lfh9 Wnalhor vot. vto xo. PONTIAC 208 ' OCTOBER g, 1002^-84 PAGES Prayer Ruling to Be Studied by High Court Verdicti in Marylond, Penniylvanio Will Be Subjean Bible reading in morning opening exercises in sclaxils would be to ignore the traditions of this nation. Edward L. Schempp. member of a Unitarian church in the Gei'-mantown section of Philadelphia, began the litigation. Mis children attended Abln schools. Schirra Suggestion: Move Up Next Shot HOUSTON, Tex. t AP) - Waller M. Schirra Jr., America's most widely traveled space pilot, says he came back from his "textbook tUghl" six times around the world with one suggestkm for the next U. S. space venture; "Just up Us launching date.” He came back from that flight reluctantly, said the 39-year-old Navy commander. ' "1 would like to have gone lor 12 more (orbits)," be said. Sehirra alM told newsmen at a nalbnuilly televised nmvs «toh-ferenee Sunday that at one |mlnt In Ms »-bour. 19-mlnute flight he completely ent hitnsidf off (rum ground control. To conserve the power supply of his iSigma 1 spacecraft, he said, he threw a switch cutting off the electrical system which would: have allowed ground control sta-j lions to bring him out of orbit I in an emergency. dr dr * "From Ihc beginning. ” he said, I wanted to turn off tln> armed squib tconlrol box), which means that it is my capsule and no one can bring me back until I put iho switch back.” He left it off until Christopher Kraft. Project Mercury flight director, told him; "1 think you have proved our point, old buddy." As he told (be story of Wednesday's flight, Schirra maflis9 hours and 13 minutes 1n the weightless world of space sound like a drive to the Comer drug store, dr . dr ■ W" "I had no problems, no uneasiness, «no queasiness,” said Sehir-ra. ”1 had no fatigue. I was ready to continue through one day." He had no moments of apprehension, "Not one." But the near-iN'rleel flight did lack Huinelhbig. In an aside to » treckle-laeed, U-year-old boy In the audience, Schirra contesi^: "I’m sorry, Marty, my son, i did not SIC any green eheese.” Schlrra's flight was the longest paiison to the 61- and 48-orblt flights of the Soviet cosmonauts, Andrian Nikolayev and Pavel Popovich, ,dr ♦ dr . It was a link be.ween the three-orbit flights of John B. Glenn Jr. and Malcolm Scott Carpenter and one-day, 16-orbii mission planned for early next year, possibly in late Fe)«uat>’ or early Maroh. The flight began at 7:15 a.m. Wednesday at Cape Canaveral, Fla., and ended at 4;28 p.m. 275 miles northeast of Midway Island m tie Pacific dr Schirra was picked up by the earrier Kearscarge, and taken to Hawaii where he was placed on flown by an American astronaut, plane which arrived in Houston though a short journey by com- shortly after midnight Saturday. 1 ■ n Doctor Has Visa Problem WeatherMld i Research rime Fleeting! By BAU'H P. HIJMMKI. A local doctor, who has found a possible clue into the cause of multiple sclerosis, now must leave this coun-ti7. He is Dr. Constantine C e r k e z, 30, a resident physician at Bt. voseph Skies Cloudy Next 2 Days Township Varying degrees of cloudiness along with mild temperatures Is the area's v/calhcr picuire ihroiigli Wednasday. ★ dr ^ A low of .'iO with mostly cloudy Skies Is tonight's prediction. Pint-ly cloudy and mild is the outlook for Tuesday. Wednesday’s weather wilt also b« mild with incroasing cloudiness expected. Today’s east winds at 18 to IS miles per hour will slitit to the north and northeast «t to to 17 miles per hour tonight. Tl)c lowest temperature preceding 8 a.m. was 58. By t p.m. the mercui-y reading was 60. Flashes A Waterford Township couple, Armaml Guerrero, 4t, and bis Wile, Isih, 89, were fmmd dead of knife wounds In what police believe wan a murder and sul-ttMe In their home at 8888 Island Park Drive aboat aaea today. The deaths were dlseav-ered by the eeaple’s daughter, Mandra, d, when she eame home EURPIA. CaUI. W-The pisue of missing Rep. Olem Miller, D-Calif., was found today on a monatMn slope 8( to 80 miles ea»t sf Eureka. Two ‘ DK. CKRKEZ In Today's Press Total Score state Dorns evaluate impact of Keim''f>y's visit — PAGE 18, Ohio Campaign rages at high pitch — PAGE to. Phase, Mama Imiwrtanl to clilldron for mom to visit school — PAGE tn. His discovery eventually could bring to multiple sclerosis victims lUmHar Itope of a normal life now olteied diuheloH vi<’tims thiough drugs. It links multiple sclerosis amt diabotes t(« a similar delect in the life mechanism. ♦ a But time Is running out on Dr. t!pHte;t. Having stqdled U.S. medicine lor five years on an exchange visa, he must leave for his native Tur-key within a month. With luck, he bn|ws l« entry to Canada Instead. Pi bly he might return lu I'.S. Nfsirob tuoUUies Inter. But (or the moment his resoai ch here is "A lot of people have tried to gel my visa extended so 1 could slay." ho says. "Tliey failed. But please don't say anything bad aiwui the government: If 1 have to , I will." Bitter Speech Interrupted by Anti-Castroites Sttvenion Chargei Island Is Springboard for Aggrassion UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. I . (^1—In an uproarouj meet- | f Injr of the General Asaem- ‘ bly today Cuba called on the United Nations to brand as an act of aggression any naval blockade of Cuba by the United States. Outside the meeting, chief U.S. delegate Adlai E. Stevenson declared that the Fidel Castrp regime by importing Soviet weapons( and personnel had turned his island country into a springboard for aggression to overthrow the American system. The Cuban position was i cd by President Osvaldo Doriicos Torrado in a bitter speech interrupted repeatedly by anti-Castro hecklers. ★ w * He challenged Stevenson to stand p and give guarantees that there would be no U, S. attack on his couptry. ■ ' ' DE5ION8TRATOR EJECTED - Guards lake an unidentified man from the gallery at the United Nations today after hecklers re-pealirily interrupted a speech by Cul)an Pres- ident Osvaldo Porticos to the general assembly-Porticos demanded that the United Nations condemn as “an act of war" what be called a U.S, naval blockade. Fidel, Lawyer Discuss Release of Prisoners _____________ _ to U. N. From (Hir News Wires tradition, refused to onswor the HAVANA - New York iattorney chief of slate directly In the as- g Donovah oBd Premier sembly. Fidel Castro met secretly today in He told a iHirriedly colled news jwhat was purportedly the final conference the United States would {phase of talks to free 1,113 Cuban never rommit aggression against Cuba. WOULD ACT.I)lI|f%UV But he add(>d he wanted to make M clear that the United Stales would act quickly to stop aggri's-sion launched by any other country against the Western Hemis-pheiT- Stevenson said the United States already had begun to lake mpasares to shut off Ike shipment of arms and war materials to Cuba and that preparations are under way lor a eol-iConlinued on Page 2, Col. 4) r.\i;HF!4 STIH Dr. Ccrk<’/'s rosenreh caused n stir In t;.,S. mcdieal .Inly when he puWlshed his findings in n national mcdicul journal, "Diseases of Ihe NervoUs System." CollaborutoiH in his work were two l«*al brothers. Dr. Jow'ph H. £ .Chandler, St, Joseph Hospital neu-i Irologisl, and Dr. Douglas Chund--t her, chief of medicine there. Obituaries . ...........28 Hisirts..... 22-29 Theaters ................20 TV ami Radio Programs 8.2 I. Earl ................88 Dr. O'rkez had tackled a Socarras fold a rally of 1,100 He said he hoped the Untfoil Cubans In New York that a landing States would help out in the fiMl force of Cuban exiles is already in stages of the aseault, although Cfo invasion prisoncr.s. training tor Ihe planned attaek, but bans would form the '‘llrst liifo ql There was no Indicatloii of wiiere itt did not wty where fljuY the two men might be meeting -——<—------------------------..—-Z------------------------------ hut It ifoaM' be nearby Vanidero Beach where they talked tor seven hours last Week id dliciHM Cghtto'a Hiller's Grand 5Mi$ Powers Giants Ahead, 6-2 9-2 lead over the New Ywk Yankees here today in the fourth game of the World Series. *, * The Giants' rookie second base-man connected off Yankee relief piloher Marshall Bridges with two out. Whitey Ford started on the mound for New York hut was lifted tor a pinch first, Skowron trapped 1, Boyer to third, Ford to second. Kubek sato on error, bases play. No runs, 2 hits. ghUh Innhqt GIANTS Meys grounded otd. F. Alou groiinded out. Gepeda grounded, out.. No rUM. no hits. YANKEES ■ “ ‘ ‘ * iiUtside l(H7ii1ons will end ever, say that this payment must be In eash, k * k n«c Cuban premier's brother warned that If there were another Invasion, the attackers this lime would not be ransomed but would be shot. Meanwhile, Dr. trarlos Prio Oocarras, Cuban president lieforc Ihe regtote of Fulgcacto Battsla and riirrcnlly leader of aa anil- GIIAI’lllt' REMINDER ~ More than '20 Oakland County lire departments paraded along Saginaw Stieet Satusday to kick off Fire Proventlon Week activities tiVl. T-«». Shown her* U a Went ttoBfnfleld Township truck. The parade waa (ollowwd by a field day program at the Norlhrid* ball park, with various lire de- partmont units oompeilng (or trophies to a tost (d their effletoncy. weak. Utorature will he dtolributod at schools and Wms on fire | Quiz Lets You Test on News Knowledge I which What are the vital Issue rouble our world today ? Readers of The Pontiac Press are In the knoiv and now have a way to test themselves In the we<]|f-1^ News Qtllz, (Mind today on page The <|Hls Is part *f (he ed-ucsllun program of The INmtIac newsreel program In some Pun-llae area sehools: The films acquaint aludnnta with current events hy showing photos from around the world. 'They aic compiled by the Visual Edurution Center of Madison, WIs., experts in educational film programming. Answer to today's News QuI* appear on page 10, \ > ■ ■ game at t-t. A two-run horner; ■ hy catcher Tom Mailer in the second gt le Giants an early 2-0 margin. Juan Marlchal started Tor 1he Giants but had to leave after lop of the fifth when he injured his pilchtog hand while batting. Tom Bolin took over and was chased to Ihe Yanks' 2-run sixlFi. . FIRST INNING GIANTS—Kuenn filed out. Hiller lined to short. Mays groundcii out, No runs, no hits. ' YANKEES - Kubek walked. Richardson fanned, Kuto'k oUt stealing. Tresh singled. Mnnile NEW YORK - A grand slam YANKEES •- Bo home run by Chuck HiUer in the (Martchal litjiUvd hi top o< the seventh inning puihed Stonyron siqi^. Boyer smgifa (hie San Francisco Giants Into a Skowron to third. Ford grounded fanned. No rons, 1 hit. SECOND INNING (HANTS - F. Albu doubtiH^ Cepeda grounded out, Alou lieW, ed out. 2 runs, 2 bits. YANKEES - Maris filed out. Howard lined out. Skowron tripteJ. Boyer (lied out. No runs, I hit^ TMni Inning GIANT'S - Marlchal fli«d out. Kuenn grounded out. Hiller ground-1 out. No runs,'W> hits. YANKEES - Ford (lied out. KU-hek filed out, Rlchardma walked. Tresh filed out. No nine, no Idto. . Fourth hsMiig' ' GIANTS-Mays tingled: F, Alou grounded into a . double play. Ce-peda (lied to Marts. No ifunti hit. yANKEP^^Manll# slnick out. Marls grounded out, Howard fan-, red. No runt, ,tH» hit*. FHIh Inalag GIANTS — Davenport grounded out. Haller singled. Pagan singled, Haller taking third. Marichal Kuenn walked. Hiller giants -r Ooato* relieved Ford. Davenport walked. Haller atnick out. Id. Alou batted for Pagan and doubled. Dhvenport stopped at third. Bailey announced tor Lar-aen, Bridge* replaced C’oa«8, Nlie-man hatted tor Bailey and walked Illy, Kuenn popped o«t. Hiiler homered. Mays grounded out. 4 runs, 2 hits. . YANKEES - O’Difll pitching tor Giants. Richardson died out. Tr«(4» 9Ul. Mantle popped out. No' runs, no hits. ElgMh lanhig GIANTS r- F. Alou graundfd out. CefoNfo funned. Davenport walked. Haller tanned. No rung. No hits. YANKEES-Maria fouled Pi|Oltiq NorthWest while rain Is fore-la. It wfil bo 1 1 be cooler in the east-I and aeutbs^ through the Ohio and Storms Slash MuchofU.S. He added, however, that it IS absurd to say that these self-protective measures are aggressive or warlike. From Our News Wires A deluge struck Dallas, Tex., today. Flash floods swept cars off streets, cau.sed some home evacuations and stranded i-esidents. Rain measured 4.67 Inches between 3:t)8 a.m. and 7:.30 a'.i practically paralyzing the northern portion of the city. Continued moisture was forecast through tormorrow. Other Dallas County towns i-o-ported Serious flooding. Storm - stunned New England braced for more flooding today in the wake of Hurricane Daisy, which hustlM off to assault Canada's Maritime Provinces. Heavy rains during the night washed scattered areas of the from. Ohio to Oregon. In the midwest, the downpoilrs were accompanied by damaging wind balsy teamed up with a punishing nor’easter to leave a trail of death and deotmetlan In the ■lx New EnglaUd Mate*. Twqnty-elght deaths were attributed to the weekend whipping. ly homeless and property damage estimates soared Into the mlllioni. The weather bureau . said last Ight “Daisy is no longer a hurricane," but flood waters remained met the length of New England coast, and Hdn-swollen rivers were expected to conttaw risbig. The hind quarters of the buck parts of both fawns taken. All according to conservation officers who were summoned by 81a- Proud Lake Recreation Al Masini estimated that the 175-pound buck, his 110-pound mate and the fawns had been ________ sometime Saturday or' early Sgp. day. They were found at 2 p.m. Sunday. AsksCondemnation of U.S.'Blockade' (Continued From Page One) leclive defense of the hrmls- If Cuba really wants to resume friendly relations with its neighbors, he said, it might start by severing its ties with the Soviet bloc. In grave tones, Dorticos re- minded the delegates that Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Oro-m.vko had warned that jiny attack on Cuba means war. "We believe In the sincerity nnd value of those statements of solid-arity by the Soviet Union," he asserted. "If the United States does believe it, then It does what principles SOVIETS APPLAUD Dorticos’ reference to a U.S. naval blockade brought a prolonged burst of applause from the Soviet bloc, a small group of African delegates and some visitors in the public galleries. At the conclusion of his speeeh. a group In I unfolded a | They were hurriedly hustled out of the gallery by guards. Ad«fi^uDr R«fr«sh0d by Vocation in Italy BONN (UPI) - Chancellor Kon-id Adenauer returned \from a month-ieng vacation Ul Italy last ' ' I, appearing relaxed and in good spirits. A * A\ The 86-year-old chancellor received a stream of West German and foreign officials during bis vacation In Cadenabbla, on north-em Italy’s Lake Como. Romney Sets 2 Talks Here on Thursday By . The Associated PreiM Michigan's campaign for gove^, nor goes on the air waves tonight in the final lour weeks before the Nov. 6 election. vDemocratic Gov. John Swainson and his Republican challenger. George Romney, clash tonight in 1ebat| foi public debatl for thb first time In the campaign. ★ ★ ★ Detroit radio stations WWJ and WJR will broadcast the houi^long pri^pram, starting at 8:30 p.m. It will be rebroadcast at 10:30 p.m. Tuesday over WDTM-FM. llieaday night Swainson and Romney will appear in the first of three television debates. Channels 2 (WJBK). 4 (WWJ) and 7 (WXYZ) will can^ the debate from 7 to 7:30 p.m. MORE DEBATES The same stations will telecast two more TV debates—also from 7 to 7:30 p.m. — Wednesday, Ocf. 17 and Friday, Oct. 26. plants in Troy—AMT Oorp., 1816 E. Maple Road, at t p.m., and Industro - Matlvo Oorp., W»1 d. at S:40 p.m. At 3:10 p.m., the GOP gubema-.jrial candidate will visit Rochester for a handshaking tour of the village’s downtown area. A scheduled Sept. 22 trip to Rochester was canceled when the time was needed for taping of Romney’s controversial television Interview by Guy Nunn. In accordance with his custom, Romney did not Campaign Swainson’s politicking was limited to an appearance before an audience of Detroiters ol Italian descent celebrating the discovery of America by Christopher Colum-470 years ago this month. FiVe Ki7/ecHH00%rt}^^ I:M p.m., go from there to Miracle Mile Shopping Center, a.id attend a dinner meeting of Oakland County certified public Romney also Is slated to virit the Armenian - American Cultural Building at 22001 Northwestern Hwy. in Southfield Thursday night. He will try out a new campaign idea Wednesday nxiraing when .he will hop aboard the suburban train in Bloomfield Hills and ride with commuters to downtown Detroit. Time for Research Fleeting; Doctor (Continued From Page One) cirenit. The patient develops There is no known cure. Instead of suspecting viruses, infections or allergies — all research alleys trod before — Dr. Cerkez suspects a defect in the victim’s body metabolism, a previously untried research path. He found his clue in testing ten patients at St. Joseph Hospital over a period of two years. Dr. Cerkez one day compared two test curves, tracing two patients’ sugar use under stress over period of hours. One of the curves was that of multiple sclerosis victim. MATCHING CURVES ’The other curve belonged to a patient with a disorder called pre-diabetes. 'The curves matched. They matched in seven out ol Cerkez’s 10 multiple sclerosis tlms. Immediately Dr. Cerkeg suspect-I that the same metabolism defect was present in multiple scle^ osis victims and patients in thi pre-diabetic state. To avoid the possible trap that pre-dlahetle, he ehecked them for diabetle his- “The future will show if we have here really one disease with two faces or whether we have two diseases with a similar defect," says Dr. Cerkez. of sugar, the body’s energy Vnlike the persistently recurring symptoms of regular diabetes, prediabetes shows erratic sugar levels only under stress. SIMILAR MALFUNCnON Doctors have known the malfunction is similar In diabetes victims and pre-diabetes victims who later develop full-fledged diabetes With Oerkez’s discovery, a third multiple adcroals —Indicates a similar defect in the sug- Campaign Hits the Air Waves Swoinson, Romnay Debating Tpnight Bimingham Area News 2 Rezoning Requests' to Get Publio Hearings _________________Club of Detroit forum at Cobo Hall wtll be broad- In tonight’s debate, Swainson and Romney wlO have 15 minutes to discuss state Issues. Then will have two minutes eaeh to in Traffic on Weekenc BIRMINGHAM — Two rezoning requests already opposed by several Birmingham residents will be aired at public hearings scheduled for 8 Pifo- today. The City Commission will consider one request tonight to rezone property bounded by West Maple Road; Waterfall Lane and City Park and another platted site on the northeast corner of West Maple Road and Waterfall Lane. Developers want this property A former dean of humanities at the Massachusetts Institute of TTochnology, Dc. Purdell served ’The proposed zoning change has been disputed in letters to the (ytty Conimission by the Birmingham Improvement Association, which sents 77 homeowners in the neighborhood, and several other individual property owners. The objectors claim that the re-zoning would Increase traffic haz-lower property values in the area and amount to "spot zoning." Another public hearing scheduled for tonight’s City Commission meeting involves rezoning a site on the east side of Lakeside Ave-lear the city-owned cemetery from public property to single family residential. Edwin S. Burden, resident consultant of the Oanbrook Foundation, has been elected to the board of directors of the National Recreational Association. of the Mld-Idle Eut Tech-DR. RUWDBLLnical University and chief of mission for UNESCO, both in Ankara, ’Turkey. Dr. Burden, who lives at 335 Barden Road, Bloomfield HUI*> also is former president of th« (jooper Union for the Advancement-of Science and Art in New York aty. tDeell M, Knlghtf Service tor former Birmingham resident dteil M. Knlghtf, 70, of Pompano Beach, Fla., win bo at 2 p.m, tomorrow at the Manley Bailey Funeral Home. Burial will be in IWhite Chapel Memorial Cem-tery, Troy, Mr. Knlghtf died Friday in a Pompano Beach h^ital after a He was a member ol the Pom-pano Beach Presbyterian Cihurch. Surviving besides his wife Elea-..3T are a son, Lee M. of Sunny-side, Wash.; three daughters, Mrs. Everett Gould of Drayton Plains, / - • il Rzasa of Westfield, / Mrs. Michael ________ . . , N.J., aid Mm. Paul Bird of Ml- / Ian, III; two sisters and 13 grknd- r HWITE and TUESDAY SfEfim,s"\ SIMMS DISCOUNT BASEMENT traffic accidents Oakland County took 'the lives of five persons, including three children. Two of the children Were killed when the car they were riding In with an aunt struck by a train near Holly. Ymr To Date 71 The other was killed in Pondac. The latest victim was Harry G. Laprntt, 26. of Unlonvllle. who died early this morning at Pontiac General Hospital from injuries received in an accident late Saturday. Ijipralt was driving north on Elizabeth Lake Road In White lobe Township when he lost control of the car as he entered a curve Just sooth of MW. The car rolled over Into a ^fleld. Lapratt's wife Sylvia, 24, is in serious condition at the hospital. Two-year-old Tamara Ann Reece, daughter oil Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Reece, 595 Nevada SI., was killed Saturday when she ran In front of a car near her home. DEAD ON ARRIVAL The youngster was dead on arrival at Pontiac General Hosplial. The Reece girl was killed shortly after 4 p.m. when she darted In front of an auto driven by Mrs. Annie R. Green, 41, of 464 Nevada Mrs. Green naM she had 'Just Nevada at W-U miles per hour when she heard a thud against She said she had not seen the child and did npt know that she hit someone until her passenger. Hazel Edwards, 33, of 498 Nevada, told her. Pontiac police said that there were no cars parked along the Mrs. Green was released after making a statement to the county The vietims of the Satarday E. Clartie, 61. of Mil N. Vemoii Ave., Flint, and Bherryi and Douglas Saber, ■ and 7 yearn oM, of 18MI Gravel Lake Road. Holly SIMMS Hoovywnlflht all cotton/theet blan% kots witir floral priiit on whlto backgroung. Seconds of bettor quality. About 64x72 inches. RAYON-NYLON Bl«nd Irrmulorj of $3.49 voluei— 90% royon blended with 10% nylon. 3-Inch satin binding. Choice ol 4 colors. Easy to lounder. Wash-’n’ WowFIumIi Boys’Shirts SI.29 Big Miection of prints, plaids, chocks and pottorns. Sport stylos In sizes 6 to 16. Warn QHILT UNMIi Boys’Jackets In Popular BOMBSR Stylo 100 ouaranthd Wotor repolloni shoon gabardine with l(L ounce lining lor warmth. Zipper frost, 3 slosh pockets, elastic Inserts el waist. 4 colers— charcoal, npvy, block er brown In elzoi 610 18. Mrs. Clarke, who was taking the, children tor a ride, apparently was going west on Lahrlng Rood when the train smashed Into her car, according to Sheriff deputies. Mrs. Clarice wps thrown out of the car on Impact but the bodies of (he children were found In (he wreckage. Hm cor bad been pushed nearly a hidf-mUe down the Iracka before t , ;.Ti raK3a. Moiro/tY. octobbr »■ im ■ '‘WW \ ■? Rwls$«tOlfN.BM VmKLk, 8wM« (AP>«»t1l* MinM^e«l iBMltute «f 1/p|MMla Uahwnlily rc|iit«t«t Sunday night •nothcr Soviet mictaar teet in gw Novayt Zemiya ana, the tnotltiite reiKurted today. Jt was the isth in the pteeent anriee to be recorded of three n ■ WANTEDI A MAN THAT: 1. Wolfc* aieno 2. Necdi a fuN.tiiM e( ,, Ml an ahort on built'ira, irm-ttandlng unite an the only loIuUon aUe to « Wl NAVI . WHAT YOU NllPf NKW FAKiy MFOEE •« The euccessor to the Soil Right Market, Biizabeth Lake and located only a few yards cast. The old market Teiegnph roads. Is the Country Party store is being tom down, Call n or laaaiit a» 219 Veoihals *Asfc hK OMtT Baptists Back Kennady AN» miTHQNI PHILADELPHIA (AP) - 1116 Gnater Philadelphia Baptist Ministen Conference, In a telegram inade public Sunday gave President Kennedy “its wholehearted approval of your action in enforcing the court's order in the James Meredith case.’’ Party Store Will Open on Elizabeth lake Road Sure Bookcase Can Be Adjusted. game boms can be top of each oUmbs. .. Another idea: Haasocka with UR- space while serving as foot-stools aof difr In the '•game ceater,”' yen’s aug to store dMKdter boards,, toyg. duds, etc. near the tabls whee« tbey’U be used. You migM reserve several shelves in a bookcase for these items If you don't have room for a aerate unit. For accesalbillty and It’a a gr»d idea to adjust the shelves fairly close together so ; only a limited le boms MlMi ] PARK FREE m City M.-tcr lol OPiNTMfiif#n|Ml WetherUl Mesa, in Mesa Verde athmal Park, was the home of .ueblo Indians who OourlMied for centuries and reached a high state of culture before mysteriously vanishing TOO years ago. Their cruipbHng bvdldings are being staUlised ao they can be open^ eventually to the public. ’jgWWCHEg I «msE Preparations are being made for the new Country Party Store, Ell^ , next month Of ^ : grand opening next month of ^ ^ according to its own- r ' ss*”''*’*'* -tine W •**^ *''’*'****** rte* *’ MOV.* *00 **^ 1^ I. SMamsa, O.D. 109 N. Saglnsw Street i 9ii0 to 5:)0 f 9:30 to 1:30 Mrs. James Felice said the store is noF open for business but a special occasion is planned t< inclde with the grand opening in November of an adjacent drive-in restaurant that is now under construction. VnUI recently Mrs. Felice op- tabllshed by her father about M years ago at the corner of Elisabeth Lake Road and Telegraph. The build|ii| is being rased to make way for the drive-in parking lot. The store tyiU carry the usua line of staples in addition to liquor and party foods, Mrs. Felice said. The $30,000 structure is of Early American design, even to the point of using exposed beams in the ' terior and ..wagon-wheel light 1 tures. Small panes of stained glass, are used on the ^#est side of the builc ing. The store, 429 Elizabeth Lak "AMP* Brand Seat Can Mal(or*»Uit^ilZ.9S -SIMMS PRICE- 7.88 fMtfon Itaring Adjutfi gYoung a Hyfon It i Rugged stool, tokei plenty of obuso. Bettor thon pictured. ti Hoiet roa cwm8TiM8 SIMMS.*"™' >taginaw St. «trtMoMrs-IOAM.toll>.M. ------- kfrf.“ ------ Chock SIMMS Low PMCiS & on MfN'S and LADIES’ , wgreHES J ?Our Aro So low Wo Con'tg lEMwition the Fomovt BRAND NAMES % i. . . Comporo Our EVERYDAY DIS-« SCOUNT PRICIS,. gwgwiiw--ii^....... £9 i I w%>mt>iw»....... 47®* ■: r:Ro|JIMg ;:WRT0Nn-no ^:brond watches. Doublo GUARANTEED ^ f;by makers ond Simms. Pay cosh, poy S '^iless-usa freo loyowoy. AH pricof J r! 1075 W. Huron St Phono 334-9957 , Abcdrdlng to the Nationaf Small I Huillta omKCr WlitoW"iig " I ant single property is streng Tests by the Federal Forest I Products Laboratory prove that i is actually stronger, pound for pound, than steel. The quality is an important rea.son why lumber forms the structural frame works of moet American homes. HATTER PRICESL EMPLOY-THE-HANDICAPPED WEEK October 7 to 13 YOU help hire HANDICAPPED PEOPLE wl|ien you CONTRIBUTE DISCARDS TO GOODWILL INDUSTRIES ...or Purchase Reconditiqnod Merchandise in Your Locai Goodwiii Store G/yiL FE 2-1496 For a ^Goodwill Collection Truck Shop at Pontiac's New Goodwll Retail Stan ISEaitPikeStrael OiNi 0ff Hi# ConvDniont Colltclioiii Cenlmrs at Your Nolghboriiood Supomncirkot Parking tot CLO1HIN0-4»|0ESr'-1[OY5 Skillfully Reconditioned and Soldi by Goodwill's Handicapped Employes. 4/' ^ L Ttiii ^ce Contributed os a Public Service by Mr* Robert Dawson I Hi'' THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 8> 1^62 For Reading Meters Utility’s Key Plan Works necmtly, a ww ___________ locked herself in the bnseinent of 3he was few^shly hacking away at the door with a butcher knife when, suddenly, to her sw-prise, the door was unlodc^ and opened hy.a Consumers Power Company meter reader. meter man’s book to determine the house and the lock the key fits. He had the key to her house. In fact, the company has. to more than 3,90dtH)UaM in Fontiae. Consinners' "Key Plan"! has Increased In popularity in the past few years, according to C. “ Brown, Pontiac Division manag- ‘Although lost keys have never Mine^a pinUan,^ each is tagged with the company's address to help insure their return. Keys for each route are out of our office one day each month.’’------- er. ’rhonaands of residenta In eitlea aerved by Osnanmara Power have entruated their houae keya to the company In the evmt they aren’t homo when “ reader makes I The key plan presently in effect in the Pontiac area calls for a letter to be sent requesting the customer to entrust the compapy a key to his house after three KUtive bills have been estimated. Each key Is identified by a number, which is a three-part identification r designating the district, meter man's book or route number and the customer’s number in that book. "The identification number is of no use to anyone who might find a lost key,’’ explained Brown, "since the finder would need the • S|wcM This WNk 4 Blutberry FilUd DONUTS 6-35 fit of thee ________mers like it and meter readers eertalnly appreciate it," JSownJ»«a!!dtA------- "It’s much better than returning time after time in lutile at- ‘The-keV‘ohm is ltiiendsd m for gas meters. Moat electric me- Before Election Day Senator Predicts U.S. in Cuba BBDPOBD, NJS. (AP)->Seti. Nortis CoUon. E-NJBT., predieted Banday night, -We will be in Cnbs hetpre Ilee-tien Dsy.- The BepabUcsn eenntor told s GOP rally: -PU make thia predietlon-4ot for the pnrpeae of esrrylng the elee-thm^ r do normnsn thai-hni, H the President Iwepe on traveling out into the hinterlands snd hearing how the American people feel, I prediet that before eleetlon day. We will be tli Cttha” Cotton, a candidate for re-eleetlon, declared-the ringing. vlUi Issue In this capspslgn Is becoming Cnhs.” Tomara Lockhart Soil Wadding in Novtmbar TROY — Announcement Is made Of the ^engagement of Tamara Lockhart and Robert O. Renahaw by the bride-elect’s parente,- Mr. and Mrs. J. Uwson Lockhart, U1 Wendelton St. The prospective bridegroom Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis F. IlMishaw, €0M Niles St. A Nov. 17 wedding is planned. rica. Swahili and other Bantu laiiupiages are spoken in the aouth. | a PftOmStONAL d» Voor . "ORTRAlTe, 518 I Near General UoafiBA ft 4-36e&W„^ ’ When the meter reader can’t get into a house, the company ■-------------- customer’s bill. en and Oonsumen would like them, aceordlng to Brown. "With the yearly Increase in the number of new gas space heating customers,’’ Brown noted, actual meter reading becomes in- HST's Charge Brings Threat of Libel Suit EVANSV1L*LE. Ind. ,, ...Third Floor Pilo or Quilt Lined! GIRLS' 7-14 WOOL COATS Reg. 19.99 Belted bock or dressy 100% wool cools In solid colors or bold plaids. Orion ocrylic pile or quill lined. Grey, brown or green in sizes 7 to 14. Girls’ rear.., Second Floor Very Special Sellingl "AAAGIC CREPE PRINT DRESSES Qualify usually found at much highor pricosi 'A Short Sloovo Shirtwaist ★ % Sloovo Shirtwaist lovely, easy care magic crepe print dhaSses by Mar4ynn Casuals of an exciting low prl^j W«9f I|m». or without oIWk’ Cfibrt^ or red prints in sizes 10 to 20 and 14Mt to 24Mi. Daytime Dresses... Third Floor Womon's Orion BULKY KNIT SWEATERS Nice 100% Orion acrylic bulky knit sweaters with two pockets. Chqqse white, black, blue, pink or mlnf in sizes S,M,L,XL Sovt nowl ^ Dreu Aecessoriis... Street Floor CLASSIC or CONTINENTAL LOAFERS Pick a pair of eachl Smart continental or classic loafers, each in your choice of English wax calf or black leather. Terrific low pricel romen’s Shoes,.. Street Fleer BELLEAIR LONG WEARING MUSLIN SHEETS Rog.1.99 TWIN Rog.2.29 FULL -- Rog. 98c pr. CASES '149 >tJH 79* Dewestiw,.. FewiA fker 100% Orlont and Wool Blondtl AAEN'S CARDIGANS JUen’s Wear... Street Fleer 4 Styloil Franch Puiioi and Protty Prints in Woltx Length Slrathnl Franch MIHwl WOMEN'S WALLETS COTTON ROBES ' HAND SOAP 3.90 $499 , VaiwM ‘ ’ CovdiWe welleM end ftwich IWiit In 4 celoW. frelty prints end pbldi In ilm 10 to 19. Weihobb. Sin lyiNM In die eswrtiwMl, Stock epi HaiMaat.,,SirmFlaer lMet.,.Seeeifdnaer CewneilM... fenivA fleer \ V <‘ ■■ ' . - . ' i ' 1 '.'.J • , CaotorMIddySMs MEh /MEN’S PAJi^ f;: hi‘lM»'^'". Sqnlarkei bmeddtO b IwB h4'MiAkk 4 Ik A #1 \Ai.....teef , THE PONTIAC PRESS Huron StrOet ; ' MONPAY, OCTOBER 8.1962 Pontiac, Michlgui joKa A. mwT. 5Swt*irnt*"DlrMtor a MuMhau Jo«mii. Lixml Advertlitni ItSeems to Me ... . Russians’ Increased Interest in Religion Alarms Mr. K Uoubles are multiplying in Russia. Gfood! Religion is receiving attention. ★ ★ ★ When I was in Moscow two years ago, there were approximately 50 churches for seven million people. We have more than 125 in our own area of 125,000 people, ★ ★ We visited two churches and were struck by the age of those present. The people were well into their 50s and 60s--or around 10. It simply meant the remnants of the holdovers in religious generations were in attendance, and they were taking their grandchildren. Their own offspring—■ the fathers of the grandchildren —werO disbelievers and scoffed at the whole idea of God as they have been taught to do. Their remarks on religion left us speechless and aghast. They treated God as indifferently as you would someone you’d heard a casual rumor about on Mars. miles, issue prudamations, circulate pronunciamentos all over the globe-and then twiddle our thumbs while Russia builds menacing offenses within 90 miles of our shoreline. Newspapermen who are closer to the scene than 1 am suggest that John F. Kennedy may be listening too intently, too often and altogether too seriously to Adlai Stevenson. ★ ★ ★ There were well-grounded rumors last June that he would never weatlier the summer at the United Nations. But he still holds forth— calmly, serenely and apparently in complete control. Military men say it was this same unperturbable “statesman” who dissuaded Kennedy from lending naval aid during the-abortive “invasion” last winter. ★ ★ ★ A host of people are coming to the conclusion Stevenson may well be one of the weak links in a chain that isn’t too stout at best. Voice of the People: ‘Lcf 8 Do SonMng Now to Clean VpOurCW ain’t PontUu; keep Ke etreete end parke clean? My dam at Webster School took a Meld trlH to Beaudetto Park. BtUken glam and bottles Writes Ahoot Staff, Editorial Page ^Has Press Fought for Constitution?* le editorial page every day you could say the views are conservative. Bui !■ M true that the men on the editorial staff must wear double-brested suits and hand paint«] ties? The press of the U.S. fights to keep the press free, but has the press fought to keep the Constitution as it should? P. L. V. tleaUy rewritten In vMnI pnrts, ^ not by the people but by aswrr (Ion — “orafty argnmenta of h More Give'^iews on Mississip^ We urge an immediate myesll-gation of Mississippi becfausi^the upon by ambllhras poUtielano.” Horn. Guilt by Association David Lawrence Says: state has suffered an unwarranted assault. We’ll take the word of Governor Barnett any time. Contempt is due those who want to force hundreds of thousands to live contrary to their traditions and in many cases under conditions the arbiters refuse themselves. We have troops to crush an old custom while the nation’s danger builds up undeterred, ninety miles Thomas Jefferson said, “In questions of power let no more be heard of confidence in man, but bind him down from mischief by the chains of the Constitution.” There Is m power over edu-eatlon given to the FederjU Cov- If the aapteme Court ena ehnnge the raUnge what Is to stop It Mississippi Issue Delves Deep We have allowed politicians to disregard the Constitution and one wonders how much liberty we have I believe that inborn in nearly all And m ConcluSlOlt . • . • peoples are an instinctive reverence Jottings from the wfll-thumbed andli regard for the Hereafter—how- notebook of your perlpatetic re-ever It may be conceived. Even Chief porter: Pontiac respected and bowed before Virginia Martin, the redhead with the t«Happy Hunting Ground” where sid Caesar. hasAYOcaliange of three. Ihe <|eparted teaves and their squaws octaves: from A below middle C to would foregather. E flat above high C—whatever that WASHINGTON —The Mississippi story — legally speaking — is just beginning to unfold one of its most important issues. Every slate in the Union could be affected. For the U. S. Court of Appeals, 5th Circuit, really raised the ease of Gov.j pamelt of Missls-J sippl the question' of whether the LAWRENCE of charge and subjected to a jail sentence, thus interfering with the ex- ★ ★ ★ Khrushchev has just ordered hi$ Russian newspapers to take up the cudgel against a current is.............America is still the land of opportunity. Every citizen-yes, every citizen—can vote for the Kennedy of his own choice of religious belief. It has ............Las Vegas gamblers haven’t alarmed him sufficiently to draw added censure. Antireligious pCSbpaganda has been sharply stepped up. The people are ordered to “cease and desist.” The older folks he leaves alone to nurture their “quaint beliefs” as they see fit for any Russian belief in God is to pass on with their deaths. ★ ★ ★ But Ck)D Is again on the ascendency in His most unholy country— aiid against unremitting opposition. Food Is Big Problem .... China is learning. decade back, the Chinese embalmed on a “great industrial expan-sioil” which was heralded with the beating of drums and public celcbra-tlorifi. But the move’s a dud. ★ ★ ★ More Chinese are dying for lack of food and malnutrition than ever before. It Is difficult to believe in this country, but reports Hpggest that tens of millions are steadily on the actual brink of starvation in addition to those t|iat have already succumbed. Now emphasis switches sharply til agriculture. . It has to. ★ ★ ★ There are so many of these miserable, unhappy people, Chiano Kai-feels an invasion of the an ounce of sentiment or friendliness ...............At the moment the smart money’s on Rocicefeller, Romney and Nixon in the gubernatorial races—and in that order .......... Ole Miss Is having internal troubles. Faculty members are casting about for next year and some students are indicating the same sentiments. ★ ★ ★ Purely personal nomination for an especially attractive young lady: Tania Verstack, crowned “Mias International” at lx>ng Beach, Calif. ercise ot his duties as the chle! executive of a state. For decades past the principle accepted by the federal and state courts has been that a president of the United States or the governor of a state can be removed from office only by the Impeachment process. If the rule Is reversed now by the Supreme Court of the llnited Slates — aNNiinilng that It will rhiMise to hear the ease at all — It would be possible lor a private lltiKaiit hereafter to Insist that a presld<-nl or a g feels war would get votes, let’s start it in Mississippi or Alabama. I like this town and the people TRjwernnTOsrR (wmmiireF; at ahy“ moment it may elect, to determine whether or not the governor shall perform the duties of his office. "The .recognition of such power in Cofigress irf to admit that the power lies in one department of the federal government to utterly destroy the entire concept of dual sovereignty." , Teaching Hours Much Too Short every day so we could read about trouble elsewhere. Dr. Brandstadt’s Mailbag: How can a child get an education when he doesn’t go to school on the average ot four short days a week. We get a note every week saying there is a day off. Just look at the week vacations they have. The hours are too short. Teaching is losing standing. Says Policemen Did No Wrong Cataracts Usually Linked to Advancement in Age 5 Forest J The "foot race incident" should have never been condemned by the chief of police. The officers involved should have been commended instead of ridiculed. It is not uncommon to become drow- sy. Complains of Films for ‘Adults Only’ Officer Bookie put his life at stake for tha. people, chasing a Bob BurnH the next Negro that enters Ole Miss should take Sonny Liston as a bodyguard, in which case he’d be registered, signed and en- Even congressional committees could then order a president to appear ix'forc them, and, if he refused to do so, a judicial summons could Ik- issued demanding that he show cause why he shouldn’t be hold in contempt. If he were adjudged In contempt, he could then be imprisoned and thus removed from the office to which h(- had b(-en elected. It so happens that these very issues were .discussed in July 19.51 when a U.S. Senate committee, investigating gambling practices in Florida, issued a subpena ordc-r-ing GoV. Fuller Warren of Florida to appear and answer questions. Mr. Warren tiled a compr»-hen-slve brief covering all the legal Q — What causes cataracts? When should they be removed? How Ipng would it be after operation before the eyes can be used again? A — When the crystalline lens in the eyeball becomes cloudy, the condition is known as cataract. The commonest cause in an adult is advancing age and this type of cataract Is found in an increasing proportion of persons as age exceeds 50. Such cataracts! 1 s u a 11 y affecti both eyes but not* necessarily to the BBANDSTADT same degree. Although varicose veins are most commonly seen In the legs they may occur anywhere, and although varicose veins of the upper extremity are unrommon, that Is moat likely what yon have. Since some form of operation Is usually required, you should see your doctor if the condition is causing ......... * a lot of discomfort. Teen-agers between 13 and 16 pay adult prices lo movies because we are "over 12,” yet wo are not allowed to see the so-called "adult" movies. If we pay adult prices why can’t we see adult movies? In Mi-ssissippi the Negro pays taxes, yet is not allowed lo enter a state institution. If the "adult" movies ore so bad that young adults can't see them, then no one should. Teen-Ager printed. Sgt. Rogg has 34 years of service and his outstanding record speaks for Msolf. George W. Smith 203 W. Falrmount lEdlfor's Note: It Is Pontiac Press policy not to publish rape cases until the defendant Is convicted.) (Editor’s Note: We are not printing "Just a Poor Taxpayer’*" lei-ter as it is unsigned and libelous.) Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Business Outlook Business Week rolled in two minutes and six seconds. (Ask Floyd 1‘atterson.) ..... .... Most people thought the lengthy and especially corny TV commercials would be brushed up this falli but the crop is especially dismal up to now. ★ ★ ' Wigs are worn increasingly and without concealment. Many women wear them openly and discard them whenever they please. There are a few in our own area............. the Senate committee did press tor the enforcement o Past rulings indicate that, while a governor may Ignore a court order so far as his p<’rsonal appearance in court is concerned, nobody else in the state govei-nnu-nf can do so. would find millions and The Chicago Sun-Times says a minions of Mao Tzk-tuno’s minions Windy City swain is so affluent he denting through disillusionment takes his girl to drlve-ln movies In a ttn4 discouragement and hunger. overheard: "On GOVERNOR IMMUNE Hence, a court can enjoin one or more (dale officials from carrying out any illegal act even if it is ordered officially by a governor. A.s for the governor, however, he i.s himsell immune from arrest and punishment, the brief contends, because no court can remove a gov- The development of cataracts is varied and unpredictable. Most of lliem start in the outer layer of the lens and the time required lor ane to reach the "ripe" stage varies from months to years. In some persons the process comes to a halt and the cataract never matures. Anyone who has a developing ralararl should have periodle examinations by an eye speelal-tdt. He alone ran tell you when I he ratarart is ripe for opera- The economy appears to he heading Into the tonrth quarier with gathering strength. The Business Week Index ilgisgged la a narrow range nil summer. New It hints thnt n mUd upturn The rise that’s in prospect will be slow and gradual. In some respects it will resemble the pattern of the economy in the third quar- Of particular significance to business pulse-takers is the Increasing share of truck sales accounted for by the larger vehicles — those over 10,000 lb. (or what the trade calls medium to extra-heavy). From Jan. I through Sept. 10, these 'broad-shouldered unit* accounted for 38 per cent of total truck sales. Last year, their share was only 27 per cent. As a Ford executive pqlnted out this week: "Heavy tniclUi arc not ordered by businessmen who are losing confidence in the economy." sease killed off the ixdtins on (he University of MIehIgnn enm- e( Ipseets that preyed on the Douglas firs of the Northwest, turned out to be even more deadly enemies of the firs. Residues of ohemlonis sprayed on ter. Removal of the lens at this stage Is tile only known means of relief. Following operation both eyes are bandaged for three-or four days, then the eye that was not operated on may be allowed to But there will be one important difference:,' Steel output — which limped upward through most ol the last three months — will be back in force by November. This Is virtually assured by the high rate of auto production projected for next month. Teisfar The London Daily Mirror ■Jhls could be. 1|fho knows? ^ak Link Somewhere.... '^c’ve been spehding $50 blllloh a ye<|r lor world defenses covering peo-plf|l everywhere. And yet, we allow a {pave and awesome menace to «ie-ve$?p right in our own back yard. Honsider Cuba. Vho’a at fault? ★ ★ ★ i Wa roali iraopa thouMnda af taxi..............Overheard: “On graduation from college, Governor Barnett was voted the man the most likely to secede.”...........Dept. of Cheers and Jeers: the C’s— Walter Schirra; the J’s—Ole Miss. -mHarold a. Fitzoerald The Country Parson "How can I stop my wife from waking up several times at night and smoking cigarettes?” someone asks. Doubtless anything he might do that would keep her from waking up wouk^ solve his problem. ;■ ■ ; i’.'’ . DARK OLAS8RS When after seven to 10 days the other.eye no longer needs to be bandag^, dark glasses should be worn for a while. November will call the turn on the opening quarter of 1983. By November, retailers will know how Christmas shopping is likely to go. And election results should provide some measure of the odds on a meaningful tax cut next year. The Americans launched it. It is a triumph for their scientists, a tribute to their vision. But more than that, It is a triumph for the human race. This is the kind of space shot devoted to peaceful research which allows the whole world to breathe more easily. As an alternative to indiscriminate spraying, Miss Carson urges more extensive and intensive use of biological control schemes. In (iome cases, for example, harmless insects have been Imported Into crrialn areas to eradicate other Insects. That’s all very well, but wliat must be remembered Is that miture is always being unbalanced either by nature Itself or by mankind. Every time we drill for oil, cut forests, or spilt an atom we tamper with nature’s balance. Without some such octlone there could l>e no such thing os human progress. Beeaase, when the lens Is removed, the eye can no longer no--eommodale tor nenr and distant ' vision, the two eyes will not work together as n team. 