Tht Weather WJ. WMtter Bwvm Faracai Chance of front (OfMrtb VOL. 128 NO. THE PONTIAC PRESS Homa Edition - * W PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. MONDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1968 —44 PAGES mfWMHLm Pope in U.S. for Historic Visit, Meets Johnson Uruguay Launches plan to -JIT.—1- _ 1 Try a Quick-acting Press Want Ad Durability feature* include full-depth frame* and cantilever combined with a relatively narrow, slbping visibility. mounts. Body-abell lap Joints in-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) NEW YORK (AP) - president Johnson set the gears of government and diplopnacy in offer America’s motion today to offer A r political State Sm Story, Page D-10 may be refuge to Cubans who seek to leave the Communist island of -fidel Castro. the people of refuge nd it, windswept bill-signing ceremony | who hat at the Statue of Liberty. “The dedication of America to oar traditions as an asylum for the oppressed is going to be apheld.” Johnson thus took up the challenge posed by Castro’s offer to let those of his people who wish leave their homeland and go America. But just hours after Johnson yesterday in ajspoke, Castro laid down a new fhe steps to for Cubi some He said he has asked the State Department to seek through the Swiss government challenge in a Havana speech, an arrangement for the movetelling the U.S. President to also I ment of refugees from Cuba to open the doors to permit Ameri- Miami. The United States does cans to travel to Cuba if they) not maintain diplomatic rela- TO CUBA et the United States permit any citizen to come freely to Cuba,” Castro shouted f cheering audience. “Let them citizen to come free- Johnson said be wants the Swiss to seek Cuban agreement request to the International Red Cross Committee for assist-in processing movement. to Cuba Department. Of Johnson’s proposal to per- mit Cubans to come to America, U.S. government sources believe 50,000 to 75,000 Cubans seize the opportunity their homeland and take up refuge in the United States. Johnson stood aKpos historic port of entry — ied New York harbor — to open the gates of another, Miami. He /Mid the Florida city wiQ be “a temporhry plaice for refugees as they resettle in, other parts of this country." MISSION IN SHADOW OF SHRINE-. Johnson’s dramatic announce President Johnson speaks “"•* overshadowed Us major franthe shadow of the Statue mieeion on Island the of Liberty in New York yes- iKe terday as he offered Ameri-ea’s refuge to Cubans seeking to leave Cuba. migration quotas based on national origin. Johnson called the old system un-American.' Frost Is Possible, Says Weatherman Plan on protecting your tomato and pepper plants tonight. Hie weatherman warns of local tract and a chance of freezing temperatures. Tonight’s lew will faB between M and 27. Tomorrow will jbe sunny and wanner with the temperature ranging between 65 and 72. Increasing cloudiness and still warmer temperatures are predicted for Wednesday. Scares el government offl-ctade and hundreds et sightseeing tsarist* thronged liberty bland as Johneen signed the measnre and passed ant tonvenir pens. Before the crash of pen seekers was ever, he passed eat three carteas foil, perhaps 316 peas. Johnson said first priority in immigration to the United States will go to Cuban refugees ing. Fidel Says Guevara Left Cuba - HAVANA (AP) - Prime Min-refugeejuter Fidel Castro says Ernesto Guevara, one of the key leaders | of his revolution, finished his Vice President1 Church Eyer to Visit Western Hemisphere visors today after to appropriate mot for the prosecutor was narrowly def< The new budget ith the current one of $17,218,- It provides <7,511,212 for salaries, $7,445,627 for departmental and institutional operation and $3,167,466 for nan-departmental appropriations. Prosecutor S. Jerome Bronson spoke at the public hearing portion of the meeting and an- Will Visit OU NEW YORK 00—Pope Paul VI arrived oh his historic visit to the United States today, and held a meeting with President Johnson. Their encounter brought together on American soil the most powerful spiritual and temporal leaders on earth. “God bless this land of , yours,” the pontiff said aa he *r ru,T alighted smiling from a trans-ENTERS CATHEDRAL-Pope Paul'VI walks, throbgtf^lahtic airliner, into the-engulf-the main door of St. Patrick’s Cathedral in Nhw York today, - - - _J‘'“ followed by other clergy and officials. In the background, a small segment of the huge erbwd lining Fifth Avenue can be seen. and moved on to revolutionary nekled for additional funds to (activity elsewhere. hire more personnel. Castro talked about his for-l He said that'the growing jmer close associate in a speech!crime rate and the added com-to a rally last night. He did not plexities of. prosecution work Isay where Guevara, a native of due to recent high court deci-i Argentina, had gone or whereLions has created a need for Oakland University will wel- he was now. exoansion of his department in come Vice PmWent Hubert H. Gaev,r,., Cuban wHe was Humphrey™ his visit to M.chi-1 „ m aodience< dreiud ta gan . j black. Hie crowd gave her an * * ★ , ovatkn when she entered. She Following a noon luncheon on appeared near tears, campus, the vice president will] move to the Howard C. Baldwin Pavilion be will deliver , a major address: on the United States education policy. Democratic,: congressman! Billie S. Far-raim of the 16th district has been instrumental in HUMPHREY making arrangements for the offidaTYisit, according to OU Chancellor D. B. Varner. Guevara had been minister of Industrie? and in the,first years of the revolution dominated the Cuban economy. He disappeared last spring, and since then there have been numerous conflicting rumors about his whereabouts. Castro read a letter which he said Guevara gave him April 1. It said "other lands in the world” needed his services. DUTY FULFILLED’ 'Key figures in Michigan and Oakland County education plus county official and student leaders from county public will be among those present,” said Varner. .t ★ ★ In the event of inclement weather, the program will be moved to the Intramural Build- "I have fulfilled the pert of my duty that bound me to the revolution in your territory," the letter said. “I formally resign frem my post as major (the highest rank in the Cuban army), as minister of Indus tries, and my status as a Cuban (he was proclaimed a native Caban citizen in 1656). “My only mistake of any seriousness,” the letter continued, (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) order to function pFoperlyj David' Levinson, chairman of supervisors’ ways means committee, responded that other county departments had similar manpower shortages but that there wasn’t sufficient money to meet 'justifiable requirements. A resolution by Philip O. , Jr., Hazel Park, to add $46,666 to the prosecutor’s office budget was amended before coming to a vote. End Offensive Arms as Goal, U.N ment of a tremendously warm welcome that tied up large sections of New York City. ■ , Police estimated more than 600,000 greeted the Pope in Queens, and the crowds in-j creased in Manhattan. A thin, sUght man in white, Pope Paul is the first reigning pontiff ever to visit the Western Hemisphere, on the longest journey ever undertaken by the head of th* Roman Catholic Church. ; UNITED NATIONS, N.Y, UPl — Pope Paul VI, in a history-making speech to the U.N. General Ass bly, called today for the end of offensive weapons as a noble goal which “the peoples expect of you.” In a speech prepared for delivery before the 117-nation body, the Pope also called for steps, to guarantee international secu-* rity without the use of j ,Jwy Wore tte n7Httaoll arms. General Assembly, the Pope With him Pope Paul brought -the prayerful support of half a billion Catholics throughout the [world and the weight of 26 centuries of papal influtnee to be expended on an unique mission of peace — its highlight a dra-appeal to the United Na- The amendment by Fred L. Yockey, Huntington Woods supervisor, called for an appropriation of $16,000 for two new assistant prosecutors. It lost by a 40 to 39 vdte. Another amendment suggested by Lee Walks*, supervisor from Madison Heights, which would allow $19,000 for an assistant prosecutor, an investigator and a secretary, .lost by a 57 to 21 vote. . When the budget itself came i a vote, only Marguerite Sim-son, supervisor from Pontiac, voted against it. She opposed wage hikes for judges. He added, however, that “as long as man remains that weak, changeable and even wicked being that he often shows himself to be, defensive arms will, unfortunately, be necessary.” The Pope reaffirmed his support for tte United Nations ahd urged as its aim “no more war, war never again.” The pontiff urged the United Nations to do its utmost to feed the hungry of the world, but he spoke out against a U.N. endorsement of birth control. 'You must strive to multiply >ad so that it suffices for the tables of mankind, and not rather favor an artificial control of birth, which would be irrational, in order to diminish the number of guests at the banquet of life.” In a speech prepared for de- “If you wish to be brothers, let the arms fall from your hands, one cannot love while holding offensive arms.” He urged the audience of dip; lomats to find .ways to guarantee international security “wtth-t having recourse to arms.” ‘This is a most noble aim, he said, “this the people expect of ynii, this mint he obtained.” CRUSHING EXPENSES Gratitude will be expressed to you by all peoples, relieved as they will then be from the crushing expenses of arma-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) GMC Truck Lineup Introduced Today Lowest mercury reading before t sum. in downtown Pon-I tiac wae ». By 2 p.m., the thermometer stood st 45. In Today's Press Luna 7 New Soviet rocket has automatic station—PAGE D4. LBJ on Viet Pushes for fun details on Asian fighting -PAGE A greatly expended thick line that couples bold new design concepts with increased power, performance end economy was introduced today by'GMC Truck It Coach Division. The 1966 GMC track lineup consists of 116 basic models which generate 450 wheelbase models or 1,312 different engine, wheelbase and brake combina- b u m p e r-to-back-of-cab (BBC) *A new 637-cubic-jnch V-S medium and heavy-dpty trucks designed for maximum durability. e A family of “Magnum” gasoline engines with advanced performance and fuel economy features. version of the division’s now famous Toro-Flow diesel. i- cabs. e A 114-inch BBC truck and tractor series tailored for the heavy-hauling industry and the West Coast market. All were developed by GMC and heavy-duty conventional Truck k Coach Division engi-neers and are being manufactured in the division’s plants. REPLACE B’ MODEL The new 92-inch steel cabs replace GMC’a “B” model cabs Retained in the.’66 line are 72-inch steel tilt cabs, 48-inch ahiminum tilt cabs, and light medimn conventional Basie models raafe frees quarter-ton delivery vena to giant highway tractors with Both the new 92- and 114-inch cabs have an aerodynamic de- They are more durable, easier to maintain and embody d comfort fend safety features. Exterior styling is., modern and interior treatment functional. BIDES CURVED Sides of the 92-inch cabs are curved to reduce air resistance and minimise road splash. Hoods open on each side to provide easy access to the engine. In models which have flber-the entire 6 grille as- Narrow front pillars and broad windshield, combined with a relatively narrow sloping hood, provide excellent aide and forward visibility, a key safety fac- declared: tions for an end to dissension and war among mankind. FIRST STOP The Pope’s first stop was St. Patrick’s Cathedral. He arrived there shortly before noon in a 24-car motorcade from the airport between of shouting, waving humanity. There, in New York’s center df~ Catholicism, the pontiff blessed the crowd and elicited a spontaneous burst of applause --well-nigh unheard of within the solemn confines of a Roman Catholic Church. Man Is Guilty on Tax Charge A former Pontiac bar owner was found guilty, tills morning in Federal District Court, Detroit, of failing to pay a federal wagering tax. The verdict was returned against Clovis Skelton, 53, of 33 Colgate, by a jury, which deliberated 20- minutes today and a half hour Friday. Judge Frederick Kaess will sentence Skelton after the federal probation department submits a presentence report. He faces a maximum sentence of one year in prison and a $10,000 fine. Skelton and six others were arrested July 19, 1963, during raids on alleged gambling op-’ erations by federal agents, city and state pottce. OWNED TAVERN He was taken into custody at the Baldwin Rubber Tavern, 377 E. South Blvd., which he owned at the time. He was charged then with conspiracy to violate state gambling laws. The federal charge cfeme Inter. His preliminary court examination on the state charge ended last month in PbQtiaq Munich pal Court following numerous From the cathedral, Pope Paul moved on to the nearby Waldorf Towers on Park Avenge for his Kneeling with President Johnson. UNIVERSAL RESPECT The multitudes were almost universally respectful in their tribute to Pope Paul. mil passage from the aif-port was marred only by a fake bomb threat telephoned to authorities. In bright but biting weather, with a blue car rug around his feet, and a bubble-top canopy above his head, Pope Paul rode for nearly two hours from Kennedy Airport to mid-Manhattan. Crowds qn the .streets were up to 50 deep, thousands Indeed on from hillsides, apartments and office skyscrapers. Helicopters above the 30-car motorcade. CRUSH OF SPECTATORS Through Queens and its heavi-j Jewish areas, through Negro Harlem and Spanish East Harlem, through German Yorkvilte, the pontiff proceeded amid the (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) “Still Swamped after 30 calls,” reported Mrs. R. M., concerning the following nd: Judge Cadi McCallum has not yet made a decision on whether FE 2-8181 to bind the case over to Circuit Court for trial. — V- ' 7 Cubans Ge of Refuge Huge Crowds iet Pontiff First Head of Catholic *r-» THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 4, jtHjg Pope Paul Arrives in U.S; (Continued From Page One) cgp|i4f spectators to the catbe-jedml steps to the sound of or-dra] at Fifth Avenue and 5lst|gan music and chimes. tte tan* « He knelt in prayer in the oyee knepmg pnce with the e*hedral tteil with Bpr*rf spaed .of the motorcade j kands Messed the crowd. -He waved and smiled at the i _ . t .. .. ... A ! Pope Paul toid the gathering I {within the cathedral: Many among the specta- —j^j^y we feel a common! Ta!‘^J'!nlg*L ^.^citizenship with you because we I gM?iy of the Pope. Some h*;,* here in your cHy and your! j country. beckrofis. —At the cathedral die onlookers surged against police barri-l “Asking you for your prayerful support of our message for pence, we extend to all of", and to your dear ones at home, (fie aged/fte sick and the difl-* I manner, our cades. KNELT IN PRAYER - The Pope Watted up the cafe > ★ ★ * paternal apostolic blessing.” Urges U N. J The first applause and shouts! of welcome greeted Pope Paul CnJ DUancix/a M stepped from hls airliner cna urrens/ve|at John F. Kennedy Airport It . | landed at t: 37 a.m. Arms as Goal catholic children (Continued From Page One) ments, trusting in your senti- Among the spectators at the sealed-off airport and along the papal routes were big delegations of CathoV children, peril ments of humanity and generos- of the 706,000 from 1,001 metro-. JAKARTA ROADBLOCK - Troops loyal to Indonesian President Sukarno used armored cars to block Off a street in Jakarta following a dash with rebel forces in the attempted military coup against Sukarno Friday. It was reported yesterday that army troops had virtually crushed the uprising. tty.” politan area parochial schools! He urged farther that the whWtdedwed a holiday for the} savings resulting from arms reductions will be diverted to the benefit ef the developing countries. The pontiff told the delegates: "You have performed and you continue to perform a great work: the education of mankind in the ways of peace. - “The United Nations is a great school where that education is imparted, and we are today in the assembly hall of that school. ARCHITECTS OF PEACE . “When you leave this hall, the world looks upon you as the architects and constructors of peace.” He continued: “Peace, as yea know, is not built ap only by means of patties, by the balance af fare— and sf interests. - “It ** constructed with the mind, with ideas, with works of peace. “You labor in this great construction. But you are still at tbebegbming. BELLICOSE MENTALITY “WiO the world ever succeed in changing that selfish and bellicose mentality which up to now has been interwoven m so much of its history? ;-*3tls hard to foresee; but it is eiftrlto affirm that it is toward find hew history. A peaceful, truly human history, as promised by God to men of goodwill, that we must resolutely march. [historic visit. UN. Secretary-General U Thant, the official who invited the Pape to lay kh church’s plea tor peace before the iaternattoaal body, beaded -the welcoming delegation. No other aircraft were in the cool, dear sky as the big jet approached from the east for landing. Airport activity ceased workers and spectators watched. With Thant were the other official greeters: Secretary of State Dean Rusk, New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, Mayor Robert F. Wagner and Francis Cardinal Spellman, archbishop of New York. ITALIAN PREMIER Also there were former Italian Premier Amintore Fan-fani, president of the UN. General Assembly, and the four other U.S. cardinals. An excited conversation swept through spectators watching from (he airport observation deck. “There he is!” The crimson - capped car-inals joined to the applause as the Pope stepped onto the platform, donned spectacles, aad with Thant at bis side, began to read an arrival He spoke in English, fast and almost in a monotone. * “Greetings to you, America!’ the pontiff said. The first Pope to set foot upon your land blesses you with _ all his heart. He renews, as it... The roads thereto are already!were, the gesture of your dls-l well-marked out for you; alS|covera,, Chrlstopher Columbus,] the first is that of disarma- when he planted the Cross of JlL A Arm Ht ia ment.”! I Christ in this blessed soil. 1 4lff /VI Ofl UUe . Fatal Shooting Said Accident DETROIT (AP) - The Wayne County Sheriffs Road Patrol says the fatal expressway shooting of hospital executive Dr. Wayne W. Glas is ealled “purely accidental” by the factory security guard who held the gun. * ★ * Dr. Glas, 43, director of sui gery at Wayne County General Hospital, was shot to death in Ids station wagon Saturday night while driving to the hospital from his Ann Arbor home to see a patient. He was shot in the head. The road patrol said yesterday Harold L. Rassel Jr., 43-year old factory guard, also of Ann Arbor, declared his gun discharged just before bo was to fire a warning shat after trying to make a “citizen’s arrest” of Dr. Glas. A statement attributed to Russell by the road patrol said he bad stopped Dr. Glas for what he (Russell) considered driving offenses by the doctor. * * * The shooting took place on I-M expressway in suburban Romulus Township. Russell said he was driving to his night job Chrvsler Corp. plant in Detroit at the time. NO INTENTION ‘It was purely accidental,” Russell said in the statement. 1 had no intention of shooting him. I didn't know I hit him. Indonesia Army Said in Control of Jakarta KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia IB — Radio Jakarta said today that the Indonesian army is now in “firm control” of Jakarta but there are reports of Communist activity in other parts of the country. The broadcast gave no details of the Red activity. Indonesian observers in Kuala Lumpur said Communist paramilitary units, who are believed to have been supplied arms from Red China, could be preparing to take on army units loyal to the government. Associated Press correspondent Antoine Yared reported from Jakarta that there wot fears rebel troops from central Java would attack the capijtal. President Sukarno to a broadcast yesterday said be was “firmly la charge” aad “the leadership of the army at the moment it directly under Sukarno’s broadcast was his first public statement since a revolutionary council” led by m officer in the pi palace, guard attempted to seize power Thursday. Radio Jakarta said the bodies pf six Indonesian generals killed by rebel forces were found in aj ties as part of common grave in an area of the riabilitation. capital known as “Crocodile However, Radio Medan, la Sumatra, reported Gea. Abdul forces chief : liter, was safe at the headquarters of Maj. Gea. Sabar-to. British Embassy sources in Jakarta reported to Singapore that Suharto and another right-wing general, Maj. Gen. Pramo-to, appeared to be in control the capital but that Sukarno was trying to reduce their power to ‘redress the balance." Guevara Left Cuba-Casfro r (Continued Prop Page One) “was not to have' confided more in you since the first moments of the Sierra Maestrs (wipe Castro’s revolution started), and not having sufficiently understood your qualifies as director and as revolutionary.” n -n—* ■ There was no explanation of this apparent reference to differences between the two men. The letter added without expla-nafion: 'T liberate Cuba from any responsibility. ” ~*r NEW BATILEFTEUM “hi the new battlefields, shall carry on -. . . the obligation to fight against imperialism wherever it may he,” the letter said. The letter expressed fond regards Is Castro and ether friends. It also expressed confidence the Caban people would take good care of Guevara’s wife and children. Castro said he was “confident this explains everything” about Guevara. * * * Guevara, now 37, was educated as a physician but left Argentina in 1953 because of his opposition to the Peron dictatorship. MET IN MEXICO He met Castro and his brother Raul in Mexico where they were planning their revolt against Cuban dictator Fulgen-cio Batista and landed With Fidel at the foot of the Sierra Maestra on Dec.2,1956. Batista’s troops nearly wiped out the Invaders, bat Guevara was sac of the 12 survivors who made it into the hills with Castro, * Reveal Sex Change of Oregon Prisoner .SALEM, Ore. . ' It's trur ever 4,000 IndhrMvsl mI«< were racked up by Fritter Appliance tact month, mi I'm prssd as CM be. Bvt I knew the retiM for It font Tap brand merchandise only, fowest nteelbfo price, M MK ice. Immediate delivery and aaay lew cast credit. Why net five me 1 try? j premise yea went be "127“ * COLOR TV THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. OCTOBER 4, 1965 A » Insurance Cost Too I SKRIBs-SI* JMffl example;, *15,000 Homeowners —(rtOApypiHy Cover* *44 These Perils . , * *»*»•.....? *IMC0 firs........... lightening 0an»....U00 * Windstorm . .....*« Contents ......... 4,000 El(plo(k>n.. . 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Momors's nrHor fnr Hithanillnff j.. ____i__il. *_______i.i a___j -------- Naraara's order for disbanding dan when the terrorist tossed a Army Reserve units.McNamara! fragmentation grenade at the said in so announcement Thurs- car. It landed in the street and day the units are not needed forbid not go off. The terrorist fled contingency war plans. , into crowded streets. The association said the ac- Twelve Vietnamese were tion will release 55,000 reserv- um ^ M tadud. ists “at a time Army training - - I facilities are overtaxed.” It disputed McNamara!! statement that the 55,000 can be shifted to high-priority units. “This'is not so, because the majority of the Army priority units already are at their authorized levels,” the association said. “There are simply no places in the units for these reservists. Ct/ba Institute Hunting for George Raft Twin' USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS. I BUY, SELL, TRADE. MIAMI, Fla. (AP) — Havana radio has appealed to its listeners who look like American film star George Raft to come forward. The broadcast, monitored in Miami, said the Cuban Art Institute i&eded someone looked like Raft for a part in a film. ini three Americans, wounded in Communist bomb and grenade attacks Saturday. Four unexjiloded grenades were discovered yesterday < in Saigon’s waterfront area Mar a fertilizer factory and quarters area for its workers, j On the military front, an an* phibious force of more than 1,-000 U.S. Marines backed up by naval bombardment and rocketfiring jet planes wiped out a Viet Cong base near the South China Sea during the weekend. WADED ASHORE The Leathernecks waded ashore and then were dropped j by helicopters into a Communist-held area near Phu Cu Pass, about 270 miles north of Saigon. More than 1,350 Viet Cong U.S. planes continued during ["the weekend to strike at tar-r gets in Communist North Viet Nam, hitting barracks, bridges j and barges. A reliable American source' said today a Viet Cong machine I gun mounted on a truck was reported taking shotr st -U.S7 planes northeast of Saigon. A crewman aboard an L19 ob-i Nervation plane was reported wounded on a flight today near Bien Hoa air base, 15 miles northeast of the capital. U.S.I jets were ordered to took for the! wandering machinegunner, the U.S. source said. PARENTS! Is Your Child Taking BAND FALSE TEETH That Loosen Need Not Embarrass Iteny wearen of fate* teeth Dave •uBored real embarrassment because 1 their plate dropped, clipped or wob- llve In :fear of 1 Juat sprinkle tlie alkaline (non-aciaj powaer, on your plates. Hold false teeth more firmly, so they feel more comfortable. Does not aour. Checks "plate odor breath". Oet FA8TEETH at dnit counters everywhere. ‘ •lipped or if time. Di___ happening to you. 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Grosse, Mgr. 1007 \Vest Huron Street, Pontiac, Phone: FE 5-949-1 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ■ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ; SAIGON (tJPI)—A Viet Congj have been reported killed in i A Vietnamese police spokes-iin the air and hung a banner !____ H" *''! *-"»<■•■>«»«»—said four or (i,e VIMIand ViM Cong flag, on utility WASHINGTON (AP) — The rvin. h>nr If n Air f n r, . nr Cong agenta slipped Into the pates. They disappeared up|'. S Reserve Officers Association r■ «n^ ih* industry. Production has laggbd in the past few years. The boys/along the assembly lines are sijdply losing-interest. Why strive to do better when it isn’t recognized? AMuriif to their own phi-______ losophy, Russian workers should be the happiest in the world. They “own” everything. Over here, our “dreadful” capitalistic system is in ^effect. Property h bought and sold and an entrepreneur can start a business of his own. anywhere with' one employe — himself — if he wishes. It’s the productive way. ★ ★ ★ The Government now grants “more pay, more vacations, better • homes and shortei: hours” if the Russians simply pitch in and do a b e.t t e r job. That’s precisely what the head Red promised in three solid pages ip Pravda. (And Pvaoda’g a four-page newspaper.) The last time T was in New York, newspapermen from abroad do-! dared they' were hearing repeatedly that things weren’t “jake” at all hi the lanxf of the hammer and sickle. Good! ■ —Jr----------’ ~ ' Bosch plotted the overthrow and as soon as it was well under way the Reds stepped in and assumed command. The Johnson administration originally'leaped into * this situation “to prevent a Castro-Communist take over.” That’s precisely what .we have. What now, Mr. President? New Outlook.... 1 The old order changeth. This fall, many All-State football players, track stars and basketball centers had to grope about, strictly on their own in quest of a college to attend. ★ ★ ★ Emphasis is definitely'Shifting to star students and campus leaders who have shown other outstanding abilities and all-around poise. I first heart) nf this through Oakland University which has no athletic scholarships. Right from the outset, the enrolling division of the local institution discovered stem . competition in this field which was mice neglected. . Here’s one more indication. Never forget “This Changing World.” >nd in Conclusion.... Jottings from the well-thumbed ■ notebook of your peripatetic re-' porter; In 99 cases out.of 100, the left foot is larger than the right.. .......I still like that little boy . in .Sunday school who raised his hand when the teacher asked for twins mentioned in the Bible and said: “First ' A A It becomes clear that event-' ually there can be no individual freedom if the lawmakers ignore human nature and incentives to efficiency. Voice of the People: ‘Bait-and-Switch Racke Fools Millions of * The bait and switch racket is one of the more widespread abuses today. It dupes millions of people and often can be used Successfully sgaihst even those who know. The practice of “baiting” the consumer with an advertisement offering spectacular savings on a brand-name product and then “Switching” to a more costly, off-brand item takes a variety of forms. The best'answer is a knowledgeable, alert consumer — one who knows what the rapket is, how it works and watches for the telltale signs. NATIONAL BETTER BUSINESS BUREAU NEW YORK Comments on Unidentified Flying Objects Mr. Walton ought to have been more lenient with The Pontiac Press editorialist who debunked UFOs. Editors are often nearsighted because they have to read large volumes of fine print and this allows little time for stargazing. Furthermore, it Is unrealistic to expect an editor to buy a story as fantastic as that without proof. Consequently, those who have actually seen UFOs flying about in space are put in a very difficult position. What would happen if that editor by some near miracle were to make an UFO sighting only to find that he was the tarn witness? Weald he astame that what he had seen was only the fleeting figment of Ms fevered imagination and remain silent, or would be see fit to modify his editorial opinion about the existence of UFOs to the extent of keeping an open mind on the subject? JUST WONDERING Reader Questions Finances of Michigan How can a Governor of Michigan tell the taxpayers that the State is spending more money than K is taking in when we have had two years of great prosperity? Why are we building more colleges when we are supporting two times as many colleges as Ohio which has more than a million more taxpayers? Why are we trying to educate more students than the taxpayers can afford? Do we need more tax money to squander? I say “No.” MERRILL J. DEEM UNION LAKE Recommends Record for School Assembly There are few things tajiIt today that are able to shake people to a great degreer'Every teen-ager and adult in the United States should have the privilege of hearing the record “Your Workf and the Berlin Wall.” This record would give area high schools and colleges one of the best school assemblies they could possibly have. It would certainly be a challenge and an inspiration, far the problem and the answer are both given in the album. GARY STONEROCK CLARKSTON Magnuson Has Best Plan for Revision of Congress By RUTH MONTGOMERY , WASHINGTON - The nip of fall is in the air, the rush for adjournment is on, and Congress will there-fore have no opportunity this session to undergo some major, surgery that’s long over- The Soviet plan—recommended in tong speeches by Premier Kosygin and now approved by the Central Committee of the Communist party — calls far m abandonment of many of the, regional economic councils and the setting up of fewer tot nevertheless important groups of government ministers. • a * a " They are to issue regulations to the managers, who are to be allowed to retain the profits they, make for partial use as bonuses or higher pay. A * * This recognition of the importance of incentives, is not altogether new in Russia^but the doctrine hereafter is to be more extensively applied, find greater discretion is to be given to the local managements. IN GOVERNMENT ACCOUNT The so-called “profits” to be encouraged will not go to private personnel but will be set up in the government’s account as a bookkeeping credit to each enterprise, so its progress can be measured and the quality of its production appraised by higher authority. The London Times, la an editorial, interprets the change as an effort by the Moscow government “to devise a sys-. tem which would enable it to retain snfficicat central control to easare the fulfillment of national goals sad at the same time permit enough local initiative to promote efficiency.” The London Daily Telegraph takes this view: * * * -“The present changes are recognizing what to part already exists. More important, they amount to a repudiation of the Marxist doctrine that all value derives from labor, and a move toward accepting, in however disguised a form, the capitalist Last April newly created Montgomery joint committee on organization of Congress was handed the tools and told to go to work on an operational plan. Some 1AM pages of testimony, have since been taken on ideas far rcvHalizfaig the legislative body, bat recommendations will be deferred information that every stockholder expects in a corporation’s annual report.” OBVIOUS ADVANTAGE “The advantage of concentrating all money bills in one session is obvjou ». During the earlier session, Jpongress would authorize programs and expenditures. In the late fall, with the legislative program enacted,” Magnuson says “the money bills could be considered on a much more businesslike basis, instead of appropriating in the dark, as now." Personally we vote “aye” on Maggie’s solution to some se-rious congressional ills. ‘Teen-Age Volunteers Were a Great Help1' I agree with Mrs. Sellers’ letter about the teen-age Red Cross volunteers. This ambitious and pleasant group of young ladies were s great help to the X ray department. MRS. BEVERLY REICH, R. T. X RAY THERAPIST TECHNOLOGIST ‘Gtizens Should Demand a Better Solution' On the Chrysler Expressway you see a panoramic view looking into the vacant land and the residential area, and Pontiac Motor and the water tower. This vacant land is considered prime residential property, our neighbor to the west is exclusive Lake Angehis and to the east Oakland University. ‘1" • /• if— A west side comipisstooer and real estate man increased the value of this land when he told his neighbors, saying Ms district is one of the nicest in town, but It I* dying and they had better face up to a decaying, changing neighborhood. ----- ’^4'w"' ---“ Is the whole City of Pontiac destined to be one large slum? The City Fathers are placing a junkyard upon cheap vacant land that is destructive to three communities. Only one legal step need be taken—a public hearing. After this is over they allow a junkyard in the future heart of Pontiac. Let us demand that the. City Fathers find a better solution._____.___ GEORGE GRBA 28 KIMBALL Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Among the most sensible and far-reaching proposals is that of Sen. Warren G. Magnuson, D-Wash., who suggests cutting out the-center sector while strengthening the head and tail. * * A. In other words, Congress would convene every Jan. I to handle all legislative matters such as authorizations, treaties, nominations and new programs. It would then recess until (he second Mondav of November, and during this secorid session would consider only money bills. WOULD CONFORM The government’s fiscal year which now ends June130 would thereafter conform to the calendar years, as do corporations and housewives. Magnuson, who is chairmaa of the Senate Commerce Committee, also proposes that Unde Sam adopt the normal basinets practice of separating operating expenses from reimbursable expeaditnres, Exceptionst The Rodney (Ont.) Mercury All the world tones a lover, except when he’i in a telephone booth. Amateurs Can Work The Arizona Daily Star In an era of high scientific specialization, with people holding doctors’ degrees sf all sorts grabbing the headlines, is there room for the amateur? * A A o The answer is that to some areas the amateur can do valuable work, for which the professionals have little time, bat the results of which are needed bddly. A generation ago teur can go to work today «in his own back yard.” A A ’ A In the past, amateurs hav# made some mighty discoveries: A Delft janitor named Anton vpn Leeuwenhoek in the 17th century ground microscope tones and discovered germs. An English country doctor, Gideon Mantell, contributed much to the knowledge of dinosaurs through Ms hobby of picking up fossfls. A • ■ A A. Gregor Mendel, an Austrian abbot, worked out the principles of heredity; an English Unitarian minister, Joseph Priestley, discovered oxygen and, perhaps more important to whisky drinkers, soda water; and the Koda-chrome color process of photography waa worked out by two American musicians, Lee Go-dowsky and Leopold Mannes, who experimented in hotel None sf them remember the one Sunday, years a| when Mr. Brews was trav tog to Georgia sad (as l lawyer for the estate wr« stepped to at the Audi where tomdredg of amateurs wore enlisted to etaerve vis- "Inconceivable as it may seem," Magnuson says, “no official accounting has ever been required to show the current value of the billions of dollars worth of land, minerals, buildings, goods and e q u I p rqeii t owned by the federal govern- “The taiga U J. budget has become an object of public ridicule because of its cohsplexlty; yet it fails to present even the wonld have been time-wasting for professional astronomers with telescopes, hot which too valuable to helping de- was gives such a warm v come that he always rapm keyed. “Not having a ehnreh affiliations, obii ttons, or charitable intern) ha told Ms lawyer, “I ml as well give what I have When tile New England clergy tell this story to their congregations, as they surely will, we hope they will somehow minimize the pecuniary angle — emphasizing rather, that there are lonely people; and that those who slip unannounced into some New England pews are in danger of being frozen to death. "The amateur Is to no dan- Stop to Think ger of extinction,’’ Tie Times The Pana fill.) Newt-Palladium Before deciding to retire' — stop home for a week and watch Ihoxtoyttme televiiion shows. the depth sf the atmosphere, the content of matter from outer spoce, etc. "7 A A A Today, In entomology, It is estimated that somewhere between two million and tt mutton insect species exist. “The professionals have hardly begun to catalogue them, tot alone record their habile,” a New York Times story says. “Any ama- New England Story... The Manchester, Npw Hampshire, Union Leader Members of the 11111 • Meth-odist church of AndersonvUto, On., were startled the other day to learn that Robert B. Brown of1 Washington, NJ., had toft their congregation f 178,MO worth of A. T. ft T. and Continental Can company stock. -!!*.'rww n «mu •MffWW* *o lt« in* for rtauM. 22* fp -A|-J4 fj 'Liftk Separates Being Whan the lowlands were taken, Meerloo joined the underground. He was captured by the Nads, escaped to England and came tack to help reclaim Us awake when they are really ■sleep, according to Dr. Joost A. M. Meerloo. Vitae exists no sharp S> AN AWBMUTT —'- - Meerloo is yd authority on brainwashing, as well as sleep. He relates the two (objects in One of Us boob. “Depriving victims of sleep plays pa person cannot be expected to re- main that way for long periods. have to be continually on the alert for enemies. OTHER PRIMITIVES “Other primitives squat, some crawl and or leaky lean-tos, while others prefer sleeping bags in the open. “The ancient Romans dept on stone benches. I had to , keep myself reminded of this »*• Ml conditioned,’’ be says. Although be realizes the im- * portance of sleep, Meerloo does' not worry about “insomniacs”' who actually spend more time asleep than they know. Junior Editors Quiz on- BRD MIGRATIONS "Attar week* of pain in aw back i hip*. I tried DeWitt's KOs-got m derful relief,” says Mr*. R. Gardi Waterloo, low*. 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Pontine, Mkfalfgn this odvertissmsnt sponsored by PONTIAC STATE BANK EVERY FASHION NEEDS ITS OWN POUND A-TIONi Lef ovr expertly trained corietierei fit you for fhsf utmost lit comfort, figure flollsry, THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 4,jm A KEEPS PRICES DOWN “There is a distinct , clinical difference between the feeling of not sleeping and actually not sleeping,’* he says. “You can never rely on a person’s estimate and account of sleeping hours. SPEND HOURS “ “Many who complain of not sleeping well spend hours and hours in a sleeping state.” Meerloo says there are rare individuals who sever deep at all — at least aot the way we know slumber. They don’t close their eyes >r even lie down but rest for periods sitting ddwn with their eyes wide open. They are carrying to the limit the business of actually being asleep while apparently awake. ' ★ * dr What we call deep sleep usually is pretty shallow, according to Meerloo. “As a matter of fact, nobody realy sleeps like a log,” be says. . QUESTION: What birds make’fee longest migration? dr* ★ dr ANSWER: In spite of much study, many mysteries remain shoot why mid bow birds migrate- Why do young bobolinks, for example, leave their summer homes in August — whan bpect food is aiill plentiful and they, have never expariooced the cold weather that Is coming? Aad exactly bew de birds Sad their way ever oceau — ■lias, witbam riven of BMuatain ranges to guide them? 8mm sdeatlsts think they may aarigate, using stars and ami the way saOen de. If wn can’t give exact answers to these questions, wa nevertheless can name fee long distance migrating bird champion: the arctic tern. These araasing, graceful little creaitures, only 17 inches long, breed on fee coasts of Greenland and the far northern islands Of the Arctic Ocean. In August, some fly down the west coast of the Americas and others follow a route touching the African coast .. ..I They sieve sooth towards (he shores of Antarctica, a distance of 11,IN miles, where they spend the winter. Ia spriag they start to fly toward (hie arctic agate, ■aether 1MN miles. ~ A 17-inch bird Journeying 22,ON miles a year! We can’t, explain such an astonishing feat, but we can join with you in wonder and admiration. ★ ★ ★ FOR YOU TO DO: Read everything you can find about fee subject of bird migration and clip out this grticle to paste in your scrapbook of interesting birds and animals. If you do not have one, why not start one right now? “Even in normal sleep there is a Continual moving about. Statistically, the average person makes 9S to 45 movements a “Thanks to experiments, we now realize that men on sentry duty cannot be expected to stay alert for more than three or four hours at a time,’’ Meerloo says. “It is also a warning to drivers of cars feat the monotony of PONTIAC Rockcote PAINT STORE ROCKCOTE PAINTS WALLPAPERS 2 South Cm 312-4043 Weeks Of Back Pain NowJlelieved New! Pastel Heather Match Mates People write in every day praising the remarkable relief they get with DeWht’i Pills. DeWtt’i Pill* act fiat with a proven analgetic to relieve pain of backache. Their mild diuretic action helpe to eliminate retained fluids and flush out irritating bladder wastes that can cauee physical distress. If pain persists, tee your doctor. De Watt's PHI* often succeed where others fail— quickly relieve n’ and naine, too. Ii Dewitt's Pills. Over IM million De Witt's Pills ai Creamy pastels art the big news In fall's _________Jivejy sportswear lines. You must Hava a whole set of the smoothest look around! Mix and match this versatile group for many exciting outfits. The soft blue tones will brighten up your whole wardrobe. / Lined plaid shell, back zipper . . . i99 Long sleeve . oxford shirt... 2.99 Plaid A-line sktrtwNW belt.. .7.99 Heather cardigan crew neck sweater, ribbon trim ... 7.99 Solid color woolakirt, lined seat by John Meyer ... 5.99 nCAtPtllAG It’s new I Exciting! Different! Made from genuine carpeting—rich and - luxurious. Pick from colon galore in solids and tweeds. Novelty shapes to fit your fanciest tastes. Completely new and — oh, so very chic. Came in ond seel 300 to 600 Handbags Not at Drayton Plains 1/3 Of F f SEAMLESS NYLONS 47* Our own exclusive Empress nylons in two popular styles . . . run-resist meiti Weave or streak-free plain knit, all with new run stop top and toe. Softly sheer nylons made exclusively far us to our own rigid quality standards. Poll's nqwost shades of beigetone, tqupetone, cinnamon and off-block. 9-11. OPEN EVER NIGHT TO 9 Drayton open Sun. noon to 6 FEDERAL'S DOWNTOWN ANO DRAYTON PLAINS §m ZforHO 20* x 24* FINISHED 'SIZE SOFT DUCK DOWN Always buoyant I They're dustproof, non-allergenic and Iast for yaan. Sen* forized* cotton ticking zips off for laundering. IS* * 25* x 5%*. fluffy duck down. Linon*look cotton ticking, reinforced cord edgd,20*x26* sizes. Save of Penney'sl THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, ’ OCTOBER i, 1965 YWCA WE'RE LATE FOR SCHOOL Because of Moving to our New Address 269 W. HURON * CORNER OF HURON and FRANKLIN Classes Includa Arts ond Crafts Spanish — Guitar Bridge — Yoga Swimming Sewing — Knitting . CUSSES BEGIN WMkof0et.1l for Information and Registration Contact Y.W.CJL 334-0973 W. Provide Nursery Service Ask World Desalination Effort WASHINGTON MONDAY, OCTOBEIt C 1965 WT wihptuous S Show cars will be shown by Amer-ican Motors, Chrysler, Ford and General Motors. .■ * * .* X A large tent on the mimds of the convent will weatherproof the affair. Proceeds go to the building fund far the ndw gymnasium 'which next year may house the fashion show. Mrs, John B. Abblnk and Mrs/ Victor C. HUlebrand, presidents of the Janet Stuart (mailers’) Association and die Alumnae Association, respectively, are cochairman of the event. * ■ a • Tickets are available from any member of either group or at the gate. The afternoon performance will be at 2 p.m., preceded by tea. There will be refreshments after the 8 p.m. showing to which men are invit- Wftg can resist a w* . man? , Mr#. Rickard J.\ Mewrer, BloomfUldHUls, wears a Ben Reig navy blue wool day drees and sable bloa as she scans blueprints in the uncompkUd gym at the C&lrvent of . ___y___WjWlJi B. NaMo the Sacred Heart. She bill model Oct. 13 when the Alumnae Association and the Janet Stuart Association present their ninth annual. fashion show. PairVtests to Parents for Dinrier ‘■I/ parents of cMMren attending Temple Beth ^noob nursery scfaopl gatheped fordimer Saturday evening in the Dow Ridge home of Dr. and Mrs. Eugene Sikorski. ,Special guests were Rabbi Ernst Conrad, the Melvin Ellers and the Harman S ten-bucks. Assisting the hostess were Mrs. William Freyermuth, Mrs. Delbert Brown, Mrs. Charles Harmon, Mrs. Harry Reed and Mrs. Robert Rye-son. Mrs. Eller, director, and. Mrs. Stenbuck, head teacher, reported on school activities and the forthcoming field trip to Upland Hills Farm. Mrs. Robert Crandall, program chairman, announced that Fern Perrin, visiting teacher, will speak at the November meeting, r;.^.. • ... FasUonette Club, 8 p.m. Adah Shelly Li- brary. “Diet Discussion Night.” WEDNESDAY Woman’s World Series,, 10 a.m., Pontiac Mall.) “How an Amateur Can Take Professional Pictures” by Dimitri La-Zaroff. Parliamentary C1 n b, 12:90 p.m., Maurice’s on Edison Street Mrs. Charles Crawford is chairman of the luncheon. United Fund Rally, 1:15 p m~, Elks Temple. “Hello Dolly” dessert and fashion . show. The photographer framed Mrs. Raul J. Canon, Sandringham Way, and she loved it! She’s admiring the Maurice Rentner ensemble ' of winter blue with 'apple green satin lining and blouse. Her beret is mink. Walton-Pierce and Furs by Robert are combining their fashions for , the afternoon dnd evening performances. fi&p Photographed in one of' the parlors of the convent, Mrs. James J. Byrne, Chisholm Trail, is wearing a flag blue wool dress with fur-trimmed hip length jacket. She dons a matching feather hat. Models are members of the mothers’ club of the school. Baptist Gleaners A harvest luncheon took place far members of the Wayside Gleaners recently in the First Baptist Church.' The Ladies quartette and Mrs. Alta Koch presented a musical program. The speaker was the Rev. JackMcCurry. Writer on Recovery List By AMGAnTVXNWUR®Li Wends, doctors and people WAR ABBY: I don’t know Ttte-yoji^were pulling for me. whether you’ll remember but I met you while I was a patient at the Institute of Living la Hartford, when Dr. Zeller took you on a tour of the fadlittoe. I recall how Itind yott were to me, and the encouragement you gave me both verbally and in the letters you wrote to me afterwards. You made me feel,that you really eared about what happened to me. That’s why I’m, writing to tell you I’ve been medically discharged. ■ g * * • * There were some rough tinm, Abby.God only knows bow rough they were, taut L never “let go” Mfi knew that Sty parents, It may'~'aoum£ corny, when a person is dan like I was in, It’s tant to knoW that people rare. Sometimes the patient may act disinterested or even hostile, but he la lust testing to aw If the other person Pees Mm own enough to swept Mm oa ho k /• fggy* * • it l don’t mind If you print this, Abby, to let-friends and rolativoe know how important they are uPl-patient's progress. , *. * \J There are still many pnju-dices.against those who have been hosMbdlsedlgr a mental or emotional illness. I want people who have only heard of mantel illness to know that we are like everyone else: wo Won't possessed of «VU spirits. Wo aa “BL” Just m if wo had a broken leg or appendicitis. And moot Important of all, WE CAN BE CURED. 