-Elizabeth Lake Road and the Doyle 0. Hemptons, Allen Lake Drive, White Lake Township, are parents of the couple. •* it -k Imported candlelight English lace over satin fashioned an Empire gown and cathedral train -for the bride who also chose a bouffant veil of silk illusion. ★ ★ ★ Her cascade bouquet held Phalaenopsis orchids and Ste-phanotis. ★ ★ * With Sherry Leach, maid of honor, were bridesmaids Margaret I^nge, Janice Abel and Helen Sloat. Mary Bonneau attended her cousin as junior maid ' and Debbie Liske was flower girl. * * ★ Attending their brother were Bruce A. Hempton, best man, and Laurence Hempton who seated guests along with Michael Dunkel and Dale Alsup. Randy Bonneau was junior usher. * * * The newlyweds’ eastern hon-eyrnoon will include a visit to Washington. Calendar MONDAY Women’s Association for the Pontiac Symphony Orchestra, 1 p.m., home of Mrs. T. R. Schroeder of Silverside Drive. PEO Sisterhood, chapter CL, 1:30 p.m., home of Mrs. J. F. Williams of Waterford. Exemplification of ritual. Mrs. H. R. Cox will assist. Soroptimist Club of Pontiac, 6:30 p.m. dinner meeting at the Elks Temple. Junior Pontiac Women’s Club, 8 p.m,. First Federal Savings Oakland. Fred Ready of Detroit Edison on “Interesting and Unusual Effects of Light.” ‘City of Pontiac’ Auxiliary to Post 1370, Veterans of Foreign Wars Harvest dinner, Sunday, V.F.W. Hall. Mrs. Arthur Lees and Mrs. Earl Hall, cochairmen. Nicki Ross models “Squaws,” a lime crepe beret with Hiawatha plait in turquoise pom-poms during London’s Mayfair milliner Edward Mann’s spring 6f 1967 collection showing. Mann called his collection “Oddballs.” Secretaries are Advised The Pontioak Chapter of the National Secretaries Association, International gathered at Sylvan Glen in Troy Wednesday. Hostesses for the evening were Mrs. Garland Woody and Mrs. Laverne Adair. A talk was given by Wayne Yeager on insurance and the types available today. A discussion period followed in which the women learned what type inspranCe suits their careers the best. < .a, • * , * ★ The chapter which will be the Host Chapter for the GIMAC CPS Awards dinnei* at the Stat-ler Hotel in Detroit made plans for the event. Rose Mary King was the guest of thenevenlng. MRS. R. J. HEMPTON Sheila Bird Wears Velvet Bridal Gown Reception in Orchard Lake Country Club followed the marriage of Sheila Hamilton Bird to Norman Oscar Norgren of Shepherd, today in the Birmingham Unitarian Church. ★ Mr. and Mrs. Reilly Bird of Snowshoe Circle and the Oscar W. Norgrens of Roscommon are parents of the newlyweds. White chiffon velvet fashioned the bride’s floor-length gown with velvet roses accenting the oval neckline. Velvet petals formed a cap for her elbow-length illusion veil. For the morning rite, she carried miniature white Fuji chrysanthemums encircling a white orchid. ★ ★ ★ Matron of honor was Mrs. Clifton Patton with Sara Rix and the bridegroom’s sister Jane, as bridesmaids. k * k On the esquire side were Terry Patterson, best man, and the ushers Alger Butts and the bride’s brother Michael of Washington, D.C. Men's Night is Planned for Tuesday By SIGNE KARLSTROM the yearly men's night planned by the University of Michigan Alumnae in the Bir-mingham-Bloomfield area takes place on Tuesday, at 6:30 p.m. at the Village Woman’s Club. Chairman of the event is Mrs. G. T. Christiansen assisted by Mrs. L. E. Quinn and Mrs. G. H. Pitts who will accept reservations. There will be an interesting program by Richard L. Cutler, U. of M. vice president, who will be introduced by William H. Baldwin. Mr. Cutler who is in charge of student affairs was formerly professor of physiology at the University of California. Among those who have made reservations are: Dr. and Mrs. Cecil Conrad, Mr. and Mrs. Parker Stetson, the James Fullers, the Robert Wyatts, the John Thornhills, the John Coles and Dr. and Mrs. Dwight Ensign. A tremendous crowd turned out Thursday evening to welcome back the Detroit Symphony Orchestra and its conductor Sixten Ehrling after several weeks of guest appearances in the east. Appearing with the orchestra was the eminent Russian pianist Emil Gilels. Among locaTsymphony supporters present were the LeRoy W. Dahlbergs, Mr. and Mrs. L. T. Lewis, the Martin Butzels, the Edwin Ander-sons, and Mrs. Harold Warner. In a group were Mesdames Fredrick Erb, Wililam L. Kemp, Walter Gehrke, and Caron E. Dalton. Mrs. Dalton had just returned from South Bend, Ind., where she visited the Richard Robertsons, Party Chairman Is Mrs. Almas Mrs. Dorothy Almas was named chairman for the Christmas party of the ‘City of Pontiac’ Auxiliary to Post 1370, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Friday in the V.F.W. Hall. Gift boxes will be mailed to members’ sons and daughters in the Armed Forces. Mrs. Joseph Pedrogo Jr. is chairman of this project. Nats Defy Explanation By EDDY GILMORE LONDON iFi — Are Princess Margaret’s royal ears cold? If they aren’t, why has she been wearing a series of kooky, head-hugging hats? With no explanations — royalty doesn’t explain — she has made a series of public appearances in the oddest looking hats of her hat-wearing career. They had one thing in common — they sheltered her ears. Early in October, she attended a London art exhibition in a; Spanish style lid that covered the ears. ■A- ★ ★ A week later, she appeared in Poole, County Dorset, in a black and white head-hugger; starers could not see so much as a tip of the royal ear. WITH EAR MUFFS Nov. 1, she generated comment by fashion writers in London when she appeared in public with a fur-trimmed hat that sup- ported ear muffs and tied with ribbons under her pretty chin. Last Tuesday, on her way to bleak Scotland, she wore the > strangest looking lid yet — a hat that resembled a football players helmet studded with nails. One fashion writer commented: “The nailheads give the effect of the whole thing having been hanimered together and result in the sort of hard and uncompromising line most women would probably not favor.” It could be the weather. It’s fairly nippy, but not so nippy that thousands of other English women have clapped on ear-muffs, ODDBALL OF YEAR? In any case, hatmaker Edward Mann has named Princess Margaret the winner of the title “Best hatted Oddball for 1966.” He said he took this action because of the princess’ original personality and sense of humor toward fashion. J Of late. Princess Margaret of Britain hat worn at London Airport last month, has been keeping her ears tightly under left; a white leather helmet with gold wraps in a series of th6 oddest-looking studs center worn in Edinburgh, Scotland hats of: her hat-wearing career. Among this week and a white feathered creation them ttre^-yellowNind blm^^pixk-style mmm at St. James’ Palace. THE PONTIAC PltESS, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1968 COIFFURE 3901 HigUaod Rd. . CaU 335-5552 . Study Group Slates Meet A—13 The Parliamentary Study Club will meet at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday in the First Federal Savings Oakland Building. This program will be a continuation of the Nov. 2 meeting in which the “Precedence of Motions” was the subject The segtnent breakdown consists of “to commit or refer,” “to postpone definitely,” The previous question,” “to lay onthe table,” “take from the table” and “to adjourn.” Mrs. Ross Elliott wiU be ttie leader .with Mrs. Forties Has-call as sponsor. OPEN SUNDAY 2 to 5 P.M. SEMINOLE HILLS COLONIAL 4-bedr^m home in excellent condition. Uving room with fire-'^Il-’o-wall carpeting, modern kitchen ond la^ory on first floor. 4 bedrooms and 2 baths on second floor. Full ba«ment, gas heat. Nicely landscaped lot, 2 car garage. $24,500, terms. Directions: South off W. Huron on Cherokee one block, turn right to second house. *294 W. Iroquois. WE WILL TRADE ANNETT INC. REALTORS 28 E. Huron St., Pontiac, 338-0466 .Office Open ^enings and Sunday 1 to 4 Music Group Season Ends at Oakland Oakland University’s Meadow Brook Chamber Orchestra of 16 Detroit Symphony musicians will give its final performance of the season TYi., Nov. 18, at 8:30 p.m., in the ischool’s new Wilson Hall. The lielbert Harden-burghs of Durant Street announce the engagement of their daughter, Sandra Kay, to Terry A, Upcott, son of the Ernest Upcotts also of Durant Street. Idea^ Are Offered for Season FACTS ABOUT PHARMACY -/HOWARD L DELL Your Neighborhood Pharmacist WATCH YOUR WEIGHT An aduK, aceepdiiy fo tha dd jolin, l> a j ‘ >nd* and jutt grows on Baldwin Phaimacjr D.,^ 219 Baldwin a MINI-AIDS for Nerve Deafness NO WIRES-NO PLUGS 30% OFF ON ALL HEARING AfOS Byeftm-Behind-The-Ear-Bedy Aids Pontiac Consumers Co-Op Optical 1717 S. TELEGRAPH ROAD 333-7871 (14 Mile South of Orchard Lie. Rd.) It’s Holiday time again. Time to prepare for festivities ahead by attending the Pon-6ac YWCA Holiday Workshop to learn new and exciting ideas. The, workshop will be conducted each Tuesday from 10 a.m. until 12 for four weeks beginning Tuesday. The Candle Wix, custom candle makers of Birmingham, will conduct this Tuesday’s program. They will demonstrate the step-by-step method of making candles from molding to special touches. Wreath making, holiday foods and a workshop day for students to experiment with their own projects are slated. To enroll now call the Pontiac YWCA. Wine Social for Sorority A Wine Tasting Social will take place Thursday for the Oakland County Alumnae of the Delta Zeta Sorority. The event vrtll begin at 8:00 p.m. in the Knights of Columbus Hall, Southfield and 13-Mlle Roads. Mrs. Ken Pett of Christian Brothers will be the guest speaker. This is the group’s fund-raising project to benefit their national philanthropy for aid to the hard-of-hearing. Friends and spouses of Delta Zetas may attend. Further information may be obtained by contacting Mrs. Charles Fleckenstein Jr. or Mrs. Clarke Morrison both of Royal Oak. Mid-August vows are planned by Susan Ya-gield, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Ya-giela of South Boulevard, Avon Township, and Norman L. Williams, son of Mr. and Mrs. Russell Williams of Oaknoll Drive, Pontiac Township. Her fiance attended Lawrence Institute of Technology. Mr. and Mrs. John Kehus of North Pine-grove Avenue announce the engagement of their daughter, Linda Jean, to Bruce A. Stigall, son of . Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Stigall of Mary Sue Avenue, Independence Toumship. The bride-elect who- attended Pontiac Business Institute has set a Sept. 9 altar date. Family Twice Honored WILMINGTON, Del. (JPI -When Col. Louisa Spruance Moree, commander of Delaware Wing, Civil Air Patrol, recently received a Distinguished Service Medal, she became the second member of her family to be given that high award. Colonel Morse, who has commanded the state wing for 13 years, is the daughter of the late William D. Spruance Jr., who served as a colonel in the Army Reserve in World War I and was awarded the Army’s Distinguished Service Medal for his work in the Ordinance Dept. The Christmas centerpiece that Mrs. Thomas Reed of Pleasant Lake Drive is admiring with Mrs. James Coulson of Irwin Drive is fust one of the many handcrafted items that will be on sale at the St. Perpetua Catholic Church Christmas Bazaar. The bazaar and card party are sponsored by the Rosary Altar Society and will take place Thursday. Bazaar hours are 6 to 10 p.m. and the card party from 8 to 10 p. m. Albert Tipton will conduct with Faye Turner, soprano, the soloist. Miss Turner will be heard in Karl Heinrich Graun’s “Godi I’amabile” from “Montezuma” and Ibert’s “Deux Steles Orientees” for flute and voice. The program will include Handel’s Concerto Grosse No. 7 in B flat, Corelli’s Suite for-Strings, Monti-verdi’s “Three Scherzi Musical!,” Hindemith’s Five Pieces for String Orchestra, and Brahms’ “Liebeslieder Walzer.” Single tickets at $3, $2 for University students and faculty, are available at the Meadow Brook Festival office, Oakland University, 338-7211. Major Kennedy Is Their Guest Major Walter Kennedy of the Salvation Army Citadel, Detroit presented Scottish stories and songs and talked on the “fhirpose of Life” at Tuesday’s meeting of the Opti-Mrs. Club of Pontiac. Mrs. Roland Smith, Mrs. Gay Herrington and Mrs. Tom Hruska assisted the hostess, t Mrs. Oiarles Crane of Blr- ^ mingham. Cosmetic Sales Sales of cosmetics and allied articles totals more than $2.5 billion annually at the retail level, according to the ■ Food and Drug Administration. restore life and color to your * RUGS No Muss—No FiissI NEW WATl —will send experienced professional crallsinen into your liome-clean your Carpel>-re.slore the lustre and color that will make iliem “look” like new,” Phone: FE 2-7U2 Our eourteons personnel works quickly and efficiently to perform “Carpet Cleaning in Your Home.” An inex-jiensive way to add life lo your Carpets. ★ IWW WAY^ mu; AND CARPET CLEANERS ■12 WIS.NER STRKKX - rOMTAC Bloomfield Miraelo Milo Only _'HE HOUR SHIRT SERVICE thewo®^' REPAIR AND ALTERATION SERVICE .Dry Cleaning Special. M0N.-TUES. and WED., NOV. 14-15-16th MEN’S SPECIAL TROUSERS OR SWEATERS 2 98* MEN'S TWO-PIECE SUITS n.09 Bloomfield Miracle Mile Only Dial 332-1822 OPEN SUNDAY 12 to 6 MONDAY 9:30 to 9 BECKWITH-EVANS ________ Mid Season CARPET SALE YOU GET CARPET, PAD, AND TACKLESS INSTALUTION INSTALIATION GUARANTEED FOR THANKSGIVING COMPLETXLV INSniLEO NYLON PILE LOOP 490 H./4 Mmun yam. Choka of 6 celora. YOU GtT CARPtT, RUBBiRCRAfT PADDiNO AND INSTAUA-TION) COMPLETELY INSTALLED SPACE DYED NYLON TWEED 598 H.|nL IKSTHLED r.gl4 nylon pita loop canilrwc- VOU OIT CARPET WITH RUB- COMPLETELY INSTAUED PIPING RIDGE HEAVY WOOL PILE TWEED COMPLETELY INSTALLED RANNM SHEAR ACRYLIC PILE . YOU on CAR. Pn, RUBBERCRAFT PAD AND INSTALUTION. I *q>yd. INSTALLED i j of dacorotor c« __________ I from. YOU GET CARPET, RUB-I BERCRAFT PAD AND INSTAU UTION. COMPLETELY INSTALLED SOI LOOP NYLON PILE C98 I./A INSTALLED COMPLETELY INSTALLED WOOL PILE LOOP TEXTURE FREE RUBBERCRAFT PADDING WITH EACH REMNANT SIZE 12x10-11 gold loop glad.....75. 12x12 blu# corvod trumpot... i 130. 12x13-7 boigo quoon twood__120. 12x21 groan twood squiio :... 206. 12x11-9 bluo-groon twood hotly . 80. 12x25-3 candy stripo.........200 12x13 groon stroll Hampton_270. 12x9-10 lilac plush Monty...92. 12x13 gold plush Monty.....125. 12x9-6 gold random ihoor ... 149. 12x10-6 groon loop Torch.....70. 12x15 Boigo Bark Glondolo ... 180. COMP. SALE SIZE 12x11 black and whito 4I.9S t1(.BS 109.SB 12x12-10 groon plush AAona . . 204. 12x13-4 gold twist Dob . i... 126. 12x21 boigo mojosty ..........195. 12x9 groon AEodino.............96. 12x10-6 bluo loop Rondo......140. 12x14 bluo scroll Hill........210. 12x12-2 groan scroll Saturn ... 140. 12x18 purplo loop Glad.......120. 12x13-8 lilac plush...........108. 12x9 boigo Rivorviow..........108. 12x16-7 groon twood Philmon .. 220. 19.95 94.95 125.95 45.95 12x17-6 Martini loop Kingly ... 144. 12x9 groon lyric.......... 108. 12x16 whito plush...........130. 12x9 rospborry tempo.......120. 12x18 bluo groon Vorono ... 144. 12x9 melon damson...........108. 12x13-6 Boigo Palomo........180. 12x9-11 gold loop Rock......110. 12x9-8 bluo comoo...........130. 12x10-6 BoigoShog...........ISO. 12x9 groon morit........ 140. 12x15-9 Boigo Loop Nylon .... 147. SALE 89.95 B9.95 19.95 69.95 109.95 49.95 109.95 69.95 CONVENIENT CREDIT - NO MONEY DOWN - I YEARS TO PAY FIMU PLOOW COVBitlMOS nL-HURGN WEST HURON at TCLEGRAPH- 334-9644 A-^14 THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 12. ONE DOLOR {^NDAY SPECIAL DIUYTON STORE CLOSED MONDAYS AND TUESDAYS CANADIAN BACON V™"/ Ot$100 Pi««es MS I PETERS Extra-Lean BONELESS I SMOKED HAMS _____________II [DRAYTON PLAINS STORE ONLY BAZLEY CASH MARKET .4348 Dixie Highway-Drayton Plains REGULAR $90.00 CONVERTIBLE TOPS Instant Credit! Rear Windows and. Zippers' BillKelley^s SEAT COVER Telephone FE 2-533S Open Daily 9 a.m. to 6 p.m SALE ENDS NOV. 19th ■#51 *»IPricMWithTli|iAdlhily cei^ I SORRY whAeoev I NO DEALERS lAVV SALE “Thrifty Savings" HOURS CLOSE-OUT SALE 20% to 90% err ALL SLOT CAR ITEMS MUST BE ^OLD OUT BY JANUARY 1st TO MAKE ROOM FOR EXPANDING BICYCLE SALES r HO-1/32 - 1/24 Scale | SCARLETT'S "s°Ho°r 203 N. Perry at Wide Track FE 3-7843 “A HEAP 0' CLEANING FOR A WEE BIT 0’ MONEY" . . . i SHIRTS LAUHDERED Monday-Tuesday-Wedilesday With Dry Cleaning Order of $2.00 or More VALUABLE COUPON At Enggass in Downtown Pontiac Boil Water Faster . . . for Instant Coffee, Tea, Cocoa, etc. ELECTRIC “INSTANT KEHLE” Specially Priced Only HOOVER /VACUUM 5 or More SHIRTS ZD With dry cleanin, order of $2.00 or mere anJ this ceupei c Each VALUABLE COUPON * MONDAY - TUESDAY - WEDNKDAY^''^^ * I COUPON I COUPON I • Lidies’ Plain Skirts | (■Men’s Pants I *Men’!..„„ Dry Cleaned KQC ] • Lfi”’ Ihein Catered I -n^jYessed Q9 I ^ ^ With BiniiiHim dry cleaninc order ef $2.10 HUROH SERVICE REBUILT CLEANERS SERVICE - PARTS for ALL MAKE SWEEPERS POWERFUL HOOVER UPRIGHT CLEANER CLEANERS AND SHIRT LAUNDRY 944 WEST HURON ST. Open Daily 7.a.m. te 6 p.m., Sat. 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Telephone FE 2-0231 Decorated glazed ceramici 22K • Gold TrimmedI Easy to CleanI Beautiful "Moss Rose" DesignI ^ Never before at this low pricel Buy Now for Christmas Giving! PONTIAC ENGGASS JEWELERS 25 N. Saginaw St.. iff Downtown Pontiac HUNTERS’ SPECIAL! BRAND NEW SNOW TIRES NOT RECAPS 6:00x13 Black (Slightly Blemished) Model #69 or #34 Attachments 99c with Purchase 2 for Clip This sus Coupon BARNES & HARCRAVES HARDWARE 742 W. Huron St. PARK FREE FE 5-91 01 Across Vrom the Post Office OTHER SIZES AT TERRIFIC SAVINCS CRESCENT U. S. ROYAL S20 S. Saginaw 333-1031 SPECIAL NOTICE Due to economic reasons-Hoffman's retail dept, will hove new hours. Effective week ending Nov. 19th, 1966, the retail dept, will ONLY be open on Friday 18th and Saturday 19th from 9 AM. to 6 P.M. Freezer orders will be token Monday through Saturday 9 A.M. to 5 P.M. Doily, We know that this change will bring to you outstanding values that "Hoffman's" ore famous for. Please watch for future Ads in The Pontiac Press. Thank You, MR. HOFFMAN The Heme cf Naturally Tender Meats FREEZER SPECIAL MONDAY threugh SATURDAY FULL SIDE 0’ BEEF 49C lb. Cut, Wrapped, Frezen and Delivered Free 1 slab cf bacen free with a frezen erder this week. PUCE YOUR ORDER MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY 9 A.M. to 5 P.M. We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities HOFFMAN’S PONTIAC FREEZER FOODS 526 North Perry St. FE 2-noo IBUCKLOAD SALE 'til Thurs., N LUCITE INSIDE WALL PAINT $A99 ■§ GAL. UUIOlUC A A .A HOUSE PAINT^Sfi!'! SUPER I KEM- TONE NEW LOW PRICE , ^ $449 ITenef I AIM966 Colors .. .$4.99 Gal. TOM’S HARDWARE T..V 905 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 5-2424 You Cm Waalhanfrip $995 Your Door! ^ Ccmplete set, fasteners inch KEEGO HARDWARE NO. 1 3041 ORCHARD LAKE 682-2660 SUPER KEM-TONE Ceiling White Only SHERWIN-WILLIAMS A-100 LATEX HOUSE PAINT, Gallon........ 0SS LUCITE EXTERIOR HOUSE PAINT, Gal... 095 Regular $19.95 SUNBEAM FRY PAN ?T's HUDSON’S discount 41 EAST WALTON JUST EAST OF BALDWIN AVI. FE Op«n Fridoy 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. Weeltdoyi9 A.M.fo6 P.M.-Sun, 10 A.M.to3 P.M. BUSTER BROWN CLOTHING FOR CHILDREN ^BLUE BELL WEARING APPAREL ____20R_THEJENTIRE_FA^LY___ We Carry a Complete Line of YARD SIMPLICin GOODS “ PAHERNS Art E234 - Washable Colors COATS and CLARK’S RED HEART KNITTING WORSnO $-|19 100% Virgin Wool -Mothproof - Tonglo Proof-Roody to Knit . — Poll Out Skein UHAN’S VARIETY STORE 14TS Baldwin Ave. at Walton FE 4-3348 O0on Doily 9 A.AA. to 9 P.M.. Sunday 10 A.M. to 6 PJIL The PONTIAC ANOTHER MALL Presents SPECTACULAR I WINTER ' ART and FASHION FESTIVAL NOV. 14th through NOV. 19th With JACKIE COMPTON WJBK-TV Fashion Co-Ordinator giving two fashion Shows doily at 4 ond 7 P.M_UNDER THETGLOO. Art in color and design co-ordinated with winter foshionl SPECIAL FEATURES • Horry Whitlow and his unique gloss collection and book on gloss. • The "Quints" and their famous "Lady in Red" • Tetd Gilmore ond hit Pic-A-Peorl • Portraitists, Liz Collins, Mary Egstrom David Ford, Elizabeth Olsen • John Groot and his Antique Pewter • Ruth Nobel — Handmade Jewelry • Barbara Pierson — Early American Wood Plaques • Cormi O'Dell ond "The Wood Box" • J. T. Winston — Metal and Gloss Designer ELIZABETH LAKE and TELEGRAPH RD. PIHiRlI THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, %QVBMBER 12, 1966 B-1 For Preschool Children Initiate Religious Classes A religious program entitled “ft^hool Child’s Encounter With God” was initiated Sunday for four and five year old children at St. Michael’s Cattiolic Church. Classes are conducted each Sunday morning during the 10:30 Mass. ★ ★ ★ Children whose parents are of the Catholic faith previously received all early religious training in the home. Those attending Catholic schools received training in the class room daily. The preschool religious program in the Archdiocese of Detroit was started hy Mr. •nd Mrs. Charles PUIon of Allen Park using the manual “All for Jesus” by Sister M. Agnes Iherese I.H.M. Three years ago in view of the renewed liturgical and ecumenical movement in the Catholic c h u r c h, Archbishop John F. Dearden appointed Sister Hierese to the office of super- • of preschool religion for Uie Diocese of Detroit. She works with Msgr. Edward Burkhardt, director of Detroit Confraternity of Christian Dcx:-trine. ★ it Sister Therese incorporated the French program, translated “Religious Educaticm for the Very Young,” and adapted it to the needs of American childroi, adding songs and activities. “The object of the program is to develop the faith of the child through personal encounter with God, said Sister Therese. ★ ★ ★ "The children learn through fte beauties of croatlon, progressing from nonliving things, such as water, rocks, sun, moon and stars through the creation of living plants, animals and people. Sense perception is emphasized. For example, listening to a shell, smelling a flower, feeling a rock leads to a deeper awareness of the wonders of creation. Simple liturgical activities from the “Book of the Word of God” introduce the child at an early age to the liturgy. PRAY IN SONGS No formal prayers are taught until the lessons are studied in which the prayers are explained. The child learns to offer spontaneous prayers in song, in chant and in gestures. Other activities include drawing, pasting, cutting, learning to share, and use audio-visual aids, felt boards and pictures. Michael Clever, Mrs. Richard Doll, and Mrs. Dean Kleino. According to the Rev. Charles F. Rooney, an assistant pastor, parents play an important part in the program. Each week the child gets a take-home sheet describing what was taught and suggesting ways for parents to help their children grow in understanding during the week. ★ ★ ★ Parents can share and learn how to instruct their children without w 0 r r y of not knowing the right answer. “Our aim is not to teach a lot of material,” said Sister Therese, “but to build these children There 80 difldren enrolled* into real Christians who are at St. Michael’s with classes[ known by their love,” divided into five groups according to age. Each class has a teacher, substitute teacher and an older grade school girl helper. The volunteer teachers include Mrs. Stuart C. Cappell, Mrs. Richard Reynolds, Mrs. LEARN STORY OF CREATION-Mrs. Richard Reynolds (tf ^ E. Rundell shows Angie Kleino of 59 Oliver (left) and David Clever of 45 Chamberlain rocks, flowers and plants as she.tells the story of God creating the world to children of St. Michael’s Catholic Church. —---- Church News FIRST PRESBYTERIAN i charge of the 9:30 a. m. Sunday Three new members have been ISchool. Junior High Fellowship added to the staff of First Pres-iwill meet at 5:30 p.m., and byterian Church. They include Mrs. Russell Ciuchi, housekeeper in charge of church dinnos and receptions; Charles Reid, church custodian; and Cyn^ Skoog, assistant secre- “Scoreboard” will be Pastor Galen E. Hershey’s sermon theme at the 9:30 and 11 a. m. services tomorrow. Jdm Ward will Bing “I Am the True Vine’ for the (^ertory number, and the choir willprasent “The DONELSON BAPTIST New members will be received into the fellovnhip of Dondson Baptist Church at the 7 p.m. service tomorrow# The worship hour will also include the rite oi baptism and installation d new officers. Members installed will be James Brown, Frank Thick, Mrs. LeRoy McKnight, Cheryl Worthen, Mrs. Earl Taylor, Mrs. Clayton Salles, Duane Meisino, Mrs. Dorothy LaFlamme, Mrs. Lewis Goff and Mrs. Irving Taylor. CHURCH OF ATONEMENT “Wb«t Temptation Come s” will be the theme of the Rev. Crea M. Clark’s sermon at the 10:45 a. m. service tom(»Tow in the Church of Atonement, United Presbyterian, 3535 Qintonville, Waterford Township. Francis Manning will be in young people planning to attend the youth retreat Nov, 18 to 20 will get together at 7 p. hl to discuss arrangements. GRACE LUTHERAN The Rev. Wallace B. Turner, ehaplato with the U S. Navy, will fill the pulpit at Grace Lutheran Church, his home congregation, for both the 9 and 11 a.m. worship services tomorrow. ★ ★ ★ Chaplain Turner and his family are on annual leave visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Turner on Old Orchaiti Drive. ORCHARD LAKE I The baptism of children will be included during worship of the Orchard Lake CJommunity Church, Presbyterian tomorrow. The Cherub Choir composed of four, five and six-year-old children will sing at 9 a.m. with Martha Grother directing. The Chancel Choir will offer “Walk in the Path of Peace.” The Crusader Choir will present “Prayer of Hianskgiv-ing” and “Thank You God” at 11 a.m. Pastor Edward D. Auchard will preach on “The Price of Manhood.” Henry Jones will meet with Senior High Fellowship Sunday e V e n 1 n g for a discussion on 'Christian Mission in Industrial Society.” BIBLE STDRIES—St. Michael’s Catholic Oiurch is holding religious classes for children 4 and 5 years of age every Sunday during the 10:30 a.m. Mass. More than 80 children are enrolled in the five classes. The boys and girls learn Bible stories, paste pictures concerning the stay in books; PontPM PrMi Photos by Ed Vindorworp sing; and offer their own individual prayers. Shown are (from left) Teresa Doll of 123 Oliver, John Reynolds of 250 E. Rundell, Mrs. Stuart Cappell and daughter Joanne of 100 Vernon Drive. Open Nov. 21 'Education for Marriage' Courses Set for YMCA The Pontiac Area Council of Churches will offer the course entitled “Educatiai for Marriage” again this fall. According to the Rev. Jack H. C. Clark, executive director of the Council, the course is intended to be a supplement to pre- 1 marital counseling given by pas-1 of Churches office in the YMCA I Pontiac Area Council of Church-fa’s, priests and rabbis of the between 8:30 and noon Monday es. Box 931, Pontiac 48056, Rev. rea. [through Friday, or writing thejMr. Clark said. The course will be held on alternate Monday evenings beginning Nov. 21 in the YMCA, 131 Mt. Oemens. Each session begins at 7:30 p.m. The classes, first pffered h the spring, were well received by those who participated. Teen-agers as well as those in their SOs attended from Rochester, Hadley, Lake Orion, Highland Park, Femdale, Flint, Binninf^m, Madison Heists and Pontiac. Although offered to couples, either toe prospective bridegroom or bride may attend the PUT UP SIGN — Looking at the sign announcing toe locatktt of thair new diurdi are (foom left) 4daioioe.A. Rife of 261 Dick. Henry V. Knight of 428 Grey. Auburn Heights and Gerald A. OuUand of Roctoester, pastor of toe {resent church at U Froot The oongragation will build on the psp-«rty seress bum toe Herrington School, 541 Bay. Missionary Conference Next Week Evangel Temple, 1380 Mount Clemens will be host for the fifth annual Missionary Conference Wednesday through Sunday. ★ ★ ★ Missionaries speaking at the five-day sessions will include the Rev. Cliff Bedell, home form the Philippine Islands; and the Rev. Gordon Stinson from Pakistan. ★ ★ ★ Former Pontiac residents returning to speak at the conference will be the Rev. and Mrs. Harry Metro from Ethiopia, and the Rev. and Mrs. Lyle Legg from Nigeria. Services are scheduled for 7 p.m. daily. The annual missionary banquet will be held at 6:30 p.m. Saturday. The public is invited. 'Riding the Pulpit,' Film af Northern Youth for Christ will present a new Gospel film entitled “Rid-^ the Pulpit” at 7:30 toid^t in Pontiac Northern High School. The film concerns a true story of a young man going into toe ministry. Admission Is free and the iwblic is invited, Norman Clothier, director, saidL ★ ★ ★ Youth for Christ Bible quiz practice will be held at 3 p.m. tomorrow in Marimont Baptist Church. Church youth groups competing this year are Gingellville Baptist, Sunnyvale Chapel, Sil-vercrest Baptist, First United Missionary, Stone Baptist, Waterford Community and Marimont. TTie phUosc^y of the marriage course was develqied by an interdencHninaticmal group making reconunendations to toe council which Included Catholics, Jews and Protestants. OPEN NOV. 21 Dr. Arthur RiewaW, director of the Oakland County Marriage Consultation Program, will lecture on psychological aspects of marriage on Nov. 21. !On Dec. 5, Dr. Everette Gustafson, Pontiac physician, vrill lecture on the physical relationship in marriage. Ralph Nwvell, insurance ex-executive and Pontiac Council layman, wfll speak on toe financial resp^billties in marriage on D«c. U. Coordinator for eadi of jthe three sessioos will be toe Rev. Charles A. Colberg, pastcn- of Gloria Dei Lutheran Church and vice presidait of toe Pontiac Coun<^ of Clnin^. the “Education for Marriage” course is being tiered to all in DISCUSS COUNSELING - Looking over plans for toe coming courses on “Education for Marriage” scheduled for toe YMCA are (frmn l^t) Ted Slosson, of 2645 Woodbine, toe mea, IkR reseruatioBaifra^WMocd ToumsU^^ toe Rev. . be made by caDiiig toe Cotmctt Gaflwrg of 2550 Pontiac, Pontiac and Ralph t. Norvell of 46 Wenonah. Mr. Slosson is executive secretary of toe Y; Pastor Colberg, moderator of_the course; ,fti^Mr. Ncnrvell, a pendist. ' - -4 B—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. s/tURDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1966 E¥ANGEIICAL UNITED BRETHREN BALDWIN AVE. CHURCH - 210 Baldwin Sunday School.....................10:00 AM Morning Worship . •...............11 KM) AM Ewning Service .............. .... 