> [r J J)y 2-^ j"'-kVr-' i . l,r^^ t ^________ LJ/“ 6 i • 1 ^ • - * '— I L ^ - ■> A |v* I 1 Hit 1. L. ■»-» 'w' I.. ■ t—\ I ^ . The Weafher ' U.i. WutiMr luratu ^ortc*i< PONTIAC PRESS Home > Edition VOL. ^23 NO. 307 PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. TUKSDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 196H—30 PAGES Want Saigon, Hanoi at U.N. Talkl GM '65 Profits Top $2 Billion kf.S. Pounds! Targets in | N. Viet Nam SAIGON, South Viet Nam WV-V^. warplanes hammered at ^-gets in North Viet Naip again /today, while on the ground American and allied forces caught the Viet Cong in a giant vise along South Viet Nam's coastal plains and sent them sprawling into retreat after 488 were^eported killed. An Aip Force spokesman sai(K • three American planes — one Air Force and two Navy jets were lost in the first dqy of air i attacks on the ComrhunistI north after the 37-day bombings pause. *1 There were no details yet on the second day of the raid?. The pilots of the two Navy i planes were rescued, but the j pilot of an Air Force F105 Tbunderchief was missing. He pulled into cloud cover and< .disappeared. Rescue efforts were called off after a search,' the spokesman said. U.S. Proposes'^ New Confab to Seek Peace DETROIT W')*—With profits increasing |391 million ih 196.5, General Motors yesterday became the first corporation ever to , a year’s earpings of more than $2 billion. Shortly before, GM’s stock closed at |10£.75 a share, down 87'/4 cents for the day, on the New York Stock Exchange. It closed.at 103 later on the Pacific Coast Stock Exchange. The size of the profit and the price of the stock renewed speculatiqn in some quarters some split or dividend action might be forthcdniing ^ the Feb. 7 meeting of GM’s directors in New York. Cormnunist Regimo Says It Won't Abidd by Ruling of Council Ck>mpany spokesmen declined any comment. Another source commeilted: “Speculatien is always with us, and Often its robts are in wishful thinking." 23 PER CENT . dM’s 1965 earnings Soared 23 per cent above 1964’s to a record $2.12 billion. , UNITED NATIONS,. N.Y. (AP) — The United States proposed today that CLEARING THE WAY — A -team of snow blowers tosses snow high in the air as runways are cleared at Washington National Airport yesterday. Things were getting back to por- AP PhtlpUx mal in the capital area today after the worst snowfall since 1922 tied up trans!portation. Snowfall Lets Up in the East South Viet Nam be invited jto take part in United Na-jtions discussions on a conference to seek peace in ! Viet Nam. I U.S. Ambassador Arthur J. I Goldberg told the . Security Council that he believed it would be useful to have jsentativeS of Saigon, and Hanoi [appear during the council de-|bate. It was a fourth straight record-breaking year for the world’s largest manufacturing enterprise. - « Dividends and sales also set records. The company paid dividends of $5.25 a share in 1965, includ-a^pedal yearender^ 62.25, paying out a total of $1.49 mil-'lion to common stock holders. • (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) By The Associated Press Snowfall eased tpday in the . Radio Hanoi claimed yester-j day that North Vietnamese gun-| ners had downed five American] big Eastern storm, but cold, planes and damaged 10 others. | gusty winds continued to. pile OPERATION MASHER bedeviling efforts to cleh;r . . roads in smothered communi- As U.S. Air Force and Navy , ..... carrier planes, roared over the north again, the combined allied; f Operation Masher in the rice-: j fields and jungles 290 miles, ; northeast of Saigon smashed atj large Viet Cong force from] [ ties. Meanwhile, a new storm spread 4 .to 8. inches of snow northeastward out of the southern Plains. , Syracuse, N.Y., still was in tne' grip of blizzardly snow three sides. Some of the guerrillas were reported ripping off I their green jungle fighting suits and donning the black pajamas of the Vietnamese peasantry in' a desperate effort to escape. In addition to the 488 dead reported, six days of heavy fighting with the hard-core Viet Cong backed up by North (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) Sonar Contact Made off Spain With N-Device First Apollp Unmanned-Shot Is N^ar PALOMARES. Spain (UPI Two U.S. Navy submarines have made' sonar contact with a missing nuclear bomb Tying in 1,200 feet of water off the southeast coast of Spain. The sources said nothing could be done now to retrieve the device until a specially-equipped two-man midget submarine arrives from the United States. The midget sub Alvin was to have been flown to Spain yesterday aboard a C153 Car-gomaster transport plane. But the flight was delayed because of bad weather in the BUSTER KEATON Film Comedian Cancer Victim Star of Silent Screen Succumbs at Hgme CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) The Federal Space Agency said today America’s first unmanned jApollo moonship will be launched as early as Feb. 22 with a powerful new Saturn fB rocket. U will be the first Apollo spaceflight in America’s $21-billion drive to. send tjiree men to the moon in n similar ship by 1969. The initial unmanned three-seater will be hurled 280 miles into space and then rammed back into the earth’s atmosphere in an 18,750-mile-an-hour test of the heat shield that will have to protect astronauts on 25,000 mph lunar returns. HOLLYWOOD (API - Buster Keaton, the baggy-pants comedian of the silenk screen,'died ink s( today at the age 0* 70. A recovery force will be waiting in the South Atlantic Ocean 5,400 miles sbutheast of the cape to r e t r i e V e the 11,000-pound Apollo cabin section about 40 minutes after launch. It will be the first of at least A spokesman said he suc- United States. The Alvin will be flown tq the Polaris submarine base at Rota, on the Atlantic Coast, northwest of Gibraltar, and then taken by ship to the search area, about mile off the coast near here. ctimbed to lung cancer at his home in suburban Woodland Hills. In Today's Press Political Storm Tempest may be brew-ing for city primary ^ PAGE C-1. State Capitol Leaders ponder fate of old building - PAGE B 2 Algeria *' Regime facing first ^ major test — PAGE B-3. ; Area News ......... A-4 Astrology C-6 Bridge ..... , C-6 ^ > Crossword Puzzle ... D-9- | I Comics ...............C-6 I i Editorials ....... A-6 High School ...... B 1 y ; Markets , . D-3 | Obituaries ....C-l ; Sports U-1-tD-2 ^ f Tlieaters---'-. -- .. C-7 | • i TV-RadIo Programs D-9 | 4 WOsoB, Earl . D-l | . Women’s Pages Br7—B-9 ® His wife of about 25 years, Eleanor, was at his side. Keaton had two sons by actress Natalie T a I m a d g e ; James, of Santa Monica, and Robert, of nearby Marina Del Rey. Keaton had been under treatment for cancer for about three months. Keaton was one of the great comics of the silent screen era and one of the last surviving entertainment stars of that day. He had been in show business nearly all his lifd,'starting as child. CHARACTER SPOTS In recent years he had done character s|)ots in movies and guest shots on television shows. Keaton’s trademark was his dour expression in the fade of any disaster, comic or genuine. That went along with'a straw hat that he usually when performing. Peronists Winning Big BUENOS AIRES (UPI) Mounting returns from Sunday’s election In Jqjuy Pnjyince confirmed early today tnat the vote was a smashing victory for sup-, porters of ousted, ex-President Juan D. Peron. If Mr. Groundhog comes out of his. hole as scheduled tomor-to see if winter is over, he may find another inch w two of fresh snow on . the ground, so says the weatherman. According to tradition, if he sees his shadow we’ll have another six weeks of winter snowing and blowing. two unmanned (launches before the first three-man Apollo crew is shot into an earth drbit with a Saturn IB rocket late year or in early 1967. JFK Sister Gets a Divorce From Actor Lawford ■ ,i SUN VALbEY, Idaho (AP) -Patricia Lawford, sister of the late resident John F. Kennedy, was granted a divorce today from actor Peter Lawford on grounds of mental cruelty. The divorce was entered at the District Court-of Judge Charles Scoggins in nearby (3odding, Idaho. ; Mrs. Lawford, who established Idaho residence at the Sun Valley resort last Dec. 26, went to court with her attorney, but was unavailable for comment. Idaho requires a residency of only six weeks before a divorce pan' be granteij. ^ Mrs. Lawford was given custody of their four children, taw-ford was given visitation rights. LEQAL SEPARATION The Lawfords were married II years ago. They were legally separated since, early in Janu-uy but had lived apoi for some time. , No financial arrangements of khe decree were disclosed. squalls blowing off Lake Ontario. Four feet of snow covered some parts of the city. The Weather Bureau,.-said that the record January snowfall included 43 inches at Worcester, Mass., 41 inches at both Burlington, Vt., and Roanoke. Va., and 32 inches at Lynchburg, Va. Florida recovered from its frost and freeze and mild weather pressed in from the Gulf of Mexico along the coast Ic Texas. snow, dunes were reported 15 feet higlyf Witl/ communications hampered, there was no way of as-ses^g the cost in lives or dol-lai;8 of the January storm se-Death counts boggled an attrition took many ifurm^ including fire fatalities, freezing, and heart attacks from snow removal exertion. Statewide emergencies were declared for Pennsylvania and Delaware where hundreds of travelers and rural dwellers were still isolated by road blockages caused by drifts of 10 feet or more. In Virginia, the In Pennsylvania the highway department said that with 11,666 men engaged in snobr clearance, the cost could fw to $5 million. Ihe cleanup cost in Philadelphia, where 9 inches fell, was put at $500,000. In some localities, all except vital road clearing operations were put off until- the snow-drifting winds should die down. Groundhog to Need Snowte what warmer, a low of 8 to 16 tonight and highs of 16 to 22 tomorrow. Partly cloudy and cold is Thursday’s out- Winds variable at 8 to 15 miles per hour wilt ’shift to northeast at 10 to 20 milbs late today and increase to 15 to 25 miles tonight. A ‘‘warm’’ 10 above was the low in downtown Pontiac prior Temperatures, will be some-^to 8 a.m. today. The 2 p.m. read- ing was 23. The U. S. delegate took the floor as the 16-nation council met to consider a U. S. proposal for preliminary talks on arranging a Viet Nam peacd conference. ) Soviet Ambassador Nikolai T. Fedorenko listened intently as Related Stories, Pictures on Pages A-2, A-3 Goldberg spoke. Fedorenko had declined to tell newsmen in advance of the session ^vhether he vouldJ>ppo6e council debate. TLN. diplomats, however, noted a Soviet news agency dispatch from Hanoi quoting the North Vietnamese guveniment as declaring it would consider any Security (Council resolutions as invalid. GAVE DETAILS Goldberg explained in detail U.S. reasons for bringing the Viet Nam problem to the United Nations. He said President Johnson had acted after every other effort had failed to bring about peace negotiations. “Our resort to the Security Couhcil, despite what anyone may say or speculate about it,’’ he said, “is briefly and simply further evidence of our resolve to settle this conflict peaceably, resolve that .stems from a deep and abiding belief that a negotiated settlement rather than a. military solution is obviously to the best interest of the Vietnamese people whole.” Hoffa's Grip on Union Is Tightened WASHINGTON (UPI) - Teamsters’ President James R. Hoffa tightened his grip over the nation’s largest union today because the Supreme Court agreed to review his federal jury-tampering conviction-The ruling was a blow to U.S. government efforts to put Hoffa behind bars and raised the union leader’s hopes the tribunal would erase the eight-y ear prison sentence imposed on him in the jury-rigging case. • It also apparently cleared the way for Hoffa’s reelection to another 1,700,666-member union expected to return Hoffa to his $75,606-a-year post at the teamster convention-brJuly. Hoffa still faces a five-year prison sentence as the result of a Chicago mail fraud conviction in connection with loans obtained from a labor-management pension plan. But that case is still in the Appeals Courts and is almost certain to find its way up to the Supreme Court. This may take a year or more. ARGUMENTS Supreme Court arguments of the jury-tampering bonviction are not expected until next fall and the justices may not hand down their decision liritil June 1%7. Such a timetable would practically assure Hoffa’s claim to the union presidency. It also would dash at least temporarily the hopes^or the job of Teaip-sters’ vice presidents Einar 0. Mohn and Harold J. Gibbons. $3.39 .Billion Asked for'Aid' LBJ Backs 5-Year, 2-Category Program WASHINGTON (AP) - President Johnson asked Contp>ess today for five-year authority for foreign aid and proposed that the global program be split into separate bills for economic aid and arms aid.' In a special message seeking $3.39 billion in new aid funds for next year, Johnson also spelled out a $1 billion program of food, education and health assistance abroad. “I propose that the United States offer to join in new at- world poverty,” the President told Congress. “The incessant cycle of hunger, ignorance and disease is the common blight of the developing world. This vicious pattern can be broken. It must be broken if democracy is to survive.” Hew t1.25S.0DD expansion program FOR ORION TOWNSHIP Tbe $3.39 billion - $2,469 billion in economic aid and $917-million in military — is more than Congress voted last year in comparable new funds for the year ending June 30,1966. But just how much, the increase amounts to is difficult to say because a large chunk of the arms assistance, for Viet Nam, has been wrapped into the regular U.S. defense btidget. FIGHT CERTAIN? A fight' seemed certain over, nonmoney items in the aid legislation as well as the more usual tugging and hauling over the financing. In calling for a five-year term and a spUf-up of the economic and military aid legislation^ the President was going "down a road advocated by Sen. J. y(. ' Fulbright, D-Ark., the' Foreign Relations Committee chairman. pmhk erait eiwf* CONSTRUCTION START^ — Breaking ground for . the |1.2-miUlon Bell Telephone Cb. central office in Orion Town-. ship arq (from leR) E. Eugene Russell, the company’s Pontiac district oommerclpl manager; John Lesstter, Orion Township supervisor; State Rep! Robert J. Sljngerhend, D-Lake Orjon; Earl J. Fortin, president of the Orion Area Chamber of Commerce, and Charles B. WobdhOad, Michigan Bell Pontiac manager. (See story. Page A,4.) SAME REASONS Johnson said the large scale foreign aid program is necessary for the same reasons as his “Great Society” program inside the United States. He sajd the aim is to improve “the kind of world our children will live in.” C.ofC.toHold Installation at Annual Event New officefs will be installed tomorrow night at t(ie 56th annual meeting qf the Pontiac Area Chamber of Conunerce. The annual meeting is slated for 6:30 p.m. at the, Pontiac Elks Temple. Entertainment for the dinner meeting will feature Wes Harrison, billed as “Mr. Sound Effects.” ‘ Kenneth S. Miller, assistant traffic manager of GMC Truck & Coach Division, will be installed as the chamber's 1966 president. Other officei:5 include Harold B. Euler, first vice Alger V. Conn^“a6cond vice president; Russell, aec- Stqiiunan, A-2 THE PUNTlAC EKESiS, TUESDAY, FEBRCARY U.S. Pounds Targets in N. Viet Nam (Continued From Page One) ^ Vietnamese regulars, yielded ' 12 enemy prisoners and 408 suspects. A U.S. Army spokesman said Intelligence had established that 75 per cent of the suspects are Viet Cong The battle raged over an area 13 miles wide and 10 miles deep. Units of the U.S. 1st Cavalry, Airmobile pivision were pressing the Communists from the south, and west, while South Vietnamese and South Jiorean marmes were hitting from other directions. CONVINCED REDS CAUGHT IN BATTLE - A Vietnamese Art Americpn. spokosinan said woman sits with her children on battle-the battering by ground forces, ground near An Thi in South Viet Nam after artillery and air strikes ap- gj,e was wounded during a recent battle be-peared to have convinced the Communists their, only escape i from an area they have heW for 15 years lies io the hills in the west. Of the Communist toll of dead, 100 were credited to the Vietnamese force of several regiments and 75 to the South Korean marines on the flank. U.S. and Korean casualties remain light, military, spokesmen said, but the South Vietnamese suffered'^moderate loss- tween members of the U. S. 1st Air Cavalry Division and combined- forces of the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese regulars. SEARCH FOR ESCAPE—A limping American soldier moves toward an evacuation helicopter in Ifoai Chau, South Vret Nam, after he whs wounded when his company was hit , 'i}y heavy Viet Cong sniper fire. Friendly Vietnartiese fprces also mistakenly opened fire on his unit, catching it in a fierce crossfire. Birmingham Area Mews Garage Site Go-Ahead Tolldws Sale of Bonds LBJ to Keep-Fi^bt^R^w ott^ V Hong Kong Is Used as 'Bose —Chino y erate^TheT mean T^wh^e TOKYO (AP) Communistlcrat'ic Republic of (North) Viet I from’ onStenth to one-third of*China >«i«ed a strong protest Nam or Jan. 31 and wildly the total force involved jtoday-with Britain agamst offer-clampuring for an. attack on the total force involved. , ^ nucfear-powered and oth- 'FIRE FIGHXS joperatiops forHhe United Statesier warships of the United States I ,A government spokesman'to expand its war of aggressipni are having constant access to I said'the Vietnamese troops havejagainst Viet Nam.” , I Hong Kong and assembling I been in a half dozen fierce fire: pgijjng contended that Britain inhere. ’ I fights and while the number of allowing use of "Hong Kongl “The British government dead is low, "the. number ofjgg ^ pperations . . to "’“st’immediately take effective wounded is quite high." /make war threats and nuclear i measures'to stop all U.S. activi-Two new punishing actions blackmail against the People’s jhes of war preparation in Hong against the insurgents onened I Republic of China (Red Chi-and prevent Hong Kong u5 south of SaigoS. / naK” , from serving as a base for U.S. * /; . . I * * ♦ .aggressive activities anyi ,The Vietnamese 9th/Division - *„lmore,’’ the note said. I kicked off a regimdrftal size'^The protest was hand^ tO| .,jf British government March_a.^ destroy attack come to its senses,| Hanoi, Port 'Ruled Out' as Targets ;81RMINQHAMw- With the Shle of 215 million in revenue bonds last night to finance the construction of the city’s first municipal parWng garage, the City Commission directed the contractor to get work tinder way Feb. 14. * *■ If no delays are encountered, the five-level structure is scheduled for. completion by Sept. 2, months ahead of the previously anticipated completion date. The building, providing parking spaces for 566 cars, will be constructed on the L-shaped parking lot, fronting on^ Woodward and Willits. The Commission accepted the low bid of the First of Michigan Corp. to purchase the bonds, which will be paid for with revenue derived from the Auto Parking System. ■* I The bonds will mature in 25 ] years, and at an average interest 1-ate of 4.17 per cent, win* [cost the city an additional $967,-1 666, or a total of $2,467,666. j REFINANCING | I' Although the garage will costj I only $1,016,000 for construction, t it was necessary to refinance 'existing parking lot bonds, to-| taling about $550,000, before selF' ing the’new bonds. I First of Michigan wis one ' of two firms that submitted 1 bids. The other was embody and Co. Purklss,” but considering the recent change, it met with our satisfaction.” OAK PARK FIRM The parking structure will constructed-by the A. J- Etkin Oo. of Oak Park. In other business the commission gave its approval to a preliminary Civic Center plan which envisions Shain Park as a shallow bowl that could be used as an outdoor theater area. Emphasis would be on natural landscaping. In authorizing the plan of Johnson, Johnson and Roy, the Commission said it wanted to give some direction to the Detroit planning firm so it can begin developing specific ideas. ★ * ♦ The Civic Center would encompass the Municipal Building, the Baldwin Public Library, Shain Park and the parking lot immediately south of the park. 6M'65 Profits Top $2 Billion (Continued From Page One) The 1964 payout was Both these were records. Net earnings equalled $7.41 WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi- ^ity Finance Diretlor James, r.T.Lu Ani Trvl%ne/\n itOj* o/lminiC- _ - . ....... ■*"' V... , .— jtjnance uirecior james i u: i. dent Johnson has told admims- the bid was "good,| itration officials he intends to noting that 1 me uiu TTa,. in IMi- the federal rekervC; “ “ m keep a tight rein on any expan-rate was raised in,De-j Sales were estimated at $20.7 sion of the Vietnamese war. He affecting interest rates billion, an increase of 22 per jis understood to have ruled out gf] areas of bonding cent over the previous record of jany bombing of Hanoi or Hai-: . wouldn’t billion, the previous year. Phong for the immediate future.!^ Last tall, the Did wouian i * * I Officials said, today the Presi-acceptable, said worldwide sales were K. H. CUMBERWORTH JAMESHv DAVIS --Vfflh-Binh-ErmdB^ ns 7n rewd, Two File Nominating Petitions and reported 78 Viet Cong-killed nan-‘he New Chma News Agen--^ being hostile to the and eight captured. ®aid. people of Viet Nam, China and * * * lo London, the British Foreigntjjjg gjjyjjjgast Asian countries, it' A spokesman estimated thatj^^Hice withheld comment on the ^iu certainly eat the bitter another 50 bodies were carried The Foreign Office said fj-uitg of its own making.” away by the retreating Viet >t had not yet received the note. i Red china lodged a protest Ident is determined at this time, I haying resumed the bombing in the north, to*stick to a middle-course policy. They said he intends to avoid any show of a: I lack of determination, on the one hand, and any unnecessary .escalation on the other. Burglars Strike at Area School for City Commission Primary equal to almost one-fifth the federal budget, and just its $391 million- increase in profits was more than most corporations make in totaPearnings, CARS. TRUCKS / Nearly 7.3 million GM^cars and trupks were sold in 1965, comppr^ with 6.1 million in 1964, the previous record total. The pattern of attacks in the inew phase of the war following Ithe peace offensive is expected J^Je ^ CM claims about 53 per to be consistent with a pattern School in West Bloomfield Tovm- ^ l.„llow.d Wore U.. pause "<*«• ' did approximately $800 daniage, Cong who left behind 31 weapons, including two East German machine guns and four Czech light automatic weapons. BUNKER COMPLEX Bomhine was susnended be-t‘o ‘he school offices this morn- The company paid nearly $2 Bombing was suspended De /_ billion in United Ws and for- U.S. 1st Infantry Division missile frigate Bainbridge, troops, 10 miles east of Saigon which arrived in Hong Kong sent back word they had uncov-i York “ ' ____________ .. .J Omaha Albuquerque 43 ]4 Phoenix ' .Atlanta 32, 25 Pittsburgh, .. _ (Bismarck >^-15 Salt Lake C. 34 73 Boston 29 23 S. Francisco 55 50 22 Chicago 17 t.t S. S. Marla " ” I Cincinnati 20 15 Seattle Denver 35 12 Tampa I* Detroit ......... I Washington Rooney himself was, under v'ln" 41, s sedation at St. John’s Hospital 'ciw 3o' II in nearby Santa Monica, being “ 5 treated for an intestinal infection acquired during filming in the Philippines. ' , , ' Said Rooney’s manager. Red Dffff: “Mickey told me they’d (he and Barbara)- had a very good talk and they were very close to reconciliation. I think Milos may h£fve resented it.” 50 32 AP PMMfOk ;^NATJQNAL WEATHER-Snow » expected tonight in the Nqi^east area and the Rockies with showers along the CaH-fdmia Cloast and in the south Atlantic states. It will be cqjder from the- southern Plains to the'Great Lakes- and south Atlantic states and war^r in the Southwest. Alpena Gas Vandal Has Price on Head ALPENA (AP) - A $5,000 reward is teeing offeneji for arrest and conviction of whoever shut off the natural gas supply to some 2,(X)0 Al^na homes in near-zero temperatures Sunday. The reward was posted Monday by Michi^n Consolidated Gas 6)., which said Jt cost about $10;000 ,to t-estore gas service In ,this city of 14,000 popolation.' * ★ A The utility said both the FBI and State Police had been asked to check oqt leads. A. Warren and Daniel T. Murphy, chairman of the Oakland County Board of Auditors, agreed yestefdSy on termination of the city’s contribution to the county-operated health laboratory. Murphy said that the annual $16,130 city contribution will be eliminated from the 1967 county budget. , ' He added that the termination could become effective April 1 if city commissioners take formal action requesting it. This would leave a deficit of $12,000 for the balance of the current year in the health department biidget, which the [ county would have to replace from its contingency fund. ★ w * The City Commission last week called for termination of contributions to the laboratory based on economic reasons. PONTIAC ALONE Warren said then that no other municipality ifas making such a contribution and he was directed by commissioners to work toward its elimination. Prior to acquiring Detooit wa- Cumberworth, who attended Pontiac schools, said the c i t y must progress better than if has. A SUPERVISOR Davis is employed' at GMC Truck and Coach Division, ahd is a supervisor in the McConnell Conununity School program. Since U61, he has also worked with the Pontiac Parks and Recreation Department. A member Of New Hope Bap-tiat 'Church, Davis, 40, served two'years as vice president o6[ the Southeast Cdmmunity Improvement Association. it * I- W Davis, a graduate of Pontiac Central High School, is married and has five children. I feel I can help to do a job,” said Davis. Davis and Cumberworth are each the second to file In their respective districts. They bring the total to six filed to seek nomination in Pontiac’s seven districts. The deadline for filingi nohiinating petitions is Feb. 15. ! tary of Defense Robert S. Mc-*‘be^hreak-in. Na'hiara and other advisers throughout the week. Late Saturday afternoon thej| Presiident went over targets which had been submitted for the first strikes after the pause ended. He had followed that.^ procedure during the bombings' last year, exercising close con-j tool over the operations against] | to!f State police are investigaUngjlion in 1965, up from $4.6 billion the preceding year. the-north, and will continue i do so, officials said. ★ * * Johnson reportedly reexamined on Saturday the fundamental premises underlying last year’s bombing strategy and decided that he*must do everything possible to reduce the volume of supplies flowing into the south. He also decided, in a final review of his peace offensive, that a resumption of bombing would ndt afiect the outlook for negotiations because the possibilities of getting North Viet Nam into a conference had been exhausted during the month-long peace drive. After he reached ihis decision to renew, the bombings, he allowed 24 hours for notifying several governments. Month Was 0 of January Real Chiller Foocj Riots Spread in Southern Indio | NEW DELHI (UPJ) - Food! riots spread throughout Commu- January was quite a month: snow, below zero tefn- | peratures, biting winds and stalled automobiles. m In the weatoer department, January did itself proud | when, on Jan. 28, a 94«year-old record for that date was I smashed as-, the mercury plummeted to .eight degrees | below zero in Pontiac. ’ The record bustor surpassed by one degree the j previous low for that day, and the coldeit in January a yearago.^^^;,,i . 'I The eight below reading was' 26 degrees lower than the ? coldest day of the previous month, December, when the % temperature never dropped under 18 degrees. | ★ ♦ * ^ • f. While Pontiac residents chilled to the bone with the | minus-eight reading in the city, those living in the outlying |( areas of the county shiyer^vtto readings of 20 below in 2 in Keego Harbor. Hof Item Theft Brings Search tor Heft^ Crodk nisMominated Kerala State in| A dishonest Paul Bunyan may southern India today and police be oh the loose in Waterford --------- used tear gas and metal-tipped Township. ter, -Pontiac receiited fxtensive|j.jybs to batUe the growing dis-l At least a mighty, giant, water testing services from the'tyrbaiices. : perhaps with the aid af a btee The government arrested E.|ox, jshould be a prime suspect M. S. Mamboodiripad, leader ofiin a theft from the A. J. Qood-the pro-Pel^ faction of the man home, 5070 Sparrow V’ood, Kerala State Communist party, according to township police, in an effort to cut the protest The %ili»-lt stole Goodman’s hiovement at its source.' {furnace. - Leonard and 18 below HEAVY SNOWFALL ( Compared to January 1965,'the snowfall last month was extremely heavy. ^ . Over 12 inches Vlf measured in Pontiac last month, while a year ago, the recorded accumulation ranged between six and eight inches. In December, the snowfall was less than four Inches. laboratory. ^Ibe other major.service, milk testing, no longer is required due to legislation last year giving the sUte responsibility for (Ulk. testing milk ^ With the coming,of the zer*o'temperatures at the end | of the month, snow decreased to occasional flumes. But I It wasn’t much of a consolation for the three-inch snowfalls I ’ on Jan. 7 and i22, and the four inches of snow recorded Jan. 12. , - WARM OPENING 1110 month started out relatively warm, with readings / in the high 40’s the first week, but then the bottom dropped/ i of the optimistic weather picture and temperatui began to fall steadily. * Thp high of 47 on the first day of the ^ipanih. however, i was 14 degrees colder tlmn the warmest day in the previous ! January. ^ THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 1, 1966 A—8 LONDON TAP) - Moscow and Peking reacted angrily yesterday to the renewed U.S. air raids on North Viet Nam. AP PlwWax Viet Cong mwtar fife nedr. Da Nang in South Viet Nam. Bombing of North Viet Nam has resumed after a 37-dAy lull with attacks on bridges, ferryboats and truck ronvoys. Peace Effbrfs Labeled Hoax Moscow, Peking H't Bombing Resumption Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. CIUIIQ "0*" Q‘ 9IHIIII3 Wed. 9" /r But in the West, Britain gave full' support to Washington’s decision, saying Hanoi had laid down an impossible condition Sunday for pleace talks. The Soviet government is-sored a statement saying resumption of bombing of the North “shows that the United States actually does not want the war in Viet Nam to end.” It called the U.S. peace offensive “a diplomatic move aimed at misleading world public opinion and preparing the ground for further, escalation of aggres- To k««p our staff of export seat cover tailors busyt^S'fO offering sensational values for a limited time only! . . . Don't miss this opportunity to soye oniirst quality seat covers. an iiSSX Bill Kelley ON BRAND NEW LUXURIOUS SEAT COVERS (FRONT SEAT ONLY) INSTALLED FOR ONLY Choose from the newest and smartest colors and patterns BUY NOW! PAY LATER! INSTANT CREDIT! Regular *90^ CONVERTIBLE TOPS Beauty and protection ii yourt with o new convertible.top expertly tailored for you individually by. Kelley. The'‘best cost no mere. BILL KELLEY'S SEAT COVER OPEN - DAILY 8:30 A.M. JO^ 6 P.M. 756 Oakland Aye. ; Comer Kinney ^ telephone^ FE 2-5335 Fulbrighf: Will Await Viet Debate in U;N. The Soviet news agency Tass said President Johnson’s decision means he has “followed the advice of the most 'warlike and militarist quarters in the United States. WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. J. W. Fulbnght said today his Senate Foreign Relations Committee will not press its inquiries intq President Johnson’s Viet Nam policy until the United Nations has debated the admin- PEACE HOAX’ had been made .for the resump- Said Radio Pekihg: “U.S. Im-tion of bombing in the north. utter failure Sen. Wayne Morse, D-Ore., ‘’“x, recklessly re- among the m6st outspoken foes surned its bombings, of renewed raids on North Viet istratmn’sjiew peace effort.' "IfTius^slarts debate ip the United Nations,’’ the Arkansas Democrat said, “the administration should have full opportunity b submit its case.’’ But Fulbright, who wanted the administration to lengthen the now-shattered lull in bombing of North Viet Nam, said there remains “grave apprehension” in Congress about the air war and other facets of Johnson’s policy. There was also substantial backing on Capitol Hill for Johnson’s decision to loose new air strikes on the Communist north. DELAY RETURN The Foreign Relations Committee, of which Fulbright is chairman, delayed today’s scheduled return of Secretary of State Dean Rusk for renewed auestioning about . Southeast Asia. Fulbright said he anticipates hear- Nam,' said the Foreign Relations Committee should meet morning and night to bear administration testimony about Southeast Asia. \ ★ ★. But Fulbright said the administration should have ample time to pursue peace through th,e United Natidfis, “a course many of us have been urging for months.’ Morse, who said Johnson was “dead wrong” in ordering renewed bombing, has introduced a resolution calling for a full-scale Senate investigation of administration foreign policy on Viet Nam, A Vatican source said Pope Ppl VI expressed disai^int-ment'that the bombings were resumed after his appeal last week for U.N. arbitration in Viet Nam but still hopes his request 'may lead to the establishment of permanent peace in Southeast Asia.” . FACED SENATORS Rusk faced-Senate questioning Friday when he went before the Foreign Relations Committee to seek a $415-million emergency foreign aid appropriation, most of it earmark^ for South Viet Nam. The Senate Armed Services Committee put off until Wednesday another appearance by Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara on Johnson’s request for $12.8 billion in Viet Nam In 011 a w a, Prime Minister Lester B, Pearson of Can: said his government h^3^ the bombing pause might be continued on the possibility there might be some softening of North Viet Nam’s position. INFORMED SUNDAY He told the House of Commons he was informed of the U.S. decision Sunday. The British government, in a strong Foreign Office state- Senate Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen and House GOP Le^er Gerald R. Ford both said Johnson had choice, when his peace offensive failed, but resumption of air raids on North Viet Nam. Johnson’s order ended a 37^ay bombing pause. no new Viet Nam policy ncm- ... - , , ings until the end of U.N. debate "“‘‘tary on the peace conference call sounded at Johnson’s order* ★ ★ . The Security Council meets j toda/ on a. resolution presented by 'U.S. Ambassador, Arthur J. Goldberg, aimed at “a durable peace in Southeast Asia.” It calls .for discussions among interested nations to point the way toward a peace conference, with a supervised cease-fire in Viet Nam as the first step toward ending the war. Even senators who hailed Johnson’s appeal to the Unitdd Nations voiced no optimsim about the prospects it would win peace. “I do not think it is likely jto be successful,” Sen. Eugene McCarthy, D-Minn., said of the new administration move. NO CASE MADE? 1 - McCarthy contended no case' Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield who opposed resumption of the attacks, said it was not the Presraent’s fault peace efforts failed His assistant, Sen. Russell «. Long, D-La., said, “When/you are in a fight, you do well to win it.” Sen. John Tower, R-Tex., said he was “particularly delighted that those of my colleagues who would have us withdraw or fight war of attrition, that their counsel has not” prevailed.” North Viet Nam declared: “The resumption of the sir strikes once again divulged the Johnson peace offensive was a fraud.” ment, said President Ho Chi Miiih of North Viet Nam had laid down an unacceptable condition that the Viet Cong should be “the sole genuine representative” of the South Vietnamese people at any peace conference'. The statement said a message telayed from Ho, through Moscow to Queen Elizabeth yesterday said: , ‘If the United States really wantsipeace, it must recognize the Soto Vietnamese Front for Liberatwn.'(political arm of the Viet Cong) as the solo genuine representative of the people of South Viet Nam.” PREVIOUS MOVE previously, the Communists had held out merely for Liberation Front representation at the peace table. 'Qie British statement then made this comment on.the 108 NORTH SAGINAW SPECIAL LOW PRICES.. . . HASSOCKS with soft foam tops Butjiow the demand is made that the Liberation, Front should be the sole representative of South Viet Nam. 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Cut frM'to your tneosurements up “ 1 inches. While only; W InsHla-Outsifla SHade Brackets, pr. *.. . k 6c Plastic Shade Pulls.............. 2 for 2So v.y' THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUE^AY, FEBRUARV 1, llwia Area Centennial Farm Alma (College Gets Land . y Cause of Fire Stilia Mystery Oxford to Seek Help SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP-i The John Landon Centennial ^>Farm at 10350 Oak Hill, which has^served its owners for more' than 100 years, will soon sen-e students from Alma College. Nevys of the Area J John B. Landon, grandson of while his father was operating a share of the pigs In return for John N. Landon who started the drugstore in Detroit that they farm in the I840's, has given figured they owned it. “We had an advantage in thej competition with exhibitors from other counties,” he said, ‘becausb we had an earlier start. For about foui' years we, were always ahead of the others.” , ALMA GRADUATE of State Investigator the 80-acre tract to the college. With money from the eventual sale of the land, the school plans to establish^ the Landon Scholarship Fund to help n u m e r 0 u s'^udents finance their studies at Alma In the future. Ownership of the property has| been in the same family fori ^more than a century, starting when John N. Landon. came toj Michigan from Connecticut in, 1847 and built a two-room log house on the homestead. , The following year, his fam-| lly joined him and they used the log structure until a larger home; was built. The old home was, destroyed by fire on Valentine’s; Day, 1942, and Landpn moved a, tenant home to a more prom- i. Inent position on the farm fon “f . use^by his family. , ' j ARROWHEADS ! In recafilng his earfy days on; ^e farm, Landon remembers when his father, Charles, found] several Indian arrowheads while planting beans. Landon explained that along a nearby ridge was an old In- , dian trail and that near it was a grove of,willows frequented by deer. ’He said the arrowheads he and his father found in the field were undoubtedly those that had missed their marks when the Iml dians shot at the animals. “We had a large apple orchard and the tenants had to give us apples, eggs and a Undon, a graduate of ||jna,lousinesses here y e s t erd ay also earned‘a B.D. degree fromj use of the property,” he said. He also remembers that when the 4-H movement began in Oakland County he was involved atteifded the University of Mich-j in the work with rural youth. OXF^D rr Fire Chief Francis. P. Earp today planned to call In a State Fire Marshal investigator to seek the cause I of a $250,000 blaze which destroyed or hady damaged six that the fire started in the Ox-igan for a year and Wayne States Supply store, 26 University for a year. Washington, but what started B e f 0 r e his reUrement last “ a mystery.. year, he was a school teacher.; The six-hojir blaze, which He met his wife, Iva M., also a was discovered about - 2:30 teacher, at a little one-room a.m., completely gutted the school next to the “property he office supply and the Parrish gave to the college. I n s ir r a n c e Agencv which The Landon’s son, Bryce, is shared the same building. studying for i education. Reopening of Lodge Set The adjacent building, which until recently housed the Bart^ lett Paint and Glass -Co., was also a total loss, as was the Oxford Cafe next to the empty building. COLLEGE BENEFACTOR — John B. Landon, 1175 Whittier, Waterford Township, has given his 80-acre farm on Oak Hill Road to Alma College. Funds from the contemplated sale of the property by the college will eventually establish the Landon Scholarship Fund. Bill’s Bar and Oxford Auto Supply on eacinend of the fire, f f area suffered heavy smoke and tor I omorrow watei^ damage, and a vending machine inventory stored in the AtiDISON TOWNSHIP - Mt. »>s tel. Crampian Ski Lodge, which was S™DBV CREW to reopen tomorrow, according w hnild'intr to Vern Pillsworth owner Masonic Temple building, ! iL fl™l decision will l.hige;»“' ''““f on whether the electrical wir- ing to Serve the .tOws and snoW-1 chief said he could not making machinery is completed, locate the source of the Pillsworth ?iad. ; smoke, but he didn’t want to take any chances on the fire breaking out again. BOXES OF BOOKS — Peter Armstrong of Boy Scout Troop 36 and West Bloomfield Township Librarian Mrs. Eunice Tuttle examine a few of the 4,200 books which re-vcently Were moved Into the library’s new West, Acres branch at 7321 Commerce. Located in a renovated store, the branch will open with regular hours Feb. 8. Peter, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Armstrong Jr., 8520’ Buf|alo, Commerce Township, waa aiiiong 18 scouts from troops 36 and 160 who helped with the moving. At Orion Twp. Site Fire of undetermined origin destroyed nearly all of t h e snow-making and tow equip- Ground Broken for Bell Office High winds during the fire ' , Dixie Highway owes its start to the n d 0 n farm. Charles Landon used to t^e |imber from- the farm to a nearby mill ^ be cut up for use in the Milford Group Report Raises Possibility of Water Issue Vote plank iwd to Saginaw, now_jgjj j’ggj pjgjjt received Dixie Highway. L citizens’ committee report on XEGAEBTEPS -------------^----milford’s water problems, are Landon also recalls when his'considering taking the matter to father had to take legal steps tb^lectorate at large, to have tenants removed -fromi verbal report, delivered th? property. He said they had ^ joint executive session of Uved on the farm for so longlthe committee and council, de-• ______^-----------------—, tailed results of a recent survey MILFORD, — Village council- is necessary, and that the method of financing should be de- I indicating half of the village residents are in favor of a. municipal water softenihgand iron removal plant. ■Vjj* Such a facility — which would provide softened water free of odor, rust, color and I sediment — would cost an es-WIXOM-“World’s Fair En-j timated $415,000 and would counter,” a Billy Graham film,i g^d about $2.60 a month to will be shown at the First Bap-i y,e average water bill. Ust Church, 620 Wixom, at 7:30’ p.m. Saturday. Jhe survey was sent Movie Scheduled atWixom Church voted on by the electorate. Mrs. William J. Dildine, committee meiAber, noted that three-quarters of the persons responding to the questionnaire wanted something done. "This 0 some ORlON TOWNSHIP — The by business and civic leaders in take several more months for In- m7nT‘anribo“sets’''of 7htal | th^atened’to^pTead^t Through Michigan Bell ■ Telephone Co. the area as well as Michigan I sUllaUon of new switching ap- skis poles and boots at the I the entire block. A totaj of 10 yesterday broke ground for a Belj officials, was the first step paratus. od’ge located on Lakeville 'fire departments were engaged new $1.2-million telephone cen-:Jn a local improvementj^oject I . t - .Aty t • • Tlfnlyl/wt DnoH tvAcrf 011/1 norf nf a $17^ mil- Road: two mUes east of Ox- in the battle, which was also tral office on Waldon Road west and part of a record, *175 mlL J^e "^w one-story buil^g • , . hon the company will spenj^ this Will measure 82 by 79 feet, im ford hampered by near-zero tern-! of Baldwin. ------------. - , . , , . . * neratures i The groundbreaking, attended year for statewide improvement general contractor on the struc- Several buildings were also *^ ★ * ★ ..... ...... .