1 am now working and hope to go to New York and get my degree. Right now I am adjusting to on the “outside.” % I know I amgoinplu make -rattled ltorlng». it, Abby. Thank you for everything. And I sincerely mean It. YOUR FRIEND IN 1 HARTFORD DEAR/RDCND: And thank YOU for sharing your victory wiflt me, and for permitting me to share It with others. YoUH never know the number of people you've inspired and encouraged by your fine •letter;. Troubled? Write to ABBY, cam of The Pontiac Press. For n personal reply, endow a stamped, self-addressed «BVdOp«L^ 't % ‘ >jt * For ANtfffeoklet, "How to Havwa'£v4y Wadding,” send M alnts to Abby, care of Tho Poutiw-priw. j ' ■ MRS. N. W. BURNS Calla Lilies for Bride's Arm Bouquet A candlelight ceremony, Saturday, in the Grace lather an Church marked the vows of Catherine Walser and Norman Wayne Burns. Parents of the couple wed before Rev. Richard C. Stuck-J meyer are the Egon F. Wal-sers of Myrtle Street and Mr. and Mrs. Worm a n A. Burns of Beverly Hills. LACE APPLIQUE Alencon lace applique circled the waistline of the bride’s Italian-design gown of white silk peau de sole and bordered her skirt and chapel train. \ h k. ■ She wore a veil of imported French illusion and held an arm bouquet of white calla lilies. Mrs. R. C. Holan was her sister’s honor matron, with Mrs. R. A. Smith, Mrs. C. D. DeLorge and Mrs. M. N. Burns attending as bridesmaids. * * * Jennifer Holan was flower-girl and Mnrley N. Burns Jr. Here’s a show stopper—and she’s only five. Jane Briggs, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.'Basil M. Briggs, Birmingham, wears a navy blue and white sailor dress. Her willing accomplice ,is also a charmer named YumYum. . Crafts to Be Featured at Their Benefit Sale Dr. Morion. Jf. best man along with ushers Edward ThQftor, Donald Edmunds and Lee Musson. * • p *•' Carl Walser of Schaan, Liechtenstein, Switzerland, came for his oousin’s wedding, also the Wayne McCaffertys of San Diego, Calif., aunt and Uncle of the bridegroom! Mrs. McCoin Hosts Mrs. Luther McCain of Til-more Drive was hostess for a recent meeting of the Lorraine Manor Branch, Woman’s National Farm and Garden MeMfcers qttxtaded a workshop for their Christmas Bazaar Duot 1 at the Pontiac: By SIGNE KARLSTROM Mrs. G. T. Christiansen of Fairfax Road will open her home on Wednesday for members and friends of the Bloomfield Hills Alumnae Chib of Pi Beta Phi. ★ * * This is the Arrowcraft Tea — in the morning it’s a Coffee — where Arrowcraft articles will be on sale for the benefit of the Settlement School in Gatlinburg, Tenn. # . ★ ★ Mrs. Marshall H. Wright assisted , by Mrs. Arthur W. Bull have assembled the articles. Some of the items are handwoven table linens, handbags, stoles, hand wrought jewelry, ceramics, etc. Jk ' * * Mrs. Paid Metzter, Mrs. FWlip'Barttett.Mrs-.-Maurlce B. Allen, Mrs. William Cowan Jr. are among those saving on the committee. ‘-------- CINDERELLA BALL Mrs. Jesse P. Judd, chairman of the Cinderella ball which took place Saturday evening at the Sheraton Cadillac hotel is denoted with the excellent response she and her commijttee' members received. i - / , . ★ % k : k So me 480 people dined and danced in an atmosphere of elegance and fun, all tor the benefit of increasing the treasury of tiie TB and Health Society. Erne* A. Jones whs master . of ceremonies. ’ ★ - w'' k Troy Homberger -f Prinee ChafSung escorted Susan Haase who was crowned as Cinderella by Henry Forester, a member who has supported tills worthy event from the beginning. * -k , J . * ; Mrs. John P. Richardson Jr., presided ofthe Women’s Committee looked happy and pleased with the entire evening’s festivities. Saks Fifth Avenue also presented breathtaking fashion show which has been an annual event for the Cinderella ball. THEY DANCED Among those present were Mr. and Mrs, Roy Fruhauf, Mr. and Mft. John Bauman, the Chester Cahps. Mr. and Mrs. John Deniniui, Mr. and Mrs. Lynn TqjtitturiLMf. and Mrs. Walter Fisher and the Edgar Ants. Others were Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Fykse, Mr. and Mrs. David Demarest, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Krue, the Joseph Risdons and Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Gerhard. She Joins Group Mrs. Ayres Miller, Immediate past (resident of the Cook-Nelson unit No. 20, American Legion Auxiliary, was made the group’s newest member at a recent meeting in the MarVffi 'Redmond tome on Westlawn Road. Schedule Men's Night The annual Men’s ‘ Night Party sponsored by the Oakland County Bar Association Auxiliary will be Wednesday in the Edgewood Country Club. House cochairmen, Mrs, John O’Brien and Mrs. Cecil McCallum, are handling reservations for the evening of dancing, following dinner. HOSPITALITY Mrs. Richard Kuhn and other members of the hospitality committee will welcome the guests at a social hour beginning at 8:36 p.m. Those attending the dinner will be introduced, as will Mrs. David Pence who has been elected to national office by the Lawyers’ Wives. Auxiliary president, Mrs. Robert C, Anderson has announced that the auxiliary has 88 new members this year. Slide Show Event Set The Thursday meeting of : Waterford branch, Woman’s National Farm and Garden Association will feature the wild flower and bird slides of. Mrs. John Plassey. The 1 p.m. gathering will take place in the Forest Drive home of Mrs. George Stout. Mrs. Eugene Cleland and Mrs. Carl Koehler will assist the hostess. y HARVEST' IfALI UE$MW! l SPEClAL! 1 VtoyWrtMfr* ggm g* 1 .CEILING jsjbkjL£ ; TILE » ^ -ifr- ■ (Irrag.— 5i rL 1 1 at Quolityl ■ Ea. mg/tr j 0**h*cSSc»* *"**’’ ; (1,18 VINYL RUBBER TILE IK" 9”x9” 1 sl All R mm colors Genuine toSAiciiu ^ery Special! J^Whit..Gr^n,p. Genuine CERAMIC TILE 35‘> .uxorious — Commercial long-lasting Csrsmlc Tlla will a12” - 8 Colort 19! Genuine SANDRAN VINYL Floor Covering FE 4-5216 2525 Elizabeth Lake Rood Sq. Yd. 9x12 LINOLEUM RU6S RUSTIC WALL mi THE. PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY* OCTOBER 4, 1W Pontiac to New Home Afrs. William J. Emerson, (lejt#, West Iroquois Road and Mrt. Robert A. Armstrong, Cherokee Road, ,leave the new home of the Pontiac TWCA on.tyest Huron Street. Once the hornet of the Oliver Beaudettes, the mansion was dedicated Sunday afternoon for the use of women and girls throughout the Pontiac area. loan Terrell, Clovese Street, a member of the 'Y-Tjeens, tries the new fire, escape which ■ rises’ three-stories high on the west side of the . building. Sunday Ceremony Is Simple Dedication Ujitil next week children can only look through the loindows. of Ihe new nursery, building, formerly a garage. From the left are Daniel Shawn, Karen Ann and Timothy Scott Rafferty, all of Thorpe Street. White Lingers During Winter The white no longer go into hiettng when winter comes. So mtKh white is in the fall and whiter fashion collections the local dry cleaners stand to clean upon cleaning fulls. White's great for hats top. SaHy Victor shows them in furi, leathers, velours, felts and wools. Deanna Birker Is Wed TuU Thu HEARING CENTER in the MALL • TESTS • AIDS • CATTERIES (injwlt* ®onti«c MsH Optical Center I OMR Evenings HI 1:11 ttS-1111 .Thos B. Applet™. Consul'.mi St. Perpetua's Catholic Church was the setting for the marriage on Saturday of De-I anna Sue Birker and David John Regner. Their parents are the Fred I D. Birkers of Loon Lake Shores and the John Regners Of Pauline Street.' SHEATH GOWN I With her sheath gown and cathedral train of white Chan-til 1 y lace over taffeta, the bride wore a butterfly veil of silk net. She carried white carnations and rosebuds. * * ,★ ---------- Nancy Shadrick Was maid of honor along with bridesmaids Linda Beauchamp and Mrs. Barry Swan. Kelly Birker waa flower-girl and Donn Marshall, ring-bearer. ■ Dennis Begen was besfman. John Borgine and Barry Swan | seated the guests. * * * Reception in the VFW Hall followed the rite performed by Rev. Bernard Zaglaniczny. The cbuple will live in Ypsi-I lanti where he attends East-lorn Michigan University. I v'";...... | For 'Your Own Custom Blended WIG or WIGLETTE Wj a suggest you have Ora at Randall’s take a -our order direct to the manufacturer in ew York on October 9%. t SB Wayne St.. In a short, sftnple impressive ceremony,, the former home of the Oliver Beaudette on West Huron Street was dedicated Sunday afternoon as the new Pontiac YWCA building. After, a dedication service ready by Mrs: Percy Jones, Mrs. Robert A. Armstrong, of the board of trustees, presented the keys to Mrs. Wil-' liaro J. Emerson, president of the YW board, and to Mrs. Reba Ross Netzler, executive director. * * ★ Also dedicated was the new nursery building, the remodeled garage building at the rear of the property. Rabbi Erpst J. Conrad gave this dedication. Open house preceded and followed the ceremony which Dr. Braden Is Speaker Enjoy the Supfrb Artistry of lUiMMIZ and NEMENOFF - PIANO DUO - Curst Artist* Appearing » With the PONTIAC SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA ~^Tnn«IW| Ortnhipr 5 — B;30 P.M. PONTIAC NORTHERN HIGH SCHOOL Mi* Rrtnick, Conductor "Baldwin , , . truly Inspirational... the world's finest piano.’' This Advertisement 1 Courtesy Of CALBI MUSIC COMPANY 119 North Saginaw PONTIAC MM ; ii MRS. D. J. REGNER Tip in tor's Rpom Decorating tip for the children’s rooms: buy two bedspreads alike, using one for the bed, turning the other into curtains, or draperies. Dr. Roslyn Braden, director of the Detroit P r o j eel Headstart, will be speaker for ^Jhe Oct. 12 meeting-of the Detroit North Suburban Alumnae Club of Alpha Gamma Delta. Topic for discussion will be •‘What Prffjsrt Headstart Means to Inter-city Preschoolers.” Dr. Braden recently was appointed permanent director of the project Members will gather at the home of Mrs. B. James Theo-doroff, Birmingham, at I p.m. Cohostesses will be Mrs. David Raup and Mrs. Paul King. Needs Suds Rub Rub persistant grease spots and stains with thick suds, then sponge with cold water before putting in the machine. If a spot is still there, use a stain remover. McLeod Carpet Sale “PE-3.T087 Arrival of Girl KANSAS CITY, Mo. (IT — The birth at Lakeside hospital here of Janine Renee Capa-roon caused no little excitement in the family. She was the first gfrl baby born on the paternal side of the family hi nearly 57 yean. The parents are Mr. and Mn. Jack Wayne Caparoon Jr. The great aunt of the baby, born soon after the turn of the century, was the last female born in the family until the arrival of Janine. was attended by about 100 Members of the board of trustees are Mn. Armstrong, Mn> Allan Monroe, Mn. Fred Haushalter, Harcourt S. Patterson and Milo J. Cross. Telephone Manners Important By The Emily Post iintitate If It interests you to know how good (or otherwise) your telephone manners may be, the number of “yes” answers to the following questions will give you your rating. s. " a . Or.. * If every one is “yea," yt_ deserve not merely a crown, but a halo! ,* Do you make sure of the correct number so as not to risk disturbing strangers by calling from memory? ' • Do you make conversations with busy people as brief Couple on Honeymoon in Poconos Mr. and Mrs. Francis William J. Burns (Joyce Eloise Ball) who were wed Saturday in the First Baptist Church, Walled Lake, will honeymoon at a Pocono Mountain resort, * * * Their parents are the Charles Balls, Richardson Road, and the Ivan. Youngs, • When calling intimate friends who do not recognize msMsh tag “Guess Who?” and announce yourself pnpnptly? • Do you try to time your calls so as not to interfere with the occupations of those you call moat often? • Do you make business calls well before the dose of office hours, especially if calling a person you know is a commuter? • In a business office do you explain to personal friends inclined to talk at length that you will call them after hours? • Do you treat wrong-number calls as a mutual inconvenience, answering, “Sorry, wrong number,” in a tone of polite sympathy instead of showing ill-tempered annoy- • When the number you ara. calling is not answered quickly, do you wait long enough for someone to lay aside what she may be dotag, so that when she reaches the telephone she will not have been disturbed just to answer a dial tone, since you love already MRS. F. W. J: BURNS Woodview Avenue, all of West Bloomfield Township. ★ * * Re-embroidered Alencon lace highlighted the bride’i gown and Watteau train of white satin worn with an illusion bubble veil. IVY IN BOUQUET She carried white spider chrysanthemums and ivy for the rite performed by Rev. Carl Grapentine, followed by reception in the VFW Hall, Keego Harbor. Bridal attendant! were Mrs. Gary Ball, honor matron, Mrs. Walter Coe and Donna Young, bridesmaids; Debbie Croft, flowergirl and Edward Rock Jr., ring-bearer. *, * * On the esquire side were John Johnaon, best man, with James Werthman, Gary and Charles Bull Jr. us ushers. PTA Council Planning Instruction Program Hip Pontiac Council of PTA plans its annual fall School of Instruction at 7:90 p.m. Tuesday in Washington Junior High School. Robert Boyce, Washington Junior’s principal, will offer the invocation. * ' t * Workshop leaders will ha: Mrs. William Wright, Mrs. Robert Trachet, Mrs. George Watters, Mrs. Frtjl Gotoes, Mrs. Howard McConnell, Mrs. Ross Elliot, Mrs, Leslie Hotchkiss, Mrs. Ervin Christie and Mrs. Jtoberl Anderson, . ★. * a.. Others ve Mrs. Laura Me* Keever, Mn. Thomas Bartle, Mn. Beatrice Davenport and Arthur Heaton. WSCS Sla tes Coffee, Panel Parley oh (JN fellowship hall. Ada Duhigg Circle members will serve refreshments under chairmanship of Mn. Francis Figart. ♦ -* . * Hostesses will be members of the Reah Miller Circle, with Mrs. Robert Field as chairman. 8everal visitors from Ann Arbor will present a panel discussion on the United Nations for the meeting. Hospitality for the event Will be provided by the PTAs of Grofoot, Owen, Will Rogers and Washington Junior High schools. A parent education institute , is planned Nov. 9 at University of Michigan. Mn. Thomas Henson will take bus reserve- Style Show Plans Set by Women Members of Kappa Delta Sorority are completing plans tor HiMr fnrrtwnming fa.hlnn show-luncheon on Oct. 21 at Phim Hollow Golf Club. - |n the meantime, the South' Oakland Alumnae Association has planned two meetings. W * * The afternoon group will gather in the Foxcroft home Women’s Society of Christian Service plans a 9:90 a m. coffee Thursday at the church Tale of a Term The term “cardigan” started as a reference te a form of rib-knitting stitch, says the National Board of the Coat and Suit Industry. Nowadays, the term refers to Just about any collar less neckline. Oct. 12. Assisting the hostess will be Mrs. Robert L. Brown, Mrs. Arthur R. Karstaedt and Mrs. Donald Rader. • Mrs. Blenman will narrate slides taken of her recent trip to the Orient. EVENING GROUP; The evening group' will meet the same day at • p.fii. in tha Emanuel Christensen home to Southfield. Cohoatess will include Mrs. Katherine Closson and Mrs. Wesley K. Smith. ♦ "W* rt * Highlights trThe^natlonal convention to Chicago will be presented by Mn. Stuart Totty. S IB. WASKBBS 20* 12 IB. WASHEBS 2S* 20 IB. WASHERS 9S< ECON-O-WASH m JRmtOnU MATERNITIES • UNIFORMS MIBACIE MILE SHOPPING CENTER OWW fVININOS NNTII MINI WOODWARD AVE. (N*c* Sw* «f Ufc* Open 9 io A The Pontiac Mall Open Ewningi 'Hi 9 CANDY DISH "Assorted Chocolate" . Reg. $1 lb. Umk 2 lbs. par cwtomer • and wamaa idal- I it Is steady,1 CsM creams in. lot's talk It aver, IS BANKIM THE CAREER FOR TOC? Parsaaaal Office, 418 Cimmaalty National Bank Bldg. Nows: 9 am It 4:90 PJL, Monday, Toasday, Thursday •ad Friday; 9 sjo. ta 11 mm a* Notional I Booh THU PONf I AC PRfcSS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1W5 B—41 Holding Out on Hubby? ALL PERMANENTS^ By MARY FEELEY Consultant In Money there are more gray hair* in more women’s heads than ever before in the history of this country, .1, couldn’t be h surprised. I’m glad share my :h on this Subject with the hair - coloring people and the MARY FEEUSY sion: die New Gray is no diet deficiency, fj's due to that recent crackdown by the Internal Revenue Service that says you have to report the interest on youi account, whether you file a separate or a Joint tax return. Am here’s where the trouble starts. Now let’s look at this situation. All these perfectly nice women who file a joint income tax return with their happy husbands have' written the by me hundreds: “Miss Feeley, what will I do? I’ve had my own savings, my nest egg, for years, and I just didn’t mention it to my husband because -J .”_______ * . * * The “because*” cover a multitude of colorful experiences “My husband is just naturally extravagant.” “My husband is a bom gambler.” “My husband wotiid just drink it up and we’d have nothing.” The large majority of these women have no desire to defraud the government. They’re Poll/s Pointers Pipe Smoker’s Tip Ennstt Chairs MM litmf DEAR POLLY - My husband glued a large cork in the middle of an Inexpensive glass ash tray which\he now uses to knock ashes qut of his pipes. This saves the tray and minimizes the noise that this action normally make*. It also loolu good and is easily cleaned with soap and water. I know pipe snookers and their spouses will like the idea as much as we do.—FRANCES DEAR POLLY - My Pointer is for those who may write with a pencil or ballpoint pen for long periods of time. Sometime* I write for hours and have, gotten a callus on my middle finger where the pea nibbed. I took the foam from a broken foam hair curler, slipped my pen through the hole in the center and writing is now easy and with no rubbing.—VERA ★ ★ * ■ DEAR POLLY - In oi downstairs coat closet I keep a wire coat hanger with a plastic bag pulled over the top (a hole in cut for the hook to come through) and the bag is ait off so it is only about nine inches long. On the hanger I have a row of snap clothespins and to them I fasten my gloves when I hang up my coat after coming home. The gloves are always neat and in place when I am ready to go out again. There is no running back upstairs to get the right color or FITZPATRICK'S PHARMACY. INC. m wm*mt* - mart w «. jiMpk nmsnm FE 2-1383 FI 4-9915 pair. My husband has such a hanger of his own so. he never has fo look through overcoat and jacket pockets to find the gloves he wants.—DOROTHY * * * DEAR POLLY — Before starting on a paint Job, danb some paint on the underside of the can so it serves as “glue” to stick the can to a larger paper plate. If any paint drips down the outside of the can as you work, the plate'catties it and prevents paint spots on the floor when you set the can down. * ★ * Stretch heavy rubber bands lengthwise around your child’s toy autos or trucks. They act as bumpers to prevent scratches on the furniture or baseboards. Bands cut from old tireinner tubes are excellent for this.—G. M. D. WWW Share your favorite homemaking ideas . .. send them to Polly in care of The Pontiac Press. You’ll receive a dollar if rdly uses your idea in Polly's Pointers. * * * Polly picked a peck of Polly’s Pointers to include in her 32-page booklet. To order, send your name, address with zip code and 50 cents to: Polly’s Pointers, care of The Pontiac Press, P. 0. Box 489, Dept. A, Radio City Station, New YOrk 19, New York. Just up against the problem of Who’s going to be maddest when their little private savings account comes to light—their mates or Uncle Sam. They want to pay the required tax on these carefully hoarded savings—but how, oh haw? Mrs. M. R., of New York City, doesn’t beat around the bush. She Just states the problem simply: “I don’t go to business, but my husband and I fill out a joint income tax return. We have a joint bank account and include the interest in the joint return. have a separate savings account in my name only. ‘ Do I have to include that with the joint return—or can I enter that separately under my social security number?’’ * if- * Well, Mrs. R., everybody knows by now that this particular tax ruling has brought about a lot of belated confessions between husband and wife. Maybe in some cases it has been healthy for one or the other to put all the money cards on the table Sind clear up a lot of frustrations. But many wives who managed to save a few dollars out of the week’s grocery allow- ance and tucked them into a personal savings account haven’t yet confessed, the longer they keep their savings a secret from the income tax experts, the more trouble they’re building up for themselves. . I talked to some of our tax officials on this subject, and while they’re sympathetic with the whole situation, they’re unanimous in their ana You just can’t hide your individual savings account, whether you file a separate income tax return or a joint tax return. Just state the facts on the right line. It’s not the intent of the Internal Revenue Service to police the his-and-hers handling of family funds. It’s just iheir job to collect. Indoor Herbs Keep your, indoor crop of herbs on the dry side. This is best accomplished by starting your parsley, chive, basil, shallot, rosemary, dill and other savory seeds in porous -clay pots to make sure excess water will drain and leach out. The humid air of your kitchen or laundry room is the best atmosphere for your indoor herb garden. I WBtem# MRS. CyfC. KNOTTS ! MRS. DENNIS L COX Lace Accents l Newlyweds Fashion Her j Take Trip Bridal Gown ! to North Work 99.6-Hour Week Housewives Demand Sa/ary Do you feel unfulfilled when you’re scrubbing the floor on your hands and knefes? Do you honestly enjoy playing pitch and catch with little Robert? Whether you love it or hate It, you are a housewife and likely to remain so. But to make your Job a little more pleasant why not demand a salary, just like all the other people who work? .★ W * today’s Secretary reports that a regular housewife works a 99.8-hour week. She spends 44.5 hours as nursemaid (at $1.25 an hour), 5.9 hours as laundress (at $1.90), 13.1 hours as cook (at 12.50), plus a muK* titude of other duties. Even without overtime for work beyond 40 hours, your weekly pay would come to $150.34. PROTEST MARCH Let’s start a movement Have a protest march. Organize a union. You’re worth your weight in gold, spread the word. Victoria, Africa’s largest lake, is the source of the Nile River. Joanne Marie Johnson of Mechanic Street became Mrs. Charles Robert Knotts, Saturday in the Lake Orion Methodist Church. * W ★ Chantilly lace fashioned the bodice for her gown of white peau de soie over taffeta, worn with illusion veil and crystal BIBLE BOUQUET For the rfte performed by Rev. Robert J. Hudgins she held a white Bible covered with white roses and Stephan-otis. * * * Parents of the couple are* the Howard A. Johnsons, Commerce Road, Commerce township, and Mr. and Mrs. Otto Knotts, Highlander Street, Orion Township. * * * With honor maid, Dolores Rygiel. were bridesmaids Susan Cowdrey and Mrs. Gerald Knotts. ★ ♦ W Gerald Knotts was best man. Thomas Hutchings and Wayne Evans were ushers. Sr, W The couple left for a honeymoon in the southern states after a reception in the American Legion hall, Auburn Heights.; Off on a northern honeymoon are Dennis L. Cox and his bride, the former Anita Louise Tucker, who were wed Saturday in the Central Methodist Church. The George T: Tuckers of Gage Street are parents of the bride who chose white peau de soie withShortbodice oT Chantilly lace. A crystal tiara held her il/ lusion veil, and white opeMds centered her bouquet of Steph-anotis, for the rite performed by Dr. Milton Bank. . Laural McCurdy Was honor attendant, along with Mrs. James Cox and Virginia McDonough as bridesmaids. Dr. James L. Cox was hi* TrotKer’sUfeXt man. They art the sons of Mr. and Mrs. Okm L. Cox of East Princeton Avenue. Stephen Hutchinson and Thomas Tucker Were ushers. Give Flat Paints tHe Blotter TeSt Before applying fresh flat paint, find out whsft Dolor it will be when it is dry. A good test for this is to brush the paint on a clean white blotter. . The blotter soon soaks up the oils, leaving the pigments on the Surface of the blotter whffc they assume the same oolor the paint will have when it is dry. NEISNERS Beauty Salon DISCOVER cold wave! A new world of beauty awaits you when you cele-brats Mlaa Zotoe* first anniversary with u*. Hare’s the protein wave that’s become the favorite of millions In just one year.-1 ~rr^~vr- '*?“ ’?: i>^ Rag. 10.00 Miss Zotos /I95 bid. Cut V Set v 42 N. Saginaw, 2nd Floor FE 8-1343 NONE HIGHER 1— New Lustra Shampoo 2— Flattering Haircut 8> * 3-i-Lonoltn Neutralizing .1 * 4-^-Srrart Style Setting HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY Open Mornings at t A.M. ~7gN. Saginaw Over Baxley Mkt. 333-MS PONTIAC BI.OOMFIELD HILL* 24 Wral Huron Si. 4080 Telegraph Kd. nirnfoien Ponlinc ft? 4-U-U It Un* Lake Rrf. 644-7379 Mon. *frl.'ll! 9 P.M. Mon., Thun. A Fri.‘til 9 P.M. ■raoicisc&n earthenware starter set 'iS"SS%0ff Now 'til Oct. 9 Save *5.00 - on 16 Pc. Starter Sets! Now -v you can save $5.00 on starter sets in America’s favorite earthenware — Franciscan. Hand-crafted patterns, designed and made in California — are chip resistant, color fast, will never craze. Can be used safely in oven and dishwasher. All patterns offer you a wide choice of beautiful multi-use accessories. Eacn starter set includes four of-each: dinner plate, bread/butter plate, cup and saucer. Enjoy substantial 25% off savings by starting your collection now. Sale ends October 91 Sierra Sand and Malibu 12.95-regularly 17.95 14.95 r Brides-to-be: Register your china and crystal patterns iw Wiggi bridal rectetery “ ■ avoid gift duplication. Mvll •..Hi- THE PONTI AC 1>RKSS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1965 Thinking of Suburbia Unn Boyle AND TRUCKS WANTED HIGHEST PRICES PAID IP# Pick Vp FE 2-0200 dty satisfy this ft yearning by ft buying i amaBn. Valhalla in the A uring GO to 100 / feet / ]^r Then, they p^ft S* paytagfor B0YLE it and going to and from it Some of my best friends and worst enemies dwell in the suburbs, and I feel equally sorry for them all ETERAL TRANSIT They don’t live where they work and they don’t work where they live. They are people in Their children have forgotten how to walk, and their wives mildew in self-pity because they resent tbeir role as unpaid fami- If You Are Overweight If You Are Too Thin Next I spread out the editorial section for die cat. Then I lie down on the floor, open the real estate section and spend endless happy hours looking for bargains. Many times I have been tempted to invest. Particularly I considered a crumbling castle NEW YORK (AP) - Arthur J. Goldberg, U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, entertained President Johnson and UJf. Secretary General U Thant at a dinner Sunday night. Twoecore and their wives were invited to die dinner in Goldberg’s suite at the Waldorf-Astoria. HOPKINSVILLE, Ky. (AP) -The Hopkinsville Police Department moves today into its new $212,000 headquarters building including a jail with a microphone in each cdL Police said any conversation, even a whisper, will be picked up by the microphones and transmitted to a radio room where an officer will be on duty at all times. Hubert H. Humphrey, Secretary of State Dean Rude, Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield of Montana, House Speaker John McCormack of Massachusetts, Amintore Fanfani of Italy, president of the UJf. General Assembly; Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, D-N.Y., and New York Mayor Robert F. Wagner. FITNESS PROGRAM WORKS Seismic waves provide geologists with almost their only means of studing the earth’s deep interior. Among others present were Luis Vidal, president of the UJf. Security Council, and Ralph Bundle, U.N. undersecretary. SPECIAL Wo oi# expanding to full fociliti#t and o LIMITED numbor of PREFERRED MEMBERS being enrolled at... Eft®/ ACC OF NR MTIOUL RITE 334-0529 ONLY Our offHloted Prestige Clubs are FACILITIES SHOWN BrifNMnorr Quick Credit! OPEN TONIGHT TIL 10 PM. 1 N. PERRY ST. nrmr of Pike «d Peny ■ . M MW Mi FMMr mt ML PRICES-TOP QUALITY-SEE US NOW! HERE S WHY YOU SHOULD INSTALL YOUR Thus, it is always a concern of [the president, he says, to be certain he is getting all the in4tior”Jhe proportion of American formation on a given situation and South Vietnamese casual-and his' advisers are posing for|ties to Viet Cong losses; the ra-him “all the alternatives.” |tio of materiel losses; the name “I think,” he says, “the American people want their president to be courageous but cautious. That’s why I surround every decision with aU the cau-jtion I can get.” * ♦ * * *- ■ Accordingly, no American! of a helicopter pilot who completed his mission though wounded; the question of whether better pay and housing might reduce the South Vietnamese desertion rate; the possibility of sending the show “Hello, Dolly” | to entertain American troops im Halgon., ' j ' t During' one three-hour session j with the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the President asked no .less than 78 questions about Viet Nam, says an aide. - "All t laid 'was' . liH! Show HI a filter that realty delivers * taste and I’ll eat my hat.’’ ^ “He aBu^ftations not only for information, says andther aide of this and other presidential cross-examinations, “but deliberately to keep pressure the people working for him, keep them off balance and thus get extra performance out of them.” The men around Johnson say they are puzzled by the fact that some people think the President has, been impetuous in his conduct of foreign policy' On the contrary, they say, he movfes only after long consultation and study. Before making up his mind, they say, he insists on hearing all viewpoints and, on file occasions where there has been only one, he has been known to appoint a devil’s advocate. President Johnson,” saysi ______ g _________________11____________________ tusk,I word on American pilots miss-switching system permits the “spends more time consulting ing over Viet Nam. He has also dialing of a second call while with his senior advisers thanj been interested in the “k|U ra-lstUl engaged in the first. I any president I’ve observed.” a nLT $13 Shop at Irish Airport “politically sensitive” area A .... ,, n , without the specific approval of rilfC l\Q\\0\ "NCeS the President. It is he who} VWWMHWsi i mwj makesJhe final decisions after J DUBLIN (AP) _ y. UBt*- i,P°? ble e of the most important terms in its history. By long tradition, the openjng will be given over to formal ceremonies,' the high point of which is the swearing in of Abe Fortas as the 95th justice in the nation’s history. By the end of the session thq court will have delivered major decisions on civil rights, obscenity laws, antitiagt laws and reapportionment of state legislatures. A record-setting stack of more ’than l,300,^ppeals awaited consideration as the justices prepared to welcome Fortas to their ranks. FORMAL CEREMONY ‘ High government officials, friends and relatives of the new justice and prominent members of the bar were expected f attend the formal, solemn, ceremony by which Fortas succeeds to the seat vacated by Arthur J. Goldberg, now U.S. ambassador to UirUnitod Nations. Fortas, 55-year-old Washington attorney and long-time adviser to President Johnson, will take two oaths before he is formally seated. In one, hi a private court con-j ference room with only justices! present, he will swear before Chief Justice Earl Warren to support the Constitution. In the! {second, given in the courtroom; ! before the public, he will swear, to administer justice faithfully.: ; Earlier plans called also for itfze official presentation of the, new solicitor general, Thurgood Marshall. The first Negro to; hold the position, Marshall was { ito have been introduced to the: court by Atty. Gen. Nicholas [Katzenbaoh. The presentation [was postponed—for an unan-; nounced reason — until the court’s next session the tol- PONTIAC'S LARGEST TILE CENTER Own Installation Work Done by Experts » Mm. m4 fri. *tH t:M P.M. Tmi., W*X., Thun., tat. IK I PM. isi i H You Don’t Buy From Us, Wo Both Lose Money! TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! THEf PONTIAC KRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1965 B—T Sealab 2 by Sea Lion LA JOLLA, CaHf. (AP) - A curious sea lion apparently has survived her brief whiff of the high-pressure, helium-charged atmosphere ip Sealab 2, a Navy Spokesman said today . TlDe visitor appeared Saturday. Aquanauts were routed from their bunks by a strange barking. The sea lion, dubbed Samantha, had poked its head through the capsule’s entry hatch. Aqua* nauts grabbed their cameras but the flashbulbs startled her and she withdrew. The capsule hatch is left open to the sea because the atmosphere inside — 80 per cent helium, 16 per cent nitrogen and 4 per cent oxygen — is maintained at seven times the pressure of the surface, sufficient to keep the water from rushing Into the capsule. MAIN FEAR Navy Scientists feared that as the sea lion later ascended the 205 feet to the surface, its lungs would expand and the mammal would die of embolism — air in the blood vessels. A deathwatch was established by. surfers and lifeguards from Coronado to Huntington Beach — 70 miles north of tne project. * * * Blit no sea lions washed ashore, the spokesman said—indicating Samatha instinctively exhaled the fumes in,her dscent.i Today aquanauts planned to l buzz for SaAiantha, who has! responded to earlier buzzer 1 calls. ' Sunday, Navy scientists spray-painted several of the six sea lions that play near the project’s surface vessel — anchored about 4,000 feet Offshore. ; Capt. George Bond, project supervisor, said aquanaut Rich Grigg, 28, of La Jolla has been • returned to full duty after being stung four times Sunday by a scorpion fish while, he was working near the capsule without gloves or boots. He was given a pain-killing drag.' and. antihistamines and / five' Kours later was walking about, the underwater laboratory. ,He and the nine other members pf the third team are due '/to surface Sunday — at the end of the last 15-day phase of the 4fr{fay experiment. Passes Halted at Berlin Wall BERLIN (UPI) - The Berlin Wall closed again today. The Communists stopped issu-| big passes to West Berliners seeking emergency visits with! relatives in East Germany. Aleut 26,001 special passes had been issued, permitting visits for reasons of sickness, WASHINGTON (AP) - the Senate was set today to stamp Anal approval on the foreign aid money bill and then plunge into debate on President Johnson’s call for repeal of a ban on untoi) shops. Opponents of the repeal move, led by Republican leader Ever- Senate to Act on Foreign Aid, 14B Measures ett Dirksen of Illinois, have lined up- more than two dozen senators to speak at length against the House-passed bill to junk Section 14B of the Taft-Hartley Act. It is this provision which permits states to outlaw labor contracts in which union membership is a condition of j (block consideration of confer-1 Administration forces claim ajence reports on bills previously majority of, the Senate backslpassed by the Senate. Because repeal. But they are not claim-1 of this, the 43,218,000,008 foreign ing they have the votes to crack j aid bill Is expected to sail a filibuster. This requires two-!through. - thirds, of the senators piesentl In the House, a light schedule' and voting I is on tap with twp major meas-j Dirksen has agreed not to lures — highway beautification i land sugar — set for consideration later in toe week. The highway bill, already passed in the Senate, was cleared last week by the rules committee for floor debate. The Senate has not started sugar ^hearings. The foreign aid bill was ap- proved by toe House Friday after Republicans narrowly lost a bid to force it back to conference to write in a, ban on aid to any nation whose ships go to North Viet Nam. The bill urges Johnson to seek an end to such trading, but leaves continuation of aid up to him. ill Mimeographing Churches—Schools ; Groups t CHRISTIAN LITERATURE SALES / 55 Oakland Ave. FE 4-W4I On Saturday, East German officials announced that their of* fidals would not appear today the pan office in West Berlin? They kept their word. 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HR M ■p' . | of : THJE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1965 FCfkONiY SiSL*"r'«» mi I HilWiMiTi ^w—mIi i niEESIW; 3 GIGANTIC PONTIAC LOCATIONS CORNER OF DIXIE H.WY AND TELEGRAPH RD Little Known ot Shadowy Cong Leaders m, comfortable — so easy to wear —it could show you the way to joyous freedom from your rupture trouble. WWSWI aaa urn awe /ww». Inconspicuous, vrtthout leg straps, elastic belts, body «• circling springs or harsh pads, it has caused many to say, “I don’t see how it bolds so easy, would not have believed, had not tried It” nedy (coder), D-Mass., and his brother, Robert, D-N.Y., are in stitches as they receive ceremonial pens. The ceremony took place beside the Statue of Liberty on Liberty Island.in New York harbor. A LIGHTER MOMENT—Pin-striped suits and a jovial mood are common to this famous trio at ceremonies yesterday in New York City where President Johnson signed new immigration legislation. Sen. Ted Ked- By COL. RAY CROMLEY WASHINGTON (NEA) - Almost nothing is known of the shadowy top men of the Viet Cong. These men have deliberately kept their pasts, their personalities and, sometimes, their real dames hidden even from their colleagues. It often is ancertaia which —men are fraati and which wield the power. Bf luck, a former Chinese . underground fighter introduced me to a man who once was a principal military representative* of the south in Ho CU Mind’s first government after the defeat of die French in ISM. it h it For three months, a decade or ao ago, he was foe roommate of a junior colonel named Tran Nam Trung. Totter, on the books, Lt. Gen. Tran Mam Trung is vice chairman if foe Viet Cong National Liberation Front in South Viet Nam. There Is reassa to believe be Is aetoaOy commander-in-chief sf the Viet Cong armies. Some believe be is also foe “Trung was disturbed, too, by the amount of time I spent reading poetry. He considered it a waste of time. He was, himself, always reading — any kind of a serious book, phut especially politics, history and geography. He’d read anything of this kind he could get Ms hands on. “In a restaurant in Hanoi one day. I watched him bum an old geography book from a man at a nearby table. * w * “Trung kept .notes on everything he" did. His diary was always with him. He’d write down in very small letters everything that happened during the day. He’d analyze his own mistakes and criticize himself severely. T think he was a Communist party member ever then. But, strangely, he said he had no objections to my reading his intimate notes any time I wanted to. “Trung pas t very suspi- Even after foe war was over and Ho Chi MU had set up Ms government, Trung would go IS minutes early to government meetings, look around foe meeting place and inspect carefully before going in. “He’d always be getting suspicious of someone, reporting than and having them arrested." Trung, now about 45, was born in South Viet Nam’s Kuang Ngain Province. sent to you on 30 days receive a $3.50 special truss as a present for your report Write for descriptive circular. ,,’s free. Jtist | din’s Appliance Koch Bldg., 290T City S, Missouri. But do it today before you lose foe address. It’s free. Just address Phvsi-_ , Company, 4068 Koch Bldg., 2906 Main, Kansas . REDUCE iA'^^-UTOBdUMI 7 Yc UP TO 6 LIS. A WEEK r < CAPSULES! Easier to fako and more \ effective than the powdered and liq-\ uid food supplement, and costs less A including Capsules suitod to you H INDIVIDUALLY by Lie. Physician, / M.D No Gastritis or irregularity ./ with Medic-Way caps. DON'T DIET ) —JUST EAT! As thousands have / done, you can lose 5, 50 or 100 lbs. I and KEEP IT OFF! MEDIC-WAY 7 Offic* 1 MEDIC-WAY 335-9205 i in Oakland and Wayat CaaaNaa - Odd la Mirada MW Why do some children need more love than others? 9—‘ •' Because some children are loved less than others. But all M children deserve lets et love. Make sure they get it. Your gift / can help turn tears into laughter. 0n« Gift Works Many Wondars/GIVE THE UNITED WAY Support Your Pontiac A^ea United Fund J. A. Fredmi, Inc. 735 $. PADDOCK STRUT m PONTIAC BUY, SELL, TRADE USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS of foe VC. x Here, then, is Trung as reported by his former roommate: “My messiness got on Trung’sl nerves. He’d regularly complain about it. His own things were always in order. “Trung was a peculior man, very austere. He neither drank nor smoked. He was very neat and very regular in his habits. He went to bed at nine and got up at five. I never saw himj laugh. TO EXTREMES “Trung carried his orderliness to extremes. He was a stickler for planning. He would sit down ’ Ihr night btfohr"and taHSBfcr work out his schedule for foe1 next, day — both for his work —and ■ free time, even to what books he would read. “He wasn’t a fancy dresser. Bat every night he would put Ms :4Mrt and pants under Ms pillow so they'd be pressedet much as possible for foe J morning. “Even out in foe field in guerrilla days, he washed his underclothes every night. * A. ...it “Because he hated the sneakers that many guerrillas wore, be always managed to wangle a pair of shoes for himself. “Ceremonies were a very serious thing. On one occasion 1 wag in charge of the next day’sHlag ceremony. (The job was rotated.) I’d been out and came home late. When I came in, Trung reminded me I was responsible for the ceremony foe next day. He chided me for having gone out. He said I should have stayed home and purified myself. •4 lasmuiiwin People 50 to SO Tear Oit This Ad . and mail tt today to find a IPTP can Mill apply for ame nod of life insurance ^available when you were W- Once your application roved, the policy can be l foe rest of your life. wtinfar by maiL. No I caB! Amply aend your address and year of j OM American Inaur-» Co., 4N9 Oil, Dept LB 622-----1 City, Mo. 04141. Home Outfit SUPER VALUE Coffee Cake AP’SuPer Mamets AMIRKfl'S DIP!N!>A6ll 1000 MtRCHANT SiH(t 1&S9 Values UCB HIOMDAY and TUESDAY 3 Weekend Marches Result in 409 Arrests Beef Rib Steaks NATCHEZ, Miss. (AP) -Charles Evers, state field secre-tary of the NAACP, said Negroes would demonstrate here again tonight despite the arrest ^eTOa ctvty rights lottos In weekend demonstrations. Police arrested 103Jb the first of three attempted marches to the city hall Stmday. Evers turned some 500 Negroes back after they ran into a police barricade tile second and .third timOs, both after dark. * *; w * The number jailed, including a few whites, reached 400 with 19 pickets arrested Friday, and 10 pickets and 271 marchers picked up Saturday. Most of those arrested have been taken to the state prison farm at Parchman, 200 miles to the north. Police said those 12 years old and Older would, be odd at Parchman to await trial. WERE CHARGED The marchers were charged with parading without a permit. The pickets were charged with contempt of court. * Chancellor Curtis Collins last Thursday issued an order prohibiting both tha NAACP and the Ku Klux Klan feom any action that might increase racial tensions in Natchez. City officials asked for the order. * * * Even said Negroes would continue marching until the city granted their demands, which included school desegregation and the hiring of Negro policemen. Each of the marches started from the Beaulah Baptist Church. None got farther than two blocks. FIRST WAVE Police Chief J. T. Robinson met the first wave of Sunday' marchers two blocks from the church and asked them to disperse. He said: “You’re parading without a permit. No permit has been asked. No permit has been issued.” A Negro minister leading the group replied: "Chief, all we would like to do i»go to jail and nr ay for our people you have. B'a our constitutional right.” Then the marchers knelt for a prayer. When they got to their feet, Robinson said: “We think the place to pray is in church." He placed them under arrest. Evers led the night marches. Back to School ■ Now Theme for Hart's Spouse - WASHINGTON (UPI) - Janie Hart, 44, who can operate a plane and a helicopter, rear eight children and help her U. 8. wants to complete her education. „She jcJd her p!a»W.*nd enrolled this fall at George Washington University as si sophomore. - fehe intends te earn bar degree.' “It’s either that, or become the first middle-aged dropout in history,” she slid. Her enrollment made her hue-bank, 8en. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., the only member of the family not now going to school. “But I think he learns something every day in the Capitol,” she said. Michigan Sailor Dies CHICAGO (AP) - Ernest Bowden, 99/ n^Uvonia, Mich-, n crewman on the ore boat William H. Danner, anchored in Lake Michigan, died Sunday of an apparent heart attack. Bartal tournee Sold by Mail ... You may still be qualified for HAM Me insurance ... W you with not burden y*K loved ones wilh funeral and other tnensaa. This NEW policy is especially hilpful to those between 40 111190. No medical examination necessary. When your policy is issued, you can keep tt for M*. Rates can not ha raised-friendly service. OLD LINE ----iAL RESERVE LIFE THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1065 PORK LOINS F«il7-Rib UhFW Portion 3$ 49* Center |k R® ID Cuts Delmonico Steaks •kit "Super-Right" QUALITY All-Beef Hamburger JANE PARKER Hamburger nous 35* PKG. OF 12 3 LB. PKG. OR MORE Lessor Quantities lb. 47c Groat Lakes Mushrooms 4cub 39 6-INCH CUT "Super-Right1* Beef Rib Steaks are cut from Mature Corn-Fed Beef. No Coupons, No Gimmicks, No Limits... 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A legacy for education in Ohio, These an gUmpees from the UA. scene this week.) * ★ * . GRANVILLE, N.Y. (AP) -Ab Army payroll of gold and silver cotes, buried ’in a meadow two esoteries ago by retreating French troops, still is hidden near ibis upstate village, a local historian soys. The big mysteries, historian Morris Rose-Roten says, are tee exact location of tee treasure and its worth. He thinks the money lies somewhere on propertybow owned by fanner John Plenty admits he’s intrigued by the story but says he has no piUw to go treasure-hunting. According to Rose-Roten, tee money was buried beneath a beech tree near the Mettawee River. The burier was a French captain who wanted to keep it put of the hands of advancing (British soldiers during tee /French and Indian War. Rose-Roten says tee captain never returned to tea spot The historian bases his information on a story in 4 1912 issue of a now defunct genealogy magazine. The account said teat a man who helped the captain hide tee money returned later but was unable to find it It appears, Rose-Roten reports, teat tee beech tree disappeared and the river changed its course, eliminating the best landmarks far searchers. BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) Calling out tee National Guard for duty during the Hurricane Betsy emergency in Louisiana was easy; paying off the guardsmen was a little more difficult. The bill was $900,000. The National Guard treasury didn’t have $300,000, so il called on the Louisiana Board of Liquidation of State Debt The board kicked in with $100,000— the mnThmlBI1 under state law it can give toy agency In a single year. Getting the other $200,000 a matter of juggling funds. The board withdrew $200,000 ' plus funds from another account, gave $100,000 to tee state treasurer’s office and $100,000 to the Public Works Department and directed those agencies to pass the money along to the Guard. DUMAS, Tex. (AP) — This town has found that people can tire even of Christmas—the displays, that is. That is why Dumas, 48 miles north of Amarillo, has placed its city Yule decorations on tee auction block. Each Christmas season, since 1959, Dumas Avenue has been renamed Storybook Lane and the city has placed 50 8-foot-tall figurines in an eight-block area. The figures are made of plywood and painted. Such characters as Pinocchio and Rudolph the rednosed reindeer are included. USED TO FIGURES “Our people have grown accustomed to teem,” said Herbert Harter, chairman of the onmmiMttf jp CX- plaining why they have gdne on sale. “If another city of about 8,000 had teem, they would be juniqpe there for three or four years.” No price [had I mined. The figures were painted t by a Dumas artist ana were i lighted. A drive for different decora-1 lions, not yeit selected, began i last week with $8,000 already EMMITSBU/RG, Md. (AP) -The swallows, they say, come bade to Capistrano, but Lil’ Peep comes back to Emmits-burg. Lil’ Peep is an English sparrow. It all started when Mn. John Davenport’s daughter. Linda, 15, found a baby sparrow in tee tarn. It had fallen from its nest and was too young to fly. The family took it Into the house, fed it, and named it LIT Peep. Then, several weeks ago, much older and wiser and with a full set of feathers, Lil’ Peep Michigan Briefs By ESTHER VAN WAGONER TUFTY WASHINGTON — President Johnson has kept his Demo-cratic-controlled Congress busy. riwgruimnn Elford Cederberg, R-Bay City has discovered teat a hew record4228) ha> been set in the number of roll wlt« and quorum calls in the House. The old record was during the fist Congress with 300. Officially, Secretary of Labor W. WiilHd Wlrtz has not made op his mind about continuing his experimental policy of fni^Hfaitfng domestic labor for Mexican nationals during the frail-vegetable season. Uriahs pomtog to from Michigan pickle growers, the complained of a has st crap for lack si pickers, have nel been evaluated. In an fatorview, the Secretary said “bad weather was one unlucky factor.” Also Interfering with a “fair test” was the dismal working conditions (lack of showers, etc.) for the high school students in some seas, he said. The secretary Is proud teat the number of Mexican —latex era was reduced from 180,000 to 25,000 and that the switch fat labor policy did not increase prices. Secretary of Interior Stewart L. UdaO announces the sale of $3 federal “duck stamps" totaled 79MB in Michigan during fiscal 1964-65. Stamp sales ($88 million nationwide) aid in restoring waterfowl population. Sen. Philip Hart, D-Mich., will attend the congressional bearings on Sleeping Bears Dimes lake-shore project fat Traverse City todayandonthe Pictured Rods proposal in Marquette tomorrow. Oa hand from the Hone Interior and Insnlar Affairs Committee will be Wayne AspinaU, D-Ohio, aad ----Itoft* f Elf ere, P-Alariu. Congressman Robert Griffin, R-Traverse City, nwho has some objections to the Senate-passed Sleeping "Bears bill will also, be at the first hearing. Congressman Raymond Clevenger, DSauH Ste. Marie, Is pleased that a $75,000 study is to be made of all the ideas to deice the St. Lawrence seaway to allow year-round traffic. “If tee season could be delayed by a month it would mean H million to Eecanaba alone.” . ‘We knew it was wild and needed/freedom,” arid Mrs. Davenport. Lil’ Peep flew away—hut not far long. That night, much to the delight of the Davenport children, Lil’ Peep returned. And the bird has been returning every night since. Mrs. Davenport says she lets Lfl’ Peep out of tee house about 7:30 each morning and It returns about sundown. ‘She knows when she has a good thing going,” Mrs. Davenport said. ALLIANCE, Ohio (AP) « \ Three Alliance high m ' graduates go on to school each year because Oliver M. Coxen 5 was hired 71 years ago as a •: -Jteariw.