Horn# Edition THE iPONTI AC The Weather THE PfrffTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY^ SEPTEMBER 18, ,1068—62' PAGES- Commission Move Climaxes Hearings Chrysler to Hold Line on Price for 5th Year; Others May Follow President, Negroes Set for Confab From Oar News Wires DETROIT The cost of new cars probably will re-main steady during the 1964 model year. Chrysler Corp. yesterday announced it would generally hold Hhfr IriceihtriJirifiniewT^iB for toe fifth straight year. Other auto Anns were expected to follow toe lead of Chrysler, which was the first to announce prices for toe second straight year. Ford, General Motors, AmericanMotors and Studebaker will announce their prices yvlth-In toe next two weeks, probably within hours of introduction at dealers’showrooms. The last general price increase in the industry came, in the 1959 model year when they rose $50-$ioo per car. - The first of toe auto industry to reveal new model prices, Dodge and Plymouth announced a few increases yesterday which were balanced hk about as manv similar price cuts. Grand Jury Inquiry Asked in Pontiac on Vice aad Elections The Pontiac City Commission On A Night Of Decision Plymouth prices were up $2 to $6 for some models, down $2 and $3 in others. Still others were unchanged. Valiant announced a ~$T8 price cuT on a station 'wagon and a $14 increase on toe Signet 200 hardtop. Dodge announced reductions from (6 to $29 on some models, increases of $2 to $16 on others. HIKE SPECULATED In recent months there has beep speculation there might be an industrywide price hike, because of the increase in some steel prices and higher supplier The industry also has faced with higher labor costs because of Contractual wage increases and cost of living raises, Despite toe increased costs in labor and production, the four major auto producers have been heading toward record profits during the year. By the first half, the big three reported combined profits of more than $1.2 billion. Chrysler also announced that toe firm’s five-year 50,000 mile engine and drive train warranty has been strengthened by toe inclusion of the water pump and intake manifold. iE-Mexicans Die in Crash Train Smashes Truck at California Crossing SAUNAS, Calif. UP) - A speeding freight train shattered a makeshift bus jammed with Mexican field workers ye$tiat#ay, killing 28 and injuring 85 in the worst ’ vehicle accident in California history. At least six of the injured were reported in critical condition today The 28th victim died at Monterey County Hospital. Pontiac Area Junior Chamber of Commerce > charter amend-ment petitions were officially certified by City Clerk Olga Barkeley at last night’s City Commission meeting. Mrs. Barkeley, whose job it is1 Bodies were strewn for half a mile along both sides of toe track after the crash at a farm road crossing near the town of Chua-lar, eight miles south of Salinas. Twenty - two died by toe tracks. Others died as 15 ambulances rushed them to three Salinas Hospitals. aj in i The workers were returning Mercury TO r\Cf/1^6 from a celery field to the Earl , . f I Meyers, Co. labor camp near Sa- A DO ve Nor 1710/for I Unas, 100 miles south of San Nexb Few Days Temperatures for the next five days will average two to four degrees above the normal high of 72 and low of 53. Cooler weather will begin about Saturday. Precipitation will total one-quarter to one-half inch In showers Friday and , again Sunday or Monday. Fifty-six was the low temperature reading preceding 8 a.m. today in downtown Pontiac. By 2 p.m., the area had warmed to 83. In Today's Press Francisco. RODE ON BENCHES They rode on four board benches running lengthwise on the flat-bed truck. Francisco Gonzales Espinosa, 34, of Salinas, the driver, said he stopped at toe crossing and looked to his right. Highway Patrol Capt. Francis, Simmons said Espinosa declared he did not hear or see the train until toe front wheels were on the track. Engineer Robert E. Cripe of San Luis Obispo said he blasted, the Southern Pacific locomotive’! whistle when he saw the stopped at the crossing. TV Plea ! JFK to tike tax cut ap-i peal to people tonight— jpAGEC-4. Reasons for Slide AMSTERDAM, Holland (UN) A New York-bound Pan American Airways jet airliner today overshot the runway at Amsterdam’^ Schiphol Airport and was “badly iged.” Officials said there were no casualties. 1 decline of hotel, restau* | I rant business—PAGE A-7. I 1 No Coddling J 1 “Doctor of year” ad- t 1 vises heart attack victims I I -PAGE C-10t || Area news A*4 1 CASH IN A HURRY! .'^Twenty calls from bur Want Ad. Sold the lounge set first day.” Mrs. 7. B. 5'rben lbathsr LdvtiM chair and ottoman. f Awrorogy •«-» g i Bridge ...08.1 1 Comics .. X, ■ • v • -C*8,1 l Editorials ...•••• A-6 1 < Markets --C4 | PRESS WANT ADS are toe fastest way to turn “don’t wants” into good cash. They have a way of p Obituaries.'~ C-lo f~ - Sports GM'l' 4 Theaters iSJ ■ 8 TV, Radio Programs C-W I 8 Wilson, Earl .......yC-I5:| | Women's Pages B-14 1 “founding up TiroBperts fast for what you want to sell. They'll work the same for you, too. Just, Phone 332*8181 ASK Fofe AN AD VISOR Jet Damaged Landing Action on Jqycee Delayed by He Objection to determine if petitions qualify as vplid under state law, was satisfied but Commissioner Mil-ton R. Henry wasn’t. So, over objections from, both Mrs. Barkeley and City Attorney William A. Ewart, action U. N. Unit Asks Assembly to Review Buddhist Issue resolution ordering Ewart to pre-pare ballots for p special elec- Ig tion was deferred one week. Hen- H ry pad wanted the resolution tabled. The petitions requested that a special election be help on toe Jaycees’ proposal to change voting proofing* fe the April municipal election of city commissioners. , . UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AH The powerful U.N. Steering Committee recommended today that the question of treatment of Buddhists in South Viet Nam be placed before the current session of the General Assembly. The 21-nation committee took the action after hearing Ceyloneee and Indonesian delegates declare that the situation in South Viet Nam has become a matter of international Before it gcted, the committee got bogged down in a procedural argument over whether it should floor to the Viet Nam representative., SOUTH AFFRICA The committee approved placing fyuth Africa’s facial segregation policies on the agenda despite an objection from that country- Before the assembly is a request from a special committee that toe assembly and toe Security Council consider without delay expulsion of South Africa from jthe United Nations because of its refusal to abandon- Its racial policies. It also called on U.N. mem* Under the proposed charter mpndment, commissioners would still be nominated by district, but voters at the April election would vote for seven candidates (one from each district), instead of one. mmv* * ■ * ■ Mrs. Barkeley said the petitions had been checked and contained ’in excess of the necessary number of valid signatures required for calling an election.” aiKUiiroiib vrw "irewivi os#v**«* -- --- . v « m - hear the delegate from South bers to carry out penalties Viet Nam, which has only observer status. Assembly President Carlos So-sa-Rodriguez, after listening various views, decided that the consensus was against granting the against South Africa suggested by toe assembly last year. These include an arms embargo, a petroleum embargo and an end to* foreign investment in South Africa. By DICK SAUNDERS The City Commission last night fired City Manager Robert A. Stierer by a vote of 5 to 2. The move _camel after fourweekstrfhearmgsinto charges of incompetence, irresponsibility and insubordination filed a g a i n s 1 Stierer Aug. ’ S. After the meeting, Stierer indicated he may “fight to1 keep his job’’ through further court action. BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (UPI) -President Kennedy today arranged a meeting in Washington tomorrow with seven Negro leaders to discuss the tense racial situation in Birmingham following the bombing of a church which killed four girls.. The White House announced that toe conference, requested by Negro leader pr. Martin Luther King Jr. of Atlanta, would be held at 3 p. m. CST (4 p. m. Pontiac time). Hundreds of saddened Negrops gather this afternoon for the funeral of three of toe girls. King was to be the main speaker. ' * . * ROBERT A. STIERER She said that “in compliance with state law, the calling of a special election would be necessary between toe dates of Jan. 8 and 18,1984.” The clerk then read a resolution stating the necessity for special election under state law and ordering Ewart to prepare the ballot forms. RESOLUTION OFFERED The resolution was offered by Commissioner William H. Taylor Jr. and seconded by Charles H. Harmon. Henry objected and offered a motion to table the resolution so commissioners could check toe petitions. Mayor Pro Tem Winford E. Bottom seconded Henry’s motion. Henry questioned the validity of signatures and said he could see “a patent defect” on a petition furnished hint “that under the law of the state makes that petition no good.” A quiet man sat in the front row at City Hall last night and listened as five men fired him. City Manager Robert A. Stierer accepted his fate without comment ,or show of emotion. , ★ ★ ★ ‘We probably will appeal the decision to Circuit Court,” Stierer said today. Decree Fails Commissioners William H. Taylor Jr. and Charles H. Harmon voted against firing Stierer. Taylor had been the only commissioner who. opf" * Stiercr’s suspension Aug. 5. Voting in favor of firing Stierer were Mayor Robert A. Landry, Mayor Pro Tem Winford E. Bottom and Commissioners Milton R. Henry, Loy L. Ledford and DiekM. Kirby. Following toe decision, Howard I. Bond, Stierer’s attorney, condemned toe manner in which hearings were conducted. “If this hearing is what |s meant by ‘fair and impartial,’ then God help us ail,” Bond Stierer Shows Nd Emotiqn at Ou$ter Moments after the final vote. Commissioner Loy 1*. Ledford called for a grand Jury investigation into “campaign expenses of all candidates in the 1962 City Commission election and into vide conditions in Pontiac.” Roy Wilkins, executive secretary of the Notional Association of the Advancement of Colored People, was among the Negro leaders planning to attend the mass funeral. . Wilkins told a news conference at National Airport ueay Washington prior to departing for Birmingham that Kennedy should cut off “every nickel” of federal funds sent to. Ala-. Wilkins said as a first step the President should “’close Maxwell Air Force Base at Montgomery, Ala. ipP” FIGHT HARDER Wilkins also urged that toe President fight harder for the passage of a strong civil rights bill. He said solace might be found if too bombing tragody “shocks” Congress and the administration into acting promptly and courageously ip this PREPARED He asked City Attorney William . Ewart to prepare a resolution for action next week “asking too State Attorney General to request a grand jury investigation” into those areas. There was no comment, nor objection from the commission table. The resolution was or- He said he would announce definite plans “within two of three days.” ‘“I would like to return as city manager if possible. I naye had two job offers in the city but am not, presently, looking for another job as City manager outside Pontiac.” 4 His. attorney, Howard I. Bond, said the decision was up to Stierer. “If we take further action, it would be in the form of a special petition asking the court to rule on several points of procedure,” he said last night. Bond said such points might include “whether the hearing was held in accordance with the city charter, it members of the .commission should have been disqualified frqm voting by absence or because they entered testimony.” ' > ; Seven reasons for his removal were outlined in the seven-page resolution calling for his dismissal. the reasons for removal “were developed at the hearing” according to the resolution. The reasons stated in the resolution were as follows, »’ 1) The Manager dictated mat-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) He wouldn’t say what the defect was. Mrs. Berkeley said she had a petition that had been disqualified because :it contained signatures affixed to it on a Sunday. Commissioner Dick M. Kirby asked if any names signed on Sunday were legal. Mrs. Barkeley said 7,380 valid signatures were necessary to qualify toe petitions for certiffca- ^on‘ I Stierer, however, was’still able MANY FILED |to manage a spark of humor. Jaycees said their count showed i * ,* * 605 petitions . containing 11,543! when asked by a reporter how signatures were filed. until old he was, Stierer smiled and replied, “Why, do I look older tpan when this all began?" ex* NOTE OF HOPE — Opening the 16th session of the- United Nations' General Assembly is Carlos Sosa-Rpdriguez (foreground), 51-year-old. Venezuelan lawyer diplomat. He Was elected yesterday hs president of-the body] United Nations Secretary-General U Than) stands at his side as Sosa-Rodriguez proclaimed toe assembly as ohe of hope for peace. lere because one or more signatures were affixed on a Sunday. “This Was done so-there would be no question whatsoever about the vfelid signatures. The 7,440 (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) King had asked Kennedy Monday for toe conference and also called on the President to send federal troops into Birmingham to put down the violence fhat broke out following toe bombing. There have been hundreds of incidents of rock throwings nightly, several suspected cases of arson in fires at Negro business firms and two Negro youths were shot to death on the streets following the explosion. White House Press Secretory Pierre Salinger said the President had not received any formal plea by King or his Birmingham associates psking that regular federal troops-be sent to Birmingham. State Road" Toll 1,214 EAST LANSIN& (Uflf) - State police said today ah early morning traffic death In'-Ingham Coun: ty brought the dearth toll this year to 1,214 as compared to 1,107 at the same time to 1962. OBJECTION — Harold Brown of 80 Marquette stood up tod told five commissioners “you ought to be ashamed” for voting to fire Robert A. Stieirer. / THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18,1968 Birmingham Area iNtews Commission Fires Stierer in 5-2 Vote School Superinte Concerned With Quality that it was “unfair to act without first talking to Mr. Stierer.” Landry answered, “There’s been enough talking already.” Taylor charged he had been *n of policy under the control afttMComnissioa. At an introductory news conference yesterday, Smith commented on suburban school systems in general. He compared Birmingham to Greenwich, the Connecticut community he left last week to come here. ,, “They are concerned with quality education and, see the importance of good schools,” he noted;. ' Another feature is that sub-urbanites emphasize preparation ter college." “The parents are college-educated or in jobs where they can “You have finally thrown in what I call the kitchen sink (byy Including charges here that were not in the original charges filed,” Bond said. “I think Mr. Stierer has vindicated himself “the cttyw attorney, who prepared this, is responsible to the commission, not just a majority of the commission. “This brings up seme brand new charges that are jut seme Ideas picked np (by Ewart) ,ia.: £ 3) He was Insubordinate. He ief|flMl to follow commission reo-immendations when given 'by resolution and by direction at in- in the eyes of everyone but five commissioners. “This resolution is as asinine se same of the charges filed against Mr. Stierer. by the audience. Harold Brown of 80 Marquette, rose and said: “YoB five commissioners an d Mr. Ewart ought to be ashamed of what you've done hare tonight. “The people of Pontiac will show you how much strength they have when they cast ballots nest April.” attorney, have I seen a more partial or unfair hearing as'I have jut witnessed, ia this meeting chamber,” He was a p p 1 a u d e d by the crowd. • HADN’T READ Taylor and Harmon said they hadn’t seen foe resolution yet. Harmon objected on grounds Waterford i d) He interpreted the city charier so met he was deciding cpm-mission policies. 17) He has exhibited a defiant and noncooperative attitude toward die majority of the com- “What America needs is excellence In everything. Industrial arts, home economics and commercial aspects are important^- Car Photos Insido Photos of the 1IM cars announced today r- Hedge 880, Buick and Lincoln — are on page C-2 of today’s Pontiac Press. Petition Action Stalled NOT ONLY TIME—Mrs. John Pfister (left) of 2840 Buckingham, Birmingham, demonstrates a crucial point to some 3,500 volunteer workers in the current Republican neighbor-to-neighbor fund drive as she hands over a donation to one of the 3,500, Mrs, Russell N. Bell Jr. of 2755 Buckingham. Her point: that volunteers should contribute money as well as time. Mrs. Pfister Is county chairman of the drive. After the meeting, Ledford said he had evidence of conspiracy to violate election lews on tiie part of candidates opposing commissioners elected in 1962. VICE EVIDENCE He also said he ha< tome vice evidence" over to the FBI. Ledford refused to elaborate but said that “grounds for jury investigation will be included in next week’s resolution.” He added that he wanted the investiagtion “to clear the air.” Investigations centering around campaign expenses of certain commissioners, of whom Ledford was one, were a factor the charges filed against Stierer. During the meeting and after te vote on Stierer, Taylor again attacked Ewart, asking a resolution was “I ter last week to curb I hot-rodding.” Henry came to Ewart’s defense, and he and Taylor engaged ■ a brief, but heated exchange. Then Ewart Went to his bfltce and got the resolution requesting Pontiac’s municipal, judges “to continue their good work in administering the city’s traffic nance.” The resolution urged full cooperation of judges in an effort stem the problem. No vote was taken, but it was passed for lack of objection. Henry had argued the commission couldn’t tell judges what fines to administer. (Continued From Page One) Signatures were contained in 4< Of the 805 petitions.” Mayor Robert A. Landry called for a vote on Henry’s motion but Mrs. Berkeley, obviously surprised, interrupted. “But I have certified the petitions,” she said. Ewart warned that “when a petition comes in, you have, no alternative but to act on it under law. Under the right of initiative and referendum the law Is very careful that... we have no control over what; the people put in (the petition) and we must put' up to a vote. STATE LAW That is the law of this state. Even if the state attorney general doesn’t approve it by form, still has to be voted on by the people.” %r“ ‘ “We have no objection to iat,” Henry said, adding that The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Variable cloudiness and continued warm today, tonight and Thursday. Highs today and Thursday near 86. Low tonight 58. Southerly Winds 5 to 12 Highest tempfrsturs ...............«9 Lowest temperstur* ..............,.S0 Mean temperature ................. SO. Weather; Sunn), mild. U.S. Heiress Sues Husband for Divorce ZURICH, Switzerland (UPD-Ro-manian playboy Andrei Porum-beanu flew here from New York today to try to persuade his j American heiress wife, the former Gamble Benedict, to drop her suit for divorce on the grounds of marital misconduct. The announcement of the divorce action by Mrs.. Porum-beanu’s attorney here yesterday apparently came as a surprise the one-time hairdresser, chauffeur and butler. The runaway romance of the debutante heiress to typewriter millions and the then-married MB hies on two continents for nooths. But the fairy-tale story of the American princess and the handsome pauper came to an un-* M WMhtogton % «|happy ending with Curtin’s ants n nouncement that Mri. Porum- beanu had “filed a claim for divorce against her husband based on the ground of misconduct . . . and has revoked all powers of attorney to her husband.” Vet's Hospital Bod Bill Votdd Okay by House WASHINGTON (UPI) - The House has passed and sent toi the Senate a bill to provide 2,-000 additional government nursing home beds for disabled vet-rans. . - The measure, approved on a the law also stated that petitions would be disqualified if commissioners found signatures “Once she (the clerk) checks and certifies the petitions,” Ewart argued, “that’s an administerlal act and . . . it follows automatically that you bring in the bat-lot.” \ 7 V \ - ★ 'ft,-' Henry said, “We don’t mean to table tills indefinitely ... just long enough to check the petitions. We don’t say we won’t set an election date. We have 90 days to do so.” Haraoin said, “If we can’t take the clerk’s word, how can we toll ff they’re legal .or not? I’m certainly not going down to her office to check them.” Taylor-suggested Mrs. Berkeley bring the petitions up to the commission ^ablef so Henry coukl check (hem before the meeting was adjourned. Henry said he’d like more tithe. DEFER ACTION Harmon said it would be better to defer action, not-table the issue. Henry agreed to deferring it one week. No vote was t a k e n. Landry asked for any further objections. There were none. When they filed, Jaycees said they had received petitions containing some 11,743 signatures in all, but had disqualified about 200 signatures before filing on the basis of checks they themselves ran as signed petitions were returned. Pontlto Pr«i< Phot# INCORPORATION BOOSTERS - A Junior Citizens’ Action Committee (JCAC) is being formed in Waterford Township to assist a citizens’ group in promoting incorporation of tha township as a city. JCAC members Virginia Watson (left) and Pam Bomsta will be among those handing out literature at today’s 8 p.m. open meeting at the Community Activities, Inc., building. At Waterford Meeting Noncity Areas to Be Eyed Four areas within the boundaries of Waterford' Township but excluded in the proposed incorporation of the township as a city will be outlined In a panel discussion at 8 p.m. today at tha Community Activities Inc., building. 'ft f - The public meeting Is one of a series sponsored by a citizens action • committee advocating a Chang* Jam dealing with the vale, va* ySST-J changes laws dealing with the care of veterans. Among these Would be an increase in aid to state veteran homes and provisions for limited care in ajiri-vato nursing home for certain [patients of the Veterans Admin- tion. EXCLUDED AREAS . The four excluded areas, all on the eastern boundary of the township, include Lake Angelus Village; the county service center near the state police .p oi t, Pioneer Highlands, just north of the City of Sylvan Lake; and the City of Sylvan Lake. Also slatod for panel diMps* slou is a small parcel of land near Dodge Park No. 4 deeded over to the township by West Bloomfield Township. Panelists, all members of • group that prepared an incorporation study last year, will answer any questions on Incorporation at tiie meeting. In addition to voting bn the question of cityhood, township residents also will elect nl charter commission members in the special election. IT the incorporation proposal passes, the commission will begin drafting a charter. If it fads, charter commission will be Tin/Railroad Is in Texas AUSTIN, Tex. (UPI) - Texas Parade magazine reports the smallest railroad reporting to the Interstate Commerce Commission is a two-fifths of a mile line running from El Paso to the center of the international bridge between that border city' and Juarez,, Mexico. 1 i ★ - f' ★ the Ej Paso Southern, owned by the Southern Pacific, operates to the point where the tracks meet those of the Chihuahua Pacific Railroad of Mexico. The line owns no rolling stock and rents locomotives. It does not operate on Sundays. A total of 2% persons, including five of the seven Waterford Township Board members, filed petitions for charter commissioner in Waterford Township. Election of charter commission and the question of Incorporating the township as a city both will be dedded at tin polls tea special election Nev. I. ' ■*. ft f Those who filed with the county clerk before yesterday’s 4 p.m. deadline were Loren Anderson, 2361 Edinburgh; Walter Baming-ham, 2858 W. Huron; John Coleman, 100 Crescent; Robert Cook, 3825 Shoals; Patrick & Daly, 4830 Irwindale; Elmer Fangboner, 3327 Meinrad. •''-■ft- jjf David Foran, 3879 Embaracad-ero; Donald Fraser, 5790 Hatch, ery; Leon Grbgg, 4481 Parnell; William Healy, 2987 Shawnee; Ben Lowell, 3772 Aquarina; John McGrath; 1311 Edgeorge; Mrs. Dorothy Olson, 3599 Shoals; Larry Payne, 8782 Percy King. OTHERS E. Frank Richardson, 6592 Row-ley; Lewis Ruelle, 5158 Farm; Shirley Ryden, 5119 Farm: Arthur Salley, 3403 Carmen; Deal Salley. Jameson; James Seeterlin, 4597 W. Walton; James L. Smith III, 3634 Breaker; and. Charles Sayre, 3193 Herbell. *** Seeterlin, Mrs. Olson and Fangboner ate the towiisbip’s supervisor, treasurer and clerk respectively. Anderson and Coleman are trustees on the township board. Daly and McGrath are the township’s two justices of the peace. If voters approve cityhood, the charter commission would begin drafting a city charter. The commission would be voided if the incorporation question is defeated. The new superintendent said that after his first contact with the Birmingham Board of Education^ he was very impressed with i|s apparent desire to have the very best schools possible within the resources of the community. He also commented on the board’s communication with residents of the district making it possible for the people .to visualize a continuing program. Regarding his own work, Smith said he |s an educator first and then an administrator. He stressed the importance of developing each individual to the best of his ability. The superintendent, a pioneer in several educational Innovations, said he has no pet proposal to try out In Birming-iam schools. However, he added: “I’m cori-vincet) that no matter how good they to ‘they probably can be better,” ■ •' Clyde C. Bennett Jr., 1274 West-wood, was named yesterday to the new State Council for the Arts. The 16-member council, created i encourage the advancement of finO arts among Michigan citizens, replaces the former Michigan Cultural Commission. Bennett is a Young and Rubl-cam account executive. Quint Mom Due Home ABERDEEN, S.D. (AP) - Mrs. Andrew Fischer, red-haired mother of quintuplet?, looked forward today to returning home from the hospital as her tiny Infants steadily gained in strength. * ft. t The four girls and a boy, born two months prematurely last Sat- Dionnes Speak Out Page C-4 urday. were at last report continuing active and healthy with the outlook good that all five would survive. The infants were expected to remain in the hospital for at least two months. [ The infants are being handled as little as possible in order to conserve their strength. They are being fed about a teaspoonful ofl“But I am very happy.” artificial milk formula and water every two hours. _ “I told them upstairs that I would rather go into the delivery room than come down here,” the 30-year-old mother told a battery of newsmen and photographers Tuesday night at her first news conference since the quints were bom. ,/ Mrs. Fischer said She has not been told when she may leave St. Luke’s Hospital, but Berbos indicated it would be late this week. Visibly nervous and speaking barely above a whisper, Mrs. Fischer said she was concerned about her other five children at home—also four gir)s and a boy— as she was about her famous new brood. . ‘It’s like a dream,” she said when asked how she felt about becoming world famous overnight: 30 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18>. 1968 A—* Adoptable Babies Often Illegitimate (Editor’s Note—This is the tut in a three-part series m adoption procedures in MichV gan. The series deals with the current picture in numbers, procedure by parents, and sources, of children, By LOIR BLACKBURN LANCING (OPli-Most of the chil- dren available for adoption in Michigan are infants derived from referral of unwed mothers a the various social agencies. Elmer Ameses, executive secretary of the Lansing area Children’s Aid- Society, said re* ferrals of unwed mothers come ASTHMA „ It brmthlnc. wheeling, ooughlne •Wife «So ntb> remove ehoklnt pbltraj fi*S thusi promote freer breethln* Mur U«n restful sleep. Most rtrutslst. keep »nd recommend MWDAOO. the possibility of placing their children for adoption. yers, hospitals,' courts or clergymen. Statistics indicate there are 7,000 illegitimate births recorded in Michigan annually, and an untold number of babies are bum in facilities other thah hospitals which are not recorded. The Children’s Aid Society, Just one^severalnagenct^ state, conferred with some 1,200 unwed mothers last year about < Advertisement) WORRIED, NERVOUS Over Change-of-Ufe? In doctors' test* woman after «... change of life discomforts...hot f Don’t dread those endless yean of misery, of sadden hot flashes, of weakness, irritability. > If you are going through the "change,” do aa thousands of women do-take a special woman’s, medicine—Lydia E. Pinkham Vegetable Compound —developed to help women by relieving such functionally The gentle medicine with ths gentle« caused female distress. In doctors’ tests woman after woman found that Pinkham’s Compound gave dramatic help without costly "shots.” Irritability was soothed, hot flashes subsided. So don’t sit and brood. You can feel better. Get help. Get Lydia E. Pinkham Vegetable Compound today. .me LYDIA E. PINKHAM Arnesfen said there 1$ approximately a 50 per emit rate of attrition in final arrangements as compared to initial contacts by Children’s Aid. Hie 10 per cent of women never heard from again apparently make a decision to keep their babies, or make other arrangements for their care. The other half go through a series of stops with Chtotraii’a Aid er other agencies. The basis of this action is toe signing of a legal release of toe child. The mother relinquishes ail rights to her child; either at birth if the paper is signed before tote, or effective when toe relearn is signed. The child ' is then placed in a foster' home designated by the agency. A pediatrician examines the child thoroughly as frequently as necessary until its health is good enough for placement in an adoptive home. Most of the illegitimate children available for adoption are infants, for whom the release is signed before birth, Arnesen said. Less than 100 of the 541 children placed by the* agency last year ere over a year old. Ages of the women seeking assistance from Children’s Aid Society foil in a small group pri-marily. Arnesen said statewide in recent years, the agency has dealt with as many women under 20 years old as over this age. Many are girls in their teens. The rest of toe children avail- two - ot^er sources: Married couples and court referrals. Most of the.children of married couples are “rrieased” before birth, but court referrals Involve children primarily in toe six week to three month age group. These are the result of neglect and de* pepdencypeases for Jhg most part, Children’s Aid Society was re- hibits this,” Said Arnesen. “The natyrai parents Of1 toe child entrust the agency to find a good home for it.” Each adoption -costs between |500 and $700 to the community, Arnesen said, and most of this is paid with Community Chest funds. ; ★ ■ ★ ★ There is no charge to a family placing a child for adoption, but adoptive parents are asked to pay a portion of the cost. This portion ranges usually from ,$250 to $300, based on the parents’ ability to pay, Arnesen said. TRIBLEDSEBIgGE^ "It is our feeling that those who benefit should pay,” he said. Canvassers■ Increased to 4 The number of Oakland County election canvassers was increased to four Monday with the appointment of Mrs. Verne C. Siegfried of Royal Oak by the County Board of Supervisors. Her appointment balances toe sponsible for the care of an esti- Lft, practjce ha8 enabled us to1 mated 1,800 children in foster j triple our service since 1857. when homes last year, the Lansing spokesman said. Each of these is checked monthly by an agency representative to assure proper health and general care. NEVER MEET Adoption ’procedures involve confidences closely parallel to that of a doctor-patient, lawyer-client relationship, Arnesen said. The natural mother or parents of a child placed for adoption never meet the adoptive parents. “Good adoption practice pro- the payment idea was instituted.” Contrary to general ideas, Arnesen said, hospital costs of an illegitimate child “released” for adoption are not paid by the agency. “We give counsel and help plan for the child .and limited amounts of money are available to the mother in an emergency. Usually, however, we attempt- to get] the women in contact with oilier social service agencies which can help financially if necessary." number of Democrats and Re{ publicans on tge bipartisan board of canvassers. ,The * supervisors also reappointed canvassers CarRs Richardson, Democrat, Hope Gorman and Sally Dixon, Republicans. .. • Mrs. Siegfried of 301 N. Steph-nson Highway is an active member of the 'Democratic party in the county. Her term on the board of canvassers is for two years. Quick RaHaf fratf' 4- PitelrriteMi piles, ml spread across the land making Peterson’s Ointment a favorite in -thousands of homes. Ask your ment delights or money back/ Evangelistic Services THE SALVATION ARMY 29 Lawrence — Pontiac CONTI WINGTHRQUGH SUN., SEPTEMBER 22nd Sapt. 19th , "God1* Question In An Atomic Age” THE CAPTAINS THE INMAN TRIO ‘ of Owosso of Pontiac Sapt. 20tH - "Answar’s Tb Our Greatest Need" THE TEMPLE TRIO of Pontlae Sept. 21 st. * "God's Invitation To A Foast" Or A Funeral" THE DICIPLES QUARTET of Pontiac - "Road To Santification" "Last Call" Sept. 22nd • -NURSERY AT ALL MHCES- Brigadier Ed Ne(*on Evangelist Chicago, Illinois 'Ho That Hath the Son Hath Life* I John 5:12 W ! — .... ' w as iiia> ni i sa u » sm ■aa'i'i1 1 i> VI0 Cawa Ta SIMMS Toaarraw 12 NUN ’til IMOor liesi EXTRA SAriMS •MMKHMt’ftoetrle Alarm Clods 31# Self-storting 'Princess* model vitlh luminous dial. Ivory com. PluiJOfa tax. -SUNDRY Main floor $3.98 Box ef 800 Sheets Kleenex Tissues 29* /V 89c Value Soft and absorbent Kleenex tissues |n pop-op (dispenser box. White or colors. t —DRUGS Main Floor 9*V Transistor Radio Batteries ..........100 4f.1< Original 73c inllors - hi power imported batteries tor most Iran-sistor radios. -CAMERASMoInHeoy LOOK For The Thousands of Other Unadvertised D/scounfs| M il lac , — YOU’LL FIND ’9-HOUR SIGNS' On ALL 3-FLOORS - Do come to Simms tomorrow for these advertised specials, bring a. friend or neighbor to Join yoy-in this savings spree. And look for the special '9-HOUR SALE' slgns-YOUR GUARANTEE of EXTRA DISCOUNTS—There's something for everyone. SimmS reserves the right to iiriiit oil quantities. ' _ SORRY. NO MAIL OR PHONE ORDERS PLEASE. YOU MUST BE HERE FOR THESE SUPER DISCOUNTS .jimmj Main Floor CLOTHING DEPARTMENT Genuine 'TODDLE TYKE' Childs’ Creepers *1.9* 100 Value I .*»»«— i 27S: bindjng. Hooxywoighf In P9*tal color*. ]pj size-9 to 24 months. 36x50 Inch Sha Crib Blankets ,2.00 C 00 i r OamtaTmiRcKRT^ Moth-Proof Bomb 96* Wash 'n Wear Cotton Girls’ Polo Shirt $1.39 Value $1.39 Value 100 With 'Johnny Collars' Child Sweatshirts j 100 | Hooded Style....... $1.19 I Tori# peek style* with long sleevet. 100% cotton, fleece lined. Red, black, » fa* color* of gold, blue or brown. , .... i . j® -- fA. 1 Wash 'n Wear Cotton 1 2 Styles in Glris' Girls’Blouses | ‘Ban-Lon’ Sweaters $1.29 Value V1 Odd* 'n End* of better blouses, tailored jl; Girls* 'Ban-Ion' sweaters In slip-over collars, button front. Print* and aolldn. or cardigan styles. Whim and pastels Short sleeve. Size 3 to 6x. # Inslzed to 8.. SIMMS DISCOUNT BASEMENT Ton Kllows 39* Waterproof Piaetio < Mattress Covers $1J9 Value 98* Decorator toss pillows for sofas ond j: chairs. Gold color rayon & silk cover jj wlthijpper.^ 70x90 inoh Six* Blend Blankets j large 14-ounce size aerosol,spray can of moth-proofing for clothing. -Maln-r ' For Rand and I Woodbury Lotion $1.00 OCc Value iJU Genuine 'DURA-GLOSS' Nail Polish Remover Dr. Ellis Famous Hair Wave Set 8* Cigars 25'.'89* 79c Seller 39* i» | 2,or $$.93 Value _ " $3.30 Rayon-nylon blend blonkels In asst ed pastel colors. American made v satin binding. All Ootton-Oombination . Mattress Pad & Cover Twin 1 99 Beys' Full Zipper Hood Sweatshirt *1.69 1 34 Value | p $ Full Slso..............2.99 Values to $4.93 — pad and cover js combination slip on and Off easily. If- Jj|ra^utor». * ...... • Orions or Lambs wool Men’s Sweaters Roasted and Salted Cashew Nuts 72* Full Freshly roosted and sallid cashew nut* In full pound bag.A tgsty treat. ■mu .Mhiw >: Mostly pullover Ityle* with a few 4* |s hole style cardigans. Size* small-| medium and large. . Stays Put Anywhere Ash Trays 39c Value 23° Quilt Lined-Boys' i Fiann.r^Or Bl.nk.t Lin.d Bomber Jackets | Men’s Work Jackets •Weighted bate makes thlco safety, _ type aih tray-itays put anywhkre. ^^unForThsSid^1^ Feather Rockets ‘OEM’ Pediclip Toenail Clipper .69c 4f|C Value '“'I . Chrome finished dipper to Cut t# UyW scout knife with blade, noils at the correct angle. Limit 2,/ ; ^ e^epmr and bottle 'ACME' 7-lnoh Size Pinking Sheers $i.93 QQc Value 00 Block-handle pinking shear, with edge | h, (|n|lW lrlmmtr, to cut rcivel-proof. zig-zag edges. X; .... • Limit 2, .. -- ------------- .— DRUG and COSMniC DISCOUNTS $3.93 Value 3°° gabardine shell sper front. 4 col 099 Far Qolde, Hay Favsr DRISTAN Tablets 24'. 58° Regular 98c . bottle of famous decon-gallant tablet*. Fast relief with Dristan. Economy liz* Tube IPANA Toothpaste QQc Size OO Save 30c on Improved IfANA toothpaste, dally brushing with Ipana help* teeth. , ‘EVERYDRY’ Brand RoII-On-Oeodorant $1.00 QCc Value • OO Marrows CRYSTAL CLEAR Hair Spray Choice of round ■ oil nttpal con dor rectangular plonk Wn' RemavoWo *' step-on twiddle eovsi*. Value* to $6.98 U whipcord* Ond denlmi fixed. Zipper front, slash S Size* 3d to 50. 29c Seller 14* Feather Rocket .hoot* up to 200 ‘ fast Into the air, use. caps to make ^explosion, -Main Floors 77* Ohoiea of S typat of Woodbury Creams 59* $1.00 Jar Jumbo tire sproy con of crystal clear hair .pray far all hair styling. Limit 2, ; Choice of Vanishing Cream, Dry » Cream or Cold Cream. Your choice, j-Omit 3 |an, Cl 1 LA j Jll m j ▼1 BROTHERS^ 98 N. SAGINAW ST. - SIMMS CASH PAY CHECKS HEEL Mat THU PONTIAC PKKSS. WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER IB, IMS Areo FT As 'Good Teacher' Panel Topic "Bripiaf to Get and Keep Good Tsacbera” Is the subject to be die* erased by a panel of experts when PTA members from the Avondale, Clawson, Lake Orion, Dray and Oxford school districts lowed at 7:30 by tbe program. AREA N£WS| l neat for dinner Sept. 25 In Lake Both will be hekj at Lake Orion Community High School. The 6:30 p.m. meal will be fol- The program’s subject co- incides With the statewide project of the Michigan Congress Parents in cooperation with the Michigan-Education Association — “Recruiting Teachers.” . >...- Dr. Gordon Fielder, associate professor of education at Eastern Michigan University, will moder- ate the panel and present the project. Others on the panel will be the superintendents of the five participating school districts. They are: George Shackleford, Avondale; Eugene Spencer, Clawson; A. A. Reed, Lake Orton; Dr. Rex Smith, Dray; and Roger Oberg, Oxford. , PARTICULAR PROBLEMS Panel members will discuss particular problems of their respective districts, and how they The program is open to tbe pub* "c. The regular workshops pta officers and comm chairmen will follow the panel discussion Iranian Miss Weds in Oxford Ceremony ||_____pw r,_, ■ WED W YEARS - Mr, and Airs. Richard Roggow Sr. of feel the pta rjin hoip ■nlvo thom 301 Woodwardr «ochester, will observe their golden wedding Freni FfcoU LOG-SAWIN’ TOME! - With only a few days to go before the annual St. Andrew Pit Btfbecue Beef Dinner in Rochester, preparation arw already undo: way. Here, Joseph Kowaleski, pit technician, holds a log for hia helper Jim Ferguson, while Father Edward Baumgartner (toft) and Father Thomas Sauter watch. Fifteen cords of wood are needed to barbecue the 2,300 pounds of beef. Sdiools Slate Health Check Children in Avondale Tested by Technician A two-way health testing program is in progress this week tor students in the Avondale ScbooTDistrlcf. Until next Wednesday, Airs. the Oakland County Health Department, will be giving vision tests to pupils at the Junior high. Si. Andrew Pit Barbecue Dinn ROCHESTER - if takes a lot of people to, iat 2,300 pounds of beef, 450 pies, 30 bushels of vegetables and more, all served at one meal. But tfcwi working w ffils year’s St. Andrew wth Pit Barbecue Beef Dinner are hop-big' tor a lot of people to flock to Rochester Sunday for the event-even more than the 2,400 who attended last year. . . . I . Although serving begins at| ents “ STRdes one* 11:30 a. m., the select prime beefj serving the meals. St/ Andrew JSwihllES AS roundg be placed in two Hall on Walnut will offer seated eleven are scheduled for the test- oveng 30 feet ;ong three feet wide dj j d ,h Elk T _,e tog. Students from the other and {our feet d ,ate Saturday,dining’ , ®nd Elksll grades , may be checked if. re* night across the road is available for nigu . those desiring carry-out service. animal husbandry at Alichigan State University, will agai; supervise the meat preparation. When the beef is offered Sun* day, it will be complemented with vast amounts of other foods, including 21 gallons of olives, 96 gallons of sweet peas and hundreds of potatoes.. * ★ ★ Two halls will be in operation Following is a list of the workshops and their respective leaders: • Presidents and vice presidents — Airs, Leonard Fry, director of District No. 7, Michigan Congress of Parents and Teachers (MCPT). • Council delegates — Airs. William U. Porter, director of district services, (MCPT). • Program chairmen — Mrs. Richard Morgan, past prestd< of the Oakland (fowity PTA Council. !* ...•■■. • Secretaries, recording and corresponding — Airs. Eugene " beys, past secretary of the t Oakland Area PTA Council, • Treasurers — Airs. Clyde Kohl, past president of the Troy City PTA Council. • Hospitality and membership — Mrs. Homer Ratliff, past president of the Clawson City PTA Council. ... . v • Publicity — Lee Winbern Olson, area news editor of The Pontiac Press. • PTA Magazine — Mrs. Paul Keith, state chairman of the PTA Magazine — MCPT. Officers and committee chairmen in the five PTA districts taking part are urged to attend the conference. For reservations, contact Mrs. Eldon PoWtoy at 2085 Cole, Orion Township, before Friday. Sues Officials referred to Mrs. Mann by their teacher, Vision testing will be conducted at other Avondale schools through Oct. IS. Pupils at the Sacred Heart School will be tested from Oct 18 through Oct. 21. Beginning Sept. 30, all students In grades one, five and nine will have the opportunity to receive a tuberculin skin test. , . : ____ Prior to testing, parental permission requests will be sent home with the studente. Fifteen cords of specially sea-i Proceed* from tbe dinner will soned hickory, burning in the! be used to help furnish the earthen oven, provide heat for the ««cted St. Andrew con- meat. The hickory will flame until two feet of red-hot embers remain at the pit bottom. SAND SPRINKLED Sand will be sprinkled over the coals and the encased beef will be . lowered- Steel sheets-wiiMhen M^mMlevgaing.^ form a top for the pven, which is sealed by covering it with earth. Robert Dean, professor of To E. Robert Tucker Norma Van Camp Is Wed / HOLLY TOWNSHIP - A floor-length gown of lace and organza was chosen by Norma Jean Van Camp for her Saturday evening wedding to iS. Robert Tucker. The daughter of Air. and Airs. Jesse Van Camp. 8453 Tucker, and the son of Mrs. Robert L. Tucker, 5481 Shields, were married at Trinity Lutheran Church to Fenton. The skirt of the bride’s gown featured organza over two tiers of lace. The bodice, with long tapered sleeves, had a modified Sabrina neckline. * * ★' A crystal bridal cap held her bouffant veil tit imported illusion. The bridal bouquet consisted of white rosea and Stephanotis. . The bride’s sister Sharon was maid of honor with Janet Hertz of Flint, Jrndl Willey of Flint and Marilyn Servoss of Drayton Plains, cousin of the bride, ra bridesmaids. Jack Brasher of Holly was best man; Ushers were Neal Lahring, Robert Linely and the bride’s brother John, all of Holly. ||}'",.’ IpU ... tit ' W Following a reception in the church paries's the newlyweds loft on a honeymoon trip to Virginia and Washington, D. C. * vent, adjacent to the achool and to the site of the barbecue, on Inglewood. ■ir ★ * Many are expected to observe the pit preparation Saturday af- Chairman of this year’s barbecue, is Dick Brandt, whq will be assisted by cochairman Alvin Rossman and Norbert Brinkman. A citizen’s suit has been filed in Oakland County Circuit Court charging seven officials and one former official of Southfield with illegally spending $3,400 for travel expenses to conventions and! for private luncheon meetings. James E.' Wells, a Detroit businessman who lives to Southfield, demanded a court order for repayment of tho money. He was an unsuccessful candidate for City Council last April. Named as defendants were Counciimen C. Hugh Dohany, Clarence A. Durbin, O. David Edwards, Alexander . Perinoff, Thomas C. Rowley, .Philip arson;- -City Administrator - Don-ald V.- Smith and former Councilman John J. Hollywood. Earlier this year Wells unsuccessfully sought a grand jury Investigation of city government, anniversary Saturday with an open house from 2 to 5 p.m. at Avon Park Pavilion. Hosts and hostesses for the occasion will be their three sons and their wives, the Elmer Roggows of Pontiac and the Richard and Norman Roggows of Rochester. The senior Roggows also have three grandchildren. Rochester School District to Have White Warehouse ROCHESTER — The school district here is going to have one of the most attractive, well-land-scaped white frame warehouses to the area. ' * ★ * At Its regular meeting Monday the school board agreed to use the former administration build* tag, on the lawn of the newhigh school, as a storage facility. ★ ★ . ★ , Stoney Creek Elementary School; where school supplies were formerly housed, is now being used for morning and afternoon kindergarten classes, The school superintendent’s of* Mason Youth, 18, Dies in Car Crash on 1-96 . MASON (UPI) - A two-car crash on 1-96 near this Ingharii County community resulted in the death early today of Clester Horton Jr., 18, Mason. State police said Horton’s car was struck in the rear by another Norton’s vehicle rolled over and burned. He was trapped inside. flee and other administrative offices which were in the converted residence are nowinthe more rodmy Harrison School on West University. ' * * After discussion of the board’s policV on bid acceptance, it decided to continue the practice ijof opening bids to all and -accepting the lowest. The board had considered accepting local bids, even If they were not low, but decided a ‘ the policy change. ’ ★ ★ * In other action the board agreed tp. borrow $220,000 in anticipation of state aid from Rochester branch of the National Bank of Detroit, The rate of interest will be 1.92 per cent. ★ ★ ★ At the request of member John Patterson, mis board decided upon a communications policy. Mrs. Donald Geisler, sister-in-law of the bridegroom, was, ma- " tron of honor. His sister, Normaj* Geisler, was bridesmaid, dr dr ■"'* On the esquire side, Donald Geisler assisted his brother as best man. James Van Wagoner served as -groomsman while Gary Stewart and William Somerville seated the guests. The church’s Fellowship Hall was the setting for the reception that followed the nuptials. Patterson wanted that ah hoard members would relate to the board as a Whole any communications they received from citizens. The board agreed to comply with his request. OXFORD— Richard Lee Geisler claimed Fariba Bozorgi of Teheran, Iran, as his bride to a candlelight - cerenpony Saturday afternoon at Immanuel Congregational Church here. Parents of the couple are Air. and Airs. Norman Geisler, 71 S. Washington, and Air. and Airs. Khalil Bozorgi of Teheran, taw. The bride’s ankle-length white satin gown was ornamented around the hipline of the skirt with appliques of cutwork embroidery interlaced with satin Her illusion*veil was held in place by a pearl crown/ White roses and carnations formed her il bouquet . ' MRS. RICHARR L. GEISLER Oxford tions to Host Confab OXFORD — The Oxford Lions Club will serve as hosts for tomorrow’s zone meeting at 7 p.m. to the Legion Hall on Washington, New Zone Chairman Homer light, 97 Denison, will he honored at the meeting, District Governor George Hart of Anchorville is expected to attend, along with Immediate Past District Governor Richard A. Young of 2810 Indian Lake, Addison Township. . ft . ★ ★ Also expected are several international Lion counselors, as well as presidents and secretaries from 10 clubs in Region 1, District llA.:' ' Skit to Follow j Potluck Dinner ROCHESTER — A comedy skit ’It Could Be You, Mrs. Magoo!” will follow the potluck dinner planned by the Rochester Branch of the American Association of UniyersttyWOtoM The dinner which begins at 6:96 p.m., will be held in toe home economics room of West Junior High School, as will all other meetings scheduled tor this year. * ★ ★ All characters In the play highlighting Wednesday's dinner pro-I gram will be portrayed by club members. rr ■ * * , ★ ■ * Special guest will be Airs. Mar* vin Marsh, of the Birmingham branch, who is news editor of the State New Bulletin. ■ ★ , ★ Arrangements for the event are being handled by Mrs. Finley Kennedy of Lake Orion, Mrs. George Wallace of Utica, and Mrs. John Solverson and Mrs. Kenneth Roose, both of Rochester. APPLIANCE BUYERS! OLLIE FRETTER SAYS: NOTE TOO BUSY TO MAKE FANTASTIC CLAIMS! Sural I know everybody cut* pricoi, give* fantastic discounts, makes claims, and saves you mora money. Please excuso us this wook... wo’ra just too busy soiling appliances and don't hava tlmo to trado bragging. Shop our pricos this wook and soo why. HOOVER CONVERTIBLE *439 EMERSON TELEVISION $4 £A 28” PICTURE ......... IW AOMIRAC TELEVISION 21” LOWBOY...... *149 JJEHUHIDIFIER DISHWASHER EM SPECIAL SALE WITH TRADE p|jl w,8K . , . In, D mutt bs belli In. To bullet quality rtqvlnn plants, i and above all a loom of axpnrlnnend and dsdkatdd crafttmnn. Qualjly Il a 63-ynor-old tradition at CURTIS MATHES. 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Shopping G !«'s and Krogers) ) Mile—LI 7-4409 Open Mon. thru FrI. 9:30 to 9i30f-8et« 9 to 9 . ’ h TOE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1968 Feature Film Skunked ! E^AST GREENWICH, R.|, (UFlj — A skunk wadjlled into the Kent Theater last night and deared' the house five minutes if ter the staff of the feature movie, “Come. Blow Your Horn. WHY THKY CANT stop YMwmmo IH YOUNOBTOWM TkeyVebeietf. So wooM yoo bo. ' TMok ff tMSoe toS«o(N you mi oai i tboU $» a town wboro yoo bo Happy yOM*io In MeMgan, WtMM tho too one oboor (Might of Cook Wlnoo ora as near to you lease stats or tavern. CASK WINES CASK TenseNerves Block Bowels Your colon has norm thal control regularity. When you are Unse or nervous, normal bowel impulses may be blocked—and you Become constipated. New Colonaid ablets relieve this misery with a new principle-e unique colonic nerve stimulant plus special bulkinsactioo as recommended by many doctors. Result? Colon aid puts your colon back to work—gently relieves constipation overnight You feel stoat I Get clinically-proved CotONAlb todfcy. Introductory sl» 430 30 Days to Batter Grades Study the Teacher, Too Strictly for the Birds REDONDO BEACH, Calif. (DPI) - GHy Councilman David K. Hayward wax in with a ire-quest todhy far By The READINCT LABORATORY Written for Newspaper Enterprise Association So far, we’ve been discussing the ways in which you should ac-commodate yourself to . courses — how to develop a constructive attitude toward school and how to pinpoint the purposes behind eaeh course. But for every course you take, you also take a teacher, and until teaching machines take over the classroom, it’s important to study your teacher. The old cliche says, “If yon can’t fight 'em, joia ’em,” and since there's no point in working at cross-purposes with your teacher (he marks yon), learn how to work With him. Working with a teacher is not the same ax apple-polishing. You have to work with people all your life; start making a science of it. Here are the major things fo look for when studying a teacher. # What part of the course does heifim best? Whatpart does he like least? Watch out for Small points that your teacher spends a lot of time op — he likes those points. They may be on a test. UNIMPORTANT If..you catch your teacher supplying a lot of seemingly important background material make sure you learn that “seem* ' f unimportant” material, you can give it back on a test, your mark may soar. • Does he like argument in the classroom? (Not fights, of course, bnt intelligent discussion of both sides of a prob> lem). Some teachers don’t — usually because they’re pressed for time. But try yours out. Bring up a question that, contradicts of his own statements. If he likes if, do it again. If he doesn’t, it may behest to keep quiet when you disagree. There' no point in irritating blip. • Does he mark tor claim participation, or does he just count tests? it % This will usually depend on the size of his class; the best way to find out is to ask your teacher. If he marks for class participation, whenever you feel you have something to say, say it! POP QUIZZES • Does he like to give pop quizzes? If he does you’ll have to prepare for class every day. Whenever possible, check for this with older students who have already had your teacher. • What Mad of tests he give? Essay True-False? Multiple choice? What kind of answers does he like? Good understanding of main idea? Tiny details? You’ll have to adjust your studying to his tests; it can save you a lot of unnecessary work. You can check this out with older students. • See if he has “good days’ id “bad days.’’ Don’t go out of your way to give your teacher a . hard time on his bad days. , it St W • Make a private appointment with your teacher. It can be helpful to both of you, He’D be glad to see you, but be sure you have something specific that fflQOO PERSONAL LOANS APPLY NOW SAVE INTEREST COSTS REDUCE PAYMENTS The new Michigan Loan Law means you can save on interest costs and reduce payments by combining two $500 loans into one $1,000 loan. U. . . Now you may reduce your monthly payments by combining all your bills into one $1000 loan to ha paid in 36 months at $38.24 per month. You may make application by phone fight now, Mien your money may be ready for you when you come hu MICHIGAN UNIVERSAL CI.T. CREDIT COMPANY 857 W. Huron Street, Pontiac Phonei Plderal 1-7981 the nyment above I* computed on an Inter pf *14% per month on bnianoo to ISM ana 1 you want to talk over; he may not have time for just small talk. (Next: How to disagree with your teacher sod still get good load with wings rocketed the Atlantic missile range today, but after 'several hours recovery vessels failed to find it and officials feared it may have sunk. March OK'd in New Orleans 6 Negro Groups Get 'Conditional' Permit NEW ORLEANS (UPI) - Six Negro groups, planning a march on City Hall to demand “total desegregation in New Orleans,’ today had Mayor Victor Schlro’ conditional approval for an orderly parade .but noj;, for a cial demonstration.” Schlro announced yesterday the civil righto group would get the parade permit.they sought to stage the Sept. 30 march on condition they complied with city ordinances regulating parades. “A parade is something der control,” Schlro explained. “A demonstration often becomes unruly” He urged New Orleanians to shun dei strations. Negro leaders said at a rally Monday night they would march “permit or no permit.” They have accused Schlro of falling short of keeping desegregation promises he made thetn. “We're going to march to, around and in City Hall,” the Rev. Avery Alexander, president of one of the six organizations, told the rally. “We wan thousands of Negroes to participate.” Meanwhile in Thlbodaux. La. about SO miles southwest of New Orleans, Francis J. - N i c o 11 State College had Negroes attending (tosses today for the first time in its history. The world’s main tobacco-producing countries are the United States, Red China, India, and the Federation of Rhodesia and Ny- UL’RICHIE says, p£v “You get twice tbs mdse is RICHARDSON’S products, ’cause everything we make Is , double, double good! """""pi — *1 j 10° OFF s s15° OFF AKTFUVN j * Soar Cream or Fr. Onion Dip!! OL Hand Packed Ice Cream i ^ tfani 9/01 /63 at all Rkhardton't dealers j j thro 9/21/63. 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The beacon was to have activated on landing to aid recovery forces. There was no report whether parachute landing system worked. quirlng cate to weif bells as a warning to birds in the area. Canada la larger in area than ordinance re- continental United States. Hit in th# Eyo for olio * * NjfW RAVENNA, Italy (UPD-Sven ^ ranbeaden, 43, a Norwegian, said from his hospital bed today that he was beaten up to a bar n Water expands about one-tenth "!1000 CASH a month - 'fojTv rANY accident Even for the rest of your life while hospitalized from ANY accident 1 ■ This plan la GUARANTEED RENEWABLE for Life! Time Life Insurance Company is making o special introductory offer of a lifetime Insurance Policy, that pays you at the rate of $1000.00 cash a month, FREE for 30 days, to readers of this publication under age 80 who qualify. 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No agent will call. It is available to you NOW if you act immediately. Mail the coupon RIGHT NOWI r-r CUT OFF HERE and MAIL TODAY! Time Ufa Insurance Com- | Mad to TIME LIFE INSURANCE CO., Dept. 82A38H, Gan. Wainwright Sta., San Antonio, Taxae78208 I pony to an OStabRshad * IdiwimoaiiwfMtNwSl/lOO coAawwilV A^d*n»He«»lMN«crwfckl.elye«»e30der»Nw j i- 1 ■ * ■■ ■; ’. 77~r~Y i- I I My Nama is (Print).. i,-. , j Data bom: Month.. .T.. Day...... Yaar.. I ‘ . . , . , | Beneficiary's Nama.........................................(•••••••<•„ | I i-u—Steitories!—1—“ “—r*- r - j fT | | Sign HemX..;...............,.........................................I I Addrast....;..............................................T...T___(H)f old lino lagal rasarva Company, its co-foundsr and first president was the lata General Jonathan M. Wainwright, hare of Bataan and Corrogidor In World War It. ' II You Want FreePolidei For OtferMtmbm Of Yoer Family, M Chevrolet already builds four lines of cars-now why is it a fifth? The reason—and we never had a better one—is you. Or people very much like you. Each year, in caw you haven’t noticed, you’ve been growing a bit harder to please. A bit more demanding and selective in your tastee. And that's line by us. If we didn’t believe in change for the better —if we weren’t a bit restless and hard to please ourselves—wev wouldn't be in the business of making cam. **..” So for ’64 we’re building the Chevelle—a THERE’S £5 IN itilllv T1PUT lino nf pnra that nfTora a oAmhinatiAn Iks U MM II N totally new line of cars that offers a combination of advantages nobody else has got around to coming up with yet. Chevelle’s comfort and conveniences, for example, are in the same league with many of today’s bigger cars. Yet it has the handling ease and agility you’d expect only In a smaller car. And that’s only part of the story.. To get the full picture you'll have to see and drive this one yourself. Glean, brash lines amMut.amnM.wtoB Bi backed up by the kind of engineering—a choice of 14 power t no less—that allows for plenty of brashness in the way it I Chevelle may be your kind of car—and then again it may not (Which is the reason we’re building our other four for '64: the new Jet-smooth luxury Chevrolet; the thrifty new Chevy II with a choice of iiew V8 power: the sporty hew Corvalr with a more powerful rear engine; and the refined new Corvette, America’s only pure-bred sports car.) But whether yOu decide the Chevelle is for you or not, we think you’ll agree it’s for people * very much like you—people who take ehooeing a car personally and are rather proud of bring hard to please. Your Chevrolet dealer—with five kinds of ’64 cars to choose from—is expecting to meet a lot of1 people like you come announcement day. Chevrolet Division of General Motors, Detroit, Mich, Chevelle ! by Chevrolet . Coming Thursday, Sept. .26 Dpi 1“ iii THE PONTIAC Articles on ‘Drag Racing Stir Reader Coinmerit mmm It’sConstitutkmWeek -Meditate Blessings The one hundred and seventy* sixth anniversary of the signing of the Constitution should give pause to all Americans for a few minutes’ meditation. ■ ★ ★ * In this day of widespread despotic government and hunger and ---Bend-slavery for bilHons of th* - world’s inhabitants, we as a nation and a people might well meditate on the heritage of manifold blessings born of the Inspired Several years ago, Congress authorized anhual proclamation of this - week as Constitution Week. -★ ★ ★ . Particularly timely is the keynote of the significant commemoration: “To strengthen a nation dedicated to liberty and Justice — a nation in which its citizens may live an abundant life, developing to the fullest their individual opportunities for success and rendering a corresponding service to their country.” 1 ★ ★ ~ ★ Recognized and honored at this time are the young Americans who have become of age and the aliens admitted to citizenship. The Press salutes our new citizens on their attainment of full s t alu s and commends their patriotic countrymen who have worked in consecration of our constitutional birthright. ■ , " : • Will New Razor Blade Shave Production? With two leading razor blade manufacturers hitting the market with long-playihg hlader.^teicsIEig conjecture is not amiss. Will blades in time become so enduring that a household wlU possess but one only lifetime blade, to be handed down from one generation to the next-—much as were the old-fashioned straight-edge razors of , grand-. pop’s day? ★ ★ ★ Will this single blade stand up under the misuse suffered when the distaff member of the establishment appropriates it to shave her shins? What will be the effect on the razor-blade-disposal industry when there are no longer blades to be disposed of? ★ ★ ★ But since those directly involved seem to be giving little or no thought to what to us are pretty serious social and economic uncertainties, we see no reason to get ourselves all In a lather. sent opposition to the will of the ★ ★ ★ But even If we come to conclusions such as these — or to conclusions similar to our government’s, or to our news reporters P-Mi South Viet Nam — we are speculating. wVran’t hope to look at the situation ns a Buddhist, as a South Vietnamese or as a Southeast Aslan.