r/it Wto^har Chance «f ihowen THE POJSTTIAC PRESS Home Edition VOL. 123 NO. 221 ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY. OCTOBER 22, 1965 -48 PAGES Speech Prepared for OU Visit Humphrey; Schools Basis of Great Society Grant Increase OK'd for City R44 Project A grant increase of $580,936 has been approved for Pontiac’s R44 urban renewal project. I Congressman Billie S. Farnum and Sen. Patrick McNamara today announced the urban renewal grant, authorized by the Urban Renewal Administration of the Housing Alabama Rests Case Against Klan Member Township Acts on Pollution Waterford Moves to Speed Sewer Project Waterford Township officials are taking immediate steps to eiq^ite construction of sanitary sewers in the West End Drain area and for extension of city sewer services to a township school site. and Home Finance Agency (HHFA). The increased federal contribution hikes the city’s original grant to a total of million. It falls at least $34,000 short of the amount originally requested by the city. James L. Bates, city urban renewal and planning director, said the balk of the grant increase was “credit” for the Clinton River 'nmnel project. Supervisor James E. Seeterlin said that the administration’s main objective is to clean up the township’s pollution problem, following a meeting yesterday between township, county and city officials. Pontiac officials noted the City Commission would approve an extension of sewage facilities to Cherokee Hills Elementary School if the township submits a formal HAYNEVILLE, Ala. (^) —The state rested its case today in the second murder trial of Ckillie Leroy Wilkins Jr., 21, a Ku Klux Klansman, after an FBI ballistics expert testified that bullets which killed a white civil rights worker were fired from a gun Previously the HHFA had Jn*-nduced as evidence credited $238,600 of the cost the tunnel toward the city’sl 8“". a 3^hber Sm share of R44 project costs. Local ^ officiaU had asked that thisjtified yesteriay by an FBI in-•credit” be hiked to $584,000.1 as the one us^ to kill ^ ^ ^ iViola Gregg Liuzzo last March The 10-acre school site is located north of Elizabeth Lake Road near Pontiac Mall. Ballistics Expert Says Fatal Shot Fired From Revolver In Evidence Stresses Need for Classrooms In a prepared speech to be delivered today at Oakland University, Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey pointed to education as the foundation of the Great Society. “Without knowledge, we Americans cannot live successfully in the society Big Crowd fo Greet VP in Livonia we are building,” he said in the prepared text. He noted, however, that 400.-0 more classrooms will be needed in the next five years to care for an additional four million youngsters. ‘‘Today, 54 million young people are in school — one-fourth of our toUl population," the vice president said. "This tidal wave of enrollment presents a challenge to our 125,000 schools, 100,000 administrators two million teachers. Although still awaiting dc of the latest grant. Bates esti-nuted that credit for the river project had been upped to $650,- BALANCE OF GRANT The balance of the grant, he said, was to cover the cost of property acquisitions, which ran higher than anticipated. Also, the resale value of the land did not meet expectations. This would increase both the city’s expenses and the federal government’s coutribu- Tbe school is scheduled to open next September. INITIAL ACTION Township officials took initial action yesterday to draw up a contractural agreement with the Ckxmty Department of Public Works for construction of sewers in the West End Drain area. The township requested the DPW to proceed with a resolution to be presented to the Township Board lor approval. According to Seeterlin, about 230 homes and 30 vacant lots are in the affected township area. The latest government approval also changes the time limit on the R44 project, originally slated tar completion by Sept. 1, 1965. Marion E. Williams of the FBI criminal laborato^ in Washington, said markings on a bullet taken from Mrs. Linz-to’s head and test bullets fired from the pistol bore similar markings. WilUdms said empty cartridge cases found half a mile from Mrs. liuzzo’s car on U.S. Hif^-Lowndes County also were from the same gun. Gary Thomas Rowe, 35, Klansman turned FBI informer, testihed yesterday that Wilkins emptied a pistol into Mrs. Lhiz-zo’s car after a nighttime highspeed auto chase on the highway. Williams testified that at five bullets strudc Bfrs. A WET WELCOME—Vice President Hu- troit’s Metropolitan Airport this morning. The bert Humphrey chats with NeU Staebler vice president was greeted by Ught showers (left) and Congressman Billie Farnum, D- as he began the first of several stops in Waterford Township, upon his arrival at De- Michigan. DETROIT (AP)- Some 4,500 t youngsters and adults massed s at a Livonia high school to wel- r come Vice President Hubert H. a Humphrey at the first stop on ^ , his scheduled round of speaking “I might add that Oakland is appearances in the Detroit area a good example of the enroll-ovnineinn ” Humohrev The crowd of spectators ment This has been extended to March 31. 1967. Income Tax Adoption for Highland Park? HIGHLAND PARK (AP) -Mayor Michael M. Glusac said today the Highland Park City Commissioo is preparing tc' adopt a municipal income tax. Senate, Governor? Romney Undecided TOKYO (J1 — Gov. George Romney of Michigan said today he had not yet made up his mind whether to run for the U.S. Senate next year or for another term as governor. Romney, one of nine American governors attead-iilg the annual U.S.-Japan Governors’ conference made no mention of seek- car and that three, including the one which killed her, were recovered. During a lengthy session, Rowe, the State’s key witness, pistol to Wilkins before the Parts of the following streets gre involved; Myrtle, Lakeview, Boston. LaSalle, West End, Fremont and Pioneer. FEDERAL GRANT Seeterlin said the will apply for a federal grant, asking for SO per cent of the construction cost. He observed the remataiiBg funds will be paid Iqr beneflt-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) He said the commission would meet next Monday to adopt a 1 per cent income tax on residents and ono4ialf per cent on nonresidents working in Highland Park. In cross-examination, defense attorney Arthur J. Hanes ques-ticHied Williams on the bullets fired into Mrs. Uuzzo’s car. Hanes, using a diagram, attempted to show that bullets might have also struck a passenger seated in the car. Mrs. Liuzzo was traveling with a Negro civil ri^ worker when she was killed. Quits the Klan, Yields Records 'God, Country Come First,' Says Witness Life Terms Handed Ex-Cons in Kidnaping SACRAMENTO, GalH. (f) -life prison terms were given today to two Oregon ex-convicts who kidnaped California finance director Hale Champion, his wife and baby daughter last July. ing the 1968 Republican presidential nomination. He said some moves within the Republican party to block potential candidates were “sui- Wilfred Marion Gray, 36, and Carl Cletos Bowles, 24, were sentenced in federal District Court by Jndge Thomas J. MacBride, who toM them: ’*Tliis was a heinous crime exeented in a vicions man- / service will d pupils Aren News .........M Arirology W Bridge................M OroMword Puzzle . . Comics , M Edltorlnls Farm and Garden .. C-7 . B-1 Marketo W Obitoaiies ......... ...C-1-C4 ^^nmaters TV-Radlo Programi D-U .Ml 4-Year Search for Girl Ends In Tokyo, Michigan Gov. George Rmnney said in an interview that American demonstrators against U. S. policy in Viet Nam “are reprehensible and shonld be punished under the law.” te one of nine the annnal U. S.-Japan Gover- cklal.” Romney, himself a potential candidate for president, did not elaborate. Hie governor said in an interview he hoped the GOP conld “poll itself together” before the next presidential election. He praised the new Republican National Coordinating Committee for working to provide nniijed leadership. Looking ahead to the visit he Indian Woman Held'*™* *® make to South Viet Nam after WASHINGTON (AP) - A Goldsboro, N.C., Ku Klux Klansman resigned from the! Klan today in a congressional witness chair, saying he believed God and his country should come before any Man vows. Joseph G. DuBois, a use salesman who said he was treasurer of the Goldsboro Klan Klavem, turned over records and documents of his unit to the House Committee on Un-American Activities. The committee, which is making a general investigation of the Klan had sub-peonaed the records. In sessions of the investigation earlier this week, higher leaders of the Klan had refused to turn over any records or answer any questions. on Kidnaping Charge SANTA ANA, Calif. (AP) -Blonde, blue-eyed Linda Lee Ridings, 6, reported kidnaped in 1961, has been found — after sharing the hard life of a migratory farm worker for four years. Linda, a bright and cheerful girl, was found living with Ramona Doughtery, 41, a full-blooded Indian. Miss Doughtery was booked on suspicion of kid- they leave Japan, Romney said he will tell U.S. servicemen there that the “bulk of the people” support U.S. policy on Viet Nam. He said anti-Viet Nam demonstrators represent a small fraction of the American public ‘but create more news than justified.” LIVED WANDERING UFB-Bk»d«. bhi»«y«d Linda Lm Ridlnfi, 6, was held in the Orange County, Calif., juve- Police detective Clarence Boyd said, “She jaid at first the child was given to her. Then she admitted taking her.” Boyd quoted her as saying: “Yei, ~ kidnaped her as a baby and took her to Oklahoma.” Boyd laid police have been nnaUe to locate Linda’s mother, Barbara Ridiap, 25, who moved from her lesHmewa address in Let Angeles |ix months ago. Howevo-, police said a nile fadUrir’yeitUrday after pdloe dleoevored that alto la. a ^ identified herself as hto- . . . . V ' . At..____tl.-i__mwi_________ww________ 4«WlflV flrl misai^ aince 1961. She was Doughtary/dl, a fUU-bloodad Indian migratory fvm wa Mist Doopitary was arrested on a chufa of Uonqdng. Livonia Franklin High School contrasted sharply with the absence of any sizable number of greeters when the vice president arrived at Detroit Metropolitan Airport. Humphrey, whose arrival from Buffalo, N.Y., was delayed by cloudy skies and rain, saw only a few officials and dozens of policemen when he walked from his plane to a limousine at the airport. Humphrey, besides his speeches at Oakland University and Livonia, planned to address the Economic Club of Detroit tonight. explosion,” Humphrey said. "When your doors opened for the first time m 1959 you had several hundred students; today you have several thousands. And in the next few years you can expect to double your enrollment.” Humphrey extolled the United Nations as a “noble idea” of man capable of resisting all physical force, in his spewh prepared for delivery in Livo- UVONIA SCHOOL The speech keynoted dedication today of another Livonia high school, the new $4 million Adlai E. Stevenson High School. ‘The United Nations today may appear weak in the physical world,” Humphrey said. IDEA MOVES “But that nation does not exist that is powerful enough to kill it. For the idea moves forward.” FAR-REACHING LEGISLATION Humphrey said that "Under the leadership of Pr^ident Johnson we have enacted in this session of Congress the most far-reaching education legislation in history. “These programs will help ug to prepare today to meet tomorrow’s demands. And they will enhance the educa-ttonal opportunity here in Michigan.” The speech was one of three scheduled by the vice president during a visit to the Detroit area. This morning he was scheduled to speak at the dedication of the new $4 million Adlai E. Stevenson High School in Livonia. Tonight he is to speak at the Economic Club (rf Detroit at (tobo Hall. In his Oakland University speech, Humphrey outlined the benefits Michigan and Oakland County will receive through legislative acts. DuBois, earnest and nervous, told the committee he had b^ advised to “stand on the Fifth Amendment.” But he said “I think that will not help record. Rain to Stop —for a While ‘VOWS ARE SECONDARY’ “Any vows I took in the Klan are secondary to my loyalty and integrity to the nation. God is first, then country. “I have no intention to take the fifth no matter yhat.” ‘The Fifth Amendment to the Constitution provides no one can be forced to ^ve testimony that would incriminate hint. This amendment was invoked by previous Klan witnesses, including Imp^l Wizard Robert Shelton of the United Mans of America, in refusing t( lat’s' the weather prediction? Will it rain? The U.S. Weather Bureau re-j ports today’s light showers will end by late aftemom leaving' skies partly cloudy and temper-; atures cooler, lows near 38 to 45. I Tomorrow will be partly it a chance of a few more showers by afternoon with highs about 15 to It Sunday’s forocast Is partly etoady and RkUngs telepbonod early today from Los A^elet and said she (Ckmtinuad on Page t, Col 5) V Temperatures fell from 60 early yesterday to 46 at 6 a.m. today. The 2 pjn. recording was 47. 