'This can be corrected with glasses alxad a month utter the operation. Alter this the vision is usually good. I Q — During Hie seventli month of pregnancy 1 noticed the veins In my wrists and hands protruding. Spending for trucks certainly leaves little lo be deslrod thin year. It begins lo look as Ihough domestic tnwk sales will go over the l-mlllion mark for the first lime since IMI — and may ehnl-Icnge IMS for second place In the annals at the Im Pesticides The National Observer do won Popular Pesticides were targets only of criticism but new eonlrol their (Asngan. If wa 4* ttot. w* run llie risk of llppliir haforn’t balance agaiMt oatoOlvtML 000 vehicles — a 10 per C( over the -flrsl nine m« tool. For the lagi qus The condition has persisted gnd become worse. The veins do not protrude when my hands are not . will have lo average better than 04,000 nails a month to beat 1048. Bat (hat Is a virtaal eer^ me what is causing thia and if there 1* anything I can do tor It? y , ■/ _ ^ tlwa a BMalh threogli Mm (hM qwrtor. / i * A A majfism tee OwUh ekss 1 . ,/ . " • ' V 8 1-' , Till gQNTiAc pkBsa MpypAT. ocTonink mr. Atlanta Negroji toJiyfor . Senate Chair Suui !*3iy3«y »*T • law loot wiwk. ATLANTA H0N( 6|}TA?0 lumoirmNC BY DONNELL lloiirHi Mon. thru Sal. 9 lo9 Appolmti Xot Alwayt Neee*»ary Optn Til 9 P.M. IlMiaylhraSiL SAU! WAMM RBGULAII at.9B 10 3B.9B WOOLCOAIi 23 90 o.Ndvmit illhoueHei * Fall colori, black 0 Large collection Word Week savbigi when you want ‘end All wool pluslws, tweeds. Some zip-outsy raccoon teoliart. Mittet* $izet8to18. Shoes for smart, stylish < PONTIAC MALL “pye care & fashioB FORinE ENTIRE FAMILY Pontiac MairO|iti(an!ent(r Dr. Paul €. Fclnherg, Opiometrist-Ph. 682-|nS MONDAY and TUESDAY, October 8,9 msa's easkiM fbel ComforfaMs NOSE 3V-, ^1 Men like the comfort they And in these hose. They hove odshioned foot end they*ra' heavyweight eottop forltar er wear. ElastiokmdlpSifoe 18585727 3rd Year of Poor Hanrests Hungry China Asks World for Food already maide will trie* aim were amaller than In | «Ha ot at iMWt 9.7 1 M In the Sino>Soviet arena | Altogetheir the UJS.SR.. China and eaatem Eu- , urchaaed In 1981'' aome S.7 | TOOD STORE HEIR AND BRIDf: - Hunlinglon Hartford Ili the AAP food atore heir, ami former model Diane Brown are shown aa they vlaited Phllhamumic Hall at New York’s Lincoln Center two weeks ago. His attorney said the two were mOrried in a quiet ceremony at the family’s plush estate in Wyckoff. N.J. Cardinal Guarded After Bomb Attack NEW YORK (AP) — A police bodyguard for Francis Cardinal Spellman was maintiained today following a bomb explosion at his St. Patrick’s Cathedral residence. The head of the Roman Catholic archdiocese of New York will be kept in view of plainclothes-men until he departs Tuesday night for Rome to attend the 2nd Vatican Council. The explosioh early Saturday-poUce said they have evidence a homemade dynamite bomb was used-shattered windows of two servants’ quarters in the basement. No one was hurt and damage was slight. Consultant, 61, Dies READING, Pa. (AP)-John R. Howland, 61, ot Philadelphia, a consultant on; closed circuit television, died Saturday and injuries suffer^ in an automobile accident last ‘Thursday. This picture of the incrca.singly desperate; situatkw of Gonwunjst China is painted by the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO)Jn world survey NO OFFICUL FIOURES “For mainland China, although > official figures have been announced, all evidence points to a third successive year of poor harvests in 1962," the report said. The FAO, In repoiRng China was forced to tom again to the world marketo to buy food, dM not mention any pnrcbasea from Soviet Russia but FAO sonrccs said Russia has seat iCIiina Mth-ing bocauso Peiping has nothing topayittietara. World agricultural trade would have shown a decline in the past year except for China’s big purchases of grain, mainly from Canada and Australia, and the Chinese and Russian puivhases of 5.7 million .tons of sugar to htlp keep Castro’s Cuba off the rocks. W ★ Sr 'Acute* shortages in China also influenced world trade in vegetable fats and qlls and rice,’’ the FAO survey said. It added: “The lNl-62 haivest apparently has agate been poor, and tarth- Psychlafrisf Retains Post on Health Unit Dr. L. Jerome Fink, Pontiac psychiatrist and formerly gtaff psychiatrist at Pontiac State Hoapltal, has beenjf^ected to the Board of Dit^lors of the Michigan Society for Mental Health. Ifr. Fink has served mi thh society’s executive committee and special committee on psychiatric units in general hospitals. He was effective in the establishment of the psychiatric unit at Pontiac General Hospital in 1961. , He was reelected to a three-yeUr term on the board. “Ttes compares with grass Im- | ports ot about 2.5 million tona .te ‘ first year when trade in | sugar was affected by the breach | between Cuba and the United ] States, and an average of s 500.000 tons in the preceding \ years.’’ /Aarine Vet, 40, Quits Football for Studies MIDDLETOWN, Conn. (AP)-A : 40-year-old Marine Colonel bowed | to the pressiuw ot academic ; studies Sunday and left the Wes- < leyan University fbotball squad. Lt Chi. Adolph Sdiwenk, a omi-bat vetertni who ptai^ ta^e, , said he felt he had to ^vote all M j to studies. Pontiac’s Hnotl LEAN GromHl BEEF] or Sliced PORK LIVER According to a recent poll, the j most pouplar places to see in Virginisi Are Colonial WilUanu- | burg, the Skyline Drive, the Elue j Ri^e Parkway and Mount Vernon. ‘ 3"89^ *« thorittea, Ha addiNl ha “«wMd ■ the iwir^irtih turned Ohio into ana a( tlM rough and tumUa campaign areaa of Danaeratto Gw. Michael V. »i Balia. Mng to put new Ufe into hia UDdetdof campaign, ------- challenged hia oppaiient, can Btatd Auditor Rhodda to make hia peraonal in* coma tax racorda pubr (Mato Ohalrmaa WIIHam L, CM«- Ha aahi aome of thli information waa in Rhodeav income tax retuma and lUiodea didi hia recoida, he would call federal agendea in Democratic' handa to inveatigate.. ★ ★ ,★ MwdM ahot back tha Income tax retuma were iuppoaed niMISiiflar jUlMrLib jiQciusermawoman?’' chargM to hto liquor department* Earlier a Chicago dlfliller i'e-fuaed lo do buaincaa with Ohio be* caiuto he aaid he had to make in a hotel room with per* high in Democratic clrclea* CONSERVATIVE,ld)E Such chargea and counter-dmrgea perked up intereat in a dull campaign in uddeh the atakea are high. At laaue are a U.S. aen-ate aeat, 24 congreatOonal poate, the govemorahlp and all atete of-ficea, three i^acea on the atete supreme court, mid control of the legislature. Just because you’re a woman you don't have to suffer nasty cramps. Don't have to go through the change with fear, mlseryl Today, mcht Womert can relieve "female suffering” at ony age —* with Plnkham Thbletol in doctor’s tests with Plnkham Tablets, moat youhg women no longer suffered agonlalng "period pains". In mlddle>age. a out of 4 tested got remarkable relief from distress of change-of-llfel No coetlv shots were used. Taking Plnkham Tablets alone, "hot flashes” subside. Nervousness is calmed. Then you can start llv-Inga full, baiw Ufa agalnt When simple lron*defld( . ._...ts arealsoabless* Ingl Rich in iron, they help strengthen blood and vitality I _jdly, like vltaminsI Bee if you don't And new peace*of*mlnd, ---------'-m pM^cal distress. new relief from pi MUM of Ms "eoNservadve” 0 righto vIewB. Both parties believe they make gains In tha oongre^ciMl liiie*^, which to now IB to T Rm edUsilaqy peeddint Ottalla to ---------— poUltoa and Jury to to* The OOP hopes to elect Taft and perhapg beat Hep. Robert Cook in the Udt District where former Rep. Oilver Boltin is running their best chances- against Rep. Charles A. Mosher in the 11th District where former Rep. Oliver Bolton is run* nig again. Democrats see their best, changes against Rep. Charles A. Mosher In the 13th District; William Ayres in the 14th and Tom Moorehead in the 15th. b the IMh. Bebeit Beeraat, there servative tide is running to ttoto. that It will be a rough year on tax levies. A major stumbling block In OtHalle’s campaign hss President Kennedy has given Ohio special attention, the Buckeye state being the only big industrial state in the Midwest and East he lost in his campaign for president in 1960. Kennedy obviously wants a friendly administration in Ohio. Republicans have marked Ohio as one they feel they can win this year and thus strengthen their hand in the 1964 presidential race. W ★ Sr Democratic Sen. Frank J. I4iu8che, who has had a hand in killing several of Kennedy’s legls-tlve proposals, is rated a sure .. inner over Republican John Marshall Briley in a campaign (hat has arous^ no excitement. TAFT JR. AHEAD Ujited equally certain of victory Is Stale Sen. Robert A. Taft Jr., son of the late Republtcan Senate leader, who likely Will burst onto the national scene a big winner 08 congressman at large. 'llhls to ff'h^W dffUin Into being when the legislature failed to redlstrict the state to provide a district for a congrt slonal scat picked up through population Increase, by MspotW ba- growth and Job opportunities tha top issue. He contends the stole has slipped in thto Held end OiSalto has . , In major fields. Rhodes propoaed an oiveriiaul of DiSalle when a paroled sex cilmt-nal kUled two gtrto, he also fllvara overhaul of the tax law,' administration in various depart-ments, and increased aid to universities. OTHER RACES Elsewhere in eastern and Middle Atlantic races; Pennsylvania — Democrat Richardson Dllworth, 64, former mayor of Philadelphia, and Republican Gongiessman William W. Scranton, 45, are locked in a gubenui--toctol battle that has been going strong since they both won nmni-nations lost May. eve to name Mm to the Federal Trade Oommlssioa. to ruanlng again. DiSalle was written oft early in the campaign and is still rated an underdog. Faced wllh a losing fight against the Republican Legislature last year, DiSalle said he could do more for Ohio if people sew he wasn't a politician run* Ing for office and said he would St seek re-election. it it it He changed hto mind and barely squeaked through a primary which left scars. DiSalle lost Cleveland 21 counties in his re-election bid. TRADE CHARGES DiSalle has campaigned hard, saying Ohio’s growing population demands increased state services and spending. He has been criticized for his tax and spending program, opposition to the state and county imrs, anticapital punishment views and fusses with the GOP legisla-ire. The Cleveland Plain Dealer, in endorsing Rhodes, said the nhxt legislature likely would be Re* puMlc^ and the^ state could not stand more bickering in the state-house. puiauon inc-i-euHc. lu pay Its bills, . Taft to oppos«Hl by KIrJiard D. Rhodes, former Columbus mayor 1 gressmen ennedy, a siirprlw winner In a and slate auditor lor 10 years.' most Inie A Democntic win would givu psurty eoBbnd ot both houiM of ths slate teatototim tor tha liitt Unw sincu W4. ISgiit of the 14 ttotoas to osMered ms a speatol etoetlsu to flU a stoto stoato tic Rep. Harris B. McDowell Jr. against Republican WUmer F. (Rudy) WlUtoms, a former state hopta of i5lh dtotrict created to rapidly County, a Dem- ocratic stronghold. W * Maryland — Gov. J. MlUard Driaware — ths the only major WASHlNGTtBf l» - .The 8b-preme Court afflnned today a ^ transportation Expert Dead ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) ~ Atv thur W. Fuchs, 67, a nationally known authority on X-ray proced-urea, died Sunday. Fuchs served for 16 years as siWe^'toor of medical technical aervi^ tor Eastman Kodak Co., retiring in 1961. Fuchs, who Joined the company in 1927, was bom in Chicago. Court UphpWjfj Bars Jo Bias segregation ItutiDnal. At the same time, the high tribunal affirmed another dectoton ttpheid an Intenrtate. Com* porisne* - . how". Our ------------- ' fPioiactlon.s'Fliii - ■* to-all phaias of jNur- 1 by Georgia ICC order. Georgia’s appeal from a dediton tiy a special thiet!* mudge U.S. Disirict Court in Atlanta. The special court held the ICC Oder valid. la Am Biato>-and plans addltton-ol vlalto to kupport Ow Demo- Dwight D. Elsenhower, a Pena-syivaalan who to actively ea- An estimated 350,000 Pennsylvanians are unemployed and this has been a key issue In the Dll-worth-Scranton campaign. Scranton, elected two years to his first political office, charges the Democrats with falling down in providing new industry and few jobs. Dilworth disputes this and contends his party, which has held the governorship for eight years, has kept the state moving. (Gov. David Lawrence is Ineligible under, state law to succeed himself.) A U.S. Senate race - pitting incumbent Democrat Joseph S. aark and Republican congressman James E. Van Zandt — will be resolved In November, along with 27 congressional races and handful of statewide offices. ★ ★ * West Virginia -- the reapportioned 1st Congressional District threw incumbent DemocTat Cleveland H. Bailey against another incumbent congressman. Republican Arch A. Moore. 'Their fight has been described palgn in the state in years. Bailey has had help from Kennedy, former President Harry S. Truman and House Speaker John W. McCormack. New Jersey — Fifteen eon- interest among the poll- YOtR NEWS QUIZ PART I. NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL Give yourseU 10 points for each correct answer. 1 The major purpose of the U.S. Marshals, such as those used in the Mississippi incident, is to serve the ..... s-President b-Federal Courts c-FBI 2 The OAS nstions, which met to discuss Cubs last week. In 1947 signed the Treaty, a Pact to meet aggression against the Western Hemisphere. a-Rlo b-Anxus o-CENTO 3 The announcement that the Uveatook holding action would....was called a "utrategio maneu- ver” by NFO President Oren Lee Staley. a-end b-reoeas o-convert to a strike 4 Among the “firsts” accomplished by the U.S. during the flight of Astronaut Schlrra, was the a-astronaut’s ability to cat while In space b-Atlantlc landing of the capsule , c-prolonged orbital drifting of the space capsule 5 Under the new tax law, corporations will receive a 7 per cent tax credit on Investments.... a-ln underdeveloped nations b-ln low etitoloynmni areas o-to modernise their plants PART II-WORDS IN THE NEWS Tak« 4 points for ffach word that you can match with its correct meaning. 1-fomeint a-bound to happen a-extrioate h-to stir up 5- plauaiUe o-to break apart 4-lnevitable d-belleyable 6- disrupt e-to free from dlffl- The Pontiac Press Oclolirr 8, 1962 Match word clues with their corresponding pictures or symbols. 10 points for each correct answer. - a .....new llnkbetureen North and South Amerloa ...Canada’s first satellite ...He asks hunters to be careful. d....site of a 40-na- tlon manpower confereme I MA-8 PART III - NAMES IN THE NEWS Take 0 points for narnoa that you can correctly match with the clues. a-Missleelppi's Oovemor 1-Jamee J. P. MoShane b-new U.S. Treafurac Ifasa 2-Chim Bn-Iai 8-1^ Barnett 4-Katlwyn E. Oranahan 8-Leroy 0. Cooper o-ohiefU.1. Marshal d-baokup pilot for Astronaut Sohlrra e-The oommunlais have ruled bis nation for 13 years. .....recent U.S. visitor from Berlin f Head of Ecumenical Council g....This week. Inde- pendence begina. ...aflaoted bv a etevedorea strike .Aatrooaut Sohlr-ra’a flight I ALOUETTB | ...new Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff 10. HOW DOYOURATiT (Soon Eaak Sktoof QuIs faa||Maly) 91 tolOOpalnli-TOPSCOM! Bile fOgeliila-Bwaltenh .71to lOpahito-iBead. 41 to 79 palnta «itelr. 40wUMar77f-lfiiim! Thli Quia It part of tha BfoHilfopI IMpMt whleh IM1 Nawipafm tomIthM to Sohoalt In Hilt ima to SHwulato brtanNl la NiNmI r 0 VCCff Imu* MmUmm I* WImmrwIii siuUNTS V.I^ answers ON REVERSE PAGE •ALUMIHUM PATIO MOMOAir TUESDAY IGA POTATO ,4„ CHIPS "* 45( niEr 11^ 6M SALItBURY JIAf Steak 49* JELLJt 2^350 OEUTIN teS? w w HEINZ STRAINED Baby Foods 0fcr5™ ASSBHTEO CN0C0U1ES 39 7!4-02a ^ CHOCoun C PEANUISovOroi. CNOCOUTI RAISINS 39* US’ FISHER MIXED NUTS IGA SALAD DRESSIND SARA LEE FROZEN BAKERY PRODUCTS COFFEE CAKE Full Oudit 7||c Cream 7||e • w Cheesa Cake amgjg l4«.pk9-29* 33' UNaE MEN'S Ml Cdgoti WEEK’S BONUS BUY ALL Popular BRANDS COFFEE P0N(DEN UriM SOAP BOWDEN Urgt 33; 35< \/^l liquid V 61 SOAP ft-Mi. REG. SOAP PALMOLIVE Mi f-4 . /'• THK K)yU7AC PKRS^! koKPAY* dpT6BEE 8. l|68 — T,^/ ' \ ; ‘[v^T w OEy Installation Set for Clarkston School CLftRKSTON •- Installation of officers of Joseph Bird Chapter No. 294. Order of Eastern Star, is scheduled for Saturday. '8 pm at Qarkston Junior High>-School. MBS. CLYDE BONAB Organize New 4-H Clubs Mrs. Oyde Bonar. 6846 Ung-worth Drive. Waterford Township, 'will be installed as worthy matron and Gordon E. Stayt, of 5805 Winslow St... Pontiac will become worthy patron. Other el«-Hed offleers are Mrs. KotH-rt Mors«-. associate nia-tnai; Kobr-rl Morse, assrwiate patron: Mrs. Jess.' Sperliinan. .•onrIiietresK; Mrs. tieratd L'rtek. assn.'iale conductress; M r s. R<.bcrt asurer. Participating in the installation ceremony will be. Mrs. Eli/.abelh Gilbert, past matron of Ovid Chapter No. 279, who will install her sister as worthy matron. Mrs Sally Wallace will serve as install ing organist and Evelyn Overholt will act as installing soloist. Also a.sSisttng in the ceremony will be several past matrons and patrons of the Joseph C. Bird Chapter as well as honored queen. Uis Stayt: senior princess, Judy Roberts; and princess JUdy Hoffmann of Job’s Daughters. Bethel No. 25, Clarkston. , SOUTH LYON ^ Two of three teams, which will represent Mich" igan in the national Future Farm-of America judging contests this week, are from South Lyon. The two .South Lyon teams and one from Morenci will compete with FFA representatives from 44 other slates in the contests Wednesday tluQugh Fnday at Kansas City, Mo. Conipeting In the meats contest Wednesday morning will b«. Gerald Vmtk of .11161 Old Plank BSad, WtXoHl: WllHam Erwin of 61051 Silver laike Bond; Janies' Sprinkles, 10170 Pleasant laike Drive; and Jaiiiers Bruner, «266» Pontiac Trail. County Director Urges Participation Oakland County Extension Director Lyle B. Abet today re-ported that new 4-H Clubs are be-ng organized throughout the coun-y lor youths and children from 10 to 21 years of age. Individuals in this ag^ group, ahether from rural or metropoli-:an areas, were urged by Abel :o take part in 4-H Club activities. Some of the crafts and skills Included In 4-H Club projects Include clothing, automotive, conservation, crops, dog husbandry, electrical, home man- scaplng, poultry and •photography. Xoung persons interested in 4-H serve as leaders are asked to contact the Cooperative- Extension Office in the Oakland Cduntyi Service Center. 'Turkey Shoot' ■ Slated Sunday in Davisburg DAVISBURG - The Davisburg Junior Chamber of Commerce will sponsor a “turkey shoot’’ for area marksmen at 1 p.m. Sunday. Competitors will be required to shoot at three different targets at the Davisburg Jaycee Range on Andersonville Road, l‘-s' miles south of Davisburg Rbad. Turkeys will be presented to the top marksmen, according to chairman Marlon Hillman, who said proceeds from the event will be used in the Jaycees’ youth activities program. Friday is the registration dead- S. LyonFFAs in Competition Two Teams to Attend Kansas City National Taking part in the poultry judging event Wednesday afternoon is a South Lyon team which includes David Cain, 125 Detroit St., Harry Coleslock, 58311 10 Mile Road;' Dennis Gibson, ‘22502 Pontiac Trail; rind David Nelson of 28900 Martin-dale Road. Wixom. Donald McCormack of Brighton, vocational agriculture instructor at South Lyon High School, will accompany the two South Lyon teams. Cain, Coleslock and Nelson all were June graduates of South Lyon High. The others still a students at the high school. Sewage Plant Chief Resigns Holly Post tabled .from any Jaycee member or at the Davisburg Lumber Co. ' E & I Confectionery and Walter’i 'Service Station here. ilOLLY — Jolin T. Smith, superintendent of Holly's Sewage Treatment plant lor the past 4'i years, is resigning to take a similar position in Romeo. Smith said his resignation, which is effective Oct. 15, will be received by the Holly Village Council at its regular meeting tomorrow night. In Romeo, he will be in charge of a new treatment plant which OBetied Ib^re pplv last Smith, 50, of 230 Airport Drive, was assistant superintendent of a treatment plant in Port Huron before coming to Holly. by Antitax DETROIT (UPI) — The Vigilance g with 40,000 aignaturee already cfmnted an ftinuwi fit outlawing local income taxes, without Tater consent, moved ahedd today with plana tor aecond ^ doo^to-door campaign in the Detroit area. ‘ Mayor George Kuhn of Berkley, committee cliai^ji man, said another canvass « ~ ‘ will be conducted Oct; 301 from 6 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. 'fhe committee conducted Its first door-to-door petition drive last Tuesday night. Kuhn said 40,000 signatures were counted in 18 communities. A total ol sod. ..re needed by the oonunlttM before It can proceed to Lansing taxes. DECORATE MYSTERY TBEEL-A featured attraction in the eighth grade room during the Avondale , Junior High School Fall Festival Wednesday will be a mystery tree. Sliown.here attaching slips to the tree that will entitle puiv • chasers to prizes arc (from left above) Pam P«nll«e Premi Photo Henderson and Valerie Babb and (below) Sherman Blomberg and Gary McReynolds. The fair, to be open from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m., also will feature bodihs. concessions, game* and bake sale and light refreshments. It the petition drive is successful, the Michigan legislature would have two choices. It could enact the statutory law, nqt subject to gubernalorial veto, or it could place the matter bn the ballot in the next general election. WOULD LIMIT TAX The proposed law would prohibit any governmental unit, other than the state, to enact an Income tax without voter approval. And it woidd outlaw any collection ol income taxes from nonresidents. Kuhn said the committee, which has petitions In clrcnlntton throughout the ■tato. Is urging nil-day signature drives In sueh UF Campaign Begins Tonight Dinner Will Launch w 3 Independence Drive Examination on Alleged Bribe Oct 16 Police Officer to Appear on Charges ROYAL OAK TOWNSHIP lice Lt. Anniah Ruffin, 41, will appear for exambiation Oct. 16 bi Farmington Township Justice Court on charges of extortion, bribery and conspiracy to obstruct justice. Ruffin, accused by Redford State ltijkaJ3umik He Is free on $2,500 bond. The police lieutenant was ar-| rested by detective Calvin Lopien and trooper John Aird after he met a numbers racked operator and gave him $25 In marked bills, accordbig to State Police. ‘RECORDED AROUMENT' gambling in Royal Oak Township, demanded the examination Saturday before Farmington Township Justice Alien Ingle. APPLIANCE BUYERS! OLLIE FRETTER SAYS OLLIE FREHER YOU BE THE JUDGE, Who Has the Bigger Dlseonnts ... On bnfter nationally advortised applianent and fnlovision. I believe mine are i^etty good. Stop in anyone of my stores, I think you'll think they're pretty good, too! P.S.-Our Service is awfully good, too! n Otii'ofMifliigan'f Orifinal Discounleis AIR CONDITIONERS Selling Out Below Cost Largs Saleetion TRANSISTOR RADIOS TAPE RECORDERS at ridiculous prices Family'Siio Refrigerator •148®® RCA STEREO With AM/FM Radio •199®* Kolvinator AUTOMATIC WASHER •159®® Hotpoint FREEZER IB Ft 219®* Name Brond 19" PORTABLE TV's Floor Modal* »I15“ GAS DRYER 3 Tompt •119®® 30 in. Deluxe GAS RANGE •88®® BRAND NAME WASHER-DRYER COMBINATION Now in Cralos •229®w^. Complota Soloolion HOOVER CLEANERS rr.6. •39«* 21" COLOR TV's •359®® reside* at 20854 Mltchelldate 8t. The numbers operator claimed that he has paid Rpffin $25 month for the past two years to prevent interference bi township gambling operations, police said. tricts and shopping centors by municipal olflcUIs, homo owner group*, civic orgnnlsnllon* and Hcrs’lriB cluU«. And the committee also plans fo form petition committees in Detroit and Hamtramck within the next few days to seek signatures. INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP— f The township will launch Its 1962 United Fund dilve tonight with a • kickoff dinner for 200 volunteei^-workers at the Old Mill Tavern' Hotel, Waterford. Reservations indicate a large turnout, acemding to Dr. Einest F. Denne, campaign chairman. Detroit and Hamtramck are the only two cities in the state currently collecting an income tax. If convicted on all three counts Ruffin could receive a maximum The Vigilance Tax Committee was formed last spring to fight the Detroit income tax, a one per cent levy which became effective July not Identified, recorded an argument over the amount of alleged pay-off on a miniature tape record-1 er, police said. The meetUig allegedly look place at a new home Kiiffin I* ...... In the tounHhIp. He now fine of oVer $20,000, according Justice Ingle. Ruffin, mani^jmd the father A Wayne County Circuit judge of one daughter, joined the Town- vuled against the committee when ship force as a patrolman in 1949. I He was promoted to lieutenant last .May. it attempted to block the Detroit tax on grounds the levy was unconstitutional. their materials and tastructton* and will bo ready to begin their “We are anxtoue to get our. drive under way and be able to report an early victory.” This year’s goal of $5,800 Is expected to be met. Commercial, residential, professional and school solicitation will be sought. Merle cfiafiroanTw^report the progress of advance gifts at tonights’s meeting. Guest speaker for the occasion ill be Rev. Alex T. Stewart, vicar. Episcopal Church of (he Resurrection, Clarkston. Sale! at FREnERS tartan 19 M, »139" ! M«4*ll(nitnS*IS* . »*ar Bu*r*nt«# e*v*r* fr»* txctiange or rtpair ol onr componont proven dofKiivt In normal uto. Arrongod through tolling doolor. Uboroxlro. BUDGET TERMS 30 DAYS EXCHANGE GENEROUS TRADE FAST 24-HOUR NO MONEY DOWN COURTEOUS. ARER 36 MONTHS TO PAY If Hot Fully SMiifi#4 AUOWAHCE OEUVERY ON ANY PURCHASE THE SALE SERVICE rnlfor’i CJtrlQsd Discount Make! thg lig Dillertnct - Prove It to Yours«l( - Service Comes First Rtfirtims of Price ■ FRETTER DISCOUNT APPLIANCE MIRACLE MILE CENTER (BETWCEN Khl.OE S AND KROGER .) $. TELEGRAPH AT SQ. LAKE RD. IIMBIBIIMI OPEN: Mon. thru Fri. 9:30 a.m.-IO p.m, FE 3-7051 Sal. 9-9-Sun. Closed IjESTION... Where do you receive a full months benefits when you save by the 10th of the month? NSWER... FDtST FEDERAL SAVINGS and Loan Association . of OAKLAND biecause when you add to your savings account by the 10th of the month •«• earnings actually start on the first day of the month . . . giving you ten extra earning days. THE PONTIAC PBESS. MoisrDAY. OCTOBER j 1962 ilMciett't eattan crop Is tMmM 1.9 mUllon bales d plam by ment's lelts. 78 NORTH SAGINAW STRICT MSUOtoOpen Placement Unit Seniors Have fhartce to Look Over Service Hors&'Kayoes Cruising Auto WAKEFIELD, EnKland (API-Private detective WlUlam Cooke cruised sently aloiiK at the ufheel ot his car. Suddenly a horse fell WlClAt FOR TUBPAY ONLY! Your Choice! 34kt. aroiBi Beef ^ Net Dogs ? 34bi. ^ SIkei Bate! j 1962 Dozens Flee AmmonioGas Fumet' Hospitalize 22 in Dallas By BOB THOMAS AP MttvIe-lMcwtsloa Writer HOLLYWOOD - There is a sequel to the sequel in the curious Case of Lorraine “ " DALLAS (UPI) — Poisionous, lung-searing ammonia gas fumes an Ice plant compressmr exploded last night dtwe dozens ot families from their homes. , ★ * / * At Jeast 22 persons were treated at Methodtet Hospital and released. Two victims were hospitalized. None of the three employes in the Southland Ice Co. plant was injured by the blast. . There was no fire, and no damage to the building. reduced a total of 400 pounds In two dramatic tried. You may remember Lorraine. She is the daughter of star WU- area around the plant. Capt. R-M. Nichols of the lire department said resldenta fled their homes “screaming and hollering The residents began returning to their homes after the gas started to settle in the lowlands around the Trinity Rivet. The plant is located across the Trinity from Dallas proper, but is within the city _____________ e driver, John Butler, and a small girl, who' was not Identified were hospitalized. One fireman was credited with reviving a baby girl with mouth-to-mouth respiration and many other firemen gaye their gas masks to residents of the stricken area. Huge ventilnting fans were positioned at the windows of the one-story plant to force the fumes from the building. W . W dr Cause of the explosion was not determined. Paul Curtis, chief engineer at the plant, said he detected spewing gas about 8 p.m. and the explosion followed almost Immediately. Detroit Officer Dies After Saving a Man DETROIT (»t — A city policeman died Saturday of injuries suffered Tuesday when he was pinned by a runaway car against a light post in the business district. The officer. Gordon Schneider, td, had lunged into the auto’s path to shove a 60-year-old man out of the way, saving his life. Bisndix*^ Daughter Lpyes1?’ood 400 bounds Lost in 2 Tries the nature of the operation. When the stoiy was printed- last time, she received thousands of inquiries, plus tonplaints from doctors' She said the opera- dlikeh a lover THOMAS of food. She at through her chlld-( hood and turned Ipto a young worn n of 325 pounds. Diets did no good; she lacked the will to stay with them. So ste learned to live; with her bulk,] had a] daughter and dabbled in acting. But the burden of her weight caught up with her. Her blood pressure reached such a height that doctors told her she had four months to live. That scared her into undergoing a then-experimental operation by hich part of the digestive process was bypassed. Within a year she had reduced to a svelte 118 pounds. It seemed like a happy ending to a human tragedy. CP AGAIN But it didn’t turn out that way. “Within a year and five months, had eaten my way back to 315 pounds,” she says. ‘‘The operation had not been perfected; I was the guinea pig that taught, the doctors a lesson. ‘Also, I lacked the will to stop ;ing. Being thin was to of a shock to adjust to so ly. I went through a divorce and that was an emotional drain, went to work, but I did it pn ‘The Life of Riley’ show. I enjoyed it. and my father was very kind and helpful. But It wasn't the same as if I had made it on my own. ” ★ A * I-orraine says I can take some of the credit for her new resolve. Apparently I quoted her father in an interview as saying she had eaten back all the weight she had lost. Something in the story made her mad. She spent a year as social director at a classyq health farm in Mexico, but that discipline wasn’ enough to make her shed the weight. Again she resorted to dra.stic means. wifi rHANtTR tion would be detailed fa the proper' medical authorities , this fall. So to those who are interested in if-^wBlt, and consult your ivn doctor. * * * Lorraine has dropped to J29 pounds, expects to lose 3 more and regain none. Now 30 years old, she has had six sets of clothes, ranging from size 28% to 12. Part of her well being stems from the fact that she is working again. She opened at the Statler HUton last week in Barry Ash. ton's “(3iips Off the Old Block,” a streiiuous musical revue starring Other stars’ chUdren—Monica Henreld, Ted Lewis Jr. and Lcan^c’^s beau,TlaroldU^ Jr. - W . Work is all-important,*! she said earnestly. "Taklfig all that weight off meant nothing if I don’t do something with my lUe. I think I have something to offer show business. I’m going to fight to show that I do.” 2 Pte Downed; Collision Suspected JAC3CSONVILLE. Fla. (AP)-Pregments of a Navy Demon jet and a Beechcraft civilian plane were recovered wlthlii SO yards of each other Sunday the ocean floor near Ponte Vedra, where two such pllnea vanished Tuesday. _________:____ Navy and Civil Aeronautics Board investigators are trying to establish whether the jet and the civilian plane, carrying a General Electric executive and three other persons from Syracuse, N.Y., collided in flight over this Ponte Vedra area. dwiniiii Fw«-fer-A»i slind Coupls atMuiiicktikiebtrfHt MyNlcai. Germany fJJWl -The Ctdtoberfeat-eK^erinany’a beer and fun festival -> ended last night with the final police tally for free-foMdls put at 111. More than' four million visitors from all over the world came to Munich for the festival. Police said they arrested 115 piciqmckets. Is Married Bethany Baptist church, Jaipalca, Long Islknd, New. Yack. Ha offl. Remambars Waltrtti LEICESTER. Ehglapd (UPD-Wealthy surveym* Fi^rlck ^ks left 100 pounds (1280) and his waitress Doris Bean who reminded him daily to take the umbrella when he left the cafe whlfre she worked, veaied today. PHILADELPHIA (AP)-A Mind Hiple was married by a blind minister Sunday while « 'Mind Oman sang and another blind Oman played the church organ. The bride is Mary Nixon. 21. of Reading, Pa., and the brlde-Is Wilmer GUI, 35, of the Pennsylvania Home fw the Blind ere. ' ^ They thet five weeks ago whUe attending a fellowship meeting at CJ^t Memorial Reformed Epla-where they were married. Present at that meeting was t ^^ediSssasjKiMst' ANDERSON ' SALIS and SIRVICI 210 I. Pike it«’ ; 46‘VALUE 20-OZ. LOAViS Mol-O-Crusi w Butformilk ^ ARMOUR STAR Tender Young Speciolly Selected The Pacific Ocean couid contain all the continents within Us 63.8 million square miles. Worry of FALSE TEETH 'Slipping or IrrItoHnq? t«ctb •Upping, drupplng ot v._—. Whan fuu pnt. MUX «« Ixugh Ju«t •prinxft« unit PAS'nEBTH on your pTutM. Tbl» piaMnnt powder givee a By this time the bypass operation had been Improved and I went back to my surgeon,” she said. “He sent me to my Internist for an examination. 'The Internist advised against the operation, saying my blood pressure was again so high that I couldn’t live through It. I decided to go through with it anyway.” w ★ ★ Lorraine declined to talk about Oat pauTBITU at any drug oountar. Thotchar, Patterson and Wernet INSURANCE Area Woman Studies Shelter Management A course for civil defense shelter management instructors has been completed by Mrs. Marie L. Rodriguez, director of medical emergency for the Oakland County Civil Defense Office and director of training for medical emergency for the County Health Department. Mrs. Rodriquez of 916 Symes ,St. Royal Oak, took the five-day cour.se at I he Office of Civil De fense St!»ff College in BatUe Creek. She will in turn train other volunteers to manage shellers time of emergency. EARH MORE ON SAVINRS SAVINGS IN BY THE lOTH OF THE MONTH EARN FROM THE 1ST AT Advanced Payment Shares Certificates 4’/2% IF HELD TO MATURITY AVAILABLE IN UNITS OF $80 PER SHARE Eitablinhed in 1H90—Never missed paying a dividend. Over 72 years of sound management-'your assurance of security. Assets now over 74 million dollars. CAPITOL SAVINGS A LOAN ASSOCIATION 75 W«t Hurbr trdit Dwamfewn Datreit OMlcai Woihington Blvd. Bldg. Comar Stola Straat 'yVO2-I07B FE 4*0561 Officat 27215 Seuthflaid at 11 Mila Road KE 7-6125 I Coupon) I Speciolly Selected Pork Loin Roosts Full 7-Rib Portion Perk Lein Beast Center Perk Ckops Spare Ribs 45’.^ M*. 4*-» WRIGLEYS Fresh Uon Ground Beef 31^ Every Pound Specially Ground for Tasty Hamburgers, Meat Loaf and Spaghetti and 3-Lb. Budget Pack Lesser Quantities 49i. Peschke Leaiij Sugar Cured Sliced Baeon Peschke Mich. Grade 1 Sliced Largs Bologna n!(; Sliced American or Pimento Food Club Cheese 2^49‘ Eskimo Pie “Rocket” Ice Cream Bars I D^lcrest Pre-Ground _ ^COFFEE Fresh, Pan Ready 49‘ LaksSmsIts ib.2V Mat eHttflve thre Safurday, Octobtr 13 nt$ft where ROttd. We retente the right te limit geentltlet. Fresh, Boneless, Nova Scotia HaCAKkFlllalt ».69* iSt VALUABLE WRIOIEY COUPON M Sava 10c WMi Thli Caugan Pra-Ground Delcrect Coffee '.2 3*- Snider's Pure Tomato ^(MTSUP Assorted (Delatin Desserts ^ROYAL Swansdown 2-Layer Varieties—Cake ^ MIXES Groan Giant , Wholo Kotnol Corn GET FINER GIFTS FASTER WITH GOLD BELL. GIFT STAMPet •ii -(v'— '> ^ ■'fr^ r*-'" . , , I, '1 Ly TOEP(^1AC ■ V. PKBSS. ■A-' MONDAY, OCTOBEK A MW Kennedy's Vfis/f fo Mio —^r,------- .J,...p.*.... aUAUM FOR PRESIDENT - President Kennedy tMturw m he speaks to a crowd at the Dvia Center In Flint on his whirlwind pollti- MiChigaa Democratic leaders today were aasessing thi impact of President Kennedy's whiriwind pp-Itical vhdt In search of voter sup-»rt for the party’s congressional nd slate Office candidates. The President swung through Michigan as part of a fast weekend tour of four states where he wpes to whip up voter enthusiasm 0 improve his party's position in congress and aail down some key governorships. Accompanied by Gov. Swaln- t APriwtafsi' cal tour of the state over , the weekend. Armed irds are shown atop the City Hail. you after the razor-thin majorities by which we have won or iost, that we need every vote we can get." aose to UEOW persons lined rally the faiU^dl and oonvinca the doubtful" in those areas adilch Could prove crucial to the Democrats against a strong Republican challenge. The central flwme of the President’s appeal •«- voter 8up|x>rt for Democrats on Nov. 6 — was established upm his Arrival in Detroit and repeated at every stop on the tour. . . . Under the constitution of the United Stales,”*he said in Do-trait, "especially in . matters of dto mestic affairs, the House of Representatives and the Senate have equal power with the president, and If member after member, con-I after congressman, senator after senator, says no to all our programs, then this country will stand still... •NEED EVERY VOTE’ "The decision is yours, every off year election in this century with the exception of once the party in power has lost votes and 1 can tell blsn of Detroit and the crowds who heard him qieak ranged Gov. Swainson and Staebler re-mained with the President throughout. They rode with him in open convertibles in the motorcades and flew in the same heli-from Detroit to Fliqt and thm to Muskegon. The President departed by air for Minneapolis Saturday atte^ son after delivering his last ad-ress at the county airport. The emphasis of his appeal seamed to be on electing Democratic congressmen but the Presl-I high in his praise of as "A distinguished and courageous governor” who served re-election. He said that under Swainson's A kltchtn exWrwion phone brings calls where you're cooking, saves you time and steps. Take yout choice pf colors and styles: the handy spaoe-toving wall phone, the Idmiliar table model, or the lovely Princess phone. To order. Just ooU our Business Office or ask the man on the telephone truck. MICMIQAN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY can candidate for governor, in not-l "You jan't find tha wwd •Ra il Ing that in aeveral atqtes. GOP publican’ on their literature.’’ he has been a fovortte theme of» candidates imiR their party’s name said.’’and 1 don’t blame them," igan pmaocrata to lha from campaign pbaters. 1 The ondaSon of the word Re-'campaign.^ iDo 29 3. S3I0 ? ••• In 29 years in busineM food reason to bold a cdeJ^atkmjiiale^ ... It nure is! But not at Highland—because EVERYDAY FOR 29 YEARS HAS BEEN A SAVINGS DAY HERE! Since 1933 theW-•ands- upon-^^tkmusands ..of in and around Detroit have bemeBted with Highland’s discosint prices . . • TThell «r new Detroiters poreluishig at Highland Appliance Co. always reeejhret • DISCOUNT PRICEi^ o l^AMOUS BRANDS aBIGSELEO TIONS • HONEST VALUES e EXPERT SERVICE e experienced SALES HELP • EASIEST TERMS • and as always * • • Satisfaction Guaranteed 100% or Money Back 100%. FULLY AUTOMATIC WASHER WITH AUTOMATIC SUDS-MISER • 12-Lb. Capacity • 2 Cycles • Lint Filter With trade. Free delivery and service. Fully guaranteed. New! iHKitpOlJllr AUTOMATIC PUSHBUTTON ELECTRIC 30” RANGE , ly. Many other fealnret. *138 Free Itollvery, Merviee Fully Guyrame«d ORDER BY PHONE • NO MONEY DOWN ORDER BY PHONE • NO MONEY DOWN RCA WHIRLPOOL Automatic Electric DRYER NEWZENI'TH 8-TRANSlSTOR POCKET RADIO Noa-breakable cabinet. Fam-out Zenith Royal 500. In-elude, carry ca.e, ear^Mno and battery. Deloxe glnlim. RCA WHIRLPOOL 12 CU. FT. 2.DOOR Refrigerator 2 ippIlanoM in one. Separate true mio defTM ftocMf hold. 107-lbe. frpMn foM Saper etorafc ndlUon-nuisBM door. With trade. *229- Free Deliveiy omf Service ORDER BY PHONE • NO MONEY DOWN NEW MODEL PRICE BREAK 2.3” DANISH DECORATOR LaWBOY TV Clam 2tM .^la, f'SamhliM" pie-inra tab*. na» Many other top i|Ballty rtaiuroo. Opootally prlood with trade. Exactly iw Uinrtrated. »188“ ORDER BY PHONE • NO MONEY DOWN Oven CyeliNg Lights e' Sapw^ SiMed^ Push-Button Controls Quick Heat • Antoar Lift Off Oven Door OvenTemikConlroL Chlrod Heating Units WESTINGHOUSE 10 Cu. Ft. Freezer Convenient nnright. style. Holds SXI lbs. frosen fo^ Previous year’s model. Sale priced at just. •147 GENERAL KLECTRIC Swival-Top Cleaner •34“ ♦tor Free Deliveiw at Sarvlee-Fnll Guarantee With Trade ORDER BY PHONE • NO MONEY DOWN NEW LOW PRICE EMERSON 1963 PORTABLE *128 STEREO With revolutionary neW Zenilh antomsile changer... Exclusive Zoiiitk "Miero-Tonch”' tone arm! NO MONXY DOWN J f. I OPENDAIL' NOW IS WE TIME TO BUY COLOR .., BUY WE NEWEST AT HIGH! 14ND*S LOW PRICES ,,, BUY 1963 ZENITH COLOR TV Handtmfted for Greater Dependability No printed circuits. Zenith quality ae-auras yon flnest color pictures ever .«. Shaipeiv cleared black and white pietnres, too! Superb trim. Cohtehl* porary alyllng in several finishes. Como In for a Color Dentoiuiration Get Hifhhind*g Amnzlng Low PPieeT(Niny-.Yoa*UBo SnrpHoedl N^OjMON PAY daily 9 to FOltUTKRN THfteOPOKTIAC PRElSS. MOKlPAY. OmOJPf» I, |M»y TV Shows Offering Double Story Lines n business isn’t good, is that of I to a single pHce. They are called “two-fers’‘ -two fer the cost of oiie. One of this season’s minor trends- which seems to have escaped notice is the, television two-fer. A number of the new ^ows are now serving up two stories— sometimes more—in a single episode. CHILD FOUND SAFK — Two-year-old Verna Marie (Coky) Kress clutches , her doll and stares wide-eyed at all the fuss being made over her. She wandered away, was found near her home at Appomattox, Va., the next day, asleep in a field near her puppies who were with New Drive-In Opens Today Area Getting Second Big Boy Restaurant The second Elias Brothers Big Boy brive-in the Pontiac opened today on Telegraph Road just^ south of Huron Street. ★ ★ ★ The J200.000 building, under construction for four months, is a departure from the usual architecture of the familiar Big Boy Restaurants, according to manager Ted Michaels. The stone and brick restaurant at 20 8. Telegraph has dining room with a capacity to serve 140 persons, Michaels said. Curb service is provided lor 40 .cars, with additional parking facilities to those dining inside. Michaels said the drive-in, the 40th Big Boy in the Detroit Metro-pnlitan area and tbe-.4IthJML Jbfi. state, will employ 50 persons. The restaurant will be open from,^ 7 a m. to 1 a.m. Sunday through Thursday and from 7 a m. to 3 a.m. bn Friday and Saturday, ■A ★ ♦ Michael operates the Big Boy Drive-in on the Dixie Highway at Silver Lake Road. ilibout a mad murdereM in Jttstioo Oliver Wendell 1 figured as the unlikely heavy. Then there was a minor and mlld- By CYNTHIA LOWRY AP Televlslon-Re«o Writer NEW YORK-A venfrable show business device. One of these is CBS’ “Fair Exchange,’’ a pleasant comedy hour pegged on the temporary swap of - daughters by an Eng- ___ an American family. Each Friday Ihe program shut-ties smoothly between, the merry Then there is NBC’s "Sam Benedict.’’ which always has 1 wound sometimes more-stories going at one time. Last Saturday there was the main story, — keejter innocently selling liquor to minors. Both were neatly wrapped up at the end. -The first episode of CBS’ "'nie Nurses,” suggested that this rer-ies, too. might Juggle a number of medical and emotional plots and counterplots simultaneously. Bitt last week’s show was a straightforward story about a wwktng woman’s problem in ad- goings-on in London and New justing to housjwM^^ York. It is really two welWnto* Cargo tonnage passing through the Panama Canal set a new record during I960, 39,238,219 ton U.S. MilHary Still in Laos, Reds Claim military bases of the Savanaakhet party (Ota, Phoumi NOsavan’s ligMwing iac|tlan) in ‘ * IMtkin) .....-irtwSiw lag'party’s *-ise commando a TOKYO. OR - COmmuiilat Viet Nam’s otficlal ngwapaper charged today that the Iwted States and its alliea hare "aerions-ly breached” the Geheva agrae-ment on Laos by keeping military personnel in the 8outbe«wt Asian A 'A The newspaper cording to Hanoi radio, ‘a number of U. S. military Dan, ae-chnrged guile of diplomat . membera of the U. S. operations mission and U. S. Intomatkm Service.” "Others are scattered to varioue Boy Critically Injurod in foU From Brtdgo ORlENVlLLlB Vfc old GrOenvflle hOy. waa Injured critically Saturday when ha fall gO kit tram the wider gtaderg «t tti North Lafayette Bridge over the Flat River. ■ ♦...'A- A , Officlale of United Mefnortal Hoepital In Onanvllle said Bryan BlahUch aulferad nsvere head to Juries tn' the fall, ' Police said Brian and one of his lends were playing on the bridge girdera when the accident oc- tound in an alIey.„,Hli father is C. E, OUs of MkHand. Michigon Aifomn oiot From Sovoro Booting FARGO. NJ>. ill-"'Patrick Otto », aon of a MkUand, Mich., in a Farga hospital Saturday alter being injured taur days earlier in a light at Qraad Forks, Otis, an airman stattawd at thg Grand Forks Air Force Bare, waa StoBjbuekwud. meaning ”drawn .» .11... m. •- ^^ name to nw|M PSORIASIS SNWV TsUeti to I weeks. dto •ppsared as If w^ lUn eomidstely daared and elaan. First Uwa toMyaar;. pert teUs of a user's sueecss with - dusl trastmmt for tiw M^,id mptoms of psorissto fw to .... plsn from Cansm Ca.» 0 269 N.Roekport. Main KROGER LOWERS FOOD COSTS— iOlVES TOP VALUE STAMPS TOOl Black Muslim Says Time Up for Whiles PHILADELPHIA (UPD-Blljah Muhammed, leader of the Black Muslim movement, said yesterday that "The white man’s time is up on earth." •A ★ ★ The Negro leader urged a crowd of 9,000 at a rally to “Stand up and fight like a man. The white man considers us all cowards. If you fight this will change.’’ He characterized the nonviolent demonstrations of the Congress of llnclal Equality (CORE) and the Students Non-Violent Coordinating Committee, and the enrollment of James, Meredith at the University of Mississippi as "foolish." ★ ★ ★ Muhammed, who proclams black supremacy and favors establishment of a separate Negro, state, was guarded by his 200-man security crew which is known as the "Fruit of Islam.” The maple syrup industry brings important sums each year to Vermont, New York, Wisconsin and other states, but Canada leads in 51 rawnfui Niw PiuNon aiAis OOCCEDTOUIS in aJHfyl CWM Mily lunni • kmm. tsit you tho vtry pmim irou Wm4 ** ..... ... (orleaiso, no ofr*«*«5Se**e«f"«SJ «opo.T)w(uUi IJiSi LOIN END PORK LOIN ROAST HYORADE'S SKINLESS __ "OALL^FARinMlENERS HORMEL SLICED BACON KROGER BUTTERMILK VARIETY-SAVE 8' WHin BREAD 16-OZ. • • • LOAF SAVE ID-SUNSWEET PRUNE JUICE . ..................... REI*RESHING KROGER _________ ORANGE JUICE.................. . 