—V—— There is one\thing we can do. We —as a nation—realize that we lost Laos. We can reaUze that we are pouring billions intoweaa tiiat Red nhinu could take when^she is ready —and wants them., Why are we in South V^et Nam?' "Are we doing any good? And if we are, what is the cost? And if tne cost Is great, but the end seems Com nistic anyway, why do we stay? This is the time for a cold, calci lating and down-to-earth review and N examination of our entire Southeast Asian policy. Teen-agers whfruse the. highways as "drag strips’ deserve to be censured and punished, but don’t condemn all the teens. There are many of us who use our cars, properly and exhibit the very same Christian attitudes behind the Wheel as we do in church. I wish to defend the many good kids who are suffering from the criticism deserved dirty % the misguided few- 4 I pray daily that these immature kids will come to their senses and haake constructive use of their time before this drag racing leads to injury and possible * death for innocent parties. is:" Concerned Clarkston Youth I won’t congratulate Mr. Thorne on his article for I don’t think it is all teen-agers on Woodward. If you drive there you will see married men and women, f have seen men racing as young as 65, *... I’m with .tho^«»M>feo-«Md--^^--ORes--vd»-4flw--ta--rare---o--- drag strip. That should solve everything. ' : - • • Mrs. Elvis McConnaughhay I congratulate Mr. Thome for hia articles about dragging on Woodward. It’s time the public was awakened to these facts. But what is going to be done? The public should start a petition for a drag strip in Water-, ford or Pondac. That will cat down the racing on Woodward.------ A few years ago the Waterford Police tried to get a* petition for a drag strip,, but it was voted down. Drayton Plains If We Didn’t See It With Our Own Eyes David Lawrence Says: fax Plan Can Bankrupt U.S. WASHINGTON - If any large corporation announced that it was going to borrow several billion dollars to gi its customers big reduction prices, though the business itself had been running in the red for several # _ — _ , years, mdst pe©-| for Grid Contest Only .Two Days Left •“ * umm to Be in the Running Deadline Is Near deficit incurred, it is “indisput-able that the bill increases the need for additional deficit financing at the very time when the financing of existing deficits presents a major problem.’’ . The minority report of the House committee asserts that the tax burden is excessive and that steeply progressive rates should be reduped, but argues that “tax reduction should be accompanied by a reduction, and not an in- crease, in the level Of government expenditures.” Hie report adds: “In contrast • with the fiscal policy of the Republican’s tax reduction programs, the Kennedy administration proposes tax reduction of $11 billion in the face of a $9-billion deficit, and planned increases in expenditures of at least $3 billion, and more likely $5 billion per year thereafter/’ , New York B«SS5»S5pne*S,Bdle»»«. Ine.) ‘Some Commissioners Put on Quite a Show* One cannot help being dismayed by the implications of the adolescence displayed by several city commissioner? in the charges against the manager. * ★ ★ I’m sorry the proceedings art over. The farcical performance was the best in many a day. Besides, It was free. I could kick myself for having voted for one of these commissioners. * * * V I strongly recommend that the commissioners who displayed such unsuspected comic talent organize a troupe and put their show on the road. It should be a smash hit. It would also keep the comedians out of town. L. S. certain forerunner of bankruptcy. But the United States government is about to borrow $11 billion to give the people a tax reduction at a time, when the Treasury is running deeply in the red and ther£!a--no^ deficits being removed for several years. A bill providing such a tax reduction over the next two years has just been reported to tho House oI Representatives by the Democratic majority of the Ways and Means Committee The Republican minority on the committee, however, has issued a lengthy statement contending that prosperity caftnot be bought by borrowed money President Kennedy made arrangements to present over national television and radio facilities this week his argument for the passage of the tax bill. The minority, on the other hand, have no such opportunity to give their Time UJ8. Examines Southeast Asian Policy Our adventures in big brotherhood in Southeast Asia demonstrated that another nation’s culture cannot be judged in terms of our own. ★ ★ ★ Maybe that's what we are -trying to do in South Viet Nam. Maybe our experience there—with our $1.5 million a day in aid—indicates that we ought to get out. The government of South Viet Nam is not a democracy. It Is a patriarchy — or still better, a proprietorship. The owners are President Ngo Dinh Diem and his brother and sister-in-law, the Ngo Dinh Nhus. ■ „. This family is causing great anguish to ouir Administration’s diplomatic department. •dr ★ ★ It has been asserted, for instance, • that thd Ngo threesome has been persecuting; the Buddhist monks because the family was Roman Catholic. This Is an oversimplification, and' speculation. The main reason why the family is hostile to the monks is probably because they repre- A newspaper axiom is that there is nothing deader than news once printed. And just as dead is a contest entry NOT sent in. ' •: , •" —— - Which to to retfdfid you that time is running out for the 1963 annual Pres* Football Contest. Remindful of forthcoming snow (br-r-r), entries have been drifting in and piling high. ★ ★ ★ But fn case yours Isn’t among them, there s time to invoke the gridiron muse for the answers that could make you sole owner and proprietor of a $500 U.S. Savings Bond. The rules are e# simple they’d make a Washington bureaucrat commit hari-kari. Here they are: 1. Check your choice of Winner for each of the 15 games indicated. If you see a tie, don’t check either team. 2. You may send in entries on the family plan—one entry for each member. 3. Press employes and immediate family members are ineligible. , 4. Entries submitted on form or duplica- viewpoint to tho same audiences, tion may be pasted on cards or enclosed in * * * envelopes and mailed or deposited in The The argument on the Demo-,Press’, Huron Street drop box—or delivered cratlc side is that the reduction by pony express. Directed to the news- in taxes will stimulate business, paper’s FOOTBALL CONTEST, entries must Tho Republican?,’ answer is that be received (not just postmarked) by Friday this cannot be done If the deficits noon, Sept. 20. continue indefinitely and if the 5. Decisions of the contest judges will be dollar is reduced in purchasing final on all questions concerning tee contest, power by Inflation. Several fiscal experts, including a former chairman-WiBe' President’s Council of Economic Advisers and' a former director of the budget/ have testified that inflation is a certainty if the deficits keep up. MINORITY REPORT The House Ways and Means Committee minority report says: “As of June 30, 1963, the Kennedy administration had already added $19.8 billion to the public debt, and now proposes a program of tax reduction coupled with - increased' expenditures which will add at least another $50 billion to the debt, and wjth no plans of reducing or paying off these additions to the debt at any time. * “Not only is this morally wrong, most of our states have laws making it a crime for an individual to incur bills Which he does not Intend to pay. It is a fraud. \Bob Considine S&ys: . Vtyiirap Down to -Rwr Quite a Chore in 1930s Organization’s Leader Defends Picketing In reply to “Taxpayer” (aren’t we all?) on teedlsgracrful display of pickets at PNH, I’m not aware of where he obtained his information. I suggest that he do more research. We are not the highest paid nonteaching employes. Since when is peaceful picketing a disgrace? It is the Con-stitutional right of all citizens to picket. Many organizations have experienced pickets from time to time-even the U.S. Government. And when you can picket the U. 8. Government, you can picket any organization. _ • • . - Jew Lott-President 1 ■ • ,1 ' ■' . U8MTE' □ Georgia -Sept. 21- - vs. Alabama n Sept. 28— □ Oklahoma vs. Southern Cal. □ Oct. 4- D U. of D. vs. Boston College □ Oct. 6- □ Det. Lions vs. S. F. 49ers □ Oct. 12- □ Michigan vs. Mich, State □ Oct. 19- □ Slippery Rock vs. Westminster □ Oct. 26- □ Washington ’ vs. Oregon □ Nov. 2— □ Texas **v*'“'" vs. SMU □ Nov. 8- □ Waterford H. vs. Kettering H. n Nov. 9— □ Kansas vs. Nebraska □ Nov. 15— □ Pont. Cen. H. vs. Pont. North. H. □ Nov. 18- □ Cornell ( vs. Dartmouth □ Nov. 2$— * □ Pittsburgh vs. Penn. State □ Nov* 21— □ Det. Lions vs. G. B. Packers □ Nov. 38- □ Army Name * Address vs. Naivy □ Verbal Orchids to— Albert W. Rayner of 509 Lowell; 86th birthday. Mrs. Pearl Hinted of Ortonville/ 85th birthday. Mrs. Bertha Guess of 186 Victory; 89th birthday. “By continuing to spend and barrtw, and through tax reduction to avoid our responsibility to pay our bills, we will pass on to our children an unbearable burden of public debt. “Repudiation may. be the only, course open to them. The ever-increasing public.debt places in jeopardy the savings of the American people,I their life insurance, and their expectations for pensions and old-age security. That is also why this tax-# cut program is morally wrong.” The minority report says, moreover, that, regardless of whether $50 billion, $76 billion, ____________, .... Tr_rp____________ $100 billion or $150 billion is the aad, and Georgetown, B r l,t i s h NEW YORKw My friend Dick Joseph, the only travel writer I know who is entitled — yea, urged — to put “Esquire” after his nam$, reminded me today teat the 30th anniversary of the Fred Astaire-Ginger Rogers “flying Down to Rio” movie is coming up any minute. it all m look a bit on the 'la late, late show. CfrNSIDINE , But, listen kids, that was a movie that really shook us in the mauve decade of the talkies, dancies and long-range flight. Hr Hr Hr' Some of the great tunes from it are still around today, minced and diced and clobbered into the music by which the younger generation dances — if teat’s what they’re doing. But the flying boat is in museumvllle. ----The vehicle, or prop, was— one of the more thrilling aspects of the picture. It was a fine crate for mat era, but one into which both Fred and Ginger would hesitate to step to-day. ( Pan-Am was understandably proud of It. After all, this Con? solidated Commodore Clipper had two Wright Whirlwind engines, carried 20 passengers as well as a captain, first' officer, radio officer (!), ana steward, a n d Offered to carry a passenger's baggage for free if he went the distance, provided it weighed no more than 55 pound?. ★ .. Hr-.-. * The Commodore tooled along at 100 m.p.h., and the price Of a ticket from Miami to Rio was a mere $417, or $834 roundtrip, minus 10 per cent. NO NIGHT FLYING It took a week. There was no night flying. It Fred and Ginger were flying it today they’d fly at less cost in a 120-passenger jet, pressurized, and at about 600 m.p.h., 10(4 hours, nonstop. When a person flew to Rio 30 years ago, he started at Miami, not New York. He flew to Nuevitos, Cuba, and Port au-Prlnce that first day, slept over, and plunged on tee next dhy to San Pedro in the Dominican Republic, San Jhan, St. Thomas, Virgin Islands and St. Johns, Antigua. , The third day saw him journey up and down to Port Castries, St. Lucia, Port pf Spain, Trfni- Guiana. The tourtn day of adventure took him trom Paramaribo, Dutch Guiana, all the way to Belem, Brazil, via Cayenne, French Guiana. ★ Hr Hr Brazil itself was something of a problem for the Commodore. It took off breathlessly end landed, out of wind and nearly of gas, from Sao Luiz to Amarracao to Comocim and then to Fortaleza for the nignt. Then on the next day to Arela Branca, Natal, Recite, Maceio, Aracaju and Sao Salvador. And, finally, on the seventh day to Ilheros, CaraveUas, Victoria and (let’s have a roll of .drums, professor) Rio! The Country Parson The Almanac fa “It’s a shame that so many of us who can tell tee world how to solve its problems haven’t been able to solve our By United Press International Today is Wednesday, Sept, 18, the 261st day of 1963 with 104 to follow. Hie moon is approaching first quarter. Hie morning star is Jupiter. The evening stars are Jupiter, Saturn and Mars. On this day in history: In 1851, The New York Times published its first issue. In 1927, the Columbia Broadcasting System went on the air with a basic nptwork of ,16 stations. Irt 1961, U.N, Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold Was killed in a plane crash in North- . ern Rhodesia. "** ~~ * Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Officials Surrender The Rockford Register-Star State Department and U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service. officers displayed a shocking lack of firmness ip dealing with the 50 Americans returning from a Castro - financed junket to Cuba by not invalidating their passports. * Hr Hr The travelers staged a-sit-down demonstration at New York’s Idlewild Airport and lasted 2 hours and 40 minutes until federal officials agreed no stamp would be placed on the passports. Instead, 45 of the group, a number of teem students, were given letters from the State Department Informing them their passport privileges had been "tentatively withheld.” Is this country surrendering to juvenile tantrums? Does the United States Intend to let all questions be resolved by sit-down demonstrations? The public should protest against this type of dictation from irresponsible malcontents. The travelers were warned before they left tee U.S. about travel restrictions to Communist Cuba. They went ahead. Even the President said they faced government sanctions when they returned. Violation of tee travel ban could result in penalties of as much as five years in prison r and $5,000 fine. Hr Hr Hr... Citizens now can only feel that government agencies Involved are not fulfilling their duty..It is one thing' for the students to flout U. 8. policy. It is- some- thing entirely else for federal ofr typical of tee large body of sensl-ficials to meekly surrender to ble American youngsters. They such defiance. Congress should are hoodlums, bums and trouble-determine why disdpiln«ry make™ THoy nw» too womt-of -measures have not been invoked, us. V • ——-------------—— Let’s stop making .excuses. 1 Let’s stop this Vicious foolishness1 before it spreads further. There is only one way; only one language this disreputable lot understands . . . toughness. A $10 fine for disorderly conduct won’t do tee job. A few 30 - day jail sentences might help. And if they don’t, let’s try 80 days or 98 days or six months. Get Tough , The Hillsdale Daily News “Thousands of young hoodlums began heading for home after engaging in Labor Day weekend rampages across tee country. “Local and state police and National Guard troops were used to curb the destructive reveters who set gasoline (Ires on a highway, smashed windows in business places,, and hurled beer bottles.” * Hr ★ The atxftre appeared as the lead a story in a metropolitan hews- Modern Day Robin Hood The Chicago Daily . News A British magazine says thftf paper. The story went on to tell if Robin Hood, the outlaw wht of disturbances from coast to robbed the rich'* and gave to th< coast in which hundreds were ar- poor, were alive today he wouk rested and scores injured. This he jailed as a hoodlum, was not a new experience in this Country which we like to feel has tee most advanced civilization in the world. Such outbreaks have been occurring With increasing frequency. Hr Hr H 1 We haVe read of student-led riots in other countries and have passed them off with vague references to “backward nations” and “lack of democracy.” Now tee Infection has , reached our own shores and it is high time that strong mete-' ode were used before we-ex- We doubt It. More likely, he would have written a book titled “A General Theory on tee Distribution of Wealth,” been elected to Parliament, and be a fair prospect for tee next Chancellor of the Exchequer. These are not normal young men and women. They are not iJJJil JHju THE PQffTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1963 A-r Factors Blamed in Hotel-Restaurant Business Dip NEW YORK (AP)—Hotel and restaurant business fell drastically over much of the country during the first half of this year and many in the Industry place much of the blame on Uncle Sam’s tightened expense account tax deduction ndea Others! said the new rules were just one of several factors responsible for the slide. Other factors cited: ,V Confusion over the new regulations rather than the rules them- , .selves,.—;— Overbuilding, Stricter rules imposed by prl vate businessmen glad for an excuse to crack down on their own employes. CRMEPUBUOTY Wide publicity on crime In some tourist centers,..notably Washington, which discouraged some woukPbe visitors. In general the government now ! (AdTcrtliemeat) " A FAMILY AFFAIR Fidmtjnc, now-picking, a tormenting rectal Itoh are Often telltale signsof Pin-Worms...ugly paraaitea that medical experta aay infest 1 out of every 8 persons examined. Entire familiea may be rierims and not know it. they live and multiply. Tbat’eexactly what Jayne s P-W tablets do ...and here’s how they do Itt /rtopffg epientlflc coating carries the tablets Into the bowels before they dissolve. Then—Jayne's modern, medically-approved Ingredient goes right to work—kills Pin-Worms quickly and easily. Don t take chances with danger-oUs, highly contagious Pin-Worms wUeh infect entire families. Oet genuine Jayne's P-W Vermifuge . . , small, easy-to-talce tablets... special sizes lor children and adults. demands that businessmen show a closer tie between the expense involved and business activity, and that there beno lavish entertainment of customers or business associates. ★ * *' In New York City, expense account capital of the world, a .}. spokesman for the hotel association said the rate of occupancy for the first seven months of 1963 was 65 per cent as against 70 per cent for the same period test yji FOOD SALES DIP ....... The spokesman said total food sales in hotel-operated restaurants was down 11 per cent and banquet sales down 13.6 per cent from last year. > dr ,-Ar Hr He Said the drop couldn’t be ascribed to any particular source although tite confusion and complexity of rules and the recordkeeping requirements of the new (AlrtrllniiMl) CALLOUSES D-Scholls lino pads The Town Cobbler THE VERY BEST IN SHOE REPAIR OR 3-0501 regulations contributed to the decline. New York City has 400 hotels doing |350 million to 1375 million Worth of business annually and a payroll ,of 1150 million. A spokesman for the 3,500-member New York State Restaurant Association said operators, felt that the “very scare of the (expense account) regulations has brought an absolute ax to the restaurant business.” In Washington, William Thomas Power, National Restaurant Asso- Ousted Priest Is Reinstated MARYKNOLL, N.Y. W - The Rev. Felix McGowan, suspended from a Roman Catholic missionary society for making a trip to Communist China, has been reinstated. f> lie priest, 39, returned yesterday to this retreat where the society, toe Maryknoll Fathers, has its headquarters. A Maryknoll spokesman said Father McGowan's superiors ‘will plan his future assignment." The spokesman added that Father] McGowan “has declared his willingness to follow the Instructions! of his superiors" in the future. ★ * ★ The priest violated an order of1 his bishop when he made the tripj to Cuba this summer. He went there alone, but later joined more1 than 50 American students who! defied a State Department ban on travel to Cuba. ciation spokesman; said the restaurant business had improved slightly since the big drop in January, and February, but is substantiallyoelow normal. w * * Power said business will be off 10 per cent for the year and that this will mean a low of 1700 million to H bOUon in business. “The main deterrent at the moment,” he added, “is confusion over the new rules.” ★ ★ ★ A Washington association of 36 hotels and motels said totsd* business was off 7.6 per cent in June and off 6.2 per cent for six months. HITS ’OVERBUILDING’ Bourbon Dawes of the Hotel As-sociatioir of Washington said the main reason for the decline was “overbuilding.” Seven hotels Were added in the area inlhe past year. Total business- was about the same as test year, he added, but the new places dut into receipts at tile old. ★ , 'pA #>/ The Commerce Department has no figures on how the large, luxury-type hotels and restaurants are doing. The department sometimes uses figures of Horwath & Horwath of New York City, a private firm, in making predictions but does not publish the figures as its own. w, * These figures show total hotel rooms occupied id the United States down 3.2 per bent in the first six months of this year, hotel restaurant sales down 3.4 per «nt, ahd fllltetihg ancTarinRmg places —’including hamburger stands, and coffee shops—up 5.4 per cent. WON’T SHOW UP The National Restaurant Association said decreased sales resulting from the expense account rules changes would not show up in Commerce Department figures since only a very few “expense account” restaurants are included. The Commerce Department disputes this, contending any decrease would show up to some extent. ★ ’ ★ ★ ■ Executive Secretary Dave Arpin of the Florida Hotel and Motel Association said the new rules had a substantial effect on business in the first half of this year. The lhdustry^^ show a 10 to 15 per cent drop in the business in Florida attributable to when the regulations were first the changes, Arpin declared. “Conventions are tremendously important to Florida hotels,” Arpin added, “and a decline of 10 to 15 per cent in business can mean the difference between 7 a-dine he estimated would vary profit and a revealed,” he said, Fl;ed Abood of Jacksonville, head of the Florida Restaurant Association, likewise blamed -the new regulations for a business de- fer any |76 MILLION SPENT The Florida Development Commission estimated visitors spent $76 million in the state during the past year. Arpin said many companies had tightened expense, accounts, and small businessmen who didn’t keep extensive records before must do so now. ■ ft *• havp been every bit as bad as business feared from 5 to 40 per cent, depending on the area and the type of clientele. 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APPLIANCES S THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, ,1963 TAKE 36 MONTHS TO PAY RM WHIRLPOOL KGU. Ft. Refrigerator Freezer RCA WHIRLPOOL 11 CIL FT. Refrigerator OLYMPIC 3 WAY STEREO RADIO __ phono irrri BE EARLY FOR BIGGEST SELECTIONS! SOME ITEMS ARE ONE-OF-A-KIND OR STOCK LIMITED! THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 106a •Junior Editors Quit on CAMELS THE CAMEL15 fOOT , Z HOLDS HIM UP if IMS SOFT SAND QUESTION: Why does the camel have t hump upon his back? without food, lor considerable lengths of time. Hiey can survive severe desert conditions which would destroy other creatures. Many people believe that the camel carries a reserve of water in his hump. But this Is not irue. The camel has reserves of fat stored In his hump, and this ads as nourishment when he can’t get anything • to eat..., ...A . It is true camels can get along without water for long periods. This is because, unlike most animals, the camel does not have to sweat to keep his body cool. Camels will drink a great deal of water when they have a chance, but since they don’t sweat, their water supply lasts them a long time. ★ ★ ★ FOR VQU TO DO: Ask afriend. if he knows where camels live and he’ll probably say Arabia and the Near East. He’ll be right about one kind of camel; but you can then tgll him about the Bactrian camel, which lives in north central Asia in such places as the Gobi Desert. This is the kind of camel with two humps. HALLOWEEN COSTUMES Reg. 1.48 Speedway hauler, trim metal friction toy. 88c •Bi|, Mg eoloctions •Scary onaif, funfiy ones •Famous impersonations •Dovils, witches, more •Comploto with masks Against Russ in Europe PARIS (UPI) - France and West Germany appeared today to have reached agreement on blocking any East-West pact that would confirm Soviet territorial con*1 quests in Central and EasternJ Europe. '' ' 1 .... 1 Observers said this was the , result of yesterday’s five-hour j discussion between French For-, j eign Minister Maurice Couve de MurvUle and West German , Foreign Minister Gerhard Schroeder. Both French and German 1 sources appeared elated by the 1 results of the talks, but small 1 “technical” differences of viewpoint were believed to remain. j ★ ★ ★ , j Schroeder was understood to, have pressed for continuing nego-, tiatlons with the Soviet-Union, In line with current Ignited States policy. 1 Rambouiliet, west of Paris. • After yesterday’s conference, a French government spokesman said there was “full agreement” on all major East-West problems, “especially that everything must be done to prevent a policy which would result in the worsening of the situation in Central Europe and Berlin.” Schroeder said before flying back to Bonn last night that he and Couve de MurviUe were favorable to the East-West partial nuclear test-ban treaty “as long as it does nothing to preserve the status quo. “No detente is worth anything in our eyes unless it gets to tta root of the EastrWest tension, for example die partition of Ger- Sturdily constructed cobbler seat in pine, hiasonlto tops. 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THE PONTIAC PEESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1963 officers and civilian volunteers pTifined to return to wooded areas around EManaba today for a third all-day. effort to locate the two boys. ’ ft -, '. - ,;v......................4 Delta County Sheriff’8 men said they still were without any clues to the pair’i vrtiereabouts. 2 modern sofas that convert quickly to comfortable beds CHOICE Israeli Youths Charged in Riot at Church Schools SEALY HOLLYWOOD ENSEMBLE SALE! MOTOROLA , FAMILY FUN AT FEDERAL'S BUDGET-WISE PRICES Consolette TV brings you a big; bright 23-in. picture FREE SERVICE POLICY Red China Building Macao Border Wall TAIPEI, Formosa (AP) —A Berlin-type wall is being built by I the Chinese Communists along; part of China's border with the; Portuguese colony of Macao, the official Chinese National Central ■News Agency reported today. The agency quoted unidentified persons who strived in Macao from the south China province of Kwangtung as saying several thousand persons are working on the wall, apparently designed to stop Chinne* from fleeing', to Macao. Cuban Antiaircraft Guns Fir#:»ri /Aystary Planp ' HAVANA (AP) - Antiaircraft guns fired for five minutes, Tuesday night at An unidentified plane along the doast near Havana. Witnesses said the twin-engine plum flew out to sea as soon as tl» batteries opened iq> and there was no indication it was hit. WORKERS JOIN Local businesses and factories had turned out their employes to take part in the hunt. Both high schools closed early so students could help search. No stone w#a left unturned. Skin divers searched and re • searched the harbor area in Green Bay. Yesterday fou separate 500-man search parties went over the local terrain again because of the possibility some clue to the boys’ whereabouts had/been overlooked. But the boys disappearance remained unsolved. ' TEL AVJV, Israel (UP!) Ten Jewish religious students were officially charged with rioting today to connection, Rjjr ... demonstration Sept. 10 at a school run by the Church of Scotland in Jaffa. Their attorneys wem granted time to study the eharges before entering pleas far the youths, and the cases wore postponed until Get 1L Nina other students were arraigned in Haifa on charges of trespassing add unruly behavior. All pleaded Innocent to demonstrating at Christian mission schools in Haifa. Police Can Moonshiner ATLANTA (AP)—A policeman’s knowledge that the canning season had passed its peak in this area led to the discovery of $14,000 to 117.000 worth of illegal alcohol. Noticing a truck loaded with fruit jaifi aa it passed him Tuesday* officer P.E. Johnson decided to. investigate. The driver fled on foot when Johnson stopped the truck, which turne d out to be loaded with 1,258 gallons of illegal whisky. 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But start at the beginning. -one part Communist and one part Western -Sgt. Chahn of the 803rd Viet Cong Regiment went nerth with the Rede. set up a tmce dividing this coun- but nobody believed him. He is try by fee same recipe as Korea He really didn’t Mke army life but Viet Nam having been fought over for 2,000' years left little choice for SgL Chahn. He had to in somebody’s army so he The/tt Be Paid for Stories picked fee Viet Cong. Money IsA-OK With U. S. Astronauts WASHINGTON (AP) - In the newsfrom Washington: A-OK: The astronaul to pioneer i path to fee moon have struck gold on earth. They have signed to tell their private stories in a million-dollar deal Wife Lifemagazine and Field Enterprises Educational Corp. * * * The 16 astronauts already in fee Gemini and Apollo program signed contracts feat will bring each *5,000 over the next four years — a total payment of * ,060,000. ■ Ten to 15 new astronauts to be added to fee program within ..three weeks pfllres^l 4|J*“ offer. If 15 are added, fee ments to all 31 would b«S| over fee four years. UNDER RULES Marshal Field Jr., head of Field Enterprises, fae., said fee contracts abide fully by ground rules established by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration which provides for public release of all official Information but recognizes the astronauts' right to sen their personal stories. COLD WAR: West Germany’s foreign minister, Gerhard Scbro-eder, will not turn a cold shoulder to possible new U.S.-Soviet efforts aimed at easing cold war strains When, he visits Washington this week, German sources report. A * A But he will, they said, repeat Bonn’s view that fee Western allies should not give away anything without getting something in SCHOOL: Establishment of a“Nixon would be president now had fee votes been accurately counted in Cook County (Chicago) nd south Texas last time.” Nixon, who lost to President Kennedy in 1980, said he would not again seek dative office after he was defeated in the 1962 California gubernatorial election. college to teach trial Judges “fee most modern and effective techniques of trial procettare" * boon announced by So* Court Justice Tom C. Clark. BEGINNING Ascending the bench is the beginning ratter than fee eod of one’s professional striving,’’ Clark said. _ The college developed from seminars for state trial judges held over the last two yean by the National Conference of State Trial Judges and the Joint Committee for Effective Administration of Justice. ......-A- The first session-a four-week course for about 200 Judges—will be held at the University of Colo* concern. He had settled down hi North Viet Nam, left fee artillery and Joined a production teami Yon can stay closer to home that way — working on roads, mnrohing to work in the fields, Welling your smart white uniform and staging Communist songs as you parade to formation with other members of the team. The 803rd Regiment offered a good life because Chahn was an artilleryman. The Viet Cong had stolen ko many weapons left by fee Flinch, who’d gotten most of them from fee United States, feat it was pretty easy cleaning up that old 87mm recoilless rifle every day, firing it on fee range now and then, and going downtown at night to meet some girls. NEW INTERESTS Chahn went on to new interests, however. By 1908 the recoilless rifle \ Last February, Chahn said, he “prepared to infiltrate into South Viet Nam.” He didn’t give fee reason, U.S. Maj. Dave Lermin didn’t push him on this point It can be assumed fee sergeant was hofoesick, lost his girl, or was drafted by fee Communists to return to his home and fight for its 'liberation from American imper- about 5 feet taH cams down fee mountain trail to Quang Ngai Province where the trees tower more than 100 feet and rice paddies dot fee vatieya-RETURNED WITH WORKERS Chahp said he returned wife * work battalion. Tho 25,000 professional Viet Cong soldiers and their 25,000 guerrilla-type helpers inside Viet Nam have political advisers, production teams and a communications system just like their opponents — the United States — advised army ft fee Republic of Viet Nap). Anyway, Chahn went into training at Xuan Mal ta the Na-Dong ‘ ee of Province of North Viet Nam. In longer his greatest March a little brown-skinned guy Ngai became the possessor of two 57mm recoilless rifles. They had to find someone who chquM shoot them and Sgt. Chahn wound up leading a squad. SPOTS ARMOR VEHICLE Twenty miles south of Quang Ngal. Chahn saw what looked like a tank approach down fee tree-lined road. It really was an American armored personnel carrier.Theper-sonnel inside were Viet Nam soldiers hunting down fee Viet Cong. “Fire,” somebody Chahn. One day this month, an air strike ripped Into a Viet Cong nest 300 miles north of Saigon. Next day about 60 Viet Cong were knocked off to a fire fight south of Saigon. Somewhere since spring the 95th Viet Cong Battalion near Quang Somehow he struggled out of fee area and was found wanting down fee road, his right grin to shreds and his strength gone. SURGERY SAVES UFE Col. Robert Byrne, of Sacramento. Calif., who is senior ad-to fee Viet Nam 25th Division, suggested Chahn be hospitalized Immediately. In a hoe-pita! operated by Medico at Quang Ngai, Dr.* Stanley FroeBch, of Toronto, amputated Chaim’s arm to save his life. ■ The first salvo, was indirect and whistled off into fee bush. Chahn admitted later feat he was surprised fee personnel carrier did hot blow up. Instead it wheeled around, unlimbered its 50-caliber machine gun and ktiled everybody to Chaim’s squad except him. Froelich Is watehtagover Chahn just as he watches over other patients to his ISfeed hospital. He is confident fee Viet Cong soldier is going to live. They have to keep him shackled to fee bed and feed him intravenously through fee one arm he has left. - V1 “He is going to prove valuable to us,” Byrne said. ado Law School next summer. ASTROGIRLS: ■ “““ ....... The UA . agency has no [dans to follow the Soviet lead to sending a woman Russians hurt their program by flying a girl,” Robert R. Gfl-ruth, director of the fence Flight Center told the National Rocket Club to a question-and-answer session. “This represented a diversion of their program, Just as it would be a diversion from ours.” NIXON: Sen. Barty Goldwater says he regards former Vice President Richard M. Nixon ns a possible Republican, presidential nominee next year. The Arizona Republican, himself considered to be one of the leading candidates for the nomination, said to ah Interview that BIGGER LOANS for today's greater needs NOW! BORROW UP TO *1000 FROM MFC with up to 36 months to repay Dying costs have grown. So have family money needs. 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Bnjoy‘ several pounds at tills price! 57* American • made •. -. Open Stock **Whispering Rose** 9" DINNER PLATES Reg. |0$ 291 ea. ||J* Umlt six per customer Watch Kresge’s ad each week for other special Dinnerware Coupon Offers. Build a complete set of "Whispering Hose" dinnerware at low coupon prices! ‘ This coupon expires Sept. 21 DOWNTOWN PONTIAC 1 TEL-VURON 1 1 DRAYTON 1 ROCHESTER 1 BLOOMFIELD L PONTIAC 1 CENTER 1 IV PLAINS | - PLAZA | MIRACLE MILE : MALL 1 Shop without ca§h— "CHARGE U" AT KRESGE'S —Pay only once a month! , ~THB PONTIAC PtoS8, #Et)NESDAY. SBKTEMBER 18, IM8 ■* Tito Uses U.S. Aid to Undermine West 1VITD ^ ^ , . . ... . i / When Money Matters... got the most for — at Richman’s giving »M and comfort to Caitro-Cnba. . Tito Will toy to lay the groundwork there for next year’s presidential elections. U.S. PRESTIGE Frankly disturbed that President Kennedy is providing Tito with the prestige of a White House forum at the close of his Latin American tour, Dr., Thorn-ing declared: “At Cuba’s recent 10th anniversary celebration of Castro’s July 26th movement, Tito sent By RUTH MONTGOMERY WASHINGTON — Yug os 1 av tod’s Cube: and hi win be winding up ofQcial visits to Bolivia, Chile, Brazil and Mexico. 1 A top authority on Latin Americans communism saya it is “more than coincidence” that Tito is concentrating on the four republics which have been the chief centers bf jpro-Castro sentiment within the Organization of American States. Father Joseph F.. Thorning, admiringly called! “the padre of the Americas” by Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield and other solone, was the first expert publicly to brand Fidel Castro a Communist, While officials of the Central Intelligence Agency were Still adamantly insisting t h a t Castro was not Red. Dr. Thorhing how says of the Tito visit: “It.is meaningful that AS Communist dictator will be support tor Castro, to United Na* visiting tour key nations who all tions recognition of East Ger-have presidential elections next Chta#*” year. AID TO TITO "U. 8. taxpayers, throngs toe Father Thorning said he has foreign aid program, are pro- been informed by a member of moting and financing font visit the Joint' Chiefs of Staff that al-while Tito works to undermine though “all the money does not ns.” show in public accountings,” the For nineteen consecutive years! Ut ? 1con‘fibuted Father Thorning has been invited more than $3 billion toCommu-by House speakers of both parties Yugoslavia since the war. to offer toe prayer in the House Wicial figures top the 12.5 bil-on Pan American Dav. lion mark. half , of Bolivia’s entire national budget is being supported by U. S. taxpayers. Vice President Juan Lechln is an admitted Marxist. • It to an undisputed fact that Brazil’s highest echelon of government and armed forces is heavily infiltrated with Marx-ist-Lenintem ageats. The U. S. could halt the unfavorable balance of gold outflow simply by cutting off aid to Brazil and Bolivia. • Although Chile now has a good president, he cannot succeed himself, and a strong contender next year will be Socialist candidate Salvador Altende, “a traveling salesman for Mairxlst-Lenin-ism” who came within 50,000 votes of winning election last time, TM timbal the*Soviet supply RUTH line to Fidel Cas-MQNTGOMERY Two ot toe delegates — Nikola Sekulic and Nasim Albahari — while parading as officials of the Yugoslav government, were actually members of Tito’s secret police, pad active participants in an international Communist conspiracy.” • Bolivia has nationalized its principal resources, Including tin, and its left-wing officials are doing such a prize job of mismanagement that from a third to a Gun and Target Set* Quit with two suction-cup darts, plus target with plastic birds on perch • • 778 shoulder big.with diaper, two PsttormuiNBriS Kltorl^. Kildare, Dr. DaAoc Timmy. With stethoscope, microscope, etc.. 778 TV Cartoon Stamping Sot. 10. rubber scamps and accessories. Jetsons, Yogi Bear, Popeye *. 778 Marble Max# Game. Fascinat-ing skill game lor all ages — a real test of coordination. Layaway! 778 May Cosmetic Sal, Utoto girls' Coronet Ringing Telephone, dainty atomizer, cologne, soap, It rings when you dial. “Princess” tgxmge set. Layaway Now!. • 778 design in poly plastic Sale! i, .778 Doll Hat Bax. Zippered vinyl case has carrying strap. For doll clothes, “pretend” trips. Layaway Sale! 778 Bawling Sot. 10 white polyfow -tic .pins, 7” high; plus two black bowling balls. Layaway Now! 378 UJ. Army TlHMdWrOPv^~dSB~* DorTRifleSet. 2trifle with three poly plastic tractor with soldier* auction darts, metol target and easeL, driver. 14" long. Sale! . .. . 778 Salel Layaway Nowi . • • * . 778, Dun arid Holster lot. Metal dip gun with plastic bandies; genuine feather two-tone holster ... <- 778 The Most in Quality t Luxury 2-Ply Worsteds ...imported for Rickman Suits Now It the Time to Buy for Christmas Most of our new Fall and Christmas toys are now in stock, Avoid the holiday crowds!.. . Buy from complete selections. . Buy now at sole prices! Gun Sot. Choice of Captain Combat or Shooting-^ gup; with figures; or detective gun in holster. . .778 Land, Boa, and Air Vahid**. Paly Plastic Plane. Huge 24" 1 J ot more pely plattic pIa ti es, wing spread; movable wheels and trucks, and ship*. Sole! ... , 778 propeller. Safe priced! « • *. 778 Rich 2-ply 100% wool worstedsI Long-weering, smooth surfsce fabrics of tine queiity. You'll lib these distinguished imports, in shedow weaves, end # soft touch ot color to new Iridescent tones. Here’s queiity onlyRlchmon's con offer et such »low price. Barble*-Mldge* Wardrobe Case. Vinyl covered trunk 10Vi"x 12”. Six hangers, shoe drawer.1.77 4-Pc. Doll Luggage Sot. Colorful vinyl-covered luggage for dolls and ‘'Mams? LaytWtyl 4 pcl.77 Housekeeping Sot, Over 80 pieces. Foe cleaning, cooking, serving. Broom, mixer, dishes, etc, 3.77 BROTHERS BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER V Open Doily 9:30 A. M. to 9 F. M. Charge it how... toko up to 6 months to pay! for birthdays for surprises for Christmas Shop without cash. DOWNTOWN TIL-HUKON DRAYTON ftOCHESTlR BLOOMFIELD PONTIAC PONTIAC CINTBR ' PLAINS PLAZA MIRACLE MILE MALL CHARGE IT" AT KRtSGB'S Plllfgfl ■ THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18,1968 at HUDSON’S^ BUDGET ,pers check prices alTaround town. They compare, you share in prices that are as low as any they check, special savings events that stretch budgets lable quality. satisfaction. Here are a tew of the many prices you'll find. ___m Mill le a 3.5100. Ask lor a personal shopper, she'll doable-chock and well adjust oar price accordingly. Magnavox Portable TV Compact 16-lnch television you can take wherever you got Front controls, out-front sound. • «* m telescoping antenna. IIU.JW Sunbeam Hand Mixers Powerful 3-speed mixer you can use at the stove, on counter. Push-button beater •)e-ctor> ■■ .. • breeze to dean. •'W* Bissell Shampoo Master Comes with 22-os. rug shempoc Twin rollers, brushes spread foai evenly, dean deeply. r a ■Trigger release.; v*® Toastmaster Toasters Accurate Ught to dark adjustment to suit your taste. 2 slices, pop-up when ready. Chrome- .... stainless steel. ie»0# Combination appliance opens cans ■nd sharpens knives electrically. Easy-to-dean parts, easy- nM carry handle. Get physically fit! let his 110-Ik bacball-dumbells, 5-ft. steel bar, wrench long collars, in* .«u etracdons. i03U Toritinio Barbell S.I om SMC movie pnjwloi oai AMC lIM. pioiecto, M«U.l Guerilla Gun Automatic film thread, zoom lens, 300-ft. reel capacity. Forward, rev* ami sdlL Cover In- » eluded. Our own brand. W.w Compact and complete with automatic remote 60-slide dianger. Sharp 4-in. f3.5 lens, top .. adjustments. Fine quality The toy for young commandosl Automatic, cap-finng, complete with authentic sights- « m Camouflage green pftstk General Electric 19-in. TV Thin designer style portable is light, has clear daylight blue picture, front controls, tele- c| .. scoping antenna. IW General Electric 10-in. TV Only 22 pounds light! Equipped with private earphones. New daylight blue picture has a* sharper contrasts. e**w EVERYDAY VALUES on nationally-known brand household aids at Hudson's BUDGET STORE. Korex Copper Cleaner; 20-ox. 97s International Silver Polish; 16-Ox. ..................... Blssa|l Rug Shampoo; I gel., 4.14 Glamorene Llq. Shampoo; qt.,l»4V Johnson Klaar Wax; Gal. 2.7? Johnson's Pledge; 14-oz... 1.2S Johnson's. Car J. Wax; 9-oi. 77e Raid House-Garden Spray; 14-os. ....................97* One-Wipe Dust Cloth......54e Bon Ami Window, Clean;. 12-oz. .............. 79e Bruce Wax Remover; l-qt. 77e Bruce Cleaning Wax; l-qt. 72c Bruce Self-Polish Wax; l-qt. 77c Easy Glamour Upholstery Kit 1*97 Korex Stainless Cleaner; , 4l/i-o*. ....................<*« Korex StovsT Cleaner; 5-o*. 59* Rosenthal Cleaner; I-gel. . .1.69 Caddy A|um. Cleaner; 32-os. 1.59 O'Cedar Sponge Mop ....2.19 Calgon Water Softener; 2 Vi -lb. ...................69* O'Cedar Sponge Mop Refill, 1.3S. Alcoa Wrap; l2rln., 75-ft., 89« Plastie Clothes Line; 100-ft., 1.51 Bon Ami Foeming Cleanser 21-os. ..................H« r.u... Thl T.lavitloni. HoUi«w«r»l—Hudien' ■ I irtAET i Mall patented medicines and toiletries Manufacturer's SPECIALS MMrie antiseptic, 14 es. battle with plastie cup, 4le , Suave men's heir letle*, 4-m.; with after shave, 4fe* Lustre Cram* shempee, 10-ounc* jar ...........l.M Lady Esgier four • pur-ppse craam, I O-oi. jar, 72e* Pends' eeid eream, lb., 1.11* Arrld rell-en deederant, 114 * •i.; with Ilpstlak pack, .lie* Ustertne teathpaite la thrift peek.....2 tubes lie Stepette rell-ee deede- rent .............2 far W* Ireek Shempee, 14-es., with freak set,..........fte , Silk and Satin Intlnn, I# •«. with pars# sltn.....74e* Cured bandatds, •2-aount ................Me Woodbury thampoo, 10.)-o>. battle.........lie Colyato fluerlde paste, giant ehn.......2 tubm, Me •pins MW FaSaral fee i 100" I— •43e WMBmkwm aspirin, 500 tablnts It's made especially to the High-quality standards of Hudson’! BUDGET Stores* Compare price* .. .and satit on this med-Icine-cabinet atand by. 7"€ OUR OWN DEPENDABLE HUDSO' BRAND Boyer Aspirin Moolox liquid 12 eunee 38° Alko Seltzer 25 £22 31c llvnr, Iron & B-compInx, Our own 'Hudso' body-and-b|ood builder is especially important with coliyweather ..approaching! Capsule contain Vitamin* Bl, B2, B12, B6. 100 capsule*. 1.4“ our own 'Hudso' Heating Pads 1 vitamins with B-12, 250'i Capsule contains Vitamin* A, D Thiamine Hydrochloride, Riboflavin,, Nicotinamide, Pyridoxins mtm 3.59 Hydrochloride, other i portant body-builders. our own 'Hudso* Chowdblo Vitamins I jnmeWIve 03 100«187 Crost Toothpaste •sr 53° Colgato Toothpaste klng.ilse Ik tub. £§./ Convenient FAMILY TeHetrles Depertntenf-wHudien'i SUDOlf Itere—PeeHee Meg NIGHT SHOPPING, Monday- through Saturday till 9;00 PCM.V Good Grooming Aids_________Vitamins. Food 'Hudso' hair spray, 14-ex. 49jb* Toni roller permanent Idt, 1.44* Gillette Blue Blades, 20 for 49* Gillette Super blades, 15 for 44* Ban rollon deodorant, I '/i-ex. ................49** 'Hudso' glycerin end rose water, B-ex. bottle ......... •. .53c* 'Hudso' shampoo, 32-ex. .. .$1 'Hudso' bubble bath, 32 ox., 79e* 'Hudso' hand lotion, 16-ox. bottlo .1....... .4fe* Gloom toothpaste, fern, six# 55e •Mu. 10% T«l»r«l Tex For Colds and Sore Threat! Listorine, 14-ox. bottlo ....57* 'Hudso' ember mouthwash, 14-os. .....................39* L.voris, 15.5 ox. bottlo.....43« 'Hudso' rod mouthwash, 16-el ..................... 39« Vicks' Formula 44 qpugh syrup, 3 '/* ounce bottle .........44« Anahist cough syrup, 3 !/*-•*. 49* Ram cough syrup, 3-ox. ... *53* 'Hudso' eough syrup, 4 ox. . .49* Certeldin, 25 tablets ......B2e Drtstan, 24 tablets.........40c ,» Drlsten nasal spray, lie*...71* AllareSt, 24 s4abl«ts Supplements 'Hudso* multi vitamins and minerals, 100 eapsulas ....2.19 'Hudso' brewer's yeast, 250's, 39« Cheeks' eMfd ehawablo vitamins, 100 tablets ............ J.89 Upjohn' Unieaps, I00*s . ..1.86 'Hudso' B complex with B 12, 100 eapsulas ............ 1.49 Poly-visol drops, SOce ... .2.38 'Hudso' hl-poteney multi-vitamins, 100 eapsules .......2.99 Park Davis Myadec, 100'...3.79 Pain Relievers Bufferin, 100 tablets ......63c 'Hudso' buffered aspirin, ;.. i oo> ■ ............. 4e«.. Emplrln, 100 tablets ......99« 'Hudso' APC,, 100 tablets”.. .59* Anactn, 100 tablits.......43* Saloto, 100 tablets ......74e Bromo Saltier, soon. six*...67c Other Drugs To Keep On Hand Meelox, 100 tablets ..... Galusil, 100 tablets...... 'Hudso' milk of magnesia, •200 tablet bottle ....... .Ilf .1.39 ;I9* FREE PARKING 'Hudso' Isopropyl/ 16-ox. .. .39* 'Hudso' saccharin, 1000 tablets, ^ grain .....................69s Phillips Milk of magnesia, 75's, 46s no Phone WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER^*. 1963 THE POffTIAC Purchased just for this event from American, European and Asian makers. Priced far below Usual, so hurry! Take advantage of the sewings at Hudson’s BUDGET Store. Amy Helicopter li Nfc, modem, friction COME IN PERSON SHOP-BY-PHONE TOLL-FREE Coll ULysses 2-5400 for ULysses, OLive, FEderal, Republic,I TRoJan. ■moke. SALE! Toys’— Hudson's BUDGET Store — Pontiac Mall I. Highway Patrol Police Helicopter to Motion powered. Metal. SALK! 67c 14. Karoo Horn for little muelolana. Really playel Durable plastic. SALK! 67o If, Sewing Card Set; 12 doubled-sided pictures needle, yarn. SALS! 67o IS. Girl doll to 9-in. tall, blinks her eyes. Washable plastic. SALE I 67c 14. Wiggly Caterpillar to 12- Inches long. Wind-up, he crawls. SALE I 67c It. Animal Lacing Garde of 6 favorite'pets, colorful thread, needle. SALE! 67e 11, Coloring Books are educational, child occupied for hours. SALE! 67c each 21. Greyhound Bus friction-powered Scenlcrulser style. SALE! 07o 22, Snap-on Beads; non-toxic, Unbreakable plastic. 32 in package. SALE! 67o 21. Tiddly Winks Set has winks for 9 players, cup, in scored box. SAL! . fo II, Binoculars have eye width, foeusing adjustments. Plastic. SALE! 67o 14. Alphabet Play Blocks, wood, non toxic colors. Set of 20. SALE! 97e It, Oatapult Gun shoots jet plane by spring notion, 9 jets. SALE! 67 19. Deluxe Paint Set has 41 water colors, 1 brush In colorful box. SALEl 97c If, Telescope has cover for adjustable lens. Plastle frame. SALE! 07c 42. Jaguar Grand Prlx Sports Oar Motion • powered. SALE! 07c 11. Globe teaches children geography graphically. 12H-in. clrm. SALE! 97c li* Brigitte Bardot doll; 30-inchee tall, real looking hair, SALE! 1,97 12. oytn Training Set ink s spring muscle builders, jump rope. SALE! 2,67 ■ ■ - ', I-wJ 47. Magna-Sketoh Set; children dSr sign with board, Upe. SALE! 1.67 49,/Itort Set Includes regulation board, six darts, SALE! 1,07 49. China Tea Set; 9 cups, saucers, plates, pot, ersam, sugar, SALE! 197 19. SateHIts Ship to battery powered. Battery not tnoluded. SALE! 1.97 PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1968 HHH Portugal Covers Up Tension was a country at war,” remark* ed a Portugese friend. REVOLT INEFFECTIVE The picture is in sharp con* trast to only a little more than a year ago when revolt flared inside die army and demonstrators demanded an end to the war in Angola. The revolt was crushed but it was the first in the more than 30 years of’Salazar’s rule. • - ' Salazar’s efective security police quickly crushed the INS manifestations and a wave of arrests discouraged other By rtflL UPI Foreign News Analyst LISBON, Portugal - With 40,-N0 troops in Angola and another 30,000 in other African possessions, Portugal today is the only European nation engaged In armed struggle. Vet metropolitan Portugal, and especially this ancient capi- UniveTOity students. MODERNIZATION PRESSED Portugal continues to press its modernization program despite the heavy financial burden imposed by Premier Antonio do Oliveira Salazar's determination to hold on to Portugal’s African territories. Across the broad River Tagus 1 new $80-million bridge is taking form, and eventually will be a counter-part to San Francisco’s Golden Gate Bridge. The Ford and General Motors companies are building assembly plaits to participate fit Tortu-gals industrialization program. “You wouldn’t beliefe that this 44 percent. Aside from support from the military, one of the secrets of Salazar’s success has been his determination to protect the little man, peasants and workers, from high food costs. So there remain strict controls over essential food prices, such as for milk, meat and bread. A 20 pear cent sales tax has been imposed on such luxury items as expensive radios, jewelry, furs and special beauty parlor services. A IS per cent sales tax is collected on other items such as fountain pens and elec- "Intemational pressures actually have strengthened the regime” Whatever the popular feeling, there scarcely is a family in this small country of approximately 10 million that does not have a son or relhtlve in the armed services in Africa. COST OF UVI14G Figures are hard to come by ini Portugal but undeniably the cost of firing qlso has gone up as result of the .struggle in Am gola. Ladies’ All Weather Coats imposed, although by United States standards they are com- Oporto, traditional center of Fully lined tackle twill coats to carry ill through . the fall season. Black, black oliye, beige and others too! Use A Lion Charge With Option Terms fgMt flffi PRIZES foMutia* FURNACE AIR FILTERS jMMT Coupon • Gardener • Weather, Wlnky • Play land This coupon entitles bearer to purchase 2 furnace air filters at 19c each during the Grand Opening of CHANDLER HEATING CO., 5480 Highland Road. GOOD ONLY SEPT. 19,20,21,1003 LIMIT TWO PER FAMILY. With Coupon LIMIT 2 3 Day* O nly Finer quality, all washable easy to care for, easy to get on and off. Norpolc nylon, quilted or Orion pile lined. Windproof water repellent. f ROUND OAK GAS and OIL FURNACES ART POOLEY EXCLUSIVE LIFETIME GUARANTEE DEPOSIT THIS COUPON AT CHANDLER HEATING CO. QRAND OPENING SEPT. 19,20,21,1963 for fra* drawing on Round Oak gas fumaca, Aprllairu Humidifiar, Sportsman Haator, General Humldifiar, Free Furnace Cleaning. No Deforming PRESSURES IN FREE PRIZES JACK POOLEY By Buster Brown Furnace • Aprilaire Humidifier • Sportsman Heater • General Humidifier • Frau Fumaca Phono Wilder Shoe by Buntar Brown Drawing to Be Conducted by MR. ROBERT PECK ViSS Praaldant First Faderal Savings of Oakland One of the principle causes of deformity in children’s feet is the limited toe area of oonven* tional baby ; shoes. The X-rays above show a conventional children’s shoe and the Wilder Shoe by Buster Brown. Notice that In the Wikler Shoe the child's foot may grow to the end of the shoe without eneounlnrinfe any deforming pressures. There is also extra which, allows for the vital muscle building, toe spreading action. Plan to stop In today and give .your child's feet a future . , , let us fit them in u pair of Wikler Shoes hy Buster Brown. 54S0 HIGHLAND Road, V Mil. East ol Airport OR 3-4492 OR 3-5632 THE PONTIAC l'KKSS, WEDNJKhuA^ SJftRTBMBBB 18, 1963 1- Choose Favorite of A—IT I By JANET ODELL . I t PontlacPress Food Editor Do you suppose anyone ever counted the number of meat loaf recipes in cookbooks? We’re about to add three more to whatever collection you may have. Although we have been unable to sell meat loaf to the teen-ager in our home, we still think it a good dish and serve it occasionally. Yop can make a pound or two of ground mist go a long way If you make it into a loaf, adding, of course, other ingredients. The binding ingredient may be bread crumbs, cracker or cereal crumbs, oatmeal or even instant mashed potato flakes. Changing the liquid changes the flavor too. bed meat loaf made with oatmeal and dry mushroom soap mix. Meat Loaf lft lb. ground beef • % cup oats quick or old fash- ,ft teaspoon salt & teaspoon pepper ft cup chopped onion One 1%-oz. can cream of-mushroom «fay soup mix 1 egg, beaten ft cup milk Combine all ingredients thoroughly. Pack firmly into an Sftjt 4ftx2ft-inch loaf pan. Bake in preheated moderate oven (350 degrees) about one hour and 15 minutes. Let stand 5 minutes before slicing. Makes 8 servings. Howvaboot a lamb loaf? Lamb is In good supply now and your butcher will be happy to grind a couple of pounds for you. This loaf has a special sauce. Bak#d Lamb Loaf with ........ Olive Sauce........... 2 pounds ground lamb 1 cup milk 1 egg, unbeaten 1 cup cracker crumbs 2 tablespoons parsley, chopped 2tablespoons onion, minced salt and pepper to season Mix all ingredients thoroughly and pack into a ring mold. Bake at 300 degrees' for 1% hours. Serve with olive sauce. Melt 4 tablespoons drippings, add 4 tablespoons flour; Mend. Add 2 cups milk gradually, stirring constantly. Bring to boil; boil briskly 34 minutes.; Add 8 tablespoons sliced staffed olives and season to taste. Makes 8 servings. A ham loaf is a flavorfuldish; this one has a touch of ginger for Savory Ham Loaf 1 lb. chopped raw bam 1 lb. chopped raw pork 2 eggs, slightly beaten ft cup milk ' % cup fine dry bread crumbs 1 teaspoon salt ft teaspoon pepper ftjbgap ispoon ginger . ft cup finely diced green pepper 1 teaspoon Kitchen Bouquet 2 tablespoons soft fat Place ham, pork, .eggs and ttiilk in bowl. Add crumbs, seasonings and green pepper, Mix well with handt or kitchen fork. Pack into greased baking pan, Id"* 10” Blend together the Kitchen Bouquet and fat and brush over the top of the loaf. Bake in moderate oven, 350 degrees, until dope, about 1. how- Remove to serving platter and serve cut into 8 or 8 oblongs. Makes 6 or 8 servings. Here’s a brand new idea for a salad — cool, sparkling, quick — jellied! dressing on shredded SAVE BP I Flour 5-lb. or larger amok Pre-sifted, Light, Fine, Fluffy t So light,fine, and fluffy, it give* you beautiful bakings when you don't gift, or when you do. Follow any all-purpoee flour recipe from any magazine, any cook book. Whether it calls for sifting or not, Pfllabury’q BEST will give you the, finest results possiblel Pillsbuiys tBESTt v..XXXX..v • ENRICHED FLOUR Clip this coupon NOW... and SAVE! JELLIED DRESSING — Pottery ’’shapes,” used for puddings in colonial days, make handsome molds for jellied salad dressing to serve with shredded western iceberg lettuce. French- Dressing, Pickle Relish Are Jellied Salad ingredients ern iceberg lettuce. To make, just combine ft cup of your favorite bottled French dressing with a package of lemon-flavored gelatin. Add a little pickle relish for extra zip. Chill in a fancy mold and turn out bn a bed of crisp lettuce. It’s the perfect perk-up for a family meal, conversation piece for a pot-luck supper. Another version, which is delicious with cold green beans and shredded iceberg lettuce, can be made by blending gelatin into mayonnaise and sour croam. Horseradish adds the .zip to this one. Jellied Dressing on Shredded Lettuce 1 medium head western Iceberg lettuce 1 package (6 ounces) lemon gelatin 2 cups boiling water 1 cup cold water . . ft cup bottled French dressing ft cup undrained sweet pickle Core lettuce; wash in cold water and drain well. Place in plastic bag or transparent film; refrigerate. Dissolve gelatin in boiling water; stir in cold water and French dressing. Chill until slightly thickened.' Mix well and fold in relish. Pour into a 1-quart mold; chill until firm. Line large plate with outer lettuce leaves; cover with remaining lettuce, shredded. Place wet plate over jellied dressing, invert, then slide onto lettuce. Makes 8 servings. Molded Horseradish Dressing medium head western iceberg lettuce 1 package (10 ounces) frozen cut green beans, cooked and drained, or 1 can (1 pound) Deserves Prize Egg salad, made ettD7 salad dressing toid thickened with unflavored gelatin, is turned into a pie shell and comes to the table as a cool, delectable main dish. DevOed Egg Salad Pie 2 envelopes unflavored gelatin 1 cup cold water 1 cup milk 1 cup salad dressing 2 tablespoons prepared mustard 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce 3 tablespoons lemon juice ft teaspoon salt ’ft teaspoon Tabasco 1 teaspoon instant minced onion ft cup. chopped pimiento stuffed olives JA caip diced celery " - ■ j 6 hard cooked eggs, diced 9-inch baked pastry shell Sprinkle gelatin on water in a 2 M quart saucepan to soften. Place over moderate heat, stirring constantly, until gelatin is dissolved, about 3 minutes. Remove from heat; stir in milk, salad dressing, prepared mustard, Worcestershire sauce, lemon juice, salt, Tabasco and iuitant miacM bnfon. Beat un-til smooth. Chili, stirring occasionally, until mixture mounds when dropped from a spoon. Add chopped olives celery and eggs. Turn into prepared shell. Chill until firm. To serve, garnish with olive slices. Yield: 6 servings. 1 small onion, thinly sliced 1 tablespoon olive or salad oil 1 tablespoon wine vinegar Salt Dash pepper 1 envelope unflavored gelatin Vi cup sugar lft cups water ft cup lemon juice ft cup dairy sour cream ft cup mayonnaise 1 tablespoon prepared horseradish 2 teaspoons chopped chives or ft teaspoon onion juice ft teaspoon dry mustard 2 medium tomatoes, sliced 1 medium cucumber, sliced 1 pound cold cuts Core lettuce; rinse hi cold we-ter; drain well. Place in plastic bag or transparent film. Refrigerate. Toss green beans and with oil, vinegar, 1 teaspoon salt and pepper. Chill. Mix gelatin, sugar and ft teaspoon salt in saucepan; stir in water. Heat and tolr-rnittt"geiatiir~ai888mg:Add lemon juice; chill until slightly totcitaied. Blend sour cream with mayonnaise, norseramsn, cnives and mustard; fold into gelatin mixture. Pour into 6 molds or custard cups (5-ounce .size). Chill until firm. Line platter with outer lettuce leaved; top with remaining lettuce, shredded. Turn molds out onto lettuce; surround with marinated beans, tomatoes, cucumber and cold cuts. Makes 8 serv-ings. Next time you make chicken salad, try tossing in tiny cubes of chilled cranberry sauce for sparkling touches of color. SAVE On 6 lb. or larger * W sacks of * ■4 Pf 1 Pfllsbury’s BEST a • JLQy Pre-sifted Flour | | TOMOCnh Uj»aOUmiMtmmripanhntmica ofrt» Q | S TMI MUSVRV CO, V. O. SOX Mtt> (MMHlAfOMf Mb MINN. JL (Dm C»M»| ^ Ssqxxxr 08at IX^iNOunoo'auoAsI* Special at.. e ' . * ■ MIRACLE MILE STORE " Talagraph Road at Squaro Lakaload :hH j 1 PONTIAC MALL STORE 1 Talagraph Road at Elinbath Laka Road UTICA Van Dyko at Oahaidt THURS., FRI., SAT., SEPT. 19, 20 & 21 GIANT 11^(14” or 8”XlOn PHOTOGRAPHIC PORTRAIT OF YOUR CHILD §P|g|Pg ONLY 99° j UNMOUNTED Mas Mo malting charge I Age limit 12 year* YeslYou eon order additional photos at a rea-‘ sonable price. Children's groups $1 extra per person (no age lim.it) /, Make Ideal Gift* Guaranteed Delivery Limit 1 offer per family Photograph* taken by widely known and respected studio. x BAZLEY’S THURSDAY SUPER SPECIAL 78 N. SAGINAW 4348 DIXIE HWY. FRYING CHICKEN QUARTERS £ LBS.$' Legs or 7 Breasts i- r - - - - -COUPON j This valuable coupon " entitles bearer to a 1 -LB. LIMIT with meat || purchase. REMUS BUTTER BAZLEY’S THURSDAY SUPER SPECIAL *78 N. SAGINAW 4348 DIXIE HWY. Discover Planters Oi The premiuht quality polyunsaturate Fries so light Tosses sought Rakes so light So light it f loats on other oils l Which polyunsaturated cooking oil is lightest of all? Laboratory tost* show that when any of these other cooking oils Is poured gently on Planters 01 Wn seconds, Planter# will rlaeto the top, This lightness Is what makes th# delicious difference between Planters end these other polyunsaturated oil#. Planters Oil dose not taste like peanuts, but has | subtle quality that enhances the flavor of other food*. y 44. THE PONTIAC BlUSS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18,1963 These Correspondents Reql Pen Pals Ml This Mail Rates Big Stamp of Approval By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK (AP)—Fragments from letters people would like to geM>ut rarely do: t “For some reason, Dad, ever lined I married the dean’s daugh- BOYLE r'Jall my protestors are giving ( me letter grades,1, and it now looks like I’ll make Phi Beta Kappa for sure. Hie dean also managed to wangle me a $3,-D00 scholarship, $o you can discontinue sending me my allowance, as I really don’t need it any more.” “I bowl in the all-girl league that plays Just before your league iooB. Last week I stayed and watched you bowl—and I never saw such grace, such form, such style in a middle-aged man. If I stay late next week, would you like to buy me a drink? Everybody says I’nf the prettiest girl Ha our league, and I1m not-an ^6- -pensive date. I simply dote on beer." GOOD-HEARTED DENTIST “It’s a mystery to me why my secretary sent you a bill for 1513 for your new dental plate. Actually, she got toe figures backward. Red Ctferriilas Telf New Viet Victories TOKYO (API - Communist 'guerrillas have claimed new victories in skirmishes with the South Vietnamese government troops in early September, the New China News Agency said today. Quoting the Communist Viet Cong’s liberation radio,, the agency said in a broadcast from Peking the guerrillas demolished a large number of strategic hamlets and wiped out or put out of action more than 660 mem Including 5 Americans, between Sept. 1 and Sept. 9. The amount should be $315, but feel so embarrassed over the error, Pm going to knock off another 6100 and make it a fist $215. But there’s no rush. Send me your check whenever it’s convenient.” • , t "You don’t know me, but Rudolf Bing, and I manage the Metropolitan Opera. While out for a stroll the other evening I passed beneath your apartment, and couldn’t help overhearing the bawling out your wife was giving you. We haven’t had a dramatic soprano voice like hers in our company for years, If your wife would care to audition for us, I'm sure we could reach contract Involves More Black, White Bias? JUNEAU, Alaska (UPI) -Racial discrimination isn’t always a matter of black and white.