T/if W§pfh9r ».l. WMlMr tiNrMV PcraCMt Pv%elMid)r,eoid THE PONTIAC ^ MCOIOIL XT XV-CiOJ^ Edition VOL. 121 NO. 227 ★ ★ ★ ★ THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 80, 1963 —58 PAQES 1(K Republicans Hold Hopes for Tax Plan Despite Response LANSING Ml—Gov. George Romney and Republican legislative leaders held out hopes today for their sharply revised tax reform pro^am after watching it receive a cool response in its first test. The program—built along lines originally proposed by major changes, including an increase in state aid to schools—was headed for a second scrutiny by GOP caucuses in the House and Senate. ^ In its first ©cposure yesterday, the program encountered mixed reaction but failed to gain anywhere near the degree of support GOP Outlines New Program Romnty, Forty Chiefs Revise Proposals LANSING W-Here is an outline of the tax reform program as revised by Gov. George Romney and the 10-*iember Republican leadership committee in the legislature: • Income taxes of 2 per ccat OB IndWtdBab, SH per cent oa corporatieBs and six per cent on financial institn-tioas, effecth'e Jaa. 1, IIM, bat with a r^erendnm in No- a eoastUatioaai cefliag oa all iaeoine taxes. e A 10 per cent across-the-board reduction on ali general property taxes (not special .as-aesements) with local taxing units to be reimbursed by the state. ir * w a A three-year program of increasing state aid to local school districts by incnasiqi the deductible miUage 14 mill per year and increasing |ier pupil aid by 7ayear;atq^|«2|nUlisaIi new funds for Schools over the next tfafse hscai years. cmr iNCxnMg; TAXES a Local op^ city income taxes of up 1 per cent on Individual ru^iits, and up to Vt per centi on nonresidents working in 9)e city, effective Jan. 1. 1965. a Loeal optioM tor eonaties |o impose an aato licensd fee of np to Oi to be distrlbated to local govommeaU for road ass taking the burden off general funds, and a 1 per cent tax OB real estate traasac-tisas. a Give local assessing units of government option to provide retired citizens over 65 with either a deforal or a clear ex-mnption of a portion of property on homesteads. No reim-bursemoit by the state. WWW a Exemption of grocories and prescription drugs from the state’s 4 per cent sales tax, the loss to local governments to (Continued on Pa^ 2, Col. 1) In Today's Pr^s ' SogrtAoHofl . Ris-ri Georgia town bitterly battlef inl^gration-isto-r-PACiCA frai/ OofSwater may an-nornice poUtieal jdans ■oonar tfaal saiMeted page C-IA VhfBaiHw Three ^ ndufaig as CoDf -atndsbes govern-menttroej^-PAGEAA A»l6a^l^..f...A4 msms i.i, ^ Republican leaders had ho^d for. “It didn’t wbi any medals — bur it wasn’t a totd flop, eith-said one member ot the Republican'Vteaderahip commit-formed last week to end the tax reform stalemate. IRON OUT DIFFERENCES The 10-member committee met again with Romney last night in an effort to irm out some objectiona raised by Republican lawmakers in the cau- laterest ia t centered chi^ ! changes in prop- ! inchuioB of state scbosi I snuanting to some |tt Where Romney had caDed for a 20 per cent reduction in school property taxes to be rmted to districts by the state, the committee proposed an across-the-board 10 per cent reductioa in al! general property taxes, w w w This would be tied to an increase in state paymenfs of $7 pupil over the next three years plus a V4-tniU increase per year in the deductible null-age equalization factor. This could cost |7 million in 19MS, 114 millioa In 190546, and 921 miUion in 106547. Romney apparently had acceded to the esaaalttoa’s wishes in the area ef pr^ erty tax and lacinslon ef earlier fat the day that the FBI Arrests Two on Spy Charges ar nwMax VETERAN ACTOR DIBS-Adolpbe Menjou, whose acting career spanned abnost 50 years, died in Hollywood yesterday at the age of 73 of hepatitis. Menjou played many major roles and was noted for his dapper dress. able to him. He said it met his basic demands for any accq>table program: tax relief for low income groups, tax relief and equity for business, property tax relief and provisions for hx^l onits of government to raise needed revenues. WWW “I would consider some parts of the new program to be improvements over the first one,’’ the governor said. The new program retains ate income taxtt of 2 per cent on individuais, 314 per cent on corporations and 0 per cent on financial institutions as its central feature. Space Official Sees K Fraud Sayi Moon Move AAeant to Slow U. S. WASHINGTON (UPI) - A leading space adviser to President Kennedy believes Premier Khmshdiev’s recent space statement was an attempt to slow down the U.S. lunar project, rather than a Soviet with-irawal from the space race. Dr. Edward C. Webb saU yesterday that the Rasslans have a "strwg space pre-^am and are concentrating •att. IWre is aMUag la toia (Khrashchev’i remarkaj to iadicale otherwiM and an reason to believe they are Mjiek-ealag." | Welsh is executive secratqry of the National Aeronauticf aiM Space Council wfaidi advises ident Kennedy on U.S. space programs. In an interview with United Press International, he First Freeze Hits Area, but IfII Warm Up Temperatures nosedived to a freezing 31 degrees at 7 a.m. today. But the weathermaa said tonight will he somewhat warmer, the low about 44 with skies partly cloudy. Tomorrow’s high is expected to reach 10 with skies partly overcast. For the next five days, temperatures will average 3 to 7 degrees above the normal high of S3 to 55 and normal low ef 35 to 30. No important day-to-day dtanges are predktod through the weekend. Generally mild conditions are expected most days. Dry conditions will persist with no precipitation of quence during this period. The thermometer reading at 2 p.m. today was 54. Swth African Judgt Kills 10 tndictnwnts | niETORIA, Sotdh Africa terise aaythiag he saU as aa Lansing Chief of Police Charles Stragier said Michrile identified Clay as her abductor when she picked him out of a group in a police lineup. ★ ★ w “She cringed and held her nwther,” he said. The 8-year-old brother of the victim, Frank, who saw her snatch^ from the mother’s car, also nude tentative identification of the man, he said. Romance Is Sunk DALLAS (UPI) - Neiman-Marcus specialty store today offered the “ultimate in togetherness’’ in its CSiristmas catalog — a “his-and-her” submarine. The two-placer cruises at seven m.p.h. and sells for $18,- CHARGEIWohn William Butenko, 3$, (right), an American electronics engineer, and Igor A. Ivanov, 33, a chairffeur for a Russian trkde relations oiganization, were arrested by the FBI last night on espionage charges. Way Is Smoothed for Traffic on Huron Agents Seize U.S. Engineer, Russian Driver 7 Months of Work Topped With Capture in Englewood, N. J. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (if) — The United States demanded today the immediate departure from U.S. territory of three members of the Soviet U.N. delegation accused of spying. NEWARK, N.J. UF) — FBI agents have capped seven months of around-the-clock work with the arrests of an American electronics engineer, cleared to handle top 4 secret material, and a Russian chauffeur on espionage charges. Tliey were arrested last night after a rendezvous near an dd stone railroad station in Englewood, N.J. Two Soviet diplomats serv-tag with the Soviet mtsotoa to Huron is again a “through” street in downtown Pontiac. The barricades that have detoured through traffic from Wayne to State since Sept. 10, came down today 4as most of perimeter rokd paying at Huron and Cass was completed. More perimeter road intersections are slated for similar treatment between now and Ford Sales Up, but Not Profits Last; NIb# M#nthk Wert: Btggtif Ivor DETROIT (AP)-Eoid Motor Co. set a nine-months’ sales rd this year, but Its profit picture wasn’t as rosy as that of Oirysler or Gepoal Motors. The accused spies, charged early today with “delivering to a fordgn government information relating to the nationa] defense of the United States,” are John william Butenko. 38. of Orange, N.J., and Iger A. Ivanov, 33, of New York City. RUSSUN PARENTAGE Butenko, a bachelor of Russian parentage, is a $14,700-a-,1-., contTol adnalnlstrator for day to -tohn Gusman, intemaUonal Electric Con>. SagkMW, closed to through traffie from Oaklaad to Fair-grove siaco Sept. $1, is scheduled to be t^ened Sator-day. Construction crews are scheduled to mpve to the other side on Oakland tomorrow and on Perry and Mj. Clemens Satur- ANALY^ TOUR—Pontiac was a major stop yesterday on a tour aponaond by Consumers Power Co. for 36 representatim of major eastern investment and brokerage houses. VidUng Pontiac Motor DivialoB wera (from left) Robert P. foiggs, Consumers executive vice president, Tbinnas A. Herbert of Bankers Trust Co., New York, and Charles F. Brown, Consumers Pontiac Division mao-* ager. (Saaalory Page 2). last of the aattoa’s three biggest aato maken to file Its fiaaBcial report for the first three qnarters of IMS. 'All reports agreed tbe auto business has been very good. Dollar sales by both Ford and General Motors for the three quarters were records. For CSirysler, they were tbe highest since 1957. ♦ w ★ Ford found itself in the unusual situation of doing more dollar volume that it did In tbe first nine months of 1962 and having less profit to show for It. PROFITS LESS Ford sales for Ute first nine months this year were almost $IJ billion with |Mt)fito of $346 million, or $8.14 a rfuue. The previous record for a nine-month period was in 1962 when sales were about $5.8 billion, with profits of $350 million, or $3.18 a share. Far the th year, Fsrd prefUs were 888,' 708,8M sr tt cents a share, eempored with tSZ.M0,N6 sr 74 cents a share ia the Hkc quarter test year. CaossUd-atod sales far the qaarter ware $1,78I,7MM ■UShUy higher than the |1.747,8M4I0 to the like perM hMt year. Ford HoA dropped In value, after tbe lower earnings were reported, from a 54V4 closing on the New York Stodc Exch^e to a 52Ts closing on tbe Pacific Coast Stock Exchange. ★ * * There was no comment on the decline in profito hi tbe report to Ford diareholders. whkh was signed by Henry Ferd II. _ -----------ear- Cammluiwt. TanlfM. W4ttr4«r« ScD44t. I pjm. city traffic engineer. e e -k Contractors have been paving half of the latter three streets, restricUng traffic to two lanes at perimeter road interaections. WIDER ‘DETOURS’ Marlin Sumher, assistant city engineer, said that motorists should find the new, two-lane ‘detours” a little wider and (Ckmtinued on Page 2, Col. 8) apprehended by^ FBI, bat they were releaieij hecauM,af their diplomatic inmnnity. Seized in the itusslans’ car were a briefcase that contained information about a secret Air Force contract and a liny document camera designed tq operate from the car’s cifnette of Paramus, N.J. Ivaaev, married and father of a 6-year-oM daughter, was a chauffeur for Amtorg, a Soviet agency that handles U.S.-Soviet trade relations. He came to the United States to March 1982. U.S. Commissioner Theodore Kiscoras at Rutherford ordered both men held in $100,000 bail pending action by a federal (Continued on Page 2, Ctol. I) From Rags to Riches , JanilorOuleamsMayor I NEW YORK (UPI)—The income of a Brooklyn High School custodian last year topped that of Mayor Robert F. Wagner, is was reported yesterday. Eugene E. Hult, superintendent of design, construction and physical plant for New York City, identified the high-priced jan-» itor as D. Paul Bishop, 66. Huit said Bishop made $53,000 as against $50,000 fw Wagner. Tbe only public official in the nation with a higher salary is the President. Holt said K was reported tost week that Bishop-tuper-visor of a 15-meadwr ^i-tertol staff at Bushwick High 8choe5-aiade $43,Mi. Hew-ever, a double cheek ei the eoatract arraogemeats revealed the kigber figare. A special commission appointed by Gov. Netoon A. Rodcefeller has been investigating the high cost of custodians and has turned up several instances of where custodiens made nnore than $40,000 yearly. WWW About ^ custodians have been subpoenaed for questioning the investigation in which it has been found that at least that many janitors earned at least $25,000 tost year. FLAT SUM Although the custodians have to pass Civil Service testa, they sreshidependent contractors who receive a flat sum to clew> the choob. The ameoat toctades lal-aries for helpers aad for equipmeat. The ceahractori k^ the rest qs salaries. About 850 custodtoas are on-der ceatract to tbe cHy. ■ The board of education expects to begin negotiations Friday to readjust amounts paid for school cleaning and to provide a UmitaUoD of about $K.-000 for the aiinual salary of a A?—^ M THE PONTIAC l^RESS. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 90. xm C6ng Crushes Unit; Three GIs Missing SAIGON, Seath VM Nam (AP) — Communlit guerrillas smashed a crack South Vietnamese tadk force Tuesday and probably captured the three U.S. Army advisers with the 120-man taisk force. ♦ * * llte three Americans, listed as missing and believed captured, were two offlcers and an enlisted medic. Stragglers returning from the rout said both officeia had been wounded early in the fight—one in the head and the other in the leg. A second government force of about 200 men, operating only a few thousand yards away, learned of the battle too late to help. U.S. authorities said Communist radio jammers knocked out both the main channel and the alternate channel on all local military radios. BATTUE COSTS The operation cost the Vietnamese Special Forces an estimated 20 killed, 30 wounded and County Air Service by 70—but Where? Pontiac Municipal Airport or Allen Airport — which should be devdoped into a major airfield serv^ Oakland County by 19707 TVs is what a coaatywide ■tady of fatare airport aeeds is intended to shew, according to Charles Edwards, Aair-maa of the Conafy Board of Sapervioors Aviatka Committee. This committee has been given the Job of recommending what the board of supervisors should do widi the county’s recently acquired sod airfield, in Orion Township. Yesterday, the committee met with engineering representatives to weigh qualifications for carrying out tbe proposed study. FOUR REPRESENTATIVES Six firms were Invited to the meeting. Four sent representa-Uvas. One said his firm was only fc-r GOP Outlines New Program be reimbursed by the state, effective July U IfM. BUSINESS AcnvmES tax a Repeal of the business activities tax. a Repeal of the state intangibles tax, either totally, or in part to preserve some revenue from tbe largest taxpayers, tbe state to reimburse local governments some lOVk million lost annually. a Incorporatton of tbe so-called IS-mill bill, a measure implementing the new constitution, into the program. It provides that counties may increase their annual millage limit from 15 to 18 mills if voters approve permanent formulas for alloca- interested in doing actnal engineering that might be entailed in any expansion. Two firms combined a single offer to perform the study. A representative of the (ourth firm said his organiation wouldn’t be able to begin study for at least three months due in other commitments. •NEW START ’The combined offer of two firms recommended a “fresh, new start’’ at determining avia-ticn needs in Oakland County. This the committee is trying to avoid. It wants a study based on a compilation of existing data. Members said they expected to learn how much of this data is availabla when they meet with the County Plaiming Commission ’Tuesday morning. Ex-Con Admits Killing Woman in Burglary Try MnXAND, Tex. (AP) - A youthful ex-convict has admitted killing Mrs. Fred Turner, wife of a wealthy oilman and race horse owner. She was bludgeoned during a burglary attempt. Police said James L. Marion, 22, was charged with mnrder. He told newsmen in the county jail last night, *T don’t want to talk.” Mrs. ’Turner, 68, so badly beaten about the face that it was first thought she .had been shot, was killed in the family’s palatial home yesterday. Mrs. Turner’s daughter, Mrs. Clarence Sharbauer Jr. was knocked unconscious by the attacker when he fled the mansion. The Weather Foil U. S. Weather Bnrean Report PONTUC AND VICINITY - MosUy sunny and a little warmer today. High 58. Partly cloudy not so cool tonight, low 48. Partly elondy little temperature change ’Thursday, high 18. Light variable winds becoming southerly 5 to 15 miles per hour late this afternoon and tonight then west to northwest 18 to 15 miles per hour Thursday. 12 missing and presumed captured. Heavy weapons lost included a 60-mm mortar. Viet Cong losses were unknown. “The day ended with the enemy in command of the field," a high-ranking American officer said. “He had plenty of time to get his own casualties out of the way along with prisoners from our side, before we could get "back in.” Names of the missing Americans were not announced immediately. The U.S. casualty list rose to four late Tuesday when the U.S. Air Force pilot of a light spotting plane was hit by an enemy machine gun. The pilot flew back to his base and was evacuated to Saigon. SAME AREA The fight was in the same general area 140 miles southwest of Saigon where another government unit took a bad beating Ocf. 19. Some 40 Vietnamese troops were killed and 13 Americans wounded in that battle. ★ ★ ★ All day today, patrols and spotting planes combed the marshy rk» fields, canals and patches of palm jungle where the fight took place, but they made no contact with the guerrillas. Tracks were spotted in all directions, but there was no indication what happened to the Americans or the other captives. TTie government unit had good intelligence about the Viet Cong, and only the final, vicious cla^ came as a surprise, American sources said. NATIONAL WEATHER-Occasional rain is expected tonight in the central Mississippi Valley and in western Washington while showers are forecast for the Northern and Central Rockies. It will continue cool in tbe Atlantic states and the Northern Plains. Wanner weather is expected in the Southern Plains and the Ohio, Tennessee and Central and Lower Mississippi valleys. FBI Arrests 2 as Spies ((^ntinued From Page One) grand jury. ’They pleaded innocent. * ★ Butenko, perspiring, complained about photographers in Kiscaras’ office. “If they keep on taking pictures, they’re going ' ruin my life,” he told the commissioner. MORE RELAXED Ivanov, more relaxed than Butenko, smiled and asked per-missiolfi to tel^hone the Soviet consulate in New York City, just across the Hudson River. The prisoners were fingerprinted and then taken to Hudson County Jail, Jersey City. The two Soviet diplomats were brusque when released from FBI custody here, despite the FBI’s offer to provide them transportation. * w * ‘The conduct of the FBI agents was very rude,” snapped Yuri A. Romashin, 38, third secretary of the Soviet U.N. mission. His companion, Gleb A. Pavlov, 39, an attache of the mission, had nothing to say. STAFF MEMBER The FBI complaint also named a staff member of the Soviet mission, Vladimir I. Olenev, but he was not apprehended. The 01 d fashioned Erle-Lackawanna Railroad station in Englewood was an unlikely setting for Tuesday night’s drama. Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy and FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover gave this account of the cat-and-mouse activity: FBI agents watched from the shadows as Butenko and the Russians met in the station parking lot and then strode away. The agents moved in, collaring Butenko in his car and Pavlov and Ivanov in their automobile. Romashin was seized nearby, where he was posted as a lookout. * w * In the rear seat of the Russians’ car was a briefcase that Butenko brought to the meeting, containing data relating to a ‘highly sensitive Air Force contract being handled by the International Electric Corp.” Tbe document camera also was in the Russian car. Tbe first mcetiag ef the ae- NOT A MARK—Rep. Ed Foreman, D-Tex., grins as he looks in a miirror yesterday after, he says, R^. Henry B. Gonzalez, D-Tex., aimed a punch at his head in a House lobby. Foreman said he ducked and the punch landed on his shoulder. House Texan: Is Over Fight WASHINGTON (AP) - Rep. Henry Gonzalez is ready to fight, either “Marquis of Queensberry rules or alley fight rules.” But his intended o^w-nent. Rep. Ed Foreman, says, 'As far as I’m concerned, its over with.” So no rematch of ’Tuesday’s one-punch fight just off the floor of the House of Representatives is In prospect. Gonzalez and Foreman are both Texans. YOUNGEST MEMBER Fm-eman is the youngest member of the House at 29, and husky. He is a Republican who espouses conservative causes. Gonzales is 47, a .Democrat who espouses liberal causes, and the 26 Financiers Taken on Tour by Consumers A group of eastern investment analysts who toured the Consumers Power Co. service area yesterday said they were impressed by what they saw in Pontiac and Oakland County. Robert P. Briggs, Consumers executive vice president, said the group of 28 commented frequently about the private and public facilities and improvements in the Pontiac area. Briggs, who was accompanied by Charles F. Brown, Consumers Pontiac Division manager, said the idea behind the tour was to show that “Michigan is a good place to work and play, and one of the best places in the country in which to create iw jobs.” * * * He said the 26 all represented major financial institutions frequently involved in business transactions with Consumers and other major Michigan industries. LOCAL SIGHTS LocM points of interest seen in yesterday’s visit were downtown and shopping center retail areas, nfw Ix^ and office construction, city and county facilities and public works. Lunch and a tour of plant operations was sponsored by Pened next is in some dispute, but in the speak-'’s lobby jqst outside the House chamber Gonzalez wound up giving Foreman a single punch on the shoulder. MAN TO MAN “I’d still like to have it out with him man to man, but he’s joto—that’s Spanish for yellow-livered sissy,” Gonzalez said. “I asked him to take off his glasses but he wouldn’t. In fact, he put on his glasses as soon as he saw me coming over.” Foreman, discussing the incident later, smiled and said, “I played four years of college football. I’m 6 feet 4 and 200 pounds and I exercise regularly.” Gonzalez said he weighed in at 174V4. ★ * w Foreman said, “I’m sorry the folks of San Antonio (Gonzalez’ home city) have such an irresponsible hothead representing them in Congress.” “The only intelligent way to continue this is to discuss and debate; I think we’ve progressed beyond the use of clubs and fists.” JFK Praises Compromise House GOP Wary of Dems on Rights Bill Birmlngharti Area News Schooi Board Secretary Submits Resignation BIRMINGHAM ~ Ridiard P. Barnard, Birmin^uun Bear ' of Education secretary, has submitted his resignation to Board President E. Rm Hanson. Mrs. Louise C. Adams of. WASHINGTON (AP)-HMiae Republicans kept their fingers crossed today as they received administration' praise for helping to launch a strong clvQ rights bill in Congress. The RepuMlcans have warned the administration all pledges of support for the compromise measure are off if the Denoo-crats seek to make any political gain out of civil rights at their expense. ★ ★ ★ At the moment, though, bipartisanship was holding firm and the long bottled-up legislation finally began to move Arougb the louse. Even with President Kennedy, Speaker J(dm W. McCormack and Republican Leader Charles A. Halleck behind it, however, the far-readiing compnnnise biU faces delays and obstacles. MID-NOVfiMBER Tlie most optimistic estimate heard after the House Judiciary Ck>mmittee approved the bill by a 23-11 vote Tuesday was that Mr, Adams has been serving it would be mid-NOTember be- on the steering committee of I to replace Barnard as a imstee. Barnard, an attorney who lives in Franklin Village, said out-of-town litigation has caused him to miss board meetings with increasing frequency. ★ ★ ★ A heavier work load, he noted, is not permitting him to devote the time to board matters that he feels they deserve. TRUSTEE SINCE ’» Barnard has been a trustee since 1958, serving as secretary since 1960. e Barnard’s 1882- 63 term. Mrs. Dean Beier, a Detroiter Found Dead of Monoxide Poisoning A 27-year-old Detroit man was found dead of asphyxiation yesterday in a car parked in a field behind a farm at 3600 Sleeth in Ck)mmerce Township. Sitoriff’s deputies said a hose ran from the exhaust into the trunk of the car. Robert G. Cline, 14895 Rockdale, was pronounced dead of carbon monoxide poisoning by Dr. Wellington C. Gibson. - A girl on horsebadc discovered the car about 5 p.m. Cline had been dead about four hours, according to the coroner. fore it gets to the House floor. Other estimates made it earfy December. The time will be needed to write a report on the voluminous measure and hold hearings in the Southern-dominated Rules Chmmittoe. The biggest obstacle remains the Senate, however, where it is accepted as fact that a determined Southern filibuster will have to be broken by a two-thirds majority vote if any biD is to be passed. The swe^g nature of the bill makes that questionable. Many observers doubt that there is enough time left to pass civil rights legislation in this sesskm. Tabbed a compromise between a tough subcommittee bill and more ntoderate measures introduced by Republicans, the bill that emerged from the Judiciary Committee proved stronger than the original administration bill. It retained several provisions from the subcommittee bill, including one that would create a federal commission empowered to ban racial discrimination in employment in private industry. The commission would have to go into court to get an Injunction carrying out its findings, however, instead of having its own enforcement powers, as in the subcommittee bill. Youth Is Arrested for Obscene Calls An 18-year-o)d Walled Lake youth pleaded guilty in Municipal Court today to making obscene telephone calls to a 26-year-old woman. Stuart R. Thylor, 2478 Mas-sena, appeared before Judge Cecil McCalhun and wiO be sentenced Nov. 8. He was released on personal bond. Taylor was arrested at 8:45 p.m. yesterday after tbe woman, on the advice ot police. the Citizens’ Elemen^ Curriculum Study Committee during the past year, w * A past president of the University of Michigan Alumnae Gub in Birmingham, she was PTA president of the Bloomfield Village Elementary School in 196041. She is the wife of Birmingham pediatrician Dr. Frederick M. Adams. They have five children, four of whom attend Birmingham PubHc Schools. The fifth is a student at Albion College. The Birmingham PTA Council has served public notice that it stands against those who encourage drinking and smoking among teen-agers. The council’s board passed a resolution statfav that it is MSU Gets Project on Plant Life EAST LANSING (*) - Michigan State University today nounced it will conduct a large scale basic research project on plants for the Atomic Energy Involved wfll be the construction of about a |^mil-lion research laboratory, a staff of some 98 persons and a budget of approximately |1 million a year by 19T. The researdi will be aimed at understanding in detail bow plants live. The understanding is expected to furnish answers to questions about how radiation affects plants and bow damage from fallout to the nation’s food crops could be minimized in the event of a nuclear war. Additionally, it is hoped MSU had agreed to meet hirn fm a'researchers can find plants date, Lt. Fred Goines and patrolman Guy White of the Pontiac vice squad were waiting when the youth ai^roached the woman. 45 Years, 1 Accident BATH, England (UPI) - Herbert Carpenter, 77,' Bath’s oldest cab drhrer, was ordered to take a new driving test yesterday after he admitted driving carelessly before his taxi strudc a wall — his first accident in 45 years of driving. With Price Tag,on Tiny Parcel Legion Blocks Downtown loop Street accerdiag to the FBI com-ptehit, M April 21, at a res-tavaat in tbe UMih Jersey rural csomunlty of Norwood. The bespectacled Butenko has worked for Intematianal Electric since March 1980. Ponttec’s Cook-Nelson American Legion post last night thnew a roudbk>ck across the propo^ interior loop road designed to circulate tr^ic Inside the perimeter road. CRy officials got a tetter from the Legtea pattteg a ' ^ of $U4M sa a trteagalar parcel at Oaklaad and Sag-riaaw oa wUeb tbe legtea’s Civil War statue stands. “The land is a key parcel in the extension of Lafayette to Ferry,” explained City Enfldneer Jose^ E. Neipiing. “Without it' we couldn’t complete the inh^ dreulator (La-fayettet Perry, Pike and Wayne).’’ SUGGESTS DONATION > Neipiing laid he thougitt “it would be a real dvicminded gesture for the American Legion to donate the'parcel to tbe dty." matter over to City Attorney William A. Ewart Neipiing was asked what he thought of the $15,000 price tag. “The parcel has no value,” he said. “It has no use, eacept maybe to put a statue on.>^It is too small for a.... TORCH SITE The oared abOi site of^omiap^^ United Fund t«^ smd‘'Chrlstmtt tree. WWW tt lies squarely in'the path of the proposed toterior cirailator and cannot be bypassed without cutting into downtown stores or the First Baptist Church of Pontiac. WWW The city has agreed to move the dvfl war statue to the Wis- which largely exclude r^oac-tive materials or plants which concentrate on them and could be used to scavenge the earth. Either type could help to eliminate radioactive materials from the diet of men following a nuclear war. BIOLOGY PROGRAM Dr. Richard Byerrum, MSU dean of natural sciences, said.of-ficials of the Atomic Energy Commission visited several sites and selected MSU as the most desirable. Favoring the university, be said, was its strong biological science program. The research will be led by a director and about eight pro- “uBdterabiy opposed to the prevailing practice of mlMTs bl vi dMfchi^'statotos.’* In a separate resolution, the board condemned the practice “by which minors are aUe to procure liquor, whether through direct, illegal sale or through devious channels of accommodation.” WWW Board members noted, however, that the problem of enforcement lies in the hands of the police. Neglect Pair Gets 90 Days Saying that no sentence could equal the punishment imposed by memory. Circuit Court Judge Frederick (j. Zlem today nwM out maximum 90-day ^ terms to a Waterford Township couple who left three children alone the night they died by fire. Sentenced were Mrs. Harriet Kitties, i divorcee, her boyfriend, George h' ko. Their guilty pleas to a misdemeanor charge of contributinf to neglect of ntinors wen $e-cepted Oct. 15 as their trial On a manslaughter charge was about to begin. WWW “No punishment meted out by is court can ever equal that which each of you will undoubtedly suffer the rest of your livss whw you think of what your neglect has caused,” Judge Ziem said. Mrs. Kitties’ three sanD children perished In a fin itet gntted the bonse at 182S Maase where she and Mishenko Uved while they were drinking at a nearby tavern. The two were accused of negligence in leaving the yCung-sters locked in tlF house. Nei^ bors who tried torencue the chfl-dren after fire broke out could not get in. WWW A cigarette left snKHildering in a sofa was believed to be cause of fire. Agreement to accept the pleas to the misdemeanw charge by Oakland County Prosecutor George F. Taylor touchdd off a storm of protest by neighbors and relatives of Mrs. Kitties' divorced husband, who was the father of one of the dead children. sers. The operating bodget will be about $M8 J88 for tbe first year and about $1 million a year by tbe time the program is fnl|y operative. Under terms of tiie agreement, MSU will construct a $2-milK lion plant research laboratory of about 63,000 square feet with built-in Mqn Injured After Car Overturns in Highland A Milford man is in satisfactory condition at Itontiac General Ho^ital with a leg Injury after his car ovolumed ye^-day on North Milford Road in Rainer H. Baetx, 21, of 160 Panorama tarid sherifTs deputies he swerved to avoid hitting another car in finot of him. Way Is Smoothed lor Traffic on Huron 4 (Continued From Page One) much smoother on Oakland and -Perry. Mt. Clemens is a boulevard-type street. Curbs and gutters will be ^ completed on tbe Cass-Haroa intersection under normal' .. traffic conditions. Cass, from about Lafayette south, will become the perimeter road. The big highway starts at.' Parke and South Saginaw sti-etching north via Parke and curving around t h e northern edge of the central business dite trtet to mtet Cass on ttte watt •Ida. I1NAL BBdTON Th8 third and final aaeUon it Cass extended south from Huron to Ssflniw. It 18 ourranb ty slated to go under contraot early next swing. Traffic will move one way to a counterclockwise dlrcetlon around the perimeter roed OAOi it is opened. An lalerler teep, to eirctttoto traffle out wty to tbe epporito dlreetiea toiMe tbe pertotetor reed, Is aha aeartog toe eeto It tovolvae < _ Mith ona block to Lafiyttte to Perry ^t Btrto of toe laari Roebitok Ob. iton. Bagtoning at PUia and Parry, for txampie, traffic wouM nwra wait on Pike, north on Waytw, iist Oh Lafayette and aeuth oh Parry back to toe 81011101 paint, w w w OMstructlon work on tha to-tertar loop and tin final aaeildii or tite parifltetor road WH puN “ 80 aa Mt to problemi to too downtown araa. THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 80. 1968 A—8 HEADQUARTEB8 LEVELED -'Rie Me Counly Demoo^ pvtjr headquarten baild> ing in mkttown Bfiiml, Fta., wee levtted Monday by a mnrive czplocioo. Offidak ny do one m> bdieved to ham been in tbe boOd-ii«. told BO talnrtos hm been rcportod. Cauae of tbe blaet is as yet uBdetarmined. The first domesticated bb^ mala are believed to have been A new kind of ^ for auto- sunlight, -but mobile or office buildings be> again when whan eqxi^ to moved. Doftined to Lead West Quirks of Fate^Shape 4 Lives By RUre MONTGOMERY WASHINQTCNt: An unruly fellow called “domestic politics” crash the party when President Keanedyi sbortly hold his first "• Ludwig Erhard and British Prime Minister RUTH Sir Alec Doug-MCmTGOMERV las-Home. Both Presideat Kennedy and Lord Hshm wID be np far re-electioa next year. AHhoagh Chancefler Ertard does net have to ceefrait the elector-nte nntO H, he wffl face a tsngh battle to regaia a Band- ty's ewB pabUe epiaiaa peUs iBdleata that the Socialists have beeeme Germany’s most In a presidential election year, foreign policy traditionally takes a back seat to domestic Douglas-Home is a shy, shrewd and pocketbook issues and *64 promises to be no exception. * it it JFK, an astute politician, has given top priority to dvU rights and tax-cut lei^tion » two domestic issues that hold Uttle enthrallment for Erhard and Dou^-Home. FRENCH VOTE Further to complicate matters for the summit club, Frendi President Charles de Gaulle has given indicadons that he, too, may caU a national election next^ear. The clnb’i four card-carrying members are a fasdnat-ing Btady in contrasts. In fact, if a statistieiaa fed a mlllien identiflcatton cards into a cempnter, he weald be bard-pressed to find fear pelMeiaas more dissimilar in tastes and aristocrat who has relinquished family titles dating back to the Middle Ages in order to succeed ailing Harold Macmillan. DERDICKE Plump, cigar - smoking Erhard, who at n succeeds t7-year-old Konrad Adenauer, is the .unpretentious son of a Bavarian storekeeper. His favorite dish is a stew, and his nick-name has long been “Der Dlcke” (the Fat One). sH down arith M-year-oid Pres-Ideat Keaaedy to plot coatiB-aed Westera strat^ far the K e n n e d y Jr., Jack Kennedy would have become a political writer, instead of a pditldan. Joe Sr. had earmarked politics and the presidency for his namesake son. OLD SOLDIER Were it not for Frendi capitulation to invading Nazi forces in that same war, “(Bd Soldier” Charles de Gaulle would probably now be “fading away" in the obscurity ofhlacountry house in southern France. World War I may have played the trick that east Lad-wig Erhard in his e a rY e a t role. He tried to take over Us father’s s simaltaneeasly be taaed to the elamer ef their own elector- Byt what strange twists of fate did four such dissimilar men eventually reach the pinnacle and find themaelvea ranged alongside eadi other in Senior member de Gaulle, a dangerous battle of wits with haughty, aloof, nationalistic and the roly-poly sOn of a Russian as obsessed with French “destiny” as the mystical Joan of Arc,lsnow78. Except for the wartime death Sndy - haired, aO-year-oM | of Us elder brother, Joseph P. Lanarkshire Yoemanry at the outbreak of WorU War H. but was struck down by spinal tuberculosis and qient two years flat on his back. Ibis astoning tragedy may have spared Urn death on the battlefleU. but he was to have an even doaer brush with fate. Ehicept for a new law passed only a few weeks ago, the aristocratic foreign secretjuir would not have been permitted to renounce his SCO-year-old titles, and thereby become prime In Bavaria, bat a i as a BOBcen 1 iron far kag periods, so be tUned totbestadyofecoBomics. He became economics minister in 1»M, and the subsequent mirade of West Germany re- choice to succeed Adenauer despite the latter’s objepttoos. * w * Lord Home enlisted with the, By such quirks of fate, the hist^ of mankind has been (OMrikuMS Or nw fwIww iveskBe) Small eggs usually hatdi faster than large ones. Robins’ eggs, for instance, take 13 or 14 days, but a bald ea^’s eggs take about K. Paint and WaOpaper Foy-Johnston WAIXPAPEB IN STOCK I PI i-nti UNITED SHIRT DISTRIBUTORS I wii has ts mnA Wmwia fi^TiiMeTimnrsiBiiiiar I avw mtosmm rh masBawwa » ---jjjRjiiijtoWiiK i.u.iamjJtoHlHto iStogiatlJitorJlWBiaa^ 'DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL^OCR BUSTER SPECIA IISll0V9MI -rimS taws for homo, ofboB r, sic. tMt 4,pad(t. -DRUGS Mato Pleo^ Pamoas Naaio Brand Men’s Underwear 2 for 1«0 Choke of T-Shirto Pitoii or e ihbB. AU Baas. SOghl bn oroal aodotobto -OjOTHING Basammt BBRNM-MATie Propane Gas Tank OOe PorAdultaiYaiitka MONOPOLY Game NO TRICKS-Every ITEM Is A TREAT During Simms 9 HOUR SALE look for Ihe epsetel 94ioor algiia-your guorontoe of todro Mvlngs. Bring a frisnd and nsi^bor wilh you, yoult have fun ehopptog ana youll bolh go home with BARGAINS. Something for emryone-ond Simms reserves Ihe right to limtt quantities. SORRY, RO MAIL OR PNOME ORDERS PLEASE-TOU MUST BE HERE FOR THESE SUPER OlSCOUini! r CLOTHING DEPARTMENT Many Sfytoa > Mb Breup Ladies’ Skirts s: 66* WootoMU rayoi oad’wooi bnd WaabVWaarCdtoa Ladies’ CuHottes |67 $2.9S VmUu Dwebleterrydolb OhiMron’t Panties 49c OOc Vaimm ar pemls. Dosteaetdh, bond legWyteShmOtoA Complato Idr - ready for to-ataUalioa. Glws goo• Sometimes it pays to stay home. into certainly wlU be tee case tomorrow night as the Ctorkston Area Junior Chamber ef Conuaeree stages Its gram backed by a 3259 budget Jaycees will award prizes to 21 area youngsto's vdio are home when the telephone rings. The deadlines are 8 p.m. for elementary school youngsters and 9 and 10 p.m. respectively for Junior high and high sdraol students. Members of the senior and Junior Methodist Youth Fellowships will be canvassing dow-to-door with their identifying canisters, to collect funds for the United Nations Intematknal Children’s Emergency Fund. Lest year tV twe groups received more teaa 339 from eoaunmilty resideate. The money is nsed to aid needy moteert and children la 119 The “beggars” will be knocking on doors from 6 to 8 p.m. This Information will have im-1 pwtant value in formulating^ plans and making decisions in their apple marketing program. Button said. WWW storage opawtors will flll'out storage repivts on the 1st and' 15th of each month beginning i Friday. Forms are provided by the a^e commission. VARIETY AMOUNTS The reports will give the amounts of each variety stored in each of tte different types of! storages, either common, cold' The Michigan State Apple: Commission win be sending out i storage report forms to all apple storage operators in Mkte gan tefdre Ftiday. Storage operators who do not receive a re-1 port form are asked to call or' write tte commisston. MARILYN ST. CHARLES A spring wedding is planned by MarUyn Kay St. Chaitoe and Levi A. (Bud) Eliesaen, whose engagement to announced by her parents, kfr. and Mrs. Stanley St. Charlw of 2407 Hoover, Union Laka. IV prospective bridegroom to the son of Mrs. Joan Stana, 2679 Massena. Union LMm. and Levine Eliasaen of Madi-sonville, Ky. OXFORD — TV Halloween call here for some will be “Trick or TYeat for UNK3JF!” Clarksfon Unit Plans Dinner CLARKSTONWoeepb C. Bird Chapttt No. 294, Order of Eastern Star, win hold its annual Autumn Harvest Dinner and Bazw Friday from 5 to 7:29 p.m. at the Masonic Temple. A widely varied menu to planned, according to chairman Mrs. Richard Young, w ♦ ♦ Aprons, stuffed toys, and Christmas gift items will be on sale all day Friday. IV public is Invited. Announcement to made of the engagement of Janey Marie Lyon to Airman S.C. Danny Thomas Beer by her parents, Ifr. and Mrs. Ge^ Lyon, 1700 Gunn, to llw,soa of Mr. ^ Mn. Alfred C Bm. Bond Usuo Approved for School District WEST BLOOMFIEIJ) TOWNSHIP — The State Municipel Finance Commission has approved a |1.64nilUon bond issue by WeM Bloomfield School District. WWW TV issue, approved by property owners in June, will fl-oonstnictioB of a new Jun- tmlli^hy mn^ pOKiinal of totes for fur-- SHOP Whfit Tht WIDEST SeltdiMi ti Hit NEWEST MeichiadlM Pvti FALL 1.1 NUTSHELL! Evsfywtero yeu leek, yseTI sse ■ wtehh ^ MAM Uamw --J Wn^n mffe HMS IW WwWlNM itointoaito uSeeFAUut nmity tf Free Mbit L«fe for Your Shopping Oonvonioneo SwM lw«Mv«r contimM ta te cMUMTctelly wid in Mmm leta o modMl choioe Is mede V pwUno- Wet nitDI.PMRI jiwEun ^ M W. ttmm ft. »M*» ft wmu THE PONTIAC ritESS. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 80, IPOa A—4 Drought Eases in Northeast Rain, Snow Help, but Other Areas Still Dry CHICAGO (AP) -Rain and anew eaaed drought condlUona and forest fire hazards In sections of New England today but not much rdief was reported on other parts of the dry belt from the southern Plains to New York SUte. Heavy rains along the edges of Hurricane Ginny splashed southeastern New England Tuesday as the storm moved into Nova Scotia. Moderate to heavy snow fell in central and northern Maine with IS inches in Greenville and nearly a foot in Houlton and Cariboo, fluniea fell throughout New England, including Boatou. More than m inches of rain doused Nantucket, Mass. OTEN EVENING cnsiG mra I MILLION DOLLAR* BIRTHDAY THAT TIME AGAIN—A sudden snowstorm struck Presque Isle, Maine, yesterday bringing a familiar scene. A motorist from tte northern dty gets an assist in moving Ma car away from the curb. Several inebas ef snow hit the community as Hurricane Ginny swept up the coast into Canada. Tuesday’s rain belt extended along the Atlantic Coast from South Carolina Into New England. I4ght rain dampened scattered sections in the Great Lakes region and southeastward to the Appalachians but amounts were too light to brtak the prolonged dry spdl. Saow flurries flecked Bhwfield, straddling the Virginia-West Virgin^ border. NEW FIRES In New York State B new fires were reported with a total of M still biBTiiag and a total of 64S blazes in October. Strong winds in some woodland areas increased the Are danger. State forests have been dosed and outdoor burning banned since Oct. U. Fresh rains in Rhode Island, up to one inch, resulted in the lifting of restrictions against starting outdoor fires. Maine also lifted a ban on smoking, starting outdoor flres or hunting in wooded areas. In Kentucky, winds of 15 to 20 m.p.h. fanned flres that burned nearly 7,000 acres of woodland Tuesday. One man was arrested on chaiges of setting a woodland area afire. In Msbama, which reported its diiM October In SO years. Mme. Nbu to Address Young GOP say that i World Fair for Dotroit? cr part if the stadia. LOS ANGELES fUPI)-Mme. Ngo Dbih Nbu, controversial first lady of Sooth Viet Nam, was scheduled to q>eak to Los Angeles County Young Republicans tonight as part of her extended visit to this country. Miss to say when news of the plan far Soufli Viet Nam visitor and her daughter to visit the laviab set reached the sound stage: “If she comes, I won’t be here. I’m sorry, but I’U be HI.” DETROIT (f>-Detrolt Mayor Jerome P. Cavanagb said yaa-terday he wfll form a oomnit-lae to study the ftasUlity of hoUiiw a world’s fair 1^ hi Detroit ia U71 (N members will be about two weeks, said. rrs sn. rrs ra. rrs s clock buio TRIM COMPACT WESTINCNOUSE by airDaer from Saa Fraaeis-ea last night after a speech at the University of CnHfstaia nt Berkeley, gha had gsae la tai Fraacisea after a week) U15 fires have destroyed more than 16,000 acres of woodlands this month. No buntmg is allowed in 32 counties. The general drought situation showed little change in most areas, with acute water riiort-ages in many sections. Agriculture officials in Htinols said 96 per cent of the state has less than adequate fail moisture The sister-in-law of South Viet Nam President Dim said on her arrival at Intemaflonal Airport fliat die may have a “major pronouncement” to make before heading home to Saigon in several days. However, she gave no hint as to what that pronouncement would be, nor did she say definitely when she planned leave for Saigon. IHHXTWOOD NIX Before her arrival, officials at Warner Bros. Studio in Hollywood disclosed that they h^ denied a request for Mme. to visit the set of “My Fiar Lady” and to meet stars And-rey Hepburn and Rex Harriaon. irs ALL NEWm I* Krtra ikh mmJ. Spadd bvSt^ i3»7adMdtaa^ WakM to aMitic taSdi. SoHr ahiM Si wato I yaa «at ap, iMalaaat clack kdd* to talyaa lU ftato acM la Ika k, Slaak wtop-araaad cabmat al hig«i.«lTaaarii,. lioktwai«l« pladic. Sylvai Stereo & TV Sales Opm AMerPriefar • 'tB 9 ... Satanfay ‘iU 6 2263 Ordmd Laki lead (Sylvaa CealSf) Plmaa 604199 Outstate Firm Wins Highway Map Bid LANSING (UPP-A Grand Rapids firm has submitted the low I to Finl the 1914 official way Commissioner John Madiie reports. The Michigan Lithographing Co. low bid of $38,712 to print 900,000 maps was the lowest of eight bids received. Mackle said he would recommend approval of tha bid to the State Administrative Board. The bU was one of the bwesl, on a per map baoia. received the highway department in many years, Mackto said. Kentucky’s Mammoto Cave contains cigkt waterfalls, three riven and two laket. WHY LOB9T$R8 TAarm mrrrfB IB MicHimm thaw im m^uttB Entire stock ’13^ Scotch Grain Shoes with fuH leather finings **10“ Lobkamn-yoa poefesiUr saviufa-aMl chooM from the idntical shoes that an alwaya a sell-out auecesa at regular pricaa! Good lookiiig^yea-bat that’s ao* an. Ton get supreme walkinc aaae ttaaha to supple topc^ uppers, q^cwwhida quarter Hniiife, flatibla fiber iaaoloR Oaltbeiid leather ontaola. *teJ5§ Berndmeeee BOND'S OPEN EVERY EVENING THE PONTIAC MALL PHONE 682-1010 big booming bargains See all the newest styles, fabrics, colors—big choice from our Fall stocks OtroDser Pun Worsted Suits reduced from*S9»f.. mw 49^ 0tnuserSt]|le Manor Suits __>___I A__mm reduced from . ROW 57«® Qtrouser Park Lane Suits reduced from ^4^^, • ROW 03 Qtrouser Executive Group ^ __I___I A__ reduced from . stw 68^® Harridge Row Suits .... reduced from . HOW 351^ Bn oiuop rail oww reduced from^S'P^.. HOW 4# wainii lufiuuaia reducedfrom^^^.e HOW 38^^ Style Manor ZipGners reduced from*S7^.. nSW 40*" BOND'S reduced from^29^ee WOW 24*® VMti ft MBlBli mHIb-mIb pileBd *• Alt alteratioiu without dhargt. -IwHhlmouthlypeymsute-aeiervtoeeharga CHARGE iTItolm «iMrihi to pv-eMfl a THE PONTIAC MALL PHONE 682-1010 I :."l THE PONTIAC PRESS PontiK, Michigan a Huron Street ■omi* p. Timmu a bwvtif* TIm rrwid WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1963 iu»ou> A. rr^w»uj> mm A. ibuT Sr£rn.”