7:W PM. Rev. Marvin Ridcerf, Pastor ■ NORTHEAST COMMUNITY CHURCH - 6200 Mf. Clemens CHURCH SCHOOL 9:45 A.M - WORSHIP 11 A.M. YOUTH FELLOWSHIP 6:30 P.M Wed. Adult Choir 8 P.M. - Bible Study 8 P.M. Thurs. Friendly General Baptist Church 69 S. Astor St. FE 4-3421 334-7407 REVIVAL CLOSING SUNDAY NIGHT 7:30 PM: - REV. HOMER JACKSON, Evongelist First Congregational Church t. Huron and Milt St. Rev. Malcolm K. Burton, i^inister MORNING WORSHIP 10:30 ond SUNDAY SCHOOL Cfiurc/i 0/ tm H.ayflovir Nltri FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH OF DRAYTON PLAINS (G.A.R.B.C.) . 3756 Sashabaw SUNDAY WORSHIP SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:45 11 A.M.-6:30 P.M. WEDNESDAY EVENING 7:30 Pastor, Rev. Marshall Reed '? ' wf’ff In humility imitate Jesus and] Socrates. — Benjamin Franklin, American statesman and phil-osc^her. LAKECREST BAPTIST CHURCH-The first unit of the Lakecrest Baptist Church building program is being completed. The new red brick church with white trim is located on a three-acre site at Airport and Elizabeth Lake, Water- ford Township. Tlie Lakecrest congregation, currently worshiping in Waterford Center School, is a mission of Columbia Avenue Baptist Church. Eldon Eroh is the architect. The Rev. Marion E. Sherrill is pastor. In Area Services Music, Ministers, Members Scheduled Sabbath service of the N e w Temple, Bloomfield Hills, will be conducted by members and children of the congregation at 8:30 p.m. Friday. Rabbi Ernst Conrad and officers of the Temple will be at the regional convention of Union of American Hebrew Congrega-I tions in Milwaukee, Wis. meeting will be the annual father and son sport night dinner and program at 7 p.m. The date is Dec. 5. . NEWMAN AME The Goodwill Singers of Albion will present a musical con- First United Missionary Church < The harbor LIGHTS '' , . Quartet Special Sacred Concert 7:00 P.M. SUNDAY SCHOOL WORSHIP 10 AM n a.M, 149 North East Blvd. PONTIAC EVENING WORSHIP 7:00 P.M. FE 4-1811 The congregation is currently worshiping in Unitarian Church, Woodward and Lone Pine, Bloomfield Hills. . CHRIST CHURCH CRANBROOK Dr. James H. Laird, pastor of Central Methodist Church, Detroit, will be jguest speaker at the Men’s Club dinner at 7 p.m. Monday at Christ Church Cranbrook. MARIMONT BAPTIST CHURCH 68 W. Walton FE 2-7239 SUNDAY SCHOOL 9=45 A.M. WORSHIP SERVICE !............ 8:30 A.M. WORSHIP SERVICE.............11.00 A.M. "A FAITHFUL SAYING" ; EVENING WORSHIP......... 7:30 P.M. ■THE APPEARANCE Of CHRIST" PHILIP SOMERS JR., preoching of oil services _^OSTOLIC CHURCH OF CHRI^ 458 CENTRAL Saturday Young People .... 7:30 P.M. Sunday School ond Worship 10:00 A.M. Sunday Evening Services.......7:30 P.M. Tues. ond Thurs. Services .... 7:30 P.M. Williom D. Portnt. Church Phone FE 5-8361 Pastor's Phpne 852-2382 Dr. Laird is nationally known for his stand on civil rights and for his critical views of United States policy in Viet Nam. His subject Monday evening will be “The United States; Should We Fight in Viet Nam?” The December Men’s Club cert in Newman AME Church, 253 Bagley at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow. gregation will be guests of the Bloomfield Hills Oiurch. The Rev. A. N. Reid, pastor, will preach at the Unitarian Church, Bloomfield Hills, tomorrow morning. Many of the con- A service will be held at 11 a.m. tomorrow in the Newman Church. Men’s Brolherhood Hears Editor; Educator Speaks FIRST CONGREGATIONAL Do We Have Great Possessions?” will be the theme of the Rev. Malcolm K. Burton’s sermon at First Congregational Church tomorrow. The Rev. C. Stanley Lowell, editor of Church and State in Washington, D.C., will be the Men’s Brotherhood dinner speaker at Kirk in the Hills Wednesday evening. Dinner is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. in the refectory. The Probationer’s Choir will present “Father in Heaven” and “Jesus, Savior, Son of God” and the Chancel Choir will give the Choral Invocation. A prominent clergyman and editor, the guest speaker is widely known as'a preacher, writer. FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH Disciples of Christ 858 West Huron Street 9:45 AM. CHURCH SCHOOL lliOPAM. WORSHIP SERVICE Rev. John Scott Phones: Office 332-1474 Porsonoge 335-9723 Loyalty Days Start Sunday; Workers Call Musicale Set for Friendship educator and authority or church-state questions. His book entitled “Protestant-Catholic Marriage” is used by many ministers as a handbook for counseling young The Missionary Department of Friendship Baptist Church is After serving several method- sponsoring a musicale at 3:30 ist pastorates, Rev, A. Lowell,p.m. tomorrow, visited South America studying! ★ ★ ★ religious freedoiii ptobleiiis. ParticipaUfig aie Jaiiies Her-He was an accredited cor- ring of Liberty Baptist Church, respondent in both 1963 and 1965 |the Goldenaires of St. James at the Vatican Council. iMissionary Baptist Church and AUBURN HEIGHTS U.P, 1^® Gospelettes, a groqp com- Detroit Bible College, will con-' tinue his messages on “Proph-| ecy and Fundamental Teach-1 ings of the Bible” at the 11 a.m. service tomorrow in Au-A consecration of workers will burn Heights United Presbyter- Dr. R„y_A,*ich. president ofSchttr “’'“'“‘l be included in the 10 a.m. service tomorrow in Oakland Park Methodist Church when Dr. Julius Webb brings the morning message. ian Church, United Presbyter-, ian. Sunday School 11:30 A.M. Wed. Serv. . , 7:30 P.M. Morning Worship 9:45 A.M. Evening Service 7:30 P.M. Christian Tempfe "Where Faith and Friendliness Meet" 505 Auburn Ave.’ , Rev. Lola P. Marion Pastor CHRISTIAN PSYCHIC SCIENCE CHURCH 12 Warren St. Speoker 7:30 P.M. Silver Tea, Wednesday 7,30 P.M Dr. Webb, is here from the department of finance and field service of thj Methodist Church to assist in raising a two-year budget of $50,000 in preparation for the new church. ILGRIM HOLINESS CHURCH Baldwin at Fairmount ; Sunday School..............10:00 Worship....................... .11:00 Pilgrim Youth.......... 6:15 Everting Family Gospel Hr. . ... 7:00 Wednesday Prayer and Praise . 7:00 Rev. William Doe, Minister THE LUTHERAN CHURCH '____INVITES YOU THE LUTHERAN- CHURCH MISSOURI SYNOD THE LUTHERAN CHURCH IN AMERICA CHRIST Rloomlield Hills Phone: 646-S887 Sundoy Church School 9,45 Sundoy Worship 8:30 ond 11,00 IS. Lake Rd., Wot Phone OR 3-7331 Sundoy Worship 11 lOO Sunday Church School 9,20 GRACE Genesee pi GWndole (W, Side), Poniioc. Phone: FE 2-1562 Sunday Church School 9,00 ond 1 Sunday Worship 9,00 ond 11,00 PEACE 5825 Hlphlond Rd. (M-59),' P Phone. 673-5438 Sundoy Church School 9.00 SuDjllay Worehip 10:30 M pAltfkl t GLORIA DEI 2600 Ponlidc Rood. Poniioc Phone 335-9141 Sundoy Worahip 8:30 and 11 Sundoy Church School 9:30 Chorles A. Colberg, Poelor ASCENSION 4150 PonKoc lake Rd.. Ponli: Phone OR 4-1212 , Sunday Worihip 8:30 and 1' Church School 9:45 ,00 rd H, Foucht, Po ST. PAUL Jeelyn ol Third (N. Side). Ponli: Photw: FE 8-6902 . Sunday auich School 9:00 Sunday Wonhip 10,45 Maurice G. Shackall, Potior ST. STEPHEN Sothobow at Kempt. Droyton Ploint Phonei OR 3-6621 Sunday Church School 9,1^ Sunday Worship 8:00 ond 10.,30 E. pdiu Evonm, Poslor ■ IT. TRINITY 311 Auburn Rd. (E. Side), Pontiac IWEE 49405* THE AMERICAN LUTHERAN CHURCH BEAUTIFUL SAVIOR S631 N. Adom Rd., Bleotnfield HilIt Phone Ml 6-5041 Sundoy Worihip 8:15 and 11.00 Sunday Church School 9:30 Daniel Zlll, Potter MT. HOPE Phone. 335-9681 vd., Pontic ly Worship 8:30 and 11.00 . Sundoy Church Schoo; 9.30 Ronold E. Roin, Potior , SYLVAN LAKE 2399 Figo, Pontioc Phone: 682-07^0 Sundoy Worship 8,00 and 10.30 Sundoy Church School 9,15. "THE LUTHERAN HOUR" Each Sunday WPON 7.05 A.M., CKLW 12:^ P.M. Christ's Church of Light NON-DENOMINATIONAL Lotus Lake School, Waterford Cor. Percy King and Harper St. Sunday School, 9:45 A.M. ' Worship ... 11:00 A.M. Rev. Eleanor O'Dell 674-2650 The congregation is presently building a new church to be known as the St. James Methodist Church on Kennett Road across from Louise Al-cott School. At 7:30 p.m. Dr. Aldrich will | conclude the series of se^ mons with “Invitation Words of the Bible.” The congregation will hold the annual meeting for election of officers at 7:?0 Wednesday evening Mrs. Flora Byers will present the nominating report. Sam Sheehy will preside. Action will also be taken on the by-laws. Loyalty Days of the church will be Sunday, Monday and Tuesday. During this period workers will canvass the membership for pledges or gifts. BETHEL TABERNACLE First Penecoslal Church of Pontioc Sun. School 10 am. Worship 11 o.m. EVANGELISTIC SERVICE Sun., Tues. and Thurs. — 7:30 P.M. Rev. ond Mrs. E. Crouch 1348 Baldwin Ave. FE 5-4387 "AN AMERICAN BAPTIST CHURCH" Bethany Baptist Church West Huron ot Mark 9:45 A.M. Church School For All Ages 11:00 A.M. Morning Worship Sermon: "THE PRIORITY OF PEACE" Ample Parking Space Dr. Emil Kontz, Pastor Feature Quartet at Two Services The Harbor Lights Quartet of Battle Creek will appear at the First United Missionary Church, 149 N. East Blvd. at 10 a.m. and 7 p.m. tomorrow. Members of the quartet started singing together in 1961. Since that time they have made hundreds of appearances in Michigan, Indiana, Ohio, New York and Pennsylvania churches of some 30 denominations. According to Pastor Kenneth L. Pennell, the Harbor Lights Quartet is known for the exceptional blend of their voices and warm presentation of repertoire. The group consists of Arnold Burch, Arden Field, Dean Lotto and Dan Pierce. The public is invited. All Saints Episcopal Church Williams St. otW. Pike St. THE REV. C. GEORGE WIDDIFIELD Rector 00 A.M. — Holy Communion 9:15 and ) I A.M, — MORNING PRAYER' and SERMON By The RECTOR CHURCH SCHOOL 6:15 P.M. Episcopol Young Churchmen - Pontioc Stote Hospitol REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST of lotter Day Saints 19 Front St 7 P.M. - Elder V7 I A. Outlond, Pastor - Lothwall 651-0732 MEMORIAL BAPTIST CHURCH 599 Michigon Avenue, Pontiac GeroW H. Rapalje, Poslor Bible School...............-.9:45 AM. Morning Worship.............114)0 A.M. Evening Worship..............7:00 P.hA Prayer ond Bible Study Wednesdoy....................7.00 PM. Contest Begins The Bible School Attendance Contest at The Elizabeth Lake Church of Christ, known as “Reach New Heights for Christ,” will begin tomorrow. The contest will continue through Dec. 18. GOOD SHEPERD ASSEMBLY OF GOD Temporory Location Leggett Elementary School on ELYRIA RD. off Pontiac Lake Rd. Waterford Township Sunday School. 10:00 A M. Morning Worship 11:00 A.M. Evening Service . . 7 P.M. frulor RanalH C.on/ier EM 3-0705 ■ CHRISTIAN CHURCH Temporary meeting place: Mason School Walton Blvd. (Bet. Sashabaw and Silver Lake Rd.) Worship 9:30 a.m. Bible School 10:30 o.m. Gospel Hour 7 p.m. Bernard M. Cogel, Merritt H. Baker, Min. "No Book But The Bible: No Creed But Christ" HRSI opM • SUNDAY SCHCX)L • MORNING SERVICE • CKLW PROADCA^T • CJSP BROADCAST • YOUTH FELLOWSHIP • EVENING SERVICE • MID-WEEK PRAYER SERVICE>W«dn«$day • WBFG-FM Wed. ChuAilL 9:30 a.m. 10:45 a.m. 11:00 a.m. V 4;0b p.m. 5:45 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 9:00 a.m. OAKUND and Saginaw Rev. Robert Shelton • Pastor Me* Mlh ita IhM «r Uh siMi tni-IMItai’i raff toSlM Mrm^ :K' V. ■/i L BIOOMFIELD HILLS BAPTIST CHURCH 3600 TelegrapIvRoad 10 A.M. Sunday School 11 A.M. Morning Worship 6 P,M. Evening Service Wednesdoy, 7:30 P.M. Pmyftc. Meeting Church Phone: 647-3851 ZION CHURCH of the NAZARENE 239 E. f^ke St. Bsv. Melvin MorgrM, Poster 10 AAi — Sunday School 11 A.M. — Worship Hour 7 PM. — EvongelisHc Hour Everyone Welcome I AUBURN HtlGHTS FREE METHODIST JKK; Agbm;,n RgOd___ . Hemy S(dimidt, Foitor SUNDAY SCHOOL............10:00 A. morning worship..........10.45 A. tVtNING WORSHIP CLARKSrON CHURCH OF GOD 04 S. Main — Phone 625-2940 Sunday School 10 AM. Prayer Meeting Wonthip 11A.M. Tuesday 7 P.M. Youth Service Py . Evangelistic Service Thursday 7 P.M. 7 PM 6lwO. SamnlW CALVARY BAPTIST 3750 pontiac lic rd. Sunday School 9:45 — Morning Worship 1 LOO Evening Service 7:00 — Wed. Prayer Meeting 7:30 HENRY WROBBEL, PASTOR AFFILIATED CB.A FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH 3411 Airport Road SUNDAY SERVICES SUNDAY SCHOOL.. 10 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP ' 1 A.M. EVENING WORSHIP 7 P.M WED EVENING BIBLE STUDY ’ P.M Rev. Joe P. Massie, Postoi CHURCH OF THE SPIRITUAL FELLOWSHIP Malta Temple 2924 Pontiac Road Service 7:30 P.M. — Rev. Helen Daggett November 13 — 7:30 P.M. Charles ond Bessie Youngs November 20 —' Mildred Miner December 11 — Fellowship Doy MISSIONARY ALLIANCE CHURCH N. Coss Lake Rd. f at M59 MORNING WORSHIP 11:00 A.M.- --why 1 Am Thankful" EVENING WORSHIP 7:00 P.M.- "Last Days and Lost Men" REV. M. A. MARVIN, SPEAKER CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN 46 Roselown, N. of East Pike S S. 10: Richard Durnbough Supt. Worship 11: "The Eternal Giver" Worship 7 p.m. With Special Music Leonard W Blackwell, Pastor 332.5 COLUMBIA AVENUE BAPTIST CHURCH. 64 West Columbia Avenue (A Southern Baptist Church) "Where the difference is worth the' distance." E. Clay Polk Pastor CARROLL HUBBS, Music Director STONE BAPTIST CHURCH 3931 Auburn Ave. at Adams Rd. EVANGELISTIC CRUSADE NOVEMBER 13-20 7:30 P.M. T EVANGELIST; JAMESfMERCER Plus the Famous "MUSICAL BASINGERS" ' giant YOUtEi'JAMBOREE On Saturday, Navember 19th at 10:00 A.M. there will be a Once-in-a-Lifetime program» for all the school age children in the community. Doors )|yill be open at 9:30 A.M. The program will be under the direction of the famous Basingers. It will be something unforgetoble. ' ^ Admission Willie by a Free Ticket NURSERY WITH AHENDANTS FOR BABIES OPEN, EVERY EVENING yilE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1966 FIRST i:-.; ASSEMBLY ^ ' of GOD P*rry at Wid« Troek M Sunday School II. 9:45 A.M. i EVERYONE WELCOME M 11:00 A.M. 'THE SPIRIT OF FAITH" 7:00 P.M. SUNDAY SCHOOL 10,00 MORNING WORSHIP 11,00 TOPIC THI PUIW» evening service 7t00 Dr Kantwll, Cofiman. Spnkar B# Obsarvod in rtt# Evening Service. Two US, Churches Merge + B—8 CHICAGO (AP) — The iftirg-l In separate meetings in Uie er of two churches into the larg- same hotel Friday, delegates to est Protestant sect in the United the general conferences of Uie States, the Unied Methodist Methodist Church and the Evan-Church, with 11,081,000 mem- gelical United Brettiren Church hers, has been approved by del- voted overwhelming approval of egates of the two ehurdrea. ithe merger. Chorlos K Dovanport The Church on the March The Pontiac CHURCH of CHRIST Salute you (Rom. 16:16) 1180N. PERRY WORSHIP 7-.S0 ond 9i55 AM. "THE SURRENDERED SELF" Boyd Glover, Minister HEAR HERALD OF TRUTH ChannnI 50, Sun. 12,30 P.M. ENROLL IN BIBLE CORRESPONDENCE Box 555 Pontiac, Mich. Tile Methodist Church, with 10,331,000 members, is now second in size to the Southern Baptist Convention with 10,393,000 members. Merger with the 750,-;flOe*member EUB would make Pioneer Girls Mark National Week National Pioneer Girl Week will be observed tomorrow through Nov. 20 by Pontiac area Pioneer Girls and their mothers will be present at Marimont Baptist Church Tuesday evening for hobby night, the encampment service, and cake bake. Pilgrim Girls will receive awards for the cake with the best appearance as well as the FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH. ROCHESTER 7v ow««>* (G.A.R.B.C) Walnof at Fourth, Rochester I • 7^ New Binh , I • TTle Preciou Blood | SUNDAY SCHOOL 10 A.M MORNING WORSHIP ) 1 A M. EVENING WORSHIP 7 P.M. St. Stephen to Celebrate The congregation of St. Stephen Lutheran Church will observe the 10th anniversary of the church with an annual festival service at 3 p.m. tomorrow. The Rev. Edwin Weber, president of Michigan District of the Lutheran Church — Missouri Synod, will be an honored guest and speaker. An anniversary dinner for all and friends of the Spiritualist Church of the Goad Samaritan 4780 Hllk^ Dr. OR 3-2974 Waterford Suodoy 7 P.M. — Rev. Allan Hinz, Waterford "A Center of Spirituality and Sociability" I will folio wthe festival I SILVERCREST BAPTIST CHURCH 1 7S62 Olid* Highway, 2 Block* N of Silver Lake |j< I Sunday School . . .... 9:45 A.M. i I'The Devil Attends Church" II A.M. 1 I "God Is Not Dead-I He's Just Sick" ^ i FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH A Downtown Church Huron at Wayne, Pontiac WORSHIP & CHURCH SCHOOL 9:30 A.M. and 11 A.M. An anniversary dinner for all members and friends of the parish will follow the festival serv-:e. The founding of the church will be remembered at the 8 and 10:30 morning worship services tomorrow. Holy Communion will be celebrated at both hours. Special music will be provided by the dioir aid Mrs, Emil Hagen, organist. The St. Stephen congregation had its beginning in the Drayton V.F.W. Hall on West Walton Boulevard, Waterford Township with the first service held in early November 1956. The Rev. Martin Renner, than a student in his year of theological internship, served the 49 communicants and families the first year. When Vicar Renner returned to seminary. Pastor William Grafe of St. Mark Lutheran Church, Union Lake, ministered to the parish. cake wiUi the best texture. Along with the cake bake girls will receive awards earned since September. ★ ★ ★ Those in charge of arrangements include Cathy Yingling, Mary Ellen Hill, btrs. Rodney Attwater, Mrs. Albert Tomanek and Mrs. Gwdon Matthews. Junior high youth will have a progressive supper Friday under the supervision of Mr. and Mrs. Stock Manning. Besides Marimont Church Pioneer Girls are active in First Baptist, Memorial Baptist, Five Points Community, Perry Park Baptist. Oakland Avenue Unit^ Presbyterian. Silvercrest Baptist, Calvary Baptist, and Judah Lake Baptist. Pioneer Girls are also active in Christian & Missionary Alliance Church, Waterford Community and Sunnyvale Chapel. OAKLAND AVE. U.P. Pioneer Girls, guides, friends and committee members will celebrate National Pioneer Girls Week with a special program at 7 p.m. Wednesday at Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Church. * ★ ★ Members of all clubs will participate using the theme, “Partnership in Prayer, Friendship and Service.” Deacons are asking members to participate in the “Make Gratitude Your Attitude Food and Clothing Drive” by bringing donations for worthy families to the church. The drive will continue for the next two vSundays, CENTRAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH 347 -N. Saginow Sf. 9:45 o.m. — Bibis School 11 a.m. — Morning Worship 6 p.m, Youth Meeting — 7 p.m. Gospel Hour A Ffitntlly Church In th« H«ort of Pontiac Proclaiming tht Word of God" CHURCH of CHRIST 87 Lafayette St. Rodney R. A.M,, 7 P.M. Rom, Wednesday ... 7:00 P.M. *^“"9*'"' Fri. 7:00 P.M. Study: 1 Corinthians Bring Your Bible "The Soul You Save May Be Your Own" CHURCH of GOD Members will be received and the sacrament of baptism administered at the 19 a.m. service tomorrow. At 7 p.m. Paul Allebach will present a piano solo and the Crusader Choir will sing. A short story for children will be told by Mrs. Wayne Good. ★ ★ ★ Judge Frederick Ziem will preside at the special meeting of the congregation at 7:30 p.m. Monday. Members will discuss plans for the construction of the Creswell Memorial Christian Education Building. the new . church the nation’s largest.- Tile merger, which must be ratified by regional conferences of the twd churches, carried 749-40 among Methodist delegates. EUB delegates approved by a 325-88 vote. Policy differences that'threatened to stymie the merger were resolved by a joint committee ju^ before the vote. Most issues were resolved in favor of current Methodist practice. Both churches agreed on the pro-1 posed name. f Among the issues were election of bishops for life, district superintendents to be appointed by the bishops, and acceptance of a 1972 target to eliminate racially segregated conferences. There had been sentiment for .an earlier date. i Two-thirds of each church’s regional conferences, which usually convene February through August, must ratify the merger. Leaders of both churches said ratification appeared likely. Schedule Revival, Talent Program ■^e Rev. W. H. Donaldson of Mount Zion Baptist Church, Moline, 111., will conduct the revival scheduled for New Hope Baptist Church, 392 Bloomfield Monday through Nov. 20, Congregation Observes Anniversary of Pastor Officers and members of the |pwiii!i Church of God, 296 W. South “ ' Blvd. will observe the 20th anni- ’ versary of their pastor,' Elder Major J. Watkins tomorrow. Guest speaker at the 11:30 morning worship service will be Elder Connie Keene, pastor of the Church of God, Detroit. A special service is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. with local and out of town guest speakers participating Elder Watkins came to the Pontiac congregation in 1946. During his pastorate the congregation moved from the location at 132 Wessen to the present building dedicated in 1964 LIVE ALONE Mah, Lit, Meri EnjoyaU*. Tha man who clasps Christ’s outstretched hand, has found a friend whose love never ft»des dr diminishes. HEAR ABOUT THAT FRIEND IN THE SERVICES SUNDAY SUNNYVALE Cl 'EL Welcomes 9:45-I 1:00-6:G 7:00 Pontiac Pastor Speaks The Rev. Arlond N. Reid,|cltal at 7 p.m. in the church minister of the Newman AME sanctuary tomorrow. Church, will preach at the Uni- ' * * * ■ tarian Church, Woodward at A sophomore at Wayne State Lone Pine, Bloomfield Hills, at University, Miss Lane is study-both the 9:30 and 11 a.m. serv-|ing theory and voice under ices tomorrow. iCeleste Cole at the university. “The Dimensions (rf a Full i Her program will include sacred Life” will be his topic. Members of Newman AME will accompany their pastor and Sunmfvcile CHAPEL «811 PON'RAC LAKB ROAD V.L. Martin, Pastor n OAD f u United Presbyterian Churches AUBURN HEIGHTS 3456 Primary Street F. Wm Palmer, Pastor 9:30 A.M. - Sundoy School DRAYTON Droyton Plains, Michigan W J. Teeuwissen, Postor Ass't. Donald Remillord Bible School . .... 9:45 A.M Morning Worship .... 11,00 A4 Youth Groups...... .6,30 PA4 Wedne$day^Proy©f ond Study Hour'..........7^0 PM OAKLAND AVENUE 404 Oakland of Cadilloc FE 5-4246 Theodore R. Alleboch, Minister P((fsonage, 300 Ottowo Dr fE 2-1555 Audrey Limdemotl, Youth Director First Sunday School . . 9,00 A M Morning Worship...10,00 A.M Second Sundoy School 11,20 A.M Youth fellowship....5,45 P.M Evening Worship .... 7,00 P.M Wed Proyer Meeting . 7,00 P.M WATERFORD Lakeland 7325 Maceday Loke Rd. Roy F. Lambert, Pastor Sundoy Sch6ol 9130 A.M MORNING Worship ia45 A.M Youth Fellowship 6*30 PM CHURCH OF ATONEMENT , 3535 Clintonviile Rd. Waterford Twp. Church School 9,30 A M Worship Service CRESCENT HILLS CALVARY ASSEMBLY OF GOD TEMPORARY LOCATION JOHN PIERCE JUNIOR HIGH HATCHERY AND CRESCENT ROADS • SUNDAY SCHOOL 9=45 AM • MORNING WORSHIP 11 A.M. ,7:00 P.M. EVANGELISTIC SERVICE "A N-ew Church With An Ageless Gospel and A Cordial Welcome* ______^TOR ARNOLD Q. HASHMAN - PH. 673-0049 CENTRAL METHODIST 3882 Highland Rd. MILTON H: BANK. Poslor i BROTHERHOOD WITHOUT RBTRiaiON MORNING WORSHIP 9:00 and 10t45 KM. "OUR GREATEST SINGLE NEED" > ' Dr. Bonk, Preaching .' Ample Porting FIRST METHODIST CHURCH South Saginaw at Judson Qyde L Smith. Postor ■AH roees and all mee welcome at oR «me*" Sunday Service Oiurch School M 9:45 AM. IlKWAM. i SERMON SERIES: "STEWARDSHIP OF LIFE" | II "Three Reosons for Responsible Giving" Clyde E. Smith, preaching Wednesday 7:30 PM Bibte Study SI PAUL METHODIST 165 E. Squat* lake Rd.. Bloomfield Hlllt - FE M233 ond FE 2-2753 ^ Morning Worship 9:30 and 10:45 AM Church School 9-.30 AM j:;:S Methodist Youth Fellowship 6 PM :. Ample Porlting — Somuel C Seiiert. Min. - Supervised Nursery FIRST SPIRITUALIST CHURCH 576 Orchard Lake Sunday Service 7:30 P.M , GENE SWAILS Speaker Healing Service Daily Except Tuesday BIRMINGHAM UNITARIAN CHURCH . Woodword ot lone Pine Bloomfield Hits Ml 7-2380 ' 9,30ond I IZIOWordilp Servtees 9 JO Nurssry Ihreugh 9lli Grade 11,00 hh-rsery through l2(h Grade be guests at a buffet luncheon following the second service. The Rev. Mr. Reid was graduated from the University of Chicago, and Phillips Seminary. Post graduate wwk was taken at Roosevelt College and Ohio University. A member of the Michigan Council of Churches Strategy and Planning poard. Pastin' Reid is chairman of the Christian education committee of Pontiac Area Council of Churches. FIRST METHODIST Methodist Men’s Fellowship will get together for a breakfast meeting at 8 a.m. tomorrow. Boys of high school age are welcome to attend. A color film on “Old and New Israel" will be shown. Pastor Clyde E. Smith will preach on “Three Reasons for Responsible Giving” tomorrow morning. . ALDERSGATE A week special meetings ^ will be in progress Sunday through Nov. 20 with the Rev. Alan Weeks of Deckerville, guest speaker. « Services will be conducted at 9:45 a.m. each Sunday; and at 1 and 7 p.m. each w^ day. There will be no mieetings Saturday, Pastor Horace G. Murry said. bethel baptist The Nurses Unit of New Bethel Baptist Church will present Karen Anne Lane in a re- and semi-classical selections. STONE BAPTIST Iner and Emily Basinger, often called the Singing Basingers, will appear with Evangelist James Mercer in the revival crusade at Stone Baptist Church, 3931 Auburn. ^ Meetings beginning tomorrow' are scheduled each evening at 7:30 thifough Nov. 20. ] * * * \ A youth jamboree for all school-age children in the com-1 munity will be staged at 9:30 a.m. Saturday. Admission isl free. FIRST SOCIAL BRETHREN CHURCH 316 Baldwin FE 4-7631 Sundoy School lOiOO AM. Sun Worship lliOO A.M. Evening Worship 7:30 P.M Wed Prayer 7,00 P.M Sot Service 7:30 PM Rev, Loy Borger, Pastor FE 4HS994 FIRST NAZARENE 60 STATE ST. The Church Where All the Famil'/ Worships Togethei 9,45 A.M. GREAT SUNDAY SCHOOL HOUR "Teochfng the Word of God" 11 00 A.M, MORNING WORSHIP "Success in Living" 7,00 PM. REVIVAL TIME A service to Inspire and bless you. Music by John Burton and the 30 Voice Choir. God Is present in this iervice. Rev. U. B. Godmon, Minister FE 2-9857 Meadow Brook Baptist Church 9:45 A.M. Bible School 11:00 A.M. Morning Worship Temporarily Meeting: Meadow Brook Elementary School LAKE ORK^N CHURCH OF GOD 760 Clorkston Rood *‘Welcome$ You" Sundoy School .. .10 A M. ACTS 2,47 Worship........1 I A M. "■*"4 Th, Mrrf AHilril ^''•’’'"9.... . . THURS. Y.P.E. 7 P.M, •• aLFRFD LOWf Pnstr The SALVATION ARMY ' 29 W. LAWRENCE STREET Sundoy School 9:45 A.M.—Young Peoples Legion 6 P.M, Morning Worihip 11 A.M. — Evongelistic Meeting 7:00 P.M. Tuesday Prayer and Praise Meeting 7:00 P.M. Major and Mrs. John Grindia Good Mutie—Singing—Truo to iht Word Broaching God Meets With Us —You, Too, Are Invited ELMWOOD METHODIST 2680 Crooks Rd. Sundoy School 9i:30 o.!*. Worship KM5 o.m. Evening Worshtp 7 p.m. Proyer Wed. ‘7 p.«. Ertc 6. WeM. p< , ALDERSGATE METHODIST 1536 Boldwin FE 5-7797 Horoee G. Murry, postor Worship 9d5 o.m. Church School 11 o.m. Eve. Worship 7 p.m. Proy*r Wed. 7,30 p.m CHRISTIAN SCIENCE Q. MORTALS AND Subject: iMMOjlTALS Sunday Servica and Sunday School 11:00 A.M. Wednesday Evejhing Service ...8:00 P.M. Reading Room — 14 W. Huron -Open Doily 11:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. - , Monday thru Soturdoy FIRST CHURCH OF CH&ST, SCIENTIST Lawrence and Willioms St. - Pontioc SUNDAY 9,45 WJBK 1500 kc THE LOCAL SPON.SORS OF “FRANK & ERNEST” RADIO BIBLE ANSWERS PROGRAM INVITE YOU TO HEAR THE TOPIC HOPE FOR A FEAR^FILLED WORLD DISCUSSED BY B. E. ROSE ASSOCUTE OF “FRANK & ERNE.S'F’ . 7:30 P.M. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19 Pontiac YMCA — 131 Mt. Clemens St. ' Pontiac, Atich. VE URGE YOU TO GOME AND HEAR THIS INSPIRING MESSAGE, AUD HAVE MANY PERPLEXING QUESTIONS ANSWERED. / Hear “FRANK & ERNEST” Sundays CKLW - 800 KC ~ 6:00 P.M. EMMANUEL BAPTIST CHURCH 645 S. Telegraph (Near Orchord Lake Rd.) DR. TOM MALONE, Pastor REV. ARVLE DeVANEY, Associate Pastor h Fundamental, Independent. Bible Believing Baptist Churdi BIBLE SCHOOL 10 A.M. Hear Dr. Tom Malone tench, the word of God verse by verse in the large Auditorium Bible Class, broadcast on WPOK 10:15-10:45 A.M MORNING WORSHIP SERVICE 11:00 A.M. EVANGELISTIC SERVICE 7:00 P.M. BUS ' Transportation CALL FE 2-8328 FE 8-9401 DEAf CLASS JOYCE MALONE, Music DR. TOM MAiONE, Postor PRAYER , ,1 > MEETING-WED./7:30 P.M. COMING DECEMBER 18 7:30 P.M. JOHN W. PETERSON will direct the*trt)manuel Baptist Choir and Orchestra in "BORN A KING" Prootice: Nov 13-20-27 Dec, 4 -11 - IB - 3 PJ4. B—i THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY. XOVEMBER 12, 1966 Milwaukee Terror Over? MaiTL^jCharged With Stabbing MILWAUKlgE, Wis. (AP) — |Oct. 17 and with attempted mur-,Ho$pitaI at the suggestion of a “Everybody can sleep a little der of an 11-year-old girl Fridhy i social worker after his parole paeipr” said Police Chief Bar-1 morning. i from prison ■ old Breiei after police charged] sreler said Herrington, idenU-; a factory worker m a senes of|fied as a parolee from Leaven-stabbings that had terrorized Mmrth Federal Penitentiary, had residential areas in Milwaukee. | admitted two slayings for which * * * I he was charged with first-de- Michael J. Herrington, 23, {gi-gc murder, and the latest as- f acc<»npanied to Milwaidcee ^ N County Court by his pregnant wife, was charg^ Friday night with slaying a 10-year-old girl KATHLEEN DREYER Sept. 4, an 18-year-oid waitress (AdvtrtlMimnt) NEW TREATMENT FOR HAIR LOSS Frank Moran. Ha Did Nor Hava Mala Pattern Baldneis HAIR CONSULTANT IN PONTIAC, MICH. