Th» W.I. VMMtar luraw ^w«cmI (MaHi M pa|( t) - THE PONTIAC PRESS ONECip Edition VOL. 128 NO. 15 ★ ★ ★ ★ _______" -------- ■ - I»0NT1AC, MICHIGAN. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1965—48 PAGES UNITIQ*^ISS*MTIRNATK>I«AL A .a French, Soviets to Work for Viet Peace Talks 7 for Board of Institutions Newly Formed Group to Centralize Control of Medical Facilities United Front Urged in Wide Track Feud Pontiac should present a united front when negotiations are reopened with the State Highway Be* partment on Wide Track Drive. This was the proposal last night of Commissioner John A. Dugan, who said he agteed that the state “hdd the whip" in the matter. __The District 5 commissioner proposed that a meet- Neutralization of South Is Said Russian Goal U Thant Discussing Settlement Proposals With Parties in War Moving In on Malcolm s Killers? A seven-member board of institutions, responsible for the administration of all county- operated medical facilities, was created yesterday by the Oakland County Board of "Supervisors. Elected to three-year terms by unanimous ballot were John A. Macdonald, chairman of the social welfare board, and Walter M. Kahn, a member ot the ^natorium board of trustees. Mrs. cym B. Lewis, secretary af the TB Sanatorium beard ef tmstees, sad Mrs. John D. Ramsey, iUte-a|>-pointed member of the social to two-year terms. Elected to one-year terms by unanimous ballot were Maurice J. Croteau, member of the so-eial welfare board; CSiarles B. Edwards Jr., Madison Heights supervisor, and Tliomas H. O'Donoghue, Femdale supervisor. * ♦ * The board of institutions wad created to satisfy legal requirements lor transferring patients from the County TB Sanatorium to the County Medical Care Facility at the Service Center. BUILDING SOLD The TB Sanatorium has been sold to Oakland Community College. The transfer Is to be made about April 1, when college officials plan to start remodeling the sanatorium to prepare lor the enrollment of some t,m students aextdnU. The State Heahh Department has approved the transfer, subject to creation of the new administrative body and ext^ sive remodeling of the Medical Care Facility to make it suitable for contagious patiants. Some 75 patients will be transferred from the Medical Care Facility to private nursing homes in the county to make room for the Incoming tubercular ing be called with the Downtown Pontiac Business __________ Association, the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce, The Press and radio. “We must bring about all the pressure humanly possible,” said the commissioner. Dugan also challenged anyone to come forward “and say he likes this type of thing." Mayor ProTem Leslie H. Hudson pointed out the state had insisted on letting a decision on the loop road question be held up for 90 days. * a ★ Negotiations on the controversial Wide Track Drive are slated to reopen April 20. JUST WAITING Dugan charged that the state had made no mpve to change anything and “jVst seems to want to wait and wait.” NEW YORK (AP) -A top detective, reporting investigators are "on the rignt track” toward solving the slaying of Malcolm X, said he would confer toefty wHh me-^Hstrlct attorney’s office. Asst. Chief Inspector Joseph L. Coyle, in charge of 50 detec-Uves assigned to the case, declined to elaborate. Only one person has been arrested from among five believed to have participated in the slaying of the Nepo black nationalist spokesman Sunday as he started to address a meeting in Harlem. Charged with homicide and under police guard in a hospital is Talmadge Hayer, 22, a Negro, of Paterson, N. J. Hayer was wounded in the leg in the melee touched off by the shooting of Malcolm X. Coyle said that one phase of the investigation was concentrated outside of New York City, but he declined to say where. However, attention has been focused on Chicago, headquarters of Elijah Muhammad's Black Musiinis, whom Malcolm X served as New Yorh'^ minister until a break 14 months ago. STAN LAUREL Second Half of Comedy Duo Dies SANTA MONICA, CaUf. (iB-Stan Laurel, the little, rubberfaced partner of the late, SOO-pound Oliver Hardy in the movies’ most successful comedy team, is dead of a heart attack at 74. Victim of a stroke in 1955 and of d«!totes _in suffered the fatal seizure yesterday in his bluff-top apartment overlooking the ocean. His fourth wife. Ida, was at his side. laurel and Hardy starred in 300 films, mostly two- and three-reelers, and made millions laugh. PARIS (iP—France announced 10 d a y it has agreed to work with the Soviet Union in pressing for an international conference to settle the conflict in Viet Nam. The Russians took the initiative in making the proposal. Diplomatic sources in Moscow said the Soviet Union would seek neutralization of South Viet Nam at such a conference, a course France has advocated for North Viet Nam, Cambodia and Laos as well. In another development. United Nations Secretary General U Thant disclosed today he had been engaged in private discussions for some time with the United States and other parties to the Viet Nam conflict and had made concrete propMals aimed at a everyone concern^ got to- negotiated settlement, gether and take a tour of Wide He declined to dlacloae the Track. nature of his proposals, but told Main points of contention in • conference he was coiv the Wide Track diaputd revolve Went a fonnula be fwnd around prohibited left turns at would eiri Urn the east and west ends of the e>»*>le the United States to Auburn-Orchard Lake cross- withdraw pacefully ^ ste-over. blllty has been achieved. Also a p^on of Swth Sag- * maw has been ‘wl-tcri from tobTunconvinced that the Com- vehicle on Saginaw. ^ negotiations and he wants to * * * retain flexiblllb' of action, both City E n g i n e e r Joseph E. diplomatically and -militarily. Nelpling, asked to explain the concept behind the loop road, ENVOYS l^ET said the object was to take traf- Never^les^ ...... fic off of Saginaw In ri»mnvp sador John MOOTS Cabot met appeared to be just another out Uie to congestion and permit parking, with Rrf (STtose mb^^w „ well-todlo neighbor- ^here was nothing suk ! Wang Kuochuan m Warsaw for ^ hundreds of dollars -hout the brtek and This is new, it is different hour and 50 mmutes. and it h.nH. in th- hixpmpnt I.* . Police, alarmed by telephone threats on the life of Muhammad, stepped up security plans today for the sect’s convention in Chicago this weekend. The calls to police came within a few hours of each other yesterday. The first warned; “we have arrived. Muhammad will have a lively conveliUon.” *The second caller, who identified himself as John Henderson, said IN men were coming to Chicago from New York to kill Muhammad. The caller also told police a bomb had been planted in the Coliseum, site of the conventiaii which is expected to attract 6,000 Black Muslims. Police said the caller imfi-cated the bomb was timed to explode Friday or Saturday when Muhammad is scheduled to address the convention. Telephoned bomb threats also haras^ New York police and reinforcements were ordered into Harlem in an attempt to prevent further violence. Ewly yesterday an explosion and fire, beiievSto Tiave iSeen »Tl>y avengers of Malcolm X, wrecked a four-story Muslim mosque. No one was injured. TEEN GAMBLING CASINO - This is the $40,000 private tome in Haworth, N.J., that teens operated as a gambling casino for teen-age clientele. ’The gaming room, in the base- Snake-Eyas in the Suburbs ment of the home, was patterned after dice rooms in Puerto Rico, police said. Teens Rocked, Rolled (Dice) OUTSIDE COUNTY A few 'iB paUents may have to be relocated in facilities outside Oakland County, according to Dr. Bernard D. Berman, county health directw. The remodeling work, estimated to cost $1N,IN, was also givea the grw* Mgkt yesterday by the board «f «-pefvisors. ll will be financed by a $130,-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) shown regularly on television and in ^aters» around the world. Fans remember Laurel as the crop4iaired, bungling yet lovable scamp, who, wearing a understand the logic of maximum-time routes instead of maximum - distance routes," said Neipling. According to the city^ engineer, Wide Track ir designed for future conditions, not the low traffic volumes of today. Work Begins on Golf Links N®w CoursB Will B« Ready This Summer .'j ... u . Development of a new 15-hote .»iwv.vu. public golf course has begun on Vegas atmosphere. _ and went to pick up other cus- , mtersec- Police Chief Gaston Michel Michel said the casino o^at- ^ ^ disclosed yesterday that his men ^ ^ ATMOSPHERE Sprihgfieid Townahip,~B4l w+sh TiBu ui«ncii u .Gage,^ Pontiac area real estate— bling casino, operated by three ®f 19^2 vintage were used to minated the gambling room. A developer, announced today, teen-agers and catering to a pick up the young clients and croupier in black tie greeted the ’The new course, to be known teen-age clientele. An anony- bring them to the home. players and led them to a three- as Holly Greens Golf Course, ------ e r g e i jjp apparentiv from the The driver stopped the car at section dice table covered with will be of the latest design with Vinogradov called at Elyse Pal- .parent of a youth who fell too the garage door and honked the pink felt. Michel said the table extended tees up to IN feet ---Inr A ..SILmimilA,................. ....... - _________Inna' ' ' HAWORTH, N.J. (UPI) *- It far into debt, led police to stake tom twice, Michel said. Some-^ one in the house then pushed a button to open the doors. ________ Inside, the players identified J u ^ L .. —------------. . .... changed hands in the basement Irav h^w"--a themselves over an intercom and U to be givra time presumed the war to Vie * teen-agers had crowded ^ ,ou“le^l^”^^115 a *ystem before they wero admit-so the traveling uublic can ».< discussed. Neither ___i»P«nevei nome wim • ^ »nflit“toT'aft«^^^ sp.cioul'uw.'' would confirm this after meeting broke up. Information Minister Alain Peyrefltte an_nounced the French decision tii coo^aft with the Soviet Union on an international conference. Soviet Ambassador tably brought disaster to his fat, exasperated partner. ★ , w * Babe Hardy used to say Laurel was the brains of their act. Stan wrote and directed many of their films. ALWAYS LOSERS In a stock situation, the skinny Laurel and the rotund Hardy were at odds with authority landlord, grim mother-in-law or chief of police. ’They always lost — except at the box office. Laurel was born Arthur Stanley Jefferson June 16, IM, in Ulverston, JSagland, the son sif a theatrical family. Spending much of his childhood to 'dressing rooms and railroad stations, he toured with his parents to English stock (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) 6 Inches of Snow Forecast Neipling Jidxled that Wide ace yesterday for a 2P-mtoute Track Drive is only part of a discussion with President complex. He said a future in- Charles de Gaulle, and the ques-terior loop ro«d would allow tion then was discussed at the traffic circulation to the down- weekly cabinet meeting this town area. morning, Peyrefitte said. ★ * ★ **■*.. The interior loop was slated In Washington, Presidential shovels are due for a workout. Up to six inches or to be constructed entirely with Press Secretary George E. 3,3^3 3^ forecast for the Pontiac area by tomorrow city funds sometime after Wide Reedy replied “no” when asked Track was completed. However, whether JohnMn has any com-it has not been programmed »uent on the joint effort to get jrt. interested powers into a discus- However, the city engineer did si®h of a possible Viet Nam admit that present turn prohibi- settlement, tions are not justified by the As to whether the Washington traffic volume. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) was marked with lines ahd'bet- long; ting odds in a professional man- , ^ ^ possible to vary More than N boys gambled in the casino while their parents “thought they were out skating or sledding,” the chief said. They ranged in age from 15 to 17. One won up to $3N the length of the course frmB 53N to 7,IN yards by chug-tog the markers acewdiag to Gage. Temperatures will continue a little warmer, the low near 16 to 11 tonight, and high reaching 18 to 2f tomorrow. Partly cloudy and warmer is Friday’s prediction. Northeasterly morning winds at IS to 25 miles per hour will become north to northwest at 15 to M miles tomorrow. ’Thirteen was the low mercury reading prior to 8 a.m. At 2 'p.m. the thermometer registered 25. ’The golf coarse will cover about half of the site. ’The development may ulti-and another was in debt for mately be expanded into a $10-$192. million recreation center con- “I was shocked" Michel said cept, accor^ to Gage, when he announced that the LONG-RANGE PLANS gambling operation had been Long-range plans call for the smashed. addition of apartments, a hotel. Arrested in the raid Sunday moiai_ tennis courts and a swim- were the adult owners of the mtogpool. ____ home. Mr. and Mrs. Oscar 01- News Book Still Offered From Beatles and boycotts to Saigon and the Pentagoin -it’s att to teeJOOfuge Associated Press book, “The World to 1N4," along with liailreds of the past yeVK best photos and news stories. _ ’This mtfveloas book for readtog and reference is mw avafllUe threogh ’The Pontiac Press. Far details oa how to purchase yuv copy, see the coupon to today’s Press oa Pago B-12. Sales af Pontiac sen, and their maid. Mrs. Minnie Chatham. Tliree teen-age bankers, one the son of the 01- of Chicago; who has desigaad more than 4N golf courses. Five small lakes fed from a on the property will pro- BATTLB FLAMES — llhirty firemen, fought thl'. Ore in a two-story frame farm-home at 945 Lockwood to Brandon Township today, the blaze broke out shortly after 9 a.m, and destroyed the home and an attached shed. The owner, Alfred Caudill, his wife and two small childmn, were not injured. Firemen from five townships were hampered by a lack of water. Cause of the fire has not been determined/ CompletioB oftbecoursd and clubhouse is planned far late this summer, Gage saM. Hit New High hr sens, who allegedly split the BmT^ ^ teke were held for juvenile court February Period PUERTO RICAN VISIT Continuing its fast pace. salinire Olsen . . . . tiac Motor Division sold a rec- to vi* Between 1954 and 1964, the net j asked Craig “We’re not wor- verted aro^ this area rather toured Europe on his own wng ss on operations has ranged Hed We can nrotect oursclv-# ” --------- and dance art. At 17 he joined loss on operations has ranged Hed. We can protect ourselves.” between <11,000 and <19,500 an-' nually with the highest single loss reaching <24,500 in 1961. However, bonds were paid off last year on hangar construction and the loss for 1965 was pro jerted at only <2,000. Total expenditures for 1066 are proposed at <97,165 with revenue at <95,293. Pair From Pontiac Hurt in Car Crash airport. The CAB approved dropping NCA service here and in two other Michigan communities under the board’s “use it or lose it” policy. Warren said the CAB order Two persons were hospitalized could be appealed. a third treated and released I following a two-car collision at ‘The little use that has been 9;3q p.m. yesterday on Auburn made of the present routes through Pontiac make it difficult to imagine that anything could be done to save this service here,” he said. JOINT APPEAL Hbwever, the city manager did think that a joint appeal with other affected cities might accomplish something. Meantime, Pontiac has ,a second request before thie CAB. This asks for flights to Cleveland and Chicago. James Ramsey, director of the State Aeronautics Department, has indicated he would back any attempt to fight the proposed abandonment of air service to the Michigan communities. ' near Squirrel, Pontiac Township. In satisfactory condition at Pontiac General Hospital are Gerald Byrne, 22, of 533 N. WU-cox and Roberta Width, 18, of 251 Randolph. lane into the path of Miss Width’s eastbound car. A ★ * Wanda Cunnmgham, 18, of 409 Oak, Rochester, a passenger in Miss I^idth's car, wqs treated for injuries at the hospital. Mystery Parker Is 'Honored' — It had happened before, and Prosecutor S. Jerome Bronson was hopping mad. Someone had parked in his jHlvate space at the ()aMand (XAfflty Cnzrr U house. A * A Indignant, he placed one of his business cards under the windshield wiper. On it he printed in large letters “Do Not Park Here.” The trespasser got the message. That was last Thnrsday. Yesterday, Bronson’s office received the business card and an attached letter from the cul- Byme told sheriffs deputies that he Au _ste.!l _yyliite . meeting. ^ ^ with circuit judges in the build- bum when he put on his brakes to avoid a car backing into the road and slid across the center j write anything stronger,” said Bronson sheepishly. THE CULPRIT The culprit was Michigan Supreme Court Chief Justice Thomas M. Kavanagh. ERNEST A. JONES U-M Program 6elsP.P Music School Grant by Ad Firm Presidont Whoops! Wrong Plane Chlc«oo CMKinn«ti , u- .1.-4 4 Blanche Griswold, en route from Saranac teom-the Silver Lake-Betater-tiate to New York City to catch a plane sv«t4.m jjyg ^ embarrassed. “but the Kennedy family seemed pleased and didn’t ittind it tfl.” ver Lake Estates, Jayno Heights divisions, all served by the line NA'nONAL WEATHER - Snow and flurries are expected from the Lakes to the Atlantic Coast tonight with showers from the Ohio Valley to tiie Gulf Ckiast and in the Pacific Northwest. It will be colder from the Lakes to the eastern Gulf Coast and the southern Plains, but wanner In New England and from the Plateau to the upper Mississippi Valley. r water system. Besides lowering the water supply considerably, the fro-zen Une also caused leaking of hot water tanks In some of the homes dne to activation of pressure relief valves on the tanks. Most rt the trouble was reported early in the morning when residents ^vere—getting ready to go to work, acrardiM to Kenneth Squiers, superintend ent of the Township Water Department. Squiers said the problem was corrected by 9:36 am. when the Jayno Heights pumping station was activated. The frozen line has been thawed and is ready for use again, be said. I She Flies With Kennedys MIAMI, Fla. (P—A New York woman, dashing to catch a plane for the first leg of a flight to Florida, boarded the Kennedy family's pri-jvate jilane Caroline by mistake, but went along entered the plane when the agent had no ohjection. “Inside, it didn’t look right,” Mrs. Griswold wcaltei. ‘‘It. was small and,! saw Mrs. Em- Aboard die CareUne, retuming ta New Yeit Monday from a sidiBg holiday at Lake Placid, were Mrs. John F. Keanedy, Sea. Robert Keanedy, D-N.Y., aid the Kennedy brood. In Ithaca. N.Y.. Sen. Kennedy confiimed that a woman mistook the famUy plane for a commercial airllno' and said: “She wai a very nice woman. But she thought it Was very crowded for a conunerdal plane.” dr ★ ★ Mrs. Griswold, a Saranac widow, said yesterday she didn’t take time to look at the plane. RUSHED TO PLANE " “I was late and rushed across the airfield and entered the l^lpoe.^’ ’ Stopped by u FBI agWt, sIk said ^ toM them she was gel^ to Florida ami nedy aiid Bobby and lots of children.” ★ ★ ★ The plane was almost airborne when she noticed tables between the seats and remarked: “This is a waste of space.” HAD LUNCH “This plane isn’t siqiposed to make money, this is the Kennedy plane,” she was told by a member of the Kennedy group. During toe fUi^ "ekildreB raa areud -ambwie had lunch •> saadwicbes,” she said, addhig that the Kennedy family was eon- Mrs. Griswold said both the senator and the former first lady wished her a good trip and said they were pleased to have her aboard. ★ ★ ★ “It was our pleasure,” Mrs. Griswold quoted the senator as saying when the plane landed at U Guardia Field in New York. “Hiey^were most gracious. They knew my embarrassment,” Mrs. Griswold said. She took a commercial flight to Miami. The University of Michigan <55-million program h a s received a gift of <100,000 from Ernest A. Jones of 39 Cran-brook, Bloomfield Hills, it was announced yesterday by Paul G. (^bel of Grand Rapids, na-;i I UonaTchairman of the drive. The gift is specified for the U-M School of Music. Jones, chairman of the Metropolitan Detroh Division In the multi-million campaign, is . president of MacManos, John and Adams, lae., advertising agency in BloomflM Hills. A native of Jamestown, N.Y., Jones worked his way through the University of Michigan graduating in 1938 as an econoi major. ' ' He was business manager of the Michigan Daily, and manager and trumpet player with the Michigan band, in which he lintalneda continuing interest. In accepting Jones’ gift, Goebel said that to date <15,542,000 has been secured from gifts and pledges. Campaign headquarters have sen establislMKl In the First National Building in Detroit. The campaign is being (wgan-iaed nationally and staffed by alumni volunteers, eventually to exceed 5,000 workers. Punjose of the program, according to Goebel, is to enhance the private support which makes It possible for the university fully to meet its growing responsibilities to state and tion. Fred Amo’s London comedians, starring Charlie Chaplin. CAME TO NEW YORK The company arrived in New York in 1910 on a cattle boat, toured the country for three years and disbanded. Stan went Into vaudeville, then the flickers. He started as a writer and director. Then one day, in 1927, he replaced aa actor who had taken sick and played a butler opposite a hefty comic villain named Hardy. They were aa iastantaneons click. Their heyd^ was in films for the late producer Hal Roach. They made many pictures for him before moving in 1940 to 20th Century-Fox. They kept no property ri^ts to the old films, so reap^ no rewards when they later were shown on television. AAA Their movies include “Babes in Toyland,”-“Devil’s Brothers,” ^‘Way Out West,” "Our Relations,” “Blockheads” and “Bonnie Scotland.” They nude their last film, “Atoll K,” in Frimce in 1949. Tterdy died in 1987.-- Besides his widow. Laurel leaves a daughter Lois, of suburban Tarzana. Her husband, A. H. Brooks, is a movie production man. 7 on Board of Institutions (Continued From Page One) 000 fund which had previously been earmarked for remodeling of the TB Sanatorium. The fund was created by a one-tenth mill levy on .the county’s state aqual^ valuation permitted by statute for building or remodeling. The new board of institutions will have administrative responsibility for the Medical Cara Facility and fuph other hospital »es as the county may ere-the future. The county hospital had previously been the responsibility of the social welfare board, which will continue to exist to serve other functions. Ihe board of trustees of the TV Sanatorium will cease to function when the sanatorium is taken over by the college. Separated Siamese GirU Are Improving HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) - Siamese twin girls who were separated surgically last week ate milk and cereal Tuesday. A Texas Children’s Hdipital spokesigan said Kareh and 10mbe^ Webber were, in »t-hdact^ physicai condition and oteventfal recovery Is expected. ^^^^Tomorrow Thursday THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 24, |965 ONE COLOR A~8 Don't You Forgot For Foreign Exchange India Threatened by Drop in Reserves SIMMS WILL OPEN AT 12-KOON For Our Big END-OF-MONTH 9-Hour Sole NEW DELHI, India (AP)-The Indian consumer is being asked to tighten his belt a few more notches because a crisis in foreign exchange is threaten ing the nation’s economy. Foreign exchange reserves -the money India has for pu^ chase of goods abroad—have dropped drastically. Prime T ister Lai Bahadur Shastri’s government, already under staggering commitments to foreign creditors, is seeking future loans so it can pay off past loans. Tia a string on your fingor to thot you'll romombor to cotno to Simms tomorrow, 12-noon to 9 p.m. and got in on thoso terrific savings at Simms cut thoir prices even rtvore for end-of-month clearance. We reserve the right to limit all quantities — no mail or phone orders please. AllSp^cio^s Men's Flannel Shirts Worm, washable flannel shirts in 100 voriety of colors. Sizes S-M4- " ■ Bosement 1' Men’s Work Sox-7 for < in elostic or long style ankTe.~Sizes 10 to 13. Irrs. of 29c. __________________________—Bosement 1 00 17x22” Bed.Pillows mm. Shredded foom rubber pillows with ■ M colorful floral ticking. —Basement Bath Towels—3 for 1 OO Sunbeam W Electric Drill Powerful 3-amp drill develops 2000 rpms. Geared chuck. Buffed finish. —2nd Floor 10 00 10-Pc. 3/8” Socket Sej $ I2.es value — American made 'Husk/ socket set with spark plug socket, ratchet. 98 4-Slice Elec. Toaster Chrome finished toaster with automatic shade control dial and crumb troy. —2nd Floor 12»’ Last week, the bank rate was raised to 6 per cent from 5. "Finance Minister T.T. Krishnama-chalr said India wonld ap^ peal to the “Aid India” consortium of nations and to the International Monetary Fund for all possible assistance. Earlier the government announced a K per cent cut across the board in authorizations for foreign exchange expenditures. PUBUC PREOCCUPIED All this has fallen on a public which had been preoccupied with language riots in south India, troubie along the border with Pakistan, and the incessant diplomatic shouting match with Communist China. Foreign exchange reserves slipped last year from $233 million to $200 million. ’Then a more flramatic dropnvff began. The re-, serves totaled $1BS million Jan. IS and $109 million 22 days later. That isn’t much for a nation of 480 million people who must purchase many things in foreign lands. Commerce Minister Manubbai Shah says an “austere import policy” will have to continue. MAY BE STUFFED That means the Indian consumer, even though his pockets may be stuffed with rupees, cannot look forward to a Japanese transistor radio for himself, a pair of German silk stockings for hio wife, or an American refrigerator for the kitchen. It also means trouble for India’s fourth five-year plan, due to begin next year. mitment to the United States totals more than $2.1 billion. India must repay these loans in foreign exchange or renegotiate the terms lb delay repayment. Officials hesitate to ask creditor nations for a moratorium on repayment because tiiat would fri^ten off other loans. Fertilizo- or fertilizer manufacturing machinery is needed to increase farm output. Steel or steel-making equipment is needed to increase industrial produc- tion. Just as serious is the threat to India’s credit rating. COMMITTED TO PAY The nation is committed to pay $3.6 billion to foreign creditors between April 1964 and March 1976. Its future repayment com- One reason for the foreign exchange crisis is an increasing unfavorable balance of trade. India imported $871.5 million worth of goods more than it exported last year, even though sales abroad were the highest ever. Name Midland AAan to Head Seminary EVANSTON, ni. (AP) -Appointment of Dr. Orville H. McKay of Midland, Mkh., as president of Garrett Theological Seminary v day. Dr. McKay wtil prrive at Oa Methodist seminary’ in ndd -April to succeed nktop Dwight E. Loder who was bead of the school until his elecdon as bisb- State Trio Will Visit Florida With Mrs. LBJ WASHING’TON (AP) -Three Domestic Peace Corps volunteers from Michigan will accompany Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson when she visits a domestic Peace Corps group in St. Petersburg, Fla., Friday. The three who will accompany the First Lady on her one-day visit are Mrs. Alberta Knoob and John A. Knoob, both of Grosse Pointe Woods, and Rhode Kluge of Lakeview, a White House announcement said Tuesday. 9 Do You Know AN tbo Antwort INCOME TAX Yovr tox' cut ond th. n.w COMPLETE ! rul»$ on d«dune pen writes in r black ink. —Main Floor 69< Perma Lint Roller & Refill 95' $1.48 value — removes lint and hair clothes. 50c refill. _____—Main Floor Calm mm Deederant $1.25 volue—powder deodorant that goes on dry to keep you dry all doy. Wbn'f stain clothes. —Moin Floor 69< Concentrated Shampoos $1.00 volue—your choice of Lustre Creme or Rtnseqway concentrated for your hair —Main Fir. 5i Lustre Creme Spray Set $1.25 volue — 1814-ounces In choice of regulor or bord to hold formulas. ■ MNj, Vet uwMBDotersi^^ 79c value' — 20-ounce size pink detergent is gentle to your hands. —Main Floor 58^ 'Razer Blades A > AQe mmi Teeth Brushes 69c value — your choice of Colgate, Pycopoy or Prophylotic tooth brushes. —Main Floor 33> Wire Rubbish Burner to burn trosh, t2. —2nd Floor leaves, rubbish, e 127 “What I said was: Giant ^ectric Griddle 12x21-inch party size with oulo-matic co6l control. Completely Im-mersible. —2nd Floor 4-Pc. Aute Mat Set $5.95 volue fits^ot^ors. 2-fron 2-Ft Weed Step Ladder Folding wood step ladder Inforoed steps. Limit I. —2nd Floor Clamp-On Utility Lamp Lorge\|luminum reflector shield in 4 odjustablespcket. Bulb extra. I 1-Qt.ml^ Thermes Show me just one filter that won’t ^ take away the taste and I’ll eat my hat!” $3.99 value — vocuuhv bottle for or solid foods. Aluminum or cosing. —2nd Floor 1-QL Aluminum Sauce Pan $1.49 value—heavy gauge aluminum souce pan with cover for various jwokin^^^^^chores. —2nd Floor 4-Pc. Canister Set $3.98 value ♦J.ro value — designed to save 187 spoce. Snug-fitting lids hove Msy " grip knobs. —2nd Feldjng Aluminum Cot $12.98 value — 4-position aluminum frame cot with saron top. 2nd Floor Glamerene Rug Cleaner Asserted Pecket Knives 98c value — 2-blode knives in simu- indie or oloin MV —Moin COc loted ivory, stag handle or plain lUT MU Alarm Clocks $7.98 volue — wind up olonti clock in ivory or black case with plolk ;99 dial. Lumineus'BEN'Clucks $8.98 value — luminous dial Big or Baby Ben alarm clocks. Plus Fed. fox.__________________—Main floor 199 Cigarette'Lighter Fluid 29c value — large 8-ounce con of Red Devil fluid for all lighters. ________________________ -AAoin Floor 16‘ Alkaid Antacid Tablets lOc value — new pink antacid for stomach upset, gas, heartburn. -AAoin Floor Alberto VO-5 Shampoo $L39 value — 11-ounce bottle of sbompoo for dry or normal hair. J4 -AAoin Floor ^Pewder er Celegne $1.00 value — famous Bourjois dusting powder of cologne —Main Floor 2 f®' ^1 98 North Safinaw Sfraat SIMASJ!. Wa Cash Pay Chteks frat! LUCKY SIRIKE niHRS putbackthetasteotherstakeaway *IS1.ET LUCKY STRIKE MEANS FINE TOBACCO LUCKY SYRIKE MEANS FIAVOR TIP You get-unchanged-Lucky Strike’s famous fine-tobacco blend. And Lucky’s FlavorTip actually enhances the taste. i- A—l THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 24. 19M FRUSTRATED FIREMEN — For two cold hours late yesterday afternoon, members of the Lake Orion and Oxford fire departments strove to Qght a Maze at 6K Knollwood, Orion Township. Tbe fire, of undetermined origin, spread between walls and into a windowless attic. Owned by Roy Swisher of Detroit, the summer cottage was unoccupied at the time and in the process of being converted into a year-round home. Covered at least partially by insurance, the structure sustained heavy water damage. Bid Openings Tuesday Troy OKs Qty Hall Plans TROY — City commissioners have given formal approval to architect’s plans for the n^w city hall. To be located at Big Beaver Road just east of 1-75, the two-story struQture was ^timated to cost abwt $800,000 last ^ November. The next step toward con-stmctieB of the buildiag will be opening of bids on Tnes-day. If excessive bid amounts do not create a delay, architect Frank Straub of Blrtniii^am ~ hftes construction' will begin irf April ★ ♦ * In other action, the commission approved in^liminary plats for two new subdivisions, .Mt. Olympia Subdivision and Carle-ton Estates Subdivision. CONTAINS,383 LOTS Carleton Estates will have frontage on both D^uindre and Maple roads, containing 393 lots on about 110 acres. The degeloper, Graham Or-ley of Detroit, is reserving a 12-acre site for a future eie-.mentary school. Mt. Olympia will front on Big Beaver Rond, with 38 lots. The developer is Practical Home Builders of Detroit. Thirty per cent of Japan’s imports of farm products come from U.S. farms, with payment in dollars. Training Plan OK'd by Board ROCHESTER - The board of education has approved participation in a youth work training program administered by the Michigan Employment Security ComnSssion (ME^). Two students will initially train under the program, one in the cafeteria area and the other in clerical work. ★ * ★ Under the state program, students are given an allowance of $20 a week, with half co from the school district and half from the state. Ibe purpose of the program is to improve the skills of the trainees, in order that they might find a job aRer the training. Postponed Hearing Set for Tonight PONTIAC TOWNSHIP - Residents get another crack at a osed $1.34-million water main system tonight, as a public hearing postponed from Jan. 25 is held. The January hearing on the assessment roll for the system was officially postponed when it was discovert that notices of the hearing were not sent out in time. But word of the postponement did not reach many residents in time, and the hearing was held on an nnofficial basis anyway. At that . hearing, Oakland County Department of Public Works (DPW) officials were grilled by businessmen and owners of vacant lots, as well as township officials, for the assessment plan. * ★ ★ The complainants claimed they were not given the facts of the assessment structure prior to the hearing, and many said that the plans to assess on a unit basis were inequitable. TO HEAR COMPLAINTS Tonight's hearing will give townahip offieiria < chance to hear any complaints the residents may have about the assessment ron. Adjustments in assessments can be made by the Township Board at a later date, according to County DPW Director R. Alexander. Avon Subdivision Unit Sets 3rd Annual Dinner AVON TOWNSHIP-Members of the Judson Park Subdivision Association will gather Saturday for their third annual dinner..^ A family style dinner followed by dancing is planned this year at the Sylvan Glen Inn, 5725 Rochester, Troy, beginning at 7 p.m. lustrous iridescent sharkskin slacks by Eagle When on excellent tailoring house like Eagle turns its talents to slacks, you know they'll be something special. The look is lean, but flattering—^trim, and in good taste. And they're tailored in a luxurious blend of 90% wool and 10% silk/ in a handsome iridescent sharkskin weave; permanently-creased. In black, blue, brown shades. 25.95. OUR RONTUC MALI STORC OPOl EVBY IVININ6 TO f PJL REV. RALPH JANKA Church Series in Rochester ROCHESTER —A series of four meetings designed to help people find spiritual resources for contemporary living will be held at St. Paul’s Methodist Church Sunday through the following Wedne^ay. Open to the public, the meetings will be held from 7:30 to 8:30 each night. ’The Rev. Ralph Janka, pastor of the First Methodist Church of Troy, will be the ' guest speaker. Church groups such as the Chancel Men and a Gospel quartet, plus selected soloists, will provide music. ★ ★ * The meetings will be dramatized and built around the appearance of the 12 dJscM®5 pL Jesus as portrayed by prominent laymen. For 2 W. Bloomfield Centers Zone Hearings Slated WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP—The planning commission last night scheduled public hearings on rezoning requests for two Stopping c^ers, one of which could, be the township’s largest. Borman Food Stores Inc., which opwates the Food Fair chain, plhns to open a large complex of stores on the southeast comer of Orchard Lake and Maple. The firm has asked that a 228-foot strip of property on Maple be rezoned from residential to commercial to ex-' pand the M acres now under the latter classificatioB. However, planners want about 100 feet on the east end of the parcel owned by the company to be retained as residential to provide a buffer between the center and the adjacent subdivision. ^ Planners last night approved rezoning for a proposed multi[rfe residential complex on Orchard Lake Road. They will recommend that the resoning be accepted pending a public hearing before the Township Board. ON WEST SIDE Herbert Ross of Detroit is sedcing to hav<» th* elasatfica-tion of 18.13 acres on the west side of the road north of the Township Hall changed from general commercial and park- “We’re very about this and we •want to en-comwgfr them io develop as large a center as possible without imposing on the people around them,” planning commission chairman Henry Moses said. OTHER REQUEST Hie other request to be considered at the 8 p.m. session March 23 is that of Howard Keating, developer of Pine Lake Keating has requested that 8.9 acres on the northwest corner of Lone Pine and Orchard Lake be converted from residential to commercial to allow construction of a small convenience shopf^ center. ing to multiple residential and limited commercial. Ross proposts baUdlBg some 131 units on the sHo. The planning commission again tabled action on a proposed multiple residence ao^ code amendment which would aOeviate the need to construct each building on a separate lot. Township attorney Joseirii T. Brennan baa aigge^ thalthe provision contain a more detailed explanation of restric- Students'Run'Farmington Twp. FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP -Some 17 new faces were seen behind desks at the Township Hall today as North Farmington High Schwl seniors participated in their second student government day. Over at the board of education offices, seven teen-agers were taking over as school board members. The young officers, who had been elected by their class-mates, interrupted their duties at noon to ga^r for a luncheon at Salem United Church of Christ. Sponsored by the Farmington Ex^ange Club, the luncheon featured a speech by Oakland County Circuit Judge Philip Pratt. Heading the list of students who took over township offices were Supervisor Ron Martini, Clerk John Kraft and Treasurer Bob Linderman. Diane Anderson served as deputy clerk and Dyana Davidson Ijiideputy treasurer. Trustees were Jim Wriggles-worth, Denny Zartaalaa, Lisa FackniU and Ron Peterson- Also in office were Janet Lam, drain commissioner; Ron Watson, zoning enforcement Officer; Terry Sharback, building inspector; and Keith Swanton, police chief. ★ ★ ★ Others were Jon Bond, attorney; Randy Degrow, assessor; Mike Maloney, consulting engineer; and Nancy Chamberlain, planning consultant. The Students’ school board consisted of Mark Oemke, Roger Mingo, Janice Foss, Tom Czubiak, Jim Jajick, Dan Vartanian and Debbie Saundry. APPLIANCE BUYERS CLUE FREHER CHOPS DOWN PRICES ■ ■ ■ ■ 19” Portable TV's RCA Color Wood Console TV EASY SPIN-DRY WASHER ■ ■ ■ ■ lsir .7.. •298“ 20 Lb. CAPACITY ~ $10000 Special Offer 1 £0 2 DAY h*t th« tol« riwl heppwii only pne* o ypor. Ttiit particular lala li M uniqua that I'va gana abiolulaly »iW in pricing avarything In ovary on •ay a (torai. Huny In lor anco-a-yoar bargainc on avarything. far tha navt 4 rtayi you can maka itupanaav* buy* on th» ap^ianc*. TV, or «ti that yovVa cot your koort on. Thara ara many ana only Hamt thot youll novar too again and thay'ra all pricort to lovr that yov'J think I'va gang •< *------'-------onoy 4own, no paymontt 'til May gnrt immodiatg rtglivafy.___ limited time only • Biggest dryer drum and fen-dries clothes faster, more wrinkle-free. • Giant lint screen — traps more lint, requires less cleaning. • Exclusive Norge 5-woy venting—saves installation cost. Limited C Time Only ^ 106 00 ECONOMY SPECIAL NORGE 13 Cu. Ft. Refrigerator Full Width Fj-jeezer Dairy Keeper / FREnER’S APPLIANCE WAREHOUSE. NORGE GAS RANGE • Deluxe Hi-Lo Burners • Balanced Heat Oven • Automatic Ignition • Speed Broiler *134” nSTIM WUEIOUSE TELEGRAPH RO. V2 MILE S. ORCHARD LAKE RD. i North oJMlrttsltMUt OPEM SUNDAY - FE 3-YMI OPEN OAILT 10-9 SUN. 10-7 __ NO MOmY DOWN-US TB is Hftsmil TO MY ■ ■■■■■■NiaBB ExetptRCAWhiripool THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 24, 1963 Primarily a ^Grass-Roots' Problem Federal Powers in Crime Prevention Are Limited (Editor’s Note: Statistics show an alarming increase in all types of crime. The federal government finds itself powerless m mamy instances ta join the battle against criminals. What can be done about______________________ tt? l/yrs national reporter 'our penal system, and Jo-discusses this aspect in the jseph lilllmiWn/l tramS Qj ' more complex trafflc to be regulated. * -k -k You search in vaii^ for a piece of sunshine anywhere in the dark, grim picture. Obviousiy there is something wrong with following dispatch, last three.) By HARRY FERGUSON Foundation has been applying himself to (he problem. “We send a man to prison," WASHINGTON - PmidM i ^ Jobs® he Inteed, to do WIthoot doubUns hi, good |„:iP«l«»ye.Hi;.lioooiwi»th.. tentions, the hard facts are that it is easier for a President say it than to do U. ^ There is a vague and utterly inaccurate belief abroad in the land that all crimes are the responsibility of the federal government. Actually, under present laws the feder^ government can fight crime only on a narrow front. It can't do anything, for instance, about murder; that is a local responsibility. A President can make speeches deploring crime and appoint commissions to study ably will do both before long. The Federal Bureau of Investigation each year conducts schools for more than 100,000 local and state law enforcement officers on the latest techniques in crime prevention. Then the problem lands right back where it came from — in the of cities,^ counties and states. * * ★ When Robert F. Kennedy took ofHce as attorney general, he made a thorough study of crime with special emphasis on juvenile offenders. What he found out appalled him and what he said was discouraging: SOLVEI^ AT GRASS ROOTS “It has its roots in such things as school dropouts, broken homes, racial discrimination, | slum housing and youth unem-' pioyment. The federal government cannot solve these prob-! lems. The fight is going to be won or lost at the gem rgoto„ level.” Right now it is being lost. Even if tomethlng drastic from breaking the law. “This is supposed to be wisdom? Jut about 7S per cent of our prison population is made up of repeaters. Here State Labor Mediator Is Set to Retire at 70 COLDWATER (AP) - Dr. R. P. Cranson of Coldwater, who was 70 last Dec. ji, announced Tuesday that he is retiring effective Feb. 28 from nearly 20 years of service as a state labor mediator. State employes must retire at 70. i who do not lean tinue to punish them. “Our prisons perpetuate the vicious cycle of hurt for hurt. Tho-k some of treatment so the man will not go out and do it all over again." Perhaps you would like to need it. If he can array the best brains in the nation and give them some 82 billion to work with, he may slow down wish PiWdent Johnson g o o d , the nation's rush into crime, luck in his campaign agahist That anybody can stop it al-beeause he is going to I together is doubtful. Golfers ... Now is the time to Improve Your Game!! gary player’s golf Improvement program $095 Chciru* Account^ by Otry Playat lnckid*4 in Mnr Ml. health-disc* NiihM wimSn^tS “3T (tWIllCWR 211. Ttitrifft ri i-22n nymSbt MMMM WOMM u ism •NlkN tional basis, the crime rate probably would continne to increase lor the next three years. Too many juveniles already are in the pipelines that flow into our prisons. Social workers? "There aren't enough of them and no money —to hire iiiorcrlWen and womenr who are right down on the curb- i stones working with juvenile gangsters make occasional; breakthroughs that are encour-; aging. But then you have social workers whose heads are in the clouds like the psychiatrist who had been working in a boy's training school. * * 0 His recommendation may have had some merit, but nobody will ever know for sure bKause it was gibberish: “Unseen and unheard but always omniscient are the subtlii and covert resistances Inevitably encountered when a contrapuntal modality invades the province of reeducational discipline." ADVICE TO PARENTS A more down to earth approach to the problem was issued several years ago by the police department of Houston, Tex.^ in advice to parents. The sure way to create a juvenile criminal, the department said, would be: “Give the child everything hp wants so he will grow up believing the world owes him a living. When he pii-ks up bad words, laugh at him and tell him he is cute, Ut him read any printed mat-—ter he can get-his hands on. Be careful that his drinking glasses are sterilized, but let h|8 ^ ^ - “Quarrel frequently in the j presence of your children so they wUl not be too shocked when the home is broken up later. Give a child ail the spending money he wants and never let him earn his own. Take his part against neighbors, teachers and policemen on the gronnds that they are all prejndked against your child.” More police? tt would help, but it wouldn't strike at the tt»t of the problem. It would mean that more offenders would be arrested, but it would not > keep the criminal from going on the prowl in the first place.! there is no doubt many of our i large cities are underpoliced, I partly because changing times and the population explosion have created such things make these beautiful dresses for less than f eoch Simplicity Pottarn #5822 Tha Chaltaa collar, print 3ydi.@1.98 5.94 notions .85 pottarn .65 7.44* Simplicity Pattern #5865 The blouson, solid 1 color' 3*/rydi. ® 1 49 466 notions .65 pottarn .65 PENNEY'S MIRACLE MILE STORE HOURS 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. JSM ^69.50 TWO Trouser Suits 2f0rM11yoi/javet2«2, urged MARLOW defraence to the wishes of Congress and state legislatures, on the theory the people eventually wmild pressure them into doing what was needed, even though they had avoided what was needed for years. In 1N2 the court ruled, I to 2, that state leglsla-tiins to give voters a fairer representation was subject to the scrutiny of federal courts. For over half a century some legislatures had declined to reapportion themselves even though their state constitutions called for such action every 10 years. ★ ★ ★ Back in the 1940s Frankfurter had urged the court to stay out of such a “political thicket,” and when it did step in in 1962, still opposing it, he said: “In a democratic society like ours, relief must come through an aroused popular conscience that sears the conscience of the people’s representatives.” CAN IGNORE PEOPLE This ignored the reality that in some situations politicians in power can ignore the people. It was the greatest frony of Frankfurter’! life that when President Franklin D. Roosevelt put him on the court in the New Deal days of 1931 he was not ’waly a hero to liberals but was de- noimced as a Red-by4he far right.---------- By Uie time Jie left the court 2!