}. A part Chippewa Indian pleaded guilty here yesterday 'Red Sp— May Speed Chiang SEATTLE (UPI) - Gen. Chiang Ching-kuo, oldest son of President Chiang Kai-shek of the Republic of China, yesterday said the current squabble between the Soviet Union and Red China may speed the day when the republic gpeS back to the mainland. The general was in Seattle for a one-day visit before he left on a direct flight to Tokyo via Northwest Orient Airlines last night on his way * home to Taipei, Formosa. He was originally scheduled to return home via Honolulu and Manila. He arrived in Seattle yesterday after a flight from San Francisfco, It was his last stop during an 11-day stay in the United States. ComtSays Can't Force Attendance NEW YORK (AP) - A state court has upheld the' right of vhite parents to keep their chil-Iren out of a Brooklyn school 'hat is predominantly. Negro and Puerto Rican. The school is in Brownsville, neighborhood heavily populated iy Negroes and Puerto Ricans. , rhe City Board of Education, acting under orders of the state education commissioner, started to bring in white pupils from outside the neighborhood. Parents of the white pupils, who wanted them to attend their neighborhood school in predominantly white East Flatbush, sued i o prevent transfers. They contended that the board’s transfer order was discrimination against whites. Supreme Court Justice Edward (57B^gfagre«l;riiltngthetrans-er violated a state law which prohibits racial discrimination. CONTEMPT The board appealed, and sought to register 51 white pupils at toe Brownsville school until the appeal could be heard. The white parents* then got an order from . Baker, threatening the board with ' contempt. The board then let the white ,"*7 pupils register at their neighborhood school, An appellate division of Supreme Court threw out the board’s application to temporarily stay Baker’s order. Hie appeals Judges said "it would now be unfair and a hardship to the children to again dislocate and disrupt them”—by removing them to the predominantly Negro-Puerto Rican institution, Junior High School 275 in Brownsville. The Judges added, “We do not pass upon any other question.” Other aspects of Baker’s decision will be argued later. He toured Boeing Co. facilities) had tea at the Chong Wa Benevolent Association hall and held a news conference there. MADE STATEMENT It was during the news conference that he made his statement , about toe Sino-Russian squabble China’s aspirations of returning to the mainland. The general tenor of his comments during the conference was that the republic has no intention of giving up plans of eventually overthrowing the Communist regime and returning to power on the mainland. Speaking through an interpre-er, he said many Republican agents are doing undercover work on the mainland in an effort to asten a revolt by the people. .r * - ★ * .. He also pointed out that the economic situation on the mainland was "today at its worst since the Communists took control in 1949 and 1950.” to a charge of violating Alaska's civil rights statutes by refusing to cut a Negro’s hair in a barber shop owned by a Filipino. The Negro wound up being convicted of assault and battery. It happened like this: Allan Wilson, a Negro con* struction wcirker. entere(i jthe. barber shop. k if, dr The barber, Henry Larance, said in court that he told Wilson, "I don’t know if the boss serves colored people in here, and he’s gone right now." ' ★ ★ About the same time, an announcer on the barber shop radio broke in with a bulletin from President Kennedy’s recent press conference on civil rights. JUMPED TO FEET Larance said Wilson sat down and after listening to the newscast, jumped to, his feet and began beating Larance with his Jfists and shouting, "You’re one of those kind of guys.” Wilson was convicted of assault and battery and sentenced to 30 days, suspended, and fined $100- - Larance received the same sentence for violating the civH rights statues. ★ No complqint was filed against the shop owner, Fred Carrillo. agreeable to all com cerned.” VOICE FROM THE PAST 'The years' have done poorly by me since otor high school mates picked you as class dunce and voted me the boy most likely to succeed. But the post as custodian at City Hall is going to open up soon, and' I know I can get it with a little pull. The next time you play golf with the mayor would you mind putting in a good word 'for me — for old times’ sake?" ★ .★ a [Although you say you merely raised your hand to stifle a yawn, our auctioneer took it as a signal you were bidding $36,Q00 for Von Rumpsprungle’s famous landscape, and closed the sale- This morning a noted collector came to us and offered $50,000 for -the painting. Would you care to pari with it for this amount, minus our commission, of Course?’ Wac Discusses Scandal Report Confer! With Home on Decisions to Follow Adult Course Will Cover Stock Market LONDONM is ter Harold Macmillan conferred privately today with Foreign Secretary Lord Rome, one of toe most influential members of the ruling Conservative party, on key decisions to follow the Denning sex and security report. Reports said the two men started work early at Macmillan’s country residence, Chequers, after a study of the report handed in by Lord Denning. Macmillan designated Dennutg to investigate the scandals set off by the resignation of War Minister John Profumo. The prime minister must decide quickly whether Denning’s findings should be published in full or in part, how they should be published and whether any action should be taken. A full cabinet meeting and a confrontation between " Jews Tonight Mark 1st of High Holidays By LOUIS CASSELS United Press International At sundown today, toe sonorous romp Mm wailing of a ram’s horn In thousands of synagogues around the world will summon Jews to observance of the High Holy Days, most sacred period of the year. and Labor party leader . Wilson are scheduled for tomor- What is leverage, round lot, window stock? The basic information for anyone interested in the stock market and investments will unfold in a six-week Tuesday night adult education course openihg Oct. 1 7 Pontiac Public Library. James W. Fox, course instructor and member of Watting, Lerchen & Co., investment house cosponsoring the series, said toe classes will cover a wide range of, finance subjects. Tftry party circles were said to be feeling slightly optimistic because no resignations followed Macmillan’s study of Denning’s 200-page summation of testimony by*«polttidans, prostitutes a wd playboys. LINKED IN AFFAIRS Persistent • reports have linked two, and posstoly three, ministers in affairs allegedly similar to Profdmo’8 relationship; w i t h call girl Christine Keeler.- Observed continually since toe time ef Moses, the High Holy Days are ton days of self-examination and penitence, Which mark the beginning of a new year on toe Jewish calendar. ' This will be the year 5724. 1 ★ ★ ★ The High Holy Days open with Rosh Hashanah, a Hebrew phrase meaning "head of the year.” Tradition holds it is the anniversary of the first day of creation. Orthodox and conservative Jews commemorate Rosh «hA-SHeltefPlaft Goes to Senate Hashanah for; two days; reformed Jews for one. FAMILY .RITUAL Unlike toe great spring festival of the Passover, Which centers around a family ritual’ celebrated at home, Rosh Hashanah is primarily a synagogue service. I Some Jews who don’t attend a synagogue at any other time of toe year show np for Rosh Hashanah (just as some Christians appear at churches only at Christmas and Easter), The sounding of the Ram’s horn, called the “shofar,” is a call to conscience. It bids the Worshiper to reflect on his past deeds and think ahead to the coming year. • There is an ancient belief among devout Jews that G6d judges each Of his human creatures on Rosh Hashanah, and determines their fate for the coming year. YOMJdtPPUR Civil Defense Officials Cautiously Optimistic The Daily Herald said Macmillan and his senior ministers may now be considering wheth-/v..- * uit . , . . . . er the report vindicates toe Course titles include origin and government enough to allow a ypes of securities, mechanics of Jineral election to the autumn, the New York Stock Exchange, 8 interpreting financial news, Without naming any source, it watching economic indicators, said top ministers ao not rule out and using investing techniques. 1 1 ★ !,W; ' * The classes are being offered without charge at the main library, 60 E. Pike. Registrations can be made by calling the library, or Watting, Lerchen & Co. the possibility an election may be called Nov. 7. However political observers said the 69-year-oid prime minister is not toe type to move hastily no matter what the problem. News of Area Ser ment’s second squadron in-Germany. Montross entered the Army in Convict Freed Tram Theft Trial Charges Dropped Due to Witness' Death A convicted robber who won new trial from the Michigan Supreme Court has won even more now-r-no trial at all. The Oakland County prosecutor’s Office has dropped charges against Rudolph Castelli concerning a 1960 theft of $6,000 from ~ woman on a Hazel Park street. A witness who never testified is now In Middle of Road, Both Sides 'Right1 COLUMBUS, Ohio (D-County Commission Chairman Henry A. Koontz has a reputation for making middle-of-the-road decisions. Commissioners Glenn L. Myers end William. M. Hicks, stili unable to reach jut accord on a procedural matter after some discussion, asked Koontz for hfo opinion. Replied toe chairman;, "I agree with both of you." Failure of the witness to testify at Castolli’s 1961 trial was toe key factor in the Stale Supreme Court’s May decision. The high court ruled unanimously that the late Oakland County Circuit Court Judge H. Russel Holland erred In falling to have the witness, one of four at the scene of the robbery, take the stand. ★ ★ ★ Because the identity of the thief was a major issue, “the testimony of every witness who could describe him was of utmost importance,’’ the high court said. Castelli was identified by the victim while he was In Wayne County Jail-on a,narcotics charge. He was serving a five-year prison term on the narcotics charges when the robbery trial as held. The witness not palled was an elderly woman. irVvK>): Raymond J. Masters, 20, son of Mr. and Mrs. Russell F. Masters, 450 Farnsworth, Union Lake, was promoted to specialist four late in July in Germany where he is June m> CQrapleted basic trainserving with the 35th Quarter- L,g aj port Knox, Ky., and'was master Battalion. last assigned at Fort Riley, Kan. Specialist Masters, a clerk in He is a 1961 graduate of Clarks-the battalion’s Company B, en-L Hiphs h , tered the Army in August 1961jt0 8 and received basic training at| Fort Knox, Ky. He arrived overseas in September 1962. Masters! was graduated from George N. Bentley High School, Livonia, ini 1961. Robert Watson, j8, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Wa tson, of 4832 Pont! Lake, is now completing basic training at Fort Knox Kv. Pvt, Watson enlisted this July in the Army Airborne WATSON division. He at-led Waterford Township High School. Raymond J. King of Pontiac has been promoted to airman third class in the United States Air Force. Airman King, presently undergoing technical training at Keesler Air Force Base, Miss, entered the service to June of this year. The son of the James H. Kings of 178 Clifford, Pontiac, he is graduate of Pontiac Central High School. .....■ ★ ★ Spec. 5 Charles Prano, Clarks-J ton, recently received the Frisk-Fidelity Award in t h el form of a plaque * United States Savings Bond from the| Carnation Prano led rescue1 efforts toll July for a lost dog near Fort Carson, Colo., where he was-stationed at a noncommissioned officers academy. ■ ★ * ■ ★ Specialist Four Burton C. Montross, 21, whose mother, Mrs. Bernice Gronzo, lives at 9924 Hadley, Clarkston, re-enlisted for six years in the regular Army While serving as a tank driver In headquarters t r o o p -of the Third Armored Cavalry Regi- PRANO .. BSil PARKER DEMPSEY Army Pvt. Richard G. Parker, ' Glacier Graveyard for Grasshoppers COOKE CITY, , Mont. W-One of the most interesting of Montana’s many glaciers is the "Grasshopper Glacier” in the south-central part of , the state hear the Sliver Gate entrance to Yellowstone National Park. It takes Its name from the fact that millions of grasshoppers are buried in its ice, Scientists estimate that years ago the insects, migrating over the high mountain ranges, were -caught in a severe storm and deposited in the forming glacier. • ★ ★ ★ Until recent years, they were frozen solidly and visitors of fen dug perfectly-preserved specimens from the ice. Warmer weather in the last few years has exposed hundreds of, the grasshoppers to air, where they have decomposed. son of the Clarence F. Parkers of 93 Monteray Street completed an eight-week communication center. specialist course at the Southeastern Signal School, Fort Gordon, Ga. in early August. He entered the Army- last March and completed-basic training at Fort Knox, Ky. The 18-year-old soldier [attended Lake Orion High School. * ★ . ★ Cadet John V. Dempsey of Farmington is in summer Air Force Reserve Officer Training Corps (AFROTC) training at Plattsburgh Air Force Base, N.Y. k k ♦ ' Cadet Dempsey, a member of the AFROTC unit at Michigan State University, has completed four weeks of indoctrination in various phases, of operations on the base. )‘ * > Dempsey is the son of tiwFrVr Dempseys of 33907 State, Farmington, The cadet Will be eligible for appointment as ari Air Force second lieutenant upon completion of AFROTC training and graduation from college. India Flies Tri-Color WASHINGTON - India is a charier member of the United Nations. On its tricolor flag, a saffron band symbolizes courage and sacrifice; a white one, peace and "truth; the green, faith and chivalry. A .spoked wheel centered on the white stripe repre-sente India’s ancient culture. WASHINGTON (AP)-The $190-milUon program of federal aid and government construction to provide fallout shelters for 11 million Americans heads today for the Senate, with civil defense officials voicing cautious optimism about its chances there. ■ * •* ★*' The Kennedy administration measure won House approval Tuesday with surprising ease. Its staunchest supporter had forecast an uphill struggle to. get the bill through theHouse* 'Administration officials said the Senate in the past has been more sympathetic to civil defense measures than has the Houle. NUCLEUS OF SUPPORT “We’ve got a nucleus of support there,” one official said. Before it passed the bill on voice vote, the House turned down a bid by Republicans to erase section offering $175 million worth of federal aid for shelter construction in public and nonprofit institutions,----------------- most slice of apple, to symbolize a for a sweet new year. It is perfectly appropriate for gentiles to wish their Jewish friends a “happy new year” on Rosh Hashanah’* Bat It is toe grossest breach Ntf manners to wish anyone a Chappy” You Kippur, since ft ti a day of affliction and atonement A traditional Jewish greeting for Yom Kippur is: > ■ “May you be inscribed for a This Is an allusion to the belief that each man’s fate for the coming year is inscribed in the. book of life during the High Holy Days. That, sponsored by Rep. F. Foreman, R-Tex., was turned down on a 172-67 standing vote. I Speaker John W. McCormack, D-Mass.,. took the floor to tell the House “in my conscience I could not vote against this bill. This bill is aimed at saving American lives in case there is a general attack.” 'SENSIBLE STEP’ Chairman Carl Vinson, D-Ga.„of the Houle Armed Services com* mittee, called the administration plan a sensible, economical step to guard Americans. Nuclear physicist Edward Teller added his voice to the debate in a last-minute telegram read to the house by Rep. Oliver Bolton, R-Ohio.. * ★ ★ ‘Civil defense,” said the man known as the father of the hydrogen bomb, “could mean the difference between the survival of the United States and the end of the United StetesTTs a nation and as an idea.” Foreman, at 29 junior member of the House, said Congressshould “let the taxpayers keep their money^ to build their own shelters.” ■ The ten days of penitence culminate with Yom Kippur, the ‘day of Atonement,”-which begins this year at sundown Friday, Sept. 27. This Is toe holiest day of the year for religious Jews. It Is observed with prayer, fasting and synagogue services that continue around toe clock, from sundoWn through the night and day until the following sundown. Memorial services for the dead are a traditional feature of Yom Kippur services. The ancient liturgy also includes a chanted hymn called toe Kol Nidre, which actually a prayer of repentance. The interval between Rodh Hashanah and Yom Kippur is supposed to be spent in prayer, rest, and solemn festivities. It is regarded as a most important time for Jewish families to be together. TASTE OF.HONEY At meals, it is Customary to pass around a bowl of honey'into which each member of the family may dip a piece of bread or a fh Senator Backs Treaty Iowa's Millar Accepts; Vote Likely In Week WASHINGTON (AP)-Sen. Jack Miller, R-Iowa, declared his support today for the limited nuclear test-ban treaty, becoming the 80th^ senator to indicate approval. Ratification of the agreement to prohibit all tests except underground will require a two-thirds majority in the Senate—67 if all 100 senators vote. P~.' An Associated Press survey Shows 13 senators opposed to ratification and seven uncommitted. The final vote-'on the treaty, Which, Republican and Democratic leaders had hoped would come by this weekend, seems likely to be delayed until next week, DIDN’T SAY Miller had been among the uncommitted until his announcement today which bristled with criticism but concluded that the military risks are "acceptable." 'Within reasonable limitations, we have a moral obligation to keep trying-for better relations High Mormon Pies-m Sleep" ORLANDO, Fla- (AP) - Henry D. Moyle, high official of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints* died in his sleep early today at a Church-operated ranch at nearby Deer Park. The 74-year-old first Counselor to the president of the church had been in Florida since Sunday on business in connection with Deseret Farms of Florida, Inc., a 310,000-acre ranch in Orange and Osceola counties. The Church had offered 2,500 acres as a site for a university to be built in central Florida and Moyle planned to accompany members of a selection commit, tee today on an inspection tour of the land. , Elephant Was Mascot The first elephant seen in Christian Rome was owned by the 18th-century pope, Leo X, “Nanno” became a mascot of the people and'was featured in marly public processions. When the animal died, Leo ordered the great Rapheal to pajnt a likeness above its tomb. - World News Castro Rebel Prieto Is Killed BOGOTA, Colombia (AP)—Ro- tory , by government-supported berto Gonzalez Prieto, who boast* ed he was organizing peasants as Castro-type guerrillas, has been killed in his mountain hideout. Prieto and another member of his gahg were shot to death by troops Monday in west-central Colombia, where he has been operating since returning from Cuba. Two other gangsters were captured. Troops were led to the hideout by informers. ★ ii k k The government said a, pro* Qommunist kidnap gang was smashed the same day in north central Colombia by army anti-guerrilla units. Elgnt bandits, including the leader, Federico Arango Fonnegra, were killed. TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - Results of Iran’s long-delayed parliamentary election were proclaimed to-<)ay as an endorsement of the shah’s land and other.reform policies. , ' v" V > , First returns in Tuesday’s nationwide balloting pointed to vlc- candidates for 230 seats in Parliament, WOMEN VOTE Among reforms sponsored by shah was granting the right to vote -to women. The shah dissolved Parliament after the election,- in 1961, contending voting was rigged. PARI& (AP) — In a ‘protest against the South Viet Nam regime, a Buddhist sliced himself with a dagger Tuesday and with his own blood wrote a letter to the United Nations denouncing the Ngo Dinh Diem government, } Nguyen Thang Thai, who identified himself as secretary-general of the International Buddhist Federation, ceremoniously cut himself before a crowd of 300 in Paris park inflicting a one-inch ga$h in his chest An aide collected the blood in a cup. LONDON (AP)-The Birmingham church bombing has dam- i r aged the United States image in Africa, but there is sympathy for the Kennedy administration’s civ-, 11 rights efforts, says Secretary of Interior Stewart L. Udall. ★ ★ ★ Returning from aft 11-day tour of Uganda, Kenya and Tanganyika, Udall said Tuesday leaders in these East African countries expressed understanding of what the administration was trying to do in civil rights. ALGIERS (AP)--President Ahmed Ben Bella hifs taken his first step in his promised policy of nationalization by ordering the takeover of the three remaining privately owned newspapers in Algeria. The papers wore ail owned by Frenchmen. Beri Bella also told a meeting of the National Liberation Front that “privilege will be destroyed in Algeria” by 1964. He said millions pf dollars in foreign bank accounts will be takeft by the government and distributed to the poor. with the Soviet Union In our efforts to secure, a just and lasting peace^’ he said In a speech prepared for delivery before the Senator One of those opposed, Sen. Carl T. Curtis, R-Neb.* assailed the treaty today in a speech prepared for the so-called “Groat Debate.” ‘A missile-atomic age has moved our country into toe front line of a possible war,” said Curtis. “A treaty that weakens our missile defense endangers the security of our military defenses, our cities and our homes.” Miller's removal from the doubtful list followed announcements of support Tuesday from Sens. Sam J. Ervin Jr., D-N.C., and Alan Bible, D-Nev. FLOOR FIGHT The prospect of a floor fight over a proposal by Sen. Richard B. Russell, D-Ga., seemed to be fading: Russell had proposed that the resolution of ratification include a provision insuring that any future amendments to the treaty also be submitted to the Senate for ratification. Higbie Gives Report on Stock Earnings Higbie Manufacturing Co., 300 E. Fourth, Rochester, reports $1.74 per common stock earnings on fiscal year net sales of $9, 514,167. Carlton M. Higbie Jr., firm president, shid the common share earnings- were up from $1.40 in 1962 on net sales of $8,263,988. ★ k k This year’s, net earnings for Higbie, which produces small-diameter welded and brazed steel tubing, wais $638,732 after federal taxes. This compares with $501,-326. Average number of outstanding shares is 366,151. Seven Is Lucky for Citrus Growers PHILADELPHIA (UPI) -The right or wrong side of “7”, has nothing to do with dice as for as the citrus grower is concerned. _ f’ That figure is toe dividing line between the acidity and alkalinity of juices. , *■ When tested with the latest measuring devices the pH factor of toe liquid — Acid below 7 and alkaline abovA — is determined. \ . ') if the pH factor la right, fruit apd vegetable juices can be canned ana will remain palatable. THE PONTIAC PRESS WEDNES] PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. Nothing new under the sun? Not even king-sized beds and er furniture should be arranged around it. - If possible, place your bed away from spots where drafts, early morning sun-, shine or glaring street lights are apt to be disturbing influences. You will try to select your furniture according to the size of the room. If you like to read in bed, don’t forget a good lamp. Today’s homes aren’t apt to fact that they are dual pur-have guest rooms. But mod- pose, em families make the most ' ★ ★ ★ of limited space with dual Dual purpose furniture bee-purpose furniture in enter- Ically falls into five groups: tabling overnight guests. convertible sofas; jack-knife Dual purpose pieces have sofa beds; studio couches; been around for a long time, single sleepers; and chair but there are some changes.^, beds. Smartly styled design^ How’s the sleeping situation have replaced the former in your home? Perhaps it heavy, cumbersome pieces. needs checking and a bit of. Many of them conceal the change. , Years ago, plantation homes in the Old South had extra large beds in which three or four girls slept during house parties. These beds were more than 7 feet Wide and had massive, ornately carved headboards. . ★ $•;; ★ ; Today’s focus is on “peoplesized” beds and bedding. And Established over 100 years ago, the dimensions of the standard double bed, 54 by 74 inches, are no longer right for aUL individuals. Experts suggest that a person needs at least 39 inches of space and a bed 6-10 inches longer than he is.. crHf'xjdafytedtooms are beingfurnished for living as well as 'sleeping. A studio couch, which doubles as abed, will provide a sitting room appearance and also may afford extra space for a table ojr desk. Constructed of cotton cushioning and inner$prmgs, it will provide the best resiliency and proper support needed for both sitting and sleeping. HABIT PLAYS PART Better Bow Out Habit plays r large part indetermining the kind of mattress you’ll Uke best. Hard, medium or soft; you have your choice. There is no one right mattress for all people. Buy the best quality in ^whichever one yep choose; it will pay in the long run. 1st Meeti Dinner S&t by Alumnae You’re in Wrong Game! By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: I met a man at work and liked him right Don’t give children hand-me-down mattresses. If you can’t afford a.new one, having the old one remade will improve it. One of tfie easiest ways to fit a roomy bed in a compact bedroom islb use a latex foam mattress on a platform base. The one pictured above (by Herman Miller) provides ample sleeping space for a teen-ager and doubles as a daytime sofa as well. Sleep experts say fOr the maximum rest, a mattress should be at least 39 inches wide and Le 6 to 10 inches longer than the person using it. Teenagers often “outgrow” their beds without parents realising it; Available locally^ ried, but we saw each other anyway because he said his wife didn’t care if h e w e n 1 LEGGETT An ice cream social1 from 6-8 p.m. is set for Thursday with a business meeting from 7:30 to 8 p.m. Halt Draw Strings To stop draw strings from beingspuiied through or out of clothes, stitch them into/the hood, pahts or blouse. For the man who likes the casual look—even in town—is this impeccably tailored coat by Stratojae. Fully lined with extro Warm alpaca, it has a detachable alpaca collar to change the look to fit any occasion. At, Simply say, “You are wonderfully generous to give me such lovely presents, but please don’t do it any more." Then, if they continue to: bring you presents, accept them with the pleasure they are intended to bring: The Emily Post Institute offers readers booklets on a variety of subjects concerning etiquette. If you would like the booklet, entitled, “The Bride’s Trousseau, send 10 cents in coin and a self-addressed, stamped envelope to the Emily Post Institute, in care ofThe Pontiac The Tuesday meeting of the Junior-Child Study Club was a festive occasion. Taking time out to chat with the day's speaker, Dr. Jean Chambers of Birming- I gdess it 1MRV must be true ABBY because he never has to rush home; and he can get away to she me as much as he wants to. I am divorced, I don’t want Better Idea 'Is to Give a Tea Party By The Emily Post Institute Q: My son is engaged to a young woman who has recently come here from’ Eng- She doesn’t know many .people and my son would like me to give a bridal shower for her so that she can meet some of-my/ friends;—--------- WM, you please tell me if such a party would be proper? any trouble, Abby, so I told him. I wasn’t going to goon seeing him unless he brought me a note from hie wife saying,she didn’t care. If She will do this, 111 go on seeing him — otherwise, I Won’t. He says he’ll put her on the phone, but he won’t ask her to sign anything. What do you think, Abby? * I am 44 years old and I don’t want a shot in the head. CAREFUL DEAR CAREFUL: Note or no note, you’re in the wrong game, with the wrong guy; at the wrong time. You’ve, admitted it — now act on your confession. DEAR ABBY: My husband and I wanted to will our bodies to a medical college. When we wrote telling them about it, they wrote back and told us we would have to pay the shipping charges. We wrote back asking them how much it would cost. They wrote and said they didn’t know, but when the time came they’d take it out of pur estates. Wouldn’t you think if they wanted our bodies they would be glad to pay the shipping charges? Or at least toll us , how much it will cost? ■ MRS. c. DEAR MRS. C.: More fn-formation is needed here. - SendmeyoUrlullnameand- address (it will be confidential) and the name of the medical college to which you wrote. DEAR ABBY: I have been invited to a number of weddings this summer, and my problem is I never know what to say when I go through the receiving line. I have a friend who always says something funny when he shakes hands with the parents of the bride, like “Well, you aren’t LOSING a daughter, you’re GAINING a bathroom!” Is this appropriate or shouldn’t something a little more serious be said? STUMPED FOR WORDS -DEAR STUMPED: The parents of the bride and groom,1 and the groom, should be congratulated — never the bride. She is wished a lifetime of happiness, end the jokes are saved for later. ★ ★ ★ CONFIDENTIAL TO MAX’S WIFE; You are mount^n-cliiqblng over molehills. Be grateful that you still have a husband who always leaves his shoes in the living-room-,--...— ;■ ★ ★ ★ : What’s on your mind? For a personal reply, send a self-addressed, stamped envelope to Abby, care of The Pontiac Press.—----------------— The 41st Pontiac season of the University of Michigan Alumnae will open with a dinner-meeting Monday. ★ ★ ★ . "f ■ The scholarship committee will review the activities of the recipients of tito^Unlver-sity of Michigan Regents Scholarships granted last year. The benefit bridge party which raises money for the Awards and club-supported projects on the university campus will also be dis- Meeting at the home of MTs. George Gary of Clark-ston, the alumnae will hear a summary of last year’s club events from the president, Helen Swanson. Reservations for the cooperative dinner may be made by any interested alumnae of the university by contacting a member of the telephone committee. Both cotton and foam rubber mattresses have their advantages. There’s no denying that foam rubber is easier to handle. Cotton is a little cool* er. People with allergies love foam rubber. NO GUARANTEE A comfortable bed properly sized, tor you doesn’t always guarantee a good night’s sleep. **■*,.■ Although nobody knows exactly what sleep is, scientists do know that all sorts of changes occur in the body during sleep, and that it is absolutely essential for all animals and humans. / d it it Going to sleep, authorities contend, is a purely mental Committee members are Mrs; Maxwell Shadley, Mrs. Richard Tompkins, Mrs. R. Grant Graham, Mrs. Harold Northon, Gladys Heitsch, Lillian Jacobs, and Julia Dal-zell. HL.. "-7, Assisting the hostess will be Miss Jacobs, Mrs. Peter Evarte, Miss Swanson, Mrs. Clarence Carlton and Mrs. Theodore E. Wieroema. The best way to prepare oneself for sleeping is to establish a routine that will permit the mind and body to relax, Case up and forget the activities, tensions and problems of daily living. ( How this relaxation comes about is up to each Individual. The room itself plays , a part. ' ' A: I’m sorry, but it would not be proper for you, to give a shower for your ton’s fiancee, but you can give a tea, a cocktail party or any other type of party you choose for her and invite your friends to come in to meet her. ' Psychiatrist Speaks to Dr. Jean F: Chambers, Birmingham psychiatrist, spoke at the first fall meeting of the Junior Child Study Club Tuesday. MTs. Philip E, Rowston was hostess for the luncheon in her Cherokee Road home. A graduate of the Mennin- ger Foundation, Dr. Chambers is associated with the Birmingham Child Guidance Clinic. Married to another psychiatrist, she is the mother of two children. Mrs. Howard O. Powers, Mrs. Robert O’Connor, Mrs. Leslie R. Ware and Mrs. Ar-ley J. Lowe assisted the host* Guests at the meeting were Mrs. Ira , Vail, Mrs. H. J. Green, Mrs. Lloyd Wagner, Mrs) Alfred DuBruck and MTs. Annice Henline. Bedrooms lend themselves to more personal decorating ideas than the rest of the house. They should be rooms where one can relax during the daytime, too. Strong colors and lively patterns should be used with restraint. FURNITURE ARRANGEMENT ’Q: I have several friends who never come to visit me withotit bringing a present. It is very nice ofjhem to do this and I do appreciate their thoughtfulness, but it is becoming embarrassing and I wish they wouldn’t do it. Will you please tell me how I can tactfully discourage this practice? Since the bed is the largest single item and focal point most bedrooms, your oth- Mans for Year Discussed by Xi Pi Chapter Discussion of plans for the coming year highlighted the. Tuesday evening meeting of Pi chapter of Beta Sigma .... sorority. '★ * ;; Mrs. Andrew Vitt, chapter .president, atinounced new committee chairmen. ham (center), are Mrs. Donald O. Newman, Watkins Lake (left), and Mrs. Phlfip E. Rowston, Cherokee Road, the The group voted to continue as a contributing member of the Pontiac Symphony Orchestra. Mrs. John Wilkes opened her Green Ridge home tor the affair with Mrs. Ralph. Price assisting the hostess. Personal News Notes of Birmingham-Hills PTA Groups Set Confabs PTA meetings for this week: BySlGNEKARLSTROM Neighbors and friends of Mr. and Mrs. M. S. Rosen-berger and their daughter Carol are getting together Thursday morning to hear plans for Carol’s forthcoming recital at the Detroit Institute of Arts Lecture Hall Nov. 1. Mrs. Robert Hackett of Woodale Road will entertain, for coffee. Among those pres* ent will be Mesdames Maynard Andreae, Harold Twy-man, Walter Skinner, William Hartman, Roger Cudini, Harold Warner, Mark Kraus, Robert Lovell, Earl Bartholomew, George Cutter, William Saefkow, Charles Hun* toon and Charles Wiggins. Club is Mrs. John D. Richardson Jr, With Mrs. rJ. P, Judd, chairman for the school’s money-making event “Holiday on Ice” to Detroit, Oct. 8, she will explain the opportunity for entire families to enjoy the premier presentation of the 1964 ice show. BETHUNE A potluck dinner and membership drive at 8 p.m. Thursday will start tills year’s activities. Rev. Roosevelt WeUs, , pastor of the Chur.ch of ‘ Christ, will speak. Mrs. James Woods and Mrs. John Mutton are chairmen. Mr. and Mrs. Fi S. Strong III and. Mr. and Mrs. Walde-mar H. Adams are entertaining a group of friends for dinner, in the Strong home on Vaughan Road to welcome back the Hugh H. Louds. The Louds have returned to De-,. troit after living in Beloit, Wis., for several years. Mrs. M. M. Burgess of Country Club Drive entertained at tea Tuesday afternoon mothers of students at Bloomfield Country Day School, members of the board, of trustees and the faculty. Assisting at the tea table were: Mrs. Donald Nicholie, Mrs. James M. ■ Booth, Mrs. Floyd Foren, Mrs. Read Jenkins, Mrs. Charles Brick-er, Mrs. Robert Wild, Mrs. -David Raymond and Mrs. » Stewart Cram. President of the Mothers Zeta Eta Chapter Plans for the state convention of Beta Sigma Phi, to be held in Ludington Oct. 18,19, and 20, were discussed at the Tuesday meeting of Zeta Eta chapter, An oratory was presented by Mrs. John Ward who was cohostess for the meeting held at the home of the president, Mrs. Karl Dale of Kempf Street. First Fall Meetings The first fall meeting of the Michigan Weaver’s Guild will be Thursday at the Bloomfield Hills home of Mrs. Carl Zuber. . The program will include a workshop on book binding of hand woven material conducted by, Mrs. Renah Green of Flint. s PHHHRP .. j time to prepare your .Fall and Winter Wardrobe! Thrrr’i no question about tttC9idafioeaihorUoh the ivay... and usually without warningJ It takes just a minute to give us a call • IJbr convenient pickup and delivery. All your heavier outer garments will receive the professional care dry cleaning, and water repellent if desired, that not only puts new life in yotsr garments but offers the assurance that you'll always look your best at stay occasion. Remem- j her . • . it's the little [ things that count atJ Gresham. SAVE 10% ON CASH AND OA f GRESHAM | i CLEANERS I | SHIRT LAUNDRY . I .....KJ 605 Oakland Avenue FE 4-2579 Color Television HEADQUARTERS Complete Stock of Radio Batteries | TAPE RECORDERS . ...........;$29.95 Up Stefeptfo Television and Radio Sales and Service 1157 W. Huron Mich. T.E.SA No. 1156 FE 2-6967 Early Week Special! BUDGET WAVE $650 CALUE’S BEAUTY SHOP 116 North Perry * FE 2-6361 V SEPTEMBER 18, 1968 Mrs.. Don Ahrens, Bloomfield Hills (left), Mrs. John T. Higgins, Birmingham, and Mrs.- Louis J. Colombo, Bloomfield Hills (center), confer on arrangements for the Hemlines and Horsepower Fashion Show Sept. 25. Mrs. Ahrens is- general chairman. To be held at and for the Convent of the Sacred Heart, the show will have performances at 1 and 8 p.m. ft will feature clothing, furs and children’s fashions, us well as 30 new cars'from General Motors, Chrysler and Ford. Couple Weds in. Church Orchard Orchard Lake Community Church, Presbyterian was the setting far riicetit vows between Barbara Bryant and Walter James Miller. if4S The daughter at Mr. and Mrs. ®. R; Bryant Jr. of Orchard Lake chose, a street-length gown of white lace and organza with a front lace panel and a lace bodice trimmed 16 seed pearls. Her shoulder-length veil was held fay a circle crown and she carried white carnations. WWW Honor maid Carol Hall of Wayne wore a teal blue taffeta sheet-length dress with a slightiy flgred skirt and carried pale yellow carnations. Flower girl was Debbie Anderson of Clyde. W . ★ . ★ : The son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Miller of Clyde chose Daniel Winchester as best man. Ushers were Kip Reed and David Bryant. Bathe Bathroom With New Color When your bathroom accessories become old and faded, use your automatic washer to give them colorful new life. With a few packages of dye, it's possible to have a new “wardrobe” of matched bathroom accessories, including shower curtains, drapes, rugs, towels and wadi cloths. If your automatic washer has ait automatic dye dispenser, the task is quick and easy. Moreover, you’re sure to end up yith beautifully uniform colors. ★. * Wt 'u\» When washing them* it is important that all detergent is rinsed out. Set machine on wash-and-wear cycle, using a warm wash, cold rinse with normal agitation and slow spin. STAPP'S .. . accurately fill your Doctor's prescription... mmum your doctor miy wl Extra support shoal for boys and girls carried In stock. Prompt, personal Service at dll 3 Stapp Stores. Shoe shown Is made for style, value and particularly adapted for extra support modification according to, prescription. Sizes' 8V6-1 mra support moamcc dan. ’ il 1-12, C, D, E, EE $Q99 Sizes 1216-3 m ■ oo4 *10" Sizes 3t6)-4 • . C-D-B . .. no* $]2W SHOE REPAIR SERVICE At our West Huron Store we have a complete shop operated by Expert Shoe Repairmen. Shoes for repair may be takdn to any of our three stores. Stapp's for Convenient, Prompt, Personal Service JUVENILE BOOTERIE 2« t Lawrence St. (Open Man. to 8i30, JUNIOR SHOES 926 W. Huron at Telegraph (Openfrl, to 9, Sot. to 8.30) ROCHESTER STORE i ' Junior Shoes , 418'N. Main St ' (Open Frf. to V) Practical Prof Saluted Try Quiz on Newspa By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE QMS: Carl R. Turner is the type of practical professor whom I like to salute. For he la a brilliant attorney who specializes in handling estates.^ Rdf he , also teaches sophomore ecor nomics at Ur- bana College---------- in Ohio. DR. CRANE And Carl uses the Columbus Citizen - Journal as collateral reading for his students. This classroom use of the daily newspaper is becoming very widespread 'throughout the United States. Indeed, you parents should conduct a dinner table quiz each night over the contents of your dally newspaper.,. For it contains current history on page. one. And the , editorial page offers editorials on political science, ■ Other columns, such as this one, deal with psychology, medicine, finance and even Hollywood chit that. FOLLOW DEPARTMENTS If you will analyze the major fields of Interest hovered by the dally newspaper, you will find that they follow the most popular departments fa 12 Circles of Society Meet During Past Week Twelve circles of the Woman’s Society of Christian Service of Central Methodist Church met during the past The Agnes Stahley Circle met at the home of Mra. George Smith of Lorena Drive. Mrs. Otis Brtaey of Echo Road, Bloomfield Hills, entertained the Leora Shanks Circle. Mrs. Norbert Hoffman and Mrs. Alien Palmer presented the program. The Ada Duhigg Circle met at the home of Mrs. Charles . Sayre of Herbell Drive. Mrs. Junior Olson and Mrs. Percy Jones assisted the hostess. Mrs. Charles Crawford opened her Westlawn Street home for the Marta Slmons-son Circle meeting. v * ★ * The Etha Nagler Circle met at the church for a cooperative luncheon with Mra. Cecil Choate and Mra. Colin Canon included in the program. A dessert luncheon highlighted the Janette Hbepner Circle meeting at the South Lake Angelus Drive home of Mrs. Max Kerns. Mm. Ralph Robinson presented the program. DESSERT LUNCHEON Mn. Donald Porritt of Cherokee Road served a dessert luncheon to the Otto $ls-ten Circle. Mrs. Charles Stacker was keynote speaker. Mn. Vemell Haul entertained the Sara English Circle at her honie of Montjoyal Avenue, W . W ’ ★ Mrs. Gelston Poole served a dessert luncheon to mem-ben of the Barbara Norris Circle at her home on South Shore Drive. The Marian Shaw Circle met with Mn. Donald Kibble of Dover Road. Mn. Allen Cline of Elizabeth Lake Road entertained the Martha Graf Circle. The Orths Lane Circle met at the church for devotions and a program. , r a lifetime of proud possession Og-? OMEGA , thi PBZRLiM accuracy of . Omcgsbatwonforltan ’ international reputation aa . “the watchmaker*’watch.** Holder of high obiervatory award*... official timepiece of Olympic Game* (Rome I960)... a gift of incomparable distinction. **« quality ’ timekeeper” ★ REDMOND’S * Jewelers—Optometrists .81N. Saginaw 8t. — FE 2-3612 the average college or university. The sports pages, too, compare With the “athletics department of the usual college. - Meanwhile, foe comics entertain and SHOULD attract young children into the habit of reading the newspaper instead of relying solely on TV. ■ ★' ★ ★ Actually, the comic page should serve as the home “reading laboratory” for youngsters just learning how to read at school. So follow Cari Turner’s admirable plan and utilize the newspaper for whetting the wits of your family. For example, you sian quickly - develop a 10-point quiz, each day to encourage wider penisql of this news-paper.1 '/JSv ' , At present, children may stop with 2 or 3 minutes on the comic page. High schoolers may add the sports page and society column and thus spend 10 minutes with the newspaper. Cultured adults should de-vote Sfr to 45 minutes More they lay down their newspaper. To help children learn to utilize the newspaper’s educational advantages more fully, pick one quiz item from each of 10 pages. COMPILE QUIZ For instance, compile a true-false quiz like this: T F (1) The weatherman predicts a high tomorrow of 62 degrees. T F (2) The front page auto accident case showed 3 people were killed. T F (3) Dr. Crane’s column today dealt with how to carry on interesting conversation. T F (4) The medical column discussed gall bladder disease. T F (5) The price of IBM stock dropped today. Use this method but expand it to at least 10 quiz ltemz. It you Wish, you can include IS or 20 statements. That is especially true if different inembers of the family take turns compiling the dally quiz. And as 8 reward, you can pay your child one cent or even 5 cents for each item ha gets right. Write, to Dr, (How W. Crono In MM of The Pontlec Preee. Pontlec, Mlehlgan, enclosing » tone. » eent •temped, lelf-eddreiied envelope and 1» cente to. cover typing ond printing eoata when you tend for one of big booklet!. - (Copyright, ISM) ieumode SEAMLESS l'DEPEND ABLES" 82 N. Saginaw St. Wed -recently Win- the Mm Methodist Church, Clarkston, were Undo Gale, Talbot, daughter of the Frederic W. Talbots, lotus Drive, and Owen Earl Smith, son of the ■ Earl Smiths. of Fremont. Smiths Travfel in North The Owen Earl Smiths (Linda Gale Talbot) left for a northern honeymoon following their recent marriage and, reception in the First Methodist Church. Clarkston. Rev. RonaklThompeon performed the early afternoon Parents of the couple ate the Frederic W. Talbots of Lotus Drive and the Earl Smiths of Fremont. Embroidered organdy and seed pearls highlighted' the bride’s foil-length gown of silk-faced white peau de soie worn with illusion veil and pearl tiara. She held cascading white roses and shattered carnations. .. The .attendants wore tur-;, quoise silk fade, short bouffant veils, and faille hair bows. Kristi. Talbot, her sister’s maid of honor, carried turquoise glaroses. ' t ■ is, White glaroses accented turquoise bouquets for the bridesmaids Donna4 Wall of Birmingham and Molly Leach of Fremoht. , James Meyers of Gr a n d, Rapids served as best man. Ushers were Philip Olson and Jan Meeuwengerg, both of Fremont, f. The coup# will be at home in University Village, East Lansing,, while completing senior year work at Michl-gan State University, DAILY 10-10; SUN. 12-7 THURS., FRI., SAT., SM. » Kmart Miss Ratliff Married in Candlelight * The Macedonia B a p t i s t Church was the setting for the recent vows of Velma Ruth Ratliff to Horace Tliaaipsoh, followed by re* ception in foe church annex. |i' WV* % ,,¥ V z. Rev. L. R.« Miner per* formed the candlelight cere* mony before some 250 guests. Daughter of the Willie Ratliffs of Ditmar Avenue, foe bride wore white Chan* tilly lace over taffeta, styled with tulip neckline and floor-length tiered skirt ★ * ★ A crystal tiara securing her illusion veil and a cascade-of white carnations completed her ensemble. Glenda Ratliff attended her sister as maid of honor . wearing pink satin. Irma Stovall, Doris Coleman, Ethel Simon and Sandra McCahts, who served as bridesmaids, appeared in bell-shaped blue satin dresses. ★ ■ ★’ it ■ ■ Millie Ratliff .the bride’s —nfesf man for the bridegroom, the son of the Oliver Thompsons " of Crystal Lake Drive. After a honeymoon in Canada, the couple will reside odOsmun Street. mis F0NTUC JPEEga W^WESpAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1963 : B—8 SEW SIMPLE By Eunice Farmer 'Dear Eunice; * s'In a recent column, you told us that it 'wasn’t possible fo fringe a straight piece of fabric that has been cut at an angle the end#. Isn't it possible to fringe foe ends of a bias tie?” . , v, * ' '; Mrs. Ci B- S. Dear Mrs. C.E.S.: * Yes, it is possible to fringe the ends of a tie or scarf that has been cut on the bias, provided you cut foe ends on the exact straight grain rfifoe,fabrtet Ibis will still leave an angle on the ends of the tie, however, since the cut edge wllf either be the lengthwise or* crosswise grain yon should have no difficulty fringing it. Yen are very astute for having noticed this, many thanks! ’ MRS. H. THOMPSON Communications inspire Model The “hot line” between Washington and Moscow has inspired a toy manufacturer to commemorate another famous chapter in world communications. The maker has created^a^nodeloTthefamedf Great Eastern, largest sailing ship of its day, which1 laid the Atlantic cable between Newfoundland and Ireland in 1866. The model carries cable - laying equipment and cable-marking buoys. TAILOR IRK WINNER Mrs. Claude Brooms of Monroe, N.C., is this week’s winner of a Tailor Trix pressing board for foe following suggestion. "In working with cotton knits, I have, found that foe use of single fold cotton bias tape used on-hems of sleeves, overblouses add skirt hems etc., is really ideal. The bias tape allows the knit hems to give and yet controls foe shape after many machine washings. This tape comes ih many colors and cah be machine stitched to your garment; and then hemmed by hand.” ml ’When making raglan sleeves without a gusset, how can prevent the underarm seam from ripping? - " I have clipped the seams according to pattern instructions, but the clippings seems to be causing foe ripping.” Mrs. W. E. S. Dear Mrs. W. E. 8.: The correct way to finish foe curved underarm seam where is no gusset is as follows: 1.‘ Stitch foe underarm area* of about 4 inches twice for rein-forcement. Go walking in 'SERENA' by \ Perfect fotfon-the-go (toys, this tow stadked casual with multi-hued patches on a softly sculptured vamp. You’ll really love the Serena-thanlcs to its Wonderful foot-hugging fit. 2. Clip foe underarm curve about every half inch, foe clips must be made to within a thread or two of the stitching line. Tjp l. Place this seam on foe ^ edge of a pressing board and w * press the seam open. The clipping, if properly done, will allow foe seam to lie flat. Baste a small piece of hem tape ever the clipped sefon. Last, turn the garment to the right side and machine stitch each side of foe seam line, as close as possible to the seam. This area is directly at the underarm and will not show unless foe arms are raitod very high, and will almost prevent any tearing and still give you the benefit of -the added -ease ~ achieved by clipping your seam. \ / ■' ’ JPnMw ’ ★ Dear Eunice: “I am making a wool A-line skirt and wonder if you advise lining the back to keep it from stretching.” Kathy K. Dear Kathy: I would line the skirt because of the A-line, and not because of stretching. You should use taffeta, firm interfacing, or any fabric -with a little body so the skirt will have the proper hang. Baste fojs lining to your skirt fabric and treat foe two layers as if they Were one. ★ ★ Rebecca (11 years old) says: Do not use cable cord when Making a rope belt because it will cause twisting. . YOUR REWIND GLOSSARY: Two-faced fabrics: .Two outer fabrics are bonded together (usually by invisible stitches) This type of fabric is found in reversible garments. Some fabrics are two-faced by having foe outer fabric and the lining bonded together .(these cannot be separated). Brocade sheds a romantic aura when the lights go on. R&K poses a’ self-flower at the hem of the overblouse., In jewel ttines of. green-blue and gold- | blue, the-dress is available ] ^ locally...... Fine Shoes for the Entire Family Brush Holder # Now Importable A new hygienic toothbrush holder Is designed to be attached to the wail by means of two self- adhering tabs. -Two parts of it may be removed and used as a compact, hygienic traveling tooth-‘ brush container. The case can be dismantled easily for cleaning without removing from the wall. Bath Before Books As school days start again, try to take your daily bath and get into clean night clothes just before sitting down to your homework. Then, when you put away those books and pencils you will be really ready for bed? and not “too tired” for foe personal grooming that will make you a prettier -- and better! student foe next day. HOME OP FAMOUS BRAND A vast improvement jn the. recreation of inusic! So dependable mat ports are guaranteed for 5 years!' The new Magnavox (right) gives you stereo realism you'd never believe possible at such a low price. Micrbmatic player has diamond stylus guaranteed for IQ years—records last a lifetime! Two 8" and two 5" speakers,, OMIT 13950 , ~ NEW! TUBELESS agnavox STEREO PHONO' No Down PoytTMnt Required GRINNELL’S, WORLD'S LARGEST MAGNAVOX DEALER .'The Savoy* Enjoy beautiful PM or AM performance. Automatic frequency control prevents drifting. Walnut. 59:45 ■Ult YOurCHAkGE, 4-PAY GRINNELL'S DOWNTOWN, 27 S. Sdglnow-PONTIAC MALL — 682-0422 teN (VO Days Samt si Csih) or BUDGET PLAN WN, 27 S; . 'Pocket Mato' 6 transistor radio provides brilliant ' tone end enjoy-me'ht anywhere. Case, batteries end earphone included. „ 14.95 ■ PE 3-7168 Office Hours Not Favored A survey of New York secretaries.showed that about one-third don’t like foe traditional 9 to 5 office hours. Seventeen per cent would prefer to work 10, to 6 and an-Ofo^HTper cent favor storting Rt 8 and quitting at 4V Will-O-WayWill Offer Vocd, Dance Training Will-O-Way Apprentice Theatre will offer special vocal, dance and accompaniment, training foil toll, paced to the increasing popularity of foe musical show in the theatrical world. "V . v 1 Jk \ t Celia Merrill Turner, director of the dramatic trade school in Bloomfield Hills, announces three Special courses to -prepare students for,, roles in musicals, which she says “are here to stay in American theater.” ★ ★ ★ Offered for foe first tone this fail is a 30-hour course opening Sept., 30 and closing Feb. 23 at foe apprentice theater, West Long Lake Road near Telegraph/ Staff members will give information' at open houses . at foe theater from' 2 to 9 p.m., next Saturday and Sunday. 1 ■ ' # ' ‘ W V A new couriv* in twh. nique will train actors and actresses to sing effectively and to learn musical scores. Included in another course on musical techniques will be dancing for foe actor, combined with acting for foe dancer. it -k ★ , third new^eourao wilL train organists and pianists in foe special art of accompanying soloists, chorusef and dancers in musicals. En-rollees will gain practical experience at accompaniment during student rehearsals of scenes from musicals. •k it it Mrs. Turner, a graduate of the Juilliard School pf Music, will direct the musical Other Will-O-Way instruction opening Sept. 30 includes Saturday dramatic classes for children, with adult drams classes on Wednesday and Thursday nights. the three-act musical, “Pajama Game” goes into rehearsal at Will-O-Way soon for a spring opening. Esther Court to Play Cards Esther-Court No. 13 will sponsor its annual-cup and saucer card'party Friday at 7:30 p.m. at foe First Federal Savings of Oakland,building. Mrs. Pierre Shaver is chairman with Mrs. Maud B. Vackaro as Cochairman. Mrs. Samuel Wi scorn be is in charge of refreshments. The party is open to foe public. Learning Pays ' With Money AUBURN, Ala. (UFD 4 The Alabama Extension Service reports that book learning pays. * #''■/! During his lifetime, foe average college graduate earns $760000 more than foe student who attends college but doesn’t graduate, and $103,-000 more than foe average high school graduate.' MIRACLE MILE-FE 8-9680 Children’s Latest FASHIONS RICHARDS Beta Theta Phi Has Dinner A cooperative dinner and business meeting at foe Hatchery Road home of Mi*s. U. C. Meeker Tuesday evening opened foe season for foe \Alpha chapter of Beta Theta Phi sorority.: Committee chairmen appointed by president Mrs. /Meeker Included Mrs. Frank Coad, Mrs. Helen Turek, Mrs. Jack Greathouse, Mrs. Orben Wilkins and Mrs. Cecil Denison. Others included Mrs. L. Z. Monroe, Mrs. D. R. Kibbe, Mrs.-Chailes Iiisli lyul Mi's. Emil Mailahn. Mrs. Howard Johnson was a guest. Exciting New FEATHER Hats Delightful and flattering plumage designed to wear now and Into fall. The first new styles of this collection are a must for every fashion-minded women. Mllflitwy Show winner*! Eltio Fink - WoM Loko Mary JoMcBraarty — -— OnomawTCcn----------r 48 N. Saginaw St, i § THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1963 REDUCE Tuition Plan-r Save Now,Pa Later m EAT and LOSE f UPTOC LBS. fl WEEK CAPSULES! lASIERTO TAKE AND MOREEFFEC-TIVE THAN THE POWDERED AND LIQUID POOD SUPPLEMENT, AND COSTS LESS IN-CLUDING CAPSULES**SUITED TO YOU INDIVIDUALLY BY UC PHYSICIAN, M.D. NO GASTRITIS OR IRREGULARITY WITH MEDIC* WAY CAPS. DON'T DIET-JUST EATI AS THOUSANDS HAVE DONE, YOU CAN LOSE 5,50 OR 100 LBS. AND KEEP IT OFFI you know you can set aside regularly than to Tiope for a major windfall in the always dubious future. V* While It’s back-breaking these days to accumulate enough money to completely cover two college educations in one family, you Will at least save up enough to launch your children. It’s always possible they' may be able to contribute their own earnings later on. 7/ long run? . V r *•1 recall an aunt of mhtcf always saying; “Pood you don’t enjoy doesn’t nourish yon.?. % Mrs. L. Y., New YorfcCity v a ★ ' pear Mrs. Y.: If you want to argue it out with the Department of Agriculture, you’re braver than I am! The department says in plain words — based on consumer marketing research — that you can trim 10 per cent off your grocery bill by taking advantage of “specials" at the food market. You have every reason to be optimistic about this program you’re now setting up. Now for your question about nurse’s training, costs. You’ll find they vdry astonishingly, depending on where and how long your daughter plans to train. Some training courses charge no tutiion. Some can ran as high as $M*. About M per However — and this is impor-tant—you have to b& abla to use than once you’ve bought them; And these “specials” mUst account for a fourtir of your purchases. As for your aunt’s remark, I have one I’ll stack up against it: She willL letters, off modem SSI® BOS liquid i regular monthly savings at ISO, even though you hope to increase this amount. Hoe’s how the picture will look at the end of sixyetup: k t y ★ In a savings account offering 4 per cent, interest compounded semi-annually, you will have approximately $4,070. At 4% per cent,, approximately $4,120. The same amount invested in savings bonds will total a cash value of around $4,090. AVOID INSURANCE Since insurance is primarily designed for protection rather than for saving*, and would only pay interest at 2% to 3 per cent depending on the type of policy, I would suggest you concentrate on savings account or savings bonds, the slight edge in favor of the savings account. As yon continue your savings plan while you daughter is completing her education, yon will be building up your son’s college fund at tiie same time. You and your husband are tak-i hut > very realistic approach. It’s! given on the premises at hos- Food you can’t afford doesn’ pi tab. nourish yttq, either — for very “Even where there'b no tuition r00?- to pay, your daughter would still!, | have certain living expenses. Bpthing Suits4 Need Washing Any swim suit will retain ifc' new look and last longer if rinsed after each wearing and washed frequently. Otherwise, pool water, chemicals, sea water, and sand will, take their toll of the fabric. /it ' * " it Use the automatic washer for the job. A cold water rinse ’with slow agitation and a normal spin is recommended. If your washer has the extra , rinse cycle, this is ideal when only rinsiiig is required. To. wash, use warm water and slow agitation. Dry on delicate' heat.1 Many of the newer swim suits are made of Spandex and these launder beautifully; however,, never use a chlorine bleach.*1 I suggest that the best thing to | great# intererf.) do U to decide now, as accurate---------L--------- ly as you can, where your daughter will want to receive her training- Why not write to The Natiqnal League for Nursing, 10 Columbus Circle, New York 19, N.Y. for a list of nursing schools, a&nwcll as scholarship programs available. This should guide you In estimating the amount of money she will need. . \* For professional or amateur, tfiis reversible ski jacket by Strainjac is top fashion on the slopes. Of quilted nylon interlined with warm dogrnn fiber fill.— the jacket sports a concealed hood in the knit collar. LAZELLE Agency Inc. ! 504 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. • Phftr.; PF 5.8179 Dear Mbs Feeley: Yod have made the point, several times in your .columns that one can really save o# the food budget by taking advantage of food “specials” at the market. I’m wondering—since my family never seems to want the specials when they’re offered! If it's chicken, they want beef, or vice versa. . ★ '★ Does thb kind of food'shopping Patricia L. Green Wed to Peter P. Vasquez Xourisbury Street and the late Mr. Vasquez, had Pfc. Joe Garza for his best man. Peter Perez, A1 Lucero and Bob Gomez served a$ groomsmen. Michael Green and George English, of Warren, ushered. NOW OPEN One of Michigan’s Finest ~~ CONVALESCENT HOMES—~ Top Facilities and Care at Reasonable Rates. -Just 2 Blocks from Pontiac General Hospital! WE INVITE YOUR INSPECTTONT^ " Seminole Hills Nursing Home 532 Orchard Lake Ave. — Pontiac Between Telegraph and Woodward — 338-7153-4 COBBIES OUR “POPULAR DEMAND” COBBIE. Just on* it*p will show you why so many activ* women literally liv* In this smart llttl* shankless ti*. It’s so flexible, so light and soft, you can forgot you’r* wearing shots. Try itl Discover how this famoui-fltting Cobble thankless wond*r can sooth* your busy-day steps! CARACAS, 12.99 Available in Black and Brown Linen Look Is Strong for Autumn ]—The “linen look’-V is-big in coate, suite and dresses. The newest trend b texture . . . often seen but not felt. Styles will feature plain surfaced linens, linen printed with bold stripes and designs and linen embroidered with beautiful, elaborate designs. , Linen knits are designed in soft, latfedflv. c-lo-t-hcsfor travel and sportswear. Some knits are made of cotton, flax, acetate, and rayon in a cable stitch; others combine rayon, cotton, and flax for a shantung effect; rayon, flax and silk are woven into a fish-net fabric. * * * Many linen-weave fabrics made of rayon are available in a variety of colors, prints, textures and weights. But the big news in linens comes from foreign markets. Foreign fabric manufacturers flax and Terylene polyester. The big hurdle is price. A blend of linen and Terylene costs more than a 100 per cent linen fabric. But they say the Terylene gives the fabric wrinkle-resbtance that cannot be duplicated even in a linen with a crease-resistant finish. * it. , it Similar blends have already been used by a few men’s wear houses. In the past these blends were used only for knits, and manufacturers had difficulty making anything but neutral beige-like colors.'