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 14, WALDRON HOTEL, 36 E. PIKE, TE 5-6168 WILL EXPLAIN HAIR PROBLEMS TO MEN AND WOMEN FREE Saturday, November 12, 1966, Chicago, III. — Your decision on becoming bald Is yours. The worst enemies are (1) improper care, (2) neglect and (3) putting off. FREE CONSULTATION Mr. A. C Erickson will be at’ Waldron Hotel, 36 E. Pike on AAonday November 14 only. His hours are noon to 8 p.m. It costs you nothing to come in •rkd talk over your hair and scalp problemi In private. Learn how hundreds heve combatted baldness In their own hone with the brick-son Homs Method. DECISION If you have dandruff, excessive hair fall, thinning hair, Itchy scalp, excessive oilinsss or dryness or if your scalp is still creating furr make the decision now to see Mr. A. C. frIdsKm, We w«t tell you frankfo If there is hope for you. It win only take about 20 minutes. Theta Is no charge and you are not obligated by coming in for consultation. If your decision is to use the Erickson Hair Specialists treatment you will be told how long it will take, how little it will cost and what you can expect. If you are slick bald after years of gradual hair Iota Ericksoii Hair Specialittt cannot help you. Mslo pattern baldness la tho cause of the groat majority of cases of baidnets and esceniva heir iota for which tho Erickson Treatment nor any ether la affective. GUARANTEED RESULTS For your assurance you will be given a written guarantee for whatever length of time it may require on e pro-rated basis. Make your decision now 1 Erickson Hair Specialists. Mr. A. C. Erickson is a qualified consultant who is reliable, sincere and will give you an honest decision. sault whose victim was reported in satisfactory condition. Hetrington accompanied police to the sites of the attacks on the city’s near West Side. Hie series of assaultl had resulted in demands fw increased police jMtitection, a campaign to have ^rch li^ts burning all night, and a request by toe city that youngsters make Halloween trick-or-treat rounds before dark. A candidate in the Nov. 8 election said he could not get at front doors during a ^r-to-door campaign. ★ ★ ★ Gordon Beckwith, 43, father of one of toe victims, said after the arrest that his “family is much relieved tonight, even though there is no positive proof. For toe first time since our daughter’s death, we let one of Our other girls, out visiting after dark.” Mrs. Gerald Dreyer, 35, mother of toe latest victim, said she wvHild continue to be fearful when any of her five children leave home, but added that “now perhaps people can sleep nights.” Herrington had been questioned in the beating and stabbing of Julia Beckwith, 10, whose body was found Sept. 4 in a vacant lot near her home after she had gone on an errand for a sister. The body of waitress Sherryl Thompson was found Oct. 17. She had been stabbed 22 times, Breier said Herrington had admitted both slayings. Breier did not comment on toe death Nov. 4 of Diane 01k-witz, 19, of Menomonee Fails who was stabbed more than 100 times, Menomonee Falls Police Chief Chailes Kuhn said he banned to question Herrington. Breier said Herrington admitted attacking Kathleen Dreyer, 11, as she walked to school Friday. Hie child, stabbed in the back, told police her assailant fled when she screamed. Police said Herrington, employed by a tool and die manufacturing firm, had been given a job at Milwaukee Children’s Charles Hurst, acting detective inspector, said the car seen leaving toe alley where the Dreyer girl was attacked contained ‘various instruments which are found in hospitals.” * A ★ Herrington was seized after witnesses, including schoolchildren, provided police with a de- WKC’S MONDAY SPECIAL! ■UWMEVII I KEYSTONE FULLY AUTOMATIC tleCtllC^4lje CAMERA WITH 3 LENS TURRET Hew ImM Starting Kaset bail PfQjgOfQf AND ALL THE NECESSARY ACCESSORIES ; V„ TO TAKE ANO SHOW COLOR MOVIES! USE OUR CONVENIEIIT UYAWAY PUW! -TO- WKC OpM Moodqr 9iM AM. fo IRM. HOME OF FINEST BRAND NAMES 108 N.SA6WAW-.Ff 3-7114 scription of a man seen in toe I alley where the Dreyer girl was attacked. Police said tbfi Dreyer girl’s I assailant reportedly leaped | frnrn a car, clapped a hand over toe child’s mouth and forced her into the alley behind garages I and dwellings. Herrington was named warrants sipied by Ccwnty i Judge Christ T. Seraphim who ' set bonds totaling ^,000. The Best Reiiault Ever' The Renault 10 NOW ON DISPLAY AT OUR BRAND NEW LOCATION ^R&MINstin^ 417 West Wftttofi^vdi 2 BIkt. W«(t of Baldwin 334-4738 SHERRYL-raOMPSON CHILDREN OUTGROWN SKIS, SLEDS, TOBOGGANS? SELL IT WITH A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD, EASY TO USE. JUST PHONE 332-8181. YANKEE IMS nv SUE! A SMALL DEPOSIT HOLDS ANY TOY IN LAYAWAY EMENEE'S SWINGIN’ 16.95 ELECTRIC GUITAR WITH AMPLIFIER 888 Make the scene with this super combo. Authentically styled double cutaway electric guitar, 3 nylon and 3 metal strings complete with RedI Amp Trans’istor-ized Amplifier with powerful . speaker. 16.00 EASY-BAKE OVEN, REALLY COOKS MARKS’ 12.95 MUSICAL KOOKIE KOMBO 088 988 Bakes with 2 ordinary electric light bulbs. Watch it bakel No oven door to open, so it’s a safe toy. It’s the greatest musical piece since the one-man band. Have your own musical session with Kookie Kombo, a§ seen on TV. NEMCOS MOTORIZED 25.00 LONG JOHN HRE ENGINE MATTELS 10.00 MAnELA-PHONE TALKING PHONE KENNERS 7.95 CLOSE'N’PLAY PHONOGRAPH MATTEIS'20.00 BABY HRST-STEP 21” HIGH DOLL 1488 588 488 088 Young (irtchicft or. htroi with th* Long John, SIron Scrtoming, fho ball clangs, whan thay Two-way tolk^ with 40 friends' voicss ora loud and elaor. Pousat ta lat child reply. ;iongs, wnan may or- lo lai cniio raf rha fira the ioddar IS ininutas al conversation. Entirely different principla | (Patented) No tubas. No tron- | Sho walks on oil lovol surfot sistors. No .^plug-in. Close it I and on most rugi and it ploys, automatically, I door across tho lust lika tho big phonos. | ■X IDEALS 16.00 REAL LIVE LUCY DOLL, lOST LOOK! 988 Tho livaliost, livlngott doH ovor. Lucy nods otid baba hot hood. Sho won't aot hot spinach. But aha will toko hot bottlo. TWO YANIEE STOKES IN THE PONTIAC AREA * MJBACIE Mll£ SHOPPING CENTER * CORNER OF PERRY ANO MONTCALM STREETS [lUAI. ESTATll THE PONTIAC PRESS cetetHEta Patio Garden Overlooks Picturesque Paint Creek Valley PrtH Photoi by Ed Vandcrworp Bilevel Brick Of The Bernard Grassers In Oakland Township Built By Robert Smitha Of Rochester Family Transforms Site on Paint Creek By JODY HEADLEE Home Editor, The Pontiac Press Eight years and many backbreaking hours later, the Bernard Grassers of Oakland Township have reclaimed from tangled brush their four - acre site bordering the meandering Paint Creek. From a terraced patio garden held in place by strategically placed boulders and railroad ties, one looks over a steep incline at the grassy valley floor edged on the east by the busy stream. A kaleidoscope of colorful annuals and fall blooming perennials punctuated the rock gardM before last week’s snowftll nipped their vitality. Sitting in the contemporary living room during the warmer days of fall, visitors are conscious of the fountain’s symphony of running water, the calls of wild biijds and the sporadic chirp of a cricket or two. The brick bilevel is truly an idyllic retreat from the rush and bustle of the work-a-day world for the whole Crasser family. LIVING ROOM Setting the monochromatic background of the living room beige walls, looped carpet- ing jmd loosely woven linen draperies. A pair of walnut-framed occasional chairs, covered in a brown and white striped fabric are grouped about a walnut table before one of the room’s two facing picture windows. Serving the black and brown sofa and the terra-cotta chair arrangement in front of the handmade brick fireplace is a long low walnut table. ★ ★ ★ Unfilled travertine marble tops the built-in china cabinet under the orginal black and white woodcut in the adjoining dining room. In the bedroom wing, the master bedroom features a private screened porch. “If you’ll notice,’’ said Mrs, Crasser, “there are no outside doors to the porch.' The only entrance is through the bedroom itself. “It was designed as a place to relax and get away from it all and it is just that.’’ •In decorating the bedroom, Mrs. Crasser chose an iridescent blue, green, gray and pastel striped spread and blue linen draperies to accent the off-white walls. Furniture pieces in the room are birch. Private Porch Opening Off Master Bedroom Offers Refreshing Valley View Dining Room's Tangerine Chairs Accent Honeyed Birch Paneling And Beige Grasscloth Driftwood Dominating Family Room Fireplace Resembles Leaping Dolphin Orange Tree Thrives In Living Room's Boll-Footed Apple Butter Kettle, An AnHque Find Mr$. Grosser Relaxes In Contemporary Living Room Against A Background Of Beige C—2 THE PONTIAC PKKSS. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER J2, 19«# CAN YOUR ROOF TAKE ANOTHER WINTER’S BLAST? Our Roofing Business is: • Built On Raputation • Succattful Through Satisfaction • [>ona By Expart Machanics • Licansad Contractors • Parformad with Brand Nama Matarials • All Workmanship Guarontaad SftVmG THIS AREA OVER 12 YEARS All Work * • tMat • MaMnsHtn ShHnima HeMNnliea Fully Bonded tsMS M miia.nt . SlMrttws » Sulaw FrealsHawlea and Insured • belgsiint • Fiti*i Call m-im HIGGINBOTHAM ROOFING & SIDING Clarkston, Mich. 625-2779 I Cabinet Door I Hanging Help When hanging matching doors for a cabinet, insert a paper match between theip, as you set [the hinges. [ ★ I This will provide just enough clearance for easy closing one without scraping the other. IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY Dsily l-r p.m.—S«Miy 1M 1- and 2-BEDROOM ilNITS Cali FE 5-8585 or 682-2610 ARROWHEAD AAALL APTS. 2435 gMsabetli Uk« Road PLEASANT SPLITLEVEL—Hiere’s a world of “curb appeal” to this multilevel, three-bedroom house, "nie architect has tastefully combined redwood, cedar and stone veneer under interesting roof lines to produce the kind (rf residence with an inviting appearance. Design Gives Crisp, Contemporary Look NEED WORK? USE PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS. LOW IN COST. FAST IN ACTION. PHONE 332-8181! TTiere’s a crisp, contemporary I And It required less land [look to the splitlevel created for than a ranch with the same the latest House of the Week, amount of square footage on It’s a pleasing combination of I the inside, vertical V-joint redwood siding,! as a result, prospective home red cedar shingles Md ledge purchasers began to ask for stone veneer with trim hipped jspiitievels even on flat land, roofs. . - - Planter boxes on both sides of the entrapce platform are among the exterior features. -Owning a house that has a ■ pleasant appearance is, of i course, important to a family. Yet, in the early days of the splitlevel, the popularity of this type of residence was due principally to the fact that it fitted so well on sloping- land. ★ ★ ★ Its popularity increased when people iscovered its other advantages: it eliminated much I of the waste space in basements jby utilizing this area for habit-jable rooms and a garage. FEW STEPS It separated the living and [Sleeping areas with only a few (steps rather than a long stair-iway to climb, as in a two-story j house. ’These days — as in the case of this house — architects are using ingenuity to design attractive, distinctive exteriors for the multi-level structures. Here we have a home that’fti' nice to Io4476 (Call Collect) BASEMENT 3 GARAGE PLAN FLOOR PLANS—Lots of features here, including seven closets on the bedroom level, a circular foyer serving as the hub of the circulation pattern, and access to the rear terrace through sliding glass doors in the living room, dining room and family room. OPEN SUN. 12-6 P.AA. Llve in Lakeland Estates - in the Heart of Michigan's “Water-Winter Wonderland" Where you enjoy... • A Par 3 Golf Courea • Boot AAorino • Tonnii Court • Shopping Cantor 1 Block a 9 AAinuta* to Pontiac AAall • Supariot School System • School Butas • Naorby Churchas • Ropid Access to 1-75, U.S. 10*3 AAiles Water Frontoge • Controlled Lake Levels e Paved Roods and City Water. 90% FINANCING 6¥a% INnREST on these lovely Lakefront Homes FOR A LIMITED TIME DNLY! -k 4-Bedroom QUAD-LEVEL WITH BASEMENT *31,950 k 4-Bedroom COLONIAL WITH BASEMENT S *32,950 .orSL ★ 3-Bedroom BI-LEVEL *31,990 NOW 10% Down These lovely homes include incinerators and builMns plus 3%-cor attached goragfs. Weed-byrning fiftpIflM In family rooms, and on abundance of closet space. All are waterfront homes! SIMPLE TO FIND Drfv* out Din. Hwy. 4/10 miU North of ‘ Wolton Blvd.-Wllllann Lie. IntMMcMon. Turn rtght ^ 'Torado of HomM* .ign. 3-Bedroom RANCH Convmignt traffic pattern In this lovely home with < wood-buining fireploca, 1 Vi baths, 2Vi-eor garago, fi teoled-gloit windows and dorwoll. 3534 Loieno [>r., Wertkins Hills. 1 /10 mils from Dixie Hwy. - Watkins Lake Road IntersocHoa. FULL PRICE incl. lot $25,900 OR 3-8021 ^OSS HOMES INC. 1941 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 4-0591 The Om REALTY CO. Presents FAMILY PLANNED ConilllllllltiCS IN WATERFORD HUNTOON SHORES - OPEN SUNDAY 2-6 Softwood lumber accounts forjduction, and hardwood 25 per about 75 per cent of U.S. pro-(cent. I PRESTieE? STATUS? You'll eittoy both when you. live’In the incomponible EmboA^'^’JWtm^: Aportmwits irt Woterford T<^n»fup. FamillM with children find a lot to like in a Beauty Rite built home in Huntoon Shores. The floor plan of thif favorite Tri-Level offers maximum^ living area for the active family. There’s a large family room for the children to romp in. IVk baths, ample Mrage, well planned kitchen with adjoining breakfast area. Carpeting is included thronihonL See this model and others today at Huntoon Shores. Our 1 - ond 2-b«droom sulto« new elegonce to oportment living. '* ' I WESTRH)GE OF WATERFORD - OPEN SUNDAY 2-6 drive to downtown Pontiac or nearby shopping centers. Featured is traditional Early American-Colonial ModcL Also available at Westridge or Huntoon Shores are the popular IVi-Level or the Custom Ranchers. Feature for feature, you can’t find greater value than your investment in a Beauty-Rite built home. Drive out Sunday~bring'the family^ MY 0'H£IL 3520 l^ontiac Lake Rti. OR 4-2222 Oriiri> 0|M*n Sunday 1^ . and they ore quietl All electric Hot point KHchen, lorge tiled bothfooms Hiot ar^ fit for o* que‘ “ Icompfifetyauitt/ PAY ONLY *69 PER MONTH 2 & 4 Bedroom Homes Also At Great Savings We build within 75 miles of Detroit! See us and sove THOUSANDS! i-limei 19819 Telegraph Road Between 7 and 8 Mile Road, Detroit Phone KE 8-5550 Crefetbrook Estates 'Take Crescent Lake Rd. ofC M-59 to Creotbrook, turn right to models! MODELS OPEN DAILY 1-6 P.M. New Homes From BUILT by TRU-KRAFT DON GIROUX REAL ESTATE sPhone 673-0200 WEINBERGER HOMES Modeti Opon 12 to 8 P.M. Daily and Sun. Candlaitiek Dr.-OH MSt Salts by PAN MATTIN6LY WANT TO BUILD? ExcapHonol buy on 2 larga building sitos in Watt Bloomfiald ntai Oichord Laka Rood. $5,000 each MAX BROOCK INGr KEATINGTON BALDWIN at 1-75 OPEN DAILY 12-6 Lake Mviligo Lots $4991 HOWARD T. KEATINO 00. MOetWMSMIlsBd. Ml 6-9200 Enjoy Life ... Take It Easy On Morgan Lak^ In ^%ake View Estates’^ 2663 Montebello-OPEN SUIHIAY 2-6 P.M. Comfoit Is King ^ eompi^Hon la this FOUR Bodreom, two and ^ Coloniol, with boamod calling in fomily room, Goorgia Whito marblo firoplaco, Mparato dining room, wot plaatorod walla including $34,950 - tormt or trodo. DIRECTIONS! Walton Blvd. to Clintonvillo to Angolut Road to Lake Angolut Lake View Eatatoa. 2675 Montebello-OPEN SUNDAY 2-6 P.M. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION on this gracious and spocioui home awaiting your inspaction . . . this split rock ranchtr with sunkan living room, sloto foyar, oil Formica kitchan with indiract lighting dining orao, baoutifully ponelad family room with Gaorgion whita morbla liraploca, thraa genarous sized badreems, 2Vi baths, main floor laundry room, full basement with gas heat, oversized plastered two-cor garage, plus the house is furnished to catch your dye and imagination. DIRECTIONS: Walton Blvd. to Clintonville to Angelus Rood to Lake Angelus Lake View Estates. Jo Soft will be your hostess in finding your address of distinction. Other homes ora being built and nearing completion—trade your old house In. KAMPSEN Directions; Walton Blvd. to Clintonville Rd. to Angeles Rd. to Lokeview Estates REALTY AND BUILDING CO. 334-0921 1071 W. HURON • PONTIAC ARMSTRONG CEILIHG SAVINGS to lower high-old fashioned ceilings . . . ^ Armstrong SUSPENDED CEILING with Textured Fashientone Panels It’s decorative, easy to install, washable, and acoustical. Ideal for brightening up the office, store, or home, the Armstrong Textured design creates a rich and elegant ceiling. SPECIAL RECORD ALBUM OFFER! Original sovnd frock from tht TV spectacninr. The Armstrong presentation of "Brigadoon," starring Robert Goulet end Sally Ann Howes. $|00 A totally new look in ceiling tile Armstrong Brunswick Temlok Ceiling Unique wide bevel, wood-like design Brunswick features wide bevels to create the rich effect of a custom inlaid ceiling. It has a handsome wood groin surface design to enrich the decor of your room. 2V per square foot Armstrong DOVER TEMLOK CEILING Wide bevel creates a custom Inlaid effect This pattern features o subtle textured surface de-sign with the new wide bevel accent. per square foot Buy Your Armstrong Ceiling from a Lumber Dealer-Where all your building material needs are in stock! GET THESE JAMBOREE SAVINGS AT ANY OF THE FOLLOWING ARMSTRONG DEALERS POOLE LUMBER CO. 191 OAKLANP AVe. PHONK Ft 4-1594 BURKE LUMBER CO. DKKIE LUMBER CO. BEDFORD CASHWAY LUMBER CO. N3 I. MAIN ST. ROYAL OAK i;t«>NE 941-2153 BEDFORD CASHWAY LUMBER CO. 124M EVEROREEN OETROIT I PHONE 136-1336 WALLICH LUMBER CO. 14941 SCHAEFER at LYNOOH , OETROIT PHONE VE 1-5151 ALLBI LUMBER CO. 7374 HISHLAND RO. E LIIMBER & SUPPLY CO. PHONE 4744116 ALLBf LUMBER CO. IDEAL LUMBER I HARDW. CENTER 4443 KERCHEVAL rROIT PHONE 547-1644 WE LUMBI 1 E. EIGHT I lER & SUPPLY CO. EAST YAR PHOHR 0 LUTZ LUMBER CO. 1141 MT. RLLIOTT PHOHR WA 1-14 LINWOOD LUMBER CO. 14944 LINWOOD at PeNKELL DETROIT PHONE UN 1-3141 CAL'S FIVE POINTS LUMBER & SUPPLY CO. 2S7M W. SEVEN MILE RD. at BEECH DETROIT PHONE KE M140 KANDY LUMBER CO. 21717 KEAN AVE. DEARBORN PHONE 543-26M TELA-WARREN HARDWARE & LUMBER CO. 4939 N. TELEGRAPH RD. DEARBORN HEIGHTS PHONE, LO 3-2196 H. A. SMITH LUMBER AJUPPLIES CO. 31575 GRAND RIVER mar EIGHT MILE RD. FARMINGTON PHONE KE 54440 GR 44410 MAPLEWOOD LUMBER CO. 4132 MIDDLE BELT RD. GARDEN CITY PHONE GA 2-0449 SALEM LUMBER CENTER STANDARD LUMBER CO. 27332 VAN DYKE PHONE 5L 7-3494 WYANDOTTE WYANDOnE LUMBER CO. 791 OAK STREET PHONE AV MI4I PILLAM-O'BERO LUMBER CO. TIMBER TOWN, INC 15790 PORD RD. PHONE 721-1919 C-4 THE PONTIAC PHESS. SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 12. : WHAT IS KLINGELHUt FACE BRICK SIDING? It it th* Mutti-Puniose Brick Sidinc that does so many jobs-BEtTER New Product Repairs Foundation Cracks “olir' POMTIAC ninTiMsn MOOEINIZATKM Opp«ile Silver lake load PhoBO (73-7507 Dan Mattingly Offers These Weinberger Homes OPEN SUNDAY Directions . OPEN SUNDAY LIKE COLONIAL LIVING? Here is a 4 bedroom brick colonial that you will love. 1 '/a baths, 2 iflie won id win the first heart in his own hand, lead a diamond to dummy’s ace and a second diamond back toward his king-nine. He wonld plan to rise with the king in die event diat East showed out or played the queen or ten. Assuming East did play low expert South would play his nine. Hien he would cash his king; return to dummy with the ace of spades and give East his queen of diamonds. This line of play would guarantee four diamond tricks agaipst anything except a 5-0 diamond break. Four diamonds plus two spades, two hearts and a club adds to nine tricks. How wuold expert South make an overtrick? East would i»-obably lead a second heart when he got in with the queen of diamonds. South would have discarded a spade on the fourth diamond. He would discard another spade on the fifth. He then would cash his ace of spades and be left with the nine oi hearts and ace-queen-small of clubs. Assuming West had held two qlubs, South just might end play him by leading the nine of hearte. cziannKn Q—^The bidding has been; Wert North East South „ 3 4 3N.T. Pass 4 4 Pass Pass 4 4 Pass Pass ? You, South, hold: 4K J2 4A5 4 tKOTe 4AK4 What do you do? A—Double. Take a sure prof- TODAY’S QUESTION West opens three spades. Your partner doubles. You South, hold: What do you do? Answer Monday Ll;As|ro|ogieal 1 Los Angeles, founded in 1781, had a population of only 1,200 in 1830. PONTIAC PRESS SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1966 His Case Freed 1^00; Now He's Robbery Victim fort LAUDERDALE, FU. (AP) — The man whose freed 1,5Q0 convicts across the country has again become news I — this time as a robbery victim. 1 * ★ ★ I Clarence Earl Gideon was an inmate of a Flprida prison In 1963 when he sent a hand-written appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court, telling that body he had been convicted without legal I counsel. He was serving a five-year sentence for breaking and entering at the time. The Supreme Court handed down a historic decision requiring counsel in felony trials which freed prisoners in every state. * ★ Gideon made headlines here Thursday when the gasoline station where he works was robbed of about $75 while he was on duty. No arrests have been made. BERRY’S WORLD By Jim Berry ^ ^ •y SYDNEY OMARR ■n contra points tiM ARIES (___________ __________ conditions spotlighted In indirect Discussion with mate or partni clear the air. Planning ahead no aents Intelligant move. Know thi accordingly. TAURUS (Apr. 20 - May 20); ™.. learn by studying ARIES message. There Is basic concern about leisure pursuits, possessions. Avoid superficial judgment. If you act with confidence ... you gain Cycle high but you undergo challenges. May come from hlgher-those m authority. Be receptive and -but DON'T BE INTIMIDATED. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 - Jan. 19): snt ability to be versatile. Show you re not tied to one method or subject, bu can enhance prestige through great-r self-eKpresslon. Gain also f" -through written word. Be alerti AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 - Feb. 18): . obligations. Applies especially where -j- — concerned. Promises made ■■ d to your attention. tent. Don't believe halfway sincerity. Heed words of viser. Be true to yourself. CANCER (June 21 ■ July 22); Chance to hold serious discussion featured. YOU learn If nbseryant. Fine for get-together with neighbors, co-workers. Excellent day, for EXPRESSING GOOD ‘ LEO (July 23 - Aug. 22); Favorable Moon aspect spotlights affection, appreciation, love. Accent also on creative endeavors. Bring forth best highlight accented. IP MONDAY lg YOUR BIRTHDAY • . you have vifaiity, are an excellent ales person . . . you Inspire confidence mb can promote favorite subjects. necessary adjustment. VIRGO (Aug. 23 - Sept, your areas of uncertainty You can come to terms ... you outline goals. Key is to fight procrastination. Be confident. Express yourself. Stress VITALITY. LIBRA (Sept. 23 - Oct. 22): Deep convictions come forth. Stand tall. Some staunch guideline, coursel SCORPIO (Oct. 23 - Nov. 2i: to heart of matter. Face basic Ask questions to obtain answers. F SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 - Dec. 21; Cycle high. Stress Initiative. Display courage of convictions. Fine for cultivating new friends, contacts, added independence. Look to future Instead of pasti CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 - Jan. 19): Some of your friends, your fond hop come under personal scrutiny. ■end to CHANGE YOUR VIEWS, s creative, healthy . . .. but find lime to be quiet within. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 - Feb. 18); Much of CAPRICORN message applies. Also -. --- ;ircumstances turn In your favor. PISCES (Feb. It ______ activity promotes professional ambitions. Sharpen motives, goals. Know what you desire. Express thoughts to those around you. Evening favors rel. GENERAL TENDENCIES: Cycle high for SAGITTARIUS, CAPRICORN. Special ‘0 VIRGO; Stick to one project ime. Find out what you really Far Monday ARIES (Mar. 21 - Apr. practical aspects before beginning project. Start work week by makln; thorough analysis of efforts. You — gaining . . . but patience, maturity basic requirements. TAURUS , (Apr. 20 • May 20); T*nd-*“ *- skip essentials. fusion. Accent Investments. B-are In ordar. Taka GEMINI (May 21 GENERAL TENDENCIES: Cycle high for SAGITTAR.IUS, CAPRICORN, AQUARIUS. Special word to LIBRA: Concentrate forces. Fix attention on Some of major goal. (Copyright 19M, General Features Carp.) e 196S l>y NEA, IncO “Tell me what kind of giveaway contest you have, and I’ll let you know if I want any gas or not. BOARDING HOUSE IVE FIWALLV \ DlSOOUEReD WHAT MY ROLE IW LIFE 1 IS, EBK! J / PO YOU REALIZE ' A I WHAT THAT MEAMS?] I THAT MEAMS iVE ) 1 FIMALLV FOWD / V MYSELF / y { SWELL, tJOUJ ) V &BTLOST.I J -y in 6-1 i By Ernie Bushmiller By Bud Blake By Walt Disney Shots in Vain DETROIT (UPI) - Several hundred schoolchildren received injections of plain water instead of measles vaccind' during a reednt mass iminunization drive, health officials said today. Hie-incidents re^ port^ly occurred only at Wayne County ce^;^. THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 12. 1966 Record of Transactions for Week on Stock Market k St&cfc E>tCt>Bngf.j 20 Most Active Stocks , 333 21^ 27 ABC Con .S8‘ NEW YORK (AP)-\ 23^4 Ashland Ojl ! M»t I Howard Joh ChS Howme,t .#0 Ji?’ iHudBay 2.40 • ^ IHwtfds .50 1 ..isi........3S--............................ 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AmSoAfr .70 277 29'Mi 28 City I' i^K"y s T 2.20 2071 56'4 556k «'/■+ 6k j 1.80 418 3264 31'n 316k— I'.k (S .56 18 1364 13'/4 13'* . ' 1.25 y20 23 23 23 + 3'* AW4.1pf 1,43 Ampex Cp Amphenol .70 ra^ AnchHG 1.41) _____ . 172 23V 23 _____ , Clark. Oil .60 - 48 22V 21V 213'4- +• ClevCIif 2.40a 11 S8V 57V 58’% ... Ji tn; tk tkr ‘ Clevjte 2.10 76 42 40'/4 41 + V CluettPea .80 159 17V 16V* 17 + V CluettP pf 7 130 1 23 1 23 1 23 Coast St Gas 363 257* 24% 25%+ +i CocaCola 1.90 114 85'* 82V 84V+ v xiu V *.7 4 *0 4 , - CocaBtlg +10 39 22’2 21V 22V*+ + 49 20V- 20 20V colg Pal .90 292 29% 28V 29V+ IV 60 20V 20V+ IV ColgP pf 3.50 26O 71'/j 69Vj 69*/2 , 61 54Va 52V* 54 + 2 coHinAlk +20 xl97 20V 19V 20V- + 996 21V 19V 2-1 -v 'CollinRad .60 1209 50V 45V 50 + 4V 406 20V 19',% 19V+ V coloIntG +40 151 30V* 29V 30‘/*-|- + ^ tl tu 4T rl &! ‘ 'IS ^ ^ ^ ttl T, ll'U Hi W. ittiM JO 36 35'+ .35' ,- 'sjColPic pt4.35 7400 746. 74 74 — H ..............., iCOISoOh 1.52 360 35'* 34'A 346A- 64 " ' TiComb Eng 2 507 466k 44 446.— ' ..VM.^J. j ... .... ... --6- ykiComICre 1.80 23* Z47i .24 241*-- ArmcoSt 3 313 476k 46'k 4664- *jcomCr pl4.50 7 7364 73 73 - Armour ,1.60 573 307k 28'* 3(P'b+ JlklcgmSolv 1.20 950 416. J66* 406/4+ Armr pt 4.75 24 73'k 72'* 727b— '* icomISol pf.90 28 306» 266k' 27 — ArmsCk 1.20 163 41'A 40 41 . iComw Ed 2 228 516k 506k 51'k— . ArmCkpf3 75 l50 77 »'* 22 iCom»f Oil .48 2498 227k 2l'k 226k+ V/i ArmRub 1.60 11 40>* 396k 406k+ 1 k coinsat 417 426k 38'* 41'k+ - Arc Corp 1 6 19V 19 19V+ V.^oneMill 1 20 x 49 22V 22Va 22V+ Arvlnln 1.20b 38 2666 TSJk »*+J?|Con«olm .80a 502 156* I36k I5Vk+ Ashland Oil 1 2800 3164 287k 31*4+ 26* Con CIg 120a 275 18'* 1764 18'/.— AshlOil Pf2.40 56 63'* 59'k 83'*+ 4 con Edi$ 1.80 748 336* 32kj 325k— AssdBrew .40 82 12'k 12'k 126/.+ +. ConEdis pf 5 42 886* 87 SB AssdDG 1.40 315 55'/. 52'/. 5264— 16* conE pfC4.65 1 836/. J334 8364- AesHCnrinn 1 70 70** 1964 20 'ConFlerlnh 1 746 7RI* 75V. 7R1*4- Z70 74 73 74 + 2' 36 7'k 67* 7'k+ ' -5 I Fla Pow 1.28 287 47 466. 4664- ' + 1'*lFla PL 1.52 127 74'k 72'* 736*+ ' 1+ 2'.'. I Fia Steel ,80a 15 15 146* 146*— ' .+ I* Fluor Corp 134 24'* 22',. 24 + 1 .1- FMC Cp .75 434 33'* 32+1 33 + ' - FoodFaIr .90 137 15 146. 14'*— ' FdGtMkf .80 88 11'k 106/. ]o'b— ' FdGMk Bf,« 6 ,86k 8'* 9Vk, :. Anken C Arms D sir 1017 ll'k 1 Associnv 1.40 99 216* 2O’. 21'* CbnFrght .80 131 17'* 156* 17 + Atchison 1.60 549 297. 275* 28 - 1'*XnLaun 1.20a 58 24',4 23'k 237*+ 1 Atchis pf 50 155 9'* 9'. 9'4 ,r„nwn.. ! 7n 100 50a. mv. soi,-. AtCityEI 1.22 213 28 276* 37'/.— AtlcLineSa^ '40 676* 64 67 + AM Rich 2.80 X246 88 855* 86'*— AtIRch pt3.75 1270 7' AtIRch pl3 X92 7 AtlasChm .80 125 1 Atlas Cp 530 Aurora P^l .40 85 1 AustNich ,50b 12 1 t Niag Shr'' 1 ; NopcoCh 1 k NSPw pf4.11 k NSPw pf4,10 . NSPw pf3.60 ^iWolv W W .50 186 1 ^' Wometco .62 39 1 k SouCalE 1.25 452 39 37'* 38»e+ 1' 372 306 . 281, 28' , - 1' 6 3364 33'/v 336/.+ ' 84 30 29 S' 30 + 6 + 27k'Sou Ry p. . ..- .. - + l'*jSwest PS .64 x153 17 + I'klSpartan Ind 193 14'* - 6k!SpartlndA .40 135 15 + 2 SparfCorp .40 63 B'k 6 UnArtisf ,25e * Unit Carr 1 “ i UnilCoro ,40e ‘ I Unit|lasMc 1 6, Un "Fruit .75^6 248 “UGasCp 1.70 412 + 2'* IWrlgley 3. . , [Wurlitzer ,B( ’^,WyandW .40 j 2jH 2W4 216i+ 41 Xerox Corp Fo te N ,25d FordMot 2.40 1693 41=4 ForeOelr .50 272 16'j FostWhl .50e FoxboroCo 1 - FramCp .60b 32 39'* 376. 