7 disappointed people Group at OU Protests U.S. Viet Policy Among the spectators gathered to hear Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey this morning at Oakland University was a group protesting U.S. policy in Viet Nam. “These programs cost money,” he said. “But they are bargains in comparison to the cost of inadequate or incomplete education; to wasted talent and resonrees. Inadequate education leads to unemployment: The high school dropout is twice as likely to be unemployed as the high school graduate, and five times as likely as the college student,” Humphrey added. “Inadequate education leads to poverty: two-thirds of the families in which the father had less than eight years of schooling find themselves locked in economic h Members of the group knew what they were protesting, but couldn’t agree on what course of action they favored. Led by Bruce Walker, interim chairman and a so{riio-more from New Ywk, an organization called Oakland Committee to End the War in Viet Nam, passed out literature denouncing the United States foreign policy in Viet The first person that came out, the first night this ad appeared, bought the foUov^ item: 7 othor people too late, reported Mrs. E. W. Sell your unwanted items through a Press Want Ad FE 2^181 “Our object is not to agitate,” claims one of the group’s spokesmen, Lee Elbinger, second semester freshman from Detroit. “But to form concrete alternatives to the war in Viet Nam.” ‘I have circulated a petition,” said Barbara Schaffer, sophomore from Long Island, New York, “and have more than 100 signatures including students and faculty urging the withdrawal of troops.” loPPOSITE VIEW I “We’re in favor of the troops in Viet Nam,” countered How-*ard Tamower of Teaneck, N. J. I (Cemtinued on Page 2, Col. 5) INADEQUATE EDUCATION Inadequate education perpetuates itself in future generations: The children of the unemployed and poor become themselves unemployed and poor. “For these reasons. President Johnson proposed in his historic education message to the Congress that we declare a national goal of full educational opportnnity.” Humphrey said that the American people support this goal. “This year, for the first time, public opinion polls show that Americans consider educational opportunities to be their most important domestic concern. BURDEN OF CHOICE ‘The foundations of this Republic rest on a people capable of accepting the burden of choice — a people who can assume voluntarily the burden of “Our wealth and power represents freedom’s best hope tm the world. And av people represeat the best hope fw ha-(Continued on Page 2, CoL 3) K s tHE PONTlXc PRI83S. FEIPAY, OCTOBER 88, 106fl Adjournment Hinges on 2 Major Issues WASHINGTON (AP) — Coo-foreign and domestic quotu for gress pushes toward adjournment today, still faced with final dedsions oo federal pay and sugar legislation. Senate RepdiUcan leader Everett M. Dirkaen predicted flatly Congress would finish its work today, while oflier coogresshxua leaders said the end would come by tomorrow at the latest As the sessloB drew near a close, the Jdmson adminlstra-tka saw moaey denied to start two of Its "Great Society” prograau when bote Houses accepted tee decisioB of Senate^oose conferees to at this time ter rent sriteidy But the action scarcely dimmed the luster of a Congress whidi has given President Johnson practically every major bill for vdilch he asked. In both instances yesterday, the Senate backed down in the face of House insistence that funds be delayed until details of the programs can be further woited out. These issues remained to be settled: • SUGAR. Senate and House conferees meet today to work out differences betweoi the two chambers* measures setting Tariffs Removed on Cars, Parts From Canada WASHINGTON « - President JohasoB proclaimed today an ead to UJS. duties on antomobOes and parts imported from Canada and took final steps to provide free trade hi teese pradncts. The duties will go off after M days, but the actem wfll then be retroactive to last Jan. U, the date Canada removed its dnttes ea American The United States and Canada signed an agreement last Jan. U ter fliis free trade in cars aad parts to end what JohasoB said “might have led to serioas oeoaomic coaOkt Tech Enrollment Told HOUGHTON (AP) - A combined fall enrollmesit of 4,440 on its two campuses is reported by bGcfaigan Tech. The schod wtidi has a campus here and another at Sault Ste. Marie, said the figure was a 17 per cent increase over last fall. the U.S. sugar market. Chairman Harold D. Cooley, D-N.C., of the House Agriculture (Committee indicated he thinks there wiU be UtUe difficulty in readiing an The senate bill is more in line with administration nwndaticxis. • FEDERAL PAY. Senate passage was expected today of a bill with salary increases of 3.6 per cent effective Oct. 1 for 1.8 million federal workers. The Senate Post Office and cavil Service Committee scaled down a House-passed bill calling fw a 4 per cent raise — more than the administration favors. The House was expect to go along with Senate action in order to avoid the possibility of a presidential veto. Before turning to the federal pay question, the Senate hoped to act on President Johnson’s nomination of David G. Bress to be U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia. Hospital Plans More Parking A pair of two-story apartment buildings, one recently gutted by fire, win be demolished and tee land used ter employe paridng, the Pontiac General Hoqdtal Board of Trustees agreed last ni^t Ho^tal Administrator Harold B. Euler reported that one insurance esthnate put the cost at $49,700 to restore the building labeled a “total loss” as a result of a fire Oct. 3. Euler said that an adjacoit apartment stmetare dso needs imprevemcats. These are estimated at $15,N0 for temporary occnpaacy and $30,M0 for permanent occB- Both buildings are on Seminole directly back of the hospital. The board was also told last night that three bids had bea received to demoDsh the build- ] ings. The cost to tear down both buildings would be $4,200, be said. Bought by the hospital in 1980, the apartment buUdingt were used to bouse hospital interns and their families. Euler said that an entinmto on tee building prior to tee fire gave it a value of $32,100. The had $32,000 worth of insurance, be added. Trustees referred tee matter of future usage of the vacant land to their planning commit- Hunvtirey said that two-thirds (rf all tee sdentists who ever lived are alive today and teis age has alrea^ [noduced twice as mucte knowledge as all succeeding history. LEARNING MORE “The science student today is learning 400 times the amount of new information that his predecessor did only a decade ago. “Emte new discovery in turn triggers other new advances and more new knowledge. “Yet, our ability to harness new progress for the benefit of all is even more rfiallwiging and complex than the discoveries then^lves. tee. The Weather Fall UJS. Weather Bareaa Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Considerable cooler today with scattered showers or light rain endi this aftemooa. Highs SI to S7. Partly cieody aad co^ aight, lows 28 to S7. Increasfaig doadinets aad warmer day with chance of scattered showers by afternoon. S5 to $2. Northeast winds II to 2i miles tU momhig ( ishing to light variable this afternoon and becoming u ■oatewest $ to 15 miles tonight OnUook for Sunday: cloady and coder. «« by » to-ktar-Highs dimia-rest to partly ■ding I ajn. ^ A» S >Ji^: Wind Valocity 10 " ■t t:$l tjn. at 5:05 p.in. I. at 5:35 ojn. „ 31 Ft. ............. RapMt 50 45 Jaduonvttla 13 ing 51 45 Kansas CWy 57 luatta 40 31 Los Angolas 51 41 21 Miami Sa'di 14 Pdlsloo 51 ____________________ “ravarsa C. 54 35 Now Yarti NAnmiAL WEATHER—Rain is expected tonight from the towar Urim and Ohio Valley to tee Atlantic Coast with dsomers ia anidiBni Florida. U will be cooler from New BoflaDd to the OUe V$lkv and in tee eastern Gulf Coast states. Warmer weather wifi prevail from the southern Plains Jet Explodes in Air, Crashes Plane Plunges Ntar Jackson, Killing Pair WOUNDQ) VETERANS — President Johnson chatted with a graiq> of Marines, wounded in the Viet Nam conflict, at Bethes- da Naval Hospital yesterday. He and Mrs. Johnson visited tee veterans Just before the President left tee hospital. Humphrey Cites Need for Schools (Continued From Page One) naa, swtel aad sdeatlfie ‘We have tee genius to soar far beyond our own imaginations into tee distant reaches of qiace. But we also have tee diance to reach for the human heart — to do what we must to {weserve life and make it full and free and bountiful.” A former political science professor, Humphrey said teat be is car^ abwt keeping his academic credentials in order by regularly facing campus andi- He said teat in the past few years he has found significaiit “Ten years ago, most students were primarily concerned with their own well-being and security. It was ‘Me First* “But this is not true today. This is an era of committed young Americans.** MORE INVOLVED Today’s college students, he said, are less introspective and more outward-hxddng, less unconcerned and more involved hi the political and social issues of the day than at any other time in history. He told tee student body, “You are in tee forefront in the battle to restore civil rights, correct social injustices and enhance human dignity. Your motivation is, I think, based upon the same desire that has prompted us to sedc a Great Soci^—a realization that today we have die best chance in hirtory to better the human condition. And we have our best dbance ever of truly becoming an educated and enlightened society.’ Liberian Ship Founders in Atlantic; Four Dead NEW YORK un-A Liberian frei^ter foundered in tee Atlantic today, and the Coast Guard repoi^ that 22 of the 33 persons aboard had been cued. One body was recovered and three others had been sighted in the 15-foot seas about 640 miles north of the Azores, tee Coast JSuard said. It said no one was left on the ship. Gypsios Are Searched YORK, England (AP) -Police searched Gypsy vans an along the royal route today after a threat saying Queen Elizabeth H would be shot by a Gyp$y as she drove from Tadcaster to York dtirk« a north country tour. JACKSON (UPI) — A Lear Jet Carp plane exploded in flight a^ came crashing to earth “like a Fourth of July fireworks” northeast of here last night, killing two test pilots. The jet, beloniging to one of Lear’s distributors, Robert Graf of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., dug an 18-foot square, eii^t crater and pushed the dirt b^ fore it more than 50 yards in m wooded area on the north shore of Eagle Lake about four miles from here. William Lear, presUeat of tee jet eompaiv Wichita, Kan., identified tee victims as CHen David, about 21, and Larry Banhola, aboot 21, bote from Whteita. Viet Cong Resume Attack on Special Forces Camp SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) - The Viet Cong made another strong attadc on tee beleaguered sped camp at Pld Me today, but the figh^ died down ag^ late in the day, a UJL military man reported. The Communist guerrillas shot down a U.S. Air Fmce Sky-raider, but the pilot was rescued, the qKteesman sakL Eaght Americans were UBed in two helicopter cratees in the area Tuesday and Wednesday. The Viet Cong battered tjie Plei Me garrison 210 mOes mntheast of Saigon with mortars, automatic weapons and small arms. A Vietnamese ranger unit fought Us way into tee camp shcHlly after dawn to bolster the tough mountain tribesmen who have kept the guerrillas at bay for three days. U.S. jets pounded tee guerrO- ly- Ml CONG Aboot 500 Viet Cong launched the attadc at Plei Me eariy Wednesday. The canq> tte was defended by about 200 Mmtag-nard tribesmen and 10 or 12 UJS. helic(^>ters lifted several conganies of Vietnamese in Thursday, and U.S. authorities said it appeared the Onnmunist offensive had been blunted. But latest reports said the Viet Cong remaiiwd in positions around the canq> in heavy strength and were massfaig large ccmcentrations of, weap- UJS. advisers in tee canq> reported seeing at least 90 enemy bodies in the barbed wire around the camp and oo the ground bqrond. UB. officials said tee garrison had suffered li^t casualties. NEW BARRAGE The Ctonununists began a new heavy barrage early today, and U.8. planes also drew heavy fire. “It was a pretty hot ni^,” said Capt. Bill Vfittenherg, Kansas (3ty, Kan., who flew over the area dnq>ping flares. Wittenberg reported the camp was under fire from all directions although American planes were pounding tee Cknmmmists ftmiigh the "igb* U.S. pilots said a field to the north of tee camp was littered with Viet Ckng bodies. Find Youngster Lost Since '61; Woman Charged (Continued From Page One) would come here to claim the child but did not say just iteen she would arrive. Investigators said Linda was first taken to OklabiHna City, irtiere Miss Doughtery was bom. They joined tee farm labor circuit, traveling throu^ the Midwest. Los Angeles PoUm Dqtart-ment records show that Mrs. Ridings reported the diDd missing in June 1961. She told police and Miss Doughtery, the child's baby sitter since birth, disan;)eared the previous March, while she was on a tr^ to Florida. The records also shewed teat Mrs. Ridingt was separated from her hasbaad, Ha-bert, and teat she had toM poiiM bOss DoogUery had wanted to adopt Linda herself and have her baptized. Linda came to police attentioo on Cict. 14, when officer Woody Williams ston>ed to question a man sitting with Li^ in a parked car. The man, Wilfred Leroy Green, 27, Santa Ana, was booked on Oct. 18 on sus|ddon of child molesting and released on $500 bond. He was ordered to appear in court on Nov. 2. The two pilots were the only ones aboard the craft which was bound for Wichita from Detroit’s Metropolitan Airport. John Kohn, a guard at Southern Midiigan Frison here, was on duty when he saw the jet explode “like a Fourth of July fireworks” and come to earth in a flaming crash. PIECES SCATTERED The area on tee north shore of Eagle Lake is owned by the Michigan Audubon Society. Firemen and State Police said they found pieces of the fuselage Birm^gham Area Newt School Officials Warned to Step Up Construction BL(X)MFIELD HILLS - The race continues between school construction and enrollment increases, with the two neck-and-neck as they round the first School officials were waned this week that they had bette; step up their pace or be caught lagging in the next lap. This year they opened a new elementary unit and a 10-room addition to East Hills Eight smaller projects added to these took the construction biU to $1,937,287. The inrojects constituted the first p^on of a $7.6-million program. HAVE BEEN SETBACKS There have been setbacks — notably in obtaining sites. Rejection of construction ids becanse of Ugh costs and have played their parts in delaying tee program. Dr. James H^ Michigan State University educational consultant, has urged the board to have another elenoentary school ready for the 1981-1967 school year. The Children’s Ballet Theater, Inc., Sunday will iwesent the first in a series of ^seminars for advanced dance students. His recommendation was a about a foot in diameter scat- fn-eliminary one with a full re-tered throughout an area from! port to foUow next nwnth. the spot where the planej crashk. Russell Morton, who lives on tee sooth shore of tee lake and has hnnted throi^ the entire area, said he saw the explo-sioB and immediately notified anteoritieB. He directed firemen and troopers terongh tee wooded area. Russell said all the trees within a mile radius looked like a tornado had hit them. He said tee smaller trees were uprooted and the entire area was covered with jet fuel. Lear said the pitme bad just undergone a major overhaul and was not yet re^ to be ' eredtoGraf. Waterford Moves to Correct Pollution (Ctontenied From Page One) ting property owners in the area, and spread over pessi-bfy a 20-year period. The township and city have ‘GLARING NEED’ In a letter to the board, Heald cited tee “glsring need” for an elementary buildi^ in the western portion of the district He noted that the Piae Lake Elementary School area there has experienced a 28J per cent increase la home coa-stmetkm daring the last two years, while tee figare for tee district as a whole is 20.1 per School trustees have authorized board attorney Lawrence King to begin condemnathm pro-ceedings on one of four elementary school sites. The 16-acre site is oo the south side of Long Lake Road, directly across from Kilt in tee Hills. DEEDRESTRICnONS While the board already owns the property, it is governed by deed restrictions allowing only residential devefopment. Sprifosmea lor the cathedral have indicated they would oppose constractioB of a school whlehwoaldclaahirehltoe-tiirally with the Gothic edillee. Other possible elementary sites ate at Long Lake and Telegraph, Lone Pine and hflddle Belt and North Franklin north of Club Drive. When science museum officials engage in “attic cleaning,” the castoffs are apt to range from the esoteric to tee exotic. Jut each a eidleetisa will be offered at tee Graabrook Institute of fieieace’s white Listed among tee items for the 9 a.m.-noon sale are several antique Asian and Mon Iwasses and some Oriental rugs. Also to be sold are i samplu, stretching boards for bug collectors, publications and non-museum Dealing with Scotch dancing, tee program will be hold at 2:21 p.m. at the Village Nursery School. 21111 W. 12 Mile, Farmington Townah^. Succeeding seminars will be held throughout tee area u space is made available, according to Mrs. Paul Pankotan of 519 W. Maple, Birmingham, artistic director ^ tee groiq>. The lecturu and demonstra-thms are designed for young people 10 to 18 years old who are already studying ballet, she Duke Is Satisfactory Following Eye Surgery NEW YORK (AP) - The Duke of Windsor was r«f»tted in satisfactory condition today at tee Institute of Ophthalmology where spedalista repaired a snudl break in the retina of Us right «ye on Wednesday. an agreement, dating back to 1958, which says the dty will provide treatment of waste from the West End Drain area if and when the townsUp installs sewers. Just recently, the State Wato-Resources Commission Issued to the township to remedy drainage pntelems existent in the area. The commlsaioi complete construction {terns and spedfications for facilities pn or before March 1, 1966; conqdete financing of the fadlities oo or before June 1,1966 and to award construction contracts for tee facilities on or before June 15, 1966. A Presbyterian Medical Ctoter said the former Bti^ moa-aicb, 71, would leave tee hospital Saturday. Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St. $aw M EbdriMl Wiring Heeds Here at Siwai! In Airplane, Helicopter Two Fly to Freedom in West BERNAU, Germany 98 N. Saginaw 5 Reasons Why You Should Roy Transistor Ra^ tt Sinnns IRunranlao Starts Jan. 1st 4 Isoliisiva 1-Month Onar-0 H lougM Now for Wfts. As nntoa on Radios. 3 Rodins are Toatad hy J Shnins Nos Riggoat Soloe-■ ShnoM and the Makars. Lilian, Lawast Prieos. e Radios are Rahimabia tar Rohind or Va Ixahango-lobjaet to insMOtions. Sale! SIMMS TRANSISTOR RADIOS ‘Realtone Jade’ 6-Transistor Radio ‘Realtone Lancer’ 8-Transistor Radiol With Casd-Battery- Compor* to $17.95 mlfart—8 tronsii- tort, I tharmiitor, I diode. Large lulling dial. $i holds in rSSimms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw M Holds Your Soloction in SINNSFREELAYaWAY -and all equipmant warranties start on Jan. 1st, 1966.. . only Simms offers this unique feature SAVeiNOreOiTAX' If you buy any camera equipment now Simms won't bogin the guarantees until Jan. 1966, so you'll have extended coverage on your purchases. All specials for Today and Saturday. _______________ Sale ‘KODAK’ Color Movie Films Super 8 Kodapak 209 Super 8 comerq.. 50% n picture oreo, and you shoot 50 ft. without slopping. Limit 10 rolls. 8mm Roll Load Kodochrome II color n\ film lor indoors or ouldc 1 69 'Kodak's Worlds Fair' Flash Camera 444 flash. As shown — built-i uses low cost 127 size film for color or block and white pictures. $I holds. Regular $8.95. Instant Loading - Auto Electric Eye KODAK SUPER 8 Movie Camera New Instamatic M4 Model $74.50 volue —electric in fillers, 11.8 coated lens, enclosed viewfinder. $1 holds in free loyowoy. ‘Semiliole' 12-Transistor AM-FM Radios Former $39.95 Seller-twin antenna radio with FM-AM ond AFC features. Complete with bottery, ond eorphone. $I holds. *St. Moritz Tokai’ 9-Transistor Walkie-Talkies Talk and Listen WHheut Wires Operates on channel 7, plug in crystals, to transmit ond receive. Compiele with cose, batteries and eorphones. $1 holds. lOID’ Color Cameras 4393 68*« 117” Sale of ‘POLAROID F|5F 069 jOS Roeharfoablo Battory or AC Optrated 4-Speed Record Player stereo phire needle, two 4 detachable speakers, —^ completoly portable. Floys up to 8 hours before rechorgfng or uses ^ ffoihlight batteries up to 50 hours. AutomoHc record changer ploys 16-33-45-70 records. Only $1 holdf. Regular $89.95 seller. [ MBofNi Vlaninaw i SIMMS.«S. ‘SAWYER’ r SKdo Projoetor ^ RIowor CooM 500 WaHc 198 $39.95 Seller 8mm Film Editor & Splicer American SAIA’ SIMMS Opel Tinight til 10 P.M. Show 35mm, Super Slides or Inslomotic slides this new 'Roto Disc' method of showing. ^twice of regular 8 or Super 8 editor wHh newest dry splicer, lorga viewer for editing film, 400ft. real copdcKy. $ I holds. SIMMS.