- They don’t have thb problem with the woven blends. it , * it The National Institute of Drycleaning points out that the “tired look” some dark colored linens -get can be overcome with a special fid-bh the cleaner adds after the garment is drycleaned. Thb finish makes the original color come alive. - Msgr. Thomas A. Jubspar-formed a recent nuptial cere-money for Patricia Lee Green and Airman 3.C. Peter P. Vasquez in Our Lady of Refuge Church. A white satin cummerbund and chapel train highlighted a gown of white Chantilly lace over taffeta for the bride, daughter of the Marion W. Greens of DePew Drive. •>[ h. v> She donned a silk Illusion veil with crystal Crown and carried cascading white carnations andydiow rosebuds. Butterscotch pompons complemented gowns of apricot organza over champagne taffeta for Mary Kay Green, her sister’s honor. maid and bridesmaids, Mrs: Peter Perez, Mrs. A1 Lucero and Angie Garza. Attending their sister, ab TWO DAILY DELIVERIES TO DETROIT AND INTERMEDIATE POINTS The All New Modern IMPERIAL SV • Hair Styling qs You Like It! " •~“t58 Auburn Ave. Opposite Parkhunt $t. Culling — Swing — Tinting--PARK FREE FK 4-2878 Living Room Sofa Cushioned with Solid Molded Foam Rubber SPECIAL PURCHASE! CUSTOM BUILT SOFAS- Tasteful high fashion cdrtteinpdrary with an air of sophistication. A look of elegance, a feeling of lux* ’ urious comfort, and the' unmistakeable gtiality of fine Custotn craftsmanship. A fabulous array of colors. Buy now at' a very low special purchase price... Regular 19S00 SPECIAL SALE PRICE $12990 0 ’ INTERIOR DECODING CONSUL AT NO EXmOOST ; Terms, Of Course Opsn Mon., Thurs., Fri. ’til 9 P.M. AMPLE FREE PAHKINQ BXT3BtJRBA.3>T ftirmture , DR.AYT01T 4948 Dtxnn KWY. 1 1 the ppyTiAc ■ Press, ^veokesdayI September is/1963 it comes to Anniversary Sales By the Associated Press Five civil rights demonstrators in Ann Arbdr—jailedby their choice rr vowed a hunger strike, while hundreds in Detroit and Saginaw planned prayer meetings and parades today. The five In Ann Arbor elected nance which demonstrators felt was inadequate. WONT POST BOND Jailed at Ann'Arbor were one Negro and four whites who decided not to post a $25 bond. The sit-in began after toe fail when they were arraigned with 46 other demonstrators on loitering charges stemming from a sit-in at City Hall Monday Michigan to prohibit .discrimination in toe sale or rental of multiple housing of five or more units. night. All await trial. A spokesman for toe city’s chapter of toe Congress of Racial Equality said toe five prayer service and silent march preceding a city council hearing on av proposed antidiscrimination housing ordinance for Detr-it. At Saginaw, clergymen planned to carry a 14-foot wooden cross in silence through city streets to death of four children in a church •# i • bombing at Birmingham, Ala. Knifed in OTHER DEVELOPMENTS .........................In other developments: fjl *| J f I • • A 15-year-old white boy in rnilflflPlDnlfl Detroit told police more than a I I IMUUCip/ IIU dozen Negro y0Uths attacked him yesterday and stabbed him in the ^ PHftADELPHIAiUPl)-^Two left arm.^Oleg IJarhusha said he women were found stabbed to was walking near a school when death; in a blood-drenched room one of the Negroes said, “get In a home here last night. Police that white boy.” f sounded a 13-state alarm for the husband of one of the victims. The nude bodies of toe wom- • Dearborn citizens appealed for. a second time to the City Council to prevent repetition of incidents such as a Labor Day rock throwing demonstration touched off by a-false report that Negroes were moving into a house. of Mrs. Eleanor Butler, 27, who was killed along with Mrs. Joan Finn, 27, of Petersburg, Va., a visitor to toe Butlers. Tito and Wife Start Latin America Tour strike in their ceils. The sit-in was a protest over the City Council’s adoption of an antidiscrimination housing ordi- Both victims had been stabbed in the throat and chest. Three blood-stained butcher knives were found in different rooms of the two-story house. The walls of three downstairs rooms, the stairway an BraT.ll, Bolivia. „ Chile and Mexico, they will fly Washington for an informal meeting of Tito with President Kennedy on Oct. 17 and later on to New York, where he will address the United Nations General Assembly. Cancer Researcher Dies 1 PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP)-Dr. Edward J. Ottenheimer, 64, nationally known for his work on cancer, died Tuesday. He came to Phoenix in 1961 after retiring as chief of staff It Air Force Fires Titan 1 in Training Launching1 VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE. Calif. (AP)-ThaAIr Force fired a Titan 1 intercontinental ballistic missile from this West Coast test center Tuesday. The launch was described as routine training launch of an operational missile by a Strategic mart BOWLING SPECIAL! -‘ISEBOnK g OPEN DAILY 10-10 • SUNDAY 12* i ■ :---------■■ W m mm FAMOUS EBONITE WfORNABO” ■ bail WITH BAG tT SHOES COMPLETE OUTFIT DISCOUNT PRICED pl.t* outfit for tho bow for. IncluiUo f35 & *39.50 SPORT COATS Handsome Solid color blazer_______ rugged tweeds , . . smooth Saxonies. mijua ted Anniversary J2090 All-Wool Worsted Flannel SLACKS Ich woritod, faultl.ul/ tall Spodal Group ■ Fine Quality SWEATERS All-Wool Melton TOSSIE COAT Zip Lined ALL-WEATHER COATS Spodal Group Long Sleeve, SPORT SHIRTS and * tha Anniversary Prlted $990 * $C90 Values to $74.95 Reg• $74.95 pr. Anniversary Priced Anniversary 'a* Anniversary ’16" ’ll" Prited Meed SEE OSMUN’S SELECTION OF FINE FRENCH-SHRINER SHOES AT THE TEL-HURON STORE a part of Pontiac since 1931 STORES FOR MEN Vie One of Osmun’e Individualized Charge Plane DOWNTOWN SAGINAW ST. corpor HURON ST. Open Frt. and Mon. 9:to 'iii J P.M. - Tue*.. Wed.. Thun, and Sot. 9t30 ‘lU 500 P M. FREI PARKING en Old Courthouse Let Next to Stem - FE 4-4551 TEL-HURON / ^TEL-HURON CENTER, Telegraph corner Huron St. ■? , .Open Every Evening *MI I PM. FREE PARKING Right in Front - FS 4-4541 T WfoOTSDAY,; SEPTEMBER 18, 1968 , , THE POK^I^Cj Streaked Peschke SUMP bacon WHOLE LEG MSS GET FINER GIFTS FASTER WITH GOLD BELL GIFT STAMPS VALUABLE WRIGLEY COUPON XJEHT nsa W#J I ^^-‘■Aaydmwiwr" AUNT JANES PICKLII Cavpan XmB L j^fi | '■ mmsm' . On* Nu-Mrtc Raaan ar liMMt ■ KILLER f '“(s.-rr**" onders of the ;Sefrelwnq.4i ■ J f HIS COUPON QOOD ‘ I | FROM SEPT. H TO SEPT. II j I » Packets No. 8 and 6 oost i " F only 15« each. I ffi SALE! t — Big Tender KEEN NEW THINGS FROM TNI BURDIN ARE HERE HIS 5*99* Grain Giant While Kernel CORN 6 99* CREAM STYLl CORN 4, Green Giant — Save 17c - — w-w.»f - s«y, 14t so* I ”*••• , W g Whin NIB1EIS6 12-oi. Cane Green Giant — Cut Green fl? 303 n cw‘ 4 |? 89c 6 X2 5J00 4’SMf:oo ** 39 * . i v ISSr*"*1" 2K29< u(9< ZV"' *«* , M JO* Sett##**- no ■T-i S!" 3 39< Sandwich Baa. " 2 c*n> 49* Facial Tissue MHO TO YOUR HANOI Ivory Liquid SIZE r'-ae* DOWNY Fabric Softener SS-Ot. JtO« Mania U7 ssSO* HOUSEHOLD CLEANER Mr* Clean ' ”-69* .» 81* REGULAR SIZE Camay Soap 2 .'.J23‘ ", '■ r_ . CHOCOLATE BARS . , •• <. * ' 3^*1 • HERSHEY Plain or • NESTirS Almond • CADBURY'S Save T7e THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY* SEPTEMBER 18, 1963 FRYERS TOP FROST SALE DAIRY VALUES BAKERY VALUES VALUABLE WRIGLEY COUPON GET FINER GIFTS FASTER WITH GOLD BELL GIFT STAMPS v SJ8 ■ X • ' ■ >. • y, f SAVi He With Cmwm At Might - Limit Om - 3 Spaafal Label " -LB. CAN TBR PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1068 w* ____* Golden Wiioontin Paper Napkins'^ JfclO* Hi-C DrinknSlnmn . .'Iff Wiscontin Tender Mo. Cross Pso* 803 Royal Ooooll Can TABLE DM.,. PURE VEGETABLE, Guaranteed to be the$ineat used, or Double Your Money J Back! Animal Crackers aoMon - YoRov... ... Finn and Ripe!- 1 W- Top Yoor Favorite |p. Cereal With Bananas. Carrots*^,®. . . . i«10c Fresh, Firm Radishes or fir. Onions ^JO* PEPPERS er CUCUMBERS 2* 10* Boneless Round STEAK ifc-OO6 Blade Cut CHUCK STEAK >» 59° MUX SUE Frencb Fries Frozen Punch AiMtfMl' a iff 10* Pizzarino Frozen Cheese tPtfS Waffles Frozen, for Toaster* a I Pkf. to* CREAM CHEESE KRAFT Philadelpliia 3-oz. Pkf. ROUND SIRLOIN T-BONE 990 Margarine %?«’. 6 iff 00* Ambrosia ...... 79s Muffins S . . * . r .St fO* Colby Longhorn09* More for Your Money Here... ROYAL GUEST 10* SALE Ohlll Net Beans Northern Beans Yoor Choice no.*mom HP IGA WELCOMES 3 MORE STORES to Serve Yen in The Pontiao Area! There ore 3 mono independently-owned IGA Supermarkets to serve you In the Pontiac area now. Chock for the ana nearest you and shop' the savings ovary waakl EL DOR ISA 2685 North Weetfwnrd, Bloomfield Hide KEEGO GENERAL IGA 3169 Orchard Lake Rd., keege Harbor WALNUT LAKE ISA ' 1160 Walnut Lake Rd., Birmingham , This authentic Boston Booker will be Mat home” in any room of yonr house... welcomed by every member of the family for its smartly tailored comfort. Salem Maple Booker has corduroy cover of Gold or Avaoado Green. Booker may be selected In Black with gold decorations and Bed cord* uroy cover. *4380 Very Special Salem Maple Black/Gold. THE PONTIAC PRESS, What Is Willow Runs Future? YPSILANTI (M - Remember lured back in 1946 when an operating termii 1,986-acre airport, with buildings 15 mi included, cost only $1? troit I This was an unusual deal. But .ways; that’s what the University of Ali Michigan paid the federal gov- ££ ernment tor nearby Willow Run_________ Airport-#. 2J . The government built die air-port in record time in 1941 as a test field far B# “Liberator” Will bombers. to hai What will happen to Willow Run when all its commercial airline customers arOgone? TAKE UP SLACK Airport officials are hoping airline Beets operated by business and industry will take up some, of the slack. ' The university has received nearly $400,600trom ANTSCO under a lease agreement calling for $15,000 rental plus 10 per cent of gross nonairline revenues above $250,000 yearly. BACK TO MAINTENANCE It put most of' that money back into airport maintenance, and hasn't spent any of its own funds On the airport except for the $1 purchase price. / The commercial peak Is past for Willow Ron, though. In July 1958, there,were 16,088 landings and takeoffs - 18,46$ of them by commercial airlines. But last July operations had dropped to 10,319 — with only 5,145 by commercial airlines. Civil operations accounted for for pore tenants like the air transport service of Geneyal Motors Corp., which rants a third of a large hangar as the base of its big fleet of corporate aircraft. The Hoover Ball Bearing Co. of Ann Arbor and Saline recently constructed a building*on the airfield and moved its airplane to Willow Run from Ann Arbor Mu- LOSING CUSTOMERS - This is the airport at Willow Run, once the scene of bustling activity as air airport for B24 “Liberator” bombers and later as a commercial airport. Operated since 1946 as a commercial airport by the University of Michigan, nicipal Airport. war or comparable nationa Ocean currents may carry. The median age of the United young lobsters hundreds of miles States population at the time-of from their spawning place. I the 1960 census was 29.5 years. Private investment by the U. S. in Pakistan from 1957 to 1960 was 81.8 million rupees ($6.7 million) or less than 10 per cent of total foreign investment. Pakistan, India Get Protection Prom Each WASHINGTON (UPI) - The United States has assured both Pakistan and India tbit it will After 17 years ot operation as one of the nation’s safest, busiest and most economical commercial airports, Willow Run has a problem now living up to that condi- JUNK CARS WANTED na MTO NUB Willow Ruq once was Detroit’s commercial airport. But by Jan. 1, 1966, all airlines serving Detroit are to be operating from Wayne County-owned Detroit Metropolitan Airport-eight air miles away. NEW TERMINAL It costs more to operate from from an attack by the other. SHIRT DISTRIBUTORS lU4km Shopping Center retary of state tor near Eastern and South Asian affairs, said yesterday both nations bad been assured that in the “highly unlikely event that either country should attack the other, there would bo ah Ameri- ioMPlETB OPTICAL SERVICE OPTICAL CINTIR JUST PLAIN SENSE to shop where ... One-fourth of Argentina's population is in the Buenos Aires here's a bargain! HOOVER Smkker, Polisher £ *24“ HOOVER Cenertikle Special , beats as It sweeps as it cleans ^ • 2-Speed Motor 1963 CLOSEOUTS HAMILTON Electric Dryers Fully Automatic—■ - Every Deluxe Feature Adjustable Temp. Control They Last *158 ONLY $10 DOWN Free Delivery-Free Service 1st Time OFFERED! HAMILTON Deluxe DRYER m* “SIGI” safe-instant: GAS INGNmON A revolutionary system eliminating the need of a pilot light... reduces servicing potential and extra safe! HOOVER Slimline VACUUM CtMER • Easy to Store • 1%H.P. Motor Motor 0 Automatic Shift • Throw-away bag h 0 Modern Styling Pits FeaUnres Include: i00 Suncday Lamp v0 5 lent Setting a* 3-Cyde Retary Timer t00! Introductory «189» Maytag" Deluxe Heavy Duty WRINGER WASHER With ALUMINUM TIB The Most Deluxe Wringer Washer That Maytag Manufactures NO MONEY DOWN FBEE DELIVERY Free 1 Year Service HOOVER Constellation The sensational sweeper that almost dees everything for yon. Double stretch hose cleans up •to 30 ft. without moving . > • yet compresses for easy storage. Definitely gpts more dirt with Vard the effort 90 Days As Cash Open Monday and Friday Evenings ’til 9 P.M. HOUSEKEEPING of PONTIAC 51 West Huron FE 4-1555 S3 9 SHOP % COOD OUSEKEEPINO with there by a new $8.5-million terminal built in 1958, alocation 15 miles closer to downtown Detroit by freeway and longer runways for Jets. Another new terminal add ether improvements costhig more than $18 m i l li e a are scheduled for construction la the next two years. Willow Run, however, is able to handle Jets safely now at tbe result of engineering advancements and Experience since Jetliners were introduced five years ago. ......w With landtags and take-offs at a rate of one every three minutes, Run was at its peak as a commercial airport in 1058, Just before four major airlines moved to Detroit Metro. #1 MILLION PAYROLL More than 86,000 landings and carriers in a single year. The Willow Run payroll for 2,500 employes approached $11 million. The U of M’s Willow Run research laboratories on the east side of the airfield quietly grew into one' of the country's largest research installations, doing a volume of business as $7 million to $• mi ly. The U of M didn’t run the airport directly. The airlines serving Detroit,formed the Airlines National Terminal Service Co. (ANTSCO) and foe U of M contracted with ANTSCO to run the MORE MONEY? NOW YOU MAY APPLY FOR A LARGER LOAN UP TO *1,000 See us to arrange a consolidation of your bills into one monthly payment of your choice. Get cash to meet present needs or purchases. Arrangements may, be quickly made by a visit to our office or a phone call to FE 2-9206. OAKLAND LOAN CO. 202 Pontiac SMM lank Bldg. FI 2-V206 Hourst 9:30. to 5:30 — Saturday 9:30 to 1:00 CHAIRS And Rockers Cotton prints In colonial motifs add decorative comfort to his high-back rocker to be selected in Salem Maple in Brown, Beige or Natural prints. The sturdily built rocker is also available in Black decorated, upholstered in Blue or Red printsi Salem Maple...... *32" Blaek/Gold....... *37“ Round-cushioned boudoir chair (right) offers comfort and charm at a pretty little low price! The cover* are available in quilted plastic: White, Fink, Lilac, or Blue .. . or polished cotton swipes in Silver, Blue or Red with White. •34" Very Special t Beef Stew MTH SOAP % MR 25. DOZEN RM. MOUTH—Of. «M 1.11 M mm All FURPOSILIQUID—1-PT. UOZ. ■*, PLASTIC MOD BAOI M «( SweetHeart3 °25 Ball Jars W 1-15 Ajax Cleaner 59 Baggies 25 A 41* THE ^ONTIAiC PHjESg; ^OfesepWuil^elflN^eih Food Useful for Any' Time Cook macaroni aceordbig to package directions; dfain and' . pour into 1% quart casserole. Melt butter overtow heat; blend in, flour; pnd seasonings. Add milk, stirring constantly, and cobk until sauce is smooth and thickened. Add cheeses and stir , until melted* Add parsley, pi-miento and mushrooms. - Gourmet Macaroni 17-ounce package macaroni ~ Vi cup butter (W stick) 3 tablespoons flour 1 teaspoon salt % teaspoon pepper 2ttcupsmilk % cup blue cheese (4 at.) " 1 cup shredded American cheese >(WJb.) . I 1 tablespoon parsley flakes Wttapdteed pimiento V« pound (% cup) mushrooms, it sliced Vi cup buttered dry bread Cheddar cheese equals about two-thirds of a glass of milk ip calcium and protein.’ Cheese should be wrapped in either the original wrapper, wax paper, foil or plastic wrap to keep the’ air from it Stored in this manner, ft will keep well in the refrigerator, for several weeks. There are also many covered containers especially designed for cheese storage. American diet, fti 1982, per cap-ita consumption reaped an all-time high of 9,1 p&mds — excluding cottage cheese. With so many varieties from which to choose, the cheese counter has become a popular shopping center as more and more people discover uSes for each type. Cheese is a concehtrated and Sonvenient form of milk. Approximately 5 quarts of milk are need-id to produce one pound of Ched- ahle. Assorted fruits and cheeses make an excellent dessert. Try some of the following recipes for other ways to serve a favorite American food- Crusty1'. Cheese Loaf f 11-pound loaf unsliced whole wheat bread 1 cup shredded American cheese stirring with a fork to blend thoroughly. Tup with buttered crumbs. Bake ih a moderate oven, 390 degrees, for 30 to 49 Place on cookie sheet and bent (optional) jroFQUAirr? CLOSED SUNDAY AS USUAL “SUPIR-RIOHr 24B. PRO. Thick-Sliced 1.09 CHOOSE ASP StOREWipE NEW I.OWPRICESI Cap's John's Fish and Seafoods COD OR OCEAN PERCH . Jfc. Fillets.... “■ 39* Breaded Shrimp 'pkoz 59c 2 pro. 1.89 Ocean Perch iSmSS , . 2 f» 99c Fresh Oysters standards pt. i .29 pint 69c SMOKED SALMON * 69* SPECIAL SALE! A&P FROZEN VEGETABLES Sweet Peas, Cut Corn Peas and Carrots French Fried Potatoes Crinkle Cut Potatoes 2 39c FROZEN HIP, CHICKEN OR TURKEY A JMC Morton's Pies 4 SSL 89 FROZEN BEEF, CHICKEN OR TURKEY Mfkt Banquet Dinners'^ 49 10c Off LaM rp. 24c Off LaM Giant Rinso Lux Soup S*U. 6-OZ. CIRC » ■or™.- 12 w96c Light or Dark Brown or Confoctioiwirt' 4 X Sugar 2 » fjc BOXES J f Pinconning Cheese 49‘ MILD, DELICIOUS FLAVOR S-LB. IHi-OZ. PRO. OMf id# ANN PAGE QUALITY _ m J%r Giant Cheer 73 Mayonnaise <49 DETERGENT—1-PT. A-OZ. OM OMC — — — — Capri Liquid 33 GALLON BOnil 0U Jd# Clorox Bleach 59 might sail OM Ac Bleach.. . ^ 29 CAMPBELL’S OR HIINZ MEAT RIO. VARIlTIIS CAN SHORT GRAIN RICI Sultana 2^29 ANN PAOI STRAWBERRY, WH f A* Preserves 2 A 69 PEANUT MITTIR JT, OW# Sultana 2 67 Soups CAMPBELL'S—VIO. VARIlTIIS (ft ______ Except Muth., OR JOUPS Atpor. or Onion CAN UPTON’S CHICKEN-NOODLE Soup ENVMOFlS 1 SUNSHINE KRISfY Afo Jf f Crackers. . ^iO 13 2 A 29* NUTLIY—QUARTERS m Margarine7^1*00 PLMSCHMANN CORN OIL '-mm Af Margarine ™ 39 SUNSHINE HYDROX Cookies.. & 49 HERMAN GOLDIN NECTAR j| Jto# Cookies ..49 lev Mat SEE Tour Coffee Ground To Enjoy COFFEE MILL FLAVOR Choice of coffee lovers who prefer a mild, mellow blend. Whole-bean Bight O’clock la custom* ground, of course. Suptrb; p • MILD AND MELLOW EIGHT O'CLOCK COffEE $-LB. BAO Sc OPP LABEL—LARGE A£ C PEANUT BUTTER 7 f ||( HIINZ CREAM OF m ||( FACIAL TlSSUI - M|f|C Rinso Blue, L^0Z 26 Velvet 2 ^69 Tomato Soup & 11 Putts .. KINO BIZI—10« OFF LAIEI M f m Tide.. ^ FLOOR WAX—OT. CAN—12c Off mm EWR# Simontz Vinyl 77 DUSTINO WAX—7-OZ CAN mm A# Pledge .... 79 BRIGHT SAIL—1B-OZ. A #WC Spray Starch 47 BRIGHT SAIL—QT. BTL. M ||( Ammonia... IV BON AMI ".M'fd# Jet Spray ’^59 MO. SIZE—Ye OFF LABEL MM OM C Camay 3^23* GREEN OIANT, MID. SIZE M MB# Sweet Peas ^15 IONA CUT M OMC Wax Beans ^12 WHOLE KERNEL—ORIIN GIANT M mm* Niblets Corn'll 7 WHOLE KERNEL—MB. CAN m Stokeiy Corn 17 CAMFBILl’S id# Pork&Beans^ 13 SULTANA—MB. CAN M JA# Pork & Beans 10 ORIIN OIANT CRIAM STYII mu Copa eMyf F^i 4 cans 57 WAXED PAPER ddf Cut-Rite . .-23 ALUMINUM FOIL ffcftr Alcoa . . . W29 KITCHIN CHARM—2 CT. 100 FT. id Jdf Waxed Paper 39 Salt Tissue “ 12 REGULAR SIZE ifl JMC Scot Towels,ou 19 SANDWICH RAOS-t-EO CT. Tidy Home..25 TOILIT TISSUE id Od C Northern ip| 33 GERBER'S STRAINED Wyler Soups lxc.pt Onion or Mushroom RAM BRAND ARMOLHtt STAR Baby Food Baked Beans Chopped Beef Lifebuoy Soap Wisk Liquid Palmolive Soap 10^99' S5: 10( ^29* SIZE PI 12-OX. Me CAN JJ iH I.™fee CAKE . Y’, ONLY JKM4? THE POyTIAC ^RESS, WEPKBSPAY, lEPtEMBER 18, 1968 Defrjwt Woman's torole Wins 85,000 Bake-Off Prize and cook until limp and transparent, about 5 mimrtei ' Add 4 ears oil fresh corn, cut from dob; 3 cups diced fresh tomatoes; 2 cups 1% pound) sliced summer siqtmbr 2 teaspoons salt and % teaspoon ground black pepper.. Code 10 to 15 minutes. Yield: 6 servings. 4 Vegetables for Dinner BEVERLY HILLS, Calif, (ft*A Detroit housewife won |25,000 in a baking QmtesL -Tuesday with this plain fare: A hamburger and bean eassefole. Mrs. Roman Walilko, wife of an engineer and mother of five children between ages 9 and JO, made her concoction so tasty, however, that she won out over 99 other contestants. She calls ndr prize-winning dish in the Pillsbury Grand National Bake-Off a “Hungry Boys’ Casserole.” She awes it for buffets or .picnics because “It is simple and quick to make, economical and attractive to leak at.” 1 teaspoon paprika % teaspoon monosodium gluta-mate . .1. 1 can pork and beans, untrained 1 can garbanzos or limm beans, undrained r \ Saute in large skillet ground beef, celery, onion, green pepper and garlic impl vegetables air* tender; drain. AdlLwater, tomato paste, salt, paprika and mono- 2 teaspoons baking powder ;%tes^p0tm. s# ......... y* cup shortening milk 1 tablespoon cooking oil' M> cup^pimiento-stuffed olives 44 cup blanched slivered almonds % teaspoon paprika . Sift flour with baking powder and salt into mixing bowl. Cut In shortening imffl particles are fine. Combine egg and enough mUg to measure Mi cup. Add to flonri mixture. Stir until dough clings together. Knead lightly on floured sur- To make a glaze, combine ft cup sugar, l tablespoon cornstarch and a dash of salt in • 2-cup saucepan. Add 1 cup water. Stir and cook, stirring constantly, until mixture thicken and bubbles. Remove from heat mid add Y* teaspoon pure vanilla extract and 2 teaspoons lemon juice. Arrange whole fruit in baked pie or tart shells. Spoon glaze over the winning recipe: HUNGRY BOYS’ CASSEROLE I pound ground beef 1 cup shced celery M cmpchoppedonion Yz cup dropped green pepper l clove garlic minced 1% cups water % cup tomato paste Ai teaspoon salt Turkey Corn Salad Combine com cut from the cob, cubed cooked turkey, and chopped red and’ green peppers. Season with chili. powder, salt and pepper. Add enough mayonnaise to hold hie ingredients together and serve atop crisp, fresh die pulp. Be sure to protect your spoons butter or margarine in a hand with a kitchen “mitt.” skillet. Add Y> cup onion rings wl mr OKHIAUTV "Super-Right" Skinless, Fully Cooked dj HAMS Mil#* 12 Pound h GRAPES BANANAS CRISP, FRESH 24-SIZE "SUPER-RIGHT' liver Sausage you CAN PUT YOUR TRUST IN "SUPER-RIGHT* iUAUTY MEATS NEW EVERY-DAY LOW PRICE! Sunnyfield AllPurpose Jane Parker every day AT A*P Orange or Cherry Popsides 2 PROS. OF 6 12-39’ Marvel lew Milk 2 'jiVUr 89c Every-Day taw Price Sc OFF LABEL Spnr 3 - 69' Cottage Cheese 19 RISDON'S large «r Small Curd |C MB. CTN. Mix 25-- IVIRY-DAY LOW PRICI-QT. JAR m mm* KSLIOOO'S—12-OZ. FKO. Ofe 'Mm', ABF Hwncctylc, Frecrtane^ 14*, M aa OT>U> MIOAL OR FIUSBURY M |||| Miracle Whip 45 Com Flakes 24 Peaches 3^1-00 Hour. vfl & |*W SALAD DRESSING—QUALITY m gm* POST'S—9-OZ. FKO. 4*0*# AIF Chimin, Tidbit*, Cru*h. lBto-ez. 0* Mt# WhNehoase 13 Mither’iOats- 45 Pears.. 3 «ll,oq Syrup..... 59 AIPPUMniMOUAIITT—l»Oi. Ja. A A, “»» fflC WUMW-MAT AHO WV, . ““-J"* JAC i«i 99 Tea Bags 48 N> 51 I. OUART 6-OZ RTL gmf DAILY BRAND R||( HAWAIIAN FRUIT . OTR Q*# OUR OWN—16 FRRI WITH 41 jm M* Wesson Oil. .49 Bog Meal5^49'Punch..’^33 Tea Bags 64^54 Eveready 2 79 Gravy Train 2***v Tang •. x7” purse and belt ',f‘ - ' if. New Back-to-School Campus Cowboy Boot S2:* ,£76. Campus rage! Rakish black boots! These dashiqg boots boast cowboy heels and Qenulns Handsown Vamps! Moc Casuals K-mart Discount ■ IMim OTvlMfl Handsewn classic moo eOMVall boast built-in arch support, flattering fall colors. Cordo, Cobblers tan, bronae waxhide. 4-10. AMoaHn Itself SUBMARINE SANDWICH elastlcised side gore. Siaes 4 to 10. OltCtCuCcf ) FOODS cit Discount Prices II GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLEN WOOD THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, WHOLE or HALF Semi- Bonele** 17'-WHOLE KERNEL OR CREAM STYLE CHUNK STYLE CALIFORNIA FLAME MUSBURY—WITH KINO CINNAMON ROLLS. 6%-OZ. CANS PRESTONE $069 50 EXTRA TV STAMPS WITH COUPON SB APPLES . . . 4-59* MICHIGAN ' # PRUNE PLUMS . , 2 «s 29' discount «®yDc^c rtSJw f COUROH* o°°o 2S se of need*0* s*>s» -SSB 1100 EXTRA VALUE STAMPS I i.WA!MpilR«aiEglM|l ? UHVIi VUHt >AIIW%y AUII MlferUiCR 5 *"* WI n urn A stamps! STM KISI TIM »""H n"5>!j3i.‘i5 4 *«.«*. cans 99* | ferity Swm«'ll Frtth Chips ! 50 EXTRA TOP VALUE STAMPS VALUABLE COUPON WITH THIS COUPON AND '5 PURCHASE VALUABLE COUPON VALUABLE COUPON f SBlB Bfa?i L ■.. tasty ■ mt: 1 SUCED BACON . ... *4T I KLIEN'S f HOT DOGS .......3-99* HOMEMADE n ri PORK SMIMGE .£ ..8*99* HYGRADE'S , SLICED BOLOCHA .. 3^08* tIBBY'S CORN.......6~sl SAVE 8*-PlUMP A TENDER / ' LIBBY'S PEAS 5 SI WITH TOMATO SAUCE OR MOLASSES • U A * LIBBY'S.™. BEANS.. .8 ^$l SAVE 1SH-TWICE RICH _ ~ ___ LIBBY'S TOMATO JUICE. 4^*1 SAVE Ifr-KROCER ' . . L.'. > - ' PEANUT BUTTER...-;? 60* KIND TO VOW HANDS VEL LIQUID.. >. .■.,. not m. 65* FOR WHITER CLOTHES FAB DETERGENT..................AY> SEPTEMBER lg,jM8 I Pontiac 2fil Affairs :lm imm Mk \ Wm:*& in Contracts Awarded for Community Rec Center Hw City Commission last ■warded contracts totaling |333,787 for construction of a community recreation center on the old water works site near Wessen and Walnut. Low bids totaled some 111,517 store than original estimates far work covered by the con* Hie general construction con-tract went to Carl W. Luoma, builder of Southfield, who bid 3241,588. Luoma was lowest of four bids submitted. The plumbing and heating contract was awarded to Eames & Brown, of Pontiac. Their bid of $68,528 was the lowest of six submitted for that contract; ELECTRIC CONTRACT Moote Electric, Inc., of Pan-tiac, was awarded the electrical contract. The firm bid 325,711. Their bid was lowest of throe “for the electrical contract. Harry M. Denyes Jr., Asso- Purge Urged of 'leftists' * in California Original cost estimates totaled 3337,728. The architects estimate included about 320,278 for landscaping. LANDSCAPE LATER The 3333,767 in contracts an ed last night doesn't include landscaping, which will have to be done at a later date. Denyes said that contractors "will attempt to save money on equipment costs in an effort to get Hie landscaping done within the original costestimate." The center plans call for a 5,225-square-foPt Swimming pool, bathhouse, concrete shuffieboard courts, horseshoe courts, parking area, bike racks, concession area, bleachers, landscaping of adjacent Rotary Park and remodeling of1 an existing building for indoor recreation and meeting 19%™.,#'' WASHINGTON (UPI)-Rep-Charles H. Wilson^ P - Calif., believes the California Young Democrats have been captured by the “radical left," while the state’s Young Republicans are captive to the “radical right." About half the cost is being paid by a Federal Public Works Acceleration Act grant with (fie rest coming from capital improvement funds. LIFE INSURANCE Also approved last night was a revised group life insurance plan for city employes, including policemen and firemen, , In a speech before the House- creases coverage available to yesterday, Wilson called California Democratic Party officials to oust the “unscrupulous radicals" who have won control of the Young Democrats. - >lnfwj He said he was not responsible for what happened to the Young Republicans but was concerned over his own'party’s youth group. i When She Cuddles 'Em They're In Her Power NEWCASTLE-ON-TYNE, Eng- — land-fDPI-)-----^rederioa-Marttor 21, said today that cuddling crocodiles in her circus act was just a matter of “know-how." “You have to nypnotize them first," she said. Juvenile Division, ...................... In the mutter of the petition concern-t Brendu Mines, minor. Couse No. i?!«8 ■ To Scott Mines, futher of s*ld n Worker's report hevtni been file thle Court slleclni thut the pre pendent t o unknown u d child 1» de-.for sump, ___ ____ ,_,d should remuln under the Jurisdiction of this Court. , :|f In tbs nnrns of the people of the Stete of Michigan, you are hereby notified that the nearing on eald petition wlU be held and to coneldor temporary or permanent eeveranoo of all parental rights, and/or adoption at the Court House, Oakland County Service Center, la the City of Fonttae to told County, on tho 3rd day of October, AJ>. 1303, at 1:M o'clock In tho afternoon, and you are hereby commanded to apponr personally at eald hearlnc. it being impractical to make pereonal service hereof, this summons and notice shall be served by publication -* -one week prevloue ““ * I Soaring to __________o Press, a newspaper printed and circulated to said county. . witness, the Honorable Herman R. Barnard, Judga of said Court, to the City of Pontiac to said County, this nth -— if September, A.D. ■ (A t (Beal) NORMAN R. BARNARD Judge of Probate DEtPHA A BQUOINI Deputy Probate Register Juvenile Division IP SYLVAN LAKE -oby given that Saturday; of ieptember, 1MI, dates, Ioc„ architects far the project, had recommended that contracts be awarded to the low Construction is scheduled b gin immediately and the c i t y hopes to have most of the center completed by next spring. , bidders. The engineer’s’cost estimate for the Job was 33,500. % contract wiR be formally awarded at a future meeting. STREET PROJECT A resolution was alsb passed approving a contract with the Michigan State Highway Department for widening and resurfacing Oakland Avenue from the west city limits southeasterly for 133 feet. The ctfy's share of the {total estimated cost would ha about 8580. Most of the project fa out- side the city. It involves re-channeling traffic at the Tele* graph Road - Dixie highway intersection. An ordinance to combine voting precincts S and 38 in District 1 was introduced and adopted as an emergency ordinance. The area now covered by both precincts thus becomes Precinct No. \ and the “38" is The change was initiated ommendation of the City, clerk who felt tihe area contained too few votera to warrant the cost of two separate precinct election staffs. Commissioners accepted a resolution from the County Buildings and Grounds Committee and Ways and Means Committee whereby the county will deed a small, triangular parcel on Lafayette Street to the ctiy for widen ing Lafayette and Wayne as parts of an interior loop road. / Commissioners also accepted “with regrets" the resignation Of Stuart Austin from the Fire Civil Service Commission. Aus- tin, a veteran member, is leaving the commission for health Final approval was granted a transfer of ownership of a Class C liquor licensed establishment at 505 S. East Boulevard from Harold Wolgast to Martin Jensen and Norman D. VanKuren. DANCE PERMITS Tentative approval was given requests for dance permits in connection with a Class B hotel at the Waldron Hotel apd a Tavern and SDM license at 417 Auburn Ave. Also given final approval was 3 transfer of ownership of an SDM licensed establishment at 588 Franklin Road from Evelyn Mina to Simon and Marie Re-jPovsh. Seward, Osmun to Park: Assessed cost, 34,586; city Share, 33,036,10; sewer stubs, 3268; total cost. 37,910.10. Public hearings were slated fur Oct. 1 on the city’l plans to construct Curb, gutter, grade and gravel on part qf Seward, and curbs, gutters and blacktop on West Iroquois add Linda Vigte. I PRnPI 5 Cost estimates for each job, presented last night, are as follows. ...... West Iroquois, Algonquin to Cherokee: Assessed cost, 31,768.28; city share, 32,715.20; to-talcosy34,«8«^ ^ Linda Vista, Carr to existing' pavement: Assessed cost, 3555.24; city share, 32,471.96; total cost,. 33,027,20. —» 1 The new plan generally in- cmployes in all wage categories and was asked for by various employe groups. Botli the old and new plans’ were underwritten by Aetna Life Insurance Co. The city will still pay 88"kP®r cent of tee. cost of premiums, with 31 per cent deduced from employe paychecks as in the old plan. Rowever, the improved plan will cost the city 315,724 more annually. The city’s share was 317,-651 'under the former, mqre limited plan. It‘Will be 333,376.20 under the revised plan. ! EMPLOYES FAV6R ' City employes .recently voted 594 to 163 in favor of the revised plan which officially became effective Sept. 1 with last night’s commission approval. -Commissioners also approved the form for a lease agreement on present Pontiac School District Administrative offices in 40 Patterson St. The lease is for a term ending Oct. 1, 1964, with n six-month extension op- Execution of the agreement will be approved at a later date. Presently, the city is buying the; Patterson property as part of the R44 urban renewal project. 13:00 o’clock noon, will bo tho ltd day tnd time In which to .file nominating petitions for tho following City office: HpBWVHHH Commerce Town-chip. Oakland County, Michigan. To Whom It May Concern, Fartleu-. ■ tom: TSj ■ All owncri of property fronting on, abutting or having aooacc to rlgntc in Fox Lake, or who are Interested In 1—ton —- maintained the having fixed and maintained the normal height and level of atid lake pursuant tho provlctona of Act Mt of the Pub Acts of 1S61, aa amended, laid lake b ing located In Section 3 of-Commerce Township. Oakland County, Mlohlgan: You are hereby notified that the Oa land County Board of Suparvleora h caused to bo filed to this court a col. plaint praying for the establishment by thle Court ot tho normal height and level of Fox Lake, said lake being located ■ji Section I of Commerc Township, fink ___________r notified that a h a the matter will be hold to Circuit Court for the County of Oakland Oakland bounty Court Bouse Tower, 1300 North Tdlograph F—-Pontiac, Michigan, on Monday, the day of Ootobar, A.D. 1003, at the c tog of Court on that day at 1:10 | or aa soon thereafter as Couniel You a i further notified that oi after si MMtit V, TA' TAYLOR __ JUtlnf Attorney, County. Michigan ;fa: feoamw^7iQytN CorpoMtlon couneel,: juwAimwHniocK ' ’t Corp. Counsel of Oakland County, Michigan Office Address: OaiMOCNptfC f3SO N. ToJoarapii Fptlne, JMSten Mac, Michigan Ml BHlIl, Bat. (IS August 31. 33. September 4. *» and 33, 1W (gust 31. 33. •< - T' The school district will then rent the building until its new building in the civic center is ready1 to be occupied. Rent is tentatively proposed at about 3180 per month. RESCIND SALE An agreement approved several weeks ago to sell land in the civic center tot a new Pontiac Municipal Employes Credit Union Building, was rescinded by resolution last night. The resolution also authorized re-execution of the original agreement with “some minor changes in . . . form rather than substance." The technical changes were recommended by urban renewal officers in Chicago. The salek agreement had been signed by < commissioners before approval from federal officials. City Attorney William A. Ewart reported that the purchase of 12 parcels of land had been completed for a proposed employe parking lot at Pontiac General Hospital. The deeds were accepted by commissioners and City Clerk Olga Barkeley was authorized to advertise far bids on a demolition contract to clear homes on the 12 parcels.' , Bids will be opened at 2 p.m; Sept.. 30. The property lies south of and adjacent to the hospital’s present public parking lot between Johnson and Seminole. Eight of the homes must be demolished and tour can be moved if owners so desire, according to the city engineer. Commissioners accepted a low bid of 33,100 by H. H. Stanton Plumbing & Heating Co., of Pontiac, for installation of water service lines in a neighborhood park under development in the R20 urban renewal area. Stantpn was lowest of three THE POffTIAC PBBSS, WEDNESDAYr SEPTEMBER 18, 1963 Sweeten Beverage With Corn Syrup r* i I _ j ^ irom me spiuc oireu bui.ii «o t . OH LantalOUpB ry powder, dill weed; lemon! Beat 1 egg white until It stand* tea, j^nyme and mint leaves in addh in soft stiff peaks. Gradually beat pine- Cantaloupe is a natural for bite- tion to salt and pepper to sprinkle in 2 tablespoons currant jafiy and used, size appetizers. Wrap cubes of on the melon. | \\ teaspoon pure vanlUa extract [inger-cantaloupe with prosciutto, hoiledi, * ★ * J7 rtf a deener oink is desired, add 1 ■ve as ham, salami or chipped beef andj East meets West in “Canta-jy‘ • J* J™1 ... * spear on picks. Skewer canta-loupe Orientate” by sprinkling!drop pink food used- iloupe balls Mid, cubes of cream chopped crystallized ginger over!hot .water and bake in slow wen Blicateiciwese or cantaloupe chunks and the traditional combination of va-[(328 tojffgf) ter It ms of Cocktail sausages. ' « nilla ice cream in cantaloupei utes, until lightly browned. Serve JDS 01 i ion soft custardsr Brown Cooked Cereal1 Slices It’$ back to school time and Here’s a refreshing beverage that’s bound to appeal to guests of all ages. and cinnamon and sprinkle over Inside of can. Cook cream of wheat according to package directions, pour Into cans and chill overnight. Pit apricots and wrap each in a half of bacon slice. Bake in a moderate oven (35D Meanwhile, reiuovd> cereal from cans, cut into %-indh slices and fry .quickly in butter or margarine until lightly frowned. Allow 2 to 3 .slices and 2 bacon wrapped apricots per serving. Serve with syrup. Makes 5 serv- icing off to school without an t adequate breakfast. ( Johnnie gets up late* dresses, < and dashes downstairs with only ] minutes to school bus time. < Mother may not have had time • to fix an appetizing breakfast to Johnny gulps some juice and a doughnut and is off on a run. . But here’s a tasty and nutritious breakfast that Mom can have on the table in a matter of minutes , . cream of wheat pancakes. The cereal is cooked and poured into cans the day before. Apricots can be pitted and wrapped in bacon. Come breakfast . time, ill she has to do is pop the bacon wrapped in apricots in the oven, unmald the cereal, and slice and fry it as each child appears. As an alternative to the aprl- 1MS; cups light corn syrup % cup strongly brewed tea Mi cup lemon juice • *4 cup orange juice For soup-and-salad .days, serv&Jjklves. red food coloring. 1 cup pineapple juice Cream of Wheat Pancakes 2 tablespoons sugar Me teaspoon ground cinnamon 3 cups milk % teaspoon salt Mi cup quick cream of wheat cereal 1 (1-pound 13-ounce) can whole apricots, well drained and pBled W' M 5 bacon slices, halved Vi cup butter or margarine Syrup Lightly grease one 8-oiince andj one 4-ounce can. Combine sugar With TM, Coup«fl ,„<( PwcImm Pood Fair Fresh Ground Leg 0r lamb Ring Bologna TV Dinners U.S. Choice Full Cut H-G*!. Cut. CHICKEN-NOODLE » 2-Pk. UPTON SOUP MIX ... n9. SAVI I It I FRANK'S „ g-Ol. BLACK PEPPIR ...... Can SAVE U ON let STRAINED HEINZ BABY FOODS.. SAVE U ON 101 STRAINED CLAPP'S DABY POODS LINDA LEE — FRENCH Reg, APPLE PIE «V LINDA HI— DANISH R*q. almond ring............ farm Maid Ice Cream New iortes. Your ilnr Wavorsl Chelae 21 Ixtro SlrH STAMPS ICE CREAM LIMITi ONI Wits thU cbunoi .pd WOO Burcn* ♦imuiuwrMjS wi Add Corn to Salad tou can stretch a tossed green-salad, . and make it especially interesting to men,- by adding wholeJmrnel corn* Cut the kernels O^m leftover cooked com on the cob, or use canned corn; in the latter case,, drain it thoroughly. YOU CAN DEPEND ON FOOD FAIR GIVES YOU S.&H. — AMERICA'S MOST RELIABLE STAMP! ALL FOOD FAIRS OPEN 9 TO 9 DAILY Champagne and Sherry Mix in Punch . An impromptu party punch simplifies spur-of-the-moment en-. tertainihg. This rather Inexpensive- version has a Sherry-fruit jUice base that can be and kept in the refrigerator for any party-type emergency. The nutty California Sherry — so extra complementary to fruit flavors— sparkles elegantly when a bottle of Champagne is added just before serving. Illk eapeniutiy easy lor open house affairs because , all you need do is have several recipes of base waiting in the refrigerator. When the punch bowl needs refilling; just pour In a recipe of base, a bottle of California Champagne Ind a bottle of sparkling water. No last-minute measuring and mixing for the host or hostess! Fruited Sherry Punch 2 (4-5 qt) bottles sherry7 3 cups strained orange juice 2 cups canned pineapple juice Thinly cut rind of 1 lemon (in one piece) 1 (4-5 qt.) bottle champagne 1 quart bottle sparkling water , Combine sherry, orange and pineapple juices and lemon rind. Cover and chill several hours or overnight. Pour over ice ip punch bowl. Add chilled champagne and sparkling water just before serving. Makes # quarts. Kraft Velveeta 2-79 Farm Mail Buttermilk. Kraft Natural Swiss... Farm Maid Skim Milk. Piuconning MIM Cheese Sliced S-Oz. Pick. 29' V4-GeL Convenience Food Quickens Cooking One of the new frozen vegetables helps to make a quick meal. Jigtime Green Peas and Dried Beef 1 package (8 • ounces) frozen green peas with cream sauce % cup milk Mr to 1 teaspoon curry powder, if desired; 1 jar (about 4-ourtces) dried beef 1 or 2 tablespoons butter or - margarine Place contents of package of peas In a saucepan with the milk. Cover and over medium heat bring just to a boil. Remove from heat and stir until sauce is qmooth. Add curry powder, if used, and stir until blended with sauce. Meanwhile rinse dried beef with hot water; drain well. Heat butter te a 9- or 10-lnch. skillet; add beef and cook quickly, turning, until slightly crisp- Serve peas with beef* Makes 3 serv- Town Pride Frail Cocktail... .*"«>*<£21 19* Thrill Liquid for Diihui..»El* 89* Salvo Low Suds Po|ltf*........ t01 79* Downy Fabric Softener Rinse..... 46* Medium-Slit Ivory Soap.• * Bar 11* Lnrgo-Siio Ivory Soap..... • •• 18* Gentle Ivory Soap Flokof . .. E?‘ 33* Giant-SIxe Ivory Snow......y...... u* 79* Camay Bath-Sire Su«F v. . V... .. .4 ** 15* Queen Sixe Premium Dux..... « “■i0*’ 99* S«vt lie en 21 |A( 25Vi-Os. Can -MW Sava 8c on 21 |(lt 11-Ox. Bex mw Pineapple-Grapefruit Prink Franco - American Spaghetti Hunt's Tomato Catsup Mother's Oats QUICK OR RIOULAR! Saltine Crackers CRACKIR BARRIL e e o o o UK *•* 19* Maxwell House, Hills or Beech Nut Coffee i&kSw tare 3^yfiAft press, Wednesday September jg, ms I r your shopping dollars bacausa ■■ at HOFFMAN'S you get m bettor quality meats at mil best possible mdrlcet prices and that means SAVINGS FOR EVERY MEAL... EVERY DAY!! I , fresh-ground— ’ HAMBURG ting several hours in. bottled lemop juice and other ingredients. . Tenderize Chuck Steak Hie most tempting and flavor-1 ful meats need not be the most expensive. The taste and tenderness of an inexpensive cut may be enhanced by martaiatISg T6F several hours in a combination of bottled lemon juice, spices and other ingredients. I 2 tablespoons soy sauce 1 teaspoon rosemary, crushed ft teaspon dry mustard 2-3 cloves garlic, minced nRaoe~sfear itr Single layerin shallow pan. Combine remaining ingredient; pour over steaks. Marinate meat 4 hours', turning several times. Broil steak on Pity the poor boy who’s never had a Poor Royl Some call this popular sandwich a Hero — but whateveryou callitryou’Ul^the heroine of the family when you serve it. Delicious any time of the year,, the Poor Boy makes Grain-Fad TENDER STEER BEEF STEAKS • Round Cottage Sfyla PORK CHOPS porkIteaks Delicatessen •SPECIALS* Mich. Grade 1 mm m UVER 39 SAUSAGE Vll (Fresh or Smoked) Ready Serve Salads • Macaroni Wk'tki •Ham VIM • Potato yu i SLICED DRIED BjEEF Mox. Fkf. DEVILED STEAK — The taste and tenderness of Deviled Steak is enhanced by marina- With Lemon Juice round- steak^sScirTias "b«Bjgfffi=over=i^ marinated four hours in bottled doneness you like turning lemon juice, catsup, oil, Worcestershire sauce, soy sauce, rosemary, dry mustard and garlic. The marinade gives a spicy tang to the meat, which is further enhanced if it is broiled over charcoal. Yon may add a gourmet side dish by santeeing mushrooms In butter and stirring In little of the marinade for seasoning. Deviled Steak 4 pounds chuck or round steak, 1 Inch thidK Vi cup bottled lemon juice ft cup catsup , ft cup oil 2 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce Bananas Good Nutrition historians of the future may well label the 1960’s the Snack Age, for according to recent surveys more Americans prefer to nibble than to sit down to an honest-to-goodness breakfast, lunch or dinner. This sounds - like bad news for dieters. Not so, claim nutritionists. Providing you snack moderately and on the right kind of fare, you can stay in the swim of things and still stay slim. As a matter of fact, snacks are often recommended as a means of dulling appetites for the main meals of the day. ★ ♦ ★ High on the list of approved snacks is 'fruit. Not only is It light in calories, it satisfies the sweet tooth craving for off-llmit foods. And for ease of eating, convenience in carrying and nutritional content. .. nothing beats a banana. You can peel It easily, no knife needed, and eat it on the move. And there’s no stickiness left to wash off. It travels neatly to work for those mid-morning pick-me-ups. Just one banana and you’ll be recharged with a fresh supply of energy for it contains carbohydrates that are easily digested, plus vitamins and minerals. In calories, however, all you get is 85. Another nice thing about the banana from the weight watcher's point of view Is this: since it leaves you with,a well-filled feeling, you won’t have the: urge to reach for another some-thing-or-other an hour or two later. Consequently, when you jojn your friends at coffee breaks or look for an evening snack when watching television, treat yourself to jr banana... an all-American favorite. once. Baste with marinade during broiling. Yield: 8 servings. Grated Carrots Put Zip Into Meat Loaf This meat loaf, using fine dry breadcrumbs and grated carrot, has good flavor and texture. Cprrot Meat Loaf legg % cup milk ft cup fine dry (sifted) breadcrumbs 1 pound ground chuck beef 3 tablespoons finely grated onion (pulp and juice) Vi pup minced parsley ft cup finely grated carrot lft to 1ft. teaspoons salt ft teaspoon pepper , In a medium mixing bowl beat fegg just enough .to combine yolk and white; add milk and beat to combine. Add crumbs, b ref, onion, parsley, carrot, salt and pepper; use mixing fork or hands to mix together thoroughly. Pack into oven-glass loaf dish (about 8ft by 4ft by 2ft Inches). Bake in,a moderate (350 degrees) oven 50 minutes. Allow to stand in oven (with heat turned off and door open) or in a warm place for about 10 minutes so meat will re-absorb juices, Loaf may be sliced and served from dish. Makes 6 servings. mer. This one is filled with breaded shrimp. Since shrimp is loaded with precious nutrients, you can be sure this dish will provide a well-balanced meal. Tomato slices extra special no# that they’re in season, and crisp lettuce are added — served with a tempting tartar sauce. BREADED SHRIMP “POOR BOY” Split a loaf of French or Italian bread lengthwise. (Frankfurter rolls or hard rolls may also be used.) Spread both split surfaces with butter. On bottom half, arrange lettuce leaves and skinned toniato dices. Top with breaded shrimp that have had tails removed, and then have beeh heated according to directions on package. (Use about 2 packages.] Liberally dot shrimp with Tan-gy Tartar Sauce, below. Top with uyper half of bread and garnish if desired with a few reserved shrimp. Makes 2 to 3 “poor boys.” Tangy Tartar Sauce 1 cup mayonnaise or salad 1 small onion, grated 1 teaspoon prepared mustard ft teaspoon horseradish 1 large dill pickle, coarsyly grated Combine all ingredients; mix well. Serve garnished with additional coarsely grated dill pickle. Makes about 1 cup. ' Much Meat Available at Lower Prices Oscar Mayers RED BAND SLICED BACON Eastern Style^W t Boneless BEEF ROAST redly tender and jufcy Tender-Steer SLICED BEEF UVER Gordon's Spicy Pink ROLL SAUSAGE Snow White - Really Clean only sfl BA CHITTERLINGS 10 LB. Bucket I Rice Sandwich, Salad A little cooked rice leftover? Add it to mlged’cooked and raw shredded vegetables, dress with French dressing and use as a sandwich filling. This medley also makes • good salad. Use crisp greens with both sandwich and Shoppers will find most pork cuts, beef roasts, lamb, and poultry at special prices in many stores this week. Supplies of mojt vegetables will remain largfe until heavy frost. Apples, pearls, plums, and grapes are fruits in generous supply. Liberal receipts of hogs in the 12 major markets and slightly lower wholesale prices are being reflected at retail reports the Consumer Marketing Information Agent, Mrs. Josephine Lawyer, Loin roasts, steaks, country style ribs, and ham are some of the better pork values this week. A hindquarter of U. S. Choice or comparable grade will yield about 104 pounds of retail cuts. Ibis would include approximately 31 pounds of round steaks or roasts; 19 pounds of porterhouse and T-bone steaks; , 17' pounds each of hamburger and sirloin steaks or roasts; 10 pounds of Stowing beef; 6 pounds of rump roasts; and 2 pounds of flank steak/ * Broiler production is about 7 per dent larger than last year at this time. Shoppers will find | that broilers, Tom turkeys and roasters are receiving special emphasis' in some stores. Both lamb and veal prices remain about as they were a week ago, however, some stores are featuring lamb cuts at less than usual costs, - Barbecued breast or heck slices braised and served with buttered noodles are two lahib dishes to ease the meat budget.. . yet bring the compliments. Did you know that tuna surpasses all other canned fish and seafood packs? Choose from solid packs of fillets; chunk-style broken into bite-slzO pieces; or grated or flaked tuna In small bits. Tuna may be packed in vegetable oil, olive oil, or water. Most vegetables will be in abundance until severe frost occurs. Buyers report that broccoli, cabbage, carrots, celery, tomatoes, head lettuce, squash of. all, varieties, and peppers are in heavy supply. If there are still plans to cati tomatoes, do -so before the end of the month. Volume supplies are expected for about two more weeks. Prospects now indicate that. Michigan’s apple crop will be 11.5 million bushels. The forecast is 88 per cent of .last year and 98 per cent of average. A smaller crop Is expected for all varieties except Northern Spies, with Red Delicious down the sharpest (42 per cent). ’ s of Michigan blueberries, cantaloupes, and peaches | grow stnaller. There are plenty of pears from | Michigan and western states, Don’t let russeting (browning on I the skin) influence purchase as this does not affect eating quality. Among the many processed I foods offered, at special prices I this week are: peas, corn, beans, j tomato juice, applesauce, and waffles. P* Neck Bones • Port Tails Port Ears • Hog Maws • Port Feet HOME FREEZER SPECIALS no monay down — taka 30-60-90 Day* to pay I NO MONEY DOWN All This Moat & Potatoes TOO!! ||| FREE 1 bushel lLS.No. 1 All Purpose Potatoes with any home Freezer Order listed below! i U.S.D.A. GRADED TOP QUALITY BLACK ARCUS A HEREFORD •Beef Front Qtrn. 391 *Beef Sides' or Halves 45it] •Beef Hind Quarters 49 it •Pork Sides $ W 391. •Veal Sides <,/:?al9 45 it farm-fresh FRYING CHICKEN PARTS {!$$$ LEOS backs attached . 39° 1 BREASTS ^faHacM 45 it wiWIHGS ...... 23 it GIZZARDS . . 29.t ^ LIVERS Celif. Thompson LARGE SEEDLESS GRAPES extra . fancy I Golden Ripe CANADAS 10.l Calif. Solid Head LETTUCE I0L SWEET a JUICY m nm I LES 4*29*1 al| purposw-aatina or eeokina ^ 1 PARK FREE IN REAR HOFFMAN’S PONTIAC FREEZER FOODS, Inc. RETAIL DIVISION of OAKLAND PACKING 7 QUALITY MEATS AND PRODUCE AT WHOLESALE PRICES 526 N. PERRY ST. we reserve the right to limit quantities Opan 9 to 6 Daily -, 9 to 9 Friday FE 2-1IOO Gov't, Inspected Now 1961 Crop Fancy m-o*. K|i. met wtSYtjf 3-lb. Bag EM miow ONIONS Chickm O' S«a—Delicious in Salad, Will Cospon Below and Purchase of Any 10 Lb. Bag or More of Potatoes V, Green Crijp—Homegrown Flash Cabbage && 10® Hfm Q»*d Medium Iln m 1 YellOW OhI( Fresh Eggplant 2flr 29 ■ VfW I Netlnnel Feed StoiA Andaraont Bait Quality 2 Coupon (xplrta Saturday Sopton Michigan Peal 59° — Homoarown Butt.mat or - T<> **“ W * ' Acorn Squash 2 far Z9 Sunklst Orang Orchard Ptoih lO-Oi. Pitted or 12-Ox. UnpHtod 4m Bfoa, Fresh Bates.. oq« 2 »«• 79* Gordon Frosh - Frozen 10* Kidney Beane y _ American Boouty—Greet 10* Northern Meant i warden rraeh — Frozen m S]» £rso Pcos 6tt!l" #01 Ail Garden Fresh — Frozen — amAA *r French Fries . 6 ift 51" FROZEN •allerlnd • Micro Mesh • Seamiest NYLONS Mm€ Save Pair fM M Nore/ Batty Cmkfr Cinnamon Rolls . 29* Batty Crocker —- Chocolate A ^ Chip Cookies . . Ar 39* Betty Crot Butti Batty Crot Fudg :ker — Sweetmllk or MB aa p ermilk Biscuits 3'^ 25* e Brownies . . ~49 ^ PALMOLIVE — DEAL PACK LIQUID DITIRGINT k? 35* 1 ^55° 1 *^74e ^^SeiwtSmSTscoupo^^J M EXTRAS STAMPS j j, With the Perohooe of a 12-0*. Id. of ] Readier or Ammonlotdd Toppo 1 All Purpose Cleaner | I ^FRErwirSnfH^ ! 60 EXTRA M£r STAMPS With the Purchoxe of One or MON at * Chun-Kin* Products , Radeon* This Coupon of Notional Pood atero*. Coupon axplroo Set., Oopt. liot. rHB^WHTHiscouro^™ 60 EXTRA H£* STAMPS With the Purchoxe of One or Mere 25-Lh. Begi of Champ Dm rood Kodoom This Coupon at! Notional Pood etoroi. ■ Coupon expire* tot., fept. Hit. FREE WITH THIS COUPON | ; FREE WITH THIS COUPON 26 EXTRA HSS" STAMPS 1 26 EXTRA "ft* STAMPS With'the Purchase of 0 22-Ox. 1 With the Purchoxe of 0 7-0*. Btl. of Pink-Lotion I Jor of Monxonlllo Easy Ufa Dotorgont j Top Taste Olivos Rodeem This Coapon it National Pood store*. 1 Rodoom Thls coupon at Notional Poe# Stores. « coupon Bxpirox tof., topt, lift. ! ■, Coupon Sxplros Sot* fept. list. 25 EXTRA HJ5" STAMPS With the Pnrohooo of o BH. of 2S Tablots Alka Settlor TBlr PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 18, 1068 Say Dispatches From Saigon Sept. 19m, VANTAGE WATCHES Men’s and Ladies’ JliTT..... 14.95 NEISNER’S WATCH REPAIR the South Viet Nam situation (to —Centra! Intelligence Agency blotted With such spectacular ad* Informed sources. The evidence (CIA). ministrative debacles many times indicates that the informed source ^-Agency for International De* before this. - Some Of them led to probably was Ambassador Lodge shipment (AID). » loss of China to the Reds; mb* or gomeonf speaking for hiip. ~UnitodState s Information pigyg at Yalta; division of Ger* “ Agency. • ? many td leave Berlin surrounded Both correspondents reported a IMS ftJKJ by Communists; U. 8. aid to state of^oTnTSaos among Castro in taking over Cuba. By LYLE c. WILSON came over tee weekend hi dls-United Press International patches from Saigon. These The word from Saigon is that dispatches evidently Were based. President Kennedy has lost cott- on • closed-door briefing ft fool of both U. S. policy and per- U. S. correspondents in Saigon, sonnel in South Viet Nam an mlthe qttMttooe often 0 wkad tyyounjpadple .bout the world DtA j.,.. Urn ^ time. ...OerfuHy uKortet. It will pro- naaable. Information is presented con- ,/ . A ' ,,, IJY cisely, to cleor, eimple language that “*« yovr youopmre with . wild b«k. holdj the elteotioo of young ptople. For r^-dofbto-MptlMttrtll betov.h> odditlonal clarity, all of IhHl! volumei » 0— fa their ItonraWdtoe.. , •re levhhly illuetroted—over I JOOcherte endUtoetrattonein colort S^K^Ep Proparadbya Cwieml EWctrlc Company. roft»b). AppUana. Dtp!, distinguished Editorial Board... a.co«daSt Ths editors include: Sir John Cockcroft. ThymtkOwMmnmfvhrth** NobS Prize winner in Physics • Prof. L. .* Dudley Stamp, eminent geographer • GENERAL H ELECTRIC Sh Jsmei Chadwick, Nobel Pries winner ASK US ABOUf OUR . .. SPECIAL PLUG-IN PRICE INCLUDING 230-VOLT WIRING PER DETROIT EDISON PROGRAMI V 1 ( DDAS-1 rnrr SERVICE for the rifCC LIFETIME of DRYER INCLUDING ALL ELECTRICAL PART! MOTOR AND LABORI PER DETROIT EDISON PROGRAMI 0«n«ra(1ElMtrit SCIENCE ENCYCLOPEDIA P.O. lex S2> NSW York 46. N.Y. Float* sand m«—poatpaid—l2 voium« POPULAR SCIENCE ENCYCLOPEDIA. I •m ancloaing (chack) (monty ordar) lor $7.96 and covtr (or ncalmlla) oMh* Use NO DOWN PAYMENT-2 YEARS TO PAY-80 DAYS SAME AS CASH! LOWEST INTEREST RATES IN TOWN!! y Yaurlaitliiy' IS A Frifldaire At Wayne Oabsrts! SIMMS BROTHERS W N. Saginaw St. 144 N. Saginaw St. a - Fcntioc , .v . . Pontiac ' ... inT:11..T.;.rri.1.i: At Your Neighborhood Federal Department Store! LIFT THE LID AND SEE THE BIG DIFFERENCE! FRIGIDAIRE ACTION ZONE helps get aN your wash fabulously clean! ^M&ipQNTIAC BflEiSS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18. 19ft3 tender Chicken Wi (MbgyHo" MEATY CHICKEN Wines TINDER BACKS CHECKS tot PIONEER PILLSBURY BANQUET cmmm. PRESERVES w^b f With Coupon Bolow Without Coupon DOUBLE iW Fhtvors^-GAYLA ^UiVltVApVfil ttUtwiwUwSlMMjllWmUf MlfflMBMH I BmOm* «»omm hoiMION Hnn lunHwnnHiimnHHiHMiiHiiiiiimii lWlWlWlWlWlYftWiWiWlWlWtWiWIWlWltf&) (4)/ll !Hf»wahww )sm BlSwiSiw^^WiP udum nwWiviwtWtvm^wr^rt u\ »wrt /jwfr j fouiua «w«> <1 wi^»y»whm tGmpOoupini~ Mfree GOLD Bill Stamps With Purtfcasa ;: ' of 3 Lbs. or Moro of; DEUCIOUS APPLES M FREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purchasa ) of 4 Loaves or Moro of FRESH BREAD 9 FREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purchasa of Any ./V \ beef Coasts a FREE GOLD BELL ’ Stamps With Purchasa of drty Pound or More of ^UIISTIAK I FREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purchasa of 3 lbs. or More of HAMBUI^ERr iSHS Ilf JMIAUWMtMiAlMMWyA»AWVM,tWWtwVAtMVWl^i t^MMMUMt/«A»MWWfWOW0W«MtMjnW SUPER MARKETS FOOD MARKETS THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1968 [cfion in Area C •; Awaited for Dequ New Career and engine, which give the buyer a wide variety of performance or economy options. Buicks go before the public Oct. I: Some Style Alterations Buick Changes Mechanically Animal Drue Rub* Opposed by HEW WASHINGTON (UPI)- Parents test — In which his former boss in the Oakland County GOP, Arthur G. Elliott Jr., beat him — whetted his appetite for the excitement of the race. It gave him a taste of bow the other half of political circles revolve, and he liked It, even though the loss applied the dhMAer to his decision to qoft fall-time politics for now. He had said before die contest that he would' stek a Job longer profile. Lincoln Continental, which also offers a four-door convertible, continues as Ford Motor Company’s top-of-the-line car, with many luxury items as standard equipment or extra-cost options. If you Wont to help your children get the most put o( school don't miss Jew* Lincoln in private busfoess if uft lost. He stayed on as Elliott’s assistant while looking for that job. ENTERED RACE Then assistant to former state GOP Chairman George Van Puersem, Gibbs entered the state, chatnaanshty race in February at tbs xst&4 of supporters hi Oakland County who thought Elliott would be more valuable to the GOP In Gov. George Rom. ney’s office when he then held n temporary peat. Classic Lines Are Continued change provides greater head-room Inside, n longer profile out- NEW GRILLE A new grille will make Its appearance, with revamped exterior ornamentation, floor sides and underbody reinforcements are new. Appearing Daily Pontiac Press of the-state convention when be learned that the majority of delegates, including thole from Oakland County, were backing Elliott as Romney’s unspoken but Well understood choice- The Pontiac Fresh is p$oud to bring young readers a practical ‘‘how-to-study”, course that will help them handle increased homework loads, get more out of text books and score higher grades. 30 DAYS TO BETTER GRADES is a concrete plan of action aimed at improving study habits to help yoUr youngsters get the most out of school Parents should encourage their high school and, early college students to read and apply these new study ideas. The course is concise, expert arid authoritative. It was developed by The Reading Laboratory, Inc. of New York, famed specialists in improving reading speed and comprehension. He had worked only briefly in private business — as a technical writer for Pontiac Motor Division — after graduating from Ohio State University and General Motors Institute and before becoming Elliott’s full-time assistant in 1K7 when Elliott was Oaklaad County GOP chair* tion held to a single aide molding the length of the car. Options available fqr the Custom 880 models, include tilting steering wheel and four-speed, floor-mounted transmission. Design Changes in Series Dodge Luxury Models Priced Moderately he ’64 Dodge MO and Custom cava grille with a pattern of slender bar. Side ornamentation inches long, station wagons an which go m display Friday, linked rectangles, creased by a is a thin, single molding extend- inch and one-half longer. Among aimed at Ida buyer ‘Who-—------------big the length of the car. i) exterior colors offered N “A* da blg-car Notary at a mod- , * * * idversary Geld” to honor of Actrau Hooe Lanas “1Vh"^!