38'.+ iKanCPL 1 56 108 38 ' KC PL pf4 20 y20 77 ' KC PL pf3 80 V20 69 ‘iKC Soutnd 2 101 345* > KC Sou pf 1 14 33'* 326* 326*- 3 32 23"* 226* 23'/.— ', 67 15'a 15 15'.— '.'Zavre Corp itt' iI” Zenith Rad 1 in3« SB/, nosij- 1* Copyrighted t 18’/^ 196k+ '6k Z-Sales in 37 1 664 1 6 1 6'k— 8k x5 13'/. 13'* 136/.+ '/. _X-Y-Z— 1506 184V 174'/a 181V+ 3% X464 28V 27 28 - V 37 17V 17V 17V , i 42Va 42 42V+ ^ junlndus pf.42 35 8V V/t . 23% + StdBrd pf3.50 Std Rolls .50 StOIICal 2,50 StOIIInd 1.70 ... StOilNJ 3.30e 977 70 StdOilOh 2 40 76 71', Unit MM +’20 it'* =^iusli lfM1n loS 1714 1B14+ 114 ! disbursements based on tha.Iast quartarly or semi-annual declaration, Special or i3,/4 a 43ei ..... extra dividends or payments not detig- 176* 14. l4'/«— »4 nated as regular are identified .In tht 2'/. I'k 2 — 'k following .footnotes. if' t??;' „/ i-u =u, ”6;ri6:,arp»i,?, ? 27V 27 27'/4+ ’ 192 38V4 35+2 37'-4-, - . 235 26V 26''4 26'4- V Kellogg +20 ^50 78 76 76 + 1 Kelsey 1 30 46 9'/^ 9 9'/2+ V* Kendall Co 1 ^ Kennecott 2 39 23’k 23‘/i 23'*+ '* KernCLd'j^60 18 38Va fl'S -W- ; Keebler 1.20 25 25 24'k 24'.- ' J8'* < Gam Sko 1.30. GaniSk pfl.75 GarnSk pfl 60 Gar Wood GsrW ptt.Stk GardDen 1.50 225 29'. 27'* Garlock .60 ” GenAcept pfl . . • - - - GenAcc pf.60 6 10'* 106* 106*— GAmln 2.94* 73 286* 27'* 28',.+ GAInv pf4.M 1110 876/. 87’* GAmOII .40b , -5>*-'T,'4 I W*.....30'* KeystnnSW 2 KimbClark “ ]'k KInkSel 1.5 ''/•jKIt^g DSt .5 X116 65 6 64'.+ 45* O'* ^d pl3,90 zllO J .«8f ■786r-74_;.7SUi+ W tg^f#g|e-.^..-72- j 158 lit* B2'/a+ i/jjC7felaNGs 1,12 119 1 133 17'* 15'/4 1 664+ 1',4! .. 37 29 26',4 : 6k , Kinney pt 70 17 27'* 256* S X1310 93’k 89'* 90',4 : St Pkg pfi;60 , 1064 16',+ sij Std Press .60 ui,l 1,1 StPrudUn .66 I 741. ’,StanWar 1.50 at Bij- 'StanWks 1.20 »; L'lKJVif, i-iSei'•!»’:!! St'i liSterlDrug .90 ; 15?! stev-iEr pti.so ! 17'’/. 17'k+ StevenJP 2.25 -r,j_ 6*,stokeVC '.80b '^‘IStokeVC pf 1 j Slone Web 3a J /■ StoneCont .M 13H 1364+ 6.«,5torerBdcst 1 ! 5264 495k 52 o?,+L aC I UBwyuMri ja 8k+ 6k : (j5 |n(,u5, 75 US Lines 2b ' USPioe 1,20 ■ I US Play 1,55e 'iUSPlywd 1.40 ' US Rub 1.20 28 32'/. 30'k 3164'+ 1 45 186. 18'* I8+1 + dividen, e—Declared c ing 1965, estimated cash value on ex^fivi-dend or ex-distributlon dale, g—Paid last year, h—Declared or paid after stock dlvi-dend or split up. k—Declared or paid this 115 30 29',4 2 S 38 35'. 376*— ', ! 16H 15'/. 166*+ ' V Amer 239 106. n arrears, n—New issue, p—Paid his year, dividend omitted, deferred or 10 action taken at last dividend meeting. •—Declared or paid in 1966 plus ito« - .-=a.i°value on *x-dtvtd#n^ or ex- 1 6kidistribution dale, ■ t cld-Called. x-Ex dividend. ^Ex Dlvl-■ 'kidend and sales in full, x-dls—Ex alstrlbu-1 ition. xr-Ex rights. xw-Wllhoul 78*+ i'/j!estimatfd tl GA Tran 1.55 126 : GenAnilF ' 286* 29'*+ 6* Koppers 1.40 I zlOO 75'* 746/. ^3 44'4 4JV3 4J'*'4— ’4|;: [140 95'4 94% 95''4+ >4 G 121 42+1 40 41V f IV 1320 77 76V 76»'a+ ','2 Avon Pd +20 X Babbitt BabcokW +25 Bak OUT .50 Balt GE 1 52 BaIGpfB 4.50 2 Balt & Ohio BangSug lOe Bangs pf+25 BarbrOn 64t Basic Inc ,80 BauschLb .80 101 50'4 BaxtrLab .24 322 38’b BayukCig .50 46 9V ^'Cont Mot ,40 i 25'/4 24+% 25V4 + 35 53 52'/4 52% + Gen Baking - lane .48 ___ Bronze Gen Cable 1 GenCon? .ioe GenFinan 1 GFlrepfg +20 (ieninstr ’ GenMot 4.55e : V p^fsM GenPCem .80 GPrec pf+60 GPubSvc .49e G PubUt 1.50 G Refrac .80 Gen Sig +20 G StIInd +20 l%— V4jKroehlrMf lb 26 I agiOwensIlT 1.35 74%__ 34!Owpnslll pf 4 44+4+ 23g OxfdMfgA .60 I 28% . 29%+ V ^ ■ ,'*iLaneBry 1.' ■ '’'. ‘Lanv Ritz .M 301 : ■ ’ < Lanvin pf 80 43 ' ' V uatrobeSt .60 19 ■ l’^;Lear Sieg .70 394 5 52 22V 21V .22'% I 74+4 73% 74g2+ ' 4 Lehman +97e PacG |l +30 Pac 'Ve^tror*^ + PacPwLt 1.16 ’ PaeSwAir .68 " PacT&T +20 » PacT&T pf 6 ; ” Pac Tin 60a ® Pan A Sul .60. Pan Am .60 ' ” Panh EP 1.60 * Panh EP pf4 , Pargasinc .4 . 55'^'t ’'*iSuburGas .68 125 li 156'. 16V.+ »k| Sub Prop 1,52 21 18',. 19',.+ kklsuCrest .80 8 _ jSunChem ,40 81 336'. 34H+ •.'suna°o 370 ns. 1. a, p, , 45 » Sunbeam 1.16 23 '» Sundstnd 1.20 124 6— '*,Sunray 1.40a 300 " SunshMn .60b 240 37 Ik M6* iH'-T6;y"ptTeaf’ fa « ’»'• ’’’7 ^-;;:T3?,^Uni^Leaf pie z *0? ?7 . ??., iUnivOPd 1.40 1 tl/“ ■ UPlufin ' 68 !Urls Bldg .60 pO 145'* 145'-! 145'/.— 2866-f- H : tributes wi-Wt ■ delivery. v|—In bankruptcy e being reorganized U“- vw—With warrants, wd—When di It day I 27'/.+ ' ' j! IVallyMId 1.20 ‘ I VanRaal 1,30 ’ n“ iVanityFr 1.20 1 54'k+ 16.. |Varian As 37 34-1* 32'* 3 Weekly Investment Companies 625 26V 255'/a 291 33+4 31V • 34/4 34-"4-r -4 ^TCl Ei +__ ,_______ .. 27V 27VI GTei pfB+30 4 [Control Data 1595 3(F»4 27V 30 2' ^ ■ Gen Time .SO t 34V ... Conwod +20a 84'2+ Va Conwood pf6 29 + 1 CookCoff .85t 27 + ivlc op Ind nl a 29U+ IVa I CooperTR .80 31'a— '4 Copeland +20 4 12V+ Vi CoppRng .50b 4 40^ + l^jCopwdStl +20 30 '* j CorngGWk ft 'a 50'4+ IV Corpnet .40 * 't ^1'' Cowles .50 CoxBdeas . _ _ LIlyTulip 1... , 43V— % LingTVghI lb 23 — I4 LingTVgt pf3 I 14V+ % LinkBIt 1 80a , 32V— v« Lionel Corp J 36+4 34V 36V+ IV Livingstn Oil 543 ,50a 221 56V 52'/4 i 1 70'^a 70^4-1- 34 ■ K'4 Jv ; Aberdeen Fd 62 26V 25',a : Beat Fds +50 73 49V 4 1 23 22 22V + 32V+ 3 '4j Crane Co +68 Crescent .90 ' V Creset pf+25 * 1? *t t CromptKn .80 43vi IV .*7® JJ., “ Crown Cork * Hi!” *7 tCrownCk pf2 xj 4 , 27 '9-r IV'Crown Zell 2 168 4 ' 'i! Cm Z pf4.20 1670 8 *»!•+ ?J,Cruc Stl 1.20 132 2 }?:•;- ,? CTS Corp ,40 209 3 I Giant PC .80 f 3//.jGibralt +26t f 437. Gillette +20 „ GimbelB +80 3/4 Ginn Co f 3 ‘‘Iciidden 1 1 i/jiGlobeUn .60a 1. Globe W .70b _ H4: Goodrich 2.40 f n,jGoodyr * I iz-JcouldBal X51 26'2 26 26',4+ ^ 3,^ Londontn .20 LoneS Cem 1 LoneSGa 1.12 LongIsLt 108 bid price. All quotations, ! National Association of 7.66 7.50 7.66 7.50 6.88 6.85 6.85 Johnsfn Mut Fd 17.69 17.27 17.66 17.18 Keystone Custodian Funds: Invest Bd B-1 23.08 23.05 23.07 23.04 Med G Bd B-2 22.57 22.54 22.54 22.53 Grth Fd K-2 Hi-Gr Cm S-1 Inco Stk S-2 Growth S-3 LoPr Cm S-4 Inti Fund Knickrbek Fd ' Knicktbek Gr F ■ 1 Fund XV4— iv, Lorillard 2.50 Lowenstn .80 Lubrizol .80 j" LuckyStrs .80 I itHIniA/ 1 7A k Pet I, C pf.80 35 19'a 18V 19','ai- ' '[Granites l.iO 108 20'a 20V 20' a+ V f ! Granitev +4d x41 23V 22V 22V- '/% ^i+ 13/4. Petrolane 7 _ »4 Petroim +e/e 4'« iV+ 3'4iPfizerC +20a 374“ I — 3/4 ,PhelpD 3.40a 276 5'4+ 1 Phila El +43 178 )V+ l'/i]PhllEl pf4.68 1350 I%+ 2 iPhilEI pf4.40 2150 .. 3V+ ''ijPhilEI pf3.80 2130 72'a 71’Y B 13.95 14.38 13.94 ) 34V 32'4 32'/4- naA sxnl '{X V* CuneoKrs ,« 77* 3V 33 35V-i- '4 CunnDrug .: ]?!* ’*iGlNn'’rp’’p?., BenFin pf4.50 * Curt Pub 3pf ‘ / CurPub ,60pt Berkey Photo 110 30V 27V 30V+ 2'% GtA&P +20a GtNo Ir +40g Gt Nor Pap 1 ,.d .w/ GtNorP pf.40 1 11>'4 11V+' V4IG* Nor fey 3 ' 13' ’ n"’- ^[Gtw'sug* L60a ' : '’"iGmenG*nt'’'.70 104^ 401/4+ lAiGreenRf l.io W 29*+ '.jGreenSh 1.10 32'/% 33 + 38 55V 54 55V- *" 277% 27 V 27V- > 38V 37’^a 37+4 ) 107| 1034 103/4 •Z20 150 150 MadSG pf .6( ^IMagmaj: 3.6i Mallory +60i BiackOk +40 Biaw Kn +40 BiissLau 1 80 61V 63 + 1Vj%\arathn 2 I 443/4 47',^+ IV Maremont ' '** ■''V; Mar Mid ' 45 52’* 505% « ’ 20'% 19+i 20 ilRdg +20 .* Pit Coke .40 V PCoke 5pf 5 ■ ,? PitForg +40a ' ^ PitFtW pf 7 ■ ,f?rP'^P>afe 2.60 ■'/^Pit Steel ■ ,j!PitStl pf8.25k PitWtVa .56e I Pittston iBondstock Corp . Boston Fund I Bullock Fund II Can Gen Fd .'Canadian Funi ............ . ^ , . [Capit Income 380 39V 37V M7'b+ IVjCap Life Ins 70V + 4: 33 V + ' 83','4+ + 1; 5.9B 6.11 5.97 9.58 American Stocks ^EW YORK (AP) Following is a lord of selected stocks traded this week the American Stock Exchange, giving > individual sales for the week, the ek's high, low and closing prices and Aerojet .50a AiaxMagn AmPetrofA ___ ArkLaGas +50 159 38'% Net » Chg. 121 233/4 21+4 23%+2'/4 29 137% IIV 133/4 + 2V 87/% 8'/a 87/*+ V 407 3'% 2 11-16 3 1-16+5-16 AttasCp wt Barnes Eng BrazLtPw 1 Brit Pet .55e Campb Chib Cdn Javelin 202 2V 2 5-16 2V . 237 6'4 5Va 6 + 181 3 23/4 3 ... 3)5 26? 25V4 26 ... 1 27.37 14.61 14.49 14.61 14.47 Manhattan ' Fd 13.49 13,32 1147 14.24 Mass Inv Grth 8.58 8.43 8.58 8.42|Mass Inv Trust 16.30 16.04 16.30 16.91 I Mass Lift I 725% 73 - ; 50' 3 47'% 47V3— 2= Sh 6.93 6.86 6.92 Tr 1+52 1+37 11.48 1 250 84 84 84 — '4 Chase Fd Boi 37 M+4 35 38+4+ 3'/.'Cheml,cal Fd z20 126+k 126+4 1263/4 . citadel Fd 126 53'/4 52'* S3'/4+ 270 10'/2 97» 10V4+ a«rColonial Fund “ to,,! 40,.' to,;" .^['Colonial Grth&En 1 7.96 7.90 7.95 7.91 2,43 2.37 2.42 2.37 M-I.F. Growth 5.20 5.13 5.20 : 4 14.20 14.54 14.13 MV,'6r*t 2V1DPL PtA 3 75 I 3 19V 18V 19V+ Vip 285 63V 60% 63 DelPowLt .90 t 5vl DentISp +208 i 'J DenRGW 1.10 , DeSotoCh .70 +- 7/.lGulfStaUt .80 . 4. ValGulfSU pfS.08 i20 91 +. 2 Gulf SU pf 5 2100 93 _ 7,'GulfSU pf4;52 240 84 4. u GulfSU pf4.40 2260 82 4. S^^lGulfWIn .25b 3849 31 545 597* 59 59V- ........... S,/,+ Plough .92 2% Marquar, ,25e 215 12V IOV2 117%+ V/a V Marq Cmt 1 107 13'% 12V P or Co 1 l^iMarshFleld 2 x98 44V 42 x26 8V 8V 8V ... bd Mtge 4.2 ^i7 S9'^* JJ!Commonwealth Funds: 2435 1 5^7i U5V 153V+ 6%j Porter''pf5.50 z200 87V 87^ 8^*11 V 9.20 $.14 9.20 9.15 - 3V4'Md Cup .4 'Masonite + ^ % Massey F >1 115'% 100 115'a-+-lO’i'MayDS pf+8p ' 36V 36’% 36’%+ ’ 4J J4 4 0,r-4 44-4-r , 4 , ^'''‘-'P'«t I .„ 4266 21 20 20»k— v. i Procter G 2 63 12+4 12 12'/4— Vj'PubSvCol .90 X187 97. 37'* 39''!-f 134 1,46 xl 34V 34*8 345%+ 5.J'^PSEG pt5.28 r280 19 13 12'/4 12V.+ WIPSEG pf4,08 81 33 31’4 33 + 1** 1 PSEG pfl,40 207 37 - 35"i W4+ ,7*/>“Srdar .,BO 97 ,53/. ,*,/.+ '/.|C“''.' Commw Tr A8.B 'Commw Tr C4.D Composite B&S [Composite Fd ■ Concord Fund 9.16 8.99 9.13 8.95 *•’3 ctrywlde RIty 165 Xreole P 2.60e Data Cont EquityCp ,18t Fargo OilJ Feimt Oil .15i Fly Tiger 1.2 Gen Devel Gen Plywd It 88 IJ’/. ll'/i_ 11'/^ 5k 5.95 25k 2 5-16 255+ 'k 75k 7'/. 7’/.- ? 393* 37J* 3855+I'k .60* 450 8 3-16 7 11-16 7 13-16 . 19 i HoernerWald .82 25 1 25 I Hycon Mfg 78 1 13; Imp Oil 1.80a 15 5 6.34 6.43 6.32jMcCrorY wt National Securities Series: Mf*t? s°"" I Balanced . 10.66 10.57 1 0.66 10.571 Moiybde^n*'^ '* ■Bond 5.59 5.55 5.59 5.55 i n** pj Mng Dividend .41 . ib 441 '4ia,_— . ■ Preferrfid Incotn* Natl Western Fd NEA Mut Fd New England- 2 6 29 J'SiSignalOllA 1 it^ ■ 397 17'k 15+k 177*+2'k 734 2354 21'k 2J5k+2 102 265* 255* 26'/4- 'A' 2133 I'M 9.00 1... 3.75 3.62 9.00 Brisf My ,80a 511 I BwnShoe 2.40 Buff For 1.80 Burndy .40 Burroughs I 1 Bush Ter .20r BVD Co SO . 1 DiGiorglo .1 . i _ i* i DinersCI ,50b j3,i+ 1/* 'Disney ,4r ii,_ i.iDist Seag ’ 16/11 ,'iHmdOrg 1.40 1 615*+ 7 I -T® I 315*+ 3'*'KjP5wik lAO ' 255*- p,' ^ ^ '„JjHarcourt 1 ' Harris lot 1 ‘ T , HarscoCp .90 ' 55 jw'iHarshaw 1.20 ' ’1 .li HartSchM .80 '?r H,rv Al 1.20 HawElec^ 1.01 I 1334 13'*— 5» ; McCrory6pf 6 I 26'k 28'»+ 25* McDerm 1 20 I McDonald Cp I 235* 23'* 235*+ ' Cilgon .80 Cal Fineni Calif Pack 1 CallahM .36f CalumM 1.20 CampRL .45* ' '2” sii i CaDry pf4.25 16O 78’A 1 CanSou Ry 3 1150 56'/* i edh«re*» .40 10 6+s, CdnPac 2.I5*“ 76 49'k / Canal Rand 1 “ ’ Canteen .r* 383 35* 600 307k 1 ..IduPom xi'sS 286 +* duPont pf4.M 19 90 duPont pf3.M 5 70 Duq Lt 1.50 111 39'k 1*1 Dq 4.1Spf2.07 Z30 38'/: 'klDuqLt 4pl 2 13 3754 }Dq 3.75ptl.87 ZllO 35 63. 215* 21’.4 21'4— '. 20 5 2 503,4 51',*- \ 22 37 36'* 36'k+ ’,4: McLean ,60a 40 31'/4 30 30'l+ 5*tMcL0Utn 1.60 288 2654 2 5 26'k+ '.I McNeil Cp lb 13 8 7'* 73,4+ 'k'McQuay 1.10 7 26'* 26 26 — 'k Mead Cn 1 90 38 29'k 285* 283 4+ ' 118 205* 195* 3 345 26'* 24'4 1 138 32'* 31'/4 3 138 687* 67 6 Pubs Ind 1.76 x287 495i. / . j*IPSInd pf3.50 y70 6" ' . 5*IPSInd pfl.04 xl3 1 F '/4! PurexCp .68b 524 1 F l'* 'Purolatr 1.60 22 : ' 255k '247k ' 255* + I----------—J. j./j J.-4 4./J 3.62 Peoples See .. Convert Secur Fd 8.17 8.11 ,8.17 8.07 i Phila Fd * Convert Grth 10.78 10.46 10.78 10.43 Pine Street l^lCorp Leaders 16.03 15.90 16.03 15.95 Pioneer Fund ,Crown W&tn D2 5.89 5.79 5.89 5.80 i Price, TR Grth ■■ ■ -J ------ 44 1, 45 20 44.25 Provident Fd 10.50 i Puritan Fund ' Putnam Funds: Statham In j JS Syntex Cp .1 li'?;: Technlcol l4?5iUn Control 2o!bo Copyrighted WEEKLY AMERICAN STOCK SALES 13151 Total for week ............ 7,809,893 lM4|Week ago ...... ' " le Associated, Press 196* Vegh ru 9%+ ViQecatur incoma f Delaware Fd 15,- ^ I Divers Gth Stk . Divers Invsfmt 1 3334— 1'/41 Dividend 487/B+ lie I Dow Th I 28'*+ '* I Dreyfus I ■ 6.56 I 1 42+4 44’k+ l''!lQuekSf 1, 10.67 10.52 1 ‘12.02 l‘ 8.88 3.39 12l22 1314 12/9 1..T, ■■■..J. 11.86 11.83 11.86 11.83 I Oily Dfst Sh 15.07 14.93 15.07 14.90; Rep Tech 22.85 22.55 22.85 22.59 ! Research ln> 12.21 12.05 12.21 12.02 i Revere Fd 0 7X *■« ! i Scudder Fur 9.48 9.62 9i48 8 85 8.80 8.85 8.79^ 7.09 6.99 7.09 6.91, 7.39 7.29 7.38 . 7.27' ..... 7,433,655 ... 14,399,575 .. 610,357,865 414,726,010 WEEKLY AMERICAN BOND SALES otal for week ..................... $4,531,000 reek ego $5,160,000 ear ago $2,816,000 10.50 10.11 10:45 lO^Os! 28 18+* 17+i 1 1 22+4 23'k+ 4*{ RCA .1 Federal Gr Fd 12.55 12.30 1 Fid Trend Fd 26.45 25.98 2 Center Proposal fo Be Discussed Hazelline Cp 233 Hell Coil .60 121 15'* 1 . 323-4 31H 32'*- '- HershCh ,90a Hertzt 1.20 Hertz pfB 2 Die .30 1 I 22'* 21+4 22'4+ 6*'Payette ,48 1122 31'* 28k* 3I'*+ 3'k I 32k* 30+4 32k*+ 1'*'Raymlntl ,60 70 9k* 9'* 9k* ,., I 74 73 73 + 1 iRayonier 1.40 205 28k* 26’k 27k*— Vi I 30'k 30'/z 30k4+ Hi Raytheon .80 1131. 50H 47k* 4l’k— '* — — ■ Co 102 14 12'* 13+4+ I'k Meredith 1.20 23 27H 26'* 27H+ 1'* MerrChap le 9 22’* 22 22'.k— H MesabiT .80* 13 012'k 121k 12H- 'k MestaM 2.50a 159 32'* 31H 31k4— “ '3> ?! iHeublein I'10'* 12'*+ l'*:HewPack _ I 16'* ,16'k+ +4 High Voltage 151 / 22 23H+ I'/kiMetEd pfS.'sO I 33 34’*+ 1'*!MichGas 1.20 - 1 Reliab Sir .80 tu /u + Vj RellanEI t.10 68 68 Republic Cp 1 68'* 68'*+ 2'* RepC rp pfl . East S Sn 1 32'*— i-vi, E Kodak ' I 49'*+ 1 EalonYa ' 87—1 Eaton pf I 46'*+ H Echlin Mf I 16H+ '* I EdisBros I 7-32 . EGAG .20 vvrw *■! iiiW 34'* 32'* 33 — HjElasSfop terrier 1.6Aa x70 65k* 63'* m+ 11®?"''^ 5K&rag''8 S a.»4i8 |is;; &S f “i* i« !!S_BtiiilUS; CareyPh 1 Cerlisle Cp . ..j — ._ _ 16'k 17kk— +4'MidAPipe ,40 16'* 14kn 16 + IHiMConITel .76 2534 24'4 25 - Ik MlidAP'pll.l2 65'* 62'* 63'*+ 1H MidSoUtll ,68 Electron 137 lOH 93-4 9';.-- '* Midid R 1.40 Inn .50 156 363.4 32H 363*+ 31/, MidRpfA 4.75 .... Sugar- 1 . 90 183>» 177i is - '4 MIdwOll 2,40 HolfRW ,80b 230 51+4 49 49’*-^ 27k MiehleGD .90 Hnm.xik 1.60 135 36'k 35','. 36'*+ I Miles Lab 1 .10 711 58'* 55'k 57'-.+ ' j Milt Brad .70 Honeyw pl 3 ’ *2 _ 80*4 80+4- - »« MinerCh ‘ HiltonHot .80 I 11'*+ ' Revere 2.60a 73 54 51'* 51+4- I 22'k 21'k 22'*+ H ! 4 3H 3H+ Ik 1 11H ll'k 11'*— 'k I 14 12'* 14 + 3* 37H 35'k 37'i.+ H I 243,4 2334 241*+ - 43'*, 43'-4- . _________ ,, 14'/4 16'i+, 2',*'Houdin I Uk*+ l'*'Houd -pt 19'* 19'/i- '* Revlon 1.30 505 4 ! 20'k 20H— '* Revlon pfl " ' I 24 25k*+ 'kiRexChn 1.20a 118 118 — k* Rexall pf2 ■” '4 Reyn Met ,75 ..... * ReyM pl4 50 I 35H+ 1'^iReyM pf2.37 ' 28'* 28 28H+ 'k 5.65 5.61 5.64 5.64 5.10 5.02 5.02 5.12 7.56 7.44 7.55 7.42 "’1 12.05 11.70 IOC Stk Pfd Stk Utilities Fund of Am , Fundamtl Inv Gen Invest Tr Group Securities: Aerospace-Sci Common Stk Fully Admin Growth Indust Gryphon Southwstn Sovereign inv State St Inv Steadman Scl Steadman Shrs ;teln Roa Funds: Stock‘d* Sup Inv Grth Sterling Inv Televisn Elect Temp Gth Can Texas Fund 20th Cent Gr Inv 20th Cent Inc ,,:lncome Found 12.15 12.04 12.15 1 Income Fd Bos ' 7.62 7.59 7.62 * Trend 11.08 10.95 11.08 1 ■ Bank Stk Fd 5,37 5.32 5.32 Tr Bos 11,59 11.41 11,57 1L43 Investors Group Funds: Mu^al Inc 10.79 10.71 10.79 10.69 io!49 IMS itf!48 io^mI School Supti Dr. Dana P. 1+94 1+72 1+92 iJj?|Whitmer will discuss the Pon-^5 27 ^1?3 ^27 School District’s proposed 1775 17.41 i7.'75 i7:42'Human Resources Center at a _______ , I meeting Monday night of the Baldwin - Walton Community Club. The 7:30 p.m. meeting will be held at Owen School, Columbia near Baldwin. 5.27 5.19 5.27 5.17 7,87 8.03 8,27 Already There LYONS, Kan. — Shoe Store 4 22 4 24 Robert Freeman was help- 11 497 5” i ® woman customer with a 10.66 1052 io'.66 io.M‘new pair of shoes when she ixfii iiis iiii Jxwinoticed that another customer 12 96 12 « 12 96 12 w ^hc old sho6s shs ” ^7?i '‘,'’1;^®'* wo™ to the store. She re- / f n 7M m'fusedio sell the old ones. Opposes Draff Draw tiators have reached a tentative XS". (AP,-M»st, :n,e.aa majority otAmeri. w Elec-1 Americans oppose substitution i cans favor drafting young men strike to a thirrf ml; system; a polling organization * Harris 4 Associates said in a stn^ to a third major defense’told a natiprutf conference on ^eport presented at a luncheon the draft today. session. 'Kie memorandum to Gus lyi-er, director of special projects for the AmeHcan Veterans Committee, which is sponsoring the conferenee, added: “This support is expressed almost equally by those who have relatives in the armed forces, those who say they have a family member eligible to be drafted, and those who are not personally involved in the Viet Nam war.” Representatives of educational, professional, youth women’s, labor, business, veteran, church, farm and other national organizations are attending the conference, which ends today. It was called to provide a national forum for discussion of the present draft system and of possible alternatives. THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1966 quality & economy withStramSteel buildings ’""’'"il- The savings are >t only better, but also economics to SoTrXe’ tT*" “"struction, often 60 s? OAXSTEEL DIVISION SCHURRER CONSTRUCTION COMPANY 2431 Pontiac Road, Pontiac Phone 338-4019 Dow Answers Protesters on Making Napalm BERKELEY, Calif. (AP) -A demonstration by 300 persons on campus against the manufactur- - C-7 Woman's Hip Broken Rash of City Street Robberies A 50-year-old woman received stopp^ his car at the intersec-broken hip and nearly $270 tion when the youths approached was taken in a series of rob- him and demanded his money beries on city streets yesterday.' He said he was struck on the Rosaline Hickman of 115 State head with an objm. TO told pd-suffered a fractured left hip lice he then drove away and when a youth knocked her to the.his.assailanisjilsDilaJ_ ground about 6 p.m. while in ------------ the process of grabbing her purse, containing K3. The victim told police she laid on the ground in the rear parking lot at 62 W. Lawrence for about 30 minutes before someone noticed and came to her aid. She was admitted to Pontiac Gener^ Hospital^ where she is reported in fair condition. 2 Area Execs Get Treasurer Posts at Ford Two Bloomfield Township men have been named assistant Michael Hines, 25, of 1585 ‘measurers _of the Ford Motor Beach, Orion Townishp, told po- Co., it was announced today. Thev r GIFT HORSE - Two year-old Toni Ayers sits atop Cooney, a pedigree Shetland pony, as her brother Rick, II, accepts the reins from Lee Pickard, a trainer at the Meadow Brook Farm. Mrs. Alfred G. Wilson gave the horse to the Richard Ayers family, 3901. S. Rochester, Avon Township, to replace a pony that was maliciously shot on Halloween. The owners of the animal, which had been boarded by the Ayers, also have received another horse to A two-ear collision at Walton i 2-Car Crash Hospitalizes 2 lice two men robbed him of $211 '"t’' '''"^ent J. Trivison at gunpoint on Chapman Street J Hausman. at about 8:30 last night. Tnvison 4726 Hedgewood. was vice president and finance man- KNIFE FLASHER J.L.VOORHEES For niccess in life tact is more important than talent, but it is not easily acquired by those to whom it does not come naturally. Start by considering the person you are with. Never lose a chance of giving ^ j pleasure. It costs nothing and buys 11 everything. In fact, it buy:# what 1 I money cannot purchase. Tact often succeeds where force fails. Always remember that men are more easily led than driven, and in any case it is much better to guide M.E.SIPLE than to force. voorhees-siple funeral home 268 North Perry Street Phone FE 2-8378 er of napalm for the Viet Nam war drew a Dow Chetnical reply Friday that it doesn’t decide military policy. “We will do our best, as we always have, to try to produce what our Defense Department and our soldiers need in any war situation,” the statement laid. It endorsed “the right of any American to legally and peacefully protest an action with an action with which he does not agree.” The demonstrators moved campus Thursday, protesting the presence there of work recruiters for Dow Chemical. Pontiac Theaters EAGLE Sat.-Thurs.: “Cast a Giant Shadow, ” Kirk Douglas, color; “Die, Die, My Darling,” Stephanie Powers Starts Fri: “Munster, Go Home,” Fred Gwynne, color; !“The Mad Executioner.” j HURON I Now Showing: “The Blue |Max,” George Peppard, Ursula Andress, Jqpies Mason, color resulted in the hospitalization of a Pontiac Township couple. j * [ Listed in fair condition in Pon- I tiac General Hospital are Robert, 49, and Yvonne Carrie, 41, of 2766 Genes. . They both received severe facial lacerations and possible internal injuries, according to hospital officials. In addition, Mrs. Galxie sustained a fractured leg. »••••••••••••••••! mYOURSELF 1ST EVERY WEEK Deaths in Pontiac Area A youth, flashing a knife, grabbed Willie B. Mestin’s purse as she walked along Highland Street just before 8 last night. However, the thief escaped empty-handed as the Mestin woman of 489 Bloomfield put her money in her coat pocket when she became suspicious after hearing someone running from behind. Sheriff’s deputies said they were not certain who was driving the Carrie car. Rochester. Lewis W. Giers ■■ Two youths escaped with $4 alter taking a purse from Lula of Ford Motor. Argentina. Mrs. Charles Kipp Oulman, 62, of 1.54 N. Paddock to early 1966 when he Graveside service for Lewis! OBTONVH.LE Service for at Mount Clemens and Senecas finance W. Giers, 2-month-old son of Mr.!Gharles yesterday morning. She and Mrs. Lewis W. Giers of 3734:* ^ * 87, of was knocked to the ground. | With Ford since 1953, he Breaker, Waterford Township,Ihe 1 p.m. Monday at: * ★ ★ | previously had served as re- will be 11 a.m. Monday in Lake-i^^® Algoe-Gundry Mortuary,! John Kelly, 62, of 77 Foster gional finance executive for view Cemetery, Clarkston bv^Ortonville nearly was robbed at the corner Latin America. .. . ^ „ ... •' Cemetery ---* —i— v--. *i--1 j Mrs, Kipp died Thursday. Sparks-Grlffin Funeral Home. TheLtantdledyesMay. | She was a mambar otTh. Or-; Kelly Surviving are the parents; der of the Eastern Star, Chap-'-grandfather George Buche offer 299 of Davidson; the Gene-Mulberry, Kan.; and nine broth-see Health Group: and the Pro-Driver of the other car was'^rs and sisters, Robert of Walled igressive Farm Bureau Larry Reisig, 22, of 339 Castell, Lake and Linda, Lana, Brenda,, Surviving are two sons Mar Patricia. Gregory, Richard, shall and John, both of’Flint Daniel and Brian, all at home, and four grandchildren of Tregcnt and Foster by three; i youths at 9:30 last night. Manager of the domestic prof-told polkf'he had'*‘ analysis department of the ____________ company s finance state since October 1965, Hausman, 920 Sandhurst, also joined Ford in 19.53. Mrs, George Hous Requiem Mass for Mrs. Mrs, Alex Nisbet MILFORD — Mrs. Alex (Sar-' Pontiac Twp. Driveri Rolls Car Hurts iGa^Ge^re'Anna'^jTHaus DETROIT (AP) - President nuilb a brief ill- Walter Reuther of the United ^•shto, 3®be 10 7m MoS Workers will be absent A Pontiac Township man was at St. Patrick’s Catholic Church! the Richard-,AFL-CIO executive injured early today when he lost i White Lake Township with bur-T'ouncil meeting in Washington control his car on a curve onlial in Lakeview Cemetery,I a/pyrinrlor R Adams Road near M59 in the Clarkston. Alexander B. Tennant •. r, . p township. I Tho nlycr, i, k .! COMMERCE TOWNSHIP An aide said Friday Reuther Listad In fair condition in,7 Im S bV hew'ljD Clo‘b B- Ten.:'''' “ pr'''«'>le '» atlend a Pontiac General Hospital with I,7hc 'eLck J™!' »'■ »' »''> S Ve severe leg lacerations is John Home Union Lake The Parish^ P *"■ ^^''^sday at the Rich- executive board G. Robertson, 24, of 110 Har-RTarv wThe said at nwill discuss the union s _ Kosary Will be said at 8 j,^ji967 collective bargaining pro- Reuther to Skip ! Hausman served with operat-» r-i r II !ing divisions of the company be- Arl I Iri Tsil/C I'he finance staff in Death Notices vard. j Sunday in the funeral home. ■jWalled Lake, ; Wixom Cemetery. gram. The aide declined comment on public reports that Reuther's absence from the AFL-CIO session meant a further rift be- According to sheriff’s deputies, i u • u , Robertson’s car rolled over sev-ip Jack’s^rhiirrh™nH^r/snfi ' l°day fol- eral times before coming to a' cin^ i ^ ^ i stop on the roadway. Robertson'yester-. Survivors include his w i f e„ was thrown onto the pavement, Martha; a son, John A. of Cano- . „ --------------- ---------, Surviving are two sons, Nor- ga Park, Calif • three daughters AFL-CIO Pres- notTeTf'pubu?Sno G'-W H. of Flint; Mrs, William Brown of Walled ^ m NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that . I two daughters, Mrs. A. J. Lake, Mrs. Margie O’Donnell of ™eany and Reuther split n7nr^crr.io:^rrTrhs;,p^"1'^ Sauk Rapids, Minn.,-(k)mmerce Township and Mrs. ^FI^CIO Bloomfield, Oakland County, Michigan,|and Mrs. Richard Apcn of BigiHarvev Coniam of Detroit- ®^tions bearing on foreign pol-rm,"T^;;.'^ors^?;alI’n,<«^‘.,^l Rapids; 15 grandchildren; and! grandchildrenf and rgJt executive counc:.il Pu*rwse'’“o? consti2riIg°*"the"’' fofiowInS great-grandchildren. . i grandchildren. support of Meany. to ordinanca No. i7°, be'^ Al.so Surviving are two broth-: ers and two sisters. Omar WilcOX To add a new sub-section to s< Ordinance No. 67, to be known section 1300 (p) reading as tollow Section 1300 (p). Notwithstandi anything ^|o the contrary inj this or Mrs. Dwight Hooker Service for former Poritjac LAPEER — Service for former resident Omar Wilcox, 68, The UAW board is to convene all week to work on the negotiating program it will take of Flint will be 2:30 p.m. tomor: ‘i’" "h*" manufacturers Qgjm ^ next year when present three- resident Mrs. Dwight (Carole: ,, . year contracts expire. Ann) Hooker, 27 of Detroit will| Reuther’s aide said Reuther , be 4 p.m. Monday at Coats Fu-|^'^''y- notified Meany of his plans to accompanying mrpra'ciIWaterford Town-j. 'remain in Detroit. ■ inspaction at thai ship, with burial in Perry Mounti Thursday - ■ ■ - - - I after a brief illness. A retired factory worker, he CARTER CHAMBERLAIN " Park Cemetery. ■■ • r ,2, died yesterday after .a long ill-[ Surviving are *two sons, Wil- ADVERTISEMENT FOR ’reposals will ba received ... .... 1. Eastern Standard Time, November . 1944, by the Board of Education, Clarkston Community Schools, Clarkston, Michigan, for the Bus Garage Site Work. Proposals will be read aloud at the offices of the Board of Education, 4595 Waldon Road, Clarkston, Michlgt Plans end specificetloni will be d at ti wing KalamazoO; Michigan Board of Education Clarkston Community Schools , 4595 Weldon Road Clarkston, Michigan I No proposal will be con«irt»r, lactompanied by a bid bone jot 5% of the proposal ^amages if the successful ---* ■ ■■ necessary ness. She was a saleslady. 1 of Pontiac and Eugene of Message for Vets in a Blank Spgce SEATTLE, Wash. (UPI) -The front page of Saturday Surviving besides her husband j Marquette; two daughters Mrs‘ areheriwother, Mrs. Ralph Ry-1iiene McCormick of Flint and, ■ ---------^ den of Pontiac; a son, Dwight! Mrs.. Elaine Spencer of Lapeer; Seattle Post - Intel- K.; and two^bj-others, Aldwintone sister, Mrs. Jessie Pardee carried a blank space G. of Pontiac and Darien L. of of Lapeer; eight grandchildren: columns wide and six Wayne. i and nine great-grandchildren, ’inches deep with the following Earl J. Mullins y fh« Owner ( Service for Earl J. Mullins, 60 of 75 Nelson will be 1:30 p.m. Monday at the Sparks - Griffin ^ ed unless'Funeral Home, with burial in 'uqSidate'd M'hite Chapel Memorial Ceme- ' ■ »»|tery, Troy. ot, Mr. Mullins diedfesterday. '.i >id He had been employed at the!