-k^ years-ago, liberals looked upon him as a conservative, and he was when compared with some of Ae other justices. There was another contradiction in his life. He was a man with many friends, well-beloved, and a delightful conversationalist, as a recording of his conversation in a book, “Felix Frankfurter Reminisces,” shows: But as a writer of legal opinions he was long-winded and complex. He was a lively man, an emotional one and a great questioner, heckler and lecturer of lawyers before the court, so much so that he sometimes got on the nerves of the other justices. But this cannot obscure Frankfurter’s concern for justice. He was with the majority of the court in the civil rights decisions and he was concerned for justice to individuals although he sometimes let ab-stractioos get in his jway. ____________ Voice of the Peojrfe: Urges Action to Replace Tuberculosis Sanatorium Mr. Horton, Supervisor of Royal Oak, made a motion to start plans for a buUding program for medical care facilities especially for housing tuberculosis patients, and received no support. I urge that you reevaluate his idea and start immediate plans for a new building before the near million received from the sale •of the Sanatorium is spent for other than housing of tubercular patients. DORIS SUPERNAU ROCHESTER Readers’ Views on Proposed City Taxes I compUment The PonUac Press for not haying jumped to conclusions in voicing its opinion opposing tte city inwTO tax Too bad the Junior Chamber of Commerce didn t do likewise. I («, h... I’m sure no one win dispute Mr. Irwin’s statement that ‘The sharing of part of the cost of city government by nwimidento k a definite advantage to Pontiac ta:M»yers.” It would be an ad-vanUge financially if we could get someone else to help pay our way, but we are morally obligated to stand on w own two feet. R. M. SMITH WATERFORD TOWNSHIP Another Baby Boom So tl» city needs money. One source of revenue has been overlo Reviewing Other Editorial Pages The War Hawks The New York Times A comparatively small group of Americans, at this moment predominantly pMitical bi character and predominantly Republican in politics. Is doing its best to multiply the perils and frustrations of the war in Southeast Asia. sians and the Red Chinese visualize as a possibility and which they have been threatening. They see victory through such an operatlbn fai ” Viet Nam. itself. They cannot, however, assume that the U n i t e d States would be content to use just ^und forces in Southeast Asia if~a war did come. “The charter of the United Nations must be changed to meet the changing timn. U. N. cannot be called an in- Thia poap ignores tbe reali-of tac present sltoatton. It ignores the obvious warweariness of the people of South Viet Nam. It ignores the tempt at a negotiated peace. It is one thing to say, as Secretary McNamara did in his tMtimony, teat this country has “no other alternative than continuing to support -South Viet Nam against the Red guerrilla onslaught.” It is quite another to argue that the road out of the present hazardous situation is to invite world destruction. The American people made it ovorwfaebninf^ dear in the last eiectien that they do not want to plunge recklessly down that road. that are taking place. He must be prepared to meet the competition from local areas as well as national and taiter-national areas. I organization I terttiQdhan does not include China, the largest nation in the world . It is tbe prospect of major operations along the coast of Red China with air and naval expeditions from Formosa, Okinawa, the PhiliK>ines, and possibly Australia whidi may give pause to the Russians and the Chinese. IN OFnCIAL CIRCLES But nobody in official circles “Our policy is foolishly based on the presumption that Russia will attack us and that revolution can be exported. Neither is possible . . . Verbal Orchids to- Cbarles Bassett of Novi; Mth birthday. Alvah Porter of Union Lpk9; 88tb birthday. “It is nonsense to send a projectile to the moon when people on earth are uneducated and unemployed . . . SHOULD ASK WHY “If China says that coexis-tance with the United States is out of the question, shouldn’t we ask why? . . . “Tbe Russian spokesman here said that adhing is impossible of sdntion by nego-tiatioB. He must have spoken with official sanction. . . . “When will all of us be intelligent enough to understand that it is not an>easement or,weakness to recognize that wbht cannot be settled oo a batUefield should be settled at a coofer-mice table? . . . from the Vietaamese Army. It ignores the difOciilty of protecting isolated American bases apinst the snrprise at- taefcs of guerrillas. ---- It ignores the pouibility of an invasion of South Viet Nam b}’ the ver^ considerable North Vietnamese Army. It ignores the problem of how an aerial counterattaek could cope successfully with a massive ground attack of this character. It ignores the pos-sibilify of Chinese interven-tioa. It ignores the logistics and beUttles the cod in Uvea lost, blood spilled and treasure wasted, of fighting a war on a jungle front 7,IM miles from the coast of CalUamia. of Five The Urn Magazine Doctor (arranging patient on operating table): “I’ll be pefficf^ fn^ and^TeU ybiT that four out of five patients die under this operation. Is there angtfmg I can do for you before I begin?” Patient: "Yee^-help me on with my, shoes and pants.” Business Today The Holland Evening Sentinel The whole aim of this group is to expand the Vietnamese war, even if H means drawing in China and perhaps the Soviet Union as well. By tta lights. President Johnson’s declaration that the United States seeks no wider war is as mudi a prescription for faUure as any at- iday must be geared to a fast changing world. Retailing to some people may look like a fairly easy business; th^ may think that aU yon do is red or own a location, lay in a stock of goods and then wait for the customers to flock in. We are afraid that it is just not that easy. Today the successful busi-■essmaa (both retaB and wholesale) mast eamstantly check en tee mi Recently the National Association of Food Chains was reported to be spending $100,000 for a series of reseante projects. This work, which is to be supervised by Dr. Roger Grey of Stanford University’s Food Research Institute, wUl cover a review and appraisal of food industry statistics; a historical review of long term food industry trends; a study of the changing nature of retaU competition; a study of the “concentration” themy as it appUes to food retailing; an analysis of procurement practices by food fetalfers; i study of food retailing and economic power; a synthesis of the above, in the context of the world we live in, and a review of food marketing literature. This study should be of prime importance to all people who are in retail business as well as wlwlesaie and manufacturing concerns. The American consumers today are constantly .faced with many problems in making their dollars readi.' This is no doubt ^ reason for yuch studies. We are living in a fast-changing world and our young people who think that there is nothing to do could well spend a lot of their spare time gaining more and more knoWle^e about all oHhe problems that they must face. Djere are plenty of problems in your community that you may be able to lend a band in solving. TWP* pnAn PRRSS- WKDNKSnAY. FEBRUARY 24. 1905 A—t Answers Viet Policy Critics Solon's Somiofficiol Talk Hits Negotiation WASHINGTON (AP) - Rep. Cornelius E. GiUsghet, who recratly made an ins^don trip to South Viet Nam, said today negotiation with the Communists under present conditions would be capitulation. The New Jersey Democrat, a member of the foreign affairs and armed services committees, said, "If Peking and Hanoi remain intractable in their right to subvert a free government in violation of our ^ting agreements, what is there to negotiate except the abandonment of freedom" * ★ i It was learned isional source that while r initiated the idea for the veech, he prepared key parts of it in consultation with State Department officials at the highest level. It therefore was viewed as representing an indirect reply by the edminis-tration to some who have been; ur^ng a course of negotiation in the Viet Nam crisis. Tuesday Sen. Thomas J. Dodd. D-Conn., assailed proposals for disengagement in Viet Nam as “new isolationism." urge SETTLEMENT Sens. Frank Church, D-Idaho, and George McGovern, D-S.D., are among those who have urged a peaceful settlement of the stepp^-up conflict. Gallagher’s speech was prepared for delivery in the House today. ★ * * He said. “It is difficult to accept the reasoning of those who advocate ... a socalled negotiated peacein Viet Nam. It is even ffioreUlfftcult to ratipnat ize the Statements of those sponsible citirens who urge withdrawal from South Viet Nam. This we must view in the harqh light of political realism as a first step towards ultimate abandonment of the free nations of Southeast Asia to Communist control." Gallagher added: “Certainly we must keep open the door to negotiation, but shall we fall on our knees and hammer on a door that was slammed in our faas? If we are not to negotiate from fear, let us not negoUate either from a position of ‘peace at any pri«.’ ^ He asked: “Can anyone seriously believe that neutralisation of South Viet Nam would not mean Immediate Communist ^ take-over there and a new battie beginning in Thailand the next day? { “The advocates of such a policy must understand that our abandonment of commitments to protect freedom in Southeast, Asia is a recognition that we ' Communist China to ab- sorb all of Southeast Asia. Are we prepared for some future n«g(^iadions for the partitioning of Hawaii which is on the collision course of the Communists on their way to Seattle?" Woolworth Heiress to Remain in Hospital SAN FRANaSCO (AP) -Woolworth heiress Barbara Hutton, suffering from an intestinal ailment, is expected to remain at Presbyterian Medical Center j for another two or three weeks.! 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Chocolate chip wool nylon tweed coot sports o low-slung ^ 099 belt iMck with o cocoo toffeto scarf for contrast. | W FREE ALTERATIONS ON FASHIONS PRICED FROM 10.99 UP OKN EVIRY NIGHT TO 9 Monday through Saturday DOWNTOWN AHD DRAYTON P^INS THE PONTIAC PRgSS. WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 1965 FORD ADDS SUPERVAN - A longer (18 inches) SuperVan has been added to the line of Ford Econoline Van models which can be converted from a utility to a camper vehicle. The “big brother” in the Ford com- pact truck field is said to have 23 pv cent more lodd-space than the standard size and will carry extra-long items up to 14 ieeL Comparison photo (arrow) shows the extra space. Couniy Awards Contract on Building Remodeling How To Hold FALSE TEETH More Firmly in Place Do yuui nUM (Mtli uuoy ana am-bartaw nr aUpplni. druppms«» bllni •nan rmi eat. laugn oa talKT Juat unnKla a Utile PA8TBKTB un ynur ^tea Thte alkaline iitno-acldi puvdar nude (alie teeth mum llrmlT and man umlnrublt No suinmT. •~>ey,paat; taste •« (eellns Ooe» not r C^ki -plau idoT* Idantura PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL CENTER a 8J0 PJit 6t3-lll3 Waterford Board OKs Alcohol License Transfer The Oakland County Board Of Supervisocx yesterdi^ awarded a $39,650 contract for remodeling of the Social Welfare Building to Bundy Construction Co. of Pontiac. The ways and means committee, which recommended the Bundy company for the job, further recommended that a 10 per cent contingency fund be appropriated, bringing thr total to $43,615. Money lor the project, which will convert the basement area of the bnUdlng into a^cemmpd iatake center for Transfer of ownership of a liquor, beer and wine licensed business was approved last night by the Waterford Township Board pending written assurance that violations will be corrected. * * ★ Seeking the ownership transfer of the Waterford Hotel, 5803 Dixie, was Richard D. Puertas who intends to remodel the building’s interior in western style. Prior to the board’s action, Puertas assured that he would bring the baOdliig^np to code~ as specified by the fire marshal. The fire marshal (xdered that the main floor of the building be rewired. The upstairs quarters will not be used, according to Puertas. In other business last ni^t, the board accepted the bid of the James Boaz Agency for three-year money and securities broad form insurance cover- ?e. The Boaz bid of $274 was the lowest of three proposals which ranged to a high of W13. Board members also approved a request from the David Be-lisle Post, Veterans of Foreign Wars, for a carnival permit May 19-23 at the Drayton Shop-ping Center. The usual fee for permits was waived by the board due to the charitable nature of the carnival. Modul 305y 6E 14 Cubic Ft. Refrigerator Only »239»® Or Just >10" Per Month f Copper Ton* Or Colors GE12 Cu. Ft 2-dr. Refrigerator’199% Electric 3 Heat Dryer . . . >79" P I ELECTRIC COMPANY lFE42525 ^82^ESnjUROI^«m TERMS AViUUBLE \cimidoi& county welfare and bureau of ooeial aid cUento, w» eouso from unappropriated surplus. Part of the cost will be reimbursed by the state because the bureau of social aid is a state-supported agency. * ★ ♦ County engineers estimated that the (bounty Maintenance Department could do . the job tingencies. BEST INTERESTS After considerable study of the project, the buildings and grounds and ways and means committees decided the best interests of ^ oounty wedd be served by employing an outside firm, County engfaieers say It would take consMembly longer for the maintenance department to complete the intake center, which is nr^ gently needed because of a heavy increase in AM to Dependent Children M the Unemployed. In other action the board referred a special report recommending the creation of an Oakland County traffic safety council to the ways and The report was presented by Erwin Hendershott, transportation director of Oakland Schools and a member of av42-man committee appointed by the board last July to study the need for a permanent, traffic safety organization in the county. FINAL REPORT It recommended that the council’s organization and activities be based on the final report and reconunendations of . traffic safety study be^ conducted by ^. ?*"** for Community Affairs at Oakland University. ★ * * The report further recommended that . of the council be included in the next county budget. Fire hose must be^ to wltBs^ iwessui-es of frwn w to 700 pounds. PRECISION WATCH REPAIR • CfystiRi f‘NaN »Fwi» iPoii • WATCH BANOS >1.95 Up wnmii’s wtw 42 N. Suqinow 8-3593 Offer Rejected in Bowling Rift The Michigan Civil Rights Commission has rejected an offer by a Pontiac bowling alley to give a Negro league one hour and 45 minutes of prime time to bowl. In a meeting yesterday, the commission ruled that an offer by Orchard Lanes, 645 Opdyke, fell short d the time normally allotted for a league of similar size and number of teams. The original complaint arose when the establishment reportedly would not permit the Negro league — the Pontiac. Community Bowling League — to bowl during TMdme boon 5:39 - 9:39 p.m. The commission had issued a temporary order, which expired yesterday, to allow the alley to offer prime time to the league. The bowling alley now has until March 5 to act on the commission’s order. r "1 DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Offers FREE 9 PARKING DOWNTOWN PARK-SHOP v^**'*jy furnished by the /^lowing merchants ARTHUR’S 48 N. Soginaw St. RARNCTTS CLOTHES SHOP 150 N. Saginaw St. 909ETTE SHOP ^ 16 N. Soginaw St. OALLAOHER’S MUSIC SHOP ITiHuiMiSt. •IMUirSMIiriWIAR SI. N. Saginaw St. FRED N. MULUEWELERS 28 W Hufon St. nWTIAC ENOGASS JEWELRY CO. 25 N. Soginaw St. THE MHTIAC 89188 48 W Huron St. CLOOHAH DRUG CO. Y2 N. Soginaw St. 24 N. Saginaw St. WARD'S HOME 0UTFITTIN8 CO. 17-19 S. Soginaw St. )Ow sales people aren’t really inore couileous. They iusTseem to be. It’s logical. With a storefull of famous name brands, they don’t have to keep putting their Two cents1n.Tamour brands (like Eagle suits) practically speak for themselves. Which means our sales people can concentrate on the well-known Osmun’s extras...our free alterations .. .free parking... and the individualized charge plans you can tailor to your own budget. —^—Now... if you^ant our advice^ you’ll come in and... oops! There we go . . .putting our two cents in.| a part oi Pontiac since 1931 SMUN’S STORES FOR MEN & YOUNG MEN FREE PARKING at ALL STORES I Downtown Optn Fri. !■ Pontiac I Mon. ’til 9\ t-Huron Ctnttr in Pontiac tn Ewrjr Night 'til 9 ■ Tech Plaza Opon Evory Ni Center in Warren ight 'til 9 ,r- THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1965 A—» Foreign News Commentary Japan, S. Korea Try loEnd Bitterness By PHIL NEWSOM . ypi Ffiir^ N«wi Aailyit . Off and on for 14 years under United States’ urging, the governments of Japan and South Korea have sought to patch over the bitterness left by 35 years of Japanese occupation of the Korean penii sula. But old ani-j mosities dii hard and than once when] agreement] seemed near, violent t i 0 n dwailed] the negotiations. Sb Seeol forced abandonment of the last spring and led to three months of martial law when success seemed near. In December the talks were resumed in Tokyo and this month seemed definitely on the track again. In Seoul, high (rffidals of the Korean and Japanese foreign ministries signed a draft treaty on a basic relations that was described as the most significant step yet taken toward establishment (d formal diplomatic relations. VHHJCNT OPPOSITION Violent opposition remained. In Seoul, riot policonen cracked beads of demonstrators led by former Korean President Posun Yun. In Japan, leftist dem strators scuffled with police in an attempt th prevent Japanese Foreign Minister EUus-abnro Skiina’s departure for Korea. Protest demonstrations also greeted him in Beoul. In Korea, the opposition fre-guently has seemed more emotional than a thing of real substance. Posun Yun and his student demonstrators have accused the government of showing a weak attitude toward Japan and have -opposed any agreement that smacked of Korean "concessions." They also have demanded that Japan apologize for abuses suffered by Koreans under Japanese rule. This has been too much for the Japanese to stomach. But Foreigu Minister Shiiaa came close to it In the com-mnalqae announcing the draft treaty when be expressed his "deep regret” over relatious between the two nations in the past In Japan, leftists oppose the government plan to recognize Seoul as the only legal government in Korea. Japan does not recognize Communist North Korea and says it has no intention of doing so. The new draft treaty calls for establiahmeut of diplomatic and consular ^ without delay and for negotiations on trade and i other matters as darly as pos- Agreement between its two pre^Vestens aUlea is impnrtant to the United States because it believes that without it, Korea never can achieve a stable economy. U.S. aid to Korea since the war has amounted to more than $5 billion,, and the U.S. is trying to reduce it. Pi’evious negotiations already had obtained Japanese agreement to extend to Korea $300 million in grants over a 10-year period in settlement of damage claims, and another $200 million n long-term loans. StUI to be setUed is disagreement over the secalled Syngman Rhee lines (which bans Japanese fisherman from waters within 2M miles of Korea’s coast) and the states of about half a million Koreans living in Japan. Parliaments of both countries must approve the new treaty and it is assured of stormy going. However, both governments have placed it on their “must" lists and both have solid majorities. *3.74 feeds a family of 9! (count ’em) PUBLIC SALE NOTICE!!! CRANBROOK FURNITURE IS REORGANIZING! SALE THREE DAYS ONLY -THURS., FRI. and SAT. Hurry! First come, first served. Many one-of-a-kind. Every article on Sale. Save up to 75%. Buy with No money Down. Take 36 months to pay. Sale starts Thursday 9 AM. NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED All Nationally Advertised merchandise. We carry American of Martinsville, Basic Witz, Laine, Coleman, Lightcraft, Roller, National, Artistic, Schweiger, Vaughn, Hooker, Thayer-Coggin, Curtis-Mathis, Olympic, Stylecraft, Charlton, Strat-0-Lounger, Chase-Daystrom, Brody. Listed are only a few of our Salo Items at the Home of the Nation*^ Best in* Hionburger... 3 Piece Sectional Foam Cushion 100% Nylon N«Monty RED BARN *109 * ’99 Sofa and Chair Floral Print Foam Cushion Sofa, Mr. Chair, Mrs. Chair and Ottoman Foam Cushion All 4 Pieces >169 5 piece Sectional Wide Arm, Foam Cushion, 100% nylon mSSt ■ MoiwiHy ON TELEGRAPH CORNER OF ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD 4 Pc. Bedroom Suites BOOKCASE BED Walnut or Grey n NATURAL GAS HELPS GROIN YOUR FOOD/ /jsAPMieSOUgCEOFMTpAfB, 6J4S /S OVC Of 7»£ PR/mfPte tN&R€QIEN-i /NCOMMERC/AL P&RT7UZERS THAT HELP AMeRtCA'S FARMS fyiODUCE MORE FOOD THAN eveRBEFORB, Gammas MATERNAL _____cmxxs^pjsletsafd^ CrmER BARNYARD- OUNG ARE MOIHERED/N GAS-HEATED BROODERS, BARNS AND Omat S7RUCTVKS UNDER CONTROUBD WjdfreproceSses. FAmPRODUaS. - - \-AMEiHCANGASASacaAVON CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY NATURAL OAS-Dees Se Much, Costs Se Little SWIVEL CHAIR with arms 100% NYLON $-jg88 9 Piece Dinette Marproof Top 6 Foot Table 8 Chairs ALL TABLES 1/3 From *4” Every LAMP 1/3 From»2” Oak Bunk Beds Complete mattress and springs, guard rail and ladder. No Monty >66 Innerspring Mattress or Box Spring Twin or Full Six* $•1088 5 Piece Dinette Marproof top with leaf 00 39 T1 All Dining Room 1/2 - All Styles Recliner Foam Cushions all colors >39 00 All Pictures 1/3 FromH’^ Odds 'n Ends in every department 75% b off ALL SALES F.O.B. STORE Open Thurs., Fri. and Sal. 9 AM. ’0 9 PM. Furniture MILE SHOPPING CENTER . A—10 ! , ' ■ THE PONTIAC PKESS, WEDNESDAY, FEBBPa£y 8«. 1»65 FOOD3 M ne Store that SM frkn Hfttln tkrw Smrfay, M. 21, IfU. Wt nunt Hu rlflif t* limit fMafttwi. Pure Creamery Butter GA nORD Mb. . Print Limit Om with C»npoM Bt Mt. Grade A Fi«sfr Assorted Gelatin flavors FOOD CLUB DESSERTS 3-n.JCc Pkf. «' •" * 49 Urade A Fresfi~ Large Eggs 2o ^ Limit Om wIHi CeoFoo.it lot* All Purpese Fleur, Pillsbury, Rebln Heed or hm i moUMedalS 38 r limit Om with Caeoea of left. ' Fric* t1 iiqr ONE ileii «( nr refulrr lin* B | OFF awrey ? VI I^ BAKKD GOODS t . . . Dicept decorated cakei, wed-I dtnf cakei and ipecial orderi. I I Coupon valid throufh Feb. IS Limit Om wM Ceo|»ee et left. Asserted Gelcrtin Fla vers Food Club o£^s£Ris Limit Three with Cevpen at Left. Meadowdalo Loan, Deep Smoked Flavor £ W SUeeiBatoit^49^ From Our Cherry Pie Mel-O-Cruit Retli Brewn 'N Serve For Cooking or Salads WESSON OIL Srokely Oelicieui Fruit Cocktaii Kroft'i Soled Dreuinf Miracie Whip Checelate Flavor Reyai Pudding Vanilla or Strawberry BORDENS MOOLAKOOLA Iver^San l^riees on Same BranSs nee COMPARE! Green < 19‘ Sove 7c 4-01. oft y Fkf: 9-01. Can NIblets Corn 15* Dares Best-O-Bics Cookies |49i; ”C Hershey Chocolate Syrup 19* Brack Pick-A-Mix Candy 147* Buster Spanish Peanuts 139* Oven King Cookies 3/*!* Campbeirs Tomato Soup 10* Vegetable Beef Soup S'/a-ei. I Upton 37* Chicken Vegetale Soup SVi-ei. 1 Upton 2.p#cli I _________^ I 37* Palmolive Liquid Detergent | ST* Blue Vim Detergent Tebiaft • 2-lb. «-m. Im Spaciel UM 52* COMPARE! Our Lew Price Pillsbury Cake Mixes • ChOC9ltt9 Ms. G WhHm 125* Mavis Seda Pep Clerex Bleach 157* Roman Fabric Rinse 169* Lux Liquid Detergent 79* •~TidMic6Siimisfea(at»ofctfa-^^^f49*1ga ^rj~29*iKai Kleenex Facial Tissue 200 2-ply I fkt- ' 19* Avrora Bathroom Tieewo 123* Toilet Tissue 31* Final Tovch Fabric SoftOMr* 179* Liquid Dotorsont Speciol Label A|ax Detergent 31* Rinse Bide Detergent 159* IMO SXAIVIPS! IMOGlIVlIVlICKS! JUST SAVE OASH THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESbAY, FEBRUARY24^19^ A—11 mm! smubn! Cold Water "All"' DRAYTON PLAINS 5050 DIXIE HvVY N OF .WALTON BLVD WALLED LAKE TCO PONTIAC TRAIL AT WAPLE 1855 WOODWARD AT >4 MILE TliE PONTIAC PliESS. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 2i, 1903 For Michigan Foiks Who DONT DRINK ~ 4 Soedal New I GOLD STAR I Low Cost Mm MEDKAl-SURGICIU.-NURSE PROTECTION -3-Day Introductory Offer Yours For Only *122 FOR FIRST MONTH-MONIY BACK IN FULL IF NOT 100% SATISFIED! > OFFER GOOD FOR 3 DAYS ONLY I YOUR ENVELOPE must be maiM by Midnight Saturday. Feb. 27th 1965 ★ NO AGE UMIT-YOU CAN BE 1 OR 101! IF YOU are the one American in four who does not drink alcoholic beverages, you are eligible-to apply for this new low-cost Gold Star Medical-Surgical-Nurse Protection that pays you big cash benefits to help pay sickness or accident bills. You can apply for this new protection regard-leu ofJiow old you are now - there is NO age limit. And Gold Star jiays in addition to any other coverage or compensation you may have. Yet, because yorfve bwn protecting your own health all along by not drinking, you get this big-benefit protection for only pennies a day! In facti tojntroduce you to this great new Gold Star Plan, we make this special offer: Act within 8 days and you may have one whole month’s coverage for only $1.00 - less than four cents a day! Then, if you’re not 100% satisfied that this policy is the best—and least expensive-^—let us know— within 10 days and yoiir dollar will be refunded! Otherwise, you have the privilege - only if you wish - of continuing this great protection at the low, low rates shown here. Look At Alt These OoM Star Banafite Right now, you probably have some hospital coverage. You may think you’re “safe” from all the financial burdens of sickness and accident. But hospital coverage usually only takes care of part of’your expenses. Are you protect^ against the soaring costs of surgery bills, doctor visits, nursing bills? • Now^ with this Gold Star Plan, you WILL be proteebwi! Gold Star pays yiu for surgery bills, if surgery needs to be performed. Gold Star pays you for doctor visits when you need them. And, Gold Star helps you pay for a full-time registered nurse to take care of you at home, after you leave the hospital! The chances are one in seven that even you will spend some time in the hospital this year. A fall on the stairs, in the bathtub, or on the sidewalk - a sudden illness or operation - could lay you up for we^s, months, perhapk even years. - Can you afford costly doctor, surgery, and nurse bills? Even though you probably have some-protection now will it be enough f Sickness, accident, hospitalization, cost many pwple their savings, their cars, even their homes. Don't take chances with your financiai security. Now tor only pennies a day, YOU can enjoy the added protection. the peace of mind, the freedom from worry that this new Gold Star Medical-Surgical-Nuaee Pland^LLE-41064 offers. MAIL APPLICATION TODAY-“later" May Be TOO Lata I Once you suffer an accident or sickness, it’s too late to buy proTecUorat any cost. ThaU^^ urge you to act today - before anything unexpected happens. Simply fill out the simple application on this page and mail it with just $1.00 for a full month’s protection, which will go into efifect at noon of the day we receive your application. Your policy will be sent to you right away by MAIL. When you get your policy, examine all its benefits and features. Have it checked, if you wish, by your doctor, lawyer, or other trusted adviser. If not 100% satisfied, let us know within 10 days and your dollar wil) be refunded. Butif you decide to continue this worth-whiie protection, you may do so at the low rates as follows, which are for your age at the time of renewal: OOLO STAR MONTHLY RENEWAL RATES: Ag« 0 through 39 $1.97 par month Ago 40 through 59 $3.89 p«r month Ago 60 and ovar $6.68 par month TIME IS PRECIOUS! If you don’t drink, act quickly. Get your coupon into the mail today. COMPARE THESE GUARANTEED BENEFITS FAYS YOU UF TO $1,000.00 for a registered nurse, after you leave the hospital and are convalescing at home. That's right! If you have been in the hospital for at least 5 days, and your doctor has you employ a full-time registered nurse within 5 days after you leave the hospiital, we will pay you $10.00 a day for this nutse for up to lOO days! And you need not emplay this nurse a hurtdred -days in a row — Etecause this big bertefit is payable during the 180 days following your hospital stay! FAYS YOU UF TO $300.00 for your doctors’ bills for surgery, whether performed in or put Of the hospital, according to a sched-ule printed right in your policy! For each sickness, injury, or hos, pital confinement, you enjoy the maximum benefit of the largest amount specified for any one operation. For example, you would get $250.00 for removal of a kidney. FAYS YGU UF TO $32ecaM you grow older or ttecausa you have too many claim$,'*Vnd guarantees never to refuse to renew your .policy unless renewal is declined on all policies of this type , IrV your entire state. Of course, if deception is used In making applicatlon7 this policy may be ineffective. This Is another way Gold Star protects honest folks who don't drink. ONLY REQUIREMENTS. You must not drink alcoholic beverages; you must have no previous rejections of any application for health, hospital or life insurance; you must not have been advised to have an operation which has not yet been performed. ONLY CONDITIONS NOT COVERED. Every kind of sickness and Accident is covered, except, of course, hospitalization caused by the of xirnhnlir beverages oc narcotics; mental ot^petyout disorders; any act of war; or pregnancy. Everything else IS covered. These proper exceptions help to keep Gold Star rates lower for YOU! has been In effect for just two years, you are even covered — In addition to all your other Gold Star benefits — for pre-existing cortditions (which are not usually covered aY all). What i boon to those with chronic, recurring health problems! GRATEFUL POLICYHOLDERS PRAISE GOLD STAR SERVICE Mrs. Christine Watson, Sonta Ana, California! “You are to be commend^ for the excellent way you handled my claim. Your promptnesa in paying is. greatly appreciated as I am a widow and living on * limited income. I would recommend your plan to anyone.’’ , , _ Rev. Jamot L Roberts, Phsavllle, No. Coro-linoi “Thank you for the prompt attention given my claim. It was aa if everyone in your office waa working just for me. I have been a member for 4 years and am pleased to recommend the Gold Star Plan.” “Thank you for the check for my recent illness. As a former Insurance Agent I know value and recommend De Moss to anyone. The attention and service you gave my claim is most commendable.’ Mrs. Iwiaa Gortol, Tonkara, Naw Yorfci “Thank you for ybiir chock which I received this morning. I waa embarrassed to present a claim after signing for the policy such a short time ago. I can certainly recommend this company without reservation. I truly appreciate your prompt service.” JOHMS O. Lamdia, Fort Woyiia, Indlanai “Without delay. Gold Star mailed me a check for the proper amount to pay my claim. The immediate and courteous attention given me ia appreciated very much.' There seema to be a ‘personal’ interest by Gold Star, beyond just a ‘businsss’ trana-action. A hearty THANKS.” Gaorga F. Owior, OUtan, OkMioaiot "This is the third aubatantial claim you have paid me in the last year. All were handled in a very prompt and courteous manner, for which I certainly thank you. Gold Star is very high in my estimation. LEADING AMERICANS PRAISE GOLD-STAR PROTECTION! MAIL APPLICATION TODAY TO: DC klOSS ASSOCIATES, INC., VaiiSy Fdfie, Penfieylwanla 0-0-5-4213-025 APPLICATION TO NATIONAL LIBERTY LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY VALLEY FORGE, PA. a a KtHSt. fouadcr of (Iw S. S. Krctft Co.; ‘T'ln dw lighud UiU iKMi.driBlicn an mow rtwtrdcd by buurint wiUl the Ootd Star Flan at aubataiw-lial aavinga. GoM Slar'a popo-larily indkalea dial H it did rigtit anawdrlednouaalioa of LywaBdfta. Otympic and world oi mla. Neitiidr I nor any oibtr Of eourae, I hl^y rteonunand tba Gold Star HoapiiaUzalhw Flan for non-dnalMra." ADDRESS......... W. K. Mwtta—, General. U. a Amy (lUlitcd): “le mty loe« tapcrieacc in die Army I have with the Meirogehun Opera Twe.-Ttwa -tair war i»»f »• - f need lor a apccial hoibiial plea f-for total alnialnera. Havfaif 1 known Art DcMoia for a lor lime. I am moat happy lo rc< ommead ihia low.«>ai Ool •ur Foiky. b OooM prove 1 be a leal help ««) Meaalag i Neither I, nor any person listed above uses alcoholic beverages; has had any previous rejection of any application for health, hospital, or life insurance; or has been advised to have an operation which , has not yet been performed. I hereby apply for the Gold Star Medical-SurgicsI Nurse Plan, Form # NLLE-4-10 64. I have enclosed $1.00 for each person listed above for the first month's coverage. I understand the policy is not in force until actually issued. ' If, for any reason. I am not comptetaty satisfiad with this new protection — I may return my policy within ten (10) days for cancelling and my paymapt will be promptly refunded. If I dacida to continue, I may do so at the special Gold Star rates for the attained aga(s) at renewal date. The Gold Star Plan policies, available and paying claims in all 60 atatea and in many foreign countries, are underwritten by the RATIONAL LIBERTY LIFE INSURANCE CO. Valley Forge, Pa., which ia licenaed solely under the laws of tba (Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, and which carries full legal re-aervM for protection of all policyholders. This Gold Star Plan is issued by the sanu tnutod organization that has already iesned Hospitalization Trotection to hundreds of thonsands of non-drinking folks, and that has advertised in over 300 leading publications, tn-cluding Reader’s Digest, Farm Journal, Christian Herald, Woman’a Day, Redhook, Together, Today's Health, Family Circle, Cap. per's Weekly, McCall’s, Better Homes and (Sar-dsns, Ladiss’ Home Journal, and many othsrs. YOU MUST MAIL APPLICATION BVORI MIONIOHT lATURDAY, FIB. 37, IMS < NO SALESMAN tW toH ee yea... MW or ever. Veer peHcy wW be maHed «• yee at easel Fill Oiit and Mall Appllcotloii-Coupon TODAYI THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 24. UKI5 l!-» FjowersAre Nice Gift in This Case By The Emily Post Inititate Q: My brother-in-law has been in business many years but bu only been renting the store he occupies. Very soon he wiU move into his own newly built store. la it proper, or expected, of me to give him a gift when he has his grand opening? W * -k A: While a present is not necessary, it will be proper and a nice gesture on your part to send him flowers with yjur very best wishes lor the-miccess of his new store. WOMAN ALONE Q: What is the obligation on the part of a host to an unescorted woman dinner guest when it is time for her tc leave? Must he take her home, put her in a taxi (and if so, does he pay her fare) or does she make her own way home? * ' ♦ k A; It isn’t necessary that he take her home but be should see her safely into a taxi. She pays her own cab fare. PHONE ETIQUETTE Q: I called a friend on the telephone the other day and we had barely said Hello when she said that someone was at the doOT and would I please bold on. I waited almost 10 minutes and she still hadn't returned, so I hung up. k k k My friend was quite peeved over this and thinks 1 was very rude not to have held on. I think 1 wu perfectly Justified in hanging up. May I please have your opinion on this matter? k 'k k A: Your friend should have returned to the telephone and explained that she had to pay th» milkman or give Mrs. neighbor a cup of sugar she came in to borrow, or what-* ever the reason, and asked if you would mind holding on while she did so, or said that she would call you back in a few minutes. But as she did not do so, „ you were entirely justified in hanging up after 10 minutes of Jaines F. Kipfer of the Michigan Society for Mental Health was speaker for (he Foundation for Aid for the Emotionally Disturbed Children Tuesday. With him are Mrs. Louis J. Colombo Jr., Bloomfield Hills (center) and Mrs. May ford L. Roark, Raven Road, new president of the group. To Survey Emotional Ills A research program on mental health in Michigan was propoMtd at the Tuesday meeting of the Foundation for Aid for the Emotionally Disturbed OiUdren (FAEDG). James Kipfer, director of the children’s mental health division of the Michigan Society for Mental Health, told what has been done in the past for emotionally disturbed children and what is being done now. The FAEDC which has been contemplating a program of this kind voted Tuesday to undertake- it. Mrs. S. D. Steiner will head the committee making the research for the report. When completed, the survey will point the way and indicate what the future direction should be for thoae in a position to direct funds, time and procedure connected with emotionally handicapped children. SINCE IMC Organized in 1956 under the direction of Dr. James M. McHugh and Mrs. Louis J. (Colombo Jr., FAEDC exists mainly to promote the welfare of children at Pontiac State Hospital. It is a fund-raising group, supported by both individuals and other groups which donate money and time. ’They provide parties, help with ^ildren’s gardens, tutor, conduct numerous classes, direct plays and give those extra bits of attention that institutionalized children need. One of their goals has been to award scholarships each year to members of the Pon- tiac State Hospital staff who wish to continue their education in the field of the emotionally disturbed. ’The foundation finances the industrial arts program. Groups contributing money and/or time this past year are the North Woodward Alumnae of Kappa Kappa Gamma, Franklin, Birmingham and Bloomfield Hills garden groups, Jaycee auxiliaries, the Huntington Woods Women’s Club, American Association of University Women and countless church and high school groups. Many Individuals have given time. k k k Mrs. Steiner and Mrs. Hugh Martin are newly appointed members of the Foundation OU Presents Musicale on Sunday • The first public concert the Oakland University Ool-legium Musicua hat b rwn scheduled for Sunday, according to George V. Cri(^, OU associate professor of music and director of die group. k k k Open to students and the public without charge, the performance will be at 3:30 p.m. in the Little Theatre. ★ ★ ★ The group is made up of nine, vocalists and four instrumentalists, using early instruments — recorders, viola da gamba and krumm-hom. ’They will perform Italian and English madrigals and instrumental pieces of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. ★ ★ ★ According to Cripps, the Collegium Musicum's initial appearance was at the November Madrigal Festival in Flint, sponsored by the Michigan Vocal Association. PARTICIPANTS Instrumentalists in the group include James C. Had-en, Norman Susskind and G^rge V. Criiqis, all of the OU faculty; and Kathleen Grulich, a junior from Royal Oak. ★ ★ * Vocalists are Mrs. Clive Henery, Mr. and Mrs. Victor Lindquist of Pontiac; Barbara Mann, and Linda Woodruff, Birmingham; Mrs. Alfred Lessing, Oxford. James E. Davis, Marc E. Briod and Duncan Sells of the OU faculty will also sing. Forgetful Mate Due for War — - ’The clothes of the bride’s and groom’s parents as well as those of the wedding guests are described in the Emiljf Post Instihite booklet entitled, “Correct Gothes for a Wedding Reception.’’ * * * To obtain a copy, send 10 cents in coin and a stamped, self-addressed envelope to Emily Post Institute, in care of The Pontiac Press. * * * The Emily Post Institute cannot answer personal null, but all questions of general interest are answered in this column. Calendar IlfURSDAY Village Woman’s Clab, I 9:30 a m., “History in the Making,’’ by Dr. Charles ^ Cumberland. Round Table Club, 12:30 p.m., First Federal Sav-> mgs of Oakland Building. Benefit salad luncheon ^ and card party. General admission. Lourdes Menscoia Guild, 7:30 p.m., Menscoia Nur-sihg tlbm, l^atkins Lake Road. American Association of University WonMn, bridge group; 8 p.m., home of Mrs. Robert C. Irwin, West Iroquois Road. Welcome Rebekah lodge No. 241; 8 p.m., Pythian Hall on Voorhels Road. FRIDAY International club, YWCA; 6:30 p.m. at the “Y” on Franklin Boule- * vard. The film “Gxinter- a Attack’’ will be shown. ^ St. Hugo’s; men’s choir, ^ altar guild, and ushers i dub, Mardi Gras; 8:30 j p.m., m school gymna- A Celebration Is on Schedule d ’The Chapel Hills branch. Woman’s National Farm and tlardefi AsabdaUon, will observe its second birthday, Monday, in the home of Mrs. Clarence Barker on Winchcombe Drive. Spring flowers will form a setting for the 12:30 p.m. dessert preceding an illustrated talk on “Perennials” by Darrell Bordine of Rochester. Cohostesses will be Mrs. Edward Martin and Mrs. Edwin Schaeffer. Gift, Madam Chairman For women’s club presidents or program directors who are at their wits end to provide ap interesting tmd entertaining program for' their members, a unique women’s club kit is bring offered free of charge! The kit includes a 13 minute 16nmi film documenting the emancipation of women over the past century, a commentary on current fashions, and a number of booklets designed to delight the hearts of women’s organization members throughout the country. The film, in black and white commences at the turn of the century when the mqres of the time greatly limited the activities of women and rer fleeted the Victorian attitudes of previous years. "k k k As women gradually broke the barriers of traditional thinking and became active and productive members of society, they became pioneers in business, social, political and philanthropic fields. An interesting aspect of the film deals with pregnancy, revealing the sociological change from the expectant mother who spent her waiting period in confinement to the healthy, active expectant mother of today. BOOKLETS Also included in the kit are special booklets on correct dress for tall and fuller-figured women. A size chart which helps women to find their true size category is another feature of the kit, as well as posters on fashion specialties of yesterday and t^ay. * * * The women’s club kit may be obtained free of charge by writing: Department WCK, Room 1000, 465 Fifth Avenue, New York 17, New York, upon request by( and two pinowcow with bunk or hvndl* b«d. fine of OnklunH V.ounty't iMrunt ttUplay of Hunk, TrundU and Canopy hods, 1672 S. Telegraph Rd. Pontiac 338-6666 B—2 jCHB PONTIAC PRESS^ WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 24. 1963 ■Rje “Horned Screamer” is a I something like a magpie. It has i • ^ South American bird looUi^ > a long, slender bom on its head. L.inQQ t^.Ollll TakfesVows Recently St. Michael's Church was the scene of recent rites officiated by Rev. David A. Britz for Linda Lucille Ponn of Beach Str€*t and Peter Stanley Schneider. ★ It-- -k Parents of the cobple are Mrs. Edwin Hoppe of Walnut Street and the late Ira R. Ponn and the Oscar Schneiders of Second Avenue. ★ * * The bride was gowned in Chantilly lace and a double crown held her waterfall veil of illusion. She carried a cascade of white carnations on a lace covered prayer book. . * * * Mrs. Louis Schneider of Big Rapids acted as matron of honor with bridesmaids Valerie Barber and Terry Tunny. Attending the groom as best man was his brother, Louis Schneider and Robert and Ronald Hoadly ushered. * ★ * An evening reception was held in the Moose Hall. YET-YOU’RE ^ SO CORRECT TWO DAILY Dllivemis TO OITROIT AND INTERMEDIATf P0;NT5 /0/\ w Special Purchase Junior Petite SPRING COAT Laminated crepe with tackle twill trim on collar, lapels, and pocket flap. Fully Taffeta lined. Black with beige. , •15 MRS. P. S. SCHNEIDER Give Showers for Jane Mrs. Cecil Poppy of Shad-dick Road, and daughters Janet and Sharon, honored bride-elect Jane Lvdia Dunn of West Hopkins Street, at a recent shower in their home. Gifts of linen ware opened following a recent Sunday luncheon given by Mrs. Elmer Granflaten of East Beverly Avenue for her twin. Mrs. Robert Hudson of Roseville was hostess at a buffet supper and shower in the home of the bride’s parents, the Albert G. Dunns. The Saturday bridegroom-elect, James E. Abel of Grix-dale Street, is the son of Mrs. Frederick Abel of Hudsonville and the late Mr. Abel. Shoe Styles Are Extreme One of the most extreme shoe styles during the Renaissance was the ‘‘Duckbill,” which had a toe no less than nine inches wide. Another was^the “Crakow,” which had a toe point so long it had to be chained to the knees, according to research done by Irving J. Bottner, President of a shoe care products firm. Saves Trees Galvanized screening of one-fourth or one-half inch mesh, obtainable in rolls . 18 inches wide, makes fine tree protectors. WOMEN'S WEAR It always seemed uncivilized to me to rush right into the day without tal^ time to w up graduaiiy. I guess it seemS this way to me because I am a slow waker-iq>per and sort of weave my way Into the day. I am struck dumb with horror and amazement by those wtio jimip out of bed in the morning with a song on their lips and speed past the alarm clock as though they were trying to make the next traffic, light.* * ★ * You can therefore imagine my delight to discover that there is scientific backing for the feeling I have. It as natural and healthful to stretch your muscles and yawn and breathe deeply when you awaken. Some mnscles have been cramped and all have been comparatively quiet. They need awakening. Circulation should also be speeded up gradually — not suddenly. Dr. C. Ward Crampton, one of the distinguished geriatric pioneers felt so strongly about this that he devised scientifically planned waking-up exercises. Here they are. HOW TO WAKE UP One; Take a deep breath and place the hands on the shoulders. Fists are tight. Lift your j chest as you take a deep breath and push back with the head. Now stretch up with the left arm and qut with the right and bend to the right. Twist aad beml^ thr left Stretch in each direction. Gradually exhale to the end of the double stretch, . ........ ^ Two: This Is Called the pee-saw massage. Ue on your back on the bed. Make your chest big, lifting it as your abdomen becomes hollow, during the count of six. Now push down making the chest small and the abdomen large. Do this three times without breathing. (Then take three breaths. Continue, exercising and breathing. Three: Kick the covers off. Lying on your bacjt, make circles with your legs, as though you were bicycle riding while lying down. After a short time of this raise both legs up ito right angles to the body, knees stiff and swing them down over the edge of the bed, sitting up on the side of the bed. Four; This is more difficult and will take practice. The abdomen moves around in a circle while the head and hips remain in the center of the circle. Five: Stand with feet apart and hands on hips. Bend to the right as far as possible. Bend to left as far as you can. Bend forward as far as possible: Continue. Six: This is the beginnii^t step in many primitive dances. Hop twice on one foot and twice on the other. Feel the rhythm and let your body sway a little from side to side. An Indian war whoop should go with this, either from you or a member of your family. Seven: Stand. Look down toward the floor. Place your hands behind ycHW head. Lift your bead and lower it backward. Resist gently with your hands. This is not only a splendid waking-up routine but gives you a wonderful internal massage, j and some good stretches. Fol-I lowing this program is a bene- { I ficial and pleasant way to ! weave your way into the day. Mrs. Jimmy Taylor, South Johnson Street (left) and Mrs. Lee Roy Myers. Crawford Street, are gxnng to have to share one chair, it would seem. They are members of Les Bonne Amies, the club holding a benefit card party Saturday evening to raise funds for furniture for the lounge of Hayes Jones Community Center. The event at First Federal Savings of Oakland is open to the public. Card Party for Center For 18 years the club, Les I to support community projects. Now they, have taken on the big job of furnishing the lounge of the new Hayes Jones Community Center. * * ♦ Saturday evening from 7 to 10 p.m. they will sponsor a card party in the First Federal Savings of Oakland building. Tickets are available at the door. * * ♦ Working on the plans for the benefit are Mrs. Jimmie Taylor. president: Mrs. William Cabarras, vice president; Mrs. Anna Williams and Mrs. Dewey Burch, secretaries; and Mrs. Lee Roy Myers, treasur- Assisting them are other club n MIAMI BAKE SHOPPE Open Evenings THE PONTIAC MALL SPECIAL BUDGET $^50 WAVE CallieE' May 22 vows are planned by Patricia Madeleine Hughes and James A. Booth. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. George P. Hughes, Rob ell Drive, Commerce Township and the James E. B o o ths; Williams Lake Road. The prospective bridegroom attended Lawrence Institute of Technology. Butte K.nit- BuftFs su^'ffiT^textured double knit wool ensemble. Brass buttons higblight the single-breasted jacket with notch collar and contour pockets. The slim skirt and short sleeve oveiddoase complete the trio. In white or Azure Blue. Sizes B to 18. $3^95 U»e A Lion Charge with Option Terms ,, i 1 Ladies^ W ■•V? iir -V; Noturolizers R«q. to $15.95 *7 > - f- American Girl' OroM Reg. $895 $4 [ American Girl Flats $7.95 »3 1 1 Snow Boots * Reg. to $15.95 *7 ■V-’: Men's II J Porto Ped Loafers Reg. to $13.95 *12 W. 1 Porto Ped Oxford Reg. *0 $23.95 14’° M 1 ' r French Shriner Reg. tO“ $25.00 N Pedwin Oxford Reg $12.95 *7 W: t ■■ Children's 1 r Buster Br6wa-Poll Parrot $»95 M h: — 4741 * SIZES 12-30 Spring days are coming, and what a smart wrap-tie dress to have on hand! Sew it in solid outlined with.vivid rick-rack. Easy-sew, easy-care. Printed Pattern 4741: Misses’. Sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20. Size 16 requires 34li yards 39-inch fabric. Fifty cents in coins for this pattern — add 15 cents for each pattern for first-class mailing and special handling. Send to Anne Adams, care of The Pontiac Press, 137 Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th St., New York»ll, N. Y- Print plainly name, address with zone, size and style number. Complete fashion report jn our new Spring-Summer Pattern Catalog coupon for I one free pattern! Everything you need for the life you lead — 350 design ideas! Send 50 cents now. NOW ... A LONG LEG CORSELETTE WITH THE NEW STRETCH STRAP Tantaliii* all-in-m« Itti you movo Slim yourself in seconds in Lycro® spondex. Bro gives true uplift-plunge bock goes under everything! Adjustable stretch straps 'n convenient open crotch. 34-38 B and 34-40 C. :99 :99 CUSTOM MADE SUP COVERS Avufwgu Choir $31.95 Avorod* Soto $S2.9S CMuoUtai IncMine rohitc, < Zippwt en4 Ubw FABRIC FAIR Mwocu auu s>ywfiNO anna DuPont Lyrrde arriale rollon ipanHet with Lyrrai u-lin lesirx front panel, cup 100% nylmy, CPt*l EVERY HffiHT TO f Menduy rtirougli Sulurday THE PpNTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 1965 N Fears Bully, but Own Behavior Too By MURIEL UWRENCE Dear Mrs. Lawrence; My husband and I disagree about what we should do about a bigger boy who roughed up our 8-year-old SOB on the way home from school. I ttiink he should be reportqi “To the police as a manace tb younger children in our neighborhood but my husband says .that Fred has to laam to defend himself. Though I am now driving Fred back and forth to school, he is still so frightened of this bigger boy that he won’t go outside the yard to play... rcastared that he did his at-most to defend himself against this Imlly? I ask this question because wfaaL often seems tn be -our fear of a bullying person who has hurt us is fear of ourselves « fear Rut we’ve ac^fefT ourselves badly in our fight with We’ra not nearly so scared of the insult or bloody nose he EXPRESS YOUR THOUGHTS with FLOWERS by JACOBSEN'S JACOBSEM’S FLOWERS For 42 Year, Dewntewn5feie 101 N. SoginowSt. PImmmFE 3-7165 GraonheuM, Oardsn Lok* OiioM Phono MY 2-3681 has given us as we are of the possibility that we showed cbn-tetppdMe weakness fai Qur J>ak tie with him. So we will devise many ways to hide from him, not because we’re stiU smarting fram ihe hart he -hnt dam iag from shame at the way we accepted the hurt. ________ Has your husband’s Insistence that Fred learn to defend himself against bullies contained any suggestion that the boy did not defend himself well against this particular bully? the boy is more than usually frightened of another encounter that might expose him as insufficient again. He seeks the safety of his own yard to avoid, not a bloody nose, but humfliating criticism of his effort to protect himself. REASSURANCE I- like your idea of driving him back and forth to school, but I like even better the idea of his father telling him: “Yoir did the very best you could in this fight with this bigger boy, didn’t you? “AH right, that’s enough for us. Mother and I are pr^ of May I remind you and your husband that the anguished fears — Army doctors caU them “peychoneurotic’’..— which im- mobilize soldiers after battle have less to do with fear of the enemy than they have to do with fear that they behaved badly under stress? And add that our civilian fears of people who have insulted us is not so much fear of our insulters as it is fear that we’ll collapse again under If it (Hd, trs fso wonder That ^ bullying._______________ Versatile Shades ’Die versatile window shade boasts many talents. To its decwative assets, add the ability to control light without glare, easy wash-ability and care, plus a special insulating quality that helps keep the room cool im-summer and warm during the winter — a welcome economy factor that reduces the load on the air conditioner and saves fuel in the winter. who’s much bigger than they j The Japanese consumes are. Bat yon tried to, didn’t ! 12 pounds of meat per year per yon? Yon made it clear that i capita. ’The average Airterican you don’t like bullying, didn’t | eats thu much meat in about you? ' three weeks. SEW SIMPLE By Eunice Farmer PRE-EASTER SPECIAL! BODY PERMANENT C.OMPLE’TE WITH HAIR s-ni,E, riT shampoo tin ntiAJTirv I.IM|TE» TIME ONLYI So hurry iu for your appointment. Anne Courtemanche Oioner,Operator Open 6:.W Til 9 Except .S»i. 673-0712 4713 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plain* Enjoy the BospUality of the /WalhrgttlfltgL Home of the Famous TTaldron Buffet PLANNING A PARTY? IT’S OUR SPECIALTY WHETHER IPS 20 or 200 LET US HELP BIAKE IT A SUCCESS CALL FE 5-6167 Cocktail Hour: Special Late Price, Mun. Uini Tkim. 4 to S — a to 10 I'.M. OPENING soon: • GAS tJGHr ROOM" TYOICAL OLD STVLB TAViBN . Corner of Pike and Perry Call 33S-6167 i Dear Eunice Farmer: ’This past fall I lined a winter coat in rayon crepe. Since it ^ ao narrow and straight, I did as you suited and fanned the lining to the lower edge of the coat as I do with my suits. I haven’t worn the coat for several weeks and now the lining hangs limp and droopy. What did I do wrong? * , Mrs. S. H. Dear Mrs. S. H. Crepe is the one kind of lining fabric that stretches as it hangs. It is not the best lining possible for a full length coat; I suggest you use lightweight taffeta or a dull satin. Both of these have a little extra body necessary for a coat. To remedy the lining in your coal, remove the stitches across the back of the coat, between each side seam. Hem this section separately and aUow it to hang free of the coat. To keep it from flying away from the coat, you may use a long bar-tack between the center back of the lining and the center back of your coat. Dear Eunice: J have purchased one-fourth of a, skin of leather to use as trimming for a suit after reading your exceUent suggestion. However, I don’t remember what you said abouP the grain oMhe leather and what direction it should be cut. Mrs. L. J. Dear Mrs. L. J. Leather has no definite grain so any direction may be Ybl will find that some sections of the leather are much heavier than the rest, this would be the neck and tail section of the skin. sKin. Leather can be cut with regular scissors and stitched on your sewing machine. ing niaciiinc. Use the scraps and practice before you begin on your finished product. \ chudiki .FI ^ Ow»"Thors.,FH.“HI9 'grown and Ann Stroots - lirminqhom Ml 1-1IM TAUA)R TRIX WINNER Thanks to a teacher of adult education we have these two great tips; Use a spray bottle to dampen your professionally treated presscloth instead of the proverbial sponge—works great and it’s easy to regulate the amount of moisture. m Bridals From $100 Bridasmaidt From $29.9B /If you are using a sewing machine that is q^w to.you, remember that the last thread guide determines the direction the thread is to enter the needle. This holds true for foreign as well as domestic sewing machines. Mrs. W. E. Bannister, Somerville, Mass., has been awarded this week’s Tailor Trix pressing boart for these suggestions. SPRING SAVINGS ON life' OPERAS E,' ■ ^ Silver on Table Sterling silver flatware adds to the beauty of any table setting — formal or informal. In arranging flatware on the table, the spo go to the right et tha piaM setting Md tha forks to iBa left — except tha seafood eadk-tail or oyster fork. It goes m the right wife the spoons. to be worn with pride O OMEGA MRS. CLARKE RIECK MRS. R. W. CHITTICK Sisters Are Married in Double Ceremony Mary Ann Tarchalski and her sister Patricia Elaine, daughters of the Casper Tar-chalskis of Elizabeth Lake Road, became brides during a recent ceremony in St. Per-petua’s Catholic Church. guests were James Neph, Lake Orion, Edward Tarchalski and Blair ChltUck of Dav- PATRICIA ELAINE An Empire gown of French Rev. William J. Shanahan offered the nuptial Mass. MARY ANN For her marriage to Ralph William Chittick, son of the John W. Chitticks of Judah Road, Pontiac Township, Mary Ann chose an Empire gown and duqiel train of French lace over organza. A tiered crown of lace and pearls cradled her bouffant veil of Illusion. With honor maid Betty Mul-haU of BeUe River, Ont. were bridesmaids Donna VanHom, Theresa Shovels and Mrs. Douglas Storey. Douglas Storey of Lake Orion was best man. Seating lace and organza over taffeta for Patricia Elaine Tarchalski who exchanged vows with Clarke Rieck of Kalamazoo, was styled with chapel train. Bouffant veiiing feH from ^ lace petal headpiece. The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Catherine Rieck of Kalamazoo and James Rieck of Paw Paw. Caren Coley attended as maid of honor with bridesmaids Nancy Tarchalski, Janet Heikes and Patricia Berry. WHEN YOU give an Omega you say a thousand unsaid things with golden eloquence. Few giftt render such life long service or attract such universal admiration. Both inside and ou^de ^“ev^ Om^Ts ineBcuTousIy cnrted,Tw a lifetime of proud possession. REDMOND’S On the esquire side, were Sam-Kline, best man, aiKT ushers Richard Stewart, Thomas Day and David Walk- Jewelry 81 N. Saginaw Si. Pontiae FREE PARKING IN REAR OF STORE Shin* in high or rnid heeled Larks Oper* pumps! Dressy patent leather or lizard-grained lustre leather uppers . . . that you’ll want in more ways than one! Choose soft Light Blga, Pink, White, or Beige'lizard-grain; bold Navy .or Black patent. Save now on the season's bright looks. mid-wiiiter furniture SALE Store - Wide tiedilctions ... Everything Ineliided Except A Few Established Items Dramatic gnd Final reductions on all fine furnishings... sofas, chairs, bedrooms, dining rooms, tables, lamps, bedding, accessories, pictures and drai»eries. LAST 4 DAYS! Ends Saturday 5:30 P.M. Early American, Traditional, Modern and Contemporary Furnishings SPECIAL ORDERS INCLUDED “ AT SALES PRICES Open Thurs., Fri., .Mon. Evenings 1il9 PJA 1680 S. Tnlagraph Rood — Parking Fm« just south of Orchard Laka Road —FE 2-8348 Interior DecoroHng Consuttotion flf No Extra Cost THE PONTIAC PRKSSt Wji^DyESDAy, FEBRUARY 24, 1965 W. DOUGLAS Dance Club Plans Gala Cocktails at 7:30 p.m. will precede the dinner dance for members of the Continental Dance club. Saturday is the date set for the gala to take place in the Pagoda Inn of Troy. Arrangements are in the hands of Mr. and Mrs. Duane Lamiman. Their . assistants include Mr. and Mrs. Robert Davis and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Price. For ticket reservatiwts which should be made by today the following officers may be contacted; Max King, Peter Morris, and Mrs. Ron McGraw. Linda Porter Exchanged— Recent Vows White bridal satin fashioned a gown and train for Linda Anh Porter who exchanged recent vows with Wesley William Douglas, in the Leonard Methodist Church. She donned a bouffant silk illusion veil and held a Bible covered with white carnations. I h * h Parents of the newlyweds are the Edward J. Porters and Mr. and Mrs. John Douglas, ail of Leonard. With Mrs. James Ostrander, her sister’s honor matron, were the bridesmaids Mrs. Hiomas Patch, Mrs. Richard 'A^anConat, Verna Sutherby, R^ Ann Douglas and Cindy Porter>Tlieir gowns were red velvet. The brid^WQm had William Stafford fcKhis best Ushers werc^Eugene Drying Machine The oldest food-drying machine known — the sun — stiH is- used to dry most of the raisins, currants, apricots, and pears marketed commercially, but manmade driers, employing vacuum drying and foam spray drying, are taking over the processing of most other foods. Mollia, Cecil Linesman, Paul Sutherby, Stephen Porter ai Norman Green. Scott McMillan carried the rings. * a ★ After the reception in Rowland Hall, Leonard, the couple left for a northern Michigan honeymoon. Rub Bread On It Rub small stains and smudges on wallpaper with pieca of stale bread. Hiis often is all that is needed to remove mars. Polly's Pointers Try Indoor VolleybaTt DEAR POLLY - My children, ages 4, 5 and 7, became restless when they had to stay in the house for several days because of colds. 1 put my adjustable ironing board down to its lowest position in the living room. They had great fun playing volleyball across the lx>ard with a big balloon. The balloon could not break anything and they were careful about the way th^ threw their arms oiit to reach the ball— JEAN DEAR POLLY - Venetian blinds on a door have a way of banging against the wood of the door when it is opened or shot. This often mars the paint finish. I tacked a Venetian blind cord onto the woodwork along both skies of the door so the blind would hit the cord instead of the wood. This really eliminate the noise, too. — RITA * ♦ w \DEAR POLLY - When shopping, in a crowded supermarket, if is so, easy to put items in someone"blse’8 cart. I made a Might ribbon tag with my iaitia^wii it and attached a string. I tie this to the cart I am filling ^ it saves many mistakes. \ While I am at the checkout" counter the tag is removed and put in my purse to be ready for the next shopping trip.—MRS. Q.S._______________________ ery day so I do hope the girls keep those Pointers coming. Perhaps my invention, a “pattern caddy," will help those who sew. Cnt the tops off of several cereal boxes from two top corners diagonally down to the middle of the opposite side. Stand these boxes in a row and gine together. Paint the boxes and decorate with pictures of spools and other sewing accessories. Label the front of each section with the type of pattern in that compart-1 ment — skirts, dresses, blouses,' baby clothes, etc. They are neat and easy to reach when needed.—RUTH ★ w * DEAR POLLY - When the weather is bad, I slip my note for the milkman in an empty bottle, as usual, and then cover note, bottle and all with a plastic* bag and it is dry when he arrives.—MRS. R. F. E. DEAR POLLY - I learn something from the column ev- SRESHUI goes a long way to give you 4UISTOMOLEANING at regular prices! Htrt are just a few examples why aur. customers reture year after year, after yean e ORESIUM taket the time at no additional charge to retack all leete garment tininge. e eSESIMM repioeet l^en er milting button!, e eafSIMM will mend year hroken belt leopi . . . and much, much more. That's why we tay— "If* The little rhiags Thai Conat at Gresham" 605 Ooklond Avnue FE 4-2579 Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence L. Ashby of Ha-zelton Avenue, Avon Township, announce the engagement of their daughter, Patricia Mar-tell to James E. Periso, son of the Etnest R. Perisos of Auburn' Heights. May 22 has been selected for vows. Smorgasbord ief Saturday of Church The Newman A.M.E. Church will sponsor Its first annual community Smorgasbord dinner at 7 p.m. Saturday, in the Bethune School on Lake Street. * * ★ The Women’s Fellowship of the church is completing arrangements. w ★ ♦ Featured qteaker will be the Hon. Otis M. Smith. State of Michigan Supreme Court, w * * Judge Smith received his bachelor of laws degree from the Catholic University, Washington, D.C. He was admitted to practice in Michigan in Jan. 1951 and appointed to State ofHce in 1957. ♦ ♦ * He has been with the Michigan Suprenne Court since Oct. 9,1964. (!✓ ...and the eyw! Do ywnnjoytM unique aiNIC-quility comkiMhen St fuhion, 91 i oomfortf You’ll low HI |95tol295 PAiirs SHOE STORE 35 N. Sajfinaw Street THE BOSS ORDERS LIQUIDATION!! All 11 gigantk World Wide Stores are clearing oot aH floor models and odd discontinued stock at dealers cost and in most cases below cost. No reasonable offer will be refused. SAVINGS NEVER BEFORE OFFERED ...PljS...WE>BE GIVING^ II ORIROrnilTABLETV (rtf This rose-design rug In easy and charm to any room. Woiic rug in easy single crochet. Use two colors or combine black or white with a color. Pattern 909: chart; directions for crocheted rug. Thirty-five cents in coins for this pattern — add 15 cents for each pattern for Ist-class mailing and special handling. Send to Laura Wheeler, ’The Pontiac Press, 124 Necdlecraft Dept., Box 161, Old Chelsea Station, New York N. Y. 10011. Print Pattern Number, Name, 1965 Needlecraft Catalog-200 designs. 3 free patterns! MORE to crochet, knit, sew, embroider. 25 cents. •'Decorate with Needle-craft’’—fabulous, new book , jiaclwd,*Uli-2S.4al^^ top decorator accessories shown in 5 idea-filled rooms. Applique coordinates, pillows, wall hangings, more. 50 cents. Send for superb Quilt Book —16 complete patterns. 50 cents. The All New Modern I.HWJRIAL’tiiiv.v IVrnian«*n!» Tinting & Bleaching 1^8 Anburn Ave.. Oppoth* Parkhnr.1 .«l. Hair SiyUmg A* UHi^tH,» H2 PARK FREE FE 4-2878 Rllow-Puff There's easy to wear slip-on styling in this built-for-walking wedge heel Pillow-Puff* casual. J'oam cushioning provides cloud soft comfort. Treat tourself to a pair soon. PLUS YOU GET - YOUR •CHOICE PORTABLE TV OR • CONSOLE STEREO 10*Pc LIVING ROOM 8*Pc BEDROOM SUITE 5*Pc DINETTE SET WESTINQHOUSE REFRIGERATOR DETROIT JEWEL OAS RANGE (PER WEEK IS ALL YOU PAY AT WORLD WIDE ALL FOR ONLY 4389 INCLUDES FREE • PORTULETVur • CORSOLE STEREO PORTARLE TV OR CORSOLE STEREO ^ PLATFU«M «0CKERS1 Exactly a* Shotvn I NOW 11-GIGANTIC LOCATIONS IN MICHIGAN 1 -Pontiac ★ 4-Flint ★ E-Lansing ★ 1 -Port Huron 1 -Saginaw ir 1-Bay City 1-Battla Craek RECUNERS NO MONEY DOWN USE «U THE CREDIT TOO REED WfQRLD IDE •; ^'V.WIDE HOME FURNISHINGS 5050 DIXIE HWT. MunH HMS iMinK Gtinn 1 THE PONTIAC PRBS$, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 24. 1965 Sheriff Gets Aid Offers in Selma Struggle B-« SELMA, Ah. (AP) — Sheriff! “I have gained up to 225 on James G. Clark, ieaniog hack in these sandwicfaes an4 milk,” the Ws chair at his courthouse of-to, -Id ^ ton .to P-- sms wanting to help Mm stopj he has aneste^hundreds of Ne-the Negro demonstrations hereigroes. had been coming fnnn naany I “I think it is very good,” -the ^as of Alabama. I sheriff said, “that I am the only > “I have had offers from sur- person who has been injured in rounding counties and some............. ftem halfway across the state — people wanting to come in here,” the big, soft-spoken sheriff said. dark had .plastered the bulletin board in his outer ofSce with dozens of telegrams, clippings and letters from persons favoring his stand others denouncing him. On his desk were three stacks of letters. It appeared there were about 200 letters altogeth- this.” He was struck in the face by a Negro woman during a w * * demonstration. I “That’s the day’s mail,” NEGRO INJURED Ctok raid. (tot, toe™,, totodd hi. ■•ton. poq.!. hnv. .(tend » whether I ought to say that” clergyman during CLA*« PRAISED went on flngwhw a St d deinonstratloo last Others praising dark came letters 0^ his cluttoed desk i!T°® California; Washington, “I have told them to stay' "I’ve got a pli^ nerve InjaC ; MiairU Fla^ D^it, out» my neck and a fracture of my | Mich., and Tulsa, Okla. Ihere cprBirrATiftMi«n>! I ^ i ''*** * ®I • newspaper SEGREGATIONISTS to turn loose my stick. He ran' Clark said that if he had not over another man and fell down discouraged such offers from' and split his lip,” Clark raid, angry segre^tionists,. then vio- ★ w ★ The sheriff said he had no objection to Negroes registering to ^ vote. “What I can’t understand for is their methods,” he said. Clark charged that some of editorial criticizing Clark and carrying a jdioto of the sheriff. Stuck into the sherifTs pictures were six straight pins. “Most shameful exhibition since Hitler’s regime,” read a telegram from a man in St. Paul, Minn. The sholff said bis mall was running about 70 per cent in his favor. Cardinal Cushing Said to Be Better BOSTON (AP) - Physicians r* JjJJj Two Frostbite Experts Treat Avalanche Victim KETCHIKAN, Alaska, (AP) - ’Two experts in the treatment of frwlbite were called )n from ry exercise in central Alaska to help a man who lived 78 hours under an avalanche. Drs. W. T. Mills and W. Sud-gen arrived from Ft. Rich- attending Ridtard Cardinal Cushing, Roman Catholic archbishop' of Boston, have expressed satisfaction and opti-.- ^ „ n.™ 0^ hi. major abdommai surgery de-, attending Einar Myilyla of Win-spite a slight setback in his con- nipeg, Canada, and Kemi, Fin-dition. , land. M-Week Unit Named The IS9-year-old prelate’s re-LANSING (AP)—Fbrmation of covery has been retarded by an Midiigan Week council of service .clubs has been announced by Stephen Czamecki, governor of the Michigan District of........... The service clubs will band together for year-around promotion of Michigan, the announcement said. asthmatic condition, according to a bulletin issued ’Tuesday by the chancery office. intestine was removed in a 3W hour operation Saturday. The section contained a growth known as polyps. ASTHMA McrarttM neurrlac •tuck* of Branehlal and mueuf ooDcmUoa from raofa eoutt, ■Urt UklndlBfDAOOtoeombMoUmr, loooon and help muore eho"- •Dd thiie preiMto freer hi mere reettul sleep. Meet Negro Extremists Ccin Be Influential in Crisis NEW YOR K(AP) - The vio-kooe that flared in rival Negro Muslim groups in the past three days involved just two of more thu a dozen organisations active in the secretive world of N^ro extremism. tha exception of Elijah Muhammad’s Chicago-baMd Black Muslims, whose New York mosque was destroyed by an explosion and fire Tuesday, most groups of any strength have headquarters in New York. f * ★ Police in a number of major American cities indicate tliat extremist groups command al- thre handful of Negroes. Because the groups often refuse to say much about themselves, it is almost impossible to get accurate membership figures. Four years ago the New York Times estimated that perhaps only 2,000 of this city's rme million Negroes were members of extremist groups, compared with 25,000 due^ying members of the NAACP. the proportion is believed to be considerably less in all other cities. OUT OF PROPOR'nON Yet officials agree that the influence of extremists can, in times of crisis like last summer’s riots, be out of proportion to the number of persons involved. In New Ywk City last summer, at least 17 black nationalist groups were members of a coordinating body called the African NaUonalist Federated Council. ★ * * Most of these organizations WALTER T. GAY Officers Installed in Ceremonies at City Shrine Club At recent ceremonies of the Pontiac Shrine Club hdd at the Waldron Hotel. Walter T. Gay, 2523 Empire, West Bloomfield Township, was installed as president. The oath of office was^dmfe- -istered by Moslem Temple’: potentate, Harold Ling of De-troit. Staff officers installed at tlw same time include Clparles R. Keathley, first vice president William A. Baggett, second vice president; Fay M. Magner, treasurer; and T. E. Amos, secretary. antiwhite, and believed the American Negro could gain freedom only by linking his fate with that of rising African and Asian nations. “The white man has never given us anything without out- side ixeasure,” said a national- have states’' for an all-black nation. The Muslims have claimed as many as 200,000 members. OUi-er estimates put active membership as low as 5i500. Rallies o(>en to the non-Muslim public ist speaker at a summer rally. “We can never get anywhere in this country by ourselves, because we are a minority. But what the white man doesn’t underhand b that black jteople are a majority in the world. We must look to people who are our color.” VARYING LINES JOlt. along varying lines. Some, like the various Muslim ^ups are oriented toward religion. Others are primarily political. An example is Hariem’s Progressive Labor Movement, headed by selj-proclaimed Communist William Epton. A few tiny groups appear to be little more than individual attempts to gain personal power. Some, like the Cultural Association for Women of African Heritage, are primarily social. Historically, many are offshoots of the llarcus Garvey “Back to Africa” movement of the early 1900s. Garvey, a Jamaican Negro, counseled American Negroes against integration. He was convicted of mail fraud in 1923, deported, and died in 1940. Harlem still annually celebrates Marcus Garvey Day. About half of the Negro extremists are believed to belong to the Bla(^ Muslims, properly known as the Lost-Found Nation of Islam. Formed in 1930, it preaches complete separation of blacks and whites. ALL-BLACK NA’HON Wiry, 67-year-old Elijah Muhammad, who has led the group since 1933, says the United 500 in St. Louis, 7,000 in Chicago and 9,000 in Philadelphia. WWW Although they claim to oppose violence, members occasionally have been iitvcrived in serious clashes with police. And, a number of former members have charged that a strong internal police force — the Fruit of Ts-is used to keep wayward members in line. Chicago’s police, however, say they have “no problem with them whatsoever,” adding, “as matter of fact, they seem to go out of their way to avdd trouble.” SOW DISCOIU) The Black Muslim dpctrine teaches that whites are “devils” created 6,000 years ago by genetic manipulation to sow discord in an all-black world. Muslim members profess an ascetic life. Smoking, drinking, gambling, violence except in self-defense, and all forms of vice are forbidden. WWW Their most famous defector was Malcolm X, an urbane light-skinned Negro who was shot to death as be stood on the stage of the Audubon Ballroom 'in Manhattan Sunday. Malcolm, who formed the rival Muslim Mosque, Inc., said lie was expelled fltra Muhammad’s group a year ago because some of its leaders felt he was getting too powerful. SECOND GROUP Malcolm also organized a second group, the Organization of Afro-American Unity, to appeal to non-Muslims who would ac- should meet violence with vio-nce. Although he was an effective and colorful speaker, it generally was believed his groups had not reaHy gottoi off the ground, w w w -poiate-ew- which mart such groups agree, are that Negroes must pool economic and political resources into power blocs, and that they must not look to whites for help. “There is no use deceiving ourselves, Malcolm X once said. “Good education, housing and jobs are imperative for the Negroes. But th^ cannot solve the main Negro problem.” CONSIDERAKJ: POWER Other New York nationalist groups include the United African Nationalist Movement, founded in 1948 by its current leader, James Lawson, 46. Lawson says his group, which he describes as antiwhite and for meeting violence with violence, has less than 100 mem- bers, but adds* “oiir influence is considerably more.” WWW The Muslim Brotherhood, which claims to be the true Muslims and is hostile to Muhammad’s Black Muslims, has a membership estimated at les-s than 100. Detroit is believed to have less than 400 active Black Muslims. Bosfam, the only other city reporting any followers of Malcolm X, is believed to have not more than 50 Bl^ Muslims with minor influence in the Negro community. Police say that if Chkags baa any other extremist groups, thw are “veiY minor.” * * Los Angeles police report fewer than 500 Black Muslims, with negligible influence, and “two or three” tiny extremist groups known to ei^t last November. San Francisco police report a small Black Muslim unit of mi-M»' influence in the community. DR. HU^T H. CURSON — Foot Specialist — Announces the Removal of His Offices to $36 WEST HURON STREET (next to pvUna lot of Betluuiy Baptist Chwch) Hours by Appoi-ktment FE 5-6}29 > VINYL inlaid ) LINOLEUM l a PAINT, ALL COLORS 1 IH inm VINYL Bf[|^ linoleum $1.00 09 Yd. 1 VINYL RUNNER ,4.x. NOW *1?® ' CLOSE-OUT VINYL TILE 5.-. , WE LOAN TOOLS - EXPERT INITALUTION - FREE EIT1IIATES SMITH’S TILE OUTLET FE 4 4266 •''TVh« 736 W Huron St OPEN DAILY 10-10, SUN. 12-7 THURSDAY. FRIDAY, SATURDAY and SUNDAY States should turn over “several cept his teachings that Negroes DOUBLE D DISCOUNT CENTER^S PRICE-BUSTINC SPECIAtl VIEWMASTER SALE terrific Discounts Now on Sawyer's 3-D Equipment Keep 3-D Reels Clean and Safe LIBRARY BOX Free Demonstration Reel w/Pnrchase 3-D VIEWER BUFFERIN TABLETS 4 ■ r M2-37 volaa. 225 tobUtt for fa«» ra-| I DISCOUNT |liaf<»fpoindu.toe6ld.,.fc. I CENTER , lyjjLi Here’s a sturdy polystyrene storage box which will efficiently hold a 3-D viewer and hundreds of 3-D reels. 3-Day sale! 2 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU! OXFORD; i south Washington ST^nr n/«Nl-PI*n COPXtN OF SACIHAIN AH3 lAWNtHC rUNTIAu; In PonliAC SlAtr Bank Bid; Charge Hours of fascinating entertainment are yours with this 3-D viewer. You’ll want to start your own qpllection of thrilling subjects. 3-Day sale! for spring IT’S BURGUNDY T>1E BtAUTIFULlY LUSTROUS SHADES Of THE SEASON'S SPRIGHTUEST CaOR ARE VERY MUCH IN EVIDENCE IN OUR r>tp* wTAir^T_____ VBf-WfaYIn cri TT BURGUNDY. BURGUNDY AND MORE BURGUNDYI AMONGST OUR HUNDREDS AND HVNP>iEDS OF SAMPUS. FOR SUITS, SPORTCOATS AND SLACICS. • WOOLS. SILKS. KENOS -r CHOOSE YOUR fAM RANDOLPH mutmtijxh CUSTOM TAILORS and CLOTHIERS UNIFORA4S -AFTER SIX- TUXEDO RENTALS 90s W. Huron at Talagraph, Pontiac E4.auuuuLum.tiM i utux.u.1 jmujuuuC Manufacturers Closeout on Viewmaster FINE 3-D REELS 3-D ReaUsm in Brilliant Color 3-REEL PACKETS i f4 for 1.25! 1 \ Your choice 1 of any 6 1 ^ reels while tn : quantity lasts. ■ 68a GLENWOOD PLAZA 21 Thrilling 3-dhnensional scenes in each packet Selection of many subjects including {Hipular TV personalities, travel, science and others. 3-Day Sale! |25 HR Charge It NORTH PERRY STREET CORNER GLENWOOD ■r THE PUNTIAg PHKSS. VVEDyESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1965 B—7 Open id to 10 Pally * Sun., 12 to 7 WED., THUBS., FBI.f SAT, and SUN. WASH 'N WEAR COnON DRESSES Sizes 7-12 at 2.22 Sizes 34X Anuzing price for such quality shirts! New ; quick-dry, no-iron Dacron Pblyester Tricot : wash 'n wear dress shirts with spread collar. : Siaes 14-17. Get set at savinp. Limited time only! A preview peek of firls’ new fashions for sprins! 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WEDN^^SDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1963 mmsL Counters Prospect of Lower Defense Spending Nongovernment Business Growing in Aircraft-Aerospace Field fEditor’s Note - With fevaer defense corOraets, the leaders of the nation’s aircfaft-aero-space industry look to the development of new commercial planes and new frontiers of science to keep the industry busy in the years ahead. AP business news writer Roger Lane reports on talks with industry leaders in the following story, second tn a four-part series.) * * * By ROGER LANE AP Bosineti News Writer LOS ANGELES — “Assuming progressively lower national defense budgets, the aero-space industry jit l^st will remain stable, quite possibly decline,” said Dudley Browne, group vice president of Lockheed Aircraft Corp. “But major problems ronain in Viet Nam, Cuba, the Berlin corridor. Africa, the Middle East, China and in Seutii America. It is hard to foresee what today’s assumptions may look like tomorrow.” * ★ * Browne noted the industry also is riourished by important commercial demand, stands on frontiers of science and invention that conceivably could lead to big-scale exploitation of the oceans and electronics applications. His view typifies industry reaction to recurrent talk of a major shrinkage in the offlng for the nation’s 1.1-million man, ■^billion a year aircraft-aerospace complex. WORK CUTBACK A management consultants firm foresaw recently a 15 per cent cutback in government work by 1970, and one estimate envisioned a 25 per cent qut-teek. Relaxed totemational tali' sions and a downward drift in arms spending were cited. Uncle Sam is the industry’: No. 1 customer, accounting fort about 85 per cent of revenues, but nongovernment business is growing. Head men at the Boeing Co. and Douglas Aircraft Co., ranking one-two as commercial plane builders, in interviews begged off prophecy on future defense spending. They stressed expanding horizons ot dvil passenger and cargo flight. Boeing’s order ba^log is over 60 per cent commercial, Douglas’ about 45 per cent comirier-cial. QUITE BULUSH’ “We’re quite bullish,” said Donald W. Douglas Jr. As president of Douglas he directs a May Lead to E. German Recognition Ulbricht's 1st Visit to Non-Red Nation BERLIN (AP) - On his trip to *^-gyp*i Walter inhrirht is taking his first state visit to a nonCommunist country. The stocky leader of East (Germany’s Communist party can consider President Gamal Abdel Nasser’s invitation a personal victory. In the past, even the most left-leaning neutral countries have held back from associating too closely with one of the Kremlin’s most accomplished helpers. The fact that these and other nations have refused to-grant full recognition to his regime has been irking Ulbricht, especially since he must constantly find ways with which he can improve his own image and stature within the Communist community. CONSTANT SCHEMES He has constantly schemed and pushed toward being recognized, seemingly disregarding the obstacles placed in his paths G5 3-ROOM OUTFIT JUNK CARS WANTED USED AUTO PARTS FOR SALE FE 2-0200 by the West, chiefly the West ftprmnn... gnvpmmpnt which maintains it has the only legal right to speak for the entire German nation. Scheming and perseverance are among Ulbricht’s main personal assets. ★ * -V “Look into his eyes and you will see how scheming and dishonest he is,” said Germany’s most famous woman Communist, the late Clara Zetkin, about Ulbricht back in the 1920s. Ulbricht had just finished his first ax job for Joseph Stalin by chopping up Germany’s big, independent Communist party into small cells easily controlled by the Kremlin. ALWAYS SURVIVES Since then, his uncanny abili' ty to follow and survive every nuance in the Kremlin line had made him one of Moscow’s most valuable functionaries. Bom in Leipzig^Jie joined^! Socialists at 19 and became a union orgffiizer.' # * Later in Berlin, he joined Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht in forming the Spar-tacus Society that became the German Communist party in 1920. With the passage of time and the cutting down of numerous comrades, he became the Kremlin’s man. ★ * * He is married for the second time and has a daughter. 2 i Beechnut Founder Dies J FX)RT LAUDERDALE, Fla. B I (AP) — Raymond P. Lipe, 94, a ■ ; founder of the Beechnut Compa- ■ j ny in 1891, died Monday. He also 2 I was a grain shipper and finan-g cier during World War 1 and ■ I lived in Toledo, Ohio, for 60 ■ ■ 1 years. company on the rebound from a severe wrenching diat has left employment and sales at roughly one half the levels of the mid-1958s. , In a major gamble, Douglas has just entered a 1X^9 short- to intermediate-range jet airliner in competiticp for a market timated at up to $2 billion and 1,-000 planes over 10 years. ★ ★ ★ The $3-million 56- to 90-passenger craft would be mostly; for feeder airlines. ’The Britl^ Aircraft Corp. already is selling a plane for this service, and Boeing probably will bring out a model for the same market. Of gloomy forecasts for the industry, a Boeing official observed that the company was founded in 1916, and add^: “If at any time in the past 50 years you had asked 'what will you be making flve years from now?’ the answer would have to have been, based on programs in progress, ‘Of course, we’ll be broke.’ ” VISIONARY PROGRAMS Underscoring the same point, Brovme enumerated seven major programs Lockheed is seeking totaling possibly $12 billion in future business, mostly in areas a layman would regard as visionary. re a 2,000-mile- an-hour conunerdal airlind;, two military transportter, an intercontinental missile, a space laboratory, and a rocket * w * Despite a fat current backlog of business, Lockheed was backing up its bids with huge and manpower investments, knowing much of the spending would avail nothing in gambles that at l>est would land two or three sizable jackpots of business — or maybe none. Browne said that over three yeare Lockheed had laid million of its own funds, beyond receipts from government study contracts, to position itsdf to compete for business now in hand or soon to be awarded. SUPERTRANSPORT The company In the last three years has had an average of 300 engineers and designers working on its concept of a supersonic transport, the plane intended cut transatlantic travel to 2% hours in the 1970s. The sales potential is thought by some to amount to at least 2T0 planes at $40 million apiece. ★ ★ ★ Since early 1963, Lockheed has kept up to 700 engineers and technicians toiling on a military transport The craft, capable of carrying >800 armed btmps or 120 tons of cargo at 800 miles an hour, could bring $750 million or more in development contracts and production orders in the $l-bil-lion to $2-billion range. Boeing is working just as fev-olshly and at similar cost to land both contracts. Also zeroing in on the military plane is Douglas, which has teamed in its bid with North American Aviation and Martin-Marietta (k)rp. Fierce hunger of all three -competitors for the military plane program is whetted by suggestions that after military needs are met a cimunercial adaptation — either for passengers, cargo or a combination of the two — might offer lucrative possibilities in the 1970s. ★ ★ * Boeing’s worldwide dominance in jet airliners is traced by many observers to trailblaz-ing contracts for a direct military ancestor, the jet tanker-1 transport. Boeing made 820 of them over a decade. In the intensifying military craR rivalry, Boeing is trying to I play down its mounting prosper-']" ity,Douglas to “poor relation” status from which It Is emerging and Lock-'f Sewing wa$ Introduced to heed a kind of share-the-wealth ton public schools In 17*9, giv-appeal. -I mg New England the oldest tra- Nttt: Effects of defense cut- dition of definite home training backs. I in America, NEWl REDUCE lAf find LOSE ^UP TO 6 LBS. A WEEK CAPSULES! Easier to take and nruiie effective than the powdered arxl liquid food supplement, and costs less including (^psules suited to you INDIVIDUALLY by Lie. Physician, MO No Gastritis or irregularity with Medic-Way caps. DON'T DIET —JUST EAT! As thousands have done, you can lose 5, 50 or 100 lbs. and KEEP If OFF! MEDIC-WAY MEDIC WAY 335-9205 ta OaktaM aa< Wayaa Caai EVERY SAVINGS DOLLAR EARNS GOMPIHHIDED AND PAID QUARTERLY WITH BANK SAFETY Ndtional | Bank MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT l.ysURA.\CE CORPORATION NEW FROMSIMER DUST BUIE LIBBET GLASSES in the beautiful new inside every box! e Exelusiv* Libb«y Wildflower design glasses-yours inside every box. • Qreeeful elessic shepe-3 populer sixes. • Easy to collect complete sets. A wash so white you know it’s clean! Silver Dust Blue gets even the dirtiest clothes extra white-turns out a wash you can be proud of every time! For the —whltestwash/theioveMest glasses,piBnver TO Detergent. Get a box today-and save. 7* OFF Regular Size Silver Dust with juice glass inside Don’t miss this chance! Now—save 7g and find out how wonderful Silver Dust is for whiter washes and lovely Libbey glasses. Specials on other sizes, too! 15c 6ff Gianf Size. 258 off King Size. Look for the epecially marked 7i off package* in your local etoree! tAe I^ONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESpAY, FEBRUARY 24, 19C5 B^ll U S. Secretive on Laos WASHINGTON (AP) - The Defense Department seems to be trying to tighten secrecy around U.S. air operations against the Communists in Laos. It took four days, with considerable prodding from newsmen, for the Pentagon to acknowledge Tuesday that Air Force Maj. Robert F. Ronca,.41, of over Laos “on a routine mission.” This was in marked contrast to the handling ofpast incidents in Laos since Uiis country’s Navy and Air Force jets started last May to conduct reconnaissance and strike operations against requisitions and supply- reinforcement routes in Laos. Jan. B, Asat. Secretary of Defense Arthur Sylvester volunteered the infcmnation that an FlOO and an F1Q6, both Air Force fighter bombers, had been shot domiJn central Laos by ground fire. Nov. 21, the Defense Depart-mmt put out an aonouneonent that an RFlOl reconnaissance by ground Are, in southern to south central Laos. Nov. 18, Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara wound up a news conference on base closings with a 'surprise announcement that an FlOO had been downed by ground fire in rou^ly that same part of Laos “while escorting one of our reconnaissance aircraft.” In all, seven U.S. Navy and Air Force jets have bem identified officially as downed in Laos since U.S. air operations began over that vital Southeast Aston country. Five of the seven pilots were rescued. The other two, including Ronca, were killed. Their bodies were recovered. Although the U.S. government won’t talk about K, there have been strong indications that U.S. jets have been flying re-peated reconnaissance and bomb-rocket missions against Communist targets in Laos--many more such missions than have been admitted. Bill to Allow Elderly Sales Tax Refund LANSING (UPI) - Rep. Edward K. Michalski. D-Detroit, yestoday Introduced a bill into the House that would make elderly citisens eli(dble for a refund on the 4 per cent state sales tax. Michalski said it seemed to him the best plan so far introduced to help “these people, who have lived most of their years in financial support of the tax base Under this bill, the refunds would go to males over 65 and females over 62 who are on pensions, oid-age assistance or receive low income. West to Appear at Inquiry LANSING (AF) -Rep.-elact Daniel West, D-Detroit, has been subpoenaed to appear at a public inquiry into his qualifications in Detroit Friday, Rep. Albert Kramer, D-Oak Park, said Tuesday. West has noj been seated because be has been indioted with 117 counts of income tax law violations. He also has been charged with voting irregularities, forgery and impersonation. * Sr * Kramer, chairman of a committee whidi has been investi-ating West’s qualifications since mid-January, said other witnesses have t)Mn subpoenaed and documentary evidence will be brought in from outside the state. West, be said, will be able to cross-examine witnesses and to call witnesses in his own behalf, “if dtey have testimony whi^ is revelant to the subject of the committee’s inquiry.” Kramer issued a progress report on the committee’s investigation. House Minority leader Robert Waldron, R-Grosse Pdnte, has been trying to get him to do this since the early part of the legislative session. Many of the minority Repub Ream ham been br^g to speed the committee’s work, so West’s seat could be fUled in a special election in Detrdt April 5 if he is disquaUfied. Democrats, refusing to be rushed, said the electien was secondary 1o~assuring^~ fair hearing and setting proper precedents. U S MOST KAciincm imioKT imnuMi vuskt: REG. 1.00 LARGE TUBE HEAD sad SHOULDERS SHAMPOO Eliminates embarossing dandruff. fhe,Ac/upt(on^Speaui£i^ Bloomfield Miracle Milo Shopping Center-S> Telograph Tel-Huron CBntor, S S. Telograph-Pontiac Mall Shopping Center, N. Telegraphy Birmingham, Maple at Woodward «-Rochestar, 1451 N. Main I I Ibani 22 PC. ELECTRIC HAIR CUPPER SET WITH ATTACHMENTS REG. 9.99 — ^ Complete with ! lostrated booklet showing how to give pro- fessionol hair cuts ot home. h\ *f6. 39 f IP? ^4srt QUALITY - ALL PURPOSE SCATTER RUG ASS’T. COLORS Attroctive scotter rugs, for every room in the house, in on assortment of beautiful striped or solid decorotor colors. FOR LiVlHC ROOM, i It OVAL- COVEIIbl «o»smi6rM! 1.66 Blue baked HoldslSpoundfOwlorlS pound roost. Regular 1.98 RED TAG SPICIAl 9 01. BAG SPANGLER CIRCUS nANUTS 1 Daliciouf, toste-I tempting morsh-1 mollow I RED TAG PRICE fORWt MOHIX SAVVHw ■ yoUR CHOICt. rocKT MCRS ‘ 3'“79‘ I PtPKWNttWIj IIEMD i M COMPUTE WUSCRIWIOM SERVICE the lOWEST rossiiit n\a COSSISTEHT WITH THE . highest OUAltTT" '^ SHOP oid COMPARE ’F .."•i i«r >»»•' «»■ *>'> r»r “«’»r REG.596 ^ RENUZIT aireresheher 7-OZ. ASS’T. FRAGRANCES 2“83*- REG. 3.51 ABDEC VITAMIN DROPS 50CC REG. 69t PHILLIPS’ I Mill Bf MAGNESIA^ REGULAR OR MINT , PACKAGE OF 7 ^ERSONNA STAINLESS STEEL INJECTOR BLADES 2.19i:»49< RED TAG PRICE 79* ISolaDoys Thru Sun. Add Fed. tax where oppi icoble. We reserve the right to limit quohtitiesj ham's FOR A SHOPPERS SNACK OR DINNER OUT! CUNNINGHAM’S DRUe STORES HIGHLAND GRILL ROOM fwPONTIACMAU eTEL-HURON • MIRACLE MILE 06' DRUG STORES B-l» THE PONTIAC PBESS, WEDNESDAYI FEBRUARY 24, 1065 Commissioners Cite Tax Need / Tack Funds for'Youth Rehabilitation, Police' More W «nforceinent and Job training for youth were the key points in two statements last ni^t on Pontiac’s hwoma tax. Following the practice of recent weeks, two city commissioners, Wesley J. Wood and James H. Marshall, issued policy statem««t8 last night. Wood said the city’s size 1 jand the dafly velnme at traffic make law enforcement dif-ficnlt. “The city finances under the present tax base will not provide additional officers for this important work.’’ he said. ★ ★ ★ Wood maintained that additional police officers are necessary to give Pontiac citizens the protection they should have. CITIZEN FRUSTRA’nON Said the District 6 commissioner, “If the needed officers cannot be provided, the frustrations of our citizens will c«i-tinue and the present high accident rate will increase.” Marshall said that a lack of funis prdiibits the city from offering programs that cooM aid the rehabilitation of yoaagF*^- “■ITie funds for this purpose pan only be obtained by broadening the tax base and tax reform,” he said. ★ * ★ Marshall, new District 7 commissioner, said the income-Uct would enable many social programs including child recreation programs and rehabilitation of young people. ARE POWERLESS “Without the necessary funds, city officials are powerless to turn some of the unfortunate -“TSSar^ch are present in this community,” concluded Marshall. In other income tax talk The city eq>ects to save $1,-377 per year under a new rate for. gas at the sewage treatment plant, it was reported las{ night. The Gty Commission approved a new contract with ’Consumers Power Co. which gives the city facility a new gas rate. Pontiac City Affairs New Gas Rate OK'd for Sewage Plant CoBsamers Power made a study of the treatment plant to deterniiae a “more favor-ahle” rate. Based on 1964 consumption. city officials expect to save |1,-377 annually. * * 0 In other business last night, commissioners accepted dead to property at 165 Cedardale for construction ol the Murphy Park trunk sewer. DEED RECEIVED The deed was received from Willis Brewer and Floyd Mc-Neary. Also last night, a resolution was approved thanUag Rob- ert A. Armstrong for his services on the Pontiac General Board of Trustees. Armstrong, first appointed to the hospital board in 1958, resigned'last week. * a * Rezoning was approved for property on the north side of East Walton betwMn Giddings andPqry , ' ' P^i^TY REZONED The property, slated for multiple .and single-family dwell- ings and a neighborhood shopping center, was rezoned to res-idential-3 and commercial. the extension of water and sewer facilities to the area. In still other business, the commission directed the city attorney to prepare an amuid-ment to an ordinance that woidd eliminate a 319 impounfing fee on city dog owners who have dogs put in the County Animal Shelter. i The County Board of Auditors had requested that the city j make arrangements to collect the fee. ^The board said it was bad pubUc relations for the eounty to collect the dty-«nposed fee, wWch appUed to Pontiac residents but did not apply to other county residents., Eight to ten different bells are usually used in a chime clock. A. Dngan charged that Charles Nasstrom was a one-man committee (^posing the levy. Addressing Nasstrom, Dugan ^ —^gH7-“Vnn-and vour-commit- tee; ’you’re the only one who 4 has done any work. You are Nbe only one to come down here.” ■a * ♦ Nasstrom, who is chaimaan of a self-appointed Citizens Committee on Taxation, denied the charges. •NOT ALONE’ He said he was not the only one to circulate petitions or the only one to come before the commission. Nasstrom repeated that industry would get a tax break with the income levy. City conunissioners denied Nasstrom’s contention. ★ ★ w Commissioner Robert C. Irwin replied; .