——. ~ ."_______ini I Coxen, a native of nearby Marlboro, taught three years to •: the Alliance school system, [ beginning ta^ttOO, and served / year as (school superin- \ tendent. j Then be quit education for i business. He was successful, but ; be never lost his interest to edr \ ucation. stive until 1161, because his late was left to trust of Mb ten until their deaths. The coud sister died In 1090 and, e next year, the first scholar- Be Our Guest! You'll be thrilled with the beautiful styles, the quality and selection of our sofas and chairs. Especially the modest prices made possible only by our lower overhead. You are invited to De our guest and see the new Fall Styles of sofas and chairs in a galaxy of new covers and colors. Colonial, traditional and contemporary stylos of Furniture for Living room, diningroom and bedroom. 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Daley to intervene in the Chicago public school crisis Involving $30 million in federal education funds. The dispute arose Friday when the U.S. Office of Education ordered that $30 million in federal funds be withheld from Chicago public schools for failure to comply with the 1164 Civil RiglrfR Act. * * ★ Hie Coordinating Council of Community Organizations, an organization of integration groups, appealed to Mayor Daley in a telegram Sunday: “Because of an intransigent superintendent of schools and a school board hardly able to take the most feeble steps forward, segregation and inequality In Chicago’s schools has brought on a crisis of catastrophic proportions with the withholding of Meral funds. * ★ * "We now call upon you to otter this situation with vigor and determination to bring Chicago schools into compliance with the Civil Rights Act, and to encourage in every possible way the city’s full cooperation with the UJ. Office df Education . . .” 4-YEAR CONTRACT Schools Supt. Ben]amin C. Willis, 63, was rehired by the Chicago Board of Education in May to a four-year contract, with the stipulation that he retire on his 65th birthday in December 1966. Integration groups contend Willis has maintained de facto segregation in the public schools. A ★ ♦ The council, led by Albert Fahy. ippf*w to Francis Kep-pel, U.S. commissioner of education, in July andasked that federal funds be withheld the Chicago public schools are properly integrated. The U.S. Office of Education in Washington said Friday that - a preliminary investigation indicates some instances of failure in Chicago to comply with the 1964 Civil Rights Act. A federal spokesman added: “The Office .of Education believes that the situation in these instances can, with the cooperation of Chicago school authorities, be resolved satisfactorily.” NEWS CONFERENCE Willis called a news conference Saturday and said the threat of holding back the $30 million "for unknown, unstated would set back in opportunities for Chicago school children.” Willis added: "I feel it (the action) is despotic, alarming and threatening. It undermines the foundation of local control of public education. WWW “While 1 am sorry this hap-pened to Chicago, perhaps it is a Messing in disguise. It may serve to alert the public to (be capricious and autocratic actions emanating from the federal education offices,’’ J Ray Page, Illinois superintendent of public instruction, said he had received a letter Thursday from Keppel which said, in part: Some of the complaints are very complex and may require analysis over some period of time. The preliminary investigation of certain of the complaints, however, indicates probable noncompliance with the (Civil Rights) Act... NOT INFORMED Page told newsmen had had not been informed of the specific charges and that the Office of Education did not specify the alleged noncompliance with federal regulations. Illinois is to receive $61.7 million under the 1965 Education Act. Willis said Chicago’s budget for schools this year totals $341 million, and that the $30 million in federal hinds for the city would be in addition to the regular budget. Chicago has 562,000 public school pupils in some 560 elementary and high schools. About one-third of the pupils are Ttltn HAN9EN TRAVEL AGENCY HOLIDAYS OH SKIS Ski the famous Ski resorts in Switzerland, Italy or Franca. Or combine two countries All inclusive from Detroit. *621 QUEEN ANNE MARIA WEST INDIES CRUISE 13 Days - 5 Ports ’360 332-0310 PMI PARKING J % % AUTHENTIC COLONIAL IN RK^H MAPU 60 inches long with three oslidinc PONTIAC 567 5, SAGItMW- FE 3-7901 , OWN MONDAifAHolfillOAV Tit. « _ I 405 DIXIE HWY • OR 4-0321 INQar. THURSDAY. FRIOAY TIL 9 CLASSIC SPANISH IN EXOTIC HICKORY 60 inches long with three sliding doors.......................$99.95 fe-lt THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 4. 1196$ Strange Rank Nowadays Where'dAll the T-5's Go r By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (UFO - As Pacific Stars and Stripes, Rr (be V&1 armed forces in the Far East, is celebrating its Hth anniversary this week. By: "Coincidence, it also was 20 years wfo-^his^H*eet that I was mus- tered out of' the armed forces!recognition. as probably the highest ranking technician-fifth grade (T4) in the UJS. Army. I suppose (bat may of the presort readers of Stars aad Stripes never even |ad of that rank. The Army, la a lyplpal dripped It World Warn. -Fm noL aure wjiy (he rating sn’t used anv more, but I like I to think the Army retired it in Rmy honor. Anyone aha remained a T-5 for three years certainly deserves some kind of We T-5’s ranked somewhere between a PFC and a corporal. That may sound impossible, but it’s true. MILITARY CAREER __ _ It may have been my distin-‘nstiifi* ffliftf*1 military career that Vfter IMHpted the editors of Pacific s&s to Write me to contribute something to their special anniversary edtikm. Uafortaaately, the request arrived while I was ea vacation and I did not retare in time to ec REMINDERS According to a publication In of the ]y are not regulation. Airmen must cease ta-pering the legs of uniform trousers to conform to current civilian style trends.” •aincoati. Tbs Air is determined that to identify an en-man’s grade when he is wearing a raincoat is not as keeping the Slight ift So| Claims MSU Ouster Tied to Roto in Group GRAND RAPIDS (UPI) Federal Judge Noel P. Fox i to heel testimony today on whether Michigan State University can be (breed to readmit Paul Schiff, a Grand Rapids graduate student. “’■*—~fr Schiff has been denied admission to classes. He filed salt charging he was expelled became of Ms role to a student righto ergaa-isation. Schiff, MSU Vice very President John Fuzak informed him that he was expelled for * ■ his activities with the Coounit- a re' tee for Students Rights, a stu-j dent group which eponsored sev-fa" eral demonstrations at the university. ARE DEFENDANTS Fuzak and Dr. John Hannah, president of MSU and the board of trustees, are* defendants to theatitu Both Fuxak and Hannafc have been called as witnesses. Schiffs suit contends his expulsion violated his dvil rights. Ironically, Hannah is chairman of the U.S. Civil Rights Commission. OSE&K&tf Frederkkf^ s ca?ft a jfihity angle: ‘Zealand AT NATO EXERC5S] of Denmark wears Ms as he rides in an American atpiored car 1-during a visit yesterday at an Wm& many participating. where war games Are being held -with United States NATO forces from Ger- India Halted—Pakistan Schiff, according to MSU records, was doing graduate work in economics, dropped out, and then applied for graduate work' in history. CLAIMS ACCEPTANCE He dainrf the history department accepted him hut Hhrbld C, King, the university registar, BREECHES-BUSTIN’ JOB-Bulldogging a belligerent Brahma hull became a breeches-bustin’ task, Howard Harris of Cowtown, NJ., found last night when be tried to get the beast aboard a ferry after the bull broke loose during a rodeo in Toronto. 15, the button and buttonhole on shade 1505 shirt will be elim: mated. I These decisions, it says, “riMseeking.' . .. fleet the collective judgment, of and e perptan«Mundidb, a number of senior Afar Fori* straining seRoM Ifficials fr [did not t ; Schiff; KARACHI, Pakistan (UPI)-Pakistani forces tnfllried heavy casualties on Indian troops trying to seize Pakistani territory in the Chhamb area of Kash-Radio Pakistan reported today. The broadcast said Pakistani troops stopped the Indian assault, which began Thursday, and reoccupied positions bald prior to the Sept. S U n 11 e d Nations cease-fire. The radio qmtod tea clandestine “Voice of Kashmir” United “to stop Indian tryaa-ny” against Kashmiri Moslems. The speaks for pro- Paitistan rebels trying to over-thing Indian rule in Kashmir. -fjto>ebel radio said n) whves of Indian repression attest Moslems In the mountainous regions of Poonch tel officers supplemented by trrtMtorriMjng ite Ms studies i nical assistance from speriabzed fituk psralsiqeutfrfiteg fee 1st Rajaori forced 175,000 peraoot to to tbelflee into Aad (Free) Kashmir. It reported several date be- agencies sod industry, ■ a p-and rah J propriaie Constitution. MODERN WALNUT 60 inches bng with 3 sliding doors. . . $90.95 forSpaceTest 4 to Stay in dtofiibwr Until Mid-Decembwr BROOKS AIR FORCE BASE, Tex- (AP)-A Michigan pilot Is among six Air Faroe men Who volunteered for the chance to embark today on a simulated ■pace voyage in a pressure chamber. K Lt. David J. Johnson, 28 of Highland Township in Oakland County, a bachelor, is one ef the four men selected by doctors for tbe voyage he won’t see the world uritil ahpoft Christinas. The two men not selected for the experiment will srve as monitors. The Air Force Is using the volunteers to conduct its most extensive experiment with helium and oxygen as possible components of the sir that astronauts will breathe aboard a manned orbiting laboratory. A giant steel door will slam Jut on the four men at 4 p.m. at the School of Aerospace Medicine. The door will not open until mid-December. The first eight days will be spent at normal earth condi-— ground level pressure air of 20 per cent oxygen and 80 per cent nitrogen. Then, tween armed rebel! and Indianjhadur Shastri, in a separate troops yesterday In acatteredUpch yestenisy, warned the a^ in the Indian gtjkl Britain that „ _ - - ■ > _ i lndia would reshape its policies cabin pressure will beshlfted to J* /vew DeBU, IfatJtWtet Howard nations which tried to the equivalent of 27,000 feet end pressure the New DdM govern- the air witibeawitched to 70 per ment into a settlement of the 17-year-old Kashmir dispute. “We want peace, but on our terms,” Shastri said, ruling out any Kashmir plebiscite. ef bdte’s party, K. Kamaraj Nadar; said yesterday “any country that extends aid to Pakistan is an enemy el late.” He called an the Untied States and Britain to make what he called “a bold decision” and withhold aid to Pakistan in the interest of democracy in Asia. ★ ★ ♦' Indian Prime Minister Lai Ba- ft cent oxygen Mid 30 per cent helium. \ r All U.S. astronauts who have it traveled in space breathed 100 per cent oxygen. \ British Diplomat Dies LONDON m — Sir Lancelot Oiiphant, long-time British diplomat, died Saturday at M. As a junior member of te Foreign Office in 1914, be Wpfa the British declaration gr war to Germany’s ambassador in Un-don, JOE’S “w SURPLUS Will Be Closed j From 4 ML Toss. IM Day Wad. for Yom Kippur credenzas in 4 handsome finishes specially priced for one week only! What a beautiful functional way to accentuate your decorative theme. Credenzas in four of today's most popular styles completely adaptable for stereo and hi-fi. Each a masterpiece of elegance and craftsmanship, modestly priced by Thomas Furniture. Choose: modern in rich walnut, traditional white with fruMwood top, colonial in warm maple of Spanish in exotic hickory. Convenient credit terms, .. TRADITIONAL WHITE WITH FRUITWOOD TOP 60 Inches long with three sliding doors....... ..... $99.95 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1965 IV* A Pleasure To Shon dnd Suve At iRdBcrr circus $$$£§&$& BCjU FOODTOWN AAARKET 55J9 SASHABAW ROAD • clowns *oips • FUN FOR EVERYONE J Hf • Kiiwwi ® ■ • Potato drips - * Samis I ^ CIRCUS OF VALUESj® i MMttMl TINDER-SLICED BEEF LIVER NEW MICHIGAN POTATOES 10 «»*■ 29$ Lean " Tender, Meaty PORK CUTLETS 69 MAXWELL HOUSE ■KMIXMIFFEE BONELESS BOSTON BUTTS ROMAN STARCH OFREE GOLD B«4. Stamps With Pure has* ' • ; of Any 2 Pounds of PORK SAUSAGE I Stamps With Purohata of Any 2 Pkgs. el COOKIES 2 Pkgs. d ORACH'S CANDY ef 2 Whole er CuNip FRYERS APPLES ★ GOLD BELL GIFT STAMPS!!!* 1 :00D TOW SUPER MARKETS ■ 1 1 ■ tllOHiihlind ' tUtPtei H JMMatWiUlwMl ^B_OnNIUHOA' 11200 IsMwIn Alrs.il ttiscoslty Lakt M. 1 4*M.| Cnwf C»ln>M» I Hriulrfwlnfci I fi f I OnNSUNDUl | OWWMMn 1 MninMwSM ■ hmmpim CawM^koU ornsunowts MEADOWDALE-6 or. con ORANGE JUICE 15* ^CREAMETTE-ELBO-7 or. Pkg. MACARONI 10* VmO pound chips - oyy AQUA NET-13 or. con HAIR spray 49* -CHEF DELIGHT CHEESE SPREAD 2&49‘ REAL PRUNE JUICE 24 or. IOC Bottle P&SSST" ROUSH SAUSAGE 69 .b HY6RADE CHIU STICKS Ptr W§£f? a pumpkin PIES SftOZ. SIB I9<| DIXIE COLA 120z.Cc Bee 3 VELVET PEANUTBUTTER 3t99° MEADOWDALE—1 Pound 13-or. can^ PEACHES Sliced or 1 UC Halves 19 THE PONTlA<^PRES8: MONDAY, OCTOBER «, 1863 U ebbie Watson Is probably the envy of every girt who ever wantfd to become an actress. The first time she ever stepped in front of a Hollywood Fifteen-year-old Dlbblt'l busy schedule calls far posing fer publicity stills at studio. in her own television show—Unhlbi^at Studios’ comedy series, "Keren/’ Ip Debbie didn’t burst into this Cinderella land overnight; she planned for it. Six years ago—when she whs only nip* —she made the pronouncement to hir parents that she was going to be a tunately, her mother and father, neither of whom is in show business; didn't dismiss the remark whiten shrug. Neither did they become bar-ticularty overjoyed at the momenK.« nine-year-olds have been known to change their minds when declaring their destinies. Two years later when Debbie began working with little theater groups, she was encouraged by her parents. Her first professional appearances were in “Bye, Bye Birdie” and "Brigadoon" in a theater near her home in Culver City, Calif. . The next step was to get an agent and to study acting technique. One step followed another and when her agent heard that Universal was looking for a teen ager for the lead in a new comedy series, he took 14-year-old Debbie to meet the producers. A screen test for Debbie and 50 other girls followed and Debbie got the part. Debbie recently celebrated her 15th birthday and is now a busy television star who most study her tenth grade high school subjects in a school set up on the productiorrlot Being a TV star means a lot of work, but Debbie is enjoying every minute of it Veteran makeup ortist Bud Wntmort attends to Dlfchie'r-mokeup before she faces the cameras an the "Tommy" set. * ■ ■ „ ' s . , 4 vT |THB PON-HAC PRESS; MONDAY OCTOBER ♦, IW YOU GET ALL THIS PLUS: EVERYDAY LOW PRICES! Hamburg* Sn’ over Houston, Kansas But then Wartick, the regular! City’s defense produced two tight end who is primarily noted touchdowns in a 27-17 triumph for his blocking, sometimes feels he has to emphasize his * " w w pass-catching abilities as he did Sunday when he grabbed a key four-yard touchdown pass from Kwnp in Buffalo’s 17-12 victory Oakland. The pass — the only one JStfeUTuw caught by Wariidc during foesS'oL. .......... entiregame and only his eighth The Bills pulled into a 10-0 lead on Pete Gogolak’s 20-yard field goal and a one-yard touchdown smash by Billy Joe before the Raiders, now if, tied the •core on Tom Fjorea six-yard pass to Alan Millar and Gene Mingo’s 33-yard field goal. Then Warlick put the (Continued on Page C4, CeL 1) broke a 10-10 tie midway of the (Mrd quarter and kept the Bills Football League. ST sFsr Bot-fG CamMtHI 1* KC-e«N a rwvm Lm. 3 Victories for Lakeland Midget Teams The lakeland Lakers took three games from the Walled Lake Blue Devils yesterday in Suburban Midget Football action. In Saturday action, foe Walled Lake Red Devils won two and lost one in games with Madison Heights Spartans. Dennis Brown scored three tones as Laketead’s varsity peeled a 22-7 victory. Penny Boriingame tallied for foe !••- qr». In the junior-varsity tilt, Lakeland won, 7-0, as Brad Almas •cored and added the-extra point. Steve Ingham « for Walled Lake’s TD. in the fraternal game, the Lakers came out no tap, 13-7, ae Urn Simon and Herb Cooley posted TDi. Chuck VaoderHoiat i scored for Walled Lake. oils amateur Ed Zatwiler to win the championship with a record Header per ISO. Souchak, who got into the two-day tourney at the Loaanti-ville Country Club by subbing for Sam Snead, pocketed the first prize of 13,500. It was Zutwiler’s second win in the tourney in three yearn. He teamed with Sam Snead to win it in 1063. The winners did not card _ single bogie during the two days of play. PHILADELPHIA (AP) -fumbled punt recovered by linebacker Sid Williams on the two-yard line jet up Jim Brown’ second touchdown plunge and keyed a 35-17 victory for the Geveland Browns over the Philadelphia Eagles. The Eagles led< 17-14, JH their defense forced Cleveland to punt with about eight minutes remaining, but safety Tim Brown dropped the ball at foe and hobbled it to the two, where Williams recovered. Jim Brown crashed over on the first play. Cleveland went to score two more touchdowns before was over, but the punt fumble broke the game wide open and gave Cleveland its second win in three games, while the Eagles lost their second straight after defeating St. Louis in foe opener. BROWN GETS 3 Jim Brown Scored three TDi, boosting his career, total to 106 and breaking the NFL record of 106 held by Don Hutson, Green Bay’s fabled end of foe 1935-45 The Browhsf Lou Groza, who kicked five conversions, established a league record, 25.000 Pro-Am Golf Champion- playing in Me 177th fame, breaking the longevity mark of 178 held by foe retired Y.A. lit-tie. Before T. Brown’s fumble opened foe floodgates, foe Eagles’ King Hill appeared to have bested Cleveland’s Jim Ninow-ski in a duel of second string quarterbacks. No Tolovioion Allowed for Slott-M Contest -A state ANN ARBOR (AP) senator’s proposal t foe University of Michlgan-Mfehigan State football game next Saturday was rejected by Michigan Athletic Director Fritz Z , l THB PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1968 C-i* Dodgers Dally With Hurlers in 3-0 Victory Sub QB Dir Arrows' Victory SIX POINTS COMING - Safetyman Dick ltaasw (27) of Notre Dum picked off this Northwestern pan in the third quarter Saturday at South Bend, Ind., and raced 92 yards for a touchdown as the Irish romped, W-7. Failing to stop Raisas’ long run were-Woody Campbell (X) and Mike Shea (59). Rassas pulled a similar feat in the fourth quarter as he returned a punt 72 yards for six paints. A reserve quarterback directed two long touchdown drives in the second half Saturday night as Pontiac's Arrows came from behind to nip Lansing’s Ail-Stars, IMS, in a Midwestern Football League game. With the Arrows trailing 134 early in die third quarter, Bill Harrington, former signal-caller nt-Uhivsrrity of HUnols, came on to direct die attack after starter Karl Sweeten left with an ankle injury and be led the Arrows to a pair of IDs to pull out the victory. MSU Blossoms in 2nd Half Spartans Trim Illinois, 22-12 Winners Tally Twice in Fourth Quarter MO 1 _ Caarti WLTP1 Midi. It. mmm nxxr ftf Michigan s£S: iii m AN Qomoe f L T fit. OP mil i.*r # s Him f11 EAST LANSING (AP) -One spectacular second half surge made Michigan State the team to boat In the Big Ten football scramble this fall. The Spartans didn’t hit their stride untfl the fourth period. Then they powered and passed for two touchdowns to overcome Illinois 22-12 Saturday. was i 15-7 by Georgia at Ann Arbor. So undefeated Michigan State next will meet the humiliated Wolverine Big Ten and Bowl chamna, wary that the wounded animal fights the hard-est. The old foes meet next Saturday at Am ‘Arbor. , Michigan can win back great prestige by beating State in their traditional rivalry. ttGGAMB at MSU realizes “This to the big game,” Spartan Coach Duffy Daugherty said. «it should be quite a battle. There’s no one we like to beal hotter than Michigan —Notre Dame comes next.” Notre Dome, by the way, to the final team MSU must play this season. The Irish bruised Northwestern M-7. " ■ *r--* > MMdfrn State was frustrated for three periods by HUnols beforo it finally got going. sum fullback Jim Grabow-dd was just as good as advance raves advertised. He powered for IS yards. FROM BEHIND uirfdgnn State was behind 12-9 when Grabowski sprinted op the middle for X yards and tt looked like HUnols was going to put another victory in the rooord books. Jim Summers a track sprinter, grabbed Grabow- ski from behind to save (he game for State. ' * . * * . -The frustrations for nihmiN quarterback Fred Custardo used a tong count hi hto signal-calling to make MSU defenders repeatedly jump offsides. The Spartans had eight off -Side penalties called against them. QUARTERBACK STEVE Then MSU—with Juday dlrect-tog started driving lata In the third period. Judmr mastermind’ ad an X-yard TD march sod Anton bulled Us way the tost tt yards, carrying two tomtom SU--------------- with Mm over tee last ★ ★ Miscues Plague Wolverines as Georgia 15-7 ANN ARBOR (AP) - A sputtering offense and an inenvl-able knack for giving, the baU away continue to plague Michigan* as it prepares to open defense of its Big Ten football title Saturday. The Wolverines’ vaunted running game was held to 28 yards in Me second half last Saturday as determined Georgia scored a 1M upset victory. ★ ★ Michigan had a 29-yard touchdown scamper by Carl Ward called bade because of s penalty tha first time ft had toe bail and never seemed to recove though tt held a 74 edge the final four minutes of the ime. "Wo expected n ton. _ id we got tt,” Coach Bump Elliott said. “Any time yon have • touchdown called bade it’s tough. We played wen in some spots but must improve s groat deal In others." SHORT PLUNGE Michigan scored its only touchdown in the second quarter when Tim Radigan capped a 45-yard drive with a one-yard The Wolverines advanced into Bulldog territory four more times in the game but never moved past the 29 and had only Stan Kemp’s punts to talk about for their efforts. Kemp twice punted out of bounds inside the Georgia eight yard line. Two earlier punts were downed .inside the Bulldogs’ 10. 4 ' ★ * But 10tb-ranked -Georgia, which upset Alabama in its sea-opcoer, failed to get rattled moved out with little \athtLmsk toe before punting. Kemp dropped a pass from center midway .through the first period and Georgia, aided later by a pass interference penalty, moved close enough to allow Bob Etter to kick the first of his three field goals. Elliott used Dick Vidmer at quarterback for most of the fleeted no criticism of Vidmer. tote in the game. SCORING PASS Elliott insisted the move reflected no criticism of Gabler. Tt was just that Vidmer was not hot and we decided to try Gabler for a change,” he said. Quarterback Preston Ridle-huber put Georgia ahead far keeps with a 10-yard touchdown pass to Pat Hodgson after running 22 yards to put the Bulldogs deep in Michigan territory. Etter added his final field goal 2% minutes later after Lynn Hughes intercepted a Vidmer pass on file Michigan 48 and returned it to the 9. ★ it it The Wolverines couldn’t have two tougher opponents than the pair against whom they open the-conference season. Michigan State will provide the opposition Saturday with Purdue, the only team to heat them last year, following. w h Or Ward and fullback Dave Fisher suffered hip injuries and Jim Detwiler reinjured a leg but returned late in toe game. All are expected to be ready Saturday. Detroit Pro Kegjer California Winner SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Bob Strampe of Detroit defeated Jerry McCoy of Tort Worth, Tex. 195-179 Sunday and won the Professional Bowler’s Association $25,500 Northern California Open. Strampe’8 total fay the game grind was 9131 pins, m-duding 500 bonus pins for winning 10 of his 16 games in the final. McCoy’s final count was 9076. This was Strampe’s fourth major tournament victory. The 1965 Bowler of the Year captured last year’s All-Star and toe PBA National Championship. This year he took toe PBA Detroit title. The $3,000 first prize gave Strampe $20,580 in tournament winnings this year. It also moved him from eighth to sixth place on the money list. Paasas Intercepted GEOR—Hodgson 10 pees (pass failed). WnifO*M»Mr 31. With the 44 record, the team owns a two-game lead over Day-ton (1-2) and defending champion Lansing (34). SCORING SNEAK The All-Stars went in front early in the first quarter when Howard Neeley dived over from the two-yard line and Ron Parkinson added the point. ■; r 4 it it . Sweeten pulled toe Arrows within one point when he sneaked over from die one-yard line hi the first quarter to climax a 53-yard drive. Sweetan’s extra-point try sailed wide. Sweeten, hamsaed by a hard-charging AO-Star line, completed only four of 12 passes for X yards and bad ona intercepted. He was dropped fear times by toe All-Stars for 81 yards while try* tag to pass. INJURES ANKLE He suffered toe ankle injury when toe AU-Stars dropped him on a pasting attempt early in the third and left the game In favor of Harrington. ...★ it 4 Harrington, a Pontiac school teacher, kept toe Stars confused with his handoffs. Starting at Ms own 11-yard line hi foe third quarter, he drove fim club to paydirt la six plays adth halfback Bob HOI hitting off left tackle for toe final 12 yards. HiO was hit hard at die five and toe two bat maintained his balance and fell into the end-zone. Halfback Jim Johnson of Te-cumseh carried twice in«4he drive for 48 yards and his run of 53 yards in the fourth set up the Arrows’ winning TD. Harrington started the final TD march from his own 27 and toe All-Stars helped the drive along with a 15-yard penalty that gave the Arrows a first down at their own X. Johnson, who played only 18 minutes, carried the ball seven times and collected 106 yards for his best performance of the season. LINE FORMS AT RIGHT — The lineup for. World Series tickets started last week in Minneapolls-St. Paul as Ralph J. Belcore (lower right) of Melrose Park, 111., brought along his bedding and settled down next to the ticket window at toe Minnesota Twins Metropolitan Stadium. Workmen at -toe stadium started hanging the World Series banners yesterday as preparations began for the first Series game Wednesday. Killebrew Stirs Twins; Tigers Lose Last Game BILL HARRINGTON Unranked Teams Score Upsets By Uattod Prose Iaterutional Strange things are happening to the unrated college football teams this season when they op- Mild-mannered backs suddenly leap towering tackles in a single bound, unobtrusive linemen bapd opponents out of shape with their bare hands ‘ plodding defensive safeties taster to Southern California beat Oregon State 3M2. SCORE LATE The aroused Mustangs scored in the third and fourth periods to offset the brilliant passing of Purdue quarterback Boh Grieae, ★ ★ ★ The Southern Methodist Mustangs, 15-point underdogs and 434 losers to Illinois tbs week before, tuned toe tables on tile Fkrdus Boilermakers on Saturday with a surprising 14-14 tie. However, the Boilermske pulled a surprise only the week before which was almost as amazing whan they defeated tha touted Notre Dame Fighting Irish to earn the right to tbs top rating. - - MOWN*, noma wieiwo ""‘1» 14-7 and A» Tans subdued Indiana 27-13, against Northwestern 38-7 sod SOUTHNArriNH COHWMCn WLTpl2n|k WLT^H^H _ tors I* ISO 42 37 3 *0 St 34 K st. too is u 300 in lo AwBom* 1)0 « 14 1 1 0 01 34 , 11 MU if ill * 14 3 f 0 30 30 (if oil £ § .1.1 - -t 1 3 0 S7 33 who completed 18 of 24 pa for 282 yards and two touchdowns. Mac White passed 17 yards to John Roderick aad 14 Is Bobby Goodrich for too South-ora Methodist scores. Steve Spurrier passed 22 yards to Richard Trapp for Florida's first touchdown and also set up a one-yard scoring plunge by John Feiber against LSU. Auburn Bryan kept Kentucky off balance with a varied attack, which included IX yards Ing and 141 running. Southern Cal’s Mike Garrett raced to three touchdowns tor come-from-behind victory over toe Beavers. Defensive bade Nick Rams scored two touchdowns -for Notre Dame with a 92-yard interception return and 72-yard pant return. Halfbacks Harry Jones and obby Burnett scored two touchdowns each for Arkanm against TCU. Aad Texas used the passing of Mar? KristyMk. agalnat Indiana 43—34 133-130 S-14 4-11 1 1 3-33 3-14.3 _ __ ......... 3-3 3-3 dYd*. . 4-10 4-31 SCOaiNO PLAYS L—Nottty 3 plunge (Parkinson kick) RTStinnClildHWliS) P—Leonard S past from Harrington tick failed) _ scon* av quarters Mttac .............3 • o 13-11 molng .............. 3 4 0 3-13 By MIKE RATHET Associated Press Spurts Writer Hannon Killebrew has lost his crown but found the range, v] Killebrew, Minnesota’s threetime home run champion in the American League, officially was dethroned by Boston’s Tony Conigliaro Sunday, but he hit his 25th homer in toe Twins’ 34 victory over seventh-place California. The number wasn’t significant but the homer was. It was Kille-brew’s second in two days and third in toe last five games, giving the Twins what they hope will be additional power when they open the World Series against toe Los Angeles Dodgers at Minnesota Wednesday. Killebrew, who [ missed 48 games because of [a dislocated elbow but seems to have found the range just in time, finished with his lowest homer total since he began playing regularly in 1959 when the dub still was in Washington. LOWEST SINCE ’54 Conigliaro, who did not connect in ninth-place Boston’s 114 loss to the sixth-place New York Yankees, won toe crown with 32 toe lowest winning total since Larry Doby also hit 32 for Cleveland in 1954. In other season-ending games, the Chicago White Sox clinched second place by defeating Kansas City 3-2, Baltimore wound up third with, a 2-1 victory over fifth-place Cleveland, eighth-place Washington edged fourth-place Detroit 34. Rookie Joe Coelman Jr. whose father was a major league pitcher, gained his second complete game victory in six days for the Senators as he checked the Tigers on five hits. Singles by Willie Kirkland and Woodie Held and Jim French’s grounder produced the winning ran in toe fourth inning. Whitey Ford became the biggest winner in Yankee history when he posted victory No. 232 against the Red Sox despite surrendering 11 hits, including homers by Jim Gosger and Carl Yastrzemski. Tony Kubek drove in three runs for New York and Ray Darker two. SET RECORD Tom McGraw hit a homer for toe White Sox in the fifth inning, his third in three days, and broke a 24 tie. Eddie Fisher worked in relief for Chicago, setting an AL record with his 82nd appearance. John Wyatt of toe A’s pitched in 81 last year. DBTROIT 3krkM Wert 3b 30 13 Lump* 3b 11(0 — a *999 lb fill Morthrup rf 4 0 1 3 Held Redmond cf 4 0 ( ( French c Sullivan c 3 0 0 0 BrTunan « Stanley pr 0 0 0 0 Ceteman p Oyler u 3 100 E-None. DP—Washington 1. LO (-Detroit 4, Washington 3. 38—Kirkland. Cash. 3—Sparma, Wart. IP H R HR •• SO Sparma L, 1M .. 5 4 3 3 * j Coleman w, 34 f T—3:06. A—3.064. COfceSSSifCOM Michigan State 33, Illinois 13 Qawfla 14. Michigan 7 Albion 31, Alma 7 Ksiamhaas 13, Olivet * Miami (Ohio) 34. Western Michigan 0 Ham II, Adrian 7' Northern INMa 10, Central Michigan 1 Northern Michigan 10, Hillsdale o Wayne State 0. John Carroll 0 (tie) , “ (WIs.) 41. Perris State 0 i jssi---u —esyT ntitRojOrva 7 SOtfflt — h CeroHnl^IL^orth'cerollns St. 7 -‘1a State (, Saylor 7 ..j 34, Miami Fla. 14 ar&fta.. Colaredo 34, Kanaaa State 0 Xavier, Ohio W, Ouantka Marines IS SewtUng Green 0. Dayton O Cincinnati 14, Wichita 4 Kant State 37, Ohio U. 10 Miami Q, bLWadsm Michigan » Drake 34, Southwaat Missouri I ' Marshall 14. Toledo 0 Akron II, Wittenberg 0 MuUnhgum 47, Marietta 0 Northern llllnolt 10, Cant. Michigan 14 IndVll Kalemamo 13 Ball State 43, Mount Union & W________ pen&an SL^hUmi 0 Hope IS, Adrian 7 John Carroll 8 Wayne State 8 Hb SttSSrJd.a'SilS.",'*” ' KSX'WT&US8L Augustana 48 SauNl Dakota 0 SOUTttWSST Arkansas M, Tans ChrioNan f Navy 18 Oklahoma--Oklahoma State 17. Tilda 14 Louisvlld 30. North Tans State 31 Texas Western 3), Haw Mexico State 4 Tsnneoaae StataJjZ. Tens Southern 7 Wyoming », Arltona 0 Oregon V, brtghem Young M Stantonl 17, Air Farce It ' ■■■ ’ Colorado State U. V, Near Mexico 33 Utah State 38 San Jaaa State 0 Pacific IMIv. 18 CMIaga at Idaho 7 Montana M, Idaho Stale 0 Idaho 17, Washington State 13 U. at Pacific Si, Hawaii 0 Western Colorado 34, Fort Lewis M Six Pitchers Used in finale Manager Alston Gives Everyone Chance By Ike Associated Proas Manager Walter Alston might have discovered a new Sandy Koufax. He’s Howie Reed-Bob Miller-Mike Kekich-John Purdin-Bill Sing^-NIck WffiHur “ ★ * ♦ Alston unveiled his new pitching weapon Sunday as the Na-tlonal League champion Los Angeles Dodgers concluded toe regular season with a 34 triumph over Milwaukee. Reed - Miller - Kekich • Pur-din • Singer • Willhite held the Braves to three hits one day after Koufax became a 26-game winner by halting Milwaukee on four hits in the Dodgers’ pennant-clinching 3-1 victory. Manager Alston, giving- his second-line pitchers a chance to get some work, started with Reed, who gave up a double to Frank Thomas in his two-inning performance. Miller, who received credit for the victory, followed with one inning of hitless ball. SIX STRAIGHT Then came Kekich, who permitted only a single by Woody • Woodward in two innings, and Purdin, who retired all six. batters he faced. * * * ■ Singer took over in the .eighth, giving up another single to Woodward before Willhite completed the versatile exhibition by setting down the Braves in order in the ninth. - The shutout was the eighth for the Dodgers in toe streak — 15 victories in their final 16 games ~ that carried them to their seventh pennant in 14 years. - TODAY’S FlMl Standings AMERICAN LBAOUE Wan Lott Pet I .. 102 00 .430 ... 03 67 S ... 04 40 .300 •8 ff . .......rrn 77 15 Adrdp ...... 75 0 .443 iffbjdn ..... 70 »2 .433 ^ 43 100 JB ’^aturday'i Relulta’344 Minnesota 3, California 3 Chicago X Kantoa City 2 Baltimore 2, Cleveland 1 < “- ^---lY.TiitrOlt 3 lT, Boston 5 NATIONAL EAOUE And as toe Dodgers prepare to meet Minnesota in the World Series starting Wednesday, their pitching staff has allowed only five runs in toe last 87 innings, a fantastic earned run average of 0.52. In other season-ending games hi the NL, San Francisco defeated Cincinnati 8-3, Pittsburgh downed Chicago 6-3, Philadelphia swept New York 3-1 and 3- in 13 innings and St.. Louis beat Houston 5-2. While Alstom’s sizzling six stymied the fifth-place Braves, Los Angeles scored on run-scoring singles by Ron Fairly, John Kennedy and Hector Vtiie,. TWO BEHIND The second-place Giants finished two games behind toe Dmlgers while dumping Ctodn-nati to fourth with the help of Willie Mays’ 52nd homer, a Giant record and high in toe majors this year. Ken Henderson’s two-run single capped toe winning, three-run rally in the ’ seventh. Pittsburgh vaulted into third place, winning their Uto game in toe last 13 as Roberto Clemente hit a home run and sewed up his second consecutive NL batting title. The Pirates won with a four-run, eighth-inning rally, two ofJhe nos scoring on Jim Pagliaroni’s single. Bob Gibson became the NL’s seventh 26-game winner and toe majors’ ninth, scattering nine hits in seventh-place St. Louis’ victory. . Ninth-place Houston ended ther season with a total attendance of 2,151,470 under the Dome. MILWAUKEE LOS ANGELES _ „ -*> r h bl obrbM 10 0 0 Wild u 10 0 0 SmScr'e 4 o 0 o T'ciwsic! X 3 0 1 o 3b 4 • 0 0 $rirty*\b* 302 1 .. - - - - t Davis pH 1 I f 0 Johnson If 300 0 , Ferrara I 2 0(0 0 Crawtord ef 4 1 I 0 - Lalohn 3b ‘ New York I *" "IMflSSis6111" Lot Angadal WUhooukaa b San Fr&meajk Cincinnati 3 Pittsburgh 4, Chicago 3 IWaSi^o»3fhdw York m French Colt Wins Rich Race Classic in Paris PARIS (AP) - Sea Bird, French-owned 3 year-old colt, scored a whopping six-length victory Sunday in the rich Prix de L’Arc da Triomphe clastic and earned a $217,600 purse fat Lyon industrialist Jean Ter-nynck. The American-owned Tom Rolfe was an outclassed tixth. it it it Winner of the Epsom Derby and French Grand Prix and un-sn this year, Sea Bird scored handily ov« French-owned entry, Reliance, 3030 0 0 0 0 Oliver 2b Totals 30111 tows si LWAagSaa '.V.'..'1. SR E—De laHoz. OP—Milwaukee 2 f 0 1 0 i 1 u 0 * l fit 0 0 0 0 i. VSsA# 'Gentleman Joe' Wins DETROIT (UK) - “Geuti®* man Joe” Shubeck, a Cleveland, Ohio, Cha&irtaidlder, played the role of subetitote at Motor City Dragway Sunday and wound up winning a match race with Maynard item of Harper Woods. 4 + A Shubeck put to Od‘ysleMX>w* ered BAM hydro AA-Fuel dragster against Rupp’s Chevy^ow-ered “The Prussian” fori look !, two out of throe rant. 4> THE PQNTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1001 ________ rStowThurlow (37) goes across the goal line on a six-yard plunge to give the New York Giants six punts during the first quarter of their game yesterday with the Steelers at Pittsburgh. Ahead of Thurlow is teammate Bookie Bolin (S3). At right is Steelers' Bob Hohn (29). Seaholm Harriers Win County Meet Birmingham Seaholm placed only three runners in the top -T5,, but the Maples success-fqUy,v defended their Oakland County cross country championship Saturday at Bogie Lake Country Club. Individual honors went to Hazel -Park’s Ken Leonowicz who set a meet record with a time of 10:0.7 over the tough two-mile course. Dave Hogan of the Warriors won first place in the open event for those not competing in vanity or reserve meets. Mike Brank of Seaholm sparked the Maples with a third place. Steve Bell was 11th and Chip Gorman 13th as the Maples scored SO points. Gary Player Canada Cup Emmanuel 14-0 Victim Lions' Defense Shines in Win Over Redskins (Continued from Page C4) feet pass down the middle lor a 66 yard gain to the 11. 1 dr ir it Maher stole the ball from Shiner, but the officials thought differently. On third down, however, Dick LeBeau intercepted in the end tone to end the threat. With 1:17 la the quarter, Clark then stopped another *Skfa drive with the tth interception of the had, and the sbttWrDeML— Early in the third quarter, alter a 61-yard punt put the 'SHw« back on their own 14, Purvis Atkins fumbled on the eight; McCord picked it up and got to the four. 4 YARD MARCH Loonemthen scored from the four, to cap the longest thouch-down drive of the day for the lions’ offense — four yards. Walker made it 14.6. A 69-yard punt by Studstill, which Clark' attempted to down on the two but slid into the end zone, kept the Redskins in hole; but with Danny Lewis running and catching Shiner’s passes, they got to the Detroit 46. Here fee Lisas took over and on the sixth play Looney ran left end, fumbled and Shorter picked it up to go 54 yards for fee touchdown. Jencks then tried an onside kick and it nearly worked as the loose ball skidded around before Mike Lucci fell on it at the Detroit 43. *’. Three (days later, however, Am Steffen ran bade an inter-, ception 25 yards to the Detroit 29 and the job again was left to the defense. With 3:47 left Jencks settled for a 3-pointer from the 34-yard -Uae, ■ , _ , ______. ... J There were six minutes left Hazel ParkLg after Jencks’ Pat, Wasb-and Pontiac Central third with|{| 106. n ington was back in the game. One of the big surprises inj BIG MARGIN the meet were the runners from Leonowicz won by a cofafort-Brother Rice. Although no War- able margin of 50 yards over riors placed in the firat 15 of the varsity meet, Brother Rice wound up sixth in the team la addition, Brother Rice ■wept the top five places to Chargers Still Without Loss (Continued from Page C4) ahead, and the best the Raiders could do the rest of the way was a safety when defensive end Isaac Lassiter dosed Kemp out of tiw end zone late in the third quarter. * * > Hadl, completing 15 of passes for 242 yards, hit Lance Alworth on touchdown passes covering 69 and 57 yards and —connected withkDve Kocourek on a 15-yard play- Paul Lowe, the league’s rushing leader, ably complemented Hadl, gaining 157 yards in 20 carries as the Chargers brought their record to 56-1. Walled Lake's Jim Lindler. Kim Hartman of Southfield was fourth and Sterling Speirn of Bloomfield Hills fifth. Bill HaOk took sixth place for PCH. Martin Acoota of the Chiefs was 12th. Pontine Ner-thern’s Nick Odwa was eighth Brother Rice’s reserves scored 15 points to 71 for PNH. Kimball was third with 94, Seaholm fourth with 97, Walled Lake fifth with 155 followed by PCH with 159. Dennis Stewart of Brother Rice won the reserve meet in 11:324. Over 350 runners from 21 schools competed. OU Defeats U. of D. in Cross-Country Oakland University's country squad ran its record to 4-1 Saturday with a 26-29 victory over University of Detroit on the OU course. U of D’s Dick Dohorty won tiie event in 19:15, but OU grabbed five of the next eight places to take the victory. Pacing OU were Louis Put-am (2nd), Gary Cobb (3rd), Tim Kaul (5th), Tom Tobias (7th) and Gil Asbendorf (9th). 17, FarmliifNa 147. 4. Kte Leonowicz, HuH Put 1*11.7 new Ml record)) Jkn Lindler, Welted ■.eke; X MM Brank. SeeMm; 4. Kkn Hartman, Southfield; L Sterling Spelm. Bloomfield HIM; 4. *“ —1 Cowfrol) 7- DoobIo I----------- I ------- IteWm ;t. 14 The worst break for Washington was still to come. HALTS REDSKINS—Defen- .. „ __. live halfback Dick LeBeau r,^wtam_rf8,STr!!? S makes like an acrobat in fa- 5"!? * "*■**■■ P"88 ^ *5 In the end zone yesterday to ^ PeUegrim on ttie back of a Bedtkjn ^ ^ terception Was one of six by J1*70™ « * the Lions who won, 14-10, at the baljand untfl the 14*econd Tiger stadium ^ Detroit, mark, Detroit held possession. in MIAA With Victory By The Associated Press Albion opened defense of its MIAA football crown Saturday with a 21-7 win ova Alma. In other weekend gridiron action Kalamazoo downed Olivet 134; Miami, Ohio, trounced Western Michigan 364; Hope beat. Adrian 15-7; Northern Illinois downed Central Michigan 15-14. DALES LOSE Northern Michigan handed Hillsdale a 104 Ion; St. Nor-bert, Wis., humiliated Ferris State 414; Michigan Tech squeezed past Winona, Minn. State 13-12 and Wayne State and John Carroll played to a scoreless tie. .* >.* - * Tom VanderBusch, a freshman full back starting his first game for St. Norbert, sowed four of the Wisconsin chib’s six touchdowns in a slaughter of Ferris State. * * ★ After a 64 halftime deadlock Michigan Tech’s Charles Loc-chesi scored on a pass play and Cranbrook Harriers Gain 25-34 Triumph Cranbrook opened its crosscountry season Saturday with a 25-34 triumph over Howe Military Academy in Indiana. - . i*T .. Mike Koerner paced the] Records Shatter Cranes by taking second place vWi m time of 10:34. followed by teammates Cbarlie Craig (Mi), John Bogt (5th) and Bruce Hunter (6th). . Pontiac Golfer in Tie of Pubiinx Final Event Wally Smith of Pontiac and Jim Pfeiffer of Dearborn tied for medal honors in the final yesterday at Hickory Hollow hi Mt. Clemens. * * * Smith fired a one over par 39-35-74, while Pfeiffer had 37-17-74. Sr it * Other scores bad Don Curyla of Detroit at 76; Joe Sobol of Mmrm at 76; Joke Kowalski af Hamtramck, 71; George Williams, Monrra, 79; Ray demons, Warren, TV and Wait Kokh, Hamtramck, fa. MPGA Golf Team Gains 3rd Straight Atlas Cup For the third straight year, Michigan Pubiinx golfers defeated the GAM entries in the 20th annual Atlas Cup matches at Black River Country Chib hi Port Huron. After the private club members won 4-3 in the best ball matches on Saturday, the pub-linxers won 10 indivldua' matches yestenlay of the 16 played to win the Cup, 13-10. The GAM still holds the all time lead 13-7. Three Pontiac golfers were among the winners for the MPGA all playing under the Bald Mt., colon. bide Robertson defeated Dr. Bob Cerley of Jackses, 1-up; Ed Wasflc wm over Roy Palmer of Grease He, 1-op ud Tom Balfiet defeated Chack Graoader if Birmingham, 1- Playing out of Morey’s Ray Kane won over Robert Reynolds of Washtenaw, 1-up, Bill Curtis defeated Bill Hampton of Black River, 3 and 1 and Lee Gobs won over Dick Zeller of Groove lie, 5 and 4. Pete Green wm one of the GAM winners defeating Peak of Moreys, 1-up. CHANGES PLAY Doug Wilson, Pubiinx s t a t e ' champ in 1969 and 1961, yesterday won for the private dub players in defeating Tom 8te-vens of Rnrhwtor 2 asd L He flaps out of Waridmaw CC. Allen Thompson, a native of Scetiand, playing Mt sf Syl-van Glen defeated Hater Me-Donald of Oaldaad HOls, 4 and 3, asd turned in the best medal score ef the day, 36- Balliet was one bde down with two to play when be dropped in a chip shot on the 17th for a Untie to ev£n it, and then made a great recovery on 16 to win. * . V * He blasted out of the trap on the 543-yard hole to within three feet of the cup and then dropped it for a birdie-4. In Saturday’s best ball, Ji Smith of Lakepointe fired a on his o w n ball with seven bridies and a bogey. He teamed with Granader for a best ball 64. SUNDAY? MATCHES | g 'IMOMW._____________ 4 MM*, 44 Sad Sort, lam LIMA doer — __ _ era* Burn d* SMar, Birmingham, 44. ____1, Oteted Late oaf. Jo* __ Mor*y», I-up. R*y Kate, Moray* pal. Bob Reynold*. Woptenow, )-up. jkn Smith, I akipalwta Pal. Oaaraa Lam, Morey*, l-up. Clapp* Owt*ht, tecteaMr pal. Jo* Mrkfea, Blare Olwar. 1-up-CacH Prion, MM WyM --------- l-up. OP Woaik, Poimar, £rot*e Ha, “-*1 Ml. Par. Op* —_ SIS Cprtla, Morey*. Pal. Black OlPar, >4. La* O— MWL ^— Hkk lei* caMi oaTtotou-Tiimm m,»- Illprem-Palmor Par.. SrlopH Puk, *4. ----- pp. tappdrt Ha*npH srsasjaw •urt-Or. SWte P*T. FrtwfPteOa M. rap* BiaaaPar Par. LaoWmate 44. as Miss Bardahl Wins on Coast Royal Oak Flier Women's Champ GRAND HAVEN (AP) - A Royal Oak ovintrix, Elizabeth Schucker, won the 16th annual women’s Ninety-Nines" (Small) airplane race Saturday. ■ it h it Miss Schucker, flying a Piper, outflew 56 other contenders from several states in a 15-mile __ . _ ______J triangular race that began and HHnoia victory over Central ended here after going to Wa- Michigan. The game was the --------- * * * conference opener for both UAC SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP) -Records, they say, were made to be broken, and a fast and fancy hydroplane named Mas Bardahl was obviously built to do the job. Sunday she shattered three world speed marks at the $15,-000 San Diego Cup races for unlimited hydroplanes.— * * + Miss Bardahl, from Battle, Wash., won all three hats she entered and, besides the speed records, gave herself and her driver, Ron Musaon, this year’r point championships. In her first heat the green-and-black craft covered 15 miles at an average speed of 116.679 miW an hour. She had set the mark for that distance at the same race last year, a speed of 413.91 ntpJf.---- In that same fast hat, Mas Bardahl turned in a record three-mile average speed of 11747 m.p.h., cracking the 117.674 mark held by another Seattle entry, Mi«« E«irfe Her third record was for 45 miles, in which she averaged 115.064 m.pJi. South Africa Team Champ Nicklaus Three Shots r: Behind in Second Tom Worley converted for the winning point over Winona. Albion capitalized on three touchdown passes from quarterback Dave Neilson in each of the final three quarters to down Alma. Alma scored on* a pass from Jim Johnston to Roger Prayer. Kalamazoo scored with right seconds remaining in the game to down Olivet in the MIAA season opener for both clubs. The Hornets took over oh the (Rivet seven following an unsuccessful fourth-down pass attempt by (Rivet. THREE TDs Miami of Ohio's halfback A1 Moore scored three touchdowns, including a 95-yard runback of the opening kickoff, in ‘ the Ohio squad to a trouncing of Western Michigan. Western scored on a field goal and a touchdown in the first half. Scoring twice in the four th quarter, Bill Keur led Hope to MIAA conference victory over Adrian. Adrian went ahead in the second quarter but Keur’a plunges from the one and two yard lines put the game out of reach. A last period touchdown by Jama Wendlcr give Northern MADRID (AP) - Oiiy Ptop r, 39-year-old South African, loft Madrid today a the king of the golf links — the man who ss won all the big ones. Player won the individual title in the 37-team Canada Cup golf championship by three strokes over defending champion Jack Nlcklaus of Columbus, Ohio, whom iron play let him down Sunday over the 7,096-yard, par " 3646—72 Club de Camp ★ ★ ★ "There’s little left for me to conquer in golf,” said Player. He has won the U.S. Open, Masters, PGA, the British Open, the World Series and now the Canada Cup. * * * Player’s victory in the 72-hole individual competition and his triumph with Harold Henning for the team title made Player the favorite to win the award as the Golfer of the Year. He’s already won the U.S. Open this year-and the World Series. JACK DETHRONED Player dethroned Nlcklaus with a four round total of 7049-68-74—281. That was seven-un-der-par for the sun-baked coarse littered with little oaks and well watered to conquer the hot weather. r Steve Tarcsy, the ▼Wtor’s talented sophomore p**, jm off the pass' end scooted fl yaW" for the final touchdown. / r : * #V . The Lancers’ defense stiffened notcieably after that. Coodfey Day was forced Into four ftm* bles (nil recovered by Wrawf* uel) and a pass interception. Four pesrlnferceptiaiw keyed the Cranbrook win. Jolto Livong-stone grabbed • P** by teammate Km OoOord ttd ran 46 yards for the first Crane -Craig Tallberg’s scoring spring and Tod Lowritfe toudj-down pass to Hugh Mahler both covered 20 yards and concluded as Madison Heights Lamphero cranbrook Scoring. Tbo boet- By JERK CRAIG North Farmington pulled last minute hawks and GouMry Day of Birmingham scored early for prep football victoria Saturday. North Farmington tallied tie touchdowns in the final minute and 35 aeconds at lieonia Frank-lin for a 14-7 win over the defending Northwest Suburban Activities Association champ. Emmanuel. Christian was a 144 victim of Country Day’s Yellow Jackets. Cranbrook journeyed to Indiana for Its first win, a 19-7 conquest of Howe Military Academy. fa an other game; Ty Jobin ran 63 and 36 yards for scorn Nlcklaus. winner of the individual title for the last two years, wound up in second place With a 71-72-71-70—284. Nicklaus’ teammate, Tony Lema of Oakland, Calif., was way down the field with a total of 76-76-71-75—296. 