| I Fisher Body in Livonia and was a merhber of the Johnson Lodge ;■ 'Enemy May Start N-War' BIRMINGHAM; Ala. (UPI) — Air Force Chief of' Staff Gen. J. 0. McDonnell There's nothing; selfish about paying yourself first, in fact it’s a pleasant habit to get into ... watching your balance grow. (Compounded over 12 full months, the rate is actually 4.84%, and that helps, too). Your funds are always conveniently available, and you can save the ea*iy way... by mail. ANNUAL NATE COMPOUNDED ARD PAID OUAATEALT MEMBEN; FEDERAL HOME LOAN BANK SYSTEM lot lows: I. Excavation, Grading and J. Electrical Work Tha Board ol Education r right to accept or n ’ (30) days from the date of reception. Published by authority of the Board t Education, Clarkston Community chools, Clarkston, Michigan. ~ ' - Nq^274 and the Masonic Lodge,/ yesterday'it would be m Fall Oron/>h Tonn hi . in Fall Branch, Tenn. Surviving are his wife, Char-, lene; .three ‘daughters, Mrs.! Wilma Eaton of Waterford Township, Mrs. Wanda Wait-man of Pontiac and Patricia] Ann at home; seven brothers;] three sisters; and three grand-! children. , CAPITOL SAVmS & LOAN: INCORPORATED 1890 • LANSING, MICHIGAN • 75W. HURON, PONTIAC, FE 8-7127 II ' • I • • • ^ •• • •• • •«••••• Glenn H. Griffin i Sparks-Griffin FUNERAL HOME '-•r-. **Thoughtful Service** 4« Williami St. Phone FE 8-9288 “fatal mistake” for the United States and its allies to assume the destructive force of nuclear weapons would prevent aggressors from using their arsenals. “A major technological breakthrough, such as d^ ., velopment of an effective antimissile system, could conceivably induce an ag- explanatory note “This sMce was reserved for an event mat never took place here — a Veteran’s Day parade and major ceremony honoring the city’s war dead. But Seattle forgot. “With this blank epitaph,_the Post — Intelligencer apologfees to the memory of the thousands of men in American history, from the Revolutionary War to Vito Nam, who gave their lives for this great country. News in Brief Lonnie JeffersJn of 216 Rae-burij reported to Pontiac police yesterday the theft of a television set valued at $100 from his home. City police are investigating a -------- .UUU.C «w ! burglary at Pontiac Cash Regis- gressor to wage nuclear Sales and Service, 476 W. war. . .” he told a Vet- : yesterday in which sev/ eral adding machines and cash registers were stolen. I New Holiday dresses, clothing |for all, far coats, misc. items, I rummage, use rear entrance, 143 Oneida Rd. Sun. and Mon., 110-2. Congregation B-Nai Israel, crans Day audience. ★ ★ ★ McConnell said the preservation of nuclear superiority by the United States is “by no means a foregone conclusion.” - - -tx, Brenda, Patricia, Patrick's Catholic Church. Interment in Lakeview Cemetery, darkle t the (uneral_ home._____ HOOKER, NOVEMBER 11, 1964, CAROLE ANN, 22 West Grand River, Detroit; age 27; beloved wife of Dwight Hooker;, belovbW^ daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph E. Riden; dear mother of Dwight Kevin Hooker; dear sister of Aid- leral service tiiovember Interment .iti Perrj g hours 3 to 5 a JACKSON, NOVEMBER 10, 11 BESSIE M., 727 South- Can Royal Oak; age 78; beloved v ol Lloyd Jackson; dear sister I, 420 South Lafayette, Royal Interment in Camp Nelson nal Cemetery, Kentucky. Mrs. KIPP, n6veMBER 10, 194* ELIZABETH E,; 7022 East Atherton, Flint, formerly of Ortonville; age 87; dear mother of Marshall and ol Davidson. Funeral service will be held Monday, November 14, at 1 p.m, at the Rose Chapel Algoe-Gundry Mortuary,. 703 Beach Street, mXn nTn GN d V E M B e'r”'i 0~i 96 ' FRED J., 97 Whittemore Street; age 82; dear uncle of Eugene and Frederick Meagher and Mrs. Mary Elks Lodge i e B.P.O.E, I Joseph's Catholic Churcl MULLINS^ NOVEMBER" " ton, Mrs. Edna Adkin and Roy Isom; also survived by grandchildren. Funeral ser-vill be held Monday, Novem-I at 1:30 p.m.' at "the Sparks-1 Funeral Jdome. Interment hite Chapel Cemetery. Mr. ' by 13 grandchildren and 12 greatgrandchildren. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, November IS at' 1 p.m. at thd Richardson • Bird , Funeral Home, Walled Lake. In-Wlxom Camatary. Mr. 4«l In atata aT-thd- C—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, NOA'EMBER w A N T FAST R E S U L T S 7 USE PRESS W A N T A D S 332 To Buy, Rent, Sell or Trade Use Pontiac Press WANT ADS Office Hours: 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Cancellation Deadline 9 a.m. Day FoHowinf First Insertion Help Wanted f 6 Help Wanted Male WELL DRESSED MEN TO OE-iBARTENDER, EXCELLENT $ iKver »dyertlslng m8l«r:»l. *!S p*r| VT, st»«dy wnplaymcat. Sum__ I Ctr nectssary. 6iS-iS4«. and holMays off. Town A Country AGENT COLLECTOR Permanent position. No experle^i necessary. Training salary. $7,00 or more possible first year. Pen Sion and paltf vacation. Hosp. ins for selU and family. FE 2-0219 o _FE J 2119. A t OPENING FOR experienced rr»i rstatf salesmen, extra g c'onfide^ntisL Contmcl’'warren'’siou”| 1450 N. Opdyke Rd., Pontiac. Mich ! igan Member Myltiple Listingj - lf^1727 S. TeU^foph,_____ BRICteEPORT MILL HAND, rates, all 1t># fringa bonefits. hour workweek. Apply M a Bending EngineerinB Inc., John R„ Troy, Michigan. Hdp Wont^ M«l#_ 6 GAS STATION ATTENDANT, Experienced, medianically inclined, local ref., full‘or part flmt. Gulf, Telegraph and Maple._______ GAS STATION ATTENDANT WANT- ed, must have expr---- '■ ----, ISW t Announcements $50 CASH ANNOUNCING A AND HARASSMENT. AUTOMOBILE SALESMAN FO Pontiac cars and GMC frycks. Keego Sales & Service lime, Mon.-Sat.. » hrs., 16 i jver. ^Western Union Teleorap.i, Bus Boy I part time. Immediate I suburban |ob openings, nens, Utica and Birming- 4 hrs. Sun a.m, I Help Wanted Hate 6 TRUCK DRIVER, G06D OPPoW-tunlty and wages, for wholasalt D CONCESSION HELP. Blue Sky Drive-ln 7207. 6570 Tele- C(>oKV~bAYS. dobskT's7~union ARKING LOT ATTENDANTS wanted. Full or part time. 16 or alder. Apply at 27 E. Huron SI, ar call 334-3501 I TURRET LATHE OPERATORS - Hand and automatic VARIOUS MACHINE OPERATORS CRESCENT^MACHINE CO. 2501 Williams Dr. Pontiac CLEAN, HOME FOR YOUNG G 1 Boys” No bunSay work. Apply t person only. TED'S PONTIAC MALL _ CAB'DRIVERS, FULL OR PAR' WANTED: , Advertising Salesman =or young, progressive, dally news-aaoer In Macomb County. News-aaper selling axperlenca-helpful but lot necessary. Good Salary, bonus! CARPENTERS, RESIDENTIAL I GENERAL SERVICE PERSONNEL for tire changing. Good working conditions. Excellent benefits. Good pay. Apply Firestone, 146 CAPABLE OF : Rambler, EM 3-4155. P.O. Box 129, Utk :onlldence. i CONSTRUCTION LABOR. HAVE I some knowledge of block laying and cement work. Builders prelect. "YOU CAN'T BORROW (BONDED AND LICENSED) i fPcXurhl G' '^^FOR”5 E R V fc E 'ins ii^formatFon on Automobile Mechanics New Cars Used Cars j CONSTRUCTION TIME KEEPER for Pontiac area, experienced .1 ferred. Walbridge, Aldinger agement and social work. Salary dependent upon qualifications. Excellent fringe benefits. Apply City I, 450 Wide Track I LOOKING FOR las management WHO, supervise wornen. Who --tentlal of $1,500 per! appointment. 332-4314. j' INDUSTRIAL SALES LOCAL PROTECTED TERRITORY HIGH COMMISSION Call collect to Mr. Brown, 216-371-5908, Sunday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., Monday 10— ‘ " — CARPENTERS-ROUGH '4orth, South, East and West. Foremen, crews, Indivirfiials )nly. 647-4294 after JANITOR Immediate openings (or full tim must be bondable. App^y in person JACOBSON'S • Blrmlnghan CARPENTERS FINISHERS AND ROUGHERS. ^teady ^wo^k, houses and apts. JOB HUNTING? WE CAN SOLVE YOUR PROBLEMl Choose your career from over 5,- INTERNATIONAL ind automatic'l-OCAL VENDING COMPANY 'hAS DRAFTING, MECHANICAL AN I ELECTRICAL EXPERIENCED. I GEMCO ELECTRIC CO. 1080 N. CROOKS RD. New Car Prep Delivery j BOX REPLIES ? I I At 10 a.m. today there! One of Pontiac's busiest I were replies at Thej shops. You wont big pay! iViQii I Press Office in the fol-ji checks, steady employ-j itaVs, grod iMn”Vewrd. Tit Mowing boxes: j ment, top benefits? It's waito'n. f ‘j here. , 7. 22, 34. 35. 37, 40. ! j 49, 52, 56. 60, 65, 70, 80. I Also need lonitors, porters. LATHE OPERATOR, EXPERIENCED. GEMCO ELECTRIC CO. 1080 N. CROOKS RD. LL OPERATOR, EXPERIENCED. GEMCO ELECTRIC CO. 1080 N. CROOKS RD. I 83, 103, 105 Funeral Directors I COAIS I FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS________6 ] OONELSON-JOHNS "Designed to Huntoon and clean-up men. Business is good. We need-more help. Ask for Al Martin. Phone 335-9436 Oakland j Chrysler-Plymouth I 724 Oakland ■ DESIGNERS DETAILERS CHECKERS PROPOSAL ENGINEER machina mamifacturer. n Equal Opportunity Employer SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME • "Tliougiiltui service"_FE Voorhees-Siple' FUNERAL HOM1 Ei'abllshed Ovr Cemetery Lots THE GANGLER CORPORATION ROYAL OAK, MICHIGAN 549-6200 days 625-3997 eve. ___ MR. TAYLOR DIE SETUP MEN DIE REPAIRMEN SHIPPING CLERK MIDDLE - AGED MECHANIC TO help manage service station, fu" time. 4396 Highland Rd._____ MACHINE HANDS LATHE,'MILL, HAND SCREW MACHINE AND BULLARD OPS. ALSO, MACHINE REPAIR AND HYLRAULIC MAN ALL BENEFITS AND LONG PROGRAM HAWK TOOL & ENGINEERING CLARKSTON, MICHIGAN MARMAC INDUSTRIES INC. 2527 ■■'lIs St., Marysville, /V .: . :: uid like to re-locate in the Port ron area and have had experl-:e In a supervisory capacity, may have the position you seeking. Openings Advancement opportunity unlimited tor ambitious responsible Good salary, interesting fringe benefits. Can be y______ .. you qualify. Openings available at present with more anticipated 2725 NAkOTA,-RbYAi; OAi<- emploT' EXPERlENCED-^H^Ak^-M^^^ tspabis of scrvisiiig and Inttalling peoplv'i Fisir and FovHir Market, — -lU bmeht. < Qanlnau, PURCHASING » FOLLOW-UP Young man experienced In up or buying, reed prints have mechanical ability. Some college preferred. Many fringe benefits, steads M. C. MEG. CO. __Ai^equal opportunity employer PRINTERS W‘ANfEb~ MALE EXPERIENCED OR TRAINEES To learn a printing trade In a modern air conditioned Business Forms Plant. Blue Cross, Health and Accident, Life Insurance, Vacations, Holidays and Pension all paid by Employer. (STEADY YEAR AROUND EMPLOYMENT. APPLY IN PERSON TO PERRY PRINTING CO.), Flint, Mich. . Please give complete inclutfc height, weight, expected. (For 72-hc...... Its.) Reply to Bowll Halp Wanted Femate 7 COUNTER WOMEN, PART TIME, wilt train, ^rmlngham Cleaners, Help Waoted Femate 7 HOUSE MOTHER. LIVE IN_. MORE '3-114! b I 6^^ p. 2NATION CURB GIRLS -No e*perlepce_netei$ery, will - Full time. Day or evenino — Paid hospiteluation, varation and pension ( s Bros. Big Boy, ! ing salary for all females Is .. per week with 3 quallftcationsl I. Have to enjoy meeting a talking to people. 3 quallficationt pleesc do not call For personal lolervlew — CALL MR iOWE at 338-1890 PROMPT-LY BETWEEN 9 A.M. to 1 P.M. DAILY. ............... LADIES - FILL Wlft ORDERS AT home. No outside _^work. ,Selery. Wigs, lay P». 1 LADY ) TAKE CHARGE 0> ^nd Opdyke Rd. ______ _______ i DINTnG room WAlfRESS, FVE"-| nings-Mllford, 887-9922. (WANTED, GROOA oughbred breeding Night work, 9 p.m. to 2 a.r Apply at Big Boy Restaurant, S. Telegraph. PROTECTION MANAGER Excellent opportunity In national retail organization for has security or law enforcement background. Send com- de 313 achiloi WAREHOUSE CLERK WELDERS - SALES your welding experience .. t Into the highwat paying welding les field. Large repeat sales to Justrial accounts. Our products Call collect to Mr. Brown, 216-371-5908, Sunday 10 a.m. p.m., Monday 10 a m. to 8 p.r REGISTERED PHARMACIST Immediate opening for '‘Registered Pharmacist. Salary commensuriTe with training and experience. Good tor, Leila Hospital, Battia Creek, H. M. STIER CIRCULATION DEPT. THE PONTIAC PRESS RETAIL MILKMAN Established milk routes, salai tease. Call FE 4- AG E b Standard p.m. Apply and some follow u fully paid benefit program video. Higbie Manufacturing 4th and Water St., Rochester, SERVICE STATION A starting salary $120 ........ exp. please. Shell station, Tele-graph and Long ' SERVICE GRINDER. WITH PRO-gressive die detail experience. Steady job Working 58 hr. week. Top rates plus benefits. Day shift. Fisher Corp. 1625 W. Maple, Troy, SERVICE STATibN ATTENDXnt heating equipment. This is year-round position. Good pay, plus fringe benefits. Apply ' person only at Kast Heating a Cooling Co., 580 S. Telegraph f i MEMORIAL estate's. GET OUT OF DEBT ON A PLANNED BUDGET PROGRAM YOU CAN AFFORD TAILORED TO YOUR INCOMF. AIRCRAFT PARTS TRAINEE, TO call FE z-8734. Contidential. AUTO MECHANICS \ national chain of automc llagnostfc clinics Is seeking q fled men for a new location, ellent working conditions for tl vho qualify. Call Mr. Shefi it 335-0302 between 9 a.m.-2 p ELECTRICAL DESIGNER AND DRAFTSMAN MAINTENANCE A to repair hi be willing t< ARE YOU LOOKING f ;!«EXPERIENCED ROOFERS, FULL AUTOMATIC WASHER INSTALLER CHRISTEL, VAL ROSE SALON. Perm's $10, set $2.50, haircuts, $2. FE 4-2876. AN EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY for qualified home entertainment servicemen. Need man with record DAINTY MAID SUPPLIES 2028 E. Hammond FE 5-7805 changer 'and tape recorder service experience. Also experienced tele- iethel chapdelaine's chateau Beauty ^Saton^ Permanents, $10 up. vision bench man. Top wages to qualified persons and fringe benefits. CALL Ml 4-5232. s lately? The O'Neil office: led to handle all details of i. ■ty transaction. They know!; advertise, screen prospects' nge a sale effectively. They; the interest of each. Callj ir home. No obligation. ** i A PART-TIME JOB married man, 21-34, to work jrs per evening. Call 674-2233 4 $200 PER MONTH EXPERIENCED Automobile Salesman Would you like ' to sell the top three lines of automn--biles? We offer BUICK-CHEVROLET - PONTIAC at MAINTENANCE MEN — CARPEN- - AND MECHANIC MECHANIC—I MECHANICAL DETaILER, HIGH School graduate with minimum ll EXPERIENCED PaTnTER WANTED. 6mB7TJ___ EXPERIENCED MACHINE OPERATORS Lathe, milling, 00 a Complete and fully facturing Co. 4th a Rochester, 651-5300. . .J grinding. . . shift. Steady work, overiime and fringe benefits. Briney Mfg., Co. 1165 Seba Rd., be- ATTENTION Opening tor distributor, nationally ----- ----rage, established ‘ ‘ Ponli ,. Exp. r Offering rNFORMATioN bti Dale Carnegie Sales Course, 334- ON AND AFTER THIS DATE, NOV. Can collect, 536-0274, Mr. Corby, AUTO^PARTS DRiWRyCOUNTER : trainee. Over 18, draft exempt, i Must- have Urivers *condi'" lions. See Bill Myers Birmingham I PERSON RESPONSIBLE FOR VaY-, I my garage please pick up before: I ^ Telegraph FE k SLEIGH RIDES ; i ARE .UNMATCHED FOR WINTER TIME EXCITEMENT. I 1 UPLAND HILLS FARM I With Its new facilities can take care ol your party, large or small. 1 M for reserMlIon. 628-16)1. { I WIGS FOR RENT i FE 8-370' Lost and Found I LOST: SMALL DOG, I LQgjr BLACk'“ANb~WHITE I N'S WALLET, BLACK,! -V 8 1 8 1 IlOST: 1 _rewam, FE 4-3213.___ iLOST, b'l'aCK spitz WEARING! LOST: NOVEMBER 9. GERMAN SHORT HAIRED POINTER. Male I 4 months old. Vicinity of Lahserl X; THE 1964 CIVIL RIGHTS Y.' LAW PROHIBITS, WITH X; I ;•:! CERTAIN EXCEPTIONS, ! :v DISCRIMINATION BE- CAUSE OF sex. since :X X SOME OCCUPATIONS ARE CONSIDERED MORE AT- Y: :< TRACTIVE TO PERSONS v! OF ONE SEX THAN THE '.v OTHER, ADVERTISE- (c M E N T S ARE PLACED y i >: UNDER THE MALE OR FEMALE COLUMNS FOR X I v: CONVENIENCE OF READ- ERs. SUCH listings are :■< Building Maintenance Engineer Our building ex-pansion has created an excellent career oppor-t u n i t y for a mature man experienced,in building maintenance. Must be capable of handling men and working flexible hours. Salary commensurate with experience. Many company benefits. Apply Personnel Department daily between 9:30 a.m. . and 9:00 p.m. or send complete resume to Personnel Manager at: Montgomery Ward ' Shop the Classified felumms ce Rds. off West M-55. k. 693-1855 aft. 5 p. EXP'D FULL-TIME STOCK HELP Produce Manager Assistant Store Manager Apply at any "Big D" Store_ U L L OR ^ PART~"T^ME,~C^ out, Apply in per: Paddock. FE-4-1518. 351 required." Send^ repll graph at Maple (15 FACf6^“W^RKERS Apply Molmec Inc. 4205 Martin FACTORY MANAGER selling and hiring^ SMte ^’age a 377 S. Saginaw.______________ (AN PROFICIENT AT ARITHME-tlc tor office work, high school graduate. Send complete resume SALESMAN ABLE ' TO QUALIFY car and truck dealership. Give lull details in first letter. Reply to tex 30 Pontiac Press._ __ SALES AND SERVICE Young man to learn sewing ma-chtna bH5Jn*:5s,: sver Jl;,, sslarv and commission, company auto, Ing. Apply or call tor Interview 9-5 p.m. dally. Singer Co. Pont' — Mall Shopping center 682-0350. MATURE MAN WITH ‘tall hardware experience. Able Id willing to accept responsibil-f. Send complete rdsuma to Panic Pres^Box 87.____________ VVANTiD”BUMPER viilTH G.M. experience. Haupt Pontiac Sales, Clarkston, Mich. 626-5500._____ WANTED: MAN FOR DELIVERY and service of appliances and water softeners. Must be able to life and have some hand tools, be mechanically inclined and able to -----reterences. Call FE 4-3573 V EXPERIENCED AUTOMOBILE s md oper^t^'ranTr” SALESMAN, FULL TIME OR .......... —. Unusual opportunities Includ-all fringe benefits. Contact G. -amy, 6333 Highland Rd., or .... ..... MOW'ER RE- Steady employment, top posl-T good man. Apply W. F, Co. 1953 S. Wdodward, MECHANIC wanted' CHEVROLET experience helpful but not necessary. Blue Cross, li‘-Insurance, vacation and retlreme of flat rate. Apply in person. APPLESATE CHEVROLET CO. 3637 S. Saginaw St. FLINT, MICHIGAN MOTOR ROUTE OPENINGS — 0 ■ “ ee Press, Immediate opi Walled Lk. Southfield I iTbetroit, 222-6500.' NEEDED FOR CHRISTMAS SEA-son, Santa Claus. No experience needed. VValtes, 5th Floor NEW CAR PREPARATION A N I lean up man for new car dealer hip In Birmingham. Good pay ■Inge benefits, ----— OPPORTUNITY FOR YC who likes general ol Some typing required. S SALESMEN IF YOU ARE INTERESTED IN A CAREER POSITION WITH TOP BENEFITS Hudson s PONTIAC MALL L plus commission, Standard FABRICATOR, SHEET METAL' ...L TRAIN. GEMCO ELECTRIC CO. 1080 N. CROOKS RD. STANDARD OIL SERVICE CENTER has openings for driveway serviceman. Sunday holidays and -- or°357-4”763. ' TOOL MAKERS FIXTURE BUILDERS TOOLS, SPECIAL MACHINES SHAPER, PLANER. LATHES HANDS APPLY. JODA INDUSTRIES ____^590 WIDE TRACK DR. on 407 F Hr. Wk. $6,000. Call Don McLe« 334-2471, Snelling and Snelling. TRl)CK“DRIVERS Construction Workers For fuel oil deliveries on regul_. winter basis. We will train. Good ■ seasonal workers. WANTED Man to train tor Installing and servicing, heating and alr-condl- employment. Apply In person only. Kast Heating and Cooling Co. 580 S. Telegraph.__________________ WANTED manager AT ONCE; ";w 20 and 28 unit buildings city. Apartment with all utiles furnished. Adults only. Send CLERK AT GENERAL Store, sales and cash register experience. Must be over 21, Union j Lake Drugs, 8050 Cooley Lake Rd., Union Lake, Mich. EM 3- 4134._______________________- DEPENDABLE GIRL OUT OF akeeping. lac Press IvIYtTHOUSEKEEPER, 2 QHIL-dren, Bloomfield area. TR J-7200. Ext. 5548.____________ DINING ROOM SUPERVISOR Excellent benefits plus pension plan. Must have experience. Dependable and responsible woman. Elias Bros., Telegraph at Huron. EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY a barmaid in a small intimtate cocktail lounge. In West Bloomfield. Call 682-0600 for appolnt- EXPERIENCED REljABTi~WOM-2 days a week. 8 hours. $14 a y and working condiftb MIDDLE AGED ' in,' More for ho . . MA 4-3353 or 363-6795. MAID, GENERAL HOUSEWORK. Live In 5 days, Mon., Tues. oft. $50 a week. Ml 6-0025. EXPERIENCED OFFICE GIRL FOR: permanent position. Must be an experienced typsit and bookkeeper and must have a good background of general office procedure. Reply Pontiac Press Bo* 105 statinf — interviews Nov. FULL TIMT Women wanted for counter worl bagging and Inspection. Apply MOTOR ROUTE OPENINGS - DE-■' Free Press, immediate open-— Walled Lk. Southfield EL 3 before 10 a.m., after 10 - ■ 222-6500._ FULL OR PART TIME CASHIER. Day shift only. Chips Drive-in 5818 Dixie Hwy.____________________ Collins Cleaners, 640 Woodward St, Rochester. 651-7525._______ GENERAL CLEANING HOUSEKEEPER ' Wanted Birmingham Arei with lovely home and 2 sch employed. Must live in, e —WNG-MiN—:housewives Pontiac Laundry and Dry uicBiierS, 540 S. Telegraph._________ MATURE LADY. LIGHT HOUSE-keeping, 3 in school, live In. 12 -"e, Southfield, 353-5050 a(t. 6 NEED EXT^ CASH If you have 15 flexible' hours weekly (??) and need t3S to $50 NURSES AIDES Midnight shift. EM 3-4121 for a pointment. PROGRAMMER, GOLDEN «PPOR* tunlty for someone with some experience, Call Jean Moore — 334-2471, Snelling and Snelling._ IMMEDIATE OPENING FOR APPRENTICE TO LEARN TRADE I AS AN AUTO. SCREW MACHINE! OPERATOR. NOW STARTING OUR NEW INCENTIVE BONUS, INSURANCE AND RETIREMENT! PLAN. CALL MR. MENZIES AT CLAWSON JU 8-1341 FOR AN APPOINTMENT. REGISTERED NURSES FULL TIME Excellent personnel pollctti and ben- Conlact Personnel Dept: ST. JOSEPH MERCY HOSPITAL 900 woodward Ave. Paritlac, Mich. FE 8-9ni-Ext. 238__________________ AVAILABLE TO SELL DURING CHRISTMAS SEASON BABY SITTER WANTED, AFTER'-f Maybee Rd. Call 33S-7974 bet. HOUSEKEEPER, 1 child, 5 days, i transportation. 626 BABY SITTER FOR 2 PRESCHOOL-2:30 p.m. to 12:30 a.m., live r own transp., Waterford Area. BABY SITTER, TO LIVE IN OR out, transportation not FE 8-2784. BABY SITTER, LIVE IN FROM November 29 to Dec. 6, School —" children, $30. 626-2137. BABY SITTER FOR WORKING mother. Mon.-Fri. Paid holidays. 852-3444 after 5:30. ___________ BABY SITTER TO SEND 2 CHILi riren to school end* do light work. ■ FE 5-3932. BOOK E E P E EXPER r this BUSINESS ASSISTANT — DENTAL, BOOKKEEPER, CAPABLE OF full responsibilities. Benefits organization. $350. Call Jo M> 334-2471, Snelling and Snelling. Hudsons PONTIAC MALL I, Pontiac Press. NDIAN VILLAGE HOME NEEDS gentle, refined woman as Substitute Mother 5 days weekly, 8 to 6, while mother works. . Duties include care and feeding of 4 children ages 12, 9, 2 and 7 mo., light housekeeping, and preparation of children's evening meal. Own transportation and ref. please. No. Sat., Sun. or Holidays. Preference given to non-smoker. Salary. $120 per month. Phona 338-8264 for appolptmer* KITCHEN HELP SHORT ORDER COOK Day and night shifts. Apply i Big Boy Restaurant. Telegraph i ir General Hospital. Call 32-3032. Registered LICENSED PRACTICAL NURSES Needed to staff new addition In modern nursing home. Starting salaries are very attractiva and shift differentials are paid. For further l.nformation regarding salary and --- Mrs. McCarthy - —. --- 22, Seminole Nursing H-- Competitive Salary RECEPTIOhllST FOR MEDICAL group, mafurt woman, good typing required, cheerfulness desired. mas selling. Full timi and part BLOOMFIELD FASHION SHOP PONTIAC AAALL EXPERIENCE FIT- SALESLADY Grettel Shop, Birmingham, retarlal experience, she WPM. Excellent trlngi Apply City Hall 450 V Telephone from our office In Rochester to make appointments for our sales organization. Experlenca desired but not requirad. For personal Interview phone Mr. A. E. Van-Bibber, 651-3500. BUS GIRL, DAYS, APPLY IN PER-i son. Four Corners Restaurant, cor. i Walton and Perry. ___________________j If you are experienced In type of clerical work and are Ing lor top temporary am. . nnent, apply today. High hourly KELLY SERVICES KELLY GIRL DIVISION 25 N. Saginaw 331-0 Equal Opportunity Employer OUTSTANDING OPPORTUNITY FOR OUTSTANDING SHOE MAN Better women's and children's FINANCE ARE YOU INTERESTED IN WORKING WITH A SOLID INTERNATIONAL COMPANY WHICH OFFERS; ' (cellent working conditions )od w;ges and fringe benefits (cellent opportunity for ad- proven record of accomplish-ents and good future tor quall- OUR BASIC REQUIREMENTS ARE: Must be neat, personable, 21, end Intelligent Must have a sincere desire to establish a career with Consum- ^xperiepce preferred but not Will Train with pay Salary and other benefits open. CALL CHUCK HOPKINS: ASSOCIATES CONSUMERS FINANCE CO. ' 673-1207 _____^^e^cojifldenllal _ ____ PONTIAC MOTOR DIVISION Bdiate openings, for GRILL MAN „ Day shift. Night shill. Pith ..... Good wageiband all benefits. Big Boy Restaurant, yelegraph —" Apply Oak-le. 2480 Op-, Michigan. I dyke. Bloomfield 647-6200. GAS 'station attendantsI full or part time, days ' -------- ferences, Sunoco i CLERKS be able to type 25 WPM. Apply or send resume to SALARIED PERSONNEL DEPT. Glenwood Ave, at Kennett Rd. Pontiac, Michigan (An equal opportunity tmployar) PIZZA HELPER. _ „ 2 OL 1-7800.________________ patrolmen Applicants for police patrolmen, salary range $6420, to $7704. Pretits, including longevity bonus and retirement. Must be between 21 to 31, High school graduate, 5'9" 6' 4" at teas! 160 lbs, 20-20 vision without correction, pass written examination^, agility test and char-| Contact CWef*ol'pollca — Ml 4-3600 I n £ity,,ot .Birmingham —.W -TWartin loin the Leader in thp Medium Priced Field of the Auto industry APPLY NOW FOR: Production Work (No Experiences Necessary) ALSO: QUALIFIED JOURNEYMEN FOR TOOL & DIE WORK OR MAINTENANCE JOBS IN PLANT I ENGINEERING DEPARTMENTS All of the GM employe benefit programs will accrue as you enjoy t6p earnings with a winning team. MAKE APPLICATION AT OUR EMPLOYMENT OFFICE Pontiefe Motor Division GENERAL MOTORS CORPORATION Pontiac, Michic^an general MOTOR! IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE CO. Has IMMEDIATE OPENINGS for , KEY PUNCH OPERATORS and CLERK TYPISTS in Our Southfield Accounting Office > -No‘Experience Necessary-—Full Pay While Training— Requirement High School Graduata Must hava own transiSoatatlon Must meat minimum quallticatloni APPLY IN PERSON 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Monday thru Friday at: Northwest Office Center Room S-101, Service Center 23500 Northwestern Highway Southfield, Michigan AN EQUAL OFJXORTUNITY EMPLOYER Wart*** °« pa7t i,.iiT.5i-J"“'* “ ®*P«’l»ncM. JuJItfd s ^ ' hospital, iiva %°'“'EN-^RT TIMB OPPORTUNl- housekeapar mi 007. i^l^NTiyi^rED-S^^ ’’^^TASEATg^Y THE PONTIAC i^RKSS. SAXlLRDAY. NOVEMBER J2. I Wark Wanted Female 12 Wanted Real Estate FART OR FULL TlMB FOR REAL estate sales - Morning Of ----------------- wiii tram If afternoon floor .............„.. .. -7t expartenced. Top commissions. Bll Clai* Real Estate, FE • Rowden, FE S^733 Clark or Mrs. 51 PhOna___________ RESTAURANT HELP Mount Clemens St, be- la hours of ; and 6. „ , M HOUR, BOB'S Restaurant, Keego. 682-9857 before 5. 335-0190 after 5. Waitresses,' lo or over, ap- ^ly 575 S. Hunter Blvd., Blrmlng- WAITRESSES Exc BLOOD DONORS „_^ ,„ .URG£NILy , NEEDED.... RH Positive t a” ft*®?' positive factors A. B 8, AS neg. kelly girl. Temporal assignments now avail tlac. Full or part 1 -iv P«W meals, hos-: pitallzatlon, pension plan and paid; vacation. I Apply In person Elias Bros. Big Boy ^ Telegraph at Huron Dixie Hwy. at Silver Lake Ri 125 N. Saglr kelly girl Division openli|ji for an experienced have opening for a Trainee, substantial draw to a qualified man. Call Mr. Korby at 674-0363 for personal In-tervlew. Instr-Jctions-Schooli Sgjes Help, Male-femaia t-A FULL-TTME REAL ESTATf SALES- j^ePref^ed^- ANDERSdN-GILF'oRD.^NC. hone Mr. WlderaanlELiilM;_____eves. FE 4-5884 BatliMn Strvica IS A LOVELIER YOU deLORIS DEAN'S Birmingham School of Modeling WAITRESSES BARMAIDS COUNTER GIRLS Must be over 21, will train in guarantee, car necessary! Must be rk immediately. Call 9 874-2233. Wanted Woman for typing / tailed clerical work, W, Office Box 232,' Pontiac I DE- __________opportunity employer I DISTRIBUTOR TRAII^E” c. Train to take over wholesale distributorship tor large well known! rampany. Salary plus commission sin'/vin " Future potential Fashion modeling Self-Improvement Personality Development I. Call 332-3053 8 to experienced only ELK CLEANERS WOOL PRESSER 220 S. TELEGRAPH RD. EXPERIENCED ONLY ^ ELK CLEANERS DRY CLEANER AND SPOTTER 220 S. TELEGRAPH RD. GRILL COOK TO WORK NIGHTS full time. Ail benefits with gooc pay. Pled Piper Restaurant, 4371 Highland Rd. FE 8-6741 CARPENTRY, PAINTING, HO repairs, any size |obs. 332-4138. LIGHT HAULING-CLEAN OUT basements, and attics. 332-9682 or HELP 1 I OL 1-7800. Work Wanted Male Work Wanted Female 12 1-1 IRONINGS, REASONABLE, day service. OR 3-1021, VI IRONING, 1-DAY SERVICI •1 IRONINGS CALL 338-1230 St MOTOR ROUTE DRIVER FOR DA-,BABY-SITTING IN MY HOME 4 .ge,--«luV.tlon7'iamll^'''sT.tus!'iob®!MT^^ Orchard Lake-Pon- and pay experience.___________ I Woman for general clean ! ‘“"y of 3, top wages, owni penings for ushers and '-n help. 18 yrs. or over, '1 person after BABY SITTING ALL TYPES WELDING. „ _________ '■ ' Guaranteed AAA — 2274 S. T*le-| ALL OFFICE WORK DONE AND CASH money for your homei quickly, for Dorothy Bette. Ray O'Neil, Reoltor ^ OR 4.222”“ ^‘^® , 80'S300' i- . ... BAYh,! _“I.L?'luity, OR 4-1064^ L 75 Bellevue, 2 BEDROOM HOME, FIREPLACE, anytime. Call 335-6641. Credit Advisors C^volmnt-Nursing 21 We Need Listings Buyers Golore J. A. TAYLOR .AGENCY - GOOD ,5**'f»*»te—Insurance—Building VFOVO u oh unit Rh IUico\ no , ODERN T^RI^m'' terrace;! A/dl V stove, reflrgerator, $145. See Mgr.l3 BEDROOM COLONIAL BRICK. '' V V kj. / 2403 jArrtAR V Bj«l.l4kw>..ed eci I r^imleve. I!..i________ Open House SUNDAY 2-5 h 345 OAKLAND A... , ^ Pontiac's FHA Appointed ® : Property Management and .! Sales Broker 70 Chippewa RES-r HOME, PRIVATE, EXCEL - living and Trucking 22 ;, •artments; Furnished ROCHESTER, NEWLY DECORAT-!,, ed, fully carpeted, 6 rooms, no I’ children, no pets. 651-3742 after! Red Barn Village Subdi (00 mortgage. $750 mov< VILLA HOMES e 628-li65 AA MOVING Careful, enclosed vans, 2-3999 or**628-35tr *®*''"®* ^tin^an^Decoroting 23 LADY IN^TERIOR DECORATOR, GRIFFIS 8. SONS A I N T I N G, FREE ESTIMATE, work guaranteed, 682-4837. , PAINTING AND PAPERING. YOU next. Orvel GIbcumb, 673-0496. PAINT, PAPERING I Transportation 15 3 BEDROOM ...____ __________ --------------------------------------■ MENT. Will trade. Choice lots,' orton. Call DALE HAMPSHIRE FE 5-9497 APART Rent Houses, Furnished 39 ^L''"?iy_Agency^ RENTING $78 Mo. WEEK, 850. De: IQ pets. FE 8-3832. 2 ROOMS, BATH, 2 MATURE MEN, no drinkers, 50 Cottage, FE ^6e63. 2 ROOMS For RETTRlFMAtToR 1 BEDROOM, NATURAL WOOD II 2-BEDROOM house, NEAR ( $10-Deposit i S'lowlv, Off Baldwin H APPLICATION 2 bedroom APARTMENT. Living room with fireplace. Bedroom i with balcony. Beautiful view. IVj bam. Completely carpeted Atr84 SISsL'SfF” =’S#,p i=t“l SCHRAM RHODES I i ■“ '"cl;,: ,.... :W:/r! ■“ $25,900 mcM.,. f Ross Homes tnc. ' ' You'll Be Luckyj tiGHWAY I Warden Realty THE PONTIAC j*RESS. SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 12, 1966^ Sd* HottMhold Gm^s 65 LOANS TO $1,000 ^ «ri» vlilt. Quick, WtiHi- HFE 2-9026 OAKLAND LOAN CO. L 0 AN S ln»urS*l^yn»nt Plan lAXTER *r LIVINGSTONE SET, t150. Walnut £12, “12?'' !?