3 *1 GRAPEFRUIT SECTIONS KROGER ORANGE-GRAPEFRUIT BIENDED JUICE . . SAVE lA'-KROGER 39* PINEAPPIE-GRAPEFRUIT juice . 4 SAVE V-KROGER ----- _ 303 • • 7 CANS 8 FLAVORS- * ORANGE , \ommHT • MIRIVIV ^ tivrew ' 3‘£S«»’ JEU-O VITAMIN-RICH KROGER GRAPEFRUIT JUICE . . SAVE UP TO 4^-EMBASSY PEACH. PLUM. GRAPE OR 5 ’1 STRAWBERRY PRESERVES... 3 MEDIUM iR. 59’ SHARP IB. 69* PINCONNING CHEESE 49. SWEET MILK OR BUTTERMILK BISCUITS RORMN'S •••••< GOLDEN HOMESTEAD .............................S cTNi TO* SAVE 8’-BORDEN'S ICE CREAM CAKE ROLL. SrousOO* frettn MORTON'S DINNERS voo ot Kroior In Fonlloo Molt. Norik r*rrr M-. Mlrotlo H' Drorloo riolm, Vnlon l,oliii on. Uolor. tkra Toot., Art. t, INI, No .1 •oM to ioolon. Umlt Ono Coooon For RonUlz. WITH THIS COUPON LARGE TIDE CsAve «• SAVE 29‘-WITH THIS COUPON BORDEN'S ELSIE g ICE CREAM BARS : 12-49' I Coorei OOM ol Kro(or )n ronlloe Moll, Nortli *vni MIroolo Milo, B Droyton Molnt. Vnlon Loko on< 0*l*H Ikra Tooo., Ool. *, IWf. Noao ^ toM to ROolora. Limit Uno Coopon For romlly. |g ■ ■■■■iBWBaiailllllllMMBMRIMMRIliM WITH THIS COUPON-GRANULATED CANE ! DOMINO SUGAR ; - 43* I , OooiMHi rolM ol Krofor In Fonlloo Moll, Norik Porry Rl., MIroolo Milo. B ! Droylon riolnt, Volon Loko on. OnlorR Ikm Tnoo„ Ool. K IMt. Nooo* _ > ioM lo Roolori. Limit Ooo Coopon For Fooilly. g| SAVE SD-WITH THIS COUPON ! SWIFT'NINO ; 3 491 "1 ■ ■ ^ 50 IXIBA TOP ^ 100 EXTRA TOP i □ VALm STAMPS □ VALUR STAMPS ■ WITN TIM OOIMON ANO Bl WiM TIM COUI^ AND tl PURCHASt CM MOM PUlCNAM M MbM ■ORgIN «IAN-r_. nmn^ tmi tm m'W m rmbpmii 9 whiWr rBAV f RlAHt. WMOU KIRNIl OR C^M CORN ■ 3-100 : tarsT'.i'r’.jia-.rMVk’W'’*- J THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1962 Guests New Open house ms held Sunday at the First Congregational Church to inaugurate its dediMm^aidk^m^ had tea in the lower hall. Mrs. George Caches, president of the Teeners Vocal Music ClinicSeV- to Sing for Club Women o( Forest Lake Country Club will be entertained by The Caribbeans Wednesday Oct. 17 during their monthly The annual fall vocal music clinic Is announced by the music department of Pontiac schools. (A massed chorus of some 700 voices from Pontiac \Central and Pontiac Northern high schools will present some The Garibbeana are a group of some 55 teen-agers from Pontiac Central High School. They'll ^ native that after--•neenr^wHh costumes and~HF~~ struments as tliey beat out their Latin American rhythms. Social chairman Mrs. Richard E. Reiter will provide special effects by creating a sandy beach, with swaying palms and a look of blue water In the background. ★ ★ ★ General chairman is Mrs. Richard Carter. Committee wqmen include Mrs. Elroy Sandberg, Mrs. J. C. Brink-man. Mrs'. Duane Freese, Mrs. Lklward Bolle, Mrs. Robert Cosner, Mrs. William Nern and Mrs. W. A. Sutherland. Heritage Club Hears Talk on Mount Vernon Mrs. Edward R. Hansz entertained members of The He^ Itage aub Thursday. Members and guests heard Mrs. Hansz discuss Mount Vernon, George ■ Washington’s home, illustrating her talk with slides. Guests for the evening were Mrs. John Sloan, Mrs. Walter Obenauf and Mrs. James Roaers. Mrs. Francis McDowell Is November's hostess. . Slate Benefit Sale About 400 guests toured the needy icoim^ed ’nrst Oan-gregational Church Sttndi^ afternoon and had ti^ as part of , the church’s dedication week activities. , ★ ★ ft John Madole airange* the tours, using high school members of the diurch as guides. Mrs. Elwood Bi(der, general chairman of the tea, was assisted by Mrs. Frank Kirby in charge of the kitchen, ft ft ft During the afternoon those presiding at the tea table were Mrs. Malcolm Burton, Mrs. Charles Andrews. Mrs.' Dex- -ter Craig and Mrs. George Gaches. Others were Mrs. Harold Gillow, Mrs. Arno Hulet, Mrs. Donald McIntosh and Mrs. E. C. Russell. ■ Guests Included members of other churches in the Pontiac area uid city officials. Puzzled by Zigzag Eating By the Emily Post Institute Women’s Fellowship, poured for Mrs. Mac Whitfield q- i am an American citizen .................................................■in Germany and came to this country when eral chmrmm of the tea. i ' accustomed to the European way of eating, which is knife in right hand and fork in left hand and not switching back and forth, which seetos to be the custom here. I still follow this practice. I have been told that my method of eating is not correct in this country and that I should switch to the “American” way. Will you please tell me if my way of eating is considered Incorrect table manners. A: Your way of eWing is entirely co^ect here as well as abroad,<^nd you certainly need nor shllt to theAwkwant zigzag method of eating which even here is not seen at the tables of fashionable people. Q- Recently my Mrs. Elwood Bigikr, also of West Iroquois Road, gen- for City High Schools of the world's finest choral selections Nov. 5 in the Pontl’ac . Northern High School gynma- Selectlons to be .used include spirituals, patriotic songs and a variety of religious numbers. The massed choir and band will present the finale. Dr. Joseph E. Maddy’s "Festival Finale.” The bands of Pontiac Northern — 50 members — and Pontiac CentraLj- 105 ^wlU be combined for the instrumental part of this number. Conductor for the massed groups will be George H, Put- The annual fall benefit sale of the Episcopal Churchwomen of Christ Church Cranbrook is slated for Nov. 1 at the parish house on Lone Pine Road in Bloomfield Hills. ft ft ft The women of the church are busy sorting and marking the many items, from pots and pans to fur coats, that have been donated by members for the sale. ¥ » ¥ Bargains will be available for all the family in all depart- ments •- from better dresses to bluejeans. There will also be household appliances, books, and many other items offered. In the past, well over a thousand persons have visited this semiannual event. ft ft ft The Episcopal churchwbmpn ,will preview the clothing bargains during a luncheon fashion show ine^ay. Proceeds from this sale will benefit many Oakland Cbunty service agencies. County Nurses to Hear Hospital Pathologist The Oakland County District Nurses’ Association will meet Oct, 16 at 7:30 p.m. In William Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak. Dr. Jack Kavorklan, assistant pathologist at Pontiac General Hospital, will discuss “The Future of Cadaver Blood Transfusions.” Born in Pontiac, Dr. Kavorklan, who received his medical degree at the University of Michigan, served a two-year pathology residency at the University Medical Center before accepting his present postion. ft ft ft Research on the subject to be discussed was begun here in Pontiac. Professional papers on this topic have appeared in major pathology Journals and were presented to the New York State Blood Bank Association earlier in the year. All registered nurses are invited to attend the meeting. Esiinger-Partrick Vows Told tied greens and candela-wound with white satin Ivy graced the chancel of Birmingham Church of It where Karen Lee Par-became Mrs. Floyd L. iger In a Saturday eve-ceremohy. A reception in the Mk'liignn Christian College, Rochester followed the vows spoken before Brother Morris W. Womack. Parents of the bridal couple are the Clarence H. Partricks of Rochester and the Albert L. Eslingers, Birmlngbam. Styled along classic lines, the bride's gown of white spotlight satin featured a court train. A satin pillbox caught her bouffant short veil of ^nch Illusion. White chrysanthemums, miniature rosebuds, Stephonotis and ivy comprised the bride's bouquet, ft ft ft Mrs. Richard L. Cairns, matron of honor, appeared In a pink wool sheath dress with matching organdy overskirt and satin flower hat. Her cascade bouquet included petal pink rosebuds and inlniature Fugl chrysanthemums. Wearing deeper pink dresses of identical styling were bridesmaids, Mrs. Jarrell N. Vickers, Birmingham, and the bridegroom’s sister, Mrs. Earl Baumunk of Farmington, ft ft ft Franklin Howard of Berkley was best man, Seating some 900 guests were Earl Baumunk and James Cose. The mother of the bride cboae a teal blue silk tweed dress and corsage of white rs. Es- tal and secondary vocal music. Music directors partlclpatihg in the affair are l^nald Bentley, Jerry Libby and Richard Morse of Pontiac Central; A. Michael Dempsey, Judith Parry and Eldon Rosegart, Pontiac Northern. Tickets may be purchased at the door, from music students oe'it the music office. Sorority Hears Talk by Student The Alpha Alpha Chapter of Epsilon Sigma Alpha sorority met Thursday evening at the Waterford Township home of Mrs. Elmer 0. Johnson. Special guest of the evening was Gabriele Schwarz of Lune-berg, Germany, a foreign exchange student at Waterford Kettering High School this year. She told of her be life and compared it with her present life as an American schoolgirl. Mrs. Johnson was Installed as vice president and Mrs. Edward Hummel as corresponding secretary. Plans were made for the first rush party for new pledges to be held at the Clarkston home of Mrs. Anthony Grand, president of the sorority. Guests for the evening in- cluded Mrs. Paul Lampkin, an honorary member; Mrs, Harry Watkins, Mrs. David Wood, Grace Sutton and Mrs. William Kay of Royal Oak. Women Meet Swap Plants, Conversation Members of Waterford branch. Womans Notional Farm and Garden Association, met Thursday afternoon In the home of Mrs. A. W. Emery on Dixie Highway, Mrs. Mark Stewart and Mrs Robert Ma- cousin and her husband and their daughter came to this city from the West Coast for a visit. They,spend a week with us at our house. Yesterday my husband received a note from this cousin thanking him for the hospitality shown them while they were here. #vThe note was addressed to my husband alone, and although she did make mention of me in the note, I felt rather put out over this as I was the one who did all the work and think the note should have been sent to me — or at least to Mr. and Mrs, Wasn’t this Improper? A: Correctly, the bread-and-butter note idiould have been addressed to you or to Mr. and Mrs. The Emily Post Institute cannot answer personal mail, but all questions of general interest are answered in this col- Sorority Sets Saturday Tea Mrs. Elmer Mellebrand will open her Bloomfield Hills home Saturday to members of the,Detroit branch of Lamba Tau Delta Sorority for the alumni tea. Prospective pledges will be Introduced. Local members planning to attend include Mrs. Reginald McNichol, Mrs. William Jensen, Mrs. Charles Plants of many varirtiea were exchanged and garden pnd)lenut dlstsissed. The Michigan Division WNFM3 will sponsor a Dried Arrangements Workshop, Oct. 16 in the Community Activities Building. Missionaides Plan Meeting The Pontiac Missionaides will meet at 8 p.m. Wednesday in St. Patrick’s Chunrh, Union l,ake. Plans for the November benefit sale will be discussed. All mlsslon-tnlnded women are welcome. Pledge Sororities Two Birmingham girls recently pledged national social sororities at Denison Unlve^ slty, Granville, Ohio. Nancy Drinkard, daui^ter of Mr. and Mrs, William Drinkard pleged Kappa Alpha Tlwta and Susan McClanthan, daughter of the John Mcdanthana Is a Delta Delta Delta pledge. *Bo(h girls are freshmen. brocade and matching orchids. Alumnae Unit 'to Meet noyp L. Bsm The Dale Partricks of Carlisle, Pa., came for his lister’s wedding, olio the bridegroom's fairother, Robert EsUn-ger, of Bangor, Maine. < Mpee Oct. 30 the newIyWedi wiQ be at home on Euclid Street. The North Suburban Chi mer M. Baken Jr., special Omega Alunuiae will meet at 8:30 p.m. Thursday In the home of Mrs, Richard McGrath Jr., Wellington Drive, ft* ft Giiest speaker will be Pat- agent for the Federal Bureau of Lnveatlgation, In charge of the Detroit office. Cx)hostesscs tor the evening will be Mrs. F. J. Fitzpatrick of Berkley and Mrs. Edwin C. Kerr of Franklin. Winners of the poster contest for this year’s PTA fair at DatdelyWhitfield -School were Debbie Olsen (holding the winning poster) of Bloomfield Town- ship; Pat Roy, West Bloomfield Township; and Rick Smith, Berwick Bird. A'fair will be held at tke^c^ xwednesday from 5 to 8 p.m. Women s Section Tell QtiBband Divorce OUT Speak Up About Rival! By ABIGAIL VAN BlIBEN DEAR ABBY: About two years ago my hustand stmted seeing another woman. Shels ABBY J) he left her 1 e 11 e rs (addressed to hte place of work) around where I would be sure to find them. When I read 'iAe letters was broken-hearted because we have a lovely family and I thought we were happy. This woman writes about “waiting for the day when we can tell the world about our love.” Abby, I would die before I would break up my home. I haven't said anything to my husband about it, hoping this affair would die out by Itself. If I wait patiently, and keep praying, do you think he will get it out of his system? WAITING AND PRAYING ft ft ft DEAR WAITING: NO! While you are "waiting and praying,” your competition la building bombs In her tiasement. Tell your husband you know about the other woman, that you love him, refuse to share him and will not tolerate his double life. Tell him divorce is OUT — and let him know you mean It! DEAR ABBY: A relative (an only child) Is ai; "A” student. He has an 8 o’clock Class on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. It seems he has difficulty aamkening In time to make this lariy roendng lISS uid UNTIL Ms mother makes a long distance call to get him up. (They live about 300 miles from his university.) Hita itiident swaietimea pEiis hi before and reminds them to phone him in order to make his 8 o’clock dass. BOTH parents have master’s degrees in education. What is your opinion? TELEPHONinS DEAR TELEPHONmS: I stock in the telephone com- DEAR ABBY: I loved the prayer, "Slow Me Down, Lord,” which you published In your column. Speaking of prayers, when I was a little girt my mother felt that, "Now I Lay Me Down'to Sleep,” etc., "If I Should Die Before I Wake,” etc., was too depressing for a child. So she wrote the following prayer for me to say each night: e Shephod, hwr Guard thy Uttle lamb tadklit Thn^ the diiiiiBn be thos llgSht.” 1 believe many motiwn ones say a prayer like my mother’s. You have my pep-mission to print It. NAOMAW. DEAR NAOMA: Many thanks for the revised version of “Now I Lay Me Down." etc. If I were to suggest an "Improvement” on a prayer, 1 fear the ecclesiastical ceiling might fall in. But I agree, your mother’s prayer is more appropriately worded for a chUd. ft ft ft What’s on your mind? For a personal reply, send a sell-addressed, stamped envelope to Abby, Box 3365, Beverly Hills. Calif. ★ ft ft For Abby’s booklet, “How to Have a Lovely Wedding,’’ send 50 cents to Abby, Box 3365, Beverly Hills. CUUL 65 Present at Brunch Sixty-five members of the Woman’s Society of (Siristlan Service of Central Methodist Church, attended a brunch Thursday in Fellowship Hall on M59. ft « ft Members of the Jean Bag-nall Circle were hostesses and the Leora Shanks Orcle, with Mrs. Mae White, chairman, Nfewlyweds on Trip, Go to Niagara Falls Allen Palmer, Mrs. W. S. Dawe, Mrs. Lois Hajocos, Mrs. William Lacy and Mrs. P. O. Latimer. Mrs. Latimer gave the i«o-gram on "The Rim of Eaat AMa” and Mrs. Percy Jones led devotions. Mrs. Walter Barnlngham and Mrs. Harry Baker told of home misston duties. RetireiJ Teachers to Meet Oct. 17 Hie Pontlae and VldHlty Retired ‘Tsachen wUI meet at The First Free Methodist Church was the setting for the Saturday evening vows of Marilyn Kay Rice and James F. Sholte spoken before the Rev. Carl Koerner. Receiving with the newlyweds in the Knights of Pythias Hall were their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Homer J. Rice of Blaine Avenue and the Oils L. Sholics of Waterford Township. ft ft ft Pink sweetheart roses, white carnations and ivy, arranged in a cascade, were carried by ihe bride, gowned In floor-length white (Chantilly lace over taftria. Her fingertip veil of Illusion fell from a double tiara. Attired in romance blue lace over tafteta, Mrs. Kenneth B. Young, matron of honor, carried azalea pl«* carnations. The bridesmaids, Mrs. Lao™" / H Rice artd Mrs. Daniel Mo- / Qeacby of Watertord, hcld^ pale pink carnatlona. On the esquire side were best man Kenneth R. Young and ushers Lauren Rice, the bride’s brother, and James iShea of Flint. , The couple will live In Kee-go Harbor after their honeymoon at Niagara Fpdla. - Corsages of white camaUont and roses complemented an embroidered turquoise s crepe dress for Mrs. Rice a royal blue sheer wool shi dress for the mother of bridegroom. and Oakland at 5:30 p-m- Out. IT. Ath Refervattons for tko C:3P the dinner will be MarUyit Kay Rice, daiighter of UmRomer J. Rices ,M BUune Aveune exchanged vows with Jamas r. Shake, tm of the Jamat r. Shoket of Watarfori, Saittrday : iiAi- I FirtI Fm “ SIXTEEN Tragic Toll , In the last decade about 115,-000 people have died in tires In the U.S., according to Al-Chennical's Barrett Ed* vision. sini» most fires are caused by carelessness Barrett and other building terials manufacturers continually stress use of fire-retardant materials such as gypsum wallboard. EznaazzsEr "MOVIE PRODUCER PRAISES VOORHEIS" "FINiST DRY - CLiANINO AND FINISHING ANYWHIRI" tclothaf Wife #rom: Cui»om $hep Shirtmsktrs, 5th Avi., N.Y. Crippr Importers ami CuiieM. Founteinbleeu. Miami; CMitom ClSualeire. Let Vegas.) LOW MONIY-SAVING PRICES Dry-Cleaned and Finished SKIRTS-PLAIN AQm SWUTIRS We Clean arid Scientifically Spot Them 5‘^‘•99* VOORHEIS "1 Hour" CLEANERS Plant; 4160 W. Walton, at Sashabaw, Drayton PIsina renttee Breasfei ISI BsMwta Art. Itt Blosks eat BsMwIa ®efree' TRUE CHINA by SYRACUSE OPEN STOCK SAVINGKSPREE Never before such savings on famous Carefree, the magnificent true china that’s so strong it’s guaranteed against breaking, chipping, fading. Now’s your chance to complete your Carefree collection *... every piece, every pattern in our store reduced 20% for this sale only. Don’t own Carefree? You should ... and this is the best time ever! Regular low prices on Carefree Starter Sets and Complete Services Carefree Savings Spree ends October 20. A\i 0^^ Michigan's Largest Dinnerware Specialty Store NOKTII KNI) OF MIKACI.K MII.K SIKH’l'INO FKNTKB ON TKLINiKAFII ItOAO Telephone FK 2-H(il2 OlM-n Dally and Sunday 10 a. m. lo » p. m. TifE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. OCTOBER 8, 1962, Bonnie Lou McArthur, daughter of the Lloyd McArthurs of Oftonville to Bobby Dunavant, son of the Edward Dunavants of Lewis Street. Avenue ‘ announce the engagement of their dmghter • Linda to Alfred W. Wilkins, son of Mrs. Forest Strauel of Silverwood and the late Alfred Wilkins. BONNIE LOU McArthur LINDA 7. BUCK Start on Different Paths Feeble Minds Peril U.S. By DR. OKORGE W. CRANE CASE N-443: Arnold G.. aged 12, almost died from gas fumes. •■Oh. Dr. Crane," his mother tearfully informed me, ‘‘Arnold was sitting in the car in the garage. "Appar ent-ly, he had started t h e motor b u t didn’t open the garage doors, so the exhaust fumes overcame him. "My husband happened to go out into the backyard and thought he heard the motor running, so he investigated. "That’s all that saved Arnold’s life, though at first we thought he was dead. B u t they whisked him to the hospital and gave him oxygen until he finally revived. ♦ ★ ★ "But, Dr, Crane, he isn’t normal anymore! The brain DR. CRANE specialists tell us the carbon monoxide damaged some of his brain cells so he now* has only the intelligence of a high grade moron.” FACTS ABOirr MORONS Some people are born with a low I. Q., so their feeblemindedness is present at birth. 'These people have what is called "amentia” or/ absence of normal mental alertne.ss. But other folks may start out as brilliant boys and girls yet later lose some of that natural alertness, as from car-b 0 n monoxide asphyxiation, tumors, poisons, too high fevers, etc. ♦ ★ People who ’once were normally bright but later are reduced in I. Q., fall Into the "dementia” category. But both may be feebleminded and thus be classed as idiots, imbeciles or mofons. Idiots are the lowest in in-telligenee, with a mental age when they are adults of not more than 3 years. Imbeciles are a notch higher and may range up to 7 Have You Tried This? Chicken and Broccoli Joined in Casserole By JANET ODEIX Pontiac Press Home Editor Chicken has many points In its favor as good food. One is that it is inexpensive; the other that it Is low lii fat. Now that wo can buy parts of the bird, it is ea.iy to prepare the dish below. Mrs. Rudolph Buchman is our cook today. The mother of five active children, she docs her slint in participating in sch(X)l activiiie.s. She is ntKMit lo start a Great Books discus.sion group with young-KliTS. Sewing, wiamlcs and bridge are among her hobl)i»*s. (’IIK'KEN (’ASSEROI-E By Mrs. Rudolph llucl.iiiaii 2 packages frozen broeeoli 2 cups wide noodles > j chicken b'tjnst iwr serving Cream sauce Cheese Cook chicken breasts and broccoli separately. Cook noodles In boiling salted wa-. ter until Just tender. Spread chicken breasts on | bottom of casserole. Add lay- § er of broccoli. j Make a cream sauce with 2 cups of milk or use one of | the new cream sauce mixes. | Stir in Kom(? sliarp clH-ese. , Mix tills cheese sauce wilh tlie ccMikcd niMMile:-. Pour sauce over broccoli and chicken and sprinkle wilh more sharp clKS'se, grated. Hake .30 minutes at 400 degrees. .Serves 6. We're Celebrating Our 23rd Anniversary OFFERING THE NEW SENSATIONAL PERMANENTS ERMANENT j. I vBUdom , I Reg. *17.50 PERMANENT j I For Problem I Complete ' ' Complete m mmm mm mm J Immmmmmmmm^mmmmmrneM $100 I 2 CANS OR HEI.ENE CURTIS SPRAY | Heg. $2.50 69* j All Permanents Vurondittonally (luaranleed THE FINEST PERMANENTS IN 1HE COUNTHY OBTAINABLE ONLY AT ANDRE'S VALUABLE COUPON NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY Open Friday HU 9 P.M. Phone FE 5-9257 Beauty Salon I FREE > ' *2®® Gift j I I I With Each Permanent t L ________- - _ - - J 11 North .Sagimiw Ret ween l^iwrenee and Plke-Sl. years in mental age when they are fully grown. HIGHEST CATEGORY Morons are the highest category of the feebleminded. wlUi a top mental age at maturity of about 11 years. ★ * A We now have millions of actual feebleminded in this country! They help zoom our welfare rolls. But they can vote, even if they can make only an “X” on their ballots, so they are a tremendous threat to this republic and its ’’free enterprise” system. Earlier this year, in the typical state of Indiana, Dr. Stewart T. Ginsberg, mental health commissioner, listed over 3 per cent of the state’s total population in the leeble-minded category. AAA The Indiana survey showed 131,900 morons (I. Q, frotn 50 lo 70) 9,000 imbeciles (I. Q, from 20 to 50), and 2,IM id-iot,s (I. Q, from 0 to 20). And, said Dr. Ginsberg, the waiting list in Indiana Iw admission to mental institutions ”ls probably the lowest in the United Slates.” In our large cities, the feebleminded are herded by precinct captains into voting booths, where those feebleminded neutralize your vole and determine who will be elected president, CRY. FOR REUEF They also cry the loudest for handouts and more relief. Because they can vote, they c.*m thus zoom YOUR taxes and dig deeper into YOUR earnings, so beware! AAA To slop their dangerous trend toward Socialism, send for my booklet ”How to Save Our Republic,” enclosing a stamped, return envelope plus 20 cents. cart «f ini* Pnntl«c Vrfm. Mlchlxan. *n*lo«ln» a Ion* imiinl, 8*l( • a(Ulr*»*«l envf- Alwavi wrIU Plan to Play Phone Bridge Members of the Mercy Ix'aguc of Oakland County will enleiialn at telephone bridge parlies in their homes on Oct. 17, at 1 p. m. AAA Mrs. Judge W. Bearden's home in Birmingham will be headquarters lor awarding prizes. Cocn solved. Exp<‘rts at a sort teen-agers fnmi Malm* lo Mon-tan.’i are wearing fltable . . . call tixlay! VrDOR MILLINERY 800 N. Ba.v fUreet off Ml. Clemem SI. ___1 »lB*k Lan W*tor« Opilyli* Raa< from ronlla* -All Permanents- COMPLETE WITH CUT AND in' $095 *3 NONE HIGHER Shampoo and Sat $1.95 Expert licensed pperotors to give you o»» eosy-tO-monoge haircut, long lasting permonent ond becoming hoirstyle. No appointment necessary, permanent complete in two hours. HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY SHOr Ope" Heininga e» I A. H. ‘ 78 N. Seginow Over loiley Mkh 3l3-9*«0 -IJ THE 1>0NTIAC WtBSS, MONDAY. OCTOBER 8. 1062 Show Chillj Whaf Theft Does to Yictim Dear Mn, Uwrmce: Since our return from n comp trip, our ID-yewMtld ion iita boM uoing on peiMive Mout knUt. HeiMkIit a goodby preoont from a boy he played with at eamp. Then my huaband got a letter from the bay’s father eaylng the knllle was # Hr Is that my oonteee taUng It And hd keeps saying that the dther Idd wfis m careless he deserved to e it. . I hi trying to avoid the disagreeable reaHsatlesi of the Injasllee he lalllotod on the other chUd. U Is your reoponslUI-Ity to help him laeo It This Is seldom done by whip ping. If severe punishment purified criminals would always emerge from priaim with benevolent emotions irartead of their often ’ creased 'vengefulness. So I suggest that you now apply true discipline to this angry youngster. Try to persuade him to tell you how desperately he wanted that knife, how hoj^less he felt about getting you to provide him with one, how troubled he was by the prospect of losing It. I hope you can get hM, to break down and talk abont hta yearning for that knife. For It wUI be through hie letoeling of hto own ha«tag littt we toed hbn By dOgEPIIINi: LOWMAN Every person has a right "to his own approach to life, his or her cnvn philosophy and viewpoint. I like to Jump when lightning strikes, and before, if I can. ' '* ' A * Be that as it may, today I am writing about the many preventative measures we can use to guard health and good looks. As we grow Ider some things will happen to I, willy nllly, no matter what we >. Joints may become suffer, muHles less elasflo aad some I droopo will occur has dono to; the other ohlld. It is especially important for you to get him to tell you about his yearning for this knife because the confession destroys his alibi. It is then Um( we can say to him, "How do you know Jimmy didn't care Just as much about this knife aa you do? Because he didn't tell you he liked it? But you didn't tell us how much you liked It. "No, sir, you did a m( Af all Neumode Hoikry Shape St Norih Saglaaw St. thiag. Il’a aat that you Jast took no chance to toll yon bow ho fstt about It You mowed no bitcfeot In bio feeUngo .» The praUam ol ehUdrea’a atml- ing fa always the |im>Ucm dif-| Blul nooldiiig and whipidng can ooniwetion from thair vieOtoY toil-push Mm nway from the hive enumd the victtei, wa musti*** iel^-cwtered belldf that he is flnrtshmvourinUNrestinourswiig;^ only buy who was really at^ osn of deprivatloa. 'tadied to that knife. Frevewtive Hpi Guard Health and Looks mms Btrive for to LATER beoauM LATER gtveo no more time and more youth. The regular use of a lubricating mam will greatly delay the ap^ pearance of lines. Good nutrition and mcercise prriong the youthful part of life and add zest to daily living. Fine physical condition trees the spirit fi^ ihe straight-jacket of chronic fatigue. WARNS OF DANGER Actually the message I am bringing you today to frxm the United States Department of Health, Education and We.'fare. It comes from the office of the secretary, apOclal staff on'aging. This communication warns older people of the danger ot jnfluensa. welfare of older permn* are urged to coopperslc In trying to get them to protect themselves agnlnst cooperate In trying to get them to protect themselves against PREDICTED outbreaks ol Influ-ehsn. Older people are especially vulnerable to thto illness. They are urged to have these shots now. Later on, when the flu 'flburishes, may be too late, since it takes a while to build up immunity. A ★ ★ Now is the time! Everybody 65 or more should have them and informed i^plnlm suggests that we would be wise to take them from Donald P. Kent, special secretary one which could save thousands from premature invalidism or death.” Tomorrow: “Don't Let Neck Show Age, Watch Posture — E^c-cretoe," Now's the time to hove your summer wardrobe completely cleaned before storing away for the long winter months. >l«kdl|i ewl Delivery Service Aveileble COMPUTE >SHIRT SERVICE Rig^ riou) is the time to check with your doctor about flue shots —especially if you belong to the older ger^eration. asR dinctor ki> ^ With Matching Ottoman, End Tabla, two drawars .... foam-dacron supar soft cushion, box plaat $359.75 Colonial high-back Sofa, ikirt, rosa twsad covar ... .. daluxa fosm-docron tupar toft cuthloni, tola twiad $27995 $295.00 Curvad-back Colonial Sofa ...................... by Globa, all foam rubhsr cufhlonsd, sklrtad btM, ' $189.95 TwO-euihlon Wing Sofa, aqua and bslga nylon tl QQ5O pillow bock, foam rubbar tapaitry cover ^ cuthloni, balga and turquolia $ 1 ^Q50 colonial print covar........ $199.50 42-lneh Dry Sink In tarra- cotta finijh, eoppat llnar, $ 1 2050 $395.50 King-sfza 89'/i" Wing Sofa by Wsstarn Carolina, attschad pillow back and _ looM pillow arms, mint $7QS50 groan covar ........................... $239.75 Barrtl-back Pull-up Chair by Horltofla. daluxa foam-dtoron cushion, icattor toot, RQQ05 gold bracada covar.....................▼z z $149.50 Frullwood Pull-up Owlr, curvod hand-carvad back, foam cushion, Fsdsral print tQQ50 covar In aqua and nutmag , $129.95 Small Lounga Chair wlfh swivdt-rockar bsM. button-back, foam rubbar T-cuihion, skirtod bato. Iridoicant $805C groan covar ................ x $ 39.50 High-back Kannady Roekar in _ antiqua mapla, rad corduroy / $2Q95 cushlorw and , arm pads ...... » Z antiqua brass hardwara WE HAVE A GROUP OF ABOUT 25 TABLE LAMPS VERY SPECIALLY PRICED! Clearance of ‘ CRICKET CHAIRS and RCXKERS Values Up to $19.9S" YOUR CHOICE $14” Clever Early American Cricket Stool with Braided Top $595 ' If you Ilka colonisl docor —. you'll lova this cuts llttla stool with Its gay, braldod top. In cholea of tavaral baautiful cotor combinations! Mapla lags. Stands 9" high wl(h 13141” diamatar top. 24 Wist HURON STREET Open Tonight and Friday 'til 9 PARK FREE ON OUR LOT BEHIND STORE Notice to QUr Ethan Allen . Customers ... w* hove 0 iHimb«r of floor Mmpig Ethan Align * plostic-tQp drggtgrg, chests, and d g t k duegd for Immgdlot* clgoronctl Floor somplgg only—eo shop torly for KfeBTEIHf- PRES US Doubles Copt^, iri! Viet Nim I VHt TMed StatM to almost its helicopter force in Nam. hi addition to formy cmnpanles of Just-30 Wil helicopters, two s on the way and a com-: new Hula Jet turbine i has been arriving piece-er the past two and a lonths. I additions will give the i. a total of 184 hellcpoters In Nam. Informed sources y the goal is one company of I earrying a sqnad of troops Ml, all but the SO 1 capable of oanylag a e troops each. The Hulas are utility craft for scouting, evacuating wounded and dropping supplies. Some have been armed with 50>caliber machine guns and rockets. Plans ate to use them as escorts for. the troop curriers in strikes agafost the Communist guerillas, mwing in ahead of the assault site and smothering Communist ground fire with close-range strafing. EXVRBIA hVench officials see hopeful signs of what could be the beginnings of a drift back to Algeria I SMIagasiTrin f Wo cover all woodwork 1 laf w thaw yon why Alnmlnom ^SMhy^ndtifn^^ I FE 4-2597—EM 3-2385—OR 3-2842 C. WEEDON BUDGET $129 Svp«r Undenlnictaie IlMiim OT ribtiflas ScrMBiiig oi Gliu EncItuMf Ivdilablg by the fiOO.OOO Europeans who fled to France. For the first time rince last June, the numbers of 'retuihees has exceeded the numbers oi those still fleeiiv to France by boat and plan. Alt^ria desperately needs French technicians and French know-how. TAKINO IT TO FBWtB: President Ch||rtes de Gaulle remains supremely confident that the French people will back again solidly in the Oct. 28 stitutional referendum. Britain's desire for a dedstoa befose the end of the year win be pressed by Lord PHvy Heal Strongly favoring British entry Italy, But de GauUe 'still counts Ml .West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer and Intends to make the terms as t l>e Gaulle changes to make the French president elected directly by the pedpie. He la opposed by poll-tlclisns who see hi Ms plan for. a strong presidency the end of the parllainentarlan system. DeGaulle's cmifldence is not reflected by^gome political experts who believe be might obtain no more than, and possibly less than, per cent of the vote. In such an event, de GaiiUe might decide to qijttt. TO BE OB NOT TO BE Britain and PYance square off again thia Week in renewal of Bru^ls negotiations over the British application for membership V.S.{I.R. FIRST Nikita Khrushchev continues to play the part of a .man very much disinterested in attending either the current session of the United Nations General Assembly in New -York or meeting with Piesident Kennedy in Washington. While his foture plans remain unanouced, he continues his leisurely tour of Soviet agricultural areas in central Asia. Meanwhile, Finnish President Urho Kekkonen is vacationing on the Black Sea coast and is expected to confer with Khhishchc before hia departure for Helsinid on Oet. IT. Report Rumors of Soviet Riot ; WASHINGTON (4?) - DW®; matlc officials report peralatent rumors that RuMians in the city oT Novocherkassk rioted last Juni after the Soviet government , announced food price increases. These officials said Sunday night the reports reafching the West indicate Soviet troops helped quell the disturbance, and tome reports say a number of people were shot. It waa not known H there were any deaths. ★ ★ W U.s. officials said,they were cMivInced there was Mine sort of civil diiturbance In the south Rus-Sian industrial center of more than 80,000 near the Bladi Sea the food price increase. NovodwrkuMk about that It foBf M CWoaiJ * iMvu Ay at tha 1*1* n I aquara milt jpgr • An Mttma^ ti^ Imle-ttory »tyle. CRYSTAl OlAt iMk fM OBBiiiBB riEX-d-GUSS Jht Nanif li Prlnttd Along NO MONEY DOWN-TERMS TO FIT YOUR BUDGET! i'L BIO FAMILY-SIZE ;^138 VOQUE ^ Debutante SILAv J Elec. HAIR DRYER ami HAT BOX Hai Nail i Dryar, too! M Mmmv S.WII EUREKA or HOOVER CANNISTER VACUUMS ADMIRAL 1^ STEREO Phonograph ^ *r, Siiislv sl«ir. able suction, ovor 1 h.p. motor, flip-top lid. On ballboorlng castors. AttOchmonts Includod. YOUR $oe CHOICE WV No Monoy Down i| ’'4 Fresh CHICKBI PlUirS!!! NECKS and BACKS.u Kk CHICKEN WINGS....... i> 29' CHICKEN LEGS tT'.u. 43' CHICKEN BREi^S ;^:! ...». 49' ^asca CELERY Fresh Crisp l\^ Stalk Food Club ■ TOMATO JUICE 19< GIANT '46-oz. Can LAYAWAY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS AND SAVE! Small Size FRESH EGGS 29 King Size SURF 89! PEOPLE’S m food town FOOD MARKETS OPEN MON. THURS. FRI. SAT. NIGHTS ’til 9 J2AS AUMM 14«f L m SLIFN AUMill ST.|l WM*Mn«wM ■ ■^aNNrwwiAWiw ■ owItwNMM ■ wwiwMTta* ■ fAMsttarj*,. ■ SUPER MARKETS THEl PONTIAC PRESS .HO»QAr. OCTOBEH S. i«B •' - - - i — - Reserves OH on Missions, It was a sray FHday morning at MetropoUtan Airport. Ground-fog twirled around still propellora at tbe Michigan Air Guard apmh. Above the fog Aoated a hpdVy overcast. A Jet. engine fired , with a bang. Air and fuel whooshed through its body. The high-pitched whine rose to a howl. \ ■ 'If * * The first gray shape trailing a l^lazing torch hurled into the sky. That was the, beginning. For SOO officers and men of the State Air Guardmany from the Pontiac area — it was ^rt of the quiet war of readiness which is fought by reserve men. and* their families throughout the nation. Their mission: Aerial reconnaissance and maintaining the reconn Jets. Their destinaliea: El Paso. Tea. Pontiac Press photographer Edward. Noble went wItt them. In this largest pcace-timb deployment test of the Stale Air Guard, 32 reconnaissance jets streaked over the overcast to their target. Eleven C97 planes followed with the ground troops and materiel which would keep those jets flying. That attemoon the first plane lowered onto the sunbaked runway at Biggs Air Force Base near El Paso. Squadnm Leader Major Leon Wooden of Livonia Overlooks Operations. Hide Seven < bv Joai around-the-clock and mabilenaaoe opetallMis, stayed on du^. some sack, sense toured near-byj *• - ■ • Among the Juarez tourists were Major Edwin G. Pipp of 3756 Shallow Brook Road, Bloomfield Hills, and Lt. Robert J. Winters Jr. 2350 Old Salem Road, Auburn Rcights. Their booty; Mounted steer home. A ★ W / At the base, Airman Second ........... Oass Mike Purton of 777 N. Wood- V- . v*<- ward Ave., Bloomfield HUls, was PmUm rrt» PiisiM bf BSwsrS n. Nasi* checking out a Jot’a Inatniments Jet Enirin4 Mount Is Hoisted Into Qargo Plane at Metropolitan Airport. xheir turn for Juranz cam^ter.' By Sunday night, Brigadier Gen. Budd Marks, chief of the guard, ***• ' Planes and crews returned to-day to their state base, their loads a little heavier with souvenirs. C97 Prop Frames Jet at Take*Off. Bloomfield Hills Airman Mike Purton nt Cockpit In Juarez — Bloomfield Hllla MaJ. Pipp and Auburn ‘Heights Lt. Winters. State (luard C97s Are Lined Up Against Backdrop of El Paso’s I Gunpowder Charge Inaleml of ComprooBed Air Starts Jet’s Engine. wT i Yoiir Choice 14 Off! SHOP AT EITHER STORE — EASY CREDIT TERMS — AMPLE FREE PARKING Size Reg. Price Sole Prict 28x36 2450 14« 30x40 2995 19»5 30x44 3450 22M 30x54 4500 29** 36x48 4500 29»» 36x60 59»5 39*» Door Mirrors 16x56 2250 14** 16x68 2750 n** ' jj. r EicoasrolyfliTr f\arnit\ire ;P0K*riAC / I'.pax m. HAOimAW o ' »«i s»T(etox ' Sp-BXTR.aA.' ■ fuxuitus^ ■ mvmf, m, .qit, Sunpotters Oreet Gen. Walker in Dallas DALLAS. Tta. (AP) NtaJ- G«a. Edwin A. Walker, wIm dnica ha'a chaigei evoivlng from riots af ttw Untv^ty of Miasiniivi. wlU un-derfo paychiatric •Hie frnner army officer, chained with indtihg an insurrection and seditious conspiracy flew home to Dallas Sunday and was greeted by about 200 flag-waving supporters. He was released late Saturday from the U S. Medical Cenffr in HURON N0Wat1iNind11:N FYOUKUEVEMSEXMIO FUN-PLEASEJOMUS! I MOMMJOSim(.UVIM<~« ■ KIMNOHMC IWYMUMIL M A MASTIN SANSOHOFF PSOOUCTION NOWI *‘flM MASr* and EAGLE Stqrfi nilSDAY FIGHT PICTURES! posted by his family. only after he agreed to submit to a psfychiatric Walker was Jovial and talkathto —to tUe nolnt his iawyera would «Uo«F. Amid signs of “Welcome home Gen. Walker," he told his Supporters, ‘Tm happy to be back in Texas. The air is clear, brigjit and wonderful. - ' ‘It was supposed to be a short trip to Mississippi, but it was extended to Missouri—much to my surprise." During a news conference, attorneys repeatedly advised him not to answer questions surrounding his actions at Ole Miss, where violoice erupted when the federal government forced the enrollment of Neipro James H, Meredith in the previously all-white schod. Walker haa been accused of leading rioters against U.S. marshals. His only reference to the night's rioting was that he advised stu- DBNlEpOinLT Ariced if he was guilty of the federal charipn. Walker said, "Certainly I'm not.” Walker was directed hy U.S. Dist. Judge Claud Clayton of Ox-fprd, who reduced an original of $100,000, to undergo psychiatric examination within five days, > Dr, Robert Stubblefield, chief psychiatrist of the Southwest Medical Center here, was chosen, along with a yet unnamed psychiatrist to be selected ^ the government, to conduct the ex- Robert Morris of Dallas, one of Walker’s attoriieys, told newsmen the agreement for the examination was strictly voluntary. Morris said, “We agreed to sub-lit him: he wasn’t ordered." Before going to Oxford Walker issued a call for “10,000 volun- 'Nixon Out of National 1964 Race' BURBANK, Calif. (UPI) - Po-tentlaL Republican candidates for president in 1964 today had an open invitation from former Vice Presi-d«it Richard M. Nixon to try for California’s endorsement in the pri mary election. Nlxoa said yesterday he will not be a candidate for president In ISM. He hopes to be elected The Republican gubernatorial nominee made his position *clear nationwide televl- He left the door open a teeny cradt for 1968 in the presidential race, howevw, when he said he support that year “the Republican president who would be ■ 'ir re million p<>r year. TARZAN Americans are estimated to spend more that $11 billion annually end more than $11 billion ann-side the home. PONTIAC f OPEN 6:45 STARTS 7 P.M.l ITMIFIIM2J4! UbytabooI Ir,a. NEW TARZAN HIT! MOST SPECTACULAR 0 IHEM ALL! .OMNimm-VKIlM -‘niEnnMs iwwasm ANN ARBOR of Ubor W. Willard Wirts labor unions will haw to eMfclae gTMter self-xintniint in trikes. * * ..A- Wii^ told newsmen her day, "Aa the economy gets ta- be more and I cases in. nrlileh public be hurt’more than, the •bflh' Ing partiee." A W ♦ WIrtz said, hotyever. the govern- BACK IN TEXAS — Former MaJ. Gen. Edwin A. Walker smiles as he arrives in Dallas Sunday from what he said was a short trip to Mississippi, extended to Missouri. He was released on ISO.OOO bond after agroelng to submit to a psychiatric examination. ^ - ■ ; ■' , It'.. , . ^....J--------- Wirtz Asks Caution I in Calling WalkoutsI Drive-in Trlc|>ru|)h n MOOO the right to strike. ■ ★ dr A ' ', The labor ■ecretaiy was in Anp Arbor for • political appearanee at a Second Gongreaskmal District Ex'Prigon Bou Dead TAKOMA PARK. Md. (AP) -Heber H. Vofaw, 81, superintendent of fed^ prisons and chairman oFthe Federal Board of Parole hvm 1921 to 1925, died Sunday of cancer.. Votaw imred for 38 years as an associate aeere-teiy of the Religious Liberty Department of the General Confer-of Seventh-day Adventists, ng in 1964. He was bom ip West Mansfield, Ohio. Early Week Budget Stretchers I 50RXTRA HOLDEN RED STMIPS With IS.00 PnrehaiD Boiled Ham ORCHARD FRESH Makts 24 OuncM of Dtliciouf Orongo Juice Froxeh Orange Juice 6^79 ORANGE JUICE Giant Oxydel =59' With Cenpen at Rifht ontf Any $2.00 Pyre^tntl Bhachet Ag It Waslwil Red f okay Grapes .M' California, Best Ouolify, Largs Clutters, Flame Red, CAMPBELL'S Tomato Soup 3'-25 rnh Zotpm tl »liU nd 4>, IMF Hnhutl nUS fllH HOLDIN lUD STAMPS WITH tVlKT lOe WPCHASH k V' Would you suspect this man and girl of starting a cliain-of-cvents that will affect many, many people? , < " - • That is what they are doing. He is going to leave the state. Moving out! She is help-’ ing him. . They are making up a Classified Ad to sell a truck, house^ld items, including a 40-inch range and a Chevrolet. autonmbile. He has to sell them before he can leave. He will do it too! The Classified ad will find buyers for him quickly and at a low cost. Everyday hundreds of these informative, action producing ads appear in The Pontiac Press. Regular readers of the section almost invariably find just what they want there! A house to rent. A job. A car. A washing machine. A housekeeper. There are folks who want to trade guiis. antique dealers looking for items, owners seeking lost pete, farmers with produce to sell. Really, almost anything and everything concerning people may be discovered in' these columns. This is a section of the newspaper filled with interesting activity. Read it today! You will find much enjoyment and adventure there. The Classified Advertising Section with all the other wonderful, regular features make every edition of The Pontiac Press an encyclopedia of information, entertainment and facts. There is no other way you can get so much, in such detail about your own local area, your own state, the nation and the world, so up-to-the-minute as you get in today^s Pontiac Press. It is your newspaper about your world... The Pontiac Press For Home Delivery, Phone FE 2-8181 /; fWBKTV-OTrO THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. OCTOBER g, 1IMI2 Lions Take Page Out of 'Believe It or Not' to Lose, 9-7 ^ By BRUNO L. KKABIirs T Sport! Editor, rontlme PnM OREEN BAY. Wls.-Ai unbeUovablp ao It may seem, the Detroit Lions have to swallow the bitter fact that they lost a 9-7 decision to the Oreen Bay Packers. No page out of Robert Ripley’s “Believe It or Not" column Is as factual and yet more difficult to accept. A Detroit 7-6 victory over the brash world champions was only 89 seconds away. The strategy to preserve It seemed so simple with 1:29 to play, B»at even the 39,669 fans had it all figured out. This Is the way It looked to most everyone, to everyone except to Coach George Wilson. It was third down and eight to go for the Lions on their own 49.. On 3rd down, everyone expected. Plum would try an end sweep to waste time. By using up 30 seconds on the play. Green Bay would have to call for their last allowed time out. The Lions, with Yale Lary punting; would kick it into the end sene and the play would use up at least another M seconds. The Packers weald probably take aver around the M or M and they would have to pass out of bounds to stop the clock. If completed they may have gotten to midfield but by thto time the clock may have; been out of seconds. , Wilson, a gambler with aU the confidence In the world In his quarterback Milt Plum, caUed the play this way. “I wanted to kep the ball, and Plum had just completed two tblrd-doFni piasses in a*row to Blbbons. He's toUgh on thOise and-oUt passes, so I called one for Barr," Wilson said. •k if ir ■ Unfortunately, when Barr tried to come back In for the pass, he fell on the sloppjr turf. Herb Adderly, former Michigan State halfback was on his feet and he grabbed the ball on the Packer 42 and was away before Barr could recover. He dashed to the Detroit 19 before getting knocked out of bounds and the stage was set for Paul Homung to kick his third field goal of the game. Two plays put the Packers on the IS and with SS seconds left Hornung booted from (bs SI. BITTER OBfEAT It was the first time In three years that the Packers had been without a touchdovrn. and for the Lions It was without doubt the most bitter defeat in mernwy. The Packers, who openly jeered at the Lions defense In press stotements prior to the game, moved on the first series of plays from their own 30 to ttie Detroit 8. Three plays gained them nothing and Hornung had to settle for a IS yard field goal. The Lions had trouble moving through the mud In the first period and after reeoverlng a fumble on the Packers 34, they moved In six plays for the tonehddwn with Danny Lewis sweeping end for the last six yardC A field goal attempt by Waype Walker from the Packer 25 a moment earlier was blocked by Adderly imd recovered by ' Forester on Oreen Bay’s 36. It was in this possession series that Bart Starr fumbled ^vlng Detroit the ball. In the second half, the Uons' held the powerful Jim Tajrlor and Homung to only 87 yards rushing, but the Packers gained their second field goal to make It 7-d «s result of a play which Wilson swrmed “the lowest" caU he hsd ever seen In pro ball. On their own 4 Starr passed at Bfax MeOee. Diek LeBoaa Went np with MeOee fer the baU. it booneed high Into Tale Lory's arttu and Lary bad gained at least eight yards before |lold Judge Chartss dweiney decided to pull the banky and eaU Interferenee en LeBeau. The Lione proleated vehemenlly. LeBeau said he went up and “Upped the baU" and If anything the Interference was on ths part of MeOee. At least four seconds had passed before Sweeney made hls move to call the play. “I watched the play close all the way and In my mind It was Interferenee said Hweeney. WlUi 9:00 minutes to play. Walker tried a field goal from the 41 and the ball had distance but went less than a yard wide. The heartbreaking defeat which followed is now history. rickara Ltoni ruthlni V T mniHi ..... 