™. IP Saturday Hours 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. Friday and Saturday at SIAAAAS Pay More? What for? Simms is Right Here In Pontiac! Visit SIMMS For The Largest Selection Of Electric Razors and Parts in Pontiac Famous Rrnnd —Discount Priced $11.11 Rensen 2N Shmr 119] »4.H Sehick IH« Ms4tl suptr ipttd .. »I.N Nertics #11 Flestini hssd shavtr $II.H Nertleo #20 tl4.lt #11 Nortlee WESTINGNOUSE (W) Vacuum Cleaner i|‘Permex’ Anti Freeze •ii Permanent il'CornIng'Saucepan 1 iii.isn. -2nd Floor $II.M Lady Rtminflen ____ All brond new factory guoronleed Shavers. $2 holds in free loyawoy 'lii Chrisimos. Main Floor SUNDRY DISCOUNTS Sale of Electric Razor Parts Norelco Head-Cutter Norelco Head-Cutter S7.00 volue - h Sunbeam Comb-Cutter $3.95 volue —single blode for models W WB-CB-140 electric shovers . .. Sunbeam Comb-Cutter • volue- 3-blode unit fits model 555 elec- ilx Sunbeam Comb-Cutter w 99 5-blode unit fits model 555-11 electricCjE Schick Razor Head J|99 $6 volue —fils models 20-25 ond 'Whiskowoy' electric shovers..... Ronson Razor Screen 4 19 $1.50 value —lor the Ronson 66 and CFL ADVERTISED COSMETICS ‘Hiddon Nagic’ Hair Spray $2.35 value l5^;H«iden Magic' holds and holds yet ^)u A. rmoouLo PtMdrat ud Pubitober Joim A. Kiurr ClrcuUUon Manafcr Lot*] Advntidaa Bench Bid Backfires on Senator, President Sen. Edward M. (Ted) Kennedy’s surprise request yesterday to rec«n-mit to the Senate Judiciary Committee President Johnson’s nomination of Francis X. Morrissey for a Federal judgeship ended one of the most sordid political designs to affront the Nation in many a day. The storm kicked up by the Kennedy - sponsored nomination of Morrissey has been growing in intensity since it appeared on the Senate floor for confirmation, two weeks ago. ★ ★ ★ Morrissey was nominated over protests by the American Bar Association and the Massachusetts Bar Association. In documenting their opposition, the legal fraterniti^ established that he had twice failed the Massachusetts bar examination before passing in 1944, and has little major court trial experience in that state. Thirty years ago, Morrissey had acquired a quickie law degree at a Georgia “school,” later abolished by the state. But though his legal credentials for the judiciary were negligible, "'^the likable, glad-handing nominee "had others far more potent. He was a Kennedy henchman. ★ ★ ★ Joseph P., patriarch of the family, had recruited him to help John Kennedy’s first campaign for Congress in 1946 and, after running various chores for the Kennedys in the intervening years, he coached TeP through the scion’s victorious 1962 campaign for a Senate seat. According to Joseph Kennedy’s bic^apher, Morrissey is among the circle of family “retainers, agents and hangers-on.” To the credit of the Senate, it was becoming increasingly doubtful whether Morrissey’s nomination would pass the vote forestalled by Kennedy’s sudden withdrawal of it. Democrats as well as Republicans, led by scrupulous Sen. Everett Dirksen, R-Ill., were solidifying strong opposition to the unpalatable political pill they were being asked to swallow. ★ ★ ★ It is reassuring to find evidence of integrity in the Senate body as a whole. However, none can be found in Sen. Kennedy’s endorsement of an entirely unqualified aspirant to a high judicial post nor little in President Johnson’s nomination of him. Tluoridation’ Murk to Douse ‘Yes’ Votes? Our big neighbor to the south is suffering from a distortion of lucidity in the municipal area. The symptom of the affliction is the cloudy fluoridation amendment on which Detroiters vote Nov. 2. As matters now stand, the City has the legal right to fluoridate its water, and the Common Council has decreed such action for the near future. ★ ★ ★ But in the face of virtually unanimous endorsement by dental and medical authorities, public health officials and residents of fluoridated cities (Grand Rapids and Toledo are two close ones), the required number of petitionary objectors has acted to put the issue on the upcoming ballot under the guise of Amendment A. “Disguise” would be a more apt term. Since the wording of the amendment was the prerogative of the petitioners, they seemingly are out to accomplish by gobbledygook what they presiunably could not by votes. This is their proposed amenc ment: “Shall Title 4, Chapter 12, Section 7a of the charter of the City of Detroit be amended to prohibit the adding of fluorine or fluorine compounds to the public water supply in any manner?” ★ ★ ' Now, we ask you. If you favored fluoridation, wouldn’t you naturally vote “Yes” on that chunk of language; and if opposed cast a “No” ballot? Ha! In both cases you’d be as wrong as the guy who originally tagged automobiles as but a passing fad. What you would do is vote “No” if you wanted to vote in favor of fluoridation—and vice versa. Do we make ourselves clear? ★ ★ ★ The gimmick is, you see, that the city charter already permits fluoridation, but to prohibit it would entail passage of the amendment by a majority of “Yes” votes. We think that the person or persons unknown who authored Amendment A rate an “A”—for Ambiguity. New Showdown on Birch Society? ^ By WALTER R. MEARS WASHINGTON (AP) - Republican policymakers may be headed for a December showdown on the nagging question mark of John Birch Society influence within their party. The question zoomed into prominence when Sen. Thruston B. Morton of Kentucky tied into the Birch Society and said its influence should be booted out of the GOP. Morton, chainpan of the Republican Senatorial Campaign Conunittee, charged the militaatly conservative or-ganiution is trying to take over the party. GOP floor leaders of the House and Senate joined him in declaring the society is no part of the GOP. The Birch Society promptly denied it has designs on the Republican party. As the Democratic National Committee gleefully noted, society founder Robert Welch said that would be “petty larceny.” EXPECT LITTLE IMPACT Most state GOP chairmen said they doubt the Capitol Hill denunciation will have any particular impact on the party itself “The denunciation was more for the edification of the public than the party,” said West Virginia Chairman John Scott. At last year’s San Francisco convention which nominated Barry Goldwater for the presidency, delegates jeered to defeat a platform amendment that would have denounced the society. Now a similar proposal may face the next session of the Republican C^dinating Committee, a council of party leaders due to meet in Washington Dm. 13. SEEK DECLARATION Morton and Michigan Gov. George Romney have said they may seek to have the committee declare itself on the Birch Society. Goldwater. who has denouaecd the positions taken by Welch but ant the society’s members, serves on the coordinating committee. So does New York Gov. Nelaon A. Rockefeller, who has expressed delight at “a growing awareness that the John Birch group is trying to gain control of the party.” Gi^water has said he sees no such threat, but he has suggested that Republi- cans resign from the so^y and spend iwfparty. their time working for I NOT POTENT FORCE Most state GOP chairmen agree that the society is not a potent force within the party. Since his original denunciation of the society. Morion has said there are probably as many Democrats as Republicans in the Birch Society. Later, he charged that "Birchers of the left” had a hold on the Democrats. Mrs. Carrie Mows of 121 PraU; list birthday. Mrs. Ada Schreefc^ of 14< E. Ruth; Mth biltf biijWay. Voice of the People: Lonely Viet Nam Soldier Wants Mail From Pontiac I wag TWrn and raised in Pontiac and went to Pontiac Northern. I am 18 years old and one of the lonely young men stationed in Viet Nam. I’m with the 1st Brigade, 101st Airborne Div., from Ft. Campbell, Kentucky. I arrived here July 21, 1965 and my tour over here is 12 months. I would like to know if there is a teen-age girl between the ages of 16 and 19 who would like to write to a lonely soldier in Viet Nam. PFC Gray U.S. 55-801572 HQ C./2/327/Inf. Div. 1st Bde 101st Abn Div. Viet Nam San Francisco, California APO 96347 Complains About Press Coverage of Football Why do your sports writers feel that Bloomfield IBlls is the only footbaU team in the Wayne4)akland League? It a a little disheartening for the boys on the o^r teams to PKijuP The Pontiac Press several times a week to read only about Bloomfield Hills. Whether they are winning or losing they get the big coverage. How about being a Uttle more fair m your What A Camel's Back! (Editor’s Note: Bloomfield Hills High is currently unbeaten and is leading the WayneOakland League. As is often the case in sport stories, winners, league leaders or champions get primary attention as Milford did when it won the league title last year.) Teen-Ager ALSAC March Was Successful David Lawrence Asks: We would like to ex(H«8s our appreciation to every teen-ager who marched in the ALSAC teen-ager march for PonUac. (xm:hairmen Is Judiciary Reform in Works? JOYCE ALEXANDER LYVONNE HERRINGTON Says Entire Nation Shares Guilt for Crime If the price of civilization is insanity, as a historian has opined, it seems the world will soon have made payment in full. WASHINGTON - Maybe a milestone has been reached. Perhaps from now on, neither President Johnson nor members of the Senate will propose for a federal judgeship someone who is n 01 qualified and will appoint i instead an individual whosel qualification s’ are not doubt. public confidence in the judiciary system can be retained if it begins to be suspected that the men on the bench are not disinterested but are inclined in their decisions, particularly on economic and social issues, to follow the philosophy of the party in power. For many decades it has been customary to extol the federal judiciary as impartial, parti- cularly because judges are given life tenure. While most persons on the bench undoubtedly feel an obligation to avoid any conflict of interest and to abandon any previous political affiliation, the decisions rendered have not always home out such an attitude. (CwyrttM. ms, Nmt Vtfft HtraM TrtkwM SyiNlkat*, Im.) Attorney General Riemond Flowers of Alabama asked a TV audience not to blame all Alabamians for a crime charged against Tom Coleman. I believe that the shame and guilt is national as well as sectional. No society should allow states’ lights to take precedence over human rights — it creates a climate favorable to the growth of individuals such as Tom Coleman. It might be fair to say that “Society prepared the crime Tom Coleman was accused of.” BILL ELOBY 502 BRANCH Appreciates Action to Protect Cemetery LAWRENCE Bob Considine Says: Perhaps, loo, the disinterested advice of the American Bar Association will be given more attention than heretofore, and maybe the American people will start to get the reform to which they are entitled — the estab-lishmoit of a federal judiciary comprised of competent persons. TUs may be aa optimistic iaterpretatioB of the latest episode, which would np with a dramatic speech by Senator Edward Kennedy of Massachn-■etts. Democrat, at he asked the Senate to refer back to the jndiclary committee, for further consideration, the nomination of Francis X. Morrissey to a Moral jndgeship. The result could be that the nomination will languish in committee, or the issue may be raised again in the next session of Congress, though it would then require a resubmission by President Johnson. Audience Is Spellbound by Air Magnate’s Outlook I would likelo express my appreciation to the Oakland County Sheriff’s department for the wonderful job it did at Lakeville Cemetery. I have been to the cemetery after a beer party there and it sure didn’t look like a place of rest. Those who were fined by Judge Stanaback should learn a lesson from it. FUTURE RESIDENT OF LAKEVILLE CEMETERY ^Staff SuppoiiA Avondale Superintendent NEW YORK - Donald W. Douglas held more than a thousand air-space industry people spellbound the other ni^t when he spoke at the Wings Club din-n e r honoring him for his half-century of ran-tributions t o aviation. “Full integra- I of I miles by the end of the century, Donglas predicMi op-poMdtoMbOlioninlNI. With mart and more leisure time and more affluence will come a sharp step-up in recreational air travel here and abroad. But certainly public ofdnion asserted itself forcefully' and members of both political pv-ties in the Senate did come to realize that, as Congress hastens to adjouiTi, there was no other way out than to defer action on the nomination and let the matter simmer. personic airliner in commercial service CONSIDINE appears to be at least 10 years off,” said the man whose DC3 paved the world’s aerial roadways. “These first such aircraft are likely to be followed, not later, by a mneh- “Particular attention must be paid to foreigners visiting the United States,” he counseled. “In many ways, ours remains a somewhat insular society; we have done a minimum in the way of preparing ourselves for visitors from abroad.” Many unpleasant things and some very questionable ones have been happening in the Avondale school district. It aeems the members of the school board are in the process of dismissing our superintendent, Mr. George Shackelford. ★ ★ ★ We deplore the situation that exists here and wish to state that we respect and support Mr. Shackelford, who was principal at the Elmwood School before he became superintendent at Avondale schools, and we are in favor of a renewal of his contract. ELMWOOD STAFF: CLARA ISAACS BERTHA PLUNZ EARL CRITTENDEN MARY JUREK FLORENCE BROADWAY ERMA