0 w ♦ South Africa’s team of Hearing and Player won the team title — one held for the last two years by the United States — by right strokes from Spain’s Angel Mguel and Ramon Sota. South Africa totaled 571 and Spain 579. Lema and Nicklaus came third in the team competition with 582. Howes squad •«*** in tho flfol twominutraof play. football itatistk:* oatroitjit.rh*» j i Cotter Line St. Clement 40. Ore*** was intercepted. ifom* it. f*ui is A touchdown by Cirir Lambert fas the first period and a Arid goal by Tony Richardson stretched Northern Michigan’s winning streak to eight fa tile shutout over Hillsdale. Hillsdale never crossed Northern’s 23-yard line. tervliet and Ionia. * * Margaret Uttie of Schiller Park, III., was second and Alia Davis of Grasse He third. Jacquelyn Markham of Battle Greek was fourth, Mrs. Babe faith of Lansing fifth, Maisie Stars of Kalamazoo sixth, rad Mary Clark of Jackson was -iQALiiLiirararara Ten High islzye bourbon • sip ft slow and easy • it's made by Hiram Walker • it's M proof • it’s straight bourbon whiskey • it's sensibly priced. Your Boot Bourbon Buy *4« *2“ ALSO AVAILABLE IN 166 PROOF, WTTIE0 IN I0N0-S TEARS 010 KflMM WALKER « RONS INC, PEORIA ILLINOIS A**»4II*4 by a* AimOtea Caanleeleo ef Mo Motenat Hoaw Study CeuocN DO YOU NEED A NIGN SCHOOL DIPLOMA? AMERICAN MMOL PSono OU 2-7639 P.O. Box M-63, AJUn Poffc, Mich. Sond mo yew ftee 55-pogo High School Booklot Going to the Big Game? Bent a Ford from us. (Ws’M just a low minutee away.) Why rnkw out, just beceuM someone is using the fondly car? Rent anew Mustang, Falcon or Ford from us. Give ue a call and we’ll have it ready for you to pick up whenever yon give ue the Mgnolo And the pries* ate all remarkably low. (Lp for a Falcon tho*. a Thunder bird, of count.) Insurance is fnrltfdofl fa the price. 80 you see, you can have that extra oar available whenever the need arisM— —s for law than yon thought poerible. \ C/&PCC J to JOHN McAUUFFE FORD, INC. <10 Oakland Avenue V PI 5-4101 Pontiac, Michigan % V fHB PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1963 | St. James led 18-0 at halftime, against FOLS but lost quarterback John Kozlowski with a side {injury In the third period. Dan' Slivats tallied twice on long > runs for the winners; and Koi-t lowski once. } Ken Wright's pass to-Mi k e' Charette produced the only points in ROSM’s triumph over imr™ unbeaten_______ a costly gamble Saturday night St. Michael tied the tom* and St Rom at H with a 11-I verdict ever Richmond St WINNING SCORE—Detroit half-hack Joe Don Looney (32) dashes behind Washington Redskins tacklers in the third quarter to scorto the winnlrih touchdown in the Lions' 14-10 victory over the Skins at Tiger Stadium LOSING HAIR? Wings Lose in Exhibition MEN Hair Connltaat to Explain Hair ST. .LOUIS (AP) - The Chicago Blade Hawks beat the De-Red Wings 4-2 Sunday night in the opening National Hockey League’s exhibition games for both teams before 7,-370 fans. Norm Ullman got Detroit off in front in the first period, but Len Lunde then got the Blade Hawks even. Dennis Hull put Chicago ahead in the second period. ♦ ♦ ♦ Hull scored a goal in Billy Harris >it tally before scored the last Waterford Our Lady of Lakes BrcednskTs three-yard run 1m Then St, Mike's defense, led grabbed sole possession of first'the last 37 seconds of play. I by Frank Laolnger, stopped place in the Macomb Catholic j Unbeaten Birmingham! ^ vis|torg after they had League football race Sunday, Brother Rice was held to a (HI ^ ^-----„ while St. Frederick and St Mi- tie by Detroit Cathedral; and •at to tha RHna data N 71,314. P. OFFICE USE, LEFT-OVER, » ACCOUNTED, SPOILED AFTER PRINTUM: . : A Tha sv snaps nui Farm Jobs Are Plentiful to Those Witfi LANSING (AP) - Despite the tag number of farms, it’s the same «tory ta agriculture as ta : There Beans to be plenty of Jobs If you bare the right skills. *1Our greatest challenge is! to. attract enough talented youths Into agricultural engineering,'’ says C.S. Morrison, president of the American Society of Agricultural Engineers. "Today one*U.S. farmer produces enough for himself and 80 other persons,” Morrison points out. “By 1900, we wfll have to step up our technology so a farmer will be abfe^ produtie food tor himself ana OS others” —because of the population explosion. WASTE DISPOSAL He describes the American farmer and those who serve i “first-line soldiers ta the struggle to overcome the social, economic, and political problems of the world.” addition to increasing mechanization ta cultivating harvesting crops and in livestock production systems, Morrison says waste disposal without pollution of air and water is an engineering problem of major importance to agriculture. . X,. ,j, A survey at Cornell University indicated a bright Job picture for agriculturally trained students ta such off-farm agricultural Jobs as sales and services, manufacturing or processing, recreation and educate The survey team recommended development of courses of study ta agricultural business, mechanics and plant science at the high school and university levels to prepare students for the Jobs. For farmers seeking Jobs off the farm, a Michigan State Un- recently investigated whether nate against farm people. “No,” reported Dr. Ralph Loomta * * * But, he said, “they do discriminate on the basis of formal education, absenteeism, aptitude and attitude, long dis-tance commuting, poor health inadequate job perform- ■ Ow»M-4t Tgpil^fREr ,:Mk' •. ' 1 i ^ — m J mKPNti ANCIENT IDEA—Looking like the vast Madurai, India, point toward the sky. The collection of gantries at Florida’s Cape Ken- ancient towers house many art treasures, nedy, the towers of the Meenakshi Temple, but there’s not a moon rocket to be found. STOCK f PROOUCT CLERKS MANAGEMENT TRAINEES HIGH SCHOOL CASMERS & CLERKS Wrigfoy Super Markets has imihadiate openings ton - . Full time stock and product clerks. Management trainee requirements, high sehool degree. Ifp to age 21. Part Time Nigh Sehoel student cashiers and stoek clerks. IxcoNant working-conditions Apply 9 A.M. to 4 P.M. Wrigley Super Markets 13901 Joy Road - Near Schaefer 11 manths la 1,641. b. Tbg tuM *9 a sing la lasua naar-*s» *o th* filing a*f* Is 1,714. M. TOTAL: a. Tha avarag* numbar «* < *9 aach Isau* during th* 11 months is jmA b. Th* total *f * slngla lasua Mar sat la Itw fRIng ast* It TXiat. I earttfy «Mf ttw atatamants mada bi im arg fame* and mmalat*. HOWARD H. FITZGERALD II,- Volunteer Firemen Were Dressed for Job RIDGEFIELD PARK, N. Y. UR — The volunteer firemen here were out ta drees uniforms for a parade and their annual dinner, which was to follow the parade. During the parade, the firemen were called to a Maze at a steak bouse. The restaurant ta flames was where they were scheduled to eat. • Pull She Round Dobbin . • 5-Spood Control • Automatic Pretturo , • Clog Ratiatont * Ruloaa# Round Bobbin FULLY GUARANTEED FREE HOME DEMONSTRATION OR 4-1101 < A Ann COMPLETE Mbastsaa HMI* Raalar Parti t«4 (ante* with CAIINKT 4UTH0BIZED H00VEB SERVICE OEALEM | NEW MOOT VACUUM CLEANER HOSE Braided Cloth, All Itybber Exchange bin With & | Your Old Rn-U»n- MP Regular 7.50 wW Cnme in or t'rrr Dtllvrj PARTS and SERVICE OMAUOLEAM1RI Ditpoial Bagi-Ho.d.-Bru.hai-Bolts-Attachmanta-Ett. "Rebuilt by' Curt's Applionena Using Our Own ForttL Ml Me Home Demonstration-OR 4*1191 .. Within 21 Mil* Redlu( ' ** ,|1 ■ CURT’S APPLIANCES Raraefy SeSNHbad STHl#;S fl MW LOCATION MSI HATONIIIY R0AO OR 4 ■ Wert on M5V te Airport Rd., North to Hotchgiy H Turn Wait 2 Blocks on Hotchwy Rd. B . Opon Mendoy and Mdey VN • P. M. k^nnnna SPECIAL HOME BUYS YANKE MIRACLE MILE IMF COLORFUL-QUILTED CLOSET ACCESSORIES New-modem-beautiful. In 7 assorted colors, for matching sets. Aqua or gold. GLOVE I0X HOSIERY BOX SHOEBOX EACH QUILTED STORAGE BOX Far lingerie, QUILTED HAT BOX 12x12x9)9. With laran window. All guHtnd In Aqua or Gold. SI m for JUMBO GARMENT BAG With moth prevention cannistgrs — lippar — 16 garmgntt. Hdavy quiltdd top - aids, and bottom rainforcad. “MULTI-WIDTH” WHITE-ON-WHITE DRAW MEN’S ADJUSTABLE SHOE TREES Sturdy metal adjustable to fit all shoe sizes, keeps shoes in shape. Buy Several Pairs at This Low, Low Price WOODEN CLOTHES HANGER SALE! • SKIRT HANGERS • PANTS HANGERS • SUIT HANGERS SET OF 3 Sturdy finished wood-chrome trim, your choice of suit, skirt, or pants hgnger. A SMALL DEPOSIT HOLDS YOUR SELECTION IN LAYAWAY... DRAPERIES Get custom look travora# Draperies of this low reedy made prtce. Acototo rayon, aeU bocked for Single Width 93” Long * 900 ■ta MIR H LEMiTM I 1 IMBLE WIDTH HALF DOUBLE TRIPLE [I 36” 1.99 1 W" 2.99 3.99 1.99 ' 1U9 II 81” I 949 4.99 7.99 12.99 Washable TIER CURTAINS AND VAUUICE SETS... Machine washable-cottons, rayon chal-lis, flocked border, pullariia. All 36" |38 2 YANKEES IN PONTIAC... MIRACLE MAE SHOPPING CENTER STORE ONLY A D-> THE roN llAl- I'KKSS, MONDAY", OCTOBER 4, 1065 The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown j produce by growers Snd sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations .are furnished by the Market Recovery Is Scattered NEW YORK (AP) - The DetrohfKireau of Markets asof-stock mrtet stfSweA Wcdnesda> Produce j recovery early this afternoon in (fairly active trading. I The Associated Press average of 60 stocks at noon was up .6 at( *4 Si^*^-9 with industrials up '1.4,l®OOW)MIC BAROMETERS ■ - |Jg rails off .1 and utilities up .4. I Economic barometers were •'-1 Airlines and most leading mo-not completely bullish and Wall many of the volatile high flyers bn the September rally. Some of the battered former favorites showed strength while others lagged. Jt* tors were up from the. start but (Street observers expressed fractions. Gains of about a point by Chrysler and Ford were the best produced in' this section of the General Motors erased an early fractional rise. American Motors was up a bit. United and American Airlines were up about a point each, Eastern and Pan American “(there wasn’t muc|i group action opinion that the correction of |otherwise. (the recent sharp advance may *■ ' * * still have same time to run. - Te—hst—was—eoming back} The Dow Jones industrial av- ■■ • us from four straight losses in erage at noon was up .33 at t3.Mlwhich profits were taken on 929.98. Prices an the American Stock Exchange were mostly higher in active trading. Corporate and U. S. Treasury bonds were mostly unchanged. Been, topped, tw. Cdbbopt. Curly; fe The New York Stock Exchange Soviets Launch Luna 7 Rocket Contains Automatic Station Toward Moon Profits Blossoming £§ to Record Height* MOSCOW <* - The Soviet Union launched a space rocket Tontaining an automatic station toward the moon, a broadcast taro dispaich said today. The probe was designated as Luna 7. Toss said the launching was by a multistage rocket. Tass uM thf irtithw ~*lgl,» 1,50S kilograms (334 pounds). “The final stage had been put in advance on an intermediary orbit of a satellite of the earth and then in accordance with a present program put the auto-atic station into the trajectory of its movement toward the moon,” Tass said. Tass said the last stage of the rocket was put into a parking satellite orbit and then the automatic station was launched toward the moon. ON TRAJECTORY ‘The automatic station Luna 7 is moving on a trajectory which is close to the prescribed me," Tass said. The automatic station was equipped with telemetering, measuring and other scientific instruments. The term automatic space station normally means the der vice is unmanned. It was expected the Russians again would try to make a soft landing on the mom with the station in a trail run for a manned moon flight There was no mention la the Tass announcement of the specific purpose of the flight other than to collect scientific By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK — A fresh flood of profits is sweeping business toward new records. Early returns show that tha summer months continued thq< upward surge that brightened the first half of j the year. Of 1041 ie] report so far on their most re-1 cent three- DAWSON month performance, only 21 had slimmer net Incomes after ta* es than they had in the like period of 1964. # As the third-quarter earnings announcements flow in'Aht rest of this month in increasing volume, signs are strong that the big gains of previous" 1965 quarters will be matched. In the first three months of 1365, net profits topped year before figures by 16 per cent In the second quarter, the year-to-year gain was 17 per cent. The annual rate of |44 billion was reached in profits fof\the first quarter of 1965 and |44 billion in the second quarter. Betting is strong that the rate will have been topped in the third quarter and may mount higher in the -final three months. RECORD PROFIT Bellwether of the cpmpanies reporting so far is mighty American Telephone & Telegraph with a record profit: of 6445,930,000 in the three months ending August 31, a gain of 8.6 per cent over the 6419,629,000 in the 1964 third quarter. Most of the companies reporting so.far have fiscal quarters But the announcement that the rocket was launched “toward the moon" indicated that it would attempt to land there rather than to circle the moon. A soft landing was believed a likely mission for two reasons. First, it would permit doseup photographs to be taken of the lunar surface. The photos could be radioed back to earth to help select a site for a manned landing. This was not possible with rockets that crashed on the moon. A soft landing would also show whether it is possible to land a man on the moon safely with present equipment. It has been estimated that a Soviet soft landing would put the Russians months ahead of the United States in the race for the moon. Luna 7 weighed slightly more than the last two moon rockets. Luna 5 weighed 3,250 pounds and Luna 6 weighed 3,176 pounds. County Engineer Unit to Hear OCC President Jrihtil!. TBfelir president of the Oakland Community College, will be the speaker at the Oct. 14 meeting of the Oakland Chapter of the Michigan Society of Professional Engineers. Hie dinner meeting will be held at the Holiday Inn, 1601 S. Telegraph, beginning at 7 p.m. The program will honor the wives of engineers. American Stocks NOON AMSaiCAN NEW YORK (AT) — Foil ending on that same date, and a few elose their boob on July 31. Among the big earners already reporting are Sears Row-buck with'Tto.5 million profit this year against $70.4 million last summer; Campbell Soup, $14l mlIliQn thia year end <14:1 million last. But International Harvester was an exception with $26.9 million in the 1965 quarter against 629.6 million the year before. Gainers this year include: Douglas Aircraft, with 64 million against |3.6 million; Acro-jet-General / with 63.2 million against 62.6 million last year and Avco Corporation, with 65.9 million against 65.2 million. REPORT GAINS Beatrice Foods went to 64.8 million in the 1965 quarter from 64 million in the previous year; Grand Union to 62.5 million from 62 million; General Mills to 64.9 million from 64.7 million; H. J. Heinz to $3.8mliIlon from 63.7 million; and Food Giant Markets to 6107 million from 61-02 million. Hart Schaffner ft Marx reports 62.16 million profits in its latest' quarter compared with 61.42 million a vow ego; Bobbie Brooks reports $1.79 million against 61.41 million; Wyandotte Worsted has 6173,002 against 6124,042; Lane Bryant $1 million against 6815,000; Glmbel Brothers $2.04 million against 6102 million; and American Enka rose to 63.28 million from 62.86 million in 1064. But Indian Head Mills slipped to 6563,000 from 6613,000 in its 1964 quarter. —r ............■>>/■ Among numerous other gain-lers this summer over last are: Hooker Chemical, Eagle-Picher, Syntax, Interstate Department Stores and Ex-Cell-0 Corpora-on. ’ ^ The reports are particularly -cheering to businessmen and stock traders because, earlier in the year, many had feared that the upward trend in profits couldp’t be maimained. If early reports are good indicators, this summer will have proved to be a record breaker. % Mental Health Facilities Expanding, Says Romney f centers 1 to serve LANSING (AP)—Gov. George, establish i Romney said today Michigan is 250. expanding its mental healthfpmxjRAM INITIATED care1 facilities 'to help such children as Ricky Thome, the youngster abandoned at the Miami airport. \ In view of the Thome case, The Mental Health Department, he added, has initiated a job training and- placement program “which should have a.sig- Romney toM hi, MW Conte,: w tc- mmmmm Aflat Cp Barnet C., Bru Trac .44 ... ... ... .... Irtt Fat jm 14 nj-u nut 7 ii-H+ Brown CoA I IN IN IN C*WmSC*I> 147-M 4* 4H Canto Ptf -Sit 15-14 * +1-t4 Can Java ten I n M Mv+ if 1 4 3V* j |v*+ v* —-----IUNB M j t Craefa P J4to 1 41'* 411* 411*4-Oat* Cant __ 1 MB MV* UM>+ B*etty Ca .IN I M M «*-Fargo Ollt 12 7-14 3 7 14 3 7-14+ Fly Tlgor 47 Mt US4 231* --- JJ 31* Ji* M+ £ 1 N M t*+ 1* a 137* 131* 134*4- 1* ---— M 14* It* 14*4- V* Gt Bat Fat I j | j Hoarnar Boxat 53 4 *14* *11* 314*4- V* 8 ft ft ft ' asSTW-w is ift « i C 5 \Wa i ft ft Stktw mis* aiftiritw* Ummt or a la I- SfW BarTv R Nt---1 4 ms By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “I have a mm who married recently and a daughter entering nursing school. I teach and have invested only in General Motorf. With some available cash, perhaps you would advise ase whether to buy more General Motors or Geaeral Electric. A friend advised me te buy blue chips only, since I am 01 and most be sore of some extras when I retire—ether ban just bank interest. What de you suggest?” B.H. A) Be sure that you really are buying a blue chip and not just a “big name” stock like National Lead—which is, in my opinion, a retrograde situation. General Electric is a genuinely strong growth issue, which should help to cushion your retirement. I believe I would mid this stock in order to diversify and, if additional funds become available, I would buy Texaco and Corn Products. All of these stocks have the potential of enhancing your capital over the years ahead. * A Q) “My sou has.quite a lot of Litton Industries. Have you ever meutieoed this stack in your column? Ip It about to split?” B. P. A) I have indeed mentioned Litton quite a number of times, since I consider It to be one of the best growth stocks on the Big Board. T do not usually , advise it for people who cannot m j&L’ h afford market rtok, since Litton ww »4* m*t <* sells at about 35 times my conservative earnings estimate of 63 £0 a share for 1085—a rela- ence,. “it is important1 to know what is being done to deal with these urgent problems.” ■ ■ p * * Thorne, a 14 - year - old from Troy, now is under care in Florida, where his mother left him in ’the hope, she said, that he would be cared for. Romney said the waiting list of retarded children attempting to enter Michigan mental health care institutions stood at 1,574 on Sept. 1, with 729 of those requiring hospital care. UNDER CONSTRUCTION He said facilities to hospitalize 420 are under construction at Plymouth, and planning authorization has been given for an-| PrAJ, ,-i!a*. ether 420 beds there. rrOOUCTIOn crowding.” To train qualified personnel to operate the expanded facilities, the governor said, the department is cooperating with Michigan State University on a community psychiatry program. In addition, be said, the department has appointed a training officer and its training budget climbed from $140,000 to $260,-000 th|s year. GM Reports on September Hq said a total of 750 other new beds have been authorized at other locations. The governor also cited new outpatient facilities at Michigan institutions, and the establishment of 12 day - care centers to serve 225 severely retarded children. *' General Motors Corp. has an-nounced that 19,304 Pontiacs and 7,947 Tempestl were produced in September, compared with 36,673 and 14.641, respectively, during the same month in 1964. These day • care centers allow the children- to stay at home, better than an institutional influence.” Romnev said, qe said “* authorization has been given to Commercial vehicle production by General Motors Corp. Truck ft Coach Division reached 11,258 last month, an increase of 3,052. Over September a ye ay N«dft^^HFgp6T W'«iw . ~ Mr. ■ *• toil tsalkESuto . toMfws waHK H&SSr.} I u Wars,: lively high multiplier. Hie company has very strong management and has put through number of sound mergers which have aided earnings growth materially. There is a stock-bidders’ meeting scheduled for December 4,1615, to vote on a 2-for-l split of the shares. Since stockholders never shoot Santa1 Claus, the split is virtually certain to be approved. Your son has a very good holding, which should be retained- (Copyright, 1M) OCC Site Due in Royal Oak ROYAL OAK (AP)-Negotia-tions are under way, to purchase property for a proposed two-year community college in Royal Oak, Dr. John E. Tirrell, president of Oakland Community College has announced. Hie proposed college would be a branch of Oakland Community College capable of enrolling 3,000 students. The college would cost an estimated 63 million and would be Oakland’ first campus Hi the heavily populated southern portion of Oakland County. * * * Details of the proposed site were not Immediately known, but a spokesman said- no> construction is anticipated. Tirrell was granted authorization to proceed with negotiations laat week by Oakland’s board of trustees. ESTABLISHED IN 1604 Oakland Community College was established by a countywide vote in June 1164. It opened two campuses last month. A third campus, is scheduled to open in September 1007. STS SilSiBHj if :S$M ill !SW, SWBiSHi ... MM 131.7 141.7 s Lodge Calendar Annual meeting. Pontiac Chapter No. 228, O.IJ., Moo., Oct. 1,6 p.m., lift E. Lawrence It. M. Coons, secretary. Total production far tbs Pen-tiac Division during tie first nine months of 1665 was 626,: 412. During the comparable' period ia 1664, the production figures for both the Pontiac and Tempest was 641,Ml. CMC Truck ft Coach Division ended the nine month period by building 99,314 vehicles. In 1964, the total for the nine months was 83,976. The corporation, through the first nine months, produced a total of 4,459,603 passenger cars and commercial vehicles in the U. S. and Canada. Through September of last year, the total production of all vehicles in both countries was 3,067,380. News iii Brief Pontiac Police are iflvestisat-ing a report by Mrs. Paul Will-hite of 06 S. Geqpsee that a youth snatched her purse containing $75 as she came out of a bakery Saturday night at 131 W. Huron. Ranuuge Sale: First Presbyterian Church, Birmingham, W. Maple. Thurs., Oct. 7, 9 a m.-8 p.m.; Fit, Oct. «, 0 am-5 p.m. _adv. Treasury Position ** 8,*fts UP. *7.1444 “T*W ' .NlSuM5*3J4 314,733,434.141.74 THE PdNTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER ft, 1965 NORTH (D) 4 II ♦AJ10 ♦ Q 74 2 '■ ♦ AK J9 6 WEST EAST ♦ aaqts ¥Q«4 *752 ♦iV' ♦KJM V*CRRD Sen*** Q—You, South, hold: *A WKQ 4541 ♦AKQJSIt What i« your opening bid? A OpBR the bidding with one dob. To* aren’t «nil# ■tronr enough to make a toning two bid. TODAY’S QUESTION You open one—ektb. Your partner raapond* one diamond/ Whet do you do now? Anawer Tomorrow BERRY’S WORLD U. S. Future Hinges onGOP-Romney MIDLAND (AP) - Gov. George Romney told a Republican group Saturday the future of Michigan and the nation “depends on making the Republican party the majority party.” * * * “Lot’s get fired up and go out and convert Democrats end .independents to our party,” Romney said at the annual ox roast of Midland County Republicans. ★ ♦ ★ . WlmuTdo that becauset there is no other way,” he said. “We must make these people feel welcome.” By Jim Berry TALES OF THE GREEN ] By Robin Moore A COMMON BELIEF, BUT THE TRUTH IS, THAT HAIF OF THE ARTHRITIS IN THE LL6. ARE UMOfiR PC WE DON'T KNOW MUCH ABOUT THE CAUSE OR CURE, BUT IN SOME CASES THERE'S AN EASING OFF. RECURRENCE OF PAIN AND STIFFNESS OCCURS NOW AND TH&J, BUT IS BY RATHER COMMON RAMON IS QUITE, OF WHAT HAM ARTHRITIC. THE BERRYS COMMON? BUT Tl DRUGS RAMON HAS A 8EgN TAKIN6...' IB By Carl Gruhert I GUESS THATS HER SUBTLE WAY OF TELLING ME SHES STILL MAD AT ME H -r FROM THIS MORNING/r^ s DRIFT MARLO By Dr. 1.' M. Levitt. Tom Cooke and Phil Evan* “Great news, Sarge —you’ve been cleared on that charge of‘police brutality’I” BOARDING HOUSE DON'T WRITEVA6} kj.ae ACC *fiyST )/ser/ HS'6 8BTTIN6 ON THE MOON, HITCH BOLTON IS DRAWN IRRESISTIBLY TOWARD A CAVERN INTJCSlpE OMTf CR/S— | tWith one op, HIS PATENTED GOAL-LINE FUMBLES-•'•HE'S 601N6 TO FORCE 3AKEJ \jO BELL HiM SOME THAT SAKE HAS BEEN 61VIN6 HIM A FAST 6HOPFLE / By lYOlWY OMARR WELL, AT LEAST WE) NON'T HAVE TO i WAIT FOR A CONGRESSIONAL 1 INVESTIGATION TO LEARN WHAT HAPPENED-*-THEY'RE BEAK- 171 TO-BEAK iNTHB 'aukUl fAar. It la May SB): Hum ciififSQflW Claaajdiitlnrj veal, MltUto Bay. V*--------------- I act* which BrevW* a • reference*. keep cam Your It nto poiltiv < July M) H , Tendancy I* to J* It. fHtBhU^* watch tuoom CANCER (Jun* SI to Jo*y SS): Avow lumping I* conclude be caret*,,. Overt------ ipedtlc*. Baa* dadalan* an httoM to lankly mamBar t*.„. ... nutation. LEO (July tl t* Aug. SI): Una relation* with butlnaaa eaaedatea a I other* da tha aem*. Frank but yeNt* timlndar daaa tto tiirT VIROO (Aug. M te i harmony'. No tkna to F*mdf whan irritation, la *raw» Oat dMMtt nut a* way. Reap appoIntmaM*. oapfcUBy medical-dental. NOTHING TO FffiRt. LIBRA (Sapt- a t* Oct. air OaRpM- . *ul avanlng for |------- " turprlao loved on* pec# DM* out . a* haa* tin* t IU*5rFIO (Oct. 13 la Nov. St): Llaten te htdlvldual whoa* Ida** appear “ centric. Your own ImagKMtlon cp ' stand • toit. RaaSm it I* tbn* B pk Ijtorsr. — -ilLE AT CONTROL CENTER... IT ^5 NO USE, HUGO/ THE ROBOT 'IS CONVINCED SOMEBODY--OR ' SOMETHING-CALLS HIM FROM THAT LUNAR CAVE/ TAKEOVER,^ HUGO/ I'VE GOT jO PRER5RE-FORMY FLIGHT TO THE MOON/ LET'S HOPE I CAN FIND HITCH WHEN r TOUCHDOWN/ ALLEY OOP By V. T. Hamlin WHAT A SPECIMEN! MAhl! HIS | WELL, I PUNNO MIND WILL BE LIKE WRITING J ABOUT THAT..BUT ON A BEAUTIFULLY BLANK / IF HE'S WHAT VOU SHEET OF PAPER / WANT, HES WH4 YOU'LL SET... ...NOW IF YOU I THATS RIGHT, DOCTOR, L JUST STAND WE THROW A LOT A...NO PL Act BACK OUT Of OF ELECTRO VOLTS I THE WAY AROUND HERE... ( CARELESS. CAPTAIN EASY By Leslie Turner Walloon. WARFARE f?eTURN6= WHY you BJSIRT OW YlHRPTI RiTURMNe THAT OLD I DOTY. H_, CRASS MUTT BEATS MBA TO GET HI HOMBRl NOW. YOU MUST> pay to nrw rm war chabnt you mx wi . "OUT OUR WAY i tbn* *'sAOITTARt8s*(mv. a to aDc. Many pr* attracted to you. inwii i?MrtI_er m** ■’ywrt* Taka can tn chocking not**, Important *“ ~ MEANINGS. *1): PURI .j b* aware at HIDDEN MEANINGS. _ CAPRICORN (Dae. a to J AQUARI - sardine ftnaoCT*. ’ Day to ba raoeptiv*. Permit matt or partner to taka imtto—— A*aW autek dadalan*. Dbaarv* L PISCES (F*b. If t* Mif. SO): OL _ n**d panonal aNmtM. J# — Mean* dm't fad thara j* only i ad. Chock with authoritt**. ♦ ★ ♦ ' IF TUBSDAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY Much cannactad with ARRIVALS and OEFARTURIS iat kOaihdtonal flgura,. capyrtpM IMS, ttaaard Faatama cam. > DONALD DUCK r mu mm we «*-gooDeaeFi that* doty POtt-OtJ HID PORCH l EEK & MEEK By Howie Schneider / Vt)U NEED A \ ‘1 LEADER WHO CAN I -t SEPARATE THE J A MAW WHO CM TURM HljL BACK \ \ ON ALL THE NON- j V FACT FROM THE T~ FICTION! J V SENSE THAT OOUDS J \THE ISSUES« J By Ernie Bushmiller By Walt Disney / 4^ OP TWOHUNCNRCo' r DOLLARS tS feieWT-“ I CAN PROVE THAT IVE BEEN READING By Charleg Kuhn i D—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER A 19M OU Enrollment Hits1 Record of 2/458 Students A X per cent increase has pushed Oakland University’s fall enrollment to 2458 this to ' The jump of Ml students over la* fall’s total of 1AU is the largest experienced fay the school which opened classes for 570 students just six yean ago. Growth to the sise as the OU student body is accsited far asatoly by a large fresh-maa ctess of 1,171 stadents, and a total ef ZB new transfer students from other colleges. The fall figure includes 7S7 sophomores, ZB juniors, IB sen-fun, 06 graduate students and 32 unclassified. * * * Although the bulk of the OU students come from the Oakland Macomb County area, the proportion of students from beyond commuting distance is growing * a higher rate each year. * * * From Oakland and Macomb REGAL RIDE (Ml MULES-King Constantine and Queen Anne-Marie of Greece ride mules on the Greek island of Chora yes- terday, the final day of their five-day royal cruise through the Cyclades Islands. Book Exhibit Schools __ ROCHESTER - Books on Ex- comaga l'm'""SS" ■"* Mbit, a collection of the year’s S74 are from other Michigan outstanding books, will be on counties. There are presently 144 out of-state students and 10 foreign students enrolled. Agree on New Pact NEW YORK (AP) - The Mailers Union and publishers pgreed today on a new contract, hat the strike of the APlrCIO Hew York Newspaper Guild against the New York Times continues into its lltfa day. display in four schools tomorrow through Oct. 14. More than 800 books, from SO publishers, are made available by the Oakland County Schools. The bodes will be on display at the senior high school, We* and Central Junior High schools and Brooklands School. One of every 10 planes is grounded during the winter -in foggy London. Clk OY. 3)oruhon CDonaU 31. Johm A Finer Funeral Home for a Deterring Community. It is only right that the good people of Pontiac have truly fine funeral service. That is why the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home has been made one of the very nicest- in’ alt Michigan. Gracious end hospitible, it wilt serve our community well, Your inspection is invited. ROCHESTER — Senior high school student Pamela Bird has beat named a semifinalist in the 1965-66 Merit Scholarship competition. ♦ fr ■ ♦ Pamela was among the highest-scoring students in Michigan an the National Merit Scholarship Qualifying Test, administered last March. Ts become finalists, the (Indent mo* substantiate the qualifying teat performance on (Phone FEDERAL 4-4511 Pevrldnq On Our (PmniteV= til n Right now-today-you can find some of the best used car buys in town at your nearby FORD DEALER USED GAR LOT! Thousands of cars to choose from-all makes, all models. Bargain prices! <23* PAMELA BIRD Area Girl Is Named Merit Semifinalist by his other re- Afl Merit Scholars for 1966 will be selected from the finalist group. + * * Names of file Merit Scholars will be announced April 27. Story Periods Are Planned WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP—Story periods for preschoolers will begin tomorrow * the West Bloomfield Township Library, 5030 Orchard like. *____*_ * The half-hour sessions for youngsters three to five years old are scheduled for 10:W a.m. on consecutive Tuesdays. They are scheduled to run through Nov. 16. Story tellers will be members * (he theater group of the Pine Lake Women’s Association. Working with chairman Mrs. Alan Pfaff are Mrs. T. W. Keating, Mrs. Leland Connors, Mrs. John Onken and Mrs. David Caswell. Parents interested in register-'kg their children can do so by telephoning or visiting the library. 2 on Saturday A Pontiac man was killed in a traffic accident on Dixie Highway in Independence Township and carbon monoxide poisoning took the life of a Sylvan Lake woman Saturday to Montmorency County. The victims are William G. Gilmore, 53, of 75 Clark and Mrs. R. Bruce Lewis, 21, of 1417 Roeedale. Gilmore was killed when the car he was to went out of control and smashed into a ditch and two trees. Another man in the car, Wfl-ford L. Taylor. 24, of Kyle, S.D. is listed in satisfactory condition at Pontiac General Hospital from injuries received in the accident. Oakland Highway Toll in ’$5 112 iato Year to Don 115 ALAN B. GREENE Service for Alan B. Greene, I, of 67 W. Beverly will be :M p.m. tomorrow, at Voor-heea-Siple Funeral Home with burial in White Chapel Manorial Cemetery, Greene, a retired employe of the Fie* Carrier Corporation, died Saturday following A long taess. He was a member of the Oak-md Avenue Presbyterian Church.. Striving are his wife, Marian; his father and mother, Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Greene of Pontiac; three sons, Arthur B., Richard L. and Gary, all of Pontiac; five daughters, Betty L. and Mrs. Pamela Robertson of Pontiac, Mrs. Helen Spitxer of Fallbrook, Calif., Mrs. Norms Schmid of Rocb- ■nd Mr« Joan Hill of (Charlotte) Lewis, 21, of Mi7 Rosedale, Sylvan Lake, will be 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at the SparkaGriffin Funeral Hone with burial at White Chapel Cemetery. Oakland County Sheriff’s officers said it was not yet definitely determined which man was driving the car, which was owned by Gilmore. Witnesses told deputies the automobile was weaving from lane to lane at a high, rate of speed before veering off the road while attempting to pass another car. Gilmore was dead ou arrival at Poatiac General. Mrs. Lewis was found dead n a cabin at Lake Avalon, northwest of Hfflmaa. * O'* She was discovered by a neighbor who saw ha husband stagger from the cabin and attempt to break open a window. HOSPITALIZED Lewis, 23, was hospitalized at Alpena. ★ ★ * Montmorency County Sheriff Joel Secrist said the young couple apparently lighted a charcoal burner to warm the cabin and want to sleep unaware the fire was emitting deadly carbon monoxide gas. Everybody Can Ride in front Seat of Car j SAN FRANCISCO (UP1) — It is now possible fa every man, woman and child in the United States to ride in file front seat of a car — simultaneously, according to the American Automobile Association (AAA), w w ★ Teh AAA says there sre now 2.6 persons for each passenger car registered in the United States — and estimates the ratio will drop to 1J persons tor each auto by 1175. Consult us with CONFIDENCE We are specialists to fully /nannc\ guaranteed monuments I D/\1\I\C I sculptured from Select TGUILDJ' Barte Granite Monuments Monuments from $195 Markers . . from $ 35 Memorial* for Over 72 Yeart D IMS MEMORIALS, DC. 864 N. Perry 3354931 Broaze Plates far Memorial Park Cemeteries at Below Cemetery Prices Waterford Township. Also surviving are a brother, Edwin Greeneof Pontiac; three sisters, Mrs. Hazel Old of California, Mbs. Dorothy Bletch of Pontiac and Mrs. Frances Ry-den of Keego Harbor; and 11 grandchildren. MRS. RAMSEY R. HAMPTON Service fa Mrs. Ramsey R. (Mary L) Hampton, 55, of 117 N. Shirley, will be at 11 a.m. Wednesday at the Zion Church of the Nazarene, with burial at Ottawa Park Cemetery by Voa-hees-Siple Funeral Home. Mrs. Hampton {died yesterday after a long illness. She was a member of the Zion Church of Nazarene and a retired nurses aid at Pontiac General Hospital. Surviving besides ha husband are two sons, Barry D. of Waterford Township and Charles at home; four sisters, brother and four grandchildren. MRS. HARRY C. JORDAN Service fa Mft Harry C. (Florence B.) Jordan, 82, of 372 S. Roslyn, Waterford Township, will be 1 pzn. tomorrow * the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home with burial in Oakland Ifllls Cemetery. Mrs. Jordan died Saturday following a 10 month illness. She was a member of file Central Method!* Church. Surviving are two children, Mbs. Blanche M. Roggenkamp of Howell and Alfred H. Jordan of Poatiac; a brother, a sister and two grandchildren. MRS. R. BRUCE LEWIS KENNETH a MAY OXFORD — Service fa Kenneth H. May, M, of 258 Bins will bo 2 pjn. Wednesday at Pix-ley Memorial Chapel, Rochester. Burial will be In White Chap* Memorial Cemetery, Troy. May drowned Friday is northern Ontario. , ’ DONALD C. RETTELL ARMADA TWNSHIP—Service fa Donald C. RetteU, B, of 20148 32 Mile wflLJil 1 pJL Wednesday at Roth’s Home fa Funerals, Romeo. Burial will be Service for Mrs. R. Bruce fo Clinton Grove Cemetery, Mou* Clemens. Mr. Rettefi died Saturday in an automobile accident. He was an engiaea-for Detroit Wrecking Co. Surviving are his wife, Mary; James of Romeo; and four sisters, Mrs. Zoe Rachow and Mrs. Beatrice Parsons, both of Mount Clemens, Mrs. Marjorie, Kexsr Of Romeo and Mrs. Gladys Ha-teg of Warren. *' LYLE A. SMITH TROY — Service for Lyle A. Smith, 69, of 2414 Rochester will 2 Bandits Rob City Drugstore Mrs. Lewis died Saturday of , daughter, Zoeann; three carbon monoxide poisoning. Bruce mi^I and Daniel, all She was employed as a secre-[,t w. «—*■>■, Ur mat tary at Pontiac Motor Wvtotonjj^^umbus Rottell of and attended Western Michigan ^meo; two brothers, Paul and and Wayne State universities. -- ■ -— Surviving betides ha husband are ha motha, Mrs. Edto Tauriainen of Detroit, two sisters; and one brotha. MRS. AUGUST F. SMITH Service for Mrs. August F. (Delia) Smith. B, of 263 Edison will be at 3:30 pjn. Wednesday it the SparksGriffin Fu-be 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at neral Home, with burial at Price Funeral Home. Burial will White Chapel Cemetery, Troy, be in Crooks Road Cemetery, Mrs. Smith died today after Troy, brief illness. She was a mem-j Mr. Smith died yesterday af-ber of Oakland Park Methodist ter a short Illness. He was an Churcb. employe of Detroit Plastic Mold- Surviving is a daughter, Miss ingCo. Pearl Smith of Pontiac. | lom a. TRUSCOTT MRS. FRED D. CARR | ORION TOWNSHIP - Serv-WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN- ice for Lois A. Truacott, 12-year-_HIP - Service for Mrs. Fred old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. (Jennie) Carr, 79, of 1545 Mal-Kevern Truacott, 1035 Bayfield, colm will be 11 a.m. Wednesday.will be 2 p.m. Thursday at Al-at Sparks-Griffin Funaal Home,lien’s Funeral Home, Lake Or Pontiac. Burial will be in Oak ion. Burial will follow in East Hill Cemetery, Pontiac. |Lawn Cemetery. Mrs. Carr died yesterday af-j Lois died this morning after ter a long illness. She was a|« long Illness. She was a mem-member of Central Method!* her of the Lake Orion Method!* Church. v | Church. Surviving are'two sons, Fred- Surviving besides ba parents eric of Union Lake and Ken- m two brothers, Philip K. and neth of Fort Worth, Tex.-; a1 Donald P., and a sister, Lori S. Pontiac drugstore owner was robbed of some $400 Saturday by two men one of whom carried a black snub-nosed revolver, according to police. . ★. * ★ Louis Finegold of Oak Park, owner of Lou’s Drugs and Hardware * 493 S. Sanford, told of; fleers two men came into the store Saturday morning shortly after it opened. FlaegaH said he and a clerk, Pocy Deline * 379 Midway, were ordered to fie on the flow. The bandits tosh both men’s billfolds and then emptied a cash register before leaving. One of the two men wore a black mask and the other sunglasses, Finegold said. %■ * * * Pontiac police are investigating the case. Employes Stop Work Over Au-Tea-Mation STOURPORT, England (UPD— Production at Europe’s biggest chain-making factory was threatened here by an edict fa-bidding workers to make their own tea. w *•; * • An estimated 500 employes stopped work during the weekend when management said waken had to g* tea from automatic vending machines installed four months ago. STARTS CONGREGATION — Rev. C. Leroy Johnson, 5644 Dunmore, We* Bloomfield Township, has bean rfaoasn to organize a-iew Lutheran Church of America congregation in the township. After inl- sjster, Mrs. Lucy Skarritt of Commerce; a brother, Roy Sprague of Bloomfield Hills; three grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren. Memorial contributions can be made to the Central Method!* Church, Pontiac. MBS- iVID CREVIER Service fa Mrs. David (Angeline) Crevier, 90, of Roscommon will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at Pixley Memorial Chap*. Burial will be in Mount Avon Cemetery. Mrs. Crevier died Saturday after a short illness. She was a member of the VFW Auxiliary Post 4159, Roscommon. Surviving besides ha husband are four sons, Ross Hdchel of Auburn Heights, Myron Heichel of Detroit, Elmer Heichel of Pontiac and Frank Heichel of Pennsylvania; two daughters, Mrs. Mary Maher of Rochester and Mrs. Luther Whiting of Pontiac; 17 grandchildren; 36 great-grandchildren; and two great-great-grandchildren. JOHN DAVIES MILFORD - John Davies, 71, of 1*9 Marlene died yesterday. His body is at the Richardson-Bird Funeral Home. Mr. Davies was retired from the SeaHert Dairy Co. ( Surviving are his wife, Eliza-j beth; two daughters, Mrs. Dennis Soja of Milford and Mrs. David Walker of Livonia; one son, David G. of Tulsa, Okla.; 10 grandchildren; one sister; and one brotha. ALAN G. HOLST SHELBY TOWNSHIP - Service fa Alan G. Holst, 11-montb-oid son of Mrs. Margaret Hoi* of 5766 Westpalen arid Gordon Holst of Rochester, will be 10:B m. tomorrow at Kingdom Hall of Jehovah’s Witness, Rochester. Burial will follow in White Chapel Memorial Cemetenr by Diener Funeral Home of Utica. The baby died Friday afta long Qbiess. Surviving besides Ms parent are a brotha, Franklin, and sister Bonnie, both * home, and all at borne, and grandparents, Mrs. Fannie L. T^minga * Lake Orion and Mrs. Myrtle Truscott of Detroit. BENJAMIN R. TURLAND OXFORD TOWNSHIP - Service fa Benjamin R.' Turland, 76, of 2894 Baldwin win be 2 pjn. tomorrow at C. F. Shaman Funaal Home. Burial will be in Mount Pleasant Cemetery, Oak-wood. Mr. Turland died Saturday after a tong illness. He was • member of Oakwood Masonic Lodge 100. Surviving are Ms wife, Jane; a daughter, Mrs. Roland Park-hurst of Armada; a son, Rich-\ a brotha, William of Pontiac; a sister; five grandchildren; and one great-grandchild. Death Notices _______ Mrs. Hampton brill II* i (tala at too yoarhss»Slpto Pu- sm.£aMLJUi9 Ham*. Mliiimiit In Oakland Mini *--y. wggatrtsd vliltlng houri u ni t mi Villag*. aaa »l; belovsd wife of biTUHt MHil MpIr of Mrs. Edla Taurlatoan; daar alator of Mr». Dolor** Richard*. Lorraine and CM taarMaia. MNfal mtv let win ba MdWMnaadav, Octobar * at 1:10 pjn. at to* iparfca-Orlffln Funaral Ham*. In-fennsntTn wwfe Chapti camatary. itolwifea-JiWHM^nt^ fe I *A, *n* 1 fa > bjw. ■ kombr, Ieptembib a. MB ERNA, MM Croak* Itaa* Avon Townihlp; ago tt; batavad wtfa of WMa Chapal ^amatory, Tfw. Mr*. Ranwr will lia In ifltn at (ha funaril hema aflar II naan. OtojtuSfyt daar brafhar of oaerga sranew and Prod Chart; alia (urvlvad by four grandchll-dran. Funaral aarvtoa will ba hald Tuaadw- Ocfabar A at II am IUKLANU, UCTUBER 2. ITU. El JAMIN a., M4 Baldwin Sd.,_______ ford; ago Hi bilovad hutband of MM Turland; dMr fatfwr of Mr*. Roland Parkhurit and Richard Turland; daar toolbar at Mr*. Haft la Harrow and WWabn a. Turland; alaa aurvlvad by flva orandchll-dron and ana groat grandchild. Funaral tarvlca will ba Iwld Tuaa-day, Octobar S at 1;*0 p.m. af fha C. P. Iharman Funaral Homa. Or-tonvlllt. Intarmanf In AM. Plaaaant Cematery, Oakwood. Michigan. Mr. la Memoriam IN LOVI NO MEMORY OP ChgrTt* HlwiCBdi who a aaa ad away Octobar 4, IM4. Many a lenaly haartacha, ONan a sllanf taar; But atngya a baauffful nwnwry N LOVING MEMORY Chartaa Hitchcock who pai away a yaar ago, Odt. 4, I Offan lha lonaly haarfneha to m ter Hoi* of Rochester. GEORGE H. K1NCHLA AVON TOWNSHIP—Requiem Mass fa George & Kinchla, 15, * ills Truwood wffl be 19 a.m. tomorrow at St. Lawrence Catholic Church, Utica. Burial wifi follow In Mount Avon Cemetery. Rosary wffl be recited * 9 tonight * the William R. Potere Funa* Home. Mr. Kinchla died yesterday afta a brief illness. Hs was a pipe fitter * GMC Truck aed Coach Division. Survtviqg are Ms w i f a, Mar-two daughters, Car* ef tial surveying, interested res- [Rochester ■* Mr», Kathy Ma-idents wffl bold service! in a Iris of Utica; a sister; a brother; ranted hsO. land a granddaughter. DM 332-8181 Want Ads roaj^gL actio*i AOvSSmtRRS AM RKEIYM SY S PJL WILL M PUBLISHED THE FOLLOWING DAY. W MMtont Wait AG* to * Am. tha day of ggifatolin attar tha tint tomrttan. Whan cancalto-ficna an mad* ba wra la fit ChataS ftaw tar advarft**-manta jBMtatotog tyga atoa* totorjp ngular agafa typo la n o’clock naan ffia day pro-VtaSuH RATES TSHS**® zoo uo TS SM SB. (N iS t2 AS US IS p M I.R IU 4.1# IMO MJt tm tjurnm* dan* af M pnto wiN bg mada tar wa if Death Notices grandparents Mr. and Mrs. W*- carr, October _ ■ . - - ■ ----- O., 1545 Malcolm Btvd., Laka; ago 7f; daar mo Pradark and Kannata H. BR daar alatar af Mrs. Lucy Skarritt and Bey Sgraaua; atoa aGmtoad by torts grsndchlldran and fwt graaf Kandotlldrtn. Funaral tarvlca wHI rpErass—s 1 car* to __________________ antral Matoedlat Church, It will ba agent-ctotod tot tot family. Suggtatod wStoi aeurt 1 to I pal ind r OREdNf, OCtOBE* t Ifid, ALAN BRNNI*; 17 W. Btuarly aga Iu taiwai wmrAMnm 4 Maty and bar af Mr*, nmjm warma Scbmltl, n Hill, Mr*. Pamala Rato Jarv, MNy L-r NlcbardX gTmrowri . .....vi"a»r LOSE WEIGHT SAFELY WITH Dm-A-Otol Tatoato. Only to cants af Sbnms Bros. Dtuba BOX REPLIES At 18 a.m. today there were replies at The Press Office M the following boxes: S, 7, II, 15, 17, 18, 22, Jl, It, 41, M, N, M, fi, a, tt, 99, n, 191, 199. fener* Pireders • 4 DRAYTON PLAfNI 4fLS4«l C- J. SOOHAROT FyNOBAL HOM1 Mam Harbor, Ph. tn*WO DONELSON-JOHNS Funaral Hama -"Paabmad far Funaral*" Huntoon . FUNERAL HOME D. E. Pursley d-MioaciFFm FUNERAL NOMI Vborhees-Siple *aawa» CBMETERY LOTS IN OAKI fhitl CHAPEL-4 LOTS. (IN EA. DAINTY MAID SUPPLIES m Manaminaa PE s-rsoj NNY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING wayg/p. 2 twar, call PE J4T34. Canfld*mial. ECE, AVAILABLE P Ega Neal family jun nave a nayrldt party af UPLAND HILLS farm. Family iwMny.JInRW part lot. DaytUna or avanlng. tit- aIWAii?" LOST: IRISH SETTfl Ralrlavar. mum. S____________ THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1965 D—5 $1 ICR IMI NATION BB-wtjfi op tax. tiNca womb Occupations am coNtioaaao Moatr at- TRACTIVE TO PERSONS - SOP tax than the otmir, a d v a a t 11 a- M a N TI ARB PLACID MM* THB MALfl OR PBMALH COLUMNS NOR CONVINIBNCB OP IREAD . Such witmqi Ml [ INTBNDP“ *“ s—ntf pb« iithbr sax. DRIVER AND MAN T7711. _____• _____, MIDDLE • AGED HANDYMAN -Board and room, more for homo , than waera. FE APIS, mom Inga. i MACHINE OPERATORS ' EXPERIENCED ON ALL MACHINES. STEADY EMPLOYMENT - HAWK TOOL AND ENOINEER-_____■- - --- IHO, CLARKITON, MICH._ ENGINEER: . , dia wlneiA neeos: carv gyftiSPT. •gl”g‘ dishwashers. Appl^ person. 443 Adam*. tirminghom. _ experienced macfiankal NIGHT PORTER, 5 DAYS, APPLY jgaWtlB -—1ep naw mechanical prod- PLAINS. _ and be rMOMMlbl# lor ore- NORTHWEST SUBURBAN BOY'S * *~ dam------------------------ retired) 5 YOUNG MEN 19-33 Fir Weal factory branch that hot a toady, year around wort W itrikat or layoffs. $480 PER MONTH c supply, activity t .. abWty I___ _____ iltty. 5V5 days par amok dur-___________ __ th* sah^yrarbra'--1— EXPERIENCED ENGINE LATHE mMIMOlV. Noon moor operator, and aiiemtity man Hour* 10 un. • 4:J0 i Brlooy Manufacturing Co. 1105 Pontiac Praaa Box >._____ otlng ileeM... EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER to Rd. off W. M-57. xi, yard office. Johr I Railroad, or Bn oRANO TRUNK WESTERN RAILROAD 40* BAST ATWATER DETROIT An aeual apparlunlty amployar .Salesmen We hove several career opportunities for experienced salesmen who must earn top commissions, in big ticket deportments.—- Some training positions open for inexperienced men, full time and part time schedules available. Apply personnel department between 9>30 o.m. and 9i00 p.m. daily, Montgomery Ward A NEW PROGRAM for nursing hgm* and hauaakaaoar. | era and “ *" ' ' ' no*phono^RWR,»|' Walton Hpraens nfaw l farfaty. obi* IXPEkllNCBD WAlYRtSS '3n$» ot wwi. , ,AAaatorlng experienced office supply — —-"I ctork. F*rt~~ "" OMa ■ OR 3-7747. • Dlxto -7[He