— '' and expansion of its facilities. that the fire, which started in: a building housing snow-making POLICE SERGEANT equipment, was caused by an R was discovered by Police termined by the council. ^___pWtrical failure. Sgt. Ray Westphal. Committee members said that §omE COVERAGE ‘ entire front of the present village water rates. „ , „ j the office supply store was a. are fair and recommended that] partially covered arrived within any proposal to raise them be “y insurance, he said. minutes after the alarm was Workmen have been on the sounded, job around the clock to re- — place mechanical equipment, and a borrowed snow machine has been set up to get the slopes in shape as soon as the the Vnswer. The! completed. people have spoken,” she said. I Rental equipment is also be- Hospital Women’s Auxiliary is After further consideration ofling feplaced ag quickly as pos- accepting applications for nurs-the matter, councilmen are ex-sible, Pillsworth said. ing scholarships'from residents pected to take action Feb. 14 oni “If we can’t open tomorrow,]and students .in the Dryden, whether a special election should we’ll make it by the end of the;imlay City, Almont, Capac, Ar-beheld. week at the latest,” he said. mada and Romeo School Dis- Hospital Is Offering Nursing Scholarships - The Community ALMONT - ture is the Bundy ConstruCtian i Co . Inc. of Pontiac. Charles B. Woodhead, Pon- Architectural work was) done tiac manager for Michigan Smith Associates, Inc. Bell, placed the cost of the Vf Birmingham, new central office at $1,256,- 850, including cost of the new building, centrai office equip- | ment and oirtiide-plant faciii-^ lies. To provide improved local and long. distance switching of Free Course Offered on Medical Self-Help 11,200 village residents. Prior to the "showing of the the 700 who respond^, 50 film, the junior and senior [.Per cent favor^ the dual-pur-youth groups ‘will sponsor a P«sc system 23 per cen fav-“teen funspiration” and pizzajored a pant which would re--party at 6 p.m. in the lower i per cent Lditorium of the church. I wanted nothing done to the wa-* ★ * » I ter and seven per cent indicated The young people are asked;"®Preference. _Jq bring their own soft drinks. STUDIED.PLAN ^ ■ I The survey was'central to the 'report of the 16-member citi-i zens’ committee, which was appointed by the council to consider r^c»»AHipnrialinns of engineers at Hubbell, Roth and Clark Inc. of Bloomfield Tovm- Imlay City Teachers Nix Pay Hike Offer :ts and the villages of Leonard and Lakeville, j * * w. I Orchard Lake, Farminjlftbn I The scholarships will cover Town^ip, recently was in-80 per cent of the cost of tuition stalled as honored -queen of and books if the.<7student enters] Farmington Bethel No, 55, I a school of registered or practi-j International Order of Job’s j cal nursing. i Daughters. WALLED Li\KE - A free telephone calls in Orion Town-'(.„yrse m medical self-help spon-ship the equipment to be housed j,v the Walled Lake Fire in the new building* is known as ^ . ' . • No. 5 Crossbar. ' f^Partment will begin here ^ ♦ Thursday. It will enable users to dial their swncMki direct to milltes ol tei^thones across the coan- «.'» P ■?: ■" JL trv as well as in Canada '^y try as well as in Canada. ^ Trail/ Scheduled for 12 conseeu^ COMPLETION DATE , ■ tive Thursdays, the course will Woodhead said the new build-1 be taught by instructors from HONORED QUEEN — Jerw is scheduled for'completion j the Oakland County Civil De-Bachelor, daughter of Mr. and jin September*after which it willifense Department. Mrs. Warren Bdthelor, 24602 ...... ) T' --------- STAPP'S. ROCHESTER STORE R 0 Opinions of committee members were divided on about the same ratio as those of persons responding to the poll, according to Village Manager , J. Stuart Brophy. They agreed that a water ■ problem does exist in Milford, IMLAY CITY - School teachers here who have been boycotting extracurricular activities in an .attempt to get more monlast week turned down a $206 increase offered them by the Board of Education. Schools Supt. Alvin Norlin said the teachers refused the’raise' but did not give a reason. He said a meeting will be set up this week between teachers and board members in an attempt to iron out their differences. The teachers have been in' refused to grant them a $500 across-the-board pay raise. ; In retaliation, the teachers started boycotting all, extracurricular activities. They have said they will do so until they are granted some kind of financial consideration. They also w^ant other incentives to end the boycott, including extra pay for extra duties, paid insurance and a bonus for this year’s teaching. Norlin said the extracurricular activities are'still, being conducted with the help of par- dispute with the board ^ince last; ents and members of the ad- ” that a new source of treatment I November when board members |minstratioh. K E A lot of people think they’re broke when th.ey’re not. • That’s because they’ve forgotten their good credit can be worth hundreds of dol« lars at Seaboard. So maybe you’re not broke after all. How do y}u know until you get in touch with us? Drofj by tbday. SERBORRD mmcEvoimuiY A lllesav*!' when yoo need ce»l> 11S5 North Perry St. . Pontiac Phono’133-7017 CHANDLER HEilTING CO. -6480 HIQHUND ROAD Vz Mile East of Pontiac Airport SALES $14-8411 FHA TERMS NIOHT SERVICE OR S-6SS2 FINAL WEEK Ctmuiw Children's SHOiS OFFICE FURNITURE iidwest ^foypewriter art FE4-5TS8 It N. SAGINAW ST. NextteSimiM OPEN FRI,TIL9P.M; Boys' Girls' Growing-Girls' Children's School-Dress .Famous ma1• «|fOfldF>rTul 'cotuoj iho... Come in, chooM the «tyl.*rou wont ot iheM clKirancp Kile prkei. m LADIES' SNO BOOTS ' A tew poir left ond nc comfort ond .mart we 10 thoM loAy enough ond Kvie now. ' w priced to bring (I* / ^ ^ aring oppeoronce vP / / . Sole at Rochester Store Only 418 K Moin^ St. ROCHESTER 'V ■1- - THE PONTIAC PUKSS. TUJj:;;Si)AY, FEliHLAHV’ ] Great Decisions of 1966—1 Vief War Is Major International Issue (EDITOR’S NOTE: There are great decisions to be made in foreign policy around the world in 1966. This and subsequent dispaiehes, prepared by veteran United Press International reporters, will examine these major problems in The Pontiac Press over the nexLnine^weehis.} By PHIL NEWSOM * UPI Foreign News Analyst shadows international problems of deep urgency in their own right — the chaotic struggles within and between the new nations of Africa, the threat to the NATO Allidnce in Europe, the never easing Communist push in Latin America. So it is that Viet Nam is at the head of the roster of great decisions facing the American people in 1966 as suggested by The world enters the year 1966 the Foreign Policy Association in an atmosphere which many for Special Study this year. i feel is more ominous than- at. possibly since World War II. over-all questions. They are; Every year has seemed perilous and foreboding sipce the. fleeting breather after the gj|^al conflict ended in 1945. But 1966 finds the Uni^ States, with its almost incQ^rehen^ible mlTi-tarj^^f^t,'deeply committed ln.*« war next door to the world’s most populous natiog and one violently hostile to' America. i • Struggle for Viet Nam .{nations of the continent around politely behind the United what stakes; what options, for it/ jStates, blit it .made no prac- hrael in the Arab world ! <>"e of the few stable lical move to help and the Jap- I j., , ' ■ and reasonably democratic na-anese people were shown in • West^ Fiirnne and the thfoes of at-! polls to be overwhelmingly ir lie • ^16 r AUi revolt and from Ghanalfavor of the United States get- U^S end of the Atlantic Alli-Tanzania to South Africa the'ting out. c.ih CoV„;..o» r'o^'fwture was unpredictable. i Decisive American interven- stabirny b^achfev^^^^^^^^ "^>EW LEADERS 'uon in the Dominican Republic • Riusia after Khrushchev: The Soviet Union, under Does coexistence have a future?!new leaders, Kosygin and l^eoni«i corivfnced was a definite Castro-,.t r’ W “lowed i. main U.S.; -WiH-4be'4nter-American the policy of coexistence of Puban leader acreed to let un-.,ye.e.n..ork? • ,____________;Nlklt. Kh,del,cte. and, .until men leave for the United States and relations between the two countries were overtly relatively calm. Makina forbi'gn policy in a'the intensification of th^ Viet-any time since the Korean War, The FPA has proposed eight the U.S. meet n.amese war, the relations be- |the challenges? PEACE OFFENSIVE The war in Viet Nam over- j N(J Flu So Far, Officials Say Colds Continue to Be a Notional Nuisance i The turn. of the year saw President Johnson wielding a “peace offensive’’ that unprecedented as it was spec-r f-bina had grown more bitter d _ 1 _ ‘ #kon AtrAW AM«I nUkAMfrl. AUa TRADE UP TO HIGHER aUALITY HEATING tween the United States and j Russia in some aspects had improved. Russia was on the spot over Viet Nam. Her clash with Red I Vice President Hubert Hum- By Science Service WASHINGTON - People are says no inHuenM has ,yet been.g^j^jur Shastri with little reason officially retried tins season. L ^^out the postu. What most people have is the ^^e Soviet Union followiife common cold, or a gastrointesti- ,o„g talk with Russian Premier nal upset, or both. The well-Alexei Kosygin, known seasonal cycle of colds— high in winter low in suihmj-i The United States found itseU continues to be demonstrated. , p^^ttion of having to push A 10-year study of a small 'ahead with a war it didn’t want group of cieveland, Ohio, but couldn’t shed. Many Ameri-families shows an “amazing jeans could not comprehend the constancy’’ in the number of why and wherefores, of Vietj colds from year to year, re- ;Nam, but the temper of thei ports Dr. John H. Dingle of people was overwhelmingly be-1 the Western Reserve Univer- hind the determination of its sity School of Medicine, aeve- President to see the thing land, in Medical Times (Feb- through. But na one professed ruary). to see the end. A total of 25,155 cases were diagnosed, a rate of 9.40 ill- ‘General Charles de Gaulle nesses per person each year. Of called it an “absurd war.” ’The these, 15,783, or 63 per cent were ^cid remark was typical of the{ classified as infections of the a'^ost hostile course the-newly respiratory tract reelected French president Jiad| Ninety-five per cent of the re- with regard to the United spiratory infections were diag-fi nosed as the common cold. nitis, laryngitis, bronchitis and other respiratory illnesses. SYMPTOMS economically bYwrroMS prosperous and, although the Symptoms included “weep-; division of Germany stood in ing,’’ or lachrimation, sneezing, the corner as a dynamite Is-runny nose. Irritated or mild sue that would some day, sore throat, chills, hoarseness,| somehow, have to be resolved, cough, headache, malaise, andi there appeared Jess surface sometimes, especially . in chil-| danger than at" any time in dren, fever. | years. than ever and, although the Soviets wanted dearly to avoid engagement in the Viet Nam War, China was openly taunt- injg her with accusations of „ . . ,. trying to help the United and many other States off the hook there. greatest danger of all the prohferation of Japan was solidly pro-Ameri- nuclear weapons among more what would be the stand of can — on virtually everything and more countries/ Red China, now a new, if , except Viet Nam the Japanese it was, indeed, a year for fledgling, nuclear power? government was publicly and great decisions. tacular. Few A|me)d|^ana doubt that tng President was siiieerely seeking an bonoilMlile cessation of the Vietnamese war, but many saw it as a prelude to escalation ef .that bloody conflict. And then . NATO when the present treaty “ term expires in 1969. More than 150 viruses are now Britain’s Labor government GOODWILL AUTOMATIC HEATING CO. 3401 W. Huron FI 8-0484 lust W«t» of Eliiaboth Lk. Rd. known to be associated, in one bad proved a staunch Americani vyay or another, with symptoms ally, but the British were ui deep of,the common cdld. Dr. Dingle b*ouble in Africa where the said, explaining that there are crown colony of Rhodesia had probably hundreds or even declared its complete indepen-^thousands of others, as yet un- dence in defiance of England discovered. -and of the newly emergent black muBECutar mIBVENIOIV TUESflAY l PERRY AT MONTCALM EDI CLOSED UNTIL 6 P.M.... RE-OPEN AT 6 I WEDNESDAY I MIRACLE MILE CENTER CLOSED UNTIL 6 P.M... RE-OPENS AT 6 : , : THE PONTIAC PRESg 48 West Huron Street Pontiac,'Michigan TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1966 > vie* Prealdtnt knd AdvtrtUlbg DlTMtot O. MMOItU. JO«M» 1. iibi Government Machinery Faces LpJ Tinkering* • It’s a loilg time until Halloween, but plenty of ghosts will be abroad in Washington when .Congress be-gins deMting President Johnson’s proposed constitutional amendments for reforming the Electoral College and changing congressmen’s terms in thej House of Repriesenta-tives from two to four year|Sr^ The ghosts, of course, are the spirits of th^ Founding Fathers, which inevitably will be called forth to do double duty on both pros and cons of the issues. ★ ★ ★ There is no argument that -the Electoral College has never served the purpose it was intended to that of a buffer between the presidency and the passions of the mass citizenry whom the framers of the Constitution so greatly distrusted. Today'its balloting is a mere formality, a ceremonial ratifica-^ tion of the popular vote in each state. „ The President’s amendilient would make that ratification mandatory, thus removing the theoretical freedom that now exists for an elector to cast his vote for whomever he chooses. But it would not remove tW possibility of a candidate being /^ted with a minority of the na-tional popular vote as has happened thrice in U.S. history. There is also little argument that a two-year term for House members is too brief today, when a congressman’s job becomes ever more complex and time-consuming. art form or are its practitioners merely doing what comes naturally? ★ . ★ ★ (Mfemo to Orthbpedic Surgeons:' How ’bout inviting uS to your “next convention?) __________ \ . Recognition DeferrM” for an Act of Bravery Yet to elect the whole House to a four-year tenure concurrent with that of the president, as President Johnson proposes, would remove an important check and balance which, unlike the Electoral College, has functioned in practice —^ not always well, but it has functioned. Electing half the House to a four-year term with the president and the other half two years later has been suggested as a compromise, yet this may actually t>e going to the other extreme. Voters are notoriously antiadministration in off-year elections and it miy be just as well that the effects of a “punitive” vote now endure for only two years.' The President has raised questions which are fundaniental to the Nation’s political machinery and consequently not easily or lightly to be decided. Any advice from the shades of the Founding Fathers would mdeed be greatly appreciated. The lot of the Good Samaritan is not always an easy one, as Enriquk Negron can testify. A Bronx grocer at the time, the doughty 5 ft.-5 Negron last May went to the aid of a policeman threatened by a mob —and got a knife in the back for his, trouble. Moreover, it turned out, Negron’s Puertan Rican neighbors took a dim view of his stand beside law ^d or-deff and instituted a creeping boycott of his business. ★ ★ ★ Deserted by Jriends and customers he had one? helped, his fortunes declined until last month he was forced to sell for $400 the .store for which he paid $5,000. Penniless and with a sick wife, Negron’s plight was discovered and publicized by newspapers. Ahd, no doubt to his amazement, a host of new friends appeared. ★ ★ ★ From among some 50 offers, he appropriately enough selected a circulation job with a Spanish-lan-guage daily. Mewiwhile, his fair-weather neighbors have suffered a . change of hearh Once again^ they >are speaking to him. The somewhat cynical- moral of the vicissitudea-o^ENRiQUE Negron^ knight be that besides a good heart a Good Samaritan V needs a good press agent. Income fax Table Needs Revision Orthopedists Now, Hip to Cause of Wiggle No phenomena of the times is immune to scientific speculation, it seems. Latest area to undergo technological scrutiny is the feminine wiggle. • A conclusion drawn at the annualmeeting of the Am?fi^n Academy of Orthopedic siurgeons is that wonoen wiggle when walking because they take short steps and keep their knees stiff. Hence the hip bone is forced to oscillate. ★ ★ ★ Well, its okay with us if the learnied lads want to give convention conjecture to the mechanical complexities of the distaff midriff and the gyratory gait that results. For our part, we think the effect is more interesting than the’ cause; but sined the wiggle has been scientifically recognized, we hope the experts will hip us on a: few questions that conie to mind: • Do (he ladies wiggle clock-wise^or counterclockwise? • Is Che wiggle a practical auxiliary of locomotion or mere-Jy a background feature? • Is* the wiggle a developed By EDMUND LE BRETON WASHINGTON (AP) - As every income tax payer knows, withholding is never perfect. , ■ In many cases there is a • refund due ^ from the government, or, unhappily, something owed the govemmgnt after the annual return has been sweated out. A major effort is now on ip Congress to improve the system, which has teen getting more and more out of kilter with the passing years, because withholding is based on lower-bracket tax rates and Incomes in this counti7 keep going up. In 1964, for example, most U. S. families l\ad incomes above $6,500 — and the median has gone up since. If the slice taken out of everybody’s pay check is based on minimum bracket rates and more and more wage earners moye up into higher brackets, there is bound to be trouble. This has teen the situation. ★ 'k'ilc Moreover, the tax Changes of the past two years have cranked more complications into the system. Since the inqome tax reduction was staged over two years,.there had to be a special withholding computation for the first year. It turned out to be a bit low and, last year, many taxpayers who thought their withholding had covered their, liability had to dig into their pockets to make up a difference. Moreover, a new minimum standard deduction benefiting lowest-income taxpayers was ins^tuted. BUt this change was not reflected In the withholding tables. As a result of these and other factors, the Treasury estimates, only about 12 million of the 63 million employes wte pay their tax essentially by wltjihojdiilg come within $10 a year of correct amount Withheld. Voice of the People: ‘Busy Intersection Needs Enforced- Regulations* You Con Leon Ovet Backwards Just So For The Huron-Telegraph intersection is possibly one of the busiest, in the city. Tel-Huroh traffic complicates this considerably. For that reason* the driveway into Tel-Huron from Huron Street is clearly -marked “no exit’’ by several signs. Yet nearly every time I’m there, which often, I see cars blithely disregarding the signs and pulling out into Huron Street traffic. . * ★ ★ ★ Thursday during the 5:00 rush another car disregarded the signs, pulled out into traffic directly in front of me and temporarily blocked tlifee lanes of traffic. After much maneuvering by several cars and a light change, the 'driver of this beige Chrysler wasi able to drive away, unconcerned. — As if that weren’t maddening enough, I discovered the car behind me was a patrol car, and the officer made no attempt to reprimand or ticket the driver. ★ ★ ★ ^ If drivers are allowed to flout those traffic signs so flagrantly, they should be taken down. From , the standpoint of respect for law, it’s worse to have regulations that aren’t enforced than to have none at all. INDIAN VILLAGE RESIDENT . Comments on Plight of Public Employees David Lawrence Soys: Bid to U. N. Likely to Spur Talks WASHING'TdN—The chances a veto in the Security Council, peace table. But the issues' now are that the Vi?t Nam war is . not likely to exercise that thfnjs^ves will probably never When will someone recognize the plight of public employe? Even the nation’s labor leaders would sell' us out. Has Mr. Reuther made himself aware of the facts Involved In the New York transit strike? Being past president of a public employe » union, I know how hard it is to bargain with a government agency. It took us the better part of a year to get them to the bargaining table. ■k ir it We have yet to receive recognition for our worthmess to the IS IlUl liJkCiy lU CAClCldC UlOV will pi wnwij ttc II«VC JVV w ivwv.tv t ----------- - ^ will be halted soon and an Privilege. It may not appear be settled finally any more than community. Legally being denied the r^ht to s^e, how^^oM enthusfastic about a peace they were in Korea. ■ Mr. Reuther suggest we demonstrate this? Until all recognize move at present, but it cannot The fightii^however, could this, nothing will prevent public employes*from demonstrating, be in the position of being re- end, opposing military sponsible for the blocking of units would guard the armistice peace in Southeast Asia. line for years to come as they * * ■, * have been doing ever since4933 As for Red China, it isn't a at the 38th Parallel in Korea. ' member of the U. N. and plain- JOE VANCE LPCAL 92, AFSCME, AFl^CIO ‘We Should Rise in Defense of Our Rights' Iv the North Viet Nam eovern- that solvfis DisUnguished hero or not, a convicted Communist leader ment ifiVt 801^2 t^^^ fundamental conflict be- has no place in Arlington NaUonal Cemetery. In my opinion, that ment isn i going to oe gumea f^ue bberation of peoples reserved for the truly deserving Americans. It’s about time we I S nega- nn/l cAlflck aIIaHc tn QAnilirA . ___.r ..... **AMA.i#,Ar, ..iAkic " Wa arA going entirely by Red China’s negativism. and selfish efforts to acquire Americans rise in defense of our “American rights.” We are 7hn fam ir LAWRENCE So the chances of a pe< ..c^onference are good, and if would be the happier. ^ ... . ® : . ^Thismew^tunHof events is hot and control territory against being snowed under with socialism and communism. the result of planned strategy but of an alertness on the part of President Johnson and Secretary of State Rusk to take advantage of the “breaks” that • have come. America’s way in the psychological aspects of the war. The United followed a logical course. A truce for the holiday season was ordered. Bombing of North Viet Nam was discontinued for 37 days. America meanwhile sent emissaries all over the world urging that some kind of peace negotiation be started by neutral states. Then came time to resume the bombing because the North Vietnamese refused' to heed any appeal for peace. 1^® wishes of the Inhabitants of today’s world, the formula of jrlong-drawn-out istice agreement is consid-^faFlnOTe~”p^acOci' rising loss of lives' and a con- B. M. some strict rules can be drawn up to govern an armistice, the way may be'opefBSl'slioitly to-stop military action on both sides. If the U. N. itself by a strongly worded resolution gets behind the cease-fire, it will be hard for. the North Vietnamese to violate any agreement they make. There, of course, will be some J>‘al£s will have world support concessions given. The Commu-^fw _ an intensification ot the nist faction jn Viet Nam, mis-"'lvar- takenly called the “natipnal lib- An armistice, therefore, now eration” movement, will get seems^a some form of recognition at the Ladies Enjoyed (booking Sehool Sessions rising loss oi lives niiu n cu.i- We attended the^re^enTbodtinr^---- tinging financial burden for We praise Mrs. Janet Odell and aR those who worked to make both sides especially when the it a success. underlying issues themselves ^ ^ ™ j are almost unsolvable. We came out of the school Thursday mght to fmd our c^ If the Communists are so ill- wouldn’t sUrt. ’Two police ^icers came to help us and offered advised as to force a continu- to take us home when the/ar failed ta start. It was a wondeil^l ance of the fighUng, the United feeling to have police o^ers that you trust when trust ts needed. SIX LADIES OFTHE COOKING SCHOOL ‘Proujl lo/Be Stmlents at Isaac Crary School’ (CopyrWhl I Bob Considine Asks: The President, however, didn’t want to be in the position of deliberately enlarging the war without letting the world know, that 41hs was forced on When Will V.S. Put Arm on World War I Debtors? In replj^ the letter of Another Irate Citizen, are you posiUv* these are ^udents from Isaac Crary Junior High? Even though these ^dents may be in the minority, no one stops to think of the helpful things the student body does. They have brought in food for needy families at Christmas time, students give their time to work in hospiUls, and (jtnerous contributions have been made to different organizations such as U.N.I.C.E.F. We are proud to say we are part of the student body of Isaac Crftry Junior High. ____ , . . MARSHA RITTER ■ SHARON LIPPERT Discusses Recreation Recommendations NEW YORK The next time American aid, doesn’t make A citizen’s advisory committee i^ommend^ .. t . . ... . __________>itoh cphnrkl rprrAiitinn I am -........ ..... .... iiiZjVf iiic iicAi ui|ic aiu, uvcaii i iiioivc *• ------^ — ... . , *• #i ij i himbytheCommunistsrfle was get a sharp note from the sounds today like a man who a\necessary dome over the high school recreatiim fiel^. I am k«. mAvnKAfe . ^7. *1. . V _ . ........ ........a !___T am .Qufimminff TU)t\W \n hotll hlffh urged by some members of Congress to prolong the truce. He sought a way out of his dilemma. That should shake him. . Armenia owes CONSIDINE yoii (US) $27,391,079 interest on Of the remainder, almost 37 nAillion now have top much withheld and have to Tile for' refunds, while more than l4 - million have not enough withheld. ★ ★ ★ The Treasury asked Congress to enact a new set of withholding rules. If withholding were gradunted. Tike the taX rates themselves, this change, the Treasury said, would increase'to almost 29 million the number of taxpayers who would brpak even — within $10. A, . Overwithholding would continue for almost 24 million and upderwithholding for, more than 10 million. Some people apparently like overwifhholding as a form of savirfgs. ’ ’ ■ ■ ■ , ■ i : ► •fhe House Ways and Means Committee t looked over the Treasury tables and several members said they thought they could do better. This is wher^the matter'stands while the committee finishes Its bearings. It will probably go fo work dn legislation Feb. 7, - ' * • ; • LAST EFFORT He decided finally to make a o" your easy . last 'effort to start peace nego-' 8300 loan, ask tiations, this time through the the guy why United Nations. The timing of he doesn’t do the move was fixed to coincide s o mip.th ing with the resumption of bomb-ing. , Tile United States a week , ^ ago had expressed a reluctance to take the problem to the United Nations tecanse of a feeling that such a step woi^ prove futile. Suddenly', when Pope Paul publicly advocated that the Viet Nam war issue be submiUed to Jnited NRtions, President Johnson saw a new opportunity. Ambassador Goldberg in his letter to the Security Council of the IL'N. stressed the point thft ’way: you BCl a snarp noic II uiii iiic suuiiui* iway unc a iiiau wiiu “ .7 ----- ■ — -— “ . _ . . _ , ui-i. Friendly Shark Loan Co. threat- runs a pountry that still owes not impressed — I am staggered. Swmunmg jwls in both high enii^ to garnishee because the U.S. $4,688,478,839. schoolsi Which communities hswe multiple pools. EXACT SUM Evidently Mr. Tatroe believes our schools should be posh I happen to know that France gu schools in the State. Mr. Tatroe should stiqk to educa- you’re t h r days overdue with a payment has the money to pay. That’s yoi, not approve Mason Junior High sawed-off pagodas, the exact sum I paid not long * HARRY W. FOWLER' ago for a weekend at the Ritz. We loaned $12,193,267,338 to 20 countries during World War I.‘ Principal and interest due and unpaid as of the end of the WATERFORD TOWNSHIP People Want to Decide in Joining Unions’ -M- « ». -.c c«« «. By bfetter than 4% to 1 margin (64 per cent vs. 14 per cent) last fiscal year amount to $14,- the American people believe that Congress should kdep 14 (b) 463 284 560 of the Taft Hartley Act that allows individual states to outlaw rJ 90 11 compulsory unionism. Reed Larson, Executive Vice President of u • f paid off. Li- National Committee said, “the study results show that ma- mg World .War I. . ^6,000, paid it back with $10,471 ^jgj,t (<, decide whether or not to jom a union. You might also suggest to ★ * ★ - - ------- the collector that he Prince Philip on the shoulder P'hen his highship comes here next month, cough loudly, and say, “Now about that $$,837,- NicaraguaJjjt-US-for-$141,950, retumedn and the $26,625 interest to boot. . . But the pre-Castro«Cuba is the best job of all. It borrowed $10, OW-OW, returned it after a bit and Uqcle Sam cleaned up' $2,-*‘1,751 on the interest. “By a 63 per cent vs. 25 per cent including support from 35 per cent union members,,the American people prefer that Congress should pass a law making all union membership voluntary rather than compulsory.” • ★ ★ ★ Mr. Larson said that “one interesting and significant aspect of the study was the fact that while they generally favor compulsory unionism, union members do not show an overwhelming concern for the need to .repeal 14 (h). More than half (55 per cent)-feel that thcvstates should be allowed to decide the Right to Work issue themselves.” NATIONAL RIGHT TO —WORK COMMITTEE ’ WASHINGTON, D. C. ' the War to End All Wars.” Next time Russia sends a multimillion ruble ground - to - air ‘We ard mindful of the re- rockdt systenv to Hanoi, some- Vice President Humphrey’s •hewed appeal of ,his Holiness should remind Brezhnev chauffeur made a fearful gaffe the Poge only two days ago m g„^j Kosygin that they owe'the the other day. which he suggest^ that “an ar- Americans (against whom the i-ovIhb Natinnai Cathedral bitration of the United Nations rockets will be aimed 1 $640 680- Leaving National Cathedral confined to neutral nations’ 535 from World War I in Washington, rfter a memo- ‘Resident Needs Protection Against Vandals’ mierht resnivp the niipstion ” mb iroiii »yuiiu nar i. rial service fOT the late Indian ® *• rirt'itc iMciiiTVM/'i;* c II h f mht In Prime Minister Shastri, the Mr. Henry Landry, a resident at Judah Lake, once had » TREMENDOUS INFLUENCE De Gaulle, jiTio *®“8hLin Humphrey Umonsine took first lovely, backyard but every thing has teen broken, including a rose The Pope wields a tremen- W®rid / ana tnereiore ^e- entourage headed trellis, outdoor swing support four wagon wheels and a shrina ' dous influence in many parts of ““d so™® sHgnt way trop bito the city. So*i»e- \to St. Jude. Ti prevent dam^e this man started to,build a fenca the free world, and certainly his where behind it was the car «nd set 47 posts in cement. That night they were all palled out. suggestion deserved respectful bearing President Johnson. One boy in the area hn? boasled that the fence would never ba Horrified,. Humphrey ordered built arri it looks as if haisr^^^^ ^ . !!hpk Mr This man lives akine, works nights, and caiujot afford to stay le^to^wa*^^ Presidents car jjis^roperty. We think it’s timeppeone helped «^ A ^ him. 1 * U . u u • • ELMER GRI2BNWALD BILL TAYLOR Must be tough being vice president. A vice president the only American who can’t say to the president, “Hi, haw are you feeling?” treatment by the United Stales eveft though tte Communists may prefer to oppose it. , Bnt the United Nations will, f be on the spot unless it takes .firm' measures to get a peace Ipriey going. Its prestige as a peace-keeping organization is ■| af -sfoke. Hie Soviet Upon, which has malM In Oakland. Llv- ingston, Maaxnb, Laptar and WathlaOaw Countias It It I1S.00 a year; alttwHere in'- Michigan and . GENE HEliNE ED PALII0VINE , CECIL G/KARL /• LEONARD ROBERTS J. A. CATHEY : BASIL D. SMITH s- (Continued on Page Aj7, Col. 1) ' I THE PON'AUc TUE&UAY. FEBKUARY 1, 1966 Voice of the Peop/e China Entrance 1 Castro Reiwndly Auctioning Goods (Continued from Page A-6) Wonders How One Gets Info Some New Cars . Four of us who attended the auto show at the Mall would like to know how you get into the cars. We are averagMized , people (a little heavy as^ retirees sometimes are) but we couldn’t get Into them with our hats on. If you were to" have hn accident and tdrn oyer. It would sure be hard on the neck. Guess we’ll put new motors in our old cars. , L. FOS'TER ORCHARD LAKE Case Studied Ex-Detroiter Faces Prosecution by U. S. HONG KONO (UPD-A former Detroit nurse who entered Communist China may be pros: ecuted for violation of passport More Letters on Latin American Leadership regulations, U.S. officials indicated Monday. The reaction from the Pontiac Latin residents is amusing. Mr. Chavez hps accomplished a great deal by bringing out something in them we never knew they had. Each letter from tlie long-time residents had noticeable emphasis on some past event important only to them. Ttiey fail to mention the connection , with the present benefit of the Latin community. ^ I haven’t met Mr. Chavez, yet I intend to become better Informed before I follow suit of all the self-appointed judges. He is to .be admired for daring to try and represent a community that refuses his services and has disqualified him before giving him a chance to prove himself. ★ ★ ★ Mr. Chavez should be advised to resign while all In one piece, for obvious reasons. -He’ll soon discover Pontiac Latins have a single motto: “Dog eat dog.’’ So you see, Mr. Chavez, there’s no Latin community to represent here- Ignorance is almost as annoying as resentment. ' MARY GONZALES 'lam from Peru. I am a maid. Mr. Chavez has helped me many times and also otheh people from South America. I attend his English class and now speak a little English. Manv girls from Costa Rica, Peru, Brazil, etc. can’t write too good English’' and cannot defend him. But I try. GARCIELAyALDEZ BLOOMpELD HILLS The letters denying the leadership of the Latin American community in Pontiac by Mr. Tom Chavez Jr. are giving an eJttremely distorted picture of the actual situation. They come mainly from a small splinter organization which has for some time been a rather dissident group among the EaRn Americans of this community. ★ ★ ★ ’ The fact that Mr. Chavez has been in this conhmanity for a relatively short time and some of the writers of these letters have been in Pontiac for as long as 40 years is a credit to Mr. Chavez and.a discredit to them. In his few short years Mr. Chavez has done more" for the Latin American community than these men have ever dreamed of doing. ★ ★ ★ Many Latin Americans and others have expressed their appreciation for the work of Mr. Chavez and acknowledge him • as not only the leader of the Latin American community but a leader in the community as a whole. I have never known a man more untiringly devoted to the Service of his community. RICHARD J. REYNOLDS ASSISTANT PAS’TOR ‘ FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH (Editor’s Note: The arguments concerning the topic of ’Thomas Chavez Jr. have become repetitious. Since the question has been adeouatehr covered by both sides, we are stopping publication of any more letters.) v> ^ Wonders If Gvil Rights Are for Everyone The Michigan Civil Rights Commission Says that Mr. William J. Pulte violated .the civil rights of freedom more by not selling him property. Do you have to be a Negro to have civil rights? I thought this was a free country for all. Where does a white man’s civil rights come to? Is it at tax paying time? . GEORGE E. SMITH WATERFORD TOWNSHIP Reader Questions Law on Double Parking Is it against the law to double park If someone sits in the driver’s seat? M.L.B. (Ekiibr’s Note: If there are “no parking’’ or “no standing" signs, you should observe them. Howevqr, it is a matter of judgment and if it doesn’t interfere with the normal flow o( traffic, it is usually overlooked. Location and traffic conditions would determine a decision.) . ‘We Need More Candidates Like Mr. Kuhn' In answer to Ralph Hudson’s charges that Richard Kuhn should stay off the GOP ballot, Mr. Kuhn has shown more strength to capture votes over any previous primary GOP candidate, and lost to his Democratic opponent by only 3.5 per cent of the vqte in the ’M election. We need more men of Dick’s cajiSer who unselfishly seek to serve their constituents—no "matter what the odds—for the preservation and fulfillment of the prtoclples qpd ideals on which the greatness of our nation has been built. E., H. ZELLEN WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP ‘Cubans Are Arrested for Asking |o Leave’ ’The shortage of rice is a severe blow to Castro. It worsens his already rapidly deteriorating internal situation. Since his Sep-fember speech which promised to let “all Cubans who wish” leave the country, he has been forced to throw obstacles in the way of departures. ★ ★ ★ So many military officers and government employes applied that thousands have been arrested and put in new concentrate cam(». In Havana Province alone, 75,000 people were fired from their jobs, had their ration cards cancelled, and were thrown upon friends and relatives for support. ’Their only crime was to ask to leave the country. LATIN AMERICA REPORT MIAMI, FLORIDA ‘We Can Exj^ct Mofe Trouble From France’ ' Now that Johnson has decided he needs no advice on the Viet situation, we can prpbably expect more trouble from France. I doubt de Gaulle will take kindly to a Texas tap oh his direct line to the Almighty. Gives Warning About Answering Your DoW * I warn all women-«nd children against answering your doors without making sure you know the person. Recently a young fellow knocked at my door shortly after midnight. He wanted me to let him in to do any odd"Jobfi,I might have.. No one in his right ihind wolild be out this time bf night looking for odd jobs. Can’t we have polich to patrol the styeets and watch for people like this? Are we going to have an attacker here to Pontiac as there was in Nankin Township? C. PAAD 335 W. HURON ’They said they were studying the case of Mrs. Beverly Reilly, 38, of Omaha, Neb., who entered China from this British Cdibhy about tiirqe weeks ago. was returned by the Chinese Sunday; Mrs. Reilly, who said she wanted to write a book about China, came to Hong Kong early iq December and rdhted a room in a small boarding house in Sheungshui village, near the border. It was not known deflnitdly she was in China until she was returned Suddenly Sunday. WENT TO BORDER U’S. ofTicials were summoned by Hong Kong authorities and went to the border to escort Mrs. Reilly to the downtodm district. Red Chinese officials said Mrs. Reilly had entered China by “mistake.” OWOSSO (AP)-Former City Clerk George Adi VaiiEpps, 60, died Monday in Owo^ Memorial Hospital an hour after he was to have been arraigned in Shiawassee County Circuit Court on a . charge of embezzling $3,506 from the city employes’ retirement fund. ★ #. *, VanEpps was admitted to the hospital Sunday. He had been in poor healtb for months.. VanEpps nvas city clerk from 1929 until his suspension in AprU of 1965. He had been bnarged on -four counts of embezzlement- and was arfested last Mardh! He had pleaded innocent previously and was free under MIAMI, Fla. (AP) -< Cuban refugees arriving under an airlift imogram' that entered its third month today reported the Fidel Castro government has $5,000 bond. r - prikrud 1 V JNSUHANCE 'Nationalist Chinese Should Fight in Viet' WASHINGTON (UPI) - Rbp. Robert L. F. Sikes, D-Fla., says that he would like to sm Nationalist Chinese troops fighting alongside Americans in So u t h Viet Nam. Sikes said yesterday he would like to see the Chinese in the wqr because “It is, first of all, a cause which is very definitely their own. If Viet Nam should fall, each Asian countity would speedily find itself oh the Communist timetable for conquest.' opened auction centers to sell belongings confiscatod * from persons leaving the island country. “There Is lively bidding for clothing and .shoes which are scarce in Cubar* said Ernesto Gonzalez,. one of 168 refugee flown here Monday. ^‘Auctions are held several days weekly with militiamen on guard to avoid disorders.” , f * ★ ★ ' 'The refugee airlift totql since Dec. 21 reached^ 6,700! Under Cuban regulations; persons must relinquish their property and money to the government before leaving. DRAFTING SUPPLIES Drawing Instrument Sets 198 to 19 50 Frsnch Curve* — Pjotroctort Architect and EngmeerScafet Beam Compa»*e*, Pantographs Drafting^Boord*. Metol Edge *.M Slide Buie* lie to l2$NirihS*ilniwSt “We do not know what action will be taken, if any,” a U.S. official said. “We have reported the matter to Washington.” A-8 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUEStrAY7~FEflRUABy 1, 1966 Wl WILL BE CLOSED WEDNESDAY, FEB. 2 UNTIL 5 P.M. FOR INVENTORY WEDNESDAY FEB. 2 5 p,m. to 9 p.m. SAVE UPTO 50% SAVE 50% AND MORE DURING OUR AFTER INVENTORY CLEARANCE HELD UP BY THE HEW YORK TRiMSIT STRIKE ,_V‘ COAT V. e moved to any Pontiac Central Will Host U. of M. Band Tomorrow By HELEN COLUAS Tomorrow Pontiac Central High School will host the University of Michigan Band, under the sponsorship of the schqol district’s—City of Pontiac Music Departmenh William D. Revelli will be the conductor. The band will give an afternoon performance tomorrow in the boys’ gym. The performance is for area band students, grades 5-12. A public evening performance will be. given at ^ontiac Northern High School at 8 p. m. that ime day. Both Pontiac Central and Northern band ' members will usher at the evening performance. A BENEFIT The evening performance will be a benefit for the Cultural Experiences and. Scholarships for Pontiac Youth organization. Several Central vocal groups will participate in the District Solo and Ensemhie Festival. Student chairmen and managers chosen include Gail Caughill, assistant director; James Stockwell, stage manager; Forrest Roguske and Ned Barker, publicity; and Judy Almas and George Ellen-wood, tickets and programs. Others are Pamela Harrington and Marilyn Smith, costumes; Katherine Vandergrift and Darlene Morrissey, props; and Allen Walker and Robert Alexander, lighting. Cindy Jones and Barbara Al-sey are makeup cochairmen. Saturday, at Madison Jr. High for the contest. Cential’s SeiJpr Girls’ En-aembld, Senim* fllQrs’ Ensemble, Mixed Octet and Girls’ Trio are under the direction of Michael Dempsey, vocal instructor. Mrs. Theodore Wade will direct the Central Songsters, made up of junior girls, and the Sophomore Madrigal Singers. WILL PARTiaPATE ManyTentral soloists wili a take part in the festival. Dance tryouts were held i oentiy for the dancil chorus of Central’s mnslpal, “Kiss Me Globe Trotters and the -National Football League basketball teams. Proceeds from the game will be used to finance future spectator buses. Sudent volunteers will meet at Pontiac State Hospital tonight to conduct a recreation program planned for the teen-a^ patients. _ Kate.’ Waltz and jazz dancers are Judy Almas, JStasia Bums, Lihdfr-Jackson, Marsha! Luther, Susan Ninotti and Judy Nosen-chuk. Male dancers are James Filak, William Johnson, Warren Petiprin, William White, and Ronald Young. Members of -the ballet are Mary Beth Balanger, C^thia Bryant, and Victoria Lecze! At Cranbrook School Pair Vie for Scholarship' By RICHARD BOSLEY Cranbrook has been invited to participate. The scholarship: i nfic I u d e s room and board, transportation during vacations, spending money and the like. Last week, Robert M. Sandoe, Headmaster of Cranbrook' School, announced the two winners of the Mprehead Scholarship competition: Randy Dar-wall and Tom Elliott. « ★ A ★ ■ John Morehead, Wealthy alumnus of the University of North (Carolina, established number of full, spholarships to UNC each year. Recipients of this offer are chosen by means of a competition: a board of directors asks selected schools to choose the two top all-around boys on Ihe basis of established criteria.. The \ boys fill in required If they are chosen as recipients, all the boys need to do is accept. FIRST mVITA'flONS Although the scholarships have bipen established for several years, this is the first time that Sacred Heart Holiday Ends By MARY ELLEN QUINN Sacred Heart students returned to school Monday jvith much to tell about the term holiday. Many spent the weekend at northern ski resorts. It. was recently announced that Milmary Mathews, a senior, was Sacred Heart’s winner in the Betjy Crocker Home- in February to be interviewed. ship contest. A Earlier this year, she received a lettbr of commendation from . _ the National Merit Scholarship fs a'sdiool mascot. Board. The biology blasses took a field trip to Risdqn Brothed’ Dairy Wednesday wterp they had a chance to view the ]iro-cess of pasteurization. Students Opposed to Lower Vote Age By DAVID HOHENDORF The St. Lawrence High School student body, voted strongly against lowering the state’s minimum voting age to 18 at a mock election held after classes resumed for the second semes- There were 140. votes against the change and 98 in favor. Plans for the Valentine’s Day dance are completed. The theme, “Catch Us If You Can,” seemed appropriate for the “girl-invite-boy” affair. Girls must pay one penny per pound for their dates. Seniors will attend Career Day at Michigan State University Thursday. Semester Changeover Completed team, according to playing ability. j By DOLLY GASKILL The varsity team won a vic-j ^t^ldents at Utica High School tory last week, over Pontiac almost recovered from Northern. ' f'"®* examinations as report * * * cards were passied but and a Pep club will sponsor a bas- new semester begun, ketball game between the Texas * * * Star Cowgirls and faculty mem-' A homeroom was called on bers next Monday at 8 p.m. f Monday and students having notables^ 1 one-semester courses changed The Texas team has opposed such notables as the Harlem Waterford - Kettering varsity ski team recently participated in an interscholastic slalom at Mt. Holly. PLACED FIRST Sophomore Robert Trepp placed first over-all in the boy racers, and junior Michael Boros placed 14th. , ^ Pamela Meyer and Penelope Young, both seniors, placed sixth, and 14th respectively. As teams the boys’ placed fourth, ahd the girls sixth, w ★ Cast members of the next play “The Doctor In Spite Of Himself,” were announced last week. CAST USTED Parts will be played by Thom-I Ojay, Sganarelle; Carol Methner, Martine;. John Van Roekel, Robert; Penelope Young, Geronte; Kathleen Kevorkian, Valere; David Swain, Lucas; and Karen Alexander, Jacqueline. Uthcrg la ttie cast an tricia White, Locinde; Peter Teeuwissen, Leandre; Ronald Momas, T h I b a n tJames Swartz, Perrin; and liftrgaret Huddleston and Kathleen Es-siambree, maids. Scene changers are Ona Lee, Christine Quinn, Susan Caswell and Susan Rose. * ^ The plhy will be presented in March. Dougigs Provencher was named local winner in the 30tb annual current affairs contest sponsored by Time magazine. Paul Gardocki and Paul McGowan have placed second arid; ^ third, respectively. ★ ★ Lois Brickman of Utica High has received recognition from the Veterans of Foreign Wars. REPRESENTATIVE She wjll represent Oakland and Macomb counties in the VFW voice of democracy broadcast scriptwriting contest. The newly formed Future Homemakers of America club . sponsored a splash party yes- ' The girls had fun swimming in the school pool and enjoyed the refreshments served afterward. The Girls’'"Athletic Association is planning its annual pajama party Friday. The party will be held in the school gym. NO SLEEP Girls may swim, play basketball, - volleyball and use the trampoline, in short, everything except sleep. ' ★ ★ ★ A Road Rally was held Sunday. Sponsored by Teen-age Republicans, the rally was successful. ........ ★ w ★ A Chilean exchange student Is Tt~ Yvette Desmartis of Vina dd Mar, Chile will be here for sik months studying senior ^sub-jecto. ★ * w When Yvette returns to Chile she will attend one more year of high school and then attend the University of Chile. She plans to study chemistry. READY TO TRADE GAS BURNER -“Pull boy, pull,” urges Virgil Knowles of Adelphian Academy, Holly; as he tries to poax one of the school’s mechanically temperamental buses into motion. Stumping for a new bus are Eli Baldwin, student asso-ciation sponsor, and Cassandra Hawley. Virgil and Cassandra are residents of the school dormitories. Mock U. L(. Session Planned at Romeo By XIM WHmNG Plans are in the making at Romeo High School for a mock United Nations session. The student council, sponsor . of the project, plans to hold an assembly this week to solicit the help of interested students. The council has also asked Frank Knngel, government teacher, to advise them In this project. ^David Smith, council presi-drat, says if all goes as planned the HMck U. N. session will take place In early April. The council also approyed the purch^ of an English bulldog. Donations from clashes and clubs are sought to help buy the The senior 'class chose navy and white as its colors; and%e rose as its flower. Protests Get Action: Bus Fund Is Started By ARDYTHE GALLANT The regular Tuesday Chapel J«sponsible for raising $20. at Adelphian Academy was disrupted as half a dozen, students came storming through the rear door and up the aisle. Dressed for winter weather with bright - colored muffs and mittens they carried posters and chajited, “We want a new bus. Brent Bills, Student Association president, then asked what the stndents wanted to do about getting the much-needed bus. Many suggestions came from the floor, including collecting trading stamps; selling chocolate bars and soliciting for doha-tions. \ A committee of five wfts chM-en to viork with Jack dean of boys. Each student will have to be He hopes that this can be done within the next three or four wbeks. “We need a fire under every student and faculty member to make this a- success,” Dean Stiles added. , ' a a ★ The senioV class has chosen« for lip color and flower, dark green and the white chrysanthemum, Cards and announcements are being ordered from the five committee members. a . a a The Adelphian Academy chapter of the American Temperance Society will Be represented in the statewide February cQii-tests. 2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. ^BRIMRY 1. 1966 Legislators Are Weighirig the Fate of Outdated State Capitol LANSING (AP) — Legislative If lawmakers decide the capi-lmake way for a central building| Basements of the wings wouldjcSlJlW have been t\^rin spurs toiing," said Lane, “but we can. Lane said the Michigan his-^ toricaL cdmmission atjd allied interests would doubtless pose abandoning ,the present chambers. leaders have agreed to build of- tol cannot be satisfactorily ren- in Om mid(J|e of the square. |be parking garages. Lane said action, fice wings around, the capitol ovated, they will build jdetails of exteriors would de- m tein» »«ving. and 8«rn.r s offjces Sen. Garland Lane, B-Flint.ithe front, comlileting a hoUbwr^y diocks wesi oi me ^j,y eygnt j,e said, archi-chairman of the Senate Building square, said Lane. . „ Jtectural styling would be tra- snbcommittee. said Monday that; * , ♦ w I ^ said &naje and Mo^ej^y„„3,, foundations for twin four-story The exisUng building then will ^ f^mloFFICE FQR EACH wings would be poured by au-be either saved only Mr histori-,‘~‘®*"®'^®"‘^®®®^^^ . tumn and occupied by 1968 cal viewing or to^ down to , Troops Sent to Quell Miners os Crisis Grows in Belgium Last year the Legislature deposed numerous administrative offices to other buildings around Lansing and expanded House and Senate office space. UNSOUND EDIFICE Safety officials have said for years the capitol, opened 86 years jgo, is a firetrap and ihad favored one building behind [Senators, nine hearing rooms, structurally unsound. |the capitol but the Senate final-jcaucus rooms for each party The frame of the building is jly won support for its wing con- and some joint legislative oper- wrought iron,' which Lane said cept. . ations such as a post office, jcould bend and collapse under * * * Lane said there were no plans the intense heat of fire, The Lane, who revealed the Sen-for facilities such as rdining huge rotunda*and other flue-ate’s wing plan several weeks,rooms, swimrfling pools or;like*areas combine to make the ago, said architects are drawingiworkout rooms. building a fire hazard, he said. legislative office! The Senate, wing would con-- space should take. The Houseltain an office for each of the 38 on four sides of it tindi lea^e it net functional.” i He said the Senate considers its chamber workable, but the 110 House members, he. said, are jammed into a room such that access to desks anywhere but on the main aisle is difficult. as a tall “C,” ^t said they might merely be long rectan- x gles. In any event, he said, tbO wings would not. protrude in front of the capitol. Lane said the proposed wings would not be attached "to the present capitol. He drew sketch which showed each wing If new legislatiye chambers are built, he sakl, they would connect the rWr, or west, ends of the wings: ' sketches now but cost estimates! . » » ’'■ 'I cannot yet be made. He said thel Lack of space and-poor physi-| “We are not at this point will- . / i. j I j » » cannoi yei oe maoe. ne saia mei L,acn oi space aira-pooi pnysi- . vie are iiin ai ims pomi wiii- BRUSSELS. Belgium (APi —complex scheduled for t®-,cost would be under $10 million.leal condition of the presentling to scrap the capitol build- para-W-' ■,** ------■ - —-----------------. ------------------------...........----------------------------------- » , An agreement was reached troo,|rs^ to, n^lhea^Mm^ B^^^ The government osdered para- giuih today to help state police broke out Mon- quell rioting miners and Flern- jay when the nationalist^ joined ish nationalists. Additional tbe strikers in attacking police. U-TOps were put on the alertPolice said 19 of their number Police killed two, mini day night and injured nef^s Six 0 Mon- others '" were injured in the clashes. They said about 600 strikers when rioting broke out 3(ter Winterslag coal about 400 Flemish nationalists - . . 7---- 7 , -pit and one man was injured; joined miners striking to protest when police ^fired into the' the closing of mines at Water- crowd. scj^andWiift^lag. • ’ pouCE ATTACKED Doctors announced thev would go on a nauSvide strike Sun- „,The^t['>«rs then marched to dav to back ^‘to the finish" their Waterschei; pulled down the demands for a 5 per cent hike in ^9 1 of a- mine building and at-fees paid/them under the gov- ‘a^ked policemen with bricks emment's medical insurance ,. . . J plan. Talks between insurance' Jokce fired over the heads of j &an Officials and the doctors‘he rioter.s af er tbeir tear gas r , , 1 . j siinnlv ran niif Whpn thp atfark broke down early today supply ran out. When the attack . Social Christian ' Premier'Poheemen were or-■ Pierre Harmel called an emer-at the legs of min-gency meeting of his coalition Cabinet. The Social Chrtstiansi and their Socialist coalition partners were reported split over the doctors’ demands. CRISIS helped Political squrces said that only the crisis, in the mining district kept the government together during the night Minis- A^ut 2,000 miners of 140 nationalities are on strike. The mines are to be closed because they are losing money. Train Strikes Auto; Motorist, 46, Dies HOLLAND (AP) - Andrew of Social Affairs Herve Gutknecht. 46, of near Holland, I Brouhon, a Socialist. Would nei- was killed today when his sta-! ther confiiTO nor deny rumors tion wagon was struck and, .^that he was about to resign. sliced in half by a Chesapeake; Harmel and other government , & Ohio train. OomA/I tha mininol ' spokesmen blamed the mining! ' The’engineer. Miles pwyer of district violence on the Flemish Muskegon, said Gutknecht’s ve-nationals. The miners went on hide appeared to slide into the strike last week to protest the path of the train. The victim closing of the Zwartberg col- left a wife and nine children. ir II II II II II II II II II II II II II II II II II II II II II II IL, II II II II II II II II II II niSH YOU COULD STRETCH YOUR FLOOR COVERING $$? You can, when yoii come to ADVANCE FLOOR DECORATORS for fine-quality hard-surface floor coverings by reliable manufacturers like Robbins, Goodyear, Armstrong, and Mannington Mills. You’ll have change, color, and charm in your rooms — and easy-to-care-for comfort! Drive over this week for free estimates, or — • PHONE FOR FREE AT-HOME ESTIMATES CARPETING-LINOLEUM TILE-FORMICA 4712 W. WALTON BLVO.-DRAYTON l>LAINS-n~<;674-042l II II II II II II II II II II J| BUSY MOTHERS NEED MODERN KITCHENS! So, if you'ro itruggling along with an ald-fathionocf, outdiKod kitchon . . . do somothing about it NOW. Talk to tho homo romodoling oxportt at POOLE LUMBER about modomizing your kitchon—with roach-oasy cabinott and counter tops)' and noifo-roducing coiling tilt. Phono thit wttk for fftt. ot-homo tstimatos. Eat^finoncing con bo arrongod. ASK FOR Jim McNeil LUMBER s. HARDWARE 1st OAKLAND AVE. - PONTIAC Phone FE 4-1S94 -\ G- \ Are Your Voluoble Popers Protected From Fire? They Gan Be ...a^nd a, DE3FOSIX BOX —I ooats so little! Let Us Watch Over Your Safekeepings With a SAFE DEPOSIT BOX A Safe Deposit Box protects your valuables day and night from Fire, Theft o( Loss land'for far less than Insurances, charges to protect such valuables as Stocks, Keepsakes, Coins and Jewelry Bunk at Communily - Most .People Do All Oj'^tvvs Oinii For,Sulunlay Mornififg liankhiK Except Comity Center National I Bank 18 OFnCES IN OAKLAND ahd MACOMB COUNTIES Mtmber FederalVeposit Inturancm Corporation THE PON'J IAC press} ftlKSDAy. FKiUtLAKV 1. 19(>G Regime in Algeria Gets 1st Challenge No^Criminal Action Pue in Fatality Fire Chief Succumbs by Fredonia Township, col-' ■■ at the scene of. a house MARSHALL (AP) — Carl fire Monday and was dead op Yaudes, 62, fire chief of near-arrival at a Marshall ^ospital.' (AdVtrtiMnmrt) '-.r- ALGIERS (AP)>i-Col. Houari|dents to avoid public demon- The political bureau of the MARSHALL (AP)-A state-Boumedienne’s Algerian gov-,str^ons for the time being. 'National LiberaUon Front, the ment Monday by talhoun ernment is facing ifo first seriJ About poliUcal County Prosecutor John 'm. ous cha}leogftS“ce foe^litary ^ j riotws je^eck ^ there would be no (A«vtrtiMm«nt) (AtfvtrtlMmtnt) ‘'‘Diploma Break For Higlr School Dropouts’ giers University, most of them'_j"“ “ 1^)“' ^ The Algiers Students Commit-u Ln n«no aronn!“ released. No .k.,. .k« struck by a car. Marshall woman apparently Ben Bella Sympathizers^ are oni ^ announced three-day strike protesting alleged viola-/,• Uons of university prMk|!Mby*“«"““‘“’r r . : Under nnieeteily tradition^'*? = “ Boumedienne’s police. j tv rule. ^ lK. day today and student leaders threatened to prolong it indefinitely unless their demands were met.-. The students demanded that Boumedienne discuss their grievances with them. There was no indication whether the LET, Dept. WW-T"^te Iir~ National School of Home Studv 2774.3 Mound Rd. Warren, Michigan. 48092 (ivuii.. xiicjr ncic uciiiuiiaiir,„„ tutcd 8s regards the death of igalnut Morvc™ Interior Min- ister Mohammed Oufkir, who, ... j- . . w ^ w hae„beeu IntptoM in the ale Pollce,,sa»l Mrs, Jennlnga, «#. ductlou niai protaWe fPpa™“y »a« ?truck by'a car GOODBY TO LONDON -- Queep Elizabeth II stopped off at Claridge’s Hotel in London yesterday while peparing to leave England fora tour of the Caribbean area. She and Prince Philip will visit the islands until the first week of March. ..II ij . Moroccan leftist leader Mehdi u’.™®'being backed tu6m*a drivewav .taciturn colonel wouU agree tO|B^„ ,diate, appealed to the riudents such an unprecedented meeting. I TEST OF STRENGTH Several hundred polidt| were TpromSt ?Surafoifr Algiers remaipeu pulMnUyp^ana A‘to\«n, llate"?^^"^ calm following violent disturb-Mw raided the university city ® 'tendants said she was found ances Saturday. The strike noW|H55re most students live and MORAL VICTORY dying .between the curb and m ' , , has developed into a major test'arrested 11 Moroccans accused The students’ committee sidewalk area of a driveway at Ql^-1 of strength between the regime i°f organizing the occupation of called on Boumedienne to re-, a Schulei: restaurant. DwffIfiJ OLUl V# OlUWa. vTOrI and the pro Ben Bella opposi-the embassy. lease all those arrested sinca{ > ★ ★ ★ of Queen's Sunny Tour lion. I An estimated 95 per cent uf the university’s students boycot-' ted classes Monday. ! Their leaders, apparently I,anxious to avoid further clashes minute delay due to a false couple to Jamaica,'Trinidad^and bninb alarm. Queen Elizabeth lljTobago and T2 British teirito-j and Prince Philip took 6ff today ries in the area, including rest-' for a five-week tour of Common-M^s British Guiana, wealth territories in the sunny i For the first leg of their jour-Caribbean. ney, the queen and Philip were Philip will go on to the UnitM flying by super VCIO, the rear-gtates to seek a million dollars'engine jet British Overseas Air-for charity and more trade for | ways Corp. uses for interconti-Britain. mental flights. . Just before tlip queen and her! The royal plane was to refuel husband were ta board ttieir in Gander, Nfld., then fly to jetliner, an anonymous caller Barbados. There the queen and telephone London Airport that her husband will board the roy-| a bomb was aboard the plane. al yacht Britannia and sail to The couple waited in the royal British Guiana, where the tdbr lounge' while security men officially begins Friday, searched the plane, but no bomb gi^D JAMAICA was found. * m. • ■ .p,SiiE^4oft ^brr«f>7" ”1; S rj, «"a"S _ 19. His dual mission will be to I raise money for jmderprivileged _ _jhildren and other causes Saturday about 2,000 Algerian, Friday and to reaffirm the iinl-l The poUce report said Mrs. students staged a rally in^versity’s traditional inunuhity,Schuler started to back from sympathy with the Moroccan 1 from poHce action. Acceptance the driveway after making students. The demonstration!of these demands would be r^ certain she was clear of traffic quickly turned into anlanti-Bou-|garded as an important moral but was stopped by the honking medienne, pro-Ben Bella out- victory for Ben Bella’s hereto- of an auto horn. She told police fore intimidated-supporters.' she felt'no impact. NEWl REDUCE lATdndLQ^E UP TO 6 LBS. A WEEK Capsule^! Easter to take and moie effective than the powdered and liquid food supplement, and costs less including Capsules suited to you INDIVIDUALLY by Lie. Physician, M.D Nq Gastritis or irregularity with Medic-Way caps. DON'T DIET —JUST EAT! As thousands have dorieTyoirc^aTYTdse^, 50 or 100 lbs. and KEEP IT OFF! MEDIC-WAY MEDIC-WAY 335-9205 7 Olfictt In Onklnntf ana Wayna Cauq(iai — Ona In MUracIt M perature was 52 degrees. I _ Eaclt I 39 to Age 80 I Aboat I through Variety Clubs Interna- Lile Insurance I tional and to promote British exports. I You can apply for a guar- l,| " anteed-rate legal reserve *t| I Life Insurance Policy pro-' 11 ■ viding lifetime nrotection ■ I ' viding lifetime protection I ALL-BY-MAIL from our I Home Office. Application I! Viet Cong Next Test I mailed to you without ob- ■ ligation. Te^ out this ■ final exam was! BLOOMINGTON, (AP) I reminder and mail today 1 I with your name, address, I I only 15 minutes old when an , ■ Indiana University student ■ zip code and year of birth | turned in his paper and depart- to Great Lakes Insurance ■ ^d I I H® had written only:! 60120. Dept. 1B270P8A. “Goodbye I.U., Saigon here .l' A ■■ Bi ^ come.’’ ’nme to ^ consolidate biUsI for prompt service One loan.. .one place to pay. A consolidation loan can simplify your money problems by pitting all your installment debts into one convenient package...with one monthly payment. A trained ~ counselor will be happy to review your needs with no obligation. Contact Associ^tea today. A flittnelna For evory Nood ASSOCIATES CONSUMER FINANCE CO. IN PONTIAC 6t4 Oakland Avenue..............PI 3^214 349 North Telegraph Road........682-2000 Pontiac MCill ShoppliB CH. B-4 ■ -.w, •/,: ■; \ ^ ^ _________THE PONTIAC PRESS, TbESDAY. Ii:EBRUAI^Y 1, 1906 "Future of Krebiozen in Doubt Despite Acquittol of Supporters Gets 12th Buck at 83 TARENTUM, Pa. (* - Frank Donnell, ah ardent hnnter for CHICAGO (AP) The four|acquitted Saturday, hfis called chief supporters of Krebioren|agajn for a govjemment test of have been acquitted, hut whatu^g K of the future of the drug? | i„ Washingtop, the Food and The foreipan o^the jury yhich Administration has reit- Monday acquitted Dr. ^Stevan contention that Kre- Durovic, developer of Krebioz- jjjojpn is worthless in the treat-en, said the jury was convinced cancer and cannot be that .the. goverhmept had hot>g„,^ interstate, proved Krebihzen was worthless. • ' ^ eral practitioner who adminis-|oh Dr. Ivy before unanimous MASS ACQUITTAL The U.S. District Court jury tered Krebiozen to cancer pa-!decision was reached, tients. I WWW Adolph J. Beranek, 59, the He said the ballot on the jury foreman, said after, Uiejjgjjg^jgygj, ..^gj jygj out thing. Most of MS felt it dqes'^'’- Durovic innocent, have a value.” • | Beranek Said the Issue of whether Krebiozen is an eftec- Beranek said the men were | five treatment is a question to ® emment was wrong in all 1 accusations.” The white-haired Dr. Ivy said a new test Is the only way the drug’s worth can be evaluated in cancer control. RESUMING WORK ‘T intend'to go back into research into the anticancer substance which I have been work. bornly refuspd” to act on his suggestions made over .several Dr. Andrew C. Ivy, interna- acquitted Dr. Durovic, 60. andlJ^^ggYVo^desU^yi^^ tionally known physiologist who the Krebiozen Research FoUn-j Rpranek .said Ik__Ivv-.el ■" With tw(j utliei" defendants wasdatlon, th\u clearing all hve dc line leasT^bleilli. ----- ~ ' fendants. The four men and the SilUll vu.. eAi*T U T 'ji «K,.it.ed "l»c.U8e we M n.tlbef«ol»^ by KtebttoU «kI "»t but I think there may be oth- 1 jury. i SO years, has ^ot his I buck at' the age of 83. The retired tailor, who drove to hunting camp and . bach himself, also hauled the deer to the car and loaded it without help^_______________ foundation were charged in a FACTOR f. .■ mulUcount indictment with mail ‘‘Dr. Ivy’s reputation as Po C6 D0|3 iySlBni <^0"spiracv in the sale scientist was a big factor in our years that Krebiozen be given a clinical and hospital test. The FDA, wjiich has banned interstate shipment of Krebioz-' en, said that ‘‘scientifically, the case was closed in 1963.” HOLD STAND | -The government agency said' that tests by FDA inspectors,' scientists, cancer experts and‘ chemists showed that the “so-ialtca Krebiozen powder could Ivy, director of medical re-l"°‘ larph at Rnnspvplt Ilniversitv claimed. Krebiozen has never been verdict acquitting him,” Bera- test of the drug,” he said. ’This trial, I understand, cost over $1 million. I think the mon-search at Roosevelt University; ey could have been put to a bet- and chief sponsor of Krebiozen, . . , , ter use, such as a laboratory i said he is “not yet ^ully re-l®PPT.^ .it does not now| and. promotibn of the drug. . _ ! The tpibl, the longest federal nek said. “I don’t think that a 'lieyed” by the jury’s > verdict meet the StbndArds for distribu- Sludv UnClGrtW3Y Icriminai'triarin Chicago histo-^man who would work 50 years ' X I Iry. lasted nine months and three for humanity would just dump Ka oil tVtof nvArfv\arH Beranek said the majority of and that the trial Vas “just anj tion even for investigational [days and cost something be-. EAST LANSING ,{AP)—St^ tween $350^ and $3 million. Police met with a busine^ con-j depending on who made the es-sultant ^rvice Monday to start timate. a study of the feasability of es-' . . ,, , . , . The jurors, seven women and tablishing an electronic law m-jj^gjj listened to 178 wit-formation network in Michigan. „ggggg 22,000 pages of tran-The legislature authorized g^ript which formed a stack $47,500 for the study. ^ ^ ] seven feet high. ’They heard ^ „ .physicians and cancer patients Scientific Systems for the government and defense all that overboard. 'Beranek said 12 ballots were taken on Dr. Durovic and ^2 on Dr. Phillips, 8 on Mai^ and jurors held for acquittal through incident in my quest for a clini-j*^®®'” out thq.^liberations. cal test.” ★ ' I First permanent trade union The Yugoslav-born Duroviej Sen. Paul Hi Douglas, D-Ill.,lin the United States was estab-said: “An American jury has said in a statement from Wash-lished by Philadelphia shoemak-made the decision that the gov- ington that the FDA “bas stub-'ers in 1794. NOTICE TO cm dF PONTIAC DOG OWNERS 1966 Dog Liconaot or* now duo and poyoblo attho CHy Clork't Offko, First Floor, City Hall, 450 Wido Track Drivo East, „Pdntiac, Michigan. FEE: Up to and including March 1st $2.00 Aftor March 1 st....................$3.00^ It it nscottory that ali dog owMrs in tho City of Pontiac produce a cortificato that tftair dog hos boon vac-cinotod against rabiot, in oidor to tocuro a 1966 dog liconsK If such owners do not pottots such a cditificato, ono may bo ebtoihod from thoir local votorinaiian, or at tho County oporatod cUnic, located at 1200 N. Tologiaph Road. - lui Ulc Kvivciiimcat cuiu Bloomington, Ind., which has worth- __designedjei^ral computer jto- ;ggg„ggg ^ drug, lice^ormation sySteinsriy-co--^|,gy deliberated-foi-47 -hotirs^ operating in the study. igj^^j minutes and took 38 bal- » k ' .i,"lots before acquitting the -de- ’Ihe proposed system woi*l|{gg^g„jg provide for a central bank ofi The data 2 DEFENDANT^ police ■' information, would be sent to terminals in The two other defendants are State Police posts and municipal Marko Durovic, 64, a lawyer police, and sheriff’s depart-!and Stevan’s brother, and Dr. . ments. I William F. P. Phillips, 52, a gen- Last week to save ComrSes the Glomoreus MlV^eother FUN ROOM 100-Lorge 5'X8' PORCH AWNINGS Reg.$M9:50 Completely $Q750 j Of Instolled Rambler American shows its newrnuscle! Outruns Corvair, Dart, Falcon at Daytona. Rambler wins big! Comes in 1,2 in ClassVlAccelerationtest-one of 3 events in 1966 Pure Oil PerformanceTrials. BUY NOW and SAVE NO MONEY DOWir PAY NOTHING UNTIL JULY ! OPEN SUN. 166 PJR. • PJN. Come, visit Oetioit’s most completf manuffltfuring facilities and showroom This is the car...with the newest, biggest, most powerful standard engine in its class-and itshbws-outrunnihg Corvair 500, Dodge Dart, Ford Falcon. This is the car... that ev6n with ail this performance is still the lowest-priced car made*^the U.S.A.If^. This is the car...that, with automatic trjansmission, ggit a tremendous 24.483 miles-per-gallon in the. Econ- omy Test. (The only car that could do better, by a scant 0.5 mpg. had such a small engine^that it took nearly 4 seconds longer than the American to accelerate from 25 to 70 mph.) This is the car...with more flair, more style, more downright rog^d sense" than any other car in its blase • • - the car you have to try-and soon.-Rambler American by American Motors.,.wherb quality is built in, not added on. ThefamousPureJOilPerformanco Trials held at the Da.ytona International Speedway are run under strict supervision of NASCAR' officials. Cars are selected by surprise visits to dealers. No special parts or preparation permitted. The result,.is the most realistic and reliab'le comparison of car performance ever devised. Drive the new American at your American .Motors/Rambler Dealer. --u 26400 W. Eight Mile Rd. Hi Mile West of Telegraph ; BtrrhiOgham SoutMiek) Toledo Pontiac Downnver |PR.I-inaiLS-9452 AT. 5-3595 Royal Oak 0. 7-2700 CH. 8-426) | lansint U2-S172 • SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 OAKLAND AYE., PONTIAC* • BILL SPENCE, INC:, CLARKSTON I RUSS JOHNSON MOTOR ^ALES, , LAKE ORION gl^pur products are only m good os the company behind them • HOUGHTEN » SON. INC, ROCHESTER • ROSE RAMBLER, UNION Ul THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY FEBRUARY 1, 196ft [iiulfb iiu/lAi6b> lovfiiu! UDALI $100,OQO SA;, PAINTII^ EXIPpgMfj^V $ TbDiOFfWtf Siivd^ I^l iMriUtiMR, ;»«tu«d m i0»r flr«t floor cp«< . ,....., ....., . l, .tbrottfh F«bro«y' i. ’nie'iMiibitinipi «oiti|>r^k tHo eoatnMMian^d ..... * * * “ I UkOlir fai»od« l)«Mrt jr Shnlton, Ine., to. l»ter|tr«t tti Hower porfame. Thry have jast «pm|deted • tour of Lfttia Ataerieu and Canada, and plana for a Eampean toitr for tho palntiaf* are now underway, l^ed ‘*ff»U«ir of the Oeaettr theae paintinaa had dh^rlifatj^irnteahowliif kilfewYorhta 1946 at ihe Eonedw CiallMdpa. Fin« ptihlic ahowina waa ai thia Society of the Four Arta Ctnh In Pahn B«ach,4i;'|[e sottthweatem deaerK was tm cxoeiient anhleet {or Oaifa pnioue eoneepta of r^lor and periqpeethre. Ha liviM there for some ycafa and ii ^inimiuhle ‘ a inimitah)e«tyle>has eapturad on eanrasthe very depth, the ntxatery,. the intensity of M*a desert as wall ail the hannttotriy beantifni Betcrt Plower fnmrance.. Since the 'IVilogy waa inapired by this , romantic peifwme, Hall has nsedY'enna and Apnlio as the eternal syMM* pf love. -V:- iliii “THE INVISIBLE LOVERS” “Two lovers are imprisoned in the mystery of limitless space, romantic essence of the desert. Of one of the fossilized foot-'prints of the feminine lover is born the dandelion, echo of the moon-the symbol of feminity and purity.” “MIRAOE” “The aura of classic antiquity evokes the desert flower, issuing from the forehead of Apollo.” AAontcomerv WARD ... ik “OASIS” “The visible lovers. At the approach to the oasis, Apollo and Venus materialize in empty space. By grace of tiie desert flower they rise into view from the aridity of the rocks.’* These provocative paintings have evoked enthusiasm wherever they have been shown. Stop in and find the invisible lovers. ' See ma [iii^ eoCleeGoii ori^ifuii paiftGfigd*(iiui Mfvuiduieta ill [(oor §itbii(M£ depcMtnuitt Choose from a wide collection of exciting original paintings, now on display. Styled high with''rich, handsome frames. Prices start at thirty-nine dollars to one-hundred and twenty-nine dollars. There’s a wide selection of reproductions also on display. Prices starting at five dollars to nineteen dollars. ^ Choose from a wide assortment of scenery or maybe yon’H lean towards still life. There are many to choose from here. Modem decor demands I the originality of contemporary and wo hamjiut the contemporary painting to accent your demr. Stop up and visit onr second floor glftware dept, today. I hfpffs* H\»si4>rn .sitfit* in tvani4»d eoiora iittifP hnys*styiv in tn^n nn^firnn fabrics Wheat, black, loden j^reen and faded blue! Now permanently-pressed finish comes to WestAn styled jeans / ssith wide belt loops! Stay-neat blend of polyfester- cotton ....timesavers because they never require iron- .... ing. Regular and slim boys’ sizes 8 to 16. Boys’ Udther Western BELTS ......... SALE! 1.25 •«rt' rioltalnf. Fun • Ba4i«t 8tAi«—PonttM M This is the age group that wears a lot of jeans! These time savers need no ironing . . . they’re permanently-, pressed, no special care is needed, they can be worn direct from the clothesline or dryer! Two stay-neat blends . . .’polyester-cotton in navy blue; cotton-polyester in loden. Little boys sizes 4 to 8. 2 27 in the 3Matt j Famity~nlght Shopping tUl 9:§9f Monday through Saturday . •. Plenty ot free parMmg . . ' 7 -7^ TIIK PONTIAC, yKKSS, TUESDAY. FKHKl:AK^ 1. 19fi6 The second annital “Hellenic Night” dinner dance of the Pontiac chapters of the National Order of AHEPA and the Daughters of Penelope will take place Friday evening at the Kingsley Inn. Making a check-up of reservations and other last-minute arrangements are (from left) Beth Gregory, West Hurori Street; John' Condon., also of West Huron Street, general chairman; and Mrs. George Pratt, North Edith Street, president of the. Daughters of Penelope. Proceeds of the pre-Lenten affair will go to charities of the two groups. Mrs. Socrates V. Sekles is fochairman. . She s Throwing Up Screen to Hide Her Addiction Gen. Marshall Opens Series , at Hunt Club Brig. Gen. S.L.A. Marshalll ffiU iOMigurate the “Celebrity Series’’ at the Bloomfield Open Hunt Club pn Feb.AO following the musical ride and family dinner at 7 p.m. Gen. Marshall served with the United States Armed Forces from 19W until his retirement in 1960k In civiliith life he is a newspaperman, military critic and author. . ^ ^ “Pork Chop Hill” is perhaps one of his most noted books. The “Celebrity Series’’ will feature speakers in commerce, industry, professions and the arts within the/ club membership. ^ Program Chairman, Mrt. William E. Hartman Jr., has announced future programs will include Frank McGinnis of the George Pierrot World Adventure Series, Ernest A. Jones of McManus, John and Adams and Robert M. Halsted, sportsman, raconteur and noted horseman. ABBY DEAR ABBY: My bride of five weeks is trying to quit the c i g.a r e 11 e habit, so now she smokes one of'’« those ladies’ pipes, It is dainty i and fancy, but,^ it's a pipe air the same and' she .smokes real he-man to-?, bacco in It. She likds to smoke* in bed at night while reading the newspapers, and she knocks thit dam^ pipe "BJlInst the headboard, the night-stand or the wall to loosen the tobacco. Our b e d 1s always full of ashes, and the bedroom smells like a tobacco warehouse on fire. Should I tell her that either that pipe has got to go, or she does? BMOKED OUT DEAR SMOKED: Don’t threaten her or she’ll heed even more nicotine to calm .her „ nervfa—Substituting one bad habit for another is useless. Believe it or not. some smokers are so badly hooked they * needf medical help to effect a cure. Your bride sounds like a victim. Don't wait for smoke signals. ★ ★ ♦ DEAR ABBY: The principal —^—H»f-1he school our children attend cajls my sister and me by our •first names at all the PTA meetings. She taught us 18 years ago. I asked her please tq call us “Mrs.” and she said she didn't know the “Mrs." meant so much to ua. I think she should have a ■ little more respect for us in , front of other parents. Dali Will Be on Display at Ward Store Three famous Sajyfldor Dali paintings, valued at IIOO^OM, are on exhibit at The Pontiac Mall Montgomery Ward store through ‘ Feb. 8. Called .