^irKt.. DR. HATT Prog:ress Is Notable at Cranbrook School The Press warmly congratulates Cranbrook Institute of Science on the impressive record of progress since its establishment 33 yeus ago. Reflecting physical growth are the regular additions to the Institute’s facilities beginning with the observatory in 1930. A new museum. The McMath Planetarium, The Bulkley Greenhouse and the Terrace Extension followed in order. Latest contribution to the science I complex is the I Skillman Wing I for the Physical I Sciences dedi-I cated last Sep-I tember. Each year has seen increasing use of the Instl-I tute, as Its pro-* gram has broadened and the population of the area has steadily increased. ★ ★ ★ Representing the Detroit area’s only science museum, the Institute occupies a unique place In the cultural resources of Southern Michigan. Indicative of its educational importance Is the expanding use by school systems from surrounding communities. Over-all attendance the past year toUled 154,682, an 11 per cent increase over the previous year and a 42 per cent gain over five years ago. A significant sidelight on attendance is that, though The Science Institute is a private school, over 90 per cent of the school classes were from public schools. The report points out that the Institute is dependent on special funds for its administration and fulfillment of objectives. These funds have felt the strain of increasing demands, and it is hoped that additional endowment support may be forthcoming. ★ ★ ★ A particular note of recognition is merited by Director Robxrt T. Hatt and his quarter-century of service. His dedication and vision have played a major part in the growth and eminence of the Institute. Solons to Evaluate State Driver Courses Soon to have legislative scrutiny is the efficacy of Michigan’s public school driver education program, which, adopted in 1956, had pioneer significance for the Nation. ★ ★ ★ The training is required for those under age 18, but paradoxically statistics show it hasn’t contributed to driving safety as expected. A 10-year review of a dozen representative states reveals that the rate of youthful accidents was little affected by the training. Indeed, the state having the highest percentage of enrollment in driver education had the highest ratio of teenage accidents. Of the 12 states whose accidents were analyzed, the teenagers in the six having the highest number of students in drivers’ classes — a third of the total in 1952 — accounted for 11.7 per cent of all accidents. In the other six states, w^iere only one in toi students was taking driving training, the youth accident had a slightly LOWER rate —10.9 per cent. The enrollment averige of the first group rose to 77 per cent by 1961. The other six states Increased their driver education little, if at all. ★ ★ ★ It would therefore be assumed that the rate of teen-age accidents In the first group would be substantially reduced. Instead, the percentage increased — about the same in both groups. And nationwide, 16 per cent more driver-education grajlu-ates failed their drivers’ license teste than those who never took the course. ★ ★ ★ A Michigan legislator who is an insurance man points to lack of community uniformity in the state’s training plan, and students being certified with incomplete instruction as weaknesses of the system. Another drfect, he says, is the indifference to the program of smne ^hool official^ who look on it as an added scholastic burden without sufficient funds to administer it. We think that the concept of youth driver training is sound. It tmly remains to reappraise the program In the light of the weaknesses uncovered and strengthen it to effect the high degree of safety protection intended. Verbal Orchids to - Kfrs. Hartm Graves of 1S6 Palmer; 89th birthday. CariJ.Nlqiritt of Birmingham: 86th birthday. John B. Maas of Farmington; 85th birthday. Mrs. Bertha Hyatt of 308 Oakland; 92nd birthday. Voice of the People: ‘What Are You—Unpatriotic, Or Something’ David Lawrence Says: Racial Tension Not Decreasing Who’s Watching the Watchbirds? By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON — Five years ago Sen. Richard L. Neuberger, Oregon Democrat, complained that nobody polices the policeman, that Congress can investigate the whole area of government but nobody polices Congress. For example: Hie head of a department must rid himself of his stock before the Senate, to prevent conflict of interest, lets him take office. Hiis is to prevent his prof-itiag from some company he may do bns-Bess with. MARLOW But a member of Congress can have .ill kinds of outside interests, and even fight for a law to help those interests, but he doesn’t have to rid himself of anything or reveal anything about his total income. Qieuberger was calling on Congress, which has passed laws to prevent conflict of interest on the part of federal officials and other government employes, to pass a conflict of interest law on itself. CALMLY IGNORED Congress ignored him with great calmness, as it has ignored similar proposals by other members of both bouses for years. Recently two former members of Congress were convicted of influence-peddling while they were in Congress. Neuberg^ died of cancer in 1960. His wife. Sen. Maurine Neuberger, also an Oregon Democrat, was elected to succeed him that same year. Last week she picked up where her husband left off. JOINED BY CASE She and Sen. Clifford P. Case, New Jersey Republican, asked consideration of a bill they had introduced requiring top government officers, members of Congress and their staff to report their yearly income, gifts of substance, assets, liabilities and financial transactions to the comptroller general, with these reports available to press and public. Case has made this kind of proposal repeatedly aad, like the tote Neuberger, has been ignored. He and the present Sen. Neuberger made their pitch In a letter to Sen. B. Everett Jordan, North Carolina Democrat who is chairman of the Senate Rules Committee which yesterday began an investigation of a former Senate employe, Robert G. Baker. Right after President Kennedy took office he asked Congress to tighten and broaden the tows against conflict of interest as they apply to employes of the executive branch. He got quick aetkm. A tow was passed. But there’s hardly a chance in a billion that Coogress will do anything about itself. WASHINGTON - Racial tai-sion is, unfortunately, not di-minishibg. News dispatches in the last 24 hours tell a tragic story of inflamed feelings and irresponsible action. In Phitodel-i phia, for Instance. the As-| sociated Press repinis that on LAWRENCE Monday 500 Negroes rioted. Th^ broke windows and looted stom. Shattered glass littered . . the streets. \ Policemen turned back news photographers for fear their flashbulbs might touch off more outbreaks. The demonstration arose because last Saturday a Negro was shot and killed by a white policeman who said that the Negro lunged at him with a knife while resisting arrest. In St. Augustine, Fla., according to a United Press International dispatch, white men drove through a Negro neighborhood near that dty Monday night, blasting homes and Negro night clubs with rifle and shotgun fire. A live hand grenade was tossed at one night club but it failed to ex|dode. Authorities said two or three cars containing white men were involved. These are typical o( maay Negro leaders are themselves divided. Althoagk Atty. Gea. Robert F. Keaaedy to certaialy doing his atmost to aad Is trying to do it by leg- The reference was to the administration’s efforts to get a bill through the House Judiciary Committee. Faced with certain defeat on what was tamed an "extreme” measure, the President had intervened personally to get a compromise biU re- ported out by the committee, and was successful. If a “dvil rights” bill in enacted, there will at least be a tow on the subject Instead of vague court orders. • JSFTXJTb, Bob Considine Says: United States No Slouch at Sending Propaganda attract Nearly every day the press associations carry in brief form a list of dtotnrbances dae to racial friction. The question arises as to whether the recent agitation and series of “demonstrations” hasn't produced a racial consciousness that didn’t eziat before as widely as it does today. * * it Certainly the subject is one that causes grave concern to the police everysrbere. Many cities have Negro pdicemen and. unquestionably, there should be more of them, es-pedally in Negro neighborhoods. WRONG IMPRESfflON For when a white policeman and a Negro coUkie, the impression can be spread by inflamed persons that the arrest is unjust or that dtocrimination the objoci of a picketiag dem-oMtratioa Monday night la New York City. The pickets were led by the orgonlzation known u the Coo-greas of Racial Equality and included per ions from other "civil rights” groups. * * * ■' A spokesman for the demonstrators was quoted by Upi as having exclaimed: "The Kennedy brothers sold out the American Negro by trying to water down a stroiM civil rights bill." NEW YORK -Whenever we set our minds to tooting our own horn through the world we make the greatest Russian propagandists look like bums. In his semiannual report to Congress on his steward-s h i p of the United States. I n formation CONSBHNB Agency, ailing Edward R. Murrow singles out what hto organization did with one story: Gordon Cooper’s two-day trip through space. USIA blanketed ttm earth with that one, operating out of 239 posts in 106 countries. Its Voice of America was on the air continuously and exclusively with this story for 36 hours, a first in the hishny of broadcasting. Its wire service carried the running stay for 18 hours. A half-hoar TV program deaUag with the way Cooper traiaed for the fl^ was to USIA affices the werld, to be given to local TV stations. Anofoer 10-minute film wu quickly distributed to 500 theaters abroad, and a six-minute version of the same film about Cooper was rushed to newsreel theaters in 36 countries. One of the films hit 2,-400 African theaters simultaneously. WWW The Voice broadcast from Cape Canaveral, engaged in by VOA commentators, NASA people and congressional leaders, employed the largest radio network ever assembled: 55 transmitters strung around the world with a total power output of 5,673,000 watts. LOTS OF POWER That's as much oomph as is generated by the 113 largest U.S. radio stations emnbined. It drew the biggest overseas radio awUeBce to hio-la addition to the VOA’s 55 traasmitters the broadcast was piped into the aatioBal networks of Deaamrk, Fia-toad, rimace. West Gerauay, Greece, hraa, IsraeL The Netberlamls, Spate, Turkey and Bumy Afrieaa ooantrieo. A laborer, listening to the Spanish-language account of the orbiting as part of the crowd that gathered in front of the agency’s downtown office in Santo Domingo made a speech; "Here we are in Santo Domingo, in front of the cultural and Information section of the U.S. Embassy, listening to every step of this fli^t and hearing about difficulties with aubmutic controls,” he said. “We know this is really true. How do we know the Russians really sent somebody up there?” ★ ♦ w The crowd applauded, just as we can now applaud Mr. Mur-row’s organization for reminding ua that, when the mood moves us, we can demonstrate that we’ve forgotten more about propaganda than the blinking Reds ever knew. Offers Answer to Reader Asking About Seat Belts In reply to “Safety First,” no one knows whether the person mentioned would have been more seriously injured or less if he had been using a seat belt. We do know: Chances of injury in all types of automobile accidents are in the ratio of o^y 1^20 wtth wat beltil compared to thMe without theih. x Anyone who does not take edvmtt^e of tWeee odds is not aware of the facts. Everyoiae dhpuld fasteh his seat belt before moving his car, even ^ he if toV6*ing only one block. ‘ ^ ' Qeoige Harkless, O.D., CUdrman Traffic Safety Copiml^ Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce ‘Share Halloween Candir With Otheiy, When your children have what’s left to Pepper School. RooseveR School,'tiieCto^ t^ty Children’s Center or my home, 24231 Gardner, ^ Park. Hwa are about 500 children who are wards of OaklaBd County, unabto to go begging on Halloween. They get plenty of food, but camly la something they only get if people are wllUn^^fo share wlm mem. Mrs. L. H. Lmuiv ‘Donations Should Be Giver’s Choice* TTiis is in regards to pressure put on employes by employers for bigger donations for the United Foundation* Employes are told unless they gi^e the minimum it will reflect on their jobs. Charity is an act of being generous. Who is to determine that? A donation should be determined by the giver. Our donation will be sent to school with our children who will feel the real sense of charity. Union Lake Mrs. Charlette Kramer Asks About Township Boundaries Thanks to Frank KeUey, attorney general, for clearing the issue of tax assessments mid the right to vote on them under the old and the new constitution. WaterfenI TewasUp residents want to know If the boond-aries of a township can be changed Just for tax parpeses? Everyone to saytag vote “yes” lor a city beeanse the mere preepaens areas could be aueexed to leave our towuship without this tax taceme. It was my uadersteadtog R cadd eat be dene wUhout a vote of the Oektoad Ceqaty Beard of Supervtoors aad it was tried la Ortonville and didn’t stead a chaaee. If this is m, let it be kaewa. I’m voting “no” because Waterford Township is not ready to become a dty and the taxes aro already overburdening for the average home owner. Concenied Taxpayer ‘Girl Scouters Obstructing: Traffic* Girls in scout uniforms have been walking In the center rf Indian Trail directing traffic to the side of the road so they couhl remain in the center. A 20-year-oid encountered this and didn’t know if she was supposed to go on the wrong side of the rood or what. It must have been the uniforms that disappointed her. Jnd a Mother ‘Police Lax in Controlling Lawbreakers* After reading in Ttie Press about 4 teen-agenikilled 1^ cars on our street, I think somqthing should be done about the laxity of our police department in letting the speedsters, drunken drivers, faulty-brake drivers and no-Ught drivers go uiqiunished. ★ ★ ★ When n^erting speeding to 21 or 3f m.pA. zeaet, we’re told they’U look into H, but they never do. They’haag ap R you argue abenf when seuMfUag will be done. Ike poUcenma at the.desk has even btomel| the taxpayers. ★ ★ ★ I can't imagine why taxpayers are paying such people for not doing their duty. We need to sweq> out the police dSpartinent as wall u ttM dty haO. Ma^ Beggi (Editor’s Note: Letters concerning Waterford incorporation vote will not be published after Saturday.) Reviewing Other Editorial Pages More Managed News Adrian bttUy Telegram children . . . are b u r n e d to deeth or terribly disfigured by leaf bonfirea. White Defense Secretary McNamara and Gen. Maxwell Taylor were in South Viet Nam on a fact^nding mtoshn, a House government operations committee released a report dusking that the State Department had hobbled the factfinding of American correspondents in South Viet Nam. The committee declared the State Department in 1962 initiated a p^cy designed to keep unpleasant developments in Viet Nam from thd American petite. WWW "Instead d hiding the facts, the State Department should have done everything possible to expose the true dtuatlon to full view,” thie subcommittee said. "Millions of dollars and the lives of many Americans have been qwnt to assist the government of Smith Viet The news drafted and seat to the U. S. OBbassy In Saigsn. WWW The directive said correspondents should be advised they were creating difficulties if they critidzed the regime of President Diem. Abo the subconunit-toe declares, American officials in South Viet Nam were in-stnwted to try to keep correspondents away from military operations whh± might suggest t^t the war against the guer-rlHas was not going wefl. He ■ the Stirte Department saya the France's Leader The New York Nevoe It was no surprise to hear President de Gaulle of France as good as announce that he will run for re-election next year if not sooner. He is needed, as he OKidestly sees it. to keep France independent of the “doiiUe hegemony” (overlordtiiip) of the United States and Soviet Russia. This incident is setting various teeth in official Washington on edge, and no doubt cutting anti-de Gaulle speeches and wisecracks are already being fashioned in White House circles. WWW For our part, we hope Big Charlie renudM Preskteat of France as tong at he wants to; and if he can keep JFK from falliag all the way into the arms of N. S. Khrathchev, then de GaaOe wfll have served UJL iateresto la the 29th Ceatary as nobly fw did the Marquis do Lafayette la the 18th. ~, ptoy - —T- ——. of laaeos stacked temptingly af *o enrb, go into the sfreels and are atrimk dowa by nMtoriste who f^ to see them becaaso id too much tpeod, dost, aa-tnmiul hsM or leaf dost kicked im by small foet Vw w * Parents should keep constant watch over burning leaves. They should make sure childroi do not play in leaves ptifid near the street. Drivers should slow down in residential areas and be doubly a^ for small figures which may-race through leaf piles and not stop at the curb. * w w Let’s not mar the beaaty of autumn with neodleii, trag-®dy. -i- Tax Cqllecfars? The Medina (Ohio) DaUy Lapder Post A new defini^ of a tenke ttatkm i$ a plocf where they collect federal and^tate taxee and teU gatolh^ a» ^ tide line. ol mioal'ntwt prM«> h W.H M M AP Dangerous Leaves ' The Hilltdale Daily Newt Most of us think of leaves as tovely to look at and horrible to rake. Tm often we forget they can be kiltors. Every year people ... mostly Horn oi mjoMi' Tt» PgnHK Pr.ii I. (MI*Mr«l br cwTWr for SO onii. . wook; wMro mo(M In OoUM4 GininO. Ltv-mowoo. UlMonb, LtMor one WmMtnaw Coumot ltVl1l.ee • yow! elMwhonl 10 MIMom •nt olhor pIKIi^ln Nit WnOod n eet.00 • Jkar. an mM wO- ---.itioni poyUM. In oOMiieo. PoMoft hot at MO IM THE PONTIAC TRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 80. 1968 A—7 Ex*D«an Succumbs iONNEAPC^ (AP) - Roy Cbiids JoDM, n, former head of the University of Mime School of Aicfaltecthre, < Tuesday. Jones retired in 1963 after servinf on Uie facuity M years. He wu horn in Kendall-ville, ind. Foreign Policy Reversal Soviet Ability to Make Peace Debated By PHIL NEWSOM DPI ForeifB News Aulyst A worid which for years based HE GREW HAIR its foreign poiicy oh the Soviet Union's ability to make war, now finds itself in the midst of a curious reversal. Policy makers now mnst consider the Soviets’ abUtty to make peace. The questiop^ a matter of serious debate slid A Few M-thi umr Mr. T. A. MaMa^ Jr, tt Bem^yebnr. Pa. (ab«v«) gave aioni Si mAmWob adra Um Ssr aa tatorriew with Um Ericuiro wSSeisifaaivehsimsii^^ Us hair ia ealy a lew aumths ERICKSON HAIR AND SCALP CONSULTANTS -r-.—1 Wn he is PmHsc, I WsMrN HoM, H . NE.PIkt-FEM1M V Therriay, Odebtr 31 If you have dandruff, excessive Um Brlcksoa Hair and Scalp District Director, Mr. R. W. UtMday. wffll be at the Waldron Hold between 13:10 Noon and t;« pjn. Every hair-wotried peraon should taks advantage of tUi grant opportunity. Hw Erickson Method la known all over the United States. You can have a oonfetence adtb the Erickson rrpreaentative regarding your hair and scalp proUema otUness or dryneaa, Mcfay scalp, take as minutes of your time sea what you can do. work, and ttw rewilts yon can expect in a sfiort period of time. fay the Ic you to take II be glvcnaw The ma)o^ of cases of baldness and exseasive hair loai Is from the Ehickaon ! Method. Why harden yourself with unhealthy hair and scalp? Anywiy. it coata you nothhr-learn how thousands have hriped by the years vi Erid^ experience, plus the wonderful opportunity for help it offers. Just go to the Waldron Hotel in Pontiac on nmrsday, October n, oidy between 12:00 Noon and 8:00 p.m. Ask the Hold Desk aerk for Mr. Loveday. Ha do the rest. NEWaOM aa effect t» U. relations ^ the U.S.8. For example, except for the present seeming cold war thaw. It scarcely seenos conceivable that the Unitr ed States ever would have codt sidered lifting its embargo and seriously negotiating W^ the Soviet Union for the sale of $250 mlUioa worth of wheat. Wheat bag hu been ea the Id of stretegic materials benoed for sale le a And in the Ikuted Stotes it baa aroused debate whether such a sale and a revision of U.S. trade pUicies furthm the cause of peace or simply tides the Soviet Union over an dner-gency from which it can emerge to press still harder the cause of aggressive world commu- Nllclta Khrushchev jump or he pushed? WAS PUSHED The iRrklenoe is that he was pushed, despite the fact that oo-Mistence with the West has for years been » proclaimed Soviet policy. Devious and secretive as are the ways ef comnsnaism, its practitioners often are araa^gly frank, la discns-sioBs ef intemal difficulties. And recent discussions in Soviet publications indicate Soviet planners expect Russian difficulties to get worse before they Less directly related but factor is the same question in the reaction of West Germans to the successful airlift of an eifUre U.S. division to Germany. Despite U.S. reassurances to the contrary, it aroused in Germans the fear that the U S. intends to reduce its troop strength Europe. TIMING INTENT Invirfved in the Soviets’ ability to make peace are matters b^ of timing and intent. Oa the matter ef thaiag, is 9$ewei1hy that Soviet I degree ef caotton immediately after Ae Cribaa crisis Just a year ago this month. Khrushchev’s of the Soviet Union’s withdrawal from the moon race has been taken as a measure of the country’s economic difficulties. BELOW AVERAGE Russian grain harve^ are estimated at between IS and 20 per cent brfow average. New 4uat bowls are ftreatened as result of a policy which ordered abudi iriowed up for planting. Fertilizer and irrigation programs will take years to implement. At a reeidt ef a shortage ef fodder, Soviet farmers are slaughtering livestock, with Shock«d Tot Is Fair ANN ARBOR UB-Ten-month-oM Daniel Reddy, badly burned about the mouth Monday when bis saliva apparently shorted an electric wall outlet on which he was sucking, was reported in fair coodHion today at St. Joseph Hospital. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William J. Reddy of Ann Arbor. HawaU had 362,145 viaitort last year, a 13.2 per cent increase over 1381. Brozilian General Dies RIO D£ JANEHiO, Brazil (APj-Marshal Ettclides Zeno-bio da Costa, 70, first Brazilian general to command tnxqw in an overseas war, died Tuesday. PBItl DIPFICUL1 lOO . ■LTWT tl* boiMmlUtpraMntlM, utBsmt fat auMPHaara -Ito hanMMi: M ontertpOo meat shortoge the natural re-talL Even worse is a steady stream of complaints against incompetent or dishonest management, including large-scale loot-; tag, bribery and speculation. These are factors which | present positkm. They are no measure of intent, and are but I momentary in any measure of the Soviet desire to make peace. He's a Fraud Papa, but the Rule Stands PUEBLO, Cdo. (AP) -Principal Brian McCartney, who banned student smoking at Cen-1 tennial High School, passed ^cigars to men on the faculty The question of intent is even Tuesday to celebrate the birto j more important. of hi* fourth diild. it * * The edict against pupils smok- * In toe present thaw, did tag stands. i ------------_-------------- APPLIANCE BUYERS! OLLIE FRETTER SAYS: "SaRSaiR lUITEIIS! I HHKl ten ail floor t«n|des to make raoai for earloads of bow models arriving daily!” dlGMnC FLOOR MODEL SEU-OVT SYIIt.TOMY Mm roa. mm mm Noawlraade ggQ IS4rWoed ta fi lHaoRoiweo MKaaa rwai....... 149 ”’"JSr *389 RCAViCTORALrIfWTV • 23* tuba (ovaralt diag.1-J82 blade ar aara 19.88 Florentine style 3-lite pole lomps Throg gtoboi direct 8 27 29.88 wolnut finish handy room divider ,977 Hot sliding fiesirs, gloaming brass accents. Cobinol haldi 29.88 oportment size drop-leaf dinette set l-pISca. Whito, bloncio' ^ smM pioftic top dln^, # m Tohas ap iMa space. • rm:r Spedall Comfortable, foem-flNed sofo-sleeper end matching chair 77 OPM lYHlY MieNT TO f MsiiAiy A—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 80, 1968 Queen's Horse Drives Cosf-Cuffer Buggy LONDON (f* — A government efficiency expert is urging Queen EUxabeth II to scrap the horse and buggy system of doing her family marketing. The queen’s four-wheel carriages, known as Broughams, are a familiar sight ia Lendoa’s West End shoppiag center. la front sits n coachmaa, magnificent in brown coat, silk hat and high-winged collar. In the bnck sits an elegant lady-in-waitiag, carrying the royal shopping list from, grocer to dressmaker to bsuA. Behind comes h frustrated procession of honking car drivers, slowed to the pace of an unhurried iKMwe. WWW Edward Dowling, a Treasury expo! called in by the queen to he^ cut costs, says cars should supplant the Broughams. He believes the Broughams are too slow and too accidehti>rone. 2 HUBCAPS • Last week, one had a collision with a taxi and lost two hub caps. A few days earlier, the horse got bored with its Brougham and lay down in the middle of the traffic, refusing to move until it was unharnessed. Palace sources say any switch to cars seems unlikely because the carriages are considered part of palace tradition. The palace likes to have hwses accustomed to traffic for use on state occasions. The first Brougham was dw" signed by Baron Brougham, who.lived from 1778 to 18M. He had a large and awkward frame and needed a low-slung carriage. -Junior Editors Quiz on- QUESnON: Why do carpentos speak of a “10 penny nail” or a “20 penny nail”? ★ ★ ★ ANSWER: Driving nails is one of the most secure and least expouive ways of fastening pieces of wood together. The nail point pushes the wood aside and lets the nail enter, also helping to keep the wood from splitting. When nailing two planks together, carpenters follow this nseful rale: the nail should go through the first plank and penetrate the other by a bit over half of the second plank’s thickaess. ★ ★ ★ In England, in the 1400s, nails were sold by their weight. The word “penny” became used to show the size of nail, according to bow many pennies you had to spend to buy 100 of each size. Then the length of the nail began to be considered too. For two pennies, for example, you could buy 100 nails 1 inqh long, and so a two penny nail was the same as an inch nail. We stin ase this system of speaking of nail sizes. Our pictare shows the penny nnd length names of sobm nails larger than the 1 inch or twopenny. As in old English days, we also sell bulk nails by weight. For instance, you nuy ask for 5 pounds of threepenny nails, and you’ll know these will be IMi inches long. ★ ★ ★ FOR YOU TO DO: Learn to drive a nail properly; It’s a most useful accomplishment. The main thing is to hit the nail squarely on the bead, being sure it doesn’t bounce off and hit your hand holding the nail. Nw^ro Youths Sought for Guard Academy WASHINGTON (UPI) - Urn Treasury Department has asked the preas, radio and televiskm to he^ recruit Negro youths to comp^ for the 230 appointments open to the Coast Guard Academy. Robert A. WaHace, the department’s employment policy of-flcer, said yekerday that “unless we receive more applicants the academy class entering in July may not have a single Negro.” J4 in Area Drivers Lose licenses Fourteen area motorists r»-. cently had their drivers Ucenses either suspended or revoked by the Michigan Department of State. Ordered to shew preef of flaaneial responsibility due to convictioBS of drunk driving were: Donald E. Meacham, 685 Northway; Earl E. Burchfield, 21635 Wheeler, Farmington; Joan S. Malls, Allen Road, Or-tonvlUe; William L. McCary, 32164 Leelane, Farmington; and Paul R. White, 21525 Jacksonville, Farmington. Unsatisfactory driving rec caused the Mowing to lose their licenses: Luther L. Howard Jr., 6 Green; Jerald J. Joimstone, Estes; Rex W. McOomber, 3614 Bpaefagrave; Audio L. Dsd-ieb, 3406 PembnAe, Birmhig-ham; Gerald S. Dprling, 8750 Mqilewuod, Clarkston; and Clifford W. Stanton, 787 S. Gko-hurst, BinninghanL Robert H. Alexander, 261 Harrison; and J(dm H. Hudson Jr., 800 Golden Gate, Lake Orion, were ordered to show proof of financial responsibility due to unsatisfied financial judgments against than. William R. Cooper, 55 Murray, was ordered off the road for driving with a revoked 11- JUNK CARS WANTED KD MTO HITS niSAU FE 2.0200 BAZLEY’S THURSDAY SUPER SPECIAL 78 N SAGINAW 4348 DIXIE HV/Y ^Ou C cUi COiinl on I (O^ts ><) More' at S(’‘ar SEARS K()i;iU’('K AND CO " VALUE ^ Demonstration 3-pc.bedroo Chooae Limed Oak or Walnut NO MONEY DOWN on Seare Easy Payment Plan Cases fully dnstproofed with dovetailed, center Euided, solid oak drawers. 2hase design, hrass-fin-ished hardware accented by brass trim. Handsome panel bed. FWwInw liapfc, JaeendWaar t. Sale ... Kenmore Sewing Machines Portable Kenmore Fan-Forced Radiant Heaters Regularly at 82S.95! Weigba Jnat IS pounds 1988 SHOP ’THi 9 Tomorrow, Friday and Saturday Jmm rny, **CHARGE FT* at Seat* j It givw fhD heat flow ia Just 2 ^eemidt. n»l mnM heater on and off ahunnati-eally. Safe^ tip^wer switch turns heater olT[if over. torned. Booster dement ’ aUoSrW Dm*., 5mw« JfoJa BmmmoI Sale! Room-Darkening Washable Vinyl Shades *Satialaction goaranteed ypur mon^ back** FREE Imt-Connllnt SERVICE! Downtown Pontiac Phone FE 5-4171 THg PONtlAC PRES^. WEDNESDAV. 0CTOBER 30, 1963 A—11 ^<»^l (an ('ouni on I k . . . (^iia M (> (INo IVloi’t* a( Soa VALUE Demonstration fsX/iTcToJrAVpAcT *AFUD6SICLES I I APOPSiCLES 1 ★CHERRIOS WITH THIS COUPON I I A ICE CREAM SAHDWICHES Only one candidate will be on the ballot in Tueaday’s council election in the City of Sylvan Uke. Donald A. Tewi, 1§M Lakeland, Sylvan Lake, Is the lone contestant in the fall council race. An assistant friend of court for Oakland County, be has Hved in the city for nine Siichardson FARM ®dfry lOOK FOR MCHAIOSOII'S QUALITY DAIRY FRODUCTS AT THESE STORES: • RiciuunsDrt 7330 NIOMtANO SO. SS.89 0tAZA • RieilUDtRN’t 4343 Ohif HWY. blUVTON 7UINS • RICHARRMN't 3340 W. HUaON AT luzAarrH iaki • RieNAMSOVt SMI Mt-IS ClARKSTON e THE MRTY t JoO WAUfD UKf e VILUU MRTY SNOR UNION UKI • KE’t Mun STORE 1. HIOHUND • MWrt IROCERY CRfSCINT lAKI One Man Runs in Sylvan Lake Tews has served on the city council since June. He was appointed to fill the unexpired three-year term of Edwin F. Clark, a six-year veteran on the council. Clark resigned last spring in a dispute over the |»yment of sick leave and vacation pay to a public works employe. Ex-Columnist Dies VENICE, Fla. (UPI) - Ray] TrulUnger, 68, veteran newspaperman and former hunting and fishing columnist for the New York World-Telegram and Sun, died yesterday at his home here. Up Now... for The Holidays Asphalt Tile Sale each HOMART B-Colors .Asphalt Tilr in (l-Colors • .. each 714e Asphalt Tile in D-(]nlors.each 9c CE1L1N(; TILE Plain Style, 64-sq. ft...box 7.04 Rantlom-Drill Slar-.Spray.. box 11.59 ASST’D WALL TILE Plastic, Ren. 25c, now .... sq. ft. 21e 45c .Alabaster Tile.....sq. ft. 39c Homarl Ulaaed Mosaic .... sq. ft. 89e UnglazecI, Reg. 79c!....sq. ft. 64c 4x7xVi” Wall Paneling “Tske-W iih” 4.19 Be ready (or the holidays, fix-up your rooms now with Homarl quality malerisL. Colors molded in tile, won't fade or discolor. Save! Building MaUrialt, Perry St. Bntrmertt Sears Latex Interior Flat Paint Reg. Q33 14.98 ^ Dries in one-half hour! Ready-Mixed Paint Waterproofs Walls Beg. 13.69 2“r.al. No mixinx, ju»t apply to mrnt walli. \l'alerproaft in S colon. Long latling. i'avel Coes on smoothly with roller or brush, dries to velvety finish. Durable and wonderfully washable. Chara* It Clean tools and hands Coes on estily with bmth or with soapy water, roller. Choice of colors. Choice of colors. SI.49 Undercoat. .. ql. 1.17 Sears 1-Coat Satin-Finish Paint l”o.. Reg. S2.S0 Paint i>r/me op soon before the fufl interim committee, whose sugges-tioas wiU then be given to Gov. Romney for his bglslative message on implementing toe new constitution. * * * One way the legbbture might try to get around Kelley’s ruling b not to directly extend tbe county terms, but to rapaal the togblation setting up for their eloction. RETAIN POSTS Hib way, n6 elections for those officaa could be held, and incumbents would remain under the constitutional provbkm that office holders stay on until their aucoessors arc elected and qualified. The methsd could be similar for toe appototad Jwlicial paato -repeal of Me ' election ti 1M4. However, aeveral p e r a o n a have said any kgbtotive action to extend tbe terms would be chaUenged to tbe courts. * * ★ For two or three of toe county’s five elected officiab, however, toe question may be one of target rather than relaxation. OTHER RACES Taylor and Barry are considering other races. Both may run fw Congress from the new Itth District, a move Roberts and Murphy may also make. Taylsr ibe b psadertog a gaeat hr a aait aa the new Roberts b aba eoasidertag, sr for one sf toe Circuit Court potto held by appotatmeat, U Mey go op fir etoefioa. Having their terms extended would encourage Taylor and Barry to m for aitotoer post, ahwa liMy’d sUB have their old Jobs if thv to«L * * * ★ In Murphy’s case, moat depends on whether he fa named next week to tbe County Board of Auditors’ chairmanship with the authority and »alai7 be wants. If not named by the board of sigiervbora, he b expected to run for Congress. Although Murphy aays he would run whether or not hb preaant term ta extended, such extension would still make it easier for hiin to sedi a congressional poat. 4 Fischer Quints Soon to Move to New Home ABERDEEN, S.D. (UPII -Four of tbe Fbcher qulntup-lets may Join tbeir fam^ soon in a new home. Mr. aad Mrs. Andrew Fbeher «d theb five alder Drive Pumps far Plumber to Head Council LANSING (AP) - Plumbers unions started campaigning yesterday for one of their leaders to break a Carpenters Union hdd on the presidency of the lN,000-member Michigan Building TYades Council. Election of a councU pre-ideat to succeed L. M. (Boots) Web, secretary of D e t r o i t District Carpenters, is scheduled for tomorrow, final day here. Weir has been president inlN7. Carpenters unions are pushing George Burger, executive of the Carpenters State Council, for tbe presidency. ★ ★ * The United AssoclaUm of Plumbers and Pipefitters started a campaign to elect Jack Wheatley, business manager of Plumbers and Pipefitters Local 190 of Ann Arbor. * * * Gov. Georgs Romney addressed opening day meetings of the council Monday and urged support for hb tax reform program- * * * Romney also said he had ful-fiHed campaign pledges to workers for a state construction safety code and a raise in workmen’s compensation payments. Bitter Pill Refined HULL, England (UPI) - A new refinery opened here today to make a mint-flavored version of cod liver oil. froai aa aU twaatory frame fanahonse twa milea fram Abcrdeca tola a targe ramb-Bag haaM to a galet, weD-to- The new retldenoe wiU serve as a temporary home until the community flni^ its promised $1W,000 home for the family. * * * Hospital authorities said aU the quints ware “fine.” Administrator Sbto- M. Stephens said Maiy Ami, toe first born and tinieat, probably wiD move to an incubator and then a bassinet as aooQ u she reaches S pounds. Rdb«rt E.'Lee's Niece to Be Buried Today CORONADO, Oilif. (UPI) - today for Mrs. Ahm LSa Hir-boed, ShyeaivoM great^iace of CtoU Wv Geo. Robert E. Lee. Mrs. Harbord, widow , of the lata LL Gan. Jhmes Guthrb Harbord, n of (Vl.K)n.iv(M TV from only ^ 119 90... Stereo High Tidelity consoles from only M49 50 AMPLE FREE PAWNING f FvL, Evealags fM. Ofhir Dsys TN $:$• PJN. SXJBXJKrBA.3Sr fuimiture DR,ilLTrTON 4b«b Dxacxs aewT. A—14 THE PONTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER ao. 1963 the SKI WNITI STAG stretch ski pants are a great value. (Shown) 70% rayon-30% nylon; In black, blue, green ...... $tS In 53% nylon-47% wool.........$20 In 60% wool-40 % nylon........$30 WHITI STAG "CLASSIQOr* cardigan sweaters, with full zipper front, in pure worsted wool. Rsglan shoulders, rib crew neck, tube knit cuffs and waist. Black, white, blue, brown, sandstorse. Sues S, M, U XL....................$17 McGRECOR SKI MIISTIR reversible: quilted An-tron (R) nylon to smooth contrasting nylon. Hidden hood, zippercd pockets, ski cuffs and waist tabs. Insulated linirtg. Black, birch, black olive, winter blue. S, M, U XL.................19.95 30" RtVIRSIBLI ski parka; nylon shell reverses RIVmiBif RHJ lAi perke. vertical striped Acty-to Acrylic pile. Zippered pockets, ski cuffs, drew- he ptie reverses to smooth rndon. Big double zi^ string hoiM and waist In navy-rad, or olive per, srppered pookats, sMeched drawstring hood. green/mint green Sizes 36 to 46..... 1R.95 In brown/beigt. or bleek/red. Sizes 36 to 46 ......... ........................... 21.95 MeCRIGOR STRETCH ski jacket of lithe Antron (RJ nylon. Tube knit front and back; smooth sleeves. Zippered pockets, hiddm hood. Black olive, cranberry .................................$32.9$ I: (Background) WHITE STAC reversible quilt ski jac^ of pure nylon, with raglan shoulders, stand-up collar, hidden hood. Reverses to blazer stripe. Black, blue, green . . . $20. (Foreground) WM. BARRY TRUTONB reversible sU parka. Orion (R) shell diamond intarsia reverses to smooth nylon. Drawstring Ivtod and waist. While, loden .................................................. $25 RIVERSIBLI quilted ski parka: An-tron 4R) nylon box quilt reverses to cron-88 (RI lining. Zippered pockets, hidden hood. Navy/burgurtdy, white/, blue, or black/red...............11.95 OUR PONTIAC MALL STORE IS OPEN ^VERV EVENING TO S P.M. ’ 1' : r ,11'^ ■ r' it ‘ THE PONTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 80, 1968 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. Luncheon and Tea Local Hospitals Honor Volunteers at Parties Mn. Ruby Eargle, director of the nursing department at Pontiac State Hospital (second from left), talks with some of the volunteers honor^ at Tuesdayt tea. At the far left is Mrs. E. J. Schluck- bier, Alice Avenue; wearing the checked suit is Mrs. Francis Oak, Lake Angelas Road. At the far right is Mrs. Arthur Heaton of the Oakland County Citizens’ Committee for the hospital. Before Tuesday’s luncheon at the Elks Temple this group from Pontiac General HospikU examined certificates of appreciation given volunteers. From the left—Harold B. Euler, hospital administrator; Harold S. Goldberg, chairman of the board of trustees; Rev. L. R. Miner, a founder of the hospital chaplain’s group; Dr. Dale R. Drew, a member of the hospital staff and the day’s speaker. Just Hand Presents to Guests By Hw Emily PmI lutitiite . Q: T am going to bo married at a nuptial Maas and am having small prayer books made up of the marriage service idtb the names of the The guests win be aUe to follow the ceremony from these and also keep them as Dr. Lynn Allen, chairman of puhlic relations for Pontiac General Hospital Board of Trustees, presents a bronze pin to Norma Jean Ivanov of Davis- Ifs Not Too Late burg for her many hours of volunteer services. At die right is Mrs. Lynn Leake, Birmingham, who has been a Gray Lady at the hospital for 14 years. Speakers at the annual tea for volunteers to Pontiac State Hospital gathered in the employes cafeteria. From the left are Ted Panaretos, director of community relations; Dr. Myroslaw Hrushka, director of geriatric services and the chairman of the day; Mrs. Janet Odell, women’s editor of the Pontiac Press and the principal speaker; Dr. Robert Braun, acting medical superintendent; and Rev. Joseph B. Brady, hospital chaplain. Two Talks Pilot Club Started Don’t Send Sympathy I would like to know how these prayer books should be distributed. Shoidd they be put In the pews before the ceremony, or would it be betr ter to have the ushers hand them to the guests aa they are By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY; Six. weeks ago a neighbor of ours lost a child. They were all broken upp about it and^ the A: It will be much nicer to ive the udiers hand eadi jest his (or her) prayer Q; My daughter is going to be married next month at three o’clock. She will J»e married In dnrch and a re-ceptioo win follow in the church auditorium. Win wedding cake, punch and small sandwiches be sufficient to serve, or should more, substantial food be included? We want to keep the cost down as much as possible but if you think we should include other food, we will do so. ★ ★ ★ A: At a between-meal hour reception, wedding cake, pundi and pa^ sandeidies, win be auffident. The correct wording and addressing of wedding invit^ described in the new Emily Pest Institute booklet entitied, “Wedding Invitations and Announcements.” To obtain a copy, send !• cents in coin and a self-addressed, stamped envelope to the Emily Post Institute, in care of The Pon- me. Do you think it would give them a lift if we sent them a card now? We need an answer. NEIGHBORS w ♦ DEAR NEIGHBORS: Don’t send a card now. It could only open the old wounds. WWW 0 n 1 y one who has Just learned of a loss can properly send a condoienoe message six weeks later. DEAR ABBY: A few months ago a new girl nwved into our neighttwhood. She is 12 and I am U. WWW My mother insisted that I be mce to ber, because this girl didn’t know anyone. She has turned out to be the world's biggest pest. WWW She is a show-off and loud mouth. She calls me on the phone and invites herself over. Sometimes she doesn’t call, she just appears at the door. Once she is inside, she will not leave. I have run out of excuses to give her. Blease help me. DESPERATE WWW DEAR DESPERATE: When, she telephones you, teU her you can’t invite her over because you have studying to do, or have to help your mother. When she appears at the door, greet her with the above information, and tell her she may oome in — but only for 10 minutes. She’ll catdi on. DEAR ABBY: I have been married several years now— I might add, to a good man. Relative Gives Bridal Shower Mrs. Raymond E. Keith was hostesB Monday evening at a bridal dwwer in ber home on Manson Drive, honoring her Among the guests were Mrs. Henry Y. McLaughlin of Opdyke Road, mother of future bridegroom, Richard Mc- Tbe November bridewlect’s grandmother, Mrs. Daniel Ndiaon and her aunt, Mrs. Dallas Nelson, also attended the party. But a very important matter has come up, which is: This man was married before and his first wife was (and still is) in a mental hospital. They have children. As far u I know he never was divorced from her, but he said, under the circumstances, it was all right to get married again. I would like to know, Is our marriage legal? I Im not a young woman and I have never earned my own living. Thank you THINKING OUT LOUir WWW DEAR THINKING: There are NO circumstances under which a man may marry again while he is still married to another woman. • (X)NnDENTIAL TO “J”: We may not ask of God, “Why did this have to happen?” Rather should we say, “Since this HAS happened, Lord, give me the streii^ to bear it, and show me where to go from here.”. Then refrain from adding the burden of your own aor-row to the troubles of those who love you. What’s on' your mjnd? For a personal reply, sod a self-addressed, stamped envelope to Abby, care of The Pontiac Press. w w w Hate to write letters? Send one dollar to Abby, care of The Pontiac Press, for Abby’s new booklet, “HOW TO WRITE LETTERS FOR*AU> 0(X:ASI0NSr Scheduled at Oakland U. “Comments on Economising ^ in the American Economy” * is the title of a lecture by Professor Ben W. Lewis at 3:30 p.ra. Thursday in the Oakland Student Center at Oak- in Southeast Michigan Professor Lewis is chairman of the department of economics at Oberlin College, a consultant for the Ford Foundation in the Near East and consultant and staff member with numerous government agencies. He is a past vice president of the American Economics Association. WWW The public is invited and there is no charge for admis-sion^ TALKS ON TRAGEDY Dr. Lester G. Crocker, dean of the graduate actiool and chaiitnan of the department of romance languages at West-> em Reserve University will present a public lecture on^ “The Substance of Tragedy” at 1 pjn. Nov. I, at Oakland ilniversity. ♦ ★ ★ Dr. Crocker is an authw and was. a Guggeidieim Fellow and Fulbright Research Scholar at the University of Paris and a member of the Institute of Advanced Study at Princeton University. WWW The lecture will be held in North Foundation Hall and Is open to student, faculty, staff and the public free of charge. For the first time in over ten years, a Pilot club charter will be sought for a southeastern Michigan city. WWW Under thO direction of the Detroit Pilot club extension committee and chairman Mrs. William R. McGregor, an organizational tea will be held Sunday from 2 to 5 p.m. at the Botsford Inn for a Pilot club of Greater Birm- Spearheading the drive to interest business women from the Northern Detroit suburbs in the international service City Sorority Celebrates Halloween Fall and Halloween provided the theme and decor for a recent party of Alpha Chapter, Beta TMta Phi sorority, w w w Mrs. L. Z. Monroe of Hat- ’ fam Drive opened her home for the affair at whidi members’ Among the 35 guests were Mr. and Mrs. Howard Johnson of Clarkston. WWW Committee members for the dinner were Mrs. U. C. Meeker, Mrs. Arthur McKlnnlss, Mrs. Walter Kinsler, Mrs. Monroe, Helen Turek and Mrs. Jack Greathouse. club are local women Dr. Louise Kozlow, temporary chairman; Mary Holaday, temporary secretary; and Mrs. Richard Tait, temporary treasurer. LOCAL MEMBER The Pontiac member of the Detroit Pilot club committee is Margaret Schnoll. WWW Pilot International, founded In Macon, Ga. over 40 years ago, is one of five service clubs for women which sets a limit on the number of business women from any one profession which may b^ long to a local club. The organization is devoted to service projects on community. national and international levels. 'De Profundis' to Be Sung The choir of All Saints Episcopal Caiurch in Poatiac will preaifent the “De Profun-dis” of Michael Richard de LaLande Friday at 7:30 p.m. The work will be conducted by Edgar BUlups, organist and choirmaster of All Saints and the soloists and dioir will be accon^Muiied by organ and ’ orchestra. WWW Soloists will include Mary Louise Lindquist, Nancy Jaynes, Suzanne Iborin, Vic-tw Lindquist, and William Vender Ven. The public is invited to attend the performance. Soroptimists Hear About Newest Foods The Soroptlmlst Club of Pontiac heard reports on the recent district conference in Hillside Inn, Plymouth, at a dinner meeting Monday in the Waldron Hotel. WWW Plans were finalized for the annual Kard Kapers and gift sale, Dec. 0, in the club rooms of First Federal Savings of Oakland. Mrs. Janet Odell, executive women’s editor of 'Hie Pontiac Presa, spoke concerning new food items introduced at the recent Food Editors’ Conference in Chicago. Parents Go to College Attending the annual Parent's Weekend at Stephens College, Columhia, Mo. were Dr. pnd Mrs. Anthony J. Michal of MaUbu Drive; the Jack C. Brannacks Of Lakewood Lane and the George L. Stouts of Forest Drive. w w w Their re^Mctive dau^ ters Toni, Barbara and ‘Joanne .are juniors at Stephens. w w w Mr. and Mrs. Richard Vershure of Orchard Lake were guests oi.their daughter Sue, a sophomore at Wheaton College, Wheaton, m. for Parent’s Day festiv- B-2 THE POXTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER m, IMS The All New Modern IMPERIAL Hair Styling as You Like It! 158 Auburn Are. oppMM rwwwre n. CaNtof-^IrHae— PARK FREE FE 4-2878 SAM & WALTER Delicioni Saoiage Open Evenings PONTIAC A4ALL Airman, Clawson Girl Married TTie Polish-American Century Club, Hamtramck. was the setting for a dinner-reception for 300 who attended the recent marriage of Sandra Beatrice Maior to Air Traffic Controlman Edward Joseph Kretsch. Rev. Michael O’Hara of St. Sebastian Church, Dearborn, cousin of the bridegroom, offered the nuptial high Mass in St. Ladislaus Church, Hamtramck. CARRIED ORqmDS The bride, daughter of David G. Maior of Clawson and the late Mrs. Maior, appeared in white silk bro^e with French illusion veil. Her peu-l tiara matdied the bridegroom’s gift necklace. She carried white Cymbidium orchids. ♦ ★ w Karen and Beverly Palciar-ski of HamtranKk attended their cousin as bridesmaids, Mary Ann Krasusky of Grosse He was maid of honor. The bridegroom, son of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Kretsch of SylvSn Lake was assisted by his brothers Elmer Jr. as best man and John who ushered with William Downing of Walled Lake. WWW Returned from their Kentucky honeymoon, the couple are at home in Utica. He is stationed at Selfridge AFB. Keep Shoes Loose Tight - fitting shoes or boots can cause frostbite, which can be not only painful but serious. JUDY PAVLIK January vows are planned by Judy Pavlik, daughter of the John Ppv-liks of Royal Oak and Richard Fox, son of Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Fox of Meadow Street. Sorority Discusses Transfers The Pontiac City Council of Beta Signu Phi sorority considered membership transfers from other cities Monday .evening in the home of Mrs. Andrew Vitt on Silver Circle. WWW Plans for Founders’ Day were discussed, also a tea for new nwmbers in November at the Clarkston Road home of Philip L. Stomberg. STAPP'S. . shoe treats without tricks . . Girls' New Saddle Style With colorful Injerfi at tha laddit . . . choosa either the new 'Peat' or Red ihadei. Sizei vnall fVj-12, 12 Vi-3, In widths too and price* tror^ . . . Boys' Blutcher Moc In mallow leather with rubber heel artd leather *ole. A man'* style in little men's size*, too. Little Boys' 8Vi-t2 to Big Boys' 9‘t. Priced according to size from *8” > SHOE REPAIR SERVICE /it our West Huron Stora we hova a completa shop operated by Expert Shoo Repoirnrten. Shoes for hepoir may be token to any of our three stores. Stapp's for Convenient, Prompt, Personal Service JUVENILE BOOTERIE 28 E. Lawrertcc St. JUNIOR SHOES 928 W Huron at Telegraph (OpenFh. tp9. Set. toBJOl ROCHESTER STORE Junior Shoes •418 N. Mein St. (Open M. to 9) ^ Red, White Featured at Recent Wedding An Italian-American club reception followed the recent vows of Karen Lee Gorkie and Ronald Frederick May, in St. Paul Lutheran Church, where Rev. Maurice Shacked officiated. Daughter of the Frank L. Goridea of East Mansfield Avenue, the bride wore white taff^ combined with Chantilly lace for the candlelight ceremony. A coachman-style lace panel centered her full gathered skirt styled in a chapel sweep. A rose headpiece topped her bouffant illusion veil and red roses accented her bouquet white carnations and Stephanotis. With Mrs. Eugene Hubbutdc, her cousin’g matron of honor were the bride’s sister Carole Gorkie, Glenda Roberts and Mrs. Robert Tumbun pf Oxford, who were bridesmaids. Kathy Gorkie was junior maid and Candy Jones of Oxford served as flower girl. niey wore red dtiffon over taffeta and carried red-tipped white carnations. The bridegroom, son of Electric Sheets Need Cleaning Be sure to launder your electric sheets before summer storage. TTiey are safe in a washing machine, but should never be wrung or twisted. Just wrap the piub with several thicknesses of cloth, ana tie it in place with thread so U won’t strike the washer tub. Follow the manufacturer’s instructions for Frederick L. May of Forest Avenue and the late Mrs. Lorraine DeVar, had William Pal-lace of Clarkston for best man. Seating guests were Ernest Gehrke, Henry Grace, Gary Wright and junior usher John Jones of Oxford. The couple will be at home on Pioiwer Drive after a honeymoon in Miami. 'A' for Cleanliness Clean hands, clean clothes, and clean sdxwl supplies rate an A-phis firom any teacher. Foil Fashion Show The fashion show to be presented by the Sisterhood of Temple Beth Jacob will start at 1:30 p.m. Nov. U at 4ha temple. Arthur’s will supply the fashions. Women of Central Methodist Church hosted the distrut confererux of Womans Society of Christian SerV' ice Tuesday. Shown above are (from left) Mrs. William Cansfield, North- ville, district president; Mrs. P. G. Latimer, Dwight Street, a district chairman; Mrs. Marshall R. Reed, and Bishop Reed, Detroit. Mrs. Reed tvas the honored guest of the day. Big and bold houndsUxOh check pattern highlights these lined pants paired with a dp-up-or-dioum tur-Ue-collar shirt with drawstring bottom. Called VeU tino, this new f/p^brie is reminiscent of a cross between velvet and cadunere. Available locally. By Pan-tino, division of Chestnut HUl Industries. Straight From Polly Pointers for Brides By POLLY CRAMER DEAR POLLY—I, too, save the pointers. Recently when I gave a shower for a bride-to-be, I passed out a Polly’s Pointer clipping to each guest. ’Then each one read her Pointer aloud. llus led to our sharing our own helpful hints with the bride. We had an Interesting and informative afternoon not only for the bride-to-be but for us older homemakers, too.—MRS. M. K. ★ ★ DEAR POLLY—To nnake shoe trees for women’s pointed-toed shoes, unwind two wire coat hangers, place the straight end of the hanger in a toe and bend it at the desired length for the heel I hang mine on the clothee rod by using the hook that was in the hanger. My foet are wide and my shoes get out of shape but this certainly helps to keq> them nice looking. MRS. J. S. ★ ★ ★ DEAR POLLY i- Ever try to wwk with a stiff chamois? IL ii a tough job. phamois in a pan of warm water with or two of vegetable oil, aoak for a few minutes and thoroughly. Softens it in a jiffy!—POLLY P. Thick Suds Clean Cane ’To scrub cane w rattan furniture, use a fairly stiff brush dipped into thick soap or detergent suds. Only after each piece Is thoroughly dry should you apply a fresh finish — uring oil, wax, or polish according to the manufacturer’s directions or your own preference. DEAR POLLY — I have found a good way to store flower pots. Take a strong cord and tie a big knot (bigger than the holes in the pots) on the bottom of the cord. 1108 BlUe the flower pata •• to the esH threagk the grakage hahs. After the pato art stoaag mi the card, haag tha emnd an a haak ar shelf hi the garage er baaeaMrt.-Mrs. B. D. ★ ★ ★ \ DEAR POLLY—Before washing sweaters, tadc the button-holas tether to keep them from stretching out of shape during the laundtfing. > Wax on window sills not only protects the paint but makes ■ simple job of wiping off dirt and rain spots. • To get more mileage out of bath mats, I make them reversible by sewing a turkish towel on the bottom side. • Before purchasing dark colored corduroy, take a white handkerchief and rub the surface of the fabric briskly. If the color conies off on your handkerchief, you can expect it to rub off on other clothing. If the color rubs off when the fabric is dry, the problem will be worse when the material is being laundered.-MISS A. S. Share your favorite homemaking ideas . . . send them to Polly in care of The Pontiac Press. You’ll receive a bright, new silver dollar if Polly uses your ideas in Polly’s Pointers. TUXEDO Beautifully fittad . . . ouf_ "After gor-ments will help make any occasion bng remembered. Harwooii Ml W. HURON FE24NI CtttTBMTMLOm-WnFOgm Dins SUIT 8ERTAU Children’s Latest FASHIONS RICHARDS 48 N. Soginaw St. GOSSARD'S INTERNATIONAL Women Hi« world over love fh^ fit, fashion, comfort of 'Answer' Ndturol control b tha lacrol of Answer'* natural fit. .. wHh bonslois eomfort. Inner diogonal* of olotlic Mt and curvo In four diroclions to flotton Ibo tummy, eonteur hlptnos. V-shopody imwr slottic lifts in bock. Whitt. 25 to 34. |095 Also in motchiag ponty tfyl#. 12’* fvm fAsmoM Nttos ns own rouNOAnoN, m • mrHf trmm^ cwn*i.r*« fit nmcifr f»r th» t-Im Mrf fi,»n fhtHr, 'fiMfS mv«U eriN IVUY NtONT TO 9 FALL HAT SALE OFF THREE DAYS ONLY THURS.,FRI.,SAT. EXCITING DESIGNER COLLECTION SALE PRICED IN THE HEART OF THTSEASON! Designers samples end many one-of-a-kind. Exciting shapes, striking trims, smashing colors. Lobols youll rocognixot Mr. John Jr. Miu Hottlo Comlgio Mkhool Torre N. Gladys A Sollo Chonto' V PtorroCoidin jn/fiMr?'Solan . JfMMMiiie THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 30. 1963 B—3 Wash Them Right Sweaters Everywhere! It’s sweaters - sweaters -sweaters, everywhere! ★ * * When once two or three sweaters were all that you needed for a whole season’s wear, today’s collections are so varied and highly individualized that the basic pullover and cardigan just do not satisfy an needs of styles for all occasions. w ★ * Just take a look at the infinite variety of sweaters now available in local stores. Sweaters today come in' all color rangte, in many fabrics and weaves, in any number of stylings and trims. KEEP IT NEW LOOKING After the choice of style has been made, some thought should be given to sweater care. All sweater designers suggest a bit of pre-wear care —that is, some thought applied to proper laundering. ★ ★ ★ An old tried-and-true trick is to become a label saver, when it comes to caring for man-made fibers. These require simple — yet specific —washing treatment, and detailed laundering instructions are usually printed r i g h t on the h a n g t a g. Keep these handy for easy reference. Wool is still the favorite sweater fiber for fall, appearing in many types of weaves, stitches and finishes. They, too, deserve special treatment and a few simple steps should.be fo|)owed. • First, soak sweaters in lukewarm soapsuds or in cold water with special soap made especially for wool. After soaking, • Gently squeeze the solution thfough the garment thoroughly. • Rinse in lukewarm or cold water twice. (Don’t lift the garment out of the water entirely; the weight of the water may stretch the yam). • Squeeze out the water, and roll the g a r m e n t in a Turkish towel to remove excess moisture. • • Shape on a flat surface, and dry away from sun or direct heat. • If pressing is desired, use A bulky “tweeds* look wool is generous in cut as well as good look.), and suggests the casual look of the “sportive” that's so good this fall, even to the nice addition of leather buttons and leather trim. It looks equally well over sleek ankle length pants or over a slim sheath skirt, as shown here. Newlyweds Plan Trip to New York Rev. Wayne Peterson officiated at the recent marriage of Alice Jean Jokinen of Davis-burg to James Harold Scott, In Christ Lutheran Church. Norman Jokinen escorted his sister, daughter of Mrs. ’Thor Olafsaop of Davisburg and the late Matti Jokinen. The Harold Scotts, parents of the bridegroom, together with Mrs. Olafsson, gave a reception in their Lexington Avenue home immediately after the ceremony. A dinner for the bridal party followed in the Fox and Hounds Inn. * ♦ ★ With her A-line gown of white brocade, the bride wore a veil of silk net held by a rose headpiece. She carried white carnations and yellow roses. Wearing Empire gowns of silk brocade were maid of honor Nancy Stanquits of Clarkston - in green, and bridesmaid Mrs. Michael Aperauch, in gold. Accenting their corsages of white carnations were green and bronze roses, respectively. Stanley Smith was best man. Guests were seated by John Garlac of Clarkston, Michael Aperauch, Leonard Hudack,-and Barry Allen of Keego Harbor. ★ ★ * The couple plans a mid-November honeymoon in New York City and Niagara FaOs. They will reside in Keego Harbor. KEEPS YOU INSULATED FROM THE COLD, CRUEL WORLD Your foot have no need to fear winter’s blasts if you own a pair of these Hush Puppies* boots. Their anti-winter selling points include water-repellency, fleece linint Breathin’ Brushed Pigskin* (which keeps you both warm and dry-^rspiration passes out through the leather but cold air can’t sneak in), a weather-proof crop# sole, and a minimal need for upkeep. Keep the winter out in comfortable style, with Hush Puppies* Hush l^a|a|»•M^ “Shoes for the Entire family' 20 WMt'Huron Str««t »n»5 SHOE STORE Open fti. 'HI 9 FE 2-3821 a steam iron on the wrong side of the garment, or use a specially treated pressing cloth. Ski-look sweaters, worn with trim stretch pants, are great favorites for casual wear. This striking ‘ two-tone abstract jacquard design is in a heavy weight Orion say e lie that's a cinch to launder, no .stretch, no .shrink and no blockirig necessary. All suteaters pictured are by-Bobbie Brooks and are available locally. This is the third day of my| Trick AND Treat Diet. For a qouple of days now I have been telling you about some of the tricks you can use to make food delicious even when dieting, tricks 1 used to make this short seven-day diet a happy experience for you. I have already mentioned powdered fat-|ree milk, whipped cream made from fat-free dry milk. 1 have inentioned the use of lemon juice and tarragon vinegar. Today, I want to give you a few more suggestions. If you Insist on a cream sauce once in a while it will not be very hi^ in cniorie count if you use only a little butter or margarine and skim or fnt-free powdered milk It. The .sweater is a soft fur-blend yarn that combines lambswool with fur fiber and nylon.. .'. that closely resembles precious cash-mere and should be treated as such. I have not yet mentioned herbs. These are wonderful for pepping up the flavor of all kinds of foods and have practically no calorie count. A baked potato seasoned with salt and parsley is delicious. This is just one example. I have not mentioned the artificial sweeteners which can be used successfully in many dishes. Onion and garlic salt adds flavor to food. A very light sprinkling of cheese over vege-i tables or meat or salad adds to the flavor and is light in calorie | count. Here are the menus for ’Thursday: BREAKFAST Six ounces tomato Juice ’Two baked or hard poached eggs, with the pokcher lightly greased with butter and a dot of cheese on each egg One piece of toast Coffee, with one teaspoon sugar LUNCHEON Broiled lean meat patty (three ounces) One-half .cup carrots One glass skim milk One medium apple . DINNER Six ounces vegetable juice, two bye wafers Four ounces lean beef One-half cup carrots and peas, flavored With one teaspoon butter One-half cup grapefruit sections (fresh or water packed canned) One small potato, baked or broiled, with salt and parsley Eight ounces skim milk Apple Snow If you have missed some of the menus for this diet (which gives you a loss 'of about five pounds in seven days) or would like to have the complete diet in booklet form, send 10 cents and a stamped, self-addressed envelope with your request for it to Josephine Lowman in care of ’The Pontiac Press. NOW OPEN One of Michigan's Finest CONVALESCENT HOMES Top Facilities and Care at Reasonable Rates, Just 2 Blocks» from Pontiac General Hospital! WE INVITE YOVR INSPECTION! Seminole Hills Snrsing Home 532 Orchird Lake Ave. —Pontiac Between Telegraph and Woodward — 338-7153-4 REDUCE EAT and LOSE UP TO 6 LBS. A WEEK CAPSULESI EASIER TO TAKE AND MORE EFFECTIVE THAN THE POWDERED AND LIQUID FOOD SUPPLEMENT, AND COSTS LESS INCLUDING CAPSULES SUITED TO YOU INDIVIDUALLY BY Lie PHYSICIAN, M.D. NO GASTRITIS OR IRREGULARITY WITH MEDICWAY CAPS. DON'T DIET-JUST EATI AS THOUSANDS HAVE DONE. YOU CAN LOSE 5, SO OR 100 LBS. AND KEEP IT OFFI MEDIC-WAY 335-9205 7 OFFICES IN OAKUND AND WAYNE COUNTIES-ONE IN MIRACLE MULE . J B-4 THE PONTIAC P|IESS. WEPyESDAY. OCTOBER 30. 