*1 ^W** >»• COORDINATOR Gibbs was campaign coordinator for the state GOP last fall and for the April 1 election in which the Republican - backed new state constitution eked out a narrow victory. tye also h credited with drawing the blueprint for* the The Pontiac Press For Home “Delivery Di al 332-8181 CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT An estimate by the Department of Agriculture, based on coat per person as Compared witha family of four, shows how food costs vary to relation", to the size of die familyi 20 per cent (flora for an individual; io per cent more for a couple; 8 per cent more for throe; I per cent lees for five; and 10 per cent leas foe a family tor Dan Murray in Mill They have two chUdren, Christopher, now 9, IS, 1988 Big Vatu Specially Selected Beef — Lean and Meaty onders of the Valu Selected Beef — STANDING For Stew or Braising Short Ribs Loan, Pm-Dlccd' ■ ' y ': I Stewing Reel Big Valu Specially Sdtected Beef ' Maxwell House ? Regular, Drip or. Fine Grind Center Blade Cut Round Bon® Chuck Cut W, 100% Boneless CHIP STEAKS | SWISS STEAKS I CUBE STEAKS Always Fresh Mel-O-Crust VacuumRacked Hoi lybrook sealtest U S. No. 1 Michigan — Sand Grown IXCITINC FROZEN VEGETABLES SAVINGS! i Cut Green Beans 9-o*. __ Save ,16c On 8 5060 DIXIE HIGHWAY-DRAYTON PLAINS MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 9 TO 9 - SATURDAY 8 TO 9 398 AUBURN & SANFORD-PONTIAC MON., TUES., WED. 9 TO 6 -THURS., FRI. 9 TO 9-SAT. 8 TO 9 536 N. PERRY & PADDOCK-PONTIAC ,MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 9 TO 9-SATURDAY 8 TO 9 50 S. SAGINAW & AUBURN - PONTIAC MON., TUES. 9 TO 6-WED., THURS., FRI. 9 TO 9-SAT. 8 TO 9 Maxwell House Regular,' Drip, or Fine Grind ' FAEBEF ill 59 ' Limit One With This $3.00 Purchase or Mor Baer, Wlno or Tobacco, plros Monday, Saptamli Limit Oho counon P»r € Save p ] 0c 1 ? Coupon and o Including Coupon lx- 3 THE PONTIAd PRE^S; WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1968 Mrs. K Leaves Hungary BUDAPEST, Hungary (AJP) — Nina Khrushchev, wife of the So* Quints Eltfer Toward Parents Surviving Dionnes Reveal Painful Life v|et jiiq^r, left Hungary Tites-reported. HaMaM G°Wen Brown ' Boneless Fillets .T"? Sewed Wednesday i K&iriSnrRsh.Fry All YOU UN EW...H80 «5# French Fried PetatoeseCole SfaweTartare SauceeRolls and Butter . HOWARD ^ 3650 Dixie Highway “Dad” and “Mom” Dionne treated their older children as one family, the quints as a sep* arate category. r ONE ENTITY “We wore treated as five who really amounted fo one, live of A Hind so close and alike that we could not posdbty have separate identities or desires,” they wrote. from Dr. A. R. Dafbe, who de- ^ sisters* said that after a livered them, and their sister pampered babyhood in the nut** Emilie’s epileptic seizures dark- gery; they were forced to clean ' ened the latter years lived with bathrooms in their parents’ home, 1 their'family. ‘ feed hired hands, milk cows and ! ‘SHAMFjnn. THING’ make scrapbooks Of holy picturts • “The family considered her '*f^Way'to ? • (Emilie’s) illness a .shameful co^e- thing,” they said. “From what Their father allowed them doctors say these days, it is un- only $2:a month eadTspending likely that she couM have been money at college, they said. cured; but they say modern care • who made me go back to,work,” . said June AHyson, her oldrtlme ! vivacity again in evidence. , Except for a brief television drama last spring, she had been Inactive since the death of her hus-band, Dick" Pow-ell, Jan. 3. She spent much of her time griev- WWw “We are tired of listening to these generalities,” said Bap. “I had to admit that I had.” Mil right,’ she said. ‘You’re going to work on my show. I heed you and you’re going to help me out.’ ” John W. Byrnes of Wisconsin, the chief Republican tax spokesman. ACTION PLOTTED Although the House Is not expected to vote on the tax cut until a weak from today, preliminary partiamentary maneuverings were star| thinking you’re great, because Judy is the big star around here.’ The reason we’re both s6 short is that they kept beating ns down. We never got to be really good friends until after we left Metro.” That’s the way it happened, and I found June rehearsing lor the Garland show at CBS, her hair in curlers and a new note ol enthusiasm in her voice.> ‘ ’■ June lost her gaiety,when asked aixmt her plans to marry Glen Maxwell, owner ol Newport Beach barber shops. “I don’t want to talk about it,” she said, and then she did. “Where Is the engagement ring I’m supposed to have?” she Then one night Judy . Garland spotted her at' restaurant. HHHH “She tame over to my table r and started to bawl me out,” June recalled. “She told me, ‘You look terrible. rYou don’t even look like a movie star. She reminisced about the old days when she and Judy starred atMGM. USED BY STUDIO “We didn't And out about it until later, but the studio used to work us against each other,” she asked, pointing to the wedding band and, solitaire from hgr mar- NEW * HIIiI S THEATRE • ROCHESTER rlage to Powell. “And how could I find anyone good enough to Kennedy is expected to rends the argument his administration has been making-that spending win be rigidly controlled and is in fact leveling off, and that neit year’s budget deficit will be smaU- Your eyes are all red. Hava said. '•They’d say to Judy, ‘Now marry after Richard?’ er than this year’s. ■A ★ ★ The administration position is that the proposed tax cut, which TREE Hxcmus FREE EjKDDK CIRCUS FREE mccnriMS Ol XIS HffiHWAY (U.t, io» t SLOCK NOWTljf TltlCWASH WP, PLUS: “1 NOW PLAYING AT POWTjAC EDGAR ALLAN PORS THE i’ . Vincent PRICE Chairman Wilbur D. Mills, D* rk„ of the House Ways and bet t you're AlK., UI U1U nuuoc Means Committee, who drafted that sectton, has said It is Intend- PALACE ed to mean a choice of tax reduction, and not big government spending, as a means of building the U.S. economy—“And we want it understood that we fie hoi intend to try to go along both roads at the same time.” ihebetd. teased, •••••WAS THE HIDEOUS THING JHATCAMETO . *HONOR*HERi Republicans contended such expressions of sentiment fay the ex- Now Location 6 Cooler Lake Rd. .UNION LAKE CHILDREN*)* Under* IZ* A MAN OF 0f| RIYSHBY.^muI dcshcmjt OFCRIMS! THE PONTIAC, PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBEB 18, X&63 Even St Louis Has few Doubts Now in NL Race Dodgers r%‘p Behind Koufax Am Lefty Handcuffs Loserion 4 Hlf»; Lead at 3 Games WO TOO MUCH — There were two too many Los Angeles Dodgers at Busch Stadium in St. Louis last night. The first place visitors whipped the Cardinals, 4-0, and put the losers’ backs to wajl in the once hot National league pennant race. Instrumental in the important win was Frahk Howard (left) whb smashed a two-run homer in the eighth inning to givq, ST. LOUIS m - There was lit, Ue doubt today m even in St. Louis which National League thapi would meet the New York Yankees in the Wdrid Series. It should be the Los Angeles Dodgers, who whipped the Cardinals for the second straight night, 4-0 Tuesday, t6/gtiden their first* place lead to three* games‘over. Si. Louis. • dr ;• ★ -it • This is a different Dodger team than the one that blew the pennant last year. Different because it has a healthy Sandy Koufax instead Of Just another sorefingered leftrKhncler as Sandy was in the latter part of last year. The . 27-year-old made only 87 pitches, only 21 of which were called balls. He did not give up a hit until Muslal singled to Open the Cards’ seventh. He did not issue a pass and he came close to being scored upon in only one inning. And it was ML hw it A Glance ' Won Last Pet. Behind PI17 Lot Angela! ..S3 9* .912 - M •t. Louie ..... 91 S3 ,391 S ' I Lot Angela!—(t horn* 9. Pltteburgh (■*01. 20-22). New York 3 (Sapt. 24-21 FhUMIolphU 3(8ept. 37-39)1 (way 1, I Louli i (3anillHS3®H£ ‘ st. Louli—nt horn* (. Lot Angela! (Sent. 18). CtnptntieU 3(Sept. 27-28). «w 4, Cincinnati 2 (Sept. Mill). Chicago (Sept, 24,28). not because he had trouble with the Cardinal hitters but with his own fieldihg. After hitting catcher Tim Mc-Carver with a pitch, he flung pitcher Cart Simmons sacrifice bunt past first base putting Red-birds on second and third with one out. 4 ■ ★ - .* | Then, reaching back for that little extrih Sandy who has been beaten only five times this year, induced Julian Javier to hit j | ground ball to Maury Wills who threw out McCarver at the plate. Dick Groat’s tap back to the; box ended the Sards’ chief threat. TOUR STRIKEOUTS The handsome hlack- haired bachelor from Brooklyn Who Sow makes his home in Los Angeles, struck out only four, well below his normal gait, but that Increased his season total to 288, bettering his own national league record. He also leads in victories, shutouts, complete gardes and innings pitched. Not since Grover Cleveland Alexander hurfod 16 shutouts for Philadelphia in 1918 has a ma]oir league pitcher turned In more. “My fast ball and curve were my best pitches,” said Koufax. “I had good control, too.” KoufaX’ brilliance overshadowed the "fine pitching of Curt Simmons who, except-for the first and eighth innings kept the Dodgers from,scoring. VvWjf At one stretch, the Cards’ veteran southpaw retired seven consecutive batters and trailed only by 1-0 until Frank Howard followed^* two-out single by Tommy Davis with a home run, his 27th of the season, hitting a two-strike, no-toll pitch. It was the big outfielder's first hit in 19 times at bat against St. Louis pitching at Busch Stadium. «It was a curve ball that sailed outside," Sindmons explained. "He Just reached out and overpowered It.” *7 J ;# ‘ * In addition to his fine fielding at short, the fleet-footed Wijls also starred at bat. He opened the game With a single, stole second, continued to tKiri when ’Simmons made a wild pitch and scored on Panf‘er Jim Gillfom’s double. .., j Ealkwellfo time was Just 35 sec- mm i.nma lor anobles °ndB Off thfe school record of 9l>ki ' A *» iVq 10:20, set by Don Pounds in 1953. Coach Don Smith said Balk- 'Good Pitching' Key to Success pitcher Sandy Koufax (right) breathing room. Koufax didn’t need much room as ho held the home team to four hits and set a major league reicord for shutouts hi one season (11) by a left-handed hurler. The ace of the Dodgers staff gained his 24th win of the year, By striking out four Cardinals, Koufax boosted his total to 288 for the season. | ST. LOUIS (AP)—"Good pitch-. ing will always beat good hitting/* Johnny Keane sakl sadly tot wise- I ly after Sandy Koufax of Los An-* geles overpowered his hard-hitting St. Louis club in perhaps the key game of the National League season. { "The Dodgers’ pitching has been great and that’s the story of this series so far,” the Cardinal i manager said after Roufax’s four- II hit 4-0 shutout vidtory Tuesday night. Johnny Podres and Rim Perranoski stopped the Cards on three hits, 3-1 Monday after they had won 19 of 20. Walter Alston, Los Angeles manager, bad high praise for tity big left-hander whose Uth shutout off the season was a major league record, for lefties. “Koufax was great — he’s the greatest pitcher in the game)” Alston said. "You don’t tout out the Cards very, ofteiL” Stan Musial, perhaps the greatest player of hjs generation, had this to say-about Koufax: "He’s held that club together, he’s the reason they’re up there in first place. "It’s tough to Compare him With other'toys in their greatest years, like (Don) Newcombe when he won about 27 games and (Ewell) Blackwell. But they were right handers'. . . ” Asked whether he could recall a lefty in his best season better than Koufax this year, the 42-year-old Musial thought long and hard and couldn’t come up with a Tigers' Fox Not So Foxy USGA Approves New Rules; May Shorten Playing Time NEW YORK (AP)—How many seconds are a few seconds? The question may arise under a new code of golf rules adopted the first time. Previously the two nations had differed only on the size of the ball, whjch is larger here. for use next year and announced/ A joint American-British com- Tuesday by the United States Golf Association. Some of the changes should save some strokes, and one is designed to Save time. It’s a rule about how long a golfer may wait for a putt to drop that is hanging on the lip. vff',:■■■■ W'v 'W- The current rule allows a "momentary delay” in hopes the ball will drop. The new rules allows a "few (seconds.” The Royal and Ancient Golf Club, which runs the game in Britain and many other parts of thb world, rejected a couple of tiie rule changes. Thus, there will be differences in the rules between Britain and Jthe United States next year for mittoe met last May in an effort to get complete agreement, They agreed on the Up of the cup rule, a milder penalty for carrying More than 14 clubs, and simplified and clarified 21 of the 41 rufos of golf. EFFECTIVE DATE However, the British rejected these changes, which go into effect in tiie U.6. on Jan. 1: 1. A ball striking an unattended flagstlck from within 20 yards of the hole will entail a two stroke penalty, or loss of holeIn match play. • ■ .'■■■ w 2. An unplayable ball may be dropped within two club lengths with the penalty reduced from two strokes to one. 3. A provisional ball may be Walled Lake and Milford racked Up impressive cross country victories Tuesday afternoon. Walled Lake’s Vikings defeated Waterford Kettering, 20*36, and Milford runners grabbed the first seven places hi trimming Oar-enceville, 15-50. The Vikings’ Don Balkwell covered the two-mile course in 10:55, winning the. race with a 25-yard margin over . Waterford’s Mark gayer 3b , (« 0Javier . White lb 4 0 1 OeKolb U Uuelal If MaCarver a Simmon* p bshannon If Schulte p M'Kenale p 3 0 1 OoWIthrow 4 0 0 OSkawron lb Jienwir ih 4 0 1 T. Davit It 11 2 f Howard rt 4 11 KOUfM P 999 , 31 * 4 OTotPle “ J “ Totaie . ; b—Filed « well has a good chance of cracking the record. "He’s as close as anyone we’ve had in tiie past io years,” Smith said. The Vikings captured five of the first seven positions- Mark KareU waa tith'd, Charles Gross fourth, John Lundquist fifth ^ Jim Jin I s sixth, Waterford’s -lot Angei*ir374rsr ; Bruce Bodner came , in sixth. •loi Angeio* ■ The Victory was the second in succession for the Vikings, They J IP HUB* bb so I opened lasVweek with a 21-30vlc-KtniStx w. »w • 9 \ o » # ] tory, over Berkley. The'Vikings l l i [will match their speed against ® Koufax (iweirver), *wf -Pontiec Northern Thursday % jlmmoOT^J^^o^nnan, Form«.:lthe WaUed Lake COUTSe. Walled lake's reserve team dame out on top also, 18-41. Gary Sparks and David Stafford paced the win. FOUR-WAY TIE Milford’s victory over Clarence-ville ended in an unusual manner, with four members pf the squad sharing first place with' a time of 10:49. Sharing the , top spot were BUI Nelson, Ron Hardy, John Groraes and Hdrold Fautfit- 'Don Boyd, fifth, Tom Needham, sixth, and Ferril McCarthy, seventh, winded out the scoring. Waterford, in squaring Us record at 2-2 for three meets (one triangular), captured seven of the first eight places In defeating Ctarkston, 1846. Scoring tor tiie Skippers were George Batllngall, John Meyer, Ron Carpenter, Ron Potter and Chuck Wheeler. Only Mike Turek of’Ctarkston was able to crack tiie top six positions, taking third. Ballingall led with a time of 11:46, a record for the new two-m)le course just opened at WTHS- Meyer trailed In second place by 16 seconds, 1 Neal Stalker was the next Clarkston scorer, finishing ninth, played only for a ball which may be lost or out of bounds, not one ihat may be in the water or unplayable. -■ * .4* An R and A spokesman said the differences In the rules "are regretted, but they arise from the different playing conditions in the two countries. ‘Every effort has been made to keep these differences to a minimum so that if the opportunity of a completely common code should arise jn the future it may be made as easily as possible.” SouthpaW Wins * World Flyweight Championship TOKYO (UPI) r- Japanese southpaw Hireyukl Ebitora took tiie world flyweight crown tonight with a first round knockout over champion Pone Kingpetch of Thailand. The heavily favored 23-year-old Eblhara decked Kingpetch with a left to the jaw and then put him down for keeps a second time with toother left to the button, The knockout canto after 2)87 of the first stanza and created pandemonium In the capacity crowd of 12,809 at the Tttyo metropolitan gymnasium. MINNEAPOLIS - ST. PAUL (UPI) — It looked like Charlie Dressen really had something going in this WUUe Horton-Terry Fox combination. But the latter half of the combo failed last night and the Detroit Tigers suffered a 3-1 setback at the hands of the Minnesota Twins. The defeat left the Tigers five fuU games back of the fourth place Baltimore Orioles and left the Tigers a Utile worried that they might drop back into sixth place. Detroit is only two games ahead of the sixth place Boston RetiSox. Last Saturday, Horton, a $50,- 880 bonus baby off the Detroit Pro's Playing-Managar to Quit Ttnnis Circuit LONDON (AP)—Tony Tratort, the new head man of the pro tennis traveling show, announced his retirement today, both as a placer and a front office man. Tratort; who lost 6-2,6-3 to Ken Ropewall In the Wembley pro tournament Tuesday night, said he will travel with the tour through South Africa next month and then’ quit. To Airlift Racehorses LONDON (AP) M A British transport Company said today it wiU alrUft 30 racehorses from Britain to Singapore, Sept. 23, to beat the West-East bloodstock traffic caused by tho Africa horse disease thred years ago. The movement, the largest single flight of torsos' in aviation, history, was planned by Malayan Runme Shaw, Horton its, Reliefer loses Minnesota Home Runs Defeat Bengals, 3-1 Ken Boyer, Cardinal right-handed slugger, had this to say about Koufax:. "Hts fast baU rides up on you very good. A lot of people don’t realize U, tot he’s got a helluva curve, too, and he keeps it down. “YoiLbave to give him one of the two pitches when you go up theAhod try to hit the other one. Youmight as well decide it before you go up. ★ * * ★ “And you have to go after the first pitch,” the Redblrd strongboy “I believe hd throws every pitch fur tiie strike zone. He doesn’t waste any. You can’t afford to get behind him." .. Koufax was amazed when told he had made 87 jrit^ies^ 21 of which were balls. He struck tot only four, well below his average, and didn’t walk a man ta running his record to 24-5. J (' , T don’t believe I've ever pitched a game when I made under 100 pitches,” said the 27-year-old Dodger ace. The jubilant Dodgers had other heroes, although Ktofax was,the center of attention. Frank Howard their giant • sized outfielder, clubbed a two-out, two-strike, two-run homer to the pavilion roof in right for a 3-0 lead. Maury Wills, their shortstop of many talents, ruined the Cards only real chance with a good stop ana throw which nipped Tim McCarver at home in the third inning. GOOD GAMBLE gambled and won,” Wills said, "And (John) Roseboro made possible, It was on the first base side tot he made the play in one motion.” Wills als6 singled, stole second and scored oh Junior Gilliam’s bloop double in the first for a 1-0 lead. His left ankle heavily taped, the oft-injured Wills vowed “it feels better and if I get on I’m going to run until I wop.” two-run pinch-hit homer off Robin Roberts In the last of tiie eighth inning to give, the Tigers a 2-2 tie. FoX, then came out of the pen to blank the Orioles until Gus Triandos slammed the winning homer in the last of tiie 10th. Horton, who’s only 29 tot looks like one of the most promising Tigers of the future, came through again. Dressen sent him up to pinch-hit with a man on second base and two out in the top half of the eighth with the Twins leading, H Horton promptly slammed single off Twin rookie pitcher Dwight Siebler to tfo the contest, 1-1 Horidn n# has batted four times in the major leagues -- all in pinch-hitting roles — and connected tor three hits, But. this* time. Fox didn’t perform like he Hid last Saturday. Earl Battey tagged him for two-run homer in tiie last of1 the Both Alston and Keane had words of praise for losing pitcher Curt Simmons, a crafty veteran who held the Dodgers at bay, 1-9 until Howard’s eighth Inning blow. “Simmons wasn’t bad, either,” Alston sai(f.*“In tact he* was mighty tough,” Keane said Simmons “pitched a beautiful game. He was right along with Koufax except for that one bad pitch to Howard, a curve which sailed. Howard went with him, first time I’ve ever seen him doit.” THREE-WAY RACE — The feet proved faster than either * the human arm or a flying hat in last night’s Dodger-Cardinals 'JJ game at St. Louis. LA’s Willie Davis (3) slides safety into " second with a stolen base in the ninth inning. Catcher Tim Mo ^ j Carver’s throw to Dick Groat covering the bag was too late to / -catch the runher btlt dld beat tbe helmet’s descent to the . Dearborn* Bow Rolls 24 Consecutive Strikes DEARBORN (UPI) ^ Don Paschke came within five strikes of a world record Tuesday at Oxford Lanes when he bowled 24 consecutive strikes, including a 300 game, In the West Side Bowl-ling Proprietors’ Traveling League. The world record for consecutive strikes by an lndivldual, as recognized by the American Bowling Congress, is 29. Paschke’s performance put him fourth on the ABC’s all-time list for consecutive strikes. Pashcke, 32, ended his first game with six straight bullseyes to start the string, rolled the third 300 game of his career, and then started the third game by reeling off six more strikes before missing the headpln on his 25th ball. . His other two games were tit and 258 tor an 817 series, only 21 pins rity Of tils Detroit City League mirk of 838, Pashcke, who has been bowling for 18 years and carries a 18$ • average this season, rolled hia -last 300 in February, 1002. His * first perfect game came the year j before. .J H pacific5' 8** SFIrRfc ’oronto. %, s! XaSffltL aK"*3. tie Champ Flying Home; to Ailing Daughter ] LONDON /AP) - Sonny ListO^ f broke off a triumphant exhibition-tour of Britain today to fly^ to jjie J bedside of his ailing 12-year-old i daughter, Eleanor, in the United* States. The world heavyweight cham-« plon booked out tor Denver, Colo. J Ixit promised to return tiie first* chance he gets/- 2 , ,, 3 His advisor, Jgck Niton, said:^ "Sonny is worried. 1 do now! know what is wrong with ‘thaS child and only beard of the prob-i lem at 2 o’clock this morning. We| hake been treated; Very kindly * hero and we hope to come back2 to clear up our remaining thrto| engagements In Blackpool, Bir-| mingham and a television ShowJ We also want to come back and* fight Brian London here Mforel the end ofthe year.” I Why is Imperial now outselling almost; every other whiskey in tne world ? eighth and that decided the game. JETBOIT MINNESOTA •krhhl HftM IMPERIAL Bruton of 41*OOorrl lb 4911 MeAulUf* M 4 0 0 OPowor ^lb 40 1 OrifiWu 4*1 Smuotoow 'll 411 Com lb loiRffiion of 0001 Phillip* lb 3 0 1 OAllleon M 3 0 11 Wort lb 3 11 OBottey O 4111 Preehoa o 3 0 0 OBonko 3b 4 0 10 Aguirre p 2 0 9 OVorHUOt 10 3*91 (Horton 1 0 1 1 Siebler p 3 0 0 0 Fox p 0000 Votofh' 30 1 4 1 Tetale Mill (—Singled fox Aguirre in Mb. Detroit OH OOO 019-1 MwiOMta 9*9 001 *«»—1 ; HIRAM WALKER (OUT37'lf DP—Aguirre’ Wert (Od CmS LOB—Detroit 3. MlnneeoU 7. W IB—Sill. Wort. KR-XIUebroF. B»tio» SB-Pbinip*. , ” IP 1 1 EBBBSO V l .[■.■•'"1.1 Blebler W. 24.... 4 41111 HBP—Bjr Aguirre (VeruIlH). tJ—A( lemo. Honooblok, Soar, Smith. T—2:1* A—14,147/^ || • l Sf! IS; Because knowledgeable^ people have a taste for Hiram Walker quality. 123* 139$ ..4/1«. Km l Co4# Ne. 401 Cede N*. I ILENDC9 WHISKEY • II PROOF • SIS STMItRf WHISKEYS '* 7SXIIAIH NEUTRAL SPIRITS .,IIMH WALKER ISOHS INC., PERN. ILL Wednesday, September is, tmf. Broncos Seek 'Major' Foes Capac vs. New in Top Thumb Battle If the Cepeda trade should come off, It would also mean that the Tigers would probably swap first baseman Norm Cash to a National League club for .aonae pitching, Cinoipnati might he interested, in such a deal. new uxw . 1 ® If both Sunning and Cash are swapped, It’ll mean there will be a new look to thb Tigers ne^t season because teftfielder Rocky Co-lavito is a cinch to be trhded regardless of the outcome of the other deals. ! ; m 0 * it it' There’s a chance that Colavito could go back to Cleveland where ! defensive strength to games last ! week. v i Brown City downed Peck, BO, while Dryden was held to a BO tie by Waterford Our Lady of the Lakes. Dryden’t offense sputtered all day, losing toe ball three times on fumbles and twice on interceptions. i t it it ' | One of toe moat exciting plays ® of the game was a 40-yard field j goal attempt by Dryden’s Dennis « Hilliker on the last play of the game. The bill sailed toward toe ® goal post but fetfflve yards short, f ★ . it *’ ■' t Almont and Anchor Bay tangle * in the final game on the Southern ST. LOUIS-(UP*) - Wouldn’t toe Detroit Tiger Infield lock a lot more menacing next year with Orlando Cepeda playing -first base? f It’s still a long shot but the slugging San Francisco first base-maw could be with toe Detroit Tigers next season. d* * With many National League moguls gathered here for the key Cardinal-Dodger series, $e trade rumors were flying «U over toe place. It itas just like World Series time when the groundwork is laid for most major trades. The Tigers are expected to be one teem which will do i tot of trading this winter since the club was In ninth place for mudfof the season after being picked by most experts to give New York a good run for the pennant. \ According to some sources, San Francisco plans to offer Ce* peda to toe Tigers next season for pitcher Jim Bunning and anotoer player. Cepeda and the Giants have been on the outs this season according to some report# and Bun- Hope far Good Show vs. Big Ten Chomp in Opener Saturday week against nonconference opposition and the result was three losses and one tie. DeckerviHe, a newcomer to the league, salvaged a 13-13 deadlock with Umonvdle A full slate of league games is on the Soutoem Thumb schedule with Memphis entertaining Armada, Brown City playtog host to Dryden, Anchor Bay at AL mont and Capac at New Haveh, Thumb slate. Almont played New Baltimore St Mary to a M tie in the opening game. Anchor Bay turned in a 20-0 win over Chippewa Valley. ! Imlay City, smarting from a 25-6 loss to Marine City, moves j to Flint toil Friday to Mm powerful Holy Redeemer, »B-12 victim of Bad Axe, rated the No. 1 Class B team in the state. Saturday toe Broncos open their1 second season in major classification — and! play Wisconsin at Madison. It’# an ambitious way to open a season for even the most assured of status seekers, playing a Big Ten championship team that’s favored to repeat. “I refuse to assume a defeat-let’s attitude;” said ScMosser. “Well do everything to get our can Amateur Baseball Congress. The Coldwater victory broke toe Pacific Northwest’s three-year hold on the AABC championship and also marked toe first and could use Colavito as a gate attraction. But Tribe general manager Gabe Paul has to offer more than he did in negotiations ai the beginning of fast season to keep Colavito from being traded to n National League club. Paul hasn’t agreed to giving up some of his good young playerl like third baseman Max Alyfejn the talks so far, However, With the Indians sagging at the gate he may change his mind. A 1 .' ■ ir , * * With general manager Jim Campbell planning to enter the trading mart this winter, there are only two positions certain to be in the Tiger lineup next spring. Al Kaline will be in rightfleld and Bill Freehan will be catching. After that, It’s air a question mark. - New Haven turned in an 1m-: pressive victory last week with a i 44-7 romp over Yale, while Ca-i pbCs Chiefs were taking a drub- ] bing by Mayville, 244). The Chiefs’ biggest problems are Dwight Lee and John Mack, New Haven’s big halfbacks, who: rambled for a combined tptal of 02 years against Yale last Friday. Mack scored three touchdowns and Lee added a. pair in the easy victory. falERSmVEL Armada, a 19-12 winner over Cllntondale, travels to Memphis to meet the Yellowjackets, who squeaked by fUehmond St, Augus- tournament triumph for a local ,Seattle Won toe AABC title in 1960 and Portland, Ore., took it the following two years. The big gun for Coldwater was SPEECHLESS — Pitcher Warren Spahn of the Milwaukee Braves wipes his eye as he listens to applause after his introduction to 33,676 fans at Couhty Stadium; on hand for the’’Warren Spahn Night” Tuesday night. A special scholarship fund in Ms name and a few small gifts were part of the tribute to, Spahn. But the San Francisco Giants were not in a generous mood. They defeated Spahn and the Braves, 11-3. / North Branch’s Broncos, second hi the Souto Central League with a 2-1 record last year, lost a 40-6 decision to Marlette last week, ’ , first baseman Larry Gorman who batted in three runs with a triple In the Sixth inning. Tom Schmidt picked up the victory, hurltog nohit ball tor four innings after relieving starter Joe Schmidt In the fourth. ■ * Seattle ............... 001 000 6-1 I 3 Coldwater ........... 400 433 *—1118 1 make the .final result respectable, they’ll achieye tfaeit purpose lb Windy City Twosome in Bowling Lead def for Wisconsin. It’d tfiean that in the future other Big Ten teams — possibly Michigan or Michigan State — will be agreeable to playing West- Halas Lguds Defense in Win Over Packers CARTERS Records BOISE, Idaho (AP) continued to tumble at Westgate Lanes Tuesday night as the National Bowling Proprietors doubles tourney finished the first day of the match competition, and 4 veteran duo from Chicago, Andy Rogoznica and Jim St. John, emerged toe leaders at the end of four matches. The records went to a pair of Southwest bowlers, Luke Barlow, Hobbs, 104. and Ronnie Brown, Lamesa. Tex. Barlow fired* 300 game and joined Don Carter, St. Louis, as the only men to accept* I plish the feat in tourney history, i Schlosser does have a large squad with considerable experience. He has enough players so that the school issued a four-deep roster, not the normal three deep coming out of other places, including Wisconsin. v > APPEARS STRONGER’ Western’s backfield appears stronger than last year when toe ’ NEW YORK (AP) - George 1 Halas claims the Chicago Bears’ defensive effort against Green Bay last Sunday was a better job than their famous 7H playoff Ylc-tory over Washington in lb40. No wonder the Bears lead the National Football League in team defense. They were so effective in the opener that the packers wound up 14th and last in team offense with only ISO yards, 77 running and 73 passing. When the Bears thumped the Redskins in that playoff game long ago, Washington made only three yards* rushing but got 229 passing. “I mean it when I say the Bears played a better defensive game against Green Bay than they did in 1940,” skid Halas, the coach-general manager. ’’The defensive plays that beat the Redskins were all clutch plays. Against the Packers we had corn- sure that kept the clutch situation from arising.” ‘ duced last year to help landowners plan ahead with their reforestation projects. Official stock price lists and order blanks are available from the Department’s forestry division in Lansing, or at offices of district foresters and county extension agents, w Rain Slows Net Match LOS ANGELES (AP) - Rained out Tuesday, the Pacific Southwest Tennis tournament hopes to resume play today. mary purpose was to develop a Stephens Regains Form TORONTO (AP) - Sandy Stephens, the quarterback who ford CAI building this fall—if enough interest in ~ generated— according to SMOTC officals. Additional information can be obtained by phoning the Bloomfield Hills or Rochester boaijls of education and the Waterford recreation department. 1 \ Registrations are still being accepted in the Walled Lake class. The sessions are held at the junior high on Tuesday at 8 p.m. helped Toronto Argonauts break a five-game losing streak in his first Outing last Sunday, has been named Toronto’s No. 1 quarterback. 1 inancia U.S. Directors Planning Meet on '64 Olympics i * CHICAGO (0 — Having accepted Japan’s fornial invitation to participate ill the 1964 Otympic Games in Tokyo, the United States Olympic Committee's board of directors will close a two-day meeting today. ‘ g The board will devote much of Its time to planning for a full U.S. Olympic Committee meeting in Washington Nov. 10-11 at which time programs will be launched to determine the tfS. squad for the 1964 Games, Japanese Consul-General Shire Shimizu of Chicago- presented a leather-bound bid to Kenneth L, (Tug) Wilson, president of the U.S. Olympic Committee, to accepting the presentation, Wilson lauded Japan’s preparations for, the Olympic Games and predicted they would be the most successful New Michigaft State Law Lets You Borrow Up to 440x16 5.90x15 5.30x19 6.70x15 7.10x15 7.60x15 6.00X15* 6.30x15 \ 6.00x15* 7.50x14* 5.00x14* 5.50x14* 9.00x14* 9.50x14* 6.00x14 4.00*15* Gome ih today and ask about Seaboard’s FRESH START FLAN 1185 N. Perry St., Pontiac Phone 883-7017 UNITED TIRE SERVICE "WHERE PRICES ARE DISCOUNTEO-NOT QUALITY" 1007 Baldwin Ave. 3 MINUTES FROM DOWNTOWN PONTIAC 1 III II IglMpPM ^ENGINE snammflM GUARANTEED TUNE-UPS LOW PRICES 1 AUTOMATIC 1 I transmissions 1 EASY TERMS | OUR SPECIALTY | MOTOR EXCHANGE Ml S. Saginaw St. FE 3-7432 SEPTEMBER THE PONTIAC No Matt** How Bright the Child Simple Writing Skill Is If M TJMfue J NASON (EDITOR’S NOTE — TMs it course, be detected by anyone When forced to write a thei boy a totalled “gifted" % eighth in a series on learn- who takes the trouble to look for he stalls as long as possible a ngster is }«it laying up two- top faults and hoio to correct ft . . ... then does it ip one sitting; He far himself. them.; Alton iff mm w dlsmaved whenthe teacher fe it lades organisation and polish. CUTTING IT DOWN faced, with that algebra problem^ he should write it down carefully, then search it cprafaHy for some operation, however small,, that he can do, (hen re* write the problem and search again. That will whittle it down to his size. UikSKSivi ^UK/VUK£ j When Oils changeover is scheduled at the third grade level, parents must Insist _ that their children master longhand writing. And they must see to it that arithmetic papers are written 1 »nnJ Ikni iliAti AAninin Witt By Dr. j. M. Lovltt, Tom Cooke and Phil Evajpa w.you lead your last spade to miny’s queen and give West a art trick, hi order to hold you two West must lead a dia-md to his partnqs who must urn a» club, whereupon they t two dub tricks plus the spade art and diamond already in TUB MAN VWO WHS THE LAND VDU k Jwm nkeo—^ 10 HERE/ ALLEY OOP UCHA y DON'T LET 1M WC/flUW aiSiT FORA MOMENT By OSWALD JACOBY Take a look at toe North hand trump. If you play no conventions at all in re* >rnai| sponse to a ^ trump your best WfJ» ^.1 bet is to pass. M You will only W “ W get Into trouble W AAI if you bid. ^ L Two bearts^R figures to be a^^#A better spot ftan^fv*^ Uni HO - hump JAcunx and ordinary Stayman players cm get there by simply bidding two nsarts. Two spades will be even bettor if year partner holds four spades and Jtocohy - Stay-man makes It posable far yen to base your cake and pat it - CAPTAIN EAST “Wouldn’t you know! Just at the cocktail hour!1 BOARDING BOUSE have bear if yon had responded two hearts directly. Actually he bids two spades and yon hare found toe right spot* You will make two spade* even if you get the best defense, a spade opening and a spade return. You win the second spade In your hand, cash the ace and king of hearts and ruff a heart. jf BANG BANS' SfOOtZB DEAD/ v lognot)... ( \ocjt»petoD/ 'EfiAD.lTS working/ , THE DO& v~> wakt ^gjjpA- sfra/ogia forecast NANCY I WONDER wwy NOBODY Give® ME ANY BUSINESS Setter WATCH IT, T0/W* \ FASTCST SERVICE IN TOWN ONI YOUR PAINTER'S COLIC FROM PAINTING TWO SCREENS.* YOUR 'CHARLEY HORSES* FROMTH’ J LAWN MOWER/ READ THIS/ \ 'A CHARLEY HORSE ISA STIFF" 1 k NESS IN ARMS AND LEGS J T OF BALL PLAYERS/* GET f V BACK TO THAT LAWN/ J MAYBB SHE'LL CUT THAT [WATmaMELON Wt SAW HBI \Tca«ry womb LAST -NI0MT DONALD DUCK By Walt Disney twiujiMto T-/n ffipllh |**CBRP Sertej* l#|B|ra|B 1 — - noktk* ■ at. M 4 BY O S f KXOOO ♦ 02 ivs ' wmr BAIT A1002 > 4 A* ♦ 007* ♦** ♦ -I00 ♦ A107 5 3 to Ail 4QJ104 BOOTH it) 4KJSS $> ♦ KQ» 4 It «s V Both vulnerable. , Sreifc Wert North But 1N.T. Baai 24 Pus 24 ■ Bass pass Bass Opening toad-4 * ■ M THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1963 following are top prices coving sales of focalty grown product by growers and sold by thentta wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by die Detroit Bureau of Markets as of noon Tuesday* Produce .JjBMWaw ■ Apples, Crab, bu. .......*3.80 SktSM* • .. Apples, Mo&tosn, bu. .....1.80 Apples, Wolf River, bu. ...... Blueberries, crate .......... Cantaloup*, bu. ..........2.75 NEW YORK (APMThe stock market continued to move unevenly near Its record high in fairly active trading early this afternoon. Heavy profit taking in stude-baker, continued strength in Chrysler, weakness in airlines and a scrambled performance by the high-flying speculative issues characterised trading. Wall Street showed a degree of caution over what President Kennedy might say in Ms address to the nation tonight. The general news background remained fairly encouraging but there was no big development to spur the market one way or another. iNNMrlSl! .............. . ■ if? i So*.’ ‘ ij* Carrots, topped, bu. ................2.0 Cauliflower, do*. . ................3.00 Oelery, Pascal, stks. ............ i.as Celery. Pascal. AO do*. crates " “ uoumbera. pickle ..................0.80 .Av.... t.oo Okra, pk. btkt. ........... onions. dry. 80 lb......... Onlona. green, bob. ....... Onions. piokUng. m, ....... Parsley, curly, bob....... Parsley, root. ben. . .... Parsnips, cello pak. do*. . ::£B Turnips, fi Cabbaee. bu. ..... Collard, bu. ..... Kuna. bu. Mustard^ bu. ..... ipto'seh^bu.' Swiss Guard, bu. ., AH* AND SALAD QUEENS Eacaroie, bu, ........... Eacaroie, bleached .... Lettuce, BlbiTW.......... Lettuce., Boston, doi. .. Lettuce, leaf, bu. Poultry and Eggs DETKOIT POULTRY .. .«r ■HI at Detroit rSea»y type bona 17-10; Ukht typo bout 8-0; roasters over • lbs. 33-34; broilers and fryers 3-4 lbs. whltss It; turkeys fc*iw ~ wlw*rBMiktl*oit buying generally oompteted^ ! (AP)—Bgg prices paid POT _________Jotroit by first reoslvora (including DJI.): Whites trade A extra term 43-4 large 41-48(4; medium 35%-6t%; si large 41; medium 3644-38; small 31-3 33-3314; browns grad# A extra large oheoks 34-3714. , Comment; Market bartly steady on lam IfHlfifbja 1|_. by pilot l demand slow and buying t - jafiBUMT (AP)—Chioago jHBiWr Exohange—Butter steady; wholesale buy* lng prices unchsagtd; 03 score AA 80: IT A 60; *0 B 80; 0 C M; *144; 80 C 0714. Iggs about stoady; . wholesale burlnt Stocks Upward Uneven Tobacco* recovered moderately from recent losses. Steel* and aerospace issues were generally lower. Otis and rails were mixed. AVERAGE UP The Associated Press average of 99 stocks at noon was-upsJP at 280.7 with industrials up .9, rails unchanged and utilities off .2. Studebaker, which has behind it an astonishing rally, ran Into some sharp profit taking as sell orders accumulated and the stock was delayed in opening. Its initial transactions found the stock down % to 8—a big percentage loss—on successive trades of trimmed the loss slightly in later 5,000, 34,500 and 23,100 shares. It & Myers dipped slightly. Chrysler kept the bettor pa# of a' l-point gain while General Motors eased. Xerox rebounded 3. Polaroid and U, S. Smelting tost more than a point each. IBM arid High Voltage Engineering were down major-fraction*. Northwest Airlines dropped about 2, United Airlines a point, Pan American and American fractions, Small .gains were posted for Reynolds Tobacco, Lorillard and American Tobacco while .Liggett The New York Stock Exchange NEW ■YORK (AP)—Following Is i of MiMted stock transactions A dm___ Vont Stock Exchwgc with l;3*p. m. mipi FUtrOI LIO 'T IS? 32% fit? + ft ilrpatnc Xb 73 3744 3*44 3044 — 44 SKBKfeBgl 30 4044 4844 «% MU- Ml Ji Mil 1444 «% Ford M 1.0 884 98% 8844 8844 — 14 ------it- q. n TgH -v 3 3644 3644 36% 08 37 3044 3644 MM 7* 3* 3844 3144 - 44 Plft PL 1.38 M _r«ir .oo WfW.M FreeptS 1 mchf 1.1 144 W44-, <4 I ' Nil 4 % MW „ .... .144 0444 + 44 AmeradaP 3 101 7844 7844 7*44 — 44 St 46% 'OS; mSr 783744 8044 3044 *1 1744 1044 1044 « cul JtsnNm xOO i ZUFw l.oi JHtMlt j7{f Dome i.44g im Hosp .30 Am UPd .80 PnPCI 1. w AmMot ,80a Am NO 1.440 AmPhoto .33 /Utf Inc .40 Ampcx CP -AmpBorg .80 Amcou i.oog AnkenCh .40 ArucoSt 3 Armour L40 ArmOk 1.80 Atobls 1.30ft mriki Atlas Cp AutCant .I0g Avco Cp .00 AVCOorp-F Avast ,40b W- Polaroid .20 ProMfiO 1.80 fifiexe" Publkln ,34f Pullman L# Pur»011 i.oo Oon Clg 1.30 Sen^lsc 3 Om Mo ds I 9 jwjyp Sou Mdrta GPrecn 1.30 OFUMO .38g OFubO i.aoh. , GTel&El .08 MHriiW' Qa Pac lb osttyou iiOg OUl«ttsT.lOa OlOnAfd Jo fluudnA AM OocHmir 1 Qrwrcfa lb OrandO .60b ammt i.4o ;W. BltQE 1.34 . Bsaunlt 1.30 Bookman Beech Air .00 *tow .40 I 3.40 St ,04g _____all Jin Beth Stl 1.50 " Bigelow 1.30 Booing I Borden 1.00 Borg War I Brunswk .30p BuckeyePL i BueyEr ,30g Budd Co .80 Bullard Bulova .00 BurlJnd ,00g Burroughs 1 . 3 *3 If. (3 $0 34^ **44 + 17 48V4 4844 48% ~r M «44 . 03 y« 4! 8 ioS ^ & 18 1044 1044 M44 —ft ' 35 8444 64 64% + 44 7 ii44 im n& , 30 1044 10% 1944 — 44 30 3044 30 i 140. 10% 10% 10% 1* (9 43% 43 ' 111 044 .0 0 , 24 09% 88 88 ■ 30 li% U% 18% to 134% 134% 134% , 300 17% 37% *744 3.30% 30% 30% I 33 33% '31%. WT 80 18% 18% .{*% — % '■ « wl-. 31% H', — 44 36 80% 40% 50 •>- % 12 Uvk £% = 40 40% 40% 40% + % i«-h2PIP — 27 M% .*%,: SM4 . S°“ 3 50% K 50% * % 21 83% 53% S3%-MJf 18 wik ,J%. + 7* 104 14% 14% 14%,., 5 — 2 63% 63% 637/a .. |l ff||l|HVi El 78 74% «% — % SffiSH! 0 U% 13% 13% 4- % »**“*— •“ 18 31% |I4( 38% + % « » 51% 81 81 — %B 02 1% 1% 1% ... g T4% + % g 17 33% 33% 33%- .% fiti* SSTt 18 01% 88% 0% ... 0.. 30 38 38 — % 1H 78% 70% 70%—.% .0 30.. 33% 33%—1% 0% »% 5% 30 34% 34% 34% . ,, 1W 2844'28 N — 4i 107 14% 14% if% 30 H% 08% 88% U 14% '34% • (4% 68 0% 37% 37% % & g» i 4844 . 40% . mx RCA 1.40b Rayonler l . . Wp m pWgjmli Co RelchCh .4»f RepubAv 1 BapubSO 3 Devlon 1.10b aottU. ,10b BeynMei .50 BMIUQtl 1.00 Robertcont 1 ' Rohr Dorp i RoyDut l.Olg Royal MeR Ryder Syst it 30% . .. »KS 8!=S . 41 if. ' *• IntlHarv 3.40 InMlner 1.00ft W pk 3* M Pack 1 IntPap 1.05b *• rkt i JoneahL 2^ Joy Mfg I 173 Mlf 10% 10% + 1 65 30% 30% 30% + 1 30 37% 17%' 1741 ... CM IW .43t CallahM .171 CHICAGO P01II.TI CHICAGO (API (U8DA) - Live Po ry: wholesale buying prices unehana > 1 higher; roasters 33-24; spoolal 1 diite rook fryers l8%-30. Livestock [ the * f average clftsaes fully _______ _ _____ to high eholoo slaughter ............. ....... ft tow lOftdl of low ohoioo steers 24.00-14.60; scattering of good to low ohofN steers, 32.00-34.00; utility oowg 14.80-a few select up to 10.00. i Hogs 300. Bftrrowi and gilt* 0 hlghe sows steady to '30 higher, 2 lots of 0. 1 210-213 lbs 16.60, guifttt lots mlxett »ntf 2 310 lbs. 0.36, miked 3 »nd 3 18. riba. 16.78-18.10; (en, head of mostly 307 lb 18.38, VM, 1, I ftnd 3 300-400 lb sows 13.70-14.76: 3 and I 400-W0 13.00-13.0; boars 11.70-13.60. Veftlers 100. Stsady, eholoo and prin tandard ftnd good 33.0 Irainr 14.00-33.00. 3000-0.01 38.00; puli g changed, not enough in early supply to CHICAGO LTVEHTOCK . CHICAGO (APl-(DSDA)-HogO 6,000; fslny active, bUMhon steady to strong. h"gh*mos?lyh3fej>0 *hlgller lw?8f greatest advance on weitht* over, 400 Ibjr.i WCattle 0,000; ealves none; trailng w (laughter eteer* and holfere »•**• •»;*!!* Em ISSvw Snst iso Cerro 1.10 Oor-teW .60 CeasnaAlrc 1 TSS?> ■Pr On 4 v Chi MStP P 11 • m Mm %Vj 10 ,16% 16% 16% + 23 30% 30% 30% .... 0 0 30% 0 + \. |i % w.£ ..........%^tt KaiserA1 .0 KaysRo .40ft Kennooott 3g KernCL 2.0 KerrMcG 1 KimbClark * KlrkNat .40 KorveUe * Eresge .60s KressSH .40s Kroger 1.10 n i.«o r 2.60 _„,_Jl 1.0 CocaCol 2.70 ■, OolgPal 1.0 MUlnsR ,20g Colo F Ir OBI l.(0b Col Oas 1.10 ColFICt 1.271 OomlCre 1.0 ComlSel .sob ioUMi’IAOb' ’ ConBdls 3.30 CM»1 Ind l CnNQas 2,30 ConsPw 1.0 Cwllln .0 oontAir .log MMjpkn 'f' Contlns 2.30 ooni llof .0 Cont OU 2 ,«a Control Data IR «%' n% „■ M il% ii% io% — % 18 22% 21% 32% " 104 38% 38% 30 , , .. 3 33% il, 33 — % 0 03. «% 0 14% 14% MM 1 ... 1 31% 31% 31% — % 87 36 % 0% 0% —% : II Pm . |1% 40% 41 23 07y« < 13 38% u i% W 47 78 74% 74% — 8 28% a*Vb 70 l 87% 4- 4 102% 103% + I ® 1-1 ■*" 74% — j. 17 41% P% 7 M 70 0% 20%.20 ir X24 52% *1% 63% 11 0% 0% 88% 15 37% 37, 37% , .1 0% 044 M'/« ..... 18 48% 47% 47% - % U 31% 0% 30% — % 887 13% 13% 13% — % 37 48% 0 46 + % 31 66 67% 68 .... 33 11% 12 13% — <1 ltt H% 81% ft “»' 33 0% 68% 88% 7 % bj 1% m mm® , u Luo tbs. ,*1.00: . good 0» ,,*ft "W fB: -,~£T«| 10 lbs. JH.78-33.78^ -isvera) l«1 % 1#3% % 71 vfo K& Wt —p— ST 0> 4% 1 40 0% 41% 0% 8F Jig. * ^ p m Evans Fd ivorehp’ l ispHni Vhe ,h’n,lfi??oci0S8 ‘ +'% „ MM il% i 11 45% 41% L... 18 84 83% 84 . .. 34 {04 0% 0% + % 3 48% 0 45 — % 84 *0 40% 49% " 21 37 0%, 37 —H-— 4 M% 58% 82% .11 0 38% 0. 86 0% 34% ' 35% 31 48% M% 46 18 0% 38% 34% 34 43% 43% 43% , 18 13% 0% i0%, 8 23% 0% 23'/ linyor 1/ Imlth ^ A( ‘■'S' "I/r? "1/? "RiZ ,w ^-%a ^ 7 80% 59% MM I 13 4Ma «%.«%.4 -if-tm- 'ti% «% 7 .0 7% 7% 7%- 8 33% 0% 23% + | 88% 88 88 -3 52% 0% 82% + at.s 10 0% 85 0. 83 I h 1 11 M% 0 53 3 14% 14% U% ..J 0 0% 47% 0% + % 12 18% 18% 104 — % 22 83. 01% 81% — % xenn Gas : 33 37% 17 . 27% — %, Texaco 3ft 0 73% 78% 0. t 64 84% 84% 84% 4- % Id 0% 48% 0%....... 86 80% M% 58% + ’ » m 3« »%.......... 367 101 183% 10%.+»% 81 70% 78 70%^+ “ 10 73% 73% 7|% ■ 10 7 7 7 ... 10 30% 28% 36% 4 0 48% 4444 44% - ;s a a''Baft si s% ft £ 5 11% 11% 11% 4 M 24 18% U% 10% — % ft «% u sa-a i ir 0 0% 48% 48% -0 87% 17% 37% -. | 10 M U 133 40% 0% 0 -% 18 1% 10% UK ... , 4*:~WSuJL, 11% 4 % 6 1 StRegP 1.40b •anDIm .0ft Schenley l |9d .40 (4 13% 13% 13% 0 38% 23% 32% 4> 154 47% 45% 48% 4l WgKk SOuPac 1.40 Ry 2.0 itdOUCal 3b gjfgg&fMb StaiiffCh LTO SterlDrug .66 itowp ^.0b Bunray 1.40 iwifl 1.0 -K— 15 35% 35 0 — 10 0 0% 0% -20 70% 76% 70% f! : a Bn a±a lot a sa a 10 24% 24% 34% ... , 2 22% 0% 28% 4 % 0 30% 30 30% 4 % U 10% 10% 10% — a as afii-8 0 10% 11% 16% 44 71% 70% 70% Uttohln 1.67t . 275 M% /70_ 0% —1% k Fort 1 k V fad __,imn 1.46g LOFOls 2.60 LlbMON «f LlgghM 6 , LockhA 1/ Loews Than LoneSCem 1 LoneBOaa 1 LonglslLt .86 )kTr 1.80 _Jm liw Mad M Oar Martin Ifj ‘ ivDOt 3.0 jbonAlr lb HeadCp ni im > .30g 1.0 i .40a, i u* Jorreil .80-Motorola l Mat AlrUn. NatBliel.0 NatCan ,1U ! VCashR 1.0 jfffijj, 2.30 0 37% /30%* 37. -5 18% 18% 10% ., 14 21 0% 21 n 33 83% 23% 0% 4 30 0%, 32 y. 32% 4 ' 0 u% S% 30 44% 0% 44% 4 % —M— « 30% 37% «%-33 11% 20% 21 .. 8 31 0%’ 0% {! 30 43% 0% 43% .. i-aaaiK 1 0% «% 0%4 % 33 m 81% fi% *1 40% 40% «% , .. if Aval s 1 si sf-? 15 31% 37% 37% -Xl4 33% 33% 0%‘4- 30 10% 10% 10% 4l *7 05 M% 0% 4 t, fi» iPJ Mf. —N— s s a a IpfriP! 18 0 0% 08% — % 30 28% 0% 0% 4 % id a 17 48% 45% 46% 4 1J Nwst Alrl 1 Norton 1.0 Nwwlch la >, OtleElev iM OutMar .40^ Fao GbE 1 Pae Petrol PaoTirr 1.0 KhAAn.' .0 ParamPlot 2 FafflMrl PeabCoal .70 *.... .% 34 41% 41% ill i M 1... laa-ara a a.a a SiSi-i j 62 30% 37% , 38% 4 % 1 01% 0% 81%.— i p IBs ' 7| »% ii% Wl-4, 10 M% 0% 0% 41 —p-^ yj 13 34 0% 33% .. m 13% H mi» ft sj ft aic J1 p Penney PaFwLt m ft ftTi «% 1%71 ft? l i fe l r lari 7 7% 7% 7% - % 84 M% 48% 0% 33 48% 47% 47% — % 0 0% 0% 0% - % , 12 33% 33% 33% . 0 0% 07% “0 4 48 74% 74% 74% ., 18 38 38 0: 4 21 33% 5 33% 4 -j4}bHB"“r 83% 03% 63% 4 7» 30% 14% 0% -130 0% 83% 0% — % 110 18% »% 16% I “■ 87 30% 0% 0% . I • « « ’ «% - % 0 74% 74 ,74% i | 0 13% 13% 13% 0 > i a riavia, where he recently visited, ^f^’a/il^PTOdSh higher grate yields than Pontiac Division Manag-K.. ...T , er Charles F. Brown, although because of uw Kinnear’s successor as person-!01 Ierunzer- Business Notes Roger F. Kinnear, 2681 McClte* tock, Waterford Township,, has been named {personnel and safety supervisor of Consumers Pow* er Co.’s Macomb Divisiori at East Detroit. ^Kinnear. , been with Con- since graduating from.Unl- ^ i:llH|Ver8ity. of tllch-j ll . . ImM to • «»* serving in Pon-: '.7i% tide, Royal Oak, .i.4o% Jackson and] 1 nel and safety assistant here has ‘{not been named. Trl Ooot .Mg Texfiut .00 ToxPCO 1.20 foxFLd .35* Textron 1.40 ■ ■« IO XOJk 30% 10% 1 0 0% 0% 0% ft 37 Stl k * Sill............... X10 47% 47 47% — % IN 33% 33% 0% 4 % 23 7|% 70% 78% “ 33 0% 0% 30% 10 37% 36% 17% 13 44% 44% 44% I 0% 8% 8% 44 34% 0 34 17 30 0% 0% 4 17% 17% 17% ... ' 4 0% 0 0 '4'% 13 0% 43% 44% 4 % 8 00 M% 0% 7 0% 0% 0% 5 42% 42% 42% XlO 83% 03% 03% , I 10 0% 41% 48%-% IB smelt a X30 100% 0% 07 — % .... 0 10 , 10%. 10% ..... 11 0% 34% 34%—% 0 45% 45% 40% ' “ —V— ^Alro/^T” UnFruif .to! *Qp 1.0 ^JSKlTr USBorx .0 USFrht 1.0a IHj US Line* 2b USPtywood 3 US Rub 3.0 T8 smelt a ] rn7^elCl.0?p M* Upjohn .i Keyitone Income K-l ... Keystone Growth K-3 ... Mxu. Investors Orowth . Mats. Investors Trust .. Putnam Growth ........ ~il«vlsloq Electronics . eillngtoh Fund .......... Indsor Fund ,.t........ lift0, Air L l WUnToi 1.40 luiw lA*. WIIool QI ij H 0% 30% 0% - % 8 18% 10% 10% -■% 11 70% 70% 70% 4 % 43 43% 43% 0% . *;jj% - 6% 87 30%' 20% 35% - 4k - 10 *4 03% 03% If 42 S g% g|l=» U 81% 01% K% — % 1 ff 37 37 4 37 * T: . w J % % 18 7: jo% 0 MT ATl —X— 87 03 170 Compiled by Th* Associated Press .. 30.0 10.1 f 10U— W.1 10.0 140.0 170.0 111.0 161.3 1MJ 04.; . 30.0 10$ ..mu io mf m 377.1 iri 10.0 30.1 .30.0 07.0 110.3 30.4 POW-JOI ■ ,,,, Sleek* 4*% 0 Jndu* Snake Came on the Ride MIDLAND, Tex. ffl-“Snakes alive” shouted Bill Shaddox, at the controls of the J. P. Gib-bins, Inc., plane, flying at 7,500 feet, to, Roy Minear, company vice president, when he spotted a shake sticking out about six inches from the left wing, Hie snake kept working himself out until about a foot and a half was showing, but gave up and retreated to the whig. The men returned to Midland and cplled police to verify their flying snake story. A IVt foot bull snake was removed from Its hiding place. ’BURDEN’ In the Soviet Union, Khrushchev said some form officials regard their fertilizer allotments as a burden. “The matter has reached the point where directors of some collective and state farms must be persistently reminded to eake fertilizer they have been allotted out of the storehouse arid not let tt lay for months,” he said. Treasury Position WASHINGTON -41l*r.___________ of the Trcaiury compared with eer--ata'a yoar moi < e S Sept. 18, ..... 0 4.070,01 »i year i jjO " .........,.* if,00,000,017.0 fMBl yt. I 17,170,440.03.04 ..........*007,03,420,080.37 .......... 8 18.00.147,558.0 Dopoiiu ti Jvfir l “Hhdrawa Bank Promotes Two Employes Two Community National Bank, appointments, one the naming of a new assistant cashier, have been announced by A. C. Girard, president and chairman of the John E. Gardiner has been appointed assistant cashier and assigned to the Bloomfield Hills office, 25 W. Long Lake. post as manager of the Woodward Avenue office, 900 ■j ............21 be tskm over DeaoiUo meat year f ... j by MarvinG. Caswell. .July, 1 ' t ll.471.04.80.Ml * ,■■■■'■ ' ■■■"■ 7B Withdrawal! llical yr. f 0,171,377,077:18^— Total debt ... J... 830,303,011,333.40 .... i | if 07 44t,lli.0 Onion otherwise noted, rani* ot dtvl-•nd* In tit foregoing table are annual Isbureements bused on the Inst quarterly extra'divTSends or*paymwii nmC,dp*lg-,a^l» extra or e ! 40 Bonds ........ ; 110 Hlgner grade re 10 Seoond grade re 110 Public utilities ) i Industrials .... . 0.0+0.01 . 004*0 . 00.47 + 0.00 Orders From Russia Ups Wheat Futures CHICAGO (AP) - Wheat fu-teres were mostly Ann in early transactions oh the board of trade; reflecting additional pur- . BOND AVBRAGES _ Compiled by Tbs Aseselotsd Prsss 0 0 10 10 U '. RAII. lad. VIII. Fgfs. L. Yd t Change i ... ~ Wad. 81.6 101.4 litMHPPMI ^ n. mt ii.i ui.i -M?:.'ja' ^ .............. SftrnX *1.7 m ft* If Chases of wheat by Russia, fe Z 6raEB tgv& 0 2 iftl ft* |:S h?d towght “&pumkrnOT S S ft? 10* 0* ft;* bushelspf wheat from |f *rr8a/7.., w-tr.™ Aisflar 190 low 0.1 0.7 0.7 **i; «.* Australia after purchasing 228 ,v' ..."■......' Imillion bushels from Canada over American Stack Exch. I?1® weekend sfinred new demand igures attar dsetmal point, an .i.hths Wh«^ American stocks Trade advices Said the Rus- NEW YORK (AF) — Afaierlcsn Stock ~ tivldends In *ri------ Irlden < omitted,. deferred or. JMHMR. Mum as last dividend meeting., r—tie-ilared or paid in 100 plus , slock dlvl-i*t)d. t — Paid In stoek during 1982.1 istimated oaab valuo. on ek-dlvlasnd or, ix dUiflputlo^^ate. oidr/CslleS. x -Ex dividend? y-Ex Dlvi-lend and sales In full, x-dls—Ex dlstrlbu-Ion, xr—Ex rights, xw—Without war-/ant|. »w—With warrants, wd—|men ms-mauled, wi—when issued, nd-Nwt day XVfif Cal ZlVw ... 0% con* Mng ... 3T I Creme Pet ... 43% 1 dwwi'<;“ % 1 Imp Oil AO I Ins N Am ... 0% ' sians, facing a shortage of grains as a result of adverse conditions, had token an option pl an arbi-tional million bushels of Australia wheat, all for delivery in 1904. GARDINER Gardiner, who lives At 5188 Drayton, Independence Township with hi* wife and three children, lies been with' CNB eight years. I U. 4 ' p Girard paid his new post was crested in line with the bank* policy of adding personnel to compliment customer growth. Caswell, married and the father of taro, resides at 167 W. Cornell. , n By ROGER E. SPEAR Q. “With hank interest at 1' per cent, Is stock investment -realty profitable? We are I family with two young children, an average income, and we’re looking for further earning* to offset the constantly increasing costs of c a IM and family maintenance. Do yen still recommend Sears. Roebuck?” FJF. A. If I may say so, I think your secorid sentence answers your first question. Everyone should have a savings account sufficient to provide for any contingency that may develop. But, except that the Interest is. compounded, savings accounts do not grow; and 110,000 of principal in tiie bank will re-mainthe same ten years hence. Good stocks; gaining steadily in earning* and dividends, can substantially increase the amount ' of your capital by rising in price as growth develops. Ten years ago, Sears, Roebuck sold for. one-fifth its present price. I do not know whether it ' will do as well oyer the next ten years, but I think it is • safe stock and I recopunend it to you. Q„ “I am attaching a News . Letter put eiit by Calpak, the ‘ company 1 Work for, which I .. think you wnt.ftod interesting. Mly I ask year opinion ef Cal-ifornla Packing stock, since I own these shares?” GJ. A. I appreciate receiving your News Letter, which indicates that California Packing is continuing to make progress in the first fiscal quarter ef 1968-64. I consider the eonsuiqer food companies excellent vehicles for growth. California Packing IADs largely into this group because,/ of the strong consumer following, for its Del Monte brand. $ te addition, of course, tiie Com*, pany is tiie world’s largest pack*/ er of fruits and vegetables* and ' operating, results are sometimes affected by the selling price of food! Packed- Thera have been some variations in earnings over the past ten years, but the trend has been definltelv upward and has brought stockholders nine successive annual dividend to* GMpaftr' ,£•*!'4 fcMyiH I like the shares ind would rotate my holdings. A Mr. Spear cannot answer an mail personally but will answer all questions possible in his column. Write General Features Corp., 250 Park Ave., New York 17, N.Y. f ™ m (Copyright 1003) News in BrM Georgette Berwager, 4100 Elizabeth Lake Reed; Waterford Township, told police yesterday; that miscellaneous items valued at |80 were stolen from her house.. Two wristwatdhee worth |M" wero stolen from Fred N. Pauli; Jeweler* at IB W. Huron last night by smashing a display Wte- Ralph Long, 4444 Monroe, Waterford Township, told poUce yesterday that a tiro and wheal valued at 267 were stolen from his car parked to the garage. A fire to the kitchen ef tfc*. home of James Yeargto, 82 Elm, caused an estimated damage of 81,750 to the building and contents, according to Pontiac flra officials, who said the blase started when a pot of food on ton' stove boiled over. Enroll how for clatsoo St Ve --Dor Millinery. 324-5437. -adv., MOM’S 10 cent sale, itomitoy!'' 1-12, IhdiAnwood and BAMwte;, ; -«dv St. Paul Methodist Chhrdk will be holding thrir semi-annual rummage srie,lnri., Sapt. 20, faja.to 8 pm. 620 Romeo Rd., Rochestfr, *HUl»+, Rummage Sale ThartlAmrs Friday, Saturday. 10 until 1 Joliet off Airport Rd. h supper, Friday, > to 6 p.m. 20, 8 _ . — . Chureh. Adults toils 1 PRESS, WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 18, 1968 ■ Heart Patient Aid: r^ 'Get Back fo Work PHILADELPHIA (AP)--Amer-lea’s “Physician if toe Year” IP | heart attack Is devastating but raraiy crippling, and only^ manently damaging if the patient to resume near'normal work irittln HI dagrs. “After four months the chances V of a patient getting back to work 'lit all definttely goes down,” says Dr. David Gelfand, international* ly famous cardiologist who heads heart departments at Philadelphia General Hospital and Kensington Hospital. “Some people accept a heart at-tyfc as fate, as port of life, re* cover sod go back to wotk,” Gel-land says. “Others take it as a A sentence of $60 and $20 costs was imposed for the disorderly person charge and a cost of $15 was set for the assault and battery. Mrs. Schmitzer was given 80 days to pay toe $95. Pontiac TWp. burglar tp Gft 6-Month Term flMahfaiw-year-old Donald W. Gardner, of 2251 Old Salem, Pontiac Township, was sentenced yesterday jo nix months in toe county Jtfi and three years’ probation for A burglary be edmittea in court Sept. 3. :: Gardner was sentenced by Ckr* cult Court Judge Frederick C. jmpp The youth bad pleaded "ty to breaking and entering a ‘ 58 Ofgyke, Pontiac Town- guilty I bar at ship, AUjK-vJp; of beer end 10 bottles of |9 Police Chase Ends in Jail for Woman nhd tiro Krumboltz, Webster City, Iowa, swerved off 1 Highway 65 and plowed through • heavy wooden fence last night. Three posts impaled car, one.going through toe steering wheel pnd grazing Krumboltz’ chest. He escaped in-Jury/-. . i f \*t, A 24-year-old woman who crashed her car bead-on with another while leading Holly police on a high-speed chase was sentenced to 80 days in the county jail yesterday and ordered to pay a $100 fine and $25 court costs. Mrs. Joan S. Malts, 421 Harden, Holly, pleaded guilty to a charge of drank driving when she appeared before Justice George DeLand. Her driver’ license Win automatically be suspended by toe state for 90 days. She was arrested shortly after 11 p.m. Monday when sh smashed into a car driven Paul J. Gazetti, 34, of 1011 Marion, HoUy. FORMER POLICE CHIEF Gazetti, a former chief of police in Holly, was on his way from work in Flint, wjiere he is plant guard, when the accident occurred on North Holly Road; just south of Quick. '■W Gazetti was taken to S(. Joseph Hospital ,in Flint where he Is listed in good condition. Mrs. Mails suffered minor injuries but was ndt hospitalized.' '' Patrolman Edward Stout, who was in pursuit of Mrs. Molts, reached speeds up to 85 miles per the league and is being enlarged members who do not belong to toe league. Funds to carry on research on toe application of toe state constitution’s county home rale, provision will be sought immediately, said Caw. He said he is contacting political leaders of both major parties, service clubs, chambers of commerce, the Michigan Municipal League, labor unions and other groups for new committee members. SECRETARY Mrs. Doris Mosher of 551 Mo-hegan, Bloomfield Township, was elected council secretary. She is leader of the American Association of University Women. Other members include Mrs. Harriett Phillips of 2510 W. Ray-court, Huntington Woods, a former county Supervisor and leading Democrat; Mrs. Jo h n D. Rumsey of 5950 Wing Lake, Bloomfield Township, representing the League of Women Voters; Frederick C. Nash, 130 Endi-cott Road, Bloomfield Hills, who served as general counsel of the U.S. Department of Commerce under toe past administration. Also, Bloomfield Hills Commissioner Henry Woolfenden, a lead-in the recent state constltu-tlon ol convention; Huntington Woods Mayor David .Calhoun; Probate Judge Norman Barnard and White Lake Township Supervisor Edward Cheyzj COmetery. His body is at the William F. Davis Funeral Home. Mr. Leonard, a member of the Rocky Blasts Foreign Policy Charges ifWC Weakans the Western Alliance Ex-News Director, Scripps Scion, Dies DETROIT (A — James Scripps Whitcomb, 71, a former director and measurer of The Detroit News and a grandson of the News’ founder, died yesterday to Fprd Hospital. Whitcomb’s grandfather, Janies E. Scripps, founded the Newt to 1873. Bus father Edgar B. Whltconfb, preceded hi® on toe News’ board of directors. Sr ★ ★ Whitcomb was named a News director in 1936 and added the duties of treasurer in 1952. He retired to 1962. He also Was a member of the Detroit Institute Arts'. Commission, serving as its that began to downtown Holly. hour during the three-mile cha'se president for 10 of his 22 years on the commission. GLEN FALLS, N.Y. (UFI) -Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, speaking to a crowd to a campaign spirit, charged last night that the Kennedy administration had weakened the' Western alliance through unilateral negotiations with the Soviet Unteln. Rockefeller, who has promised to announce by toe end of the year if he will seek toe 1064 Republican presidential nomination, also renewed his attack on President Kennedy’s fiscal policies. The governor said that in toe' Elsenhower administration tiie late Secretary of State John Foster Dulles made sure that the United States? position represented that of its allies before engaging in talks with Russia. “Now we are negotffittog and signing treaties,” he said. “They are asking our allies afterward, without, consultation, and publicly shaming them into a position that if they don’t sign toe whole world is looking at them ahd turning against them.” It wair the second straight night that Rockefeller had criticized Kennedy’s foreign policy, without menttehtog toe recently signed nuclear test-ban treaty. WiU follow in White Lakh Cemetery. A retired watchmaker, Mr. Mayer died Monday after a four-month lllhess. \ The Rosaiy wiU be recited at p.m. todjty' at toe Flumerfelt Funeral Hompi Oxford. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Barbara Crawford of Warren, and a son, Edward of Lake Orion. LESTER GIBBARD IMLAY CITY - Service for * e s t e r Gibbard, 81, wfil be 3 j.m. Saturday at the Muir Brothers Funeral Home. Burial will, follow to Imlay Township Cemetery. Mr. Gibbard died yesterday after a long Illness. ^ Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Eleanor Peaslee and Mrs. Evelyn JLaidler, both of Attica; six sons, We n dell/Leon, and Warren, all of Imlay City, and Clare of Hialeah, Fla,. Vernon of Attica and Leo of Charlotte, N;C. Also surviving are 13 grandchildren and four great-grand-children. Last night, in Accord, N-Y^ his said failure to consult the Western aUles in talks with Russia had “eroded” their will to resist communism. to his talks here, Rockefeller said tito administration had faUed to spur national economic growth ahd curb unemployment sufficiently, Members of too group Which greeted RockefeUer carried pictures of top governor and signs reading^ “Rocky ahd Happy to 1984.” JHa was accompanied by his wife, Margaretto (Happy) Rockefeller. Nixon Declines' to Enter Ballot in West Virginia WHEELING, W. Va. (AP) -State Republican Chairman Howard V. Corcoran said Tuesday former Vice President Richard M. Nixon' has declined to enter the West Virginia Republican presidential primary next May. ' In a letter to Corcoran, Nixon wrote, “At this time I believe that my best service . . , can be rendered as a constructive, Independent critic of the Kennedy administration and its policies rather than as a candidate.” ok ★ . ★ Corcoran hid invited Nixon, loser to President Kennedy in 1960, and several other prominent Re-* publicans, including Sen, Barry Goldwater of Arizona and Gov. Nelson A. RockefeUer of New York to enter the primary. No commitment has been received from Goldwater or RockefeUer. Cbal Convtrti to Energy Energy produced by one pound Of coal burned to a modern electric generating station equals the * energy exerted by a man working a fuU week. TOl PONTIAC PB^^TOPNESBAlT, SEPTEMBER X 8, 1963 c-~i.il w m w R E S If L T S ? «wirs gLSr^to.VB&ASB and Milton Irani; dear slater o' Mr*, Sarah (Earl) Shelton, Mr* Verda Smith «nd Elmer H. Bit dren. Funeral arrangements are HADJI. SEPTEMBER W Mk "ABY JEFFERY L„ 5135 Mary ue, Clarkston, Michigan; be- A D S Announcemstin ' | GET OUT OF DEBT ON.A PLAN you can . ,v isn - Michigan credit I counselors f»y Off Yoiir Bills . JNjrowfelwr* a*15«~iifc. , City Adjustment Service Hg ,W. Huron FB 5-9281 !unsral Directors 4 Marion vfeANKEfft, lit ru»-mtt: age s»: dear sister of Mr*. Ma^ ffi.' .jomiaeni. Mrs. Laura I. MUeiarakl and Luotus H. Davis. Funeral sendee «LU be held Thursday, September It at 3 p,m. Ml .the D. B. Purslay Funeral Home with Dr. Milton H: Bank officiating. interment In Perry ff fee WM Mi D. I. Ptirsletr Wneral Home. 110 Coats Road, HUS unon Township; age 77! beloved wlfe of Arthur Empty; dear mother of James itopay and Florence Empey; dear sister of Imrinbei Hoifenmire and Mrs, Bessie Metealf; alto survived by tlx grandchildren. Funeral win be held Thursday. Beptei C. F. Bherman Funeral 1 D. E. Pursley . FUNERAL HOME EXPERIENCED LOCKE MC Donelson-Johns mmoois i FUNERAL HOME S Pontiac for 50 Years AverX ' -FE m iKS-GRIFFiN FUNr- | --- 'Thoughtful Be Voorhees-Siple ^stabll^^lver 40 Years' Cemetery loti PERRY MOUNT IT oordon* ., SIX-ORAVE LOT; CHOICE LOCA-" to "0»kvtow” to Royal Oak, ■nHE | F SO% REPLIES— At II a.m. Today there were replies at The | Press office in the following boxes; 17, 20, 21, 23, 26, 39, 40, 48, 80, 56, 62, <4, 70, 81, 84,85, 80, 61, 100. finJnB Johns Funeral Home. HARRMON. SEPTEMBER 10, 19*3, ROBY F., H Florence; age “• beloved wife at John B. He son; dear Ester of Mm Emma LOOT! BLACK AND WHITE 4300. Bald Mounteto Recreation area, LOST—MALE BBAOLE. BLacSL brown, black harness and CARL. WMOI$K|PKMfViR ' -SALESMAN Guaranteed salary, , fra* vans on, tree insurancs, free hospitalisation, conteev Jack Rafoto 198 W. How- Blood Donors URGENTLY NEEDED |5 Rh Positive, 27 Rb NegaUv* DETROIT BLOOD SERVICE U SOUTH CAM FE 44341 Now Open Mon- thru Fri. BORINA MtaLL HAND (O EJWB..1A J _®P?Efi2r’ tJSJS is. lue.. MI 7-1EH CAB DRIVERS,’DAY AND NIOHT shifts, apply Chtof Cab Co.. Parlor , ST Waldron HatK . " ' - CLBRk fAr general mu8 flora work, over It, must havs driver’s Itosnsa. Exp. preferred, stop in fgr Intomsw |ra * m| Certified t . Arc Welders ^ghbls of pagslpf Jf»v> Designers Detailers Checker! Draftsman I hr. plus p«r week on tons grams, frin|0 bsnsflts. top paj fcpm*n PARMCO ENGINEERING Jl Jtstoii H _ j, Oil II MUs bat, Adams and C> Help Wanted Male DIE MAKER TO BUILU AND malntain dtos tar madi111" stamping plant, located Disturbed In yoiir present Work, 92 yr. old msn^S-goJ^Sfe*tbne- posiUmi^lSoo per week starting salary, plus-many other benefits. PE 2-0219; DO YOU LIKE TO WORK? Do you like steady work? *\> you prefer good working Condl- ra you In your lata 40’s of aarly Ms? . if so we have an oponlnt lor 3 men for JanttorlM J6SW3..,. • tbit versatile _ Interesting' » rad fun. Write Ponttas new $100 • MONTHLY FOR WEARING nnggs received as oxtow ■________■ show Fashion Frocks friends. 