“Trilogy of the Desert,” these paintings were Icommissioned by Shulton, Inc. to IntdtjM-et tHfeir famous Desert Flower perfume. They hang in the office of the company’s president in Rockefeller Center, New York aty. •k . * k Shown first at a private exhibition in New York in 1946, the paintings have had numerous tours. .They have just' completed a tour of^tin America and Canada and plans for a European exhibit are under way. After the current tour, they will be .returned permanently to New York. • Dali’s paintings come to llje Mall at an appropriate time. About 750 entries in, the 1966 Mall art show are also on exhibit. k k k In addition, the Pontiac Socie-, ty ofWlists will be demonstrating various forms of art in a* V booth in The Mall. We are respectable people in our neighborhood and church. It’s no fun hiring a sitter ai^ going to PTA meetings just to pend up feeling like the end of a janitor’s mop. ' DEGRADED MOTHERS DEAR “DEGRADED”: Hold on! I am sure the principal Intended only to be “friendly”— not degrading. Dqp't forget, she did know you by your first names when you were pupils. However, since you did make an Issue of it, she might have accepted your criticism a bit more graciously. But 1 think you -are a wee bit touchy. * ★ * Hate to write letters? Send one dollar to Abby, in care of Pontiac Press for Abby’s ^klet, “How To Write Letters For All Occasions.” High Style hr Middle-Class Now^argain i^^hrons PARIS (iJPI) - Lofty Paris high fashion for the first time dropped to the level of middle-class women. In what may be a significant sign of the changing Paris high fashion industry, the salon of Capt. Ed^ward Moly^eux an-nounced at the jBliening of its spring collection > that it was lowering Its prices from $160 to $250. Before, a Molyneux suit or dress began at $800, as they do at most of the high 'fashion salons in Paris. Other salons in these days of rising labor and fabric costs ,............ have dropped out oHugh fash: t^rude ion to offer only re||y to wear combined,* which would permit “a high number of women to dress themselves at a grand couturier and not in a boutique.” ★ * * “It is our conviction that a new impulse then will be given to high fashion in.^reserving its aspect as a creative laboratory, and at the same time allowing a greater number of clients to wear it.” NOTED CUSTOMERS Moiyneux, who was one of the biggest designing names of the 30s in Paris, formerly dressed such womeA as actress Ger- in boutiques, such^ Simonet-ta-Fabiani and Real. Most high fashion houses already have ready - to - wear boutiques, including Christian Dior and Pierre Balmain. MOLYNEUX But Molyneux claims to be the first "to............... middle-class meaning custom and hand-made clothes with several fittings and presentation of the designs on live mannequins. Molyneux announced his ready-to-wear boutique and high fashion salon 'would be of Windsor. He came out of re-, tirement a year ago to open a new salon near his old place on the Rue Roy ale. k k k Today in his third post-retirement collection, Molyneux abandoned his conviction that skirts should cover the knees. He gave in to the skirt panic and raised his to the top of the kneecaps, whi^ is-eonservative now in Paris. His mannequins still managed to look dignified because they wore shoes with medium heels instead of the baby-doll flata that have been shown around Paris. Ae WlrtAMI* Capt. Edward Molyneux, fighting a battle for the return of the ladylike lady, presents his spring collection. This red and white strawberry - printed linen dress, pleated back and front from yoke to hemline, is loosely belted*at the slightly dropped waistline. Club Meets in St. Petersburg Members of the Pontiac-Flori^a Club will hold its annual meeting March 1 at the American Legion Hall on Fourth Street, St. Petersburg, Fla. Those wishing additional information may contact Mrs. Harley Bowers of Tarpon Springs, Fla. “The Invisible Lovers" oni of a series of oil paintings by Salvador Dali, was inspired by the western desert. It was painted especially for ShuKbji, Inc., to interpret their pesert ¥\ower perfume. With two others in the same series, this original Pali will be on display at the Montgomery Ward store in The Pontiac Mall today through-next Tuesday. Can you find the heads of two lovers whose footprints are fossilized in the Mnd to represent the eternity of love? i No Present Is Necessary in This Case By The Emily Post Institute Q: A friend of mine has been divorced six years and is now remarrying her ex-husband. The ceremony will. be private but they are having a party afterward to celebrate their reunion^ I would like to know if y/e', her friends, are expected to give her wedding presents. I don’t think it is at all necessary, but there are some who feel that^ wedding presents should be' sent. What is your opjnion? A; I agree with you-that wedding presents in this ppse are not at all necessary, especially , for any of her friends who gave her presents at the time of,her first marriage. ■ SIGNING CARDS Q: When signjng a greeting card to a relative or very close friend, should it be signed with one’s full name — Jane Brown, for example, or should it be signed with one’s first name alone? A friend and I were discussing this the other day and she said that to sign a card with one’s full name was much too formal, and therefore not correct, when sent to a relative or close friend. What is your opinion on this? A: If you are certain that..the, relative, or friend,' will know who Jane is, you may sign simply “Jane,” but as it is moat, annoying to receive a card signed with only a first name and have to guess who sent it, the last name should be Included if there can be any doubt as to your identity. RING BEARER* Q: My foor-year-old son is to be the ring bearer at my nephew’s wedding. I would like to know if I am supposed to furnish the white satin pillow on which he will carry the ring or is it furnished by the bride? A: The pillow is rarnish^ by the bride. *______ Name Heads of Committees for the Opera Mrs. Stephen DuBrul, Lake George Road, and Mrs. Ralph Curtis, Noble Road, cochairmen of the North Oakland Grand Opera Association committee, have announced area chairmen. k k k They are: Mrs. Arnold Brown, Pontiac: Mrs. R. J. VanWagner, Lake Orion; Mrs. Fred Davis, Romeo: Mrs. Frank Lambert, Clarkston; Mrs. Edmund L. Windier, Waterford; Mrs. Ben Coleman, Lapeer and Mrs. J. L. Walters, Avon Township. ★ ★ ★ Among the several sub-cochairmen in the Rochester area are Mesdames Clare McGoon, Wallace Hodges, Donald May-hew, Joshua Madden, F.‘ P. Whipple and John Yount. Dr. Walter Collins and Dp. David DiChiera are serving as advisers. « w ★ From funds earned in the committee’s pupjJet booth during the Apple and Arts Festival in Rochester, a donation of $150 was presented to the Meadow Brook School of Music scholarship fund. Another $75 scholarship was given to the Oakland University Opera Workshop directed by Dr. DiChiera. Flower Art to Be Shown Waterford branch. Woman’s National Farm and Gafden Association will hear a program on Japanese flower arranging, Thursday, In the home of Mrs, Mark Stewart on Orangegrove Drive. , v k k k Mrs. Glenn Bedell of Sylv*n Lake who -lived in Japan for five years, will lecture and demonstrate the art. k k k The violet and the amethyst are the flower and jewel themes for the month. Assisting the hostess at. the 1:00 p.m. meeting will be Mrs. Carl Koehler and Mrs. Robert Matema. I BARBARA JANET WILIER SUSAN CHERYL VERSHURE Mrs. Steven Worm of Williamsburg and the late Mr. Worm, to Lyndon Claude Salathiel, son of the Lyndon Salathiels of Shore View Drive. MRS. LYNDON C. SALATHIEL Salathiels Fly to Aspen for Skiing Honeymoon Among ski enthusiasts at Aspen, Colo, this week are the Lyndon Claude Salathiels (Mary Patricia Worn) who left Traverse City by plane after their recent vows in the Immaculate Conception Church. k k k The bride, daughter of Mrs. Steven Worm of Wiliiamsburg and the late Mr. Worm; was escorted by her brother James at the noon ceremony. Her husband’s parents are the Lyndon Salathiels fA Shore View Drive. A bouffant veil of illusion fitted to a cloche cap of lace liters::. ' Calendar > 'I TODAY I Pontiac Symphony Or- | chestra Concert,8:30 p.m., | Pontiac Northern High |-School. I WEDNESDAY J Parliamentary Stndy Club, 1:36 p.m.. Masonic S Temple on East Lawrence »i Street. . $ THtJRSDAV ' , Friendship circle, Wei- J come Reb^h Lodge No. | 241, noon PONTIAC IfrfciwreiM^ ^t^SfNESS INSTITUTE R. E. McLane Speak Vows THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1966 Rilda Cobble, R e c e p t i 0 n in the Italian* American Club followed the Recent vows of Hilda Aldean Cobble and Robert Edward McLane in-the Central Methodist Church, Their parents are Mrs. Chester J. Knickerbocker of Myr-tle Street, NEED HELP’ USE .PONTIi^ PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS. LOW IN COST. FAST IN ACTION. PHONE 332-8181. MRi R. E. McLANE m's coat sale •Untrimmed regular to $135 $39.0 $79 Here's your chance to buy a quality coot at prices not normally found at Alvin's. Buy now and save. Fur Trims regular to ^325 $79,o$199 A great selection of opulent furs in minks, foxes, or beaver that, accent fine fabrics both domestic and imported. Shoe Sale Save ■up to 50% ■ Caressa-Mr. Easton regular to 16.00 ♦10 Andrew Geller — DeLiso Debs ' •Town & Country DRESS-r«gfo15.00^7 r'eg. to 30.00 *16 regto^2L00 $12 Town & Country - Cdjifornia Cobblers CASUALS rpg. to 12.00 ■T - ■ . ■ '^5 ' HURON at TELEGRAPH Cobble and the 'Carl E. Mc-Lanes of Davison. COLONIAL GOWN White peau s a tin with French lace bodice and skirt panel of< galloon lace fashioned the bride’s redingote-style colonial gown and train. A petal headpiece held her silk illusion veil and a white orchid centered her bouquet of white rosebuds and carnations. Honor maid was Mqry Kis-sick with Mrs. Larry Harbert and the bride’s sister Carrie Knickerbocker as bridesmaids. t e v e Merrell were flower girl and ring bearer for their aunt at the rit^ performed by Dr. Mil-ton H. Bank. Marking theif 60th wedding anniversary are Mr. and Mfs. Fred C. Wilkins of Orchard Lake Road. A buffet dinner was given in their honor on Sunday, by their children, Darwin Wilkins arid.Mrs. Ele.anore Van Mar ter of .Orchard Lake and Mrs. Lulu Baldwin of Es-' ,canaba. The pair, wed Jan. 31, f906, have 12 grandchildren and U great-gmndchildreh. Western Look Gallops to Fore (UPI) - .The Western look with Its levis, cowpoke shirts and yoked jackets is galloping into a first place fashion spot, the National Cotton Council report?. Sample: calico printed canvas pants, shaped like^jeans, and teamed with a matching* voile cowboy shirt in Wip-pette. The tailored shirt TRIO TAXI CAB CO. OR 3-5510 Drayton Plains and Surrounding Area’s Hours: 5:30’til 2:30 A.M. SCISSOR HAtRCUniNG ^ J18 yuKwl 1 into the hip-riding, slim-fitting cowgirl pants. One maker. Country Calicos, feminizes the trend with a long, red calico prairie skirt featuring a drawstring waist. The blouse: white cotton eyelet. PERMANENTS, f*S Fr.t Parking un Court r Beauty Shop RIkcr Bldg. PE 3-7m |i r ur ooLoNULunmN ■ Wfth Gerald C. McLane, his brother’s best man, were the bride’s brother, Joseph Cobble and Kenneth Schaschl, as ushers. Troy Church Is Setting for Wedding Ceremonies Chicken After a honeymootl trip to the Boyrie Highlands ski area, the couple will be at home in Flint. He has completed three years’ study at ferris State College. I SAVE ON WMIPAPER 41 SALE! SPECIAL SELECTION FROM OUR STOCK REDUCED TO THE TOWy-tOT OVER IM.iMO ROLLS IN STOCK RED TAG SPECIALS CLOSE OUTS BIRGE FLOCKS . .$2.49 S. R VARLAR STAINPROOF . : .$1.29 S. R. BIRGE PREPASTED 39c S: R. AND UP FULL WALL MURALS . .$10 ACME PAINT The Allan Wayne Frinks (Linda Jean Stewart) greeted guests in the Sylvan Glen Inn following their recent vows in St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church, Troy. Candlelight silk peau de sole fashioned a bridal gown and cathedral train for the daughter of the Benjamin D. Stewarts of Rochester. Elbow-length sleeves were embroidered with seed pearls. HEATHER ON VEIL Heather and Stephanotis arranged in a. circle held the silk illusioh veil and were re-. peated in a nosegay held during the afternoon ceremony performed by Rev. Carl R. Sayers. ~Dawii Kostcckc of Milford FAMILY STYLE • DININGROOM • COFFEE SHOP • CAR SERVICE • CARRY OUT ^ InciudBs crispy golden brown lip-smocking chicken cooked .V. ...,h soup, vegeta- ble, whipped pototoes, biscuits and hot chicken gravy*. $]85 ALL YOU CAN EAT ; 5896 DIXIE HWYue WATERFORD They'll Host Their Mates JHeumode The second annual “Sweethearts Night’’ dinner being held by the West Side Christian Women’s Club Feb. 11 will take place in Devon Gables at 7 p.m.-------- •TIP-TOE' SEAMLESS SHEERS ML The Rigk Hai;tsoes will provide the musical part of the program and a fashion show commented by Jackie GrAmpi^f ton will be held. Styles will be fiinningham. William K. Viekman a missionary for a number of years in Japan, will be the speaker. He is now director of the New York Area of International Students, Inc ' s the bride’s only attendant. Gary Frink of Alexandria, Va. was his brother’s best man. They are the sons of Mrs. Wayne C. Frink of Rochester and the late Mr. Frink. Mark Stewart and James Frink, were ushers. The newlyweds are at home in Rochester after a brief honeymoon. She formerly attended Wayne State Univer-sify. Paisley Prints Score for Ties (UPI) — Shopping for ^a young man’s tie? Designers are adopting printed paisleys in'a big way, the Men’s Tie Foundation reports. More mature men seem to prefer wov- SAVE 25% II BABY SHOE BRONZING DURING FEBRUARY NMTItliitlMttnillyMYt — M kmuiiii 'bibif't krtclous jfeoM. Witk m7 •doribl* Niff ad cniiT priierved fonver la Mild Mtil they Mki prictlin lift! t and finishes 45 Partrait Stand C Onl Mlnlitor* iBilMCB S1I.95 Bran $14il 15.95 - 11.M 15.95 - 11.» 14.95 - Hit 4.50 ” aiaiMi PLUS MANY MORE...Ask for FiM FsMa taakvlnc fair ISb NT IMtar Bring Shoes Jn NOW...Sole rnds Februaiy 21 _____ Phone 334-0725 *7t HirrktM Lmp 51 UuBMutid ShN mx eivls Junior Bootery 1060 W. Hufon (Huron Cuntro, Nuxt To China City) ' 2 pairs $1. 82 N. Saginaw St. ’ There’s a trend away from Reservations may be made I stripes„too. In addition to the by calling Nfrs. Jack Wilkin, paisleys, popular prints in-son of Hollingsworth Drive, elude medallions, club fig-Coinmerc^ownSu^ ' ures. - Open Today IN OUR NEW BUILDING 1710 South Telegraph -i4"MiIe~Soutli of Orcifiard Lake Ave. Styled for today’s gracious living . . . fashioned to bring forth great music. ^895 In Ebony Bench Jnrluded Priced at f^LOWREY ORGANS fom^495^ ySED SPINET PIANOS front '29^ PLENTY OF FREE PARKING! **Where Music Is Our Business" Open Every Evening Til 9 Sat. 5:30 LOkGINES THE WORLD’S MOST HONORED - watch- men, NEVER WIND THIS WATCH ... NEVERMISSADATE... LONGINES AUTOMATIC CALENDAR, AIL-PROOF* PROTECTED AGAINSTMOISTUR^____ DUST, AND SHOCK-AN INCREDIBLE VALUE. $110 BWMp BMoitd hand, toa. ^ TERMS TO SUIT YOU WKCJ Jewelers 108 NORTH SAGlhAW FE 3-7114 Parfc Free in WkCs Lot at Rear of Storm THE PONTIAC PRESS^ TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 1. 1966 B—9 AMHjrilf SOUND tl TIMIti. B«lion» onnauKM, jntMi Utoplon haaring O'd IliM li at ^« a Nilmb' No cordi, no wirtih M ploiNc tuO it providti rtmorkobly nalurol higt fidtlit/ htaring, ol natural I ptoplt wllli mild loMM. So oo»y to i In ond Old of ploco wdiM you nttd I. NEAmNOAID CENTn £ar( If. Gla$pi0y Judy Fitzpatrick Heads Her Sorority 138 N. Sacinaw St. Pontiac 3I4-1111 O/flc* with Dr. J4rry Lynn NOW .OPEN EVENINGS Dr. E. D. Van Deusen Fool Sporialitl 5648 HiKhlanil Road OR 3-L335 Busy getting ready for a Valentine card ' party and dessert sponsored by the Pontiac Mis-sionaides, Inc., are (from left) Mrs. Basil Martus . of Myrtle Street and Mrs. Stanley A. Hustosky of Lakeview Street. ♦’ Missionaides Sponsor Party The Pontiac Missionaides, Inc. will hold a desert and I card party Feb. 15 at 8 p.m, in the First Federal Savings of Oakland Building. Cochairmen for the event are Mrs. Basil Martus and Mrs. Samuel Lemer. Assisting them will be Mrs. Allen Neville, Mrs. Adrian • Huir Styling ♦ Permanents hvrningt hy Appoinimtnt >ERDA’S BEAUTY SHOP KE 2-0361 .Sl.t K. Pike at North Franrii DECOUPAGE' SUPPLIES Available at PAT ULLY HOUSE OF COLOR 3139 West Huron St. FE 8-0427 Teens Can Do Bookwork Well AMARILLO, Tex. (UPI) -Teen-agers often make the best bookkeepers on a farm or ranch, according to farnt management specialist James Murphey of Amarillo. Murphey says farmers who prefer to spend their time with production problems should turn their records over to wives or children, especially their high-school aged youngsters. “They are good at arithmetic and often learn to be better bookkeepers than their parents," he said. Unwanted HAIR REMOVED Fait — Saf« — Pcrmanant N.,sh.rtw.,.M.«,ou I Flashin' Fashion get accustomed to many of FREE CONSULTATION the new prints for spring. REBECCA BONNER Such combinations as red, yel- low and violet can come'as a . shock. But don’t be a fashion drag. Try them. You’ll find BUY. SELL, TRADE - - - USE amazingly wil^ combi-PONTAC-PRESS’WANT ADS. | roloring'^*” ^ ***'^**'* Shapemakers fa8hion begins with a foundation spend 5 minutes in Qur fitting room and s^e the difference Sp«riaUy-T^in*d CortetinrtM All Nationally^ Advertiaed Brands. Bpbette Shop 16 N..Saginaw, Downtowii Charge AccounU FE 1^.921 Free Parking Magnan, Mrs. Phillip Schur-rer, Mrs. William Bridge, Mrs. Herman Klinck and Angela Pastorina. ★ ★ ★ Proceeds will be used for a mission group in. Ongole, India. • . Bride's Unde Unites Couple at Ceremonies Off on a northern Michigan honevmoon are Mr. and Mrs. George Edward Curtis (Linda Lou Duncan) who chose the First Social Brethren Church for their recent vows and reception. Rev. John Hancock of Gary, Ind. performed the ceremony for his niece, daughter of the Galvin E. Duncans of Tee The bride’s sheath gown of Chantilly lace over white satin was styled with draped skirt and chapel train of satin. She wore a bouffant illusion veil with* rose head-piece and held a Bible arrangement of white carnations. Mrs. Jam^ Smith was honor matron along with bridesmaids, Sue Watson and Nancy Gurtis. Pamela Findley was flower girl and John Duncan carried the rings. ★ ★ ★ The bridegroom, son of Mr. and Mrs. James E-. Curtis of Warren, had George Chippi for best man. Darrell Duncan ushered with Roger Hancockk Judy Fitzpatrick, Eastern Michigan University Junior, has bean installed as president of Gamma Zeta Chapter, Alpha 3fl Delta sorority. Secondary education major, she is the daughter of Mrs. Thomas C. FUzpatrick, Mary Day Avenue. WWW other activities for Miss Fitzpatrick are: homecoming committee, Association of Women Students judicial board, Panhellenic and Campus Service Corps. FLORIDA A. AND M. Speakihg at a recent Sunday' Vespers program at Florida Youngsters Write Own Textbooks BURIIN6AME, Calif. (UPD — Remedial readers in elementary schools here are writing their own textbooks. The subjects deal with events from the child’s life, itkig the zoo, caring for a pet or a family trip. GIVES CONnOENCE "Reading a story about real-life things gives a child confidence," said Mrs. Alice Ragghianti, a first grade teacher. “Many children freeze up when they see a book. They think they can’t »read it.” • *■ * *. The language art approach used in the Burlingatne remedial classes is in getting the students to tell about their lives. Then the teacher types the stories and helps the “author" read his story aloud, w ★ w Mrs. Ragghianti works with one child at a time. Eventually the student gets up in front d the class, reads'his story and often asks others to read it also. A “The confidence comes when a child realizes a book is a story of real-life happenings—their own experiences,” she says. A. and M. University, Tallahassee,‘’was senior law student Elbert L. Hatchett, son of Joel Hatchett, Earlemoore Boulevard, and Mrs. Keola Hatchett, Esther Street. Representing the Student Bar Association, he spoke on “The New, Negro." An Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity member, he has done undergraduate stud| dt Central State College, ^ilberforce, OhH, and University of Michigan. KALAltL^pO Among 73 Kalamazoo College seniors spending the winter quarter off campus in independent research or practice teaching is Marilyn Coifing, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Coffing, Pontiac Drive. Miss Coifing is practice teaching in German and history at Bloomfield Hills High School. LINCOLN MEMORIAL U. Judy Ruth Pressnell of Ed-wood Avetiue, West Bloomr field Township, has been pledged by Delta Theta Sigma sorority at Lincoln Memorial Uni^iersity, Harrogate, Tenn. MSU A pledge of Phi Kappa Tau fraternity at Michigan State-University is Eric J. Larson, a freshman. He is the son of Mr.' and Mrs. Peter S. Larson, Kenilworth Avenue. NOTRE DAME Timothy J. O’Neill, son of Mr. and . Mrs. Robert J. O'Neill, Locklin Lane, Union Lake, has bdbn. iiutiated by Beta Chapter, ~^ta Gamma Sigma, national honorary business fraternity at the University of Notre Ifome. Memb^-ship in the fr'|®Emity, is limited to the top four per ycent of the junior class and top ten per cent, senior class. ★ * * After receiving his business administration) degrM this month, he will attend the University of North Carolina for graduate studies. WESTERN MICHIGAN Janet Ruth Taylor, daughter of Mayor and Mrs. William H. Taylor Jr., Ottawa Drive, ha& been elected president Of Draper Hall at Western Michigan University. She is an elementary education junior.' it it it ^ . Jerry Cavalier, a junior at ENROLL TODAY-( There it a Demand for Cosmetologists! 1 Hi S. SAGINAW-PftONE FE 4-2352 Western, has become a mem-^ her of Sigma Chi Fraternity and a charter member of its new Zeta Nu Chapter. Re b the son of "W. and Mrs. Clarence. Cavalier, Lakeview Avenue. BUY, SELL, TRADE - - - USE PONTAC PRESS WANT ADS. Mrs. Ragghianti say's a similar technique is used with remedial readers up to the seventh grade. We would like to welcome you to visit oor showroom and look over our wide selection of sofas, chairs, bmps and many more items for your home. Stop by today! . -i-T FURNfrURI •a T«». T""n» r.fmUarr aad a«Uato fixed for rodemgitlon, at least a in a newspaper or publication clr-itod In the City of Detroit, Mlchl-J, which carries as a part of Ita regular service, .notice of tho sale of municipal bonds. principal and Interest will be payable at such bank ,«r trus.t company which quallflet as a paying -—1 under Federaf or MIchligan law which shall bo designated by the - sol purchaser of the bonds- who may aTso designate a similarly q co-paylhg a^—• 9-paylhg agent. ■ The said bonds are asseosed against Special Assost ____ .... . ... . . Pontlac-CIInton River Drain No. 2 made to defray the cost if locating, eslabllshing end constructing the County of Oakland on account ot drainage ot Oakland County highways andk against the City ot Pontiac. The State' of Michigan and the County of Oakland -------- ,,^,vnenls Ip full. The ;“ro^'^i;j sufficient to p_, _____. . " with' Interest without llmllallon as to ite or amount. By offirmativo vote et Srds of Its lembers elect, the Oakland County Board of Suporvlsofs has ptod|M the full --------- - - - c^rf - • > «r>d ertdit ot tl 1 the pa'ymenf of a ;Vcri,ir, ber of Knights of Pythias Lodge No. 19 Surviving a son Francis C. of Pontiac; a grandson; a great-grandsonj a sister and two brothers. DOUGLAS A. KALBFLEISCH Service for Douglas A. Kalb--fleisch, 73, of 66 S. Roselawn, will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Pursley Funeral Home with cremation at White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Kflbfleisch, i former em- (ploye| of Holly Machine Co., died yesterday after a iong ill- ;ss. Surviving are his wife, Doris; a son Stbart G- of Saginaw; anji two grandchildren. JOSEPH LANYI JR. Service for Joseph Lanyi Jr., 54, of 542 Meadow wiil be 1:30 p.m. Thursday at Sparks-Griffin Chapel with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Lanyi died yesterday of heart attack. He was a mechan- , , I Surviving are a son, Robert car crash in Waterford Town-|L of Birmingham; and three ship this mftriiing, were held for grandchildren, observation in Pontiac General | Hospital. Edward R. Cook, . 28, of 4761 Maycrest, Waterford Township, apparently was making a left turn from Cass-Elizabeth onto Cooley Lake Road when the collision occurred. ■k * * Cook’s vehicle and a car driven by Davjd L. Liddy, 25, of 759 Melrose both struck trees following the initial impact, according to township police. A passenger in Liddy’s car, John J. Samson, 26, of 845 Rob-inwood, also was rushed to the hospital. Wants Firemen Off All Freight Trains Follow Detroit Raid Charges Filed on 8 Cyclists DETROIT (AP) — One man was charged with assault with Intent to kill apd seven other persons with carrying concealed weapons at their arraignments Mdlvclay after a police raid op a motorcycle club Saturday. Joseph H. Weiner, 28, of De-^it pleaded innocent before Recorder’s Court Judge Elvin Davenport to the assault charge in connection with the ^an. 9 •hooting of Amol(f Heleski, 23, of Detroit, at the club. ■ * '* - > Examination was set for Feb. 21. Thirty-one other ^youths apprehended at^ Renegades Motor- cycle Club were fined $25 each for disorderly conduct. Charges against five- others , were dropped. PLEAD INNOCENT Pleading innocent to charges of carrying concealed weapons were: Paul R. Cari-ol, 30, and his wife, Christina; 20, of Detroit; William Heard, 28, of Ferndale; Thomas J. Duke, 23, of Madison Heights; William W. Wilcox, 20, of Royal Oak; Michael W. Ostrander, 24, of Kalamazoo; Ronald T. Iverson, 29, of ^uthfield. , Examination foi’* the beven also was set for Feb. 21. WASHINGTON (UPD -• The nation’s railroads want to eliminate all firemen on nonpassenger locomotives instead of keeping 10 per cent of them as required yby a federal arbitration award. J. E. Wolfe, chief negotiator for the railroads, made the proposal yesterday as an answer to the demand -of the Locomotive Firemen & Enginemen’s Union that at least half of the. 19,000 jobs wiped out by the ruling be restored. ★ k Union President H. E. Gilbert has threatened a strike when the award expires March 31. Wolfe has predicted there will be no strike and charged the union with creating a “jihony crisis." -Astronomer Dies NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) -Dirk BrQUw^r, 63,-Netherlands-bwn astronobier and director of the Yale Obseriiatory, for *25 years, died Monday of a heart •I- DAVID P. UGON BLCXJMFIELD HILLS-Serv-ice far David P. Ligon, 28, of '661 Kingsley Trail will be 3 p.m. tomorrow at the First Methodist Church of Birmingham. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy, by VasurLynch Funetal Home^ Royal Oak. Mr. Ligon died Sunday. of a heart attack. President owner of Ligon Enterprises of Romeo, he was a member of the Men’s Club of the First Methodist Church. He was also an officer , of the Advanced Meta! Co. of Washington. Surviving are his wife, Jill a daughter, Angela, and two sons, Rodney and Barry, all at home; his patents, Mr. aqd Mrs. Robert G. Ligon of Lake . Angelas; and a sister. , FRED R. RAPER TROY - Service for Fred R. Raper, 79, of 6903 Livernois will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at the William R. Potere Funeral Home. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Mr. Raper died yesterday after a short illness. He was a retired farmer. Surviving are his wife, Gertrude; one son, Victor of Pontiac; a daughter, Mrs. Mildred Graham of Wayne; three grandchildren; one sister; two brothers and 12 great-grandchildren. MRS. JAMES fa. SCOTT WES’! BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP Service for Mrs. James G. (Josephine) Scott, 93, of 4234 Crestdale will be 2:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Harvey A. Neely Funeral Home, Detroit. Burial Will be in Grand Lawn Cemetery, Detroit. Mrs. Sodtt died yesterday after a short illness. Surviving are a son, James ailment. Brouwer was an expert G. Jr. of Walled Lake; four in the field of celestial meeban-grandchildren; and six great-igrandchildren. . . Court l«r tha County of Oakland, land to tha Srodipt paymant of tha Juvanlla DIvlilon .clpal of and Maratf on thli bond ____ In tha Matttr of tha Patitlon Concarn-tdua and hat dlractad tha County Treating Patricia Crolt. Minor. Cauta No. jurar to edvtikt to tha Drainage Dlitrict “Now where would a jerk' ''J like Oswald get the information croTr, minSr"'ch'iid. T» .. . •* Petition having been filed in this that the President was coming alleging that uid. enud comet witm to Dallas," Ruby asked in one|pTM’!Lawt°*oi^*4M%/'aritecided!''Tn letter. “Only one person would “a'nd’uw chi.d,vai. . have that information, and that v'q'fied a law of the state, and thaf|Mai Trying for Fifth Time man was Johnson ...” ! ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ________ “'e Name of the People of the State (bidder whose bid oA^e :hlgan, You are hereby noUlled tation produces’tlitiwtett Interest cost le hearing on said petition will be to the Drainage DIstNct. No proposal ’ the Court House, Oakland County for the purchase of legs than all of the _ J..Y.C Center, in the City of Pontiac In bonds or at a price leaf than the(r par iTenn., paid $1,000 for one of on me lOth day of February,'value, will be considered. MOSCOW (AP) -With thcRiiby’s letters and Penn Jones, C.^d f'e" “h^^V cofI.mari!.,4u'nn^'S4,S« .4 to their respective lurltles and deducting therefrom any •mitmt. Tha bt — - to Make Soft Landing |pays $1,000 ;; Walter Ferris of Bristol,!! experience of a near-miss last time stored into its mechanical mind, a Soviet space vehicle sped toward the moon today to try a historic first soft landing. Luna 9 will try TTiursday to lower itself onto the moon and then message back data on the lunar surface. A success would be a major step toward putting men on the moon, yielding information needed to design the equipment for the first lunar explorers. FOUR FAILURES The latest Soviet aUempt tolP'*™ whom-we could not agree set instruments down in work-l’*'?^' * • ^knfked him down, which made him bleed like a of Midlothian, Tex., paid for the other. Booth’s correspondence in-|< eluded one letter that chronicled a night of drinking and brawling. Bought by Dr. John Latti-mer, a New York neurologist, for $1,0M, the letter said: “I have had more excitement than I have had for a good while. First and foremost, I whent to a chimpaign drinking, and you had better believe that the-road (home) seemed longer that night than it ever did before We had a ciient on the d nollca iOrainaga Board ha Pontiac Press, a newspaper p nd circulated In said County. Witness, tha Honorable Norma Barnard. Judge of saidsCourt. In tlx -■ ------- 'n said County, this 24tl ing order, on the moon, two moons kgo in early December, almost succeeded. The knowledge gained then and in three earlier failures made pi’ospects look better this time. The Russians announced Dec. 7 that checks on Luna 8 “showed that the systems of the station were functioning normally «t all stages of the landing except the final touchdown.”' * * ★ That appeared to mean that the retrorockets had fired, braking the speed of some 6,000 miles an hour, but that in the last few dozen feet the spacecraft was going too fast and smashed up. further step was made toward the reaiizatidh; of a soft Luna 8 said. MONITOR SHO’T The British radio observator at Jodrell Bank mopitored Luna 8’s progress. Its i agreed that it proobably had almost worked. The Russians had four failures* in their moon program in 1965— three crashes on the moon and a complete miss. The Americans plan to launch their first Surveyor space craft next May, and their first four launchings are to be “engineering tests," to see how various components of the incredibly complicated device will work. The designation indicates that American space scientists do not expect a successful soft landing in the first four shots. STATE OF MICHIGAN-Tha Proba Court for tha County of Oakland Esfate of Eira WInokur, Oacaased. It li Ordarad that on April It. 1444. ina a.m.. In tha Probata C_ Pontiac, MIchllan a haarkig ba which all craditora of said astara ara raquirad to proya thair clalmv and on — *—*— —*- hearing file thair claims, I Kip- butcher.” In tha matter of tha patitlon coo-carnlng Michaal Allan McFarlana pllaa DaCapo, Minor. Cauta No. 14440. To Bobart McFarlana, falhar of tald Two County Officials at Health Conference Oakland County Health Director Dr. Bernard D. Berman and Deputy Director Dr. Frank J. Condon are attending a conference of state health directors today through ‘Thursday in East Losing. Une of the discussion topics at the conference will be the re-^ lationship of Medicare to public health programs. ^ _______lin J. Spflr, Atty. 2400 Cadillac Tower, Oatrolt February 1, | ar Compllad Laws of 1444 at amandad. In praiant wharaabouti of tha taW minor child It u'nknowa of Michigan, you ara harpity notified haorlng on tald petition will bt_____ *- Court Houta, dakland County Sarv- A.O. 1444, at 1:30 o'clock In tha fora- Itoon, an^ you ara haraby ---------------* * to appear partenally at tald .. ^— •“ -aetkaMo ma It being ImpractI irvka hereof, thlt iiall tat tarvad by I copy _____ _______________________. In the Pontiac Prau a nawtpapar printed and circulated In taM County. Wltnaet, tha Honorable Norman II. Barnard, Judgi of taM Court, In tha City 'n laM County, thlt 24th day A.O. 1444. . NORMAN B.. BARNARD, Judsa .of Probata *. BOUI^INE, -rwOta Ragletar, Juvanlla Dlvltlon February 1,^144i DELPHA 4 (Seal) NORMAN I true copy) Ju PELPHA . - - Deputy Probata Ragittar . BARNARD Iga of Probata • -OUGINE a Ragitti February 1, 1444 McKean I, %llo (Claude H. Stavant, of Countal), ettornayi, Oatrolt, Mkhlgan, approving the legality of tha bondt. The I ba prornpiiy rai 't rapraiantativa 'ha good faith chackt uniuccattful bMdart -----* ■ each bld- raglttarad f Dick Inton, Wright, ' Detroit, Michigan 1 The right It ratarvad to rtlacf any or Envalopat containing fha bidi thould .a plainly marked "Propotal for Pon-tlac-CIInton River Drain No. 2 Bondt." DANIEL W. BARRY, Chairman Drainage Board lor Pontlec-CIInton River Drain No.' 2 550 5. Telegraph Road Pontiac, Michigan : January 24, 1444 jvtd: January 25, 14U STATE OF MICHIGAN MUNICIPAL FINANCE COMMISSION February 1, 1444 Prepared to serve' any treed — equipped to serve you anywhere in our nation. » . Thoughtful Service - , Jpafks 46 Williams St. FE-8-9288 Outstanding in Pontiac for Service, Facilities ailE PONT!ACLPHKSS. TUESDAY. FfcBRUAR, 1906 [ M>PL\M*Ctco. C-—3 FEBRUARY AT HIGHLAND BEGAN LAST NOVEMBER But'you're fust in time..,It's fust thort we*started planning and working last November, December and lanuq^ to bring you the many special purchases you will find during the month of February at Highland... It s a fact.. . our buyers traveled the notion,„they searched, found and bought...hot fust ordinary buys af ordinary dealer prices — but very , special purchases, manufacturer's clearances, distributor's'closeouts, factory surpluses.'We bought by the corload, by * the truckload •H'we bought at great savings to be sold at even greoter savings. We specified delivery in February to give our etofes a chance td clear their decks... everything is ready-f- otir stores ar^ stocked, ygu will find many new. items ~ everything is top-brand, top-quality. And all thesr special purchases are tagged at even less than Highland's / traditionally low prices. Come in today —you'll be fust in time for the event that p*grtH SPECIAL! EMERSON DELUXE 19" PORTABLE •witch t...... off automot-kolly. [orphen* joclii. Ooubl* on-tonna and cany handla.franfioood ond cantrola. Vary PHILCO DELUXE 13 CU. FT. 2-DOOR FROSTLESS REFRIGERATOR WITH TRUE SEPARATE FREEZER Enjoy tho full-footurod convonionco of thU Philco booulyl Two loporato qpplionco* in onol Truo loro dogroo top frooior holds 90 Ibt. frofon food supply, full width porcoloin crispor. Dairy storogo, ogg rack. Toll bottio storago. Doluxo. Frao dolivory, instoilotioQ, sorvico and full worranty. REGULAR $218.80 SAVE $30.00 WITH FREE INSTALLATION Sava $41.50 wiring installation costs with fraa Insfbllotion par RCA ViaOR 16" HF/VHF PORTABLE NAUTILUS ELECTRIC RANGE HOOD Eliminate Cooking Cdors Smart dacor styling. Install It yoursolf In minutas. Na ducts, na vont, no holas In wall.. LIfa-tIma aiumitium fihar, ra- YOUR CHOICE 1 SO" OR *108 DELIVERED and INSTALLED. UHF/VHF racoption. High- . R cabinot doiign.Top-front sound and' (trols. Sturdy carrying handl* and lanna. Lightweight — easy to carry. I warranty. An extraordinary valuel ■ .\ .l.l.l.l. ^ I I I I ................. . SI.A AH prioM FAJ. tiorg gelsst FrM IoHm NO MONEY DOWN • 3-YEARS TO PAY OPEN DAILY 9 to 9 c--* THE PON'UAC PliEtjS; TUESDAV, FEBKUAKY 1, 1966 IT'S A SNAP TO PLAGE YOUR WANT AD with this easy-way-to-do-it form Be your own Want Ad writer. To sell. To buy. To Rent. To Swap. To got a job. To find a lost pet. To find help. To do almost anything. Just write your ad on the form below circle the number of days you want the ad to appear fill in your name, address and telephone number fold mail. No postage necessary. / Your Want Ad will start working for you the very next day after we receive It. POSTAGE FREE WANT AD ORDES BUNK Use This Handy Postage-Paid Order Blank or Telephone 332-8181 BLANK FOLDS JNTO ENVELOPE... NO STAMP IS NEEDED J- FOLD BACK ALONG THIS LINE FIflST WRITE YOUR AD I IN THIS SPACE I FIRST CLASS ’ PERMIT No. 840 (S«c. 34.9 PL&R) PONTIAC, MICH. 1/ BUSINESS REPLY ENVELOPE. No Poitog* Stamp Ntccitary If MqlUd In th* Unitnd Statai. THE PONTIAC PRESS P.O.BOX 9 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN • . 48056 WANT AD DEPT / y • t ■ r ' • ‘ FOLD BACK ALONG THIS LINE SEOOND Send bill to. CIRCLE THE N)JMBER OF DAYS YOU WANT THE AD TO ApPEAR 3 Days 6 Day* 12 Days 30 Days 1 1 COUNT 3'Day Rate 8«0ay Rate I24ty Rat< 30-Day Rata 1 ' 1 j A ■ ' , ' ■ 8 AVERAGE 2 Lines ‘2.70 ‘4.20 ‘9.40 ‘20.40 City .,..1.... WORDS 3 Lines ‘3.96 ‘6.12 ‘12.24 ‘29.70 ' i' TO A LINE 4 Lines ‘5.16 ‘7.92 ‘15.94 .‘38.40 1 • THIS LINE y. r /, 1' .;s. ■ . >/ iL .. iiAj^ x oiNjtiAc 1 ivrvaa, xuxiaj^AA«, X jjiUAtcAm- 1, lubo 14 Experts fa Study U.N. Finances—Now $100 Million in Red UNITED- NATIONS, N.Y.inally by France, one of the (AP) — A group of 14 experts countries which -has refused to wiii , begin detailed study pay for peacekeeping expend!-Wednesday of the financial tures — the major factor that problems of the United Natioris, caused the U.N. deficit, currefltly more than $100 million! '* France, the Soviet Union and In the jlO others refus^ to pay, con- They will have before them at the opening session an analysis prepared by Secretary-General U Thant intended to help them in their search for recommendations to be submitted at the next session of the General Assembly in September. TTie study was proposed origl- Be modem with tending that the assessments were made illegally by the assembly, and should have been Sept, made by the Security Council. UNDER REVIEW Peacekeeping procedures and finances afe under review by another 33-nation committee, which wfll be holding sessions also on that special aspect of the 9ver-all pr^lem. The last session of the assembly approved, with some modifications, the French proposal for an examination-of the financial picture of the United Nations and all its specialized agencies, whose combined 'annual budget runs $350 million to $400 million. the United Nations declined re-:' quests from correspondents for a briefing by a financial authority on. Thant’s analysis, which gave the U.N, financial piqture as of last'Sept. 30. ' But the analysis contained these figures: From Jan. 1, 1957 through 1965, the United Na-took in $976.6 million^ leaving a shortage of $193.9 million. This was offset in main by issuing $173.1 million in emergency bonds. PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL CENTER omw gvtBim* HI Sill in-iits Thant’s analysis avoids mention of any debtor nation by name, but says the organization’s financial difficulties are caused by failure or refusal to pay not only the peacekeeping assessments, buK also for items in the U.N. regular budget regarded by some countries illegal. These include the interest on the U.N. emergency bond issue, jthe maintartance of a U.N. I cemetery in Korea, and the costs of the U.N. Commission for the Rehabilitation and Reunification df Korea. POLITICS TO PLAY A PART PONTIAC ROCKCOTE PAINT STORE ROCKCOTE PAINTS WALLPAPERS tion totaled $125.9 million as of' Sept. 30. ★ ★ ★ The U.N.