WAUN JUNE R. KIRSCH LUCILLE FRAILEY MARY SADLER WAVE MOULS NORVAL JONES MAHALA SCOTT EFFAH PERKS GLADYS UNDERWOOD RUTH M. COLBOTH ROBERT L. SNOW WAS COMMENDED The Massachusetts senator was commended for his action by Senator Everett Dirksen, the Republican leader, who spoke of it as an example of “complete integrity” and independence. Kennedy didventnrethc predictioH that the Judiciary improved, type. *'I believe the subsonic jet airliners — greatly improved versions of those we have today-will continue to play a dominant role in air transport for at least amther generation, and possibly through most of the rest of this century. Reviewing Other Editorial Pages 'Take Over' The Macomb Daily mend the appointment of Mor-risaey. TUs is why, he said, ment to lay it aside. The Senate promptly sent the Morrissey nonnination back to the judiciary conunittee. “This is almost certainly true with respect to air cargo, which by the year 20M could be the larger p^ of thf business.” HUGE MEGALOPOLIS He sees a day when the American city, the megalopolis, becomes so huge that its workers will commute by air from “suburbs” hundreds of miles away. Their aerhd trains wfll be short4akeoff and qniek-land-iag Jobs needing “perhaps Mly a couple of fsotbUl HeUs worth of real estate.” In Chicago, an engineering firm employe gritted his teeth on his pipe stem and bitterly mention^ to anyone who would listen that he’s “fed up with surly waitresses and Alabama juries” and is going to live in Sweden. He said “the American people just don’t care about each otter and the situation is getting National Educational Association’s annual convention this summer, the teachers passed a resolution declaring that “the schools should play an important part in the building of moral and spiritual values.” Character - baOdiaf workshops for teaeters are being started aad will be mUtipUed. The NEA k labbytag la Wash-iagtOB far the “rearmliig of the hearts of our youth.” And PTA greupo are working to hack them up. Ins, draft dodgers, free speech-ers and critics of U. S. foreign policy bring to wives, parents and relatives of our soldiers fighting in Virt Nam must at all times be unbearable. But that doctor named Richard P. Omsteen and his family have started something called “MaU CaU Viet Nam” with the fuU blessing of U. Gen. William Westmoreland, commander of United States forces in Viet This gentleniaa Is aot aloae in Us thinUai, although Us fans would be coaopicaous by ttetr aboeacc at the scad-off. Right or wrong in the solution — running off to Sweden — the feet remains that there is e general breakdown of moral end spiritual values in tUs country. The whole development may prove salutary bi many respects. There has been a tendency in recent years for federal judgeships to be matters of patronage. FIRST CONSIDERATION Lawyers with political affiliations or local judges identified with the activities of political parties have often been given first consideration for any vacancies on the federal bench. He feels that there will soon be a major breakthrough in fuels used in planes, and that speeds and performance features will be notably increased. He leans toward hydrogen as particularly promising. “Our accomplishments i n space flight make it reasonable to suppose tjiat a ballistic transport may ultimately supply the answer to real high speed, long distance travel,” he said in a matter-of-fact manner. And for the first time in Amer-ica's history, many are now saying that the building of character is not the concern of the public school. Some coUege edaeatori are eaeovagiag sexual laxity oa CoMs can obtain And for parents who protest this “take over” by the schools of the responsibility to re*instill moral and spiritual values in their children, isn’t it a sad commentary indeed when the n oc e s s i t y for this exists? Had it started in the home in the tint place... Esseatially, “MaU CaU Viet lam” it ss open iavUetieB to aad child to write messages of hspe, belief that their sacrifice means something very real to thote of ns enjoying the bleto-ings of freodom. Perfect Antidote The Saginaw News Verbal Orchids to- KS The trend toward making a .jdicial appointment a Und of poUtical ^nm has bees growing, and even nominations to the Snpremc Conrt of the United States have had poUci-cal overtones. RIGHT ANSWER “Indeed, if some of the objectionable characteristics of hypersonic flight in the atmosphere prove difficult of solution, (sonic in fsvsr of four-letter words and otter forms of Uceasc iateM freedom go nnqnoUed. Unlike our Chicago friend, not everybody ripis away from the situation . . . most stay and fight. It has taken not a Philadel-(diia lawyar but a Philadelphia doctor to praacribe the perfect antidote to a current and persistent national headache. The pain all of these sit-ins, teach- ..M AmocMm Frw* h «MHM srvjr ■ Since those noisy minorities who find freedom such a handy platform from which to espouse their cause—often using up taxpayers’ time and doUars to do it on sh-eet comers and college . campuses - it’s eminently (air that the equaUy long-suffering and much less noisy majority of Americans are now given an outlet to get their message across to the GIs in Viet Nam. Th* Pontiac Prow b MivtrM bv eorrbr lor N canto ■ >—-• te.) t provide the right answer.” The real problem is how long Domestic air travel i There are nearly a million teachers in America now committed to th? reversal of this trend toward duos. Through their elected delegates to the Vf^i otioiotiofo In MkWgan • •cripUoHt payaMo In aOvwM Jw baan^ •» StoS Mambar al Aac. Doctor Omsteen’s puj'ely American, purely patriotic Uttio idea of a national maU call to theae fighting men should do much to reassure them Uiat they are not forgotten; that they fight with and for all u4u> love f r e e d 0 m and understand the painful responsibUities and duties it demands in i tion. , THE PONTIAC PRKSS, FRIDAY. OCTOBER 22, 1965 A—7 New Cancer Surgery Plan ^'2nd Look' Operation Saves Some lives ATLANTIC aTY, N.J. (AP) — Novel “Mcond look” nirgical operations fpr one of the worst forms of cancer are increasing survival rates moderately and also are blazing trails for ‘‘better operations” of the future. The operations are undertaken in apparently healthy people. ★ ★ ★ This was reported to the American College of Surgeons today by Dr. Ward 0. Grlffen Jr. of the University of Kentucky. He defined a ‘‘second look” operation thus: It’s a repeat operation planned virtually from the time certain patients are sewed up after undergoing an initial operation far often high elusive malignancies of the gastrointestinal tract — cancers of the colon, stomach, or rectum. The latter are cancers which tend to spread insidiously, no: matter how extensive the surgeon makes his original cutting. SECOND LOOK | The “second look” operations are planned for four to nine months later for patients whose tissue removed by the initial surgery shows the cancer has a potential to spread via the lymphatic system. > ♦ ♦ ★ The second-shot operations are based on these statistics; i If a patient has a cancer confined to the cdon, his chance for five-year survival after ihitial operation—the usual criterion of “cure” — is about 75 per cent. But— If the cancer spreads to the lymph system, chances of survival are reduced to 30 per cent. The percentage is lower for cancers of the stomach and rectum. NOVEL FACET j The novel thing about the| “second look” operations, Grif-fen told the closing session of the surgeons’ convention, is that they are undertaken at a time when the patient is showing no symi^ms of cancer. i Qe said abdut 50 per cent of gastrointestinal cancer patients have leftover cancer, even though they show no symptoms. ★ ♦ ♦ And, of these, the “second look” operations save 15 per cent of those with colon cancer; 5 per cent of the stomach cancers; 3 per cent of the rectal cancers. ’The “second look” dan mount to multiple “looks,” because, Grlffen said, one woman underwent six different operations before being rid of the seeds of malignancy. The doctor conceded that the increase in life saving is still moderate, but he said there’s at least suggestive evidence that the record is better than it would be if repeat operations were reserved until patients actually develop recurrent cancer symptoms. Land Sale Receipts LANSING (AP)-Sales of tax-reverted state land has netted 148,000 for 34 northern counties, the Conservation Department reports. Biggest sales were in Midland County - $12,060. I Pontiac Mall i Hearing Canter SALE! ENTIRE STOCK OF 19.99‘60-00’COATS 17“ The coots that nover stop goingi Fantastic soloction of top-quality fabrici in popular styloi. Sizes 8-18. Save 1.181 80% cotton/20% nylon blend never needs iron-ingl Tapered western styling in wheat. Reg. slim 8-18. $1-1.11 pr. H pari. OPIN IVIRY NflOHT TO f Drayton opsn Sunday noon to 6 DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS A-« THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. OCTOBER 22. 1065 High Fashionl Vnsurpassed Value! at Orchard Furniture! HERE'S WHAT'S HEW IH '66 OPEN MON. and FRI. FROM S to 9 TUES., WEO., THURS. and SAT. 9 to 6:30 • No Monoy Down • Froo Doiivory • 24 AAonthf to Pay • Freo Parking • 90 Days Cash • Good Sorvico DEAL DIRECT-PAY AT THE STORE NO FINANCE CO. 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PRICED FROM CHOICE OF Stylish prints or long-wearing tweeds at one low price over 1 50 colonial chairs to choose from and Oil on sale MLT THE LOOK IS EXPENSIVE STANDARD IN EVERY BRDTNILL SOFA • Foam Rubber Reversible Cushions • Quality Coil Spring Construction v o Arm Covers and Self Decking Buy the mattress and the nriatching box spring l>o'tliL foi:? one pr»ice! OPEN MON. and FRI. FROM 9 to 9 TUES., WED., THURS. and SAT. 9 to 5:30 • No Money Down • 24 Months to Pay • 90 Days Cash DEAL DIRECT-PAY AT THE STORE NO FINANCE CO. INVOLVED • Free Delivery • Free Parking • Good Service Phone FE 58114-5 ORCHARD™™ COMPANY 164 ORCHARD LAKE AVENUE • PONTIAC 2 Blocks Watt of South Wida Track Drivt THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. OCTOBER 22. Iflfift Locked Ballot Box ^ ^ Really a Safeguard Famed German Baron wm to be inchided among tnoac who would be remembered Honored in Yorktown m defenders of American ilber-I ty, German Ambassador Hein- YORKTOWN, Va. (AP) - A rich Knappstein said of his coun- GLOBE, Aria. (AP) - Elec-German baron whose knowledge tryttian: tion workers in one precinct of siege tactics helped defeat ------------------------- locked their ballot box about as Lord Cornwallis in the Battle of Wheeling Was the first capital securely as possible for a spe- professional foresters are Yorktown has been honored of West Virginia, but Charleston dal election this week. pec ted here for the 65th annual here. ^ has been the capital of the state They locked the key to the meeting of the Society of Amer- todc election officials two hours i to saw the lock off so they could count the ballots a day late. | Forwiters Dus in Detroit DETROIT (AP) - Some 1,400 Cause Still /Mystery in Death of Actress Baron von Steuben’s only de- since 1885. padlock inside the ballot box. It lean Forsters Oct. 24-28. To Help You Set the Stage for J.uxurious Olonial Living 84” SOFA Plus Mr. and Mrs. CHAIRS and Matching Ottoman ('4>lonial entemble, long favored for iusurioui comfort and beauty. Graceful roll arm*, wide ncroll wins*, deep button-tufted hish back*, and full pleated «kirt*. Heavy tweed fabrics and authentic Early * X. American Prints. ALL 4 PIECES...................... ^ (ktod Furniture costs you less at FURNITURE i44 Oakland FREE PARKING LOT, JUST AROUND CORNER ALONG CLARK .STREET! Open Monday and Friday Nights till 9 P.M. Cln*rd Wednesday afternoon* thru October HIDDEN HILLS, Calif. (UPI) star’s dressing table — over -AuthoriUes today sought to de- which she was found slumpcd-being analyzed although TJe Body) McDonald commit-ted 8Uic.de by gulping an over-dose of pills medication. Los Angeles County coroner s * * ♦ ^ deputies said an auto^y ron- Toxicological and microscopic ducted yesterday shortty after te^ts also were being made to the actress was found dead m j j„, (he cause of death, her home, did not reveal the These were expected to take cause of death • from two or more days. ^ey said she could have died “from natural causes or _ ^ ^ suicide,” or might have taken ‘be bosomy .12- an overdose of pills accident- ^ear-old actress was found be-ally. Foul play was ruled out by her husband. Don- by the autopsy. ®ld F. Taylor. A neighbor. Dr H. Bryan Herdeg, pronounced Bottles of pills found on the her dead. Taylor told sheriff’s investigators his wife retired about ! 