•*'**' Heyward Wake-5*“/ *«• *' dented Imitation Christmu tr«6d 130. C4ott>ftty M* dftsk and chair, mtoc. 02^1267. °'H'NO ROOM SUITE, LIGHT hirrh. . -- LOANS TO $1,000 To oontolIMt bills Into one __ ly payment. Quick service with ^rtaous ixptrlanced counselors. Credit Ufa Insurance available — Stop tn or phone FE MtJl. HOME & AUTO LOAN CO. » N. Ewni.W. FE MISJ. » to 5 dally. Sat, y to 12 jr what------ ”1 trailer, SELL OR trada for north— ------- - U S-1714 after 1»55 PLYMOUTH SlOO OR TRADE for anything of equal ' DOG HOUSES INSULATED, 741 OR- 1»40 FALCON STATION, WAGON, $100 or what have you7 FE $-1455, Tt64 FORD TRUCK AND CAMPER, House in Rochester, will sell on lan^ contract or take your etiulty In trade. OL 1-0903 eve. iELL OR TRADE, 700x15 d-PLY Heavy Duty, snow tires, for 12' or 14* Aluminum bat, OR 3-5537. illILL SWAP MY EQUITY IN 3-bedroom home for lerge house “A S>2tl0. HOUSEHOLD SPECIAL » A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OF FURNITURE - Consists of: l-plece living room outfit with 2-plece living room suite, 2 step ’ cocktail table, 2 table I (1) »'xl2‘ rug Included. 7-plece bedroom suite wl dresser, chest, full size .................................. Innersprlng mattress and matdrlng I ENCYCLOPEDIAS - NEVER USED box spring and 2 vanity lamps. i original value $200, sacrifice $35. 5-piece dinette set ‘ ------i -- -------- credit Is Sob Clothing 64 HOME FREEZER SALE Full family size, holds 344 All fast-freeze shelves original factory carton. Npw $149 FRETTER'S°WAReBouS^ OUTLET ISO S. Telegraph Manmada fur. Ph. FE 2-2167 Ladies' winter coats, rus- clothes 9-.. .. 10-12. OL 1-3750. RiAN'S topcoat, size 42. JACK-et 42. Like new, $5 ea. 625-5266. Hew gray wool coat, silver Fox shawl collar. Size 12. worn ^ 't. S50, FE......... Wedding gown, size .. .. white lace and net over taffeta. Full skirt with long lace sleeves. Wedding gown and bouffant veil, lovely detail, size 1-10. Was WK. Will tell for $65. Call 682- WeDDING dress, size IZ FULL SbIg Household Goods 65 W WHAT YOU'D EXPECT to PAY $277 THREE ROOM OUTFIT BRAND NEW FURNITURE 7-PIECE LIVING ROOM 7-PIECE BEDROOM f-PIECB DINETTE May Be Purchased Separately E-Z TERMS LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE 1461 Baldwin at Walton FE 2-6842 First Traffic light south of 1-75 Acras of Fret Parking Opan Eves. Til 7 Sat, 'til 6 4 ROLLAWAY BED, COMPLETE. wllh h( t Gllpcovera $ L 2-4606 1 MORE TIME BRAND NEW FURNITURE $278 (Good) $2.50 Weekly $378 (Better) $3.00 Weekly $478 (Best) $4,00 Weekly NEW LIVING ROOM BARGAINS 7-placa (brand new) living roon 2-plece living room suite, two ste tables, matching coffea table, tw. decorator lamps, all for $109. Only PEARSON'S FURNITURE 110 E. Pika FE 4-7881 Between Paddock and City l‘~" Open Mon, i 1 FrI. " 1 BIG SALE. U^ED BARGAINS Used washers, stoves, refrigerators oedrooms, living rooms, odd beds chests and metal cabinets. Bar gains on everything. LITTLE JOE'S TRADE-IN DEPARTMENT, Baldwin at Walton. FE 2-6842. Terms. ______ _ Adams, FE 4-0704, World Wide (Next to K-Mart).___________________ 1 KENMORE ELECTRIC DRYErI $150; 1 Kenmorc Auto, v ^ -$150 1 Kenitiore Electric $150; 1 Coldspot refrigerato Call OR 3-2551 after 4 p 1416 Avondale, Sylvan Lake. I PIECE DINING ROOM SUITE. Good condition. 334-7718. C—11 BUNK BEOS * IS styles, trundle . - jndle coffi-pISe, US.SbS* 7'xl2' LINOLEUM RUGS tS.7S EACH Plastic Wall tile Ic ea. B8.G%m!*FE 4P957f^s'*W., Huroi Furniture. 210 E. PIkr 71 W. Sheffield APPROXIMATELY 70 SQUA yards of used earpattng, In | condition. Also used 21'* Cor TV. FE S-7534.___„ IS STOVE, $25; WASHER, «$; rv set, $35; retrigeretor, top free-ler, $49; electric stove, $35; dry-ir, $20; V. Harris, FE 5-2766. : RANGE, PUCH-BUTTON, FINE ‘j&nzditlAib AD <>.C1AA 682-6577. 3S7 S. Rbityn. For Solo MitcoUaMOiM 67 1004)00 wHh- BTU GAS FIRED BOILER (hriftmai Trees . PICK YOUR TREE ON stump. Bring the whole Tag tree now, cut. later. Intersection, Cedar ____ Tn— ------- ---- 625-1722. Chrittans Gifts AIR CONDITIONER CLEARANCE SALE Welbuilt, Whirlpoof*Kelvlnator Hotpolnt, Westinghousa. 177 up. $5 down, $3 per week FRETTER'S WAREHOUSE OUTLET 1650 S. Telegraph______FE 3-7051 LIONEL TRAIN, ^AL TENDER, traitress; BUNK-OR TWllC Wn;- lywood bed rails, HO train, ' ’ game boys — hair dryer 3-3247. BOLEN'S TRACTOR. 10 HORSE-power. 1 mo. old. Lawn mower, snow blower, enclosed cab, leaf sweeper, chains, never used. $1200. HonO ToolB^odiiiiory 68 38' SEMI STORAGE VAN, A-1. $456. Fork lift trucks, sum im Blvd. Supply DUCT WORK FOR HOT AIR FURN-ace, made up for 7 room house, brand new, will sell reasonable. x)d at Wyman's. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. HURON FE HIDE-A-BED, $50 FE 5-1705 after 5 p, " FOR SALE, 1 porch $1.55. Irregulars, samples. Prices only factory can give. Mich-------------------- ------------------- n Fluorescent, 393 Orchard Lk. FURNACE BLOWERS USED, C; be used for any purpose soi with mrators. $5. ft 4-1504. A WALL TO WALL, NO SO ill, on carpets cleaned with Bl Ire. Rent electric shampooer I ■ ■ E, Walton. ondltlon; $75. Lime oak bed, Ai ocraff health mattress, and t prings complete, $95. 2 chest feokiase, $10. Boy's 21 M-k hristmas Traa Farm, 1970 Dlxi 67-1 OOKS, TOYS, AAANUAL Olf ELEC- - accordion. OR 6 USED ORGANS REAL BARGAINS IN ORGANS $250-$495-$695 AND UP SAVE MANY DOLLARS GALLAGHER'S MUSIC 171 o s. Telegraph— S. of Orchard Lake Rd. Saturday 'til 5:30 p.m. dition, $100. 682-4452. EXPERT PIANO MOVING PIANOS WANTED 1075 W. Huron GARAGE SALE - CHILDREN'S, men's, women's, matarnlty, clothing, other items. Nov. 10-19. 5686 Everest, Clarkston bet. Sashabaw REPOSSESSED GE COLORED TV $2.75 PER WEEK . Goodyear Service Store 1370 Wide Track^Dr., West ROSE TAUPE SOFA, CHAIR, GOOD REFRIGERATORS AND RANGES, Michigan Appliance Co., - Hwy. 673-8011, REPOSSESSED Norge Wringer Washer $1,25 PER WEEK. Goodyear Service Store 1370 Wide Track Dr., Weft Pontiac FURNACES,^ CONVE^RSION wer humidifiers, make-up j 2^11 or 682-5574.''’''^ ”** GIBSON MELODY MAKER GUITAR ' amp:, $13S. FE 2-6379. “In my opinion, Madam, he’s going to lose some of those teeth if he doesn’t stop eating the wrong things!’’ - Sparting Goods 74 : REMINGTON 300 SLIDE ACTION > deer rifle, $129.95. Remington 12-gauge model 1100 auto, shotgun, $174.95. Poole Hardware, 2333 S. Telegraph, FE 0-9618. Pets—Hunting Dogs 79 PART POODLE PUPPIES. OR 34077. PUREBRED BEAGLES, GOOD rabbit hounds. 693-6716. SCUBA DIVING EQUIPMENT, BEST FRIDAY AND GAS FIRED BOILER, CAST 85' of baseboard, heating. A..... is necessary for complete heating GUITAR $20, 21" RCA TV $15, PING pong table $10, ham radio rec^'— $155, settee $5, McKesson air pressor $40. FE 8-1452. MUST SELL. VOSt SMALL GRAND piano. Excellent condition, $550. OR 3-6675 aft. 3.________________________ LOW PRICED 5' bathtub feNCLC)-sures — glass, $25. Design"* ** extra R A. ThgmPIOn, SINGER AUTOMATIC ZIGZAG ewing machina — lawi ilngla .. ouble needle, designs, overcasts. UNIVERSAL CO. FE 4-0905 MOVING: VICTORIAN BEDROOM suite, marble top washstand, dry sink, round tabla with 4 captain chairs, kitchen clock. Kentucky rifle. Wall crank telephone, old doll. Several other things. 338-6132. REPOSSESSED NORGE GAS RANG| $1.75 PER WEEK. Goodyear Service Store must SELL: MAYTAG WASHING machine, new Admin' ' to haul furniture wit baby high chair, pie er, toaster. 731-4228 '*■" HIggIr- NEW GREETING CARD STORE: airrple parking. Greeting cards, personal stationery, wedding announcements, printed napkins, wrappings and gifts. Forbes Printing and Office Supplies, 4500 Dixie, Drayton, OR 3-9767._______________ OIL BURNERS, SINGER DELUXE MODEL-PORTABLE ______Pay oft 1 payments of $5 PER UNIvKl'cO. FE 4 REPOSSESSED Block and White GE TV Set S1.25 PER WEEK. Goodyear Service Store 1370 Wide Track Dr., West ____________Pontiac _______ PLUMBING BARGAINS. Standing toilet, $16.95. 30-gallon RIDING TR;\CT0R, WJTH SNOW Blade Cycle-Bar, 9-horse, Briggs and Stratton motor, OR 3-5537. A N E R. HOOVER RUMMAGE SALE: MOVING, MUST sell, clothing, furniture, antiques, misc. 9-5, Sat. and Sun. 1158 WRINGER WASHER AND PORT- WYMAN'S USED BARGAIN STORE At our 18 W. Pika Stora Only Odd Chairs ............$ ' Mangle Iron ...........$105 Guar. elec, refrigerator .......... Guar. elec, washer ...........$59.95 ■■ ir Credit is good at Wyman'* 4 BEDROOM SETS; WALNUT, $57, mahogany, $70 and $90, blond, $75; night $tand, $15; chest, $20; dresser, $20; bad, t)0; couch, $27; chair, 110; Early American couch, $125; studio couch, $65; and table set, $20; dinettes; 5 pc., $27; 7 PC., $55; 7 pc., $85; refrigerator, $30; stove, $15; rugs; hood fans, $20; piano, $75; desk - ■ i»- pard. 559 N. Perry. Antiq^_ 8. M. C. Llp- I CUBIC FOOT FRIGIDAIRE RE- frigarator, --------- 2-7234, aft. .. INCH USED TV ............. 127.75 Usad 3 ipted phonographs $ 4.75 Walton TV FE ^2^57 Open 7-7 515 E. Walton, comer of Joslyn f. 731-2443. Utica, 9x12 Linoleum Rugs . .$3.89 Solid Vinyl Tile ........ »c e- Vlnyl Asbestos tile Jc e Fteor*'sho^^5J Elizabeth Lake* "Across From the Mair 20" APT. GAS RANGE $39.95 Used TV'S ............... Sweet's Radio and Appliance, TV, HOLLYWOOD mes with head boards. V. FE 5-4620. 1765 MOBILE DISHWASHER. NEW. $277. Now S197. Used slightly. Call 152-1484. . ___________ A-1 BARGAINS. COMPLETE JUNE Of new sofa bed and chair, SW.75. Box springs and mattresses, $44.75. Stoney. HO N. Cass. XLMOST NEW BRONZE MAGIC Chef, glass door electric rsnge, usad t months, “Ji-. y** price $167.00. The first 180.00 It. AAs^ba seen at 467 S. Pa 338-32611____________________ WANTED TO BUY Leaded glass lamps or lta< glass lamp shades, ft 4-7076. ■Fi, TV & Radios RECORD PLAYER NEEDLES For Sole Miscenuneoui_____67 •a off on any heating j or St least 10 per cant. Reas NOW operating from home f little expense. Local and State ciprocaf licensed. Over J" MAIL BOX POSTS INSTALLED. 682-0356. RINliS. Ill sell tor $125. 338- lught 1-2325. 5 BASEBOARD HEATING ure and elevents. $1 per to ‘ Thompson. 7005 M59 ' POOL TABLES RUMMAGE. IS WOMEN. NOV. 10, 11, 12, 13. 9:304 p.m. 247 Teg- gerdlne. Oft M59._________ RUMMAGE SALE: BOAT, TRAILER - etc. 3370 Otter B SPACE t^EATER 56,000 I SEVERAL GOOD USED FURNACES M.. A. BENSON HEATING DIV.,_____________333-7171 ADDLE GAS TANKS FOR pickups and alum, covers, r " ~ camper, 20 E. Colgate. FE TALBOTT LUMBER $6.75 gal. No. 748, MIsc. la ', $4X0 gal. »nt$ a qt. WILL SACRIFICE 10 HORSE F Reconditioned console piano I GALLAGHER'S MUSiC Sond-Gruvel—Dirt LOWREY SPINET ORGAN SAND, GRAVEL FILL DIRT DE-llvered. Excavating. FE 2-7567, SAND, GRAVEL, _________ Builders Suppllei. Trucking dozing. OR 3-5850. OP SOIL, OOZING AND 1 Woed-CouKoke-Futi INSTRUCTIONS AVAILABLE JACK HAGAN MUSIC 469 ETizabeth Lake Rd. 33'24)506 8192 Cooley Lake Rd. 363-5500 ■■ Pike. FE 44064. Used Organs $450 GRINNELL'S Downtown 27 S. Saginaw Tie of the Pontiac H. Organ Society USED BAND INSTRUMENTS All In good playing condition Flutes, Clarinets, (Tomets, Trumpets, Trombones, ^--- MORRIS MUSIC 34 S. Telegraph Rd. Across from Tel-Huron Office Equipment DESK, $20; Bookcase $15. CHAIR fluorescent light flxturta C. Uppard. FE 5-7932. Store Equipment 73 "LARK RADIANT HAMBURGER broiler. 1 grill hood end fa- ' chop block top work tabla. 1 I spindia ngalt mixer. Also misc._ be seen 535 Commerce Rd., Commerce, or cell EM 34117---- 3113.______________ Sporting Goods 0 REMINGTON WITH MM CARBINE, $34.75. L ........ rifle, $28.50. Luger matched, $105. 45 eutometlq, 847J0. 30 Sml'" Wesson, $51.75. 877-6173 a 30X6 REMINGTON-PUMP, $85. 3(W6 Remington automatic, 875. FE iMF SKI-DADDLER SNO eler, new, $725. Now, U 731-8200, Eves. 731-5217. 30-30 RIFLE LOW AS $37.75 Ruger 44 Mag. Special $87.00 liR 30-30 tingla Barral Convartible, (30-30) (20 GU) (41* --------------- barrel) and (22 REM ahotgun 4 Rifle) THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE 118 W. LAWRENCE ST. Everything to meet your needs Clothing, Furniture, Appliances USED OFFICE FURNITURI desks, chairs, filing cabinets re sonable. Pontiac Farm and li dustrlal Tractor Co. 825 $. Wood-ward. FE 4-0461. IP TO 20 PERCENT DISCOUNT on used and new typewriters, adding machines, office desk, chairs, files, tables, storage cabinets, mlrp-eograph and off-eet machines. i OFF ON SPECIAL BOXED Christmas cards, big aalactlon, discount on personalized Christmas cards. Forbes Greeting Card “»■« -----Dixie, rr- *> "’ 1 2!8"X6'8" door w " ■ ABC t... - jiew, S40. FE 4-188B.____________ "i 2-WHEEL UTILITY TRAILER, S35 __________ 3354755_____________ -------OR CHROME ' DINEffi ^A sale, BRAND NEW, Urge and Awnings, Storm small alia (round, drop-leaf, rac- fof » prices tanguler) tables In 3, 5, and 7 pc. AT .LOWE^ ****PEARSoR'S FURNITI'RE I 110 E. PIkt • PE 4-78811 -■ ____________________ BEDROOM - ORTHOPEDIC MA I-3-PIECE COLOPp tress, double dresser. Lawfiin, ny- ®“H|-ln ha^ Usin. R^ Ion sofa and chair. 1 pW twin versa trap telW. CT.7S. G. bads, and mIsC. 602-1674. I Thompson, 700S MS7 W. YOUR WELDWOOD HEAPQUARTERS DRAY I ON PLYWOOD 4112 W. Wallen_____OR 34712 WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS discount prices. Forbes Prir and Offiea Suppllaa, 4500 C Hwy. OR 34676. Cliff Dreyers Sports Cen-■cr, x210 N. Holly Road, Holly, ME 44771. Opan 7 days - ---- BUESCHER ALTO SAX, GOOD CON-dltlon. Call after 6, OR 35076. DEER RIFLES WITH , OR 37514 F CARTS, 1480 VALUE, 1175 Mfg. closexuts iupply 500 S. Blvd. E FE 3-7081 ________ mting and 5. Telegrapl SKI DOG'S GUNS-CAMPERS CRUISE-OUT, INC. Walton Daily 74 p.W. FE t-4402 POODLES. CHOICE puppies. Tiny toys. Ai tiny toy stud servici OA S-3397.________ Announcing The All New Lifetime Premier Motor Home Innebago Trails OXFORD. TRAILER SALES OPEN 9-8, CLOSED SUNDAYS' ability that wilt let ‘'‘''“priced from"'' $6575 WINTER HOURS _____I Wed. through F Id closed Sunday Au^ion Soles 80 AUCTI0NS--AUCTI0NS FRI. NOV. 11, 7:30 P.M. Sat., Nov. 12, 7:30 P.M. TOM STACHLER AUTO AND MOBILE SALES II W. Highland Rd. M59 FE 2-mt ATTENTION HUNTER^! See the NEW rounded corner LAYTONS Also carrying Holly and Corsair Ellsworth Trailer Sales UNCLAIMED FREIGHT I BANKRUPT MERCHANDISE i^stt^Dixr nvry .zo-..uu 'storage antiques - angel campeT"~' I Pickup camc^rs 'made to order. 38M Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 4-0031. ®co?ers^'5or*'anTprckup^3l^^^^ Pets-Hunting Dogs MALE BOSTON BULL TERRIER, reg. 1 Pug female, rag. Also Poodles 10 weeks old, AKC reg. $10.00. 852-2634, 1-AKC DACHSHUND PUPS. STUDS coachmen at JOHNSON'S FE 4-5853 FE 4-0410 517 E.... GOOD HUNTING BEAGLES, 1 AKC, registered. $30.--end 1 $20. Tyson's 43 Baldwin.________ AKC REGISTERED POODLES, $35. ea. 674-1341. ____________ EVERY SUNDAY 2:00 ---- . 'rizes Every_______ Wa Buy — Sell - Trade, Retail Consignments Welcome B8.B AUCTION Dixie Hwy. OR 3-27)7 LARGE PUBLIC AUCTION TO-nlght. Auctlonland._______________ AKC SILVER REGISTERED MIN-lature male, females, poodles. Reas, FE 4-7353.___________ KC BEAGLE, EXPERIENCED rabbit dog, 6254842. AKC COLLIE PUPS. SHOTS AND wormed. 3 sables, I trl-collias. 685-1394._______________________________________ SATURDAY 6 P.M. BIG FUR SALE FURS AND MINK STOLES TO BE AUCTIONED AT HALL 'S AUCTION SALES, 705 W. CLARKSTON RD. LAKE ORION, MY 3-1871 OR Ml 34141. ___________ SATURDAY 6 P.M. rigerator - frtazer c^blnatlon size bed complere, mapli POODLES, APRICOT, BLACK, ar. S50-$60. Also black ftmala rs. old, IM. 602-5725. AKC REGISTERED A6ALB IRISH " ir pup, 3 months old, hr-s. EM 30616._______________ MINIATURE - -Red tamale. FE 4-3813. AKC DACHSHUND PUPS-TERMS Jehelm'8 Kennels — FE 32538. AKC BLACK FEMALE POODLE, m yesrs. FE 2-2703.___________ LL PET SHOP, 55 WILLIAMS. FE 44433. Rabbits. AIREDALE PUPPIES, i ‘yoirfstinas. EM 3201 BLACK MINIATURE AKC REGIS-tersd Poodle pups. FE 54075. COLLIE PUPS, AKC, SHOTS, VET VISIT THORTON NURSERY AT 701 N. Milford Rd., Highland. Large selection of nursery stock. AIsc Christmas trees. Wholesale or re tall. No Sunday sale. 405-2774 oi 332-3798 after 6 p.m._______________ Russell. 332-7820._______________ DOGS AND PETS Three year old Boxer, dark brindle. Champion Bang Away and Mazelaine breeding. Male and very gentle end affectio-ate. Must sell because he doesn't get along with my 10 year old male. Write Pontiac Press Box 72. Pontiac, Mich- FEAAALE i color. AK. ............. breeding stock. 6344505 FREE TO GOOD HOME, GET THE LATEST MODEL. 1966 Beagle, only 4 months old. Perfect running condition. AKC registered. Female body stylt. FE IDEAL FOR HUNTING. 1764 GMC POLARIS SNOWMOBILE - 1964 model Colt In ______.... condition $490. Used 1766 Bombardier Ski-Doo snowmoUla run less than 25 hours S545. New Fox-Trac snowmobile $475. All models of new 1767 Johnson Skee-H6rse end "—*—------------ - HEALTHY AKC REGISTERED TRI-■)r show qualify Sheltls puppies 4-3541. mediate delivery. Come and get them while the supply lasts. O^ daily 8 a.m. to 6 p.m., - ---and evenings by kppoli Phone 664-2022, Your Snow___________ Headquarters. BILL COLLER, 1 --------• ---------f on M-21. REMINGTON 760 GAMEMASTER 35^ ---- ... .--- LONG HAIRED KITTENS. HOUSE broksn. 2 nhos. old. FE 04157. ^ MINIATURE DACHSHUNDS. REG-Istered. 4 females, 1 melt OL 1-8675.____________________ MINIATURE DACHSHUND AKC Black and tan male — OR 3-5354. AAALE BEAGLE 7 MONTHS. LIKES NEED STUD SERVICE FOR TOY .. .. . --------- .. , SUNDAY 3 P.M. CHRISTMAS TOYS AND GAMES. New furniture tor every ro ill Auctioneer, MY 3-1871 Plunts-Trees-Shrubs 81-A Hoy—Grain—F«edyke Hardware_____FE 8-6684 < CARS AND TRUCKS, FREH I to 427. Also 1959 FIAT PARTS. _____________FE 5-3746. 1966 CHEVY 396 ENGINE 360 H.P. 4 speed Muncie, complele . Terms. Other makes __________537-1117____________ ENGINES - TRANSMISSIONS — rear axles, etc. Also buying — radiators, batteries, generators, starters. Don't fuss — call us." NEW 1966 RAMBLER 327 ENGINE —I ..... transmission. Competely — *"** -—■- 682-2391). disassembled $200. Frank 6 New and Used Trucks^ 03 3 RUBBISH TRUCKS, 2, 1962 GMC Thiele box, 1 1963 GMC Tilt Cab, Garwood Box. 6464092. 1951 CHEVY PICKUP, $150. Call 673-8206. After 4 -- 1953 FORD DUMP, 5 FORWARD, 2-speed, heavyXuty tilt-bed trailer, $495. 1040 Cherrylawn.____________ 8 CHEVY 3/4 PICKUP, WARREN ) TRUCK, GOOD CONDI- 1963 CHEVY Vj-TON PICKUP, $795. 1963 FORD ECONOLINE PICK UP. 1963 FORD V, TON PICKUP. ... reservations now. Kar'$ Boats 8. Motors. Lalcd Orion. MY 3-1600. Open - 1965 CHEVY Va TON PICKUP BIO 6, 4 speed, heavy duty springs. 10" tires on back, extra wheals. Good set up for camper. 4676 Fourth St. Drayton Plalna, (Wood- THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 12, 1966 Haskins =™- = -J CENTER :=5.™r;j-Js: GMC i “iiS"' 3^1: SfS; Autotohn SPS2aih^i„c. l96W£6j $695 up .“Hfr,. 'SoJ'" ’ ]964^Chrjsler Ti SH-r?*: S CREDIT rSlm? I S®S.°®?f,®®i2,5 ' KING ESTATE . , STORAGE ! auto sales ■ mm- Trucks 651-6100____I fE 8-4071 Capitol Auto ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP ' 312 W. f—..... TRUCKS All Scries In Stock JEROME EORD ' TRUCKS ARE OUR Business 1962 Chevy One-Ton Pickup 1964 Ford MOO Pickup '/j-Ton '$150 1957 Dodge Stake « .... ,r.. $495 1965 Ford MOO ’/2-Ton Pickup with V8,. sfand«rIU 000*/000 LLOYD 1965 LINCOLN sxsfr- “ Lloyd Motors ;ion = TURNER LUCKY AUTO T9WGT0“ $1495 GM DON'S USED CARS SMALL AD-BIG LOT iH' WILSON Cadillac a4,'.I&"K"8iG V..... 1955 PONTIAC 677 5. LAPEER mV’2-|041 "'kIng AUTO SALES M‘59''s-iarsK. FE 84088 HAROLD TURNER -c=-i^sai 1964 TEMPEST 1965 PONTIAC 'pain'nob. 1966 PONTIAC 1966 CHEVROLET smm Audette Pontiac Pretty Ponies 1965 MUSTANGS ' ’SfS" ^ iSiKf Clean Inside and out'5375. Ml .1821,[ priced FrOm Repossession HARDTOPS 2's $1295 As Low As $49 Down lER MOTOR SALES Time to Save See All the New 1967s TRIUMPH-MGs-SUNBEAMS AUSTIN HEALEYS-flATS " Vode-ln Mtftthews-Horg reaves 631 OAKUND AVE. KING HAROLD TURNER Downey ■ . $275 Downet Oldsmobile, Inc. 1084 OAKLAND , 338-0332 BOB BORST GO!! HAUPT PONTIAC “"iSnlaV^ '""°bergen'’motors" Transportation Specials UY, here-pay here [Tardtop-.T.-.-.lg »-oori ii C 1304 Ball GM »«Sa,.a AUTO sales Eirbe^lM? FE 84088 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM \ —Television Programs— Programs by stations listod in this column ora subjoct to ehango without notie* li TIl^ PONTIAC PUKSS. .'>ATl HDAV, X()\'K.MliKR 12, C—13 Television Features AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) Read Runner (4) Top Cat (7) Bugs Bunny (9) Hawkeye 12:30 (2) Bdiagles (4) Smithsonian (7)' Milton the Monster (9) Country Calendar (50) Cowtown Rodeo 1:00 (2) Tom and Jerry (4) Animal Secrets (7) College Football: Northwestern vs. Michigan (9) Champiraiship Series (50) Movie: “The Chinese Ring” (1947) Roland Winters, Mantan Moreland, Warren Douglas. 1:15 (56) College Football: Wayne State vs. Alma. 1:30 (2) Movie: “Pillow of Death” (1945) Lon Chaney Jr., Brenda Joyce, J. Edward Bromberg. (4) Quiz ’Em 2:00 (4) Movie: “Moss Rose” (1947) Peggy Cummins, Victor Mature, Ethel Barrymore. (9) Music Hop 2:30 (50) Upbeat 8:00 (2) Movie: “The Forbidden Street” (1949) Dana Andrews, Maureen O’Hara, Dame § y b i 1 Thorndike. (9) Tides and Trails 3:30 (4) Beat the Champ (9) (50 ) Wrestling 4:00 (7) American Bandstand 4:30 (2) It’s About Time (4) Flying Fisherman (9) Supercar (50) Horse Race 8:00 (2) Mike Douglas (4) Oorge Pierrot (7) Wide World of Sports (9) Swingin’ Hme (50) Horse Race: Garden State Park (Special) Romney on 'Meet the Press' Fish Story TONIGHT :15 (9) Bill Anderson Show :25 (2) Movies, h “Love From Paris” (1961) Horst Buchholz, Romy - ■ ItK 12LT»ro FootbaHr Detroit' 9:30 10:00 10:30 (4) News, Weather, Sports (9) Shirley Temple -f (50) Hy Lit Show Ijq! (2) Grand Ole Opry j (4) News I (7) Mirhigan Sportsman Nq. (2) Death Valley Days liol (4) At the Zoo | (7) ABC Scope (9) TwUight Zone I (50) Rifleman I (2) Jackie Gleason (4) Flipper 111: (7) Shane j (50) Movie: “The Brute! Man” (1946) Rondo Hat-1 ton, Jane Adams. (4) Please Don’t Eat the Daisies (9) Adventure (2) Pistols ’n’ Petticoats (4) Get Smart (7) Lawrence Welk (9) Movie: “I See a Dark Stranger” (1945) Deborah 12; Kerr, Trevor Howard, I Raymond Huntley. (2) Mission: Impossible (4) Movie: “The Man Who Knew Too Much” (1956) James Stewart, Doris Day. (50) “The Ox-Bow Incident” (1943) Henry Fonda, Dana Andrews, Anthony Quinn. (7) Hollywood Palace (2) Gunsmoke (7) Musical Carousel (9) World of Music (2) News, Weather, Sports (7) (9) News (50) College Football: MSU vs. Indiana Blues” (1941) Bing Ci-os-by, Mary Martin. :30 (4) News, Weather, Sports (7) Movies: 1. «A11 Fall Down” (1961) Brandon de Wilde, Warren Beatty, Angela Lansbury. 2. “To the Shores of Tripoli” Jdm Payne, Maureen O’Hara, Nancy Kelly. :00 (4) Johnny Carson :15 (9) Window on the World :30 (4) Beat the Champ :00 (4) News, Weather :00 (2) Movies: 1. “The Skipper Surprised- His Wife’ (1950) Robert Walker, Joan Leslie, Edward Arnold. 2. “Under My Sun” (1950) John Garfield, Micheline PreUe. SUNDAY MORNING :30 (7) Living Past :40 (2) News :45 (2) Accent :00 (2) Look Up and Live (7) Rural Newsreel :25 (4) News :30 (2) Christopher Program (4) Country Living (7) Insight :00 (2) This Is the Life (4) Eternal Light (7) Dialogue :I5 (9) Sacred Heart :30 (2) Temple Baptist Church (4) Church at the Crossroads (7) Understanding Our World (9) Hymn Sing :55 (4) Newsworthy :00 (2) Mass for’Shut-Ins (4) Bozo the Clown (7) Three Stooges (9) Oral Roberts :30 (2) With This Ring (7) Linus the Lion-Hearted (9) Rex Humbard 45 (2) Highlight ^ 00 (2) Let’s See (7) Beany and Cecil (50) Lift Him Up 15 (4) Davey and Goliath 30 (2) Faith for Today (4) House Detective (7) Peter Potamus (9) Fashion Internationale (50) Through Children’s Eyes 00 (2) Stingray (7) Bullwinkle (9) Forest Rangers (50) Dickory Doc 30 (2) Mr. Magoo (7) Discovery ’66 (9) Movie: f'Ambush In Leopard Street” (1959) James Kenney, Michael Brennan SUNDAY AFTERNOON (9) Movie: “Bhoken Ar-1 row” (1950) Jam6s Stew-1 art, Jeff Chandler, Debra If Paget Lions vs. Minnesota Vik-|| ings 2:30 (7) World Advenhire * ries 2:45 (50) Changing Times 3:00 (7) Directions (50| WresUing 3:30 (7) Issues and Answers 4:00 (4) Meet the Press (7) Porky Pig, (9) Pro Football: Sas- katchewan Roughriders vs, Winnipeg Blue Bombers (50) Eastern Football 4:30 (4) International Zone (7) Tennessee Tux^o 5:00 (4) Wild Kingdom (7) Movie: “Pillow Talk” (1959) Doris Day, Rock Hudson, Tony Randall (50) Movie: “Canadian Pacific” (1949) Randolph Scott, Jane Wyatt, J. Car rol Naish 5:15 (2) Pro Football: N. Y. Giants vs. Los Angeles Rams (56) Christopher Program 5:30 (4) College Bowl (56) Smart Sewing SUNDAY EVENING 6:00 (4) News, Weather, Sports (56) Musicale 6:30 (4) NBC News Special (9) Movie: “The Kentuckian” (1955) Burt Lancaster, Dianne Foster, Diana Lynn. (56) Casals Master Class 6:45 (2) To Be Announced 7:00 (2) Lassie (7) Voyage (50) Sid Able Show (56) N.E.T. Symphony 7:20 ( 50) Hockey: Red Wings vs. New York Rangers 7:30 (2) Patty Duke . (4) Walt Disney’s World 8:00 (2) Ed Sullivan (7) FBI (56) When in Rome 8:25 (9) News 8:30 (4) Hey,Landlord! (9) Outdoorsman (56) Contin^tal Comment 9:00 (2) Garry Moore (4) Bonanza (7) Movie: “Jumbo” (1962) Doris Day, Stephen Boyd, Jimmy Durante, Martha Raye. (9) Flashback (56) Festival of the Arts 9:30 (9) Star Route 10:00 (2) Candid Camera (4) Andy Williams (9) Sunday (50) Lou Gordon 10:30 (2) What’s My Line? 11:00 (2) (4) News, Weather, Sports (9) News 11:15 (9) M 0 V 1 e: “T h e ;00 (2) Movie: “Father’s Lit-, sentence” (1958). tie Dividend” (1951) Eliza- ij.go ,2) Movie: “Anatomy of a Murder” (1959) James 6:30 (3) Sunrise Semester (4) Classroom (7) Three Stooges 7:00 (2) Bowery Boys (4) Today 7:30 (7) Morning Show 7:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 8:00 .(2) Captain Kangaroo (9) Romper Room 8:30 (7) Movie: “Half Angel” (1951) Loretta Young, Joseph Cotten 9:00 (2) Merv Griffin (4) Living (9) Bonnie Prudden Show 9:05 ( 56) Understanding Numbers 9:25 (56) Of Cabbages lnd Kings 9:30 (9) People in Conflict 9:50 ( 56) Spanish Lesson 9:55 (4) News 10:00 (4) Eye Guess (9)' Canadian Schools (50) Yoga for Health 10.05 ( 56) Reason and Read 10:20 (56) Science Is Fun 10:25 (4) News 10:30 (2) Beverly Hillbillies beth Taylor, Spencer Tracy, Joan Bennett (4) U of M Presents (7) Championship Bowling (50) World of Dogs ;30 (4) Design Workshop (50) Herald of Truth ;00 (4) Pro Football: N.Y. Jets vs. Buffalo Bills (7) Movie: “The Flying Missile” (1950) Glenn Ford, Viveca Lindfors (50) Movie: “Torpedo Alley” (1953) Mark Stevens, Dorothy Malone :30 (2) Changing Times :45 (2) Voice of the Fans :00 (2) Pro Press Box Stewart, Lee Remick, Ben Gazzara. (4) Beat the Champ (7) News, Sports, Weather 12:00 (7) Movie: “Sombrero’' (1952) Pier Angeli, Ricardo Montalban. 12:30 f4) News, Weather 1:05 (9) Window on the World 1:15 (2) With This Ring 1:30 (2) News, Weather 2:00 (7) News 2:15 (7) Have Gun, Will Travel MONDAY MORNING ,6:15 (2) On the Farm Scene 6:20 (2) News —^Weekeri(d Ratdio Programs— ~WJR(760) WXYZO 270) CKLW(800) WWJ(950) WCARQ 130) WPON(1460) WJBK(1500) WHFI-rM(94.7) CKLW, News, Music WXYZ, News, Music, . WJBK, Music, Van Patrick WHFI. Show Bl2 WPON, News. Sports WCAR, News, Joe Baca WJR, News, Sports «:30-WHFI, Music for Moderns WWJ—News, Toscanini WXYZ, Man on the G( 7:0#-WCAR, Ron Rose WPON. News, Johnny WXYZ, News, Music, S Taylor WJBK, News, Blocker, WJR, News, Showci Sports 7:3#—WWJ, Melody Pan •:0O-WHFI, Bandstand WWJ, Red Wings t0:0#—WJR, News, Cavalcade, Professor 10:3#-WWJ, Interlochen 11:0#-WJR, News, Sports, II:0#-WWJ. News, Music Overnight 1I:3»-WJBK, Reviewing Stand SUNDAY MORNING «;0»-WJR Musical Prom| enade I „ WJBK, Rx for Health, Writers CKLW, Album Time WXYZ, Morning Chorale WWJ, Overnight »:3»-WJR, Organ Encores WJBK, Science News WXYZ, Negro College Choir #:«5—sVjR, The Christophers WJBK, Living with. Ado--' lescents 7:«#-WJR, News, Music WJBK, Hour at Crucified WCAR, Choir Loft , WPON Lutheran Hour WXYZ, Notes 7:3#-WJR Sunday Chorale CKLW, I______ ._ WJBK, Ave Marla H WPON, Sunday S WCAR, The Chur WXYZ, Christian In Actio • :(X»-WJR ,News, Music WWJ, News, Music CKLW, Your Worship Hour WJBK, Revival Time WCAR, Lift for Living WFON, St. John's Church WXYZ, Message of Israel WCAR. Back to God Hour »;0«-CKLW, Bethesda Ten pie WCAR, Music for Sunday WPON, Protestant Hour WWJ, Church Crossroads WJBK, Listen, Highlights CKLW, Heb. Ciiiistian WJBK, Common Ccuncll Report, Bible Speaks *vrur». The .ChristopherI WJBK, Loi^ at Books WHFI, U S. Navy Band WJR, News, Music, Sports WXYZ, Pat Murphy, Music, l#:15-WPON, Emmanuel Bap I1;0»-WWJ, St. Paul's Cathar CKLW, Pontiac Baptist WJBK, Assignment Detroit W,HFI, Music f(>r Sunday WPON, Religious Music SUNDAY AFTERNOON 2:^WWJ, News, Newhoul WCAR, Music lor Sunday _..LW?,*S.____ WHFI, Uncle Ji 1:I5-CKLW, Report from WJR, News, Sports, Show- 2!#0-WXYZ, Jim Ham'pfon News, '—'- WJR, Fanfj 3:0#-WHFI, ...... WWJ, Symphony SUNOAY EVENING *:0#-WXYZ, Closeup CKLW, Frank end Ernest WJBK, Music, News WCAR, News, Music WPON, Sunday Serenade WWJ—News, Report, Music WJR, News, Sports, Weather, Showcase ‘=3^;. They come in a host of colors. In sizes 7 to 14. Huy several Monday! girls’ print jeans - 277 Sonilihed cotton denims are in! I'ly front pocketi belt loops. Jn pi-plly assorted prints. In sizes 7 to 14. Malcli lliem with any color lop. Monday only! Cirh' 7-14 Dept., Sectmd Floor MONDAY ONLY-y til 9 No Phpne Orders, C-Q.D.'s or Deliveries •eKcepI large items Open 9 'til Tuesday And Wednesday! sal? for men . . . Briefs and T-ShirtsJ Regular OO^ $1.29 1 aay, “CHARGE IT” a! Sears Proportioned for a perfect fit e 7.irc cotton and 2.491- nylon for easy i Machine washable. Junior sizes only, 1 13. Pontiac only! T-shirts are extra heavy-weight with 100% combed cotton body. Briefs are 100% Egyptian, cdihbed cotton. 2-ply’ mercerized yarns give added strength. Limit 6 each! Furnishing$, Main Floor ’teens’ and women’s Slip-ons 447 ‘-JH i>r. Regular $5.99 Sizes S'/z to 9 Charge II Strap and Imckle style with pert square toe. Slip-oh in inellow glove type leather uppers. Handsewn vamps. Long wearing composition soles and heels. Perfect for school and sporty wardrobe.s. Black or brown. Shoe Dept., Main Floor MONDAY ONLY-9 ’til 9 MONDAY ONLY-9 til 9 MONDAY ONLY-9 Yil 9 Super Latex or Latex Semi-Gloss> Super Latex interior flat paint. Pleasant „ odor-free painting, quick, easy to apply. last, soapy water cleanup. 