50 investment;' canvaa- L* M-5M4-, Cta- [OWER 1-2558. „ BABY SITTER, REFERENCE; OWN transportation; Judah Lake Estates, pB^srafiR wanTbd To1 XMK hi wKmrmF- for full time employment. Dalby Radio R TV. 343 K. Lehtgh, EXPERIENCED CAR WASHER, 149 EXPERIENCED SERVICE STATION ATTENDANTS, STEADY EMPLOYMENT. APPLY MOBIL STATION AT CORNER OF MAPLE AND ADAMS. BIRMINGHAM. GAS STATION ATTENDANT-. MUST be experienced in lubrication and minor repairs. — **”" Sunoco Statlo MaplsRds. 1. Good pay. Apply qas stati’on attendant, ll tune-up and ■ >d working con >blle Seryfce. 5 OAS ATTENDANT AND UGHTME- ORILL MAN A u* iron nunnuwwi ui U and chalk rendering, ne and paste-up experi-ed. Good starting salary and Oompany Mneftto. Past growing. Birmingham based nationally unto' promotion and markatfog firm. Bend resume to Pontiac press. MEN'S CLOTHING SALESMAN. EX-perlence required. Mr. Sobwerti, Lion afore. Miracle Mile. ikAN 'FOR1; AVUWON 'SUPPLY business, .must b qutred. Unlimited opportunity i-. advanceomenl. naUonal^ or ganlsa- .MECHANIC Must havs Hydramatto transmission experience and or jtood tune-up bid, Pontiac aaalersklp. Must have tools. 693-8252. All tw MiWD RH -.ji college d#> If ,0 math and staaetlos. it rtwrkatlng manager of BSwmStMjmiiiy^ riiwMebi presentations and statistical planning. send reeume to Box 20, Pon-a— Praei. - DEEDED : 7 MEN AT ONCE NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY , payroll with profit plea and jh^h lmmsdlate_ewninfs. Sght * have references, FE 3-9071 It PART TIME Men .needed at once for delivery >r sites work on established route*. We train. Earn 23 an nbur,. FE Professional Career INSURANCE SALES 2410, a. mo. starting salary, plus comintoston, pays fringe benefits, paid vacation ulus bonus. Up to ■ a«* 44, Ft 2-W31. , 11 REAL ESTATE SALESMAN sinter and form market. Yaw around work. Knowledge of nuvk- apmt. , 303-2991 for interview ....,______LawKr__________ service. 0734349. r2aL 1 'ESTATERALIRMiN.... Kfl SAL 1 (Into • W SI 4s. I d prsfL.-„ _ 1 FB 2-3471, i wanted. 200 house project and apertment. WE 1-4000, LI EBMpSowm. * mWR'A^NDARTS, MOW bB married and steady. Apply ,*-4 p m. on'^SHEK,EXraHiiNCBD. SILk FINISHER And wool pressor, top pay, paid vacation, voorhsis Cleaners, 4120 w. Walton *| sjlihabaw, Drayton graph ahd~W. Maple, (wililt ^*i mimm'vvti ma~vmwo work, ,[apply svs*. Roeto’s, 3171 Dixie Hwyv > ■■■ wiX^^Mvrin WiJiljlilkl,!,!;,, Daft, steady. Moray’s O' ^Country Club. 3220 Unto Rd., off Commerce Rd. 1 triMfosmel TO CALL " ^ F\\ Building Sirvics-SEppUM H Woodeti Pallets {or Satis' WAITRESS Jeffries Pine. Foods. 1! r A IT R ESS WANTED. „ VICTOR Lynn Restaurant, Drayton Ffoilto. ;.jagj^u!5.rDBaaaj«i«s» PrssyinflMng 5 TqilgriR| 17 DRESSMAKING. ALTE|UtION8 ~.;tW42mi2lW, itidland ' .............TA*LQE«jg.l'>i£- couple, ran1........... apply 73 Clark St.. '4:82 am. i S ETEr*" Sr7 . 2, 3:2 PONTIAC LAKE NUR8INO HOME, catering to men and women, (790 Arlington, Phone 073-3142, exc. care, epeclal dins for patients, professional nurse* right around the clock, physician on call, state -approved, beautiful surrounding*, with Shorn* atmo-spher*. -a VACANCY FOR ELDERLY OR CON-valescent person* In NUfiM' Home. __ COMMISSIONS IN real estate. Two openings. Contact Mr. warden for Interview. WARD-' EN REALTY. 3434 W. Huron. 333- MANY BU8INEM £jM6 ADVBRTl2-lng Him* now need resident typ-tot*. Typtote era earn 245465 weekly with adjustable working hours. Spring FlaM.JftMWjfrt^ HOUSEMAN OR HOUSEKEEPER, neat, mature map or Woman to five in, 2 m family, Hmttt have own Car Bob’s. Van Service MOVING AND STORAfMS REASONABLE RATES ;afejfoggm2r-10 Yean Effl||j|nBJ ROBERT TOMPKINS OR 4-1212 Palntiwfl & PscoratiHg 23 -l PAINTING, FREE ESTIMATES. required, fit day* week, own room and TVr In nice, Bloomfield Hills A-l DECORATING - PA1NTINO -plaatoring — papering; Fra# aat„ dlacbunU for cash, 682-0620. ADULTS ONLY 3 ROOMS AND bath, Call MI 4-14M. ■ M.mMrsBlSctoj;^i^-7m,for ap* polntment. ilbdZr IRfTERIOR DECORATOR. Papering, FB *4343. ALL NEW. EXCELLENT WEST Side location, let floor, Strictly private. 1 or 3 ladle*. ( a.m. to 3 HAVE AN IMMEDIATE OPENINO for 3 eatos pewet in our real estate department. Experience preferred but WlU jjjiln lf neeeeeary. Plenty gfojfjptmMnfoui. eNpert painting, drcoAat-Ing, paper removing. OR 3-7224. pjm. Call FE 5-2432. Aft«r 6, 383- GRIFFIS BROTHER* Commercial—Residential Painting and decorating OR 34049 bachelor — 3 Room private, , carpeted, aloe. 3334372. CLEAN 6 ROOMS, NEAR GEN-eral, adults only, FE 3-49*6. establIshEdxwatkhis route, earning above average. PE 2-3053. MASON THOMPSON—DECORATOR, Interior-Exterior. FE 443*4. EFFICIENCY^ ApARjfMENTa 6n KITCHEN HELP WAmngD, MUST be beat and dependable, It or orar, apply In person only, 3**i —Union Lake Rd. at Commerce PAINT IT NOW Done for you at a re**, price. uShtiee tocl.,*’22* *weok, 8M* Highland Rd.. Mrs. LUey, 673-1190. KITCHENETTE APARTMENT, ON PoSnae Lake-Rd. *73-I94fc;- — Saks Hslp, Msis-PiliMils l-A $25 GUARANTEE - Salary plus commission. Working from horn by tetopbone. No selling. Car nteeaaary, call -before U —~m iW3, Executive—Part-Time Work 2 to 2 p.m. — training salesman. 220 to 2120 a week. Car necessary, call . before it noon. 1414481 ' TOY DEMONSTRATORS yean With refwMMK4mi4y at iM Motor Satoi. 2527 Dixie High-,,-y or ciB OB 44102. OOMO TO"'SOUTHERN CAliFOR- EVELYN EDWARDS "VOCATIONAL COUNSELING SRRVICB" Telephone FE 4^0584 - Young I______ For olortoal duTtoa and good typing. Must be M(h echool graduate. Midwest Employment FB 54227 405 Fonttoc gtato Bank Building InitractioRi—$chos(t ,10 BRAHMS SCHOOL OF MUSIC 7533 HtoriaM Rd, »Ura of 11 b*a* trainer accord loTm. ** I for eoUaco or b* ibm Training Learn IBM, Keypunch or mi ohlhe operation and wiring, week courses available. Approvi by wohjfMi r ' " cation. Its* pu..-------- Fre* parking, -financing ranged, . . ., ■ ■ SYSTEMS INSTITUTE | 32 B. Nine Mile, Haial Fart 547-4301 SEMI-DIESEL DRIVER TRAINING Learn to operate over lb* .road equipment. Actual fieM training can qualify you for Ugh earning*-Budfet forms and piaosrnfnl’ald PIANO ■ fe t-imr-TT^? VOICE LESSONS Ixpsrlsnoed teacher Detroit Institute of 4 In Pontiac os further ^ilormi f*s*}f*irE Work Wonted Malt kinds. FE C^PENTER^WORK. FREE EBTI- LIGHT HAUUHO. HAND DltKUNO SEMI-RBlriftlh..'^tto*ih. REA- Work Waiitwi Psmale 12 2 WOMEN WANT WALL WAS and house Meaning, FB 1-7501. KXP*RI»NCEfc,feYlfitF»R Building Ssnfict-Sappiitt 13 Wk It’S COMPLETE LANDSCAPINO, sodding, grading, etc. FE 4-4235. . MOVING SERVICE, REASON- Tslevition-Radio Strides 24 TraRspertation Wiiitiii Httlthtld 0ttd» 24 auction sale evert satur- OR 34047 or MElroe* 74112; iinn eon’s. FE 44221._v WANT TO BUY FURNITURE AND appliances or anything df value. Hall'* Auetton Bales, 705 W. Clark-a ton Rd., Lake Orton, MY 1-1271 orMY24l4lT 1ITER8 • IAOH1NRB SEWINO ^MACHH used OFFicHmSilmruiiE. riucs WwHftd tt Rtwl jfl EMPLOYED BUSINESS WOMAN need* fiat, terraoe or aparuneM. Preferably two bedroom*. Must be nto*. and^clean. Reply to Fonttoc cloee In l*k fAITim. Realty. FI TENANTS WAIT 1‘ «#■ Sham Utdin Hwrtm 33 room couple to snare •> and Sundays 0 (c BUILDER Need* loll In Pontlao. Immediate 52»9i7lP%e^mva}^ Realty** ' •GASH 48 HOURS LAND fXW^CTS-BOMBS WRIGHT 323 Oakland Ara, FB 2-ti; JOHNSON SAYS: Watch our sold eigne all m town. List your borneIrlth ue. w MWi ^ Wh° °“ ^AUGUST JQHNSQNL 'mWm J2L LIST YOUR Ht" ifoiSSr' HEwEinroC-orated. aunoM new. Very, -raft reasonable. REAL VALUE, 5» 4-BEDROOM, I BATH2. FULL ijjtl- ROOMS ON FIRST FLOOR, FULL 1-TTr- *t 422. Orahard L'S*t!Ul»Su 34303. BOULBviRD lfMldlri'S ' ' — 2 Bedroom Unit — - 272 Per Month ->t J«Vd..i» V. FB 4-7033 161 LEAUI OB-SALE -* CLEAN 3-bedroom, lake privileges, fenced ysnl. 1835 Petralto near Ontoh Lake , VlUSgt. , ;• , LOTUS LAkE. WATERFORb.' YEAR llkt front, 2 bedrooms, oil mjjm MODERN 2-UEDROOM HOME WITH hraeVlvUegea, deposit; *75 month. "SEwa-AtoD 4-iiEDlt6oM HOMES . . .2, Yale at Stanley RENT" OPTION'** $59.66 MONTH iif, - a . UW M2M Hunllwg' Accoindlwtions 4ES Rent Rooms jUff ROOM. I* LEXINGTON GENTLEMAN AFTERNOON SHIFT, am* to town ~ Bom* oooutf. ftg*..... ROOM; AND BOARD FOR IMfi Rent Iteres a NNwuiar amt, "You eraTi jtl there, from where you wo. A*, eauee of construction of Perimeter ROM In pout of it IM Huron Strati 00 feet to to* norm of it) but this 100 *q. ft. newly rafur-btahed etor* will navi a prim* location whin the conetruotlon to completed in about thru weieks. Rent Offks lyu* 3®; WAREHOUSE SPACE S^Truok doors! Oti-Hri **ir heat. Hot wator heater end towvv. to, *220 per mo. 2675 Orchard Laky ''' M; I Middle ACRE8 WITH BASEMENT, 24x42, need* repair*. «k.SMr gk —‘ .. Ighlande Bunny Riui, Lake Orion. MY 3421L Bedrooms, attaciued oa* WsT'............... ____.mock from echoolon hard top ro^d. 290^Oranger Rd^^Orton- ACRES — 20 RODS FRONTboi bn Flint river. 2-bedroom Cap* Cod bungalow, fireplace. OH heat. , Rock well. Wall to watt oarpattog. Landscaped With plenty of Vtrgw pines and evergreen trace. Very prlvat*. If looking for something, extra nlea tee this an*. Root Realty Ottovilla. Phone MX 1- ____ KITCHEN — PIN* ing — living room and bath pins lovely apertment for inoomt — Mixed neighhoihood ' ~" LOW" DOWN PAYMENT. Phan* OWNER — S4ME. iDROOM BUNGALOW,. alum- softener. . BEDROOMS.' FULL BASEMENT, large living room, dining roolr kitchen. Close to Union wUtair-. ping .oral; Priced at only t|L with' approx. '10 'per OU EM 14703.' Hi' ,r„ Sam. HACKETT REAL* ; _____ ' 4-BftDROOM CAPE. Cob, Lit us baitn before cold waatl model* open daily. Pontlao 1 SaWI’Stt models. NELSON BUILPIN BEDROOM COMPLETELY i|fo modeled 2 lots, fenoed, Waterford Vlltoge, trees, shrub*. 6» 3-1007. 5-ROOM HOUSE. FULL BASEMENT, to all sehooM, C-ROOM HOUSE. BREEZEWAY. S-“T garage, .lot' 100x230, pries , >■050,182-7~~* Ler'1 I ROOM MODERN HOME WITH 30 sera* and tor** kenaal info modern horn* ana I extra lots, $100 Down—No Costs 3 BMroom, .basomsnt. carpet, draw*, gas halt, mh itaraon*. fenced, wndecaped, I ear garage, •BORABAUGH Df’ Down—*57 Mo. u* low taxes And Insurance, wen kapt home, basement, new AC sm OUR,TRADE DEALS Aj^TERROfiC , MICHAEL'S REALTY f . 3-W55 FE : $400 DOWN 3-Bedroom, Nearly New Everyone Qualifies : LAND contract terms. . 1'" BfOTLlTE BUILD1NO CO. ' V 43S l* EDI’fe ' 1 Mixed neighborhood, Ilka new, 3 bed. room, glaesed-ln din. nip. part . basement, *4l p*r month to reliable family, RUSSELL TOUNG, fb 4-3302. 'rnrvT ■ESfS W7H. BASS REALTOR FB 3-7*11 " "spaofoilMMt to Associate' NO MONEY DOWN Mixed 1 Neighborhoods ; Land Contract, VA, FHA No Matter What the ■Need, a Press Want- Ad III AJwaya Available to Help You Fulfill It- j anil. ffi- ifH» , > THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDyESp-tfcY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1068 , 'W& Compton & Sons BEAUTIFUL 3-badroom, • privilege*. 5 fireplace and the lot Is 100x6 Here to the best pert, full, pr onto $17,990 With attractive ter Cad tonight and have the llat . 1 repreaeoteUve. Mr. St. Souver, Crescent Lake Estates ■BjjjK J'SfisEgafy® filter REALTOR PARTRIDGE is the Bird to See streets, 1 I down, $63 m Price rodlKWd — $ bedroom Cuatom tmllt renfch. Spaclou Dated living room Fireplace.---- rook war end flrepSeeT Dining ana. Large built-in kitchen. In ■ ceramic die bathe. Fireplace In basement. Attached garage. Generous sired fenced landscaped lot. <« owner rearing- small dow- *™ beadle. Dorothy Snyder Lavender .....TOtl Highland Road. _____ KM 3-g3BFK Vt600 Eves. 007-5417 -COUNTRY LIVING In tbla 4 bedroom. I bath, aprawl- the bUU.h family roam, fireplace, large breeeeway and 3to car garage. pantry and storage------ built-in laundry, all bandy I isoo ft. home in warm oedoL ,.... children and bones. Reduc~* “ $31,000. MY COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK For Hama Ownership Loans lt*S Easy ______FK 3-8171 CHRISTIAN HILLS. 1 YEAR OLD. , 7 spootenular a — bl-level. $4,011 Ml-6800. Eastwood 93441111 CHEAPER THAN j* RENT, NORTH PONTIAC $69 Down NBW 3-BEDROOM HOME $55 Month "Excluding taxes and Insurance Everyone qualifies: Widows, dl vorcees, avail pereons with i Carrigan Cons't Holly $34-9261 Beeb. OL 1-lTio CUSTOid WnJT ’ HOMES' YOUR LOT OR OURS , Ross Homes, Inc FE 4-0591 ELIZABETH LAKE States bedroom, alum siding, $1,000 d< OK 4B» Lakeside Dr. original purchase .price. 3-bedroom, full basement, 2-car garage,, num storm* and awning*. lot in nor£ea*tP(mUM.FE 3-7734 or WE 843217 LARGE 4 - BEDROOM COOLEY lake front, large Uvlng room, “ place, lot IMglm landscaped. Eves. FE 3-7444 LOCAL LANDMARK Ottawa JDrhpr _aa# Poke purpose^Tot it approximately 2-3 a, n Orchard Lake,A K. L. Templeton, Realtor MIXED -AREA, 0-ROOM, BAS meat, gas heat, term*. Trade 1 land contract. MA 0-3100. MODEL 3- «r 4-bedroom, brick and aluminum ranch, luu basement, sen, ter entrance in Mate, sunken living room, thermo windows, lit ceramic bithe, oven range and 'Hood, formica cabinet*. J-car ga- ""e. J. DUNLAP FE 8-11*8 NO kONEY DOWN NEAR PONTIAC unfinished, large living roetni beautiful fireplace, lto bath. Only $13,-000 — Terms. NBW1NOHAM REALTOR. UL $-3310 CLEAN 3-BEDROOM HOUSE ___iiiTiik: l»g»im . NORTH ROYAL OAK. TRULY FINE 3-bedroom brick In wonderful neighborhood. trees, fireplace, garage, —ant, eta. 9I7i8».«364fl0. w$HpS3BKDYl«3w :* privileges. Pontiac Lika Road „ NELSON BU1LDINO CO. of state St.. 16.030 ....are: new s^nd,* •V bU^^9^Mo. & iZL ,7hL laughter of many Utile ones. 3 bedrooms. full basement, recently Installed git furnace, lit bathe. 3-car garage. Close to everything. UnbeltavaMot $7,800. $46.75 month Bee*- can OB WHB*., ■* biTBaiW TaMtaSiL- mg-PB Wm. Evee. PRIVILEGES OH C^ LAKB . n, lto bath, fu ' ■ Rochester-Gtica Area Family mm with fb i mm mtmm tmenm FRANK SHEPARD REALTOR SEE OUR NEW MODEL. 942 DeET-ta Troy, duplicated on your lot. 96,MO. Ooodell UL * **" “ "“ ) CARNIVAL By Dick Turner Sate Houses 'NEW HOMES Full Basements ‘ > 7 $D0 * . /DOWN per mo. Excluding taxes and ^OsuraSM, Visit 3-bedroom , mi UsW elf W. Kenm from Flatter,Bady. OPEN-10-8 DAILY , ’ SPOTLIGHT BLDO. CO. »,* SEMINOLE HILLS 4-bedroom. Msf, all alumlnt exterior, mb basement, buut-ta.-ear garage, fireplace, earpaOng and drape*, by owner. PE 2-40M 'iil|w-¥lim, .»CTgfTV. 7gM| _A heat. One-year lease avail- VERY NICE 4 BEDROOM , HOUSE for tale on Brio Drive, Orchard Lake, if Interested caU 683-116$. WALTERS CSC 3-BEDROOM home on large lot. OL 1- WATKINS-PONTIAC ESTATES. Older home. axe. e most new oil furnace, large b yard. Privilege on Middle Lake. Only M.ooo with approx, Near Maceday Lake _______furnace, new de< pump. Draperies and rug* Inc Aluminum screens and storm tra larga lot. Low taxes. West Side Duplex Brick 2-femUy on a quiet street. I rooms up spd I deem. Hi excellent condition. BulUrib ranges and ovens. Oil tornace. Paneled base, meat. $11,960, terms. , Rolfe H. Smith FB *4888 UK 84431 WEST HURON and TELEGRAPH LOCATION — 3-BEDROOM COLONIAL — CARPETED LIVING room and piNma room — FULL BASEMENT - PRICED RIOHT AT WRIOHT. WRIGHT WILLBUILD On your lot or ours Tour plan or ours don McDonald Bulidar or 3-383 l> SUPERIOR—FE 4-3177 0 REMODELING EAR-LIFE BATTERY OO. • Generators—Regulators—Starters Batteries $5,95 Exchange Bylldllng Medernliation 2-CAR GARAGE. 1899 i Doors. Cotierete Floori ,;>?r^!!PUINN CONSTRUCTION Soma Improvements, porches, t torte, additions. All types of MR work, patios, driveway*, , ildewalke. iffm*. FB »MM. GENERALCARDeNTRY, KITCHEN oablnet*. recreation rms. PE f"'** Cwpst $erv|ce Premwaldiig. TaHorim ftuds; R. O.^MfTOM^yTO FLOOR LATINO, MBRION BLUE BOD. PICK UP OR delivered. 3601 Crooks. UL 3-4643. PURE MERION 1 tny^ bulldoslng. Free estimates, 1 TALBOTT LUMBER Mithu WORK OUAR- . — LsevFB 3-7WB. Roof Repairs $10 Up . Trw TrimmlBi Service •1 TREE TRmMINO AND RE-moval Free est. FE 2.9024._ HAYDEN 3 Bedroom Tri Level $9,995 $1,000 DOWN ______OPEN DAILY 9 TO I P.M. •UN. 3 TO t KM. WILL DUPLICATE ON YOUR LOT J. C HATOEN, Realtor EM 3-9984 19791 pgblsbd Rd. (M-99) NEW FHA APPROVED 3 Bedrooms Face Brfijk Homes $150 ;.. .DOWN, . .. GAS HEAT1— PAVED STREETS LARGE ROLLING LOTS WEST SIDE SUBURBAN, ! u, large living root it space, fuU' naeen attic. Very nice loeatlon. Only $10,-$00 on convenient term*. TOM 1 REAGAN SOUTH MARSHALL r%i gs*SBSu.°»WKmpS, ".WRIGHT / M WleU».bamiii.9AIW.*" “Mom’s in one of her moods, Dad! Maytoyou'd better ^ try to listen her out of 1)1“ , » | Sale Hootas WILL EXCHANGE LEW HILEMAN, S.EC. nil W. Huron IRWIN BMKip MULTILEVEL, with --------------- — noted sunken lhring room, beautiful room With fireplace. 2V4-c*r HOME AND BOMNESB—Have your * — 11 -Kxnblnea In laiye apact- lwgellvlng^ approximately 998 iquaro — flee spas* for most any kind of looking $ AUBURN HBIOHT8 AREA - room homo with basement, 1----- yard. Ut-car garage, fruit treea and berries and nice work*1—- Good retirement bdme for the __ couple who Ilk* to work In largo yard and garden. MULTIPLE LISTINO SERVICE OEOROE IRWIN, REALTOR W W. Walton Blvd. FB 3-7M3 seal Estate U N. Opdyke R Ad BUYS HIITER- SEMINOLE HILLS - 3 sp bedrooms, full basement. . M garage. Bxeelleni neighborhood. Priced to eell at *14.800 with $3“ down on FHA term*. ELBOW ROOM — Lovely 3 hi room raneh, 3 ear garage, at »l*e lot. Garketon schools. $12,9 Easy terms. : WATERFORD REALTY mm Dixie Bwr. OR 3-1373 General Tree Service Any else job. PE t-9994 FE 6-3C Trucking LIOHT TRUCKINO AND HAULINO 673-8043 UOpt' AitP HBAVi taUCthfO. S&tWiiMm ioao3. TOP SOIL,' PEAT. BLACK DIRT. Trucks tg Rent Mi-Ton pickups 116-Ton I TRUCKS - TRACTOIti _ AND BQUVMBNT Industrial Tractor Co; S3 S. WOODWARD | ,sflUl4tt KENT d In ms - NORTH — 38 ft, carpeted floor. Pu^bsmtll1' breese-» Mtoohed A oar garage. Fully Insulated. Os* heat. I right at only $8,960 and only down. LAKE FRONT —Large tooniy home In Waterford srea. 4 bedrms. Tiled bath, m It. living rm. Far' bsmt.; gas boat. Large deep lot landscaped, Now at 818,800 terms Floyd Kent,Inc., Realtor TRADE Pleasant Lake Woods Frio* reduced $2,000 on thle lo ly ranch home, only ono yi old, built by a master builder, feature* 8 Bedrooms, lovely f« . .—a- j aumBUn*. mat*, i ar garage. It'a a be ri-vaom-Trad* $500 , Frushour Struble GILES WATERFORD TOWNSHIP RANCl! In ~ lUent shape. 6 rooms and • paneled family room d*e«|ffl’*rib Ifcfieo1 lot with ed book yard, garage, much' e. Priced to go at IlLlOO., 3-BEDROOM'RANCH — 7 rooms bath, larga lot, oil boat, wall soaped. Waterford area. Priced fast sale at only I10.0"" 13x13’ living room. llxM’ dtoia room. Nloe locale on blaekto atreot.. Only 00,180 with eaay tom GILES REALTY CO. FE 84176 331 Baldwin Avt MULTIPLE LISTING9 &BRVICE OWNER SAYS SELL. 3-hedroom, T, new gas furnace. 300 ft. lot t Oakland Lake prtv., low down BL1Z. LAKE ESTATES, large 1 b-—ns and bath, Uvlng room « id. nice lot lake prlv. 08,1 WEST SIDE, 3 bedrooms, 1V6 bathe, large Uvlng room, den, full "" ment. gas beat, $13,800, term*. NORT/H SIDE, excellent 3-bedroom, lari* kitchen, ceramic Ole bath, full basement, alum, elding, IMrCir garage. CaU today, B. C. Hitter. Realty. 3060 Ells. Lk. Rd. FE 2-0178 or FE 4-3980 or FE 8-9874. 6-Room’ Bungalow This on* I* In top shape with roof and elding. Ha* lire* I4x2i-foot living room. Budget priced at $8.-350 on1 Land Contract'. WARDEN $9,300 . model available anchor — 3 bedroom, on — full bseoment, oik fl« heat, birch oupboards, I BY DOWN. 863.77 mo. ,*'M^ NO MONEY DOWN NO MORTOAOE COSTS, brand nowl Just a Job moves you In, Large 3 bedrooms with walk-ln closets, oak floors, famUy sized kitchen, *83.78 mofith. ., MODEL AVAILABLE YOUNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER BUILT RU8SELL YOUNG S3Mi W. HURON ■■■ FE 4-3380 .... BATEMAN Trading Is Our Business Save $2,000 m ■■ *Mok MM large lot close to —— down plus costs in new mortg. or Can hi sold on oontraet with no mortg. ebsta. CALL NOW. LET'S TRADE Northern High Area THREE . BEDROOM Bungalow. With a possible fourth bedrm.. full/ basement and gas heat, owner transferred and wants quick sal*. Pull prloa only 10,080 with 1880 dn. LET’S TRADE Brick Colonial 4 BEDRMS.. 116 baths, gas beat and 2 ear garaga. Built In 1888, large spgploua lot and .beautiful ■ shaded street. Wall to wall Carpeting and other extrae. Wonderful city west side loeatlon. Sickness makes Oils sale, necessary. This should k*0 fast* at $34,880 with 82,800 down ulus costs. LET’S TRADi 4-Bedroom Colonial; S' bathe, DOWN — Plus mortgage ooete, Excellent condition In fact Just, IUST BE SOLD —To settle I estate. Exoelieat .brick hungelo with toltpaiemenf. Attached t -rag* ana hreeeeway. Large TOO .. 130 lot. Lake, privileges. Priced al only tftTMO.* MIXED NEIGHBORHOOD ed on Raeburtt Street. 3 bedroom modern bungalow, Full b Screened ^jorch and large NICHOLIE •ee - bedroom bungalow, living I dining area, kitehen, utility m and attached garage, gea HA >t, vacant. NeWly decorated. Va-t. About 8250 moves you In. 8ASHABAW AND MAYBBB AREA Three - bedroom bungalow living, and dining area, kitchen, utility room, carport, large corner lot. Var cant. About 8380 move* you fn, WEST SUBURBAN Three • bedroom bungalow, living and dining------ ■' NORTH SIDE Two > bedroom bungalow, living and dining L, kitchen, fuu bnaa- t, call MR. ALTON, FB 4-8338 NICHOLIE HAROBR CO. 83Mr W. Huron St._____FB 8-818 mly $7,750. Easy fact 8280 wjfl LITHE FARM —With almost n storm*. 8 acres of lend. School hue. oil Fire AC Furnace. Here ‘ lot of home for only 814,380. OPEN DAILY - From 4-r," HOME OF HOMES. 8UU»t._ .. lovely Fdx Bay, Bub on large 107 X_1M lot. Paved street. TOUR BEDROOM BRICK COLONIAL i.'fw^wnruli ..tlon tomorrow, (r -o 9 p.m. Multiple 1 lng Service. L. H:; BROWN, Realtor 000 Elisabeth Lake Road Ph. FE 4-3864 or FE 2-4810 KAMPSEN- &; I 30 Acre Farm Close in tooatlon, two ^battle, oU heat,. 80x80* om home 80' burn,, h asking Elizabeth Lake Estates - A beautiful home In MeeRet condition Inside ttm Ml, KlP rooms,batha. IS.OxIF. living “lifi /ironiaeo, reonattM e/*rporohr’ l'7"c»i Ol.SOO down plus c S3 BUYERS WAITING 1 New Colonial * Close In west suburban loeatlon, -* four bedrooms ind two1 and to batlu, paneled- famtly room With Jftwalshaped kitchen with breakfast nook, IM-- mil dining room,1 basement, gat , ---not . water, beat.. attached two ear .garaga, paved drive,, oom jrv /Stir I 3-7966 $14,500 FULL PRICE FOR THIS . WATKINS LAKE FRONT HOME 8 bedrooms, huge living room wlU fireplace, many other nloe features CALL FOR APPOINTMENT, NORTHWEST SUBURBAN LAKE PRIVILEGES ON MACEDAY and WILLIAMS LAKES 6 rooms, lto-slory, basement, clean and good oondltlon. 100x181 lot. Close to shopping. A VERY OOOD BUY AT 19.780. r GI RESALE SUBURBAN WEST Attractive frame ranch, with brtok and stone front, 8 bedrooms, oharry paneled dining roam, large knotty pine paneled kitehen, 10x12 ft. 8 closets, plus ample storage spas*, oil heat, many excellent ^'features. 888.03 ptr month including taxoi and Insurano* 4to per cent Interest. WHY WAIT, CALL NOWI 'Smith Wideman GAYLORD ‘•‘srKwtSSH i44|93 or UfMm; ' '' Lawreflce W. Gaylord i FE 8-9693 or MY 3-2831 , , BroMlway|affi*lbfl';.;.' Lalto doles STOUTS BestBuys Today ■ — nfUtocbe ini-, ctuaea who *dl* fl**£ - home. Features It JbJMWS & ck«s Sous,. 102x188 lutiW'JBk paved street. Ow **••18$ With convenient toros*. fron—“ t RETIREE* — cuto,'8-wem part bMentont. oU “*■ •-• blacktop. anpt n \.XSBL lehool. out SB a feWSTim. -»*» with $480.ftown. E'S.rv,ta-«aE: Warren StOMt Realtor O'NEIL MODEL- - Open Daily S to 8 ' 3903 BHAWNEX - Beauty Rite’s neweet "Idea Nenie of " .’AtiaaiyBSMr^.aoyrtly1 ' furnished end profeeetonUly landscaped for your .wmroval ‘wonderful .thfag* jfou‘7* ooroa » MmMt -BWw Beauty Bite . arc here, the sunken living room, the tutra Wtofien. W glamourous bath .and family room plus thel$imStr room a” on a single level TT* exposed baeement. provtde* a lot of extra Uvlng: window wall lead* out to the take- uCoflHK ■place, den Ml Iocludld, t—a .Li.tir deluxe features, found only • In noWM in (SelFmou'WJ , price “range. Offered, *t eoy r.. •*-- with excellent flnani- ____ i awel—. m lng terms. Cwt today -your appointment. scros of la^,,Property- he* nice elMd private trout PO»4 woU etoeked with .1 to * pound bVMtljM >r- ► flener-man’s paradise. Prise right sternly 318,000. CU! today, ARE YOU WHW1N® TO* A LARGE FAMILY HOME » OPT West mXt atcr and Washington. Jr. High? Oas heat* roll }>»»•* menti garage and a nice large K Zn 5£!fred bu?°Ml*- font found. So better Eurryl PIONEER HIGHLANDS.,, On* *M#I HURON OARWBNi. A Very neat ranch home oo a me# corner lot. Large. I bedroom, sharp kitchen, llvhto room, utittty room and lamlly room, Bnjkwus! 0.1: SPECIAL CASS ELIZABETH LAKE R®ADr'--whjr.w,^‘,hT.b^ bedrou.. ww- ™ rrzr t. Your I b 2 lots. Lovely CANAL FRONT On Cass Lake _ 1 to etory hom* In excellent ditton, living room, dining room, bedroom, to bato, and a beautiful kttohen With dining area, large' ptoture Window . overlooking a sa.a. —-XriTtliq shady wall landscaped bedrooms end toll batt. _______ ment with noreatton room, to bath and super »•»———• »•— jpaoe^rwo doyti d garage,: Priced -t 814,9 SYLVAN VILLAGE LAKE FRONT Large family bom*. Five bedrooms, 2 baths, family room with nreplaoj!' oun room.,, den, llvtog room, dining room, kltohen, walk out basement, garage,, large lot. w < Pontiac schools. Priced at $19--900. Shown by appointment. fc B FRONT outgrown this beau- room, large kitchen, 2 bedroom* and bath, flraptatw, oarpetlng. and drum, large eloeete, Lake levei has family room with flrepiaoe. dining L, kitchen, bedroom, laundry room and bath. Two ear, attached garage. Three large lote; Prlced at $33,900 with $6,000 down R06SHIRE COURT - , ' owner retiring And lea lng state so take advantage of, kix buy Five targe,roomiJ kitchen modernised, 1 board*, __ _ nltlal Included are 3 nice sited loti with lake privilege! on Cat* and Elisabeth Lake*. Don’t . rent another day. Call FE 3-7103 for appointment. ST. MIKES AREA — No down payment — 3100, closing - costs move* you Into this large 3 bedroom family home. Excellent north end location, monthly payments Ires than, rent. Asking only 3I>M0. RAY O’NEIL, Realtor 302 TELEGRAPH RD. OP^,* TOJ FaMULTTPLE LlffTINO SERVICE take Prflperfy 51 3 BEDROOMS Lake front. CUIly $12,000, nObl Union Lak# vibgo. Daria WjHNI. room with gtaremfiteto, huge utility room, oil tornate, toll tosui. ovari tleed 34*r jaregO. Musk sail, . HAROLD OKaMUTrEALTY 1883 Union Lika Road EM 3-3208 EM 3-7181 t, 3-bedroom briok ' 'efronta**, aii-to-waiT .oi ; a^thUi^*- . ___________carpeting, boautl- iu, kltohen. 'iWItb stalnlee* steel electric stove and oven, 2 baths, plus "extra*, 3to-**r garage, must be teen to b* appreciated, only $31,000. Term!, flail today for aa appointment, '■ HERE'S A HOME FOR YBAR- around living - M large — hex it r Ruome, baauwi- ___________________1M lake front- \ at*. Property fensed' tori armor. $30,900. Will take property A Rocto estor or Clawetm area in trada. Put a Low Cost, Fast I Acting Presl Waftt Ad i1 to Work for’ You. Then Get Ready ter Result* t , , THEsPONTlAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER Iff, 1063 cm" . M0*«o. Only *j&WyEiJvND J 41M ntu TAka Rd • EfflEftBKK- ; oHlo* IItm Mohawk Dr. m'mt * w«^CwH»icti Mig-dO-A TIZZY ROOM. 2 BATH RANCH BOMB. jfaNI, nu garaf*. OH,000. MY BY OWNER For mi* or tor 1mm. ID mi iSmltoS^mwtol'lW — After 5 p m. DSTCHXOWNIAirON TEtfACRBS. 3-bedroom. 1V4 bath, fireplace, car* abasement. J-e»r garage. — ■■ — ton per cent down., 3581 ■ Perry Lake Edf, north of OakhlU 3.300 SQUARE FOOT BUILDING with fO* frontage on Elisabeth Ira BjjtjjT&7 to”* from Pontiac 6500 iquare.”flMt'' I block! Off South Blvd-Truok).------ - lU ; fi-A 40. ACRES NORTH OF CORRAN, 13.500—8800 down. OR 3-0878. **"' * 30 ACRES ' Mmue>an? block cabin^S'/i mUee north of Lincoln. Cheap. MOLTIFLB LISTING SERVICE - ^ffioROE IRWIN, REALTOR 288 W. Walton Blvd. FE 3-7883' K*ooifedKCBmpJslto! FEANELW. MICH. KEN? Ott‘ BALE — FURNISHED modem lake-front. cottage. OR 3-4830 between 5 78 ACRES — large brick term home BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY WHERE YOU CAM' BORROW UP TQ $1,000 CASH Loans to $3,000. Broom apartment on TO 10 — good ’ business — 830.000 f* * - or $15,000 cash. Family Acceptance Corp. 117 National Bldg. 10W. Huroi Telephone YE >8888 TEAGUE FINANCE CO 202 N. MAJN’ ROCHESTER ROMEO 214 E.‘ST. CLAIR LOAMS 825 TO 8L009 ____aSyoa if.MTOSTocE HOUSEHOLD OOOTO OLMOjI TO I W« *4818_________, n BLOND DINING ROOM BBT. DROP-ISM table. 4 chelrs, buffet and 2 glass hutchee. modem 3-plece turquoise sectionef good condition — , mm v wrhp jb table and ,8 padded chairs. Call after 8 p.m. 673r7*66-_ CLEARANCE SALE Used Kelvlnator electric range tthiiI gsiiinm i rtiHrW rondo Used FrtHdave refrigerator Used OErefrlferator T CRUMP ELECTRIC it expressway it building - large » WHEN YOU NEED $25 to $1,006 INO TILE ......... s* in. tip .™Je^wnOrila to.......ie oadt Vinyl Flmrag ....... 48c so. yd. BtoO Tile, PE 848W. 10W W. Huron CHAIR AND SOFA W|CT';ALIR Mi-Fi-TV-Radios ^,300 PER UNIT ■usuall Northern AAA motel grossing over 82300 per unit annually. REALTOR PARTRIDGE Is the Bird to See W. Huron PE 8-1881 J4em::P*rtrldt* A Aetoc., Inc._ AUBURN HEIGHTS PARTY STORE Beautiful ultra-modern store, pood pawns. Finest equipment. Lady BY OWNER Very tine restaurant in busy area on malh hwy. Unlimited possibilities. Includes building nnd equipment. 35 p6r cant down, or tnW.VTOBM ddt Elizabeth Lake Road, lust west of Pontiac. ComgjvJShnrt- hours, no • Sundayr'Oia owner here 18 yoors, rolrihg. Business can easily be Increased. Vary ,nte* spot. 88,000 Mortgage 1—y CLASSC It 812.tS7 per year, 1 71 *18,000 down. OO^fT i . CO&T ' TRADES . Realtor Exchanger id property 5GENT 731 (>AS 8TAtlOi< ANh PARTS STOKE for sal* or lout. 38.000 wUl handle. MY 3-87M. OROCERY, AND WINE store tor $aio or WUl accept trads^ may^bOj#«o«n at 831 S J ^AVB BUYER FOR OAKLAND COUNTY BAR OR PARTY STORE 818,808 CASH DOWN Warden Realty 3438 W. Huron. Pontlao 838-7187 LAKE BAR; One of the busiest resort bar* li Opsrstor. Terms. MICHIGAN Business Sale,s, Inc. JOHN LANDMESSER, BROKER 1873 Trtsgftph ’** isT!.' to ACRES SPRINGFIELD TOWN-, ship. Mostly tUiaWe, beautifully , ' woodidmllingland.'oo.ooo. ■ “J® MULTIFLB USTINO SERVICE OBOROE IRWIN, REALTOR US'HB1! I -------- 60 Acre Scenic Farm" QMlM area. I bedroom homs, j car garage and bam. 318,000. torms, . : C. PANGUS, Realtor ill wtawarmaia _____________ 833 3I1U pT NA 7-3818 - FRONTAOE ON 8 the Claikston substantial fan olosa to laka UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE, 1*88 Mila Ewy. Clarkston 884818 EV08. 8384341 320-aore dairy. < Beautiful pisln —______JEEP ' fronting paved road, river tl property. A W " 118 ACRES — A PICTURE Modern, large white homo.. Red out buildings. Large trees. Fronts psvea road near village. 838.880, B ACRES'— MILFORD ROAD, ' garden, paved road, last this at OUiOpO. . RUTLEDGE REAL Party Store Exoollsnt math stteet location In very progressiva oommunlty. Kleal for eouple to operate. Win owl business. equipment and residence or UMdppM. «r™“ Hi **•“ * .., ___ have * good , selection of grooery stores with Boer and Wine licenses Call for more details. State Wide—-Lake Orion OA 0-1800 AFTER 8. OL 1-3603 - -. and from wdrtMPPW^WI^p Ini sppmx. 1,(00. so. ft.. 8-room hrnns sttaohod. Must be* seen to b* appreciated. By owner. 624 N. isglnsw. FE 8-8326. J ___ CLASS C BAR ideal set up for. portnsrs. with 810,000 eagh. Investment back In #*jfT J6LL*°Realty PE 5-BB57 ' or «02-02fe Restaqrant Owners Take notioel Located In busy vll-lags In lake area. Now doing over room A profitable location fo many years, owner ready to Call Coll for dstnllk. HAROLD R. FRANKS, REALTY 2883 Union Lake Road EM S4308 LEW HILEMAN, S.E.C. Realtor-Exchangor 1011 W. HUEON FE 4-1878 Sale Land Contracts 60 Land Contracts ACTION 8EASONEDI 18 FBR^yisM’t count. Sold MSroh 18*0 for W.WW-Present halsnos. 83.808 psynbl* 180 off month, 6 per cent Intorost, Call Ward B. Partridge at FE 4-3801. Wanted Cwtracrt-Mtg. 60-A Land,Contracts Be* us boforo you deal. W Stout. Realtor. 77 N, Ssflna FE 8-1181. CASH TO $1,000 QUICK. FRIENDLY SERVICE ■ NO RED TAPE ^Baxter & Livingstone LOANS gXwRBg LOAN C CUT YOUR PAYMENTS ONE-HALF by aimk ouh homo loan up to 82,808 from Voss and Buoknor. 18 W7 Harni si.. Room 209. ,Phono Loan Service. 1717 Si ' 008-018 "FIRST IDO IN MICHIGAN —FREE HOME DELIVERY— WHOLESALE , MEATS AND GROCERIES . All nationally advertised brands, savings up to 40 psr cent. Soap, sugar,, eofte*. flour, butter, oak* mix, caroal, soup, 1 vegetables, fruit Juioea, Kleenex,. — YES! UP TO 40 PER C Tor frps catalog and showing, how you c. these prices. 047-1877, GOOD CLEAN 36-INCH GAS STOVE HENRBDON 82 INCH BEIGE SO#A, HOUSE ' FULL QP (BRAND NEW T 7lture) $295. 85 weakly or cash. . v-rsott’o Furnlturs, 210 E, Pike. KENMQRE AUTOMATIC SUDS^A^ KIRJBY VACUUM Rebuilt. Oood condition. Ouaran-' ' i year, 880. FE 8-8343. MAPLE POSTER BED, I NEW AND USED 9X13 RUOS $4-and up. Now and usod oarpetlug, 13.80 and - up. AvouTrOir carpet Sales. 1080 E. Auburn Ru., Roch. ' J°hn R. NICE nEPMOERATOB — FE 84003 and 111* Insurance ' COST. Phone or Apply In .. Family Acceptance Carp. 317 Nstlnnil •* - **— POOL TABLK; 6 F RSPRlOBliATOR Wlf H Fo FRIOIDAIRE STOVE AND REFRIG- SPECIAL > 830 A MONTH BUYS 4 ROOMS .PlilMiTOIlP;,* Consists of; 2-ptscs living ro«to sulto with 2 s By Kate Osaitn Hammond Chord Organ converted %ree.wrym»-button speaker control, echo, regular, or botti. A pew ^hwh^extsbsi"" «“ho NO NEW CONSOLE PIANO, 10; row guarantee, nwMgaay, W45. Walnut ' slightly 1.1 1ALBI MUSIC “ ■ FE 68322. $64“ • Walnut"' silghtTy”" higher. CALBI MUSIC CO.. U0 NTsogL nuw FE 8-8222,_____ BALDWIN ORpANSONIC jW.NET, CONR CORNET. LIKE. NEW, REA-sonabto, Ut 2-41Q3 after 8 n.m. CONN luit/r THUilW. oulbransen ( 3 montha 0— .....- PIANO TUNINO—LESSONS Wlegand Music Co. PONTIAC’S 5 Sheet mule headquarters For Rent: To Scnpol Band and Orchestra Stu-^ dental - “Don’t hang up! You have the right number. I can explain the cornball background music! ” Sale Miscellaneous NEW CARLTON STAINLESS STEEL double sink, single lever faucet, — strainers extra. 0 R oil REFRIGERATOR, \partment gas stove, as Is, ... '/. ft. bath tub, (Lags) $8. PR >-8843. Dljl, FURNACE Wrrfe ALl. CON, LAROE OIL SPACE HEATER, auto, eontrols, usod *l mo. Now condition. 878. l heavy ditto lawn cart, dump box, 838, Ml 4-8W8. A ALUMINUM SIDING, AWNINGS, STORM WINDOWS. VlNYL siding. tottalUft or mitorial* ohy. For 8 PLYWOOD OP ALL kTnDS Plywood Plst, - FE > PLYWOOD PANELING SIOUX VALVE FACER . WITH stand and attachments, t HW! WVt seat grinder, complete with Worn : 3-3012, luxaire oas furnaces forced air. oountwOow, 05.000 BTUs and 118,000 BTUs, perfect WOrinUl Mnution, WS ' ---------------- 449 PONTIAC. OOOD TRANSPOR-tatlon. 180; 2 Ba«4K)Wl, 44 and 34 lbs.. Plus aoo**i, OL 1-WWO. KBLVINATOR DRYER, EX- ACCORDION8, ItCCORDIOI wmoB, ANCHORFENCES NO MONEY DOWN FE 8-7*71 AUTOMATIC OAB HEAT BATHTUBS, CHIPPED I17.M AND ■"l, Toilets sod IsvstorlsiL** lie values. Michigan F _jnt, 393 orchard Lsxa — 1... BATHROOM FIXTURES, OtL AND heater. Hardware, elect. SUpbitSS, crock and ^1^ and fittings. Lowe ding. Immsdi-n Supply, 18* COMBINATION ELECTRIC RANOE, - -p, sink, refrigerator, 33x80", 878. oloctrle rang# ISO. 10 r " , chest, full si Eg msltreto ai to ma^hlwlth 3 vanity lamps. 5-plece dinette set, * ohrome chairs, lormlos top table. 1 bookcase, 1 8X12 rug lneludsd. All (or (099; WYMAN & FURNITURE CO. 17 H. HURON FE . .... 18 W. PIKE FE 34180 Take Over Payments Wringer Washer . Lik« New $2.00 Per Week GOODYEAR STORE able Whirlpool Old, FE R-WOS. 'WE HAVE QARPSJT KNOW-HOW' A-l CARPET SALES i measure that "New Homs' jn „*t plant In Pontl* 8 Whittftnora — FE 4-7110. WYMAN’S USED BARGAIN STORE. Odd tapestry sofa .....fit 2-plece seetlonal Sofa ,- .848.... t-plsoe living room suit* ... 139.96 5-plece dinette,set ......51948 88" flectrlc ), E-8 'Perm; wArobF ol^l CHAIR, EXCEL-I.^t addition, IIMIO*. I* Bd tip WALNUT DINIBW ... ... ■ - tit'T'dryiri, HvliMH, —r- -9 leaves, 4 ohiir*. ui Piok at. Washer-Dryer Floor Models Maytag Dryer, 1 only .. $118. 8 PIECE HEAVY CHROME DIN-sits 138, $139.00 vibrator chr‘- 4 speed, like MW, 838, Phont <* 8-7038. •. 6' YEAR CRIBS , (BRAND HEW) 314.88 up. Trunlog chairs,: 88.88. Pearson7* Furniture; 910 B. Plk*. 8iU "Umbrella 1 tbNt, i ■ 830. Easy auto, washer, 008. a upright planOi lOO. lS.-uiww* ______s rown suits. 8300. FE 84371, ____7IC XSIjB ..... J. v I /W\ TILE, CEMENT. TRIM FOB BMWI’UB AREA .... ;. . JfmHjOOR SHOP. 2235 ELtZABBTH LAKE RO delivered, Installed Easy Spinners, Now ........ Hamilton Dclux gas drysr; all Honts. new, doilwrsd, Prl|ldalro Automatic^washer. THE SoOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP 61 W, Huron St. * • FE •' ‘ ' tVSlNOBR TYPE WA1HHR. -1 gallon ♦4W4. After 3180. Wk ANTIQUE SHOW AND SALE, . days, Sept. 18, 1»T 30, 1 p.m.-10 pirn's Sept. 31, 1 p,m.-6 p.m. Com-nuiuty. H0U8O- Biles and Town* sendr Birmingham.: sponsored by Piety Hm Chapter PAR. . HLFi-TV*-«MK6 .;,f; ^TJl 1 CLEARANCE Used TV'S. Colir;— RlaOk White. N$t Rot Sales and Service. Clearance Sale ... SLA Motorola TVs and stereos, fcwul): prlcss on all ntor models. if portable lliftt. £ LowBoy M>7.77Jff48 Stereos 080.80. Easy *, Tsrtns.S. F. Goodrich m— . Perry. FE 141(1. D. & J. Cabinet Shop Dlsoonttnusd formica 38c iq, ft. Hood* 118 and up. Porcelain —1 stainless Sttol sinks, tau metal moldings and hardware. 886 W. >' Huron FARM-FRESH MEATS JBA'- * •••• if® JS* Homemade hot dogs OPDYKE MARKET Neoohl^KlnV,' "Wl *6, prfcM'A* ice mil makes and models of — lng machines ana vacuum c GAS STOVE, 825 ;______ OR 3-3563 GROUP “YOUR MISCELLANEOUS bills with a Consolidation Loan to 13,000. Convenient .payments i. life Insurance it NO EXTRA COST. Phone or Apply In Person. Family Acceptance Corp. 317 Nations! Bldg. 10 W. Huron ’ MICA Stook alts* and Odd slack Discount p|Mi , ' Mica 8,29 squara. ft, and up with P d.2uW.V aw* up. Rang* hoods 824.50 toll Olid vinyls up to 80 ofyt i TTCHEN CABINET SINK scratched 43" modal 880 vslu. 0*4.80 trail* they last, terrific », U" and 00" models. ........................ 393 Or- f49.95. Spray. Automatic mi ry, nor * West igst. oitiLJ Thompson. 71 rTlTMsllon drum, UL M.bl __ Underwood. ovss. MA 8-itott. TMiSBgX NEW BALDWIN ACR080NIC PIANO, ----- 837. mahogany finish, floor 10-year guarantee, ton*. 1. forms. CALBI MUSIC * N. Bsglnsw. FE 8-0323, X 0 Natural Mibogany g 8 Coffee toned ...., X 7 Silver Sapell .... x 7 Miss matbhsd ..... PONTIAC PLYWOOD PLUMBING ’BARGAINS Standing toilet, 818.88; 31 hoator. 848.98; ,3-piece bat U8.88. Laundry tray. Mm, M-totH shower stall, trim, IlSril jtt ||.llklinH HUPP I 810 and up. ™* put and mrsadsi . SAVE PLUMBING CO., 17» 8. Saginaw, FE 84100. PLYSGORE CASH AND CARRY ORNAMENTAL IRON PORCH AND ) POUNDS WEIOHTS PE 84M6 sumF pumps soU), rented ,re- unsnssb wrsi-rsar, ora WALL COPING—FLUB LDfER COMPLETE STOCK OF FITTINGS 4” DRAIN TILE—10c EA^-PICKUP BLAYLOCK COAL A SUPPLY BlOTfluardLsisAvs. ■ WB1_____ SEWmO MACHINE, TEEN OIRL' Clothing, OR 3-2178. 8T0K0L HYDRAnUC DRUM STOK* - $30. PE 3-8676 after 4:30. 14" pre-flnlshod mag. 4x8 .,.(4. V." HARDBOARD 4x8 .......ft. *5" A-2 Birch 4x8 ...... *13... DRAYTON PLYWOOD Mil Dlxto Hwy. OR 34012 ,"W am..............»'■«.——- SUMMER CLEARANCi . . M used offlo* furniture, typewriters, and admbg machines. Forbes. *11 Dixie Hwy., OR 3-0767 also 410 Frank St., Birmingham. MI 7-3444. TALBOTT LUMBER OlasS Installed In door* Pud win-KRToakland Ave. FE .4-4888 B SALVATION ARM CP 8HIELD 8TORI tottom. OL 1-1*80. 1KILL SAW. BABB benches and muiy mb tool* - OL 64703. 8ei 6100 N. Rochester Rd. Canwrai—Ssrvict FOR SALE — BOLBX WITH 1 cable release. Exoollent cond Ph, 8454884, > ; , FOR BALE - MAMiYA C-S BODY oood fiiyl 4 INCH TUMO. NEW FWISH. perfect throughout. Pvt. Owner. iSm. iMvolMr RENT. A Trumpet, Cornet ^mhone, Flute Cllnnet. Violin or Snare Drum Kit ONLY $5.00 AMUMTR Rant for ai long as. you wlata. inlimited rei§HlUi?RrvrSiai Grinnell's 11 . wjart e new. <125. 33B41D8. 1 TOY. FOX; Poodles, othc... -.......... WELL TRAINED OERMtAIj^HQRT haired pointer; female. Exesllsnt started. 1-Whits male poodle 8 mo. old.’ Sun-Crest Kennels, 3080 Indian Wood, Lake Orton, ARC POoGLE PUPPIES. $80; I atl-ver female, 880,. Ob lease or trad*. B£rS)’tp» «n TOJ*. i DEERE. EUURfWWD HD WE. Phoao BtAWTLANDBBll. USED TRACTORS 1514 FOOT ALUMINUM. IDEAL BRINDLE BOXER, TAN. 1’4 YEARS old. good with ehlldron, all her Shota, 838, FE 34580. Bassettt male, 3 years, c BRITTANY PUPS, 0 MONTHS Old, breed out of National field trim (Champion. 038-2501. lim -mbne kittens; free to nets, Flutes, Drum kits, trombones. cornets, trumpets, ;VI0< Uns, violas, etcO month plus taxes, pay no hotter until the of the oomester, all rant >plles towards the purchase. applies towards the purebi MORRIS MUSIC 34 8. Telegraph Rd. FE 2-0567 (Aeross from Tsl-Htiroh) POODLES, AKC. WHITE TOY MALE 5 months, tin puppies, btook standard mkls, f rasr. Parsfcssts, binaries. tropical nan, pet supplies. " 34300. prices. 54438. ACCORDIONS. LOW ft SPINET sxcsUent PIANO. 4 YEARS eonapmt, beautiful PUPPIE8, NO MONEY DOWN, 13 mos. to pay. Poodles, Dachsund, Pekingese, mixed breads. PE 8-3112 1 Hunt's Pet Shop TOY TERRIER, 7 WEEKS 862-3028 ’SOHLAlib WHITE TER-~~ males. B* Wr**- FLAYESr PIANO Completely rebuilt with silent motor. No pumping (330. MORRISMUSIC 34 S. Telegraph Rd. • FE 2-0567 (Across from Tel-Huron) PRIOR’S AUCTION,. FURNITURE, household turns, and antiques accepted lor auction or will pay cash, Wed. mm Sub. 12-5. OA a Road, Oxford. RENT A NEW GRINNELL PIANO $2.00 Muslo 1*1 AU payments a; sntiae Mall 4^34423 Grinnell s IIOHT PI NBW fl LEW BETTEBLY ,, MUSIC COMPANY MI 64002 ' Free Parking tt__ (Aorow from Birmingham Theater) tOO HIOH • QUALITY, graphed business oatds, 38.80. __ ERAL PRINTING AND OFFICE SUPPLY, 17W.LAWRB1--7 Store Equipment PEPSI-OOLA MACHINE L “ ^ 04383 or Sporirt ngGood* ______ BROWNING SWEET lauge. 1’ Winchester : .2 Gauge. 3 Dear Riflsi ibn >Oh Autfastlc, 1 fteming-I 3-7838, '.23 RUGGER SINGLE 6. «M. OP-dyke Hardware—PE 84888. APAd(i ;,l c75iP SBCPSTI clearance silt, new wit models St UM trailer pries*. Opsh J3*®f (gSr M 8 p.m,, closed Sundays, tsetory hopte-town dealer, lufcm- BROWNING OUNS OUN AND SPORTS - - The most complete all you* sportsman thonsed dealer for LymsmBush-nsu-Woavar anr 1 We also are authorised, dealer tor *U BROWNINO. WINCHESTER, REMINOTON, . ITHACA, WeatHERby OUns on display ** "'scopes mounting and aUTOMnimfO 18210 Holly Rd, AUCTIONS WEDNESDAYS 7 P.M. WUKt-Ww Country Mart, ou -----Xak* Bd. lC 7-3488. VBtUt ^ milk truck, FE 3-ewx.___ RESULTS OP BUMMER TRADINO Now YellowstonH and Gams, 10 to Eeif-contstnod and regular, prtoad OXFORD TRAILER RALRS mu* ooutb of Lake Orton on M3* SALES and RENTALS BAB AUCTION SALES EVERY FRIDAY 7:30' P.M. EVERY SATURDAY 7:30 P.M. EVERY SHMDAT > _ 3:00 P.M. Sporting Oood* — AU Types Door FrlaM Every Auction t buy—sell—trade, retell 7 days Consignments welcome 9088 Dlxto Hwy. OR 3-3717 TO BEE THE NEW WOLVSiURR Plonti—T res«—Sh rubs »1-A PECIMEN LANDSCAPE EVER-' graens, made trees, shrubs, _Prlvet hedge. - TO* your own, McNeils Entrance on Maybe* ’ Rd. Closed .-1 TREES, SPRUCE, yews, Mborvito*;'iBSnlo«. Juidwr, mugho. Dir ymir own. 8333 Mssth. 3 miles west of CqmmeroOx village. , Pally. 6844835. • 1 . EVERGREEN AND SHADE TREES. “ Colorado Blue, ,*11 also*. I™**1 Landscaplng.FE 8-0*77, ,MEIIM NURSifiY GROWN EVERGREENS. Uprights, spreaden. Dig t — P'sell. Cedar Lane Ever.-.— m 12 mil** north Of FonUae-ml. N. of MB Viaduct, 8970 Dlxto Hwy. MA 5-1933. . .’. H»bbl8« I. tappHBi St H AQUARIUM; COMPLETE Livestock / EVENl / FTD YORKSHIRE fcWMK-TOD ""*■''44881.'. v.. . —ANb SATORDAI FlDmG LESSONS ALL APPALOCWA HORSES Children, Adults H0R8EB BOARDED GOLDEN H CORRAL isoo Hlilor Rd., Fontlao .____ EM 3-4011 , fME t TOlAR OLD QUARTER KLENTNBR RIDINO ACADEMY NEW RIDING STABLE. 13050 NEAL Rd.. .TOvMburg, 0344073, oall for detail*. Riding Instruction* av*U-abls. Oroup* vroloogno. 'L_L ' ' .. ..ypst.awn wOt* rabbit* UL 2-18W. — YOUNO HIGH gWjyfmW daby *0W*> some fre duem. MA 5470. Hay-^wdii—Ned ;... ■ ■ W SECOND CUTTING ALFALPA BAY. hsmshJ ' OF' ' I_— 8 bale, FB ^0385, RAY, AAA PEACHES $2.99 A BtJSHFL 3015 Auburn Rd. Near Adams Rd, EARTvITT . PEARS, $3. BUSHEL. 4370 Lessing Rd. Waterford. OR OMQ ....... ........... ----equipped With ww,-'waaifejuftia window. 0034733 oun( - buy sNi,L. tRAGE 8 Baglay 1 , SC OPE .MOl ... btw. sell hn all guns. Burr-Shell. 375 graph Rd. FE 2-4700. USED BOWS FOR' SaLK. CALL ““ 34B77 altsr 4 p.m varmint Rifle 22-250. curly maple stock, doubie-set triggers, msuser action, douglss . barrel, 12 power variable soup*, hand-tooled bather sling. Excellent condition, a steal for 8150, 1130 Myrtle Avenue after 7 p.m. Sand-Orovel-Dlrt Th A-l TOP BOIL, REASONABLE. road gravel il.' *1.60: washed si 30o, a yd.: top Delivery . extra. Products, ***“ M A 64101. 84.00 A firocoaied yd.: 00x40 SClUlOlrt 3 PRACTICE PIANOS, 1 CONSOLE piano in food condition, 8375. 1 KIMBLE grand piano reflnlshed In BALDWIN organ, 3785. ES17EY organ tor oluiroh or ho I OULBRANSEN organ, mspl* Ish. (MO. * We rent brand nsw pianos. L*$i Included only $8 psr month or . may purchase for only 118JO per month, in bsnutitui walnut pood ana 10 year guarantee. Organs to rant for th* beglnnei Included only $11.85 tot Gallagher Music Co. -1 BLACK DIRT — 1 sand, gravel, fill, R FOMUOOin..Olt||l«63l9. 11 LANDSCaFFiNG, YoR BOIL, blaok dirt fill, naval and ms-nurse. FB 44838 loot! Lake Ra. CHOICE faRm.tofjo LUCKY’S TRUCKING Beautiful top soil, black dirt, fill jan^ and gravsl. UL : 3-3470. 01 MEL'S TRUCKING •1 top loU> blaolt dirt, fit! dirt, Bob & Bill’s Produce Special Best Grade Peaches $2.99 A. Bushel NONE PRICED HiaHKR McIntosh Apples^........12.49 AU Varieties of gquuR■>.. ‘ "-a- 5-Dor.'Bag ........Bi potatoes, | CHOICE CONCORD GRAPES, ALSO ■. pluml, 5441 'E, | Orion, Mich. choicE bEbf SIDES, 4(o Li.. 46c lb- hogs 38o lb- many small hinds, fronts, (loss and halves st grant savings, mond Meat Packers, too-M-59, % toll* seat of th* f„™. Airport. Friendly pmw .ssrvtng you with respsot. Open 0 days.' not Suns., $ *tu f h jfuE | cash. For payments DODD'S ORCHARD______ 9830 W. Clarkston Rd. -■■■ pstri. older, >iTorY?440* MARdvt, FreS^Fiitifered Ooer' Apples, peart andjiluini. DlEliui ORCHAWJS AND ' CIDER MUX, Rose Center and MUford Rd. South o( Holly, north of MUfOrd MsciMw "’aftoII. orcha at 001 N, laulrral Rd. PEACHES-4PEARS Ka.hav.nP1rd* X^aohe, for - M%toSh °.ndPo“tl!erB wpT^oS-land Orchards. I|tl|il»8mrn Rd- 1 mile east of lilitfwCir^ to o p.m. daily aurim poach STANLEY PRUNES: MsoIN'TOSH Trot wood.. CWpmr, I ______ Scamper, Siesta, nvumu Camper wtQ) boat-. Oood jetowmi of used Trailer _ Trailer. ELLSWORTH AUTO and TRAILER SALES TOTwVTiTESEl^ ----Installed. TRAVEL TRAILERS Avalaib-The new Ught weight, self contained. Also Fleet wing end Taws* Brave self .ntatMa tratt: ELLSWORTH AUTO and TRAILER SALES 8 * U. stoop* 5, 811 TO.Elmllrl. AU Will Go '' Thfi Week 81861 CENTORYg AU With llfe-tlm* SI 4'rave!csdes.'lnsU pedal ^prices on 1883 rsutal unit*. all 1963 modeU and spotless. Grdsrs nra .now being token ' tor Mi Conturyn7: CentUf^Tfgvej_ Trailers" and aooeSsorlOO. Bl FOR SALE Wra.OTOpN TO"BUY 10x45 Great Lake* MobUe home. OXFORD TRA3LK& ' SALES ew 80* and 3-bedroom Mariettas. On* of th# host buy* • where today. Hot th* UMrE ultra j uuktorn, 80’ -13’ wMb •id qS8», for thos# wpo -» only th* hiot. .. 10' wld* General, a complsto i* * 3 bedroom*. Thoe* WWft, j* *, an prltos. Priced buyer, term* reason- ^OXFORD TRAILE". BALES mile south of LukeOrton on 1IM MYl-ir*- ' 1 ethsl used ( SALES SIZZLER tll^E NOW AT BOR HUTCHINSON Savings galore on now 19*3 * and Utd htOfui qOQOS. W4* JflMp gans to sebot worn. Comparg W* ETROITER, ALMA , and PONTIAC CHIEF tor prion, quality and Uyablllty. Yos you get n S^ho^Tn Z Suf roVM ber. stop out tMtmy. you’ll b* glad Drayton Flalllg ■‘“Sro Par khueat Triilef Sate* , . and Nomads, u,. 2, . Loonted-haK way between Orton and Oxford on MM, next to Alban Coun-try Cr' '" 1' T. mapHfl ............ Oood uaed home type 10 PER CENT DOWN. Cart wire and hitohos;histallod, Complain Uu RentTroilor Syo. ^ B=e=B l==:i ,lu* Tax and Rooapabi* Tlr* 24 hr. aorvto* on recapping mirSF 1063 HONDA TRAIL 00 « iltyciM HMD 35.UP; NBW 830.00 pF. Scariefcr» irioyoi«» Hbbb^ Am III f fl- I4M - THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER IS, 1068 CLEAR THE DECKS! Everything Must Go! I Uo 4o 25# Discount !l ■a Hydrodyne Comboards boat biw»v- IHHPUI 1 Harrington Boat Works] UM k. Telegraph Rd. «M«j INRUDE M . OAtWOH'k SALKS JNSroESTORAUJi * CMS LAKE MARINS 3981 CASS ELIZABETH RD. IHH1 «6 *•» OWEN? DATS JET BOAT ,SALK REASONABLE JOHNSON 8ALEB-SBRVICS Everything for the BOAT S’ UP to 40 per cent off on Skis >. Owens Marine Supplies S Orchard Lotto " * ‘ t ^ running oio' cruleTl^/'l 'Brqnee Prop*. a bargain oi Mi. f» T • Firestone outboards, re*, price - • imr*0* only mo. , FIRESTONE STORE no n. saginaw pe t-wt SUNFIBH SAIL BOAT. FIBEROLAS hull. MW OUi summer, W7I. «**- SHARP SEA-RAY 900. CU8TOM DE-luxe. fully equipped. SMS boree-pover. electric. Evinrude. ueod leu Bum M hours, 11300. OR 4-liM or OR MM. ‘ SAPS BOATING CLASS - 8-WEEK [ TONY'S MARINE POR EVINRUDE ^ wrwW mwi m.Atni fl' fiber (lul bull and DOW red H dacron Bella. TR 6-3100. F WINTER STORAGE -Br.flWMt **""*>* torjoato and, motor*. MM^^lQ^ohMOP^wSre fj Sea-Ray. MFG. Aerocraft boots. P PJOTEKS BOATLAND *■ ' (After the solo It’s the eenrloe w> ms w. opdrhe* c yja MEd Uted liutlu lOl MM CHIVY PICKUP. RUNS Naw and Usad Tracks 10) MBS CHEVROLET H TON STAKE 6 cylinder, 2 speed. sttdto. aM jraOME**FERO^toN,* RocLrter MURE PTCKUP, Dm- lSMCraVROLET 2 TON STAKE. • oyllpder. 4 .speed. 2 speed axle. liHLa WeltminMM■' gxtfft •l'*pn -TFIROMFI I960 CHEVROLET 14 TON PICK-up, I oyttndar, standard tana* i»s ^ . OL 14711. ■sssifirjt Buff; DODOE pickup. mm HUTCHINSON SALES :«;g“«0#S7 CLEAN MSI „ CADILLAC.'' RADIO, " heater, S100. inquire 221 Perry; 198j^HBVY OgNreBTIBLB. PAIR 1985 CHEVY S. AUTOMATIC. PRI- 1249 FORD Mi TON, OOOD CONDI-lion. OR 24277 ).... 1991 FORD DUMP - 5-YAfkD BOX. PE 4-9392. I 1999 FORD WRECKER FE 5-29M ^ ‘ .MCT-UP |M8». 99S INTERNATIONAL TAMtutk truck, a-1 condition, toll or trade, will exoept ear u trade to — PE M4IK ; SALE $795 SALE $695. t ■ ALSO / I MW '03 Ford .BeenoUne vans below factory InvoiM. Saro on ISM. .... 5 JOHN McAULlFFE FORD ^jwteo, 1 LIQUIDATION LOT US S. Saglnow —if ~ IMS CoEVETra. 8SPEED. , 291 Oakland Art. ' PE 8-4079 CHEVROLET' VTwMt' EfJ , « cylinder, stondord tro salon. SM down, payments w as 227. per month. BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER 998 a. WoodWMtr MIS-9 Better Used Trucks ...GMC Hunters Specials 1952 Ford Pickup In A-l Condition, with almost now camper, as If contained, gaa lights, TV converter, sleeps 4. 1963 Chevy Carry-All like new. Take the seats out In 9 rnln.' and you have got your BILL SPENCE Rambler-Jeep 6873 Dixie Hwy. ot M-15 _ CLARKSTON MA 5-5881 tsh, spotless In and out. stick 8-OyL drives this one — MuIIUHI ** • • LLOYDS 2922 Oakland Ave. j SAVE- oii Auto Itrsuranee • 1 NOW Aetna Auto-Rite PoUoy saves careful driven REAL MONEY. (25,OM liability, SL2S0 medical. II,0M dehth benefit. *20.|M uninsured motorist ooveragt. $11.00 QUARTERLY 2 can 217.M BRUMMETT AGENCY Mlracla Mile PE 4-0989 Paniga Cars 105 AUSTIN 1957. A-39 SEDAN. 1220. MI A728I. 1980 ENOLIBH FORD, 4 ON THE SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 Oakland Ave., US-10 1993 TRIUMPH TIM, RED I wire wheels. OR 3-2100.___ 1982 Tlti EXCELLENT CONDITION. FE A9967 alter A ~ 957 METROPOLITAN. HARDTOP, radio, ‘ hea | ^Eh PE 4-0013. OPlL, NO ROST. Low MILE. as*. »M1 FE 9-9*11 after I. 199* RElifAOLr DAUPHINE, SUN roof. *285. 2214 Ternou. OR 2- Sift 15*5 SUNBEAM ALPINE SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 Oakland Ave., US-10 Renault "Authorlaod Dealer" OLIVER BUICK and JEEP Ml Vl^ BUB 9-I>ASBENOkR, A-l condition. Pontiac Eportc.Con, moT csYAuburn. OaU 339-1811, OLIVER RENAULT Arc you looking for a oar that will glva you up to 40 miles pc? gallon. Renault Is the answer. RENAULT DAUPHINE .81490 RENAULT R*8 . . 11840 SUM down on above eon. low ww jwmuti OLIVER .. .rInault 1963 VOLKSWAOEN A-l RUNNING, radio, heater. *1105. SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 Oakland Ave., US-10 Naw and Usad tars MBS BUICK, I DOOR. CLEAN, ' ‘white wolla — H «47Bt. ' .. 1987 BUICK. DRIVEN BY BLDIBLY 1997 BUICKS. 4 IS CHOOSE FROM, low m 8297, no money down II pw w**k. HEATER, ' imtM SIDEWALL TIRES, MUtPRED WITH POW-f ER. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. PAYMENTS OP 839.78 PER MO. Mo Mr. Porks at Harold Turner Pord. Ml 4-7100. Now aid Usad Cars CADILLAC 1997 CADiUtjuB IOIUaII' Po'IUaJ. ' full power, air conditioned, light i Also 1959 SS~‘ Mr. W-totto t i^^tioWB Be vSle c^i^lac. CHEVROLET 1999 V-8, RADIO, heater, auto., rung perfect, body rusted, 81,809 actual miles. *198. 828*2344.________________ 4K CAM AND 1 RUNNING - . Pint 88* take* all, FE 4-S39S. loss cHkVir ''ittbOK ""shiEt."" vs. with IS down. Marvel Motors Chrysler-Plymouth 1001 n. Main Rochoator moTSwvaj* COUPE,, »iSSSr^nftS^ special ^OUM. 1902 CHEVROLET IMPALA CON-vertlble. V8 engine. Powergllde. Power steering and hrakee. Autumn gold finish. Only I2.MB. PATTERSON SSvRWtT CO..’"* * WOODWARD/”* --liridWK- 1002 CORVAIR SPIDER CtWtVERT-wblto with red Interior. 01.* 884-8185 - Milford. IS CHEVROLET 2-DOOR WITH 0 cylinder a n d powergllde. radio and heater, full price only 0307. 1903 CHEVROLET 8 BISCAYNB 2 . stick $1,710. CaU owner 625- JKasfl—l money down. — - - King Auto 'Sales 3275 W. Huron St. ___________FE 8-4088_________ 1963 BEL AIR STATION WAGON S I, powergllde. power* steering, ra-v.o. heater* whitewall tins, saddle ton and belae - EM 34)892. V, VldHAni . DAK- JRIBSUB Conway, dealer. IMS CHEVROLET CONVERTIBLE, Mm engine, power brokei and itoer-9099, OL 1-1— 1963 Impala Convertible Demonstrator, fully equipped. Cortavan Brown. Low mileage. Priced to cell. Van Camp Chevrolet MILFORD ’ MU 4-1098 1002 MANZA CONVERTIBLE, 4 speed — 102 H.p„ wire whgel ...... OR 2*>92T lli i i 1983 CORVETTE 8TINO R f . IMPALA, f- door hardtop, hi* engine, very nice. 0748. Frank's Auto Sales. >NE OWNER, 1980 dHKVY BI8-' cayne 2 door, 0 cyl. straight stick; »4».- ©R MlgJ. 4298 Hatchery ltd., Drayton Plains. chUvy' bel air 2 uidOR. 1960 CHEVROLET door,. 0 aylindor prloo with no money down. LUCKY AUTO SALES "Pontiac’s Discount Lot" M2 a. Eoglnaw I FE 4*9214 _ . CHEVROLET 4 DOOR. 1902 Chevrolet Bel-Atre. Toko payments, FE 4*9722 oftor 0 p. 1989 CORVETTE, 2 TOPS. WHITE with black interior, radio, boater, only 92.198. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO.. 100 8. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMIHOltAM. MU 4-2738. 90 CORVAIR MON2A, WlVU'S^dAR, low mllaago. A*i. FE 94802. PLED. 11,200. Can bo s 1901 CORVAIR 4-DOOR MONZA with outomatlo transmission, ~ dio, heater, whltowallt. $1290. JOHN McAULIPPB FORD 21H W4ft Huron dtreet (One Mile West of Telegraph) Matthews-Hargreaves CHEVROLET Has( Openings for All Late Model Used Cars Call or drive by 631 Oakland at Cass TOP PRICES OFFEREDI Aik for ■ uMr, Bauer or Mr. Mlsfoldt BIRMINGHAM. MI 4- 1961 CORVAIR MONZA 4 DOOR. One owner. Juit.liko new. 01200 full price with no money down. L'UCKYAUTO-SALES "Pontiac's Discount Lot" , M3 E. saglnow FE 4*3914 1061 CORVETTE. 3 Y6rt, PC glide, radio, healer, whltowolto. Extra clean. Only 02,708. Easy t- PATTERSON CHEVROLET 1000 S, WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM. MI 4*3710. ___ BUICK ELECTRA 4 DOOR hardtop. 4 way power, pvt. r PWnor. Best Offer. PE 2-4070. MOl BUICK LelABjt# •' I bOOR hardtop," l owner, powered, “ consider good older Of" — up a* down payment, 3*1710. - ' r pick- 1002 BUICK' LoSABRE., POWiit brakes > and stooging. Excellent ^ OR 8*0202. R & R MOTORS >00 VALIANT V-200, 4-door, auto* „ matlo ......... ........I •00 COMET adoor, atlekV ..... 2 >80 FALCON 2-door, (tick . • ’88 CADILLAC 2-door hardtop, power ........ '82 CHEVY it 3-door slide ,$1, •61 MONZA 4-d(ior automatic BL Maciy others to choose from OW Warranty ot 1961 PALCON't OWNER, BlRMINO- Jfmwn i a. ivoodward mi o*8»oO We picked some flowers for you, Mommy! huoket seats. M.000 actual | TwtUght blue flnlah, 02,498. saw terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO.. 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE., B1BMINOHAM. 1C AjBBH .,7. -24-HGUB SPECIAL 1962 CHEVY Impala Sport Sedan V0 englna With powergl1"- — er steering, radio am •olid ttr~ dream ct_. $1999 finlSft W t, PAST ____.speed tranemuteion. power otoorin* and brakes. Saddle tan finish, 0,000 actual miles. Only 93,-995. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM MI *4n£^M 1963 CHEVY SPORT COUPE With a 4-speed transmission, power steering and brakes. dark blue finish, matching inlSrlor, lest than 9,000. Sea this bargain I Crissnian Chevrolet Co. Rocbaster_______________OL !■***• CHEVROLET STATION , Power atoerlng, power brakes. __tomatlc. 03,378. OL 0*1037. 1089 CHRYSLER t-DOOR. IDEAL second oar. Only 8798. Suburban Olds 989 8. Woodward S? OWNER Sportsman, gleaming fl 1958 DeSOTO door hajdtop, nlsh Inside and out, _________ power atoarlng and brakes, oxe. tiros, radio. FE 2* i power atoerlng and brakes, «it ,aae this one to ,,l'» a throughout! 7 DODOE 9 PASSENGER 8TA- blg family oar. 999 down, pay* manta at low a« 927.80 par month. BIRMINOHAM RAMBLER 000 E. Woodward___MI 0*2006 ISO EDSEL 4-DOOR and radio, apotlosa _ luxury ride and drive oout price. automatic) GOOD NEWS! . $1,000 This Is The Amount We Can Now Lend You Borrow hero for caah need* paymant to na *“ fast, convenient counselor * log this phone Fl_pfi MMMRH8II1 Home & Auto Loan Co. llF w__ _____ 1th, ,Our service la r steering, VE. -Rat to. i960 FORD - 4202 iridoK St. Binningfem TRADES' Every used car offered for retail to the public is a bonafide 1-owjier, low mileage, sharp car. 1-year parts and labor warranty, ■08 ELECTRA.'„™. I •U LeSABRE hardtop .. Bargain •01 ELECTRA hardtop ....; FISCHER BUICK I960 FORD 2-DOOR WITH 8 - CYL* ’—-Minis- payments %92 Fordomatlc t , IBP mjMMkr, * o onto 9197, monthljf payme and iw money down. King Auto Sales 3278 W. Huron St. mi Q-40W . pay CasU M *T iftHVr'TUQUi —“h a Consolidation Lota.Up to. 00. Convenient .puments end Insurance at NO EXTRA COST. Phone Or Apply n |*9r*on. Family Acceptance Corp. 317 National Bldg. M w. Huron Telegfcono FE <4022 '' -. DOOR, VK, AUTO* matlo. runs ahd drives perfectly. 8299 with IS down. ■ Marvel Motors 1997 LINCOLN PREMIERE 2-DOOR hardto^bsrgsln, full power, full Surplus motors I960 FORD 4-DOOR, BRILLIANT ^^-ik Mauty, bargoin buy al ““ ‘ LLOYDS \i __ 1998 MERCURY RUNS OOOD, ""usporatalon^prctal at $0^. Oakland Ave. ■* “** 1990 MERCURY 2 DOOR HARDTOP. Exc. condition. Low, mileage. Auto. 2-tone. Radio. Hoator. whitewalls. Tinted glass. Windshield washers. -Other extra*. Beri -**--^** ***' USED CARS SAVE at SPARTAN 1 ft, r i 211 edge, inc. DOOR FORD OALAUf ■ . hardtop. Y*t atlefc ihtft. full prloa with no money down. LUCKY AUTO SALES “Pontiac's Discount Lot." 103 8. Baglnaw ■ FE 4-23H * FORD 4,4)OOR, V*8, AUTO-latte, I owner. |080. Coll P” ' 1959 Forf 4-Door Sedan With V8 engine. Fordomatlc transmission. radio, hoator, yours (or mo. ' BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER' Since 1030” ON DIXIE HWY IN WATERFORD AT THE STOPLIGHT OR 3-1291 1082 . OLDBMOBfUI tt CONVERT-lbie. a real honey for the money, all white with red interior, full gower with 8,000 aotual miles, 02.- Suburban Olds 868 8. Woodward MI 4-4488 1050 FORD',“GOOD RUNNINO CON-dltlerl. g36U. FK 9*0608i 1080 FORD STATION WAOON (It 2 door V-s automailwr (1) 9 cylinder stick. 8386 full price with no money down. Your Luefcv AUTO SALES “Pontiac's Discount Lot" 163 S. Okgmaw Ml' ...» FALCON, OOOD CONpiTIOIL iiW. OB"' 2-8611. ' ________ I960 FALCON 4 DOOR STATION WAOON, RADIO, HEATBR. AUTOMATIC transmission, WHITE SIDEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONfY DOWN. PAYMENTS UP 626.75 PER MO. See Mr. Parka at Hargld Turner Em MI 4-7800. i960 FORD FALCON.. STICK, good condition. FE 8-2026. , 066 DELUXE TUDOh, radio, outo.. low miloogo. like now. OR 8-MT9 »ftor 8 d. 0 FORD 6. EXCELLENT CONDI- 1880 FORD STATION WAOON, V- automatic, special 6666.' _ BIRMINOHAM. RAMBLER - --- ' " MI 6*3866 Auto Sales. UL 2*1190. _______________ W FORD FAIRLANE 800, V-8, power steering, axe. condition. 660(1 MI 4*2126. JOHN McAULlFFE FORD 630 Oakland Av** PAYMENTS OF 626.78 *"■*" •* Harold Turnar Ford; % .... id brakes, radio, naater. _________White with turquoise Interior. Only *1,409. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1006 8 WOODWARD AVE,, BIR- 7 N. Perry 8t. PE 5-8121 Houre: 0 to 5 daUy; Sat. 9 to 1 1961 FORD 4 DOOR STATION WAQQN. RADIO, HEATER. ECONOMY ENGINE. WHITE SIDEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY 1984 FORD CONVERTIBLE V-8 stick; '88 Pontiac 2 deerrTIS^Ply^ '87 Plymouth 6 atlek. Gordon’s Pure Oil Service, 1061 Joelyn, FE 8-6.180 OF *36 75 PER MO, Sec Mr. Parks ^ Harold Turner Ford, mi 4* 1947 FORD t-UOOE, Vfl. FLOOR shift, sell with or without 6 new ft” whitewalls. Call after 6 p.m. Ml (-8894. PATTERSON Chrysler-Plymouth ,061 Main N Rochester 1081 FALCON Deluxe wagon, with automatic tranamla* ilwrr-radio; 'hjPSYW^'''t|fM**ltoito» beautiful jet Mae* finish, with black ana whit* vinyl trim. Only IP HASKINS <, Back-to-Scho61 Used Cars 1160 FALCOn Moor, gas earing 6 ouinuHlon, radio, tlniw. ... corVaIR Moor, etc_ transmlaeldn, load# of gaaauwMggi radio, Uke/now, light blue finuh. ft Bel Air Moor, wagon, bwergllde. radlo,^ heater, npala 2-deor hardtop, taudard./fransmtaslon, il mar«on finish. 