1668 Haunt hr the Best: Girl Ghosts WASHINGTON T^Men cUim superiority in many areas of endeavor, but when it comes to haunting they can’t hold a candle t9 women. For every male ghost ^ who usually can think of nothing more imaginative to do than clomp up and down stars or clank chains — there are dozens of fascinating female phantoms with spell-binding bags of tricks. One of the.se alluring apparitions is wraith in residence at The Octagon, historic brick house that served as a temporary Executive Mansion for President James Madison and his incomparable Dolly when the British burned the White House during the War of 1812. For years the stately Georgian borne was a center of Washington’s social life. * * * Mrs. Velma May, The .Octagon's hostess, says she doesn’t believe in the supernatural and she certainly has never seen any of the feminine ghosts whose stories have made the old mansion Washington's favorite haunted house. "But I have seen that chandelier.” she says, pointing to a big glass affair in the stairwell, •'start to sway as if a hand had done it. There was no wind. It would stop after awhile. "The former caretaker, who lived here 33 years on the top floor, said he got used to not meeting people on the stairs after he heard them coming. And he saw things.” The Octagon s most famous ghost is one of the young woro-ea of the Tayloe family. Ac-counto vary whether It is Betty, the colonel’s niece; one of the coloners daughters or a cousin. What happened to her isn’t clear either. You have a choice: 1. Hurrying down the magnif- icent stairway to meet a lover I she stumbled over a black cat I and fell to the marble landing, dying instantly. Shrieks, the thud of her body and the hiss of the cat can be heard during thunderstorms. * it * 2. She threw herself down the stairwell because of thwarted love for a British officer. Her shadow may be seen re- J fleeted on the wall by the flickering light of the candle she carries up the winding stairs. ★ ♦ * 3. She eloped against her family’s wishes and returned to beg forgiveness. She was met with such rage she flung herself over the bal-! ustrade of the top landing. (In ^ one variation, her infuriated brother pushed her. In another, the terrified girl was fleeing her father’s wild anger when she stepped on a kitten, fell and broke her neck.) Her unhappy spirit, swathed in white draperies, floats up and down stairs. For years the bellwires were inexplicably haunted. All the bells would ring at a certain hour every night. ★ * * Once, so a story goes, a skep- ^ tic leaped up and caught hold ^ of the wires as they started to ring. He was lifted off the floor, — but the ringing kept on, i To keep superstitious servants. the house was entirely rewired — and this apparently I did the trick. { Officers Installed Monday Some 250 members and guests witnessed the Pontiac Chapter No. 228. Order of the Eastern Star installation of officers Monday evening at the Roosevelt Temple. Leading the group this season will be Mrs. Norvil Vincent as worthy matron with Mr. Vincent as worthy patron. * w * Also elected were Catherine McCrindle. associate matron; Glenn Williams, associate patron; Mrs. Edith Coons, secretary; Mrs. Mary Erickson, treasurer; Mrs. Leroy Hecox, conductress; and Mrs. Russell A' Kneale, associate conductress. OTHER OFHCERS Appointed to office were Mrs. James Howard, Mrs. Virgil Newton, Mrs. George McDonald, Mrs. James Sheldon, Mrs. Robert I. Gilbert, Mrs. James H. Phillips, Mrs. Clayton Randolph Mrs. Robert B yr n e s, Mrs. Duane Boughton, Mrs. Edith H i 11-man, and Mrs. Irl Williams. Installing officers were Mrs. Paul Hagle, Mrs. Roy Wilton, Mrs. Joseph Minton. Mrs. Howard McCoy, and Mrs. Clyde Marshbanks. Included in the p r o g r a m were Mrs. Sylvan Clark, Mrs. Earl Ross and Mrs. Arthur MacAdams. Josephine Haskins was refreshment chair- Cut Off the Cuffs If shirt sleeves are too long, have the cuffs taken off, the sleeves shortened and then replaced. Universities Honor Five Pontiac Students 21 JEWELS 14” y#f Only V SHOCK-RESISTAMT V. OUSTPaOOP, ANTI MACNtTIC V PaiCISION MOVtMfNT "V IIFCTIMC MAlNSPPINC V WATta atSISTANT MODUS 2M5 ORCHARD LAKE RD. KEEOO HARBOR S82-D830 MIAMI BAKE SHOPPE OiM*!! Evening* THE HONTIAC MALL Anton Keats Simson of Pontiac has received the doctor of science degree in the field of mechanical engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He has previously been awarded bachelor's and master’s degrees from .M.I T, A * * Marcia Karen Strong, a sophomore, was cited during Kalamazoo College's annual honors convocation Friday in the campus chapel. Her parents are the James L. Strongs of South Ardmore Street. A ★ * Miss Strong received the freshman chemistry and physics award spon.sored by the Chemical Rubber Company. It is awarded annually to the student who demonstrates outstanding achievement as a freshman. ‘IN CALIFORNIA Laura Marie Freville has been named leader of the freshman class of the University of San DiegQ College for Women at Acala Park in California She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. Stanley Freville of White Lake Township, and is studying pre-law. Three of her seven courses are in advanced honors classification, j Att, freshman investiture,' Miss Freville received an honors scholarship in recognition of high scholastic atttainment of high scholastic attainment tests. A , * A Don Carlson of Bloomfield Hills is among 58 members of the Indiana University senior and junior athletic boards working on activities for I.U.’s homecoming weekend Nov. 8-10 on the Bloomington ilnd.) campus. KANSAS CHOIR Gordon Messer, son of the Walter A. Messers of Pine-grove Avenue has been chosen for membership in the concert choir at Sterling College, Sterling, Kans During the year the choir is in constant preparation for the annual spring tour which, this year, will take them to Colorado April 3-19. IT S THE SctttimcHt OF FLOWERS THAT COUNTS TWO OAIIY OEIIVERIES TO DETROIT AND . INTKMEDIATf POINTS COBBIES k mtO C»0%% ShOC OUR "POPULAR DEMAND” COBBIE. Just on* step will show you why so many octiv* woman . litorolly liv* in,..this smart litti* shonklou tio. It's so R*xibl«, so light and soft, you con forgot you'r* wapring shoas. Try iti Discwvar how this fomoui- buiy-dgy stops I CARACAS 12.W PAUU’SJIISF. STORE .15 \. ,S.\GIN.\W iTMt otoSiKl Sm w fOaaKOM wktfMi »AS rw U n NsMoM M Ciwsi $EW SIMPLE By Eun?c« Farmer America Healthv I p"' /Aryierica neaiiny Americana for all their per-The health care bill in 1962 sonal needs, thet Health Insur-represented an estimated 6.4 ! ance Institute reports. ‘‘Dear Eunice: “I have just finished a beautiful mohair dress, but much to my horror, it makes me look like a stuffed teddy bear. I have seen this in fashion shows, pattern books, etc. and it always looks so lovely. How can I avoid this mistake again?” Mrs. P. G. .V * * * Dear Mrs. P. G.: One of the most important parts of sewing is the selection of fabric and pattern, because it must be right for you as an individual. I gather from your letter that yoii are not tall and | willowy, and unfortunately, these heavily textured fabrics do add pounds to us. j This type of fabric would be best suited to a long coat and ^ then, one is rather slim, in order to be becoming on you. j If your are uncertain about the style of a pattern, or the' fabric, shop around at the ready-to-wear departments first and try on a few, it won’t look better on you just because you made It if it doesn't do anything for you in the finished garment. ★ A A “Dear Eunice Farmer: ! “I made some clothes last season out of stretch fabric (which I dearly love) but when they were cleaned, several of them be-1" came stiff. I would like to make some more this fall, but can't' afford to have this happen again. Any suggestions?” i Mrs. T. C. C. Dear Mrs. T. C. C.: ' Most of your better stretch fabrics can be washed as well as dry-clean^, however, the stretch fabrics using rJbber, must | be washed, and not dry-cleaned. This rubber dees have a tendency to swell and stiffen in dry cleaning solvents. Be sure to ask the sale$girl the content of your stretch fabrics when you are making your purchase. , ★ ★ ★ Mrs. E. M. T. says: “Use left over plaids for school-book j covers—they’re sturdy and distinctive and no harder to make i than the usual paper ones. These also make excellent gifts for ^ a beginner-sewer to make for her classmates 6ince it. is all straight stitching. •Hi Fashion or Casual Styles | WALTO^ j j Jjemtti \jd(M \ \ 3984 W. WALTON OR 4-0501 Z *s»s»siBas^sostntB«s»»sainti«»tmmiiT out or water, or in it Iceeps time -to the minute TISSOT TAILOR TRIX WINNER "For those of us who dislike wearing long nightgowns and have many taking up drawer space, I have a suggestion for converting them into shorty pajamas. "First, measure and cut off about four inches at hemline. Then, with ‘Sljort’ shorts-pattern, proceed to cut out same, starting at the bottom of gown. •‘After making the hemline even, attach a ruffle at the bottom which is made from the four inches previously cut off the lowet* edge of the gown. (Girls, I did this out of my gowns and gave them to my two teen-age girls and they thought they were darling).” Mrs: M, E. Albert. Mt. Horeb, Wis., wins a Tailor Trix Pressing Board for this suggestion. who nndt a watch hi can tract umiir aR I, wi ncommind thi Tiicet SiaAStar. Tha rugged SoaAStar watir riciftant can ii la intartly itylod It goat will with dricc-ug eccaiiiM or a day af octln ploy. SoaAStar, Ilka oil Tilcot watciiM, will gtvo yoori ol dipindabli iirvico. ill itSlmr Olhirr, includiif MN-winding mgdili to fttM f.lj, REDMOMD^S Jpwrlent—OptopwirtHti II N. Sacinaw SI.—FE t-MU AathorHad Tlccat Agincy ■.. Troitod for Aecutaty SInca TUI Ogon Than., Prt. 'tN t B^;>-iMNijnMiMK£SRMmiiinnBiMw^ —. YOUR SEWING GLOSSARY: Homespun: A loosely woven | fabric, rugged and textured in appearance because of the un-, | evenly spun yams. Ideal for sportswear because it retains its | shape and has a casual appearance. i| Emir Waak Spaciolf BUDGET WAVE .giO CALLIE’S BEAUTY SHOP 116 North Perry Sweden’s imports from the i U.S. last year totaled about 1313 : million. GERALDINE T. PFEIFFER The Rudolph L Pfeif-I fers of Garden Court an-I nounce the engagement of their daughter Geraldine ! Tereasa to Charles W. Evans, son of Mrs. .Archie Crumm of Vinewood Avenue and George Evans of Ceres, Calif. A Feb. 8 ' altar dale has been set. Dandy Cut Popular Gina Mora SALON WAVE Fall Special 750 or g95 You get an excellent permanent complete with .'Special conditioning luster - giving rinses and the newest fashion setting. All included at this low price. And you’re in expert hands in our salon. donnell^s HAIR STYLIST AppoiniHaat JT*( Atwayi Nacauarf Ph*M M2-0420 Naun 9 t* 9 PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING. CENTER WIQQS End‘Of~Month CLEARANCE SALE! All of our floor samples and odd pieces at really exciting mark-down*! All for immediate delivery - to make way for the new merchandise arriving daily! Shop early for best selection —■ most item* are one-of-a-kind! PONTIAC STORE ONLY! ★ 5^ 1379.9$ IS” Wi«g Soil ky Wnleni CoraliBi, woria print 7095 JJ; covir in boigi and brown, ihirted bin........ ^ t 7 S *395.(»86”lloll-amiUwconSafibyWMteniCirolini.poly gOQirOO die ran cuiUoni, pain wnvm docnmcntiry duign eoiir... 5384.00 S3” Coliniil Sofa by Wectini Cirolini, ikirlid ban, 90 Q C 00 larquoicc and biifi woirin docaioinlary deiign eonr. 5315.00 S3” Tradilional Sofa by Linaaga, akiriad bnao, $| QO50 olivt grain laxtnrad cover.................... itZ9S.00 72” Colonial Sofa by Harden, hox-plaal akirl.9OQQ00 wbita intfblna lapartry rover.................... S29S.00M” Wing .*ofa by Wnlam Carolina, foam eoih-Rk^CVQOO lonad, box-pleal ikiii, beige twaad eovar..... 1375.00 so" Traditional Sofa by Lineage, very handaome R| 0050 with tufted bark, coroa brown broeada rover... X70 tlW.30 V ing Love Seal by Vaaiern Carolina, ikirted bata, 9 •99" Ir in ollvo and pnnapkin on wbilo.. 9QQ7S % 24 WEST HURON ST. 40S0 TELEGRAPH RO. FE 2-6361 Early American SOLID MAPLE j OCCASIONAL TABLES j ! With Mar-Proof Plastic Tops One-of-a-Kind Floor Samples! $35.50 COCKTAIL TABLE $23.00 j $23.90 COCKTAIL : TABLE 117.50 : $23.90 STEP-END ; TABLE $17.50 ; $35.90 STEP-END TABLE $25.00 ^ $39.50 MAG. END « TABLE $29.95 ii $2450 LAMP TABLE $18.50 ^ Floor Sample - One Only! Plymouth Rock Maple Dining Room Group Was S129.95 NOW 42 ” Round Ekten sion i|i; Table with 1 Leaf 4 Spindle-back Chairs i^; 5-Drawer Chest hyDroxol In Diitraned FrnirivonH Was $185 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 80. 1068 B—5 .A. Grade A Whole FRYERS TT Fryert <^31' Fryer Breaats >^ 55' Fryer Dramslicks ‘^45* a TURKEYS 39 U1J.A. Grail k 10-22 Lkf. Pimp Teider! Ball Park Fraaks Hygroda't HI Finest PKG. 59* BeUsriUesiSS.^ IBA Luncli Meal Caiaed Haai PrfcM £fP«etfr« thru Nowmbf 2 Craakrry Sauce S5"2'toJ'39* fPET~ Daiety Leneh Jar 3 ’!^ 99* I VarictfM 49 54,^ Jialw PlatUe Wathkaikat .... a8< 49c BOTAL GUEST GBEENS Nailtra O SI •r IMf Q *» I tOTuniBinuttEuc 4-4 ar Biaay Baui MICHIGAN No. 1 Caeliflower largo Snowbotl Froth Crisp APPLES 4^39* Jvicy . Nclataal B—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 80. 1968 Dr. Wayne G. Brandstadt Says: Fast Not Recommended to Lose Weight To fast or not to fast—that is the question a lot of persons are facing today because they have allowed themselves to become overweight. Over the centuries people have fasted for different rea- sons. Through fasting, the adherents of'some religious faiths have brought] themselves to the point of de-iirium. Other per- BRANDSTADT sons motivated by their religious beliefs have fasted as a penance for sins. Ghandhi used fasting as a political weapon with appreciable success, and on at least one occasion carried it almost to the point of death by starvation. Most modera practioners of fasting, however, do it for the sole purpose of losing While an absolute fast (going without anything by mouth except water) will result in a rapid loss of weight, such an extreme or heroic measure has little to recommend it. Those who attempt it are usually persons who have lost patience with slower methods or who find that after a halfhearted reduction of food intake on two or three days a week they weigh as much as or more than they did before. In any case, the weight lost is quickly regained. Dr. Nevin S. Scrimshaw of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology made a study of teen-agers who indulged in partial fasting (skipping meals) and found that they lost weight. But at the same time, because of failure to get a balanced diet they lowered their resistance to infecthws dis- This is an especially dangerous way for teen-agers and young adults to do, because that is often the way tuberculosis gains a foothoid. In another study, in which normal volunteers were used, fasting caused a decrease in the alkaline reserve in the blood. LEADS TO AaOOSIS This could lead to a type of acidosis. Another result was that the normal nitrogen balance between what was ingested as protein and what was eliminated in the sweat and urine as urea was disturbed. Nitrogen was lost and this can slow the healing of wounds or the recovery from any disease. Other constituents of the blood to be lost while fasting are sodium, calcium and glucose. The sugar stored in the liver is released to' the blood and thus rapidly depleted. DON’T FAST For these reasons, nutritionists today do not recommend fasting. All the evidence points to the benefits of an adequate well-balamed diet with all the essential elements in quantities sufficient to maintain normal weight. Top English Singer, 35, Dies After Collapse CROYDON, England 'UPD-“Britain's Bing Crosby," singer Michael Holliday, 35, died last night in a hospital here. Holliday, who collapsed at his home earlier, had an eight-year career that included, reond sales of more than a million. His biggest hit was ‘‘The Story of My Life," which climbnl to the top of Britain's hit parade and said 500,000 copies. WITN MEITED BUTTER Anyone who insists on a period of fasting should consult his family doctor who will take into consideration the subject’s general health, h i s present weight compared with the de- sired weight for his height, the reasons why a fast is desired, the type of fast (partial or complete), the length of the fasting period and the anticipated extent of activity during the period. Although these would vary with the individual, the doctor would in all probability try to dissuade the patient in favor of a more rational approach to the problem. New Kent Airport to Open on Nov. 23 GRAND RAPIDS (UPD - The new Kent County Airport In Cascade Township will open fop business Nov. 23 although several facilities, including the restaurant, won’t be completed until next year. The County Aeronautics Board approved the opening date for the |8 million facility yesterday and set Dec. 1 as the closing time for the old airport here. Construction of the new airport 12 miles southeast of downtown Grand Rapids began 2(4 years ago. It is located next to Interstate 96. FYom 60 to 80 per cent of the graphite used in the U.S. is imported. CHANGE-OF-LIFE... does it fill you with toiTor...frighten you? R0od how 3 out of 4 «venwn In dodonf loth got omadng roliof inehnfmg roM from hot fhuhot, oorvou$ tonthn Have TOU reached that time of 'hen one minute yon feel next are efammy, cold, nervous, irritable? Are you in a constant agony of fear? Don't just suffer these miserable symptoms of change-of-lifel Find relief the way count- less women have, wHh gentle Lydia E. Pinkham Compound. In doctors’ tests 8 out of 4 women who took them reported effective relief without expensive "shots.” Don’t brood. Don't worry yourself sick. Get Lydia E. Pinkham Vegetable Compound today. The gonlie modicins wHh lh» geni/e noipe LYDIA B. PINKHAM imijH U.S. GOVT GRADE FRESH, WHOLE Fryers 29 QUALITY YOU CAN DEPEND ON ! SHANK PORTION — SUGAR CURED Smoked Ham 39 iUTT PORTION OR WHOLE HAM. 49e LI. Ring Bologna Bull Park Franks Cottage Cheese Plain or Oariie 39 Mb: pin. 59* 30-01. Ctn. 39* iHtrodMctery Off«r —Sovt 28e! QUAKER MAID Ice Cream Va Gallon Carton Morton Cbsrry Piss .... Grs|is or Glnrry Drisk.......STt: Pins, Frsnsh Frist, Wsfflst. rwr s-rak. 29* IIP 10* Sapor Spteiol Volnn! PURE APPLE Horida Grapefruit .. GaldaR Ripe Bananas Linda Laa Danuts ... Florida Son Sovo 17el Oiooa PraatPowa Sovo 6e POTATO CHIPS IGRAPIFRUIT Juice PEACH HAIVES TOMATO CATSUP I RECIPE SALMON I CAVERN Mushrooms m BABY FOODS SKM V eiANT RINSO BLUE — _ 10c DomlRf't Plok NsrHwrsJunlsTswili „ 2F Waihx Wand Pipsr 'K" 24‘Wixfu Sandwich lati 'SJ'3F Free iZ. Glasses TO MATCH YOUR BLUE HEAVEN DINNERWARE! OPEN DAILY This Wook. Frto — 5 Onset A different fleti free eacli week. Yen will eel- w. Jake p.rch». ssjr&i'viS’iJS:: a? i m. k i m- leverege Oleu. Deo'l nilii tk)c ceiatise offer! of 3 and Conpon Bolow ! eeeaaese^e ■ e e HT;Bf|W!f!Wf!l!Wi ■ e e e ■ e s s e s e FREE! ILUE HEAVEN 5>Os. Juice Gloss wM tbh aORfOR HRd POKIMM of 3 foT lYc Yen get all 4 glosses for S9e r A EXTRA J’M STAMPS SATURDAY 8 Is I p.m. With *5 Purchase or More MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER DAWT RICH DRADI A FRHH CRIAMaT BUTTER Limit: On# 1.Lb. Print 59* IRI. w MAIMS MARYUNO CRIMI SANOWICH COOKIES Limit One 2%29* ME. 39* MU owms ruRi sfRAWimY Preserves 29* Limit: One RES. 39* eSN rOWDERIO, LIDHT OR DAM MIOWN SUGAR Limit Two Roxos 2j^29* » HUNTS FAMKY SOI PORK & BEANS Limit Two Cons 2-^29*» With this coupon and |5 purchase eacluding beer, wine tad ciRSrettes. Valid thiouah Stiurdar, Nov. 2. Limit: One coupon. 12a OPP UEtL-RBDULAI OR MT V(F SHAMPOO Limit: Two 7*Ox. Rottlos 69* MS. 77* ■ With this coupon tad $3 punhate eududiag baer, wins Sad a ciaarettet. Valid thronah SsfUrdsv, Nov. 2. Limit: Oac eoupoa. TbriNLhiiMftrDiilm .. ‘tsi' 54* Salvt Dstsrgtst PtIltIt . 'Cm' 71* Dtwiir Fshris SsHsttr Riast... 87* MtSam Sin Ivtry Sttp..... iv Largs Sin IvtryStap..... h, ig IvsrySsspFlakst.........”t?*34‘ Oisit Silt Inry Ssiw......."Jf* g]- Bsmsy Btsily Swiy......... *S“ IT t /- / HE rONTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER_80. 1&63 ONE COLOR B—T Remember When You Got First Drink From Hose? By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK (AP) - Every Hum’s life is measured by his memories. They are his mental Bae-decker, the fadeiess guidebook of the mind. Memories alsol are the lasting' lingerprints o f he soul. No two i>eople, no matter how deeply shared tfaeir lives, ever have quite the same set. We are born individual, and as we age our memories accent that individuality. But they also help keep us mutual. And you’ve passed a lot of milestones yourself if you can benefits of the protective tariff. When you wanted to plant a garden, you wrote to your congressman and asked for h«e BOYLE Dad first let you drink from the nozzle of the garden hose as he watered the lawn-and it had the most wonderful flavor in the White collar workers earned more than blue collar workers. Hie wealthiest guy in the block was the Ud witti the most marbles. ’The worst fate that could befall you was to be picked last when the gang was dioosing up sides to play a game of scrub TALK POLITICS Voters would listen patiently for two hours in the hot sun while a politician orated on the Coast Guard Ends 9-Day Tug Search PORTSMOUTH, Va. (API-After nine days of fruitless search in the Atlantic for the missing tug Meitowax, the Coast Guard ended its hunt at sundown ’Tuesday. The tug disappeared on a coastal run from New York to Charleston. S.C. She was last heard from Oct. 20 when she radioed her position as SO miles off Norfolk, Va.. sailing southward to the area where Hurricane Ginny was bom off the Carolina coast ’The 105-foot Meitowax, built in 1027, carried a crew of four. ’They are Brandon Dykes of Cotton Woods, Ala., captain; FYank Whitehurst of Miami, chief engineer; Albert Jones of Hialeah, Fla., assistant engineer; and Jack Bush of Hialeah, mate. Births The following is a list of recent Pontiac area births as recorded at the Oakland County Oerk’s Office (by name of taflier): ____________raw tan* Ki Maw. 27*1 Harrlnstan _____>11 a. Ml Thalia Sobart N. SmlKi. 21S N. AIM Tffti'TIth Saors* liiieh' jK; ?«MO«5Sl#id StMsm- Jaramlah M. Gary L. Nor .. o'N^MmSr! Im Tense Nerves Block Bowels s:^aSsss Girls thought curls'H'ere a blessing and freckles a disaster. Only farm girls had a tan; mothers of city girls never let their daughters venture out bareheaded in the summer ftn* fear tiiis would ruin their com-^ plexion. Evenr young lady cotild play a musical instnunmi-even if it was only the tambourine. You could tell how cold it was in winter by how far the frozen cream stuck out of the bottle the milkmm left at the front door. CASTOR on. Only rich families had oranges except at Christmas—or when one of the children had to take A low-class saloon was one which didn’t keep its brass cuspidors brightly shined. Amos and Andy were a radio team as popular with the Negro people as the white folks. Htmie patriots helped beat the kaiser by collecting tinfoil from discarded cigarette packs. SUPPORTS WIFE When a boy married, he was expected to leave college and start supporting his wife. A specialist Was a doctor who charged $3 for an office visit. Nothing in a five-and-ten store cost more than a dime. You could almost be sure a family had a daughter of nur-riageable age if they bought a new swing for the front porch. Brown Says Rocky Won't Back Barry SACRAMENTO, Calif. (API-Democratic Gov. Edmund G. Brown says he is confident Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York cOuld not support Barry Goldwater for president if the Arizona senator wins the Republican nomination. “There’s as mudi difference between (joMwater .and Rockefeller as there is between Gold-water and me-almost,” Brown told a news conference Tuesday. Brown said he still regards former Vice President Richard M. Nixon as a candidate for the GOP nomination in 1964. Kiddy Movies Slated Saturday afternoon children’s movies, sponsored by Community Activities, Inc., of Waterford Township will resume Saturday and continue through the winter. The weekly shows are slated for 1 p.m. at the CAI building. Heart Attack at Wheel Causes Double Death BUFFALO, N Y. (AP)-Anna-belie Dill, 61, of Buffalo, was killed Tuesday night when her husband apparently suffered a fatal heart attack, causing their automobile to swerve into three other cars at an intersection. Edward J. Dill, 61, was driving the car when he lost control, police said. His wife was thrown against the windshield and out of the automobile. Candidate for Mayor Sure Debate Winner ROSELLE, NJ. (AP) - The Republican candidate for mpyor is claiming a debate victory and there is little question that the debate was Indeed one-sided. GOP candidate Warren C. .Stadden, at a meeting of about 150 persons, addressed an empty chair bearing the sign “Reserved for Mayor (Janies) Argyros.” . Ghana Seeks Move to Liberate Africans ACCRA, Ghana (AP)-Ghana called Tuesday for establishment of Z unified military command of African nations to plan immediate liberation of dependent African states. Ghana’s defense minister, Kofi Baako, proposed the plan at the opening conference of the drtense commission of the Oiv ganlzation of African Unity. The conference was attended by delegates from 26 of the 32 countries that signed the 1963 Afri^ can charter at Addis Ababa. »«sASTHMA MBktTwiSlMrlBf BrMNi? n work* (ut to eombot •llom. rolu bronchial tuboo. thin onA help romo** thick, ehokint oidoai Thli luuoUr moo* broathinc tact, allart oouchlnt: tbui proBotot toondor iloop. Oot MBOMOO at drunitta Lot it bola you. The use of music to stimulate I has shown an increase of over crops is being investigated set- seventeen per cent when stim-entlflcaliy. One of the test plots I ulated by music. Free Placement Service A free and permanent placement service is available to all PBI graduates. Although no school can guarantee employment the student who acceptably completes a course of study can be reasonably sure of finding satisfactory employment. A high recommendation, possible because of outstanding work at school, considerably improves the employment chances of a graduate. PBI graduates are corporate officers, administrative assistants, secretaries, accountants, supervisors, etc., in all areas of business. Among the employers of Institute graduates are many former students. Pontiac Business Institute 18 W. Lawrence More powerful new engine Coup* ’64 CQRVAIR Monza by CHEVROLET We think: it’s fhe most important dngle thing weVe done to Cmvair mn(» it bq^an winning rear-engine (inverts four yeua ago. You now have a (dioice of: 95 hp in the standard Tuii>o-Air engine (up nearly 19 per cent). 110 hp in the optional-at-extra-cost version (up nearly 8 per cent). And 150 hp in the Turbocharged engine (the top-rated job t^t's standard in the Monza Spyder modds). How does all this show up in the driving? The best way to answer that is by nmking personal contact with the gas pedal on some roads of your own choosing. But we'll due you beforehand that long stretches of highway are going to seem even more inviting and hills—welly you may get the impression there just aren’t any steep ones around any more. Our engineers were very thorough, you see. All engines, for example, now have a stronger alloy steel crankshaft, hairier stellite-faced eihaust valves and other refinements that were available bdore only in the ^der version. BuV,thoee things that made Corvair such a joy to drive in the first place are still there—the easy steering, maneuverability and sure traction. , That's another nice thing about those ^igineere of ours. They im-^ve what they can improve. What they can't they leave alone. Hiie place to sample their handiwork is your Chevrolet dealer's. Sm five MiUraly aiffatMt Him* «f can at your ChavroM ShawrooM-CHEVROLET, CHEVEUE, CHEVY n, CORVAIR A CORVETTE »31 OAKUND at CASS MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES, INC. PONTIAC. MICH. w FE 5-4161 B-8 ‘if THE PONTIAC rilESS. WKDNKSDAY, OC/^^OBER 30. 1963 Wrigl^ NO REDUCTION IN DUALITY. NO REDUCTION OF OUR TABLE TRIM. rafuUr tvtrydjy pricM... WRI6LEY ALSO GUARANTEES that ragi t regular prices have not been raised in order that we might accom* modate this spectacubr beef sale. Every effort has been made to make this event an outstanding money-saving sale for you. You must be completely utisfied with your pur- chase OR your MONEY RACK! U.S.D. A. Choice ROUND STEAKS Tit U.S.D.A. Choice SIRLOIN STEAKS U.S.D.A. Choice CLUB STEAKS sliced bmoh *^^CreeRRaOe Always Leon, AKroyt Fresh 7^. 39* foil Pon SlM BOIOQHD Mich Grode ' __eftltCUGE HAMBURGER MIW PORK ShUSKOE SUCED Turkey CORNED BEEF ml Ificn Budd'o’* 3 WM. 3Vi.OS. Pk9- I SVi-o*- orl^s SI W*- Freshly 3-lbs. Ground or More Rriees effectlvs fbreoffc S ifR.We rueergs He rjgbt l> limH qmrtHkt. ^ VALUABLE COUPON Regular or Drip—Sore up to 26‘ HILLS BROS. Hilb Bros. Rogular or Drip 2-ft. COFFEE instant COFFK Limit One With Ceopen At Left WITH THIS COUPON ANO PUtCHASI OP mt $1.00 e. M«« ef HALLOWE'EN CANDY Bubble Gum Cbubbii « LhnII e 101-Ct. Pkg. BIT 0' HONEY Miniatures STARK MONEY ROLLS SLIM JIMS DUM DUMS CANDY BARS LEAF TREATS for Tots HALLOWEEN POP CORN BALLS BABY RUTH or BUTTERFINGERS SLO POKE SUCKERS m-ct. pk,. RO.O. Pki. 100-0. Pk,. sr 79* 39* 69* 98‘ 101-0. Pk,. 1S4r. Pk,. 40-0. Snider'e Firm Temate Certsup Van Camp—Save Sc am Vubet Imeetb er Krmicliy Pork & Besms *1'’* Pecmiit Butter 2>^35* Fruit Drinks 69- Gold Medal-Special Label ^1 FLOUR V - 1®® King STze—Sove S- ^ A JH x DOUBLE COLA ”48- VALUABLE WRICLEY COUPON Spocial Label Ki., Site Pk,. 99* Sere Me UaS* nlir Green Giant—Cream Style or Whole Kernel No. 303 Can King Size Stvo special 34e p. Ubol WMi TISSUE 2K27‘ Sandwich Bags 50-Ct. Rkg. 29‘ Palmolive Soap ■eU|-«w Palmolive Soap Fer llectiic DWiweilieti Cascade Soap 2 R«n Sbru 23* 49* 2^. 49. "All" Detergent CeM Weaev UmM "AH" Detergent OieMSin Ad Detergent 3-lb. 7Ac ’-**'*' Rosenthal Cleaner Sine ^49* ■■pwi Bowl Brush -79* 79‘ Liquid Palmolive, 45* » 79« GET FINER GIFTS FASTER WITH GOLD BELL GIFT STAMPS [V . , THE rONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER .10. 1963 B—9 GET FINER GIFTS FASTER WITH GOLD BELL GIFT STAMPS l! B—10 J THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 80, 1963 Pontiac City Affairs Richman Quality You can See! At a Price To Compare! Remarkable Sharkskin 2-Pants SWTS Msi $25,000 Sewer System Plan Presented A (25,000 master plan aiyl survey of Pontiac’s sewer system ordered nearly two years ago was formally presented to the City Commission last night. Acceptance of the three-volume plan was a formality in view of the fact that commissioners had received the volumes as they were completed. The final volume was finished last May. The State Health Department recently certified all three volumes. The city contracted its consulting et)gineers, Jones, Henry and Williams, of Toledo, to prepare the master plan in February 1962. * -k * It includes topographical surveys, charts, estimates of future ne^s, proposed future sewer construction along with what projects should be given priority and cost estimates for future projects. OUTUNES PROJECTS Compiled in connection with the city engineering department, the plan outlines projects in areas where there is no sewer- age and improvements to existing sanitary and combined sewer systems. Volume I contained preliminary design and other technical criteria. Out of the s e c 0 n d volume, completed late last year, came a proposed Murphy Park and Galloway Creek relief trunk sewer system estimated to cost some (1.5 million. w ★ * Hiat volume contains studies of the areas along the north and east city limits without sewers, and relief of the overloaded Shirley and Jessie street trunk sewers and the Bagley street trunk sewer area. SURVEY OF NEEDS Volume III is a survey of sewerage needs in the rest of the city. It recommends relief for the Clinton River interceptor and the northwest Hazel avenue and Sylvan Lake trunk sewers. Some nine sewer construction projects are suggested in the final volume, ranging in estimated cost from (29,000 to (I.f miUion. The master plan will be used extensively in future years as a guide In planning sewer projects to best satisfy the city’s needs. ★ ★ * In other action last night, commissioners okayed a bid of (400 ifrom D’Hondt Wrecking Co. of Mount Clemens to clear a house i at 96 S. Johnson. EMPLOYE LOT The house was added to property already purchased for an employe parking lot south of Pontiac General Hospital between Johnson and Seminole. D’HcHidt holds the demolition contract for a dozen structures on the site. Also approved was an agreement granting Bloomfield Township a permit necessary to retain a sanitary sewer it erroneously installed across city property in Wrenn Street right-of-way last spring. * ★ ★ The sewer serves Miracle'Mile Shopping Center. TAX PAYMENT Another agreement with the State Highway Department concerning payment of 1963 taxes on property at East Huron and Parke was also approved. The land was purchased in cotnnection with the perimeter roisd and Clinton River Drahi construction early this year. The state will pay one-sixth of the pretperty taxes due on the parcel. The deed to a recently purchased lot on Peltry north of Sears Roebuck Co. was accepted by the commission. ’The lot is one of several to be bought for the extension of Lafayette east to Perry. ★ it The Lafayette extension is part of an interior circulator to be built inside the perimeter road. PERMIT EXPANSION Commissioners concurred with a planning commission recommendation to vacate the easterly 100 feet of Bondale and an alley between Bondale and Cedar-dale to allow,expansion of parking facilities behind doctors’ offices at 880 S. Woodward. A public hearing on the move was scheduled for Dec. 9. Tentative approval was granted a license to add space to Metes & Powers’ wholesale beer and wine distributing warehouse at 2000 Pontiac Drive. APPROVED SALE Commissioners also approved the sale of a small parcel of urban renewal property to William and Marjorie Grace, 169 Whittemore, for (300. The parcel is adjacent to their present lot. It has been restricted to residentiui us* by the adjacent properly owner only. Another proposed sale of urban renewal land was deleted from the agenda for further study. ★ ★ ★ This sale Involved some 200,-000 square feet (4^4 acres) on Pike at Douglas and Parkhurst to Charles Langs, the city’s urban renewal developer. INCORRECT FIGURE Before the meeting. Commissioner William H. Taylor Jr. charged that Langs’ offer of 23 cents per square foot, published in a Press story yesterday, was ■incorrect.” * ★ ★ He objected to The Press being given erroneous information. After the meeting, urban renewal officials confirmed the 23 cents per square foot figure as “what the price will be, or very close to it.” White Collar Workers Get Raises 2 to 5 Pet. WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Labor Department reported yesterday that white-collar workers received average pay raises ranging from 2 to 5 per cent in the year ending last March. The survey, based on wage scales in private industry, showed that engineers got the largest average increase — 4.4 per cent. Accountants received 3.3 per cent; engineering technicians, 2.9 per cent, and clerical employes, 2.6 per cent. Seven U.S. states were never organized as territories. Sup*rti, luturious all wool worstod sharkskin'-Quality lab-nc you’ll rotognua a! a glanca—that you can compare at S20 rnore! Tailored by Richman's in their own factories in 2 and 3-button models, plus an extra piir of pants! Thai 's real value! Gray, brown and in new compounds. Richman BROTHERS BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER Op«ii Doily 9:30 A. M. to 9 P. M. ^ Charge it tfow... lake up to 6 months to pay! ^ PUJSTHlSEOmERMmnEB: ■ ILLY MAY LOU MONTH tHK HI'LO'OI MAVIO niVBRO LKB BAXTBR & NBLBOM Binni ■ lyAr .N THB PALLADBBRB "IDBUH 5060 DIXIE HWY. DRAYTON PLAINS 398 AUBURN at SANFORD, PONTIAC 536 N. PERRY and PADDOCK 50 S. SAGINAW at AUBURN 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 30. 1063 B~n SUPERMARKETS PLUS BK 4 DAYS OF.. : SIRLOIN STEAKS lif Valu Spacialljr SalacfaS T-BONE «.b STEAKS lb. lig Vain SsMlaSy S«l«ct«4 CHUCK STEAKS 'lb. 89* 3-99* e*.,-a-M w Pm* uvn SAUIA^I ApC M**mr !•** , AA* KNACKi KIIUASA e**Pb*. _ AA* COAKID wr BUR SALAMI sama, TM*r A A* ■HP LIVIR Alw«nfs Fr«*h HAMBURGER Sigle 't 3lks. w Mra; Country Kitchon 9- COnAtE CHEESE ^ “19*"^ Giant Six* BLUE CHEER iMimt Mw*eir, N«v. 4. MMOEWm It lOe Iwim O 10X DOMINO SUGAR OtANGEJUKE »' Msons It VNOT WOlipHi ^ OBSEffKAD Uma Twa wak Cwaee tsalmt M—4«y, N«v. 4. Umft Tw* Pm CaiHmw 14-om. Boltio TRICK OR TREAT CANOY Bit O' HM0y MinicMres S9* Candy Bern K 93* HallpwdM Bop Corn Ball 3^ 69* McIntosh APPLES ’ Urtm Lb. Baby Ruth or Buttorfin^en Steak Monoy Rolls Mi*ita« t/ >- N«. 1 Fmct Hm4 PI*mI MkonApplu MkMawi U.S. N*. 1 Pmkv N..4 PMi.4 MidiMi Apples ‘'>'uT tA 49* MI*laMi US. N#. 1 Pmmv H«i4 PMm4 Delideu Apples ‘’t'lt*'i^49* FREE HalpweM Mask Whil« They Last Wi* PamlMM *11*. Appim Mal-O-Cnial — Plain or Sugaro^ IKL DONUTS Anna cion -79* 5060 DIXIE HIGHWAY-DRAYTON PLAINS MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 9 TO u SATURDAY 8 TO 9 398 AUBURN & SANFORD - PONTIAC MON., TUES., WED. 9 TO 6-THURS. FRI. 9 TO 9- SAT. 8 TO 9 536 N. PERRY & PADDOCK-PONTIAC MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 9 TO 9 -SATURDAY 8 TO 9 50 S. SAGINAW & AUBURN - PONTIAC MON. TUES 9 TO 6 WFD. THURS I Rl. 9 TO P SAT 8 TO 9 ./Ui B—12 : V THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1963 MERCHANDISING CORPORATION DISCOUNT CENTER-Phone 332-9137-1108 West Huron ( I C-7—2 i A. 4^ THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 80, 1968 Sweet Shell Encases Swedish-American Pudding By CECILY BROWN8TONE ANwIaM PTMt FMd Editor Wo don’t mind taUnf oomo cndlt for rtvMng during' tho put fow yMTo, a Scandinavian pudding that la both foolproof to main and uttarly deUcioui. * * * We’ra not sure whether this desoert viginated in Sweden or whethv Swedifh-American cooka In thla country developed It. But we’vo found Iowa women of Swodiah descent devoted to recipe, and we’ve alao dls-ired that It la used u a favorite dessert at 8wedlah•Alne^ lean futive suppers. New eoniM a new versloa of Don't Wattf Ends Pare cucumber ends — thoae you would ordinarily discard; chop fine and add to tomato Juice; chill overnight; strain and aerve. The cucumber adds -. - _ recipe created by ia iageahaa CaUforaia oeok. 'Mad la oar Utebaa and aoraed at sapper ta oIJh tasten, B waa lots of raclpe) with a rich soft custard sauoa, and the combination pleased. So take your ohtdoe of toppings. A little of the fruit codrtall used in the pudding makM a garnish. Moot cooks who make this doaaert, in one form or another, larva It with whipped cream and we’ve followed suit. Other cooks larva it with vanilla ioo or abur cream. But this year we offered the dessert (m^ by the following m cupa sifted flour 1 taupoon baking soda % tMspoon salt 1 tablupoon butter, soft H cup finely chopped walnuts H cup flalMd coconut tOcup flrmly-packsd light m cups granulated sugar im 1 can (1 pound, 14 ounces) fruit cocktail, well drained Mtaiur* Egg Whitts If you are not sure bow many egg whitao you dropped Into that jar in the refrigerator — to save for angelfood cake or other dishes — remambar that a couple of egg whites yield about one-quarter cup. Soft soda and salt. Spread the seft batlar ever the eatira inside sarfooe of a I er IH cap ring mold. Mhi together the wslaata, eissaat, brown sugar aad 14 eup ef the paaalated sugar; using Bw back of a spsea, tirady press this misture agidust me but- Beat together thoroughly the remaining 1 cup granulated sugar'and the egg. Reserve Mi cup of the wsll-dralnsd fruit oooktaO; stir the remaining fruit cocktail into the sugar-egg mixture. Add the sifted dry In-and stir until com- Ntvtr Undercook You may not be cooking thooa pork chops long enough to bo really tender. Thick chops may need as long as 1V4 hours tai a moderate (350 degrees) Bake in a slow (VO dogreee) oven 1 hour and 20 minutoa. Place pan on wire rack to cod for about 10 ndnutes; invert on serving plate. If some of the sugar mixture sticks to the bottom of the pan. remove it with a spatula and press it down in ISM. Serve warm with whipped cream or soft custard sauoa; garnish with reserved 14 cyp fruit cocktail Makes I to U servings. ANOmm wwkof extra ^ -.S .. . /. ./5.: ''Sujier-Right'' Quality 10 to 12 Pound/ Sklnlofs Semi-Boneless, Fully Ceeked HAMS Whole or Half Ne Center Slicee Bemeved 59 AiP etpi off a great month of celebrations etith anothar thrift event yoa’Il long remember. Our Mid-Fan Stock-Up Sale continues BIO SAVINGS of the past few weda with a long line-up of yonr favorite foods SALE-PRICED TO SAVE YOU MORE AND MORE CASHI This extra special savings week is your opportunity to cash in on AaP’s ability to satisfy your pan-tf^a needs at prices that will ease the burden oii yonr budget Itis anotiier event that will put AfcP'a pledge of service in action. You’ll know what we mean when you aee the fresh, new look of the etore... the fully-stocked shelves... the friendly people amdoua to serve you. And, of course, you’ll like eduit AfoP hae selected for you to save on: A STOREWIDE SELECTION OP YOUR FAVORITE FOODS AT SALE PRICESI A&P BRAND FROZEN FOODS MIXID ViOHABUS BABY lImA BIANS PORDHOOK LIMAS Prt-Holidoy Sola! USDA GRADE "A" YOUNG KING OF ROASTS! *^Supor-Right" Mntiira Bool **SUPER-RIGHr QUALITY TURKEYS RIB ROAST PORK LOINS 18 TO 22 "J POUND IK m ^ Cfl< SSi Qll* y || „ OSJ LI. rOATION ^ J 10 TO 15 POUND SIZES 4# 7 lb. M Be C.IHW Mk VAc PoithM PoHcChfjw jy ^ Marvel—AAR'S Pina Quality mm ICE CREAM---49 CMOICi CAULIFLOWER BROCCOLI SPEARS BABY LIMA BEANS PORDHOOK LIMAS 2 }2~39‘ MIDiUM SHAlCr niOZIN Tl Pinconning Cheese 59 Fudgsicles EbMI-BIt SEcm «69 DBUCIOUS niOZIN TRMT . 12 49 fUNNYniLO SWHT CRIAM ORADI "AA” JT J%C Butter m QUARTIRS , , , ^ 09 Dll MONTI ^lUOW aiNO, SlICID OR HALVK A Jfo# Fruh Cocktail H DeliMontePEaeiiEi'^cr’^29 RISDON'S Cottnge Cheese Large 19^ CTN. Orange Somoa **«>'*'crot 5 ^ 99c Libby's Pies ^cHioliN 5 99c BATHROOM TBSUI A A ^ Dll AAONTI A A ^ Delsey Q q9^ Catsup 2 29 AOP HAS THE SOAP PRICES, TOO! Ajax All Purpose LIQUID CLEANER WITH pa 1*^- AMMONIA 12-OZ. Ainx Oennser A. 12* Ginnt Ad _________________56‘ Pnlmolive Soop .. » 14' Sooky Liquid... .’iS’^59 Action Blench SnSBR ^ 69* Ajnx Clenner'»’'”,.’85*'“'~ 24* Florient asssss ... ’^ 69* MlchtflonO.S. No. I ^ ^ McIntosh or Jonathon AMes 0-49' LIQUID DETERGENT CAPRI Fine for Dishes 43* QUART BTL IMARtH taUKlU OR RUST RK Grapefruit. e 5 & ^9c NNi ror KHOoi umetm Banona% ... 2 “ 29e HowoIIor Punch . . 1.QT. 1A0Z. «•. Horshoy Fomlly Cocoa ... . lie Presto Whip tASM Honhoy bntoiit Cocoa Sff TM ISC Twidir liof rJowuSii • •. .'Mr* 52c W. gC.L CWCKBN«r.TNS4U /lUM MSB IWHT. CHUNK STYLI . . 30c K«ylwMorg«iM'r.;i^ 2 TVt ■btHUMiNMAiM .... His Bros. Cofffoo ”Si . OR I4S. gm sr • • • CAN 0/€ CoradPIfsfkBoiKlogos MmcAT* 45c Airo StANO y« OW lASM 1 isi orr lABSi 1 eoifr Dog Food Largo Serf 1 Gient Surf I liquid . UH.OL e CAN "kj* 24* 1 58* 1 nx QUART ASP's PINI QUALITY Cooking or Salod OH dexoln^ 0^39 BTL 73* Ustoil • 47* 'asr THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 80, 1968 C—8 Author-Teacher to Discuss Book: Art in Classroom A Ua Angeles elementary teacher will visit Pontiac Friday to demonstrate how teachers can promote art in the classroom. Mrs. Natalie Ook, aalhor of **1he Arts hi the ClaaaroeBii,” ing and Is la wtde nas h imi-versities and teM across the nation. temtes at Webster School. She will explain her philosophy and approach to classroom art instruction. Her book is in its 13th print-1 Exiled Cuixin Comic Succumbs in Miami MIAMI (UPI) - Alberto Gar-rido, an exiled Cuban comic who took part in anti-Castro radio broadcasts, died here yes- Garrido came to the United States in 1M3. With the late Frederico Pinero he formed what was probably Latin America’s most popular comedy Firm Denies Stealing Ideas GRAND RAPIDS (UPI)-Con-ductron Carp, denied yesterday that its new electrio-mechanical facility here has been using “trade secrets" of Lear Sieg-ler, Inc., its main competitor in the electronics field. Lear filed a saU hi Kent Csaaty droalt Oonrt htenday. elalintag that aiae-ex^ear tree esnspired te prodnee The salt asked that Csndac-trea be enjoined from cooUn-niag the alleged practice. Conductnm, which is based in Aim Arbor, said yesterday flie firm “plans to demonstrate the superiority of its magnetic lu*akes and clutches over those of Lear Siegler in court." w a * Lear last year moved its electro-mechanical division to Qeveland. Conductron said it then started its Grand Rapids operation and hired the Lear employes because “a source of taint” had been made available in Michigan. Keeve M. Siegel, Conductron president, said the firm’s commercial products have reached the rate of 31 million a year. Conductron and Lear also compete for govemme U. S. Office Suspends Parcel Post to Cuba WASHINGTON (UPI) The U.S. Poet Office Department has suspended all parosl post shipments to Cuba, except medicine, because of reports that the Castro regime has confiscated contents of some packages. Assistant Postmaster General William J. Hartigan said yesterday that the action was taken after conferences with State Department officials. Court Will Take 16 Children From Unwed Mother MUSKEG(Mf (UPI) - The first step has been taken to make the 16 children of Harriet Williams, who has never married, wards of the Muskegon Probate Court. Miss Wiffiams, IS, places the anmber of her children at 17 rather than 16. Authorities said the Muskegon Heights woman told them she was put on this earth “to have diUdren." Authorities said she has received more than 315,000 in various forms of welfare pty-ments since 1900. Eight of ho* children have already been removed from her custody and placed elsewhere. Ex-Pennsy V««p Di«s SARASOTA, Fla. (APh James Logan CranweO, 37, a re tired vice president of the Penn syivania Railroad, died Tbes day. ROMAN STARCH iiT iiiSkiWiDiiTHRij^ SiiWfiONF MAri .... — , -..... "SUPER-RIGHT” QUALITY BEEF Steak Sale si; ROUND SIRLOIN T-BONI 79 89 99 c >:lSS^^fQUAUTO HIOHLINR PROZIN-84b. Bax 1.30 Cod Fillets ... ^ 29^ LB. Oceoi Pordi Fillets 39e Medium Shrimp Moim .. 79e Fresh Mushroonls Porterhouse Steaks BONiLSSS RUMP OR Rofisserie Roost .. 89* AsP SAVES YOU MORE ON MANY, MANY LOW MEAT PRICES Not Just a Few Specials! You Can Pot Your Trust in Super-Right Meats 2c Off Ubd FACIAL TISSUES Puffs 5 KGS. Bleaches and Disinfects IRomnn. Qennser 49* GAL BTL SunnyfleM—AAR'S Fine All Purpose FLOUR 10‘59 Light, Chunk Style mmgg A‘P TUNA 5^99 4I4B, Ac AAP—Whale Kamel ar Craamad m m A# ______. . . tSk 99 Golden Corn . ,4'«*49 WCHUMaMSUOD K a 00 ^,41.1.01.^11* Pineapple. .. 3 ^ Kernel Corn 2 AKP HOMISTYLS RilSTONI A 14B. « gkgk SULTANA BNAND m 14B. JMJMc Peaches "15=.“ 3 1-®® Tomatoes.. .4 SS 99* II ,4.. f on Green Beans 9 r®® OXPORD ROYAL PlacM and Stanu Mushrooms giagg* l^rtM dikken Soup m 29c Dd Monte ComcnAMSTYu. , 3 ^ 49c Liyor Cub Mix *5coi5uSa* . . mS’. 31c Stoinly CMwmuitM ... I7c $Mwy Pcwdowl HMch .... iti: 43c Fudg. Brawiia .. .’^42c <^49t OrismMtsMi CsoUm aSSS. ''.ii£^42c AnmeiR Htrttagt . HWon OMM mm mis THE CIVIL WAR QO< Wt. m 11 «mimi m M -m [ - ■ -■' ,1. , I! ^ ■ All prkas In Mils cmI affecHva thrw Sot., Nav. 2nd In all IcMtarn Michigan AAP » 1MORE OUTSTANDING A&P VALUES ON Cube Steoks... 89* BKP, VIAL AND PORK ^ Meat Loaf________49 BONnin m Strip Steaks... “^ 1*®® •oraun m . n Delmonke Steaks 1*®® COUNTRY STYU OM JMC Span IHbi ... - 3F Xi;o'bmk...-69‘ WHOLI. 13 TO ie POUND m MMa Smoked Hams 49 WHOM oe mo piKi Slab Bacon . .. **^ 3" SMOKIO—2 TO 3 POUND m MMa Cottage Butts.. 09 suciD OMMMe Beef liver. . . . “ 39 CUT PROM TINDM CHKKB4S m Fryer Legs. ... **^ 49 RMS AHACHRO Fryer Breasts .. 3)3 CHKKINS—4 TO S POUND SIZRI A AC Fresh Roasters 3V CHKKD6S—4 TO « POUND Sm ^ VC Fresh Stowers.. “■ 3/ ORAOl *A”->134>Z. SOI JP Cornish Hens .. 69 COUNTRY STYU A AC Bacon TMek-Sllete 2 r% 77 ' M Uver.... »^ 29* NEXT PAGE ... C-4 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 80, 1908 City Schools to Join Study I derstand the Importance of their work in counaeling employment- Pontiac school counselors and students will play a key role in a two-year study to improve counseling methods for youths aot planning to attend college. naaiced by a fed- end graat. the study project wiD involve II cooBselors from >mior and senior high schools in Pontiac, Waterford Tow» ship, Royal Oak, Clarkstoa and Soath Lyon school dls-trlcta. Dr. William Moorhouse, diMc-| tor of the Oakland Schools’ guid-| ance program, will coordinate the project. “Counaeling for college-bound students is generally adequate,’’ he explained. “Counselors are college-educated, college-oriented people. It is easy and natural for them to assist in college and career selection for the 90 to 50 per cent of the students who are headed in that direction. “However, it is less easy for them to assist students who will ing directly from high school,’’ Dr. Moorhouse added. He said the study wili analyse the methods, tools and techniqaes that might be developed to help jolHbonnd jna-lor and senior high school sta- Pontiac will furnish about 33 of the 60 counselors in the study. The entire project will Involve about 17,000 secondary students. Roughly 8,500 are anticipated to enter emptoyment or job train- i be employment-bound- Dr. Moorhouse listed the project’s major objectives: • Study the feelings and understanding of students concerning their opportunities. • Find ways to identify em-I^oyment-bound youth. • Evaluate the needs of employment-bound students. • Work toward a program to help students develop an understanding of the occqmtlon-al and educational choices available to them. • Help counselors un- • Evaluate the effectiveness of guidance, counseling and testing programs for emptoyment-bound youth. ■ft '■k • -k The work of the counselors will Be aided by an advisory committee consisting of guidance directors of the par-tlc^Nrting school districts, two university consultants, M house and a staff person from the Michigan Depvtment of Public Instructkm. Earl Warren Bombarded by Pickets ' Tiousands of tons of rock salt are mined annually from the vast vein of salt Iwnealh Detroit. NEW YORK (UPI) Chief Justice Earl Warren last night was bombarded by leaflets and placards hurled at him by demonstrators demanding his Im- The demonstration took were leaving the New York Bar Associatioa building where earlier In die evening he sms made an honorary member of the arganhatton at a testimonial dinner. The pickets, srtm said they were members of “The Move- ment to Impeach Earl Warren,” also booed Gov. Nelson Rockefeller, who attended the dinner but left the building separately from the Warrens. * * k Neither Warren nor Rockefeller was hurt, and police moved in quickly to keep the pickets from the men. ORGANIZA’nON LEADER Walter Zaleaki. who said he was the leader of the organization which is based in Summit, N.J., told newsmen the Supreme Court’s decisions “have helped to erode our free- doms.” He sAld die groiqi Wi not connected with ^ Jeh Birch Society. The approximaMy 75 pidwts were waiting for Warren when be arrived at the building with his wife and daughter,, M r John Daly. ★ ★ * During the dinner, he commented to aiMciation members that “the honor guard is'waiting for me.” Brazil has nn estimated 800 or more million wild rub^ trees. FOR THE VERY REST OF VMUES-SEUa A*P*§ VERY OWN RRANO$ AND... SPECIAl SAU! MILD AND MELLOW RICH AND FULL-BODIED 3-lb.bag A*P Coffee VIGOROUS AND WINEY 3-IB.BA6 $i The mammoth Mid-Fall Stock-Up Sale gives AfkP another opportunity for a tangible expression of the Pledge of Service. The fully-stocked shelves ... bright, clean store ... and the courteous assistance of personnel—all these tell more than words just how much your patronage is appreciated. But the bek way AAtP can express appreciation is with VA~ AND MORE VALUES! Chief among these are the quality-famous ASsP Exclusive Foods: fresh and delicious Jane Parker Baked Foods, always good and thrifty Ann Page Fine Foods, and freshly-ground whole bean AflkP Coffee. Diuring this great storewide value event it would be a fine idea to stock up—and stack up EXTEA CASH SAVINGS! .Come to AlkP and do just that today! / Therea nothing like fresh-ground coffee. That's why for your coffeemaker right in theiitore. That*s the only AaP pcemmm-quality Coffee u never factory ground. way te give you btg, fresh, wonderful COFFM MILL You see your A&P whole bean Coffee custom-ground FLAVOR.. .fresh-ground flavor you can’t get m a can I Good Eating, Priced Extra Low-ANN PAGE Fme Foods ^S: Eaay as ^iife^PumpkinPie MADE WITH... FREE RECIFE for this ds-lusclous pis at AiPI Whtts House mskst it smooth. No bettor evaporated milk at tay pricel U’Y-OZ. CAN 13< Peanut Butter IP CREAMY SMOOTH or KRUNCHY l-POUND 8-OUNCE JAR STYll ANN PAOl—104-OZ. CAN Tomato Soup 3 29* Pure Grape Jelly 3';!SZ ^|00 JARS ■ ANN PAOB wltti Cbeete and Tomato Sauce 151^-OZ. CAN 13' Blende^ Syrup 49< l-PT., 8-OZ. BOTTII cial! 20- Off UlAR PRICII l-U. lAO Our Own Tea 89* Special Offer! SUITANA SMALL low-OZ. JAR Stuffed 0lives49* SULTANA Strawberry Preserves ZiSV Spaghetti. ^ Terrific Variety of v4es - JANE PARKER Baked Foods'"' ^ jANt PAMca Slkid, ENRICHED Spado! this Weehl White Bread ^ I9< JANE PARKBt Apple Pie "• * 39 '£!%' 49c Cheese Breed . . . Hb 33c JANP PAWn—UOHT Chiffon Cake. . . . 4 VAStirilS—JANi rAMiS Sandwich Cookies . JANS SASKM—OANtSH STUUSSU Ceffto Cake................. S% 39c Disnor Rofls JANE PARKER MMUTS Wv. 39c Fndf Cokes Mum^AM MUITS AND NUTS HZI 1.49 ?il7c I Sugared or Cinnomon JANE PARKER—l-ll. lAO Potato Chips 49* THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 80, 1968 C—^ USE CHRISTMAS SEALS FWfIT TUBERCULOSIS nd itttr Rupiritory Dimsu 1963 Stamp for Christmas to Go on Sale Sale of the 1963 Christinas stanqi will begin Saturday, Pontiac Postmaster William W. Donaldson aimounced today. The seeend annaal Christ* mas stamp will be available I Da- Ths postage stamp will be sold on Ftiday, Nov. 1, fai Santa Claus, Imfipna. * a w Donaldson said the special Christmas stanm proved popular last year whm it was issued for the first time. This year’s stamp is Uus, green and red on white paper and delicts the national Christr mas tree in Washington, D.C. Intriguing Paint Job LANSING liH-lhe Stete Highway Department has received inquiries &x>ia as far as Tasmania, a stite in Australia, about the osp'of gay new paint varietias on overpasses. The da-partmeot is experimenting with two shades of red, two shades of green and ivory and beige on six overpasses on 194 between Mount Cfemens and Port Huron. tUWOHS \ / A«k hi «k/l 0-Scholls lino pads FALSE TEETH ThotLoesM NmiI Not Emborron MMV wmnn tt turn iM«a imm ia>l anbunamtot DMMM Mlp^ at wak-i« Um« Oo —I » (OOU-Mid) DV«dW OB ■ iM4 teat taaU taott i’bS.ts^. r braatk". Oat Vi Ipontiacaiau. [ ■optical CMTHI jop* iKttiiifi w sdo Pte. eeMnij A Shot Does Wonders Alcohol: Preserver of Health By MCK wnr t WASHINGTON IBI -Spiritually speddiv. the popidation la divided into two parts ^ flase who regard alcohol aa a cnras and who regard it as a others dtots of aootch. I talked with one patient who waa improving his cir-I with a martini. Hk good Among the latter group, apparently, is an organization called the PIqraicians’ Wine Appreciation Sodety. I have at head a press iseiety rsflhe sf PsrtagaL Mtsfasws *r • sf tesHsiialsls Is liie madklml pswsrs al Soma of thorn appear to regard a beaker of booze aa the asat best phisi of penidlHn. “Moderate use of beverage alcohol improves the smiditude and force of the he^ the mass movement of the blood, the output of the heart and the ettldeniby of the circulation,” ooa medioo conunanted. FEEL BE1TBR? Another noted that “When nttrites are not available, an ounce or two of whiriiy or wine may give quite rapid reM for angina pectoria.” A nip or two before a meal “stimulates gastric, pancreatic and intasttnal Juices,” said a third. metiag sleeps It likewiae wu represcated u haviag beneficial effects in cases old age and the common ceM. A test carried out by a biologist was said to have indicated that moderate drinkers live longer than tee- Press releases are not always the last wocd in scientific accuracy, but this one certainly gave me a new perspective of fermented Being eager to observe its curative properties under clinical conditions, I repaired to the health bar at the National Press Chib for labora-torial study. It was amazing to see so many health-seeking journalists lined up in the taproom getting shots EARN MORE OM SAVINGS SAVINGS IN BY THE 10TH OF THE aionthearn from THE Ij^TAT Advanced Papent m% IF HELD TO MATUtUTY AVAILABLE IN UNITS Of $M PU SHARE EttaUUhmd in 1999—fimMrIidMtd paying a dividend. Over it yemrt of tomnd mamagement—wnr a$$uranco of eocnrity. A»$eU over 90 mlilion doUarg. CAPITOL SAVINGS A LOAN ASSOCUTION 75 Wait Huron FE 44561 Hmm OffiMi Iwwiilu t ic'dcral Home Ijjn Bank Syitom I wouldn’t be surprtosd If the bartenders get arrasted for practictog msdicina without a " Guttod by Pan Flames MARQUETTE (I) - A large, twtealory stoat building in downtown Marquette was gutted yesterday by a fire which apparently started in a deep fat fryer la the Jet Grill, than spread to the adjoining CAS Discount Store. Local firemen were assisted by fire dspertments from Ne-guanee and K. 1. Sawyer Air Force “ U.S. Accuses Cong of Geneva Breach WASHINGTON (UPI) - -nie Communist North Viet Nhm yesterday of violating the 1962 Geneva accord on Laos by resuming shipments of war material to the Red-led Psthet Lao. State Departmeat spskes-maa Richard 1. Phillips said that the lUpmeals, which began aboat three weeks age. Geneva agreement to gnaraa-toe a aaatral regtms la Laas. Phillips said UoUan Premier Souvanna Phouma rabently asked the thrae-oatton < commission, composed of sentatlvas Of India. Canada and Poland, to investigato the ahip-menta, but the Pathet Lao had not psmitted free access to the Bachelor, Shopkeeper Win British Soccer Pool LONDON (UPI) - Graham Partlett, 23, a bachelor, and Stanley Buckley, 53, 9 retired shopkeeper w 11 h a wife and three children, today shared the I23MII winnings ia a British soccer pool. Both men oorrectly pktoed all ei^ wtoners in last Satarday's C—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 80. 