The Weather VA+mmtr Urm Ptmui Partly Snnny, MM rasnas MPaifl' VQL, 188/ NO. 206 THE PRESS t...W ” ■-- 6. 1965 —8fr PAGES Home Edition PONTIAC PONTIAC. MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, OCTOBER Oil Is included UP BOOSTERS - Kan Morris (left), director of United Automobile Workers Region 1, and Calvin J. Werner, general manager of GMC Truck and Coach Division and 1985 chairman of the Pontiac Area United Fund, discussed campaign plans at a breakfast at Ted’s Restaurant this morning hosted by the UAW. Both labor and management officials attended. Say Labor Leaders UF Everyone's Job Labor support of the Pontiac Area United Fund campaign was emphasized today at a breakfast meeting hosted by the United Automobile Workers at Ted’s Restaurant, 2515 S. Woodward, Bloomfield Hills. * . * * The breakfast, an annual event prior to the United Fund kickoff, this year slated for Oct. 14, was attended by labor and management officials from the Pontiac area. Ken Morris, codirector of the UAW Region 1, stressed the importance of IMper cent Dixie Dems, GOP Join in filibuster on 14B Bil WASHINGTON Ufi — Southern Democrats take over from Republicans today a filibuster aimed at frilling repeal of a ban on union, shops. A veteran of several civil rights filibusters, Sen. Sam J. Ervin Jr., D-N.C., will captain the Dixie forces for the day as they try to block with words Senate ————-----------— Democratic leader Mike . . Mansfield’s motion to AMC Holds Price Line DETROIT CUPI) - Ameri-ran Motors todnH*^ n*IM'ir-ai Motors and" Ford in holding! ffie price line on its ISM model bring the repeal bill to the floor. The filibuster began yesterday under the leadership of Republican leader Everett M. Diritsen, ~iBd tomorrow OOP senators will hold the fort again. For this newly forged coali- AMC, smallest of the four Americdk autoihakeri, said it was reducing prices in a range from JS.70 to <132 AS compared with similarly equipped 1966 toodels, in addition to on layings from the 3 per cent reduction in the federal excise tax. However, some equipment that was optional last year has been made standard. Thus, the cost of. those options was tacked -4ato4faebaseprice-oftor — torn of 25 Southern tad Republican senators has decided to alternate dally efforts to ffflitratr toe White House-backed drive for passage. Administration forces have j||d#Hd*d to leave moat of the talking to opponents for the time being. Mansfield, their leader, skipped yesterday’s session to be in New York for the visit of Pope Paul VI. In Today's Press VM War Small U. S. unit is ambushed by Cong-PAGE 2. Report HR ator raps-.ca in California — PAGE If. Tiger Trade Detroit obtains Bill Motdmiquetto front Boston — PApE IS. ..ft .St ...» ...» .21 YTT-4-...» Sports ..........IMS Theaters ..........tt TV A Radio Programs tt Wtisra, Earl ......» i’s Pages 12-15 The bill to repeal section 14B of the Taft-Hartley law was passed by the House July 23 and It on President Johnson’s list of "mubt” legislation. Unions are anxious-to have toe Taft-Hartley law provision repealed, for under it Itstatea have made the union shop illegal. A union shop agreement is h "This community effort is the responsibility of each wage earn-Morris stated. "Labor’ share in toe drive’s success is estimated at nearly 50 per cent of the total <375,000 goal." ★ Sr A Brendan Sexton, director UAW Leadership Studies Center and breakfast speaker, told guests, “We in the AFLUIO have •ought to make voluntary agendas more useful toour* _hbors, to mi single annual United-way campaigns more effective, to make community planning more valuable, more realistic. OBSERVE TRADITION ‘In endorsing our United Fund campaign for 1965, I am sure that Afl-CIO officials and members through their community service activities as individuals, will observe a tradition now soundly established by giving intelligently and generously.” Calvin J. Werner, general manager ef GMC Track and Coach Division, and 1M5 UF chairman, praised officials for seeking a better common' by working together for “Thera is no room for partisan politics, ' ered by the on are required to Join a union. To crack a filibuster requires two-thirds of the senators present and voting, and supporters of the bill confess they haven’t got the votes to accomplish this. Dirksen said time is on his aide. Members of Congress are [fatigued and batttejraat'j” be said. “They want to go home.’1 John Glenn Welcomed to Hamburg Germany HAMBURG, Qermanylfl -Astronaut John Glenn Jf.; flew into Hamburg today from Berlin on the last leg of his weak-long German goodwill tour. He was welcomed by Mayor tag the possibility of Herbert Weichmann in k ceremony at tot Hamburg dty baU. Glenn flies to London tomorrow, accompanied by his wife, rapport os the part of labor for the 55 Pontiac Area United Faad agencies maintained by drive coatribatiou and payroll discord or racial and religious discrimination to enter into this humanitarian effort. • T W—* “There can be no success without vigorous participation, both financially and in terms of voluntary service, to insure that our United Fund agencies get the support they deserve need.” Historic Trip Over Pontff Returns to Vatican Sen. O'Brien Asking Romney Support on $ 1.2-Million Measure A $1.2-million appropriation to pay for higher than predicted enrollments at Oakland Univer-sitv and seven other state colleges and universities won preliminary Senate approval in Lan-sing yesterday/The bi 1 fl was moved into position for a final vote today. Meantime, Sen. Carl O’Brien, D-Pontiac, appealed to G«Vf Romney to lend his support to the bill. Romney vetoed a similar bill during the regular session of the' legislature. The higher education bill was debated as the legislative held its first night deliberations of the autumn session. If approved, funds will be allocated to the schools on a proportional basis to their excess enrollment over predictions made more than a year ago. O’Brien said he thinks the new bill will meet whatever objections Romney found in the old measure. INCENTIVE "This measure was promised to the schools as an incentive toward taking in extra students and easing toe load on the big three universities,” O'Brien added. “We fed "mem,to believe that toe funds would be coming even though the requests weren’t made ns part of the regular budget for higher education.” Other colleges arid universities that- would xhare in the appropriations are Eastern, Northern, Central and Western Michigan Universities, Michigan Tech, Grand Valley State and Ferris State. In mid-September, an attempt to override Romney’s veto failed in the Senate by a 21-13 Vote. . The appropriation committee chairman, Sen. Garland Lane, D-FUnt, said his talkd with ad-ministrative aides Indicated Romney would approve the cur-, rent measure. Should the bill in its new form " be adopted, It has been estimat-ed that Oakland University’ share would be between <100,000 and <200,000. Enrollment at Oakland University is up 36 per cent, jumping from .1,612 last year to 2,459 this fall. WARM PARTING - President Johnson uses both hands to clasp the hand of Pope Paul as he bade him goodbye after their meeting yesterday in New York. An interpreter stands between the Pope and the President. PeaceJoumey to New York Draws Millions Pope Telia World: Extraordinary Hour Not to Be Forgotten NEW YORK 0B—'With a '%od bless you all!" Popfc Paul VI today returned to his "spiritual city” at the end of his history- making bid for peace in the "terrestrial . city" of men and th^ir governments. “We shall never forget this " extraordinary hour,” he said in farewell. Anv estimated 3.8 million, the greatest outpouring in metropolitan annals, had acclaimed his to-and-fro passage, from one stirring scene US. Fighter Down-Peking . Claim Plane ! of 4 Over China Mainland TOKYO (AP) - Communist Chinese air force planes shot down a U.S. fighter plane over the China mainland today, Peking radio claimed. The Chinese-Ianguage broadcast said the plane was one of four American aireraft that in-truded over the mainland. It said the intrusion was into Kwangsi Province in southeast China at 12:28 p.m. Chinese planes intercepted the aircraft and downed the one, the broadcast said. The broadcast made no. mention of the pilot of the downed plane. It added that the three other planes fled. ‘MILITARY PROVOCATION’ Peking charged that the four planes flew over the mainland mission of “military "prov-ocation.” Peking claimed on Sept. 21 that a U.S. Air Force F104 jet in. the Gulf of Tonkin and Was shot down and*its- pilot captured. The United States said that plane had developed mechanical difficulty and went down in the Gulf of Tonkin. And in the chancelleries of the O7 P A f • llnations, powerful men weighed o/ o. Africans ^ in Railroad Disaster Foreign Aid Bill Goes to LBJ DURBAN, South Africa (UPI) — Rescue workers toiled through the night to free survivors from the twisted wreckage of a derailed work train in which at least 81 Africans were killed and 130 injured^ last night. Frenzied survivors killed sjwhite railroad manj and wounded another in confusion of rescue Qpera-tions. Hie South African railway system, after a recheck ofThe more than 1,500 workers who had been crowded into the work train, revised casualty figures downward from an earlier announced toll of 84 Africans dead and 133 injured. The derailment was described as the worst railroad disaster in South African history. Three can of the packed train left the rails it 0 p.m., but the accident went unreported for more than three hours. The slain white man, a signal-, man Identified ns W. Hartslief, 20, was hacked to death when fiebied to help "the Tnjufed, railway officials said. His assistant was attacked by a near flow over ««faan uioiwi berserk mob and hospitalized with broken ribs ana other serious injuries. The three can jumped the rails as the Natal north coast line train was en route from Durban to the African township of Kwa Mashu. For 2 Waterford Areas Urge School Bus Service The Water ford Township Board will send a letter to toe board of education, strongly urging additional sdhool-bus service for children of two neigh- The action wax taken list night fofiowing .separate appeals by citizens of the Hatchery and Cass-Elizabeto areas, who contend their children walk dangerous routes to school. The residents presumably will nuke a strong appeal fsr extra sobssi bus facilities at one sf the next two board al The board of education, which ag approached by dtiaena of the twoanas Sept. 3^ is weigh- ous walking conditions are encountered by their children — largely pupils of Pierce Junior High School and Lambert Elementary School. BOARD AGREES Board members were in complete accord with Supervisor James E. Seeterlin’s sentiments that additfonal bus service would be less expensive and more safe than sidewalks or gravel walkways. Spokesmen from both grasps eencarrcd after Seeter-Ifat rajffcf anflhrf- biUty of bonding walkways alaag toe two reads, characterised by uneven ter .... along with other suggested solutions. Last night, the two groups told township board that hazard- __________citizens may consider toe ppadbility of • special‘Ubessment district project for walkways, under which they would pay 90 per cent of the cost and thetownship the rest. • - dr * ★ Commending the Cass-Eliza-beth parents for their presentation of. the issue, Seeterlin asserted, "This (additional bus service) is the best solution for this particular area. SAFEST WAY BY BUS Addressing the Hatchery contingent, Seeterlin said, “I Would say the safest way to get the children to school is by mis. "That read doesn’t lend itself te walkways.’’ The Cass-Elizabeto residents went! into toe meeting favoring additional bus service, while the Hatchery citizens advocated walkways. ★ Devoid of atop sigps and traffic lights, the heavily traveled Cass - Elizabeth s t r e t c h h marred by iwo particularly dangerous spots, according to the parents. DANGEROUS SPOTS One is a steep hill which severely limits a driver’s line of vision, while toe other—In the same vicinity—is set off by .deep water on one side of the road arid swamp directly across the street-----? Seeterlin implied that a special election for construction of sidewalks te the township $3.2-Billion Measure Approved by Senate WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate gave final congressional approval today to the $3,218-Ibillion foreign aid money bill and sent it to the White House for' President Johnson’s signature. *.r, ,.I ..| The House passed the bill last Friday 204 to 127. -It pmvMo. <1.17 htilfam in military assistance and <2.048 billion for economic aid. The measure also includes <714,188,000torUwrpeace Corps, Ryukus Islands and support of international lending institu-tions, bringing the over-all total to <3,932,188,000. A ..4 The Senate-House conference restored .<50 million in economic cut on the Senate floor oil an amendment by Sen. Leverett Saltonstall, R-Mass. PUT BACK It also put back <25 million of an <82 million cut made by the Senate Appropriations Committee in funds for economic development loans. The compromise cut out the House ban on aid to nations whose ships go to North Viet Nam and substituted an amendment leaving np to the President any aid cutoff. The final aid total is <87 million less than the House voted and <142 million below the ceil-foreign aid set by Congress when it passed the au- wayfarer’s impassioned summon to quit war and lay down their arms. So did plain citizens. * * * ‘We must make our own the cause of peace,” he told « vast host of them, massed under the stars at Yankee Stadium. Serve it!” He quoted his Lord, ‘Blessed are the 'peacemakers." UN. SPEECH In a swift, day-long round of unprecedented confrontation, with the great and the many of America, with President Johnson, and before the United Nations, he pressed that same urgent exhortation. “ * “If yon wish to be brothers, let the arms fall from your hands,” he implored the U.N. General Assembly. He challenged it to make real its noble oath: "No more war, war never again!” He met also, in brotherly intimacy; with Protestant.-Ortho- -dox and Jewish leaders, and both he and they pledged mu-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) "To put this to the people by special election, I believe would be futile,” he said. -1 ' ♦ * . The last special election for sidewalks was defeated in ail 23 precincts, Seeterlin noted. Kress wnen U poSSCU UK sin .r lntarl SatfoiTBtn wveial mouths — ago. The aid total is <341,470,000 less than President Johnson requested from Congress, and <32 million less than Congress voWd lor aid last year. Pontiac Area Mercury Drops fo a Chilty 30 Jack Frost painted the town _ glistening -white wlicri he ar-rived early this morning In the Pontiac area. » ★______*_____ Temperatures dropped to a chilly 30 degrees, a new low for the season. The weatherman tomorrow will be a little warmer, with highs of M to 67. Partly sunny and mild is the forecast for Thursday. Lows will fall to 35 to 42 tonight. -« ★ A A Variable 6- to 12-mile-per-hour winds will become southeast 8 15 miles per hour late this afternoon and tonight. AHf p.m. the mercury registered a mild 53. No “Bug-a-Boo” Needed next summer bf the person who answered this ad: See for Yourself Preen Want Ada Really Work FE 2*8181 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUB3DAV, OCTOB£^ 8^1965 Yank Patrol Ambushed Earlier U S. Paratroopers, Cong in Big Battle SAIGON, Sooth Viet Nun (AP) — U.S. paratroopers and Vie* Cone guerrillas were engaged in heavy fighting today * miles northeast of Saigon, eye- The paratroopers, t jungle hill by sporadic artiper fire, found ft honeycombed with Communist emplacements and fought a day-long battle to dear it, the aources reported. They said the Americans, from Urn 173rd Airborne Brigade, suffered light to moderate casualties. Eleven Viet Cong bodies had been counted. Earlier, another Viet Cong force ambushed a small VA. Army unit IS miles northeast of Saigon and lulled or wounded every American, a U.S. military spokesman reputed. Another U.S. Army patrol government troops heard the shooting and rushed to file scene but the Viet Cong had fled. Two guerrillas were reported killed. *♦ • * ★ The patrol unit that was ambushed from thp 1st Infantry Division, was made up of less than 13 men, the spokesman said, but the exact number was not givep. Three other Americans were killed in .air missions South Viet Nam, the spokesman said. 2 CONG ASSAULTS Elsewhere, two Wet Cong assaults of battalion size were reported: Heavy losses were inflicted on when the Viet Cong hit a river convoy of five boats in the Mekong Delta 55 mile* southwest of Saigon. Hie convoy drifts intense small arms and automatic weapons Sre fron^the shore and two of the boats were sunk. * * fr The convoy was on a supply mission to a nearby post Another guerrilla battalion attacked and overran a hamlet defended by government troops 110 miles northwest of Saigon, the Cambodian border. The fate of the hamlet was not known. Df* SMALL UNITS The Communists' had been nppuHhg In iimII units In ra» cent weeks. A Viet Cong bat ‘ ion normally numbers about Crime Jurisdiction Next Rights Target? WASHINGTON (AP) -The nation’s dvil rights leadership has agreed to consider a new congressional goal for 1900: passage of a personal security act to take civil rights cases out of state courts. * * * “We had the Public Accommodations Act in 1054, the voting rights bill in 1965 and we look forward to the personal security act in 1966,’’ said Jo* seph L. Rauh, counsel for the National Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, in discussing his own personal views in an interview today, ♦ ★ * The conference, an amalgamation of more than 109,Church, union and civil rights groups, met privately last week. The meeting came shortly after a HaynevUle, Ala., jary acquitted Thomas L. Coleman, a special deputy sheriff sf Lowndes Cwmty, of maa- Daniels, 27, civil rights worker for the Episcopal Society iattal->ut 509 101 Viet Cong killed hi two other actions Monday — 70 in the southernmost province of Xuyen and 31 bodies counted after heavy fighting near the Phu Cu Pass in Binh Diph Province. “Heavy” goyemment casualties were reputed in . the Phu Cu fighting. U.S. authorities charged that far Cattaral and Racial Unity. Viet Cong guerrillas used children as shields against American gunfire while crossing a stream under surveillance by the plaque recently received by Charles i, ML senior vice prarident and creative Government forces claimed \ director of MacManus, John A Adams, for the .slaying of Jonathan M. The church group said Daniels was the 10th civil rights worker in the South to die violently since HU. * * * ■ ■■ The leadership conference asked itself, Rauh said, “is this thing going to continue? Have we seen the last of the judicial farce we saw in HaynevUle?” US. Marine aircraft last Friday. The incident occurred during a Marine action near Qui Nhon, NO miles north of Saigon, authorities said. A South Vietnamese military spokesman claimed that government forces killed 1,787 Viet Cong last week while only 229 South Vietnamese "were killed. BIRMINGHAM - The hiring of an urban designer on a consulting basis will bl taken under consideration by the City Commission. City Manager Robert Kenning was directed by the commission last night to prepare an outline of the function of an urban designer and then invite qualified persons to submit proposals. Kenning also will submit a i the frnol- his contribution to a project refocusing creative Interest in newspaper advertising, are (from left) Ernest A. Jones, president of MJ A A; Louis M. Rich, vice president auto- motive sales, Bureau of Advertising, American * Newspaper * Publishers Assoc.; Felt; and Gordon 6-alg, executive vice president, Boteh Newspapers, Inc. and board of directors member, Bureau of Advertising. The plaque was awarded by the ANPA Bureau i of Advertising. Because the field of urban de* rim Is relatively new. Kenning Ends for Pope The conferees agreed, he said, that “every assault with a ra- - —- ,______ ... e , . eminent soldiers were missing And congressional passage ^ action of such an act, be added, should be the major legisla- tive goal of the leadership drive la 1*00 Rauh said the legislation be has in mind would, in effect, take civil rights-connected criminal cases out .of the state's hands and into a federal courtroom. jk "fr ★ 'In a federal court we just don’t get judicial farces like we saw in HaynevUle,” he said. Not all federal courts are perfect, but they certainly don’t act like this." NEXT YEAR ^ The leadership conference unsuccessfully attempted to Write! similar provisions into jtiie IMS; Voting Rights Act, Rauh said. (Continued From Page One) tual labors in behalf of international conciliation. Then, before be departed, he stopped off at the World’s Fair, and as fireworks lit the air, he declared, “We have offered our prayers to Christ...whose message of peace and concord we have come to proclaim.” DRAW INSPIRATION Thoughtful statesmen of the world’s communities found promise in the dramatic papal mission. “Afl'Of us...will draw nouaced the number of Ameri-jinspiration” from it, said U.N. Picks Doctor for State Unit Dr. Lynn D. Allen Jr. of 110 Wenonah was appointed today by Gov. George Romney to a three-year term on the crippled and”plans no legislative drive) children’s commission. {until next year. . * * fr 1 A Pontiac optometrist for 15| “There’s no bill ready yet,” he . years, Dr. Allen, 40, fi.a mem-j said. “We know that this Con-ber of the Pontiac General Hos- gress is ready to go home and it pjtal Board of Trustees. j won’t be very well received. I * ★ * think a bill wUl be ready when The appointment requires con- i Congress comes back in Janu-firmation by the State Senate. | ary.” U. S. PERSONNEL military officials Group Urging World Regime DUBLIN, NU (AP) ^ At group of 52 prominent Americans called today for the establishment of a world federal government, hopefully through strengthening of the United Nations charter. In a statement concluding a five-day conference on Peace Through World Law, the group, headed, by. Kingman Brewster Jr., president of Yale University, said, “The time has coipe for political leaders to put can military personnel in South Secretary General U Sant, a meaning and substance Viet Nam totaled 131,700 as ofjBuddhist. ^ l**“l------------ Sept. 30. They said this included a ai, ltateI u 75,6M Army, 5,830 Navy, 36,900 ................................ Marines, 13,in Air Force and 270 Coast Guard. Fire Damage Put at $50,000 Two-Story Apartment Is Hit Near Hospital do their utmost to make this organization a truly univerqgl instrument of peace,” said the president of- the 117-nation General Assembly, Amin tore Fanfani of Italy. And tie head of the mightiest if the countries. President Johnson, said the Pope’s strik- FnD U. S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Sunny and warmer today. rngha 48 to 55. Mostly Jair aod not so cold tonight, lows 35 to~42. VartoMe rlfwdfoi’Srjmd wanner Wednesday. Highs 60 to 67. Variable winds 6 to 12 miles this morning becoming southeast S to 15 miles this afternoon and tonight. Outlook for Thursday — Partly cloudy aad mild. Pontiac Fire Marshal Charles Metz today set damages at 150,0M on a fire which swept through a two-story apartment building at the rear of Pontiac General Hospital Saturday night. Metz said the fire was caused by a duct which overheated when a register was turned off. Loss of the building was put t $35,000 and contents at $15,-000. Fire officials said the contents were uninsured. The blaze, battled by city firemen for some \six boors pntil early Sunday morning, completely gutted the brick building and destroyed tee belongings of tee three families who lived there. their generalized statements as to the need for the rule of law in world affairs.” • , ♦ * fr The group called for amending the U.N. charter to establish a world police force, open the organization to all nations and create a court system able to enforce settlement of international disputes. Among the conferees were 13 hig personal appeal “may be who attended a similar confer-just what the world needs to get eoce held 20 years ago in this us thinking of how to achieve picturesque southern ~ peace ”. Hampshire community. FIRST CONFERENCE The first, conference, viewed the then newly established United Nations as already inadequate, and urged creation of a world federal government with adequate power to prevent war. That conference placed little hope in achieving its goal through the United Nations. The latest declaration said: We believe that the United Nations, through amendment of its charter, is the best instrumentality for the achievement of the we seek: The declaration—said the present United Nations has been neither effective nor reliable in preventing war. * * ★ Participants in the conference eluded Norman Cousins, editor of the Saturday Review, John S. Dickey, president of Dartmouth College, Harold W. Dodds, former president of Princeton University, J. Robert Oppenheimer, physicist director of the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton, U.S. Dist. Court Judge Stanley A. Weigel of San Francisco and Dr. Paul Dudley White, Boston heart specialist Throughout his 14-hour visit, alohg the packed, meandering miles into the dty, in gatherings at St. Patrick’s Cathedral and elsewhere, the Pope met a rousing clamor of cheers, applause and music. THRONGS SHOUT “Hooray! Hooray! throngs shouted. “Long live the Pope!” Police Commissioner Vincent Broderick gauged the total turnout of those who saw the Pope in person at 3.8 million, exceeding the crowds which in the past have saluted returning American heroes along Broadway. Countless others, in this country aad abroad, watched via television. * preceding 1 *.m.: {Lowest tgmptraturt a—on■ Tmw M—S»|f«l TIWIHWI Chart Alpena 41 W Fort Worth < ttr. Romm a » UrttHihiSOs m _ Hiughtoh 44 a K«ntP« Ctty 71 m <7 Looting 47 a UP Anjflgg 04 a 50 Marquette J* 7t WUpml Qpoctl M It St, Muskegon a 3# MH—Ufcgj M 34 S3 Pension a M New Orleana ‘ reverse C. 45 a New Yartt TTii residents—three doctors, their wives and 10 children— escaped moments before flames closed off exit from the building. “We’ve lost everything,” said Dr. Terrell Bond, who Sunday moved his wife and three children to a Telegraph Road motel. Dr. Bond, a second-year resident at Pontiac General, first discovered the fire when he entered a smoke-filled from and saw fire coming up through zr first-floor ventilator shaft. the fire department. Dr. RonridF Hairston, in hk first year of residency at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, and Dr. Carlos Gay lot, third-year surgical resident at Pontiac General, and their families also lived in the four-unit building. One apartment was vacant. » NATIONAL FORECAST — Occasional rain is expected teaight in tee lower Mississippi Valley, the southeastern Plates, interior northern California while showers are expected in fee northern Rockies It will' be cool along the Atlantic Coast from New Enghtel to fee CaroUnas while a wanning freed Is expected from the central Plains to the Grant Labes. “If those goals cannot thus be obtained, with reasonable effort wife reasonable promptness, the endeavor to go forward should be pursued resolutely through a supplemental It was the first- visit of aiorgamzatien or by any other reigning pontiff to the Western fruitful means." Hemisphere. The 8,580-milej Brewster said only two of the round trip was the longest papal)54 attending refused to endorse journey ever taken. ‘ ‘ Unlike the Pope’s religious pilgrimages last year to the Holy Land and to India, the western expedition also was unique in its purpose and significance. It put the world's most far-reaching religious leadership directly into the forefront of in-temational affairs, at a crucial A hospital watchmaa called moment of history, seething the declaration. NOT IDENTIFIED Grenville Clark, conference secretary, declined to identify the dissenting pair, saying it was hoped they would agree later to support the document. with conflict and fear of nuclear arms. Yet there was, a simple, grave humility hi fee Pape’s demeanor as he moved a boat the city, assertiag fee primacy ef peace. “I am a man like any of you,” he observed from fee U.N. ros- Romney Offers Salary Range LANSING ton - Gov. George Romney today recommended to the Legislature salaries ranging from $20,000 to $35,000 for fee 19 priixdpal department heads under fee new Executive Reorganization Act. In a written message, Romney also urgfrl the Legislature to hold fast on\budgets for fee new departments^ * fr ■ ★ “I suggest' that if you increase fee salary level of present department heads and their deputies, you provide that fee total expenditures for fee agencies combined in any one department not exceed appropriations you made last ring,”, he said. The governor said the salary recommendations were made wife fee idea fo mind feat department heads “deserve compensation feat reflects their service and their sacrifices. “Michigan is one of fee leading industrial states of fee nation, wife vast frontiers of fiitore growth and development which require the best, most far-seeing leadership available” Romney said. He said salaries must be made high enough to attract the top talent for state jobs. Birmingham Ared Now* Commission Consider Hiring Urban Designer Detroit, was named to prepare > of retaining an urban told the commission feat It wifi be six weeks or longer before he can return wife the proposals and recommendation. * #•■## Hie Citisena’ Action Committee recently suggested that the dty hire an urban designer. 8ER VICES EXPLAINED In a letter to the commission Birmingham architect Carl Luckenbach, chairman of the Civic Design Committee, explained some of the services an urban designer could perform. He noted, however, feat only a few architectural schools give degrees in urban design and then only on fee graduate level. Harvard University, he said, was fee first to recognize urban design as a legitimate field of study and has only been granting degrees for four or five years. * * * "These people,” Luckenbach wrote, “have broadened their own outlook to consider suck things as fee relationship of buildings to obe another, to the dty as a whole, to fee urban landscape, and of course, the urbanite.” MASTERPLANNING In master planning, an urban designer, said Luckenbach, would coordinate and correlate the various planning studies and designs prepared for the dty. * ■* ★ He would work with the commission in setting forth a clear statement Of objectives and concepts for the total design of Birmingham, according to Luckenbach. The commission, in other business, hired a landscape architectural firm for fee beautification ef tee civic center area encompassing Shain Park aad tee parking let Immediately south of it Johnson, Johnson It Roy, Pic., The firm has said that ft wifi be ready to begin the pqjeet next month. THREE PHASES A period of five to six months wlU.be required to oomplete fee first three phases of the program — site analysis, design concept and fee development plan - and an additional three month! to prepare detailed working drawings. ’ Jf fr A The schedule would permit construction of the park In the late summer and early faU of next year. . Shorter Jury Terms Slated Jurors to Sorv* in Court Two Wotks Close Street for Display A portion of Saginaw, from Lawrence to Huron, will be closed to motor traffic beginning today. The street will remain closed through Sunday. Saginaw is to be fee site of a display of fee 1966 Pontiac and Tempest models, Thursday to Saturday. Sponsored by the Downtown Pontiac Business Association, fee three-day display is to be housed In a huge tent erected in the street. The length of jury terms in Oakland County Circuit Court will be shortened beginning next month. ♦ . ★ ■ ♦ , Jurors will serve only two ween, rather then being on duty four weeks at a time, according to Judge William J. Beer. The judge said that to his knowledge this wID be the first court in fee state to use fee two-week jary system. ___; * ★ ★ ' , The new system, proposed by Beer, has fee approval of this entire bench. It will be put into practice Nov.'l, when Baer takes over as presiding judge. • fr Sr * “Hie shorter period will be less of a financial burden to jurors,” added Beer. DIFFICULT FOR SOME “It’s difficult for some jurors to: take off four weeks from work under the present system without suffering economically.” To carry eot fee plea without reducing the aaaber ef jary trials, juries will be impaneled for the first two weeks of every mouth. Jury terms are now held every other month. ★ it Beer said feat he hopes fee new practice will make serving on a jury more attractive, and reduce the number of those excused for “various and sundry reasons. MORECAN SERVE “It will also ghre more citizens an opportunity to serve on a jury,” said Beer. Head of Police Post to Retire Michigan.State Police Commissioner Frederick E. Davids today announced the retirement of the present Pdhtiac State Police Post commando' and appointment of a new commando 'far fee post.' Staff Sgt. Frederick H. Bm- Rumors that tee building had . imttHAY* been condemned were squelched ,oroefuUy' _ today by City Building Inspector. ar*J**?*r* °* * meeieS* far sfl Cm F AR (mankind. ‘NEVER-CONDEMNED’ “The building has nevo been condemned as unfit for living to my knowledge,” Alt said. He was sappirted by Metz, whe said fee apartments were inspected by the tea department tear times a year. Meta described the structure as “a perfectly good building.” Alt added feat health department condemnation of a building, for sanitary reasons. Is usually brought to Ms attention. Ha aaid he has reesfoad no such notice. Later, as his remarkable excursion neared its doss with fee mammoth nighttime worship service at Yankee Stadium, be told the more than 10,000 gafe-sred there: “This is tee day which tee Lord has aiudr; let as rtjotee aod be glad today! This is *e day which we have desired fer across fee packed steel and con-1 crete tiers. “Prates to fee Lord,! the Almighty.” The vast congra-l fatten joined In a litany Of prajfrj cheil, Pontiac post commander since Aug. I and a 28-year veteran retires. Oct. IS. Replacing the ilfaar-aid Bsschdl will be DeL Sgt. Karl W. Luts, presently stationed at Paw Paw. Lutz enlisted in fee state police in 1941 and has been detective sergeant at fifth d trict headquarters in Paw Paw since 1161. He has five citations for meritorious service. JOINED ai L FREDERICK BUSCHELL KARL W. LUTZ nm Buscfaell, who joined the Bad Axe post in £997, has seen service throughout fee Lower Peninsula. He assumed command at South Haven hriH7, and was premotor to Staff sergeant and I commander at Pontiac In Auguat, j of this year. H)s service record Jodudaa pa sward for tesvery. Rumors Buzz Over Capital WASHINGTON (AP) - The White House generated s gener-al expectation among newsmen today that an important announcement might be forthcoming by the end of the day, but there wss no hint of its nature. - ♦ ★ w , The expectation was heightened when press secretary BUI D. Moyers ended Ms morning news briefing without slfowtag time far fee usual questions . Moyers gave reporters freer ies of announcements — none oi them startlfaig — and answered questions relating only to those He ended the briefing by inviting fee newsmen into President Johnson’s office to witness a routine picture-taking session. Hie reporters tried to return to Moyers offide after feat — for questions they had in mind — but were told the briefing was over. UNDERSTATEMENT. The buildup of expectations began Monday night. *.*■ * . Wife evident understatement, White House officials suosstsd reporters would bo wefi-advioed to be to feet job. Some had planned to take fee dak oft after returning from New York and fee historic meeting of President Johnson and Pope Paul VI. L ....■ , * '„fr . -fr- 5 This suggestion, made to several newsmen, sat fee White speculation about s buzzing wl a possible n I THREE THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1965 News Briefs From‘Around the Work! ■baffle, a minor one, !• to give extensive new powers to Frank Cousins, minister of technology, according to these reports. The neW powers are to make him virtually minister of industry and production, although his title win probably remain un- nouncement on the specific purpose of the flight, their third moon shot this year. But it was believed to be another attempt to make a soft landing on the moon, to photograph its surface prom close up, and to act af f members of his government if he promotes COusins. LONDON (AP) - Prime Min-ister Harold Wilson is expected to make his first cabinet changes soon, according to reports circulating in London to- VIENTIANE, Laos (AP> -Government forces are intensifying efforts against Communist Patbet Lao forces near Ttiak-hek, ISO miles south of Vientiane, the Laotian army chief of staff said today. Efforts to clear the Communists out of the central Laotian area have “stepped up a little KttohM-Bar Stool Simms Price Simms Pries Sturdy stool with foot rest handy in Ihekffchen Ur bar. Chromed tegs, "choke of colots. -2nd Floor GET THE PERFECT PARTNER FOR AN AUTOMATIC WASHER! Lunar 7 May Make Soft Landing on Moon MOSCOW <*» -' An Unmanned Soviet satellite headed today for the moon and possibly history’s first soft hmar landing Thursday night. The scientific instrument package, Luna 7 was Monday from a multistage rocket. Tam said Luna’s course was "close to the prescribed one” and that all systems aboard the •pscecraft were functioning normally. A * A Hm Soviets made no an- DOES THE WORE OF A GIANT takes less apace than a clothes dryer T He smarint att-mw Silent Auto-■adc gas boiler basts a two-story home yet take* up only inches of ■pace. Every feature is designed to give you economy, plus comfort ... speed with dependability. Sea them new gas boilers today. Get • free home survey and estimate. No obligation whatever. Easiest ef tern*. O'BRIEN HEATING 911 Vootheis Rd. FE 2-2919 After Stere News NEW SERVICE HOURS Wednesday—10 A.M. to REMINGTON TST SERVICE • OILING SIMMS..?!,. and six or seveq other bodies might be found in the Montreal or Quebec City areas. * *' A “The purpose of these murders is to suppress proof or to ensure silence,” the minister said. The minister said police are holding four - men in connection with the killings but no charges have been filed. STOCK t PRODUCT CLERKS MANAGEMENT TRAINEES HIGH SCHOOL CASHIERS & CLERKS Wriclay Super Markets has immadlata openings for: Full time sleek end produce clerks. Management trainee requirements, high sehool degree. Up fe age 21. Part Time High School student cashiers and stock dorks. Opportunity (or odvoncomont Apply 9 A.M. to 4 P.M. Wrigley Super Markets r------13901 JoyRoed - Near Schaefer NATO Units Draw Latest Jet Planes NANCY, France tfl - NATO air forces in Western' Europe have begun receiving their first American RF4C Phantom II jet reconnaissance aircraft, scribed as the world’s fastest and highest flying operational military planes. The first of the 1,600-miles-per hour planes arrived at nearby Toul-Rosieres Air Base following a nonstop flight from Shaw Air Force Base, S.C. Americans spend mately .fTOO million annually on greeting cards, with Christmas cards accounting for 40 per cent of over-all volume. Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac Tomorrow 9 a.m. ’til 6 p.m. at SIMMS Wednesday ht Wonders If yew or* wondaring why we coll them V____ bargains for one day only shopping. So shop tl of Shams Wednmday Wenders. 6-Ft. Rug Runners can do for you. ■ 1 IN ADDITION TO ’ENDING LIFTING, LUGGING AND HANGING CLOTHES ON WASHDAY! • VALET SERVICE—wrinkles earn be removed from corduroy, velveteen or wool garments by placing them in dryer for short tumbling period with damp sponges or bath towels. Place sponges or towel in dryer before putting in clothing to build up steam. Use medium heat setting.. Bath towels leave lint on dark cottons, so damp, color-fast sponges are best. There must be moisture to release wrinkles and prevent shrinkage. Remove garments before completely dry and hang on wooden or plastic hangers until completely dry. • FLUFFING QR DUSTING-draperies, chenille bedspreads or other articles that need airing. Place in dryer on "no heat" setting and allow to ■ tumble for 5 • 10 minutes. • REMOVING MOTHBALL ODORS from clothes that have been stored. Use "no heat" setting and short tumbling time. % BATHING SUITS 8c SNOWSUITS cate be dried in preheated dryer with bath towels (which have been in dryer during preheating). Dark towels are advisable with dark fabrics. den, irt because they are wonderful this Wednesday end take advantage Assorted Scatter 24-30" Widths Washable HI^^Hf.loot long runner* (or Uoiri or hallways, or ■HfiMrimT any lieavy traffic Inch width* by 6 (eel long. Wide Washable cot-ton or corpet-ing rug* in assorted small sizes. You will like the smart tweed colors.1 These rugs are nice (or bedrooms, bathrooms or kitchens. — Basement 24 or assortment or colors. Sewing Fabrics Cotton Acetate 5i1#0 37* 1 to 10' yard remnants. Material that is ideal for many-patterns kuaU wanted drapes, spreads and dresses, color tanks. Ideal for lad- It comes in a wide assort, ies frocks, girls dresses, ment of colon and patterns, blouses, play wear etc. — Basement 100% Cotton Flannel Boys' Pajamas At Simmo Only EviroMy’ Flashlight Batteries Reg* 'D' Sin - lOO X Fresh, genuine TEvereod/ batteries for flashlights or toys. Buy nAw and save. Umit6. —2nd Floor POUR THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY^ OCTOBER 8, IBM YWCA WE'RE LATE FOR SCHOOL Because of Moving to odr New Address 269 W. HURON - CORNER OF HURON and FRANKLIN CUSSES BEGIN Wttk of Oot. 11 For Information and Registration Contact Y.W.CJL 334-0973 We ProvicU Nursery Service Classes Include • Arts and Crafts Spanish — Guitar Bridge — Yoga Swimming . Sewing — Knitting lllliMilirlk-f uf VJ I TRAVEL and ADVENTURE SERIES presented by Downtown KIWANIS CLUB of PONTIAC 1965-66 SEASON TICKETS $5.00 Series of 7 Starts Tuesday October 12 Pontiac Northern Auditorium 8 P.M. Call Today FE 4-4516 Order Tickets by mall From KIWANIS CLUB 1132 Voorheis Rd. Pontiac, Michigan - this advertisement sponsored, by COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK We Will Be Closed ALL DAY WEDNESDAY October 6th Jewish Hol iday RE-OPEN [ THURSDAY, OCT. 7th AS USUAL MAY'S — Downtown Pontiac — 18 and 20 N. SAGINAW IHATCHER-PATTERSON INSURES MR OWNERS THATCHER-MCTERSONL MW. “Since JMJ.— Tailored Policies, Totol Protection" 711 Community National-Bank Building, Pontiac, Michigan “““* WOodward 1-4656 Arrest106 Negroes in Mississippi NATCHEZ, Miss, tit) - Police arrested 106 marching last night, then broug their leader to help content other young Negroes who, pushed toward some 150 heckling whites. Negroes filled the street wi officers loaded a bus with rested demonstrators. They shook their fists and yelled to police near the whites: “Get those Klansmen out of there.” IF--W ★ * Among the whites- who had gathered a half Mock from a Ndgro church, where the march started, was E. L. McDaniel at Natches, Mississippi Gran Dragon of the United Hans of America. Police kept the whites and Negroes separated although both groups surged at one another. •GO BACK’ Rudy Shields, a Chicago Negro and NAACP worker, took bullhorn from police and told the Negroes: “You are defeating your own purposes. Get bade. 'Go back inside the church.” But the jeers continued from both sides. , About 30 minutes liter, police car returned to the area with Charles Evers, NAACP state field secretary who was one of the first arrested. Evers ordered the demonstrators to go home; saying: no “Point “There’s no point in causing any trouble. If you want to be free, Awe’s no point in us fussing and fighting and cursing and shouting. “Those people out there, the whites, don’t know any better. They are ignorant. I ask you to go borne. Please don’t fight in the streets." '■ - * * * Police said Negro, Hugh Ransom of Natchez, was carrying a loaded 38-caliber revolver. The gun was confiscated, and he was taken away in a police car. The arrests brought to 517 the number of demonstrators rested since last Friday. Most were sent to the State Prison Farm at Parchman to await I trial on charges of parading without a permit Some have been released on $200 bonds. RECEIVES AWARD - Marye Mahew of Lansing receives a bouquet of flowers yesterday in Washington, D.C., as part of the Luci Baines Johnson Service Award. Actor Paul Petersen makes the presentation. The award was, made at the national meeting of March of Dimes volunteers. Miss Mahew was named the outstanding member at the March of Dimes’ national Teen-Age Program (TAP). Washington Correspondent Major Bills Passed to Aid Children By Esther Van Wagoner Tufty WASHINGTON - Ibis Congress has been kind to children. The American parents committee says “a record” amount of legislation has already been passed to help the crippled, the poor, the mentally retarded, the disadvantaged, the juvenile delinquent children. Pending is more legislation to benefit the migrant and abused children and the “black market” babies. Ia brief, the five major bills Centers Act under a seven-year program with authorizations of $224 million to staff centers with professional people, in the training of mentally retarded children; involves research and a Health research facilities amendments under a three-year, $280 million extension of original program will construct medical research facilities. a Drug Abuse amendments controls the manufacture and distribution of depressant drugs, sleeping pills and pep pills. • “Medicare” act upped authorizations for maternal and child health services and crippled children’s services by $6 million 1906 and by $10 million thereafter; day care centers recognized as part of child welfare services (committee ’especially grateful” for this): Police Chief J. T.~ Robinson |itraini?« * professional per-stopped the march as he had!80"™51,, for- cnppled <*fldren, halted similar marches Satur- mentaUy retarded 81x1 cbiWren day and Sunday “for parading without a permit.” | Evers said the demonstrations jwould continue, despite a court order against them, until city officials agreed to desegregation demands. Donation Announced GLEN ARBOR (AW—An an-lonymous donor Monday gave with multiple handicaps; payment or “reasonable costs” of inpatient hospital services for needy children; a new five-year plan to provide health care for school age and preschool chil-of low income families; an amendment for research to prevent emotional illness in children. Community Health Services act extended far three years Glen Arbor School District Public Health Service immuni- RENT, LEASE, SELL. BUY HOMES, PROPERTY, COTTAGES, CARS, GOLF CLUBS USE PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 332-8181. $200,000. School Board President Arthur Huey said the district nOw has $500,000 of its $3 million goal in a building program. zation programs to protect preschool children against polio, diptberia,' whooping cough and measles. • Community Mental Health Truck Jackknifes Into Lifie of Cars; 2 tilled, 5 Hurt TEXARKANA, Tex. (AP) -Two persons were kitted and five others Injured near here when a tractor-trailer Aldded into a funeral procession. Killed Monday were Marsha Lynn Otwell, 12, attending the funeral of her grandfather, Wallace S. GuDedge, 63; and Clint Otwell, 31, an uncle. Both were from Texarkana. ★ ★ " ★ Highway Patrolman Paul Boone said a car, headed north, stopped on U.sr50 for the southbound funeral procession. Thick driver Billie Jeff Robbins of Hoxie, Ark., saw the stopped ahead of him and slammed on his brakes. His rig jackknifed into the fourth and fifth cars in the funeral line. • Juvenile Delinquency Control Act to train personnel to prevent and control delinquency. . * * ★, Pending legislation includes the Elementary and Secondary School Construction Act of 1966 which would amend and extend for three years federal assistance to schools in “poverty-impacted” areas. PACKAGE TO AID MIGRANTS The children, of migrant farm families would benefit from the “package” of five bills for migrant workers by extending the child labor provisions of the Fair Labor Standards Act to children employed in agriculture. feWKCMAKES IT EASY FOR YOU Win* wlrflv 108 NORTH SAGINAW 40“ Anniversary Sale “BARGAINS BEGIN AT 40" A Lane Sweetheart Chest.. . for only What doaa the college problem add up to? ' To a national problem, unless we take steps to correct it promptly. The colleges educate most of our leaden. But they are hampered by shortages—in classrooms, fadlitiaa and qualified teachers. - . Some colleges predict that they soon may have to turn away qualified high school graduates. This will hurt us because we urgently need leaden to make wise use of our resources, our manpower and am . human skills. It adds up to jobs and opportunities, and high Hvfaif standards, for all of us. This ia everybody’s concern—give to the college of your choice. Collfgi it America's btst frltnd THE PONTIAC PRESS LOW IN GOST . . . BIG IN ACTION . . . PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS ... TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 3324161. !Hichardsons fpgsh soup cpeam A Harvest Of Good Flavor 1965 Model Illustrated (Ml Walnut finish,'separata base drawer, self-rising troy, solid %-inch cedar interior, 40" tong. You just can’t beat a buy tike this! Com*, in Thii Lana Chant and many mora too. Thin Lana Swaathaprt Chast i« bigger, roomier, lovelier. It looks Scandinavain (It almost speaks Danish!) ft has oil walnut finish and cadar lined Insida. It will kaap your things mothproof, dust-frea, magnificently fragrant. Now's Tha Tima to Buy at our low Anniversary Price. WK6 PLUMES Ara AUffc Villi Mara FREE SERVICE i In Our Owii Sarylcg ■ Credit Arranged H FREE DELIVERY | FREE PARKING LnV our attendant pork u 1 YOU BUY HERE. PAY HERE AMD Wf AHStfl VIl eNP 'wWRmp ■ wU oMMI BIST VALUES ALWAYS! 1 Department by factory tie teed expert*. -We Guarantee j Satisfaction. ■ fa meet yevr individual Hneedt, budgeted and Hte Sored to moke it Mee>»er far yen. . n „ i ■ by our expert end courteous driver* fa eeeure you eKerempt, careful delivery. 1 your ear irf wKCe private parking fat at rear of Our store. VVI WniKLVH SERVICE, DELIVER AMO FINANCEEVERYTHIN!) VlfE SELL BY HOW WHILE OUR PRICES jtRE DRAStlCALLY REDL OCTOBER Pumpk!nPi.§[ CfitflfH491 OCTOBER FRENCH ONION THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1965 FIVE Red Rift May Be Even Worse Now Than Under K By JAY AXELBANK MOSCOW m - When Nikita 8. Khrushchev fell almost s year a|o, some diplomats here predfcted the pissing of Pe* king’s enemyjio. 