“You (Nasstrom) missed the point entirely, we went for the income tax because we thought it was a more. equitable way to tax and we’re trying intentionally to change' the basis of taxation." S^Youth's Death Probed in Bloomfield Twp. Bloomfield Township police are investigating the death of a 16-year-old youth from a rifle wound that was apparently self-inflicted. Steven L. Wayland, 5071 Dianna, was found dead in his bedroom about 10:15 last night. ’The youth was living with his mother. His father Wilfiam lives at field Township. Seventy-five per cent of the troops in the American Expendi-tionary Force in World War 11 embarked from Hoboken, New] --Jeraey. ^ •' i USED TO CRY FOR NO REASON AT ALL” Om It till first ekiRfiiMIft daagir tiiaals N«,Wonder a woman feels like crying! Suffocating hot Aasheo one minute: cold, clammy perspiration the next can set —rrerres on edgOi AH-her with fearl Now, proven help!-In doctors’ teats, Lydia E. Pipkham TableU pave remark-am* relief from mid-life hot flftriwa and nervous tensions to woman after woman! Yes, Piiifeham’a dramatically, quickly'MIeved woman’s burden of suffering during the •‘change.” Get famoua, gontio Lydia E. Pbikham ftbMa, today. , ! LAST 4 DAYS TO SAVE »41“ WIRING INSTALLATION COSTS nSTAilATHHI OFFER ENDS SAT. FEB. 27 a UVEI wm!... MVE many deHart on Hm electric dryer ol yeur choke at Hi|hland’s special lew prices this week! . .. SAVE up te SIN on the life el your dryer because Hie Edison Co. will give you FREE torvkc, ineludini tabor end oloctric parts - oven tha motor!... UVE $41 .M wiring installation east this waok. Inslallod troa in any rttidonea up to and including a 4-family dwolling in tija Oatroit Edison sarvictarna. 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Free dalivary, InafaNatioii, aad tarvka laaludad. 'V An Tow Tomomiws -A REFERENCE VOLUME AS EXCITINfi AS TODAY’S NEWSPAFER HEADLINE! Even now, can you remember just how it was last year? . . . How everybody and his brother was going to quit smokinit cigarettes? How Barry Goldwaler was counted a dead polilical duck after the New Hampshire primary? How the glow left Jimmy Hoffa’s face when a jury foreman said “Guilty”? How Christine reappeared in London? There were a thousand events and incidents that already seem dim to all of ns. Think how unfamiliar they will be in a year... ten years... twenty years... to yon, and to your children. That is, unless, just unless, you have captured them now and forever in THE WORLD IN The Cost: Only $3 for a Major Publication That Ordinarily Would Retail for ^8 or More. To obtain THE WORLD IN 1964, send check or money order in the sum of $3 for each copy desired. This coupon is for your convenience— pm wm mm mm mm mm-iHw wma'm^mmmm mm'mmwaorm I I THE WORLD'IN 1964 I THE PONTIAC PRESS r > BOX 66, POUGHKEEPSIE, N.Y. Enclosed Is ---Please send . efTHEWORLDIN1964. I I I CITY AND STATE - ap - A the PONTIAC PREgS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1963 THflff CDLDRS C-, It’s A Pleasure To ; FOOD TOWN I PEOPLE'S * SUPER fVlARKETS V FOOD MARKETS COUPON NO. 7 GOOD THIS WEEK! .S OnKSDNOAn I OKNSUNOAYS I OnNSUffAYS I OfINJtMOAn Bl NOW! Instant ri<«k utith niira rnffflft nftrtar SALE DAYS; WED. thru SUN., Fib. 24-28,1965 100 GOLD BELL GIFT STAMPS plus a 1 pound 10 ounco pockago of SALT Cuupon A*a>1oW« «• Itmrn Wa rattrve tha right to limit quanti tias . . . nona told to daalars or minors. CHASE and SANBORN COFFEE f ORANGE JUICE 6 oz. can STOCKTON TOMATOES 1 lb. 14 oz. con e BOOK MATCHES 50 Count Box 02330435 c—a THE PONTIAC t^ilESS, WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY g4, 1065 Fried Bananas Served With Meat Here W the United SUtet, wiwre we take a yearreund supply of good quality bananas more than half the world's com- nana ripening has developed into But like many other skills In this world, it had to be learned the hard way. In an issue of Le^’s Popular Monthly published in 1886, It was noted. “One great drawback In the banana trade is the heavy losses through the decay of the fruit, either on the voyage or here, in case the market is overstocked." Twenty to 25 per cent of the fruit was inedible by the time It had made its slow trip through the Gulf Stream and np the long Atlantic coasOlne. Most of the bananas on . duce coimtm today show tinge of green at each end. '^t’s because bananas never can reach the golden - yellow stage successfully while still growing on the parent plant. Tree-ripened bananas have poor flavor and usually burst) Fot that reason all bananas are harvested while still green. As quickly as possible, the big stems are stowed in the h^ of refrigerated ships at a temperature averaging about 55 degrees. They get flip VJP. treatment, too, when reach their nudnland destination. They are carefully placed on beds of straw in air-c^itioned rail cars and trucks. Wholesalers ripening rooms are held at a comfortable 58 to 68 degrees depending on the desired speed of ripening. When the bananas finally reach our kitchens, weeks after leaving their tropical hon», they usually need time at room temperature to devel<^ full color and flavor. Of course not all the bananas reach the U.S. Mainland. Millions are eaten right near where they grow, in Latin America and the Caribbean area, and they are shipped to most parts of the non-tropical world. From the test kitchens of the United Fresh Fruit and Vegetable Association come recipes for banana dishes Caribbean style. Fried Bananu 3 firm ripe bananas Butter, margarine or shorty tag Grated Edam cheese Fed bananas and cut in half, cronwise. Fry until golden in butter, marga^ or shortening. Sprinkle with grated Edam cheese. Puerto Ricans sprinkle with t^ native Cheese. Serve as an accompaniment to ham, pork or poultry. Yield: 6 servings. Ify 3 te 4 miuates or datil browned. Remove from heat and drain on paper towels. Serve hot as a meat accompaniment or as a dessert with Lemon Sauce. These may be kept warm in a slow Ofvcn (300 degrees) until ready to serve. Yield: 8 to 10 servings. Conserve Is Yummy ' eadj Make apple - cranberry conserve for your family or for gifts. Quarter ana seed 2 oranges and put through coarse blade of fo^ grinder. Add 2 cups of water and cook 20 minutes, then add 2 cups of fres|> crazies. Lard h Plaific canned ^>|de sauce and sugar, 1 oup of seedless raisins and V4 teaspoon of salt. Cook rapidly, stirring often, until thick. Pour at once into hot stoii-ized jars and seal. Makes 6 cups. Almost 600 double stars were discovered by George Washington Hough, Uth centuiy American astronomer. Did you know that you can take lard right out of the refrigerator and work it Into the flour mixture for p^s^y or biscuits? Without trouble, that is. That’s because lard is the most plastic of an fats end means-that it has a wide range of temperatures at which it’s workable. HAtlKlTEP' OMKKdien? Kitchnnt D«sign«d I in mindi with you i e Free Sstimatee • Deeereterf ' Service e Ne ObUgaOem PONTIAC KITCHEN SPECIALTIES Ml Orohard Lake Ava., t llks. I. ef Tel. Fried Bananas, Bermnda 3 flnh iipn»«iahas 3 tablespoons flour tk teaspoon salt 1-16 teaspoon ground black pepper 2 tablespoons rine 1 tablespoon light brown sugar Peel baiumas and cut in half lengfliwlse. Roll in flour muted with salt and Mack pq>per. Melt butter or margarine in a 10-inch skiUet, in which arrange bananas. Sprinkle with brown su^ar. Fry until browned underneafli. Turn and brown the other side. Serve as a meat accompaniment. Yield: 6 servings. Banana Fritters, Bermuda 1 cup sifted all-purpose fl6ur 2 tablespoons sugar 1 teaspoon double«cting baking powder ^ teasixmn salt hk teaspoon ground mace 1 large egg, lit^tly beaten % ciipmilk 1 tablespoon butter or margarine, melted 3 firm ripe bananas 1 teaspoon fresh lemon juice Sift together into bowl the first 5 ingredients. (Combine egg and milk , and stir into the flour mixture along with butter or margarine. ~ t bananas in crosswise slices Vi-inch thick. Roil in lemon juice to prevent discol(»'. atkMi. Add to the batter. Drop i tablespoon of fritter batter at a time into deep hot fat preheated to 371 degrees. FRIED BANANAS — There couldn’t be an easier, more flavorful accompaniment to ham, pork or poultry than these cheese-sprinkled fried bananas. tfi^tatTice for Meat Pie What’s new? Lattice - T^ped Hamburger Pie! A delicious hamburger - vegetable baseTs over mix; stir B^tly until enhanced by a creamy cottage cheese fillip. ’The cheesy lat--.lice topping a made from a pie crust mix... delicious. LATTICE-’rOPPED HAMBURGER PIE Meat Base m lb. ground beef One 10»i_itt_can omdensed vegetable soup 1 teaspoon salt " “Vi teaspoon pepper Vi cup rolled oats (quick or old fashioned, uncooked) 2 cups creamed cottage cheese 1 60, beaten onelidf 104». pkg. (1 pie crust mix 2 taUespoons Parmesan cheese 2 iMiespoons cold water Gombine meat base ingredi- juce that give off appreciable ents. Press half of mixture into ungreased 2-qt. baking dish. Combine filling ingredients: over meat; press re-I Bteat mixture over fiU- Meaeen pie cmt mix tale bowl; stir in cheese. Sprinkle cold water by^ tablespoonfnls just dampened. (If necessary, lano^r one-half taWe-coM water to make Form Into ball. Roll dough out on lightly floured board or canvas to form 9xl2-iiich rectangle. Chit into V4-inch strips. Lay half the strips across meat base; stripe over and under these. Trim. t * * Bake in preheatod moderate 1375 degrees) abont^ minutes; let stand 5 minutes before cutting. Lettuc* Storage Mixed storage can have some effect on lettuce. This salad green is sensitive to ethylene, and russet spotting appears I when subjected to this gas. Pro- park fRif IN REAP a m 0 un t s of ethylene are: apples, pears, plums, tomatoes, cantaloupes, hpneydew melons ahd avocados. Tl^ore, these fruits should not be stored in the same area with lettuce. HOFFMAN’S PONTIAC FREEZER FOODS, Inc. itOet »4 OAMLMHe PACeiHC QUALITY MEATS AND PRODUCE AT WMOllSAlf PRICES H 526 N. PERRY ST. uistavi thi u* t h 4 Doily — 9-to 9 Frtdoy FE 2-1100 tHE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 24, 1965 C-^ These Three Recipes Considered Low in Fat Content Are Both Tasty and Different In these days of wei(^t consciousness, many modern Americans have come home from their doctors’ offices with low calorie diets. Food |»«paration may then suddenly pose a |vob-lem to the homemaker, especially in the dessert lihe. Following are three recipes providing a solution to this problem. Apple Betty is truly easy and delicious, with its layers of apples and sugared com flakes. Cinnamon mixed with brown sugar is spriakled throaghoat. Just bake until the apples are favorite lemon sauce. Special K Phffs are light de- lectable cookies that fairly melt in your mouth. Beating the egg whites until almost stiff is the secret of the lightness. Add sugar gradually, then fold in ready-to-eat high protein cereal. With the variations listed here, you can serve these Puffs fw any occasion. Special K Puffs and sherbet after Barbecued Crusty Chicken. Use the familiar dip- roll — bake method of prep- Dip pieces of chicken in barbecue sauce, roll in crisp ctnn flake crumbs, and bake on a foil lined pan. No need to cover the pan or1 turn chicken pieces while baking. The result is tender, tangy chicken, dime to a turn, with no fat added. Even if you don’^ follow a low calorie diet these recipes are handy to have, easy to make, and good to the taste. Apfde Betty 4 cups sugared com flakes 1 cup brown sugar, firmly pmdced 2 teaspoons cinnamon 5 cups sliced, raw apples Crush cereal flakes slightly. Sprinkle bottom of tail-inch pan with part of the cinnamon and sugar. Spread a third of thp^api-irfes in layer over cinnanwn and sugar. Sprinkle lightly with more sugar and add cinnamon. Cover with half the crushed cereal. Repeat until there are 3 layers of apples and 2 layers of cereak Bake m moderate oven (375 degrees) about 40 minutes w until apples are tender. Serve hot or cold w^ Lenoon Sauce. Yield: 6 servings. Special K Puffs 2 egg whites 14 teaspoon salt % cup sugar ~ H te«spnon vanilla flavoring # cups ready-to^at Iilgh-i^fe-tein cereal Beat egg whites and salt with rotary beater until almost stiff. Add vanilla. Add sugar gradually, beating well after each addition. Fold in cereal. Drop by taUespoonfuls onto well-greased baking sheet. Bake in moderate oven (350 degrees) about 15 niinutes. Remove from pan immediately. Yield: about 3 dozen Puffs, 2 inches in diameter. VariatioBS Brown sugar: Substitute % cup brown sugar, flr^y. pecked iorgramilatectsngar:\ Coconut; Add cup flaked coconut with cereal. Date; Add % cup finely cut, pitted dates with cereal. Pecan: Add % cup chopped pecan meats with cereal. Cinnamon: Add V« cup red cinnamon candiesb Purina Dog Chew^ 2S-lh. SAG SATISFIES A DOG'S NATURAL APFITITI ^3V4-01. 2 Pock - VEGETABLE BEEF Upton Soup pVg“'3^9 2 Roll Pock BATHROOM TISSUE - SPECIAL LABEL Aurora Tissue Pkg. 25‘ 14-ox, PKG. NABISCO TASTY PfCAN Shortbread Cookies Pkg. 49‘ 2 Pock CHICKEN VEGETABLE Upton Soups 39 Gallon Battia FOR SMOOTHER IRONING Roman Starch Benia PKG.^LSTON BREAKFAST CEREAAL Chex Mates 49* ...sr lOO-ft. ROLL.THRIFTY FOR YOUR FAMILY Strong Kwik Wrap roii 19‘ Qt. BOTTLE AUNT JANES KOSHER ^ Dill Gherkins jar 49‘ Pt 6-01 BOTTLE PALMOLIVE FAST ACTINQ Liquid Detergent sottia 66‘ CDairy Specials A 2% Low Fat, Low Calorie Milk Sealtest VITA-LURE MILK u 37 Vi Cal. Ctn. ____ Half the Fot/Coloriea of Homopentxoti Milk Country Kitchan Amarican ar Pimanta M. ^ C Sliced Cheese Pk,' 85 Saalleil A Orange Drink ’'ij;'' 3y 3^roien S^alues . Meadowdalc Frozen Cut Green Beans 'x*“39* Maadowdala Staw MM- Vegetables 39* 50-cL PKG. SANDWICH BAGS - KEEPS FOOD FRESHER Plastic Baggies Pkg. 29* Mb. 4-01. BOX ALL-PURPOSE SAFE SUDS Ajax Detergent bok 33‘ Pt 6-ox. BOTTLE MILD TO YOUR HANDS Lux Liquid Bottia 53* Ot 1-01. BOTTLE FABRIC SOFTENER Nnal Touch ..HuSr 3-lb. -BOX HELPFUL LAUNDRY AID Extra Fluffy "all" 79* Mb. PKG. DARES FRESH AND CRISP Best-O-Bics Cookies Bkg. 49* 12-ox. BTL. ONE CALORIE GINGERALE •Vernors Sr,' J2iutu.89‘ Pt 6-02. BOTTLE GENTLE - SPECIAL LABEL Fels Liquid 55* WWRRYf rWAL Food Club—Rich in Flavor—Save 3(h mmm P 45 S. TELEGRAPH ot HURON 536 N. PERRY 398 AUBURN AVE. ROCHKmjPtAZA ____ __^ ^ fAMBii M T. w.. 9 t# s AT SAN90RD * 59' TOSSED SALAD OR - ^ FRESH. TENDER ^ ^ Cole Slaw .. »19' Rhubarb... »19' WESTERN RED DELICIOUS Frozen Food Buys AfrP—Our FineW Quelity _ Boby or Fordheek Lima Beans OR Broccoli Spears or CaulHlower YOUR CHOtCE BIRDS IVI ....4»;l95' naiv Rin or iunsnini vrllow Hiwillii Pnck 2t& 39' tIROR RYR vacuum SRALIO Sweet Peas... VI 27* RIROS tYC VACUUM SRALRO m......Vt%7' SAVE 2dc-^ANE PARKER ALL RUTTER Chocolate Brownies • • JANE PARKER 13 EGG RECIPE Angel Food Coke • • • • JANE PARKER COFFEE CAKE Danish Nut Ring • • • • i-oz. RING' 9-OZ. SIZE JANE PARKER BREAD BOX Sandwich Bread 2-^0* LOAVES Italiou Bread .. (B 29* | S29*^ » 29* i?- 29* tf-25* ^ Old Fashioned Plain Raisin . ^RE VEGETABLE ___ ^ Crisco Shortening . . 3 o7' Protein Bread PUiN OK SIEDiO Rye Bread ... WHITS. SLICED, ENRICHED Early American 25* Kluski HoodloR........R: 29' Shredded lAfheot r^n'risr Vi?a.'27* Stir Kht Tuifia w ^ Puffin Biscuits.......10* Jell-O Gelotin ... 3n>if.v 29* Comet Rice iSTn .... ut 49* Hydrex Cookies ..... 49* Poriiay Morgarine . . . 29* PnisburyFlour .... 5 .*A% 53* Fruit Cocktoil Bothroom Tissue ilrach ic orr LAsiL m pro. 25' 23' 19' Veq-AlIVcqatablcR 2 iSi 37' I4.U. ^ Roman Cleanser 33* Roman Starch xvTn. ,VT^ 37* Ken-L-Rotion RieULAB 3H 77* Ken-L-Rotien "ew 2”c^4? 39* Upton's Soup 27* Mirocle Morigarint .. 36* Corneii Betf Hosh URMOCART NWjfl 39* Kraft Dr#RRinq„»:TS',ffK.:%28* Pi* CfRst Mix tsr'jVEr." •». vsa 45* Choc. MotrcIs .1""” KS 22' Choc. MoproIr .SSL'.:. . 43' GirInhr Cracktrs «••>«<> k:. 39' Wiihb«M Difuini Gioiit Ajax Ajax CItoner VtIDttwgMt Yel Palmolive Vel Beauty Bar LAUNDRY DEnRaiNT T< OFF LAtEL WITH AMMONIA FOR WALU AND FLOOK Sc O^LAHL Rose Liquid liqUID OCYIROINT REGULAR SIZE BAR J^JLB. iiTfX 1 Va-OZ. O M PKG w m -29*^89^ U^OZ.^ PKG gJi ® :58' 3 58* 12-39'- : \ ^ T^K PUMTAA<^ PKE8& WEDNESUAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1965 C—7 Just Quality Merchandise at Low Prices! PREPARED FRESH MANY TIM^ EVERY DAY! "SUPER-RtGMT' All-Beef Hamburger Boneless Chuck Roast Stewing Beef "SUPIR RIGHT"—LIAN ,, Ok EEC STRIPS Of GROUND lb ^ ** 69° OmkIi Slcaln'c:-''::^... >49' Pork Roost -ar»u>45‘ Grapefruit Juice. ww CANNED FRUIT SALE! A&P Tomato Juice • • •. 4 'Hi 99‘ ^^Lody Betty Prune Juice . 3 SULTANA TENDER -- TW 0% Whole Green Beans • • • • WHOLE KERNEL OR CREAM STYLE A , .. m ^ DdMoirteCorn............3^49* Iona Sweet Peas •••••• 4 49^ 3 W AOP—H«Ivm Bartlett Pears AfrP—Californio Fruit Cocktail AOP—Unpoolod Apricot Halves AfirP—Holvot Freestone Peoches CHINESE FOOD FAVORITES U CHOY CHOP SUIT ^ Vegetables 2 Bean Sprouts 4 , I U CHOY CHOW MilN ^ Noodles . . . 2 LA CHOY CHINSSI Vegetables. . . U CHOY BI-PACK CHICKIN Cbow Mein . * OtlAT UKU mmd ttrmmm r., Mr. Dennis died yesterday after a long illness. He was a member of the Multi-Lakes Conservation Gub, 2 gallons for >696 158 N. Saginaw St. FE 8-6544 nr Broost O' ChickMi Tuna 24* 19< :^rs.ekn. s.lm« ^ 88* FLUOftlSTAN fmm MCAY Crast Brand Toothpast* BoocInNuf Or UTi^p MS'23^ Franeo-Amorican Spogliattf‘'*^ei!^ 19* WTINDBR riBCB AND STM Ptnn Dutch Mushrooms ^ 19^ 4s99* Hunt's Rod, Ripe Tofflotoes VIC» JUST RIMT HAt's Best Tomato Catsup M HUNTt OWN TOMATO SAUCI Hunf s Rich Pork & Boons ANTOHtnwioe — -______- ._____ ftozMmTomooNvwtMNCi Awrey Boked^Ceodir Birds Eye Orange Juice 908 WmI Huoi St. FE 8-3738 |;3 V4 OFF AWREY BAKiD GOODS Ei.*3S OPEN MONDAY TIIRU SATWOAY 9 AJ6. to 6 PJW. ^1^ - J. J i SoJt St2JM|?§ 1®®', Uittklltst Sw|)®H5! CANDY SAItt* |Il 6Aiil^Kll''n8UFI " | S ROMANslfACH f 11 I ,■alii '5!^ ^TTTpresstias less than half the calories of oil-packed tuna. Empress tastes great! Fresher, moister, more natural-tasting than oil-packed tuna. Send-us'^^abels^^ and get 3 cans FREE FlU OUT AND MAIL—--- Mail to: EmpranTuna P. 0. Box 361, Canal St Station, N. Y„ N. Y. 10013 Encloaad ara thraa (3) labala from EMPRESS Tuna. PiaaM land ma a cartificatt for thraa (3) Frat cana. T”?HFRlEnTffiAT!Ta1iito'priSduet ofTi THE FONTXAC PRESS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 24^ 1965 Shoppers [Deserve [Both... Tlatiorial Shoppers Qet [Both! STAMPS i LOW PRICES! 1 “•*•*•*• V*l»t-W0y Trim0t4 _ ^ ^^^| |®on./e«RumpRoa$l . « 99‘ * J|uj.PJb OmIc* latf, EUrt-Fawy, TI*J [UJ.PJb OmIc* latf, Ertra-Fawy, TIaJ ®one/ess(huck Roast . “ 79‘ Laaa, Jaicy, and Flovarfwl, Pra-Dictd ^ (Bone/ess^ttl SiCW . Strvt with lacan and Onions, Tandtr SNced Beef Liver . . laddif'i, ChapH & Sliced Beef . . . HiHtida, Mch. Orada 1, 10 In a Ph|. Skinless Franks . . . Eckrich—Fiaatt, Fraahast Fla«ar UJ.OJL Chaka laaf, Valaa-Way TrinnMd I A Ma^allaWa VWWICV VWfp wWIWW*WWy BlB^BW^W Swiss Steak . Z 49‘ P Ac vr* A Ac Eckrich>Fiaatt, Frasbast Fla«ar . ^ 1% mM **** Sliced Bolorina .... 59* 9J|,b Lb. Ttndarlaia Partian, Ttndar, Jaicy & Flavarfal Pork Loin Roast .... Fina far laking, lar-B Q, ar with Kraat ^ Couiil^ St^e Spare Ribs “ 39 Hilltia*, 16-21 Lmh, UnifMiii SlicM Pn PmhO Medium Siiced Bacon h!: ''^'49* Th. Kin* o1 »«•»■ “■*'*'^*a D Standing R* *® aati"f * 151 - lst-5th Ribs ^fesh, Lean "r^ - H ^ J Pork •*»* (bops Too Tam, A^aarty Slict, toncfc Thick Siked Bacon 2>^ 99* Top Taito, Laoa, Smokoy, Crhp iin Sliced Bacon . '^^*59* :S-$i So Froth, Benolati FroioR Cod Fillets . . . . ||.S.D>k* Rib 4thk 8«h Wh» oo„ t«l. Sleofcs f-1 Pork ClioB. 'SWT' " ■*P» “•39* Breaded Shrimp . 49* Ocean Perch Fillets. u. 49L . 'S‘99* National's Quol'ity Rite, Fully Cooked SeminBoneless Smoked Ham tSVk-Oi. Con IP-Oi. Six ................... Far snacks ar far Oassarts, ar far FraH Salad Royal Gelatin Honay Swaat Brand, la Haavy Syrap, Fancy Califamla Bartlett Pears... . Itfrashing Traat far tha Kids, Bardan's Strawbarry tr Vanilla Moola Koola Haafs-Taadar Baaas wHb Uts af Park in Tamnta Saact Pork & Beans .. Caotadiaa. Vina^ipaaad, Rad and Raaad, Salid Pack Catifamia Tomatoes .:..... "ir 23* Far Parfaet Cakts EvarytioM Usa Batty Crackar Cake Mixes Batty Crackars All Parpasa Flaar Bisqukk..................... 7 39* Creme Cookies 2 39* Stokely Peas . . 2 ^ 39* Orchard Frosh Froxon Orange Juice ' 399. Save 20' ouneo. • •reef i““' ’ ‘ In Vitemin C. 12-OZ. LARGE CANS FMI WITH THIS COUPON 50 EXTRA STAMPS with PurchoM of ] Lbo. or More AU-BEEF HAMBURGER 29* Top Treat Vanilla, Choc., fir Neopolitan Ice Cream 49c L-GAL. CTN. Strainad Vagatabias Beedi-Nut Baby Foods Doviliihly DiHoronl—UnUorweed Deviled Ham ... A Troel witk tco Croom, SHurgeed Apple Tarls Morton'i—Jed Hoot Sorvo Frozen Pot Pies. . 3 Dog* Go For It, NourMhing, Dry H Vets Dor Food . .5 ^ FroA, Criig, Creem Sondvick Ceokio* OOXX.. Nabisco Oreos . . . . 39* Alwey* Frotk end Critg, In the Twin Feck H ^ Vita Boy Potato Chips. 59 Sorvo with Ico Croem or Coffot mm Weston Sugar Wafers »» 35 Frnh ond Critg, foe. Snockt nr DetMtt Sunshine Vanilla Wafer 39 Vicks Formula 44 Cough Syrup SVx-Ox. iottia F 0 m o ■ t Vick* oHoctivo relief frem dhcemferh ef ceeaht end sere Dry ar Nanaal Farmala, far laxariaas Hair Cara “ ‘ Bd)i. Siia Brock Shampoo . Ptoasaat-Tastiaf Oral Aatisaptic LIslerine Antiseptic noagor laotbiR, SawatbarSbavhig Pononna Blades .. 14^)1. Pbg. af S 77 74 63 A-ax. DaHa Bavaraga Wara Juice Tumbler WMi Ceugen He. 2S frem Netienel Beeklet Phis 25 Free Stamps With Purchasa of Any 2 Other Piacaa of Thii Beautiful Bavaragawara! 100 Extra Stamps With Purchase af Any PiMt of loyal Cbombard Teflon Cookware Pins Big Savings ■"inirtaapan No. J7 from Nntionnl Boaklat! Standard Treasury of Learning S Srh Volume 5 This Wook, whh Coapon fraoi Notiaaal Boaklat FRIi WITH THIS COUPON 50 EXTRA STAMPS with hurchoto of Any 7 EVEir/ HELP WE CAN THE BERRYS in the classes cited, the cost in terms of successful education was at an gpproximate rate oft $2,000 per student. i The all "A” high school student not only hpd innate ability, but was eager to succeed. Tte faulixests with the college. Administrators should be able to see not only that capable high schoiri students are coun-sued into courses approximate tp their background and goals, but that the teachers assigned to beginning classes are capable of leading students to successful completion of the courses. (You can write to Prof. Nason in cai$j of The Pontiac s.) KERRY’S WORLP By Jim Berry Down one undoubled not vulnerable doesn’t seem like much of a loss except when you note that if South had passed at two spades he would have made a nidie satisfactory part score. Q—The bidding jbas been; ■wHh WiSS NBBth iM IV PBSB a* Paa a« PasB 3« Pais You, South, hold: 4A3 VKQlSSt hAQt 4K1SS What do you do jiowT A—Tort partaer.hBB ahowa Bt laaat .10 pUato by hh two* atab Md aad —mm by kla tw^wpada bid. A slam la vary Ukaly, bat tbera is bb >wry. JiBt bid thrgg dabs aad • aaxt bid. trs QUESTION thraa cluba and your partner i^aa to thraa haarts. What do y«Kde now? |•IMSWNEA. luc. “Hey buddy, ya’ got a quarter for a fuel line freeze-up?’’ BOARDING HOUSE THI6 SORTA TAKES 6TAMP FOR OUT OU R WAY 7 VE GODS.'I FORGOT TO PUT JAKE OUT AMO HE'S SLEPT ON HER BREAD DOUGH J ALL NIGHT.' I— I'D BETTER GET AAV OWN OSNERAL TENDENCIEt; Cyclt higll for CAPRICORN, AOUARiUl. SmcM wore ft SAGITTARlUt: So arfdoow BORN FDirfy /EARS TOO SOON X-W «T By Carl Gmbart DRIFT MARLO By Dr. I. M. Lavitt, Tom Cooke and Phil Evans ^ 6MH, VES( ' HE'6 IN CONVER9AT10N WITH TWO ' ^PEOPLE! ALLEY OOP •By V. T. HamHa _______ \ YES._ANPOFCOUI PROBLEM TO ] THERE MUST BE A araiRN tha ) limit to the ufe MACHINE TO / OF ns SMTERIE& THE LJkBl y" V I8NT THERE? L„, / HEY.' YOU PIPWT _ that thins COULP • RECHARSE ITS OWN BATTERIES' CAPTAIN EASY •nwrauJLo' '!WK By Leslie ’Turner VdRCATSCOn... r HI5^0ETTW ON!>. MORTY MEEKLE Bv Dick Cavalli rULTUBNlNlDA B(y&At€>6P/04-mS DecHCArro HAVFNO By Ernie Bushmiller LITTLE TONY SURE IS PROUD OF HIS By Charles Kuhn IS BECAUSE HE CHON" ACT like the majority OF- BABIES DO, THE FIBST time they see Y MUO DONALD DUCK By Walt Disney r .... eOIN3 TO TELL HIM T\ BROKE vr-Afy conscience MLI«T5.' =---7 --->/--■'( THAT'6 N0TAUJ\ I / THAT'LL HU(?T VWHEN HE'5 tXDNEy , (^ITH VOUJ^ FOR OWNINO U LIKE A MAN, I'/ TO REVWVRO M C%-12 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1965 Funeral: Last Chance to Steal Show Boyle Goes Jumping fo Conclusions By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK UB-Jumping to concluskMU: Many, people today complain funerals are barbaric relics of the past, but most of them want just such a funeral for themselves. After all, it is the final sure way to catch tiw attention of others -and be the center of in-| terest. BOYLE vain of all is a red-haired, left-handed woman with one blue eye and one hazel eye. Her vanity doesn’t make much sense, but then vanity rarely does. * * ★ A bank robber or a barber has to prove his ability in his craft because we alt feel competent to judge his skill. But if a man tells us he is a surgeon or a scientist he gels by on credit.-We can’t be sure whether he’s brilliant or a dolt. Half the patients in hospitals would recuperate just as fast— and at less expense—if they were put into a good hotel with first-ciaSs room service. WORKS WAY UP One thing you notice about a man iriio works his way up from clerk to president of his. firm: When he retires, he is rarely succeeded by another ex-derk.' In the old days when a boy had an apple he ate most of it— but gave the core to his buddy to fiaish. Kids don’t do that much anymore, Is it because they are more sanitary —.or more selfish? ♦ ♦ * ’The average general or admiral is just as henpecked as the average shoe salesman. In the academic world the most henpecked husbands are pro- fessors of philosophy or eco-nomics. Any waiter will tell you that fat ladies argue less about the food than skinny ladies, and cigar smokers tip better than cigarette smokers. BECOMES RECQNOLED A man can become reconciled to a wife who constantly changes her opinions, but he can never be (|uit(e happy with one who is always changing the color of her hair. The moon has a powerful effect on the emotions of alcoholic women. When it gets full, they do, too. ■WWW Half the guys who fish newspapers out of New Yoik subway bins aren’t poor. ’They’re just Marriage Licenses too cheap to buy their own reading matter. One of the surest ways to please a wife is to tell her that the expensive new hat her best friend bought looks too silly for words. DRINK ON JOB Despite the perils of their work, more ironworkers drink op the job than do office employes. I always have an urge to stuff a bowl of fried rice In the face of anyone who thinks it clever to use pidgin English when ordering in a Chinese restaurant. ’They are among the crudest of all boors. WWW If rabbita were as a^iersti-tious as people, they’d still jMob-ably have more sense than to mb a human foot for good luck. MM® Bald-headed bosses hardly ever promote office boys with duck-tailed haircuts Who comb them on company time. MOVIE STARS Movie stars hate to pay cash in public. Like members or royalty, they feel this tarnishes the glamor of their image. On the other hand, most comedians carry more money in their wallets than do stockbrokers. ^There are, few more fcfflora. feelihgs in life than the one you get when you take your child to I an amusement park and find he ' no longer wants to go for a ride on the merry-go-round, w ★ . w People at a cocktail party will remember you longer if you have a pimple on your nose than if you merely make witty remarks. Dig this nutty new box., Take advantage of this PHI LCO now dig into r PhllLCO COOL CHASSIS for Longer TV Life TRIMI TAPEREDI LIGHTWEIGHT! Equipped for 82-CHANNEL VHF-UHF reception PHILCO 3300 WH. Ntw tapered Continental shape In attractive white with rmishad back and disappearing handle Telescoping Pivotenna (TM) for both VHF and UHF channelt: transistorized UHF tuner; 6* s 2* speaker »^h out ONLY 139” , FREE STAND! 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TiddTe faddle I THg PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1965 Key Tes^ With Illinois Slated /Next Michigan 5 Sidestejis Minnesota's Ambush, 91-78 •IS m STANDINU ’sra IHttWh lEliM ».m.. . 1 1 JW IS .TW (ndIWM Purdut t 4 AOO 4 « .40S WIimM Norfnwtfttm MkMocn suit . . 1 • .MO . 1. 1 JOO . • IS .000 MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Min-nesoU’s Gophers dug the holes and lay in ambush, but Michigan’s Wolverines nimbly sidestepped all traps in a second period rush Tuesday night that proved they are on top for go9d reason. Saddened Minnesota coach John Kundla admitted it after his team took a 91-78 licking froip the nationally top-ranKet) Mkhigur InviMen-wiitett may have made the Wolverines Big Ten champions for another year. ★ . * * “TTiey really are No. 1,” Kundla said. ‘‘And you can see why the’re No. 1.” Minnesota had hoped to repeat last winter’s stunner when it gunned the Wolverines down 19-75, but this year even the brilliant marksmanship of Lou .Hudson ^ the make-or-break play of the whole Minnesota team didn’t help. ^w START The Wolverines warmed Op slowly in the first haif. ’They ended the half at 39-all. But*then class showed, Cazxie Russdl’s 27 points, George Po-mey’s 20 and Bill Buntin’s decisive rapid-fire rebounding plus precision all-around teamwork, showed iHto was in charge on the Gopher court. With six minutes left to the final buzzer, the Wolverines surged ahead 75-63 and then stood their ground and staved prise in the Big Ten will be«4f Michigan loses a game. It could happen at Illinois Saturday. But even soi Michigan can afford a ............breeze to the con- off Minnesota’s frantic efforts with free throws. The team from Ann Arbor has Ph«t* Bailey (14). Behind Binge is 6-8 center Doug Hess. Dave Sudbury of PNH moves in at rlpt. The Shamr^s downed Northern, 74-60. «. The Vikings, down 12-10 after the first quarter, poured in 22 points in the second stanza to ^ I • i take a 32-27 lead at halftime y nrj in / nrtn and broke the game open with 23 points in the third period. | Matt Planck paced Walled Ortonville Brandon’s Black-Lake with 15 points, 12 of them hawks clawed Flint Hamady; -j • ' coming in the second quarter. 77-73, Tuesday night to tie Byron ^yn wd in a pre- Tim Moller poured in 21 for the for second place in the Subur- « « *mpn n . ««m. Lakers. ^ ban C league. * * * ! They were aided by Hartland Dondero took a 34) lead earfy which upset Byron, 83-80, in dent Arthur C. Allyn Jr., who away, whm like Finley voted against the.Man^'®^^ fifth-ranked sate, said^Jie is satisfied with ______________________ the manner in which baseball Providence, whose last prenow is policing the deal. ^ I® ViUanova In “The integrity of baseball still being zealously pro- pared statement to the committee. last season’s NCAA playoffs, met the Wildcats on their home floor in the Philadelphia suburb of Villanova. EMPTIED STANDS That’s about IS miles from the ’ ballots when the Ameri- ' October Miscue Costly for Tip Ace Mrvatively. This worked until straight 30-point game sped Kimball went ahead m the: jhe Blackhawks to victory over closing minutes, but Doug Gou-1 jjamadv lait tied it for Dondero’' riairc with a layup. mhmmr*-' F- FO ft TF 1 1-3 3 t t-1 T S S4 15 4MCM<«II I 1-1 3 S 1-1 f Mbury 5 Ml 1* - . . 4 M . I U CuVilit 3 M 4 MHiCCi • l4 I Cpiocpr I S« 0 TMaU M M-17 74 fatalt if ISM 4S Kons ST wsFrans / fralt .. 17 n M it-74 — . . .U 11 II W-4MI 004ara 1. oatralt LAKELAND. Fla. Of)- October 1 will always have a special meaning for Dave Wicker-sham. For it was on October 1, 1964 that the 6-foot-4 Detroit Tigers pitcher was ejected from a ball game — for the first time in his career. it * * But njore important, the ejection while the Tigers were trailing in the game with New York meant Wickersham could not win 20 games. The Tigers went on to defeat the Yankees in the game, and that hurt him even more. “It all happened because I really didn’t know the rules,’’ Wickersham explained recently. TWO ERRORS It was in the New York half of the seventh inning, Wickersham explained, and a couple of errors had pul Yankee runners in scoring position. On the play which put the ^Yankees ahead, 2-1, Norm Cash Cazzie on All-America fielded a tricky ground ball near first, raced the runner to the ^ and thought he had him out. But umpire Bill Valentine called the runner safe and Cash started to argue. * * t Mel Stotlemire, the Yankee pitcher, went to third oh the play and looked like he wanted to try to score while Cash and Valentine continued to argue, 1 Wickersham said. “I called time out three times,” he continued. “But I’m, sure Valentine didn’t hear me. AUTOMA’nC OUSTER ‘Filially, ThI, worW „„UI „„H «• w™*. the »l. K •Their testimony highlighted' “ No bomb was found. Oaks this last scheduled day of the |returned for the sec- * * * subcommittee’s investigation of The flashy backliner hit 14 the transaction. Moving to their own gym, the A last shot by the home ; points in the last quarter to dis- Sen. Phillip A. Hart D.-Mich. "^*Wca.fs exploded Providence’s team faited. Goulait and Rich , solve several ties, the last at subcommittee chairman said iii undefeated HIrsch then each canned lay- 53.58 gnd boost the Ortonville a statement the testimony; Villanova saw a seven- ups In the overUme to gam quj„tet to its eighth league win showed that “there is no ques-i I®*® in the first half in 13 starts. tion now that the purchase byi^'”'^*® intermission sbi in the earlier meeting. j Slaughter added seven in)s major network of a majorerupted in the second A string of 10 points in a row, the winning quarter and had 11 j league ^11 club opens new pos-i ^ the triumph, gavp Orchard Lake St. Mary a for the game. Jim Munstl eon- sibtiities for anticompetitive be-! ♦ ★ * 39-35 lead at'Wyandotte, but Mt. tributed 12 to the victors’ cause. ^ havior.” « The scoring of Bill Melchionnl Carmel then spurted in front] Flint was paced ^y Tim Bur- — 43-39 and never trailed again, trum’s 16. Despite Connie Krogulecki’s sea- NEW YORK (UPI)-Caxaie Russell of Michigan, the only junior honored, and Rhod^g, scholar Bill Bradley of Ihrinceton led the voting today for the .tjnited Press International 1965 All-America basketball team. ALL-AMERICA BASKETBALL TEAM • Player and College Ht. Age Gass Hometown Avg. “ " .............. '20 ■ ~ 6-5 6-5 6-7 Cazzie Russell, Mich. B- Bradley, Princet’n R. Barry, Miami, FI. Gail Goodrich, UCLA •W. Estes. Utah St. 6^ Fred Hetrel, Davids’n 6-8 •Honored posthumoushr SECOND TEAM Dave Stallworth, Wichita Clyde Lee, Vanderbilt Bill Buntin, Michigan Bill Cunningham, N. Carolina Dave Sch^ilhase, Purtjue Chicago, HI. 26.3 Crystal Gty, Mo. 30.2 Roselle Pk., N.J. 37.0 N. Hollyw’d, Calif. 23.3 Anaconda, Mont. 33.7 21 Sr. Washington, D.C. 26.2 THIRD TEAM Ollie Johnson, San Francisco Keith Skip Thoren, Illinois A. W. Dayis, Tennessee Dick Van Arsdale, Indiana 1 Tiir-W tapped him on the shoulder and he.J6(»w me oHt.of^e game. I knew you could get in trouble for hitting an umpire when you are arguing with him, but I didn’t know just touching him I meant ejection, too,” Wickersham explained. But the big righthander, who Won 19 games for the Tigers, was not fined, and did not hear from the league office. son high of 20 points, OLSM lost its third straight tilt. TIED Imlay City broke a 39-all deadlock midway through the final period and pulled out its (Continued on Page D-3, Col. 2) ★ ★ ★ Packer Unit Rolls in Recreation Play w. SLOOMFIELD WAL1.SO LAKl H'Rin*till 3 B»ifi I HoSmi 1 Holllttar ( 7 Strwitr 1 14 European Skaters Here COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo (AP) — All of the Europebn competitore |in the World Figure Skating Gimpibnships here March 2-6/arrived by charter airliner Tukaday night. 'V ' , A 27-point scoring effort by Darrell Lovell paced the Packers to a 78-67 victory over Ben PowelLTrucking in Pontiac recreation basketball last night. William Sekulich tossed in IS in assisting Lovell with the scoring. Hitting (or the losers were Jack McCall (16), Ken Miskin (21), Harold Weston (12) and Jerry Powell (10). A pair of Wlllies.kparked Messiah Baptist Church to a 74-73; verdict over Booth Builders, waiw L4k«"SrWMt*'sk)omfitid 54 i Willie Harster ■» collected 22 WYAMOOTTS “btcHAso LAKE i PoiDts Idd Willie Ratliff pushed MT. CAKMEL_J44)^ ST. MABY («)__ added 2IK William Allen topped the loser^with 19. In other games, J.R. Neph Heating downed the All Stars^ 61-58, an(l\ Coulocos Insurance turned In a 77-53 victory over the Hawks. Fryggckl It II n ii-M »« IS KroolKkl 7 M 5-7 W KWIMki 5 M 11 »S 1 Smridll • SS t and Jim Washington opened up ; the Wildcats’ margin late in the contest. Each finished with 21 1 points while Washington also I snared 17 rebounds. Duke, now 18-3, had won 10 ! straighl games and hadn't lost' to Marvland in five years before the hustling Terps started to” work. They grabbed a 46-28 halftime lead, but the Blue Devils rallied behind a full-court press and sliced their deficit to 72-69. That was as close as they could get, however. I ii-rf Texas Kegler Leads Tourney in Colorado COLORADO SPRINGS, COlo. I (AP) — Skee Foremsky of El - Paso, Tex., shot 2655 for the AF pmtiit 'Yirst 12 gaities Tuesday to hold RESIGNS — Ed Jucker the lead in the Professional (above), who coached the 'Bowlers Association 828,500 in 21. T^mmate Sammy Cole University of Cincinnati bas- Pikes Peak Open at the half-. J ketball team to NCAA cham- : way mark in the 24-game quali-piionships’ in 1961 and 1962, re- I fier. signed today for' health and { Dave Soutar of Detroit was family rearons. He wHI be re- the Abtw2.man at 2637. He wu placed by Tay Baker who has ; followed“by Bill AHm~brOrlaa-been Jucker.'s assistant since do, Fla., with B87 and Hmry 1960. ; Smith of Boston with 3873. D—2 THE PONTIAC PH&8S. WEDNESQAY> yg^RUARY 24, 1065 No somot sOioduM. I EXPERT ENGINE OVERHAULING GUARANTEED TUNE-UPS 1 LOVY PRICES EASY TERMS AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION^ i OUR SPECIALTY MOTOR EXCHAI^GE 405 S. S««inow St. FE 3-7432 BASKETBALL SCOKES I coiNto ------ ■V Tko AtwctoM Arm AAorylontf IS, Oukf n North CaroUni 10S, Vlr«lnlo 111, ovcrtlmos FMido 77, FlorMo Stoto OS MtOWIST Mlimcsoto 71 Kontos 71, Nobrotki 01 Oklahoma City H, North Taxai 7* Michigan t1, MInnasota 7t Nprthwood too, Hillsdale *1 Ferris 11, Northern Michigan 17 SOUTHWEST Baylor M, Texas Tech M _________________ Wee H Texas ABM in, Texas Christian I Taxat 74, Arkansas 7] FAR WEST Son Francisco *0, Santa Clara M Spring Arbor 07, Fort Wiyhi BTblo tJ— CC n,^ Jackson JC.M Delta 14, Murtegon HlOH S'-Muskegon Heights Detroit Northwestern I SCHOOL s Cath- Detroit Southwestern ( Romulus 70, Deorborn Detroit St. Thomas H, Bisl^ Gallagher 71 Detroit St. Bernard 44, SL Ellzabolh V Walled Lake <0, West Bkiomflold S7 Taylor Center 71. Deorborn Holgl Gordon City East M, I Vest 51 , , Dearborn 71, Livonia B Clair Shores Port Huron, Catholic 7T, St. Clair 00 Richmond 71, Croswell-Lexinglon 00 Marysville 71, Algonac OS Marine City 71, Yale 01 Elkton-PigieOT-Beyport 101, Vassar M Mayville 17, Unlonville 70 KInde North Huron 71, Casevlllo 4S Femdale 71, Fort Huron SI Imloy City SO, New Haven 44 Yellow Jackets FalltoCousino O-A Champion Troy Edges Dragons By HERB PETERS Troy and Warren CouSbio put on fourth-period spurts last night to down Lake Orion and Avondaie4iT «aWand-A Confer^ ence action vital to the race for second place. If beer, Scotch, vodka aren’t fun anymore... TrythewhisI^^ you can live withJ Seagram’s VO. It does for youL^22!!?\ 4vhat no other whisky can. Defines smooth once and for ail. W Light? Of course. | hHB Jj Seagram’s\ iMEHaor-i aae of kucts emsiues. tu ytMt oil. im noor. nuouMiiTiuus co. ar.a NORTHERN TWO - POINTER - Pontiac Northern's Bob Harris pumps a shot into the basket in the second quarter against East Detroit last night. Harris moved around Archie Price (33) to take the shot. At left are East Detroit’s Ron Binge (S5) and Fred Bolle (23). No. 22 is Northern’s Dave Sud-btiry. Northern lost, 74-60. Like St. AAiry M RoMvIlle SKrad Heart II 1, Detroit St. *4, Garden City West 71 Royal Oak Dondero 47, Kimball 41 warren Cgutlno Tf, AuFum Heights Avondale M ' Mount Clemens 7X St. Clair Shores Lakeview 7# Jackson SS, Kalamazoo Central SO Lansing Saxton It, Battle Craft tan- East Lansing 44, Adrian 44 Stocfcbrwge 41, South Lyon 44 ^ Lansing Boys Training 44, P Lapeer 74, Davidson 71 Flint Northern 44, Flint Northwestern Flint Ainsworth 74, Grand Blanc 44 Young Texan After Shot Put Record Swartz Creek 70, Montrose 10 Ldkevllle 01, Flint Alharton 7i Ortonvllle 77, Flint Hamany 71 Lake Fenton 57, Genesee 50 Goodrich 54, Linden 51 COLLEGE STATION, Tex. | lete reach this high plateau at (AP) — Randy Matson, the ■ such a young age? Hard work, dedicaUon and the shot M ^hes this : singleness of intent are the an- week to signal the start of hisigwers - he wants to be the drive toward the outdoor „eatest weightman the track world s record. known. He also Matson already has estab- throws the discus and expects to Ushed the indoor record of 66 joo feet this year, feet, 2*-4 inches and now he’s Hjj training rouUne is some- thing to make a fellow tired just to read it. Monday he starts out by doing j various calisthenics, running ’and easy tosses of Uie shot to loosen up. Then he throws six to 15 times, depending on how he HOW DOES THE SUCCESS CAR OUTDO ITSELF FOR ’65? BEAUTIFULLY, JUST BEAUTIFULLY! PmMte Tempest... Buy Now During Our February Clean-Up On All Stock Cars. Immediate Delivery - Thursday, Friday and Saturday! • SAVE MONEY -•JM THE SPOT FINANCING • TOP TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE ON YOUR PRESENT CAR There Must Be A Reason: Others TaHc Deals, But The Pontiac Retail Store Makes Them. The PonttoA Retail fitere 65 Mt. Clemens St. Dewntown Pontiac .7^ FE3-7951 after Dallas Long’s outdoor standard of 67-10. He will be in his first meet of the season Saturday when Uie Aggies host Baylor and the massive sophomore might just get the record then. If he makes as mudi progress this year as he did in 1964, he should be heaving the 16-pound ball around 70 feet before the seasqn tffTiver. He went from 60 lapeer^i fqpt to 66. Sunday Matson, in the rela-Uve quietness of the A&M athletic field, treated a half-dozen witnesses to his greatest throw yet. It was 6V4 inches better thah the one he thade to win second in the Olympic Games. OVER 65 Six times the 6-6V4, 255-pound Matson heaved the shot. Five times it exceeded 65 feet. The Lapeer '5' Nips Pavison on Late GoalJ4-73 Bob McKenna’s jump shot with 31 seconds to play brought behind 74-73 victory over Davison last night. The Tri-County League Panthers pushed Uieir record to 19-3 with the triumph. Tied 34 . 34 at hatfUme, the non-league contest swung to Lapeer’s favor, 58-51, after three quarters, but Davison (3-12) took a five-point lead with two minutes remaining. McKenna, who sparked the sixth throw went 66-10 and Mat-1 closing rally, scored 23 points son quit for the afternoon. and teammate Larry Mclnally How did the 19-year-oW ath- > tallied 20. This is followed by wind sprints of 50 to 60 yards eight or 10 times. Next he runs up the stadium seats five or stx Umes at full speed to strengths his knees. Then he takes 20 turns in the discus ring. The league champion Colts (IM) who clinched the title last Friday, parlayed five free throws in the closing minute to edge Lake Orion, 6^56, and jolt the 64 Dragons’ bid for the runner-up spot. Coosino’s Patriots started to move earlier in the fourth quarter to rock Avondale, 79-68, and tie Rochester for second nt U. Hie loss dropped the fifth-place Yellow Jncketo to 6-7. Troy led a cold-shooting Or* ion quintet, 18-8, after one period and by 31-24 at halftime before the Dragons caught fire in the third to whittle the margin to 45-43. Tuesday and Thursdays, and sometimes on Sundays, Matson works on weights to increase his strength. Each session is about two hours. He will bench press from 200 can at the l&ttCT weight. Then he does eight full squats with 400 pounds on a bar across his shoulders. Then he will lie on an inclined board and do dumbbell presses with weights totaling 120 pounds. Next he does half squats with varied weights and then about 10 minutes of lyrist developing exercise with 50 pounds wei^ts. \ If You Need | j Money ... ; Then he will hoist weights over his shoulder and squat jump. He winds up with 50 twisting On Wednesd^ Matson repeats hig Monday routine. Friday is a day of rest and Saturday is the day of competition. Orion's comeback fashioned a 55-55 deadlock in the finale, which Troy sub Dave Miller severed at 1:13 with a pair of free throws. Avondale stayed with Cou-sino through a faiHmced first half and it took Drew Pisha’i jumper with eight lecowb to go to forge a 42-40 lead for the Patriots. The Yellow Jackets closed to 57-56 with three seconds left in the third stanza on Roger Hill’s layup, and trailed 61-60 early in the fourth. Cousino then broke the cwitest open with a I^2 burst. FO FT TF FO FT TO >Wi4 14 4-7 14 Tkurpg I 4-7 H Fltz- R«4k 4 04 11 maurtc* S-34 13 McCoikty 4 44 14 ■rwtn 7 M 14 HIM **■* >1 UFalA 1 4-1 Tibe 1 M NorkliHci 1 1-1 V TtMH M IBII M V OUARTIRl n It II »-7* LAKI ORION (14) FO FT TF I Htmlltan 4 1-5 n Champion Baseball 9 to Play 'Cute' Quintet The California Cuties, a bunch of gaily-attired, fun-loving baS-ketball players, will battle tha district champion Huron-Airway baseball team at 8 p.m. March Tickets for the contest — $1 for students and $1.50 for adults - are available at Griff’s Grill, Tri|de XXX Rsstourant, Voter-ans of Foreign Wars Post 1370, and Bob It Ken’s Bar. • Bohrodoro • Barracuda • Fury • Chrysbr • hnporiul OAKUND KYM^H 724 Oaklaod Auo. FI 5-9436 S Now You Can Get Up To I *5000 CASH ■ On Home Equitios or First AAortgayes g Tber* ore timei when each of ub mutt look to othor tourcei ^ g for oiiittonce in solving our financial dilemmoi. Ctor new — g Homeowner's Loon Won hot been the answer for mony in ^ ■ such need. If you qualify, oil present bills moy be com- g ■ bined into one convenient moothly payment and oitange- ~ ■ ments con be completed within 72 hours with no doting ■ costs. Your loon fully protected by life insurance, so why M delay... coll today! FAMILY ACCEPTANCE CORP. : 317 Notional Buiyihg CC W lOWESTHURON rC Special STANDARD ENGINE SHmuElS 6 Cyl..... .’95** Y-8's ... .