9:38 Wednesday night. He ' said she was happy because they were about to launch a cosmetics business. Miss McDonald's husband said he awakened at 4 a m. to find his wife sitting at her dressing Oakland County's Civil , De-table. He immediately lele-fense organization will demon-phoned Dr. Herdeg. strate various emergency func- Taylor said his wife had been tions tomorrow in Oakland convalescing from recent ulcer Township. surgery. County CD Director Wallace Crane said the 3:30 p.m. program at the township hall will include first aid and protection against radiation. CD volunteers equipped with walki^talkies will locate several “lost” people as part nf the demonstration. Various equipment used in CD operations will be displayed, Crane said. Participating in the program will be persons from Oakland, Oxford, Orion, Addison and Avon townships. WEINBERGER # HOMES MODELS OPEN Pnred $15,000 to $50,000 BK.4UTIFUU LAKE LOTS and LOTS with LAKE PRIVILEIiES Salex by D tS MiTl'ISUA Phone KE 2-2444 Civil Defense Program Is Set JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS WANTED v- HIGHEST PRICES PAID We Pick I p FE 2-0200 Industry in this country spends an estimated $400 million a year to control water pol-' lution. DIRECTORS Louin H. (eolr Investments Robert R. Eldred Executive Vice President Community Notionol Bank of Pontiac Harold A. Fitzgerald Publisher, The Pontioc Press Alfred G. Girard President and Choirmon of the Board Community National Bonk of Pontioc Alfred R. Glancy, Jr. President,.A. R. Gloncy, Inc. Harold S. Goldberg President Thomas Jewelry Co;npany, Inc. Howard W. Huttenlocher H. W. Huttenlocher Ageny, Inc. Harry M. Pryale Consultant m I National I Bank or roMTiAC PONTIAC, MICHIGAN STATEMENT OF CONDITION as of close of business October 13, 1965 RESOURCES Canh and Due from Bank*..$15,12.3,324.54 W: United States Government Obligations . . 25,117,542.50 II Other U.S. (Jovemment Agencies . . 6,530,155.94 $46,771,022.98 i State and Municipal Securities 33,755,222.01 608,259.00 I,oans and Discounts . $39,815,916.82 ii Real Estate Loans i . 45,9^5,679.00 85,751,595.82 i^- Accrued Interest 980,224.39 i Rank Properties and Equipment . 4,647,966.53 123,182.02 TOTAL RESOURCES $172,637,472.75 LIABILITIES Deposits: Demand • • • . $65,857,988.43 I Savings and Time . 92,348,875.65 892,314.63 4 TOTAL DEPOSITS $159,099,178.71 Unearned Interest 2,070,. ^6.38 Accrued Expenses and Other Liabilities . . 982,463.13 Reserve for loan Contingencies . . . 1,116,968.40 Capital Stock, Common Surplus .$ 5,000,000.00 3,750,000.00 • Undivided Profita....... General Reaerve.......... TOTAL LIABILITIES . 448,960.84 169,575.29 9,368,536.13 $172,637,472.75 DOWNTOWN FOURTEEN MILE-MOUND OFFICE LAKE ORION OFFICE ' MILFORD OFFICE ROMEO OFFICE WALLED LAKE OFFICE 18 OFFICES: BLOOMFIELD HILLS OFFICE HURON STREET OFFICE MALL OFFICE _ PERRY STREET OFFICE UNION LAKE OFFICE WATERFORD OFFICE of 17,004,070.36 Book Vaiae, in the rora|oin|t*Uleni< enl and for oihrp pnrpiMaeVcqiiirad by law. COUNTY CENTER OFFICE KEEGO HARBOR OFFICE MAPLE-TELEGRAPH OFFICE ROCHESTER OFFICE UNIVERSITY OFFICE WOODWARD AVENUE OFFICE Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation TOWNCRAFT--PLUS! 2995 OUR OWN TOWNCRAFT PLUS ZIP-LINED ALL-WEATHER COAT What a choicot Slook 65% Dacron polyottar 35% combad cotton poplin — it rosist* and shod* wrinkloi liko o no coot yoO'va ovor toon, dnchlook at tho lining! Tho body^i* fully pilo linod, tho sloovos quilt (inod, with worm 100% Orion Acrylic! Zips out in worm waothor wear! Add DuPont'* amazing roin and stain resistant Zopol finish for a long corofroo lifo! Solid colors or mutod patterns! PENNEY’S MIRACLE MILE i THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 82. 196A For Waterford Pupils Temporary Bus Service Will Begin Temporary bus transportation. In other business the board will begin Monday for sime Wa-|approved: terford Township School Districtj • An invitation to township junior high school pupils now clergymen to assume reqmisi-walking to school along bus y'bility for high school bac^au-thorou^fares, it was announced reate services, at last night’s Waterford Town-j , ^ request tor the Oakland ship Board of Education meet-jcounty Road Commission to ing. , ! place a school crossing sign Dr. Don 0. T a t r 0 e. superin- Elizabeth Lake Road near tendent of schools, told board Williams Lake Road intersec-l members that two spare buses A resolution was passed iMvit- instruction and personnel, pre-lbachdor’s diegree la $5,350 and ing citizens of the community to seated a report on teacher re- $6,750 for a teacher with a mas- .......................... cruiting, eiriphasizing the com-ter’s degree. petitive salary schedule a n d| He noted that the school sys-other factors instrum^tal in tern employs 719 teachers and drawing outstanding instructors! administrators, 556 with bach-to Waterford Township. lelor’s degrees, 148 with master’s ★ ★ * I degrees, 11 vrith doctorate de- He pointed out that starting grees and four non-degree bold-salary for a teacher with a ets. visit their schools during American Education Week, Nov. 7-13, to leam more about the instructional program. TEACHER RECRUITING M. Barrett Voice, assistant charge of will be used and some bus drivers will make extra trips. TTie move is one of several proposed after parents recently complained that their children were forced to walk what they termed “hazardous routes” to school along heavily traveled streets. a Authorization for the ad-1 ministration to install gas service at the new Manley Elemen-| ary School through the Waterford-Kettering High School meter. j Authorization for the ad-i ministration to install a storm sewer line from VanZandt Street Royal Oak Firm Awarded Contract for OCC Branch ^ ^ . The construction contract for The board of education last to Manley Elementary School at, tj,e first phase of Oakland Can- night also consented to a joint a cost not to exceed $3,500. meeting Monday night with the « The hiring of a home eco-Township board aimed at up- nomics teacher and a part-time grading traffic safety conditions elementary school instructor, for school children, ^ j Also last night, the board ap, ”'"‘“1 proved purchase of an elemen-' The board also okayed more tary school site near Pleasant pay for coaches and other per-Laice for $30,224, The parcel of sonnel involved in extra-duty ac-land consists of almost 12 acres. Itivities. Here's Formula for Giving forUniledFundCampaign How much should you give to| UF deduction would be about the Pontiac Area United Fund? I 23 cents per week. The answer to this quesUonl ^ su^ing scale would up the has been devised in a formula, deduction to 93 cents a week at which operates m conjuncUon g ^ggg ^ j,our. Pay $I.N 1.25 1.59 . Weekly Deduction $.23 ......29 with payroll deductions. Figured on an hourly basis, if you made $1 per hour, your Rips Up Draft Card | lor Different Motive i PITTSBURGH (UPI) - Fraiikl Gaworecki readily admitted toj FBI agents that he tore up his' draft card, but not because of any ,objections to U.S. policy in Viet Nam. j Gaworecki, 24, said he de-l stroyed the card in a fit of tun-| per afttt the Army rejected himl when he attempted to enlist. | w * * I He was fined $10 on a dis-| 1 orderly conduct charge. i The U.S. attorney’s office said ig per CENT it would decide ^y fed- ^ \ eral charges would be filed. g g per cent contribution for yearly! More than 16 million persons J^g f^om $2,000 to $6,000 - or were mji^ed last year in high-l deductions rang-' way accidents, representing an!,__________^ ______________T. economic loss estimated at $8 billion. 2.59 2.69 2.79 . 3.25 3.59 3.75 4.99 J1 J17 munity College’s proposed Orchard Ridge Campus last night was awarded to the J. A. Utley Co. of Royal Oak. The /irm’s base bid of $5,416,000 ,was the lowest of four proposals received on the Farmington Township project. Construction is contingent on approval of a $7 million bond issue from tiie Michigan Municipal Finance Commission. College officials said they had reasonable assurance that this would come Tuesday. The bond issue would finance construction of the first phase and part of the second phase. * » » Construction of the seven buildings in the first phase of the new campus near 1-696 between Farmington and Orchard Lake roads is tentatively scheduled to begin next month, with completion slated for summer, 1967. BUILDINGS NEEDED Also in the realm of campus development, the board last night reaffirmed its position that existing buildings were needed to meet |M-ojected enroli-ment increases and for continuing education. Serious negotiations will be continued for acquisition of facilities which are needed hy next fall. by area industrial and business firms in this program. Fightmaster said he had interviewed several execatives In other business, the board in recent weeks in an effort voted to discontinue bus service | to document needs in planning effective Monday after hearing! Ih« cantinnlng education pro-a report of a $2,936 loss in the' grw». past 25 days. Progranu in apprenticeship Only 35 students regularly training, electronics and me-used the bus service. All but chanical technology as well as eight of these were from the basic mathematics and data southeastern part of the county, processing were preferred by in-TAKw pni I dustrial firms, he said. , „ u * Management training, retail- James Hol^n vice prudent-ing g„j ^ales programs were business, ^d that a poll of ^ a„„ng those cited by business regular riders indicated that all fif„,5 interviewed, but a few could arrange for transportation. POTENTIAL EXTENSIVE Hobson said efforte will be Ffghtmaster said that on the made to help solve the trans- ^^^is of his interviews, the con-portation problem of t h o s e education potential seem finding difficulty arranging for very extensive, rides. Also last night the board ap- ! Trustee Earl M. Anderson, cH- proved promotions M nine | ing nationwide campus demon- faculty members to subadmin- : strafions against the Viet Nam istrative leveb, hired six ad-phtm driait. Frice MKludw Fcdertllax, Bloomfield Mirocle Mile NEAR CUNNINGHAM’S S 2,009 $.59 2,509 93 3.000 .75 3,599 -8S 4,099 1.99 4,500 1.13 5,900 ija 5,500 IM 6,000 1.59 7.000 2.95 8,000 2.99 9,000 3J8 10,000 4.15 11,000 5.38 12.000 0.09 13,000 7.90 14,000 7.67 15,019 8J4 HAS LOW OVERHEAD LOW PE ICES Far OualHr Di. 3 Kill Selves in Protest TAIPEI, Formosa (AP) Three young Formosans cm-! ployed ;by a housecleaning company took fatal doses of ^ison and left behind a note accusing their employes ofmistreating them. oad yooli got t prleo on ______________ ... color tv, or itoroo yov want thet will meks yoo smile frem eer le car. And re- member ttMfs where ths sale stem at Fretter'i. Yev get great sftsr the sale service te beet. Why me a try? SALE SUNDAY 11 A.M. to 6 P.M. PONTIAC WAREHOUSE Telegraph Rd. ’ 2 Mile South of Orchard Lake Rd. 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Frrttw'gLcw MJQ90 Sol* Brie* iM 21”P0RLTY e An S3 Ownnol Tumt a Now Chomitl loloctor e Sviit-fn tMoMpolo Antmaa e Folorlud IMo Cord Frottar's law lalo Prba *159” 1x6 ROUGH SAWN REDWOOD 9 for Fall Fencing c Hn. ft. n 1005 LOUVERED WINDOW SHUTTERS StaMard Sizas in Stank 1W» THICK 545. pair • Plastic Shuttars • Aluminum Shuttors INSULATION KNOTTY PINE PANELING e’-ff-KF 8* BUNDLES 125 perm 2x4x8 BRIfiHT NEW DRY STOCK 39- 4x8 Pra-Fliiiilnd Rnda t MUORMT PRHEUHfi 095 %9 A SHEET BURKE Lumber 4499 Mxl« Hwry. -Ot 3-1211---- OHM WMCMV9 MONMT thru FRWAT lAJLtoMMPJI. I CCTUBmEVC fcomO AM. H * PM. HOURf- THE PONTIAC PRESS,, FRIDAY, OCTOBER t2, 1065 A-11 merging as Important Force in Russia By UEON DENNSN Im a tool of the ruling CommU' UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. nist party, !