11 4 Lions Stunned by Setback Shock, Anger, Tears Break Silence Giants Find Themselves Behind Again Ford Slated to Oppose Juan Marichal Frisco Hurler Makes First Series Start; Kuenn in Lineup ★ ★ Giants Confident They Can Triumph GREEN BAY, Wis. - Many defeats have in the Past filled the Lions’ locker room with the atmosphere of dejection, but never has there been the emotion, the shock, the daze, the anger and even the tears behind turned backs as after yesterday's stunning 9-7 loss to the Packers. “Christmas came early them,’* said one of the players. “It was a bad call, other. “It cost the heavy, heart within him, managed a mild grin. "He (Wilson) la m helluva guy, 1 make plenty of mlatakes eveiy game. We all make plenty. It takes a great guy to atand up 'I’ll aay one more thing,” Ided, “don’t bet agalnat ua 'Ibankaglvlng Day. we’re going to win that title." A crowd of several hundred which welcomed the Lions* home at Willow Run after thq Baltimore game, dwindled to a handful of players* relatives upon arrival at 7:30 p.m. last night from Green pa—ra Hornunt IS Ott—Uell « run -minlcan Republic, who posted an 18-11 record during the regular season, said a foot injury which ■Idclined him for nearly two weeks in Seplemlx'r, was ''.still i little sore," but he did not expec It to handicap him on the mound Marichal started and pitched six iiinings against the Dodgers in lh(' game Wednesday in Los Angeles. Tlie odds-makers have eslab-ilshed the Yankees a 7V4 to-.') favo-|1te to win today and 4-1 to lake the eeries. Today's weather forecast is fair with increasing cloudiness late In the day. Manager Ralph llouk of llic Yankees planned to use the same line-up against right-hander Marichal he employed against loft-bander Billy Pierce Sunday. The Yankees broke Ihi-ough Pieix«'s guard in only one inning but that wag enough. Three straight hits In The seventh—more than they got in the other seven lnnlngs-hel(ied produce Ihn'e i-ups and caused the removal of Pierce. TWO-RUN BIJI8T Dark planned to make only one change from the line-up that could get only four hits against " the strong pitching of Stalford. Two came in llie ninth, when the Giants scored their only runs on ICd Bailey's two out home run on top of Mays’ double. *' Harvey Kuenn, who failed to hit In five tries against Ford in the opaner, relununl to the otitfleld but was placed In right field with Alou remaining In left. In Candleillck Park, Felipe usually plays rlgiit field and Kuenn left. Hut there the right field Is the sun field and more difficult, while at Yankee Stadium It's the other way around. Alou had some difficulty in left field, but he made one of the serlee' great defensive plays, a backhanded, gloved-hand catch on Hovltaixl'i near Iwmer In the lec- NEW YORK (AP)-i^ Fran-lUmes in the seventh inning en-cisco’s Giants found Yankee Stadi- route to Sunday’s 3-2 decision, both um as tough for them as the Felipe Alou In left field and Willie Yankees themselves yet remained McCovey In right drew errors confident today they would beat fielding hits?'' both In the World Series. Catcher Ed Bailey declared It As the Yankees scored thret; I was tough to see in this park, add- LONG STRETCH - Orlando Cepeda legs it to first safely in yesterday’s World .Scries game at Yankee Stadium as first baseman Bill Skowron of New York is pulled off the bag by a high throw. New York won 3-2 to lake the lend in Series play. Composite Box Score NEW YORK (AP) -nie cl^mpo^llli box «cor» of Hid first Hire# gsmes of th 3 10 0 3 0 ,0 0 H»llrv 0 Orsliin r 0«VI>I1|H>I oXll p PIOITS p . ..19) to 0 II 3 2 . 233 2 3 8 18 .213 78 29 3 NEW YORK YANKEES 0 0 0 2 SO B.Ar. PO A F.A» Ford p Trrry p ■■niitnehord 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 13 0 0 l.Of ing, ’Tve never seen Felipe have trouble in the outfield.’’ There was gloom In the Giants’ dressing room but no more after a regular season loss during this hectic 1962 campaign. HARVEY CONFIDENT Harvey KUenn back before and we have confidence we can do it again. Despite having some trouble seeing the ball in Yankee Stadium, Bailey hit the two-run ninth inning homer that gave greater significance to a bad bounce, a pitching mistake and a near miss. It was in the seventh that lefty Billy Pierce ran into trouble after pitching a fine two-hitter up to that point. Tom Tresh opened the seventh hitting a low Inside fast ball for a single up the middle. Then Mickey Mantle slammed a Pierce slider for a single to left with the ball taking a high bounce and the runners reaching sec6nd and third. ’’That opened the game up, Manager Alvin Dark obseiwed quietly. "Felipe played It as good as he could. Roger Marls was next up with no outs and the last thing Pierce wanted to do was throw close to the middle of the plate. "It wasn’t what I wanted to throw but. it got here anyway, he sadly relat^. MORE TROUBLE Marls hit the ball to right field scoring both runners reached second when McCovey had trouble with ,the pickup. ■'Tile outfield was wet from the rain,'' Alou said. He showed clay from the running track still slicking to his cleats. The track surrounds the outfield at the fence, it rained Saturday and early on Sunday. With Maris on second, Elston Howard hit a fly to Willie Mays in center. Although it didn’t appear a deep hit, Marl.s tagged up and beat Willig's wide Ihiw. That eventually proved decisive as Hill Skowron was hit by pitch and then Maris scored on force out grounder by Clete Boyer. Even then the Yankees might not have scored run No. 3 But Clutck Hiller at second couldn't get a firm grip on the ball for hls double plfiy attempting throw, and Boyer was safe at first instead of tielng the final out. “I know want you to know, play.” "We have the best quarterback in the league and you are the best football team in pro ball." "We can’t replay that game, we have lo more to go. 1 hope you’re with me.” With this ending, Wilson walked from the nose of the plane to ex- pbetefei treme rear. The silence was broken when VICTOR AND VANQUISHED - Head coach Vince Lorn->meone brought out a deck of bardl of the Green Bay Packers carries a faint smile but Lions' cards and a joke brought a chuc- coach George Wilson (right) Shows dejection in hls tape as they kle. left the field following Green Bay’s 9-7 victory yesterday in the Captain Joe Schmidt, fighting final 33 seconds on a 21 yard field goal by Paul Homung. 18 .m VB 32 2 >. b-lllt Into lore* play for 0 2-3 I 0 1 0 0 8 0 0 -IXW 0 1 8 3 0 .1 8 8 I) I « l.OOO 0 880 0 8 9 1 (I .1 0 U 8 I .000 2 0 1 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 .000 0 1 28 12 n t 18 2 0 I 2 . 333 I NEW VORKVANREEH I wr W r«l. KRKR.AV. - - - 1.800 I 2.tHI 208 080 421-8 Dal»y I "lallmrt I Total) 3 I'omiMMlta Srara By Ini an rranolMia IN) aw York (A) BB Tr«)h 2, klancla. "- F Alou. I’a Id Bkowron: Boyar, Rlrliardnon and l,ii avail and McCovay; DavaiiiHirl and Hll ork lAI 18. IIBP -By (I'hallj illiiwai •11) 11 -Marlirk iN) llarry lA*). l.anda .uar lA) T'~2 4.1 lEIrnl oamai. 2 11 iNa llrit lamal, 83.818 (aacund gaiiia). 71, 8 0 0 1 0 3 I 0 0 t 0 « 0 • « an BE-Boyar. DP-Rlolianlxon. Kubak II. Davanporl, lllllar and Canada: Hlllar, T l.on Han PranrDi'o iNi 18, )4tw >. by Tarry iPaaani. by I.araan (“ “ IN). Hiiniirhlck IA>, lliirkhart' ..... •ml oamai, 2 no (Uilrd |amt). A-43,892 14 (Uilrd Kama). Time Change Means Loss for Lancers Emmanuel tTirlitlan hiRl It* fourth game Saturday without a Idineer ntepplng on the flelil. Tldlt PiHiilar wihool wa* ■elw'il-iihNl Ko meet (kiunlry Pay at Birin I n g h a in. Game lime was chang4>d from i p.iii, to 10 a.ni. and MMiieone forgot to tell the Einmanual playera. They ahowed lip at the locker room for Ihe ALL IN VAIN - Yule Lary of the Detroit Lions Intercepts a pnss which bounced off Ihe fingers of Detroit's Dick LeBeau and Max McGee of the Pilckers, when the two went u|i for the bull llirown liy Hart .SIar^•. l,ury’s 3rd AP Pkatafai period inlerceptlon was in vain liowever as in* lerference was railed on Ihe piny on lA'Itenu. The Packers got ihe ball and then kicked their .second field goal. Ron Kramer (88) ex-Mlehi-gaii great inmkt the (ackle. Veeck Seeking Control of Senatoi3 OoUntiy Day, claimed a 1-S forfeit victory, Ha Ihlytf win against one setback. Emmanuel favtored to win the game, Is 0-1. NEW YORK (AP)-A syndicate headed by Bill Veeck has obtained an option lUlchnsc the Washington Senators baseball club, -It was learned Ufday. The deal is said to Involve approximately $4 million. Other key men In the syndicate Include Hall of Fnmer Hank Greenberg; Nate Dolin, currently vlee-pl’csideni of the Cleveland In-and Rudle Schaefer, busl-manager of the Chicago White Sox. Ten stoekholderi currently the Washington dub, each \vfih ten per 4'enl. WANT IT ALI, The Veeck group IS sWking to obtain complete control. Ncgotla-under way for several weeks, may l)e completed next week when Veeck leaves hls Maryland home lor New York lo keep an sppolntm4»i)t with Gen. Elwood (jjuesada, ihx’sldent of (lie Senators. * Veo4‘k, who would lake over president upoh completion of deal, has l)een out of base since he sold his 91 i)cr cent In* leresl in Hie White Sox lo Arthur . Allyn in mid-season of 1961. ♦ A Before that. Veeck was (iretl-dent o( the Cleveland dub Irom 1046 lo mo. and the ,Sl. Ia)uIs Hixiwns from .1091 to lil,Vi. He became president of. Ihe Wliiie Skix In 1059 and left the post Inst year because ol IIIih'im. 8 » 0 0- 7 DETROIT (UPI) - Dave De-BussChere, the hnsektbnil and baseball star from University of Detroit, made hlji pro basketball debut with the Detroit Pistons Saturday night and helped the Pistons to a 112-98 victory over the Chicago Zephyrs at River Rouge High. DeBusschere, who took a week off after dosing out the bnKpl)all on with the Chicago While scored 13 points and grabbed eight rebounds olthough playing less than half the game. Bailey Howell was high seorer for the I*lst4>ns with 19 points. ’ Chicago, playing without scoring ace Walt Bellamy, was led by Woody Sauldsbury with 16 points. Bellamy, Nntlonal Basketball As- -Bociatlon rookie of the year in 1061-62, sat out the gume with an injured foot. The Pistons have right more days to got n;ady for their season opener agnlnst the Los Angelos Lakers In New York. fWMpms RAYBLUTH FINGER swelling Climatic conditions or a gteat deal of bowling can cause the fingers to swell. ' When good bowlers can't put their fingers In the ball, they put a handkerchief or plf4'e of doth over the hole, then stick their fingers In. That cases the fingers Intc) Iho hole and—for some reason whicii I can’t explain—when the fingers and the handkerchief are taken out of the bnll, tlie fingers .irern to come back to natiirnl size and fit easily Into the holes. 1 , ' - Ml “* THE rONTUC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 8,1962 Open Letter fo George Wilson Oeorge Wtlion Heftd rootl)Kll CotMh Detroit Llone 1401 Mlohlgen Ave. Detroit. Mlcb. Dear Oeorge: Monday. Oct. 1.1900 Yeaterday, i made my 90th road trip with yon apd the Dgtrolt tiona In six yeare. I have aeen you win 90 gamea In exhibition and regular aeaaon away from home, and yesterday I aaw you loae your 7th. Three others were tlea. r ■ ■ - ■" , Today, la probably the Maekeat day of your life, even worae than yesterday oe-cauae you are raided by newspaper stories, radio and TV comjmentarles of the stunning defeat suf^red In Oreeh Bay. into year heart to read and hear the question* *Why play eallod:** It la even worse hnewing that at least i million people and WIseenaIn watched the game and hardly a handful may( have you.,, ... : felt badly about '4>b defeat, but none could have felt worse than y(ni. pains must have been magnified beyond Imagination, especially upon of the bitter reaction of your players. Oeorge, during these past six years, I have never seen you lose your poise as and yesterday was no exception, even though the defeat was the most bitter in eoaching life. ■■ ■, .' I We 1^1 say and do things nMhly, mollvated by setbacks, shock and heartbreak. | On your ball club you have 38 great "uys. Ihey may still feel that Shock today, but % iomorrow and the day after, and every .Sunday hereafter, you’ll see them give their all. k To them, you're coach Wilson and I kOnw you will never have to doubt their loyalty. To me, and I know, to my brothers in Journalism, you’re Oeorge Wilson, head /; coach of the Lions, a fine coach and a straight guy. You have ten more games to go. The greater fandom of the Detroit Lions is with ^ you. Give’em hell, Oeorge. With kindest regards, , BRUNO L. KEARNS 'i Sports Editor | Rontiac Press I ★ ★ ★ ★ ' ★' W , w ★ w Enthusiasm High at MSU During Rout of Tar Heels By CRAIO EAST LANSING ~ Saturday a great day for Michigan State football at Spartan Stadium- ' ■■ * Sr Sr There was noise spawned by enthusiasm as more than 01,000 fans turned out for the home ~SIMhUOi Of ill* 81. LouU-N*ir York footboU gome; OIANTC Ca^DS ruv dowtw .............. aiuKlns yotdaso .... I^jns forOofo PoMM lolorotpltd bf ! Puinbiof ioii .. :::; Toi-do ponidiHS ........ ......... ..............T14 7 S-M S». UuU ................7 7 S e-M ITli—Crow 7 run (Porry Uok) «Y-ttohor a pou from TIttK lor kick) STV-Crow 1 run (Porry kick) Nl^Wobttor 1 run , as is his custom, to on all of the OUers' points. He kicked a IBraid field goal and comwcled with 'Charley Frasier on a 73-yard ■coring play be^ fore his laot-dttch mrolct, Gary Cutainger'a interception of Warren Rabb'’s paaa set up the wining 79-yard drive. The Bills, now 0-4 and l(nwra ot both their 186SI games against Houston, led 14-3 going Into the final pariod with touchdowns on Carl CharOn'a run with an toter-and OookM Gtichrlst’a have a fair teain before the year’a enthusiasm, we’re EX-cinim Itontiac gridiron (^he heart from the p^rmances of two former Pontiac Central high ■ stars, Jerry Rush and (^barley Brown. The two linemen were teamed at right tackle and right guard, re-sp^vely, for the first time in a Spartan varsity game. Rush played extensively in the first three (lumters on the second 'niere wasn’t a Spartan player who could be accused of a bad a^une to the-easy triumph. glv_____ . - .. second half-to work Ms W out of Duffy’s doghouse. The 5^. 209-pouAa competitor had been demoted from his startihg Job to the third stri((g after a po(Hr showing in the eia. The a*l, SM-powM sophomore made a beanUfRl opea lleM teokle of toe Tar Heel maaer His 1 I Brown, a junior guard-line backer of whom big tMngs were expected at the beginning of the season, had his troubles. Not that be played badly. yards in 11 plays ftor Jheir fifth six-pointer, they relief heavily on power plays oft left taride and left the hole which invarigbly ' opened in the visitors’ lUie. Daugherty had told Bntorn a the demotion that the ttoon nee every roan It could get,)bul needed each man at his best. Ip his enthusiasm to do hi! best Saturday, Charlie Brown didn’t realize he was playing along\side high school teammate Jerry Rudi for the first time on the green-but Rush knpw iMm’s Wolverines today etorM devising wnyi to handle n much tougher tingle plttooa ol gndfltii from East Lansing. ■ , Michigan State doea have mart than 11 p^aia, but hayo^ (M starting unit there to a deftatta lack (4 mqieriencad talaat. ^ ■ it W ♦ Hfichigan matched Arm/a "Rag- uIans.” "Oo” " I M Ito own. Tha Wolvarinea .A.... the upper hand all the way and sent the 10th ranked Cadeta back to West Point on.tba ahnt end 6f 17-7 soore. Befora geHtaf dawn to tha vaiy at pnpaitag it, and he was enthused. to victories over Wake Focest and Syracuse in his first season at The Potot* took dia bimna for Amy’a poor Blowing by saying, “I didn’t do a good enough Job of prapar-Ing the team f«f Mldhigan.” “They (Mkhigan) came to play riball,” said former Hint Cen- directs Army’s offensive hack-"rid. ”Our boys hustled, they RveC quit, but Michigan was tod Bod today.” In fact, tha Wotverbwa ware 4 ttle too eager, drawing 13T yatda , hL,l«naJltea.~-----™-T-»™-— IXINO DAINEB — Sherman Lewis leaps over a would-be North Carolina tackier on the urdoy. way to a 17-yard gain for Michigan State Sat- 38-6. Michigan State whipped the Tat- Heels, Albion Leads Slate Small College Teams By United Press International Albion College is off and running in its bid for a second straight perfect season. Mike Homus plungefi for a pair o( touchdowns and Jerry Chandler added two scores on a 58-yard pass interception and a 24-yard pass from Frank Gould to carry Ihc Britons to a 28-6,MIAA vlc-toiy Saturday ov.cr Alma. ★ dr ★ Gould set a school passing no ord in the process, breaking the old career record of 2,185 yards by single yard. The old mark had been held by Frank Jordan and as set a decade ago. The win was Albion’s I4th straight over three seasons third this year. Including two triumphs in conference play. day to knock Olivet from toe uibeatoa ranks, 81.14. The Cometa picked np • M-9 edfes In toe Hrst half, bat Dlok Goodrich gathered in a pass for a 66 yard touchdown In toe final period to turn toe tide for mt a difference a month made for Central MlcMgan, The CMp-pewas lost four games In September. But they broke into the win column Saturday In their first October game with a 17-9 decision over Westell Illittola. ffmi. UNBEATEN Hillsdale rallied in the second half Saturday to keep Its unbeaten record Intact with a 14-6 ded-eion over Norihem Michigan. Grid Scores tTAYR' n 91. Otlrat 14. n«too 41. HoP4 sa. ____U Hormd 10, Mi BtmIdJI atett 43. Mlohl— ‘ St. Norbtrt 35. Nirrli M Mlnneiota 3I. Navy 0. Nortliw«Bt«rn 45. Illlnolt S. Purdue 94. Notr* Dam* 4. 8out)uirn California 7. Iowa 0. UCLA 5. Ohio St. 7. citmton 34, Waka INir Duka 31. norida 3I. aULWatSlSS k S. Mlululppl 40. F -- PIGSKIN scramble Art Lewis (12), almost quarter handoff an^ • Army quarterback I, fumbles « second n's Arnold Slmkus reooven. Bill Sherreil (70) ot Army also 4 tor tha ball. The Wotvartoae wm Sntwtl ). IW. One Unit This Sail ^Ratdan' K»§p Qam From Bocomtn0 pvttf Roim^ Top RuilMr By DON VOQKL ANN ARBOR Mlddgan State’s flnt team ta expected tO be stronger than all three Army units combined. Aiid the Spartan\ reserves picked u|a added needed experience in the romp over Ndfth Condina. AlthouMi the Wolverines were Hila unit tortheX dlstingotehed itself by marching the Mich-igen U to the An^ 34, under *d, before bring relieved % I’a No. 1 team. The maize RUy stal^ I a 35-yaM field goal to give Michigan a 10^ adtmntege It carried off the Add Michigan’s fint TD waa aei# when Anoya cail Stiehwdi fumbled a fair catch call on Joe O’Dooi-nell’a punt and Bob Brown raeov^ ered on ftw Knlglite’ S3. plays later Jack Strobel went Ite final toot on a dive. i ★ A ★ Army crooSed the midflehl stripie for the first time to the game eariy in the third quarter and reached the Michigan six. Glinka hobbled an Army pass to the and zone, bet Strobel grubbed the baU befoM it hit the ground to end the threat. IBuFvey'ffkapmaa Jr.'el Hamar -------—abet oMhe •‘RaH^ tamed SI yaida «e the Mmjt M. Dave Rehnsgr, MMUgaa’e leedteg miher «4Bi IS yoide ia LONO RUN Early in the fourth period, Sthiti. weh fumbled an O’Damril punt, im the idgritto end weeved 7 73 yards for AmWa toiK^ around waiting tor "the other fill-low” to make the tarida. Aimya hwdlag grsnad grimv Lmi Favlott M Kami PMk made couple of brief appearaaeea for the Wolvertoea at guard and imlay aty end Jim Wetd saw oowidtto-abie action with the "Bhjiiam.** ^' Pesk/s Tegm] 3 Years S^ay NKW ■■..... ...... / I " tW|iyfY-F6UR THR ppyriAit PitESsI \ I OCTOBER 8. 1998 NIGHT RACING ■? R.ico', Nightly Rain or Shine through November V JACKSON harness raceway JACKiON, MICHIGAN TIRE mSCOUNTS mir BW • ■•••vr ■>»« SNOW TIMS 6.70*15 57.95 7.50*14 58.95 MOUUR TIMS 6.70x15 54.88 7.50*14 *tr 58.88 NO MONEY DOWN UNIHD TIRi SERVICE or*N DAitr • 1MI BaMirhi At*. Catholic loop Shaken by Two Sunday Upsets The standings (or the Northwest Catholic League received a good shaking up yesterday with two ot the top three teams being the victims o( football upsets. * * * OrChanl Lake St. Mary pulled the biggest upset by handing Farmington Our Lady of Sorrows a 7-0 setback for the Lancer’s first loss of the season. Waterford Our Udy of tl\e Lakes dropped from third place to a lie for fifth when 'it was surprised by Royal Oak St. |Mary, 21-7. DetraH 8t. Agatha moved Into a first place He wtlh FOUl 'by pinning a lJ-0 loss on St. Frederick — the iMh straight defeat for St. Fred’s In two seasoiM. OLSM took advantage of the final break it received - In a game I full of breaks for both teams — to register a fourth quarter touch-'down, the game’s only score, at , Farmington. Jeff Barth, a hero all The Lancers had stopped an OLSM drive with an interception in the end *noe and relumed the ball to their elght-yard-line. Barth, attempting to pass, was thrown at his four, was detected intentionally grouniflng the ball on the next play, and rumbled the ball on third down. reoovisep bobble Sophomore guard Ed Suchyta covered the ball for the Elaglets at the two-yard line. On the first play. Dog riglel plunged two yards (or the touchdown. Quarterback Larry Janlszewski passed to Chris ZIemba for the extra point. BIODirS COLOSSAL FALL DISCOVHT SPSCB 20% OFF ON ALL 5 STAB MUFFLERS AND FIFES There it no intlollotion charge for front or rear pipes when purchased at the same time as muffler. BRODM’S 121 VVoynaSt. ’ bp|NDAIlY«loSi30 SATURDAY 8 to 4:30 FE 4-4900 n tor FOLS, were the loat’B I He the game in the chMlng mlimtes of play. They movis^ •thfc winners’ M from their W te t by hitting o ibne ran ou In all. the football changed ..ands 14 Hmea on pass interceptions and fumbles in the loosely played contest. JanisaswsW picked oK tour Lancer passes In the second quarter and t e a m e d with FYankie Rompel tn the Eaglets’ defensive secondary to harass the home team all day. A strong detenalve line (or FOLS held the winners In the third ouar-ter when they had second down and goal to go from the one-foot Waterford Our Lady of the Lakes dnA» 73 yards tor a touchdown the drat time It had the football Sunday but after that It was al‘ Royal Oak St. Mary to the 21-conteat at Memorial Stadium in R^al Oak. Dob WeBs. bob e( eomh Osri the flnt half. Ab U-yard pasa play from qaarleibaek Tom WagBer to end Bed Baimiiter “ by the Mike OonneUy booted tbre PATa (or ROIBf wWle Georg Sharpe ran tor the lone Laker PAT. -WOybra.- _____________ preceding Sunday against (XilM, could only muster one concerted drive after Its opening touchdown. Maples Up, for Meet, Score Win GOING FOB FIVE — St. Agatha halfback Greg Peck (29) breaks away for a gain of (lye yards early In the half for a first down aided by teamates C3iuck, Roemer (l5) and Dick Rig« ley (9) who appear to be blocking themielvcs. Looking on ta" St. Fred’a Marwlo Gallardo. St. Agatha defeated the Pontia^4eam 13-0 at Wisher Stadium Sunday. / Mikes Post Win, But Freds Lose ___________________ 18 too* Ws off last yoar’a wtaalBg time to take ladlvldual k tor the (wd-mHe r ord waa pievtoutly held by Belli-ley'a Bon Pulferd. A hardy Milford team took second place with a total of 122 points ; followed by the 1961 defending; champion Walled Lake with 124. Milfonl is unbeaten In dual meets and Walled Uke has loat only two out of seven. Finishing behind tourth p I a c i Hkiel Park were Waterford Kettering, Southfield, Waterford Township, and Rochester. Pontiac Central and Northern ftnished lOth and Uth reqieottvely. ’The Milford Junior squad won the reserve meet with 29 points. ’The JV Vikings placed second. ’The annual meet is a com! nity project aponpowd In pari by; the WaUed Lake Chamber of Com-. merce and Walled Lake High; School. win of the season Saturday night at Wianer Stadium defeating Flint St. Matthews, 7-0. Sunday, St. Fred wasn’t so ludey and lost to visiting Detroit St. Agatha, 1341. The Ram victory was a badly needed moral booster after last week’s, 4S4) shutout by Farming-' Our Lady ot Sorrows. went, baek to paaa tm the He also acored the extrp point from Larry .Soimernberg, with nine minutes i^maining. t, Fred’s defeat was their tenth EXCUSHE n nOGEI AND YOU GET TOP VALUE STAMPS TOO in two years, the third under coach Chuck Lewis. le Rams worked to liln the Agatha U-yard line- four times they were unable to score. The Rams held the statistical edge throughout the game on the round and In the air but fell vic-m to a strong Aggie defense. Twice the Fredmen had less than a foot to go for first downs and (ailed. ■k k it The two Agatha touchdowns came in the third and fourth quart-•r. With six mlnutes^jgone.l|| |he„ ibIrA Rob Dorohy eappH a IS-play, b3 yard drive by plunging five yards over right tackle. On the first play of the fourth quarter Tom Braunseholdel scored on a 31-yard pass play. Tom Au-buchou caught the lone PAT. ★ ★ A The Mikemen allowed only two penetrations on their side of the 50, 20 and two yards, respectively In the first and last quarter. ★ A * The Matthew line succeeded In fighting back a Mike’s drive that ended up on their one-yard line. After a 16-play series the Shamrocks gave up the ball on downs at the Matthew 20. THE COMPLETELY NEW POPULAR MECHANICS Flint had lour unsuccetntol tries and a punt from their 19 w a a blQcItod. St. Mike recovered on flie ). -Dick Ghastln carried the ball 19 yards tn two plays and on third down the Mikemen faced the goal line one yard away. The first try was beaten back to the two. On the following play the Rams fumbled ending the threat. The two teams were an eVen latch on the ground. St. Mike gained 124 to 103 for St. Matthew. S.S3 Punta sad Averse* Tsrdi . IJ T«M Flrit Doirn* . n Tsrdi o*in*d n - m Tsrdi oslsid P 3-115 Punt* snd Arerai* Tsrdi . 1 Pumblii Lint . 5-50 PensItlM. Y*rd* SCOBINO PLAYS St. Asaths — Dorchy. 5-ysrd pluns*. (PAT run no sOod). St. Assths — Bnuatshildil. ll-yird '**“■ * SroUTBY'^ABTBBS St. Assths ...........0 0 5 1 13 at. Prsd ............_.0 dot* Bnds—Dssn. BTATlBTlOa . ItotslOsk uiiui. ■i.llsry 5 First Mwm XystoS .......... 1 nrst Oswa* PsuMi .......... «. Knt Dosras tonslUui ...... S totsl Ttrst Downs ......... '37 tirds 110 Tout Nst Tsrdi C Get your car a new Midaa muffler GUARANTEED for BB long BB you o«fn your car. 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MahovTicIv Poesn't Care *3" Where He Plays Hockey Front End Alignment pftcislon oqulpnwnt ah* lorract Oattar, cambor, toa» Tmm> (AP) - WWl# the Toronto MapltKUafii wid the CM-eago Black Hawks contlhued tiUdr WHEEL BALAROE Frank llalaniich witt ptay in the Natkmal HockejJLeague tWs yw, the high scoring forward said today he doesn't partlculatly care where he winds up. The deal started Friday lUfht when Hawk Chief Jim Norris ottered the Leafs $1 million fpr Mahovllch. Leaf President Stafford Smythe was astonished at first. Then, when he thought it over, he termed ft a “publicity BnmnNo. mm iaa oTnaiito $090 Q AH SAVE ‘5“ *9“ But Norris is having none of that. “f have made the offer," he said today. "One million doUars Is my offer. tVe made It Friday and we shook hands on it. As far as I am'concerned, it's a deal. ’ BIO fXfiymACT •anwhlle, Mahovllch, who had been having ctmtract troubles with the leafs, signed for four years for a reported $110,000. Hla first reaction to the reported sal wu a quip. “I'm' not getting any of wneyi" If the deal goes through, would ho' report to Chicago? ‘WlML’B’'’in«ng wlMr Chlbago,*' he obeeryed. "I don’t care where play aa long as I’m getting my bucks.” Did he think aU the turmoil of le proposed deal will help him in 1s contract battle with the Leafs? "I guess it did, eh?" he smiled laMLii MARKET TIRE CO. 77 West Huron FE 8-0425 OPEN DAILY UNTIL 9 P.M. Drinkt are mots tatty...whto mads with Schsnisy. That’s bscsine Schsnisy'i choies griin neutral spirits an bisndsd with straight whishys • fall ifim •> agil Taste lbs diffsrsncsl He apparently was not taking it Norris sent Hawk General Manager Tommy Evan to ihe , Leafs’ offices in Maple Leaf Gardens with a certified check for $1 million Un Canadian Money. Put President Clarence Campbell of the NHL remained unim-«sed. ‘There’s'no deal as far as I am »cetned," he said. “The Arm bid indicates there was an offer intended. But no responsible officer of the Leafs accepted.’’ The rest of the league was Just as surprised as the Leafs, Bobby Hull, Chicago forward, had the last word. /- Hr „ ★ ♦ 'Can you imagine,” he said shaking his head, ’’The Hawks quibbling over $200 when they signing me to a contract for this year?” Mahovllch scored a goal Toronto’s 4-1 victory over the NHL All-Stars in the annual All-Star game here Saturday night Sbrfne^ins 4th Game ,Boyal Oak Shrine posted a 4 Sunday with a IW) di Redford St. Mary at h dium In Royal Oak. Hr -H Stv quarterback Chuck Lowther led Ow unbeaten! Shrine team throwing for one touchdown and running 11 yards tor the final score, Lowther hit Jim Seymour an ll-yard paw in the aecond quarter to cap a 95-yard drive. Mike Haggerty kicked the extra olnt. The winneni opened in’e aooelng wUh n aategy. A I pa«i fram eearter in at pent where it WM cewccnd Wln«iirWanh»" ,POR1UNO, Ora, Gota’a layup bwAmC Uk Omi .I aix seconds of play gave t FrandaoD Wairiora m eoami ^ behind US-U? vM«y elea Lnissra tai A I The Lakrea heat the 1 13M25 at Salem, On.. I '61 Indy Winner Wins DETROIT (AP) - A. J. Foyt of Houston, Tex., winner of the 1961 Indianapolis 506-mile classic, won the 150-mile late model atock car race at the State Fairgrounds mile track yesterday. 9 THi THINQ -TO DO IN'62--FIHISH S HIGH SCHOOL ^ AT HOME IN 4PARE TIME Ym WMt be IT o# ever md hare fate seheU. WiMe fw PBII 1 5S 5 ^ Addnu .... .... • CUT ........... Zon* ...... SUM ................ API... Blazers Hot, !21-14 GRAND RAPIDS (AP) - A tour-yerd pass from quarterback Ed Chlebek to end Ron Mtkylinolkl gave the Grand Rapids Blazers a 21-14 victory over the Wheeling, W. Va. Ironmen last night in the closing minutes of their United Football League game before r crowd of 4,8.17. fllilirf j for your convonionco [ j ...atyourcommonill I I *25 Te *500 i I tobu]rciotlw$,r«|Mlr,piyMII$! ■ By The Associated Press One thing's certain. Horace Greeley wasn't talking to the Big Ten when he issued his historic advice, “go west, young man, go i kind of people who 1 Huderatand. 'I Call, wrHa or coma M ! Pl/SliJ LOAH - COirOMTION • . ^9 W. Huron FE 3-710lJ EASY, MR. HAYES - Coach Woody Hayes of Ohio State looked like this Saturday when his Buckeyes fumbled near the goal line in the first half against UCLA. 'Ihe Bruins went on to post a 9-7 upset. Big Jen Grid Powers Shouldn't 'Go West' TWO weeks in a row now a tlonally-ranked college football team from the Big Ten has ventured into the California sunshine. Two weeks in a row they have straggled back to the midwest the victims of an upset. Michigan State was the first. tanfoi3d!a.-Jfi«13-.Mumph knock ' the Spartans oqt of the top ten. Saturday it was Ohio State, the No. i team in the nation. An inspired crew of UCLA Bruins did (he honors In this one, stunning the Buckeyes 9-7 with three goal line stands. “They were dedicated hungry," UCLA Coach Bill Barnes said after his team's opening game. FRUSTRATED OSU Three times Ohio State put to-Icethcr long drives that* ground away steadily until they reached the one yard line. Three times UCLA turned back the threats.'^ Hermit Alexander flashed off tackle for 45 yards for a UCLA touchdown in (ho first period, but Ohio State went up 7-6 In the second period. From then on it was all defense until UCLA sophomore Larry Zeno kicked the winning 24-yard field goal with 95 seconda left. Two other top ranked teams, Georgia Tech and Aroiy, had their perfect records lighted tn “ continuing string of upKta. ■k It, •it ' Georgia Tech (No! 5) got a 10-7 licking from rebounding Louisiana State in a nationally televised game and Army (No. 10) fell before Michigan 17-7. Otherwise, it was bustacBS as sissippi making a bold bid to improve its seventh-ratdwd poaitfam. Ole Miss walloped previously unbeaten Houston 46^7 with quarterback Glynn Griffing throwing four touchdown passes. DRAFTED BY N.Y. Griffing's performance equalled a school record set by Charlie Conerly. Griffing already has been drafted by the New York Giants of the National Football League, the team from which Conerly retired last season. Alabama (No. 2t came behind and boat Vanderbilt 17-7, with Joe Nameth's .IVyard toud^ down pass to Dick Williamson the clincher. It was 'Bama’s third victory this season and 13th in row, the country’s ‘ string. Headquarters for Cozy Conifort! 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When she arrived, she saw sev-eral other young mothers, all carefully dresaed, |the school, ahd her nmented; ‘Mama, this .. you're supposed to come in and hear.me read!" NOW SHE KNOWS Well, at that point there was nothing she could do about Once home, she uidoaded the wj ing machine and found the invitation, all sodden in a pocket of Ryan's jeans. He had forgotten to deliver it to her. JACOBY ON BRIDGE By OSWALD JACOBY You are going to be sitting East all this week and are going to have a problem on the very first trick. If you want to benefit as much as possible just look at the bidding, the opening lead and the North and East hands. The five of hearts , is played from dummy on West's deiice and approximately 99 out of 100 players would play the Jack from the East hand in accordance with the well-known rule of "third hand high." You probably won’t because , have f^red that 1 would not be writing this article unless there were some reason to play low. Now look at all the hands and WASHINGTON (UPI) ~ The Tobacco Institute reported yesierdny that the ISderal government col-tectad BWM than |a bUUon in to-bacon ttUMNt last JiOtP. Yhe insti-, lute said atate and local govem-^^yenta ooUacte^anolher |l......... THE POKTIAC press. MOKPAY, OCTOBER 8, 1962 Britain Asks Mart for Few Changes MARKETS TIm lioOowinf »n top ptkm product by them to ' ■ Mart Gains in Slow Trading QuMtIoni w« ftimiahed by the Detroit Buntu of Marketi, u of Mondiy. Prbducjit KEW YORK oritea among “growth" atocha moved up routinely. There were tract awarda are e record next year Opening Bond Mart Calm NEW YORK m — The Ixmd market waa becalmed at the opening a. Beam. ...................... Ctri^. b«h.................. C»ri^ Mttoiwk. I di. “ Activity waa quiet both in over-the counter dealinga of V. S. Treaaury bonda and in corporate bond trading on the New York Stock Exchange. quoted the Mg maJorNy of gov- gahn of 1/St or 1/Ma. Price changea ' were almoat aa limited in the corporate market, and in only one early trade did the fluctuation amount to aa much 8 one half point. The Northern Pacific .la of 2047 gained thkt much, moving u 57'i. Food Rioting inSoviet Union? Reports Say Several Killed in South BRUSSELS. Belgium fAPi-Briuin’a chief neigidaiar with Eu-rope’a Common Market aought canr eeaaiona today for Mx Ompngn- to riae to no ap- WA8HINGTON (UPD — U. 8. ottieiala aoid today th^ have received reporta of "targi public diaturbancea in a aoutherii aection ol^ the Soviet Reauming negoUationa with the aix nationa of the Common Market foUowing laat month'a Commonwealth conference in. London, Edward Heath aought changea for India. Pakiatan, Ceylon. Ghana, Nigeria and Tanganyika, who are worried about their future if ^t-ain entera the European trade Moc. Soaieea cloee to the BrHtoh delegation aaM Neath propooed lively among the olla, litdding moat of a 3-p^t apurt. Broken aaid buy-era were attracted to the atock hy a revival M rumora that the com-paiiy niiv sell ita tibyah inter-eata, aplit Ita Union, There were unconfirmed reports Chrysler gained nearly a point in a ragged automotive section. Ford and General Motors eased. .Studebaker, which has contracted to buy Frftnklin Manufacturing Co., was steady. Prices were generally higher Jn alow. trading on the American Slock Exchange. several hundred people 1 In the most serious in the In^rial city of Novocherkassk, near Rostov. According to word sitting rat of Russia, officials said, the rioting began after butter and meal ^ceo were raised on June I. The State DepArtmenf, asked or public comment on the violence, said only that, "we have had reports there were disturbances in the Rostov area thW Chase Leads fo Smash-Up; Teen Ticketed A young driver led Pontiac Slate Piillce on a five-mile chase Saturday night at speeds that reached 120 miles per hour and ended when the car smashed into an embank- dla. Pulditan and Oeytau. The three, he aaid, were frightened about the effects of the application of the Common Market’s Joint external tariff on their trade. WANT PACT The three, he said, want negotiations for a compre trade agreement started as Britain is in the Common Market and want common market tariffs on their products withheld until an agreement is concluded. ★ * ■ ♦....... The three African Ctumura-weelth membera, Ohana, Nigeria " a do not warn the 0 of overseas aa- , a to i ut. ertt. rr. »i?S. f i 3.M iBiNni iHoklo iiM bn, SSu:S:i!!:5! PumiiklMi bu. . RritliihM, rod. d«. Hodlahu, Mock . Rkdiahoa. whlU. < squMb. soom. mi ...................- B^uh, buUorcup, bu............... t.M The New York Stock Exchange NSW YOBB line operation which la fettinff .ii ' lot of competition in Oriifotida, Suburban is one of the Mivcat West coast dfstributors of LP-8M>^ and dividends in each of the past 0 six yean. An antitrust suit entered in 1961 should have no seriou Im- > pact on earnings. 1 would bold SuburtMU, but I* Paso into CUi- fortiia Electric Power. rt>r a growing brilri thtC; goDd newt is to the woeha. It the > public geto that Idea, it will go Mr common stocks again. The lMfsr.„ yields, compared to savtags VWit gif thaw atocka aiwiY aiaatoautiiifc. . /. I TWENTY-EIGHT ‘ THE PONTIAC PRESS. MfONPAY, OCTOBER 8, ^1962 Pontiac, Nearby Area Deaths WILLIAM G. GUTHRIE JR. Service-for William G. Guthrie Jr., 49, ol 4490 Island Park Dr. Drayton Plains, will be Wednesday at 1 p.m. at the Coats J'uheral Home. Burial will lollow In Cres-ctent Hills Cemetery. Mr. Guthrie, a member at the Community-United....P'resbyterran Church and an assistant master mechanic for Chevrolet, died yesterday at Pontiac Genelal Hospital from a heart attack. Surviving besides his wife Kathryn are h's lather, William G. Guthrie of Pennsylvania; his mother, Mrs. William Pineo of Niagara Falls, Canada: one son, William G. HI at home; and three' sisters. ‘Body Division, died early today following a long illness, >.Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. litllian Moran and Mrs. Evelyn Burt, both of Pontiac, and Mrs-Esther .Mulholland of Illinois; two ■sons, l.t'on of Clawson, and Gerald of Pontiac; eight grandchildren; and 18 great-graiifichiJdren. W. HENRY II.4I.E Service for W. Henry Hale, 91, of ,381 Mt. Clemens Wednesday at 1: ,19 Huntuon f'uneral Home. Burial will follow in Perry Mount Park Cemetery, Mr. Hale, a retiree of Fisher MRS, MAUD S. NEWBOUND Service for Mrs, Maud S. New-bound, 81, of 92 S, Frahcls St„ will be .3 p.m. Wednesday at Rich-ai-dson-Biixl Funeral Home, Milford. Burial will follow in Highland Cemetery, Highland. Mrs. Newbound died today at Pontiac General Hospital following brief illness. She was a member of the Central Methodist Church and an honorary member of the Women's Society of Chris-will bejiian .Seivice, )i-s include a son. Thur-of Pontiac; a daughter, •len N. Brosted of Pontiac: a grandchild and a greatgrandchild A brother, Flo^d Jones «f Milford, and four'sisters, Mrs. Walter Huff of Highland, Mrs. Fred Bush of Lindei Mrs. 0. ,1. Murphy. Detroit, and Mrs. Nina Wilkins of Lansing also suivive. Gibbons, 61, ol 3331 W. Oregon Road, will be 10 a m, tomorrow at the Church of the Immacutfilc Conception, Lapeer. Burial will he in Mount Lor-clto Cemetery, Lapeer, Mrs. Gibbons died .Saturday at her home of a heart attack. The flosary will Ih> recited at 8:30 p.m, today at Muir Brolhe Funeral Home, Surviving arc two sons, Lyle of Poughkeepsie, N. Y,, and Robert of Coltimhiaville: two daughters, Mrs. Marjorir .Srramlln mid Mrs. 5 Brown, both of Lupcer; two brothers, Thomas Stacy of laipcer and Robert Stacy of Pontiac, and !2 grjimichildrcn. HAROM) J. 8CHONFELD SR. IMLAY CITY—Service for Harold J. Schonfeld Sr„ 66, of 245 Wes-Sl.. will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at Muir Brothers Funeral Home, niiriat will follow in Imlay Township Cemetery. .Schonfeld died unexpectedly Saturday in Community Hospital Altmint. He is past ank K. Warner III; t«. of 5H0 N. Rm-hestrr Ruud. I told sheriff's deputies he pulled out from Tlenken Road lo make a left turn onto RiH'hesle Road and failed to see Warner’ iVnrner, wlio was soulhbound on Rochester i^xid, said he uppliiKl his brakes hut wu^ unable lo Stop tn lime. Rochester Road traffic has the riglit of way at Hie intersection. Hire Handicapped, Employers Urged It pays to employ the handl-c^^.” That is tlie - message 6,000 employers In the Pon-rea|wUl receive In the mall during Fimploy -the - Handicapped Week; which starts today. The material is being maiM by the Pontiac office df (he ivliehigan Employment Securities Commission'. The week was pi'oelalmod locally by Mayor Robert ^ Landry, following similar action by President John ¥. Kennedy and Gov. John B. Swalnson. Flint________ alf part of i-u ...............- not only ordinary shoeing, but also lor In some instances, he puls toe-weights on parade horses to make them life their (eet higher. Or if one foot drags a little it is measured and corrective shoes nailed on. Taeger and his 19-yearnild son, who graduated from Milford High School last June, shoe about 60 horses a week. It takes an hour and costs JIO if it is an ordinary Job. F'or special jobs sui'h as snow shoes with corks for winter, Taeger charges » S40. .. rule, horses like to be shod. Taeger said. I lowever, Ixilh fatlier and sot) have had the undignified experience of being "bowled over back wards” by an irate animal. When this happens — out comes tranquilizers—for the horse. Recently Kenneth got slammed „i the mouth by an impatient mare, but said, "I’m lucky. I’ve still got all my teeth in my head.' School Chief to Speak to Orion Twp. PTA Unit ORION TOWNSHIP - S c h o o Supl. A. A. Reed will be guest speaker at the Proper Scliool Par-■nt-'l’eachers Association meeting It 8 p.m. ttxiay at the school. Reed will discuss the proposed '$2-million bond issue lo be voted on by the district electorate Dec. 11. Parents, teachers and community residents are invited to attend. \$ ’m I Brandt.Prodainis West Won't Abandon Bertin From Onr Newt Wire# instead of enother addition to a pile of paper proteets, to counter the latest Communist challenge lo Western freedom of nwvement In Brandt appeared at a nets* eoafereaoo where he reed ft Btatement he prepared la a week- from Iha United 8tale« fksturdeyi He hinted he was expecting a major developttient over Berlin In the next Iwo or three weeks but refused to elaborate. imm West Beriin la retalletloa for the nfusal of Bast Germaa border guarda to let a British ambulance enter East Berlla. The ambulance was barred Sot-uiday when It attempted to go to the medical aid of a West Berliner who was shot at a tunnel entrance on the East side of the wall. He was helping refugees escape. It Is not known whether he died of his wounds. It was reported In London that Meanwhile, West Berlin papers demanded Western action, High Court Upholds Pay Television Plan WASHINGTON UB - The Supreme Court refused today to Interfere with plans tor a large scale tryout of pay tolcvisloa. The tribunal rejected without comment an nppeal by a group ol theater operators who have ooughl to block Ike trial opera- Zenith Radio Corp., owner of n patent on a phonevislon system, planned a three-year experiment In the Hartford, Conn., area under Federal Comniunfra- • Com Individual programs would cost TV act owners 88 cents to teats over the barring of th^ The British F’oreign Office announced that American, British and French commandants in Ber-ire considering follow-up ac- Three East German border guards escaped into 'West Beriin under cover of darkness. West police reported today. - range of 75 cents to $1.80. No commercials would be broad- MONTGOMERY WARD CO. HEARING AID DEPT. If you can hear, but cannot understand, we can help you!! CALL US FOR A FREE HEARING TEST... In our office or at your home. 682-4940 Ext. 233 BATTERIESr CORDS, REPAIRS ON ALL HEARING AIDS PONTIAC MALL A Great-West Life Annuity offers more value! Relax and enjoy a guaranteed income at retirement — a life, lime, tax-iavmg investment with an excellent dollar return. A Oreet-West representative will be glad to advise you in selecting the most suitable reUrement income program to supplement Social Security bensflts. A wide range of annuity plans is available from which you can ealsblishlk secure flnan-tial future geared to your individual m ‘ Consider the annual raxMiUM XR'nsEMnNT annuhv. A man, nge 35, investing $1000 a year is guaranleed a monthly retire-----------, yf $270.30, beginning al age 65; dividend ment income for life of $270.30, beginning al age 65; d accumulationand surplus earnings, based on ciirrei would boost this income lo $370.07 per month. For a better dollar return, talk to usi Curtis E. Patton 314 S. Tllden Ave. FE 4 3739 Great-West Life Onn r«aUa» rrsM ism* JAVUKE M'HOIARHHir — A $1,000 scholarship check has been donated by the Pontiac Area Junior Chamber of Oom-meiTC lo Michigan State Univeniiiy’ Oakland. Presenting the check to Chancellor D. B. Varner (lefU la Richard M. Pllz-gerald (right), Jaycee vice president and ccwhalrman of the Aug. 4 Delmit Lkms sCgimmage ganjte which provided the funds. WUIlato J. Looking on it Jayceee President \ n J. Dean: I DEPARTMENI CLASSIFICATION INDEX dASSIFliD ADVERTISING (REVISED JULY 21, 1962) . NOTICES Cord of Thonkt .. In A Floriit....... Funoral Dlncton .... CfinttiiyLott....... Pinonou............. Lott and Found ; . EMPLOYMENT 6 , 7 Htip Wontod ............ « SoIn Hflp, Molo-Fomolo 8-A Empfoyrmnt Agtnciat ... 9 Employmtnt Informotion 9-A Initructioni-Schoolt ....10 Work Wonttd Molt.........11 Work Wonttd Fttnolt ... 12 SERVICES OFFERED Building Strvict-Supplitt .13 Vottrinory ..............14 Buiinoss Sorvict - ------15 Bookkeeping & Toxea; ;^6 Credit Advisors .......16-A Dretsmoking & Tailoring .17 Gordening............ .18 Landscoping........... 18-A Garden Plowing ........18-B Income Tax Service.......19 Laundry Service .... —20 Convolescant-Nursing ..,.21 Moving ond Trucking ... .22 Painting & Decorating .. .23 Television-Radio Service .24 Upholstering ..........24-A Transportation ..........25 WANTED Wanted Children to Board 28 Wanted Household Goods .29 Wanted Miscellaneous .. .30 Wanted Money ............31 Wonted to Rent...........32 Share Living Quarters ... 33 Wanted Real Estate . ... . 36 RENTALS OFFERED Apartments-Furnished ... 37 Apartmants-Unfurnished . 38 Rant Houses, Furnished .. 