1968 LET NATIONAL FOOD STORES BE YOUR SANTA CLAUS EACH WEEK!! > CASH CIVEAWAY BIO YOU CAN WIN EACH AND EVERY WEEK!! YOU JUST CAN'T BEAT THAT NATIONAL MEAT! IS SLICE ’OOP’’ CHOPS . ROAST < 49* Lmh AAMty C««atry Styla SPAR! ^ 39* ^^bssmebebsl FRYER cQe BREAST 88 FRYER LEGS lasEi a. 49* TaaTaMa-MMai^MMi.«raaa1 , StusageUnb 49 BnaMSferinp. 59' Wieiwn.. 49* lakeA9* FRYER AQe PaO WINGS Z8 FRYER LIVERS a. 98' Taa Taita — Wafar MM#4 SIlKdBaan.... Mwa. 1 ao-traih — aamity aaa aaaa. 59*|Fisli»ida !% 89' ISSR fryer . OQ, mm GIZZARDS48 BACKS & NECKS »10* SLICED 1 BACON •< 1 Mkke»wnH-SVeiktk»—MkeiMetdi 1 *•49' 1 tiSS"!'. 4fst*r iMiMMrt uj. ciwiM MA* Ug O’ Lamb------------- uj. cimiw mmn. Shouldar Umb Roaar .. 49* 98* 89* 69* .39* Rib Lamb Chops •Mtonal'i SIM* CM Shwldar Umb Chops . Lamb Spars Ribs 2ND BID WEEK OF NATIONAL’S FREEZER SALE! Boof Rounds . *^59* Chucks UJ. «nM CMm — WWte Boof H Rib Roost ." 59* Loin of ^79* UX ••T^. SraM Wholo n Foro- Boof Sidas Quortors • 43*1 "llOji UX «•**». «i«At CMm — tMf Hind Quortors UXOav^. OnM KAc Wholo '* 9W 1 Lambs • 59* NATIONAL’S "DAWN DEW’’ FRESH PRODUCE U.S. No. 1, Mich. Hand Pickod. Rod or Coldon « H.AtK Apples WHY PAY MORE? I U.S. No 1, Boot Quality Coldon Ripo 2-29 : tmti D«nr—0«IMmm WM Omm I BRUSSIL SPBOUTS. E \ PmAcH PfMk DcOr; TaMy ITOSHD SALAD. . . I Nataa—4« P*m Pay^M Saf I Roastod PIANUTS . . 4^49 0» DaWaiaa., TaMy—P.a* ^ ^ »• 29* CARAMIL APPUS. 3^11^ 29* 19* Y8LLOW ONIONS.10 ^ 69* a>Mix_ taafaMaS, Ui«a Siaa, Law PtiaaS _ — _ ^ 39* PRISN COCOAMUTS . 2 '> 29* Kaiya Taath WMtar, Saalla triflrtar Crest Tootlipasts Cwt oad Wrapped fr— of Ckorfo SF^ECI Alv I 66* TIm OaaAariaY P Arrid Oat Qaitk SaOaf Praia _ Roywr AspMB. . 59* NATIONAL’S "MONEY SAVING” LOW, LOW PRICES! Birdsoyo—Froson Peas or Cut Corn 2-39* Fnwon — Chickon, Boof, Tuikoy or Saliobury Morton Dinners 2 ~89* Whito or Aaot. Dool Pack Kleenex Tissue 3 99* Orchard Froth Tatty WMi Pork Applesauce Buttorfiold Wholo, Dicod or Sliced Potatoes 4 Absorbent—^Toblo Kleenex Napkins 2t49‘ Top Tosto-—Tha Most On Toostl Grape Jelly 2 39* Rich Tomato Flavor Hunt's Catsup 2 4^29* Notco — EToporatod Canned Milk 5”^75‘ Coldon Com — California In Syne *m-> Halvos> or SlicMl Peaches S"cJ!"99‘ Smooth Sproading Top Taste Margarine m N Cc •sr' Cin. Tooitf Fresan Crinklo Cut Chef's Potatoes II xoi. Ndkc ^ 1 tfcf, g H^mkKrfrt i 25 EXTRA WMi TM Puiahaat at a »ai. m. at Mate. SOASTSD PtANUTS la PRil Pap»at lay JaJiaai Tbit Caupaa a« Nattaa. Pm4 ttaraa. Caapaa IxMraa (M. PSII WITH THIS COUPOtf SOEXIM Sl/UfS 'lA Mw PafthaM at An tr t|an. can. at MUrval ar CaaaaJa CIGARFmS BREAD CRUMU \ PSII WITH THIS COUPOH 3BIM "Sr STAMPS at Taa Traat BEVERAGES LOW LOW PRICES PLUS HOLDEN RED STAMPS L- , . 4.1 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 30, 1963 Halloween Is Happiest Falk mum C—7 Halloween. I ^ fall holidays la And yeast breads star for thi fun day. Your baalc white b r i a 4 e«n be shaped Into beat or a foUin, an owl or bat. Or you can use your intaginatlon bn the face of Oils Jack-o-lantera cake. It’s an easy-hHio refrigerator dough that you can mix a day ahead. This will give you extra time to prepare the party room --decoral^ so your little trick-or-treatavs can invite their friends ^ after their journey from dook*'to door. Since Jte recipe makes two, you mi|^ want to make one a smiling pumpkin-the other with a 8cowlit% face. PUMiUaCake H cup inilk V4 cop sugar m teaspoons salt ^ 1 cup (B stidu) margarine H cup warm water (106-115 de- 2 packages or cakes yeast, ac-tide ^ or compressed 3 effyolks, well beaten 1 Ublespoon orange extract 4^tcnps unsifted fkxir mfted margarine Otiiige Butter Frosting Se^*sweet chocolate bits iseau mUk: stir hi sugar, t bad margarine. Ceel to PUMPKIN CAKE — A tempting Pumpkin Cake is fun to make for your little trick-or treaters. Make one with a smile and one with a frown. / until doubled in bulk, about 1 hour. Bake in moderate oven (SM degrees) tar SO minutes, or i done. CooL Frost cakes with Orange Butter Frosting and use chocolate bits to make the fea- Meaiure warm water into large warm bowl.' Sprinkle or cn^le in yeast; stir until dissolved. Add lukewarm milk mixture, egg yolks and orange extract; stir to biend. Add flour; beat untd well blended. Cover bowl tightly with aluminum foil. RefHgO’ate at least 4 houn or overni#it. Divids douidi in half. On a li^itly floured board shape each half is to a ball. Place on grease^ baking sheets. Brush, tops of cakes iit^tly with melted margarine. Cover; let rise in warn piece, free from draft. Molaues Sweetens Hot Spicy Cider Hot Molasses Spiced Cider adds spiee to cold-weather entertaining. Stud 4 slices lemon, cut in halves, with 12 whole cloves. Combine 2 quarts ddcr, % cup unsulfdiured molasses, 2 cinnamon stidu 2 incbes long, and the cloved lemon in a large pan. Bring to a boil, reduce beat, and sinuner for 15 minutes. Remove cinnamon stidu, add the jnice of 2 lemons, and serve hot in mugs. Makes • servings. lemon Rind Is Flavor GWer Ingredient variation for this pastry shell! Pastry Shell m cups sifted flour H cup sifted confectioners sugar 14 teaqwon salt 1 teaspoon grated lemon rind % cup butter or noargarine 3 tablespoons milk Sift together the flour, angar and salt; add lemon rind. Cut in butter until particles are fine. Mix in milk. RoU dough thin; flt into a S-inch pie plate; crimp edges and keep at least 14-inch higher than rinf of plate because pastry will shrink. Bake in a moderate (350 degrees) oven 15 minutes or 1 browned. Cool before filling. Use leftover pastry for tum- By JANET ODELL PMitiac Press Food Editor It’s about time to tell you of some of the new cookbooks we have been receiving lately. We came back from food editor’s conference with about 50 pounds of cookbooks. When the Rice Ooundl entertained us, they served some foods prepared from recipes in their new cookbodk, "Servo Rice and Shine” (Rand McNally^ b Co., 13.95). ’This slim little volume suggests way of serving rice from morning ’til night and in every possible manner. Rice-stnfled mnshrooms may be served as appetizers or in quantity for a hpcheoa entree. Rice-Staffed Mushrooms 3 tablespoons minced onion 2 tablespoons butter or margarine 1 cup cooked rice 14 cup chopped nut meats 1 tablespoon chili sauce 1 tablesi>oon lemon juice 1 teaapdon salt Vi teaspoon pepper 24 large mushrooms melted butter or margarine Cook onion in butter or margarine unto tender, but do not brown. Add remaining ingredients, except mushroom caps. Form into 24 smaU balls. s^ve ®ve save brighter, iter wash Super Suds is the new detergent that gives you a bciohtar, whiter wash than any , leading powder detergent... And safe sudsings too! Bw Super Suds now at the low regular price of 2 large boxes for only 49/... Giant Size 59/ Fall Crop of New Cookbooks Is Heavy room caps st ruck in broOer paa, rowMleA side up. Brash with melted buttsr and krMI M minutes. Toni muihreom Place ban of rice mixture in each cavity. Drizzle with melted butter and broU until goldeW brown. Yields 24 mushrooms. SOUP COOKERY Another little book, ‘‘Cooking With Soup” is a premium item dry mushrooms. Place mush- Leftover Ham Easy to Use Ever add strips of leftover baked ham to cooked snap beans? The ham strips can be browned slightly fai the butter that is to be used to seasoh the beans. Good with roast or fried chicken cc turkey. ♦ * * A small amount of baked ham leftover? C!ut it in matchstick-size strips and add it to « tossed green salad aibng with grated Parmesan cheese; or add it to the egg mixture you are going to scramble for lunch or brunch; or mix it with leftover diced cook (|eam sauce. that will cost you SO cents and three soup lab^. ’The Campbell Soup home economists have choaen over COO of their beet recipes to include in the spiral-bou^ book. ■-'Also spiral4foand h “Favorite Reelpes of California Winemakers” (Cask Book — Dept BB — PO Box 04, San Francisco 1, Calif. 32.00 PP.). We food editors also sampled some of the recipes in this book in Chicago. I’m giving two recipes flrom this bwk to show its versatility. Like rice, wine can be used in many ways. ‘The first is a chafing dish recipe. Chicken Livers in Port 2 smaU green onions finely chopped V« cup butter or margarine M pound chicken livers V* teaspoon fresh sage or t4 teaspoon ground sage V« teaspoon salt 1 tablespoon lemon juke t4 cup Port wine •k teaspoon freshly ground pepper Saute onhmi in melted batter a few mlnntes. Add livers; saute 34 minutes, depending on size. Bruise sage; add along with salt, lemon jnice. Port and pepper. Cook slowly about 8 minutes, stirring occasionally. Correct seasoning and serve on toast. Makes 2-3 servings. And for a simple elegant dessert .. . Rose Strasrberry Cream 1 can (ft4 os.) crushed California Rose wine 1 package strawberry gelatin few grains of salt 1 pint vanilla ice cream Drain pineapple thoroaghly. Add wine to pineapple juice to make 1 cup liquid; heat to hoiling. Combine liquid with gelatin and salt, stirring until dissolved. Blend in ice cream. Chill until slightly thickened; fold in pineapple. Spoon into individual serving dishes; chill until firm. Lunch Is Ready in a Hurry (2ulck dish to feed to a drop-in neighbor. Mere Com Than Eggs 4 large eggs 44 cup drained canned whole-kernel com Salt and freshly-ground pepper 2 tablespoons butter Beat eggs Just enough to blend yolks and whites. Add com and a dash of salt and pepper. Melt butter in an 8-inch skillet so it is mediumJwt; pour in egg mixture. Cook gently, lifting egg mixture from bottom of skillet as egg sets. Serve at once. Makes 2 servings. MORE MONEY? NOW WE CAN LEND YOU UP TO »1(»0 See us to arrange a consolidation of your bills into one monthly payment of your choice. Get cash to meet present needs or purchases. Arrange-' ments may be quickly mode by a visit to our office or a phone call to FE 2-9206. OAKLAND LOAN CO. Ml PgnHao tM« Mnk iM(. H 1«N Hours: 9:30 to 5:30—SoturJoy 9:30 to 1KK) IVSHiOUIIOMm IkmiwaMaliilk BnafldliMi ttBa iHiia tMtol nnnnnp irwijoio uoUi: MiQ , SM DIET COLA FIGURE EXKRT OEBRE DRAKE layr “GREAT TO YOUR WAIST!" "NO SUGAR ADDED- “Dru/ApniNP LESS THAN 1 CALORIE TPiif rnTn^r PER6 Thursday — Friday - Soturclay 9 to 9 9 to 9 9 to.l2 noor| PONTUC JUnOBT —97 WATIB STBIET P«BtUc JEWORY APPLIANCES TOOLS RAOtOSi TOYS MOf* ceortoir-ITorrall Agomey Bamum said objectives still include public facilities and pri- ELEaRIC HALLiWEEN hunt Marathon We Will Be Open From Monday Oct 28 thni Thirs. Oct 31st We will be open 24 Hem A Day For TWs SAIL WASHER • PILTIRPIO • OIANT 12 lb. Capacity • OC Load SaUctor • 3 Wash Tamp. • 2 Rbiso Tomp. REFRIGERATOR- niBEi wire rack cover for Msy tray rwnovai. oAu^ic derrettli« tefrigwator section. • 4abinstttwives.Ono slidwout • 2 porcelain vegetable drawen. • Buttaroomportnwnt r ttmiHi Bottom shelf mndsHMuTaiilk oonliinea tall bottles. *248 OENEML Euenic OtUl.lTr UP TO SS MOS. TO PAY EASY YESMS FBEE! Coffee and Donuts will be solved 24 hem a day doing TMs Sale! Fa«e! Fewet 24 Pc. Set Glasswara OODYEAR SERVICE STORE: Op«s AU Day^mtmrAmgr 80 8. CASS RM12I Open o now oeeeimt or puichoao of $28.95 or got Hiig eof of So Versatile You use it many woyg I I Extra Long 40 CABINET All Purpose TIm cabinet of many uaoe. A bondsoow addition to your room as well as a functienol unit for kaoping your rocotda •torod and clean. Has four sliding deero with three hross plated record dividere. Your choice of walnut, lined oak, or mahogany. 40" wide, 17** deep, 25** high. YOU ALWAYS SAVE AT NEISNER’S modern TABLES In Hmed Oak or Walnut Finish Reg. 9.95 ea. Add llvMlity toyeur room so inexpentively. Smart,modem tables With easy core liewd oak or walnut, spot and scratch resistant.finish. SoMWtly'turned legs with brass plated ferrules end sunburst decorativs trim. STEP TABLE - 28" x22" STEP COCKTAIL TABLE -38" X 18" X 15". HUGE 46" X 66" lush Pile RUGS 333 Rag. 4.44 NEISNER’S Solid color cut pHe and loop pattern rag wiA non-skid, fm rubber beck. Stltdied en oil 4 sides and rounded earners. A colorful eddition to your room. Cut to Size FREE WINDOW SHADES 34" X 4* neunled glsstlc esAostsd or olein window 1 ohodoo. Koora Wight oun ovt • wintor hoot In. WImo ^ oWon with doom ololli. Too, Ihoy'fo out for yoor window dlownoWno FRKI 42 N. SAGINAW DOWHTOWN PONTIAC THE PONTIAC PRESSi WEDNESDAY^ OCTOBER 80, 10C8 C—9 Expfit^eontoMoat GrpviKMFr«ioiitw Rac0 Events Around U,S. lAUlAffnS. MARIE (B->Th« RapubUe Steel Co. ore eanler Charlw. lL White, which ran afroond..lR fog Monday in the main atdpping diannal at tba iowtf end of ttia ‘Soo harbor, was expeqted to be refloated some ttmdioday. Spokesmen for Republic Steel I the Ship was bellsred to e a gash in tts hum, but gused to kaq> NM public and prtv% debt in the United States increj nearly • per cent last year to more than |1 trillion. Demonstration Ban Hiring Continues |[WianTiins eivNa wiTN iNon. JM M«i ii( ■ -SSOEREraiSPEeUU- I lULF SOLES 1*5#^ “xem H_____SMNMite I Pf» SewMlOn ews w All Work Quarantood! | WHILE YOU WAIT tlRVIOI 20 Minute Service On HeH Selet |S. S. KRESGE-1 oowirrowN ponhao stori By UalWd Prew Interaatioaal Testimony continues in a sUta court at Jackson, Mbs., today on a petHlon by city officials for a permanent Injunction against racial demonstrations. Police •fflcials 'ttU yestar-day that ^iwiastraHias which resalted in tte arrest of mere than MN Negroee last widespread vMeace hi the MbsisMppi cepttal. More than 2,000 Negroes marched on the Omaha, Neb., City Han yesterday to protest the City Oouncil’s failure to paaa open houiing legislation. Polioa kept the crowd under control. At Philadelphia, Pa., whits policeman John Touriginn wni “relieved of duty” yesterdiy pending an official investiga* tioa into his faUl shooting of a Negro theft snspect A meeting protsoting the slaying led to a riot by several hui»-' dred Negroee Monday night. OTHER EVEhfrs Racial ncthrities elsewhere ip the nation: 8T. AUGUSTINE, Fla. - Negro integration leader Robsct Hayling was arrested yesterday while surveying damage caused by two ear loads of whites who fired gune into Negro homes and tossed a live grenade at a night club. Hayling was charged with in- SAVANNAH, Ga. - Postal au-thofitias cancel substation contract with drug store which re-lused to integrate its lunch BIRMINGHAM, Ah. - Gev. Geerfe WaUaee pledges te “centhae to stand” witb p■^ eats attempttog to set np sag. spoke at a rally hat night to raise faads to- fhawce the NEW YORK o Roger M. Bhugh, dudnnan df Ui. Steel Oorp., said yesterday be did not approve of exerting economic pressure on Birmingham, Ala., to aid Negroes in their civil rights battte. MUSUM CRITICISM HARTFORD, Conn. - Black Miiapm leader Malcolm X described the compromise civil rights bill as a “political football” being kicked bade and forth by libtf al and conservatiys elements in Congress, e ♦ * NEW ORLEANS - TBs board of directors t«r Brown Shoas.....................S ASS J 2 Pair of Ladim* American Girl Shoei...........I A9S j 2 Pair of Ladiet’ Naluraliaer Shoot............I12.W i Pair sf Ladiaa* Hath Puppiet...................I APS { Pair af Men's Hath Psppiet................ I P.PP ; PairafMaa'aPortamSIioaa........................SU.PI i Pair of Man's FtoiaiiSliooa...................S17.PS ; 2FUrofLadiat’8nMrtaira!iboas....................SAPP ; Pair of Evans Men's Slippart...................• APP j Pair Men's SboaTroM.............................PAPS ! Pair of Ladlat'Shea Traoa......................• tSO I 2 pair of Boys'Fortana Shoot..................I APP ; LADIES* Ladies'Robe................................. SIAPP | SPieeetof Jewalryl^F^oaliil....................S AOO ; Ladies’ Lorraine Slip........................I APB ; Pair of riger Macks......................... S1A9B ! Pair of Stretch Panit... /......................MAPB ; Udiet'Baray.AshIay Skirt ....................S P JP | Una Necklace and pair of Karriiipi...........P APO ; Ladiaa’ Purse..................................P APP : Udies'Sorbin Drata........................... PU.PP ; 2 pair of Ladies’ Slaekt.............. ......P 7.PP : Garland Sweater...............................P 7.PP • Ladies'Car Coal............................. PI7.PS ; Prineaaa Gardner Wallet/.......................P AOO j Prtoeeaa Gardner Clntch Purse..................P APP j 8^^...........................................lii-pe S 3 John Abbott Blouses..........................P APP : Pat Perkins Dtms.............................P APP BAKDnss..................................... P2APP ? Ladies’Skirt................................. SIAPP ; Ship *N Shore Blausa.........................P APP J Hollywood Vasiaratie Bra.....................P APS ^ Hollywood Vassaralla Girdle..................I1A95 J Pendleton Suit.................................ISAOO 5 Pair of Mr. Thomson Slacks....................I12.PP ^ Swirl Dress..................................t APS ;! 4 Terry Blouses..............................P A50 i 2 Exquisite Form Bras........................P UP | Exquiaiu Form Girdle .........................P APS I Buna Knit Suit................................PtP.PI i Jonathon Lomu Orait...........................P17.PS I Talbott Sweater................................P APB j Bobbie Bfoaks Drest............................PILPS -J 5 Blootaa by Shapley...........................P APS i tpalrofPkjaaua..................................PAPS f Ladiaa’Baba.....................................PIAW j MEN Pvraatar.......................................Plt.^ , :i ftniunBanjiMShirt..............................PAPS | ■■ Pata-orPlaalu...................................PAM Mea'a Sweater Vest............................P APP j Robert Brooe Knit Shirt.........................P tM 1 ItattofCuffUnki............................... PAOO | Wool Shirt Jae........ 6 pair of Gloves....... Pi 4 Swank Jewelry Items.. P 9 pair of Socki......... 2 pair of Pants........ .... ....PIAPI I ..........P AOO I .........S IJW f .........p APP ; bineoal.................................... P2APP tAdamaBHafc..-...............................P IM ................................. lOAPP UTlaa............................................P iJO UTlaa........................................• ASO Man'aSnil....................................P7A0P 3 pair ef Paieatat...............................P AOO 4 Van Henson Dress Shirts........................P 1410 Stndanta Sait............................... P4A00 Coat........................................PI9.PP Pair of Panli................................PIAPP Mr of Slaakt............................... PIAPS Sport Coat..................................PIP.P5 Coat....................................... PlAPp 5 Knox Hnta...................................P12.W .. 1 Deaan pair of Seakt.......................P LOO ij:-:; 1 pair of La^..................................PAPS i' GIRLS* Glrb'Slip......................................PAPP i Kata Greenaway Orart..........................t API : FawnFathlonlnfamlMB...........................PAPP KMiSUrt..........................................P LSI a Stoop and Play Sail....................... PAPP SCIito’Hati...................................PAPS JoMpb Love Dram..................................I API Dioaa......................................%^.PAPP Cool...................................... ;.p».pp Polly Flindan Dreit...........................P APP j Ski Jacket...................................PIAPP Chubby Dratt........... ............. .......P 7.PP \ 2 Infant Sals by Dapper Do...................P 2.00 s Pre-Teen Jodeen Skirt ..................;....! API ^ Hi-Uno Slack Sal....: .......................S APP Hi-Uno Short Sal.................................$ APS Pair of Pajamas............................. 3.00 Infant Coat and Hal Set..................'i.. S AOO Pair BdbTDaor 8^........................ s-.P AOO Pair Baby Dear MMoa.................... ....I ASO J YaucUndDiaa,...................................APB 5 Giria'Jnakal...a........................... PIAPP BOYS’ ) 2 Rabat Bruaa Pwahlwt « ............... i DOWNTOWN TIL-HURON ROCHESTCR DRAYTON 1 ILOOMPIILO FONTIAC T FONTIAC CINTIR FLAZA. FLAINS 1 MIRACU MIU ^ MAU* ^ Shop without cash— "CHARGE n" A T KRESGE'S —Pay only once a montfi C—10 THE PONTIAC PftRSS, WEDI^SDAY, OCTOBER 80, 1968 i^DOUBU S' DAILY GROUND WHOLE or HALF Semi-Boneless HAMS LB. HYORAOrs SLICEO 6 VARIETIES SPARE RIBS . . . .<^39* LUNCHEON MEATS . . '^ 49* CENTER CUT RIB TASTY PORK CHOPS . . .<^69* SUCED BACON . . .>^45’ KLEIN'S HOMEMADE HOT BOGS ..... PORK SAUSABE . .3>^99‘ KROGER SPECIAL LABEL I* I f AC nc COFPU VAC PAC ■ IntMii Mck Mini lal, Nw. a, IfM. * I UmkOMCMpMipwlMnay. | ^ COFFEE 299 MEAT PRICES & ITEMS EFFECTIVE AT KROGER in PONTIAC, DRAYTON PUINS or UNION LAKE thru TUES., NOV. I 100 EXTRA ^ STAMPS S| WITH THIS COUPON AND PURCHASE OF IP 2 Pkgs. FRYER PARTS I or CUT-UP FRYERS S Coup«n volW at Kio^ar hi RooMoe, Proyton Wuhw or ■ ^ UnhM LolMMiMTaM.,Nav. S. 1M3. ■ I WITH THIS COUPON-SAVI 10* I KROSO SHORTENINS 1 IM. CAN 49' WITH COUPON I «iM. CAN NT' V ALL PURPOSE ■ CMfM mM m KiafW hi Datitll onM I H I ImNui Mkh. Mmi Sol., Nm. S, IfM. " j^On.C«.^p«l.ni«y. | SHORTENING MAM BY SUNSHim KRISPY CRACKERS . HEAVY DUTY REYNOLD'S WRAP. MISBURY BUTTBMIUC FLAKY BISCUITS... 9KHm9 Oft QUICK AAOTHER'S OATS .. STA-PUF UQUID STARCH. FOR son mm aoTHM STA-PUF RINSE QQc I OAL ITL W W WITH THIS COUPON-COUNTRY CUJB _ ROLL BUTTER! 1-LB. ROU Cmurm v«M •! Ki«B«r bi IMmH mti hilini MUcMemh Hnw B SMwiUiV. Nwiiibw % 1MI. 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BOWl WITH 3RD WIEK COUfON FROM MAILED BOOKLIT VACRONWARi-SMART-MODIRN-PRACTICAL 303 UZi VACRONWARI It • ii«w ranctpl In lakit Mttinot. SlyM likt • vMUum iMttit «nd fwaninlMd wnbraokablt hr m full yt«r. Il kttpt fttdt «nd btvtragM hoi or cold lon|or and II won't (wool to no cootltrt oro noodod. VACRONWARI It itoin rotiitonf, toft In oil dlthwothon, ond ovolloUo In Ihrot tolort . . . Turguoito, Pink, or Ytlltw. ■i SURi TO RIDEIM THE EOUOWINC COUPONS I raOM TOUR MAILED COUPON ROOHin I. CRRPM WRRTR «*• ft covtr tht compitit ctti tf o NEi VACRRRUIARE ll>0RNa RRWL In WTRA top tain ITAMPI with purchoM tl TWO IS-OORa lOWU AT OP NCR. 1.N EITRA TRP UAIN ITAMPI with puichoM tf I PRRRR RAN N POP CNR. 4.N MTRA TRP TAIN ITAMPI with putchott tf ART S JARS flAIK PKRIU. Sn extra TRP UAIRI ITAMPI with purchoM tf UTRA lARN OlIM TRRTHPMTI. 0.N UTRA TRP VAIRI STAMPS with pwichoM tf TWf IRAUN RROON VARMH RRUR ' -w — — — — — O o o - - Exctp 30 tl. 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STAMPS WITH COUPON KLOW-SPOTIIGHT ■%BD“5D5SHHKBr——i instant (offu . .v'l” ™“,*rr I teabags.................................................................... dOe BOc HEINZ BABY FOOD J00»..£I*^^^^B! ||““3S 1 CttftavtMttKltptf laOtlithtndlttltmMkhlH^w I B tetafUty, Ntvtmbtr 1, IHI. UmH tat ct«ata ptf ItatRy. " ■ ^ A T M I ■ i33aair"4JimMnmMmR *BB 11191" L^xBw .Sa STAMPS ilM ilTU vSS. STAMPS I “S!? vMIBliB^B LHBB gy.T’ I rs.Tt.TsrjssjT” FlBk "-jnr • HiweMATitliAUPsi nAWtilu I NtotnnAiAts I instait ctFni IRaMB ait ai«mm»m p J umwmm m •.« URttw b. Otntn aaU I Ctwpta taW M K.^ [a I S**T" ? **!«r Cttpta *aW M Ktaw la Otlrth tat | I LjT* rriftL Xu tST Htr?*tWlj| Ihtt StT Ht*. 1, ttMj^wItra MIth. Ihrt Sal., Na«. 1. tOOS.^^ ItMtni Mhh. Ihm Sot., Ht». 3, tatltm Mkh. ihiw Sat., Ht*. 3, 1043.1 ■ ■- ■ ”1 , . ,! i -i"l !\ ■ .i ■ ' li ■ ' I ' Jf, ■ J . ,i ■ .1, ' • . C—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 30, 1968 bSTcasey School Argument—II Faulty System Hurt Children's Reading By LESUE J. NASON, Ed. D. The twins “Look-Say” and “Look - See” are us^ interchangeably in referring to the instant word recognition approach to the teaching of read- Tests used to show that in grade school, under this system, the median or middle student was reading better than students of previous years. However, as children trained primarily in this meth-I od reached hi^ school and college where it was necessary for them to read new materials and where they were constantly confronted with new words, the fallacies of the system became evident. Parents have referred to this i group of children as a “lost generation of readers.” Jacoby on Bridge Reintroduction of diversified approaches is having some effect — at least in California. Progress is being made but it still is not sufficient. PARENTS CONCERNED California voters showed their approval of a return to diversified approaches, including the use of phonetics by their election of Dr. Max Rafferty as State Superintendent of Public Instruction. This was part of his platform. The indication is that the public, especially parents, is seriously concerned that the teaching of reading be strei^thened. I of the ace and no play will work, j 13 per cent of the time the king ' will be singleton in back of the ! ace and the drop will work and the finesse will lose. 13 per cent of the time the king will be singleton in front of the ace and either play will win. 37 per cent of the time the king will be guarded in front of the ace and the finesse will work and the drop won't. Thus the finesse works half the time exactly as you would expect. The drop play works 26 per cent, or only about one quarter of the time and is really inferior. There is no longer an organized movement to restrict the approach to reading to the Look-Say method. On the other hand, there are organizations such as the Reading Reform Foundation which are working on a national front (n opposition. The president of the Foundation called it a breakthrough in the Look-Say iron curtain when alphabetic phonetics were to be introduced into almost one-quarter of Rochester’s elementary public schools, this fall after successful experiments begun two years ago by a school principal thhre, Fred B. Parker. FURTHER PROGRESS "This important progress in one of New York’s larger cities may soon lead to the hoped-for release of all New York schools from the strait jacket of the Look-Say or configurational dogma, which was proved as ruinous in practice in the last 40 years as it was unsound in theory,” said Watson Washburn, president of the Foundation. The Foundation has committees operating in 34 states and the District of Columbia, and a 193-member National Advisory Council of authorities and leaders in educational, national and community affairs. JACOBY tipt wHh • ctpv 1 "Win at With OawaM jKohy." Ju>t «ir namt and addraii. and M i: OtwaM Jacaby Raadar Sarv- Q—The bidding bu been: South Went North Eut 1 ♦ Peso 2 ♦ Pens Pa.ns 2 tr S ♦ 3 V You. South, hold; 4|3Z VA2 aKJIS «AQ9 81 What do you do? A—Bid four Hubs. Ton don’t plan to (o to rame. but yen want to compete further and fat eaac the opponent*' ' ' hearts yen moy wont a club openinr. TODArS QUESTION West bid* four beartf. North and East pass. Wbat do you do By OSWALD JACOBY North had a mighty good hand and became really exuberant when his partner responded one spade to his opening club' bid. As a result South found; himself in six' spades before | he had a chance to catch i his breath. West opened | the king of i hearts and shifted to a 1 o w I diamond. South Won in dummy and led the queen of spades. East played the seven spot and after a little thought South Went up with the ace and lost h'lS slam. South made the usual complaint about bad luck, but North seemed to think that South had taken the wrong play. North was correct. When you hold a 10-card suit you should finesse for the king. This isn’t anything brand new or world-shaking. I imagine that several million bridge players know this, but I wonder if many of them know just how much better the finesse is than the drop. Here are the exact figures from, “Oswald Jacoby on Gambling”: 37 per cent of the time the king win be guarded in back Astrological * ♦ W * THE PONTIAC FUJBSS. WEDNESDAY,^ OCTOBER 30, 1968 C—13 Disney Releases New One Qahoon Features Discussed By BOB-nOMAS AP Mmrl»>TdnrW0B Writer HOliLYWOOlWTbt adroit of a new cartoon feature-alwayi a major oocaaijM for knrers of the art of anioflKioii-iinHnpted some refledioni by Walt Dis^ ney. The parant of Mickey Mouse, Snow. White, et x al, ia o^erlng as Ui Chriat-mas gift to the natinn, “The Sword in the Stone,” a fablaj of the early! yeara of Xing Arthur. M M a rolUcUng tale, occoil^Bga raOMAS mare 71 mhwtoi on the acre If^ took thrte yoata Ihd a shade under $S million to pro- “A lot of people aa^,me why I don’t make more cartoon features,” the head man mused. “Well, they are tricky things. of Mickey Mouse, A Many other outfits have tried to make them, but none have ‘The cartoon features tie up a lot of people and take a great deal of time. Ihat means money. ‘Sleeping Beauty’ ooat |4.5 million — because we decided to use the big screen had to fill in all that space with drawing. *101 Dalmatians’ i not as high - IS.5 million.” GIVES A HINT “Dalmations” was. a hit. “Sleeping Beauty’’ wu only, a fair suocess. Walt’s aaalysis gives a hint of the Disney genius. “The dog picture was'ahpnt animals and jieople,” ho observed, “while ‘Sleephig B ty* was a pageant I’m ah . trying to reaeb pcopio in die haart, to give them real emo-tk». Some of the boys around here fight me on it. WWW “They say, ‘beire comes Walt with his sticky, aentlim stuff.’ Okay, maybe It’s sentimental and corny. But 1 think It’s better to send people out of the theater with an esno-il charge.” I illustrated with the fhst cartoon feature, “Snow White.” ALL 1WE STOPS “I pulled out an the stops on lat one,” he said. “In the iene where Snow White is sup-. seed to be dead, I not only bad the tears coming down the dwarfs’ cheeks; I also had it raining, so drops trickled down the c^fin. I even had the candles dripping tears.” ter “The Sword in the Stone,” what? WWW The IMaiiey artists are al-. tady well Into a treatment of KlpUi«’s “Jui«le Book.” Hie studio is preparing a “Wfamle tha Pooh” cartoon which may develop into a feature. *THE oi6WDED SKr WbiT-jie. fcu larnriff| TEq|AQEB$^£g& 2^ EVERY WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY ENJOY , JOlUARD ONnson'( All YOB CAB EAT ovoNDERFUL n: $1.00 T-vtiri- S.ujrf- • Ro CHILD'S PORTION_____65« 3650 DIXIE HIGHWAY •f^Dya)^ f loins Play About Pope Provokes Fights in Switzerland (XjTBN, Switzerland (UPD-Pist fighU broke out here last night when hundreds of youths crashed a theater showing “The DOgMy,” t b e controversial Gernan play about the role of Pope.Pim xn In efforts to save Jews In World War n. yoatks hi irsat of the ttealsr aad thea ran knUe. Fistfights flared Inside, while rioters outside smartiad the I doors and beat ushers, out S,8N persons ware drawn to flie dMorbonoo and id, outside the thei SoBM of the demonstrators mandeered a prop truck, steered it into the middle of the street and slashed the tires. WWW The Rolf Hochuth play, soi times called “The Vicar” *1110 Representative,” accuses the Pope of failing to condemn the Nasi persecution of the Jews during World War n. CONCORD, NJL (AP) - Bon. Barry (kildwater says he may mce whether or not he wUl sedc the Republican presidential numhiaHnn sooner than he had Rated a leading contender for the GOP presideiitial nomina-tkn, Goldwater told a news conference Tuesday night that if be seeks the nominetkin he will campaign vigorously In New HainiiBhire’s first-in-tboaatiaD prln^ nett March U. During a brief visit to New Ariama Rapub-rsferrpd to the Jan. S7 deadline be^ set for anno ing his intentions. WWW T think I may make up my mind before that time in fair-to my supporters and the No Alcohol for Atlahfans / AlLANni W - DrhikiiM peo-pia M ^ Atlanta area imty have to'seout -around coBsiddr- Idy today to find a sourca of «PPly- The licenses of in of the dty’s 117 retail liquor stores have been suspended until Dec. 2 by the city’s aldermen on recommendation of Mayor Ivan Allen Jr. The penalties were imposed for salM to minors. Big Tippgrs Irk Fop«r MADRID (UPI) -The Madrid newspaper Pueblo, < plalnhig the foreivi touriste tip too much, said today that a Oreak miUhnaire recently picked up the 2MH«eta (133) tab in a Madrid cafe — and left a tip of llMI pesetas (1113). LTUS CmYUI ?hiM»any Invlias Ym E1U07 Aa EvUBteff At lira DANONG NIGHTLY Exe«]pt Saa. aad Maa. Featariag DICK BELMONDB andjbanikAulbrey FUN & EXCITEMENT NO OOVBI OHABOa IMMOOMOK • EXCELL^fOOD Owmil AtPliB INN (At AlpisM Ski Slopes) SCOTCH BEAUTY WINS - Susan Jones of Aberdeen, Scotland, wbe was Misa Scotland in the 19M Miss Universe contest was wad yeaterday at Waitsfleld, Vt. VBk husband is Dr. John Paroate. Barry May Reveal Plans Sooner Than Expected To aupportara wbo gave him a warm welcome at Cooeord airport, be said: “I expect to bo back eooe.” RAISES FUNDS Tbo oeoaaloa for Gehhfetor’s viettwasaUbaiitBtttandrala-ing dfaUMT for a cbMr in goeem mnt at Haw England BroHNn kivt daat N agMi...ilMi ta la aa* tf the b«it pictam of tteioir.’’______ TONIGHTS TIMB ONLY I 7:00 and 9:15 ‘•Sioplifilonous.’’ HMENS ABOYE! Spenoeals WmsSk. HURON MON. M llddlllltfllll 7KM-10:S0 HawMia ItMsl YELLOW lOWAKE SHOW C—14 THE PONTIAC PRRSS, WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 80. 1963 THURS., Oa. 31 THRU SUN., NOV. 3rd ___________OPEN DAflY 10 to 10 ... SUNDAY 12 to 7 ^ - A- ffYld A Division of iho ■. S N % ❖SiW \ S. S. Kresge Company FE <-41l2 I AUTO CINTOI Cbarje-tt at K-MART GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD 12 month root! hazard guaranta* AI^ SIZE) LISTED whltowoUs.. LM aioru 8 88 Btaelfwall*, tut^typ*, plus tax ojtd rwcap~ pahU tire. :”eox» 10^ • 8.00X1S* plwtwW ll«okwans.twNtyp«.^M rtctpptAUtin III *114 f ■p»aM> tih«. ■ I! ' THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30. 1963 D—1 THREE MORE - Guard FYed Marlin is Navy’r leading yeDrer this season with 38 points; and he started last Satur-Ay’s 24-12 upset of Pitt with a field goal. The stocky lineman from Woodbury, N.J. has missed only one field goal attempt in flvc games, and he turned that into a touchdown by covering the free ball In the end zone. Hawks Edge Wings, 5-1 to Pad Hockey Lead More Homers Needed by Yartkees--Berra NEW YORK (UPI) - Yogi Berra’s first objective as new manager of the New York Yankees will be to restore their old trade mark — the home run. "Personnel seems to run in cycles with teams,” says Berra, who has been observing Yankee teams since 1847 when he reported as the rawest rookie since Ring Lamder’s Alibi Ike. “And for A while It has been running toward fielding and finesse with us.” Berra was appalled when the Yankees scored only four runs in their four-game World Series sweep at the hands of the Log Angeles Dodgers. “Ihey had great pitching,” he conceded. “But we had lousy hitting. We’re supposed to hit great pitching.” The Yankees lest te the Dodgers hy scores of M, 4-1, 14, and M — the worst shewing they ever mnde in a World Series and one of the worst in a World Series. “Hm first thing I’m going to look for is some more muscle,” said Yogi, in going over his future plans. “The Yankees mean power to people. I want to add some power — left-handed if possible but right handed if I can’t get left-handed power-hitting.” The Yankees hit 188 homers last season — a king-sized total — but they were far behind the American and Major league leading total of 225 hit by the Minnesota Twins. WINDOW BREAKERS j “They were calling the Twins the window breakers at the end of the season,” grumbles Ber-j ra. “We’re supposed to be the window breakers.” I Injuries to Mickey Mantle and i WharramGets Hat Trick in Easy Victory Gordie Howe's Bid for Record Goal Checked by Defense SWING AWAY — Detroit’s Henry Hank (right) comes out swinging at Eddie Cottdn of Seattle in the fourth round of Tigers Offer Colavito to Milwaukee Eye Mathews in Negotiation Detroit Also Bargains With Other Clubs DETROIT (UPI) - Jim Campbell, general manager of the DetroU Tigers, today confirmed that controversial slugging star Rocky Colavito has been placed on the trading block. ' CampbeU, conunenting on a MUwaukee Sentinel report that Colavito had been offered to the Milwaukee Braves, confirmed that the home-nm hitting outfielder had been offered “to several chibs.” Other than the Braves, CampbeU refused to identify the other clubs with whom he bad discussed Colavito. “The possibiUty of t r a d 1 n g Cdavito with the aim of ac-quking pitchers and strengthening our infield has been discussed with sewal clubs,” CampbeU said. He weald act reveal the names of players the Tigers were trying to get bat one b maared to be the Braves’ third baseman, Eddie EVANSTON, lU. m - Northwestern hopes to keep Its slim Big Ten title hopes alive this Saturday afterhoon at Michigan as the Wildcats rei»w their 71-year old footbaU series. Michigan’s 1-4 record notwithstanding, the WUdcaU enter Saturday’s game with three- lhain worries: 1) A Michigan line that wiU be as big as any faced by Northwestern this year: 2) The offensive threat posed by three first rate Michigan quarter-badu: 3) The possUiUity Michigan finally may be able to shake the streak of bad luck Canqiben said the Colavito negotiations had been going on “for aome time.” Colavito, 30, has been among the American League leaders in home runs the last six years, ■immlng out 222 for a yearly average of 37. However, last year he feU into disfavor with the Detrdt Chib wboi he suffered a long slimqi at the beginning of the as the Tigers sank lower into the second division. WORST TOTAL Oolavito’s hitting picked up at ^ end of the season and he findUy eitoed up with 91 RBI but hb 22 iwmers were his worst total in the last six years. Hie Sentinel quoted Braves’ president John McHale as say-ii« Colavito had been offered to hb club and that “we arc interested. “It’s hard to find a more powerful hitter than Rocky and he’s one of the few power guys avaUaUe who would fit “We’ve been apfiroacbed by the ligers with raspect to Col-avtto but it’s a matter of coming up with the right type play-os to get him.” Ihe Braves’ president said fn regard to the posslbUity of giving tq> Mathews in the deal: "We’d have to get more than Cdbvito if we ever decided to give up Mathews. They {faveo’t asked for anybody hi our db-cussioito but they need pitchers and we’ve got a few extra in Wildcats Lack McCauley hr Michigan Grid Clash Roger Marb cut down on Yankee homers, of course, but Berra doesn’t see that as an excuse. He feeb the team he has inherited from Ralph Houk b buUt basicaUy on defense and he thinks a Yankee team should be buUt basicaUy on power. “We always had good field-tag,” recaUs Yogi of the great Yankee teams of the UNs. “But we had the hig sticks.” It b conceivable, the way Yogi b talking, that he wiU break up the AU-Star inner defense of 1963 by replacing third-baseman Clete Boyer with a harder hit- ter. First-baseman Joe Pepitone, second-baseman Bobby Richardson and shortstop Tony Kubek are “safe” for the moment. which has haunted it in conference pby thus far. Northwestern scout Bruce Beatty describes Michigan as “the hardluck team of the Big Ten” after having seen it bow twice, to Purdue and Minne- Nortowestera’s task of moving the baU oa the ground against the bulky Wolverine line win be complicated by the loss of its leading gronad-galaer, junior halfback Didi McCauley, of Pontine. McCauley, who has gained 248 ★ ★ ★ ★ Rocks, Bullets Aimed' at Wolverines' Leaders ANN ARBOR (DPD-Rocks and buUeb are aU Michigan footbaU coach Bump EUiott b worrying about these days and aUiletic director Fritz Obler has taken care of the rocks. Now aU EUiott has to concern himself with between now and Saturday are the buUeb of Tom Meyers, Northwestern’s snappy quarterback and one of tiie best field generab in the Big Ten Coiderence. EUiott has beoi a target for the rock-throwers for hb team’s performance thb season, 1-3-1. In facC out of a total of 14 games, the Wolverines have only won three to date since the beginning of last season. In the midst of a ^7 record bst year, Crbler gave EUiott a strong vote of confidence and said he would be back next year. Ibe clamor for ElUott’s job increased again thb year and Crbler was forced to strongly defend EUiott. He did ust however, give his coach the same ceufideuce veto that he handed out last T(H> BACK - RusseU VoU-mer, t h e Memphb State quarterback who returned to the game after a trip to the hospital in the first quarter last Saturday, has been named the Assoebted Press back of the week. VoUmer ^ked a bte rally that led to a 17-10 wb oyer Mbsbsippi State. If I have any criticism of Bump and hb staff, I wUl go directly to them and teU them my thoughb,” Crbler said, “and I have not done so and do not anticipate any such action.” Crbler, who coached EUiott at Michigan during Bump’s pbying days, said there has bem “no great surge of maU regarding Michigan’s footbaU yards rushing for an average of 4.1 suffered a twisted left knee in the Michigan State game and b not expected to pby against Michigan. Some of the running stack could be taken up by another Michigan product, senior fuU-back BUI Swingle of Grand Haven. Swingle had one of-hb best running days in Saturday’s loss to Michigan State, and may be returning to the form that made him Northwestern’s scorer as a sophomore. FEARS PEAK Coadi Ara Parseghian fears the Wolverines may be reaching a bte-season p^ as their youngsters ~ whom he rates as “probably the finest sophomore group in the Big Ten” — approach maturity. “We’U also have our defensive problenos, especblly in coping with any one of three fine quarterbacks that Bump ElUott can call upon,” said Parseghian. “It looks like Bob Timberlake has come into hb own since recovering from an early season injury. He’s a tremendous threat on the option pby. But I’U teU you, when they repbee Timbtflake with Bob Chandler or Frosty Evashevski, we won’t be abb to relax.” If Ike Wildcab can’t gab sa toe gronad without Mc-Canby, all the more pressure wfll be ptaced aa qaarterback Ton Myers, who took quite a beating from Mhtoigaa State’s hard4nsliiag forwards. Myers compbted only nine of 27 attempb for 20 yards against the Spartans, and was dropped for losses totaling 61 yards. Hb favorite receiver has been sen-tor end Gary Crum, who has cau^t 21 passes for 400 yards. AERIAL BARRAGE The rpdu dbposed of, EUiott can give hb fuU attention to the buUeb. Northwestern has 44 over-all record and Myers can be expected to give the Michigan pass defenfe a mighty workout on Saturday. Purdue’s Ron Di Gravio and Navy’s Rogw Staubadi gave the pass defense fits and the defense has not boon one of Michigan’s strong poinb thb year. EUiott plans to send hb squad through a moderately heavy workout today with the empha-sb on pass defense, AU of the first stringers are expected to be in action Saturday. It’s the power production of the foursome that concerns Berra. Pepitone was .271 with 27 homors and 89 runs batted in; Richardson was .265 with three homers and 48 RBb; Kubek was .257 with seven homers and 45 RBb and Boyer was .251 with 12 homers and 54 RBb. That b an average of 12 homers and 7S runs batted in per man — not a good average in thb day of the jack-rabbit baU and slim tapered bat. Rally Takes Hawks to Overtime Win their light heavyweight title bout at Flint Tuesday night. But Hank didn’t swing often enough and Cotton gained a unanimous decision in the 15-rounder along with Michigan’s version of the light heavyweight crown. From Oar News Wires CHICAGO-’The Chicago Black Hawks are threatening to turn the Nitional Hockey League race into a runaway. Playing with a determination which they hope will offset last season’s late collapse, the Hawks have lost only one of their first nine games and pulled into a sb-point lead over Toronto and Montreal with an effortless 5-1 victory over Detroit Tuesday night. FLINT------It may take a while for Eddie Cotton to get a crack at the world light heavyweight championship, but the quiet Seattle fighter wiU take le title in pieces if he has to. Cotton, ranked the No. I contender to World Boxing Asso-ebtion champion VfilUe Pas-trano, won the Michigan version tOHTt ■v TM AlWCMM erm HOUSTOM-ltip Randall, Haua- on, outpoMad Frankla Ramlrat, I4na, Why is Imperial now outselling almost every other whiskey in the world ? IMPERIAL Because knowledgeable people have a taste for Hiram Walker quality. HIRAM WALKER $395 $249 p\nr I €•#• N«. 41 Captains Trim WTHSHarrieis Kettering Adds Points in Sports Trophy Bid Waterford Kettering scored a 50-point victory over arch rival Waterford Township yesterday in cross country, although the final score was only U-31 The close win pve the Captains 50 points in the competition for the All Sports Trophy. Actually, the victory was worth IN points sii^ Kettering had won M points with an earlier cross country win this season; but the Skippers could have offset that advantage with a triumph yesterday. There will be IM points available in the football contest next week between the two schools. Bruce Bodner and Mark Pank-ner flnished one-two for the Captains yesterday with the former’s winning time of 10:58 only one second ahead of his teammate’s time, on the windy, chilly home course. ★ * ★ Waterford grabbed third and fourth places by George Ball-ingall and John Meyers, respectively; but Kettering’s Len McPherson edged Ron Potter of the Skippers for sixth place and the clinching points. ’Ihe victory gave the Captains 0-5 dual meet record. Their reserve squad also triumphed, 17-48. lURin miSKlT • N nilF; llt SIUltHI NNItKEyS m tItIR REVIMl SPIIIIS . RlltH HUKEII SIRS IRC.. PEOlU, HU PROTECTION HEADQUARTERS FOR HUNTERSI f US FOR - ^ SPECML ACCIDENT POLICY FOR HUNTERS. You | •elect die amounts and number of dava. A 3 day ^ policy coats only |1.05. 'ALL RISK’ PROTECTION for your guns, hunting equipment snd baggage. See Us Before You Leave! T^lazelle AGENCY, INC. 504 PONTIAC STATE BANK BUILDING, PONTIAC s ws! *> U-D Fullback 2nd in Rushing Yardage DETROIT (ifl - Collegiate football’s second leading runner is a University (rf Detroit fullback, Fred Beier. The stocky U-D junior has gained 550 yards in 116 carries for a 4.7-yard average in the Titans 1-4-1 season. He could be come the school’s best runner since Lloyd Brazil in 1928. Brazil’s record is safe, : ever. He gained 1,383 yards rushing in the ’Titans’ 9-0 campaign in 1928. l^ier is likely to be handed the ball often Saturday night when U-D plays Houston Houston, Tex. Houston is 1 less — but has played such rugged teams as Aub^, Baylor, Mississippi, Texas A & M, Mississippi State and Alabama. Marathon SALE We Will Be Open From Monday, Oct. 28 thru Thnrs., Oct. 31st. We Will Be Open 24 Hrs. a Day for This Sale! 80 HOUR Marathon SALE GET WINTER TIRES with 190 tractor-type cleats...dig in, pull you through snow like a tractor $ TubNiess Nylon Suro-Orips In 8mall-to-Blg Car Sizes I K4S'|I|F4S- |I|A95' |P|09! ^ los ■nMNOiteiri. PUbSet. Mer. .r, PntUc. MMnr.. NOT SECONDS! NOT RETREAD81 NEW GOODYEAR TIRB8I NO MONEY DOWN - EASY TERMS I GOODYEAR g^lsss?.sa3iss SERVICE STORE 30 S. CASS FE 5-6123 BEATS BING - Uwis Miller of Birmingham was one of 27 golfers picked nationally to compete in the Beat Bing tournament at Tucson recently. He fired a 154 for 5th placeand failed to qualify for the Crosby Invitational next January at Pebble Beach. ’The top three were selected. Bandits Steal League Title With Late TD The Motor Mart Bandits scored a final period touchdown last night to clinch a'T6-6 victory over the Lions and take the city men’s touch football regular season title. The Bandits thus went unbeaten through seven league games and will enter next week’s playoffs as the top-seeded team. Other scores last night at Jay-cee Park saw the G. M. Raiders topple the victors, 3IM), for their second win, Anderson’s All-Stars nip West Side Lanes, M, and the Misfits bump the Pontiac Packers, 1541. ★ ★ ★ ^ Warren Stephens and Fred Davis scored once to pace the Misfits as they clinched second place. Ernest Robinson had the only touchdown as the All-Stars tied for third place by beating West Side. Jerry Gerber went over twice, Fred Acker, Bob Haux-well and Dick Heller each tallied one touchdown as the Raiders tied for fifth place. ★ ★ ★ All eight teams will engage in the playoffs which will start next Tuesday night at Jaycee Park. CITY MBN-t TOUCH FOOTBALL AfMM«n'. AII-StMli Buckeyes Recover Fast Hayes Uses Trump Card at Wisconsin COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -He’s known for winning the big ones around the rugged Big Ten, but when his back is to the wall — look out. He’s the dean of Big Ten football coaches, and his teams have dominated the league for seasons. He has an edge over every opposing team in the conference ' except Minnesota, which Ohio State has not met during the “Woody years." He’s Wayae Woodrow Hayes, the oatapoken, kard-hwiag coach at Ohio Stale. ’The 13-10 victory over Wisconsin last wecdc was a complete turnabout for Ohio State, which ' been c r u s h e d the week before at Southern California. But that’s when Hayes is the most dangerous—with his back tothewaU. ‘There have been only two or three times in the last years we’ve lost two in a row," Hayes said. "But the Important statistic is if the kids can fight their way back after a humiliating defeat. It’s the boys that come back to win that make a One team." PRIDE HURT His pride battered after the humiliating SM defeat,.hia worst as a coach, Hayes asked each of his players to write a critique of what would do the most good in getting ready for Barrington waa kept off the field at Wisconsin until the squad cime back to start the game. He was not listed on the traveling roster. ★ ★ ★ “Although they might have had some premonition about It, they weren’t sure of it," Hayes said. Primarily a runner, Barrington gained 58 yards in 16 carries, but his lift was psychological more than anyth^ else. It took displaced quarterback Don Unverferth to provide the pass- ing that set up the whining touchdowO in the final three “Maybe IPs healthy te stick a boy OB the beaeh," Hayes smiled. During the “Woody years" in the Big Ten, 1951 to 1963^ Ohio State has comidled a 58-184 record. Although the Buckeyes have not plajiM Minnesota in that time, the best any of the other eight have done is Iowa with five wins and six losses. He also did a little thinking on his own and came up with a trunqi card—Tom Barrington, a a05 • p 0 u n d quarterback who nearly lost his life last summer in an industrial accident. Hayes closed the doors to the practice field and drilled Barrington long and hard. He had been idle since last spring from the shattered jaw that forbade any c o a t a c t work 'We felt it would be a good advantage to us if the opposition didn’t know about Barrington," Hayes said. Carswell Will Return as Syracuse Manager SYRACUSE, N.Y. (fl - Frank Carswell, who managed the Syracuse Qiiefs to the northern division championship in the International Baseball League last season, will manage the team next year, the club said Tues- day. Carsw< iwell, 43, was named than ager last June 19 to replace Bob Swift, who was called up to the parent Detroit Tiger organization as a coach. Meet Celtics Tonight Pistons Seek Home Win DETROIT (UPI) — ’The Detroit Pistons will be seeking their first home victory of the young National Basketball Association season tonight at Cobo Arena. But they might have to wait awhile, because they will be playing against the world chant-pion Boston Celtics. ’Die Celtics, minus the services of the great Bob Cousy, who retired have shown so far that they hardly miss the back-court wizard. ’They have a 341 record and are all alone in the lead of the eastern division. The Pistons, under new coach Charley Wolf, are la the cellar of the western division. Nhe Olts have been bothered by the usual opening season bugs. A couple of front line players have come down with the flu and Tom Heinsohn has been suffering from the afahq^ but the Boston chib doesn’t show any signs of letting up. BULLETIN PLAY OUR 9 HOLE PAR 3 IC 50’ FOR ONLY AND THIS AD I Camrtry dah MA 5-2M9 Wolf said the Detroit club has been having its troubles on the foul line. ’They haye consistently out-shot and outsoored foeir. first four rivals but come apart at the foul line. He said he would place emphasis on this in practice. Green Bay Adds 'BraY for Passing Insurance LOS ANGELES (UPI) - The Green Bay Packers have picked up former Los Angeles Ram quarterback Zeke Bratkowski on the waivers and he will be in their lineup Sunday against the Pittsburgh Steelers. Bratkowski will sub for Johnny Roach, pressed into actkm as the Packers’ regular quarterback because of an Injury to Bart Starr. ... axpartt tell ut that wet, colder weedier Is surely on the nMyl Now's the time to think about the guaranteed protection of Water Bepelleat You'll enjoy your hunting trip more In fredily deened ferments procaesed by our experts for deep down toll confident you look good with tho finest weether protection availablo. 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Yop just cent bslieve psople stW take the nwyiNtappieciatalWMrsolMybuillaearinustba trouble SAAB does, year after year... and wins. BacauM of it* unusual R ttreke anilne/tront-Mlwai drive poiwer system*, SAAB cehsistently baeU larger. e ear at great ae th 'Warranted for 2 yeere or 24,000 n SAAB *49 *imoY . tmMe . n. Mst a sport* ear—tehee more rcHy M any car ie Mw smtd. ■dtas to say, R parferme ■■ neBdim alsn MIRACLE MILE MOTORS, be. 2160 S.' Talagraph Rd. • * A. M, le f F. M. Oaify. lacept Wed. Fhena 334-9779 THE PONTIAC PRESS. ^VEDNESDAT, OCTOBER 30. 1963 D—3 NIW YOUK-V.. York. outpolnM A N*w«rk, N.J., I. NIGHT RACING BOWLING The house team hh a 1057-3045 combination last week to climb into second place in the Wonderland Lanes Masters League. Howe’s Lanes 92.240 Peterson points are .237 in front of Wonderland in the team race. Dave Eby’s 223-225-637 led the way among the individual scores last week. Bob Leibler had a 235 and Joe Roerink a 234 game. At Auburn Lanes last week John Noonan had a 258 game as the house team moved into ■lONlYDC 8“ rON HIGH TIM PRICES BRAND NEW ANY SIZE 7.50x14 1st • 00x14 QUALITY snnn JS;;;: 9.50x14* 6.00x16 - ----- 6 00x13* AM $3.00 hf »kHm«H«-$3 00 ••r»wk.UM-limil4Mrcuitom*r 5-90x15 iHSf.sssuuMi 6.50x13* N»f« WtCMriHl •• . V.I.