*115" This inciudas . . . Ringa, Rod Boar-> ings. Main Boaring, Grind Valvoa, —Fit-Pma;-Ooglox»Cylindor Walls, Goakots, Oil and Loborl -x4L50- F4CT0RY REBUILT ENfilRES 695 AUBURN RD. IM-MTI m^n i X I I Tilr: ri XMAC I HIO.SH. WKDNKSDAV, yEBRL'ARY 2i, 1965 the Out4wt yi-ail wiA DON V0CEl-0«t4Mr E«t*r, FmIIk Prtu BUMPING ALONG—Dennis Ovoracek (left) of Minnesota and Larry Tregoning (35) of Michigan do a little bumping as Dvoracek grabs a Michigan rebound in second hall action. Mel Northway (right) moves in to give teammate a hand. Michigan won, 91-78. BOWLING Scoring fell off some last week but reports of high individual games and women’s series indicate the lanes were as busy as ever locally . Bill Shaver’s 254-828 in the Friday Pontiac Motor Morning League at 300 Bowl was among the hijihest reported. Ntel Williams had a 233. The “3N” Ins & Outers Mixed loop Saturday night listed Bill Palmer’s 211 as high game; and Pontiac Motor’s Inter-0 f f I c e bowlers were paced by Bill McKee’s 211 and Ralph Pack’s 218. H u r 0 a Bowl’s Wednesday night loop had only one 600, the 609 by Mike Samardzija Sr., for Wolverine Entertainers. Urry Crake hit 237 for All-Star Loudge. which moved within two points of the lead. TOr WOMAN The top women's ed was Audrey Friday' 610 Thursday in the Lakewood Lanes’ Oakland County Women's circuit. ♦ .* * The Pinspillers’ Kathleen Little hit 213 and Helen Fry 204— 548 Sunday; and last week’s In- of the Lakeland Ladies loop at Sylvan Lanes, scored nie Kuaak ML This is the league’s silver anniversary season. Orville Davis fired a 201-262— 622 and wifd Dorothy a 209 to h i g h I i g h t the Sunday Night League at Auburn Lanes. Bonnie Stockard earlier had 536 among the Ball ’n’ Chain keg-lers. Auburn’s Thursday Ladies Majors recorded a 206—569 for Marie Jennings and 234—597 for Bdessa Corrow. ♦ *' * The Fisher Hill circuit Montcalm Bowling Centre last week featured Louis DiClea’s 233 for Austin Nor^ell Bev Bum-ham’s 225—517 for Brown’s. VikirigsTrip Laker Quintet (Continued from page D-1) _________^ _________ _________ victory over Southern Thumb de'p^ent" Women’s loop had! champion New Haven, a 201 by Loretta Lauinger and| Dale Goodrich had eight of| 533 by Eula Vick. Marge Demetrak, president Fishermen Gain Control of Lake Fishermen can take heart. All of the lakes aren’t being taken over by powerboaters. There’s one case in Southern Michigan where anglers recovered control of a lake once dominated by water skiers. Henry Vopdette, district fish biologist at the Pontiac Lake Conservation Department office, remembers the lake very well because he indirectly had a hand in giving it back to the fishermen. ♦ * * "It was one of the lakes 1 had in the (Allegan) district where I was stationed before coming here,’’ he said. “The lake had become full of carp and other rough fish and there was very little interest in fishing it.’’ The lake was large enough to attract water skiers, he related, and they had the lake pretty much to themselves. They didn’t have to worry about dodging boats with fishermen. “We poisoned the lake and restocked it with game fish and panfish,’’ said Vondette. “The fishing became so good that the lake was covered with fishermen in boats. “Pretty soon 1 started getting phone calls from people complaining. Only they weren’t fishermen. They were skiers who said that there were too many fishermen. ★ ★ * “Finally the skiing dropped off to practically nothing.” He pointed out, however, that this lake is shallow, “about six feet,” and this is the reason fishermen were covering the entire surface. On deep lakes, the anglers tend to fish along-) leaving a large bole m the imddle for skiers. WB« NAIKmAL FIELD TRIAL Dave Grubb, the dog handler from Lake Orion, has added another national champion to his growing list of field trial accomplishments. His latest came in the National Derby Championship near Jackson, Miss. Grubb directed Air Control, a pointer, to top honors after the National Trial scheduled for Tennessee was called off because of a lack of quail. The pointer is owned by W. W. Till of Bowling Green, Ohio. It is the first northern born, raised and trained dog to win the National Derby. Father of the champion is Air Ace, owned by H. E. Sheg-grud, 1801 PetUbone Lake, Highland. Grubb’s first major trophy was posted in the National Shooting Dog trial. ‘BEAR’ At OAKLAND UNIVERSITY Three Oakland University students reported to The Press that they had found the remains of a bear carcass in a wooded ^wea on the south campus. Conservation officer Cyril Adams of Lake Orion was contacted. A quarter mile jaunt over hill and dale, led by the students, brought the officer to the “bear.” It turned out to be a deer skin with the head attached that had been thrown away last fail. “Last year 1 was called out here,” said Adams, “when seven deer hides and three dead dogs were discovered.” SEVERAL LAKES IN ONE The report that bluegills and perch were biting at Stringy Wa//ed Lake Mat men Win I as a 16-point second-half bulge ion visiting Oxford in avenging i an earlier loss. Glen Jamison’s . 31-point production for the win-Walled Lake s wrestling squad f^gju^ed nine, nine, and closed the 1964-65 season last; the dosing three sessions. —night-with a 2H4 deciskm overj defending state Class B. cham-' pion River Rouge. Junior Roger Nicolay gave the winners their biggest victory wheiS^ pinned a 3-2 defeat on Charles Gardner, defending state champion in the 133-pound: The first meeting this season division. between Romw and Chippewa his 13 points in the IM (jUAilifTjJife results in several phone calls to The Press asking where as Iihlay’s Chieftains pushed | the lake is located. their record to 134 over-all. I stringy is a local name for a body of water west of Oxford Jack Belt’s 20 points led host I gnj just south of Tan lake. It is actually one lake with octopus-New Haven but he also missed | lihe arms. eight of 16 charity tosses. por those who want to find it on the map, the “arms’ * * * named Second, Cedar, Long, Squaw^and Clear lakes. North Branch had as much ^nd the bluegills are still hitting, out from the public fishing site. He . tive with his long jump shots. North Branch connected on 43 per cent of Its field goal tries although yielding the back- The victory gave Walled Lake an over-all 8-3-1 record. Valley was decided on second jump shot by the former’s Rod Rohloff. This time it was different. The Bulldogs pulled away in ... ..j the closing half as Bob Rowley tv* i rlirwer otiin, M; 'i«-crutch-1 in the third quarter. His 20- fltM (RR) dtt Brandt, t-t; IIO-Rlck*rd : . . . i uvHtnH hish in (WLI OK Cowan, Mj HVT.-SIremora POml tOiai WaS SecoilU 11U511 m (rr) pinnad jamaa, t.sj. (he game to the losers’ Dave Bums’ 28. Romeo, which had an 84-70 advantage in attempts, is now 10-5. ProliriddersieT for Avondale Duel Pro gridders will clash with ~ feacHar~»id^^Btudent8-1tr-y basketball game that will benefit baseball next week at Avondale High School. The Detroit Lions probably will try to two platoon their opponents (the Faculty - Alumni Uglies) at 8 p.m. Wednesday in a beneflt clash for the Auburn Heights Boys Club baseball program. The Lions will bring four of their offensive platoon regulars John Gordy and Jim Gibbons— and a quartet of defensive stars —Wayne Walker, Bruce Maher, Sam Williams and Dick LeBeau. Two boys’ club basketball championships will be decided in preliminary games. Tickets are |L25 and available from any club member or at the game. One Post Vacant Conservation Staff Grows KIMBALL l«3) t 0 PT TP FO FT TF • M IS Ftitt I l-S 3 1 M It WMck 3 M * McLarty, with the department for 18 years, has been a conservation officer at Cas-sopolis. Under the department’s reorganization, the fire and law supervisor’s position has been split. Herman Haedicke remains at Imlay City as law supervisor. There will be no fire supervisor for that district. Robert A. Thompson of Lansing will continue as Region Macomb' Three (Southern Michigan) law supervisor. His former fire A game biologist has yet to ^utifs »>y Albert be named i Livingston of Lansmg who moves up from assistant re- The Conservation Depart-ment’s Pontiac Lake district office added two more supervisors this week, leaving one position to be filled. George H. Bruso was namod law supervisor and Carman G. McLarty will head the firefighting units. They join parks supervisor Alfred Masini and fish biologist Henry Vondette in the recently opened office that has charge of department operations in Oakland, Wayne Counties. and Ice Festival The accent will be on speed in the first annual Union Lake Ice Festival Sunday. The Union Lake Junior Chamber of Commerce, sponsor of the event, has scheduled speed skating, ice fishing and ice boat races. And even the ice fishing derby will have to be fast. A tip-up Derby will start at 9 a.m. and end two hours later. The' speed skaters will be on the ice at the same time. Ice boating takes over at 1 p.m. The boat event is “open” and will be conducted near “Little Brown Jug.” National Ice Sailing rules will prevail. The skating and fishing contests will be headquartered at the public fishing site. Entry blanks for the boat racing will be available at the starting line. Solunar Tables The schedule of Solunar Periods, as printed beloa^-haa , been taken from John Alden KnUM’a SOLUNAR TABLES. ~ A.M. F.M Maw Maiw Mlaw I .. 2:25 «:1S 12:3S pese Calls Foxflunters Br’er fox will get no rest Sunday if he lives in a certain area of Groveland Township. .★ ★ * A long line of shotgun toting burners will be out to make life miserable for foxes in the Joss-man Road are^ The gunners will be participating in the animal Oakland County Sportsmen’s Club hunt. The bunt will be open ta Hunters living in the area of Oese are to meet at the clubhouse at 8 a. m. Others are to join the contingent at Grange Hall and Dixie an hour later. * * * Only shotguns will be allowed and the maxinmm shot size is No. 4’s. There will be no dogs. The hunting is done by driving the fox past hunters posted on stands. „ i:IO I DECEIVING BAG—Strung up on a game pole are (from the left) a small bobcat, a Canada lynx, trapped on Sugar Island, and a whopping-sized bobcat. The lynx and the bobcat at the right may look the same size, but the bobcat tips the scales at 39 pounds while its Canadian relative weighs only 12 pounds, the same as the cat on the left. Lynx show signs of spreading their low numbers across the Upper ^qn-insula. All three cats were taken in the U. P. Aim at People Over 65 Free Angling Bill Meets Opposition Site of Swimming Championship Shifted The Little Oak liiague swimming championships, orginafiy scheduled for Groves High School, have been svHtched to Berkshire Junior Highl and Sea-holm High School. \ The diving event will\be held today at 4 p.m. at Berkshire. All other events, prejiminaries and finals, will be tomoi;iW at 7 p.m. at Seabolm. \ The Seaholm Maple Swim Club, which normally meet^ at Seaholm on Thursday, will m^ tomorrow at Berkshire. LANSING (* - Let the oldsters over 65 fish for Tn». There is a bill in the legislature advocating the free fishing licenses for the retirees. ★ * ★ You would think anybody who opposed it is an automatic fink —as if they had said something bad about mothers or the American flag. But the State Conservation Department patiently explains that, while it loves old people, there are very practical dollars and cents reasons why the bill should not be passed. A survey of 1963 fishing license sales showed that more than 11 per cent of all licensed fisherman are 65 or older. Granting them a free license plus avoiding payment of the trout stamp would mean a revenue loss to the department of an estimated $781,735. If this bill were passed, there exempting senior citizens from buying Imnting licenses. The revenue loss from both hunters and fisherman in the oldtr bracket would be, in round figures, nearly half a million dollars. Arguments for the bill are that it would grant a token measure of tax relief to senior citizens who fish . It might encourage others, not new dedicated fisherman, to take up the sport. The main argument against it is that the bill would sharply reduce existing revenue to the department and also cut into federal granfis,- based on the number of licenses sold. The license fee, according to national surveys, represents Inter-Resort Slalom Meet at Silverbell Ah Inter-Resort Slalom championship race is scheduled for 4he- area’s Silverbell Village, tonight. Due to the distances involved and late afternoon classes for some instructors will race, a definite starting time has not been set for the competition. Some northern resorts will lie represented as well as most southeast Michigan ski schools. In addition, there will be a dedication of Mustang Hill by Ford officials. Silverbell Ski School director 01 h m a r Schneider, internationally known ski racer and instructor, will also participate in the night’s activities. There is no charge for spectators and there will be skiing on the slopes before and after the race. I M 2 N«v*rrt n 3 3-3 » 4 74 15 1 S-3 2 Bruso moves to Pontiac Lake from Newberry* where he has been assistant district super-. gional law-fire supervisor. JUNIOR VARSITY RBSULTS T*»«U II 17-27 47 TMBta 12 13-22 43 SCORi BY OUARTBRS 10 Dwyw ....... 7 17 7 12 NBW NAViN 1962. He is a 1-year member of | the department who formerly i worked as a conservation of- « ficer in Lapeer (bounty. I. Carmel 42. OrcBard Lake UZELLE Aieaeyliie. I 6Q4 Rofitiac Sidtt Bonk Phone FE 5-« 172 Mark This In Your Calendar! The Pontiac Marine Dealers Association Is Presenting Its Third Annual PONTIAC MALL only 3 per cent of. the total cost' to a fisherman. , “Anybody who wants to fish | can surely afford the three | bucks,” was the way one de- j partment spokesman put it. In more formal langauge, the department said: ★ ★ “Although we do not oppose the principle of tax relief for senior citizens, we are cemed about a possible trend tojvard group exemptions from the license requirement.” Michigan, the department notfed, is presently the only state in the nation which allows a wife to fish, free on her hus-'SHfic^siT There also Is no fee for fishing the Great Lakes. * ★ ★ So the senior citizens should be advised that everyone loves them, but the conservation experts think these oldsters would rather pay their own way. S«« the Fomous OPEL “KADETT STATION WA«ON AT OLIVER BUICK 71( OrclMrd Lk. Aw. it Wllll«nu Go To Orion For Your and SAVE at... RUSS JOHNSON MOTOR SALES 89 M-24, Lakt Orion 693-0218 Wintertime's most fashionable, most popular, most helpful CALLING CARD BOAT SHOW MARCH 1st THRU 6fh WhBth«r you'r* o novico or on old salt... or just o drooiTiBr... you'll g*T OThlltt; OUT of thu array of boots on display during this big ev*nt. Bring th« family and onjoy the huitdrods of conoBs, rowboats, sailboats, inboords and outboards. Pontiac Mall Shopping Center Telegraph at Elizabeth Lk. Rd. 0 More than 650,000 MicBigan driven present just this card—Dpt cash—to more than 700 otScial AAA femergenev Road Service stadooi to get help when their cars won’t go. Have AAA Road Service—Uie world’s largest, roost dependable—on ycMir eule this Join the Auto Club now! AUTOMOBILE 6LW OF MjGHIGAM 76 Williams Sr. FE 5-4151 N. C. H»amaam. 03026498 D-4 THE PONTIAC PRESS WEpKESDAY. FEBRUARY 24, 1965 The foUowing are top prices 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 Friday. Produce 1‘aum Apples. GpMen Oeiicipus, ML Apples. Red Dellclout. M. Apples, lonattien, bu. Apples. Jonattwi, CA. ,bu. . Steels Spark Stock Advance Face Issues, Romney Urges ler. 4^1. veerrA Onions, dry. N-lb. ti Persnips. bu. ~ TsrsnW celRTpiS Potetoes, new, IS lbs. NEW YORK (AP) - Steels continued solidly ahead in a rallying stock market early this afternoon. Trading was heavy. It looked as if the New York Stock Exchange would have another day of well over six million shares as traders and investors climbed aboard the bandwagon. Airlines were other standouts, several iwaching now highs. The trend was generally higher among farm implements, building materials, nonferroys metals, chemicals, office equip-:n[ments, photogriqihic atocltts. drugs and elec^oihcs. Aerospace issues turned nnixed, however, and utilities had no upward drive. KEY FACTORS Record weekly steel production, forecasts of a nine-million-car sales year in the auto industry, and relative'quiet in Viet Nam were cited as factors in the renewed show of confidence in stocks. The Associated Press average^ than a point. of 60 stocks at noon was up .9 at 334.9 with industrials up 3.1, rails off .1 and utilities up .1. General Motors and Ford edged higher. Chrysler lost a fraction as a 300-shale secondary offering of the stock was made. Borden advanced more than point to a new high following a 2-for-l stock split proposal. Pepsi Cola advanced 2 I new high amid rumors of a stock split and of a possible takeover. Frito-Lay, mentioned in this connection, jumped more Advice Given to GOP at Connecticut Fete Prices advanced generally in active trading on the American Stock Exchange. Corporate bonds were mixed. U-S. .Government bonds ad- HARTFORD, Conn. (AP)-Michigan (3ov. George Ronuiey says the Republican party must berome issue - oriented rather than personality-oriented. Ronmey, mentioned prominently as a potential Republican presidential candidate in 1968, told a Lincoln Day dinner at Hartford Tuesday night that “issue facing is not the favorite national pastime. vanced. •'But I btltevo that the people Turnipi, loppwt, bu. The New York Stock Exchange of this nation will respond once , as they did in Lincoln’s time, to a political party that ■ 'has’The' vision Poultry and Eggs face- squarely real issues and problems of today and apply correct principles for their solution, without primary regard to special interest groups or the sources of his political support, financial or otherwise.” The Republican governor said the DenMcratic party is dominated by “its coalition of special interest groups, its top4ieavy power structure and its cadre of entrenched federal officeholders.*’ 3 CATEGORIES Romi^ said the three major categories of issues today are: Moral and social—“The moral responsibility of self-reliant individuals and their voluntary institutions versus big government and a regulated society.” Economic — “Employer and j Seeterlin also criticized t h e union monopoly power versus | committee for selecting the Con-competition in serving free cus- i --- *—^------------------ In Waterford Township Pension Plan Stalled A proposed employe pension given preliminary approval last month by the Waterford Township Board, met an impasse last night and may be scrapped. The plan which his been naore than a year in the making by the Employes Retirement Committee came under heavy attack by Township SupeiVlsor James E. Seeterlin when it was presented for consideration of the board. Seeterlin said the plan prepared by the committee fell short of the pension program for the toWn^’s p<^ and fire personnel established three year! ago. This was denied by attorney Calvin E. Patterson who has served as a voluntary consultant for the committee. “It beats the police a AT LAST MINUTE Seeterlin, who also complained because the pension proposal was placed on the agenda at the last minute, cited several other objections. He was critical that past service of township employes is not considered, pointing ont that an employe with two years service and one with if would be in the same catagory under the pension He also objected to a provision that a person must be employed 12 years before becoming eligible for disability benefits and said the plan's trust agreement was unsuitable. federation Life Insurance Agency to draft the plan and suggested bids be taken on it. •BEST AVAILABLE’ The committee, consisting of two board members and two emidqyes, offered the plan the best one available after studying many othero. The plan was first drafted to ezdade elected officials at a cost of $n.SK5 aminally to On the suggestion of Seeterlin at the Jan. 4 meeting of the Township Board when the plan received tenative approval, elected officials were later included. This boosted the cost to 333,100. A total of $39,000 was budgeted for the pension program by the board last fall in anticipation of its adoption. WASTED EFFORT? Patterson said after the lengthy discussion on the pension program that ft looked as though the committee’s yearlong effort was wasted. He said the beard either should have gfoea the cem-mittee a directive at the start on specific points wanted in I, or confidence in the committee to draft the plan. Patterson then said he would no longer offer his servfces and suggested the board name a new committee and start from scratch. Trustee Rudy Mansfield summed up the feelings of a majority of the board members when he said the Impasse on the pension proposal seemed to be created by a lack of communication between the board and committee. The board made no move on a future course of action for the pension pr^al. OK Proposed Budget for Oakland Schools A proposed 196&46 budget of $421,109 for Oakland County Schools was approved last night -by the schodjlistrictdesigBafoL' The budget which is based on a .13-miIl tax rate was previously approved Jan. 28 by the Oakland County Board of Education gram for gifted children but the objection lacked support. A technicality arose concern-.|ng,the jright,rf„ArU)ur PeUetiw;, designate from ^thfiekf, to vote because no letter was on file officially appointing him as a designate or alternate. tomers who thus exercise ultimate economic power.” Political — “Excessive federal sovereignty.” He said these issues must be faced—"but not in a reactionary negative way. Sheer opposition is not enough. We must show superior results. He said full exercise of state and local responsibility is necessary to answer excess federal sovereignty. 2 County Men Get GOP Posts Cadillac Promotes Exec From Franklin Under a reocgamzatiottnMtie|^ Republican State Finance Committee, two Oakland County men, Don E. Ahrens of Bloomfield Hills and Max Fisher of Farmington Township, will become honorary chairmen of the organization. The appointment of Carlton A. 1 >J Rasmussen. 28009 Hersheyvale, 4 ^ I Franklin, as chief engineer for ^ "; Cadillac Motor + jjICar Division • was announced ,5 ^ today by Har- —II— ' old G. Warner, “■ 131'/% 131V% 13H4 w _ ,« «... J. Cadillac gen- eral manager Ahrens, 540 Haverhill, a retired vice president of General Motors, has been chairman of the finance committee since the mid 50s. and referred for final action to | vote ALLOWED the designates, representatives, ^is vote was allowed, how-of the county’s 29 school boards. | ^j,en Smith pointed out If the county allocation | that the designates have the booni allows the .13-mill tax | power to admit members to rate next spring, the budget | vote. as approved by the designates I The designates will meet will Uke effect July 1. ' again in June to begin consid- TV propo«l I*, badge! compares with the current one; of $390,027 which is based on a .ll-mill tax rate. i More than half of the $31,000 increase in the new budget, or' Tells Position dfeTT SALARY INCREASES Approximately $10,000 is spec- 10 S2V, JIV, .... . “ vicepres- ^5 ident of Gener- 17 37V% 37 3714 -I-"* 77 aid. a<4 m H • ait a. of Michi- gan. A newcom-Gem Club Speaker Set er here. »ms has been with Specialists in identification of minerals and rocks Howard Hawn and Floyd Mortenson will be present at tomorrow’s 7:30 p.m. meeting of the Waterford Gem and Mineral Club at the Community Activities Inc. build-ing:-------------------------------- Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AP)>-Th« c«sh Position f the Treosufy comr‘"'* - JJSti < 7Mb32l/40S.n Oapotiti FItctI Ymt . W.344.WMJ* ------------ WIIMrtwdt riical Ymt— M.IMUD1.477.V7 I1.IMJN.4MJ* ivuaiM.4M.N iintsmina 1S.4«t,I45,7*7.W i4,ni,tn,ii4.n ___________ X-Includn aUJ3MI«Jt dMt not Met to flatulury “ SIMS ant manager of the Chicago region and manager of company operations in Columbus, Ohio. Sims will supervise sales and distribution of all Pepsi - Cola products in Oakland County from headquarters at 922 Oiii^ ified to meet contracted salary increases and $4,000 is earmarked for staff conferences and instruction conducted by outside experts in various educational fields. Of the 23 designates present at the meeting, II voted to accept the proposed budget and four cast negative votes. DLs-seniers were Beraiel Root of Birmingham: E, Burrows Smith, of Royal Oak; Frederick W. Hiller, of Lamphere: and Must Pass Savings to Consumer—Farnum Congressman Billie S. Farnum of the 19th District says he favors legislation to remove the 10 per cent excise tax from automobiles — but only if the savings is passed on to the consumer. The Waterford Township Democrat said in a statement for the Congressional Record yesterday that his-primary con* Robert Sheardy, of Ijike Orion.. cem has beep for the economic * ♦ ♦ I well-being of the nation rather All expressed basic opposition i than the shoH-range Interest to financing of the county school | of his district and state, systehi through county allocat- ed funds. They would prefer state allocated financing. EXPLAINS VOTE ^ Smith, in elaborating on Kis vote, said he was voting agamst the budg^ proposal at the request of his schwl board. “My board believes the present system of financing “I have explained this in detail to those who have api>' proacbed me from the City. ’ of Pontiac in my district and from other fi^t aatoiBoMe^ manufacturing centers,” Farnum said. “A point I made was that unless the tax savings wero I passed on to the consumer, the ^titutes a reallocation M i measure would have not my sup-c«tra^ to foe spirit | port but my opposiUon. '■'celved assurances mg, ne saia. ; ^ reduced Uke-home price Sheldon Hockman, designate i for automobiles will be the re-from Ferndale, objected to the suit of removal of the tax.” proposed spending for, a pro- --------------- 6-Mill School News in Brief A total of $171 hi cash was re------- ---- . ported stolen in a break-in early Tax Renewed | land. Edward J. Giblin, 1365 Fairfax, Birmingham, former treasurer of Ex-Cell-0 Corp., has been promoted ^ to director of corporate de-^ ■ velopment, ac-cordihg to H. G. Bbcby, c 0 m-pany president. ml nica Orinn February 26. 1188 LUKe Kjrion S. woodward. Birmingham. 9 am. % Ady. Lake Orion School District --------------- renew a 6-mill operating tax by a 2-1 margin, 450-218. The renewal for a five-year period maintains school taxes in’ the district at 24.49 mills this year. The levy brnreases to. 28.48 mills next year srhen a 4-mill operating tax approved last summer goes into effect. TJTS^TurniturglTniSiSry Has $3 Billion Year i*3 74«I.7S|f<*| CttMM* 111 74 + S.OS Noon W» an im-portdnt govem-Rwnt • financed research project l^y treating it as a Joke. The purpose of the study was to find out why guests at a cocktail party tend to ___________ talk louder and louder as the party progresses. ★ * "Progi'esses” may not be exactly what a cocktail party does, but you know what I mean. Since this project impressed piano and began picking out his celebrated one-finger arrangement of ‘"nie Whiffenpoof Song.” Then it escalated alamt-ingly. The volume was further augmented hy Eddie 101- liner’s decision to demonstrate how much a lampshade resembled his wife’s new hat. Peak output can^ right after the first female guest departed. It developed that everyone whether the ipaterial used in a certain part of her blouse was really transparent. These findings may not be conclusive but they do prove one point: It takes more 'than Congress to halt the march of science. Exam Is Slated in Rifle Case A Pontiac man, arrestdd Sun-jday for allegedly firing a rifle at a speeding car, faces a preliminary examination next Wednesday at 9:30 a.m. on a charge of carrying a concealed weapon. undertaking, I expressed hope that it would someday be revived. It occurred to me that one thing I could do for my country would be to pick up the loose ends of the project ahd see if I could tie them together. * * * Fortunately, there was a cocktail party In my neighborhood that very evening. This gave me an opportunity to spend a couple of hours making scientific obwrvations. i Officers found a loaded rifle TRAY ARRIVE^ |in Smith’s car when they The first Ume I was able tol Sunday in front of detect an increase In the voice i level at the party was when the Albert Smith, 24, of 461 S. Edith, demanded examination at his arraignment yesterday before Municipal Judge Cecil McCallum. He is held on $3,000 bond. Smith reportedly fired a high-powered British .393 rifle at a car as it sped away from 462 S. Edith. Woes for TV Night Hosts Les Crane Is Droppedj ' Carson's Show Cut NEW YORK (AP) - AU is not serene these days for nighttime network television hosts. The: two men involved are Johnny Carson and Les CTane. The American Broadcasting Co. announced Tuesday Crane; will be doing his last show Frl- j Death Notices CARTS. FCSRUARV tX IMS, ORACe M. WS Rural, WstarMnI; ssa Til btlovM wNt al OwriM cant; dtar molhtr of Mrt. Oaorgt (Jolct) Pirkini; Star tWvr o( Mr>. NtllM Sltrllri|j> alt^f turvlvtd itrvict «X bt htW' Tlwridav, PtbiWy IS at I p.m. at Iha Coati Funaral Hama, Ortylon Plaint, with Rtv. Oannii Duiak at tha il Hanw. n. IMS.) Hlah.'« rwui ne aomg ms last snow F riday night. The 29-year-old per-fmmer, dropped because of low to be called “ABC’s Nightlife.” 7 By The Associated Press ’The National Institute of Arts and Letters has named Walter Lippmann, 75, author and columnist, winner of a gold medal for essays and criticism. The institute also announced yesterday its gold medal Carson’s situation with the National Broadcasting Co. is completely different. He is arguing with the network be- paintinR would go to Andrew Wyeth. 48. realist painter of hT^SSighr'^sSi! the American scene. ! when he does a monologue, has been cut out of stations in New York and San Francisco. Nightlife.”, Crane may wind up in file host role from time to time, the network saM. I eS Roll«< Mid Ruutll CHtdrly; d*«r wnt ol Wdrrwi Evmu. Pu-iwril ttrvlct will te hM Prlday, February J» r ‘ ‘ Id of Orria Oaw-klnti daar lamar of William, Elllah, Thomaa. Abraham, Samual, Nathanlal. Ruth and Joyea Daw-kbiaj daar brothar of Samuai and Lawli Oawkini and Cordalla Clark. Paarlar Hawkini, and Maltia Davis. Funaral sorvlca will ba hald Thurs-day, Fabruarj^IS, at 1 p.m. at Iha Smith earlier had been arguing with Sarah McFarland of that address, according to police. hostess brought in a tray hors d’oeuvre. I tamed to a man near me and said, “You seem to be talking loader than yon were a few minutes ago. Would you I. “It’s me is “Not at all,” he replii because the lady next t eating stuffed celery.” TTie next big jump decibel count came when Sam Butterfinger spilled part of his manhattan on Mildred Wring-er’s dress. Mildred gave a lit- tie scream that gave Mrs. Butterfinger the wrong Impression of what had happened. Once the voice level rose to that plateau, it remained there until Herman Octave went to the Mayor Cavanagh Cited by 2,000 in Detroit _ DETROIT (APj-The City of^ Detroit borrowed the mayor’ proclamation powers and proclaimed ’Tuesday “Mayor Jerome P. Cavana^ Day.” Nearly 2,000 persons attended a $50-a-plate dinner at Detroit’s Cobo Hall to honor the young chief executive for “reawakening the spirit of Detroit with his new, daring leadership.” Rite Is Set for Dean BIG RAPIDS (AP)-Funeral service will be held here TTiursday afternoon for Fred W. Swan, 50, dean of the Ferris State College School of Technical and Applied Arts. Swan died Monday at University of Minnesota Hospital after open heart i^«*»r»y i surgery Feb. 9. Luci Impressed by Ceylon Painter Loci Johnson, the President’s 17-year-old daughter was impressed yesterday by the painting ability of Senake Senanayake, 13, a visiting artist from Ceylon. Senake, whose paintings are being exhibited in this country, gave Lad a large oil painting entitled “Outer Harbor” and had his picture taken in a White House “New Yoi CO represent five million the opening worth it — workin( material — if the going to put It on the York, where the ginates, or a major city lik^ Francisco. It’s an integral of the show.’ Carson met Tuesday with an NBC executive to try to iron out the dispute. A network spok^ Barbara C. Cooke. 29, widow of jopnlar singer Saw—| man said laterv ’^The chances Lua “My gosh,” exclaimed the President’s daughter. “Imagine someone as young as he being able to ^contribute something like that.” Singer's Widow to Handle Estate Carson disclosed his stand to his television audience last Friday night after sitting in his dressing room during the first 15 minutes. He explained he was “sulking” and has since balked at doing the 15-minute opener. FIRST REACTION Garaon’e-firat reaction j ' and San Francis-1 of four to I night for | It isn’t prepare isn’t New ori- Road. Orchard Lakt, formarly o Northvllla: aa» M: balovad wif of Frai Michigan. Intarmant In Oakland Hills Mamorlal Cardans, Novi, Michigan. Mrs. Hallett will lla In RATHSBURG, FEBRUARV 23, IMS, RAY J., «1 South Winding Driva, Waterford Township; age W; beloved husband of Gloria Rathi-burg. Funeral service will be held Saturday, February 27 at 1 p.m. at the Sparks-Grittin Chapel. Interment In Imlay City Cemetery, Imley City, MIchiMn. Mr. Raths-burg will lie In state at the Sparks--Grlfiui Funeral Home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 p.m. and 7 to e p.m.) ___________ STtoH^NS, FEBRliART a ms. THELMA M., 2S57 Knowlaon, Kaego Harbor; age 52; dear mother of Mrs. Thomas (Sandra) A. Robinson and Theodore C. Stephens. Funeral arrangements are pending from .., C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, ' Keego Harbor. ARIECK CORSUO Not reck V ran. AyeflaHe tor club work, re^lent, wedlngs, „partlaa. eK. FS MS37 att^ « pjn. AtiV GIRL OR WOMAir a trlandly advhar. e. t-Sia batore 5 p.m., ar n i« ewer, call FU fm*. Cant dentlaL OAlNTYliAlb iU^^LlIf' 73» Menominee_________FE S-7IIS LICENSED PRIVATi OETBCTIVBl - Don't - - - big. Free oonsuttatlon. FE S-S3SI. SAVON CONFEDERATE BONOS -wlH trade tor HUX - call after s p.m. - OR Aasao. aoain. b The Bay Collier Rd.—Baldwin,_________ Reward. Call es^5l72.________ LOST: male BEAGLE PUP, 4 months, vicinity of W. Chicago.' and Weaver School. Reward. 33S-323I or 334-773S. LOST: NEAR HdLLY~5BRMAN I pup. sllVOr ' nd ring around Holly «3»»at5. LOST OR STOLEN YEAR-OLD WBI-gulred or know someone that has II, plaasa call FE 2-3iM or FE 2-eM7. Reward SSO. LOST; TiR€ AND WHIMl OFF frailer 700x15x1 pty, between Roeb-ester and Alina. Call UL 3-4605. L6sf. BUCKNBR AND VOSS PAY-mant 'book with tSO from Edison* Huron St. I7M Oraves-Pontlac. LOST: VICINITY SILVER LAKC and Walton ^Blyd^-Udtlany mala, onngr^nff white, ans. to Lance, George Burklgw, 2*50 SllverhIII. OR xouS.___________________ 2 MEN Hiring Port Time w factory branch It rations tor I Cooke, yesterday in Los Angeles was appointed administratrix of her husband’s estate, said to consist of $9,006 in personal property and $50,000 a year in record royalties. Cooke, 32, was shot and killed last Dec. 4 as he tried to break Into the office of a woman motel operator. The shooting was ruled Justifiable homicide. Comic Files SS-MUtigr tibftLSyjf. I are 99 to 1” there will be no change in Carson’s usual rou-I tine. I I “It’s a convenience to stations,” the spokesman ex-1 I plained. ’The 15-minute opener I has been cut out of New York I and San Francisco because of ^ expanded news programs. ’The NBC official said Carson would be shown “the facts of life” in irning «t which tlirw he will oe ;en to thf Church tor tervlco. 14 WEEKS Comedian Jackie Mason has filed a $3 million libel and | Crane, on the network show slander suit against Ed SulUvan and Robert Precht, producer «W>arently was surprised by his ouster. i of Sullivan’s television show. * * * ROSALIND WILOGEN City Clerk FgbriMry 34, IMS Mason said in papers in New York State Supreme Court yesterday that Sullivan claimed that the comedian made obscene gestures on the program last Oct. 18. This was false and untrue. Mason claimed. REGISTRATION NOTICE tor SPECIAL ELECTION MONDAY, APRIL 5. I*AS •bip of Whit* Laki (ProcliKt wW 31, County of Oakland, Mkhiw. None* N baraby gbron that In conformity witb tba "Mkblgan Elactlon Law", I, Itia undaraignod Clark, will rJunior Editors Quiz on— LIGHT YEARS - ■ His first comment: “I Just can’t believe it. I’m in a state of I shock.” Tuesday ni^t on his program he read the ABC state- ^ ment about the change of programs. ’Then he told the audience: “I imagine you probably expect me to say-somiething at this point, but frankly I don’t know what to say.” Investors Service Center ► LISTED SECURITIES • UNLISTED SECURITIES • MUTUAL FUNDS • TAX EXEMPT BONDS • CORPORATE BONDS Cofne in Jbday or phona Watling, Lerchen & Co. Mambtrt Naw York Stock Eachai^ 2 N. SagiNaw Phone: FE 2-9274 QUESTION: What do astronomers mean when they talk about “light years?” ANSWER: When we pull up a window shade in a darkened room, the light seems to be there all at once, yet it Iias actually moved in from the window at a certain speed. Scientists say tint light it composed of tiny packets of eaergy called photons, that it moves in waves, and ■peed at whldi anything can traveL To give you tome idea of this enormous sp^, our artist has dram a symbolic figure of Apollo, whom the Greeks conceived as the god of light. If there was sach a character streaklag along with n flaming torch^ at the known speed of light, he would have covered 186J282 miles while yon coanted one second. Hiis would mean, that, in that one second, Apollo would have flashed more than seven times around the earth. Then think of the dhtihicc Apollo would cover, not in ode secowl but in one year! It would amount to almost six million million miles. Distances in space are so enormous that astronomers often describe them in light yeims,*each such unit being the distance light travels in one year. Used in this way, we ^peak of the nearest star as being 4.27 light years away. Waldron Hit DV C'^llnr F/rP The latest Nielsen ratings putj / I II ^ 1114 shows with a rating of 2.7. Fire at 8:32 a.m. today in Carson’s show was in 107th' the basement of the Waldron Hotel, 36 E. Pike, caused an estimated $4,500 damage to the building and contents. Firemen said the blaze started in the vent fan above stove in the kitchen. Damage was estimated at $500 to the building and the balance to contents. Most of the latter was the result of smoke damage. place with a rating of 7.8. WE WISH TO THANK ALL OUR relatives, friends end neighbors tor Ibe net of kindness and the beeufl-4ul Moral offerings In the lots of our beloved wife abd mother. Special thanks Id Rev. Robbins, The Mount Vernon Ladles AM.—The Royal Fosdick Family. WE WISH TO EXTEND OUR heartfelt thanks to all our neighbors, relatives end friends tor their many acti of kindness, beautiful Moral offerings end messages ol sympathy and to Iha ladles who furnlshW and helpad serve the ---------during the ----------- — *“ 'Til the eternal morrow. Idly missad by daughtar Mary L oil and family. Son Gang La Id family._______________________ i. Hours to 1 salary plus shan Ml to SIN weakly of yytA 2 EXPERIENCED MECHANICS ON Chevrolet or OMs. Call MA 5-5(1(71. Mr. RavnoMs. Haskins Chavrolal Inc., 5751 DIxIa Hwy. at M-15. 2 Investiaators ’ in Oakland Coonty as Insurance and parsonnal Invastlgalors. This __!l_a non-sajes, salary position with full expanses and excellant bane-Mfi. All promotlens from within. Some college preferred but will take well-ouallMed high ichool graduates. Age 22 to 2i, typing AFTER 6 P.M; $200 PER MONTH 3 men to work 3 hours In evening. If you work out pert-time, you couM begin training; program earnings to 510,000 per year. New cer, other company benefits. Cell 5^ p.m. lor Information, OR 3- brnationAL sales OR- sharlng progtwn. Shel-van r-onriFtC-BuiCka InC.a Aik for CtI._____________^ BODY BUMPER. MUST BE FIRSt ■ArW—Mlldn _______ Tru-Tork Inc., Maple. Troy, «45Rt3l.__________ ExAERIENCfb MAN tO RERAIR truck Mret. 3354141____________ ^ experienced day TIM# TRUCK mechanic end experteisceR nl|M crane operetor. sggui.________ E'X P E R I B N C E~D AUlSTAliT manager tor------------ ' *—“ XI,” route. Appb; IIF4. Faygo Bcuer-—A *30 FealNeritona. FULL TIME MAN FOR BEIF AN6 ------1 In Romao a“* ' ■“— 51.25 aar I FORD MOTOR CO. UTIQA PLANT NEEDS CLOTH CUTTERS EXPERIENCED IN OPERATING APPLY Hourly Personnal Offict 50500 Mound Rd. At 23 Mil* Utica, Mich. "HELP US" And SM will help yau to an amazing incoma. DON'T PASS THIS UP WE NEED YOU AND YOU NEED US. It you hava a naal and digniflid mearanct: Call Mr. Jordan at FE S043I. tor ar-- Hnovy Duty Mnchonic (Transmission work) naadad at onct to compittt our Sarvica OagL (Apply In partonl. JEROME Oil£-Cadlllac 2SC S. Saginaw Straat. HELP-HELP . Walton Blvd. Apply SCHOOL graduate, GOOD '.’"hrss&n-aS JUSf“ A hard working man vtlio wa steady amal^malit and a gi ■----Car halatoL Apply 2 B4oagd~WANTF0 VULI 'TIME'. 24M Ilt-Jnn Lake Rd. OR 3-2*11, EM 3-4253 ___ B"MP * NO ”¥*1 NT man. COLII-slon Shoe Exoerlence only Plenty One of the reasons for division in the Christian Church is the kind of bread used in celebrating the eucharist — leavened or unleavened. Rights Issues Involve High Court—Douglas EUGENE, Ore. (AF) - Jus-' tice William 0. Douglas said Tuesday the U.S. Supreme Court is involved in civil rights j problems because “the court' reflects the anxieties, the perplexities and the needs of the age it is in.” Douglas told the Eugene-Springfield Metropolitan Civil Club that he expects the United States to be embroiled In civil rights matters for a long time. MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS 702 Pontiac Slate Bank BMg. FE I-04M PontiK's oldast and largest budg- CHANGING JOBS? t enough Uture In enwEYOR COMPANY N E 6 6 S 'ItMer with layout fxperlinei; -*3»-en hour. 0*y shift. Handling Svs-Oak’ "®ral ^c.“o.“ p7s~inc.^ ; We hove full-timn opening for Experienced salesmen in the following departments: CAMERAS SHOES . BUILDING MATERIALS ’ PLUMBING AND HEATING PAINT FURNITURE Prominent Rights Lawyer BOX REPLfES At 10 a.m. today there j I were replies at The [ I Press Office in the fol-! lowing boxes: 5, 25, 33, 46, 48, 51 j I 54, 58, 59, 71, 72, 78, 79, I 92, 96, 97, 98 IM. icrap yard. 22 Congress. t e hloh who"' educ»i'nn ahliitv tn type. Apply I otfice Pontiac General 1st Woman Ghieffof NY#ea DRAYTON PLAINS FOR YOU TO DO: Cut out this article '«nd paslie it In your Junior Editors or astronomy scrapbook. Refef- to it when you see the term light year again. NEW YORK (AP) — Con- until Dec. 31, said at an Albany stance Baker Motley, Negro news conference that she would state senator from Harlem and » 1“'* four-year term next a prominent civil rights lawyer, D. E. Pursley FUNERAL HOME FE 4-1211 Manhat- borough president tan. She was named to the $35,000-a-year post a little more than a year after she entered active Democratic party politics. ★ ★ ♦ , Mrs. Motl^, a tall and handsome woman of 43, was elected unanimously Tuesday by the Manhattan members of tlie City Council, six Democrats and two Republicans. ^e .fills a vacancy created Jan. 1 when Edward R. Dudley, a Negro and former ambassador to Liberia, was elected a state Supreme Court Justice. Every borough president of Manhattan since 19S3J>a8 been a Negro. TO SEEK REELECTION Mrs. Motley, whos^ term runs the backing of Mayor Robert F. Wagner, makes’her the . first woman to serve on the Board of I Estimate, a branch of the city’s I legislative setup. In addition to the mayor, comptroller and ci^y council president, the board includes U|e presidents of the city’s five boroughs. Mrs. Motley’s election createa^a ^avairj cy in the state Senate. * * * Before her meteoric rise in public office — which began at a special election to fill a vacancy in the state Senate Feb. 4, 1964 — Mrs. Motley served as counsel to the National Association for the Advancement 7 N PC S-576» aftgr 6. Montgomery Warid PONTIAC MALL AAACHINIST for SORiNb MILL and LATHE, al|p madtlna ripMr-man, Oakland IHd. Inc. I70BS Ma- ' ionic Blvd., Fraaar, Mkh._ — AiDplioinee Salesmen -Excellent opportunity for men with real obil^t —Seme selling experience in reloted lines. —Permanent fuH-time schedules. —Cor necessary. -Earnings up to $8,(X)0 per yeor. Apgly Parsonnal Dapt. Montgomery Ward MANAGER TRAINEE Young man to bagin training program leading to $10,000 par yaar ----. ^ months. 1120 furnlshad, group MARRIED, HON-ORINKER AND Draftsman Cutting tools V R/Wesson TJTORkMH Brlghlon, Michigan ELECTRONIC ~ TECHNICIAN work In axparimantal d< alactric motors and ralaled ~m^ cbanic*l davicas. Immadlata opan-Ihg. Modern plant. Oxford area. Write full rasuma. ana. education, salary dasirad. ratarancas ^ Pon- pald lita and hoapital. Msuranca. , paid hallddvs. Clyda Bngtn^big A Phoot 673^134 10 to 5 p. ni MEN rking days oft par month srRti ,_y COMPANY VEHICLES FURNISHED. Wa guarantee S3 good pay checks par yaar. It you an|oy getting paid tor what you da, CW"* dhd discuu Nils pdattlon with us *' "“highland motel 2201 ’ Dixie Hwy., Pontiac 33^4051 Cab or apply Wed., Ftp. 14. 1*05. Art lor Mr. Rica from naan la 0 MAWMSTS GENERAL MACHINE SHOP WORK, ALL' MACHINES. LONG PROGRAM. 50 HOUR WEEK. fringe BENEFITV APPLY IN , PERSON. I 750 W. MAPLE ROAD { TROY. MICHIGAN TSifR ^ A D—« THE PONTIAC PRfeS& WEDNESPAY. FEJBRUABY 24, 1965 MIN N AND OVIR TO MAKt l|W RMIxwlw M Drty«w Rtokw. MiN Orlw and (Mwd wm. MmM N©©ci $ $ $? IIIMIM (or a « hoar waak New Car 1) Dmno Furnishid 2) Insuranc* 3) Paid Vocotion manage. I MS tn»ed« NEW CAR RREf>ARATORY MAN naadad, axRarlancad praltrrad. Ap-^ a^ Jarotna Motor Salat, M S. CLOSERS ONLY NEED MAN TO CLEAN NEW AND mad cart (or dtllvary. Taylor Cliavrolot Salat, Walltd Laka. Ap- NEEDED AT ONCE Auto Salesman I Demo (umithad V,; tx NURSERY MEN. GROWERS ^ND taNtman. Bor-"“'- ----- and Nurtary, Rd„ Rochaotar. Need $ $ $? S11S4IM for a S4d hour waak OPERATOR For hydraulic hot balonging 1 Local 3M. OEneva S^dNIl attor PRESS WANT ADS ARE LIKE HAVING YOUR OWN "MONEY TREE" Wolp WaiitEd Mato Pontiac Mall ORGAN SALESMAN PIANO SALESMAN Grinnell's QUALIFIED EUMF mAN WANTED, “^our wook. S1SS. Fonllae Oath Laka Orion. MY »2d(l.______ REAL ESTATE SALESMEN Takbif appllcttlont — Tom Rata man or L. H. Crimot. BATEMAN REALTY CO. ___________FE S-TUI __________ SERVICE STATION HELR WANT-ad for now Notion. Inqviri at SSfS Mt. Clamant and l-rs, Pontiac Mich.____________________ SERVICE AND STOCK MEN-PQR parmanant potitlon — ditcauntt 'on SALESMAN - MUST EE MATURE salesmen WANTED! _ , For tulMImt amploymant hi Real Ettatc. Exporlancad prNarrad, W will tram. Tam Raagan RmI Et; tata, »«1 N. cidyka Rd. Ca.l FE smiSd or FE Mft7. SENIOR ACCOUNTANT Caratr opportunity with larBo i gjnUNIon SHORT OFoIR COOK, MUST NAVE braaklaN axportanca, app> a* Boy Driva-ln. TalograpR •"<> SEE OUR AO UNDER BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES “A ONE-MAN BUSINESS S2.000 INVESTMENT" (CAN START PART-TIME) carpentAr contractor NEEbS —r«r good work In custom field/ Work braaklng rt only, call OL 1-Mdl o( adaTFor hdervlow, call W ___OM* YEAR parlonS'parsont»r^lr^. TIto and VS. Paid vacation. Paid holF dayt. Frk^ oanatllt. Gro^ -- Inquire count, 1(10 Wide Track Weal._______ YOUNG M*N FOR ^^.MANENT kXPERIENCEO PULL TIME waRraw. Apply In partan Tawn B Country Inn, S. T( NELL'S. MSdOI. Tha ^ BEAUTY OPERATOR, FOLL OR part-time In Drn^ Plaint. Colt-lurt Par Anne. TTSdTIJ or ' _________oWor, FE________________ BABY SITTER^ 4 DAYS A WEEK. FE A4223. BABY SITTfeR FOR 3 GlIiLS. _ ^ S months oM. f:15 to 7:00. 