7274. I «xp„ rough. Union., 3S5-5445. sS3i jJP* SSTSS** c-*~ r- MAh' .dh. v^trwAttTio to coll 33>7SfO attoT i, t. . . ......— -avmara. np ™ ™ WOMAN FOR KITCMiN. APPLY capital ragulrad. Writ* Big Ray Orly* In, 1470 Dlxla Dapt. MCi-aM-lil Fraapai HWP^tWRWWR SB 04R. 1 WOMAN OVCR JS, MILFORD ARI waak. talary opan, apply M Far-aon only, H S. MlH St. Pontiac. womAn in VlfiNltY of BliIa- WOMEN. OVER R 'AND SEAMSTRESS TO toxo cnargo of aliaraltom In *»■ Speciality Shop. Ml Mill, Dm* PuNar Pruah daatort, aarving gi... " aitabllihad cuatomart In a prolacf- r ad larrttary. Profit* avaraga |3 oar hour. Call OR MSM ssr FO* FULL top^talary ALTERATIONS rampn'i battar spacialty ba axparlancad. Apply. JACQBSON'5 Mapla, ' ■ Drayton Plaint, WOMAN FOR BABV sHTiNO AND .. .,______________________^ light iMMawarfc. S54W E. Clvd. SSSt FULL' TTMT EXFKTfNeib _JOu*h^FE 57431.______________ jrt In o protacf- wantco. Apply In perton. WOMAN TO WORK IN IakIRY. A Country Inn. 1717 CTolo- 4M ORCHARDLAKEAVENUE 0|RL^FR|6aV. UNDER 'wTmUST, «ypor2n!l ofUct v V - L flgurat, plaote land MAN OR WOMAN WITH LATE MODEL CAR To daliver news-papers to subscribers homes in the vicinity of Walnut Lake, Southfield, or Farmington. Apply to H. M. Stier, Circulation Dept. The Pontiac Press, Pontiac, Michigan. _ Work Wanted Fenle I t Sel? CLEANING AND WA^ WABHINO. x t a xbyfUnch oF- IRONINGS DONE I - . .. __________ Clot* hi. FE 54)717, LADY DESIRES HOUSEWORK oX baby tilling FE, M«7t. WILL BABYilT IN MY HOME. fB 4-aws, coll anytlma. wiodw.' b x f a a i a * c K d in stroke patlanti and kiyaHRh sur-i rounding area^ond Pontiac to llv* WILL lAeVSlt. Coll 4*7-5113.________ ‘ WOMAN DBSlRiS mbNITHTS. ____________ssa-ifle. . . Building Service-Supplies 13 15 ■ .......HI _________ - ^ ~ DISHWASHER, ALSO PART-TIME ButiMSS Service Birmingham p.m. YOUNG LADY WANTED WITH EX- w*!tr*ai. and bartender lor week- ---------—— GIRL OR WOMAN, HOUSEWORK, parjanct on caah r*gj«»*f.*wd.eg; S^. ^ESJja1""' 4707 Hls'1l*r>d ELECTRIC MOTOR SERVICE-RE- live in. EM 3-04*4. 5 oral oft lea Aoo.v t»40 Coo toy Lokt Rood. W7-*wa.____________palrlr ] and rewinding 7IS 1 Flko. wpii i kffi'F&iMYRR "itfll'IlBBBL Rd., UhHin Lm»r---------PART TIME DISHWASHER — Olv-nr eE 4 37*1 mutt fat ovtr II* Apply Paul't YOUNG LADY TO~ LIVl IN -AND Pv*Y'« CooHr liS* Inn, gt-4057. GENERAL TRUCKING SERVICE -Homburgor, 775 Pontiac Troll, help In tmall rott homo. MS-OWi. RiAL ESTATE Toptoll, till dirt, tond ond grovel, PPMMPVC W*'M Lake. VOUR "ROAD TO SUCCESS" . .......“ _'_C. _______________ haekhoo work, bulklgilnp. _ rillNINlL I O HAIR STYLIST WITH EXFIrT- DO. YOU hpv* an AVON ------------------Mgbd-------- ---------- JOB, OPENINGS fOR fALt- u ragulorly? Alterations men's STOCK MARKER | !• High school graduoto ego 17-27. i Fir mo non! work. Bloomfield Fashion Shop. „ 245 W. Maple_______Birmingham HOUSE CLEANING, -1 DAY WEEK. real estate Investment, ant and new home -mssTTI A >1147 Phone Operator Marking Room __ __ gmpany benefits Include life and —?1?" "?."*?• ">*_«««». ................................ edical Insurance, tick pay, vac*- HOUSEKEEPER — S DAYS, MOTH- ^ on. dlicount on purchooat. . V ariosi home, 3 school ago chlldran. ALLY HIMSELF WILL TEACH YOU I Live In. Birmingham area. Ml real **t*t*. dTHTBI. i . Apply In parton, 7:10 to 5 h rnuld otter prOWCM. t . _ ...... ..... ■ ________..rnlno oDnorlu- KINZLER, REALTOR, 5717 nttl. SfortnoPtoP Wg ChHitm.t \ Hwy. 474-2235 profits. No experience necessary. THE STEREO AND MUSIC DIVI-DRESSMAKING Part time., work. Phone FE 4-45M slon of Readers Digest sales and -llemtlont to' ar writ* FO Box 71, Drayton .Sarvlcaa Inc. hot a carter oopor- Plain*.._____________________ -tunny tor the right men! current i_____i____i___ :—-JU!. .~j~u' ■-----* g and aualltlfed toads tumllhedl II Lonuscaping Sin Wanted NL ar r. 0 YOU have the initiative and drive ■" be given the opportunity A-l SOD, PEAT MOSS. TOP SOIL, Dressmaking A Tailoring 17 iaIIOHiNG and Bodef: ft 4-9QS1 18* A PENNEY'S1! HOUSEKEEPER FOR DOCTORS I — — lependeble, live Aden. ■ ____________ _ KH chlldron, Glngellvllle , BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED s Warren, r 482-4720 ii - Tall 1 Tuaaday only batwoon 11-13 rx TatoPhana 474-301. START WORK NOW expERiENCip truck ^iWr, . NEW OPPORTUNITY P’ARlvTlME INCOME man lx 7 auaOfl* salary to HOUSEKEEPER, MONDAY day lor naxt 4 weeks 125 474247S IMS S. ' 8V_ V ii EXCELLENT CARE POR ELDER- -334-1472. Instructions—Schools . 10 E BASIC INCOME TAX COURSE NU,4lw6 TTvT-in~ano apple"pi^i^'^wraTrap out EamF"good' meiV^duriinp tax j Moving on3 Trucking^ 22 ATTENTION AN'S ond LPN's Vi SSi— Rechaatar i__ houseKKW-ra-L.^1 nTI motorlrout^e g AA MOVING VfSSSSiSsufiS IOUSE KEEPER, LIVE EQUAL OPPORTUNITY ■ _ EMPLOYER TANDEM DUMP TRUCK DRIVER wpervlaer.l pltals. Call 334-7154, Ext. 3.__ | BABYSITTER WANTED J TO' > Exparlanca TSSnSSL ***** *•+ cast apafatloni important, lae* background daslrable. w - - „BB ply John Bean Division. IMS S. nr Park. FE Cedar, Lansing, ntCMtary. ■ -;o- dows area. it73-2442. __ BABY SITTER TO LIVC IN. PER- t fL|M :tober 25, | R. Block 11 S. Bal- —4 BABY SITTER tr y^ort it km, Waterford Hlil' __FE 2-3M3._ 1 jg HOUSEWIVES J expanses, I . Coll pair. 121 W. Fourth Stro4 77 or 424-351*. BOB'S VAN SERVICE MOVING AND STORAGE FREE ESTIMATES =ULL TIME REAL ESTATE SALES- room and man. Phene lor eppt. OR 4-2222. WHI Inji w«nn> ,ni™nnt Ray O'NellRealtar Oakland Unlvanlty 3520 Pontiac Ld. Rd. i _ F»fSWhOl Otflce > OR 4-2222 i Rochester, Michigan I ISlFURMUREIAlEI^WION; SfIn.no-N^”vAi^Ta-To i GUARANHED SALARY AND --------- ----------- I COMMISSION. CALL FE AC^AXLf(Z«C0Z n0,1 3-7114 FOR APPOINTMENT. BERTFALKNER ULATION DEPARTS THE PONTIAC PRESS TIM? STUDY ENGINEER: Opportunity tor young men wlj college training or equivalent I methods work. Knowledge of co reduction, lob layout and flo processes I BABY SITTER, LIVE transportatlan, vie. of « mm ana Romeo Plank Rda- call ST 1-4344 between 4-5. ________i LIGHT HOUSE- I start working Immtdlataly. caApEntbr with bquip- nd drug ■ Establii____ irrltory. This Is g challenging opportunity, blood on capoMwlos of salesman. Salary SIN par week ■lip commission. Trutpc tumtihad. paid, hospitalization, 1— ______________________________ .TOOL AND DIB LEADER POR DK- PARTS /Sail AildAFT AMO 'I?1* Tool shop. Opportunity tor IwrmanwH position. I a^voncomonl. Reply Pontiac n~M| " TOOL MAKER UNDER ACE 54 - JOURNEYMAN CARO OR 10 YEARS EXPERI ENCE REQUIRED. APPLY AVON TUBB, 4TH AND WATER ST., /VO- ROCHESTER. "IdllMna IBM TRAINEE POR MACHINE SHOP, wrtos ~mmmS?? tom wlllln9 •* to*rn on oil typos of ■ — machlnas. EM 33071._______CASHIER. _____ _ ___ computers!TREE TRIMMERS. EXPERIENCEQU women L. bo considered as IBM No. 340 *3 par hr,, young men willing to 7*JB Boy Roafauront, Tologrot - ^ ---. i ^ jj p". hr < apply and Hur _____ „ ______________ |P morning* I •-*«-. *sm w umu sirobie. Send resume and salary. W* ara an We ore adding to pur soles staff for our busy fall season. If you wish to supplement your income with part time work, we can train you for sales. Business-like appearance and a pleasant personality a requirement. Apply personnel department daily between 9:30 a.m. and 9:00 p.m. Montgomery Ward _ __ ____________PONTIAC MALL BEAUTY OPERATORS TO WORK HOUSEKEEPER, LIVE IN, GOOD - s..-. 5/---u t— 1— ----- - elderly lady while per- OR 34740. I S. Cadar, baby SITTER. 4 PAYS. ■ IVE IN. 2 children, 5, 4 yrs. MY >4477 BABY SITTER TO LIVE IN, 14 OR over. OR 3-4442. SALktWOMAN. riiLL evenings or Sundays. Bakery, 124 W. 14 Mile, xn. Ml 4-7114. ' __________N'S ASSISTANT. EXPE- lg.25, rlanced. Nino Hair Stylist,' 2507. Aluminum Bldg. Hems j ■ ; Ixcovatiat ^ | A ALUMINUM SIDING-STORMS j BULLDOZING AND GRADING. PE, Rental Equipmeat FE 5-7545. JO* V, 5-2720. Milford i R. R Melvin 4 Son. _____ 3 BULLDOZING, GRADING. Moplo, Birmingham. ErlHHlMBi ... Flint. I Heltzners N T E E D ALUMINUM estimates. Call 473-0107. Evas, call from 07.07. Deal direct, 343-7747 or 017-5604. 'ty M*^ ----- SEWERS. WATER LINEt. SEPTIC ALCOA ALUMINUM SID- Wald, repair and naw. FB >7)22. i cessing system. Should have a facilities. Friendly LITTLE DUTCH TREAT RESTAU-mnq conditions. Immediate root, opening so~> ix<* nine. Ask for Mr. AAontgom- cook and porter . , Ply In a*— VILLAGE RAMBLER 444 S. woodward Ava. Birmingham, Michigan " NIGHT * itflEf. ___________ 'wty MiPOLMHkaab laoy. i t*Hb rapn welcome, to keep home tor child-h. Mornings PE 4-0354. AWNINGS. SUPERIOR. FE 4-3177 — Architectural Drawing I OF PLANS DRAWN -----— 343-4504. Art Instructions PRIVATE TUTORING FOR i BROWNIES HARDWARE FLOOR SANDERS — POLISHERS WALL. PAraR STEAMERS RUO CLEANER — POWER SAWS 952 Joslyn Open Sun. FE 4-410S WALLPAPER! STEAMER Floor, sonders. polishers, hand sandars, furnace vacuum claanars. Oakland Fuel A Paint 434 Orchard Lk. Ava. PE MISS. DRAYTON FENCE CO. R„tB«rBrts r Addle SI.___________474-05311--------------------— ----- BIG BOY DRIVE • IN, DIXIE A *"—- Like—Telegraph 41 Huron. . „_____ 3275 Orchar Rd., Kaago Harbor. __ __________________ MAID FOR BEAUTY SHOP. AGE 3355535- ' ' '. ~ II toi 25ifNliw Hair Stylist. 2507 W^ Asphalt Paviug Floor Sanding^ ^ L t. CARL L. BILLS SR.. NEW AND,P old floor sanding, FE >5707. I ” JOHN TAYLOR. FLOOR LAYING! ' , Sanding and finishing. 25 years . | exparlanca. 332-4775._______ Road Maintenance heLPER FOR FURNiTURE STORE. OAKLAND COUNTY COURTHOUSE " * SL«*i* twmV /WFto In PERSONNEL DIVISION r isos N. TELEGRAPH RD. WKKk ______PONTIAC MICH, I . II netOt Of 14 Mil*. PHARMACISTS - REGISTERED, aWarnaans. — Assistant Manager . WANTED rk. Apply If to Co. 1532 S —h, ; btocki 9 SERVICE iWlisi axparlone*, salary ” opaii! Mftanars — Pontiac ^ O^eopathlc Hoaplfal. 334 PORfERS VENDING PERSONNEL Repairman, servicemen, route supervisors. Opportunity tor advanco- ---- * nationally expanding —--------nt corp. Da- CASHIER-PBX Top pay tor lop girl auto dealer. Bi ASPHALT PAVING Tag Asphalt Paving “ A-l I Furnace Repair >7370. i, fringe tx i. Sub- ... „ _____ . HELPER, I—------- week, ll»* In er out. EM 3-0242. _______ NEW CAFETERIA NEEDS: CARV- ,r experience pro- er, counter girls,- cooks, waitresses, . 1 co”ld*f .a” 443 DRIVES, PARKING LOTS. WHAT? employe benefits, South Adorns, Birmingham. Reliable Contractors. Inc. FE 2-2414 I . .___________ _______________________ . . , hospitaljiatlan — NURSES' AIDES, SOME EXPERI- npmBvuAY cpuriAi ht ff 's-^sm OIL AND GAS SERVICE. FURNACE ROOFING AND SIDING, OLD, NEW •tc. Permanen me* necessary, Rochester or**. °*|Vf^.y_?EfCIALI,T' FE 5‘4M# REPAIR’, MOREY'S-4»2-l»10. . and hullOgp. Guitar repair and men. See or call _446-24» orJSL4377. _ Fro* Estimates._______________„ » ------------------------- leaks. 20 yrs. exp. All work guar. PARTjTIMq BOOKKEEPER' FOR DURNEN ASPHALT .PAVING CO Janitorial Service I Cuthhl8' Ft ****• OFFICE CLEANING “ CLARKSTON ROOFING COMPANY, I Insurance and own. 47>7277. „ ______ BRYAN F. FENCH CO. NEW ROOFS, REPAIRS, INSURED c. FE 2-2414 Estimates freely given.. FE 5-4773 j ' “‘“J Gag *— “ MM service station, 5 af 4 Gat our bid Expansion program and promotion laava vacancy far anaroanc, young -— ‘■crBtll Mb IMbfto. Age —mfrhi IF YOU LIKE MUSIC AND HAVE A WAY eWwtoMi nrwh-te mfc, WITH PEOPLE Imum. Mum by abto^to meet peo-| Let us train you I* become a sal XmabaftocUm. abagrti tralm raprasanlallv* af th* world's lai ZSH fHw» bttomTso* Mr! ^^noxrt highly rsspactofI nr Springer, Seaboard Finance Co.,1 ak store chain.. Featuring SI* IlMlTFarrvIf. S3>7017. I way ptonos. Hammond _ orgai ,r„T-..ini.. ■■ ... Conn band Instruments, Magnav 'j Tv', Fjth*r. *'*r“ *"U jnony ofh I YEARS OR OLDER Clerk-Typist ... estimates . _ _ asphalt seal 3-1757 or FE >7371. PANKEY'S POWER TOOL DEMONSTRATOR public o backgroui till. Exp pitallzotion, paid vacation, steady WANT work. McElroy CaHMan. 1411 W. hwi.............. ’* Mlto, Btrklay. - some delivery, must have good _____________ ................ . driving record. Houghton & Son, HT =RI«T • R ambler. Olds. GMC Trucks. SB ABLE TO HIGH SCHOOL GRAD-1 .NrMeln Strmt, Rbdtestsr UATE. GOOD TYPIST, SHORT- IWANTED DRIVERS AND HELPERS wo” SALARY.UL'nO°^RDAY,SORTER, FULL.TjME. CALL 4*2 tor estobinhed solt^ drink route. WORK. PAID HOSPITALIZATION, 6W0 between 10-4. Ask tor Mr *PP*r ’H py*» Beverages. 731 j days VACATION AFTER 4 IKonde._________________________________ _F»#therstons, Pontiac.---- MONTHS. WRITE P.O. BOX 117, RESPONSIBLE WOMAN TO BABY, 'WANTED REAL ESTATE SALES- PONTIAC MICHIGAN FOR AP- sit In my hom* 4 days waakly. ..... -------------—a Neat POINTMENT. AN EQUAL OPPOR- Must tove chlldran, rat. ragulrad. BLOCK LAYING AND CEMENT _____________, _ WALT SEIBER ASPHALT-PAVING . PART-TIME INTfRVIEWERS FOR FE >7543 Or RE H6I3 *■■■■'- “'-Ion surveys. --------------------------—— BIRD preferred, not ixperlonco desirable. I.... ---WB BO» 171. ROOFING AND REPAIR. 412-4770, QL 1-4441 ROOFS: NBW..RBPAIR Landscaping SEA nOOFIN | bonded and Inaureo, ( ^c l tuarentood. 442-4747. Sare&.'S.'t Auto TOWajfllE-*-PHtigii TwiiSi. Apply cars and hveks, Ford axparlanc* Products Tool Carp-. "5 pratorrad. So* Bill Marble, John Rochas tor Rd., Clawson. frcAylliS pord, 42* Oakland Ava., jAW|ta¥.~PARTTiM¥:~JANdT DA We need a. man who is experienclfd in power tools who can demonstrate as well as sfIL Part tima evenings and Saturdays. Many company benefits. Apply personnel department daily between 9:30 a.m. and 9:00 p.m. Montgomery ’ Ward Block Laying Call Mr. Warden dan Realty. WANTED: REAL ESTATE SALES COMPLETE LANDSCAPING.1_____ ddlng, seeding, discing, plow- CHOICE rtrtxt - - -g a B8* “sat •?.?!“ aa.a jsjisK'i.tsa!1 _------ MERION BLUE SOD. PICK UP OR Sind-CrEVtl-Pirt I BLACK DIRT, SAND AND GRAVEL ,1___________FE 4-277) ___ tnirw top SOIL, CLAY LOAM dirt. FE 44511. Tree Trimming Service SYLVAN Miracle Mila, Building Modernization l-STOP BUILDING SERVICE, FREE _z—|gj hF--— ------c— Chamber BAL TREE TRIMMING, REMOVAL ______________________9_____I . Fra* estimate. FE >4447, 474.3510. SODDING. SEEDING, END LOAD- fevpgiT TRIP SfeRVlbi—TRIM-*v, Dump Truck, Top Soil FE expert tree service, trim- 625-1744 delivered. 3401 Crooks. I TONY'S COMPLETE LANDSCAP-Ing, Morion Mu* or Kentucky sod, laid or. dallvarad.- top son. — nil. 4C2-4714. __________ I Coleman, WAnBfBD EXPERIENCED MAIN- _ SALES LADY, EXPERIENCE NOT| 0. D. GRINDERS SPLINE GRINDERS DETROIT BROACH & MACHINE CO. -I Rochester QL 1-7111, BARTENDER, MUST B* FULLY oxporiancad—Ouffy's Cooley Lake AND PAINT MBN> ALSO _______ _____ ■ RELIABLE HOUSBK|EPElT i^llifwSf'call Sr COUNTiR WAITRESS,. OAYfc_AP:l $S"?ld child. vTwfeo^dV "TL1 1‘tyMS"1*' "" v ^ BBWiBmmi. zrJWTME—Cwwf 4-47M ntghft,--- LATHE^OPERATOR POR SMALL ** wtflrthnf tor^craMtos*5printor.^Ow-" Wol5fT*SSl *TS£h SSady* r3ffhw* Or’fiT^aS TO SHARE ^rvocessirY^ogMy A*.,%brst ,M. ssffrS?5£r* ff® ^«.,nB«.rrEto>7Si advertising er printing talas as ___ GARAGES. 20x20'. H7S. WE build any sits. Camdnt work — Fra* estimate. Pody-Bultt Garage 1W 2-CAR GARAGES, 22'x20', $075. CE-mi. mant work. No money down. W* ---------------------— 3* rough In houses as Sprlngflald I Store, Mirada Mila, i i, 6117 ihlhlMi CREDIT CLERK, EXPERIENCE ~ ig Machines witrii.op. EQUAL OPPORTUNITY Bump Shop Foraman for Chevy Beelerihlp, muet be re--i—8WMT1P--«-i Machine Shop mu K*ND egregh and Huron. 2 to * pjn. tol^WAViiSi po* mi I P.O. box 57, LarnbiB, I All igpHot villi ba haM It, ,un.in, I cyfldanc*. .RADIO BENCH MAN. IMMEDIATE I fulMlm* its i d y amp toyman t, I Phan* Ml 4-5222. RBSTAURANT PORTER,'~7;0'>JK. . I to 4 F.M, 4 Bara, Sunday* atf, top Si JflgjpWT Pw*w- 1« w. ROOFERS ONLY. SHINGLBRS AND hat roafars, axpqriancad. Top pay by th* square only. 852-1450. SALESMAN - S Pin PER WEEK Education Offtca, 4» S Orian or caH 47>427l. BUTCHER, PULL tlME, APPLY Fo*»*3rr bwJ GRINDER I D. - 0.D, HONE OPERATOR INSPECTORS CRIB ATTENDANT OVERTIME, FRINQBt, DAYS M. C. MFG. CO. 1 ff» 1» indlamvaed Rd., Lake Orton CAkPENVjhs, ROuqw- „P d al-l An equal aapariunRy amptoyar man and t^'rMACHINIST, qPyCinilfirY 1 Sales Correspondent: Carter Opportunity h opportunlly h uccasstul saw* __ ____ background with anglnaoring or iaamlcM training, profacabTy bi aumglng , equlpmant spoclalty sales. Customer contact by Phan* and car- r«nS..tt>-Pfoduction assemblers WIXOM Ford Motor Co. Assembly , Plant SALESLADIES r register we urs. Vacation SCAR GARAGE, S077 AOOITIONS i Also Alum, windows, doers, sldln I GRAVES CONTRACTING Free Estimates _____UR 4-1 . Full benefits. Christ- CARPENTRY AND REPAIR WORK SECOND COOK WANTED. B I R- fXpERX REMODELING AND AD-?r^* Chrls*mas,°tonus?8”all ° M* r appolntir RE>T, T1 marlca w CURB GIRLS . l, top wages. Harvey's Crass, Christmas* bonus,-call sa, 5474 Dixie, Water- 4-41W tor appobitmanl. . SEE THE RE>T, THEN SEE OURS. Lakes Tree Co., Trimming - Removal—Fra* Estimates Fireplace Wood-42»414 TALBOTT LUMBER Glass installed In dears end dows. Complots building sei 1025 Oakland Av*. FE ■ Ray's Tree Service —■no. planting and rw tnt tor Dutch Elm Ol exparlanca. 343-7444. Trucking Moving and Storage Painting and Decorating 1-A PAINTING - INTERIOR - EX- GENERAL TRUCKING AND EXCA-'»ting. Top tell, fill dirt, sand and travel, back hoe work and bull-tozing. No fuss, no muss, lust call HAULING AND RUBBAm, NAME ---- ..... - y tlmo. FE 7-0475. Light Truckli^ and Hauling LIGHT MOVING, TRASli HAULED. FB 4-4344 Raasonabla. FE 4-1353, ,- MpUSE;:hAr>iNO~Airo. MOViN^*^HT,*,|OF AND EXTERIOR LIGHT TRUCKING AN»|kuUNB S IMMEDIATE OFENINGS FOR trafejne centarancai.il XMrtrr *Mlfiy and-Hi.... buiw ernttmt accacetnca < errata respect af ftatd solas n rssantstlvas. /Mail com*lata r urn* to John Been Division, i: *’ -^al^p3rtun’ity EMPLOYBR Metal finishers , Welder combination Journeyman electriciai. TED'S FONTIAC MALL OOCTORr ASSISTANT I spoclellf). win ink I Tims., Oct. 5, 1:30-4:34. u.~ie« urmr Qb», Plastering Service TT^Rn*1 Dressmaking, Tailoring MM rang* araeram. Call u* b» "H'TLLi s^i ewal OPPORfuNlTY DRV CLEANING ^NT DRMRB* >ymnra n*x», W*gwy»YBn 7_ ' woman-tor ^!;tojN».^W^ESS«S ANI repair, i &Fw«SSBr B Inlarvlaws bartenders, dlshwtshars. *** Cooley PM* KmB Ski Rarart, 71 — — T:—_ -—.________________ I KHabRk. CI*rtn*ra, DRY CLEANING INSPECTOR. OGG WAltRBU. PULL TIME, EVENING ALTERATIONS ALL TYPES, KNIT Ctofnars, 377 Bail Pika. , work, Rocco't, (171 Dlxla Hwya| drassas. leather coats. OR >7171. DRY CLiANING PLANT DEtlRES P|r«7,p" "BlRB, / ..J i ORES* MAKING-ALTERATlOkiS woman tor spatting department. WA1TRESSE* AND SHORT ORDER MR*. JOHNSON-33S-7W PLASTERING AND REPAIR. ssonabla. George Laa.-FE >7723 ACCOUSTICAL CEILINGS, ADD. Mi and repairs. 343-S347. AND EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks - Saml-Trallers —Pontiac farm and' Industrial Tractor Co. a* S. WOODWARD PE 44441 FE 41441 Open Dolly Including Bendoy WaB Oeaa^B .________ BLOOMFIELD WALL .CLfANERS chine mSr man ar aqutvalsnt No phena caH*. BHL.TTLT' "*' ^*ar‘j|grgg *1 pressway, Wlxom, Michigan. An Bqual Oppotruntty fiiMkiill taction guarantaad" PillBl. WALLS AND WINDOW CUSaNING FE 3-001$. . - - DRUG AND COSMETIC CLERK, *r part nine, Russ' Caintry 4M*""*'1* * 4a WORK TOMORROW Warahausa, Landscaping, __________ Onwaaxtg, H*n ,ym*n. JOB* WAITING — apply ready SS. - -T-»lwAtfBtU prater a woman tima iral atflca axparlonca “» dkRanwTPjwe addrass ragUra giving qualtflca-Hens to Fontlac Press Bax M. XPIRIBNClO BOOXKEEP-ar or /BBE3 to wMr^ds^^jt --------------------- njrtjBjFEfHbi QLuSSf AdoIv Ii ravra**' icSnisSy ... wSkurodBR lSerwiDB TRACK W. YOUNG MAN OV'BR 21~TO WORK Ml ton* In gas itatlan, days. jnvr— -j _________ 5147 Dixie HWVT Drayton Plain*. Mff. .OMBbira.-er yr soigw. n- • nnJ r.-L 332-4224. RxlIkillwtitO O P P IC i GlilL K00m «" —4 vmikir racy— -------- tor parmananl psrt-tbM wart wffli Pull or pert-ftm*. Paid vacations. TUUNO McN local company. Warkbra year will Howttlllnlten. Lunch haor and 14-M. NOW TAKING APPLICA- extend tram approx. Oct. 1 to Toe* attonranc*. Apply In pats saraisasrwvis su%sssss&t w VANCEMENT. INQUIRE 114 N. Ing ^IflaittonaVPonttoe Pros. WANTED: BABY SITTER FOR TWO PERRY. , Box 50. I chlldran. Call FE 3-477*. t D—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER >,1»«5 tats KARTAGt wSTfmJSJ!, &W1 tWt H»ipw5: 5MALL CliAM- Lmrt mauling '~1Ig 1 LUUJ> ttVUk I I DOOM AND GATH WITH TWO I ' —» -jmIUpE.- i i rwSEjiwh ■ >; w«hE' ' ' $9990 273 Be4dwki Ave.. call Wit , Rancher on war M. U..„ __ ■ ■ 04 catenets. No money down. Y0UN6-BIITH0MES RRALLY MEANS better-gilt I RUSSELL YWNO.^nvt W. HURON .4111* Htmi ' Aft) C^L u------' WTj 49IS* Hmns ■HTm______| Silver Loin Const. Co. EAST SIDE •r ritinnff musr mii nw fnarp, i*0 P*N*f' NVIW llBtnin. II-foot Hying - room. MK beee- AUBURN INCOME WRIGHT REALTY Wt BUY EQUITIES HOUSES. FARMS. APARTMENTS LOTS. LAND CONTRACTS , I, Qrvol Gtocvmb. WEH. Inqubo at S73 Baldwin. Avo.. call >*g£g'JfgBr »MWtt*>w> ~^lljnash.no esTRra^ir«rn panTT- duiit. CARRirEO i-EEPROOm WSSBnTSSS*^ SJjQQp^ - ""__________________________ **----------------ig«t Hmmav “WS ” Tuo^irtEflEQ ts «0^|LAZENBY4wSHjS,TL' SSKJVaHJ-Wsy, GILES torn nW gmpte tunbmtdtpaca. Car- down, balanca land contract. • INS ROtlnR throughout. full basement. JUDAH LAKE ESTATES. Nleo 3-s&auss^ai-ahHs>s'i wm wwiwiiw www m n*« nwfM MMnifUl tirricid MML ll||4 btdrwm homw. ou hNt. commu-1 • AWING SWWgyag — ««»•»» SSsSwaftsa1 -----* GOOD IIWBTMWT J.Mlm off silvekbeu rd. I i muMM-mlSRj smiths iJBBfcs “""j HOME AND BUSINESS ' WIDEMAN BEUIRE HOMEBUILDERS SIS SNomfUW Moor Luther '■ ft tvo tils To s n --------------- .Qs» INDIAN VILLAGE huron gardens, smoii SMroom 4-room bungalow, l-car garage, hofno. MaiTjir Ggt. Wgljj. otw^^ttttog. oftiwo «nd kMeJwi^etectrlj stove i*m WtaT'recriSksweom, aim porch! HUMPHRIES REALTY f QA M417 i highway, kXTxSOO' (over OCA ITIUK on eomor zoned commer- KtALIONS _______a 1st. Deposit required. StM parochial mo. 040 Mondon Dr. OR HUI. Lone eft 3 BEDROOMS, LOVEL HOMEOWNERS I -Seotoa. - -FE- H»ll SAVE = tedroorn hornet, only'l'iott. large. Pioneer-Voorhei* , let. Bear gorogo, Kill' basement.! Srlrk vnwfmun bunaaiow cot NMPLffiMS' SSfcttB E^ySSLlSSt.’ 5r (SnRalS lawn. HIM coah to mo rigs go. Mt. UL 3-3SM, Ml pAUl jg^ R#fl^ 1 - SSI W. HURON J - I neighborhood, large lets, woH re-| - _ 1 •trictod, moisnsbfy prtood. Coil to-! ONST44526! aKeRtTrHODES. Broker I mg end « chinory. M MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE Highland n. Coot II _. OTTER HILLS FE AtH0 Builder', own homo. Hoi ovary-bo MM. 7-room, " HIGH on the RIOGE r gLTgfjCTgg^ R—t Hoosts, 0Mfontlifcti 40 ranch^ W.bR- *• t* OF ^O’i.eeneAu un run non rail ' hang- tom-bunt 1-bedroom, TO eh with Vf at living I .,«. 2-BEDROOM, NO CHILDREN. CALL k» Jus* Phono FE 443S4 tor o before 5. FE 0-0001. , ■ guotoflon. K. 0. Hempstead 13-BEbROORLtW BATH, FIRE- WiNtBO Children to Board 2B JE&. —~ —-1 _ ,)25 plus SSO. deposit. A RELIABLE LICENSED HOME First and lest month required. day, hour, woe*. FE >4346.____1 Reply to Box 4333. Auburn Heights, CHILD TO ROOM AhO BOARD IN -------------------- ju-tiM month. Callbatwoan 1M or ________l _ p.m. 173-1717. h25r^lnwt**d5ol5m Rottremont SILVER LAKE GOLF COURSE. ! sola. Flno I end«: aping G------ • value. Mott commending i SMITH CLARKSTON MILL POND Frushour t gracious largo oMor homo of , , ho typo Clark,ton to famous tor. Is & illoblo now tor ywr considers- ^ 11' St^ublej Fu" m **"■ ii.ooo DOWN^Broom iwm. to Wv. orion twp. i-jggs, g5Tt*W3a Owner wtilb5?Tt!ko rooson.bto QILES REALTY CO. FE 54175 ^ ‘ MULTIBUS LISTliW SERVICE NICHOLE List H*r»—All Cash for Your Homsl bast side , Throe-bedroom, lVk-Olery bungalow. R. J. (Dick) VALUET • .L^.uTaM!^^A mP Oakland Aye. OsenM >HA TERMS. or hours FE 04410 or FE 4-»li- WEIR, MANUEL, SNYDER & RANKE Woodward. Rlrmtngtu... ----0 PHONES 544-3333 Vfl tiTi. t^- 'oeiu',15 mo WreWaw^W 4ww M. •SUSCrtS^imL -*****&■ ----------------------- w m i iV OWNER: MIOOM fiii^LKViu : __1 mourn, npty PowtlMC Prwt to €. Orchard LiF ■fi|~ hOUMf*. BMMt BATH UTI1 ITY. ”US S& }S3** Y 3-6497. 2-BEDROOM. NEAR CASH FOR FURNITURE AND AP* WEAVER AT ROCHESTER 4ryor and extras. 524.500. con* down plus costs. DRAYTON AREA - 512,250, 0400 down phis costs. Don't.delay, see today! JOHN KINZLER, Realtor 521* Dixie Hwy. 074-2235 Multlpto Llottng lorvlco West Bloomfield A TERRIFIC BUY clous family homo, — one Roar, atom fireplace ream, lr kltchon, -“““ s KENT Opdyhe Road.____ 3-Bedroom Brick Rancher | fnnDt~ nsrtrinr . Immediate occupancy. 300 North ter apftener, double geraoe, lot Hill Circle, Rochester. Owner will loO'xSOO'. Shown by appototmant. •how home Saturday only. 3135 534,*00. Coll 43B3M0.__• » ^^ss^SSSRiSmt% *t*j**m mWaSft51 or appliances and what have you. We'll auction It or buy It. * B & B Auction ' MM Dixie ' OR M71*i HOME OWNERS' GROUP WOULD Now Doing Custom Building on Available Building Sites I Your Plans or Ours OR 3-51S3, ME 7-S1T3. BOilLEVAPD HEIGHTS Applications new being accepted ll convenloncei. only 37, 30 Contact Resident Manager --------------- « I * *“"d- «t Votondr_______j.family - Fay to rhseH, tlp-t FOR PIANOS. FURNITURE. COMMERCE AND UNION LAKE condition, everything separate, SI cal Instruments, tools., etc. FE. Rd., 3 small rooms and shower, *50, 52.400 down on wntT contract, stove and refrigerator, .washer, appear. 329,500, tertno, R0LPE H. SMITH, Realtor we.it.r . 244 S. Telegraph 1 school, f rooms, spoctouo family. S1S.JOO. FE 3-7141 EVES. FE 3-7302 Kama, OS' carpated bod room, tiro- _ ------"...................---------■ placa, 4 badroomo In « 11, gas WEST SUEUREAN ____________________ boat, all wick extorter. Bear 5-rm. and full bath. Cabinet sink -—*» «>-•—*i-i commercial or In kitchen. Full bamT.. all boat. ig. OIMMT , Attached garage- See ttito at 14,500 ■ — Terms. j OVER 4 ACRES - Ranch l-bedrm. home. 214t. cerpetdd Nv. rm. with fireplace. Tile bath. Hooted porch. Oil heat. Gorogo. Pino Knob area. »15,000 - Tormt. „ Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor 2200 Dbclo Hwy.' at Talagraph FE IW1S3 or PE g.t*«4 1 payment required. Only I7J50. SCHRAMI ARRO • pnmiUT incumc, com-; IV turn!shod, MB bosomont, boat, Bear gorogo, pavod t, walking distance to down- $900 Down 1 HERE IS A NICE 3-BEDROOM ranch, priced lor quick Mlo. t I will pay yau to tovastlgate this one. Located to a shsrp mlgh-borhood. IS ml las wool et town. Soiling ter SMW. Call and ask how yau can buy lt. JACK- FRUSHOUR I MILO STRUBLE REALTORS TIMES JS^SJNWroom Si HIGHLAND RD. , dining roam and ----- cash paid for - ...._____.... MS I SIMM — SMR dawn. ■ J. J. J0LL REALTY U 4-5573 WAW*'.Ui» ptoftm^ sAED- recnod parch, • W4itTt Fantastic is the Word r this quad-lovol tour-bat :e (rant noma In Lekowoo M. lust 12 miles from m Ponttec. It has full co lit, flraateca In living r 4 family room to- toko off dining'n *15,900, to CLARK ! DONELSON PARK I logos with this I family home. Wa jr% iSy?vliw]roo tog room, lVb both ANNETT Sharp homo on fruit trees. Thli right to soil i WHY NOT LET Ivon W. Schram , ^ ^ ■ BE YOUIl REAL ESTATE MAN HAGSTROM: 11H Joshm *— HURON. OR — — — IMMEDIATE POSSESSION on story and o half homo with 3 rooms, has oak floors plastered walls. IVb BPtlN, basement, oil hOat, spam ... _______ recreation room, . wall-to-walt and gas carpeting. Bear garage, pavod tlful Ian street and lake privileges. — shade iron, iw->. ■ 513,900. Terms. ( good tecetton, 322,900. WEST SIOE INCOME CLOSE-IN I Bedrooms 1“ *h?f£28;JL*J ¥,ar. « u "XT'Cl h®"'* I** h^^atto-My^ I, gat heat. Garage. Its coots an FHA. I - Close In MOST UNUSUAL WARDEN REALTY 3434 W. Huron, Pontiac 333-7157 ^ ^ DREAM STUFF Sagamore MateT, 7B9'S. Woodward. Lags crackling In merbie flroplaco rrrf-Tr=rr;—s? ssxes—of mult Dunxxc llvina room. OMf- HAYDEN 3 Bedroom Tri-Level I ___________________ PHONE 682-22T1 , , , . BATEMANi T,d£c*£iii'S:l'or I Brs A ■*—|J-Y ■*"* ’ . MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE £j£i C TRADE • [ Open DAILY 9 TO * rrS? vtW BATEMAN wiU guarantee \Y’ A sale of your present home.1V‘riJ-v-Ljr kJJ-,1N f / . • - - - Your Neighbor Traded ^n». |. Why Don't You? - sttechad Beat Coll for appointment. ...... Question? $12,900 ! need • 2-bedroom budgot^rlcod Attached Geraoti home? Comer lot with blecfciQP —.S Paved drive leading to elu-corport? Waterford ^ Twp. ECON-O-TRI | Hi -Jtohbp. ..... Why Don't You? Split Level You must see this teveiy spill-, umscepeo oi mm « gyj.-» level three bedroom homo, naa-| Pavod streets and water 527,500. tied among the trees. Extra- -___ size living room, and separata ELIZABETH LAKE FRONT LOT I dbttoo (!)-----— ■---------— ■ *-* “ ■“ antarraini CLARK REAL ESTATE 3101 W. HURON ST. F E >7SM or OR 3-1*75 MultlPlo Listing Service mage. Very mw, • mna mm u—in pi 2nd floor. Largo tat. Full baeement, gas neat. SttAOt, Won bum terms. i Elizabeth Lake Front tet*aond Shade -reel. 3-bedroom ranch, an 1 apart- 1 Vb baths, larga kitchen and Snthly pay- family room wfth, flraoiaee. 0 with S3,- get baseboard heat. At Cf. 2^ Sylvan Lake Front * . rS.rml. LMM puy you can't. afford to ml Alio hot large living room w fireplace, aeporete dining roo full basement, tiled 27W n Charming Areom ..brick and OR 403*4 them taka you through thla lovt-^jly homo. Times Realty M*S DIXIE HIGHWAY ”STrih ofWotartod NIK) frame trMovol « IRWIN ftto' beta, utility/i FE 8-0466 _ /««nSisr * >a iss Nda^NtTffirs • tK^-R^tereflg% 8*1 , Brower RmI Estate . Y "* AME‘?ic5NA*HOMft' *^'1 LAWRENCE W. GAYLORD MITCHELL. SMm bWr^ --- _ 4I443M______’ ireodwuy A Pflnt M. ■" " Ji* __HQ. MONEY DOWHI MV 3401 * cNtont condition. Full besomoaf, get heat, city conventencea Near Km* Elvd. lalRng on FHA tertno. 140* down, plug mortgage caot*. John K. Irwin Church. 'RAY O'NEIL, Realtor 3520 Pontiac Lab Rd. Bttagji with dM0PMH fiik gild utility il__ __ . m _ *1*2^0°.q-iAN RETIREMENT ^ter^'jr^miSS^. "Kwi F« 1-521* >TUCKER REALTY AND SONS REALTORS Ft 544*2 J11 W. Huron THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1963 0-7 m ACRES. 9000 BUILDING. MjlgRpiv mllgaJ BRAND MW FI —ode lijTEttY [CMIGE R ATOR. OS. MOVER. US on iltni IIS. Refrigerator with Mem*™ Prfrly ' fifc hMS >ty ' 57 NfW FURNITURE Gat tlovt, US. fflmhz SLSr&jti Renewed Appliances tSMM.OO wsr>>« I h'lTnjlTi^fnfc "iiasinns* _________________M _______________________emotion tall |;yg (Good) $2.50 Wltklyi etc. Repo*iai3:>?; AllTfl pADTC YAftfi I$378 (B#ttW) $3.00 -Weekly ^oron'leed"** ------1 cHvTiK^JJ-iaM^TS (B.,t) $4.00V .:kl{-i55t---------------------- w*a_*------ IS hxllrflnn WvIV RinInMt >nrf real Lett—Acreage S4; 44VS ACRES, ROCHESTER RO, ItoRtlie, with 3-bedroom he >. F. Wolfe, lin Mdwotor I utlneti a ____„...__JBKcoh ... GROCERY ifh SOM. Watkins Lake iludaa^rMOf^MpW. ■ 500 ACRES BATEMAN GOOD FARMLAND $800 TOTAL PRICE SZS DOWN, S3S PER MONTH Open FREE COLORED BROCHURE^ 1*0 so* ecjes of good farmland where ragetaBWirlce. wheat, earn, fruit and mast iahythlng planted Amual cotnfall 45 Inches. NEW LIVING ROOM BAROAINS SPECIAL f-plece {brand, flow) living room:,no A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OF elSi living room write, two atopl FURNITURE - Consists of: tibia phlTiTaST * NEWSTOROOM BARGAINS 7-aSea**bedroom suite with double l-plere (brand flaw) bedrooms: dresser, cheat, full alia bed with Double dresser, bookcase bed and Irmersprlng mattress and box cheat, boat soring and ktnersprtnol spring to match. with I vanity mattress, two vanity lamps. Alt' Tampa. - . -i tor »m. St JO weekly. S-pieca dinette set, 4 Chrome chairs, formica top table,. 1 bookcase, 1 owr rug Included. All Ipr noo. . \ WYMAN FURNITURE CO. n E. HURON 1 FE 4-4SSI1 III W. PIKE _______I FE S-SIIDi 13 Travel Trailars By Kate OsannjlEE# Brwrtl-OIrt 781 UtftslBcjk_____________ ___________________ ^IMLUDOZINO - SAND, GRAVEL 3 THCROUOHBRED AMSRICAnIpRIVATE PARTY WANTS W • CHOICE BLACK : BKSMEI, MICHIGAN Busintss Salts, Inc. OHN LANDMESSER, BROKER S Si T- PEARSON'S FURNITURE . lit S. Pika . . _.rw >7 Between Paddock and City Han Open Mon. and Frl. *1119 F.m. 1 BIG PRICE SMASH Factory ClosBOuts 3 ROOM OUTFITS Look What You Get fort $317.00 J2.88_.WKLY, SINGER PORTABLE, $19.50. zag equipped. . “ ' curt's appliance for Salt Miscellansous ‘I can tell you one thing: If any toy talked to me the,A^, *^Sa»°aftafYplm16' BLACK way Romeo talked to Juliet, I’d die laughing' Pets-Huntlng Dogs 79 | ^ 3 BLACK KITTENS^ , ^ ^ MY htSftA****-*“' b0,'tfAln,d' Mtl APPLES. GRAPES. MAHAN OR- ! _______-------------- chard, 41S E. Walton, T blk. 6. ot 3 BLACK AND TAN COON HOUNDS joslyn. No Sunday sales. age 3 to S yrs. 3344174. -----1---------------------- A1 DACHSHUND PUPS, . - Stud dogs. JAHEJMS_Ffe I A-l POODLE TRIMMINGTflAM. POOVNS. g AND UP. 6B-M7S. H IH AKC CHIHUAHUA PUPPiES, STUO rffilL , ! Service. IMA TODD'S 333-7139. ™r°I' 1 __________n fm world - Ing factories throughout W® MVt 750 firm® ®f EWf RU Cl •wnau toPW9SFm»wwesr w T_______ ••Ch to Mil. Th®y art located 400 11573 1 Tfprtph_____FE 4-1513, Nq m0NEY DOWN ,mm "to capital of Brazil, BUSINESS CORNER IN PONTIAC, Largo double dresser, aha |L must tall to cleat estate. D. E. apd large mirror, lovely ha Purtley, executor. FE 24015. . and mattreii, 2 boautit BUSY RESTAURANT tlac? LOADeId urtSh^buslnaas.’ Tn-| large tl,.. - - . eludes banquet room that ants an, and nlce^ Formlca^lpp table over 300. Ideal for partners. Sub- wtth (MG ■••ntlal cash down. "'ll______ WARDEN REALTY j ^rM&n SINGER Zigzag equipped tawing macMna, GAS prawwnad, to cabinet. Does hams, *■ Thompson. GAS WATER HEATERS, I ___47 j Musical Goods .so. 0. .— ----- — -- - KICKING OFF OUR >944 STIHL AKC DACHSHUND pWfPIIsTSTUD chain saws. .Regular SI99.9S,_ ----- x— p- fcc - ,4, umitad time. Evans Equip- —_________ ment Sales and Service, 4507 Dixie WOLVERINE 4-3307. Highway. Clarkston. Ph. 425-1711. | * ----------no. THE LAROfST "REAL” FARM We Proudly Introduce for the First Timt in This Aroo! BOLES AERO A Most Luxurious _____Troval Trailr____ Aircraft Construction BOLES AERO For People Who Love Caravaning— Want Luxury ~ DISPLAYED NOW AT JACOBSON TRAILER SALES & RENTALS iMd 6STELHEIMS. FE AKC BEAGLES. CHAMPfON STOCK y;l PddlgrM "■ South America. Each < bean tolly surveyed, it rMtatonM. Mineral rights -All of aur titles are frat i Free booklets showing pk raqusaf. Sallg Bros. Real F'fate Camp any. 43 W. South street, in-itlanisxifli Indiana.-Telephone area cede 317—ME 4-432*. Wa -jra members of the Indianapolis Chamber or Commerce. CANAL LOTS Cheka building >l'*l - . 40x147. Cannactad wlth Syhran Lake. JACK LOVELAND S110 Cam Lake Rd. _____________403-1255 living rm I nyton ( ^ boudoir | IfcJSr*1' m JIM'S OUTLET ~;3Wtoft,n T PtoSrt5AitS5: Et <*k H.«ct*ry and Airport jggf"1-"*1 V5*bS& SScWiM7M 0R «•’» 0 GRAND PIANO, SPECIAL SITS. UP-— right piano. SSO. Pump orgar { Looks Ilka Spinet organ, SlD. >.i styled upright plane with mirror, S11S. Player piano, needs smsll repair, 095. OM piano stool, SIS. M Coast Wide Van Lina, 371 B. Pika AKC BRITTANY PUPS, SIS I 390 HIIHIeld eft Auburn one diock ! beyond Opdyka. I ALL PET SHOP. SS WILLIAM*. —...........imstert or--- service store I i Michigan. John- ire. Gold Bell stemps with all terchandise In stack. Davis Me- -------*~B. Ortenvllla. N R 3-S9SI TRUCK CAMPERS I Sleepers. New and used *395 Also rentals. Jacks, Intercoms, ‘scoping, bumpers, ladders, ------ ---------1335 bsagles, ^months. rWson- u^^H^jAwriso^D'6^ Housotrailers Used riding tractors and snow blade. WYMAN'S USED BARGAIN STORE At Our IS W. Pike Store . LAVATORIES COMPLETE valua $14.95, also bathtubs. . shower stalls. Irregulars. Te- GUITARS GUITARS GUITARS AKC i, Pontiac 3-pc. living room suit Apt. slit gas stove . nhr *19.95 —.............................. *39.95 Orchard Lakel. PE 44443. • Hf'!? LOST BRIGthTTCARPET COLORS, *39.95 . , , raster, them with Blue M»« Lgitra. toilets,. Flat top*, classic*, 1 electric j CEDAR BHORRS SUt^ *_VE(IY M *1,500 etch.' TWO-ACRE ™Jn Wbodt ___________ M CWklfin and 1-75 M. RoaftfcPN The finest In thd land. Cash « Closs “C" Liquor Bar Licensed business 1 FAUL JONES NSALTY BARGAIN BASEMENT 5uir §|bc wether »,«] yy 12 W. Huron FE 44550 Nice 7iirjfcnC^!£lop fri^I#r' K m Yoor Credit It Good ®t WymenJ. —colored" LAUC LIQ|u6r EARriEM TAKE- 000,1 '"f .***'“ EASY, TERMS_____________FE 3-3150 »rATM1j.UB'f COLORED, |4mi. "crooksd* Lake* LITTLE JOB'S ! ■ _____ ... 7BBM-S9W. il^ quTrt^i VkaT^ti w: * BARGAIN HOUSE . Antl^ws 65*A oil~heater~with~blower. »so. 9 tor appointment. Except Mom 1441 Baldwin at. Walton, FE 3-4043 ^ OR Sill- ____________________x. “ * Plritlrsftlcllghttouth of l-^l' ABO MARK R-S PRUSSIA, CUT OIL TANK. 140GGALLON, LIKE T~KASr _ Acres of Fret Parking | ?i!“, .9&m. ^tWtWWr new. SOS, 4145 w. Huron. *73-4555 . stock'ot aTl'tygas of guitari C0M MA *njo._ r — ----------------------— MORRIS MUSIC BRITTANY SPANIEL. 3VS 34 S. Telegraph Rd. old. Excellent hunter and pat. *n. tram Tai-Huren fe 3-0507 no paper*, fe 4-4903. Travel Trailers FE 4-0734 MANY OTHERS KING BROS. Fl Pontiac Read at OpdY> MUSIC CENTER I HAND'S 10 PER CENT OVER 1305 UNION LAKE RD. pkk up payment *30 par mo. Can be Man kcekr.- Call Credit Man-agar. FE 4-4500. PLAYER PIANOS BRITTANY PUPPIES FOR SALE 343410S Fg hml-________________________ | BASSET PUPPIES ’ L,Ke> AKC axcallant bleed line seven weeks. Stud service. 007-4012. ’ TAWAS, SLEEPS *, td 3 month*. GOODELL TRAILERS Rochester Rd. GREAT LAKES. REPAII ,10x50 RICHARDSON, 2-BEDROOM . colonial turnrshlngs. 853 3414. 10x55 MARLETTE, 10S9, 3-BED-rooms, W bath*, 334-9144. ,, 1954 MAYFLOWER HOUSlfRATT-9r. call FE 44391 before 9 pan. ■ 1959 24' HOLLY, GAS FURNACE, R e»c. condition. 333-3915. ■ * 1940 DETROITER. 0x34, EXCEL-' lent condition. TV -ncluded. Walton »• Trailer Park-B-17. 1944 GENERAL, 10x50, 2-BEDRQOM, , ---.. .- •- —0 Shlmmons CANINE COUNTRY CLUB 24' DELUXE YELLOWSTONE. Sic.-"--—ty C-E-7. CLARKSTON AREA Beautiful IVb-acro homeslles on Rpoo* Rd., nertn ot Halcomb Rd. WtR be Included In the wall ro-jtrktad Rolling Maadaiw* Sudvl- ESTATE REALTY CO. SSI N. Cass Lake Rd., Pontiac MONEY-MAKER Automatic toothpick, holder i. Wr to B. B D. Novelty Co. P.O. I “ , Mfotuor* . 1 GOOD GAS -DRYER, S39.00, electric and gas ranges, SIS to S49,| refrigerator, *39, 2 - place living TV » rooms, S39, hideabeds, dressers, m ' t- chests, bads, dlna“- — •• at bargain prkss. I- gain Dipt., 1440 Bi | FE 34043. » 1 REFRIGERATOR! , gas stove, I chr - 4 chairs, all tor I I cam. I Radios O TV, . GOOD C MA S-37B9 after 4 — ONE OF THE BEST BASEBOARD deals in town. Hot water base-M board, heat with enclosure and Hamtipr II II Mr fl A A ThoftlO- tometlc et'anly fStTfi"®' MORRIS MUSIC 34 S. Telegraph Rd. big, boarding. Pickup 1 9 to 4 dalty7*0S3-4740. 1964 VOLKSWAGEN and d®liv®ry.| condition, 91 .WJ PLYWOOD Ss^t^n^te f LiI " VP'-/A-*- electric guitar, with ami FULL DOOR FREEZER RSPRIG- fcOLOR TVJi FllOM HURRY I Th* I. 052-9772. CLARKSTON, 3- TO (-ACRE PAR- ton ri locetion Brick t cels, rsasoneble, 10 per cent down, quarters, tor details writs or cell Colring tlfe^ Sashabaw, 2- to Acre percale, | Tytor. LsNoBto Realty, .1.51.4 E. vinyl A*b«atos„tt reasonable, 10 jar cent down. De- Michigan, Lansing, Mien. IV 2-1637. . ressonsble, 10 par vsleper, 474-1740. _ COUNTRY ACRES ivahtogi SWISS. _ SPARfTIME INCOME Refining and collecting mar tram NEW TYPE high auallty c operated dispensers In this ar No selling. To quality you m have car. references, MOO $a SI, cash. Seven to twelve hours we “Across From tht Mall" and rods. 4744B71. . EttlenrSend, ti40,~47S-14407~ ~~ Alum.’comb' pro-huns' door" ' IJ7J0 • RECbRD PLAYER NEEDLES AND Delw* Alum, combination door 121.95 CARTRIDGES'. 90 PER CENT IN NO. 0 common nails, SO lbs. t 4.95 ’ STOCK. Basement lack posts S 5.9S I JOHNSON TV - FE *-4549 3'0"x3'0" Alum, sliding window $14.9* < 45 E. WALTON NEAR BALDWIN S'0"x4'0" Atom, sliding wlnqow'123.95 - USiD TVs 119.95 *’®''x4'0" Alum, sliding wlnSow S39.95 S’ Sweat's Radio B Appliance Inc. _ D..rrn ~ 5 _1 — r-> 433 W. Huron 334-5077 DUnT161Sl©r S ... HOUSE OF • POODLES 1 choose from, listed below PERSONALIZED GROOMING :es, select one to tit your SUPPLIES TOY FUFFlEt VLr RIVER BEND POODLES I AMERICA'S LARGEST {SELLING CAMPING TRAILERS NIMROD NOW ON DISPLAY > IMMEDIATE DELIVERY joTo'SIxtE highway CRUISE OUT, INC. i coma. Mare toll time. For persorwl _ 1 interview, write WINDSOR DlS- tw dialing. Must collect UlJH cash _ TR'bUTiHG COMPANY, 4 N. or SS.1B monthly. Guaranteed. Call I BALPH AVE., PITTSBURGH, PA. 1 cradtt manager, 3354303. Rktonan °*r 15302. InctodB Phans number. ! Bros. Sawing Cantor. A SINGER For SeIe Miscellaneous 47 opane*'daya a week 1 •.m.i aeedk dial central zig-zag -----------------—y. Sundays 10 to 3 .?aSM:.l>r^0*g*p5 l.A YOUR WIFE WANTS THE PLUMBING BARGAINS, luttomoles, appllqua. hams h0UM t0 ggm. yog want Stondbm toilet. 014.95. little maintenance. Stilt time to or; your aluminum aiding, have home Insulated, too, end every- rozr-xx -------- egnjfy pHA *1.095 - $2,115 - 13,495 - S3,095 WATERFORD - DR 3-8930 fl £ W||ton B|y4 — OMS. POODLE PUPPIES REASONABLE, ________Open Pally 94 See U* Before You DpcIde SfftrjT” "■ BOOTH CAMPER GALLAGHER MUSIC CO., poodle- cUffing and'oroom A'v«"'"«" “3,? - ---- P/n4544 Ing, any stylt, 4t»489C. _ •£. VgVPiJ67 LtFor*’ VI .i.mm wWAA■(at irirreuc tM Hi „5E9L5!Li2 Water- Y NOW AND SAVE . PURE SIAMESE KITTENS, $20 E CAMPERS* TRAILERS 47.99) 3 plece I Thomas sf Old, $495. m®m# IMS P®f ®cr®* C. PANGUS, Realty 4M MIS Orton Cell Collect NA 7-2*15_ HI-HILL VILLAGE CHOICE BUILDING SITES WINDING PAVED STREETS EXCELLENT OEAINAOB LADD'S, INC. FE S439?W'Loir?i371 attar 7:30.. CASH FUR Open Dtfty 1B4 ' 1»d! * J „V|« LteBHrtP bu jtjbt tT^t^TTbE- slrtbl* tot to Clertuton, will build to your Flew or euro. 41S-1319. | LAKE LIVING, PONTIAC li TO 15 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgantty needed. See . us Jjtfari'tn Stout. Realtor 450 N. Opdyka Rd. MME (MBMry T.. shower stalls with trim *34.95; Oulbransan full size organ, . 2-bowl sink. S3.95; Lava., «.9S»I A! . .AVINOS Oft FLOOR ... tub*, *10 and up. Pipe cut and MODELS AND OTHER TRAbE-INS ________________ _0LJ44» thj^s*^ plumeing co. Jack Haflon j 1« rn^sW^; ^^OfVw! u,Eb.-ANO Music tenter I vww, « ^ ^ #r *“■ SSffij. ^toFurwwk* only S2St — . I PR BITER'S WAREHOUSE OUTLET _______________________________ 1450 S. Tekgrpph FE S-7BS1 1 HYDRAULIC COMB-OUT .CHAIRS, .AD.._'.ES’ *!. .T22J' ------- Pimi/~nenc------------ 72"x30" mirror, J3 Formic* comb- llvered. Timbers 4 xlb xS' BUNK BEDS • eutunit.,333437#: J^lcp^bHi_______________________________________________________ ■ ..................-cusslon, $495. LEW BcTTER- TOY POODLI 74751 registered boston bull ter- K7 rtar, I veer* old, loves children, Wolverine ■■■ well-trelned, S4S. MA S-3407. Also used trailer* and cimMro. REGISTERED FEMALE POODLES,] Pickup covers. We Mil .end NlitPII) ' H^^WwIffiTALI - - “Ixle Hwy. . OR 3-1454 Open 9 ajn. HI 9 pjw. OW AND ARROW HUNTERS Campsites pvalteW* tgr |— _ ________ . . . DE- UPRIGHT ‘ FIA Formica comb- Mvered^ Timbers .4'W'xy long. condltlon. S17». WURUTZER SPINET ORGAN WITH 1 "^tle,'^aprioei.~PE~S9313.- 'I Raw hue end toy Fox terrier stud service. FE 2-1497._________ „ Richwoy Poodta Salon 313 0500 021 OAKLAND , FE 04024 EXCELLENT SEALPOINT SIAMESE CAT. FOUR _ BUNK BEDS ^mlts. JM437fT tt ooch. Celi etler 1.4354024. FT54t4*t Ctwlse-.pl 15 styles, trundle beds, XPI ECB~SlCTtONAiTuSlDWOOb- RUMMAGE ALL WEEK OCTOBER I pm | triple trundle beds end bunk bed* en windows, floor furnace and fuel *• >0c to *1« clothing. 412J Flam- --------complete, tMM and up. Pearson * oH tank, Young*town kitchen oink, Ing* Lake Read, Clarkaton. ... , . „ ■ Fumlturo. 3iy l. PIka. nmUpw wall pump, 14' troval tr»IF RUMMAGE - FURNITURE. GLASS, Music Lessons : OR CHROME OINSTTE ar. FE 4413S. ACTION °'roia.^%R^TtO>' N-EW.^ Lorga~ 'aii rUr UHOi rum rugs SI.9S each JTK'.'EIJSS: SS*."!.,Si. Broker, 3793 Elizabeth Lake Read.! MtfcjNiM md-Ug;_ BBQ Tito. FE 449S7, 1075 W. Huron WENttd Controcts-Mtq. oO-flsio e?wSS^^'fI^x-tboi ****J.™ JLas^fujnacR, good -------------m ■ BUY, SELL ANOTtoSirMICH- m "***■ 71 .a'Pit lE^plEi iiimw 79-A 4-7353. LAND CONTRACTS, i Igen Appilancs Co. 4734011. wan. 4S40 Dixie Hwy CHINA CABINET, TA' _____ WITH LIBERAL - Liberal Bill* Outpost, 3345 __ —WMfc Hwy.0X341474. Harlay-Oavldaon motorcycle. IstEEL BUILDINGS, S'X7- umj: Parry. FE ACCORDION. GUITA t LESSONS. -P^DLE M(^NG AND T^ "warwick S>l*-S*rvlCT PulMW*' 0R Zd^ * uf. Sr.. Lake.W «T GUITAR LESSONS Wallah Lake. MA 4-27*5.______ DRUM LESSONS . IAecHoe Sdii , . 10] Pontiac Parcuaalon Cantor EVERY FRIDAY dawn, S3* mo. Blacktop, w atorm atwpr, natural g*», n fith, »wlm. Bloch Brag- OR * FE 44509. ir,l deal. 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS 1. Sea ua before y« Supply. UTS Orchard ______________ __________ JttOP 1999 FORD GALAXIE SOO, MH m . traction rear and, *4 racing cant, wxie nwy. on z-ee/4. nuu .... ----I - ■ JMMi. B Iti? HarlMJkivMaM (nahirfivelt.lWlli eIiii Kibiai aiTli L. . chairs, black and jafhM® • | 629*1076. GE HlWrifio! 21||IphJ?»p Sor' AA BAIBIK, TAMMY Ofl SKIPPER 1 jjjj' wtWHy hous® ---------------------------- , tiCTdMT'hSSliT volet" of mS»°c pholmraph hl-M doll clethaa, complete wardrobe'tO'xr acrotn hwsa **39 *0 all METAL EXECUTIVE TOP OF- Wt Buy-Selt^Trada. R^ll 7 I.°,|c*73Mtf 1 tor Chrhtma*. 04. 447-3344, | TALBOTT LIJMD'S tics da«k with matching chair and aSTAUCTfoN^ ~— **•*'““ — J.--- ’ -----... i »«•--------------------- NO MONEY DOWN___________FE_B7471 *UMF_ PUMP OEJWOTOR I70J0 jg^ SELECTRld TYPEWRITER J LIOUriDATION Blf S32S. M-4 Rex Rotary mimeograph ----------------------l?n - For your Don't lei CASH CRADDOCK OININQ ROOM (DROP I aiLPwTN^~t>Ti4BT—PIANOT^Oo] V?'V?_ m0lL*d< d0S° sri»yy,gU!r,isyi^'>^''a-^?JvS' ... contract*. CRIB. MAT^Ej^PINETTt. SOFA ,|U jj. mens pant* and heme, smallest desk^radle, Hyver. 4474195. coats size medium and 42: sweat- onrauma. Celt 402-1I20. EASY ALL FABRIC AUTOMATIC era, tort, drapea and ml sc. 143 Taf McCy^i|^ lr. wether, PI. OL I-«y4. , Norton, MB 4014. chin* 075. All electric ai AMibAY LAKE .CANAL FRONT, ^3W. Vh(Uf (Bride, and to* walk-out basement, all nicely land-OCPPPd. vim. Ft 14971. Roclmfir Building Sitt» | AARQlEALTy i FREi^ PROvitiJiAL ioucH, bathroom fixturbi, oil and Maw «veUaAte. BUv new tor win! St4l Cpte-EllMbirit^Leke Road I ,>ct|i«nt, US. F« 44415. | get turnaeaa and Mleri. automatic new lima. Terma available. Call NEED LAND CONTRACTS.. *MALLl..i^.^.ikfc .n4Aliivi>-~ u,*¥lI: water heaters, hardwwe and etac- FRANK SHEPARD I WORKING 4x0 MahmSw v-5Sm5d T fTTFowm.**?.m OM Pytif *X7 Mahogany V-Oraovqd **jl-..CA2l.L<^. *A“'^\fc^ >y_y?ir_*y,r,_J9iJ*?.**?!*• > »«n MON..pnd FRI. at furniture, tote and chair, l end tables. 1 cot- ,, 71 fee table, i table temps, i pole aTOrs tqutpmeni i* lamp, l 9x11 rug, 4-plece bed- ---------— ~ - room outfit, mirror, double dree- 5' GLASS SHOW CASE. I wr,' chaatr^bcokcaia-BwrTftoM " Frto^ll77. RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT, GOOO ^,Ti'9torS!rrfe^^ 4orFr2*nV,,on “J- -- Furnishings. ^ Fr#n,t' Bottle Gas Installation used gas and oil furnaces.JpErting Goads Two 100-pound cylinders end enuip. Chandler Haaflng, OR 3-4430. ----t, 011 Great '--------------— - *— Gas Co., USED POOL TABLES, JLATE*fOP, II GAUGE ITHtCA PUMP. MODI- GENERAL ELECTRIC REFRIGER-, now Chief medals loft at 0350. New and used Apache ' pickup campers, choice *245, while they. Ia*t. Apache _Fac- coller. t mile ea*t et Le- peer en Ml. _____________ BOWS, ARROWS, SUPPLIES * SO ACRES ON CORNER, S-BED-| room ranch, herdwaad floors, fire- _ -■— large „ __________h Wx-I „ n. 039.500. k^Se«qna Km. H- Wltaon. lrokar. LOANS OSS TO OlriNB LOANS ns to SIMM Insured Payment Flan _ BAXTER B UVINOSTONB Flnanca Co. 401 Pontiac State Bank Build FE 4-1538-9 , SS9.~131 N. Qanaaaa. FE M9M. ’ CInTAUR TRACTOR WITH MOW- w ILL fw AF MV.JINE. SSMM dARAorWr^TMM srt^, mraratorfc XT chain ^ HiXto lxiii^ k^s QARAtifc lALi, TUElbAY " 9-1, CLEARANCE OF USED OFFICE ^Xa^Surt add md wbtract! |g|ffi»a;^| W°»ummRS,M|ltord.M^ j °lkad rofrltF^tor ^mtoL°^i PrtBw.^Fetbw* ^ ' KStd. FE tPftl. 1 mttoflfc Cuwom Thraadtog. Imrrad; ffliwray. OR 147*7. ^-b' jyjSfct "T, * .m IH—d TbgIs—Machinery 61 a *o'WNik Vaui I SSndSra hma rarer swlvtl reckar, 00U8LE W ft 1 f I ALjMlTfOR] ^ --—--------- gauge, tlOO. 473-7193. I *-drswer. double draaatr, all Itkaj rtartn and tertan door, [heavy PRODUCTION MACHINE!.' ' ~TPA HOME FREEZER BUY—SELL—TRADE GUNS PMMjHPgrtMpre, wtldar, pic. Oadykt Hardware FE »4< Fanfipc Stokpr. F| .1^44;—-CLOSE-OUT SPECIAL Approximately 11 mil NEED GASH p^w-xRssw1 -- i*T. TEMPLET0N, Realtor 1339 Orchard Lake ~ “**“ • ooor 'ENCYCLOPEDIAS, 194S. COST S140, m m weak must aocrlflce, PS. S4HS1S. 3USB OUTlETi EVERGREENS, WESTER BLUB CE-FE S4BB dar. up to r toll duo, ready to ....... ...‘I BO,S4. 7S1-7433. ___________ For the Finest in Top-Quality Merchandise W’ will swap my fine ssmm ar-Out C4 camera wtth flash, wide angle and telephoto auxiliary tone, complete with leather caw tor adding machine In goad operating condition. S47 Summit St/Mllford, x, dinette, ovar-aliad •ire, boT — —1 ____ Evara. _,_T Service. 4(07 Dixie High-”--------415-1711. am. MF0RD HORSE FARM BUCKNER ^^aM^'^WaSN LOANS aT&lmEl___^ to si.odo *2£ 20-ACRE FARM | WEiCHIiLG-Ji6SS««to.t Gurts-Guns-Guns Ona of ttw moat comp lata llna guna In Oakland County! Wa carry the comaletellne.of BROWNING-WEATHERBY REMINGTON __ WINCHESTER-COLT PI1TOU tsustassTuroJsr PEfesa t uVn&fhtt: 1 CM credit manager, EHEI — I RSchman Brea. Sawing Cantor. i —--igrya nyjTLu i kiM kELVifjAtgir eEFRtaiw- garage doors IK jm tHam$. iramor. m.. ana-atogw joattoitolr jaood IE 10" GAO RANdi. to. F^’^SyXroSTl^^ro^da" 1 caaTooo now. FE SQM*. i6AI>5kfjAgt. Ifc^OO fcfli. wt. PFAFF AUtOMAtlC I* zig zao sEwiNj machine | HAGGERTY HAS r CLIFF DREYER'S Gun and Saorf Cantor. J__ 10 Holly Rd.; Hally ME 4^771 Open Pally and Sundaya— ^ GUNS - lUY - SELL • TRAbl Burr-ShtS, 175 %. Telegraph CAMPING SITES • jgsftjg 1^15,F» Close-Out Streamline for 1965 24', 26' Models NOW ON DISPLAY -Tht Twin Bad Modaia-—Luxury-Duality- Holly Travel Coach Inc. IIS Holly Rd., Hally ME 44 -Open Dalhrand Sundaya- ELLSWORTH AUTO & TRAILER SALES Trailer Storage lee the ell new Avallero,Barthe, rawaa Braves, Hally and Ceraaire, wvw. ~ __ | 14 to 1* loot. Wa alto hava ranlalt. °»* -r-— -“-ut S"S's&‘S'« PI0N“11 SAtES and rantrols. 2 feed mlx®rf, Kelly ^ Trew*»Ouae '/*' Nick. E*tn^am«xw»;j ^ ^Hur^E “ifW Jjg, F'CK-UP^CAMPIRS'^ dust col lector.* Smalt n &rftir2£irss platform scalps to 1 to Several mill laga, wood grain cuds, S-lSeh steel veyor, 8'. 3-spead redu for driving toga. Auger, In HOLLY. Only the grain buyliw and lead processing la being told out at auction, plus related equip-; J|W at the t slashing prlcaa. ,vH; history. have financing up to 1 havg 1-, 2- or 3-bad rm. la. x- -■ - have many used. ______ Detroiter products meat ixcaad the rigid Blue leek dards tor heating, plumbing electrical sysfemt. You ir-**- * uiti- end electr—. HH9 .1 gamble. You always anloy mats In aataty, comfort sale value. YES, you'll save hundreds of dollars during our aato. Open Dally until 9. Sat. and Sun. until 4. Bob Hutchinson Salat, 4301 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Ftalna. Parkhurst Trailer Salas • FINEST IN MOBILE UVINO IS to '2 ft. Featuring New Moon — iuddy and N— rated half mi SIS THCNIW^W^MOOELS anAiS2S.I Lew down payment on the spot financing' FREE DELIVERY—FREE SET-UP WE GUARANTEE A PARKING SPACE. Largo as lection ot IT wldas. HOLLY PARK, CHAMPION_ ARK WOOD AND PARK ESTATES Oxford Trailer Salas lightweight go travel w— unlit. Wa guarantee trailer We have no gimmicks.. . years of good mtrchandlsl 2.400 satisfiad customers. Open 94, closed Sundv WILL TAKE ANYTHING IN TRADE ---lovely large 2-bed room mobile ■ Call Holly, 4344447.___ Rent TrailEr Space_________90 NEW SPACES WITH NATURAL GAS • Pontiac Mobile Home Park.___ Tires-Auto-Truck 92 Used TruckTires All Sizes Budget terms available. FIRESTONE STORE 333-7917__________ TAR CAMPER MFG. CO. 552-3334 Grata A gar, 11'. Smallrarn shell- ... ___j. 1 moMura testers, IMF venal. Screens. Antique been picker. Mixer section: 4' diameter. . COAL UNLOADER OR. AGGREGATE CONVEYOR, FAIRFIELD, W. FARM TOOLS: Tf«OW, FCCR, 9N, -serial 19575, Spolnt and fol-l FOR RENT; 3 Wolverine ’(-It. campers '45 GMC pickups. *100 week i up plu* mileage. SCOTT RENTAL SERVICE >4 W. Walton FE 8-4148 U N T B RS AND VACATIONERS ■pedal. 1964 Craa Travd-Trailer, 22-toot. Salf-cantainad. Toilet, «—™ 1957 HARLEY SPORSTBR, *350. ________ FE 14715. 1945 HONDA ISO SCRAMBLER, 1.500 mllaa. 1450. 473-0985. ■ 1945 TRIUMPH 500 SCRAMBLER _______ OR 4-0273_________ 1945 HONDA SUPER HAWK, 305. aw, harrow- chlaall («'). bucket .acapp.| Now )t , ’S0,.n, l traitor tor ™ m NOW ONDISPLAY FROLIC - YUKON DELTA— ^liS^TRO^DOD tech manta,: demo. 30 lawn mowara, used real ;and rotary. Roller. S Wheel bbrn^ Lavm1' spreader, Scotts, Medal 190 11-Inch. Lawn: tampan. Rato tlltor, Botom 1M1 4*hb7 OWWb..^»tdNL-togla and shovalt. MISCELLANEOUS: Steel tones (new), pasts, shop desk, ------— '-inch, water pump (2- saorad motor, itaam JACOBSON TRAILER SALES B RENTALS ““ williams Lak* Rd. OR 3-5981 rith gaar Vi-lnen). Playmate Jr. OUR BUDGET MODEL "YOU SHOULD SEE IT 1GBEUMW JOHNSON'S 117 E. Walton at Jcalyn . FE 4-SSS3 er - PE 4 rift Sna^i i^le "service? c- *■' CATE Phona: 4354400. 111M OilbLi _______________ ___________U Swartz Croak. i 9"" noMtll' NWY acceptIno" RIFLE RAHQ%-TgAn t-icLu ammunition and sporting go rW^nSrcvSpSc ■■ Out They Go I_______ I buy lor at. big gun auction on WadgoStotr-* p.m., October 11 1945. HALL'S AUCTION SALES, 70S W. Clarkv ton Rd. ' ■*“ * MY 34141. WBONISDAV. otf. 6a I Orion. MY 9y1l71i •£■1 WME It AUTO LOAN CO. 7 N. ifirrylk ^ PE ■“ 9 to* dally. Sat, 9 to it wf1jw|^flinwinfl organ dams l * Mlpr fanning. 