1661 CORVAIR Monsa Coupe, 4-epeed big engine, radio, aolid white finish. HASKINS Ch@vrolet-01ds 1961 Econolhnle Ith radio, hedter. 2nd and 3rd ro ■eat*, MEM. . 4- * BEATTIE WsWawdUmdCurt.. ftt MiofT Chryslar-Plyhiouth 1061 N; ifta , ' , Roch T 1*6) PLYMOUTH Wagon rwlth V6 angina, automatic I ’ mission, iwffloi power stes whltewalls.Tbsautrful bronss OR 34^1 ■" FALCON, 3vboOR "beBan; th a medium gram Usiah, an it-of-state ear and le only.:A Hr.,.’' .?. . JOHN MqAULIFFB | bis. v*a. AutomaUe, rad to. ■ iBwitor. whimwalMi t-qtasr. *Hi>8r JEROME • FERGUSON, Rochester Feed Dealer. OL 1-1711. „ M2 FORD ' OALAXilTt'^'tjadR. ***•- ..ovM»iiwii' ■ naetmaht*.________ 1661 FORD Otl, A.xift, PIIllV iipped.t owner. JjAiEW. FALCON fUTURA.t* CYLIN- lera, outo. transmleelon, 4 wagon, U.666 mlloa/Mr own* I146Q, EMMEU, ,y ;; PATTERSON, ' Chryslar-Plymouth JOl N. Main . Rochester . MU-FORD Oalaxle 900 2-door hardtop, with sutomstlo transmission, .radio, heater, nowar steering, whitewalls, beautiful Ct»(t- 1*57 OLDS *9. 4 DOOR HARDTOP, Very clean, no ruet. 6639. EM 3-3416 after 6:30. 1686 OU3E SUPER tl 'I BfioR hardtop. Power bralei, power steering. 6666 (ull prloo with no LUCKY*AUTO SALES / ^Pontile'S DlRcount Lot" 081 &.DB P-85 WAQON; 9 PA8-senger, fully equipped and sharp. *1896. r , Suburban Olds 865 8. Woodward Ml 4*4488. 1960 OLDS 98 CONVERTIBLE, EXC. Condition lniHe and, out, all power and oxlrnc, now tires, oar had good eare, reasonably priced, 1 p.m.-8 1962 F-85 DELUXE STATION WAO-on. Fully equipped including iug* gage raok. 1-owner. Birmingham .trade. Beautiful maroon with white top. Sale priced at 92.398. Suburban Olds 568 S. Woodward MI 4-4498 1063 tolllBT DBLUltlD 4-DOOjft. o.uuu actual nuiee. new-car gu tee. Only 81.898. Easy torme. TERSON CHEVROLET CO., 8. WOODWARD AVK., B1RM PATTERSON Chrysler-Plymouth, m Ni’Hfcln Roch 1959 PLYMOUTH FURY Moo? hardtop, with V8 engine, automatic, radio, heater, power steering 188. 89V9 AUto'. Wf 9-3279. 999 'PLYMOU™^ SAVoi#"i 6 'UYUS* der, stick shift. 8390. 1096 Prsmont. .......-........ COME VISIT RUSS JOHNSON’S Used Gar Strip '61 Bonneville Convertible ....61986' '61 Chevrolet convertible .... 1196 '63 Catalina Convertible ,.... 2765 '62 Mercury Comet .'.. 1895 ’61 CorValr Monza .... 1596 ’62 Corvalr Monza ........... 1896 ’62 Rambler ■ Amerloan ....... 1195 *62 Rambler Wagon .....1396 ’62 FoAtlae Sedan '. 1996 '89 Rambler Super Wagon ... 896 '69 Ford Oalaxit ............. >96 '89 Pontiac Hardtop .. IMS '61 Rambler WMon .....1395 '61 Tempost Sedan ... 1318 '61 Anglia 2-Door .... 896 '69 Rtmbler Wagon American 998 *60 Falcon 2-Door .....~ 699 '67 Dodge Wagon ...... 496 ’58 Rambler sedan “....... 796 ’8g Ford Hardtop ......176 . RUSS JOHNSON Pontiac-RagfflMer Dealer M24 at the stoplight. Lake Orion ’_______MY 3*6268 SIMEONS DEMOS ' etoertbk and brans, ,'*-^AY SIMMONS i FORD WHERE BETTER SERVICE KEEPS YOU BOLD . 841 8. Lapeer Rd. 1962 ‘ LOW! mileage, 1 'owner, Uro now. egn be aeon at 6677 . N. Dixie Hwy. j, flnillfMiiiMBMBBMMM Oengor.. V*S.: manuol ahltt. power stoerihg, tinted wlndohteld, under* coot, Coot bOlta. (tfi wws amt 8. 1927 PONTIAC |Mt|E door wagon, radio, hi aMtlp, double power. MMomToar. Frlood „ Rambler American, super 2-door., stlok shift. Excellent rubber, runs ^pSSkES AUTO SALES 66 OaklMd Avo. PE 2*2381 irtcirlM .. ___________WAOON.*4p». • ,-STARCHIBl\ ' hardtop, radio and nttm, oondltlon. 6848. M88 Ford, oondltlon, 6166, private 1998 i*ontiac^(-dooE, Excellent wlU trade. OR 3-1391, .SPECIAL 1959 PodtlOO hardtop, (Ull power. PONTIAC I960, 4 DOOR. POWER. I fUlBSintoiimr:l>.U>. 661*6611. 1666 CXTA(.INA bVaTION VlAGON. power brake* and steering, hydro. Mat offer. 112 Wampole Dr.. Clarks. 1962 Pontiac Catalina 4-door sedan, radio, heater, hydra* maiie. power brake*, power itoar* "*■ $2295 Pontiac Retail Store ' 65 Mt. Clemens Si ’ FE 3-7954 TEMPEST LeMANE 9 CONVERTI-'" , whit* with red' Interior, k. OB 3-2114, LAST SHIPMENT • NEW RAMBLERS FRESH STOCK A complete fine of sedans and , wagons. Must sell 35 new Ramblers. A choice of 7 demonstrators. Rambler Amerloan, heat, er, window washers, fully factory equipped. Delivered $1498 (621 Immediate delivery, excellent fl* - naneing. SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 Oakland Ave,, US-10 .OLIVER BUICK 1963 BUICE LeSabre 4-door ..82886 1963 BUICK LeSabre hardtop 63186 M63 BUICK LCSahra wagon . 66469 1963 BUICK Elaetr* 228 .83748 1663 BUICK eonvartlbla ......13246 Mty BUICK Skylark 3-door ,.23826 M63 JEEP Cab, FO 176 ......81741 1983 JEEP Waggonear ......63376 1663 JEEP ptekup . .$1981 1963 RENAULT Dauphin* ... 81446 1983 RENAULT R*| 4-door . .*1826 OLIVER -BUICK >199*210 Orchard Lake FE 2-9101 Naw ami Usad Cm to IMF CATALINA 8-DOOR. < Birmingham' BOBBORST 1*63 PONTIAC CATMitiM 3 DOOR - - hardtop, power ' brr •— -**—’— other axtras, 7166 3 PONTIAC UONREVILLB, VM-,a 4*door, automatic' tranemlesjon, whitewall WqeTM,***’ 7»*JMiyn. Low mUeaga. ARer 6 Mi Hrand PRIX 'FAJ-tory effiolari car. excellent eondl-•; lion. . AM-FM radio. Safe-T-Track 1683 PONTIAC CATALINA SPORTS Coupe. Power brakee, power FE3-7M3. iw ‘ YAcftoirr <#• ficial ear. Call alter 9:30 p.m. MA 5HM, 1*63 #b#tlM CATAUNA. 2 DR. .hardtop, tri-jower atlek, venture M63 PONTIAC 4 DOOR HARDTOP. RAMBLERS Thla Is lb* lest roundup. Gel that big deal on e '63 Rambler from 'ROSE RAMBLER SUPER MARKET # Union Lake T. DM 3-4153 EM 2-4156 1*99 RAMBLER * DOOR SEDAN, standard tranamiulon, run* good, loeki jert. W- ments as low SiWtaMlniontb. BIRMINOHAM RAIIBUIR “kg.’s.sss:ftnSBF2 RADIO. HEATER. WHITE SIDE* WAtSTTSUS. ABSOLUTB.Y NO MONEY OF *32.1* PER MO. Se* Mr. park* at Harold Turner Ford. Ml 4-7900. 19631 TRRU.iSSr Any toake or model , . You plek It - We’ll finance It You e*ll or have your dealer Call FE 44166. It!* easy COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK BARGAINS IN AUTO .GEMS i960 PONTIAC Star Chief, 4*door hardtop, beautiful (nag. finish, hy* dramatto tranimleslon. radio, heater. power etoering and brakes, whitewalls, a gem! WE HAVE A NEW 1963 DEMOS THAT MUST OOl l TERRIFIC DEALS ! STOP IN LET'S DEAL TODAY! H’aupt Pontiac ' Oni Mile North of U.S. 16 on M-ll Open Monday. Tuesday and Thursday until 9 p.m. ; MONEY BACK Guarantee After 4 Full Days' ™ , OF ANY USED CAR PURCHASED FROM Uft £ BONNEVILLE 4-DOOr( ... 8 BONNEVILLE Convertible 6 ELECTRA "MS" ........ 8 BONNEVILLE 2-Door ... I 1983 TEMPEST 4-Door . 1963 BONNEVILLE Convert. . $3399 1932 MONZA 2-Door .. $1891 1962 BONNEVILLE 2-Door ... *2*99 1962 ELECTRA "223” ,i,. *3199 19(3 IMPALA 2-Door Hardtop *2691 1983 BONNEVILLE Wagon ... »4tM 1989 BONNEVILLE 4-Door .... 91499 1992 PONTIAC 4-Door Sedan .. 91999 19*2 BONNEVILLE 4-Doer ... 12*99 SHELTON PONTlAC-BUICK 223 N. Main OL 1-8133 ROCHESTER, MICH, itow Mri Bad CiN 'to ' ■ PI ..... TCMMid*! ■ BUt YOUR rambler HOUGHTEN & SQN_, SN.MatoARaefaaator OLI.yf*! f.choice ot • ilk u*Sb Ramblers. Sedana. waioni. A complete stock. Zxcetlent ftoanc- lug, immaqiaw SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 Oakland Ave.,MJ§-10 A CHOICE OF 100 SELECT USEU CABS ' Clearance Sale. No Mir otter refuted. Mostly one owner new ear deaL**8eel0an ’*6 4 deer with atr. ALSO Oet your ninq,m eur list for one of the flrat trade-ins on the 1*64 model*. Avalleble on or around Got. S. Call Ed Downey. WILSON' pontiac-Sadillac 1350 N. Woodward OLIVER BUICK1 M2 LeSabre 4-doer power ..*87*9 M2 BUICK Skylark 9*door . .62381 M2 RENAULT *ldoor sedan tlOIS Ml BUICK Blectra 2-door . (2384 Mi BUICK Special black ....61662 Ml CHEVY 3-door atlek ....613(1 Ml BUICK Eleetra 228 . 62871 Ml BUICK LeMre convert. *2113 Ml FORD convertible ......61616 1(6 RENAULT 4*door .6 8*6 M0 BUICK Eleetra 326 ,...61886 M0 T-BIRD 2-door .hardtop' $1711 M0 MERCURY 3-dr. hardtop 617(1 M0 MERCURY 2-dr. (tick . 6 996* OLIVER BUICK ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN SPOT DELIVERY X JUST MAKE PAYMENTS Car Full " Pay ' Car Full . i Pay Price ^Vkiy, j > Price v Wkly. ’58 Pontiac. Hardtop $497 ' 4.17. ’^8 Ford v Hardtop $297 $2.73 ’57 Ford 3-Door Hardtop $ 97 $1.08 ’59 Me*cury $697 $6.52 *57 Plymouth $197 $ii2 ’57 Chevrolet $197 $2.12 ’55 Chevrolet CO $1.08 195) Chevrolet 3-Door, Etlex $497 ' $5.17 ’59 Chevrolet Convertible $997 $10.24 1957 Pontiac 2.Doer Hardtop $397 $3.72 '56 Oldamobile 2-Door Hardtop $97' $1.08 1959 Simca 4-Door $297 . $2.97 .. PLUS MANY OTHERS ’ TRADE-INS ACCEPTED. NO CREDIT PROBLEMS CREDIT MAN ON DUTY AT ALL TIMES TO OK APPLICATIONS, EITHER IN PERSON OR BY PHONE LIQUIDATION. LOT •9661 ’ 60 S. TELEGRAPH / X \ ’ 333.4 ACROSS FROM TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER 1 rilE ■ PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER ■ 18, lgC3 ision Programs $ Attempt Plung From Golden GcM 8:30 (?) Movie: "The Otter Love." (1947) Berfceft Stanwyck, David Niven 8:48 (5$) Drench for Teachers . 1:91 (D Warm-Up T 8:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 9:00 (2) Movie: "The Skipper Surprised His Wife.” (1950) Robert Walker, - vJowTtariie ' (DUrieg (9) Romper Room 9:19 (50) Let’s Read 1:81 (9) Jack La Lanne 9:85 (58) Tomorrow's Homemak- SAN FRANCISCO .((JPI) -Three men who had never met, were from different dtiee and Held dissimilar Jobe, tried yea* terday to jump off the GoMsa Gate Bridge. TV Features He Just Couldn't Sef> LONDON (UPl)-The Mar: of Aflesbury bail rejected a They were prevented from making the 235-foot plunge by: highway patrohnien and mfli-fttury police. TheyiMiuned marital or ether domestic prob- Since it was beilt 31 years ago, the f graceful, erange- PATTY DUKE SHOW, 8:99 p. m. (7) Debut of comedy series starring Academy Award winning teeiHger in dual role of look-alike cousins, one American^ tte otter European. ..._............ ■ - BEN CASEY, 9:00 p.m. (7) In seaaon premiere, new day, worker ta brought to hospital with radioactive substance lodged in spine. CHANNING, 10:00 p. m. (7) First show in drama series set against background of midwestepi university campus. 18:89 (3) I Love Lucy i (4) (Color) Play Your Hunch ;(7) Girl Talk (9) Movie: “Violent Playground." (1957) Anne Heywood 19:49 (58) French Lesson 19:55 (56) Spanish Lesson 11:99 (8) McCoys (4) Concentration (7) Price Is Right 11:19 (61) Let’s Read ^ 11:89 (2) Pete and Gladys (4) (Color) Missing Links (7) Seven Keys 11:51 (98) Memo to Teachers THURSDAY AFTERNOON 12:08 (2) Love or life (4) (Color ) First Impression Twenty year* M the ' •/wsAw yearn on TV! Join the Nahona tor top comedy t ; ' 7:10 P.M. TONIGHT ON CHANNEL (9) Cheaters 10:88 (9) Ted Lindsay 18:45 (9) Maurice Pearson 11:09 (I) (4) (?) (9) News, Weather, Shorts 11:20 (0) Lucky Scores 11:25 (7) Movie: "Jolaon Sings Again." (1949) Larry Parks, Barbara Haie 11:81 (2) Steve Allen (4) (Ookir) Johnny Canon (9) Movie: "Action in tte North Atlantic." (1918) Humphrey Bogart. 1:99 (2) Peter Gunn (4) Best of Qyoucho 1:89 (7) After Houn THURSDAY MORNING 4:15 (1) Meditations 4:20(2) On the Farm Front 4:25 (2) News 6:30 (2) Spectrum’63 (7) Ernie Vbrd (9) Hawkeye 12:25 (3) News 12:31 (2) Seereh for Tomorrow (4) News - Huntley, Brink- ley ■ (9) Yogi Bear (58) Art and. Artists (8) Story of a Country Docs tor (D Best of Groucho SHE’S A WHS — Carol Woodward, who will bo 10 this month, ridos a bicycle and playa like a norma) child, despite having lost her , Sponsored by CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY CLOSE-OUTS PORTABLE <•) (Special) Politol Me-cast (56) Kaleidoscope (2) CBS Reports (4) (Color) Virginian (7) Ozzie and Harrltt (9) Movie: “Split Second.” (1968) Alexis Smith, Richird Egan (50) Crossroads of the arms were cut off by train wheels eight genre ago at Ticon-deroga? This Associated Press follow-up depicts Carol today.) SCHROON LAKE, N.Y. ft * Carol Woodard is a sparkling little girl who rides a bicycle and, she says, "can draw real good" —even though she lost her arms at the age of 1 Carol will be 19 Sept. 25 and (4) People Are Funny (7) General Hospital CONSOLE STEREOS (19M) Boris Karloff, Jason Robards Jr. 1:19 (50) German Lemon 1:89 (2) As the World Turns (4) Best of Groucho (7) Bachelor Father (5D World History 2:09 (2) Password (4) (Color) People Will Talk (7) Byline: Steve Wilson (86) Mathematics for You 2:25 (4) (7) News 2:39 (2) Hennessey -i... (4) Doctors (7) Day in Court (56) Young Artist at Work 2:55 (7) News 8:49 (2) Tb YeH the Truth (4) Loretta Young (7) Queen for a Day (7) Patty Duke Show (56) Great Books (2) Dobie Gillis (7) Pried Is Right (2) Beverly Hillbillies (4) Mystery Theater (7) Ben Casey (9) News Magazine (2) Dick Van Dyke (?) Funews 7:09 (2) News (4) Today (7) Johnny Ginger 7:08 (2) Fun Parade 7:48 (2) King and Odie 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Big Show BECOMES ADJUSTED Now, Bring at a foster home in this Adirondack resort, she has become so adjusted that tte was tte first to reach a foster brother who fell off his bicycle tte otter . day. She lifted tte bike off tte | boy, 10-year-old Dennis Ford, ’ made sure be had not been in* \ jured, then wheeled the bike to . the house. A testimonial banquet honoring Allen D. Noble: retired Pontiac police detective, for his community activities will be held Saturday at Jefferson Junior High School, OO^dotor, Ike 6:39 pun. program is befog given by ttb South East SCHOOLS lindIay SOFT WATER CO. a and Noble, now an Oakland Coun-naybe ty Circuit Court officer, is a km. member of the board of direc-• tors of the PORfiac Area Urban Jr* League and is on the executive boani of tte National Assocta-tion for tte Advancement of Ori-Raii- ored People. 90,909 He Jotted the police depart-)f the ment In 1937 and held the rank edlcalof detective sergeant when ha ill be retted this past spring. , ANTENNAS INSTALLED AMD _ REPAIRED SWEETS RADIO (I) Mile: "Kind Lady.” (1961) Ethel Barrymore, ' Maurice Evans ■ (4) Mickey Mouse Chib (9) Hercules (4) (Color) eftorge Pierrot (7) Movie: "The Parson and tte Outlaw." (1157) (9) Larry and Jerry (59) Industry on Parade (59) What’s New (9) Rocky and His Friends (8) Weather 1 (4) Carol Duvall 1, Across 1 Eli 5 Iowa college 8 Los Angeles university 12 Top 13 Miss Gardner \ Husband 8 Majuscule script 9 Cocaine source 10 Diving bird ; 11 Handle. 17 Mixtures 19 Bishopric 22 Rabbit’s tail 23 Hindu nurse. 24 Rodent 25 Jacob’s son (Bib.) 26 Pakistan province 27 Darling 28 Behold (Latin) 29 Southern university 31 Swirl 34 Pigment 35 Grouped 37 Promising 31 Nominal value a peg-leg sttgerl being in trouble. He g« ve I lm, money to get back on his foot. The Midnight Earl . . . Fernando Lamas’ll do a stock produc ion < r and his honey, Briber Williams, wants t< pla; a show... Ed Salivas will fly to London toTV- ap. Sonny Liston AT A prominent TV personality wa writ to "get rid1 of ten . pounds of lard." \ REMEMBERED QUOTE: "Home is tte pla ful men are treafod best and grumble most.” KARL’S PEARLS: The ideal of some tte i is girl who’s too proud to have her husband wor L, i Goa sign youf’re getting older is when yw r I they’re studying ta history - and you remem wr it tt Current Events .. That’s earl, brother. Reverend Tells Parish Hard Fads of Life NORTH STAFFORD, England (UPI) - The Rev. William Smith told his parishioners today that, unfortunately, honesty was not always tte best policy. "It is well known tat business that the honest man does not get tt Left 16 Cyclones 18 Flattered J - 20 Vine ^ . . I > I 21 Boy’s nickname { 22, Karesan Indian | 23 Fast 26 Nagged 30 Spar St Papal name 32 Shield 33 Tpp card 34 Small boat 35 Football position 36 Cambridge university 38 Thick soup 39 Lubricant 40 Armyfront f your husband keens coming home too "beat" to be gay and stimulating, tea wm oat to lobe gen ~i Only 00« Stops gutter clogging. t Limited Playing Cards Aas’td Plastic Pails Hue. QQc Only 00« Choice of Mi’td colors. Lhnh 4 Bdl. . O^C of 8 Of bdl TerryTiTasiorted colon Limi|2bdla. Type*, W f dock Colorful, irtistic pictures. NO MONEY DOWN on Anything You Buy on Credit at Sears! Automatic Washers 137 fYnawN £!*!?. m!l\ #3440 NO MONEY DOWN Just choose wash time, water temperature. Clothes are’washed in hot, warm dr cold water ... spray-rinsed 7 times, deep rinsed, then spun dry. 6-vane agitator; 12-pound capacity. \ #2580 Auto. Washer, Copper, “As-Is’?, .219.88 # 11572 Washer W/Suds-Saver, “As-I»” 189.88 #3560 Automatic, 3-cycle, “As-Is” .... 189.88 #31580 Auto. Washer, 8 cycle-“As-Is” 209.88 #3370 Deluxe Auto. Washer, “As-Is”.. 199.88 • SORRY, NO PHONE ORDERS or C.O.D.’s BEDROOM FURNITURE EXTENDED WARRANTY Provides Additional Protection AFTER Yonr Regular Warranty Res Expired., , ASK YOUR SALESPERSON ROEBUCK AND CO. NO MONEY DOWN Warehouse-Priced Wringer Washers I Number 4110 $77 NO MONEY DOWN #3250 Wringer, 1 only... 89.88 #1280 Wringer, Just 1.. 109.88 HURRY - QUANTITIES LIMITED AT SEARS WHSE. Automatic Elec. Dryers Elec. Dry^r Installed FREE on Det. Edison Lines-Venting Extra ' #3740 Gas Model . . $107 #3860 Electric .. 129.88* #3760 Gas Dryer 8147* #2880 Klaclrfo 159.88* . *“AS.IS” LIVING ROOM FURNITURE 2-Pc. Harmony House Living Room Suite, sible foam Heg. 1189.95 ,, ■RpP||M| _ Up-to-date, ;#» m 1 Uyling. See it tomorrow at our warehouse. Nr I Sisprs ‘saves you more! Limited quantities!w .R.MP1P $199 Living Rotam Suite. 5-Pc..•... $177 Divan Bed, Toast Color, Reg. $199.95 ..... $138 . $39.95 Harmony House Rocker ... V'i'.. .. , . $27 Haitdaumely Styled $59.95 Rocker ...... $33 \ , “Take. With” $5 9.9a Gold Reclindr, now only ..........$44 s 30% to 50% Off Summer Furniture SORRY, NO PHONE ORDERS pr C.O.D.’s 5*P ... . 69.98 Kmnmnrm Garbage Disposers, Whse. price,. 26.50 Regular $139.95 Dishwasher, now.........109.98 IHOMART Wall Cabinet, 30x30-ln............19.98 § Assortment of “AS-IS” Wall and Base Cabinets, „ Portable Dishwashers and Disposers Glass-Lined Water Heater 30-Gallon Sise, Homart! 40-Gallon.. .56.88 Other Water Heaters REDUCED $41 Homart Laundry Tub, Less Faucet.. Bath Outfit, less4rlm, Regular $80,951 ..., Still Shower Outfit, Regular $71.90!....... $99.95 HOMARTJet Pump, %-H.P., now ., $109.95 Convertible Pump, Mi-H.P., just.. Reg. $219.95 Auto. Water ^&e|er >. tf|U|j 'TEMA]f[)T LI ‘ MANY OTHER ITEMSt $34 .. 49.88 .. 49.88 .. 79.88 .. 94.88 V 189,95 $79.95 Console Machine, Round Bobbin.........$59 ZIG-ZAG Console Machine, Reg. $204.95 ....... $139 Deluxe Desk Model Sewing Machine, Reg. $307*95! Automatic ZIG-ZAG........... 249.88 ^KENMORE VACUUM CLEANERS Cluster Vacuum, Warehouse-priced .......... $26 Deluxe Kentnore Canister Vacuum . ..« . .... 59.88 - Renmore Quality Floor Polisher. < • . v . ,-.V. •. ....$21 MANY “AS-IS” PIECES NOT LISTED! HOMART Aluminum Doors 1 *^88 30x80”, 32x80", 36x80” “T.ki.wiih" FIBERGLASS) INSULATION $5.39 P41»er Wrap, roll., 3.88* $6.39 Foil, roll.. . 4.88* Regulgr $2.19! Pouring Insulation ..... ..... .1,49* , IIOMART FOLDING DOORS 32x80’*,Reg. $9.75,6.88 38x80”, Reg. $11.95,8.88 , . ■ •’ In Beige /. Disappearing Stairway, Reg. $21.95.. ........ ]5.88 . ,MT4KErX1TH” ON SALE AT SEARS WAREHOUSE - 481N. SAGINAW ST., TOMORROW ... HURRY IN Rnd SAVE! / in fashions and accessories . . . furniture ... in supplies and services • ALBERT’S • ARDEN’S DRAPERIES • ASSOCIATE LOAN 4 BAIRD'S BARBER SHOP • BAKER SHOES * BROKER SHOES • BOND CLOTHES • CARPARAMA • BOOKWORM BOOK STORE • CLAIRE HATS • CROCKER CARDIES * CUNNINGHAM'S DRUGSTORE* OONNELUS HAIR STYLIST • EMPIRE SHOE REPAIR • FATHERS SON SHOES * FINGER’S OFFICE SUPPLY • QRINNKLL’S MUSIC STORE • HIGHLAND APPLIANCE * CULLIOAN WATER CONDITIONING • FLOWERLANO FLORISTS • HUDSON’S BUDGET STORE * HUGHES-HATCHER-SUFFRIN • KINNEY SHOES • S.S. KRESOR • KROGER’S • MARIMNE IMP • MIAMI BAKE SHOP • SAM S WALTER SAUSAGE • MONTGOMERY WARD * NATIONWIDE INSURANCE • PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL CENTER • PONTIAC TRAVEL SERVICE * RIONARDS BOYS G GIRLS WEAR • RCsTjEWELERS * SAVON FOODS * MALL STANDARD SERVICE STATION * SHERWIN-WILLIAMS PAINTS * 8INQER SEWING OENTER • TANDY CRAFTS • TED’S RESTAURANT • TIE IUK • VANITY FAIR • lUlEBACK’S SUBURBAN • COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK * OORN OABIN TELEGRAPH AT ELIZABETH LAKE RD. ip c; E PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESD >»•*» available STAWllS* H9UID SHAMPOO ARXWRITER 1VNWRITER JRAA ChiMr* *a **Y I MOISTURE LOTION I SPECIAL §* I J W«fcl»ta. CONSTRUCTED OF Mrs I Ufm.^AUOMESAIUI ROUNDS AND FINISH IS NATURAL ' ' M ■ "*wuys IACKT0 11 SCHOOL ■ SPECIAL ■ Pmm4M AiMwW wfM* AwN Ml wM art wmIt «r «Mj (NmKng. flap «m amir «• I Hw iDmM mL •Wb NMW ftt TtyU to ImH 0 •AW iw ahmpMk limited timi 4AAVS shabB CUNNINOHAM'S C SIMILAC K CHUX DIAPERS •gmasf' 'mam mm BROS. Cigarillos St 925 5«g^Wmwww "saw WITH COHrtMMCS ZKKVt*l»«*I 11 DRUG STORES New! Mac DIARMIDS ICE CREAM w II t> muG STORES lJ 1ST. JOSEPH i | aspirin I »OTtU I OP 100 1 1 Ar«wMw*,«lbf I A7CI | itWB . vwiiiwmin w""* . „ , I 1 NIFTY -.m. 12*79* AMMUHCmmi K il LADY BROOKE M fc| j NHIBWt ^ I "aw TOILET TISSUE 10 ™“77‘ Shoe Cosnotis Shoo Coloirl V\f In 1 ■ n m Hp i | IIBT § 89° fl JL Folding Syringe 99* u WIIWw WIVIH m COLOUR YOUR OLD Al IffOIf WITH ANY JM NflY COLOUR YOU ■ | mm "VI 1 K5#il 1 1 VE |ll COTTON ■*»» 67* ].•==. COTTON MBS W II s TNBHNMETB B» CHOOSE/ H] wYiyrjff IH i.MMi WOMB: M oWm M'.VoN i^HHR * wifMMWy ■■ §yio6o^ ■Ml h^59c 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1963 ★ three days only 1 Thursdayy Friday, Saturday NOWHERE but at Vanity Fair. ,. at this tow price! MOHAIR SWEATERS I Here they are . .. at the lowest 9 pi;ice In townl Magnificent, hand*-I knit mohair sweaters Imported directly from sweater-delights In V-nack .and' car* digan styles In a host of- costume matching colors. Inlav# with tweeds pnd the town tailored looH . . ^ -Vitality's Mugging Pump. Pin-thin elastic editor is affectionate ib-feet all the lively loud day. Inside It's all comfort. Enfoy „ yours today. DOESKIN FINISHED ROYAL ADAGIO S-T-R-E-T-C-H . PANTS Selling everywhere at ' 10.99 to 12.99 ,-j VITALITY! 'flu stnsiU*shot too mm to show it Compare then) with 7.99-8.99 Mum’ll Slim, thin, tapered — the. fit that ftdttms your feminine lovetlneii. Autumn-right colon and black. With pr without airrupi. Your.. ' Florsheim Store OPEN EVERY EVENING UNTIL 9 YOUR CHOICE OF 2 MAGNIFICENT Maanavox FAVORITES! STEREO PHONpr,FM-AM RADIO COMPACT ir TV CHOICE OF EITHER SET True stereo high,*- fidelity with Micromatlc record player, diamond stylus guaranteed forlO years, four speakers and finer Magnayox stereo amplifiers provide undistorted music poweroutput. . . separate, continuously variable bass and treble controls . . . record library spine. In mahogany. This new versatile 280-sq.-lnch TV Is perfect for arty room. The compact case is only ,12 deep; making It ideal for shelves or bookcases; The optional mobile stand affords convenient room to room mobility. Exclusive Vldeometlc makes all tuning adjustments electronically for perfect pictures. Wood Cabinet. DOWNTOWN PONTIAC FI 3-7168 PONTIAC MALL 682-0422 VANITY FAIR VANITY FAIR : ■ ^'--r:'S ji-ym* V*“ «*■ w »-' pjijSW^W^ FABULOUS U STYLES <* flow you can have the truly alegaflnt hat you've always dreamed of . » ,* picked from Warde unbelievable one-of- a-kind designer sampltsalo. Find soft fur-fiber plushes and valours, chic rayon satins, newest colors and trims • • « all in the smartest brimmed and brimless silhouettes. • Smooth rich Calfskins e Fine ktdskin suedes o Slim mid or high heels e Leather soles, too Just arrived I The smartest costutne-look buys of the fall season I Softly detailed wool car-dtgans with matching skirts and cotton knit shells highlighted by embroidery or knit trims. Red, turquoise. Sizes 7-15,8-16. pick your wool suit dross now WARDS 3-K STY LIS TO UVS IN MSHIONABLY - DAT Ami DAY SEE WARCt BRENTSHIRE GLOVE COLLECTION AT 1.98 Just say Charge Iti SAVE 2.09 fashion pumps QUALITY PLUS ELEGANCE IN How marvelous—to find such shoo elegance at these big savings I Our pointed toe pumps feature new foam cushion oboyg toe for extra comfort. Black suede, black or brown calf, black patent leather uppers. Sizes 7Vi-9 AAA, 7-9 AA, 5 Vi-10 B. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1963 long-sleeved Brent knits MAtHHH WAIHAltl NO-IRON ' strikes AND SOLID COLORS SALE ENDS SATURDAY, SEPT.21 WATER REPELLENT RfgA HEN'S RIO, 4.98 WASH *N WEAR SPORT JACKETS Tops for casual living at typical Wards savings I Our long* | sleeved pullover knits fit to perfection, feel at wonderful as they look. Tailored with placket front, chest pocket and barrel cuffs. Choose stripes in 80% Orion* acrylic and 20% Woolf contrast-edged solids In 50% acrylic and 50% rayon. In sizes $,M,L A super value... at a lowWard price I Hand* somely tailored Jackets of Danstorml A great-looking wrinkle shedding cotton poplin from famous Dan WVer mills I Features tndude Zelan* water repellent finish, sueded cotton pldfd linings. Favorite colors. S, M, L, XL BRENT SsMdmMwVW MwnewiwnrWwi EXTRA LOW PRICE MpBRENT Jr - imp #BRENTJr D I So fittlt to pay for I Words Lab-Approved B knit shirts of 100% H washable combed cot-ton. Styled wllh crew-iSPl) W n®ck, long sleeves. Roll j M inforced seams assure f'JB long wear; matched i lH q| sides. Assorted stripes with solid-color lrib-knit trim. Hemmed j J|ppF bottom. Hurry I BRENT PREP PAJAMA VALUE Reg. 2.29. Sanforized* cotton broadcloths in button-front and pullover middys. Assorted prints, strides. 5 to 18. •MtAihrMbtR BRENT JUNIOR sm-Rimi prs Reg. 2J29.Warm 100% combed cotton knits. Solids with colorful action print. Fully Washable. Sizes 4 to 12. MENS’WASHFAST MECHANIC SOCKS 2 *r 91* Reg. 3 prs. 1.15.2-ply cotton body plus nylon on outside tor longer wear. Vat-dyed.$lack, long length* 10V4-13. Reg. 59c pr. 50% wool for warmth, absorb* ency—50% nylon for strength. Machine washable. SizJs 10-13. OAAERY THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER; 18, 1968 2, save *3 to *4! DACRON-FILLED 2* r PAIRS NOW *2 OFF Wards Anniversary Sale means big savings for you! Soft,' buoyant, sleep-inviting Dacron* polyester fiber fills the sturdy striped cottontick. Pillows are non-allergenic, odorless, mat-resistaht for Sleeping comfort. 20x2$r cut size. Buy and save at Wards! GOOSE DOWN FILL star & Imported doWltIn striped cotton tick. 19x OK*. «« TOO ma. ' FOAM LATEX CORE ^***** Reg. 4.99 ea. Won't mat. Zippered flora! cottop cover# 18x2dr. SAVE BIG! DURING WARDS HOUSEWARES SALE tU\A—4m. mffim DEFROSTER WITH THERMOSTAT! Wt 59f Melts freexer lee so fast food has no time to thaw! Automatic thermostat always keeps the right temperature. CURVED LEO FOR WARDS'BETTER MORE KNEE ROOM MLIci TOASTER T*1 n«f. 9.95 12*1 R#*. 14.98 Ironing fable adiusts Radiant control gives for standing, sitting. you the exact shade of Wheels on tear foot. toast you desire every Swivel front foot to time, whether bread Is level table. Vent-top. jry fresh or froxen. WARDS 3-PLY "PRESTIGE" COOKWARE Carbon steel Inside, stainless outside for even, economical waterless cooking, quick cleaning! 1 and 3-qt. saucepans, 2-qt. double boiler and 10Vi* skillet. Modem swirl design on gleaming stainless steel. Mirror bright fln-ishjstorage chest Incl. ‘including cov.n. ONTGOAAERY wool, AcrilarT, nylon piles 9 PATTERNS, 49 COLORS! PADDING'AND ALL PRICES CUT Beg. 4.H featuring our NATIONAL FLOOR COVERING SALE AT KOMI “ Sea carpal sot* pla* at ImmI Re* part advfaa at no obligation! , ^ ts ^fiiuiVi u in ifV rivitV.l^UHlOV f.j JlWWlUjM^T L fc UK «f ff. MM r. * • & THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1963 D—7 EAST-CARE NYLON RILE IN 4 EXCITING COLORS •j? Continuous filament nylon pMe^-well-known for ease-of-care, resilient comfort underfoot. Springy pile won’t mat down even under heavy family traffic Fuzzing and shedding are gone for good! Pretty loop texture enhanced by 4 clear colon. 9'pnd 12' widths. NYLON AXMINSTER OIL LOOP FILE Axminster; continuous filament nylon 4M Hr* pile. 9x12, 15' widths. Reg. LONG-WEARINQ NYLCREST Rich multi-level face,- 7 color styles. 12'x 15'widths. Rag. IAI CM Hr* 601CARPET-Dlf FONT NYLON PILE Tufted loop pile In "3-6" effect. 5 « 8.49 H»* color* 12^x15' widths. Reg. 1C.M VELVET-WEAVE WOOL WILTON Won't mot; hide soil. 15 colon In oH. 12 x 15'widths. Reg. 11.11 ,. h r*. ACRILAN ACRYLIC OR 601QARPET 2 easy-core carpet* In 15 colors. ' * 1 Ueww 12 x 15'widfhs.Reg.11.M eg* yd* NO MONEY DOWN Good-looking rug is perfect for den, living or family rooms. Foam rubber bockanhions steps, reduce* wodr—ng pad'needed. Lush rayon loop pBe stays springy, colon remain clear. 5. practical tweeds are -eloV to show soil. Other sizes from 4x9' la 12x18' mix NOUS! RUN FATTKRNf Mafcf paltems won't wear ...|4| off! Gently colored and. metallic chips set in dear, vinyl. SmooBi surface shuns " grease, scuffs, harsh soaps. Use aboYe grade* 4 colon. liiHissfflii D—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1988 D—9 Seconds! cotton percale pillow cases in PALE PASTtLS Seconds! 1 a printed thirsty teriry Hand TOWELS If addition to wide /elections ft brand-(MW, tint quality merchandise, we 'me* proud to offer these irregulars from OUT regular makers. Most imperfections 'ore minor oariations in weave, stitching. Appearance, wear not affected, hut you ' tape plenty at the low, low prices. 1 thermal Shirts, Drawers SECONDS! From well-known *D»n River’ mills! Delicate fashion color pillow casea tv EXCEPTIONAL SAVINGS! Don't miss these specially - selected groups of seconds, samples and J^e^^f^Wcmrsoared America s leadmg m We hand-picked them fdr style, freshness. Below are just a few of the savings! SECONDS! Almost impossible to find misprints mesa big savings for you. Big I5x25-inch hand towels of plush, absorbent terry, Wok, blue or gold tfointls on MMie.iill?,,.', «i tiffla. injjm,. i.!.} ,t')w SECONDS, Print Pace Cloths,.. .5/98c }2x70rin. Tablecloths, 1.77 ■hfawlla:- launder wily. Choose pink, blue, yellow, green, mocha. 42x38 V^-incnea. SALE! Circular knit cotton . . . tiny pockets hold body heat in, old man Winn* out to keep you warm „ in. coldest of weather. Wear them,, lot skiing, hunting,, ice fishing and all of-jypur outdoor ' activities. Have several of each how while they’re priced for be-pre-pared savings J Long sleeve shirts and ankle* length, drawers. Ecru; men’s sties small, medium, large and extra-large included. Slight misknits won’t affect wear. •toctvlc brew pelf IRREGULARS! Ceramic pots holds six cups. Long cord hkludad. Slight decorating " imperfections. Heats ‘. . m a16. Chinos, Petit* 8-16>~ Average 10-1 ft. Tall 12-16. Speciall j $M4 Women's ^Stretch Chinos. Cotton* nyipfi rrppor* tioned. Black, royal, lodan, $8.44 Women's Stretch Denims. Rodeo slacks of cotton-nylon. Navy, sand. S to 16*».eMI * Bulky Shetfand-look stylo of 68% wool-35 % Kodel* * Woinen's sizes 36 to 44 Jntrodudng our new Kodel* and wool* cardigans. Because of Kodel® polyester they art machine washable and dryable, are atelokSgecontrollcd, require no blocking. Soft to the touch. In medium grey, camel, black, winter white, red, blue. *TM Rutmsm Kodtk fiber TM DuPont Corp. CHARGE IT" AT KRESGE'S TH» -PONTIAC PRBSS.WEDNE&PAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1968 SAM & WALTER Delicious Sausage T1ML, FRI., SAT. SPECIALS! TURKEY LOAF 3... *89' ROAST BEEF LOAF . . . * 89' HICKORY HARD SALAMI...........*1.19 Italian GENOA SALAMI . . . *1.2S COOKED SALAMI.. | * 79' SERDELKI... . ..... *79' MIAMI BAKE SHOPPE Almond Nut COFFEE RING I newsy pared-down bootlet Uppered in softly caressable black glove leather, QualiCraft’s brass-buckled low boot takes on a new slender* *<1 AQ line look for fall fashion, wivv PARTY CAKES THE PONTIAC MALL AAALL OFFICE SATURDAYS 9:00 to 1:00 National iBank i ’ /♦ W k'\t ¥ a e Member Federal Deposit Inruraltce Corporation, 1 C l>Kft$g,V WteDNESfrAffy SEPTEMBERIMS THE P< rs9 Convenience Thw child whose vision is below normal believes ' that everyone sees only what he sees. Only w.ltH gjiJ5w<[a thorough eye examination can you know whether ■ he needs glasses or not. If corrective lenses dre, indicated we have special safety glass and frames that will take the hard wear of active children. Call today for an appointment. Pr.Paul C. Feinberg, Optometrist Phonau682<4113 IS THE. PAINT ON YOUR HOUSE D—14 The Scot’s Dining Room and Garden Court Cafeteria TED’S RESTAURANT BEST IN COLORS Be sure to see our ■rase mint SPECIALISTS ) We will give you the right adviet on how to got the hoot house paint protection and beauty for your homo* | TIE SgRWIi-WILmilS CO. Create Your Own Beautiful Bedrooms • . • With Arden’s New Fall Selection Of Bedspreads matching Draperies Floral Provincial AH Quitted THROW IIDSPREA1S 1 H Twin Full Dual $I998 *I998 $26M Red, blu«, block, melon, gold or green . .. all on whfte backgrounds. Matching Draperies. ■ ■ (Per Pair) 48"x45" 6M 96Mx45M1211 72"x63"10#l 9*1 48"x63M BM 96"x$3"13M Phone 681-1191 tfse Your “Security” Charge Curtains o Draperies Bedspreads THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1963 TV, STEREO and RADIO ENTERTAINMENT at HIGHLAND’S ROCK-BOTTOM PRICES! Free Delivery • ast, Dependable Service • J. 00% Satisfaction Guaranteed PriceBreakon New Deluxe S-Pc, Gift Pack ZENITH 6-TRANSISTOR POCKET RADIO Complete With ••''’'Ik*■ iloe ease, carphene.qD ■ ■£ .-■ FIDELITY iSTEREO rum 8 SPEAKER SOUND SYSTEM NEW! 240 walls of peak UHUhl power. NEW! Pushbutton studio control panel . .. 2-G tone arm—impossible I* accidently twin ■ meal'd! Superb, long, low styling with louvered more. Oil finished watnukyuMen •ad hardwoods. Model ML- Ufa COME IN-GET OUR SPECIAL LOW PRICEI Deluxe 23” Decorator TV Big, brilliant 23" picture. Slim styling. Newest Zenitlt quality features. Service •aver handle rafted chassis. 282 sq. in. picture area. ' MICRO-TOUCH ’ , Mm Tone Arm NO MONEY DOWN SENSATIONAL N -UlAM • STentO JETLINER 19” PORTABLE Truly beattlM lanawsupefsllm luggage «y]l«P Built-In dipole antenna and carry handle. 16,500 voh picture power. Large else rich tone FM apaakar. Quality hand-crafted chjpsli. 172 aq, In. pleura area. 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Chrysler Corp. yesterday announced it would generally hold the price line on Its new models for the fifth straight year. Other auto firms were expected to follow the lead of Chrysler, which was pie first to announce prices for the second straight year. Ford, General Motors, American Motors and Studebaker will announce their prices with; in the next two weeks, probably within hours of Introduction at dealers* showrooms. The last general price increase In the industry came in the 1959 * model year when they rose $50-$100 per car. < The first of the auto to reveal new model prices, Dodge and Plymouth announced a few increases yesterday which were balanced by about as mjiny similar price cuts. Move Climaxes Weeks Spent in Testimony Grand Jury Inquiry Asked in Pontiac on I Vice and Elections 28 Mexicans Killed as Train Rams truck The Pontiac City Commission On A Night Of Decision ''•' ....... ..... .■...’" ""1™^'"""***^ • Action Delayed Week SALINAS, Calif, iff)—A speeding freight train shattered a makeshift £us jammed with Mexican field workers yesterday, killing 28 and injuring 35 in the worst vehicle accident in California history. At least six of the injured were reported in critical *7—•—————♦condition today. Hie 28th U.N. Unit Asks S. Africa Ouster Special Committee Hits Apartheid Plymouth prices were up $2 to $6 for some models, down $2 and $3 in others. Still others were unchanged. Valiant announced a $16 price cut oh a station wagon and a $14 increase on the Signet 200 hardtop. Dodge announced reductions from $6 to $29 on some models, Increases of $2 to $16 on others. HIKE SPECULATED In recent months there has been speculation there might be an industrywide price hike because of the increase in some steel prices and higher supplier The industry also has been faced with higher labor costs because of contractual wage increases and cost of living raises. Mercury tp Range Above Normal for Next Few Dciys Temperatures for the next five days will average two to four degrees above the normal high of 72 and low of 53. Cooler weather will begin about Saturday. Precipitation will total one-quarter to one-half inch in showers Friday and again Sunday or Monday. Fifty-six was the low temperature reading preceding 8 a.m, today in downtown Pontiac. By 1 p.m., the area had warmed to 79. In Today's Press ■■I TV P JFK to take tax cut ap- j peal to people tonight-* I i .PAGE C-4. I "Reasons for Slide | 1 Many factors blamed in | I decline of hotel, restau- 1 | rant business—PAGE A*7. 1 No Coddling “Doctor of year” advises heart attack victims -PAGE C-10. | Area news.............. A-4 I Astrology ...^.......C-8 I Bridge ............... C-8 i Comics' ................C-8 I Editorial*" ............A-6 1 Markets ..........*....C-9 I Obituaries ........... C-18 I. Sports........,.v...C-5,7 I Theaters ...............C-4 § TV, Radio Programs C48 I Wilson, Earl.......... C-15 | Women's Pages ........B-14 ■■ j re FuneralTocJay Memorial Services Planned for Victims victim died at Monterey County Hospital. Bodies were rirewfr tor jUft I mile along both sides onKfzmci after the crash at a farm road crossing near the town of Chua-Iar, eight miles south ol Salinas. WASHINGTON (PI - President Kennedy will , talk tomorrow with die Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., and six other Negro leaders on the racial situation in Birmingham, Ala. BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) -They hold the funeral today for three victims of a church bomber—and already memorial services for the four Negro girls killed by the explosion are being organized over the country. The funeral for one of the girls Carole Rosamond Robertson, 14, was held yesterday with hundreds of persons, some white, paying silent tribute before she was buried in the red clay beneath cedar trees. National Negro leaders, including Roy Wllkitis of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, were en route to join In tribute to Denise McNair, 11, and Addle Mae Collins and Cynthia Wesley, both 14. Twenty - two died by the tracks. Others died as 15 ambulances rushed them to three Salinas Hospitals. The workers were returning from a celery Reid to the Earl Meyers, Co. labor camp near Sa-100 miles south of San Francisco. •, RODE ON BENCHES They rode op four board benches running lengthwise on the flat-bed truck. Francisco Gonzales Espinosa, 34, of Salinas, the driver, said he stopped at the crossing and looked to his right. Highway Patrol Capt. Francis Simmons said Espinosa declared he did not hear or see the train until the front wheels were on the track. . In Congress, a resolution asked President Kennedy to set aside next Sunday — the 101st anniversary of Abraham Lincoln*! Emancipation Proclamation announcement—as a day of mourning for the four girls. ASK MOURNING The Congress of Racial Equality in New . York asked 100 of its chapters to observe mourning Sunday, and the 10 chairmen of last month’s march on Washington asked all Americans to do the same. - Wilkins, NAACP, executive retary, was to be joined at the afternoon funeral by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. of Atlanta, president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference; Bayard Rustln, deputy director of the Washington march; Fred L. Shut-tlesworth, president of the Alabama Christian Movement Human. Rights, and others prominent hi the integration fight. ' hr ★ In Washington, assistant Senate majority leader Hubert H. Humphrey, D-Minn., and other senators asked the President to proclaim Sunday “a day of national observance in memory of these children and /a day of rededication in this nation to the principles of law, equality and tolerance.” UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) -A special United Nations committee asked (he General Assembly and the Security Council today consider expelling South Africa at once from the world organization for tts policy of rigid racial Engineer Robert E. Cripe of San Luis Obispo said he blasted the Southern Pacific locomotive’s whistle when he saw the1 bus stopped at the crossing. Pontiac Area Junior Chamber of Commerce charter amendment petitions were officially certified by City Clerk Olga Barkeley at last night’s City Commission meeting. Mrs. Barkeley, whose job it is to determine if peti* --------—— -----------~—^tiorts qualify as valid under It also called oa UN. members to carry ant penalties against South Africa suggest* ed by toe assembly last ytoar. These include an arms embargo, a petroleum embargo and an end to foreign investment in South Africa. The 11-nation special committee of Asian, African and Latin American nations was established last year to review South Africa's racial policies. Its report was submitted to the assembly shortly before the UN.’s steering committee met to draw up an agenda for the 18th General Assembly session. African racial quarrels took top billing, along with the Buddhist conflict in South Viet Nam and the question of Red Chinese admission to U.N. membership. The powerful 21-nation steering committee had an agenda of more than 80 items. It was expected to approve all controversial questions for debate during the session. The assembly opened Tuesday on a spark of hope generated by the limited nuclear test-ban treaty, But the first meeting was full i of surprises. on Jaycee Petitions Thd City Commission lgst night fired City Manager Robert A. Stierer by a vote of 5 to 2. The move came after four Weeks of hearings into charges of incompetence, irresponsibility and insubordination filed a.gaInst Stierer Aug, 5. Stierer accepted the verdict without comment or show of emotion. After the meeting, he indicated he may “fight to keep my job” through further court action. Commissioners William H. Taylor Jr. and Charles H. Harmon voted against firing Stierer. Taylor had been the only commissioner who opposed Stierer’s suspension Aug. 5. ROBERT A. STIERER Indonesians Bunt Embassy Rioters Attack Homes of British Personnel JAKARTA, Indonesia ® - Indonesian demonstrators protesting creation of anti-Communist Malaysia looted and set fire to tiie British Embassy and attacked homes of embassy personnel today. The three-story embassy was left a burned-out shell. Indonesian troops were reported moving to quell the riot-big, the most savage in a three-day outburst 6t mob violence directed against the new federation, created Monday, with Britain’s backing, from four former British colonies. U.S. Ambassador Howard P. Jones said he received official word that the Jakarta garrison had been instructed Ity the government^to"take over .responsibility for quelling the outbreak. Jones said he had heard that the troops Were ordered to points throughout the city. W '• ★ ; ★ Jones spoke by telephone with the British ambassador and reported tho envoy was safe at police headquarters, along with members of his staff. NOTE OF HOPE — Opening the 18th session of the United Nations General Assembly ^ is Caros Sosa-Rodriguez (foreground), 5l-year-old Venezuelan lawyer diplomat. He was elected yesterday as president of the body. United Nations Secretary-General U Tbant stands at his side as Sosa-Rodriguez proclaimed the assembly as one of hope for peace. ^ ' £ -' '. Quiet Man Unemotional at Decree I A quiet man sat in tiie front row at City Hall last night and listened as five men fired him* & City Manager Robert JL Stierer accepted his fate With* out comment or Show of emotion. state law, was satisfied but Commissioner Milton R. Henry wasn’t. So, over objections from both Mrs. Barkeley and City Attorney William A. Ewart, action on a resolution ordering Ewart to prepare ballots for a. special election was deferred one week. Henry had wanted the resolution tabled. The petition requested that a, special election be held on the Jaycees’ proposal to change voting procedures In toe April municipal election of city commissioners. Under the proposed charter amendment, commissioners would still be nominated by district, but voters at the April election would vote for seven candidates (one from each district), instead of one. Voting to favor of tiring Stierer were Mayor Robert A. Landry, Mayor Pro-Tem Wtoford E. Bot-t and Commissioners Milton R. Henry, Loy L. Ledford and Dick M.'Kirby. w ★ * Following the decision, Howard I. Bond, Stierer’s attorney, condemned the manner to which hearings were conducted. “If this hearing is what is meaat Ity ‘fair and impartial,’ then God help ns all, ’ Bond After the meeting, he said he would announce future pitots ‘within two or three days.” ‘iM would like to return $i Moments after the final vote, Commissioner toy L. Ledford called tor a grand jury Investigation into “campaign expenses of all candidates to toe 1962 city commission election and into vim conditions to Pontiac,” PREPARED He asked City Attorney William . Ewart to prepare a resolution for action next week “ask-tog the State Attorney General request a grand jury investigation” into those areas. There ,was no comment, nor objection from toe commission table. The resolution was ordered. HOMES SACKED Diplomatic informants said the hoihes of a number of the British Embassy personnel had, been sacked and possibly burned. The British Cricket Club, in a fashionable residential section, had been set on fire. Informants said confusion stemmed from lack of official information, and toe fact that some Cars and belongings had been burned to front of British Mrs- Barkeley said the petitions had been checked and contained ‘to excess of the necessary number of valid signatures required for calling an election.”" She said that “to compliance with State law, the calling of a special election would be necessary between toe dates of Jan. 8 and 18,1964.” The clerk then read a resolution stating the- necessity for a special election under state law and ordering Ewart to prepare the ballot forms. RESOLUTION OFFERED The resolution was offered . Commissioner William H. Taylor Jr. and seconded by Charles Hi Harmon. Henry objected and offered a motion to table toe resolution so commissioners could check the petitions. Mayor Pro-tern Wtoford E. Bottom seconded Henry’s motion. Henry questioned the validity of signatures^ and said he could see “a patent defect” on a-petition furnished him “that Under (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Seven reasons for his removal were outlined to the seven-page resolution calling for his dismissal. The reasons for refliovar“were developed at the hearing” according to the resolution. Some of the reasons stated to toe resolution were as follows. 1) The Manager dictated maters of policy under the control of the Commission. More than a score of rioters were injured, mostly through own actions., A hard core of several hundred, which moved on the embassy to trucks, quickly swelled. Thousands of others flocked to toe fringes to watch. It was mob pressure of a type that formed a prelude to the political - military campaign by Which Indonesia won West New Guinea from the Netherlands der an agreement signed Aug. 15,1962. In Kuala Lumpur, capital of Malaysia, the government announced it was putting the country-in “a state of preparedness’ because of hostility from Indonesia and the Philippines. CASH IN A HURRY! “Twenty calls from our Wont Ad. Sold the lounge set first day.” Mrs. F. B. abllSIN LEATHER LOUNOB PRESS WANT ADS are the fastest way to turn “don’t wants” into good cash. They have a way of rounding up prospects fast for what you want to sell. They’ll work the same for /you, too. Just ... Phone 332-8181 ASK FOR AN AD VISOR city manager If possible. I have bad ft “ “ two job offers to the city but am not, presently, looking for another jd> as city manager outside Pontiac.” , Stierer indicated there was some possibility he might tile a suit to Circuit Court challenging the manner to which he'was fired And conduct of commissioners through the hearings. ; P His attorney, Howard I. Bond, said toe decision was tip to Stierer. “If we take farther action, it would be in toe torn of a special petition asking toe cento to rule on several potato of Bond said such points mtthfc include “whether the bearing was held to accordance with toe city charter, if members of the (commission should have been disqualiifed from voting Ity ab-because they entered testimony.” Stierer, however, was still aide to manage a spark of humor. , When asked by a reporter how old he. was, Stierer smiled and _.... “Why, do I look older than when this all began?” 2) He induced for political purposes toe publication of irresponsible and malicious pub* (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) State Road Tall 1,214 EAST LANSING (UPI) — State police said today an early atom-tog traffic death in Ingham County brought the death toil this year to 1,214 as compared to l,UH at the same time to 1962. OBJECTION - Harold Brown of 60 Marquette stood up a told five commissioners “you ought to bs ashamed” tor voti to fire Robert A. Stierer. . , KM| mi igggi I mr' THE PONTIAC PRBSg, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1963) _ NGTON ............ ■Mat tamparatura ................. Waatbar: Sunny, mild. « Thuroday at 7:41 a Bawataam Im , Taaiday’i Ttnpnitaii Chart ta 74 S3 Duluth ■ ■ ——laha 84 oi Wort Worth II 73 Or. Rapid! 12 si Jackaoavllla “ “ Houghton : 78 M Kanaai city tanning II ee Miami Beach Biflunta it «a uiiwaukaa .......... *1 64 Haw Orlaai ______ j if iNfliifaRII Trav. City |3 at Omaha 71 17 Afbuguaraua M at piMtlWMfti1 •» 47 *| 13 fe. Utka City 17 (4 13 78 41 if ). ■. Maria ■ I 71 fi faattla #7 41 •1 83 Tampa II 73 IS Waihlnitoa 70 13 NATIONAL WEATHER - Rain Is due tonight In Gulf , central Pittas and Central Plstesu. Showers are due lit i Valley and upper Great Lakes westward through Plains and into northern Platoeu, in southern Plateau lio|tham Pacific Coast area while light drizzle Is due along |m| h north Atlantic coastal area. It will he cooler in north* * era and central Plains and central and southern Plateau and iNgHfy warmer In p«Ms of Pacific Coast region and north AUuitfc Coast area. the public, such as parks. play* City Action Delayed on JC Petitions (Continued Prom Page One) the law of the state makes that petition no good” He wouldn’t say what the defect was. Mrs. Barkeley said die had a petition that had been dlsqufifo fied because it contained signatures affixed to it on a Sunday. Cemmissieaer pick M. Kirby asked tf any names si Sunday were legaL Mrs. Barkeley said 7,380 valid signatures were necessary to qualify the petitions for certification. MANY FILED Jaycees said tbeir count showed B petitions containing 11,543 signatures were filed. “We checked petitions until we had 7,440 valid signatures and then stopped,” she explained. “Daring checking there ware 27 petitions set aside became one or more signatures were affixed on a Sunday. “This was done so there would be no question whatsoever about the valid signatures. The 7,^M0 signatures were contained in 400 of the 605 petitions.” Mayor Robert A. Landry called for a vote on Henry’s motion but Mrs. Bes^eley, obviously sur prised, interrupted. But I have certified foe ps-ons,” she said. (Continued From Page One) lie statements by foe Prosecuting Attorney that members of the Commission would continue to be under investigation for election expenses when no basis for such investigation existed,; 3) He was insubordinate. Ifo refused to follow Commission recommendations when giyen by Resolution and by direction fit informal 4) He withheld important in- Ewart warned that "when a petition comes in, you have no alternative but to act on it under Under foe right of initiative and referendum the law is very careful that.. . we have ng control over what the people put in (foe petition) and we must put it tip to a vote. STATE LAW "That is the law of this state. Even if the state attorney general doesn’t approve it by form, it still has to be voted on by foe people.” “We have no objection to that,” Henry said, adding that the law also stated that petitions would be disqualified if to be erroneous. ‘Once she (foe clerk) checks and certifies foe petitions,” Evart argued, "that’s an adminlsterial act and . . . it follows automatically that you bring in the ballot;” Henry said, “We don’t mean to table this indefinitely ... just long enough to check the petitions. We don’t say we won’t set an election date. We have 90 days to do so.” \ . Harmon assarted, “If we can't take the clerk’s wfird, how can wo tell If they’re legal or not? I’m certainly not going down to her office to chock them/’ Taylor suggested Mrs. Barkeley bring foe petitions up to the commission table so Henry could check them before the meeting was adjourned. Henry, said he’d like more time. DEFER ACTION Harmon said it would be better to defer action, not table the issue. Henry agreed to deferring it one week. No vote was taken. Landry asked for any further objections. There were none. When foey filed, Jaycees said they had received petitions containing some 11,743 signatures in all, but had disqualified about 200 signatures before filing on foe ‘ sis of checks they themselves ran as signed petitions were returned. Vet's Hospital Bed Bill Voted Okay by House' WASHINGTON (DPI) - the House has passed and sent , to the Senate a bill to provide 2,- Birmingham Area N«wi School Superintendent Concerned With Qualify BIRMINGHAM -r New Superintendent of Schools Dr, John B. Smith, s New Englander with • broad background In education, said he moved to the Midwest for “growing room.” _ ; ; Mimlnnham —«*— to be S community that will stay with proven themselves aad yet be willing to iis n good, bard look at iteelf and make changes If necessary far progress, Smith At an introductory news con- 22 File for Posts in Waterford tiM tor college. “The parents art college-educated or in jobs Where they can see foe value of college,” Smith said. ' ONLY THING . / ' ' if After all, about the only thing you really give to your children Is education,” he continued, "I feel It is foe greatest tiling to giveto a youngster.” , . However, Be noted that college preparation could be stressed to me detriment of SCHOOL STRATEGISTS — Dr. John B. Smith'(center), new superintendent of foe Birmingham Public School System, talks with two members of his administrative staff, administrative assistant Walter J. Piel (left) and Lfoyd H. Van Buskirk, director of finance. Stierer Fired by City formation on the City’s serious financial position, i 5) He failed to give direct and forthright answers to questions asked by members of foe City Commission on matters of substance pertaining to foe reasons for removal. 8) He interpreted the City Charter so that he. was deciding Commission policies. 7) He has exhibited a defiant find' nori-cooperative attitude toward the majority of the Com- mendations contrary to the called City Manager Plan of government set forth in the City Charter. The resolution also pointed to portions of the City Charter which stated the manager’s responsibility- to foe commission and that the commission could fire' him 'for any re*son . *. at any no surprise.” . “You have finally thrown in what I call the kitchen sink (by)1 including charges here that were not in foe original charges filed,” Bond said. . think Mr. Stierer has vindicated himself ... in the eyes of everyone but five commissioners. “This resolution is as asinine i some or the charges filed against Mr. Stierer. “Never In my 35 years as an attorney, have I seen a more partial or unfair hearing as I have jnst witnessed to this meeting chamber.” He was applauded by the crowd. HADN’T READ Taylor and Hannon said they hadn’t seen foe resolution yet and objected on grounds that it unfair to act without first talking to Mr. Stierer.” Landry answered, “There’s been enongh talking already.” Only one opinion was voiced by foe audience. Harold Brown of 80 Marquette, rose and said: “You five commissioners and Mr. Ewart ought to be ashamed of what you’ve done here tonight. INCORPORATION BOOSTERS — A Junior Citizens’ Action Committee (JCAC) is being formed in Waterford Township to assist a citizens’ group in promoting incorporation of foe township as a city. JCAC members Virginia Watson (left) find Pam Bomsta will be among those handing out literature at today’s 8 p.m. open meeting at the Community Activities, Inc., building. At Waterford Meeting Noncity Areas to Be Eyed Four areas within the boundaries of Waterford Township but excluded in the proposed incorporation of the township as a city will be outlined in a panel discussion at A p.m. today at the Community Activities Inc., building.- ing home beds for disabled veterans. The measure, approved changes laws dealing with foe voice vote yesterday, also changes laws dealing with the u care of veterans. Among these would be an increase in aid to state veteran homes and pro-visions tor limited care in a private nursing home for certain patients of foe Veterans Admin-istration. The public meeting is one ot series sponsored by a citizens action committee advocating ‘yes” vote on the incorporation Issue in foe Nov. 5 Special elec- EXCLUDED AREAS Hie four excluded areas, all on foe eastern1 boundary of- foe township, include - Lake Angelus Ullage; the county service center near the state police p o s t, of the City of Sylvan Lake; and the City of Sylvan Lake. Also dated for panel discussion la a small parcel of land near Dodge Perk No. 4 deeded over to foe township by West Panelists, ell members of a group that prepared ait Incorporation study last year, also will answer any questions on In-corporation at the mooting. In addition to voting on the question of cityhood, township residents also will elect nine charter commission members in the, special election. If foe Incorporation proposal passes, the commission will begirt drafting a charter. If It falls, the cnlrter commission will be voided. \ mission on Commission recom- Those who filed with the county dark before yesterday’s 4 p.m. deadline were Loren Anderson, 2361 Edinburgh; Walter Barning-ham, 2856 W. Huron;-John Coleman, 100 Crescent; Robert Cook, 3625 Shoals; Patrick K. Daly, 4630 Imindale; Elmer Fangboner, 3327 Meinrad. “The people of Pontiac will show you how much strength they have when they cast ballots next April.” „ „ Brown brought a burst of applause from foe capacity After foe meeting, Ledford said he had evidence of conspiracy to violate election laws on foe part of candidates opposing commissioners elected In 1862. VICE EVIDENCE He also said he bad turned 'some vice evidence” over to the. FBI. Ledford refused to elaborate but said that “grounds for a jury investigation will be included in next week’s resolution.” A total of 22 persons, Including five of the seven Waterford Township Board members, filed petitions for charter commissioner in Waterford Township. Election ef t nine-member question of incorporating foe township as a city both will he decided at the polls In a special election Nov. 5. David Foran, 387? Embaracad-ero; Donald Fraser, 8790.Hatchery; Leon Grogg, 4461 Parnell; William Healy, 2967 Shawnee; Ben Lowell, 8772 Aquarina; John McGrath, 1311 Edgeorge; Mrs. Dorothy Olson, 3599 Shoals; Larry Payne, 3782 Percy King. OTHERS E. Frank Richardson, 6992 Row-ley; Lewis Riielle, 5186 Farm; Shirley Ryden, 811# Farm; Arthur Salley, 3468 Carmen; Deal Salley, 6229 Jameson; James Seetorlin, 4597 W. Walton; James L. Smith HI, 3634 Breaker; and Charles Sayre, 3193 Herbell. Seetorlin, Mrs. Olson and Fangboner are foe township’s trustees on the township board. Daly and McGrath are foe township’s two justices of the peace. If voters approve cityhood, foe charter commission would begin drafting a city charter. The cotor mission would be voided if foe incorporation question is defeated. forence yesterday. Smith commented on suburban school systems in general. He compared Blrtmngham to Greenwich, the Connecticut community he left last week to come here. ....... “They are ttoqcerned wlfoqual-_y education and safe the importance of tfootl schools,” he Another feature is* that sub- . ‘What America needs is excellence in everything. Industrial arts, home economics arid, commercial aspects are Important,” Smith said. ":.x' ■Wg'ff, ★ ■ .' The new superintendent said that after Mi first contact with foe Birmingham Board of Education he was very Impressed with ifo apparent desire to have the very best schools possible the resources of the com- He also commented on the residents of foe district making It peeslble for foe people to visualise a continuing program. Regarding his'own work, Smith said he is art educator first and then an administrator. , He stressed foe importance of developing each individual to foe best of his ability; The superintendent, a pioneer in several educational Innovations, said he has no pet proposal to try out In Birmingham schools. However, he added: “I’m convinced that no matter how good they are they probably can be better.” „ 5 i Clyde C. Bennett Jr., 1274 West-wood, was named yesterday to the new State Council for the Arts. The 16-member council, created to encourage the advancement of fine arts among Michigan citizens, replaces foe former Michigan Cultural Commission. Bennett is a Young and Rubt-'cam account executive. Quint Mom Due Home ABERDEEN, S.D. (AP) - Mrs. Andrew Fischer, red-haired mother of quintuplets, looked forward today to returning home from foe hospital as her tiny Infants steadily gained in strength. The four girls and a boy, born two months prematurely last Saturday, were at last report continuing active aijd healthy with the outlook good that all five would survive. The infants were expected to remain in the hospital forat least two months! Dr. James Berbos, foe family physician who delivered the quints, said he might weigh them today. ■ ) . ]' The infants are being handled as little as possible in order to conserve their strength. They are being fed about a teaspoonful of artificial milk formula and water every two hours. “I told them upstairs that I would rather go into the delivery room than come down here,” foe 36-year-old mother told a battery of newsmen and photographers Tuesday night at her first news conference since foe quints were born. She had been kept in seclusion by her doctor and attorneys to give her time to recover. Mrs. Fischer said she has not been told when she may ljieve St. Luke’s Hospital, but Berbos indicated it would be late this week. Visibly nervous and speaking barely above a whisper, Mrs. Fischer said she was concerned about her other five Children at home—also tour girls and a boy— as she was about her, famous new brood. “It's like a dream,” she said when asked how she felt about becoming world famous overnight. "But I am vfijry jtopjpy^ I , 7 THJjf l^ONTIAC PRESS, WttDXESDAV'&KPTEMBKR 18, im PIGtopI tender! Chicken Breasts WB1,W VWhRlbPoUlo" meaty . ■ IVtCM II : «• HUS ^ A CHICKEN WINGS TENDER ROASTING PIONEER PILLSBURY BANQUET cuopv SUGAR ZESTEE* RASPBERRY I I With Newspaper Coupon on Page 00 WithOwf Coupon 54.34' FOULD'S elbow Macaroni 2 £ 29* : oodtoton-Peoples Bonus Coupon* DOUBLE GOLD BELL STAMPS AND THIS COUPON Asst. Ffavoter-GA CANNED , (pAWIWlWlWlM MIWWWHggl 1 r>l) U/ UMM Mi OHU iu|j «y40W>WMinUUMUUMUWUMini;UIUMIMl>U>Unitfg^ si'll ! ft FREE GOLD BELL P|| Stamps With Purchase of 4 Loaves or More of FRESH BREAD » FREE BOLD BELL Stamps With Purchase of Any BEEF ROASTS a. FREE BOLD BELL Stamps With Purchase of any Pound or More of CUBE STEAK I FREE GOLD BOLL Stamps With Purchase of 3'lbs. or More of HAMBURGER § II DELICIOUS APPLES H I Limit 1 coupon. Expires S«pt. 22,1963. ilmlll wwpwi. M»h«« S«pt. 22, 1963 «»* ;S5 ILimlt 1 coupon. Ex( ml. l||umhWimHnh\hWii^ Limit 1 coupon. Expire* Ssftt. 