39 Rant Houses, Unfurnished 40 I Cottogas...............41 I Rooms...............42 Rooms With Board........43 Rent Form Property.......44 Hotel-Motel Rooms.........45 Rent Stores...............46 Rent Office Space ...... 47 Rent Business Property 47-A Rant Miscellaneous .......48 REAL ESTATE Sale Houses ......... Income Property ----- Lake Property......... Northern Property ... Resort Property ..... Suburban Property .. Lots-Acreage ......... Sole Farms ........... Sale business Property Sale or Exchange FINANCIAL Business Opportunities ..59 Sola Land Controcts —60 Wonted Contracts-Mtge. 60-A Money to Loan ..........61 Mortgoge Loons......... .62 MERCHAflDISE Swaps................ Sole Clothing ....... Sale Household Goods . Antiques ............ Hi-Fi, TV & Radios ... Water Softeners....... Sale Miscellaneous ... Christmas TrNs ...... Christmas Gifts ..... Hand Tools-Machinery Do It Yourself ...... Camaras • Service — Musical ^oods ....... Office Equipment — Store Equipment — Sporting Fishing ! - Bolts . 63 ...64 .. 65 65 A ...66 66-A ...67 .67-A .67-B ..68 ...69 ...70 ...71 .72 .73 .74 .75 .76 .77 Flshii Soi Wood-Cool-Coke-Fuel Pets-Hunting Dogs........79 Auction Salas............80 Plants-Trees-Shrubs . .81-A Hobbies & Supplies.......82 FARM MERCHANDISE Livestock ...... Hay-Grqin-FNd .. Poultry ........ Form Product ■ Form Equipment . ....83 ....84 ....85 ....86 ....87 AUTOMOTIVE Housetrailars .........89 Rent Trailer Spoco ......90 Commercial Trailers .. .90-A Autqi Accnsorlet . Tirbt-Auto-Tnick .. Auto Service ....... Motor Scooters ... Motorcycles ........ Bicycles ........... Boots-Accetfories . .91 .....92 .....93 .....94 .....95 .....96 .... 97 ^________ . . . . 99 Wanted Cois-Trucks .101 Used Auto-Truck Ports .102 New and Used Trucks... 103 Auto Insuronco ........ 104 Foreign Cora ...........105 New ond Used Cora 106 f ^ *ii f tovnM imiooT or r*ii ... nmm'imi ... OOT ((W 4 MiailGAN CREDIT COUNSEU>K& BUDGET SERVICE ttJL-HfflS?___________E*-ia Bt»l Homa with Rav. Jldwhrd DuMfMt iafliaWtiDi. inUrment In Parry Mt. park ^ Oamttaiy. Homa. tram Ifcnry. MM Thamaa aoub-vard, Whita Uka Townahm; aca 71: twlorad huaband ot Iva a. Oordon: dlar fathar of Bartram, A. Oordon: daar brothar of Roy . T. Oordon; aim lurvjvad by aav-an irandehtldran and two fraat-(randehlldran. funarol aarvlca irHlll”crmV^y.;'ib; Ho”W5ara**&oma*'** 0. J. OODRARDT PONBHAb OU^lSHTocrOBBRJ. IMJ. ^L-..— ------- 4400 laland Park Pinao; daar »»thar of W'****™ * Quthrla in; daar brothar .of Bei ty. Roaamarla and Irena Outhrli Funeral aarvlca^ will be hal Wadnaaday. October 10 at 1 p.n at the CoaU Funeral Home, Draj ton Plalna, with Rav. Walter-Taauwlaaan Jr.. offlclaUn*. In daar ’leather of Mra. Lillian Moi an. Mra. Evelyn Burt.Xra. Bathe. Mulholland. Laon and OaraW Mala; alao aurvivad by eight grandchildren and W greal-grand-chlldran. Funeral aarvlca will ba held Wadnaaday, October 10, at Donelson-Johns Voorhees-Siple LUKABlEWtCZ. OCTOBER 6. 1007, Saloma (Oronaki). 08J1 Waataway. Troy; age 74; dear mother of Frank W. Oronaki, Mra. Btanlay and William Oronaki^; alto aurvivad by 14 grandchildren and ala great grandchildren. Funeral aarvlca will ba held Tuaadav. October ». at 0 a m. at Our Lady Quean of Apoatlaa Church, Ham-tramck. Interment In Mt. Olivet Cemetery, Detroit. Mra. Luka-amwlca- wlll 4la^4n -atate- ^ John^J. Skupny Funaaal Ho^e, B'T R I N B. OCTOBER 3. 1003. Gerald E.. 1005 Holbrook: age 55; beloved huaband of Evelyn I. Btrine: dear father of —*•* A. Dianne D.. Keith E.. and fluan I Btrine. and'Mra. Barry Coutta. dear brother of EVf—‘ “ worth. Kenneth anc .... Btrine. Mra. Paul Prlta. Tony Melaar. and Mra. Oeorge Lonabury; alao aurvived by 11 grandchildren. Funeral aervlce ........«rtS5*bs»r j'ohna Funeral Home. Mr. Btrine will lie In atate at the Donalaon- Johna Funeral Home._________ UBRBY. OCTOBER 5, 1002, BABY Jeffrey Mark. 3430 VanZandt Bt. Drayton Plaint: beloved Infant ton of Edward R. and C«ol J. Uarey; dear brother of Becky Sue tlarey. Funeral aervlce will be held Tueaday, October 0. at 11 a m. at the Donelaon-John; Eii-neal Home. Interment In White Chapel Cemetery. Baby Jeffrey will lie In atate at the Donelaon- WARINO. OCTOBER 7. 1063, ODES-aa Rounaley, 15 Bummit; age 01: ------ itep-mothar of Llojrd, Rom OCTOBER .. 1065 Lockwood BlvC While Lake Townahip; age 81 beloved wile of Loula P — ...... of Richard ___ Funeral arranaementa are pending at the aparka-Orlf-fln Funeral Homo where Mra. Weppner will lie In atate. -BOX REPUEft-At 10 B.m. TodBjr there worn repileo at The Preee offlee In the followliw bozee: H, 15, 17, 35, 57, 5S, 57, 71, 71, 51, 55, 93, 90, 99, 113. t PAUL. Off Voiir Mills AhoM A loue — ^ nte low aa .ilo vk. r 4jrt'c*°A ‘‘"intmoma City Adjustment .Service W. Huron rm pe3n COATJ .RA,Yoy"paftik°»“'oR BIT. D. E. Pursley PIINKRAL HOMS INERAL HUMK HUNTOON FUNERAL HOMB_ SPAKK.S-GKIKKIN FUNERAL HUME Tinughtlul aetvlca" FE 1-5041 FUNERAL HOME Lots ANY OIRL OR WOMAN NEEOINO .. ‘,y advltar, phone FE rr 0 pm. Or il no an-_ _ FE 10734. Conftdeotlal. DAINTY maid' BUPPl.lltB. 130 Meimmlnea. FE O-IOOO. _ WILL THE" eiHLiy~WIIO PICKED 00 a dotty tray kitten In the vt-chilly of Victory 81. and‘Vernon Drive Thiiraday afternoon, pleaae return the pel to my brokenhearted lliile girl at 00 Vernon Drive. No queatlona aaked. relorn ■ ------- will be greatly appreci- WBt: VICINIT-Y OF BALDWIN anu Weal Beverly, black and while Hanchetler dog. weaUng red harneaa, anawere to name of Corky. Chlldren’i pel, reward. The Pontiac Preaa Pleaae r.------- Important papera to Pontiac Preaa awltchboard. Reward_______________ LOST 3 MALE BROWN AND while Brittany Bpanlela. Vlclnliy ol Oiidyke and 8. Blvd. Reward. 1105. Eo^ ORANGE AND WHITE BRIT-tany Spaniel In area of Wildwood and Orange Hall Rd. Will nerd Vet. Call 837 M OR_ 3-5070.______ rr MEcirANic. ateady lo^gpa"""' To repreaent manufacturer ol Perlahable TooU In eaatern part ol Michigan. Reply Boa 74. Pon- AN UNCOMMON MAN }is hunaelf and that will work a full 0 hour day wllli one ^ve^'r'eX ‘firr O".*? •alea loole If you like new Ideae. hard work, deaimg with the public and treater imanclal relunim can Mr. Partridge at PE 4 3501 for an appolnlmenl -and a happier future, ^_____ DIAL FF. 2 m' rrom S a.m. to 5 p.m. All errora ahould be reported immediately. Tbe Pretc aaaumea no reepon- elblllty lor -------- Pi fo. ..... Ineartlon ment whicn naa neen dartd Taiuctaia throutb «1 arror. When eanoellaUo are <>e aure to I CASH WAHT AD RATES Llneo l-pay 3-Daya 0-Daya t 91.7I If 31 $1« • 330 i ii Stontlae Praae boa numbara. Kenta eonlalnlng tvpa aiaaa rgor than regular agala' type la 13 o’clock ;^n the day pravloua to publie*t|7n. Oloalhf nma for advtrUaa-NOTIPR TO ADVKRIISBRI All advertliing appealing In 'The pimtlae Pteaa Help Wanted riatallled Colv. .-whMaTftoatimia. 1. 7. —e Fu5T wrNT'ADS AUTO PARTS MAN Some eanerirnce. Legible band-writing. married and reanonalble KEEOO SALES It 8ERyttE_ AUTO MECHANICS WITH TOOLS Appljf Keego Sale# and Service._ Xiiro jSfECHANIC.-EXPERir.NrED. own toola. guarenie# and benerita. 3143 Coolldge. Berkley BUMPEh ASrT^AIHfiH. COM llifistfnn snRfs. must Ml 60T. 2-t6n 8fAkET>'A&DIN& Oeneral haultog. FE 04N03. EVELYN EDWARDS •'VOCATIONAL COUNSELINO SERVKne" Telephone FE 4-0.'584 Ptjii^Eg t Dac6fEWE| 23 AAA PAINTING AND XIECORAT-•—!, 30 years aip. Reas. P— — latea. Phone DL 3-1300. __________JR80NNEL -------------------------------- COUNSELINO SERVICE MASON TH( MPSON DBCORATOa r. Maple Birmingham -------------------- s in ____________Ml 4-"" - PAINTING PSPBRINO WALL iBttriictiaHi-Scliooli 10 FI.NISH HIGH .SCHOOL let write to National ----------- ... Home Study. Dent. PP. Box 6314. Del/olt 34. MIchlgi WA8H1NO. TOPPER. OB 3-7061. PAINTINO. PAPeRiNO; REktOV-al, waahing. 673-2073. C. White. PAlinjNO AND DECORATINO LEARN TO OPERATE HEAVY equipment, eamtoga 3170 week more, Por Information write "Ke 6330 West 6 MUe Rd , Detroit : Diamond 1-7323. PIANO lessons; dr AYTti ’ohtiac Stole Bank, FE 4-3501, paper HANCJINd AND PAINT-tog^Mark Nelson, FE 0 1000. PAPEBHANCJWO - PAl¥|Tl !l, dll, for cosh i transpertotltHi - MEN -Get That Job!! Operating Heavy Equipment POWER SHOVELS BULLDOZERS OHADERS SCRAPERS DRAG BACK HOES CLAM SHELLS Thousands of addlllonal be needed to operate th EQUIPMENT used to - new roada. lubdlvlslona, bridges, j Irrigation aystems. pipeline ' missile sites, shopping cei dustrlal parks, home si i BNOINE AIRLINER. LOB AN-gele*. Ssn Francisco. 070 60. Hawaii. SM extra. New York, $3u. Miami. $44. Ferry Service. Inc.. Wanted Heuieheld GomIi 29 CASH POR FURNITURE AND Appliances 1 piece or houseful. Pearson’s FE ■--- AUCTION SALE EVERY SATUR-day at Blue Bird Auctim. We’ll buy furnllurm^ toola ^_and ^ajjgll- LET Us BOY IT OB SELL TTVOB Brewer Real Estate JOSEPH F. REISZ, SALES glOR. FE 4-5101 Eves. FE 041023 HAVE $100,000 to cissb to purchase good seaeooe land contracts. For immediate at lion call us. . AUGUST JOHNSON REALTOR 0 WEEKLY, 3 R003U. PI^Al hath, and entraneo. BmI. OtUKla., - ALL UTILITIB8 INCLUDED . On 1- and Mrooni eflletoney apMrt-menu, loeatod an Pontiac Late O^ 11 p^ wk. CaU Mra. LUay. *»-tlfO. AfMrtEWEtS’fErEiilMd 37 COLORED. 3 n BEDROOM DELUXE KITCR^-etle apartment. Newly ‘ first floor, parking at ----- heat. FE 5-mi or PE 4-4360. 2 AND BATH. WKBI 8IDB._ BbAs-oiiable. Business peraon. FE, 0-5044. 3 ROOMS.. PRi'vATE ENTRANCE’. 79 Clerk St. ' FE 3-0901. , iUZABEfis LAKBPRObV NEAR DRAYTON BHOPPtNQ Center. 4 rooma and balh. OR 3-1970. NICELY FURNISHED 3-R06mI , 3 H()OMS. PRIVATE BATH. HICR- - --------Baby woleome. 310 B. B a-IMT3. TOP DOLLAR PAID FOB PURNI-ture, apDilances. Mola, etc. Auctions every Friday, Saturday and Sunday. OR 3-17lf. B II B AUCTION. 8$M Dixie Hwy. apartmento, 3- lumlahad. 1 t niSad. gaa haai, uUIUtoa, a 53 Park Place. ________ WEST bide. 4 ROOMS aR6 BaIHU. nicely turn.. utUltlea. adulto eqjli. FE 54100, rm 04030 evn. gives you the beckground to get that JOB you — ....... ......PMEN EQUIPMENT OPERA- THIRTY , f •: THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 8, SalaHoBW 44 (S-aicDROOM LOWERi, 1-2 ACRE LOT On corner W; aubmban S-bed-room, oil beat. pnv«d paM. 2-oar karage. $205 0Mt. 2M.73 nM. i^rag».„.l)ia.ym«ot, .FE 2-lTtE , t-ROOM-KITCHEN AND ro«n$. Uun^^t^H«»4* «hlWren #g^d^'2K "SLATERS” 2-BEDR(X>M HOME. FULL BASE-manL^Mtered waUa., h»rdwo^ lima, ^aln Itnk fence, newly _ 82 H enfkn tSm FB 4'-384g Nl|btg FE 4-9137 i Bfi6M¥TrEAT. »*e«IOERArtli Mm atoye furn. Upper. 02 Union. CLEAN TO* 152 WOtt Wilton. FE 2-6702. decorated. Lake wlyllegee' Big . dUcounl. 4 per cent bilereat, wlA aubaUmtlia^W peymeni, Orton- ” r°r'enL*y*'45M7^'‘ FRON'T. 3 bedroom brick ranch. BASE-ment: 2317 Kohler. OB 3-946I. 1 BOOMS.. BATO. 3 BEDROOM RANCH. ALUMINUM aiding, brick front, carpeting, draper, washer, drm. end ‘ wa-_l;r_softner. OR 3-5608. . . and neat, real close In, garage. FE 2-1296. 32 Stephena Ct; rSoOMS AND BATH, HEAT FURN. 3 bedroom" ranch HOME. Drayton Plains area, ^newly ^ decj wt*r‘move**you In. ¥asV terma Bute St. EB-3444 114 OAKLAND avenue, 3 ROOMS. WATERFORD REALTY OR 3-4525 ftrat floor, stove and refrigerator, utlllttea furnished. AR'cadWJIL^^ walking 3BEDROOM RANCH. FULL BASE ment. Baldwln-Walton sectloii Almost new. Vacant. ‘ connections. War^ In winter, cool in auminrr. Also cloae to schools and churches," All clean and well Cali JAMEs''rEALTY. or 4-5464. riROOMS. BATH AND OARAOE. near. Fisher Body. $3,500 cash.. $.9,500 on terms. FE 0.6732. decorated. Good neighbors. Children permitted. Fine lauudra fa-clllltea. 254 per month^ K. o. 4 ROOMS. MODERN. AND BASE-ment. Near Fisher s. 732 Wing SI. Hempstead. Realtor, 102 E, Huron FE 4-0204. after 5 p pi, FE 2.74J2, i iiQQUfi cm- iJiK^ ATTBJTCTI1{»^2 Write Pontiac Prass. Box 25^^ melit *'? small bedrooms. Cheaper than tent. $6050. $900 down. Taka oar on down payment. FE 2-5961. 4 bedrooms " clarkston" 4 ROOM. BUILT In stove, oven, near schools, stores, churches. MA 6-tl65, eves. COLORED. UPSTAIRS APARTMENT, OI •DprovecI $10,390. Near K Mari COLORED 3 bedrooms, full basement, fenced PE i 7053. Adam* Re$Uy J SahH*w*________________ COMMUNUY NAHOKAL BANE ■1— bBj»m« AMtamhlivf AAftH ' ilf KttoCNMUUi ____ OR a-S506 FOR SALE. BAROAIN OF 2 hotuet to be moved on your lot •t 0 bercoln price. Morton ond Young Howe Moving. FB 2-726S . or FE «-g4M.___ . ■ ~ hodseJfop, sale by^^wnkr. -r-~ LEASE”0Pn0N« ' ^ {bedroom, full b«.vement. fire- VACAHt. « ROOMS. OA8 HEAT. «2SSrrrmf”b,.Mb“5ff r'dr:^;;.'^.r;e"ia*>':s{s!!sj londecop^. Coll FB >SIM._ COLORED 3 Bedrooirls "O" DOWN ^'HOM. REALTOR. 4900 W. Hu- DON'T MISS OUT ■ “““ --- ■■ ON THIS CHANCE OF _ _____________________________ A LIFETIME NEW 3-BEDROOM HOME. GAS Over 30 locotloni to cbooae tl ............Model ot 430 Irvfn (Between E. Blvd. ond DLORAH BLob. CoT _______ FB 2-9m NORTH l rooms; ( PLEASANT LAKE WOODS. 4 BED^ room ronch. 1'* bothe. lobe prlvf leges. Community woter. lorg bosement. FE 4-55M. Eves.___ ^9 PI'fK MONTH Open Weekdays ond Sundays I: FE S-2703 LI 2-4S77 alter 7 pjn. ""‘N REALTY Near Walled Lake. $190 4-R(k)M HOUSE. “‘mODERNT^"EVERY DET 700. Adults Only PF HiHS j Modern 5 Ropm APARTMl'IN'l 5-ROOM HOUSE. LINI? fence"" Lake .privileges. Sell or . Oode for ( . Piingiis. Realtor ORTONVILLE m Mill street NA 7-M13 NEAT 3-8i6DROOM MOD* Jluded'*' 11 Dally and Sunday 12-7 __________Call 624-47U idly? Cool in summertime -intertlme. Thps# ft«nt Hwms, Furnished_____39 iM. SUITABLE or 3 people Orion. »fY I. 165. 49 Pork Ct.. ; ^1195 or 3 R(X>MS AND BATH. furnished 2^ BEDROOM^ YEAl Ref., OR 3-6.456 lKE. ___________ . S75. OR 3-1057. WILLIAMS LAKE. NEAR SCHOOLS gage or terms. By appointment. FE 0-4550 or_OL l-Olj94 alter 5 P m. "$46 MONTH I's-car garage wit lake privileges, i appreciate, owni OR 341796. - ‘ PRIVATE OWNER 2 bedroom home. 798 Montlcello _______Come See 12-5 Dolly!_______ ^ CUSTOM BUILDING Your Lot Or Mine _ . John C. Myles, Bldr, " Coll'OB 3-0021 for Detotla HOUSE aoL. COLEMAN by owndr. sharp 3 bed- ______ almost new carpeting. Ma taogany paneled, basement witli Formica bar. $900 model train — - ■—at, water softener car garage, patio ________ _____s and landacaulna Will sacrifice. FE 2-0075. STOUTS Best Buys Today Rant Hwut, Unf«rnishail 40 2 BEDROOM MODERN. NEW BABY welcome $80 mo $50 seiurltv I: ___anijel,- FE 4d»m^*l Dorla 2~BSORTOM HOME FOR RENT. prefer couple. FE 4m081. S-B^DROOM. $69. $63 8TANLHY oner 5, OP 3-2627.________ 2-BBDROOM DUPLEX.^^DJl^TON -ASSOiclATB BROKER8- for oiir equity. FE 4-3869. BALD LAKE FRONT HOME 3-bedroom, frame n * ‘ HAYDEN ‘ TEL-HURON DISTRICT.^ OwneMeav^ ■oom home. Large L. R. hard-il floors, lull basement, oil heal (0 fenced lot $1,365 down. Take payments of $87 per month. WALTON BLVD.^^Large^Jo^^$0x^ and extra bedroom In basemei on furnace. Oarage. $1,100 dot , plus mortgage costs. WAljKINS ^ LAKE 2*”ots fenc^ *2**bedrms, aL d which could be u.sed as 3rd. bi Slone fireplace. Lots of closets a •V BED ROOM TRl-I-EVEL $9.()O3_$l,000 DOWN INCLUDES: 83' Lot. Finished fi ' I. Painted Interior. I'i cai Model open. 227 W. Kennett. tlac Motors, Priced from NEW HOUSES • MMIySn.»»TAS»SAMb««. /QtB “Look at it this way — it’s all part of President Kennedy'! physical fitness program!” Sola Hautes PIONEER HIOHLANDS. ----------- ---- ....... -----.... 162,59 Lauderdale In Beverly Hills. lofi Pierce). 3 bed- “ ' excelten'***condlfionI -bedroom completely fur-'treplaee. large screened eds some work. Only $10.-down payment. Reason- D'orofiiv Snyder I.avender 7001 HIghaInd Road (M99) 10 M. West of Telegraph-Huron MALL. $700 Down. 0 rooms $73 TOTAL Mo, $350 Down W. Side. 3 Bedrms. Basemen. C SCH UETT FI- 8-0458 $9,300 5. children. OR 3 ,-S BR0ROOM FRAME HOME IN ;s required. PE 5-8165. Cuie. 3 room atone for couple only. out...... ...... Rocheater, PE 9-8169. Warren Stout Roall r._____________________ 6 BOOMS FOR SALE OR RENT, gaa heal, large yard, near schools. colored. $65. Call FE 3-7579. 44 GREEN STREET 9 rooms and bath. All on 1 noor. Newly decorated. 2 children per. initted. Hand fired coal furnace, CT.EAN 5 ROOM HOME. 100 L . _____Carpeting t Included all lor oi _____ jn Interesting terms Priced lor Immediate sale. I’.NRTRIDCF. $10,900 c :;sfabl.“ $55 A MONTH * |th cuutract to buy Mu t qtmiUy for morlKHRO RBAr>Y BOON 099 Kinney, corner of Blaine. 2 blocks eaat of Oakland. 2 blocks north of Montcalm. 1:30 to 9 p.m. WESTOWN REALTY $15 down on sales moves you In. __________FK S- r/62 - boulevard RBIOHTB - 2 Bodiooni Unit - , $75 Per Month Conta., Resident Manager $44 East Blvd at Valencia FB 4-7$3l_______ COLORED. $55 MONTH IN PON-tlar, new 3-bedrMm IN WATERFORD. 3 ROOM CLEAN for swap or bargain lor cas Ells. Lakejirea. FE 5-7229. .W (yWNER 969 Spence 81. ~ Near Not High and Pontiac Motor. ------ room, lull basement, fireplace. 2- room. den. fireplace. 2’4-car garage. 1662 sq. feet Lot 100x170. blacktop. V« mile Chrysler Hwy. $12:900. $250 down. Oslo Brian r and sewer. Immediate P RETIREES ATTENTION — Modem nome. located In Oulct Vlllar-Lapeer County, features one n, ignd. low tax raw .. Invrslment^^^ '^‘aji&tiney ~ 1 DOWN - Immediate pi COLORED^^--^^Whv ^j)ay newly decorated, ready (or oceu-panev. $490 down, easy monitilv Warren Stout. Realtor r N. Saginaw 81. Ph. PE 5-8165 OB A QUICK SALE. CALL US’ GILES BY o\vnm*:r 9 Whutfnmr# St 7 roomi. gas ■at. Call aft«r 4 p m OR 3fl4oo, "BUD" riark.stoii I'ainilv Home MODEL AVAILABLE 1017 HOLBROOK HURON OAROEN8 3 - bedroom, lull basement, oak ..Large 3-bedrqom w HIITER 1 .ew Hileman—Pontiac's TRADEX Attractive . . . 2 • bedroom home, plasterf walls, full basement. 2-chr g 40 Acres . . . Own Your Own Home >r Les« Than Rent $53 WigMM 44|lebllMW COLORED SPECIAL 1 bMt mmn Hantnaralobe M W 4b L. ft Jodya -ISIS Oolnitmcotisb. OMmuiUty wslor. I. risauH. KENT •d. 816.400. con Air doMiU. SELL OR TRADE - Here good ireal -aide home In C cchool u«g. 3 bedrmt.. tiled PuU bowment. gu heot. I . garage Oemer will lake contract on amallor homo or vacant property M trade. Selling prtc* tll.OM. car garaga. Now at n.MO. Ttrms. Floyd Kent Inc.. Realtor HOYT ra larga It' nm. kitchei bath up. Ma 21. lull basi e — OARAOE — l»0* PAYMMT. WB NEED USTINOt.' WRIGHT ^ openVtoT ___1. huUbln vanlllaa god doubli olotota In badrooma, caramlo Ula balb. larga gUtsaed In porch, IomiM roar yard. IMi car gargga. nkr .M***,*’ kY.'I.IS ri«.i.rrs.: i£v Strnlahmla^ bieluded ttt lull pric# "'h‘”r. hagstrom g!!n.y.."eyg,24m..r%t:«^ CLARK Mao .POWN. Mffm Erym lemenl. gga lurnneo. 0 DOWN, Dealrablo I-igalow. oil furngee, 1 good ooiidltlou, 2-cgr districl. Close reereaUoii^iace, aulomalw lu CLARK REAL E8T4TI0 3101 W. HURON FE 3-T; Evenings coll OR 9-2391 or FB 4-02 Multiple Listing Servleo MILLER TRI-LEVEL 3 BEDROOM, built Homes - Farms 1 ACRE — Wooded custom bull 3 bedroom brick — full base meni — fireplace — close li. paved road near Davlsburg. gl5,-MO - Terms, 2 ACRES - 3 room home----- barn and easy to heat. Tbit one will appeal to older couple who are price Timlled. $6,900 - SliSOO MULTIPLE LI8TINO SERVICE TI43 CA88-BLIZABBTH ROAD PHONE 682-2211_ Val-U-Way. II. Only $1,700 down. C REOUCBO on this nei om bungalow near St. Ml nice bedrooms, soparate dl lull basement, i Humphries FE 2-92.V) 83 N Telegraph Road If No Answer Call FE 3-5022 Home — 20 Acres Priced at $10,900. 07 ft. long I 1 fool lovely, 0 rooms P k HOME AND ACREAOE. A wooded ' acre corner on Clarkston Rd. >ar Elkhorn Lake. A picturesque tiling for ibig 2-bedroom homo. Id the otalldren can kora Ibeir iny on tho proporty. (fall for stalls - 110.900 - terms. s COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE and that are 2 flreplat grill and rotlssei " 3-bedroom models on Stanley. Lake Privileges “TRTPP $780 Down' New! .Spacious! 3-Bedroom Home Aluminum Siding. Basement, I'rected on 5 ACRES ROUGH OUR COOPERATIVE PROGRAM Bass (St Whitcomb REALTORS FE 3-7210 VL 2-2030 3906 Auburn near Adams Road __SPECIALIZINO IN TRADES'_ Ci.ARK.SfbN ilRICK lod hunling and fishing. $12 500 r — An up north selling jiisl It of Clarkston? 10 semi-wood- DORRIS OWNER^_TOINO^ ■ro^^SEJ.L^THIS for mVoso. * 'n(?w" beh R. J. (Dick) VALUKT REALTOR F'E 4-.LS.H 349 OAKLAND AVE. OPEN >f \Vebster School Very nice 7-room modern home, vestibule entrance. Ing and dining >'««»'■ ..‘‘"iSkfS alt large bedroome, tile bath, gaa forced air beat, garaga. nice tol. call us for an mpointmeni. Brewer Real Estate ■ _1iyig/' Even FE^ ^KEEGO HARBOR Possession on this 2-bedroc compact home, full fenced ¥«r. Ink prelvlleget. 17.9. Convenient terms. \\ isner School District 5 rmmis. 2bedroom, larga llv kl!ohrm’”*ca*n make 2 bedroomi li! amii. I'lll basement, lot 1W> William Miller Realtor EE 2-026.1 Mis W»n to wall carpel-till baaement. famlv kltch-eautlful ceramic 2- *and Bpactous** comer lot APARTMENT HOUSE - 4 THREE-room apts., tompieiely furn. 2-car RaruKC- 2IK> Samleraon. Inquire rear 3“ FAMItY -IMKEPRONT HOME T.AROE 3 BEDROOM BRICK IN Pioneer HlRhlands. Spacloua living n. Kitchen with eating area. • sized bedrooms. Full baae- 1500 DO\VN ^NORTHSIDE a scaping and ail city convt Northern High district. 3 BEDROOM ALUM With carpet , and drapes, lovely kitchen. marbU tills, full basement with rec room grin and bar. Oarage, large loi and^irmch more. Only $12,900 with (ilLES RE.M.TY CO, FE 9-6175 221 Boldviln Ave. MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ANNETT Oiilv .$6,fl.=i(V-2 Lots South Last Side (il ‘ BATEMAN OPEN Daily 5-8 Lake I'roiit .Models ( larkston Brick Ranch ler transferred-Price reduced 14.950. Terms. Highland Village Rolfe 11. Smith. Realtor 244 8. Telegraph 3 7848 MA ^431 O'NEIL ml Belance owing to be *. ....J. everetI'" j'Tumminos REALTY. 4540 Dixie Ilwv.. P-tun Plains, OR 4.|82l^___ Colored—F'HA Ajirtroved 66 Lorraine Ct. near downtown. 3-bedroum ^hoine. 11V 1 n with apt. and gas heal. Excelle condition Ihronghoul. $11,300. Ava kbie to qualiriad buyer for a proximalely $700 down. JACK LOVI'.LAND 2100 Caai Lake Road. Ph. $02-1259 SII.VER I.ARE MANOR TRADE CUSTOM BUILT 9 BEDROOM TRI-LEVEL OR 3 BEDROOM RANCHERS MANY CHOICE LOTS TO CHOOSE FROM PAVED HTREEIS ---WATER. LAKE PRIVILEGES I PLANS OR OURS ....... TAKE THAOE IN ANY AREA. _____ —. _____________ig equity In amall home In trade. 3 bed-rooma. apse Iona living room. 12x20 oak floor Kborooxioir «LWo',“ DOWN IN DRAYTON PLAINS: bungalow with conveniences. leellenl neUhhnrhood. i MY 3-1143 NORTH-EHA TERMS Attractive 3 bedroom h^e. llv Ing room, family altad dining room, cleah. $2,450, Terma CLOSE TO SHOPPINO. SCHOOLS AND TRANBPORTA- ^‘“"$500 DOWN PLUS MTU. COSTS 5 ACRES BRICK RANCH UNDERWOOD REAL 2 85 DIxIa Hwy. A 9.26I5 MA 51241 7 ROOM BRICK i EARt.Y AMERICAN 1 YOUR PL ......FRA I.UMBIA V REALTY *^.*'h«M°'S-4!l2o"®®“'®' P'TIK'liei' .?« iS ■'moT' neW'T A:'!"'"*".."Il!lL age' POf riAJ CITY, bedroom alngl'n ...... ■ egrpeting. large dUilng rTOiii. In nor!h p«i1 of city near Norlliem Heal 5^?ue'Realtv7FK 5367^, ilMALL I BEDROOM HOME. COZY place for couple, no children. $45. 4326 Benateln Hoad. Tel, Delroll VE $-9710;__________________ TWO BEDROOM TERRACE Near A. turn and Eaat Blvd. MO per month (las heat and aaraga kvAljab fmo**''’ *** * WmTil^NC'sMAlxiSWET^ year around house 1 bedroc"’ '“V" 42 r FLOOR FOR lady. Homo and cojAln^g^rWllegei 2 SLEEPING ROOMS IN NE\ home near bua and IllllcresI Driv In. Home and kitchen privileges I Olanaworth. MY_3 729I.______ ^ CLEAH RLBEPINO ROOM. CLOB* 'wlth*ter-ins“‘’*pai ‘BUIT’ Nicholie, Realtor 49 Ml. Clemens 81. ■ EE 5-1201 After 6 p in. F'E 2-.L370 Exchange t)K Traide Your ejjully for what you ^rral- .\uhiini llclglits 1-Acres—2 Homes hL'‘.':'‘!5rra':,»n"7td;U"'2lul^^^^^^^^ TRADINO 18 OUR BUSINESS awnings. 20 foot living room \V>st Sulnirban airMcluwlV *Mu ”*be Hold In basement, separate 2 bed- ment rancher with allaebed ga- Frulr fr*e7s*''lsaM* CiVry "s?hf*i ln**raw "ind ’oJm i" dllo. “pine ar'^rai ()ii!y OiSImo. $2,000 down C'.'''K"ce'd’‘lo*sVll 'qm?k CaRO'E HGOM FOR OENTLBMAf ■private entrance._FE 4-JJ19. fLEEPING ROOM ONE (lENTI t man. 24 Norton, FE 3-i77l H-IepIno HfKlM FOR (IKNIT.l Oakland, FE 3-OKKI. ___ OARAOE. OR ''1 od.'tys Top Trades” Lake F'roiit Bargain Only ^$10,900 and look wlial ybu jeor^ oJd'*'brlck "|ho|n»^ with Jbwe- I er will benen, . |4 Per Cent ^ ^ li!\*”wiia"u. wall carpvthi?. *4* fanceU yard. $9.95o. $1,500 dn. or your tquity In ttada. Niitliiir to nisturl) You at tills real aubiirbai. retreat-private lake and 4ts arras, al- Clarkston—4 Bedrooms Brick and Icdgerork ranch In vicinity “t^hew hljih school^ 2 car^garage^^.^alUchcd t.ul 109 Seminole Hills ^1. AttrftctlVf 5 bedroom brlik, only place [n living room, formal ,o“& ■UBINEggMIlN - SALBSMI Wakkly. memy. off aeaaon ’^‘*'^ERW<)OD MOTEL t4W Dhtle Highway___ 47 upen evenmgR « aunaay i-a FE 8-0466 O'NEIC KAMPSEN SPECIAL allaehad garage, A $11.1100 and we want 1 1 PE. 4 0«M MLB OR 3-3IM ULEVEL STAHTEST ragel* i»S'’ii*'^'ee!*'’i!m^'’V fioi BrTan nmly daeorkled. nc «4, by owMr. FB l-30$< COLOR F'.l) 240 S. .'^aiiford RRE IS A DANDY NEW- I fTrmaFdlnhiriK.*'8ro3°re'v.' el family room with fireplace featureii. carpeting. ^***P*’' TRADING 18 OUR BU8INE88 Trade owner saya sell. .1-bedroom brick rancher freshly decorated i ' new carpeting. Hoi water hi .fireplace, attached garage On big Mdoot wide lot. gl.lOO down or trade your present 'home or lend coni reel. Immeillate post^sslon and price cut to rock boltoiq. TRADINO IS OUR BUSINESS Only NOwV'*^ TRADINO IS OUR BUSINESS Save $1,000 ‘ lable bungalow on '?j:!w'“is:'‘£i"i!S h**$lG« THADINO IS OUR BUSINESS No Down Payment To Veteran, oiily morig. cost gild low low paymenia ol approx $50 per nionib Including iaie and Insurance. Nice 2-bedroi)n biingalow. "J A terrific value. Owner will lakt lose but aays lell. LOOK TODAY. t.oast-to-Coast ^radrs Fr'^I^ KmUot 1P» g‘7l$l 0|Nm M , tui^iir i t . mcnl And 2 cAr gArAge O rr Will givff »nmi IsORRAINR MANOR Hcr< TRADE IN YOUR >»RE8ENT HOME OH EQUUT ON TUI8 WATER-FRONT HOME. 8U rumiiM And fAmlly room. butU-In kitchen, carpeting, drapes. 2 balhs and 2-car garage , Hnllt In I960 Many more extras Make your appolnl- IMMEDIAin ^ OCCUPAJ4CY Ideal for 'retired coiij^le. H's . rar garage giiil city selver and water 610.900. Will trade. $.100 DOWN WIIX MOVE SOME LUCKY PEOPLE who can qualify on FHA or OI In: this dandy 5-room bungalow with bill basement. It's located walking ^dlsunce to OUAUTY AND VALUE ara combined In Ihla fine ranch home featuring gll briek con-nlriictlon. a 23xt0-fool living room 'complemented by a brick firrolace and nica cai^. pelltig. Three apacloua bedroom*, that hard-to-find dining room, biilll-ln kitchen, m balba and 2-car allaebed ga- ai No Money Down WEBSTER SCHOOL DISTRICT. S-Tpom 3-Atory homA With m bAUi. Vtry ««tl k«|B Iniiklt And out. 5 bodroonu. upAckniA kttchm. A roAl fhorp RAY *0’NEIL RltALTY WILL BUILD, ON YOUR LOT OR OURg YOUR FLAN OR OURS baVamcnl'’m^T''to'alio^'"' * Don McDonald LICENRBI OR 3.2t37 $4 ,190 FULL PRICE - THAT IS all for this two bedroom bungklc with over an ACRE ot land. Nee painting and cleaning. Full bal Electrlo hot water, near Clarkslc $299 down.' "A llllla land a belter living." HURON gardens - Only M down. Pull price only 14.9(10. Ti bedroom bungalow with full bal Nice lot. Can't go wrong on U '*'la*Thla?? ■' near Websl porch. Two NIGHOLIE itlachcri 2-cai 5mi?*^nts cedar lined. Large reore I room with brick fireplace rllcnt soil lor gardening ~ L FOR DETAILS. : DEER LAKE FRONT I ROMAN BRBCK RANCH __ Recreation room with firaplaco. Walk-out baaemonl. P . dows furnishing bsav ot lake and large hill o. In background. Home baa many beautiful features. WE'D LOVE TO SHOW IT TO YOUl Smith Wiideman 3 BEDROOMS. PONTIAC LAKE, garage, extras, OR 3-3949. 4-B^ROOM home HfCELY^ FUR- sesslSn^?000^own,'MM^^^^ fixA(5o HAS o-tbar'old sta-tlon for lease on Orchard Lake Rd. In Birlvan Lake, Michigan. Btatlon will ba available Nov. Itt. Meanwhile you will attend our paid _(lealar .training program. Call Patrick Purdoni days at LO 5-0000, evenings at VI 2-1420. LAKE LIVING LOTS -- 18 MIN-iiles Porllac private lake. $729, $10 down. $10 a month. Bacellenl fish swim biMI Dale Brian Cor- puratiuii, FE 4^500, OR 3-1295_ LOT. CEDAR ISUND LAKE. RE- - L’H_2;4J?A Wiitkins l.ake Front Excrllrnt building site, 00x200, for $20.1)00 or brlt«r homr. Fine sin- WEST SUBURBAN ly $1,900 down I turnoces. Private SELL OR TRADE built to please I nating buyer. Cat tv Dl-Level bon lion room. Two aiding. Perlaol oi rga rma. R baths Aliu . LARoE fenced NORTH SIDE Three bedroom bungalow. Living and dinbig area, kitchen, full basement. Aulomalle HA h Newly decorated. Vacant. TERMS. DRAYTON AREA Three-bedroom bungalow. Living abd dining area. Kitchen, full basement, oil HA heat. I------ desoraled Vacknl Baay 1....... CALL FOR FURTHER DETAILS WEST SIDE Two bedroom bungalow. 1_________ nnd dining area, kllehen. full baaement oil HA beat. /' PR?CKo"''Ib 'bell. Term7."caii today. Eva. Cali MR ALTON. FB 4 82: NICHOLIE HARGBR CO Mtb W. HuiWIt St, 1 FE $-tll 50-FOOT SPRUCE s aetting, 22SgllS H. 1 fruH ireea and ban Snow while frama, g rage, new luibaae. plenty roei for arorkabop on gmino leys Large L. ihaped earpeted Heir roam, nice kitten, huge maali bedroon, full balb Coupla i amaU fomllir will lova Iba loc lion on pininiult. Only $L9(. HaS^D r'"”'FRAMKS. RKAL'IfOR LIST WITH US - Wa buy, acil L. it. BROWN. Realtor 909 Kllitbelb Lake Rond Fb. FB »3004 or FB 2-4IIO $9,500 will kniM |.b4Htroom rdnehaiyto homo on roiir M. Fiail laaewem, SSSrdS'*{?fc«“' •“► RUBS iIcNAk ART MEYER LAKE PRIVILEGES GOOD LOCATION D“nMSnalcl jrarjSTR GAYLORD WEST SIDE. Cloaq to Oaneral Hoapllal and Waal Huron St. Older borne tat tgeelicnl eondl- issit *c.r?Ti.irsv two bomtt In the Mme tree. CONVALESCENT R 0 M E. An Meet onot to atpH yeur own. 12-room briek eohmlel. All extra lerge raonM. Sunroem, glaiM en- «eaT""«r« S? ttSX: Hern. Over • lereg ef hekulltnily unllmlled CnU la IM Ibb now. rt;s^A.jr»“ffl5: « Lawrence W. Gaylord iMurifn. Bm 412 WEST HURON ST __ SCHRAM Off Baldwin 2 bedroom bungalow with 13x14 living room. 11x13 klicben, maa-ter bedroom 0x13. btl FA heal. On a lot 45x130, Priead al 57.050 and terma can ba arranged. Northern lliRli 4 bedrooms with 12 x 14 'jjjjjj ktr^an.'*fu?l ^|^Metn^'"oll^ ^A garage. On a fenced corner lot. ig.iSS with 11.200 down. IVAN W. SCHRAM Realtor FE 5-f)471 242 JOSLYN COR. MANSFIELD OPEN BVENIN08 AND SUNDAYS MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE M3 Coimminlly Nat l Bank Bldg. PB 2-2211 Eves. FE 5-1392 Cooley Lakefront -WILL TRADE -Smaller property, Ponllao area or Norlham Michigan. .1 bcdriMiin ranch, 2 car garage, IS acres. 240 It, lake Iriniiage. good beach, beautifully landactped. Owner re-llrcd Priced lo move fast at 2I0.4M Favorabla larnis Jf^nde. Hurry 1 Taylor, OR i-AlvE ORION 2 bedroom, Hying room, balb. and Iiimiy room, oil heal, 10 ft. frontage. Only I7M down. I’etersoii Real Estate OA g-IOOO after 4 MY 11451 Niirfliirn f*r«|Mrty 51-A NORTH SAOINAW: Large, lovely idder bom* In good condition. Center hall, living room, dining room, extra large klloben. bedroom and Vk-beth --fireplace and Iota ot otoaats - 4 badrooma and bath up -- baaa. ment. new gaa furnace, alum, storms and sertans — Priced to sell with 21.000 down and lOS per month. Inunedlale Posseaalon. NORTH SIDE: 2 bedroom ranch home In good oondlllon. Living room, large kitchen, utility, bath ml heal, nice lot - (irleed at 28.500 -5900 down^ aM 2U per month. HE All M2UO: 3 Vdroom ranch home. Ilka new -- Llylnf ^rom^. tUnelje. large ^ . TRAM" N ncraa of Oak and Fine with to-aers laka, betUillfuI SUM alone looM s'S*?"**" lure. Inalda flnishad In^nnlly pine with log beam callings. Oueat =fer,rr.'’V!!orur will accspl fret and clatr propar-iLi*' J?".*! MnlraoU. Throe bouto polnUnenl only. Clarence C. Ridgeway r» .705. w. WMUn allMhcd garoge, giM hanf. alum', alormn and Mraena — Friotd al Ramt FraiMny 52 ar 21.202 to paraon M Ot. gbown by appolnlmanl. ipOR CGLOlUID; M^B *sif .147 Haaburn siraet — Largo, wall kept - living room, dining room, kllekan gn let floori 2 be? rooma and balb up, Naw carpM-ai^2IO.I0g. VA-^No down pay- • WEBSTER LAKB OKlOlf OXPORO $7 Will ilMet ~ t.slory trnma. batbT* ff s'mVt.rTai7 Ir*"** l^o#d'’'al ’viL*No‘down paymanl. 222.71 par menUi. L-SfH' fNnfdaled l bed'. •W* NEIID LISTINCM’ John K. Irwin "{laaraLrwfia •j.,. THB yONTIAC PRESS MONDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1062 5 ACRES Ha (|mafc(. n« hoim. imt > n . r«IUBg ««rM (or Uio homo j •icp««1 to build. IS rolnulM (r C. PANGUS, Realtor _ oRTUNvnxa I-an Saivleo 1717 f Telegranll FB 4 0321 ___ CASH avaiTabI.b now To oay --- - IN IT'H OWN lor nmny yra. tlibllabed Blxoellent Phil 08 X .n d..»iiiiiK 1 all Inventory, truck, etc. Here a real ael up tor an ambitl eouple. Preaent owner iniiat due to health but wlll^ remain^ exilerlenciut .'"^Priced '*«? 'only 1 073 (or the whole ball of « Terma. L. H. Brown. Reahor. .Ellr.ubeth Lake Hoad. I’h. r FE 3-48 R()LI,I':R RlSlK Tfrrlflo vol#ne Nfwly dfct»rtLt«tl V.My hotiri^as 000 profit MICHIGAN HUSINI'.SS SAU'.SCOKroRATlON l. Teleiiranh ...... ■ ■ \nIi« $25 to $.500 on Your signature Aulo or 3lher Becur'lv FAST, CONVENIENT 24 Mcnth. to R -ay lliime Ik Anto Loan Co. r N. Parry B( FB ASI21 Wi.rSe! .. AVAll.i oil all your bllla. lar or inorljiu«e. i.rovidlii i eaully or Big xtruHlon Co ' cash' LOANS J(i(K) to .$25(X) homes any place In Oakland j”Vncelve full anit>un( In cai deduettons). the eeme i y nexc day after makli Borrow f;om u blllR, your tax r any other purpoae. ir offlic ti) talk .It over LANllMRSBEII. imoKICIl V.iss & lUu'kiKT, Inc. 3011. NATIONAL BUILDING SUBURBAN RANCH STYLE Al’ART menls In rapidly growlun Oakland Co. area. Seventeen 3-rooni R»oin"\or"’mm thiH near 5-ac NON-FERROUS fo operation Lo^». Toeat manufet rlimex itlS.iNK Oakland Co. 500 gq All City la- CASH Loans to $2500 all vmir debla with only ona tmai iiionllilv pamieiil. E.iiiiily Afceiitaiuc Corp. .117 Nallonal Bldk. 10 W. Huroi leienhone FE 8 4023_______________ I’AR'I RIIKib: RBAI. ESTATE. REALTORS Member Parirldxe A Aaaor.. In. AMOolate oHIcea thruout MIol 1080 W Huron ■ FE 4Jl^t8l___ 5pwobav service station for leiiae. MOO amt Porter Road. Minimum Inveatment. Phone Holly. MB 7-7I0I. NEW wHOl.ESAl.E DISTRIBUTOR FULL OR PART TIME Oulalaiirtlnf merehandlaln* pi gram developed AAA milhmal qiniTllled " lnrtlvfd*mla'!'’'''Yoiir' I Swaps iiltio” KBNMORE WliiNOEfT WASH-rr With llmer and inter, excelleni (omlitlnn. Trade for alum. boat. 41 i )(>UBLE ' i. Y W 0 b D BED, irade or aell. OR 4.1143.________ i buff ■'Tin s-bedroom lake- Inml home lor late model atatlon »»»SfL... ..... .....A___ -......... V 480 One or i as A MONTH BUTS I NOOMB OF lurnllure. ^ . ,l?p tl!SlJr»ktS?'?.bre'%nJ J table lampa. de«k and obalr. pi), bedroom eel with Innertprins mstlrcco snd box eprlng lo matob witb t vanity lamna. ■pAB~HEXfEB: 841; ^MEATEIL liei aump pump. 8»I I)}* .“>** altelrlo drjrere. 838 up i 80 elean guaranteed itovei, relrlgeratori. and waahera. all etna. 818 m. NoU away bad, Wioewlng inaabin# 8101 big Dletura TV, $38i dreaaer baae. 88: baby crlbe, 18 upi dinette eeU. 813 up: bedreome. living room a. odd beds, ^•prlnka, dreeaert. cheaU, ruga.^ and tablea. Everything In uaed (urnimre ,at bargain piicea. ALSO NEW LIVING BOOMS AND BEDROOMS, Sofa bed( --- .--- ------ beda. roll Factory i E-Z terma. ___ i BUY-SELL—TRADE Bergaln Houao, 103 N. Caaa Lalavelle. FE 38843. Open 'I 40-INCH ELECTRIC STOVE, OOOD A BEAUTIFUL BINOEB SEWING MACHINE, cabinet. Includae dial ilg aagger Makes fancy work, button holee, monograme. etc. 85 monthly oi 834.40 lull price on new contract and guarantee. Telephone ind guarar E 4-&U. ALMOST NEW. ELECTRIC STOVE. ABOUT ANYTHING FOR the H0_-FOUND AT L A 8 INO you WANT “ME Ci^ BE : CA BALI •y 6i r or iraoo. uome i I 8 TO 0 imlae or 1 mile B. admiral REFRIOBRATOR, OAS alove imd TV_qB.J-0184. ■ aT* A'R T M E N T SIZE EttCTRIC alove, Duro Therm oil apace beat-er. OR 4-0831._________ APPROXIMATELY 100 YARDS heavy duty commercial carpeting. Slightly used. You lake up. Call MI 6-1213, Ask (or Mr. Young. AMAZING HUY I No Payment '111 February MONTOOMERY WARP, Pontiac Mall AUTOMATIC SINOBR ZIO ZAO WYMAN’S HARGAfN STORE Rebuilt weshar, guaranteed $40 08 Rebuilt Maytag .......... 880 08 Rebuilt relrlgrretor 889 88 3-pc. Living room suite . . 830 80 3-pc. Sola bed suite .... 830 80 Heda, spring-, matticai . 830 05 Oaa ranges ..............8.U.88 Electric ranges F’.o »» •» W. Pike E-Z terma FE 4-1133 Cl,USING OUT ALL FLOOR SAMPLES Open 8 'I V.30 Mon. 'til 8:30 “edrooui aele, hoi aprlnga and mel-treas. living room arts, chairs, rockers, lampa and tablea, odd cbeala, dreancra, b-da, bunk beds, EVEHyTHlNO^MIIST 001 BEI)nO()M oJIFin* NO CO. 4703 Ulalu Drayton Plaint OR 3SI34 DHEXEL MAHOGANY BEDROOM twin ’ beds box aprlnga and mal-Jrcaa^ExIr^liuy^^ 81.80. OR 3.8001. DRAPERY. NEW FiTB 18' WINDOW'. Ladles aultea eliM^lO. 0838161,^_ DRASTIC "CUf ON ‘f98I TELEVI-•Iona and alereot, Peere Appliance. 8l8t Commerce Rd. Fouble ovbn 'hotpoint, O.E', relrlgerator. maple double bed, springs aiid_mnllTOa^ 02()-.8im«. ELECTRIC "stove. upBioiiTT FAiiuijB WHOLESALE MEATS AND OROCERIB8 —FREE HOME DBLIVBRY-All nationally adverllted brandi Buy with savings up to 40 pe cent. Snap, sugar, roftee. (Imii butler, rake mix. cereal. aoui dng food, vegdablea, (rulla, lulre Kleenex. Pet milk, baby, goodi Examples; Dog Food - » (or BOe Baby food ~ 34 (or 88e Cut un (ryera I8e a lb. Call for free calalof and Intnrmi lion showing how you, loo. ca buy at Ihete prices. EM 3-3338 to 9. _________ _ _______ ~“~HERB ARB SOME REAL -BUY.S- RCA Whirlpool, aulomatic walher 13 pound. Inalalled 8189,98 RCA Whirlpool gas dryer, new, matching, heat control UB Bweepera, Pew with all allachP 17 loot Admiral Free) noiinda aloragr , 834 08 ii tin I a GOOD HOU8EKBKPINO SHOP >• w, Huron __ FE 4-1.888 name brand merchandise i llonal rejnirchaae a g r e You will be yiiur own boa proven high pi-oMI opereth piying dealers eatabllahe you. No aellinu neceatary. For drat consideration It area write Immediately i conlldence to: .... 88x138.... ltd op- offer 44T H Merarall. 8 rwma emenl. and balli Don Nlcholle. FE 8-a 111 a 111(11 __ _ . REPRIOEnATtiR. ELECTRIC DHY er lor rifle or 7 OL 1-1719._ 'WAP OR 8ELL~I8B8~DODOE,"v-8, 8 yard dump tniek (or late model oar or etc. OR .1-0380. ____ IWXf^iaipiiRib IfimWY and pumd ahotgun (or a iholidm. fiiAFSnW OTwT^oiT'picxOp or boat, PE 3-7377, __________ ^liKaml Caatracti__ 60 *8 88 Contracts deal. Walren I. sagbiaw at. Land Land Contracts Bee uee be •lout. Real PE isUKI. URNlTUKl''. S.M.E - FUX)R MODBI,S -SAVINGS UP TO ep PER CENT KM UY’S APPI.IANCFS a»i7 DliUe Hwy _ Dravtim Plain) gold BARRfeL SACk'^'CHAin. jiraen ’^•’***" *Fi'' oAs'lir'''''' Sal* Clathji^ -14 ( Biijta' "^-“yFSMAbs '““I'TiLi^^I I. nylon cbIRon. aim 14. PB (III Ridlia rm and bedrni. aullet 870 81 80 week Bargain Houee. 103 N, Caaa) FEJdlMI. , ’EiLiNa"TttB""0o“F¥rUPI •laalT Wall T" .....- Vinyl FlWmi m6 Tilt I B lo'eaeb. rVgio "and' appliance 131 W, HURON FB 41111 H A NF~"‘CAilVBD"OAK .CTNINO room aullt. 0 plecH. ISO. EM gTSfif^’AcWMlSliAKK new. Omulete wUli all attaeh. menu Including 'loor poUeher, grinder and buller, Pay oil de. (aiitlera balance i)( 8f‘ "■ CARNIVAL Of Dick Toraor SIEGLER , MkilXablisni'i^ ...... . -t.._ —a “Tor, 878; fM 1103 8yS*«. tie. TJkibw.-u*. Via ow. ^ w “Oh, well, I guess I might as Well get up and go to school. I don’t feel well enough to enjoy beihg sick anyway!’’ Sate HouMliBid OooJi 65 KIRBY SWEEPER AND ATTACH-menU. 148 00. Phone ELECTRO JHVUIENB. PE Msa._________ LEAVINO TOWN - RCA COWR desk, living and bedroom lur-re. etc. OR 3-7188. ___ 67 l-PtECE GRAY COLORED BATH-room set ai lerrlllo lavlngt. good quality, «aat Iron tub with trim, 8139.08. O. A. Tbompaon. 7008 M-SO. BEEF AND PORE - BaLF aSB quartera. Opdykg Mkt. FE 8-7041. MAHOOANY'DININO BOOM SUITE. MOVING: MAHOGANY DROP LEAF 4 chteiix hreakfront. ■ o f ft. e. MA 6-3830. BAY CITY DRAG LINE. $2,300. _____ other houaehold furnUhInga. OH 3-8483 aftr 7 p.m.________ OIL HEATER, TOUBLE BURNER. .. ..... .ondllloil. Call at our rice or see caretaker. A-3 Arcadia . FE 3.7439, K. O. Hempstead. 3888 Lapeer Rd'. 4-8431 broken'SIDEWALK FOR RE‘fATN~ Ing wall. FE 8-8843. Conee Rental. rental-hental-rental singer Sewbig Center_ PONTIAC MALL_ REFRIGERATOR. APARTMENT alee O.E., auto, waaher and -- bal. 83 per week. Schick i RECLINER CHAIR . Euy. New guarantee. renter. FE 4-4340. ___ SIEGLER on and^^aa^haatera. f **|J gYara*iUee;_8chlck'a._fl9^371JL_ SEALY^ MATTRESS AND BOX aprlng. excellent condition. FE 5-4870^_______________________ SEWINO MACHINES WHOLESALE to all. Singer Console, elk sag equipped.. 830. Many others to choose (rom Curl's Appliances. 8481 Hatchery OR 4.1101.______ SINGER ZIO ZAO AUTOMAJjlC needed to*pm'on'''hutt*nV' biiltoii holes, blind hema. etc. Must sell. Available on new contract, tor 83S.04 or win accept 84.10 monlli-iy Capitol Sewing Center lor ap-jolnlment_FE 5^9407.___________ 8Tnoer./,lant^eed Pay off account In 9 monins at 17 per month ort0 balance. Unlveraal Co. FB 4-01108. USED TELEVISIONS Some with new eel guarantee reasonable ^ JOHNSON’S RADIO and TV 48 E. Walinn near Baldwin FB *48(13 AiilhnrUed Admiral Dealer . VACUUM CLEANERS Wi iiMiR*’";;''n jgo WAsHiCTki 838: refrigerator. 835: 31 TV ,840; dryer* 848: relrlgeremr with (reeier. }40; gae o‘o*o Jg?: J«P treeae. 878. V. Harria. FB t-378d. WE8TINOHOUSB,REFRi®ATOB. -|ood oondltlbn.-835. FB 5-8863 alter OAS furnace. VENETIAN blinds, excellent car bed, cheap. 375 Exmoore. Ellaabcth Lake- Ea- r wiWiNaHouiE combine 848-0188. a I m 0 • 1 new. I ANTIQUE LAlitFS. HANOINO, OIL HlHfVil _________ "pact Just repaired. 388. OR 3-7888. riALLICBAFTER, 8-X tOO RECBIV-3011183. 3 FUEL OIL t'AnkB. 330N PROPANE TANK. . ^ aink, 133.N. SAVE PLUMBING CO. 173 a. Saginaw FB S-3108 RANGE HOODS. tih.lS: MEOiCINB lOMEX WITH OBO0ND ~ 3c. OUT-Xtftu — $$o ft Itnitli; Vk-lnoh oopp«r 14« gnIIjiHM i*r ” wriif. W ii 4elno .,»ftftl IQ I. Wurwlik B siNoairiiiirtifi UACHTHiUzIS Zagger Maple deek niodel. Pay off account in 7 inuntht at 18 per ni«i^ nr 138 balance. Unl- beauljr bOWllM b«H and bs«. Nil and trad* ^^rtsair 148S BALDWIN TALBOTT LUMBER Paint, hardware, plumblna, alertrlcal suppllee. Comnleta B8**&AK{SN&‘A%.”*i?« AAMS Noordlon. PB 4-7083. TAKE ON PAYMENTS 33.81 1 month on Singer g --------- In modem oabbr*‘ «II0. Captol 8e 5-8407 LAMP 4 FOOT FLUORES-cont llghU. Ideal for r ' - Shopa - 818,98 vi marred. Call factory Ht(^gM Fluorcacent. 388 Or- TO^ SOIL. CRUBIIED •'TONE. ,nd. iravet and (HI. Lyl* Conk- .1 FE *S873.________________ CRUSHED STONE, S3 YARD: lO-A alone and ovartited ttone. .S3 yd. Prorotaed road (nraval and pea gravel, 31 yard. (lu dirt 30o yard. (Ill taod. Me yard. 4040. il.80 American Slone ProducM, S33S Saahabaw Road. MA S-3ISI. AI^S LANDU^A^O. BiA^^DIR'T Nadm 4-472S Used Oil and Used Gas Furnace ixe. condition. CaU 68MS73 after USED CONVERSION OIL BUR Timken rotary and tanka. 3-0106.___________ ■ - iiCD TIRE CHANOER AND TOOli th Bled. Gull Service, Used”Oi! and Used Gas Furnace USED HEATING EQUIPMENT Gas—Gll-Coal Furoacea Gaa and Oil Conversion* Blower*. Control*. Etc. in. , euh. Used wood oors, all elzcf, $4.80. 13 imp with eutta choke. $48. Chriitmas Trsti SEVERAL THOUSAND SCOTCH PInea, 3 to 8 (t. high. FE 3-5309. Hand Taoli-MacliiMry 68 ATLAS METAL LATHE. 54-INCH. Complete with chuck and access. MY 3-1246 alter 6. _____ COMPLE'TE SHOE REPAIR. _________ machinery, everything needed to **''**’’ PoLliTAiiTOMATIC SAW' FILER. 981 MODEL walnut CONN OR-gan Minuet. Priced to cell. Call FE *9128. After 8 p.m. .. ... .... Violin. Unlimited return privileges. All payments applied toward ourchue. select (rom the newest Conn mo Grinnell's BEAUTIFUL STORY AND CLARK ' ?t for sale. 8400. MA 8-1842. BRAND ReW spinet PIANO. Special 3805. Including bench, tuning and delivery. Lew Betlarly Music Co. Across (rom Birmingham Theater. FrI. till 8 p.m.. Ml CABLE SPINET PIANO, USED, •pedal 8448 With bench. Lew Bct-terly Music Co. Ml *8002. FOR SCHOOL BAND—ORCinCSTRA t too late to get etarted. Rent Instrument from a local firm give you eer‘" MORRIS MUSIC CO. 34 S. Telegraph Rd. FB 3-09S7 (Acrost from Tal-Hurop)_ oRaND PIANO SPECIAL. BXCEL-■ • -----). 1548. Lew Br.- Music Co.. Ml 8-1 ..cw with ukalliio Save 8300 on this one. MOIHHS MUGIC CO. 4 S. Telegraph PB 3438 (Acroee from Tel-Huron)_ RAliMOND SPINET ORGAN. MOD--------------- Phone OR 4-|883. LOWRBY bkoAN WITH LARGE -------rJA_prlce j[384l5S. MAONA TONI^MPLIFIKR, Vibrato. practically new. A-l condt-tlon 878. 847-3163______ 3 used orgaiit . Real bargains 1 SHOP EARLY AND SAVBI . GALLAGHER’S 18 E Hijron lisED cm . ----nd Music NEW BURROUOHS ADDER ------ VALLEY BUSINESS MACHINES 460 W. Htjron SEVERAL DESKS and CHAIRS Ckn be teen at 7733 Highland Road. .T*1!ojuOR4;0J08, sEd omcr — 0 OFFICE DESK, OOOD CON- Stors Equipimot BAR AND RESTAURANT KQVt ment lor laie. Call FE 3-1374. BEAR ALLIONMENT RACK Excellent condition Complele with all gauge# (lOODVKAR SERVICE STORE 30' 8. Cass Ave. FE Mill ’ " lor Service Manager Sportlng^^ook^ fOV..... RiPLi7~i$5PI optlonM. OA 8-3887 after 8. 3*3r~WlN<3lE8'rEB -CAR bTnI •hot 4 times. Remainder of eholls, •heepekbi carrying caea and notlw clea^l kit, m. 1140 MyrUt It., Huron 0*rdena, after 4 p.m .38 RBMINOXQN PUMP. NIF^ON-dUlun. Mr>7478. _____ r'ftiu“siL|c‘ftoN 'tiifi" 'AhW gune and rlllet. Ben's Loan 0((lc*. ft N„ Saginaw. FE 44I4I. Buy—Sell-^Trade BrawnUip-Wineheeter-RamIngmn ... .B«n'0‘ * Hargravee BJwe^^^^ Dreyere Gun and Sports Can 18210 Holly Rd.. Holly, MB 4-8 Open 7 days a waabu________ DEER RIFLE. (la, Alum, boat, trailer. FB t-i-.. ovNS - bIB^ "* xbaBI IS ■ FOOT HOUSETRAILnt. Ellaabrtb tk. Rd._____ lEW 1383 WINNEBAGO CXiir Deluxe. 10'6" km* M’’. eemi luniltM, Llit pno* , Prie* only SItSt. Come tee 3 John McAulUfo Ford, NO od selection ol uaed unite. Long tormt. (air prices, bank rates. OAforti Trailer Sales TELEPHONE MY 2-0721 1 MU« S of I ake Orion on M-24 BXPEKT MI'BILB HOBtE REPAIR service. e • eetlmatee. Alsr parte ar« ecseesortes. Bob Rutet tnsnn Mobile Home Sales. Inc. 4381 Dixie Hwy.. Drayton Plalne. OR 3-1283 _____________ FALL SALE 1188 oft on (allowing 19’ Trolwood 34' Trotwo^ 28’ HoUy r otheri,----* — -,j* (rom ” w for deei 1. Resarvo your trailer Parkhurst Trailer Sales -FINEST IN MOBILE LIVINO-Featurlng New Moon—Owoeso— Venture - Buddy Quality Mobil* Located hell-wi TREF SERVICE, FIREPLACE wood. OL 8-1571. _____ d Oxtord OP M24. my 3-46H. 2 POODLES. TERRIERS. HOUNDS. _W^t 2 Schipporkee. NA 7-2931. AKC D"ACH8RnNb PUPS, $10 THE NEW LIGHTWEIGHT AVALAIR Self-oontatnod travel trallere. Ellsworth AUTO SALES 6877 Dixie Hwy.___ dogs In good (leeh, too. Wayne (It's a real) Tall Wagger Dog Pood, comes In three forms. Just right (or your dog. Get Z from Schllchl’s. 680 Auburn FE 4-2613._____________ STOP IN AND SEE The “All-New” 1963 FANS. FRANKLINS. CREE8. -13 to 25' on dlsplny-REAL OOOD BUYS on ALL USED TRAILERS-8TOP IN TONIGHT I —Open 7 dnye a week— Holly Travel Coach, Inc. 18218 Holly Rd., Holly MONKEYS , , , V *39.85 $1.25 A WEEK '• Pet Shop________F|t 3-3113 POODLE PUPPIES. TOY AND miniature. Stud service. 81 " and grooming. $8 and up. lervlce. PE 3-1487. TALKING PARAKEETS, CANARIES. pdles (Ish Crane's Bird Hatch-cry 24S9 Auburn. UL 2-3300. TOY FOX TERRIER, EXTRA small breed FE 3-3910. ________ WANTED TO BUY: AKC FEMALE Beagles. 8 month* lo 2 yaars old. Bon Cot* 8830 M-18, Clarkaton. MA 5-1334.