1 would allow Russia and China to moderate their ideological feud. Instead the Oct. 15 anniversary approaches with Sino-Soviet relations not only unimproved but possibly worse than under Khrushchev. In fiset, two undeclared wars ia Asia—Viet Nam sad Kashmir may have made it virtually impossible the two patch lap their differences, the Kremlin's openly ef-pressed moral support fbr India in dm Sino-Indlan border conflict so infuriated the Chinese that they charged the Soviet “revisionist clique” was hi league with Western “imperialists.” Not only has the Yiet Nam conflict failed to make the feuding comrades cklse rahks against a common “imperialist” foe, but this situation, too, has driven a Wedge between them. China has accused the Russians of being “accomplices” of the Americans in Viet Nam, and there have been pi reports circulating hi Moscow that Peking has hamstrung the flow of Soviet aid to North Viet Nam across Chinese territory. He new men hi the Kremlin appear to be much cooler under Chinese verbal fire than SHE SIX ALl NEW Domestic Open Arm Automatic Zig Zag SEWING MACHINE DEUIXI AUTOMATIC ZIQ ZA8 with built-in decorative I stitch patterns. • Lightweight, weighs less than i 20 pounds. ' SAVE *164“ I Regular 9829.00 Introductory Cost No Money Bown Lew so $2 per wssk Unlimited \ • Simplified centrals, one lever I___ _______ dee* it all. | Only 12 Machines • Versatile open arm features • «♦ This far sleeve and other hard to • 5164.50 Savings mw tasks plus snap-on tab | TssTJliisS^r | „ (traits s. He sSSsa- 1 DOMESTIC-EUU SEWING CENTER FormsHy Domalco of PontioC — Arcade Ana MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER S. TELEGRAPH AT SQUARE LAKE RD. MadsmDrira-up ^.AC Sendee Canlar 33M521 They have virtually turned the other cheek, almost never attacking China by name — and when doing so, only indirectly with calls for .“international Communist unity.” On July 31 the Chinese took the gloves off. The “Peoples Daily” accused the Soviet Union of a policy of “capitulation, betrayal and split” by preaching peaceful coexistence. The newspaper referred to the new ders as “Khrushchev revisionists.” APPEAR RELUCTANT But thus far, unlike, Khrushchev, the Brezhnev-Kosygin leadership appears reluctant to force a showdown. They backed away from such a confrontation at ttm March international Communist parley attended by If Diplomatic observers feel that the Russians—the “fat” Communists, compared to the Chinese —have everything to lose ia a fight to the bitter end with lean and hungry Peking. The Chinese, these observers say, are boxed in both by the Kremlin and resolute American action In Southeast Asia. era say China might feei .it has something to gain by forcing a formal split—if only to get away from 4>e frustrating status quo. REPERCUSSIONS A Moscow-Peking split might have repercussions in East Europe, where the Kremlin is already feeling the effects of Romania’s loosening of the strings to Moscow. Thus the betting here is that the Russians will continue to turn the other cheek and try to resist slapping .back tit-for-tat Thus, like a man who becomes Teckless in the face of ming odds, the observ- U. of M. Officials Wont Attend State Mediation Board Hearing ANN ARBOR (AP)—The University of Michigan Monday refused to appear at a State Labor Mediation Board hearing called in connection with requests by three unions to represent certain U-M employes in wage talks. The refusal to attend the hearing was considered the first challenge of the Board’s authority after changes in state labor laws last summer permitted public employes to join unions and bargain collectively. * * * Amendment of the Hutchinson Act gave the board powers similar to those of the federal government’s National Labor Relations Board. Petitions to authorize such representation were filed by the Teamsters, the International1 Union of Operating Engineers and Ok Washtenaw County Building and Construction Trades Council. RECEIVES LETTER l Robert Blackwell, executive secretary of the board, said he! had received a letter from U-M officials claiming the amended | Hutchinson Act does not appiyi to the university. The letter asked that the three petitions—which would affect a total of 344 U-M employes -dismissed, Blackwell said. ♦ • W -d University officials claimed U-M has for years used procedures under which unions may express their views on behalf of U-M employes. U-M also has provided a union dues checkoff and has a grievance-procedure, the official added. NOT COVERED? Salary and other terms of employment are the responsibility of the University Board of Regents and are not covered by the Hutchinson Act, tiuLjt claimed. Blackwell said he will schedule a formal hearing on the petitions by the unions seeking representation, and that.board members will discuss the University’s action. Jtot of people think they’re roke When they’re not. That’s because they’ve forgotten their good'eredit can be worth hundreds of pol-lars at Seaboard. v> ' So maybe you’re not broke after alT. How do you know until you get in touch with us? Drop by today. SERBORRD FINANCE COMPRNY A Hfeiavor when you heed cash 1185 North Perry St. Pontiac Phone 353-7017 SPECIAL! YOU SAVE AS WE TRY TO DOUBLE OUR SALES! Even the thriftiest Frigidaire Jet Action Washer has a 5 YEAR PROTECTION PLAN at HO EM CHARGE! Strongest Frigidaire Washer Protection Plan war...backed by General Motors! One-year Warranty for . repair of any. defect Without charge, plus four-year Protection Plan tor furnishing re- f lacement for any de-active part in the complete transmission, drive-motor, or large capacity water pumpi JET-SIMPLE ROLLER-MATIC MECHANISM! NO GEARS! NO PUUIYS1 NO BELTS! 1ST ACTION ADVANCES GALORE! - • Jet-Away lint removail No lint trap to dean. • Jot Spin goto clothes wonderfully dry-saves heavy lifting! • Automatic Soak Cycle loosens dirt, grime! CLAYTONS 21M ORCHARD LAKE PHONE SSS-1M2 WIN A FREE 1966 PONTIAC DRAWINGWILL BE SAT., Oct. 9 Tickets Available in all Departments at Waite's, 70 N. Saginaw _ . Tailortown Naked Wools Fine tailoring has created a new and excHing took for fall Traditionally in good taste with beautiful simple line and devotion to little things. FUrt bows, flip tie, concealed pockets, Battering coachman style,' fly fronts, no wo ids shifts. Metalling bob. 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INFAtsITS DRESSING-TAB^- Pullover, side snap dosing. Combed Slight Irregulars. Infant's Corduroy Crawlers Pin wo I e corduroy providers hove snap closing. Assorted col- IS 1 Voice of the People: THE PONTIAC PRESS Pm Teowne ■ Circulation Manacer We Pay a High Price for Playing With Fire This is Fire Prevention Week. That there is surpassing need for such an event can be found in the record economic loss from ffife that 1965 is headed toward. The record is a ghastly one. For the first time in history, a shocking $1.5 billion annual .loss is indicated. A companion record, anot toric first, is seen in the number of building fires — mostly in homes in communities of 2,500 or more. The year’s total is estimated at 546,000. ★ ★ ★ Bat even more horrifying is the toll of human life lost to this powerful force of nature— a force'for both good and evil. Before year's end, fire is slated to claim 12,000 lives. Locally, during the first eight months of 1965, 236 building fires caused total loss of $785,000 and took two lives. What accounts for these grim and —growing losses? “The answer,” says the American Insurance Assn., “has always been the same: people." Negligence accounts for 75 per cent of all files. Along with careless gmniring habits, misuse of electricity heads the list of fire causes. On? in five home fires is due to faulty, electrical wiring, overloaded circuits, unsafe appliances. «> The peak home fire months are December and January. What can you do to minimize their shocking portent? Ar ir_____★_____ There are two measures that should be taken immediately—one of preventive nature; the other a safeguard against financial loss should your property be struck by fire: ★ ★ ★ • Have a qualified electrician .check your house for proper wiring, the condition of major appliances, load distribution of electrical circuits. • Review your fire insurance. While we have steadily increased our coverage, a majority of American homes are still under-insured — many seriously so. The insurance “gap" stems from the fact that millions of families have failed to boost their coverage to keep pace with the climbing value of their homes and household contents. In observance of the Week, a public Fire Fighter Festival will be presented at Wisner Stadium Thursday evening by units of county fire departments. The program will combine entertainment with demonstration' of fire-fighting and prevention principles. ★ ★ ★ . One last word on protection against^fire — the destructive “enemy within": Fire Prevention Week comes but once a year. Why don't you make it Fire Prevention Day— jmd practice 11 every day of the -yew? a psychologist offers another that seems to be more inclusive &nd to go farther toward ex-plaining the many thoughtless and accident - inviting tricks most of us have been guilty of at one time or another. Says Dr. Faso McKinney of the University Qf Missouri: “Of course, the immediate cause will vary with the individual. But I believe the general, more basic happens when you get behind the wheel You sort of become part of the car. The other driver does, too, in your eyes and the human feeling is watered down." It’s something all of ua could profitably think about the next time we drive. Those other cars that get in our way and make us so impatient all contain people — human beings we would recognize and politely make room for if we met them walking down the street. Does Driver’s Seat Rule Out Golden Ru]e? Why is it that the normal, average man—or woman—wrtii* would never rudely push aside a fellow pedestrian on the sidewalk can change completely behind the wheel of a car and become inconsiderate, careless and even reck-less? A lot of people have pondered the question and come up with a lot of Miw jWh f*that a < give a sense of power to the otherwise inadequate-feeling person, or that soms people unconsciously* use an automobile to work off petty angers and frustrations. it it it Deebtless there is much truth In those suggestions, hot Verbal Orchids tour. a«l Mr*. Rusted New of INI Woodland; S2od wiping anniversary. _ Mr*. Sadie Patten of 41 Augusta; 14th birthday. FIraak Buell of Milford BnH htrthdny. Mike GraviBa of Emmett; 90th birthday. Mrs. Lay Morris of 7521 Haley Road; 00th birthday. Mrs. Pauline Hard of 1200 N. Telegraph; «7tb birthday. Mr. aod Mrs. Grover Porter of Drayton Plains; Mth wedding David Lawrence Says: It seems the Administration’s policy with reference to Viet Nam hasn't changed one bit from what it was—whatever that was. Amendment Fraud Faces Court Grid Upsets Fog Press Contest Contestants’ Predictions Getting a Kicking Around Well, whatcha know. A favorite in the Press Annual Football Contest finally came through. The 372 contestants who saw things through orange-colored glasses and cast thor fortunes with Syracuse were amply repaid as their helmeted heroes Saturday gave Maryland a 2l-to-7 gridiron lesson. ★ ★ ★ Needless to say, the victory was bad ■ esrs-lsr the 147 entrants who had pinned their hopes m Maryland. The seven who had crystal-balled a tie can console themselves that they were at least half right. The outcome followed the season’s script to date, having an upset tinge to match the over-all Saturday grid scene that abounded with surprises. • The Press’ Friday pigskin “morning line" saw Maryland taking Syracuse 14-13, but the newspaper’s super seer, Major WASHINGTON* — The Supreme Court of the United States, which has just started a new term, has before it a most challenging issue — how to correct a gross injustice, indeed a ble remove blemish. American h tory committed mwRENCE fa) July 1888 by . Congress in proclaiming the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution as valid, even though it was not legally ratified. For nearly 90 years the high court has1 refused to take a case for adjudication of the question despite efforts whteh have been repeatedly made to obtain a hearing. He issue is not whether the order to get a necessary' rtia- day how the high court can by-jority, but also J>y a .simple act pass the new Kansas case and of Congress to ignore the aetion allow the blot on America’s rec-of state legislatures by declar- ord to remain, ing them out of the union. ‘ ri^|T|r m ^ Ywt Observers are wondering to- syMww. jm* Capital Jitter: Press ColoredFeafurito Commended b# Reader , a,s both a photographer and ft former | advertising man who was frequently in-1 volved with production, I want to com-1 ptiment you very sincerely on the color 1 picture that appeared in your Septem*| her 21 issue. ★ ★ ,In the first place It Is an outstanding piece of photography, and COALE In the second place it is beautifully reproddeed. , fr ★ ★ I’ve enjoyed reading your paper for a number of years. Extra touches like -this, among other things, mairo The Pontiac Press an outstanding newspaper. SIDNEY C. COALE GLOBAL FILM PRODUCTIONS ORCHARD LAKE * Comments on Help for Retarded Children Being the parents of a retarded youngster wo have followed the sad account of Ricky Thome and his parents’ desperate plight while we cannot condone Mrs. Thome’s actions, we understand the feeling of futile helplessness that would lead the parent of a retarded child to even consider such drastic |ction. ■ * if— it"' W-*<' You seek answers from people in educational supervision and are told it should be the problem of the board of health. The board of health tells you this is a problem of the board of eddbation. State politicians tell you that aid for retarded should be « local community problem, and the local community for the most part remains indifferent. As “the buck’’ is passed from one to another, another generation of retarded children grows into retarded adults without the benefit of my attempt at education or training because there are no facilities for them. LS—1 v it #-—★ Must these' “forgotten children” be pushed aside and made to wait still longer? Write to our Governor and demand ^that action be taken now. Early FidelFollowersNot Among Poor—Ex-Cuban Amos B. Hoople, Thursday har-rumphed Syracuse finishing 10 points ahead of Maryland’s predicted 21. —How do thing* look for the Michigan-Michigan State fracas coming up? A little cloudy, a little cloudy. * ★ ★ ★ Michigan has 256 bond-eyed supporters, while 109 like the looks of State’s green. (Could it be the color association with money?) Seven, the same number as last week, refused to take sides and are keeping fingers crossed for a no-decision exercise. Picking the winner is something we don’t want any pert ef. Te ge bade to last Friday’s expert, he gave Slate a 14 to 12 edge over Illinois (Slate won 22 to 12) J Hoople was for ooce thrown for a toes. He, too, called a one-point edge — hot gave it to Illinois. Tck-tck-tckrkaff-kaff. ★ ir it M If you weren’t confused before, you surely are now. But be of good cheer. Each week, the 8508 UA. Savings Bond draws nearer to the outstretched hand of the ultimate is desirable, for undoubtedly two thirds of Congress and three fourths of the states today would immediately ratify a substitute using the identical language. Die real question is whether the crooked method used for “ratification’’ shall be allowed to stand without court condem- Many people are saying that the Supreme Court has, fa) effect,' sustained the Fourteenth Amendment because it has decided various cases involving interpretation of different phrases of that amendment. NEVER ACCEPTED But the truth is the high court has never accepted jurisdiction in any case involving the valid-ity of the actual process of “ratifying” the Fourteenth Amendment. For many years, the coart refused to hear all such questions as being “political.” Bat even this barrier was later broken down. Thus, the Supreme Court in 1838 took a case known as' Coleman vs. Miller and ruled that, although KansaHwt-M-ymn-before rejected the child-labor amendment, • its later ratification must be permitted to stand. * * * The Supreme Court has also taken up in various'cases other points in which procedure and ratification of constitutional amendments were involved. The state of Kansas now has brought before the Supreme Court of the United States the question of whether the Four- By RUTH MONTGOMERY WASHINGTON - A former Havana businessman who managed the Cuban electric power company is currently lecturing throughout the hemisphere on the lesson we can learn fromSHfl^Bi his fectively refutes the. long - be' * theory thatSg^HiL communis m makes realHHHHK headway only Roth in city slums Montgomery and underprivileged areas- ef the world. Serafin G. Menocal, a grad- land had an extensive public school system free from discrimination. It was cheaper and easier to get a college education in Cuba than the U.S. * Sr *V , . - “It Was not the illiterate or the poor who were responsible for the take-over by Castro,” Menocal says, but those members pf the mkkfle and wealthy classes who were “too absorbed in their own pursuits” and liked the found of Castro’s promises. ANOTHER CONCERNED MOTHER When I first beard thfc news about Mrs. Thome abandoning her son in Florida, I wondered how she could have done such a thing. Then I think of Ml the aid, etc. sent to other countries while people can’t get help in their own state, ithink it is time for USA to wake up and help our people first. Remember, charity begjns at home. H. DEAN . a 136 W. MANSFIELD lam the mother of an 18-year-old mentally retarded girl and can sympathize with the Thornes. For eleven years we had our daughter in a private school in Canada where the costs were next to prohibitive for an ordinary factory worker. She could only stay at that school until she was 16. - jfc it ■ it Recently we had oar daughter re-evaluated and were told agate te send her to Lapeer. These psychologists don’t understand that we love these children and want kelp, not have them institutionalised. it it it " I wonder how fast we’d get help if one of our Senators, Representatives or our Governor had a retarded youngster and took it to Lapeer. , mrs. John hill .. 47 CHAMBERLAIN In Washington: Austria’s Economy Vital to West farmer president of Cuba’s National Cornell of Boy Scoato, says that the laboring dans and farm workers were actually Fidel Castro’s greatest stumbling black in his to subvert Cuba. not legally ratified, and the attorney general of that state has requested that the high court take jurisdiction. He has made a lengthy argument contending that the high court fat reapportionment cases dining the last few years has 4 alul to -^—1 ucivro mo wmi u ua jiviF ously called "political” quss- If the Supreme Court avoids the tome of whether the Fourteenth Amendment was legally adopted, it is tantamount to saying that Congress possesses supreme power not only to unseat members at any time in The easiest prey, be declares, were students, politicians, churchmen, and “businessmen who generally remained aloof from politics.’' * " ★ * Wjtfa an engineer’s precision ije carefully documents the steps by which Castro took over his native land, and warns that unless others profit by those mistakes, it can happen here and in Sotith America. To prove Us point that Com-maatem does not necessarily feed eu poverty and illiteracy, he makes the following Interesting points ahoat pre-Castro Cuba: • Among Latin American countries, Cuba ranked first per capita in TV broadcasting Stations and receivers, motion picture attendance, and percentage of national income invented in education. 1 * k • It ranked second in value of imports, exhorts, and rfc— dio receivers; third in income, number of newspapers and magazines, telephones, auto-biles and electric power consumption per capita. ■ • One of every five Cubans had a radio; one in 28 a TV set, and one in 27 an auto- By BRUCE BIOMAT^ VIENNA (NEA) %The free world has an important stake in Austria as the Weto*i easternmost industrial nation in Europe, as an outpost country set deep among the 8oviet satellites. It has tobe of, c o nsequence, therefore, that] Austria’s basically healthy BI068AT economy ts plagued with some difficulties that are far from trivial, b a highly competitive world, Aostria mast export to live. One-third of its total output is new seat abroad. Preliminary figures shew that its exports actually were hh created for the first half of 16* by 11 per cent over the' ing too much foreign invest- over how to finance perhaps *0 ment. American interests are million worth of flood damage currently offering to help fi- resulting from heavy spring and ' nance a new autobahn stretch- late summer rains. A burden of ing from westerly Innsbruck this sort can be critical for% • toward1 the Italian border. The small nation, money is needed, but it will not be automatically accepted. Heavy infusions of capital Nevertheless, Aostria goes < But, like some other western European lands, Austria suffers a serious labor shortage. This year it has imported 25,000 foreign workers, mainly Yugoslavs and Turks. In 1904 the figure was 10,100 less. Unhappily, not enough of these have even rudimentary skills. One large industrial firm says that last year it tost a month’s production through lack of trained help- Much of tbs lost output would have font West Germany might be had, except that Austrians plately fear Genua control ef some enterprises might result. The sevea years ef Nasi rule are not forgotten. The country also is heavily dependent on imports, for crucial raw materials. These include two-thirds, of its high-grade coal, 1.4 million tons of iron ora a year, all of its Mum-inum-bearing bauxite, perhaps a fifth or more of its food sup-ply- * + * Its trading abroad is threatened fay the common tariff front being erected by the six nations of the European Common Ittr-ket. This front includes West Germany, Austria’s largest export market and largest source of imports,_________ ' ' If West Germany has a to per ceat duty eu certain ethers relati*te the conlittou nature ef its government. It trades with more than 120 countries. One faig firm sells to 70 nations, another to 50, and so on. Its reputation for quality and precision products is wide, Landlocked, it builds fiahh« boata for Nigeria, a terry for Ecuador, cargo boats for 0 lflle fleet. It builds whole foctostta for export. Luckily, tourism keeps rising enough to offset — so far —'jm amual excess of imports. Tqnty ism has quadrupled in a decade, fo 1945, Austria had six crude ski lifts. Today R has more tipi 700 scattered across its craggy mouatifint. Austria has big plans far. trial growth. But its ttay stao and Its host of problems keep It operating always te delicate * * * To offset such ahsrtftfes, • According to a UA. gov- Austria needs i eminent report, Cubans «« ng. a—» "’among febetter tea people capital, has* aver b aba somewhat short. • Cuba had the lowest mor- ” £ - tality rate in the Western / country ^rdty bipmflimi Hemisphere. Main*, with, a little mdrh than • Its industrial workers million people, cannot in- were protected by strong un- *«• too much foreign capital ions, mid its term workers by with** birring other dangers, legislation which amounted to - », *» .* *. .. , a proflttoiaring arrangement. One ll inflation. Atofrto fears • The pre-Communist is- “importing inflation” by allow- pay Kb tail. Yet tt may be reduced to 0 per ceat for Ae Germaa partners to the Common Market Austria's only way to rompete, te the circumstances, te to lower pitees ' Austria’s friends In the fred work! must inevitably share tbs country’s hope that thif ‘balance te not only maintained hoi1 Improved as wefl. lt Is a linchpin in the prosperity of weriftpl Europe. Austria’s membership m the so-called “outer seven,” em- portagal, swi (Met Britain, is taUpito) but not decisive. It needs closer •sspetetton with the Common Market. it. i, * - As If Mi these problems wttto not enough, Austria is tom now Tins PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1963 SEVEN Thant U.N. Flag SPACE CENTER, Houston, Tex. (AP) - A small United Nations flu, carried into space tar astronaut Edward H. White ft during Ids historic space walk will be prtsittod to UK. Secretary Genteel U Thant Thursday At,the United Nations. .★ !'• jf . ★ White and Us space partner on GafliqL^Ait Ftfce Lt. Col. James'A. McDivitt, will make the presentation. White carried the flag in a pocket of his space suit.. He stayed outside the capsule for 30 minutes June 3. Pontiac Residents 'Best Informed7 Survey Finds Opposition to Income Tax A survey cor Michigan Taxpayers Association (MTA) reveals that there is strong opposition to a state income, tax, Stewart J. Wolfe, chairman, announced today. Wolfe of 7*5 Charlesina, Oakland Township, said that the survey also showed that legislators who favored the tax would lose votes ln the,next election. The statewide survey of 5M persons, said Wolfe, revealed that three out of four believed nomically. The MTA distributed 6,(00 survey fopns to taxpayers through* out the state with die cooperation of civic organizations, Chambers of Commerce and members, according to Wolfe. . ★ A * / He said that Pontiac residents surveyed showed b e 11 e r knowledge of aetual state taxes than taxpayers elsewhere, but BUjNCBD SCOTCH WHISKY. SO PROOF. IMPORTED IN OHDINAL CASKS BY McMASTER IMPORT cn | ^npn|T| ^ir-u A $7.00 Scotch for only $4-97? What’s the gimmick? Here it is: Michigan taxpayers were particularly incensed by statements! from state economists who in- DETROIT (AP)—Plant guard, sis ted that, as more people paid1 Harold L. Russell Jr,, 43, stood inf s reduction in die sales tax if an income tax was imposed. 'WOULD BURT’ City residents also believed more strongly that an income tax would hurt rather than benefit individuals and businesses/ Three out of four persons questioned said they were dissatisfied with the Michigan Legislature, Wolfe said, and almost half said the legislated “had no regard for the taxpayer.** The MTA sufvey showed that the hardest hit by an income tax would be the auto industry. * *. * Wolfe said that over 42 per cent of those surveyed said giey wouldn’t buy a new car if they had to pay added taxes through an income tax. WOULD MOVE OUT* A few businessmen said they would move from Michigan it a state income tax was adopted. Only I per cent felt the state needed additional revenue and most believed that tax reform was a disguise for more taxes, Guard Mute; Exam Is Set Plant Worker Held in Shooting of Doctor more taxes, the demand for services would increase and further tax increases would be necessary, he said. ■ * * “Many felt that most of the demand for extra services came cities rather tlten the majority of taxpayers in the state.” Wolfe said that only 35 per cent of those questioned said they benefited directly from state services. Crash Kills 2 Soldiers COPENHAGEN (UP!) - Two military trucks collided night, killing two soldiers. Police said one of the trucks burst into flames. The accident occurred between the towns of Slagelse and Naestved on the last day of a military maneuver. One fine day the McMaster’s people discovered that, simply by importing their Scotch ’ whisky iii barrels instead of botdes, they paid a lower tax—. and saved their customers money. *! >-• Big tax savings, that's the reason •McMaster’s comes to America only in barrels. . ' You’d expect to pay $7.00 for an imported Scotch with the flavor and mellowness of' McMaster’s. But we save on taxes and other costs—so you pay only $4.97 a fifth, only $2.50 a tenth (tax included). Note qvaitable in a new H* gallon size for just $12.95. Sony, they won't Ictus sell it by the barrel A $6.50 Canadian for only $4.80? Sure. McMaWr’s gives you the same big tax savings I on its fine imported Canadian whisky, too. (Tax in- Rk| eluded.) Abo available in H gallons at only $11,957 J CANADIAN WHISKY. A BLEND. SO PXOOF. IMPORTED BY M.MASTER IMPOST OCX, DCTKOIT. M1CHKJAN. (People in the News! « * By The Associated Press Television star Patty Duke, 18, says she is engaged to. Harry G. Falk Jr., 32, a New York television director. No date has been set. , Miss Duke said she met Falk two years ago when he was an assistant director on “The Patty Duke Show.” They have been dating for the past year. '“Last night he asked me to marry him and I said yes before he could reconsider;” she said yesterday. Czech Deputy Premier in Cuba Otakar Simunek, deputy premier of Czechoslovakia, is in Havana to sign a trade agreement. Cuban officials said the agreement will run until 157* but did not disclose details. |. Ike to Attend 'People' Confab Former President Dwight D. Eisenhower is scheduled to attend the opening session of the People-to-People National Conference Thursday in Kansas City. Eisenhower is chairman of the People-to-People Trust. Seek Author for New 007 Novels Ian Flcmhu’s heirs in London arc reported seeking m mute in demanding examination at his arraignment on first degree murder charge Monday in the fatal shooting Dr. Wayne W. Glas, director ofl surgery at Wayne County General Hospital. J Nankin Township Justice Michael W. Bradley set examination for Qct. 20. Russell of Ann! Xrbor is held without bond. Dr. Glas, 43, also, of Ann Ar-jr, died of a gunshot wound in! the head Saturday night. Police! said Russell declared he shot him accidentally while attempt-) ing to make a citizen’s arrest for bad driving on 1-94. William Doran, assistant Detroit corporation counsel, said! in commenting on the incident] that citizens have a right to make arrests only in connection with felonies or when summoned by a police officer. Michigan law does not per-] mit a citizen’s arrest for a misdemeanor, such as a traffic violation, he said. * NEW! / REDUCE ^ATctndLOtl gzr OP TO 6 LBS. A WEEK f CAPSULES! Easier to take and mure l effective than tha powdered and Ikp \ uid food supplement, end coats less j\ including Capsules suited to you n INDIVIDUALLY by Lie. Physician, /. M D No Gastritis or irregularity if with Medic-Way cape. DON'T Dill ) —JUST EAT! As thousands have / done, you can lose 5, 50 or 100 lbs. 1 and KEEP IT OFF! MEDIC-WAY I] < A MEDIC-WAY 335-9205 1 Offic*. In OskltnS and Waynt Count** — Os* In Mind* Mil# Dies in Accident CHEBOYGAN (AP) - Robert Brown, 29. of Rogers City was killed Monday when a mechanical loader he was steering behind a towing truck overturned and crushed him. ‘ I American-e$tatrd«rd Beauty and convenience in a truly luxurious lavatory. Gleaming, one-piece vitreous china with a deep, roomy bowl and spacious counter surfaces. Wonderful for coemetics and toiletries, and so easy .to keep sparkling dean. SERVICE PLUMBINC & HEATING ----,—< INCORPORATED)-- SALES • SERVICE • REPAIRS LICENSED MASTER PLUMBERS Calf 334-8310 or 334-8868 375 Auburn, Pontiac USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS. BUY, SELL, TRADE. author to write new James Bond novels. The most likely successor to the late creator of Secret Agent M7 was said to be Kingsley Amis, author of “Lord Jim*’ and himself a James Bond fan. Amis has written a study of M7 called “The Jqmes. Bond Dossier.” Amis said bringing Bond to Ufe again would be “a great, a frightening challenge.” WKC MAKES IT EASY FOR fljft "BARGAINS BEGIN AT 40" SPECIALLY PRICED FOR SAVINGS! 30” GAS RANGE by BROWN PIobbo Road These Exclusive Features • Safety-Lock Oven Racks • Lift-Out Ovtfi Bottom • Four Giant Bonus Burners a^alishid Burner Oapi • Four Range Leveler* Regular 119?s ROW ONLY . . • Low B.T.U. Flash Tub Ignition • Beautiful bhiu-groy Porcelain ! finish distingulshas tha interior of all rangaa by Brown, assuring. rust-proof durability and effortless cleaning. During Anniversary SalaYou SAVE $21.50 Credit Arranged to mootjrouri^Md- and tailored to make it sail* for you. * FREE DELIVERY by our export and ms driver* to you of prompt FREE PARKING lot oof.attendant pork ynor oar in WKC* private parking lot at roar at our state. Y«». 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Holiday! a mw, acrcit a Devote** oavtae naaar drying condition* Con trot lod air Hew Mr Mr all Maw ar Marica ovtn distribution or no* tod air a lamk UMT aaiLicTaa III your drying cloOtot Mfi-222-10 s1,000 to *5^100 1st or 2nd HOME 1 mortgage hallmonth^ I PAYME NThl * X | CREDIT UkE | r NO EXTRA cost. Cash when needed! H itboul obligation, see and talk wills Mr. Merle Voss or Mr. Buckner, wl/o have been loaning money to hnndreds of people in Ponliar during tlie past 40 years. All borrow._ ers will testify to receiving fair, honest, and courteous treatment. (Do not take a chance dealing with strangers or fly-by-night lenders.) When you deal here, you receive the fait amount of your loan in cash at once. No papers to sign until the loan Is eiosed. No charge for Inspection, appraisal ar survey. Na charge for abstract, tide search ar title insurance. Borrow from us to consolidate your drifts, to pay off the balance you owe on your contract. In pay taxes, to make home repairs or improvements, or for any other pood pur* pose. See us today. f SPECIAL f*** ^3 ,r ****** la* comer M. Sag* Free Porking whonaver you apply for on {*•* Nason St*, ooch tun* you bring opprovadl loon or renewal 4* ear office a Ml monthly payment. Bring oe year parking ticket to he stomped. VOSS and BUCKNER 209 NATIONAL BUILDING - Ft 4-4729 , IlCHt THE P6NTIAC P&ESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1963 Call Is Oul for Volunteers in Cultural Aid Project *• A person-to-person aid pro* * gram for culturally deprived Pontiac children, begun one yaar ago with a handful 6f women, has mushroomed to a corps of # volunteers and could still urn 10 more. According to Gerald White, director of elementary education, the present demand is for at least 100. ‘Tv* had 12 achaal priaci- IU. S. Jews Said Backing Out of Negro Struggle DETROIT (AP)—Saul Alinsky said Monday American Jews are backing oat of the Negroes’ fight for equal rights. “We are trading our heritage of fighting for freedom for a philosophy of materialism,” Alinsky told a Jewish group Alinsky, a Jew, is director of the Industrial Areas Foundation of Chicago. The West Central Organization, a Detroit group, has invited him here for his help. ----Mr'., t— * . Speaking" to women of the American Jewish Congress, Alinsky said: “Up until eight yews ago, Jews were in the civil rights fight out of propor-l tion to their small number. But when the battle moved out of tiie back conference rooms and private phone conversations and into tbe streets, most Jews withdrew.” “The same was true in’Rochester and in our current effortl in Kansas City.” he said. ! pals ask for this kfod af help at their seheals” White ■aid. “We’ve got women from as far away as Franklin and Rochester . . . what we c use are more from Pontiac.” * ★ ★ ; This morning, the second of two faQ training sessions was held for new workers. AIMS, ACTIVITIES The women meet with selected elementary .children on a one-to-one basis at schools. Story-telling, modern math and a feeling for art and literature are some of the aims and activities of the meetings. The children are chosen by principals and teachers at the varioos schools. Officials attempt to keep both the conferences and children’s identities confidential. ;,w V. * “We’re very pleased with the results so far,” White said. “The women drive in here every week, bring books and other materials and treat the kids as they would their own.” TEACHING STAFFS He emphasized that course instruction was still in the hands of teaching staffs and was not related to tbe volunteer program. Die cultural aid idea was in-j, itiated with nine other women in the summer of 1964 by Mrs. Abraham' J. Levin of 7420 Franklin, Bloomfield Township. Interested women should contact Mrs. Levin or the director of elementary education at the Pontiac Board of Education, 350 E. Wide Track. KLAN DRAGON ARRESTED - Calvin Craig (center), Georgia, grand dragon of the Ku Klux Klan, talks to newsmen in Crawfordvifie, Ga., yesterday where he was arrested on assault and battery charges after- be grabbed a Negro demonstrator who tried to run through police lines,*Crnig said the Negro tried to hit an officer “and I grabbed his arm”.......... Little Progress in City Dispute More Protests Set by Georgia Negroes Attog&noN JUT WE SERVE TOO TOOf l We Pay 4V4 Ptr — m Your Savings Account! CRAWFdRDVILLE, Ga. (AP) — Negro leaders in this east Georgia town said they will attempt another bavin and teach-in today in continuing attempts to integrate a white school in Taliaferro County. Hosea Williams, political education director for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, which is pushing the integration attempt, said Negroes will first attempt to board Its wage demands and school buses Which haul white ah* disenssed longevity pay. pupils to schools in nearby City Manager Joseph A. War-|count*e#' iron said that the city presented! * * * 1 a copy of the recently adopted! Negro leaders later plan a pay plan and also tbe city’s, teach-in at Alexander Stephens Spolesmen for both file city h and Pontiac firemen reported “no progress” yesterday after a two-hour meeting with State Labor Mediator Leonard Bennett. * . * * Die hearing was adjourned to 10 a.m. OcL IS. ' Jack Douglas, president of the Pontiac Firefighters Association (PFA), said that his analysis of wage figures offered by the PFA. . * The latter figures resulted fronfan August survey made by Douglas. 1 PARTIES AGREE I Douglas and Warren both said that there had not been much progress in the two-hour session. an arm infection and is confined to bed. Williams said King, who fell on a broken glass and suffered the infeckm last week, is expected to recover and visit Crawfordvifie next Monday. Williams also said King plans to tour Georgia’s farm areas thickly populated with Negroes next week. At Monday night’s courthouse sally, Willie Bolden of the SCLC headed a list of Negro speakers and taunted Calvin F. Craig of Atlanta, the Georgia grand [dragon of the Ku Klux Klan, as he did at an earlier demonstration. Bolden told Craig, “You MILAN (AP) - The director of the V.S. Bureau of Prisons said Monday tbe Milan Correctional Institution was one of pine' institutions selected for a novel prisoners’ work program because of employment poMpi-bilities in the area. Director .Myrl E. Alexander announced details of the'new program last week in Washing-Under the plan, selected prisoners will be allowed leave prison each morning, go to their Jobs, work besides regular employes and voluntarily return to their cells at night. * * * The program is expected to get under way Jan. 1, 1966, he said. Alexander said tbe Milan area offers more'employment possibilities and more opportunities f$r reeducation than others. Milan has 560 prisoners. NEAR PAROLE Prisoners participating will be those with demonstrated stability or those who would be up for parole soon, he added. Wages wifi be controlled by the prison supervisor, Alexander noted, and the men will pay for equipment and clothes. If they are married, their earnings will be sent to their families. * * * . - One of Milan’s two largest employers, the American Foundry Co. which employes 156-160 men, expects to consider the possibility of hiring prisoners. Another area employer, Wolverine Plastics Co., was not certain what its position would be. Wolverine Plastics hires mostly women, but employs some 60 men in plastics molding. HON MUCH CAN YOU USD LOAN SUE CAW | YOU REfftY MONTHLY 12 Mot. It Mot. 24 Mai. E $100 $0.17 0 6.99 — — 300 20.31 20.00 01043 $1440 000 40.12 34.11 2740' 23.17 •00 7541 0340 4240 0547 1000 93.00 -00.01 5240 43.73 Mth on tkat pot at tha enpsld srlnciptl bslsnct not in wt* *1 1300.00; a at psr math n atv naniaMr St Dm wMpatlsiaaes. MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER 2243 S. TELEGRAPH ROAD Phone: 334*9954 might as well come on over here and get into line. We are going to be your brothers.” State troopers ringed the Negroes attending the rally. Craig was arrested Monday by State Police and charged with assault and battery after the Klan leader grabbed a Ne- High School, which closed because all white pupils transferred. The Crawfordvifie school was scheduled for desegregation this fall. Williams said Negro leaders will march about 300 pupils to the school. “We’ll ask to go inside,” be said. “If we cap’t that, well hold a teach-in an thei „ . . . Well have a freedom > youth involved in an at- Die following is a list of recent Pontiac area births as recorded at the Oatitknd County Clerk’s Office €r. fo*6? adopting new pay schedules for liberty’s nearly 750 employes. Firemen have contended they should receive $50 more per [year, pay for certain ranks should be hiked and the city [should institute a longevity pay [plan. There is an accidental death nounced plans for today’s integration attempts at a late night street raityin front of tbe Taliaferro County! Courthouse in Crawfordvifie. They were heckled by white bystanders. Williams announced similar plans in Atlanta, where he spent tbe evening with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., head of the SCLC, who is recovering from Raitisburg, Ml I. Wh**"* mvhi it. walfl, 3440 aaeane, aedw jerry D. DavWson, 110 Otgtsy .. Virgil W. Hlefcay. VI wTcSaaM* Archie 1. Alexander. 4lt Luther Bobby E. Mener, 4 Fertreee HMSer tempt to board school buses - with white pupils. He was re-'uffiuaj/, Inocrui ilsxeleui tlfifi kmul nn/J 4mnl Nfillflilfi T. leased under 2100 bond and trial was sat for next February. [ Physician, 85, Dies WEST BRANCH (AP) — Dr. Roman Sadowskl, practicing physician for 61 years, died Sunday in Tolfree Memorial Hospi-jtal. He was 15, but had con-tamed his medical practice in -Dearborn until a week before BUY NOW AND ON THE PURCHASE OF A GAS CLOTHES DRYER te jhe U.j, ewnr 5% and an accidental injury every three seconds. \ THE PQNT1A£ PRESS. TUESDAY, OCTOBKH 3, 1905 - NIXK. AP NNMM JOINS mOH BENCH - Associate Justice Abe Portas stands in his judicial-robes before taking the oath yesterday to become the 96th member of the high bench. He took his oath At the opening session of the Supreme Court's new fall term. u „ r Justice Changes View on Rights Ruling JACKSON; Miss. (Ap): - A State Supreme Court justice who once wrote thst the 1964 U S. Supreme Court school decision “is not the law of the land” now say* that federal rulings in civil rights cases are binding hi state courts in similar cases. Justice Tom P. Brady, who had written a pamphlet called 'Black Monday," attacking the U.S. court in 1164, ruled Monday that two Negroes who desegregated A Greenville, Miss., park three years ago should be pet free because their constitutional the U.S. Supreme Court is still the ultimate in judicial determination and is binding on the tribunals and cltifens of the respective states in comparable In a written opinion in the cases eg*!"* Carroll Bolton and Amye v Lee Bynum, Justice BratRr said, "Irrespective of how erroneous it may appear, or how odious it is, a decision of W. C. Burnley testified in a lower court the two bad alright to use the park and had done nothing wrong but that violence would have occurred if they re- The two Negro girls were arrested after they attracted -t crowd of white people, then refused to obey police orders to Greenville Chief of Police The Washington County Court handed down sentences of 91901 in fines and 90 days in jail and Circuit Court affirmed the | PRIVATE DETECTIVES HAROLD L SMITH IHVESTMATORS 1301 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. FE 5-4222 — 24-Hour Numbar OFFICES IN FLINT — PONTIAC — SAGINAW LOW IN COST BIG IN ACTION . . . PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 332-OlBl. Vote on U.S. Amendment Near; Bridge Bill Delayed LAN8ING (AP> —The House moved Into position for a final vote today the federal amendment on presidential succession. But in heated debate Mon- The House also gave prelimi- nary approval to a committee amendment which would strike a provision making the division jdirefctfy responsible to the state day H dtlayed action In Mack!-1 highway director, nac Bridge refinancing. A bridge refinancing bill weatogrSd debate that included charges of “pork-barreling’’ and “dilatory tactics." Id become tbs seventhstate to ratify the presidential disability amendment. Approval from 39 state legislatures is nseded. ‘COST OF |399,999’ Rep. Joseph Swallon, R-Al-pena, chief sponsor of the other bill, charged that this provision would, in effect, keep the Mackinac Bridge Authority sBve -at an annual cost of more than 9300,000. The measure, which already has received State Senate approval, drew some sharp crit- icism in an hour-long debate actually solid- and gradual, if led dong party lines. Demo-, orats backed the proposed amendment to the U. fL Constitution end Republicans'generally opposed it. PRESIDENTIAL ABILITY Opposition centered around objections nst repeated uae of the term “pnabto” in inference to the presMeut's . entity to carry out Ms functions was vague and “could open the door to disaster. The bridge fight centered around differences between two bills aimed at refinancing the 9100 million structure. One Is predominantly Democratic and northern-district sponsored. The other Is predominantly Republican And freshman sponsored. Rep. George F. Montgomery, D-pefroit, leader of the so-called “freshman caucus,” and cosigner of Swallow’s bill,, asked that the Mil be laid over one more day; The move carried, 37-33, Jacobetti said the MR hr is baekinf would not continue the1 authority in existence. The language making the division directly responsible to the director was strid# “because it is not needed. Other divisions of the department do not have their,relationship to the director ; spelled out in the. law.!* k ___The Democratic - sponsored bill, backed by Repa. Einar Er-landsen, D-Escanaba, and Dominic Jacobetti, D-Negaunee, includes a section which says when the remaining 999.9 million is paid off, the bridge will be administered by a separate division within the Highway Department. 6. A. Tbempeea A Sees Plbg. A Ktf. 7005 HlflilMJ n. pt s-iiio H takes, more than a Krona * to conoottdato Mile (6* *• Mir IP md-W kmienl) At Associates, you may borrow the cash it will take to pay your bills in full. Get extra for present needs, tool Thie way, you'll have only one monthly payment—* payment you chooee! •Th* Krona U a coin Uttd in Swtden. ASSOCIATES Nationwide Insurance announces a real break for safe drivers Only one driver in five causes nearly all accidents. By excluding him, Nationwide can offer safe drivers a car insurance plan with these valuable benefits: IYou pay only what you deserve to ■ pay._Whe^you start Nationwide’s new insurance plan for safe drivers your rates are figured on a sliding scale. This, means that the premium .you pay reflects your particular situation and driving experience. The fewer accidents you've had, the -lower your rates. Nationwide Insurance thinks it unfair that safe drivers should foot the bill for careless drivers—which is how a lot of insurance plans are trill rna nowadays. * • If you haven’t had an accident for the last thrde years, better check with us. 2 You pay leas for second and third ■ | cars- Nat ion wide’s multi-car discounts offer bigger savings than are possible with most other Insurance companies. An. / ■ FINE JOB / When the 101st .Airborne Brigade sent 20 wounded men to the 86th Evacuation Hospital in mid-September, the nurses did a fine job despite dlfsicult conditions. S6me doctors, however, have dqubts .about the effectiveness! of female nurses on the warjl front. 'I often wonder here if the nurses’ tranquilizer value is leas effective than vtheir frictional influence," said one doitor. ) He apparently was frying to say that demands for better liv-j ing quarters and amenities are: an upsetting influence. i "We don’t even have boards MICHMAN STATE HIDHWAY DEPT. PUBLIC AUCTION SALE Public Auction Solo of vacant landlockod land located in the City of Wixom in Oakland County. The described parcel of land will bo offered at public auction sola at 2:00 P. M. Thursday, Oct. 21, 1965, at the Wixom Municipal Building, 49045 West Pontiac Trail, Wixom, Michigan. Sola 9-106-A. Minimum Bid: $79,000.00 Central 43022, Prelect 63-29 Bid Deposftt $7,900.00 Parcels 106, 109, 110, 121, Landlocked 122, 124, 125, 127 (Pori A), 129 (Port A), end 219 ’ GENERAL DESCRIPTION Aa irregular shaped landlocked parcel of vacant land located Northerly of and adjacent to the North limited access right-of-way line of Interstate 88 and lying East of the Wixom Road Interchange and West of the Beck Road Interchange la the City of Wixom, Michigan. This parcel contains 72.8 acres, more or less. The property consists of two segments separated by a-I * M Company tower line right- ae Ilea West of and abats approximately 18.5 acres the Edison right-of-way North and Sooth % line. A| of the subject land Ilea West of and is zoned “B4” or General Basiness. Approximately M acres of the (Object load lies East of the Edison right-of-way and to zoned Residential. The two segments are connected by two 68 foot wide roadway easements reserved across the Edison right-of-way. The cost of con-strnctioa of roads over them easements would be at the expense of the owner of the sobject land and not at the expense of the Detroit Edison Company. There shall be no right of direct ingress to or egress from ^ * lihereta described. Ml Freeway from or to the loads The bill acres \ ef-wey. The billboard restrictive danse does art apply to the 18.i acres tying . West of the Detroit Edison Company right- TERMS DID CONDITIONS OF SALE Title to this land to owned by the Michigan Slut* Highway Department. The property to offered for sale subject to the following conditions: 1. All eaenmbrances, governing restrictions and easements of record. The State make* no warranties or representation aa to the condition of the property. 2. No MBboards, signboards, or advertising devices, other than those advertising articles, products, or services sold or mnaufactared on the premises shall be ended, permitted or maintained in or men the 3. The Limited Accese Previsions as stated in the general description. 