- tTi' * €—ivme iwni well. THhU mi. i to 9-mt. t ts t-cnin nwi- UNITED TIRE SERVICE WHERE PRICES ARE DISCOUNTEO-NOT QUALITY" 1007 Baldwin Ave. 3 MINUTES FROM DOWNTOWN PONTIAC EXPERT ENGINE OVERHAULING second place In the Wednesday Nlte League. The Huron Bowl Friday afternoon Ladies Matinee League had a 232 by Marcia Whittier and a 210 by Delores Jack-son. Doolins Super Shell holds a five-point lead. Rosemary Tal continued fine bowling in the Hilltop Rebels loop last week. She had 227—544 for Stemmer’s Catering, the league leaders. Last night the women dressed in Halloween costumes for their annual competition. The Airway Lanes Kings & Queens circuit Friday had a 230—577 by Beverly Filka and a 220 by Ray Lanham. The Columbia Avenue Baptist Church Mixed League Saturday at Airway had a 6-7-10 conversion by Georgia Green. The preceding week Wayne Wheat-ly’s 263 game qualified him for a Century Club award. The open bowlers are shooting for turkeys this week at 300 BowL One dinner bird will be given away with every 10 entries each week until Nov. 27. • Entrants receive a 70 per cent handicap and only pay for three lines of bowling. Entry blanks are available at the main desk. IiT league action last week at 300 Bowl, George Chicov-sky led the Tliursday Nite All-Star Classic with 247-213-073 while Joe Foster had 230—020 and Larry Crake - f 1'%'i f, -rya ' * m [V William Meir and Homer Foltz paced the Pontiac Motor Inter-Office loop with 224 and 221 respE^ively. In the Good-fellow's League, George St. Amour rolled 216-211—590 for the top scores. IN THE RUNNING, AGAIN - E. C. Richards had a pleasant smile for Press photographer Phil Webb when he entered the Bowlerama recently. The smile undoubtedly was prompted by the $625 he took home as champion last year. His grin probably has grown now since he bowled a 647 series last Sunday at 300 Bowl. In a tournament where ex-champions have a hard time repeating. Richards’ total is the highest to date at *‘300” and looks good enough to qualify for the Dec. 1st finals there. Qualifying will resume at 12 county keg establishments this Saturday and Sunday. British Join Nkkiaus Supporters GUARANTEED TUNE-UPS LOW PRICES EASY TERMS AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSIONS OUR SPECIALTY MOTOR EXCHANGE 301 S. Saeinaw St. FE 3-7432 647 Top Total in 'A' Loop The 647 of Dick Childress i led all bowlers in the Wednesday Nite “A” League last week I at Huron Bowl. Included among the five 600 I series were the 622 and 618 I by A1 Latendresse and Tony i Ledesma, respectively. Ron 'Slack’s 255 topped the list of ’ 40 games 200-or-above. Wolverine Entertainers has a 12-game lead over Salfi’s Bar i in the team race. LONDON (8V-“Superman.” “Wonder Boy.” “The King.” ★ ★ ★ These >vere some of the accolades poured on Jack Nick-laus today by British golf observers who 18 months ago were calling him a big overstuffed kid who couldn’t carry Arnold Palmer’s clubs. Nicklaus’ fantastic birdie spurt in the Canada Cup competition in Paris Monday — birdies on five of the first six holes and five 3s in a row — sent the typewriters of the usually hard-to-impress British writers singing another tune. “At the moment Nicldaus seems out .on his own in the world of golf," wrote Leonard Crawley of the Daily Telegraph. “One may well ask: What is his secret? He seems. In the exuberance of his magnificent i^anhood, to be able to get the figures when most they are needed. His great physical strength is, of course, an asset. His mind sees every golfing problem as through iced mer as the world’s No. 1.” Ronald Meager, in the Daily Express, christened Nicklans “the golden bear of American golf” and said his performance in the last nine holes of the tonmament at Paris was superhuman — the work ot 'a superhuman.” Roger Malone, writing in the Daily Herald, called Jack “the king of world golf.” Jack Wood in the Daily Mail, termed him the “heir-elect to Arnold Palmer as the world’s No. 1.”.. “At 23, he is longer than Palmer from the tee,” 1]food said. “His crouches over his putt with his left shoulder high and it is Impossible to be unaware of the tremendous effort he is mak- Lady Sets Keg Record COLUMBUS, Ohio m- A Califbrnia bowler has sef a rnoord for a three-game series, the Womqp’s International Bowling Congress reported Tnesday. The WIBC said Janet Harman of Norwalk, a Los Angeles suburb, fired a 792 Monday night on games of 211, 276 and 3N. The WIBC uid, however, that the 3N game is pending nnUI official verifica-tionArrives here. The 792 series shatters the previous mark set in 1156 by Angela Mica of St. Louis, who recorded a 787 total. Tiger Hurler Wins DUNEDIN, Fla liP - Dennis McLain struck out 12,> and walked only two as Detroit whipped Minnesota, 10-0, in a Florida winter instructiogal baseball league game Tuesday. “Seagram’s V.O. and soda!’ “Rye and ginger!’ “Make mine a vodka mactini!’ “Let me have a V.O. on the rocks!’ “V.O. straight!’ SEAGRAM'S IMPORTED Why doesn’t everyone ask for VO.? Maybe it’s because everyone hasn’t tried it! V.O. Known by the company it keeps cuuus mitn'-l ncsi or kuct(I«miwu.i mu sit.sM mor. tunw Miaitn co. i.t.c. JEROINE welcomes you to drive these two new never before Oldsmobiles f'BS StBppBiluiiinsizB.. jBtst^SS All new from the nameplate back ... V-8 for action, X. If • 6o • *^"®*”y* room, new zoom. 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I SAVE UP TO *5.00 ON A HEWBATTENTl I Binary ifu||ljh» ^biHiiy mor* I I* • wr •»P0rti cl ■ bollory today... InUill I now moil ■Mia iMaceapaNNiTN Vie. amaixpaKSNowMacaia. teas. IHSTMT CRWIT! Open Monday and Friday Evtningt til 1:30 P.M. Your credit la already established at your nearest B.F.Qoodrich store if you have any active national credit card. No delaysl No questions! Buy now... pa^later. JS.r.uoo(lricli 111 North Perry Street, Pontiac FE 2-0121 D-4 THL POXTIAC PHESS. WEPyESDAY. OCTOBER 30, 1063 iU.- dlpHf the Out^wf “tutil with DON VOGEL Outdoor Editor, Pontiac Pross North Wind Blows Good News for Duck Hunters MMsi Machine Does Everything, After Birds but It's Still Not Human N»Tte IlliSURVIVOR^ M^SCWB Leaders Hold Places in Press Contest-Some Geese Taken KEEP OFF—A bad experience with h plowing through his grain field last year prompted Bob Schmidtke to erect a warning sign on his rural St. Joseph, Mich, property. The sign is very effective," says Schmidtke, who is very serious about the warning. Undoubtedly. his gun adds strength to the poster. The north wind howling through Michigan Monday afternoon and evening meant good news for duck hunters, but it didn't carry any rain for Southern Michigan's harried pheasant enthusiasts. As temperatures dropped and the wind increased, ducks began pulling out of Canada. They rode the wind into Michigan and begjsn dropping down on the 'Great Lakes. LANSING Jr> — Hunters who stirted. they first ran a 20-min-! have been 928 permits allowed year, a new high. About 10,500 applied for antlerless deer hunt- ute test. Then the machine ' for the area. | rejected because they ing permits can be sur^ they worked from 5 p. m. until 3 i ★ * ♦ were filled out incorectly or received a fair shake in the a. m. on the drawings. It is es- machine was borro\^ed ''eceived after the Oct. 10 drawing. timated the machine method ,he state Department of deadline.' Machine 113M 1401 saw to saved some 1,000 man-hours of Social Welfare' > I'' previous years it took sev- I A1 Dasen sunerintendeht of ®''al days to draw the permits For the first time, the SUte -The only error the machine ' orncessinc for the Welfare f®’’ hunters in areas where there mi* “ I Crtrn"^ thVmost i -- year used an automated ma- by us before it gets the data, versatile machine now avail- allowed. =11?. J r ‘StL S IU.1™ ,lSt ’ ISl rl, , » * wherethenumberofhuntera^ ^ ^ ent operations, he said, plications exceeded the quotas. ^^e machine /**»•«" J®«> »' “>* chine is to process checks for As an example, the mac|iine ] spat out an objection when I The average person. looking , 7„‘i welfare recipies at ^e machine, is tempted to jj,e*iontmorenc7cwntvwea. , ,,, the Montmorency County area, thmk of it as tefog uncanllly Jackie Enters Sardar Kennedys May Star in Horse Show Flight ducks, mostly bluebills and goldeneyes, that had ir-rived earlier and were basking in northern Lakes Huron and Michigan during the pleasant weather, were chased inland by the stiff on shore breezes. WASHINGTON (AP) - The -Jiennedys star at the Washington international Horse Show tonight. First lady Jacqueline Kennedy, although not attending in' person, has entered her Pakistani gift horse, Sardar, for an official debut on the show circuit. The thoroughbred bay gelding, a gift from Pakistani president Ayub Khan, will be ridden by Mrs. Kennedy's friend and Mid-dleburg, Va., neighbor,' Mrs. Eve Fout, in a sidesaddle ladies’ hunter class. And»Bthel Kennedy, wife of the Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy, will ride a borrowed hunter in a conformation class if she can get clearance to wear the colors of her defunct hunt club. Ethel, now 35 and the mother oi eight children, was a well known horsewoman before her marriage and rode in Connecticut and New York shows with the Fairfield-Westchester Hunt. RULE VIOLATION Some show folk complained when she rode' here two years ago although she was not a card carrying member of apy recognized hunt—a rule-book violation. This time, Ethel is seeking credentials. Claude W. Owen, horseowner from nearby Potomac, Md., and a director of the Washington show, is letting Mrs. Kennedy ride his 7-yeaF-old chestnut hunter. War Life. He said the masters of the foxhounds association in Boston have been asked to issue a hunt card to Mrs. Kennedy, even though her ex-hunt club is now extinct. If all the legal maneuvers are squared away, the attorney general’s wife will take the jumps in War Life, the second highest scorer in conformation divisions in the U.S. The wind also took a lot of dead leaves off trees making grouse and archery deer hun- .ru It. Iiuiiioiiai More than 261,000 applications human. The machine can P™y • they were incorrect. The ma-, for anv-deer permit.s were rechess game, a ^me of check-1 should ceived ’ by the department this ers or write poetry If given th^ ® ______ proper instructions. | a 1 ^ The people who work Fith it I * » » w » » Deer Permits Go in Mail This Week even have had the machine draw a picture of a pretty girl. Every curve is just right in the machine-made drawing. But the people directing it show they realize it is just ' machine, They haven’t even Plan Temporary Form for Ski Safety Checks CADILLAC A^-Michigan ski, areas will operate under a tern- i porary permit this season pending full implementation of the state skiing safety act, according to Ski Safety Commission ^ chairman Fred Bocks. Despite a late start, he said today, all the areas will be inspected with emphasis on mechanical facilities and "glaring safety hazards will have to be corrected" state ski safety law is borne by charges to individual operators. They pay $2* per application to operate rope tow facilities. $5 for T-j>ar and $15 for chair lifts. Inspection of the facilities ranges in cost from $8 for rope tow installations to $25 for T-bars and $30 for chair lifts. Bocks manager of Caberfae Ski Area here, says application and inspection costs would total approximately $600 at Caberfae The Kennedy contingent will spark the second night of the six day show, which got off to a White tie social start in the national guard armory Tuesday night. West Germany’s young and speedy trio of riders rode away with top honors in the first test of international jumping. They took the first four places, shutting out entries from U.S., Canada and Argentine teams. EXPECTED LESS U.S. team coach Bertalan De Nemethy of Noroton, Conn., said he expected the Germans to be the toughest competition in the show. But their smashing victory Tuesday night was a bit more than was bargained for. . With only three riders—Alvin Schockemuehle, 26, Germany’s jumping champ. Kurt Jarasin-skl. 24. and Herman Schridde,. 26. they routed the powerhouse American squad with its seven riders and a string of 14 horses entered in the fault and out ringmaster challenge trophy. Whistles and applause from the opening night crowd of 3,800 greeted Schockenmuehle's victory dash on Oozent. He also took second place, riding another mount. Freiherr. His teammates sewed up third and fourth by going the same distance, Schridde riding Kamerad and Jarasinski on Almmusik. But for the pheasant hunter there was no good news. The extremely dry weather has made dog work almost impossible. In fact, conditions are so adverse that many ninvods are staying home waiting for a good rain. PHEASANT CONTEST The leaders remain the same in The Press Pheasant Contest. A 40^ - inch ringneck is leading the length division while the weight class is topped by a 3-pound, 9-ounce bird. A $50 savings bond is awarded to the hunter entering the heaviest ringneck and a $25 bond for the longest. The contest is open to all residents of Oakland County. Only ringnecks are eligible and the birds must be brought to The Press Sports Department for weighing or measuring. The contest closes at noon, Nov. IT. NO PERSONALITY “It is just a big. Hard old Anilerless Deer Hunting ^ in S. Michigan Supported I LANSING (UPI) - The SUle ; Conservation Department has ' been deluged with tele|rfione I calls from hunters who sought I the 146,000 ’’any deer’’- permits I available for next nxmth’s sea- “ Everyone wants to know when they will be. notified of their success or failure Th The draw.” said a- department A state Senate conservation i The Menominee River, with, ^ ^ hunk of hardware,” said Jim | committee Monday heard wit- Ike Brule River, forms much of ^ computer pnii»H out the Hughes, administrative analyst nesses urge that an anterless Michigan-Wisconsin border, jmjjy dinners in the permit for the Conservation Depart-. nermitted in Michigan officials say there is, draw last week, but the appli-ment. “People who work with l /v, no pollution originating on this! cations now are awaiting a these machines don’t think of I •^"ern lower Michigan. • state’s side of the river and that, printer’s stamp of ’allowed” or them as personalities.” ' committw, meeting problems originating in Wiscon- denied ’ •Hughes and Harry Cox. in Kalamazoo, talked to agricul- „e being abated .noke.man s for them to draw up instructions. When the drawings were mailed out tomorrow. The season starts Nov. f in the western U.P. Holly Canoeists Areas where discrepancies requiring engineering changes for compliance are found will be allowed to operate this season but must make corrections when ordered. All new facilities including rope tows. T-bars. chair lifts anid others must comply with the American standards code adopted in Michigan, said Bocks He said the law provides for bearings with some lati-t u d e expected in rases u( hardship. Bocks estimated “It will be well into the winter” before the area inspec- The cost of implementing the Oil Rights Auction Damp areas in northern Oakland County, the Brown City area, Sanilac County and the marsh area in northern Ttfscola County have been the most productive pheasant spots. Goose hunting at Swan Creek and Fenitville game farm in ■Allegan County is holding up well, but the big migration of honkers has yet to arrive. Hunters using decoys and calls in southern and western Oakland County are picking up a few geese. The local honkers are taken while flying between refuges and feeding grounds. Grouse hunting in Lapeer and Oakland Counties is only fair. antlerless deer — now allowed ______ in the northern part of the state. . • A total of 85 ski centers are The committee will hold expected to operate in Michigan | Jis winter, including two mul- 3 yew In other areas befm timillion dollar, layouts. ^ther areas, where the season making any recommenda- The two plush resorts are 1 starts Nov. 15, will be notified Shanty Creek Lodge near Bel- Otters being mailed Friday One nurseryman, John Zelen- Boyne Highlands at a third set of letters will be U / K.I T ka of Grand Haven, told the Harbor Springs. gent out next Monday, to the ixOnfC lV©Or /op lawmakers that deer did $49,000 “^ke new ski areas and ex- estimated 115.000 hunters whose . ' damage last year to his trees.' facilities at many of the | luck in the draw was bad, the in State Races ----- established Michigan resorts i department spokesman said. I The Kalkaska National Trout skould add up to winter business -------- r=n~.i«ic frnm Unii. . Festivsl. oldest in the nation, that will surpass the record $20 amoSe too To tiams fo ttr"®‘ Local mill'®" season last year,” said ong the top 10 teams m the decided to spend State Tourist Council Director ^ate during the past racing sea-; fhT m^; | William McGraw. A1 and Pat Widing were nm- *I*try to the northern Michigan ners bp to the first place tan-1community. iS^e^n «pa^7 dem - Jerry Lauwers of Tawas I ------ ! have been expanded^_______________________ City and Stan Hall of Oscoda, i Michigan and Wisconsin water Uuwers and Hall scored 5,000 ‘ resource officials are unhappy points and won all but two of over the U.S. Department of the races Health, Education and Welfare, announcing it would hold a con- Atrowaf Archny Crater GRIMES ARCHERY CO. MaitlilKivrtn *1 THi OaiMIt eilTOL ORIP SOW «tw HIOHLAND ROAD (M-WI PmtiM. Michit«ii OR >nn CIMM Pri., M.. tun. SwUif 0«t. the Holly's Roy Widing teamed,ference on .pollution with Dan Glasco of Flint to | Menominee River. ' place fourth while Ed Adams of r i -1 i • “intervenHon XfSs?. wiSi:. They were honored Monday i officials are irked tbat the night at the sixth annual awards! f«leral government steppedJn banquet of the Michigan Canoe; ■■<1 proclaimed poUnthm wlta-Raclng Association. out first coMulUag them. The pals are spread out and in heavy cover. They are also flushing well in front of hunters. One good thing about these birds is that they can be walked The Holdridge Lakes area and . sections off Van Road, both in Holly recreation area, contain pals. The Hadley Hills has a few i Old orchards around Meta-mora are productive grouse locations. Solunar Tables Stale oil and gas rights, covering about 17.000 acres in 11 northern Lower Peninsula counties, will be offered for leasmg by the Conservation Department during a Nov. 6 public auction in Ifansmg. NEVER "fOO OLD - Mrs. Luella Halverson of Milwaukee Lists of lease restrictions and plots distribution of a 43-inch muskie whose big nMuth got it lands open to bidding are avail-' into trouble after the fish underestimate(f the power of a woman, able free from the departm^t's The 83-> ear-old grafidmother, who had been stalking muskies division in Lansing. while fishing with her daughter on a northern Wisconsin lake. The schedule of Sblunar Periods, as printed below, has been taken fixftn John Alden Knight's Solunar Tables. Plan .vour days so that you will be fishing in good territory or hunting in good cover during these times. A.M. P.M. Omv MiwMaMr MMwr RtolW Tad«y J:I5 f:k 1:3* f:S» ThurldAy . 4:t5 ISIO 4» 10:41 1 1I:M 4 OS ♦ OS t si IO;OI l:M IN PONTIAC fircHone MEANS Carter Tire Co. 376 S. SAGINAW FE 5-6136 Locally owned and staffed by Pontiac people qualified to give you careful, conscientious tire advice and service. Try us arid see the difference! ■ $200.00 rkwardI IDENTIFICATION • Aaeuree better service when traveling. • Assiste Emergency Road Service Tnicka. • Quiddy identifiea you to fellow memben. PROTECTION ' A $200 '"nieft Reward” protects ah can displaying this emblem. RECOGNITION A Badge of Honor for your oontribution, through the Club, to more enjc^able and safer motoring. Join the Qub Aod proodlv pUm this emMen ra your Stop bjr or esU your MAr«M Auto Club oOm todAyl NOT* TO MEMBERS: B« h_____________ toetad And moogniwd by Om Chib wnbiaB a RepUoMDrat •mbtema avaiUbU at your Club a AUTOMOBILE aUB OF MICHIGAN 76 Williami St. — FE $-41 SI R. A. waniM, in-ins R. L. Taft, PR Mtit C. R. Wlhtn, 4S4.1SJ1 c. H. aunit. Pa atm I. a. Tyaaa, ttailK McNaUty, OL i-ntl THE gONTlAC PR£SS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 80. 1963 D—5 MARKETS Sharp Losses The following are top prices covering sales of locally gro:vn produce by growers and sold by them In wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of noon Tuesday. Produce stum Appte Deildw. to..........I4J0 1;^ ApptM. Nprthtrn Ipy, to....4.M Applu. cM«r, cmt ..........l.n Ptn. SoK, to. .............A« Blue Chips Lead Mart Decline Carroto tawad ......... CavltflaiMr, dot. ...... Calary, Paicat, craft . Calary, Rtel ........... Celary, wWfa ........... NEW YORK (AP) - Blue chips took some sharp losses as profits were taken in a declining stock market early this afternoon. Trading was active. WWW Losses of key stocks went fn»n fractions to a point or so. Issues which were the biggest gafaiers recently were among the sharpest losers. The size of the gains and the uncertain performance of the market as a whole even as averages reached new highs prompted selling, brokers said. INCREASED DECLINES As leading issues gave ground, stop-loas orders were touched off. increasing declines. These are orders placed in advance to sell a stock when it drops to a specified level. Generally, the news background remained encouraging, although Ford’s report of hwfr earnings brought an accumuia-tion of some sell orders which delayed the stock’s opening. It dropped 2Vk on an opener of 25,-000 shares and sold at close to the same level in later dealings. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks at noon was off .7 at 281.6 with industrials off U, rails off Jt and utilities off .4. General Motors, whose dividend action on Monday is one of the overhanging question marks in Wall Street, dropped more than a point of its recent large gains. Corporate and U.S. Government bonds were mixed in quiet trading. American Stock Exch. NSW VOaiC (AP»-Am»fle«i Sleek excitowt: Chou Elec Creole Pet . 3H NJ Zmc ... U IVU Neve Indue . .11'A MW Pete Her ..me The New York Stock Exchange Leaders Meet on Sahara War Ben Bella, Hoiian Seek End to Conflict BAMAKO, Mali on - President Ahmed Bea Bella of Algeria and Moroccan King Hassan II were reported today to have readtod afree-meat an the bash of a compromise fermda settUBg their border conflict. BAMAKO. MaU (AP) - King Hassan II ci Morocco and President Ahmed Ben Bella of Algeria met face to face today In an effort to end their fronUer war the Sahara conference, sources reported. It was their first meeting since fighting began between the two countries. The meetiiig raised hopes for a compromise satUemsot. Ben Bella and Hassan sat down at a confereoce table in the Mall presidential palace with Emperor Haile Salassle of Ethiopia and Presldant Modlbo KeiU of Mall. Since the arrival of Ben BdU and Hassan Tuesday, Selassie and KeKa had been working to bring them together. POSSIBLE COMPROMISE Delagatko officials had said earUer the Algerian and Moroccan leaders would roact only if the mediation efforts of the em-r and Keito produced a poa- Kliv*. tofdwrswto W M I ipMri ewpt toS rU (to. ^M»l **?^.*s to pitoHy pf»»* and prlftto WISM to. aW-M-ISl tujk etok» 1W-14J0 to a^r — •ootf fi.M-a.Mi wiuly toS ^ lAOS-IMti ctoitor* „ 11.M-M.0O, WHlfv pto toBUtofCtol toll* arawM- Ltd tow to mtoko. citoto Irtofdr Ltd Itotol OtI ASS .1» » W lltodi wi li 0 ’iili anrTv Rd^ 1.US 0 ' i 11:8 It! ^ ^ _ JSBS "ilWdilnir r—oT _____ ____ - --- piM atoek dlvi- xr—Ix rMih. iw-Wlltout wjr-. «w--Wllh torrMla. wd-WtiM «»-wMMWk IMMS. N*-NmI SdV Selassie reportedly propoaed that an'international force from African nations patrol a demilitarized zone to be Mtablished in tfas diipiited border area. Algerian sources said this proposal was acceptable to Algeria only if it meant the total withdrawal of all Moroccan farces from territory claimed by Algeria. However, Hassan’s hand was strengthened over the weekend by military successes. OUST ALGERIANS His forces cleared Algerian troops from the area of Haaai Baida oasis, scene of most of the fighting ao far, and on Monday the M<»t)ccans announced their troops were only eight miles from the Tindouf oasis, k^r to rich iron reserves that,are the chief prize in the disputed region. Grain Prices Firm on Board of Trade CHICAGO UR - A fairly active speculative demand strengthened aoybean futures today in early transactions on the board of trade and moat grains showed a tendency toward firmness after an uncertain start. Soybeans started off with grains running to three cents or more a bushel in spots. Dealers said the support appeared to have been linked with the sale of 5,512 tons of aoybean meal to Hungary and talk that the late-planted soybeans in Arkanr sas appeared to have been damagad considerably by Wheat and rya potted gains of major'fractions at the ax-trame during the first several minutaa but feed grains wwe Grain PricM CMKAta etAIN (HICAOO (AP>-Op^ r Pi^towSto iStoiwiieViW^toSlfiS M^DWMtoSwM (ktoirt to amS) Man Gets $95,000 Ferndale Loses Suit A Circuit Court Jury yesterday awarded a 196,000 verdict to a 24-year-old White Lake Township man who blamed the City of Ferndale and one of its policemen for the loss of an eye after a police station scuffle. The damage award, went to Robert H. Hickey of 0245 Half Acre. Hickey sued for |1S0/N)0 damages from Ferndale and Patrol-Patrick T. Sullivan. 20. He claimed Sullivan beat him without provocation and failed to w W * The Jury deliberated m hours at the end of an eight-day trial. Before retiring to deliberate, they heard hutructkms by Circuit Court Judge William J. Beer that Ferndale could not escape liability on the doctrine of governmental immunity. BOTH LIABLE If they found Sullivan liable, they would also have to find the city liable. Judge Beer said. Hie Jndge twice disatissed motiou by the city’s attorney ............of the cue an News in Brief Grandville LaM, 21, of M Jad-son pleaded guilty to a rackless driving charge yesterday at a preUmiiiary examination before Patrick K. Daly and was aen-tenced to 10 days in Jail in lieu of a ISO fine and $10 court costs. Poatiae Khmurfs Club Aannal Rununage Sale at Pontiac Armory, 57 Water St., Oct. 31, Nov. 1 and 2, Thursday and Friday 0 to 9, Saturday 9 to 12. -adv. Thursday, Friday 0 to 3. Corner of Woodhall Dr. and Secood, 1 block off Sashabaw. —adv. Runmage Sale: 4M1 Major, off Sashabaw, Wednesday, and Friday, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. also Saturday, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. and 4 p.m. to 6 pjn. —adv. Rummage Sale: from 0 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Thursday and Friday. 5060 Oak Park off Maybee Rd., Clarkston. —adv. Rammage aad Garage Sale: Antique furniture, clothee, toob and toys and misc. items. Next to SheU Station, 4275 S. Commerce Rd., Commerce, Mich. 363-2882. Saturday, Nov. 2, 10 to 4 p.m. —^v. Rammage Sale: Welcome Kt-bekoh No. 246. 128 W. Pike. 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. Friday, Nov. 1. —adv. Special Square Dance Saturday night, Nov. 2, at I o’clock p.m. Everyone invited. Hall’s Auction Saks, 706 W. Clariuton Rd., Lake Orion. —»iv. Hear Caadidates for Waterford "Cityliood” Commisaion. Tonight. Watarfbrd Township High School, 8 p.m. -adv. MOM’S lOc Sate: Thorsday, 9-12. Indianwood and Baldwin. -adv. St. Andrew’s Thrift Shop, Hatchery Rd., Drayton. Open every Frl., 9:30 to 3. -adv. Tr^suiy Position WASHINGTON (AP)-TM CMk ftoRto M to* TrMtury oompund w«h tom-ipondlng d«H • ytor Octotor H. IMS Bttoict ....... I AMRIWmSl WHkJrawato fl toM MMto . to limi |«ct to itatuMry U Stocki dk Local Inhntf OVOR TNO COVNTIR IVeCKI .... ____ __________ J nm»- KUy rtornwR actoal trMMCitom tot eI i AMT Carp. -lIMNCBtor iraunlMli SIX' ’gt-iii I PrtoNito ............. ____Rt OfiltoR ............tM B.I vantor-t Otofar Ala.»....S.7 T.J ii-E;;;;::iti ii the groaads that a city caa-pot be held liable for a poUce-maa’s aetleas ud that opea-hig remarks by'Hickey’s attor-aey were preJndJcial. The officer claimed Hickey attacked him white under arrest for drunk and reckless driving Nov. 4, 1981, and that he used only reasonable force to restrain his prisoner. The two reportedly came to blows over the handliiig of Hickey’s wallet. ★ * * Hickey later was found guilty of both drunk and reckless driving by a Municipal Court jury, but he appealed to Circuit Ckwrt where he pleaded guilty to reckless driving after the drunk driving charge was dismissed. In Downtown Pontiac Taylor:'Too Many Bums' ’There are too few policemen and too many “buma” on downtown Pontiac streets and benches, according to City Commissioner WilUam H. Taylor Jr. . Last night Taylor asked for more foot patrols ea downtown slreeto, partieulnrly Saginaw. Other commissioners have complained about a lack of foot patrols for some time, and recent actions had been aimed at improving the situation, Taylor said. “I’d like to know where these foot petrols are,” he said. “I thought things were supposed to get better, but they’re not, ON BENCHES 1‘There are bums on the Sentence Teen in Shooting Fifteen - year - old James W. McConnel of 138 Hi-HUl, Orion Townriiip, was placed in a church-operated boarding school yesterday by the Oakland County Juvenile Court. The boy shot his father Oct. 3. The dispeeittea was made by Probate Ceort Jodge Ner-moa R. Bernard after ceoenl-tatiea with the bey’s parents, ceurt workers and psychote-gisti nnd effietels of the boarding seheel in Detroit. The youth’s father, William McConnel, 37, a die maker at Pontiac Motor Diviaion, was shot in the chest with a 32-caliber rifle as be entered the boy’s bedroom to discipline him for skipping school and being involved in a car theft. ★ ♦ ' The boy fled and became the object of an all-night search before he was captured the next day in Pontiac. His father was reteaaed Oct. 17 from St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. Business Notes Raymond M. Foley, onetime Pontiw Press managing editor who went on to become bead of the Federal. H 0 u 8 1 n gi Agency, hasL been named' president of a!^ Grooee Pointoj Woods 8a: and Lo elation. Foley, lives at Birch, Grosae’ Poinle Woods, FOLEY has been in semiretirenwnt the past year. He will become head officer of Colonial Federal Savings and Loan. He joined the staff of the newepoper (then the Doily Prose) u dty editor in 1813, benches along Saginaw. This isn’t encouraging women shoppers to come downtown. Let’s get the patrols there." Assistant dty Manager John F. Relneck saM he would order foot patrols increased downtown to^y. Mayor Robert A. Landry commented: “I’m glad to see Commissioner Taylor finally agrees with us on the need for foot pa-trob.’’ * * * Taylor shot back, “I’m not agreeing. I just don't see that your actions have accomplished anything.” FOUR YEARS Landry replied, “We waited four years for foot patrols, so I think you can wait a few weeks." Asked if aaythlng would be done to improve downtown patrols, Landry said, “That was the Idea In changing the chief of police. Now you’re going to see some action.” Actually, Joseph Koren is still police chief. He has been temporarily suspended with pay while a panel of experts surveys police operations here. R ★ ★ Lt. William Hangar has been named acting chief. Reineck, as of yesterday, said he was “having trouble" finding anyone who wants the Job" of surveying the police department. Itor. Ha left in the mid-U20’s to publish a in Detroit. Bruce J. Annett, president of Annett, Inc., Realtors, has been elected a director of the Michi-gan State Chamber of Commerce. Harry R. Hall, late diambei' oxecuthra vlca president, said Annett «U1 ANNETT The statewide organbaUco of businoesmen and industrtalials waa formad thraa years ago. It to active In prooioting bush neea through tegtolation, train-iof oonferencas and urorking with local chamban of com- 4 City Men Charged on Gaming Law Four Pontiac men arrested July 10 on charges of failing to pay federal wagering tax were charged yesterday with conspiracy to violate state gaming laws. Released po $500 bond each after demaadlag a prelimi-aary exaBiiaation next Thart-day before Municipal Court Judge Maerice Fianegaa were: Ellis C. Adler, 46, of 1910 Hopefteld; Roy A. Powell, 53, of 822te Baldwin; Robert L. Barnett, 32, of 312 N. Saginaw; and aovis C. Skelton, 51. of 33 W. Colgate. Detective Lt. Ray McConnell of the state police racket squad said the arrests yesterday stemmed from the July 19 raids when eight were arrested by federal agents and local police. State police and two members of the Pontiac vice squad made the arrests yesterday. AWAIT SENTENCE Powell and Barnett pleaded guilty to the federal charges and are awaiting sentence in federal district court in Detroit. The otiiert are awaiting trial in district court The raids of July 10 were on what police described as bookie operaUons that took in $1.5 mil-Um annually. Pontiac Students Get Close Look at Local Business Thirty-nine Pontiac high itu-dento tills week are getting a ckMa look at local burtiiess and local business leaders. The students ore enreOed to the advaueed stage ef the hl|^ •cheel eoNip pregram, said Northern High faculty advisor Ralph RotuU. All are senkn and have been working part time at area retail stores as part of their studies. * R ★ Tours of mejor busineesee and hMchool ttdks by store exect|h tives will be conducted throughout the weeP,'wtildt to national “Caraan in Dtotributtoa” weak. D-6 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 80, 1968 Deaths in Pontiac Area MRS. EZIO BISOGNl Mrs. Elio (Elvira) Bisogni. 74, of 44 E. Chicago died yesterday of a heart ailment after a 10-year illness. Her body is at the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor. Mrs. Bisogni leaves three children, Varese of Sylvan Lake, Ivan and Boris, both of Pontiac; five grandchildren; and six great-grandchildren. HARRY E. COLUER Service for Harry E. Collier, 68, of 558 E. Mansfield will be at 1:30 p.m. Friday in Sparks-Griffin chapel with burial In Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Collier, an employe of GMC Truck & Coach Division, died yesterday after a long illness. He was a member of the American Legion, Cook Nelson Post and the Masonic Lodge of Harrisburg, 111. Surviving are his wife, Essie; a son, Harry C. of Pontiac; seven grandchildren; and two sisters. WILUAM R. HARRELL Service for William R. Harrell, 80, of 280 Midway will be at 3:30 p.m. Friday in Sparks-Griffin Chapel with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Farrell, a retired employe of Fisher Body Division, died yesterday. Surviving are four sons, Fred of Femdale, Robert, Dan and Guy, all of Pontiac; two daughters, Mrs. Ruth Shaver and, Mrs. Joyce Gibson, both of Pontiac; 17 grandchildren; and nine ^at-grandchildretl. CHARLES J. MIDWINTER Service for Charles J. Midwinter, 57, of 90 S. Merrimac will be at 1:30 p.m. Friday in Donelson-Johns Wneral Home with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Mr. Midwinter, an employe of Pontiac Motor Division, died of a heart attack yesterday. He was a member of First Presbyterian Church. Surviving are his wife, Ruth; a son and daughter, John C. an(l Lois D., both at home: and two sisters, Mrs. Russell Rebtoy of Oxford and Mrs. Leonard Friedman of Mount Clemens. ROBERT G. tUNE COMMERCE TOWNSHIP -Service for former resident Robert G. Cline, 26, of Detroit will be 11 a.m. Friday at the Rich- ardson-Bird Funeral Home, Milford. Mr. Cline died yesterday. Surviving are his wife, Janet; I a step-daughter, Pamela, at ! home; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Cline of Milford; his grandmother. Mrs. Maggie Dowling of Milford; a brother, William of. Union Lake; aJjd a sister. Miss Gloria Dowling of White Hall. MRS. W. H. HEINTZELMAN MILFORD — Service for former resident Mrs. W. H. (Plu-ma) Heintzelman, 82, of Detroit will be 2 p.m. Friday at^ Roy J. Kaul Funeral Home, St. Clair Shores. Burial will follow in Cadillac Memorial Gardens, Fraser. \ Mrs. Heintzelman died yester\ day after a brief illness. MRS. JOHN B. STOCKWELL PONTIAC TOWNSHIP-Serv-ice for Mrs. John B. (Lauretta A.) Stockwell, 83, of 691 Jamestown, will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home, Pontiac, Burial will follow in Perry Mount Park Cemetery, Pontiac. A Gold Star Mother’s Memorial Service will be 7:30 p. m. today at the funeral home. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Stockwell, founder of Pontiac Unit No. 9, Gold Star Mothers, died yesterday after a long illness. She was a member of the Auburn Heights United Presbyterian Church, Disabled American Veterans’ Auxiliary No. 16, Cook-Nelson Post No. 20 of the American Legion Auxiliary, and the Navy Mothers. City's Share in Stop Light Installation The City Commission last night agreed to pay 17,982.75 toward the cost of installing traffic controls on the sections of .perimeter road currently being paved. Total cost of the signals is $27389. The State Highway Department will pay the re-mainin]^ $19,905.25. One of the stop lights, at the perimeter road intersection of West Huron, is already up. ★ ♦ * Other stop lights are to be placed at the perimeter road intersections of Auburn, Pike, Perry. North Saginaw, Oakland, and Cass and Lafayette. The contract also calls for two “Keep Right’’ signs/and interconnection of the traffic signal system at a cost of $5,292. Youth Placed on The third of three youths who pleaded guilty to breaking into a Waterford store last March was placed on three years probation yesterday. Robert C. Lee, 17, of 269 N. Cass, also was ordered by Circuit Court Judge Frederick C. ZIem to serve 60 days in jail and pay $100 probation costs. Lee pleaded guilty Sept. 19 to a March 15 burglary of Gene’s Paint and Wallpaper. 4835 Dixie Highway. Several items of sports equipment were taken, * * * Two 19 - year - old Waterford youths pleaded guilty in May to the burglary. One was placed on probation and the other was given a prison term for violating a previous probation sent- Bishops Win Bigger Role VATICAN CITY (AP)-A big majority of the Vatican Ecumenical Council voted today in favor of a declaration that the Roman Catholic bishops as a body share in the Pope’s authority. ITie vote was intended only as a guide to further council consideration and was not binding. But it was greater than the two-thirds majority needed in any formal ballot to turn such a statement—with its implications for Christian unity efforts —into a council decree, w * *• The council voted 1,808-336 that a theological schema on nature of the church should ^te that “the body or college of bishops in its evangelizing, sanctifying and caring for its flock is the successcH- of the College of Apostles, and that as a body, in union with its head, the Ronuin pontiff, and never without him, enjoys full and supreme power over the universal church.’’ DIVINE RIGHT By a vote of 1,717-408, the prelates also approved the insertion into the schema of a statement that the episcopal-papal power “belongs to the college, in union with its head, by divine right.’’ Teen Is Hurt in Crash; Listed as Satisfactory Jack Emerson, 16, of 1400 Sho-man, Waterford Township, is in satisfactory condition at Pontiac General Hospital with injuries suffered yesterday when the car he was drivings overturned Waterford TOwnship. Emerson told police he lost control of the car while rounding a Hatchery Road curve after midnight. Two passengers, Richard Willis, 17, of 6497 Graham, Waterford Township, and Raymond Fay, 18, of 8615 Pontiac Lake Road, White Lake Township, were treated at the hospital and released. 2 Youths on Probation for Stealing Wheels ’Two youths, one of Pontiac and one of Avon Township, were placed on two years probation yesterday and ordered to pay $200 probation costs each for stealing two tires and wheels from a car at a Femdale auto dealership Sept. 9. , Michael J. McCarthy, 21. of 26 Mark and William C. Lukes, 20, of 3261 Grant, Avon Township, were sentenced by Circuit Coi(rt Judge Frederick C. Ziem. ’The two pleaded guilty Sept. 30. For Area Crimes Court Gives Sentences, Fines Salary Hike Is Proposed for Chairman of Auditors The chairman of the County Board of Auditors will be paid an additional $4,000 next year if the County Board of Supervisors approves a recommendation of its salaries committee next Wednesday. Die additional compensation at chairman would raise his income from the county to $18,999 or $19,999. Committee members were of the opinion that the chairman, as top administrator of the 1 nWILE-O MSClUVrCCNTEI wMMKTItS .. / w fniMit wWiMilKS POPUUR BRAND CICARETTES Prr 449 Carton ^ ^ ^ TEN-O^X 1 SHULTON'S •OLD SPICE srmsun LOTION •W'45 79® TOMIs^ 119 NOMf PCmiANENT 1 LISTERINE RQe (umsime rmg. »9e V DOUBLE-D Discount Center Corner o( Saginaw and Lawrence In Pontiac State Bank Building county, should be paid more than his regular auditor's salary. Only the committee member from Avon Township, Supervisor Cyril Miller, didn’t agree to the M.OOO figure. TOO MUCH “I think the chairman should get more, but $4,000 is too high,” he said, adding that he thought a $2,000 increase would be enough. The $4,999 increase was approved over his objection. Elarlier, the committee adopted a resolution to pay a new member of the board of auditors $15,000 next year, $15,-500 the following year and $16,-000 the third year of his term. ♦ * , ♦ The new member is expected to be appointed at next Wednesday’s meeting of the board of supervisors in th|. courthouse auditorium. ONLY CANDIDATE The only announced candidate is County Clerk-Register Daniel Murphy, who would have to resign his present elective position, to join the auditors. He also te a candidate for Richard K. Allen, 30, of 7 Short was given a one- to two-year term by Circuit Court Judge Frederick C. Ziem yesterday for attempted larceny from Simms Brothers, Inc., 98 N., Saginaw, Aug. 11. * ★ ★ Allen, who police said was caught as he ran from the building after breaking a front window was originally charged with breaking and entering, but was allowed to plead to the lesser offense Oct. 2. ★ ★ ★ He previously had served prison terms totaling nine years for burglary, parole violation and unarmed robbery. He was on parole at the time of the Aug. 11 incident at Simms. Burglary of a Pontiac gas station SepL 20 resiilted yesterday in three years’ probation and 15 days in jail for 17-year-old Thomas T. Dernan, of 73 Stout. Dernan, one of five yoilths ac- cused of the break-in at Ralph’s Cities Service, 435 Auburn, pleaded guilty Sept. 30. He was sentenced by Judge Ziem, who also ordered him to pay $100 probation costs. Two of the accused are awaiting trial. Charges against another were dre^ped because he already is in state prison on a burglary conviction. The fifth was turned over to juvenile court authorities. A five - to - 15-year prison term was ordered yesterday for one of three men found guilty of unarmed robbery of a Waterford man a few hours after School Association % Picks New Officers New officers were elected last night by the Oakland County School Boards Association at a dinner meeting in West Junior High School, Rochester. Selected for three-year terms oh the board of directors were Merrill 0. Bates, 1250 Long Lake Road, Bloomfield Hills; George W. Coombe Jr., 4412 Park Lane, Birmingham; And J. W. Erwin, 6150 Silver Lake Road, South Lyon. Erwin is also vice-president of the group. Pontiac Girl, 3, Hospitalized as Auto Hits Tree A 3-year-old Pontiac girl was hospitalized yesterday after the car she was riding in hit a tree on Squirrel near Tienken in Pontiac Township. Kimberly Ann Price, 192 Cameron, is in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital for observation of a possible head Injury. She was In a car driven by her mother, Dianne M., 19. ★ * ★ Mrs. Price told dieriff’s deputies her car went off the road when she was distracted by another daughter, Kay Marie, 1. Both were treated and released following the 1:18 p.m. accident. their May 30 escape from Camp-Pontiac Charles Byas, 22 of Detroit, was sentenced by Judge Ziem. He was convict^ by a jury Oct. 4 of robbing William R. Cleveland at his home at 1539 WiUiams Lake. The two others, John W. Breathour, 20, of Port Huron, and Norman Royer, 21, of Avon Township, are serving identical 5- to 15-year terms for their part in the robbery. They pleaded guilty Aug. 5. ★ ★ ★ Brethour Is awaiting trial on a perjury charge stemming from his testimony at Byas’ trial. He testified Byas was not at the scene of the robbery, although he previously had said otherwise. The three were accused of forcing their way into Cleveland’s home and taking money and his car after fleeing from Camp Pontiac, a minimum - se- Warrant Is Ordered in Auto-Truck Death A negligent homicide warrant was ordered yesterday against Walter R. Meadows, 30, of 1702 Birchton, Commerce Township, driver of the car that crash^ into the rear of a truck on the 1-96 freeway in Wixom Oct. 23, killing a passenger in the car. The victim was Richard M. Langforth, 28, of the same Commerce Township address. Both the truck and the car were approaching the Wixom Road ramp when the accident occurred, police said. Want Water, Sewer Motel Services Eyed City Commissioners last night night okayed a resolution by 4-3 vote, tentatively accepting an offer of $27,000 for Pontiac water and sewer services from developers of Holiday Inn Motel in Bloomfield Township. The resolution calls for necessary legal and engineering documents to be prepared and brought back before the commission for final approval at a later date. The projwsed sale of services o an outside customer without annexation touched off a hassle at the commission table that saw Commissioner Winford E. Bottom, Milton R. Henry and Loy L. Ledford vote against the resolution. ★ ★ ★ Asked why he didn’t decide to locate inside Pontiac, one of the developers said he had been told by former City Manager Robert A. Stierer that np^ liquor licenses were available^ Pontiac. NOT ms DECISION Mayor Robert A. Landry strongly opposed the alleged statement on grounds that Stierer had no right to make a decision that was “the commission’s decision to make.” Landry asserted, “I’d hate to have anyone on this administrative staff make a decision like that between now and next April (the April city commission election). “There would be some new people on this staff ... and we won’t take 20 hours to do it,” he said, referring to the long hearing into ouster charges against Stierer. ★ ★ ★ “If anybody comes up here who is planning to spend $500,-000 to $1 million on a place in Pontiac and needs a Class C license, he’ll get my vote.” OPPOSED SALE Landry, however, strongly supported the sale of services to outside customers, urging that “Pontiac must b^me a core city eventually, or we won’t be able to exist. “The day will come when we can’t live on our tax base alone.” Bottom held out for annexation. * ★ ★ “The purpose of these facilities is to serve our people and to attract new businesses and industry to Pontiac. “If these people want our Robert Lilly, who is presently secretary - ns e m b e r of the board of auditors. I Lilly's salary as auditor al-! ready was set for $14,000 next I year, which means he would get ja total of $18,000 if appointed ' chairman by the board of super-! visors. Murphy as chairman would be paid a total $19,000 if the salary recommendations are adopted. water and sewer, they should locate in Pontiac or ask to be annexed.” UNDER CONSTRUenON Holiday Inn is now under construction on Telegraph Road just north of Miracle Mile Shopping Cente?. ★ ★ ♦ Developers have offered to pay a $27,000 tap-in fee and all costs of running lines from their property to city water and sewer mains. * ★ * In addition, they would pay a sewage rate nearly double the rate paid by Pontiac residents. It is,the first outside request for water, so the water rate would have to be decided by the conunission. curity prison in White Lake Township. , Arthur Sabourin, 21, of 484 N. East Blvd., was ordered to pay $50 fine and $50 costs yesterday for being disorderly and engaging in an illegal occupation March 11. w w ★ Sabourin was sentenced by Judge Ziem. He was permitted to plead guilty Oct. 2 though earlier charged with the greater charges of gambling and possession of gambling equipment. He was arrested for allegedly conducting a dice game behind Scrib’s Bar and Restaurant, 130 S. Telegraph. L. D. Childs, 38. of 498 Branch, was placed on two years’ probation yesterday and ordered to serve 45 days in jail and pay $100 probation costs for attempting to accept the earnings of a prostitute. Childs was sentenced by Judge Ziem, before whom he pleaded guilty Oct. 1. He had been charged with accepting $9 from a prostitute last March at the Roosevelt Hotel. Dental Worker Faces Charge Claude Trinun, 38, of 1141 Banford, Waterford Township, will be arraigned Monday in Circuit (tourt on a charge of practicing dentistry withou a license. Trimm was arrested yesterday by Waterford Township detectives Jack Hart and Arthur Holmes. He waived examination at arraignment in justice court and is held on $10,000 bond set by Waterford Township Justice Patrick K. Daly. (tomplaints by various individuals to the Michigan State Board of Dentistry led to an Investigation of TYimm’s alleged activities by Dean L. Hasse, the board’s chief investigator. FITTING DENTURES A free - lance dental technician, Trimm is charged ) manufacturing, selling and ting dental plates without prescription, a high misdemeanor. UP Cities Won't Merge IRON MOUNTAIN (* - Disapproval by Kingsford voters led to the defeat yesterday of a proposal to consolidate the city governments of Kingsford and Iron Mountain as an economy measure. Iron Mountain voters approved the proposal, 1,632 to 481, but Kingsford voters rejected it, 1,5(« to 383. Secrecy Essential, Say Baker Probers DIMES CHILD — Lively, 5-y.ear-old Mary Lou Graves, Flint, was named 1964 National March of Dimes Child yesterday. Born with an open spine, later corrected by surgery, Mary Lou now can get around to a wheelchair and is learning to walk. Gov. George Ronuiey announced her selectioln as (be symbol of the 250,900 children bom with serious birth defects to tRis country each year. WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen-, ators delving into the business affairs of Robert G. Baker are working bdiind a barrier of secrecy they say is essential to the early stages of the investigation. ♦ ★ ★ Baker, the one-time page boy who achieved wealth and power as secretary to the Senate’s Democratic majority, resigned under fire Oct. 7. Sen. B. Everett Jordan, D-N.C., chairman of the Senate Rules Committee, said it was necessary to take exploratory testimony behind closed doors to avoid hurting innocent persons merely because of association with others to the inquiry. WOULD BE THOROUGH Jordan said firmly that the investigation will be thorough and at “some point” would be opened to the public, with Baker as a witness. The next closed session of the Rules Committee is acheduled Friday to consider procedural matters, including hiring a staff. ★ * ★ The committee’s task is to determine whether Baker or any other Senate employe has been involved ill conflicts of interest between official duties and personal business affairs. Conunittee members said the hearings could touch some in the executive branch of government as weU as on Capital Hill. SUMMON WOMAN , D>ey are considering trying to sununon a beautiful West Ger- man woman from her overseas home for questioning about rumors linking her name with some Washington figures. The West German press has quoted the woman, Ellen Ro-metsch, 27, as denying any intimacies or even “tender relations” with men other thaq her husband, Rolf, a West German army sergeant from whom she is now divorced. WWW The West German government has said Rometsch was called home last August from a post at its embassy here because of reports concerning his wife’s Sen. Jordan said she might yet be a witness in the probe. Jotdan said -the conjmittee about the woman and added that the FBI was “doing some work” on the case. The committee has subpoena powers only in tois country, but can invito witnesses from any point. w w w Sen. John J. Williams, R-Del., gave the conunittee a swmn and documented report Tuesday of his own one-man investigation of Baker’s many-sided business affairs. y' I m nn e UcMOWl. OmI licit It ttorts OcMwr » tnd 3Si W mtitaL. win te lotd ruMc um •• mo E. Nbtt Milt Rote. FtmOXt, Mldit-oon, Itwt ttertit teMw wtert Hit vo- •"5ar,*5rs~. Death Notices fivt erondchlMron ind tlx groot-ortnOctilMnn. FunortI arrango-mantt art ponding at Ite C. J. Godhardt Funtral Homo, Kttgo Harbor. coLLihR. oetdsik it, (m HARRY S., SH Salt MaiwfMd; ago M; bolovtd hutbpnd of Eulo Collltr, doar tatter of Harry C. Collltr, doar brottiar of Mrt. Howard (Alllo) Ptarey, and Mrs. Vomit (CalUt) Ptarey. Funtral ttrvict will bt hold Friday, No-vtmbtr 1 at 1:10 p.m. at tte Sparkt.Orlffln Ctiaptl. Intormtnt In Parry Mount Par* Camottry. Mr. Cteltr will lit In tWt at tte Sparki-Griffin Funtral Homo. HARRELL, OCTOS4r S; I»«, WILLIAM R., WO Midway; ago N; door fathar of Mrt. Ruth Shtvtr, Mrt. Joyet GIbton, Frtd, Robert, Dan and Guy Harrtll, alto turvivod by IT grandchlldron and nine grtat.grandMlldrin. Funeral lorvict will bo how Friday, Novtmbtr I at 0:10 p.m. at tte Sparfct-Griffin Chapel with Rev. MIDWlllTER, OCTOBBlI l4, tNl, and Lolt 0. Mldwlntor, dear brother of Mra. RutMlI Rabtoy and Mrt. Leonard FHadman. Funeral larvica will bt hold Friday, Novanubar I at 1:10 p.m. at the Donolaon-Johna Funeral Heme with Rev. Galen E. Htrtety officiating. Intermont In White Chapel Cematary. of Mrt. Chariot (Softy) and Mrt. Dale (Jactiltyn) Andarion, dear brottiar of Mrt. Varla Barttiuma, Mrt. Sllnbath Travart, Jamat, Jack, Edwbi and Daniel Pilar. Alto turvivod by eight grandchlldran. RacNattan of the Rotary will be thit evaning af 1:10 at Huntoon Funeral Hama. Funeral tarvica will te hold Thurtday. Octoter H at 0:10 a.m. at St. MIchaal't Catholic Church, intarment In White Chapel Camo-tery. Mrt. Pifar will lie In Mata at tte Huntoon Funeral Home. sYoCkwEll, DdtbtlK >, m. LAURETTA A., tOI JamoMown, Auburn Halghtt; agt B|: dear mother of Mrt. Margaret Salley, Garnet C., Frank, ForoM, William Robert, Jack, and Albert Stockwell, dear titter of Mrt. Elliabath Sheldon and Mrt. Zoo Rymal. Alto turvivod by IS grandchildren, 41 great-grandetitidfan and two gmt-graat-grandchlldran. Thera wHI be a Gold Star AAothert Memorial Service thit evening at 7:10 at the Veorheet-Sipla Funeral Heme. Funeral tarvica wHt te hold Thurtday, October ll at 1;10 p.m. at tte Voorheet-Slple Funeral Home with Rev. WilHam Palmer officlaling. - . - Ml. Park C Dial 332-8181 Pontiac Press Want Ads FOR PAST ACTION AOS RBCBIVSD SV S F WILL SB PUSLUHBO 1 FOLUTWING DAY. To Buy, Rent, Sell or Trade Use Pontloc Press WANT ADS Office Hoursi 8 am. ^ 5 p.m. ConceHotion DeodRtto 9 ojn. Doy Following First Insertion CerdsITlMinta IN THIS TIME OF DOR LOSS, WE with to thank all w our doar friandt and ralatlvat for their kind-neu and thoughtfulnaet. Tte LtH WE WISH TO GIVE OUR hSaRT- IN LOVING MEMORY OF OUR mother, Lulaa RuMo, who patted away October M, IMS: GET OUT OF DEBT h paymentt at low at SIEJS BUDGET SERVICE FB tetei 11 W Hureo Where Buyer and Seller Meet Pontiac Press Wont Ads Just Dial FE 2-8181 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 80. 1968 D—7 0*T OUT Of MBT ON A NLAN you con MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS m Pontloc »at|^tnk BUg. -onHoc'f^cJdojj^" --- —■ PAY OFF YOUR BILLS AND REMODEL YOUR HOME Any homo ommor, widow, rotiroo or tvon tlwto wIM) crodit dlttlcul-tloo, coo bo olldiblo providing ttioir homo It hoH or moro poM iXAMPL* modernization ..... 0,000 HOUSE BAL. ....... 02,000 TolOl Owod ....... 02,000 MAIL COUPON OR CALL FROM ANY PLACE IN MICHIGAN FE 8-2657 BONAFIDE IMPROVEMENT & INVESTMENT CO. Pay Off Your Bills — wNhowt 0 loon — PoymiM >ow 01010 wk. Prohict your lob ond crodit Homo or Offko Apiiolntmontt City AJjustmtnt SorvicB 7U W. ------ — ■“ HEAR CANOIATEO P6it WATER-ford "CItyhood" Commliolon. Tonight. Wotorfor' ■*------"■- —— Sdwel, 0 p.m. ChrMmot, Mrlhdoy, ptoco cordt, Invitotlont, odvortiting, longi — nouncomontt, otc. FE >0005. Blood Donors 10 SOUTH CASS CITY OP PONTIAC FIRE FIGHTERS Oolorv ■HWI in mo tny or i-oniioc I DIE AND FIXTURE DESIGNERS DETA1LERS TOP RATES OO-HOUR WEEK Andorson Design \m ORCHARD LAKE RD. COLLECTOR 'or Inturonco (Mbit. 0100 por »,_ |*O'Thi0 Miory. FE 2<210, FE AUTO BUMP SHOP MAN WITH •omo oxporlonco. Koogo Solot Sorvice. ' lAfc l>**^«y-jaoR 6l6Er7 man. AP- EXPERIENCEb CAR WASHER, 140 experienced wrecker DRIV- or, good poy, doy or night ond torvla Motion ottondont with o«-porlenco ond ovtr IS. Coll FE 2-20I0._____________________ EXPERIENCED MUFFLER AND broko mon, toll or port timo. m OfChord Ijko Avo. Evening work Try biAbAk tablets (f6Eao-orly DoaVLOtot) Now nomo, tomo tormulo. only SNc. Sbnmt Brao. -------------------------------- GRILL MAN, II A.AL4 PJM. SHIFT, fringo bonotitt, vocolion with poy. In ponort. Eliot Brot. Big Boy, Tologroph ond Huron. AS STATION ATTENDANT, MOST D. E. Pursley DONELSON-JOHNS GROOM OR FARM HAND TO 6kRE for toddio hortot. Good wofot, boord ond room 0 doyt wook. Out-londt RUkig StoMo, BITS W. 14 Milo Rd. INTERESTED IN AMBITIOUS /WAN. "Dotl^ for Funoroy HUNTOON @515 VOORHEES-SiPLt LATH HAND WANTED, MUST BE flrtt CIOM. MOl Rochoftor Rd., Troy. _________________________ laborer, WRITE US STATING ogo, holM, -----■ tion, woHi 0 Cook, - • ' Mkh. SPARKS-GRIFFIN Mwwmmt. F« S>7I01 IRISH SetER, 4 /MONTHS 0L6, ontwort M Thn II, vicinity of Comotot ond Polo Rd. 072-2M0. LOST — OAI forgo ----- lost”- basset'An6 bIaglE Hound, noor Pkw Knob ond Sotho-bow Rd. Roword. Rowwrd. iosgon. vicinify Dlxn Hwy. i Rd., taofktton. Rfv LOST: BLACK AND WHITE ENG-llth Sottor. Noor M-IS ond Stoto Pork Rd. Roword. FE 4-2Sit. LOST-BROWN ANO WHITE BRIT-tony Oponlol In vklnltv of Adomt •nil Sooth Blvd., BfoomfloM. -BOXREPLIES-At M a. m. today [ there were replies at The Pren offiee hi the 18, 14, 8S, 31, 41, 41, I tt, 17, 71, 77, 88, 8S, 87, jtl, 112, 118. 