5 days, own (rani-poHatlon pretarrad. MS47S7. S5Iy sitter, days, call after 4 pjn. FE 4-JS40. days. 33FS4SI attar t._________ BABY SITTER LIGHT HOUSE-keeplng - Mo^ dayt only — rNarenca, Bloomfield Hint, 447-SS43 attar 4 p.m. BAR WAITRESS, NIGHTS. VICIN- Rocheater, OL I-I3M. CASHIER"^ TYPIST, PLEASANT working conditlont, Okparlanca CAKE DECORATOR Frlday-Saturday — - thU*$6aV- tranaportatlon— CURB GIRLS AND WAITRESSES ...... .1. Top w hotpltalliatlon, IH. . , ...Id vacNIon. Apply In at tha BIG BOY^RIVE nagraph and Huron, or Dl» _____/. andSllvar Laka Rood. COUNTER GIRL, FOR DRY CLE^ person a m, Telt( DEPENDABLE LADY. LIVE care ol 5 chlldran while m. It In hotpital. 4 or 5 dayt, ISO, 343-32P. DEPENDABLE COOK, AFTER-noont, 3 to II p. m. FE *4Ni». Dr.'S ASSISTANT, »-40t EXPERI-ence preferred vldnlty et GenerN Hospital. muN be attractive and In good health. Reply to Pontiac CAREll ng? Like ------------- ningt for part-time work r home showing AVON mellct. Mutt ac^l at oiKe. -4-4S0S or write Drayton Plaint PO ____________ 'UkV -■i??Tfi. parMIma, Kaopo area. dkSStai. EXPERIENCED OPE*Atofc TO manage |iaauly shop. Ouarantaod salary and ^ammlttlon. Goad cH- jilWda! FE B4S1I batwaan |-j p. m. Experienced Waitresses 21 or Over Good^nS* Good working conditiona Apply In Perton HARVEY'S COLONIAL HOUSE person. Alter 4 pjn. Huron Bo Loungo. tai Elliabath Laka Rd. WAITRESSES WAklTED FOE SHOW Bar. 47S-7m._______________ WAITRESS. APPLY IN PERSON attar 4 p.m. Llttla OMch Treat, ms Orchard Lake Read, Kaago EXPERIENCED AUTOMOBILE UN-derwrlter, Pontiac Insurance, Agency. salary opan, S day weak, call FE B7li7. w-a;..e---- EXPERIENCED WAITRESSES FOR dining room - dayt or nlghtt. Rael't Drlva-ln OR S-7173._ Alterations Woman with some alteration experience to learn men's alterations and pressing mochine. Full-time, permanent schedule. Mony company benefits. Montgomery Ward _____PONTIAC MALL__ EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY . —. ^ny'-SSitTwRi: Retail Management We have an excellent opportunity for a department manager who has had supervisory eTtporience in f eody-to-weor or yord goods: We prefer a mature woman who has been a manager or assistont ia a small shop or large volume department. Good salary plus override. Many company benefits, including Sharing Plan. Apply at Personnel Dept, or write to Personnel Mgr. ----WAiTpKryk-----— TELEGRAPH AT LONG LAKE RD. BLOOMFIELD HILLS Ml 4dMS WANTED: EXPERIEtiCib WOOL Balt. FE MS7I. wanYIo: TiLiFriSNi sAi¥s ■ I, full and part ttma. caH- attica, FE M4ia. WOAAAN FOR TELEPHONE SALES salary phn cammltalon, days. FE S-W7. ______________________ WOMAN FOR GENERAL OFFICE work, typing raquirod. Writa Pontiac Pr«$ Box S4 giving oom-plato rotuma ot work and pay exparionca, ago, aducatlon and W()NIAN^^ W GENERAL HOUSE^-3-3144. Attar 5,^ OR S-7S44.' WOMAN, OVER 31 FOR INSPEC-tlon and atiambly dopt., will tram. Apply Fox Dry Claanara, 713 W. WOMAN FOR CLEANING IN CON- BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED H N«"** 17.00, SI0.00 B 313 DETROIT BLOOD SERVICE I Pontiac PE 44 1343 WIdo Track Dr., W. DISH WASHER, DEI^ENDABLET' EXPERIENCED SALESPER-ton man or woman, axcallant opportunity tor axparlaocad person capabla ot sailing largo tickal marchanidsa. Sail tha finast lines ot stereos, telavislona, pianos and ^ LIGHT DELIVERY WORK, n.m., musl have automoor part time. CaH 473-5707, A Better Income by Learning IBM Machines LEARN IBM KEY PUNCH, M*. CHINE OPERATION AND WIN. ING. COMPUTER PROGRAM- W—Hdl tE Beat PONTIAC POLICEMAN - BAt^lE-lor - dMiraa lum. OpI„ Wlh kHdian, lor axchango ei < RochastoT o5l Fimi. 33S«" “ 731-4007. ________ Share UeIih 4wrteft COLLEGE GRADUATE - PRIVATM phono, TV, nraplaca. --- pool. 3S3 W. YpNIanll. I WORKING LADY WILL SHAR| B LIGnY HAULING I^RRieb7«AN~WANTllAlilTt5i’‘s VouitO vifOMAN WANTS YOuW couDla to sharo hama, r child vrsfcema. 343-W30. YOUNG WOMAN WOULD UKd Y6 1TO.50 ,, ERTIES AND LAND CONTRACTS WARREN STOUT, Realtor UO N. Opdyka RC. FE SOI4S mjltiple*li1t7ng service WIDOW desires 'Care 6f in- tr elderly < .Iva m. FE madlatoiy. DETROIT. BR CASH 48 HOURS LAND CONTRACTS-HOMES WRIGHT 1 3-(141 ELECTRIC MOTOR SERVICE-RE-Ml^ «d^ntwlndlne. 310 E. Pika, OressNNitfRI t TeflariNi 17 DRESSMAKING, TAILORING AND ) YOU WANT TO SELL? ta need listings 'on homes, al partmants and lots. A. JOHNSON & SON REAL estate B INSURANCE iob NaoME W. H. BASS "Soaclalliing In Tradaa" REALT^ FE 3-7310 BUILDER toot WIce S»gci ^ 1-ROOM OFFICE FOR RENT I now buHdhio. W, par month I Cludine hoot and Hgh(s.,C Bataman or L. H.—Gn FE 0-7141.______j. & R. tS'. Rooty.« MODERN, PANE Un>, FURH- *tm^shod racroatlwi my, POVM drlvawoy^Wr dono taneod lot many dtmr uoMiv locathm. only 3W mlnwop to^tli^Mili; 0l4,fS0, nsio dassn cash to IMW mortgaBO. 3-UHn INCOME - PfOirtWt. Warns ^ir.tsir'Jisrd-irs :ss cash attar. UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE CHEROKEE HILLS. JI53JK: mim^^ woim. W- ■mine mehidod. Ph. FE SdOdO, CRESCENTJjAl^ ^ ?ST5S3 Kkm'-’Nisffi '“hTlTOP REALTY 473-5334 ___ FAMILY RANCH S. ToNgroph. FE 3-1044. OFFICE FOR RENT 040 sq. It. oNIco spoca toi Ask tor Tom Baloman or GrImos. FE 0-7141.____ lEEt Batliwii fripirty 47-A FOR SALE OR RENT: BUILDING on S. Sogmasv SI. SuHoMo lor many purposo^^^Lm^ solMroOT. mi prlvIlMtt Is Is • bimr ________»»»«• offered. Price H5.»»a down h7r()Ld"r.'*F^NKS, Rtolty 3i03 UNION LAKE "OAD EM 3-3300 ______________3*»-ri« ~ GOLF MANOR ^ nMloly 7A00 H p.m., 343-3114. ________ NEW 30'X70' BUILmNGl . PLUl S^^7or 0-NBIL REALTY. OR 40437.____ STORE BUILDING FOR RENT OR maao, opproximoloty 3,001* •— (Toklondlivo. FE 40133. S5 LONG FORM PREPARED AND typed m my homo S5. Your homo, I4l None higher axewt businessas. George Lyla, FE 0-0853. , ACCURATE. F P i e N D L Y TAX GET RESULTS WE NEED NsfUigs. Ci for dvk* Mio ow lop ■Hi '* "** ****^' ** “A?*'? DON WHITE. INC. Fhana4740W4__________i Hesieak lervica. tout noma or 343o”h! HAVE kUVkRS WITH CASH FOR Parry, KEYS AND NACKBRMAN, hom^ Con got f — FE 0-33(7. FE 3-3171. 1 prlco. Wty lgkO_ low FE 5-3144 Bxporloncod EXEERIENCED - DEPENDABLE I \lnoema Tax-Bookkaaping R. PollEyr 673-«0^ j HAVE BUYERS FOR ANY KIND 1 ot property tar quick sale, call: Paul Jonas Really - FE 40Sn. INCOME TAX U UP H & R BLOCK CO. Nation's Laraost Tax Sarvica 30 E. Huron St. Woakdiys^MtuL, Sun. (-5 LISTINGS WANTED You cap got mora lor your homo by ItalMt with us bttero you trade. AliSjST JOHNSON realtor 1701 S. Telegraph FE 43533 LONG FORMS PREPAID, U. OR 30333. LISTINGS WANTED DRAYTON AND WATERFORD wa buy and sail land contracts AL PAULY, Reoltor 4514 DIXIE, REAR OR 3-1000 Evas. FE 1-7444 CtavalGsctiit-Narsiaf 21 sToneycroft nursing home 4U-35M ROCHESTER OL 1-00(3 1W-STORY, 3 BEDROOMS, CAR-**| pot; drapes and stove, aluminum ' storms snd sera— ““ Coll OR 41144.___________ - BEDROOM FENCED YA«a near FIshor Body, 6M, NT --------------------- many oxtros ^ _ and tlroplo* vs-acro lot wNh ISO- Irontago Bleomtiold. t34J0i. UL 1 - BEDROOM RANCH. WATiP front in Coder Shares SuB. Largo landscopod let with paved circle drive. 3VS car garage. 40 It. wim laleusla windows. il4,(«_. . par coni dawn. 100(5 Burgass Court. 343-73(5._____ BBEDROOM NEWLY HOMEFOR A SUCCESSFUL MAN Mil bo the first thing you «r,»i7.s:in,“;;5^j5s; S»iSnV*?t2S?.'*.‘OivJ'S!!! ;s^d"rkSSi."m.Ki«S and 0 3-car attochod Mraat- Laid ^ In Iho popular ^l’’^sIiopo. You'll lind this hdmt o mutt,on your list at flno homat la aaa. Full only S30.000. Tarmt to tutt. Taylor Realty ^^4^HKH.mndR^INy.3^7^ HERRINGTON HILLS use DOWN 3-bsdroom ranch, boaomonl, ho^ wood floors, newly docerolod. land-sewad. povod. vpcant. 4 v a e r a oM. Excollant tecoMon. RORABAUGH Woodward ol Squart Loko Road IE Man________ Rortiof HIITER SELL OR TRADE: This 3-I^Oom Kmo corrwr kii. IRTOB terms. ^ NORTH SIDE: Immsdioto paososslon SALESWOMAN FOR CHILDREN'S ---------- gmSJI*—' *" MY SON THE SalesmM^ r * tliAla hand ot 130 w.p.m. to tram ter court rtportlng position. Training lor those positlont scheduled for Thursday and Friday. February 35 and 34. Apply Par. sonnal Offica. OMcland Caunty Court House. 1300 N. Totograph Rd., Pwitmc. '•i IS Ks SUPERVISOR _________PLUMBING SUPPLIES, S400) MECHANICAU S4M< ADVERTISING (MO paid), tIOtl OFFICE EQUIPMENT. SHO) CHEMICAU S400I RETAIL, SSSO; RUBBER, SMOl PLASTICS, S4M| FOOD, SieOt ELECTRICAL INSURANCE (loo paW), S7U; DRIVER SALES, S4I0, INDUSTRIAL (loo mM), wo. " ' Porao^ 41 lattnKt|wi^GGb ATTENTION! 4(0 E. Maple Days only, oak tor Mr. Crwit, Wyman Furniture. *°5^i£!dro2n*^^ 075 Par Month S44 East Blvd. ot Vaioncio FE 47133 CASH FqR PIANOS, FURt1jYuR_fe( 44044. hire,'portaMa and otnea typawrlt-art. addbio machintt, droftka l» bits. etc. OR 34747. iASt SIDE Twobodreem, IW^tto^ homo — UntumWiad. Boootapnf. Goo hoot, !!t!.JI??ttoir **" ,3(r;f.'SJsyfr“*Fir«,« HANDICAFPEO PERSON WOULD Ilka uaad lumllura. 3(3 Hlghts Rd., Lake Orion. WANTED: JJSED TyMwMTUI. goo^ondjmiweksoimbta^^ m66ern sgedroom house, targe taneod m back yard, very ctoM^naar O.U- W o month. Wooti^ t« iBRt 32 1-BEOROOM home. IN NORTH OR WHt, Pontiac Caupio with young child. ROMonoMe FE MSI A 3- OR l-BEbROOM HOME, W OR SMALL S-BBOROOM HOME, VERY claon, 3vy-car gorogo, no diUdron. FE 44041 attar 4 p.m. ••■( apeMe 09 3-7131. BLOOMFIELD HILLS SCHOOLS NEW COLONIAL ____Machamci . Auto Body Calllaalqn WOLVERINE SCHOOL 1400 W. Ford, Dttren WQ SW3 FINISH HIGH SCHOOL AT HOME. DIplOmo ow “-----"— (or FRB- __________ ________ Sdiasl of Homo Study, 37743 Meimd Rood, Oopt. tf. Warron, MkhlgOn. Phono SL 7-3W. 3-be6r6wJh»Si ■ 6r ■ A^arT.’C'-^';' general mant. Untumishad. Near Peotloc-Agy***' ____________ Lake. Adults. 473^511 or 444007B-; COMFORTABLE ROOM. EVERY-Lapaor-Mr. Brusa. I thing fumishod. codking lacllltlat B QR~3lgDRObM HOUSt. N(>Rftt I K Wired, eldor porsM,l34fU3. or wtsi oraa. FE 1K3S. | PRIVATE ENTRANCE,, LARGl cleaR—workTng couple.' 3 schootega chlMran, datira Mod- I. FE 0-1343. ....—. oSTKi,. bNi^E'tR OESiiiis' lllblSSii homo m Pontiac or luBurba tar family at A FE 4*473. PROFESSIONAl gRnTLEMAN Mill area, medarn, FE 3«15. ROOMS FOR LADIES ON PERRY BIRMINGHAM POUR-BEDROOM ranch with laka prlvUtgas. dining room and pan-tlad family room, 3VBcar attached ^*%7mi*'’ ^ ’’*** WEIR, MANUEU SNYDER & RANKE 3(0 S. Woodward, Birmingham ,P,HONES 5443333 & 'ii on. targe tal. 1 100 with 10 per cant down. .FLAHLEY REALTY 430 COaOMBRCB _1XN1 SCHRAM Brtnd«l CokB-3 Bodrooms \ «ttar4. TOTAL ONLY^ ' WHY MOT LET Ivon W. Schrom BE YOUR REAL ESTATE MAN II Jealyn Avt. F| Bfon THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 24, 1&63 lX-7 D—8 •HIE IWriAC VKESS, WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 24, 1965 ^ . ... ..M tMO ILKT- ------------r m CASH BAL- AHCI. Ittll UMW nurr-^- ■ — ------- -!♦«*_ SPECIAL m A MONTH ruVS 3 BOOMS OB F^NITUBC - Comhli Of: *«'■■■" ‘ Formic* top tobta. . _ txU ruB MclwM. All tor tSW. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. i; C. HUBON FB A4N1 ’■ BIKE____________FE niSO ----BCA Color TV, now pictort tub* S3M SotooBt BaOlo A Appllonc* Inc. 431 W. Huron_______________334-5*77 WE TAKE TBAOB - INS. FAMILY Homo FumWiIngs, 1135 Dixie Hwv. WASHEB, US. ELECTRIC STOVE. S35. Dryer, SIS. Bofrigorator wltK tap froenr, S4». Gat ttovo, SIS. 11-kidi TV S35. Bafrigorator SIS. V. Marcit. BE S-334S........... W^STINOHOUSE WASHEB AND tt^, good condition. SI25. Ml WYMAN'S IN STC.,_ I* Star* Only ............. .......... S5».»5 EASY TEBAM FE All** WRINGEB WASHEB MACHINE — axcallont condition - *7441*13. TV A RmHm 15 E. Walton, comar et Jt Jt m.fs SI40. 3-SPEAKER AIRLEINE STER-. ao rtcard playar. Hardly uiad. Varlout raoord albums. 3100. anar 4:30, FE A3*40. CLEARANCE ON tRAbE-lN TV'S. All rabullt and W day warranty. Obal Talavltlan, 34H Enubath Laka Bd., FE A4M5. Open ______________ . MAKES AND JOHNSON RADIO & TV 45 E. Walton FE 84569 USED TV'S FBOM S45.FS. BILL WatBT SBftBMn HO-MABT, 70.000 GRAIN, 3 YEARS ♦T3-I177. Univarial SoH Water. Fbt SbIb MIscbIIbiibbbi H CARAT M 1* HORSEPOWER SUMP PUMPS, MW. Wa financa. AIm rantalt and rapairt. Conato, FE 5-5*43. PRE SEASON SPECIAL _____ _____'$3M*»5 'tor*V« Riding Rati, S347.*5 tor $24* RWIng Real (Oamo), t349.t5 tor 11*5 PARTS AND SERVICE KING BROS. FE ♦40734 ^ FE ♦1442 Pontiac Ed. at Opdyka SINGER PORTABLE SEWING CHINE. -------- —" lad. Pay off account AT 55.50 par montb Or tu I BALANCE. Unlvartal Co.. SPREOSATIN PAINTS, WARWICK Supply, 3470 Orchard Laka. tH-'/WO STAINLESS STEEL DOUBLE SINKS WBOd-CBBl-CBkE-FBBt 77 A AGED WOOD - S7 UP. ALSO slab - FE 04755 or FE 04044. CANNEL COAL - tHfi iblAL firoplaca foal, firaplaca wood, tlra-iWa colort^ OAKLAND FUEL A PAINT. 45 Thomat St. FE 54IS*. DAN AND LARRY'S - DRY SLAB THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE no W. LAWRENCE ST. Evaryttilng to meat your -Clottiing. Fumitura, and Ap TWO LAMP, 4-FOOT FLOURES- ---- — banchas, Ol0.*5 marrad. FlouraKant, 3*3 Orchard Laka. 10 USED GAS AND OIL FURNACES Chandler Haatlng, OR 3-5433. TIENKEN OIL FURNACE AND * ---» BTUt, TOOT of 1" rope, 3-MONTH-OLD HALF BLUE TICK i>nd, 050 — FE M547. DACHSHUND PUPS, TERMS. • dog*. Jahalmt. FE 0-3530, AKC DACHSHUND PUPPIES. STUD dogt. ESTELHEIMS, FE 3-OBOt. KC GERMAN SHEPHERD. 075.. Vary good watchdog. OB 3-5304. __ _ M AND JOINTER, AKC REGISTERED AMONTH-OLD Brittany pups. 405-1775, MIHord. AKC CHIHUAHUA PUPPIE4, ♦ waakt oW. FE 24274. I cabinet*. 045. 330- . AtANO WANTED TO BUY, ANY to-inch prafinlthad Birch . 0 4.*5 W-bich proflniihad Walnut 0 0.05 PONTIAC PLYWOOD -------- . FE 2-3543 AT GALLAGHER'S NEW PIANO ARRIVALS At Claamac* Pricaa 9x12 LinolBum Rugs $3.89 Jaw IR* *x*" 4c aa. Floor Shop - 2255 Ellubeth Laka "Across From the Moll" Xir LINOLEUM bugs 03.*5 IaCH 12" >lllna tlM >SG Tlla, FE 44*57, 1075 W new SHOWER STALL, 33A2753. After 4._______ 1* INCH PORTABLE TV**, NAME Brand Ctoaranca. Uted TV's 1* 00. LITTLE JOES BARGAIN HOUSE 1441 Baldwin Open Eva*. FE 2-4043 2(1 PER CENT OFF ON ANY USED da*k, typawrltar, adding machine, ■"‘nteograph, ate. Marked with red tag. Forba*, 4500 Dixie Hwy.. next to Pontiac Stata Bank, OR 34747. Wa oho buy. __ 320 GALLON OIL TANK WITH 1964 Necchi Demo I with zlM*o I, etc. 05.00 p rIgULAR "795-SALE $588 HO^ Quantity I* Llmltad______ GALLAGHER'S MUSIC IS E. Huron FE 44544 Royal Oak Store 4224 Woodward Y AT BETTE BLY'S Plano-Sala-Kohlar S Campbell, all modal* and finloha*. Uva. U*ad con*ola piano, bargain. Demalco. Inc. FE 04521_____ _ ; BEEF AND pork-half and' I ouartar*. Qpdyfca -Mkf_5 7*41. bathroom FIXTURES. OIL AND ga* fumaca and hollar*, automatic water haatar*. hardware and alec-trlcal aupplla*. Crock, *oll, copper, Mock and gatoanliad ptpa and fitting*. SaMry and Low* Brother* paint. Sugar Kam-Tona HEIGHTS SUPPLY Bottle Gos InstoIIotion Two lOIPpound cylinder* and equip-mant, 012. Groat Plain* Ga* Co., CASH AND CARRY Vi" pra-flni*hed mahogany, 4x1 Open MON. and FRI. CB HALICRAFTERS RADIO, 015. 1 Dial* Hwy. OR 34747. buy______________________ CLOSET COMBINATIOM WITH COtft telkock S19 4x7 pra-linlahad mahogany TALBOTT LUMBER COAL heaters-6il burners. Taylor'*, 403 Mt. Claman* SI. COMPLETE STOCK OF PIP* AND fitting*. Cinlom threading, Imma-diata —rikit. Montcalm Supply, 154 W. Montcalm. FE 5-4712. D4J CABINET SHOP *34 W. HURON 33*4010 SPECIAL LIMITED TIME ONLY 10' BIRCH prefinished CABINETS WITH FORMICA TOP INSTALLED, 0300. DRILL MOTORS - THOR W-INCH, ravorolbto, rag. 055, now 035; 5/14-Inch Spado, rag. 050, now 030.00; Vi-inch drill, rag. 035, new 017.05. All ball baaring and aoma JaCab-Chudu. aow- and Oh-Inch drill kit* with dpien* of attachment*, 011.05 to 022.5*. JliWo Salyao* Out- END-OF-MONTH Clearance Used and Floor-Sample PIANOS Large Selection of UPRIGHT PIANOS $49 Rebuin Mirror -Pianos $'r99 GRAND PIANOS $1^5 NEW FLOOR-SAMPLE PIANOS LOW, EASY TERMS GRINNELL'S (Downtown) n S. Saginaw FE 3-7168, MUSIC CENTER 268 N. SAGINAW FE 44700 SPINiT PIANO. A-t CONDITION RECONDITIONfcO 'll PRIG plane. 0135 dallvorad. 3314110. SALE GUITARS . ... ACCORDIONS Loaner* and l**aen». FE 5-5431. Sm the New Thomos Organ Arthur Godfrey is talking about. Jock Hogon Music Center 410 ElInbaNi Hha Road . FE 245(11 PONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS SOP-ily. land, graval. fill dirt. OR >1534._____________ TOP SOIL, SAND. GRAVEL, FILL Balia, FE S1422. AKC DACHSHUND, REGISTERED ___________FE 44371_________ kKC POODLES, BIaCK BEaOtiES Miniature*. FE 41405.________ AKC POODLE STUDS-CLIPPINGS, AKC POODLE, BLACK, AAALE, S mo., 050. FE S1147.___________ AKC CHIHUAHUA PUPPIES -UKC Toy Fox TarriOr Pupple* Chichuahua and toy fox tarriar - - aarvic*. FE 2-14*7. AKC REGISTERED WHITE CHI-huahua puppia*. MA >7430. AKC WHITE POODLES, MUST ■ 045, EM 34510. BLACK TOY MALE POODLt, month* oW, had *hot*, haircut, an hou*a broken. 070. OR 35745. MALES AND FE-mal*4, 4- -tag**, -3 *tand». 43148 eemplata. 142 Chamberlain. GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPPIES, Champion blood line*. Only 3 left. 4244377. GERAOAN SHEPHERD PUPS ____________FE ♦723* GERMAN SHORTHAIR pGinTER. Akala. 7 month*, ihot*, lic*n*ed. Excellent paper*. Raaaonabla offer. 424-53*4 IMATODD'S AKC VERY TINY CHI PARAKEET. BABY MALES, 04.*5. 3B5 Flr*t, Rbchattar, 45141105. 'OOOLE PUPPIES, AKC REGIS-larad, mala or famal*. EM 33310. POODLES, 051 m-fm_____________ POODLE PUPPIES, STUD SBRV-parals*^ canarla*. Pal ______CRANED, Ul H2P1. PERSONALIZED POODLE C L I P-ping. OR 34*31. registered TOY FOX TERRIER puppia*. after 5:X p.m. MA 5-2177. Richway Poodle Solon All breed profe**lon*l grooming Complal* Lin* of Pat Supplla* SMALL MINIATURE PART BLACK poodle, female, 325. OR 34314. miniature SILVER POCL pup*. Male toy I year. Stud „ ice. Hutching*, 1425 Hadley Read, Ortonvllle, NA 7-371*._________ TROPICAL FISH AND ALL PRT aupplia*. Froxt Pet Shop, 401 Naw-ton Drive, Lake Orion. MY 3-1312. Holly Rd. Holly ME 44771 Open Dally and SunMy* - NEW CAMPER, USED TRUCK, , ----------- ^ travel trallar*, 13 HOT ROODERSI 3*3 CU. IN. STOCK 1*57 Chfy*lar hami-haad angin* 1171 Saa It run-Paa-Waa'* Ga- FE 44100. PHOENIX FOR '65 PONTIAC'S ONLY AUTHORIZED DEALER Covar*, Camper*, Travel Traitor* AA CAmVI^ VTRAILER SALES u Baldwin Ava. Open ' .... PE ♦4208 TirBB-AEtB-TnKK 92 CARLOAD OF FACTORY SECONDS PICK-UP CAMPERS Pioneer Camper Sales Truck Cannpar* Overland, A--- — or of Marlt FIbargla** pitk'up triiSto. FE 3-3*B*.****” SEE YOU _____________ J*cob*on Trailer Sale* 4 Rantal MARCH. ---- ^let 4 R---- Lk. Rd. Drayton Plain* SALES and RENTALS Wlnnaoago-Wolvorln* Camper* and trailer* WE SELL AND INSTALL R*e*a and Draw-tit* hitch** F. E. HOWLAND ' ■___________OF - Thursday-Fridoy-Soturday Prices Slashed Display Trailers All Are 1965 Trailers 1 Travalmaitar, 23 R., front awn 110 volt and 12 volt haatar blot.... pump and battery *y*t*m, chang* over value, braakway *wll(h, rounded corner* S“ — 1 Century, I* ft., front dlnati le*e trailer* will have ipeclal price card* In them for the** day* on* TOM STACHLER AUTO & MOBILE SALES ............... FE 2-4*21 Winter Prices Now! MIDLAND TRAILER SALES 7 Dixie_________33*4772 WOLVERINE T^UCK CAMPERS bumper*, ladder*, rack*. LOWR' CAMPER SALES, EM 33411. WARREN STOUT, Realtor 450 N. Opdyfce Rd. FE 51115 *57 RICHARDSON 35FOOT HOUSE-trailar. Excallant ln*id* and out. Fully fumiohod. SIHO. MA 51143. »» SKYLINE TRAILER, KTaSS'. On* bedroom, Immadlat* occupan- a-2' ......... ABctioB Sales EVERY FRIDAY 7:» P.M. EVERY SATURDAY 7;X PAl. EVERY SUNDAY 2 00 P.M. Sporting (5ood*—All Type* Doer Prlie* Every Auction Buy—Sell—Trade. Retail 7 Day* Contignmant* Welcome X4B AUCTION Dixie Hwy.________OR 53717 MONDAY, MARCH ......... HARTWIG CENTENNIAL HOME 5377 Grpvaland Rd. Ortonvllle Stan Partin*. Auettonaar_ Friday. WEOWESDJ^Ye MAUCH OTTO P. GRAFF FAR«A$ Hoy-Bfala-rfBBd! 1400 BALES OF GOOD HAY . - call 4151444.________________ (EXCELLENT HAY j_____ Call 42534*3 GOOD iiCOND CUTTING. ALFAL-- fa hay, 3B** Gregory Rd., Cln- (KX3D HORSR hay, grain WANT-*d in truckload lot*. EM 34171. ifORSE HAY. number 1. FIRST Trey. MU tlil7. W NEW MOON 10x50 FOOT, ing of lOxM, oil tank, TV ani on a larg* lot. Pric* of 11.2*5. laka privlloga*. Call MY 24411. 1*44 DETROITER, XTXW, TAXfe -------------- 22* E. Walton. Lot LOOK lATINTER SALES OXFORD TRAILER SALES I mil* aoulh of Lake Orton on M4 ________MYM721________ BudW Locatw _____. .. Oxford on M24, Country Coualn. M.__ WANTED TO BUY-GOOD USfO YOU SAVE $$$ 1*45 (O' wUo*. 1 badroon .._____ down, paymant* of U* par month, IncludInB Intaroit and inauri-- --------- —■ *at up. ■ down.' Term* to your latlatact BOB HUTCHINSON 51 DIxto Hwy. OR 5ISB3 Drayton Plain* Opan *4 dally - Sal. M m 1*44 FORD F4SI « TON, LONG box, cuitow aautpfBwt through- Sa! M ig,*!; new. Km. JEROME-FEMUSOK =4W\ G.M.C. / / New ond Used Trucks FE 5*43$ 373 OoklWd v» ( GMC HANDYVAN. 1*44. HEAVY duty pock. 1310 mltet. 3WI undir warranty. 3H^14 oftor 1 ( REPOSSESSION wa CORVAN with no menoy down. Johnoon at MA 534B4. Repossession 1962 FORD ’/i-TON PICKUP No Money Down Call Mr. Johnson at MA S2604 diacoum prl^ Super Sport*, Ny-N. Saginaw ~ Used Truck Tires All Sizes Bugat term* available . FIRESTONE STORE Chryalar-Plyinoulh'* new Mimp ihop. No lob too *mall or Wo Mg to be handlad by u*. insuranc* Work Frac Eatimata* OAKLAND Mow god C«i 1H Repossession 1963 BUICK SPECIAL . CONVERTIBLE No Money Down Call Mr. Johnson ot MA 5-2604 l*lwh*el **g*n?*^155wr V4 anglB*, radio. -*13-1155.______________ 1*44 ELECTRA ApOOR SED^. Com* out and drht* IhU orwl Pricad to i*il at a low, low ■“fischer BUICK 544 S. Woodward 447-5400 BUiCK imptoyntant *r *e»'..f". *** roll cloan Blrmlni^m trado. 01,1*5 full prk*. 050 down or VILLAGE RAMBLER 666 S. Woodward BIRMINGHAM 53*00 ------- BUICK L*^ ag*. (iood lira*, full power 0 Will tinanca. 343-3534. ____________ HJTBOARD. CORRECT CRAFT FIbarglat Inboard ipaadboot* prkii from 130*5. Sat and buy Ihoa* quality boot* of OAKLAND MARINE 391 S. SAGINAW FE B4101 (Sn"iwk*d5»‘*'TlV 4^^"*' 1*5* FORD F-3Sa oi ydi. dump, compk . . ad and pokitod, ready k A-l IIJ*5. Save $350 Wantod Cors-Trocks 101 California Buyers tor iharp car*. Call . . . . M & M MOTOR SALES Did You Know? VILLAGE RAMBLER 444 S. Woodward AVERILL'S to havo ohtor* to 100 lata modal* "Chock tho rosi but gat th* bast" AVERILL'S B S A - NORTON - DUCATI SALES & SERVICE 230- e. Pika___________FE 4007* SPECIAL PRICE PAID POR 1*551*43 CARS VAN'S AUTO SALES McAULIFFE FORD 104 ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH FOR YOUR CAR INSURANCE our praiant auto kwuranc* premium probably ^laefi th* prior driving record M Iho an-lou metarrst. . Lot him pay tho high rato*, ho daaorvo*. AETNA CASUALTY'S AUTO-RITE It •ootS-HlLcCBBSBriBS 15-FT. FIBERGLAS RUNABOUT. BEAT THE HEAT lUY NOW - UP TO 30% OFF ON BOATS NOW IN STOCK Pontioc's Only MBreury MERCRUISER DEALER FOX SNOWMOBILES NIMROD CAMP TRAILERS Akarin* and Sporting (xood* CRUISE OUT, INC. 43 E. Walton FE 4-4402 BOAT SHOW WALT AAAZUREK'S LAKE AND SEA MARINA ON DISPLAY 13 Now Crulwr* 345 South Boulavord E. FE 4*517 ENGINES AND OkiVES FOR INBOARD-OUTBOARD NEW AND USED can convart your outboard boot 1-0 AT REASONABLE COST OAKLAND MARINE 3*1 S. Soglnow FE 0-4101 HARD TO FIND BUT EASY TO deal with." RInkcr, Stoury, Choro-kaa boat*. Kapot pontoon*. Evbi-rudo motor*. Pamco troilers. Toko MS* to W. Highland. RMit on Hickory RMgc Rood to Oomodo Road. Lett and follow *lm to DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE. Phono MAIn *-217*. LOOK NO MORE! PINTERS Evorythlng tor the boot OWENS MARINE SUPPLY 3*4 Orchard Loko MOTORS - CLEARANCES BOATS MFG-GLASSTRAN-LONB STAR PENN-YAN BOATS Marcury Motor* 3.* to IW H.P. Cliff Dreyor's Gun and Sports Centar 5310 Holly Rd. Holly ME 44771 — Opon Dolly and Sunday* - , OPEN SUNDAY 124 P.M. «r liM • aatoctlon* of SEA-RAY BOA^ STARCRAFT and tha now quit" MERCURY OUTBOARD. Birmingham Boot Ctntar M. OF 14 MILE AT ADAMS RO. OVER 75 DORSETTS. THOMPSONS, onu X7HNION motor*, laverol OORSETT Ito't and Jot Damon, •trator* wHh 3 yoar guarantot ovar lists oH. ciim tarty tor ba*t tatectlon at winlar prka*. PAUL A. YOUNG, Inc m Diplt Hwy„ Drayton' PMna GLENN'S *53 W**t Huron SI FOR CLEAN CARS OR WANTED; l*SM*43 CARS Ellsworth AUTO SALES 4577 DIxlo Hwy.__MA Sh WE NEED CARS! TOP DOLLAR FOR GOOD CLEAN CARS , Mattbews-HorgreovBS Ul OAKLAND AVENUE _________FE 44S47_____ *"** ASK USI BRUMMETT AGENCY .JSUtACLE MILE_____FE 41111 AUTO INSURANCE Uo^Jtoday tor|M Anderson Agency FE 4-3535 1044 Joslyn Ave fBMlpsCm Its* AUSTIN HEALEY 3 Jaidi Cors-Trocks 101-A 1-1 AND 10 JUNK CARS - TRUCKS Fro* tow. OR 53*31.__________ I OR 10 J U N K CARS - TRUCKi troa tew mytlmo. FE S34M. ALWAYS BUYING JUNK CARS - FREE TO* 105 0 Tniimph TR-3 roadttar, ihorp, ’**' SUFERtOR RAMBLER 550 Oakland_________ FE 5*411 1*41 VW, SDOOR stOAN, LOW MILE-ir b«l otter. iTiPWB WE'LL BUY THAT JUNKERI ! ._____ FE 2-3502 UsBd Aoto-Trock Ports 102 1*51 PONTIAC FOR FARTS FE 511*1 ^6ro 3*2 6r chevy fact6Ay r high » 537-1117. I«*2 VW 3-OOOR SdDAN, CLEAN, RADIO, HEATER, WHITEWALLS. 3ljm actual mlM*. II2S0. M4II7S. MIHord. Attar 4 p.m,_______ 1*43 RENAULT, HAS RADIO AND HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES, LOW MILEAGE, NO MONEY DOWN, ASSUME CAR PAYMENTS OF 13117 PER MONTH. village RAMBLER, M4 woodward ave. BIRMING- ......I 53*01. KOTOR AND TRANSMISSION brok* (hot*. Only 40JM0 mitoi. Camplito a***mbly, tUS. Ar~ * 0^540x15 tirt*. MA 54»5 1*44 TRIUMPH, TR-4 ROADSTEp. 1*51 W-TON FORD PICKUP, RUNS 40*, N M to ippractot*. .4751514 BRAND NEW, IW CHtVYTTcTCUFrENtn^Si Rf 1*15 FIAT M5S: built OU. 44. I4M. 3354734. _| J'l gF—T- ■ v: l*i» FORD PICKUP I «Ti3oS FE 43711 ___1 52i"SI’*W,JrJX FORD V, TON _____WPERIM RAmELER TERRIFIC DISCOUNTS l*M now and utdd molort i boat5 Tony"* MorWa-Johnaon K or*, LMiwr *— “------ Sw'lat -Orchard L ( CHEVROLET PICKUPS ------ -------------------- I 1*55 BUICK, 3145. 1*43 FtoataW*, 5toet, Kylindtr, tur- _______FE 57111.___________ quote*, rdally nkt *nd only Sl,4>5 |*» buTCK~5^R HAftDtaP, 5 W44 FteattM* 5toel picfcup. Light bMgi. 5cytlndw^, whitowill*. Exfra tew mllat - 11,1*5 l*M BUICK RIVIBBA COUFB. •lu*, ton power ptot air oonditlon-Ing. Ihenieel ana to town. nj*5. FATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. IIM $. woodward Aye. BkitHng-(tam. Ml 43Z3S. Wilson Specials accaatorte*, t.OOO f *tlll In tactory warra 141*5 h malching Intarlor, 5wty t, 7.115 actual mite*. Sav* 1 Cadillac Coupa DaVllte. ir condHionIna. wii Mt. white with I 1*41 Flaatwaod alr66R. _^VUN6inr -^ifvAi'rTAkt 09tA>AY. ■ of 313.4* r --- •* I CHm^ ; 5660ft. AUfbMAT. 1*4$ CHEVROLET BIKAyWIL Hick, Kylindtr. V*ry etoan. latiV rad. Call QR >Om._________ CHEVROLETS Out Birmingham Way 1*3* cmEvrolets Nomad Hatton wagon. WMto, V ongino, Paatergtldt. powor (to* Ing, oir conditlonlnt 3 F 1*40 CHEVROLETS Impalo canvertibtai. 3 to chow from. On* ceneir, on* —--------1. Shamoot -31.,a Farkwood HHIon « mt CHEVROLET! 31JM •tooring and brok**, i daw* ................ B*l Air 4door iodan*. VI*, Foat-arglMa*. 3 to choot* from. 1 greon, I light turquol**. Both real nic* ............ 31AIS kwood 5pa*t*ng*r H Pawn baig*. ^ f -r Hoorlng 1*43 ^HEVROLETt 1,1*3 glM* ' 31,4*$ ■ol Air 3-door aodan. e*lg* with rad Intorlor. Fcyllndor, Fowor- OLET3 FowiJ! V3 ongln*. atick *hHt, nica i r“*iRwergll2* ” V.lfl iNl Monia COUP*, w Inlorlor, 'Poworglid*. 25 MONTHS CHEVROLET OK warranty PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO IIM S. Woodward Av*. ^1*1^ BIRMINGHAM - J liWf mi Ui^ Cot m Repossession 1962 CHEVY CONVERTIBLE No Monty Down Coll Mr. Johnson at MA 5-2604 •nd standard transmiulon vkM Hcallmt aconomy lallsn. ,Ont e( tha ctaanast wsdont yau. wM dddf And. Orlakwl tur- snsc;^' ssy'n^sr s? turn fun plea an mis flna car Is onjjr n.aas. Tarms arrangad to *“ ’^“BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-nLYMOUTH 1. Weedward ---- r w< Ihti Cm ' TMd4U Ba.ai.....4^ t ' , ■ THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 24. 1065 D^» taS3 CORVAIR MORZA 4 SPEED, tUfS »t bast eftar. FE SdJM. IM3 CORViTYk, FAST'IACK, XO S5!?!Vi?r*' '****• IkotD mj JaoNiAT^sisigo,' 175 and taka ovar paymants. FE ^ m3 CHEVY IMPALA WAGON, f-passangar, V-t, 4-doar automatic, POSIT slaaring. brakss. Pricsd a. fcl................... igaj-CHEVY IMP ALA "CONVERT- Sharp im3 Chevrolet impaca $H3 OHiVV L NOVA STATION wagem^hdg aguippad. A-l csndl- tiis SPIDER CONVERTIILE,~4. spaad, baat attar. OR 3-3443 alter tag IMPALA f-PASSENGER WAG- mim*Ml'2il^**' '***"' 1963 Chevy Biscaynt 2-Doo'r with «Hitla Hnish, rad Interior, radio, haatar, wMtawalls, Only- $1495 BEATTIE OH^XI^"S«^**N^WATMFW "Hama at sarvka attar OR 3-1291 1964 CHEVROLET ImpptP. Mpr hTdtop, damon-stratw. WMIa wltk Mua trim, automatic I witti power ttaerlng, low mUaaga. New car warranty. ”^AN CAMP CHEVY ' MILPORO ____ ________MU 4.|«35 IM4 CHfVY IMPALA HARDTOP. - OA 1-3305. Ex- CHRYSLER NEWPORT, 4-OOOR, tl,aSR CAN ARRANGE FINANC-INO; OL A3t3t or OL 1-M54. Come To Lloyd's Crtdit or Budgtt PROBLEMS? We Con Finonct You I Call Mr. Darrell .338-4528 —ANYTIME— iRTAN podge 1964 Docige Dart Hordtop 2-Door Ntw wd Ihod Cars 1B6 1963 Ford CONVERTIBLE mf. iixsss^jsz^ EaaatItulcT. $189L Call Mr. D^SytvastT at McAULIFFE $1795 BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER SInca »30" ON DIXIE HWY. IN wr~“'“—' "Homo of sarvka atta OR 3-1291 KESSLER'S DODGE CARS AND TRUCKS Salas and Sarvka I'tSt EDSEL WAGON. GOOD RUN- ItSt EDSEL 1-DOOR HARDTOP, body, a very solid < ' I prka tts, S3 down. lEL_________351 Oakland Ava. 1941 Ford 2-DOOR $595 Call Mr. Wilson at McAULIFFE FORD ax Oakland Ava._FE 5^1 nil porO, sso or will iel INI FORD ANGLIA 1-DOOR ---- condition, prka sm. A MARVEL ■ 351 Oakland Ava. MX FORD 44X)OR, . V-Sr »WiR staaring, Milford. tax FORD 1-OOOR, «YL. StlCK, radio, heeler, low mllaaga, o-*" SX5. JEROME - FERGUSON I Rochastar FORD Daalr, OL I ' 1963 Ford Country Stdon 6-poss. ?i?iirt-3sruNiitiinv5‘“' $1695 BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER SInoa 1130" ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD "Hama of sarvka altar Hw sak" OR 3-1291___ 1963 Ford Foirlane 2-Door Ibis one has a matk blue finish !hrlRy*a'cyMndw"5!aina OrSy-I^ $1488 Call Mr. Bab Ruslall at JOHN McAULIFFE GUEON Inc., Redtadhr FORD Daakr. OH-PTIL_ bobKrs't lincoln-mcrcury M S. Woodward tlrml MI 6-4538 BE E IN A QUAI CAR WHERE MONEY Autobahn ItM VW Station wagon with ipl tront Mat, Turqueisa and whih 11AM miles ;...... SIN Ital Chavrolat l-dar. -stkk, V-whim with rad Intertor ... SIM INI VW Sunroof, black. rMlo IN4 GAULXIE XL 3H. RaBIO, 4 T-BIRD. LANOU WITH FULL power, air condltkmang, leather trim, wire whaals, AOM milat, Ford oNktal ov. SS Save Si, JER_OME_-^ FERGUM|H.,Rachas- H4 ford GALAXIE 5M >ASt-back" with tha 151 VP engine, automatic, power staring, lAOO mHas, naw ondHIan. Only SL3H. JEROME-FERGUSON Inc., Re-chaatr FORD Qaakr, DL M711. ItM FALCON SGDOR, WITH VP SH angbia, 4-spaad Iranamlsslen. radio, TSw mlloogtl SUN. JBR-0ME-FBRGU80H, Hky RoeboXr FORD OMkr, OL 1P711,__________ ItX FORD A-l SHARE, I OWNER. T«l-Huron Auto 31X W, Huron FE SPt73 powr ^sAMtorlng, tX5, mo ford falcon, autoniatic, beat this prka Slf7. WE FINANCE Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM FE 84071 laae FORb convertible. 3m- wagon, radio, heater, POWER BRAKES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Taka------- payments of UM. CALL C mgr., Mr. Parks at Hi TURNER FORD. 1M FORD GALAXIE 1-OOOR hardtop, full powr, Cordova top, 11AH actual milat. Can be purchased with small down prrmant. WE FINANCE Lucky Auto 193 or 254 S. Saginaw FE 4-2214 or FE 3-7853 At HOUfIfir ItM Dart CT ItM Dart ^Oar ltS3 Folara---- ini Foira 300 -------- Warranty '62 Pontiac Catalina n^^ll^ bh SS CMf. FuU Mfkc bargain. FE 3*7542. M. Htggint oaator. ______ FORD, InTSUNLINSR CONVERT-IMa. bladL buk^tlc. daubla paw- rT SSO, OL IPMS._________ ttiW FALCON HJOD^RAOIO, HEATER, STANDARD transmission, WHITEWALL TIRES. "iwLUTELY NO MONEY OWN Taka ever pay man! t at S5.43. CALL CREDIT MGR.. Mr. Parks • HA^ROLD TURNER FORD. $1650 '62 Pontiac BonnavilU I Mack any* beauty Is In a 5 comfitlon Imk trontmlulan, I S£FS $1780 '61 Olds r‘»Tir«scr»'T automatk tranamlssian, a a w a storing and brakaa, wtiMaaK tires, radio and haatr and all II QMsmabHa OKtrat. Oriva H m sae. FuH xka $1295 '62 Mercury Custom Mont*rcy , kig ktrtor. mistlon, Bowr brXa% uAltawa Goninir outsida $1450 '62 Corvair 2-Door 6 Daalr. OL IPMl. THUNOERBIRD5 **bU7»rT'l«. windows SM PottBrson Chevrolet Co. musi Xll. Bast otir. X3PS75. NlTORb, VP, AUTOMATIC, FRI- Vila. JXPML_ ' INI FALCbN Sti^N Vi^N WITH RROlO AND heater, WHITEWALL TIR11L CAN FINANCE IX SUME CAR FAYMINTS OF SNA nn MONTH. VILLAGE 1962 Fairlane 500 4-Oer Sedan with daao chasira Hnish, VP, automatk. Wonderful large family car. $1423 Call Al Petrs at McA^IFFE WLAkfe—5^^-^ sta^....brMntt,, INI FALCOli'WAOIMI, 4-DpO*. cyllnM onolna. «2|*^'2eJ2Ui s;?^4RSs:E'.‘gSoir^ Rechastr FORD Daalar. OL iPtn T963 Ford Custom 300 4-door 1964 Ford M mintt lutomaflc tr ■'"$2393 C«n Mr. Ro^r WhIU McAULIFFE Itse OLDS LOADED WITH POWER. ' — - ^iy -- JEROME OLDS-CAOILIAC — _. Saginaw St. FE 3-7MI ItX OLDS, 4-OOOR, AUTO., %07. Daalr. FE SPIN.___ IX OLDS 4-DOOR HARDTOP. RA-DIO, HEATER. AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, POWER STEERING, POWER BRAKES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. -Taka ovar paymants of Slt.lP. --- CREDIT mgr. 1964 Ford Custom 2-Door a!ja.s3R — - $1995 BEATTIE ON*8ix?^Sv^*N*WATMFojK) Home at sarvka attar OR 3-129J 145 MUSTANG 1-DOOR HAR6tO^ IX Enable, 4naad, radio, whitp walls, nka new condition throughout! Sovol JEROMEPERCUS6N Inc. Rochester tORD Daalar. OL Mill.____________ tiS MUSTANG HARDTOP WHitf, VP, Crulsa-O-Matk, radio, h- standard transmission, radio. Nr cor warranty, XI tS. Call attar p.m. 4X-4lt3.__________ 1965 Mustang 2x2-2 Door Hardtop with a lira angbia rad Hnish, snc tha IX VP angina, s^paad. Irons- $2799 BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER SliKS lt30" ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD ‘Homa at xrvka aftr ““ OR 3-1291 FIRlt BOB BORST LINCOLN-MERCURY MI 6-4538 tires. This car hM many many aeonomkal caralraa mllai leH. Coma soa ft Mr yeuriaH. Full '60 Chevy Hordtop This Is a aqua 1-door hardtop bi tha popular Chevy Sport Ciwpa ?A-1 Plus oandltton, cams drtva away today. Full prka $1150 LLOYD'S $1495 BEATTIE OR 3-1291 Ito rdRb 'GALAXIE Ste, (tL4AN car. Must sail. Blue. VP rtkk, A door, 3445 W. Brocktr Rd. 5 ml. north 01 Oxford oH M14. Phone tW^TOEA.nE-OH-y_ER-TT^E. real nka. kH ark. gnl| Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM -FE 84071 4ERCURY MONTCLAIR 4P^ ___ir Ol'TpTII'^ 1H4 COMET aiilhte “i-Bgoir. with VI sx. CruMad>-Matk. praar stearins, brakes, radla. solid Mack, factory oHIdal. Save. JBROM FERGUSON Inc., RachaaXr FORD Daatar, OL--- ffeN?NtSUMEW.. . MENTS OF XI PS PER N»NTM. VILLAGE RAMBLEC 4M E W&^ARD^AVB.. EIRMING- 1963 Falcon 2-DOOR Fire angina rad Ibilsn with G luxe Irbn. Economy sooclal. $1256 Can Mr. Charles HamIHon at McAiTlIFFE MERCURY, AUTOAAATIC, Buying? Selling? Fixing? Looking? Whotever Your Automobile Needs F.ioy 8e Come to LLOYD'S LINCOLN-MERCURY NEW LOCATION 1250 OAKLAND AVE. FE 37863 V Sunroof, ouM MuOf r Autobahn Motors, Inc. By AndETBon and Letmliy ^ -4 1W4 Ceh. ItNiwt W •HAUPT PONTIAC INI BONNivlLLE hardtop, power' stealing, and Makes, turquelM bi Csrs'srt cavarad by Pontiac • hmuSSESST'' $2^95, Russ Johnson On^-lg^ REP0SSE5SI0N )N4 PONTIAC stkk, m manay d "xgy&Rga.y.r Only 2 Left 1964 Pontiacs SeSSyrsTfS! SSt riHx — viiIage RAMBLER \ 666 S. Woodward ilRilMNGMAM_W *W*e 196^JFlambler "xr' wAGWMwwBiygx Lucky Auto 193 or 254 S. Saginaw FE 4-2214 or FE 3-7853 fnSW", ‘i wanna sec if blondes re«lly DO have more fun!” Now and Used Core 106 1963 Valiant $1495 Russ Johnson Pontlsc-RsmUtr on MM In Lakt Orion ______MY 3-4144__ 1N3 PLYMOUTH FOUR-DOOR $E-Ihot Is tha dandy family car. il lor somoona soaking aconomy will provide you excellent tri portatlon. Original matatllc I finish snd matchbig Interior I are vary nka. Easy tarms can be arrangad to suit your budget. A "TOP QUALITY" value that can be yours today for only t1,X5. 8RIMINGHAM CHRYSLBR-PLVMOUTH )1 S. Weodwoid Ml 1P1I4 SS PLYMOUTH SPORTS FURY 3M angina. tIPtS. EM 3-3X1._ Now tad Usod Core i^PONTJAC STAB CHIEF. FULL I4X. 474-1441. _______ ■MA 5-5X4 ihar 1962 Pontiac STAR CHIEF FOUR-DOOR VISTA PONTIACS I Bannavllla convertible. I groan w Hydram. brakes. Rsdk), hsslar. !. Light blue loo. Hydrs-d brskas. ItX VALIANT 1-DOOR WITH RADIO AND HEATER, WHITE-....... TIRES, REAL NICE, CAN DON'S 3 CHOOSE FROM 677 S. LAPE» RD. Lika Orion MY 2-2041 IN4 FP5 CUTLlSrCONVERI tl.475. Call X3-44C4._____ fN4 OLDS SUPER IS. PDOOE H7-dramatlc, SIPM. FE t-MM. N4 n"01:dS - LUXUhY sfoAN. Just Received prka to Mil qukk. U down d Lucky Auto 193 or 254 S. Saginaw FE 4-2214 or FE 3-7853 d S. WOODWARD AT HUNTER INI Corvair 4-Door . INS Biscaync 4-Ooor 1 Chevy Convertibit Potterson Chevrolet Co. 104 S. woodward Ava. Ml 4-1735 ________BIRMINGHAM 141 BONNEVILLE X.IM0 actual m 4047. Call betora < $1695 Rus'^ Johnson REPOSSESSION ItX PONTIAC IPoor hardtop. No money down, call Mr. Johnson, MA 5-14»4, dealer. (Will Bring Car to Your Home). _____Jl _ ftX TEMPEST. l-D<>bR LYMANS. ItM RAMBLER 4-OOOR, REAL U..rp..ull^,;^|Onl^«7. Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM FE 84071 VILLAGE RAMBLER 666 S. Woodward BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-3tW - [RICAN, 44:^ $1395 Russ Johnsoh^ DnWbi'iiam. mg onfl the oil-new 1965 Ramblers. See them now! Used cars ore being sold at wholesale to moke room for the new cor trades. ROSE RAM8LER RAM8LER IN4 American hardtop. Hat naiacar warranty, radio and heater, bucket seats, auttmotlc tranM mistlon, whitewall liras. SM doam will handls. VILLAGE RAMBLER 666 S. Woodword SHELTON: For a Great Deal usTSst----------1 PONTIAC-BUICK Paniiar ' *** Roclixtor Road / used Pontiac gjj ItX PONTIAC. t-FAUENMR WA-gon. Aulematk, power staaring, orakat, radio. 1 owner, Raatenabw —OR->tlX^ietwoowT a.m.^«:3ey.m. KEEGO PONTIAC SALES B SERVICE 682-3400 HILLTOP 144 VALIANT - "V-MO" TWO- door with a "MJ" angir----- on tha floor," plus re- --- seat bcitt, outsido mirrors, whitewall Hras and other extras; driytn only 11,400 miles. Itavbio ygu 31,-400 nr*Hos at FACTORY NEW C*R WARRANTY. This IIHIe turquoise beauty It "TOP QUALITY" b — or to bumparl LOW COST I CAR TERMS II you wINi t nsnea. Almost Ilka buying a BIRMINGHAM. chrysler-plymouth 111 t, Woodward ‘41 Chrytiti '41 T4*n| ‘41 Pontab ‘41 Poni ‘41 Ram ‘41 Chevy ] ‘41 Pab -LOT SPECIAL-1956 Corvette red convertible, completely rebuilt, 4-speed tronsmission. $1095 962 Oakland FE 8-9291 ItX PONTIAC CATALINA SPORTS CATALINA CONVERTIBLE, war brakes, pawar staarbig, 4-lad, Sl.tOO. UL 1-S4lt aHar 4. bar-tonk radio. Call aHar ]:M p. PLYMOUTH SAVOY. STICK, radio, haatar. Factory guarantee to SOWS milat. SI.4X. SIX Highland Rd., OR 3-I1S4. 46hTIAC - GOOD TRANS- Repossession N1 PONTIAC 1-DOOR HARDTOP, REPOSSESSED. Paymants of luf y(Sir'honO!'*iairMg.^^ to'estst Msh bank ersdit with no co-tignars. itX fEAPe^f WACdit, AUTOMA- tfc, radio, heater, ------- - condition. OR 4-IOX. 1 CA'^^^ 11,15*. Catalina Sports 1963 Tempest Custom 4-Door Easy Financing by Bank Ral * Superior Rambler —-Oakland -------FE S-t411 ItX RAmOlER classic itATION WAGON, WITH AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES. CAN FINANCE IM PER CENT ASSUME CAR PAYMENTS OF XI.75 PER MONTH. VILLAGE RAMBLER, 444 S. WOODWARD $1495 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE M Mt. Clemens St. FE 3-7954 REPOSSESSION It44 PONTIAC cenvartIbM, no i down, credit' chackad by l--- Can Mr. JohmeiL at MAvB-M04, BONNEVILLE HARDTOP. 4- OLDSMOBILES " stl3u"r*£!*h5Cj 1*» PONTIAC STAR CHIOpI Bunker's Outlet 34IM Elizabeth Lake R FE I F-X canvertibla. Patterson Chevrolet Co. IM $. woodward Ava. Ml 4-1715 BIRMINGHAM HEATER, AUTOA4ATIC ■«*•<»-MISSION. WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO Taka over paymants of S4.73. CALL CREDIT MGR., Mr. Fsrkt -• HAROLD TURNER FORD. REPOSSESSION ItX PONTIAC hardtop. ------- of $— ---------- MA 6-1404, deal PATTERSON OUT ROCHESTER WAY 1960 Valiant $383 1961 VW . _dt end Is g ond-ownsr, flow c trado, sxcellsnt condltionl Only $35J 1960 Ford iskon 1-door, with radio, hasli no owntr, now car trade, oxl Ijnly $343 1960 Dodge $333 1961 Ford l-door with V-e OMlna. Nick, rMh haatar, new car tradel Only $363 PATTERSON chryiler-plymouth-valiant 1M1 N. Mam etraat ROCHESTER Repossession ItX PLYMOUTH 4-OOOR, REPOS-tawsd. Paymants of lust S11J7 wMkty no I doM wtii b^ — Id your hama. Call ae-XX. Darrell tor ptwna XtgUcblton. 8-7137 IX PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CON-vartlbla, power, bucket seats, full •'‘“^vJJV.NANCE " Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM FE 84071 PONTIAC Hardtop, has full price only SXS, cen Rambler Clearance AVE.. 1965 Rambler American 2-Door Sedan «xSLS*IStS!i« Only — $1877.26 Inc., eH taxae end X ptotee Houghten & Son nor FltilMIV OXlMmBIX DllXr ROCHISTER OL l-fXI SX N. Mam Xraat 1962 STUDEBAKER $947 Call Cre^ Myiager X NOW OPEN Additional Locotion 855 Oakland Ave. Spartan Dexige IF YOU ARE HAVING TROUBLE GEHING YOUR CREDIT RE-ESTABLISHED - NOW YOU CAN TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE ------- ALL YOU NEED IS A STEADY JOB. $5.00 DOWN PAYMENT AND A DESIRE TO HELP YOURSELF. CALL MR. SIMMS: FE 8-4088 INCORPORATED Beautiful Cars Beautiful Buys OVER 7S BIRMINGHAM TRADES 1QQ%-Written| Guarantee ZZr 1962-1964 STARFIRES - all have full power, some, hove air conditioning, we hove 5 to choose from, starting ot..........................$1995 1964 BUICK Skylork Coupe, with bucket seats, V-8, stick shift. Only .............$2195 1963 PONTIAC Bonneville, automatic, bucket seats, power steering, brakes. Only.........$2295 1964 OLDS “9B" -Hefdtop> fuH^ powefr 30^ dey----------- unconditionol worranfy .....................$2995 1962 OLDS 2-doors, 4-doors. Hardtops, Wagons, Convertibles, full power ................$ove $$ 1963 BUICK Skylork coupe, automatic, rodio, heater, power steering, whitewalls..........$1995 1962 CHEVY 9-possenger Wogon, V-8 auto. Power steering, brokes ................... $1795 1964 PONTIAC Catalina, 4-door, power stMring and brakes, auto., rodio, whitewolls........$2295 1964 OLDS Cutlass Coupe, auto., radio, whitewalls, power, 30-doy unconditional warran^.. .$2395 1963 OLDS Cutlass Coupe, V-8 automotic with console, power steering, brakes ............$2095 1964 PONTIAC Bonneville 44oor hardtop. Full power, the one you've been looking for.. $2795 ------------ 2-VEaII WAftRAMTV ------------------------- 635 S. Woodward Ave. Birmingham 647-5111 VILLAGE RAMBLER Itx PONTIAC dONNEVILLE 1-door hardtop, has full power, radio and heater, runs like new. Full price, tJH. No money down - SIX par weak. Call Mr. ESTATE STORAGE WE FINANCE Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM FE 84071 Itx PONTIAC CATALINA .l-DOOR,' ‘ good condition, 335-4M1 bo-... 1 p.m. and after 11 pfli. ItM PONTIAC HARDTpP, Ra6|6. HEATER, AUTOMATIC TRAMS-MIUION, POWER STEERING, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN., Taka ovar MymenU X til.04. dALL CREDIT MGR.. Mr. Parks It HAROLD TURNER PORD, Ml 4^ Repossession II tor phone sppileatkm. Bi n REPOSSESSION ItM POliTlAC wogon. wM< no money gyW^at^^ itti PSiiiYiACroooonKNSrfloN PONTIAC ~ BUTCr--:OHEVROLET 1964 PONTIAC Bonneville 1964 PONTIAC Bonneville throughout! Only— 1964 PONllACTonvertiMe' $2795 $2795 $2995 rinisrv wniTt topi uoiy— 1964 CHEVY Impala , /1965 Director Likes New races No Stars in 'Red Line 7000' mddng tKe auUH-acfaiK Sim with newcomers. “Once I adced a studio boss why he was hiring me,’’ he remarked. “I was toid: ‘Well, we made a picture with John Wayne that didn’t get back the cost of the negative and advertising. You made one with Wayne and I understand you cleared $2 million, yourself.’ "That proved to me that names don’t in They help — if you have a good Ry BOB THOMAS AP Movie-Television Writer HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Howard Hawks is an old-style movie-maker, a director who hand-fashions his product with precision and care. In 10 d a y’s quick . buck movie world, that makes him old-style, but he] is anything w • ■ You have only! to visit the set of his latest THOMAS .11.. Jill. people reacting to the raucous music of a discotheque. ‘Red Line 7000" concerns an old passion of Hawks’; he raced a Mercer from 1012 to 1916, once owned a car that won the Indianapolis race, and has two sons who drive in competition. Because of the nature of the subject, be didn’t want to cast Hol-lyw^’s existing stars. “In the first place, none of the young female stars are good enough actresses,” he explain^. "As for the male roles, the race drivers today are real good picture, all the names in by-pambies playing the roles.” Hollywood won’t help you.” So Hawks decided to return to Hawks, who has long favored the angular, fashion-model type, remained true to form. His choices for the race-car followers: model Gail Hire, television actress Laura Devon, stage-trained Marianna Hill. The men He did it before with “Scar-face,” which made stars of Paul „ ^ ^ Muni and George Raft; with None of the nrincioal oer- Force” - "John Garfield i behind the wheels are Jamra S“L u«S-Z '«'>?» ^ • recomizable and that is how *>im play a featured role ; and Robert Crawford. ‘ "The Thing” (unknown James ' "I must have seen a thousand INTERNATIONAl mut FRIDAY 5 to ihSO P.M- DORMAN’S Old Mill Tavern Waterford, Michigan OR 3-1907 MORE TIGER ADS — Discussing plans ■ increasing Pontiac’s "tiger” advertising campaign are (from left) John Malone, advertising manager of Pontiac Motor Division; Colin John, vice president and account super- visor of MacManus. John & Adams. Inc., advertising agency; and Ernest A. Jones, agency president. The toy tiger sittihg in dh the conference is one of thousands distributed by Pontiac dealers in recent weeks. Hawks has planned it. ♦ ★ ♦ At 68 he remains an earnest ■ -maur^ a tali, spare figure who -roams the set infecting his workers with enthusiasm. He paused to explain why he is technicolor FE4TURES at 7i 10-9:20 1 HURON n NOW SHOWING at 7:00 1 9:00 'UNigCurW RaialieiinMMi Henry Fonda Lauren Bacall Forrer View College Proposal LUDINGTON (AP) - Representatives of Mason, Lake, Manistee and Oceana county intermediate school districts meet establishment of a community college district. ^ZZaKEEGO __________________ . IS>II LOVf NM aONf liN 0W.T wtrSt r mtrrWK tutn-“--------------WAINOtSIOSj YDUNCBlflOD HAWKE Suraon mam m«m |amni^ mnniKs nffnu io«*TtCMjgKorj»_ mcHOS MetroGoiOwvnMaveioiesentsAArtsP'f’, ^--1 I JkIM NOVAKand LAURENCE HARVEY* * OF Human eonoace! Audrey Hepburn Ignored Amess played the title role). Still Ducats for 'Salute' young people before I picked them,” said Hawks. "Already ‘ other producers are asking to | use them. I think that’s good | * business. Hollywood desperately i needs new names, and somebody had to start finding some.” 