9 colors ‘ Afv $6.99 Tough Latex Semi-Gloss 5.33 Paint Dept., Main Basement diliJ gal Sears Navarre Trials Rugs Save on Sears All Wool Flannel Monday Rt'giilar $9.99 aiui $10.99 Set a mood of Spanish splendor! Deep plush Reg. $8.99 pde of Kodel'S' polyester and nylon has a carved Moorish tde motif. Rich colors. 33 84.99,24x40” Accent Rug .4.44 ^ 813.99,3x5’Area Rug...............8.44 Floor Coveringt. Second Floor 2 7x48’* This is the perfect fabric for the whole Reg. $4.98 family. Make dresses, suits, shirts, robes and many other things. Soft, smooth finish OO adds the touch of luxury. 54-inches yj. Sears Best Cotton Plus Sheets Cotton Plus sheeu are 66% cotton and 34% Rog, $<> 7n rayon. Our best percale sheets. 66% stronger —^ than regular percale. Slock up Monday! •■11 83, full Hat or Htted...............2.41 81.70, Pillowcases..................1..3I isin llai MONDAY ONLY-9 til 9 sale! men’s brogues! 797 say “CHARGE IT” at Sears Men’s oxfords have smooth leather uppers Slip-on in classic style, handsewfn V-vamp. both with long-wearing composition soles and heels. Sizes 7>/2 to ' 1,1. Shop at Sears and save Monday! Yard Goode, Main Floor _ Charge It Powerful 3-S|)oed Electric Blenders Early American Rocker in Maple Finish Reg. 836.99 26^^ Ideal f r a gift. Chops, mixes purees , eyerylhing from hahy foods tle of marches that died deep in KMtering territory. The lone Waterford score came in the final minutes after the Skippers recovered a fumble at the Kettering 15-yard line. On fourth down at the Kettering eight-yard marker, Paul Thomas ripped up the middle for the touchdown with 29 sec-ondsremaining. TTie loss left the Waterford crew with a 34 record. Pwitiic PrMt Photo bi REASON TO SMILE—Coach Jim Larkin of Kettering and end Bob VonBargan were all smiles after their game last night against Waterford. The smiles are undo^tand-able. Kettering won, 204, and VonBargan caught two touch down passes to spark the victory. Pontite Prosi Photo CAPTAIN SLOWED — Kettering halfback picked up eight yards on the play. Helping Mike Lyon is slowed by Waterford guard (center) is an unidentified teammate. Other Steve Main (56) in the first half of their Waterford players are Tim Willis (15), and game last night on the Kettering field. Lyon Bill Foley (87). Vikings Finish 6-2 Walled Lake Ends on Flat Note The Vikings of Walled Lake came up with a flat perfMm-ance last night and wound up saddled with their sec ‘ ' of the season. ★ ★ ★ The Vikings held a brief lead early in the game, but they couldn’t keep pace and finished on the short end of a 25-7 score at East Lansing. “They were up and we wmmi’t,’’ said coach Dave Smith, who was disappointed last wedc when the game against Plymootb was canceled becanse of snow. Smith wasn’t alibing, Ixit that layoff coupled with bad this week that prevented the team.from drilling regularly, no doubt contributd to their effcnls on the Blast Lansing field. back Jay Breslin, who scored three times to spark the East Lansing attack. ★ ★ Chi the second play of the game, Breslin took a handoff and sped 60 yards for a touchdown. The Vikings stormed back, moving the kickoff 70 yards with Steve Fogle getting the touchdown cm a 38-yard run. Fogle booted the point and Waned Lake led, 74. It didn’^ last long. ★ ★ ★ Breslin bulled his way five jmrds for a six-pointer in the The Vikings fumbled four times, losing three of them and had one pass intercepted. Th biggest hehdache for the Vikings’ (Mensive unit was l^alf- SCORINO PLAYS EL-^ay Brtslin, 60 run (kick fallad) WL-PogIt, 38 run (Fogta kick) EL-Brtilln, S run (PAT pau) EL-Breslin, 3 run (kick falM) EL-SlewarO, 36 run (kick (allad) SCORE BY QUARTERS (alM Laka ...........7 i • B-7 laat Unsins ......... 6 7 0 11—25 2nd Round Rained Out LAKE CHARLES, La. (AP)-Second round play in tha A1 Daric Invitationid Golf ToorDa-ment was rained out Friday. second quarter and the winners took a 13-7 lead at intermission. Shortly after Breslin’s second TD, the Vikings moved the ball to a first down on the East Lansing one-yard line but they couldn’t take it in. ★ ★ ★ Two plays went for no gain and a fumble on third down wound up in East Lansing’s possession. Breslin ripped off his third score on a three-yard slant in the fourth and Bob Stewart closed the scoring with a 36-yard run late in the game. ’The setback left Walled Lake with an over-all record ot 6-2. Chiefs Battle Bay City 11 Down to Wire Wolves Stop Central's Late Bid by Strong Defensive Play (Special to The Press) BAY CITY - A huge 278 pound middle guard, Jerry Bill-meier, was Bay (2ty Central’s immovable force in the minutes as the Wolves handed Pontiac Central a 20-14 defeat in a Saginaw Valley Conference game last night. The Chiefs led 74^ fought back twice and then late in the game had the potential winning or at tying drive going but “ ‘ meier and his teammates on the defensive line put a stop to the threat. With five minutes left to play, BCC was forced to punt. Mike Shorter blocked the punt, caught it in midair and PCH had the ball on the BC 49. The Chiefs pounded yardage to the 34 and Hardiman Jones picked up eight to the 26. Bennie Williams got one yard to the 25 and this gave PCH a third down with one yard to Williams tried for it and was stoped one foot short. U)SE YARDAGE Jones then tried the right side, but the entire Bay City line led by Billmeier convergi^ on him for a three yard loss and the Wolves took over and controlled the ball for the final three minutes. Bay City scored first after a 3d punt of only 10 yards gave the Wolves the ball on the Pontiac 20. On the 4th play Mike Smith went two yards. Smith tried to run the point and failed. PCH stopped a Bay City drive on the 23 and pounding out short yardage, the Chiefs moved to the Wolves’ 25. A 4th down pass failed but a roughing the passer penalty gave Pontiac the baU on the BC 15. ★ ★ ★ On the first play Williams went the distance and Mike Prince made it 74. With a good kick return the PCH 48, Bay City came back to score. The key play was a 13-yard pass from Rod Parrott to Harry Cowen to tiie Pontiac 27. A few plays later Parrott drove over from the two and Bill Maxwell ran the point to make it 13-7. BCC had a 61-yard run by fullback Dan Owczarcak for a tally called back in the third On this series Harry Froede (Continued on Page D-4, Col. 3) STATISTICS BCI FIrtt Down! Ruihlng ... 13 Awag* ........ 1-10 4-37 _______ No. Loat ........ 0-0 1-1 Panaltlaa and Yarda ..... 4-45 B-I7 SCORINO FLAYS BCC-MIka Smith, 2^ard run PCH-Ban Wtlllama, 15-yd. run ( kick) f BCC-Parrott 2-yard run (M BCC-BIII AUaxwall, 15-yard run (Owexa- ........1-yard run (Princa kick SCORE BY QUARTERS Bay Clly Cairtral ...... 4 7 0 7—3. -------------... . ...., j j Worriors Dominate Birmingham Play By JERE CRAIG Brother Rice confirmed its role as Birmingham’s No. 1 high school football power by holding off Seaholm’s late-starting Maples, 27-20, Friday night at Groves' field. Victorious over Groves in 1964 and 1965, the Warriors surprised Southeastern Michigan Association member Seaholm with, two early touchdowns in their initial grid meeting. Adding importance to their victory is the fact that although the Warriors didn’t . meet Groves this year, Sea-holm blanked the Falcons in the public school’s annual opener. Elusive workhorse halftack ON WARPATH - Brother Rice halfback Greg Pilette scampers into the open on Greg Pilette burst over from the ()ne of the numerous runs that four with less than three and a saw him gain 136 yards and half minutes gone in the first score three times Friday night period to cap a Brother Rice against Birmingham Seaholm. h-yard drive in seven plays dur- Pontlae Pmt Photo by Ed Vandorworp CHOPPING A MAPLE-Blockers Don Kacy <77) and Dan Parks double-team a Birmingham Seaholm defensive player on one of the many blocks they threw in springing Warrior halfback Greg Pilette loose last night. Brother Rice surprised the Maples, 27-20, in the first grid meeting between the two Birmingham schools. Groves Not in Groove Occasionally, those points after touchdowns come in handy. Southfield picked up a pair of the PATs last night and used tiiem in taking a 1W2 decision 1 Birmingham Groves in the 1966 finale for both teams. The triumiA left the Blue Jays with a 63 record Groves wound up with a 5-4 mark. The Falcons led twice in the WOLL Ends 2nd Perfect Season SAGINAW — Waterford (kir Lady of Lakes coach Mike B<^d has the undisputed No. 1 racing among Oakland County pr^ football ment(HS todqy after the Lakers routed Saginaw Arthur Hill Tech, 47-13, last night. The victory completed an unbeaten campaign for Waterford OLL and gives Boyd two straight perfect seascms after taking the job last year. Boyd thus is the only cor* rent county grid coach to have an tmUemished record for hi> cnreer, standing 144 following last nlght’a easy victory. The Lakers’ Tersigoi sped into tile end zone to climax their first two series with the pigskin. Hitting rapidly, WOLL drove 79 yards in she plays after the open ing kickoff. Tersigni covered the final 22 yards. Following an Arthur Ml Tech punt, be dashed 45 yards, then six yards to paydirt in a 65-yard drivig that took only three plays. FROSH SCORES Freshman Mike Webster game WOLL a 204 halftime lead by plunging (me yard late in the second period. Roy UUy tallied the first two times tiie Lakers had the ball in the third period. His runs covered 35 and 26 yards. In all, Lilly gained 172 yards in 10 carries for the game and added his third six-p(^ter on a 31-yard pass £rom Tom Sirbaug lilly posted one PAT and Tersigni (who ran for 119 yards In 10 tries) scored two conversions, Don Gnibord the limping Waterford ace runner, posted the other toncMown on a six-yard spurt. ' It was a frustratihg night for defensive end Dennis F—Wood, 10 run (run failed) S-Anderson, 5 fun (Osterman liIcK) SCORE BY QUARTERS -------^ ^ f .......7 t 7 B-M ing which the 170-pound senior gained 56 of the yards. Pilette lost a fumble at the Seaholm six-yard-line the next time Brother Rice had the ball; then he caught a pass from Bill Rose in the left flat and dashed 44 yards to score, aided by a crunching block from tight end Lee Hart on tiie last defender. Hart, incidentally, is the 64, 245-pound son of former Notre Dame and Detroit Lion star Leon Hart. A junior, he played an outstanding game blocking and tackling for the Warriors last night. UPHILL FIGHT Pilette’ s two quick strikes put Seaholm’s Maples at a disadvantage they never quite over came, though the running antics of Chris Charlton jlid bring them into a tie. Charlton, a duplicate of Pilette at 610 and 170 pounds, * matched the Brother Rice star’s off-tackle bursts with a 16-yard scoring jaunt with only a minute and a half to go in the half. ★ ★ ★ Trailing 14-7 as the second half began, Seaholm — who was forced to delay the start oT the game because it had to change jerseys — took a 15-yard, de-lay-of-game penalty for return ing to the field late after the intermission. But the first scrimmage play saw Charlton spring loose around right end, break a couple tackles, hurdle the defensive halfback and outrun the safetyman for an 6yard touchdown. Art Kale’s kick tied the score. The host Brother Rice squad promptly marched 65 yards on 12 attempts with Dan Parks cracking the final three yards as it went ahead, 2614. An exchange of fumbles, with Hart recovering the second one at the Warriors’ 33, preceded the winners’ clinching score. They drove 67 yards with Pilette posting his third six-pointer by going 16 yards off tackle. Charlton wasn’t through, either. He registered his third touch down on a dramatic 76yard down the left sidelines as the dock ran out in the final period. Sparky Renault hit the Maple co-captain witii a pass in the left flat and no blocking downfield. Charlton headed for the sideline, broke at least three tackles and again outran the final defender. The classic duel between the two star halfbacks found Pilette notching 136 yards on 18 rushes and catching one pass for 44 Caiarlton garnered 137 yards on 16 runs and snared the one. aerial for 70 yards. Brother Rice completed its best grid season with a 62 log; Seaholm finished 63. STATISTICS R ° S . Downs Rushing ___________ 9 5 First Downs Passing — 3 4 First Downs Penalties ... 0 1 Yards Rushing-Passing .. 227-111 159-126 Passes ................... 3-6 „6-l2 Passes Intercepted by .. 0 0 Punts and Average ......... 3-27 3-16 Fumbles - No. Lost .... 2-2 2-2 Penalties end Yards . . . 10-90 5-41 r SCORINO PLAYS SCORIN BR-Pllette, 4 run (Rose run) BR—Pilette, 44 fiat pasa (Perks run) BS-Charlton, 16 run (Kale kick) BS—Charlton, SO sweep (Kale kick) BR—Parks, 3 plunge (run stopped) BR-Pilette, 16 run (Rosa run) BS—Charlton, 70 pass-run from Renault lick blocked) SCORE BY QUARTERS -irntlngham Brother Rice .7 7 6 7—27 Blrmlnghem seaholm ....... 0 7 7 6—30 NFL Standings .. L T Pet. Pts. OP St. Louis .......... 7 1 1 .875 212 147 Dallas ............ 5 2 1 .714 289 130 ---------- . 5 3 0 A25 240 140 . 5 4 0 .556 167 207 . 5 4 0 .556 174 201 . 2 5 1 .H6 149 224 . 1 6 1 .143 117 234 ladelphia dilngton . Baltlmoro^.... San Francisco .. - J .770 233 1 01 i 2 0 .750 213 132 I 3 1 .571 153 1B2 I 5 0 .444 144 155 1 Detroit at Minnesota ---- -----_js Angeles Philadelphia at Cleveland St. Louis at Pittsburgh San Francisco at Chicago^ Sunday! id «t San Dl i (Sty \l- D—2 THE PONTIAP PRESS. SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 12. 1966 More Than 9,000 See Rivals RO Dondero-Kimball in 14-14 Tie The clock stopped any celebrations which more than 9,-000 fans in Royal Oak had in mind last mght With kicker Jack Runchey trying to get off a field goal on the Dondero 18-yard line, time ran out and highly rated Dondero and Kimball finished with a 14-14 deadlock. It was one of the most exciting games, before the largest crowd in the 10-year series and it was the first tie. Kimball leads the series 5-4-1. Dondero scored first after Chuck Larke recovered a Kimball fumble on the 14. Dave Charleton then hit A1 Shepier with an 11-yard pass for the touchdown and Fred Heidemann kicked the point. Kimball hit twice in the second period. TTie first drive went 51 yards and Mike Yankee went over left tackle 16 yards for the score. Runehey added the point. FAST SCORE Later in the quarter, a 52-yard drive took only two plays with Ken Dockett going off I right tackle 46 yards for the ! score and Runchey’s kick ! madeit"14-?— * ★ ♦ After a long kickoff return ; in the third quarter by Shepier and a penalty to the Kimbali 37, Dondero needed only five plays to knot the score. Charleton passed to Larke 20 yards and Heidemann tied the count at 14-14. j With eight minutes left in | j the game, Dondero had a sneak by Charleton called back for a pushing penalty. There were 42 sieconds left when Kimball started its drive. The Knights hit on two pass plays to the Dondero11. On the third play, Dan Molen was hit for an 8-yard loss hying to pass and with no time outs left, and the crowd in bedlam, Runchey lined up for the field goal but couldn’t beat the clock. Dondero finished t { 8-0-1 and Kimball, champions I of the Southeastern Michigan I League finished 6-2-1 overall. STATISTICS K D Downs RusOine f 3 First tJowra FASHiig i i First Downs Ponditles ........ l l Yards Rushing Passing . . 113-47 43-103 Passas 3-4 S-13 PasMs Intarcepted by , 1 0 FumWai . No. Cost . 3-3 3- 3 cCORINO PUYS PASS from Charlton 1 •J Rochester Falcons Flying in Victory Brings Team Shore of 2nd in 0-A Romeo Treats Dads to Win The Bulldogs of Romeo were' Romeo’s defense stopped treated to steak dinner yester-The season may have ended day and after it was all over too soon for Rochester’s Fal-Ithey went out onto the football cons field and reated a Dad’s Day They’re at a point now where^crowd to a 7-6 victory over old 20 with penal^s^ they could take on the Spartans Utica. ! R^ mo tr played control ball of Warren Fitegerald, Oakland “ couple Utica drives, and the Bulldogs drove to the Utica four yard line in the third quarter, but lost the ball back on the A League champions. Rochester tangled with Fitaqiterald earlier in the season and came away on the short end of a 34-6 count. But that was long ago. Lately, the Birds have been the hottest item in the league, with the exception of the champ. The victory gave Romeo pos-| with Hanley’s play calling and session of the “Little B r o w n Czhaka’s running, outgaining Jug” in the series with Utica Utica 162 yards to 91. for the first time since 1957 statistics when they won 25-(L " ‘I •' I First Downs Rushing i 4 The Bulldogs stopped the pO-lFli-s' Downs Passing 2 0 , , ° . First Downs Penalties 1 0 tent Utica running attack of; Yards RushIng-PassIng .14131 84-5 Gordon Schwartz and Gary Lei-; VS Pontiac Prats Photo SCORING PLAYS her and finished the season with ! Penalties and^ a 6-2 record, compared with! u-car Utica’s 5-4 mark. kicV’' ‘ SAME LEAGUE Next year the two teams vrill “ have more at stake when they play as members of the Oak-land-A League. The Chieftains scored first ju opening period with Ue-SLOWED BY SNOW i ber going 11 yards following Last week’s snow forced themi a 50 yard march, liebcr’s run to sit down a week but they I for the extra point faUed. came back last night to knock j jjj first quarter, John off Madison’s Eagles, 19-6, fOiThomas recovered a Utica fum-gain a share of second place in|,jjg 32 y^rd line. Two the league race. ,jjgy pggg plays from quarter- * * * . 1 back Dick Hanley to Brad Ca- Madison and Rochester wound jjg^g q oanfield put the ^ r n l«» writlA ! . .... A month ago, the Falcons blanked Avondale, 14-0. Two weeks ago, they trimmed Warren CoHsino, 66-7, in one of the most potent local display of the HELPING OUT-Kettering guard Ken McLean (51-on ground) tries to give teammate Mike Lyon (16) some running room by blocking Waterford’s Bill Foley (87) in the second half of their game last night, but Foley dives across McLean to trip up the runner. Pontiac Prtu Photo YEA, TEAMl-A few of the Kettering fans get into the mood of the game as they team was coming through wth the points come through with the cheers while their in a 20-6 win over Waterford last night. Frustrating Night in Oxford Victory, Tie, Defeat for SEM Elevens Berkley came up with a winner, Femdale rallied for a tie and Hazel Park was blanked as those three wound up the 1966 football season last night. The Bears of Berkley pinned a 37-0 setback on Oak Park, Ferndale and Port Huron battled to a 20-20 deadlock and Roseville’s Wildcats turned back Hazel Park. 20-0. up 5-2 in the league race, while utica the Falcons closed with an overall 6-2 record. The Falcons went into last night’s game a two touchdown undergod, but they choked off one of Madison’s top offensive threats and turned a few key defensive gems In posting their sixth win. Jerry Dash, who had scored 76 points going into the game for Madison, was held to eight yards in 10 carries by the stiff Falcon defense. SIX. The quarter changed and af i ter two rushing plays and a play failed to start the second period, Romeo had a 4th down and one to go on the one yard line. Hanley sneaked over for the TD and Frank Praino added the all important point with a placement. Oiler Bock on Squad HOUSTON, Tex. (AP)-Hous-ton Oiler defensive halfback! Mickey Sutton, who joined the; taxi squad this week, has been activated for the Houston-Bos-ton American Football League game Sunday. Sutton, a six-foot, 190 pounder Scoreless Second Half Dooms Avondale,' 41-20 yards fw a TD and Toby Hurst iced the game with a 35-yard scoring jaunt. BIG MARGW Fitzgerald rolled up a 27-7 lead at halftime and coasted to victory. Bill Kinnie sparked the Fitzgerald attack with scoring runs of 36 and ofie yards. Defensive tackle Dick Dobertsein recovered a lateral and sped 42 yards for the first Spartan score. Other Fitzgerald tallies came three-yard run by Roy t Rochester jumped into a 7-0 lead in the second quarter on a four-yard run by Mike Phillips and an extra point pass from Jim Ball to Don Golding, and opened the lead to 13-0 in the third on a 51-yard pass from!is from Auburn Ball to Laurie Kesel. ;—— ----------- ^ ------; CUTS LEAD Madison sliced the deficit to| jhumb Title, Record Close Book seven points, 13-6, on a (our-| yard run by Greg Keller in the| third, but the Falcons opened, the gap again in the fourth when| guard Dave Stoner intercepted | a pass and raced 55 yards for a touchdown. WARRIOR POW-WOW-’Three Birmingham Brother Rice defenders combine to drop Seaholm’s Gar Thomas on this first-half run last night at Groves’ High School field. Making the stop while two other Warriors follow up in the background are Lee Hart (72), son of former Detroit Lion Leon Hart, Bill Damman (left) and an unidentified teammate. Armada Caps Memorable Campaign Avondale’s hopes for an upset faded with a letdown in the second half last night as the Yellow Jackets dropped a 41-20 thriller to Marysville. In another game, Warren Fitzgerald capped a 9-0 season with a 40-7 triumph over Center Line. Avondale, closing the ’66 campaign with a 1-8 record, held a 20-14 lead at halftime, but Marysville came up with a touchdown in the third to take a 21-20 lead and wrapped it up with three six-pointers in the fourth. Quarterback Bob Partridge jRackham, a 20-yard pass from turned out to be too much for!John Pahoski to Larry Gintner the Yellw Jackets to handle, land a one-yard sneak by Jerry . -k ir -k ICooper. Pahoski kicked four ex- Partridge scored three touch- Points.^ ^ ^ downs and passed for another oleiniczak raced 82 vards and it was, his running under ■UhetOtojnczakraced^ _______ tv... tor the Center Line touchdown pressure in the second quarter , npnnk Pricucski kicked that kept Avondale from break-f"f^Ue"nis Pncucski kicked !ing the game open. the i^oinL^^___________ EARLY LEAD The Jackets jumped into a 7-0 lead on a one-yard sneak by Archie Anderson and a PAT run by Rob Burt, but Partridge, back to pass, was hemmed in NBA Standings PhiladelphI* Oak Park and Berkley, neither with anything to crow about this season, wound up with identical 2-7 records. Berkley was nursing a €-0 lead at halftime but pushed across a pair of touchdowns in the third quarter and broke it open with tiu-ee more in the final frame. Dean Henkel opened the scoring door for the Bears with a one-yard sneak in the first and it was all the Bears needed. RETURNS KICKOFF In the third, Ian Redpath took the kickoff at the start of the second half and raced 80 yards for a touchdown, and moments later, Jim Gillespie raced 12 yards to open up an 18-0 lead. ★ ★ ★ In the fourth, Dennis Cox ran 15 yards for a score, Larry Page took a 12-yard pass from Larry Duncan for another and Larry Israel raced 30 yards for the final tally. Quarterback Monty Heclo flipped a l^yard scoring pass to end Wayne Clapp with 6:1S left in the game and Jim Thomas ran the extra point to give Femdale a tie with Port Huron. Port Huron had moved in front 20-13 moments earlier on a two-yard plunge by Gerald Noble and a PAT kick by Bruce Christick. C)th^ .Port Huron scores came four-yard dive by Bob Bales and a 40-yard run with an intercepted pass by Steve Jurk. Heclo ran seven yards for the first Femdale score and dived over from one-yard out for the second tally. Femdale finished the campaign with a 2-6-1 mark while Port Huron closed at 1-7-1. Rosevilto (9-1) won its eighth in a row by blanking Hazel Park (1-7). Play 6-6 Game i Penalties Mar Tilt; Aerials Aid Dragons By DON VOGEL It was a fmstrating night of football in Oxford Friday. Lake Orion came within an extra point of snapping its 17-game losing streak. A stout Orion defense and a flock of penalties thwarted Oxford at almost every turn. The final score was 6-6. ★ ★ Oxford chalked up its touchdown the second time the Wildcats gained possession in the first quarter. Mickey Cummings sprinted over right tackle and raced 62 yards. Roger Miller’s conversion kick was blocked. Late in the first period. Lake Orion started a 65-yard march that was capped on the first play of the second quarter when. halfback Tim O’Dea swept right end from the 22 with clearing blocks by Dave Leach and Jim Ross. But Ross was stopped short on a plunge for the extra point. Penalties totaling 130 yards hurt Oxford and two Wildcat touchdowns were nullified. After a 22-yard reverse by Garry Cummings was called back, the Wildcats drove to the Orion two only to be hurdled back to the four. The Dragons, trying to play over 100 yards in penalties, drove to the Oxford 21, 34 , 27, 16 and 30. Penalties bogged down two drives, an interception stopped another and the Wildcat defense took care of the rest. Followers of Armada’s Tigers are hoping they won’t have to wait another 35 years for their football team to have a big Championship a few games ago. The only blot on the squad’s record was the season-opening 19-14 setback at St. Clair. Jim Voelicker picked up the final Armada tallies on runs of 59 and 33 yards in the third stanza. Carl Reiter ran the point after Voelcker’s first touchdown. Rochester picked off four, Madison passes and three foiled Madison drives. Along with'season. Stoner’s TD run with an inter- ★ ★ ★ • i„ another Thumb game, Im- ception, Bob Woodruff inter-1 xhe Tigers put the led on an jay City ran its record to 7-3 cepted one in his endzone to kill g-i campaign last .night with a with a 14-6 verdict over Almont. la score and Larry Shue took a a third-period drive and mo- 25-12 triumph over Richmond, * * * 50-yard pass from Dennis Bow- ments later Kesel picked off marking their best season since „„ ^^ith touch- '"an for the Richmond scores. idowns in the first two quarters! * * * The Tigers sewed up the for a 12-0 halftime lead and Inilay pushed across touch- another in the endzone. Madison made It in^to Roches-^ the Southern Thumb Uague j dosed their offensive efforts | downs in the first and fourth tor territory only once m the _ I . . periods to down Almont. first half and that drive was halted at the 37. with 13 points in the third stan-! periods to down Almont. 7,a. Wayne Brinker sped 54 yards for six points for Imlay in the first and Jerry Stryker picked -1 SPARKS WIN Two Props Surposs Quarterback Lee Thompson gn Almont fumble and ^ n r Pk J Imparked the Tiger victory. He;romped 2^ yards for the other Pro Stars Record —........................ " touchdown run and Steve Plun- s»n Francisco kitt’s PAT kick tied the game, ★ ★ ★ Ictilcam Burt flipped a 57-yard pass to Saunders moments later to push the Jackets back in front, but Partridge made it lfl3 Marysville with a 14-yard run and the second of Plunkitt’s five PAT Jim Hollis ran 40 yards for kicks. Saunders regained the lead for Avondale by hauling in a 39-yard toss from Burt and the Jackets left the field at intermission with a 20-14 margin. The second half belonged to Marysville. Club ta Fete Mentar CLOVIS, N.M. (AP) - Tommy McDonald of the Los An-jgeles Rams of the National Foot-iball League, scored 151 points ^way back in 1952 for the New Mexico Class AA prep scoring record. The record stood for 14 years but was broken Friday — twice. ! scored one touchdown and'gpartan six-pointer. Chet Mar-passed for another in the easy pg] [jooted two extra points, triumph: ★ ★ ★ End Ron Rush hauled in a 30-yard 'Thompson pass for the first score and*’ ’Thompson sneaked three yards for the sec- Services far Keg Star Almont came up with its lone score in the second on a 28-yard j pass from John Bacholzky to Mike Besseau. SCORINO FLAYS Partridge passed 14 yards to Ron Goodin to put Marysville in front, 21-20, in the third, and in the fourth, C. J. Knuth ran 10 yards for a score, Partridge picked off a pass and ran A—Ru>)(, 30 0 3 run (run filltd) A-Voilek»r, 5* run (R»lt»r run) A—Vocickv, 33 run Downt Passing ... First Downs Penalties .. Yards Rushing-Passing . Fumbles • no. Lost ..... o Panaltits and Yards . .. Ah SCORINO PLAYS A—Anderson, sneak 1 (Burt fL... M-Partrldga, 4S run (flunkitt k BOSTON. (AP) - Dari- Robert Lee Williams of Al- CLEVELAND ()Pl mouth’s Bob Blackman will be buquerquc High School scored services for Steve N honored as the 1965 New Eng-j30 points to break McDonald’s Iber of the Amer land Football Coach of the Year irecord by five points and Wayne Congress Hall of by the Gridiron'Club of Boston'Hallmark of Clovis High^scored'at 1:30 p.m. Mi next Wednesday at a dinner in '; .35 points to bring hi.s .season to-lF’irst Hungarian the Hotel Somerset, jtal tp 159 points. I Church here. A—Saundars, 57 pass from Burt I ■" fsrswi DOSTon m, Naw YorR iw Philadelphia 134, Chicago 113 San Francisco 133, Los Angolas ' Today's Gamas Philadelphia at Cincinnati Baltimore at New York Detroit et Los Angeles Boston et St. Louis Sunday's Oames Philadelphia at Chicago Detroit at Sen Francisco Monday's Oames Detroit at San Francisco First Downs Rushing Yards Rusning-Passing Passes Intercepted by .... Punts end Average ........ 3 Fumbles - No. Lost ....... Penalties and! Yards ..... 7 SCORINO PLAYS 'HM) 8-Jlm _ Jim Glllaspla, 13 r B-Dannis Cox, 15 run B—Larry Page, '13 pi Duncan (run failed) SCORE BY QUARTERS Oak Park .............0oo. . Berkley 4 a 13 1»-17 Allan Park 13, Southgate Schafer 13 Armada 35, RIchmbnd 13 Battle Creek Central 31, Lakaview 7 Bellevilia 30, Monroe 1* Birmingham Brother Rice 27, Saaholm 20 Barkley 37, Oak Park 0 Bay City Central 20, Pontiac Central 14 Benton Harbor 28, Gr. Rapidi Union 14 Cass City 13, North Branch 7 Corunna 30, Durand 0 Comstock Park 31, MIddlavllla 7 Dowaglac 14, Buchanan 7 Dtckervllla 31, Brown City 13 Datrolt Lutlwran West 25, Harper Wool larpar Wool Deyborn Haights Robichaud 32, Rofnuh Ecorsa 31, Wayne 7 '< East Datrolt 14, YpsllantI 0 Kalamazoo Caniral 38, Loy-Nori Lake Orion 8, Oxford 4 (tia) Lansing Sexton 19, Waverly 0 LIvonie Clarencevllle 33, Dearborn Heights '■—twood 30 emens L'Ansa Crcuse 31, St Clair Midland 10, B ' City H Montrose 24, Flint Hamady 12 Marysvllla 41, Auburn Haights Avondale 30 ...... ______ . Grand Blanc 4 Okamos 26, Flint Atherton 0 ‘ itad 35, Addison 13 ■t Huron Northafn 33, Bad Axa 7 . 