4. He right of the owner of any existing public utility facility to maintain in and go upon thy land described for the purpose of maintenance of said , faeiUty, be It on, otter, or Oder toe ground. I. Thto property to offered aa landlocked property with ae Ingress or egress except by Me shotting owner. Anv purchaser, other than the abetting owner, mast make hie own arraagemento for aeeeea across the property of toe abutting owner. MINIMUM BID — The minimum bid, as stated, is the minimum sale price. No Sale can be made for Ires than the minimum bid indicated. BID DEPOSIT — The bid deposit will remain the same as stated regardless of selling price. Bid deposits must be in the fonn of cash, certified check, cashier’s check, or money order, payable to the State of Michigan. (PERSONAL OR COMPANY CHECKS ARE NOT ACCEPTABLE.) Bid deposits must be made by successful bidder at time of sale. LAND CONTACTS, ■*- Items bid at KAMI, or more, may be purchased on a Land Contract with a i ' n payment of 21% of the successful bid and the bal-e with interest at the rate of 1% per annum la monthly Installments of aot {ess than 1% of toe purchase price. Failure of successful bidder to doffiMM payment within 30 days after notification of AitanlMnni* -Board approval or to execute Land Contract within 10 days of notification may result in retention of tbe propertylad deposit ~ by Ihi ImMHgl Mate Highway Department aa liquidated damages. The right to reserved to rejeot any and ail bids ■A • **“*“ (rfi* 111splaaffiaUbe 4 Administrative Board. and to waive defects in Ilia bidding, and all sates shall be mbjecfto final approval by the State Administrative Board. A sign will be placed on toe property ao that the item cah be Identified. For farther information, contact Mr. J, J. Hoiefca, District PWpirty Reureeeatative, Michigan State Highway floors," one doctor But thye are signs the nuraaa are . gaffing used to doingtheir own washing and other chores. W * Ur\ >■ "The great saving grace that American women a adaptable—I hope," said m male officer, surveying the Education Lengthens. .Television Coverage Washington (AP) -'The Office of Education says two out of every, three students in the nation’s colleges and schools wlfl be in areas covered by ed- When goose eggs hatch, goslings take the firit living thing they see as their mother. to a potential viewing audience of 126 million persons in 46 states, the office said. Assist to Education NEW YORK (AP) - The Council for Financial Aid to Ed- . ucation Inc. says that Americas ucational television programs'corporations contributed t this falL itimated $250 million to colleges The office said seven new ed- and universities last year. The ucational television stations will council is a nonprofit group set start operating in the* next few up by business leaders in 1953 to weeks. Thto wUl make a total of encourage voluntary support of 109 such stations broadcasting higher education. Wintariza now! A phono call brings Budman Bargain Prieas and Fantastic Credit Terms to your homo at no obligation. Call 6(2-4910 Today! UDown-Nofftinq to Pay'til May tt WOMAN'S FIND INSPIRATION Dr. ritet* noted that proponents of continental drift have found inspiration in the fact that the opposing outlines of Africa and South America across the South Atlantic appear to dovetail. TRIPLE FATAL — Three people lost their lives yesterday afternoon when the driver of an automobile, pictured above, made a left-hand turn into the path of a heavily-laden sand truck on Kalamazoo’s southeast side. Killed were George I. Bushhouse, 66, the driver; his wife, Alta, 61, both of Comstock, Mich., and a passenger, Mrs. Elda Reitinga, 60, of Kalamazoo. The truck driver was not hurt. Soviets Urge University of Californio Educator Blasts are the policies or practices of the greatest of American universities. Both are accepted because universities are devoted to the search for truth, through SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -University of California presi-that Clark Kerr released a ! MOSCOW (UPI)—The Soviets 'today proposed a world disarm- . r JZ, flict of idea with idea, by people versity has two policies which who are free *** the tnith” have been the “subject of con- * * * tinuous controversy” — the pol- In Sacramento, Senator Burns icy against the employment of declined immediate comment on Communists and the policy „ Kerrt analysis of the committee favor of an open forum. report. ^ + ' ' kinoLj fcioim eyewear When you ehoooo your handbags, rw, ahoea, you're looking for right color* and stylos. BUT irs FAR MORE IMPORTANT TO CH008E the correct, properly* styled eyewear—the one accessory that builds the most complete impression. Come in soon! YOU TOO CAN HAVE A TOP QUALITY fiTMIB Osier OH < UEBmFimucE With tha Wondarful Bind AU 0,8TR'*UTINfl system Installed by Dapandabla GOODWILL .fflBSL 3401 W. Huron WeU of Elirobeth lobe JW. ff 6-0484 PHOTOGRAPHIC DISPLAY - Dimitri LaZaroff (left), 03 Oliver, and President Opts R. Haskili, SMI Woodbine, Waterford tb—Mpi.MMmPuHac PrafeasienalPhoteg- TWELVE THE PONTIAC PRESS, 1?UESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1903 Claim Indians Regain Sector KARACHI (UPI) - Pakistani troops in the Chhamb sector of Iodtoheld Kashmir ware (bread to retreat last night under a heavy Indian attack, Radio Pakistan announced. A late evening broadcast said a “sizable force'’ of Indian troops moved into die gion, which had been taken over by Pakistan during the border Conflict, and forced the Pakis-tmd* to “move back to main defensive positions in the rear” Radio Pakistan quoted fpmuaeeat officials as say-iag the act ion was a “flagrant” violation of the Sept 9 cease-fire arranged by the United Nations. Majority Rule Out the Swim India earlier accused Pakistan of cease-fire violations-<* the ground and In the air. An Indian government ment said Pakistani troops fired on TmHan positions in die Meud-har and Haji sectors of Kashmir. CITE AIRCRAFT “Pakistan continues to fly aircraft in various sectors for reconnaissance purposes,"' the New Delhi statement added. Iadia claimed its security forces had rounded ap a nnm-ber of Pakistani “infiltrators” la the disputed state. (The Comm11"*** China News Agency, monitored In Tokyo, reported that Pakistani minister for commerce Ghulam Faruque thanked Red China for its sup-port in the conflict with India. (The minister, visiting Peking was quoted as saying India “has for the last IS years been suppressing the people of Kashmir and denying them their right of self-determination.’]) BOLSTER D1 The Indians charged that Pakistan had improvedjits defenses along the khhogil Canal in die Lahore section, south of Kashmir. In some sectors, the Indians charged, Pakistanis “have tried to move info] Indian-held PROVO, Utah (AP) - You can’t swim at Brigham Young University — at least not on the dance floor. Student officers- deckled Monday night that die swim, jerk and “other suggestive fad India and Pakistan also- ac-dances that cannot conform to n|a»rf each other of burning bor-standards .of the (Mormon) ^er villages. Churah will not be permitted.” The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormon) founded and operates the school, which has 20,000 students this fall. There was some dissension faj the ranks. ONE OPINION jf* **g05 OKLAHOMA CITY k. Tory Letoo, ^ ^ Robert Welch< Odcago^ “I wouldnt waste my Bin± ^ , X time with guys who are against^ ^ dvil ^ , and various govemn grams were indicative < By Science Service WASHINGTON—Sunken “mi-crocontlnents” may eventually provide the answer to die original position of the land on earth — if they can be found. For years, scientists have debated the theory that the earth's continents are fragments of two former supercontinents, Laura-sia and Gondwana, which broke apart and formed the modern continents that then drifted to the*r present positions. Laurasia combined Nort hr America, Europe and Alia, and Gondwana combined Sooth America, Africa, Madagascar. Antarctica, Australia and India. T)r. Robert S. Dietz, a qeologi- l#l nceenoqraoherd...the En- vironmental Science Service’s Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce, said that reconstruction of thei Gondwana supercontinent results in several Texas-sized' missing pieces to this jigsaw puzzle. ★ * “A large submerged microcontinental block, capped by the Seychelles Islands in the Indian Ocean, If one of these, but there must be others Us well.’* “Look,” said Rod Alim. 21, of Rochester, N.Y., “Mormon kids in England do these dances and its all on the up and up. Here they couldn’t tell a frag if they saw it” But student body president nation’s “insanity.’ “Not only is the vast insane asylum today, they are letting the worst] mates run the place,” Wek told a crowd of about 500 per-Bob Christiansen. 24, of Ely; p®5, Nev., said he was confident ihej The gray-haired Maesachu- ban would be well accepted. “If students violate the standards,” he said, “they will be asked to leave the dance floor." FACE EXPULSION BYU President Ernest Wilkinson, who said provisions of the ban went along with his suggestions to the students, declared setts businessman listed evidence of the United State’s “insanity” the civil rights movements, foreign aid, por- prevent the spread of nuclear weapons. The proposal was published by Pravda, the official newspaper of the Soviet Communist party, the form of a frontpage editorial. The Soviets coopted the idea with an attack oa U.S. disarmament policy and indicated that the Kremlin had nothing new to present to such n world conference. that persistent violators would play-acting wars where, bothltbe*^” Pravda said. Ko awiAlIm) ri<1nr »ro A\rt%niaA Kt/ thp Ramp " * be expelled. sides are directed by the same, “One of our problems here,” influences.” Wilkinson said, “is that we have 4,500 new freshmen from nearly every one of the 50 states and unfortunately they learned only there suggestive dances in high school." Wilkinson announced a BYU program of intramural dancing — similar to intramural athletics. “It won’t bp for credit,” -he said, “but it anil have skilled teachers to teach the fine qrt of social dancing. There will be soma competition. “But it won’t be carried on with the vigorous competition of athletic*-” There-is a real danger that! The legislative report on nography and such govern- besides the five states which al- Communist influence at the meat programs as urban re- ready possess atomic weapons,! university created a furor uewaL other states will embark on the earlier this year when it was He described the Korean and road of manufacturing these realeased by subcommittee Viet Nam as “sham, weapons or getting access to chairman Hugh M. Burns, D> . ■ -»-* Fresuo. Kerr denounced “allegations suggesting that the present university administration is sympathetic to communism.” He said university authorities have consistently denied employment to known Communists. .* ■ ★ ’ * “The report contains no actionable evidence against any single one of the jmiversity’s more than 40,006 staff mem-1 ben,” the UC president said. DEMANDS ACTION He called on the Burns com a state Senate report that “Communist elements” were primarily responsible for student unrest at the Berkeley campus last fan. Clark, in his 42-page analysis of the report by the Senate subcommittee on un-American activities, charged that it “presents half-truths, with resultant distortions, about items oni which the whole truth was read- “Some o jily available to anyone who the first of these policies,” said!**®r1U?ni sessI°f1 |Kerr. “Some on the right do not Burn? sa,d- ‘ Mf’ 1 Kerr took several months to digest the committee report and [prepare his statement. It will .'take us quite a while, too." sought it” the left do not likeij1 jajd! offer until the next session of the e right d |Kerr. “Some a like the second. DEFENDS POUCHES ________ ‘Yet there two policies . The civil rights movement, Welch said, “has been planned . . promoted and controlled by the Communists for Communist purposes.” IDEALISTIC MOTIVES He said however, that 95 per cent of all persons supporting the. movement do so for idealistic reasons. 4 Welch, standing beside a huge replica of the American eagle, Mfh^ present session of the United Nations General Assembly must adopt a decision convocation of a world disarm-The Soviet Union proposes to convene such a conference in the middle of 1906. The editorial also urged a' nonaggression agreement between NATO and the Warsaw pact, the Communist version of the European alliance. Earth's Continehh Part, of a be required to discover and survey the mleiocontinantSt but it would lead to the conclusive solution of one of the earth’s major mysteries.” The French nation sometimes is personified by the name “Jopnnfa Crapaud.” MAIL EARLY WITH CHRISTMAS STAMPS CODE USE----- CHRISTMAS SEALS FIQHT TUBERCULOSIS and Other Rsspireteiy Disuses Published as a public service without charge for the U.8. Post Office Department. The Pontiac Press.—s----P#*— DIAL 334-7711 ' Fstay ahead of HEARING LOSS ot $e/2ont\ I Measurements taken indicate lat the continental edges with a precision far beyond the expectation of even the most ardent advocates of continental — '----------. LITERALLY UGHT Dr. Dietz asserted that thei earth’s continents “are literally light, tabular bodies of rock buoyantly resting in the earth's dense mantle, the part of the interior wfak^mfa above the molten central core. He said “a major effort would PERSONALIZE YOUR GIFTS IN GOLD STAMPING • Napkins • Convention Guest Tags • Gift Ribbon Gold Embossed Names on • Bibles • Books » • Leather Goods CHRISTIAN LITERATURE SALES ---SK kvm.__ FE 4*9591 New York Oty’A borough dj^tee to either “Voluntarily re-also criticized President John- Queens has 361 Protestant,and move ^ . report from the son, Supreme Court Justice Earl; 106 Catholic churches, 131 syna- protection of legislative privi-Warren and Secretary of State gogues and 16 Orthodox church-ji^gg M that its contents may be jexamfaed fairly and with due process before the court,” “officially withdraw the . report from issuance because of its many errors and innuendos which have resulted fa sueh widespread and harmful publicity to individual staff members and to the entire University of California.” «> As examples of the Bans fdnort’s inaccuracies, Kerr dted: A statement that “at least 9,600 students who were trying to get ui education were subjected to brainwashing fa their [efaireoeBi^-—- * * | He said till; report “does not; reveal how it arrived at this! astounding figure, nor does it disclose by whom or bow the ‘brainwashing’ was accom-i pUshed” NAME PROFESSOR A section accusing Dr. Martin Kamen, now a professor at the UC’s San Diego campus, of 13 N. Saginaw St. WHY TNI JIT It WORTH TNI MONEY wun nuuaumon n n» wtenr mucin ih history LET US FILL YOUR NEXT PRESCRIPTION Pfmnmmey Plaza Pharmacy Jsrry ft Joann* Dunsmora, KPN SIM Poatiae Ik. Rd., Pontiac, Mich. More 111-11ST U H,un A Uay Sfrvlre NMI DELIVERY *> fVaMwMaaiIm Ctmdy KEEP UP YOUR SPEED TVKWHTER only KSi.A:, oo•:roJ-4 5, i$gg Gardeners Will Light 35 Candles • Birmingham b ran ch, Woman’s National Farm PATRICIA KAY CORPRON June vows are planned by Natalie 1. Manoogian, daughter of the John A. Manoogians of Nesbit Lane and Robert E. Mosher,“ —son of the Martin E. Johnsons of Ansal Drive. She is an alumna of Michigan State University where her fiance is a junior. SUE DAVIDSON1 To Hear Opera Music NATALIE J. MANOOGIAN Richard Allens Honeymoon at Niagara After Vows At Niagara Falls tor a , honeymoon are the Richard Lowell Allens who were married recently in the Oakland Park Methodist Church. ★ w, w Parents of the former ' Mrs. Eugenia Ann Vick era of Bloomfield Hills are Mr. and Mrs. Herman S. Vickers of Dumas, Ark.— ’ fr * * , For the afternoon rite pdr-formed by Rev. Jaiqee Deeg, the new Mrs. Allen chose an Empire gown of brown Chantilly lace over matching crepe. She held a nosegay of yellow roses: fr ★ ★ Mrs. Jerrd N. Vickers attended her sister-in-law. Don Allen was his brother’s best man. They are the sons of die Paul J. Allens of Oliver Street. Hugh Parks The couple was honored at a reception in the Bloomfield Hills home of Mr. and Mrs. JerrelN. Vickers. Choou from mn Him 2,500 patterns of special WALLPAPER ’ Trimmed—Pasted—Washobls 29* *. «• 99* *• * Rssm Lets $1.98 and up ACMEPAINT I N. Saginaw Co. Pika St. PI 2-IIOS Wo DaUvar He Will Speak Before Women on family Life Guest speaker for the Oct. 12 meeting of Christ Church j Cranbrook’s Episcopal Churchwomen will be Daniel Lamb, branch supervisor of the Mid-Oakland Child Guidance Clinic.______1_______ ♦ - ★ ★ “How the Family Sees It-ear will be the topic lor •Mr. Lamb who win speak following both the 10 a.m. Communion, service at St. Dunstan’s Chapel and the noon luncheon. * * * . Located In Birmingham, me clinic is supported by the state, county and United Foundation, including the. Bloomfield Township Cent munity Chest, Avon Township Community Fund and Pontiac Area United Fund. * * ★ • ■ In addition to the above program, Marian Athay, director of adult education at the church, will conduct the first Of a six-week series in a training program on human sensitivity. An informal lecture on opera, accompanied by taped music will be given Monday at 7:15 p.m. in the Pontiac Public Library. Ibis inaugurates a new type of program in Pontiac. Mrs. Lynn Townsend, 1965 chairman of me Detroit Grand ' Opera, organized similar programs in other parts of the Metropolitan Detroit area befoi'e the May opera season. The lectures and music are offered solely for entertainment and to stimulate interest in opera. Mrs. Ferdinand Gaens-bauer is Pontiac chairman and Mrs. James L. Howlett is Pontiac Library chairman. Mrs. Robert G. Leggett Calendar TODAY t Joseph's Hospital N u r s 0 s’ Alumnae, 8:90 p. m., h o s p'l t a 1 board room. Plans will be made for Nov. 6 bake and candy sale benefiting the building fund. PTA in Action Dr. Albert A. Canfield, vice president of instruction at Oakland Community College, will speak on “What We Have to Offer” at the Wednesday meeting of Pontiac Northern PTSA The 7:90 p,m. event will take place in the llbrery. ,t * * *' The school’s vocal group under the direction of John Tousley will ring several There’s a demand for Graduate Operators! “learn a professional service” IWtOORt Faculty A Instructors V ZOTA JAYNES ★ ORA RANDAL MACE COLLINS ★ MARYANN LEATHERBERRY 1114 S. SAGINAW — PHONE: FE 4-2352 Past Noble Grands Club of Pontiac Rebekah lodge No. 488, 11:90 a. m.', home of Mrs. /Ethel Kline; schoolgirl luncheon. Dr. William Bryant’s Spanish Class from Oakland University, 7 p.m., OU. Slides and films of Mexico trip. Open to public. ' i { . THURSDAY Friendship Circle, Welcome Rebekah lodge No, 248, boon cooperative luncheon at home of Mrs. Gladys Holliman, Charlotte Street. Oakland Writers’ Workshop, l p.m., new YWCA building, West Huron Street. Fashion Your Figure-Club, 7:90 p.m., Adah Shelly Library. Pontiac Great Discussions Book Group, 8 p.m., Webster Elementary School library. Judge's Unit Will Gather Op Friday msf Michigan Division of the Woman’s National Farm and Garden Association of Graduate Judges and Teachers will meet at me Women’s City Club, Detroit. The lecture-demonstration and business meeting will be in the morning with a workshop conducted In the afternoon. Mrs. John C. Calhoun of Birmingham, recently returned from study in Japan, will lecture and demonstrate the Japanese techniques of flower arrangement. Mrs. F. Gordon Davis is president of this association. Meet Friends for BREAKFAST and LUNCH BIKER FOUNTAIN Hiker Bldg. - Lobby daughter SUF_JuMGardenAssociation,will Fa WaaWva in mil ---*-- open Its 95th anniversary year,-Monday, at 12:90 p.m. in the Birmingham Community House. . • . * Prof. Robert Iglehart, who heads the'art department at the University of Michigan will speak on “Architectural. Design in Gardening.” Serving on me board of governors of U. of M. for the study of art education of the Museum of Modern Art, he is currently advisor on art to the University of. Tel-Aviv. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts and a member of me College Art Association and the National AEA, Chairmen for me day are Mrs. Robert McVeigh, hospitality; Mrs. Donald Irwin and Mrs. Donald Wallace, social, and Mrs. C. V. Di-Pietro, table decorations. NEW BOARD The new executive board includes Mrs. Norman W. Berry, president; Mrs. R. A. Taggart, vice president, Mrs. Richard Kaltz, recording secretary; Mrs. Chester —Wisniewski,—corresponding secretary and Mrs. . Stewart Cram, treasurer. * ★ * The Christmas Fair and Greens’ Mart will be held in me Birmingham Masonic Temple this year. Orders for some of the articles which' were purchased or made by small groups this summer will be taken by Mrs. John Doerf-ner. Jr., chairman of the fair, on Monday. Mrs. Sixten Ehrling, wife of the conductor of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, (left) discusses the selection of a Michigan Lucia with LeRoy W. Dahlberg, Bloomfield Hills, and Mrs. Edward Johansson, Birmingham, both board members- of the Detroit Swedish Council. Girls of Scandinavian descent between the ages of 16 and 23 who are interested in the contest may contact the. Detroit Swedish Council. Some Are Holey of Royal Oak, area chair* man for “Opera Programs in the Libraries,” will present the -program entitled “Laughter and Melodies.” There is no charge. Fun Furs Are New Rage ' MRS. GAENSBAUER Piano Duo to Play at Meeting Mrs. James K. Rosenthal and Mrs. A. Roger Welton will present “Ivory Duel” at a program in the Morris Music muse, South Telegraph Road, Oct. 12 at 8 p.m. This wffi be the October meeting of Zeta Xi chapter of Delta Omicron International Music fraternity. Mrs. Rosenthal is plenist with the Pontiac Symphony Orchestra, a member of the symphony board and the Pontiac Tuesday Musicale. She has p u b I i s h e d piano compositions. Mrs. Welton teaches piano in Birmingham and is pianist and musical coach for Will-O-Way Apprentice Theatre. She is a member of Birmingham Tuesday Musicale. The two performers are hostessing the event along With Mrs. Homer Sisney. Pair Plans Fall Vows ■A Nov. 27 wedding is planned by Mary Ellen Has-kamp, daughter of the William A. Haskamps of St. Paul, Minn., and Donald George Hurley, son of the Fred C. Hurleys of Highlander Road, Orion Township. The bride-elect is a graduate of the College of St. Catherine in St. Paul.* Her fiance will receive a degree ..in history-from the College of St. Thomas, St. Paul, in January. Georges Kaplan the French couturier in fur, New York, has a long established reputation for the incredible and the too-new in fur design. * * * fr Twelve years ago, when Jacques Kaplan, co-owner -and designer introduced what he called “fun furs,” everybody laughed. Who, in heaven’s sake$, was going to wear Mongolian lamb, Kit fox, old fashioned skunks,-Guanaco and assorted bulky goodies? “HE WHO LAUGHS... Well, Monsieur Jacques now has the last laugh. Three years ago, inspired by the many paintings of his private collection, Kaplan introduced the first painted fur coats in history (all done by prominent American artists.) * fr- .•fr- it is not necessary to • elaborate on what happened next. * fr ★ This year brought the triumph of the Op-art clothes, the Mondrian dresses and the Poliakoff fashions. This year’s novelty is a revolution.* Fur coats with holes in them. fr fr fr Although it may seem weird, ‘it is a marvelous new idea. Indeed, there are so many ways to' fill holes. You can fill them with nothing but a body stocking. This is for stay-at-homes. , * * * You can wear a colorful: * dress so that everytime you change the dress, the background of the fur will look different. 3-D LOOK You can also fill the holes with other furs and so obtain a three dimensional effect. Or you can fill the holes with Marabou or Ostrich and be part bird or beast. frfr.fr The collection features also the youngest mink coats ever designed. One is wit- tily edged in Russian sable (gilding .the lily perhaps?) collared in fisher, double breasted and narrow as a column. . For the younger set, there •is a white bunny coat with one red and one green pocket' and a* giraffe stenciled trench coat. • ★ ★ ★ For the romantic there is a wedding gown of Swakara white broadtail with 10 feet of train. Area WeaveVs to Exhibit Work Area members of the Detroit Handweaver’s Guild will meet Friday at the International Institute on East Kirby Street, Detroit: A hobby and craft exhibit ' of members and program will begin aft l p.m. Visitors desiring to attend may call Mrs. Clifford Alger of Lake Orion. PEO Meets Members of chapter AW, PEO Sisterhood met in the West Huron Street home of Mrs. P. M. Snover on Monday. Hie program was “Un-derstandingthe World Through World Travel.” fr fr fr Mrs. C. M. Moyes was a guest from chapter AF of Grand Rapids. r PoiloV 1 School Of Beauty Inc. • Low Monthly Payments • Day or Evening Classes • Easily Readied from all point* 4823 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plain* l OR 3-0222 FAI.L SPECIALS! Pemaieit Waves Complete *7“ up y Beauty Shop White Swakara broadtail evening , coat is punched with holes for a new*effect of lace in fur. Exclusive creation by Georges Kaplan. Don’t Throw It Away ... REBUILD IT TODAY! Our axports will restore now comfort, higher quality Into yew present mattress or box spring . . . compare before yeu buy! 27« SERVICE i Guaranteed in Writing 7 Yearn S OXFORD MATTRESS CO. J 407 North Ptriy ll., PontiaB FE 2-1711 S SERVING THE PONTIAC AREA OVER 41 YEARS REUPHQLSTERING ‘ Styled to enhance the hidden beauty of your favorite — furniture. Our quality ' < workmanship adds years of wear. “Fine Furniture and Quality Carpeting Since 1924” 5390-5400 DIXIE HWY. OR 3-1225 Open Friday 'til 9. Sat. 'til 12 Noon _4fc_ Office Training Leads to Good Jobs for ^MATURE WOMEN Mid Term Opening Oct. 26 (Day School and Evening Division) % tots are experienced and Mature women are now finding good jobs and high salaries in the business world. . ' \ : understanding. You WiN hove the abilities and confidence you need (or on office position. Thousands of mature women the mature have entered office work recently. You, too, can do It, with our training and If you are such a women, —you can team business drifts—or brush up ; 'former frMl-wih a quick course Phone our office for more foctL" We will be happy to discuss your opportunity' In office work. The i is law,. Instruc- PONTIAC BUSINESS INSTITUTE 18 W. Lawrence, Pontiac FEdaral 3-7028 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1965 Hunter Is Target Wrath Sensational Specials Some of tt* words they use are Just terrible, Abby. My tyuabeind spent three years in thrMavy, Mid it takes a tot to shock him, but when the three-year-old asked him what a certain gutter word meant IHt marring, he almost faint- the point? the / luxurious j conditioning wave with Vive«Oil * DEAR ABBY: I am a young mother with two children, ages 3 tod 4. they repeat every- Think of it! The Luxury Of Our I2S.00 Salon Ctfstom Wave Sale-Priced Now For Only $12M CLEARANCE REMOVAL ^U I Bloomfield # % I Township • —Lien—No- 7 MOVING TO BIRMINGHAM aPdWpKCUL $ RED TICKET BARGAINS OAIL ■■Hi I 1\ WmlmmMi I 1 Wrnmfm WMm WSi m 1 fMmm. IWM 131 SWIM SUITS ad. * 3 ?. 2-tmu 4 SUEDE COP ^w y.M 4 GOWNS a*p<|Me V,w BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE STORE * anafe* r,. 3.mgawii g^- •< * *1 rations upward. Procrraaivelr the face la “lifted.” Vhe face and neck look younger again! 2ND DEBUTiagremaeknaind pleasant to use. At our cosmetic counters $3 and 11 MONEY BACK GUARANTEE. 24 WEST HURON STREET NATIONAL BRANDS FOURTBBir PONTIAC 1251 Baldwin Near Columbia ft t>nn ■ 459M Btvd. at P*ny Ft 1-7152 S97S Adame Next To ABF mum 3417 Biz. Ik. M. •tM-59 Ft MM Well, Melvin tovee to shoot, so last year ha went deer hunting with three other guys. They drove BOO miles ini were gone a week. I stayed home with me baby This year Melvin says he wants to go again. I told him Intense Excitement Continuing Pontiac store only. ALL FURNITURE DISPLAYED IN OUR PONTIAC STORE PRICED FOR IMMEDIATE REMOVAL 20%i.40%d« sofas, chairs, tables, lamps, wall accessories, dining room and bedroom furniture ... . ■ . . . . „ Hr,. SI 19 Hi-Back r+m.mUr: mm re clouring out mil------ * Ts—p Chatr TVX> furniture in bur Pontiac Hare! MRS. J. E. CHAPMAN Many more sofas and chairs at close«oul prices, plus many distinctive decorator pieces — a few listed below Keg. IW Early American Dry Sink by a famous maker in rugged pine............... 79.95 1 Keg. 5119 Early AmAiras Harvest leble in nutmeg maple....... .......................89.95 Beg. sao Solid Cheery Tea Wagon in Colonial . styling........... ............. ...59.00 Reg 1120 Hitrbeock, pi astir-top trestle table in antique cherry ........................99.00 Keg S67.S0 3-eerner, Tavern-Style drop-leaf table in maple................. 49.50 Reg 542.50 Drop-Leaf, maple window table. Early American, styling .................. 49.50 Reg 5533 Solid Cherry Bedroom Crwaping, include* a 4-drawer dleaser, framed miner, full panel bed and , chest...................................................................................;............SS9S Afternoon Ceremony for Couple Roberta Lee Heacock and Jack Earl Chapman were married in a recent afternoon ceremony in the Iga-terford Community Church. Their parents are die Lloyd H. Heacocks of Sunshine Terrace, .Mrs. Vivian E. Reeve of Drayton Road, Independence Township, and Albert J. Chapman of West Ketmett Road. With her chapel-length gown of white Chantilly .lace over taffeta, the bride wore an illosioa veil and carried cascading white carnations. ’ W * # : Lorraine Pizzuti was maid of honor with bridesmaids Elaine Finlay tod Mrs. Leon Johnstone. With Louie Antonucci, best man, were groomsmen James Flangton and Douglas Heacock. Robert Decker and Leon Johnstone were ushers. Try Towel Curtain Cotton terry towels make ideal curtains for a bathroom window over a tub with shower. “Towel” curtains win dry quickly when wet by the shower, and they can be machine-washed and dried without needing ironing. The National Cotton Council suggests that you coordinate towel curtains with your other bath towels. WIOQl 2nd DEBUT FOR MOTHER Since She Had Her Face Lifted at Home Without Surgery DEAR PUZZLED: For every vulgar word, there is a more refined way of expressing it Don’t get flustered, and don’t put off the explanation. ★ ♦ i Answer the children in the most nonchalant and truthful way you know how, (It doesn’t matter whether they understand or not!) P.S. And you might tell this Couple to pipe down because your children are getting postgraduate courses in “life” before entering kindergarten. No Appointment Needed! Realty Salon Phone FE 5-9257 RENT, LEASE, SELL. BUY HOMES, PROPERTY, COTTAGES, CARS, GOLF CLUBS USE PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS ... TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 332-5181. ■V- b I I THE PONTIAC* UKESS. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 5, lpte fifteen What Is a High School Equivalency Certificate? I year High It la now possible for men abd women who never finished High School to earn > specie) High School Certificate. This diploma <8 called the High School alency Certificate, and n geneOfl acceptance in business and CHrfi Service as the equlva-lent of a raguir* School Diploma. More jtoan 63,000,000 adults am presently without High School Diplomat, lime people have been held hack from hotter pay because th never completed High State Education Departments were deeplyconcemed with this “DROP-OUT" problem. Exams ___National _ Study, chartered of Regents of them York, offers a short \ Kelps prepare “DH for the Equivalent Exams. , Recent government repbtto show that a person who has a a School Diploma earns M0 more during his lifetime than aonpWamwte. This H that iWgh School Diploma could be worth more a week. : back from,.better free Homr-fltudv* ■ Book, write to National School % of Home Study, Dept. PP, 27743 Mound Rd„ Warren, Michigan. School MRS. D. j. STEVENS rrmTi niuu fTTTrrtanj^ Emqwmw! Millinery Classes Now In Session Creative Hat Design And Styling . For All S«wn»AndOec.».on»_ VeXW CUSTOM MILLINERY AND SUPPLIES : 800 BAY STREET PONTIAC Miss Reeve Wean Lace i for Wedding For her recent marriage Daniel James Stevens in St. Michael's Catholic Church, Peggy Lynn Reeve chose a sheath gown of Chantfily lace over white taffeta. Completing her ensemble for the rite performed by Rev. David Brits wem an illusion veil and all-white bouquet of orchids, room and lilies of the valley. - ★ * * ■ Parents of the couple who \teft tor a brief honeymoon are the H. W. Reeves of Fourth Avenue and Mr. and Mrs. James H. Stevens of SigoetStreet. With Shirley Reeve, her sister’s honor maid, ware the bridesmaids Janice Bil-key and Karen Pierce. ♦ w\ W Kenneth Karnk was best man. Ross Campbell and William Franzel seated toe guests who gathered later tor the reception at Maurice’s. PRINTED PATTERN FE 4-5437 ' ~~" 1: ■ r__— ... . , . V .:-. '■ A Open Tonight urilil 9 dtmi’s Tailored Ottoman Coat. . T7 With Stand-Up Mink •Speeiattj ‘"Paused $140 Len Artel rippled Ottoman. Three button single breasted coat. Mink. stand-up collar. Wind breakers in sleeves. •£peaal Getting ^Genuine Alligators .fid WsVe seen many \ alligator shoe, but these • by far • surpass any othersl the sleek, smart styling — the excellence of die skins, the fact that they're crafted to wkhstoad many a mil* of Joshing about and will still remain handsome and. elegant! The price? Very rare Indeed for the quality Matching purse 4HUBON at TILEORAPH It-, fi f ’A*nf Tour the town in a jacket cn-semble — its slim lines accented by important collar news. Choose wool for daytime, faille for late day. Printed Pattern 4S35: Half Sixes US, 14%, 16%, 18%, 16%, 22%, 24%. Size 16% ensemble 4% yards 39-inch. Fifty Cents in coins for each pattern — add 15 cents for each pattern for first-class mailing and special handling. Send to Anne Adams, care of The Pontiac Press, 137 Patton Dept., 243 West 17th St., New York, N.Y. 10011. Print Name, Address with Zip, Size and Style Number. # • ♦ ★ Be alert to what’s new! Send for excitement-packed Fall-Winter Pattern Catalog. 350 design views — school, career,’ glamor styles. Plus coupon for free pattern — choose it from catalog. 50 cents. The National Labor Relations Board had its busiest year in its 30 year history during 1964, with a caseload of 27,403 cases. Genuine Crystal CUT GLASS one glass with 7 gallon gasoline purchase Here’s another quality premium offer by your Good Neighbor Ashland Oil Dealer, You get one 12-ounce, crystal cut glass • FREE with every purchase of 7 gallons of Ashland Vitalized Gasoline. These heavy-base beverage glasses will add to the attractiveness of your table setting. And they’re ideal for use ‘ when entertaining. Start now to collect a complete set of glasses at Good Neighbor Ashland Oil Dealers displaying the "FREE CUT GLASS" sign. Offer expires November SO. 1965 HOUSEWIVES! EX-CAUEt GIRLS! Come Seek to Work u a Manpower While Glove Girl. PleaMnt Part Tim*. Work STENOS - SECRETARIES -TYMST9*- KEY PUNCH -DEMONSTRATORS - SALES WRAPPING-LIGHT FACTORY ASHLAND OIL A REPINING COMPANY MANPOWER! * war mot m TXMrooAnv i “ CALL 332-8386 1130 WIN TIIAQK, PtHTIAO p THIS PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1995 81XTKBN ; Fire Prevention Is Everybody's Business And Essential To the Life of Every Community! Fires Are Caused By Carelessness, Neglect or Ignorance of Facte. •. Don't Be A Statistic V . DO YOUR SHARE! BEWARE Sponsored By The Following Business Frims: stadium °c!*" 7,196 7:30 P.M. ^Ticlu**- events! THATCHER-PATTERSOM, INC. -Ill Community National Bank Bid*. ••Since 1889" MmKISMI Pontiac %Jn Co-operation With The~ PONTIAC AREA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE Industrial Fire Safety Committee THE PONTIAC PRESS WgSDAY, pCTOBBfr & 10W Group Going 'Artistic for Fall Bazaar RyjPAYMcCABIY ORCHARD LAKE - It’s Jurt like is quilting bee with everything but a qufit There are pictures with velvet matting, baskets trimmed with sequins, decorated antiques and colorful handmade toys. ' To mention only a small portion, there are some 200 pictures and icons, '10 hatboxes covered with colorful paper or decoupaged, about St peck has* kets lined and trimmed and primitive paintings on all sorts of wood. TOYBOOTH Hand-sewn Raggedy Ann and Raggedy Andy doUs will be featured in r.hrimfuTtoy booth. Games and a teen club also are scheduled for the fair, to run from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. each day. A salad luncheon will be Mrs. S. J. Poniatowski, 4945 Pelletier, is general chairman of the fair. Enrollment Less Than Expected The community schools have 321 more pupils than last year, according to the official fourth Friday count, but the increase was not as great as expected. Schools Supt. Dr. William Early said enrollment this year is 6,490 in grades kindergarten through IS, as compared to 1,199 lapt yew.— “We had expected about MM enrollment,” he said, “There is itffl a problem though because of the now subdivisions where the beams are uot completed.” He said in some cases, if the family plans to move into their home within a month or so, the children are attending Rochester schools now to avoid transferring later on. 1 ;»p “However, if they don’t plan to move in until Thanksgiving, they will probably transfer their children then,” he said PROHJST COMPOUNDED The voblein of overcrowded schools k-foispeended tar the fact that there are now Ml sen* ion, MS freshmen and Ml kin-dergsrisfchhfidrta. . 1 afr. :m M,, “We wA graduate 360 pupils,” he said, hot more are moving up all the time. And this i» go- ( tag to continue.” Library Group Slates Workshop in W. Bloomfield WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — A regional workshop for Friends of the Library organizations will be held Friday at the West Bloomfield Township Library, 8030 Orchard Lake. The day-long program is sponsored by the Friends Section of the Michigan Library Assoda- are Invited to the aftcrasou session, beginning at 3 o’clock. H. p. Johnston, Michigan Library Association president, will be principal weaker! The program is datagued to met the needs of the groups through an interchange, of ideas on tbs formation, development of services to 11- Clifford Smart School Schodulos Opon Howid COMMERCE TOWNSHIP ££1 gPVfP. The 7:85 p.m. prograsju Will start the new year fir ■ school’s PTA. goals of dasses. Members of Friends groups □ass Offered on Lifesaving WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP — A class in the lifesaving tech-nlques of moutb-to-mouth resus-dtation and external heart compression will be offered tb-marrow nlg^t at Urn Oxbow Laka Veterans of Foreign Wart Past Home. thal p.m. public program at thehom*, Ml Union Luka, will hi Cosponsored by Consumers Power Co. and Me Ladies Auxiliary to VFW Past No. 4156. The class Wfll include “PflfcietUfo* and movie” ndprao- i(«fctaa Movos to Nww Office ROCHESTER - Sheldon Me- HBliS office wee at 411 SEVENTEEN TROY — The CKy Commission last night tabled a request from Biltmore Development Co. for reimbursement of the cost difference between a 12-inch and 16-inch water main being installed in the Somerset development. City Manager Paul York said the difference amounts to about (10,600. “We can’t pay this now,” he said, “so we’re Jest going to have to watt awhile.” He said the 16-inch main was constructed as part of the proposed master plan for water transmission main construction. ★ ♦ * He explained that Biltmore’s request is based on the fact that the city paid the difference between a 12-inch and a 16-inch main in an area south of the development. 12-INCH MAIN “We only assessed there for the 12-inch main because a 16-inch main covers a larger area, he said, “and it wouldn’t be right to assess these property owners for the larger main.” Biltmore should have made thereqnesttothe city, be said, before starting construction. “We haven’t planned on the allocation of any water funds for Biltmore’s project in this year’s water program,” be'said, ‘so the request was delayed un-il financial planning is done for future improvements.” * ★ ★ In other action, a future land use plan, to be used as a guide for city, planning, was adopted by a 4-3 vote. York said some of the commissioners wanted more time to study the plan. GENERAL GUIDE The plan, drawn up by Vilican-Leman & Associates, will be used as a general guide for future development of the city. It includes data on population of residential neighborhoods, economic base analysis, recreation and community facilities and public improvements plan. The commission denied a request from Mark Builders Inc., for installation of four-foot instead of the standard five-foot sidewalks in its Greentrees East Subdivision. Under present zoning, sidewalks in this subdivision are not mandatory, but if they are installed they will have to be regulation width. HOLLY—Five proposals have been drafted by the Holly Education Association as the basis for returning to negotiations on teachers’ pay. The package, which would cost the board of education estimated $57,000, is “far and beyond what we could possibly Schools Supt: Russell D. Haddon said. A $300 across - the - board raise heads the list of items presented to the board last night by file salary committee of the association (HEA). The seven teachers at the meeting were accompanied by Robert A. McKenney, Holly attorney retained by the HEA. ★ * * Board members said they would take the proposals under consideration and meet with the teachers again Oct. 18. NEGOTIATION The HEA also is seeking negotiation on a health and accident insurance plan for its members. The teachers propose that ie board donate $9.30 a deficit budget, Haddon noted. After allocating funds to pay its obligations, the board found itself with a surplus of only 119,000, he said. Haddon, three weeks ago, suggested that the board use the exmoney to hire additional staff members and purchase equipment College Night in Rochester plan for each faculty member, or add the cub to his pay check if he chooses not to participate. Duty-free lunch hours were listed as the third proposal. *- * * Also being sought is terminal pay for retirees, amounting to one day’s pay for each year of service. SALARY SCHEDULE 'Concluding the list is a proposal to finish putting all teachers back on the salary schedule. “Last year, one-third were off schedule,” said Richard Jacobson, the high school social science teacher who heads the HEA committee. “Now we’re down to about 10 per cent” The 114-hour session last night was requested by the HEA after it was recognized by the board a week ago as sole bargaining agent for the district’s 102 teach- ers.______________ ★ ★ * Reopening of negotiations on salaries was prompted by an ta-icrease in state aid this year. DEFICIT BUDGET While the district received $140,000 more this year than it did in 1964-65, it already had aiglet. ROCHESTER - . About 40 colleges, universities and training Schools will have representatives and admissions , officers at the senior high school Monday for the annual “College Night” program. -Starting at 7:30 p.m., the . evening will be'divided into three periods of about 35 minutes each. During the first two, students and their parents will remain with the college representative of their choice for the full period. The third period, from 9 to. 9:30 p.m., will feature “browsing time,” during which parents and students will be encouraged to move from room to room for . personal contacts with other representatives. * ★ ★ The Student Council will sponsor a refreshment period from 9:30 *fo 10 p.m. in the student center where informal discussion of college requirements and admissions may be continued. The program is open to all high school students and their parents. Flint's 'Singing Cop' Will Visit Area Church AVON TOWNSHIP — Lt Wilburn Legree, Flint’s “Singing Cop,” will be a guest at the Elmwood Methodist Church Rally-Day program and guest speaker at morning worship Sunday. ------—* * Before his retirement, Lt Legree was with the Flint Police Department for » years. He is presently school safety consultant for the Genesee County Intermediate School Dis- taste tangtaatisas to convert ordinary—and even discarded — items into real “finds.” Determined to put a new twist in the church bazaar theme, the women have been working on rooms full of projects sines February. •* * Sr They’re preparing for the country fair to be held Oct 15 and la at the church, 3750 Commerce. The John Donum home g t 2530 Worchester, West Bloomfield Township, has been the largest center of activity, although there have been committee workshops in various loca- “We’ve had anywhere from fonr to 30 women here,” Mrs. Donum said. Many bring their children to play while toe mothers work. The results of the women's ingenuity and talent can be seen in stockpiles of goods throughout the Doman home. Table Request on Water Main Development Firm Asks Reimbursement Holly Education Says Offer Is Basis for Return to Talks To Growing Stockpile For''Fair School Sets -Open House FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP-An open house to view the new swimming pool at Garenceviile High School hap been scheduled forQct. IS.. ’ ’ Plans for the 7-9 pifc event include guided tours of th e ; swimming pool area,. gymnasium, new laundry facilities and the homemaking department. Board of education me inhere will act as tour guides. Junior and senior high school students will see the new facilities Oct 12. Die port also will be viewed by alumni following the homecoming football game and Hum* Oct. 15. Sunday School Set for Retarded Pupils AVON TOWNSHIP — A Sunday school class far retarded children in the RochesteMJtica area will be held at Gethsemane Lutheran Church, 1892 E. Auburn, beginning Sunday at 9:15 a.m. Any chUd who can benefit from this special education class may attend, according to. Pastor Donald R. Krueger. ■y* ' " W 'if The dan will be taught by Mrs. Robert McBride and Mrs. Krueger. Anyone interested in enrolling a child may call Mrs. Krueger, 2627 Weaverton. 'It's No Hat/ Says Kirk Miller, A Eight Oakland County 4-H ers Seek Livestock Show Honors Eight Oakland County fH Club members will be among some 400 Michigan youngsters entering the 36th annual Detroit Junior Livestock Show Nov. 2-5. • * # 'Held at the Michigan State Fairgrounds, the tap* provides recognition tat the youngsters’ ability to put total’ animals in peak condnon by show time, aa well as cash profit for some. Oakland County 4-H’ere planning to etaer toe show Include Donald M. Tom Wenti of toe fleyasew Lake CUb Ml Mark Md Lewis Whims st toe Bast Orion Chib, nil «8 whom wfll shew Black An- by the state’s livestock industry. * ★ Much of the show’s glamoqr and profit goes to the youngster who has the grand champion mb or barrow. Las year’s grand champion Angus steer sold far nearly 83,000. r* it Hr,1 But the real purpose of the show la an educational event for 4-H boys and girls. The carcass evaluation caw-tort is gsleiag in popularity, Showing pen of hunbe will be Karen Rose of the East Orion Club and Jane Marta of the Hi-Lo Club. j* Other steer exhibitors will be Sue Pataode of the Ro-m Chib l larte Birger of the North-wert Oakland Club. NIGHT JUDGING liar toe first time, judging wiirbe held it night this year., Livestock wfllanrtrtQfrWftoNw-day with judging in the evening 1 sod the following riqrmng. The sate of jrtae animals SBVJSlJSt Pmhmp in mi mmmm mi wi The Detroit Show is supported to judge aaimals on l had toon compare tike with toe Hatted can the cooler. This gives" the junior I producers the opportune if their fitting has prodi top-quality meat dema today’s consumer. . ★ * * ★ This will be the thi that the carcam been hold in afi three : J* tayoortd fay the w Chib Department of the S«vi« and the Detroit Junior Livestock Society. t tt't The oodetjr Is a group of live-Mock, business and industrial Arms which has sponsored the maud show far 36 yams. DAWN DONUTS 804 NORTH PERRY Pontiac, Michigan Phone 334-9041 Evety Sunrise Everywhere *«|PIi*illTHIS WEEK’S SPSCWLlIS i , BISWRKS Reg. 79c doz. ■ vS? Cherry, Lemon, Blueberry, Strawberry, Rad J> Black Raspberry. T/& Week*» Added Feature: FRIED PIES A Delightful Variety of Genuine OPEN SUNDAY THRU THURSDAY FRIDAYS «Mi SATURDAYS 1A.M. TM 11 PP. 5 A.M. to 12 P.M. --- OothoWayto Woifc -- or Homo From a Party, You'll En|oy Dawn'* Famous Flavor Brewed Coffoo DAWN DOJVUTS the PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 5, Join the Dodge Rebellion et your Dodge Dealer's. PHONE 338-9222 • WAkTAN Dodge : maoto Los Angeles Pitching May Snuff Twins' Win It AH' Hope Los Angeles Corp Could Make Sweep World Serin Opener in Minnesota to Pit Drysdale vs. Grant LEAPS INTO SERIES - Zoilo Versalles, the speedy and energetic shortstop of the Minnesota Twins typifies the enthusiasm of the Twins who go into their first World Series game starting tomorrow against the Los Angeles Dodgers. Manager Sam Melee stands in the background. The first game is in Metropolitan Stadium in Bloomington, Minn. MINNEAPOLIS - ST. PAUL (AP) — “Win It AD, Twins," this signs here implore but the feeling is Minnesota may not take a single game from tiie Los Angeles Dodgers, whose matchless pitching may perpetrate a four-game sweep by the National League champions. In 1963, the same Dodgers, behind the dazzling pitching of Sandy Koufax, Don Drysdale -and John Podres, stunned the New York Yankees in four straight. Koufax and Dyrsdale are still around, more menacing than ever. Podres has been replaced on the Big Three by another southpaw, Claude Osteen.^. ___._______*___jt___*-________l Osteen’s 13-15 record for the) caapajpt is a modest one compared to Koufax’ 26-8 and Drys-dale’s 23-12, but Dodger Manager Walter Alston is mindful that when Osteen pitched far Washington in the American League, he defeated the Twins six times without a loss. Minnesota’s Mudcat Jim Grant, Jim Kaat and Camilo Pascual do not exactly comprise a sickly trio but not even the meet avid American League roofer would put then) in the class with K, D and 0. N PER CENT Pitching, as everybody concedes, is 75 per cent of the game. In the Dodgers' case, .it is II per cent. Since good pitching usually stops good hitting, it would not cause too much of a stir if the Dodgers won in the shortest time possible. The Series, 62nd between the rival league champions, opens ^ Wednesday wife Drysdale op-! same mistakes," said Daugber- __ rGrant \ to --------* - Game time is 2 p.m. (EST). The 30-year-old ace of the Twins’s staff posted a 21-7 record during the regular aea- MSU Aim to Contain Wolverines' Offense EAST LANSING (API-Working to- contain Michigan’s offense wiD be Michigan State’s No. 1 aim this week, says Coach Duffy Daugherty. At the start of Michigan-Michigan State week Monday, Daugherty told sports writers that the Wolverine attack is simple and yet versatile — “that’s what makes it effective.” He cited Michigan’s running passes and power sweeps as the ingredients of an attack that has “moved the ball without much trouble. IPs just that they’ve made-JTT^h Bum no mtofelrac " coiH HailoW. • • • ___«. « - team, Daugherty remarked that “in August none of us thought we’d be in tills position. “We bad so many problems at the start, there was no way to say for sure if we’d win any given game. But most of the problems have been resolved fairly well.’