- controller’s office has. ceased issuing monthly statements listing payments by members to the regular U.N. budget and for the emergency force and Congo operation. No explanation has been given. Thant’s analysis contained no his appeals for voluntary fuum-formula for resolving the finan-|ciai contributions. He. warn* cial woes of the organization.;that existing U.N. peacekeeping^ But at his most recent news operations fac^d curtailment corderence he deplored what he i because of lack of funds. And he (^Ued a seeming lack of en-Q,at the only hope of re-thusiasm to-take a closer look at solving the problem rested with U.N. peacekeeping functions. |the work of the 14 experts and * * * jthe 33-nation peacekeeping com- He noted a lack of response tomittfee. I PRIVATE DETECTIVES HAROLD L. SMITH - INVESTIGATORS FE 5-4222 UABIUTIES The potential liabilities of the organization as. of Sept. 30 totaled $133.8 million while assets amounted to $27.8 millidn, leaving a potential deficit of $106 million. The unpaid balances of as-;ssed contributions to the U.N. regular budget, assessments fw the U.N. emergency^orce and the Congo peacekeeping <^ra- 5 HOURS... NOT 3 MONTHS ago. II took ah averaga of 3 _*t to pay tha hoipltal blM« f»- lulling Irom a caia of pnaui-'■ - - caia of poaumonia ii cura drugs that cost an avaraga TODAY'S PRESCRIPTION IS THE 6IGGEST BARGAIN IN HISTORY LET US PILL YO«/r NEXT PRESCRIPTION Pharmacy Plaza Pharmacy ^ Jirry ^ Jeanna Ounamore, RPH 3554 Pontiac Lk. Rd., Pontiac, Mich. Phono IT3-1261 24 Hour, a Day Service FREE DELIYi'RY Manay Ordan laiaad Hara ITa temtare SmaAm CmmAy \ Tan May Pay AH WilHy lull af nail Pharaiacy / Seeks to Solve Cosmos Origin By Science Service NEW YORK - The mystery of how the universe was born could be solved within 15 to 20 years if the United States would spend the $l0o million that one Gemini manned flight costs to build five new 200-inch tele-Obviously, political considers-instead. i tions will play a part in the The three or four equals ofi study by the experts, who comei the famed Mt. Palonar instru-from Argentina, Brazil, Britain,|ment that could be- built at the Canada, France, Hungary, In-jWO million to $80 million price dia, Italy, Japan, Nigeria, ^ne-jtag of one Orbiting Astronoml-gal, the.Soviet Union, tha United cal Observatory would give Arab-Republic-and the-United more information than the satel-States. lite on the birth and deatl^ of In, advance of their meeting:, the u n i v e r s e for the same ' ~ ^ ~ jamount of money. These recommendations were ALUMINUM SIDIN6 <»329 CALL TODAY FE 4-4418-24-Hr. Service VALUE CONSTRUCTION CO. 24385 WOODWARD AVE. SUITE NO. 1 made here by Dr. Philip Mor-' rison, Massachusetts Institute I of Technology physics pro-' lessor. ' He said such new telescopes would be able to show in less than 20 years whether the uni-I verse began with a big bang or [is in a steady state, one which has always been and always Vill be unchanging. These two contradictory theories. are today the main rivals for explaining the structure of the cosmos as it observed now and as it was in the past. Snow in East Stops Postal Official Cold I GRAND RAPIDS (AP) -Neither snow nor rain are sup-I posed to stop the postman from I his appointed rounds but this ! apparently doesn’t help Deputy |U. S. Postmaster General Frederick Belen. He was to have [been guest of honor Monday at| iZip Code Day ceremonies in I Grand Rapids, but a fierce 'East Coast snowstorm held him in Washington. ’1 jno to «5j»o 1st or 2ndl HOME 1 mortgage ★ - I CREDIT LIFE INSURANCE I ^AT NO EXTRA COSTI I t; Cash when needed! Without obligationt •«« and talk with Mr. Mrrie VoM or Mr.-Buckner, who Have been loaning money to liuiMMa(]| of people in Pontiac during the past -tO years. All borrow-era will tentify to receiving fair, honest, and courteous treatment. (Do not take avhance dealing with strangers or fly-by-night lendrrt.1 When yon deal here, you receive the full amount of your loan in rash at onre. No papets to sign until the loan is closed. No charge for inspection, appraisal or survey. No charge for abstract, title aearrh or title Borrow from us to consolidate your debts, to pay off the balance you owe on your eon-tract, to pay taxes, to make home repairs or improvements, or for any other good purpose. See ns today. / SPECIAL Fro* Polking on county -lot cemor N. Sag- ^ Fro* Parking whonovor you apply for on inoW ond W. Huron Sfg. ooch Hmt you bring opprovod loon or ronowoi. to our office 0 foil monthly payment. Bring us your parking ticket to be stamped. VOSS and BUCKNER 209 NATIONAL BUILDING — 334-3267 * WHEELIN’ PEALIN’ DON... That’s me folks, Don Prayer HomrFuf^ nishings, Inc., 1108 W. Huron Street ^ A life-long resident of Pontiac has made me feel closer to all of my customers than most others. It has helped me know more of the wants of the people in the Pontiac Area when it comes to buying fine quality furniture at a price and deal you have been looking for, for years. My business has been very successful, thanks to the many new friends I have made. Starting Right Now I Am Pledging Myself To You As Wheelin’ Dealin’ Don to guarantee you the best Deal Ever! Come in to my store any time and Wheelin’ Pealin’ Don will prove it to you! ^ee UVINgIoOM SUITE Thif booutifu! 7-pi«c* living room tuit^ comos comploto with sofo, chair, 3 tahjot qnd 2 docorator lamps. You will liko tho cocktail tablo and two tt*A tablot with th«ir wony-froM tops that look pnd fool liko walnuti You hav* a choic* of colors for your sofa and chair. Also soloct from Contomporary ond Colonial. YOU’LL FIND HUNDREDS OF OTHER SENSATIONAL BUYS NOT LISTED IN THIS AD! . REMEMBER . . . QUALITY IS DUR MDHD-YDUR SATISFACTIDN OUR AIM! REMEMBER ... WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL AND WE SELL WHAT WE ADVERTISE. OPEN DAILY mi 9 P;M. CLOSED SUNDAYS TO ALLOW OUR EAAPLOYEES A DAY OF REST WITH XHCIR FAAA1LIESII OUR WNOUSALE BUYING POWER SAVES YOU MONEY £hr^jjtaxwt HOME ^FURNISHINGS 1108 W. HURON ST. (next to Felice Quality Market) ' FE 2-9204 C—6 THK PgyTlAC PKESS, TL ESDAV. FEBRUARY 1, 1966 Jacoby on Bridge : Hits January High BEN CVSEY NOUTH I A 10 8 e? 2 V K875 ♦ A ♦ QJ4 WEST EAST 4AQ54 AKJ9 VJ ¥32 ♦ J764 ♦Q 10 989 «K 9 6 2 «A103 ^niTTW in\ Both vulnerable ^ West North East League'that penalises a player in a tournament who bids a weak two outside this range. Our own rules for a weak two bid are rather strict. To start with, we want to be ^ure that we have a good six^ard suit. Then, since the weak two is a slightly dangerous maneuver, we vary our point count re-qiiiremenis with Vulnerability and we try to avoid both the six high car point minimum and 12 high card point maximum. Finally we don’t open with a weak two when we are void in a suit or have any four-card major suit holding in addition to our main suit. Sometimes a, weak two bid can ^oduce an extraordinary, Bv JACOBY & SON ^favorable result "L a. ex«,M weak ,..haar. that they i. strict them to a North does not know-how " 'mum of six good South's weak fwo bid is 'high card points but North does know that he and a maximum has reallv excellent support of 12, ^nd even tw his partner’s good six-cart complete has There are scientific ways for achieved by a ties but he doesn t need a lot of r u l e 0 f t*h e science. Just a little common American Contract Bridge sense tells North that there Pa.«!s 4 ¥ Ps Pass Opening lead— ^ ^ , r LANSING (API - The State mght to be a g^ play for four.TXfea^y got 1966 off to a bull--: hearts, and he bids it. January! sales and use tax collections of 1.2 million, reports State Rev- T.W u u u Commissioner Clarence Q—The bidding has been: , . West North East South u 1* DWe.- RdMe.' collections on December 2 4k Pass Pass ? business represented a 13.6 per You, South, hold: -cent increase over the $M.9 *K107< ¥AS ¥Q1954 4r'882 million collected in the first y niihfa^lim.......... lilt »f i9(a fact that you have already redoubled wUl show that yon! Dock estimated increase in have a maximum two and al- the past year at 11 or 12 per three-apode eall. ' cent, compared with an annual TODAY’S QUESTION ' growth rate of 3 Dr 4 per cent The bidding conUnuea with jover an 18-year, period preced-: three clubs by West and passes ing the current economic boom. by North and East. What do : ---------------- you do now? Ex^D Aide to Oppose Grand Rapids Mayor Car Stolen, Recovered; qrand RAPIDS (AP)-Dam Payroll in Trunk Intoct « Waters, a retired Kent ' jCounty civil defense official FALL RIVER, Mass. (AP) — and long a city hall ^dministra-A Center Garment Co. car wasjtive assistafit, filed/nomination stolen Stinday and recovered petitions Monday fpr the post of Monday. iGrand Rapids* m^yor. He will The^ company’s 83,800 cashichallenge Nfayoi: Chris Sonne-paVroll in the trunk was qn-j veldt in the Feb. 21 primary touched, police said. . ielection. THE BERRYS By C»rl Gruhert 'ttX/D BETTER NOT DAD-MAMA HAS A SPONGE CAKE * Astrological Forecast ^ Iv. » " . ? * ^ ^ By SYDNEY OMARR Fw wtaiwsmy "Th* wtM m«n contrail Ms dostiny . . . Astrology points tho way." ARIES (Mir. 21 - Apr. 1»): Importont ) consider LONG-RANGE e«ecls. — ICATE. Be olive, vltoi ~ SAGITTARIUS INoV. u - x.,. Cycle besflns moving up. -AAoney sllua-■ on Is clorlfled. Cooperation torfhcoming •ora mate, partner. Display telent-peclal products. Hendlt responsIWIIti CAPRICORN (Dec. “ “ .....h one method, outlet. Be cuiious'. Ask questions, obtain an-isvers. Highlight originality, Independeoca. GEMINI (May 21 - J continues high. You can --------- valuei^. Demand quality. Utilize intuitive Intellect. '*i“i't*~t» It you hire —. —,-— — CANCER (June 21 - July 22): Personal appearance very important today. You may be Called upon to speak, accept special presentation. Avoid embarrassment by being PREPARED. Display, sense of humor. LEO (July 23 - Aug. 22): Don't spair It eHorfi mad)ate)y. Key _ Handle details personally, oc . behlnd-scenes activity. Be thorough ------'e tasks. * .. .. . —; Analyze 'Oldest Man' Has 50th Grandchild MOSCOW (iP) - Shirali Mis-limov, who has been receiving a lot of Soviet publicity lately as , "the world’s oldest mafn” at a' _/OUl^ reptjrted age of 160, no,w has 5 —grandehildrenT------ The official Soviet news agency Tass reported yesterday from| Baku in the Caucasus that his youngest daughter. G a 1 i m a,' bore the.newest grandchild. > Galima’s age 'was not report-rt by Tass but the oldest grandchild is 75 years old and has H children. Says Canadian Ports Likely fa Go Without Aid WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS, W.Va. (AP) — The commander of the U.S. Coast Guard’s 9th District. Rear Adm. W'ill^ J., Smith, said Monday thaKCoast Guard crafts probably/won'f be able ' to help op^ Canadian ports on the Gr^t Lakes thisj spring. Smith »|)l<:e at the annual j meeting the'Lake Carriers Association and the' Dominion Marine Association. Smith, whose headquariers are in Cleveland, said the Coast. Guard had to refuse last spring! because it was too busy clearing U.S. ports. ' "I can see no prospect of.ourj being able to change this, and' hope the Canadian Coast Guardi will be able to make some ofj their ice breakers available in the Great Lakes eariy in the! season,” he said. . Killed in Viet Action ' WASHINGTON (AP)-Marin^ Cpl. Ho8y Chapel, son of Mrs. James E. Whitehurst of pattle Creek, Mich., was killrt in action in Viet Nani, the Department of tlefenM said Monday., CuNDERRMDAND \ 4 ^ OVERVMORKEP, N 1 ( THEY SWENO THEIR J * > WEEK ENOS < 1 C^RADIN© PAPERS... ) | l^NO »N C0NCLU90nS < 1 SAY NO GREATER V f crTUZEN LIVES > THAN TOOAV’S < ^CH(^L.TEACHER.' J THE p6nTIAC press, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1966 G—T, 65 Is Not the End, Sqys Violin Virtuoso V, ABOB THOMAS AP Movffe-Television Writer HOLLYWOOD - “I’m not ready to\,fade away, whatever It is yw are supposed to do at 65,” said Jascha Heifetz, whose ' birthday is, Wednesday. ' •till h a V e my worlt; I bhven’ given up yet.” Jt^notlikelyl that something ••4 r i V i a 1 t( Heifetz as a THOMAS / 65th birthday would cause him / to give up. Since making his debut as a Russian refugee in o .,ioae away, oi s yw are supposed ose (ASvMIlHiiMnt) Now hUf public appearances are limited ta a handful each year. He continues to display his artistry on new recordings, but the bulk of his energies goes into his new passion: teaching. Two or three Upies a weric, he leaves his home overlooking Beverly Hills and drives his Rolls-Royce through smog and traffic to the University of Sbuthem California, south of downtown Los Angeles. From 10 in the morning until 3:30 or 4 in the afternoon, he works with the eight or 10 students of his mas- i4rc You A Slow Reader? A noted publisher in ChlAgo reports there is a simple technique of rapid reading which shoqld enable you to double you^ reading sp^ and‘yet re^ tain much more. Most people do not realize bow much they could Increase their pleasure, success and income by reading faster and more accurately. According to this^ publisher, anyone, regardless of his present reading skill, can use this simple technique to’ improve his reading ability to a remarkable degree. Whether reading stories, bo(^, technical matter, it becomes possible to read sentences at a glance and entire pages in seconds with this method. |>To acquaint the readers of ' this newspaper with the easy-to-follow rules for developing rapid'reading skill, the company has printed full details New Yoric’s Carnegie Hall on Oct. 27, 1917, his name has been associate with mastery of the violin. ter class. DEVOTION TO TTACHING “HJs devotion to teaching has amazed us ajl,” commented a colleague. “He even lunches with the studepts in the kitchen during the noon break. He has proved to be an extraordinary teacher.” ..Besides .the classes, Heifetz, usually joins his students in a chamber music session once weekly. When he began the teaching program, USC professors were hopeful that it would last six months. That was three years ago, and Heifetz shows no signs of flagging. Powerful Portable Antitank Weapon ACHTUNG! Here is the acme of all German ordnance.The original Bazooka used by German troops to smash American British forces all-over Europe. We have these weapons ... two varieties. One is the standard Wermacht^odei in regular olive drab color. The other, ts the cangouflage color .model used by fanatical SS Troops at the Battle of the Buldge. Both models are truly Germanic. Length of Bazooka is 64 1/2 Inches arid the weight (without shield) is 21 1/2 pounds. PRICE, complete with shield.... ^4.95 ..................'.$19.95 Without shield.., TRULY IMPRESSIVE! Gun company estslog says it’s thp kind “used t German troops to smash” U.S. forces. PRICE Ui«d but ia •xctllMl caadltlen.tlOO.OO .a. Io*«n» Rlflea. Flrea a (Iga rlmleea,baited cartridge w ■led i ounce iteef armor plercl^ bu --------------------piercing bullet* ' Ideal for long range ahote at deer and bear or at car# and tfucka and even a ThMe wespbns are offered for sale by ii New Jersey dealer. The ad points ont that cannons “are ideal for use as home protectlbn weapons.” Atppad la original ci Wa oUer fabulgua tool at tha'prlce \k only $99.50 Ammunition In $1. dO aacn or 180.00 lor a caaa of 100. The same gun dealer says the antitank rifle is “ideal for f even a tank . MERCHANDISE FOR MAYHEM - These weapfns were 'offered for sale by a New Jersey dealer in a widely published advertisement. TTie ad points out that cannons “are ideal for use as home-protection weapons.” The same gun dealer says the antitank rifle is “ideal fix' long-range shots at deer, bear, cars, trucks or even a tank ...” Our Senseless Weapons Laws—? Rocky Kin in Politics —as a Dem CHARLESTON, W. Va. (AP) — Another Rockefeller has entered politics — but m West Virginia of all places, and as a Democrat, of all things. He is John D. (Jay) Rockefeller IV, great grandson of the empire builder and member of one of the nation’s best-known RepubUcan families. Jay, whose Untie Nelson is Republican gov. ernor of New York and whose Uncle Winthrop is a GOP gubernatorial candidate in Arkansas, filed Monday for a seat in the West Virginia House of Delegates. NAPOLEpN, Ohio (AP) --Three Belcher, Ky. youths on their way to Ypsilanti, Mich, were among four persons killed in a car - truck smashup near here Monday night. Sheriff John M. Casteel said the a^ containing the youths appeqfntly ran a stop sign and rammed the side of a truck on U S. 6 east of here. 4 Persons Killed in Ohio Smashup ‘ Beverly Cavins Jr., about 21, driver of the al>to; Ernest Lee Mullins, 20; and Lonnie Owens, 21, were dead at the scene. Tnick driver Dennis Lohrbach, of Bowling Green, Ohio, died later. Heifetz once explained why he had turned to teaching: “My,old professor put a finger on me. He said that some day I would be good enough to teach. Violin playing is a perishable art. It must be passed m as a personal skill — otherwise it is lost.” SPi^RTAN SCHEDULE Although his own concerts have diminished in number. of its interesting self-training,maintains his Spartan method in a new booklet, •■HowSf®"®«'“'® Practice. His social to Read Faster and Retain !“® limited, nnd he lives alone More" mailed free. No obligation. uSend your request to: Reading, 835 Diversey, Dept. 91)32,-Cihicago, 111. 60614. A postcard will do. Please include your Bip^e. in the rambling, art-filled home. He was divorced in 1963 by hli second *ife, mothe^of his aged son. During almost a half-century of concerts, he has ‘traveled 'e than two million miles. save by i the 10th EARN 4.4% iNNUA^Tt COMPOUNDED Ull|m from the “I still travel,” he remarked, but now I go as a -tourist. I think I have earned that.” Heifetz scorned any celebration of his 65tb year. “After I reached a certain age — which was SO — I said no more big parties. Ibere is noft-ing to do,, nothing to say. I am in good health, and that is the most important thing when you reach my age.” He dismissed the whole idea of birthdays in the Heifetz r ner. “I’m on velvet, and that’s it,” he concluded. ” 1st T9 tm ky mH plWH 331-7127 hr m- cAPimsAmes^ lOAK Assocmni II lOM UNK inriM Bitter Foes Block Gun Reform By TOM NOLAN Newspaper Enterprise Assn. (First in a series.) (EDITOR’S NOTE: This is the first of a three-part series on the dangers in our lax gun laws making weapons too-easily attainable. It warns of the opposition that reform measures ham met from en-, trenched orgarllfxitions and the "gun lobby."f weapon to kill his girlfriend and himself. WASHINGTON (NEA) - On I Nov. 22, 1963, President John Pay Hike Won for Seamen in Japan Walkout Kennedy was killed by a bullet fired from a mail-order riflq. purchased by a mentally deranged man. Last February the wife of a Fails Church, Va., school principal shot her four children to death before killing herself with a pistol. The woman, who had spent six months in two mental institutions the year before, bought the pistol that morning at a department store. In Baltimore — where a written statement from the police commissioner and ^15-fiay waiting period are necessary before a pistol can be purchased — a robber in mid-1964 took a taxi to suburban Essex where he bought a pistol. Four months later, a ballet from the grin killed a Baltimore policeman. A San Mateo, Calif., electronics worker bought a rifle at a shopping center last October. Two hours later, he used.the These senseless tragedies, oc-cuired in part because anybody in the United States can buy a gun. There are no restrictions sale of rifles and shotguns anywhere. Only seven states require a perinit to purchase a handgun. STRONG PLEAS Despite the emotional furies arous^ by the assassination of President Kennedy, despite a national poll which showed eight out of 10 Americans favored suffer flrearms-r^traUon requirements, despite a strong plea for a tough gun-control measure by President Johnson, Congress has twice failed to do anyUiing about the easy avail-al^ty of guns. This is not due to a lack of opportanity. Altogether there have been 34 firearms - control measures introduced introduced in the last 26 months. At the same time, they say, any latr which U^tens the availability of firearms would seriously curtail acUviUes of d^-cated hunters and marksmen who, after all, should have the right to pursue theii^ particular bobby. Spearhead of the gun lobby, one of the most powerfdl in Washington, is the National Rifle Association, an organization which, because of loopholes in the federal lobbying act, is not required to register as a lobby. From a small group of New York NaUonal Guard ofUcers, the NRA has grown in 94 years to a national organization with more than 700,000 members. It can mobilize roughly another half-million supporters in some 12,000 NRA-affiliated gun clubs and groups. The primary reasoh for this footdragging is the strong reaction of a small, but vocal, segment of the public hunters, gun collectors, firearms dealers and ‘patriotic” organizations. last July. This year, Dodd vows, it will be different. “I’m going to get a vote at ig last,” he says, “if I have ^ use every parliamentary trick in the book, and several that aren’t.” Though the NRA is flatly opposed to the President’s bill, it likes Several others which have' been introduced-including one publican'five years ago, I had which Dodd put in before the'just gotten back from 18 months assassination of President Ken- of study in Japan and my uncle nedy. was seeking the presidential it it it nomination. Says NRA Executive Vi c e' “f feel very deeply about my President Franklin Orth: 1 family. Historically, ours is a “Obviously there are some "e™® that has bwn associated abuses that we all agree need!with Republicanism. But an correcting.” jeveu stronger family tradition I has been the proposition that which best reflects you as an Focal point of the NRA effort over the past two years is the President’s gun bill, introdu^ Opponents to severe federal firearms legislation point out that any criminal who seeks wlhpons and ammunition can always find them. Even the most stringent law would not ptevent this. * TOKYO W - The All Japan Seamen’s Union ended a crippling two-month strike today after winning pay raises averaging about $20 a month. Shipowners said the strike, longest in Japanese shipping history, cost them $18.5 million. At ita height, the strike tied up about 1,SW ships in U ports;-The walkout, in four stages, totaled 3$ days since it began Nov. 27. The pay raises for the 134,000-man union jeame to 70 per cent of its initial demand.'The union estimated it spent a million dollars onAhe strike. The shipowners said the pay Increase would cost them about $8.3 miilkxi a year. Before the new agreement was signed Sunday, seamen earned an average of $100 a month. YOU ARE INVITED by Sen. Thomas Dodd, D-Conir BITTER FOES Thanks mainly to NRA tactics, this “hard line” measure has aroused the bitterest opposition since Franklin Roosevelt tried to pack the Supreme Court. Dodd’s bill would; • Ban all mail-order gun sales. • Impose tougher recordkeeping requirements on retail dealers to aid local police in keeping track of gun sales. • Raise license fees. • Ban the import of foreign 'military surplus weapons. The NRA interprets these provisions as prohibiting “the interstate movement of all firearms to all persons other than federally licensed manufactur-eraand dealers.” Thousands of NRA members* have interpreted this statement as saying that the bill would bar a Connectient dnek hunter from buying a shotgun in Colorado. This is misconception, Dodd says. With statements such as the Now 28, he, was a registered Republican for five years'. “ThE decision in itself was not di^ cult,” Ije said. '“But you just don’t walk out on that much tradition without a lot of thought.” Jay said he went to Arkansas to talk with Winthrop hnd recently met with Nelson^in New York. ‘T received their support,” he said, “because jt’sj important to them that T do what makes' sense for me as a person.” SOCIAL WORKER He arrived in West Virginia inj July 1964, and has been a neighborhood social worker m the Action for Appalachian Wouth' Program. Most of the p^t 18 months he has spent at nrarby Emmons working with people he says never had a chance. “If anything,” he said, “ftiy candidacy grows out of my work here. Political decisions affect people so immediately and so forcefully that the legislative level seemed a natural followup to anyone tryiqg to solve problems common to an area like Emmons.” 'iRUiur’s Dig into as many golden buttermilk pancakes as you can eat for just... Of coune it’s. Uncle John’s for Pancakes. But have you . ever tried his Steak Supper? WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM 1S.32S W. 8 MILE He explained his. political switch this way; “When I registered as a Re- 10001 TELEGRAPH RD. NOT NECESSARY Adds the NRA Executive Committee: “There can be good, forward-looking, federal legislation. It is not necessary to accept unreasonable restrictions.' But the NRA’s idea of acceptable legislation does not block the easy availability of guns— the basic reason for having a firearms-control law. : NRA'i Fivorllt t CavanaghSays State Shirking DETROIT (AP) -State government has shirked ita respon- individual is that which brings out the best in you. LIFETIME COMMITMENT “Politics is a lifetime commitment and honesty to self is essential. To have remained a Republican would have been to subordinate my own conclusions and instincts to an undefined feeling of what others think I should be.” \ ^THEA^S ../.zo-y., Maretllo Masfroitnnl The tall, handsome Ivy League bachelor is the son of John D. Rockefeller III of New York, chairman of the bo^rd of trus- -tees of the Rockefeller Foundation. He recently moved into his own house ih Charleston and says he plans to stay in West Viiginla permanently. merrm URSUU ANDRESS aiXTl<*TKri:OTEDOBI'J nas smraea resiwii- . use of voting machines the United States was in eventually will be forced to conlLockport. N.Y., in 1892, aqcord-skler urban problems, Detroltri Encyclopedia Britan- MayOr Jerome Cavanagh said Monday. | _______________. “Like many states across the _____________________________nation, state government in above, the NRA causes virtual, Michigan has watched as a I' inundation of Congress by letter spectytor while its main sources and wire. of revenue, its cities, struggled *. * -k Jwith the problems of the last Dodd says this campaign is tow eventful decades,’' Cava- the ju-imary reason the bill has >> been stalled in his own Judici- ' ary subcommittee for two years. QUORUM UCKING He was unable to round up a ! quorum to act on the measure after hearings were completed To visit our booth at the Cobo Hall Boat Show —> Saturday. Jan. ^29 through Sunday, Fab. 6 — Spaclal Discount admission tickats avaljabla In our offica. WIN A SONY TV — A fraa chanca, alvan wjth aach boat, quotation, THATCHER- miTERSON. INC. . Marine Insurance Since JS89 711 Community National Bank Building, Pontiac, Michigan PEdaral 2-9224 WOodwtrd 1-46M END ilESULT — In one of the, most famous killings of all time, jlack Ruby , gunk down Lee Harvey Oswald who killed President Kennedy with a mail-order rifle. CE!IlKEEGO Speaking at the Detroit Economic Club, Cavanagh contrasted Gov.'Grorge Romney’s proposal calling for $1 million to fight water pollution with federal studies whieh ,Cavanagh said Indicated a need for $250 million in Detroit alone. RIVC-IN rt 2-1000 so TELCCMPN AT SO. lAKE M). 1 MIU W. WOODWAOe IlICTilC IN-CAB MATIM I First Hur/l 1 -_ First Run I , ■ BIG STARS'4 !BQQj2S39ji >f BIG HITS! „(»L0RSC0Pt,l C—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1066 (HEVROIET OUSMOBIIE ProudfyMnnhiuiees: We Are New Veer Autheriiei Dealership fer CheneleLiiMLOlisniiebile li ithe tlerksten-PONTIAt Area! ' — ^ ^ Camplete Sdectiin of Chevrolets aid Oldsnibiles Chiefs Meet flint Quintet -- No. 1 Shamrocks Play Key Encounfer With Ferndale Pontiac Central’s Chiefs will be busy this evening entertaining Flint Southwestern, but not too busy to keep an eye on a game down at Ferndale. Ferndale, owner of a 7-2 mark, has the distinction tonight of playing host to East Detroit’s. Shamrocks, the No. 1 ranked squad among the state’s Class A te|ms. Second on the Class A lad-itr In this week’s Associated Press poU Is Pontiac Cen-^ tral, which held the lead early in flie season only to lose it to East Detroit At this stage of the proceedings, it will take a loss by East . Detroit for PCH to regain the top spot.... ★ * * And if East Detroit is to lose during the regular season, the loss will have ta be inflicted by Fefndale’s Eagles since the re-maining foes on the Shamrocks schedule are not in the class of the poll leader. CHIEFS UNBKA’TEN pCH’g contest with Southwestern will get under way at 6:30 with a reserve tilt, and in the contest, the unbeaten Chiefs will be looking for their 10th straight victory and eighth in Saginaw Valley Conference play. ★ * * While the Chiefs were holding onto their No. 2 ranking, Birmingham Groves slipped, a bit in the ‘A’ division, but F&yal Oak Shrine made it into the top 1» in the aass B poll and Orchard Lake St. Mary jumped into eighth place in the ‘C’ division. Groves (11-0), sixth last week, tnmbled to eighth despite two wins last week. Saginaw (S-2) was ranked 10th. OLSM (11-1) has won eight in a row and holds the lead in the Northwest Parochial League. ’The ranking was the first for the team this season. ★ ★ ♦ Shrine, with only a so-so 7-4 record, has ston five In a row after a slow start and has been impressive enough in Its last few outings to gain a spot in the rankings. A casualty in the *C’ poll was Capac, which dropped a 65-61 decision 4o Glass D Dryden. Despite the win, Dryden, among tte top 20 last week, fell out of sight. PAY DAY AGAIN—It’s been a long time between victories for Ken Voaturi, but the National Open Champion of two years ago carded a 66 yesterday in the final round of the Lucky International tournament at San, Francisco and was presented with an $8,500 check for first place by John Keane (right), tourpament chairman, hfrs. Venturi takes hold of the check, won with a total of 273. Pay Day for Ex-Open Champ Venturi Regains Winning Ways SAN FRANCISCO (AP) —f ’This was the course where! Venturi came back from a Ken Venturi, the golfer who re- Venturi had grown up, where |prolonged and agonizing slump fuses to say quit, won the $57,-|his friends cheered him on and | to win the national title in 1964, 000 Lucky International Open!where his dad operates the pro Golf Tournament with his heart!shop, across a lake. -j yet across Lake Merced is the M over the Harding Park Olympic club where, the 1966 United Stafef Open will be (M) 71 ■inhkM (10 » C«nlr»l_______ .^.jm Grevei (11-0) T. Binw Crook Control (I-)) 10. Saginow (1-1) Othon, In onlor; Muokogon HoIgMs, Ann Arlior, Eotl Lansing, Utica, Alpena, FHnt Alntworfll, Dotrolt DoLr*—- land, Walorlord Kottoring, -------------- CDusme, eomdato, Datrolf Norttwm, itcanaba, Detroit Hazal Park. % 3. Slver Rowoo 4. Fantan (*-1) 5. St. Louis f11 «. Ironwood ()l-7. Saginaw Arttii.. 1. Marysville (10-1) f. Allago-16. Royal nwvmi (11-0) ........, .« RapWs S. Christian (11-0) Of ------ (1M) ......... Ik *l^rlr Ishpamlng, Dotrolt Holy Radoomor, Iron Rlv^ wSnMIquo, Northvlllo, Munlihing, 1. Muskegon Christian (10-1) 1. Fronkonmyth (1(M>) ........... 1. Orooso PoTnta St. Paul (11-1) 4. Ml. Plaasant Sacred Heart ' 5. Dotrolt St. Hodwlg (13-0) 4. MIddlowlllo ()14» '......... 7. edrnora (1IF0) ............. I. Vandaroogk Lakt (1M) 0. Orchard Lake St. Mary (1). 10. Marquette Baraga (11-1) . Others, In ordor; Manchester Detroit visitation, Detroit A Flint Holy Redeainer. (1l4) 77 04 8 1. Covert (11-0) ...... 1 North Adams (IM) 1 (»-« ....................... .. 1 lorMwaTstf Vatrlrt*\'^W^.'.'! « h Lltchtleld (10-1) .......... - iT Trout Cr^ (11-0) .......... U Ruth%S. PoL B Paul’ (W) Jerry Burns Selected for Green Bay Staff GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) -Jerry Bums, dismissed as head football coacl* at Iowa after five dismal sea^ns, has stepped up Instead w down. , -. w H Bums was'bdded Monday to the coddling staff of the Green Bay Packers, champions of the * National Football League threej Df the last five seasons. municipal course on Monday brought him the $8,500 first prize, his first victory since circulatory ailment threatened his career l^fe in 1964 after he had won the U.S. Open title. Mighty played In June, and Ken said, “I’m^-going to play a lot' of rounds there, and I’m shooting for it. If I win it, I might just retire. That’s my aim." but after-the ciTculatiay ailment attacked he collected just $295 in -official money last year. Carrying hand warmers”"'to give him feeling when he swung the clubs, Venturi started four Strokes off the pace and even with his 33 on the first nine was four back of leader Frank Beard. Yankee Bats j. to Do More Bunting NEW YORK (AP)—’The mighty, Yankees are going to substitute the jab for the haymaker. ^ger Maris and Mickey Mantle are going to do more bunting this year in Manager Johnny Keane’s new plan of attack. ‘ ★ ★ ★ “We’re not going to sit back and wait for the home run,' said Keane, who was bitterly disappointed iSst year when the injured Yanks floundered and finished sixth. “We are going to do more banting,’’ said Keane. “What’s wrong with having Mantle bnnt? With men on first and second and nobody ont, Mr. Marls is going to bnnt.’’ Keane made his remarks at a news conference Monday, called to announce the signing of pitcher Bob Friend and shortstop Ruben Amaro. Friend reportedly got $42,000 from the Yanks. There were no estimates of Amaro’s salary. ★ ★ ★ Ralph Houk, Yankee general manager, said the; latest report from Rochester, Minn., was that Mantle would be in full swing in mid-March and ready for opening day. He said he expect^ Mantle to start working out March 1 when the club reports at Fort Lauderdale, Fla/ Mickey recently underwent an operation at the Mayo Clinic for the removal of a bone particle from his right shoulder. Keane said Uie snccess of the operation eliminated any pmsibitity that Mickey might be moved to first base. “ff he hadn’t had the operation and if 'his shoulder still bothered him, we might have tried first, base,” said Keane. “I was hesitant about it because you are taking a chance on his legs at first base and his legs held up pretty g8od Jpst year!” ^ Then BeaVd faltered with * I three bogeys on the first four ! {holes while Venturi shot even T psr to move within a stn*e of I the leader. Beard paired the 14th, but Venturi found the put-I ting secret of the day to sink a 25-footer, and they were even. I When Kenney sank a 10-foot birdie putt on the 16th he had the wiimiag stroke. Beard came in at 274. Arnold Palmer, 1965 champion George Archer, Tom Weiskopf and Ray Floyd all finished at 275 to collect $3,037.50 each. CuorM ArchM* n.0|7 .... (fay Floyd $3,037 T. ^ compboii »,zse . JW'sfe..,,:::: Dave Ragan $1,035 . Mika souchak $1,550 .... 404«6-74-37$ rSMir Dow FInatarwald $1,151 .. 4»-74-4*-70-37» Maneour $1,15S , 74.48-40 40—37? Barter $1,150 .... 7^4443-40-37? (Thuck Ctertnay Ol.ia ... 7340-7140-37? Jtek Burte $050 ....... 70.7040-71—300 .... -------------- 4340-70-70-300 . 7140-70-71-301 . 73404?-71-301 . 7^7140-70-301 . 76-75474?-301 Doug Ford $715 Tarry WI1»x $715 . Jerry Pittman $715 Howie Johnson $715 Rocky Thompsori 17); Bate RItkay $7ll Dan Keefe $415 Dean Retram $515 . . 4?4?-73-7)_301 . 73-70-7040-S01 70-71-7340-St3 4^7347-7f-^03 73-7140-70-303 7444-73-70-303 73-734040-303 7r71-70-70-303 Lionel__________ Steve RaM $515 .. Gay Brewar/$515 Billy Maxwall $515 .... Geow Knudaon $515...... 7340-7340-203 Rex Baxter 0515 ....... 714^7140-203 BOO Varway $351 ....... 7*7440-------- ^ Towns $35) .......... 7140-71------- Harold Kneaea*^ /.. .'. ..... Lawyers of NL Hope for 'Kayo MILWAUKEE, Wis. (AP) -Baseball lawyers say the National League isn’t ignoring Wisconsin court order. In fact, they say, they’ll be trying knock it out of the box later this week. Bowie Kuhn, attorney for the National League, told Circuit Ck)urt Judge Elmer Roller Monday that his order was unjustified, was issued without proper hearing and did not have ‘sufficient certainty and specificity for us to comply with it." ★ ★ ★ But, Kuhn said, the National league wasn’t ignoring the order whiph directs it to prepare to field a baseball team in Milwaukee this spring, either Atlanta-bound Braves or a still unborn expansion club. Kuhn said the league will move later this week if possible, to have the order vacated. FIELD DAY But his remarks didn’t stop the state from having a rhetorical field day at baseball’s expense as it pressed for and won an advance, in the trial date of its antitrust action against the ime. The trial,' moved back week to March 7, is now scheduled to begin Feb. 28 befbre Roller. “The state finds it hard to believe,” thundered William S. Stafford, special counsel, “that the .National League, which takes such pains to present an The Jackets have five games remaining on their 0-A schedule, three with the top three teams, and they’ll start tonight by playing host to league-leading Warren Cousino (8-1). Fitzgerald is bolding the runner-up spot in the loop race and the Jackets wilHtake on the Spartans in the middle of February. Cousino handed Avondale its first loss of the campaign back in December, 85r55, and since that setback the Jackets have Laker Skiers, Waterford 1st West Bloomfield and Waterford Township took first places yesterday in a quadrangular (tfep ski meet at Mt. Holly. Larry Walters (29.0) and Tim Brennan (29.3) finished 1:2 to lead West Bloomfield’s boys team to first place with a combined time of 124.8. Betsy Shuler of West Bloomfield won individual honors in the girls meet in 34.4, but Waterford took teams honors with a combined time of 113.3. Debbie McNair took second for Waterford with a time of 35.2. Waterford finished second in third and Utica fourth. Bendic-tine was third in the girls competition. Following is the summary; BOY5' MIRT Tim Brmnan 3?.3, Ttrry Brtei _ J.1, Tom Woldi 33.4-t0»al Urn? 134.5). Saeond-Watariord (Ray Tallarday 33.?, Gary. Edivardt 34.4, Rick ScBralnar 34.5, Ron Edwardi 34.7—total tima 141.7). Third-Banadictina 170.4. Fourtti-Utica T.?. GIRLT MEET Flrat-Watartord (OatMa McNair 35.1 ilia Crary 374, Sua Nya r ‘ ' - -- 113J. 704$.74-73-2$S total Duke Holds No. 1 Spot Wolverines Gain in Cage Poll From Our Newi Wires The Wblverines of Michigan, highly rated when the basketball season started then dropped from the ranks of the mighty following a mediocre beginning, are back in the top 10 in the Associated Press major college pdl. * w * The Big Ten Conference leaders, who eked out a 6^ victory over Wisconsin Saturday, are in 9th place, recipients of 49 pdnts from? the. AP’s panel of sports writers and jpprtscastersl ★ ★ ★ trading the pack are three Southern schools — Duke, Kentucky and Vanderbilt, ■Die top-rated Blue Devils received M first-place votes and 398 points after whipping North Carolina State Saturday for their 13th straight victory. Vanderbilt advanced from fourth to third, replacing Prmddence. An nnasaal note is that both the AP and UPl polls are Meirtical. Kentucky and Vanderbilt are both ready for their showdown NBA Standings By Tte AtwcloM Prat? Bnltni DMilM Wm lm m. BMiim Bf$1on ....... 34 14 .410 Clnclntell ... 34 17 .447 , V? ■............. 34 17 .<47 V, ..... 14 34 .330 II Wtrior* DiVltiM 4$ . 31 35 .554 - :hoe . . 35 30 .455 5W —.......... 25 3) .444 4- Sf. Loyta .... 23 31 .424 7 Dotroll ...... 14 37 J03 )3Vk MOdteirt R4$Mt Sm Fftecls^iy, Bajtlmnr* 11$ Dttroll vt. Boston at Ntw York Baltlnwr? at Naw York Cincinnati at San Francisco BOstonarfiSr^'*®*"^-KS‘v'?.‘j?fll»... JF 54 444 311 1,33? 21? 10. Baaty, U.L. ... M 40) 20 1A0? 20.2 Wednesday, which may possibly decide the eventual national and NCAX basketball champion. The Wildcats stretched their perfect record to 15-0 Monday night by trouncing Alabama 82-62 while the Commodores rallied well in the«finai minutes to overcome Auburn 68-63. SECOND TIME The two Southifeastem Conf^-ence powers clash for the spc-ond time this season ai Nash-wlle on Wednesday. ThI' winner oHlI be favored to go (hi to caption the conference title and an automatic berth in the NCAA championships. Ih their previous meeting this season at Lexington, Kratucky beat the Commodores Alabama surged to a 37-36 lead over Kmtucky early in the second half when Robert Hickey poured in sbc straight points aft- Bat the Wildcats ended i doubt by retaliating with 17 straight points In a foar-min-nte span. ClydeLee, held to only two field goals and 15 points, converted six foul shots in the final two minutes to [wovide Vanderbilt with its margin of victory, which left Vanderbilt with a 16-2 “5cord. Following is (he AP wHl with records for games through Saturday; Tte vqtlRB wmi fln?.plMU ballots In i. St. Jo^'s, Fa........ 13-4 75 ?. Mlcfilgan ........... 1M 4? 10. Cincinnati .......... 144 30 LAKELAND ATHLETIC ASSOCMTION A'riciirgirL' W L W L Jays 3 3 Cardinals 3 ‘ Hawks 3 3 Eaglas 1 Natianal DMslm ssff /Us- 'i irsKiSTS Eagle Scout image of its ball players, would be so irresponsible as to flout a coOrt order. “Truly it is in the character Of the monopolistic men we dealing with.’’ Stafford argu^ that baseball had won the original five-week delay in the trial because one of its lawyers had insisted that it would take a great deal of time to comply with Roller’^ order, Fanttac Frasa Fhota LEADS DRAGONS—Lake Orion’s flragons are having a miserable time of it on the baskdtball court this season, The team owns a 1-9 record, but .one of the bright spots in a dismal campaign has been the play of center Dennis Brophy, the team’s top scorer, who’ll be in the lineup tonight when the Dragons entertain Clawson. Jackets Meet 3 Top Teams Avondale in Spoiler's Role oi 0-A Avondale’s chances of winning the Oakland A basketball title are slim at best, but the Yellow Yackets are in a position to help decide who does win it. piled up a SM league mark and 6-4 over-all. ■A * * The Jackets are currently riding a two game winning streak and they just might catch Cousino looking past them tonight. The game opens with a junior varsity tilt at 6;30. , OTHER GAMES In other O-A games. Lake Orion jl-8) entertains Gawson (5M), Rochester (5-4) travels to Fits^erald (7-2) and Madison (2-7) visits Troy (M). Lake Orion has lost three in a row and the Dragons may not have the scoring punch to stay with Clawson. An important nonconference outing tonij^t will find unbeat- en Kettering (9-0) traveling t Milford (1-9). It’s a game the -Kettering Wing Star's Injury Needs Healing Time DETROIT (AP) - Team physician Dr. John Finley said Monday it will take another five or six days to determine the full extent of the eye injury to Alt Star Detroit Red Wings defense-man Doug Barkley. Barkley underwent surgery Sunday after he was struck by a stick while fighting for the puck with Chicago’s Doug Mohns. Dr. Milton Koslcy of the Red Wings’ medical staff described the injury as a “tear where the white and the colored part of the eye meet.” Dr. Finley explained that the tear was repaired but extra time would be needed to allow the blood to drain from the area and allow closer examination. ★ A ,★ The Red Wings also announced that Manager-Goach Sid Abel’s mother-in-law Mrs. Lillian Mcn-andy, 72, died in Detroit Monday. Funeral service will be held Thiqvday aiid Abel will Qy to Boston immediately afterward to join the team. quintet must win, since a loss to the Milford crew would mar the team's chances of moving into the ;lop 10 Class A teams in^ the state. Hie Captains were among the top 20 this week. AAA Elsewhere on the schedule, Oxford has a date at Ortonville, Holly visits Flint St. Michael, L’Aose Creuse plays at Clinfon-dale, Royal Oak Shrine journeys to Detroit Benedictine and Im-lay City has a date at Yale. In the. Southern Thumb, a full slate is on tap with Capac at Brown City, Almont at Armada, Dryden at New Haven and Memphis at Anchor Bay. NHL Standings Chicago :.. »fl.K New York , . 23 14 4 52 147 111 :gi’J Iff ISIS iMf^wduM. NewYorkat Chicago Tho leading scoran: Ftoyar, foam • A Ft$. i-SLST'SSR.i,; 3. MIkItl, Chk Routsaau, Atomreai 7. Richard, Montraal . a, Chicago .... 1, Dehair...... Kchlo, Dalrelt .. rBRNATIDN Mand^l Dflien Bmjs 804 NORliB PERRY Pontiac, Michigan Phono 334-9041 BISMARKS Sugar Coat«d J«lli«s and Frost-ings In a D«licious Assortment of Flavors. Tills IFeefc’s Added Feature: f PECAN ROLLS OKN SUNDAY tlmi TNUMOAY I AM. Id 11 F.M. JDaarn’a Famout Nut and Cinnamon Taste Treat FRIDAYS and SATURDAYS • AON. to 12 P.M. Qn th» Way to Work or Hom'i From o Party, You'll Enjoy Dovgn's Famous Flavor Browod Coffoo pawn DOBOT5 I>—2 THE l’OXTlAe iM{KSS, TUESl)AV, FEBRUARY 1. 1966 Runs Record to 9^1 Loop Leader Triumphs Booth Homes Tan Ms, repordi/ Another Iriter-league scrapi i to 9-1 last night with in easy'found the Packers (4^5) down- I 58-33 triumph over Tasty Bakery (0-9) in, inter-league Pontiac recreation, basekttwill action. 4ng Highland Lakes Community! College (5^4), 68-57. EFFICIENT! That’s Temporary ". Help From Manpower . Use our bonded, insured “Reli-1 ab)es" for loading, shipping, I 1 warehouse work or general la-1 bot. One roan op a crew. MANPOWER •THE VERY BEST IN TEMPORARY HELP CALL i 332:8386 1338 West Wide Track, Pontiac! AMERICAS lARGEST SELLING BRAND *^e Victory by Booth Homes kept the tearri atop the American League while Tasty Bakery slid a little deeper into the National League cellar. Roger Hayward led Uie winners with I6s points; . i Ed Zuirk tossed in 25 points for the Packers Who gained a little ground in t|ie AL.-GSry ! Ross Was high for the Community College five with 16 points. ! In a couple of International League games, Coulacos Insurance (7-0) trimmed Autobahn Motors (2-4), 47-44, and the All Stars (4-3) downed UAW 653-2 (3-3), 54-51; Plagued Track Hopes to Get Card Resumed HOWIE, Md..;alpd .ofply ImI llw linM ft ypur truck. pnougti Ip pin, pnyunl pccidpnipl nipaiing af Pioneer CampePSales 3360 W. Huron ii. Ju$t West of Elizabeth Lake Rd. Phone FE 2-3989 ■■■■■■■oooooiiooooBaaMaBBaiaiBBH ' HEAV?:DuniiEvrrREAii^ ketball. fection. The team went on. to c The- victory gave Six R’s a |- 4-1 record and moved the teanw * ^ , OVO Uy, £iU WOUlvY. DUiJ Lid Swwp four points from league other scores reported: Robertson Builders. . . into a tie for the league lead alongLwith the Fredman quintet; R The winners, down 43-36 after three quarters, outscor^ Fryman 27-9 in the final frame with Ken McClintock gefting 12 of his nifyyyyypytpoeiei^ game-high 18 points in the pe- Moshcr’s 641 (215-214) ,i5f-vW-.fi:Oa^ ^ Smith tossed in 17---------1-----JL • ^ for the losers. hit 2 a Points Comm. That cut the leqd to one-half point as Hazeltqn Lettering slipped into second place ahead of the houseteam. A strong performance also was given by the Four-O-Six bar squad which hit 3269 (1156-1116) led by Warren High Seric l3-aii-l40,- Mandon Lake CC Lake Orion Baptist - United Missionary 213-»0-a40,' Joe Foster, Trjple XXX, ,- &TYJomsr%-w;i ^ick Spartan Lineman Claremco Stapleton, 331; Paul George, I FAULTY TRANSMISSIONS REPAIRED 1957-'61 RELIAfiLUiimissio^ 922 Oakland cerd. FE 4-0701 COOLEY LAKE | PHILADELPHIA* (AP) -, High*orrS:r*.!:d"'sTi.n'r5i«iri,b.'Michigan state linemroi Haroli '"'SrwavTanbv Lucas was named college lini Thursday Ladies Meier Classic ioT -------------------- ‘ man of 1965 Monday night by the Philadelphia Sports Writers A.ssociation. In other action, Howe’s Lanes (3-2t handed Joe’s Bar^No. 1 (2-3) a 54-51 setback and Cole-: man’s Crew (2-3) downed Joe’s! Bar No. 2 ( 0-5), 90-54. | Squash Title to Whitcroft High Series—Chet Jarujel, Nagel, 401. High Games~F?a __________ 1222; Al Weisenberger, 221; Dick Wright, '217; Gordie Doyon, 217, Elies Vela, 214. wadnisday Maming Apgals High Series—Dorothea Dyker, 200-204— 577. High Games—Mildrad Putnam, 232; Donna ' Kempt, 307. les-Bill Sadler, -232; Gay Jim Devine collected 27 points for Howe’s Lanes while Joe Um- ’ phrey and Roy Beagle tossed in 12 apiece for the losers. Bill Lemaux paced Coleman’s with 36 points, a season high i City Jeweler Winner in Veteran's Class Thompson, ^Thg^ay Pontiac Women teachers 0 Bowl. Teem—3 Is Tlint Enough Money to Pay Ofj ALL Your Bills? Our Confidential HOHEOWHER’S LOAM PLAN Gats You Complately Out of Deb*'- Borrow All The Way ;:‘5,ooo On Your Home Equity $5,000 wc.il58 Par Month $3,000 - $97.23 Per Month $1,500 - $49.50 Per Month WONDfRLAND LANES Tuttday Mvin-Lakas , Last year Pontiac jeweler ei^tiC '^2*2r"'M'inusaTli5i'‘we^SS the league, while Andy. Miceli Glenn Whitcroff nabbed four howe-s lanes collected 26 for the losers. impressive squash titles, includ- Hioh'^e''r*«* ting a national three-man team Nor _______________' title trophy, but Sunday he wo ■ ‘ the biggest prize of his career, j High Games a^ The 40-year-oW Pontiac Op- mar/^chr^tie, m timisl Club president took three tesSa^LLSdS^ straight matches from Bill ‘ Schock of St. Louis to I Sports Calendar j BASKETBALL Tonight Flint Vulhwfslern at Pontiac Central | Western U.S. Veterans’ Singles I Dnr,t;»- M»r,t,»rn >1 n«trnl| CatholiC , ° 1 Caniral Bay City Central al Bay City Flint Central at. Saginaw Kettering at Milford o«4lay Feb. 11-13 In! City Centraj at Flint Central j NeW York City along With 1 Whitcroft and Austin. Wrtttlind Pontiac Central at Banina t Royal Oak Kimball FAaORY RE/yiANUFACTURED ENGINES EXCHANGE for Most 6-Cyl. 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Are! ^teovtn fnxnt sp*iw* chuck hoik shockt FRONT-END ALIGNMENT Mr*a«W*Oo- 1. Complettly align front end 2. Corrset camber, cister, and 3. We’ll r.epack front wheel bearings 4. Give bumper-to-bumper safety check Brake Adjustment! • Adjust brakes W Rcpiick bearings • Check seals 1 • Add fluid, test ^ this ^ "I I : week A ^Just JL‘ Y ] J- ,.J R__________ For Faster Leaky Mufflers? Free! Exhaust Sys- j ’ tern Safety Inspec- [ tion. Don't take | chances, driving with | . windows closedxintil | j exhaust system is k inspected. OUR RED CARPET LEADS TO "GREEN” •It a cash loan will' solve your problem, you’ll find .that our Red Carpet Service means a glad-to se’e you, make yourself-at- -| I home attitude. If you've had a brush with financial difficulties,' keep in mind that we're blushing off the Red Carpet for you. HOW MUCH .CAN YOU USE? UMN CUN YOU aipAr'MONTHLY SIZE 12MoA. UMm. 24 Mat- SOMos. $100 5 9.77 $ 6.99 nr 300 29.31 20.M $1643 |14,96 SOO 43.12 34.ll 27,21 23.17 BOO 75.61 53.30 42.20 35.57 1000 93.30 65.91 52.02 '43.73 COMMERCIAL CREDIT PLAN* »A Mrvic* Offtrtd by Commgrclal Credit Plan, ^Incbrjioratfd ’ Spring Starting MOTOR '^^TUNE-UPl Easj^Termal ♦14*“ .eyiN I Includes new spark I plugs, points, condenser, I and rotor. (Additional I parts'extra) goodAear 2243 SOUTH TELEGRAPH ROAD MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER • Phone: 334*9954 40 W. WKE ST. OPEN daily 8:30 A.M. to 6 P.M. . Ffi. »til 7:30 - Sat. »til 2:30 FE 6*6123 >/'-V THE PONTIAC intKSS, Tl'KSDAV. KKUKLAKV D-^3 arkefe Biffiess and F •>■’ r-.: . * V- ■ MARKETS The following 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. Many Other Issues Weak State Points LikeHhoods Seen in Viet War Step-Up Prof if Report Spurs GM Stock to Consj Produce NEW YORK (AP) — Strength i airlines were other features of siohs,, slipped a fraction in General Motors and further the market which was rtriftinfl ° li n 'i iriiilmi weakness in Americarh Ti la iilinili In.... I'i ul iTTitheAsso-^MERlCAN EXCHANGE phone were features in a mixediciated Press average. , _ . ■ , u- u stock market early this afte«.«^.. >rregularly high- Motiv By SAM DAWSdN ' But resumption of full-scale for still more orders, more AP Business News Analyst operations in Southeast Asia production, more jobs. Mirw vnpir it c r®™>ves for the pres’ent One of Increased demand for some uncertainties that have been metals in short supply, such as bomb ng of North Viet Nam busine.siimen and non- ronner fnr miUbirv and stepped-up fighting in South ed Viet Naiff could ossler Killing Applet, Macintaih, ear Apples, Norlhem Spy, bi Apples, Steel Red, bu. Apples, elder ■— - ige?^iy,'Ti Cabbage, Sid., bu. 1. Increased U. S. military spending in the _ .. , . , n.JOONsAVERAGE er on the American Stock Exr^MIAMI, Fla. 'iP — Asst. State period ahead, ““l" rM The AP average at noon was change. Trading was ac^Atty. Arthur Huttoc said today 2. More pres- jso GM responded to eovernightN^j^^ ^ jgj g industrials [Valley Metallurgical a^ned the state will prove that Can- sure for tax in- news of Its record-breakingmails’ off <6 and utilities off about 3 in response to sta^ split dace Mossier and her nephew, creases later r,-,.!.*. o gyntcx W3S up about 2. Melvin Lane Powers, conspired on. The opening of a peace drive American-Book, Aurora Plas-to kill her multimillionaire 3. More fire ..1 the United Nations, even tics,. Baker Industries, Product husband, Jacques, for three undef what as American Telephone was off though balanced by the renewal Research, were up a point or reasons. nowws only profits, spurting more than ’■”1 points. plaguing businesspien and con- copper, needed for military gressmen alike. hardware, will generate still more pressure for higher prices. Demand for many other baste materials, even if now “ Carroti, togptdl bu. Cticry, Root, Hi. HorMradlth, pk. b>kt. Ltokt, dz.tbcht. Onions, dry, SO-lb. bo{ Pdrinipt', Ctllo Pdk, ( iioolabout half a point, as it eqntin^ T“|ued to touch new lows ler 1965- of bombing in. North Viet Nam,[more. Dorr-Oliver preferred' The first reason. HuttOe told a simmering threat of further Appropriations for the Viet cramping .r.,1 uriHinm. D.nska... 9 19..mfln iiirv in an nnpninb inilatlon. , . j . nrodurtinn of civilian goods nr I, Acornl***'/?' I , Buttorcua I Activity in some of the lower-prices issues and weakness in aerospace defense stocks and DAWSON ^"^Itll pHULU pussil parently . still remote, govern-' , . , j ment, business and the stock « «“PPly. will grow instead marketallwill make theipplans°f slacken. This wiU Support on the supposition that the Unit-T^eir Prjcejevels and ^pmise ed States wilL priced for an production schedules, indefinite period on a small war RAPID GROWTH ■ basis. The U.S. economic growth has For the economy, this fore- been so rapid over the last five Shadows: years that it can easily take the INCREASE DUE present scale of the Viet Nam was apparently disconcerting to holders of the aerospace stocks. American Motors, the most active stock of the past two ses- and Winipms Brothers lost a 12-rnan jury in an opening, Nam war - slated at 110 biUion ^oods or more than 2. * statement, was Powers’ per-CONTINUE BID are more likely to be in-P“Wng the U S. Treasury under Corporate and U.S. Treasury sonal hatred of Mossier. The, president Johnson stresses dreased ' later on than be Sreat strain. bonds were mostly unchan^ others, he said, were “a sordid, that the quest for a peaceful trimmed. in light trading. illicit, love affair and money.” solution continue. The New York Stock Exchange The 69-year-old Mossier, who willed Kis wife • a $28-miIIion banking estate, was bludgeoned dnd^ stabbed to death in his 'Miarprapartment June 30. 1964. Hultoe told the jury at the beginning of the 12th day of the .. ... - trial that on June zu, i»w,Mos-i I, 4SH 51'* ^ ’ sler called police Jo his palatial 5? u'/T-uvi - 'wjhome at Houston, Tex., to “kick n + Hi Powers Out of his house.” regret IT’ But although spending for the Defense industries can look — ^— ________________—----- - . scheduled to be stepped up by $3. biiiroif in the next fiscal year,' ' the. al^jropriation request would r'niiri Affirinvli have been more than that with- ^uun MTTIUUYIT ^ . out fhe present cost, of the Vidt ....... ........ Nam war. Pfobe4a£fcs Are Cited: Any further escalation of mili-itary 'efforts might cause Congress to reconsider the amounts to be spared for the domestic ' DETROIT (AP) “ A Detroit The mayor declined to elab-programs. Many communities, policeman has signed an affi-l orate, and Murphy said he had business firnis, and citizens davit in which he says an aide no immediate comment. have a stake In these, this happened. Huttoe . inmr MwardL.................... 47 41H ChICMO e«cb«ngt - boll»r itcady wholkMlt buying prlc« '] ....— .. Koru AA »J A »'/j; »0 B MT*! C*n 1 JO »,C 57V., Ctrl *0,B H C “ ..... ... . - ^ J3J Eggi untvt^ unchanged to I [ ij Goodrch 3*20 M 32'/i 33'-4 M'-:* -? M 11 TO»>% 70Vi 70*/^ GrtctCo 1.20 \ 74H 74^ + GranitCS 1.40 MW - H Gt west FinI 17 3»W 3«H 3IH 3 13H 13H ■*' 44 J7 54W .. . 52 471A 4«W 44W - W 31 SIH 5IH 5(H 3 35H 2544 35H Raytheon .00 Reading Co RelchCh .30a RepubSteel 3 Revlon 1.30 Rexall .30b m Reyn Met .75 324 5»V Reyn Tob 3 3» 44 RheemM 1.30 112 30 Rohr Corp 1 34 444 RoyCCola .40 m 34V RoyDut 1.85g RyderSy .lOe _ ,, Alter mis "uuue gra„d juror EdwardioNF MAN PROBF ^ ^*®‘y _^said. Powers told Mossier that ^ ■ and an increased war effort ii 41>7 - ruwers luiu iviussier iiiai « p aa' a kivl him fnr “anvl • , 314 far! i 47°“ ^""8®®‘knowl5e^'rnight have regard- to be sustained together " ” day of your life. ^ ing an/wrongdoing in the Cityand financed. Congress might witnesses particularly in con- J"y turn to increasing taxes to keep ^[also would testify that Powers . - ..... 13 13W 13 31 4344 434i 43 45'/i 45H 45H 58V} 58H /'‘[.pnee Stated that “he loved Can-1 Re was appointed by circuit mounting too fast. ~ ■ ^j'dace so much he would kill tor| ^avanagh has ;sent the'«/<*;• ^JJey aPP™v^ « MORE EFFORT xw ★ * * I Kelley in which Kelley asked a' Also-likely is increased effort 3844 38H-v; The state will offer evidence, j J?“"‘y ’^grand^ jury to look into allegedly the administration to hold 4 Huttoe said, that in December^^Ppy , ,nr.nmn«n„in« «i«t itraffic ticket fixing activiUes in down basic prices by msistence T IM963 Powers tried to hire an em-' J" ® SSs’ affSavU ^ayne County Sheriff’s Of- «n the government guidelines on fall. the ’Treasury deficit from 43w* 4344 -t shortly bloody car at the Mi-4 75” 75** 75^ i 4 ami Airport. 1 BO'1 80H Io4 t 4 Huttoe’s opening statement was to be follow^ by -Percy Foreman, a gray-haired vet- M^*-'«!ploye of his Houston trailer Bernard A. Mullins’ affidavit, teinte ,0 kill Mossier, TOU«,'Mn tt,e counly. Pwgim that on an earlier date Mrs. ^ . ... ^ ... .sinrp has pynandpd hk artivi- watched closer than ever now. fice as well as “vice and cor- wages and prices. ’The threat of inflation will be Police Department. ! 4 Mossier tried to hire an ex-con- eJS for theTr cinsi^ ■ Viet to murder her. husband. 'ui acS asTnS^ files of the Criminal Intel- Huttoe said there .would be of the Detroit, other testimony - that Powers - 18 53W 51'. 51H - h!w3s With Mrs. Mossier in Miami 4? 58W m4 »w - h in the days before the killing, 31 MW "w u'h - 44 was in the neighborhood of Mos- 33 3744 37* 3t4 I'w sler’s apartment the night he '{ 34** 33H 3344 - ®**‘**'> ®"d flew back to - ^'Houston shortly afterward, GOP Backs New Gf Bill Mullins, a former member of the Police Department’s Vice Bureau who was transferred to precinct duty last October, said in his affidavit that State Police Det. (leorge Smith, attached to the Piggins jury, askei bTST DETROIT (APi-^United, Auto early in December for informa- Workers turned down a second tion on wrongdoing in Detroit, time Monday a tentative agree-Mullins said he had no infor- ment to end a strike at a key UAW Nixes Pact Again at Chrysler's ,i, WAS.HINGTON (UPII - Re- ................................ iiiciii III ciKi a ail me ■' M44 35v' ” hundreds of capital PiJblicans ■Threw their weight to-mation “that would allow the Chrysler Corp. plant. “ 78V4 ’7H 77H-1H crime trials, .speaking for Pow- day behind a new GI bill of grand jury to make any in- A walkout erupted Friday at '3 49H 6^ * ^rs. college education for Viet Nam quiry into wrongdoing in the a stamping ^ant in suburban War veterans and all ex-service- citv of Detroit. Sterling Township. Chrysler has men since thflt Korean War. ' pprctotitmt reported that unless there is a A ★ ★ WAS I ER.1STENT quick return to work a shortage Rep E Ross Adair of. In- Smith was quite per- parts could idle 30,000 other diana, ranking Republican on ‘^at I workers this week, the House Veterans Committee information and * * * he reiterated several times how blames what it said GOP members were ... ... . . , j agreement with Chairman Olinlf^^*’ says are hundreds of unresolved a T..on,m . n_Tov ikot onu:bc able to come .into the City,f.-:py„n_„. n,nr|rina mndi- By ROGER E. SPEAR Q)'“Can you please tell me why Radio Corp. of America is lagging so far behind the other color television producers? We bought 200 sharet righi after it split and are disappointed in its action.” -‘ ' A.K. _. Teague,-D-Tex., that any ^'‘5;!grievances over wo “Cold War” bill should extendi®! *!J® ^!^ tions. The Sterling Township to all veterans discharged since^ Pl^nt employs 2,300. , Jan 31 1955 Judge Piggins wanted the infor- Monday’s vote for rejection mation regarding the city ad-^gs 547, with 395 for ratifica-,^.. That would include 3.5-mil- ministration, particularly Mayor Ron of a tentative agreement veterans discharged since Cavanagh, so bad'that hC could cached Saturday night. Surprising both union and management Sunday, striking UAW Local 1264 voted 166-153 against 1955 in addition to GI’s now taste it. fighting in Viet Nam. Teague s bill would give all men in military service school benefits after discharge. It MsQ would open up limited hospital H A) Your RCA — siqce the 1964 benefits to exrservicemen since H split and stock dividend — hasithe Korean War for nonservice i’'‘ increased in value 65-70 per connected ailments. Another leader ' ' Area Man Resigns as Aide to Kelley ratification. A second ballot was ordered on grounds the first was not sufficiently large to be representative. Douglas Fraser, chief of the-UAW’s Chrysler department, c^. Another ^ eok>r~Iir addition, the-m* a s ii rT!___lamix f rvRn..ri{p nt Rirm- rejection meant the strike ^ in loans similar to those under the assysTanrto'state~AU^^^ "oen. 11 ??** si'* ??** 1 1? va^w 1.30 14 47 - 4844 47 ■+'.^.TTie reason for this disparity, WoiTJlVi^ IT and Korean War prank Kelley a -........ 17 4344 43 43'4 + ; pie. RCA is a great corpora- rates. tion, engaged in all phases of to .cld proykie guar.dtto tan* retired yesterday 74 MV? m'4 54V? I Ii electronics, radio and TV brbad-4?H-Ji?4 4ihI h®®^'"8- Although if is the larg-. 28 4044* 4044 + H 6st mSfcer of color TV tubes 54H 53H VsH -1^* and sets, it? volume m other ‘ 53 estli 3914 - I4 areas is so huge as to minimize ‘ -y y '/ *' impact of rising color TV 0 3r3V^4 31544-iH production. ■ ______^^0 -17? Admiral, on the other hand,i copyrighiSr by Th* Associited pr«s».i9M has a voluqje of probably a Ut-| Sales figures are unofficial ^ tie Over $300 pjilliqn, has rela-i Unless otiwrwis^noted.^raies of^^^ jjygjy shares in public hands 15-Day Jail Terms for 3 U-M Students since 1947. An attorney for 48 years, O'Rourke had been '. assigned to the I e g a staff of the Michigan Em- O’ROURKE ployment Security Commission Since W56. His office was at the" the situation and its impact on other Chrysler plants, I am taking personal charge of the, renewed negotiations.” Hedda Hopper Is Critically III TO metev^’ageol riling ^ *"f lo'’eI‘g™gJ''n C'l pl»“ to-reported ANN ARBOR (AP) - HOLLYWOOD (UPl),- Hedr in this area wir.?rX sViV* than pn RCA, and the‘?«y ^unti^s J-^;l'“52,.--7'?ri“J.yn_?r.cP.'?£.'lrr,!:‘Jrisk-^^ three University of counties^ .5,“;: demand for color TV abates, m studente .««vic^ o I i*tt . . 4 ^ in An Oct. 15 anti'VlCt TiirfdP headquarteil in Detroit. ^ rvDr...,be.^i439 Stanley, plans J® H®PP®.''' ®f the top movie in private legal prac-. ,ave trespass in , Nam !Sg„„„____________________ you would -«■-Nan, .gmonstration " ■■’llici'mu'i^fvftPPney in Admirai:^®*^ •cc’rmui.iw. ^ you have a fi better and, nTditwertld'rJiMiina l believc. Safer stock in pCA. ..) 'rtock^durliM (.Copyright, 1966) . both of Ann Arbor, and egllmitid ca«h v»IU€ dn ex-dlvIdend or ex TOmmiC L. idlstrlbutldn News in Brief U ..... liTfulT.' x-dis7|?x dlilrlbi r-Ex rlgtiH. **—Without STOCK AVERAOES ComplM by TIN Asm IS vyarrants. wd—When dl»- Net Change tributlid. wl^WhOT”’liaoad. nd-'Next day ■ Nm''Tu'et' ' Prev. Day racalyer»hlp or woek I Stgh she was being treated for pneumonia. . Miss Hopper. 75. almost as famous for her unique hats as 'for her chronicling of movie „ „ ^ colony doings, was hospitalized u;*V* ^r**!!*^®**' ®f last Sunday morning. Suber, 17„i of Waterford Townshio, reported to, Detroit, alSb were ordered' to township police ye^erday theft' A wiarful l»P“lar fig-pay $50' fines an« $15 court of a pair of skis, valued at $85. u" Hollywood for abou costs. 530.3 308.5 180.8 385.1 530.8 307.0 188.1 535.3 305.4 189.1 j 833A IN.P 1M.I 3 408.3 174.0 173.5 3 ■OND AVEEAOES CarnplM bj Xl» Day' 79.3 101.0 * 15.1 93J 90.4 Valley >4etallur I tit DIVIDENDS OECLAEED Pa- S"------------------ W* rM ■ sibcK Month Ago 78.3 '100.9 Yoar A^ 117 101.7 198SH8 High U.7 102.5 90.4 Wolvarine Al Spe INCRBAfED. ”tr§ 13.8 94.2 Woluerlna 95.0 94.3 91.4 90.1 Avnat Inc "* *‘.2|Raxall Dri tp Judge Breakey was expected to continue individual sentencing of the 29 persons convicted by a Circuit Court jury after 30 minutes of deliberation Friday. The defendants, mostly U-M students and instructors, were convicted of the same charge Oct. 27 in Ann Arbor Municipal Court, but appealed They were retried last week in Circuit Court. , three decades, Mls} .. Sheriff’s deputies are Invest!- ^as an actress in her o w n gating theft of an air wrench, | right, the former wife of i valued at $132, yesterday fromi famed sUr and mother of an Betson’s Service, 30 W. qjarks-l actor, ton, Orion Township. ■ _. ... - Since 1937. Miss Hopper has been syndicated in scores ol puDlications throughout the Unit-„ed States by the Chicago Trib- D0W-30NR8 NOON AVBRAOIt STOCKS 30 Indus, 880 10 Indutirlalt l4i 31-0 54 York News Syndicate 347!oi-i;23' Born in Hollidaysburg, Pa.. i4.9i-o.b3jMiss Hopppr went t^ New York a8:7ilIlo.ii during World War I to sUr In a 93;SIo.K I succession of Broadway phlys. THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 1, 1&66 Orders for Jet Plpn^s to Swell Civil Fleets i' Washington Scene WASHINGTON flJPD - The! The associatioj^ said yester-nation’s airlines will ad^a rec- day the planes would cost $1.4-ord number of 282 jet aircraft , billion. They are expected-to to their fleets this year, accord-j increase carrying capacity of 0 the Air Transport Associ-ithe airlines from 14 to 17 per I cent; Pilot Project Is Viewed Wirtz Avoids | Specifics on Hike in Wage FIbor I WASHINGTON (UPB - Labor By Esther Van Wagoner Tufty there were adequate and mod-^ Willard ■ Wirtz* is Washington Correspondent housing, the congressman ^ , WASHiNc-mN-A niin» ^ “«ke »"■ altract new plants an esalntl’ Wirtz did say, however, that cilq” the $1.75 an hour minimum that is being sought by the House Education and Labor Coftimittee with administration guideposts for noninflationary j growth, ''example. -.Cheboygan took the initiative. 'That’s important TfO geT - , flehberg, former city manager,} who knows what can and can-, *'• not be done in the community! and is working with NORCAP IjqJqw Kirin (Northern Community Action Program), has been in Wash- I making public a special study ington seeking what federal \j{UIZ ^TGrT~\J 13 for Congress which strongly assistance is available. , supported increasing the ' .These conferences were set up by Congressman Clarence Clevenger, D-Mich., who has taken this pilot project' as a pet'^ause. * * , ' ' ! The labor secretary discussed! the • wage issue yesterday in | WASHINGTON (UPI) - expanding its cover- Weather permitting, .congres-^®' sional investigators hoped today tor pick up where they left off two weeks ago in their in^eii- Eskimos Boost Alaska Ol$ft/\n iniA Vll iriltw ITIaM Dial 332-8181 Pontiac Pr«$$» Want Ads non FAST ACTION NOTICU TO ADVeilTISIRS ADS KKliyUD SY S FJM-WILL SB FUBUSHBD TMB FOLLOWINO DAY. All ---- ------ — - ttMn tlM day tollowing tha day of publication attar tha |l^ maartlo^ Whan carmlla- r»r J*KI LL ^ N UMB ER.‘* No^ It. CtoafeiB ttma for advartlta-manti containing typa alias largar than regular agate type Is 12 o’clock noon tha day pra- A10 1S.N 1AM IMMEDIATE PAYMENT ON SALE OF SECURITIES AT STANDARD COMMISSION RATES ... ONLY ONE OF OtJR MANY SERVICES INVESTMENT BROKERS AND COUNSELORS FE 2-^117. 818 COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANKi£LDG. IMMEDIATE QUOTATION SERVICE Our Pocilitias Extend From C)j|att to Coast Deatli Notices He took R e h b e r g to have talks with officials i„ the-new *" Mississippi. TOKYO (UPD - Six , Alaskan Department of Housing Urban , The House Committee on Un- eskimoes arrived yesterday by Development, Public Housing,® ! ""wlt^^rt'S Community Facilities AdmiJ: today. istration urban renewal, and But the weekend snowstorm nan’s nnrth^ nn^i . the OEO community action pro-1 which overwhelmed Washing- Thur gram. ‘ N ton left some doubt whether They came back encouraged' the .Mississippi witnessesj with the worthiness of such ai be able to make it. ! pilot project and -that fedhrdl| Previous testimony has linked assistance, of varying kinds, Mississippi Klansmen with more was possible. . iviolence than the committee has AN IMPERATIVE ,come across anywhere else. It • The right kind o( continuing,"T'"'’. . ^rtinatlon lx seen as Intper.^ committee’s,investigation; has been in virtual suspension! since Jan. J8 to enable 'mem-1 bers to catch up on some of their other business. j The lull was broken .once. The committee met last Friday to' hear George W. Williams, a 45-' They were able to cle^ up some misconceptions of the area which stretches across I the northern portion of the I lower peniusula of Michigan. Probably even some Michigan! ,. - „ ■ ,, , folk think of this as largely rufal-iii. character when, actu- 5V ‘*®®®”f‘® *’®, *1®*^ ^^® ^lly, it is more aptly described!-!®” disgust when fellow BENGER, JANUARY 31, 1»A, VIVIAN Y., M71 Cooley Drive, White Lake Township; age 49; beloved wife of Nerold C. Benger; dear mother of Mrs. Marlon Brecht, Betty, William and Robert Benger; dear sister of James and William Johnson; also survived by five grandchildren. FuneraJ 'service will, be held Wednesday, February 3 at 10 a.m. at tha Elton Black Funeral Home, 1233 Union Lake Road, Union Lake, with Rev. Dorr Fbckler officiating. Interment In Riverside Cemefery, Alma, AAtchlgan. Mrs. Benger will lie In slate at the funeral home.__________ BRETON, JANUARY 31, I960, GUST, ■ 452 Arthur; age 73.» Funeral service will be Thursday, February 3, at 10 a.m. at the D. E. Pursley Funeral Home with Rev. Richard Reynolds ofticiallng. . will be In Perrv^ as a collection of a dozen small towns with all the needs of city living—d e m a n d i n g schools, homes, public utilities and sewage systems. * ★ ★ ' ^“City life without the disadvantages of a metropolis” is the way the congressman told the story, stressing “that within an hour’s drive anywhere in. the area, there is hunting, fishing, Klansmen started “whupping and shooting” at each other. Perry' Mount P*rk r. Breton will He in .funeral hOme. (Sug- Talks to Eye GOP Role m Negro Rights Quest ANN ARBOR (UPI) - More Tan 350 college students are expected to meet Friday and Saturday at the University of Michigan to discuss the role of the boating, and recreational ad- Hepublican party in the search vantages of many kinds.” for equality for the Negro. MORP iMniicTRv ' statewide conference was MORE INDUSTRY ; ^ Convinced that more industry licans and leaders of vari-would settle in Cheboygan if ous civil rights organizations. New! Two savings plans from Michigan Bank Ok Cemetery. Msted visiting tiours COLEMAN, JANUARY Ij; WM, LORETTIA, 192 Judson Street; age 79; bpioved Wife of Herbert C. Colemen; dear mother of Mrs. Nick Kerchoff, Mrs. William T. Johansen, Mrs. Robert McIntosh, Mrs. Donald E, Green, Zetlwood C. (Jack) and Verlyle H. (BUI) Coleman; daar sister of Mrs. Ed-• ward Greenwood, ■ Mrs. James Kelley, Mri. James Reed, Mrs. Joseph Abrams, Albert, Charles, James, and Elgle McCallum; also survived by 15 grandchildren and 22 great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Thursday, February 3, at 1:30 p.m. at tha Oonelson - Johns Funeral Home. Interment In Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mrs. Coleman will lit In state at the funeral home after 7 p.m. today. (Suggested HARGREAVES, JANUARY 31, 1944, JOHN, 1024 Boston, .Waterford Township; age' 03; dear father of Mr. Francis C. Hargreavas; dear brother of Mrs. Priscilla Eaton, William and Richard Hargreaves; e[so survived by one grandson r ^ -- n ___ .. at 10:30 -..... .. .... Donelson • Johns Funeral Home. ‘n Oakland Hills Cenje- l:or Regular Savings Interment tery. Mr. Hargre_._..... ... state at the funeral home after 7 p.m. today. (.Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m.) HATHAWAY, JANUARY~30n^ ANNA VIOLA, 442 E. Flint Street, Lake Orion; age 79; beloved mother ol Mrs. F. Milton (June) H^- grandchlldren. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, February 3 at 11 am. at Allen's Fu-> Home, Lake Orion, with Dr. J,»*ludgins ofliciating. In-it In Imlay Township Cemetery, Imley City. Mrs. Hathaway wll Me In state at tha funeral hortVe. Robert Card of Thanks e 1 MRS. JDA MAE' ik neighbors, and Qrlridle and Salvation- i fE WISH TO THANK OUR NEIG-bor* on Marlon St., and Dorcas Circle and Pastor Clyde Smith for •their kindness during our bereave- ■Shettiel^. I THE FAMILY OF MRS. EARL Campbell wishes to thank Reverend Hlldlng Bihl, Nancy Regler and the White Cross of the Perry Park Baptist Church, their rela-.fives, friends end neighbors, the In Memoriam 4-FIECE COMBO AVAILABLE FOR club dalds and-waddlng mcdptldns, parties. I79-44S4 fter 4 pjn. ANY girl or WUA4AN NEEOiNG a friendly adviser, phone FE S5I23 before 5 a.m., or If no answer, call FE ContMantlal. BE A HOSTESS FOR A WIG PAR-. ty. All wlga 100 Odr cant human hair. House of WIb*, tvelngs or Sat, and Sun. FE 0-4214. . DAINTY MAlO SUPPLIES 739 Akenomln-t . FE 5-7005 GET UUT 0# DEBT ON A PLANNED BUDGET PROGRAM YOU CAN AFFORD TAILORED TO YOUR INCOME SEE MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS 702 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. ____________FE B0454 ON AND AFTER THIS DATE, FEB. 1, 1944, I Witt not M raaponsibia lor any dabts contractad by any other than mysalf. Richard Lea ^haetler. 414 Tllmor, Pontiac, Sleigh “ride fun For your club, church group, scouts or family get-todethars. Horsa-drewn sletgh rida. Tobogganing and Ice ^tlng plus a horn# coekad spaghatti dinner. Groups of 20 or more. Call for reservations. UPLAND HILLS FARM 420-1411 FOX HOUND. WHITE WITH LEM-on spots. Maceday Lake area. Any Infarmatlon, raward. 425-1341. ^LOST OR STOLEN REGISTERED LOST IN VICINITY OF 14 AND 71 Mile Rd., John R. attacha.casa containing papers valuable to Christian Educational OIractor. UL 2-5115.____________ LOST: WHITE TOY POODLE, AN-swars'to "Duka," vicinity of Madison and Arlen? Sts. Reward. 711 E. Madtsen, MONTH OfO COLLIE Reward. Vicinity at W. Tannyibn and Carlyle. FE 0-8505.___ LOST - ENGAGEMENT ii I N 6 sometime Saturday. Jan. 22, vh clntty of Spartan's stora. Reward.' 473-1532._____________. I'llTHE 1944 CIVIL RIOHTS LAW PROHIBITS, WITH Iv CERTAIN EXCEPTIONS, X; {-(- DISCRIMINATION BE- X-I-;.; CAUSE OF sex. since ;X SOME OCCUPATIONS ARE -X X CONSIDERED MORE AT- -X ;X TRACTIVE TO PERSONS (ft v: OF ONE SEX THAN THE X OTHER, A 0 V E R T I S E- '.X X; M E N T S ARE PLACED '.X k UNDER THE MALE M <•: FEMALE COLUMNS FOR X; CONVENIENCE OF READ-X--X ERS. SUCH LISTINGS ARE I;!; NOT INTENDED TO EX- <■’. X'CLUOE PERSONS OF-X (X EITHER SEX. 2 I Help Wanted Mole Holp Wawtod Moli > CARPENTERS, ROUGH, MUST BE union, ytar-«round work. 331-0111. CARfiENTlh ANb HiLFihi Wk- eXBlkET^'MAKiR7'I5fWfllIN’ni. Superviiory tklllt rtgulrad. Odd (alary and llbaral banafit ■ogram. Contact Ptraonnal Dtpt.., OESIGNERS-DETAILERS Apply at 1015 Golf Or., Fanttac naar Orchard Lika 0^ Tglagraph. DRUG CLeRK,'tPART TIM*, 3 nights waakly, and avatv othor SundajL Mill! Pharmacy ilrnilllt- ESTIMATORS IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR ARCHITECTURAL TRADES ESTI-/MATORS ON INDUSTRIAL AND INSTITUTIONAL WORK. iOlUST BE QUALIFIED TO HANDLE COMPLETE ESTIMATE QUANTITY TAKE-OFF PRKINO Though you are not with us You shell never be forgotlen. Your memory will ba cherished tor- Sadly missed by Children end GrandchUdren. ........... . . OF mY^SISTER, Thelma Copenhaver Smith, #ho passed away 1 year ago today, Feb. 1, T945. She's ggnc to wall -for us with Her sister, ^rtruM Racine._____ IN LOVING MEMORY O"^ OUR wife. Mother and Sister, Thelme Smith, who passed away February 3 YOUNG MEN Needed Immediately tor new branch. No exparlanca naces- SALA^Y 5405 par month. Phone Personnel Manager, 9 to I p.m. Children-Carol, Ruthie, IN LOVING MEMORY OF MISS Sharon- Rose Morgen, who passed away 3 years ago, January 31, 1944. No one knows the silent heartache Loving thoughts will always wander To the spot where you are laid, God said. We shall meet again. Sadly missed by her close friends, whom she called Aunt A Unc)e-Mr. * Emory Balmer, Lapeei,. Michigan. IN LOVING MEMORY OF Ch'aRLI^ Pearson, who passed away 3 ytari ....."-y February I, 1943. — ...-7 His will. INTEREST For Longer Term Investment > With DAILY INTEREST you urn every day on every dollar from date of deposit to dati ol withdrawal. » Interest is paid and compoundid lanuary 1, April I, July 1 and Octo^r 1. • You^^sits are insured up to J10,000 by -tin -FaderaT DiposfHrwwtBci Corporation. KALBFLEISCH, JANUARY 31, 1944, DOUGLAS A., 44 S. Roselawn Drive; age 73; beloved husband of Mrs. Doris Kalbtlaischt daar fa. thar at Stewart G. Kalbfielsch; also survived by two grandchlF ! dran. Funeral service will be held I Wednesday, February 2, at 2 p.m. 1 atJhe D.E. Pursley Funeral Home ! wlfTi Rev. Mires Stine officiating. Cramatlon to . follow at White Chapel Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Kalb-flalsch will lie In state at the luharal home (Suggested visiting hours ^:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m.) LANYI,. JANUARY 3). 1944, J(> SEPH, 542 Meadow Ave.; age 54;’ beloved husbaiM of Charflna Lanyl;’ dear brother ol Mrs. Mery Kenney, Paul, Steve and John Lenyl. Funeral service will be Thursday, February 3, at 1:30 p.m. at Spirks-Grilfln Funeral Home. Interment In White Chapel Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Lenyl will lie In slate at the funeral homo. (Suogested visiting hours 3 te 5 p. NICK, _____ CHARLES, Drive; WhIti Lake Township; Lewis Nicholas; dear If Cynthia, Christina, Debra —- --------- - r brother of lather ,. ..... and Timothy Nick; . Mrs. Russell McDonald, s.nnsi, Nick, Tom and LeRoy Nicholas. There will ba a Trisaglon service at 8 p.m. today at Donalson-Johns Funeral Home. Funeral service will ba hold Wednesday, February 3 at 1:30 p.m. at the St. George Greek Nick will lie In state at tha Don-tlson-Johns Funeral Hama. Sug-oestad vlsltlrtg hours 3 To 5 and 7 to 9 p.m. Friends may make contributions to St. Gaorga Greek Orthodox Church, r—'-------- - able at tha funeral El E„ I beloved husband ol Corrina W. ■ ^ Parr; daar father of Mrs. Gwen- dolyn AAcClanton, Mrs. ' Dayana Gonner, Mrs. Samualla Hatchett, Mrs. V-M Ann AAcConnar and Miss Zella Porri daar brother of Roscoa , Parr. Funeral service will ba ____L Hhursday, February 3, af 1 ' l~’'p'.m. at the Trinity Baptist Church I with Rev. Laa A. Gragg officiating. Interment In Oak HIM Came-. { tary. Mr. Parr will lie In state at tha Frank Carruthars Funaral Michigan Bank NATIONAL A.SSOCIATION ASSETS OVER ,400 MILLION DOLLARS . ... MEMBER FDERAL DEPOSIT MSURANCE CORPORATION Telegroph at Square Lake^Road SPRESS, JANUARY 30, 1944, JOSEPH, 2IH4 Dunweddia Drive, Or-tanvllet age 49; dear father of Mrs. Dorothy Schilling, Joseph and Eugene Sprass. Funeral service will ba held Wednesday, February 2, at 11 a-tn. at the C. F. Sherman Funaral Hama, 135 South, Street, Ortonvila. Interment will --------------------s Camatery, Orton- Mlldrad Bratxioff, —-iry 2, ^ • 1:30 p.m. at tha Huittoon Fui^fl Heme, Pontiac, tnttrmant «yll) ba m Oak r-------------- " - (Sumttd V Id 7 to 9 p.m. $50 CASH ) churches c(Ubs, civic groups. Ill 04 bottles of Watkins vpnilla. aH ^^^9059+4a 10 a.m. or 4 te 4 . AND HARASSMENT. CAN'T BORROW YOURSELF OU1 OF DEBT' FE 24)1 B1 (BONDED AND LICENSEDI BOX REPLIES At 10 a.m. today there j replies at The. [Press Office in the fol-' 'owing boxes: ! 17, 18, 22, 31, 35, ----------TICI Funeral Directors COATS- funeral home DRAYTON PLAINS_______«« c J godharot funeral HOA Kaage Harbor, PIl 402.02QC OOffEL SON-JOHNS "Odslgnaa ter Funarala", rON BLACK funeral HON N LAKE ■ 343-; Huntoon FUNERAL HOME Jarving Pontiac for 50 years 79 Oakland Ava._ FE H SI»Arks-griffin fuheral home "Theugtittui Sarvlta’’ '■ Vgorhees-Siple FUNER’ . HOME. FE 2-B370 '.»ver 40 Yaarr Cemetery Lets Other folks make money from Pontiac Press WANT ADS If you haven't ... try one. Hundreds of others do . . . da’ly! 4 • Reliable Men lANlTORIAL WORK Steody, yeor around positions. Paid vocotion, other benefits. Must be nondrinkers. C. P. LEDFORD Maintenance Dept. .The Pontiac Press 48 W. Huron Between 9 ond 11 A.M. 10 BOYS MUSI M 14 years years of age. ^Y% " Atonday or Tuas- BERT FALKNER CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT THE PONTIAC PRESS iwHiai. auomir resumt ro: Kart Kefalas,^332 Cass Ava., Mt. Clam- ALERT MAN FOR LINE CREW duties at Aviation firm, must ba IS, aas station axpariefica will ba helpful, apply In person. Command-er Aviatlen, Pontiac AIrperf. _ ALL AROUND Ny(N .FOR TOOL shop, 2335 E. Lincoln, Birmingham. A PART TIME JOB ELECTRICIANS For- Machine Tools FIXTURE BUILDERS WELDING FABRICATORS Toolroom MochinisfS For mills ■ shapars - planar OVERTIME Paid: Holidays, vacations and Blue Cross Progressive Welder 915 Oakland Ava. (UC.)O) Pantlac : ENGINEERING . DRAFTSMEN city of Birmingham. To perform drafting for tht City Englnaarlng Oepartmenl. High scheet groduf-rtqulrad. Prafar background branch. Call 474-! '2^i 3 $200 PER MpNTH ■ APPLIANCE SALESMAN Davis or’Mr." Ernst, Hoc CadlllR Bump Shop, 2501 N. Weedward, Royal Oak. ._________ A TRAINEE FOR ASSISTANT MANAGER Oakland County distributor-for notional chain operation wlll-lnlart alfrf, raaponsibia young man. 19-35, for an unufuallY aUroctlva opportunity. Salary bated on ablll-Jy and background. Many fringa banaflts. Call Mr., Paco. 10 tm!