3-flECE COMBO FOR FRIDAY ond Soturdoy n»-^ ---- *“ over to yoort. PM coll FE B4SSB for A Port-Tiino Job Noodod ot enoo, t mon for ovw. worn guoronfood oolory._For fo-tormolton. coH Mr. Poco, OR s to 7 p.m. are Vou OISS^IEO ^ your 0 to 10 thoutwid if to, coll mo. For odditfonol bicomo. FE Mm fmm l:10 ** 0:20 p.m. m' coll ^ 0 OOTfoO*-^ Automatic Screw Mocmne ym Mid OMTAtt Wft In* "VSijit'w BUMP ANO PAINT NmH, exi-tit-loncod only. EM SdllS. BENCH hANP J^DERS! Joroo induttrloo, Inc. Ml ri200 or FURNACE INST/OLLER, EXPEEi ----d wMh duett, oblo to do lorv- Mp wogot, 002-1702 oHor S comer of Ttlowoph ond 10 Rd. oKctTS; 01 MAN TO WORK IN AIRCRAFT portt tiofo, mutt bo high “■—‘ g-oduoto pormontnt pc„.— wHh future, 0120 HIghfond Rd. /WAN WANTEto-RETIRED /WAN TO ------------sissJrdirL Voter Co., ,014 MECHANIC whh Hydromotic trontmittlon i wlonce, gtnorol knowledgo Kntloct IM^I. Coll 0*24202. A tor MERLEI 6 Help Waafed FeaNde SHOE SALES/WAN, PART TIME. Evoo. ond Sot. Exporlonco pro- forrod. Solory, pivt c----- Boekort Shoot. PotNoc /MATURE WOMAN POR BOkBY BIT-tkig end IlM houtokooplna 2: IS o.m. to S;20 p.m. Droytan Ploint. rTAtllSr AYf'ENbAilYi Ailb iwfe. -^-nlct. Apply 24SB E. Wolton TUNB-U* ' NilCHANlb, JlE^tk-oncot. PontiK Prott Box SB. WANTED, HIGH SCHOOL ORADU Help Wealed Fewiah NURSES PONTIAC OSTEOPATHIC HOSPITAL PONTIAC, MICHIGAN IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR REGISTERED NURSES STAFF, S2N.4S-t4S0.24 HEAD NURSES, S472.(»-tS42.t2 LICENSED PRACTICAL NURSES Ut7.0S-S482.7S *”*^IRECTOR OP NURSES PONTIAC OSTEOPATHIC HOSPITAL SO N. PERRY PONTIAC, MICHIGAN , RELIABLE ANO FAST TRUCK aCta'S n provldod, coll o^ 4 a.n S-«IB Molottic OInor. foh ih ot tquore Ltk» Rd. ontr^k oWIH^ti ARE YOU Aggrottlvo — pertonoWo tk. Willing to prove y< -------lit poopio ond bu... — ...... Looking for o div ..... monogor petition wim oxcoF lent tofory, ovtrwrM* ond exponiet — Pormonont wim gioot opportunity to odvonco. For Inforvlow ttwt could food to 0 petition with 40-yoor-oki compony, o tuhtMiory of Britlel-Myort, write Mr. /Wohl, Oopi II, 4IU Broodwoy, Kpntos MIDOLEAOfcO LADY, LIVE IN ond cort for to montht old bo^ during doy. Roforenett required. Call 4I2-20SS. I EAT CURB WAITRESS. FROSTOP _______2110 W. Huron IPENINGS-WAITRESSES, CURB x&vTgr. syraa ASSEMBLER A > PUNCH PRESS 1 txiMfonc*.' ott, Pott ONIco BABY SITTER WANTED. ROOM __________ - S2t0t._______ BABY SITTER tO SHARE HOME wHh working moth«r« $M, ptr wfk. FE BABY SITTING AND HOUSliWORK, 1. 0224120 offor 1 p.m. BAR/WAID AND WAITRESS. FE . S-1722 or FE 4-S2S0 otter 7 p.m BABY SITVER, preferred TO llv* ki, 2 chlWron, Sdoy week. Coll FE 0-2040 offor 0 p.m. BABYSITTER. LIGHT HOUSE-kotphiB' l-lvo ki. AMvo for homo then wogot. Roffoonco roquirod. Coll offor S, FE S-3420. BEAU rV OPbRATO*, '^XPrR-loncod, on lofoot hoir ttyfot, OR 2-SNO offor 7:20 p.m. 072-7104. OFFICE GIRL FROM 12 TO_* p.m. Mutt know how to typo ^ hove Mkhlgon drlvoi-t Ikento. Apply 251 Ooklond ocrott from un-omployment owteo.__ Hudson's We Are Interested in Contingent Saleswomen for CHRISTMAS SEASON Must bo ovolloblo tor S doy wook on coll botit. APPLY NOW AT EMPLOYMENT OFFICE Hudson's PONTIAC BUDGET STORE 269 N. Telegroph Pontioc Mall RECEPTIONIST, TVPiST, OEH-crol ckrkol. High tdiool grodu-ofo. Northern Flying Sorvico, Pontioc AOunkIpol Airport. CLEANING «M/WAN 2S40, DAY work S doyt, mutf hove own front. Apply momkigt only. Andorton Bokm, 124 W. 14 Mlfo( Birmlng- hom. Ml 4-7114.___________ CLElkK FOR PART TIME WORK, CHRIST/WAS IS GIVING TIME. ---- ------oppoolt to ovory fornMy. Show thetc __Jt ond coth bi on domond. Contoct FE •rite Ori ' ----- MONROE CALCULATING AAACHINE CO., INC., DIVISION OF LITTON INDUSTRIES. Duo to 0 now prod-udt ond oxpontlon, wo no«l toM trokioot ond oxporlonced toloi rtprotonlotivot. Wondertul coreor opportunity, Collog* butinou ond tolling protorrod. Comp lot irokibig pregrom, tola tlon, frkigo btn^ kfouronco, p o I d ttock purchoao p^ . plon. Call FE 4-2S22 tor oppolnt- bOMliTlC: "eypERiaNCEb' GIRL ' mdt, goneral houto-Id care, 2 aduitt ond an, muti drive, and , SH) a day, reter- MECHANIC Full tkno. Exparlancad I •—>* *0 work on foreign a Sperfo Cor. 22S-1S11. Needed: Port-Time Soles Help 2 hourt por ovtnlM i Need i125 Up Weelcly?" I have room lor 2 more moirlod man under 42 ter route talot. Pon-tfoc area. Comp^ training mvw with $115 guoronfoe during frolnlng week. Good cor and phone necot- NIGHT Cl4RK ■ tel. 10 p.m. till 0 o.m.. S noTi. ,100 month. fE 4-JSI2._____ EXPERIENCED GIRL FOR^.SHIRT tke to loorn, PrWkig DIvltian PrinllnB, III oN of /W-S2, Pontiac. PART TIME 2 man evat. only 0S14424 offor ^ pilZA /MAKER, ^ARt A^ Party Store. 42 S. Broadway. lS; my 2-1022 before 2. FNactical^|iur*I for ,su^- mok, fiee foundry on • bonafllt. Contact P If. kTptrton. Pontioc foltol. __________ PART-TIME roufot. Cot nocoMory. u. troki. Earn M on hour. FE 44S20. REAL ESTATE SALESMAN Mkhlg^ Bmimjt Solot REAL ESTATE SALESMEN , Need two fulMimo tota paopfo 0|^ for Mr. -**^NtA CLAUs-66vyNT6i)vti~ DeparTment tforo noodt mon who Sure 10 o-m. till sm Hdot Pertormol Offtce, Waite's, *:4S o.m. till noon. Saxophone and Service Manager nMMiiixforii SfvfiodopSir Spartan Dodge Avon Coimeikt ai member r‘ — ' - S-lt'^SraS DINING ROOM WAITRESS The rewords are many, Inc good aamkigt. tomotknat --------- that of boring, routino oNka |obt. turonce benefits, paid vocation. TED'S woodward ot Square Lake * «P«1EN«D. ______________44*. _______ EXPERIENCED WOMAN OVER 2A baby tmkig ond gonorol howi* wo^ 3 davtr I •ifvi. to 6 p.fn- S1.2S par hour. AAuN h»vo refor-oncet. 32 Milo and d-.ll A mmt,. 7S7-3477. HOUSEKE^IrfeR, experiencIF exTsflVNCETTOOilTAIN 6l»C 21 or over. Union Lake Drug, 8000 EXPERIENCED. W*'T»E». M^ bo It or ovtr. Apply in ptnon* Sc LIto't Bor and Rettgurgnt. mo N. Rochoslor Rd.* Rochttter. k. 3t»2S7t. REGISTERED NURSE" In-torvke education Inttrurtloo days, evankigt or nights. Stan tofory, $472 to $542 por ma Retponslble for corryfog —. planned progratTW for In-tcrvice education of nurtbtg poreonnol — Liberal employ* benofft*. Toaching RELIABLE WOMAN TO BABYSIT ki my homo days, and Howr— *— p.m. 12 *- Phone FE 2410$. new cemetery, has NEEb OF aeveral qualified oontultanlt or will train. Age no barrier. Coll Mr. Smith, If to 4 p.m. 0S14S74. RiAL ESTATE SALES mIR 6r WOMEN. OPPORTUNITY FOR SALES MANAGER POtlTION. WILL TRAIN INTERESTED PEG PLE CALL OR 3-1273 FOR IN-TERVIEW.______________________ WOOL PEesser, experienced. /Lpply Fox Dry Cfoonert, 71* W. DAY CARE FOR CHILD FE 44402__________ BY DAV or week! ^y‘="'^B5S^^lrd'"S:^fon‘*Jv“o!;; Sdtt Htip l A DIGNIFIED SELLING FULL OR PART TIME CaW VOR’PlJftliitUft* AH6JIP-pHoncot I place or houtatul. Pear^ ton's, FE 4-7001. ' Lit Us tUVIT 6ft i8LL' ITTgl YOU. OXFORD COMMUNITY AUCTION. OA 0-24*1. WANT TO BUY FURNITURE AND 35 yrt. with ggod apgaaranoe ond personality. Will train oppileanti who are not draamart. Por oggokd-mant coU FE fSOtl or otter S I $375-5400 $375 logo 25401 LEGAL STENO, oxporionetd only. $300-$32S (20-35) CLERK TYPIST, mutt SS to 05 Wpm. FemolB PlacomBnt PRESTON-WALKER-SMITH 2*0 W. Maple, Suite 321 Birmingham, Mkhlgon 646-3663 EVELYN EDWARDS "VOCATIONAL COUNSELING SERVICE" Tslephona FE 44)584 ' r Eait Huron______Suite 4 ^oraSlFE ts. S10.SS ANNUALLY. to •wanlll dren. Eott Side. F I CHIL- oppllanci Holl't Ai .. -./thing ot -------- in Solas. 7« W. Clorkt-10 Orton, MY 51071 or 17 CAR BODY. FE 04071 SEWING MACHINES Cum OR 4-1104 AHrt»Eiiti4liilDr«iil^ AIbbrta Aportmonts 1-ROOM EFFICIENCY _ 2*8 N. Paddock PE 2 LIVING R LAKEVIEW OFF SASHABAW. 2 Mid both. , $00. 224454. LOON LAKE FRONt ^ Levety new l-^room opfo. IW water heot, OB tfoyeo and, r*; trlgerotor*. Tiled bothi,.. pfotfored wolit, Inclnorotor, utility ^ with ttoroge, plonfo of porkkvo space. Aduitt. Refwencos. 3M Oixto, >/S block N. of Scott Lake Rd. OR 5540$. FOUNTAINtLEAl) BUILDING, SOklOOl ZONED MANG focturkig. 324452*. lOwNt^-,- tdlW8ir~f~iT6»V Mock bulidkig, iMO tq. toot. Full cfoorance, tultoMo gorago, mechanical repair thop, ttorggo, wore houto, llgnt manufacturing and ate. OR 57444 after $ p.m.___ 0R6HAH6 t^RT APARTMENTS mcTdern in every detail - - “ dniy ItEirt Hbvbbs, Pereblwl 39 5BBDR00M FLAT, /^IN FLOOR, Kim.' Roforencet. FE BEDROOM, OAI mlnum Mormt m gfoit kiiulotlan. area. $5*0 down, 58»««sofietc, 6666 TcieAc: L&O.' FE .ySnkB. PENSIONED LADY DESIRES 2 b B d r 0 0 m unfurnished home, in or near Pontiac, on busline. FE 8-2696. IwtrecHefoB Scheeh ACCOUNTINO-AUDIT-TAXES Bemit-Olten Amvelt Hall, S70 Oakland, tor kilormatton Vardan Stu-dto, 23 Eott Lowrenco, FE 41781. Finish High School No Clouet. Rapid progrets. pare NOW for college or I Igb. Study at homo In tporo ----- biptomo awardad. For treo booklet write to Detroit ONke, Natlona' School of Home Study, Dept. P.P. FACTORY TRAINING AVAILABLE ot a DIESEL MECHANIC. I.T.S., 4340 Watt 4 MHO, DotroH ““ IBM TRAINING by Mkhlgon State Board ______ cotton. Free placamant anittonco. Free parking, financing ar-rongod^STEMs INSTITUTE "GEARED FOR ACTION" with our onlargod talot tlaW and now oNice facllltlet, w* can guor-uitee "QUICK ACTION" ..on the tale ol your prgoarty. "Cfoll now," Cuttomert waHliiB for horrwt In all prke rongot. Our ropr*twH5 tiv* win be ot your door "ONE HOUR" from your call. Warren Stout, Realtor TES4ir*5ol"h?fiH« MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE BUY-SELL-TRADE CASH tor your MiHy^ 7J5A5S for what you want. Fast ACTION guaronfoad. Atk the folks who have tried ut. WARDEN REALTY 3434 W. Huron. Pontioc 3257152 LEARN TO lart. gradart, 0 W. 4 Ml„ REGISTERED NURSE In-tervke kittructor a Doyt. Monday through Friday -Starting tofory, $500 to $575 per month. Retpontible for planning programs and directing bntructort on doyt, tvenbigt and nights in ^in-otrvko train; ______ leaf rokl... ... tkig, handyman. FE 52741 _ 24242.______________________ CARPENTRY. KITCHEN, ADDl-tiont, rocreotlen rooms. RomodoF Pilb PIPER RESTAURANT " ‘-‘-et to amptoy neat, oNroctlve gkl. Mutt be over 1* or .... 5ood poy. FE *4741. RfecbRb. SHEET MU>IC, ETC. tales lady, part time or full time, mutt have knowledge of MUtk. Salary and comm. CaH JANITORIAL AND FLOOR CLEAN-■— for protOMlon-' ons. Man and \ ISSdScoWe.'r'g^^^ nu'JllilitlSS'Ti U The Pontiac Prau.____ TEACHER WANTED FOR CAT^ II,.rhnni III' 1 llllir Ph. HIILP CARE IN MT numc, da^ Vkinny FeyiirUona. FE ET^PERlbNCEb bENTAL ASSIS- Ik a tELbPHONE solicitors' exparltnca nacattary. .C" SSrLwT^' a'______ 11 OJn. - 5 pjn. 1* W. Hurpn tbY tHliV WAITRESS 12* S. Woodward, -.............ch. Ml 4*741 WANTED ELDERLY WOMAN TO car* for I small dilld In our home, 5 day vNck. tramp, tuppliad. FE s-im WANTED dental HYGIENIST, tell or part tima. State salary expected, age. maternal ^tui and addrau. Raply fo Pontiac Pratt, Box I*. ____________________ W/WTED: GIRL. TO WORK FROM H * ISf, tian, and ----- vlaw. Salary to ba d EXPERIENCED NURSES’ »al"---------- elderly lady hi home. FE 44U1. WOAHAN TO CARE FOR ELDERLY man, stay ki, boaiU room and small wages. WrN* ^lac Prett. CAB DRIVERS WANTED, MEN M --------:?ir8?-B.'^W^a'S?en"S5il CiNfeRAL MbUSiVl^ir two chiWrtn, ages 4 and 11, . .. general, age 2558. 5 HOUSEKEEPER HAVt AN IMMEDIATE OPENINd for 2 salat paopfo In our real attate departmant. Exparfonce preferred but will train If necessary, ■•lenty of floor time and protfuclt. toll / A. Taylor, OR 40304. preparation of maalt tor Ref. 3204124. _____^ ----------------- CRESC^ /MATURE yeai^eld"bey.' ilDDLEAGED WOMAN, - OMAN ________ -.tewer" * wekoma. live In. FE 4 NURSING SUPERVISOR Two potHiont currently ^ In Gerlatrk hoipHal near Pontiac. Starting ufory UJOO to $$,*00 depending on experience and background. ApeUcanft mutt ba raglw fonm and mve had recent------- vltory ratpemIMIItfoe. Only **w are avallabi* to work noon or evening thiftt will b tidartd. ENcalwnl fringe bt___ APPLY PERSONNEL OFFICE, OAKLAND COUNTY COURTHOUSE, 1200 N. TELEGRAPH RD. I ' 51$4*. a tmall club. Home provided, furnished, but wHh all utllHiet Pleaae write to ----------------------- IMMEDIATE Employment TRAINING PAID PH. 338-0438 INTERVIEWS GRANTED IF QUALIFIED :. 3344*35 or 2354420. EXPERIENCED HOUSE CLEAN^ HIGH school GR^UATES wopM Ilk* tell tan*, oftke worte typing oHIc*. m»chkw kW punch trabibig. CaH OR 5*230 — ' P.m. iS IN MY liriMhit SiEEkESawha U BRICK, BLOCK, CEMENT forK chlmwf ^ W«* MY >-fi: AHENTION” -^fetrH^^^*-AND MODERNIZATION - OR 51272 PLASTERING, NEW AND REPAIR. ■miMBB SarvicE ELECTRIC MOTOR SERVICE--M- «a?Fngriin«-2i»^-free estimates on all wir- exceed $150 ly mo. 4 CHILDREN AND DOG :., needs tgl. Mutf have d retrlg. FE 54025. BEDROb/M HOUsfe, FULL BAg-mant, gu heat, 141 Watt IjOngfel-tow. OR 41024.______' 5Bij6bbd4A HbAdfe, nOwly 6^ sgs^bT^EAr-vA"^^^ 'S: 5BEDR00M HOM*. -- - naca. 1*5* White Lake Rd. 1 east at Clyde. $07-4242. ATTENTION, OWNERS! buy and tall fond contracts. PONTIAC REALTY FE 54275 NEEDED All types of Real Estate. If you have property to tell call ut tor m^ ln dHpatkig ot H. No oMF ^GMROE R. IRWIN, REALTOR *0 W. Wtiton_______FE 52002 JOHNSON SAYS: Watch our told signs all ever town. List your homo wllh ut. Wa have the talatman who can tall. Will trade. AUGUST JOHNSON REALTOR 1704 S. Tafograph FEoasn _______ homes. Wa can pet cash for m/ PAUL JONES REALTY, FE M/tST Tb iELLT Call 6<6RCfe $100 month. Reforencet. 405100$. family or r '■ “ Pike St., clota .. — tarvka, and downtowm down, 3 roomt i" tranca, lull bae rantal $75 par n 3 OR 4 Bedrooms, basEmInY, garbage dlipotal, tlp^ Kaego, fcatToto per mo. 4*2-1230. 4ROOM HOUSE, UNION t>Kbj rence, ref., FE 54424 for appokit- 42 GREEN STREET 5 reomt and bath. Gat fumac*. newly dacorafod. Children permlh tod. Rat. required. $20 per fwlh. 44 GREEN STbEEf 5 roomt and bath on 1st tioer. Children permitted. Hand tirto furnace. $45 per month. Newly dakorafod. Inquire K.G. Hemptfoad Realtor. 34* W. Huron. FE 44204. $89.50 MONTH RENT OPTION MICHAEL'S REALTY _____ 323-7555 FE 57*** W« 5430* BbUL^VAftb heights - SBadroom Unit -$75 Par Month FOR SALE OR RENT -and bath, hwly dacori ed,at 440 S. Edith St. A borhood. FE 24512. af any^ itoy«t NATIONAL BUSINESSBROKERS 1042 Orchard Lake FE 57041 8UILDER Nrndt latt In Pontiac Immadlafo offer, m oommittton. /Mr. Davit. 4244y5 Real Vaiua Realty. CASH 48 HOURS LAND CONTRACTS - HOMES EQUITIES WRIGHT LEASE - 5BEDR00M. WILLIAMS Laka. FE 42*41. _______ Lbtui LAXt, WATERFORb, --- around laka front. 2 b^ , oil temaca, tate beach. ____er mo. OR 5*542. NEW BRICK RANCH HOME, (2000 area. $150, leau option. OR 52247. NEW 5 AND 4Be6466m MmIs 2*7 W. Yala at Stanley RENT OPTION $59.66 MONTH - ' Ikig Mia** and Inauranc* 1,8kifod sheet, model open Oalfo and Sunday OUR TR/kDB DEALS ARE TERRIFIC MICHAEL*MRALTY 2257515 WE 5008 UN 5322 SMALL HOUSE ON 0AKL)MD. ssi --------•-/* Auto., FE 52270. AyarlwiBEtB-PiwTildw4 - AND 5R00M EFFICIENCY aptt. on Pontiac Lake and Hioh-land Rd. All utIHtlat kicludad. Ph. ^t. LIley, 47511*0. *1*0 Highland 2 ROOMS, OFF PIKE, EVERY-thing fumishfld. Rtf»r«nc«t rv- qylryl. FE 4^.________________ ROOMS. PARTLY FURNISHED* SIS wMk. FE 24301. «4S Auburn ^BEOROOM TERRACE* COAA-plfttly fumlfhtd. FE >7714 •fftr 2 ROOMS. BACHELOR. NAAT AND Rtirt Rbbnw 48 comfortable housekeeping II priv -_______Dixie ...... 2 ROOMS. ADULTS ONLY, PRI- PRIVATE PHONE, AND ROOM, for a man. 252 W. Y.-- *‘ Eo6m AifD board for ELOER- ly patlant. prlvat* ham*, best of care, 42502*1. ROOM AND BOARD FOR 6lDER- MgeIiiI (w4 TwcMiif k MOVING _SERWC|, RBASON- 8ob's Van SBrvict MOVING AND storage REASONABLE RATES P*ddkw-I* Years Ei ROBERT TOMPKINS rCEHTHIf m PECOTViNlf A# A LADY INTERIOR DECORATOR, Paparhig. FE *480._ A-l DECORATING - PAINTING -pfotforkig - paparlng. Free sat. dlscountt tor cath. 4024420. IXPERT PAINTING, DECbRAT tog, pwer removing- OR 57254. —^ COUPLE OR , BAWELOR PRE-forred. Inquir* 7*1 Dorit Rd. fTfeGtuS'lb 2 RftbMi ANb EatH SkKi.*Ift'lr.‘"*t'«*fi2S! Ave. Phom 330-4051.______ INtEbRAflb, 3 RO(WS, PRIVAVt Infortor-Exterlor. f_____ PAINTING AND PAPER F IWark Nelson. FE 510*4. , .......O, PAPERING, WALL wathkig. Tuppar, OR 57041. PAINTING. WALL-WASHING, kl- FE 2-4084. Watfi^' 47520W.~ 'cl Wh'lie. " TiiavisiGii-BwIlG SanricE 14 HAVE YOUR RADIO AND TELEVISION REPAIR wjjK^DONE WHILE Trakwd Sarvke Man, Reatonabfo prket. Fra* Tub* Tattkig. /Wontgomary Ward Pent OkLIFORNIA DRIVE AWAY WIN ahar* amantai and *r*« — foto modal automebll* for mut trip watt. Mutt bt at teatf 25 Sar older with reforencet. at MUM Motor Salat, VB HWiway or call ---------------- It temithed, tingle lady pre- ROOAAS. CLEAN. NEAR TOWN. _______52 (3LADSTONE________ ROOMS, PRIVATE BATH AND nlrtnce, u ler week. I ROOMS AND BATH, pIRsf floor. Child wekom*. $20 per week with $25 deposR. InquIr* at 273 Baldwin Ave. 3254051._________ BEDROOM .THREE CHILDRjiN ROOMS, CLEAN. 1 CHILD. 475 5532. $54* PonMac Lake Rd. 123 HENRY CLAY. 1 BLOCK FROM BACHELOR apartment. BEDROOM, HEAT AND WATBlf tern. Aduitt only. 2242205 or FE 52214. _________ 5ROOM, BATH, UTILITIES, bl-bsi R(MMS andbath, heat fu4- nlshed. Francis St. FE •'*“ ROOMS AND BATH, ST refrigerator, utllltMt ter S. htoi^ll. OR 5340*.__________ ROOMS ANO BATH, CLEAn. Call FE 512*2. <- "j^fkTcr-' gat ha* Mr. Rk home. 4244575.____________i' LAK^ FRONT EXECUTIVE HOME ■ droomt, I'/i batht, recreation I, 2 WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 30. 1963 49'Sflla H«nM Mixed Neighborhood MOOfLS OTiN AFTCKNOOHS \4 AND SUNDAY WESTOWN REALTY 4AA Ir..^ «ff EMt BM -----1- II ?-4677 evtt. Brick... I t-nom rmnch I TMISI Income... iri bfkM too Two Y-Mroom iNim - oor^t condition fhoMfh' out. Ook Noort, oUtlord woiU. fjll bdsomont with OM twot. SKond ttoor oportmoM Is tor-fiitliod On plocktop otroet -Oosirobt^ foit Sido Locotion. Prkod right ot flASOOt Lake... PrWUotts 6n Like Ooklond tor this irn^ he Attochod double gor^.'SoNinf 104x225 tots this homo otf to odvontaof. Ho.SOO. CONVENIENT TERMS CAN BE ARRANGED. Humphries ft 2-9236 if no answer call FE 9-9eit N. Telegraph Ro«d Multipto Lifting Sorvko - ^ULL t PUR- - $;« Dot^ - m rcK Mcmive. wrsr' SUBURBAN }BEDROOM BUNGALOW - PULL BASEMENT - 2CAR GARAOC-l’» ACRE - JUST $e,W 11,000 DOWN $75 PER MONTH. WRIGHT Rochester HAYDEN 3 Bedroom Tri Level $9,995 $1,000 DOWN n^AR CARAGI n’ LOT FAMILY ROOM OM HEAT OPEN DAILY » TO * ^ SUNDAY 1 TO S P.M. WILL DUPLICATE ON YOUR LOT J. C. HAYDEN, RMitor EM SAW WH HI»linE R<. (MW) MODEL NOW FOR SALE S-bcRrtoin, brick «n4 tlumlnunn rtnoh, 0 4-3130_________ East Sida Inconn^ 4 rooms and bath down, 3 rooms and bath up. Good -condition, now gas furnace. Upper will make payments. 123* ^ut cotls down. Act FHA ond VA Homes We have a completa list of thosa tint homef availaWa. Larga aalac-tlon to choose from. Coma In or call tor datalls. WARDEN 3300 DOWN - HERE IS ONE JUST price only 10.300. $300 DOWN — Large O-rm. homo with new aluminum Interior iwtds painung. un paved si. near Northern Hl^. A good deal tor couple. Price only S4.030. Ask tor Mr. Brown. ' HUNTOON LAKE — Rambling 3-bedroom rancher with olumCium siding, oil AC turnaca, aak floors. All AnMrton windows. Largo IS « 140 lot. Priced at only 311,400 with only 10 par cant dn. ‘ i EXTRA SPECIAL - tmmadlala pos- INCOME ON BALDWIN: Raducad to S37.S00 Bunding In elude* four 3 - room - and - bath apartmantt and two ttorat. Call to tea tht fina potential of this property NOWI INCOME; Where alta can you gat thit type of return: Nice 4room apart manI* each with —■* fumlahad. Located Properly grosses ---__________jfh. Priced at 333,- 000 with farms available. Call tor more details. 'HITFIELO SCHOOL AREA; John K. Irwin ZONED COMMERICAL - Scoom modern bungolow with 4 Urge lots, near Blue Sky Thaatar. Ideal ---- •- ottlca, nursery — WALNUT LAKE ROAD - Choica neighborhaod. Haro is a country, tsiaU and priced rIgM at the owner Is leoving. Price reduced from 330.000 to 333,000 tor quick saU. Charming colonial home with ' Jarge bedrooms and s 4th. Sunroom a CARNIVAL By Dick Tarncr 'll just doesn't add up, Pop! If the best things in life ai free, how come we’re always broke?” Templeton bfdroom, tiltd bfth, klichtn, full ba»entoot. ......... ttoft, IffBf tofe blfcktop ffrfttt, wwtr and water. Price reduced BATEMAN GuarantEBd Homt Trade-In PLAN (Two-in-Ont) House FOR LARGE FAMILY) live In this 0 room, 3 story west side beauty with 2 full baths, batr-mant, gat haat, 2 car garag* and 2 larga Mt. POR SMALL FAMILY; liva In • L. H. BROWN, Realtor _500 iniiabath Lak* Road Ph. FE 4-3344 *r FE 2-4110 / r rr s , > . ALTERATIONS ON i wemen'i ckmm. FI drattat, Uathar coats. OR 3-7133. Elactrical Coafractors ALUMINUM SIDING - tOOFING INSTALLED CASH AND CARRY CALL 5UPfRIORr F( 4>3177 FREE ESTIMATES ON ALL WIR-Ing. Will ttoanc*. R. B. Munro Elac tr/c Co. FlTd431. ArdiRectoril Drawing Ixowtlag NEW HOUSE AND REMODELING AUTO REPAIR 330-4134, MA 4-1IW attar KAP-LIPE BATTERY CO. Gtf>eratorf~RaMtatorB-$tar1erf | ■ Botteriis $5.95 Exchange | 3377 W. Huron Ml ' FE 5-0155________________y B#«t Sterafi Heating Service M.A. BENSON LUMBER COMPANY Jvnk Cart RION BLUE $00. PICK UP OR oehver^. 2601 Crooks UL 2-4A43. MERION OR KENTUCKY SOD. Laid or deMverad. Prat Evti-Landscaping. FE Sbl4l or FE 5^3303 fHINKING OF SODOINOr - • II priett — ■ ALUMINUM sTORMs-tiDlNG | > LoaMlry Sorvka Awnhm • Porch - patio • roofing. I - -— --^ CO._______PE 4ist7^, -- WAtH.Nr, ANO GUINN CONSTRUCTION AH WE DO WASHING AND IRON-Ing. FUt work by tho bound,.oltiar itwns by the ploca. With, dry and told - I3t pound. 3 day sarvict. OR 3-0401. 4404 01x14 High- tld*walkV'TS;tirF"E Min" '' NEIDRICK BUILDING SERVICE HoCM BAiiiNG, floorTevel- f^T'tbIIX Ff^ilw hi and general camant work R. McCollum contractor. FE 5-0434 or FE SU44I.________________^ TALBOTT LUMBER dows Compute bulWkig i FE 4-4535 cabtoats. racraatloa rmt. FE Htl5. Cor|Mt Sarvict * i painting and decorating ----------- ^ SCHWEITZER CARPET SERVICE, 4 5433.____________ toatagra^ Work cement work, all kinds. tria astlmata OR 3-S74L ifWfktr rdNTRACT^rTTfwsn) SrT** '' WIEOAND^ r^4 r* *^7iAH6 rUHlN*^* ^ Racpnditlonki Key Covering nR_£tm itonvcroft nursing home - ■ OL 1*033 - Call Chuck PAM'LY, MARITAL AND RETIREE TSLASTEiriNC. PlffTsTTSiATtF gounaaklng 23SM01 <0 Mayara EM 3B14I Wallpaper Steamer Floor sandarts ^llshars, hand senders, Idrnaca 'vacuum cleaners. Oakland Fuel B Paint, 434 Or-chard Lake Ava. FE 5U150. ROOFS: NEW, REPAIR Ganaril Maintenance FE 4-0444 ^F REPAIRS, WORK CUARAN- Televisiea, Radio and Hi-Fi Sarvica REBUILT AND GUARANTEED TV'f 319.35 up. Obal TV and RadU. 3430 Elliabatn Lake___FE 4-4345 Tree Trimaiiag Service ACE TREE - STUMP REMOVAL Trimming. Get our bif 403-3410. eriL'S TRfE TRlMMiNd AND _removal. Vary low cost. Ft 1-2404. General Tree Service Any site |ob. FE 5W4 FE 5-3025 MONTRdSS TREE SERVICE Tree removal—trlfnmlng^_335-U50 TREE TRIk^rNd AND REMOVAL. Col r-—- '— —* —■*«'- Tmckiag HAULING AND RUBBISH. NAME _your^ica^Any tlm^ LIGHT TRUCKING -handling. F£ S3104. LIGHT TRUCKING AND HAULING LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING, rubbish. Illl dirt, grading and gravJ al and tront and loilng. FE fUa Truck Rental Trucks to Rent kitchen and bath lacllltUt, both floors and privacy It desired. Raa-sOT^bly priced at $14,550 with West Suburban CioM to Wftortofd room brick ranch I Full bfftmont, gai nv«i range and oven. Nicely and anchor toiKed reer sharp ar>d only $H«$0 isfs liflh. 3 I lilt In 1 reer yerd. Ifs VL-- .., _______, ..... with $1,500 .W.V.. plus costs. Winding blacktop street!; just like living in town. Northern High CLOSE BY; iherp* specious 3 bed- ---- I'/h baths. Urge spacious ■—■“•In evon and .... Jding, attochod I 0 tioer plan that It k real rancher In the « lots and priced to HT NOW. Onl/ $14,450 kitchen with built-in pay mortg. < Otter Hills Sale Hoates $150 DOWN $79 Mo. Excluding Taxes and Int. NEW 3-BEDROOM FACE BRICK HOMES FHA Approved FULL BASEMENT - GAS HEi - PAVED STREETS - LARC ROLLING LOTS. DIRBCTIONS Off M24 lust north of Lakt OrUn, bahind Alban'i Countty Cousin. MODEL OPEN 628-1565 CARLISLE BUILPINO CO. MILLER romU tIUd both. 2 ot IM 3 btdroomi ora on the main Th* llv. rm. and din. rm. ... attractivaly carpatad. A chaartui tlrepuc*. Full tIUd baiamant, new gas tumaca, garag*. Evary raquiranunt tor happy cor-*—* able living. S1S.500. AVON TOWNSHIP, Auburn _____________ area. An appaaling 2-badroom homa on on oxtri doop M with BRICK RANCH West tIrepUcos. ' perfect for luburban, but IM batos, 2 >-ln tir candltUnar irlvll*g« and by the i JUST MINUTES from downtown. William Millar Beautiful brick rancher with 2 William IWlier car gar^ on wonderfully i RgQ for 2-0263 landscaped comer parcel. 3 bed- I ^___o •• a rooms plus den, I'i baths, ranga $7$ W. Hu^______________9^". ' sJ and oven builMna, wall-to-wall car-1 IAKEPRONT peting and built-in air cMdlttoner I LMhcriwn i In attic Lai basin lust i Settle tor L Just $21,500 costs. West Side 4 BEDRM. BRICK) In the city. Oldar-typa homa In wonderful condition. Idool family heme for largo lamlly 4 bodrmt.. V/i baths, good eating spaca, basamani and 2 car garage. Close to schools and shopping. tlS,3J0 with raatonabU dawn payment. Trade YodTprasant homa equity as down payiRMit. Small-Town Living ~ you prtlor tht pact ol o II town? Batter InvastlgaU this nice 1 badrm. bungalow locot-on paved siraat In heart ot ge ol Leonard- Freatily dec- TODAY. F^ ^rlca t3,500. BIG BIG Discount for Cash. TRADE THE BATEVulN WAY J BATEMAN 77 4. Telegraph Realtor FE I-7I41 Open 3-9 M.L.r Sunday 1-1 SYLVAN SHORES----------------- . who wish to stay cUaa-in and retain lhair Ptdaral phone r“—-bar should Impact IhU ala brick and aluminum CoUnUI Stoutly mainlalnad owners. Warm, ream, a tormal ling room, kitchan, half bath d a 23-toot porch overlooking I water, comprise the find or. u^alrt are 4 levaly bad ims, 2 full baths and a tiny king ream. A* a banvs. actual It still anotlwr badroam or ‘ 3rd floor. id**l tor youi ■M .1... . ••■rMrta room « Ihrlllad.l e 4fh stool ....--------- _..jl* garagt Hondsomaly carpatad throughout all ihU and much moro at Ih* Court Appraisal price of 332,000. Mrs. Bette wHI etn you. OR 3-2031. RAY O'NEIL Rtaltor 343 $. TELEGRAPH OPEN 3 TO . PE 3-7103 OR t-jon MULTIPLE LIITINO SERVICE POCKET change ever you have In your poci yattr agutty In praaant hoi buy thU 3-yoar-oW ranch w basoment, plonty . ___ _______ avatlabla. Paymantt 0*5 m*. Incl. avaryShlng. HAGSTROM REALTOR 43oa w. Huron. OR 44051, ovas. call OR 3U323.________________, GAYLORD =IVE ACRES with 4-room home, 3 bodroomt, baaomani, 3-car garage. GE auto, dithwaihar. Maytag waihor. AM to good candNIan. Just THREE BEDROOMS. Batamant, ranch home, 2'/i-c*r garage. " tool tot. Divided basamanf wl heat. All tor *13,300 and tornn Call FE ASaai or MY ^2I21. Lawrenca W. Gpylord Broadway and Flint FE g-fm or MY MI2I "SMITH" Clorkston stalely Early Amtrlcan Homa In the center of the vlUm. 3 bad- livSto with tiniplaegT t*m»y room, dtotog room and kitchan to the wing to a S-raem apert-tnant *11 on I floor. 111 fmT'V Uka frontag* wHh a S-room cat-tag* avartoaklng Park* .. Lak*. 334,300, b) ----ANT NE_________ Beautiful Bull KAMPSEN NOW to Ih* tim*. LeBaron Farms hiiat, garag*, tencad yard - Only 3400 down on tow FHA martgage. il flraplaca, toast a marHi-y or charcoal a ttoak — and anjoy the coming caM days. 4 Mg badraama, •H.«- Igrmal dining room, krtclwn, toting argt, ___ gaa hot water boat. garag*. Poaiastton bafor* ow falls. Thinking of Sailing? Want cash? Wa'll gat M tor you —give us a try. Call Frad Botavaar, Rachal Lavaly, La* Kerr, Lao Kampaan, or Fl^d YOUR CHOICE FALL U a ipytly flnta of yaar and ... can tnloy It avtn more H you buy IhU lavaty 3 btdraam hamt In Draytan Platot. ivy car garag*. .... .... — CAN you afford to rant a ham* whan you can buy a 1 badraam bam-and pay only tSO gar manlh, I catod naar Cast Lak*. Pricad i alert and taka advanlag* ot Hu opportunity to purchata “-■■ -- mat harm to Pontige. 2 badroorm. Ilyto(---- placa, dtobig raai 2 car garage. I —. No money down to C-L BEAUTIFUL homes Ilka IhU 3 badr----- ---- ranch near Lalvt Lake art rar* liMtaad. Don't wait, tot us ■— ■■ to you now. It Is a raal b family room, fuM basamai garagt. Pricad $2B,tS0 WE HAVE MANY OTHER HOMES IRWIN NORTHERN HIGH . WATERFORD AREA - 3-bedroom ranch homa on Urgo lot. Rlockeop oiroat. Larga carpatod living roam, beaulllul kitchen, "—■— “*■" PLEASANT LAKE _________________ ranch-type bungalow ol brick and redwood corutructlon. boths, tomlly roam. —........ FirapUc* and Uk* prMUgas tot GILES ST. MIKES, 1 unit or Urgo tamil homa. Use It as l.-mlly home no and an Incom* whan Mu tamil it gom. 10 rooms and 3 bath All privat* entrancas. Now gi heat, lull basement, 2-car g< ragt. North sMe. Eaty terms. -UNIT INCOME. 3400 DOWN. Li catod In easy rental area on mrl sido, 2-car gorsga. full basement. Only 17,330. Let Iht tonnonts make TRADE GRACIOUS LIVING ^ _ iPgX SSSTTw £« car oaragt, and Suiic* tot*. L» catod naar Williams Lak*. '-■■ INVESTMENT Or mavha you art UtUno .. homa, w* hav* a Mx-roam, brick 3----- 3-badimma and full lalltog t^ tajOO. KENT « PAMILY PURWItHyO APARW batamant. Broaiaway to altachad 2V»<*r garag*. tuixirbtn livlijg wHh albew room. Now at II34W DONELSON SCHOOL AREA -AltractIv* horn* with corpefad living roam, 2-badroom with spaca tw addMIontl badrotmt, titod tolh. Full basamani, pas haat. Garage. Favad road. Nicely landscaped. 112,300. Ttrmt. WISHER SCHOOL AREA - Only SaSO down tor Mils 3-btdroom horn* WIRi lull batamant. o** Ma**' siraat. This It a ooud buy tor the money. Total pries $3,350. HOME AND BUSINIOS - Owiur leaving ttato. Goad location for tulura bufinoet potontlol. Now ^ Ing ueod at TV repair shop with alfraetiv* living quarters. Ba^ mant, gat haat. Larga deep tot. All tor 315,000 - Terms. Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor RNISHEO AFAR FOR SALE 'BY OWNiR, AI>A»Y. tomlshsirnaar^caiitral re«K>n»bl«p caM IM B-9D1 tfttr 6 p.m. for appoMmant.____________ R'OOMING HOUSE, CLOSE IN, -tpollett condllton; FE S0377. lake RrogErty ,51 PontUr, *33* - I $500 In 7T tugdan li 5 rooms and only TAYLOR CLARKSTON AREA-^ nwut yw ■- 3-badroom rancher, hanrr - TAYLOR - In Val-U-Way Judoh Lake Estates Frushour Struble REALTORS TRADIRS 3330 Ellubelh Lak* Road FE 04035___Hll CLARK THACTORS Ton pickup! TRUCKS - .—_______ AND BOUiAMSNT Dump Truck! — Sami Trailer! Pontioc Form ond Industrial Tractor Co. 33 5 WOODWARD EAKI.E3 CUSTOM UPHOLSTERING 34^^ Burtoi^, Union Lake. EM meter "s ■ ■OL$OS~UP“H6LTtf»'. ing. FE S-3033. Free atl. FE 3 1354 Open avantng*. _____ ThOAAAS UBHOLSTfeiiiNO 44M W. WALTON BLVD. FE 5-8888 windows Reas. Sstlttac- BARGAIN HOUSE PAYS CASH FOR used lumllura. FE 3-4*43. _____ Weod-Ceke-teal-Fiel CANN6L COAt-THC iOfAL FIRE-«vood fv«i. taatonad «vaod both tor furnact or flrwlaot. OAKLAND FUEL B PAINT. 45 Thomai SI.* O'NEIL MODEL OPEN 5 to 8 3315 SHAWNEE L, COLONIAL, th* kin that will still b* I). - - . - . . fully suthanllc, comMnIng Cedar Shakat, Aluminum and Brick to ... amitruclton. Saalad glass CatonUI wtodme*. Entorlng ^through th* toyar and up th* open stairway, guarded by a curved ^ handrail. Built in Chin* In dining room; gorgeous Early American light llxtur*. A family room that faalurat an Early American FlrapUca, built In book cases and paggad aak ttoertog. 3<.y baths. CompUtaly 'R*;rrwatsiF.srft sT^wiUaryr'^rrar.^'LTsAfig WATKINS LAKE FRONT. Mav* you draatnad ot living on a ;.*k* but luit couldn’t afford what you hav* seen? Don't giv* upl W* hav* lust th* haute far you. it's • nica comforlabto thro* bad- TRADING IS TERRIFIC TALK ABOUT'bOLL HOUSES -Wall here's t iwaat en*. Extra Baautlli kllni * ,— acroaa M n OakUnd Lake. Min* t. SacrlflCkw for SI7.3 ns er *17,30# CASH. carpatad. T«ub nic* SIMPLE ARITHMETIC-Ownar’i hav* raducad pric* Irdm *17,301. to 3IA300. They must idll. Wa'll work out terms. 3b Q. frontag* an black lop strati - btautiful Und-scaping ■ 4 Urge bedrooms with privet* bath tor mattor bad-rooms. Fsmily room, axcaltont kilclun with bullt-Int. attaclud garsg*. 3 rooms, all on. on* Moor. You can tav* flOO* an thU dtal II you call T06ay. n a prim* V . city k........................................................ out. You'll b* thrlltod upon antoring th* hug* living r* a formal dining room ipactout anough to anhKtaIn » dl gractoutly. I boautltul btdraomt, 3 lull baths, a h*M b txira stool to th* batamant. Olthwathar. nsrttww aiwnui 300 yards ot gorgaovt carpating * -------nordinatod. --------------------- to fully • NIC! 3 bedroom bungalow, glut upstairs tkiishad tor addiManal room. Firtpuc* In living room, full basamani, phis I car garagt, ^ aatr* tot. Full prica II3.N0 with ctottog casts only I* an atlglM* RAY O'NEIL, REALTOR 262 S. Telegraph Open 9 to 9 FE 3-7103 EM 34531° MIKTIPIE LISTING SERVICE NORTH SIDE, 07.S00 full prIc* on this S-room horrw In good condition. Nice toTKOd lot, oil haat, hardwood tlwi, plattorad walls. GILES REALTY CO. FR SU17S 221 Baldwin Av*. Open 3 a.m. to 3 p.m. MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ARRO We Build—We Trade FHA 4-BEDROOM COLONIAL HOMf with Mikas only 3 311,350. FHA larms or win i land contract *a down paymant. IDEAL for RCTIRED OR YOUNG caupto. Coiy —'--------' ---- aid Kroent, garag*. Carpating in living room. Spactoui tot on pavad strain. All thU and more tar^l7,-3*0. Would taka good Und -tract at doewi paymant. PHONE 682-2211 SI43 Cata-ElUabalh Road multTplb listing service STOUTS Best Buys Today West Side « 3 btdrddm ranch ham*, car-patod living room and dining araa, ddttog ipac* kNetun, tub bdth. basamtnt wMh ggt tuot, fully totuUtod, ttorma and jcraant, anchor toncod back yard *1337 daum and attum* gay-manta ot 331 Inc. taxaa and tot. $350 Down Plut tow FHA coats move* you ^ this 3 bedroom family ham* in La Baron School dutrlct. Aluminum tiding, storm* and Kreant. batamant with rac. room, gat haat. Landscaped yard, pavad drive, I'y-car garag*. Total price only 111,500. Union Lake ^5n*'*Tom#**wM7r*t*(ur*t*'T^ i^ roRm. part baiemtafr oil torcod oir boot, lak« prfVHagata What Have You? Owner will accept tra* and clear tot, late modal car, small contract at down paymant on this year round laka-trant homa. 2 bedrooms, 3 placa bath, large living and dining room, basement, on haat. Spactout shaded Easamant, gat heat. NIC* M. 37.000 G.I. buy. Monthly paymenls agpraximatoly 031 tocludliiB taxes ind intursne*. wrcwit 1-tloor bungalow, large open front porch, dining room, gat haat, goad condition. Wsnr- --■ ''—■- '■ School Olstrk WATERFRONT BUY. *10,700 or bast otter. Neat 2-badroci-bungalow, brick tirapi bath, me Oar- ■-■—— ramie til* dr hare's Ih* bout* yau'r* toefctog tor. 3 badroam*. larga llyliw larga kitetwn. carport, utlllto . and a ntc* eomar tot. Full pric* Near Lincoln 3badr crawl Junior High , gat tumaca ntog oak Moors an 3 tidat and R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 345 OAKLJkMD AVI. OPEM 3-7 ANNETT 2-Family—$700 Down EM 3-7114 WALttfcs "! A K E PRIVILEtili ------- hill tito*. 3 tots, IIMIO .rktton-Orlon EO- *a.B»5S" salat offfeo at 103$ Me- Lake 1 tront - 14*x4tW toeludlng col- watewronT broom ranMIngrjtodi, panatod family room, todgooton* ImtaUtor fireplace In living room, dining room, kitchan 3 bodroon^ IW -sk Moors, doubt* wtodew, garage, 35' sandy baach. CLARENCE C. RIDGEWAY F»a5. *"°'^Kw. WALTON can* Ca. Trout tiraam, madam turn, ytor Hanty' oT'gama. Call Hr““ “■ lUetLLA'Ci 440 KTMy bMt of nuvffWMd uuuw •nd Mm, Vk Oil rioNttp floor Clort* MichiMnp JHOIO. Boov tonm. PAUL JONES BKALTV FE 44550 KALKASKA, MICHIGAN am cabin. S3 acres. Lets ot rnMng N^ACkCACE. . SMITH FRAWKLIN, MICH. eves Ok *<343.________ NOkTHklUl MICHIGAN A 10 acres, S1.250 - 11,500. MOBILE SITES, DON'T klMT. BUY room. Batamtnl, FA ol. .... New root and tiumlnum tl tog, Xar garagt. ti------- Seminole Hills • 14,350, *2)000 down. ‘ Tie or w-zs, tuoo. man* in. 1-IM i»RANK SHEPARD RmTO< ____ ^PE'jwVs. ' —5 LOTS IM For Invastmant or Building >-|sS BEAUTIFUL ACRES, comgtotot I'' lancad and Meal tor horeaa or bat eattto. Only 3202 par aert. CRES WITI.-----------, It north ot Clorkaton. 1 space, tul^ boommt, autoralic Swimming Pool—FrUlt Trees 5 polling scenic acres. riy an acr* fancad, land- " ’ — *—•— Md and towtring ihade u. Cotontol haika, 1st ,0. w’^^nW^'^VIbTSM sveninga call FE 5-S140 *r OR 3-137S MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE SCHRAM Brand New 3-badroam ranch, with l4x1S living room, lOxiS kitchan-dtoatti. full basement, gas haat, with 13x34 racraatton araa. Pricad at Big T to door wall and gas he It SltSSa CompIbM a o move Into. Will due tour lot or aura. tog roam, tlraglaea, handy kitctian, new family raom l*x20, baamad caUtog, tlra-pUca, caramic bath. 2nd tUar 3 badraama, bath, apa-clout ctotais. Oat FA haat. 2-car garag* and workthog. Small barn or paal house. ------------ -I once. S31S00, WE WILL TRADE Realtors 28 E. Huron St. Open Evenings and Sunday 1-4 FE 8-0466 'BUD' 3-Bedroom 'Brick Ronchkr ; faaturtog c*|v RORABAUGH DIXIE HIGHWAY BATEMAN al attontton, call the 5-Bedroom Baldwin ee^l, ItolBo’roorB Itoiii racaptton room 10x12, Urge kMeh-j "£2; an, tapartto dtotog room, h)M IJJjy SSrrmtSr SSfiEa’SSS Opto. ei” •• OffJoslyn ----------- H llxu ear-' _ --- iteio kitch- Eost Side rur*tor«arv!3j^ omy $750 dow« Plva-room brick tarraca, clean and neat, gat heat and hot wa-tar; tocludat I bidritomt, tap- PHA torm*. IVAN W. SCHRAM REALTOR FE 5-9471 342 JOfLYN COR. MANSFIELD oAn fVENINOS AND SUNDAY MULTIPLB LISTIWO SERVICE DORRIS BRAND NEW AND REAUTIPULi •22,3«a ... and sltuatod an a spacious tvnaping camar tik wHh black tapped ttraats an# community wator, avartoaklng sparkling clear Uk*. lot''" " pointmantt: Ovartitad ream, family ream with | ttoertog, tnd a unigu* - ity. half bath batwaan kNdwn and maslar badroam, oxcallant batamant and d*a h"* — dartui kitchan with b car attachad daraga, i WEST SUBURBAN UNBELIIVABLe — BUT TRUE: ~".3SB . » . It 3*1*1 prtc* ot -------- —onUI with i himaca, ilfch cup- is wandarfyl brick ootonUI ..... atim* raar, now gas himac*, ■aufitui kNchan wMhbtreh ~ - HILLS - VALLEYS - AND DALES -- Detcrihtt thit basutiful I# acr* aatala, naar Chryttor Ix-praiaway, a sackidad apat and t sportsman's paradto* wHh a rg* brick and Catkoml* hoi wood ham* t m*i ------------- pucaa, Hvto^ R tS', and 2 h*N baeist. 3«a Terms or will trad*. ■klCK^BU^NOALOW: ZERO doim clvllUn.*Ji^ *r^n ch. QuMi pc "Bud" Nicholie, Reoltor at Ml. Clamant St. FE Vi 201 '■ Afttr 6 P.M., FE 4-8773 NICHOLIE Living and dining an h built-in range and lomont, racrealton r heat, garag* arhh : bungalow. Living and |0 arw. Kitchan, full >**-I, Pk HA haat, vacant. Nawly NMTH SUBURBAN N3#mom bunaatow. __ and dining ar**, kltdian, utility room mu attachad garag*. gat hA hoot. Vacant, nawly daotratad ^rg* lot. Abevi ibl ihbvoa CLARKSTON AREA K^dtol^SSSSSSn*ind'plll! Wanted!! Lots In th* eny ot PantiK SPOTLITE BLDO. CO. _______FE Abets Lodd's Building SitM City Water Rocrattor to a Wooded with Acre percel near Mciuded area. All Poved Road—Rolling Drayton Plain* area, seme treat. ExcaltonI tIto for wtftuul bata-«08de«m*d **•••» 150x200', $1250 Good art* with Uk* prIvlUgat. ExcalUnt drainage, easy la drive ytur own wall. S2S0 town. LADD'S, INC. Open Sun., 12 to 4 Site farias S > - W cash. I ACRES S. ot Grand BUnc — 4 Only S4bN total pric*. Warren Stout, Realtor I* N. Opdyk* kd. Ph. PR MI4S MUL?f^R USTIHo'^kVICE 5!5f OWNER OUT OP STATE: Ordartd! :Ai.«s*;sKmSs:..-.. BRICK 3-b*droom nawty dacaratod, batamant, 2-car garag*. Urge MUtTIPLE LiSTINO SilwiCi 5 ACRES MIS - N. at CUrkston - ■ asWdaF- •« $6,50($ 2$ ACRES hn^, is .’«U? Evas. MA [STATE MA S-IS4I •44S Dlxu. CUrkston Ems. MA t-1141 Av “"•'-«^',k*»t T;;' I'JV-AtRE fARM • ■ bring Yoiir .Sow-Hammer C. PANGUS, Reoltor asm s.®*TONVILLE Mhl SI. NA 7-Hlf THB PONTIAC PRESS. WEt>XE$t)AY. OCTOBER 30. ms D—9 Stl« Utm for RUTURI IKURITY •UY NOW rMd troirtH* *>*4 owW Mtlly b* tpilt In imtM tcrtm. Rolli p*r-cti> approx. 11 mlittliwn Fontlac. rtrcol I — >1 ocrot Itod toll, tllphlly rtlllnp, pricod ot only tlSO p«r ocrO. Pircol 1 - N ocrot, old tormbouio 'could bo roilorodi Itrao boiomont orn. oltMr out bulMIntt, lomt iko fronlogo. Ootd toll only 1315 n .rr. Hurry. Snydtr Lavendtr Dorothy Snyd*r I nil HMIond R M l-Mtl FI Moot 17 Unit MottI : Grottlnp IIJ,000 and mora par yaar, oparatod by hirad halp. Full prica only taO.OOO with tormt. I J. J. Jolt Raolty I F SM17 or____MlOMl WANTTO BUY A I CRAFT SHOP? REALTOR PARTRIDGE Is tht Bird to See | DM W. HURON _____' Fe 4-1301 I Meney to lean CASH TO $1,000 INSURED PAYMENT PLAN AVAILABLE Baxter (S. Livingstone Finonce Co. 401 PontlK ttata Rank Ruildlng F« 4-llM-f THE U $ I- CHOICl ......... OVER MICHIGAN I. NEW "MICHIGAN TOR PARTRIDGE, )M W. HURON, FE 4-lMI, MEM-RER PARTRIDOe R ASSOC.. INC., 14 MICHIGAN OFFICES.__________ I Ri$YAuiAHT~?mnr'5# i laratina ’ condllle HAROLD R. FRANKS, REALTY 1503 Union Laka Road EM _______________EM 1-7111 WILL EXCHANGE tM.SOO laka-trant homo. ] bad ' roonu, 1'^ balht, flraplaca, built 1 ino, carpatt, drapat. ate. Eoulty tll.Sn. Taka tmallar homo or oflica and apartmantt. I LEW HILEMAN, S.E.C. Reoltor-Exchongor i 10^ W^ HURON______FE 4-lS7» WANT TO BUY A ! DRUG STORE? REALTOR PARTRIDGE ' Is the Bird to See 1850 W. HURON_______ FE 4-3301 GOOD NEWS! 51,000-That Is the Amount We Con Now Lend You Sorrow hart lor cath noadt contolldale pratant bllli Into ona account with only ona payment to meat each month Our larvica It tail, convanlant with axparlancad countalori from aver 13 years tarv-Inp Ihit area. Slap In today or phono FE 5-1111 for arrangtmantt. Home & Auto Loon Co. N. Ferry Sf. FE 54111 Noun: » to 1 dally; Sof. 0 fo i LOANS 113 TO 11.000 COMMUNITY LOAN CO. 1 E LAWRENCE FE 0-0411 ' MONEY TO LOAN WHfNTOU NEED $25 to $1,000 '^'state' fi'NAl3cE"c6"' TIZZY By KateOunn ...... ASFHALT TILE ..... 4c Oa. MM iy&RE?H*LAK^%OAD 0xirTlu5$rfeRANd~HIWT=eXM back. I14.fs up. RralM ruRt, m.00. Axmlntitr haavy rug ^t WJS^ LlfWloum..ru|t J4.PS. Faar- - 5-17M. ii-:n£h uskD TV FE H157. , Walton Cofw ot......... » N. TEbfORAFH. MIKELLA14- 1 out houthold Itomt._____________ W INCH ELEcHTc STOVE. EXC. condition; Kalvinator rafrlgarotor; 14 In. Konmort gat ttove Call a m. FE 04410. _____________ A SINGtR AUTOMATIC IN WOOD cabinal Doot ombroMory, blind hamt, buttonholot, towt on but-lont, 'monagramt, ale. Simply by lattino the dial. Accept S3.71 monthly or full balance of tSO.40 on now contract and guarantaa. Michigan Nacchl ■ EMa. FE ^11. TV't ................... 01t.PS 'up Driart ...................... W.S0 SWEET'S RADIO R APPLIANCE 411 W. Huron St.____________M4-S477 ASOUT ANYTHING YOU WANT FOR THE HOME CAN RE FOUND AT L R S SALES. A tlltio out af ttw way but a lot Iota to pay. Fumituro and appllancat of all kMt NEW AND USED. Vltll our fPado dapt. for real bargalnt. ^YRAR-OLD CONN ORGAN, PER fact tor homo or church. MA S-11M. _____________ RAubwiN 6ROA-iONic sfTnIt ifh. call Mr. Rlggt, ) by SaWwIn. I y flnlth. Large American char Ingt. CALSI MUSIC CO. no N. SAGINAW __________FE 5-0113 For Rent: to School Bond and Orchestra Students: Clarlnatt, Flutos, Drum l..._ . Trombonat, Coronatt, Trumpets VIolInt, VIolat, ok. U.m par month plua fa: You pay r*--------- kits. 34 S. Talagraph Rd. FE 2-0567 (Acroti from Tal-Huroni CONSOLE CHORD OtIGAN, UN paid balana S44. Curt's Appliance OR 4-lltl._______________________ FULL SET Vff^L "IUfIR CLASSIC" d pearl caaat It Including a Store Iqwlpwiimt 1 RURROUOHS ELECTRIC ITEM-IkUCTIONS WEDNESDAYS lilng caah roRlttorlfiR machlna, IIP*' wiii-o-wav Country Mart. ■ T llfats. SOI .......... 731 Auction Soles ^ IONS WEDNE.—,.. ....... 0-Way Country Mart. Ill V Roe-TAiL unit for soda foOn- Rest of EVERY FRIDAY nets, best offer. Can be so Top Value Redemption Miracle Mila, dally betwei I Ruy-Selt-Trade, etall t CantlgHmenlf welcome ot Dixie Hwy. OR Days OR i-ri7 _______ ______ „ _______ J qiiality llfatima guarantee ... Orwizad Travelcadet. All salt oantalnae. CHECK THE REST -THEN COMPARE CENTURY Complete service an hitch Inttalla I EACH WANTED-10 OR II GAUGE I t" --------- » or 14 go. dou- 12-3. DA f IMS, Mod. 740C REfW .NO and .373 fine handgut _ binoculars, Kwas. AMMUNITION for . 70 MAGNUMS 1.144, shotguns, rifles. owner - call lor details It accepted—will buy guns i K) - what have yout Call at . )on -- any time until midnight Friday night, 7;N p.m. — ..... Htusetrillers SPECIAL SQUARE DANCE Salurday night, Nov. 1, 1:00 Everyone Invited._____________, PiiHts-Treet-Sfcrubs________B1 -A AI TREES, SHADE TREES, spruce, pine, fir. ■" hemlock, mugno. Detroiter Alma Pontioc Finest In Mobile Living ■. ! CHECK THESE TREMENDOUS SELL ALL CVMBIDIUM ORCHID - I planti. 1304 Ml. Clement St. j E Livestock 13 buy, tell or trade. Cgmd out look around, 1 acres of free . parking. Phone FE S4141. 1 Open Aton. to Sat. Mj FrI. M 14 MONTHS TO FAY “I think I’d like marriage. Of course, a lot would depend on the fellow I marry!” CUT YOUR PAYMENTS ONE-HALF ^ wick cash home .loon up te , VOM *nd BucliMr, it W. Huron St.p Room 309. Phono Fg 4.4739. HOMf OWNtRS CASH UNLIMITED Ixclutlva plan. Remodel y --- Fay past or curront b FOR FAST ACTION CALL WARDEN REALTY { 3434 W, Huron, Fenfloc 113-7I57 BEER STORE AND PROPERTY Good preparW, corner, near Tela-1 graph and Elliabafh Laka Road Parkino lot, old owner clotat I; p m. Real potantial hare. A-l < equipment. S3.SOO total down. In (ludlng big stock. Call Ryan. M3-4313. mortgage on one ACRE UP. WHh liRfool frontaga. No aapreltal foe. B. D. CharletTRoyHabla Farm Loan larvica. 1717 S. Telegraph. FE 44311._________________ bAIRY Q r BEER - CASH Loans to $3,000 and table, upholtfered chair, waF nut formica iaMo. 4 chairt, 1 table lamps. Reaaonable prieaa. 4444iat BUNK BEOS (BRAND NEWl 'vrnmin, SIS E. FI FE 4-1144 CEILING tile - ■■ Wall Tlla _________ ______ 4c Ft. UP Flaaflc Wall Tlla ......... 1c each fbiyl Floorint ........ 4Pc aa. yd. IBP Tlla FE 44457, 1B7S WT Htiren Uaad Hudson Rafrigaratar. Uiad 4Blnch EHidric Ranga “sjfsmc^r Realty - TAYLOR - Intui TAYLI------- -- -----a Rd. (M-3P) OR 44301 FACTORY BUILDING 1 Suburbdn. 34M aguara faaf. Modern offica. (iood labor area. Room lor axpontlon. SacrHIcal MICHIGAN ' Business Soles, Inc. JOHN LANDMEUER, BROKER 1573 Talogroph FE 4-1511 PRIME PURE OIL SERVICE SfA-lion fbr loose in Lake Orion. For Information on tnis oxcolleni busMooo opportunlw coll Mr, Don Hermonson of 451-3144.___: RESTAURANT FOR LEAST. MUST I buy all small equigmtni. Grtat dpportunltjr for tonwena with InHIa- .... paynianf. He dining coat, am tift Mturanca ktcludad an unpak balance at NO EXTRA COST. Repay ovtr a Convenlanf Term Phone or Apply In Farton Family AccEptanci Corp. 117 Nafiontl Bldg. 10 W. Hurai Telephone FE S-4013 ^ A3 ^FAMILV PLUS 400 SQUARE faaf oNica or ttort on Olxic. hi Droyton. taoOS. Includot oitro lol Mokt offor on down poymont or trodo. OR 3-lf7t ._____________ 14-foot fiber6las runabout, IGhorsapower engino, trollor ond skit lor lighfweighl motercyclot, NO CC to 4N CC. 413-1117. ftS4 PONTIAC, WILL TRADE FOR taps rocordor--------‘ 473-1011 bOfori AKC german SHEPHEl ■ - 4134441. MICHIGAN" ELIVERV- -FRBI HOME WHOLkaHCE MEATS AND GROCERIES All nstlsnolly tdvsrfltad brands. Sdvbtgt UP to « ptr cml. lotw. sugar, coffst, fwur, BufSor, cokt mix, carpal, soup, voMaWts, fruit lukot, Klaanax, pal imlk. YESI UP TO 40 PER CENT For trao csfotH a>W btformptlen CTicr;47.^.g “ GAS STOVE, GOOD CONDITION. 015. I0H071 otTor 4 p.m. GE DRYER, LIKt NEW, ONLY Stole Wide-Lakt Orion OA 0 1400 AFTER S OL 1-3403 TROUBLE IS You won't look or thit ropoir go-r*g« would hovt hod now owner long MO velut It lU' of OlKle Hwy deootK. totel price $14M; 13,500 HAGSTROM 4S00 W. Huron OR 44330 Evoningt colt OR 34H7 Sole Uiid CwrtnKto A6 20% DISCOUNT CASH FOR USED TV'S, WORKING or net. 3314M7. ____ FOR SALE OR TRADE-RED . _j$"“equ1p«6“fTr for? FE 4-3141. 9wney’ SUsd' ^‘rotroads. 'Car liras. Market Tire, 77 FE|—- - _________ ^.. condition, SN. FE S4117. ______________ GOOD REFRIOERATOR, ON. SAVE WRECKER WITH HEAVY DUTY eincn. SIN or will trodo for !il"?43«I "Swr f p.m!**_____ 25% DISCOUNT S1.01S off Iho M440 bolonca. Pays MO par month, Includinii 4% in-tsrotf. R04l good 1-lsmny house, intogrotod nol^rhood. S4.04S to hondio VoMJ Hoy Roolty, 345 Ook-lond. FE 4-3031. hwTing TOff re ^_____________ WILL I6LL qR T K A DJE FOR phone OA $-10$. truck ACTION en yeur tend contreef, large or-tmefl. Cell Mr. HIHery Ff f"0179. Brokf, Ifco gllMbem Letee Roed. •* AN IMMCDIATR SaLe II FOR YOUR Land Contracts SEASONED LAN W«Htot CMtrKto-Mtf. AO-A Land Contracts Stouts n Fg 341 ’iSi'n.'*? I. J. von WON. 4540 D CASH our land confr^ ?!oi?t'l to Lmm TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 202 N. MAIN ROCHESTER ROMEO 214 E. ST. CLAIR I LOANS SIS TO 51,000 * AUTOS LIVESTOCK ----------n„. OL 14701 HOUSEHOLD GOOOi OL 4-7011 ~ PL MIIO,^ PL MS10 BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY I WHERE YOU CAN f BORROW UP TO $1,000 Fon«M^^*F.!ff«.-Uflc “"''cash'" Lexins to $3>000 CdMOllddIa your Mis with only balance ot NO EXTRA COST. Ropoy svar 0 canvonlont Mrm. Thono or Apply In Parson. Fomily AwiptancE Corp. Silt citlfciiia Bargain Box 443 S. Woodward, birmloghom Back Raam Bargains Far 2 Days Only. 10 a.m. ta 5 p.m. Thors., Oct. 31, And Fri., Nav. 1. ergo loNiIng '‘tSw, S30rMI-3303T~ LADIES' HUNTING SUIT, MRS. boy-coot. 1M4, skirts, also party dross. Reosenoble. 334-1411. la()Iev designer clothAs, sin I. Coils, dros^ slacks, euf- tlfi. Also purses. LI S-7H1._____ GRAY FUR COAT, CLOTH COATS, drasses and skirtv sin 14-14. aim Bulova wrist watch. Very reai^-able. After 3:30 p.m., call PE Sab HtEMheld G^s 1 EEDROOM SUITE, a-INCH TV, CIRCULATING COAL WOOD up. GE electr Ourotherm o erything fPr the Ii price*. Feerion'f I E. Pike. FE 4-7M1. KIRBY aid. Ilka new com 0314414 attar 3. tot, oxcsiloni csndllk table and 1 cfwirt. n bedroom choir, 1 He____________ and box whM and an Easy Spin-dryar. FE 4-W PfTar 4. LIKE NEW FLAY #4n, BATHIN-atla and bouncy choir, used 3 mao. S30. Also Glbasn olactrlc otovo. LIQUIDATING .. 'Ing room or . Mutt bo movod i .—...... building for etha ness. Easy forms. . BEDROOM OUTFITTING 4703 Dixie Orayfsn ____________OR >4734 ___________ MAPLE BEDROOM toT, M BED. box spring and mattraia, small dratsar, desk, chair, boakcaae. UO. 411-3774 after 3 p.m. MAPLE btSK. LIKE NEW, tSS. NEW AND USED CARPETING FOR salt. V------------------------- Ing ar Seles,---------—......— . ter, peat John R. ISl-1444. PAY CASH FOR . YOUR FURNI- Fomily Accaptanct Corp. 117 Notional BMg. 14 W. Hurl Talaphona PE I44B3 RENEWED APPLIANCES Speed Quean washers. Ilka new, guaranteed ..................S Easy spinners, guerenteed S Electric dryer ...............» Gas dryer, guerenteed S 33M143. 1 OVEN ELECTRIC STOVE AND living room fumjture, FE 1-1414. 2 BARGAIN HOUSES Grand Opaning Sptcials New Bargain House at 1444 Baldwin at Walton Open until 4 p.m. during solo BEAUTIFUL NEW 1-pleco Frioio living rooms, brand now with lip-par foam cushions, 1 end tablaa. cetfaa table, and 1 lampa. Choica ot colors. All for $97 large 4-piece bedroom sals, brand naw. Clwloa of colors, gray. $59 Used Gas ond Else. Sh»»a» *>♦ «P Rebuilt Woshors, Mayfoa etc. S»^ Uosd Ommg Rmm Sulfa MJ Used Bedroom SuWo JM Xo’g*c'3S““’.*^. lit Vo^oW^F-torv^ %nd All Used Fumituro bargXih*hou$e buy SELL TRADE 1444 Baldwin ot 143 H. Cass rt Lofoyefto FE 1 i-piicE Gktv nylon frikA HvliiB room ouHIt. Odd tabjM. 14mm proldelor. RCA rodjo diM record pMygr. Lkttnt. Eltctrlc comfortorniilK. Ml 44114. 1 itltcfe HCTWB ■uHo. 44S4IU dflar S g.m. iiUliMllk^^ JT 6 V 1-Wmt USi 11" ------- Tire uryor, BMj wtOnm, mv, stove. Ml. FE »ri4. V. Horrii. revere ware, dunes. HE.._ beard, fIropiKO lomgo. FE 4-SI14. REVELATION VACUUM, ALL AT- SIMMONS CHAIR. AKAKES INTO $in6er console ZIG-BAG I L^1|d soNctton. OR 4-1141. SINGER AUTOMATIC needed. Curt's a; Sglece dlnelto set, 4 chrome cha formica lop laWP, I baekcaaa txil ruB bieludad. All (or 11(4. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. 17 E. HURON FE 14 W. PIKE FE M SINGER AUTOMATIC ZIO ZA& SEWING MACHINE. Dial modal. Makat buNon belaa, avdreaoir olfna aft. Walnut cabbiat. Pa account ki 7 months at IS , mo. ar tSS cash balanca. I varoal Campany, FE 44444. SPECIAL ’~7 tl" TV S4UI, ribuIN GBI auto, waihar M4„ rotrlgarafer " " fraatar, tn.M. many o ^4a. Mkh. $«le GMdf M Take Dver Payments On wringer woshors, like now, trodo-Int. $1.5D Per Week GDODYEAR STORE 34 S Cost FE 3-4113 F»r Salt MiudllciMMi 67 ^ GARAGE RUMMAGE SALEs 77M i Simpson off Auburn batwoon i Crooks and Livernoit. UL >1457. | HAND LAWN MOWER* IE-INCH cut. Good condition. 17.90. 33S-7943 •Htr • o.m. Eridoy. . i KENMORE ELECTRIC SEWING machine, cebkiel model. GE wring- , er type weoher. lIBgdI- 'uel oil tank WHh littingt. Wooden frame storm windows. FE 1-4053 be- ! tween 14 s.m to 2 p.m. | ONLY $75 1. Evsrhot Heater 1' manufactured by TEMP-RITE 45 GALLON CAPACITY, 51 GAL- . LON PER HOUR RECOVERY. ' Gds Fired AUTOMATIC CONTRbL, MODEL ' NUMBER t5-ngl Gloss Lined for further INFORMATION WRITE PONTIAC PRESS BOX 31 : HAVE TOUR ELECTRIC RAZOR ! ciaanad and edluotod on eur spe- ' ciel Ulfratonk AAachIne of lOM »clst par iscend. GENERAL PRINTING AND OFFICE SUP- | FLY, 17 W. Lowcpncd St. | TEN-YEAR "141" NYLON - IN-otallod with rubber pad, M.45 yd A-l Carpal laNo FE 47ll4 WALNUT ItOOERN BtOROOM -Now mottrttt and springs. White •awing machine. Oeybed. OR 44(44. < WHIRLPOOL REFRIGIRATOR. ' IBM iww. 11 Cu. F(. Ills. FE j 1-MSr. 4407 Crecus. WHIRLPOOL IMFtRIAL AUTOA4A-1 tk wtNMr er llabwlnf dkhwaHwr. Tridl (or door rMr Ft SB371 WYMAN'S UIID BARGAIN STORE S«loco Mmk dInalM oat U4 (3 s.ti Livirti rm. tult* «9.« ssr.c§sr*;-fs:r«.r li'*V?'%ko kooy Torino Fi 411*4 HOT WATER BASEBOARD SPECIAL i S1K par ft. Thompasn. TSOS AMI Wo^ panel truck, used truck tiros. FE 2-71(7, AwHfwi tri-icale shop, antiques. 1 S. FAOOOCK W-n, TV « 1^ M KITCHEN CARINkt SINKS, Krotchod 42" modal, W volut, 144.34, wbllo Ihty last. Torrlfk voluet en S4" and 44" modtis. Michigan Fluortacanf, 3(3 Or-thpro Laka. - 5 BYEAR-OLO SILVERTOHE HI-FI and rodk combliMtlen with tfind, dxcdlltnt condition. MA 5-1331. KOTON - THE NON-FEELING ptinf - It brtpthao, 14.(3 par gel. Full line of Cllddwi painft. War wick supply Co., 2in Orchard Lake Rd. 443-1414. For uttd Sftrooi and TV. (Bdoy oxchongt warranty. SYLVAN ITEREO-TV 442-01(( LAVATORIES, COMPLETE, S14.S4 vilut, 114.(3) also battitubo, lol- ' ktt. shower stallo. Irregulars, ; torrillc values. Michigan Fiuorot- 1 cant, Kl Orchard Lake. — 1 AAATCHING ring tkT, 4150. ! 451-1341. COMING SOON ON 5R ABOUT Novombor 1st. LAFAYETTE RADIO ELECTRONICS ASSOCIATE STORE, 111 Hpmllton, Birmingham. Phtno 444B14S. Main store, phone HI-1155. ?OR SALE-llINCH MAJESTIC television. Call FE 41241. aaatcheo wedding ring set, 5300 valut (or $150. 451-3343. special offer LIMIT TIME ONLY-FREE with ovary TV pur^tod, ooe »P^ of Molmoc dinner wore. Prices “V F. OCDORICH (TORE HI N. Perry FE_l-OIH Ciif5'~Tvriir"GS5o''wORx 1N G condition, 27" - Blond, mohog-any or walnut, SS4. GRINNELL'S Odwitfown SlU FE 3-7144 OFFICE furniture AND AAA-ghlnot. ForbH Printing B Offica Supply. 4544 Dlxk Hwy. OR 3-(747. ornamental iron PdkCH AN(3 stop railing oomert. ond posts. Av7^ CABINETS, 1570 Opdyke. FE OIL SPACE HEATEE. 230-GALLON tank ftaaionable. EM 3-046I. PLYSCORD CASH AND CARRY H" 4'xt' Sl.(5 W" 4'x4' S3.I5 'V' plugged end sanded S4.25 SO" 4'xl' S4.X So" plugged ond sandad . $4.(4 VONTIAC PLYWOOD 1444 Baldwin FE 2-2S43 For Mt MbMNmMM 67 (^ SEE MODEL HOME WITH rovilXioTrooIld VINYL SIDING. Many ttmot foughor t^ any tiding on tta markit. WILL N(>T DENT AND HAIL CANNOT DAAAAOE. ColOf It cloor ttiru,*o no point to wear off. Btforo you buy tiding. It will be worth your 1 trip to Inw^ thIt baautiful iW-ing. Inotailod at 4444 Orion Rd., RechMttr, cor. Elm Hill, '4 ml. N. of Northlll ihopplng Cinfor; Pita Akim, tiding, tformt. awn- J<)?*'VALLELY CO. FE M545 No menty down OL 1-44U PLUMBING BARGAINS FREE Standing lollol, SI4.(S; SlFgellon hoator. S4(BS; 3-piaco both sots, S3(.(5. Laundry troy, trim, Sl(.(5. 33-Inch shower ttoli. trim, $32.(5. 1-bowl sink, U.(5) Lavs., $2.(5; tubs, SIS and up. Pipe cut ond throodod. SAVE PLUMBING CO., 171 S. Soglnew, FE S-2100. PLYwd65 OP ALL KINbS Plywood Olit. FE 2-0499 1 144,444 BTU OAS FORCiO-AIR RIDING LAWNMOWER) AUTOAAAT- ic *»y*f-o* *'pllirod'^Oyi't^Rwitdi* Vc ^44*«! 