8 class les- ....... ions, practice facilities and we «m^craWNo^duNl, Instruction materials, $8.00, comolttt. If intiristed ft ijrwnrril^iiaWTTHf1^nii coll Mr. PusBnberry at FE 3-7168. ‘ Imyvsmi.1^ ^ *v ^ CRINNELL'S (Downtown) S*SjJ"a^r|v^KSa HAMILTON Mills. HOLLY Complete dbtatto here Monday PERKINS ULT"siRV1CE,ioNEERs SWARTZ CREEK «l - UPRIGHTS, 10 trees IIS. Yeu --toe in B>-* ' c PANGUS, Riolty ***Call Coltoct NA 7G01I bm,_ , rj«, Pr^B^tN.^-, X tS&Z'rW'S: ^iteOBTY LUMBER V »■ SAGINAW CLARINET, GOOD CONDITION , sand and lop ** FldSMi __________' . PEB-TctL ___ CONN SfRfNkbi, IS PEDALS, BUD BALLARO SCR walnut, rovartoJMOB. LEW BET- _"II dM"bujde MA 44SS1, TERLY. Ml 44001 -Call OR 35771 . I®400 YAR£* OP TOPIOIU CALL »5^"3dS UholvorBraon Parai 1, *744141 attor 0 pjn. ----I am mktT Hwy. Clarkston. 413 ■" r*n WaVLI ■ ton . Trucking- Nupsia- GRAVEL, BSTyour own. m r“- ay. at Maybat Rd. CENTURY-SAGE GALWAY-TRAVELMASTER I TRIUMPH TR-4, 450CC. ________FE 1-5111 CUSHMAN EAGLE. BEST OF-EM 3-0087. nr&wcYar 'YAMAHA Two locations to terra Auburn, Utica and 7415 Hlghtor Road. Pontiac.____ .SUZUKI Kawasaki-White Big Bad Bultaco VAN PECH Lir Indian Mini Bikes SUZUKI ^ROCHESTER UL 3SMI TOM STACHLER AUTO & MOBILE SALES El W. Huron St. - PE 3M You Meet tha Nicest People On A HONDA WORLD'S LARGEST SELLER motorcv^W^jit'OCK PRICES START AT $215, F.0J. LOWDgWOLEAMMWT ,JTk(ERyiCE jeOfS-s ISdgiK%lkM.£ IM THE PONTIAC PRESS, AoNPAY, OCTOBER 4, 1965 Ww$pr<»i WMwr jwTinf'ttw Mi MMUM ■ -- m 11 ■ mm—■*““ I OAKI n* o m BWGLWjyep ANjUA. NO ONE OF THE BETTER ijw^ndchryjU!R-plymouth BUYS AT H I CARNIVAL Bf Dick Turner dm end Used Cen 186IN I Wed Con m\B* mi Bsod imi ‘ M automatic Iran*-and haaitor, whlto- '*ll fir**, 44* ar eld e eymants only *11.11 par iimil. i HAROLD TURNER FORD.JNC. . 4*4 S. WOODWARD AVE. ._ BIRMINGHAM___Ml WM Sr m, Ing. call Mr. Dan at: FE 84G71 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM LLOYD'S . 1962 BUICK , Electro 2U wGh WE powar, redto f I mmarWJBI $57 DOWN Up to 36 Months to Poy~~ Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKUND 333-7863 1964 ELECTRA CONVERTIBLE ' *** FISCHER I BUICK ! a 1M6 FORD a [ ,J?64FAU0N _________________'tsS^W&SM T°HtSSno,^?aditt C#nrnfi»lon, radio and Malar. wiSJt; rjm mm ■ imII m*m us m am mw -- |pyi^g- gitjEAiaaT m V AUTOWfW tit jar do m.n m w nSarjR.mPt54474. ’ ' |4FOOt OAV CRUISER, 155 NOR-berg engine and control*. 1 to 1 m-jtochm^mr. toad, 41.7*5 daiivari JUNK CARS—FREB TOWS JU,T •*,r 01 V***™ jsrfflsff-arts. »«.y u.-a.isfjssrjr! ERTI- 41,34*'. 3? U»d Auto-Tnrck Port* 102 i2w8l *D"dm°? FV DADDQDO tok tor I^JotowwL 4^4314 ^_ I'TVY (^ENTUPYT 144 . HORSE-! power, gray marine, good condl-1 14” WHEELS AND TIRES 1*42 SHARP VW, LOW MILEAGE. LINCOLN.MERCURY . FROM 41, UP (acrlflc* - tchool, OL 41337 oftor 534 S. Woodward ibnikwtiaili 1464 JOHNSON MOTORS AND MO- 1*34 FORD COUPE, SET UP FOR 1*41 TRIUMPH 3 i. EXCELLENT i »r storage at | (trip, 3250. 1*43 44W2S Chevy an- condition. Radio All ID*, extra*.! T^n MARINE KEE60 HARBOR_____________ rlmi *75, 4 wheel trailer, 3150. able offer. 33*4301, ■ 'fuff'11 Falcon BIG I BIGI SAVINGS! |,i UP TO 30% OFF ON 1965 j MODELS NOW IN STOCK! id PONTIAC'S ONLY MERCURY i MERCRUISER DEALER FOX SNOWMOBILES NIMROD CAMP TRAILERS Marina'and Sporting Goods CRUISE OUT, INC. _ ~i. Walton Pally * - 4 F€ 0-4403 NEW 1*45 TEMPEST RjGHT .FRONT, 1964 LeSABRE Moar. IIM mhm. Full —— “ tor Norm D 1*43 VW WITH SUNROOF, RADIO AND Hf A T C R, WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Payments only___ par waek. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, BIRMINGHAM, Ml 47300. FISCHER .BUICK HAROLD | HAROLD LLOYD'S k^S£« FORD, INC. 4M s. WOODWARD avi. la raalhTdSM, 444 s. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-7100 $57 HOWN .avu- *?' *&* m* ford custom m' apqSr, tB *1 t# B0V P UOM AdmL l*6RS%- radio, haatar, extra sharp, Only Up TO JO MOmnS TO roy v&esey&fr'*™” Ufyd Motors h 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 jart.jjNnn^IntMa, *25* or riaion f6r'D 6i*l*r. 1959 FOkD L Hill. 964 FORD MMiMdWaMMj*- 1*44 COMii WMWWIAW.TJ4.Ae.ai ja.44 554 S. Woodward ms~BUICK SFpdlAL converTT- ‘I finally got Dad’s permission to grow a beard. Now Nature’s the bottleneck!” and hsator. In axcallant condl- ilea, radio, haator, power, adilto-Hen, only bJ4 dawn and 41.44 wall firm, 4# ar oW car dawn, par weak payments, w* handle paymantTanly I1X*I par waak. i rndan L bucket easts and conaoto. 1 Marc-O-Matlc, tlntad olaaa. Oka 1 new. 41,500. MA 44441. and arranga gif fhaiiclng, call — p . 1 HAROLD Capitol Auto tttotvtpd 312 W. MONTCALM i I UTllNiLri Just sett of Oakland rft|m .... IMF ' John McAullff* Fard 1*14 FORD, REBUILT MOTOR, 4150 FORD. INC. f8*1**" 444 S. WOODWARD AVi. 1*5* FORD WITH VA ' ENGINE. BIRMINGHAM - Ml 4-7540 1964 Mercury and' hnator, rum almost perfect, . $195 can finance. 1 ■■•■a NORTHWOOD^AUTO SALES | T^K tT? Parkloiw Hardtop ' A anewalw* white, with rad bockaf matt, automatic tianamNman, power (tearing, brake*, power wto- 1440 FORD V4 GALAXIE VERY 1 1 V 1 1 dow* tool New lira*, abaalutolY apaftoss, sharpest an* around, 4*f down, flnanca balance shown below. STORAGE SALE | J*1)" McAutHto Ford mi rom-ow.12 „ . “K.yra'sWS 1965 Mustang 1 ta iv *5l,w2: Beautiful Throughout $2243 New and Usad On Wnbw end Used Cm 106 INI ORADY-WHUTS; INI EVIN- JHBB rude. *0 h.p. FE>3511. _ TWO RU BOAT stORAQE.\cARS SPATS I e otter. 3354*75. , 2-OOOR, RIO, RADIO, C K WIUXAT, AOOOR. ——-mi con in construction! t <44 Mercury Outboard* are on dlaplay new Cliff Dreyar Gun and Sports Canter ISM Holly Rd„ Holly ME 44771 •1 and--------- 277 WEST MONTCALM (on* Mock E. ol Oakland) 1965 Model Truck Close-Out x Save $400 to $500 . on All Remaining jpeheros—Econo-Vans OPEL iSFEED TRANSMI3- 734 Oakland Ava. LOOK — IN* Chavrolat Imp*la Ldoor hardtop, VI ewNmahCtPOWir »te*ring, rt power brakes, 44*7toll prtea, IS JIT down. CREDIT HO. PROBLEMS, S";, WE FINANCE, BANK RATES. LUCKY AUTO - 1*44 W. Wide Track J Repossession ! Just released for puMk solo, 1*40 U T-BIRD, IMI power. No M needed, | payments of lust S7.W ' R5P SfJPJT" — . GLENN'S "axirel si.375UNl*M°KarmanVGhla >*“ ^CAOMAAC CONVERTIBLE 1*5* CHEVROLET!, WE HAVE SIX. WJ4 Best offer. OR 3-10BL . _________ 1*44 CHEVY CONVEfttlBLE, VS,! STM 5yJ? .jgur .honw. Cl powar gUda, whit* aldawallA pow i Caah at 334-4534. Spartan. nr slaaring, powar brakes, tinted MUST DISPOSE OF mi FALCON windshield, dean, sharp, by owner, with no money down, payments 11*15. Call OR 4.1114. I *MyJM2 weakly. Call Mr. Murphy UHU14. MOO*. 41 —MeAURfwT - ---- payment*. OR INI FORD OALAXIB . SM. V4 EN- 11,0*5. $1999 Oakland Atm. FE ■■“‘IN MvAULIFFE FOR JMF JMF , convertible, tt,7*S. 1(45 Chrysleri SIR oil power, SSSTS. *”— '---------1 OR XBlf: Distress w full power, now spore, fa W.i Huron Straw. FE 47171, after 5. *, FE 5-2171. " IS* CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE, 1*45 OFEL STATION WAGOt^ A1 AT'cONDmON.'^?,0^5.W^Y)'BE real mile-maker, $4* down, *50.45 SEEN AT 13 MILE ROAD AND SOUTHFIELD. MOBILE STATION. ill MW. ________________________________________________ COOK I Mustang, VI il -harpesl II**'- — *y'LKi« WILL ACCEPT GUNS, BOATS, MOTORS Sunshine from a Beanery Echo from a steamboat whistle _ CORRECT CRAFT prteeT^onV'nl**.' See’^and buy these quality boats ait OAKLAND MARINE 1*53 FORO PtCKUF WITH 1*54 T'BIrd^w^ln*, runs good. 3233.. ML PANEL, BEIT MMdWB. 1*57 FORD PICKUP, DON7 TAKE CHANKS , ul|Tin„||„ - We Don't! Ins* kingham tri-axle dua Store your boat with a qualified trailer, M ft. long. FE 54)43. S« CLTi *r\*lrl •, FIRST CLA -ulT^90 |SPQRTS CAR; Rally Sale! 1961 CADILLAC , J-DOOR HARDTOP. POWER WINDOWS, 4WAY POWER SEAT. WHITE FINIM WITH BEIGE INTERIOR. THIS IS A REAL BAROAINI ONLY— $1697 ASK FOR MR. FLOOO WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC state wide" auto I 3400 ENaboRt Lk. Rd. 1 Mock ooaf of Caoa Lk-Rd. 1 : 1960 CHEVROLET OtdHon Wagon with 4 cylinder on-pint, stick mm. radio and hnator, toll pile* eMy 0407, no money down, assume weekly payments ef 55.00. wo handle and arrange all financing, cab Mr. Dan at: FEB-4071 Capitol Auto mi ford o-fassenoer STATION WAGON WITH AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO, HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY ' DOWN. F*y-ments only 00.02 par weak. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. FWH at HAROLD TURNER FORD, BIRMINGHAM, Ml 47500. 020*7 toll prk* Of down. CREDIT | NO PROBLEM, WE FINANCE j LUCKY AUTO 1*40 w. WMo Track I I FE 42214 Or FB 57P34 • 1*45 MUSTANG, 4CYLINDER, AS PART DOWN PAYMENT ON ANY NEW or USED CARI ISTANG* 6rCYLINDER* J- TStT T nwnrn^Md. MUST oiLL. BILL SPENCE 1965 T-i endeau with air CL__„„_^.^.. powar. Cruise-control, radio, heater, Whl--------------"-----'•* r*: 6673 Dixit Hwy. Chrysler-Ptgnmrth-Valianf varyTew mTla- CLAR KOTOW , MA MM» ratify, oido or fp1 to 34 monlbi Spartan Dcxdge 1*44 CORVAIR MONZA . CHEVROLET BEL AIR FOUR- M M rapHenMiy' 1*40 CHEVY IMPALA. 4-DOOR, A I tometlc. 0001 Osator. UL Bill CHEVROLET WAGON, S CHEVY to-TON • kJe. good — -mm ■ -_____ ------------ ------------I ton and Domes. Doubt* AA motor 1*42 FORD F-230 Ok-TON PICKUP, pair rating. Bent repairs and. extra build up tor canwar, extra finishing. Phone FE 40*24 ' clean! I JEROME FORD ' PINTER'S U PICKUP. ’ ]** **• LATEST 1*44 MODELS IN STOCK Easy FlnancIng and^Bank Rates w FORD Pastor, OL 1- IS7B Oodyke Open Tuas. Thurs. ....... (1-75 and Oakland University Exit) I HH4MD to FINO. BUT EASY To ! deal with" Rlnkkar, Stoury, Char*-! Bn Mai Kant pontoons. B«to.| I redo motors. Pomco trailers. Tsk* ROCHESTER 1963 JUDGE Pickup ^cylinder color of I 51.1*5. Crissman Chevrolet (On Top of South Hill) pry RidB* Rand to I to* md faHew signs . SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE, MAX' 4217*. E!3[ 1*43 FORD to-TON PICKUP (CAMP-dawsdn'S cr special), V4 angina, auftamMic. DAWSONS r(d)0 neater. Low rnRaago. Ford Company Truck! Suva. JEROME Financing anil Bank Ra No FairOftorMuaad Grimaldi Imported Car Co. V ’ kind Atm. S3BW1S SI MCA mi. WHITE 4DOOR, GOOD car tor wqrk. lew gas mileage. , new Urea. 444-2*45.___ VOLKSWAGEN CENTER OWENS CRUISERS Mfxjels on Disploy 24'to 42" TRADE NOW F OR Rochester i CHEVROLET (................ _ dio, heater. 30,000 ml. Shore a* raid new! *1,0*5. A. 4 S. Auto Sato*.____ car. Auburn and Rochester Rd*. mi *53-1414. 1 . __ _______aatras * ' included. FE 4*444, days. After 4 ssr ...............■" Superior Rambler 1964 CADILLAC 3-OOOR HARDTOP. FULL FACTORY POWER, BEIGE WITH BE IOC INTERIOR. WAS SELLING FOR 3X4*5. NOW — $3295 THIS IS A BAROAINI ASK FOR MR. FLOOD WILSON _P0NTIAC-CADILLAC 1961 CHEVROLET Impala Convertible LOSiT 1*44 Chevy, 4-cyllndSL 1 owner, lust Ilk* n*W. 114*7 toll1 prlcto.M down. CREDIT NO-PROBLEM, WE FINANCE BANKi RATES. LUCKY AUTO I m f RADIO .......... . IP— PI ■ *r 1*45 COMET CALIENTE, 1*42 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN, 4 old car down, up to 34 months barrel. 4-speed, heavy do doer with VI onglna, automatic. to pay- bank ratal. , pension, 3,000 mltao. Toko ever newer steering, powar roar win- payments. OR 3-1151 between 4 ny 01,0*5:JEROME ford, t T K TN 1 •sdTp.m. ______________ otwni- HAROLD SS.'2SSo?'M. !5r ’ rpT TD'KTC’D T9^JIC. ._T*AMBAAf$B!OFI, | | I K l\I H K I OR 3733* W OR YoW* FORD, INC. I 1965 MUSTANG 1 ^,,,r NO MONEY DOWN. Fl monto only saj2 per nuex. CALL CREDIT MOR. Mr. Parka 0* HAROLD TURNER J- .sis' ’tJAi i, electric windows. Oat a mow. v E 4gWs, o FISCHER BUICK IM ChtoMO M OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH { only MAM. Aak 734 Oakland Aw* 33341SSI "imt dnEvibLET impala, m'mj mi FALCON 2-DOOR WITH AUTOMATIC TRAN IMIS-MISSION, RADIO, HCATlil, WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY HO M ONI V MGR. Mr. Parka at HAROLD TURIiSR FORD, BIRMING-.... ‘U 47500. $2197 1962 OLDS F-BS, BEAUTIFUL RED FINISH WITH WHITE TOP, DOUBLE FOWl C LOW MILEAGE. RUNS LIKE A TOP. REDUCED TO $1297 ASK FOR MR. FLOOD t 1*42 FORD, GALAXIE * —I automatic, pow*- ----P*Ml Oalton; tm. RM 344*4. warranty. *^xl m3 FORD FAIRLANE jar, J tXIOR. 1 Esc condition. 3W44B4 aftor 4 PJW.I W mtoh.*^dtoT hStoT, Im-M^ZA .cpuFfe/ witH- A ag^ PONTIAC-CADILLAC 1 Mack south af 14 MR* bwham Ml 4 King Auto 1*65 CHEVY IMPALA 4-DOOR, V-l auto- power. 4743445. | CHRYSlIE, 1*42 NEWPORt. LIKE 3275 W. Huron SI. FE 8-4088 mi WHITE BISCAYNE AND 1*44 _________________|_____ i datk Mu* Cminr. 473444L_mt ^HkviLKK. nW VMXI*,, 1*41 CORVETTE, PONTIAC ALUM. 2-daor hardtop, radio and banlar,1 whotts, boat oftor, 4114142. I' Ml powar, UOS actual mu**. Dan'f 4W>I_Dg^OFm|-Oi^ OAKuJnD>CWIY»LER-PLY*40UTM CpR 724 Oakland AuU. — . FE 54141. Can b* a !ms CHEVY AUTOBAHN Motors, Inc. AUTHORIZED VW DEALER FALL -DiaCOUNTS WALT MAZUREK'S LAKE & SEA MARINA Woodward at 5. Btvd. , Rochester FORD Dealer, ’ 1*44 CHEVY VS-TON PICKUP. REA- New Md Iliad Cm 104 • FE 1-45X1 Hardtop, SMS WiHtad Cft-TnadB A TOP PRICE PAID FOR CARS Sullivan Pontiac Sales In Lapse Californio Buyers tor share cars . Call.. . MAM MOTOR SALES 4 - Otel* Hwy. • _______:OR «Mi ” BUYING SHARP CARS BUD MANSFIELO USEO CARS ISM Baldwin. 2 blocks N. of Waltor ■ ■' •’ ' (p -Yw Know? —VILLAGE RAMBLER Pays mom-tor ANY make usad ca . Call tor Appraisal. 144 S. Wsodward. Ml 43W EXTRA EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Car "Check Hw rati, then g*rto* boat" at Averill' ^1" into new only Xaao miles. si,a9e.| 101 JEROME FORD, Rochester FORD I OMtar. m suns i ■-wJMLhii l*5f BUICK 4-DOOR HARDTOP 4CYLINDER with full oowar, toll pric* 52*5. _[1*44 FORD ECONOLINE, EXCEL-, lent condition. Has windows all around. 312*5 wRh I** dawn. I mY*t!J& ®0°®*' REFOBIEMlC^ {1*44 CHEVY ALCAMINO PtCKUF, King Aujto 1965 Cadillac Coupe , 5.000 actual mtias, no ranty with book, full poi windows. Bast oftor. W range financing. Superior Rambler weakly with na money dewn. call I Mr. Murahy at 33541it. McApBHl. , IMTchEVY IMPALA 3DOOR. AU-' temattc. radio, Iwotor, oxcMIani . condition, *a*5. ■ BOB BORST KESSLER'S «■ FORD Pooler. OL 14711 COME I TO THE PONTIAC I RETAIL STORE WHERE YOU EXPtCT MORE . . . AND GET ITI (Just yk mlto north of Cost Avo.) » * TTT O *1* i;iSpartan Dodge WILSUN IMF ] ’ John McAuPffe Ford 1965 Ford ! Galaxie 500 | not with automatic, powar, I prestige Car for a fradton the original coat, wRh only 445 coup*. Na money dawn, payments ot 4M3 weakly. Call Mr. Murphy af 3354141. McAutHto. ONE OF THE BETTER BUYS AT LLOYD'S 1962 OLDS 434 OAKLAND AVE. in McAuliffa Far* JMF I ____ _l for*i4»5. JEROME ■ FORD. Rochester FORD Dealer. I PI- *471). ~ ^ j - j 1*45 FORD 4-WHEEL DRIVE. BIG 1966 GMC to-ton PICKUP 1960 BUICK HARDTOP No Monty Down Wo Finonco FULL PRICE $797 Tel-A-Huron AUTO SALES 60 S. Telegraph FE 8-9661 mt CHEVY STATION WAGON, fnww CsWomla. EM 344P. OOLD 1*54 CHkVY, CHROME wheeH and stlcka. OR 44*15, 1*57 CHEVY CONVERTIBLE, 344 Super (part can »ai tibia, with Fow-argDda tranamlaalan, V4, and toil factory aqwlpmanf I $1297 ; Capitol Auto j 312 W. MONTCALM Just east of Oakland 1*41 DODGE *-PAS5ENGER WAG-on. ppwar brake* and atoarlng. inn I Pretty Ponies wmffl 1UU | 1965 Mustangs $47 DOWN Up to 36 Months to Pay Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 na h pLepa; XLl~WWy|T|ha WveMiSUT Doidoe. AB cars rurudwjs. Sava A 855 Oakland Ave. (Outdoor Showraom) r (Ju*M4 mil* north of Cpi* Atm.l I Spartan Dodge , washers, seat baits, and MUST DISPOSE OF mi BUICK igiC , itor*— * •*- —*-■— • I1I45 ' « -And Raised Elsewhera-Houghton 3 Son OLDS-RAMSLER-GMC ROCHESTER OL M ________O* N. Main >t. nancIng^eall^Sr. 5XT1 FE 8-4071 1*0 CHEVROLET 3D00R WITH jm ECONOMY EN-OINI, RADIO AND HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Payments only M ae par waak. CALL CRBOfT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, BIRMINGHAM. Ml ATM. man lately. Auk atoarlng, braksa, ba proud to drtv easy to pay $887 Top quality, OnB-ownar, new car trades to j choose from 65 Mt. Ciemens ot WMo Track FE-3-7954 *43 FORD 3DOOR, RADIO. HEAT-•r, thorp, MR <**S. JEROME FORO,^ Rocbaster FORO Da*Hr. Mustangs I ____ USED MMTAIMi TO I *1,743. FrtoMp, OR ABWL. c&BfSrisrs OAKLAND CHRYSLER-FlYMOUTH 724 Oakland Am.______333*153 "ORAND OFENINO SPECIAL" 1963 VALIANT Soft train 5daor wRh too Imrd to tfmJf^SSSSSSi. *- HARDT0PS 2 PLUS 2's FULL EQUIPMENT As Low As $79 Down MUST OlSPOSE OF IfM-ford Convertible. No manov down, oav- .. of only 3343 waakty. Call Murphy at 3M41H McAuRfto. ^ HAROLD TURNER ONE OF THE BETTlR BUYS AT $997 - FORD* INC. ■I I. WOODWARD AVE. _____ BIRMINGHAM • Ml *7144 Repossession C<"Tpitn1 AlltO ms ebRvfrtfJ s^Hflb.TYb#. SpOTtCUl Dodge 1 clean.Can4231*34aftor5pm. htu boOGE LANCRR GT ibOOR ‘ " ‘‘acltot aaato. A real mar* HELP! ! GMC •. Cam at 344-4314. Spartan. w* need 344 sharp Cadi tiacs, oide and Buicks , slat* market. Tap dollar | MANSFIELO AUTO SALES 1144 Baldwin Are. f, FACTORY BRANCH ** Maw and Uaad Trucks FE 5*44t 475 Odklanb, I gMC 1444 W-t6n kANEL Blue! FINISH, V-4, automatic. Only 55*5. PATTERSON CHEVROLET COIN! S. Woodward, Birmingham. mm re ewasS Ml 44725. | SPECIAL PRICES Feld tor t*5*-l»45 car* VAN'S AUTO SALES _ _ W *~IM* WE°f7nANCE BANK rates'"' _ __ _ ________ 1963 CHEVROLET Bel Air | mcmaa^sam W>(ft.^TJaCS-TtSTS Onrdn rag-1750 04KUXD ^^2. .'58 T-8ird, Sharp ....$777 1*41 CONTINkNTAL 4-OOWTHARD-top, toll powor alr-condltlonlng, low mllapfa, Ford igc. carl Savdl JEROME FORO, Rachaator FORD Dailar,Gt 14711.____________________. . BOB BORST Call 334-4424 i 855 p£klon3<, k ' H , -Superior Rambler ^ cutuo. ESTATE STORAGE HA *mfl WIDE AUTO .■gSWagiu. PATTfitSON ROCHESTER Chrysler—Plymouth -Imperial-valiant TO p6nTIAC, 1-OWNtR, 1100. HD- Have you boon denied the privilege of buying an automobile re-, Mm because of credit problems? If you have a needy lob and Dome money we will dWIvar on the spot. We do our own fbuoclng: Call. Mr. Dan at FE 84071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM -yM6uth iPofti fu*y BEATTIE See the All-New 1 9 6 6 Line of fORDS Now on Display /Register for 2 Drawings 1 National Drawing - BEATTIE'S Door Prize Drawing Just Register Refreshments and Favors Come Out and Drive the All-New BRONCO 4 wheel drive iy Ford BEATTIE FORD "Year potto dealer since wr On Dixie Nwy. in Waterford "Home of SBRVICI after the Said" OR 3-1291 FINANCE ■ m • v Rw ___ _______ - Bargains Ueed Pare IMS Dixie They. 1958 PONTIAC STATION WAOON No Monoy Down Wa Finance FUEL PRICE i - I $197 Tel-A-Huron AUTO SALES 60 S. Telegraph FE 8-9661 1959 FONTIAC with automatic ti week. Wa' naMte and arrange all —m 84071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM 1959 PONTIAC CATALINA No Monty Down We Finance FULL PRICE $297 Tel-A-Huron AUTO SALES 60 S. Telegraph FE 8-9661 JMF John McAulHfa Part I960 Pontiac Catalina Hardtop With a Harbor Blue flnlih, g rag* • kept condition, automat! Irfrom lee (ea. pa war ataarbu Drakes. No monoy down, spot d llvory. $787 By Andereon and Looming,Mew mi Deed (art 186.Ntw and Deed Cm WPONWAC AOOOR, RADIO AND 1959 PONTIAC One Owner d hardtop, g i now Imorloi OLIVER CLEARANCE SALE for 1966 Models 1842 TEMPEST LoMANt CQNVERT-- bluo wtth mr*-*-1--ilte top. Am radio, MM^ioap ____ im. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1«M S. WOOO-WARD, BIRMINGHAM, Ml 4-1734 I M2 TEMPEST AOOOR, HYDRA-mMIC d^^whjtowMj*. PI Mm JMF I960 PONTIAC e Moor hardtop witt nd heeler, hydra matic 1 —an, ppwor brake* and r Matring, a nice maroor >h' BILL SMITH USED CARS 462 N. Parry St. FE 44241 IMP PONTIAC STARCHIEPT '44 FALCON >-Dr. Radio, 'its CUTLASS convorflblo, automatic, tiXk'.x&i.rz.^'sb ‘41 CORVAJR 4-Dr. sedan with radio, heater, and automatic Iran*. S t»S '41 CHEVY Stscsyne 1-Dr. with radio, hector, 4-cyllnder engine, tlenddrd transmission . 41,344 LOOK ti ms. 1MI Tampast, automatic. 1547 _ * ' * price, «S down. CREDIT NO PROBLEM, WE FINANCE BANK RATES. LUCKY AUTO '41 PONTIAC Itorcfitof 4 54S '44 BUICK LeSebre 4-Dr. midgr woar~ — i tinted glam '44 FORD etotton wagon, VS onpfcw, automatic, radta, hoaldr, wMjp-watis. Only ................ S 2»J '42 CHEVY SOr. Bdl AIT V» anglne, radio, hooter. Only ........ Sl.OfS 'It PONTIAC tafallM wagon, auto- OLIVER BUICK PONTIAC SALES A SERVICE 682-3400 REPOSSlSSION — IMS PONTIAC Hardtop. No money down, Pey-monts Of $7.87 weekly. Call Mr. Meson, of FE MW. McAufWf Repossession1 Just released tor public tale. 1841 PONTIAC BonnovlTl* hardtop, full power. No SS noododi Payments of lust SS.41 weekly. Call Mr. Cadi, “He welcomes every new butcher personally!” in* ♦OOOR HARbTbP, WHltfe »ck cordova top, loiipeidii. tow ndtoa. OR 4-H58. I Con 106 N«W and 1M2 TEMPEST CONVERTI-BLE WITH AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, R A D I S HEATER, WMTBWAU. TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Paymanto only S7.fl par week. CALL CREDIT MOR. MrTParks of HAROLD TURNER FORO, BIRMINGHAM, Ml 4-7181. 1841 (^ShtIaC YEmpIst CON-vortlbw, automatic, toko — payments. MA WIM. 1841 SONNBVILLB CONVERTIBLE. Silver finish, Mack him and top. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO* 1104 S. Woodward, Blrmlngnom — 1961 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE HARDTOP No Monoy Down We Finance FULL PRICE $897 Tel-A-Huron AUTO SALES . 60 S. Telegraph FE 8-9661- BIG SAVINGS" $1395 tf«l GRAND PRIX. Power steer- 1M4 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE Km and braktip dark biua finish wlh matching Mm. Hurry tor 1841 TEMPEST CUSTOM OOder tartar ................... 1844 POffTtAC >Oeor Hardtop. 1841 CHEVROLET Super Ipjrt. h Mack top. WOWI 12485 1848 PONTIAC STAR CHIEF Sedan. Power steering and brakes, HydramaOc, radio, Motor, white- 184} SPECIAL WAGON. Automatic, radio. Motor, whitewalls. Beautiful aqua flnlth. ideal wag-on ell yaar around ... 11585 1843 CHEVROLET IMPALA WAOON. nmrjimring and brahat, VO, automatic, radio, Motor and A 1845 Corvalr Cent CoupL 7,000 miles, radio, 4-speed. Sliver . finish, factory warranty 11,885 u 1844 Bonneville Brougham coup*. Maroon with matching bucket seats ...I.. 82.385 f 1841 Tampa it tooor, Aqua, full month. -.17.7;........ Save . o Ih Sport Fu ower. Gold engine. ftS nth ... B 1844 Chevy II Novo Super Iport. Ml power, euto-17,000 mlln 1963 TEMPEST Coupe. Just right tor Autumn i Ing^ pleasure, full price only $1 FISCHER BUICK 154 5. Woodward 447. 12 Plymouth Sport Fury coupe. Full power. Golden Commando engine. Its down, 540 A 4-door it ton and 1 Htoor. W : trensm N Cg5emr*toether*ttrim end many other accesoorles .. 11485 gjj«w^.u!!25? ±2E SSSrESS 1845 TEMPigT Mtoor. Aejd-matte, V4, radio, hooter, whitewalls. lav* on this «m with tM mw car factory warranty 82181 1844 CHEVROLBTIMPALA 3-door KjEft &£2l * brakaw Hydramatlc, radio, heot-or,wbitoip*it*. vjmm.wwr i84i Aon t i a c sonnevillb Convertible. Power itoorinjMmd au«ra.1rr®i-ja 1844 TEMPEST LaMANS 2-Door. Power itMrbig and brakoa, Hy-dramatic HO V-l onglno, oontolo, radio. Motor, whltowolle. Pag •RA "215" rssr.x!tH MIS MERCURY MARAUDER K Door Hardtop. Pawar stoorlng Sm O JBiti. radio, hoator, whttowolls. 12.000 guaren- tlros. Hurry tor only 11,781 AUTHORIZED VW DEALER to mil* north of Mlrato* MHa 15 5. Telegraph PE Mill LOOK 1841 Grand Prlx, 1-— tradt-ln. 51787 h LUCKY AUTO PONTIAC CATALINA 1845, 1-DOOR t"** ^1 jwwar, 1845 PONTIAC CATALINA, 4-OOOR oodan, automatic ‘ronsmlsalon, 1845 BONNEVILLE 4-DOOR, COR-- ■ top, tlntod glaas, ar-cpndto , tow mileage. FE 5-0654. "GRAND OPENING SPECIAL" 1963 PONTIAC A lovely marlin aqua CatallM, door hardtop that is on obool_ gom in ovary detail, automatic, power, E-Z By* glass, and r — plot* Hot of factory oqulpmon $1697 184] XL convertible, , 855 Oakland Avg. (Outdoor Showroom) (Just to mil* north of Cess A VO.) Spartan Dodge Chevy — Pontiac 2-door hardtop 1844 Bulck Riviera 1841 Clwvy Bel Air Adoor 1840 T-SIrd 1844 Clwvy pickup. Stick I .- . . .._____C GRAND PRIX coup*. Bright rad Interior. Hydramatl Ing and brakes, whitewalls. Extra . Specie! CHEVRO- at 11,885. PMTERSO^ CHI_ LET CO* ml 5. WOODWARD, BIRMINGHAM, Ml 4-2735. "GRAND OPENING SPECIAL" 1963 PONTIAC pealing red Catalina Moor tod $1597 st to mil* north el Cass / Spartan Dodge, 1844 LoMANS CONVERTIBLE SIX, 144 PONTIAC CATALINA WA06N. -dsuow power, auto., eufoty drive d(fferen<,*i. tinted glass, 4 post.,1 ----------MY 1-1510 ' 1 1844 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX, POUI spaed, aluminum wtwole, rocoi gayer. Save finance chargee 1844 GTO 2-DOOR HARDTOP. speed, dk>. 68L___________________ {844 TEMPEIT LEMANS CONVER- oakl&d*^iwySler*pi?ymouth 714 Oakland Avt._____ 232-8150 HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 4441. WOODWARD AVB. , BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-7JM SMBMBM ®8>M END OF MODEL -SPECIALS- Guarantee CompiatEly Pavtd Usgd Car lot - Naw Car Warranty (Aik for Ottaili) PONTIAC-BUICK / 651-9911 •55 RbCKSTft ROAD 1960 DODGE 6-Passangar Wagon, 6-Cylinder, * Automatic, Powir Staaring. Only .......$ 795 1963 PONTIAC Coup#, Powar Steering, Brakos, Birmingham Trado r»v.—$1695 1963 OLDS ”88" 4-Door Hardtcn, Power Statr-ing, Brakm, Sharp Birmingham Trado ...$1795 1961 OLDS Starfire Convertible, Full Powar, Bucket Seats, Only ................ —$1395 1961 PONTIAC Starchiof Sedan, Power Steering, Brakes, a Sharp Birmingham Trade — $ 995 1963 OLDS Starfire Coupe, Full Power, Uk« New. Only ...........7T...$2195 1962 OLDS "88?*, "98"s, Hardtop*, Sedan*, Star- firas; From . . ..................... $1495 1964 OLDS F-85 Wagon, V-8, Automatic, Pawar Steering, Brake*, Priced to Sad at ..... .$1995 1963 OLDS "98" Hardtop* and 5edar», Full Powar, From..................................... $2088 1964 010$ "88" 2-Ooor Hardtop, Automatic, Power Steering, Brakos ..................<$2295 CATALINA^+OOOR, LOW 1842 R A MB L B.R, m CLAwlc, RQPOS5E15ION - 1842 RAMALBI mUnf* Pi iOMl. 1844 OTO, REAL 1HARP, EXCEL-told behdlltoh. PE^itoM. | 2-OOOR HARD.1 106; Now mi Deed Car* ; MW RAMOUR cTVTXSX: I RAMBLER CLASSIC 4. C, REPOSSBI V- wagan, i -1 at ra^dtei.___-____ R A M B L 0 E "77?j >44 LaMANS CONVehTlBie. yve With white top. 11700. OR V-l, auto., tower. 425-28tl, 1965 TEMPIST LoMANS 4-tPEBO TRANS-MlttlON, "Hlt> ENGINE. BBAUTIPUL RED FINISH WITH BLACK INTERIOR. $197 DOWN AIK FOR MR. FLOOD WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC ONE OF THE BETTER BUYS AT LLOYD'S 1959 RAMBLER Station Wagon FULL PRICE $495 Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 1960 RAMBLER DIO, HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Paymanti only 0M* per week. CALL CREDIT MGR, Mr. Parka at HAROLD TURNER FORD, BIRMINGHAM, Ml 4-7500. 1964 Rambler Classic tedlo and Malar, rodln 0 miles m wagon, Ocyflndar p and hoator, pawar . brakos, factory air • -sharp, 01,085. s'! OAKLAND CHRYILER-PLYMOjmt 714 Oakland Ava7 - »HE TREMENDOUS BUTS “ on 1965 Ramblers Idft m stock. Savorai models to n choose from. Must move x-r;-— —r- ot out to maki room for the ^ now 1966 GIANT KIUER Easy Financing And Bank Rates PROGRAM! Superior I rose . 3? Rambler I RAMBLER ■*— I 4 i-LAlllAJICl | narnuiiier* enea FISCHER BUICK DON'S USED CAR! SMALL AD-BIG LOT SO CARS TO CHOOSE FROM'"’ 677 S. LAPEER f Lake Orton MY 2-2041 GO!! MONDAY ONLY '64 Catalina Convortiblf with pawar (tearing, brakes, ri dip, heater. SIAM 1963 Chevy Impala '61 Catalina Wagon 8-peuenger, power and lo only- Rambler Closeout! 20 New 1965 Ramblers at Tremendous Savings * Compare Our Deal No Fair Trade or \ Offer Refused We Want Your Business! Trading Time Is Now For The Deal You've Been Looking For. For Example: 1965 Rambler Wagon I 1965 Rambler Classic Now dome 4-Door Wagon. Radio I Brand now, Mg "127" v-i attend Malar, Dow Guard, outline I gine, heater, whitewalls, newer mirror, rodlnlng state. Full I Mooring, Dow Guard. Youri price $1818 I for only . *2W8 Wo Arrange Financing and Bonk Rotes ^85-9421 SAVE MONEY-BUY NOW AT DRASTICALLY REDUCED PRICES' BEFORE OUR 1966 MODEL SHOWING ON OCTOBER 7, 1965 - 1961 LANCER 4-door with automatic transmission, radio i whit* flnlth and bet low, low mltoogt. It I* Clonic Moor to.......-— transmission, a beautifully 1964 RAMBLER , 4-cyllnder engine, stick ehtff and an excellent drlvar. Clwvy I* practically n Classic M 1964 CHEVY .rtth dark bluo fim transmission, radio and 1963 BUICK rV Ion wagon, ha* VI onglno, automatic Iron*-ip and * nice bronze-mist flnlih. tab Ms li sparkling red Intorlor, It It luM 1963 RAMBLER MANY, MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM 1957 TO 19&V ALL MAKES AND MODELS ALL CLEAN AND READY TOGO. - VILLAGE-RAMBLER SALES 666 5. Woodward Birmingham MI 6-3900 we call these LATE ONES... GREAT ONES! buy one and save .ORIGINATOR OF 2-YEAR WARRANTY 1QCC Prtnlirrp 1 QRQDfliiliiafl— 1QRR rihow — 1QRQ i Uuu r onxiac— Bonneville * i u/oo—ruiiiiuv Catalina 19UO V*fIlC7V y Biscayne itTw Thunderbird Convertible. Fewer Matring and brakes, radio and beater, midnight blue, white tap. Automatic. 2-Door Hardtop. Radio, heater, automatic, power steering and powar brakes. 4Door. Radio and haafar, automatic, 4-cyDndar. Hardtop >-Door. Radio, haattr, automatic $3050 $1695 $1195 power steering and brakac $1895 1962 Buick 1962 Chevy A. 1964 Chevy. 1962 Pontiac Electro " Convertible Convirtible * -ir 2-Door 4-Door Hardtop with full powar. Super Sport. Rad with white lapr (-cylinder, automatic, radio and 1 mpala. Kyllndar, radio, heater and automatic. IUid6arJTi*ilw<~autamoffc $1495 $1495 $2095 $1195 1962>^ep 1965 Chevy 1961 Cbrvair 1964 Chevy Camper 4wheel drive Pickup with modem camper, stove, refrigerator and link. It'S tM camper's drawn. Convertible Impala, 8-cyllndar, radio, heator, power Staaring and automatic Panel A versatile "workhors*", and tor anly— Super Sport Radio and hoator, Kyllndw, 4-speed tranamlsston, white with black cordova top, $1695 $2595 $495 $1995 635 & .Woodward Ave. Birmingham 647-5111 OPEN DAILY TM 8 Pi4. PONTIAC - BUICK - CHEVROLET* OPEN SATURN^ TIL W, 5 FJW. OXFORD, MICHIGAN on M24 OA 8-2588 i ,P-*C THE PONTIAC PRgSS, MONDAY, OCTOBER S 1PM Miami Won't Bear Brunt -Exile Center Spokesman MIAMI, FT». (AP) — The im- ami," said a spokesman at the Cuban Refugee Center. pact of a new flood, anticipated here in view of President Johnson's favorable iwpnnir to Fidel Castro’s lot them go" offer, would be felt throughout the United States, say persons making preparations to handle die situation. "New arrivals would rapidly be sent to cities other than Mi- Airlines Excursion, Group Fares HAMILTON, Bermuda (AP) — The world’s major airlines have agreed to reduce their excursion and group fares on 1l iHOitlnnlV rmitri between the United States and points fax Europe, Africa and the Middle Sast 1 ' The new rates were agreed to 'jk a conference of the International Air Transport Association which ended here Sunday night, tfhey are to go into effect in April but are subject to approv-<1 by the governments in the jdrtttite’ home countries. - Btecirsion fares are round-trip tickets to be uaedjiuring hpedfled time limit Between Europe and Ihe United States, the return trip must take place jwithto 21 days but in not less than 14 days. . Individual rates remain un- ONE FARE The airlines also agreed to do away with winter and summer rates on excurskn fares. There now wii be only one fare, applicable throughout the year, except far a few weeks during the peak summer season. Under the new agreement the maabar of persons necessary to qualify for a group rate has * i reduced horn 25 to 15 for starting from Europe, starting from Europe aiso^will get a slightly lower faro than those traveling from the United States. II * . :* > Group teres would .be reduced by as parch as 25 per cent westbound: and 12 per cent east-bound. One example of the new rate quoted by the assodaf tee eacurston rate from New York to Beirut, Cairo or Tel Avtv. WWW The fare, now |734 in winter and $899 in summer, would be reduced to ISM. Other examples: New York-Paris, reduced to $331 from the present summer rate of $341.80; New York-Munkh $365 from $387JO and New Yort-Rome 9408 from $445.40. TMiiiy Only Special! The UJ. government-operated center already has resettled 82,000 exiles in 2,000 cities in the 50 states in order to relieve the exile concentration load here. As officials braced to meet the expected influx, exiles generally were overjoyed at the President’s announcement that diplomatic wheels for the migration had been set in motion. Excitement in the exile colony high. THANKS JOHNSON — Manuel Artime, who helped lead the unsuccessful 1101 Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba, sent Johnson a telegram thanking for “opening the arms of this great nation" to the Cuban immigrants. Artime added, "The Dant-rque spectacle of fleeing from the Red crime will be a great offering to the Statue of Liberty where you pronounced your historic words." WWW Among some Americans here, there appeared a recurrence of some resentment that readied climax in 1963 when the Cuban exile colony totaled 200,000. The Miami Herald reported it received many calls expressing apprehension over jobs and business opportunities in the face of another wave of refugee competition. The exile colony now totals less than 100,000. The President’s announcement caught tire refuge center at half its previous personnel strength. A phasing-out program was under way due to diminishing refugee arrivals. Before airline service to Havana stopped with the 1963 Cuban cri-neariy 2,000 refugees arrived weekly. DIRECTOR TRANSFERRED The refugee center’s director, Errol Bailanfonte, was instructed only a week ago to transfer to Viet Nam as an aid director. No successor has been named. Refugees continue to arrive by the hazardous boat route. Over the weekend six me checked in at tire refugee center. Five of them had stowed away on a Cuban fishing boat, then overpowered the crew and hijacked the boat One crewman joined them. ■ - w w ’ w The others returned to Cuba after a British frigate sighted the group off Cay Sal and took the six aboard. 32 Cars of a Train Out of [>etroit Derailed ST. THOMAS, Ont. Iff) — Thirty-two cars of a 143-car east-bound New York Central freight train were derailed Sunday at Muiridrk, about 35 miles northeast of here. The train, en route from Detroit to Buffalo and cither eastern U. S. points, carried 1,000 live hogs, processed meat, and a shipment of television sets. More than 200 hogs were killed or injured so seriously they bad to be destroyed. Zoology Classes Get Pet Boa Constrictor HURON, S.D. (AP) - The zoology classes at Huron College have a new specimen— Gigi, a five-foot boa constrictor. I Two freshmen, who bought the reptile as a pet and put it in their closet, had to give Gigi up when they learned more about [dormitory Wide Track Drive at ▼. Ham, 354-4732 ACTING ROLE WANTED—Baby Jane Holier, a leader in the international jet set, has decided she wants to become ah actress. She has a bundle of movie offers, but before accepting one, tee’s going to take acting lessons. By WALTER LOGAN United Press International Both Britain and the United States intend to go slow on earlier plans for nuclear sharing within NATO. Diplomats in London ny there are second thoughts onr the advisability of reviving shelved plans for the U. S. Idea of a multination NATO nuclear surface force and the Brttisb-sug-gested Atlantic nuclear force. One reason it that revival would black an agreement with Russia against the spread of nuclear weapons. The other is a lack of agreement among the allies on tee scope of sack a force. It is likely to be decided at tee annual NATO conference in December. UP AND COMING: A bright future is predicted in Moscpw for Mikhail Zbnyaniu, the exdeputy fbreign minister who recently captured the top political job as editor of Pravda, Russia’s most important newspaper. Zimyanin, 51, who was ambassador to Czechoslovakia only six months ago, is “clearly on his way ap” according to Western diplomats. They say he is Jet Set Pacesetter Hopes to B Actress By DOtkUS KLEIN HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Baby Jane Holzer, pacesetter of the international jet set, says tee’: going to work — as an actress. Which means that acting, long out in high society, is now in. * ♦ Jane jetted into town tee other day and proclaimed in her fashionable little girt whisper: “Not working is like death." She wound up with a bundle of movie offers. CARBON COPIES At 23, Jane is the young woman whom millions of other women have been copying the last two years— from her lioness mane of hair, three-inch false eyelashes and Jipsticklem lips her boots and aboveknee skirts. Fifth Avenue stores ordered lannequins resembling her. Fashion magazines devoted whole sections to her. . .~"¥— * ★ “There were so many girls at Ondine’s (a fashionable New York discotheque) who wound op looking like me, that people ~*ve never met would go up to them and ate-, ‘How are you, Baby Jane’:" Her real friends call her Janey. She was riffled to guide a jet-setter’s tour of New York for me television show (ABC’s “The Wild, Wild East,” No?. •) and taped a Frank Sinatra-Sam-my Davis Jr. television special (CBS Nov. 21). ACTING LESSONS But not before taking acting “Then I flunked Finch (a very Social girl’s finishing school). And when you flunk Finch, there’s nowhere else to go." So shetook up modeling, married businessman Leonard Holzer, settkd into a Park Avenue apartment, started ma fashion news and traveling. ‘NOT A KOOK’ \ “My biggest problem In Hollywood has been convincing people I’m not a kook," said Jane. “But I have a mind, and want to use it," she said. As the bellhop knocked at her hotel door, she shuddered. " other plane trip.” Then she sat down on the couch, lifted her right foot and said, “Schmerdlump. Isn’t teat the word for luck?” “I started last January in Ndw York with Sanford Meis-ner,” tee mid. ~ * * it White may have put Jane ahead of the other jet setters who’ve tqyed with acting. Iran’s Princess Soraya was panned by critics in her first movie. Princess Radziwill, Jaqueline Kennedy’s sister, decided it was wiser to take acting lessons instead of accepting an offer in summer stock. Princess Ira V« Furstenburg, ex-wife of a Brazilian playboy and Austrian prince, kHteteteal tom t‘-UNDERGROUND’ “Actually,” said Jane, “up to now, my acting roles have beat so off otf-Broadway, they’ve been practically underground.’ Born into a wealthy and social Palm Beach, Fla., family, Jane attended Ugh school in Coonec-ticut.” ’ Actress Malone Able to Take Walk HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Actress Dorothy Malone ha walked for the first time since bring admitted to a Hollywood hospital for surgery nearly two weeks ago. \ A spokesman said yesterday that the 40-year-old actress also was able to drink a small glass of beer and teat with her parents and a brother to her room at Cedars of Lebanon Hospital. Miss )faone, star of television’s “Peyton Place," was hospitalized Sept. 21 to undergo surgery for massive blood dots to her lungs. Bid Opening Oct. 13 on Waterford Project Die Michigan State Highway Department announced today that it will open bids Oct 13 in Lansing for construction of a right turn lane on UJ. 10 at Sateabaw to Waterford Township. The cost of the project has been estimated at $15,000. The completion date is set for June 30,1986. ------v v no-ant VTHEATRE A MOVIE THAT YOU SHOULD NOT MISS! Foreign News Commentary U.S.. Britain to Go Slow on N-Spread The Americans are speaking of spring 1900 as the deadltot; beyond this, they ny, the tariff otto needed to boost Western trade may never take place. MORE WHEAT: Moscow experts predict more Soviet wheat purchases to the West. Best The Kremlin will buy another million tons this year to supplement the millions it already has bought. Disastrous floods to tire Danube region mean increased commitments to Eastern Europe. BOHLEN LEAVE: i Ambassador to Paris Charles E. Bohlen is not expected to return to Paris- until after the Dec. 5 election for a new French preri-dent. The embassy weed is that his long leave just happens to tell teat way. ' In the meantime, the betting is 2 to 1 that President Charles dl Gaulle will not drop out of the race. But word is that he will serve only a couple of the seven years to his term if be is reelected. carries weight to party circles." A less significant pototo-he is one of the few Pravda editors with previous newspaper experience. He was once a cub reporter to his native Byelorussia. DARK FUTURE: American officials in Europe are expressing more and more anxiety about future of the international tariff negotiations called the "Kennedy round." France’s baycatt of the Common Market to Brussels has paralyzed the talks, and Americans say it is becoming difficult to keep delegations from the 54odd nations together to Geneva. Bdbby Joins Pulaski Walk NEW YORK (D - For tee aec-ood consecutive year, Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, D-N.Y., created a stir by marching to New York’s Pulaski Day parade. Last year, as a candidate for the Senate, Kennedy was accused by some of using the parade for political purposes. He and his brother, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, DMass. joined the line of march at 30th street yesterday. They were asked to leave 10 blocks later by the parade committee chairman, Francis J. Wazeter, and join him to the reviewing stand, which they did. QEFOUnON BACKFIRE The opfmtltion. struggle against the South Korean government’s treaty with J^pan appears to be backfiring. ★ ★ ★ It had hoped to smash President Park Chung Hen’s government, but now the opposition Minjoong (Popular) party has developed a three-way split. Few observers to Seoul believe It can Add a candidate strong enough to beat Park In the 1997 elections. LIKE JAMfS STIWART “SHENANDOAH" A Jeumey In Bn 4th PlwwUte “TOrflMTRMUtt” JAMES ■evuart mmm NOW! JAMES STEWART SHENANDOAH at TjjM-lltlB MIIUQE at 1:50 only It THE KEY IN GREGORY PECK-DUNE BAKER/*, MiRAGEI*, $ EAGLE Pontiac’s POPULAR THEATER Starts TUESDAY! WRITTEN IN TNE HEARTBEAT^ OF TODAY’S Y00N0 REBELS! ‘PEYTON PLACE1 With LANA TURNER in gam AR The Ptowsra •sas” YOUR NEWS QUIZ PARTI - NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL Give yourself 10 points for each correct 1 The Supreme Court, which begins a new term this week, isrilte head often ..... Branch of our national government. a-Legislative; b-Executive; o-Judletel 2 A Supreme Court dedelou must be approved fey all nine Justices. Trad or False? 3 The Soviet government says it, will insist that its factories produce goods teat sell Instead of gathering dost on store shelves. The Importance of tela step la that..... a-storea will have more room b-conaumers will Influence production more o-factorles will produce leas 4 “Ders Kmqfllha Hoihet,” or “Your Boyal Highness,” is tiro greeting used for Crown Prince Harald of ..... In Ms visit to our Midwest a-Iran; b-the Netherlands; c-Norway • Local, state, a tribute about..... at Ac personal tnoome earned by Amezkeas, tea Tax Foundation reports, arope-flftet b ona tend; o o—half PART II - WORDS IN THE1 NEWS Take 4 points for each word that you can match with its correct meaning. 1.. ...trtity a-havlng to do wlthoourt of law 2.. ...W 3.....judicial 6.....repulse eHMriqg aril Amor sea PART lit - NAMES IN THE NEWS Take 6 points for names that you can correctly match with the class. a-Secretary of Interior U^wmiamH. Stewart 2....Stewart L. Udall 3.....Lewla and Clark b-ttOaed new U.& Surgeon General o aadad 30 days under- 4.....M. Scott Carpenter d-UN visitor Vbf.XV,N*4 •-trail stay become tourist route •VEC, Inc., Madison 1, WIs. The Pontiac Press Monday, October 4,1965 Match word dues with their correspond* lag pictures or symbols. 10 points for each correct i tide Is Fire Prevention Week Assembly to debate seat for Bod China YOM KIPPUR .*4 leone In schools October is Science >Freeidtod Boaclr returned CRAB NEBULA new treaty on Canal 7mm, \ I balloon to lift teoope to study exploded star Jews nark “Day of Atooamm**’October I 9 ___ J lt’a World 8eriea time 10 ___ experts oompare waya to make* fresh from HOW DO YOU RATI? (Seam Bwh tide ef Oris hpaiatsfr) VI te 100 print!-TOf SCORE! Site 90 print!-terilmt, --------------iTl jim . 90 print* - Gaud. _ # 41 to 70 print! - Fair. S0«r Utter???- HW Ml Orix baa* ef Ihe HsmHaasI ftapaa wMch TMs Haw**" jbfflUmtofoteobleft* arm. te StteuUte Mam* to Nritmat and Vtortd Aflntn as aa aid te Dnvaiapini Oasd CMaaddpb ___________ Save This Practice Examination: STUDENTS Valuable Refamter Material Per Ml ft* ft* H §i ft* fet IM AM *1 *71flD lOBPUt Tl NR AIM M** Mg «Sm tot Hr Art WH Mi N INN ft I m THE PONTIAC PRESS' MONDAY,'OCTOBER 4, ,1965 Dr-11 .'•^>_.~T^leyfeien Programs— Pwgrame furnished by station* listed in this column are subject to ihcmge without notice V-WiSK-TV, 4-WWJ-TV, 'V-wM-W, 4-BklW-TV, 50-WKBD-TV, 5'^-Wtv> MONDAY EVENING Wl'l) (7) Pope Paul’s visit £k (I) Dennis toe Menace (56) Creative Person 6ilM7) Sports 1:11 (7) News (9) Marshal Dillon (56) Aaron Copland 6:45 (7) Network News It# (7) Stories From Beyond (9) Movie: “The Plunderers (1960) Jeff Chandler, John Saxon „i|6) (Special) Inside China 7:11(7) 12 O'clock High (50) Colorfttl World l>99 (90) Speedway International -~(t6)Great Books 0:10 (7) Legend of Jesse James (50) Auto Classics (56) Kyle Rote’s World 9:09 (7) Shenandoah (9) Show of the Week (60) Desilu Playhouse 0:50 (7) (Color) Parmer’s Daughter 16:69 (7) Ben Casey (9) Don Messer's Jubilee (50) Merv Griffin 10:19 (9) Disordered Mind 11:69(2) (4) (7) (t) News, Weather, Sports 11:19 (2) Movie: “The Big Hangover” (1950) Elizabeth Taylor, Van Johnson (4) (Color) Johnny Carson (7) Nightlife (9) The Saint 12:41 (9) Film Feature 1:69 (4) Beat the Champ (7) News 1:15 (7) After Hours 1:10 (2) (4) News, Weather TUESDAY MORNING 6:11 (2) On the Farm Scene' 6:20 (2) News Coverage of P Visit Tws networks CBS and NBC—will provide ceatfnuona live etverajg* this evening of Pope Paul’s visit t* New York City, eliminating all their regular nighttime enter* ABC's continuous coverage of the papal trip will end nnd 6:10 pm. The network, however, will break into the scheduled programs to show a delayed colorcast of die Pope’s Mass far Peace at Yankee Stadium. CRS and NBC will end their coverage with the Pope’s departure for Rome at about 11 p.m. Special commentator for CBS will be Bishop Fulton J. 6:25 (2) Sunrise Semester 6:10 (4) Classroom (7) Funews 6:55 (2) Editorial, News 7:60 (4) Today (7) Johnny Ginger 7:06 (2) News 7:10 (2) Happyland 6:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Big Theater 8:10 (7) Movie: “Take Me Out to the Ball Game” (1949) Frank Sinatra, Geiih Kelly X 8:45 (56) English V 8:56 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go Round 9:66 (2) Andy Griffith (4) Living (9) Romper Room 9:10 (66) Come, Let’s Read 0:10 (2) .Dick Van Dyke (56) American History 0:55 (4) News ' (56) Spanish Lesson 10:60 (2) I Love Lucy (4) Fractured Phases (9) To Be Announced 19:19 (56) Our Scientific World 16:25 (4) News Sybil‘ Singl* Wilson irs New Husband Plans e Role as Entertainer By EARL WILSON Jordan Christopher, Sybil Burton’s young husband, is leaving his group, “Tiie Wild Ones,” to go out on his own as a . as an actor and a singer . .. with movie and record-deals under way ... but he doesn’t plan to team up professionally with Sybil: "She’s dedicated housewife and mother and we both prefer it that way,” be sqm. The fact is, Sybil's daughter Katie, 6, and his daughter, Jodi, 2, are new part of the same hswsehsM here. Married to %bll ^tace^une 13, Jordan has attracted many would-be Hollywood producers. “Greatest potential since Tyrone Powder,” said Mervyn LeRoy. “As for ‘The Wild Ones’ . . . well, Chuck Alden, Eddie Wright, Tom Graves and Tom Trick said, ‘Crasy, Jordan! It’s what you always wanted.’ I only played the rhythm guitar with the group and the rhythm guitar isn’t missed so much that they’ll notice I’m nfoe.” Christopher, considering offers from 3 movie7 comj and TV and recording deals, says he will still be hanging around Arthur, Sybil’s'discotheque here, whenever possible . . . he's got that national disease “Arthuritis” — and enjoys it. ★ ★ ★ • Hildegard, off to Loudon to do a one-woman show at toe New Arts Theater, part of a world tour, saM at Lauren East that she’s dieting se that "everywhere they’ll took at my derriere aid say ‘Who is that tfaia thing?’ ” HUdegarde said they call the producing company fho “HAM Co.,” H for HSdegards, A for producer Arthur White law, M for pro-, ducer Mary Coffins. “I’m the H in HAM” admits HUdegarde. THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . . Judy Garland’s been in and out of the UCLA Medical Gen- delay in processing her divorce from Sid Loft held up the scheduled marriage to Mark Herron but it’s said to be due any day. Eddie Fisher has a 940,000-a-week engagement at Camden’s Latin Casino Oct. 8, followed by 6 weeks at the Las Vegas Riviera at 40G’s and 3 weeks at Harrah’s Lake Tahoe at 40G’s. Eddiell find places for every penhy of it! . . . Lauren Bacall caused excitement at Long Island Medical College, Brooklyn. She visited her mother, a patient. TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Chuck McCann notes that Dean Martin’s comedy timing is good, and he’d make a fine stand-up comic — if he was able to stand up. WISH I’D SAID THAT: The trouble with earning a large salary is that is costs so much to let people know about it—Ray Fine. ________ REMEMBERED QUOTE: “A ship in harbor is safe — but that is not what ships are built for.”