- 474-2233. AD.q 03X100 A YEAR TO' YOUR AUTO MECHANIC, EXPERIENCED, > new warm building, Tom Eahr int. MIHgrd 404-17157 ' Elrmlnghan^ ^Ml 7-0955 AUTO MECHANIC Exparlancad, mutt have own tools. Guaranteed .wage, Blut Cress, unitorms and other fringe banaflts, modem- shag, to sarvka Rambler and Jaap, axcallant flat raft, -Superior Bimblar, 550 — - BRifCK LAYERf Steady work, gooit 9>y. OR 3-3442 attar 7. ,ROWN AND SHAkPE AUTOMATIC sat-up, precision parts, top rata, pension plan, plus banaflts. na prttsurt, suparvlilon potalbit. Pos-torla Screw Products. 99S S. Eton . -....7-B733. eVs driver an6 MAiNthhANdi CARPENTERS Afi6 HILFIRI -Steady work. 333-4121 attar 4 p.m. iry $5,572. Apply Parsonnal Ot-Municipal Building. 151 Mtr-St., Birmingham, Michigan. Excellent Opportunity lor a Young Man Supervise Newsboys PONTIAC* PRESS DISTRICT MANAGER High School Education Pleasing Personality Like to work wifh young people. . Dependable Automobile Desire to Get Ahead This Position offers: Steody employment Salary, car allowance Liberal Vocation Other Benefits MR. McCULLY CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT THE PONTIAC PRESS ENCiO BRIDGEPORT MILL OP-MATOR. PREFER MSN OVER 30. APPLY 30410 NINE MIL! RD., FARMINGTON, MICH. FINANCE ASSISTANT 1944-45 asllmatad 13.1 r.... lion; present capltak Improvamant pr^ram and parking structure Il.t mllllim. Apply Parsonnal Office, ISI Martin St„ Blnr‘"‘-— bdnaflls, steady 50 hogrs, pay ratal to maWi ......................-""ty. Call ixparl^ and i 1. 9 to 5 p.m ~ M Rlk MEN ONLY Above avwaga money (31300 er 207 W. Clarksten Rd., Lake Orlan. GAS STATION ATTENDANT. MUST have aoma axparlarato. *---------- Texaco Staflan. 1S99 iT W Ava., Elrm—— _____J|»^ Wiirttd M«l« 0000 PERMANENT INSIDE JOE If Iwndry worltf, Mptrlanc* not 3?5**to8[' A***"- Ml «2M. *■ hAwijiAR^ J HE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. FEERUARV> 1. 1966 . D—5 PART time or FUa TIME ‘•‘-‘1-icbool drop-oul, oornt SIJ.4I0 y*ir. Needi help In operating i ne«t, too much lor 1 man. I glvR.,you mv lecral to tucCni markal opa’ratlooT'Ago 'a-55, excellent itartlng rate, lull range of b^lt». Apply Sevon Food Stores, Paul Wlllhita, 4J5 S. Telegraph, Pontiac Mall, Woterlord Township. MACHINE HANDS TOP PONTIAC AREA PLANT Mlll-LATHE-SURFACE GRINDER ■ CARBET CORP. 10)5 Golf Dr. nr. Orchard Lake Rd. and Telegraph. MAN WANTED F'OR~SALES~TnO work. Apply «t 1307 Elli-' t Road, between 10 and PART TIME • Job openings lor married me over II, now amployad deys I fect^, botlnoM jMtaWthgnent u 6 IWp WRiifd MmI* STEAbY FULL TIME CLERK, FOR fienerel office work Includingi reight retes, claim wwk, etc. An-swer giving exparlenca, guallflca- I,-43040 Dequindre AIHeIp Woiittd Malt ereot Box 64 s necessary. Call Mon -| SALESMEN Full Time Position SeHiiig In Carpet Area EXPERIENCE DESIRABLE BUT NOT ESSENYiA^L Apply in Person Employment Office WANTED Good Reliable"^ . ■ponira'c Used Cor Salesman Good Pay, Good Fringe Benefits, apply in person, to Haupt Pontiac, .. .. clarkston, (No Phone, Hel|i Wanted FeinaU ^^7 jHelf Wanted Female 7|Sales Help, Male-Female l-A EXPERIENCED OR WILL TRAIN,|SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS CLOSED^SALES REPRESENTATIVE FOR es apply W 1. 4-1014 I. Maple, established r SECRETARY TO PURCHASING AGENT YARD MAN WANTED OR 4-0454 young man interested in learning pliRnbIng, no experience necessary, apply 34 Liberty 1-5. YOUNG MAN T(} LEARN TOOL and machine trades excellent portunlty. 2331L i n c o I n. ' ^ Hudson's DRIVER-SALESMAN \, PontiOC MqU SALARY-COmAiSSION AND BONUS -— __ ___ YOONG BARBER OR APPRENTICE, -to start Feb. I4th. Ballard's Barber Shop—IM Baldwin, Pontiac., EXPERIENCED WAITRESS. NIGHTi work. Harbor Bar. 003-0330. _ EXPERIENCED j PARTY PLAN DEALERS ! hS.5^ Are^yju looking for something dif- rn*g*™bac”kfou,S"1 Playhouse Compony, Ipc. :L SmSy. World's lergest TOY distributor' " Call 3S3-: Is looking for women to supe ' dealers to sell toys August to ue-cember.' No delivery. No collect ! , BENDIX RESEARCH Ing. Company furnishes FREE sup- ' LABORATORIES DIVISION piles and hostess gifts. Supervisor! 'O'Y MILE NORTHWESTERN HW training In June — all expenses paid. Write Immediately for Inter-1 ««lu«l opportunity employer. view: LAulse, Erickson,, Seles Man- SEAMSTRESS Time on your hands . DO YOU LIKE MONEY? - DO YOU LIKE PEOPLE?, DO YOU HATE CANVASSING? II 353-3500, Ex. 303 lo Established route, merried, physically tit and bondable, ages 33-, lO, panel truck and all expenses Halp Wanted Female 7 3 girls AGES 4 AND 4. .DESIRE staying with ■ EXPERIENCED Typists and telephone girls o< 31, lull tin* satarlM positions, , ".V .»»««■.. APP.'V iacatto?; DESIRE BUILDING - __ . siructlen work. 334-3044 after j. EXCELLENT PAINTING - MORN-Ings-OR 3-54M.____________, SHIRT UNIT operator, STEADY Wanted Real Estate CLARKSTON AREA, NEED 3 BED- O-RFDOnnU HOME room ranch home ff retired farm- A-BtUWUUW numc ^•r, pay up to 130,000 Por quick Ihadad lof, lOO'xIlS', 3-COf sale coil DORRIS A SON, REAL- prlvUeges, good baaefw TORS. OR 4-0334. ___ '® P»? <«>»"• NEED 3 STORY OLDER HOME IN Cl ATTI CV DCAITV good condition, basement,.garage. FLATTLEY REALTY pay up to 115,000. DORRIS I SON. 430 Commerce REALTORS. OR ----- " ------------ I1I,000-S33,000. Call I __________________________3Q1*»0I - 3 BEDROOM HOMEr 3 CAR CAR- " ---, carpefint. $7»50. Inquire at ■-/. Rutgers. 333-W04. 2 FAMILY INCOME tcatod on stout Street. 5 rooms Id both down, 4 rooms and bath I, full basement, 3 car oorabe. 1 excellent buy at Sl4,0do with j:|J FAMILX-ORION-NICE INCOME wbuTba'n fM. DORRIs's' -*fly RoHy-ilKWOl. SON, REALTORS. OR 4-0334._ 4 BEDROOM BRICK, WEST SIDE, SPOT CASH FOR YOUR EQUITY, VA, FHA, OR OTHER, for quick ACTION! CALL NOW. HAGSTROM REAL-i TOR. OR 4-03SI OR EVENINGSl M brokf s. 0S3-13I3. 7 ROOM HOME :iosa to expressway, GM p-r^^enclSS^ ' ............ - -0 garage. I r fringes, days. . ________............................................. Mfg. Co. MULTILITH OPERATORS, STEADY, 111 Indlanwood Rd. Lake Orion, day work; somo experience' pre-: An EqiMl Opportunity Employer i oJiSlc Spi? i tli?l"co'.'®^3'433'~w: "EJIRED or young man.' fuu. Serviceman Water Softener 6J|>1377 SERVICE* ^ REPRESENTATIVE TRAINEE .waiionally known corpora- NEED A-JOB -----tHpWlOlfJ-MAO-JtllS- TION Is-looking for-*________ . age 31-34, In the Pontiac an who Is Interested In building _ career. Electronic fundamentals and car necessary. AAany fringe „„ benefits, fuU pay while training, S40 S..Taia- PHQNE 333-7041 FROM 74 P.M. SALESMTcN Western Auto now accepting appll- to write rapidly a U TRULY WANT: ii'abfl recognit enlorlty; ahd l«mlly, ping others, THEN: Our company needs you to fill several expansion created positions. - ~ Ws DON'T sell insurance, pots and pans, vacuum claanars or Iho rest. We DON'T canvass f knock on: doors. Wo DO guarantoo you a minimum starting income or MSd' par month If accaptod. \ _ar*p*!; Restaurant Assistant Manager Obportuhity tor an energetic young -.qjAn over 31 with a backgro""'* In food service. Good starting ary plus top employe benellta eluding paid vacation. Insun _________________ _ _ benellts and an opportunity to ad-;TEEN ORGAN PLAYER i vance in a growing firm. No Suns.,; 435-1437 or 435-ii»3. «'’r5''‘p.m*'lo?''ap':i?n1mS*nr”" TED'S j 334-5477. 7^ _______PONTIAC MALI^ ^ ^ Oakland County Offices which are In Pontiac, Birmingham, Royal Oak and Southfield. We have,3 thin^Days, evenlnc^aiut night. TherT are else at l||riJportun-1.1— — employment. . ------ Experienced — Box 454, Royal Oak 48067._______ S'GENERAL OFFICE CLERK, ADEf't with figures, soma typing, pleasant working conditions, 333-Hg. IFT AND JEWELRY S over 31, lull lime, exet experience not essentia . . Sherman Prescripfioni train. Work to begin Send name, address, le number and state areas y call toll-free, to Pontiac Box No. 41. ______________ _ ......._ _ _ _...^ TRIAL BALANCE BOOKKEEPER, Need transportation. FE 3-7377. experience In payroll, pay-i Rn*inat< Sarwieb 1C receivables, billing^ and co^-,” u! IRONING. ONE DAY SERVICE, in I Donna Holcemb. FE 5-771). ss MATURE LADV WISHES BABY'-sittlng ^ ---------- ---- ■ ROOMS AND I Haights 3-4037._________________________ 3-ROOM-AND-BATH. ON LAKE -Adults. 1003 Dixie Hwy. 035-3544. 3 ROOM A~ND BATH, NORTH END, private entrance, for one lady dhly . Rochester Paper < WAITRESS. NIGHTS, FULL TIME. GIRL FOR DRY CLEANING DEPT. WAITRESS FOR FULL OR PAH ... ----lence necessary. Apply! AfSply lo person only. Good ---.... cA's, Telegraph' P»y- benefits and tips. Frank': ___________' Restaurant, Keego Harbor.________________ COUNTER WAIT-'WAITRESS, NO NIGHTS, SUNDAYS Pauls Hamburger 333 or holidays. In ^rmlngh'am, CHAIR CANING FE 5-5443. ______ ____ 3 r60MS, PRIVATE BATH. I dIe-age, rdterenci caretaker ROOMS,___________ cobple only. FE 4 Feb. 5. Call SHEPARD'S OL I-45M ___ AUBURN HEIGHTS ' BUILDER'S MODEL Electric motor,,?ervice Re- ^^Inq^amf rewinding. 311 E. Pike, Credit Advisers ROOMS. BABY WELCOMED, S35i‘ per week. m75 dep.. Inquire 301 Chamberlain: ■ 5 'Room apartment, all util-' Itlea, ref., $130 per mo., $130 de----------- ■ FE $-31- Dressmaking A Taiieriog 17 T R U CX MECHANIC, EXPERI-ence<7 In GM. should have cor 'manent p . 3 children, 1 -------’. Call after 4 p.m. or ends. 333'0I37: On busline. WAITRESSES Dining Room and Curb Full or part-time. Paid vacations, li llospitlllzatian. Lunch hour and food allowanca. Apply in person.! BIG BOY RESTAURANT j Telegraph fc Hufon or Hwy. «, Silver Lake Rpy VACANCIES COMING UP SOON, 1 and 3-bedroom aparfmenfs, fur nishad and unfurnished Pricec from $115 to $115 per month. Adult: only. FE 5-4717. , . Estate Salesmen HELP! - , - handle all the prospects T* ' **°"*^*®'._ ' ------- - ■ ComaUuSED CAR pORTER WANTED: EX- 1. City Beverage Co.. 1 salesmen ..... ... where there's lots of aclli,,.. flee In the Mall, Room 110. * VON REALTY George Vonderhar, Broker stay nights. FE 5-7780 befon BABY SITTER. 3 CHILDREN. Incoms Tax Sarvict 1 $5 LONG FORMS PREPARED AN -typed In my office $5. Your hon 54. None higher except businesse George E. |.yle. FE 0H3S3. Dix»y‘'^ riiv^TakV R^ I I prefer: ... ... _____ essary. Steady work. Apply In person at STATE WIDE AUTO OUTLET, 3400 Elizabeth ' ' Pontiac. __________ SlTTEfe TO LIVE IN, MOTh IhOUSEKEEPER TO LIVE-IN? TOP _____orks, 67>6Q13.___________ j fOlly ''experience BAKERY SALESWOAAAN, P U L L| *?au kV) P^lvete AND PART T:me, o:sn wasner full time. Ap-' . ply in person Rotunda Inn 32301: Pine Lk. Rd., Orchard Lk„ Mich. ' WAITRESS, DINING ROOM HOS-f-ess, and pantry sales girl. No experiences needed. Paid while you Uniforms and meals fur-Pald vacation and hospital- II 333-nai,>N. J. Sourlall. . Rufgeri Sf: 473- Beauty- Crest Apartments, Unfurnished 38 $15,550 conditioned, disposal. Igerator, no f?\Vr°MT a*r*tnT «IJn'dl TUi-LEVEL - RANCH - CO- tw. near Mall, air and sound GONIAL - You must sea the "BEAUTY - CREST" jTlodels s to know why ; iney are me "noute of the Year" ! in '44. Three exciting models to choose from al^one^ Iw price—$15,- ; In Huntoon Shares Sub; you'll like the charm, convenience and simp re dignity of "BEAUTY CRESTS" RANCH, THE STATE-... --------^-------------------- L. today-bring $83 to $111 Mo. LONG FORMS PREPARED Individual and business. $3 up. Call FE 54)403. beautiful I, 3 and 3_______ townshouses with up to Large 11 - will! sliding glass ooor wau-ing to radwood-scroaned pat-GE equipped kitchens, ar schools, churches, recreation, shopping, and entrance to 1-75. Co-op com- loMmant Waterproofing BoiMing Modarnixation^ 1 STOP BUJLDING SERVICE. RI m 0 d a I i n g, Recreation rooms, roofing, go-roges, all storms and screens, aluminum siding. anteed. FE 3- Floor Sanding CARL L. BILLS SR., NEW ANo| cuvnen—cT>xaK~~i aviii> - r^rcK ler Uke-Telegraph at Huron, i T T 1 > R.ntal EquipmB^T— hUClSOn S Pontiac Mall Nurses EXPERIENCED HAIR DRESSER. Apply in person. 317 Auburn Avo. EXPERIENCED, WAtL PAPER STEAMERS LEONARD'S FLOOR SERVICE Old floors made like new * experience. 437-3775 Collect. ’ Also Alum, windows, doors, siding. U3RAVES CONTRACTING Free Estimates_______ All types of remodeling, kitenen cu|iboards, additions, attic rooms, recreation rooms, aluminum siding, roofing. Free estimates. No down poyment. G & M Construction Co., FE 2-12U. 86 N. Saginaw. Carpentry and repair work OL )-l3S5_________ KitCHdNS. RECAEATION 300MS ________and own. 473-7377. _ munTtV Heating:~474:3l'44: 1 HOT TAR FLAT ROOFS, SHIN- GLES and-REPAIRS, LARGE ------------------------------I OR SMALL, 852-1450. NEWnSbOFS, REPAIRS, INSURED FIREPLACE WOOD, SNOW PLOW- Quarantaed. Call Tom, 413-4543. Ing, trucjtj^, end loader. FEJM305. ROBERT PRICE“r60FING, BUILT-Lumbar . up rooting. Free Est, FE 4-1034. ROOFS: NEW, REPAIR General Maintenance ----- free estimates, uo to heating service, coM-i Iiaa aaiMiiuica, up lu Heatino. 474-3144. i years to pay. Vermett & Sons Builders, FE 8-6115, OR 3-9590. 2110. Dixie: y rooms. FE 4-7441. Caiygfry A-1 INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR painting, tree asflmafat, work ouaranfaad. Raasonabta rafat. 4S^ INTERIOR FINISH, KITCHENS, ... ' BRICK, BLOCK, CEMENT, I ______.jil after 4 P.M. FE 1-1$24. bAiCK, BLOCK, CEMENT FE >7531 CEMENT WORK OF ALL KINDS, ■ special winter price. OR 34173.__ Cement and Block Worjc Gutnn'i Construction Co. FE 4-7477___________Evas. FE 5^12 Ceramic Jlliag ALTERATIONS. ALL tWesTkNIT . drassai. leather coats. OR ' Building and Hardware supplle 035 Oakland _ _ PE 4-45 MoviniTand S^ga^ SMITH MOVING CO Nanary--JBY Cotb ROOFS, SHINGLES — OLD, NEW and repair. Gutter work, all; leaks guaranteed. Ftea astlmatai. FE $-4471, day or nigt I dirt DELIVERY. B&L TREE TRIMMING, REMOV-Free astimata. FE 5-4447, 474- Lakes Tree Co., Trimming Plantings — Removals Fireplace Wood — 435-1414 Tjyklgg HAULING AND RUBBISH NAME price. Any time. F#Y0075. Ph^ariag SeryicB A-1 PLASTERING, NEW AND pair. FE I-37B3. __________ PLASTERING, EXPERT PATCH >rk^ 30 years exp 333-7554. ARROW PLASTERING CD. REPAIR dps.'Paid vacation, Insurance ban afits. Apply In parson only. TED'S WOODWARD AT SQUARE LK. RD. DENTAL ASSISTANT, DRAYTON Plains. Clean, sttrictlva, capal' of doing book work. Will train .. chair side assist. Age 25-40. Write Pontiac Press Box 70._________ DEPENDABLE WOMAN TO BABY-slt. Live In. AAora for home than wages. 1 child. Call 403-7917 be-..----, BASEMENTS, ■I and tront-and loading. FE 3-0403. Trucks to Rent tk-Ton pickups 1 - area: 4S3-SI47 attar 5 p.m. Sherman Prescriptions Maple and Lahsar Rds. Birmingham _________447-4700 Drug CLERK, over 1I, refer- opening Sales Wonaqn Ladies. ' Fashions x; Drug-Cosmetic Sciles ask tor Mr. Kuhiman. Hughes-Hatcher-Suffrin s 300 Pierce St. Birmin^am 647-5300 w from 7 to 3. 451-7311. EXPERIENCED WAITRESS. APPLY In parTon. DaLlta's,. 4M0 H. Reeh-. eatof Rd., Rochastar. dXPERIENCED ' NURSES >)DE8 SECRETARY ry position avi „,d shorthand m quata lor ratmsibla' Goad salary, nbaral b *"* “aroannal Dept. Haapltai, Pcnil xt. W bahtaan itlgnmdht. afits. Coti-it. Joaaph caH 331- .J tachnclogists. Starting ’ depending on qualifications I experience. Apply Perionnel »t., Pontiac General Hospital. . . ... Pontiac or Bloomfield Hills. Experience unnecessary. Many earning $100 ahd up. ' son's. FE 4-7BB).__________ HEAR OUR PRICE BEFORE YOu ' a to imie tor your furnltura appliances and what havt you. Wa'II auction It or buy It. B & B Auction Dixie_______________OR 3-37)7 WANTED: GOOD bLEAN FURNI- WILL BUY/ ANTIQUES, FURNI- .....-Id Alalas. Bluebird Auction. IQlV-------- ’ X-Ray Technicians Position available Immediately for registered X-fay technician In General Hospital. Good salary, liberal banaflls. Graduate tKhnIclan would be conildarod alio. Contact PVTiMv nal Office, St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, Pontiac - call 331^111, i 337, betWaao 7 AM Snd 4:30 PM. ^^^i,*$3;' battaflas, $1.25. C. Dlx- son. OR 3-5049, ___________ DESKS, PILES, OFFICE FURNf tura, portable and office typawrlt-ws, adding machlnos, .drafting Hblas, etc. Eorbas, OR 3-7747. Wa tic opportunity_____________ ___ YORK, One o( Mkhlgan't Fastest Growing Real Eitala Firms. New Office, located In Drayton Plaint. Otters guarantee to qualified. Plenty of leads and floor time. Start Immadlataly — Don't mita your chance. Call Mr. Korby, Now tor a confidential appointment. wgyL REAL ESTATE Regltlar now* lor freo classes. Learn appraisals, listings and telling techniques. Get acthra lor the 1744 big t$$. Imme work for Pontlae-Walartord lake areas, part or full time. ... toe late • with 24 yr. old active company. Watarford-Pontlac arta, phone f Ml 4-ISOO. LakaGommerca area, Ph< Cotway, EM 3-711$. Young . Men Move Up with one of Michigan's fastest growlnp and largest retail turnhura chain. No exparlenca nacattary, married men 30 to 35 years old, .with two or more years of collaga pre-larrad, enthusiasm and hustle pet ahead' fasti thiris fha''way to Oo it. Wa are opening 4 Management positions $31,000 year, plus commission, plus car. Salesman $150 w** ■>>“• commission. Sand r-_______ ^ ■ ■ r ol education i I piece or houattuf. Padr- NICE CLEAN ROOM FOR GENTLE- men. Private entrance. J..... FE 4-4373._____________________ OUR HOME IS WARM, CLEAN, WaiitBi^i^Rent 3-BEOROOM HOUSE OR In Thomas Cooley or Leng-I Efm. Scheal area. SSS-IOST 1TO50 Dally 'til I '■ - • ‘STING SI - . . -.... ANb A.„.„_ ly size. 3015 Franklin Rd„ tloo •1 Hills. FE 3-3144. L. 8ml Cash Buyers For Homes and Farms. ELWOOD REALTY 4$3-3410 . LEASE OR SALE 3 BEDROOM attractive ranch with attache ' Nicely tondacappod i RENTING $59 Mo. Excluding taxes and insurance DULY $10 Deposit WITH APPLICATION quiet. Parking. FE S-7333. RoomeJIf^ ___________43 LOVELY HOME NEAR TBL-HURON good home' cooking. 1 or 2 em-pktyed man. FE $-3330._ SOU+HERN COOKIiIg. PR IVATE room. Home plrlvlegas. FT ' Rtiit Farm Property 44 MONTHS RENT FREE, PANELED offices and wbby. Hr-* —■ Parking. 143 Oakland. Rent Office Space OPEN DAILT and sat. and SUN. •*■$ COME TO 370 KENNETT NEAR BALDWIN REAL VALUE REALTY For Immediate Action Coll FE 5-3676 626-9575 OR BIRMINGHAM-' BLOOMFIELD HILLS PROPERrY WEIR, MANUEL, \ SI^YDER & RANXE 71 S. Woodward, B^Ham 4M1I PHONE: 444.4300 NEW OFFICE BUILDIND FOR lease, Chandler Heating, S4B0 Hlgh- land Rd., OR 3-5433, ___________ Nf OFFICE FOR SfidT iS .small shopping canler. Coll Tom * Bateman or Jack Ralph at FE $-7141 HAYDEN 3-BEDROOM TRI-LEVEL WHI Build on Your Lot or Ours ^as heat Attached Garage V/t baths Family Room Prices start at $tl,3S0 ' Office open 7 to 5 p.m. J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor 343-4404 10751 Highland Rd. (M571 PANELED OFFICE SUITABLE FOR '— ranee Co., broker, etc. $100 . nrto., t yr. lease. OL JJ2n^ WIDE TRACK DRIVE WEST, NEAR Huron Street.. Approximately 3,000 sq. ft. Will divide. Immediate occupancy. Call Lasita R. Tripp, Realtor, FE 5-II4I._______ Rtnf Rasinets Property 47-A _ _rkston. In conjunction . _ operating dental sultd. Paved park- l-Sa'......... ------------• condidentlal. NORTH POINT REALTY 04 S. Main Clarksloh A 5-3341 _______________MA S)5I3 HIITER • NEAR WALNUT LAKE - 3 bod-roomt. tVi baths. 20 ft. living room with stone fIraplaCa. Full bar-- new gat furnace. Garage ai prlvlloges. $15,700 terms. ' C. HIITER, REALTOR, 3 abeth Lake Rd. “ * — pm, FE 0-1315. HAROLD R. FRANKS, Rbolty NEWLYWEDS-RETIREES Suburban 1 bodrooffl home afell ---* tor, carpeted llviny room. large kl With fl: :, large pan tmk kalh, t KEEGO HAABOR Oftlca space — former city _ flees — Meal tor baautv shop.. profasiMnal otficas or other -plenty of parking, 4t2-0440 or 413- , $70 a montb. Iand« igs, 3513 UNION LAKE ROAD . EM 3 3300 . 343-71$! _ 41 MONTHLY. HOUSES! HOUSES'! ALL NEW VILLA HOMES, INC. RED BARN VILLAGE NO. 3 West of M-34 bdhvaan Lake Orion and Oxforq behind Alban'i Country “'"’'Md^l Phone 430-1545 D—« . THE PONTIAC PRJg^ tUP:SDAY, FEBRUARY I. 1966 Sik _ 49 Sal# Houmi GOOD OPPORTUNITY 11^ __Op«fi Evu. ’ ___ rom CASH FOR LAND CONtITaCTS. ,v»r H. J. Van Walt. 4S40 Dixit Hwv. 'cad OR _ _ CASH ‘ ............ IMMEDIATE CASH , ' j For vour aaultv or land contracti. FOR HOUSES, FARMS. ACREAGE LAND CONTRACTS, EQUITIES - 51 lotJ unsold - . ---------- 150 oanlly roltlng, pg ,hla ar.. uat i.n, ARRO REALTY I 5143 Cats EllMMth U|tit^;4oad IMMEbtATE CASH UPON INSPEC-'I. lion ol porparty and titia tor any TAYLOR AGENCY Raal Esiata — Building — InsOranca ! $175,000 Terms i ”3_^HIgM.ndJ^.^,^»2.0^ PEVNOLDS AT STEADMAN “ ----- ESTATE. 1-439,5144 ItfEUC- __ 1-539-4109 EVES. AND^IJN. ARLINGTON, lOO-Xjyi', NEAR PBN-Laka, high and dry. Conspr McCullough REALTY T«1 McCullough, Jr. \ S4«o' Highland Rd- MLS .Buying ......^|Val-U-Way loHn Z. TrwinTl:^ of the possibility hart. and a home all under l . ___________ Excellent-tor service business, such ber shop, restaurant lout he only wants 510,500. < -■ ■^uMdlng. You have "lO'NELit FE 8-0466: 'CLARK PLEASANT LAkE WOODS Beautllul laka trontaga a beach setting In tall oa This very nice brick ra please the most discrl buyers. Fireplace In living r kJIchen. 3 bedrooms, V'l baths,' Trade y lnating]49 Priced at 1 a tor walk-out basement, HAGSTROM REALTOR W. Huron OR 4-0351 Evenings^ 51220435 i BEST Time is-no wT ACREAGE BONANZA ,— ----------------- ------- K. L. Templeton, Reoltor Commercial Building jJise orc^hard Lake Rd. _5«3-o9oo 32x50' Ion lot 120x240- on Dixie NEED LAND CONTRACTS. S5AALL Hwy.. past Wa'b^ford, convenient' discounts. Earl Garrtls. EM 3-2511. to 1-75 Highway. 112,000. EMpIra >4014. _ J. T Joll Reolty [seasoned' laITd contracts ____________taTr’?AP?TOL"“sAvTNOS*?ToAN COMMERCIAL VACANT , near Cres- Corner M -■ Good 400.x'’'®.W .............. - Elliabath I Rd. approx. 415' deep. . 4.W. corner Hlghland-Rd. (M59) and LOANS TO $1,000 REALTORS Huron _ Since 1925 „ r Selling Call FE 5-9444t'^ -R£ALJ:0MF0RTABLE si 2 bedroom home oft Baldwin Full basement. Tiled ' Dining L. ' Buzz Bateman SAYS "MAY WE HELP YOLf?" TRADE THE EASY WAY SPACE-A^PLENTY large and SPACIOUS. 100x20 garage.. Family . room, lull basement NttLS OF ROCHESTER NEW iTRI-LEVEL; 3 bedrooms, baths, large roomy kitchen with all built ins, plus 2 car garage. Approx. 2,300 sq. tt. of llvlpg area, beeulltilly llnished family room with fireplace. Brick and aluminum, blacktop drive and nicely landscaped lot. Brand new and yours lor 132,000 with 15,400 down plus costs. CALL TODAY. , S'AR CLARKSTON AND ,1-75 EXPRESSWAY! 3 bedrm., #1/5 'bath Irl-level with tamlly room lust 2 years old. Beeutilul, -wooded-hillside locallop between ‘2 tlEes. Privileges on both lakes, tamUy Illness makes the sale necessary. Excellent vsluf at 119,950 with as little as 12,000 down plus costs. Make your eppt. NOiy. ’ NEW MObEI. HOMES TRI-LEVELS-^COLONIALS-RANCHERS f.l .*7* '®' A type and price tor everyone. Beeu- tlRilly built with brick and aluminum, tots ot extra tealures and 1 Daily bV appointment and Opan . Call lor . BATEMAN, REALTY PONTIAC M.L.S. ROCHESTER »77 S. Ttlegroph Rd, 730 S,. Rochester. Rd. SOUTft SIDE Roomy 3 bedroonT 'home .. ___ 17500. Newly decorated throughout. Large ^Ichert. Gas heal. 1300 r^ORTHERN HIGH AREA Lovely 3 bedrpgin. home Mth large ulMiy. ^as' jasr^i. Newly dwo- lo grade school also. Full price 17750.. 1325 down. Monthly payments of Ml. . List With Us-We Sell 0 Home Every 24 Hgu/s! R. J. (DICK) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531: ished basement, neighborhood of dIsMCOMMERCIAL LOT — '-x- •’r'viieges. Sell- deep on Elizabeth Lak colonial ranch . kitchen, lovely family place a— tinc*i^n .. ing tor 132,900. equity In trade. JACK FRUSHOUR MILO STITUBLE REALTORS MLS FE^M022_______ 502-2392^ KAMPSENi SCHRAMI Now. Doing Custom . Building On Available Building Sites! Your Plans or Ours • Custom Builders 20'x40' with aluminum siding, 3, bedrooms, both ond ^ holt, full bosemtnt, 2-car garaga. Only 114,400 on your lr‘ Also Bi;LeveP ^"ti^iWest Side- GLARK REAL ESTATE 152 W, HURON ST. FE 3-7IN FE 5-5145 or FE 5-3591 ___5Mtiol^ Listing Sorvico _ STOUTS Best Buys fver nio to Offpr. in« <;«n- m i - ’w“i.h*'’S*^na* loday & SILVER LAKE- --- - ---- ' ' - --- S with this chorming 3 brick family home, feo-istered walls, carpeting. -..., ------ a dandy closed In! rear porch that couW be 0 tam-l lly room, full basement, 2 car' oarage and the most beautiful: yard you hov# over seen. Priced at 120,950 with 12,100 down or' we^wm takt your prasant hemp , Clorkston Areo- 3-Bedrooni Brick East slot location. Ilka new construction, has carpeted living rooiTi and dining "all," lull basa-mont, gas heat, hot wattr, obr-port with paved drive. Ahchor fenced yard, paved street and sidewalk, city water atid sewer. Full price 113,000 with 1400 down ‘plus mortgOge costs. List With Schrom and Can th§ Van REALTOR-MLS H JOSLYN AVE. - FB 5-9471 been looking for. Somo of feoturei.art; full bosomont, oort, nico lot. The rest you . havt to see tor yourtelf. Better hurry, this one won't last. Pric‘d at ONLY 113,500 with 11,500 dot plus costs or we will trade. Low Taxes ^ White Lake Township- Thinking Pf Selling? WANT CASH? We will gat It It you - give us a 4ry. Coll Leo korr, Tony Elselt, Fred Rose-veor, Hilda Stawarl. Lae Kimp-sen, Jo Suit, Emary Butlor^. Rachel Ltvely. Immediate- Possession on this nc' orated 3 bedroom brick __ ... city, seiKt oak floors, V/5 baths, kitchon with breiklost area, out basement, "" schools end sho^T 500 with ter— $14,950- Ehe dll s, I 1,'Waterlord Twp. Zoned C-2 {4«i Acres Baldwin end Lake Angelus sllly,l Road. C 3. Additional 10" acres norTn or . Liarxiion,. ss.vw, lOw available. WEST SIDE ’ down. , 435'Highland Rd. (M59). ^ BATEMAN | living. A nice ^location lor r«'»lno cONTRACTpR'S YARD OVER 4 CONTRACTOR'S , acres wl«n,300 sq---------------„ and olllv ' fenced. Oil M59 nqAr Ponti .f.™. tiac. Zoned Heavy. Contact Mr. Messisco. H. M. SELDON COM-I PANY, WO t-7100.- J of Wil “ ■■ ' courteous _________ Credit lift .Insurai .. _____ Slop In or Phono FE S-1121. HOME & AUTO LOAN CO. N, Parry St. FB 5-1121 9 to 5 dolly. Sat. 9 to 12 _ LOANS TO -' $1,000-r37M UtutMv on first visit. Qulcke frltnd* KAlvbliil FB 2-9026 offiNDT0AN*C0. 203 Pontiac Stott Bank Bldg. 9:30 to 5:30-Sat. 9:30 to". cabinet plus a writing desk. Gas heat; sewer t water. Big garagi and paved drive. Full price tie. Frushour Strublfe •tractive and complala tamlly home In this nice Watoriord HI Community Situated on a king size corner parcel. New carpeting In the specious, living room end d C. PANGUS, Reoltor 530 Mt5 ’ OrlionvIHo _______Cell Collect NA 7-2115 & LADD'S • FIRST IN/AMILY INTERESTS The best things In tile ere sm”oI iy«h*^r.'':n“7bun‘d.*nii:' of WIDE TRACK DRIVE IW vou hevo e business looking your‘’"chlk^r'^r."’r“;'*id •- a lot In HI-HIII Vllloga.' Convtn-as 12975, 1300 down. 1-75 oxll al lonlly locatad to. any.place. As low Lapoer Rood. M-24 t^rth 3 milts Opan^latt altarnoons and Saturday) 1071 15 n SIraot FI 4 aluminum ekterlor, attached 22x-32 garage, -neny other extras. Price Includes ell decorating, rabdy for occupancy. On your JUST LISTED Wotertord Township threo/bodroom ranch, located on e lorod lot with lakt privileges on boebTiful Meet-day Lake. Genuoui sized living room with firepllce. Walkihg distance to 'elemeinary school. This tidma Is In oxcoHont condition I side and out. Won't lost long 113,500. Call today. | No. 5 MODELS Builders Close-Out $2000.00 Savings First Come-First Served- OPEN DAILY 2'to 1 OPEN SUNDAY 3 to I .J.fJ. luxurious model HOMES In baoutitui Wastrldgo ot Walartord, now offored to you "" Immadlata occupancy. Movo rig '21 U Aelghbor brook ti td. Bring your bMt Irlond eybo Iw'd Ilk# to bo your DIxlo -Highway to Cam- te, n, Wo(ld V nd range. Ask ter L ■ 7- THE PONTIAC PRESS^ TUESDAY. FEBRjLJiARY lrl966 D—7 Ln*TLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE Jaldwin at Wplton- FE 2-UJ] FIrit Traffic light south of 1-75^ *----3f Fraa Parklna ,111 9 Sat. Till « rHl6E-A-»ib (EXCELLENT) S«.- , »5. oa> aMca heater $», apartment electric range M7, dining room Tult $15, s piece d--- — Easy twatfitr $M, 3 r._. _____ room $34, S'place living room $39. Kelvlnafor refrigerator $39, odd beds, driaaeri, chaett, and metal cabinets. Everything at bargain prleai. LITTLE JOE'S TEAOflN DEPARTMENT. I4M Baldwin ' Walton. FE 2-SI43. r WOOD RANGE, M9.9T^CROSS top freezer refr----- ---- and up. Electric i up. TV's, $9.93 a 1 MORE 11ME BRAND NEW FURNITURE 3-ROOM OUTFITS , $278 (Good) $2.50 Weekly $378 (Better) $3.00 Weekly $478 (Best) $4.00 V.'.jkly OR 4 II»1.___________ SINGER DIAL-A-MATIC ZIg rag sewing modern walnut t. designs, apollques, __________ . Repossessed. Pay off $54 cash or 14 per month payments. UNIVER- SAL CO., FE 4-0905._______________ fAPPAN PHILGAS RANGE, GOOD condition. — ----------- UPRIGHT FREEZER 1 YEAR OLD, • pertact rondlllon, $100. 3$H4S9. WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS AT ^ discount prices. Forbes Printlim end Office Supplies. 4SM PIkIe '. OR 3-»747. CANINE JUNTRY CL__ -----jg Canine photography, by appointment. Cladh, comfortable, convenient, bathing, grooming, boarding, heated tacmflei. IBS t. '5. BlYdo Rochester, 9 to 4’dally. l-olKe (brand new)____________ Double dresser, bookcase bed and WASHER $15. GAS STOVE, $33. RE-1 frlgerator with top freezer, $49., Dryer, $33. TV, $35. Eloctrlc stovor ' S35. V, Harris, FE $-*744. . 41 fESTINGHOUSE REFRIGCRATOR: ! iroTpraif.'"’'’' WYMAN'S USED BARGAIN STORE At Our II W. Pike Store Only -dd living room tables From $ " OccaslonaT chairs '— * TV. . $3.#9 . TVkc f1 Tiiifi M-iiwefoB Tiiu , 7c a# InlsM Ills 9«e" 4c ei Floor Shoo - 125S.EIIiabeth Lake “Across From the Moll" 10" ROPER GAS~SaRgE, AUTO-. matic, 140) 4-year crib - white, $13; elec, dryer, $20. FE 1-9143 atl- Royal Oak Nightly door prize, CoHee Shoppe, ----------------kin g. Contribution AIR CONDITIONH SALE Drastic roducfton on all fRETTBR'S WAREHOUSE "oUTl'eT 1454 $. Teleflreph_______FE 3-7051 MB NT $i; SIZE STOVE, RE- Hpiid Tooli—MBchlntry 61 BEAMS-ANGLES-PIPES-PLATE ... ----------- 42x55-«4.95. ■Itor—$40 h.p.—$99 J.-$S00 :iHI5po indust^l band" 3-4413.____________________ PLASTER MIXER, ELECTRIC MO'-, lor driven, I sack size, pracHcally nei^ 430-3595. _-tj,. .red"b^ )iU'churrt;uo)^en"'or »*««'L'-; •9HN-S episcopal CHUJRCH W'INTER SPraAf ■P. A H. model 455 A dragllr 0-3,020 engl papers; $50. FE 0-3734. JERMAN SHEPHiRb PUPS, $1 no papers, 474-1*33.____ PERSONALIZED GROOMING POODLE SUPPLIES HOUSE OF POODLES 5410 Dixie — CLOSE-OUT SALE 1965 WI,V\R0D CAMPtK CRUISE OUT, INC.^ I East Walton, dally .9-4, FE 0-44M CLOSED UNTIL AhARCtTWHElT^E' •illl have a large selection of new -ailers and campers. Thank you. acdbson Trailer Sales. 5490 Wil-Lake Rd., OR 3-5901. IBLE-tOP tst. FIrep Hi-Fi, TV I Radios r^LOW BOY CONSOLE 1 Y old. Perfect condition, $150. 3;4t44_________ i" USED TVs ; $ Record player needles hard find? See us - we have mos JOHNSON TV - FE 0-4549 ____45 E. Walton near Baldwin •l-INCH USEb TV . $19.91) Walton TV FE »1*37 Open —1)3 E. Welten, eempr of Jeatyn 33" CAPEHART TV* Bl Aru aii COLORED TV, RCaT^WORKING B & J Used and reconditioned furniture; and appliances, automatic washers-1 dijMrs, refrigerators, gas and elec-,tri?’‘ranges, apartment-size stoves,; TV's. All makes and models. 304 . N_ Saginaw. 330-4445._____________ t BRONZE OR CHROME DINETTE' sale, BRAND NEW. Large and. small tiza (round, drop-leal, r— langular) tables In 3. 5 and 7 sets. $14.93 and up. PEARSON’S FURNITURE 110 E. Pika FE 4-) BUNK B Choice of 15 stylet triple trundle beds complete. $4950 ai _33M2«._ _____ ■ TV SET 13." $M. ^ ______331-7510._____ Watar SEftanara 6 NEW FULLY AUTOMATIC Flbergias Water Conditioner ONLY $199 SCHICK_________^________FE 4-3020 For Soio MiscBll«ii«»Mt 67 1 3 WHEELED TRACfblT"WltH I. Afttr •51‘IVJO._ ____________________ CONOVER Jilted SOFA. LIKE si2t II; I . ............ .. MA 4*l4i;.___________________ Tl E C T rTC RANGEr NORGEr Inch stainless sllp-ln model, $3.. value S)49. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard Lake. FE 4-0440 >RIOIDAIRE DRYER, $30.~ _____________473-347) _ _ 6e washer, push-button speed, 5937”o73"i!('. ____ 40" IxHT" MESH BY 17?GaOg'e special, 5 150' rolls. ' F^5-3007. __________________ ALL BRONZE SUMP PUMPS, SOLD repaj^, exchanged, ranted, -fCGNE'A- JIM'S OUTLET AND GARDEN CENTER ■- •“ ------- "'3h polished $l.49i Fitted SI.or, Tiais $1.49. King flats. -------- 1301 Dixie Hwy. FE 4-0305 iuinn -FrI. 9 lO 9 - Closed LINOLEUM PUGS, MOST SIZES, 03J9, up. rtwreon/s Furniture, •’» e. Pike St., FE »700t._______ MAPLE BEDROOM SET. $75; TV; ano, $13; Maytag C. Lippard, 3W N._____________ MATTRESS AND BOX SPRINGS, NECCHI DELUXE ZIG ZAG Sewing machine — automatic, z UNIVERSAL CO., FE NICE G.E. AUTOMATIC, WASHER, M3. Ciothes dryer, $13. 33^4347._ NORGE WASHER LIKE NEW $90; Maytag drJer Ilka new $70. Kal-vlnator refrigerator, $50. Baby crib, $15. 33i-0403. IJECCHI, LATE '65 $47.43 cash price. Call croc agar, RICHMAN BROS. 3 CENTER, PonllK'S ONLY S ONLY auth _________ ____-. 3359303. - PLASTIC WALL TILE BSiG Oytlet, 1075 W. Huron kCA GAS DRYER, BOTTLE 01 can be converted free. 33S9930. KEFRIGBRA'TORS, STbVES, i and up. New dinette sets at a st. hi^. Michigan Appliance Co. 473- REFRIGERATOR, $13. JAB(^E^^^4 III burner. OR »0130._____ Ranawed Appliances trade price, $7950. BOOY-HARRISON EQUIP 151 S. Cass Lake Rd CO. POODLES - JET BLACK PURE-‘--id tiny puppies, 7 wks., health .’tlflcates included. Say.,KBs My vMy Valentine" with a tovely Poodle. 483-4470. REGISTERED CHIHUAHUA >U^ pfes. Chihuahua and Toy-Fox ter= rier stud service. FE.3-1497. _ 'DOLLY MONKEY FOR SALE. Call 435-3411 after 4 p.m._ Ptf Sappllas-SarWcE 7^A SIZES, ______ These Assets Been Ordered Sold DOG HOUsIs, ALL 7-1 sulated. 74$ Orchard .‘ Auction Solos At Public Auction NIKON F AUTOMATIC, REFLEX. 35mm, with Photonic Ians, F 1.4, 30mm F 35 automatic with plastic case, altogether $435. 3 months old. Conn Theotpo Organ Last new Conn laft, lava I on this ont. / MORRIS MUSIC ' 34 s.' '^ele^raph Rg. Across from Te|-Huron FE 3-0547 EXCITING NEW THOMAS 0R6AN-prlces start at $539.50. See -exciting new Total Tone Wurl Total Tone organs. Also Wurl piano and several used tra< "“‘"’ jack HAGAN MUSIC CENTER 449 fllzabeth LekeRd. FE 3-0900 332-0300 EXPERT PIANO A«3VINd PIANOS WANTED Bob's Van Service , EM 3-7BH Gallagher's MOVING OUT SALE Moving to 1710 S. Telegraph R Inal 7 days left to shop us Spinet Plano returned Irom r was $450 now $ Used Baldwin Console piano Two estates ha< to be sold this February 2, at 7 p.m. ' at 1300 Crescent Lake of M59, 500 ft. from fi Polic.a Station. 30" Tappan r suita, full be. vln^ room can Pbyfe tebta) Duncan etoster tables; white crystal lamp; round dining table; gll paintings; paint easel; art tuppllesr old books and slock market records; clothes; velvet coatV rugs; bedspreeds; records; kitchen warts; towels; Cuckoo clock; pictures; plaques; china cabinet and buffet; silver; vases; glasses; garden tools; trunks and boxas not yat chacked. Here Is^an opportunity ^to have the pri«. Come to" AUCTION'^LAND*sl DOORS OPEN 8:30 SHARP AUCTION LAND 1300 CRESCENT LAKE RD. - sptclal 3W hour sale. Do .“There’s no two ways about it, Mr. Otley! That ieft fronf fender Js Just accident pronei" rucks. Economy (Sri. 1 ,----- Evan's Equlp- - . _____ a. Service, 4507 Dlx|- Hlghway, Clarkston. 435-1711. FREE HausEfraiitrs GLENN'S It Huron St. Jmk~Can-Tr^ 101-A PorkhursT Trailed Soles 1943 TRIUMPH TR-4, 450 C. C. best offer. FE 5-3017. CARS^TRUCKS 95 ' FE 4-9519 COMPLETE 1945 YAMAHA, TRAIL AtASTER I HITCH AND INSTALLATION . sen new trailer told during the lonlh of February. Ellsworth Trailer Soles 4577 Dixie Hsvy. ). MA S'.UOO; MAKE YOUR CHOICE OF: Streamlines-Kenskills Fronklins-Fans-Crses and Monitors -Look Us Over-—ServWe alter the Sale-r Holly Travel Coach, Inc. 1310 Holly Rd., Holly ME 4-4771 —Open Dolly end Sundays— 'H()g0 PICK-UP CAMPERS THEY ARE QUALITY BUILT HOBO MFG. SALES Rear 3345 * ■'--- B.S.A. - HONDA TRIUMPH - NORTON 5-SPEED DUCAT! ’ SpkUI winter prices, act n ANDERSON SALES A SERVICE 445 S. Telegraph ------ Used Aato-Track Parts 102 1T53 ClSfEVY, SELL FOR PXrTS. ___________FE ^5t4a___________ 1957 PLYMOUTH TRANSMISSION. TOM STACHLER AUTO AND MOBILE SALES 091 W. Huron St._____FE 3-4931 pToneer camper sales PICKUP CAMPERS BY Travel Queen - Overland - Ovanca-Concord trailers. MERIT FIBERGLASS TRUCK COVERS HURON___________FE 3-39S9 This 3 Lowe Brothers ANCHOR FENCES' NO MONEY DOWN FE S-7471 BATHROOM,FIXTURES, OIL AND gas furnaces and bellara, automz" water heaters, hardware and al Irical supplies. Crock, soli; coop black and galvanized tings. .Sentry and L, pa Ink Super Kam-ioi Ruslolaum. HEIGHTS SUPPLY 3415 Lapaar Rd._______PE 4-3 3^747., NCYCLOPEblAS, 1944, 30 VOLS. Appll^afloi For tht FioBst in Top-Quolity Merchandise Shop MONTGOMERY WARD PONTIAC MAiLL aiv AND UP, GUARANTEED. ALSO REBUILT KIRBYS WITH SAME GUARANTEE AS NEW ONES. KIRBY SERVICE 1. SUPPLY CO., 34)7 DIXIE HWY. CALL guarantaa. Also t year fraa ti $19.93 value 049.93. Take ...... Slightly marred. Michigan Fluorat-cant. 393 Orchard Lk. FE 40443. HUMIDIFIERS JIM'S bUTLET AND OARbEN CENTER Light fixtures for all rooms USED ORGANS CHOOSE FROM HAMMOND, LOWREY, WUEUTZBR. $ILVERTON,-ET€,- 1 Priced Irom $250 GRINNELL'S (Downtown) ____27 S. SAGINAW USED PIANO SALE BALDWIN Spinel, Walnut CABLE-NELSON, Spinet, Ebony STARK, Contolo-Speclall LEW BETTERLY MUSIC CO. APACHE CAMP TRAILERS freshmenti. Auctioneers; Mike Spak and Gary _Bej-ry_^The Singing Auctioneer." EVERY FRIDAY 7:M P.i EVERY SATURDAY 7:30 P.;... EVERY SUNDAY 3:00 P.M. torting Cooda—All Types Door Prizaa Evtry Audlon luy-Sell-Trada, Retail 7 days Consignmants Welcome BAB AUCTION )lxla Hwy._________OR 3-3717 10 SALE THIS WEEK AT Oxford Community Auction. -Wa buy astatas, large or small. 471-3333. PERKINS SALE SERVICE AUCTIONEERS. SWARTZ CREEK_________43M400 FOR SALE, HORSE AND PONIES ^ wllh^oV*bte, '— toys. Gold Ball Glfr ‘ CABOVER, SLEEPO 4, COM- _ marina lollal $1,395. AlsPI'4", $1,095. TAR CAMPER MFG. CO. 1190 Auburn Rd. ..c ........ .... gat a damonShr tien 81 Wamtr Trailer Sales. 3091 ’W, Hurnn (plan to loin one of Wally Byam's exciting caravantl. ARE YOU BLANNING YOUR VACATION NOW? Then It's time to stop In and makt your choice of a travel trailer Irom our large salKtron. AVALIER ALJO BARTH CORSAIR HOLLY SALESMAN'S DE^ Phoenix I0W-ff‘‘ --------- netle, show... ______ .... _____ heeler, gas refrigerator and lights - lacks. Ask tor Jay at JE-JtOME FORD, Rochester Ford dailar, OL t-9711. ____ _ WOLVERINE TRUCK CAMTERS and tiaapara. New anC ’—■■ up. Alao rantali. Jacks, taleicoping, bumpara. racks. Lowry Camper S. HoMittal Road, U EM 3-3M1.________________ BleyciM 96 10 SPEED SCHWINN RACER, EX- cellenf shape, bast --- £-0777___,_________ Boats - AccBssorbs 97 3S' SEDAN CRUISER, REBUILT EN-glne, new decking, formica " $3500 OR 4-0479 or FE 5-40M. Houietrailari AT COLONIAL. "Never Knowlingly Undarsolc IMMEDIATE OClfUPANCY I OUR NEW ULTRA MODERN P All 1944 Models on Display In Every Price Rangs At Winter Discounts .DETROITERyPONTIAC CHIEF Top trade allowanca on your preient mobile home. Yet, all Detroiter products meet or exceed the rigid r ------------- ardt for heating 4leclTlcal_^ I ?lm ONLY $500 DOWN, WILL MOVE you Into a new moblla home. Set up In Pontloc's finest park. Immediate occupancy. Inquira at Wa-terfordd Moblla Hemet, 4333 W. FREE DELIVePy-FREE^ SET-UP -'E GUARANTEE A PARKING SPACE. Large telectlah ol 13* Sidea. HOLLY PARK, CHAMPION PARK WOOD AND PARK ESTATES Low ovarhtad - save real p— MIDLAND TRAILER Si 3357 Dixie Hwy. -- ■ - Telegraph SAiES m*m OXFORD TRAILED SALES 13 to 40 ft. Sea the newest In M.. lettas, Stawarls, and lamoui Winnebago travel trailers, ,AM.?ISirott«KM34 ____MY 3-0731_____ RIVER BANK Mobile Village Pontiac's NBWBst Mobil Home Park ocaled In the heart of the Pontli area, on the shofai of f h Clinton River, with acettt I Sylvan Lakt. M our new large moblla heme dl play. Top quality Unas el m bile homes to fit your budget. ' IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY RIVER BANK MOBILE VILLAGE Phone. 338-6583 395 S. Tatagrapb, Pontiac OPEN: AAon.-Tua$.-Thuri. 13 to » CLOSED WEDNESDAY OPEN; Pri.-Sal.-Sun. 11 to 0 K & W CYCLE YAMAHA Two locations to serve you.. ...» Auburn, Utica and 7415 Hlgfiland Road, Pontiac. ,________ SUZUKI CYCLES, 50CC-3S0CC. RUPP Minibikti as lew as $139.95. Taka M59 to W. Highland. Right on Hickory RIdga Rd. to- Demode Rd. Phone MAIn-- -- CARS, PICKED uu. Free tow. H. B r • ■ Salas $> Service. OR 3-5300. 1945 CHEVY, 41 REAR AXLE,_______ trade for 304, 334, 355, or 370, FE 5-1733 after 5,_______________ HEVY • FORD • COMET - FALCON bOOR HARDTOP, PE ^173 a— • ______ JUAL OUAE Charger, needs qoma v reasonable otter rafuiad. JOHNSON MOTORS AND ooals, also Shall Lake, Aero---- and Geneva boats and canoes, discount on 1943 boats, motors “"“‘tONY'S MARINE 3493 Orchard Lake Rd. 13 AVOID THE RUSH Maintenance and repair. Ii and out boord mechanics. Al. _____ guaranteed. Pickup and dtllvery. American Boat Works, 135 Brr ' way. Lake Orion. 493-4411 > time, FE 3-7438. ____ ont Star, M.F.C. xl Glautron Boats y Motors 3.9 to tit h.p. ctffnrrByirs------ Gun ond Sports CBnter MI 4- CLEARANCE! 