______________________ WEIMARANBR. AKC. MALE. mqa,j040. C EIMMANS KSrsTold. I AKC. FEMALE, 2 years laid. *40 or ewap lo 'Kiclma Elwood. ttj-Wi. WAITTED: TOPNOTCH SQUIRREL dog. allmt on tract, thou-*-good ftt iree^. Q^itft Kddlft Bordner. fl WELL BRED AKC RBQISTEREb Beftgle' good looking, excellent gun dog. MY 2-S27I or ^ 2-127L Autg Ssi^iw M CRANKSHAFT DRlimiNO IN TRS car. C^llndare rcborod. zuos Ha-chlnt Shop. 33 Ho^ Phono PB *384ft ' Anctisn Sates 60 BAB AUCTION SALES EVERY FRIDAY 7:80 P.M. EVERY SATURDAY 7:30 P.M. EVERY SUNDAY 3:00 P.M. Sporting Good! — All Tynet Door Prises Every Auetion We buv-telMrade. retail 7 dayt Motor Scootsrs 94 NIFTY, THRIFTY, HONDA 80 338 ml. per gal., 48 m|£. hfts electric lUrter. $10 do^. Anderson Sftlee, FE >$30$. 5089 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-3717 Motorcyctei 95 Plants—Trass—Shrubs 81-A ...jpl*, 18 (t.. *1.30. White spruce, sheared. 3 (t.. $3.30: Norway spruce, sheared. 3-3 (1.. 81.80, 8-3 ft.. 82.50: Dwarf Yews 12.80. Many more. McNeil's Nursery, 0874 Dixie Hwy., nr. M-ia luncUon'_____________________ DRESSED BEEP. PO^K. MUfTONi poultry. MA 8-0421. ' ^ " ■■ »ft'«r 5 p.m'. EM 3-3402. HORSES BOARDED. HAY AND Haf0iiinFM(r WANTED: DAMAOED HAY. UNFIT lor feeding. No. 2 or 3 MU *1439. WANTED HAY AND OA'TS Phone EM 3-3747. APPLil, PICK YOURS. YOUR CONTAINER, 750 BU. CIDER. SQUASH. 2330 CLARK8TON KD. NEAR JOSLYN.________________ MARKET. 3380 Pontlao Lak« near tho Mall, FB i-IOTS:__ AFPLES-PRACnCALLY ALL ' VA-rtallaa. Paars. Boao ond Confer-.eiice. Bwsel older freshly pressed. Oakland Orobarda, pM Bkal Com-r mare* Road. 1 mu* saal of Mll-' * “ ■ SiW di^r- X>ME OR OUT ANb JOIN ¥hE crowd ol Iho Horoailaad Orchard, Pick rour own opplaa. It a bushel. 848* Orallird Lake Rd. niAdtils. tftt^osirirrTWA- toes, U.S. No. I-B. 80 pounds. .88: U.S. No. I. 80 pounda, 11.38: M.----- • “ •* a bushel: “ ' McCullough CHAIN SAWS PRICED AS LOW AS $149.95 wWMJS^Ei Credit Terme-~Wa lake tradaa KING BROS. FB 44734 FR 4-1113 ^ONTlAC ROAD AT OPDYKE MA 5-1400 Averill's OUT-STATE markets Extra Top Dollar 'TOn LATC MODCU ^ M&M MOTOR SALES " r»tn McAnnally. os- Oait MeAnmny. _J. OF------ 1 443^”’° 6m 4410* “TOP DOI-LAR PAID" GllNN'S $25 MORE 6mlo Hl^wsy. ntmo 4VANTIID: *14>’S1 CARE Ellsworth . auto SALES 0677 Dixie Hwy. __ JUNIUERS PARTS $$ TOP DOLLAR FOR Clean Used Cara JEROME "Bright Spot" lliafj Aut^Truck Parti 102 1361 DODGE LANCER ItOTOR AITO trftDftmission. oomplftto. n«iv. $150* MA 4-3431. ME 4-6771 SHORTS MOBILE HOMEB Good need home type trailers, 10 PER CENT DOWN. Cate wired and hitches Installed. Camplste line o( parts and bottla gaa. FE 4:3743 , 3173 WC Huron radio FOB CORY AIR 1303 L1‘ *•“ 1983 PON'nAC F Better Used Trucks GMC Factory Branch OAKWri^CASS ^e«tald“ iwdlm boater.’ Fl*?^ after 0 p.m. iMl CHEVROLET PANBi "tON, 23,000 actual mllee. UL 3400*. 3-1192 after 8 p.m. _____ .. ____ Oo^ftU —- 8. Rocheater Rd. UL 2-45S0. Sales and Rentals Vacation trallera 13, 15. 17 ft Wolverine pickup camperi Apache and Right campers. MAKE RESERVATIONS NOW F. ]’'. Howland, Rentals 3348 Dixie Hwy.____OH^3-r" WB NEED YOUR TRAILERT Any Sixe-any lypa BUYERS WAITING II Stop In and let ua sell rr traitor for you I WE 8ELL-WB TRADE )f Mart. FB 3-7848. ANY SIZE. .................. ■ “ • p. 24S9 Airport Rd. TRUCK Tl Diao. Fll 4 19$1 VOtkaWAOtN PANtL TAUCK. 1955 TRIUMPH — 6S0 CC. BUILT ugjor_comEfttmon. $350. FB 2-2625. LL STATE MOPED 1^9 MODElZ excellent running condition. $75. tonne. Hobby Shop n 3-7M3 BOAT STOR.AGE Make your reservation now. Frei Pickup on all motore left with ui Pinter's Boat-Motor Storage Inside or outside—tow rates BAROAIN ON NEW AND USED BOATS MOTORS--TRAILERS SCOTT MOTORS WEST BEND MOTORS Chrvsler liibaards- Outboards Hunting and sporting goods CRUtsfi OUT BOAT SALES 81 R. Wniton FE 8 4482 Dsllv 9-8_____Closed Sundays BOAT STORAGE FE 4-8788 MOTORS noais ana aceeseorles Wood, shimlniim. (Ibefillaa i "HARD TO FIND ” DAWSON'S SALES LarIsiT^ato^ Orummen Cftnofti^-^Jftftnftft Tr»UiWf Bis Savtngi on 1H3 boata-motors 13*1 Eylnnidti now on display All iypaa rapairi — atorat* Harrington Boat Works • MOTORS. Walt Mazurek’s I,ake & Sea Matins V-8 engine, good tires, and la a good runnorl *898. 649 Orchard Lake___________FE H480 1980 CMC Vi TON PICK-UF- 1988 FORD 8 YARD DUMP TRUCK. All around exe. condition. 8780. 1987 FORD PICK-UP H TON, WITH heater, sharp one owner I *180 down, and assuma payments *4101 LLOYD'S Ltncolii«Mftrcury*Coinet MetftoMlniiliih Ford m 6. Sutoftw 81. FET$13I 1959 JEEP FC “IW Tilth 4-whewI drlTO. long box and Iho torward- eab. a parfeet gat atatlon outfit, warn bubt, and a aolld rod tmiabi $1895 OLIVER BUICK -SSTearo-310 Orobard Lako 8 einad. 2 ipeedi *4,380. 1300 CHEVROLET 1 ton ptnti, 31,295 1900 VOLKSWAGEN Ptnol, 3S9I John McAuliffi, Ford 030 Oakland Avt. FE-S-lim ANDERSON OFFERS One Stop Inuurance SERVICE 1044 JOSLYN_________^ litjTO INsBItARci" ___________Mill $22 Typical quarttrly rate (or olae* 1%2 PONTIAC Catalina with ItOO ded„ ooUtaltm. eompre. hensiva (Ineludint roiad aor^). *38.000 Uablllty. *1.380 inkliaal. m.OOO uninsured molortot eoveraie. BRUMMF.TT AGENCY 310 S. Tele«raph FE 44MI ^ IF''9I P(9NTIAC 1%2 PONTIAC 1958 PLYMOUTH ,eJ2fr »vlll» 4-door h»rdlop. Po*- gport aiibiirbnn WtKon. V« «n- .i.iTrliid "tmwor br»k«». llydr»- • PCINIIAC gs ps&S "Sb SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK SALES and SERVICE 223 Main S|. - Olive 1-8133 Rochester Open Mon., Tues., Thurs. 8:30 to 9, Wed., Fri., Sat. 8:30 to 6 Today's Television'Prodrams-- j, . ' . . ^ THE POyiTAC PRESS. BlONPAY, OCTOBER 8, 1962 I l» « T Action Thtatcr (cont.) S.) 10: IS 10:20 I0:S0 (SI) •iM (3) Editorial, Sporta Ills (3) Weather ’ (4) Weather •iM (2) Highway Patrol (4)" <7) (9) (S6) BuckaklnBob 0:40 (4) Sport! •til (4) Newa S) Newa, Weather, Sporta iPhilSilveta (4) Gwtige Pierrot (?) Yancy Derrlng^, (9) Movie; “Abbott and Coa> tello in Hollywood." (S6) Written Word 7:30 (3) To fell the Truth (4) Pierrot (conU (?) Cheyenne (9) Movie ((knit.) (SI) Way of Life 1:00 (2) Hennesey (4) Deputy (?) Cheyenne ((3ont.) (9) Movie (Cont.) (SI) Radiation l:S0 (2) LudSe Ball (4) Sainta and Slnnera (?) (9) 9:00 (2) Danny Thomas (4) Saints (cont.) (7) Stwiey Burke (9) Featlval (Cont.) -(56) Guest Traveler 0:30 (2) Andy Griffith (4) Pi ice Is Right (7) Stoney Burke (Cont.) (9) Festival (Cont.) 10:00 (2) Loretta Young (4) D a V i d Brinkley’s Jour- (7) Ben Casey (9) News (9) Weather (9) Telescope UAW (2) Peter Gunn (4) Brinkley (cont.) (7) Ben Casey (Cont.) (9) Don Messer’s Jubilee 10 (2) News (4) News (7) News (9) Movie: /'Too Late to Love." (sWich: 1957) Worn, an lawyer enlists aid of photographer in getting evi* dene Jlchele Mpr^ * (7) Newa, ,1 5 (2) Sporta (4) Weather 0 (2) Weather (4) Sports (7) Weather 5 (2) Movie; “Laughing in the Sunshine.’’ (English; 1957) Reporter tries to learn mar-iage plans of English princess. Jane Hylton, Marjorie Fielding. (7) Movie: “My Six Convicts.’’ (1952) Prison psychiatrist tries to introduce modem methods. Gilbert Roland, John Beal. 0 (4) Tonight Show TUESDAY MORNING (4) Continental Classroom (2) Meditations 1 (2) On the Farm Front I (2) News (2) College of the Air (4) Continental Classroom (7) Funews I (2) B’Wana Don (4) Today (7) Sagebrush Shorty I (7) Johnny Ginger (2) Captain Kangaroo (58) Frehch tor Teachers (7) Jack LaLanne (56) Spanish Lesson ' (9) BUIboard (2) December Bride (4) Living (9) Movie; "The Prisoner," Part 2. (9) Film Feature (56) Numerically So (2) Millionaire (56) English V (2) TV EdKorlul (2) Connie Page (4) Say When (9), Romper Room i • (56) Our SdenlKlc World (77 News Itow (4) Newa UiM (2) 1 Lov(i Lucy (4) (Color) Play Your Hunoti (7) fctg Payctf (56) FimehJ^eaaon ^ MtW (96) GArmau LMson llsaa (3) MeCbya (4) (Color) Prio« ia Right (7) Ernie Ford « (9) Adventure Time iliM (56) Spanish Lesson UiM (2) Pete and Gladys (4) World Series Preview Wm, Ha»i. Muri WWJ. Naait, Martaaa WXVS, rAul Harvav, : OKI.W, Mawi, David WifoN, Nava, Don MoLaod VJR. Jaak (. Marv I I. VrM V VJH. Earl WWJ.,Navi, Martant I Mawi, Jarrr Olaan WXVS. lliM._WJa. Earl Ha-ii iiM-SVJIl. Maara, aiwwetti WWJ. Pra-Oama WXYS. Winter Ma«a CEI.W. Nava, Jaa Van Wjax Nava, Hald WPON. Nava, Olaan dhaw Ilia-WWJ, Hear Banball SiM—Wja, Nava, Showoaa WWJ. Nawa, Pra^lama WXYS. Winter Nvwi CEI.W. Maara. Joa Van WJBE. Nawa. Laa WPON. Nawa, Hok Oraan |ilS-40»;.W. SMIUMak. •«t»] ■ CEi.r ^C*A rjR ^jtawtj < •ari’Si., lilHt-WJn. Nawa. Mual WJBE, Nawa, Lva ra.dirsai''*" SiSS-WJH. Muila HtU WWJ. Nawa. Buni|Mr WuaA, Bitaita SEEKING UBRARY EXPANSION - Mrs. Ralph Eaton (second from right), chairman of the Waterford Township Friends of (he Library, uses books to illustrate (he deficiency in the existing township library. The library now has ?,000 volumes and should have upward of PromotinfiT Public Library 9,000 by recognized standards, she explained. Hearing about the 13 to 1 lag are (from left) Mrs. John Naz, lirat vice president of the Library Friends; Mrs. James Robinson and Mrs. Donald Maxwell, both wives of Waterford Township Schools’ faculty members. 'Siilf'k Happy to Leave . Charge of Espionag* Gillaci Rotoliafion MOSCOW (AP) -Ondr. Bay* tnond Smith, assistant U.S. naval attache accused of eisptonaga, left for the Wek today soy^ te is get out of Union. “I don’t think there is anybody who wouldn’t be glad to leave the Soviet Union, ” Smith said. "But I am sorry I couldn't finish my tour of duty here.' He came to Moscow in June for a two- The Soviet government accueed Smith of spying in Leningrad a|id out of the country. The U.S. State Department claimed the ating for the expulsion Of two hiembera of the Soviet U.N, jlele-gation. They were accused of buying military lecrets frirni a U.S. Naty The State Departmnit charged that Smith he was detained in Len Wanted: Books for Waterford The Friends chairman expressed optimism ov^r the co-operatipn her group has received from the present Township Board. ly reoeptlve to (hefo plea upgraded Hbrary and a a t u d y the Friends. Comprised of township clerk James SeeterUn and trustees By-Cole and John Coleman, the study committee met with t h e Friends recently. They concluded that there was only one major problem—money. , In order to set up a public 11-tn-ary a community must allocate a minimum of 3/10 of a mill per year to support the operation. When this requirement is honored, the state will appropriate funds; and revenue from county penal fines will also be forthcoming. MUST HELP ITSBUF As 'n other matching fund i grams, the lopal community must come up with Its share before receiving help from the outside. ‘People have been trying successfully to improve our library tor years,’’ Mrs. Eaton explained, “but governmental units in the past have been too short-sighted to make any plans along thla line.” _____ members balked at $1,000 outlay suggested by the board’s library study committee pending a full report by the township attorney on financial aspects such as state assistance, penal fines and the mechanics involved in the transition from a private to a public library. uled for the Oct. 15 boaid meet- teresled in our problem,” she said, "even though our requMt in appropriation was pendent on donations from groups and indivkjuais. The Library Friends raise approximately $200 yearly through silver contributions at their monthly book reviews and teas but this merely covers incidental expenses as the purchase of eards and repairing books that have been mishandled. ing. The library has been situated in the Community Activities, Building, 5640 Williains Lake Road, since the building was erected in 1948. Its history dates back to 1944, however, when a library was established in a barn on the CAI building site. The barn burned down in 1947. IJC8S THAN 1,000 Mrs. 0. L. Siegman of the Waterford Village School Mothers’ ANt-IASI oncoi0M) ^ AKO JANITlOl lO^MAir GAS:j/; CONVOilONl NwMoawyBNmim ' Tnwia ■jnpwwiQM 9ium Smith declined to comment on this or any other aspects of his today. He and his fainily wen seen off at Moscow airport by other Weit-ern military attatfoes and a largo delegation from the Amoican EmbasiV. After champagne toasts Smith, his wife Allen and dieir three children boarded a plane for Copenhagen. day evenings mornings, is staffed by a teer group of wives of teachera In the Waterford Totowhlp School Dtstrict.' They perform their dutlea on a gratfs basis. The library Itself pays no rent. saw a need for expanding the library facilities were heartened when Waterford became a charter township. This meant that funds could bo appropriated by the township board without a vote of the people. A It was shortly after the adoption of the charter status that the Friends of the Library laying, the groundwork for a public library. The group now boasts a membership of approximately 150. TV Show Gets an Umnvlted Mystery Guest NEW YORK (AP) - The CBS television panel show “Whnt’a My Une?” had a different kind of “Mystery guest” Sunday night. He didn’t teU his line. His appearance on the show was a my- rue wasn't a gui»t, either. He JUst Jumped up out of the audience, rap on stage into camera view, and proclaimed, “I’m your second mystery guest." CBS sources said he was on camera tor only a few seconds before being ushered off stage by producer Gil Fates and announcer Johnny Olsen. Police were called but said no complaint was filed against the man, whose name w: learned. He was released. Mrs. Eaton said the token g i»f jificr HOMi COMFORT 6AS BUmiK nillMAN lURDITT rURNACI Club spearheaded the drive to set ^ qoq helpful a library In the east wing of the then new CAI building. Population of the towiishlp at this time was about 10,000 and fewer than ,000 books lined the shelves of the room. Books were loaned to the library by the state during the early years but this service ended when financial aid at the local level failed to materialize. Acquisition of books now is group ing a preksure group,” she explained, “but we are determined to follow through on our reque with the Township Board until decision has been reached.” Eddie Fisher Started It-Gents Are Dressing Up BY EARL WILSON NEW YORK — You’ve got to say this . . . Eddie Fisher has surely brought some excitement to old Broadway. For one momentous achievement in the environs of his big opening with Juliet Prowse and Dick Gregory at the Winter Cardan, Eddie should get an Oscar, an Emmy, !, a Tony and a big kiss. I refer to the expul-1 slon of that All-American bore and pest, I Oate-Crasher Stan Berman, from party afterward at Toots Shor’s. ' A chunky chap on Eddie's staff heaved Oate-Crasher Berman out the door — which will make Ttoots Shore mad -- because he’d love to have done it. i 1 noticed tiiat Eddie also stirred up Blrnnge excitement In the menfolk about drasoln* formal. Guys were aetunlly wo^ng'nbout not having a thing to wear two nlghto from now hocanao ovoryhody’ll already have seen their dinner jacket. . Honest, In the lobby,, I heard Jack Carter’s wife Paula Stewart saying he has 16 dinner coast (also two dinner pants). ' ■ ■ ★ ★ ★ "What did you wear tonight” I asked Red Buttons, hoping 'd get a gent’s style hint. “My rented Rolls-Royce." he replied, snootily. Trouble is, though, with the gents all dressing up again for practically everything, a columnist's got to be the dressiest bum in town. Just wait till we hear some gentleman sc^am-ing: “LOOK. That eraop’a got tux pants Just like mine. I’m going strditht homa, told me my pants wet;6 an orlglnall" It will soon happtni iMra, Greta Garbo, being treated for arthritis, left a famous hospital because the other patients got too curious ... Jackie Gleason. In pain, taped hts TV’er; he’ll undergo minor surgery on a boil . . . Singer Molly Boo’ll make the switch from country-typo warbling to ballads .. . Bob Hope and Luelllo Ball, who did “Critic’s Choice," may team In an. other, to be Rimed in monte Carlo ... TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: ’’I don’t know who’s sillier." sajrs Ouy Marks, ’’—Casey Stengel who wants to manage the Mets again, or flpyd Patterson wtjo wgnts to fight Liston again." jgARL’S PRAItLS: It seema that some restaurants serve a blend of coffee yesterday’s and todays. A fellow fxplalned hla easy way to quit smoking; “I Juat Carry wet matches." ,. . That's pari, brother ‘‘J/ . ' ' starter but emphasized full .3 mill appropriation, about i $30,000, and public library desig-| nation was what the community needed. ‘The Friends of the Library no intention of Paraguayan President Delayi European Trip ASUNaCN, Paraguay (AP) -The government announced Sunday the postponement of a trip by President Alfredo Stroessner to West Germany, France and other European countries this month. A government spokesman said the trip has been postponed until April or May. The reason given that Stroessner felt he must remain In Paraguay because of the February election. He Is a candidate for re-election. Powdered bark of aspen in given to horses as a worm medicine, according to the Encyclopedia Britannica. COLOR TV SERVICE and SALIS 1 vaans jtEvaaiENca AinmoaiMD saavica CkaaiMl 6 Antoans KM . »?« I’t Ride* TV ivM ra «M N«W Part OMI<* The NEW Im CONSOLE TVs Are HERE! Bargains In 1962 (JE ond, RCA Victor whi1« they lost. Trode- Ins accepted as down payment. Open 'til 9 Sot. 'til 7 Mon.-Fri. tepiM's Rite. Co. pS W. Hniwn PI 4.252» .V SONOTONE House of Hearing 29 E. CORNELL FQUR .TUB rONTCAC PRESS, MONDAY. OCTOBRB «> 1962 India Is Buying Jets From Soviet Union NEW DEUrt (AP)-The Hill-dusUm Times said today India expects if) receive six M1Q21 supersonic Jet fighters from the Soviet Unkut In December. < The newspaper added a second batch of MIG21S, Is expected to a^ next spring under an agreement recently concluded. The Defense Ministry has fused to comment on' the p I'eports about the purchase of the Soviet Jets. QUESTION: Who wrqte the first encyclopedia? ANSWER: The Greek word "enkyklopaedeia” meant “circle of knowledge or learnlhg." The ancients did not tills word to refer to a set of books but to education. However, Aristotle, ftfny and Other Greek authors started the idea of trying to gather human knowledge together Into book form. Varro, In Rome, and many others afterwards, helped by writing various books of reference. In 15il, Rlngleberg of Basle used the word "encyclopedia’ to. describe a reference book for the first time. FTom 1751 to 1780 Denis Diderot and Jean D'Alembert published their "En-cyclopedic,” which took'a great step forward by including such things as trades as well as art^ and sciences. But the modern form of encyclopedia, in which all general subjects are explained clearly, and the various terms and details In them are also explained under alphabetical headings, did not appear until 1768, with the publication of the Encyclopedia Brittanica. The original Idea for this has been credited to William Smellle and Colin Macfarquhar. Other encyclopedias of similar type followed, and all these sets of books have helped greatly in the spreacT of knowledge. ★ ★ A FOB YOU TO DO: Our picture suggests how the ‘ circle of knowledge,” compressed into a set of books, may be com-pleted by that knowledge bein^ passed to you and the rest of us. Those yolmg people are having fun. Get in the act — get the encyclopedia habit yourself! Mall your question on a postcard to Junior Editors In care of The Pontiac Press. Coast Guard to Eye St. Clair Collision DETROIT (UPI) - The U. .S. Coast Guard said it will begin ar Inquiry today into'the collision of , two ships Friday in the Lake St. Clair Channel into the Detroit Rjv-er — the second such mishap in the ai'oa in 2*/i months, ★ dr ★ Coast Guard headquarters in Cleveland will try to determine If either the Canadian freighter Ilutchcliffe Hall or the Richard V. Lindabury. an Americ carrier, was at fault when tlie two vessels collided in a fog. The Ilutchcliffe, despite foot gash in her side, limped out on the lake yesterday from the channel where It had been run aground io keep it from sinking and tied up a dock. The rest of her grain cargo will be unloaded and the 352-foot vessel will be moved to a at Lorain, Ohio, for repairs. Reject New Constitution, KALAMAZOO (UPD-The Michigan Slate Employes Union Coim-dl wound up its 15lh annual convention yesterday by • passing a resolution urging rc.ji>cllon of llie new pioiwsed stale constitution. Some 160 delegates from Af locals of the AFL-CIO also approved a strongly worded resolution de manding repeal of llie Hutchinson Act, which prohibits slate workers fipom striking. Legion Parade Opens Confab MlasMegas— LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UP! Some 17,000 legionuire.s and their families were expected hand l(xlay for the 'lUh annual American U'gion national convention parade in this desert gambling city. Entries from all fifty slates were to provide a massive .splash of color and pageantry as a myriad of brass bands and floats pai through the city in a si.\-hour cession. Grand marshal for the parade was Air Force Gen. Walter C. Sweeney. Commander. Tactical Air Command, Langley Air Fo Base, Va. I>ac|de ir pro- London Firm Officials Want Their Gate Back LONDON (UPI) — The Vintners Company offered a reward today for the return of the S-TO-pound bronze gates hum the front of its building. A company official said the thieves took the gates Thursday whll(> the board of directors was holding a noon mec'ling inside Reporters to Be Free OMAHA. Neb. (UPII - Police have promised reporters ilmt the on Hie windows of the press r(x)in at headquarters be removed. A shrew can devour halt its weight in seeds during a 24-hour period. TESTS SUB ESCAPE - British Petty 0^ "K-- **’ fleer David Rosson inflates his special suit alter ranean Sea. It was the first time a Brttiah crew escaping from the British submarine HMS Tip- member survived an emergency escape from toe 260 feet below the surface of the Medite^ more than 150 feet below the surface. I’W EASY TO FIND OUT / Csll Fsdsml 1-TBM *r St«B SI 1S< W. Hiimii si. snd Mimic cfMiF roniL FREE POTATO CHIPS Early Bird Values Prices Deed Thru tues., Oct. 9th Perch Fillets u. 53c FRISH ORSSSfP WhMng . . >*• 19c ■FREE WITH THIS COUPON AND $7.S0 PURCHASI iKcairt Rear, Wine and CleereWw ONE 1-POUND BOX OF JANE PARKER , POTATO OIIPS MON., TUBS. Ot'WEO. ONLY >Y«TH this COUPON AND $7.SO PURCHASI I Ooo4 nH AAP fvpof MMhiiB in ImImii MMiIrm Enjoy 0 Spare Rib and Sauerkraut Dinner! ''SUPER- RIGHT" QUALITY SPARE RIBS CHKKBN BREASTS 15< WITH RIBS __ ATTACHED ■■ IjC Cornish Hens 59* IDEAL FOR BROILING FRYING OR ORIUINO EACH Ground Beef *3uHF”Rl9lit^ Quolily COLDSTREAM PINK SALMON 59< 1-LB. CAN BREAST O' CHICIIN TUNA FISH 29< LIGHT A'l-OZ. _—— - CHUNK CAN VINE RIPE BRAND CATSUP 2 “ 29 Duncon Hinos EoHy Amoricon GAKE MIXES Bottor Pfcnn, 13 Os. UMJB kr nu P«toNst,13 0s. 90c 7^!* FihIso Hit, im Os. AppliMico Rililn, 13 Oi. DbIP PREPARED FRESH MANY TIMES iVIRY DAY Ur PMck Hilni • UP Pmi lUIni UP Fndt Ctckliil • UP Afiicit Hrlni FRUIT SALE 51-lb. AAc CANS Bacon Sale Auoooo -supRR-moNr nuPRiMmiHr BRAND FANCY TNKK SUCRD 1-li. PKO. 1-tB. PRO. MB. nW. 55« 59. 1-w Green Giant Sale ! Nibicts Corn ■»•»! 'cm' 1S*-Green Bedns'^ ii;; l7e Cream Style Com CAN 15e Sweet Peas.... 19e RISDON'S JANE PARKRR--SAVE 16c WISCONSIN CHEDDAR APPLE PIE SHARP CHEESE - 59* ” Donuts •» 2Ic A&P Instant Coffoo 1.19 Half Ml Half QUART SIZE A Ac CARTON WITH THIS COUPON Ceed Thni Saturday, Dal. Ilih Matraoalltae Datrti* ADP Segar MarhaN Only Ona Par Pamlly-ADULTS ONLY AH Iprkoi In thia aid nffocHwi Hire Tenidiy, Oit. fdt in nil leatorn Mkhiuen Air Super Merhoto « P e f Ma rkets '^1 ■ \ : - - Th§ WMIhor ' V,$. wwtktt iwfii r*rtM«t Partly dandy and mildMtiHMday rail W.a. Wwtkn Sanaa Saaatt PONTT A P JL %/xll JL AxXVy VOt. 120 J NO. 208 if it if if it jyi^iiiLiCrMIcSlQAN, W • ' ‘ ' wirtpHSMtSSSW Calls for U.N. Action on Blockade' Schirra Suggestion: ’ Move Up Next Shot HOUSTON. Tex, (AP) - WuUcr M. Sciiirra Jr„ America's most widely travf)lcd space pilot, says be came back from his "textbook flight" six times sround the with one suggestion (or the next U, S. space venture: "Just move up its launching date.’^ He came back from that (light reluctantly, said the 39-year-old Navy commander. "I would like to have gone (or 12 more torbltst," he said. (erence Sunday that at one |K>int In his 9-hour, 13-mlnute (light he completely cut hbnseK o(( (rom To conserve the power supply o( his Sigma 7 spacecraft, he s '' he threw a switch cutting off electrical system which w« have allowed ground control tions to bring him out of orbit ii an cntorgeney. "From the beginning," he said, ’( wanted to turn off*lhe nrm<os to gain entry to ttinada Instead. Possibly he might return to t'.S. research facilities later. scarcli Weather Mild, Skies Cloudy Next 2 Days ‘‘A lot of people have tried to gel my visa extended so I could stay," he says, "They failed. But please don’t hay anything bad alwiit the government; If I liavc to I will." Varying degrees of cloudiness along with mild temperalures Is the area’s weather picture through Wednesday. CAUHIGg RTIR Dr. Cerkez’s research caused a stir In U.S. medical circles In ,luly when he published his findings in a national medicql Journal, "Diseases of the Nervous iSystcm.” Collaborators In his work were two local brothers, Dr. Joseph H. Chandler, St. Joseph llospilui new rologist, and Dr. Douglas Cliand-Icr, chief of medicine there. A low of 50 with mostly cloudy skies is tonight's prediction. Partly cloudy and mild is the outlook (or Tuesday. Wednesday's weathe will also be mild with increasing cloudiness expected. Today's east winds at 10 to IS north and northeast at 10 to 17 The lowest temperature preceding 8 a.m. was 58. By 1 p.m. the mercury has risen to 61, Dr. Cerke/. had tocklc'd a rse which had baffled scientists (or years. which sheath some nerves vanish. The nerves short-circuit. The patient develops Itvitches, s|Hisnis and paralysis. He lefl .il off until Christopher Kraft, Project Mercury (light director, told him: "I think you proved our point, old bujWy.’V to Miami (rom Havana during the weekend and returned to (he Cuban capital last night. Prisoners' family sources in tMl-ami said Donovan was on the verge of closing a deal with Castro for $62 million in cash and medicines in exchange for the into captives’ release. The Miami News said it had learned that the prisoners will be flown to Miami by seven Pan American World Always pianos, probably tomorrow. "There still was an outside chance the prisoners will be returned today." the News added. noiiovan reportedly Conferred with Cuban exiles during a brief trip to Miami yesterday on arrangements to fly the prisoners out of Cuba as mion agreement Is announced. In Havana last night, in a speech ipening the Latin American University games, Ctiiian Armed Forces Minister Raul Castro said that tf the United .Slates wanted [the prisoners, it would "have to for them. He did not, how-say that this payment must be in cash. The Cuban premier's brother warned that if there were invasion, the attackers this time elections, government sources said would not i)c ransomed but would today. 'be shot. In ToeJay's Press Total Score stale Dems evaluate Impact of Kennedy’s visit - PAGE IS. I Ohio Campaign rages at high pitcli - PAGE ID. Please, Mama Important to cldidren lor mom to visit school — PAGE ’J6. Aren News ......... .11 OWliiarles ...............l« Cuban Brands U.S. Activity 'Act of War' Anti-Castro H«ckt«rs Interrupt Speech by President Dorticof ronU>« FLVING BOX LlWCH — Local guardsmen checked instant chow before leaving Friday on largest Michigan Air Guard deployment in history. Heading for El Paso, Texas, along with .lOO other guardsmen were (from loft) Hans Jens of 860 Knox St., and Wayne Wright of 2669 Avonhurst SI., both of Birmingham. See photos and stoi-y on Page 19. Pontiac Girl by Car One of Four Fatalities in Oakland County A 2-year-old Ponduc girl w a killed Saturday when she ran In front of a car near her home. Tamara Ann Reece, daughle .Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Reece, 35)5 Nevada St-, was dead on aiTival at Pontiac General Ho.spital. The youngster was the f 0 traffic fatallity in Oakland County during the High Court to Study Rulings on Prayer UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (if)—In a stormy OeneraJ) Assembly session, Cuban President Osvaldo Dorticos Toraddo demanded today that the United Nations condemn as ‘‘an act of war” what he called a U.S. naval blockade. , The Cuban presWtMfwas" interrupted repeatedly by anti-Castro hefsklers. His reference to an alleged U.S-aval blockade brought a prolonged burst of applause from the Soviet bloc, a small group of Afrl-delegates and some visitors in the public galleries. He received another round of applause when he said: WASHINGTON The Supreme Court agreed today to take a further look at the whole question of prayers and Bible reading in public schools. It announced it will review: —A decision by a three-judge federal court in Philadelphia that a Pennsylvania law requiring Bible reading in public school violates " the federal Constitution. -A decision by the Maryland court of appeals, upholding a Bol-timor* school board regulation calling (or a dally ot>enlng exercise of blble rea(iing and recitation of The Lord's Prayer. afte Shortly noon Saturday two children a n were killed when their car was struck by Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad train just north of Holly Village. The viettms of the train accident were Grace E. Clarke, SI. of 961J N. Vernon Ave., Mint, and Sheirtl and Douglaa (toiler, 5 and 7-.vears-old respectively 6t I.VWI Gravel Lake Hoad, Holly Township. The Rcecc girl was killed short-r after 4 p.m. when she darted in front of a car driven by Annie R. Giwn, 41, of 464 Nevada There is no known cure. Instead of susiiecting viruses, infci'tiuns or allergies — all re-seareh alleys trod before — Dr. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) TV and Radio Programs .1.9 Wilson, Kart ........8.1 Women's Pages .....18-17 The driver said she had just left home and was going west on Nevada at about 20-25 miles per hour when she h e a r d a tliud against the car. She, said she had not seen the child and did not know that she hit someone until her passenger. Hazel rawnrds. .13, 498 Nevada St., told her. Pontiac police said that there (Continued on Page 2. Col. 4) In Its last term, the high eeurt ruled unoonslltulionni a prayer which New Vork State authorities had directed he used In public schools, ITie court held that this offleial prayer breached the Constitution’* provision lor separation of state and religion. In the Pennsylvania case to be reviewed in this term, the special three-judge Philadelphia federal court declared that Pennsylvania ‘has seen (it to breach the wall between church and stale" by its bible-reading statute. ‘IGNfHRFJg TRADITION’ The state’s attorney general, the Pennsylvania superintendent of public instruction, and the Abing-ton Township School Board In suburban Philadelphia, appealed to the high tribunal to reverse the decision. The appeal said thpt to ban blble rending in morning opening exercises in schools would be 10 ignore the traditions of this nation. Edward L. Schempp, member [ a Unitarian church in the Germantown section of Philadelphia, began (he litigation. His childran attended Abington Township schools. GHAFim; RKMINitER — More than 2o oildand D>unty (Ire departments psrnded along Saklnpw Street .Saturday to kick off Fire Prevention Week activities (Oct. 7-1.3). Shown here li a Wc|t Bloomfield Township tnwk. The partide was followed'by a field day program at the NorthaMd badl park, with varloua (Ire de- rwiiM enw PMto fejr fhu w*kk partihent units coirtpeting tor iwphios In a test of Iheir efficiency. During Ihls week, literature will he distributed all schools and films on f— «"i» he available on request. Today Is the last day (or regls-atlon (0 vote In the Nov. 6 tion. Deadline is 8 p.m. Voter registrations will be accepted until that time at City Clerk Olga Barkeley’s office at Pontiac aty Hall, 35 S. Parke St. Today's Deadline for Registration A mobile registration booth at uron and Saginaw streets downtown Pontiac also will be open until 8 p.m. Some 21 volunteers deputized to take registrations door-to-door and at other outside locations w[“ their rounds at about 4 p.m. "Oaba has friends. Ciri*a has friendly goveramenta. It Is not A half-dozen shouting men and women were hustled from the public galleries by alert U.N. guards as they hurled insults at Doritcos. Hr Hr Hr ,■ Security reinforcements were rushed Into.the galleries and the assembly president threatened to suspend the meeting unless order bitter attack on the Ken-BITTER ATTACK In a bitter attack on the Kennedy administration, the Cubw president actmsed the Unite a States of acting "in obvious contempt of the United Nations’' Iff (HilUng. last week’s meeting of Lat-Anterican foreign ministers in Washington. He Md the meeting tons Aimed at persuading the other natkms to join In "the domestic subversion of my country." Chief C.(L Delegate Adlal E. iNeveiwaii Indicated he weald abide by U.N. tMdttkn wbieb forUda deiegales to aaower r«-nuirka made by a chief at state. ease to make Ids reply Mtee la the day. He also was expected to deal with the Cuban clu^s at a later meeting of the assembly. Assembly PresUhmt Muhammad Zafrulla Khan assured Dorticoa he was doing his best to keep order. He warned that he would clear the chamber If necessary. Dorticos assailed the Joint U.S. (Continued on Page 2, CPI. 5) Ford Throws as Yanks Seek to Widen Margin 1 ISM provided laipn* ahonld be excuaed from the blble-readlng period on written requent from tbrtr parentN. Upholding this contcnilon, the special court said blble-ccading constituted an ol)ligaloi'y religious ol)Scr\’(incc burred l)y ibe U.S. Const il III Ion. NEW YORK (UPI)—-The New York Yankees, swaggering slightly now that they have gained A 2-1 lead over the San Francisco Giants, will have clutch pitcher Whltey Ford firing for them today In the fourth game of the world series. *—*■"--------------------- And the left handed Ford — the Yankees ~ bit not lutbit of losing the big ones, I Yesterday's 3-2 Yankee triumph made the New Yorkers, 4-1 favorites to win the series and they 7'i,.3 to win today’s game In Yankee Stadium. Quiz Lets You Test on News Knowledge What arc the vital issues which trouble our world toddy? Renders of The Pontfac Press are in the know apd now have a way to lest themselves in the weekly News Quiz, found today on page 10. The quis Is |Mrt bf Ike ad-iieaHun program of The Pontiac newsreel program In aome Pon- The (I acquaint atudenta wjth nts by showing photos from around the world. They are comply by the Visual Education Center of Madison, WIs., experto In educational dim programming. Answer to today's News Qute ppear on page I'l. Honed manager Alvin Dark of the Giants tor the nmpletmlh Mme. “I know It wtunds corny —but the taels are that we have been coming up off the floor all year. "There Isn't any law against’iis doing it again.” > He called on his Domlnlean-born ight hander, Juan Marichal. ran the scriei again. Marichal on ill games for the Glonis this season tyhile losing U> woil it ran 17 (or the ...... „|lng sight. And he won the first game of the aerttw, A3, hack In San Francisco on Thursday. e I pilch belter today," said Ford. Dark, with a aonthpaw going tor the Vankeeo, put right handed hitting Harvey Knenn hack In his linenp, snlMtltutlng lor (he left handed hllUng Willie Me-Oovey. Houk plannrti no lin "I’m not predicting we a Ing to finish the lerios bore." Houk asserted, adding with a smile, but we arc In a pretty good spot." He didn’t pitch too we up 10 hits and getting ‘ ‘ on a lot of batters. But It good enough. Alter today’s fourth game, the fifth game Is scheduled here, too, with the sixth and seventh games If necessary shifting to windy Candlestick Park In San Erancisco. * ♦' '* .V, Probable starting Unettpt; SAN FRANClSOONEW YORK Kuenn, rf Hiller, 2b Mays,ct Cepeda, lb F. Alou, U Kubek, s Richardson, 2b l^ih, U Mantle, cf Maria, rf Skowron, lb i,,, tf Ford, p J 2 J 4 5 « t • '» , » H I Yenkm.igiiiMiaaiB ■ ■ ■ Gionti flSVJ H3/MI 3)(VII v.’y ^ !: r ' THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1962 Congress ] l Dixie Senators Stall fo Help Pel Projects WASHINGTON (AF’I-A supplemental money measure appeared to be the key to adjournment as Congress today headed into what may be the final week of its longest continuous session since 19')1. With many .memlters of both houses alreiiriy home campaigning W the Nov. fi elections, lhes(> were some of the (asks facing thdse who remained in Washington: ^enate action on the foreign aid-appropriation. Half a dozen appropriations measures, including a JliOO-million supplemental bill on which adjournment may hinge. Ji public works authorization hustle the measure onto the Senate floor last week and threatened TO^ttrsTST (HTTwriiplitmce with a rule requiring three days to elap.se before the Senate can .such a bill. He hopes to force the Hou.se to reverse its decision on a J5-billion ap()ropriation for the Department of Agriculture. The House last week refused to accept about $25 million worth of research projects tacked onto the bill by the Senate, including a $1.6-million peanut marketing research station in Russell's home state—Georgia. ■ bill. ACTION SEEN The Senate is expected to act today on the compromise foreign aid appropriation which the House passed Saturday 171-108. Thb measure now calls for $3,-9'28,900,000 in foreign aid spending, $1,0.32,400,000 less than President Kennedy originally asked. S.MATHERS’ PLAN • At stake, Russell said, is whether the House will be permitted to block the Senate out of initiating projects its members want. Smathers, on the other hand, wants the supplemental bill kept before the Senate as a possible vehicle lor attaching a self-employed pension measure as a rid- Much attention was focused on the $.500-million supplemental appropriation which two Senate Democrats—Richard B. Russell of Georgia and George A. Smathers of Florida—were trying to delay for different reasons. tussell was trying to bring 3sure on the House while Smathers eyed the money measure as possible leverage while he jockeyed with the President over a ^nsion bill. THREATENS BILL Bussell blocked attempts to A bill permitting self-employed persons to set up tax exempt pensions within limits is now before Kennedy. There has been speculation he might veto it. It would become law at midnight Wednesday if ho does not act on it before then and both houses still in .session. Smathers, a backer of the bill, said an attempt would i)o made to override a veto. But with the ranks of both houses growing steadily thinner, it might be hard muster enough support to over- ride. Secretary of the Army Cyrus R. Vance said about 5.400 tipops now at Columbus, Miss., and Memphis, Tenn., will leave for their home stations by air and truck. About 14,000 troops, will be left in the vicinity of Oxford, Miss, site of the university and scene of the riots which killpd two jured many. FOUND 8IAIN — Illegal hunters wiped out an entire family of deer near Milford this weekend find left the remains in a ravine. Park ranger Herb Chambers (leftt and Proud Lake Recreation Area manager A1 Masini are shown examining what remains of the buck. The deer, shot with slugs, were found by Robeil Sinclaih, 1713 Old Plank Road. Family of Deer Is Illegally Slain Two fawns, a buck and a /ere found slaughtered yesterday n a back road near Milford. The discovery was made by Rob- ert .Sinclair of 1713 Old Plank Road, as he was taking an afternoon walk down Old Plank Road. The hind 'quarters of the buck and ulh fawns taken. Aii had he<‘n shot by shotgun slugs, areordlng to conservation o f f I-who were summoned by Sin- Army Cuts Forces hr Mississippi From Our News Wires WASHINGTON - Tlie Army announced today the first withdrawal of n'gular forccssenitoMississippi and Tennessee a week ago of regular forces sent to Mississippi and Tennessee A week ago be cause of integration riots at the University of Mississippi. An air of outwani chlm settled over the university campus as James H. Meredith, a Negro, began his second week as an “Ole Miss” undergraduate. The Supreme Court today jected an appeal by the state of Mississippi contesting orders that •esulted in Meredith's enrollment. Meredith, 29, enrolled Oct. 1 under military protection ordered by President Kennedy to end two days of rioting in the university area. Meredith's admission to the previously all-white university came after Justice Hugo Black on Sept. 10 enjoined university officials from taking any step to block the o’s enrollment. Detroit radio stations WWJ and WJR will broadcast the hour-long program, starting at 8: .30 p.m. It rebroadcast at 10:30 p. Tuesday oVer WDTM-FM. Tuesday night Swainson and Romney will appear in the first of three television debates. Channels 2 tWJBK), 4 tWW'J) and 7 (WXYZ) will canty the debate from 7 to 7:30 p.m. MORE DEBATES The same stations will telecast two more TV debates — also from to 7:30 p.m — Wednesday, Oct. 17 and Friday, Oct. 26. In tonight’s deliate, .Swainson and Romney will have 15 minutes to discuss state Issues. Then each will be given live minutes for rebuttal. After questluns from the floor, the candidates will have two minutes each to IRENDEZVOUS ENDS Meredith returned to the campus last night from a weekend rendezvous with his family at an undisclosed destination. He was, ual, escorted by a small groiip of U.S. marshals. Proud Uike Recreation manager Al Masini estimated that the 17,5-pound buck, his 110-pound mate and the fawns had been killed sometime Saturday or early Sun. day. They were found at 2 p. Sunday. Time for Research Fleeting.- Doctor RIDES OUT HURRICANE — A 90-foot Russian fishing trawler, one of six sueh vessels, is The sliip was i^own at anchor about a mile and a half off |X)und(-d the ghore in Cape Cod Buy near Provineetown, Mass, few days. storm which has seaboard the past (Continued From Page One) congressional statement which ho that urged action against The Weather PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Cloudy and mild with scatttered showers ending during the day. High 70. Mostly cloudy tonight. Partly cloudy Tuesday, continued mild. Low tonight 50. High Tuesday 68. Winds east at 10 to 15 miles today becoming north to northeast at 10 to 17 miles 4onight. Hcir. Rftpli HouKhton Cuba. Storm Batters New England By I'nil ‘d Press liilemntional Kl mined New England braeed for more Ihxxling Kxlay in le wake of Hurricane Daisy, liieh hiislled off to assault Canada's Maritime I’rovinees. Heavy rains during the niglit washed sealten'd areas of th<> nation from Ohio to Oregon. In (he midwest, the downpours were ae-eompanled by damaging w i n d gusts and hail. WtAtHIH $U»IAU but fhxxl wul('rs remained over the length of New England roust, and rain swollen rivers were expected to eonllmie rising, Hail pemted the northern sections of Cincinnati, Ohio. NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers are expex;twl tonight In tht Virginia urea, weslei-n New York, the- northern Plateuu, the central Remkles and the Pjaedflc Northwe‘st while rain Is Itore-caat for the central Pacific area. ^ will i)e cooler in (he eust-am Great Lake* region and southward through (he Ohio and ^ Tennessee vair|||i», ^ , i Daisy (eume-el up with u piiii-Islilng nor’e-nsle-r to leaive a trail eif ele>nth anel eb-striie-tion In tlie-sK New England stales. Twenty-eight deaths were at-Irlbule-d to the we-e-kend whipping. Thousands wei-e> made lemporm-i-ly he)mele»g« anel proix-rly damage-eslimates soare-d inlo llie millions. The weather bureau .said last night "Daisy is no longer a tairri-l .Shots being fired fre>m a nearby firing range would have covered up the noise of the guns thal kiljeei the eleer, Masini pointed out The Ixxiies we-re in a small ravine on the e-ast side of the thickly wooded area. Cuban Urges U. N. Act on 'Blockade' The- (iilmn pre-siele-iit stressexl Ihee phrase- ••lne-liiellng (he use of urins'* In preventing the spread e)f Miirx-Ix-nIn elue-trines in tlae lie-inlspliere-. "I’his is most bizarre," he said. "Was it Cuba thal was guilty of aggressions in this hemisphere-?" he denumded. 'President Kennedy admitted thal the Bay of pigs invasiem was -arried out by trex)ps prepareel in the Uniled Stale-s, troeeps w e r e prepared in e)tie Ce-ntral Atnerie-an e-oimtr.v fe)i- invasieen e>f another •icR Up iisK’r .. , (Continued From Page One) Cerkez suspects a defect in the vie-'s body metabolism, a previously untried re-seareh path. He- found his e-lue in te-sting ten patients at St. Joseph Hospital rer a period of two years. Dr. Ce-rkez one day e-om[)ared two test curves, tracing two patients' sugar use- unde-r slrc.ss over a pe-rie)(l e>f hours. One of the e-ui-ves was that of multiple .sclerosis vie-tim. MATCIIINO CURVES Die other curve belonged to a patient with a disorder culled pro difibete-s. The curves matched. They matehe-d in se-ve-n out ol Cerkez's 10 multiple sclerosis vie tims. Immeeiiale-ly Dr. (’e-rke-z suspected that the same metabolism was present in multiple sele-t-osis victims and patients in the piv-dia-betie slate. Tu avoid the possible trap that le iiinitiple selerosis patient* Iso wen« pis--ns in Pontiac Ttiursday. Romney will be aeeompaniel ;it noon luncheon meeting of tlie North Oakland County Bar Association by I.. William .Si-idman, Republican candidate (or auditor gen oral. The meeting is scheduled at the Elks Temple, 114 Orchard I nke Ave. The «OP challenger to d< John B. Swainson will (hen move on at 12:55 tq a meeting of the Pontlar Rotary Ulnl> at (he Wnb ciron Hotel. 4 Killed in County Over Weekend (Continued Fwm Page On i-ix- no ears parked along the lib to obstruct the view. substance. Unlike the ix-rsistently recurring symptoms of regular diabetes, pre-dlrilx-U-s shows erratic sugar lev--1* only under stress. Mrs. Green was released afler making a formal statement to the •ounly prosecutor. The Flint woman apparently was going west on Ijihrhig Retail when the train siiinshixl Inlo her ear, arrorillng to Nheritf ile(ii|. HIMILAR MALFUNI'TION ixx'tors have known the mal-inclion is similar In diabetes vle-llitis and pre-diabetes victims who develop full-fledged diabetes syniptoms. With Cerliez's discovery, a third disease — multiple sclerosis —In-ates a similar defect in the sug-cuiilrol mechanism. To the II N (, III II line*, neore* of ear* were re-ported damaged by falling tree*. Store* were Hooded. At Freeport, HI., 100 miles northwest of Chicago, wind gusts and driving rulns^ uiinxiled trees and knocked down |x>wer lines. Dubuque, Iowa, stmie 30 miles nihwest of the Mississippi RIvei', had 1,75 Inelies of rain in one ye*lerdiiy. If The youngslcrs, cliildren of Mrs. Patricia .Sulx'i', wen- being taken (or an afternoon ride when the accldenl (XTiMTed. Mrs. Claike was ilmiwn out of le ear on Impact but tlie IxxlieH of the elilldreii were found In the wieekiige, wbleH was pushed nearly n Imif-mile down Ihe .track* Ix’fore the train stopped. Kennedy Seet Series M'A.SMtNGTON (UPI) - Pre*l-ml Kc'nnedy got a hlglwillllude ew of the Ibird game of llie World .8i;rles yesterday, 'fhe President wMletiod (he game vInIoi) iilxxird hi* plane n (lying back from Minne allliude of :i0,000 feel ie iki tbi His work links (he mysterious cause wliich dlslnlegraies nerves' insulation to fi disorder of the body mechanism which regulates the Seldman will not go with Romney to the Rotary luncheon, but will ride to Birmingham for 'ampaign liand-shaking. Oakland County Republiean headquarters has them schixluled to join up again at a community play at 7:45 p.m. at Oak Park High School. In the meantime Romney move to Birmingham at l:.'t3 p m. 1 rally at Shain Park while Seidman attends a coffee gai'ier ing at the home of Mrs. Ray Gif ■ls„ 929 Glengarry Road, Bloom field Township. Romney will tour (wo plasCes plant* In Troy—AMT Uorp., 1225 fapio Road, at 2 p.m., and Ntro ■ Motive p of each other. Another idea; Hassocks with lift-up lids provide additional storage space while serving as foot-stools or extra seating. Wetherill Mesa, in Mesa Verde Natipnal Park, was the home of Pueblo Indians who flourished lor centuries and reached a high state of culture before mysteriously vanishing 700 years ago. ’Their crumbl^ buildings are being stabilized so they can lx opened eventually to the public. OMMrt Erie* Anywhtrt to Loom How Mueli You Savo at SIMMS 2S SOUTH Storo Scat Cars Maker'g Li$t-$n.9S -SIMMS PRICE- 7.88 • Ovtr 8 foot length • Rylon Baaring 18" Wheels e Pedals Adjust for Orowlng Youngsters Rugged steel, fakes plenty of abuse. Better than pictured. $1 HOLDS FOR CMRISTMA8 SIMMS: 28 SOUTH iSaginaw St. I ALL SPEOMS UNITE mtlllESIMY. 