■ en^rgl*^ as an ‘ (NBA) — The Soviet army,|dependent and decisive political which has long served merely^force in Russia. NOW! WaUiaJlT SPRAY WAX YOUR CAR WAXED FREE! Everytime You Have it Cleaned and Washed At AUTO WASH ■ I«AQI«MearRldHBtlttr Lasts Longtr” 149 W. Niron St. Acrou from Firutone! For the first time in the history of the Soviet dictatorstdp, then appears to be a clear pa^ tition of power in Russia, with the military establishment increasingly acting as an opposition to Uie (^oi^unist party’s The primary reason (or diis is fear of an armed conflict between die Soviet Union and Commnnist China, according to some top East European speciaiists on commnniam. Moscow’s marshals, generals and colonels are reported to be disturbed by the apparent vac-cilatlng manner in which party boss Leonid Brezhnev and Premier Aldcsei Kosygin have handled Russia’s quarrel with Red China. They want a tough policy against Peking. They are no sr convinced that the di-^-OQd disintegrating world Communist movement can be relied on as Russia’s ally, as Lenin, Stalin and even Khrushchev once bdieved. They are said to favor a nationalist Russia-first policy. The victory of the military machine over the Kremlin’s civilian politicians was recently conceded by Brezhnev himself fai a little poblidaed bnt highly algnlflcant address. Speaking to graduates (rf So-J Wet military academies, Bmb-nev lauded the role of the professional army commanders with an emphasis unheard of since the CPnununists seized power in 1917. ★ ★ ★ His comments were in sharp contrast with (he course set by Khrushchev, in which the vihflu-ence of the Communist party’s political commissars in the army was given greater stress. In 1958, Khrushchev ousted Marshal Georgi K. Zhukov as defense minister precisely because Russia’s p(^ar war hero wanted to make the professional soldier independent of the party’s political commissars. Khmshchev, like his prede- cessors Lenin and Stalin, nn-derstood only too well that er behind the throne of a dictator can easily be tamed against him. In fact, from the very inception of the Red army thb Kremlin rulers regarded it as a potential rival lor power and tried to keep it out of politics. However, it was the ill-fated Khrushchev himself who first sought the army’s help when be was reaching for power. CREATED PRECEDENT He thus created the i»*ecedent of military interference in the Kremlin’s unceasing struggle for power. Khrushchev subsequently realized his error — bnt too late. He undertook extraordinary measures to subordinate the army to his control. He even introduced the rank of supreme commander of the armed forces — a rank until then unknown in peacetime—In order to award it to himself. ★ ★ ★ But having once tasted political power, the top army brass was not going to give in without a fifdit. It was the army that raised Khmshchev to the Kremlin’s summit and it was the same army that finally banished him into oblivion. Today, the marshals and generals like Zhukov, Sokolovsky, Koniev, Zakharov and Golikov are at the peak of their popularity. ★ * ★ Many of them date their membership in the Communist party from Lenin’s days — unlike the younger generation of faceless men who now rule in the Kremlin. CANNOT BE PREDICTED How the army will conduct itself in the future regarding decisions on important domestic and especially foreign prob- lems cannot be predicted with certainty. But one thing is certain: Russia’s policies, foreign a^ domestic, can no longer be decided without the army’s m>-proval. •k It -k Further, the next revolution in the Soviet Union might well be an army coup. I.lf BOTTU DRISTM TABIETS 24’s 1.1» SPRAY TUN MUSTM NASH MIST S9e 1UBK CIMPSTKK fie BOnU MICRIN MOUTHWASH leaves year fcvMtfc MISSB' SMAU TO XXXI Frvi't tf Iht Uon HALF SUPS Tatlerod, reverslblee, trials. Acetate and ny-ien. White, celeti. 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WHY • We sell for cash only! • There are no credit chargesl SAVI • We have no credit lostetl HALL • You save because we level PONTIAC: 200 Nortli StgiMW SL CLABKSTON-WATEirOBO: Oi Diiif Eiry. Jut North of WiterfoNHiU Both Stores Opto Saadoy 12 Nooo to i PJL A—12 THE PONTIAC PfeESS. FRIDAY. OCTOBER 22, 196fl BORN A REFUGEE—Mrs. Maria Gonzales cuddles her 6-day-old son, Armando, in the immigration office at Key West yesterday after they made the water crossing from Cuba. The child was born in Camarioca, Cuba, the port from which refugees bound Tor the United States depart. Cubans of Military Age Withheld From Exodus KEY WEST. Fla. (AP) -Refugees are leaving Cuba by the hundreds but Prime Minister Fidel Castro says men of military age will be kept behind. The arrival of more than 300 refugees aboard 24 small boats In the FlMida Keys Thursday ended a twoato8 in the various plays and productions. The TlM»pian Gub, part of the National High School Dramatics Society, is devoted to the advancement of the dramatic aits in secondary schools. Dominican Events Are in Full Swing By DEBBIE VanNATTER IXuninican Academy has officially gotten into the swing of things for another school year. it k * The yearbook ad drive wi end the first of November to make way for literary w<^ on the school’s “Woodlander HI”. k k it Seniors are enthusiastic over the freshmen initiation to take place next Friday. k k k Under the direction of Sister Mary Thomas, the Debate Gub is spending time rehearsing for future school debates. Carol Beckett is Gail Cau^iill, vice president; Deborah McDermott, secretary-; and Nancy Heftier, sergeant-at-arms. St Mike Queen to Be Announced at Dance Tonight By BOBBETT^ R08ELU Homeccnning week has put all at St. Michael’s in a buzz oi excitement. The queen’s court is Donna Bieri, freshman; Jeannlne Jenka, soidiomore; Yvonne Stokes, Ju^r. The queen will be announced tonight at the Homecoming Dance. An classes, freshmen to seniors, are working hard to finish their floats for the parade on Sanday. The best float win receive a $5 prize. Music ap|»^iation was added to some of the Junior and senior girls’ curriculum this week. k k k Accompanied by Sister Edwins and Sister Gertrude Aqn, the girls went to see “Carmen” at the Fisher Theater. Emmanuel By LINDA WRIGHT Homecoming festivities and the reign of Queen Katherine Wright are over, and it is back to the books for the students of Emmanuel Christian School. k k k Homeroom administrations have been cbosen. Leading the s e n i o r s are Katoerine White, president; Linda Woolard, vice president; GaO Konno, secretary; Eric Engblom, treasnrer; and At Rochester Game Will Crown Queen By KATHY MORGAN Homecomeing at High School climaxes with the crowning of the queen at tonight’s game against Troy. Candidates for the crown are seniors Brenda Cornelius, Carol Koza, and Diane WilUto. Presentation of the queen’s court opened homecoming cele-toatlons at the pep assembly |this afternoon. Queen candidates received their tiaras from senior class vice president Bob Sebastian. Class president Larry McLean, crowned sophomore court members Jo Collins and Barbara Foster. k k k Stuart Smith, Junior class president, crowned junior court representatives Nancy Capaldl and Barbara Taylor. BEST SKIT Defending their trophy won last year, the seniors competed with Juniors and sqphomores for the best skit. The inter-class spirit ’Jug’ yril closed the assemUy. Under the direction of Richard Goldsworthy, music instructor, the varsity hand led the parade of class floats and did) cars downtown. k k k For the float conqietition, seniors entered “Colt in a Cage," the Juniors, “From Rodiester with Love,’’ and the sophomores, “TTie Enemy Below.” DECORATE CARS Over eight dubs decorated cars around the general theme, movie titles. Sophomore bonfire Is toMhed off at 7 tonight ea the practiee field. Led by pep leaders, the pep dab and Fal-eoa faas wfll drier uhOe TVey BOCHESTER ROYJULTY - Protected by the blue and gold wl^ of the Rodwster High School falcon are homecom- night with “My Fair Lady,” ing quean candidates. Pictured are (from left) Diane Williu the dance bom^ the queen td 3790 HiOendale, Brenda CameUus of 46 Wimpole, and and her court Card Kota d ‘ttlTO Mount Vernon, Washington Township. * JMane Btenda are residebts of Avon Townshty. One of Students and alumni will > the young lato will be crowned queen during tonight’s dance from 8-11:90 to the music of the “EUminators.” PNH Climax Hometoming s Here Pontiac Prftf Photo DISTRESSED DAMSEL — Caught in Pontiac Northern High Schooi’s front door. Homecoming Queen Adele Vorac of 478 Emerson waits patiently for an assist from King Nick Ochoa of 846 Melrose. The king and queen, with the help of their royal court, will reign over this weekend’s homecoming festivities. By AUCE TURNER Gimaxing weeks of hard work by students at Pontiac Northern, the Huskies will play the Waterford Skippers in PNH’s homecoming tonight. Northern’s king and queen, Nick Ochoa and Adele Vorac, will reign over the festivities. The royal court will Consist of Mary Harroun and Allan Benson, Sherry Johanson and Ted Lemanski, Barbara Nelson and Jerry Davis. The homecoming dance will be held after the game at 10 p.m. in the school cafeteria. Theme for the dance is “Submarine Holiday.” Girls should wear sheaths and heels, boys in white shirts with sports jackets or letter sweaters. Floats for the homecoming parade have been made by nine' clubs. Included are A Capella Choir, “Direct ’em to Defeat”; the band, “Sound of Victory”; and Northern’s “Couldn’t Be Comes From Good Exchange,’ by the International Gub, and “Swallow the Skippers” by the junior class. Senior class is entering “Na Go Go”: Pep Club, “Yer Goose is Cooked,” and the Student Council, “Royal Float” on which the king and queen will ride. VARSITY CLUB The annual award presented by the Varsity Club for the best float will be awarded after the game at the dance. Floats will be Judged for originality, theme and crowd reaction. Dates for Northern’s coming play “Macbeth” have been set. Matinee performances will be seen on Nov. 17 and 19, evening performances to be shown Nov. 18 and 20. This year, report cards at Norffiern are being processed by IBM computers. Four copies of the report card will be made. One copy will be given to the student, the others to go to the homeroom teacher, the student’s counselor and the office. Letters explaining the new system will be sent to parents next week. Plans for Northern’s senior lounge are now being discussed by the Student Council Last year’s lounge was removed to make room for a prpjection room. Others are “A Good Team School Briefs From Area Heading the Juniors are Linda Wright, presidept; Katherine Jones, vice president; Faith McCormick, secretary; Julie Siegel, treasurer; and Green, chaplain. ★ ★ ★ St^dxnnore officers are Eric Fletcher, president; Terry Mayer, vice president; Charlotte Willis, secretary; Raymond Hibbs, treasurer; Deanna Bishop, clKvister; Paul BlcMil-lan, cluqilain; and Leonard Loveless and John Syner, ser-geants-at-arms. k k k Working with freshman President Theodore Likens are Edward Patenkas, vice president; Deborah Mayer, secretary; Gayle Whitlock, treasure; Pamela B a slock, chorister; David MhMillan, chaplain; and Tyrone Blanchard, sergeant-at-arms. Lady of Lakes By CECEUA PARKER Atmosiriiere at Our Lady of the Lakes Hi^ SchoqLis permeated with thoughts of the homecoming wedcend. k k k “Mocmlight and Roses” dance wiil be held tonight in the school gym frmn 8:30 to 12. Highlli^tiiig the event will be the erowning ef toe queen. Crowning Awaited at West Bloomfield Vying for the title are Patricia Budnik, Mary Jo Hagan and Frances Hungerford. The queen’s court will include Karen Plourde, junior representative; Pamela Lang, sophomore r^resentative; and Barbara Mauro, freshmen