22,1963. L^MIM!tVt/UMinWA»Min|M*fMEWiUU«»M»M5nWWWl^l SUPER MARKETS FOOD MARKETS THE PONTIAC1 PRESS, WEDNESDAY! SEPTEMBER 18, 1968 I As Well.as Gains MARKETS Gains, tosses Fractional The following are top covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of noon Monday. Mart Stronger in Mixed Produce Apples. Crab, bu. p, Graham Spy. b Greening, bu. t Applet, McIntosh, bu. Applet, Wealthy, tal. . Applet, Wolt River, bu Blueberries. crate . , &ST6 WAuh*!. mib«rta. bu, .......• NEW YORK UB-Strength in selected Issues highlighted a mixed stock market early today. Trading was fairly active. Gains and losses of most key stocks were fractional, some going to a point or so. Chrysler, yesterday’s standout market leader, continued strong, rising another point. Ford gained a fraction. General Motors eased. Some of the “glamour” stocks rebounded in routine swings — Control Data up 2 and IBM up 1. Polaroid continued soft, losing about a point. Xerox snapped back more than h point. Steels gavfe ground narrowly, Republic, Jones & Laughlin and U.S. Stee 1 yielding fractions. Rails were very narrowly mixed, with a number of the leaders unchanged. Reading was firm following yesterday’s large percentage Jump of%. ' ' AVERAGE UP Yesterday the Associated Press average of 80 stocks gained at 280.4. sr 1 *•" Cindy Stalled Over Texas gainers included Occidental Petroleum, Aerojet-General, Ray-ette and Tampa Electric. Among losers were Data-Control Systems, Creole Petroleum and Ogden Corp. Corporate bonds were generally firnt. U.S. Overplays By SAM DAWSON BEAUMONT, Tex. (* - tying Hurricane Cindy, stalled over this southeast Texas industrial area, set oil cloudbursts that measured almost 2 feet today. Widespread flooding sent hundreds of persons fleeing their homes to higher ground, many of them rescued by trucks and NEW YORK (API—Americans are confronted again today with evidence that the course of industry and trade isn’t perpetually rod inevitably upward. Their tendency usually is are explanations for the (Tip that American Stock Exch. i eighth. Figures declmsl p- NEW TORS (AP) - m. i Cohu Elec ..... 4% 1 i*;*; Prices were irregularly higher r_ on the American Stock Exchange. psS temp :::: | Syntex rose about 2. Fractionalllr The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK (API—Following ta A Hgl of selected (took trsnitctlon, on the New I York Stock BkChenge with mob price*! A__ OamSk 1.20» Seles . . N'C&m1'*0 ik 'll -- Po“ as 21% aiv. 3i*-% 30 65% »»•/* 65% 3 3Vt 3% 3 Mi S 33% 33% 33% ? 41% fiMjfi le. High Lew LeetCkg. Met IS 33% 33% 33%- J 5?.. g 31 34% §4%.i4y«-% 8 R S nut Gen Poods 3 Oen Mot 3a Qpreon 1.30 QPubSv ,3Sg OFubU 1.30b OTelABl .SB GenTlre .40 Oa Pee lb jfoiS OlenAld .50 Ooodrch 2.30 Ooodyear l Orace Co lb Qrudtf .80b QtAAP' 1 M 45% :Jf£ 16 63% « , 6§ +. % 78 33% 36% jj — % 17 30% 28% 30 + % Mff% fffift ' 7 21% 21% 31% IS 19% 10% 10% i m mmw w II Pi HamP MU Hanna CO li -jrc£dr .8« Herts 1.30 Hewlett Pk HeydenN .« Hoff Elect 53% 63% 1% 1% + 57 jfflfc 38% 38% - % 34 73 37%, 11 04- 14% '14% 14% — % r—B—*' 10 13% 12% 13% 3' 37% 37% 37% . .. 10 78 74% 74% - % 4 13% 13% 13% ... 5 36% 85% 35% 8 61% 51 61 53 1% 1% 1% 4 38% 88% 36% -41 36% 35% 36% -10 05% 86% 68% - dosen et Detroit by first receiver* ^wSfee^gide A extra large 43-40%; large 41-41%; medium 34-30%; emsll aa-33%; brown* grad* A extra urge 41-43; large 40%-41; medium 35%-36; imall 21%; obeok* 28-37%. Comment: Market barely steady jumbos, extra large and largt »i**« „ demand leas aggressive ana offering* generally ample for currant net CHICAGO (AP) (U8DA) — Potatoe, arrivals 88; on track 330; total V.f. ehtp-menta SM; supplies moderate; demand moderate market About steady; oarjot track sales: Washington ruasets Minnesota North Dakora Red River . _ ley round rede 1J012.M;'Wlsoonsin round rsda 1.80; witoonsln oarly goms 3.00, CHICAGO BUTTER .Sir .SU" '«,.T TSSh wa n«s?ms Mfcg°g**atkt Steady** wholesale buying prices unchanged: 70 per cent ,or better grade A white* 4(1%; mixed 40; mediums '• 38; standard* 34%; dlrti** 28; oueeka 87%. CHICAGO POULTRY CenSW 1.18 Cerro 1.10 Cer-tead .60 CeemaAlrc J ■ MStP P ObIPneu 1.40 CRt Paelf 1 CliriBCft ,61t Chrysler 1 CIT Pin 1.80 Ottltjgv 2.60 oievintu 1.30 CocaCol 3,70 OolgPal i.20 QoUinsR .20g Colo P Ir CHICAGO (AP) (USDA) — Live Poill-t5y'j hli^*r^*roa»{e^^h24** apoclaT^ed Col t ' Livestock Pont Oil 3 Dan Rlv .60 CHICAGO LIVESTOCK , CHICAGO (AP)-*Hogs 5,000; moderate-ly active, butcher* (teady to weak: oow* TfJAfVW " W 18.00- 16.25, around 176 head at 18.25; mixed 1-3 100-300 lb* 15.60-16.00, mostly 16.76-18.36; 3-6 360-366 lb* 16,36-16.76; mixed 1-3 300-360 lb low* 14.80-16.00; 30-400 lbs 14.00-14.80 ; 400-460 lb* 18.60* 14.00; 3-8 450-500 lbs 13.86-13.78; 500-"“ lbs 12.75-13.36. . ' 1 Cattle 3,500; calve* none; trading slaughter steers and heltar* slow, ste barmy rteady; haifarr fully Heady; oowr steady to rtrongt bulla ateady; dv-'"- 1.000- 1,375 lb rlaughter steer* 33.75-3 including n load of high cholo* 1.160 , at 34.60 and a load of mixed high choice and prim* around 1,800. lb* at 34.80: good 000-1,950 lb. 32.45.38.85; a load of mixed good and oholo* 1,050 lbe 23.60; standard and low food 30.80-88.00 ,n-cludlng couple loads standard 860-1. lb* at 61.71; a load of high oholcs and prlma 1,000 lb hoHsrs 34.00; bulk eholca, 835-1,050 lbs 86.75-38.76; gOod 81.78-83.80; nbug A utility and oommarotU cows 14.60-10.66! nowch a few 16.10; oannsrs and cutters 13.00- Dress 1.80 14.60; shelly oanners 11.00-19.00; utility SuP>cmt 4.60k and oommerolal bulls 17.00-10.00. _.lDuq tt l.ll Bheep 600; moderately active, sprtng Dynlm Am slaughter Iambi and ohorn slaughter awe* steady; sovorai lots oholo* »nd prim* 00-110 lb spring slaughter lambs East Alrl, 91.00; good and oholo* ll.00-80.00; utility E*i«Co 3,30* and good 16.00-16.00; oull and utility Revlon 1.10b Dexall ,60b ReynMet .50 leyTob 1.00 16 36, 33 36 ItchfOU „„ HobertCont 1 Kohr Corp 1 miMtiilii Royal McB Ryder syrt SsfewSt i.eo SUoeLeaa lb I SanP 1 leap i.40b iDIm .53t SCottPap ,1 r 1.40 RPlv-g - 34% M% f % . 6% 6% 6% ' “* 7 34% 34% 34% 43 M% 31 . 28% 90 14% 34% 34% 7 65% 56% 55% . ... 0 24% 24% 24% + % 40 36% 37% 37% ... » 15% 18 / 16% + 33 66% 64% 66% ... 38 40% 40% 40% — 11 46% 46% 46% + 1 17 16% 16% 18% + 37 16% M% 88% +. 4 45% 45% 48% - 5 54 53% 64 + 30 30% 20% 60% + 33 46% 46% 46% ... . 4 48% 44% 44% —■ 40 60 48% 60 ... 30 37 36% 37 ... —H— 3 63% 63% 68% — , 8 36 , 35% 36 + 98 36% 34% 35% —l 24 451/* 44% 45 + Ij 38% N% 36% + m ^ M f% BrarsR 1.40a [ 22% i 7 7% i 22% - Hour* P 1.40 HoustLP .72 HoweSd .30g Hupp Cp .331 . „„ „A*-% 0 30% 30% 38%-% ‘ 5 86% 66% 50% 10 46% 45% 46% 1 U% 11% 11% 7% 7% 7% - % * 33% 33% 33% 3 65% 66 ■* 3 63% 63% . I 77% 77 , WWIPi " ' “, 44% 44% — % - % IwH I Cindy struck the Texas coast WitiT winds up to 80 miles an hour yesterday but almost immediately lost its force and failed to sweep northward as rapidly as most hurricanes do. Industrial production dipped In DAWSON August from July. And employment didn’t advance as much as usually does after the July slack period. It was centered north of Houston today, retaining ho damaging winds hut dumping massive rainfall. in I 30 (Wit 48% 48% ~ il , m m jj-® 106 46% 46 46% 18 H%.U }}% •• u It 11 , 11 — % IT 63% 63% 83% -30 3% » 30% + 360 |*% 35% 35% + 10 M% 35% MW-* 37 13% 13% U% ■. -If cm 33% tt% + Ill 47% 45% ,46% 4-1% tz INCHES DeweyviUe, Tex., north Orange,* reported 22.78 inches of rain by late morning. Latest reports showed Orange with 18 Inches and Beaumont with, 18. Civil defense authorities declared a state of emergency ill Jefferson County, which includes both Beaumont and Port Arthur and many smaller cities The big spurt in industrial output in the last seven months after a long spell,, of inaction had led many to forecast the same big gains over the rest of the year. It wlirtsTfeasy to read too much into the August dip, jiist as it was to read too much into the previous seven months .figures. There ShellOU j i5% li + % Torrents also1 poured down M 37% hi? dii “S!tiie southwest corner of Louisiana, tapering into steady, soaking rains. iier 1.7< iTih AO npiniK 1.1 Socony 2... SoPRfl 3.65d SouCslE 1.06 10 36% 36% 36% — % 24 68% 07% *7%- % » 7% 7% T%-% 19 46% 46% 46% + % 11 46% 46 41% + % 33 31% 85% 66% 4 33% »% 33% a 1811 .IN. ** 16 33% i 33% + SOUNstO 2.20 BouPac 1.40 *“• Ry 2.60 jantrt-. .... BtBrand 2 StdKollr .60t StdOllCal 3b atOUNJ 2.80 ■tOUphl.fOb Stand Pkg Stan War 1.20 SMUfiOhl.io 8terlDruj 2 74% 74% 74% T „ 6 13% 13% 13% — % *, *«i. 67% 97%...,. ..... % li IR iffr,* 3 24% 34 84 . Steven 1 31 33% 33% 33% 'Cindy Is decaying slowly due to a large portion of the circulation stUl over the Gulf of Mexico,” said a weather bureau advisory. The bureau predicted the hurricane—now reduced to the status of a tropical storm—would ease northwani at 5 m.p.h. i less. „ Ail Beaumont schools opened house flood refugees. Water lapped into many Beau- Studebaker 1063 8% 2*4^4! Sunray 1.40 IntRap 1.05b Int'TOT 1 ITE CktBrkr 66 63% 61% 63, + 3 68% 66 68Y« + 6 16% 16% 15% + 46 -34% 14% 34% , Texaco 3 TexOPd I 14% 14% ,14% .. JohnsManv 1 JonLogan .70 JonesAL 3.60 Joy Mfg 1 19 47% 47% 47% 4 TexGSul ... Texlnst .80 TexPCO 1.80 TexPLd ,36g Textron 1.40 Tnlokol 1.1U Kennecott 3g KernCI. 3.40 KerrMcO 1 10 31% 36% 36% - ' 13 31 38% |l +' 9 76% 76% 16% 4 • 4 61% 66% 66% 4 1 7 40 |9% 40 — 1 Lehmn 1.46g. LlbMcN .411 LI|gAM:6 Llttonln 1.87t 1*J ;I%' 7e 7* -3% LockhA 1.40 48 37% 36% 37 — % •Ttiaa 4 16% 18% 16% 4 3! 30% f 1 .' 11 31% 21% 33% 38 36% 33% 33% 10 ‘13% 13% 11% 14 44% 43% 44 —M— 0 36% 36% 36% 18 31% 81 11 78% 76% 4,1% I ... 6% ,»%-% i • 43% 43% 43% — % * Oh 4 9 54% _ _ 6 63% |i% 61% 41 , 3 »% 35% »% 4 % 30 43% , 43% . 43% . 13 31% 31% 31% . 8 15% 16% !6% ..... i 11 la 1&I%5 MackTr 1.60 MadFd 1.58g Mad sq Gar , 14% j 63 26% 36% 36% . 3 11% 13% 13% 4 819 77% 76% 76% 4 80 41 40% 40% 4 Marqua .25p Martin M I I 1.44 i.arf MlnerCh .70 Mpl Hon 2 MlnnMM .60 Mohaaco .60 Ccntain .00 13 31% li HH I ■ 86 13% 13% 13% - % 18 |S% 48 48% 4. % 1 11% 12%-% M% 08 1 03% 83% 1 36% 95% — % 47 31% 30% 80% - •“D— ■ 11% 16% 15% . I 33% Det Stl / Dlsne^r .' «6%°80-! DomeMln. .80 - 48% 46% 30 64% *4 6 31% 31V4 . .. 4 Wi sft sails ( 14% 14% 14% ., 7 44% 44% 44% 4 I 60% 48% 10% 4 4 86% 30% 36% 13 31% 83% 33%- 19 60% 50% 80% + 83 il MR 8M 4 3 33% 33% 11% 4 16 13% U% U% 4 0 good 6 DETROIT LIVESTOCK _. , DETROIT (AP)—Cattl* 1,000. . Early trad* on rlaughtar rteers and halfarf Slow, prices tvOj oteady, cows modtr- ElBondfl 1.20 BIAMUS ,06| EIAUOC 1.741 ElPasoNO 1 SSSf.3 Italy aottva fully it huh choice yearling taring of choice steers 34.00-65.00^ Evans Pd Bvershp 1 Mtly 1 11 110 lb ...... I and 8 160-630 lb 18.60-16.00; , U.8.E 1, ,1 and 1 300-400 lb SOWI ll.60-14.60; « and 3 400-000 lbs 11.7|" Vsalers 18*. Prloss stsady, *h“ UU-4W.UU, OUII BUU HUM*/ "'V rr.'V' . Ihsep market not fulb established Hoad of oholo* and prim? slaughtoi nbe l.OO. These steady. • 6 20% 10% 1' 6% 6% 23 73% 72% Falrb Whit Pair Oa .800 Pair 8trat fif'P 4 16% 16 , »■ 16 3% 3% 3% 1 16% 16% 15% 38 56% 66 66 —F— ■ 36 I 4% 4% 17 43% 48 41, 6 8% 6% 6% _____. - >ro 1 Ferro 1.00 ■ Flltrol 1.00 Plreitnt 1 ' FstChrt l.Olt Fllntkt .00 ' rna PL 1.80 PMO Cp AO FortmD .40 . “reepts 1.20 ■rueht 1.10a 1 10% . 10% ■ 1 40% 44% . 9M 38% 11% I i|% H% j|g 11 17% 17% 17% 4 1% 1% }%.... 11 30% 30% 30% - % 8 15% 11% 16% ' ,i jj sr.T Siu. UCarbld 3.00 pnlooEieo 1 Un^lc*i.00* UAIrLln ,50b Unit Alrc 3 33? :?S! UnltMJ?M^l USBorx .00 USPrht 1.30a I 71% — % USPly wood 1 US Rub 3.30 JS Smelt 3 I Steel 2 ..iWhel ,07p UnMatoh .40 UnOUPd .00a Upjohn .as I .4 ir - „ 30% 31 4 IS 43% 43% 43% - * 67% 67% 07% 4 34% 34% 34% - 100 10% 10% 19% - 5 06% 60% 05% 4 1 52% 62% 63% - 26- 48% 46% 46% 4 .... T 1 WUnTel 1.40 WstgAB 1.40 Vinir * “ WhlrlC 30% li% - 1 35% : 1 30%- \ 41% *31 130% 130" 130% *17 **0% M0% * •% 4% 4 3% 3% 4 i 4 i i ilii wilsn Co 1 Woolwth 1.1 Worthln l.l YalepT 1. Yng ShT 6 70% 71 —3% —N— 13 36% 38% 36% li r ii 6 17% 17% 17% 4 NatDlst 1.30 NatFuel 1.30 NatOen ,4if NatOyps 2b NLead f.38» N Steel 1.00 NBngBl 1.16 , -36% 30% 38% . I 61% I NoPao 2.20a owensiu 3 GAB 1 ■I Petrol PaoTAT 1.20 fMAAir ao ParamPict 3 ParkeD 1 PeabCoal .70 Penney 1.90a PaPwLt 1.3* Pa RR .28* PepCola 1.40 Miser* .80a Phelps D 3 Phlla El 1.33 PhllaRdg PhllMor 3.60 PhlUlpsPet 1 PltnBow .10 PltPlat 3.30b Pit Steel Polaroid .30 ProotAO L00 PSvBO 2.40 Publkln .34f Pullman 1.40 0 30% 38% 30% 14 23% 30% *3% 11 41% 41% 41% 4 11% 11% 11% 3 53% 52% 53% 8 118% II8V4 110% 80 63% 83% 63% 7 48% 48% 46% 0 38% 36% 38% .43 21% 20% 30% 37 00% 00% 66% 17 43% 43% 43% —1 40 36% 37% 30% 4 % —0— 17 41% 40% 41 « W Ik 8 84% 11% 64% —P— 8 34 33% 33% 33 11% If 12% . - 11 33% 39% 33% 4 % 14 41% 41% 41% 133 33% 33% |% . - \\ *4 isf 1 34% 34% 34% ..,'k 66 31% 80% fj™ “ » 30 88 67% 66. + % 36 53% 83%, 63% — % J, f i i”? 4 ?*,% m ?§+■* 32 64% tjflf 64% — % 1 40% ' S4 tl% 13% 13?l . „ T^1ful4 PuroOll 1.60 8 48% ,48% 1^ M% 55% 85% - \ IS ffijFq? R 80- 10% 34% — Raythn , Jtf. “ng Co Oh 9*t ■Hurl. Repub sti a 30 73% 71% 71% 4 % llpfiVl 10 13% 13% 11% - | Jf.% >1 m ilr 1,11% 11% 1 1145 36% 30% . .. * 8% - % 36% 35% — % 33 30% 30Vi 30% - —T— 36 11% 31% 31% .. *» m m + 55 18% 16% 18% .4 9 66% 66% 1 11 61% 31% j 11 30% 30% 90% ... 7, ^ n X 36 R% 22 19% — xl8 47% 46% 47% 66 36% 31% 33%' ?M%‘8% -gipfen 71 37% 37., 37., -1^ .5 ,a m' ■s s*» s 3 *>% *». *?. erase some of its significance, and for the previous rise which take away some of its glamor. SERMONS ON CAUTIONS Those viewing the current economic upturn as aging and therefore reedy for a downturn may take the August figures as a text for sermons on caution. Most industrialists probably have/already seasoned their views of Continuing prosperity with a good helping of caution. And if they haven’t, the warning of the August figures that the lines on their charts can’t always point upward may arouse a little caution, never such a bad thing as some hold. The Federal Reserve Board report* its seasonally adjusted index of industrial production in August was 125.6 per cent of the 1957-59 average. In July it had been a record 126.5 per cent. Actually, the production of both nondurable goods and business equipment advanced. The dip ram» in durable goods, mining and utilities. NEW MODELS Car production already is on the rise and is expected to go still higher, with the new models now making their bid for public approval. Steel output also is increasing and new orders are coming in at' rate that guarantees at least moderate gains in the weeks ahead, Angry Khrushchev Lashes Farmers, Bureaucrats MOSCOW (AP) - Angry over another poor harvest, Soviet Premier ‘ Khrushchev has berated farmers for inefficiency and assailed bureaucrats for exporting fertilizer because our economists haveh’t learned yet to calculate realistically what this costs,” he told a farm meeting in Volgograd —formerly Stalingrad. 'If they calculated, then they would see that it wouid be better to put a ton of these fertilizers in the earth. It would be more economical to export the grain received than mineral fertilizers. And only after we have fully sat- * then ex- era! fertilizers can port them.” RUSSIANS NOT TOLD Khrushchev spoke Monday, the day Canada signed a $500-million deal to sell 218 million bushels of wheat to the Soviet Union. The Soviet press and radio have not told the Russian people about the wheat deal, made necessary by the failures of Soviet agriculture. And hi mining goods the decline was caused mainly by a wider than usual shutdown in auto production for model changeovers, and by a drop in steel activity which followed' the announcement of a new labor contract. The summer drop in activity at the steel mills also can be explained by the mors than normal output in late spring when customers were over - ordering to build up stocks as a hedge against: « any possibility of a strike, had * the labor negotiations gone other than they did. So a bit of the glamor of the ; earlier rise in the industrial Out- , put index was only skin. deep. And ; some of the significance of the summer drop was easy to exaggerate. STEEL SLOWDOWN The increase in nonfarm employment in August of 166,000 is ; termed about 40,000 below norm- ; al. But here, too, the blame is ' placed largely on the slowdown in > the steel industry and a more : than usual volume of layoffs by ' auto makers. Model changeovers came early and closer together than usual, and also the big sales volume tills year had 'built auto payrolls higher than usual before ■ the'layoffs.' / , , w But in both steel and autos the payrolls are expanding along with -output. mont stores and homes, and each MM ow domestic needs for mfr passing rescue truck set up waves which caused more water damage. Orders From Russia Ups Wheat Futures CHICAGO (AP) - Wheat futures were mostly firm in early transactions on the board ,ot trade, reflecting additional purchases of wheat by Russia. Reports that Russia had bought 58.5 million bushels of wheat from 8% 18% -% Australia after purchasing 228 » 8% 6% v * million bushels from Canada over ‘1.48% 46% *6% - % the weekend stirred new demand •?% K% - %;for wheat futures. Trqde advices said.the Russians, facing a shortage of grains as a result of adverse conditions, had taken an option of an arbi-tional million bushels of Australia wheat, ail tor delivery in 1964. nam;n« 0# point where directors of some col* appointments, one the iwmingI of ^ ^ ^ fams ^ ^ a new assistant cashier, have ^rsistenUy remind6d to eake fer-been announced by A. C. Girara, tilizer they have been allotted out president and chairman of the 0f the storehouse and not let it board. lay for months,” lie said, 100 64% 64% I 14^5% 41% 46% 4 ii 30% ioy« ioy« — 1 18% 16%- 16% ... 4 70% 70% 70% ... 41 41% 41% 48% ... —W— I 14 14 14 — .36 36V« 28% 36% — % 5 64 13% 63% a 8 1 Sk I •? 8% ffi 73 3J% '3F% 36% | 7. 31% 31% 31% John E. Gardiner has been appointed assistant cashier and hs-j signed to the Bloomfield Hills of*, flee, 35 W. Long Lake. His post as manager of thej Woodward Avenue office, 9091 Woodward, will be taken over by Marvin G. Caswell. v Grain Prices CHICAGO ORA IN CHICAGO (AP)—Openlni today; Wheat , May .. . ... - % * 381% 4 • 17 73% 73 5 36.% 36 —X— S3 313 371 —Y— 9 31% 31% .31% 4 % 3 111% »» M9 - % —z— 47 II 63% 66 l of dlvl; .-less SLcrwlse poted, «m the foregoing ta».» -.- -a-.-r-rsemento tarta^fco tail qu^W or soml-annUal declaration. Special « SftS'd a*i1 j* ou'or r arey Wentflled1 £ *Z X#5j'*xtrao. b—Annual rat* ....k dfrldend. c—Liquidating dlvl- Declared or. paid In l#63 WU Idend. *-Ptld lMt year, f-Psy- during 1063, w .-dividend or -o«*. g—peolared or paid — —. ---j year, h—Declared or paid sltor stock dividend or split up. k-TleoUrsd or paid nils sear, an accumulative UssU* Jj® i In arrears, p—Paid this yes omitted, deferred or no eotio .... meeting. T-jp M plus stock dlv PMP stook "'fisra estimated cash value, on < V^MlW^ulf a*' fid-called, x—Ex dlvldendt y-end find Bales In full. on. xr-«|lx right#. ...... Mh dividends Ii sstf Ex Dlvl* _ dlstrlbu-■Without — trlbuted. TS' bankruptcy or receivership bsmg roorianMd under J!" U it i*ouritl*i assumed RHP,. * posed Intoi . 1.96% Oats . 1.00% Bsp. . 1.08% Deo. . 1.64% Mar. .1.67 X . 1.80% Mar. . 1.16% May . 1.10% Jut . . 1.41% • 1.40% . 1.47% . 1.34% Stocks of Local Interest actual transactions but ' gulde^to the ^spproxl- AMT corp . Braun Engineering ....... Charles of tho Hits '.... Detroiter Mobil* Homes . Diamond Cnrstal ......... Frlto-Lay, Inc. .......... McLouth Steal Co. ....... Maradel Products ....... Mohawk Rubber Co......... ' —‘ Tub# Co. . MUTUAL FUNDS • subject to pro- Mass. 'Investors Growth . Mass. Invsstors Trust .. Putnam Growth ............ Television Electronic* .. D0W-30NKB N IJO? 13 Utils .. BOeks •••• INDSl g:.4W:« Bank Promotes Two Employes .Fertilizer always has been short because much of the Soviet economy is devoted to heavy industry. But in his speech, published Tuesday hi the Soviet press, Khrushchev said farmers! often neglected to use the fertilizer they have. Khrushchev said fields in Yugoslavia, where he recently visited, produce higher grain yields than Soviet fields because of the use of fertilizer. Two Community National Bank September and October are likely to toll a lot more about the health of, and the length of, the current upturn in the T cycle than did August rf,;.jh 1 # Successful ql 1 (rivqsting ? BURDEN’ In the Soviet Union, Khrushchev said some farm officials regard their fertilizer allotments as a burden. ... ‘The matter has reached the col- Treasury Position - JBSr1! ‘“~.\.'.T. 6 13.663.990.M1W " thdrawals fiscal yt. 6_37.176.449,9*3.84 rai debt ..............•8807.763,488,660.67 •posits flloal July 1 ...... Withdrawals f! Total debt ... Gold assets .. GARDINER CASWELL Gardiner* who lives at 5188 Drayton, Independence Township with his wife and three children, has been with CNB eight years. Girard said his new post was created in line with the bank’) policy of adding personnel to compliment customer growth. Caswell, married and the father of two, resides at 157 W. Cornell. Business Notes Compiled by True Associated P Month Ago Year Ago . 1*63 High . 1083 LOW . 1999, High 10*1 LOW . Noon Mon. 61.7 lots* Week Ago Month Ago lEnTAii. 1063 High 1663 Low 1662 High i661 LOW m ion 77.8 Mil 76.1 *6.7 Iffi ili Mi ; ...iip m ».? %S £f p|:! -.RI m o ^ i: Roger F. Kinnear, 2631 McCUn-tock, Waterford Township, has been named personnel and safety supervisor of Consumers Power Co.’s Macomb Division at Detroit. Kinnear hasp been with Con-] sumers Power since graduating from University of Mich-! lgan in 1957, serving in Pontiac, Royal Dak, Jackson and Saginaw offices. |H j The ‘ promotion KINNEAR '-rT.;.,i. ... » 4,071,63 »16,Ml,147,664X1 Sept. 14,1M* . 6 6,163,191,807.14 » 16.471,834,690.16 i 36,179,277,877.85 6106,361,061,333,41 News in Brief Georgene Berwager, 419# Elizabeth Lake Road, Waterford Township, told police yesterday that miscellaneous items valued at (60 were stolen from her house. By ROGER E. SPEAR Q. “With bank interest at 4 per cent, is stock investment reaKy profitable?1 We are • family with two young chll* dren, an average income, and we’re looking for further earnings to offset the constantly increasing costs of child and family maintenance. Do you still recommend StJlli . Roebuck?” F.F. A. If I may say so, I think your second sentence answers your firnt question. Everyone should have a savings account sufficient to provide for any contingency that may develop. But, except that the interest is compounded, savings accounts do not grow; and (10,000 of principal in the bank will remain the sathe ten years hence. Good stocks, gaining’ steadily in eariflngs and dividends, can substantially increase the amount of your capital by rising in price as growth develops. Ten years ago, Sears* R ff®* buck sold for one-fifth its present price. I do not know whether it will do as well over the next ten years, but I think it is a safe stock and I recommend it to you. ' Two wristwatches worth (56 were stolen from Fred N. Pauli Jewelers at 28 W. Huron last night by smashing a display window. Ralph Long, 4444 Monroe, Waterford Township, told police yesterday that a tire and wheel valued at (67 were stolen from his car parked to the garage. A fire in the kltehen of the home of James Yeargin, 82 Elm, caused an estimated damage of (1,750 to the building and contents, according to Pontiac fire officials, who said the blaze started when a pot of food on the stove boiled over. Enroll now for classes at Ve Dor Millinery. 334-5487. MOM’S 10 cent sale, Thursday 9-12, Indlanwood and Baldwin. —adv. St. Paul Methodist Church will be holding their semi-annual rummage sale, Fri., Sept. 20,9 a.m. to 6 p.m. 620 Romeo Rd., Rochester. ps declared,to effective immediately, said xi*4 R5ie°ralabi* P° n 11 a e Division Manag-reoular lH |er Charles F. Brown,/although 03.8 F*rm*y,orJc'' ' '.30 a im n-3 Kinnear’s successor as person- ill s*n j! § . L30 In* nel and safety assistant here has (P, ;g» | LJ8 ifciJInot been named. Mr. Spear cannot anavrer /111 wifi answ mmm 01.3 Ban d osiE 6 Rummage Sale Thursday, Friday, Saturday.. 10 until 7. 5940 Joliet off Airport Rd. -adv. Fish supper, Friday, September 20, 5 to 8 p.m. Baidwto EUB Church. Adults (1.25, children 50C.17, NX, _ -adv.1 (CopyH|M|lll) .. f ■ F Q. “I am attaching a New* Letter Rut out by Calpak, the company I work fur, which I think you will find interesting. May I ask your opinion of California Packing stock, since I own these shares?” G.S. A. I appreciate receiving your News Letter, which indicates that California Packing is cote tinutog to make progress to the first fiscal quarter of 1963-64. I consider the consumer food companies excellent vehicles tor growth. California Packing fulls largely Into this group because of the strong consumer following for its Del Monte brand. In addition, of course, the company is the world’s largest packer of fruits and vegetables, and operating results are sometimes affected by the selling price of foods packed. There have been some variations in earnings oyer the past ten years, but the trend has been definitely upward and has brought stockholders nine successive annual dividend Increases. % like toe shafts and would retain my holdings. mail personally but i all questions possible ip his column. Write General Features Corp., 250 Park Ave., New York the POOTIAC PKESS, WEPyESPAt. SEPfrBHBER 18, 1988 'Get Back to Work' PHILADELPHIA (AP)-Amer-Ica’s “Physician ot the Yew1' says a heart attack is devastating hut rarely cripplihg, and only per- manently damaging if the patient' tails to resume near normal work within 120 days, “After four months the chances of« patient getting back to work at all definitely goes down,” says Dr. David Gelfand, internationally famous cardiologist who heads heart departments at Philadelphia then six more weeks climbing the stairs ]ust once a day.” '< Studies by Gelfand and his as* sociates, he says, todlcatos that more activity-as early as posst-Me — and the fastest return to normal and to working is the best medicine. “This is not easy to get across," he says. ‘BIG BLOW’ 1 Gelfand’s team, in an eight-year General Hospital and Kensington Hospital. “Some people accept a heart attack as fete, as part of life, recover and go baick to work," Gelfand says. “Others take it as a disabling illness and say let someone else support fee. You can’t ever forget that heart disease is an emotional ailment." Gelfand, 54, father of two daughters (one married), a chain pipe smoker and an every-chance-I-get golfer, recently was named No. l physician by the President’s Committee on Employment of the Handicapped, the 11th to be so honored. He’ll get the award formally on Sept 26 in San Francisco at the American Medical Association’s annual congress on occupational health. Gelfand believes the worst kind of treatment a heart patient can get—"there are always exceptions”—is too much bed rest, too much sitting down and doing nothing, Just too much restriction. The attack victim’s doctor frequently is his wont enemy, says Gelfand, “prescribing three months in bed, six weeks walking about slowly upstairs «dy, and Registration Set for Adults in Waterford Registration for adult education classes in Waterford Township will be held 7 to 9. pm. tomorrow at Waterford Township High School Classes will begin Sept. 24. In addition toi fee regular. I be offered this fall They include freshman and sophomore English, basic mathematics and Amort*, can government. Credit classes will' be held Tuesday and Thursday from 7 to 10 p.m., and the noncredit courses are scheduled Tuesdays from 7 to 9:30 p.m. All classes will meet at WTHS. * i, ★ dr Included in the noncredit curriculum are beginning auto mechanics, bookkeeping, ceramics and painting, conversational French, drafting, furniture construction and refinishing, stocks and bonds, beginning and advanced sewing, beginning typing, advanced typing mid office machines, knitting and beginning shorthand. Registrations also will be taken at the first class meetings, according to Byron Merritt, director of the adult education program. Woman for Assault Gail Ann Schmitzer, 4356 Fen-more, Waterford Township, was fined 660 plus 635 costs yesterday by Waterford Township Justice John E. McGrath after she pleaded guilty to charges of assault and battery and being a disorderly person. The charges stemmed from an Aug. 29 incident at a drive-in restaurant when she bit a police officer who was writing an auto accident report in which she involved. A sentence of 660 and 620 costs was imposed for the disorderly person charge and a cost of 615 was set for the assault and battery. Mrs. Schmitzer was given SO days to pay the 60S. i —-I----------- Pontiac Twp. Burglar . fo, Got 6-Month Term Eighteen • year - old Donald W. Gardner, of 2252 Old Salem, Pontiac Township, was sentenced yes-terday to six months in the county jail and three years’ probation for ^burglary he admitted Gardner wall sentenced by Circuit Court Judge Frederick C. Bern. The youth had pleaded guiUy to breaking and entering g bar at 56 Opdyke, Pontiac Township, Aug. 22 and taking two cases of beer and 10 bottles of period, examined 665 patients, and recommended that 92 per cent return to work full or piurt-time. ‘A heart attack is a tremendous blow to the ego of younger Americans,” says Gelfand, “and they tend to teu friends their doctor wrong. And then to prove their point they go out deliberately and kill themselves by failing to take proper precautions." Rochester Boy Killed by Car Man Hurt in Futile Try to Avoid Hitting Child A 6-year-old boy was killed yesterday when he ran into the path of a car on the outskirts of Rochester. Dead on arrival at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital following the 6:10 p. m. accident was Gregory J. Mutch, son of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Mutch, 602 University, Rochester, The driver of the car, Phillip M. Bishop, 26, of 262 Claybum, Waterford Township, was hospitalized for Injuries suffered when he struck a tree after swerving to avoid hitting the boy. Bishop, who received lacerations, was expected to be released from the hospital today. Police said they would make no charges against the driver. The accident occurred on Walton just east of Livemois, Avon Township, about a quarter-mile from the youngster’s home. ★ ★ ★ Bishop told sheriff’s deputies feat he was traveling east on Walton at 35 m.p.h. when the boy darted from between moving cars headed in the opposite direction. 166 FEET The boy was knocked or carried by the car 160 feet from the point of impact, police said. The youngster is survived by two brothers, Gary and Harry, and a sister, Sharon. His body is at the William R. Potere Funeral Home, Rochester. Barnett Set by KALAMAZOO HU - Western Michigan University spokesmen yesterday said Mississippi Gov. Ross Barnett is scheduled to speak Sept. 24 in the men’s gymnasium of the school’s physical education building. .. It made specific the site of Barnett’s address which, is being made in answer to an invitation from the WMU senior class for lm to appear here. Otto Yntema, the .university’? director of field services, is scheduled to introduce the Mississippi governor and moderate a question-and-answer session following the address. Musicians Authorize Walkout NEW YORK (AP)—Union musicians have authorized a strike wh(ph could close all stage pro-■ ” on Broadway, where the new eeason officially opens Ur-night. / The executive committee of Local 802 of the AFL-CIO American Federation of Musicians meets today to decide what day this week the strike will begin. Only 9 of the 12 shows now on Broadway employ musicians but the New York Times today quoted an unidentified producer as 'saying, “If, one show is struck, ’ll allshut down.” REJECT CONTRACT A meeting of musicians, by a 10-vote margin, rejected, a contract Offer Tuesday night. A1 Ma-nuti, Local 802 president, had told the musicians a “no" vote would ’carry With it a recommendation to strike.’’ The vote was 166 to 156. ★ % , ★ ■ Manuti said .afterward the local’s 13-member executive board would decide today “what our next step will be." He added, ‘there will be a strike some time this week." A union spokesman said musicians Working for Broadway-bound musicals still in production also would be called out. SEASON OPENS The Broadway season opens with “The Irregular Verb to Love," a comedy at the Barrymore Theater. Claudette Colbert and Cyril Rltchard are the stars. Notices that the theaters might close were posted backstage in the nine shows that have music. The League of New York Theaters proposed a 610 weekly wage increase in a three-year contract. Manuti said the local had asked for a 610 increase the first year, 65 the second and 65 the third, plus medical benefits and eight days annual sick leave. He said the union’s executive board had recommended acceptance of the contract “on the bails that it was the league’s final offer.” White Ruled ineligible to Sue for Integration judge has ruled a white man ineligible to sue for desegregation of a downtown hotel, saying the man is not directly affected In granting a motion of the hotel to dismiss a suit brought by a white Atlanta resident, Henry M. Henderson, U.S. Dist. Judge Lewis R. Morgan ruled Tuesday that such an action properly must be brought by a Negro. COOL IN CARRIAGE — Footmen and police rush to control four rearing horses of the Dutch royal coach Carrying Princesses Beatrix, Irene ami Margriet yesterday. The falling driver of the carriage (visible between res- cuers at right, at about the horses chest level) broke his leg. The carriage nearly overturned when reins became tangled in a row of pillars. The princesses remained calm throughout. ' Infants Killed, Crippled Mystery Epidemic By JOHN BARBOUR Associated Press Science Writer, WASHINGTON - There is evidence that a mysterious epidemic killer and crlppler of bom infants struck at least two areas ot the United States last year. The latest report is from Vermont—but doctors, left with the job of caring for the stricken infants who survived, we i “ Ml out clues as to the cause The Vermont episode may bO another expression of the epidemic of the brutal birth defect that struck Atlanta, Ga., last fall — and may have hit elsewhere. BORN From a one-block area in Montpelier, Vt., in just six weeks last summer, came three babies born With the rare defect. Six months later, from the same city block, came a fourth case, All of the babies in this tragic Cluster suffered from spina bifida—a congenital separation in the spine which allows spinal cord nerve tissue to balloon out (from the body. ★ A ★ ★ It can leave a baby vulnerable to death through infection. Or it may leave a child paralyzed from the waist down and incontinent for life. Frequently, there are complications, sometimes brain damage. The cluster of cases from Montpelier stirred a medical investigation. SAD COINCIDENCE For one doctor, it was a sad coincidence. He had delivered all of the four Montpelier babies. Normally, a doctor might go through a lifetime without ever delivering a child with1 this defect. An investlgatiing team under Dr. Jerold F. Lucey, University of Vermont pediatrician, surveyed birth and death certificates on babies, combed the records of the university’s two hospitals-where 23 per cent of the state’s births occur—and checked the only three neurosurgeons in Vermont, all of them in Burlington. ★ ★ ★ The Investigators wrote to ev- ery one of the state’s 432 doctors outside ot Burlington, getting responses from 90 per cent, of them. Putting their data together from all these sources, the doctors found 21 cases in all—of which only 10 survived in 1962. HIGH RATE Although the1 normal rate for Vermont would predict 99 casep in 100,000 live births, in 1962 the rate was 232 cases per 100,000 live births. Meanwhile U.S: Public Health Service researchers in Atlanta, Ga., were looking into an outbreak there. * ★ * They discovered 16 cases, between August and October of 1962. Only, two babies survived. The rate was six times normal for the Atlanta population. They interviewed mothers of the stricken babies, looking for some common due. Was there something in diet, drugs or infectious disease—anything that may have caused the defect? In Vermont, similar interviews were conducted, tip' WWW There were no clear-cut answers —no common agent was found. In both cases, the epidemic passed. So far 1963 has been normal. In Vermont’s neighbors — New Hampshire and upper New York State—there was either no increase or a decline in the birth defect rate in 1962. League Forms New Group for Studies on Home Rule Formation of a new county home rule study committee was announced today by William H. McGaughey, president of the Oakland Citizens League. Known as the “Citizens Gov* eminent Study Council —' County Home Rale," it replaces an earlier committee established by the league, said McGaughey. He said Homer Case, Bloomfield ToWnship supervisor, was elected chairman of the new group at the last meeting of the league’s now defunct county home rule committee. Caw said the new study coun- Police Ends in Jail for Wom 2 — The car of Thomas Krumboltz, Webster City, Iowa, swerved off Highway 65 and plowed through a heavy wapden ience last night. Three posts impaled the car, one going through the/steering wheel and grazing Krumboltz’ chest/ He escaped injury. i 7 -•?! A 24-year-old worn an who rashed her car head-on with another while leading Holly police on a high-speed chase was sentenced to 60 days in the county jail yesterday and ordered to pay a $toft fine and 625 court costs, Mrs. Joan S. Mails, 421 Harden, Holly, pleaded guilty to a charge of drunk driving when she appeared before Justice George DeLand. Her driver’s license will automatically be suspended by the state for 90 days. She was arrested shortly after 11 p.m. Monday when she smashed into a car driven by Payl J. Gazetti, 34, of 1011 | Marion, Holly. 7 FORMER POLICE CHIEF 1 Gazetti, a former chief of police in Holly, was on his way from work in Flint, where he is plant guard, when the accident occurred on North Holly Road, just south of Quick. ★ ★. ★ Gazetti was taken to St. Joseph Hospital in Flint where he is listed in good condition. Mrs, Mails suffered minor * injuries but was not hospitalized. Patrolman Edward Stout, who was in pursuit of Mrs. Malts, reached speeds up to 85 Miles per hour during the three-mile chase that began in downtown Holly. ell is n6w entirely independent of the league and is being enlarged by members who do not belong to the league. Funds to carry on research on the application of the state constitution’s county home rule provision will be sought ipune* diately, said Case. He said he is contacting political leaders of bo(h major parties, service clubs, chambers of comlnerce, the Michigan Municipal League, labor Unions and other groups for new, committee members. SECRETARY Mrs. Doris Mosher of 551 Mo-hegan, Bloomfield Township, was elected council secretary. She is a leader of the American elation of University Women. Other members include Mrs. Harriett Phillips of 2510 W. Ray-court, Huntington Woods, a former county supervisor and leading Democrat; Mrs. John D. Rumsey of 5950 Wing -Lake, Bloomfield Township, representing the League of Women Voters; Frederick C. Nash, 130 Endi-cott Road, Bloomfield Hills, who served as„ general counsel of the U.S. Department of Commerce under the past administration. Also, Bloomfield Hills Commissioner Henry Woolfenden, a leader in the recent state constitu-tional convention; Huntington Woods Mayor David Calhoun; PrObate Judge Norman Barnard and White Lake Township Supervisor Edward Oheyz, Ex-News Director, Scripps Scion, Dies DETROIT (B — James Scripps Whitcomb, 71, a former director and treasurer of The Detroit News and a grandson of the News’ founder, died yesterday in Ford Hospital. W h i tco m b ’ s grandfather, James E. Scripps, founded the News in 1873. His father Edgar Whitcomb, preceded him on the News’ board of directors. * * * Whitcomb was named a News director in 1936 and added the duties of treasurer In 1952. He retired in 1962. He also was a member' of the Detroit Institute, of Arts Commission, serving as its president for 10 of his 22 years on the commission. Deaths in Pontiac Area Macedonia Church, died Monday after an illness of nine years. Survivors include his wife, Ethel; two sons, John Jr. and Charles O., both Pontiac; two daughters; Mrs. Bernice W. Owens and Mrs. Evefyn Smith, both of-Pontiac) 15 grandchildren; and a great-grandchild. JEFFERY L. HADJI INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP — Service for.Jeffery L. Hadji,. 3-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph L. Hadji of 5135 Mary Sue, will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the St. Geroge Greek Orthodox Church, Pontiac. Burial will follow in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. The boy died Monay after a two-month illness. His body is at the' Donelson • Johns Funeral Home, Pontiac. ' Surviving besides his parents je a sister, Terri Lynn, at home; grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Medlen of Ortonville, Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Hadji of Fort Pierce, Fla., and Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Sampson of Detroit; and great-grandparents, Mrs. Grace* Olsen, Charles Freeman and Mrs. Mattie Medlen, ail of Pontiac. ROBERT ALAN HARBER _OMEO — Sendee for Robert Alan Harber, 15, of 153 Benjamin will be 2 p.m. Friday at Roth’s Home for Funerals. Burial will follow in the Romeo Cemetery. Robert died yesterday after a brief illness. He was a sophomore at Romeo High School. Surviving are his parents, Mr. _ud Mrs. Eric Harber; his Sister Beverly and brother David, both at home; and his paternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. E. T. Harber of England. - MRS. WILLIAM LEWIS IMLAY CITY — Service for Mrs. William (Addie) Lewis, ,82, of 341 Rule, will be 1:30 p.m. Friday at the Muir Brothers Funeral Home. Burial will follow in Attica Cemetery. Mrs. Lewis died yesterday after a long illness. Surviving are a son, William of Oxford; three daughters, Mrs. Mable Ryckman of Brown City, Mrs. Jessie Bengry of Imlay City and Mrs. Bessie Rossman of North Branch; 24 grandchildren and 47 great-grandchildren. CARL MAYER ORION TOWNSHIP — Service for Carl Mayer, 93, of 69 Mouton will be 10 a.m. tomorrow at the Church ' with buriaf toOakHlllSt. Joseph Catholic Church. Burial MRS. WILLIE CRARP Service for Mrs. Willie (Marguerite) Chard, 68, of 2543 Cottage, Fort Meyers Beach, Fla., wS be at 1:30 pin. Friday at Sparks-Griffin Chapel with burial ' i Cadillac Memorial Gardens. Mrs: Chard died yesterday of heart attack at the home of her daughter Mrs. Charles Kaufman of Pontiac, with whom she was vjsiting. She was a member of the Reformed Lutheran Church. Surviving besides her husband and daughter are three grandchildren and four sisters. MARION F. DAVIS Service for Marion F. Davis, ), of 199 Russell will be at 2 p.m. tomorrow in the D. E. Purs-iey Funeral Home with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery.-Mr. Davis, a barber, died early yesterday morning after a two-week illness. Surviving are a brother, Lucius H. of Pontiac, and two sisters, Mrs. Mary E. Johnson of Red-ford and Mrs. Laura I. Milczarski of Detroit. , MRS. MARY E. EVANS Mrs. Mary Jp.' Evans, 73, of 1651 Sterling died yesterday aft-r an illness of 10 years. She was a former seamstress for Public Dry Cleaning Co., Detroit. ■ Surviving are a daughter Mrs. Frances Thompson of Pontiac; two sons, John of Gowen and Milton of Pontiac; 10 grandchildren; 10 great - grandchildren; two sisters and a brother. Arrangements are by the D. E. Pursley Funeral Home. EDWARD dr KAERCHER The Rosary will he recited at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Donelson-johns Funeral Home for Edward J. Kaercher, 64, of 290 Dick. Funeral sendee will be at 10 a.m. Friday in St. Benedict Catholic Church with burial following in Mount Hope Cemetery. Mr. Kaercher died of a heart ailment Monday after a two-month illness. He'was an employe of Wisher Body Division, and a member of Elks Lodge No. 810 and St. Benedict Church. Surviving ■ besides his wife, Ruth, are a daughter, Mary, at home; a brother, Leo of Flint; and four sisters. JOHN LEONARD Service for John Leonard, 74, of 307 California will be at 1 p.m. tomorrow in Macedonia Cemetery. His body is at the William F. Davis Funeral Home. '. Leonard, a member of the Rocky Blasts Foreign Policy Charges JFK Weakens the Western Alliance GLEN FALLS, N.Y. (UP!) Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, speaking to a crowd In a campaign spirit, charged last night that the Kennedy administration had weakened the Western alliance through unilateral negotiations with the Soviet Union. Rockefeller, who has promised to announce by the end of the year if he wyi seek the 1964 Republican presidential nomination, also renewed his attack on President Kennedy’s fiscal policies. The governor said that in the Eisenhower administration the late Secretary of State John Foster Dulles made sure that the United States’ position represented that of its allies before engaging in talks with Russia. “Now we are negotiating and signing treaties,” he said. “They are asking our allies afterward, without consultation, and publicly shaming them into a position that if they don’t sign the whole world is looking at them and turning against them.” It was the second straight night teat Rockefeller had criticized Kennedy’s foreign policy* without mentioning the recently signed nuclear test-ban treaty. Last night, in Accord, N.Y., he said failure to consult the Western allies in talks with Russia had “eroded” their Will to resist communism. In fas talks here, Rockefeller said the administration had failed to spur national economic growth and curb unemployment sufficiently. Members of the group which greeted Rockefeller carried, pic-" the governor and signs reading: “Rocky and Happy in 1964." He was accompanied by his Wife, Margaretta (Happy) Rockefeller. will follow in White Lake Cemetery. \ A retired watchmaker, Mr. Mayer died Monday after a four-month illness. The Rosary will be recited at 9 p.m. today at the Flumerfelt Funeral Home, Oxford. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Barbara Crawford of. Warren, and a son, Edward of Lake Orion. LESfER GIBBARD IMLAY CITY - Service for Lester Gibbard, 81, will be 3 p.m. Saturday at the Muir Brothers Funeral Home. Burial follow in Imfay Township Cemetery. Mr. Gibbard died yesterday after a long illness. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Eleanor Peaslee and Mrs. Evelyn Laidler, both of Attica; six sons, W e n d e 11, Leon, and Warren, all of Imlay City, and Clare of Hialeah, Fla,.' Vernon of Attica and Leo of Charlotte, N.C. Also survlviig are 13 grandchildren and four great-grandchildren. Nixon Declines to Enter Ballot in West Virginia WHEELING, W. Va. (AP) -State Republican Chairman Howard V. Corcoran said Tuesday former Vice President Richard Mi Nixon has declined to enter the West Virginia Republican presidential primary next May. In a letter to Corcoran, Nixon wrote, “At (his time I believe that my best service . . . can be rendered as a constructive, independent critic of the Kennedy administration 'and its policies rather than as a candidate." ' .★ 7 it"' * Corcoran had invited Nixon* los-j to President Kennedy in 1960, and several other prominent Republicans, including Sen. Barry GoldWa,ter of Arizona and Gov. * Nelson A. Rockefeller' of New York to .enter the primary. No commitment has been received from Goldwatey or Rockefeller; Cpal Converts to {Energy Energy produced by one poqnd of coal burned in a mpdern electric generating station equals the energy exerted by a bum working a full week. i1', &3lgfg&&g5SSg trJgBi HWt'nAb ^HBSS, WEDNESDAY, SEPT&MBER 19, 1963 MM a , |fbdd^s Television Programs- Programs fu by stations listed in this column aro subject to change without notico ■ Chonn.l 2-Wi»K>Ty qiWW»>4-WWi-T^ 9~CKlW.lV Ciwm—150-WTUS TV Features Priesf/Politico Clash CBS REPORTS, 7:30 p,ra.' (2) Examination of clash between political bon Leander Perez and Catholic priest trying to integrate all-white parochial school. VIRGINIAN, 7:30 pi m. (4) Sonny Tufts guests in season premiere story of vow to kill Judge Garth (Lm J. Cobb). PATTY DUKE SHOW, 8:00 p. m. (7) Debut 6f comedy series starring Academy Award winning teen-ager in dual role of look-alike cousins, one American, the other European. BEN CASEY, 9:00 p. m. (7) In season premiere, new day, worker is brought to hospital with radioactive substance lodged in spine. CHANNING, 10:00 p. m. (7) First show In drama series set against background of midwestem university campus. TONIGHT 6:00 (2) (4) (7) President Kennedy (9) Capt. Jolly and Popeye (56) What’s New 6:25 (7) Weather, News, Sports 6:80 (2) News — Walter Cron-kite -Jf (4) News — Huntley, Brink-ley (9) Yogi Bear (56) Art and Artists 7:00 (2) Story of a Country Doctor (4) Best of Groucho (7) Rebel (9) (Special) Political Telecast (56) Kaleidoscope 7:30 (2) CBS Reports (4) (Color) Virginian (7) Ozzie and Harritt (9) Movie: “Split Second." (1953) Alexis Smith, , Richard Egan (56) Crossroads of the World 8:00 (7) Patty Duke Show (56) Great Books 8:30 (2) Dobie Gillis ^ (7) Pried Is Right -t:80 (2) Beverly HillbilUes W- (4) Mystery Theater , ,. (7) Ben Casey ... (9) News Magazine 9:30 (2) Dick Van Dyke (9) Front and Center 11:80 (2) Boston Symphony (4) Eleventh Hour (7) Channing (9) Cheaters 19:89 (9) Ted Lindsay 19:45 (9) Maurice Pearson 11:99 (2) (4) (7) (9) News, Weather, Sports 11:29 (9) Lucky Scores -11:21 (7) Movie: “Jolson Sings Again." (1949) Larry Parks, Barbara Hale 11:89 (2) Steve Allen (4) (Color) Johnny Carson / (9) Movie: “Action in the . ' North Atlantic." (1943) Humphrey Bogart. 1:99 (2) Peter Gunn (4) Best of Groucho 1:80 (7) After Hours THURSDAY MORNING 9:15 (2) Meditations 6:29 (2) On the Farm Front 6:25 (2) News 6:39 (2). Spectrum ’63 (4) Classroom (7) Funews 7:99 (2) News (4) Today (7) Johnny Ginger 7:95 (2) Fun Parade 7:45 (2) King and Odie 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Big Show 8:89 (7) Movie: "The Other ' Love." (1947) Barbara Stanwyck, David Niven 8:45 (56) French for Teachers l?5#W Warm-Up; * k 8:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry • Go . ■:$ Round ■ , 9:80 (2) Movie: "The Skipper Surprised His Wife." (1950) Robert Walker, ' Joan Leslie (4) Living v (9) Romper Room 9:19 (56) Let’s Read 9:39 (9) Jack La Lanne 1:85 (56) Tomorrow’s Homemak- 16:99 (4) Say When (9) Robin Hood (56) Spanish Lessdn 10:15(7) News (56) Our Scientific World 18:25 (4) News 19:89 (2) 1 Love Lucy (4) (Color)Play Your Hunch (7) Girl Talk (9) Movie: “Violent Playground." (1957) Anne Haywood 19:49 (56) French Lessen 19:55 (56) Spanish Lesson 11:09 (2) McCoys (4) Concentration (7) Price Is Right 11:19 (56) Let’s Redd 11:89 (2) Pete and Gladys (4) (Color) Missing Links (7) Seven Keys 11:55 (56) Memo to Teachers t r* r rs r r r- r r- nr rr t i 13 14 15 13 ir td 19 21 ■ r r vr 24 1 1 n ar 30 1 r H ■ r i r r W IT /■ 1 39 ■ ■ IT 44 ■ r 4T vr 48 49 S3 St 32 53 5r 55 55 18 ACROSS : i eu . .■/ . > 5 Iowa college 8 Los Angeles university (ab.) •12 Top '13 Miss Gardner 14 Midday : 15 Left 18 Cyclones 18 Flattered 20 Vine i21 Boy’s nickname 22 Keresan Indian 23 Fast ;26Nagged 30 Spar Papal name Shield Topcard -Small boat Football position Cambridge university Thick soup Lubricant Army front 41 School in Providence '44 New York school ;4& Cultural stage (archeol.) 50 Italian coin *51 Valley 52 Mouths ;53 Spirit.. 54 Plod 55 Teleost Ash 56 Cathedral churchek DOWN 1 Yawn ! 2 Mlmieker 3 Miss Horde ; . 4 Died out 5 Boxed 6'Roman writer f 7 Lug 8 Majuscule script 9 Cocaine source 10 Diving bird , 11 Hpndle. . f • ■**'■% f 17 Mixtures 19 Bishopric 22 Rabbit’s tall 23 Hindu nurse 24 Rodent / 25 Jacob’s son (Bib.) 26 Pakistan province 27 Darling 28 Behold (Latin) 29 Southern university 31 Swirl 34 Pigment 35 Grouped Promising 38 Nominal value 40 Sonant 41 Prays 42 Sway 43 Margarine 44 Discharge, at gun 45 Hawaiian city 46 Biplical region 47 Supplies with troops (mil.) 49 Weeder Answer to Previous Puzzle THURSDAY AFTERNOON 12:99 (2) Love or Life (4) (Color) First Impression (7) Ernie Ford (9) Hawkeye 12:25 (2) News 12:89 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Truth or Consequences (7) Father Knows Best (9) People in Conflict 12:85 (56) Spanish Lesson 12:45 (2) Guiding Light *:50 (56) Let’s Read 12:55 (4) News 1:90 (2) Star Performance (4) People Are Funhy (7) General Hospital (9) Movie: “Bedlam." 0946) Boris Karloff, Ja-' < son Robards Jr. 1:10 (56) Gernrim Lesson 1:89 (2) As the World Turns (4) Best of Groucho (7) Bachelor Father (56) World History 2:99 (2) Password (4) (Color) People Will Talk . J,;" .,, ,'jg ", (7) Byline: Steve Wilson (56) Mathematics for You 2:25 (4) (7) News 2:89 (2) Hennessey (4) Doctors (7) Day in Court (56) Young Artist at Work 2:55 (7) News 3:09 (2) To Tell the Truth (4) Loretta Young (7) Queen for a Day (56) Spanish Lesson * 3:15 (9) News 3:25 (2) News 3:89 (2) Edge of Night (4) (Color) You Don’t Say! (7) Who DO You TTust? (9) Vacation Time 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Match Game (7) Trailmaster 4:25 (4) News , 4:30 (2) Movie: “Kind Lady." (1951) Ethel Barrymoire, Maurice Evans * (4) Mickey Mouse Club (9) Hercules 5:00 (4) (Color) George Pierrot (7) Movie: “The Parson and the Outlaw." (1067) Sonny Tufts, Buddy Rogers (9) Larry and Jerry 5:15 (56) Industry on Parade 5:30 (56) What’s New 5:45 (9) Rocky and His Friends 5:55 (2) Weather 5:55 (4) Carol Duvall Reverend Tello Parish Hard Fads of Life NORTH STAFFORD, England tUPI) - The Rev, William Smith told his parishioners today that, unfortunately, honesty was not always the best policy. “It is well known In business that the honest man does not get lie wrote in a magazine article. SHE’S A WHIZ — Carol Woodward, who ill be 10 this month, rides a bicycle and plays ce a normal child, despite having lost her arms When struck by a train at the age of 2. She has plastic arms fitted with steel clips. Child Beats Tragedy (EDITORS—What has happened to the little girl whose arms were cut off by* train wheels eight years ago at Ticon-deroga? This Associated Press /oltcw-up depicts Carol today.) Debbie, equipped with artificial 8CHROON LAKE, N.Y. UR Carol Woodard Is d sparkling little girl who rides a bicycle and, she says, “can draw real good” —even though she lost her arms at the age of 2. Carol will be 10 Sept. 25 and now is in the third grade despite setbacks resulting from the train aCcldent that maimed her. She wears plaatie arms with steel clips for fingers. She has been following with interest the news stories about another third-grader, Debbie Mar-cuccilli of Waterloo, N.Y., who lost her legs last winter as the result of a school bus accident. legs and crutches, also is back in school, bravely facing her problem as Carol has learned to do. In 1955, two days after her second birthday, Carol crept out of bed at her home in Ticonderoga and toddled along the nearby railroad tracks toward a neighbor's house. Her arms we crushed under the Wheels of freight train. BECOMES ADJUSTED Now, living at a foster home in this Adirondack resort, she has become so adjusted that she was the first to reach a foster brother who fell off his bicycle the other day. She lifted the bike off the boy, 10-year-old Dennis Ford, made,sure he had not been injured, then wheeled the bike to the house. For those who ask how her Sinatra, Vo Wee, Scotch Becoming 'History'? By EARL WILSON |W YORK 4 Comedian Joe E. Lewis, whose topical gags lm one of the great contemporary historians, has returned to the tapacabana for the 23rd year... and in saluting opening night guest Rudy Valley, he laid, “He’s the fastest guy with a dime teat ever lived." In years to come, the history-writers will snip out things like these for footnotes: What people were talking about in the “Stoned Age," perhaps.., Q: Po you think teachers should get raise? . . . A: Scotch is expensive ehough how! . . . Q: What about Adam Clayton Powell? . . A: He’s done a great job for his constituents l his district: Paris, France ... Q: And Frank Sinatra? . . . A: He’s generous. He heard about peg-leg singer being in trouble. He gave him money to get back on his foot. Tho Midnight Earl ... Fernando Lamas’ll do a stock production of “The Fantasticks,’1 and his honey, Esther Williams, wants to play a 16-year-old in the show... Ed Sullivan will fly to London to TV-tape a sequence with Sonny Liston ... A prominent TV personality was told by the net--k to “get rid of ten pounds of lard." ' REMEMBERED QUOTE: “Home is the place were ungrateful men are treated best and grumble most." , EARL’S PEARLS: The ideal of some men |s to marry a rich girl who’s too proud to have her husband work. * 1 One sign you’re getting older is when your kids tell you what they’re studying in history - and you remember when you studied in Current Events.. .That’s earl, brother. The Fords take Carol periodically to the Sunnyview Rehabilitation Center in Schenectady for manual instruction. “They say she is adapting well," Mrs. Ford told a reporter. 'Of course, her new limbs must be readjusted to fit her as she grows." Carol is full of ideas about her future. She’d like to “work at the post office sorting letters and canceling stamps." Qr maybe she’ll be a teacher or a nurse. “I want to live In a nice house, have a nice car, alee furniture and a nice bedroom" The Delaware & Hudson Railroad has established a 9100,000 trust fund for Carpi. Part of the money is being used for medical treatment. The balance will be hers when she is 21. WILSON -Today's Radio Programs- wj*f76b)wm(iayo) aawtooo) wwjtoso) wcawi iimwoohosoo) wjikq goal WHH-sMteoj) l:M-CKLW. New, WJR, Tfwnedy WXYfc, WJBX. Mewii; Robert ... WCAR, New., Jo. BMUrclM wpojj, Uwr.not Sbow fiM-gs -WJIl, Bh»f.r -- J. MM WWJ, Builnwi N«w« wxVz. a1., nr.i.r WCAR, K.on.dy WHFl, Mutlo Toy Modem Ii4«-WJR, Low.ll Thomftl Sfc8Boru WWJ, XhN* 8t»r Extr. WJBK, Kennedy WSX WJBK, JMk th. BeUtxiy W& •§SS"?r 7:05—WPON, B.n Johnnon 7:15—WXVZ. Lee Alui CKIgW. W. SUgHll m „ .__jpu llU—WJB, Kennedy li*0—WWJ, Mutt. Sunt i caX*J® wJlorvioo' em walk war. m*t, WJBK, Bin AMSr, * WCAR, Tim, ih.rldon “wJHpa Jfl* WPON Mow*. Ario whpi. Ron, Mu*io «:M—WJR, Mttllo Hall IIOO—WJR, 1J 5:50—WJh, Jbu.iv WCAR. M.W., Mortyn IlM—WXYB. aorden. Woll CKLW, Jo. V»n UiM-WWJ. 1 mkf“ m/iM T Thursday ArriRNooN 11:00—WJR, -New., Form WWJ. Hewn. Mu ten* CKLW, AuMln Ortat WCAR, M««|, PuSe , r WKM, Newe. Burdlok WPON, N.W., L.wr.m ,tejib.MN:nw„ Sh.Hd.n IlfctyJCf SWS1 Jimmy is£han&a WJR, N.wi, Mu.le HiJ1 hands work, she flashes a pixie smile and explains that the clips move like snap clothespins and are driven by her shoulder She dresses herself, Lies her own shoelaces and plays /with other children In normal fashion. Among the children hi Dennis, one of two sons of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ford. Mrs. Ford is “Ma’ to Carol since troubles in the Woodard family led to the new it fil'd C—15 si 3 Attempi From Golden SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) Three men who had never met, were from different cities and held dissimilar jobs, tried yesterday to jump off the Golden Gate Bridge. They were prevented from making the 226-foot plunge by highway patrolmen and mili- tary police^ They blamed mar->mer domestic prob- ital lems. Since it was built 25 years ago, the graceful, orange-painted span linking San Francisco with Marin County has been the method chosen by at least 252 persons known to have committed suicide. An undetermined number of others have dropped Into the water, never to be found. And 163 persons — Including the three yesterday — have beat thwarted in attempts to jump. Schwab, 61, a member of the Toledo Blade editorial staff for nearly 30 years, died Tuesday. Schwab, who had worked for newspapers in New York City, New Orleans, La., and Newark, N. J., before coming to Toledo, was born in Baltimore. Dr. Jerome Motto, assistant professor, of psychiatry at the Langley Porter Neuropsychia-tric Institute here, said the bridge is popular with would-be suicides “because it’s simple, It’s cheap, and it has a certain glamour." SCREEN HELP? Would it help prevent suicides if a screen was erected? “It would keep them from jumping off the bridge, but they might then jump from a building," Motto said. "If a person is determined to commit suicide," I don't think a screen would help. "However, there are a number of persons Who are not quite determined to kill Stem-selves. They might go ahead only if it is quite easy. In their case, a screen might help." ■' Motto, who has conducted a number of studies of suicide, said San Francisco leads the nation fo this fleld with 30 per 100,600 jpopulation per year. Toledo Newsman Dead Twenty years on the elr~ twelve years on TV! Join the Neleone for top comedy/ 7:30 P.M. TONIGHT ON CHANNEL 7 ■ •. u Sponsored by CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY Banquet to Fete Retired Officer CLOSE-OUTS 1963 PORTABLE CONSOLE STEREOS , TERMS AVAILABLE ELECTRIC 825 W. Huron COMPANY FE 4-2525 A testimonial banquet honoring Allen D. Noble, retired Pontiac police detective, for his community activities will be held Saturday at Jefferson Junior High School, 600 Motor. The 6:90 p.m. program Is being given by the Sooth East Community Improvement Association. foble, now an Oakland Coun-Circult Court officer, is member of the board of directors of the Pontiac Area Urban League and is on the executive board of the National Associa-tion for the Advancement of Colored People, He joined the police department in 1937 and held the rank of detective sergeant Mien he retired this past spring. UNLIMITED SOFT WATER RUST-FREE f $3 PER MONTH LINDSAY SOFT WATER CO. Division of Mich. Hading. Inc. SSNowhanySt. nB-6621 Husband “too tired" for good times? Tfyour husband keeps coming home too • Kretschmer Wheat Germ actually sup- * “beat” to be gay and stimulating, too plies a whopping SO nutrients important worn out to take you out, remember—the to good health, vigor and stamina! dynamos day after day, which builds up churning tensions that rob literally mU-lions of husbands of energy arid vigor they might otherwise enjoy! • What can jou do to help counteract this tension-caused lorn of vitahty? • Many doctora recommand augmenting the daily diet with I nature’s remarkable "bounce-back" food, famous Kretschmer Wheat Gerta. Made from tho germinating heart o( the kernel, wheat germ has bean established by official U. S. Dept, of Agriculture studies to be the most healthful food knownl licious, tiny toasted flakes at a canal, on cereal, or add to pancakes, waffles, scrambled eggs, etc. • Thrifty, tasty Kretschmer Wheat Germ is greet for the entire family, so be sure to get some. Lode for it in vacuum-sealed glass jars in the oenal section q( your : food Store, Chooee either regu- ; lar or Sugar *N Honey. • GUARANTEE—(i) „ WhMt U«a It Of bmM b«dthfcl AwA known; (2) You, family wUl Uk. ita out. WHEAT GERM M