'Mary Poppins' lops Oscar Nominees Tickets are still avail-I able for the "Salute to ' Gov. Romney” Fisher Theater party March 10, ‘ Ernest A. Jones, chair- 2 Amish Girls Hurt HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Nominations for the 37th annual "Mary Poppins” and its star Julie Andrews — present a paradox this year: an actress who didn't get named is causing more talk than those who did. “Mary Poppins” got 13 nominations, including Julie’s as best actress. “My Fair Lady” and Becket” followed, with 12 each. But Audrey Hepburn, who rated critical raves in "My Fair Lady,” was ignored entirely by academy members Tuesday. Even though “Mary Poppins” is her first movie, Julie too knows how it feels to be shunned. She created "My Fair Lady” on Broadway, yet she wasn’t in the running for the movie version. Other nominees for best actress were Kim Stanley, "Seance on a Wet Afternoon”, Sophia Loren, “Marriage Italian Style”, Debbie Reynolds, “The Unsinkable Molly Brown”, and Anne Bancroft, “The Pumpkin Eater”. ‘AN INJUSTICE’ Many film folk feel Miss Hep- est of musical films. . . _ _ —AtiWamer’s the word for Miss Ustinov, ‘ ‘Topkapl”; Hepburn’s omission is: “Outrageous.” The nominees for best actor, decidedly British in accent, were: Peter Sellers, “Dr. Stran-gelove”; Peter O’Toole, “Becket”, Richard Burton. “Becket”, Rex Harrison, “My Fair Lady”, and the only non-Britisher, Anthony ()uinn, “Zorba the Greek”. i an injus-explanations bum’s omission tice, but their vary. Some say academy voting members resented the Warner Bros, decision in passing up Miss Andrews for the role of Hepburn keeps herself aloof from the press while making a picture, whereas Julie is just the opposite. Others blame the fact that Miss Hepburn didn’t do her own singing m what many consider the great- SUPPOR'nNG ACTORS ’The best supporting actor nominations went to John Giel- CAMPEN (AP) - Two Amish school girls, Rebecca Eicher, 11, and her 9-year-old sister Ada, were hospitalized for cuts crnesi «. uuues, cuiur- ^ brui^ Tuesday afto U»^ man of the Oakland Coun- I horse and buggy was struck by way, “M, F.., ‘‘T: “'JTS’SS’',. li tha had blmd«l Ira,. Edmond’f O’Brien, “Seven Days in May ”, and Lee Tracy, “The Best a Man’’. Best supporting actress nomi-; ■; nees were: Gladys Cooper, “My r Fair Lady”; Edith Evans, “The Chalk Garden”; Grayson Hall, y; ‘"Ihe Night of the Iguana”; Lila Kedrova, “Zorba the Greek”,!' and Agnes Moorehead, “HushIf HttshrSweet Charlotte.^*—jS St picture nominations; were: "Becket,” “Dr. Strange-love,” “Mary Poppins,” "My Fair Lady,” and “Zorba the Greek.’’ The production will be f the world premiere of-1 Frank Loesser's musical | comedy “Pleasures and § Palaces.” Loesser is the author of “Guys and Dolls,” “Most Happy Fel- . ia,” and “How to Succeed ) in Business Without Really Trying.” V * w * Jones said good soats-still remain in the |25 and |10 categories, and reservations can t>e made by writing the Republican OpBning Tonight! DANNY ZELLA and Hio ZELTONES W«d. through Sun. 9 P.M. to 2 A.M. Htf Mil 4195 DIXIE HWY. DRAYTON PLAINS Senate Unit Okays Sunday liquor Bill LANSING (AP) - A Sunday liquor law that would allow sales where okayed by voters was approved Tuesday by the Senate Liquor Committee. could come to a final Senate vote as early as Friday. The measure, long sought by Detroit interests to boost weekend convention business, would allow any city, village or town-ship to sell liquor from 4 p.m. ' S::; to midnight Any petition for a vote on Sunday liquor sales would have light by a-number of voters equal to eight per cent of the last gubematoriaT voTeln the jurisdiction. A majority vote would permit the Sunday sales, which could not be overturned hy local gdvefnfflent. on April 5 in Santa Monica Civic, | mingham. Auditorium. S Party of Oakland County, f ’ OPEN TO THE POBLIC MODERATE PRICES-FINE SERVICE EXCELLENT FOOD SEAFOOD SMORGASBORD FRIDAY 6-9 P.M. SUNDAY BRUNCH BUFFET STYLE 11 A.M.-3 P.M. JACK C AAAJOR Evenings nt the Kene lar 1801 S. TaUgraph Ff 1-9623 120 l«au(!ful Reomi OPEN DAILY 10-10, SUN. 12-7 THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY and SUNDAY Regularly 109.87! 000"T ^'‘Charge It** Has famous “Auto Load Caiiridge*’ that lets -you load this camera in 10 seconds! Has zoom lens for quick-picture framing. 4-Day Sale! Threads Automatically! Bell & Howell PRdjEaOR na t Howdi 8mm Projector mi7 Reg. 134.87! Shvw ilow nioliuii picture*. Zoom lent; *elf-threading. With splicer, 4««’ reel. *2p6i. . €hurga it. 8mm MOVIE PROJECTORS 58.17 Reg. 68.77! With complete automatic threading. Forward, rever*e, ttill picture control. Charge 'it.^P256. Keg. 79.87! Family 8 mm movie projector hai zoom lens, variable 3-speed control —forward, reverse, still projection!. It’s virtually mainte-nance free anil reel capacity. GLENWOOD PLAZA—North Perry Street at Glenwood THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY H, 1963 D—11 —Television Programs— Ptogrami f(tmi«h«d by •tatient llstad in this column or* subject to change without notice. WEDNESDAY EVENING (1) (4) News, Weather, Spflhs .-(7) Movie: (Cpior) “The Desert Hawk” A*^OFF YOUR BILLS REMODEL YOUR HOME . M I nnHT Call ffou). . . FE 8-9251 Operator on Duty 24 HOURS (4) Concentration (7) GiriTalk (9) FYiendly Giant 11:15 (9) Chez Helene 11:26 (56) What’s New? 11:36 (2) McCoys (4) (Color) Jeopardy (7) Price Is Right (9) Butternut Square 11:56 (9) News (56) Teacher Memo AFTERNOON 12:66 (2) Love of Life (4) (Color) Say When (7) Donna Re^ (9) Bin^ 12:26 (56) At the Fair 12:25 (2) News 12:96 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) (Cotor) Truth or Consequences (7) Father Knows Best tt:ll (56) Spanish Lesson 12:45 (2) Guiding Light 12:56 (56) Let’s Read 1:66 (2) Jack Benny (4) News (7) Ernie Ford (9) Movie: “That Hagen Girl” (1947) Shirley Temple, Ronald Reagan 1:16 (4) Eliot’s Almanac (56) Sets and Symbols 1:15 (4) Topics for Today 1:25 (56) Geography 1:36 (2) As the World Turns (4) (Color) Let’s Make a Deal (7) Bachelor Father 1:55 tf) News (96) American History 2:66 (2) Password (4) Moment of TYuth (7) Flame in the Wind 2:26 (56) Safety Circle 2:25 (56) Mathematics 2:36 (2) Playhouse 2 (4) Doctors (7) Day in Court 2:56 (56) Spanish Lesson 3:66 (2) To Tell the Truth (4) Another World (7) General Hospital 1;15 49) News 3:25 (2) News 3:36 (2) Edge of Night (4) (Color) You Don’t Say (7) Young Marrieds (9) Take 30 (50) Jack La Lanne 4:66 (2) Secret Storm (4) Match Game (7) Trailmaster (9) Razzle Dazzle (50) Movie 4:25 (4) News 4:36 (2) Movie: “Manfish” (1956) John Bromfield, Victw Jory (4) Mickey Mouse Qub (9) Adventures in Paradise . (56) Alive With Art 5:66 (4) (Color) George Pierrot (7) Movie: “Mystery Submarine” (1950) Mac^ald Carey, Marta Tbren (50) Little Rascals (56) Jazz Casual 5:36 (9) Rocky and Friends (50) Gary Stevens (56) What’s New? 5:45 (9) Bugs Bunny 5:U (2) Sports (4) ciisrol Duvall IcROSS , r i r r r r r 12 13 IS \h 1? It k r JT 2T 3T 4T 44 45 □ IT IT ?r sr 54 55 56 5) 5t 5d DOWN 1 Bovine animals 2 River into C^pian Sea 3 Reduce 4 Affirm 5 Lair 6 Tatter 7 Week gone by 8 Argonaut 9 Liberal churdiman 10 Poker stake 11 Never (contr.) 16 Roman road 20 Offleers' School (ab.) .. 22-TYain schedules 24 Angered 25 Egyptian river 26 Allowable variance 27 Hops’ kiln 29 Norse navigator 30 Venture 38 Feminine appellation 39 Puerto---- 40 Without ethics 42 Mountain nymph 44 Examine 45 Heed 47 Half (prefix) 48 British street car 49 Deathly pale 52 LifeUme 53 Constrictor WILSON Sees World Humor Struck— Some of If Would Kill You By EARL WILSON NEW YORK-It’s a Smile World . . . Today’s humor gets wilder and wilder . . . EX-FCC Chairman Newton M. Minow told the local Emmy Awards Committee “I’m the Hrst Jewish trustee of Notre Dame. I go to my first meeting in May and I may be thrown out—when 1 propose that Notre Dame abandon .playing football on the Jewish Sabbath.” Jack E. Leonard claims, at Basin Street, that Lady Bird’s snch a fnssy housekeeper, she puts a newspaper nnder the cnckoo clock ... and that things were so rough hi' Chicago when he was a boy that a cop once sidled np and saM, “Wanta buy a patrol car?”- I was about two bellydancers late arriving at Lou Black’s new club, at the Taft, for the opening of his Oriental show, but there were four bellydancers left—all beauties, Nejla Ates, the m.c., tried to kid Jack C^ter, asking him to dance, but Jack replied, “I’ve got a bellyfull already—is my fez red!” At this “Navel Academy,” they’ve also got a variety show with lovely Sheila O’Sullivan, Paula Wayne’s understudy in “Golden Boy,” singing. She’s a true find! ★ ★ ★ Lou Walters, the great Boston showman who founded the NY Latin (garter with E. M. Loew and then moved to ’Vegas and Miami Beach, probably will return here to manage the LQ again. He’s negotiating with Loew about succeeding Eddie Ris-man (who succeeded,,him when he broke with Loew and started a competing club). Mimi Hines arrived at a Jimmy Dean TV taping in tears ^appy tears, she eventually explained. She said she’s been chosen to play Barbra Streisand’s part in “Funny Girl” during one week that Barbra takes off to do a TV show in the •pring. ★ ★ ★ THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . . Robert AMa got sick during “What Makes Sammy Run?” the other night. Steve Lawrence introduced understudy Mace Barrett to the audience: “Here’s the young man who drugged Mr. Alda’s coffee” . . . Next film for Peter O’Toole (whose latest is “Lord Jim”) may be—a wqstem . . . Joan Crawford sipped Pepsi all through her “Girl Talk” TV-taping, poured it in the other guests’ cups, too. Woody Allen was asked why his film has an unusual title, “What’s New, Pussycat?” “I wanted,” he explained, “to call it ‘Gone With the Wind’—but somebody'd already used that” . . . Joey Bishop, whose Tv’er replaced “World War I” in some cities, says, "I hope I didn’t alienate all the fans of Kaiser Wilhelm” . . . Julie Andrews’!] fly here for 24 hours for the “Sound of Music” premiere, fly right back to L A. Sam Cooke’s recording sales have tripled since his death. ★ ★ ★ TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: A Russian sprinter (rep orts Changing Times) broke the reqord in the 100-yd. dash, the the mile and the marathon. And then they caught him. EARL’S PEARLS: When you’re working, two weeks is a long, dfawh-oQt 336 hours. When you’re on vacation, it’s a quick 14 days. With some of these wild new dance steps, you don’t know if the guy on the floor is a good dancer or a bad drunk. . . . That’s earl, Iwolher. (T» W»H tyiWIats. !■<.) $$(MSHFORyOU NOW!! Begin ei^ying tbo thinp yon need! 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Big l!Mn. overall diagonal acreen, 174hk}. in. viewing area. Up-front controla for easier tuning. Attractive p *?** *?■■' P*^"' peninsula - North Viet Nam, French wiUidrawal from the ambassador to France, called |ation to De Gaulle, Vinogradov Cambodia and «rea and the partition of Viet States has unleashed jet at the Elysee Palace for a 20- **/* ® memorandum of the So- ’ Nam. planes for the first'‘time minute discussion yesterday ''*** As the former colonial ruler of The United States refused to against the Viet Cong il with President Charles de A Soviet spokesman said Indochina, France feels that it sign the 1954 Geneva agree-Vinogradov told de Ganlle the has special knowledge of the ment. ly Cabinet meeting t ing. SAIGON, Nam UP - South Viet The United New Course Will Be Ready This Summer Mrs. CyrD B. Lewis, secretary of the TB Sanatorium board of trustees, and Mrs. John D. Rumsey, state-appointed member of the social welfare board, were elected sial Wide Track Drive are slated AVWlIjNUpf EdUWIU. . •tdhA Cage, Pontiac area real estate “ *'«®P«n Apn* developer, announced today. JUST WAITING The new course, to be known Dugan charged that the state two-year terms, as Holly Greens Golf Course, had ma^e no move to change Elected to one-year terms by will be of the latest design with anything and “just mms to unanimous ballot were Maurice extended tees up to 160 feet want to wait and Wait." j. Croteau, number of the so- long. It will be potsible to vary the length of the coarse from S,8«l to 7,1M yards by changing the markers according to Gage. Dngan even suggested that everyone coucemed get together and take a tour of Wide Track. cial welfare board;- Charles B. Edwards Jr., Madison Heights suporvisor, and Thomas H. O’Donoghue, Femdale supervis- Main points of contention in ■ f * it .bM h.11 .t M ,l» M ^ 1^ «M .1 M X" The development may ulb- Auburn - Orchard Lake cross- from the CouiKTTB ^atoium matdy be exp^ into a $10- over. ^ the Coun^ Medical Care million recreation center con- Also, a portion of South Sag- Facility at the Service Center, cept. according to Gage. inaw has been isolated from LONG-RANGE PIAns direct access by a southbound Long-range plans call for the vehicifc on Saginaw, addition of apartments, a hotel, Ci**' Engineer Joseph E. motel, tennis courts and a swim- Neipling, asked to explain the South Viet Nam, a U.S. Embassy spokesman art-nounced today. They have made several strikes in the last six days. B57 medium bombers and FIDO fighter-bombers, with Americans manning both Bight controls and the weapons, joined the air war previously carried on by armed helicopters WARSAW, Poland UB-Am-bassadorsof Communist China and the United States met today in a icfsion that diplomats here said could influence the crisH in Southeast Asia. and propeller-driven planes handled jointly by Americans and Viatnamese. TEEN GAMBLING CASINO - This is the $40,000 private home in Haworth, N.J., that teens operated as a gambling casino for teen-age clientele. The gaming room, in the base- ment of the home, was patterned after dice rooms in Puerto Rico, police said. ming pool. Completion oftheconrse and clubhouse it planned for late this summer. Gage said. The course was planned by architect Robert Bruce Harris of Chicago, who has designed more than 4M golf courses. Five small lakes fed from a well on the property will provide the water hazards. The million-gallon-capacity well will concept behind the loop road, said the object was to take traffic off of Saginaw to remove congestion and permit parking. “This is new, H is different and It needs to be given time so the traveling public can BUILDING SOLD The TB Sanatorium has been sold to Oakland Community College. The transfer is to be made about April 1, when college officials plan to start remodel-lag the sanatorium to prepare for the enrollment of some 2,IM students next fall. Snake-Eyes in the Suburbs Teens Rocked, Rolled (Dice) Muslim Parley Worries Police The spokesman said the decision was “in keeping with thq announced United States policy of providtag mniimnm assistance to tke govemaent of Sooth Viet Nam to its efforts to repel the Communist aggression direeted aad supported byihe Hanoi regime.” The first strike was made last Thursday against Red guerrillas holding a mountain pass near An Khe in the central highlands. $4t,$N split-level home with a spacious lawn. HAWORTH, N.J. (UPI) - It appeared to be just another home in a well-t« s**> ** G*- ministratiVE bottv anfl exten- K^KinW evamKIina 4oKIa« in tt T.oe . ^ . ... . .QPT1S *■ whn ll1lA0|hH1v Sntit fhp Battles between powerful Viet Cong units and government out-flts continued sweeping across Chicago Security Is mountainous Binh IMnh Rrov-■ ■ j tl * ince today, with a rapidly rising Upped After Threats casualty toll. CHICAGO (API IN HUNDREDS Police, In the past three days of maximum - distance routes,” ministrative body ^ ^n- behind gambling tables in a Las ymirig clients and allegedly split the alarmed by telephoned threats fighting in that northern prov- said Neinlino. sive remodeling of the Medical vegas atmosphere. .L™.. u*' take were held for juvenile court the life of Black Muslim ince. the Americans alone have option. Jeader Elijah Muhammad, lost two killed and nine wound- also keep the tees, greens and neer, Wide Track is designed fairways in top condition. Gage for fuUire conditions, not ' pointed out. low traffic volumes of today. * * ♦ George Oberer Cure S'.niittv M makA vilit ®*"™*®P*’®*‘® bring them to tlte hoiHe. P.li« Chief G.,M Mlch.1 ~ The driver stopped the car at disclosed yesterday that his men the garage door and honked the fairways In top condition. Gage for future conditions, not” the fAS^^S,S"^hA‘"P Plush gam- horn twice, Michel said. Some-nointed out. low traffic vninmA. nt inHov 106 ^*601081 car« operated by three one in the house then pushed a NeiDling added that Wide ?Ha ^ * button to open the doors. TtMc W.. » «Uy »rt of . Z SSm X' clMKIe.^;An .i»ny. _ ,„m„ M ptayer, WMifM Ohio, has joined with Gage in cmolex ‘ "lie'Lid toSre^^iiJ mous tip. apparently from the themsetoes over'an rntercom developing the project. Sv Lp iLuW allow ^ ®y®tem before they were admit- Gag^. of W Berwyn, Birmlng- SL Sulato fotiie down OGTS'DEjCOUNTY far into debt,,led police to stake Then the car backed out ham, has office^ at ^ W. Wash- tow 'arear”*"^ *®* patients may have out the home on Feb. 10. ington. Royal Oak, but plans on jbe interior loop was slated relocated in facilities out- n,ere was nothing sus-moving his h^quarters to Pot- ^ be constructed entirely with 0®*'*“** a*^”*'"* pidouf about the brick and tiac SOOT to be closer to his in- sometime after Wide (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) frame slate gray house — a terests in the area. Track was completed. However, and went to pick up other customers. Sales at Pontiac Hit New High for February Period stepped up security plans today ed. Vietnamese casualties < for the sect’s convention in Chi- both sides are estimated in the cago this weekend. hundreds. He is also o it has not been programmed ers of the Tel-Huron Shopping gj Center which is being expanded ^^e city engineer did The new aolf club is located at P’',®*'*'' The new golf cluio 18 l^ted at justified by the lA eniifliAacit onrn^p with nr. the southeast corner with access from 1-75 at the Holly Road turnoff. traffic volume. 6-Mill School 2nd Hall ol Comedy Duo Succumbs to Heart Allack Ctontinuingrits fast pace, Pon-ATMOSPHERE ‘ tiac Motor Division sold a rec- Red and blue spotUghts illu- 24,676 Pontiac ami Tempests minated the gambling room. A ‘*uring t^ ^-February sales croupier in black tie greeted the to^y 'The calls to police came within a few hours of each other yesterday. The first warned; “we have arrived. Muhammad will have a lively convention.” The second caller, who identified himself as John Hen- Most of the fighting is in steep valleys wfiere roads fnnOsh the main comrannica-tions routes for government Many U.S. officials feel the action in Binh Dinh and the HAr.»>. «.M 100 mA. ..a. "eighboring provinces o< Phu derson, said IN men were „ . , iHtmino to rhicMo from Now ^ coming to Chicago from New York.to kill Muhammad. players and led them to a three- ‘ '............. .... ThA PaK 11.*n Kiirh nri tered a phase the Communists describe as “mobile warfare”' The caller also told police a — the use of large Communist SANTA MONICA, Calif. {2PI—Stan Laurel, the lit-TOX R6n6WGcl ^^l^*^****** partner of the late, 300-pound Oliver Hardy in the movies’ most successful comedy.team, is ip Iryt^ci C^'rinn ® attack at 74. Victim of a stroke in 1955 and of diabetes in later i.k cu . A _A years, he suffered the fatal seizure yesterday in when he announced that the r***. • ikic Ki..«fA.A gambling operation had been smashed. I voters turned out yestei^ay to bluff-top apartment I renew a 6-mill operating tax by overlooking the ocean. I ■^"“*■**">^218. jjj5 fom-th wife, Ida, was I The renewal for a five-year . . . .. I period maintains school taxes sioe. I in the district at 24.49 mills this «■*** B"<*y starred in I year, 9*^1 films, mostly two- and threer * _ , ^ ’ refelers, and made millions The levy Increases to 2$.49 i^ugi, mUls next year when a 4-miU _ .u mm i. •KinmerpAlmrffM. rtAm rwlAlj leltvWo. Failure to gain approval for and in theaterl arwnd tile the renewal of the 6-mill tax world. I yesterday would have m^t Uurel at the I loss of approxunately $157 000 crop4iaired, bungling yet lova-I •nnually from the opera^ ye scamp, who, wearing a I budget, according to schod ,ypy expresswn, inevT-I (rfficiais. . tgbiy brought disaster to his fat, I ’ School Supt. A.. A. Reed said exasperated nartiier. I Ikis morning that “we’re very * ♦ ' * I tileased.' Figure would have Babe Hardy used to say Lau- I meant coining back again and ret was the brains of their act. ' —(Continued on Page 2, Col. 8j section dice table covered with "*^® *^®**- ***^ *“**' ^ bomb had been planted in the units in patterns somewhere pink felt. Michel said the table P®*" **"* ®*”'^® **’.® prevwm rec- Coliseum, site of the convention between guerrilla and conven-was marked with lines and bet- ®”* ®* *®*** ***® which is expected to attract tionai warfare, ting odds in a professional man- P®™^ ? y®®/ ®«®;* . , 6.000 Black MusUms. t * * ner. annOTncing the latest sales w w w This type of fighting charac- . ... f'Kures Pettengill pointed out police said the caller indi- terized the final phase of Mwe than 50 Imy* gambled this was the ninto conj^tive cated the bomb was timed to fighting between France and the in the casino while their par- KVday sales record for Pontiac, explode Friday or Saturday Communists in the Indochina ents “thought they were Nt “Our dealers across the coun- Muhammad is scheduled wax. which the Communists skating or sledding,” the chief try report that consumer con- to address the convention. won said. They ranged in age fi-om fidence is at an all-time high,” ^ Telephoned bomb threats also A report from da Nang. 380 harassed New York police and miles northeast of Saigon, said reinforcements were ordered a Vietnamese government force into Harlem in an attempt to routed a Viet Cong iinit five prevent further violence. Early mites south of the Da Nang base yesterday an explosion and fire, runway, believed to have been set by h« vw avengers of Malcolm X. ^vrecked a four-story Muslim “Bed aad U cap- mosque. No one was injured. IS to 17. One won up to $3N Pettengill, said. “There is and another was in debt for gi4eat de^ to buy on the part $192. of the car buying public.” T was shocked” Michel said ---------- ' News Book Still Offered 6 Inches of Snow Predicted for Area From Beatles and boycotts to Salgoo and the Pentagon It’s aU in tin SNpage As- Snow shovels are due fw a workout. Up to, six inches or more Ot snow are forecast for the Pontiac area by tomorrow niorning. Temperatures will continue a little warmer^ the low near 10 later whea The clash occurred at Yen Ne Nam along a river where the body of Malcolm X. the’for- — Black MNlimleador who ®"1 building. fortlficati^ » part of an apparent effort to close in on the base. sodated Press book, “The to 16 tonight, and highs reach-World in 1964,” along wlft ing 18 to 26 tomorrow. Partly hundreds si the put year’s best photos and news stories, nis niarvelou bssk fsr wu asnssiutod Sunday hi Mew Ystfc, was the victim.of A ttplay • lew u ,,eAianta siAWedh the area are believed to be part ol n Pdke reported Uttte progress wild herd, in their Investigation bf Mai- opBeen' thawed^an(( is ready for use {again, he said. She Flies With Kennedys MIAMI, Fla. (J^-A New York woman, dashing to catch a plane for the first leg of a flight to Florid8, boarded the Kennedy family’s private plane Caroline by mistake, but went along anyway. Blanche Griswold, en route from Saranac Lake, N.Y., to New York City to catch a plane for Miami, says she was very embarrassed, “but the Kennedy family seemed pleased and didn’t mind at all.” Aboard the Carolbie, returning to New York Monday from a skiing holiday at Lake Placid, were Mrs. John F. Kennedy, Sen. Robert Kennedy, D-N.Y., aad the Kennedy In Ithaca. N.Y., Sen. Kennedy confirmed that a woman mistook the family plane for a commercial airliner and said: “She was a very nice woman. But she thought H was veiy crowded for a commmeial plane.” -k ★ Mrs. Griawold, a Sarande wictow, 4dd yes-' tcfday she didn’t tdie tiiM to.look at tbe plane. RUSHED To PLAN^ “I was Jate and nisbed aCtixM the airfield md entered the plane.” ‘ Stopped by an FBI agent, she said iIm told them she was goi^ to Florida and ' :«f - “ entered the plane when the agent had no objection. “inside, it didn’t iQok right,” Mrs. Griswold recalled. “It was small and I saw Mrs. Kennedy and Bobby and lots of children.” Xhe plane was almost airborne when she Ao-tic^ tables between the seats and remarked: “This is a waste of space." HAD LUNCH , '“This plane-isn’t supposed to make- money, this is the Kennedy plane,” she was told by a member of the Kennedy group. During the flight “children ran around and we had lunch — sandwiches,” she said, adding that the Kennedy family was con; Mrs. Griswold said both the senator and the former first lady wished her a good trip and said they were pleased to have her ab<^. '★ “Tir ★ “It was opr pleasure,” Mrk. Griswold quoted the senator as saying when the plane landed at La Guardia Field in New York. . "They were most gracious. They knew my-embarrassnoent,”" Mrs. Griswold stdd. She took a commercial flight to Miami. ERNEST A. JONES Stan Laurel, Film Comic, Is Dead at 74 (Continued From Page One) Stan wrote and directed many of their films. ALWAYS LOSERS In a stock situation, the skinny Laurel and the rotund Hardy were at odds with authority — landlord, grim mother-in-law or chief of police. They always lost — except at the bmc office. Laurel was born Arthur Stanley Jefferson June 16,* 1890, in Ulverston, England, the son of a theatrical family. Spending much of his childhood in dressing rooms and railroad stations, he toured with his parents in English stock companies. He later attended King James Grammar School, Gainford School and TVnemouth College. U-M Program Gets 1100,(1(10 Music School Grant by Ad Firm President The University of Michigan $55-million program h a s received a gift of $100,000 from Ernest A. Jones of 39 Cran-brook, Bloomfield Hills, it was announced yesterday by Paul G. Goebel of Grand Rapids, national chairman of the drive. The gift is specified for the U-M School of Music. Jones, chairman of the Metropolitan Detroit Division in the multi-million campaign, is president of MacManus, John' and Adams, Inc., advertising agency in Bloomfild Hills. A native of Jamestown, N.Y., Jones worked his way through the University of Michigan graduating in 1938 as an economics major. He Was business manager of the Michigan Daily, and manager and trumpet player with the Michigan band, in whi6h he has maintained a continuing interest. In accepting Jones’ gift, Goebel said that to date $15,548,000 has been secured from gifts and pledges. Campaign headquarters have been established in. the First National Building -ih Detroit. The campaign is being organized nationally and staled by .ahittinl volunteers, eventually to exceed 5JI00 workers. Purpose of the program, according to Goebel, is to enhance the private su(^)ort which makes it possible for the university hilly to meet its growing r»--spon^it^ to stpte and na- tion. His stage debut at 7 was in “Lights of London.” At 15 he toured Europe on his own song and dance act. At 17 he joined Fred Arno’s London comedians, starring Charlie Chaplin. CAME TO NEW YORK The company arrived in New York in 1910 on a cattle boat, toured the country for three years and disbanded. Stan went into vaudeville, then the flick- He started as a' writer and director. Then one day, in 1927, he replaced an actor who had taken sick and played a butler opposite a befty comic villain named Hardy. They were an instantaneous click. ’Their heyday was in films for the late producer Hal Roach. They made many pictures for him before moving in 1940 to 20th Centup»-Fox. They kept no property rights to the old films, so reap^ no rewards when they later were shown on television. 7 on Board of Institutions (Continued From Page One) to Dr. Bernard D. Berman, county health director. The remodeling work, esti- mated to cost $100,000,. was also given the green light yesterday hy the board of supervisors. It will be financed by a $130,-000 fund which had previously been earmarked for remodeling of the TB Sanatorium. The fund was created by a one-tenth mill levy on the county’s state, equalired valuation ' permitted by statute for build-ihg or remodeling. The new board of institutions win have administrative respon-“sibinty for the Medical Care Facility and such other ho^ital facilities as theucounty may cre^ ate in the future. OTHER FUNCTIONS The county hospital had previously been the responsibility . of the social welfare board; which will continue to exist to serve other functions. The board of trustees of the TV Sanatorium (will cease to function when the sanatorium B taken over by the collie. .i :■ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1965 r VV FOODS D i lie Store tiet SMS PACKER hkt$ tff$tth0 tfcrv SMilcy, Ftfc. 21, 19iS. W$ rtstrrt tb« ri§kt to limil fMotitioi. Pure Creamery Butter CA YLORD I-lb. 49 limit OiM with Coupoo ot Loft. Grade A Fresh ijrade A rresn Large Eggs Limit OiM with Coopen it loft i 6oUMedal$ 38 Aiwrted Golotin Flavors FOOD CLUB DESSERTS H Limit Hiri m«m. Cmi fup«n V 3-OS. Pk«. VaOFF awrey f# VI i BAKKD GOODS . Dieept tferonted e«ke>, wed-dlni cakca and • apccial ordera. ----- valid throufh Feb. n ■ One Coupon. Limit Ooo with Coopon at Loft. Assorted Gelatin FI Assorted Gelatin Flavors fl||H ^ Food Club DESSERH ^^ Limit Thraa with Coupon at loft. Meadowdalo Loan, Deep Smoked Flavor ^jjjV ^ Sliced Baron ~ 49 From Our Cherry Pie Mel-O-Crutt Relit Brawn 'N Serve For Cooking or Salads WESSON OIL Stekely Dallcieut Fruit Gecktaii Kreh'i SaleO Drettinf Miracle Whip Ksf Gallon Can herjjilsg lew Prices on 3erne Brsnis j/ee Reyai Pudding Vanilla or Strawberry BORDENS COMPARR! I p^. I COMPARi! Green Giant Peas 19‘ Hiblets Corn 15* Dares Dest-O-Bics Cookies I49*- Hershey Chocolate Syrup 19* Brack Pick-A-Mix Candy 147* Nabisco Shortbread Cookies 149* Buster Spanish Peanuts 139* Oven King Cookies 3/«r CampbelFs Tomato Soup 10* Vegetable Beef Soup 137* Chicken Vegetale Soup 137* Palmolive Liquid Detefgent 57* Blue Vim Detergent Tablets - 2-lb. 6-et. |et 52* Piilsbury Cake Mixes • ] 125* Mavis Soda Pop 157* Roman Fabric Rinse 169* Lux Liquid Detergent 179* Baggies Sandwich Bags 29* Kleenex Facial Tissue 200 2,1,1 no 19* . AVrora Bathroom Tissue I 23* Chormin Toilet Tissue 31* Final Touch Fabric Softener'^^-Hle^' I 79* Lux Liquid Detergent 144* Ajax Detergent 31* Rinse Blue Detergent 59- IMO STAMPS! IMOGIIVIIVIICK.S! JUST SAVE CASH ! rfe:' ■4 mum THE PONTIAC PKfaSS. \VKt)N'KSUAY. KKBmjAltY 24, 1805 Linda Porter- Polly's Pointers Exchanged Recent Vows ishiohed ■ LiMa MRS. W. W. DOUGLAS Dance Club Plans Gala Cocktails at 7;M p.is. will precede the dinner dance for members of the Continental Dance club. Saturday Is the date set for the .gala to take place in the P^oda Inn of Troy. Arrang^ents are in the hands of Mr. and Mrs. Duane Lamiman. Their assistants include Mr. and Mrs. Robert Davis and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Price.. For ticket reservations which should be made by today the following officers may be contacted; Max King, Peter Morris, and Mrs. Ron McGraw. Drying Machine The oldest food-drying machine known — the sun — still is used to dry most of the raisins, currants, apricots, and pears marketed commercial^, but manmkde driers, employing vacuum drying and foam-spray drying, are taking over the processing of most other foods. White bridal satin fashi< a gown and train for Ann Porter who exchanged ■ recent vows with Wesley William Douglas, in the Leonard Methodist Church. She donned a bouffant, silk illusion veil and held a Bible covered with white carnations. ♦ ♦ Parents of the newlyweds are the Edward J. Porters and Mr. and Mrs. John Douglas, all of Leonard. SISTER With Mrs. James Ostrander, her sister’s honor matron, were the bridesmaids Mrs. Thonnas Patch, Mrs. Richard VanConat, Verna Sutherby, Ruth Ann Douglas and tiody Porter. Their gowns were red velvet. The bridegroom had William Stafford for his best man. LIshers were Eugene Mollia, Cedi Linesman, Paul Sutberby, Stephen Porter and Norman Green. Scott McMillan carried the rings. After the reception in Rowland Hall, Leonard, the couple left for a northern Michigan honeymoon. Warm, gay. smart for sports! Crochet cardigan knitting worsted for comfort, style. Four-color, puff-stitch yoke, cuffs add a smart tou^ to jacket. Crocheted in one piece, from neck down. Pattern 735: sizes 32-34 ; 36-38 included. Thirty-five cents in coins for this pattern' — add 15 cents for each pattern for 1st class mailing and special handling. Send to Laura Wheeler. The Pontiac Press, 124 Needlecraft Dept., Bok 161, Old Chelsea Station. New York N. y. 10011. Print Pattern Number, Name, Address, Zip. 1965 Needlecraft Catalog— 200 designs. 3 free patterns! MORE to crochet, knit, sew, embroider. 25 ^te. “Decorate with Needlecraft”—fabulous, new book packed witll 25 patterns for top decorator accessories i ■shown* in 5 idea-filled rooms. Applique coordinates, pillows, wall hangings,‘more. 50 cents. Send for superb Quilt Book —16 complete patterns. 50 Cenig. The All .New Modern l.«PElilALs? . Permanents Tinting & Bleaching 158 Auhum Ave« 'opiMMitr PjirilMinl .'*i; If air Slylirng Ai YOt' Likr If PARK FREE Ft 4-2878 “ Rub Bread On It Rub small stains and smudges on wallpaper with pieces of stale bread. This often is all that is needed to remove mars. - Try Indoor Volleyball DEAR POLLY - My chil dren, ages 4, 5 and 7, became restlees when they had to stay in the house for several days because of colds. I put my adjustable ironing board dofn to its lowest position in the living room. They had great fun playing volleyball across the board with a big ballqon. ' The balloort could not break anything and they Were careful about the way they threw their i^ms out to reach the ball.— JEAN : DEAR POLLY — Venetian blinds on a door have a way of hanging agaiut the wood of the door when it is opened or shut. This often mars the paint finish. I tacked a Venetian blind cord onto the woodwork along both Sides of the door so t)ie blind would hit the cord instead of the wood. This really eliminates the noise, too. — RITA ' ★ ' ♦ * DEAR POLLY - When sh6|h ping in a crowded supermarket, it is so easy to put items in someone else's cart. ’ I made a bright ribbon tag with my initials on it and attached a string. I tie this to the cart I am filling and it saves many mistakes. While I am at the checkout counter the tag is removed and put in my purse to be ready for the next shopping trip —MRS. G. B. . ery day so I do hope the girls keep those Pointers coming. Perhaps my invention, a “pattern caddy," will help those who sew. Cat the tops off of several cereal boxes from two top corners diagonally down to the middle of the opposite side. Stand these , boxes in a row gad glne together. —4*aint -the boxes and decorate with pictures of spools and other sewing accessories. Label the front of each section with the type of pattern in that compartment — skirts, dresses, blouses, baby clothes, etc. They are neat and easy to reach when needed —RUTH DEAR POLLY -.When the weather is bad, 1 slip my note for (he milkman ih an empty bottle, as usual, and then cover note, bottle and all with a plastic bag and h is dry when he arrives.—MRS. R, F. E. Mr. and Mrs. Lata-rence L. Ashby of Ha-zelton Avenue, Avon Tovmship, announce the engagement of their daughter, Patricia Mar-tell to James E. Periso, son of the Ernest ft. Perisos of Auburn Heights. May 22 has been selected for vows. Smorgasbord Set Saturday at Church The Newman A.M.E. Church will sponsor Its first annual. conunuiilty Smorgasbord dinner at 7 p.m. Saturday, in the Bethune School on Lake Street,, * e ■' * The Women’s Fellowship of the church is completing ar- Featured speaker will be the Hon. Otis M. SnUth, State of Michigan Supreme Court. Judge Smith received his bachelor of laws degree from the Catholic University, Wash- | ington, D.C. He was admitted > to practice in Michigan in | Jan. 1951 and appointed to i State offlce in 1957. ' ■ * * * He has been with the Mich- | igan Supreme Court since Oct. i 9,1961. I goes a long way to give you CUSTOM CLEANING^ at regular prices! m THE FONTIAC PKK^S. WEDNESDAV. FEBiyi AKY 1965 THRIFTY BEEF OVER 2S0,000 WINNERS! PIUS 700 EXTRA TOP VALUE STAMPS WITH COUPONS IN THIS AD AND MAIIJI lOOKUT STHWmi BRAND PRIZE WINNERI SIRLOIN STEAK 79! >; V t f Mrs. Violot NUtchoN «f |~WefeHerd, Michigon • ^ Mr. Km Swift -Wotfrfor shovfr M ond Mr. ( •f GowMw Stofogo Co., Pontioc wkoro lo ploco tho Zonith Color TV tot hy iriovifig ''SufM Bingo''' ot nOr E ‘ noorby Kregor THRIFTY BEEF THRIFTY BEEF ROUNB. RIB STEAK POT ROAST CUT . CHUCK ROAST •ERFECT CHOICE FOR SATISFYING LOW tpST MEALS 39< aM Save ^i^o] BROCA •word IROCAI iword ' WCTK V' ''•ir* ‘--p* w«. T.w«i TI-Dl" HAND TOWEL iROCADI" lb. THRIFTY BEEF ENGLISH ROAST________________^ 59* THRIFTY BEEF IS 79' SAVE 20' KROGER FROZEN* BONELESS “W ” T-BONE STEAK > KROGER DEHCtbuS FREESTOIfE peaches... 3'^ti89* KROGER BRAND \ GRAPEFRUIT. lUICE 4'^99‘ SAVE UP TO 30-EISIE OR OLD FASHIONED \ BORREN'S la CREAM ^^ 69‘ ORANGI JUICE ^y^ 6-Fl. OZ. . CANS WITH COUPON AND $5 PURCHASE NORTH BAY PINK BORDEN'S ELSIE CHOCOLATE MILK SAVf w QUART CARTON NEWl KROGER BRAND MM CORN OIL MARGARINE '^■;4is.99' KROGER HOMOGENIZED GRADE "A' \1P FRESH MILK • • plt-OAL. CTN. SAVE 2»*-B0RDEN'S ELSIE 37* ICE CREAM BARS. .12»»49* KIIP FOODS FRESHER LONGER FRESHRAP WAX PAPER.. ALASKA SALMON.% SAVE 16--10-CAI FAYGO COLA-frAESO* KROGER BRAND ' FRUIT COCKTAIL. .4iB85* FOR SNACKS OR SANDWICHES SPAM.rPREM SUNSHINE BRAND KRISPY CRACKERS. KROGER BRAND too TEA BAGS .»89‘ MORTON HOUSE-.JUST HEAT L SERVE CHIU WITH BEANS .... ... ,soz wt can 27' BEEF, CHICKEN, LIVER OR HORSEMEAT ALPO DOG FOOD...................uvi.o2. wt. can 29* DESSERT TOPPING PRESTO WHIP............. . . . IO.OZ. WT. CAN 39* GOOD TO THE LAST DROPI NEW MAXWELL HOUSE INSTANT COFFEE $]79 U-OZ. WT. JAR. CALIFORNIA FRESH CRISP ICEBERG HEAD LETTUCE 2s^ oo^ HUDS REDEEM MAILED PAG COLiPON FOR 7- OFF CHARMIN TOILET TISSUE GREEN GIANT (GRN 4161 NIBLETSi mBLETM C0RN..4-O9 GREER GIANT PEAS . .“T. 5 ‘I GREEN BEANS. ..... .5m.c««'1 I lOP VAIUE fft TOP VAIUF JR ■■ TOP VALUE “ VALUABLE COU^C 50 stampslSO stampsu25 stamps WITH THIS COUPON ON I I WITH THIS COUPON ON WITH THIS COUPON ON I TASTY UNDEHWOOD BRAND DEVIUD HAM........ MORTON FROZEN BREAD DOUGH ^ I4B. FKOS. ■ WITH this COUPON ANO Z ' SS FUBCHASi Ot MOM | | --------------, - KROOil MOUUt Ot DRIP ' | ' •RANfl JVICE I VAC PAC (OFFES J _ . S G.OX. CANS II* UVI to- ! 14k CAN AS* SAVf lO- ! ‘ _ . . B VeBA*w$ehMBwNBfMWf 17, lGil;-l VeBdHini$e»vi*,,F*iwNv.77, 1H5. I ■ MM {y ****"!*^' Nfcni«r» 17, IRGSJ^aM Hnv SatwrU^, Fak««^7, IVAS.^ LMl mm cmi^ pM NmIN- *** ««*Pn' P*' NitiBy. J I CRIST TOOTIVASn tr i I NlAi i SNOVLDIRS ” ! SHAMPOO I B ValU thni Fakuan 17. IMS. ■ V 7.pi: OZ. Can ITSOL SPRAT DISINFICTANT I 1 PINT 54>Z. CAN I EAST MONDAY . I SPRAT STARCH I THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1965 DNE COLOR Counters Prospect of Lower Defense Spending which it is emerainc and Lock-1 Sewing was introduced to Bos-d of shai'e-tl Nongovernment Business Growing in Aircraft-Arrospace Field (Editor’s Note - With fewer defense controcts, the leaders of the notion’s aircraft-aerospace industry look to the development of new commercial pkaies and neto frontiers of science to keep the industry busy in the years ahead. AP business news writer Roger Lane reports on talks with industry leaders in the following story, second m a four-part series.) By ROGER LANE AP Business News Writer LOS ANGELES - “Assuming progressively lower national defense budgets, the aero-space industry at best will remain stabfe, quite possibly decline, said Dudley Browne, group vice president ^ Lockheed Aircraft Cwp. “But major problems remain in Viet Nam, Cuba, the Berlin corridor, Africa, , the Middle East, China and in South America. It is hard tA foresee what today’s assumptions may look like tomorrow.” Browne noted the industry also is nourished by impoi^t commercial demand, and stands on frontiers of science and inventicHi that conceivably lead to bigrscale exploitation of the oceans and eU ctron-ics applications! His vi^w typifies industry reaction to recurrent talk of a major shrinkage in the ofOng for Lhe nation’s 1.1-million man, |20-billion a year aircraft-aerospace complex. WORK CUTBACK management consultants firm foresaw recently a IS per cent cutback in government work by 1970, and one estimate envisioned a 25 per cent cutback. Relaxed international tensions and a downward dfift in arms spending were cited. Uncle Sam is the industry' No. 1 customer, accounting for about 85 per cent of revenues, but nongovernment business is growing. Head men at the Boeing Co. and Douglas Aircraft Cq., ranking one-two as commercial plane builders, in interviews begged off prophecy on future defense spending, lliey stressed expanding horizons of civil-passenger and cargo flight. Boeing’s order backlog is over 60 per cent commercial, Douglas’ about 45 per cent commercial. ‘QUITE BULUSH’ f'We’re. quite bullish,” said Donald W. Douglas Jr. As president of Douglas he directs a May Lead to E. German Recognition Ulbricht's 1st Visit to Non-Red Nation BERLIN (.AP) - On his trip to Egypt, Walter Ulbricht is taking his first state visit to a non-Communist country. The stodcy leader of East Germany’s Communist party can consider President Gamal Abdel Nasser’s invitation a personal victory. In the past, even the most left-leaning neutral countries' have held back from associating too closely with one of the Kremlin’s most accomplished helpers. ’The fact that these and other nations have refused to grant full recognition to his regime has been irking Ulbricht, especially since he must constantly find ways with which he can improve his own image and stature within the Communist conununity. CONSTANT SCHEMES He has constantly schemed and pushed toward being recognized, seemingly disregarding the obstacles placed in his paths 3-ROOM OUTFIT •r l.pt. mf,: 3 JUNK CARS • WANTED USED AUTO PARTS FOR SALE FE 2-0200 by the West, chiefly the West German government which maintains it has the only legal right to speak for the entire German nation. Scheming and perseverance are among Ulbricht’s main personal assets. “Look into his eyes and you will see how scheming and dishonest he is,” said (Jerma-ny’s most famous woman Communist, the late Clara Zetkin, about Ulbricht back in the 1920s. Ulbricht had just finished his first ax job for Joseph Stalin by chopping up Germany’s big, independent Communist party into small cells easily controlled by the Kremlin. ALWAYS SURVIVES Since then, his uncanny ability to follow and survive every nuance in the Kremlin line had iffede him one of Moscow’s most valuable functionaries. Bom in,Leipzig, he joined the Socialists at 19 and became a union organizer. company on the rebound from a severe wrenching that has left employment and sales at roughly one half the levels of the mid-1950s. In a major gamble, Douglas has just entered a DC9 short- to intermediate-range jet airliner in conipetition for a market estimated at up to $2 billion and 1,-000 planes over 10 years. ^ an-hour commercial airliner. military transpprt-cargo craft, an armed helicq>ter, an intercontinental missile, a space laboratory, and a rocket. ’The |3-miIlion 5^ to 9D-pas-senger craft would be liusHy for feeder airlines. ’Hie British Aircraft Corp. already is selling a plane for this service, ahd Boeing probably will bring out a model for the same market. Of gloomy forecasts fw Hie industry, a Boeing Official observed that the company was founded in 1916, and add^: “If at any time in the past 50 years you had asked ‘what will you be making five years from now?’ the answer would have to have been, based on programs in progress, ‘Of course, we’ll be broke.’ ” VISIONARY PROGRAMS Underscoring the same point, With the passage of time and the cutting down of numerous comrades, he became the Kremlin’s man. i is married for the second time and has a daughter. Beechnut Founder Dies FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) — Raymond P. Lipe, 94, a founder of the Beechnut Company in 1891, died Monday. He also was a grain shipper and financier during World War I and lived in Toledo, Ohio, for 60 years. Browne enumerated seven major programs Lockheed is seeking totaling possibly $12 billion future business, mostly in areas a layman would regard as visionary. Included were a 2,000-mile- Despite a fat current backlog of business, Lockheed was backing up its bids with huge naoney and manpower investments, knowing much (rf the spending, would avail nothing in gambles that at best would land two or three sizable jackpots of' business — or maybe none. Browne said that over three years Lockheed had laid out $75 million of its oWn funds, beyond receipts from government study contracts, to position itself to. compete for business now in hand or soon to be awarded. SUPERTRANSPORT The company in the last three years has had an average of 300 engineers and designers working on its concept of a supersonic transport, the plane intended to cut transatlantic travel to 2Vi hours in the 1970s. The sales potential is thought by some to amount to at least 200 planes at $40 million apiece. Since early 1963, Lockheed has kept up to 700 engineers and technicians toiling on a military transport ’The craft, capable of carrying 000 armed troops or 120 tons 'of cargo at 600 iniles an hour, could bring $750 million or more in development contracts and production orders in the $l-bil-lion to $2-billion range. ~ SIMILAR WORK Boeing is working just as feverishly and at similar cost to land both contracts. Also zeroing in on the military plane is Douglas, which hds teamed in its bid with North American Aviation and Martin-Marietta Corp. Fierce hunger of all three competitors for the inilitary plane program is whetted by suggestions that after military needs are met a commercial adaptation — either .for passengers, cargo or a combination of the two — might ofifer lucrative possibilities in the 1970s. heed a kind of sMre-the-wealth ton public schools 1789, giv- ing New England the oldest Jra- N^u Effects of 4«fense 'cut- dition of definite home training backs. I in America. , FACTORY-TO-YOU ^ ALUMINUM AWNINGS FRE|) PORCH COVERS MIRACLE FE 8-9478 Boeing’s worldwide dominance in jet airliners is traced by many observers to trailblaz-ing contracts for a direct military ancestor, the jet tanker-transport. Boeing made 820 of them over a decade. In the intensifying military craft rivalry, Boeing is trying to play down its mounting prosperity, Douglas 'to capitalize the 'poor relation” status from NEW! lATdndLOSE ^ UP TO B LBS. A WEEK CAPSULES! Easier to take and rrMite effective than the powdered and liq- uid food supplement, and costs less iiicluding (.apsules suited to you INDIVIDUALLY by Lie. Physician, M D No Gastritis or irregularity with Medic-Way cap*. DON'T DIE T -^JUST EAT! As thousands have dune, you can lose 5, 50 or 100 lbs. and KEEP If OFF! 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Leaf Mel-0-Crut» WHOli WHEAT BREAD %■ 19f J*I.O.e>uu» 29' 49* Brown 'n Serve Rolls 'pks^ 1-lk. 1-U> PliB- PPH" Craif Cherry Pie "»( .91""* Sove *.