* In Monday’s practice, defensive halfback Don Japinga, rover bade George Webster and linebacker Charlie Thornhill were hobbling with I ankle injuries, ANN ARBOR (AP) - Mkte-j Etam is Central Drops in'A'Rating Despite Win Chiefs Ranked Third as Battle Creek Takes No. 2 Spot a wade ago, replaced the.Chiefs. Bay City Central continues to lead tin Class A section. Frankenmuth has displaced MiddfevUle as the lender of Class C-D ratings. # Frankenmuth outpolled MId-dleviDe by four votes, in the ratings, conducted by the Associated Press board of sportswrit-ers and sportcasters. Albion held m to Its Ne. 1 Class B ranking. Newcomers are Detroit Den-by, No. I in Class A; Jackson St. John, tied for seventh hi Class B; Grosse He, No. 16 in Class B; Femdale St- James, eighth in Class C-D, and St. Ig-nace, ninth in Class C-D. Lansing Eastern, sixth hi Class A last week, lost its first game, a 64 heartbreaker to Lansing Everett. 3. Pontiac C**4r*l (H> i mmgu <5 * \l. SoyS”oS?"K!fntoill> (3-*> Otfctn. In artfir: Gran* hi .rtwHc. NHm. ImiH M. M---_ NorltmUm, MnkiM HlMli DM Madurai•, FarmlnfNfi Horfc Parmtou- ty, alluding to some of Mkh-j^ begm for jgan fumbles. the Big Ten qplg CROWD SPLIT ' Michigan State here Saturday. Daugherty said playing fee; E®0* lectured his squad on game at Ann Arbor would be uo|J®* defensive disadvantage because “we iook|Mood*y- -on It as a home game just as * * I’m sure feey do when it’s here. On the bright side for Elliott’s Hie crowd is split about evenly first string barkfidd, halfbacks so there’s no advantage for the Jim Detwhiler and Carl *** 1 Professional odd have put up the right-handed Drysdale an 11 to 10 favorite despite the Twins’ home advantage. Tiie same betting gentry ------I----- rule the Dodgers a 7 to 5 favor-he to win the Series and will After three weeks of play, sweep. The odds qahnt a)**the Big Tm s only aB-wtnning Dodgers sweep in IMS were 27! Hastings, fears*. . to L STRONG ATTACK Power must win it Twins. Manager Sam 1 rely on the heavy hands of HsrJ moo KiHefarew, Tony Oliva, Jimmie Hal, Don Mincher, Bob] Alliaon ami Earl Batiey to ofisetj the Dodgers’ superiority in| speed, defease and pitching. The Twins own Hi ft powerful attack in fee American League. They are remindful of the Milwaukee Braves. Yet Dodger pitching held tiie Braves’ power in check. In tiie final series between the two teams, Drysdale, Koufax and Osteen held the Braves to three runs in as many * * The Twins hammered 150 more home runs in 1M6. The Dodgers bit only 71 to rank 2Mfa In the majors. The Twins outhit the Dodgers 254 to .345. But the Dodgers were matchless at chiaeliag out occasional runs and making them stand up. Los Angeles writers called the Dodgers a “cap gun" offense twin One writer said he’d seen more power ft a lawn mower. * J World Series Ide wM| Rosters Listed and fullback Dave Fisher all peared for a brief workout. They were injured in last Saturday’s bruising 15-7 loss to Geor- v T ■ The only man who may miss the Spartan clash is defensive guard Barry Dehlin. Political Problems at Olympic Confab MADRID (AP) — The Inter-I lutiw^i Olympic Committee prepared for its opening session in Madrid Vedmsday with thorny poUtical problems on its hands lid an even bigger sports issue to daboto-toe over-all fu-toe of the Winter Olympics. - lia pentieu sf the Whiter Olympics popped up out of the Monday at a moating between DC mopasaMaUwa and National (di—tc ommnUtir men. The —ndtoi board of the IOC wfli meet today ft a dined asaotoa wtft KtBe nawi expected. Than co ' I ’Quit NCAA' Lawmaker to M-MSU k .ail mi* m ii iw snortstom w f p . _ — Min 464 m IB It 77 .373 LIFT FISLDMS Min US 37 44 in a ail VI tin 431 7* JCL » » corree milmiii <•> II M I N __ M 133 » 57 IN 17 37 J 14 J14 iLoeSs m w “ SJR ,, , W 4 M J77 'mm%* LANSING If) - A state senator said Monday the University of Michigan and Michigan State University should lead a fight to pull tiie Big Ten out of the National Collegiate Athletic Association because of what he called fee NCAA’s “archaic and unreasonable policy involving television of football games." Sen. Roger Craig, D-Dearborn spoke as the Senate was approving a resolution to aril U-M to I televise its game Saturday with MSU. Craig had asked U-M Athletic Director Firifs Crisler last week to explore television for the soid-outgame. Crisler replied that un-r mi wo M 21* 33 ii 3.S|| der NCAArales, the game . S *8 2 'Vs ll T IM could be televised onlytf ismsoM I'M the boat school operated | | § 11 j lit! M educational television MINNetOTsVlTCMNe WgrtofcMto* N 17 ii 40 It 7 KlipptMn 74 • » # > | -— lad 47 n u 7 MS MS 43 W 1111___ SI # 17 n 1 1 140 77 41 fe Nil 3.14 ISRVa OUTFISLDURS Pistons Sign Buntin DETROIT (UPI) - The Deft* Pistons of fee Natisael day msatri the ritoftg ef their Ne. 1 draft choice, BIO Bmrita, a center from fee University of Michigan. station and used it for the telecast. Unlike MSU, which televised last year's game U-M operates no educa-| tional television station. * “What gripes me is this dictatorial attitude of the NCAA," said Craig. "I deeply object to a bunch of guys who don’t contribute a dime to tiie financing of both schools dictating what Michigan fans should or rixxiid not fee,” Craig said from the floor. 14. CrftSTftthVs*) jomWi. Mgrtir*. JtnJt. RTS Lion* Gin Take Note Cardinals Rip D Torry Barr and poasfely eliminate tome of the dropped passes which have plagued the team in three garnet. MOt Fima had only IS yards passing against the Redskins and according to today's league itatiatica, the Uona are 12th in the NFL Ottawa, including 277 rushing yards' and 3ft passing yards hi three games. RIP DEFENSE Cardinal runners, who bad gained only SOI yards in their first two games, wheeled through the M^ily touted Dallas defense which had given up only ltt rushing yards In ita first two games. h ★ ★ The Cardinals scored tha first two times feey got the ball on a four-yard pass to Sonny Randle and Triplett’l 16-yard run. The tempo of the game was set Only a M-yard touchdown Tigers Obtain Bill Monbouquetle From Our News Wires MINNEAPOLIS-ST. PAUL The Detroit Tigers wasted no time jumping into the player market Yesterday, fee first $|ay after the close of the American League Season, the Tigers obtained pitcher BUI Monbou-quette from the Boston Red Sox exchange for reserve outfielder George Thomas and second baseman George Smith, who has spent moat of his career in Tiger General-Manager James Campbell paid he planned to make other dtofai to strengthen the dub. He said manager Charley Dresses had specifically asked that the pitching staff be sp- ‘Wo feel Monbouquette will contribute a great deal,” Campbell said. “Now we can turn to other needs.” .* * * Monbouquette strode out 17 ner in 1963, was 10-1» with3J9| earned ran average this year. The * old rtftit-hand-| er started 35 gamia and! pitched 228% He pitched was onl 9 his care ted andfH^^^H “We I 228% because accent < a Herman young i many trades for m,” said Boa-Billy Harman games with the Tigers. Both are *7. it' h ■ ♦ 'We have the highest reports on Smith," Herman said. “Detroit was reluctant to include him hi |ha deal Thomas will play canter flald for us. Wa needed a right-handed hitting outfielder and wa hnow he’s Senators in 1961 to establish an American League record for strikeouts In n night game. This only the second season in his career ho has finished under JOO hi the won-lost cohmm. YOUTH MOVEMENT “Wo gave up Monbouquette because we pin to place the accent on youth next yoor,” “Wo hnvo two young pitchers, Bill Rohr end Gerry Herron, coming up froin Chicago hi 1962. ‘MONRO1 _ “This is the beginning of Toronto and fed they have a good chance to make our dub.’ PHHPPI *Pent moat °f the whose team ninth in the ion at Syracuse whore be batted ,.258. Thomas hit J13 in 79 or.“l The dad Monday night ana the first for the Rad tax since the chib fired Mike Higgins as general manager Sept. II. It was also the first dad completed foOoaing fee end of the regular baseball aeason Sunday. Junior Hockay Club The Arrowsmith Junior Hockey Club in the Detroit Metro League util begin praCtioe tonight at Gordie Howe’s Hockey-land, Harper and 14 Mile In St. Clair Shores. Sunday practices are also scheduled for Windsor Arena. All Oakland Coiaity boys, 16-28 are invited to try but by fee Cowboys’ Mel Renfro kept fee Cardiada from lead-, ing 21-6 et halftime instead of 14-7. Against the rugged Cardinal defense, the Cowboys wert able to pass midfldd just once in the first half and Jimmy Burson ended feat penetration by intercepting a Don Meredith peas. PLAY IT CLOSE The only thing that bothered the Cardinals all night was possibly playing it too clow to the ved in themcond halt a * a */ “We get that early laid and itVhard toftftp from becoming too cautious mm conservative." said Charley Johnson^ 8L Louis quarterback who tbrwur only three times In the last half after completing 14 of 21 for 1M yards ft tha fMt half. / a ★ a. The Cardinals managed only two field gods by Jim Bakken ft the last 30 minutes. But Dellas could do h St. Lo ended two final Cowboys throats wife another Burson interception and a fumble recovery. Prep Harriers Run at OU Fourteen teams are competing for the Class A championship today in the first annual Oakland University invitational high school cross country days. Classes B, C and D run tomorrow. Starting time for both events is 4 p.m. Class A teams entered are Birmingham Groves and Sea-holm, Bloomfield Hills, Brother Rice,'Farmington, Fern-dale, Hazel Park, Milford, Mt. Clemens, Pontiac Northern, Rochester, Kimball, Utica and Entering —------------------ Competing tomorrow will be Ortewtift, Cranbrook, dar-encevilk, Country Day, Os-ford, Orchard Lake St. Mary aid Warm Woods. Chuck Underwood of Qarks-m set a new Oxford course record of 10:56 to lead fee Wolves to e 21-34 victory. Ndl Stalker ef Clarlxwtoai was second, Oxford's Bud Gcrow was third mid George Bovee fourth, and Omkaton’s Mark Adams fifth. Soccer Win for Hillsmen Bloomfield Hills scored 1U second victory ft as i . starts by defeating Bands or Windsor, 44 in a soccer match on the Canadian field yesterday. it was the second shutout for goalies Bruce Hell and Eric Vogier who shared the duties. Hal Osterman and Chris Hubert each fired two goals wife A1 Ruther and John Merfty adding (fas others. Next Turn-day et 4:00 pm. the Hlllimm host Cranbrook. Kick the dull driving habit Step out in a lively Dodge Coronet' n«th* Ooa Forgot id you’ve won and hoard about *86 csr*. Because Coronet is here... sharp, wwrt and may, fee greatest thing from Oodgo sinceYearOne.Loodedwithluxurythohighor-ptfeed cars haven't caught onto pot Wife a choice of thro engines, Slant Six or VS, each one designed to nwhs the walls of Dutlsvilla come tumbling down. Andwithiwtiolsilewofatandirdsquip-mont that used to cast extra. Uka an outside roar view mirror. A podded dash for extra safety. Variable-speed riictric wtodtiHrid wipers and washers. Backup lights. Turn signals. Seat baits, two front end two rear. Enough oaM to gftywrsallylampftd? Now flrsf-oousin cars with Coronet for 1866, a ear wife a Italy parsonriity all ib own. The Dodge RnboMooi wants you I , 89 Dodgm Camnrnt A CHRYSLER THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1963 NINETEEN Nebraska To0 Rated in M M By Hie Associated Pres* H»ey its nowhere to be found among college football’s Top Ten teams today, but Oklahoma and Wisconsin could be the two most important teams in the country this Saturday. Tito Sooners play, No. 1 ranked Texas at Dallas and the Badgers take on runner-up Nebraska at Lincoln. If either underdog can spring an upset, it could result in wholesale shuffling In the list of college football’s elite. ★ + * Just ask fourth-ranked Georgia. The Bulldogs were considered pst another club before the season started and raised some eyebrows by knocking off national champion Alabama in their opener. That earned Georgia the No. 10 slot last week and then the Bulldogs whipped Michigan, dropping the Wolverines out of this week’s !Top Ten and jumping six notches Up the lad- Texas polled 25 first place ballots and JU points in voting by an Associated Press panel of sports writers and sportscast-ts. Nebraska had 10 first place votes and 355 points from the pend of 40 experts. EASY VICTORIES / the Longhorns trounced In$l-ana 27-12 and Nebraska routed Iowa State 44-0 last week. Third in the poll was Arkansas which stretched the nation’s longest winning streak to 15 with a 204) victory over Texas Christian. ★ dr' A Fifth, behind Georgia, was Michigan State which took Illinois 22-12. The Spartans were No. 9 a week ago. i Thp volt wHti point! on • NFM-7-4-5-4-taste and And plact tar*- 'smz snttMtess: I. Tanas ftn M INDIVIDUAL BATTI ■tttsv Min ., Waiter CM ■ VHiAfteM CIs . M/i Howard Was 514 S3 BiWfl - ... , _ Camp'nrl»*KC 571 57 SI Uk:t 355 M M It rf HO 35 55 I .. 3M 30 14 14 ...M4 45 17 3 „ . „. 354 40 17 3 B . McCraw oil . m 3* 55 5 21 . HarnMMn KC 413 at 113 *$ 45 . Hrpnototkc 27{ Zm t. Gaorala (3) 3. Michigan S > Ivina volet I i, Duka. Kant K^ntucky,^ , ^Orujon, ^Stanford, Syracuta. Watt tiKING* EDWARD AMERICA'S LARGEST SILLING BRAND INDIVIDUAL MTTINO (Ml an man al ‘hate) - ____ cfia as a h hr rbi l :iemente Pgh Ml H 114 10 55 . hH Mays » IN 111 177 52 in J17 Wllllama CM 551 1U M 34 105 Si # S « I I 5.1::: $ 8 & 8 2 a Fff v : 1 8 18 2 | SS .jteman Cln 325 31 IS 14 57 .302 Ctendanon Pgh 412 31 114 14 (* J01 Hart IP ...Ml .11 m 53 55 .273 J. AtoU IF .. 543 74 MS I 53 .270 Atev Mil ...55* 50 155 23 IS) Rototnaan gn ^ W m » ill .m JaSmSon PM_ “* * Gabr'lton IF Tarra.Mll •.. tar..: McCovty SF AAcCarvcr StL 8 8 : rm n Htn Fairly Slargal. Morgan Marrtkl Oliver Mil .. asaar MM CM ... ...ling Mil .. Aap'mnta Htn Caltf«on,nphi tEvZtn.:: 71 132 31 75 .252 __..... 71 1* If i Parti Cln ....211 40 72 13 jfiinianLA ...401 37 11 Harper Cln . 545 135 Ballay Pgh .. 525 07 ... Maya Htn .....451 45 i20 M7 55 141 Pgh Croat i ip p ” y 41 .242 27 .242 47 J41 35 .231 Rny ________ ____llllan NY .530 Backer! Chi . 414 WosNaaa ML 353 W. Davit LA 551 •prior lA .. 542 lUckman NY . 34* ---------- m Coleman, Pinion and Porte, ____________ •"-n and Colllaon, Philadelphia; Malhawt ___ling and Jonta, Milwaukee; Rodgtrt and TtoJtor, PHtoumfi; ~ —- Wllllama, Chi----- sj 13 a nr i .413 M I t 45 Mi Tillman Bin W&M , 44 to 1 II .223 ,. 472 51 IM II d M .320 25 74 5 34 .211 .411 52 70 W 33 .213 ..345 20 7* 4 35 .215 .. .9f 44 IS 14 .47 .213 . 411 M M 1 22 Mi ...Ml V M 2 M — _________B wi ii Brinkman Wat 444 36 02 I 35 Grand Stem Hameis — Conlgllaro, Boa-.jn, two. Manlllla, Boatoni Romano and McCraw, Chicago) B lot ary, Baltlmoraj Groan, Kamiaa City; Pecltona, Boyar, Manila, Clarka and MNamlBb^MW York) Shockley, ■- *— Maloney Cln McDanM Cl lining Phi irnamy C M IF . -.Iln w ......... stxrA'ff-Jstaai. 'SM, Pitcher ClaB IP H BB SO W L BRA (. pair JW F Idler CM Ilf M 32 103 14 7 Ml Ul N 41 N I 7 .22 274 171 132 321 17 II 2.17 I M 57 41 40 11 7 2.25 74 57 31 57 0 3 125 » 174 42 171 14 i Pea Dal V • CM I_j jjy Newman Cal . 255 24 151 142 47 17 12 7 . 77 IM 32 51 7 4 221 177 11 132 15 10 53 152 II 11 37 135 13 13 ... 12 122 i4 13 . M 71 37 M I I — 351 221 54 IM 14 T4 2.77 117 157 34 IM 13 I 3.00 ■|B5*5 lit | 11 Oparina Oat ...iglM 75 127 13 I m ** 7| 57 73 4 4 ^ |1 H11* 11 Mlkkelien NY li » ii N 4 f Grant Min ...270 253 41 IM 21 7 Manga Cte 132 IB 25 M I 4 Faacval Min 155 115 53 S * I MeC'mick waa iB 35 17 a i ^ JM . 115 110 m 43 5 7 ■HP Bai .107 170 J» BUB Downing ,MY . 212 IM 105 177 It 14 Boiwair Min .HD M U 4 5 J&wv-.f’B If 13 Aguirre Dot ..Mill 50 14114 10 NtaB - « 74 10 12 NWb'taM Btn 227 237 40 107 10 li nfififll ....155 157 23 Nil 4 Mottl KC . .. 55 M It M I I Wkk'iham Dal 175 — " 11] O'Donoghue KC 171 Mav Cil Radatz I KoplHz * Wilton I MNcYte Ortega Waa ::!!!! i J . 101 77 1 11 4 7 3M 221 77 1« 13 14 i IM 157 113 153 !• II • •* 11*1# 12 •laissifi,*,? ::i«!m Dm t\l ■ 11* 199 37 42 ( 13 . 110 lS 43 71 4 I ::SIB n S * If lh .110 175 77 15 It 15 .1,10 A WE WILL ■I OVERHAUL YOUR ENGINE Spepial Low Price ! 6 Cyl.. . V-8's.. .1 thla includes . , . Rinat, Red Bearing*, Main Bearing, Gfind Valve*, . Pit Pin*, Degfaze Cylinder Wail*, Ga*kety, OH ana Laberl [ Ai»0 . . . FACTORY REBUILT ENGINES \ STMDARD ENGINE REBUILDERS 698 AUBURN RD. • 138-8671-338-9672 6 QC00 H1500 i i N f I 152 V t..e«e wi 157 w .. 631 107 ill 3 :S? .371 v " \ i'S M IM 11 (7 W-f-T P M 173 31 101 !? ‘89 i 134 374 47 M ___73 141 35 n .374 407 41 113 11 M .274 tti 70155 22 73 .275 :& 2 501 100 153 14 40 371 52 134 4 54 371 33| 54 1 I .270 17—55 350 4/» 47 77 17 51 35* 412 77 152 21 105 355 535 55 141 7 50 .254 571 53 152 5 52 .243 407 M 107 7 417 73 142 32 504 75 132 31 71 IM 40 7T „ 57 121 12 125 155 II *7 150 II “ 110 5 105 14 47 IV 5 44 123 10 77 137 32 30 55 7 1H 1 57 .250 AP Ptelefax DICK SISLER Red leg Fired Boxer Fooled Everyone but Sugar Ray RICHMOND, Va. (AP) - An accused robber has been charged by the Virginia Athletic flnmmlanlnn with impersonating a reputable boxer in a Norfolk bout with Sugar Ray Robinson that turned into a fiasco. The middleweight bout was billed as a contest between Robinson, 45-year-old former champion, and Bill Henderson, one-time 5th Army champion described by the commission as a capable, club fighter, ww* Robinson was a technical knockout winner at 1:90 of the round an his obviously frightened foe lay on the canvas. The referee, Jack Levinson, walked out of fe ring, “Disgusted” because “Header-son” put up no fight. DIFFERENT NAME Monday, the Athletic Commission, which had held up the purse, said its investigation disclosed that it wasn’t BilFHen-derson in the ring with Rob- Sisler Goes Job Hunting d Stem Homan _ stirgoll, P iieoso; k ilMcCar 'JOT Schwal :=„h JJ j} f j ..................151323 {? ” 204 IM 71 li* 14 IS 3.26 .*8 157 TO 21*35 II 3.27 I j IS .1*4 172 » 100 IV J 237 WP 8 f! 'IM .........lIlfjTM OmtaM cm .1*7 142 nrni] 4 147 IB 37 107 7 0 £47 mm-cm $ H’H it mir.M * a li ® M4 »2 IM In B 10 3.70 224 m 115 m MM 3.70 2B 227 57 lit 14 If 331 PPHOI .5 * 43 01 5 0 332 Hortool SP . 171 172 47 105 11 J 134 Jackion Chi . . 257 IM 57 127 14 21 335 &—“* M* 131 Til 17 12 1 I 335 123 iM MMI ♦ 33* ^ ■ . m m M 115 114 3 .73 aSSmaV . iSS? 2 2 ill 4M Parry IP .175 174 70 147 f If 4.jl iff cm ...154 ISO 43 IB 7 I 431 MoCod cm ...m 73 47 117 7 10 4.M ladowokl Mil IB 112 35 77 5 7 432 S Glutll H»n .131 IB M 17 I 7 4.33 i'S Jtckion NY . 205 217 41 120 I 20 4.35 Kahi CM it* 207 o 711311 43* L1S lomootir mu i*4 14* M in 7 11 4.44 1 KnHI NY .. 07 03 41 51 6 * 435 1 Claeo NY .If* IIP H POh . . 100 15 34 M NY . 71 IM 17 St J ■— IM 157 15 77 ... 110 103 40 73 Cm 131 135 M M CINCINNATI ®liuiiariXLcP National 1 Bank Before You Buy Any 1966 Car t See Oliver’s Car Leasing Plan * ANY AAAKE ★ ANY MODEL • We will lease you any kind of car. You can forget about car depreciation and you have no resale problems! At the endf of your lease you just" bring in your car and pick out a new one. • All you pay is one precise monthly bill plus your own gas and oil... there are no hidden charges. The rates and length of your lease for the car of your chojce are individually arranged to suit your needs. The cost of leasing your car can be less then the cost of buying! Send in the coupon or phone for your copy of our FREE BOOKLET explaininc aR the advantages and facts of car testing. WE PAY YOU PAY maintenance license plates liability insurance collision insurance comprehensive insurance fire and theft insurance property damage insurance lubrication emergency repairs towing depreciation interest replacement car new tires snow tires anti-freeze batteries / ’ OLIVER BUICK Oliver Buick \ 110 Orchard Lk. Ave. Pontiac, Mich. 4**53 J Pleas* itnd m* your frt* booklet that answer* the ant- j tlorn of teasing vs. buying. I understand that I *m under no | H law □own qImmi_ (mik* and year of car) 1 twenty THE PONTIAC PURSE, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1963 MARKETS Trading Faster The following are top prices; covering sales of locally grown! produce by growers and sold by] them in wholesale package lots, j Quotations are furnished by the] Mart Recovery Strengthened . NEW YORK (AP) - The Detroit Bureau of Markets as of stock market recovery gathered Wednesday. Produce increased strength early this {afternoon as trading became faster. The rising price trend **•»{ widened to some of the market »tn]whe«>ihorses which have been i;“ i relatively neglected during the ^September rally. 1 25 * * * . . aj»| Steels, motors, chemicals and ^electrical equipments were 3.7s | among the gainers. Electronics and airlines were n.sc strong. Rails were down unev-enly. Drugs arid oils showed slight uptrend. cMm. Congo. Carrots, cow poo ....... Carrots, topped, bu..... Caulfilowor, di.—,-— Calory. Poicol, dt. staks Calory, white, dz. crt. Calory, white, dz. ttakt Cam, await Vdoz. *“ A number of the volatile issues which were clipped last week by profit taking resumed their recovery. Gold mining issues declined. The stock market seemed to show no immediate response to reports' of increasing interest rttes by banks normally a depressive influence on equities. ★ ■ * * The Associated Press average of 10 stocks at noon was up .9 at 344.9 with industrials up 2.3, rails off .4 and utilities up 2. The Dow Jones industrial average at noon was up 5.54 at SCM Corp. resumed Its snap-back from profit taking, adding a point. Ampex and Allis-Chal-mers also were traded briskly at 1-point gains. ACTIVE GAINERS Korvette and Magnavox were active gainers of around 1% each. Prices onthe Amerfcui Stock Exchange were mostly higher in active trading. National Video ‘A” gained about 3 and Solitron Devices about 2 along with Pyle-National. Corporate bonds were mostly unchanged. U. S. government bonds were higher. The New York Stock Exchange £ NEW YORK (API—Fallowing is S ol selected stock tronspctions on tl “IYork Stock Exchange with 1:30 Low Lilt. Chf. Revlon 1.30 Rexall JOb Reyn Met SO ReyTob 1.00 Rhoom Mfg 1 RICMOR I JO RoyCCoia ±. . — -RovDut l.Olg *0 4 RyderSy 60g ■ * Safeway St 1 StJosLd 2.60 SL SonF 1.50 StRegP 1.40b SanOImp .461 SCMCorp .SOt ScottPap *0 Scab AL 1.00 Soarl CD 1.30 iingerCo 2.20 JHifihK 1.40a Socony 2.00 SoPRSug ig SouCalE 1.25 SouthnCo 1.00 SouNGss 1.20 SouthPoc 150 s by fleet _____ „W»r smell £8! Omsira Crede A ^itrijsiy JSVbdOi tost WJOVsj mediums 341+8; o' n a uwi’ m c u.'*" jcoi.tw at Eggs unsettled; wholesale buying price* Co Pock M unchenoed to I lower; 70 per cent oriCellahM JU unowngeo re . www^ Calm* M M n- CempRL 45a Camp Sp .7* Cam Dry I CHICAGO POULTRY JCMW 1J0O CHICAGO (AP) - (USOA) - LWjK,“jf poultry: wholcsote buying .prices un- Carteryy 40e changed to H higher; roasters 1 Caab Jl special ted White Rock Fryers 10* It vs; rMgf TfK 1 tew heavy hem to-HVi. ,— CeiinoieCp 1 •Conn ins JO *. - .r com aw ill .. ' . Crrro Cp 1.60 Livestock \cm»rn X 6 21H 2M0 2176 — 34 ww.ith WHIT 3614 35H 36*4 + ' 4 30% 3S74 3*7*. .... 3 **V4 *214 6214 — Vi 63* *4H + 45 100k l*Vk lOVk — 46 im trig + Leer Sieg J* LmPiram t ncToaiT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP)-L{USDA)-Cattle, 600.|chiMII SIP 1 StMTi mostly 25 c tower, cows steady at CDRlPac .Mo Monday decline most choice 950-1150 lb ChrlsCrft .68? iSni t1 Mnrt ri,"*r cows! Chrv&ter lb ii^Ujb.OTfflyT! terr ^tn i^ao- I 25-40 c Cities S% Made Trucks MacyRH 1.20 ‘n CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP) - JUSOAI — M 4.500; toKton 21 to 50 higher; 1-2 230 lb butchers 24.25-24.5S mix«) 190*250 lbs 23.75 - 24.25; 2-3 240*270 2L304IJ0; wlxto 1*3 300^ lb 22_ 22.75; 2*3 450*500 lbs 20.25-21.00; >»*r‘ conEleclnd 1 16.50*13.00. . .___ ______. ICnNGas 2.30 Cottle l«; _sleughter rteers ‘'M* .ConePow MB H>8 higher; liuilre 1 lllfrl VU >> Cazitalnr 25.25; Choice MOWS lbs sleughfer l* 2i 50-25 00; mixed good and choico 7Mtjwn.07T3.Ki; gtm fl-DjBff ' and commercial cows 74.op-75.spt i w8wSpnls57lelwwied sisughwr l«m«;ci(ftdcoi 4C tol*good9lwooleddslighter ewes S.5M.00. i.jj „Coi Pid .1 P ComtCre 1 ComSolv 1 ComwEd 1 ? Comsat Com Can 2 40 Com Ins LOO Cent Mot .40 Com Oil 2*0 Control Dot* 4 2604 2606 2676 47 1766 17V., 1764 273 5374 S2W S36k 4-114 50 10 Boo Wk-s 36 10 ,(rik 8 11 71 77 Vj 777k 4 31 29% 2764 2TH — 124 40*4 3714 40 4 74 1714 J066 3066 - 11 3064 3066, 306k 4 5 36Vk 24v3 8'4 - 16 3564 ml »6k 4 . |B| 12 3014 IM 1014 . .. Aptflugr .25g 16 547k 5414 5464 . MotfMMif 1 32 476k 4714 47V. ... MeyOStr 1.50 107 44 4364 436k McCall 40b 21 3514 2414 35 4 6k MeponA JOb 10 74W 75W 75W — 6k McKest 1.70 11 5766 57Vk 576k 4 14 Meed Cp 1.70 17 §4 136k 16 -06 356k 36Vk 1514 .. „ IS 6114 406k 4114 -4 64 MOM IJ0 36 616k 6T' A StOII Cal 2.10 StOillnd 1 JOo .....iD*f» Ch 1.40 StoHDrug .75 StevensJP 2— It 114W 77(14 71474. I 656k 6fi4 656k “ , 874 gfi , .. ... r 1664 3114 3*74 4-7* i 674. 6764 6776 —T—...... Tamp* ef .58 12 2114 26 Tong 040 lb 105 2366 “• -execs 2 40 “ " extaefT to TexGSu l J0 Texoslnstm 1 ®.nC?fe. LhringsO .43* I m 2574 2100 4 I 3164 II 216k 4 Merethn 2 20 — “-ra MerChep J0g 113 1 ‘St J i 9U9 l.W Stocks of Local Interest { Figures after decimal points are eighths OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS ns tram the NASD are repre* inter dealer prices ol «PPrex*; a AMT Crop. ............... AloocloMd Trade .. ... o DhaMgetinf M Ufl"DO CitM A • gSSf'f- Delta Air I JO DonRioGW I OetEdls 6.30 Del Steel 40 Diem Aik 2 Disney 40b Diet Seeg l DomeMn JOe DougAir 60b TOW - —D— 4 276k 276k 276k X61 226k 22W 23V. + 67 44. 6114 6366.4 15 10514 104 1047k 4 12 20V. 20'4 20V. + I 5366 5164 536k a 3764 1364 5 4 1064 3066 306k 4 It 35 »6b S 4 I 2414 U 2464 4 • B IgM I&hT J 2764 2714 2764 4 —N— 24 7774 tO 7074 4 30 mi 5466 55 + 41 W4 ‘ »64 7464 -14 1766 1614 1766 *f . 8 31 Vk 3066 M 1 336k 336k 3366 - 4 WNJ n£ T«* 4274 NYCtnt«1i30e tdatsTw'-it t S HA 4*16 2 JO 4 VslNorNatGas 2 NorPac 2.40a 14 216k 2014 2076 -53 1114 20 >74 — 14 14 37*4 3314 W76 -414 24 2764 27 W74 4 64 10 12266 m 122 V. - 14 15 Si st-" EatonMf 2.20 EdgeOC 20g ElBondS 1.55 EIPasoNG 1 lWd',2 163 77 7514 767k 4 107 10366 10264, 103V. + 7 56 874 864 4 3 2764 27V.. 27'* 16 2714 2774 (776 04 7164 ft 8------- FairCam ,8a 19 7666 1 pS&0fr*?46 Fad Mgg i JO FarroCorp . FWral Cp I *#ieS85? I* 73 1314 I3'4 13'4 jf 1564 1566 IM t 16 V. If 1314 ■f W“ Mia r li lt I 36 12 2376 23 23 -14 18 3016 4766 4764 — ' » 7414 7366 7414 4 1 8 6364 627b 436k + ‘ 1 7364 7314 7364 27 1566 UV> 1366 4 RAC Corp RCA .60a Ralston Pur 1 Rayette JO Rayon ler 1.40 ttoding < (ekhCh . I 2364 2364 - 64 37 3364 33 3364 + ' 20 4614 4566 457k — 1 SINGAPORE (AP) - Reports om Jakarta today said organized rebel resistance in central Java appears to have collapsed. The reports, sent through diplomatic channels, said small pockets of rebel forces were still scattered throughout the central part of Indonesia's main island but these were believed to be ill armed and poorly led. The diplomatic reports said an American businessman, who was not Identified, drove the length of Java in the past tire and found very little fighting. The American reportedly encountered rebel forces but found them quite.friendly. He reported that many people he had spoken to in central Java were supporters of Lt. Col. Untung, the leader of the attempt last ireek to overthrow Presideht Sukarno. MEETING CALLED Jakarta Radio announced that Sukarno had called a meeting of his political and military high command Wednesday at Ms summer palace in Bogor, 40 miles south of the Indonesian capital. Tbe meeting was expected to shed some light on the murky, political situation in Indonesia. Earlier, the Malaysian govern-tent radio reported that fighting between government forces and pro-Communist rebels had broken out in sections of central Java. The broadcast did not give the source of the information. tlr^B The Radio . Malaysia report said the rebels controlled several districts, including the Jogjakarta region 250 miles southeast of Jakarta. An earlier Malay- th-74 3 414 474 474 5 6714 67 2 1864 1164 j 5714 5716 __ SO iM' 9$- fM 26 6666 ££7k 6614 ESK85 SR 33 37W 377* 3714 . ■ 44 6766 67 (Mb + 66 5 3264 3274 Wk - H 4166 ..... 12 3664 5514 613 136k 1* « 4266 42 Sill t 2166 1764 2174 + 37 3364 33V. 3314 - 106 15 366b 17 2014 20 114 7166 Mb 22 1Mb 79 Textron 100 W mi W. 77'4 21 6366 4114 4374 + 14 436k 446k 446b — 64 557* 546* 55V, + 27 426k 4814 6164 4 33 774 7 77k 8 507* 507* 3066 — H 277b 2774 2764 + . 1.50a 61 Mb I 8 2414 236b 24 US UuMmO US Una* 1 USPlywd l.< US Sub LI us (man us stum 2 317 i V 276k 2774 2764 1 “ 4766 + i 166k + 6 Co la VIJ6 27 SMk 51 II K It . „. . —V— 241k 226b 2414 + .. 8'4 2 i ) . ________ „ 6 +T14 ■ 13 47 4666 4664 — 74 —W-X-Y-Z— Watwortt, Co 12 774 7 ErSfekM. *io u ■>: — WornLam, .70 77 376* It 3764 - 14 WnAtrLM M 74 3364 3266 — ‘ " i (M l 4 6616 6616 4#t6 WOflffT 1.63 36 M64 «74 4H4 . , WaotgEI 1.8 222 Mb 3776 3364 +166 Wcycrtir 18 10 4214 42 42 “* Whirl Cp IJ3 Tl *f 3764 3764 WhHtM 1.40 26 3174 8 874 Wilton CO 2 13 6666 6664 466k wiwoaTtit u 2® 276* tm ■ ■" si* an 3366 3366 ■thlngtn 1 ox Cp .70 34 3464 m imf IM HP ______MB *S «h 4M Mb _ ZOflML 1.40 164 I860 I860 1026k +266 CopyrtgMog by Th* Ataaclattd Prom 1766 unofficial. _____ ________ 0*664, rate* *7 Jptvt- dendt In th* foragolng taM* ara annual dMUPrMMWMt batadion ttw last ouarterty M JUSSS or ax-dlttriby- _____g-Ooclartd or paid to far lb it r. h—Declared or paid after mock dlvl-1 Of *1*7 op- k—Declared or OdM tbit ,^.r, on gggiMig|«lww-Di)w, umh dwl dntda hi orraora. n Now litft. p—Fold thit year, dividend omlttad, dtforrod or ------- m taken at lorn dividend mooting. ■rad or P0MM 17*4 plot tto3l dMrttution^dttf. — xr—8x rfifto. xw—without war* - raw*, tw-With warrant* tra Mtdf 74 6mmy wl—Htuad. nd-N#xf "I 1H»’ bankruptcy or racelwerih* I being rurgonlzad under Hi* Bankruptcy Act. dr II&UMUI inurnad by «Mk c~ panlat. 7n-For*lgn law* lubiect to Rebels Halted in Indonesia? American Travelei Reports Battle Lull By SAM DAWSON AP Bushocss News Analyst NEW YORK - Medicare, growing population and medical and surgical advances are combining to spark a boom in hospital building. Many communities are studying both present overcrowding and the prospect of a big jump in patients when Medicare becomes operative next July. More people with more money to spend for medical carq, and new ways DAWSON of treating ailments, are putting a strain on present facilities or making them obsolete. *. * * Some cities plan to build new hospitals. Others are moving to had retaken Jogjakarta after Communist elements captured it. The army high command reportedly ordered the crack SHi-wangi Division into central Java to clear out tbe rebels. The latter’s main strength seemed to come from units of the region’ Diponegoro Division. Utility Company Wins Award for Annual Report Consumers Power Cp.’i annual report to stockholders has been named the best published by a large utility company in the 25th Annual Report Survey sponsored by Financial World, the nation’s oldest business and financial weekly. The bronze Oscar-of-Industry trophy marking this achievement will be presented to Consumers Power Co.; Oct. 26, at a hanauet in the New York Hilton Hotel. Approximately 5,000 annual reports were reviewed, in 97 classifications in the 1965 competition, held to promote the improvement of shareowner communications. News in Brief Pentiac police are investigating the reported theft of $110 worth of aluminum from a truck at Oakland Mill Supply Co. at 216 Irwin. Rummage Sale: First Preiby-terian Church, Birmingham, 1669 W. Mpple. Thun., Oct. 7, 9 a m.-8 p.m.; Fri., Oct. ‘8, a.m.'Sp.m. — ad Rammage Sale: Thursday, Oct. 7, 9 to 12. St. Andrew’i Church, 5201 Hatchery Road. —adv. nXf : !%■: 671J 17} J : 17L7 337,7 465.3 1MJ 1613 327.1 337.1 177J 17L2 346.1 30ND AVMADBI 4*4 to Tto AmMmtH PraM( Uk M. UtH. Pfb. IS ■p m m . mS i ill ; MARLIN FASTBACK - A restyled grille and newly trimmed interior are new features on the 1966 Marlin, presented today by American Motors Corp. Introduced as a mid-1965 model, Marlin continues its fast-back styling theme. It goes on sale Thursday at area American Motors dealers. Medicare Spurs Construction Hospital Boom Seen medical research complex is | stuffs and delivery of meals on tern,----———— “A computerized pharmacy processes prescriptions by doc-, tors for their patients, using unit-of-use packages. *. *■---# ‘ 'A helicopter landing area near the emergency entrance will speed the handling of victims of L6ng Island highway accidents.” Among new techniques being installed or planned in many hospitals are computers to be used both for reference information and for diagnosis. . BIG QUESTION—MONEY It will all cost money. And for many a community the big question is: where-is the money coming from? “The trend in hospital design,” said P. Whitney Webb, of the office of Max. O. Urbahn, Architects, in an interview, “is to make them in effect industrial complexes which put the doctor and the patient and the necessary equipment in tii right place at the same time.” At the new Meadowbrook hospital the architects plan a logistics center which automates tbe full cycle of incoming materials and supplies. AUTOMATED HANDLING “They will be distributed as required,” Webb says, “with automated handling of food sian report said army troops exptmd present ones. Still others are studying designs and equipment that offer more and quicker services, meet doctor and nursing shortages by saving time, and adopt some factory techniques for getting the i efficient use of space. The hospital of tomoiTow may resemble a' computerized production line. ' TO SPEND MORE Plans call for spending $2.5 billion next year for constructing new hospitals or modernizing present ones. This would be $200 million more than the estimated outlay this year. In 1964 spending hit $2 billion, pared with 91 billion back in 1950. Some predict Medicare and population growth may push expenditures to |6 billion year by 1970. Despite increasing demand for hospital care, neither the number of hospitals nor of beds has grown startlingly since 1965, By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “I am 26 years old aad have'been in fee aaritl without much success for 2 years. I have fdd lots if seven different stocks. This program doesn’t Work. If n stock goes down, I lose, and if it goes op, I don’t male much. I am thinking ef seB-ing all my shares aad investing 92J6I in owe low-priced stock. What it your opinion of AMF; Sperry Rand; General Time; High Voltage; Alberto - Culver? Or weald ! aader |29 a share?” S.C. A) I think the reason you have not had success with your stocks is that you are attracted i to low-priced speculations, without too much background of knowledge. Hie stocks you Invest money from sale ef my home la tax-exempt bonds. What do yon suggest?” AJ. A) Singer has sold down in a very earaings-conscious market because profits declined in the first half, mainly because of reduced income from certain foreign operations. For the year as a whole, I believe they will show a gain and I would hold excellent stock for recovery. In the tax-exempt field I suggest Memphis, Tennessee, 3s of 1979 at par, rated AA and State of California (when Je-sued) 3.30s of I960, offered to yield 3J0 with the same high AA rating. (Copyright, 1966) although the number of admis-jmerition as replacements are mostly without speculative at-traction—except possibly General Time and High Voltage. The only way I know of for a ytwng man Hire yourseff to in-vast successfully is to seek good value—net low price. I advise you to switch your holdings to American Hospital Supply-^ which should have even greater growth with Medicare. sions has. The American Hospital Associationpjiti the number of hospitals in 1966 at 6,966, with 1.604.000 beds and 214*73,000 admissions. Last year the number of hospitals was 7,117, with 696.000 beds, but 29,266,090 patients were admitted.. The secret of handling 7 million more patients in 392,000 more beds, the association says, is in improved handling meth-Since 1946 the number of patients receiving hoepital care has gone up by 75 per cent. Just after World War H the average length of stay ill a hospital was 9.1 days; in 1964 it was 7.7 days. FEDERAL FUNDS Federal funds have helped in some hospital building. In tbe fiscal year ending June 20, 1965, nearly 1246 million of federal funds was used this way. In the current fiscal year some $303 million is expected to be spent. Medicare could well increase Uncle Sam’s generosity. Even without Medicare tbe demand for new hospitals has been growing. The rush of dty dwellers to suburban communities has been a big factor. In East Meadow, -Long Island, a 940-million 901-bed ‘ * Treasury Position WASHINOTOM (AP)—Th* uth potltlon of tt>* Traoaury oamparod wltti Is MSL r,VH*3 ***■ Itpl. *7,1 "TigMmtsaisfil JgMwC 8>)77J61 J6S.73 ^ |3J7MTM73JI 31,1*1.771,665J7 ii*.73M8,141.74 J 73.1 72.7|#ct I* »tatutory Hmtt. Q) “I awn M shares of Singer Ca., at IIV*. Should I sell ibis stock aad take a big toss or bald? I am without American Stocks 9# 127* 1274+ 141 474 4 7-1* ‘ as 254 r H I TH TH 77 _ ! Jji in 437 ^£2? '? 4114 41'/< J’ 'l 1# 'I* *. ( 111 El -j...-.- f wh n V 3 8 5a prirC,"’g i I IP iM Will Consider Project Pads City Commiasioners tonight will consider tlree agreements frith the Michigan State Highway Department for the projected 1906 widening of Square Lake Road. As part of an over-all project to improve Square Lake Road from Telegraph to 175, the pity will participate in improvements to portions of the road within the city limits. City Engineer Joseph E. NeipUag Is scheduled to present agreements with the State Highway Departmeat for the projected read atigament, permanent prohibition of puking aad financial partiefeation. Square Lake 'Road is to be reconstructed from a two-lane highway to a four-lane, divided, limited-access highway. * ★ * In other business, e preliminary report is slated on the bids for a new serial-ladder, platform truck for tbe fire depart-tent. - Also tonight, a proposed contract is to be presented between the city and county on the latter’s use of tbe parking lot tt Lafayette and Pine. u itt tUB PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1965 TWENTY-ONE ♦ A J19 If + 1741 +•« SOUTH (D) 4k A K 10 VK542 ♦ KQ84 ♦ KJ Mo one vulnerable »th Weat North Eaat 14 Pua If Paw 2W.T. Paw SN.T. Paw Paw By JACOBY AND 80N The American lead over Italy increased to 17 International Match Points after the second session of play. There were numerous swings both ways diving this session. The larges I swing for Amer-I ica occurred on " board 25 when this team played three no-trump and made five. Their bidding is shown in the box and is rather unusual. South chose to rebid to two JACOBY no-trump in spite of four-card support for his partner’s hearts. Then North with two flvocard suits simply went to three no-trump instead of showing his second suit. #est opened the denee of chibs sgshtft fte three m-Mtract. Sooth ran off five dab tricks and played a heart to his king. The Italian West held off with the ace. It never occurred to him that Sooth would hold four hearts. Thus the defense was only able to make tricks with its red aces. When Italy held the North-South cards the opening bid was one no-trump. They use a 17 to 20 point no-trump. North responded two hearts — a forcing response in . their system. South rebid three diamonds, North tried four clubs and South signed off at four hearts. Apparently in their bidding methods die three-diamond bid was some sort of slam try so North tried four no-trump. South showed one ace and North had to stop at five hearts. Q—The bidding has been: loath West North Bate * Paw Fur ? 1 .... You, South, hold: 4AfKQ 4l4t +AKQJS1 W&af .wo you do now? r A—Bid either three dubs jr throe M-trwmp. We prefer throe no-tramp sllchtly shies it laneaetevahle that rear partner will paw three etahs. TODAY’S QUESTION You bid three dubs and your partner bids three diamonds. Whet do you do now? Answer Ttdteiytw BERRY'S WORLD False Hearing Aid Practices Viewed LANSING (AP) -In a meeting to tbscuas fradulent hearing aid practices, many hearing aid dealers Indicated Monday they fdt some form of regulation would be desirable, Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley reported. Kelley has been investigating complaints of high pressure sales, Improper fittings, low-quality hearing aids and sales of old hearing aids as new. He said his meeting with deak era did not produce a unanimous conclusion regarding the solution of problems caused by unethical dealers, but it was generally agreed such problems did exist. By Jim Berry TALES OP THE GREEN BERETS IfgHCW THe ■ SON OF THE HEAP OF AN INFLUENTIAL NEWS SYNDICATE, ONE CHKS TOWER, ON A WILD* GOOSE CHASE—HUWT1NO THE KILLER OF HW PAL, ANDY CARTER. ANP WHAT CAN I TELL HIM—THAT WE SUSPECT, IT WAS THE VIETCOtte COWBOY? THAT WON'T SET With a good break in trumps five hearts would have made but South went wrong alhd losi two hearts and the ace of diamonds to be one down. * Astrological Forecast mmm JZj SV SYDNEY OMARS Nr WWMteW "Tht wlM men cantrel* Mt < . . . ANWIwr N*l R» way.' ASUS (Mar. tl to Apr- »>« ' GENERAL TENDENCIES: Cyehi l+h tor PISCES. ARIES, Special wardT" VIRGO: Don't aueh too hard. If alto Capyright ttofc Eanaral Paatoraa Carp. THE BERRYS Bj Carl Gruber! ME.TOO.' MY ALLOWANCE 6 GONE AND I THOUGHT, .MAYBE YOU..-------- I DEr _. BPHEi I what Side op >2.THEJ=_ENCE. 0 IMS ty NIA, lec.“ V “This must be your lucky day—here’s your first poverty war check!” BOARDING HOl'SE aHarad tv CANCER-bom individual. HAVE PATIENCE I TAURUS (Apr. * to May S0>:_ Ottfum Friend* prova to (trlka fair —.— ... worth ... If you parmlt i •O. Aaaraclato humor, good GEMINI (May 21 to CANCER (June 21 to Juft 22) • SSf aonafracttoa advica to ARIRB individual. RtaUu currant Ntwatton dua to cf Maataaa raedved today may valid ckia.'Study implication*. oaf halp from export. LEO Guht 21 to Aua. 22): Rlaa,1 thaltonpa. Ha thnato ha gjw ar-glijr duty. Exhibit daring qualHIai. Thai to authority will glda with you. Van hav everythtog fa gain • • • nothing to tow VIRGO (Aug. IS to Sapt. 22): Taw ancy aaw It to broad over minor matton You can mate amotlonal gain* by a, plying galt dltctodna. Oat hint fm* TAURUS maulpa. ■* recaptlva to chan _____USRA (Sapf. 22 to Oct. H): car# yau guccatd. Maana don't upon prolact without lull undai Chancei tor tuccaw halghtonad standing. ,,, by faith, canfldanca. Loyal Indlvlduait at your SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Noy.n): You can gain through charm, par tonal map-nattgm. Rut yau CANNOT huy yaur way. Mtant bt natural. Sa truthful ... to atharo and yaurgaH. Avoid axtravagance. sincerity la hay to auccaao. SAGITTARIUS [N«V.22 to DtC. 21): Paw Wvan*. ^Direct your current position, provlda valuable aid. original ... a true CAPRICORN (Dae. _ I ;, , Mate Rattnctlsn between real friend* and tolrweathar variety. You can pat team to "prlvllappd" Information En-abtoa you to dlacavar truth. Hi hitawttepa to mtoura manner. AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Fab. It): Money sa«~peStWsW: Key I* EXPANSION OP INT«Rf»T*' Your LIMA” — hay. Tryl PISCES (Feb. tt i thorough, you .mate tidal, me could ratult. ____IP «ynnuaimv la YOUR RIRTHOAY . . . yau pito lay tram tamlty appra-elation, would mate excel lent public By Dr. 1. M: Levitt. Tom Cooke and Phil Evans I HAVE DISCOVERED AN UNIDENTIFIABLE OBJECT/ ir LjOOKSUKE A BEACON/ iT EMITS A HIGH-, FREOUENCy SIGNAL NO By V. T. Hamlin CAPTAIN EASY By Leslie Turner OUT OUR WAY Divorces MaripriTJ. from John R.MacOragor Merrllee C. S5nJPWC|» HL*LaC|«lf Emm p te&rt LtjPB___________ judHh A. from Randall E. Whittaker •W ‘F. fttm Oatmar H. Jujdaa Jack U. from JoyctM. ICtorr Norma V. fram TpwMj». Fwuar Carolina from Ruttaii A. Jorgmaon fSMffi:SSTBSKi MmtMinW.mmh I DONALD DUCK VEAH* TAKE Off THEM / H0MJ3R.GKT BACK 5PECKS, MC ILL POKE / IN THE CAR BEFORE ------TtfSNOOTl J TCU DOSOMSTMUJi EEL & MEFK By Howie Schneider just Remember the OLD SLOGAN, MY FRIEND— UNITED... IUET STAND, CXVIDGD...YDU FNL| / ITS MISQUOTE^ ( BUT STILL STRANGELY ) COMPELUL&j V------------- By Ernie Bushmiller By Wall Disney r Charles Kuhn i I TWENTY-TWO THE PONTIAC #RKSS. ¥lMsDAY/bcfeilS 6,19*6 Deaths in Pontiac, Neighboring Areas L WESLEY BOWMAN far Mrs Wesley (Catherine L.) Bowman, 74, of 111 V. Wilson was to be this afteraoan at the L. C. Friederich Funeral Home, St Clair brtrialthere in—the____Hillside p.m. Thursday at Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Church with burial ta Perry Mount Park Cemetery by the Donelaon-Johns Funeral Hone. Mr. Moon, assistant chief metallurgist at Pontiac Motor Divi- Mrs. Bowman died Saturday after a brief illness. She was a member of die First Congregational Church, St. Clair. Surviving are a daughter Mrs. John Nabarrette with whom she made her home; three grandchildren; six great - grandchildren; and a brother Thomas Bruso of Pontiac. MBS. HAROLD R. DAVIS Service for Mrs. Harold R. ilia Mae) Davis, 15, of 111 B. Howard will be U a m. Thursday at die Thayer Funtral Home, Farmington with burial in Glen Eden Memorial Cemetery, Livonia. Mrs. Davis died Sunday after a long illness. Surviving besides her husband are four sisters and two brothers. BABY BOY DEWEY Prayers for Baby Boy Dewey, infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Dewey of 161 Dwight were to have been offered at 11' a.m. today at Ottawa Park Cemetery, Independence Town- The baby was dead at birth Sunday. Surviving are the parents; two brothers Patrick and Donald, both at home; and grandmother Mrs. Stewart Dewey. GLENDON H. MOON Service for Glendon H. Moon, St, of 73 Osceola will be at 1:30 sion, died yesterday after a two- Sunday. Police Arrest Teen Fugitive Allegedly Kidnaped 2 Young Chicagoans BENTON, HARBOR (UPS -Police today wrested a teen-age fugitive from an Illinois training camp who allegedly kidnaped two Chicago youths and pistol-whipped and tortured one of them. month illness. A graduate of University of Michigan be was an elder at the Oakland Avenue Church, and member of American Society for Metals and Alpha Chi Sigma fraternity. Surviving are his wife Ruth; his parents Mr. and Mrs. Joseph H. Moon of Pontiac; four children Mrs. Gerald Dashkin of beverly Hills, Calif., Judith, Terry and Susan, all at home. Aim surviving are two grandchildren! and a sister. The family suggests any moriais be made to the Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Memorial Fund. LINDA ANN REYNOLDS Prayers for Linda Ann Reynolds, 11-day-old daughter of Mr. Red Schism Sfitl Evident in Speech MOSCOW (A - Pravda published today a digest of recent remarks by Mikhail Suslov, Soviet Communist party theorist who has been in the forefront of the feud with Peking. His remarks' indicated relathe Chinese party still are in a state of deep freeze. On the surface, Suslev’s remarks called for efforts ta overcome differences between the two, to concentrate on what mutes rather than divides Communists. But this argument already has been specifically rejected by the Red Chinese. Suslov renewed a Soviet bid for a world Communist unity meeting. Peking, which been ignoring peace overtures and picturing Soviet leaders as lackeys of U S. imperialism,’* baa refused to consider such i meeting without advance confession from the Kremlin that it has been wrong. Boti) kidnap victims, a 15-year-old girl mid M-year-old:relations is expected to be boy, were found with the es-jat the 23rd congress of the capee at a home here. The girljviet Communist party, ad -was not hurt or criminally as-uled March 29. saulted, police said. and Mrs. Frank Reynolds of 1131 Cherry Lawn will he offered at 1:30 pin. tomorrow at the Huntoon Funeral Home with burial in Perry Mount fork Cemetery. The infant, ill since birth, died Surviving besides the parents a sister. Vicki at home. FRANK SELESKI Frank Seleski, 50, of 1082 Commonwealth died yesterday after a three-day illness. His body is at the D. E. Pursley Funeral Home. An employe of Baldwin Rubber Cp. , he leaves two daughters, Mrs. Frances Clark and Mrs. Dorothy Cunningham, both of Poqtiac; jnd_a sister. MRS. ROY SEXTON Service for Mrs. Roy (Agnes J.) Sexton, 30, of 2270 Marwood, Waterford Township will be L90 p.m. Thursday .at the Huntoon Funeral Home with burial in Petty’ Mount Park Cemetery. Mrs! Sexton died yesterday. Surviving are her husband; three daughters Mrs. Royzelle Heverly and Mrs. Judy Gorham, both of Waterford Town-ship; and Charlotte Ann at home; a son, Roy Jr. at home; and three grandchildren. Also surviving are three sisters, Mrs. Georgina Gadberry Clarkston, Mrs. Isabelle Clark of Cass City and Mrs. Lillian Hefferon of Waterford Township.----- MRS. AUGUST F. SMITH Service (or Mrs. August F. (Della E.) Smith, 00, of 263 Edi-son will be at 2:30 p.m. tomorrow at Sparka-Griffin 'TftM with burial in White Chapel modal Cemetery, Troy-Mrs. Smith died yesterdpj ter a brief illness. $uprvitor» Vote Down Wan kL J f Nix Full-TimeAuditor Unit Post A proposal to restore the third member of the Oakland County Board of Auditors to (all-time status was soundly defeated yesterday by a voice vote of the COunty Board of Supervisors. Philip O. MlStljl Jr., supervisor from Hand Park, suggested that the ftlAOO full-time pod bo- kept rather than reducing the position to parMime at a maximum annual rate of 83,500 as proposed to the IMS county budget. Patent Issued on Milk Cure DOUBLE TAKE -^^Salesman Bob Hudson appeara to be Coming and going, but look again. A mirror at the bottom of the photo Is responsible for the reflection deception. The set of legs reflected to the mirror do not belong to Hudson. The scenyis a glass and mirror shop in Indianapolis. JOHN DA’ MHJDRD-- Sdrvte^ for John Davies, 71, of 190 Marlene, will, be 1 p.m. tomomnr at Richard-son-Bird Funeral, Home. Burial win be to Mil/ord Memorial Cemetery. ~~ “ ' * died Sunday. He employe of Seal-of Detroit. inninghamf irm Submits Apparent tow Paving Bid AAA Asphalt*Paving Co.l huge development project — of Birmingham submitted t h e recommended for approval by apparent low bid of 820,717 last' the township planning commis-nighi for the lndianwoods Sub- sion — was -postponed from division street - improvement! next Monday to Nov. 1 project. The bid was only slightly more than the construction estimate of 826/12. Use only other bid opened at last night’s Waterford Town- fee request of the applicant’s attorney. The 84 - million undertaking would contain new homes, an 18-bole golf course and beach. 821/14, waa submitted by the Oakland Paving Co. of Berk- Both bids were referred to 740 COMPLAINTS township engineer consultants, Johnson A Anderson, for further study and a subsequent report Police declined to release the names of the three teen-agers. Officers told a strange tale of cruelty, kindness and uncertainty that led the 10-year-old fugitive to steal two cars, kidnap his victims at gunpoint, beat the boy. and burn him with cigarettes, then drive here at the girl’s suggestion and treat his, two victims to an outdoor movie. POLICE TRAP He climaxed the adventure by walking into a police trap. The boy drove here at the girl’s suggestion when He ad-mitted to his victims that he “did not know what to do. with them,’’ police said. The girl told him she had a cousin in Benton Harbor and promised not to tell of the abduction if he would tYDUCKwrrz CITY - Service for (Emily) Duckwitz, of 550 Main was to be 2 jd today at Muir Brothers liberal Home. Burial Will be in plly Township Cemetery. Mrs. Duckwitz died Saturday! The question of Soviet-Ounese^fter a long illness. She was ajat next Monday’s meeting. Jmts— .. j----fc. member of the liberty Street Gospel Church, Lapeer. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Beryl Wehrle of Holly and Mrs. Thelma Clark of today City; a son, Basil of Attica; a sister, Mrs. Hattie Duckwitz of today Ctty; two brothers; and five grandchildren. The land ia presently zoned agricultural and small-farm district. Leonid Brezhnev, first Secretary of the Soviet Communist pnrty, handed dawk the policy tow on the Chinese question and other issues likely to come ap at fec/rsngrrii to the Soviet Communist party’s central conuattwe. Suslov's remark! were the first published oh the Chinese since speech and were believed likely to have followed (he same line as Brezhnev’s, Sustov’s speech at a recent party meeting did not mention the Chinese by name in the por-tions quoted by Pravda, hut fes reference was clearly to them. STATES BELIEF The Soviet Communist party. The three streets earmarked for blacktopping in the special assessment district project are todianview .Drive, Shawnee Lane and Shawnee Court. Ia other business last light, KENNETH H. MAY OAKLAND TOWNSHIP—Service for Kenneth H. May, 44, of 250 Pine will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Pfadey Memorial Chapel, Rochester. Burial wfl] be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Tray. Mr. May accidentally drowned Friday in northern On- * rigffrrt of fee library ud- juvenile and 4S ndnltff — Wfif _ vlaary board waa okayed arrested during the period I while another was tabled. The township board gave the green light for the library board to advertise for a librarian, but tabled a request for hiring a consultant for 8500. tarid. He was an inspector at Pon-tiac Motor Division, Surviving are his wife, Ruth ■; Ms parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin May of Pontiac; tw he said, “has done and will ^brothers, Lee of Waterford everything possible to overcome Township ami Francis of A u-burn Heights;'and three sisttys, Mrs. Earl Nysley of Fontihc, Mrs. Crystal Grant of U n 1 o n the differences in the ranks of harm her and would leave them Communists. It believes that at her cousijfs home. what units.Communists consid- * * * erable exceeds that which sep- But they went to an outdoor] aretes them.” movie here first, police said, the portion of Suslov’s re-From there the girl telephoned |nforks carried by Pravda men-her cousin she was bringing Jtioned no date for the proposed! m/riM,rtB'r r> wtm enmo fptAnda /WAT I -----»_ * ^ inn Im u —«---• « an Homewood, Hi. CHARLES H. TOMPKINS The police department report indicated feat there were 740 complaints in August and that 450 have been closed. Crimes included 22 breaking *nd enterings, 120 larcenies, four stolen cars ud 04 malicious destruction of property cases. Altogether; 97 persons — 52 The consultant—a library scientist — would conduct a study of the library’s financial problems, and evaluate the books, facilities and services provided bythe library.—...... REZONING REQUEST Also last night, the board heard a rezoning request for development of a 60-acre parcel of land on the norfeeaft corner of Cass-Elizabeth and Cooley Lake and received the August Lake and Mrs. Dewey Lind of P01** department report. By Science Service A method by which the radioactive strontium in milk can be removed if fallout from atomic bombs make! It a health hazard has now been patented, , The method waaorlglnstedbv |Dr. Bert B. Migicovskv, now assistant director-general of the research branch of Canada’s Department of Agriculture. After modification and development by an International team of scientists, it was tested commercially by the Producers Creamery Co. in Lebanon, Mo. This process removes 90 per rest af the radioactive strontium. The Missouri equipment, which processes 100.000 pounds of milk in an eight-hour period, ' is now being modified to remove radioactive iodine as well as ra-diostrontium and radiocesium from milk. ' ' * * * The system being used at Lebanon was developed jointly bv the U. S. Department of Agriculture, Health, Education and Welfare Arid the Atomic Energy Commission. TREATMENT The treatment consists of pumping slightly acidified milk ion exchange resins that have been precharged with mineral salts similar in composition to the salts found in milk. Radioactive strontium and cesium ia the milk are ex- Also, 255 traffic tickets issued, aid the dpg warden handled 250 complaints. 16 Trampled to Death at S. Korean Stadium i SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -Sixteen persons, most of them children and old women, wWO trampled to death early today by a crowd outside a new stadium in Kwangju, 140 miles south of Seoul. # Mastto pointed art feat fee board af auditors had kaoe comprised of ferae County officials propoaed the part-time petition in July after John C. Austin announced his retirement from fee board of auditors affective fee end of this Their reasoning waa that a part-time specialist, who would be available when would meet requirements. The saving to the county would be atfoattMiOJOO eer year. ASKS OPINION Earlier In fee meeting James Clarkson, supervisor____from Southfield, asked for a corporation counsel opinion on the political makeup of fee board wife a part-time member. Canty Corporation Conilti Robert P. Allen said that fee requirement would be fee same—that both political parties be represented. Austin is a Republican member as is Damel T. Murphy, chairman. Robert E- Lilly, secretary of the board of auditors, is a Democrat. * * * Based on fee statute cited by Allin, the part-time member to be appointed by the board before the end of this year could be from either party since the remaining two members represent each party. OK TAXES In other business yesterday, fee board approved taxes to be Spread on the county tax roil. The action, in conjmetire Churchmen Can't Find Ancient Cornerstone pottstown, Pa. «r - Ree. ords of Trinity Untied Church of Christ here show the cornerstone of fee church was laid just 100 years ago. - -1 •- ♦ A A Church leaders decided they would fike to open fee cornerstone and took at fee ords and coins deposited in fee ceremooy of a century ago. The big problem: No ona can find fee cornerstone. I ti fee 1M| Also yesterday tbs board rejected a proposal by Cyril E. Miller, supervisor from Avon Township, that delegates to future convention* ha by the frill board rather thih board’s ways and imam committee. '# * * l Miller had criticised fee ways iyd.means committee for au-tbwitiny a* dozen county delegates to attend a July convention in San Diego. CITES EXPENDITURE Citing an expenditure Of 83,-*36 by the county, Miller said toe® feat fee ways and committee should hot have fee power to set the num^ «nH name the delegates. * ★ *■ Miller, who is chairman of fee board of supervisors’ h—tfl. wmmittee, said fee health department could have uaed this money. British Loss Sawn From U,S. Hurricane LONDON (AP) 1 British insurance companies may fre responsible for about 8100 million in claims for damage caused by Hurricane Betsy in fee southern United States last month. A n a Broken reporting this said tiie 8100 million estimate may be conservative since Lloyds of London keeps its bodes open for three years. A final figure will not be know| until 1068. College Bracking Up That Old School Gang WICHITA, Kan. IP - For 15 students, graduation from East High School really meant breaking up feat old gang. AO of thehi have been together since kindergarten, attendiiy Fair-mount Elementary School end Brooks Intermediate before entering East Now they’ll be scattering to go to different colleges. cations an Jbe charged resins and removed subsequently by waskiag wife salt solution. After the milk’s acidity ia neutralized, it is pasteurized and homogenized as usual. The resulting milk has an accejAable flavor and meets bacteriological standards. A A A Dr. Mlgicovsky assigned his patent rights to the Canadian StudentsAre Not Up' MUSKEGON (UPI) - Students at Muskegon County College are going to have to do better in their fire drills than they did yesterday. A A'" A Firemen said some students took time to grab lunches and clothing from lockers and then sauntered out af thy One class didn’t know what the bell meant and just sat there, while in other classes the bell was ignored. Firemen termed fee driO OAKLAND COUNTY'S MOST BEAUTIFUL BANK SfRUCTURE— TELEGRAPH AT SQUARE LAKE ROAD some friends over. A ' A. The cousin, a woman, became suspicious and called police. Officers were waiting when the trio arrived at fee cousin’s home before dawn today and arrested the youth. CAMP ESCAPEE Officers said the boy escaped from a training camp at Kankakee, HI., lari week, kidnaped the girt at gunpoint in Chicago Saturday night, apparently hid in Chicago during the weekend and kidnaped the boy last night. He beat him and burned him wife cigarettes, police said. A ♦’ : A They said he then stole* car, fee second since his escape, and started driving. j unity meeting. Prison OfficiLls to Hear Farmer Convict Author SACRAMENTO, CaUf. (UPI) — Ex-convict Bill Sands scheduled to go before urns he did not want to kill feamjMKi would tot than go “If I can find a alace to take you.” , Tbs nfri told p "c* her captor first Mi bar be would take her la IWn at fes border and gave up fed ( IRNra*f J j m ice for Charles H. Tompkins, 87, of 3SS S. Cranbrook will be 2| p m. Thursday at Sparks-Grif-fio Funeral Home, Pontiac. Bur-] ial wifi follow in Oak H01 Cemetery, Pontiac. Mr- Tompkins feed yesterday after a long illness. Former credit manager for] the Pontiac Credit Bureau, Mr.i SL2“ *** *** worhers: Tompkins was a member of| _ Knights of Pythias No I Sands, author of “My Shadow! 11L 7 ^ Ran Fast,” was booked to ad- dress fee Northern Region Conference of fee California Probation, Parole and Correctional Agent Gets 007 Stub From Hat-Check Girl DETROIT (UPir- Paul Stoddard, spedal agent in charge of fee Detroit office of the FBI, checked his hat and coat and enjoyed his dinner at a downtown hotel. As he waited for fee hat-check gill to recover Ms coat and hat, he looked at the check stub in his hand., to large numbers it was stamped “667.” Surviving are a daughter,, Mrs. Max Strausser of Bloom-field Hills; a granddaughter;! and a great-grandson. « Hearse Causes Stir With 'STIFF License JaRHEN, -R.X «U»-A W year-old hearse is for sale “ cause of all the trouble it caused, ” says Rodney J. Lamar-ca, 20, one of the feres men who own it. The registry of motor impounded its license plates ye* terday because of eoinplmtalw feat they were in bad taste. The plates bore fee letters “fiTIPF.H Michigan Bank pnriilMli *■■»»*riwse , ' All deposits insured up to 8)0,000 by fes Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1965 TWENTY-THREE NOTICES Card of Thanks ........ t In Memoriam ..........j j Florists.............;...3-A' Funtral Directors......... 4 Csmotsry Lots ...........4-A Personals ...............4-B I Lost and Found ..........5; EMPLOYMENT Help Wanted Male ......... 6 Help Wanted Female........ 7 Help Wonted M. or F. .... 8 Sales Help, Male-Female...8-A Employment Agencies....... 9 Employment Information ...9-A1 Instructions—Schools :....10 Work Wanted Male .........11 Work Wanted Female..... .12, Work Wanted Couples.... 12-A | SERVICES OFFERED Building Services-Supplies...13 Veterinaryr??.............14 Business Service .........IS »ng and Taxes..... 16 elsors .........16-A 'Dressmaking and Tailoring.. 17 ....18 ..18-A ...18-B ____19 ____20 ..,.21 .22 .23 Gardening .... landscaping ... Garden Plowing........... Income Tax Service .... Laundry Service ........ Convalescent-Nursing .. Moving and Trucking.... Painting and Decorating...... Television-Radio Service....24 * . .24-A Upholstering Transportation ..25 ______26 Deer Processing...........27 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 Apartments—Unfurnished ... 36 Rent Houses, Furnished ... .39 Rent Nouses, Unfurnished.. .40 Property Management... .40-A Rent lake Cottages..,.....41 Hunting Accommodations 41-A Rent Rooms.................42 Rooms With Board ..........43 Rent Farm Property ........44 HotoLMotel Rooms ..........45 Rent Stores .. ............46 Rent Office Space.........47 Rent Business Property.. .47-A Rent Miscellaneous.........48 REAL ESTATE Sold Houses ...............49 Income Property............50 Lake Property.............51 Northern Property .......51-A Resort Property ...........52 Subifiton Property ........ S3 Lots-Acrooge ............ 54 Sale Forms .............. 56 Sale Business Property____57 Sole or Exehango..........58 FINANCIAL Business Opportunities .....59 Sole Land Contracts.......60 Wanted Controcts-Mtges... 60-A Money to Lend....... .....61 Mortgage Loans ............62 MERCHANDISE Swops .....................63 Sale Clothing .............64 Sale Household Goods......65 Antiques ................65-A Hi-fi, TV 8. Radios.......66 Wafer Softeners.........66-A For Sale Miscellaneous.... 67 Christmas Trees .........67-A Christmas Gifts .........67-B Hond Tools—Machinery......68 De It Yourself.............69 Comeroo-Service ...........70 Musicdl Goods ...:........71 Musie Lessons ...........71-A Office Equipment..........72 Stops Equipment............73 Sporting Goods ............74 Fishing Supplies—Baits .....75 Sand^ravel-Dirt ...........76 Wdod-Coal-Coke-Fuel ... . 77 Pets-Hunting Dogs .........79 Pet Supplles-Service....79-A Auction Soiee .............80 Nurseries ................81 Plants-Trees-Shrubs ....8t-A Hobbles and SuppliM.......82 FARM MERCHANDISE livestock .... .... 88 ..._____,.,.83-A HoHSrain-Feed .........84 Poultry..................85 Form fWvipmmnt 1...... .87 AUTOMOTIVE ^ TroVol Trailers .........88 HbuOtruHors .............89 Rent Trailer Space.., .* 90 Commercial Trailers....90* Auto Accessories.... i,. .91 TirstkAuto-Truck ........92 AuW%vloe ,wWW«w..93 Motor Scooters...........94 .....95 ......96 Wonted CprvTrucks ......101 Junk Qirs*Trucks..... • .1QH Used Auto-Truck Ports ...10* Nsw and U*ed Trucks -v-*M Auto-Marine Insurance ...104 FdmlgR Cert ........... JOS New and Used Crars rW...106 Want Ads roe east ‘ Xenon NOTICI TO AovaiTiseis ADS RECEIVED BY I M will ee published vim POLLOWINE DAY. : am1 ’ mar: mm *.oo *-«• « J.44 4.M AM Death Notices beth Divio; Amt father of Mri. Dennli (Vary) So|a, Mrs. Davit (Ivey) Welker and David 0. Oavlet; dear brother of Mr*. Georoe Waltor* and David Oavlaa; alto aurvlvad by 10 apr—---------- Funeral tarvfoa wtll at the Rlchardaon-Urd Funaral lord 'Mamorlai Cemetery. Mrt. Oavlaa will Ha In Mate at the Rlchardton - Bird Funaral Horn*, DAVIS, OCTOBER J, IMS. MRS. —I LA MAR, 114 E. Howard Straat ; ago 45; beloved w»to of Harold F. Davla; dtar titter ol Mrs. Nina Oranbtrg, Mrs. Farn Hall, Thursday, Otlubai 7, at ii ean. at the Thayer Funaral Hetna, with Rev. Robert F. Devi* Church officiating, interment I Glen Eden Memorial Camatary, Livonia. Mrs. lla Davit will Ha In siata at tha Thayer Funeral Home, DM Grand River, Farmington. (Suggested visiting hour* 1 to S p.m. and 7 to » p.m.) PEWEV. OCTOBIfi L 1744. EAEY BOV, Ml Dwighf Sfraalt batovad Infant ton ol Wilbur and Hum Dewey; beloved Intent grandson of Mrs. steward Dewey; door Infant brotner ol Petrick and Donald Daway. Graveside service Was • this morning at II am. at i Ottawa Fork Camatary. Ar- Hampton; batovad daughter of by jour grandftiidrqh. Funartl Morgret official In OMawa i Park ... Hampton villi lla a Voorheet-Sipie Fu- SgamwOrUfM FunarBi Hama, wk —- ‘-x“lto Chapel Cemetery. Itlng hours IMS i f p.m. i batovad kaaph H. bytarian Mamorlai Building Fund. Funaral Hama whan Mr. moan will Ha In state. (Suggested visiting hours ] to S p.m. and 7 to t pin.) tar of Frank and Ruby Reynolds! • “ - or Vkr —■ In state at tha Hunloon Funaral _________RE dear fattier of Mrs. Franaat Clark and Mrs. Doroflty (Jack) Cunningham; dear brother . of Mr*. Roe la (Jarm “ SEXTON, OCTOBER 4, IMS, AGNES JEAN, tJH Merwood, Waterford Township; age Ml batovsd wife of Roy Saxton; dear mother of Mrt. .Roytalla HaMrly, Mrs. Judy Gar-ham, and Chy istte Ann and Ray Imdan Jr.; Otar sitter of Jj£a. Gaorlna Gad berry, Mrs. Isabella Clark, Mrs. Lillian Hafferom alto Mrvlvtd- by fhraa grandchildren. Funeral service wfif be hold Thursday, October 7. at ,1;«T p.m. it SMITH, OCTOBER 4, IMS, DELLA, M] Edisonf&lpjfadearmother Of Miss Pearl *“*“r |----* - October 4, at J— HP _ OP Sparks • Griffin RpE Mama, Intarmant In Whit# Chapel Came-•' In atata at the Sparks • Griffin Funeral WilEE Tfiiggntsd vhltlng hours IMS p.m. and 7 M » pjn,) TRUSCOTT, OCTOBER 4, IMS, MISS Drive, Lake Orton; age Its SB-loved dsjjibMr of Mr. and Mr*. ., Kavam Truscattt batovad granddaughter of Mrs. Fenny L. Liming# mW aHs Mynia Tritinatti dear titter of Fhlllp K* Donald P* and Loti Trwecott. Funaral tarvfca will be held Thursday, October 7, grs pjn. at AMpTi Fmwral Mimas Lake. Orton, ,Dr. Robert J. tKmsW? tW day, oiwidfcfclrt 1 pjn. at tha Sparks . AMma - Funaral Mama. Interment In Oak. Hlfi'CamMary. p.m. and 7 to # pjn.) FOR FERKMALIZED STAtlON- MICHIGAN CREDIT COUHSELDRS 7SI Pontiac State Bank BM J FEM4S4 LOSE WEIGHT SAFELY W*TH mIBBw ms?OMw>,ll> *9 c*"t* BOX REPLIES At 11 s.m. today there were repliei at The Press Office In the faf- S, 7, II, U, 50, M, H, 61, «, N, M, IN, IN, 117. COATS ----FUNERAL HOMS DRAYTON PLAINS i Huntoori D. E. Pursley FUNERAL HOME FE 4-1211 SPARKS-GMFFIN FUNERAL HOME _ Voorhees-Siple HOME, FE M17t i Ov«r 40 Year* Csmatsry lots ACCIDENT WITNESSES. WILL THE driver or occupants el station wagon, and- foreign ad ate J*—— ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEOiHG a friendly adviser, phone PE S-flSSBatert 1 p.m., or It no *n-SWar, Mil FE 20734. Confidential. FOR REAL FAMILY PUN-HAVE-A hayride parly at UPLAND hills -FARM. Family reunion!. blrthda|t ON AND AFTER 1 Bishop, 2SS7 Liverpool, Aubum I tea**, MldUgtn.___________ ON AltBnLFTER THIS DATE OC-tobar 5, IMS, I will not be responsible lor any debit contracted by any ettier man myself. Allan 0. Runyan, SSTt Cambrook Lana, Wa-tertard, Michigan.________ Lest BRd FtEod S FOUND: GERMAN SHEPHERD pga^tamato, by City Hall. Call LOST - BEAGLE, SMALL MALE. piamRaM H ills area. Reward. Ftotia ratorti. Ml 4-472J. _ LOST - RED PEKINGESE. FE-mato, t yrt. Wilton and Baldwin. d. FE 7-7111. LOST: SPOTTTO FOX HOUHD. silt In tar. Runs fox only. MS Efira Id. FES-TmT _______ HOLD IT! , Other folks make money from Pontiac Press WANT ADS |f you haven't . - . try one. Hundreds of others do . . . daily! It pays .. . m quick, simple and productive/ Just look around your home, garage and basement and list the many items that you no longer use. 'Hundreds of readers are searching The' Press's classified columns daily for just such articles. Psrhops the piggy bank itself would bring more than* the change that it holdsl ;try HI YOU'LL BE GLAfr YOU 0101 332-8181 FOUND SMALL FAWN CHIHUAHUA type deg. tome lime age, give positive identification. FE M1M. WORKINGS ST~BULOVA 'WATCH loti downtown Pontiac. FE Atm. THE INS CIVIL EIGHTS uBi PROHIBITS. WITH Certain exceptions, discrimination be-CAUSE OF SOX. StNCj SOhfc OCCUPATIONS ARE CO* I DBA ED MORE AT-TRACTIVE TO PERSONS ’ OF ONE S«X TTMBr THE OTHER. ADVIRTISm MINTS ARB PLACED UNDER THE AMlt Ok . FEMALE COLUMNS FOR CONVINIBNCR OF READERS. SUCH LISTINGS ARE NOT INTaNDED TO EXCLUDE PERSONS OF EITHER MX. 1 BUMPER, 1 PAINTER, 1st CLASS. 2 Men Wanted for light, janitorial and maintenance work. 50 to '65 years old. Good pay, paid voca-tions, hospital pro-gram. Sand resume to PONTIAC PRESS BOX 22, all replys confidential. 4 WELL DRESSED MEN, S1J FEE evening. Car necessary. Cutco, SM-SMS 10-H a.m. or SA »jn. ACCOUNTANT FOR COST AND ACCOUNTANT: Opening Mr Senior Accountant graduate enty. Prefer men with public «r industrial accounting background. AmMIV John Bean Division, IMS S. Cedar, Lansing, ACCOUNTAN'T'FOR fast grow-Inn CPA office, excellent- bp-portunity for Junior or seml------ ARCHITECTURAL ASSISTANT MANAGER TRAINEE For local appliance store, f DRAFTSMAN: yayW-tnen to da praSMwg t Mbit. Ho* end fixtures; exp, rtonee h actual math too' sip eparattw ^ Irryient^ ApHy^Jah Lansing, Midi.’ EQUAL OPPORTUNITY MACHINE TOOL ELECTRICIANS ORlVdR- ANt wan TO WORK IN lumber yard Apply t»40 Cooley ^ Lake Ra Union Late, 1 DESIGNERS AND DETAILERS* For toots and special machines Top Ratos LOCKHART Englnaaring Sarvlea 4M N?Ca*e I PESWM 0 R I V E R. EVENINGS. PA*t- & trw"» its Drayton Plato*. DRIVER DELIVERY MAN Salt and Tanks ' APPLY: ____CUILIGAN WATER CONDITIONING ^25 ORCHARD UKE Progressive Welder SIS Oakland Aim. Pontiac FE 4PSIS An Envoi OpooriiaBty Emptovor MECHANIC ANO PIN-JUMPER MECHANIC FOR JEEPS, MERCE-da* Pans, Triumphs, Salat and iarvtoa. Will auaranlat SIM a wk. MASSfar a Ml year. OR HH4. MECHANIC. LAWN MOWER RE-owr, steady amptoymsnt. lop poal- __tton tor sigd Bun, Apply W. F. Miller Co.. 1N3 S. Woodward Ava., Birmingham, Mtehtoan. Ml 4411S, ENGINEER MEN FOR INSIDE WORK, OVER IS, also far Iron railing and con-i crate stop Installation. Concrete Step Co., *477 Highland Roeo. across from Pontiac Airport. OR ; Sms. I MEN FOR PATROL ROUTE, NEED , MlbOLE - AGED HANDYMAN - i ttSStwyagw. Ff^S^mbrnlr^!"* f MACHINE OPERATORS ' EMPLOYMENT I - HAWK TOpCAND ENGINEER-ING. CLARXSTON, MlCN. MAN TO TRAIN AS ASSISTANT Apply In pproan, yord oftlco, Johnson Avo. end Railroad, or Em- "°v“d trunk WESTERN RAILROAD , 4M BAST ATWATER DETROIT __An Cqunl opportunity omptoyor SUPERVISOR: Opportunity lor experienced me* chine shop production supervisor. Knowledge of comptoto precision machining operations necessary. Division, IMS S. I with manufacturer c requires abfllty^to^laV * duction specifications, open. Writ* PO Box 741 Bean Division/ Lansing, gan stating work history Brlney 'Manufacturing Seba Rd. off W. Md7. AGGRESSIVE YOUNG MAN FOR parson ohly. Oak Pprfc. AMBITIOUS MEN, AGES 21-41, EXPERIENCED SINGLE MAN FOR general farm work. Henry Clark, TosM T MUa Rd., Noilhvllle, Mich. I FI MBB.~______________ : EXPERIENCED HELPER ON AP-l pllance delivery truck, ateady. employment. Apply 1473 S. Woodward, Birmingham. Milks Appliance. Ask ' tor Mr. Lamh. ______ EXPERIENCED landscape men. Apply Jacobsen's Flowers. 101 I).' iiMfRIEfeclb SALESMEN TO —--■ —* -sed cars. Rambler, • Apply SSt Oakland ln^ ^Pontiac lisry naeda to Pon- HEED 58,000^510,000 With tab security, bonus plan and unllmnad opportunity .for advancement. No layoffs or seasonal slump. S120 plus expenses guaranteed to atari. Must b* married and havq good car. Report to Michigan Stale Employment Service. la Oakland, Wedne -----i k lor Mr. Bryan. NEW CAFlTERIA NEEDS: CARV South Adams, Birmingham. NIGHT PORTER. S DAYS, APPLY IN PERSON ONLY. HOWARD JOHNSON, MM DIXIE, DRAYTON PLAINS._________ HEW OPPORTUNITY-------- ms's n minimum salary tor ^VHHL.e morning. 332-... .1 South Can Lake Read 1 start working Immediately. *■017 or 673-2142. APPLE PICKERS. RALPH M. KRE-ger, SMI Ferry Lake Rd., Clarks- PART-TIME WOOL _______I full-time dry cleaner end spotter. OR 4-5760. ■ 'ULL TlMi REAL ESTATE SALES- GAS STATION ATTENDANTjMUST bp experienced In lubrication end minor. repairs, lull or porl-timo. 1 Sunoco, Totogriph ol Maple Read. GRILL MEN Day and evening shifts. Also part flma weekend work. Too wages, frse meals, hospHsIlMtlen. life Insurance, paid vacation. Apply In person between 2 and 5 pjn. at the Big Boy Drlve-ln, Telegraph and Huron or Dixie Highway and Silver Like Rd. _____________ hSHbyman .FORIneat.noMFUR- I be trained In Mist, Assistant Manager WANTED im and promotion «...________ ...- energetic, young msn Interested In Ms future. Age M to 10. Htoli stheel graduate mln-imum. Must be able to meat people, make decisions, abaarb training. Many fringe benefits. See Mr. SpriMtr, Seaboard Finance Co* 11IS H. Ptrrv SI. 333-7017. ' Attention Auto Salesman / work In Pontiac's newest, most madam • Belittles, expansion creates vast opportunity. Grand opening glut established daMMlkb equal excellent tamings. Present Mist-man average *1,000 par month. . SPARTAN DODGE 111 I. Saginaw ._________FE S-7223 Steady, yeai tablished ro Pontiac Soft FblflMEIM. atsrSarvta IF YOU LIKE MUSIC AND HAVE A WAY WITH PEOPLE Let us train you to become a Mias representative of the world's largest and fniiat highly rfHgaadmp ”— ---In. Featuring Staln- axdusiva franchlMs. You have to play a musical Inal fa become a member of .t- —. Mies organlMtlon. Apply In parson GRINNELL'S AUTO mechanic, HEAVY i Broach Makers 0. D. GRINDERS SPLINE GRINDERS DETROIT BREACH It MACHINE CO. IMMEDIATE OPEN IN •110 BORE OPERATORS, SERVICE Fringe bl Products ' Apply. F :orp„ MS I JANITOR, PART TIME. JANET DA vis Dry Ctoapert, 447-3007. landscape laborers want- $200 MONTHLY Has fira openings tor high tchobl graduates to work -n *he University Services Department and the Book a t o r a. Soma typing proficiency would be helpful, the University Services position Involves mall dls- s future, must be rename, neve good local reference, no tire repair, washing or grqasktg, life Insurance, hospltell-aafion, and paid vacation. A lob with a future, apply, Paylett Service Station, 6374 Dixit Highway, CigrtSton. Michigan. OPENING NOW AVAILABLE TO loin agprpialvt established real estate office. Member Pontiac Multiple Listing Service. Inquire Warren Stout, Realtor, MM N. Oodyka Rd* Pontiac. FE1-H46.__________________ "TPIZZA HELPER ______________OL 2-37S). NDANT >- «" D REPRE-sentative tor creative printer. Our comptoto service Includes art, typesetting, lithe plate making, J-color servlets, Our reputatlo quality and sarvlea. E advertising or println LATHE OPERATOR FOR SMALL —work; Commerce area. EM BARTtUtiBR, MUST BE -axperlancad—Duffy's Coolty iuCKNER FINANCE COMPANY hat an opening for an aggrtulvt young man. Interested In a carter In tha consumer finance field. . QUALIFICATIONS Apt tl to IS High school graduate college dMiratPe Military service completed Good RirlEiB JMMV tumty MACHINE OPERATORS: Experienced operators tor: Turret Lathes Radial Drills MIIIMg Machines : Grinders ID 4 OO . Automatic Screw Mechlnm - Tool Makar ./ Punch Press . Slwel Shears S Rotter (ask tooit’and* r^simpla prlr BK Mm Bean Division, I sharing plan, phone Mr. Rutssk, . FI 4-W1 tor Bpaalnlmini; BUS SOYS WANTED FOR WEEK- .and warit. Apply Inopraon, Rotund* Country Inn. MM.Fin* Lake BUS BOYS WANTBO. FUUTTDjt luron. lie S p.m. ._.N(*Vil69t Foil lah Orton Schools, apply at. Beard of Education Office. *ii Scrlppt, Lake Orion or 6ll 67>6271. CAB 6RIV1rs, full or PAltt time .tor days and nights. .SM' triad. Apply at IW Ruffnar In 'Opportunity Far a man who cam* tor hit f week, wr be hit m RK" anp ci_____________ - ion* rang* program. Can ^daaCBal •dwqjh tractor*1'AM*,^!f^iwid,l,confld#n-JH*L Call^ 647-4274 art. Full and' part tuna! 147 w! Huron, CLEAN UF, BARTENDERS, BUS boys, EWteWSbart. Apply FIR* Knob Ski Retort, 7777 pin* Knob RduClerMan. -towitRucTiQwuiaoiWirgiliir1 and laJdilEMirqiiM. upartiwHy tor rlgM man. Good fring* bana- fltl. EM S-71W.____________ CbMilNATldN BUMP AND PAINT " Chevrolet. 4731 Dbda mtailm*; "MAiwiRjr'Win: i Md iildllEi witom.OyarHma and. vacation plan. Zuk Design Co. M7-JJBT- ” Algln* Valley area (Mil) LIKEi'TOlVOFirwTfS MAN .T8 OfcLIVER AND JNSt.ALL - mm iL 8mQi T.r„..r ,JP FE MR.. fir MMMhfimPtt. crump ikdHe, Machine Shop MILL HAND GRINDER I.D. - 0.D. HONE OPERATOR INSPECTORS CRIB ATTENDANT OVBBTIME. FRINGES, DAYS _________M Laiulhg, Mldilgan. . All raplks will b* held In slrictMt confidence. RADIO BENCH MAN. IMMEDIATE ROOFERS.ONLY, SHINGLERS AND hpt rooters, experienced. Top pay by top square only. S52.1430. lAU6MAN.?fai^fll FElt WEEK Sales Correspondent: Growth opportunity for man who hat successful talas background with engineering or technical trailing, prefertmy In pumping ________tool repairing and tjfi making. Aagiy In gwwn *1 117 XatfiraTnaarSaElgaar il. --T1 •»— MACHINETEPAlRi Opening for Journeyman txpar an nae mdud a application englnaaring. Par-—flak its In takt meetings end training conferences. Sima travel. Require ability and maturity to bund CUStomar acceptance and create restart of field tales rep- -----1-;. —y comptoto res- n Division, IMS ___________EMPLOYE R_____ sALB*MAN~T«6iriiyaRAl. FOit-Hens at Simms. Mutt bb ever IS years old. Sat Mrt. bllllnm, at Simms, M N. Saginaw ii. Np afian* call*. jAyBft& - SALES MANAOElfS earn SMS par weak, dsys-lrads-hwuranca-retlrsmant. 2330031. STbek CLliRK, 43 HOURS, o6ob refarencas, 333-7440. SERVICQ STATIOil AtVfeNDANT, land Rd'*FE,M444,ln' 4396 Hlgh- Screw Machine Operator Mutt b* able to sat and eparato apply Llttlo t. "774 Pon- David MachtnaCoTT STOCK ROOM Immadlata opening for. ambitious mjjjpSad man, able to receive stock.. Full fimt lab. Apply In par- “ TED'S WOOOWfAIID AT SOUARE LAKE RD. see Meat man's special UNDER BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES, THEN* CALL 333-7157, IHI^MrvictV derail | types ol S^^Appte-tote?1 Earn "OL I SERVICE STAtlDM MAN, vjSkn.- 13M S. Cedar, Lansing, Pay, tell tens, afternoon **»&!... ____-____ fMtt Sunoco, Woodward rHRbuivfcious M^N TO WORK IN AWTO PA item, experkneed prgtarrad ^rrvrSrCj'fcr^ iitSaufi ... s • Aaply m. ter_; i beck^roun Salesmen APPLIANCES These ore coreer opportunities for experienced solesmen whicn poy ex-cellent commissions and —offer good opportunities for advancement. Excellent company benefits. Apply personnel deportment daily between 9:30 a.m. and 9:00 p.m. Montgomery Ward Tandem dump truck driver- ____ _ FE 4-1747 TIRE SERVICE MAN .while. Phone Ml 4-1232. _ TIME STUDY ENGINEER: Oppprtunlty tor young men with college training or equivalent In ' methods work. Knowledge ol cast reduction, lob layout and flow processes Important. Apply John Bean Division, 13QS 5. Cedar, ' Lansing, Mkh. EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYRR_____________ Tire Changers - Experienced men needed. Union •rele. uniforms himliped. Insur- — -----1 plan. Apply tally Firestone » 7-3 p.m. c <4 W Huron. TOOL MAKER UNDER AGE M-JOURNEYMAN CARD OR It YtARi EXPERIENCE REQUIRED. APPLY AVON TUBE. 4TH AND WATER ST* ROCHESTER. TRAINEE - GRILL MAN. 1I-2S>. Ins, TRAINEE FOR MACHINE SHOP, willing to Item on all typei of machines. EM 3-3091. TREE TRIMMERS. EXPlRIENCED TRUCK. DRIVER AND CLEAN-UP man, OR 34301 or FE 2-4424._ URGENT REQUIREMENT ENGINEERS all catogoritt. Design ers, checkers, draftsmen, piping, structural, textile, tools, machine. Rush resume or call LIONA-CRAFT, 44 Travis Avt., Sing-^^rtMMMERrt&Shki-772g770. WANT MAN 13 YEARS dR OtDfcR to wash, polish, new and used cart, tome delivery, mutt ' have good driving record. Houghton S Sen, Rambler, Olds, CMC Trucks, SM N. Main Straat, Rochester._______ WANTED DRIVERS AND HELPERS tor astablifhad soft drink route. Apply 14-4, Faygo Baverages. 73t Featharstone. Pontiac. WANTED: REAL ESTATE SALES- ing program. Call Ivan W. Schram. Tlaaltor. FE NCI. _ WANTED FULL TIME STOCKMAN. Applications being accepted, ages 21 to . SO. App.y Kresge Co* Mlrtck Mik, 10 «jw. I2 noon, 2 WANTED RELIABLE MAN food Store. Good driving I No evenings or Sundays. Cl Coleman, » a.m. to 4 p-f 4-5510.___________ WANTED EXPERIENCED , WANTED YARDMAtt. FULL TIME, “Cleaners Wanted, WIXOM Ford Motor Go^ Assembly -Plant ’ HAS IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR Production assemblers Metal finishers Welder combination Journeyman electriciat. „An Equal Oppolrunlty Employer YOUNG MAN OVER 21 TO WORK YOUNG MAN FOR NEW CAR dealer, all around work, mutt have drivers license, {all FE 3-IEM Help Wanted Female_______1 ALTERATIONS JACOBSON'S * 334 W. Mepk, Blrmtnrttam BABYSITTER WANTED 2 TO t. days weak. Lake Angafua (Meadows area. 673-2442. YOUNG MEN 14-24. NOW TAKING AFFLICA-TIONS FOR PAST VMM AFTER SCNCbt AND FULL TIME WORK EXCELLENT EARNINGS.WfTM' - VERY OOOO CHANCE FOR AD, VANCEMENT. INQUIRE 131 N. PfBRV. For MliVUV ___i, steady work, mutl •a. Pontiac. Plywood C*. 4 MECHANICALLY IN-•rrtm nurhlne trainee II S-W4I. YOUNG MAN, NOT IN SCHOOL, living In Wate ' ' en helper. OR SWITCHBOARD OPERAtOR. BABY SITTER TO LIVE IN, I* OR over. OR 3-446T_____ __ BABY SITTER WANTED. ONE S-year-old child goes to school, own transportation, call 335-77*1 or an- id Ikfidam, a nd rapidly, a ATTENTION UN's ond LPNfs Openings. Educational banaftts. Salaries compalltlv* with area hospitals. Call 05-7154, Ext. 1. BABY "SITTER FOR WEEKENDS. 334-7471. ________ BABY SITTER, MONOAY-FRIOAY. May live In II desired. Call alter 6 pjn. 424-4177.________ B A K E R Y SALESWOMAN. FULL Arxkrson Bakery?"?!* “w. 14™mK ienced. Nina Hair Stylist, W. Maple, Birmingham. BEAUTY" OPERATORS TO WORK in Fllrfl. Pleat* call Mr*. DeSlIppe, Helttnert Beauty Shop. SOI South Saginaw St* Flint. Ph. CE SS741. BOOKKEEPER Auto dealer experience preferred Top salarywMMMEMjMkk^^M VILLAGE RAMBLER 444 S. Woodward Av*. _____Birmingham, Michigan______ 0 $ 0 M " ANO ' SLEEVER FOR prosperity cabinet unit. Douglas Cleaners, 514 S. Woodward, Blr- CASHIER CLERK, PART TIME, . excellent pay, cosmetic experience helpful, Arnold Drugs, 2540 N. ed, but will consider COOK FOR BIRMINGHAM AREA horn* to live In. Qwn room, TV and bath. Must like children and have references. Other help em-ployed. 444-3505. _________ coffee shoF Waitress, day ond night shift, full or part Dm*. Experienced preferred, but not nac-ataary. Call W4G424 after S p.m. Douglas Cleaners, S Birmingham. COUNTER WAITRESS, DAYS. AP-ply In person — Burger Chief Drive In. SH N. Parry.__ CREDIT CLERK. EXPERIENCE preferred but not essential. Will train. Call FE . 2-7234, Mr. St. - .. Charles tor appointment._ CURB AND INSIDE WAITRESSES, cook, kitchen help. Super Chkf. Telegraph and Dixie. FE 2-0SS1. DENTAL ASSISTANT, WALLED tory an U, Wall Dining Room Waitress If you kvp children and genuinely enloy working with the public we win train you as a dining room . The rewards art many, DRY CLEANING INSPECTOR. OG6 Ckanars, 377 Beat Pika. EVENINGS AND WEEK-ENDS. IN vicinity of Ktego and Sylvan Lake, 482-0540. EX CAREER GIRLS >r Christmas — immadlata "ii- Part-Time 0*"— Ghidings or Mr.St EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY FOR. Intelllpent woman In cratllvp studio position. WM train. Call 315-0322 or SSS-0S34. Mr. Hankins. EXPERIENCED NURSES AIDES EXPERIENCED COOKS, WAITRES- apply In parson onfy before j p.m. no phone calls please, 31 E. Walton __Hudsons Diner........ ...... "Experienced waitress OL M7SI. EXPERIENCED OFFICE SUPPLY sale* ckrk, Forbes - 4500 Plxk Hwy. OR 3-7767.______. ■ ■ EXPERIENCED WOMAN FOR cleaning, 2 days. Orchard Lak;. Rato and trantp. required. 411-1513. FITTER AND seamstress t- tak* charge of a"—"— graph._____________________ GIRL—LIVE IN BABY SITTING AND LIGHT HOUSEHOLD DUTIES. MUST LIKE CHILDREN. MA 6-6891. girl Friday, under xl must GRILL AND COUNTER WAITRESS, HAM STYLIST WITH EXPER!-ence, guaranteed wage, Phlllp't. HOUSE CLEANING, 1 DAY WEEK, own transp. MA HOUSEKEEPER <*, naat^and HOUSEWIVES We art adding to our sales staff for our busy fall season. If you wish • to supploment your income with part time work, wa can train you for sales. Business-like appearance and a pleasant ptnanatify a requirement. Apply personnel deportiqpnt doily betweoqjViSP v.Htr and Montgom'ify: Ward? : # PONTIAC MAU. ' •' /' TWEKTY^roUB THE PONTIAC TKKSS. lOJiag^AY, OCTOBER 5, 1965 49 Sale Houses I—-- .. I ""T* •* mm m. rmim. rULk lime REAL B9IAII m M I 6 rtt twt fctsf. ttWW IWjMW. WSmaN FOR~H6liiE~gLBANiliQ.. MW. Btq»rt«nCed — ^ rtffcnqsl ^!gy » F-tae - idQss&if fSr:l ers. dishwasher. built-in avert end —a ‘ tm* eertege «womi, auto. «— M^wHETL*y- -TT.T» WOME^ FOR SEWING IN SEAT-, MO"T ™ • - y. NO enpertonce necev! ?»f*jtiS&TJr Sylvan ” woman "in VHrlWITY 6# KLitt-Mk Lake la m a cklMren off JejtteM and *»ey wljh_ l LlgM ter 5. women, oveJ» 3* for ruu. er aart-Nme drug Mere t—L — parlance preferred, top si _ qualified people. Lee On ® PlKle, Drayton Plaint._________ WOMAN toft EASY SITTING AND - light heuoewerfc. DM E. tlvd. South. H MM. !. WOMAN TO WORK IN OAKERY MAN OK WOMAN WITH UTE MODEL CAR To deliver newspapers to subscribers homos in the * vicinity 6f Walnut lake, Southfield, ------—MBSHTOfF Ti“ssiy.«T^&w_wtm_L,?w mBrt 1 feme or apartment, turn, or un- uCjTofe ". ......M SIN ON PONTIAC, ON * - ME. WRIGHT AT 33B4111 IWNwItt■■____ „. ____ .... Ll ..IBW.,, —B , SBSjnRnBBS i ,vaae. itaiMi. CaffMOOie - Badtaetor and Penflac. ul M»»._ ranch theftmaot tgip|g| tor two imnk Executive - needs-)- laMe double room with ml er PM «vw ja, ma BEDROOM HOME PREFER- vela hath, private entrance,. Noth- far Brjg JWBMaOh workman! Aft'? WITH BASEMENT AND ON eater. Call ever'nqs. «St-wk. 5$™*®! OP P9Njh*C. CALL L6vlLY Jiifa ftV' LAkl 6AR- StS: 00153 HAGSTROM REALTOR WEAVER AT ROCHESTER J-bedroom brlcft ranch with i RKOI3ES aeon Aretm home, Mf beeoment. oH heat, l-cer garage, heir Flatter Body, ctee# W jhmMhB and bM tranapartatwn. Only IMA 11,DM down, belanct land contract. M&fB tCiiaF'liMW- klea J- SMALL FARM AT BaMIng, Michigan, 41 ocrea an Nit Flat Rh«r, 4- faS^or’sljBcMh!*1" •MOIANWOOO SHORES. An Ideal I MT tor your ^amtiy, axcallant nalghliorttaad, large loti, watl re-' atrlcted, reeaonebly priced. Cil lt- UrtD BUILDINO TO RENTImXiF M Sme tar church aarvlcer <-.* "f'J" CE WSM (Flint) tofjact. WHO C O.U P L E wITh-T *'l &JaV -' NICE CLEi •m ■ atmtatMewi *^11,^17... STUDENT POE RETAIL SALES, adept with Ngu . . - --------1 — —— —I pay I ■■PM ta...... JBNPP Peat Office Box 2M Pootlac. K3«e UN » Mlh Rood, J»ofc ------------------ ---------------------- ---------- •*w*****i WAITRESSES, CLEAN UP HELP; YOUNG LADY WANTED WITH EX-oianwaaner*. nvr - eorson, 443 bartenders, dis-mshers Apply perNoct on cash register end gen-Seuth Adatm, Btrmhtghem._______ pine jCnob Ski Raaort, 7777 Pina aral office Apply 7*40 Cooley Lake unecer aides, some experi ..................... ' mt starting 044-1431 er 4SIAS77. Rechatter area. WAITRESS. PUli TIME. EVENING YOUNG LADY TO l SSa ar end. Alpine inn ■” ! -=- Reao. au-eyg, .«*nt. tone dishwasher- P»Wy*a Cooley Lake Jr- - Mwn Uelni kwlEti__33 ELDERLY, GENTLEMAN ^DESIRES WtSi wmm _______7W s. Woodward.' CLEAN SLEEPING ROOMS m gentlemen. No drlnkera, 14-410. __ itwlt. PRIVATE EBDROOM AND USE OF • - - welled Lake area. 4143741 w gjn. I PRIVATE HOME FOR EviiliNasw F. O. i.wK>5S;tt AL8£RT*'j: Shoois, anlur FE *-*** SP w. Walton PE Ml tan Yard haautHMIy LIST1NO SERVICE ml Waterford TWIN LAKE FRONT ^„ _T‘_________'wAtkins .L»tg*fkbift, >816-1 TWIN LAKE FRONT RORABAUGH ^Jh&xxniat Woodward at Souari Lake Rd. SwSr aJ£P £2? 6fX' 11 J*» •" . ”>•. bullt-ln .feeturea. OR KING GIRL TO SLEEPING ROOM FOR GENTLE- Realtor LIEN m WHY WAIT? Eat An V T* •" »»*• wpM V ■MU* On formica cablnati, formal 2S2i Wvlns and “ ‘nTf a to wlttt jlregtaae. i Board 43 PART:TtMt ibOIOCEEPtR FOR Drayton Plaku. , Rocco's. S171 Dixie Hwy. ■ YOUR “ROAD TO SUCCESS' n*L*Si WAITRESSES AND SHORT ORDER. DO YOU have an AVON raw* woodward cooks, apply In parson. SOD Bowl, tentative calling on you regularly? ___■ — Snack Bar. - < Jt yea. Bear parhepe, there J»_an ■iRFSSSf^'fiPS SSirTcffi; 11 re,._r?siiir^: waTtresses. puLl or part, SSSf '$£ ’y,r^ _Preea THE STEREO^ANp MUSICDtVI-l 1 TO 50 ' LOVELY HOME NEAR TEL-HURON «UI Hatchery end others, } par cant dawn hd« IH r*UlNi kcaliY m S. MAht Clerki._. ■________________ ■ . .We MA 4-1341______________ MA SNf I. Lunettes pecked. PE D4M8. J i AND BOARD. SOUTHERN NOREVE NINOS Welled Lake area. — ----' 443.34 mo. HAGSTROM f. HUMN, OR 31 »r7” erpated, Family room i. Tale waWaiw > top Mlnc^r- I. 651-4435 of RECORD SALES GIRL WAITRESSES - BARTENDERS iHtlp Wmtad M. et F. , I Apply in poraon, 300 Lounge -------:--------——---------jj— AILY HIMSELF WILL TBATM vnti ES"”r I estate. 4734701, . and drive HSPWregsra 773-0144 in Woriyu or 4844431 In j WAITRESSES i BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED i ImtnKtieNS—Schools Warren Stout, Realtor W to taka over mortgage. A tor Mr. Oaorgt' 731-4111. ALL CASH FHA AND Gl EQUITY SALESLADIES S. 4. Kraage's. graph, h . Putt bonaflts. Apply .J-* a BIG BOY RESTAURANT .5 Telegraph 4 Huron or - DWIe Hwy. A Silver Lake Rd. '■» WAITRESSES WAITED PORI — weekend werfc. Apply hi ptnen.1 Rotunda Country hat. 3S3D Pine - 14.00: Mi homes anywhere, even if ee- 47.00, tiojo - 01340 BASIC INCOME TAX COURSE l*?1.1" n? !!s,t,nB' J!? r RI non twevirw wewit. inwmc i ma V.UUA3C taoa. no delays. Cash Immadl-; DETROIT BLOOD SERVICE ...-------------pg iau7l r-eoerai, state and city 14 S. Can ' Bam- . B*d ‘ money during .. r-_: ' A______a_______ SCASOfl. If VBU IttM Ml* ftm ______________________COOK______________________________ I. Tele- WANTED: BABY SITTE»'P5M tWO PREPARATION AND SHORT OR-I n. children. Cel FE 34400._______________ I dor. Days. Apply In person, Ricky's SALESWOMEN — SOME EXPERV WANTED: BEAUTY OPERATOR - 014 Woodward. era — hill and oart time. Young- tor full- or.part-time work. Must DETROIT NEWS MOTOR ROUTE' * ***- *■— ’ ----- ~"* “ ------------I. Whlte Loke Twp. _________ __________ _____ „ _____________i, 3 routes open. Pn. « 33S-7S40 offer 5 P-m. 334-5773 or FE 2-0431. figures. 4 ototy. DETROIT BR 2-0440. AK OUR "SELLERS" WE'VE SOLD THEIRS IPs our "private finance plan" Theft (old nearly all our Sherwood , Motel LOW WEEKLY DAILY RATES TV AND PHONE IN ROOMS ------DRAYTON AREA ~ 3-bedroom Brick front ranch, fwl basement, Bear attached garage carpeted living room, gas heat pavod streets and sidewalks. Prlv iiagaa on Lotus Lake, (fat be your tor only sti.000 wffhTg par can down. r? IMMEDIATE POSSESSION Located near Northern High. Neo and cladn I badraom ranch, large family kHdMn. dining mom, iff ______ or ghPh>i,_ OlifyiW iftwh or Watkins *Lolue.^PriMd>S34?4% ^rad tTO Ortfl J , eonfrac ------ mortgage available. $12,900 • l UfATCDC^On DCAITV Everett Cummings, Realtor ‘hnt Attached Garage n _wai wywj ktai i t mm UNION LAKE ROAD lh MN ' Family Haim P_'..Mysfln. Raallar , QR 3-t EM L Ke MD-31DI °v#r I** fa- ft- of Living Area 4S4I Phda Hwy. VI i Hote Those-Stoirs?” imsSSSff, HAYDEN S 3 Bedroom Tri-Level ____ Ayaar old brick .............. tt. of living area, tr carpeted 45 wring room, 33' family -- " m«ww%.wmBnimBuji LESLIE R. TRIPP, Realtor tog room draper. — iw w uwvsvs sran ucrooer », r.» *V* « * V.MLI. ooJ-Tt i / «^!awH; ftABS2l w. H. BASS 2460 DIXIE HW1 langar Hwy, CE 54441 Hr details. »*-«etau,|I10 in Trades" ’ '_____■ "s^lC^S^R ^hEDh^ WB^°WWF C***! BuyE R FOR. 3-BEOROOM ul( wudv biKh. P«v Wark Wanted Male 11 FINISH AND iA-1 CARPENTER. rough. OR 4-1D74. _____-___ CARPENTER WORK, 34 YEARS ' e»„ reu^ NnfibTlBWtS. ■ FlkEPtACEj AMPJU3CK WQgjT ||B OAKLAND" AVe! mbOINGh,” ,UYeB> ^ and lawn work. FE 4-3344.__| Fa ececn tor swimming, ray up ra Brt ium\ : ---414,000. DORRIS 4 SON. Realtor' JP.lJs J OR 4-0334. , _ v________• L 4- "cash Ra«t Offici Space * HOURS I MM---------- OFFICE ROOMS. « HfHBP i square tael. Total l WRIGHT .......... feet. Will rent all er i Highland of Pontiac HIITER NTS HAVE EUYEBS WAITING IN LIME. | FOR AIXJIHIM OF Mpfim AND QUICK SALE <-*■ - ^-*- Work Wanted ftnsele 12 , [cleaning and wall washing Sw! ^"aST^f^rntlhS- AREA _ Mwdmom. • FrtJJ^IIka? as: ^“"rMg men with II. east side of Pontiac, at Sanford! p?. ■wowiop gert end Oomun Street. 334-H03, ATTRACTIVE EARLY AMB... can Offlce building, Wraglaca NEAE CRESCENT LAKE -IB “• —tlnf ream and ample ----------— -■—■— FE 00445, ME 44011 THE S ECONO-TRI 3 0 to menu . Lai lecMf AT $11^300 Fomli^Roem^^ MaM^Serage h OFFICE OFEN * It 11:30 s j. C HAYDEN, Realtor t M3-4404 10751 HNWand Rd. IM54 [• *lhSt lb VALUE . RENTING | $59 Mo. ' Excluding taxes and Inouronce ' ONLY ri $10 Deposit !* WITH AFFLICATION HAVfc'A a'UYglTwAiTiNG f58 cj*ir*~%*ter saaa saiiaun~gr~ resSI Sony taTmiwmIm*'uia a i apOraom ranrii out at Ponttac ground floor, $700 a month, ampla tliaoo. CALL B C. HIITER. .HH Ask_hxjvn KALTS1- JS *"*£*1 *£• wTowis0RD.V»ctisT' Val-U-Way Government Representative EAST SIDE »fun kinmoht with Bum-md oven, hardwaed fleers. Can be yours far only PERRY PARK •r Emeraan tMng ream. ■ ... m-, can ae OFF EAST PIKE Wt JjajL ^i in. ns car? beat this _n 450 With OSH down, S45 nth Including taxes and k WE TRADE BRUITIES I-A ALUMINUM BIDING—STOEMS BULLDOZING AND GRADING. FE FE 54545. Joe Vallaly, OL 1-4433 S-S0H. MMord 415-103 alter A ' .......... " 1 ------:! R. R- Melvin B Ian.________, * ituu.noiiNG. gradingT~s a n ft H Brow*. HmalL Modi dkis. Free estimates. Cell 4734M7. Eves, call 343-4747 or M7-540S._________ EXTERIOR SI O I BDAU/kllCC UABHuaann IRWHIlWe UvNC all WT HUYC, ... BROWNIES HARDWARE tlOM In. FE S4I712. FLOOR SANDERS — POLISHERS 1 l.nTrMr. uv uri.e~CA»ija«ii/ WALL PAPER STEAMPttS .IRONING, MY HOME, SASHA BA W RUG clliC«R - Po£« siwS ! L FE 4-3177. IND OF nprUrfs i FLANS DRAWN made, anas WALLPAPER STEAMER 434 Orchard Ul 4 PONTIAC FENCE CO. 5*33 Obdo Hwy- OR 3-404S Williams. faL 1-4240 or OR 4-3333. Roy O'Neil Realtor 3520 FentiecljMte Read OR 4-2333 MLS. OLt-4 s. call us today) TIONS FROM ANY WORKtl Original' .Baldwin Rubber Read. FE 3-0174, afltr l p.m OPTOMETRIST'S OFFICE. AUBURN HeWits. Ideal parking lacHHIOL 41 5. Squirrel Rd. Other offices augte||MHm^M~~ ---------- I 4-0704 INCOME - 3 units. 4 roomt. 3 Ps»—OKAY with US. ----■ carpeting, - For ImmediotB Action Coll List Hare-All Cash far Your Home! R. J. (Dick) VAUJET 3« Oakland Ave. , Open FT Alter heure Ft S4415 or FE4-n4* JOHNSON SLAKE WOODS. A lovely sob Kent Business Prepert> 47 A SB. n*Sn t . Clarkston Real Estate -T^TT r~ ---------------------------- *"* <*•*'*'■ ....... 5-5C21,24x20' BUILDING ON LAKE. 03401 ... S-Tg1 Pentlec Lake Read. 4734BB- | W REAL ESTATE ISTORE. .30x501 0N HURON^ST., 5444 Dixie Hwy- M. Hillman, Realtor * WE NEED LISTINGS ' realtor, _ OR COME TO 340 KENNETT NEAR BALDWIN NEATVALUE REALTY WOMAN DESIRES IRONINGS. OjXIE AtIwqmam Wol^jiboilNGS ~ - L*»d—Teteemph at Huron- m, hemt. Call oiler 10 a. 112-4713. ________________________ •”—» ***!Lggri!a*L/g_ | OR «N Mtir S coll FE 40441 I Megp 3m LISTINGS )*TpRE FQR:.R1NT, GOOD LQCA-, ISoundora A Wyeff______FE W04II £T' W' wrtton B,vd‘ Dr»H lANrsn Business Stnrico 15 VACANT LOTS WANTED |t,ot - nW industrIal~&bs1 In Pemiac we pay more, immadl . square ft.. Immediate occ---1 ate closing. REAL VALUE REAL- near 1-7$ expressway, y TY. 0144575. Mr. Davis.______ 5H-4343, alter 5,130-P43. INCOME BARGAIN seme, 1 ballts, full __ 2-car garage, trade far troll-sr, equities er vacant '—1 ng down to Ole. WRIGHT REALTY ASPHALT PAVING Tog Asphalt Paving Residential A Commercial ._____P j. ^|_|_|r ^ P|_______f JnJVXJ. - _i~. ^y^TjrvwTju ,j u u $g|g HOWtCl 49 •ILLS SR. NEW and *iiZ suboivision «lectrk motdr SERVICE re•' A|0Brt«Eiits, Furnished 37 ------------------------------------------------------'__________1 tending. FE 2-57W 3SU rn*irt«lned rear around, pairir q and rewinding. 110 t Plkd.' — " i t ArDt ________ __________________________mwne FE 4H01 2 ROOMS AND BATH. PRIVATE, . *. W>“C GENERAL TRUCKING SERVICE - Clean quiet men. FE 5401*._________________- DOWN Roofer TeusolL IIW dirt, send and gravel. 2 ROOMS, NEAR DOWNTOWN^FON- jSS^lor^reSiTwdl couSt S7 LAi