—John A. Shedd. BAIL’S PEARLS: Allan Swift offers this sUnile: “She’s as colorful as a peacock with measles.” Gingv Rogers (Now in “HeDo, Dolly”) is against the frug end Watusi: “When a man asks me to dance, 1 don't want to go looking for him when the music stops.” flirt's earl brother. (tin Mas trwmuH. lac.) 16:36 (2) McCoys (4) Concentration (7) Girl Talk 10:35 (56) French Lesson 11:59 (96) SpanislfLesson 11:69 (2) Divorce Cant (4) Morning Star (7) Young Set (9) Film Feature 11:20 (56) What’s New 11:19 (4) Paradise Bay (9) Across Canada AFTERNOON 12:69 (2) Love of Life (4) Jeopardy (7) Donna Reed (9)'Razzle Dazzle (50) Dickory Doc 12:25 (2) News 12:39 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Post Office (7) Father Knows Best (9) Take 30 12:35 (56) Spanish Lesson 12:45 (2) Guiding Light 12:50 (56) Come, Let’s Read 12:55 (4) News 1:60 (2) Scene 2 (4)Match Game (7)*Ben Casey (9) Movie: “The King and Four Queens” (1966) Clark Gable, Eleanor Parker (50) Movie 1:10 (56) Children’s Hour 1:25 (4) News (56) Arts and Crafts 1:36 (2) As the World Turns (4) Let’s Make a Deal 1:56 (4) News (56) American History 2:66 (2) Password (4) Moment of Truth (7) Nurses 2:26 (56) Safety Circle 2:25 (56) Book Parade 2:36 (2) House Party (4) Doctors (7) . A Time for Us (50) Love That Bob 2:01 (56) Spanish Lesson 2:55 (7) News 3:66 (2) 1b Tell the Truth (4) Another World (7) General Hospital (50) Topper 3:25 (2) News 3:30(2) Edge of Night (4) You Don’t Say - (7) Young Marrieds -----(9) Swingin’ Time----- (50) Captain Detroit 4:60 (2) Secret Storm (4) Bozo the Clown (7) Never Too Young 4:39 (2) Mike Douglas ... (7) Where the Action Is X9) Fun House (50) Wells Fargo 4:55 (4) Eliot’s Almanac 1:69 (4) George Pierrot (7) Movie: ’Target Unknown” (1951) Mark Ste- _____iiitii| Aifflf yffottl_ (50) Lloyde Thaxton (56) Driver Education 5:30 (56) What’s New 5:56 (4) Here’s Carol Duvdll ACROSS I Sanctuary section 5 Place of worship II Standards of conduct 13 Ascended 14 Pays supreme respect 15 Canonical hour (pi.) 16 Bedouin 17 Pole------(Fr.) 16 Ages 19 Bed (prefix) 20 Anatomical network 24 Norse god 26 City in Germany 27 French idiom 31 High in pitch (music) 32 Guido’s note 33 Church section 36 City hi Florida 37 Law of Moses (var.) 38 Drinks slowly 39 Church seat 40—- Alto, California 44 Joseph’s brother (Douay) 46 Ermine 47 Greek god SOTheHoly-------- 51 Preacher’s discourse 52 Cuba’s Fidel----- ECCLESIASTICAL r- r* E 6 5 7 rr IS 13 IT“ IB IB l" ii R ■ e IT u r i B ill 28 29 ST 1 1 " - B 1 H L rr r 36 "1 p H 37 ST r J 1 ii IB J J R r 1 57 II 49 r 1 F BP t BP r 4 54 Feminine appellation DOWN 1 Scent 2 Umbrella 3 Winter vehicle 4 Worm 5 Subdues 6 Of an epoch 7 Episcopal head coverings 8 Greek letter 9 Man’s nickname 10 Abstract being 11 Lion’s neck hairs * 12 Scent 17 God’s servant 10 Rodents_________ 21 Jacob’s toother 22 Relate 23 Grafted (her.) 25 Opera star 26 Eastern potentate 27 Acquires 28 Asiatic mountains 29 Sanctuary feature 30 Pack away 34 Sacrament 36 Old Testament book 39 Mexican laborers 41 Main artery 42 Den 43 Masculine name 45 Blackthorn 46 Mast____ 47 Peer Gynt’s mother 48 Through 49 Mouthlike openings 50 High school subject (ab.) Answer to Previous Puzzle Face Bridge, College Bills Legislature Returns for Final 2 Weeks LANSING (AP)—The Legisla-i lower than the rate on the reve-.enth state in the country to give tore, with its agenda finally set nue bonds, which were con- ratification, and bills in the hopper, returns sidered high-risk when thel . Two bills of prime interest to tonight for two final weeks of| bridge was built. Wayne County are up for con- aUXU! TSl i I0000 CHANCE ||M|j| M After taking nearly three _ weeks to decide what to con- J” measure is given a good sider, the House and Senate set ”“nce to clear House but sv-i •• • . A fappe Mini olo^rlinn 2m Cam an Oct. 15 deadline for action. Under the deadline schedule, bills must be reported from committee in their house of origin by Tuesday or be dead for the year. * * With tax reform off the agenda of 32 items, the most controversial could be Mackinac Bridge refinancing and a fl. million excess-student college appropriation bill vetoed earlier in the year by Gov. George Romney. The college funds would be held in case more students than predicted enroll at any of the seven smaller state colleges and universities plus Michigan State at Oakland. VETOED MEASURE Romney vetoed a similar measure included in the state budget last June because, he said, it would merely encourage schools to take more students than they could handle. He said if enrollments are high-er than expected, the money could be appropriated when fades tough sledding in the Senate State Affairs Committee, where Chairman William Romano, D-Warren, has said he wants the matter studied more. It is up for debate on the house floor tonight. ■ Also on the House action calendar are a state constitutional amendment permitting a graduated income tax ami a U.S. Constitutional amendment concerning presidential disability. The former is opposed by Republicans, from whom at least one vote is needed for the required two-thirds majority. The latter has been approved by the Senate and the House is expected to make Michigan the sev- Senate Appropriations Committee Chairman Garland Lane, D-Fllnt, said, however, early enrollment figures already show the contingency money will be needed at Central, Eastern and Northern MQchigan. universities. Hr said the $1.2 million would J be enough to take care of an extra 1,500 students. Four Person* Injured In Old West Festival PRINCETON, Mo. (AP) -Three persons suffered gunpowder burns and a fourth was injured in a mock hanging dining Saturday’s celebration of Calamity Jane Day. Calamity Jane, notorious in the old West, was bora to Princeton in 1652. Saturday’s show was the fourth one staged by the town to publicise mat fact. — Radio Programs— WJM760) WXYZfl 270) CKLWfSOO) WWJfOSO) WCA»(1130) WPONQ460) WJOKQ 500) WHH-SMC04.7) : rx ipioKT 4lW-WJR, Mtwi, Sport, WWJ, NeM\ WXVZ, Nmn X ciaw. erw \XTT7 WWJ. Phon# Opinion wcah, Nmm, OttaM «|J»-WJ«, MUMC HM wwj, mm CKLW, By* OptnW. Dovtoi WOON, Norn, Oob Liwrtnco wpon, n«w», tm*\ WHVI. Muik Or Cpwmnom til»-ciaw, FuNon L«wM \ WHM Millie lor Modtriw rljP^WJR, iSnomk'ctab liW-MSST WOrW tpotr IliW-WXVZ. MPdcop \ Murphy. Muilc joftnny Iron, tiltdMPh SSMOM— WJR, Nowi. Mtnlc Hill CKLW. MM*. Oovln WJOK, Howl, UK lito-wjS. Nmm. cuoh WHFI. NPWI, AIKNMC , WMK. SSieo •< .. «LW,*2jhwww vun. now*, Sportr . fc S252' liSO-WJR, Music Hall mnw WWJ M|M, SMiy p , , tnl-WJU. Open HoutP 'i titO-WJR, UP Murray wi, McKmmy WtO-WJU, Nowi. Hut, CKLW,' S Jo? VO! II.W WCAR. Ooyp Corondw cxiw^oSpk Jy-OMio M»rj^Wra2ie Ml-Mbile CiaW, NW, Grant WXYZ.MPreAwy.Muik WCAH, Nowi, Tom kpMIiw WHFI, Newt. incoro WJBK, Newt Edor iti’S-wjn, Sown Link. ciaw. Newt, Joo von WS3BBf UN*. sfHb wSe1 Backers of the bridge want to call in the 199.8 million in revenue bonds arid replace them with bonds issued in the name of the state. They contend such bonds could be sold for an interest rate about 1 per cent other counties became Interned. Oakland County has some 80 members, according to David PUktoton of 669 Myrtle, one of the four who hiked torough the Crosby Lake Road-ffiltoboro arm of Springfield Township Satutytoy. Study Hits Nikita Bias on Jews WASHINGTON (AP) - A study prepared for Senate use blames Nikita Khrushchev for what it calls an official Soviet policy of discrimination against Jews. nlS8 rW »F!l!f8ed*w-Slinday —«• gw« night, said that under the form- Iftinn tn atnp fh. erSoviet premier, the number Bctl0" step th^ of Jews in the Communist party and Soviet government was ^drastically reduced. “As far as is known there are no Jews to the upper echelons of the party or government, with the exception of V.E. Dimchitz, first deputy chairman of the Planning Office,” it said. The report, entitled “The Soviet Empire — A Study to Discrimination and Abuse of Power,” was prepared by the Leg= islative Reference Service of the Library of Congress for the Senate Internal Security subcommittee. OUTSPOKEN “KhraAiftefi^JUsaid, “kas been outspokenly anti-Semitic and his position has been that top Soviet echelons must be as Judenreto as possible.’ “Judenreto” — mea _ of Jews — was a slogan under Hitler’s Germany. “There can be no doubt that anti-Semitism is an nffMal policy of the Soviet Union,” the study asserted. To support ibis contention, the study said that before World War H, 41.1 per cent of the deputies to the Supreme Soviet were sideration during the .... weeks. One would merge county and state welfare services and the other would stagger terms of circuit court judges in multi-judge circuits. Negro Youths, Police Tangle Try to Board Bus Fails in Crawfordville, Ga. CRAWFORDVILLE, Ga. Utl — Negro demonstrators tried to run past state police today to board a bus carrying white school children, and several of the Negroes were hurled to the ground. Two. were dragged from the street and arrested when they vent limp. Georgia’s Grand Dragon of the Kn Khn Klan, Calvin' F. Craig of Atlanta, grabbed one of the Negro youths by the shonMer after a state trooper had blocked file demonstrator. Craig wrestled him to the ground. Craig told newsmen afterward that the Klan will increase tension in this rural east Georgia town until the governor takes Nature Lovers Expore Area jn Springfield A group of four Oakland County me m her s of the Eastern Michigan Nature Association explored a portion of Springfield Township Saturday afternoon. The association was formed two years ago to locate and preserve undeveloped areas where nature can be seen “without tiw infringement of modern culture and human improvements.” L_..:viiCS 4f ' » »_ It started as the Macomb Nature Association of Mount Clemens, but the name was changed ’.zr'bEr ists to Ji per cent by It w w^' Hie study recalled A quarrel between Khrushchev and poet Yevgeny Yevtushenko on Dec. 17,1191 at a meeting of Soviet writers. Yevtushenko, not Jew, wrote a poem denouncing attempt. TWELVE PUPILS Twelve Negro pupils showed up at the spot where white chil- UHF ANTENNA Installed $29.95 IMPROVE YOUR HOME DEAL DIRECT W,builoerTHE FREE PLANS and ESTIMATES-NO CHARGE SPECIAL CALL FINANCE PLAN 1 will ,hiw m how Jo fay present bills and do Mil rsmoBiIbi work In FE 8-8173 ana bill# Uf la 20 yaam •a pay. Na money dawn. Mortgage and bank Open Daily and Sun*. | Knaficinf. , | CALL DAY OR NIGHT | | CABINETS 5-Ft. Kitchen SOM COMPLETE £09 I-Ft. Kitchen $OQ(] COMPLETE £99 NCLUDES: Uppei * ADDITIONS ★ FAMILY ROOMS ALUMINUM SIDING REC. ROOMS ROOFING—SIDING WOODFIELD CONSTRUCTION ILL COME TO WITH FREE MATE AND PLANS—NO CHARGE IS W. LAWRENCE Pontiac, Mich. CALL FE 8-8173 6 Months Before First Payment ONE CONTRACTOR FOR EVERYTHING MS CUSTOM BUILDING NO MONEY DOWN BIG BUR CONSTRUCTION COMPANY 739 North Pony FE 3-7833 -M THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY!, OCTOBER *, im TRANSISTORIZED SOLID STATE G.E. STEREO CONSOLE $099 $J99 $1099 SAVE! PHILCO PRICE REDUCTIONS PHILCO 15 C1J. FT. UPRIGHT FREEZER PHILCO 30-INCH ELECTRIC RANGE nsa80 * 1966 COLOR TV PHILCO 12 CU. FT. DELUXE 2-DOOR *18880 *23880 REG. $279.96 UVE $61.16 NAUTILUS ELECTRIC RANGE HOOD ELIMINATES ODORS, SMOKE, GREASE! Smart decor utyling. Install yourtelf in minutn*. No duett, no . vontt, no halo* in wall. Ufotimo aluminum filter. Bocottod light. Very deluxe. Quality built. With wall guard. TWO SIZES- + mm AA YOUR CHOICE Vldao Guard 82-channel tuning system. Zenith patent custom "Parma-Sat" VMS Dm tuning control. Automatic color darffier. Automatic color level circuitry. 25,000 volts ENTERTAINMENT CENTERt OLYMPIC 23” TV - PHONO RADIO , . COMBINATION PlusBig Trade-In NO MONEY DOWN • 3-YEARS TO PAY i : I f & :*Wrm The Weather U.S. WMttwr luruti F*re< Chance of frost VOL. 183 NQ. 205 THE PONTIAC m ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. MONDAY,. OCTOBER 4, 1965 —44 PAGES ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL Pope Is in U.S. on Peace Mission Johnson Offers Cubans Refuge IN SHADOW OF SHRINE— President Johnson speaks from the shadow of the Statue of Liberty in New York yes. terday as he offered America’s refuge to Cubans seeking to leave Cuba. Vice President Oakland University will welcome Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey on his visit to Michigan Oct 22. Following a noon-luncheon on campus, the vice president will move to the Howard C. Baldwin Pavilion where he will deliver a major address on the United States education policy. Democratic congressman Billie S. Far. num of the 18th district has been instrumental In HUMPHREY making arrangements for the official visit, according to OU Chancellor D. B. Varner. “Key figures in Michigan and Oakland County education plus county officials and student leaders from county public schools will be among those present,” said Varner. * e • In the event of inclement weather, the |>rogram will be moved to the Intramural Building. In Today's Press Luna 7 ' New Soviet rocket has-automatic station—PAGE A-2. LBJ on Viet Pushes for full details on Asian fighting — PAGE B4. Uruguay , Launches plan to solve economic woes —- PAGE B4. Area News .........A-4 Astrology...........D4 Bridge.............D-3 Crossword Psssle .. D-ll Comics .............D4 Editorials ..... ...A4 Markets ............D4 Obituaries .........DA Sports ........C4—C4 Heaters ..........D-ll TV-Radio Programs D-ll Wilson, Earl .... D-ll WMMtt’s Pages B-1-B4 NEW YORK (AP) - President Johnson -set .the gears of government and diplomacy in motion today to offer America’s refuge to Cubans who seek to leave the Communist island of Fidel-Castro. ”1 declare to the people of Cuba that those who seek refuge See Story, Page 0-10 here in America will find it,’ Johnson said yesterday in i windswept bill-signing ceremony at. the Statue of Liberty “The dedication of America to our traditions as an asylum for the oppressed is going to be upheld.” Johnson thus took up the chal-j lenge posed by Castro's offer to let those of his people who wish 'eave their homeland and go tc America. * * # But just hours after Johnson spoke, Castro lpid down a n~w> challenge in a Havana speech telling the U S. Pre«ident to a'so| open the doors to permit Americans to travel to Cuba if the. j wish. . COME TO GUBA “Let the United Sla'?s permit anv citizen to come freely to Cuba.” Castro shouted to a] cheering. audience. et them; permit any citizen to come free-! ly to Cuba. . .’’ Travel of Americans to Cuba and Other Communist countries now is restricted by the State Department. Of Johnson's proposal to permit Cubans to come to America, U.Sgovernroent sources believe 50,000 to 75,000 Cubans might seize the opportunity to leave their homeland and take up refuge in the United States. WWW Johnson stood at one historic port of entry — choppy, white-capped New York harbor — to open the gates of another, Miami.. He said the Florida city will be “a temporary stopping place for refugees as they resettle in other parts of this country." MAJOR MISSION Johnson’s dramati^ announcement overshadowed his major mission on Liberty Island, the ceremony in which he signed a immigration bill into law. It will erase the system of immigration quotas based on national origin. Johnson called the old system un-Americqn. Scores of government officials and hundreds of sightseeing tourists thronged Liberty Island as Johnson signed the measure and passed out souvenir pens. Before the crush of pen-seekers Was over, he passed out three cartons fall, perhaps 3M pens. 4 Johnson said first priority in immigration to. the United States will go to Cuban who have relatives Jjere, and to political prisoners. * ★ ★ State Department sources estimated 30,000 to 50,000 Cubans may be in thoae categories. The President announce stejM jo open America’s doors lor Cubans who seek to. join (Continued on Page 2, Col.-1) ‘CHE’ GUEVARA Fidel Says Guevara Left Cuba In Indonesia Capital 'Army Has I KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (£) — Radio Jakarta said today that the Indonesian army is now in “firm j control” of Jakarta but added there are reports of Communist activity in other parts of the country. | The broadcast gave no details of the Red activity. Indonesian observers in Kuala Lumpur said Communist paramilitary units, who are believed to have [I been supplied arms from'*' Red China, could be pre-| r , i ri *•/. paring to take pn army kata \h()0| |1Q units loyal to the govern ! 1 VJIVJI 4w7lnlH ment. Associated Press correspond-jent Antoine Yared reported! from Jakarta that there “Were i | fears rebel troops from central | Said Accident DETROIT /AP) - The Waynei “the leadership of the army HAVANA (AP* - --Prime Min-, the moment is directly und ister Fidel Castro -says Ernesto me.” Guevara, one rf the kev leaders Java would attack the capital, j County Sheriff's Road Patrol! „ .. . - . . _ Isays the fatal expressway shoot-' President Sukarno in a .J of hospHal%xetuW Dr.f broadcast yesterday said he wayng \y GIas js called “pure-firmly in ^charge” and lv accidental” by the factory se-|| at cyrity guard who held the gun. I Dr. Glas, 43, director of sur-! ;gery at Wayne County General {Hospital, was shot to death in Sukarno’s broadcast was his his station wagon Saturday of his r^volutjen, finished his first public statement since a night while driving to the ho$-| work in Cuba six months ago ..revor.tionarv COuncil”/led bv!pital from his Ann Arb°r home and moved on to revolutionary revolutionary council tea ny|to a patient He was shot in activity elsewhere. an officer in the president s he hea(J Castro talked about his form- palace guard attempted to seize „ , „ , *. er close associate in a speer-h t- ™ Thursday , ™'road P8*™1 “f 1** : a rally last night: He did.not ■' * * * day Harold ± Ruisel ♦ ! say where Guevara, a native of . ... ... yf*^ a^ory .*u.ard’I a!*.° Argentina, had gone or where RaaJ0 dakarla sald of An" Arbor, declared his he was now of six Indonesian generals killed gun discharged Just before he i) .; b f .rcc w.refound ina was to fire a warning shot Guevara s Cuban wife was common grave in an area of the after trying to make a “clti* i" *J*e audience, dressed in cap;(a: known as "Crocodile zen’s arrest” of Dr. Glas. ! black. The crowd gave her an » ................_ v - - . ovation when she entered. She A statement attributed to Rus- appeared near tears. CHIEF OF STAFF ceil by the road patrol said he They included the army chief stopped Dr. Glas for what LEAVING AIRPORT-Pope Paul VI smiles from his auto as he leaves New York's Kennedy International Airport this morning to begin his one-day visit to New York and the United Nations General Assembly. Local Wan Dies on Dixie-Gas Kills Sylvan Woman LBJ, Address United Nations * - Leader of Catholics Hailed by Thousands as He Arrives in NY NEW YORK Popp Paul VI, spiritual r,uler of 550 million Roman Catholics, came to America today as a peace pilgrim to the United Nations, and to meet with President Johnson. The first Pop to, sit 'the^, New World, arrivedSt Kennedy.. Airport at 9:27 a.ta. after.® nine-hour jet flight of 4,280 miles from Rome. • Awaiting the pontiff were high-ranking officials of all lev*ls*of gnvemnigq^andtob church. The AlitaliiAffnir jet taxied to a red carpeted welcoming ceremony. -Red velvet roping enclosed the area and a long black lim-■ ousine stood waiting to take the Pope on a motorcade parade through Queens and Manhattan. Thousands of spectators had turned out hours earlier to wait for a glimpse of him. j CATHOLIC CHILDREN Amor\g the spectators at the -j sealed-off airport and along the A Pontiac mdn was killed in (was driving the car, which was papal routes were big delegations of Catholic children, part revolution in your territory,” the letter said. “I formally resign from my post as major the highest rank in the Cuban army, as minister of industries, and my status as a Cuban he was proclaimed a native Cuban citizen in 1559. "My only mistake of any-seriousness,” the letter continued, "was not to have; confided more in you since the first moments of the Sierra Maestra (where Castro’s revolution started), (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) hi m Frost Possible Tonight, Says the Weatherman Plan on protecting your tomato and pepper plants tonight. The weatherman warns of local frost and a chance of freezing temperatures. Teaight’s law will ft* between M aid 17. Tomorrow wfll be sunny and warmer with the temperature ranging between 86 and 72. Increasing cloudiness and still warmer temperatures are predicted for Wednesday. Lowest mercury reading before 8 a.m. hi downtown Pontiac was 36. By 1 p.m., the thermometer stood at 46. idurirfeT and* irTthe frst’years °* Achmad 5 ft Bussell) considered ' i of the 706,000 from “ metre idustries and in the first years ... _ .---------- - ‘h- dtttab lwav ,n Iddeoendence Towhshio: * * * politan arca' parochial schools .... ............... ■ , Glared a holiday lor the. industries and in the first years "u!l““j‘“.'^ offenses by the doctor. >ay in Independence Township re!®!“^..d0^ated^Sier.d ' W “ reP°rtedj The shooting took place on L|and carbon Cuban, economy. He disap- * peared last spring, and since However, Radio Medan, i» j Romulus Tetmship'Russell said then there .have been numerous Sumatra, reported Gen. Abdul be was ^rivtog to his night job conflicting rumen about his Haris Nasution, the armed at a Chillier Corp. plant in Dewhereabouts. forces chief and defense min- I troit at the time. *’ + * i*ter, was safe at the head- iNTFN’nnN Castro read a letter which he quarters of Maj. Gen. Suhar- • said Guevara gave him April 1 to. L It f was purely accidentai i. mmiA if ,u„ Russell said in the statement. It said other lands in the, BriUsh Embassy sources in had no intention of 8hooting him. I didn’t know I hit him.' suburban monoxide world” needed his services... j Jakarta reported to Singapore DUTY FULFILLED’ that Suharto and another right- “I have fulfilled the part of wing general, Maj. Gen. Pramo-my duty that bound me to the to- appeared to be in control in the capital but that Sukarno was trying to reduce their power to the balance." According to the statement, Russell overtook Dr. Glas at an intersection and walked to the doctor’s car to tell him he had been driving badly and to place him under arrest.' Lait Year ] automobile was weaving from bjs^orjc vjsjt lane to lane at a'high rate of Secretary-Omteii ft speed before veering off the Thaht, the official who invit-Iroad whiie attempting to pass! e*1 *be" Pope to lay his another car. _P'f« f°lrI^fcelibef,0^/ , the international body, headed/ | Gilmore was dead on arrival j the welcoming delegaUoi^-^ at Pontiac General. No other aircraft were in the soning took the life of a Sylvan Lake woman Saturday in M on t morency County. , The victims are William G. Gilmore, 53, of 75 Clark and! Mrs. Lewis was found dead j cool, clear sky as the big jet Mrs. R. Bruce Lewis, 21, of 1417 in a cabin at Lake Avalon, approached from the east for a Rosedale. Inorthwest of Hillman. 'landing. Airport activity ceased • j - * * L J las workers and spectators Gilmore was killed when the * * * I watched. I car he was in went out of con- She was discovered by a j * t ★ :* troi and smashed into a ditch neighbor who saw her husband! with Thant were the other and two trees. stagger from the cabin and at- official greeters: Secretary of For years Sukarno has played! Russell said he was carry-! Another man in the cW, $dtempt to break open a window.|State JgJg' anti-Communist military lead-] Ir>« a Colt .357 magnum /^-lfor(i L Taylor, 24; of Kyle, S.D., H0SPITALIZED Lewis, 23, was hospitalized at ers off against the Communists, vo*ver- i, ...., H | but in recent months he had ap- Russell said he tapped on Dr. j*s listed in satisfactory condition peared to listen more and more G,as? car window and that Dr. at Pontiac General Hospital H . to the Reds. [Glas "laughed in my face” and,from Injuries received in the! .. noo it . ■ i m I started to drive off. I Montmorency County Sheriff PPEAL FOR UNITY j “j was trying to cock the gun, | . * j Joel Secrist said the young coulna later broadcast message|i was going to fire a warning! * * ★ pie apparently lighted a char- Sukarno, 64, appealed for unity shot,” Russell said. “I thought1 Oakland Cqpnty Sheriff's of- coat burner to warm the cabin of the armed forces so that “the he was going to run me over.!.. . . . .. and went to sleep unaware the As I tripd to fire' the wamingl,cers sald 11 was no yet. de i‘jfire was emitting deadly carbon shot, the gun discharged." Initely determined which man monoxide gas. jGbv. Nelson A. Rockefeller, Mayor Robert F. Wagner and air forca, and army will not clash with each other." GMC Truck Lineup Introduced Today A greatly expanded truck line that couples bold new design concepts with increased power, performance and economy was introduced today by GMC Truck & Coach Division. The 1966 GMC truck lineup consists of 116 basic models which generate 450 wheelbase models or 1,312 different engine, wheelbase and brake combinations. Basic models range-from quarter-ton delivery vans to giant highway tractor* with 176,669-pound gross combination weight ratings. Calvin J. Werner, a vice president of General Motors and general manager of GMC Truck & Coach Division said the new additions to the 1966 line plus the numerous engineering refinements in ell model categories will give GMC the greatest market coverage in the division’s history. "The new model lineup features many improvements in engine, cab and chassis design,” Wenter said. VOCATIONAL FLEXIBILITY Vocational flexibility is provided by seven cabs plus 13 bodies, 13 gas engines rated 90 to 276 horsepower and 15 diesel engines rated 130 to SIS horse- Among the highlights of the 1966 lioe are: • A new serits of 92-inch bumper-to-back-of-cab (BBC) medium and heavy-duty trucks designed for maxumum durability. • A family of “Magnum” gasoline engines with advanced performance and fuel economy features. I oA new 637-cubic-irich V-8: heavy-hauling industry and the version of. the division’s now fa-{West Coast market, mous Toro-Flow diesel. | All were'developed by GMC ’ . * * ■ * j Truck & Coach Division engin- • A 114-inch BBC truck andjeers and arevteing manufac-tractor series tailored for the Uured in the division's plants. REPLACE ‘Bv MODEL -The new 92-inch'tted cabs replace GMC’s "B” model cabs and heavy-duty conventional cabs. . Retained in the ’66 line are 72-incli steel tilt cabs, 48-inch aluminum tilt cabs, arid light and medium conventional cabs. ANOTHER NEW ONE-Highlighting the GMC 1966 line of trucks ia this 62-inch cab unit which also has aerodynamic design. Narrow front pillars and a broad windshield Uh* combined with a relatively narrow, sloping hood provide excellent side and forward visibility. Both the new 92- and 114-inchj cabs have an .aerodynamic de-j > sign. . They are more durable, easier : to maintain and embody driver i comfort and safety features. Ex-| 1 terior styling is modern and in-1 | terior treatment functional, j SIDES CURVED Sides of the 92-ihch cabs are [ curved to reduce air resistance I and minimize road splash. Hbods i open, on each side to | provide easy access to the engine. In models which hive fiber-j glass front ends, the entire I * hood, fender, and grille assembly tilts forward. 'Narrow front pillars and a broad windshield, combined with! (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) | Francis Cardinal Spellman, archbishop of New York. ITALIAN PREMIER Also there were former Italian Premier Amintore Fan-fani, president of the U.N. General Assembly, and the four other U.S. cardinals. , The pontiff, white-robed and wearing a crimson cape and cap with gold embroidery stepped from the plane onto the ramp at 9:39 a.m. and waved jo the crowd. He slowly' descended the ramp, smiling, and shook hands with the waiting dignitaries. A ... An excited conversation swept through spectators watching from’ the airport observation deck. “There he is!” POPE APPLAUDED The watchers applauded and shouted as the Pope - stepped onto American soil — at 9:37 a.m., The crimson - capped cardinals joined in the applause as the Pope stepped onto the (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) “Still Swamped after 30 calls,” reported Mrs. R. M., concerning the following ad: 1M4 MARLETTU. 55x10 WITH Try a Quick-acting Press Want Ad Today! FE 2*8181 $ ' > UK PONTIAC 1'KKSS. MONDAY; OCTOBER 4, 1905 'ope is platform, donned spectacles, jnd with Thant at his side, tfegan to read an arrival vision of life in the hope of immortality. God [yours!"■ bless this land Hie spoke in English, fast and]' i almost in a monotone. I Showing no sign of weariness ^"Greetings to you, America!’’!from the long flight, thti. Pope, the pontiff said. “The first Pope to set foot upon your land blesses you with all Jiis heart He renews, as it were, the gesture of your discoverer, Christopher Columbus, when be planted the Cross of' Christ in this blessed soil. “May the cross of blessing which we now trace over yoor skies and your land preserve those gifts which Christ gave you and guarantee to you: peace; concord, freedom, justice — and above all the Cubans Get LBJ Offer of U.S. Refuge (Continued From Page One) some 270,000 of their countrymen already in the United States. He said he has asked the State Department to seek through the Swiss government an arrangement for the movement of refugees from Cuba to Miami. The United States does not maintain diplomatic* relations with Cuba. 63, walked to the limousine. Its j clear plastic top had been left j off for the 24-mile parade to j Manhattan and SL Patrick’s Cathedral, where some persons 1 had been waiting overnight. SHAKE* HANDS A-crowd continued to press! around him even as Pope Paul sat on the special seat which can lift hi mseven inches above his fellow passengers. He shook many of the hands' outstretched to him. - Police motorcycles and a cruiser-led the way and the procession started. 7 i JAKARTA ROADBLOCK - Troops loyal Pope Paul’s limousine, flying | to Indonesian President Sukarno used the papal and American flags,! armored cars to block off a street in Jakarta was the sixth car in the motor-] cade. IDs host, Cardinal Spellman, rode with him. • [' Minutes later, however, the] procession stopped and the Pope! shifted to a limousine with a' dear plastic top. Winds werei brisk and chilly. SMOOTH FLIGHT V' R§oul Fornezza, an Associated Press photographer who was aboard the papal jet from °Rome, said that twince en route following a clash with rebel forces in the attempted military coup against Sukarjio Friday. It was reported yesterday that army troops had virtually crushed the uprising. Guevara Left Cuba--Castro (Continued From Page One) and not having sufficiently understood your qualities t director and as revolutionary. . A. it Sr\ ,s' There was hoi. explanation of this apparent reference to differences between the two men. The letter added without explanation: “I liberate Cuba from any responsibility." NEW BATTLEFIELDS , “In the new. battlefields, I shall carry on . . . the obligation to fight against imperialism wherever it may be," the letter said. The letter expressed fond regards to Castro and other friends. It also expressed confidence the Cuban people would take good care of Guevara’s wife and children, Castro said he was “confident this explains everything" abdut Guevara. Birminghartv Area News CranbrookArcheologist Claims Scientifi BLOOMFIELD HILLS i? A He noted 9»t some of the bone discovered in a bean field led a Cranbrook Institute of Science archeologist to a scientific first. The association between man and the American mastodon was substantiated during a recent expedition directed by Dr. Warren L. Wittry.' It has long been known that Indians existed at the same time as mastodons, but there had been no,evidence of association between them until now. Opportunity to prove the association came in the spring of 1964 when Gottlieb Rappuhn uncovered with his plow what turned out to be the jaw of a Change Sex Reds Launch Luna 7; of Prisoner Automatic Station A tooth was brought to Cranbrook from Rappuhn’s farm near-North Branch. But it was . ,, „ .. , . not until last August that work , opposition to the Peron dictator- a| ^ site by th£ ,n the ^ i of a good crop of beans, could Guevara, now 37, was educated as a physician but left Argentina in 1953 because of his bones bear numerous scratches suggestive Of knife .cuts. * “The association man with the Rappuhn mastodon is proven beyond a doubt by the -fact that most of the ribs found in the excavations were cot away frontdhe vertebrae,” * he said. The skull was some 20 feet away from where* it should have been, and the lower jaw was 12 feet beyond that. ★ * * Wittry, who plans to do further work at the site, said radiocarbon dating tests now under way will establish the approximate time the mastodon died. A portion df the dig Will be recreated for an exhibit at the Cranbrook Institute' Science museum beginning Friday. HR «.SAL£J*, Ore. (UPB - The sex) M0SC0W <* _ u* soviet pected the Pope came from his special ola ,ma.|e s°?er.w?s chan^j Union launched a space rocket compartment to the tourist sec-]fur®ica ly shortly before his re-Staining an automatic ’station tion occupied by the press and! „ase .om , e Oregon State |toward the moon, a broadcast distributed rommemorative|Fen|tent,ary ,as* mor)th. it waSjTass dispatch said today, medals. disclosed yesterday. j The probe was designated as The flieht was smooth most i. 0fficials ,at Priso" 8aid Luna 7, Tass said the launch-ine nigni was smooin mosi i fW0 rare operations and hor-jno was bv a multistage rocket _ Johnson said he wants thej |f the way, wrth only a litUe mone treatments transformed a _ ^ Swiss to seek Cuban agreement tarbulence over the Atlantic, prisoner named -Gene” into a! , ^sst.fa,d ** *™on wej?h* in a request to the International Fornezza said, . (woman, for all pracUcal pur-| 1,506 kdo8rams <934 pounds). Red Cross Committee for assist-1 Crowds four and five persons! poses. ’ I “The final stage "had been put ance in processing refugee deep flanked the Pope’s path , I in advance on an intermediary movement. ;through Queens. About every 20 jf**]V!** (orbit of a satellite of the earth But Castro in his Havana feet, a policeman stood facing the human wall, his back to the side world as a woman named “Jean.” {and then in accordance with a present program put. the auto-The surgical change was the natic station'into the trajectory culmination of what Jean called I of its movement toward the speech rejected the idea of Red!roadway Cross aid- Castro said he was children in school uniforms]™..__ _™. reay tp begin negotiating thej cheered and waved flags and a lifetime, search “for an iden- imoon,” Tass said, matter with the Swiss Emtassy, placapds as ^ Pope | aty.- - *.,* w whioi, represents the U.S. gov-jsdiool bands played. ]«,*** 1 Tass said the last stage of the add‘BAPTIST CHURCH * “I’m not scared anymore,“ rocket ,wis put into a parking ed: “Hie Red Cross is not nec-wiURCit j h .. 1..................- essary in this.” , f Hie first church the Pope IN NEW YORK passed was that of a Baptist VOLUNTARY ACT I congregation, located on Van| The voluntary sex. change satellite orbit and then the auto- the Russians again ship. MET IN MEXICO He met Cadtrb and his brother Raul in Mexico where they were planning their revolt against’ Cuban dictator Futgen-| cio Batista and landed with Fiat the foot of the Sierra would try to make a soft land- Maestra on ^ 2 1956 mg on the moon with the station | - . , , in a trail run for a manned | » troop8 nearly wiped moon flight. There was no , mention in the Tass announcement of the specific purpose of the flight other than to collect scientific data. But the announcement that the rocket was launched “toward the moon" indicated that it would attempt to land there rather than to circle the moon. A soft landing was believed a likely mission for two invaders, but Gue-vara was one of the 12 survivors who made it into the hills with Castro, the revolution Guevara became one of the key leaders, along with Fidel and Raul, its military strategist and the architect of the social revolution which Castro carried out after Batista was overthrown in be scheduled. SIX-DAY DIG Wittry and five young assistants conducted a six-day dig and unearthed many of the bones of the mastodon, which roamed the earth some 6,000 to 14,000 years ago. ^This one, an old male, somehow met his death in a prehistoric bog. Many of the bones were found j roughly where they should be in g r e w (relation to each other. In New York, Johnson also: • Directed the Departments|Avenue of State,.* Justice, and Health,! Education and Welfare to make! Far “headerof the tide Wyck Expressway and Liberty operation is believed to be the “Bones of the feet were widely scattered and provide one of the best dues as to the association with man, “Wittry said. “Many of the charred in a manner which indi-* * ■ * . ] cates that flesh and cartilage , In November 1959, he became l were nrpspnf when the hiirnintf First, it would permit doseup head of Cuba’s national bank,ff i? 8 photographs to be taken of the the key post In the Cuban econo-r lunar surface.. - my. In February 1961, he be- The photos could be radioed came minister of industries. I, back to earth to help seled a!ni0Pe. spectators waited ties as part of a convict’s retry into the United States. ! almost immobile around St. habilitation. • He said he will ask Con-j Patrick’s in midtown. Throngs After her release Sept. 10. today for $12.6 million toj clsewhere solidiy outhned the I Jean moved ,0 an carry out the commitment. ( route he would follow uptown » He said be will ask Con-! a*** through Harlem. Oregon city and is living as a close to too-prescribed Iland 8 man on 9“ n*00*1 safely IP1 9“^?.8. cooPcratlon *‘^1 the) (with present equipment. It has Soviet Union.and Red China. h „ . 7/ been estimated that a Soviet soft The automatte lgHon was landing wou]d put ^ Russians equipped with telemetering, ]6 months ahead of the United : States in the race for the moon. I Luna 7 weighed slightly more] The term automatic space I than the last two moon rockets. to Feature '66 Pontiacs ZACHARY SCOTT Stage, Screen I Star Dies at 51 Death Is Attributed | to Malignant Tumor Castro also announced (he rally that the new 100-member Central Committee of his United Revolutionary > ,. « , I . party, named Saturday, had .sP°nsor a threeday ^ of h a n g e d the name of the j1966 Pontiacs and Tempests be- Downtown merchants will woman claiming to be the (Station normally means the *de-1Luna 5 weighed 3,250 pounds and ] party to the Communist party ginning Thursday, grass today for $12.6 million, to] Sidewalk peddlers hawked] “happiest” she has ever been. . *s unmanned. It was ex- Luna 6 weighed 3,176 pounds, i of Cuba. , Featuring a circus tent and Ofry out the commitment, j souvenire of the papal visit, j ^ rare m change was dis.j * a ^ --- * ] billed as “Tiger Days in Down- (town Pontiac,” the display of new models will be on Saginaw between Huron and Lawrence. • He appealed to agencies] Pope Paul nodded and waved i , . . . . which have volunteered aid fori constantly to the crowds. i c*os®d yesterday in a story in Cuban refugees to expand their] In Forest Hills, a wealthy res-1tl,e Fort and Gre^onian; which j efforts. “Their help is needed in idential area which is 80 Perisent a woman reporter to mter-the reception aqd resettlement] cent Jewish, spectators were 40|v*ew 9® ex'conv’c*' of those Who choose to leave to 50 deep along Queens Boule- vart 4th Man Due , GMC's Truck Lineup Introduced Todays The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Mostly sunny and cool today. Highs 45 to 55. Fair and quite cool with local frost and chance of freezing temperatures tonight. Lows 30 to $7. Sonny and warmer Tuesday. Highs. 65 to 72. North to northwest winds 8 to 15 miles this morning becoming northeast this afternoon and southeast 6 to 12 miles tonight. Outlook lor Wednesday: Increasing cloudiness and warmer. A carnival atmosphere will prevail with the tiger a (Continued From Page One) axles, brakes, wheels and elec-. The first V-8 engine designed] *ym,)0*of the-new line cars. | a relatively narrow sloping hood teical systems. and built by the division, the Black and orange paper (tl- provM, Sid, for- PtaylnJ par.'J"1” ™C’* ward visibility, a key safety fac- the Division’s new model line|famed l,ne of V-6 Ton>-F 10 wj ers and banners will drape Store r. is an advanced and expanded (diesels. windows. Music will add to the , * ★ o ' family of gas and diesel engines. ' * * * [atmosphere. | Durability features include NEW ENGINES It employs the same “toroi- * who PonUac p0-!fu,,-dePth frames ^ cantilever A second generation of GMC’sjJ1” air fl®w 88 the earUer Tor°-|axLi £ bribe aifront and semishear rear cab famous V-6 gasoline truck en- Flow*........... - • •- Arraignment in Game Raid Direction: Northeast. Sun tote today at fjio p.m. San riles Tuesday at 0:34 < Jfliloon sets Tuesday at 1:12 '-Moon rises tpdey at 1:52.p. A fourth jlice say conspired R ____ _ police officer in connection with] mounts. Body-shell lap joints in- 8|nes P°wer the new line of me-.an alleged gambling operation crease structural strength and dlum and heavy-^hity gas will be arraigned in Municipal!reduce corrosion. trucks. These new “Magnum" (Court today. , nnnn s-rsms-c 351- 401- and 478-cubic-inch dis- ! Charles Rousos, 52, of 11500 ] n rnAMiws placement engines develop 20 I Faust, Detroit, was arrested at One-piece door frames assure per cent more power and pro-j his home Saturday morning, six|a good do°r fit for the life of vide improved fuel economy , (hours after Pontiac and S t a t ejthe truck. Doors open two de- complementing the “Mag-Police raided the Seaway Civic grees wider than an previous D 5 and Social Club, 118 S. Paddock J model cabs. in the display tent from 6 to 3 DIMENSIONAL P-*n- Saturday. The motion of air at the timeillGERS AND CAR the fuel is injected is three di- A new 1966 Pontiac .wUl be mensional, resulting in ^)re given away along with 10C complete air-fuel mixture andU,^ toy uge^ better combustion. Merchants and sales person- nel udll 6e garbed in tiger stripe -i Temperature Chert NATIONAL WEATHER—Precipitation is expected to be limited tonight to periods of rain over the. southern Plains and occasional showers afln| the Pacific Northwest roast. Cooler temperatures are forecast from New England southward along the Atlantic Coast to the Caroiirms. It will be warmer in the nMdlands, the northern plateau and in' the upper Great Lakes area. Police said that Rousos was i The cab has a flat, unclut-an officer of the club, which ( tered floor. A quick-tilting they claim- was a front for ] steering wheel is optional All \ an illegal dice game. have an advanced steering g $ fSSw city 72 2-1 Rousos alsd has been charged; *y*t«m that reduces steering S’ m S « with conspiracy to violate state! effort and lost motion. « I njT'o^i If « gambling laws. | The U44nch “West Coast” r w«-Omaha0 m u * *“ steel cab has a fiber-glass hood, 2 5 P& S SLPol|.^ Pf!?" ‘" tender and front-end assembly. S 2 I: f renege o* S S th*cl"b followin« thL3:^kay"l‘ The hood, fenders and grille tilt ■is s ■» “i:? * ••»»»*»- g«------------------.* -plrtelyexporing^lheengine. KEY FIGURE j Designed for heavy highway The key figure in the opera-] tractor, logging and oil-flekl tion. according to police, was]work, these 114-inch cabs have ;Angelo (Barrels) Lombardi, 37,{such additional features as func-also of Detroit, once named byltional instrumentation, comfort-former Detroit Police Commis* able seats and interior finish, sioner George Edwards as a sec-land attractive exterior aci tion leader in the Mafia. jsories. v Lombardi is charged with! WEST COAST STANDARDS j bribing a Pontiac policeman The cab design, components who was working as an under-(and equipment exceed jVestl cover agent for the depart- j Coast standards and will satisfy ment. Lombardi and two ]the demands of the heavy-haul-others were charged with, con- jng industry, spiracy to bribe. Lt Raymond E. Meggitt^atAtfL and 114-inch cabs are safe-der the direction of PoUcrimfff ty\ engineered, providing re-William K. Hanger, pos ■ 11 -1 - - - informer for the operatj^n. j [Snobs and switches. All nre ensy to see and ensy to ranch. He was receiving $400 a mpntjn Besides the new trpek models. GMC Truck also unveiled today a completely new engine, the D<37, which powers the 114-inch West Coast tractors and mahy other medium and heavy-tonnage (Conventional models. ... i els antf some A V-8 gasoline version in the same 837-cubic-inch displacement will be available later this year. / Coverage of GMC’s in-line six- cylinder engines is fejed in ^^ mnvpnhnnal anr| tilt CflD IUOC1-'— 9 * vests and ties displaying “Welcome 1966 Pontiac” buttons Planned in cooperation with Pontiac Motor Division, the thrqe - day promotion is spon- - AUSTIN, Tex. (AP) — Zachary Scott, who switched with ease from swaggering drama to drawing-room comedy in ,thre« decades as a leading man, died Sunday at the age of 51. Death was attributed to a malignant brain tumor, detected after be complained of not feeling well last spring. The moustached and darkly handsome star of stage, screen and television “simply went to sleep” about 5 p.m., said a brother-in-law, Fanning Hearon of Tryon, N.C. He said Scott had been in a coma for two days. Death came at the home of his mother, Mrs. Zachary Scott Sr. Her son, an Austin native, returned^ here Aug. .9, leaving for only brief radiation treatments by a physician. |N 34 FILMS It was the end of a career in which he played scores of stage parts and took roles in 34 films, mostly before he quit Hollywood in 1950 and returned to make his home in New York. Scott was wont to characterize his usual screen role as that of “a heel with charm.” Associates, describing him as far from a heel in private life, liked to recall how he induced fan dubs in the 1940s to adopt war orphans and send them food and clothing. Business Association. from Lombardi, according . Hanger, to pass along/imorma-I tion about 'pending raids*on the !club, the division also Introduced toff NEW GMC TRUCK—Tailored for heavy day many engineering refine- highway tractor, logging and oil field work, ments to such chassis compon-j * GMC Truck and Coach Division’s powerful ents as frames, transmissions, new “West Coast” unit features an aero- dynamic dqsign, .increased durability and driver comfort and safety. Styling is clean and (bodton. Bom Feb. 21, 191L Scott .turned to the stage K high iscKool and at the Univeraitv of Texas. With parental constat, he left college at 19 and headeK for England. They stipulated^ that he earn his passage and he sailed from New Orleans as a seaman aboard a freighter. He landed a juvenile lead in “The Outsider” with an English repertoiy company and ap-peared in nearly two dozen plaf? before returning to this country 16 monthslater. 8EEN BY WARNER Scbtt worked through summer stock to Broadway. Hollywood’s Jack L. Warner spotted him in 'Those Endearing Young Charms" and proffered'his first movie contract in IMS. His initial screen part was the title rote in "The Mask of Dimi-trios.” Among the films in which he appeared thereafter were “Mildred Pierce,” Casa Tlmberlane,” “Appointment in Honduras,” "Her Kind cf Man,” “The Southerner" and “Born to be Bad.” After returning to the stage Stott played in “The King and I” in New York and “Snbway in the Sky” and “Requiem for a Nun” in London. Calendar THE PONTIAC PRESS MONDAY.. OCTOBER 4, 1965 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN Sumptuous Style Show . Who can resist a pretty woman? Mrs. Richard J. Maurer, Bloomfield Hills, wears a Ben Reig' navy blit# wool day dress and §able boa as she scans blueprints in the uncompleted gym at the Convent of Pontiff,Pr*M Photo, by Edward R. Noble the Sacred' Heart. She w#l model Oct. 13 when the Alumnae Association and, the Janet Stuart Association present their ninth annual fashion show. Mothers of students at the ,Convent of the Sacred- Heart, Bktojpfield Hills, and members of the Alumnae Association Are completing plans for their ninth annual fashion, show. Scheduled for afternoon and evening performances on Oct. 13, the show will feature fashions by Walton-Pierce, furs by Robert, hair styles by Geon’s, children’s clothes by Ethel M. Pollock and tea tables by the Charles W. Warren Company. In addition, 1966 passenger TUESDAY I Italian American Club, | 9 a.m., breakfast in club-1 house on North Tllden I Street. I Fashionette Club, 8 | p.m. Adah Shelly Li-I. BTary. “Diet Discussion I Night.” . j . WEDNESDAY Woman’s World Series, § 10 a.m., Pontiac Mall, i “How an Amateur Can 1 Take Professional Pic-| tures” by Dimitri La1 ? Zaroff. Parliamentary . Club, f 12:30 p.m., Maurice’s on Edison Street Mrs. Charles Crawford is chairman of the luncheon. United Fund Rally, 1:15 fun., Elks Temple. “Hello Dolly” dessert and fashion show. Pair Hosts to Parents for Dinner Parents of children attending Temple Beth Jacob nursery school gathered for dinner Saturday evening in the Dow Ridge home ‘of Dr. and Mrs. Eugene Sikorski. Special guests were Rabbi Ernst Conrad, the Melvin Ellers and the Herman. Sten-bucks. Assisting the hostess were Mrs. William. Freyerinuth, Mrs. Delbert Brown, Mrs. Charles Harmon, Mrs. Harry Reed and Mrs. Robert Rye-son. ._______ • * '• Mrs. Elier7~ranw^. A. Meadow Believed location of Army Payroll ' fi___________ (EDITOR'S NOTB: An ; ||%Rf payroll still missing. in 0 York after two centuries. Guard payroll i together in Louisiana. A Texas town tires of Ms Christmas decorations. A horn--fgg sparrow in Maryland. A legacy for education in Ohio. Wiese are glimpses from the VJ. scene this week.) * * * GRANVILLE, N.Y. (AP) -An Army payroll of gold and diver coins, buried in a meadow two centuries ago by retreating French troops, still is hidden r this upstate village, a local ‘ n says. The big mysteries, historian Morris Rose-Roten says, are the exact location of the treasure and its worth. He thinks the mooey lies somewhere on property now owned by fanner John Plenty. Prouty admits he’s intrigued by the story but says he has no plans to go treasure-hunting. According to Rose-Roten, the money was buried beneath beech tree near the Mettawee River. The burter was a French captain who wanted to keep it out of the hands of advancing British soldiers during the French and Indian War: Rose-Roten says the captain never returned to die spot. The historian bases his information on a story in a 1912 issue of a now defunct genealogy magazine. The account said that a man who helped the captain hide the money returned later but was unable to find it It. appears, Rose-Roten n ports, that the beech tree disappeared and the river changed - its course, eliminating the best landmarks for searchers. BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) -rolling out the National Guard for duty during the Hurricane emergency in Louisiana was easy;, paying off the guardsmen was a little more difficult. The bill was 9300,000. The National Guard treasury didn’t have $300,000, so it called on the Louisiana Board of Liquidation of State Debt. The board kicked in with $100,000— the maximum under state law it give any agency in a single year. Getting the other $200,000 a matter of juggling funds. The board withdrew $200,000Nin plus funds from Another count, gave $100,000 to the state treasurer’s office and $100,000 to the Public Works Department and directed those agencies’’to pass the money along to the Guard. DUMAS, Tex; (AP) - This town has found that people can tire even of Christmas—the displays, that is. That is why Dumas, 48 miles north of Amarillo, has placed its city Yule decorations on the auction block. Nq price had been determined. The figures were painted by a Dumas artist and were lighted. A drive for different decorations, not yet selected, began last week with $8,000 already donated. £ EMMITSBURG, Md. (AP) - § The swallows, they say, come 3 back to Capistrano, but Lil’ $ Peep comes back to Emmits- S burg. UT Peep is an English § sparrow. It all started when Mrs. John-3 Davenport’s daughter, Linda, 3 15, found a baby sparrow in the 3 barn. It had fallen from its nest 3 and was too young to fly. The £ family took it into the house, fed 3 it, and named it Lil’ Peep. 3 Then, several weeks ago, g much older and wiser and with 3 a full set of feathers, Lil’ Peep 3 was released. 