«t. Kaiser Bells **• dSy GET FINER GIFTS FASTER WITH GOLD BELL GIFT STAMPS 04624937 THE PQNTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 196g Achievement Tests Reveal Small Classes Produce Better Students By LESLIE J. NASON, ED. D. teachers than average, stand Smaller classes actually save higher on achievement trats. money! Class size is found to be the most potent fitetor influencing student achievement. A California legislative subcommittee, conducting a two-year study on how schools spend their money, found that .pupils in districts wtih smaller classes and more classroom They found no relation between the ppmber (d consuls Their findings were based on results of statewide pupil-achievement tests. Their investigation covered a wide range Jacoby on Bridge JACOBY ♦ A»5a «A10 WEST EAST *82 *973 erQ10 2 ¥AJ95 ♦ KQJ3 «KJ74 *08652 SOITTH *AJ10 8 TK8 4 A 10 8 6 4 *93 East and West vulneiible Nortk EHt South West 1 * Pan 1 * Pan 2 * Pan 3 * Pass 3* Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—* K- By OSWALD JACOBY Take a look at the ^uth hand only. Your partner opens with one diamond and it is up to you to act. *You have eight high card points , plus two tens,' a decent four-pard spade suit and four! diamonds for] your partner. Your hand is clearly worth some bid and your choice must be between one no-trump and two diamonds. One no-trump should be eliminated quickly. If the hand is going to play in no-trump you want to become dummy, not declarer. Two diamonds should ilso be dropped. It always pays to explore major suit possibilities so you should choose one spade as your response. South made that choice, but after his partner raised him to two spades South suddenly became afraid of the spade suit and went to three diamonds. He explained afterwards that he was afraid that his partner would only hold three spades. Of coum. North could not read that three-diamond bid as /Astrological * ^ ^ For&cosf ^ ARIES (Mar. 11 to Apr. 1*); Fine le nrw busineu .contacts, plf -’— — . Diiplay initiative, ty. Make.others re-__ -er." Then yoor wor TAURUS (Apr. 20 to A panic. He assumed that South was trying to get to game and , North went back to three spades. In fact, he almost bid four spades. Of course, it didn’t really matter if North bid or passed. Once they reached the three*level North and South were going to beset. of school organizations as Cali-fomla has 1,500 sdiool districts. How these schools spend their money and what they get for it is important to legislators sincdfcCalifomia schools receive $1 biUion annually from the state. The expenditure of money for nonteaching personnel can be justified only if it results In higher achievement of pupils. The investigation of money spent in relation to educational performance reveals startling discrepancies at all levels of the school system. Wh'en ncaiteaching personnel gets out of balance with the number of teachers at either elementary or high school levels, classes become too large for effective teaching. College costs measured in terms of educaticsial effectiveness reveal just as serious misuse of money. For example, a freshman girl with an all “A" high school record, withdrew from two of her' five classes in a junior college shortly after midsemester. As the semester drew to a In the actual play West opened the king of diamonds. South won with dummy’s ace and drew trumps. Later he RERRV’S WORLD had to lose two diamonds, two hearts and a cluh. Down one undoubled not vulnerable doesn’t seem like much of a loss except when you note that if South had passed at two spades he would have made a nice satisfactory part score. which started with close to M students each, had been reduced to eight and 12 students respectively. The cost to “the taxpayers of education in a California junior college ranges from $500 to $600 per student per year. This is measured on a basis of students in attendani^, not those who complete courses successfully. In the classes cited, the cost in terms of successful education was at an approximate rate of $2,000 per student. The all “A” high school student not (xily had innate ability, but was eager to succeed. Tbe fault rests with the college. Administrators should be able to see not only that capable high school students are counseled into courses approximate to their badeground and goals, but that the teachers assigned to be^nning classes are capable of leading students to successful completion of courses. (You can write to Prof. Nason in cai$! of The Pontiac ’ Press.) By Jim Berry U-4-CHRDJ'<"/UfA4 Q—The bidding has been: South West North Em 1V Pass 2 * Paj 2 * Pass 2 * Pass T You, South, hold; *A2 VKQ1098 *AQC *K102 What do you do now? A—Tour partner has shown at least 18 points by his two-elub bid and somethinr more by his two-spade bid. A slam is very likely, but there h hurry. Just bid three eluba await hie next bid. TODAY’S QUESTION You bid three clubs and your partner goes to three hearts. What do you do now? Answer Tomorrow -LIII"- f«IStStrNEA,lK. “Hey buddy, ya’ got a quarter for a fuel line freeze-up?” BOARDING HOUSE GEMINI (May 20 to June 20); Mone9 - ■ - ----5 . . . conceriu r“‘------ Vi ttrady pace ad '1 dealing DIPLOMATIC. Be care! OUT OUR WAY LEO (July 22 to Aug. 22): K It EFFICIENCY. FjiHill promite tentlal. Don't lay one thing and i ether — be contittent. Handle re: blllty with good cheer, dignity. TIh win ailiei. „ VIRGO (Aug. a to Set>i. 22): Strength- Key sure of tacts, figures, Thet .. _ . - toad to greater freedom! SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21): Malu rogress In dealing with nelghOort, rela ----------- obstinancy. Give a llttk SCO— progri tives-. ling prei outlets! aivSendT BIES as w 0 CREATIVE HOB- —..........jy gerton. CAPRICORN (Ddc.. 22 to to te pace setter. Take origfnal------- ----- thought, action. Cycia tr “• That you datire. Bu -Imlnating. Choose AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. II): Much sain indicated through RESEARCH. Y rdbulre certain amount of privacy.. Cha ■nuree niatariai. Ask questions Read - digest liHormatl for CAPRICORN, AOUARIUI. ^______ word to tACITTARiuS; Be gracldOs-OianttMi. H wW ^y o«tl (Capyifillit Ifal, Oaaari^ Peolww Cwy.) MISS HOLD OF ALL STAFF OOCTOW OFF wrry. OH, AND ROUND AAANV UPPER-CLASS MED STUDENTS AS ^ VDUCAN.. WE'LL NEED EVERY HELP WE CAN MUSTER! THE BERRYS > I exONT y_, GAMES aTfI LEAGUE...- I ^HEH.'HEH.'j By Carl Gmbrt DRIFT MARLO . M. Levitt. Tom Cooke and Phil Evans By V. T. Hamlin CAPTAIN EASY CAN wa rtVDuit , PLAceuMEN'. WEFA5»-n« COLFAA.UU By Le^e Tarner THAraLULU L ,ULLE$lkjd$) I herself: TMK I «S!-ryKjCj| rRAMi MORTY MEEKLE By Dick CavalH IU-TUBNINTOA BL)0ANO>6P/CN-rne OeWCAlH? HAM?NO eeN^ (OFHUMOe NANCY By Ernie Bushi|iill^r W7 By Charlea Kuhn IS because he PION'T ACT like the majority OF BABIES PO, THE FIRST Time theyseb DONALD DUCK By Walt Disney A «OINO TO TEL-L HIM 1 r-s/y conscience. r.' THE PONTIAC FftfiSS, WEpyESDAY; FEBRUARY 24, 196.5 D-.1 Key Test With llfinois Slated Next Michigan 5 Sideswipes Minnesota's Ambush, 91-78 ■t« TIN STANDINOI MInMM** ........... I I JDM 4 .too minola ............. t i JMM 7 MO low* ............... 7 3 .700 13 7 .430 lndl*n* ............ « 4 .400 U 4 .000 Purdu* ............. 4 4 .400 11 ♦ .300 Ohio ttal* ........ 3 7 ..300 * 11 .430 . 1 0 JOO 0 U .400 . 3 0 .300 4 14 JOO 0 10 .000 4 13 .311 I John Kundia admitted it after his team took a 91-78 licking from the nationally top-ranked Michigan invaders—which mdy have made the Wolverines. Big Ten champions for another year. MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Minnesota’s Gophers dug the holes and lay in ambush, but Michigan’s Wolverines nimbly side-swiped all traps in a second period rush Tuesday' night that proved they are on top for good reason. Saddened Minnesota coach “They really are No. 1,’’ Kundia said. “And you can see why the’re No. 1.’’ Minnesota had hoped to tt; peat last winter’s stunner when it gunned the Wolverines down. 89-75, but this' year even the brilliant marksmanship of Lou Hudson and the mak^r-break play of the whole ^nesota team didn’t help. SLOW START ’ The Wolverines warmed up slowly in the first half. They ended the half at 39-all. But then class showed, Cazzie Russell’s 27 points, George Po-mey’s 20 and Bill Bontin’s decisive rapid-fire rebounding plus precision all-around teamworic, showed who was in charge on the Gopher court. With six minutes left to the final buzzer, the Wolverines surged ahead 75-63 and then stood their ground and staved off Minnesota’s frantic efforts with free throws. The team from Ann Arbor has only four games to go. Its record is now 18-2 overall and KMl in the Big Ten. j Michigan opened a two-game lead over Minnesota and Illinois, tied for second place with 8-2 records.'Illinois climbed a notch with its 97-80 triumph over Iowa. Rounding out Tuesday’s action, Wisconin edged No^woet-em 93-87 in overtime. prise in the Big Ten will be if Michigan loses a game. It could happen at Illinois Saturday. But even so, Michigan can afford a loss and still breeze to the con- STILL BREEZE From here on in the only sur- MICHIGAN 10 FT TP D*r«*n I 1-3 17 Hwdten Tr'B'Ing 3 3-3 1 OVr'Cik r »4 14 N'rlHWy 3 3 I GO * PrtttIUM 0 M 0 TWata 30 13-34 »1 Tttoli 3* 1G34 7* Total Mult—Michigan 10, Minnatota 3 ference championship and a second straight trip to the NCAA playoffs. After the Illinois game, Michigan has contests remaining against Wisconsin and Minnesota at Ann Arbor and at Ohio State. All three appear to be simple hurdles for the nation’s No. 1 team.* | Illinois found Iowa a surprisingly easy mark despite a sluggish start. The Illini, trailing' through the early minutes,J ganged away to a 47-36 halftime*| lead and coasted* the rest of the' way. Don Freeman paced the Illini. mained well ahead of Russell with 33 points and Tal Brody | Schellhase has a 29.4' average added 24. Chris PervaU topped5n points in » games to Iowa with 21. 26.3 for Russell with 627 points Northwestern and Wisconsm , „ battled on even te'ms until the * . • overtime period. The score was tied 37-37 at the half and 83-83 after regulation play. The Badg- I ers then outscored the Wildcats | IIM in the extra period. Tall East Detroit Five Dumps Northern Visitors Take f 74-60 Verdict onPNH Court Foul Line Accuracy Sparks ED; Huskies Bothered by Fouls By JERE CRAIG Pontiac Northern had its chance to complete a sweep through a second league lineup; but instead the Huskies became the final victim in a similar feat by East Detroit's rugged Shamrocks ’Tuesday. Strong finishes in each half by the visiting quintet led to a 74-60 triumph that lacked the sharpness and high quality expected from two league champions. ’The Eastern Michigan League Shamrocks used their foul shooting a b 11 i t y and h e 1 g h I to best advantage in offsetting several Northern attempts to overcome an early deficit. After deadlocks at 4, 6. 8 and 10. East Detroit took a 17-12 edge on the Inter-Lakes titlist. It was 17 - 16 at the quarter break: but the winners spurted to a 29-16 margin in the second session. PNH did not score until four and a half minutes were left. The visitors hit 9 of 9 free throws In the first period and six of eight during the big spurt. BAD NIGHT The Huskies fought gamely to offset a bad shooting night but couldn’t get the key basket or two they needed, after drawing within striking distance. The difference was 11 at intermission. East Detroit tallied on 8 of 17 field goal attempts in the third period to thwart Northern’s rallies. 1 53^7^ Waited Lake Tops WBHS; Eaglets Lose SHAMROCKS HAVE CONTROL - Ea$t Detroit’s Ron Binge comes down with this first half rebound in a game against Pontiac Northern last night on the PNH floor. At left are Northern’s Roger Hayward and John Bailey (14). Behind Binge is 6-8 center Doug Hess. Dave Sudbury of PNH moves in at right. The Shamrocks downed Northern, 74-60. In something of a surprise, Royal Oak Dondero made it two-for-two against arch-rival Kimball this season with a slow-down 47-43 overtime victory. Wyandotte Mt. Carmel took ts second straight over Orchard Lake St. Mary, 64-58; Romeo repeated against Chippewa Valley! 78-63, in a make-up match; and North Branch avenged art earlier loss by trimming Oxford, * 83-74. A first-time clash found Imlay City upending New Haven, 50-44. ’The Walled Lake-Lakers tilt was also a one-test affair. VIKINGS ROLL ’The Vikings, down 12-10 after the first quarter, poured in 22 points in the second stanza to take a 32-27 lead at halftime; and broke the game open with 23 points in the third period. . Matt Planck paced Walled | Lake with 15 points, 12 of them coming in the second quarter. Tim Moller poured in 21 for the Lakers. The Huskies were d with 50 seconds to ^o in the quarter and had the ball; but! they missed and East Detroit’s j Glen Bradt put In a layup just I before the buzzer that pushed | .the scoreboard reading to 55-47. :'0ctober Miscue Costly for Tiger Ace The winners’ height enabled them to retrieve key rebounds throughout the closing half although Northern managed to have the edge over-all for . the game. PNH couldn’t get closer than seven points' in the last' period. COOL SOPH A cool sophomore making his second varsity appearance, George O’Hara, sparked the Shamrocks’ attack with 16 points and played a good floor game even daring the scrambling in the closing minutes. The last quarter was a.reverse of the first three when the officials called the fouls rather close; particularly against the home team which was hampered by two players fouling out and two more with four personals. 'Northern, also, outshot the xyinners in total attempts, 67-61, but hit a coM 29 per cent. Although pulling down .19 rebounds, PNH’s Roger Hayward hit only five of 20 Held goal attempts. LAKELAND, Fla. (ilV- October 1 will always have a special meaning for Dave Wicker-sham. For it was on October 1, 1964 that the 6-foot4 Detroit Tigers pitcher was ejected from^^ ball game — for the fif^tune in his career. a. DITROIT (74) B|ng* 3^34 It J^mall ’ I 3 M 14 Cuihitt 3 04 4 *1-1 1 Cetocar .« M * I 34 14-r 74. TMah It il-3* 4* ttoSi BY OUARTBRt rtrVH : 17 33 14 1t-74 But more important, the ejection while the Tigers were trailing in the game with New York meant Wickersham could not win 20 games. The Tigers went on to defeat th$ Yankees in the game, and that hurt him even more. “It all happened because I really didn’t know the rules,” Wickersham explained recently. TWO ERRORS It was in the New York half of the seventh inning. Wickersham explained, and a couple of errors had put Yankee runners in scoring position. On the play which put the Yankees ahead. 2-1, Norm Cash > - Cazzie on All-America NEW YORK (UPI)-Cazzie Russell of Michigan, the only junior honored, and Rhodes scholar Bill. Bradley of Princeton led the voting todpy for the United Press International 1965 All-America basketball team. ALL-AMERICA BASKETBALL TEAM fielded a tricky ground ball near first, raced the runner to the bag and thought he had him out. But umpire Bill Valentine called the runner safe and Cash started to argue. Mel Stotlemire, the Yankee pitcher,. went to third on the play ami looked like he wanted to try to score while Cash and Valentine continued to ar Wickersham said* “I called time out three times,” he continued. “But I’m sure Valentine didn’t hear me. Player and College Cazzie. Russell, Mich. 6-5 B. Bradley, Princet’n 6-5 R. Barry, Miami, FI. 6-7 Gall Goodrich, UCLA 6-1 *W. Estes, Utah Sj. 5-6 Fred Hetzel, Davids’n 6-8.' 'Honored posthumously SECOND TEAM Dave Stallworth, Wichita Clyde Lee, Vanderbilt Bill Buntln, Michigan 21 Class Hometown Jr. Chicago, 111. ^r. Crystal City, Mo. Sr. Roselle Pk., N.J. Sr. N. Hollyw'd, Calif. 23.3 Sr. Anaconda, Mont. 33.7 Sr. Washington. D.C. '26.2 Avg. 26.3 30.2 37.Q AUTOMATIC OUSTER “Finally, I went up and tapped him on the shoulder and he threw lift out of the game. I knew you tould get in trouble for hitting an umpire when you are arguing with him, but I didn’t know just touching lym meant ejection, too,” Wicker-i sham explained. . But the big righthander, who won 19 games for the Tigers, was not fined, and did not hear from the league office. THIRD ’TEAM Ollie Johtison, Sah - Francisco Keith Erkkaon,. UCLA Skip ’Thoren, Dlinoia Bill Cunningham, N. Carolina -A. W. Etevis, Tenneissee Dave Sphellhase, Purdue Dick Van Arsdale, Indiana European Skoters Here COLORADO SPfUNGS,. Colo (^P) — Ail of the Ei^pean competitors in the World Figure Skating Championships here. Nfarch 24 arrived by charter ^ airli^ Tueaday night - Dondero Upsets ROK by 47-.43; Imlay City, Romeo Triumph LOOKING FOR HELP - Minnesota’s Mel Northway looks for help after retrieving a ball Michigan’s Wolverines in a Big 10 battle last night. At left is Michigan’s Cazzie Russell. Wolverinta, won, pi-78. Walled Lake’s 66-57 decision over West Bloomfield headlined | a list of high school ndn-league ^ contests played last night. Several of the tilts were return meetings and in almost all cases, the first winner prevailed in the rematch. Two of Top Ten\Fall Finley's Testimony May Bring Government Action Providence, Duke Sum Cage Losses' By the Associated Press , , _ J . i The bomb never went off, but WASHINGTON tfi — Charles to the Columbia BroadcasUng | Evince Providence 0. Finley, presidwt of the Kan-1 System. j jj wasn’t 3 victim of fallout, sas City Athletics, inyited fed- j He told the' Senate antitrust i ^ fourth-ranked Friars fell eral aetkm today to nullify the and monopoly subcommittee iqjfrom their spot as the nation’s sale of the New York Yankees prepared testimony he fears the „n| unbeaten major team CBS-Yankee deal may herald alTu^g^g ^ i big business “invasion of pro- viiianova after, winning 19 fessional sports, with the Piay-'games ,«s fans the ultimate lea.' ^ Ortonville '5' Wins; Shares 2nd in Loop n tin.. o ■ 3s far as College Park, Md., But a^ago White Sox presi- gbout 100 miles awqy, where , dent Arthur C. Allyn Jr, who |Mgry,and edged fifth-ranked like Finley voted the I Duke 8542. '’Ortonville Brandon’s Black-hawks clawed Flint Hamady, 77-73, Tuesday night to tie Byron for second place in the Suburban C league. sale, said he is satisfied with providence who«. last nre-the manner m which baseball ViUanlva in -now is policing the deal. p,CAA playoffs, “’Ihe integrity of baseball | met the Wildcats on their home is still being zealously pro- | floor in the Philadelphia suburb tected,” Allyn said in a pre- i of Viiianova. pared statement to the com- Dondero tot by the home team failed. Goulajt and Rich Hhrsch then each canned layups in the overtime to gain the win. The Oakr won by six in the earlier meeting. A string of 10 points in a row gave Orc^rd L^e St. Mary a 3945 lead at Wyandotte, but ML Carmei then spurted in front 43-39 and never trailed again. Despite Connie Kroguiecki’s season high of 20 points, OLSM lost its third straight tilt. ’TIED Imlay City brdke a 39-alL deadlock midway through the final period and pulled out its (Continued on Page D-3, Col. 2) EMPTIED STANDS ------. i That’s about 15 miles from the They were aided by Hartland Allyn and Finley cMt the tTO palestra, where’only last Satur-which upset Byron, 83-80, in: “no” tallots ^en Ameri- Ngy 3 threat emp- overtlme. Mel McDowell’s sec-1 can League voted 8 to 2 last fall | stands and delayed the ond straight 30-point game sped |o approve the sale over their |gj Joseph’s Viiianova game for the Blackhawks to victory over ____ ^ minutes. No bomb was fdUnd, Hamady. Their testimony this last scheduM day of the The nash, tockltaer hit M B.«iliga0<» of points in the lait quwter to dis-1 ^ phiiup a. Hart. D.-Mich., solve several ties the last at chairman, said in 58-58, and boost the Ortonville ^ statement the testimony quintet to its eighth league win ^^owed that “there is no ques- I) 13'^tarts. th^ teams returned for the second half and St. Joseph’s won. Moving to their own gym, the Wildcats exploded Providence’s hopes for its first undefeated season. Viiianova saw a seven-point lead late in the first half ; dwindle to one at intermission Joe Slaughter added seven inlg^mS nefwofk Sf"?*majS 1" the winning quarter and had 11; ^^^11^17^1 neiTpSi for the triumph the game. Jim Munsil coo-1 for anticompetitive be- tributed 12 to the victors’ cause, havior. ” Flint was paced by Tim Bur- ■ -------------------- trum’s 16. Packer Unit Rolls in Recreation Play •k it if W. BLOOMBIBLO WALLBO LAKB J. Grant 3 *4) 34 31 AMaraon. 1 44 13 Hughai I 34 7 Godirty HoQan ) 04 4 RominsM HoOtottf 0 M 1 Ashby FoxfTMn 0 M 0 Lthmr- CUfk Lthm«) S •>! I n 17-t7 S7 Tfttftls IS M 10 n n II—M walled 4tbkc 4t West Bloomfield 54 A 27-point scoring effort by | Darrell Lovell paced t h e | Packers to a 7441 victory over Bfen Powell Trucking in Pontiac ^ recreation basketball last night. ; William Sekulich tossed in 15 [ in .assisting Lovell with the' scoring. Hitting for the losers j Were Jack McCall (16), Ken I Miskin (21),'Harold Weston (12) | and Jerry Powell (10). : A pair of WiHies sparked Mes- i -siah Baptist Church to a 74-731 verdict over Booth Builders. Willie Harster collected FO FT IF FO FT TF Artniak 0 1-3 1 Dtag-to-e* 3 0-3 4 Fawlak I 3-3 II Stapiatv I 4-7 • Wrierib* 3. 34 I itomickl 4 7-B 13 Frygockl- SMI* Xrof'lackl 7 A* 30 Blalaki r S-7. W KlbH^ 5 1-3 11 It 37 IG1S 04 Tafalt 3* )G3t 3* 1C OR I BY OUARTBRS ry ...........13x11 13 17..0* fm«i. IS IS U 1W-44 The scoring of Bill Melchionni and Jim Washington opened up the Wildcats’ margin late in fhe contest. Each finished with 21 points while Washington also snared 17 rebounds Duke, now 18-3, had won 10 straight games and hadn’t lost ' to Maryland in five years before the hustling Terps started to work. They grabbed a 46-28 halftime le^, but the Blue Devils rallied behind a fuU-cdurt press and sliced their deficit to 72-69. “That was as close as they could get, however. Texas Kegier Leads Tourney in Colorado ; COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. I (AP) r- Skee Foremsky of El Paso, *Tex.. shot 2655 for the i first 12 gaihes Tuesday to hold RESIGNS — Ed Jucker the lead in the Professional pitints and Willie Ratliff pushed' (above), who coached the Bowlers Association 828,500 in 21. Teartimate Sammy Coltj University of Cincinnati bas- Pikes Peak Open at the half- added 20. WilUam Allen topped! ketball team to NCAA cham- I way mark in the 24-^me quah' the losers with 19. ' ; pionships in 1961 and 1962, re- i fier ’ In other games, J.R. Neph, signed U^y for health and | Dave ^tar of Detroit.was Heating downed the All Stars, 6i-U, and Coulocos Insurance .tumeth in a 77-53 victory over the HaWks. family reas^. He wUl be re^ the No. 2 man at 207. He was placed by Tay Balter who has ■ followed by B*ill AM« of Drtan-beeh jiicker's assistant since | do, Fla., with 2587 and Harry 1 Smith of Boston with 2573. THE PONflAC PKESS WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARy 24. 196.5 TTw following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growwi and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of I Friday. Stock Rally Paced by Steels Produce Poultry and Eggs 5 OU’ brqihrt •nt fryari 3-4 tb>. DSTKOIT EOOS DETROIT (AR)—Egg pricM paid --------.. . --------, (including U ....Grada A jumbo MVb-34; extra large 27-31 V|; large 2SVi-2»'b; medium 23W-P; tmall Iflb-W. I CHICAGO tUTTER, EGGS Exctwnga: I .. uncnanged; »3 icore AA 571*; *2 A 571*; M B541t; W C 54; cars N ■ 57S; » C 57. Eggs steadlbr; wtiolesale buying prices uncnanged to 1 higher; 70 per cent or better Grade A Whllas 24VS; miced MW; Amerada 2.40 20 10 s 24; dirties un- CHICAGO RQULTRV CHICAGO (API—(U»Al—Live ooullry: wholesale buying ^kes unchai^; roasters 23-24; special ted White, Rock fryers. I♦V*•31. Livestock choice steers tSO-1250 lb 23.50-24.50; mlxdd high good and lew choice steers 23-23.50; goedsteers 20.50-23.00; standard 1 . gilts I about steady with Monday's close; small lot U.S. 1 217 lb barrows and gilts 17.05; mixrt I E 2 1*5-230 lb 1?JO-ft.TS; U^. I. 2 A 3 300-400 lbs sows 14.25-1515; 2 A 3 40MI0 R) sows 11.25-14.25. Vealers 100; Vealars lower tor the week; choice *B urima H-34; good 24-31; standard 14-24) '^11 and utility 10-14. Sheep 1200; slaughter ... CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO .M. butchers 1750-17.75; ^3 240-270 Ita 14.25-17.00) 14 150-100 lb. sows 14.75-15.25: 2-3 500-600 Ris. tl-JO-14.00. Cattle LOW; slaughtar slean »® . choice 1,000-1,. ■vs. UWW-M.W, WH— SOO-1,050 lb slaughter heifers 22.50-23.M; good 1*50-22.00; utility and commercia rammarcia cows 1250-14.00; cutler bulls 34.00-n.00. Sheep 100; wooled • —^ jti#ce NEW YORK (AP) — Steels continued to pace a rallyim stock market early today. Trading was active. Steels, buoyed by record weekly production and other bullish news, rose from fractions to more than a point. The trend was fractionally higher in other major sections of the list. A higher trend was shown by rails, tobaccos, building materials, electronics, chemicals and mall order-retails. Sotpe large opening blocks were traded. Control Data opened on 42,500 sbaroo. off Vi at 56. gained Vi at 60 on 10,000 shares. Jones & Laughlin and Lukeas Steel advanced more than a point each. U.S. Steel rose % to S3Vi on an opener of 7,500 shares. Ford also was a fractional gainer and General Motors edged higher. CbrysMr dipped fractionally as a M0,000-share secondary offering of Chrysler stock was awaited. PROPOSED SPLIT Borden, -which proposed a 2-fdr-1 stock split after Tuesday s close, fose about a point. Eastern Air Lines eased amid Wall Street gossip that directors Thursday may propose new financing to buy 10 new jets. International Harvester, showing continued strength, advanced more than a point. Non-ferrous metals and airlines were mixed. Opening blocks included: Thatcher Glass, up V* at 33 on 27,500 shares; Chrysler, off V* at 55% .on S.liOO; and Ford, up % at 53% on 5,000. 4 Tuesday, the Associate Press Average of 60 stocks rose 1.6 to 334.0. Prices on the American Stock Exchange were mostly higher. The New York Stock Exchange Face Issues, Romney Urges Advice Given to GOP at Connecticut Fete HARTFORD, Conn. ‘ (API -Michigan Gov. George Romney says the Republican party must become issue - oriented rather than personality-oriented. Romney, mentioned prominently as a potential Republican presidential candidate in 1968, told a Lincoln Day dinner at Hartford Tuesday night “issue facing is not the favorite national pastime. Hit by Seeterlin ■-CT7 Pension Plan Stalled A iproposed employe pension plan, given preliminary approval last month by the Waterford Township Board, met an impasse last night and may be scrapped. The plan which has been more than a year in the making by the Employes Retirement Committee came under heavy attack by Township Supei^sor James E. SeeterKn when it was presented for consideration of the board. Seeterlin said the plan prepared by the committee fell short of the pension program for the township’s police and tire personnel established three years ago. NEW YORK (ARl-RollowIng ii I III! at wlKttd ileck trtnMctiont on tlw Ntw York Slock Excbkng* with 10:30 pricn: —A— «•!*» NM «L) Hlgb Low Ltil CM. I* 45H 45 4SW - % 2 20<* 20* SO'/* -26 14'A UV* . 2 41V* 40 Vi 4 41W 41W - Vt -----M 2.50* Anken Ch .12 ArmcoSt 3 5 211* 21'« 21H - 125 671* 471* 47W - 14 3SW 351* 351* H I 33H 33H 331* - . 24 171* 17H t7»* -I- 1 Atchison 1.60 Atlas Cp Auto Cant .40 Avco Corp I 35 44V* 441* 44V* -f 32 SOW 50V* 50** -I- 2 411* 41H 411* 4 33W 33H 33W + 24 42V* 411b 42Vb * ,■ 2'.'. 2'* 2'4 -I- 11 20'/* 20 20W + 11*55'* 25H 25V*+ BabcokW I.IO BsMLIm* .40 Balt OE 1^ 4 41V* 41V* 41V* + Jtekman IK BeeebAIr .40 2 21H 21'* 21H + ' 43 37W 371* : Borden 2.10 BorgWer 2.20 Briggs Sir 2 Brist My la grunsiylek ucyEr 1.40a Budd Cd. .40 Bullard .60 2* 15 I4W IS I U1* S3W 531* 3 41 41 41 74H 74'- 74'* *4- '* 25 *W *W *W .. uri ind 1.40 lurrougb* 1 3 23H 23'4 23W IS 21'* 21'* 21V* -y 15 43 ............. 14 34W 34'* ] American Slocks ________ , .'ollowlng ls - ..at dl lalicltd *toek trantoctlon* on tha American Slotk Exchange vrith ' Cal FInl .301 ! CalPack .80b I CallahM .3M Calum H .40 i CampRL .45a Camp Sp *0 Can Dry 1 CdnPac 150a CaroPLt 1.14 Carrier l.*5 Cartr Pd ,.40a Caia Jl Cater Tret 1 IW II* IW -f V* rS^hnic^l Un Contn WebbAKn ( *3 7*W T Stocks of Local Intorest Rigures altar dKimal oolnti ara alghths OVER THE COUHTER STOCKS Quotations Irom tha NASO ara rapra-santativa inlar.daalar pricn at approximately It ijn. Inler-dealcr markets AtRT Corp. Associated Truck •raun. Engineering CItliens UlilHies Class A Diamond Crystal •lhy,l C I Corp. iwk Rubbar igan Sfomies Wyandotte Chemicol Quotations comptlad by tha approiimattly II a.m.. Bids a sontatlve. intaralbalar prices e include-retail bnarkdown or kaked prices have been odiustt g include approximate markup. MUTUAL FUNDS *S4, *.*3 »M .. *A5 lO.U 17.44 1*JI W.4I 11,44 , Ml *31 li.2* HM 14.70 IA24 TGasdoy-s lit OtyMands Oscisrad --IiriaKA'asi ■vE*a? 35 0 3.12 4 43'* 43'* 43V* + 5 44V* 44'b 44W -I- 5 47H 47»* 47W -I- 21'b 3IW 4 in* 2' 15 14lt- 1( 121 44'* 44 44V* -I- it SW 1.38 Cerl-le CessnaA 1.20 ChampSpk 2 Ches Oh 4 ChIMII SIP 1 fflp’ic“*l Chrysler lb CIT Fin .!.« 3 33H 33H 33H 1 43’/^ 43^ 439k + '4 *2 72H 72H 72H ^ TO 2 Cititttv fJO ClevEMII 1.20 CocaCoia 170 ColoPal 1.20 ln0utf CBI 110b Col Gas 1.21 Col Plct .541 t 1J0 X5 41 41 41 7 2IH MU ' 09 56 55^4 559k - 5 34H 34H 34H + '4 J 30^.0 30U 30U + U 5 70'^ 789k -F '4 2 40^ 40U 40U + * 11 75H 7SU 75H 4- 12 52 51U 52 4- 40 17V» 17 17Vk 4- 23 4T9k 47U 47U 4 2 3T 33 33 . 7 23U 23 23Vs 4 8 MW M'* 38W Con Edis 3.40 CnNGas 2.30 2 30 30 30 - 3 74't 741* 741* - 4 57'* ITV* 57V*- 21 30** low »?* -f 27 27W 27V* 27H -I- Cent Oil 2.40 Conirel Data Corn Pd I SO CaxB^ .40 CrowcSil .**1 Crown Cork «22 75V* 75 75W + 18 27W 27'* i 43 141* S4** 241* 4- H Dan Rivar 1 OaycoCp 40b Day PL 1.14 I 22 OaliaAIr lAO OenRioGW 1 DetEdls 1.30 Del Steel .40 Diem Aik 2 Disney .40b r .15d _____ Mlg 2 ElBondS 1.40 El Assoc .541 EIPatoNC EmotRad .40 11 37V* 37V* 37V* + '* 43 751* 741* 75 -t- 1* x7 201* 20** 201* -f ' 2 37*. 37** 37*»- 2* I4H 14V* 14*t + . 5 42*t -42** 42**.+ '4 I S2*< S2*t 52**'+ *t - 4 35W 35W S5W + V* 21 S4<* 34 34'* .. 13 021* 02'* I2H + W xll 371* 37W 377* + '* II 245 244C^ 245 ' xll 3SV* SSW 35V* —E— 4* SSW 54V, 54H — W IS I52W lU'/. 1S2W +1 - * 45 45 45 . 1 54** 34** 34*t - V* 44 10V* m* I8W.+I 14 »'* a aw + ' 39 44 451* 44 + I 1 nw IIW 11W + ' . '7'4 7'* 7'4 '4dd Corp I edDStr 1.50 Fad Mag 1JI FerroCorp I Flltrpil 1.M^ M aw aw 32**'+ '* 13 10 ♦'* 10 + V* 1 1l*> I2*t 121* . 1 10 II 18 4 75 74W 75 ks a i 12 «1* ) FsIChrt 1.411 V ii.'t r 4 4*w law M 741. 74'4 76’* Forem 0 .40 Frito Lay .04 Fruancp ,1.50' - .w ^ .. MVk U 4?^ 4 I3W 13** II** + ■ 27 45W 45V* 45W + V W* ^ tru + (kdi.l Hlgb Law L*«t Chg. «.g’?S5 gSgK?"J.2i gHiJStnw 1 GenPrec 1.20 ■ ' P . ...j *7Vb , »V* 30'4 + 4V* 4V* 4V* 6 40 40 40 43 37 341* 37 GaPacItic 1b -lattyOII lOg rillette 1.10a ■ .-lanAld .50a Ooodyr 1.15 2 27W 27 27W -V 24 33W 33'* 33'.. -I- 20 124* 12** 12*k -t a 50 40W 4IW - 4 S7W 57W 57W + 12 2IW avb aw -h Gt Nor Ry 3 Gt Weal RinI Greyhnd .10 Grumn 1.50 Gull MAO 2a GuH Oil 1E0 3 57W 57** 57W + 14 to 10 10 + 4 25W 251* 251* + 2 55W 55** 55** + 10 55*. 55V* 55'* —H— 4 41 41 41 HerePdr .20g 30 50'/, I 1» Psc lOg ... estk 1.40 Honaywi 1.10 Hook Ch 1.» Houio R 1A0 Houst LP .14 Hupp Cp .2" 5 4t’* 4t'l 4*Vi - 35 74 >31* 74 + I* 4JH 43 43- + 1 54'* 54Vi 54'* - 1 53»» S3** 531* + inSmd %?\ 1 IntarlkSI 1.60 InttusMch 6 l 21%« 31H 21U + 15 66' J 46W 46>4 - IntMUnerals 1 IntNick 2.50a Inti Paekert IntPapar 1.20 ITE^Br .10 1 SvI MU ; 3?? ^ ReichCh .30a Repub Aviat RepubStael 2 Ravloo Fm RexallDf .30b RaynMai AO RayTab 1.M RheemMI .00 RichfOil 1.00 Rohr Corp 1 RoyCCola .40 Ml.) High Law L«l Chg. 4 34W 24t* 24W 2 13'4‘ 13'4 13'/4 + W 5 IJW 15W 15’* 38 45 44’* 45 + '* 14 35W 35'* + '/4 48 S7W 37V* 37** + V* 47 If* 3*V* aw + V* S 31** 21** 21** + V* 8 44 44 44 + '.* 3 Sw 30'/. MV* + '* 2 24'/. 24'* aw + V* a 44’* 44W - .? iff* 14 17',. jlRagP 1.40b Schenlav 1 Schemg 1.40a SCMCorp Itl ScottPap *0 12 av* a', a'. — v. . 14 .aw w* W'A +1'* x5 34'* 34'. 34'S - '* 24 M WW 33 + '/! 2 27V* 27', 2T>* 5 45W 45W 45W - V* 3 MV* 20'* 20Vb - V* Sean GO 1.30 SearsR 100a SearsRoeb wl Shell Oil 1.50 Shell Tra 43r Sinclair 2 ^ SingerCo 2.JO SmHbK l.aOa ao M', 10 44** *4** Mm f 18 48 aw a + 8 130', 1M<* 130'* + 5 45W a** 45W + 7 40'4 40V. 60'* + 3 M’* M’* 20’* 11 54 S3’* 531* - t 81’* “But I believe that the people of this nation wiil respond once again, as they did in Lincoln’s ' time, to a political party that has the vision and courage to face squarely rdal issues and problems of today and appiy correct principles for their solution, without primary regard to special interest groups or the sources of his political lupport, financial or otherwise.” “The Republican governor said the Democratic party is dominated by “Its coalition of special interest groups, its top4ieavy power structure and its cadre of entrenched federal officeholders.” 3 CATEGORIES Romney said the three major categories of issues today are x8 78- : 31 5 48W 48>* 48** + 5 71W 71** 71** + xll 38W 31** MW + 4 57W 57** S7W + Std Kollsman StOllCal JM StdOMNJ .ni StdOilOh 1.80 SttutiCh 1.40 AKrIDrug .75 Stevtfl* ' .SOb Sludabakar Sunray 1.40 Swill Co 2 5 MW 30W 301. 1 43W 43W 43'. 1 35 35 35 3 82>. 82' , 821. M 13'* 12’« 13’* -V 23 7----------- — ■ This was denied by attorney Calvin E. Patterson who has served as a voluntary consultant for the committed. federation Life Insurance Agency to draft the plan and suggested bids be taken on It. ‘BEST AVAILABLE’ The committee, constating of two board members and two employes, offered the plan as the best one available after studying many others. The plan was first drafted to cxchide elected eHiciais at a cost of tt7,Bi uinnelly to the township. On the suggestion of Seeterlin at the Jan. 4 meeting of the Township Board when the plan received tenative approval, elected offlclals were later Included. ’This boosted the cost to $33,100. A toUl of $39,000 was budgeted for the pension program by the board last fall In anticipation ofJts adoption. WASTED EFFORT? ‘atterson said after the lengthy discunion on the pension program that it looked as thought the conunlUee’s yearlong effort was wasted. He said the bowd either . should have given the committee a directive at the itart an specific points wanted in the program, or exprcBsed full confidence In the committee to draft the plan. Patterson then said he would no longer offer hia services and suggested tha board heme a new Committee and start from acratch. “It beats the police, and fire plan,” Patterson said. AT LAST MINUTE Seeterlin, who also complained b^ause the pension proposal was placed on the agenda at the last minute, cited several other objections. He was critical that put service of township employes is not considered, pointing out that an employe with two years service and one with 16 would be in the same catagory under the pension provision. He also objected to a provi- ___^ _ Sion that a person .must be Moral and social-"The moral I employed 12 years before - responsibility of self-reliant in*! becoming eligible for disability j lection of presidents, dividuals and tbeir voluntary | benefits and said the plan’s trust | The commission, it is under-Institutioniisprsus big govern- agreement was unsuitable. stood, will reject proposals that ment and a regulated society." * * * . ; the responsibiUty for guarding Economic — “Employer and Seeterlin also criticized t h e, the life of the president be shift-union monopoly power Versus' committee for selecting the Con-1 ed from the Secret Service to Trustee Rudy Mansfield summed up the feelings of A majority of the board members when he said the impasse on the pension proposal seemed to be created by a lack of communication between the board and committee. The board made no move on a future course of action for the pension proposal. Group to Urge More Men, Cash for President’s Safely WASHINGTON (AP) - The and proposed protective mess-Cabinet committee on presiden- urea. tial safety is expected to recom- Government sources have inmend shortly that more money, dicated that these will be among manpower and investigaUve the recommendations: authority be devoted to the pro- competition in serving free customers who thus exercise ultimate economic power.” Political “Excessive federal sovereignty.” the FBI or some other agency. 8 32 10 42 -T- 6 * A * A ,« Successful He said these issues must be j faced—“but not in a reactionary | if negative way. Sheer opposition S * _ s % $ # JonLogan JonM&L 69% 70% Kerr Me 1.20 KimbClark KirkNat M Kopprs 2.60 9 101% 103'ik 103U 1 60U 60'xs - 73 SOVj 50% 50’a + 26 55% 55% 55% + k25 15% ............... Tenn Gat 10 Texaco 2.20^ TeKEattT .90 TexGiut 40 Thlokol .571 TimkRB 3.60 •Trans W* Air Trantam .80 Trantitroo 41 II 10% 4 SO’6 50% 9 45 45 8 47^1 47," T i'1 "®88tive way. sneer opposiuon i ^ '1 ”* 7 J} * ~ I"!'s enough. We must show | % 42' M - % ' that our solutions will produce ' superior results." He said full exercise of state and local responsibility is necessary to answer, oxccss federal ' sovereignty. . ' 12 13’* 131* 13', + '* ------------------ Investing official sources said the four-man group headed by Secretary of the Treasury Doug- — Legislation making it a federal crime to attempt the assassination of a president or vice president of the United States. SEVERAL BILLS This proposal was embodied in several bills in the last session of Congress. Some officials believe it could be enacted quickly if recommended by the 18 24’* 241, 24’ 50 78»* 78'* 78' 2 21*. 2»*1 21? x34 4SM 45** 45' 14 47', 54»» 541. - ’ Korvefle Kresge 1.40 Kroger 1.20 .. iTrICont 1., + % Twent C .( 11 41% 41V4 41% i '? tit 6*1 6** Lax val Ind 3 15', 15'* 15', 8 20'* 20’* 20'/, Lib AAcN .151 LiggettAM 5 Lionel Carp Lltlonln 1.871 LIvingaO 3 30*4 30*4 30*i .. I 5I'A 58'A 5814 .. 15 I4»« l4'/4 14'. - 2 iC*. SO** 50** + 28 M'.. 28 28'* . 8 131*4 131>4 13114 *. '/. ilO 30'* 30 30 +.'* 4 34*4 34*4 34>4 - '* 25 41*0 41 411* + 4 57'fi 52'4 Sr* 22 a^ 471. M 18 M'*. U'* MU> To Study Laws on Insurance By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) "I use the OTC stocks to gamble. Buy only shares selling $12 or lower. Sell as soon as a fair profit is made. A $3 gain on 100 shares is my usual in-and-out profit. Would you care to give me a sleeper or two in my price range?” )nil Co ,35a 65 8*4 10 81’* II** 41* 41* 87% 87% 87% .+ 1 1J% 13% 13% Lotws Theat LoneS Cam 1 LootSOa M2 XonpisILt .92 Lormard 2.50 tTV ,50 Lucky Str la Lukans Stl 2 3 16% 16% 16% + % 12 21% 31% 31% 4 Vk IT 37% r% 37% +. % 4 37V4 37% 37«/4 + % UGaaCP 1.70 - I UbiIMBM la t USBora* .ICa USGypsm 3a US Indust US Linas 2b US Rub 2.20 Ul Smalt 3 US^taal 3 UnMatch .40 Unlv OllPd 1 UPlohn 1 30 A) In my long experience, I have never found that gambling in low-priced stocks paid off over a period of time. The OTC market is volatile. Mack Truck* —M— 12 34'* 35** 341* +1'* 3 201* 20'* 20'* ■ " r* 2'* + '* T 431* 431* 43'* + 1 in Ma^MMar MayDSIr I. McCall .40b McDonAIr .40 MawtCp 1.70 Merck la AkarCnap .200 II 37*4 - 37H 37H 5 OO** 40'* 401* + '* I 32'* m 32’* 4 WA f8'4. 18'4 .......... I- ?* WUnTe .. . ‘ WestgEI 1.20 L.ANSING (AP)—Michigan in-2 ^ ^ t — especially those | as many investors discovered to 'i »'* 3?^ + <1 i insurance-are going to | their profound sorrow in 196j. « mi* iH'4. iiliA low i ® thorough study. The demand for unlisted stocks 110 443'* ^ 53'* + 141 A State Senate ' investigating | m* your category — and their 18 M'* ISt t ,5:1 committee was named”Tuesday earpings-have been improving 37 41'. 4W4 41 '•> and will meet until 1966. |jn recent months and you are 35'/, 35'/, + ’* group, headed by -^n. this jmprove- 14 24H 24'* lit? 4 ^ i ^ Fitzgerald, D-Grosse | ment. las Dillon also has reached sub- President and the Cabinet com-stantial agreement on othbr i mittee. problems of presidential securl; j - A substantial manpower ty and will'deliver its report to buildup for the Secret Service,, . the White House shortly, ♦ w + The Cabinet committee was^ This recommendation should named by President Johnson insure favorable action by Con-last Sept. 28 The Warren Com- [ gress on Johnson’s budget re-mission, in Its report that day quests for the service. They call on the assaasination of Presi-I for a 30 per cent greater outlay dent John P. Kennedy, urged j in 1966 than in fiscal 1964. "to that such a body be established [ expand the protective capabili-lo review and oversee presiden- ties of the service.” Dillon has tial protMtive activities. ; suggested a 50 per cent Increase rniMiMiTTFF MEMBERS ' the'number of agents. COMMITTEE MEMBERS _ ^ improved liaison In addition to Dillon, -whose , gecret Service and department embraces the Secret Service, the members are Atty. Gen. ' Nicholas Katzen-bach. Director John A. McCone of the Central Intelligence Agency and McGeorge Bundy, presidential assistant for national security affairs. The While House is expected the FBI and other federal investigative agencies, without shifting to the FBI any major Secret Service responsibility. SUGGESTION OPPOSED The Warren’Commission recommended that the Cabinet group consider proposals “for the transfer of all or parts of the .Kx. raZrn.wiP presidenUil protective responsi- make the report public, since 57% 57% 57% 91% 85% 25% 3^ 35^ 17 3 " W«1worth Co ornPict .50 W«rnL«m ,90 WOAIrLin .10 WnBanc MO 15 m* h 1.50 43% 4 Vk WhlttM i.30 _ .. . 52% + % WHion Co 2 1 18% 18% 18% Wooiworth 1 12 41% 41 41% +% Worthing 150 1 53% 53% 53% ■ “ ‘ 7 28% 38% . 28% 14 60% 60% ii: , shew poi„. _ , legislation needed to meet ar-ijo yoy loWer-priced specu-i taken by Congrtu on pending ’ “ “;;;,btearyc.nl:»llaUon«lautom,:uuVeXocl».«uii.ll,lhriast!- - - W.rr.n l^aM --•iblle ins»r.nc.p.l!ci«. .,nr«:t lavor in . ,t™»g bull. ! SK U i quately manned, could perfornt i effectively. ance. « ¥ 3 36% 37% 37% ,4 I* IS - ’ i f'ltzgerald said' his six-man - markePand toe first"tPdwltoe *3 72M 72+! M*41i would also look into' ^^en the upswing is ended, II 301* 30'* 3o»* + '* i problems of fire and life insur-1 , iA tn 5-51^ J. •!,. 1 • ' Business Notes 5 I'/. i'4i 8'4 1 77H 77** 77H 13 171* 17 17 V* + 1* 2 14'* 84*4 04’* t '<■ 25 4I>* 408* 41'4 + 1* 23 30** 31*4 3H* + 1* /^rreif Co 1 15 3I'4 3114 31'/. ............. 4 111 113 113 —.N*~ • 7 7SV* 8iV* 7|Vi 5 44 43’* 43’* 5 18’* 18’* 181* 5 70 77** 771* 2 M'/. I8'4 I8'4 ? 20*4 M*4 20*4 1 35H 35*. 35*» - *. I 4 10*4 10*4 10*4 - 1* j NatCaM .40b NCasnR UO NatOalrv 2+0 Nat Dili 1.40 Nat Fuel 1.40 Xarox Co ■ Yngjtiht 1 45 26 ... „ 15 581*. 58', 58*. + ’* .X—Y—Z— 34 114*4 1231. 12414 +114 30 70*. 708* 70>* sen,i.annual declaralloo, SpMial or r.lra divloends or payment* not de*lg-tated a* regular are Identified In the ollowing footnote*. a—Al*o extra - ----------- • --------- plu* *tock dMdand. e-Pai I—Payoola in *tock during 18 cash value or, cx^llvidend. oi Nat Tea .1 n/?!S 1 NYCent 1.3 .jle. g—Declared . h—Oooared or paid 8 41’A 41V* +IV* . dand or toHt up. k—D«l* 10 so oo- 10 . + V4i year x33 54 55’. 54 + 1*, 3«"< 1 I7*a 17** 171* + V*l dotx 7 281* 281* 281* + V* accumulative Issue with jrrer^ - ... I.omitted. 1 25'/. arrMrs. p—Paid meeting, r—Declared dlvl- Norfolk W 4 NA Avia 2.1 NorPac 2.40 22 541* 56'* 54*0 1 ML. iS'A 4 135 135 • paid in 1844 plus sfock dividend t-P*id ■- —— durin^^JW, esflmafad ctsh I or ex.disfrlbuflon I M*« 38** 384* f 131* 33 21 12 70*4 70V* 70*4 ;* dividend. v-Ex lull. 4.dis-Ex disi . 14 av* av* a'* *■ '< 2* 47M 47V* 47*4 + 171 17’* 17H 171* + '* 3 100*4 100*4 10814 ‘ " I—Sale* In cld-Called .. _ ’daid gnh saiss ht . .. ffen. xr—lx rights, W rants. w**-Wllh--------- 14 I IrBmtad. wt—Whi I delivery. - V* Vi—In bankrup.., .. ------- Bginf reorganliad under the Bankrui *'• ---------tie* aaaumed by - Keign Issue subi PacTAT 1J0 Panh EP 1+0 ParamPicI 1 ParkeOav la Penn Dixie I Penney. 1.50a Pa PwLf l.a Panntoil 1.40 PfiserCha la PhelpsD 1.40 Phila El 1.12 Phil Rdg I JO Sigrl P«R^ 1^ — 2 SS** 15V* 35'/, - IS 1014 10*4 ID*. 1 28'/* 28'/, 28'* - V* ! I?a ,as S.I.. JSV4. 34H + Ii r SS 4?^ + V4 • 4 53 62*4 53 e- llJ 54** 54'/. 54'/i + 6 47 I — ^ W 11 71% 71t‘ ^ 17 16% 16* 1J7 - - 1? 56 St% .,58% V 51% + % ’ubikind .341 2 8 8 .8 r 45** 451* 45'* + V* RCA .4*4 Rayonier l.a 55 32j 11*4 12 + ** NOT IIPnATFn ®“' *""■ NOT UPDATED ^ j “We need to find a way to put own Commonwealth Edison, ^ithe brakes on cancellations, ” Consolidated Edison, Northern Fitzgerald said. i ninois Gas. Chrysler Corp., •We have to provide some. Sun ray DX Oil, Comsat, judges other than the' insurers | y^morican Machine & Foond-themselves on canceling.” he | ry. $8,000 of series E bonds I and $3,000 in savings. Am 1 Fitzgerald said Michigan s in-1 holding the right securlUes at my age?” R. F. A) I am pleased to say that financially you are in generally good shape for retirement. Your .. , I* I r utilities are excellent and I ' NPW^ in BriPl i certainly retain them. I1CW5 III tlllCI j Chrysler yields less than 2 per cent, and I would prefer to own a lesser amount of General Motors which yields 4.75 per cent and is relatively more stable. rate plus stock dividend. c-Lldulo --■---!^-%aid*''i«*}"vM?* I surance code has not been up-‘ dated in the last nine years, and .•J shortcomings have developed. lid this ----/--------------- A-total of $170 in cash was re-'wi^f **wa. i P<^ed stolen in a break-in early ... — I Glenwood Bar, 734 j Glenwoqd. %r««t icotrcl Rummage. February 26, 1188 "" ® Woodward, Birmingham, 9 1. , Adv. Treasury Position WASHINGTON of the Treasury- __ sbonding data a year Peb. M, {*U I 7,M II Yaar July 1- ■4.73 4*^,874,8.14 Withdrawals FIsui Yaar. •0.B45.03T477.87 X-Total Oebt- 318,812.104+05 8« Il0,ll5.0g3jl2 09 ■isels—, U.83g.i73.234 21 81,154.384+90.14 Gold Assets- 15.a2,M,747+4 pow-JOtWI NOON AVimkOBI feM.. M.A ■CampMad ^ T Rails , Net Change Noon Tues. 83:1 101.8 Prev. Day M l 101.8 Year Ago 01.7 101 I .Ml tO.2 83 8 STOCK AVIRAOBS t'lWJSIK*^* 8S Year Ago ifeSs l8MHlgi, I by The As . 4g.4 in.5 173.2 . 4n.i m.7 inj _______ 474.1 171.0 173.1 330.7 4^.1^ 174.3 m.7 3)4.5 . 433.2 131.7 150J 296.6 :il Si-.it el 341 I 111 t 194 V 242 7 Sunray DX Oil ls not a growth situation and in fact earned less in 1964 than the year before. I would switqh this stock into sey Standardc Copisat is some distance -away from earning power or dividends, but I would hold if you can forego income. American Michine & Foundry’s dividend is high in relation to earnings and I would-switch to Puerto Rican Cement Ttsnrdqr your copy of Roger Spear’s jlew 48-page Guide to SuccossM Investing, clip this notice and ^nd $1.00 with your n a m e and address to Roger E. Spear, care of , this newspaper, Box 1C18, Grand Central Siolion, New York, N,y. ikllt. (tjjflpyrifht, 190$) . . A massive step*up in the Edwqrd J. Giblin, 1366 Knn’*, service’s protective research fax, Birmingham, former treas- j _ 4^* unit which seeks urer n( Ex-Cell-0 Corp., has | potential assassins in + i.'ii b(8en promoted advance. ‘ director of The committee is understood also to have considered whether the standards of qualification and toe salaries of agents should be upgraded. New agents are recruited at a civil service In his newly j pay level of $5,795 a year, created than some city police forces and GIBLIN Giblin will be ■ below the starting responsible for, snlaty ol I**®! men. forward planning, hew products | and organizational development.! He joined Ex-Cell-O’s account-1 ing department in 1953 and be-1 came treasurer in 1960. George G. Sims has been appointed manager of the Pontiac branch of the Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co. ef Michigan. A newcomer here, Sims hak been with toe company for seven years as area manager of govem-mmt ' sales in .Midwestern stated, assistant manager of the Chicago region and manager of company ' operationti in Columbus, Ohio. Sims will supervise sales and distribution of all Pepsi - Cola pr^ucts in Oakland County frim headquarters at 932 Oakland. ■ Cadillac Promotes Exec From Franklin SIMS. The appointment of Carlton A. Rasmussen, 26009 Hersheyvale, Franklin, u chief engineer for Cadillac Motor I Car bivision I was anno(|nced| today by Har-F old G. Warner, I Cadillac genr] eral niaiis and a vice pres-1 Went of Gener-1 al^Motors. , raSMUSSEN Rasmussen, began his Cadillac engineering career os a laboratory technician in 1940. He was named assistant chief engiiMer in 1965, the position he has held to ^is time. . , ‘ f r-