't Huron Catholic 13, Flint Bandia 0 Romto 7, Utica 4 Rosavilla 30, Hazel Park Rochester 19, — Royal Oak D LAST GAME This was the closest Lake i Orion had come to!, victory in the last two campaigns. They finished the season with an 0-8-1 ■ record. Oxford completed play ■ with a 4-3-1 mark. Orion gained only 63 yards rushing against the Oxford defense led by lineman Rich Row-ley, Paul Trask and Richard Krause and linebacker, Dan Jones. But quarterback Corky Groesbeck kept the Wfldcats loose with his passing. The Dragons hit 12 of 31 aerials for 176 yards. End Roy'Kibbie was the top receiver with six for 95 yards. Mickey Cummings paved Oxford with 104 yards in 10 tries. He had a 27-yard TD run called back by a penalty. ★ ★ ♦ Lake Orion almost handed Oxford the game on what would have been the last play. Tim Kelley raced 31 yards to the Dragons’ 40 before being tripped up. But Orion was gidlty of roughing and the ball moved to the 25. Because a game can’t end on a penalty, the Wildcats had one more chance. Miller’s 41-yani field goal attempt was on target, but fell five yards short. THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY. XOVP^MBER 12. I96fi D—3 Vikings to Risk Strong Finish Hopes Against Lions QB Tarkenton Fuels Offense Thorough Test Looms for Bench Strength; Lions Eying Upset MINNEAPOLIS - ST. PAUL (AP)—Fran Tarkenton and a proud defense have ignited the fuse oh a Minnesota Vikings mid-season explosion which Coach Norm Van Brocklin hopes will carry them to eight straight victories in the National Football League season windup. Biggest damper on such enthusiasm is the knee injury which has sidelined halfback Tommy Mason for the remainder of the seascm. The Vikings learn Sunday how much his loss will be felt when they take on the Detroit Lions in Metropolitan Stadium. Van Brocklin feels second-year man Dave Osborn, who will start in Mason’s place Sunday, and ro(*ie Jim Lindsey are ready to adequately fill the gap. Osborn came off the bench against Green Bay last Sunday after Mason Was hurt and rammed his way for 28 yards in nine carries when the going was toughest late in the Vikings’ 2M7 upset of the Packers. Lindsey filled in creditably earlier this year when knee troubles benched Mason. LINEBACKER OUT The Vikings also have outside linebacker John Kirby lost to a foot injury. Rookie Don Hansen replaces hi* CLEVELAND (fl ~ Center John Morrow is sidlined and two other Cleveland Browns regulars are doubtful fw ttje game with the Philadelphia Eagles here Sunday afternoon. Kicking specialist Lou Groza and defensive back Erich Barnes were injured in practice Wednesday, but both remained hopeful of playing against the SUPS AWAY—Hie ball slips through the arms of Pittsburgh end Bob Longe (82) ak Miami defender Hal Carew (23) grabs his helmet in the first hatt of last night’s game in the Orange^^ Bowl. The Hurricanes blew Pitt off the field, 38-14. Madden Muscles Lead Fenton's Rout of Holly Fenton’s Tigers showed Holly why they are ranked among the state’s Class B powers. The Tigers, who hold down the No. 5 spot in the Associated 39-0. The Madden brothers, Mike And split end Paul Flatley isl^"®®® poll, flexed its nursing a sore knee. We wiU not|™""‘"^ muscles last night start although he hkelv will P“®‘ play some if needed lance Rentzel replaces Flatley The Vikings will be shooting for their third straight victory one which would even their 1966 record at 4-4-1. 11 Detroit brings the Western Di-1® OTUOenTS vision s last-place team to townii u i.j t but the always-rugged Lion de-|| riOi/CfOy rOf fense is not to be taken lightly i Add to that Detroit s new quar-l| HunfinQ DoV terback, Karl Sweetan who has|| ^ ' found end Pat Studstill oftenli NASHWAUK. Minn. (JPI onough to make opponents —Faced with likely wide-wary. I spread hooky playing be- Lions Coach Harry Gilmer ai| cause of the opening of former Van Brocklin aide with Ip the state's deer hunting the Vikings, has had a mountain t s e a s 0 n this weekend, of personnel problems to cope|i school officials at this far with this season. north Minnesota commu- Gilmer may not be long on theh^* mty have surrendered. Detroit scene, despite another i PupAs at Nashwauk year to go on a contract and the I High School and nearby verbal backing of owner William i Keewatin Junior High will Clay Ford. Lions fans sang« get a holiday Monday to “goodbye Harry’’ to Gilmer andl| go hunting. ^ exhibited anti-Gilmer banners at i and Don, started the rout with touchdown runs in the opening period, ^nd the winners added single touchdowns in the second and third quarters and closed with a pair of six-pointers in the final frame. Mike opening the scormg door with a 58-yard scoring scamper and brother Don followed quick ly with a five-yard burst. Doug Walker took an 18 yard pass from Bob Niles in the second period. Vance Huff went over on an eight-yard run in the third. Niles ran 18 yards for a score m the fourth and Rick Rockman put the lid on the game with a 75-yard scoring run after intercepting a Holly pass. Ken Wegner kicked three extra points. The win gave Penton a 9-0 record, while Holly wound up the campaign with a 2-7 mark. Brown Regulars Ailing for Clash With Eagles The 42-year-old Groza suffered back injury while working out on a blocking machine and Barnes suffered a sprained left ankle while running on the rain-slick practice field. HEALING TIME Barnes seemed to have the better chance of healing in time for the kickoff Sunday as the Browns face the task of having to win the remainder of their games to remain in contention in the National Football League’s Eastern Conference race. ★ ★ * The Browns created two open ings on their roster Thursday by placing Morrow on the injured reserve list and Gary Lane, a rookie quarterback, on the tari squad. Waivers were asked on Lane but he was not claimed by any other team. ★ ★ ♦ In other National Football League Sunday, St. Louis is at Pittsburgh, Baltimore plays Atlanta, Dallas meets Washington. Philadelphia is at Cleveland. New York travels to Los Angeles and San Francisco plays Chicago. The 49ers, victorious in four of their tast five battles, were humiliated by Gale Sayers and the Bears last December when Sayers ripped off six touchdowns in a 61-20 Chicago triumph. Sayers is not having as good * ®®*®®** 8s he did last year before a franchise was placed in whein he was the league’s top Dixie, rookie but he still ranks third ... , r. • among NFL rushers with 630 jjg catcher Jimmy O r r, former ir if if University of Georgia stand- The Bears are rated one touch- i down favorites, mainly because i Coach Norb Hecker said he they will be home. They were expects the Colts’ John Unitas tied 10-10 by Detroit last Sunday to aim most of his passes at while San Francisco was down- ^^cr, although Raymond Berry ing rival Los Angeles 21-13 as Baltimore's top receiver with quarterback John Brodie com- 35 grabs for 497 yards, pleted 21 of 31 passes for 2771 * * ★ yards and one touchdown and 'Die Pittsburgh Steelers acti-ran for the other two scores. [vated defensive back Bob Hohn The Baltimore Colts are solid sfrengthen the de- favorites to boost their record'Bradshaw, who has to7-2andclaimatieforthetoplf P‘®y spot in the division with the' Green Bay Packers, who arel ^ , i Bob Schmitz, a linebacker for six years in the National Football League, was put on waivers to make room for Hohn. SELLOUT GAME { The Falcons have lost all eight NFL games since joining the pro ranks, but the game has been a sellout ftar weks because many Southerners had The Steelers also announced that flanker Gary Ballman, who was sidelined with a virus, is expected to play against the St. adopted the Colts as their team Louis Cardinals Sunday. AFL Contenders Eye Miami Miracle at KC X-Country Champs F—Madden, 5 . _ F—Walker. IS pass Bob Niles (Wegner kick) ~ Huff. I run (kick failed) F—Rockman, 7J ( )ss Interception (I QUARTERS I The district school board ' i I voted 5-1 for the holiday I after a pair of high school | 1 seniors, Joe Simone and ; I Kim Ross, presented a pe- | ^ tition bearing more than I' 600 signatures of pupils ' seeking the time off. j The schools’ principals T supported the pupils, say- } troit Uons pulled'rookie jTmIf th^e^ Probably wuld ^ Todd back on their rosetr Fri u “ * "igh rate of absen- ^ day to replace injured running'^ teeism anyway. The pu-back Bruce McLenna .1 Todd, a graduate of Ball State the last Detroit home game Lions Activate Running Back to Fill Roster „ pils volunteered to make ^ I up the time lost gt a later .uuu, a giauuaie Ul oan OiaUJ M j-.- ... i Ind. Who was cut by the Lions I J®!* 7 ^ I games, becomes Detroit s fourth running back and restores the roster to 40 men. McLenna, also a rookie, was knocked out of action this week by a knee injury. Boxer Departs MANILA (AP) - World Ju-nior Lightweight Champion Gabriel Flash Elorde of the Philippines, leaves for New York Tuesday in quest of another title. He will fight Carolos Ortiz of Puerto Rico for the lightweight championship in a iS-rounder at Madison Square Garden set for Nov. 28. FRIDAY'S FIGHTS MADRID—Luis Folledo, 163, Spain, oul Pointad Rtnate Moraas, 1S7, Brain, 10. U.S, Soccer League Gets British Official LONDON OP) - Scunthorpe United, a struggling English Third Dvision soccer team, lost another of its officials to the National Professional League of America Friday. Alan Bushby, Scunthorpe’s head coach, accepted an c^er from the New York Generals. Just over a week ago 3cun» thorpe released its general manager, Fred Goodwin, to the Generals. Goodwin also tried to sign two of Scunthorpe’s players, goalkeeper Geoff Sidebottom and in-ni, side forward Barry Mai ''*1 the club refused to sell. Golf Raises Large Fund for Charily AKRON, Ohio (AP) - The Professional Golfers Association Golden Anniversary Championship here last July raised S204,-000 for Akron charities, Raymond C. Firestone, honorary chairman of the tournament, announced Friday. Shares of $M,000 each to the Akron Beacon Journal Charity Fund , and the Akron Jaycees will be used to build two community swimming pools. *• w ★ The profit was the largest ever in the 50-year history of the tournament which drew a record four-day crowd of 64,981, according to William C. Richards Jr., PGA general chairman. Since big-time golf came to Akron with the 1960 PGA cham-pionship, professional gplfers have eam^ more than $1,342,-000 in tournaments and televised shows at the Firestone Country Club, the announcement said. (X this, more than $450,000 went to Akron charities. CHICAGO (ff) — Reigning NCAA champion Western Michigan retained its team title and Olympian Oscar Moore of Southern Illinois easily won the individual crown in the Central Collegiate Conference CCC cross country meet Friday. Moore and Sam Bair of Kent State made a two-man race of the five mile event which drew a field of KB from 17 midwest-tern schools. Moore won by 30 yards in 24:-48.2, building up a 50-yard lead over Bair with a 4:37 clocking ; ARC MIG MICRO 1 WELDERS ■ HOW WOULD YOU LIKE TO EARN S $260.75 PER WEEK ■ Mig and Micro tfarting wago $3.50 plu* fringo bon*- ■ fits. ProBontly working 11 hour* par shift, six days por ■ wook. Ovortimo of timo end ono-hdif. Apply in person ■ botwoon 8:30 A.M. ond 5:00 P.M. ■ ANDERSON TAMKAHD MANUFACTURING 00. ■ 2702 North Oort HighwayFlint < laMWMwwwwawuwsawawaliBWHWwwf' Broncos Lasso CCC Title Wilt Paces 76er Victory By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ready or not, here comes Wilt. After surprising the National Basketball Association during the first mmith of the season by. playing a low-scoring, passing-off kind of game, Philadelpha’s Wilt Chamb^lain poured in 37' points Friday night, leading the 76ers to a 126-113 home-court I victory over Chicago. * ★ ★ Chamberlain, who has led the league in scoring ever since hej joined it seven years ago, I wasn’t even among the league’s i top 20 scorers in the first set of statistics released last week. ; By the Associated Press itest their three-game winning i San Diego will try to repeat,Istreak Sunday at home against! Oakland will try to go along I Miami, last in the Eastom Divi-with the trend and both will|sion. anxiously hope tor a small mir- San Diego is in second place acle in Kansas City. I with the West with a 5-3-1 mark The Chargers and Raiders I and Oakland is one-half game meet in San Diego Sunday and;back at 5-4. ITius. somebody is the team that loses can justlSoW to have to knqck off the about count itself out of the I Chiefs if the Chargers or Raid-j Westeiri Division race in the;crs are g.ving to have a chance; American Football League. for the title. Even the winner will not be in i San Diego beat Oakland 29-20 an enviable position. The Kan-1on Sept. 25 and Sunday will] sas City Chiefs are leading the have the added advantage of its division with a 7-2 record and|home field. Rut the Chargers will have to fight against something of a jinx as far as re-1 matches in the league are con-1 cerned. ' In the 11 repeat contests i played st> far this season, the team that won the first game| was victorious in the second' only three times. The only repeat winners have been Buffalo, ■ Oakland and Kansas City. j * * * The Chargers will be without' Lance Alworth, their superior! flanker, who hurt a hamstring muscle last week against the Chiefs. Clem Daniels leads the! Raider attack — he’s fourth ini the league in rushing and tiedj for 10th ip pass receiving — that has carried Oakland to victories in four of its last five games. Kansas City figures to have an easy time of it with Miami, which has won just twp games, while losing six. The Chiefs lead the league in total and rushing offense and are third in total defense. * ★ * The top game in the East is New York at Buffalo. The Bills took the Jets 33^23'two weeks ago, burring New York quarterback Joe Namatth into five in-terceptable passes and stopping the Jets’ ground attack at just five yards on the ground. The Bills lead the division with a 5-3-1 mark and New York is tied for. second with Boston at 4-3-1. and 9:38 for two miles. Bair made up some ground on the closing two miles, but couldn’t overhaul Moore. Western Michigan shaded Miami of Ohio by three points, 48 to 51. The winning Broncos’ took third, fourth, ninth, 13th and 19th places among the 15 schools with full team entries. The Mam .cores: We.Mrn Michigan 41, Miami of Ohio 1, Notra Dsma 17, Southern Illinois 110, Ohio University 133, Kansas 103, DePaul lai, Drake 19a, Bowling Green 243, Wayne StiM 304, Central Michigan J45, MarquetM 352, and Detroit 377. Bradley, Kent SteM end Toledo lacked III team entries . Oscar Moore, Southern llllnole 24:40.2 . Sam Bair, Kent State 24:54.0 3. Andy Schramm, Miami of Ohio 25:01.0 4. Kan CobMs, Western Michigan; 5. Keith Reed, Westren Michigan; 0. Bill Orennan, DePeuI; 7. Joe Vore, Miami io; I. Ken Howard, Notre Dame; an Ackman, Southern Illinois; 10. Wolfgang Lugauer, Wastrn Michigan; 11. Leahy, Notre Dame; 12. Pierson ideau, Kent StaM; 13. John Prllle-Mleml of Ohio; 14. John Blair, Ohio University; IS. Mike Heillle, Western Rides Trio ^ CirL;le NEW YORK (AP) - Jockey Earlie Fires rode three winners at Aqueduct Friday. 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NOOTHERfHlSKY INTHEWORLDTASTES QUITE LIKI I «»RS (HO IMPOmEO IS BUITU FROM CAUDA BY NIRAN WALSH IMPOltWIN. OfTROir. UlCH. 86 8 PROOF. BUSDta CUttOMS MtSSY. D—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 12, 1966 Kickdff 1:15 Sunday at Wisn^r Stadium MFL All-Stars Favored to End Arrows' Home Streak ChIcMo . Toronfo . Another champioasbip season comes to an end for the Pontiac Arrows Sunday at W i s n e r Stadium, but a talented array of Midwest Football League All-Stars threaten to end It on a sour note. nie Arrows must take tiie role of underdogs against MFL squad coachisl by former Birmingham Seaholm and Detroit Lions’ star Tom Tracy. The kickoff at 1:15 p. m. is expected to draw 3,000 fans to Wisner. it it * A defeat for the Arrows would be the first of any kind on their “home” birf at Wis-ner Stadium in two years. With placekickw Ed Mc-Qu^b on tile injured ,list, hampering Pratiac’s field goal or extra point intidac- tion, the Ali-Stars have been made Hve point favorites. Dayton’s Lando Steele, who has chalkal up 42 points on placements, including three field goals, gives the All-Stars the big advantage in tiiis department. ★ ★ Ihe big lineman will be on tiie offensive line for the Allstars. He was a solid choice on the All-League team the past two years. PISTOL PETE The All-Stars’ strength lies in the passing of Pistol Pete Mikolajewski and an abundance of receives headed by Jim Stewart of I^ansing, A1 Baldwin of Flint, Keith Smith, Dick Miller and Chuck McEUi-gott of Dayton and Dave Johnson of Lansing. Stilwart, the top receiver in the league, is coming up from Miami, Fla. for the game. He has been talking to Miami Dolphin idficials and has been promised a trial witii the team. Other players in the game will also be given trials by AFL or NFL teams. Pete Mikolajewski has been asked by the Lions to go into can® for a trial, as wjll Pontiac’s Tony Odneal. Another Arrow, halfback Jim Johnson is awaiting word on his test also witii Miami. STTOGY DEFENSE iTPontiac’s d e f e n s e, the stingiest in the MFL this season, can contain Pistol Pete’s passing and the bevy of receivers, it could prove tiie primary factor in the contest. U.S. Pulls Ahead, Palmer Slips ABC Committee Holds Confqb on Big Series Canadian Pro Opens Margin Knudson Now Leads Arnie by 4 Strokes ’TOKYO (AP) - George Knudson, Uie dapper Canadian, stretched his lead on Arnold Palmer to four strokes at the end of the third round of the Canada Cup international golf classic today as the United States took a strangle hold the team championship. Knudson shot 32-34-66 over Uie chilly, windy Yoraiuri course giving him an eye-popping 64-68-66—198 for 54 holes, 18 under par. Palmer shot 34-35—69 for 66-67-6&-202 as he saw his one-stndce deficit of Friday widen disastrously. Par for the 6,962 yard hilly course is 72. ★ * ★ Still in Individual contention was Hideyo Sugimoto, the big Japanese iwofessional who is playing his home course. He shot 32-36-68 for 66-69^58-203. And surging up was Jack Nick-laus of the United States, who had his best round yet, 34-33— 67. *11118 gave him 69^-67-204. ’The combination of Nicklaus’ and Palmer’s mighty sub-par golf resulted in a team scwe of only 406 for the United States, 26 under par. Next was Australia, 413, and South Africa, 415. Be-fore the four day, tournament it was freely predicted that the team championship would go at 15 under par. For Kmidson, who cheerfully proclaimed himself “the world’i worst golfer six months ago,’ there were two big holes in his six under par round. On the par 5 508-yard fourth his approach shot a four iron carried 180 yards and landed ei^ inches from the cup. He tappwl it in for an eagle 3. MILWAUKEE (AP)-A special American Bowling Congress committee will meet at ABC headquarters here Saturday to .consider official recognition of \the 876 series bowled Oct. 26 by .^jCarl Wilsing of Sheboygan, Wis. The total, which included : games of 298, 300 and 278, ranks ! I second nationally in all-time sanctioned ABC league competi- Miami Looses Scoring Punch Hurricanes 5^wamp Pittsburgh, 38-14 WINNER’S WAVE-Jockey Jean DeForge waves as he heads for the winner's circle aboard Behistoun, France’s entry who won the $150,000 International race at Laurel Race Course in Maryland. Foreground is groom Maurice Pourre. MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - The Miami Hurricanes, who usually B~ ^ rel>' on a brawling defense, fi* j nally found a scoring punch Fri- day night against Pittsburgh, __J trampling a weak Panther W team, 38-14. Quarterback Bill Miller, sidelined two games back because his wild passing was giving Coach Charlie Tate a bad case of nerves, came off the bench and probably W(m his job back with a sterling performance. tion to the 836 bowled by Allie Brandt of Lockport, N.Y. in 1939. STATE RECORD ’The ^ 56-year-oW Wi I s i n g bowled the all-time Wisconsin sanctioned league record in the Root Major League at Sheboygan. It topped the previous, state mark of 854 set by Frankie Benkovic of Milwaukee in 1938 but missed by two ,pins the state’s open bowling record of 8j78 by Billy Sixty of Milwaukee in 1938 on games of 300, 300, 278. The lanes and the pins used in Wilsing’s record series were checked before noon the following day, said A1 Matzelle, ABC secretary-treasurer. But examination of the findings have been withheld for a special committee “because of the magnitude of the achievement,” Matzell added. Members of the committee are ABC president Matthew Bennie, Washington, D.C,; ABC vice president Harry Sherwood, Los Angeles; ABC high score awards committee chairman Joe Robelotto, Albany, N.Y., and Raymond V. Arnold, Jack-son, Mich. The luat line d tiie Aitows led by AU-Leag«e ddentive end Don Qnisai, has John Y e r S1 c k, Chko Johnson and Dick Stenns in the front four, with the best linebacker in tiie league Steve Szabo holding down tae middle spot. Jesse Parritii, Mike Pryor, Irv Ratazak and Gene Luppino win have their hands fuU in tiie Kcondary guardii^ the talented iweivers of the All-Stars. Coach Lyle Wells will start Ron Bishop, former Royal Oak Shrine and U. of D. quarterback, against the MFL stars. Flint coach Bob Suci and Ed McCracken of Dayton are assisting ’Tracy in workouts of the All-Stars today. Tickets are available in advance today at Griff’s Grill, Osmun’s Men’s Store, Bob-Ken’s and VFW Post 1370. Gates will open at Wisner tomorrow at 11:30 a. m. Standings I * It I I t M 5 twWay't eai Montreal at Boston Toronto at Chle^ Detroit at Wtw.Y^. Ha^^LM Port Huron atTolatIo Datton at Muskegon Columbus at Fort Wayne Sunflayto Oamaa Toletto at Dayton Fort'‘v5ayne\t Colui^ Monday's fiamas No games scheduled.______ Automatic TRANSMISSION • SERVICE • ALL MAKES ALL MODELS guaranteed'* RELIABLE TRANSMISSION S22 0akland - FE44TI1 Other State Powers Stunned St. Ambrose Wins Crown in Upset Nlcklaus-Palmer , United States Devlln-Nagle ..... Australia Player-Hanning . South Africa Chen-Lu ......... twaelens-Van Donck ......I« De VIcenzo-Rula ......... 06 Argentina Mlguel-Barrloa .......... I4M 40.138—627 CANADA CUP INDIVIDUAL SCORES Geogie Knudson, ..... Arnold Palmer ............ 66-67-6t-202 By the Associated Press Pint-sized Detroit St. Ambrose, ranked fourth in the Associated Press Class C-D prep football poll, won the Detroit Catholic League title Friday with a 64) upset victory over eighth-ranked Class A power Harper Woods Notre Dame. The victory earned the Cava-Uers the right to meet the winner of today’s Etetroit Public School' League championship game ftw the city title next Saturday. - ★ ★ ★ Detioit Denby, ranked No. 3, met Detrwt Southwestern this afternoon. St, Ambrose carried the Irish right down to the wire before winning. Tony Carucci set up the lone TD when he recovered Notre Dame fumble at the Cavalier 46-yard line. St. Ambrose marched 54 yards In 10 to score with Rich Bom-marito punching over fmm the Buchanan, ranked first in The 1 game winning streak. Jim Boyd Associated Press Class B poll, led the Dowagiac assault with Sent into action after David Olivo failed to move Miami, Miller hit 13 of 16 passes for 195 yards, threw for one touchdown, ran for another and allowed no interceptions in two quarters of work. When he turned the job back to Olivo, the score was 31-0. fell to Dowagiac 14-7, and Mid-dleville. No. 1 in Class C-D, was U®pled by Comstock Park 31-7. ~ ■ ■ loss ended a «33- HaroW Hannint South Afric Kel Nagla .... Australia Flory van Donk ............. 4»-4»-72-2» Netherlands Robert De VIcenzo .......... 4»-4»-73—211 Argentina Christy O'Connor . Ireland Sebastian MIgual Spain Martin Roasink . TOP ’TEAM Battle Creek Central, the state’s 1»p Class A power, rolled liast infra city rival Lakeview 21-7 as Eugene Brown scored two touchdowns. T<®-ranked Buchanan and Middleville, sporting a combined record of 64 straight f(X>tbaU victories, suffered stinging upsets Friday in their final games. Chiefs Lose to Bay City (Continued from Page D-1) then intercepted a Bay City s and ran it from his own to the BC 35. A clipping penalty, lost yardage and finally a fumble by Williams stopped any Chief bid. if it it Bay City took over on its - and went the distalice with Maxwell going 15 yards to pay dirt and Owczarcak running the point. The Chiefs came back and after a big run by Jones of 43 yards to thd Bay City one, Williams went over and Prince converted with 7:16 left to play. It was after the ensuing kickoff that Bay City was forced to punt and when Shorter’s block gained the ball for the Chiefs. Pontiac Central and Pontiac Northern will go into their infra-city game next Friday night with identical 44 records. 188 yards in 28 carries, scoring one TD. The winning score came on a 15-yard run by Curley Garrett with an intercepted ass. The last time Buchanan lo fas a 3-0 defeat at the hands of South Bend (Ind.) Clay in the 1963 opener. Comstock Park, only 54 this year, made it four straight victories in ending Middleville’s 31-game winning skein. Comstock Park jumped to a 19-0 halftime lead on a pair of TD passes by Skip Weatherftffd and Middleville never recovered. ’Tom Warner, Middleville’s great halfback, with 1,538 yards and 171 points this season, was knocked unconscious in the second half and was withheld from the game. Frankenmuth, rated second in Clss B, had a scare before edging Elkton-Pigeon-Bayport 20-19. Frankenmuth won after recover ing a Laker fumble at the 17 and marching 83 yards to score. Steve List scored the TD on a 34-yard run. Terry Weiss missed the extra ftoint but a double penalty gave him a second fry and he cashed in tb’'pro-vide the victory margin. Miami Huddle Nets Cookie Car Promise MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - Cookie Gilchrist, The Miami Dolphins’I 260-pound fullback who threat-! ened to quit unless he got a $5,000 car, is getting it. Cookie, one of the toughest backs in the American Football league for four years, huddled with Dolphins’ executive Joe Robbie ’niursday and emerged from the scrimmage vrtth a promise! of the car. “Everything’s fine,” saidl Gilchrist. “I get to keep the car for a year and then have the option to buy it at the wholesale price.” He added: “I haven’t decided on the color yet.” So Gilchrist will accompany his teammates to Kansas City to play the Chiefs Sunday. He bad argued that the car deal was in his contract. Rainstorm Stops Play CARACAS, Venezuela UP) A tropical rainstorm washed out the second round of the Caracas Open Golf Tournament at the Valle Arriba Golf Club Friday, ruining another four-under-par ■ 66 round by Jim Ferree. ★ ★ ★ Ferree, who was the first round leader with a 66, had finished play before the rain washed out all scores. ★ ★ ★ The second round will be played Saturday, and the field will be cut to the low 40 and ties for the 36-hole final on Sunday. I Dean Refram also had a second-round 66 wiped off the board. SLOT RACING * Pontiac’s Largest Raceways 3 Large Tracks 2S0-Ft. Banked Track 156-Ft. Road Course 120-Ft. Skill Track Plus 70-Ft. (VcMiie) Drag Strip NEW 4-Lane Track for the Little Guys Family Fun Center STftPLETQM’S 4455 Highland Rd. (M-59-Pontiac Lk. Rd.) SLOT , RACEWAYS OR 3-9991 Open 10:30-10:30 Daily I Port Huron Sextet Coasts Past Rival COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)-Port Huron struck for two goals early in the first period and went on to an easy 5-3 victory over the last place Columbus Checkers in International League hockey Friday night. The Flags led 5-1 on goals by Frank St. Marseille, Ron Ver-nette, Lloyd Maxfield, Marty Reynolds and Ken Saunders fore Columbus came back with two goals in the last period. Scoring for Columbus were A1 White, Mike Rouleau and Roger Ouimet. Pontiac Consumers Co-Op OPTICAL Eye Exams • Contact Lenses Industrial Safety Glasses Sun Glasses DR. SIDNEY GILBERT Optometrist nil SOUTH TELEGRAPH ROAD PHONE 333-T8T1 V2 Mila South of Orchard Lako Rood A METHOD OF PAYING YOUR BILLS BASED ON YOUR ABILITY TO PAY! OIWE PLACE TO PA¥! SEE Michigan Credit Counsellors 102 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. Phone FE 8-0456 Our 11 th Year THERE'S MORE ACTION AT JACKSON! NIGHT RACING •ompItM JOBAAatchad Ins of INDUSTRIAL & CONSTRUCTION .EQUIPMENT 10 Races Nightly Rain or Shim through November 30 JACKSON HARNESS RACEWAY Compltta SALES, PARTS and SERVICE ■ wheel tractors ■ crawler tractors ■ shovel loaders ■ fork lifts ■ backhoes ■ loaders ■ blades ■ scarifiersy etc. PONTIAC fARM & INDUSTRIAL TRACTOR CO. 825 SOUTH WOODWARD AYE. PONTIAC \ PHONE FE 4-1442 ■■ ' . / AUTO OWNERS! Get Ready For Winter WHEELS FOR SNOW TIRES For most American and foreign cars ACME AUTOPARTS 986 OAKLAND (Bu>. U.S. 10) Half Mil. South of T.lnn>ph Phone 332-9229 335-5661 335-6855 TXoidMl CLEANS AIR A^S IT HUMIDIFIESI MOISTARTS inr nietft W kNrtmiritlii m4 air rttimYt krtap MHbh-frash ak Is |mt biea al Nhrtar Im^ THE HDMIDIFIEH WITH A REVOLVING FILTER BELT Dust, lint Md gQier pong- KTTOW tints m tnppgd aa Sw MOISTMK Rfvolni«HRirliRMd4g- Mil Nr MBaUMinf attnilThH 74» O’BRIEII HEAnilG 371 Vooriieit Rood FE 2-2119 Our Operator on Duty After Hi \