1 1 RIDING MOWERS, 1 RED tYPE, 1 Filrbinkt Marti roliry. 4" Atlas tioctrk 44W on standard. 3 storm wkidowo, HxSS, wooden fromtt. 1 octagon game toblo, icothar lop. Roaaonpbit. FE 41444. SINbER SEWiMg machine, tiC logger. Deluxe model — built-in motor - bland eabinat. Tok# over payments ef S4 par month tor 7 me. or S41 tdoh bolonca. Uni-versol Cempony. FE 44N4S. ' ANCHOR FiNCES NO MONEY DOWN FE 5-7471 ANtibOkS, HAVILAND, HOUIE-hoW gaodo. Sat., only, call 441-2551. STALL SHOWERS, COAAPLkTk with louccts and curttint. S44.M valut, 134.90. Lavatoriot, com-pitta with fauettt* $14.99; toiiati. 111.95. Mtchijan Fluorttcant, 993 Orchard Laka. - 37 A GUARANTkEO SINGER WITH ilg sag occattoriat for bufton- ifr'nSSi'rj-urpSic? sjibP'o^? now contract paymontt of Sl.tS , monttily. Mkhlgan Ntcchl-E I n o ' FE 4461. SEWER hPE CHANNEL PIPE — PEEF. PIPE WALL COPING-FLUE LINEE COMPLETE STOCK OF FITTINGS 4" DEAIN TILE-IOC EA.-PICKUP ELAYLOCK COAL 4 SUPPLY CO. •1 Orchard Laka Ava. FE 9-7101 RARCAIN: STORM WINOOWa •nd doorie oil tankt, ttc. FE y7M. , BAfHROOM FIXTURES. OIL AND 1 got fumocM. Hof wttar and steam boiler. Autamotic water heeler. Hardware, elec supplies, crock end pipe ond llttlngt. Lowe Brothers Paint, Supw Kemlone end Rus-1 toleum. HEIGHTS SUPPLY IMS Lepew Rd. FE 4S431 STAINLESS STEEL STORE FREE! er with compressor. Reasonable. Fetters Merkel, 5177 Cess-Ellie-bath Rd. S41-(4(4. SKATES FOR CHRISTMAS? BOV'S FIGURE, SIZE 7. S3; SIZE ( 54; GIRL'S SIZE 12, S5: LADIES' FIGURE, SIZE 7, U: CHILD'S ROCKER SEAT, S3: 14-IN. TRICYCLE, $4; 14-IN. TRICYCLE, S4; SWING SET, S14: Lightweight bowling ball, SI; BOY'S SPORT COAT, SIZE 11-14, S5. MY 3-1714 AFTER 4 P.M. SMALL OIL BUkNER, GOOD CON-dltlon, S14. FE S-4434. BkEF AND PORK - HALF AND quarters. Opdyke Mkt. FE 5-7(41. BUMPER • POOL TABLE, LIKE new, S4S. OL 1-1S54. 1 Bottle Gas Installation Two IIBpound cylinders end equlp-' m«it. 111. Greet Plaint Gat Co.. FE 40471. COMPLETE NEW BEAUTY SHOP oquipmont, Sim FE 3-4731. CABiNfTS stock or custom. Coll us first. Day : pMd??fi??rEN SPECIALTIES ‘ 917 Orc^•fd L9k9 Rd. SPECIALS Fre-Flnlshed Mao. 4x1 S3.« Y$" HARDBOaRD 4xS 51.4( V," Frt-Finithed Birch 4x4 S4.(5 DRAYTON PLYWOOD 2411 Dixit Hwy. OR 3-4(11 COMPLJSTE STOCK OF FIFE AND fitting. Custom ttiratding. Imnwdi-tto service. Montcalm Supply, 154 W. AtanlCPlm. FE 44712. .SURPLUS < Bolls-Nuls-Weshtri-etc. 14c Ib. up. 104.444 misc. new, uttd and tur-plus Hems, el the Whoopee Bowl. (S40 Dixie Hwy. MA 54)111. DRAPES-1 PAIR FAINTED FLOR-al drapn, blue-grey background with comlcot covered In tame beautiful melorlel. S25. 3315 Lex-mglon Drive, Scott Lake, after 4. Talbott lumber Gliis Inttallad in doors and win-l^'oeklend Ave. FE (45(5 tUtlngs, S45. Cdl OL 1-1(14 etttr 4 p.m. ' D & J CABINET SHOP For batter built custom cdbincis, I too our cobincts on display. I4SS 1 W Huron. 1340(1(. After 4 p.m. 34l-n4j. DIscantInuad formica 25c E*ECTRIC LIGHT FIXTURES ALL ' rooms, l(41*^iilo|ns: pull dwn, bolloon, tfort. Bedroom, Sl.lS; 1 porch. SI.55. Irrogulort. samples 1 - FrkM only factory cmi glva. Mkhlgen FluoreKsM, 3(3 Or-1 chord LpIm. — 1( TeeBMw wttt. THE SALVATION ARMY REO SHIELD STORE IIS WEST HURON ST. Evtrylhins Io -nett your noodi. CtoNtlng, Furniture, Applldncoi. USED OIL^FURNACC - EXCkL-lont cendttlan, MA S-IS41 er MA 5-2S17. USED COVERED LnA^K BOOTHS, ideol tor rocreetlon room or ro-xtauranl. OR 4-1444. FRff “ Intorlor gee limg fraa with ihp purchase of a new Tippan rengc,' M«ak Chef range er Hamlnan cMmo dryer before November I. 1 FhHIlps Petroleum Co„ 1 "Authorized Daelar" VANiTV and HAND BASIN SET ufk complott, $5(.(S. B toHolt slf.fS a** outomatk wator haiton, S4>. Thompoon't 740S MW wait. WRINGkk WASHER, SIS; VANITY, SIS: foMIng colt, S3; contolo radio; Parker St-ki. lawn twoopor, S1I; lB4t. oxtonilpn ladder. 111; mloc. 7« Modloon, Birmingham, 4-7 p.m. Tuoidoy and wtdnaidoy. . GAS FURNACE, USED, LIKE NEW. 1 CALL FE 2-7144 ■ OAS SPACE HlATEHB. ALL SitkS ; Pt^jjorgelnt. Thompdon'i, 77tl M5( Chriitiwie Treks 6^ 14.404 WILL SHAPED SCOTCH pIno Iraat lor solo, rpol bar«ln In guonify, 14 mile* north el Pen-tfe^OA holbsalb Scotch Fbw. 1 mile s(^ of Hole on M-4S. A and • ixcovating. Fhwid RA BW4S^ •proytd and' prunad whotcoola, OR 1-44(1 ar Ml 4-1711. . Okbu^ V6ur misceloneous Mils wRh 4 CanooHdotlon Loan up to sues. Canvtolenf piympnn and life kiouranct at NO EXTRA COST Phone or Apply In Parson. ! Family Acceptonco Corp. ( SIT NpH^mMU*. ^le W. Huran 1 ^Sm2hf7ond p^lBHritoop Homo. 473-1457. RENT • . S NEW GSINNEU PIANO Music lassons Included Chaotayour otyla and finish All payments apply If you buy $2.00 PER WEEK Grinnell'S' NEW H AUTOMATIC WITH SCOPE. ^TENNESSEE 130. FE 3-71(5______ ' walker. MY l-30((......... CUSTOM-MADE CAMPER, EIE(: 4-H REGISTE«D EWES. trie lights, gas lights, carpeting. _ MY 1-3111_^ ^ Mounlod on lOU Chevy Pick up. (ThIviOT RAM, 3 YE^S Save evor 11,144. 474-ll5(_, MAple 5-II15 DEER HUNTING CAMP. SET UP ’ EVENING AND SATURDAY MATiafe*"* IniPection. p|p,^Q LESSONS MAN'S WOOL DEii HUNTING *LL APPALOOSA H()RSE5 44 Cheep FE 1-7453 Cliildrcii. Acfults !AL SHOTGUNS HORSES BOARDED Alter 7 pm, GOLDEN H CORRAL 1964 Modtls- 144x19 1-bedroom ......... Wt 134x10 7-bedroom M50 dn. 34x10 3-bod room ...... 44»S dn. 54x10 Spon-O-WIdd ..... 4745 do. 1 MUST SELL several SHOTGUNS Over 30 ndw modolo on dltpldy- -USED BARGAINS- I and lb wMet, I, 1 and 1 badreams, - or IS fo lolact from. lob Hutchinson MOBILE HOMBS„_ . 4301 Dixie Highway _ . OR 1-1141 Drayton FMkia Open ( 10 ♦ Dolly I Sun. IS-i intl-ng «l.,-slt. U Exmllwtrcon. „ . _____ BROWNING AUTOMATIC. SWEET ----SOXITmOBILB HOME FljRhT$inr6 sixteen, like new. Springlleld 30.04 PLEASURE HORSES - 1 MARES, up on lot. Must soli. EM wi^ Bishop’s slock, obert ' i.J,o ® *' *** i 3-lMl.______ OR^yiSI ^ Niw^^oTN^STABL^^ wmOhtfclOW NOAWO - this IS THE ONE. I Intorost rota. HT-OwT . FE t-tOtl honE and all I -I condition, cheap. Wo hove lust a tow left -CAMPER ond FIBEROLAS B Combined - Hot Ics box twin bod. ONLY S4fS. Free-Free We will give you ISO oft on sporting equipment, buy i NpMAO Cerne... Remodeling Sole In time tor hunters (10 04. ( OFF e- ---------■— “ incll"'- tlls. Riding Instructions a s. Groups'welcome. HORSES BOARDED iPONNr i ; yrt.___________ Wh*f^ vw Hty*GraiihFM4 HAY. STRAW. . DELIVERED. AL'S 773 Scott Lake Rd.. FE 4-4HS viulching hay. call em's-ism oNer 5 _________ " FSlllHOUri STRUBlt FE B40ts FE e-iieo WHEAT STRAW, 40c ^ALE DELIV-- REASONAiLE. ieX47' GA*0 RENT A Trump#t, Cornet, Trombone, Flute, Clorinet, Violin or Snare Drum Kit $5.00 thorliod daolar r Lyman-Bu owning scof 85 iForiN hU«CE B6 REMINGTON, ITHACA, WEATH- ERBV Guns on display ‘'kofe mounting GUNSMITHING /d. end too yd. and Trap Shooting UNLIMITED RENT .... i^lL*^VM!.EGEl Grinnells sH5p"Ar~ GRINNELL'S DOWNTOWN For Bargains SPINETS FROM S3M GRAND PIANOS FROM t14( PRACTICE PIANOS S30 UP GRINNELL'S Rangt and Trap Shoot , COLT PISTOLS Spaclol - l''t-powor scope, cot Inst, ond sighlod In lor,S4(.(5. Cliff Oreyer Gun ond Sports Center 15310 Holly Rd., Holly “■ ''' 44771 __ : - Sales __________ .. cktood Iho lost ...J woaks of October. Rao( day, Nov. 4lh with rock-bottom prices on 1(43 ------- ---------- tors ond factory 'apples and CIDER. MAHAN OR-, chord, 411 E. Walton, I block oast of Joslyn, closod Sundoyt. 'apples - NEW SALeSRpOM open at Stony Creak Orrtord. Popular vorictles of qualify f r u 11 •10 Ross, tar, IVi 31 Milo bushel. Rice 14' wide Ognerel. • eaimldM le, 1 or 3 btdroemt. Thdcd onus on diaploy rl^t npw. n other now IV wIdM plua H uadd coachdo, all priett. Frietd to oult the buyer, tormt rootonablo. OXFORD TRAILER MLES south of Lake Orion an MU ______ MY 1-4711 Porthunl Troihr Sain SM U% Nov. 4m t. open dr"" *-* SSi *lhwlISh I ity' fruit.*'Mroolnt* In I Apocht tocl '(^^ 0_rchord^_ _1143_^Ejtt^^Com-| Oxtor^ ; COMPLETE STOCK OF RTfLES SHOTGUNS. Asiortod ommunitii ! Mutt bo told. Sid's. 11 N. Segine :: APPLES: PICK VOUR OWN.^M ______ .. M14, next to Albin Country Cousin. MY 1-4411. SHORTS MOeiLE HdMEk hqmf typo trplltri. DOWN. Coro wired Lloonodj odiustad, MORRIS MUSIC 34 S. Toldgroph Rd._ . .. FE 1-0547 ---- ORGANS Priced from S4(5 You'll Do Bettor At Bettorly't LEW BETTERLY MUSIC io. M 44001 Free PorKIng In Roar (Acreot from Birmingham T^oforl RECONDITIONED PRACTICE PI- SMALL GRAND PIANO, REFIN-Ithtd with ntw kayo. Ilka new. Ustd Console piano 1(30, now 1550 Player piano 19(3, now (7(3. 13 Now rolls Lowrey Organ - 1 manual. 11 Low^ wllh^m-ln Lotllo speaker ny many others, buy now and save Up to (0 monfht (o pay, (0 days tamo ot cosh. Gollogher Music Co. II East Huron Open Monday Ihur Friday 'fll ( Sat., 5:14 p.m. FE 4^566 STORY AND CLARK SPINET FI- LLE dUITARS". . . accord^ns Lopnort ond lotoont. FE 5-5411 TRUMPET AND CASE. LIKE NEW. USED CONN SPINET ORGAN Mahogany ................. (431 Floor Modal Thomas Modal I I .............. (47(.3I . Vurlltior Fiona Model 14 Early Americen with bench 'Aaple ................... 173: Wiegond Music Co. WURLITZER - THOMAS DEALER ShMf f------- FE 2-4924 IF YOU WANT TO SELL Your Piano CALL MR. STEFFENS AT GrinnelLs CLOSE OUT SALE OF ALL NEW end used office desks, chelrv -------------------------------- piecds. ForbM.' ____ ______, Orayfon Flakii. K747. We buy end MODERI fumifu NEW PORTABLE TYFfewRITtR, To Buy, Rent, Sell or Trade Use Pontiac Press WANT ADS 14 PER CENT -'d hiicr— ' parts FE 4(743'"” 3I71"wT epd hitches Instelled. C of ports and betllo apt. Wonted Cleon TrolMrt $aii4-6ravel-Dirt FE 4-4M4 Scott Lake R BATTERY CHARGER, 111 I ■ 431-3343 ”' “|A»to StrvicB S35 40'--- $17.30 CRANKSHAFT GRINDINO IN THE 121.501 cor. Cylindort roborod. Zuck M^ SI2.1S Chino Shop. 21 Hood, Fhon# FE 1 TrucklhB, FEj imokod horn, canter cot In ell. only 25 lb. Hogs lot BLACK DIRT, TOP SOIL, fill, gr- -....... ...... —IzilZz------------------------ 1 2) ID. Hogs TOT BROKEN SIDEWALK FOR RETAIN-I23 ib Pig head. Ing W0II4 DoUvorod. FE 4yi. | tongue, only CHOICk FARM TOP S&IL, 5125 lb Lean slewing ... Virosr 110 tnd dirt « yardtr' Richmond Moot Pockors IIP, otuvorod. FE S"9831._____, jmo HiflhlMd Rd. DARK, *iCh farm TOP SOIL, S i,i23:Motorcycki 95 S 1.(51 ' ----------------------- 1(42 TRIUMPH BONNEVILLE. SAO-5 1.13. die begs, 1 helmets and wlnd- 5 1.15 shield. MSB IB7-4474________ HONDA 105, t, SIB d htip cut i mlBkycIte USED 15 UP: I H(.a4 UP. FILL ■ SAND,. GRAVEL, BLACK --- ■ ^ dlH OR S^iTt Oulek ft»rvlC4 Plant No. OR 4"l440. 0, «.x w. . .v... " (7b? " Sunday. c\of. lYll^ ------df FUde, many extres, 'rtlkr, rtl k _________ . . - ___ _______________ 87 excellent conditlen. 51.1(5 offer 4, PONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS SUP-1------------------ LOADING DAILY FROM 7 A 4I5S4. sand, gra> I dirt. OR WMd-Co«l-CekE-F«el 1(51 FORD TRACTOR, (373 . ---: I CALL FE 3-((l7 I 77' NEW AND REBUILT CORN PICK- LANDSCAPING, WOOD OF kktdo, tree removal. PE 4-4HI. USED TRACTORS sizes end makes KING BROS, ‘li , 79 FE 4 0734 FE 41447, Atttntion Boottrsl DON'T WAIT-DON'T HESITATE UP TO 3Cl% DISCOUNT! CHOOSE YOUR OUTFIT NOW BOATS MOTORS TRAILERS LAV-AWAY AND TERMS MERCURV.BC0TT.WE$T BEND Boot Motor Storagt CRUISE-OUT BOAT SAlJt _ •■/illon 4.10 4 FE l-*44» kviNRlIbTiv Bpofo'ond Act0440rl04, ... ...“FIRSfGkNO JAVe, JOHN: '""^hARo’tO 'PINO"* DEERE, HARTLAND AREA DAWSON'S SALES 1 CHOWS. I TINY TERRIERS, I HOWE. FheneJjARTLAND 1511. | coko -------------------- Trivtl Traitors M " down, SI.2S 0 weak. FE 5-3111 AKC GERMAN SHORTHAIRED Fointor pups. 3341005 or 334-3047. AKC 0 AC H SHU NO I^U^PlkS, doge pf otud, Tprmt. FE l-044(. ;hshuno ___________OR 3-3173 _ _ _ AKC POODLES, WHITE, APRICOT ALL NEW TRAVEL TRAILERS 1. Hlfchet Instollod. Eve: Special TrollOr Sales, L. 3-SI4I. lorage. Jk ) wTiliemt »bton Trailer Lake Rd. OR AKC TOY P()OOL_. ,. OR 3-54(4. POODLES. ^BLACKS AND PARAKEETS, BEAUTIFUL COLLIE. EXCELLENT, child's pet. FE 44174. ' gLACK PbOOLE MA L E months. Rootonablo. FE 414(5 OALMATION PUPPIES, 7 WEEKS, 13' ARISTO Traveler, '44 AAodtl, SI4S GOOOELL trailer 3104 S. Roch44tor Rd. UL 1-4S5C I4FOOT AIRSTRtAM, LIKE NEW. 3441 Sithdbaw. OR 3-1311.______ C reglsttred. Exc Ity. S444444 J. W. . .. 113 Ellen, Royal Oik. Collie, male. Wally Byom's exciting coroyant) , NOW SHOWING : The New Holly Travel Trailer ond j Truck'Comport, also Star Camping Trailer. ELLSWORTH AUTO i ond TRAILER SALES BOAT^ STORAGE . AND HAULING INSIDE OR OUTSIDE UP TO 26 FEET. OPEN 7 DAYS Cass lake marine 3(41 CASS ELIZABETH RO. 441-0431 Ovrens Marine Supplin ^ JH Orchard Lake FE 1-4014 -----CLEAR tHt DECKS! Everything Must Gol Up to 25% Discount I eV*NWoirMOTOiRS Inside-Outside Storage BOAT REPAIRS AND REFINISHINO , "Your Evkirudo Odolor" Harrington Boot Works 303 First, Rocheotor, OL 1-4371. — OR iim!________________ FOOOLkS. Akc. BROWN MINIA lige - T7» Highway, il PRESS by Arlslocrot of the — - 31'4" EM- ____ In Holly, Mkh. Holly Trailer Soles 13114 Holly Rd. Holly MI 44771 Open Dally and Sunday SALE - SALk Fall Cleronce Sole I bools must go. Including 1(44 Molt. Turbo - craft lot beats. II toko fraddt. Winter Inside Storagt londbio rafts. Contact MICH- FREE Engine Storagt On Clots A Tun Jp. Rosprvo Boat Storage New "Hot Onto" — '44 Jehntoni PINTER'S BDATUND ind fotmlo. Phone i 4444471 POdOLkS BEAUTIFUL CR ETm ' puppleo alto silver toys. FE 3-4131 PUREBRED SIAMESE KITTENS. 14' Io 17 foot I Sell-contoingd ond rtgulor prkod •- sell.K OXFORD TRAILER SALES '64 OWENS RED StAR 66g HOUSEL, BIRO REASONABLE. BEAUTIFUL FAWN Chlhuohup, tomoN. Ml TlW fHdRduGHBRiO german SHfP hy IS willlamt. Ft 44433. 1 mita south of Laka'Orion on M24 MY 2-0721 LUKE onu dfy muMiiu Saginatu at $. tlvd. FE 4-9917 TRAVEL Trailers terrific dikount at t6nv'‘s AAprino. Kotgo Harbor. 4eSG444 Avolalr-Tho new light weight. Mil contolhdd. AIM Fleet Wing end W«*to4 CHre-Tracln 101 Tewei Breve Mil conteinwt troll- $25 MDRE For that high redo imd car, Md ui, bofora yau ooll. H. J. van Walt, 4544 Obiio Highway. Fhtnd OR 5-1355. EILSWORTH AUTD and TRAILER SALES 4577 51x10 Hwy. , AAA SI444 n—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAV, OCTOBER 30. 1963 WaiiM Cars-Treclii I OR 1M JUNK CARS AND trodu wn«»R. _____ 1 TO 10 JUNK CMS AND TRUCKS wRnttd OR J____ I TO IftI JUNK cars — t1 CrII FE i-SSSA, cUyi or f Mansfield AUTO SALES 1501 Baldwin Ave. 335-5900 ARC YOU BUYING A NEW OR COURTESY CAR? WE WILL BUY YOUR LATE MODEL CAR. WE PAY more. LLOYDS BUYING Good Cleon Cars 2023 Dixie Hwy. Wf pAv mor^ becau W« tall mora ^ ALWAYS BUYING II JUNK CARS - FREE TOW tt TOP n CALL FE S4\42 _ __SAM ALLEN B SON INC. Colifornio Shipment W« need eharp late models. Et-pecielly Ponlleci. Hiohest prices pekt. Apply tor Calltomla Drive MAm'^^MOTOR sales 2527 DIXIE OR A<>30y Averiil's "TOP DOLLAR PAID" GLENN'S >R "CLCAN 'USED < «S2Wt$t Huron St WANTED: }f9h\fi3 CARS Ellsworth Used Avtojnsek Nrh 102 Itss CHRYSLER ENGINE, SSO. FE C43W 0l_^WJIlll___________ TRI >OWER SET-UP FOR J4I OR tot cnevy, S«0. FE 7 7m__ New and Uttd Trotki 103 1*S} FORD PICK-UP, W4, STICK -“1 S135 OR >3135. I*S5 FORD ITON, S»5. SMITH Motors, UL 1-IT04. I l»5» CHEVY N. - TON PICK-UP, SSSe EM 340 FORD STARLINER HARDTOP, auto. 11,000. I7940M. 1941 FALCON 2 DOOR. AUTOMAT-ic. no money down and peymenie as low as 131.91 per .month. Cell Mr. O'Hera, our credit manager for turlher Information, BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER, 444 S. Wood- word, Ml 4-3900.______ 1941 FORD 2DOOR, RADIO, HEATER, AUTO. TRANSMISSION, WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Poymonts ol S3«.75 per mo. See Mr. Parka at Herold Turner Ford. Ml 4-7S00. Ramblers-Kamblers Under tbe Flashing SATELLITE We're In Orbit Over The Beautiful '9 r '93's a V Cost New and Used Core 1991 CHRYSLER "NEW YORKER" 4-door hardtop that Is a real beauty. Snow white original factory finish with contrastrng blue In-tarior trim. Equipped w]th out^ "409 " engine. FE S4300. 19M CHRYSLER radio,'hooter, whlfevyall tires and cither extras. BtoutItuI bluior blue exterior with a luxurious bucket ave |uu y'~'s2,’l50." Financing arranged new car terms. WARRANTEED THE FACTORY TO 50,000 912 S. Woodward 1963 DODGE DART 4-door tadan. Automatic, power steerlno ond brakes. White, blue Interior. 5-year or 50,000 mil# factory warranty, SAVE saoo Spartan Dodge ', 4-OOOR HARDTOP, or, auto. Power steer-brakes. SS90. 424-5291. power steering i conditioning, radio, nearer, wnne-wans. 52,195. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE.. BIRMING-HAM. Ml 4-273S. LLOYD'S, MA 5-2433. 1942 CHEVY IMPALA 4-PASSEN' ger vyagon. power brakes, steering, windows, radio, heater. |. owner. Low mileage. A steal. 452 9441 c 451-5441. With VI engine, automatic mission, whitewalls, power Ing, low mileage one owner. 52195 PATTERSON Chryaler-Plymouth 1001 N. AAain Street _ ROCHESTER OL l-SSSa iaV3 CADILLAC DeVILLE. L 1943 CHEVY ,99$. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1000 S WOODWARD AVE.. BIRMINGHAM, Ml 4-2735.______________ ' HASKINS 1963 Chevrolet 4-boor wegon, Ms-Mvlng 959 STAR CHIEF, POWER STEER ing, brakes, 4 now tirat. EM 3-4059. 1939 PONTIAC 2-OOOR. S493 FULL prka with no money down. LUCKY AUTO SALES "Pontlae'9 Discount Lot" 193 S. Saginaw__________FE 4-2214 0 PONTIAC CATALINA 4-DOOR. 51,495. FE V424I attar 4 f*40 2-OOOR. BUCK BONNE villa hardtv, daluxa interior, — varbarating sound, new tlraa, i condition, tim Pli. 474^ a 5:30 P.- PONTIAC CATALINA 4-DOOR, - " • 1$, >war ---- 1942 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE'. Leadao. OR 3-2944. Ntw and U*«d Can 106 N$w and U»*d Can 1942 PONTIAC 4-DOOR CATALINA. Clean 13,000 mlloi. One owner. Call Ivan lW FE H403.____________ OR 3 7173, EM 1943 grand PRIX, BLACK, MANY extras, low mlleaoc. 53.300. OR 3-9P1. 1943 CATALINA VISTA, RADIO AND heater, hydramatic, power steerlno and brakes, whitewalls, exc. condi-lion. Executives car. FE 4-1^. 1943 PONTIAC CATALINA'WAGON, lull power, Hydramatic: many ex tras. very clean. FE 1-0990, 1943 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE, ----------Re^abje FEj-f73l TEMPEST, EXTRAS, SEAT j'9SI RAMBLER „ Radio, htater. $373. I960 RAMBLER 4. 4-006fc, HAD|0. auto, transmltalon, IW, by owner, will consider trade. FE 3-1U9. 1931 RAMBLER STATION WAOON. Very pood condition. 1400. FC 8*0100. _________________________ 1959 RAMBLER WAGON. *U^XX. Very NIcal S49S. Frank's Auta Sales. UL 2-1IS0. _______ 1942 AMBASSADOR CUST6m WACH on, VI, power ttaering. Mack with red bucket Hats, I7XXI0 mllat, special rtar door opening, beautiful, 1230 down and paymanti at low as 149.31 per month. Call Mr. O'Hara, our cradit msnagar lor luriher Inlormatlon. BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER, 444 $. Woodward. Ml 4-3900. 1959 RAMBLE'R^4-D00R SUPER, 5495 with payments of U.93 par PAY CASH FOR A 'USED CAR i with a Consolidation Loan up to » 13,000. Convenient P*!''"*"** ' life Insurance at NO EXTRA COST Phone or Apply In Perwn. Fdmily Acceptance Corp. 317 National Bldg. 10 W. Huron ________Telephone FE t-4023 Rochester Ford Dealer, OL 1- 1940 FALCON 2-DOOR. RADIO, HEATER, AUTO. TRANSMISSION, DELUXE TRIM. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Payments of 524.75 per mo. See Mr. Perks el " -'d Turner Ford, t" ----- I960 SXYLINER FORD, WONDER-ful condition, ectuel mileage 5,942 _i... — .... ----------- woman bral - .. . ______ ansr Sion. 41,400 cash. Ml 4-7442. 1940 FALCON STATION WAGON, automatic, radio and hanfar. full price low i O'Hai further Information. BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER. 888 S. Woodward. Ml 1980 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN. RA-DIO, HEATER. AUTO. TRANSMISSION. ECONOMY ENGINE. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN "------$29.75 per mo. See Mr. Perks at Harold Turner Ford. HASKINS 1962 Chevrolet Impala 7-Ooor super spart 2-door hardtop. VI, Powerglide. Radio, beautiful maroon finish. HASKINS I Chev - Olds U.S. 10 at MIS I Clarkston____________MA 55071 1942 tempEst wagon, very sharp, extras. 51,395. EM 3-4298. _ ________________________I 1962 Tempest leMons INCOLN PREMIERE, S5M. | jport coupe. Radio, heater, aulo-matic transmission. $1795 FORD FE 5*4101 arlon St. after $ ‘ $245 1956 MERCURY STATION WAGON, no FTYoney down, full with payments at low week. Call MR. O'Hari manager for further ___ BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER, i 960 MERCERY 4-DOOR SEDAN^ 35.500 miles. Outstanding buy. $850. Ml 7-3772 after 5:30. 1958 OLDS' CONVERTIBLE. FULL power, radio and heater, sharp. $495 with payments of $8.93 per 1981 OLDS 88. TAKE OVER PAY-ments. full power. 782 Firtt. 332-8048 after 3 p.m.___________.. Pontiac Retail Store 65 Mt. Clemens St. FE 3-7954 1962 PONTIAC VISTA, 2 POWER, 11943 DYNAMIC I 0 FALCON STICK SHIFt. ALSO: 2-doors, 4 LUCKY AUTO SALES "Pontiac's Discount Lot" ' ------- PE 4J- OLDSMOBILES, and 4-door hard-swners, low mlle-I irarfM. priced S2S93 1960. FALCON 2 DOOR, STANDARD 545 S. shift, whitewalls, radio. 412-4134 — alter 5 p.~ I Suburban Olds 1941 FALCON, 4 ODOR, RADIO. ., custom trim, a very runs nice. Priced to 1961 Ford Fairlone 2-Door With radio. 8-cyl engine. Fordo-matic tranamiuion. 12.000 actua' miles. $1495. BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD AT THE STOPLIGHT OR 3-1291 1941 THUNDERBIRD 2-DOOR hardtop, power steering and brakes, whitewalls, local trada-ln. Charcoal gray with black int ' S2.295T Jerome FERGUSON, CHOICE OF 75 TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS Reasonable. If you have a io and tome money down, we wi finance good or bad credit. SUPERIOR AUTO SALES 2120 DIXIE HWY. FE 4-7500 OLIVER BUICK Double Checked Used Cars ftp. $1495 1943 BUICK LeSabra Hardtop 52995 RAMBLER Classk 4 door SH5 1942 PONTIAC Cataima hdtp. S2295 1941 BUICK Electro Convarlibla S14BS 1941 OLDS N 4 doer sedan 1943 SKYLARK CenvartIMt , S249S 1941 DODGE 2 door. Auto.. 1942 BUICK LtSabra Hardtop .52375 40 CORVAIR Monia 2 door SI09S OLIVER BUICK ______________________4^4485 '19831 THI Any ntake __________ You pick H - we'll finance it You call or ----------- COMMUNITY NATIOI HOMER RIGHT Motors Inc. 1943 PONTIAC CATALINA Statl... Wagon — With power ttaarina brakes and Is a 4-passaoger. 124195 Chavrolet-Pontiac-Buick yford, Mkh. _DA 1-25 CADILLAC '60 Black coupe with white Inlarior. very sharp 1-ownar car. $2,395 S27S Down, 30 Months HOME OF CADILLAC OUALITR CARS ED DOWNEY WILSON COME VISIT RUSS JOHNSON'S Used Car Strip >43 Catalina convartibla '42 Pont' - - —-'43 Grar '40 Pontiac Vista . '40 Falcon wa— '41 Mercury . BIRMINGHAM TRADES Every used cor offered for retail to the public is a bonofide 1-owner, low mileage, sharp cor. 1-yeqr parts and labor worranty. 1943 RIVIERA, Air Conditioning t3l9S 1943 RIVIERA. 4-Way Power S349S 1943 ELECTRA, Air Condition. $3295 942 LeSABRE Hardtop - BUICK *-Door Hardtop . .*I29S 1942 BUICK 4-Door Sedan . ' 1941 BUICK SkyloHi ...... 19*2 SPECIAL 4-Ooor 1*41 BUICK 4-Daor Sedan tMI BUICK 4-Door Sedan 1940 BUICK 4-Door Hardtop I9» MERCURY, Likt New FISCHER BUICK $2195 $ave $2895 . $1195 $1995 $1895 $1995 .. 8995 . $1395 8995 . 83195 $1995 $1995 $1895 $1895 . $1,195 $1395 . $1395 '81 Rambler wagon . '81 Tampetf sadan RUSS JOHNSON 4-DAY MONEY BACK guarantee ON ANY USED CAR PURCHASED FROM US This guorantaa means that If fo any reason (axcapt for abuse o accideni) you are not pleasad wit your purenaaa, wa'II refund you 1943 PONTIAC 1-door .. 1942 CHEVY Adoor 1943 BONNEVILLE Adoor , 1961 VENTURA Adoor 1941 RAMBLER wagon . BONNEVILLE — BONNEVILLE .... BONNEVILLE ___ 1911 OLDS Super "M" . .. 1954 FORD truck, W-lon 1943 CATALINA 2-door . 1940 BONNEVILLE hardtop 1942 FORD XL 2-doOf .. 1943 CATALINA 2-doOr . 1941 LeSABRE Adoor ... 1941 LeSABRE Saktor 1941 BONNEVILLE hardtop 1943 CATALINA 2-door 1941 LeSABRE convartlWa .. 1943 IMPAU 2-doar .... 1943 ELECTRA "22$" .... — BONNEVILLE hardtop .. TEMPEST LaMans . 19U CATALINA convartlMa . 1941 CATALINA 1-door 1942 CATALINA convaHMa . —a ELECTRA ""MS" I ELECTRA "US" ... MONZA 900 l^oar 1941 TEMPEST LaMara 1941 CATALINA l^oor 1941 BONNEVILLE Adoor 1942 CATALINA 2-doer . 1941 CHEVY 2-doar .. 52495 S1I9S S309S SI99S SI 295 SI 395 s?:j $88! $ 385 . $2385 . $1685 . $2085 $2885 siSI . S2S9S S2S9S . S309S . S249S SIS S. Woodward SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK 223 N. Main OL 1-8133 ROCHESTER, MICH, 7 (i I HASKINS 1963 Rambler 2 DOOR, lots of gas mileage, ra-did. showroom new. blue and white fin *h. - HASKINS Chev Olds Clarkston . U.S. 10 at M15 5-5071 1940 RAMBLER STATION WAGON, automatic, payments as low as 535,17 per month. Call Mr. O'Hara our credit manager tor further information. BIRMINGHAM RAM- j BLER, 444 S. woodward. Ml 6-3900 FE 5-327S.___________________ CHOOSE FROM SO SELECT USED cars. All makes and modalt. End ol the month Claaranca Sale. No Fair Offer Refused Excellent Financing Immediate Delivery SUPERIOR RAMBLER ssiFoakland ave. $7 0 J1943 USED: CAR CLEAN-OUT ' d*® . S]i|| Volkswagen Sunroof O^ONSTRATORS ; KEEGO PONTIAC SALES | > RAMBLER 4. DOOR STAND | rd transmission. 6 cylinder, full i rice $485 with no money down -nd payments as low as $12.64 > pr month. For further Information III Mr. O'Hara our credit man BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER. ! Ml_ 8 3800. ‘24-HOUR SPECIAL 1959 CHEVY* Kingswood 9-Passenger Station Wogon Has a thrifty 4r) Johnny Car-son (9) Movie; “Pride of the Marines.” (1945) John Garfield, Eleanor Parker 1:66 (2) Peter Gunn (4) Best of Groucho 1:36 (4) Great Music (7) After Hours THURSDAY MORNING 6:15 (2) MediUtkms 6:26 (2) On the Farm Front 6:26 K2) News 6:36 (2) Sunrise Semester (4) Classroom (7) Funews 7:66(2) News (4) Today (7) Johnny Ginger 7:65 (2) Fun Parade 7:45 (2) King and Odie 8:66 (2) Captain Kangaroo TV Features Teens Discuss Sex By United Press International TV TWO REPORTS, 7:00 p. m. (2) Detroit high school students discuss “Sex and the Teen-Ager.” CHRONiaE, 7:30 p. m. (2) Film profile of traditional English vacation resort for millworkers and their families. DANNY KAYE, 10:00 p.m. (2) Guest stars Jultet Prowse, Howard Morris Join Danny in sketdi of cowboy life as seen through eyes of AmeriCM, Scot, Russian. ELEVENTH HOUR, 10:00 p. m. (4) Dishwasher (James Ck)bum) thinks he has to shower girlfriend with lavish gifts, goes back to picking pockets. ^ CHANNING, 10:00 p. m. (7) 'Gifted senior (Suzanne Pleshette), in contention for literary award, beguiles contest judge. (7) Big Show 8:36 (7) Movie: “Second Honeymoon.” (1937) Tyrone .Power, Loretta Young, Qaire Trevor, Stuart Erwin 8:45 (56) English V 8:56 (9) Warm Up 8:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry - Go-Round 9:66 (2) Movie; ‘“nie House Across the Bay.” (1940) Joan Bennett, George Raft, Lloyd Nolan, Walter Pidgeon (4) Living (9) Kiddy Komer Kar-toons 9:16 (56) Let's Read 9:36 (9) Jack La Lanne 9:35 ( 56) Tomorrow’s H o m e-makers 16:66 (4) Say When (4) National School Telecasts (56) Spanish ^son 16:15 (7) News (56) Our Scientific World 16:25 (4) News 16:36 (2) I Love Lucy (4) (Color) Word for Word (7) Girl Talk (9) Chez Helene 16:46 ( 56) French Lesson r to r" r" r r- nr 11 12 13 14 18 14 17 II Ifl 4U 2T ST s is Z7 i E S3 S4 M j r U u T u u SA Si Si ! n S4 SB 1 57 H U 80 ACROSS ' 1 African river 5 IVopical antelope 8 Eg}i>tian deity 11 Moslem Bible 12 Masculine nidouune 13 Including particular average (ab.) 14 Awake 15Hafl! 16 Fkbulous bird 17 Ihinting residence 18 Vexed 20 Comparative suffix 21 Belgian commune 22 Atlantic islands 26 Rope (naut.) 27 Feminine nickname 28 Half (prefix) 30 African fruit i 34 Horsefly larva 36 Require 38 Beetle 39 Past 41 Confiscator 43 African desert 46Rqyal Navy (ab.) 47 Giraffe4ike animals 41 Loafer 52 Presidential nickname 53 Oitiinal suffix 54 Vacuum tube 55 Enclosure 56 Scottish sailyard 57 Heron SOBqfbte 59 Socialist Soviet RepubUc (ab.) 60 Saudi African gun DOWN 1 Do not wish (Latin) 2 Angered 3 Greater 4 Penetrated 5 Rasp 6 Innovations 7Restless 8 Enticing woman 9 Lyric poem 10 Touch (comb, form) 11 Kalends (ab.) 19 Plant 22 Vestment 23 Animal collection 24 Away from 25 Spanish maids 29 Personal pronoun 31 cutting tod 32 Pedal digit 33 Mistake 35 Soidh African weaverhird 37 Mocker 40 Yawners 42 Dye 43 Temperate 44 One-seeded fruit 45 Jacob’s son 49Leaming 50 German river 51 Rot flax 52 Monkey Answer to Previous Puzzle 16:41 (9) Nursery School Time 16:55 (56) Spanish Lesson 11:66 (2) McCoys (4) Concentration (7) Price Is Right (9) Romper Room 11:16 (56) Let’s Read 11:25 (56) Nation 116: Uganda 11:36 (2) Pete and Gladys (4) (Color) Missing Links (7) Seven Keys 11:55 (56) Memo to Teachers THURSDAY AFTERNOCm 12:66 (2) Love of life (4) (Color) First impression (7) Ernie Ford (9) Take 30 12:25 (2) News 12:10 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) (Coior) Truth or Consequences (7) Father Knows Best (9) People in Conflict 12:35 ( 56) Spanish Lesson 12:45 (2) Guiding Ught 12:56 (56) Let’s Read 12:55 (4) News 1:66 (2) Star Performance (4) Conversation Piece (7) General Hospital (9) Movie: "Lady with Red Hair.” (1940) Oaude Rains 1:36 (2) As the World Turns (4) Make Room for Daddy (7) Bachelor Father (56) World History 2:60 (2) Password (4) (Cohw) People will Talk (7) Byline: Steve Wilson (56) Mathematics for You 2:25 (4) News 2:30 (2) Hennessey (4) Doctors (7) Day in (3ourt 2:35 ( 56) Young Artists at Work 2:55 (7) News 3:66 (2) TO TeU the Truth (4) Loretta Young (7) ()ucen for a Day (56.) Spanish Lesson 3:15 (9) News 3:25 (2) News 3:36 (2) Edge of Night (4) (Color) You don’t Say (7) Who Do You Trust? (9) Friendly Giant 3:45 (9) Misterogers 4:66 (2) Secret Storm (4) Match Game ■ (7) Traibnaster , , (9) Razzle Dazzle 4:25 (4) News 4:36 (2) Movie; ‘'The Glass Key.” (1942) Brian Don-levy, Veronica Lake, Alan Ladd, William Bendix (4) Mickey Mouse Club (9) Hercules 5:66 (4) (Cotor) George Pierrot (7) Movie; “The Michigan Kid.” (1946) Jon Hall, Victor McLaglen, Andy De-vine, Milbum Stone (9) Larry and Jerry Sc IS (56) U.N. Review 5:36 (56) What’s New 5:45 (9) Rocky and His Friends 5:55 (2) Weather (4) Carol Duvall SIX MONTHS TO GO — Betsy Packer, 15, surgery; to correct a spinal curvature. The daughter of a physician in Hagerstown, Md., girl grew 2V4 inches after the operation, but faces six months in bed with a body cast Sev- must wait aom^ time to appreciate her new eral weeks ago she made the decision to have stature. * Same Eff^ Today Martian Attack Via Radio City Man May Get Sentence Commuted LONDON (2)-Orson Welles choked back a chuckle and said he hu not the slightest regret for his Martian invasion radio drama that panicked Americans 25 years ago tonight. “It seemed a pretty good idea at the time,” the 48-year-old actor told an interviewer, “and looking back I wouldn't change a thing. ♦ * * “I don’t think there is any limit to the credulity with which people take their radio and television.” Six million Americans heard Welles’ broadcast “The War of the Worlds” on Oct. 36, 1938 and one million were disturbed, researchers found. It began at 8 p.m. on the CBS Sunday ni^t “Mercury Theater of the Air.” Interspersing H. G. Wells’ 40-year-old fantasy with realistically styled news bulletins, the Mercury players created this scene: OBJECTS LANDED Flaming objects landed in New Jersey. “’Things” as tall as skyscrapers emwged and marched across the Pulaski Crowds Jam Broadway for Lush 'Play Season' By EARL WILStm NEW YORK—Broadway’s having an amazing boom .. . Some nights, it looks like the 1964 World’s Fair crowds are arriving in 1963 . . . Starting right now and for many months. New York’s the Playtown of the Western World. m-i Gloria De Haven—Uivorced three weeks ago* - opened at Basin St. East with the Village Stampers and London Lee, and brought in a midnight celebrity mob including Ethel Merman and travel agent Erik Palm, Albert Finney, Jack Cassidy, Patrice Wymore, and Paul Ford. Every-} body loved Gloria’s singing except Composer Yip^ Harburg. Gloria sang one of his songs — and forgot I the lyrics. Forgot ’em real good, too , . . Yip|__ didn’t yap but he fumed. WILSON Angie Dickinson was at Sardi’s in a seqoin Mouse (also a skirt, of coarse) that was flesh-colored and mado people stare and say, “Is that girl NUDE?” Angie went to the opening of “116 in the Shade,” and, she told me, “I don’t think the man next Mkie saw the play because be kept looking at my sequins.” Groucho Marx, who likes to interrupt people, interrupted himiu»lf at 21 while discussing his book, “Menwirs of a Mangy Lover,” to announce he’ll conduct the Nov. 10 “Open End” for ailing David Susskind, “What can 1 lose?” asked Groucho. “Just the few surviving shreds of my reputation.” ★ ★ A Walter Kieman's becoming the Will Rogers of our time. “Two nullion people attended the Mets’ ball game,” he says. “Too bad none of them were ball players” ... Beautiful Ludmilla Tcherina, the French ballerina and movie star, here to beautify the April in Paris Ball, wants to take back an American musical comedy. “I prefer to dance, ” she says. “I don’t singing very well.” ★ ★ ★ THE MIDNIGHT EARL ... George DeWitt’s date ijt Danny’s was lovely Claire Kelly, his ex-wife . . . (^mic London Lee opened his Basin St. E. act by giving money to ringsiders, explaining: “My motho* always told me to make friends.” . . . Singer Danny Meehaa’ll have a feature role in the Barbra Stteisand musical. “Funny Girl.” . . . Viace Edwards ordered street clothes for future “Ben Casey” TV’ers and MMte Coaaolly asks; “What for—house calls?” Robert Reed of “The Defenders,” once rumored marrying Lois Nettleton, just met her for the first time, on the show . . . Sonny Uston, threatened with lawsuits by British promoters, will go back to finish his tour . . . Italian star Marc^ Mastroiaani says the two people he’d like to meet here are Greta Garbo and Anae Baacroft. ★ ★ A WISH I’D SAID THAT: “My wife’s hairdos are so wild,” clainu a Steak Pit dine)-, “that I don’t know whether to kiss her or pet her.” EARL’S PEARLS: “Other people’s troubles aren’t so bad as ours, but their children are a lot worse.” A great example of democracy, notes George DeWitt, is the fact that New York now has two baseball teams, each headed by a.non-Englisb-speaking nnanager — Casey Stengel and Yogi B«*ra . . . That’s earl, brother. (TIM H*M lyiMkaM, Inc.) —Today's Radio Programs— WJWyaO) VVXYIO 2T0) aavuttoo) WWJ(950) WCARQ 130) WPOHQ 400) WJBKQ SOO) WHW-8M(94.7) l;H-WPON, B«i JoDnaon Hnw lilJ-WXYZ, Lm Alan CKLW, FuNon Lawii WJB, Sparta 7:Ji-CKLW, Tam Clay WJB. DBnamlon fim-WJK. Choral •:W-WJB, WorM TonIphI Ills—WJB, Evaning Concart lilP-WWJ. Minic kana liW-WJB, Laamlnp WXYZ. AMx Driar , Thraa Star Extra 7iia-WWJ, Fhona Opinion WXLZ. m Morgan liN-WJB, Kal Kalaidotcapa I, World Nawt llilS-WWJ. Mutk Scana UilP-CKLW. Joa Gantlla WCAB, Nawt, Sparta WWJ, Nawt Pinal WJB, Nawt, Sparta THUBSOAY MOBNINO l:W-WJB, Voka of AgrI. WWl, Nawa, Bobarlt WX^ WoK, Newt Wjdk. Marc Avary WCAB. New*, SharMan WPON, Mom, Aril. Wetlon WHPI. Boat, Mutk lilP-WJB. Mutk Hall riW-CKtW, Nawl, Toby bavM 7iia-CKLW, Nawt, OavM l:W-WJB, Nawt, B. Duaat l:l»-WJB, Mutk Hall WCAB, Nawt, Martyn Joa Van lliN-WyWJ, Nlwi. Nalghbar WXYZ. Braaktaat Club WJBK, Nawt, Bald WJB, Nawt, Mutk ItiM-WjR. Nawt. Godlray THUBSOAY APTBBNOON II:N-WJB, Nawt. Farm WWJ, Nawt, Martant CKLW, Aiain Grant WCAB, Nawt, Puna WHFL Nawt. Burdkk lliM-WJB, Bud Guatt liM-WJB, Nawt. Art Lkklatlar liM-WJB, Woman't World, (Sarry Moon iiM-WJB, Nawt, Jim Waod a«:l, .... ,/J, Nawt. H snoi^'jiMnSk'Hi liSS-WWJ, Mwt. Skyway or waded the Hudson River to destroy New York. A thick black cloud choked all it enveloped. A mysterious Martian ray dealt Instant death. With Nazi Germany nibbling at the Sudetenland and the whole of America jangled by European war nerves, newspapers and radio stations were flooded by calls from fri^t-ened listeners. People crowded into the streets. w * ♦ A Pittsburgh man found his wife in the iMthroom, hysterically grasping a bottle of poison and crying, “I’d rather die this way.” A San Francisco man called police, volunteering to fight “this awful thing.” Toward the end of the hour-long drama, the Martians were destroyed by some bacteriological reaction. By then the damage had been done. TEXTBOOK CASE Congress investigated and the Federal Comnuinications Commission adopted regulations to make sure the technique would not be used again. It has served since as a textbook example of mass hysteria. Recalling the circumstances of the broadcast Welles said Tuesday night; “Sure, I had a pretty good idea it would touch off a wave of jitters, but I still went ahead. WWW “It wasn’t a case of feeling artistically justified in doing so. I just thought it was time to demonstrate that everything said on radio isn’t necessarily true.” Welles was asked if he thought a similar broadcast in today's political atmosphere would have the same panicking effect. • “Certainly It would,” he said. “Federal laws nwke it impossible to do such a broadcast these days. But the effect would be the same.” LANSING (IIPD - A 78-year-man serving a prison sentence for a 1919 Pontiac murder Is one of six men scheduled for commutation hearings here tomorrow. He is WUllam Reed, who was found guilty la Oakland Circuit Court of the killing slaying of a poolroom patron during an attempted holdup. Others to appear include a Detroit man convicted of a Prohibition Era gang slaying, Raymond Burnstein, 59, who was sentenced to life imprisonment for first degree murder with two codefendants. W -A ★ The trk) was found guilty of the 1931 Detroit killing of three men in what court records uy resulted from “a highly competitive situation involving illegal liquor traffic.” ALSO SCHEDULED Also scheduled for hearings before the parole board on their applications for commutation of sentence ore Sanford CalUer, Elton Cassidy, Matthew Cichocki and Iraiah Perry. Callier, 56, has been In prison since 1932 fellowing conviction in Wayne County County Circuit Court in the of Thomas Mabry, Ham-tramck, Aug. 17, 1^. Board argument between Callier and ■ Mabry over a woman prompted the murder. Cassidy, 50, was found qullty of first degree murder in Jack Gleason Breaks Wrist in TV Fall NEW YORK (UPl) - Con^ dian Jackie Gleason fractur^ his left wrist last night taping his weekly television show. AAA Gleason was playing a scene that called for him to ride a bicycle down a ramp and into a plastic “brick wall ” when the accident happened. The first time he tried It the wall didn’t budge. The second time it collapsed on him. The rotund comedian was taken to his physlciaa’i office where X rays revealed the wrist was fractured. Gleason’s major concern seemed to be that the Injury might interfere with a golf date I Dec. 19 with Mickey Mantle and Whitey Ford of the New York I Yankees baseball team. ^ A A . A I “I expect to win a bundle of j nwney from those clowns,” the comic said. 1 Newaygo (k>unty Circuit Court in 1939. The crime Involved the killing of his sister-in-law in an alleged conspiracy with his brother and mother. The codefendants were also given life sentences. 'Cicjracki, 52 was found quilty in Bay County Oct. 22, 1942, for the slaying of his wife following several domestic arguments. Perry, 66, was found guilty In Detroit Recorder’s Court in 1947 in the killing of his brother-in-law. Twenty y$tr$ on the elr-twelve yeera on TV/ Join the Neteons tor top comedy! 7:30 P.M. TONIGHT ON CHANNEL 7 • •pon—rtd hr CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY Philcb 2-Door Refrigerator 13.8 Cu. FL ^234 50- TBBMI AVAILASLB SWEET'S RADIO 432 W. Huwi 334-S677 The flrst passenger elevator | vas believed installecf in New | fork in 1857. ' I SAVE BAR Hov« Your FURNACE CLEANED Before Wiirter! 6n OUR SPKUl PRICI mcmcu BEsme U n 2.22S4 Husband “too tired' for good times? Tf yeer husband keepe coming home too A “beat” to be gay and atimulating, too worn Old to take you out, remember—the hectic “ret race” of today’a busineaa requirea men to perform like hutmm dynamoi day after day, which buUde up ekurniny tensimu that rob literally million* of hurhand* of energy and rigor they might etherwiae enjoy! e What caa you do to help counteract this tension-caused iom of vitality? oMaay doctors rtcoamead-augmenting the daiiy diet with nature’s remarkable ’’bounce-back” food, famous Kretaeh-mer Wheat Germ. Made from the germinating Aeort of tha kernel, wheat germ hu bun established by ofRcial U. S. Dept, of Af^ulture studies to be (A* most heaUhful food known! KRETSCHMER o Kretoduner Wheat Germ aetually sup-pliu e whopping SO nnteiont* important to good health, rigor and etamina! 0 Serve joet buabaad thk remarkable food every day and sm how much more pop and vitality he hu! Uw theu delicious, tiny touted flaku ae a coieal, OB oerul, or add to pancakes, wafliea, ■crambled eggs, etc. 0 Hwifty, toaty Kretachmer Wheat (y '4. if-iW BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE MERCHANTS Tke Nmt and Graater LIOM STORE H 4i IsasS-*’ ty 4 ON THE OCCASION OF THEIR ‘ DOUBLE CELEBRATION L 43rd Anniversary ■ 2. Grand Opening of their expanded Store. The Lion Store is recognized as one of the finest stores in the entire area. We are proud to boast of this fine institution as part of Bloomfield IMBracle Mile. We the merchants of Bloomfield Miracle Mile invite you to join ns on this gala occasion. POOLE’S NEW SKI SHOT-C^n Now 48 STORES & SERVICES OPEN EVENINGS TIL 9 \ FREE PARKING far S,000 Car$ ^ mEGMPH AT SVNUE LAKE RD. ; . ..................... THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1963 many major items TmOUCHOUT THE STORE ARE REDUCED! Ladies? Winter Coats tm $65.00 *39 “ *49 Ladies* Orion Knit Dresses Regular $11.98 799 Ladies’ Seamless Nylons 2 ^88" Regular 2 Pair for $1.25 Ladies^ Fur Trim Coats Regular to $110.00 #50 « to 99 Ladies’ Half Slips Regular $2.98 Ladies* Jewelry Megmlar to $8.00 i i LadUes* Blouses amlRoHiiik 1^ Rog.»»$8.98 Ladies* Car Coats. Regular to $25.00 16’’ Ladies* Nylon Panties 299® Regular 79e Ladies* Wool Slacks Regular to $17.98^ J99 Ladies* Stretch Slacks All Wool ^ Regular $11.98 799 Men*s Porto-Ped Shoes Oxfords and Slip-ons Regular to $24.95 Diacontinacd Sijrico. Sisea! 7Mi to 12 Widths B to E 1483 Our Famous Brand ^ Ladies* Shoes “CUSHIONED SOLES” Regular $14.99 Avsihible in-Black or Anticpied Brown. Siwt 4Vk to 10, widths AAAA to D. 333 - 933 Ladies* Shoes Regular to $9.99 * CASUALS DRESS 333 433 Bnishei Pigskin Shoes Odds *n Ends Women’s - Children’s Men’s - Boys’ 333 433 Children’s Buster Brown and PoU Parrot SHOES Regular to $8.95 Sizes to 4, widths A to E Use A Cphvenieni Lion Charge Plan With Option Terms THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 80, 1963 E—3 ★ IT’S flint 43rd AmiHimRY~| ★ IT’S flllK mm OPEHIIG I OF OUR NEW AND GREATER STORE ) THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS IN PRIZES FROM OUR FAMOUS BRANDS-REGISTER EVERY DAY-40 PRIZES AWARDED EACH DAY-Nolhing !o Buy-You need not be present to win. Our Entire Stock of Men’s Suits EMBASSY ROW, EXECUTIVE, CMPPER CRAFT, HAMMONTON PARK, BOTANY Regular S45 to $65 Regular $69.95 to $100.00 $ 39 ^58 to Men’s Wool and Kodel ZIPPER CARDIGAN Sweaters ^ Refrular 11^ 10S14.95 .'OEas, if '1 is -uM ^ W A % V A-A W - AUTOMATIC CAN-OPENER, KNIFE-SHARPENER 40-CUP PARTY PERCOLATOR reg. 14®^ O opens any standard size can automatically e counter top model * knife sharpener keeps cutlery razor keen. • highly polished aluminum shell • signal light indicates coffee's ready e Tomlinsan, no-drip, 2-way faucet. NOW PENNCREST PETITE VANITY CASE HAIR DRYER e portable case travels and stores easily e adjustable queen-size hood fits any size curlers * scientifically designed Jo give profsssianal performance APPLIANCES steam ’n dry iron • "Select-o-Guide" as sures right tomperotura • 1 7 steam vents for more •taom faster • Chrome plated shell, .. easy grip white handle 2-slico toaster e chrome-plated tide ^nels e selectronic shade selector e easy cleaning with removable crumb trdy 11" buffet skillet • detachable thermostatic heat control e cost aluminum construction • coppletely immersible when cord is removed 3 speed portable hand mixer e push-button beater ejector e blend, stir, mix or beat • plastic-tipped beater , won't scratch bowls Just in time for your early Christmas thinking! ALL PEnUCRESt AmJANCES HAVE A ORE-YEAR OVER-THE-COmiER REHACEMERT GUARAMnE! REDUCED! PENNEY'S MIRACLE MILE STORE HOURS - 9:30 A.M to 9 PM. / , THE PONTJAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1963 E—5 I ^ Where Your Fashion Dollar Means More COATS Forstmanns Finest Regular 79.95 Value Simpljr stated... )e< ■imply beautiful! Nothing but the •inceresi form of flattery you're come to expert nf R & K Original*. Evident here in a gentle •heath of “Wicker,” textured 100% wool, framed in satin piping. Shop Pefgy'a every aighi till 9 free parking for 5000 care Those Wonderful Helinkas So easy to wear, so easy to care i. ’ %-i- Short sleeve slip ons ......, • • • 4.98 'Longsleeve slip ons........* • • • 5.98 Long^sleeve cardigans.......... 5.98 black, brown, green, cornflower r^, white, bhie, amber E—G THE PONTIAC PRESS See Them At... New Center Electronics ]P^rantetdT,ke black ancO^ Bloomfield Miracle Mile Shopping Center MOTOROLA • Htndtom* Low-Bcy— conttmporiry ttyling In youi choict of mahognny or walnut tinlih on gtnulna hardboard MOTOROLA COLOR TV 6IVISV0U AU THESI OUAUTV EXTRAS: • Molord/a’f •tan tAand'iafrarf cAaaa/a— praclilon craftad with modarn hand and dip aoldaring (or circuit connactlona o( high rallablllty • Caajr Cetot Tuning— luat two additional color controla lat you quickly adjuat tha color tha way you Ilka It. •Autamtlle "Coloi Mllar”—ahuta oH color circulta whan black-and-whita la balng tranamittad. All atta Era all-channoi UHF adaptable. iModal ElCKta • Trt^llhnnl Coraaofe — Handaomratyllns, hardboard and aaloct hardwood aollda, mahogany or walnut finlahoa. *499 95 ^AeibkiJeaA AcmuL* .. MOTOROLA Stereo-Troubaxior • 3 aaparat* spRakar eyatama with alx Goldan Volea* Spaakara a Full fraquancy ranga from 2S to M.MM cpa a 2t watta paak Inatantanaoua powar output Convenient built-in cart "folds away" in a jiffy; stores in the smallest closet, wheels easily from room to room. Motorola's finest portable stereo hi-fi . . . all-transistor powered. Multi-channel push-pull amplifier delivers 28 watts of peak instantaneous power output. Full frequency range. Six matched and balanced speakers! Only TEN SPEAKER SOUND SYSTEM Wido Spactrum Starao Sound Syitam with Campreitiaiuijxa.. Baaa Vibroaonic Syatam. Tan Spaokara: two 10" woofara, four 5" mid-rPnga, two 4" Vibroaonic, two 3W"twaotara faathor Tree Tona Arm with Diamond and Sapphira Styla. Starao Tapa Input Jacka. 3 Extarnol Spaokar Jacka. Cuatom-tailorad Cuahiona of thick foam rubbar covarad with luxurious black vinyl ara attachad. Ganuina VYflliWit YRnaari and Aalacf hordwood aolida Model SKI 54 $55995 high, 6616" wida, 1 7H" daap Model SKR155 DECLARATION STYLING ELEVEN SPEAKER SOUND SYSTEM. Wido Spactrum Starao Sound Syatam with Comprasaionoira Boaa. Vi-broaonic Syatam. Elavan Spaokara, ona 1 5" woofor, alx 5" mid-ronga, two 4" Vibroaonic, two 3Vi" twaatara. Foathar Tioc Tona Arm. Exposad aolida ond vanaara of Ganuina Wolnut 31" high, 51 wida, 1 7Vii" daap MODEL SKR157 TRIUNE STYLING BY DREXEL ELEVEN SPEAKER SOUND SYSTEM Wida Spactrum Starao Sound Syatam with Comproa-aionoira Boaa. Vibroaonic Syatam. Elavan Spaakara, ona 15" woofor, aix 5" mid-ronga, two 4" , Vibroaonic, twaatara. Faathor Troc Tona Arm. Expoaad aolida and vanaara of ganuina AAoh^ony with Cloaaic finish 30" high, 52Vk" wida, I 9Vk" daap MOTOROLA Tandam Clock Radio --a portable, tool R lulls you to alaap, than nudgaa ~ you awaka with radio or buzxar. Radio playa on battary or AC currant. Whan you'ra raady to ' go out, taka It with you. Praatol H bocomaa a portable. But tha dock kaapa oparating Tha oH-banalstor chaaaia •naans Inatant ^a«k< play, long Ufa. V/lliy SHOP EARLY FOR CHRISTAAAS A Small Daposit Will Hold - Ut* Our Loy-A-Way Plair 2219 S. Telegraph New Genter Electronics/ Inc TV-RADIO-SALES and SERVICE ____________Bloomfield Mirada Wle____ Phono FE 8-9607 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBEK 30, 1963 E—7 - See and Hear it at Hew Center Electronics, Inc. Perfect Comimtion by RCAVICTOR NKW VISTA J^ew Vtsta FM-AM •ml HIGH FIDELITY . STEREO ©@[1IS TV- FM STEREO RADIO This captivating Early American lowboy Is the perfect showcase for your family’s viewing and listening enjoyment Here In one master-crafted cabinet Is complete home entertainmenti New and brighter than ever Mark 9 Color TV... precision Studiomatic 4-speed record changer featuring the new Feather Action Tone Ann that protects your records against audible needle scratch •.. custom FM-AM radio with built in FM Stereo. ,. All play through two 12^ and four 314' speakers. The Dual Channel Amplifier delivers 20 watts maximum music power (8 watts EIA standard). Beautifully finished in Antiqued Colonial Maple veneers and selected hardwoods-it's destined to become the family's favorite. Come in today! Only $995 RCA VICTOR JSfew Hstd “TV Home Entertainment Center SHOP EARLY for CHRISTAAAS A SAAALL DEPOSIT WILL HOLD * USE OUR LAY-A-WAY PUN * I Home is More Fun with B C A VICTOR HEW COLOR TV CAPTIVATING COLONIAL CLASSIC LOWBOY "LIVING COLOR" TV RCA VICTOR HIGH FIDELITY STEREO • Magnificent eight-speaker souncMwo 12" Diaphonic duo-cone speakers and six K4" tweeters _ „ • Dual Channel Ampllflerwith 24 watts maximum music power (11 watts ElAstandard) • Custom 12^be FM-AM radio includes FM Stereo a Four-speed Studiomatic changer with Feather Action Tone Arm Only '^a?* RCA VICTOR HIGH FibELITY STEREO • Magnificent eight-speaker sound—two 12" Diaphonic duo-cone speakers and six 3V^ tweeters a Dual Channel Amplifier wdth 58 watts maximum music power (32 watts ElAstandard) • Custom 12-tube FM-AM radio Includes Fm stereo • Four-speed Studiomatic changer with Feather Action Tone Arm ' e Amazing pressure limiting pick-up guards records against audible needle scratch Only $500 1^. RCA VICTOR COLOR TV • 265 square-inch glare-proof picture - • Contemporary upright console EASYTERAAS New Center Mectronics, Inc. y - • •-« 2219 S. Telegraph TV-RADIO-SALES and SERVICE Bloomfield AAiracle AAile Phone FE 8-9607 K—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 80, PM53 CarMr, 9 S. T»Ugniph-Sogirwiw c . :>eywow. w* 1 fenMoc Mol $»*oppi'*9 C#f«w. N. TtWyo^-ttooorfttW lAlt Shopping CoiMr. 2)45 S. Tttofroph^Tal Huron SheppM#. •kM Fodorol Tor WSoro AppUcoblo • I^Tm oi^ V«o0^ HAME — HRSTgUAUiY o«d coMiirics SALE DAYS TODAY THRU SUNDAY WOODBURY SHAMPOO AT IPKIALI LAROI Sm BfcM-rf “» »• S' «>»**"* laotO' PONDS COLD CREAM IT? srieiAii 14J.JAK *i—*««M# BROMO QUININE ■OTTUOrM GALLON SIZE AUTOMATIC SIMILAC LIQUID VAPORIZER ntgU. Sfcwlt' ' 3.99 fLAINOIMON Kum 4 nigU;, Sfcwlt off twfniwwHwwIyt OUR LOW PRICI CONTAC CAPSULES f QO PACKAOiOPM Swoor ^ m TISSUE BOX Ntawte. H«Mi 400 S7« ABSORUINE JR. 4^ pn»«.MATIC lOTTLII FLOOR RUNNER 99*/ LIGHTER FLUID » 33«l CORICIDIN Nasal Spray fiQ< St CC Saaor AIrromb# ^ iMRNMIy Marf* SHOE TOTER Fwly KmJ fcwwvy RitiHt wiA brw hwnhiitnb AMoct.4 colon. out LOW ftlCI MEN'S' WORK SOCKS . 5 j99; WIDOIWOOD PLAYING CARDS SINOU KO* PICK EDWARD'S SLEEP TABS. AQ< POTTUOPM___________PfcwwP ” m Pol STAINLESS STEEL 5: 5Q< IMJKCTOR RLADU ^ ^ TOOTH BRUSHES ML WBT CUSTOM ANN0AU^0'« «|SS 5SISS'*** CREAM DEODORANT 44< BOURJOIS LIPSTICK Stfur Mufil HAIR CUPS SEQUIN HUB SPBBY 14-OK. SIZB Woodbury lANDCREAl' UROi sia 'jullo May Bubble Batt puAKT sn PnvIdM ■nObMictto nduc. Ilirewt bwctortawnd IwaMaMMlMUct toRwtekfcrtlM •orathrawtpwhi inactrochi-T •^.T 1.00 MacDinrmid's ICE CREAM KLEENEX TISSUES ■OXOP4RP MKRIN ORAL ANTISEPTIC MOUTHWASH USOBSOTTU NOTEX NAPKINS BOX OPTS GUette Stainless Blades |;70< SPBCIAU Swr PhowP " . TOILET nSSUE io»u>77* LYDIA ORir Mw mm SajMT DiNMWl tRRtr PhCMBt ARE YOU GET TING ENOUGH "SPARK PLUGS' IN YOUR FOOD? TAXI S9UIIS VIGRAN MMN-VHmMm VtgrlM fcwlR "ipwril” Kw ho4 ytu npwRR half GALLON Gunninglmmssro.^. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1963 E-9 FAMOUS SHARKSKINS by CLIPPER CRAFT ONLY *65 W* hod to pkm wny in advoocotooftor th*s« supatb altork' skint ^ this prico. This n*w odiHoM of o suit alroady famevs for woor,filaiid voluo,U now tho unchollongod buyofthoywor. FinoCtippor Croft . tailoring nsotdios tho luxury and durability of too fobrk. yoorchoieo near, whilo our soloction - of oMidolt ond colors is still comploto. HU YMM SEsmrn M OM N HAY CNMI STORE HOURS fciftM t BLOOMFIELD MIRACLEMILE SHOPPING CENTER SOUTH TELEGRAPH AT SQUARE LAKE RD. per - hundred year UP TO M Mwnis TO MT CREDIT UFE INSURANCE imctuded O' NO EXTRA COST FREE goMk^r for Tour Car POHIUG STATE BANK ■nVwU pnv ,-llftsr of Fsisrsl Bspssg losiiraocs CsqpnlM HrsMb LsesM k Bansr Ins at Sibleys Mir€icle Mile SPECIAL SALE! SAVE ’A" ON THIS HANDSOME MEN'S SLIPON Hand Setpn By Master Crafismen CHCNCEOF BUCK or BROWN SOFT GRAINS LEAIHER SOUES ' MOST sizes " SPECIAL PRICE O 12^95 VALUE **Michigan*s Largest Florsheim Dealer** USE YOUR SECURITY CHARGE shoes' S. Ttltgraph at S(|tMirt Lake N. BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE OPEN EVES, ta 9 PJtL 3-DAY SPECIAL THURS., OCT. 31 Qa. FRI.,N0V. 1 N|^ SAT., NOV. 2 *■ Y Genuine Rebuilt VACUUM CLEANERS " " $21.95 NEW 7-a VACMM wcaiffi^ NOSE AN Ghdk. IbPlaUfo $Jt7B «U UKES f§ MIEU IxriMMfs WMi Ymit RfHstok Nmg InUs MICHIGAN NECCHLELNA Miracle Mile Shopping; Center 22ST S. Tslegraph-Areadt Arts BLOOMFIELD Miracle Mile Barber Shop At THE ARCADE NEATEST HAIRCUT In TOWN Three Barbers ■ To Serve You Better BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE SHOmNG CENTER Ray - Gene -* Joe E—10 THE PONTIAC 1*RESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1963 DOU B L EssB //A^ITz^ THRU SATURDAY NOV. 2 WITH COUPON BELOW GOVERNMENT INSPECTED WHOLE FRYERS U.S. GOVERNA^NT GRADED CHOICE ROUND SIRLOl OR SWISS STEAK OR 7 INCH RW STEAK 7S88 TCNOCEAT 98 __ LB. FRESH GROUND HAMBURGER LB. FIRST CUT PORK CHOPS 39« 49* VALUE VACROUWARI ROWL M SURf TO lEOCEM THf FOUOWMe OOURONS " nOM YOUR MAREO COUTON ROOiCIIT 1 couM« w«(Tit ut )• ..«•< tk« CP.) w • tm ikttm wtm 11.H. um. 2 M irnitw MUM STtlDM »<>l< ppKkp.. wl TM ll-MNW MWU *T Ma UOl 2 M unu T«r mw stum mat, p«rc)».. ,11 mmn uamrm mm. ^ M tlTM TM TtUM ITtMfl .Ml. p..nlH>.« •( MT I JM> VLMW nWltt. 2 M imu TM MUM tTUIfl ..ill. pwck.M ml OTM UUNt MJM TMTMMiTf. e N irru TM TUW ITtim .mi. p...I..m mi TW« IMMt IMM« VMMTT M(M ’ i.CMpI 30^1 S»m«mW WImi. $,mmd T M tXTM TM MUM TTMTI .Ml. pw.cK..« .1 I Lt>. M MM THM MMM Thriffy Beef Sale! RIB or SIRLOIN STEAK I U.S. CO^T. GEAOfD CHOICf TfNOCEAV T-BONEmtCUBI, STEAK I. I U.S. GOVT. CIIADfO CNOKI 1 CHUCK STEAK 1. 59* FwHOLE or HALF SEMI-BONELESS SWISS STEAK CUBE STEAK lb. 69c lb. 89c MUTMICEStlTBMS EFFECTIVE at EROOER IN KRTMC, dr;;ttor hairs •rUHIONLAKE! VALUABLE COUPON WITH THIS COUPON-KROGER—SPECIAl lABEl • Vac i^c COFFEE^ 2^99 Cmm" mU M KMfW ■" OMmM BmMhi Mklilfm Mm SMwfMiiy, N«T»mh»r J, IM*. '—^ VALUABLE COUPON WITH THIS COUPON-KROGO wim inia wurwr*—-hhxiaw _ SHORTENING _ CMf«. mM ml KcpfM I* DMmH wM 1mIm« MMIgw Mm | VALUABLE COUPON SAVE P.OWSMIO. CHUNK, TWMTS OR UlCfO DOLE PINEAPPLE .. 4^:;89‘ SAVE tl--K«OOf« SOCIO WIENER 0« _ __ SANDWICH BUNS .. 2;i£ 39< SAVE Uf TO I7.-KROMR-5 VAMKTIES ntOZEN VE6ETABLES. SAVE 7i-«ROOf» SUGAR. MAIN OR COMRINATION FREStt^NUTS.................».I9' KtArrS MAM OR MMENTO VELVEETA CHEESE . KROGER ERIIH RMCHUM WE_ 6RADE "A" EMS. SAVE S'-SWEBMIU OR •UTTERMIU PILLSBURT BISCUITS COONTtV aui mOHN reef, chicken or tukkev MEAT PIES SMI M- ... A%’l VUb E*»»rv« lifM *• ^«Mn9iti«B. Pf»e*» ond •* Krow«t PbiWibc BfBB UBlf tWv SBtwfdwy, 3, 1963. No«« »• 4*«I*t*. PICNIC STYLE PORK ROLST................... -29- LEAN MEATY SPARE RIBS................. -39* FRUIT COCKTAIL ft m TOMATO CATSUP :'6~99‘ PEM BH BEETS SLK» 5-89' UREEH BEANS.. PEACNES'sl- .. . SAVE [UP TO 17* VEGETABLES * WITH THIS COUPON—CHUNK STYlllPeCIAl lABEl Star Kist TUNA 4i‘c*.&*99” Cmtfm woM Riwfwr Iei SwiwiI mmi iMlini MkMfM 9wv Sefwiley, Wwwwfiibur 1. 1f4S. UbbbH h# —-— *—““ PEAS, CORN GREER REARS or RROCCOU VALUABLE COUPON ta GAL 59* WITH THIS COUPON-BORMN'S SHERRET OB '“SK'^ICE CREAJW JU Mt SAVE 30* BOTH FOR SECOND 88* h OAL ^ Salvrrioy, NHuHiwfcwi S, 1943. U«*4t — -'— r 1 FREEI ON. JM til t HEINZ BABT * Wl* BUByw «mI ibwmKm I IIjamW* I Cmtfm wuW Bt KMtVp tB I t 1963. UotM ow BBuyDB ^^O^NO. 1 THUNDER BAY SAVE id, POTATO^'#"*".. ,5O"09 FROZEN FRENCH FRIES «^os. * I m E 21 U.IAO. . S9, 100 10. SAG.*1.00 BIBB LETTUCE. .29: SEEDLESS CRAPEFRUIT 8-59 valuable coupon DOUBlf v.?"i STAMPS SS PURCHASE OR MORE |NB UTRA vK. STABWSISa EXTRA v25. STAIRPS i » SBWlthllMlMHCMffM I --------------- ■ ,««AMON ah.