3 “We knew it was wild and 3 needed freedom,” said Mrs. Da-| 3 venport. Lil’ Peep flew away—blit not for long. That night, much to the delight of the Davenport children, Lil’ Peep returned. And the bird has been return- Each Christmas season since osa Dumas Avenue has been m?.evel? n,8nt slnce' 1959, Dumas Avenue has been renamed Storybook Lane and the city has placed 50 8-foot-tall figurines in an eight-block area. The figures are made of plywood and painted. Such characters as Pinocchio and Rudolph the red-nosed reindeer are included. USED TO FIGURES “Out* people have grown accustomed to them,” said Herbert Harter, chairman of the decorations committee plaining why they have gone on sale. erative until 1951, because his estate was left in trust of two sisters until their deaths. The second sister djed in 195(1 and, the next year, the first scholarships were granted. Since then, the fund has1 earned $33,186 interest and 45 students—31 girls and 14 boys— have received cash awards to help them attend colleges, uni- versities, nursing schools ai other educational institutions. Only Interest has been used for these grants. Coxen’s $50,000 is still intact and earning funds for more scholarships. Mrs. Davenport says she lets LIT Peep out of the house about 7:30 each morning and it returns about sundown. “She knows when she has a| 3: good thing going,” Mrs. Daven- 3 port said. ALLIANCE, Ohio (AP) -1:3 Three Alliance high school :3 graduates go on to school each 3 year because Oliver M. Coxen 3 was hired 71 years ago as a :3 teacher. Coxen, a native of nearby g Michigan Briefs / By ESTHER VAN WAGONER TUFTY WASHINGTON — President Johnson has kept his Demo-cratic-controlled Congress busy. Congressman Elford Cederberg, R-Bay City has discovered that a new record (328) has been set in the number of roll «*»n« and quorum calls in the House. The old record was during the list Congress with 308. Officially, Secretary of Labor W. Willard Wirtz has not mtto up Ms mind about continuing his experimental policy of ywtowHnthqf domestic labor for Mexican natiinals during the fruit-vegetable season. Resalts coming in from Michigan pickle growers, who complained of a loss of crop for lack of pickers, have Bit been evaluated. In pa interview, the Secretary said “bad weather was one unlpcky factor.” Also interfering with a “fair test” was the dismal working conditions (lack of showers, etc.) for the high school students in some areas, he said. The secretary is proud that the number of Mexican laborers was reduced from 180,000 to 25,000 and that the switch in labor policy did not increase prices. Marlboro, taught three years in :3 “If another city of about 8,000>the Alliance school system, .3 had them, they would be unique: beginning in 1880, and served I there for three or four years.” lone year as school superin- 3: ifgndent. s \ [•$ Then he quit education for 3j Be Our Guest! You’ll be thrilled with the beautiful styles, the quality and selection of our sofas and chain. Especially the modest prices made possible only by our lower overhead. You jre invited to be bur guestland see v the new Fall Styles of sofas' and chain in a galaxy of new coven and colons. Colonial, traditional and contemporary ttyles of Furniture for Living room, dining room and bedroom. Convenient Terms to Suit You .. .90 bays Same as Cash business. He was successful, but| he never l&t his interest in education. * OPEN * MON. AND FRI. EVENINGS -AMPLE FREE PARKING LOT When he died Nov. 2, 1926, in 3 Canton, he left a $50,000 trust 3 fund to be used each year to aid 3 three Alliance high school grad-iv-i uates in furthering their educa- •: tion. \ | 3 I That trust didn't become op-, 0 'm&i * OUR LOW O' 144 OAKLAND AVE. BAD SAVES YOU MONEY * Shop right here for your big, new-generation Comet. COMET CYCLONE: another action seri line, Comes as convertible (shown) or hardtop. £ Secretary of Interior Stewart L. Udall announces the sale of $3 federal “duck stamps” totaled 79,268 in Michigan during fiscal 1964-65. Stamp sales ($88 million nationwide) -aid in restoring waterfowl population. Sen. Philip Hart, D-Mich., will attend the congressional hearings on Sleeping Bears Dunes lake-shore project in Traverse City today and on the Pictured Rocks proposal in Marquette tomorrow. On hand from the House Interior and Insular Affaire Committee will be Wayne Aspinall, D-Ohio, and Ralph J. Rivers, D-Alaska. * Congressman ‘Robert Griffin, R-Traverse City, who has some objections to the Senate-passed Sleeping Bears bill will also be at the first hearing. Congressman Raymond Clevenger, D-Sault Ste. Marie, is pleased that a $75,000 study is to be made of all the ideas to deice the St. Lawrence seaway to allow year-round traffic. “If file season could be delayed by £ month it would mean $1 million to Escanaba alone.” - CSTABLISHCO ISS4 ' .. . BIG, BOLD BEAUTIFUL ROOFING SHINGLES! (SALE END! SATURDAY; OCTOBER 9TH) THE ULTIMATE SHINGLE FOR ROOF BEAUTY AND TIMELESS ^DURABILITY! . WICKES JUMBO WOODTEX SHINGLES ★ BONDED FOR 25 YEARS) ★ EXTRA FIRE PROTECTION! A *1.00 OFF PER SQUARE! Heav^, rugged construction couplfd with prominent beauty, texture so distinct and eye pleasing you’ll point with pride at your roof! Years of-wear built into-this 300 lb. shingle . . . npw at a terrific .savings! See the Wickes Jumbo Woodtex Shingle Today! Reg. $1X24 J NOW ‘ ONLY... 11 24 PER SQUARE STEEL ROOFING rYear 'round economical roofing, Finest American made for durability. 27 Vi" wide corrugated, WICKES EVERYDAY LOW PRICE., j $085 MANAGER’S SPECIAL lCOMELCAPRI: planned for the young-at-heart. ‘ Available'is 4-door sedan (shown) or hardtop. COMET STATION WAGONS: Available in models, the Villager (shown) with a dual-acti -tailgate that turns into a door, and the Voyager. Look them over. Discover that Comet for ’66 is a bold, beautiful new kind of driving machine. Sleeker and roomier than ever. -Up tofi inches longer. And to match the com-plete Tirieup of Mercury Comet models, there’s a tempting list of options. Bucket seats. Four-speed floor shift. Or three-speed, twin-range automatic. Add as much of Comet's spirited luxury as you want, too. An optionaf inyl-covered Qxford Roof. Power steering, fcower brakes, under its unique twin-scodp GT hood to heavy-duty shocks and springs, engine dress-up kit, dual exhausts, and more. See the '66 Comet line. Thirteen let’s-get'rolling models— sedans, convertibles, hardtops, and wagons. They’re at j your nearby dealer's now. Do your Comet shopping early. CfttABlISHIO l«54 , f —Ale/lcu/u/COMET “Power windows, power everything. Or try the action- .,a , . .. packed Comet Cyclone GT: from a ne#390 4-barrel V-8 the big, beautiful performance Champion Theii try your favorite at y Mercury dealer's. 1250 OAKLAND AVE. LLOYD MOTORS LINCOLN — MERCURY—COMET 333-7863 LUMBER & BUILDING SUPPLY CENTER On Highway M53,iy2 Miles S. of ROMEO Phone 752-3501 Store Hours: 8-5 Monday thru Friday — 7:30-4:00 Saturday — N-MERCURY DIVISION i n KROGER REGULAR OR DRIP SPECIAL LABEL 14-OZ. CAN CANS KR06ERFROZEN VEGETABLES FRENCH GREEN BEANS, CUT CORN, SWEET PEAS, MIXED VEGETABLES, PEAS & CARROTS or CUT BROCCOLI got HF ^ SAVI k 9-OZ. UP TO A swift's ^-5^52 COMPLETELY CLEANED WHOLE MRS. IRENE KRAUS 23253 PARK DEARBORN $SOO WINNER MRS. STRUA KUBERT 1B715 FOX REDFORD WSZAUNSK. <539 STRATFORD WARREN $100 WINNER MARGARET RADTKE <1R W. CHISHOLM ALPENA $IOO WINNER MRS. GLADYS SQUIRES 23017 CALIFORNIA $100 WINNER PATRICIA PINSKEV 73140 M-19 |USDA( XHOICEJ U S. CHOICE TENDERAY HERE ARE A FEW MOST RECENT J^WAKE MONEY" WINNERS THE PONTIAC PRESS, MbNDAV,’OCTOBER 4,-1965 RENO BLAST AREA—Firemen sifted through wreckage today, trying to find the cause of a mystery blast that leveled a bar and six downtown buildings in Reno, Nev., yesterday. Nine persons were hurt The explosion was felt 15 miles away. in Chicago School Crisis CHICAGO (AP) - An integration' group has asked Mayor Richard Jv. Daley to intervene in the Chicago public school crisis involving $30 million in federal education funds. The dispute. arose Friday when the U S. Office of Education, ordered that |30 million in federal funds be withheld from Chicago public schools for failure to comply with the 1964 Civil Rights Act. The Coordinating Council of Community Organizations, an organization of integration groups, appealed to Mayor Daley in a telegram Sunday: “Because of an intransigent superintendent of schools and a school board hardly able to take the most feeble, steps forward, segregation and inequality in Chicago’s schools has brought on' a crisis of catastrophic proportions with the withholding of federal funds. „ ■ . spokesman added: “Hie Office of Education believes that the situationun these instances can, with the cooperation of Chicago school authorities, be resolved satisfactorily.” NEWS CONFERENCE Willis called a news conference Saturday and said the threat of holding back the $30 million “for unknowns unstated reasons’’ would set Bqck “an increase in opportunities for Chicago school children.” Willis added: “I feel it (the |action) is despotic, alarming threatening. It undermines the foundation of local control of public education. “We now call upon you to enter this situation with vigor and determination to bring Chicago schools into compliance with the Civil Rights Act, and to encourage in every possible way the city’s full cooperation with the UJ5. Office of Education . . .” 4-YEAR CONTRACT Schools Supt. Benjamin C. Willis, 63, was rehired by* the Chicago Board of Education in May to a four-year contract, With the stipulation that he retire on his 65th birthday in December 1966. Integration groups contend Willis has maintained de facto segregation in the public schools. The council, led by Albert Raby, appealed to Francis Kep-pel, U.S. commissioner of education, in July and asked that federal funds be withheld until the Chicago public schools are property integrated. The U.S. Office of Education in Washington said Friday that a preliminary investigation indicates some instances of failure in Chicago to comply with the 1964 Civil Rights Act. A federal “While I am sorry this hap-. Hied to Chicago, perhaps it is a blessing in disguise. It may serve to alert the public to the capricious^ and autocratic '‘actions emanating from the federal education offices.” Ray Page, Illinois superintendent of public instruction, said he had received a letter Thursday from Keppel which said, in part: ‘Some of the complaints are very complex and may require analysis over some period of time. The preliminary investigation of certain of the complaints, however, indicates probable noncompliance with (Civil Rights) Act-” NOT INFORMED . Page told newsmen had had not been informed of the specific charges and that the Office of Education did not specify the alleged noncbmpUairce with federal regulations. . . . Illinois is to receive $61.7 million under the 1965 Education Act. Willis said Chicago’s budget for schools this year totals $341 million, and that the $30 million in federal funds for the city would be in addition to the regular budget. Chicago has 562,000 public school pupils in some 550 elementary and high schools. About one-third of the pupils are Negroes. HANSEN TRAVEL AGENCY HOLIDAYS ON SKIS Ski the famous Ski resorts In Switzerland, Italy or Franc*. Or combine two countries All inclusive from Detroit. OKEiHUME MMM WEST INDIES ORIIISE 13 Days — 5 Ports *350 2227 S. Tsltpapli (Areadi)’ 332-8318 FREE PARKINS MMr m/ro DApro ware ur tii y teWM You can make REAL money Playing |PRfS| ' ............ Mayor Asked to Intervene CENTER w. l PORK I CHOPS 79: = ST CUIB SHORI H YOU TOO CAN BE A WINNER Pinr UP r0UR "Wo»$]00 W. MMM Hm right •• limit NFmMv. «t Kragor In Datiait __________n NUchigaa Tuodoy, OthkM 5, 1909. Nona told •• doalora. Copyright 1909. ■ WITH THIS COUPON AND ” WITH THIS COUPON AND ’ , -$5 PURCHASE OR MORI I $5 PURCHASE OR MORI * !| ■ KROGER REOUIAR OR DRV GRIND . SPECIAL LABEL :*■ VAC PAC COFFEE * COMET CLEANSER ■ 2 LB. CAN $1.19 SAVE 30- 114-OZ. WT CAN 10* SAVES* TWO I _______ „ ____Saturday, 0(1. 9. ■ Void at Krogar thru Saturday, Oct. ^ 1909. limit ana coupon par hmi^^NI. Until atm coupon par REGULAR SIZE—1- SAU WOODBURY SOAP. . FKG. OF 4 BARS 35* I 2 fkos CUT-UP FRYERS, I | 2fkos FRYER PARTSob | ANY HIAITH A BEAUTY AID 3 LOAVES OP WHITE DISSERT TOPPING PRESTO WHIP. j 2 ROASTING CHICKENS j WOOMURT PRODUCT J MEL-O-SOFT BREA* I j Valid thru Saturday, Ah ■ V.Rd thru S-turd^, A ■ VoIM thru Satutday. 4^1 I MM* 5* ■ ■*■■ — BBH wmimJL m 4|i . IO-OZ. CAN 39* THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1965 Uebbie Watson is probablythe envy or every girl who ever wanted to become an actress. The first time she ever stepped to front of a Hollywood movie camera, she wound up starring in her own television show—Universal Studios' comedy series,4‘Karen/’ Debbie didn't burst into this Cinderella land overnight; she planned for it. Six years ago—when she was only nine —she made the pronouncement to her parents that she was going to be a movie star when she grew up. Fortunately, her mother and father, neither of whom is in show business, didn't dismiss the remark with a shrug. Neither did they become particularly overjoyed at the moment... nine-year-olds have beep, known to change their minds ‘when declaring their destinies. Two years later when Debbie began working with little theater groups, she was encouraged by her parents. Her first professional appearances were in "Bye, Bye Birdie" and "Brigadoon" in a theater near her home in Quiver CityK Calif.. • The next "step was to get an agent and to study acting'technique. One step followed another and when her agent heard that Universal was looking for a teen-ager for the lead in a new comedy series, he took 14-year-old Debbie to meet the producers. A screen test for Debbie and 50 other girjs followed and Debbie got the part. Debbie recently celebrated her 15th birthday and is now a busy television star who must study her tenth grade high school subjectsin a school set up on the production lot. Being a TV star means a lot of work, but Debbie is enjoying every minute of it. Fifteen-year-old1 Debbie's busy schedule- calls for posing far publicity stills at studio. Veteran makeup artist Bud Westmbre attends to Debbio's makeup before she faces the cameras on the "Karen" set. A swimming peel is part ef the set for the "Karen" series and Debbie winds up workday with a cooling dip. | Waiting for cameras te roll, Debbie rests against steering wheel ef : a car she will drive in the scene. MEmms New 1966 MfNAmr ■fREE! A# WINNERS WILL BE NOTIFIED EVERY WEEK! WATCH YOU! WEDNESDAY NEWSPAPER FOR NAME OF 1ST WINNERI REGISTER EVERY DAY AT BIG 'D'l ADDITIONAL ENTRY BLANKS AVAILABLE AT ALL BIG 'O' FOOD STORESI ENTRY BLANK m NOTHING TO ROY . . . NOIHINO TO WEITII YOU 00 NOT ] HAVE TO U FtESINT TO WMI DEPOSIT THIS ENTRY HANK I AT ANY RIO'D'l WINNERS WIU IE NOTIFIED . . . EMPiOYEES | AND MEM1ERS OF CAMAY NOT EUOWE. =£££»Y0U GET ALL THIS PLUS: EVERYDAY LOW PRICES! \ Hamburger SmalUr Amounts 43 jbk Delight Your Ssgk Family ; SSls. Delicious Weat K\ for Dinner Trirrrnru V.urt-"*'' *2* vmoi-wo'' TWM*® Swiss Ste tttkMe Hkkw* YOU GET A CHOICE AT BIG D' Maxwell House*—Good Ter The Last Dropy $ mi ■ Instant Coffee ?’*v........ ..t-1 " Aunt Jemima Buttermilk * Pancake Mix .. . .........2;39 Betty Crocker Buttermilk or HVC Sweet Biscuits........ # 0rchard Fre$h Ca,if- Diced Fruit in svruP *** Fruit Cocktail29 Refreshing Frozen Orchard Fresh ^ H|C Orange Juice.......................s 15 Enriched All Purpose Flour $ Gold Medal Flour..... ..25£ 1" Top Taste Delicious, Nutritious H|C Tomato Soup........... .4 r 25 Top Tasto Delicious Top Tasto Chicken Noodle, Chicken Rick or M Vegetable || H||C Vegetable Beef || f|||< soup Z ZU soup Z ZH Dawn-Dew Fresh Fruits & Vegetables IS , Vine Ripened California Red Tokay I "•"“GRAPES 1 f 'A ; ' ' *’ * ■/ Tm P " / ‘ . C ! THE PONTIAC 1*HESS. MONDAY,„ OCTOBER X 1905 STATEMENT OF THE OWNERSHIP, MANAGEMENT AND CIRCULATION SS Th» n____________________________.... r„ n*hef, editor and managing adltor art: Publisher: Harold A. Fltigerold, 41 West Huron Street. Pdntlac, Michigan. Editor John W. Fltigerold, 41 W. Huron Street, --.HMMa Michigan Managing SOttor: Harry J. “ “'■Agp- ““** Ponttac. i: (It 01 r. Fltigerold, Nancy F Bamara W. Amberg, William is, rniywi aid and Howard H. Fitzgerald II. all ol 41 Wool Huron Street, Pontiac. Michigan: Mrs. Sanford P. Wilcox, Grand Rapids, Michigan. r security holders o That the two paragraphs m wleftge as and security' holders w cubes' interests of Such Individuals • e stock or securities of the The following Information must b nlshed for all publications except which do not carry advertising other the publisher's own and which arc n In Sections 132.231, 132.232, and 1! copies printed of each issue during the preceding^ 13 ^months h 74,041. printed of a single Issue naaresf to the filing dafe Is *3,100. . PAID CIRCULATIOtfc t. Sales through dealers and carriers, afreet vendors and center sales. V The average niMiber of copii of each Issue during the precedit 12 months Is 71,144. , b. The total of a single Issue nea 1 ............. ' a Is 7A002. to Those With Key Skills ssue'during the preceding s IS 732. :. TOTAL PAID CIRCULATION: a. The average number of copies M each Issue during the preceding 12 months Is 71,MS. b. The total of a single issue nearest to the filing date Is 70,077. 1 l. FREE DISTRIBUTION (Including samples) BY MAIL, CARRIER OR OTHER MEANS: a. The average number of copies of each Issue during the preceding! 12 months is 490. b. The total of a single issue nearest to tha filing data la 019.-. LANSING (AP) - Despite the crop .surpluses and the dedining number of farms, it's the same story in agriculture as in industry: There seems to be plenty of jobs if you have the right skills. “Our greatest challenge is to attract enough talented youths intp agricultural ( engineering,’’ says C.S. Morrison, president of the American Society of Agricultural Engineers. “Today one U.S. farmer produces enough for himself and 30 other persons,” Morrison points out. “By 1960, we will have to step up our technology so a farmer will be able to produce food for himself and 65 others” —because of the population explosion. WASTE DISPOSAL He describes the American farmer and those who serve his needs as “first-line soldiers in the struggle to overcome the social, economic, and political problems of the world.” In addition to increasing mechanization* in cultivating and harvesting crops and in livestock production systems, Morrison says waste disposal without pollution of air and . water is an engineering problem of major importance to agriculture. A survey at Cornell University indicated a bright job picture for agriculturally trained students in such off-farm agricultural jobs as sales and services, manufacturing or processing, recreation and education. The survey team recommended development of courses of study in agricultural business, mechanics and plant science at the high school and university levels to prepare students for j the jobs. For farmers seeking jobs off i the farm, 6 Michigan State Un- iversity* agricultural economist recently investigated whether nonfarm employers discriminate against, term people. reported Dr. Ralph! Loomis. \ \ | 4; But, he said*, “they do dis-j criminate diHhe basis of formal] education, absenteeism, popr aptitude and, attitude, long dis- \ ANCIENT IDEA-^Looking like the vast -tance commuting, poor health] Collection of gantries at Florida's Cape Ken-and^ inadequate job Perform-) nedy, the towers oT tiJe'THeenakshi Temple, Madurai, India, point toward the sky. The ancient toners house many art treasures, but there’s not a moon rocket to be found. MANAGEMENT TRAINEES ' HIGH SCHOOL CASHIERS ft CLERKS Wrigtey Super Markets has immediate openings for: Full time stock and produce clerks. Management trainee requirements, . high school degree. Up to age 26. Part Time High School student cashiets and stock clerks. ^ ... Excellent working conditions ' Liberal fringe benefits ' Opportunity for advancement Apply 9 A.M. to 4 PeM. Wrigley Super Markets 13901 Joy Road - Near Schaefer k. ■ fKgxof Opportunity Employer)_ 12 montt v b. The fm m_________________999 At to tho filing dote It 71 #314. . OFFICE USE# LEFT-OVER, UN-ACCOUNTED, SPOILED AFTER PRINTING? a. The average number of copies of each Issue during fha preceding 12 months It 1#S4I. b. The total of a tingle Issue nearest to the filing date It 1#7ft4. f. TOTAL: a. The average number of copies I 74,042. e fUlng < it file sti til md c MtCKH. f i correct , _ m HOWARdvH. FITZOERALD ... Business Manager Volunteer Firemen L Were Dressed for Job-r RIDGEFIELD PARK, N. Y. |JB — The volunteer firemen here were out in dress uniforms for a parade and their annual dinner, which was to follow the parade. During the* parade, the firemen were called to a blaze at a steak house. The restaurant in flames was where they were scheduled to. eat. MES4LL THIS m PLUS ALL THIS, TOO/ •♦Full Siio Round Bobbin_ o 5-Speed Control f Automatic Pressure P Clog-Resistant • Release Round Bobbin FULLY GUARANTEED FREE HOME DEMONSTRATE OR 4-1101 $OQ AUTHORIZED HOOVER SERVICE DEALERS NEW 7-FOOT VACUUM CLEANER HOSE Braided Cloth, All Rubber 1 Exchangable With £ Q K Your Old Re-Use-tfWW able Hose Ends Regular T.80 VP Comp In or Vrrr Delivery PARTS and SERVICE ON ALL CLEANERS Disposal Bags:Hoses-Bfush#s-B#lts-Attachinents-ltc. "Rebuilt by Curt's Appliances Using Our Own Parish Free Home Demonstration-OR 4-1101 Within 26 M * $|250 i-OR 4 CURT’S APPLIANCES Factory Authorlted W hile Uniler NKW LOCATION 6481 HATCHERY ROAD OR 4-111! West on M59 to Airport Rd., North to Hatchery Turn West lAlecks on Hatchery Rd. Open Mepday and fridoy *til I P. M. ,, SPECIAL HOME BUYS YANKEE MIIACLE MILE ONLY COLORFUL-QUILTED CLOSET ACCESSORIES New-modern-beautiful, in assorted colors, for matching sets. Aqua or gold. GLOVE BOX HOSIERY BOX SHOEBOX QUILTED HAT BOX 12x12x9%. With * large window. All . quilted in-Aqua or Gold. (Use ter shoes — sweaters — krfit suits'— robes and ate. QUILTED STORAGE »•* RAT For sweaters and Jg accessories. 16x11x3%. ■ JUMBO GARMENT BAG With moth prevention cannisters — zipper — 16 garments. Heavy quilted top — sides and bottom reinforced. |49 S ADJUSTABLE SHOE TREES ly metal adjustable t all shoe sizts, keeps shoes in shape. WOODEN CLOTHES Danger sale: • SKIRT HANGERS • PANTS HANGERS • SUIT HANGERS Your Choice ‘MULTI-WIDTH” WHITE-ON-WHITE DRAW Sturdy finished wood-chrome trim, your choice of suit, skirt or pants hanger. A SMALL DEPOSIT HOLDS YOUR SELECTION IN LAYAWAY ... DRAPERIES Get custom look traverse Draperies at this low ready made price. Acetate rayon, self backed for finished look. Deep Pinch pleats—wide hems. Single Width 63” Long 999 mir LENGTH SINGLE WIDTH HALF DOUBLE TRIPLE 36” 1.99 63” 2.99 3.99 6.99 1Q.I9 61” 3.49 <£ 4.99 T.99 12.69 Washable TIER CURTAINS AND VALANCE SETS.., x. Machine washable-cottons, rayon chal-lis, flocked border, patterns. All 36" long. |38 2 YANKEES IN PONTIAC ... MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER STORE ONLY MARKETS 1 In Active Trading taftce The following are top .prices; covering sales of locally grown j produce by growers and sold by; them in wholesale package kits. i Quotations are furnished by the | Grant tSWSU Mart Prices Irregularly Higherl for Bias Study NEW YORK (AP) - Prices; Produce s of | were irregularly higher jtive trading early today New York Stock Exchange as [gains and losses of fractions to t a point prevailed among the assignment, traded un-iem Equities and Kirby Petiole-! changed while Boeing, up morel urn. than a point, and Douglas Aircraft, -ahead a fraction, contiiH; ued their recovery. AN B>8 Three motors as well To Examine Patterns of Job Discrimination £ Grapes, Concord i Peaches, Etterta. I Peaches. "teal Haw Peaches, Itedskih, I Peers. Bartlett, tx VEGETABLES key stocks. las 'American Motors Gains of a point or better fractional gains, were made by Eastern andj x * * * |VSST'a*?0 American Airlines, United Air: On Friday the Associated tm High lines climbed nearly a point, Press average .of 60 stocks [Itm Togh Pan American a fraction. [dipped .6 to 343.3. *■ ★ j Prices’ were narrowly mixed Among the aerospace issues ion the American Stock Ex-affected by die big C54 con-change. Fractional gainers in-|tract, Lockheed, the winner of! eluded Gulton Industries, West- N.5 100.8 87.2 FrMay'l 1st DIVIDENDS DECLARED i: ilS The New York Stock Exchange WASHINGTON (AP) — The Equal Employment Opportunity 92isJ Commission awarded $165,000 to ”T|Wayne State University hi Detroit today tof a study of patterns of discrimination in employment.^ Commission Chairman Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr. said the study will be used to provide the basis for action by state and federal agencies and for ble recommendations to Congress to extend the commission’s power in some areas. (MOHIfS /dm Lul Chg! SoPRSug lg 7 2846 20V, 20H - '6 26'/J + H 243/4 — outhnCo 1.80 1 87'6 69Vi 8»W !."■ SouNGas 1.20 16 32V. 32'.. 32V. - V, , SJW + Ml 12H + SouThPae 1.50 -20 41 V«1 41V4 41V4 - H South Ry 2.00 17 S8’/> 5844 56’/e + '/« Sperry Rand 40 15 14h> 15 34% -f % 567/. +-% 58 SquareO' f.60 * 2 20W TOW 70V4.S- W Staley 1.35 2 38 35 38 + 86 (Brands 3.40 1 77V6 77V6 77V6 ...... 24%‘ — % td Kollsman 1 17W 1786 1776 + 76 StOII Cal 2.20 5 7876 7876 7876 tOillnd 1.50a 12 40‘A 4016 48Ma.— 'A \36% + H tdOMOh JK80 Jf 80V6 MW 60V* + 76 j 38% 74% + % terlDrug ‘.75 ' 15 32W 3276 3276 — v, I tevensJP 2 . 3 58W 56W 58W + V6 44% + % 54% + % 1 tudebaker . 5 18% 18% 18% 4* Mi : on Oil 1b 1 44% 44% 44% - % iiz %’ Swift Co f t 47% 47% 47% - : , ‘V 54% + % T€x2coGjVb if 04% 84 4 ‘84 '* - % TexEastT .80 ^ 20^ 20^«rf % 50 ’ 45%>..... 35% — % Texaslnstml 1 137% 137% 137% + M» TexP Ld .35g 4 20% 20% 20% + % Thiokol -57t 44 10% 18% + % . 37% 4- % Tidewat 'Oil 3 43% 43% 43% + % Timk RB 1.80 1 45% 45% <45% + % Trans W Air 8 54% 54% i4% + % 10% ~ 30 - % Transam .80b 4 42%. 42% 42%. + % Transltron 11 7 4% - 6?** TrICon* 1.13a 9 40% 40% 49% 54% + % Twant C .40b 4 ^27% 24% 27% + % He said most studies of race [relations agree, with a recent Rutgers University project that showed .Negroes generally are reluctant to complain to civil rights agencies in erases of job discrimination, that most complaints came from the better educated, higherincome Negroes. Roosevelt said the investigation will concentrate on three areas: —^-Investigating of patterns of discrimination across the nation. —Developing and evaluating techniques of investigation into job discrimination. —Developing sound federal-state relationships' in the area. Dr. Frances R. Cousens, professor of sociology at Mercy College in Detroit^nd former research director for the Miehi-Fair Employment Practices Commission, has been named project director. Profits Blossoming to Record Heights ^By SAM .DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK - A fresll flood Of profits is sweeping business toward new. records. Early- returns ending on that same date, and a few close their books on July 31. show that the summer months continued t h e upward surge that brightened the first half of the year. Of 104! companies to| report so far on their most recent thre’e-, DAWSON month performance, only 21 had slimmer net incomes after taxes than they had in thf like period of 1964. As the third-quarter , earnings announcements flow in the rest of this month In increasing vol-strong that the big gains of previous 1965 quarters will be matched. In the first three months of 1965, net profits Among the -big eai ready, reporting are Sc buck With $70.5 million] this yiar against $70.4 last (nimmer; Campbell $14.5 million this year am million last. But International Harvester was an exception with $26 9 million in the 1965 quarter against $29.6 million the year before. % Gainers this year include: Douglas Aircraft, with $4 million against $3.6 million; Aerojet-General with $3.2 million against $2.6 million last year and Avco Corporation with $5.9 million against $5.2 million. REPORT GAINS s Beatrice Foods went to $4.8 million in the 1965 quarter from $4 million in the previous year; Grand Union to $2.5 million from $2 million; General Mills to $4.9 million from $4.7-million; H. J. Heinz to $3.8 million from $3.7 millions and Food Giant Hart Schaffner & Marx reports $2.16 million profits in its latest quarter compared with $1.42 million a year ago; Bobble Brocks reports $1.79 million against $1.41 millions Wyandotte Worsted has $173,002 against $124,042; Lane Bryant $1 million $815,000; Gimbel Brothers $2.04 million against $1.62 milliqn; and American Enka rose to $3.28 million from $2.86 million in 1964. But Indian Head Mills slipped to $563,000 from $613,000 in its 1964 quarter. Faces Charge topped year before figures by 16 per cent. In the second quarter, the year-to-year gain was-17 per cent. The annual rate of $44 billion was reached lit profits for the first quarter of 1965 and $44 biUion in the second quarter. Betting is strong that the rate will have been topped in the third quarter and may mount [still higher in the final three months. RECORD PROFIT Bellwether of the companies' reporting so far is mighty American Telephone & Telegraph with a record profit of $445,930,000 in the three months ending August $1, a gain of 8.6 per cent over the $419,629,000 in the 1964 third quarter. Most of the companies reporting so far have fiscal quarters Markets I to $1.07 million from $102 million. Among numerous other gainers this summer over last are: Hooker Chemical, Eagle-Picher, Syntex, Interstate Department Stores and Ex-Cell-0 Corpora- tion. The reports are particularly cheering to businessmen-*and . stock traders because, earlier in tiie year, many had feared- that the upward trend in profits couldn’t be maintained. If early reports are good indicators, this summer will have proved to be a record breaker. | Menial Health Facilities Expanding, Says Romney jail for Squirting 0 Gen. Taylor Calif. I H LANSING (API—Gcv. George! These day - care centers allow Romney said today Michigan is the children to stay at home, expanding its mental health [“better than an institutional incare facilities to help such chil- fluence,” Romney said. He said dren as Ricky TTiome, the authorization has been given to youngster abandoned at the Mi- establish new centers to serve ami airport. * 250. In view of the Thome case, PROGRAM INITIATED Romney told his news confer- The Mental Health Depart-ence / itjs importanttoknow he added, has initiated a what is being done to deal w.th j ^ lacement pro. these urgent problems. !^ram -whfch shouid have a sig- _ a , | nificant impact to ease over- Thome, a 14- year - old from! ,, ^ M ft* T l8uunderfhcare1 £ JH To train qualified personnel to * . •• , ’ffhare Kt^operate the expanded faculties, $1 tl r *5?.hope’ J[he. sad’that ^the governor said, the depart- OULC^obTUI would be cared for. ment is cooperating with Mich- 3% Wi v [ Romney said the waiting list; i( ~ • s * f ' ,T7J[,r t . ligan State University on a coi f mV0$ttna * !of re*“*J ?,,dren at^7l\"!!munity psychiatry program. * _ A lto enter Michigan mental health; , he said the de- U)S ALTOS HILLS, Calif. care institutions stood at 1.574 ajji Wtain- . “1FUPI) - A woman who squirted | ] on Sept. 1, with 729 of those re-|j! officer ^ ^ / By ROGER E. SPEAR jqi^. h^itaicare................ et djmbed from $140i000 to $280,- jGen. Maxwell D Taylor with a[ water pistol will be arraign at)—-™ jj Oct. 11 on charges of disturbing1 - T the peace, assault and battery.: I The woman, Virginia Hanley, + wtH84,,.a'mathematician for an + ijj electronics firm at nearby Palo | Alto, posted $278ijail Saturday. The incident occurred Friday night after Taylor, the former.U. S. ambassador to South Vit Nam, had concluded a speech at Foothill College. A group of antiwar demostratorg paraded around the platform protesting U. 8. involvement in the Vietnamese - quiring hospital care. ■ , UNDER CONSTRUCTION Q) “I Have a son who mar- He ^ to hospitalize ried recently and a daughter ^ are under construction atj entering' nursing school. I piymouth, and planning author-i teach and have invested only u^ion has been given for an-in General Motors. With some other m ^ ^ 000 this year. available, cash, perhaps yon would advise me whether to boy more General Motors or General Electric. A friend advised me to buy blue chips He said a total of 750 other; [new beds have been authorized! I at other locations. The governor also cited new; only, since I am 83 and must | outpatient facilities at Michigapf be sure of some extras when | institutions, and the establish-1 GM Reports on September rroduction retire—other than just bank ment of 12 day - care centers; General Motors Cqrp. has an- interest. What do you sug- to serve 225 severely retarded; nounced that 19,304 Pontiacs-and gest?” B. H. A) Be sure that you really are buying a blue chip' and not just a “big name” stock like National Lead—which is, in my opinion, a retrograde situation. GenerM Electric is a genuinely strong growth issue! which Miss Hanley pushed her way through the crowd surrounding Taylor and squirted him with a black-barreled'gun, which resembled an Italian Beretta. She told sheriff’s deputies she “couldn’t pass mp the oppor- [should help to cushion your intimity to shoot him (Taylor) in tirement. I believe I would the face.” this stock in order to djvmify “She’s very lucky to be alive,” and, if additional funds/become said one of the 35 deputies at available, I would , buy Texaco Ir3i.t?ib£jthe auditorium. “The gun was [and Com Product*: All of these so realistic-looking and the light *tocks have Me potential of was so dim that officers would enhancing vdur capital over the have shot, her had it. not been [years ahead. Boeing, Union feach Accord 7,947 Tempests were produced in September, compared with [26,873 add 14,641, respectively, [during the same month in 1964. Commercial vehicle production 'by General Motors Corp. Truck Si Coach Division reached 11,258 last month, an increase of 3,052 over 'September a year ago. top machinists union negotiator i n'ne months of IMS was 828,-predicted an agreement endingj SM,. During, the comparable V*™*v|f0r the crowd.’’ County Engineer Unit to Hear OCC President John E. Tiifell, m^ident si the Oakland Community College, »<>•" will be the speaker at the Oct. nm 14 meeting oi/tneTtakland Chap-ter of UK/Mickigan Society of _ M[ Professional Engineers. + 'Al The dinner meeting will be ata at the Holiday inn, 1801 S. ’elegraph, beginning at 7 p.m. The program will honor the '{{I wives of engineers. News in Brief Pontiac Police are investigat-+ \\ ing a report by Mrs! Paul Will-hite of 66 S Genesee that a youth snatched her purse containing $75 as she came out of a bakery Saturday night at 121 W. Huron. Rummage Sale: First Presbyterian Church, Birmingham, 1669 W. Maple: Thurs., Oct. 7, m.-8 p.m.; Fri., Qct. t, 9 •5 p.m. —adv. Ql “My son has quite a lot / of Litton Industries. Have you ever mentioned this stock in your column? Is it about to split?” B.P. A) I have indeed mentioned Litton quite a number of times, since I consider it to be one of the best growth stocks on the Big Board. I do not usually advise it for people who cannot afford market risk, since Litton sells at about 35 times my conservative earnings estimate of $3.50 a share for 1965—a relatively high multiplier. Tht company has very stropg. management and has put through a number of sound mergers which have aided earnings growth materiaDy. There is a stockholders’ meeting scheduled for December ^, 1965, to vote on a 2-for-l split of the khares. Since stockholders never shoot Santa Claus, the split is virtually certain to be approved. Your son has a very good holding, which should be retained. Lodge Calendar inual meeting, Pontiac Chapter No. 228, O.E.S., Mon., Oct. 4, 8 p.m., 18*4 E. Lawrence St. Edith M. Coons, secretary, —adv. the company’s 19-day strike against the Boeing Co. would be ratified, at membership meetings todhy. -Negotiators reached the accord shortly before 2 a.m. Sunday after a 15-hour session with federal mediators. Roger Spear’s new 48-page Guide to Successful Inventing is now ready. For your copy, dip this notice and send $1.10 with your name aad address to Roger E. Spear, la care of The Pontiac Press, Box 111$, Grand Central Station, New York 17, N. Y. (Copyright, 1965) SEATTLE, Wash. (AP) Total production for the Poor tiac Division during the first period in 1964,, the production figures for both the Pontine and Tempest was 541,691. -GMC Truck & Coach Division . ended' the nine montji period by building ,99,314 vehides. In 1964, tiie total for the nine months was 83,976. A meeting of 325,000 production workers affected by Jhe strike in the Seattle area was called for. 10 a.m. in the Seattle Center Coliseum. Other meetings were called at Boeing locations throughout the country. We look forward hopefully, and with optimism, to approval by the membership,” said Ed Springer, coordinator of negotiations for the union. Charles F. West, general vice president, said results should be known byt early evening. DECLINE COMMENT Boeing spokesmen declined to comment on the"’possible outcome of today’s voting. The big aerospace firm Was struck Sept. 16 at plants and projects from here to Cape Kennedy, Fla. ’ ‘ has continued to operate. Terms of the agreement were withheld until after today’s voting. The corporation, through the first nine months, produced a total of 4,459,603 passenger cars and commercial vehiclet. in the U. S. and Canada. Through September df lift year, the total production of all vehicles in both countries was 3,067,390. M. SMB U iX-v '. kill 174.5 ml ii:j :: m fe \%i &i ,. 471.1 171.2 171.0 3M.« . 48)J 110.7 182.7 326.0 :-8B m \Zi & - f lip 332.6 i 150.7 141,7 208.1 Corn and Soybeans in Moderate Selling CHICAGO (AP) - Corn and soybeans came under moderately active selling pressure again today during the first several minutes of trading in the'grain futures market. Wheat showed strength in spots and posted gains.of more than a cent. Oats and rye were little changed in slow dealings. Trade had become rather slow near the end of the tint hour. At that time wheat was % to 1W cents a bushel 4iigho\ December $1.62%; com % to % December $1.15%; oats unchanged to % higher, December 66% cents; rye unchanged to Mi higher, December $1.25. 11 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1965 * VU' Enrollment Hi'Record of 2,4$$ $f ucten*^_1 A 36 per cent increase has pushed'Oakland University’s fall , enrollment to 2458 this fall, so-cording to Thomas Atkinson, ' registrar. aTvM ■ * * 'I'he Jump of 646 students over \ last fall’s total of 1,812 is the largest' experienced by the school, which opened classes for 570 students just six years ago. Growth hi the rise dtt the OU student body is accounted for mainly by a large freshman olass of 1,172 students, and a total of 282 new transfer students from other colleges. The fall figure Includes 757 sophomores, 293 juniors, 138 seniors, 66 graduate students and 32 Although the bulk of the GU students come from the Oakland Macamlj County area, the proportion of students from beyond commuting distance is growing at a higher rate each year. ■' * * . * ■ ;From, Oakland and Macomb counties are 1,683 enrollees and 574 are from other Michigan counties. There, are presently ,,144 out-of-state students and .10 foreign students'enrolled. Agree on New Pact NEW YORK (AP) - Th* Mailers Union and publishers agree! today on a new contract, but the strike of the AFL-CIO New York Newspaper Guild against the New York Times continues into its 19th day. ALAN B. GREENE Service for Alan B. Greene. I, of 87 W. Beverly will be :30 p.m. tomorrow at Vodr-hees-Siple'* Funeral Home with burial in White Chapel Mempr-ial Cemetery. Greene, a retired employe of the Fleet Carrier Corporation, died Saturday fallowing a long illness. | I He was a member of the Oakland AVenue Presbyterian and two grandchildren. Church. Surviving are his wife, REGAL RIDE ON MULES-King Con-and Queen Annet-Marife of Greece ride mules on the Greek island of Chora yes- terday.-the-final day of their five-day royal cruise through the Cyclades Islands. Book Exhibit at 4 Schools ROCHESTER — Books on Exhibit, a collection of the year’s outstanding hooks, will be on display in four schools tomorrow through Oct. 14. More than 800 books, from 50 publishers, are made avail* able by the Oakland C o u n t y Schools. « The books will be on display at-the senior high school, West and Central Junior High schools and Brooklands School. , One of every 10 planes is grounded during the winter in foggy London. Q)onald 3£. Johns A Finer Funeral Home for Jp®' a Deserving Community. It is only right that the good people of Pontiac have truly fine funeral servict. That is why the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home has been made one«of the very nicest in all Michigan. Gracious and hospitible, it will serve our community well. Your inspection if Invited. (Phane FEDERAL mmgg 4.49II ill ^Pmldntj On Our (Premuei m ^^neLot^oltmW 855 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC Right now-today-you can find some of the best used car buys in town at your nearby FORD DEALER USED GAR IDT! Thousands of cars to choose from-all makes, all models. Bargain prices! PAMELA BIRp Area Girl Is Named Merit Semifinalist Radiation Danger to Patient Nil Marian; his father and mother, Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Greene of Pontiac; three sons, Arthur Richard L. and Gary, all of Pontiac; fiv’e daughters, Betty and Mrs. Pamela Robertson both of Pontiac, Mrs. Heleri Spitzer of Fallbrook, Calif,, Mrs. Norma Schmiel of Rochester, and Mrs. Joan Hill of Waterford Township. Also surviving are a brother, Edwin Greene of Pontiac; three sisters, Mrs. Hazel Old of California, Mrs. Dorothy Bletch of Pontiac and Mrs. Frances Ry-den of Keego Harbor; and 11 grandchildren. ROCHESTER - Senior high school student Pamela Bird has been named a semifinalist in the 1965-66 Merit Scholarship competition. ★ # t , Pamela was among the highest-scoring students in Michigan on the National Merit Scholarship Qualifying Test, administered last March. To become finalists^ the student must substantiate the qualifying test performance on a second examination, submit recommendations by his school, and fulfill other requirements. All Merit Scholars for 1966 will be selected from the finalist group/ ★ ★ * Names of the Merit Scholars will be announced April 27. Story Periods Are Planned WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP—Story periods for preschoolers will begin tomorrow at the West Bloomfield Township Library, 5030 Orchard Lake. ★ ★ ★ The half-hour sessions for youngsters three to five years old are scheduled for 10:30 a.m. on consecutive Tuesdays, they are scheduled to run through Nov. 18. Story tellers will be members of the,, theater group of the Pine Lake Women’s Association. Working with chairman Mrs. Aten Platt are Mrs. T. W. Keating, Mrs. Leland Connors, Mrs. John Qnken and Mrs. David Caswell. Parents interested in registering their children can do so by telephoning or visiting the library. By Science Service WASHINGTON—The radiation danger to a patient being examined has been reduced to virtually nothing by a new versatile technique reported here by a University of Chicago scientist. Less than a minute is needed to ' make the picture with the new method. Dr. Alexander Gottschalk told the American Roentgen Ray Society meeting that the method combines using technetium 99, a shortlived radioactive isotope, with a scintillation camera designed by Dr. Hal O. Anger of the University of California. The new scanning technique gives a dear pattern of the thyroid gland, the brain, the liver, spleen, bone marrow, kidney, the blood pool or the lung,. ★ ★ ★ The technetium, which is combined with suitable chemical mixes, provides a* strong radiation count equivalent to 140 kilovolts of X rays, but it does not linger in the body to raise the total radiation dose to the patient. DEEP IN BODY At the same time, Dr. Gotts-cfcalk said the original strength of radiation from the isotope can be picked up even when conentrated in organs deep in the body. The scintillation camera is a complex device that records the gumma rays of radiation coming from aiyisotojie in a person’s body. The camera contains a pinhole aperture for.recording and electronic equipment for analy- MRS. RAMSEY R. HAMPTON Service for Mrs.'Ramsey R. (Mary L.) Hampton, 55, of 117 N. Shirley, will be at 11 a.m. Wednesday at the Zion Church Church of the Nazarene, with burial at Ottawa Park Ceme- LYLE A. SMITH TROY — Service for Lyle A. Smith, 69, of 2414 Rochester will be 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at Price Funeral Home. Burial will MRS. AUGUST F. SMITH Service for Mrs. • August F. (Della) Smith, 88, of 263 Edison will be at 3:30 p.rtt. Wednesday at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home, with'.burial -at' White Chapel Cemetery, Troy. |be in Crooks Road Cemetery, hurial Ottawa Park Ceme- Mrs. Smith died today after Troy, tery bv Voorhees Simple Fu- bricf illness- She was amem' Mr. Smith died yesterday af-Si Home P ber of Oakland Park Methodist'ter a short illness. He was an Mrs. Hampton died yesterday Church | employe of Detroit Piasttc Mold- after a long illness. She was al » i*a)*hter’ Mlss Co- member of the Zion Church of Pearl Sn“to of ^*“ac' LOIR A. TRUSCOTT Nazarene and a retired nurses) MRS. FRED D. CARR * | ORION TOWNSHIP — Sery- Each radiation energy impulse > transformed into a blip of light on an oscillocope. TIMED EXPOSURE By taking a timed film exposure of the oscilloscope, the total radiation pattern is reflected ina scan. By comparing scan patterns from normal organs with the picture of a patient’s organs a phtsician can detect the disease U an organ he is studying. Some types of disease show in unusually high/absorption ol a radioactive isotope but others absorb less thain normal. \ The short time- required Jor the new method of diagnosis nas a special advantage for children -tmd other patients Cannot hold still for the hall hour or more required by techniques ordinarily used. m Consult us withr CONFIDENCE We are ipecUlIits in fully |DADDF1 guaranteed monuments I 1 sculptured from Select 1GLIILDI Barre Granite V«hww Monuments Monuments from $195 Markers . . . from $ 35 IN&i MEMORIALS, IRC. 884 N. Perry * V 835-8931 Bronze Plates for Memorial Park Cemeteries at Below Cemetery Prices Deaths in Pontiac, Neighboring Areas will be 1 pjn. tomorrow at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home with burial in Oakland. Cemetery. Mrs. Jordan died Saturday following a 10 month illness. She was a member of the Central Methodist Church. Surviving are twp children, Mrs. Blanche M, Roggenkamp of Howell and Alfred H. Jordan of Pbntiac; a brother, a sister MRS. R. BRUCE LEWIS KENNETH H. MAY OXFORD - Service for Kenneth, H. -May, 44, of 259 Pine will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at Pix-ley Memorial Chapel, Rochester. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. May drowned Friday in northern Ontario. DONALD C. RETTELL ARMADA TWNSHIPr-Service for Donald . C. Rettell, 38, of 20145 32 Mile will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at Roth’s Home for Funerals, Romeo. Burial will be Service for Mrs. R. Bruce Clinton Grove Cemetery, (Charlotte) Lewis, 21, of 1417 Rosedale, {Sylvan Lake, will be 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral; Home with burial at White Chapel Cemetery. Mrs.. Lewis died Saturday of carbon monoxide poisoning. She was employed as a secretary at Pontiac Motor Division and attended Western Michigan and Wayne State universities. Surviving besides her h u s-band fltrher mother, Mrs. Edla Tauriainen of Detroit, two sisters; and one brother.* Mount Clemens. Mr. Rettell died Saturday in an automobile accident. He was an engineer for Detroit Wrecking Co. Surviving are his wife, Mary; a daughter, Zoeann; three sons, Bruce, Michael and Daniel, all at home; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Columbus Rettell of Romeo; two brothers, Paul and James of Romeo; and four sisters, Mrs. Zoe Rachow and Mrs. Beatrice Parsons, both of Mount Clemens, Mrs. Marjorie Kezar of Romeo and Mrs. Gladys Her-teg of Warren. aid at Pontiac General Hospital. Surviving besides her h u s-band are two sons, Barry D. of Waterford Township and Charles W. at home; four sisters, a brother and four grandchildren. MRS. HARRY C. JORDAN Service for Mrs. Harry C. (Florence B.) Jordan, 82, of 372 S. Roslyn, Waterford Township, WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN- ice for Lois A. Truscott, 12-year-SHIP — Service for Mrs. Fred’old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. (Jennie) Carr, 79, of 1545 Mal-jKevern Truscott, 1035 Bayfield, colm will be 11 a.m. Wednesday .will be 2 p.m. Thursday at Al-at Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home,|len’s Funeral Home, Lake Or-Pontiac. Burial will be in Oak ion. Burial will follow in East 2 Bandits Rob City Drugstore A Pontiac drugstore owner was robbed' of some $400 Saturday by two men one of whom earned a black snub-nosed revolver, according to police. - ‘ * . ★ Louis Finegold of Oak Park, owner of Lon’s Drugs and Hardware at 493 S. Sanford, told officers two men came into the store Saturday morning shortly after it opened. Finegold said he . and a clerk, Percy Deline of 370 Midway, were ordered to lie on the floor. The bandits took both men’s billfolds and then emptied a cash register before leaving. One of the two men wore a black mask and the other sunglasses, Finegold said. ★ ★ - ★ Pontiac police are investigating the case. Employes Stop Work Over Au-Tea-^Aation STOURPORT, England <*> WORKINOS OF BULOVA WATCtl lest downtown Pontiac. FE 4-1221. 1