1965 Models Now On Dlaplay Pontiac Only MERCURY-MERCRUISER DEALER CRUISE-OUT, INC. 43 E. WaHon Open 9-4 FE 8 . CLOSEOUT Boats Ctnoat Mi OWEi'VXifXlWTu'pPLY 394 Orchard Lake Ft 3-8039 DAWSON'S Dtddlar powtr sled. Big savings rw*"ai5Cv'vro'K?’'i>HW RIdga Rd. toZMrnoda Rd. Iaft%nd follow signs to DAWSON'S $A' AT TIPfiCO LAKE. Phone A PINTER'S Many Excellent Used Rlgi-imall Dapoalt Holds 'Til Spring COME-SEE^NOWI------- '7i»(?a> SEE THE ivs4 Evlnruda Motors Skeater Snowmoblla Larsen Boats HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS "Your Evlnruda Daaler" 1499 S. ^Telegraph 131-11103 SEE US At ThB Cobo Holl BOAT SHOW " MICHIGAN TURBO CrAfT and ‘ OAKLAND MARINI SALES 1337 Dixie Highway—Pontiac ~hoita 473-3443 USED CRUISERS '43 ' tuHTwIpStT «‘'lS?ri*''' ’ $3493 I Owens 34' Expr— " -lully ^ulp^ 1' flbergias Cruiser, h.p. Intcrcaptor, NEW 1944 MODELS ON DISPLAY LAKE & SEA MARINA ’•'OWENS DEALER WaatBd Cort-Tracto TOj BUYING SHARP CARS . BUD MANSFIELD USED CARS 1301 Baldwin. 3 Mocks N. ol Walton PI 1-BMl 1940 GMC 133-4834.________________________ ENGLISH FORD TON PAN- 941 CHEVY "W‘ TRACTOR, 409 engine, 3-speed axle, >pawer steering. SharpI Saval JEROME FORD, Rochester FORD Dealer, OL 1-9711. val SCOUT WITH l^ULL Tow, u,-000 milts, new condition. Only $993. JEROME -P^RD, Rochester. FORD FACTORY BRANCH New end‘Used Trucks FE 3-94S5 , 47S,Oikland New 1966 FORD $1795- Ilk for Truck Depf. Pontiac's NEW JEEP Dealer Trade-Ins '45 Chevy delux cab, U ton aefuil mlloe. ira m roHa nriT Superior , . REPOSSESSION MUST SELL TODAY, 1944 DODGE V5-TON PICKUP — LONG WHEELBASE, V$ STANDARD, JR. WEST COAST MIRRORS. ANY OLD CAR OR TRUCK DOWN ANO JUST $13.97 WEEKLY. CALL MR. BURKE, 331^311. SPAR- 1943 CHEVY V. Trucks Are Our business 1962 Ford F-lOO Vi Ton Hide pickup with a blue heater, signals. Only— $995 I96J Ford F-lOO Vi ton iside, heater, jjgnalt, $>ft. I One It DSTy— $795 I960 Forci up, 1 red llnl|h, VI eng >r, radio; signals. Only— _$435_ 45 VOLKSWAGON. in PERFECT condition, radio, $150a, PE 544M. 1945 VW, LIKE NEW, RADIO. 100 elhar good buys, 119 up. Economy Used Cars 3335 DIxlo H REPOSSESIIOTT-" 1943 VW. money down. Paymenli of 07.91 ^Aimm. 944 FIAT "1100." ALMOST LIKE n^, a rad hot ipaclal for c-‘ *”rose RAMBLER.JEEP EM 3-4155 •1962 Ford F-350 One Ton SlepVan, with the 4 cyl. angini Crulsa-O-Mitic. haatar and slgnali Only- $695 1955 Chevy '/i Ton Pickup . with • VI •rt0ln«e htatcr, Blonali Only— $245 1960 Dodge y* Ton Pickup with a sparkling rad finish, haatar signals. Only— $395 BEATTIE ON DIXIE HWY, IN WATERFORD "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" "Hofpa of Sarvica attar the Sale" ' OR 3-1291 1962 TR4 Roadster Radio and haatar, whltawalla, price 11095. OAKLAND CH«YSllR.P(YM0UTH 333-91S0 WHITE-$1330. PE SPECIALS B U I C K WILDCAT. HARDTOP IN TANGERINE WITH WHITr TOP. >OWER OF COURSE, ADJUSTABLE STEERING WHEEL ANO A COMPLETE .LIST OP PAC--TORY EXTRAS. POLL PRICE, SIPI7. ISS OAKLAND 0^ CAW- 1943 BUICK TAKE' OVltTPAY-mants with $300 from ewnar, auto., 3M H^P.^^Poiltrartlon, AM-pm r«- detux* Inlarlo?. *'ma”m4Q7*" and wtakly paymanti of 010.10. HAROLD TURNER FORD INC. _ _ 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-7300 19S9 CADILLAC 4-door hardtop with full radio, heater, aufbmatlc, ,w.. Ki'Ct $393 STATE WIDE AUTO OUTLET 3400 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. FE 8-7137 $1395 LLOYD MOTORS L lncoln.Marcury4ema9 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 1965 .VW Sedan ill little 08$ lavar It aim brand new, hat radio and heat whitewall tlraa. If muit be la to be appracitlad. . $1395-Pontiac Retail Store FE a-7954 SPORTS CARS & IMPORTS At Winter Prices - DEAL NOW AND SAVE Grimal(di IMPORTED CAR CO. 90 Oakland Ava. < iiBaiii I Can 1B6 1959 BUICKS oosa from, tuforr lion, radio, heats alt. Only 14.00 ' cly -paymenli of no and arranta Capitol Auto iUICK*ELKTRA 333 CONVERTIBLE. BEAUTI-PU' TAN FINISH, FULL POWER. WE WILL BRING TO YOUR HOME FOR JUST 141 BUICK PULL PRidk leal Caih er wm financt. KING AUTO. SALES, 3175 W. Huron $1 last CHEVY CONVERT- TUXEDOBLACK. RED TRIM, EXCELLENT MECHANICAL CONDITION. TRIM LITTLE IMPAL YOU'D «E PROU“ ■ TNYVt------- DRIVE PRICr AVE. CASS _____1 TO j^YWHBRE. PULL •“7. 031 OA"' MILE 1940. '41, '41 CORVAIR MONZAS, 1-doori and 4.daert, automatic and 4.iptadt. Hava to to chaoia from, all priced to toll qukk. LUCKY AUTO w. WIda Traek or I960 CORVAIR door sedan with automatic trana-mlsaion, radio and heater, full price $397, only . $4.00 down ansT weakly paymanti of 14.00. Wa handta aiid arrange all financing, Call Mr. Dan Su FE 84071 Capitol Auto 312. W. MONTCALM _____Jpit aaaf of Oakland iMi CORVAIR AlidNzA, kcTik, blue Interior. 0100. UL MMO. ihift. 313^^', affirV p.mT *• ® ® * iwi CHEVY Fmpala I - boe» tardtop,' powtr aftarbw, Brakta. t ^ownar car, $3.00 Sim bank LUCKY AUTO . SPARIAN ONLY SPECIALS 1943 CflEVY ANO A HaSo-TO-FIND NINE-PASSENGER WAGON. AUTOMATIC, NEW MOTOR, SHINING TURQUOISE FINISH AND DEEP TREAD WHITEWALLS. NO $$$ DOWN AND JUST M.I7 WEEKLY. CALL MR. BURKE, 331-4311. T 1941 CORVAIR MONZA $1195 LLOYD MOTORS Uncaln-Marcury.C«iitf 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 i9a~g6RVAIfc i THE 1‘ONT.IAC I'UESS. Tl'ESDAV^EKHliL:AKV 1. luub By Anderson and Leeming'Ntw md Used Cart 106 New ond UMd Cart 106 GTQ PONTIAe CONVERTIBLE, Haw and Uiad Cart SPARTAN ONLY SPECIALS 1T64 PONTIAC TEMPEST , sedan, spotless bronze FINISH WITH GAS SAVING SIX CYLINDER ENGINE, AUTOMATIC AND DEEP TREAD WHITEWALLS. , FULL PRICE UW7.-IS5Y3AK- ’ ' LAND AVE., n'4 mile N. ,OF CASS AVE.l 33I-45M. ‘ ' lt(N~FWT?AellARPt^ Catalina that l> illll In Only- HASKINS CHEVY ______ ana»lT*fe,4^ Owner - m-MTi. 1965 PONtlAC loor hardtop, po«ve brakai, almost Hk $2795 Homer Right 'SHELTONI,o™||,n It oiler. MY 3 »37 l»62 STUDEBAKER, r Avenue fE 44547 .:new facilitik“ ■ IN THE NEAR FUTURE h«H»r urve our customers -L IN BUSINESS AT N ST„ MILFOR0 . VAN CAMP CHEVY lut^or good used cars f963 ' CHEVY IMPALA^ bi« Super Sport exc. condition ] _ owner, low ml. 11300. 612 0(177. W63“fh«vy tmpolq 4-door hardtop, radio and " 155 Rochtster Road ___ 451-9911__ ■ f965' CATALINA Station Wagon Pontiac-Rombler )n MJa, In Lake Orlo MY 3-6266 MISSIONS, X.OAKLAND COUNTY CARS, $1,495 EACH, FULL PRICE AS IS. SS.OO DOWN. CAN BE FINANCED AT BANK rates. LUCKY AUTO . 33.000 actual OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PlYMOUTH TJ4 Oakland Ave._ f963 MONZA jCORVAIR 4 DOOR, auto., r^lo, heeler. ___________ iditfen. _ 1?64 CHEVROtEr ' Impale 4 door hardtop, dark blue, with matching Interior, 2 way poW-, er, weekly special, .4 real bargain. | $1595 ^ - > BIRMINGHAM i CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH -914.-S--Woodward Ml 7-3214. MUST SELL! GOING TO VIET NAM 1944 CHEVY II SPARTAN ONLY SPE< 1944 DART—"170" 2 SEDAN WITH MIST FINISH, SLANT - SIX , OMY AND FULL FAql EQUIPMENT. WARRL , STILL IN EFFECT.1FOR YOUR PROTECNOliL-ElJJ ' PRICE $1097. OSS OAKLAI AVE. (1'4 MILE CASS AVE.) 330-4S20. K£EG0 PONTIAC sales Oi SERVICE 682-3400 ' »C LARA-4AF DTOP . .) DODGE FOR LESS" * "500" 2 DOOR .......... WITH "318" V - I, TO !QUE-FLITE, POWER STE RING ■ AND BRAIC^ AND W VELY ____/ doWh.»'Payments 'v9eeMly. Call Mr. Murphy, at FE S-4I0I, McAulllte. _______ SPARTAN ONLY SPECIALS I 1944 FORD FAIRLANE SCO SPORT COUPE, BLACK,EXTERIOR WITH WHITE -ACCENT STRIPE AND BLACK BUCKETS. "289" V-8, CRUIS-0-MATIC, POWER AND 10.-000 OWNER CERTIFIED MILES. FULL PRICE $1497. S5S OAKLAND. (1'S MILE N. OF CASS AVE ) 338-452$. PONTIAC RETAIL' STORE 65 Mt. Clemens Street (AT WIDE TRACK) FE^3-7954_ 1962 CONTINENTAL INTImC RAMBI Eft BUICK CRED- 4577 Dl> If problems? - Will finance. TIC------- .— "r. Snow,~Mt 4-SSOO.________j ELLSWORTH AUTO SALES i MA 5-l400| $2495 tPONTIAC| 4-SSOO.________ _ REPDSSESJION— J943 OLDS CUT- nORTIWOOD AUTO lass. No money down. P«y't’enls\,-^p - - ol $10i«» weekly. Call Mr. Mason '"“N''*'-8l 335-4101. McAulWe. _______ . er, $450, FE 1959 PONTIAC, AUTOMATIC, RA- • ----tuH-prlce $395, ___PE_8.9239,1 MILES, I OWN- John McAulitfa Ford , SPARTAN ONLY SPECIALS ....------BONNEVILLE _ _ JJUSTTHT-NICEST ONE WE*VE SEEN FtNISn'^^^TH ''*^TCmNG ALL MORREKIDE INTERI- RETAIL STORE, 65 Mt. Clemens Street ‘ (AT WIDE TRACK) _ FE 3-7954 ' weekly payrhents , 1963. Olds Cutlass ‘Hardtop liridp"'!rutomair/®“rBn5m)M!otl;3W7PdNTrArVDOO^ URY. NO $$$ DOWN AND JUST $$.97 WEEKLY. CALL MR. BURKE, 338-4528. BANKRUPT? SHORT EMPLOYMENT? $50 cash or egulvalent trade will place you In a new '64 Ponli of your choice TICCorp. Mr. Snow. Ml 4-551 • 1965 TEMPEST Mechanic Special ily a imie money spent on ll)li . ..r can have you a real good buy ; . $1595 PONTIAC “RlTAltr STORE TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS We Finonce rs providing you have a lb and down payment 25 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM Superior RAMBLER-JEEP 0 Oakl^d Ave. , 5-9121 Some of The Newest Used Cars you can buy , are at Wilson's Check These Exomplest Cadillacs ■ CONVERTIBLE, 1965 r. Snow, Ml 6-5500. N965 NORTH^WOOO ^UTO___________338-9239 1940 PONTIAC. REBUILT TRANS- fTT >T‘TT _________ mission, good condition, $500. OR 11-ilulLi J945 B( EU9S' St (»i B(3NN pbwet tioning, 7.< $2495 PONTIAC r RETAIL STORE COUPE, white I BCd transmitslon on ti I finished wheel, rac .DEMO SALE ICK Skylark 4 1945 BUICK LeSabra ' 1945 RIVERIA 2 door 1945 SPECIAL Deluxe 11945 WILDCAT Hardtoi '1945 LeSabre 4 door FE 3-7954 ■ iNNEVILLE SPORt'cOUPE, $3595 CALIAS COUPt, 1964 SEDAN DeVILLE, 1963 Full power, laclory air conditioning. low mileage. $289S1________ $2695 CALIAS COUPE, 1962 ‘**$1895 Pontiacs Houghten & Son OLDS-RAMBLER-GMC CUT -1963 Imperial LeElaron 4 door hardtop, radic ‘ ‘ lory air conditioning,---- miles this aulomoblla Is almost like new, original cost $71400. C miss at $2995 OAKLAND -----CHRVSlEft.PlVMOUTH _-724 Oakland Ave. 332-9150 $695 LLOYD MOTORS LI nco In-Mercury-Comel 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 CHRYSLER HARDTOP, i TIC WHITE FINISH, RED TRIM. POWER. ANY OLD CAR DOWN AND JUST $12 97 • WEEKLY -CALL MR. CASH, 338-4528. SPARTAN. V and whitewall fires, only $49 down and weekly payments ol $12.88. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM MJ_4J50< 1963 CHRYSLER 9 passenger station wagon, power steering and brakes, electric rear window, excellent condltl^ ' ?o"'*fl^*'car$, o)ia"ownar B’l'mln;? ham irarie, only— $1695 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 914 S. Woodward ._ Ml 7-3214 T945 CROWN IMPERIAL, 2 DOOR hardtop, full pBwar with air. car Is Ilka new. Cost was 1 new. Must sell, no rcooKbl ter retusad. Will accept trade handle finance. 53 Neome, 4 b east ol Ttlegraph oil Ellz ^ke Rd. ______ f965 Chrysler “BOO'' 2 door hardtop, radio aod hadler. pdwer steering and brakes, One «wner, plenty ot factory warrdnty left, steel gray with black buckets, . full price, 82,595. ,. OAKLAND -WILL > ACCEPT GUNS, BOATS. MOTORS Sunshirw from a baanarv Echo fr. JI35-4I0L M^IIHe._____________ I962"F0RD wagon, 4, OVERDRIVE - 57,000 miles. Take 3-B«7, between 9 and 4 _ r942 FORD FULL |\RICE W5. Cash or wUI finance. KING AUTO, i SALES. 6495 Dixie Hwy. —1 ;. OR 3-4412 Sow-<- AUTO SALES 125 Oakland at Wide Track ' _________FE 2-9214 SEE US fTrST BOB BORST 1962 FALCON 2 - DOOR SEDAN WITH AUTOMATIC transmission, ■ ------ weekly payments of $4J8 —' ( CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. * Parks at HAROLD TURNER $1395 LLOYD MOTORS I Incoln-Mercury-Comef 1258 OAKLAND 333-7863 in McAulllla Ford, 1965 T-Bird conditioning, prestige lor, pennys RAQIO AND HEAT- TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO weekly paymenli of $1.92 r CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER -mm, mt t-nw. or, almost anything movable AS PART DOWN PAYMENT ON ANY NEW OR USED CAR I Yes-We Do-^ we haya an Auction' every tm Used cars are Feeturetf. BILL SPENCE 6673 Dixie Highway Chryaler-Plymouth-Vallent J Rambler-Jeep CLJ^RIO'rON MA t-2»3! -: 'LL -. DON'S "USED CARS SMALL AD-BIG LOT 50 CARS TO CHOQHK,FROM 1945 CORVETTE 7.000 actual miles, 425 horsepower, 2 tops,, posl-trectlon, 4 speed, new car warranty. $3795. 1945 CHEVY Bel Air 4 dr., aulo., power ileer- remy.'^*$2095. " "** 1945 PONTIAC 2 dr. hprdlop Cilellne, euto., radio, heater, power steering, new car warranty. $2495. ' 1962 FORD Galaxit 500 2 dr. hardlop, auto., I. $995. 677 S. LAPEER RD. Lake Orion MY 2-2041 $2997 John McAuiiff* Fort IMF extras (4 to select from). JEROME FORD Rochester FORD Dealer, OL 1-9711,________________ _ 1945 MUS-fANG COUPE, V-l EN- glne, automatic, power staerm^ rakA, 9,000 miles. $2,195. jfi ROME FORD, Rochester FpRD Peeler. OL 1-9711. W 6-4538 SPARTAN ONLY SPECIAL 1964 PLYMOUTH. A LOVELY RED 2-DOOR HARD- 1 TOP THAT IS ABSOLUTELY . j MINT CONDITION IN every DETAIL. VI I TORQUEFLITE AND DEEP TREAD WHITEWALLS. FOR A SPECIAL DISCOUNT ASK FOR MR. JERRY WILBURN -- 855 OAKLAND AVEi Cx MILE NORTH OF CASS i AVE.) - FE 8-4528. 1 HrisTnitC'YMOUTlir^LVEDERE^ 21 - ■" * sew . . . factory war-1 $1499. No cash 1943 PONTIAC CATALINA STATION wagon. $1400. 48^2744. ______ 1963 PONTIAC CATALINA 2 DOOR hardtop, radio, aulo. ---- ■*— — Sharp. 474-1438. ON OUR COMPLETE STOCK OF QUALITY USED CARS I Good Selection Available Now Check These Values! 1965 Olds 88 Hordtop DOUBLE CHECKED USED CARS 1942 FORD Galaxi 1945 OPEL 2-door 1941 FORD Galaixi 1945 BUICK Deluxe 1945 BUtCI^ LeSabr 1945 BUICK Special Con> 1942 PONTIAC Slarchlef 1943 CORVAIR 4-door 1941 BUICK Electra 4-dwr $1.81 1944 BUICK Wildcat 2-door $1,81 1944 PONTIAC eeteHfia --tU! ■OLIVER BUICK 194-210 Orchard Lake BONNEVILLE, 1963 ^ Coupe Dark blue finish, e>daptlenally WILSON. _------CADILLIC Ask For Lloyd Wallace (Used Cadillac Specialist) 1350 N, Woodward MI 4-1930 1954 OLDS. VERY C SPARTAN ONLY SPECIALS 1941 OLDS COUPE IN LUSTROUS ARCTIC WHITE WITH CONTRASTING BLUE ALL MORROKIOE INTERIOR. POWERFUL V8 ENGINE, AUTOMATIC, E-.Z EYE GLASS AND A COMPLETE LIST OF FACTORY OPTIONS. NO 8 DOWN, AND PAYMENTS OF 19.87 WEEKLY, 855 OAKLAND AVE. Cx MICE NORTH OF CASS AVE.) FE 8-4528._______ 1962 OLDS "98" Power steering and brakes, radio, heater, whllewalls. $1195 LLOYO MOTORS L Incoln-Mercury-Comef 1250 OAXLAND 333-7863 1964 TEMPEST Autobahn Specials 1941 Ford hardtop, full power, ceSeni'n- --- 1943 Corveir gold tinlih, ________ new liras, showroom. condition 1995 1944 Tempeat LaMans convertible. Red finish, white lop, . eutotnatlc Autobahn Motors, lire. \G011 HAUPT PONTIAC 941 TEMPEST Wlwm, new tires, end vinyl trim, full price $395 1942 TEMPEST LeMant convartlbla, automatic, powar staaring, radio, . whitewalls, only $49 down. 1944 BONNEVILLE Vista autompllc, ■••ering, brakes. We have 2 14 BUICK Wagon, leater, $99 down. t BdNNEVILLE 2 FE 8-45311 CLARKSTON NO MONEY DOWN - BUY HERE PAY HERE - ALL APPLICATIONS ACCEPTED Full Wkly. Price Pymt. 58 Chevrolet*. $ 147 8 2.02 54 ford ....... 8 97 8 1.01 59 Ford ...... $ 197 8 2.02 54 Rambler.... . 8 57 8 1.00 40 Dgdge ...... $ 197 8 2.02 1959 Chevrolet f. $ 197 8 2.02 1961 Pontiac .... 8 497 8 5.05 1942 Ford Galaxia . 8 597 8 4.04 t950 T.«rd , 04*7 tJM 1959 Pontiac .... $ 197 8 2.02 1941 PlymoJth . . $ 297 $ 3.03 1959 Chevrolet . 8 297 8 3.83 1960 Olds hardtop . 8 497 8 5.05 1941 Ford Convart . 8 597 8 4 04 1940 Ford ‘ .... 8 197 8 2.02 " More Convert . 8 597 8 4i04 Comet ....... 8 497 8 S.OS 1944 Buick .... 81997 820.20 1958 Chevy Wagon . . I 397 8 4.04 ■941 Ford Wagon ... 8 597 8 4.04 ALL APPLICATIONS ACCEPTED IF'you DON'T HAVE TRANSPORTATION, WE WILL BE GLAD TO PICK YOU UP. MR. LEE CreJlt Co-Ordinator Tel-A-Huron Auto Soles 60 S. Telegroph FE 8-9661 $1295 • ;iPONTIAC RETAIL STORE i5 Mt. Clemens Street (AT WIDE TRACK) FE 3-7954 1965 Comet Coliente hardtop, V8, radio, other extra new car warranty. Slashed to— $1745 1964 Olds Jetstor I $1895 1965 Chevy % Ton . 1964 Olds 88 Nordtop 2 door, white with black trim, V8. with power, very cletfi cut to— $1695 * Transportation Specials Fulf Wkly. Price Pymt. 1954 CHEVY, autametic 8 47 8 .00 Bsa?a.‘«sr.!» Its 1950 FORD, Wagon .. tV---- 1957 CHEVY, 8 cylinder 8 87 1959 OLDS, Hardtop . i 97... 1959 CHEVY, Impbla 4 . 8197 82.25 1940 RAMBLER, Stdan . Ilt7 82.25 1941 METRO, Sedan . 8197 82.25 1957 PONTIAC, Sedan . 8197 82.25 1941 RE^NAULT, Sedan . 1197 82.25 1940 CHEVY, 2 door .82.75 1959 PONTIAC, Sedan . StW 82.75 1960 DODGE, 2-dOor .. 8297 82.75 1959 PLYMOUTH, Stick . 1297 82.75 1959 BUICK, 2-door . 8397 84.10 1940 CHEVY, Impala . . 8597 84.34 1942 CORVAIR, Slick 8597 84.35 1942 TEMPEST, Wagon 17 ■ - 1941 CHEVY, Wagon 84 1942 FORD, Galaxle $8 1941 PONTIAC, Star yiel $8 dn. UfO CREDIT MAtl ON bUTY MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM . IHANCING CLL MR. DAN AT FE 8-4071 Capitol Auto 1964 Olds 4-Door $100 YOUR CAR, ANY YEAR JN ANY SHAPE OR CONDITION, DRIVE IN, TOW IN OR PUSH IN. ’TUP!" THAT'S THE LEAST ALLOWANCE FOR YOUR CAR DURING OUR BIG SALE. ON ANY '63 '64 or '65 BEAUTIFUL ONE OWNER NEW ^AR TRADE OR DEMO AT- ‘ VILLAGE RAMBLER 666 S. Woodward BIRMINGHAM Ml 6-3900 4963 Olds 88 Hardtop 1963 Olds F8S Wagon V8 with lull ppwer, extra citan. Only — n $1395 1962 Olds 88 Sedan bronit with a matching Intarldr, VS with powar stagrlna, brakes, culy to — $1095 1964 Pontiac Bonneville Maroon with black trim, thi lit an exceptional carl Full powar gl course. Reduced to — $1895 1963 Rambler Classic station Wagon, ono dwfwr, axcal-lent condition, slashod to — $895 / * Houghten ’ 6t Son OLD^RAMBLER-GMC 528 N. Moin Street ROCHESTER OL 1-87411 mmBMM mm BIRMINGHAM TRADES 1963 OLDS "88", 2-door hardtop, power steering ond brakes, o buy ot$149y 1962 PLYMOUTH FurV 9 passenger station wagon, power steering and brokes, sharp Birminghom trade .....................:...$10^5 1965 OLDS "88" 4-door hardtop, power steering, brakes, electric windows, factory air, transferable new cor warranty ...— $2695 1964 OLDS F85 stotion wagon, power steering ond brakes, only 19,000 miles ............$1795 1963 OLDS F-85. coupe, V-8, automatic, rodio and heoter, whitewolls ...................$1495 1964 PONTIAC Catalina station wagon, power steering,, brakes, dork blue, matching interior. ...........................$1995 ORIGINATOR OF 2-YEAR WARRANTY 635 S. Woociward Ave. Birmingham 647-5111 THE PONTIAC 1 ltJ:ss TUKSiJAV. FEliiiLAHV D—9 —Television Programs- Programi fumlchtd by stations Ustod In this column aro subjoct to chango without notico ChcMwIi: 2-WJBIC-TV, 4-WWJ-TVrT-TWXYZ-TV, 9-CKLW-TV, 3Q-WKBD-TV, 56-WTVS TUESDAY NIGHT De- (2) (4) News, Weather, Sports , (7) Movie; “The Naughty Nineties’’ (In Progress) (9) Dennis the Menace (SO) Soupy Sales (56) CSiiklren’s Hour 6:15 (56) Christopher Program 6:25 (7) News 6:30 (2) (4) Network News (9) Marshal Dillon (50) Pro Basketball troit vs. Boston'*’' (56) Legacy 6:40 (7) Sports . 1:45 (7) Network News 7:00 (2) Leave It to Beaver (4) Weekend (7) Rifleman , (9) Arrest and TrUl (56) (Special) International Magazine 7:80 (2) Dakt^ri , (4) My Mother, the Car (7) Combat 8:00 (4) Please ^Dbn’t Eat the Daisies (56) Festival of the Arts 8:30 (2) Red Skelton (4) Dr. Kildare (7) (Special) Sammy and ■His Frelnds (9) Detectives 8:45 ( 50) rCollege Basketball Illinois vs. Michigan 9:00(4) Movie; “Honeymoon Hotel’’ (1964) Robert Goulet, Nancy Kwan (9) Frontage Challenge f.M (2) (Special) Truth About Communism (7) Peyton Place . (9) Flashback 10:00 (7) Fugitive (9) Newsmagazine 10:30 (9) PubUc Eye (50) Merv Griffin 11:00 (2) (4) (7) (9) News, Weather, S{^rts 11:25 (7) Movie: “The Spoilers’’ - (1956) Jeff Chandler, Rory Calhoun SONY. I MODEL 102 TAPE RECORDER Tht viriid iirvicet of 11 portiblt^ rworder art and there ii no finer recorder available than the most rugged perforAer of them all - the new Sony Model “102." Compare the many eicluslve professional features such as full 7* - reel capacity. V.U. meter, microphone and line mixing, dictating pause control and automatic tape lifter. Tht Model “102" can also serve as a portable public address system. Lest tkae $129.50. PONTIAO MUSIC AND SOUND Corner IliiabMli Lake Road FE 2-4163 i SWfggCggf' TV Features Sammy and Friends _______ mi ICeUe_____ SSFonnetly • Strike! for M out in baiebeU <2 Indian 11 bnpendinf evU mulberry loot eons IS Get op ainia M Move to action lespou List Comments on TV Shows Has Froftr^md-Bockytew^ at Dinah's NY Comeback SI Second ____ njentioned L( Symbol for 62 Hew aloft ■it&i (ehem.) 66 Stnw in a UDUttlBnUToad Programs Considjared Unfit for Youngsters By United Press International COMBAT, 7:30 p. m. (7) Sal Mineo plays cocky recruit who proves partially responsible for H a n he y ’ s troubles. . ________ M Natural fat aOBulk SS WoWnt • organa 3SHalf-«a(prinU qowN 12Epl^(ab.) eiLoatbl 4ifonolaU _ nown^ is ChlM’i bedatead 42 Wlngad .lowly . V1® P«ne«»t** 68 Devtertor 96 Craft 2Toothllke notdi 20 Emponum holdlaf work M Sumner (Ft J S Handle 21 Operatic eolo 44 Son of Seth , SlFamale rabbit 4 Morning 22 Aateriak (Bib.) >4' 32 Narrow inlet pityen 23 Conger 45 Burat (dial.) ' SS MaacttUiia 6 AmmaUc 25 European 4S Plaeei (ab.) nickname fragrance itream ^7 FoUowen 34 Abetract being • At that place 26EtemiUee 48 Granular n 86BlbUcal w-"* —'- ............ ............... PLEASE DON’T EAT THE DAISIES, 8:00 p. m. (4) College board chairman (Leon Ames) is scheduled to visit and, wouldn’t you knew) it, the heat goes off. SAMMY AND HIS FRIENDS. 8:30 p. m. (7) Sammy is joined by Frank Sinatra, Edie Adams, Joey Heartherton and Count Basie. TRUTH ABOUT COMMUNISM, 9:30 p. m. (2) | History Soviet communism, as filmed by Russian t cameramen, is shown. * NEWSMAGAZINE, 10:00 p. m. (9) “The View From Peking'” examines life inside (]hina. 11:30 (2) Movie: “The Bray-dos” (1958) Gregory Peck, Joan Collins (4) Johnny Carson (9) Gideon’s Way 12:45 (9) Window on the World 1:00 (4) BeaHhe Champ 1:15 (7).News 1:30 (2) (4) News, Weather (7) After Hours WEDNESDAY MORNING •:I5 (2) On the Farm Scene 1:20 (2) News 1:25 (2) Sunrise Semester 6:30 (4) Classroom (7) Funews 6:55 (2) Editorial, News 7)10 (4) Today (7) Johnny Ginger 7:05 (2) News 7:30 (2) Hajipyland 8:90 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Big Theater 8:30 (7) Movie : “Only the Best” tl951) Susan Hayward, Dan Dailey - Go ■ 9:00 (2) Andy Griffith ■ (4) Living (9) Romper Room 9:30 (2) Dick Van Dyke (56) Numbers and Numerals 9:55 (4) News (56) Children’s Hour 10:00 (2) I Love Lucy (4) Eye Guess (9) Canadian Schools 19:10 (56) Your Health 10:25 (4) News 10:30 (2) McCoys (4) Concentration (7) Girl Talk (9) Friendly Grant 19:85 (56f French Lesson 19:45 (9) Chez Helene 19:50 (56) Spanish Lesson I (2) Divorce Court (4) Morning Star (7) Supermarket Sweep-stakes (9) Butternut Square 11:05 (56) Interlude 11:20 (9) Across Canada (56) For Doctors Only 11:30 (4) Paradise Bay (7) Dating Game (50) Dickory Doc M:50 (9) News I (56) Math for Parents (7) Father Knows Best (9) Take 30 12:35 ( 56) Spanish Lesson 12:45 (2) Guikling Light 12:55 (4) News * 1:00 (2) Love of Life (4) Match Game , (7) Ben Casey (9) Movie: “That Night” (1957) John Beal, Augusta Dabiiey (50) Motor city Movie 1:10 (56) Franch Lesson 1:25 (2) News (4) News 1:30 (2) As the World ’iWns (4) Let’s Make a Deal 1:55 (4) News (56) Adventures in Science 2:00 (2) Password (4) Days of Our Lives (7) Nurses 2:25 (56) Numbers in Science 2:30 (2) House Party (4) Doctors (7) A Time for Us (50) Tales of Wells Fargo 2:50 (56) Interlude 3:00 (2) To TeU the Truth (4) Another World (7) General Hospital (50) Captain Detroit 3:25 (2) News (9) News 3:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) You Don’t Say (7) Young Marrieds * (9) Swingin’ Time 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Bozo the Clown (7) Never Too Young (50) Topper /: 4:30 (2) Mike Douglas / (7) Where the Action Is (9) Fun House (50) Uve That Bob 4:55 (4) Eliot’s Almanac 5:00 (4) George Pierrot (7) Movie: “Dangerous Agent” (1964) Eddie Constantine (50) Lloyd Thaxton' (56) Piesident’s Men 5:30 ( 56) What’s New 5:55 (4) Here’s Carol Duvall As« a guide for parents. Ihe New York Herald Tribune prints~4he following comments on objectionable TV programs for children: “Addams Family’i;. — “too sophisticated.” By EARL WILS4M4 NEW YORK — I’ll long remember Dinah Shore’s great return to New York, and the Plaza Persian Room, because I sat on the ringside looking at the classic back*of Anita Louise and .................. the classic front of Jkne Morgan. “What’ll I sthing?’’ Dinah asked after quite a lot had already been sung. Milton Berle arose \ and with a twist and a lisp, said, “Dinah, you ■ thwing what you want to thwing.” “I wish I’d thought of that!” Dinah said. “You wllj,” Milton said. “You will!” It was a night for strange incidents, and ‘Atom Ant” — “spnie old Dinah continues to bring out pub-crawlers who formula ” [haven’t been crawling^lately. Skitch Henderson “The Big Valley” — “rough i tucked a red napkin under his salt-and-pepper and violent ... questionable | beard over his black tie . . . Ethel Merman WILSON social values." and her escort Eric Palm were striking looking. “What’s that you’re wearine’”Ll asked Ethel, "Are v«m in# “Branded” — “stereotyped [you’re weating’’Ll.Asked Etheir "Are you hot pinkr” . . extremely violent.” i “I’m not, my dress is!” Ethel said. “Camp Runamuck” — “un-j Greg Bautzer was with a beauty named Georgette Minelli. funny superficial.” .“Candid Camera” — "taste- Federal and State Authorities Meet Again on Lake Pollution “Daniel Boone” — “much too violent .. . . sometimes uses vicious, sadistic scenes.” “Flipper”'— “thehies abound in crime.” “Gunsmoke” — “6rime ridden .. . too much violence.” “Hogan’s Heroes” — ’’bad taste.” “Honey West” — “violence with sex . . . imitation satire.” “Jackie Gleason Show” — “'drinking aiiiil drunkenness' treated as funny and socially acceptable." Jame&” — “inexcusable “glonfit crime.” “Johi) Forsythe Show”—‘.‘me-diocrcvV “Laredo” — “violence and violent character.” — “The Loner” — “another ^oddy crime West«16.^’ He explained that in 8 years of marriage to Diana Wynter he seemed to be apologizing twice a 'week for his mistakes, whereas he couldn’t remember that she was ever wrong more than twice' in 8 years. “How do you get a wife to admit she’s wrong even once?” asked. ★ ★ ★ . • Dinah, who was in one of those shirt-waisty, black-bow-tie, white collar, sequined-down-to-the-ground, Norman Norell studs-and-cuffs $1,500 productions, was pretty great singing about the strange dress and hair styles of youngsters . . . I think the world is going,mad . .'.^en kids ask tjjeir parents ... ‘Are you Mom ... or are you Darf?’ ” ★ ★ -A - CHICAGO (CPI) - Federal and state authorities, concerned about the pollution of Lake Michigan, scheduled another meeting today to discuss new water quality standards for industry. Indiana and Illinois officials held a closed-door meeting yesterday and were expected to be Joined by Murray Stein, chief enforcement officer for the De- and' Welfare, at today’s public session. In somber understatement, the report noted: “This pollution endangers the health or welfare of persons.” -It recommends sterner measures for both industry and state and local governments to follow to try to'Bave the lake. “The hoBeymoon for indus- try is over,” H. W. Poston, lesUmony that most cities were federal regional director for water pollution, said at a federal-state conference last “We’ve had our studies, we’ve listened to industry and now it’s time to clean up the lake,” he said. That conference promptly recessed until yesterday for more study on proposed standards for steel mills, oil refineries, chemical plants, paper mills and food processing^ plants which send sluggish, stagnant rivers of pil, tar, ammonia, phosphorous, and other highly acidic or alkaline matter into the lake. FQLLOWED REPORT The conference followed a report by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare that fish and plant life in the south end of the lake were threatened, and some municipal water supplies sometimes tasted and smelled foul. Last month’s conference heard following the proposals by establishing “secondary” sewage treatment plus chlorination of their discharge by March, 1966. STORM DELAY Yesterday, Stein was delayed in Washington until the evening session by a snowstorm. The other conferees met earlier in a closed session. Lake Michigan,-a stationary body of water for all its size, virtullly would stay polluted once a certain point is reached. If you lose the lake, it’s lost for good,” Stein has said. “Long Hot Summer” — “sensational in a sordid way.” “Lost in Space” — “Terrifying to young children!” “McHale’s Navy" — “simple-minded slapstick.” “Man Called Shenandoah”— “violence, sadism, brutality and callousness.” “Man From U.N.C.L.E.'’ “frtghtenlng in its vivid depiction of horror devices and situations.” “The Munsters’’—“grotesque humor.” “Peyton Place”, — “trite and in poor taste.” “Red Skelton Show” — “tal-! It without taste is too often, Skelton’s rule.” “The Virginian” — themes.” “Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea” — “unpleasant and unsuitable.” “Wild, Wild West” - “boring nd violent. Verj poor.^ .“Batman” — came along too late for scrutiny. THE MIDNIGHT EARL Frank Sinatra arrives Feb. 15 to see his parents . . . Family Kennedy and Steve Smith playing catch witii---- Jean SmlUi't handbag . . Sophia Loren rented Audrey Hep- bum’s Swiss villa . . . Eddie Fisher will make hia second Viet Nam trjp Easter week . . . Billy Reed, whose Little Club-shuttered, plans a “Coney Island-a-Go-Go” on Second Av. Sammy Davis hosted a party at Danny’s, marking t)|f of his filmt “A Man Galled Adain,“ (H was me lourtn he’s given for the, cast) ... A famed entertainer, who recently had some tax troubles, will have more of the same ... The Stage Cigar Store put in a box of penny gums, especially for,a comic whose tightfistedness is legendary. Don Rickies notes that Liz Taylor and Sophia Loren are from different countries: “But they sure have similar coastlines!” . Hiat’s earl, brother. \ (Tha (fall Syw^lcatt, Soviet Ships Said Delayed by River Jam Ninety per cent of bedsprings sold in this country are box springs. These consist of securely tied springs mounted on a wooden frame base, padded and covered with ticking. — Radio Programs- AFTERNOON WJR(700) WXY2(1270) CKLW(000) WWJ(»50) WCAR(1130) WPON(l 460) WJBK(1500) WHFl^M(94.7) MONTREAL (AP) -heavy weekend snowstorms layed three Russian merchant ships in the St. Lawrence River and ejused increased work for Coast Guard icebreakers. Maurice Boudreau, assistant chief engineer of the St. Lawrence Ship Channel, said the heavy snowfall tum^ the river into a slushy mass which was slowing down the flow of water. 12:00 (2) News (4) Jeopardy (7) Donna Re Art Llitkletfer ’Two Russian vessels, the Vok-hovges and the Seghaza, were reported delayed near Vercher-es, 20 miles northeast of Montreal, while a third, the Olenegorsk, bound for Montreal, returned to Trois - Riveries to await better river conditions. Three icebreakers were working in Lake St. Peter, upstream ^‘j"'Nl!:i:\£a;!i *'**'^ifrom Trois - Riveries, while a l.'»twpo'N“"'N/«l*i? sjow,fourth was upstream near Sorel. “ngnt' * Their work was being ham- Dava-Prlnca Show jjjjy gjjgng winds, pOoV visibility and heavy snowfall. WXYZ, WJBK, ......... rtn WJR, News. Elliot PkM WXYZ. Princi, Musk, Naws 3;0»-WCAR, Naws, Bacaralla Up t* 7 Yrs. t* Pay Na PiyiMiits 'tfl Fab. 25 Years Experience at Your Service! MYfRlEIIJls FE 8-92SI 328 N. Perry. PONTIAC ALUMINUM SIDING SALE 30% DISCO9NT ON FINEST Sir ANT-ALUM Teen-agers account for about 64 per cent of all, car thefts, while professional car thefts account for only about five hk 10 per cent of the losses in this country, according to Michael Murphy, president’ll the National Automobile Theft Burdau. In order to reduce o«r inventory we ore ‘discounting our material cost on the finest Insulatfid olumlnum tiding you can buy, applied and guaranteed by Pontiac's oldest and lorgeit roofing and siding company. This quolity product will be applied by our experienced installers at a cost beldw uninsulated sidings. You will sai/e on fuel bills, •nd all painting expense, whil* permanently protection and beautifying your hom« Supplij • Sequins-leads No‘Mon«y Down, 12 Months th« Sam« as Cash, or Up to 5-Y«ar F.HiA. Terms Available Offer Limited to Present Stock! e SHERIFF-aOSLIN CO. Over 200f000 Quality Jobs Applied Since 1906 Call 332-6231 , Fm Estimatet I I e WOOD FIBRE and Flower Makinc plies s-Be Bells e Styrofoam. all forms e Art Foam and Nylon Net Ceke Decorating Supplies ICIiO’S" 811 Sgkiand Ave. f 1,84 D-^10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESBAY. FEBRUARY 1, 1»66 These Items on SALE at Sears 9 ’til 5;30 \()u Can Count on Us... Quality Costs No Moi-o at Soai-s K^tmore Suds-Saver Automatic Washer Check Sears.low Wic Was A 1249.95 186 Kenmore 5 Temp. Automatic Dryers Check Sears'Low Price Electric Model 15988 NO MONEY DOWN on ^ars Easy Payment Plan 3 cycles, 3 speeds insure aQ-labric safety! 3 water levels; off-balance switch with Irazzer; bullt-iii fnter. Super Roto-Swirl agitator. Porc^^in-finish top^ lid, wash basket Buy matching pair — Save $2Q more! Cycles for Normal, Delicate, WailrV-Weac_c]othes. —6" heats including ^Air Only.” Top mounts screen; safety door switch; interior light. Porcelain finish top. Gas Mtfdel....179.88 Appliance Dept., Kenmore Classic 30*in. Double-Oven Gas Ranges 19988 Was at $279.95 In Gleaming White New Kenmore Classic Double Oven Gas Ranges 19999 Formerly $299.95 Big 39 inches Wjde NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan Vou get Lu-Temp controls in both ovens . . . Keeps ^ood~8e^ving-ho^4brJlou^8^ Electric clock with 4-hr. timer,.large smokeless broiler, removable tower oven door. Visi-Rake upper oven window. Main Basement NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan Two ovens give you convenience . .. bake and broil at the same time. Handy slidentut cooktop for extra space and mo^rn look, ^^ctric clock has l>hr. timer. Visi-bake doors. White or Cbppertone. "WEDNESDAY ONLY! \<______ Enjoy Big ^ ^ ^ - All Frostless System Freezer Holds 52^ tbs Was at IS84.95 Sale-priced 29988 Formerly at $219.99 Gleaming White exterior *189 NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan Completely frostless in both freeze;; and refrigerator sections ... fan forced cooling blows away frost before it can form. Adjustable spacemaster shelving, twin porcelain-flnish crispers and meat pan. Easy to clean. NO MONEY’DOWN on Seart Easy Payment Pla^ Sears Coldspot chest type freezer holds .525 lbs. of your 5-PcT Dinettes In the Flavor of Early American 58 Save $31.95! Silvertone 23-inch Console TV; 23-in. overalltKagonal, 2h2-at|v in-.-viewingsw ..Reralar $79.95 Table, 4 Chairs Regularly $189.99 Sears Sale-price ^ family’s favorite frozen foods. Poycelain-finish interior is easy to keliSp clean. Counter-balanced lid for fingertip opening, closing. Appliance Dept.^ Main Basement WEDNESDAY ONLY! WEDNESDAY ONLY! NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan xWarm and welcoming style features a maple pattern plastic tbp that resists stains. Bronzetone finished legs, supported vinyiupholstery. 36x48-in. table opens to 60 inches. Furniture Dept.^ Second Floor 158 NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan Authentic decorator designed cabinets ip the sophisticated style of Modern or Early American. Tinted picture tube cuts “eye-tiring” glare. Static-free FM sound from 5-in. speaker. VHF or GHF tuning. % Rndi^tnd^J^D^^t^^lninFloo WEDNESDAY ONLY! AUstaite Tire Sale Fite Most Any Model Car EVERY WHITEWALUURfiTOICE REDUCED to BLACKWALL PRICES NO MONEY DOWN on Sen^nrP&WehrPIiir a Aluminum Fold^-a-Bed Sturdy and Gons^ent ____1688 ' -a-w “T.k«.v Luxury Quilt Top Foam Lat^x or Coil Mattresses , lar $79.95 Each 1 or Twin Mattress .5988 Full 4ply cord inpporta the heaviest load, rhsists impacta. Tread features thousands of road hugging vise-jaw edges. A high tinality tire at a low, low price. ' rltei ■Sears Tite Dept.^ Perry Basement “Take-With” NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan Strong, lightweight 24x72-inch fold-a-bed, with comfortable shredded foam mattress. Attractive^town print cotton ticking. Easjj' to store. NO MONEY DOWN on Scars Easy Payment Plan 6-in. foam latex or coil.on.cnil intiTipring mattrmakm* -give Hrm comfortable support Quilted blue frost rayon satin eovers. Box spring* to match. Kenmore Portable Case Sewing Machine *69 Seara Low Sale Price Furniture Dept., Second Floor NO MOI^Y DQl^-onWeaivEasrPayilieHr "SeWi"sfrafi^t stitch forward and reverse. Mdnograms, darns and mends. Built-in sewing light Buttonholer included. Complete with portable, case and attachments. Wednesday only! Vacuum and Setiing Machine Dept., Main Floor 'Salisfaction guaranteed or your money back” SEARS Dow ntowii Pontiac I^lioin^ FK 3-11 71 A The W0afher U.t. WMtiMr lurMa ParKMt THE PONTIAC PR VOL. 123 — NO. 307 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 1. 1966-36 PAGES GM '65 Prof if s Top $2 Billion DETROIT UO — With profits increasing $391 million in 1985, General Motors yesterday became the first corporation ever to report a year’s earnings of more than $2 billion. Shortly before, GM’s stock closed at $102.75 a share, down 87V^ cents for the day, on the New York Stock Exchange. It closed at 103 later on the Pacific Coast Stock Exchange. The size of the profit and the price of the stock renewed speculation in some quarters some split or dividend action might ......................- . - - ............. jjj be forthcoming at the Feb. 7 meeting of GM’s directors York. Company spokesmen declined any comment. Another source commented: "Speculation is always with us, and often its roots are in wishful thinking.” 23 PER CENT I per cent above 1964’s to GM’s 1965 earnings soared 2 record $2.12 bilUon. It was a fourth straight record-breaking year for the world’s largest manufacturing enterprise. Dividends and sales also set records. The company paid dividends of $5.25 a share in 1965, including a special yearender of $2.25, paying out a total of $1,49 million to common stock holders. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) MRS. BARBARA ROONEY Actor's Wife, Man Found Fatally Shot HOLLYWOOD (AP) - The planned reconciliation of Midc-ey Rooney and his fifth wife has resulted in her murder and the suicide of the young Yugoelav actor' accused by Rooney of being her lover. The bodies of Barbara Thomason Rooney, 29, and Milso Milosevic, 25, an actor known professionally as Milos Milos, were found yesterday in the bathroom of the $150,000 Brentwood home Rooney once shared with his wife and four young children. Police theorized that Milosevic shot Mrs. Rooney, then turned the 38-caliber pistol on himself because she was planning to resume her marriage with the diminutive actor. Rooney himself was \ sedation at St. John’s Hospital in nearby Santa Monica, being treated for an intestinal infection acquired during filming the Philippines. Said Rooney’s manager. Red Doff; "Mickey told me they’d (he and Barbara) had a very good talk and they were very close to reconciliation. 1 think Milos may have resented it.' VIOLENT ACTS This apparently triggered the acts of violence by Milocevic, whose divorced wife had asked police protection from his fits of temper. WASiAnGTON (UPI) - Teamsters’ President James R. Hoffa tightened his grip over the nation’s largest union today because the Supreme Court agreed review his federal jury-tampering conviction. The ruling was a blow to U.S. government efforts to put Hoofs behind bars and raised the union leader’s hopes the tribunal u I d erase the eight-y e a prison sentence impost on him in the jury-rigging case. ' It also apparently cleared Hoffa Tightens Grip on Union U.N. Debates Viet Proposal U.S. Pounds N. Viet; 488 Cong Die in Vise SAIGON, South Viet Nam (i?’)—U.S. warplanes hammered at targets in North Viet Nam again today, while on the ground American and allied forces caught the Viet Cong in a giant vise along South Viet Nam’s coastal plains and sent them sprawling into retreat after 488 were reported killed, An Air Force spokesman said three American planes—one Air Forcei and two Navy jets—were lost in the first day of air at- Urgent Session Airs Surprise U.S. Request Cgpncil Is Asked to Set Time arid Place for Peace Conference S1IORM TROOPERS’ - Law officers in downtown Rochester, N. Y., take a severe buffeting yesterday as they head for duty in one of the city’s worst blizzards. Conditions were eased somewhat today but more snow is threatened. Court Plan to Review Conviction Is Factor to another five-year term. The expected to return Hoffa to hit $75,888-a-year post at the teamster convention in July. Snowfall Eases in the East, but Winds Plague Cleanup tacks on the Communist north after the 37-day bombing pause. There were no details yet on the second day of the raids. The pilots of the two Navy planes were rescued, but the pilot of an Air Force F105 Thunderchief was missing. He pulled into cloud cover and disappeared. Re\scue efforts iwere called off after a search, I the spokesman said. Asked for'Aid' By The Aisociated Press Snowfall cased today in the big Eastern storm, but col