• * A-l NEW. REROOFS-REPAIR4 _ ----' OA tiiA' - . ■ , __ ____ ,... ____ | . call j«* %---- *— («* OR i------- ° . ---— 1 ROOMS -AND RATH, OFFER. L. DeltTCo. OresMHMDEg A Taifaring 17. w«4i for working couw*. f6 —=3—- vorXkm. TAYLOR MODa SEE THISv OUTSTANDING VALUE Elizabeth Lake Road 743* Highland Road el 3-BEDROOM TRI-LEVEL i, pitted d callent cond MODEL HOPPE. Harris a 3K DRIVEWAY SPECIALIST, FE 5d4H alterations. Mrs. OFFICE CLEANING kda M yrs. exp. AL D. Cwklng. FE S-44F1. ROOFING and refair 44B434B OL 1-4441 i.A?FNRy ------------!-*-‘ NEAR MALL, GAS ELIZABETH LAKE AREA COMPLETE LANDSCAPING.'BLACK DIRT, SAI_____ —“IMg, seeding, discing, plow _______FE 4-3741 __ nSbSll *?*'0^Ned?>dlrt*lSr >^UM -idewefit, arid ky,~----~;----- nates. FE 4-H71., O. PICK UP OR I e.) mw. »t creme. UL >440. VL T„„ ... 1^°^_ Free «S^.'fe sSn.*^^ ____ ^ they* T^’ T* M' FEEkFERT TREE SERVICE. TRIhi y sue. Lrmwr want — i-£SH£,___■ • ■'____________ mine and removal xupmo rree enimate. Pedy-BuiR Garage TONY'S COMPLETE LANDSCAP-! *i—r*— "77* .— co, o» 3-5Dt4._______I mg, Marion Hue or Kentucky tod,' lokes Tree Co., Trimmina KAR GARAGES. 33'x24'. NTS. CE- !»“ .2T ** F0"* F“*- kmUmMI—— BLOCK LAYING AND CEMENT 1-STOP BUILDING SERVICE. 5 CS*! 441NE |A. Johnson & Son, R«oltors 1704 i.. teitgroph FE 4-2533 'GUIS- AUBURN AND ADAMS RD. Frewtl home, St' Ttvtng room, tile and weed floors. 4 bedrooms, both, large kitchen with plenty el cup-merdfc gas heat, partial besamanl, too- of commercial frentaga. Ideal Jarretlreg men In esfabllshing business. Price enly S11.JN. W lk^^-TNU^ff; WALTER4 CAKE - .UnHI brick OPEN DAILY 6 to"? SAT. and SUN. 1 to 6 NOW IS TNI TIME TO TRADE CLARKSTON AREA ■j___HUH w.-iSiiar " WILLIAMS LAKE ROAD s^*Sga!L.!w!! £?S NORTH PONTIAC 1 Attrecffve Ibedreem hyne,_ juH.CLOSj Removal—Free Estimates FlrepIdCe WUm Ht-1414 2-CAB GARAGE. IN* Roy's Tree Service light hauling, small clean- trimming, planting up lobs. 334-4441. treatment tor Dutch rllM DliaasT LIGHT HAULING ANO MOVING. |«V.. rhMo Am. kind PS coin 1 1425 Oeklend Ave. CARPENTRY AND REPAIR WORK ■ ■ OL l-ESH COMPLETE REMODELING SERV-Ice. WU tenwai PiT?— TntckiEf K GENERAL TRUCKMff |«reEtwg .A Decentthif PAINTING 1 LICKING MOVISUl1*'’ PAINTING DONE NOW! 33M745 M0VINe'| years exp. Werfc guar. Reek S,- Hal end commercial. 473^144. aGIaOY-INTERiOR 'OECORAT hi. JLJ iTrXri ~—•— fe s-asas. .artments, Utriurnishea 31 1-BEOROOM. HEAT FUBNISHED 1125 couple. Jeennie Bee Apert-menls. 474-3H7. 2 LARGE ROOMS, BATH- NEAT 5-3747. I ROOMS. PRIVATE ENTRANCE School District. Silver loke Const. Co. WE TRADE w . ie Lane 4314HI 4-Bedroom Colonial Payments a r i y new, Waterford village model 0*EN * ». owner trenalerred. ixrellent a»«h AMPAULY, Realtor uW5UD»tl«. R1tA.M >?WFE M3Hj^^U^.. 30 Hibbdrd Court 1 bedrooms, needy decorated end remodeled, new gas furnace. 47JM 47H dawn er 01 mortgage. MODEL OPEN DAILY IM 2al Large * reams, NpUy entrance,' e»r»P : new gas luntace. comer let, ge- ^||(**] f * '-"°^‘s, YrlnM^>EC3«ri ^PAuTjONE^Veoity’ ' 5^ Tru-Kreft, drive eeTwl CRESCENT LAKE PRIVILEGES | kitchen, utility —&JT-* W*»* tor young ir retirees. *4,250. PONTIAC LAKE TAYLOR AGENCY ma Hieuand Road (MHI or sans 160 ACRES , NORTHEAST OF LAPEER wr.irw!®^jK: Jdtw' Hr rNlred caupN.*"^ GILES RfAlTY CO. re 5-4175 >r St Baldwin Am multiple flSTika SERVtCR* SCHEAM- Now Doing Custom Boldina On Available / Buildiog Sites I ' jF Your Plans-or Ours Custom Builders alr-eondltlon, carnal and laundry , 141 WEST YPSILANTI STREET 5134 a mo, tM i-fm-EM »4IH. 1 A ranch-type home with 1 fad- A ranch-type 5 rooms, living ro ream and mil I GIROUX AAA FAINTING AND DECORATING Interior and uOmHr, trot oati-males. UL 3 1157 or UL 1 1344. of similar homes. Close to a IF YOU'RE GOING TO CAUFOR- NEW 1 BEDROOM. PONTIAC LAKE „ & SL c2S"?’!£. '•stress. 'VZ TjSi" I WILLIAMS LAKE PRIVOEOES .. ^ JP I .RETIRED COUPLE *yL.* T3B*? MINT. ^ CMHEEt Work _____ Cement and Block Work PiEM Teeing Taifarfag ALTERATIONS ALL TYPES. KNIT drosses. Moffiur caotl OR 3-7)41 OBESS MAKING-ALTERATIONS I HRS. JOHNSON—315-4434 INTER LAKES FAINTING AND DEC orating, ai wart, or »3tti._ FAINTING. PAPERING, CAULK . Tom. 141 HIP or, IN 1175 DOWN. 1144 MONTH OTOMPd Lake Rd. k Com-k ammarct ' * fe ____ ___„jr gars air oil hoot 4M54 with (—- —I _______— ■ B*lan«a On FHA mortgage to qua I- marc* Rd.. taka Commerce to s. Mtod buyer. K. O. HanSotaad Root- Commerce Rd, tym rigid w Am-tti Elizabeth Leap Rd, — NEAR WAUED LAKE ktdeo 1 bedroom ranch with at- SMITH & WIDEMAN REALTORS FE 4-4524 412 W. HURON ST. A-l TUNING ANO REPAIRING car Schmidt_______ FE MR) WIEGAND PIANO TONING ! IB yaqrs In Fenlloc. FE 3-4434 I Pfasterieg Service- ran pkkups ivy-Ton stoke TRUCKS - .TRACTORS . AND EQUIPMENT Damp.Trucks - Soml-Trollers Pontioc Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. 825 S. WOODWARD —Si 2 BEDROOM CALL S 29 ______ 437-3417 or 443-4735 ’w~ J i-BEDROOM, WAILED LAKE 4 FOR FURNITURE ANO AP- eroo, lake privileges, lerge lei W>icrw&.^im^SBMriffi °Sb auraya. dsubto S*.\7T pS^Xy»4rpll? k,, j6Z2?'2ii 'nXL li’L**' hanai. Only S7.000. Good terms. J, OR 1-17.7 7-»«RO^, NO CHILDREN. CAU ’ZjZLt Z* }££. **** ~ Cak MY 3-M31 er FB F4P43. ny4rS * F“ HfOkooM, SSar tlB jqft^^getg, wr let. tradeln to w deal today. - Vacant land SS5X.1v».*-' ® WHY Nbr LET Ivon W. Schram , H YOUR REAL lltATC MAN a- . MaSm tm Shawnee Lane 4714411 N^WLY MARRIEDS 1440 plU* escrow Buys skarp' 3- jyyom. ryuer ekf rendT q«h FURNITUI CASH AaID' f6*'~WPR' "iHlb1 jWumw.l fvYnltureoed omRmpmFE 4LI44* **”>*«>*« tyOUSETTcHlESiiE1 ^TufaSr^- ^ ZUgtlMk _ . DES4C1. FILES. OFFICE FUENI *t!f°S2?*^i.a00U,LL. ~^S9:_ . _.w, - BIRMINGHAM *5diS“jATMr^urtyWTla _ . ; .i . RIAIRl builders DORRIS WAtfWtt. LAKE ABBA. Top^lotch twit suburban natohbarhaod. with blacktop sfreefs,7jas tod cem-ntonlty water, with all homes to U! olaasant surprise Insldt, Plto with •paciaus family roam with flr#- (ILL SWAP MV FINS 3$MM ,g„_______ *as* tri* s’tOOMsrUTILITY'ROOM.'CLDIE MtHr xHlary tone to iidtoM, near Qafcjiiid Uhp! r*r muitoBW Immiidialafi, IM kNrBr srjyr,c,,',w-—'*',5K »OUL > li.M 0**._yACt. W«»T>,.« family comfort.’ Sroom7 neatly ~6k 2*cor*t«l sod in" n|oi un vwms%Stst Sown plus doling costs. aB®Sf£3 •ujkjwLj jaLfeaSar-i*'*^ TO r^’^. §£ .“v£%, Salt Clothing Ot delivered SI58 08 _ _____■_____________ ---------------------------- Glbisn IJ- refrigerator, new S14S.08 GAS RANGE, fit SWIVEL SWEEP'S PAIR MEN'S PANTS. 2 SUITS. RCA Whirlpool electric dryer 1120.00 *r. 200 lb. pel tank, 2232 Pontiac ■ 4 Lad let coats. I tgr coat, lew Sylvan la. 21" color TV, new *•** *' prices. <547 w. Walton Blvd.. Drayton Plains. THE - ------------------* I---m GOOD HOUSEKEEPING $1 I S399 95 _ i PURNACfTTauot ttu. sod! MILLER PtAYTON AREA - Larne 3-bed-i 2S2. r*nc7'. ff*B bungalow with aluminum awk ------------- * “ I basement, atom* OP PONTIAC M* WATS* HEATERS. » _____________PE 4-1555 - A. Thompson. ..J PFAFF AUTOMATIC m s. f‘s, ^?®u5lMACM,Nf I HAGGERTY HAS IT! 1 MORE TIME , f ree-erm portable - 1002 model Do It yourself Redwood i BRAND NEW PURN.TUR. SKtl’rtS? 7 ** *«« SlSfI LI 1 %,c£#%wrf‘n,tt- unlv*r- HAGGERTY LUMBER $278 (Good) S2.50 Weekly " TC^icwALTriTe"--------- *1“ Haggerty Nwy, ma t] $378 (Batttr) $3.00 WMkly .................. LG. I NORTH _____ . — ^ ... . _ ir towtjtkmer plus lots more LAKE FRONT _ Completely fur- LAKL PRIVILEGES S1SM, *Mt twins. nlshad lake front home wtth .2 ex- UPPER STRAITS LAKE, go w NORTH SUBURBAN ranch. The Goedylewof We^fLall^l^Sl Jsg.J9g!*-r . wmwm0S3r3$& LAR6E C0RNER It - • <* lake huron near’ terms. 201 w. Walton ** Atom You’ll LIKE > • REFRIGERATOR. 525. OR YE R, ( >478 (Best) >4.00 t .kly Gas stove. S2S. Refrigerator wl tap treeier. 541. 2Mnch TV. si '“Aher, 525. Electric stove. S3 Harris. PE S-1744. ------SINGER-------- ___ ZtO ZAO SEWING MACHINE sijs weekly. ._______...1U ■. ~ ,T. SAR! W MODEL NEW BEDROOM BARGAINS “ S piece (brews— —-------- JIM'S OUTLET t 4-MIS •t Rds. only SIMM, can today. *^Xh ill fireplace. Ceramic t Hr“ ■» ANNETT „ Income Property . ELIZABETH LAKE PRONT _. Mi, Custom built ktoptoisad roams. __l d ^utlBty room, large fenced | kiichen, 'M'rVmlc tiie both, garage,"su,W,'SSo*Sown. 1><,r I mrrvr I»Z& ftssr: m C A. WEBSTER, Realtor L -.......................- m MY 2-22S1- . ' OA S-2515 °!^-0ally 10~l PONTIAC k MINUTES, PRIVATE L0-T .WITH LAK lake. No imtori allowed. SO'xISO' sion nf $11 down $10 month. vLm Cleared or wooded lota. ’ Bloch kSSSJ1 Broe. OR>12SrorFE ‘ kltdw CLARKST0N AREA Beautiful IMeacro homesites on Reese Rd„ north of Holcomb Rd. Will be Included In the well restricted Rolling Meadows Sudvl- V‘TmTE REALTY CO. Wl M rati I aka OM Dimllap 54 IMiimi OppRrhndtiBs FULLY EQUIPPED GO - Factory Closeouts GRAND NEW — 3 ROOM OUTFITS 59 Look What You Git for: rT $317.00 $2.88 WKIY. ass NO MONEY DOWN MOVING electric sio... I _w>w<„ w»v>. rutjs. jjftvenporl, mlsc. 450 Scat! nsV^thtubT COLOREO^JR^, OIL HEATERSrSSiM~upTREFRIG- TO 5-ACRE PAR-, to par cant dawn, to 3-acrt parcels, — I) per cent down “«■ 04-1/41)7 5-Plece dinette set. 4 chrome chair: formica top table. 1 bookcase, 9 X121 rug included. All for S3W. WYMAN -------- .riS FURNITURE CO. 1 sZ^‘ ’ Rne !a w pYi?eN FE 4‘4**1 U»M »«rgeln Store, tw complete mvm,- fe^TAtLf, ffi£a£ SUS **Br ,XPH ^Si^Tmp^4ta!2S?tor Ml 0r“S4no'^cuRrs I or C8II — PH. ^ tehl* PJI CUBT S SINGER LAKE FRONT ■o Lone H the t PtRacHud ir. Three room with flropl Hit bullt-iha. din ramie tile r H FE 4-4S0S. WALTER! LAKE OFFERS r Choke I rage. Shown byj M^ege.'fermo.-—’ W: BLOOMFIELD AREA • Attractive^ Groom rancher with WILL . TRAOE aluminum tiding situated on a - . 28 E. Huron St m pjQ- Open Evenings and Sundays 1-4 ear garage. Many extree. Call 8-0466 John K. Irwin S tots, 52,475 total. 200' obgcttons: Clarkston- to Ellon Rd., S blocks ESS Mohawk Dried. SYLVAN 425-1114 Watkins Lake HI-HILL VILLAGE CHOICf BUILDING SITES WINDINO PAVED STREETS EXCELLENT DRAINAGE LADD'S, INC. ' 33S5 Lapeer Road FE S-S2S1 or OR M221 attar 7:30 Li . Sunday 12-4 tut ......... LAKE PRIVILEGES, coi Clarkston arba. OR 3-1203._ LICENSED - GUILDER HAS DR- uu ilrahle tot to Clarketon, will hilM — 42S-131S. MEAT MAN'S SPECIAL I stan to this — A moat processing int that deals almost exclusively Ith processing meet lor farmers. » worries about selling e product. KINZLER AUBURN HEIGHTS Delightful,' tong and tow 5-raom home Early American, •4,x30‘ * ly room print tlrgp'— 1 tot, tSO'xMP. IT jyism MsrcM -awn piuo Wot#r, Woter| Wat(r; Com Lake Canal Front, LOTUS LAKE PRIVILEGES 1 l. H. BROWN, Realtor SOS (llie both Lake Read Ph. W 4-3SS4 ar PR 2-4SIS trade'] With , ! BATEMAN guaranteed TRADE-IN No. 50 Holly Inconw a«i«S2:'Si£ SASHABAW DOWNS I or and- dryjr included, ideal to- A new devetopment, 4- to 1 Pec re cation only 2’^ miles from l-» and parcels, all touel black toam soil only minutes from Flint OAJ plants, for produce, berries and trult. RaatanaMy priced at 52*450 with Larger porcoli Ideal far horee tow SMBS doswi. .art. Prices start at S3,MC. Corner taehahew end Sherwood Eds. Low*Down PoymBMdtm ignch*r Incama, is rooms. Ml baeameni, Near Expressway L75**snT'V3 'miles" ntlac. Owner anxlou 80 Acres—Mttamora •Scenic rolling land, ctoto to Detroit Boy bout camp. 5-room modernized farm homo, good basement bom.. Spin Chestnut rsH^fence sround hors* paddocks. Annett Inc. Rtoltors I E. Huron St. FE S-0444 — "— --------1 Sundays L4 ure and exceptionally high In-me. Call now tor full details. WARDEN REALTY W. MMWn, Pontiac 333-Zlj7 Near Cadillac, Mich. Clast "C" Liquor Bar, license business, building, 1 acre In Yuma, PATROL ROUTE 35 TO 40 PLACES.' mattress. 2 betutltul I S-ptoce living room Sulta^h oil he'ater, with-blowerT"MO. OR 3-SS11. OIL TANK. 1MBGALL6N, URE Zig-Zag equipped sewlm machine, "**;,*“' 4,65 w- Muron- 073-4SM S'xl2- kitcRen ruo I Pmowtlod. In peblnet. Does Heme. ^03410.--------------______ Eo Mtofdithes buttonholes and design » ' - ™ --------------- ice set ot dishes. , cams. Only S34I2 cosh »r m, oeen in ALL MERCHANDISE I ™!It.hly-. Jgjg*g- CbH board, to bt purchased eparately. I credit miMMr, 335*9313. Rlchman damper, Ii.m ner n. v. «. snow w ^ Bros. Sowbig Center.________ eon, 7BBS M-2> W. BARGAIN BASEMENT TV SET, Ut. REFRIGERATOR, IIS, — nr * m rs-NS-^T"s. SbhWr ss' Bbt& ^,r^r,iU5' PLYWOOD LITTLE JOG'S BARGAIN HOUSE m-nu. Baldwin at WaNon, FE 24S42 WYMAN'S Flt,Acms,of '^rea ParkingUSED BARGAIN STORE ■gggffi**- *tl1 *-**-^1* Knao Hbior Desk‘ * **!I5^S^.M tr'oliM" sliding H doors S12SJ0 2-pc. living room suite . SIMS 2'0"x4‘l" Mahogany doors .. f 4.4S Apt. tin pas stove ....'... S34.es 2'4"x4'i" Mthootny doors . *5.45 aloe, range ........iis.es < plate glass sliding door, ’A" S7e.es ssr hTy. ’i’C3SS"’K^3C7*'th^er .......................S39.es 4'H" plate glass sliding door S7*.95 KvetWhlng ouar. Elec, refrigerator .. . 539.95 Alum. Comb, pre-hung door 5 17.88 ■.rJSl ®u,r- e**1- wothor I49.es Deluxe Alum, combination door SSI.9S Baldwin it Walton. Your Credit Is Good at Wyman’s No. I common, noils, 5S lbs. S 4.93 EE 2:2150 Basement lack poets.....*5.95 “— '— 314.93 1 Good 4'xl' Mahogany paneling VW root boards WP . 4‘x|‘ Plasterboard b enclosure GOOD GAS DRYER, ___________ electric end gas ranges, 313 to M refrigerator. S39> 2 - piece llvii„ „ , *29, hides beds, dressers. Gas bads, dinettes. Everything Guar. •**•*»"• CmdltJ REFRIGERATOR; 1 TAPPJ -* ‘ chrome 'table a - EASY terms "BUD" Attractive__ targe llvtojfroi and 2-cor gsreger ixc^ienr*neigfu borhood. walking dlttanca to grade school. Good beach and a good buy at S14.9S0 with 52.XU down. Sislock & Kent, Inc. I J'™WW ^Pon,^ Ststa Bsnk b^ ^SJCSM iA* rcttaTOll lor^1* 1M>V. jhg ArttjEH 65-A I " renting" conipfeTe sohyp. but * GULL DOOR FREEZTp-REFRIff RED MARK R-S^PRUMlZ^COT Burmeisier's 25x14 “Sliding!* 4R fSrtogorOoS ««*• condition, Sti-FE^yro/*"**' fwas'.Opkhfli; HoilyTME* y-TfS! VT]LJ?9Hwf____EM 3*171 fuH ttasomont. Onty S5,- 7- basement. Only M,- 7-PIECE BLOND DINING SET Call Ryan Realty good condition, FE 2-3485.________ 9x12 Linoleum Rugs $3.89 ®*R» H 0D0 down ror wi. juiytlme. 274-5440.__ — RESTAURANT-TAVERN Situated in vlltage of Clarkston. Vinyl Atbcsti Drawing substantial local 'rode Inlaid tlto 9x .----—irehants and residents. Floor Shoe ir breolT""” ' " ' ( f is 10 to 3 Seats n tor breakfast. 1 5123, 474-3550 before 5 - T7..--..R I*RGAtN£^^^^H Standing toilet, 114.93. 3G«alton heetor. 147.93; 3-plece bath sett SS9.95. Laundry tray, trim, *19.95; ' “* *—1 334.95; Sl-A | DON WHITE,.INC. 1 ---3191 Dixie Hwy OR 4-0494 5-ROOM CABIN, ROSCOMMON - e-l- e~ ; ------ Grayling arsa, near 1-73, aarttyi5®* f*r** 56 furnishad. Lot le'xMt'. S3.000 cash,1------------------------- I S2.3N farms. FI 4-4M4- after 4 14 ACRES, 4-BEDROOM, BASE- *-m.___________. . _____ | manf, 2 garages, os' taka front. J'ufuu A.I.. .—— ----1 03,300 down. Oa 8-2013. A. Sanders, Ropd. H. Wilton, Broker. 100 ACRES Approximatoly >2 miles stalls tups, SIO “•-esded. _______ Baldwin. FE 4-1514. 2-bowl sink, 52-05; Lavs., $2.05; and up. Plpo cut and SAVE PLUMBING CO., Sdm and tavern llcehte Included In tale price. SM,500 tor buslnees and 2-story brick building with .. WALNUT MAGNAVOX Tv, 40" * W E. WoHon, corner ot Josiyn--------------------------------- Pre,en.t.ly «l«»rlc range, hlde-*-bed. 3-plece COLORED TV, GOOD CONDITION, P9®L..TAELES, NEW, USEDTi MM6 annually, ivw—i set, lawn fumlturt. all SIM, FE 4*157. I Erunswlek only $250 i . sacrlflco. 473-5000. COLOR TV'S PR6M Slh GOOD ___________________ KENMORE GAS RANGE, 3 selection used btack end white PAILPOAO_ TIES, *3. EACH, _ — -3— —---------- portables. C >y TV. FE 4-9802. upper level Inctudei jtjMGrt Ftiywiy ____ ________ Priscilla curtains be'mede into' sp'artmenls'for ad- . *WI rddlLOTATWI._____________ RCA COLOR- TV, 21", GOO dltional income. Terms. 42 YARDS OF CARPETING, CHAM- dltton, blond, 0140, 473-1441. R0LFE H. SMITH, Realtor | 88TVffi?*3ijN»& ““I-------------------------- 244 S. Telegraph E 3-7141________EVES. FE 3-7302 CON-1: Timbers 4”xl0"xr tongl h. Coll Sm SS: STdcK SS ^ 7 Cottage.-anOhome SIO^IOO K- tSSSflnStato V?,250*00 i "H? motol_ and home *’4-500 wn, plus costs, to ——— 5 cottegsA furnishad * Pontiac. 10-room modem house. S ‘ 1*r0^hiP"r®°(_ barns, _extra level Easy"•nm' ,BV“tment. . K. L. TEMPLETON, Realtor JSO terms *X* Grchsrd Lake Rd. ' 4124000 •Mo orm. Oxford horse farm u 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needad. See us before you deal. Warren Stout, Realtor M N. Opdyke Rd. FE 54145 Oeen Bvw. 'tll s p.m. _______________ RUMMAGE ALL WEEK OCTOBER! ££■ RECORD PLAYER NEEDLES AND fngs^Me-’^^clorkxton* F -----.-SINGER---------" "" A 3HTUCK JOHNSON TV - FE 8-4569 I antiques, clothing, appllanCM. Mon. fin noodle dial control zig-zag 45 E. WALTON NEAR BALOWIN Tues., Wed., *4. 242 Forry. FE vlng machine, pre-owned. In cob- USED TVs $1995 4*7353. “dtanntuS^coltoct'^tt nth * App"in£,Jj?44« WARWICK M.II monthly. Guaranteed. Call ----g-------—^ ' Rlthm,n 5K ^aie Miscallaneous 67 j- a7R“CONDITIONER 7 I’moOl _ „ SALE pletely ir conditioners In I Heating, 474-2611 o . 2421 Orchard Lake. 4*2-[ STEEL BUILDINGS. J'XP UTILI- vtU Sr and freshly dacaratod. "Bud" Nichols*, Realtor AFTER A Pi^iE 4-877j CLARK s*irss | Lots-AcrBogs \Z~ 12 LOTS house nettled In plow, large bedroom homo with attached 24'; 30“ garage, slightly rolling bed ground end frontage, entity at* 4rxt08' barn designed 4 make cart at horses, 12 boa wtth water and Itot' exercise poddicko am 555,000. Terms. ACTION i your land contract, largo . -nail call Mr. Hitter. FE 241,,. Broker. 3792 Elizabeth Lake Road. 52 down w $2 par week '+ WHY "0T. <1° v ? * YOU« ' FRETTER'S WAREHOUSE OUTLET ™““ with rubber end no more Mig &. Telegraph FE 3-7051 1 building sltot « and church. 3 I >. broom brick tatty "Deluxe" rnSrSilnl nSS end entrances. Fuff - _______ attodied gorogo, Mack top c pensive water front leva* with and Sito ptwjtaRda. Call ■HoikipR system. CtopoWng. details, toad* at bullMnt, hat water heat and bear garage. Raeaensbty CLARKSTON ARIA — Spacious tat newly remodetod klichen.’seoarnfe wR^MMSawllh * total, qr avrttobto to BgaUMtJqTe e n Shtri SSTtlre3ST InTtoi^ —illebta with 4 tots If you desire Acres Bvertoetnng Dear Lake, room Full baaemenf. 2-car garage, it af tarmai MAKE YOUR AP- f^ata Beach fir aubdlvltlon) touwy to--*——■ »-* K-2- '■■TtoENT NW. Ideal spot fo build your dream SmStogT CANAL LOTS W. Iroquois St. Boautltul atom I- Connecfadwtth^yhtarT Lake. * "hTe. tUb^4*S!S M LOVELAND ---------------- -aoxto^Rd. PONTIAC 13 MINUTRS, laa'xsoa' 993. MB dawn, $1_________ OR 3-HM, PR d4p», * ' fak IwhMi Pr#yirty Cash Far your equity or land contracts.! Don't lose that homo, smallest. BRONZE OR CHROME DINETTE 7 .-SaSa-■, / sale, BRAND NEW. Large and »aCTIONAL, USED WOOD- u small size (round, drop-toef, me- •" wlndovo, to— — tuto tongular) tables to 3, T and 7 pc. °i| }"*> Y?u I sets. 524.95 and up. shallow wall | 1 ’PEARSON'S FURNITURE ’ ar. FE 44135._________________________ 210 E. Pika____________Fj 4-1551 rxl*- LINOLEUM RUGS 53.95 EACH « BUY, SELL AND TRADE. MICH- Ptojtlc Wall tlto ' Ic aa. TALBOTT LUMBER 1825 Oakland_______ THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE _ 11* W. LAWRENCE ST. E verything to moot your needs Clothing. Furniture, Appliances Unclaimed Lay-Away Take Over Payments I table lamps. 1 pole xll rug, 4-pleea bad-...mirror, double dres-, bookcase bad. 5-plece CHINA . ^ Vary 7i . _______ _____ -........... USED POOL TABLES, SLATHTtOP, LYMAN, 40 H.P. MOTOR WITH »«*• only 314 N. Saginaw. _ ‘ ............. .............pmgffgfff. ___ taka Aaad DANISH modern couch NEED LAND CONTRACTS- SMALL I malchlng ‘ I discounts. Sbfl Garrets. EM 3-2511, il sppf to to la. Cad tar di MODEL HOMES W0NE 6fio„n BEAUTIpULLY turrtAhad In Lake-rtSUNt ool-il 11 2»ST#d McCuliwghSr.Real,or m%nnn&& Hwy. ta tashabaw, rlghl to Watton, /a'ATL'TT (aJ INI r.l 1. PONTIAC REALTOR ROCHRSTER nrsaas, crdar shorei our. $ vrry SJrtSw.bTSS.7r,,"r- m w. HURON ST. Slen7"'si7jtg tor '-^ -'MlS*"**' -- -------------' ? “ .......■■ _________________ ____ns, extra EMpIre 348*4.____tor couch, 855. 1 set of tall lamps 428-1074. Stag, SySVflfTaC CLARENCE C. RIDGEWAY ----------------- 3- ^ D 1959 FORD GALAXIE 380, POSI----------------------■ . tram*, foam traction rear and, 54 racing cane. WALL FURNACE, OIL, 23B43ALLON ” “ — motorcycle, lank, 195. 48" atoc. range, S25. FE Rtoltor FE 2-7318 ar Ft 4 I CHAIRS. ran# AA BARBIE, TAMMY OR SKIPPER WASHiNO MA^MINES~~20flvftT doll _ctoinet, complete wardrobe ttonal, automatic pump ti38.so tor Chrlstmaa, $4 447-3344- value S89.9S, scratched, no down Mlchtoan Ftoorascant. Old Orchard Driye — Sorry drets cannot' bt (Ivafl out. tad kept Sbiifiom ham* i carpeted BytaR’ toam, llrepl dining room, reematton ream ONE AND*TWO-ACRE HOME SITES bMroom“to^ne awnad nffU"7dJi MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE atodrlc range. »S. 33S4371. to "A^ w3adl"eE3Staf" ZSr f!?Ttodo?T'd5«« dlta?' SEASONED LAND CONTRACTS EW"ALC^ABRTC”AUT(SMATIC Ciarkiwn and i:73 eS! Rastrlctod. yy. HURON ST I STT’^af^ol^avT^s'a^oan w*thtf' »” -PL ________ “—* —1 “ nunun pi, | »JL.>APITOL SAVINGS (LOAN fRIGIOAIRB AUTOMATIC WASH- riAdaR,rEciatt^naSfe SS& 7 be tar Chrlslmas, |4. 447*3344. ANCHOR FENCES MONEY DOWN 1- GIODINGS ROAD. 3-acre Mrcd. V, with ntosiy, tandacapad tofli toT.I SST**^ W* STOUTS Best Buys Today 4 Bedrooms TRADE I BATEMAN COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT __ „ Wl. Telegraph "*-In ... I-Iuum" Monty to LeM 61 new, sm, 2W Vcarhalt. . n (Lteamad Money Lander) Qj5~0RYiR. I TO N A T LOANS TO 1 S3 misTTS Rlhtsft GAS STOVE IN GOOD CONDITION. Nerfon, 3384034. . *1(IWI _ _________BATHROOM FIXTURES, OIL AND fILL SWAP MY FINE 3SMM Argus C-4 cantor* wtth flash, wide ___________ ____________■ angle and telephoto auxtttanr tons *Urt,'taexUI?Kto8T slick.*OR* 3-6^u' LOTI lOTxStO' ON PAVEMENT i. *2300. Twrmt. 3554 ACRES _ rftdnSS frontage on 3 skies. COMMERCIAL LOT, 32,901 ■ ,'lptleo Like — ttorte Mol frontage an William* Lab workshop. 122,800. IS* d*ap. Call ovenlngs, OR 3- glMgicjnt fwo-cer attached garage, ftoxIL. L ... Nvaded Id. Carpeting to living Room tO Ramble M. "» mm- . Situated an tw. , 71ta ACRES ON U,S. IS batwas Clarkston and Grand Blanc. S39 twe car garage, fencing, tovaty, rtSH. ’prtW^d,^LAChei pN CORNER.an Dlx .11,95* with *1,208 down plus’ _CgmntrM .buttoRigs pk .“•nr.MR'lein/BiRito ■ IlSR im mtMal (tot. *7-500, .'A down, consider trade-' City 1 Neat Sbadrifm to (tarlharn High prlc* aSSd tfkSrt- ^ -%■■— NORTHERN NIGH ARIA IX2* £22?' ttSlSSr *iKE VW nlea 3-badroam ram Vim .Mgwg-JWSg tos, to klldlan, full b ropm. Priced st only d-950 wtth ^ mW i • , years aW. 01l.71l Mh I Y BUNOALOW! ou'r* cTly Mko u sin near bus sarvl we ero hapito to have this 47-acre farm I nrite from W* home tar tala, lama of Its Intersection - buildings. 532400. •“"■-ss. trs two tore* bad- Trad* considered. , 14-tt. living ’raanv ent, dandy kitchen, SALE OR LEASE Jdbft. an Oakland Avenue, for usad car m, truck tarmlneL trailer teles, ale. Zoned M-l. FE I “’national BUSINESS. BROKERS ' FI I-7I41. 1 FE 2-9026 -—Is the number to call. OAKLAND LOAN C0.> LOANS _ comm'unity'loan CO. E. LAWRRNCE Ft 144 LOANS _ Insured Payment Plan BAXTeITB LIVIttQSTONE P bunco Ca. 401 Pontiac State Bank Build FE 4-1538-9 i, REFRIGERATOR, 2-DOOR DE- gas furnacas and ■xa. FE 4-MO. water haatars, heruwurv m n R U NrflNG AUTOMATIC M'S »upp11**• Crocto. jell. usher, *33, dnfiir, S25. FE 2-4267. too WORKING RJEFRIGERATOR I {fgfnt ^r^Kafn^ona^MM S25. Gas Stove, 533. Washer. 525. r*!S£122H£E!tti^*% 70 I Hef water heater, SIS. RE 5-2764. HEIGHTS SUPPLY - GENERAL iLICTRICTEFRIOER- 24S3 Lapeer Rd. - _F1S 4-5431 SWAP MY FINE J*mm AR- I ,,or' »?»•■. Kenmom BED, CLOCK, DRESSER, DESK, SSitenrt^^hni^ii.fin!!1: uS? 1 awJg- ^-7yrWE'T.S<*t>l< -m-clamh,B-Fe M7”' ?X* e??“wm.'tdL*Sl!l*& 533- 'g^ag” srrT' yuSee,, Bottia Gas Installation I JLeg*. fXSOy sss- dfasr ^ ,0,1 “• ^ • HOME FREEZER Fidi RamRyllw Hold* 341 lbs. AM fait fraezn shelves •onus doragt doer Rt MS7t CASH AND CARRY rfe fc 71 S2i« 138 BASS SORKIN ACCORDION, I WMd very llttto, original coef Bin, I will sacrifice tor 890. FE 4-4813. NEED CASH P^aOnmA _ down 12 ptr weak <111 W. Wallen______________OR RlfTEfi'e WAREHOUIE ?mlT giNTAUR TRACTOR WITH I *-*——“ “ Hematite generators, 23* KIRBY VACUUMS It braeza- 3° acres near porter Near Cass-Oodgc Park. borders Alptnt Ski Ratari 5-FAMILY ARARTMENT HOUSE — parking tot, CPnereta shop to. downtown area. FE 24344. BORROW UP TO $1,000 Underwood Itot Estate Nddf 2-bedroom rdnchluma ,*n A ttE?5L.J BUCKNER) mSH aff‘Snlnal0ls'll stttno mmS •'•main near but tarvtct, churches m, fed -EamSGS Br«r- VWMmT {riASr. Investors MODELS * —1 buy toltoi send bum / V „ , . „ -Mm*.» Jtm. •» Open Daily 1 to 9 r.ARCEU ftiova you In. ' Wntrfdpi < I 5WttTtoTaSggri ‘^"~gvwi -i lurnlthed mods SI 7,988 tor ( Brand New dugntaoT iwo- ^a^efi^ud^jgih J at idlng cut- I'jai* sr ACRES ^Ttestasrsi, ie Actit-jbito eesiinwit1 NJU. a ^MICHIGAN isiness Soli LANDMESSE Totoflraph ss cornBr Business Soles, Inc. JOHN LANDMESSER, BROKER .173 S. Telegraph PE AIM BUilNfeSS < $•$• Milt Into one month* M Qmk itrvto with .. LIVWG, OINING ROOM, BEDROOM J eat and rttirlgorator. FE AS344. | - I LIVING, DINING AND BEDROOM uLSHi tumtture, men's clothing, size **-42, after 3:50. 444-7344. . : DOUBLE >1 Beginning organ classts ! cone's* ..."~f« 8-4441 now forming. 8 class las* sons, proctiSt facilities and : mstruetjon matorials, $8.00 : Lax*complete. If interested ' clearance >f used office ltt5*f oSsSsutJL,* d Wlda Van Una, :HTt. MS. J TWENTY-SIX THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1965 791 Travel Tnhn 89ITIZZY By Kate Osann Ferilp 6w ¥'3**ES" MORRIS, MUSIC ------------- HARMONY HiMIC "oOltAkUcAOLEt, 3 fctONTHS. REaSB sltl•aaa-.gaa «*• ■* — MUSIC CENTS! Beautiful, cuddly PIANO'S It W« CENT OVft COST! **,1* Toy Poodle PuPpy HCuHiaH LAKERD- MHIU Nine-week-old Male HAwb. wpi*”" *»■»*♦- - util ; „ akc Registered STTROJAN. 15* ENGINE. Sleep* IntaSbVX tendenThrefler. ii,Sf, COHIS4SM4. pkft $» PjTJjj »ner*FE *4SW.’ PLAYER PIANOS We have the ne* ettachmei ^JST&V" BASSET PUPPIES AN electric, no pumping, Nil tometic at only OHM MORRIS MUSIC >« $. Telegraph Rd. Actom (ram TeLHuron, =* AKC excellent i THOMAS VlNET ORGAN, IS PED-als, percussion, soeclal effects. LEW BETTER l CANINE COUNTRY CLUB lestlonal core. SS E. i SALE. HOUSE TRAILER SUIT-1 WT hunters, young couple or ■Mbir. Equipped with hooter, MS Plato, tone 1010 r Welton Blvd. after s TRAVEL TRAILERS Since 1922. Guorantood fir I See thorn tad art a dtmcool Non at Wtmor Trailer Salta, 1 JSwE^ob con-, . iir!wgpiMTOHMi.'l W>6 AMELIA. Hid' AMERICA'S LARGEST SELLING CAMPING TRAILERS ^ISnMRQD salt In our bldery. YES. we're slathlng prices. YES, we tetolrate*4ns. YES, w* have Ira dn. pymts. 1 1 YES, we have financing up to 7 . 1 = 9 NOW ON DISPLAY WiDi. gg tV1 YES. w have many used. O n CRUISE OUL INC. I E. Wilton Blvd. FE *4402 Open Polly Ft I TIRED OF SHOPPING FOR ORGANS? WHY,NOT COME TO ------GALLAGHER'S------ Dachshund, male. Cleon, comfort-1 miam, bathing', groom-1 ig. Pickup and delivery. ATTENTION HUNTERS DOBERMAN PUPPIES^ d below OOG HOUSES. INSULATED. ALL TOM STACHLER ~ AUTO B MOBILE SALES an. Huron St. H * ‘ -*M9S. - ms -jc ssTu-SUM - Hits I , BOOTH CAMPER Aluminum covers and compel any. pickup. 4147 LaForast, V ‘ rd. OR MB- g Porkhurst Trailer Sales I FINEST IN MOBlLk LIVING IS Sol i ft ft. Featuring New Moon —I r Buddy and Nomads. ’• Located half way bttwooa Orion and It E. Sea Us Before You Decide GAUAGHER MUSIC CO. I Huron FE 405*4 BUY NOW AND SAVE |. SELDOM USED TRADE-II Thomas spinet ties. Themes i tedfl POODLES »Y OWNER, TWSX7W FT. PICK-'. OPEN 7 OAYS-9 to 9 SEE THE NEW 19*4 MODELS lUlliaw «d-qm4*|er» wd Bee< CjW . 186 JMfi?* xrpfl wSSSw iw> o^vwotcr. ^ I|atl( afilfEMfr ONE OF THE BETTER BUYS AT -*■ "T 1960 JAG M - — —f— M Liter 4*0*1, gKI|MH m 3KMJRS HAROLD TURNER LLOYD'S 1962 BUICK FE 8-4071 Capitol Auto $12 w. Montcalm ctra as and heater, Met burgundy finish with matching Interior. RatiHy tt eest of Oakland ___$57 DOWN Up to 36 Months to Pay Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 1963 lUfCK two CORVAIR 4-DOOR with radio and hooter, Pew-orgllde tronemlsoton, now firai, brekoe god battery — Runs HM i , HD inf has BjTHflrTi Df Commerce. After t p.m. * ___2-DOORIPECIAL FORD, INC. M........... __. — t. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM ; ; Ml *4Ue .... mf eui^'MEcjAL cduvmt- Be. rad. *uiBhdfc.radfc. tootar. Hmttlc, radio,' heater, Wallant I0R SPECIAL mmMeiy-radio. a ________idTerguofce/nm. VAN CAMP CHEVY __.....v.tUff.'v:..—Really e met gar lur umy si.p ~mjmrn**rn BOB B0^T LINCOLN-MERCURY I. Woodward **““ iWi rINault, phone «2-45*i ills___________________, ■■ ms TRIUMPH i e. BXtiLLBNT » BOB BORST W WWk SPECIAL DELUkk. S. »«>*„CHEVY ACKX7R WAGO»T~t-doer, outa. V-i teitor. Wf45014.1 tyNnder stick, redlo, law ml Isegs, "f* *»« fc.r,,?lRDJD^VF^' 5810 DIXIE HIGHWAY d. sees. WATERFORD — OR J4W0 ot Stint re organ, ALi, SAVINGS G.4 FLOOR MODELS AND OTHER TRAOEHh Jock Hogan Music Center fe POODLE PUPPIES REASONABLE, i black, silvers or llnht browns. EM SGSaiL POODLE CLIPPING AND GROOM J3J85 P 0 0 D L E PUPPIES. AKC. JET BOW AND ARROW HUNTERS -Campsites available far hwnttrs o tt acres of axe. bunting land boi dared by Ogemaw **“4“ 1 further ------ SPACE. Large — lecHen of i __ HOLLY PARK, CHAMPION IRK ttOOP t— A § “Just think! For one little dollar yon can make .your daughter think you’re the most generous father in I the world!" mi VW WITH (UNROOT, RADIO AND HiATEfc WHITEWALL ytRU,' ABSOLUTELY it o' monYv " upright p I a W'O. ExdiuxifT condition. >175. M2-5M3.___ : WURUTZER SPINET ORGAN WITH i Alger, Mich, or call _ PARK WOOD AND PARK ESTATES | Lew overhead — save real money MIDLAND TRAILER SALES 2257 Dixie Hwy. 33B-0772 > north etTetegreph Boots—Accessories 97 Jodk Cars-Trucks 101-A Iff! CHEVROLET SOOOR WITH XS ECONOMY ENGINE, RADI O AND HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES, ffSPLUTflY Ha MONEY DOWN. Peymente enfy JMf per week. CALL CRKplt “■ 4-7500. CLOSE-QUT SALE • OF 1965s : percussion. $695. L ME 7-4751 EGISTERED BOSTO rier, I year# eld, weMrgl—‘ “* | McFeely Resort, 1140 MIS, C 71-A REGISTERED FEMALE POODLES. I — . Iff. NO B4IIS. | ACCORDION. GUITAR LESSONS. 'REGISTERED CHIHUAHUA „.. -Seles-Servlce Puleneckl OR S-SSfL, ygy Fox terriers puppies. OtHftia- GUITAR LESSONS 1 ^UrFE^er^ ^ ,tud, DRUM LESSONS Richway Poodle Solon I Pomiec Perrasslon Corner tit Oakland________fe HM d Elizabeth Lake Rd. Close-Out Streamline for 1965 24', 26' Modeis NOW ON DISPLAY We hava t________________ , , years ef good merchandising a 1400 satisfied customers. Open closed Sunday Mile south of Lake Orion an A '14 Mercury Oulbeerdi Office E«pi|MMRt ALL METAL EXECUTIVE TOP OF TOY POODLE ANO YORKSHIRE ftee desk with metchiiw choir end stud service. Puppies. FE 4-8793. ry*»im!* "**' “ * WIRE HAIRED ^TERR^ER^ Ft-j ■jPiiTii mu lYFiwBim aggiagaggR1^ I ■ Holly Travel Coach Inc. 53)0 Holly Rd.. Holly ME 4-47 x~ end iu*-—*- WILL TAKE ANYTHING IN T . on a .lovely large 2-bedroom i heme. Call Holly, 4344467. Cliff Dreyer Gun Ond Sports Center I Holly Rd„ Holly ME 44771 -Open Dolly end Sundays— , OR It J U N X CARS - TRUCKS, ftol tew anytime. Ft SSM4. iiU JUtiK CMS I Sr hooter, whitewalls, gwNhpf cendl BOB BORST 'S'SJguMf wCT l,to WPW M Nr , POWER STEERING ■ WINDOWS, 1944 opel 4-Speed transmis- -adte, hooter, will' mdltlon. Only 11,045. JE- i SEEI •I m ROME^FORD, Rochester FORD Deeler. OL t-OTtl._____________ mt Vw, tun roof, BVery extra, I1J7S. 1944 Kortnox Ohio convertible, 11,795. 1945 Chrysler, Tim-AotR-TnKk DON'T TAKE CHANCES We Don't! Bead kt/kbtrmk bwft wfr '”f.,r°22. SUT&^iate! H silks on r- Chevy wheel trailer, usd. O N WAGON. A ’ OAKLAND CHRYtLHR-FtyMOUTH 1961 tm\M MOOR HARDTOP. POWCR WINDOWS,, 4WAY POWCR BRAT, WHITE FINISH WITH •EHM INTERIOR. THIS IB A RIAL BABOAINI ONLY— $1697 ASK FOR MR. FLOOD [ 1945 VW.'Mf NOON. kAOmiifE ELLSWORTH AUTO & TRAILER SALES bm xlcu ixn, i from, itn. —------------------,——■—m $325. M-4 Rex Rotary rnkneegraph Pet SuppIlBS—Service 79-A machine S32S, Vidor iMm mo*! —------- *-| < • • electrJc end in «xc- p00DLE GROOMING ANO TRIM- See Trailer Storage ___ ___ ___ ____ AveHers, Berths, I— Tewes Bravos, Holly and Corsairs, , Used TruckTires All Sizes Budget terms available. FIRESTONE STORE $0-7017 inside-STORAGE-Outside Beat ratmishlng and repairs Motor Tune-Upt . . _ Bg reedy for tarty Serin con Install. T HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS ----~ pir' / tf^ toymn. t^' ti^Mrwwtsis. UL>ea> einiSerr Steenh*Otetw " or sell ports. _____ CHEVY - FORD - COMET - FALCON Ktrt-s -------- ssy-Tvir____________ TE '57 FORD FRONT END! dr pi Mr^.r------- I----- "Your _ _ _____ . —11194 S. Tetegrgph Rd. »ff» 1i "M RwSSwf^^SJSNEW msTEMPRrr rjghtfroht lvb6> SPORTS CAR Rally Sale WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC Crissman Chevrolet R0CH«m»B»iBa»H CORVETTE eed trenimlulen. This nwHtei 19fj impala, MOO# HARDTOP jnusl —II. Mock, >|,30B. MA S-1411 *« c0*VAI*l! "70©". l-6dOR, RA mne after. $$54975. md^YanwTtreners. Veto TWD RUtfHLHg MOTORS,. 19S7 |J to W. Highland, right an Hick- Plymouth. 1957 Mercury, and o MO A. AM-FM radio .. SI, OM Ta.ix eiM> sun NO MONBY DOWN NECESSARY OT, Stiver blue 177 WBStJMNTCALM (one btedrV. of Oakland) 1965 Model Truck Close-Out Save $400 to 5500 on All Remaining Rancharos—Econo-Vans 1962 Cadillac Coi/po Pull power, we'd trade. This Is m extra dtorp car. Siva, . Superior Rambler 8sagj»iflaet Ulead transmission, ^fl'iogetfei .Y-rs.i?? BIRMINGHAM Chrysler — Pfymeufh W4 S. WWdtord nWyMI 7-1214 C6m iTjSwfTlX. dONVIliTT. REPAIRMAN’S SPECIAL 55» OektetXI Aya. r. I943 CORVFTTF «TImA»sv~1: I9S9 Austin HOdly 1044, Baiga and 1941 CADILLAC COUPE, GOLD, ^ . ^ tarn. mown, steering. i Grimaldi Ask for Truck Dopf. F 6.5-4101 Join MCAutlfla Ford 177 Woof Montcalm PE S410)| IT ef OMilend Avg.t | -TON PANEL, Biff, Imported Car Co.-----1 m Oakland Ave. M492IS SIMCA mi, WHITE 4Door7oooo >1 4-PB- VOLKSWAGEN CENTER Camper. Turquofee f mechanical condition »495 " Ten finish, 74IOt Autobahn Motors, Inc. AUTHORIZED VW DEALER Vi mile north of Miracle Mite warranty „J >. Totawopfi ">« 44S$1 , ■__■ -- - -..C* IW7 FORD PICKUP, ^ikBT CLASS j!” re Opdyto. Open Tues. Thurs.'til 9| Ihepe. 1944 GMC, m very good (l-75et Oakland UMversIfy Exll) j Sindhian, "e ruaf. UL 3I4W. Wasted Con-Troda MOOR HARDTOP. FULL FACTORY POWER, BEIGE with setae iNTaeiM. WAS SELLING FOR SXdSfr $3295 THIS IS A BARGAIN! ASK FOR MR. PLOOO WILSON <=<”*• ylNN, m eutemdflc, AM-FM rt-dlo, praer, new exhaust and Ifrtl Beef offer. Dr i-tdli._ •MJ CHEVY, EXCELLENT CONDI-tlen, $1195. FI 44MB after $. »5YHi^*ooeCnfSIBH6F. Automatic Vfc power (tearing. Ex-raffwu cond. tl^OTTFiimil PONTIAC-CADILLAC block eeulh ef If Mite Ml 4 101 1957 KINGHAM TRI-AXLE DUMP mf vw 3-seet Molten wagon. MR trailer, IS ft. tong. FE 5*142. Sam miles. br^J B — UK Align B San.________________ finish. If 195) FORD F-lte. VY-TON PICKUP, warranty --------A, ^ — . LOOK WSSSBF ** * LUCKY AUTO __ - ^W4S W. wide Track Fe_ OAA? te-TON PICKUF,_0060 19*r>UlCKS. FuU . ------------ condition, tow mlleege. 4* E. How- choose from, from etft up. — -r=73r. j -jvodWjnd 1965 Cadillac CoupO nardtop. 5,000 ottuel miles, car warranty wMh bisk, full or and wtnpews. nett otter, arrange fktgndng. Superior ■ Rambler . take gew pgywns. OR extra buUd UP.ter camper, extra. Hardtop, np mo clean!) JEROME FORD Recll- merits of J7J7 e 59* Oakland Ave. FR 5*411 1037 ChivV. EXCELLENT CONDI-■ ■ Wen. OBUBF. •UICK ester FORD Peeler. L 1-9711, 1963 J0DGE Pickup tY-ton odfli 4»■ ®^Y*L.A*2'*T , £*• Al&S&c »S i <»<*■ 1*77 John R. Rochester. 'farm EqgiptRstrt f Las Mareh, OR $4*11 TOP .K7IL. _ 1947 J I DEERE R TRACTOR-, d starter. Hydraulic/ good d shape, with cultivators, 2-bortom plow on rub- _________________, j. Del. 401-4710.; WE ARE HOW DIGGING ^IiTBASE- sStira^ w5wwfe 4, we kicking OFF out 1944 STIHL 00 •heft tout Hits dirt to anyone M chain sews. Regular sm.95, save raid of it. If you are teoUng for S2S lor limited time. Evans Equip-‘ g sensible price, I think wa ment talas and Service, 6507 .Dixie ------s. OR BOWS. ■ Highway, .Clartoten, Fh. 625-1711. 77 THE LARGEST "REAL” FARM We Proudly introduce for thg First Tim# in This Area BOLES AERb A Most Luxurious Travel Trailer Aircraft {oostruefioh BOLES AERO V For People Who Love Caravaning— Want Luxury Y CHRIsCjLAFT OUTgdARD CAB- ^cenjfrtafy equipped. ft,1H. FI S497S, -WE BUY 14PQOT DAY CRUISER, If* NOR- Su3l-. ,-------2...... ...... fw CENTukV, 140 HOI»e-power, gray marine, good contfl-tten, norm. SfO*. EM m*f. 1964 JOHNSON MOTORS AND MO DISPLAYED NOW AT JACOBSON S*LES t RENTALS , m m2£V L*k* Roed ER. UB NOR- _ _ _ _ _ SSssLate Model rttnSHuffdV Dealer, OL 1-9711._ 1944 FOND ECONOUNI. ttftU teni^MndRwt. Has^ wjywTjNf HUNTER &MGI, Birmingham; Ml 74TB, | 19*5 4-FOOT CAMPER, CABOVER I 544 S. Woodward ' 647-5600 "GRAND OPENING" repossession, full price only SIW, C*ft f Inane*. i NORTHWOOO(AUTO SALES | 1958 CHEVROLET 1 h 4 cylinder engine, awfo-l „ transmission, radio and Nr, 1 owner, no money down, ___ weekly torments enfy *4.00. Wa hendla and arrange all npnclng, ceO Mr. Den m: Fi 44071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM 12397 SpartcmDodge r,NT^NY'S MARINE KEEG0 HARBOR nc UmWBI* KBAL FARM igy, .,|g,v.y —5 - ~ , •_____ service ttera In Michigan. John w°LvBRIne truck campers BIGI BIG! SAVINGS! UP TO 30% OFF ON 1965 MODELS NOW IN STOCK! PONTIAC'S ONLY MERCURY MERCRUISER DEALER FOX SNOWMOBILES ! "SmSSra1T gSTo,?*jggfw^ bura^, :7d77I NIMROD CAMP TRAILERS I' 7”” _ n&r r^TT,.&*■*-, M Sporting Goode i used own sXws. gig and up em mmi. ' ^**-1 CRUISE OUT, INC. Cars TOP PRICES CASH WAITING me ford pickup, *l______________ luxe c«b, all ter *1495. JEROME FORD Recheuter FORD Dealer. OL 1-9711. __j 1944 FORD 4-WHEEL DRIVE, BlS 4 engine, radio, custom ofc heavy! duty tires, 2400 miles, tor trudil JEROME FORD, Rochester FORD dealer. OL 14711,_______________ i "L - AVAILABLE- ’ J Lloyd Motors 1250 0AKUND 333-7863 TOP DOLLAR PAlft" FUR "CLEAN" USEO CAM aoMaa. *» and up. hhhl fe nm AKC CHIHUAHUA PUPPIES, STUD Pen AKC WEIMARANER MALE. AgWHSt^jagiOtUD * JjJ jyjg»«Agf a^Irj£te0*iUMLMsnm| fe !S^*°f$ XteraouaSSy torts et*^ ifrilf iin-ffttHt OAKLAND MARINE $91 S. taalnaw _ ’ Ft *41*1 OsItTYll 4, Sun. 'til I p.m 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1965 TWENTY-SEVEN MjW-faw Wtllew ond jleod On 194 "1WKpFwF* *w? only «!!%, JBROME%oBa Rochester »OKQ DeaiacTOL VW1. LOOK '*«„ fjrt Founder stick. i*7 Si' ®rlc». 15 down. CRIDIT NO "OgL.M, WE FINANCE SANK mi leod C*> 104|M*w *RdUs#dCers 106|MARMADl)KE COMET CUSTOM MOON. NAr ■■■■■■■■■■mi vneoteri tew mhasse. 8oc*nd.;—•-- > h vsry good condition, 1*40. By Anderson end LeaningiNew end Used Cers lMlNew end Used Core lOftiNew mid Used Con 104 'HS§ FE 84071 Capitol Auto 812 W. MONTCALM JmfMW of Oakland Repossession noododl Payment* of just 111.47 weekly. Co If Mr. CsNi of 338-4528. ,j, , , -----1 DART OT, BUCKIT LUCKY AUTO Hnonelnn ft 4-3314 W*» F0*0 WITH 1 EN- GINE, 2-DOOR MODEL. UJi vniaftseni. CALL cr^dIt11 illSr. Mr! J»rkl St HAROLD TURNIR FORD, BIRMINGHAM. Ml +rK- fHUNDERBIRO Vdltow, 5 chrome plated' wire wheel*. electric wtnRewt. — J MISSION, RADIO, TllAtiIt WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO M 0 N E Y DOWN. Fevmenu only 87.58 Per wook. Call CREDIT MGR. Mb’. Perks *t HAROLD TURNER FORD, BIRMINGHAM, Ml 4-790. full1 SOM. EM 3-4476.___________________ ” * ,M* fai-CON, SHARP. H4-SI17 bo-j Spot life Special etipirfin Dodge1 •off white (winner with contreetlng red Mm, Cniis* 0Ruitk "JRT on-, CSmiSSIbb 'Jk m "*"1 BUYS AT $1797 I LLOYD'S , FPU Prico I W MERCURY . r Open Every NNp^TIl W PM. jMonferoy|S^oBr fpflW.^MpmMrl ZZZ 1 '"’■mm , 855 Oakland Avo. i Up to 36 Moths to**yt' ugefiVn^rWA*,., Lloyd Motors Spartan Dodde|i25o oakuw^ y^863 REP08SES5ION-1W4 FORO~ 1958 PONTIAC I 1159 PONTIAC STAR CHIEF, ONE-ownar, ihatp, S4tS. PE 44414. . . SEE US UST ItSI RAMBLER AMERICAN f-door, Hick *httt, <100. Call 4S1-BS42. 1««S CATALINA, 4-DOOR, LOW ssa1 B%L SPENCE L, FORD, INC. FE 84071 VTi Capitol Auto '’£w T!ewT2S^S br.ke.;| 312 W. MONTCALM itMTlM, automatic trantmluion.1_Ju»t a>*t pt OcdUand - MM40S, ' , , K- -mg-x IMS PORD 3-DOOR, RAblO, HEAT-»»- JWQP*.jPl^<-Fg-9f..fr. or, ihara, only SMS. JEROME crNyjf/ j FORD* Rochttftr FORD Dealer,! good* clean inside* 8290 or re8son*| ql j^i, gvuM-^iT OWFOSE OP 1M2 FORD LOOK -1*9 Thunderbird, white, full pow-' or. r*7 f»H price,. SS down. CREDIT NO PROBLEM, WE FINANCE BANK.*AtU. LUCKY AUTO ' 1*41 W. Wide Track pj 4-914 or PE 3-7*54 tlon, only S5.00 down and SS.00 par wook payment*. Wo handle i end trranat all financing, call Mr. Dan at: FE 84071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM Just east of Oakland 1*9 fo*6/mb0ilt motor”si jo' . 628-2577 1*9 PORO TUDOR, 4-CYlINDIr (tick, hin prico S1*7, no money down, SUB per week. Cell Mr. „ ESTATE !RRnNrn STORAGE] ?R.°V?P 4 wheel drive by Ford BEATTIE FORD BEATTIE Content the All-New 1966 Line of FORDS Now on Diiployl Register • for Two Drawings 1 National Drawing and Beattie's Door Prize Drawing, Too! —JUST REGISTER— Come Out and Drive the All-New Spartan Dodge! Pretty Ponies 1965 Mustangs 7 USED MUSTANGS TO CHOOSE PROM CONVERTIBLES HARDT0PS 2 PLUS 2's FULL EQUIPMENT Z! i As. low As S79 Down HAROLD TURNER FORD/ INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVI. „ BIRMINGHAM_ Ml 4-7500 | ONE OF THE BETTER , BUYS AT LLOYD'S 1965 FORD GpIpxIo XL with full power, radk hooter, whitewall tiro*, noil *h*CP $100 DOWN Up to 36 Months to Pay Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 IWQOD AUTO SALES ___________FE B*23» .1*40 OLDSMOBILE 4-DOOR SUPER, rIpossession - w at pe s^ipi. McAuim*. WITH WHITE ! WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC STATION WAGON No Money Down We Finance FULL PRICE $197 Tel-A-Huron AUTO SALES 60 S. Telegraph ---, F£ Bt9661 KEEG0 PONTIAC SALES t SERVICE 682-3400 1*40 PONTIAC 3-DOOR, AUTOMAT- ' k, power (tearing, brake*. t~-“~ heater, whitewall*. Pull price -E FINANCE KJakSfik.'’" "■ I ""MB*. PE 2-M00 • "^^^^■"Xaeg- gxcrL1 e Wki suV.^i ngrt aSTsPORt --------------------I&awaw! Couple, MVRhdor, *tenderd t million, radn, hoatar, v ---• 9R7704. Oatoro I p.n ONE OF THE BETTER BUYS AT King Auto | LLOYD'S • 1*40' PONTIAC n .1964 TEMPEST , speed trenimlttlon, redlp, heat-, . 8-cylinder engine, - whitewall $75 DOWN Up to . 36 Months to Pay OLIVER OT TT~»T rnO\T I Up to 36 Months to Pay brltiL 1U1Nj . Lloyd Motors DAKITIAr Dlliri/ ... _ * ■___ P0NTIAC-BUICK MUST DISPOSE* OF 1*41 OLDS "M" , .55 Roc.. 11250 OAKLAND ,3387863 I Sil-WII 18*4 tlMPEST LIMANE )BW*ViRJ /m,T pin* xVr/-VT-i jlMI BONNEVILLE, MUST RAfRh tlM*. tf499- _ ‘ CLEARANCE ^ ! Repossession m^^^#^^ Just released for public sale. 1*61 i 1944 PONTIAC CATALINA. 3-DOOR, .PONTIAC Bonneville hardtop, fulll 3 plus 2 hardtop, 421 engine, 4 ' dower. No SS needed! Payments ot' on the floor; full price .31*85. |d*t 941 weekly. Call Mr. Cash. OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH -—i— .' 734-Oakland Av*. SALE for 1966 Models I FALCON 2-Dr. Radio, H 1*9 rorgp N 3-POOR W brlgtit rad finish. autemWfc, clain. PeN price 83*5. No Mtnay: °mm' WE FINANCE King Auto xnm. Huron St. FE 84088 m, ri ^’^SToF tHE fifTtER BUYS AT LLOYDS I960 T-BIRD * ’ $& DOWN Up to 36 Months to Pay Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKUND 333-7863 Repossession «T "Hi STORAGE SALE 1961 FORD—$388.12 le CSOh required, |u*t assume bol-anca. Pay only 84 J* ear GBP %. • Startlnar 2-door r'iBf r hord- BIRMINGHAM "Your FORD DEALER One* 1*36" On Dixie Hwy. in Waterford •Homo at SERVICE after lh« Sal*" OR 3-1291 ONE OF THE BETTER BUYS AT LLOYD'S 1963 FORD 1965 T-BIRD with air csndltk ir. Cruise-control, r HAROLD TURNER 0AXI^.0,CmY*U9-fi NEW 1966 JEEPS UNIVERSAL*—WAOONS—TRUCKS J your choice. We Want Your Business! NO PAIR DEAL REFUSED Superior Rambler LOOK 8L#¥£!??!!Si •a corva±r 1__T.......... _ ^ b automatic tram. $ 995 PROSlIm.^KS' i '«S..cHEyY ,ktsc*yno 2-pr: Wjth ra- lucky Atrro 1 power steering, brakes, whitewalls . .......... S1,S»S 4 BUICK LeSabr* convertible, radio, haatar, power steering, white-walls “ $2,2*5 4 OLDS Dynamic 88 2-Dr. brakes, whitewalls ,... 4 BUICK LeSabro 4-Dr steering, brakes, -IE9RL,.„ glass. Sharp! $2,345 _____ FORD station wagon, vs angina,. ndi automatic, radio, heator, white-1 on OLDS DYNAMIC 81. HARD- • ____it-1 top, doubto power, exc. condition, __ I w mile- Tpl-V8grhBI| Texaco, 188 f. Tele- r warranty, 819 or 9r*Ph or 14831 w. Lincoln, Oik n, up to 34 months PUk ------------" rss» CONVERTIBLE, . top and Interior. I .... HP— . .JM Baaoty. Only 61,745. Prival*. OR 4-1244.' ' 143 OLDS "9," 4-DOOR, RADIO ” 1*41 PONTIAC CATALINA SEDAN I -with RBtmrtijMtt, V-4 engine, radio and hdatar, 1-owner Birmingham car. 59*5, can finance. NORTHWOOD AUTO SALES _________Ft 8*29 1961 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE HARDTOP No Money Down We Finance FULl PRICE $897.-. Tel-A-Huron AUTO SALES < 60 S. Telegraph FE 8-966 i 8 '42 CHEVY 3Dr. I JEROME 1964 Olds Cutlass Conytrtlbte, » leather buck* Superior Rambler FE 5-843 FULL PRICE $1595 Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 1962 Jeep Camper 4-whetl drive, pickup with ,— am camper, stove, refrlgeretor, and (Ink, 1749 actual mil**. It** the camper's draam. Homer Hight STORAGE 3ALE 1961 PLYMOUTH—$462.04 Ne cash required, |uet a (sum* bal ance, pay only 84 par week Car I* a 3-door aodan, wM. automatic trahsmlsslon, radio. TRANSPORTATION NO /MONEY DOWN NECESSARY WE ARRANGE FINANCING ^ ^VST Ports, Three ; '55 Chevy, Del Ray $199 $199 '57 Mercury :....$199 '59 Plymouth Wagon. .$295 nn'!',PE!'60 Chevy, 4-Speed, 1 Convertible, V-8 .*$475 ' I $475 STATE WIDE AUTO 249 EHsabdth Lk. Rd. 1 block oast *i Caw Lk. Rd._ 1*41 FALCON WAGON 4-DOOR, (tick, radio, ksatpr, wtndew wash-art, power mar window, $3*1 PE UlliaGar tfwtw, .. iargJffi^2Sr3S'61 Dodge, Stick 6 ----woakfot—^ ‘ 114*~Moodowl«wn, 234-1*8*. .48 CONTINENTAL 4^>6pR HAI _ i*p, fuil power ah-condltjenlng, low mlNtgo, Por4 Exc. carl Sevol JEROME FORD, Rochoitor FORD BtilirTOL 3*711, MR US ^ihlt BOBBORST IB 1 ^NCOLN^E»c^Y||,|U|||||| MI 64538 i*J3'MlhCURY, IXCRPTIONALLY 1*9 MERCURY STATION WAOON, '61 Rambler Wagon '58 T-Bird, Sharp .. Chevy Wagon ar |‘“i -King Auto I FORD *-Pf ITION WAGON MWrfC TRAN WITH A. .. rRANSMISSION, radio, HEATER, WHITE-WALL TIERf. RMOLUtELY NO MONEY DOWN. Pay-mant* only 9.82 par worn. CALL CMHT^ “ '62 Rambler Wagon . $7 Superior Rambler ft ig « ------JLO 1?URK. , BIRMINGHAM, ____ _____ MOR. .... Pork* 9 HAROLD TURNER FORD, ' GOME TO THE— PONTIAC RETAIL STORE You EXPECT MORE . . - AND GETITI ioo ; Top quality, One-owner, new cor tradfi to chogse from 65 Mt. Clemens vm 1*82 PLYMOUTH SPORTS FURY ~ trtlbto, radio and haatar, pow-- i|.te*rlnB _end brakes, a sharp OAKUND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH m Oakland Avt. 2224158 Hal vAlIaNT CONVERTIBLE, “rgj wall llv yp V>| •»* era* uvwi paymants only $1191 par waak. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 8. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM_Ml 4-781 BUYS AT LLOYD'S 1963 COMET la* automatic transmission, 4 cylinder aMlM, ratlB, haatar an" whUBwaUttiM._,.. __ $50 DOWN I__ Up to 36 Months to Pay Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 INI cdMET STATION WJ standard shift, s-cyiMar, I ond ear, sasy on tat. i down, mjO par waak. I DOOgtTtlrmlnpham. Ml RUSS JOHNSON Pontioc-ROmhler USED CAR STRIP WM Perd Hardtop . ..*tl*S •14*5 .1.949 ...» 89 .. $ m .. * *9 Attention! Di^Cmdtt Mpnpgar, Mr. Mi l*. "^1 ayriggSg"1 feature spot dMWBry, FE 3-7863 LLOYD* tlS8 Oakland _ _ lb64 ^ALtON^ radio and'haahK SSS- gaSsfsss HAROLD TURNER iJOHNSON LiaMtW RUSS 1 anolna, ... $1,0*5 OLIVER 1*4-210 Orchard Lakt Av*. FE 2-9165 pontiac, 1*9 Excellent < TEMPEST UMANS CONVERT-e. Silver blue with matching _ ----, ___haatar, wNtgl ... tires. S9S. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1104 S.-WOOD-, WARD, BIRMINGHAM, Ml 4-2735j uto- ms TEMPEST 4-636R, HYDRA-! 95 mafic, dean, whitewalls. PE 54238, | 1 7f*t- fit p m 9*81*1 1964 PONTIAC •tlon wagon with automatic ti mission, radio and heater, w mileage, 879. FE! $1297 Bp«n Evary NIte Til II P.M. IJuat fttfifli.', ________ Spartan Dodge ;r •RV/jtoirnr* imviM gr luda^°Roed. *FE*£7145?* 1959 PONTIAC CATALINA No Money Down W* Finance FULL PRICE $297 Tel-A-Huron AUTO SALES 60 S. Telegraph FE 8-9661 FE 8-4071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM 1*43 TEMPEST CONVERTI- CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, BIRMINGHAM, Ml 4-7500. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4,7500 1*65 CATALINA 8-PASSENGER LOOK 1*43 Grand Prlx. from. S1487 and ui -€Of HAUPT p&S: PONTIAC J-UCKY AUTO-« H m vertlble, automatic, 7 196$ P0HTIAC | Catalina convertible with radio 'and haatar, automatic transmlnlen, power brakes and power steering 1,1 and a spot lees finish. *1,79. | BILL SMITH 1 USED CAES 462 N. Perry St. | FE 4-4241 j» ,1*43 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE. Kma* equipped with bucket seats. Brand new whitewalls, 949 -PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO* 1104 S. Woodward, Blrmlngnam — "GRAND OPENING" 1960 PONTIAC Hite Special at Spartan Dodge! d-tfrflnd Ventura 2-door herd- CLARKSTON $697 ------ NOW OPEN---- 855 Oakland Ave. (Outdoor Showroom) (Juct Vt mile north of Cad* Ave.) Spgrtan Dodgel Rambler Closeout! 20 New 1965 Ramblers at Tremendous Savings No Fair Trade or _ Offer Refused We Want Your Business! Trbding Tim* Is Now For The Deal 11 You've Been Looking For, For Example! 1965 Rambler Wagon i ; 1965 Rambler Classic 9* domo 4-Door wagon. Badia I Brand Bow, Mg "327" V4 bb-md hooter, Dew Guard, outside 1 glne, heater. ssMtewall*, power nlrror, reclining seels. Full I jNerieg. Sew Guard. %Ur* We Airong* Financing and jBank Rates mmmB mm END OF MODEL • - SPECIALS ~ 100% Written Guarantee Credit No Problem I 1960 DODGE 6-Passenger Wagon, 6-Cylinder, Automatic, Power Steering. Only ........(.$ 795 1963 P0NJIAC Coupe, Power Steering, Brakes, Birmingham Trade ..........................$1695 1963 OLDS “88" 4-Door Hardtop, Power Steer-, ing. Brakes, Sharp Birmingham Trade... ,.$1795 196T OLDS Starfir* Convertible, Full Power, Bucket Seats, Only, ......................... ,$1395 1961 PONTIAC Starchief Sedan, PdWer Steering, Brtikes, a Sharp Birmingham Trade .. $ 995 1963 OLDS Start ire Coupe, Full Power, Like New. Only .. . ....... ..-• .$2195 1962 OLDS u88"s, "98"s, Hardtops, Sedqns, Star- fires, From ......................... .$^41$ 1964 OLDS F-85 Wagon, V-8, Automatic, Power Steering, Brakes, Priced to Soil at ..... .$1995 T963_0LDS ^98" Hardtops and Sedans, Full Pow- w, lip6m'7^.,.....................t.......$2088 1964 OLOS H88" 2-Door Hardtop, Automatic, ___ Power Steering, Brakes .................,.$2295 ORIGINATOR OF 2-YEAR WARRANTY .635 S. Woodward Av©. Birmingham 647-5111 1*43 Corvelr 4-door. WMtb finish, outometlc transmission . excellent tires - - SW _______________________________________________________3324150 I PONTIAC CATALINA 4-DOOR TEMPEST LEMANS. 1*44, SPORT NEED A CAR? IF YOU ARE WOR KING AND HAVE SOME MONEY, I CAN RUT YOU If Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM J___Just East ot Oakland_ 1*44 PONTIAC. GRAND PRIX -Sharp! Power brake* and steering, automatic transmission, $34*3. 335- 540.03 per month A U ilr 4-d matlc t ires i rd coupe sh, power d window 0 r it * rk blue INC, V-l B Mith Spi A 1 power* n; $40.03 H N EXTRA VIP »B CLASSIC 4 DOOR IN---- NICE CONMMDN, dune trUBmissic... — O. HEATElC WHITEWALL TIRES; ABSOLUTELY NO money 0OwlL Paymants ,. only <848 per Wpk. CALL CREDIT MGR. K. Perk* at HAROLD TURMA PORO, JlUilllSMUkSHB o, neetefifwm 3- No Mbflty 0« financJpW King Aiito 'R;. only $1,695. ^ ■ feasy-FInancIng *nd B^liklf Superior ■■ Rambler- J0 Oakland Ayt, . . Ft' 54431* REPOSSESSION - JM RAMBLER . Wagon, no money down, payr—•* of *847 wetkly. Can Mr, N at PE 5-4101, McAuW* .03 per nr 1*45 Corvelr Corse Coup*, 7,-000 miles, radio, 4-sp*sd. fac-—tory warranty ________:.... $1,19' AUTHORIZED VW DEALER to mil* north of Mirada Mil* ------ • PE 1-4531 DON'S USED CARS SMALL AD-BIG LOT 1*83 Olds convsrtlbl*, auto., ddublo power. Ford, stick 4, radio, haatar. 1*43 Impale 2-door hardtop, stick I-1*44 Ford 2-door hardtop, stick I. Pontiac 2-doer hardtop. Tempest wagon. ... Pontiac 4-door sedan. 1843 XL C------ .... Btiick3-door hardtop-1842 Chevy 3-door auto. 0. 1*43 valient, auto. . 1*44 Renault. 1*43 Comet 2-door. i Chevy., . ^'i “■ * 1 kitf i L’APEER RD. Lake Orion MY 2-2041 \ BLER "778" STATION wagon, S-cyllndor overdrive, red! and heater,' power steering an brakes, factory air - conditioning sharp, 114*5. , TREMENDOUS BUYS; on 1965 Ramblers left in stock. Several models' to choose from. Must move out to make room for the new 1966 GIANT KILLER PROGRAM! “TIOSE— RAMBLER •14* COMMERCE ROAD UNION LAKE SAVE MONEY-BUY NOW ■ AT DRASTICALLY REDUCED PRICES BEFORE OUR 1966 MODEL SHOWING ON OCTOBER 7, 1965 ■ s Rambler Is a beautiful 1961 LANCER engine, aut Cnevy Is g 1964 RAMBLER sh, 4-cyllndsr engine, stick shift ir and an axcamnt driver. 