‘I!1SSI*9 ««A V®. STAMPsi HTRA ,ru.«T*-«J OF O0« FKO. KAUOr.AAOOM | <*•»• Ml COUFOM AMO | WITH THIS COUMM AHO MM-1 ------------ „ p I, fuGCMAH 0. MOM * CHAU OF l-AKOt. CUTJJA O HAUUWEn CARRY I OF 10 Ol. JA. ■ OF A^U CAN Kiooai ■ 'S.SSTS’.'SriS.mr I HOOOU AOm irAaiinn oo ; *i ruoa.AH « him - CHAHOf 1-FKOS.CUT-UA I ■thllMtlMHCMffM I RUa PEPPER I K^MpNTMMfc *--------------------------------------------------■ HAUUWEn CARRY I FRYERS or FRYU PARTI ! mrnu mt tmmrn, h OM* oM*| Com* m Kum Io OonM mm4 | , .7*1', ^ t.Ti.1- omF I URAIH UIHmn | Coopoo jN N Ki^ I. O.yo^ | Cmmmmm roM « Kiooor lo FooWoc , NhA. Mm, W, H... 1. IN*. I-, N.L K «**• J £2T iSS SuTT 1^7^ ^ AIM. M» to, N... », I.M. ^ ^ ^ ,^ | i THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1903 III 1 ! 1 «i Mt E—11 iwrrr K—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 30, 191 ONE COLOR SKIER’S SWEATER Some of your best skiing by the fireside? Do it in White Stag's “Winter flome" cardigan. It sizzles with the excitement of bolt] jocquord design. Knitted in 100% wool worsted, it has wide ribbed cuffs oitd bottom band, S-M-L, $20.00. Coordinate yours with White Stag Stretcn ski pants, $30.00. Children's Skis and Apparel Poole Ski Shop tRIDAT and SATURDAY,, NOVEMBER 1 and 2 HEADQUARTERS PCX>LE HARDWARf < MIRACLE MILE STOItl Come In To Browse and Register for the Free Drawing T / WHITE STAG PARKA WHITE STAG STRETCH PANTS FISCHERt yS: * ' BOOT TREE ^ BARRECRAF^ERS SKI POLES •dtiik V 'A ■ COMPLETE LINE OF SKI CLOTHING AND EQUIPMENT THAT WILL MEET YOUR NEEDS! • WHITE STAG > APPAREL • FISCHER SKIS • HART SKIS • HENKE BOOTS FOR SKI OR AFTER SKI Continental-cut “Dollar Mountain" knit parka is laminated to extra-insulating polyfoom. Welted seams ui^erline its new dropped shoulder look. Signed off with antiqued silver bottoms; racing collar SM-L-XL, $30.00. Carefully color-cordinoted to White Stag Stretch s k i pants $30.00. Ski Pants from *15 and Up HAS.DWARB Mnusete. Mn£ ___ nuGRAPM RPt ' 'f ■ Tf-,- , I: • Th» Weather U.S. WMltMr tllTM* PcncMt Partly cktady, caal THE PONTIAC W mm yOL. J21 NO. 227 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ THE POK^TIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 80. 1963—58 PAGES i^’nriSSSAiipNAi. lOe Republicans Hopeful on New TaxlProgram LANSING un — Gov, George Romney and Republican legia-lative leaders held out h<^ today for their sharply-revised tax reform program after watching it receive a cool response in its first test. The program — buiit along lines originally proposed by major changes includiag an increase in state aid to stmools — was headed for a second Bcmtlay by GOP eancases in the House and Senate. In its firat exposure yesterday, the program encountered mixed reaction but failed to gain anywhere dear the degree of support Republican leaders had hoped for. “It didn’t win any medals — but it wasn’t a total flop, eith- er,’’ said one member of the Republican "leadership conunit-tee’’ formed last wdek to end the tax reform stalemate. IRON OUT DIFFERENCES ’The 10-member committee met again with Romney last night in an effort to Iron out some objections raised by Republican lawmakers in the cau-. cuses. Interest in the revamped I chiefly areond the changes in property tax relief provisions and the incloshm of state school aid amountiiig to some |42 miUon over the next three yean. Where Romney had caUed for a 20 per cent reduction ip school property taxes to be rebate io districts by the state, the committee proposed an across-the-board 10 per cent reduction in all general property taxes. This would be tied to an increase in state payments of V per pupil over the,next three years plus a Mi mill increase per year in the deductable mill-age equalization factor. This could cost |7 million in 1964-65, 114 million in 1965^, and $21 million in 196647. Romney apparently had acceded to the committee’s Viihet in the area of property tax and inchuioB of school aid but told newsmen earlier in the day that the revised program was accep-able to him. He said it met his basic de- fer any acceptable program: itax relief for low income tax relief and equity for 13, property tax r^f and Ions for local units of gov-Int to raise needed reve- consider some parts new program to be im-mehts over the first one,’’ the governor said. FBI Nabs Two on Women's Unit Tops UFGodI With $32,678 Division Chairman Reports Mark Passed by $3,000; Cites 100 They rang thousands of doorbells and walked hundreds of miles, but women’s division volunteers for Pontiac Area, United Fund today reported going well over.their goal. Mrs. William Brace, women’s ciampaign chairman, at a Hbon luncheon today in Pontiac EUks Temple, repoiled that her 1,300 workers raised |32,67B, or al-most..^,000 above the division goal. Not only did they work weU as a onit, but Mrs. Brace cited 100 for reachhig or 's«r-patshtc thekr ' “ ‘" trict M arcs trlct Each received the “Indian Oscar’’ statuette. Reporting her quota, ^Irs. William FYeyermuthi Pontiac chairman, said |17,tiB. or 104 per cent was reache^. Inchid- , ed is 1871 from business I headj by ' solicitatioa Unit Earl White and Mi^ Oarissa Petm. In Moon Race Withdrawal Space Official Sees Red Ruse WASHINGTON (UPl) - A leading space adviser to President Keimedy believes Premier Khrushchev’s recent space statement was an attempt to slow down the U.S. lunar project, rather than a Soviet withdrawal from the space race. Dr. Edward C. Welsh said yesterday that the Rnssiaiis have a “strong space pro-gram and are concentrating on it. There b nothing b this (Khrushchev’s remarks) to indicate otherwise and no reason to believe they are slackening.” Welsh is executive secretary of the National Aeronautics and Space Council .which advises President Kennedy on U.S. space programs. In an interview with United Press International, be commented on Ford Sales Up, but Not Profits Last Nine Months Were Biggest Ever DETROIT (AP>-Fort Motor Co. srt a nine-months’ sales record thb year, but its profit picture wasn’t as rosy as Outt of Chrysler or .General Motors. Ford yesterday became the last of the nation’s three biggest auto makers to file Ms financial report for the first three qnarters of 1113. All rqxxls agreed the auto business has been ydry good. Dollar sales by both Ford and General Motors for the three quarters were records. For Chrysler, they were the highest since 1957. Khrushchev’s weekend review of future Soviet space programs. Welsh said Khrushchev’s comments were an attempt to encourage a reduction ih U.S. space efforts so that Russia might maintain any competitive ^ge it believes it may have. MAINTAIN ADVANTAGE “He would maintain this advantage on the basb of a slowdown on our part rather than a speedup on his,” Welsh said. He added that Khnuhehev’s remarks were made Congress was appropriation bill for th^ Adndnbtration (NASA). After a blose review of Khrushchev’s statement, Welsh said there were two key sen- Next largest women’s quota was , reported by Waterford I • * * * Township chairman Mrs. Clark found it«^ to the unusu- Easiey. She stated HI,636 was I sfhmtion of doing more (kdlar collects in the town^ip, it did in the first 114 per cent of its goal. oine months of 1962 and having VETERAN ACTOR DIES-Adoiphe Menjou, whose actii^ career spai^ almost 50 years, died in Hollywood yesterday at the age of 73 of hepatiUs. Menjou played many majw roles and was noted f(H* his dappo* dress. LAKE ANGELUS The Lake Angelus unit, headed by Mrs. Max Kerns, went high over its quota (126 per cent) for $3,914. In addition, Mrs. Brace said collections in Independence Township, although not included direcUy^in the women’s goal, totaled $3,989. Township chairman is Mrs. Keith Hallman. Over-all, Mrs. Brace said the division reached 110 per cent of its assigned goal of $29,761. In TcxJqy's Press Segregation Rural Georgia town bitterly battles hitegration-isto ^ PAGE 04. Campaign Trail , . Goldwater Imay an-^nbe political plans sooner .than toqiected — P^GS (^1$. Vief fietfie Tbraa Gb inissing as Gai|^t. smasbis govem-meiit troops—Page A4. ; Are»:Ntws .,i-........A-4 Atowlagy .........c-l* ^Bridjic .... .....C-12 ; Oundcs .... .......C-12 EditMlah .........,.A4 i Maiteto ..........D4 .......I>4 . D-l-*l>4 ......C-l$ .TV-fiMlb PivgrffBS D-M i Wootea’i Pages B-1-A4 less profit to show, for it. PROFITS LESS Ford sales for the first nine months thb year were almost $6.2 billion with profits of $346 million, or $3.14 a share. ’The previous record for a nine-month period was in 1962 wbeu sales were about $54 billion, with profits of $350 million, or $3.18 a. share. For the third quarter thb year. Ford profito were $$•,-70I,I00 or 13 cenb a share, compared with $82,1M,0H or 74 ceats a share to die like qBhrter bst year. Consolidated sales for the quarter were $l,7tt,7IO,IOO, sUghtly higher than the $1,747400,000 in the like period last year. Ford stock drop^ in value, After the lower earnings were reported, from a 54% closing on the New York Stock Exchange to a closing on the Pacific Coast Stock Exdiange. There was no comment on the decline in profite in the report lo Ford shareholders, which was signed by Hmry Fond H. , 4\ South African Judge Kills 10 Indictments Romance Is Sunk DALLAS JUPI) - Neiman-Marcus specialty store today offered the "ultimate in togeth-em^’’ jn its Christmas catalog -r a “hb-and-her” subma-rind. The two-placer cruises at seven m.p.h. and sdb for $18,-700. “At the present time we are not planning flights of cosmonaut!) to the moon . . . NEED PREPARA’nim “We do not widi to emnpete in sending people to the moon without thorough preparation.” Te Wehh, the Soviet lewl-cr’s atatmest “did net uy ‘"nie inference he apparently wished to leave,” Webh said, “was that the United States may be willing to risk lives by going ahead hastily but that the Russians won’t go until they’re ready.” In a Moscow interview, Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, the world’s first spaceman said last night the Russians now are training for new space fiighb "more complicated and serious than the ones that have taken place so far.” I Agents Arrest U.S. Engineer, Russian Driver 7 Months of Work topped WTlh Capture in Englewood, N. J. NEWARK, N.J. - The new prognun ratakb state income taxee of two per cent on individuab, 3% per cent on corporations and six per cent on financial institutions as ib central feature. ★ ★ ★ Revised' GOP Plan Outlined LAiysiNG (B-Here b an o^’v .. line of the tax reform program as revised by Gov. George Rom- ney and the 10-member Republican leadership committee in the legislature: o Income taxes of two per cen) on individuab, 3% per cent on corporations and six per cent on financial institn-tions, effective Jaa. 1, IIM, but with a refereadnm in Nc- income taxes. ra • A 10 per cent across-the-board reduction oit all general property taxes (not special assessments) with local taxing units to be reimbursed by the state. » A three-year program of in- FBI agents have capped Way Is Smoofhled for Traffic on IHuron through” atre| in downtown toure# 10, |ai Huron is again a Pontiac. The barricades that have detouredf through traffic from Wayne to State since Sept. 10, |ame down today as most of perimeter road^ H paving at Huron ana Cass was completed. More perimeter road inter- sections are slated for similar )day according to John Gusman, treatment between now and Sunday. Saginaw, closed to through tq^^ from Oakland to Fab-grove since Sept. 20, is scheduled to be opened Saturday. ^ Construction crews are sched- PRETORIA, South Africa UR -« A Supreme Court Judge threw out today the state’s indictment against 10 men — 3 whites, 6 Africans and 1 Indian accused of sabotage in a plot against Premier Hendrik Vetr woerd’s government. tiled to wive to . the other side on Oakuird tomorrow and on Perry ami Mj. Clemens Satur- city baffic engineer. seven months of around-the-clock .work with the arrests of an American electronics engineer, cleared to handle top secret material, and a Russian chauHeur on espionage charges. ’They were arrested I a s night after a rendezvous near an old stone railroad station in Englewood, N.J. Two Spvbt diplemato serving with Ihe Soviet mbsiea to the United Natkns abe were apprehended by the FBI, but they w* relepaed because ef their d^domatic immunity. Seized in the Russians’ c were a briefcase that contained inf charged early today with "delivering to informa- balf fetors have been paving If the latter three streets. r^tri$^ing traffic to two bites WF at pefimeter road intersections. WH)^R ‘DETOURS’ MlirUn Sumner, assbtant city enjplneer, said Uiat motorbts sh#iid find the new, two-lane ‘dfctoups’’ a little wider and rafich smooth^ on Oakland and Btiry. Mt. Clemens b a boulevard-type street. Curbs and gutters will be completed on the Case-Huroa faitersecUon aader aormal Cass, from about Lafayette south, will become the perimeter road. The big highway starts at Parke and South Saginaw stretching north vb Parke and curving around the,northern edge of the central buiinesi disr trict to meet Cam on tha west side. The men were brought to bial under South Africa’s controversial anti-sabotage Iftw which provides Uk death penalty for serious cases. ANALYSTS TOUR—Pontiac was a major stop yesterday on a tour sponsored by Cqn-sumers Rower Co. fw- 26 representatives of {from left) Robert P. Brings, Consumers ex-ecutive vice president, iTtomas A. Herbert FINAL SECTION The third and final section b Cass extended south from Huron to Saginaw. It b currently slated to go under contract early next spring. Traffic will move one way in a counterclockwbe dtrectipn around the perimeter roid once it b opened. An interior Iqop, to circalate traffic one way in the opposite direettoa iushle Ihe periatoter road, b aho nearing the cea- mqjor eastern investMnt and brok^e houses. Visiting Pontiac Motor Dhrbion were of Bankers Trust Col, New York, and Charles s ?Miti '------ F. Rrown, Consumers Pontiac Division manager. (See story Page li- lt involves extending Wayne south one block to R^e and (Continued on Page k, CqI, 1) tlon rebting to the national defense of the United States,” are John William Butenko, 38, of Orange, N.J., and Igor A. Ivanov, 33, of New York City. RUSSIAN PARENTAGE Butenko, a bachelor of Russian parentage, b a $14,700-a-year control administrator for the International Electric Corp. of Paramus, N.J. Kanov, married and father af a f-year-oM daughter, was a chaaflenr for Amtorg, a Soviet ageacy that handles U4.-8svlet trade relatioas. He came to the United States b March 1912. U.S. Gunmissioner -Theodore Kiscaras at Rutherford ordered both 'men held in $100,000 bail pending action by a federal grand jury. They pleaded innocent. Butenko, perspiring, complained about photographers in Kiscaras’ office. ‘Tf they keep increasing the deductible millage % mill per year and increasing per pupil aid by 7 a year; a total of $42 million in new funds forlciKtob over the next three fbcal years. CITY INCOME TAXES • Local option city income taxes of up to one per cent on individual residenb, an)^up to one half per cent on nonresidents working in the city, effective Jan. 1, 1965. • Local options for couttiM te impose an auto Ucanse fee of npto$5tobe4btrflMtedto local govenuumts for road use taking the bnnIeB off gea-eral funds, and a dae per cent tax on real estaio trsumac- a Give local assessing unite of government option to provide retired citizens over 65 with either a deferral or a clear exemption of a portion of property taxes on homesteads. No reimbursement by the state. a Exemption of groceries and prescription drugs from the state’s four per cent sales tax, the loss to local governments to be reimbufsed by the state, effective July 1,1964. BUSINESS AcnvrriES tax Repeal of the business activities tax. ’ . a Repeal of the state in»{igi-bles tax, either totally, or in part to preserve some revenue from the largest taxpayers, the state to reimburse local governments some $9% mUUon lost annually. Incorporation of the called IS-mill bill a measure im- plementing the new constitution, into the program. It provides that counties may increase their annual millage limit from 15 to 18 mills if voters approve permanent formulas for allocation. . First Freeze luscaras oirice. -ii uiey xeep i ... . I • Hits Area, but irll Warm Up MORE RELAXED Ivanov, more relaxed i Butenko, smiled and asked permission to telephone the Soviet consulate in New York City, just across the Hudson River. The prisoners were fhiger-prtated and then takea to Hadson County jail, Jersey City. The two Soviet diplomab were brusque whoi released from FBI custody here, despite the FBI’s offer to provide them transportation. ibe conduct of the FBI agenb was very rude,” snapped Yuri A. Romas^, 38, third secretary of the Wlet U.N. mfa-sioa. Hb companion, Oteb A. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Nwr,e«MMMM ^ ---... ---‘-ulofli# T( ScKM. Temperatures nosedived to a freezing 31 d^ees at 7 a.m. today. But the weatherman said tonight will be somewhat wanner, the low abont 40 with skies partly cloady. ’Toasanaw’s high b expected to reach M with skies partly overcast Fim- the next five days, temperatures will average 3 to 7 degrees above the normal high of 52 to 55 and normal low of 35 to 39. No important day-to-day changes are predicted through the weekend. Generally mild conditions ai most days. Dry conditions will persbt with no precipitatioii of coase-quence during thb period. ITie thermometer readtag at 1 p.m. today was U. i.. "•'if.' THE PONTIAC PRKSS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 80, 19g6 T ■'! ''/"I' -1 . ’ ,ri . Cong Crushes Unit; Three GIs Missing SAIGON, So^. Viet. Nam - Comrilwi (AP) — Comrilunlst •♦guerrillas smashed a crack South Vietnamese task force Tuesday and probably captured the three U.S. Army advisers with the INi-man ta^ force. The three Americans, listed as missing and believed captured, were two officers and an enlisted medic. Stragglers returning from the rout said both officers had been wounded early in the fight—one in the head and the other in the leg. A second government force of about 200 men, operatin| only ■ few thousand yards , away, learned of the battle toaiate to help. U.S. authorities sa|g Communist radio jammers l^hxdied out both the main channal and the alternate channel ofe all local military radios. BATTLE COSTS . The operation cost the Vietnamese Special Forces an estimated 20 killed, 30 wounded and 12 missing and presumed captured. Heavy weapons loss included a 60-mm mortar. Viet Cong losses were unknown. “The day ended with the enemy in command of the field," a high-ranking American officer said. “He had plenty of time to get his own casualties out of the way along with prisoners from our side, before we could get back ta.’’ Names of the missing Americans were not announced immediately. The U.S. casualty list rose to four late Tuesday when the U.S. Air Force pilot of a light spotting plane was hit by an enemy machine gun. Hie pilot flew back to his base and was evacuated to Saigon. County Air Service by 70—but Where? same general area 140 miles southwest of Saigon where another government unit took a bad beating Oct. 19. Some 40 Vietnamese troops were killed and 13 Americans wounded in that battle. Pontiac Municipal Airport or Allen Airport — which should be developed into a major ah^ field serving Oakland County by 1970? This is what a countrywide study of fntnre airport needs is intended to show, according to Chattel Edwards, chairman of the Coonty Board of Supervisors Aviation Committee. This committee has been given the job, of recommending what the board of supervisors should do with the county’s recently acquired sod airfield, Orion Township. Yesterday, the committee met with otgineering representatives to weigh qualifications, for carrying out the proposed study. FOUR REPRESENTATIVES Six firms were invited to the meeting. Four sent representatives. NEW START The combined offer of two finns recommended a “fnesh^^ new start” at determining avii^i tion needs in Oakland County. This the committee is trying to avoid. It wants a study based on a^compilaticxi of existing data. Members said they expected to learn how much of this data is available when they meet with the County Planning Commission Tuesday morning. One said his firm was only interested in doing actual ea- Way Is Smoothed for Traffic on Huron (Continued From Page One) Lafayette to Perry just north of the Sears Roebuck Co. store. Beginning at Pike and Perry, for example, ti^ic would move west (HI Pike, north on Wayne, east on Lafayette and south on Perry back to the starting point. Construction work on the interior loop and the final section of the pa*imeter road was purposely delayed so as not to create insurmountable trafflc problems in the downtown area. gineering that might be entailed in any expansion. Two firms combined a single offer to perform the study. Represenative of the fourth firm said his organization wouldn’t be able to begin a study for at least three months due to other committments. All day today, patrols and spotting planes combed the marshy rice fields, canals and patches of palm jungle where the fight took place, but they made no contact with the guerrillas. Tracks were spotted in all directions, but there was no in-dleation wiiat happened to the Americans or the other captives. 'Ae government unit had good intq^igence about the Viet Cong, and only the final, vicious clash came as a surprise, American sounoes said. No Sboof-Ouf on Pigeons NILES (AP) - Niles’ down-, town pigeon population has been given a reprieve by Mayor Mowitt S. Drew. A businessman had proposed lining up 125 marksmen on a Sunday morning, mostly along downtown rooftops, for a one-hour pigeon shoot. Drew rejected the plan as being too dangerous although it would save the city money. A health officer estimated it would cost the city $2,000 to wipe out the pigeon population by other means. Enough apples are grown in the United States each year to supply about 80 apples to every man, woman and chUd in the nation. The Weather FnU U. S. Weather Bureau Report PtWllAC 4ND VICINITY — Mostly sunny and a little warmer today. High 58. Partly cloudy not so cool toni^t, low 40. Partly cloudy little temperature change Thursday, high 80. Light variable winds becoming southerly 5 to 15 miles per hour late this afternoon and tonight then west to northwest 10 to 15 miles per hour Thursday. SAME AREA Tlie fight was i MAJOR ATTACK TTie Viet Cong had been advertising for several weeks that it plgnned a major attack against Tan Phu, the base of the Vietnamese Spe tion in Englewood was an unlikely setting for* Tuesday night’s drama. Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy and J’BI Director J. Edgar Hoover gave this account of the cat-and-mouse activity FBI agents watched from the shadows as Butenko and the Russians met in the station parking lot and then strode away. Tlie agents moved in, collaring Butenko in his car and Pavlov and,Ivanov in the'ir automobile. Romashtn was seized nearby, where he was posted as a lookout. In the rear .seat of the Russians’ car was a briefcase that Butenko brought to the meeting, containing data relating to a “highly sensitive Air Force contract being handled by the International Electric Corp.” TTie document camera also was in the Russian car. AP nnHM NOT A MARK—Rep. Ed Foreman, D-’fex., grins as he looks in a milrror yesterday after, he says, Rq). Henry B. Gonzalez, D-Tex., ahned a punch at hii head In a House lobby. Foreman said he ducked and the punch landed on his shoulder. House Texan: Fight Is Over YOUNGEST MEMBER Foreman is the youngest member of the House at 29, and husky. He is a Republican who espouses conservative causes. Gonzales is 47, a Democrat who espouses liberiil causes, and the 26 Financiers Taken on tour by Consumers A group of eastern investment analysts who toured the Consumers Power Co. service area yesterday said they were impressed by what they saw in Pontiac and Oakland CkNinty. Robert P. Briggs, Consumers ^ecntlve vice president, said the group of 21 commented frecjaently about the private and public facilities and iinprovements in the Pontiac area. Briggs, who was dt^mpanied by CTwrles F. Brown, Consum-Pdnl - • • --------- ers PdnUac Division ihpnager, said the idea behind thd tour was to show that “Mi(Aigm is a good place to work and pldy, and one of the best places Ih the country in which to create new jobs.” He said the 26 all represented major financial institutkms frequently involved in business transactions with Consumers and other major Michigan industries. LOCAL SIGHTS Local points of interest seen in yestenday’s visit were downtown and shopping center retail areas, new home and office construction, city and county facilities and public works. Lunch and a tour of plant op-emtions was sponsored by Pontiac Motor Diviskm. first man oi Mexican descent to serve in the House. Foreman said, “I didn’t call Gonzalez a pinko or a Ckimmu-nist. What I did say was that his ultraiiberal left-wing voting record was a disservice to the Ckmstitution of the United States and furthers the Socialist-Com- Gonzalez took umbrage at a news story that quoted Foreman as calling him a pinko, and confronted his fellow Texan yesterday on the House floor. What happened next is in some dispute, but in the speaker’s lobby just outside the House chambec. Gonzalez wound up giving Foreman a single punch on the shoulder. MAN ’TOMAN “I’d still like to have it out with him man to man, but he’s a joto—that's Spanish for a yellow-livered sissy,” Gonzalez said. “I asked him. to take off his glasses but he wouldn’t. In fact, he put on his glasses as soon as he saw me coming over.” Foreman, discussing the incident later, smiled and said, “I played four years of college football. I’m 6 feet 4 and 200 pounds and I exercise regularly.” Gonzalez said he weired in at 174V5. Foreman said, “I’m sorry the folks of San Antonio (Gonzalez’ home city) have such an irresponsible hothead representing them in Congress.” ‘The only intelligent way to continue this is to discuss and' debate; I think we’ve progressed beyond the use of clubs and fists.” Malaysia Calls Offer Not Very Encouraging KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia, W) — Malaysia said today a Thilippine proposal for a settlement in the two nation’s dispute over diplcnnatic recognition is “not very encouraging.” Malaysia offered a counter-proposal, but details were not revealed. The Philin)ines had asked Malaysia to agree to negotiate a Manila claim to North Borneo, now Sabah In the new Malaysian federation. The Philippines made this a condition to granting Malaysia recognition. JFK Praises Houstt GOP Wary of Dems on Rights Bill WASHINGTON (AP)-Hpuae Republicans kept their fingers crossed today as they received administration praise for helping to launch a strong dvil rights bill in Congress. The Republicans have wamM the administration all pledges of support for the compromise measure are off if the Democrats seek to make any political gain out of civil rights at their expense. i ★ I' ★ At the moment, though, bipar-tisianship was bolding Ann ^ the long bottled-up legislatiw finally began to move through the House. Even with President Kennedy, Speaker J(rfin W. McCormack and Republican Leader Charles A. Halleck behind It, however, the far-reaching compromise bill faces delays and obstacles. MID-NOVEMBER The most optimistic estimate heard after the House Judiciary Committee approved the bill by a 23-11 vote Tuesday was that it would be mid-November before it gets to the House floor. Other estimates made U early December. The time will be needed to write a report on the voluminous measure and hearings in the Southern-dominated Rules Committee. Tte biggest obstacle remains the Senate, however, where it is accepted as fact that a determine Southern filibuster will have to be broken by a two-thirds majority vote if any bill is to be passe. The sweeping nature of the bill makes toat questionable. Many observers doubt that there is enough time left to pass civil rights legislation in this session. RESULT STRONGER Tabbedt a compromise between a tough subcommittee bill and more moderate measures introduced by Republicans, the bin that emkged from the Judiciary Committee proved stronger than the original administration bill. It retained several provisions from the subcommittee bUl, including one that would create a federal commission empowered to ban racial discrimination in enqrioyinent. in private industry. The comihission would have to go into court to get an injunction carrying out its findings, however, instead having its own enforcement, powers as in the subcommittee bill. Birmingham Area News School Board Secretary Submits Resignation BIRMINGHAM - Richard P-Barnard, Birmingham Board of EducatiiMi secretary, has aub> mitted his resignation to Board President E. Ross Hanson. Mrs. Lanise G. Adams ef ed to replace Barnard as i Barnard, an attorney who lives to FVanUin Vfflage, said out-of-town litigation has caused him to miss board meetings with increasing frequency. ★ a a A heavier work load, he noted, is not ptfmitting him to da vote the t^ to board matters that he fesds they deserve. TRUSTEE SINCE’H Barnard has been a trustee since 1958, serving ss secretary since U0O. hhrs. Adams, 325 Overhm, will complete Barnard’s 1888-43 term. Mrs. Dean Beier, a tmafee sliice INI, will become board secretary, Hanson an- hfrs. Adams has been serving on the steering conunittee of the Citizens’ Elementary Curriculum Study Committee during the past year. - -A past president of the University of Michigan Alumnae Club in Birmingham, she was PTA president of the Bloomfield Village Elementary School in 198041. She is the wife of Birmingham pediatrician Dr. Frederick M. Adams. They have five children, four of whom attend Birmingham Public Schools. The ft' is a student at Albion College. The Birmingham PTA Coun--«il has served public notice that it stands against those who encourage drinking and smoking among teen-agers. The eouaeO’s board pasted a resetathm stating that it is “naalterably oppssed to the prevaOtaf pneOee of selltof tobacco to mtaors ta vlolatlOB of Mkhigaa statutes.” In a separate resolution, the board condemned the practice “by which minors are able to procure liquor, whether thnm^ Drilling Near Three Entombed in Mine BROISTEDT, Germany (AP) —Rescuers drilled to within 82 feet of three miners trapped in an underwater air bubble before baiting operations early today to prepare for the most critical phase of the rescue. H aU goes weU, the three ire expec^ to be freed by late Tbur^y — ending a weddong entombment 2S8 feet below the gntond in an iron mine that was flooded when a nearby dam broke. Eighty-six miners escaped, but 40 others arc unaccounted for and are believed drowned. The men are in a dead-end gall^, about the size of a four-room apartment. MSU Gets Project on Plant Life EAST LANSING (A ^ Michigan State University today announced it will conduct a large scale basic research project on plants for the Atomic Energy Commission. Involved will he the caih itrnctiea sf ahsot a l^mil- 45 Years, 1 Accident BATH, Englai^ (UPI) - Herbert Carpenter, 77, Bath’s oldest cab driver, was ordered to take a new driving test yesterday after he admitted driving carelessly before his taxi struck a wall — his first accident in 45 years of driving. With Price Tag on Tiny Parcel Ltgion Blocks DowntoWn Loop Street NATIONAL .WEATHER—Ocxiasional rain is expe(;ted tonight in the central Mississippi Valley and in western Washington while Showers are forecast for the Northern and Central Rockies. It will continue cool in the AtlanUc states and the Northern Plains. Wanner weather is esrpected in the Southern Pialns and the Ohio, T^iuj^ee and Central and Lower Mississippi valleys. Hie first meeting of the accused coaspirators occurred, according to the FBI complaint, OB April 21, at a res-liiBrant in the north Jersey rural community of Norwood. The bespectacled Butenko has worked for International EJet the pleas to the misdemeanor (tongp by Oakland Coonty Prosecutor George F. Taylor touched, off a storm of protest hy neighbors and relativca of Mrs. Kitties’ dl-vorced hudiand, who was the father of one of the dead children. Hunt Evidence in Abduction LANSING (AP) - Ingham Coonty Praoecnlor Leo Fadmt chargtac a Sagbaw eoastrae- of khtoapiug la the abdaetba ti tiny, bbgde MfcheOe Moraa LANSING m-dly poUce to-day continued to bM a J3-year» old Saginaw man in the abduc- tion d 5-year-old MkheUe Mo-aatF^y. ranlaatF Ak—_ - ^ the anaamed saspeet awy be sought today. Chief ef Police Charles Siragter said. M 0 r e evidence to the case was bail^ sought White authorities held the nuto, who they said was employed at a motel coa-ftroctioB Job to Laatiag. MichoUe, the daughter of Bdrs. from her rootbv’s car outside a shopping cento'. A track driver found her to a ditch alongside urday d had been moleitad. Stragier said little MicheDe identified the Saginaw cdnatnic-tion woiker as her abductor when she picked him out of h group in a police lineup. The 8-yoar-aU toether ef the victim, Frank, who saw her saatehed f(pijl the mother's ear, also atado. taatatfve ideaUHcatiaa of the saspeet, heoald. Detectives were continuing to gather evldenoe and queathm the suapect, a father of four sons, before asking fv a warrant from Ingham County ■Proseontor Leo Farbat The Ernie Davis Leukemia Fund has been established in menxvy of the famed coBe^te football player who died of that > disease at the i«e of 2K ,V '■ny T-Vfu ■ ■■:■ V B-2 THE PRESS. W^EEInIeSDAY, Ocj’OBER 80.; 1968 ,, . ,■ 'I: ’ '■ Hi« An Nfw Modem IMPERIAL flair Styling as You Like it/* 158 Anburn Are. CwOa^SlrUa^TlMtlag PABK FWEE FE 4-2878 SAM & WALTER Delicitvf SaiMft Ev«ninm AC MAUL Op«n PON1 Airman, ' ^ Clawson Girl Married The PoUsh-American Century (M, Hamtrainck, was the setting for a dinner-reception for 300 Mio attended the recent marriage of Sandra Beatrice Malor to Air IVaffic Controlman Edward Joseph Kretsdi. Rev. Michael O’Hara of St. Sebastian Cburdi, Dearborn, cousin of the bridegroom, of-felrad die nuptial hi^ Mass in St Ladlslaus Church, Ham-, tramck. CARRIED ORCHIDS tW bride, daughter of David 6. Maior of Clawson and die late Mrs. Maior, anneared in white silk brocade with Frendi Illusion veil. Her peart tiara matched the bridegroom’s gift necklace. She carried white Cymbidium Karen and Beverly Palczar-dd of Hamlramdc aUmded their cousin as bridesmaids, Mary Ann'&asusky of Crosse He was maid of honor. Ibe bridegroom, son of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Kretsch of i^lvan Lake was assisted by his brothers Elmer Jr. as best »man and John Mw ushered with William Downing of Walled Lake. tucky honeymoon, die couple are at home in Utica. He is stationed at Selfridge AFB. Keep Shoes Loose Tight - fitting shoes or boots can cause frostbite, which can be not only painful but se- JUDY PAVUK January vows are plannrul by Judy Pavlik, daughter of the John Path liks of Royal Oak and Richard Fox, son of Mr, and Mrs. Melvin Fox of Meadow Street. Sorority Discusses Transfers The Pontiac City Council of Beta Sigma Phi sorority considered membership transfers from other cities Monday evening in the home of Mrs. Andrew Vitt on Silver Circle. Plans for Founders’ Day were discussed, also a tea for new members in November at the Clarkston Road home of Mrs. Philip L. Stombtfg. STAFF'S . . . shoe treats without tricks . • . Girls' New Saddle Style Boys' Blutcher Moc With colorful iraorts at the saddle .. . choose cither the new 'Peat'- or Red shades. Sizes small 8'A-12, 12'/i-3, In widths too and prices in mellow leather with rubber heel and leather cole. A man's style in little men's sizes, too. Little Boys' 8Vi-12 to Big Boys' 9's. Priced according to size from $8» $899 SHOE REPAIR SERVICE At our West Huron Store we hove a complete shop operoted by Expert Shoe Repairmen. Shoes for repair tnoy be token to any of our three stores. for Convenient. Prompt, Personal Service JUVENILE BOOTER1E 2t E. Lawranca St. Downtown (Open Mon. to 8:30, Prt.to9) JUNIOR SHOES 928 W. Huron at Telegraph (Open Fri. to9. Sat. tp 8:30). ROCHESTER STORE Junior Shoes 418 N. (Main St. (Open FrI. to 9) • Red, White Featured at Recent Wedding An Italian-Amerkan club reception followed the recent vowg of Karen Lee Gorkie and Ronald FrederkA May, in St Paul Luthtfan Church, where Rev. Maurice Shackell officiated. Daughter of the Frank L. Gorkies of East Mansfield Avenue, the bride wore white taffeta combined with Chantilly lace for the candlelight ceremony. A cofchnibuMtyle lace panel centered her full gaOiered skirt styled In a chapel sweep. A rose headpiece helped her bouffant illusion veil and red roses accented her bou-qud of white carnations and Stephanotis. Wit^ Mrs. Eugene Hubbuck, her cousin’s matron of honor were the bride’s sister Carole Gorkie, Glenda Roberts and Ifrs. Robert TimdMill of Oxford, who were" bridesmaids. Katby Gorkie was Jodor maid and Candy Joi^ of Oxford nerved as flower girl. They were red chiffon over taffeta and carried red-tipped .white camatkns. The bridegroom, son of Electric Sheets Ne^ Cleaning Be sure to launder your electric sheets before summer storage. They are safe in a wast^ machine, but should never be wrung or twisted. Just wrap the plub with several thkAnesses of cloth, ana tie It in idace with diread sa tt won’t strik(^ the washer tub. Follow die man-turer’s instmetioos for drying. Foil Fashion Show The faridon^riiow to be presented by (he-Sisterbood of Temple Jacob will start at 8:30 p.m. Nov. 13 at the tenqde. Arthur’s will siq)ply Frederick L. May of Forest Avenue and the late Mrs. Lor->fdne BeVar, had William Pal-lace of Clarkston for best Seating guests were Ernest Griurke, Henry Grace, Gary Wright and juiiior usher John Jones of Oxford. The cou|de wiU be at home on Pioneer Drive after a honeymoon in M^mi. Area Group Sets Dances hr November The Wagon Wheelers Square Dance Chib plans three special dances, all in the Donel-son School, during November. All (famces begin at 8:30 pjn. The annual bard times dance, with optional dress, will be on Friday. On Nov. 15, ibe club will mark Its fourth anniversary under the calling of Melvin Sheffer. ★ ★ Wagon Wheelers, with Mr. Sheffer, caller, will host the following callm and their chibs at the yearly jamboree on Nov. SO: ★ ★ ★ Charles Becker, “Hix V Oiix”; Edward Farr, "Style Stealers’’, Norman Hill, “Westemaires’’; Samuel Joan, "Allamanders’’: Martin Lodi, “Happy Twlrim’’; Robert Lange, "Longhorns’’; Ra^ Price, "Pontine Square Sets’’; Douglas Rieck, “Dudes ’n’ Dolls’’; Wayne Wkm, "Cukoo Squares"; and for the round dances the Warren Allens and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jensen- By POLLY CRAMER DEAI^POLLY-I, too, save the pointers. RecenUy when 1 gave a shower for a bride-to-be, I passed out a Polly’s Pointer clipping to each guest. Then each one read her Pointer aloud. This led to our sharing our own helpful hints with the bride. We had an interesting and informative afternoon not J “This important progress in one of New York’s larger cities may soon lead to the hoped-for release of all New York schools from the* strait'* jacket of the Look-Say or configurational dogma, which was proved as ruinous in practice in the l^t 40 years as it was unsound in theory," said Watson JVashburn, Wmmrn ■ilSiS; • .'ssrjstst'tuhs&z IP \MUR$OAV,t$ YOU«,/birthday ; — p®' Mis -T- l‘'C asvti aiAO iwiii ^:r rj. THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEPNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1963 Duffy Clinic Speaker SAN FRANaSCO (UPI) -Bud Wilkinson of the University of OUahome and Duffy Dauglii* erty of Michigan State will head the ^ist of,^^ speakers, Feb. 22^, during the second annual coach of the year clinic. TUBSMVe PIOHTI ■v TIm >inrltte< ViMi HOUITOftHilp Randall, Hatw- •an, atrtpoMad Rrankia ewnlrtz, 14^ 'IjbAdIw^-'dw, CmMTV. BivIM V Why is Imperial now outselling almost every other whiskey in the world ? Because knoiriedgeable people have a taste for Hiram Waiker quality. Captains Trim WTHS Harriers Kettering Adds Points in Sports Trophy Bid Waterford Kettering scored a 50-point victory over arch rival Waterford Township yesterday in cross country, although the final score was only 2I-32. The clooe win gave the Captains SO points in conipetttioo for the All Sports Trophy. Actoally, the victory was log had wea H pohris with an season; but the Sripfiers coaid with a trhuqih yesterday. There vrill be 100 points available in the football contest next reek between the two schools. BruAe Bodner Bodner and Mark Pank-finished one-two for the Captains yesterday with the focm-er’s winning time of 10:58 only one second ahead of his teammate’s time, on the windy, ch% home course. 1395 $249 Hfiio Miun - MTnif • m nuisii Mt»m m SUN lUTui sruia - uui nuu i siu inc., kuu. u. PROTECTION HEADQUARTERS FOR HUNTERS! US FOa - H SPECIAL ACCIDENT POLICY FOR HUNTERS. Yon select the saouots and auaiber of days. A 3 day policy coots ooly |1.05. ^ 'ALL RISK* PROTECTION fot yoot goos, hiiatiog equipoMBt sod baggage. Sec Us Before Yoa LesTc! r FE 5^172 LAZELLE^'^^^ INC. 504 PONTUC STATE BANK BUILDING. PONTIAC Waterford grabbed third and fourth places by Geotge Ball-ingall and John Meyers, respectively; but Kettering’s Len McPherson edged Ron Potter of the Skippers for sixth place and the clinching points. The victory gave the Captains s dual meet record. Thdr reserve squad also triumphed. 17-46. \ U-D Fullback 2nd in l^ushing Yardage DETROIT , for their second win, Anderson’s All-Stars nip West Side Lanes, 84, and the Misfits bump the Pontiac Packers, 154. ^ ★ ★ Warren Stephens and Fred Davis scored once to pace the Misfits as they clinched second place. Ernest'Robinson had the only toudxiown as Hie All-Stars tied for third place by beating West Side. Jerry Gerber went over twice, Fred Acker, Bob Haux-well aqd Dick Ifeller each tallied one touchdown as the Raiders tied for fifth place. M. ★ ★ All ei^ mama will engage In le iriayoffs which vrill start next Tuesday night at Jaycee Park. cmr MBirt touch MoraALL e. M. e«MN PmHk Vadii Tlw VIcMra . PRIDE HUBT . His pride hptteretl aft* the hiimiHafing 3^ defeat, his wont as a coach, Hayes asked each of his play*s to write a critique of what Would do the most good in gettii* ready for Wisconsin. \ He also did a Utfl^ thinking 1 Us own and came lip with a trunqi card—Tom Barrington, a 205 • p 0 u n d quartorback who nearly lost his life last summer in an industrial accident. Hayes dosed the doers to the practice field and drilled Bar- riagtoa tong and hard. He had beea idle since laet spriag froei the shattered Jaw that forbade aayceBtact worii ”We fett It would be a good advantage to us if the oppodtion didn’t know about Barrington,” Hayes said. Carswell Will Return as Syracuse AAanager SYRACUSE, N.Y. W - Frank Carswell, who managed the Syracuse (^efs to the northern division dianqiionship in the International Baseball League last season, will manage the team next year, the club said Tuesday. Carswell, 43, was named man ager last June 19 to replace Bob Swift, who was called up to the parent Detroit Tiger organization as a coach. Barrington wgs kept off the field at Wisconsin until the squad came back to start the game. He was not listed on the traveling roater. * A “Although they might have had some premonition about it, they weren’t sure of it,” Hayes Primarily a runner, Barring-. ton gained SB yards in 16 caries, but bis lift was psychUogi-^ morg than anything else. It Um displaced quarterback Don Unyerfertb to provide the paas- tohk disf Un^erfer tag that set up the wtantag touchdown in the final three “Maybe tt*s healthy to iHek they OB the bead^” Hayes During the “Woody years” in the Big Tita. 1951 to 1863, OUo State has compiled a 58-184 rac-ord. Although the Buckeyes have not played Minnesota in that time, the b«it any of the other eight have done is Iowa with five wins and six losses. ... oxperts Wll us Hut wot, colder weather is surely on the way! Now's the time to think about dw guaranteed protection of Water BepeUent You'll enjoy your hunting. trip more in freshly cleaned garments processed by our enperts for deep down soil ‘ and stain removal and confident you look good with tho finest weather protection availeble. Call tdday for convenient pickup Remember ... the little ihinge that count or Gresham. 605 Oakland Avem TAILOR MADE FuHSat 124.98 SEAT COVERS All staf eevare out fram tha raH and tailarad to yaur ear far pariaot-ftt. Fraaipt strviaa an any mnkn or madnl ear. KELLI’S SEAT COVER KING Meet Celtics Tonight Pistons Seek Home Win But they might have to wait airiiile, because they will be ptaying against the world cham-ptoa Boston Celtics. ’Ihe Celtics, minus the services of the great Bob Cousy, who retired have shown so far that tiiey hardly miss the back-court wizard. They have a 34 record and are all atone in the lead of the eastern diVtokm. ’He Ptotons, unSer new eoaeh Charley Welf, we westen the cellar of the i The Celts have been botiiered by the usual opening season bugs. A couple of front hne play-erg have come down with the flu and Tom Hrinsohn has been sufftfing firom the shingles but the Boeton dub doesn’t show any signs of letting up. BULLETIN PLAY OUR 9 HOLE PAR 3 FOR ONLY 50* AND THIS AD Wqllrfanl HE Cawlry Oab MA S-1N9 Wolf said the Detroit club has been having its troubles on the foul line. They have consistently out-shot and outscored their first four rivals but come apart at tte f^ line. He said be would place emphasis on this in practice. Green Bay Adds 'Brat' for Passing Insurance LOS ANGELES (UPM - llie Green Bay Packers have picked up former Los Angeles Ram quarterback Zeke Bratkowski on the waivers and he will be in their linetqi Sunday against the Pittsburg Steelers. Bratkowski will sub f complained in the U.S. tani gift horse, Sardar, for an j when she. rode here two years ■ ★ ★ ★ official debut on the show cir- ago although she was not a card ; The Kennedy contingent will cult'. The thoroughbred bay gelding, a gift from Pakistani president Ayub Khan, will be ridden by Mrs. Kennedy’s friend and Mid-dleburg, Va., neighbor. Mrs. Eve Fout, in a sidesaddle ladies’ hunter class. carrying member of any recog-1 spark the second night of the six nized hunt—a rule-book viola- day show, which got off to a tion. I white tie social start in the na- This time. Ethel is seeking! tional guard armory Tuesday credentials. Claude W. Owen, night. horseowner from nearby Po-, West Germany’s young and tomac, Md., and a director of j-speedy trio of riders rode away I the Washington show, is letting 1 with top honors in the first test And, Ethel Kennedy, wife of, Mrs. Kennedy ride his 7-year-1 of international jumping. ’Diey - The Atty. Gen. Robert F. Ken- old chestnut hunter. War Life, took the first four places, shut-j ,^*g'\t class is topped by a 3 nedy, will ride a borrowed hunt- He said the masters of the fox-1 ting out entries from U.S., Cana- pound 9-ounce oma. er in a conformation class if she ! hounds association in Hoston i da and Argentine teams. A 850 savings bond is awarded can get clearance to wear the j have been asked to issue a hunt | £XPECTED LESS colors of her defunct hunt club, card to Mrs. Kennedy, even j Bertalan De i If ‘ Ethel, now 35 and the mother though her ex-hunt club is now! Nemethv oTNorotSn Conn saM TP ^ nTTa The extremely dry weather has made dog work almost impossible. In fact, conditions are so adverse that many nimrods are Staying home waiting for a good rain. PHEASANT CONTEST The leaders remain the same in The Press Pheasant Contest. A 40% - inch ringneck is leading the length division while the The average person, looking at the machine, is tempted to think of it as being uncanilly human. The machine can play a chess game, a game of checkers or write poetry if given the proper .instructlMis. ; liie people who work with it | even have had the machine draw a picture of a pretty girl. | Every curve is just right in the machine-made drawing. As an example, the machine spat out an objection when asked to draw 927 permits for the Montmorency County area. The machine told the humans they were incorrect. The machine was right. There should ent operations, he said. The regular Job of tbe machine is to process checks (or welfare recipients — some 130.IM a month. More than 261,000 applications for any-deer permits were received by the department this Deer Permits Go in Mail This Week But the people directing It show they realize it is just ar machine. - They haven’t even given it a pet name. NO PERSONALITY “It is just a big, hard old hunk of hardware,” said Jim Hughes, administrative analyst for the Conservation Department. “People who work with these machines don’t think of them as personalities.” Hughes and Harry Cox, in charge of office services for the department, had the tedious job of telling the machine what to do. It took about three days for them to draw up Instructions. When the drawings were Antlerless Deer Hunting in S. Michigan Supported A state Senate conservation. The Menominee River, with committee Monday heard wit- the Brule River, forms much of nesses nrgi- 0.at sn snlerless!‘I“ Mtahigan.Wisconsn. border. Ke. in i Michigan officials say there u T. i no pollution originating on this southern lower Michigan. the river and that The committee, meeting in pro^jiems originating in Wiscon-Kalamazoo, talked to agricul- gj.^ being abated. LANSING (UPI) - The Stale I Conservation' Department has ' been deluged with telephone calls from hunters who sought the 146,000 “any daer” permits available for next month’s season. “Everyone wants to know when they will be notified of their success or failure in the *draw,” said a department spokesman. ture agents, farmers, fruit _ The HEW Department claims growers and nurserymen Theyi^^^j^hi areas of the river are were unanimously for shooting, g^jjj antlerless deer — now allowed; ______ of eight children, was a well i extinct in the northern part of the state. ^ The committee will hold expected to operate in Michigan further hearings early next | this winter, including, two mul-year in other areas before ' timillion dollar, layouts. making any recommends- I 'Hie two plush resorts are A computer pulled out the lucky winners in the permit draw last week, but the applications now are awaiting a printer’s stamp of “allowed” or “denied.” The department spokesman said notices to successful applicants in the western end of the Upper Peninsula would be maUed out tomorrow. The season starts Nov. 9 in the western U.P. Successful applicants in all other areas, where the season Holly Canoeists Plan Temporary Form for Ski Safety Checks the toughest competition in the show. But their smashing victory Tuesday night was a bit more than was bargained for. With only three riders—Alvin Schockemuehle, 26, Germany’s jumping champ, Kurt Jarasin- Only ringnecks are eligible and the birds must be brought to The Press Sports Department for weighing or measuring. The contest closes at noon, Nov. 11. Shanty Creek Lodge near Bel-One nurseryman, John Zelen- 1®^* Boyne Highlands at _ , . , _ ! ka of Grand Haven, told the Harbor Springs. Rank Near Top lawmakers that deer,did $49,000 “The new ski areas and ex-damage last year to his trees, panded facilities at many of the in Stats Races ______ established Michigan resorts The Kalkaska National Trout should add up to winter busing ^ . . , ' „ ; Festival, oldest in the naUon, that will surpass the recori $» inn Tn ^ill not be held in 1965. Local mjllion season last y^n said among the top 10 teams in the state during ihe past racing sea- ski, 24, and Herman Schriddd; JSb ,26, they routed the powerhous . , , . , , . . ' American squad with its seven CADILLAC iJV-Michigan ski ; state ski satety law is borne by | ^ areas will operate under a tern- charges to individual operators, entered in the fault and out porary permit this season pend- pgy j2 per application [ringmaster challenge trophy, ing full implementation of the to operate rope tow facilities. $5; Whistles and applause from state skiing safety act, accord- x-bar and $15 for chair lifts, the opening night crowd of 3.800 ing to Ski Safety Commission inspection of the facilities' greeted Schockenmuehle’s vie- . ^ , chairman Fred Bocks. . Ganges in cost from $8 for rope tory dash on Dozent. He also ,n Despite a late .start, he said installations to $25 for T- took second place, riding an- Allegan County is holding p today, all the areas wUl be in- ^ars and $30 for chair lifts. ^ other mount. Freiherr. His ^ ^‘8 miration of spected with emphasis on me- ggpijs manager of Caberfae teammates sewed up third arid chanical facilities and “glaring §jjj ^pgg here, says application fourth by going the same dis- "" safety harards will have to be gnd inspection costs would total lance, Schridde riding Kamer^d corrected.” approximately $600 at Caberfae. and Jarasinski on Almmusik. Damp areas in northern Oakland County, the Brown City area, Sanilac County and the marsh area in northern'* Tuscola County have been the most productive pheasant spots. Goose hunting at Swan Creek ■ in A1 and Pat Widing were runners up to the first place tandem — Jerry Lauwers of Tawas, City and Stan Hall of Oscoda. Lauwers and Hall scored 5,000 sponsors have decided to spend their money on luring an industry to the northern Michigan community. Michigan and Wisconsin water resource officials are unhappy State Tourist Council Director William McGraw. Facilities at Alpine Valley and Mt. Christie near Pontiac have been expanded. starts Nov. 15, will be notified in letters being mailed Friday.. A third set of letters will be sent out next Monday, to the estimated 115,000 hunters whose hick in the draw was bad. the department spokesman said. Anowar Archery Cmalmr GBIMES AICHEBT CO. TMl ORIMn eiSTOL oaie uow CtoMU ert.. M.. swi. uiKtna fl points and won aU but two of over the U.S. Depaitoent of I the races. I Health, Education a^ Welfare | Areas where discrepancies re-eerin quiring engineering changes lor compliance aj-e found will be allowed to operate this season but must make corrections when ordered. All new facilities including’ rope tows, T-bars, chair lifts and others must comply with the American standards c-odc adopted iri Michigan, said Bodks. He said the law provides for hearings with some lati-t u d e expected in cases of hardship. B«*cks estimated “It will be well into the winter” before the area inspec- Hie cost of implementing llie Oil Rights Auction Hunters using decoys and calls in southern and western Oakland County are picking up a few.geese. The local honkers are taken while flying between refuges and feeding grounds. Grouse hunting in Lapeer and Oakland Counties is only* fair. The pats are spread out and m heavy cover. They are also flushing well in front of hunters. One good thing about these birds is that they can be walked up. The Uoldridge Lakes area and sections off Van Road, both in Holly recreation area, contain pats. 'The Hadley Hills ha^ a lew. Old orchards around Meta-mora are productive .grouse lo'-cations. Holly’s Roy Widing teamed with Dan Glasco of Flint to place fourth while Ed Adams of Holly and Cecil Lane of Flint were fifth. They were honored Monday night at the sixth annual awards banquet of the Michigan Canoe Racing Association. announcing it would hoW a conference on pollution of the Menominee River. Claiming “intervention without InvIUtion,” Mlchighn officials are irked dint the federal government stepped in and proclaimed poUntkm without first consult^ them. Solunor Tables state oil and gas rights, c-ov-cring about 17,000 acres in 11 northern ^wer Peninsula •bounties, will be offered for losing by tbe Conservation Depai^ent ^ during a Nov. C public auction in Lansing. NEVER TOO OLD - Mrs. Luella. Halverson of .Milwaukee I Lists of lease resUictions^nd plots' distribution of a 42,inch muskie whose big mouth got it ! lands open to bidding are avail- into trouble after the fish uriderestimated the power"of a woman. ’ able free from the department's Thefll3-j|ear-old grandmother, who had been stalking muskies m^Vv division in Lansiog. while fishii^ with her daughter on i northern'^ Wisconsin lake. 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