2nd FLOOR SPECIALS Embossed Full Colors m Metal WasMuAst 3-1 g; Chuck SIMAAS Low PRICES MEN'S and LADIES' I WATGHES I :i;:Our Prices Are So low We ConT i-i-Meniion the famous BRAND NAMES i* i:-:, . . Compare Our EVERYDAY DIS-SJ :•:! COUNT prices. 'ii iatfflg-........29"i ■f Rat. $4(-W ;:iWSTCHEt-M 3ri Sa|.$1t.St WRTOHIt-no ::::sag.tl5.0l .^i: WATCHES-1 4n :;;:Ha|.$ll.M ::;:WATGHES-new.. DU $;Newe»t models ol Americo's finest |$brond waicbes. Dpuble GUARANTEED makers and Simms. Pay cosh, poy g •iyless—use tree layaway, AH prices »QXuLi£lBS§i WATCH DEPT -Maul Floor SIAAMS \ , OPBNTonHalil PARK FREE m City Met(?r Lots Affet . p London Jewel Thieves Clean Out Five Safes LONDON (AP) — Burglars cut open five safes with acetylene torches and stole jewels worth ap-proxlraalcly 100,000 pounds l$280,-000) over the weekend; ' Scene was a building near Piccadilly Circus. The jewels werO solen from two firms which share an upper floor in the building. Leave It To SIHMS To Again Bring^ The Biggest-ln-Town Sale of TELESCOPES Biogual aolu in our history — (Inaat quality, famoua maku of tulu-scopat . . . svury acopu GUARANTEED OPTICALLY PERFECT, but foilud to post rigid inapuction bocouau oi alight point dufuett or tripod acratchoa, but will oporotu purfaetly. Limitud alock, only SI hotda In loyowoy for a limifod timu. Tonitu ond Tuoadoy. Dendrochronology is the method of rending tree rings to deteT-minc lltc age of trees. National Pharmacy Week, Oct. 7-13 YOUR ROUTE TO GOOD HEALTH IS THROUGH YOUR PRACTICING PHARMACIST, who is ready to serve you, your physician and your community. His education and experience qualify him as an authoritative drug advisor to your physician, dispenser of life-saving medication to you and consultant on household health heeds to the entire community. Make use of your pharmacist's professional services today. At this timo I couM of tho rocent dovelopmtnts both m* Honally and locally, THE OAKUHD COUNTY PHARMACEUTICAL ASSOCIATION ronows our plodgo to you-oor patrons: 1 a To supply only quolity drugs in your proscriptions 3ia To mointoin our sorvice to you only through registorod phormocists 3 a To continuo to offer you our big-gost borgoln—"Your Hoolth" PONTUC Cloonan Drug Company lllasbalh Laku Pharmacy Pllspatrick'a Pharmacy Purtnuy Drug Oallaohar't M59 Drugi Carhwh Drug Halbnan PrtMrIptlon Drugi HaiM't Pharmacy BIRMIMGHAM Ravarly Drugi Huirior-Maplu Pharmacy COMMERCE Etringar Pharmacy DBATTON PLAINS Drayton Drug Storu Aril Flhirmacy OXFORD Mitchall'i Drug VanWaguntr Drugi RIddIch'i Pharmacy Schram Pharmacy Simma Broi. Drug Slanhitar D lunaa Drugi A. |, Starh Pharmacy Thrifty Drugi Sav-On Drug! Wabuak Pharmacy Wailcy Drugi WIImhi Drug Company BLOOMriElD HILLS A. |, Starh Pharmawy HIGHLAND Whita Laku Pharmacy KEEGO HARBOR Can Laku Pharmacy Corty'l Keego Drug ROCHESTER Crliiman'a Pharmacy Morlay't Drugi Purdy Drug TROT Oil Pharmacy RERKLET Baker's Drug CLAIKSTON lonsl Cuntci O'Dell Drug StmrO CLAWSON I Pharmacy LAKE OHION LATHRUF VILLAGE UNION LAKE lohn Via Pharmacy John Clark Phannacy WALLED LAKE •n Drug .1- IDEALLY SUITED TD KEEP PACE WITH SPACE 300-POWER Telescope With Sturdy TRIPOD STAND 33< Umally Prid’d Up To $100 • Ereeting Eye Piooo o Barlow Lons 0 Diagonal Prism o Hardwood Case Deluxe professional style astronomical scope for advanced students ond hobbyists. Optically perfect tho there ore slight finishing flows. $1 holds. 4-In. REFLECTOR Scopes • Barlow Lons, Sun Lsns • Ooatsd Ooulars % Lunar Lsns o 480 X Power • llurdy Tripod o Carry Cats Design of this instrument mokos if the easiest to use. Micro motion focusing In eyepiece tube. Altazimuth mounting, focal length 900mm. 5 x 24 optical finder scope, 2X Barlow lens doubles the power of each ocular. $1.00 holds in layaway for limited Most Powerful Model Available Now Astronomical TELESCOPE Oomplata In Fitted HARDWOOD CASE 11087 hut At Simms 0 8" Attrd ond Tcrrtilriol Iquatorlal Refraoter 0 Bariaw Lent 0 Blagonal Prism 0 Rrootlng Prlim • Sua and Moon FIHor a iHH Projootlon toroon a 8 Oablo Oontrols a |.Ft. Tripod Most powerful model for groups, clubs or Individuals who want tho finest . . . opficolly perfect tho there are slight flows In point finish. $1 holds for limited OUTFITS As pictured—relief mop of U.S.A. In fulti'’ colors and hTstoricol and geogrophicol focti imprints on bock. 11 V^-inch ovol by \\W inches tall. Silvor-Brite on AAotal Well-Tree’ Platter M $2.29 Ualue-At'Simmt Oaiy As shown —heavy gouge metal with silver-brite finish thof never needs polishing, Largo 13'/4xl8 inch size. ^5TAINUSs"STEEl150-k'. Tableware Set Regular $9.00 Valtw Complete service for 8 — forks, spoons and knives in modern design. Never dull or tarnish. Move Artmnd Unit-Many Uses Toy Catch-All 299 $6.98 Value As pictured-28xl5x2I-inch size. E4ald cofeh-oll bog set into tubular steel frapie. Rolling swivel SIMMS 2nd Floor HARDWARE DEPT. mmTfOOB-WhHo Toilet Seat 99 1 White enameled finish, sdol with lid cover and hlhi^s. Easy to install on any standard toilet bowl. Limit 2. U^~20-fiilLLON~S&~ Garbage Cans WithCoVar Regular $2.98 value-galvanised steel can is approved for city and township pick-up. Side carrying handles. Limit 2 per Folding ^Ft. Stepladder \ ""^^Regular $4.9S Value-At Simms 1 Sturdy all wood ladder with steel rod stops, pall platform. Folds carrying. 2“ FuH 8-FOOt Cable Regular $1.49 Value-Now BATTERY BOOSTER For* 6 or 12 volt sys- 3/S-lncli Beelric DriK 97 9 •’Speedway' drill with geared chuck, bronza alloy bapr-, 2.5 amps, 1750 no load rpmi. HI*poliih Dnlih., ,, Has the Motor That Won*t Burn Out 7-in. Power Sow Regular $.1.1.93 Value Famous Thermowald motor that wonl't burn out, 5000 rpms, 8 amps. Sofoty slip handy blade guard lifter, able cutting gulda. THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 West Huron Street , MONDAY, OCTOBER 8, M2 HABOIJJ *. FTWOWAU) Pontiac, Michigan w H0WA«« H. FIIMWAIII n, JOHN A. muT. S«oret»ry *nd Advtrtitinii Director O. UMurnii JoiiMM, Loool Advertlelni Mtnoier It Seems to Me .... ' Russians’ Increased Interest in Religion Alarms Mr. K Troubles arc multiplying in Russia. ;X.nS“' ot . < if «fj«„ the irlobe—and then twiddle our Religion IS receiving attention. tje ^ acinir offenses within 90 miles of When I was in Moscow two years ^ ^ shoreline. Newspapermen ago, there were approximately 50 than churches for seven million people. j suggest that John F. Ken- We have more than 125 in our own j„j,y |,e listening too inarea of 125,000 people. lently, too often and altogether ^ ^ too seriously to Adlai Stevenson. We visited two churches and ★ ★ ★ were struck by the age of those There were well-grounded rumors present. The people were well into last June that he would never their 50s and 60s—or around 10. weather the summer at the United It simply meant the remnants of Nations. But he still holds forth— the holdovers in religious gen- calmly, serenely and apparently in erations were in attendance, and complete control. Military men say they were taking their grand- unperturbable children. Their own offspring— -statesman” who dissuaded Kennedy ,he fa'bers »: trom lending naeal aid during the —were disbelievers and scoffed \ ^ ^ allhe whole id« of God aa they abortive "invasion last winter, have been taught to do. Their ★ ★ ★ remarks on religion left us A host of people are coming (o speechless and aghast. They the conclusion Stevenson may treated God as indifferently as well be one of the weak links in you would someone you’d heard a chain that isn’t too stout at a casual rumor about on Mars. best. ★ ★ ★ ;■ ,I believe that inborn In nearly all And in Conclusion .... peoples are an instinctive reverence Jottings from the well-thumbed and a regard for the Hereafter—how- notebook of your peripatetic re-ever it may be conceived. Even Chief porter: Pontiac respected and bowed before Virginia Martin, the redhead with the “Happy Hunting Ground’’ where Sid Caesar, has a vocal range of three the departed braves and their squaws octaves; from A below middle C to would foregather. E flat above high C—whatever that ^ ^ ^ is..............America is still the Khrushchev h» ju»l «rd.r«l opportunity. Eveiy citizen- hU Ruriau newapapera to lake y**' clton-ean vote for the up the cudgel agalnal a earreat of his own choice........ wave of rellgloiia belief. It has .........has Vegas gamblers haven’t alarmed him sufficiently to draw an ounc&of sentiment or friendliness added censure. Antireligious ......................At the moment the propaganda has been sharply smart money’s on Rockefeller, stepped up. The people are or- Romney and Nixon in the guber- dered to “cease and desist.” The natorial races—and in that order older folks he leaves alone to ................Ole Miss is having nurture tlieir “quaint beliefs” as internal troubles. Faculty members they see fit for any Russian be- casting about for next year and lief In God is to pass on with their students are indicating the deaths. same sentiments. tAt But God is again on the ascend- „ ency in His most unholy country- l»rmain in office for the term for whic’h he is elected. He can he removed only by Impeaehment h.v the state legislature ns provided In the eunsll-tiition of that stale. The bi-iof points out that it doesn't make any difference whether the court order is served on a governor as an official or as an individual. It is contended that the court can issue such an order tiny lime, but a governor or a president can ignore it without lieing compelled even to give any reason for his refusal. IJI’IIEI.!) BY COIIUT When President Thomas Jefferson refused lo respond lo a federal court subpena, Chief Justice Marshall of the Supreme Court of the United Stales upheld him, in an opinion written in behalf of the court, oven though Mr. Jefferson gave no reason for his refusal to testify. The brief filed by Gov. WaiTcn of Floridii said: “No committee of the Congress of the United States, nor the Congress ilscif, has the power to compel the governor of a sovereign state lo an.swer a subpena and go to Washington, D. C., to testify concerning matters within his knowledge as governor. “To recognke the power of a congressional committee to compel the governor of a sovereign state lo leave his state and appear before such committee in the nation’s capital is to recognize the power of such a committee, at any moment it may elect, to determine whether or not the governor shall perform the duties of his office. Writes About Staff, Editorial Page Reading the editorial page every day you could say the views are conservative. But is it true that the men on the editorial staff must wear double-brested suits and hand painted ties? P. L. V. More Give Views on Mississippi We urge an immediate investigation of Mississippi because the state has suffered an unwarranted assault. We ll take the word of Governor Barnett any lime. Contempt is due those who want to force hundreds of thousands to live contrary to their traditions and in many cases under conditions the arbiters refuse themselves. We have troops to crush an old custom while the nation's danger builds up undeterred, ninety miles away. Concerned . To the Governor: I thought you were in office for the good of Mi«'higan. but if you want to run Mississippi go there. Then Barnett would be (roe to lake office as President, just like Romney is taking your place. ‘Has Press Fought for Constitution?* The press of the U.S. fights to keep the press free, but has the press (ought to keep the Constitution as it should? Our Constitution hat been practically rewritten In vital parto, not by the people but by nonriui-linn — “crafly arguments of left * * W Thomas Jefferson said, “In questions of power let no more be heard of confidence in man, but bind him down from mischief by the chains of the Constitution.” W * * There Is no power over edn-eallon given to the Federal (iov-emment under the Conslltollon. If the tbipreme Court can change the rullngo what In to elop It from an entirely different ruling on education? We have allowed politicians to disregard the Constitution and one wonders how much liberty we have Dr. Brandstadt’s Mailbag: Cataracts Usually Linked to Advancement in Age Q — What causes cataracts? When should they be removed? How long would it be after operation before the eyes can be used again? A — When the crystalline lens in tile eyeball becomes cloudy, the I’otidifion is known ns cataract. Tiie commonest rnuse in an adult is advancing age and this type of eul-aract is found in an increasing pro-[M)i’tion of persons as age exceeds .'K). Such cataracts I I s u a 11 y affoctj l)Oth cyc’s hut not’ nc(’es,sar’ily to the BKANH8TADT .sonic (l.’gn’c, ★ ★ A The dcvi’lopment of cataracts is varii’d and unpredictable. Most of ihi’m slarl in the outer layer of the lens and the time r«*quired (or UK’ to re.’ich the "ripe” stage varies trom miinllis to years. In some iiersons the proeess eomes to a halt and the cataract An.’fone who has a developing I’lilarai’l Nliiiiild liiivu |H>rhHlle exHiiilmilioas h,v an e,ve nih'cIhI-IhI. He alone rail lell ,vou when the ealaraet Is rl|te for operation. Hi’m Allhniigh varicose veins are most commonly seen In the legs they may occur anywhere, and although varicose veins of the upper extremity are uncommon, that la most likely what yon have. .Since some form of operation is usually required, you should see your doctor if the condition is causing a lot of discomfort. Racing Concerns Local Mother The raceway at University Street from E. Tennyson to El. Columbia is never patrolled by police. There's no speed limit, but due to large oak trees you can only drag two abreast. Don’t worry about small children, none of the other drivers or police ai*e concerned. Only parents worry. Mother of Three Teaching Hours Much Too Short How c’un a child get an cduca-tion^when he dm’sn't go lo sch(M)l on the average of four short days a week. We get a note every wcc'k saying there is a day off. Just look at the week vacations they hav(>. The hours are too short. Teaching is losing standing. Tom Klus 66 Forest St. Complains of Films for ‘Adults Only* Teen-agers between 1.1 and 16 pay adult prices to movies because we are “over 12," yet we are not allowed lo see the so-called “adult” movies. If we pay adult prices why can’t we see adult movies? In Mississippi llio Negro pa.vs taxes, yet is not allowed lo enter a stale Institution. If (he “adult” movies are so bad that young adults can’t see them, then no one should. Teen-Ager 2005 Pontiac Rd. Offers Praise for Newspaper You have sucit a good news-pap<‘r with a vast number of good writers, I have read It for 40 years. I know some very smart people write bi'cause they think as I do. Kennedy’s first comment on war It would be safer there, but could all of the Kennedy's land on the moon at one lime? If Washington feels war would get votes, let’s start it in Mississippi or Alabama. I like this town and the people and we get The Pontiac Press every day so we could read about trouble elsewhere. G. W. Peterman Milford Says Policemen Did No Wrong The "fool rare incident" should have never been condemned by the chief of police. The officers involved should have been commended instead of ridiculed. It is not uncommon to become drowsy. Officer Booklo put hin life at slake for the people, chasing a rapist and not one word waa printed. Hgl. Hogg has .14 years of sitrviee and his oiilstaiidipg record s|M‘aks for Itself. George W. Hmllh 201 W. Fairmount (Editor's Note; It is Pontiac Press policy not to publish rape (ases until the defendant is convicted.) (Editor’s Note: We^are not print-ing "Just a Poor Taxpayer’s ” letter as It is unsigned and libelous.) Reviewing Other Editorial Pages GOVERNOR IMMUNE Hence, a <’imrl c an enjoin one or more siiiie ofiicials from carrying out any illegal act even if II is or-dei’C’d (iffici/illy by a gov(’rnor. As The Country Parson “How can I stop my wife from waking up several times at night and smoking cigarettes?” someone asks. Doubtless anything he might do that would keep her from waking up would solve his jiroblom. “( lilirch.’x, like (lllliiK NlHtioiis, in Mil the Name needs without svIiIk t'ollowing o(i(’ratlon both eyes ai’(’ batidaKi’il for three or four r needs lo be bandaged, dark glakses should be worn lor a while. ilenuise, when the lens Is removed, the eye can no longer (’(minuHlute lor near ami dialant vision, the two eyes will not work logelher as a team. This can l)e corrected with glasses alsmt a monlh after Ihe operation. After this the vision Is usually gO(Mi. y “ During llie seventh month of pregnancy 1 noticed the veins In my wrists and hands protruding. Tile eonditlon has persisted and hec’ome worse. The veins do not prolrude when nty hands are not lianglng at my aide. Can you lel| what Is causing (his and if Business Outlook Business Week The heading Into Ihe fourth quarter with gathering strength. The Business Week Index zigzagged In a narrow range all summer. Now II hints (hat a mild upturn The rise that’s In prospect will bo slow and gradual. In some respects U will resemble the pattern of the economy In the third quarter. But there will be one important difference: Steel output — which limped upward through most of the lust three months — will be back In force by November. This is virtually assured by the high rate of auto produclloii projected for next month. k If k November will call the turn on the opening quarter of 1961. By November, retailers'’wlll know how fJiristmus shopping is llkel/ to go. And election results should provide some measure of the odds on a meaningful tax cut next year. Iriirhs eeiialnly leaves little to Im desln>d this year. It begins lo Imtk as (hough domeslle Iruek sales will go over (he l-milllon mark tor the l|rs( time since (Ml and may challenge INa tor second ptoce In Ihe annals of the todnslry. Hales are running clone to lilt,-MO vehicles — a 10 per ceni gnin over Ihe firsi nine monihn ol IMI. FoE Ihe Inal quarter they will have lo average better than liruiid uHiiies.'' tlicru is anything 1 can do fur it? third quarter. Of particular significance to business pulse-takers is the increasing share of truck sales accounted for by (he larg(T vehicles — those, over 10,000 lb. (or what the trade calls medium to extra-heavy). From Jan. 1 through Sept. 10, these broad-shouldered units accounted for .18 per cent of total truck sales. Last year; their share was only 27 per rent. As a E’ord exeeullve pointed out this week: “Heavy trueks are not ordered by businessmen who are losing confidence In the economy." Telstar The London Daily Mirror The Americans launched it. It is a triumph for their scientists, a tribute to their vision. But more than that, it is a triumph for the human race. This is the kind of space shot devoted to peaceful research which allows the whole world to breathe more easily. Pesticides The National dbserver Popular Pesticides were largels only 61 criticism but new control U’Kialatlon seems sure lo be pn>-posed next, year. The cause of the criticism Is a now book, “Silent Spring," written by biologist Rachel ('arson. Miss Carson’s thesis Is that Cstleides, by destroying nature’s lance, are finding a lot of unintended victims and, It we're not careful, arc going to find a lot mure. * * * A spraying (or Dutch elm di- sease killed oil Ihe niblns on Ihe Ilniverslly of Michigan eam-pos. OUT destroyed one slraln ol Inseels that preyed on the Douglas (Irs of the Northwest, but those Insects had been eon-Irolllng the spider miles, which turned out lo be even moro deadly enemies of (he lirs. lUisl-dues of chtmilcnls spiay«Ml on As an alternative lo Indiscriminate spraying, Miss Carson urges more extensive and intensive use Ilf biological control schemes. In some cases, for example, harmless Insects have been imported into certain areas to erndicalc other Insects. That’s all very well, but what must be rememlterxtd is that miture Is always being unbalanced either by nature Itself or by mankind. Every lime we drill (or oil, cut forests, or split an atom we tamper with nature’s balance. Without some such actions there could be no such thing as human progress. « * A Ho wo piiist go on bnlanelng the brnoflis of poolloldoa agnlnsl Ihoir dangers. If wo do not, wo run Iho risk of llpptof nntore’a bninnee against onrsolvos. <7 sir hMSl nswi OBnM In *• »• •» *** Ths Ponllic Prtm (• tlsllfsrse hr csrrirr for M otnti s wsik: whsrt !S“ A2t!“&S''31 ‘Cl: jrinU met. FunUiif n«ii pBtfl si Ihs aiiil Iiiiu rsis St Pi tiiehwsn. Msmfisr si atto. TIIE rONTIAC PRESS. MOTOAY. OCTOBER 8, 1882 Atlanta Negro fo Try for Senate Chair ATLANTA (API - An Atlanta Ni'gro said he would quality formally today to run for the Democratic nomination to a Beat In GeorBia’B newly reapportioned Senate. Republicans reportedly are planning to Include another Atlanta Negro on its slate of Sen-‘ ate candidates. No Negro hug served in the Georgia lA^gislature since Reconstruction days. WWW Dr. Roy Charles Bell, 36-ycar-old Negro dentist, announced he would |)08t his $500 qualifying fee with the Democratic Executive (Commit lee. Beil Is special projects director of the Southern Chri.stian Leadership Conference, which Is headed l)y integration leader Ur. Martin Luther King Jr. , * ★ ♦ T. M. Alexand»>r, Atlanta insur- ance man. Is tjhe Negro Republicans reportedly will offer for one of* the seven £lenste ssfats given Fulton (Atlanta) County under a renpportiwimont plan signed into Chrysler President to Speak at U. of M. ANN ARBQR (Jfl -* Chrysler Corp.’s president, Lynn A. Townsend, will address the annual Michigan Accounting Conference on the Untversity of Michigan campus Friday. His subject will be "Some Thoughts on Accounting, Costs and Profits.” Townsend is a certified public accountant. Grand Rapids Man Re-Elected Indian Chief ADA tfft - William Thatcher of Grand Rapids, who has Chippewa blood, was r('-elected chief of the Gland Valley American Indian lodgt' here Friday. The organization has aliout 200 members representing several Michigan Indian tribes. SO Is Key Year Toward Long Life By HAL BOYLE NEW Y^ (AP)-Things jit never know if he dn't open hii A bachelor is never safe at any IC. The census Bureau reports M you’ve reached the half cen-iry mauk yourself, the odds are that you’ll live to see your 75th birthday. If you make it to 70, the| chances are you'll beyond 80. ,^eryone has. heard of P. T. Barnum, the celebrated 19th cen-tury showman, but few knew his’ BOYLE full name.'It was Phineas Taylor Barnum. Professional pickpockets refer t> a man's right hip pocket as sucker's iiockel" because it the easiest of all to pick. ODD KAtrr In Kentucky, where most America's whisky is made, more than half the population lives in dry counties. Three out of four American families now own at least ohe car. In the last five years the numb^i owning two or more cars has in creased from about four million > seven million. ■Sr Sr - Sr Najgoleon and Churghlil found their-bathtubs a favorite source of inspiration. So do writers Agathie Christie and Angus Wilson. F. W. Woolworth, founder of the five-and-dime chain, was hired as a janitor for 50 cents a day by a retail store owner who didn’t think Woolworth had enough business sense to wait on custom- MIJST PROVE IT In Iraq, a man can't bring home a second bride until he first proves in court that he can afford to support two wives. Americans drink an average of 189 bottles of soft drinks a year ★ ♦ * A suntan lotion now on the mar ket does double duly by also serv- ing as an insect repellent. , A flying squfrrel can’t really fly. but it Clin glide distance up to 125 feel. . * California, if you catch a sperm whale under 35 feet long, you have to throw it- tack Into the water. In Barre, Vt., an old law reqjtlred everybody to take a bath on Saturday night. And in Macon, Gb., it was illegal for a man to put his arm around a woman in publlc“withoul a legitimate reason.” FEEDING HUBBV In Palo Alto, Calif., some baby sitters are demanding—and getting—the cost of their husband's dinner in addition to their regular fees. About a fourth of U.S. ('ollege students are married, ■a ★ False teeth have been foirnd In the skulls of some early American Indians. Women lose more earrings than gloves. Only one husband in 10 knows is wife's clothes sizes. It was Mark Twain who ob-served^ "j ant an old man and have known a great many troubles, but most of them never happened.” North Koreans Voting' on One Commie Slate TOKYO (if) - North Koreans voted today on a single slate of deputies nominated by the Communist , party for the nation’s parliament. Radio Pyongyang said there was only one candidate in each of the 383 constituencies. Real power in the country is held by the Politburo of the North Korean Labor (Communist) party. IKHW. S< karaifiil iln SX-S TWIN SPREAD IN BUNDED PIAIDS OF • ORCHID • BLUE • GOLD • GREEN Rtgalar $19.98 SPECIAI. $1399 May alto bo wsad OS a COW Arden’s Pontiac Mall PMTIM MAll The Only Enclosed Shopping Center... 50 Stores and Services Monday & Tuesday Only Telegraph al Elizabeth Lake Rd. Open Rally 9:30 to 9 Free 4,6110 Car Parking i SPECWLS r The Pontiac Mall Proudly Presents the First Exclusive Presisntation of the 1963 Automobiles.»« Monday Oct. 8th thru Saturday Oct. 14th Anniversary freeser HOIDS A BIO 455 POUNDS OF FOODI i90 90-year wonder in a big home freezer, ideal for city or »ub-urban families! Stores food at a certified 0“,.. has a handy lift-out basket, tool 13 cu. ft. n® 159 FULL LENGTH DOOR MIRROR WITH T SHELL FRAME FULL 16’'x56'* SIZE PERFECT REFLECTION Cunningham’s NOW OPEN SUNDAY 11:30 to 8 P.M.-DAILY 8;30 to 10 P.AA. PONTIAC MALL ,58-PIECE Wm. ROGERS SILVERPLATE Service fora PONTIAC MALL Shopping Center 357 N.-Telegraph Rd. 0pm Evenings V Mil 9 PM, SECONDS! From well-known Pacific Millx. Fitted at three corners while the 4th has a lie cord. No straining to bend the mattress. Durable, iype-128 muslin gives long wear. HODSOITS^GET STORE MATCHLESS DIAMOND VALUES Ezelutively designed... Luxuriously styled... Budget-priced Genuine diamond ^ Jewelry sot in14KGold. At CHARGE IT I Use S. S. KRESGE'S PONTIAC MALL STORE ONLY curtain SPECIAL! OAY NOVELTY fETS, MANY STYLE! YouV® sure to find crisp curtain sets to brighten up your home. Gay Cape Cod, tier, and cafe styles in easy-care, washable fabrics with sun-resistant colors. VI SPECIAL for ihr MALL AUTO SHOW VARIETY PACK 59' Special Folding Box 17 Varieties Candies Rpf(.$l.40 V»LU. CROCKER’S CANDIES Wherv. Chorolnivs Are Made WUh You in Mind 21 to Wuoilwnrd at .S,|iin>-<- l.k. ilil. Ponliao Mall OPEN UAII.Y •Til, 9 P.M. EMPIRE SHOE REPAIR While You Wait MON. & TUES. SPECIAL MEN’S RUBBER ^ HEELS Attached while MONDAY-TUESDAY-WEDxNESDAY Every day we pamper our patroii!), of course, but Mondays, Tuesdays and Wednesdays we are aide to offer that little “extra” because »iir pace is more leisurely on these days. Start the week riglit then—come in and get a UbfintS permanent wave and sliampuo, sot and styled liaircut, combined for only ... 7-^ HAIR cirrriNC BY DONNELI. Amtointmont A'ol Aluiay» lS»‘i-i>8»nry donnoll hair shlists Continental Salon rONTUC MALI IHOSSOfO CtNTia llourst Mon. Ilirii Sul. 9 i« Open'Til 9 P.M. MwNlaytliraSiL SALE! WARD! REOULAR 29.98 TO 32.98 WOOL COAT! 23 90 • N«w®$t silhouatt®! • Fall colon, black • Larg® coll«ction Ward W®ek savings whon you want '«ml All wool pluihet, fl®®c®$, twaedi. Som® zip-outay raccoon collars. MiM®s* SizaiStolB. ityliih ShOGS for smart, atylis PONTIAC MALL (larft & iashion wcai;” FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY )(• >!■ 8- >F Pontiac Mall Optical Center Dr. Paul C. Feinherg, Oploniclrlat-Ph. 682-1113 WINTERIZE at WARDSI 1.44 PosIHv® cooling system protection—lasts all winter long. WARD! SUPER ANTI-FREEZE 1.79- Wards finest—use year 'round. End rust, corrosion and freeze up. . Low-cost prolac- 'VTo tion. Contains f f 95% mathonol. u«|im MONDAY and TUESDAY, October 8, 9 men’s cushion foot Comfortable NOSE 3-.*1 Men like the comfort they find in these hose. Thev h«ve cushioi^ed foot eml they’re' heavyweight cotton for longer wear. Elaaticised toiM for anug fit and comfort white in men’s sixes lOVk tii 13. M..‘. ft/rHUlHtp-HmbmU I mnism BUDGET STORB THE PONTIAC PRESa MONDAY. OCTOBER 8, 1962 Modoo't 1M041 Mtinuiteii at 1,» t SOO po^nda tai4i, p 1« Motha can aeverefy < I at piano by daatroylng th ment'a telta. <. MSUOtoOpen Placement Unit NORTH SAGINA f Stniori Havtt Ch9nct to Look Over Service WAKEFIELD, England (AP)~ Privalc detective William Cooke cruieed gently along at the wheel of his ear. Suddenly a honw feU through the roof. SPECIAt FOa TUISPAY ONtYl Your Choke/ Mkt. fireiad Biaf ^ Nbt. rL Hal Daia ^ 13*lba «"• SHaad Baaaa, I Mm. .i^iaii aai Braasit Ubi. r-OhnkBolopa 3HiM. Fraili Pork Naekt Tor the flrat time In ,th I of Michigan State Unlveralty Oak* I land, aeidoTa will caat an eye on I poat*graduatkm Joba tomorrow. The occasion is a pt-acquainted ■ iruiwiiivm be held at I 4 p.af.r;Boom 195, mice Building. Horse Kayoes Cruising Auto The new, $2,809 car was reduced to junk. The horse wa Cooke climbed out with nothing worse than a bruised arm. The horse bad bounded over a six-foot fence separating its paddock from the road. Its owner, Susan Dixon, 18, bought him only 24 hours before the Incident Sun- WASHINGTON (APl-Tlie Air Force has banned tobacco companies from givli« free cigarettes to its men in service hospitals, citing "ever-increasliw evidence” of a link between smoking and lung cancer. The order, issued Sept 17, Stated that such evidence “can no longer be Ignored," an Air Force spokesman said Saturday. BRESCIA, Italy (AP)-The sexton of the local church, Enrico Tonati, 50. was ringing the lour heavy bells in the church tower for hioming service as usual Sat- The spokesman said the new ban will have no effect on personal gifU of cigarettes from In-dlvidnalB to service personnel in hospitals. Bells Hit Back, Snare Sexton A bell rope wrapped around one of hit legs and pulled him up with Ekicico waT left dangling head down and 15 feet off the floor. He shouted tor help until he lost When the bells failed to ring at noon, the villagers rushed to the Ike Slates Appearance PITTSBURGH (AP) - Formw President Dwight D, Eisenhower )( (oofi A drink i Century” ntmosphe jriivi'ss reservations STote 2-4563 163 N. Deorbom DOWNTOWN CHICAGO JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS WANTED HIGHEST PRICES PAID • we PICK UP FE 2-0200 I rONTlAC SenAF I comber of next year, said Bog-Istrar Hrirbert gtontonberg today. Most of these — i;n estimated U'd — will graduate in AprU, he said. To help the first MSUO graduates line up jobs before the final school days, the uMversity has set ip a placement office. The office will arrange lor Interviews with representatives of governmental agencies begtai-ning Oct. 17. A library of Job hilormatlon also wilt be made availaUe in a special room. No. 266, South Foundation Hall, where a professional staff member will assist the youny '-*■ The Tuesday session should enable all 1963 graduates to got in on the ground floor of the job market by knowing the placement services provided. Said Dr. Lowell £k-who doubles as dean of continuing education and placement director. Like Savings It Takss 61 Llttls At 6i TIhmss A Uftk SePti eeck mi emj emk eritt MU a pik of (rub k tim ... A gmieg emomi for d brighl, tamo fetmo . . . B/ SAVMO JkpMj Yo» AemmeUk PkpMy. AttSmUfi Aro Intmoi To $WfiU0Bf Poiord Dopotk tmmmeo Corpondoe National 1 Bank II ornon to inn You-wrm MomR shwho stfos Member Federal Depoeit Insurance Corporation IQSEmiRMU SUE J5S:. . ? f. / A' '■ i ," >1 mm m THE PONTIAC PRESS, " ' ' ' . ' '■ , ? MONDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1062 jy Shows Offering Double Story Lines By rVNTIHA I.OWKV AI* T»‘I<'vNI«»ii KimIIo Writer NEW YORK-A venerable show business device, usi'd particularly when business isn't MOod, is that of offerinR two tickcfs lor a single price. They arc called “two-lcrs" —two fer the cost of one. i. of this season’s minor trends which .seems to have cs-ped notice is the tc'levision two-r A numtx'r of ttie new shows are now serving up two stories— sometimes more—in a single episode. One of these is CBS' "Fair Exchange." a pleasant comedy hour pegged on the temporary swap of teen-aged daughters by an English and an American family. Each Friday the program shuttles smoothly between the merry goings-on in London and New York. If is really two well-integrated .shows. Then there is NBC’s "Sam Benedict.’’ which always has two— and sometimes morix—stories going at one time. Last Saturday there was the main story, one about a mad murderess in which Justi(« Oliver Wendell Holmes figured as the unlikely heavy. Than there was a minor and milder tale about a Chine.se restaurant keeper innocently selling liquor to minors. Both wetv neatly wrapped up at the end. The fir.st ephsotle of CBS' "The Nurses," suggested that this series, too, might juggle a number of medical and emotional plots and counterplots simultaneously. But last week’s show was a straightforward story about a working woman’s problem in adjusting to housewifery. The story even abandoned nui-sing and hiw-pital scenes and Its .stars had little to do. Cargo tonnage passing through the Panama Canal set a new record during 1960, 59,-2.58,219 tons. U.S.MiljtaiyStOI in Laos, Reds Claim military bases of the Savannakhet party (Gen. Phoumi Nosavan's right-wing faction) in lower Laos and other places to continue training this party’s troops and organize commando units." TOKYO W — Communist Nort)t Viet Nam’s officiai newspaper charged today that the United Stales and Its allies have "seriously breached" the Geneva agreement on Laos by keeping military, personnel in the Southeast Asian kingdom. . ★ ★ ★ The newspaper Nhan Dan, according to Hanoi radio, charged "a number of U. S. military men are remaining in Laos under the guise of diplomatic personnel or members of the U. S. operations niLssion and U. S. Information Service.” •Others ai’e scattered to various Michigan Airman Diet From Severe Beating FARGO, N.D. «l- Patrick Otis, 20. son of a Midland, Mich, man, died in a Fargo hospital Saturday after being injured tour days earlier in a fight at Grand Forks. Otis, an airman stationed at the Grand Forks Air Force Base, was found in an alley. His father is C. E. Otis of Midland. Boy Critically Injured in Fall From Bridge GREEN'VTLLE (B — A 9-year-old Greenvitle boy was Injured critically Saturday when he fell 20 a the under girders oi the North Lafayette Bridge over the Flat River. ★ 'it ir Officials of United Memorial Hospital in Greenville said Bryan Mahilch suffered severe head injuries in the fall. . Police said Brian and one of his friends were playing on the bridge girders when the accident occurred. Sinzibuckwud, meaning "drawn from wood," was the old Indian ntime for maple sugar. AMABN6 , PSORIASIS STORY Jan. 10,. 1960 - Pittsburgh, Pa. "Doctored for psoriasis 30 years. Spent much money to no, avail. Then used GHP Ointment and Tablets-for * weeks. Scales disappeared as it by magic- In 6 weeks skin completely cleared and clean. First time in 30 years. Thanks lor your marvelous products." This much abbreviated report tells of a user’s success with a dual treatment for the outward symptoms of psoriasis. Full information and details of a 14 day trial plan from Canam Co., Dept. 269 N, Rockport, Maas. AP Pho(or>i CHIU) FOrXD SAFE - Two .veiii-old Verna Marie (Cok.\i Kres.s e-Iulches her doll and stares wide-eyed at all tlK- fuss being made over her. .She wandered away, was found r her homo at Apiwmatlox. ' the next day, asleep in a field near her puppies who were v her. New Drive-In Opens Today Area Getting Second * Big Boy Restaurant The second Elias Brothers Big Boy Drive-in the Pontiac opened today on Telegraph Road just south of Huron Street. ★ ★ ★ The $200,000 building, under construction for four months, is a departure from the usual archiU’e-ture of the familiar Big Boy Restaurants, according to manager Ted Michaels. The stone and brick restaurant at ‘to S. Telegraph has a dining room with a capacity to serve 140 persons, Michaels said. Curb service is provided for 40 cars, with additional parking facilities for those dining inside. ★ ★ ★ , Michaels sfiid the drive-in, the 40th Big Boy in the Detroit Metropolitan area and the 47th in the state, will employ 50 persons. The restaurant will be open from 7 a.m. to 1 p.ni. Sunday Ihrough Thursday and from 7 a m. p.m. on Friday and Saturday. -A ★ ★ Michael operates the Big Boy Drive-in on the Dixie Highway at Silver Lake Road. Black Muslim Says Time Up for Whites PHILADELPHIA fUPD-Elijah Muliammed, leader of the Bhick Muslim movement, said yesterday that "The white man’s time is up on earth." it it it The Negro loader urged a crowd of 9,000 at a rally to "Stand up and fight like a man. Tlie white man considc-rs us all cowards. If you fight this will change.” He chapiclcrized the nonviolent demonstrations of the Congress of Racial Equality ((X)RE) and the Students Non-Violent Coordinating Committee, and the enrollment of James Meredith at the University of Mississippi as "foolish.” ★ ★ ★ Muhammed, who proelams black supremacy and favors establishment of a separate Negro slate, was guarded try liis '200-man security crew which is known as the "Fruit of Islam," The maple syrup industry brings important sums each year to Vi-r mont, New York, Wisconsin ata other states, hut Canada leads m volume. POWiRFUL NEW PIUNGER CLEARS CLOGGED TOILEIS in a Jiffy I HtVtn AOAIN that (Ich fMling whan your tollal ovarilowi TOILAFLIK- ToilM )nUnary ptuniiar* Jutt don’i Mat MOpar^. They permit eompretaed ilr ana wattr to eplmh back. Thin you not only hava a meH, but you loM tha vary ptaMuia you need to «apa.Tte (nil praaaura plowa through alogtinf maae and ■wiiUea it n. CM’t miaet * Muntt-tMitc CUP, pouaupmaium • 'MaiaMto.ittiruk at an* aNou ‘ KROGER LOWERS FOOD COSTS-IGIVES TOP VALUE STAMPS TOO! LOIN END PORK LOIN ROAST_____________» 43‘ HYGRADE'S SKINLESS BALL PARK WIENERS. . . .59* COUNTRY STYLE SPARE RIBS 45' SERVE n' SAVE BACON. . .59* EXTRA FANCY DAIRY BRAND HORMEL SLICED BACON . .69* KROGER BUTTERMILK VARIETY-SAVE 8-^ WHITE BREAD 16-OZ. • • • loaf SAVE 10--SUNSWEET PRUNE JUICE REFRESHING KROGER SAVE 16'-KROGER SAVE 9'-KROGER ORANGE JUICE............3 »ns H GRAPEFRUIT SECTIONS KROGER ORANGE-GRAPEFRUIT VITAMIN-RICH KROGER GRAPEFRUIT JUICE 8 FLAVORS- CHERRY a lEMON • UME • ORANGE RASPBERRY a STRAWBERRY SAVE UP TO 47‘-EMBASSY PEACH, PLUM, GRAPE OR PINCONNING CHEESE *“ 401 MEDIUM LB 59* SHARP IB 69* SWEET MILK OR BUTTERMILK BISCUITS BORDEN'S • GOLDEN HOMESTEAD , „ MARGARINE.................5 ctns 79* SAVE B'-BORDEN'S ICE CREAM CAKE ROLL. 1 tons69 no- SAVE 10‘ SALISBURY STEAK fr»tM MORTON'S DINNERS SAVE 29*i-WITH THIS COUPON BORDEN'S ELSIE ICE CREAM BARS IS-49 c ■ p Mull. North l*rn WITH THIS COUPON-GRANULATED CANE DOMINO SUGAR r5»49' C ■ d ttt Kroffir III PnnllMP M«U. 1 < ! SAVE 30*-WITH THIS COUPON SWIFT'NING 3 49 Cottpnn rralld at Kroaet hi I’otiUae Mall, North I’errr HI. MIranIe M I B l>r«i)fifln PIrIiih, Ifiilon Lakp and Oxford thru YnPi 0|.i ' n iiHi'i No * ^ •old I. dealer.. Limit One Capon Per P.mll, ' ’ j| mmmmirnmrmmmmmmmmm WITH THIS COUPON ! LARGE TIDE ! 25 C SAVE 8* PKG. DO YOUR CHRISTMAS SHOPPINO FREE WITH TOP VALUE STAMPS, THESE BONUS STAMP COUPONS WILL HELP YOU OET YOUR GIFTS FASTER. j STAMPS! I WITH THIS COUPON AND PURCHASE OF ■ URGE KROGER ■ Kroaer In rnnllae Mali. Nerth IVrr, m.. MIraele Mile, I ■ llraytan I'lalne, iminn Lake and Uilord thru Tue>., (let. I, None H •old to dealoro. Limit One Cnapon Per Pamlly. ■ mmmmmmmrnmimmuMmmmmmm ■ _ 50 iXTRA TOP 100 EXTRA TOP ■ ■ □ VALUE STAMPS □ VALUE STAMPS ■ ..... “ ‘ »' WITH THIS COUk)N AND $3 ■ PURCHASI OR MORI Ni ■ GREEN GIANT NIBLET’S CORN, plAS ! CUT GREEN BEANS, WHOLE KERNEL OR CREAM STYLE CORN 1 ■ wii viccnm 9ITLB V $kA|| ■ (.HAiR OR MORE RXCRPT BUR, ■ wonva nnvevan _ meal vrti CANS WLM MM I c.apr:r..°:rrr..M..h ! ^ , ..d^ kP ■ S I 5!' I *"'■•*''*’ <*«»'•■ Plain*. ■ Caaaan ralld at Rra»r la Pantlae Mall, ■ D**'’uii *pla1 ** ^k *^*"d*o 7*d' '**'^*'' ® ; ^"Lrr.?,;t'^'‘;:.v.;rmi!^^ i ............*...oe..aim ^ PrioPB and lipni! pffppllvp b1 Krofffr In Iho PoiiIIab MbI1< North ■ Mlr«#io .Milo, DroyloN PUIni, E Connom vnIM bI Krofor In PonIIno MnII. EB v\ THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 8. 1902 Guests Tour New Open house was held Sunday al the First Con-(•K’gatioml Chureh to insu^urate its dedication week. /Ifter a tour of the completed Imildinf’ i>uests had tea in the lower hall. Mrs. George Caches, president of the Women's Fellowship, poured for Mrs, Mac Whitfield (left), and Mr. Whitfield, West Iroquois Road, and Mrs. Elwood Bigler, also of West Iroquois Road, general chairman of the tea. Teeners to Sing for Club Vocal Music Clinic Set for City High Schools Women of poorest Lake Country Clul) will he cnlertainod liy The Carlbi)ean8 Wcdm'sday Oct. 17 during their monthly bridge luncheon. The Cnribbcans are a group of some 55 teen-agers from I’onliac CPnIral High School. They'll go native tliat afternoon, with costumr's, and in-.stmments as they Ireat out tlieir Latin Amc-rican rhythms. Social diairmati Mrs, Ricii-ard K. Reiter will provide special effects by creating a sandy beach, with swaying palms and a look of blue water- in the backgrormd. The rtnnual fall vocal music clinic is announced by the music department of Pontiac schools. A massed chonts of some 700 voices from Pontiac Centr-al and Poirtiac Notihern high schools will present sonte of the world’s finest choral se-U'Ctlons Nov. 5 in the Pontiac Northern High School gymnasium. Selections to he u.sed include spirituals, patriotic .songs attd Slate Benefit Sale The annual fall benefit sale at tht' Kplscopal Chur-chwomen of Christ Church Cranbrook is slated for Nov. 1 at the parish house on l.one Pitre Road in Bioomfield Hills. C.cneral chairman is Mrs. tichard Carter. Committee lomen include Mrs. Klroy iaitdbe.rg, Mrs. J. C. Brink-nan, Mrs. Duane Freese, Mrs. ■kiward Bollc, Mrs. Robert 'osner, Mrs. William Nern iml Mrs. W. A. Sutherland. The womeit of the church are busy sorting and marking the rtttrny items, from pots and pans to fur coats, that have Ireen donated by mentbers for the sale. rnents — from better dresses to blue jeans. There will also be household appliances, books, and many other items offered. In the past, well over a thousand persons have visited this semi-.'tnnual event. The Episcopal churchwomen will preview the clothing bargains during a lunclH-on fash-iott show "I’tiesday. Proceeds from this .sale will benefit many Oakland County service a variety of religious numbers. Hie massed choir and band will present the finale, Dr. Joseph E. Maddy's “Festival Finale.’’ The bands of Pontiac Northern — .50 membei’S — and Pontiac Central — 105 —- will be combined for the instrumental part of this number. Conductor for the massed groups will be George H. Putnam, supervisor of instrumental and secondary vocal music. Music directors participating in the affair are Ronald Bentley, Jerry Libby and Richard Morse of Pontiac Central; A. Michael Dempsey, Judith Parry and Eldon Rosegart, Pontiac Northern. Tickets may be purchased at the door, from music students or at the music office. Sorority Hears Talk Heritage Club Hears Talk on Mount Vernon County Nurses to Hear by Student Hospital Patliologist Mrs. Edward R. llansz en-lertaimsi members of Tlie ller-Itage Club Thursday. M(!mbers and guests heard Mrs. llansz discuss Mount Vernon, Georgi' Washinglon’s home, Illustrating her talk with slides. C.iH'.sts for the evening were Mrs. John .Sloan. Mrs. W.