1964 m> dark hive finish, whltswalt tires, VS lo and healer, full power, this 1963 RAMBLER i with automatic transmission, 4-cylkvMr aminn. ikt rose and white finish, IPs In 1963 BUICK station wagon, hat Vt anolna. autom napanda 1963 CHEVY II ___ ./ansmlssien, radio and heater, aperkllng red- interior. It I* lust b , automatic transmlstlon, whitewall tires, whit* fkiWi, VI engine, MANY, MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM 1957 TO 1964 ALL MAKES AND MODELS AL1 CLEAN AND READY TO 60. m VILLAGE RAMBLER SALES 666 S. Woodward MI 6-3900 Birmingham { i 7 $ TWKITTY.KIGHT THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1965 Hearing Lively on Dunes Park MARQUETTE (AP) - With , ,__, Pi cm — ringing in Hi ears, a U.S. House hare todaym a tropoeal to ea-tablish a Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore on Lake Superior. The session Was expected to before lively than the day - long hearing Monday which drew more than 500 persons to Traverse City’s senior Ugh school auditorium. They attended a public hearing at a Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore Rep. Ralph J. Rivers, D-AL aska, subcommittee chairman, successfully banned booing. But sporadic bedding was beyond control while applause for opponent points rang loud and often. &x persons offered testimony opposing Senate Bill 936 which passed Aug. 26 and calls for establishing 41,100 acres in Benzie and Teelanau counties as a recreation area along Lake Michigan. The tract would include South Manitou Island. It would embrace Benzie and DA. Day State Paries. EXTRA MILLIONS Proponents, led by Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., claim the dunes must be set aside to guard against commercialized encroachment Ip turn, they say, its development by the federal government would be worth extra millions annually to area ecooomy through tourist visits. Hart accompanied the subcommittee Monday. Also present was Rep. Robert P. Griffin, R-Midi., whose 9th Congressional district includes the dunes. Opponents of federalization contend a need for the project has tat been established, that it poses a threat of land acquis-ition by condemnation of private property*#nd that’ loss of prop-erty tax revenue to schools should be covered by federal payments. Gov. George Romney submitted a statement. It said he considered the dunes proposal “most urgent’’ Great Lakes need. But the governor ‘ scribed as “imperative” the need for amendments to guard residents against land acquisition by condemnation and to provide payments in lieu of taxes for affected school districts. PARK BUDGET Dr. Ralph B. MacMullan, director of the Michigan Conservation Department, said the state’s park budget could not adequately develop Sleeping Bear. Conservation Commissioner Matt Laitala acknowledged “local opposition” to the proposal, biit he described it “confined and superficial.” IBs drew jeetfs*. Rep. Griffin said he would Bar Unit Now Decision Reversed on Friend of Kennedys BOSTON (D - Francis X. Morrissey has received an endorse-' meat of his nomination for a federal judgeship from the Masse c h a $ e 11 s Bar Association which twice previously opposed him as unqualified. The association reversed itself last night and voted to endorse Morrissey by a vote of 269 for the U. S. District Court in Boston. He Massachusetts tar tad appased him in 1961 aad 190. The endorsement is being sent to the Senate Judiciary Com-—mittec, which meets in Washington to consider the nomination from President John- submit for consideration later in Washington a proposal that the government pay a “fair market price” for Benzie and D.H. Day. ★ * ‘ * The proceeds, he said, could cover school district tax losses on land taken by the government and sustain the districts until tourism revenues shouldered the load. Kenneth Thompson qf 'Traverse City, legal counsel for the Sleeping Bear Dunes .' Citizens Council and the Platte Lakes Association, questioned constitutional rtyht of the federal government to' “Ota tiie threat of condemnation” to control use of private property. PROPERTY TAXES Senate Bill 936 provides that property owners must continue to pay full local property taxes on condemnation-threatened sort property even though use of the property is restricted by the Interior Department, Thompson said. “Realistically, Thompson continued, “there ip no market value for such property.** MOSCOW (AP) - Meet Ivan Petrov, Muscovite. He works 41 tours a week, sharee his apartment with other family, owns a radio, wears wrinkled clothes, and thinks communism la the bast of TINE TUNING — Yogi didn’t indicate what program jie sought, but could be he’s thinking of the World Series and, like thousands of others without tickets, is getting his TV set tuned right on the button. Yogi not only can’t get a Series ticket, to can’t evpn get oiti. The chimp is a resident in the St. Paul, Minn., zoo. Platte Lake Association President Dayton Willard said Benzie State Park already protected Sleeping Bear. He claimed that its present campsites never were taxed to capacity and asked if it were so desirable—why the state had not developed its three miles of beach. Custer T. Carland, Frankfort industrialist, testified as leader of a citizens prop supporting the dunes proposal. He said he could document incidents In which fellow businessmen privately desired the park but feared economic reprisals if they spoke up. Aurey Strohpaul, secretary manager of the West Michigan Tourist Association, said he was aware of similar fears among some members of the organization bid was testifying for “the majority” in support of the pro- He emphasized adoption of irpfrgiiwrtla igrimt rlmnl Iit losses and private property condemnation. Most proponents were affirming stands taken on a former Sleeping Bear Dunes proposal which passed the Senate in 1964 but died in (be Home. One committee member predicted that any action on the present measure would be preceded by another field tour of Sleeping Bear by House Interior Committee members some -ttime uext-ymr—...............— McLaughlin said the board of! u delegates of the assodatioo\did i iLLiJ- f*L ,L not consider whether Morrissey AtHleTlC L/UD was the “best” possible nomM nee or “an outstanding” nomi-r f OfTirOrC nee, only whether be wss pres-1 ^ICL/5 \zM/Lt?r5 e n 11 y qualified, even though! lacking detailed experience.” * * * Albert E. Jenner, chairman of the American Bar Association’s Federal Judiciary Committee, has said in Chicago that, if appointed, Morrissey would to on the bench without any pertinent experience “and, so for as we can tell, with tittle Morrissey has the support oft Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, 11-Mass., and the Massachusetts Trial Lawyers Association. The Boston Bar Association opposes his appointment FRIEND OF FAMILY A long-time friend of the Ken-midy family, Morrimey tag spent seven years as Boston Municipal Court judge. Watier H. McLaughlin, preside* of the state association, •aid it mw finds Morrissey “qualified by training aad ed- that he dance of all of tributes of a good lodge, snob #s dignity, patience, toofftsy and feed “ " Straight Man in Now Top Drama By JAMES BACON AP Movie-Television Writer ■HOLLYWOOD—How thrilling it must be for an old burlesque straight man to come to town acclaimed as the serious dramatic actor of the year! “I honestly wish I could say says Jack Albertson, “but I’ve had too many disappointments in this business to be thrilled. Just say I’m grateful, not thrilled.” Albertson is the star of the Pulitzer Prize-play “The Subject Was Roses,” now playing here at the Huntington Hartford Theater. Jack, who played it on Broadway, won the Tony Award as best dramatic actor. , ;* ■ * * The honor naturally has made a big change in his career. Hollywood, there is no greater career tonic than scoring a big success in New York. HAD 25 OFFERS “I’ve had about 25 offers since hit town,” says Jack .“Whei left, I couldn’t get arrested.” -Although he’s rated now as a fine dramatic actor, Albertson never forgets his Minsky roots. His conversation is sprinkled) with the jokes. w ★ ★ “I ran away from borne in Lynn, Mass., when I was 17. My parents helped me pack. live in Beverly Hills in house overlooking the rent” Other dramatic acton h him he should be more serious now that he has won the theater’s top acting award. CANT CHANGE ’But I can’t change now. I’ve been using this material for 35 years.” When Jack worked in burlesque, his partner was a fellow with horn-rimmed glasses by the of PhD Silvers. * * ★ ‘I’ve often wondered what happened to him.” Dramatic acting came late in life to Albertson! A serious eye operation nearly caused him to lose his' sight. It started him thinking—and studying. PROFESSIONAL ACTING He had done lots of professional acting. Television view-os will remember him as one of the stars of the “Ensign OToole” series. r-Junior Editors Quiz on- SWIMMING DICTATED BY POLITICS forI mqMiti arid wu rec' ogrized by members of toe state “With that being the caw for said. "It would to unfair to make Judge Morrissey a martyr. He tas teen pilloried for Next Year Ruben Flores, 76 N. ___________ has been elected president of the Azteca Athletic Chib. He will assume office Jim 1. Other newly' elected officers are Pablo Rodriguez, 679 Bay, vice president; Tomas Chavez Jr., 122 W. Fairmount, tary; /Juan M. Vasquez, 45 E. Fairmount, treasurer, and Oucar DeLeon, 872 StanleyT sergeant at la additive, Edward to. SM Harrison, was mured of the festlvi- The social, athletic aad fraternal organization is composed of men of Mexican descent . I ., • a ' a -a Jose Gonzales is tbe cm QUESTION: What’s the best way to learn to swim? It it it ANSWER: Don’t try to learn all by yourself. The best way is to have a good swimmer teach you, so that you will establish good habits from the start. There are many methods used. Our ,picture illustrates one highly recommended by experts. You must learn confidence in the water, and it help* to start hi water only waist deep, with your instructor dose by to help (A). Take a breath (B). dme your mouth aad, holding your breath, put your head town aad grab your ankles. Yea’ll float, (C). Straighten your legs to stand ap again, (D|. ' • Now learn bow a swimmer breathes. Gulp air in through the mouth, blow it out slowly through mouth and noae. Stand in shallow water and practice gulping air in above surface and breathing it out belhw untu you can do tills easily. Then take a deep breath end shove off with your feet, arms ahead, bead down in the water. This will give you the feeling of being at tome in the water, tike a fish. \ TW htartSor w« dhow yeu taw to ktok aad werk your arms, and soon you'd be swimming! Tbe crawl stroke is regarded by many as being the best fobndatioo stroke to begin with. Learn this and the others will be may. \ ★ dr ★ FOR YOtMPO DO: Memorize them safety rules. Never swim alone. Have a buddy with you. Don’t swim until an bpw iter eating. Don’t swim if toad or overheated. Come out when you begin to ted cold. But nothing very serious. AH the top comfos wanted Albertson in their sketches because of his ability to set up their laughs. ”1 was strictly a straight in comedy shows until I did 'Waiting for Godot* in Los Angeles. It’s one of the great plays of all time and I consider it tbe turning print of my career.” After a series of “off Hollywood” theatrical shows, produce er-di rector John___T_____ asked Jade to direct tbe old Broadway hit “Burlesque” at UCLA. PLAYED LEAD “We couldn’t find an actor to play the lead role ahd I wound up playing it,” recalls Jack. There Frank Gilroy, author of “The Subject Was “ caught Albertson and decided that no one but Jade could play the Irish-American father of hta play. “And that’s not easy to do, says Jade, “became I’m Jewish.” SF~~^it It was Gilroy who fought tar Albertson. He turned down producers tor over a year because they wanted a box office name for the part The show opened to great review and lousy business until the Pulitzer Prize. Now there are three companies doing It. "And then they make it too a movie,” says Jack, “Gary Grant will play my part.” Romney Blast to Help Us, Says Michigan Bircher DETROIT (AP) — Allen B. dink, 22, coordinator of the John Birch Society in Michigan said Monday Gov. George Romney’s denunciation of toe society would “do more to help than to hurt us.” Last week Romney urged the Republican party to repudiate tiie group. 'After each of these incidents more people become interested in what toe John Birch Society is all about,” said Clink in an interview. “They make inquiries ahd come to one of meetings. Some of them invariably join.” He added: “It’s pretty obvious that Mr. Romney is naming for president end that he hat derided tito the John Birch Society would make a good whipping toy. It appears that be has derided to endear himself to that segment of the whose support he feds he needs in order to get the nomination in 1961.” Life's a Tight Squeeze Meet Muscovite Family Ivan is no particular Muscovite, just an example dra#n up from available information to show what life Is like in toe Soviet capital. Ivan is a skilled worker in toe prime of life and earns the equivalent of |130 a month. Mis. Petrov toe a job which brings hi $85 more. The family spends more than half its income for food. They get along by eating lots of potatoes, bread and cab-Even this leaves little money for other things. TIGHT SQUEEZE It’s a tight squeeze. But the Petrovs are better off than many of the other 6.5 million Muscovites, and incomparably better off than toe rural population. They are typical in that they represent the worker class, which communism has concentrated on aiding. Ivan and hi swife strike Westerners as drgb and unkempt. He wears an old suit jacket, colored shirt open at the throat, pants of a different color, light gray or tan shoes, and a cap. She wears a kerchief over her hair, a skirt, sweater, and heavy shoes. ♦ ■ a a Both are brawny and overweight. Mrs. Petrov doesn’t have the time—or appliances and other aide—to keep up appearances. She has her job; she spends 40 minutes each way getting to and from work; she writs in lines at has meals to prepare, the housework to do. AT NURSERY It doesn’t leave much time for the children, either. The baby spends all day at a nursery. The older child goes to school, or in to When the family does get together for a few tours in the evening, they listen to their $10 radio. The parents are slowly saving for a television which will take their total ages for a month and a half. f it ★ ★ Washing machine? Refrigerator? They cost twice ► in America. And toe waiting lists are long. It takes three to five years to get one, The Petrova don’t even dream of baying e car. Tbe price for toe cheapest small model is $4, 400. LIKES TO DRINK Ivan likes to take a drink Vodka costs $3J0 a bottle, beer 45 cents, wine $2.80. But Ivan is not seething with resentment against tbe system. His rant Is low, about $20 a ____Medical treatment largely free. In Ms rid age he will get a state pension. it w it I And Ivan is better off than be was. While consumption of goods in the Soviet Union today Youth Opportunity Unit js Scheduled for Flint FLINT (AP)—A youth opportunity center to coordinate area youth counseling, job placement and training services will be established tore, toe Employment Security Commission announced Monday. * * * EL Richard Elliott, state supervisor of youth services, told meeting of Flint educators and local antipoverty action committee memtarsthat the of-flee will employ 16 persons Including live youth counselors. Medicare Answers DETROIT (AP)—In order to accommodate Medicare tamers, three Detroit area Social Security offices will be open on Wednesday nights beginning this week. is only JO per cent of the level in America, it was only 20 per cent In 1950. / Tbe government keeps telling Ivan toe favorable trend GETS ANSWERS He also has been given an-rers to questions why country lags so much now in standard of living. Three are provided for Mm in tbe papers and on toe radio. First, he will tell you that workers in America are really not that well off. He’s been warned about capitalist propaganda. He’s seen Iris of pictures of UJS. slums. m And then Ivan will say that the Soviet Union would have outstripped the capitalist countries if the war hadn't destroyed so much here. fcTRBAlkfi£ A MOVIE THAT YOU SHOULD NOT MISS! laurer JMIMMi__ [OT-DMGdlDe juuecHnsne Uarliiiif an emsasa ncrurwreieeeeWW FEA?URES of 7:10-9:30 Extra! “Where Have mums mumtissiii AT MYI DAIRY 'SX2£ZZT ■KtUL tin unfiMI EHJKEECO JAMES STEWART "SHENANDOAH” Show! at 1iN and Ml start* WEDNESDAY URSULA ANDRESS mammz Dig into as many golden buttermilk pancakes as you can eat tor just... • SANDWICHES • STEAKS • SALADS WOODWARD AYE. 14HMUM BIRMINGHAM 15325 W. 8 MII.E toil of GmmfitM 10001 TELEGRAPH RD. MICHAEL PARKS/CEUA KAYE PEYTON PUCE With UNA TURNER BUSINESSMAN'S BUFFET Daily 11:30-2:30 SEAF60B BUFFET Friday 6-10 PM. PRIME RIB BUFFET Wed., 6-10 P.M. SUNDAY BRUNCH Noon-3 P.M. fill I. Telegraph PE Mill L THE PONTIAC PRESS; TUESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1065 X TVJCiJ’1 1 1 M --Television Programs— Program! famished by stations listed in this column art sub|oet te change without notice " ^honnato a-WJSK-TvTn wwj-fV, y-WxVirv. 9-AaW.fv, h-'wktt.W, M-WWi' " TUESDAY EVENING---------- 4:99 (I) (4) Mows, Weather, / Sports (7) Movie: “Target Unknown” (In Progress) (!) Dennis the Menace <») Movie: “Hie Cap-lure” (1950) Lew Ayres, Tlaresa Wright, Victor Joey (50) (Special) Inside Chink l:!S (7) Sports I N (S) (4) Network News ID News (9) Marshal Dillon Ml (7) Network News Till (S) Leave It to Beaver (4) (Color) Weekend (7) Rifleman (9) Arrest and Trial (M) Spectrum 7iM (3) Rawhide (4) (Color) My Mother, the Car 1 (7) Combat (50) Colorful World (56) Oeettve Person till (4) Please Don’t Eat the (50) Roller Skating (50) Big Picture liN (3) (Color) Red Skelton (4) (Color) Dr. Kildare (7) McHale’s Navy -----(9) NFL Replay !:M (4) (Color) Movie: “Hie Wheeler Dealers” (1905) James Gamer, Lee Rem-lek (7) F Hoop (9) Front Page Challenge (00) DosOu Playhouse till (3) (Color) Petticoat Junction (D Peyton Place (9) Flashback )(3)DecWon; Harry S. (7) Fugitive (9) Political Talk (50) Merv Griffin 19:21 (9) Political Talk 19:19 (3) (Special) October (9) Public Eye ltil9(t) (4) (7) (9) News, Weather, Sports U»M (3) Movie: To Be An- (4) (Color) Johnny Carson (7) (9) ________ 1:M (4) Beat the Champ (7) News 1:1* (7) After Hours mollis (I) (4) News, Weather WEDNESDAY MORNING •til (3) On the Farm Scene Itll (3) News 1:2* (2) Sunrise Semester till (4) Classroom (7) Funews •ill (3) Editorial, News 7 12 Gaelic ltFollower 21 Bombastic 22 Hops’ kiln 23 Thoroughfare (ab.) 24 European finches 28—avis . 26 Shrub of genus Alnus (dial.) 27 Spring fast season 29 Oxidize 30 Swiss measure 31 Venison source 35 “Diamond —” 37 Symbol for samarium 38 Believes in 39Steamer (ab.) 42 Abstract beings 43 Pewter coins of Thailand 44 Roughen, as the skin 4SBiblical name 47Theow 43 Hawaiian garlands 49 Circle parts 51 French “sea”___________ 52 Chemical suffix 54 Bitter vetch SSLagal point Answer to Previous Puzzle Indignities to Taylor Will Bring Apology LOS ALTOS HILLS, Calif, (ffl — A spokesman for Foothill College said Monday its administration will send a letter of apology to Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, who was splashed with red poster paint and splashed in tee face with a water pistol after a talk Friday night.-' ★ * * The former ambassador to South Viet Nam addressed a crowd of 1,500 at a college .assembly. * * ♦ The paint that hit Taylor on /*■■■■ the shoulder was presranably intended for 13 anti-Vlet Nam policy demonstrators standing near > the general. -... Sherriff-Goslin Co. .Free Estimate* 332-5231 HEARING A in wnumni All! PhoneFI6-T866 RENTAL Map Pinpoints Quake Areas Tails Where Tremors Are Likely to Occur ____By Science Service__L WASHINGTON - A neW kind of map allows scientists to judge more accurately where earth-iiakes are likely to occur. — Developed by the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, the maps are contoured to show strain in the earth’s crust Some of tee results do not jibe with popular ideas on earthquake activity. Oa tee basis of data taken from some 16,169 earthquakes that hove occurred in southern California in the past 36 years, seismologists at tee institute conclude that big earthquakes do not necessarily occur where there have been many small ones. In fact, an area free of quakes in recent years but lying along a historically active fault is most likely to erupt in a big rumble. This means that a line extending several hundred miles northwest of the city of San Bernardino, across the Sierra Nevada foothills to tee Mast, heads the list of possible .major quakes, said Dr. Clarence Allen, interim director of California Institute of Technology’s Seis-mological Laboratory. Small earthquakes (about magnitude 3) and slippage along faulta are thought to reduce earth strain and tee likelihood of a Mg readjustment, Dr. Allen explained. Continual slippage has occunred in Central California, as evidenced by the concrete floor of a winery there. The winery sits ea top of tee Lewis in TV Thaw, Blames Self for Martin Freeze By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — Comedian Jerry Lewis is so kind to expartner Dean Martin on David Susskind’s “Open End” TV show that some will thinlr Jerry’s trying to make up . . . “I blame myself,” Jerry says -(for the split) . . . “I wanted to add aaare pa^ fcrqtjraeif.. /Dean was a lovable guy and wanted to take it ea«y ... I love Dean very much ... we are still friends but don’t socialize.” 8o why don’t you two guys who really like each other, get together and be joint guests of honor for the March of Dimes, and we’ll sell tickets at 81,666 each and amass a fortune for the cause? . Leslie Uggams’ marriage Oct. 16 to Graham Pratt, 26, an Australian clothing manufacturer whom she met on tour, will be a Huge Event for the society editors (if any are working). They’ll reportedly wed at the 5th Av. Presbyterian Church with gala reception at the Waldorf... 21 Club owners deny the rumor they’re negotiating for the Stork Chib. (They’ve enough customers as it is/. In tee jam there the other night the Bing Orosbys met another champ—Arnold Palmer . . . Secret Stuff: Drama Critic Walter Kerr’s being urged to join another NY paper which has a vacancy ... Joe E. Lewis, winding up a tremendously successful date at the Copa, told fellow Friars that Rudy Vallee “Is a very fast guy trite a dime.” -----fr ★—★ Flash: The Yaakees’11 deny it hut they hope to get Detroit outfielder Ai Kaline, giving up Clete Boyer, A! Downing and a 3rd player to the Tigers in a swap. In another trade, Elston Howard’s likely to go to Baltimore. All part of a Yankee housecleaning. ..★—★—- THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . . Fault. Us floor is, cracked, with the western half creeping north at a rate of some three-quarters of aa tacha year. Though slippage is difficult to measure California Institute of Technology reports that concrete slabs in the San Bernardino region are being watched carefully for cracks. Much of tee -Sair Andreas Fault has been peculiarly quiet in recent years, according to the survey. For example, the concrete lining of an aqueduct carrying water to Los Angeles has not cracked at the fault since 1913 when it ires built. Seismologists have been expecting-a major Southern California earthquake for some time. Besides tee San Hernardino region, two other areas of the San Andreas have been suspiciously quiet Thor are the central Owens Valley (east of Yo-semite National Park) and tee Banning-Mission Creek zone, ‘ miles east of Los Angeles. He Just Can't Win ALBUQUERQUE, NJd. (AP) - State police radio operator Robert W. Thurman retired Sept. 1 as an Army sergeant after S3 years of service. He enlisted at the age of 17. Thurman received notice last week from a Dalian, Tax., Selective Service board directing him to register for tha ML Live Better For Lett—At The Same Addrettl Designing A PLANNING SERVICE O ONE CONTRACTOR Nothing Oown 1 Vrs. to Pay eONE JOB . fha lank Ratos e ONE PNIOE 1st Payment in Marsh FREE ESTIMATES (No Obligation) FE 8-9251 328 N. Perry, PONTIAC WILSON lined with ostrich feathers and matching hat ($1800) from Flynn 2d before going to Europe . . . “Johnny Carson hasn’t told us officially or unofficially he wants to leave ‘Tonight’ next spring, but if he does, our people will be glad .to talk to him,” says an NBC exec. Contract runs to Oct ’67. Joey HeateertonH make her first cafe appearance, at the Las Vegas Flamingo (and now she’s old enough to be in tee casino, too)... Rocky Marchmo’ll fly to Hollywood to try the acting racket... Soupy SalesTF 22 ... The new Dudes ’n’ Dolls touch—busty gal bartenders in ★ i WISH I’D SAID THAT: Son Oscar Levsnt: “He builds dungeons in REMEMBERED QUOTE: “It Is eaL... _______________________ one has heard a thousand times than to believe a fact one has never heard before.”—Robert Lynd. V EARL’S PEARLS: There are now three classes of people— the haves, the have-nots, and the charge-its. New Yorkers are trying to look on the brightef side. They say, “Oh well, at least the Yankees will be able towatch a World Series for a change!” ... That's earl, brother. OM N*N SynflcaN, Mel ’ n a Friars luncheon Oct e has a nice Wt ribed grim, pessimistic ah?.’ to believe a lie teat * ADDITIONS * FAMILY ROOMS ALUMINUM SIDING NEC. BOOMS ROOFING—SIDING WOODFIELD CONSTRUCTION I WILL COMB TO YOU WITH FRCK ESTIMATE AND PLANS—-NO CHAIMS! -— 15 W. LAWRENCE f CALL FK 8-8173 6 Month* Before -RutPayment ONE CONTRACTOR FOR EVERYTHING ALUMINUM SIDING SEASON-END i \m Z Z Sale! if Cover Your Home Baaed On 1 fOOO Sq. 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SAGINAW ST. • Provincial • Colonial • Traditional • Modern — All by America's Leading Manufacturer*!, bmOufpm in downtown pontiac free delivery Look at this new, light-hearted approach - to fashionable furniture Sofa for only REG. 229 NO MONEY DOWN AAONTttffO PAY This fumHute has the light and airy look that's so fashionable’ today. The sofa or the sectional have graceful simplicity of line that makes them "at home" in any decor. Thmy're expertly crafted by Kroehler, from the solid hardwood frames and full-coil steel spring underconstruction, to the soft, buoyant foam seat cushions. Covered in durable Nylon Perform* ance-Tetted fabrics wfth decorator colors to choose from. 90 days same as cash A new Kroehler group with a new modem look PHONE FE 2-4231 “you must be satisfied-this we guarantee” OPEN MON., THURS., FRIDAY TIL 9 P.M. "ywp uweeme oMeeioesvui--eauo ..WWW/ jfcllW W\ Try the Test and See Yo u~May Become Old Fogy Without Knowing It get rid of buses and bring streetcars beck. Does all this sound like you? If so, have no doubt about It— you*rd an old fogy. And you’re missing a lot of fun in life. By HAL DOYLE NEW YORK (AP) —Are you an oil fogy? Sometimes you can one without knowing it. your closest would dare to surprise you i*fch a kiss on your cheek on your birthday. You never read a new novel or a new poem because you be- friend may not tell you—partic- ularly if they are old fogies themselves. Nobody lieve all modern writing - Inis ua hb way to get a shot i narcotics. JEFFERSON PROFILE You’d like to take Thomas profile off the nickel rborn a fogy.i Fogyism is ae-l quired. It Just grows — some------BOYLE thing like moss. But fogyism isn’t altogether a matter of age. % no means. You can see incipient signs of it even in kindergarten, and many a college senior is a full-fledged fogy even before he gets his sheepridn. WHAT IS IT? Fogyism is characterized by an inelasticity to change It is indicated more by what one thinks and doe* than by the number of his years. * * w Like to becoming You’ve never fallen in with a movie star since Mary Rckford was in curls. At night the only thing you dream about is the problem, of your job. NAME BEATLES You cannot name at-least two of the Beatles and tell what instruments they play. ' _..* * *........... You’re not exactly sure what a discotheque is, but you suspect it is so mething a French athlete throws during an Olympic track and field event * * * -At the office, none of the girls I Dental Change Common Need By Science Service WASHINGTON - Dentures and bridges are worn by nearly one-half of Americans over age 21 and, because the tissues of tbe mouth change, it is necessary to make changes in the dental material. Relining of dentures is usually required within three years after they are first worn cause of changes in the ssue. Hie and replace It with Hud of a man who really knew thrvahie« of a nickel-Calvin Coolidge. In summer as well as winter you wear garters, because you can’t stand the idea of sloppy socks. BIRDS SING It makes you cranky If birds sing outside your window early in'the morning. Don’t they raei-iseaman You have a couple of pairs of spats stashed away in your closet because, after all, they might come back in style again. ★ ★ ★ You feel the younger generation is going to bell in a hand-wagon. Whenever a teen-ager passes, you wonder whether he carries a switch-blade knife and a needs his glaap? ★ ) ★ * The last painting you really appreciated was the portrait Whistler did of his “ Since then, you’re certain, art has gone steadily downhill. You think that every man der 60 who wears a beard Is either a beatnik or a showoff. ★ . 1 * * • ■ Oatmeal . is your favorite breakfast food because, thank heaven, it is at least silent. NO PARKING Whenever you see a car parked in a no-parking sooe, begin brooding about the breakdown of law and onto. It annoys you to sea a hunch of kids playing s game of stick-bail in the streets.. You are convinced that all doctors and dentists are robbers, and allpoliticians are crooks. You are never caught without a raincoat on when it rains, because you never forget to road the weather forecast before leaving home. SPACE MISSIONS ’’Let; well enough alone’’ is your motto. You are firmly against man’s voyages Into space, for what business his man got in space anyway? You’d rather drink warn milk out of a glass than champagne from a lady’s slipper. If you had your way, they’d fit or stability. Changes in the mouth tissues supporting the dentures, however, were apparent during sev-eral years of use, causing a! decrease in retention and sta-j hility, as well as in the mis-1 alignment of upper and lower dentures. Drs. Julian B. Woelfel and; George C. Paffenbarger. 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The bill was moved into position for a final vote today, j Meantime, Sen. Carl O’Brien, D-Pontiac, appealed to Gov.| Romney to lend his support to I the biU. Romney vetoed a similar bill during the regular session of the legislature. The higher education bill was debated as the legislature held its first night deliberations of the autumn session. If approved, funds will be al- ' located to the schools on a proportional basis to their excess enrollment over predictions made more than a year ago. O’Brien said he thinks the new bill will meet whatever objeo- • tions Romney found in the old measure. INCENTIVE “This measure was promised to the schools as ah incentive toward taking in $xtra students and easing the load on the bi& three universities,” O’Brien added, gi • — “We led them to believe that the fimds would be coming even though the requests j weren’t made as part of the regular budget for higher ejjn- I cation.” Other colleges and universities that would share in the appropriations are Eastern, Northern, Central and Western Michigan Universities, Michigan Tech, Grand Valley State and Ferris State. • In mid-September, an attempt to override Romney's veto failed in the Senate by a 21-13 vote. The hppropriation committee chairman, Sen. Garland Lane, D-Flint, said his talks with administrative /aides indicated Romney would approve the cur- V rent measure. Should the bill in its new form be adopted/ it has been estimated that Oakland University’s share would be between $100,000 and$200A)0. Enrollment at Oakland Uni> versity/Ss up 36 per cent, jumping from 1,816 last year to 2,459 this fall. WARM PARTING - President Johnson uses both hands to clasp the hand of. Pope Paul as he bade him goodbye after their meeting yesterday in New York. An interpreter stands between the Pope and the President. ' .. In Today's Press VM War | ■ Small U. S. unit Is am-' 1 bushed by Cong—PAGE 3. _ Report Hit__________ I^Educator raps campus f study in California — I PAGE 12. ' I Tiger Trade i Detroit obtains Bi^l i Monbouquette from Bos-»- PAGE II. i Area News .....17 i Astrology ..........21 I Bridge .........a....21 I Crossword Pnssle ...21 i Comics .............21 I Editorials ..........• I Markets ............21 I Obituaries 22 ts ......... 18-18 | Theaters .......... 28 TV k, Radio Programs 21 Wilson, Earl........21 Women’s Pages....13-15 81 Africans Die in Derailment Frenzied Survivors Kill Railroad Worker . new York -mwwith a “God bless you all!” >Pope Paul VI today re-! turned to his “spiritual city” at the end- of his ' history - making bid forj’ peace in the “terrestrial; city” of men and their governments. “We shall never forget this! extraordinary hour,” he said in '»* farewell. An estimated 3.8 million, the greatest outpouring in metropolitan annals, had acclaimed his to-and-fro pas- UF BOOSTERS - Ken Morris (left), director of United Automobile Workers Region 1, and Calvin J. Werner, general manager of GMC Truck and Coach Division and 1965 chairman of the Pontiac Area United Fund, discussed campaign plans at } a breakfast at Ted’s Restaurant this morning' •»"' hosted by the UAW. Both labor and manage- ,' ment officials attended. Labor Leaders Say UF Everyone V Labor support of the Pontiacj responsibility of each wage earn-soundly established by giving in- Next Rights Target: Crime Jurisdiction sage, from one stirring scene campaign was|er,” Morris stated. “Labor’s telligently and generously to another. 1 - . i.u— j-:—’- ----------<« DURBAN, South Africa (UPI) —Rescue workers toiled through the night to free survivors from the twisted wreckage of a derailed work train in wMch at least 81 Africans were killed and 130 Injured last night. * ★ * Frenzied survivors killed a white railroad man and wounded another in confusion of rescue operations. The South African railway system, after a recheck of the more than 1,509 workers who had been crowded into the work train, revised casualty figures downward from an earlier announced toll of 84 Africans dead and 133 in-Jnred.p The derailment was described as the worst railroad disaster in South African’history. Three cars of the packed train left the rails at 6 p.m., but the acg cident went umaeported for more than three hours. ,.*.;.**»*•* " THe slain white man, a signalman identified as W. Hartslief, 20, was hacked to death when he tried to help the injured, railway officials said. His assist^1 ant was attacked by berserk mob and hospitalized with broken ribs and other lerious injuries. JUMPED RAILS The three cars jumped the rails as the Natal north coast line train was en route from Durban to the African township of Rwa Mashu. emphasized today at a break- share in the, drive’s success is ( a|vin ,1. Werner, general And in the chancelleries of the fast meeting hosted by the Unit-| estimated at nearly 50 per cent manager 0f (;mc Truck and nations, powerful men weighed ed Automobile Workers at Ted’sl°f the total $875,000 goal. Coach Division, and 1965 UF the impact of this white-clad Restaurant, 2515 S. Woodward,, * ★ ★ chairman, praised officials for I wayfarer’s impassioned sum-| Bloomfield Hills. 4 Brendan Sexton, director UAW seeking a better community jmotis to qdit war and lajrdown ★ * * * Leadership Studies Center and by'working together for a J their arms.Jk) did plain citizens. The breakfast, an annual event breakfast speaker, told guests, common cause. I hi , * *. * prior to the United Fund kickoff, -we in the AFL-CIO have -There is no room for parfi- «■- ** “We must make our own tneyear slated for Oct. 14, was!sought to make voluntary agen- san politics labor-management' WASHINGTON UP) — The nation’s civ&Jights1£|TJ;r^Ctatesmen_oLJhe world’s communities found promise in the dramatic papal mission. “AU of us...will draw inspiration” from it, said U.N. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) News Flash TOKYO (API — Communist Chinese air force planes shot down . a U. S. fighter plane over China mainland today, Peking radio claimed. ■ For 2 Waterford Areas N *__________ Ifor tomorrows I -we had a very constructive The filibuster began yester-italk „ gm.th said;**we covered day under the leadership of i ]ot ot^undt n0w we want a Republican leader Everett M. uttie time to think about the Dirksen, and tomorrow G9P[ ground we have covered.” senators will hold the fort again. , «____________: • For this newly forged coalition *f 25 Southern and Republican senators has decided to alternate daily efforts to frustrate the White House-backed drive for passage. . Urge School Bus Service The Waterford Township Board will send~trletter tirtlie board of education, strongly urging additional .school-bus service for children of two neigh- ous walking conditions are en-i would The action was taken last night following separate appeals by citizens of the Hatchery and Cass-EUzabeth areas, who contend their children walk dangerous routps to ychool. Th e residents presumably will nuke a strong appeal for extra school bus facilities at one of the next two board of education meetings. The board of education, which was approached by citizens of the two areas Sept. 23, is weighing the possibility of additional bus service along with other suggested solutions. Last night, the two groups told the township board that hazard- countered by their children _ cost and the township^the rest, largely pupils of Pierce Junior the Cass-Eliza- High School and Lambert Elc* keth parents for their presenta-mentary School. tion.of the issue, Setter 1 in “BOARD AGREES Board members in complete accord with Supervisor James Z Seeterlin’s sentiments that additional bp service would be less expensive and more safe than sidewalk or gravel walkways. / Spokesmen from both groups concurred after Seeter-lin remarked on the unfeasibility of building walkways along the two roads, characterized by uneven terrain and swamps. , * However, the citizens may consider the possibility of a, special assessment district project for walkways, under which they asserted, “This (additional bus service) is the best solution for this particular area. SAFEST WAY BY BUS Addressing the Hatchery contingent, Seeterlin said, “I would say the safest way to get the children to school is by bus. “That road doesn’t lend itself to walkways.” The Cass-EUzabeth residents went into the meeting favoring additional 1>u8 nrvice, while the Hatchbry citizens advocated walkways. - * Devoid of stop signs and traffic lights, the heavily traveled of the,cass - F.lirahPlh »tr»lfh -4» marred by two particularly dangerous spots, according to the larents. DANGEROUS SPOTS One is a steep hill which severely limits a driver’s line of vision, while the other-in the same vicinity—is set off by deep water on one side of the toad and swamp dirtctly across the street. Seeterlin implied that a special election for construction of sidewalks in the township should also be ruled out. “To put this to the people by i special election, I . believe would be futile,” he said. John Glenn Welcomed • to Hamburg, Germany HAMBURG, Germany (J) — Astronaut John Glenn Herbert Weichmann in a cere sionTo Kin New York for the1aiaw_a».tfw( itaiiriwrg^cltiTKaTr visit of Pope Panrvr" Glenn flies to London tomorrow, The biB to repeal section 14B accompdnied by his wife, Annie, of the Taft-Hartiey law was passed by the House July 28 and is on President Johnson’s list of “must”, legislation. Unions are anxious to have the Taft-Hartley law provision; repealed, for under it'19 states! have made the union shop ille-( The last special election for sidewalks ■ was defeated in all 23 precincts, Seeterlin noted. A union shop agreement is one in which employes cov- ; ered by the union contract are required to join a union. To crack a filibuster requires two-thirds, of. the senators present and voting, and supporters of the bill confess they haven’t: got the votes to accomplish this. Dirksen said time is on his side. “Members of Congress are fatigued and battle-weary,” he said, “they want to go,J»ome." No ‘‘Bug-a-Boo” Needed next sunftner by the person who answered this ad: " ALUMINUM SCREEN. PORCH enclosure, mod I year, will Mil > cheap. FE jf. ■ ■ 8 other disappointed people,” said Mrs. R. W. See for Yourself Press Want Ads Really Work .. FE 2-8181 *9, THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1965 End Goal of Offensive Arms-Ponflff UNITED 'NATIONS, N. Y. OP tee international security “ - Pope Paul Vt, in his history-making speech to the U.N. General Assembly, called yesterday lor the end of offensive weapons as a noble goal which "the peoples expect of you. In a speech before the 117-nation body, the Pope also called for Steps to guarantee international "security without the use of arms. He added, however, that “as long as man remans that weak, changeable and even wicked being that he often shows himself to be, defensive arme will, unfortunately, be necessary.” The Pope reiffirmed his support for the United Nations and urged as its aim “no more war, war never again.” The pontiff urged the United ,-Nations to do its utmost to feed \tf*e hungry of the world, but he spoke out against a U.N. endorsement of birth control.'" “You muOMMve to multiply bread so that it suffices for the tables of mankind, arid pot rather favor an artificial control of birth, which would be irrational, in order to diminish the number of guests at the banquet of life.” The Pope declared: “If you wish tp^be brothers, let the arms fajT'from your hands, one cannot love while holding offensive arms. He urged the audience of diplomats to find ways to guaran- “This is a most noble aim,’ he said, “this the people expect of you, this must be obtained." CRUSHING EXPENSES “Gratitude will be expressed to your by all peoples,-relieved as they will then be from the crushing expenses of armaments, trusting in your sentiments of humanity and generosity.” He urged further that the savings resulting from arms reductions will be diverted to the benefit of the developing out having recourse to arms,” The pontiff told the delegates: “You have performed and you continue to perform a great the education of mankind in the jrays of peace. The United Nations is a great school where that education. js imparted, and we are today in the assembly hall of that school. ARCHITECTS OF PEACE “When you leave this hall, the world looks upon you as the architects and constructors of mmd, with ideas, with works of] peace^- ■*, " .. “You labor in'ihis great construction. felrt you are still at the beginning. ^ BELLICOSE MENTALITY ‘Will the world ever succeed changing that selfish and bellicose mentality which up to now has been interwoven in so much of its history? “It is hard to foresee; buf It is easy to affirm that it is toward that new history. A peaceful, truly human history, as promised by God to men •f good will, that we must resolutely march. The roads’ thereto are already well-marked out for you; and the first is .that of disarmament.” City Manager Robert Kenning was directed by the commission last night to prepare an outline of the functions of 'an urban designer and then Invite qualified persons to submit proposals. Kenning also will submit a “Peace, as you know, is not built up only by means of politics, by the balance of forces and of interests. * Tt is con8tructed with the Supervisors Okay Proposed Budget Oakland “ County’s proposed 1966 budget of $18,380,657 was approved by the board of supervisors yesterday after a move to appropriate more funds for the prosecutor’s office was narrowly defeated. means committee, responded that other county departments had similar manpower shortages but that there wasn’t sufficient money to meet justifiable requirements. The pontiff told the delegates to the United Nations their institution must not rest upon ’merely material and earthly foundations, for this it would be a house built upon sand; above it is based on your own consciences.” He declared that the hour had struck for “our -‘conversion,’ for personal transformation, for interior renewal." ‘We must get used to thinking of man in a new way; and in a new way also of men’s life in common; with a new manner, too, of conceiving the paths of history and the destiny of the world, according to the words of St. Paul: ‘You must be clothed in the new self, which js created in God’s image, justified and sanctified through the Itruth.” ADDED WORDS '''And he added these words: > “The hour has struck for a halt, a moment of recollection, almost of prayer. A moment to think anew of onr common origin, oar hisWy, oar common destiny./ “Today, as never before, in our era so marked f6r human progress, there is need for an appeal to the moral conscience of man. For the danger comes, ADVERTISING HONOR - Admiring the plaque recently received by Charles H. Felt, senior vice president and creative director of MacManus, John & Adams, far his contribution to a project jrefocusing creative interest in newspaper advertising, are (from left) Ernest A. Jones, president of _MJ St A; Louis M. Rich, vice president auto- motive sales, Bureau of Advertising, American Newspaper Publishers Assoc.;. Felt; and Gordon Craig, executive vice president, Booth. Newspapers, Inc. and board of directors member, Bureau Of Advertising. The plaque was awarded by the-ANPA Bureau of Advertising. bUlty of retaining nn url designer. Because the field of urban design is relatively hew, Kenning told the commission that it will be six weeks-Or longer before he can return with the proposals and recommendation. The Citizens' Action committee recently suggested that the city hire an urban designer. SERVICES EXPLAINED (Continued From Page One) Secretary General U Thant, a Buddhist. It “may incline all states to | A resolution by Philip 0. The new bJdget" compares **■•*•• “^*“5 with the current one of $17,218,- J?arel Mrk‘ J *? 878 the prosecutor's office budget was amended before coming It provides $7,538,212 for to a vote, salaries, $7,445,127 for depart- mental and institutional operation and $3,397,41$ for non-departmental appropriations. Prosecutor S. Jerome Bronson The amendment by Fred L. Yockey, Huntington Woods supervisor, called for an propriation of $16,000 for two new assistant prosecutors. spoke at the public hearing por- lost by *:40 to 39 vote. tion of the meeting and ap-pealed for additional funds to hire more personnel. He said that the.-growing crime rate and the added complexities of prosecution work due to recent high court decisions has created a need for expansion of his department in order to function properly: Anbther amendment suggested by Lee Walker, supervisor from!' Madison Heights, which would allow $19,000 for an assistant prosecutor, an investigator and secretary, lost by a 57 to 21 vote.' When the budget itself came to a vote, only Marguerite Sim-son, supervisor from Pontiac, the David Levinson, chairman of voted against it. She'opposed supervisors’ ways and I wage hikes for judges. The Weather Full U. S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Sonny and warmer today. Highs 4$ to 55. Mostly fair and not so cold tonight, lows 35 to 42. Variable cloudiness and warmer Wednesday. Highs 60 to $?• Variable winds $ to 12 miles this morning becoming southeast 8 to 15 miles this afternoon and tonight. Outlook for Thursday — Partly cloudy and mild. science ■- indeed, if properly utilized, these could rather resolve many of the grave prob: iems which assail mankind. “No, the real danger comp from man himself, wielding ever more powerful arms, which! can be employed equally well for destruction or for the joftiest conquests.” In what appeared to be a reference, to the absence of Communist China arid the divided nations of the world from the United Nations, he. offered this counsel: Once more we reiterate good wish: advance always! We will gb further and say strive to .bring back among you any who have separated themselves, and study the right method of uniting to your pact brotherhood, in honor and loyalty, those who do not,share in it. ’Act so that those still outside will desire and merit the confidence of all; and then be generous in granting such confix Historic Visit Ends for Pope do their utmost to make this organization a truly universal instrument of peace,” said the president of the 117-nation General Assembly, Amintore Fanfani of Italy. And the head of the mightiest rf the countries* president Johnson, said the Pope’s striking personal appeal “may be just what the world needs to get Cong Ambush Small U.S Unit SAIGON, . South Viet Nam (AP) — A Viet Cong farce am* bushed a small U.S. Army 15 miles northeast of Saigon today and killed or wounded every American, a U.S. military spokesman Announced. Another U.S. Army patrol tieard the shooting and rushed to the scene bin the Wet Cong Viet Cong guerrillas used children as shields against American gunfire while crossing a stream under surveillance by U.S. Marine aircraft last Friday. The incident occurred during a Marine action near Qui Nhon, 260 miles north of Saigon, authorities said. A South Vietnamese military fled. Two guerriflas were spokesman claimed that gov-reported killed. ( jenupent forces killed 1,767 Viet ---------[Corig last week while only 229 ... m BP viiat was am. South Vietnamese were killed, us thinking of how to achieve I bushed from the 1st Infantry !^e spokesman said 144 Wet peace.” ^Division, was made up of les>|^opS y captured and 68 gov- . L/IVIOIUII, woo IllaUC Up UJ icoo1 » • __, , yithan 12 men, the spokesman eminent soldiers were missing 01 man. rur uk uaugci wiura, / :r~ ’ 7 *7-----in a<4i/m not from progress, nor from) Throughout his 14-hour ^rsa|d’.but *•» exact number H*" along thepapjsed, meandering milesintiTmecity, in gatherings at St. Patrick’s Cathedral and elsewhere, the Pope met a rousing clamor of cheers, applause and music. THRONGS SHOUT Hooray! Hooray!” the throngs shouted. “Long live the Pope!” *• Police Commissioner Vincent Broderick gauged the total turnout of those who saw the Pope in person at 3.Bt)ie toll of human life lost to this powerful force of nature— I a force for both good and evil. \ — Before year’s end, fire is slated to claim 12,000 lives. Locally, during the. flj»t e i g h t months of 1965, 236 building fires caused total loss of $785,000 and took two.,lives. What accounts for these grim and growing losses? “The answer,” says the American Insurance X$sn., “has always been the same: people.”•>. Negligence accounts for 76 per cent of all fires. Along with careless smoking habits, misuse of electricity heads theljst of fire causes. One in five home fires is due to faulty electrical wiring, overloaded circuits, unsafe appliances. The peak home fire months are December and January. What can well, whatcha know. A favorite in the you do to minimize their shocking- Press Annual Football Contest finally came through. The 372 contestants who saw things It seems the Administration’s policy .with reference to Viet Nam hasn’t changed one bit from what it was—whatever that was. Grid Upsets Fog Press Contest Contestants' Predictions Getting a Kicking Around portent? Ther£"'*at£ two measures that should be taken immediately—one of. preventive nature, the other a safeguard against financial loss should your property be struck by fire: ★ ★ ★ • Have a qualified electrician check ysqir house for proper wiring, the condition of major appliances, load distribution of electrical circuits. _ • Review your fire insurance. , Whilej- we have steadily in-creased our coverage, a majority of American homes are still under-insured —many seriously so. The insurance “gap” stems from the fact that millions of families have failed to boost their coverage to keep pace with the climbing value of their homes and household contents. In observance of the Week, a public Fire Fighter Festival will be presented at Wisner Stadium Thursday evening by units of county fire* departments. The program will combine entertainment with demonstration of fire-fighting and prevention principles. it ★ ★ One last word on protection against fire — the destructive “enemy within” : Fire Prevention Week comes buTonce a year. Why don’t you make it Fire Prevention Day—^-tfto is and practice it every day of tlf£ to U) .year? Dpes Driver’s Seat Rule Out Golden Rule? Why is it that the normal, average man—or woman—who would never rudely push aside a fellow pedestrian ort the sidewalk can change completely behind the wheel 62 a car and become inconsiderate, careless and even reck-less? A lot of people have pondered the question and come up with a lot of ideas — such as that a car may give a sense of power to the other-wi^ inadequste-ffeeling person, or that some people unconsciously use an automobile to work off petty angers and frustrations. ★ ★ Doubtless there is much truth la these Suggestions, but Amos B. Hoople, Thursday har-rumphed Syracuse finishing 10 points ahead of Maryland’s predicted 21, How do things look for the Michigan-Michigan State fracas coming up? A little cloudy, a little cloudy. ★ ★ ★ Michigan has 2S6 bond-eyed supporters, while 109 like the looks of State’s green. (Could it be the color association with money?) Seven, the same number as last week, refused to take sides and are keeping fingers crossed for a no-decision exercise." Picking the winner is something we don’t want any part of. To go bade to las£/Friday’s expert, he gave State a * “ edge over nUaois (State won 22 while the omniscient, orotund Hoople wus for once thrown for a loss. He, too, called a one-point edge — but gave H to Illinois. Tck-tck-tck-kaff-kaff. ★ ★ ★ If you weren’t confused before, you surely are now. But be of good cheer. Each week, the 1500 U.S. Savings Bond draws nearer to the outstretched hand of the ultimate finner. • Verbal Orchids to- Mr. and Mrs. Russell New of I960 Woodland; 52nd wedding anniversary. Mrs. Sadie Patteq of 41 Auguste; MtfrUtthday. Frank Buell \ of Milford; Sind birthday. Mike GravOla of Emmett; 90th birthday. Mrs. Ley Morris of 7521 Haley Road; 80th birthday. Mfl. Pauline Hard of 1200 N. Telegraph; 87th birthday. Mr^aad Mrs, Grover Porter of Draytort Plains; 50th wedding anniversary. ..fV* taw* ‘ tweew *oc\ iry a psychologist offers another that seems to be more inclusive and to go farther toward explaining the many thoughtless and , accident • inviting tricks most of us have’been guilty of at one time or another. Says Dr. Fbzd McKinney of the University of Missouri: “Of course, the Immediate cfcuse will vary with the individual' But I believe the general, more basic cause is the depersonalization that happens when you get behind the the car. The other driver does, too, in your eyes and the human feeling is watered down.” It’s something all of us could profitably think about the ne^t time we drive. Those other cars that get in our way and make us so Impatient all contain people — human beings we would recognize ana po-litely make room for if we met them walking down the street. Voice of tl?e People: Press Colored Features 1 Commended by Reader David Lawrence Soys: Amendment Fraud Faces Court The Su- order to get a necessary i As both a photographer and a former advertising man who was frequently Involved with production, I want to compliment you very sincerely on the colon picture that appeared in your September 21 issue. In the first place it is an oui standing piece of photography, and COALE in the second place it is beautifully reproduced. ★ ★ ★ I’ve enjoyed reading your paper for a number of years. Extra touches like this, among other things, make The Pontiac Press an outstanding newspaper. SIDNEY C. COALE GLOBAL FILM PRODUCTIONS ORCHARD LAKE Comments on Help for Retarded Children Being the parenis of a retarded youngster we have followed the sad account of Ricky Thome and his parents’ desperate plight. While we cannot condone Mrs. Thome’s actions, we understand the feeling-of futile helplessness that would lead tha parent of a retarded child to-even consider such drastic action. ★ ★ ★ You seek answers from people in educational supervision and are told it should be the problem of the board of health. The board of health tells you this is a problem of the board of education. State politicians tell you that'aid for retarded should be a local community problem, and the local community for the most' part remains indifferent. As “the buck” is passed from one to another; another generation of retarded children grows into retarded adults without the benefit of any attempt at education or training because there are no facilities for them. ★ ★ - ★ Must these “forgotten-children” be pushed aside and made „ „■ ■ W ■ - , ■ , - ■ day how the high court can by- „1U„ ulcae „luuiraf « „„oireu preme Court of tor United jority, but abo by a. staple act pass the new Kansas case and to wait still longer? Write to our Governor ari demand that States, which has Just started a of Congress to ignore the action allow the blot on America’s rec- aniinn h* nn» Congress to ignore the action allow the blot on America’s rec- action be now. of state legislatures by declar- ord to remain, ing them out pf the Union. Observers are wondering, to- (CvyrfiKt, IMS, Now Yortc ANOTHER CONCERNED MOTHER Capital Letter: thhmgh orange-colored glasses and cast their fortunes with Syracuse were amply repaid as their hetaeted heroes Saturday gave Maryland a 2l-to-7 gridiron lesson. ★ *’ * Needless to siy, the victory was bad news for the 147 entrants who had pinned their hopes on Maryland. The seven who had crystal-balled a tie can console themselves that they were at least half right. The outcome followed the season’s script to date, having an upset tinge to match the over-all Saturday grid scene that abounded with surprises. —The- Proas' Friday pigafclit “morning line” saw Maryland taking Syracuse 14-13, but the newspaper’s super seer, Major ‘fy f0,Stt?d LAWRENCE ■ 'in. July 1868 by Congress in proclaiming the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution as valid, even Early Fidel Followers Not £ Among Poor—‘Ex-Cuban When I first heard the news about Mrs. Thome abandoning her son in Florida, I wondered how she could have done such a thing. Ilien I think of all the aid, etc. sent to other countries while people can’t get help ip their own state. Ithink it is time and help our people first, Remember, char- H. DEAN N W. MANSFIELD tough it was not legally rati- Havana businessman who man- By RUTH MONTGOMERY land had an extensive public WASHINGTON — A former school system free from dia- I am the mother of an 18-year-old mentally retarded girl and can sympathize with to Thornes. For eleven years we had our daughter in a private school in Canada where the costa were H , . aged the Cuban electric power and easier to get a college For nearly 90 years the high . ■ ■ — court has rdused to take a case “W * curren°y lecturin« for adjudication of the question throughout the hemisphere on despite efforts which have been the lesson we repeatedly made to obtain a can learn from • his unhappy homeland. This eye-opening address effectively refutes the long - heir theory that communis m makes reali headway only crimination. It was cheaper nejt to prohibitive for an ordinary factory worker. She could hearing. The issue is not whether the Fourteenth Amendment itself it desirable, for undoubtedly two thirds of Congress and three fourths of the States today would immediately ratify a substitute using the identical language. The real question is whether only stay at that school until she was 16. it it it & Recently we had our daughter re-evaluated and were told again to send her to Lapeer. These psychologists don’t understand that we love these children and want help, not have them institutionalized. ★ ★ ★ I wonder how fast we’d get help if one of T>ur Senators, berg, of the middle and wealthy Representatives or our Goverhor had a retarded youngster and classes who were “too absorbed took it to Lapeer. in their own pursuits” and liked MRS. JOHN HILL N the sound of Castro’s promises. 47 CHAMBERLAIN ^ education in Cuba than t U.S. '.*• '*?* ★ * * “It was hot the illiterate or the poor who were responsible for the take-over by Castro,” Menocal says, but those mem- in city slums Montgomery Ruth - In Washington: to crooked method used for and underprivileged areas of “ratification” shall be allowed world, to stand without court condemnation. Many people are saying thqt the Supreme Court hqs, in effect, sustained the Fourteenth Amendment because it has decided various cases involving interpretation of different phrases of that amendment. NEVER ACCEPTED But the truth is the high court has never accepted juri in any case involving " ity of the actual process of “ratifying” the Fourteenth Amendment. Serafin G. Menocal, a graduate electrical engineer and former president of Cuba’s National Council of Boy Scoots, says that the laboring class and form workers were nctnally Fidel Castro’s greatest stumbling block in his campaign to subvert Cuba. The easiest prey, he declares, country were students, politicians, »t deeo amone churchmen, and “businessmen c ?. .jj? litlon who generally remained aloof Soyiet s#te * ■*— from politics.” . . . * * + It has to be of. Austria’s Economy Vital to West By BRUCE BIOSSAT ing too much foreign invest-. oyer how to finance perhaps 850 VIENNA (NEA)— The free ment. American interests are million worth of flood damage world has an important stake in currently offering to help fi- resulting from heavy spring and Austria as the West’s eastern- nance a new autobahn stretch- late summer rains. A burden of most industrial nation in Europe, as an out- With an engineer’s precision c o n s e quence, he carefully documents the steps U,er®f°,’e> ing from westerly Imisbruck this sort can be critical for a toward the Italian boj-tjer-. The /small nation, money is needed, but it' will not be automatically accepted. Heavy infusions of capital by which Castro took over his Austria’s basic-For many years, the court native land, and warns that un- alfy healthy. _ qiqssAT refosed to hear all such ques- less others profit by those mis- economy is tiohf. as being “political.” But takes, it can happen here and in plegued with some difficulties from neighborfog> prosperous West Germany might be had, except that Austrians' plainly fear Geitaan control of some enterprises might! result. The seven years of Nazi tide are not forgotten. Nevertheless, Austria gees plunging forward with reasonable success despite all these very real hazards and some others relating to the coalition Mature of its government It trades with more than 180 countries. One big firm sells to 70 nations, another to 50, and so on. Its reputation for qualify even this barrier was later broken down. Thus, to Supreme Court in * 1930 took a case known as Coleman vs. Miller and ruled that; although Kansas had 13 years before rejected the child-labor amendment, its later ratifica-tidn must be permitted to stand. t * The Supreme Court has also South America. To prove his point that Communism does not necessarily feed on poverty and illiteracy, he makes the following fatter-1 esting points about pre-Castro Cuba: • Among Latin American countries,. Cuba ranked first per capita in TV broadcasting stations~and receivers, motion* that are far from trivial. JjD, a highly competitive world, Austria must export to live. One-third of its total output is now sent abroad. Preliminary figures show that its exports actually were increased for the first half of 1865 by 11 per cent over the comparable 1964 period. taken up in yarious,cases other picture attendance, and per- -The country also is heavily and precision products- is wide, dependent on imports for cru- Landlocked, it builds fishing cial raw materials. These boats for Nigeria, a ferry for include two-thirds Of its high- Ecuador, cargo boats for a Nile grade coal, 1.4 million tons of fleet. It builds whole factories iron ore a year, sill of its alum- for export, inum-bearing bauxite, perhaps Luckily, tourism keeps rising a‘. fifth or more of its food sup- enough to offset — so far — an ply. annual excess of imports. Tour- 1 * * * ism has quadrupled in a decade. ' Its trading abroad is threat- In 1945, Austria had six crude ened by the common tariff front ski lifts. Today it has more than HH s its craggy points in which procedure and ratification of constitutional amendments were involved. The state of Kansas now has brought before the Supreme Court ef the United States the question of whether the Fourteenth Amendment was or was not legally ratified, and to attorney general of that state has requested that the high court take jurisdiction. He has made a lengthy argument contending that the high court in reapportionment cases .during the last few years has "delved into what It had previously called “political” ques-' tians. centage of national income invested in education. 4t ' * * • It ranked second in value of imports, exports, and radio receivers; third in income, number of. newspapers and magazines, telephones, auto-biles and electric power consumption per capita. , • .One of every five Cubans had a radio; one in 20 a TV set, and one in 27 an automobile. But, like'mtme other western being erected by the six nations 700 scattered European lands, Austrifc suffers of the European Common Mar- mountains, a serious labor shortage. This ket. Tliis front includes West Austria has big plan far year it has imported 25,000 for- Germany, Austria’s largest ex- power expansion and Mt«-eign workers, mainly Yugoslavs port market and largest source trial growth But its tiny &e tadsTurks. In 1964 the figure of imports. - - - was 10,600 less. « West Germany has a 20 per cent duty on certain Unhappily, not "enough of these have even rudimentary skills. One large industrial firm says that last year it lost a month’s production through lack of trained help. Much of to lost output. would have gone abroad. and its host of problems keep it operating always in delicate balance. Austria’s friends in to free • According to a U.S. government report, Cubans were “among the better fed people of the world,” before Castro. • Cuba had the lowest mor- w ’ _* tality rate in the Western If the Supreme Court avoids Hemisphere. > > the jisue of whether to Four- « n, industrial workers Amendment was legally were protected by strong un- To offset such shortages, Austria needs more automation, which takes heavy capital investment. Capital, however is also somewhat short items, Amtrian goods must ___________________________ _______ * pay it in foil. Yet it may be world must inevitably aipre the reduced to I per cent^ for the country’s hope that this bal-■ ■ ance is not only maintained bat improved as well. It is a linchpin in the prosperity of western Europe. | German partners in to Common Market Austrja’s only way to competeTlnto circumstances, is to lower prices — which puts heavy strain on labor and technical efficiency. Austria’s membership in the so-called “outer -seven,” embracing Switzerland, -Sweden, A country hardly bigger than Norway, Portugal, Denmark Maine, with a little more than and Great Britain, is helpful segen million people, cannot in- but not decisive. It ttoda closer vita too much* foreign capital association-.with the Common adopted, it to tantamount to ions, and its farm workers by without stirring other dangers. Market. saying that Congress possesses legislation which amounted to 'W , ★ * * % supreme power not only to un- a profit-sharing arrangement. One is inflation. Austria fears As if ail these problems were seat members at any time in . • The pro - Communist is- “importing inflation” by allow- not enough, Austria is torn now kightee: MI IM BUS THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1905 Los Angeles Pitching May Snuff Twins' 'Win It All' Hope Los Angeles Corp Could Make Sweep World Serist Opener in Minnesota to Pit Drysdale vs. Qrant MINNEAPOLIS - ST; PAUL (AP) - “Win It AH. Twini,” the signs ben implore but the feeling is Minnesota may not take a single game from the Los Angeles Dodgers, whose matchless pitching may perpetrate a four-game sweep by the National League champions. In 1963, the same Dodgers, behind the dazzling pitching of Sandy Koufax, Ddfr Drysdale and John Podres, stunned the New York Yankees in four straight. Koufax and Dyrsdale are Mill around, more menacing than ever. Podres has been replaced on the Big Three by another southpaw^JZlaude Osteen.^ Osteen’s 15-15 record for the campaign is a modest one compared to Koufax’ 26-8 and Drys* dale’s 23-12, but Dodger Manager Walter Alston is mindful that when Osteen pitched for Washington in the American League, he defeated foe Twins six times without a loss. Minnesota’s Mudcat Jim Grant, Jim Kaat and Camilo Pascual do not exactly comprise a sickly trio but not even the most, avid American League robter would put them in the same class with K, D and 0. IS PER CENT Pitching, as everybody concedes, is 75 per cent of the game. In the Dodgers’ case, it is 90 per cent. Since good pitching usually stops good hitting, it would not cause too much of a stir if the Dodgers won in tile shortest time possible. The Series, 62nd between the rival league champions, opens Wednesday with Drysdale opposing Grant. .Game time is 2 p.m. (EST). The 30-year-old ace of the Twins’s Staff posted a 21*7 record diving the regular sea- LEAPS INTO SERIES — Zoilo Versalles, the speedy and energetic shortstop of the Minnesota Twins typifies the enthusiasm of the Twins who go into their first World Series game starting tomorrow against the Los Angeles Dodgers. Manager Sam Melee stands in the background. The first game is in Metropolitan Stadium in Bloomington, Minn. Professional od d s-makers -have put up the right-handed Drysdale an 11 to 10 favorite despite the Twins’ borne advantage. The same betting gentry rule the Dodgers a 7 to 5 favorite to win the Series and will give 15 to 1 against a Dodger sweep. The odds against a Dodgers sweep in 1963 were 27 to 1. STRONG ATTACK Power must win it for the Twins. Manager Sam Mele will rely on the heavy hands of Harmon’ Kilkbrew, Tony’ Oliva, Jimmie Hall, Don Mincher, Bob Allison and Earl Battey to offset , the Dodgers* superiority ' speed, defense and pitching. The Twins own the msot powerful attack in the American League. They are remindful of the Milwaukee Braves. Yet Dodger pitching held the Braves’ power in check. In the final series between the two teams, Drysdale, Koufax and Osteen held the Braves ter three runsin as mahy games. * -* * The Twins hammered more home runs in 1965. The Dodgers hit only 78 to rank '20th in foe majors. The Twins outhit the Dodgers .254 to .245. But the Dodgers were matchless at chiseling out occasional runs and making them stand up. Los Angeles writes called foe Dodgers a “cap gun’’ offense team. One writer said he’d seen more power to,a second hand lawn mown-. MSU Aim t Contain Wolverines' Offense EAST LANSING (AP)-Work- ing to contain Michigan’s offense will be. Michigan, State’! No. 1 aim this week, says Coach Duffy Daugherty. At foe start of Michigan State week Monday, Daugherty told sports writers that foe Wolverine attack is simple and yet versatile — ’‘that’s what makes it effective.” He cited Michigan’s running passes and power sweeps as the ingredients of an attack that has “moved the ball without much trouble. “It’s just that they’ve made some mistakes,” said Daugherty, alluding to some of Michigan fumbles. CROWD SPLIT Daugherty said playing the game at Ann Arbor ,fould he no disadvantage because “we look on it as a home game just as sure they do when it’s here. The crowd is split about evenly so there’s no advantage for the home team.” 'After three weeks of play, which-have left Michigan State as foe Big Ten’s only all-winning team, Daugherty remarked that “in August none of us thought we’d be in this position. “We had so many problems at the start, there was no way to say for sure if we’d win any given game. But most of the problems have been resolved fairly well.” hi Monday’s practice, defensive halfback Don Japtoga, rover back George Webster and linebacker Charlie Thornhill were hobbling with knee and ankle injuries. Central Drijps in'A'Rating Despite Win Chiefs Ranked Third as Battle Creek Takes No. 2 Spot Despite a 21-0 victory over Flint Northern last Friday, Pontiac Central has fallen to third place in the weekly Associated Press high school football poll. Battle Creek Central, thir a week ago, replaced the Chiefs. Bay City Central continues to lead the Class A section. Frankenmuth has displaced Middleville as the leader of Class C-D ratings. WWW Frankenmuth optpolled Middleville by four votes in foe ratings, conducted by the Associated Press board of sportswrit-ersand sportcasters. Albion held on to Ms No. 1 Class B ranking. Newcomers are Detroit Den-by. No. 9 hi Class A; Jackson Jfam, tied for seventh in Class B; Grosse He, No. 10 in Ctoss B; Femdale St. James, ^ighth in Class C-D, and SL Ig-nace, ninth in Class C-D. Lansing Eastern, sixth in Class A last week, lost its first 6-0 heartbreaker Lansing Everett. Class A 1. Say CHjr Cuntral (Ml 2. Battle Creek Central (W) «. Harper 17______ H ». Detroit penny (24) . 10. Royel Oak Kimball (J-0 ANN ARBOR (AP) — Michigan Coach Bump Elliott is taking his team into hiding today when all-out workouts begin for the Big Ten opener against Michigan State hoe Saturday. Elliott lectured his squad on MSU defensive and offensive Mohlday. * , * _ * On the bright side for Elliott’s first string backfield, halfbacks Jim Detwhiler and Carl Ward and fullback Dave Fisher all appeared for a brief workout. They were injured in last Saturday’s bruising 15-7 loss to Geor- ---- Osk .ponder* (M) 1 35 Wood* Noire Dime (2-0) fa Derby (34) 27 Hr jpjLid, CsttoHc Nile* Seuit lie. Merle; Flint "■—Tiwsilsm. Musk soon Hetahts, Detroit ■emit, Farmington Norm Farming- Grand RapMt C res ton. Birmingham Brother Rice, Warren FtogtraM, Owosso, Lansing Everett, Dearborn Edset Ford. Class b Albion (M) ttt World Series Rosters Listed MINNEAPOLIS-ST, PAUL (APIs,— k -|gia. The only man who may miss foe Spartan clash is defensive guard Barry Dehlin. ution-by-posltk* ^ fTVsi IRST BASBMIN 'Quit NCAA' Lawmaker to M-MSU LEFT FIELDERS CENTER ft ELDERS Folrly l ten is2 * CATCHER Min IM 20 117 5 I LA_ 437 42 102 I RESERVE INRIELDERS LcJohn LA 21 1 20 0 “ollins Milt 440 S2 117 5 rocewskl LA lit 17 4t 1 Klndall Min 343 41 47 4 Cennody LA , 1W It 17 1 RESERVE OUTFIELDERS 'MTU -------------- * Political Problems jj .. jc at Olympic Confab • SC MINNESOTA PITCHING Worthington Kllppoteln Perry - I 111 > n it 7 11 Mil 7 3.30 MADRID (AP) - The International Olympic Committee prepared for its opening session in Madrid Wednesday with thorny political problems on its jjram^ hands alnd an even bigger sports bSShi issue to debate—the over-all fu- «$£• to w a n ! a 2:S fare of tiie Winter Olympics. | -----;--------:— The question of me’‘Winter popped up out of the| pirtgni Sjgn Buntjn Monday at • meeting between 9 , . +* . IOC representatives and Netioo- DETROIT ) i imi 2+1-1*, j 8M 8M+ 44 « jvS 1 - 3M+ M| Od 60 M 3 1 1 411* 411* 411*+ to I l«V> Ml* 1*M+ 14 .. 1 M 3V* IM— M 117-1* 1 7-1* 1 7-1*+ 1* 47 MM Ml* MM ' 52 51* 5'A 544+ M 1 ifi (ft iftfft n n ism 13%*+ y* i« T*» iv> im+ ft * 1,1 m. 1 .15« 218* MW 210*+ V 'W *w f* ft -ifi II* 14* It 48* 48* 48*- I 14 1»W MH MM I 34M MW MW+ H Mackey Air MOtybden BfV ,;,7 r.r jvj , .. Kf } & $$& *£ Hi u!rSSlr*(# M 4* 4W 41*+ NEW YORK (AP) -Airlines, motors and electronics were higher as the stock market resumed an irregular recovery in stive trading early today. Gain* of key stocks were mostly fractional but some ran to about a point.. ★ ★ * SCM Corp. also continued to rebound from its profit taking of last week, rising ft to 45ft on an opening block , of 14,000 MFd .90 AMat Cl 1+0 A Motor! .50 AmOptie us AmPhito .20 AmSmelt 2.40 Balt OS 1.44 S----it 1.40 ______411 .250 Beech Air .70 BlgelowS Boeing 2 Borden 1. BorgWai Market Up Active shares, later expanding the rise trie, up 1 at 57ft on 5,000; and i point. Ford, ’General Motors and ysier were fractional gain- L NO IMPACT leports of rising interest In by banks seemed to have I immediate impact on the iurket - Opening blocks inciugwL^ Radio Corp., up ft aT45% on 7,500 shares; Westinghouse Elec- Korvette, up ft at 35V* on 5,300. American Traveller Reports Battle Ltffl Yesterday, the Associated Press Average of 00 stocks rose | SINGAPORE (Af/- |,7 to 344.0. Prices on the American Stock Exchange were mixed. Syntex lost 1. -Gallon Industries and Mead Johnson declined fractionally. ' Small gains were posted for Scurry Rainbow Oil, Creole Petroleum and Kaiser Industries. Reports The New York Stock Exchange NEW. YORK (AP)^Following ll a M I selected stock transactions on the New ’ork Stock Exchange with 10:30 prices: —A— Sales Net (hds.) HM Lew Last Cltg. Electron HettySug i.»o Homestk 1 J» Honeywl 1.10 Hook Ch 1.10 House F 1.80 Houst LP 1 JhrisCrft .681 fiiryUr lb cit Fin 1.60 Cities Sr 2.10 Cities if Wl Ctevittn 1.44 CecsCoia 1.70 Cftlll .90 CoMnRad .50 CBS 1.20b M jg *41 ComICre 1.80 CWnSolv 1.20 ComwEd 1*0 'omut . Con Edls 1.80 ConElecInd 1 CnNGas 2.30 ConsPow 1.80 Contalnr 1.20 Cont Air .60 ContCan 2.40 Cont Ins 1.40 Cont Mot .40 Cont CHI 1.40 Control Data "orn Pd 140 oxBdces .40 JrowCok .99t Crown Cork Crown Zell 2 Cruc Stl 1.20 Cudphy Pk Curtis Pilb DaycoCp ,40b Deere 1.40a Delta Air 1.10 DenRkXtW 1 —101* 1.10 Steel .*0 n Aik T* DynOmCp .48 East Air Lin fast Kod 1.40 OtonMf 2.20 EdgeGG 20g EIPasoNG 1 Emer El 1.20 ImorRod .40 EvansPd 45d Eversharp 1 J&sW F*d~MQf 1:*0 -ffiroiCp 2 . Irestne 1.20 MCfi+IAIt Fla Pow 1 20 Flo PL 1.40 ModFoir .00 PMC Cp 1.20 Ford Mot i KroOw JO (Kill. FruahCp 1.50 1 ItM 318* JIM + 1 5 30M 388* llh ... 3 47M 471* 47M ... 0 48’* 48M 48M - ' 2 25V, 2584 25S* + | * ftft^W* & + 1 1 t* n* m —1 1 108* MM ISM ... —D— *3. 22M 22M 22M + W 7 43M 431* 43M - M I 104 1(4 1*4. 7 20Mol0M <»M + 1 Bl* 3714 1714 + l 144* 14** 148* + 1 12 704* 704* 708* + 1 3*1/4 1414 34M — 1 2 35M 35M 1 35M + 1 *8 55M 54M 548* - 1 5 74 738* 74 . . . 0 2tW 281* MM +■' 22 40. 48M 488* + I 4 421* 421*. 4214.+ I 4 239M MM* MM* -4* 2 1014 1014 1014. —E— . 201828* 101'4.102M . .. 2 54 14. 54 + 1* 1 274* 27M 278* + M . .. 17 21 21 II '. .. Pol 5 S6M 54M 54M + 1* Pr< 10 M4* It 18M +1 Pul <0 S4W-S4 * L/dz x* law 22W -*r— 04 NM 94M 9*4* +2M i p ll** ,S - w 1 liiLJift/iift +fj XM «*M M'4 MM . . . ! ff +• 2 408* 40M 408* + I *42/41 « —1 5 244* 24M 24M — 6 1|M 1884 MM ... 2 734* 73V* TIM -V® ec-HJi > Jo 5714 .568* *57'4 + I /ft 16M 14M 16M 9 62 SIM *2 + 1 IT. IIM 11W 1IW + —G— 2 29'4 221* 22V* . .. 43 4«M 46 46M + 14 IMM 1I5M 114 -f XI S<4 »V* MM ~ 15 a JU-JU-' nsa»&*"' ' 428* «M + 4* GenPrec'Vi? rite fa OT8I II 1.12 GMTIli .40 GaPacItlc lb BMF A m ®'®- StdOllOh ra St PackMina StanWar 1.50 StavffCh 1.40 SttrlDrug .75 StevonsJP 2 55M 55Mc 55M - M 14 »M 74 +4* I5M 15M ISM — W —R— R?dirSy ’.Mg I U SUoIlJ 2.4 !JC tSSSfS ■ * ISM MM MM rif s+3 M. *44* *414 444* i-.:?,GAfe from Jakarta todp^ said organized rebel resistance ih -central Java appears/to have collapsed/ The repwu, sent through dip-1 lomatic ^Channels, said small! pocket^of rebel forces were still scattered throughout the central papTof Indonesia’s main island brft these were belibved to be lli "armed and poorly led. ★ ★ ★ The diplomatic reports said! an American businessman, who was not identified, drove the length of Java in the past two! days and found very little fighting. The American reportedly encountered rebel forces but found, them quite friendly. He reported' that many people he had spoken! to in central Java were supporters of Lt. Col. Untung, the leader of the attempt last week to oyerthrow President Sukarno, I MARLIN FASTBACK - A restyled grille and newly tHmjned interior are new features on the 1966 Marlin, presented today by American Motors C6rp^ Introduced as a mid-1965 model. Marlin continues its fast-back sty)ing theme, lt goes on sale Thursday at area American Motors dealers. Medicare Spurs Construction . By SAM,DAWSON AP Business News Analyst nKw YORK - Medicare, a ! growing population and medical I a I MEETING CALLED lapd surgical advances are com- sign,’’ said P. Whitney-Webb, °f|unit-of.USe packages. Jakarta Radio announced that pining to spark a boom in hos- the-.office of Max. O. Urbahn, * a * Sukarno had called a meeting.ofjpital building. . I Architects, inan interview, “is| “A helicopter landing area his political and military hign Many communities are study- to make them in effect industryWar the emergency entrance command Wednesday at ms ing both present overcrowding 4 218* 318* 318* - 8* . 3 4*8* 4*8* 4*8* .... —W-X-Y-Z— 5 714 7 . TW + 1 x3 148* 148* 148* ... * 398* 398* 388* ... 42 3314 32M 33M + 1 2 36 36 2* - I 4 424* 421* 424* +J 83 SIM STM 58 +P 1 42 42 42 -/' 7 3314 33M 33'4 + ’ (ti login 1 14 338* 33M 33M JX Cp .70 18 1778* 177M WM YngstSht 1.80 8 42M 421* 4248 Tenlth 1.40 *2 10114 KWM/tOl'/i opyrighted by The Assodata* Pr« Salat figum art unoHIcMl. Unless ottlarwlse noted, .tales ol — ends In the foregoing table art annual disbursements based on the lost quarterly or semi-annual declaration. Special or extra dividends or payments not deslg-njad os regular are/ Identified In th-tlng footnotes. / Also extra or/ oxtras. b—Annul. plus etock dividend. c-LIquktatlng md. d—Declared or paid In 1845 ’arable In stock during 1965, estimated Value on ax-dlvkland or ax-dlstrlby tlon data. *—Oaelarad or paid so »«r this ---- h—Declared or paid attar, stock dlvl or spilt Up. k—Declared or paid thii an accumulative Issue with dlvl In -arrears. n-New Issue, p—Paid yea'r./dlvidend omitted, deterred or no oetkm/tokon at last dividend meeting, r—Declared er pr" I dividend: t—Paid x—Ex dividend, y—Ex Dlvl > In full, x-dls—Ex dlstrlbu rights. xw-Without Ih wlrr ■ ............. -ants*wd—When dls- ..-Ibuted. wl—When Issued, nd—Next d~ dellvery. . .. -• ■- ■—■——*—■ mr receivership ir the Bankrupt nad by such coi Stocks of Local Interest Figured attar decimal points are eighths OVCR THE COUNTER STOCKS Quotations ffbm s^ho» NASD are representative Intdr-oealer prices ol approximately H a.m. inter-dealer markets -*■—** Htghout the day. Prices do retail markup, markdown or cx STOCK AVERAOES Compiled by The Associated Press ...... . j| L lad. Rails Util. Stacks Net Change .... +U +.4 +3 **— sn.i 174.5 ig.- *“* .HflR HM 491.| 171.2 ini 336.6 YMr Ago .. 18*5 High Law . . High BONO AVBEAOES Md bj Raid lad. Ulfl. Fen. L. Yd SI* (1.1 lttil 87.1 n.1 82.: iy 81.1 HM 87.1 8ti S2.l • M.f 101.8 87.5 82.1 82J ......go IDl MX 87.* 21J 82.8 Year Ago 82.7 1U.7 88.1 813 83.8 If I m » » 18*4 High ,82.8 103.5 Si 82.2 18*4 Law Bti 100.1 87.2 80.1 Hospital Boom Seen [medical research complex | planned. 11 stuffs and delivery of meals on trays. "A computerized pharmacy The trend in hospitar de-| frocefes Prescriptions by doc-'tors for their patients, using summer palace in Bogoi/ 40j miles south of the Jwdonesian capital. The meeting perted to shed some light ion the murky political situatloiy in Indonesia. Earlier, the Malaysian government radio reported that fighting between government forces and pro-Cojmnunist rebels had broken out in sections of central Java. The broadcast did not give the source of the information. The Radio/ Malaysia report said the rebels controlled several districts; including the Jogjakarta regibn 250 miles southeast of Jakarta. An earlier Malaysian report said army troops had retaken Jogjakarta after Comipunist elements captured it .V fhe army high command reportedly oniered the crack Sili-wangi Division into central Java to clear out the rebels. The latter’s main strength seemed to come from units of the region’ Diponegoro Division. CENTRAL JAVA A diplomatic report from Singapore said three key leaders of tile attempted revolt were in central Jaya: Col. Suherman, commander of the Diponegoro Division; Air Vice Marshal Omar Dhani, the pro-Commu-nist head of the Air Force, and Lt. Col. Untung, leader of the coup last Thursday. Radio Jakarta claimed that many men of the Diponegoro Division had surrendered to the government forces. Another Malaysian radio port said armed Communist units were Using guerrillp tactics to harass government troops along the main roads between Jakarta, Bogor and the mountain resort of Bandung, 75 miles southeast of Jakarta. Utility Company Wins Awbrd for Annual Report Consumers Power Co.’s annual report to stockholders has been named the best published by a large utility company in the 25th Annual Report Survey sponsored by Financial World, the nation’s oldest buhinqss and financial weekly. The bronze Oscar-oHndustry trophy marking this achievement will be presented to Consumers Power Co., Oct. 26, at a banquet in the New York Hilton HoteL and the pros jump in patients when Medicare More ople with more mon ey to spend for complexes which put the will speed the handling of vic-doctor and the patient and the tims of Long Island higliwqy necessary equipment in the accidents.” right place at the same time.” Among new techniques being At the new'Meadowbrook hos- installed or planned in many pital the architects plan a logis- hospitals are computers to be tics center which automates the used both for reference in-full cycle of incoming materials formation and for diagnosis. . and supplies. ' > BIG QUESTION-MONEY AUTOMATED HANDLING • | jj 'will all cost money. And for medical care,I “They will be distributed as]many a community the big and new ways required," Webb says, “with question is: where is the money DAWSON of treating ail- automated handling of food I coming from? ments, are putting a strain on ——-------------------------_____ ------------................— present facilities or making] (them obsolete. % f $ % >-4 Some cities plan to build new hospitals. Others are moving to expand present ones. Still others are studying designs and equipment that offer more and quicker services, meet 'doctor and nursing shortages by saving time, and adopt some factory, techniques for getting the most efficient u£e of space. The hospital of tomorrow may resemble a computerized production line. TO SPEND MORE Plans call for. spending $2.5 billion next -year for construct-hospitals or modernizing present ones. This would be $300 million more than the estimated outlay this year, in 1964 spending hit $2 billion, compared with 6L~biUion back in 1959. Sotnr predict MedicarS and population growth may push expenditures to $5 billion a year by 1970. Despite increasing demand for hospital care, neither the number of hospitals nor of beds has grown startlingly since 1955, although the number of-admissions has. t.Successful*! nvesting •' *s :*» * ' # ' «* or By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “I am 28 years old and have been in the market without much success for 3 years. I have odd lots of seven different stocks. This program doesn’t work. If a stock goes down, I lose, and if j it goes up, I don’t make much. I am thinking of selling all my shares and investing g $3,500 in one low-priced stock. What is your opinion of AMF; Sperry Rand; General Time; High Voltage; Alberto - Culver? Or would j you suggest any other stock I suggest Memphis, Tennessee, 3s of 1979 at par, rated AA and State of California (when issued) 3.30s of 1980, offered to yield 3.30 with the same high AA rating. (Copyright, 1965) Will Consider Project Pacts ... . *qa l on i City Commissioners tonight selling under $20 a share?’’ jwill ^ider three agreements & (with the Michigan State High- way Department for "the projected 1966 widening of ft q u a r e I* think the reason y have not had success with your The American Hospital Association puts the number of hospitals in 1955 at 6,956, with 1,604,000 beds and 21,073,000 admissions. Last year the number Of hospitals was 7,127, with 1,-696,000-beds, but 28,266,090 parents, tyere admitted. Thd secret of handling 7 million fnore patients, in 392,000 more beds, the association'says, is in improved handling meth-ods. Since 1946 the dumber of patients receiving liospital care has gone up by 75 per cent. Just after World Wat. II the average length of stay in a hospital was 9:1 days; in 1964 it was 7.7 days. federal! FUNDS ‘ Federal funds have helped’qi some Hiospitat building. In the fiscal year ending June 30,1965, Nearly $246 million of federal funds was used this way. In the current fiscal year some $303 million is expected to be spent. Medicare could well increase Unde Sam's generosity. stocks is that you are attracted to low-priced speculations, without too much background of knowledge. The stocks you. mention as replacements are mostly without speculative attraction—except possibly General Time and High1' Voltage. The only way I know, of for a young man like yourself to invest successfully is to seek good value—not low price. I advise you to switch your holdings to American Hospital Supply— which should have even greater growth with Medicare. Approximately 5,000 annual Even without - Medicare the reports were reviewed in 97 classifications in the 1965 competition, held to promote the improvement of shareowner communications. ties has been a big .factor. In East Meadow, Long Island, $40-million 901-bed ‘ Lake Road. As part of an over-all project to improve Square Lake Road from Telegraph to 175, the city will participate in improvements to portions of the road within the city limits. C i t y. Engineer Joseph E.. Neipling is scheduled to present agreements with the State Highway Department for the projected road alignment, permanent prohibition of parking and financial participation. Sqqare Lake Road Is to be reconstructed from a two-lane highway to a four-lane, divided. Q) “I own 50 shares of [limited-access highway. v Singer Co., at 91V«. Should II * ★ * N sell this stock-and take a big j In other business, a prelim-loss or hold? I am without I inary report is slated on the bids .dependents and would like to for a new aerial-ladder, piat-invest money from sale of form truck for the fire depart-mv home in tax-exempt hond^. ment.* What do you snggj|F^|Ss, [LaIso tonight, a proposed con-" i^wpet is to be presented between A) Smg^has sold down tedffig and the lat. jf«l‘y earnings-conscious ^lafket ter,s ^ of the M ,t because profits dechned in the ufa ette ^ Pine first half, mamly because of re-duced income from certain foreign operations. For the year [ as a whole, I believe they will show a gain and I would hold! this excellent stock for recovery. In the tax-exempt field!. News in Brief demand for new hospitals has been-growing. The rush of city] dwellers to suburban commuru- DoClOf Rummage Sale: First Presby-terjan Church, Birmingham, ' 1669 W. Maple. Thurs., Oct. 1, 9 a.m.-8 p.m.; Fri., Oct, I am. -5 p.m. —adv.- Rummage Sale: Thursday, hospital-1 Cl~l^ I jJlOet..7. 9 to li SL Andrew’s -2—I Tor 0/0/6 UniT Church, 5301 Hatchery Road. » —adv. TpAreriirti DrerilSren i Dr. Lynn^D/ Allai Jr. of 110: treasury rosilion Wenonah, was appointedLtoday! , . ' '" by Gov. George Romney to'a Delinquency Weapon _■ Washington (AP)-Tht c«h position three-vear term on the crippled! sponding date • v««r *go. s,children’s commission. j .COPENHAGEN (UPI) — A . A Pontiac optometrist for 15 years, Dr. AUen, 40, is a mem-*i?9Fite1i0 Y8*r w her of ttie Pontiac General Hos- x«T.tei iijei j8M*s.*8 pital Board of Trustees. 3lljt5t.588.433.84 316.735.436.241,741 * Or + wBM7U2i.i« 15.459,408,375.15! The appointment requires con; .. ____udes $282,00*.785.2* dtW nw sub-t— - - - - - led to statutory “ jfirmation by theState Senate. Danish doctor has suggested a weapon against juvenile delinquency. Dr. Arne Nordstad said injections * which wand make young offenders vontirfor several hours would - bymxt effective,” than prison./ Motors Among Gainers The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sojd by them In wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Wednesday. 'SfBRR Produce mum' Applas, crap, bu........ Applas, Delicious, Rad. bu....... Apples, Groaning, bu. ..... ..... Applas, JomImK bu.............. Apples, Maclntodfw early, bu.... Applas, Wolf River, bu., ........ Grapes’, Cdnoord, bk. btkt. Peaches, Elberta, bu. .,.... Peaches, KM Hauan ....:..T_,.... Peaches, Rgdafebi,M. ........... Pears, EartMtt. bu. . .......... Peart, beac, bu...... ..... Plums, Prune ................... Watermelon, bu. .......... ..... VEGETABLES Beans, green, bu................ Beans, Kentucky Wander, (8—ti 4"* *y Beane, Reman, bu. Beane, wax, bu. leatt, di. bchs. . Beets, tagpad, bu. . Broccoli, dt. Cabbage, Curly, bu. Cabbage, rad. bu. Cabbage Sprouts, bu. Cabbage, Std., bu. Carrots, dz. bchs. . Carrots, cello pok ... Cirrots, topped, bu. CeulHMwor, dz. ........ Celery, Pascal, dz. stalk! Celery, white, dz. crt. . Celery, white, dz. itelki Corn. swer* U| *“■ j Gourds, pk. bskt. Horseradish, pk. bskt................ Kohlrabi, dz. boht. ............... 1-M ' oaks, dz. bchs...... Okra, pk. btkt........ Onions, dry, 50-lb. bag Onion, green, dz. bchs. Onions, pickling, lb. ' Parsley, Curly, dz. bchs Pkratejr, gfcfctalR. .....IS 2:25 ». LETTUCE Cilery Cabbage, dz. Endive, bu. ................ Endive, bleached, bu. ...... Etcarola, bu. , ............ E scare le, bleadhad Lettuce, dlbb, bk. bskt..... Lettuce, Beaten, dz......... Poultry and Eggs DETROIT (API—Prices paid tor No. 1 live poultry: Heavy 18-18; light two hint 7; roast type 24-24M; broilers and tryei whites 18-20; DETROIT 1005 DETROIT (API—Eg* P“— dozen by first rr—'-“ CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (API - (USDA) v- L a special ted while Rock Fryers If Livestock DETROIT LIVRSTOCK DETROIT (API—(USDA)—Cattle most choice 900-1200 lb steers 25 75-27.50. Mixed good and choice 25-25.75. Gad 23.00-2544 Choice 000-800 lb. halters 24.00-25.00. . Hags TOO) U.S. 1,4 1 185-235 Rl borrows end gilts 2J.S0-MJ|< 1, 2 4 3 JCO-ZOO lb SOWS 20.25-31.50. ' Vealers 200; high choice to prime 35-31; choice 30-35; good 25-30. .* Sheep 1000; few lots choice around 100 . lb woo led lama 25.00. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (API—(USDA)—HOO! *.( butchera strong to nwetly 25 higher; 210-225 lb butchers 23.7W3.05; mixed 1-3 IMS* lbs WSVM) r1 s*** 23.25; mixed 1-3 3254 22.00; 2-3 450500 lbs 14.50-11-00. Cattle 13,000; (laughter , steers steady to '25. lower; .six toads prime 1,2001.400 i^*STnZ . choice 1,1001,350 lbs 26.25-27.50; good and choice 22.oo-24.wt; cu: id (laughter awn 5.500.00. THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER A 1965 TWENTY-TWO :I PONTIAC PRfcSS. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1965 Deaths in Pontiac, Neighboring Areas MRS. WESLEY BOWMAN .Service lor Mrs. Wesley (Catharine L.) Bowman, 74, of 194 W. Wilson was to be this afternoon at the.L. C. Friederich Funeral Borne, St. Clair with burial there in..the. Hillside Cemetery. Mrs. Bowman died Saturday after a brief illness. She was a member of the First Congrega-lionafChurch, St. Clair. > Surviving are a daughter Mrs. John Nabarrette with whom she made her home; three grandchildren;' six great - grand- p.m. Thursday at Oakland Avenue Utoted Presbyterian Church with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery by the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home, . Mr, Moon, assistant chief metallurgist at Pontiac Motor Division, died yesterday after a two-month illness. A graduate -of University of Michigan he whs an elder at the Oaklaml Avenue Church, and a member of American Society for Metals and Alpha Chi Sigma fraternity. __ Surviving are his wifeRuth children; and a brother Thomas!^8 parents Mr. and Mrf jq Bruso of Pontiac. MRS. HAROLD R. DAVIS loseph H. Moon of Pontiac; four children Mrs. Gerald Dashkin of Beverly Hills, Calif., Judith, Terry and Susan, all at home. Aim surviving are two grandchildren; and a sister. The family suggests any mo morials be made to the Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Memorial Fund. LINDA ANN REYNOLDS Service for Mrs. Harold R. (Iia Mae) Davis, 65, of 114 E. Howard will be 11 a.m, Thursday at the Thayer Funeral Home, Farmington with burial „ in Glen Eden Memorial Cemetery, Livonia. Mrs. Davis died Sunday after a long illness. i Prayers for Linda Ann Reyn- Suryiving besides her husband 0,d M daUghter of Mr. are four sisters and twolj^gjj^^m^pggg^ggj brothers. BABY BOY DEWEY Prayers for Baby Boy Dewey, infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Dewey of 161 Dwight weFe to Have been offered at 11 a.m. today at Ottawa Park I Cemetery, Independence Town-| ship. The baby was dead at birth Sunday. Surviving are the parents; two brothers Patrick and Donald, both at home; and grandmother Mrs. Stewart Dewey. GLENDON H. MOON Service for Glendon H. Moon, 52, of 73 Osceola will be at 1:30 Red Schism Still Evident in Speech Police Arrest Teen Fugitive Allegedly Kidnaped 2 Young Chicagoans BENTON HARBOR "(UPD -Police today arrested a teen-age fugitive from an Illinois training camp who allegedly kidnaped two Chicago youths and pistol-whipped and tortured one of them. * * * Both kidnap victims, year-old girl and 16-year-old boy, were found with the capee at a home here. The girl was not hyrt or criminally saulted, police said. MOSCOW (ft — Pravda published today's digest of rec remarks by Mikhail Suslov, viet Communist party theorist who has been in the forefront of the feud with Peking. His remarks indicated - relations with the Chinese party still are in a state of deep freeze. On the surface, Suslov’s remarks called for efforts to overcome differences between the two, to concentrate on what unites rdtber than divides Communists. But this argument already has been specifically rejected by the Red Chinese. Suslov renewed a Soviet bid for a world Communist unity meeting. Peking, which has been ignoring peace overtures and picturing Soviet leaders as ‘lackeys of U.S. imperialism," has refused to consider such a meeting without advance confession from the Kremlin that it has been wrong. 23 RD CONGRESS The question of Sbviet-Chinese relations is expected to be aired at the 23id congress of the Soviet Communist party, scheduled March 29. and Mrs. Frank Reynolds of 1138 Cherry Lawn will be of-fered at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Hun toon Funeral Home burjal, in Peiry Mount jfbrk Cemetery. The infant, ilislnce birth, $ied Sunday: \ Surviving besides the parents is a sister Vicki pt home. FRANK SELESKI Frank Seleski, 59, of 1882 Commonwealth died yesterday after a three-day illness, body is at the D: E. Pursley Funeral Home. An employe of Baldwin Rubber Co., he leaves two daughters, Mrs. Frances Clark mid Mrs. Dorothy Cunningham, both of Pontiac; and a sister. MRS. ROY SEXTON Service for Mrs. Roy (A| J.) Sexton, 39, of 2370 Mai Waterford Township will bq'LSO p.m. Thursday' at the Hjj Funeral Home with Perry Mount Park Cemetery. . Mrs. Sexton died yi Surviving are her husband; three daughters Mrs/ Royzelle Heverly and Mrs. Judy Gorham, both of Watepord Town-ship; and Charlotte Ann at home; and three grandchildren. Also surviving Are three sisters, Mrs. Georgina Badberry Clarkston, /Mrs. Isabelle Clark of Cass/City and Mrs. Lillian Hefferon of Waterford Township. / MRS. AUGUST F. SMITH Supervisors Vote Down Plan Nix Full-time Auditor Unit Post DOUBLE TAKE — Salesman Bob Hudson appears to be coming and going, but look again. A mirror at the bottom of the photo is responsible for the reflection deception. The set of legs reflected in the mirror do not belong to Hudson. The scene is a glass and mirror shop hi Indianapolis. Police declined to release the names of the three teen-agers. Officers told a strange tale of cruelty, kindness and uncertainty that led the 16-year-old fugitive to steal two cars, kidnap his victims at gunpoint, beat the boy and bum him with cigarettes, then drive here at the I Leonid Brezhnev, first secretary of the Soviet Communist party, handed down the policy line on the Chinese question and other issues likely to come up at the congress to the Soviet Communist party’s central committee. Suslov’s remarks were th< first published on the Chinese girl’s suggestion and treat his question sipce Brezhnev’ two victims to an outdoor {speech and were believed likely movie. to have followed the same line POLICE TRAP sis Bredmev’s. He climaxed the adventure by at a re“nt tario. alkine into a notice tran. meetm« M not LMrs. Aug! th, 88, of 263 Edison will be at 3:30. p.m. tomorrow at Sparka-Griffin Chapel with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mrs. Smith died yesterday after a brief illness. / JOHN DAVIES MIT .FORD — Service for John Davies, 71, of 190 Marlene, will be/1 p.m. tomorrow at Richard-son-Bird Funeral Home. Burial will be in Milford Memorial Cemetery. Mr. Davies died Sunday. He was a retired employe of Seal-:st Dairy Co. of Detroit. MRS. HENRY DUCKWTTZ IMLAY CITY - Service for Mrs. Henry (Emily) Duckwitz, 86, of 550 Main was to be 2 p.m. today at Muir Brothers Funeral Home. Burial will be in Imlay Township Cemetery. Mrs. Duckwitz died Saturday after a long illness. She was a member of the Liberty Street Gospel Church, Lapeer. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Beryl Wehrle of Holly and Mrs. Thelma Clark of Imlay City; a son, Basil of Attica; a sister, Mrs. Hattie Duckwitz of Imlay City; two brothers; and five grandchildren. KENNETH H. MAY Birmingham Firm Submits Apparent Low Paving Bid A ft A Asphalt Paving Co.i huge development project — of Birmingham submitted the recommended for approval by apparent low bid of 826,717 last! the township planning commit-night for the Indian woods Sub-j sion — was postponed from division street • improvement next Monday to Nov. 1 on project. the request of the applicant’s The bid was only slightly more attorney, than tiie construction estimate nMion undertaking of $26,512. | ^ OAKLAND TOWNSHIP—Service for Kenneth H. May, 44, of 259 Pine will be 2 f>:m. tomor-the Pixley Memorial Chapel, Rochester. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. May accidental! drowned Friday in northern On- walking into a police trap. The boy drove here at the girl’s suggestion when he admitted to his victims that he “did not know what to do with them,” police said. The girl told him she had a cousin in Benton Harbor and promised not to tell the Chinese by name in the portions quoted by Pravda, but his reference was clearly to them. STATES BELIEF The Soviet Communist party, a he said, “has done and will do II [everything possible to overcome of the abduction if he would not the differences in the ranks of harm her and would leave them Communists. It believes that at her cousin’s home. what units Communists consid- * * * erable exceeds that which sep- But they went to an outdoor jarate^ them." movie Jiere first, police said. The portion of Suslov’s re-1 From there the girl telephoned!marks carried by Pravda men-her cousin she was bringing |tioned no date for the proposed some friends over. j unity meeting. He was an inspector at Pontiac Motor Division. Surviving are his wife, Ruth L.; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin .May of Pontiac; brothers, Lqe of Waterford Township and Francis of A burn Heigits; and three sisters, Mrs. iEarl Nysley of Pontiac, Mrs/ Crystal Grant of Union The only other bid opened at last night’s Waterford Township Board meeting, totaling 828,514, was submitted by the Oakland Pavbig Co. of Berkley. Both bids were referred' to township engineer consultants, Johnson & Johnson, for further study and a subsequent report at next Monday’s meeting. * A * The three streets earmarked for blacktopping in the special assessment district project are Indianview Drive, Shawnee Lane and Shawnee Court. In