-ilter Obenauf and Mrs. James Roc Mrs. Francis McDowell Is November’s hostess. The Oakland County District Nurses’ Assoelutlon will meet Oct, 16 at -7:.to p.m. in William Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak. Dr. Jack Kavorklan, assistant pathologist at Pontiac General Hospital, will discuss ■'The Future of Cadaver Blootl Transfusions,’’ Born in Pontiac, Dr. Kavor-kian, who rec(>iyed his medical degre(> al the University of Mi<;higan, served a two-,V('ur pathology residency al the University Medical Center before accepting his present postion. Researcli on Ihe subject to be discussed was In-gun here in Pontiac, Professional papers on this topic have appeared in major pathology journals and were pres('nl(>d to Ihe New York .Stale Blood Bank As.so-cialion earlier in Ihe year. All registered nurses are invited to aitend the meeting. Esiinger-Partrick Vows Told Polled greens ami ciuulela-bra wound with while satin and ivy graced Ihe chancel of IIm' Blrminglmm ('hurch of Christ whore Karen Lee Par-trick became Mrs. Floyd L. Eslinger In a .Saturday evening ceremony. A reception in Ihe Micliigan Christian College, Rochester followed Ihe voes sistken before Brother Morris W. Womack. Parents of the bridal couple are Ihe Clarence H, Parlrlcks of RochMior and the Albert L. Eslingers, Birmingham. Styled along classic lines, the bride's gown of while spotlight satin featured a court train. A satin pillbox caught her bouffant short veil of French illusion. White chrysanthemums, miniature I’ost'-b u d s, Stephanotis and ivy comfiris^'d the bride’s l)ouqu('l. The Alpha Alpha Chapter of Pipsilon Sigma Alpha sorority met Thursday evening al Ihe Waterford Township home of Mrs. Elmer 0. John.son. Special guest of the evening was Gabriele Schwarz of Lune-berg, Germany, a foreign exchange student al Waterford Kettering High .School this year. Slie told of her home life and compared it with her pre.sent life us an American schoolgirl. Mrs. Johnson w.as installed ns vice president and Mrs. Ivdward Hummel as corresponding secretary. Plans were made for Ihe first rush p arty for new pledges to tx' held at the CInrkslon home of Mrs. Anthony Grand, president of Ihe sorority. (iuesis for Ihe evening Included Mrs. Paul Lnmpkin, an honorary member: Mrs. Harry Watkins, Mrs. David Wood, Grace .Sutton and Mrs. William Kay of Royal Oak. Mrs. Richard L. Cairns, matron of honor, appeared In a pink wool sheath dress with matching organdy overskirt and satin flower hat. Her cascade* bouquet included petal pink rosebuds and mlnialuis) B'ugi chrysanthemums. Wearing deeper pink dresse's of identical styling we-re bridesmaids, Mrs. Jarrell N, Vickers, Birmingham, and the brlde'groom’s sister, Mrs. Earl Baumurik of Farmington. Women Meet, Swop Plants, Conversation M e B'ranklln Howard of Berkley was iH'st man. Stalling some ’200 guests were Earl Buumonk and James Case, , The mother of Ihe bride chose a leal blue silk lw(>ed divsS and corsage of while cymbldlum orchids. Mrs, Eslinger wore champagne beige brocade and matching orchids. n b e r s of Waterford r h. Womans Hallonal Farm and Garden Association, met Thursday afternoon in lhr> home of Mrs. A. W. Emery on Dixie Highway. Mrs. Mark Stewart and Mrs Robert Ma-ItTDa were cohostesses. Plants of many varieties were exchanged and garden problems discussed. The Michigan Division WNFAG will sponsor a Dried Arrangenu'nlH Workshop, Oct. 18 In Ihe Community Adlvi-lles Building. Al)out'400 guests toured the newly completed First Congregational Church Sunday afternoon and had tea as part of the church’s dedication week activities. the John Ma^ole tours, using high school members of the church as guides, Mrs. Elwood Bigler, general chairman of the tea, was assisted by Mrs. Frank Kirby in charge of the kitchen. During the afternoon those presiding at the tea table were Mrs. Malcolm Burton, Mrs. Charles Andrews, Mrs. Dexter Craig and Mrs. George Caches. Others wi-re Mrs. Harold Gillow, Mrs. Arno llulel, Mrs, Donald McIntosh and Mrs. E. C. Russell. Guests included membeis of other churches in the Pontiac urea and city officials. Puzzled by Zigzag Eating Mrs. Sorority Sets Saturday Tea Mrs. Elmer Mcllebrand will open her Bloomfield Hills home Saturday to members of Ihe Detroit liraneh of Uimha Tail Delta. Sorority for the alumni tea. Prospective pledges will be introduced. Local members planning to attend include Mrs, Reginald McNichol, Mrs. William Jensen, Mrs. Charles Harris and Mrs. Robert Mc-Maken. Missionaides Plan Meeting Tlie Pontiac Missionaides will mi'ct at 8 p.m. Wednesd-day in .SI, Patrick’s Church, Union Lake. ; for I he November bcmdil sale will be discussed. All mission-mindi'd women are weleome. Pledge Sororities INvo Biriningbain girls re-eonlly pledged national soelal sororities al Denison University, Granville, Ohio, Nancy Drlnkmd, dmighter of Mr, and Mrs. William Drinkard picgixl Kappa Alpha Theta ami Susan MeClanthan, daughter of the .lohn McClanthuns Is a Della Della Della pledge. Bolh girls are freshmen. Alumnae Unit to Meet The Dale Partrk'ks of Carlisle, Pa,, eume for his sis- , tor’s wedding, also the brlde-gnsmi’s brother, Robert Eslln-ger, of Bangor, Malm'. After Oct. 20 the newlyweds win' ho at home oh Euclid .Street. * The North Suburban Chi Omega Alumnae will meet at H:,”® p.m, Thursday In Ihe hortu* o( Mrs. Rleiwml Me-Grath Ji*,, Wellington Drlvi>, l-'annliiglon. Guest speaker will lie Pal- mer M. Baken Jr., special agent for Ihe Fedi’iul Bureau of Investigation, tn charge of Ihe Delroll office, will be.Mrs. F. J. Fltzpalrlek of Berkley and Mrs. Edwin C. Keer of B'ranklin. 'L By the Emily Post Institute • Q; I am an American citizen but I was liorn in Germany and came to this country when I was 20 years of age. I am accustomed to the European way of eating, which is knife in right hand and fork in left Winners of the poster contest for this years FT A fair at Daniel Whitfield School were Debbie Olseon (holding the winning poster) of Bloomfield Town- ship; Pat Roy, West Bloomfield Township; and Rick Smith, Berwick Blvd. The fair will be held at the school Wednesday from 5 to 8 p.m. hand and not switching back and forth, which seems to be the custom here. I still follow this practice. I have been told that my method of eating is not correct In this country and that I should switch to the “American’’ way. Will you please tell me if my way of eating is considered incorrect table manners. A: Your way of eating is entirely correct here as well as abroad and you certainly need not shift to the awkward zigzag method of eating which even here is not seen at the tables of fashionable people. Q: Recently my husband’s cousin and her husband and their daughter came to this elly from the West Coast for a visit. They spend a week with us at our house. Yesterday my husband received a note from this cousin thanking him for the hospitality shown them while they were here. The note was addressed to my husband alone, and although she did make mention of me in Ihe note, I felt rather put out over this as I was Ihe one who did all the work and think Ihe note should have been sent to me — or al least to Mr. and Mrs. Wasn’t this Women s Section Tell Husband Divorce OUT Speak Up About Rival! By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: About two years ago my husband started seeing another woman. She is younger than ABBY improper? A; Corrcclly, Ihe bread-and-buMer note should have been addressed to you or to Mr. and The Emily Post Institute cannot answer personal mail, but all questions of general interest are answered in this col- 1, and single. My husband didn’t have the courage to come right out and tell me about it, so he left her I e 11 e rs (addressed to his place of work) around where I would be , sure to find them. When I read the letters I was broken-hearted because we have a lovely family an^d I thought we were happy. This woman writes about “wailing for the day when we can tell the world about our love.’’ Abby. I would, die before I would break up my home. I haven’t said anything to my husband about it, hoping this affair would die out by itself. If I wait patiently, and keep praying, do you think he wlU get it out of his system? WAITING AND PRAYING It seems he has difficulty awakening in time to make this early morning class UNLESS and UNTIL his mother makes a long distance call to get him up. (They live about 2(X) miles from his university.) This student sometimes phones his parents the night before and reminds them to phone him in order to make his 8 o’clock class. BOTH parents have master’s degrees in education. What is your opinion? TELEPHONmS “Jesus, Gentle Shepherd, hear DEAR TELEPHONITIS: T think these people must have stock in the telephone company. DEAR ABBY: I loved the prayer, “Slow Me Down, Lord,’’ which you published in your column. Speaking of prayers, when I was a little girl my mother felt that, “Now I 1-ay Me Down to .Sleep,’’ etc., “If I Should Die Before I Wake,’’ etc., was too depressing for a child. So she wrote the following prayer for me to say each night: Guard thy little lamb tonight. Through the darkness be thou near me. Keep me ’til the morning light.” I believe many mothem would prefer that their little ones say a prayer like my mother’s. You have my permission to print It. NAOMAW. DEAR NAOMA; Many thanks for the revised version of “Now 1 Lay Me Down,” etc. If I were to suggest an “improvement” on a prayer, 1 fear the ecclesiastical ceiling might fall In. But I agree, your mother’s prayer is more appropriately worded for a child. What’s on your mind? For a personal reply, send a self-addressed, stamped envelope to Abby, Box 3365, Beverly Hills, Calif. For Abby’s booklet, “How to Have a Lovely Wedding,” send .50 cents to Abby, Box 3365, Beverly HlUs, Calif. DEAR WAITING: NO! While you are “waiting and praying,” your competition is building Iximhs in her basement. Tell your husband you know about the other woman, that you love him, refuse to share him and will not tolerate his double life. Tell him divorce is OUT — and let him know you mean it! DEAR ABBY: A relative (an only child) is an ”A” stiKlenf. He has an 8 o’clock class on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. 65 Present at Brunch Sixty-five members of Ihc Woman’s Soi'icty of fhrislian Service of Central Melhtxlist Church, attended a brunch Thursday in Fellowship Hall on M5‘). Members of the Jean Bag-nail Circle were hostesses and .... Shanks Circle, with Mae White, chairman, (he L(’ served. Assisting were Mrs. Allen Palmer, Mrs. W. S. Dawe, Mrs. Lois Majoros, Mrs. William Lacy and Mrs. P. G. Latimer. Mrs. I-alimer gave the program on "The Rim of East Asia” and Mrs, Percy Jones led devotions. Mrs. Walter Bumingham and Mrs. Baker told of home i duties. Newlyweds on Trip, Go to Niagara Falls Retired Teachers to Meet Oct. 17 Tlie First Free Methodist Chureh was the selling for Ihe Saturday evening vows of Marilyn Kay Rice and James F. Sholte spoki'n before the Rev. Cart Koerner. Receiving with the newlyweds in Ihe Knights of Pylhlas Hull were I heir par-cnl«, Mr. and Mrs. Homer J. Rice of Blaine Avenue and the Otis L„ Shelles of Waterford Township. embroich’red lurquoisi' silk ereiK' dress tor Mrs. Rice and a royal blue sheer wool sheath diess for the mol her of Ihe bridegroom. The Pontiac and Vicinity Retired Teachers will meet at Michigan State University Oakland at 5:30 p.m. Oct. 17. Reservations for the 6:30 dinner will be through next Monday. Pink swcelbeait roses, while carnations and ivy, arranged in a cascade, were eurrled by the bride, gowned In floor- I e n g I h while Chantilly lace over laffela. Her fingertip veil of Illusion fell from a doulile tlarn. AltItxHl in romance Itluc lace over taffeta, Mrs. Kenneth B. Young, irmli'on of honor, carried azalea itink curnallons. The lirldcsmalds. Mrs, Lamvn II Rlct« and Mrs. Daniel Mc-Geuchy of Walcrford, held On Ihe esquire side were be man Kenneth R. Young and uahers Lauren Rico, (he bride’s Itrolher, and Jami's Shea of Flint. The couple will live In K<'e-go Hiirbor after tbelr honey-imxm at Niagara Falls. (,'orsages of while enrnallons : and ros(>s complemented an Marilyn Kay Rice, daughter of the Homer J. Rices of Blaine Aveunt exchanged vows with James F. Sholte, son of the James F. Shakes of Waterfotd Saturday in the First Free Methodist ChunJV MRS. JAMES F. SHOLTE bv; /. / THE PONTIAC PRESS MONDAY, OCTOBEU 8, 1902 ^ » . ■ ■■ ■ * V. ■/ ■ • . /. Reserves Off on Missions L Ih lIoiMted Into Car^o Plane at Metropolitan Airport. r.' ' H wa« a gray Friday morning ’T* at Metropolitan Airport. Ground* „ i'. tog awirled around atill projaillors at the Michigan Air Guard apron. » 1 • Above the tog tloatcd ^ heavy S * overcast. ' ' - A Jet engine tired with a bang. Air and fuel whooshed through its body. The high-pitched whine rose to a howl. The tirst gray shape trailing a blazing torch hurled into the sky. That was tli« beginni^. For 500 officci’s and men of the State Air Guard - many from 'the Pontiac area — it was part of the quiet war*iit readlne.ss which is fought by reserve men and their families throughout the nation. Their mission: Aerial reconnaissance and maintaining the reconn Jets. Their destination: Kl Paso, T«*.. Pontiac Presa photographer Kdward Noble went with them. In this largest peace-time deployment test of the State Air Guard, 32 n>connalssancc jets streaked over the overcast to their target. i:ieven C97 planes followed with the ground troops and materiel which would keep those Jets flying. That afternoon the first plane lowered onto the sunbaked runway at Biggs Air Force Base near El Paso. Ah the group HCUU-d down to and maintenance operatlonH, Honie men stayed on duty, some lilt the saek. some toiind nearby Juares across the border in Mexico. Among the Juarez tourists were Maior Ildwin G. Pipp of 3756 .Shallow Brook Road, Bloomfield I tills, and M. Robert J. Winters Jr, 2350 Old .Salem Road, Auburn Heights. Their booty; Mounted steer horns. ♦ ♦ * At tile base. Airman Second Class ike Purton of 777 N. Woodward Ave., Bloomfield Hills, was checking out % jet’s instruments with two other state guardsmen. Tlicir turn for Jurarez came inter. * ★ ★ Bv .Sunday night, Brigadier Gen. Budd Marks, chief of the guard, had declared the mission a success. Planes and crews returned today to their state base, eheir loads ilttle heavier with souvenirs. Squadron Leader Major 1 I Wooden of Livonia Overlooks Operations. Portholes Hide Seven Cameras. ' C97 Prop Frames Jet at Take-Off. Bloomfield Hills Airman Mike Purton at Cockpit. In Juare*—Bloomfield Hills MaJ. Plpp and Auburn Heights Lt. Winters. Your Choice Vs Off! bize 28x36 30x40 30x44 30x54 36x48 36x60 Reg. Price 2450 29« 3450 4500 4500 5995 Slat, (iuiril C97h Are UnNl Up Aitalnsl Ilackdrop ol K1 IW« Mountain.. SHOP AT EITHER STORE - EASY CREDIT TERMS — AMPLE FREE PARKING Door Mirrors 16x56 2250 16x68 2750 r«m» r,*n ». N»kl* jEJCOisroiwiY I f-amiture ! P03STTIAC I a SI a. aAoii»4A.w • vm n-r»cn SXJ:pXJReBjA^3Sr| furniture t)RAYT03Sr ^ktsAB mxiai Kw-v. • o*. Gunpowder Charxe Instead of Compressed Air Starts Jet’s Engine. THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1062 The following are top prices covering sales of locally gmwn produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of Monday. Produce NEW YORK (AP) - The Stock looked upon by Wall Streeters as Market moved unevenly early to- ApplM, mb, bu.............. ApplM, Britain’s chief negotiator with Europe's Common Market sought concessions todhy for six Commonwealth countries, l| be very light. The building material issues, long with most other major grotjpt. performed indifferently. Weekend news included an estimate that building contract awards likely'^ rise to a record next r, but this had no apparent early affect on prices. Opening Bond Mart Calm NEW YORK (J) — The bond mar-1(01 was iM'calmed at the opening today. Acllvily was quiet both in over-the counter dealings of U. S. Treasury bonds and in corporate bond trading on the New York Stock Exchange. I over-lhe-eounter . dealer led the big majority of gov- unchanged. A gains of 1/St or 2/Sfi. Price changes were almost as limited in the corporate market, and in only one early trade did the fluctuatiim amount to as much as one half point. The Northern Pacific .Is of 2047 gained that much, moving up to 57'i. Detroit figures Only 5.4 Pet. of Workers of the volatile issues which have been volume leaders in recent weeks. Undeb pbessure Korvette continued under pres-iire because of its disappointing earnings and its stock fell % 28',4 on an opening block of 13,400 shares. It erased the loss and fractionally. IBM was up V/4 at the opening, then trimmed the gala considerably. Polaroid held a gain of about a point. Xerox tell a point to 143*/] on an opener of 1,2IM shares. DETROIT (UPli - The Michi. gan Employment Security (^m mission reported today statewide unemployment dipped to 140,000 at mid-September, the lowest Jobless figure since the peak auto-building year of IKiS. MESC, in its preliminary 1 of unemployment for the period from Aug. 15 to Sept. 15, said the number of persons out of work at the end of the period represented only 4-9 per cent of the state’s labor force. six nations of the Common Mar-ket following last month’s Commonwealth conference in London, Edward Heath sought changes for India, Pakistan, Ceylon, Ghana, Nigeria and Tanganyika, who are ed about their future if Britain enters the European trade Uoc. The volume lender in early dealings was Rhodesinn Selection Trust which optmed unchanged at 414 10,000 shares and traded later 4‘1h on a block of 7,100 shares. Detroit an was placed at 74,000 or 0.4 per cent of the work force. Outstate unemployment stood at 00,000 or less than 4.4 per cent of the labor foree. The three, he said, w ere fright-ted about the effects 6f the application of the Common Market's joint external tariff on their trade. WANT PACT . . ................. The three, he said, want negotiations for a comprehensive trad agreement started as soon as Britain is in the Common Market common market tariffs on their products withheld until an agreement is concluded. The The New York Stock Exchange national unemployment average at the last report was 5.8 I of the work force. Return to shutdowns for the 1963 model changeover helped drop the employment figure in Michigan j from 238,000 or 8.8 per cent of the labor force to 140,000. Max M. Horton, director of the J ME.SC, said the labor force drop-• ped slightly at mid-September be-;• cause many students left summer k Jobs to return to school and sea-' sonul agricultural workers de-, parted from the state. FOIXOWS JFK’S FIGURES The preliminary report was released only hours after President Kennedy had made reference to Michigan’s progress in curbing unemployment during his whirlwind visit to Detroit, Flint and Muskegon Saturday. Kennedy said Michigan's unemployment rate was lower than the national average, under five per cent, before the figures had been released. However. Horton denied that the MF2SC furnished the President with a special report. News in Brief A $I7S stereo record player and a gun were stolen from a home at at 1385 Newman Road, Orion Township. Frank Kopecek, ported to the sheriff's department yesterday. was taken from his car yesterday while it was parked in a lot on Maple Street, Melvin Davis. 21. of Detroit, reported to Pontiac Police. Britain for Few Changes Resuming r The reason, although apparefntly he did not say so, is that the three regard the role of associate beneath t heir new dignity as independent nations. Heath was said to have suggested that an alternate arrangement could accommodate delegation Said Heath proposed adjustments In the vauge trade agreement which the Common Market Ms have promised tor India, Pakistan and Ceylon. Heath said the developed Commonwealth nations, such as Canada, Australia and New Zealand feared Common Market countries might become self-supporting in foodstuffs which are their main exports and depress world prices. lie said Common Market negotiations thus far have touched on haU the interests affecting the developed Commonwealth nations and that the whole i>rob-1cm is not yet clear. The three African Commonwealth members, Ghana, Nigeria and Tanganyika do not want the proferred status of overoeas as- High Court to Hear Pilot's Bias Charges WA.SHINGTON iP-The Supreme Court granted today a hearing to Marlon D. Green, a Negro who complained he was discriminated against in his efforts to get a Job as a pilot with Continental Air Lines, Inc. Green, a resident of Lansing, Mich., and a pilot with the Michigan Highway Department, said Continental in an examination at Denver found he was qualified but » not given employment. Four other applicants who did not meet Continental's qualifications were given Jobs, he said. nentnl to enroll Green at flrst opportnnity In Its training sehool. The c( I order was over-turned, however, by the Colorado Supreme Gout t. It ruled that only Congress has jurisdiction to legislate concerning racial discrimination by employers engaged in interstate commerce, such as Continental. Several windows In two Waterford Township elementary schools were broken by vandals over the weekend. Damage was estimated at $134. Six windows at the Burt School, .581 S. Winding Road shattered. A 39 by 40-inch window was broken at Lotus Lake School, 6455 Harper St. Counsel for Green in appealing to the highest tribunal said if the Colorado court decision is pcimit-ted to stand unchanged, it "will undermine the Jurisdiction and excellent work of the 20 state anti-discrimination commissions that are affectuating the American ideal of equal employment opportunities for all.” Chile Student Killed Rummage Hale: Thursday, October 11, 1962, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. First Methodist Church of Birmingham, West Maple at Pleasant. Snac Bar and Free Parking. —adv. VALPARAISO, Chile (UPI)-An 18-year-old student was killed and persons seriously injured yesterday when a car swerved a column of 1,500 students and workers on their way to pray for the success of the Ecumenical Council in Rome. Authorities said the car’s front tire blew out. p in the Com- ATUNTIC CITY. N.J, (UWl-Gardner Cowles, president and editor of Look Magazine, anid today the Conunon Market's danter domination is Khrushchev to panic. Speaking at the 44th annual oen-vention of the Amaican Gaa Association. Cowles said the uniSoa-tion of Europe is a “tar more spectacular far more ntdtfnt process than anything happenkiK in the Communist world today." CowiM said it Is gelag forward at a foster pn«e than 4>v«b the most ambitions e( Ms | i 'if By ROGER E. HPF.AR (Q) “At M. I am looking to and will need more Income. I purchased El Paso Natural Gas at 30 rived last night for today’s 104i(iir discussion with Admiral Hatty ]>. Felt, commander of Pacific foncfH. land other area commanders.- j, Rnmniage Sale: First Presbyterian Church, Birmingham, 1669 W. Maple. Tliiirs., Oct. 11, 9 a.m. p.m.: Fri., Oct. 12, 9 a.m. - 5 p.m —adv. Wall Streefs Wondering Can Space Hike Mart? Grain Prices CBICAOO ORAIN ^CHICAGO, Oct. I (AP)~Opcnlnt ^hcct m ..... 3:1 S :: I.IW« Mcy ... 113^ , i By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK-Can the astronauts pull the stock market up with them? Will tax loss selling, just around the corner, raise volume if not prices? Can good earnings reports especially of of the utlUtlcs in growth a conservative investor back? U. S. Action Leads to Drop in Grain CHICAGO (ti - The iiriccs ol grain (utuivs moved gtmerally lower In moderately aetlve early dealings today on the board of (rade. Thci Agiiculture Department an-noum^numt that It will begin sell-Ing government-owned com depressed all futures eontrnels In corn nnd l(Mses ranged to more thim one cent. Tlw government said sales will bo made at market prices, but not tho low levels that prevailed generally At harvest time In 1960 and 1961. Wheat drifted lower desplfe a government announcement that It would reduce eligibility reciulre-nienls (or price supimrts where the grain has lieeii damiigi-d by fl'OI||l. 307,0 M.3 m.o 300,7 M.7 tao.s _______ 300,3 M.o 133 0 314.0 :ii it ii |i lii;! \fA , . ^lOtO 30'< Itl DIvMcsii DoclorcA asl* tMlucor6%c BEDbCBb aotoiill^oa ’ M A m 9 As the market strives to make up its mind which way it’s head-1, and as most days find trading slow. Wall Street is looking fully M something that will make stocks more competitive again with other ways of investing money. of some companies with aerospace contracts already have recovered a nice chunk of their earlier price losses. Brokers aro hoping that more of the general public will be attracted. TRICK TO PICK e average investor the trick is to be sure which of the hundreds of possibly eligible companies, large and small, will land .i ¥ ¥■; 0 TclAKl 7» 30 30, lO’S 10% TA'r 'I |:y tracts. The government will pour billions of dollars into the space Iracc. for (he Investor th question; Will profits from any particular contract materially raise total earnings, especially of the big and diversified corpora- Brokers look for a large volume of tax loss selling this year as an aftermath of the drop in prices of many stocks since January 1. Persons who bought at prices higher than today’s can sell, using the loss to offset any gains from tore fortunate ventures. Naturally the brokers hope (hat such selling will be largely in-the form of switching. That is, money from sales (or lax purposes Immediately used to buy other that arc or appear to be bargain priced now. But Wall Street is aware that rommon stocks today have a host of competitors for any Idle cash. Various savings institutions are offering interest rates that still top the yields of many stocks— that Is, return In dividends as percentage of current prices. BONDS COMPETE Many bonds, corporate and govw rnment. return more at today’s prices than do lots of stocks. A lot of investors, big or small, who sold stocks durliv the market breaks In May and June are believed to have put their money then and since into savbiifo fnstl- 8PACE MAY HEUP That Is why some think the ai-tronauts who have captured the public’s fancy and enthualaiMn could lead the public back iMo buying stocks of companies whoia future is closely linked with ^ Getting them back Into i market may take some doing. One thing that could do the trick would be a sudden bit of good good news is in the works. It the public gets that idea, it will go for common stocks again. The fowler yields, compared to tavlnga or public than the hope for capMal gains—that is, the chance to aell stocks for more than it paid for Othora think at__________ ____ be Impressed by increased «4iill-Ings of many utIUtlea. Yleide to government regulation. 1 _____wn tend to he staid oom> pared to some industrials. Tt moosgoly I growth reasonably healthy general « omy In the next taw years, t Ings of these ulUltles should ttnns to gro«e~and, wlHi tael should the pricr of their st< /. gW44flA0iHVII» I THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. 0( TOPER 8. 1002 Pontiac, N^rby Area Deaths WILUAM O. Olh-HBIE JR. Service for William G, Guthrie Jr., 49, of 4490 Island Park Dr. Drayton Plains, will be Wednesd.ay at 1 p.m. at the Cont.s Funeral Home. Burial will follow in Crescent Hills Cemetery. Mr. Guthrie, a member of the Community United Presbyterian Church and an assistant master mechanic for Chevrolet, died yesterday at Pontiac Generai Hospital from a heart att/ick. Suiwiving besides his wife Kathryn are his father, William G. Guthrie of Pennsylvtinia; his moth->r, Mrs. William Pineo of Niagai a Falls, Canada; one son, William G. Ill at home; and three sistei-s. W. HENRY HALE Service for W. Henry Hale, 91, of 381 Mt. Clemens .St., will be Wednesday at l:;t() p.m. at the Huntoon Funeral Home. Burial will follow in Perry Mount Park Ceme- i retiree of Fisher LSmpher. I t;, Mtclilg Body' Division, died early today following a long illness. Surviving are three daughters, Mrs, Lillian Moran and Mrs. Evelyn Burt; both of Pontiac, and Mrs. Esther Mulholland of Illinois: two son’s, Leon of Qawson, and Gerald of Pontia^; eight grandchildren; and 18 great-grandchildren. •MRS. MAUI) S. NEWBOl'ND .Service for Mrs. Maud S. New-bound, 81, of 92 S. Francis St., will be 3 p.m, Wednesday at Rich-iirdson-Bird Funeral Home, Mll-foi-d. Burial will follow in Highland Cemetery. Highland. Mrs. Newbound died today at Pontiac General Hospital following brief illness. She was a menV r of the Central Methodist Church and an tionorary member of the Women's Society of Christian .Service. .Survivors include a son, Tliur-lan G. of Pontiac: a daughter, Mrs. Helen N. Brosted of Pontiac; a grandchild and a greatgrandchild. A brother, Floyd Jones of Milford, and dour sisters. Mrs. Walter Huff of Highland, Mrs. Fred Bush of Linden, Mrs. 0. J. Murphy, Detroit, and Mrs. Nina Wilkins of Lansing also of proposed alteration of boundaries o Ihe Madison school Dlslrlct. Oaltlant County. followln ~ Mlchlaan, by detachlnii owlnit deserfbed land, lo-wlt: TIN. RUI, Lot »33, Oakwood Acrea Subdivision, Royal Oak Township, Oakland County. land Coun School DlJlrlct, Oak I, Mlchlaan. and addlna th .............e LampTiere Public Schooli Oakland County. Mlchluai You are hereby notified lie hearlnir will be held e of the e Center, ^ Mlch- “'’ihe TamplTere 'pubiic"”sci - ■ Mlchlaan. .... .r:;: ‘r'c^kC ___ _____ of Education Drive. Oakland County ServI 1200 N. Telearaph Road. Pont laan on the SOth day of Octuoe. .. at 4:00 oclook p.m. to consider the a vlsablllty of the above described boun ary alteration. , _. The Oakland County Board of Educ tion will determine. 1. Whether the proposed altetallon boundarle- 2. The If order- Whether or not any personal or real property Is to be transferred and. if so. the equitable consideration thereof. Any Interested parties will be alye" an opportunity to be heard at tli time and P'«‘o*;>,Ji';ANTcOllNTV BOARD OF EDUCATION WILLIAM J. EMERSON. Secretary Dated at Pontiac, Mlchlaan this 27th day of September. A D. 10112 Madison - Lamphere >" 111 ii.r nv- of Oakland, le petition concern-Inji Beverly Lola Smith, minor. Cause No. **To Robert W. Smith, father of said minor child. . ^ Petition havina been filed in this Court alleulna that the present whereabouts of the lather of said minor child are unknown and said child has vl®J»‘«<{ a law of the state and that said child should be placed under the Jurisdiction of this Court. In the name of the people of the State of Michigan, you are hereby notified that the hearing on said petition will be held at the Oatland County Serv- MRS. HORACE WARING Service for Mrs. Horace (CKIessa l Waring, 81, of 15 Summit St., will be Wednesday at tlie Huntoon Funeral Home. Burial will be in Oak-and Hills Cemetery. Surviving are five stepsons, Lloyd of Pennsylvania, and Robert, Frank, Wilbur and Joseph Waring all of the area: three stepdaugh-Mrs. Marion Norman of Or-tonville; Mrs. Jane Perkins of Florida; and Mrs. Audrey Baynton of Milfoixl; and a brother. .MRS. EVEREST BARBER WALLED LAKE - Service f(7i Mrs. Everest tClotildc) Barber, 6(! of 1548 Quinif Drive, will be 10 a.m. Wedne.sday at St . Williams Catholic Chiireh. Burial will be in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery, South field, Mrs. Barber died early today In . Mary's Hospital, Livonia. She was a member of the Senior Citizens Club of SI, W'illiams Church. The Rosary will be recited at 7:,30 p.m. lomon-ow at Richard-son-Bird Funeral Home here. Surviving are two sons, Frank of Waterford and John of Walled Lake; two daughters, Mrs. Dolores Farnigia of Dearborn and Mrs. Henrietta McDermott of Walled Lake; and 15 grandchildren. will b« ‘ce C" 31ty ----------- lltn day of OcU o'clock in the onviuuu... »..« -• hereby commanded to appear personall: fnit'*rn "The Pontla'c Pre.«. a n^spape printed and circulated in eald Cmmty. WItneee. ihe Honorab^ the cltV"of Pontfac In said* County,' this 3rd of Octol - • iSeali le copy I r A.D. ltA2 DONALD E ADAMS Judge of Probate DELPHA A BOUOINE October 8, 1862 STATE OP MICHIGAN - In the Pt bate Court for the County of Oaklac Juvenile Dlvlelon. In the matter of ^•’e ^|^'imon^con^er To Robert W. 8ml Stale of Michigan, you are hereby notified that the hearing on raKI petition will he held at the Oakland County Herv-lee Center, Court Hou»e Annea, In the 18tX day o" October A D, l»6i,' at 1:30 he'reby commanded to appear personally at said hearlnii It being impractical to make personal service hereof, this summons and notice shali be served by liubllcotlon of a copy one week previous to said hearing In The Ponllac Press, a newspaper printed and circulated In said County Witness, the Honorable Donald E. Adame, Judge of said Court, In the City of Pontiac In said County, this 3rd — y of October A D IM'2 day of Oc Mean ' To William ScoU Krei Petition having been Sls1.'f''Df.'th“er *„r, are unknown and said cl BERTRAM II. (iOKUON WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP -Service for Bertram H. Gordon, 71, of 9506 Thames Blvd., wall be 1:.30 p.m. lomorrow at Vooehees-Siple Funeral Home, Pontiac. Burial will follow in Oak Hill Cemetery, Milford. Mr. Gordon died unexpt'cledly .Saturday, He was a retired depot foreman for the Railway Express, Ponttae. Surviving are his wife. Eta. a son, Bertrum of Tamp^a, El', Jo.seph Gronski of Detroit and William Gronski of Toledo, Ohio; two daughters, Mrs. Stanley Lewandowski and Mrs. James Marino, both of Detroit; 14 grandchildren and six great-grandchildren, MRS. frank MYl S LAPEER — Serivec for Mrs. Frank (Pearl E.) Myus, 69, of 4.59> Genesee Road, will be 3:30 Wednesday at Ihe Baird-Ni'wton Funeral Home. Burial will be in Mount Hope Cemetery. Mrs, .M.vus died yesterday in Lapeer County General Hospital afier an extended illness. A former school teacher, she had been aelive in Farm Bureau and 4-H Club work in Lapeer County and also liad served as seerelary of Ihe Lapeer (’ounly Cooperative Board. Surviving besides tier husband are a son, (,'liarles of l,.apeer daughter, Mrs. Hai-old Jardine of Troy; two brolhers, Dewey Lamoreaux of Lapeer and Phillip Lamorenux of Anchorage, Alaska; two sisters, Mrs. Isadore Phipps of l.apeer and Mrs. Martha Lang of Snull Sle. Marie; and seven grandchildren. Brandt Proclaims West Won't Abandon Berlin From Our New* Wireo BERLIN - West Berlin Mayor Willy Brandi, just back from seeing President Kennedy in Washington, said today if Soyie;! Premier Nikita Khrushchev wknis war over Berlin “he will get it." The President of the United States and his administration are determined down to the last consequence to stay in Berlin and defend our mutual freedom," Brandt vuid. Brandt ap|>cared at a newt* eonferenee wh e r e he read a statement he prepared In a weekend of Intm the United Slates Haliirday. He hinted he was expecting a ma,)Or development over Berlin in he next two or three weeks but ■efused to elaborate. * ★ A Meanwhile, West Berlin newspapers demanded Western action, TRAVELING SMITHIES—This is a familiar sight in most Oakland County riding stables. Kenneth Taegue and his dad "Chuck’’ go about tlic busintbss of shoeing horses. Recently Ihe No Chestnut Tree for Him quiet-spoken faiher has lieen fitting correcllve slioc’s to sliow and parade lior.ses, as part of his business of shoeing from a pickup truck. Smithy Travels County ELLA MAE BELL LAPEFiR — Service for Miss Ella Mae Bell, 76, of 483 Norway Lake Road, will lie 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at the First Church of Chlrst here. Burial will be in Stiles Cemetery, A Lapeer County school teacher for .30 years. Miss Bell died yesterday after a long illness. Her body iil be at the Bali-d-Newton Funeral Hiime until noon Wednesday. Surviving are a sister, Eliza, and H brother, William, lioth of Laid several nieces and nephews. I.VNORA I,EE DEMKER By REBA IIEINTZEI.MAN I ford, drive inlo a riding slalile. The old gray mare just "ain't Pnvale barnyard, the hors. MRS. JOHN (TIAMBERLAIN AUBURN HEIGHTS - Service for Mrs. John (Emma) Chamber-lain, 77, tormerly of Auburn Heights, will be 1;30 p.m. lomorrow a( die Moore Chapel of Spark.s-Griffin F’uneral Home. Burial will follow in While Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy, Mrs. CTiamberlain died Saturday in Ml. Carmel Hospital, Detroit, fler an illness of .several months. .Surviving are five .sons; Robert, Melvin and Orville, all of Auburn Heights, William of Jacksonville, F’la. and Harold of Berkley; three! aughters, Mrs, Irma Duvalia and ■VI rs, George Phelan, Ixilh of De-roit, and Mrs, Don Moran of KFIF.GO HARBO R— .Service for|j-|.,|.|{xi()n; three sisters; a broth-Lynora l^e Deniker, 1-year-old L,.. 21 grandchildren and . 12 great-daughter of Mr. and Mr s. Erne.sl Deniker of 3070 Cass Lake Road i will bt' 2 p.m. Wednesday at D.E, HAROLI) J. SCHONFELI) SR. Pursley Funeral Home. Pontiac. l.Ml.AY CITY—Service for Har-Burial will follow in Perry .Moun old ,I. Schonfeld Sr., 66, of 215 Wes-Park Cemelery, Pontiac. lion .St., will he 2 p.m. tomorrow at The baby died Siituniay after aMnj,. Hrotliers Funeral Home, brief illwss. [Burial will follow In Imlay Town- what she used to be. She's being filled for special orthopedic shoes by a traveling village smithy from the back of his pickup truck. A 1 When Chuck Taegcr and his stm Kenneth of 30.50 Haley Road, Mil- Ihe ground in anticipation. Although he gels almost ns much (tone, Taegcr is a fur cry from Henry Wadsworth laiiiglel-low's mighty smithy who stood under lliiil spreudlng ihesliml tree so ninny years ago. He is slight in staUire bill his Warn Customers About Unethical Contractors In the face ol increasing com- added, plaints from customers about some healing contractors in this area, Roben F. Hawkins, cily healing inspi’ctor, lixlay warned the public to check qualifications of contractors before purchasing equipment or having work done. .Surviving besides lier parents an three sisters, Nadine, Linda and Kathleen, and a brother. William. at home; and griindparenls, Mr. and Mrs. Alva Jones of Hopkins and Mrs. Myrtle Helgeson of Onaway. MR.S. MAX GIBBONS FiLBA TOWNSHIP - .Service Mrs. Max (Clara) Gililxins. til. acv of Pontiac in said County, on the mil (lay of October AD. 1962. ai 1:39 0 clocli In Ihr afternoon, and you are hereby comininded to appear pereonally at eald hearini. It ^ belnij Imprecllcal ^ to m»k notice than he eerved by pnblire fneTn 'I'he l•onll«c”f■l" • nei pilnted and clrculaled Uj ..eld C. WItneee, the llonorehle Dorn Of ■i"8"i9e2|;!3:!1 W. Oregon Road, will he 10 :i in, lomorrow at the Ctnii'ch ol^ the Immaculiile ('onceptiiin, l.a j peer, Buriiil will lie in Mount Lor-elto Cemelery, Lapeci', Mrs. Gibbons died Siilurday a1 her liome of a licari alia. k. The Ro.sary vtill he recited at 8:30 p.m. today at Muir Brolhers F'tineral Home .Surviving are two sons. I.,\le ol Poughkeepsie, N. and Itohevl of (Mltimhiaville; two diiughters, Mrs, Mar,j()i'ie .Seramlln and Mrs, Doris Brown, both of l.iipeer: two hixilhers, Thomas Stacy of Lapeer and Rofx'rl SIney of Pontiac, and 22 griindehildren. ■fo pkopfuty owNFiiei, quai iriKi)| day of October A D 1962 < Beal I IA true copy! bepul IhU, 3r< DONALD r ADAMS Jud«e ol Probule DELPHA A BOUOINE ..ch.gun STATE OF^ MICHIGAN m the matter of the pe: Ina Daniel Joeepli iter No. 17739. To Joaeph Ree, father I 13. TIN RUE. Oell did ha> violated that «ald child the Jurledictlon people of the are unknovn and a law of the eta ahouid be placed of tide Court. In the name ... ...v ... .... ■tate of Michigan, you are hereby notified that the hearfni on laid petition will N held al the peklend County Herv-Ide Center, Court ttouee Annex. In the ?#ti ttoy^M*^SStoKer*A.a^“lw/' eTiilhl! d'elook Ih the forenoon, •np you are ntrebit commanded to appear pereonally at laid bearing. Jtt being ifflpraotlcal to make per-aonil aorvie* hereof, tide eummone and NOtlea ehall ba eerved by publication ol a bopy on# waak prevloui to ikld hei tng m Ma Pontlao Freae, a newepai ——e giroulated Ip eald Count -•I „ ________ -.1 eald Ct of October A.D. 1189. DONALD 1C, AOAMH .... .. gf .... ’ OekIencl’ Cam'll■ -' hereby notified Iliul « | ------. --Ill be held el Die tie Couidy Bchool Office Camime DrI ship Ci'metpry. Mr. .Schonfeld died unexpectedly .Saluiday in Community Hospital near AlmonI, He is past commander and lile member of Ihe Amerlciin Legion Post 135 and a member of Lodge No. 341 F'&AM, and Royal Arch Chapter. He also was a past president of Michigan Muck F'armers Association. A Masonic memorini service will lie 8:30 p in tixiay at Hie funeral honic. Surviving besides his wife, An-gcline. ai(> two sons. Jack and Harold ,lr, both of Imlay Cily: live grandcliildren; a brollier and sister. UII.LIA.M SK KI.EH ARCADIA TOWNSHIP - Service for William .Sickles, 79, of 3799 Vernor Road, will be 1:.30 p.ni. Wedne.sday at Muir Brothers F'li-neral Home, Lapeer. Burial will be In Melamora Cemetery. Mr. Sickles died yesterday after lengthy illness. Surviving are lliree daughters, Dal.sy of California, Mrs. Arlene Wlilinian of Davison and Mrs. Beatrix Rie.4 of Monirose; a brother, Thomas Sickles of Melamora; and four grandchildren. MRS. I.OUIS E. WEPPNER Ilir.llI.ANI) 'ITHVN.SHIP - Mrs. iLotiis (Coni M l Weppner, 81, ofi 11865 l,(iekwo(sl Blvd,, died ,vesler-| jday in Sparrow Hospital. I.ansing, I I lei- Ixxly IS al Sparks-Griffin F'u-, iieral Home, Pontiac, t Surviving besides her hushnnd |ls a son, Riehnrd of Lansing. ■We are fortunate to have many re.speelable and reliable healing eoniraciors in Hie Pontiac area," he said, "hut there are u.sually a r|u| every cornraunily that use unethical business practices. “I)« not use price alone as a yarilstiek governing yonr pros ix'cllve purchase of any material or etiiilpmenl,” lie warned. Hawkins said people should first delcrmine what they need and then see that the need is properly satisfied. tk ★ ★ Low priced items frequently are necomptinied by short life, and high operation and maintenance •osis, while high prices often indicate equipment may contain certain outstanding features not required by the buyer's needs; Hawkins noted, ■ET HATES “We heating inspectors liate to see someone ‘taken’ for more equipment than he needs," as much as hate to see a sloppy or substandard ,jol) done for a 'liargain' Hawkins offered Hie following rules for customers seeking a contractor for Ihe repair of old healing equipnicnl or buying and installing new equipment. I, Be sure the emilriietor is lieeiiseil under the Reeipnieiil Gas and (HI Burner Sntety Code. 2, Make him pro\-e lie is Hior-oiighly covered by liiihilily insur- arms are as sinewy as any village smithy's. For' some '20 .vetirs Taege wheeled Ids little truck around the counliyside in addition to his struct ion job. Then lie decided to really gel down to (he jot) of slioeing ttnd trimming full lime. That’s what he has done for the last five .vears. Me origitvtlly learned Ihe Irade at Michigan .Stale University. •A * * Packed neatly in the back of Hie I ruck is a good-sized anvil Ideh is lifted oiil on a stand. An eleelric forge fires up the soft coals that get Ihe shoes red hoi. Rasps, liiiinniers, ellp|><‘rs and I'lint made horseslitx' nails are all part of the e(|Uipiiieni for not only ordinary slioeing, but also for eiisloitilzed jobs. In some instances, lie |)Uls toe-A-eighls on parade horses to make Ihein life their feel higher. Or if one fool drags a liIHe d ix measured and correetive .shoes nailed 'on. Taegcr and ids 19-year-old son, will) graduated twim Milford High School liist June, shoe about liorstvs it week. lakes an hour and costs $10 is an ordinary .foil. F'or jobs such as snow shw's with s for winter, Taegcr charges hnee. up ) $10. • FI I A, lie" 1^1 rule, horses like 1o be shod, Tttt'gcr said. However, iiolh fallier tirid son e had Hie undignified exiieri- ■; .....i , lenee of being "howled over hack- tor ,s licensi'd „„ When lids happens - mil comes the tranquilizers-for Ihe liorse. Recently Kenneth got slammed 'in the moiilh liy an impalieni |mare, Iml said, "I'm lucky. I’ve still gol all my teeth in my head." 3. if the c( aneed by Ha lire the conlr. the Michigan Corporation and Se Commission. Jan. 1, 1963. Pontiac and Iher eommunIHes will lie refusing insltdialion permits to all healing eontraclors who don't have lids stale iieense, 4, Clieek Hie contractor's re|iu-Inlion by asking his olhc tomers In the art quitlily of ids work, NOT CAREFUL Hawkins said many customers don’t read contracts carefully, Hawkins lists Ihe following as necessary items in a eon!fact. Accident Casualty Remains in Hospital A Delridl man. injured m a Iwo-ir aeeldeni F'riday In Avon Township, was reimrttxi Imlay in .satisfactory condition al Avon Center Hospital. Ixmlie F. Bnrnuill, «5, Nlifleretl n broken eolliirbone when his ear was lilt l>.v a ear driven liy Frank E. Warner III. I». of 6110 N. Roehesler Road. Barnum told sheriff's (leiHities he pulled out from Tienken Road to make a Icfl liirn onto Roeliesler Road and failed to see Warni ■ar. Warner, who was .souHiliound Rochester Road, said lie a|)plied his lirakes hut was unalile to slop In time. Rochester Road Irtiffii has Hie right of way at the inter .section. about the! 1, Comiiletc information iihoiit he make, lype ami sl/e ol all ■quipment to lie installcH 2. Fjiuipmenl and its jnslallalion 11 should lie .sjielled mil in delaili 1 along with any guarantees andjnil, wuiTitnIies, ter School Chief to Speak to Orion Twp. PTA Unit ORION TOWNSHIP - S c h o o 1 Supt, A. A. Reed will he guest sjieaker at Hie Ih-oper Sdiool Par-■nl-Teachers Association meeting at 8 p.m. today at Ihe school. Reed will discuss the |)roposed $2-million bond issue to he voted the district electorate Dee. High Court Upholds Pay Television Plan WASHINGTON llfi — The Supreme Court reliwed ItHlny tt» Interfere with plaim lor a large (teale tryout ol pay televlaton. The tribunal rejected wHhoiil euiiiinent an appeal by a group of llienter operalors who have sought to liloek Ihe trial «|K^ra-tion. Ztniitli Radio Corp., owner ol a pat*‘iil on a phonevlsion system, planned a ihree-year experiment in the Hartford, Conn., area under Federal Communlea- Intlivtdual programs would cost TV set owners '2.3 rents to with most offerings In a raligtt of 76 rents to $1.60. No eommerelals would he broad-easi on Ihe system. Instead of another addition to a pile of paper protesU, to counter the latest Communist challenge to Western Ireedom of movement In Berlin. Two newspapeir wigKesIt^ that the Western powers bar Soviets from West Berlin In retallntlon for the refusal of East tSerman border guards to let a British )r East Berlin. The ambulance was barred Saturday when it attempted to go to the medical aid of a West Berliner who was shot at a tunnel entrance on the East side of the wall. He was helping refugees escape. It is nut known whether he died of his wounds. It was reiMirted in lAtndon that Ihe Western allii>s plan new protests over the burring of t h« anibulances. The Brilisb Foreign Office announced that American, British and F'rcnch commandants in Berlin are considering follow-up action. * * * Three East German border guartis et^eaped into West Berlin under cover of darkness, West |X)-lice reported today. MONTGOMERY WARD CO. HEARING AID DEPT. If you con hear, but cannot understand, we con help you!! CALL US FOR A FRE| HEARING TEST... In our office or at your home. 682-4940 Ext. 233 BATTERIES, CORDS, REPAIRS ON ALL HEARING AIDS POMTIAC MALL : mill < yittbllHy III III. ont'il* ^i'*'''Edii III ildtirmln*: r Wh.lhiii t r boiinil.rlFii 1 1. Tin Ftfectli ord.mil; 3. WhHh.r Ol r«tl prAprrtv la •( an. the equiuli An, Inloreateil Named to Head PTA at Carpenter School Hire Handicapped, Employers Urged It pays to employ Hie handi' capped." That is Ihe messajic some 6,000 emplo.vers in Hie line area will receive in Ihe mull niim, .Itiii« joiiiiiy,| 0IU()N ’niWN.smi’ _ President during Employ - Hie - Handleappcd i .iiropoaed iiiFrAtioii of Hic C It I p p 111 c f Filomentafy Wcpk, which stal ls Itxluy. 'd.ie srlh. irsnafer, I School Piireiit-Teacliers Associa-; The material is being mailed by not »ny peraonti orh‘“” scliool year is ponllac office of the Michigan %o^1.id;i:nrihei?o1'rc*‘ J'-. , lEmploymem Seeurilies Commis- p«rnJr«iii be Sw'ving with her are Boyd Haga-'j,,^^' 1.. i,..,.i .1 Ih. iih,. vj,.p president; Charlesi A Great-West Life Annuity offers more value I Relax and enjoy a guaranteed income al retirement — a lif - A $1,000 scholarship check has been donalt'd by the Pontiac Area Junior Cliamlier of Coin-The week was piix lalmed loeal- meree to Michigan .Stale University Oakland. Presehling the cheek to Chaneellor 1), B, Varner (left) is, Richard M, Fitzgerald trighlt, Jaycei* vice (iresident and coehalrnian i)f Ihe Aug 4 Detroit Lions scrimmage game wlileti piwtded Hie lumls. Ltsikliig on is Jayrres Presidetil Wllllain J, Deal i.h The Donelson-Johns Funeral Home is a highly skilled and specialized group. Four registered and licensed personnel are alwoys available. Thus, you are assured of the interested competent service of a complete organization. Call the Donelson-Johns Funerol Home when the need oc.curs. You deserve ond should hove the finest service. It costs no more. (Phffne FEdkral 4-4511 (PmUntf Oh Onr^nmiiVa ass WEST HURON 8T. PONTIAC