refn-esenta-tive. The homecoming game will be played Sunday against Richmond’s St. Augustine. ASSIGNMENTS YeartxxA staff members have now been assigned to specific divisi(»s. Giosen to work under Sister Mary Eugene, adviser, and Sandra Schroff, ^itor, include Caesar Weston, assistant editor; Cecelia Parker, copy editor; Sandra Smith, layout editor; Ann dmans, business manager; and Elvira Mauro and Jane Zel-nis, photograiriiy editors. Bloomfield Hills By LINDA McNEILL Three Bloomfield Hills High school students were hosted at a Lions’ Club luncheon held recently at Devon Gables. Seniors Jane Fox, Janet Bly and John Burkoff traveled abroad this past summer and 1 a program concerning their travels. Jane and Janet traveled through 10 countries of Europe. Walled Lake By RON MOORHEAD Gimax of many weeks of preparation at Walled Lake High School will come tonight at 8 as Walled Lake plays its homecoming game against Farmington High School. Tluoe classes and many clubs have spent the past weric putting final touches on their floats, which will appear in the halftime parade. Reigning over festivities will be this year’s queen, Maureen Kostanedci. Maureen will be escorted by Carl Grapentine, Student Council president. After the game, the homecoming dance will be held in the gym. ByMARGITMISANGYI West Bloomfidd High School Vardty cheerleaders held a pep rally last night around a large bonfire to encourage spirit among students for toni^’i Along with the halftime en-tertainm^t the school band has prepared, the climax of the activities will be the crowning of the homecoming queoi. ★ ★ ★ Candidates for court nominated last week, and votes ere taken this wedc. The five girls eligible for queen and court honors are: Karole Hanes, Sue t^erson, JuUe Brodie, and Lucy Aliz, tm-iars, and an honored Junior, Margaret Penney. WTHS Group Attends School Press Program By MKE WALSH Fourteen delegates of the Anchor and Waterlog, Waterford Township High School newspaper and yearbook, attended the annual Detroit Student Press Association meeting held recently at the University of Detroit. Waterford was one of over 154 high schools from Michigan, Indiana, Ohio, Illinois and New York represented at the convention. After the presentation to Bud” Guest of the Michael Award, an award given by the DSPA for the year’s outstanding journalist, students and their advisers went to various classes. Troy By RICK SHAVER Rabbi Sherwin T, Wine of the Birmingham Reformed Temple spoke to over 600 students at Troy High School Monday on the importance of individuality. The Girls’ Athletic Association with Janice Gibbs, athletic instructor, elected new officers this year. They are Monica Mo-.iresident; Susan Findlay, vice president; Qloria Susan, secretary; and Cheryl Scott, treasurer. The Archery Gub s, by Barbara Pocklington, went to Acorn Archery Range Tuesday following 8 ch 601 to show ea^ member the correct fton and techniques. Mrs. Roy Fisher, sponsor of the Future Nurses, and dub members are plannW to go to Harper Hospital today after school ' By NADINE WILLIAMS They are Cherie Kelley, pres-The debating team of Lake I Went; Betty Reed, vice presi-Orion High School attended a toward all-male teams of districts have failed to do so. ify fw federal aid. w w But 7 per cent of the school steering wheel, drove through North Philadelphia streets ffiis wedc, chasing cars into aUeys and up on sidewalks and side-swiping four parked cars. The chase came to a suddoi halt when the boy, Rodney! Smith, rammed a patrolman’S| car — across the street from zations against coup elements, appealed to the Chinese of Indonesia to clear themselves from the rebel movement ★ * ★ Subchan, member of the leading Moslem party, Nahdatul Ulenu, said he realized that it was difficult for the people to tell who among the estimated diree million Chinese communi-is i»t>-coup. seasonal workers, he added. * * Farm labor management practices will be proved. Stuart said, and they win.............. to prqMre year-around workers to cope with increased mechanization. By 19M, there will be S per cent fewer farm operators, 50 per cent fewer family workers and only half as many seasonal , workers, Stuart said. To offsetl this, be added, the number ofj year-around hired employes states’ programs eze^ the Makambe area, Gabonese Min-| probably will increase by 20 amount appropriated in the cur- ister of State Andre Gustave! per cent. irent fiscal year it will ask forlAnguile says. They are mainly in Alabama, Misrissippi and Louisiana. SYSTEM PRESERVED While monies are being used, the law preserves an education-!Juvenile Aid Division al system based on local and ' state iMdoriihin The aim is to Police said the boy, who had strengthen the f«ind«Hnn of never driven before, had stolen 'eath school in every conununity ff»e car. of this nation. ------------------- 1hettatc4iy-stateaIloca-1 To Dig Gabon Ore tions of funds total $1,174^7.* | BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) -iU.S. and European firms will !j(^y exploit Gabonese iron orej The White House says if the deposits near Belinga in the VINYL ASBESTOS TILE 1 St Ouolity 9x9 Box Of 54 CEILING TILE 11x11 SligMty lireg. 12x11 Acoustic Dc$q-FramlSeus O Ft. Ceramic Walt Tile 35* 4Vk"x4V4” W* Lean Tools SOLID VINYL HLE~9x9xVs” r«r«60c ^00 PANELING LOAN MAHOGANY FUSTIC COATED DURABLE PANEUND 5 SHADES First Quality $C95 4x5 9 Mae-O-iae’s Wondor Faint Of Tho Conhiry • Foomos ForoMlo‘W’ le PmImi* le DlietNfinf 7.99 $R99 llSal. ROYAL BOND PAINT 4*xr $935 VEaeb ASPHALT TILE First Quality Cotor* Dork Lietrt 4*... 6l PLASTIC WALL TILE CERAMte TILE For Floor, WoS rC"owl* 59*» HBfTY PONTIAC'S LARGEST TILE CENTER OF FlijEE Our Own Installation Work Done by Exports OSM Mm. m4 Fri. 411 mi FJS. Tmi., WtO., TiMrt., M. iS S F.M. FREE ESTIMATES 1 075 W Huron St Phono 334-9957 H You Don’t Buy From Us, We Both Lose Money! TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! 4405 Highland Rd. Cor. Pontiac Lk. Rd. 1 Mile W. of Elizabeth free Oolivory Open Daily 'til 9 p.m. Terms Arranged—90 Days Samo As Cosh YOU MAY LAY-AWAY FOR CHRISTAAAS DIMNOroOM GROUP Picture this grocofully slylad Eariy American Dining group in your homo. Tho tabU is 42 inches and includes a 9-inch leaf. Formica top to protect from stains in o fruit-wood maple finish. Group includes 4 upholstered sect choirs and table. *120 BOURBON BARREL ORIGINALS Unique Furniture Desi0n . Barrel" beautifully wim any decor. Pewter hardware, rich wood grain, colorful fabrics, or celbrful naugohyde and comfort* a ble proportioned shapes combine to give you furniture youll use and enjoy for years to come. Tolc* o long, lingoring look ot ^Bourbon Bor-ror originolsi You will •njoy thorn ond your frionds ond noighbors will whon you put thorn in your h^o. SAVE MEMBERS OF Hardware WHOIESMEN i Fonwariy Big 4 HABDWABE STORES KEEGO Keego Hardware No. 1 3041 Orchard Loke Rd. 682-2660 e Floor SanBsrs • Flesr Ugtrs e Hand tandsrs e Floor PsHsbars PDNTIAD Tom’s Hardwaro 90S Orchard LokeAve. FE 5-2424 OPEN SHMMV 9AM.-2P.M. SAVE! a. ■ ^ Piiffrip™ , lAWM WMIo Floor SItek l4«ts! PRODUCTS Grey Insulatod UNDERWEAR SUITS HUIfflNfi COATS S PANTS FURNACE*™" HUMIDIFIERS Reg. 15.00 HUMIDIFIER PUTES "7i Mssf I $1« 25” UWNSWEEPER PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. OCTOBER 22, 1965 B-8 : QUEEN CALAFU’S ISLAND, ^ R. L. Duffus (Norton 15): l^le everyone else has been Wking about a populatiMi ex-Idosion, California has been living one (though more tfarou^ migration than through faibrkOed natural increase). ; There are 10 times as many l^le in the state now as there were 00 years ago, and the humber is still increasing. * “Qwen Calafia’B Island” is 3)nHas’ breeiy, infermal ac-'coont of the events that made ^California what it is today, ^with some hesitant specula-!tioa as to what lies ahead. . Duffus, originally a Vemon-(er, lived in the San Francisco area from 1906 to 1919, as a student and then as a news-j^perman. : He moved on to New York, where he was for years a mem-6a- of the Times’ editorial staff, hut he returned to the Bay area when he retired in 1964. I Hie great changes in the state (hat hie observed in his two periods of residence, and as an ^asional visitor in the years between, inspired this book. - CM)ING AROUND IN ACADEMIC CIRCLES, by Richard Armour. McGraw-Hill. $3.95. Humorist Armour has written 6 lot of yuck-yucky bodes raras-(Dg hlstoy and litaature, from “It All Started With Columbus" io “American Lit Re-Lit.” ;; This time he gives the whoie •eampns wald a good going ^ova, with his subtitle “A Low :View of Higba Education.” -Yon get some idea of its irrev-^erent spirit by noting the ded-:katiaa, to “Socrates, the first professa to drink himself to ^ealh.” ^ His diapter topics range from getting into college to commencements and alumni reunions, and he manages to cova a good many foolish facts about students, housing, food, courses, Examinations and books. - A GIFT OF JOY. By Helen bayes. M. Evans and Co. $4.95. : A diatty, reflective ramble in which the distinguished actress recalls partly and recites mostly. From the pages emerges a (ouching sblf-portrait of spunk and sentiment. - Reminiscence is split up un-la such diapter headings as fChwlie” — her late husband Charles MacArthur — "Favaite Performances” and “Gardening,” “Shakespeare” and “Soli-fude.” ' As she wanders along ary lane, inconspicuously abet-led by Lewis Funke as a writ-^ collaborator, the star lets a few cats out of the bag gentle buma (she hates “The | Glass' Menagaie” which she acted in 29 lands), but always with an aye-sayipg spirit that’s too out of fashion thoe days. State Will Get Near $5 Million to Fight Pollution DETROIT (AP) - Almost $5 million will be made available to Michigan communities in 1966 fa water pollution control, a federal official says. The money will be provided throui^ the federal Wata Quality Act of 1965, Assistant Surgeon Genaal Gordoh E. McCal-lum told the Michigan Association of Consulting Engineers and Land Surveyos Wednes-night. Unda the i»-evious law, Michigan would have been entitled " $2.95 million in 1966, he said. “According to the most recent survey of the Conference of State Sanitary Engineas, it would cost ^.6 million to correct conditions in Michigan where conmunities are dis-char^ng raw a inadequately treaM sewage,” i i\ i; s I Ai< (.fish ('.nrrv SPKCIAL! 2x4-8' 37*- 2x4-10' 45‘i. 151 Oakland Avr., Pontiac I Phone FE 4-1594 I PANELING $249 BEAUTIFUL 4x7 V GROOVE LAUAN BxtSONEYTONE *3.95 4illMtl.llnk......B.2B plywood Good 1 Sido •A 4x1........2.99 '4b 4x9........3.19 14 4x9.........4.N 4b 4x9.........9.N 44 4x9..........M9 PLYSCORED 4b 4x9.....^.2.19 44 4x9.......1.99 4b 4x9 plimed.4.19 Blanktt Insulation 1«4t.”129sq.fl. *3" r 99 ff- 9399 ZONOLITE INSUUTION ALUMINUM FOIL SIDE m 199 sq. ft. 16” ... 149 2tb 19 sq. H. 19” ... 149 14b 19 sq. fl. ir ... 1.11 2V4 199 sq. ft. 24” ... 4.99 NOUSEFILLRAO.....$1.99 MASONITE 4x9xVb....1J1 SHELVINO 1x12......12e Ortior Shot a Colon SUSPENDED CEILINGS 9xir ROOM OOMPUTE ^4 CEILING TILE MtmUlMt . ^ MAM _ S»12’/a* 55?8’/a' FURRINQ STRIPS 1x2..........2e 1x3..........3e MRR Ifit I.. I FORMICA Mm. Paltsnis «||a 9a. Ft....38 •xlxVi" . . Ul $1295 PNEEDEUVEBY t sgt SilMiSS, SAT. TIL S BIRCH PLYWOOD laautlfHl ttook 44x4x0 ALLEN W UUMBte€0, 1 7114 HIIHLAND RO. AT WILLIAMS UKI RDT Oaa MM* WM»««« HWY. OPEN SUNDAYS 12 to 8 B-4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 22, 10^ Kowalski Sees No Chance for Amish Bill LANSING (AP) -Spedur Joseph Kovaldd, D-| Delratt, appera^ luled out •By chance Tfanrad«y Oiat state lam will be changed next year to aU tte tiny Amidi settlement The State Board of Education, e moved to enforce the teacher certification law after to change tiie law or work wt a compromise with the religioiis sect foiled. w ★ ★ In (ne of his few public state-ntents on the prabiem, Kowal- ski, leader of the House Demo-jdeDls asked for Kowalski’s qdn-cratic majority, indicated to a group of high school students that he did not favor making ^ exertion for the Amish. After an address, to a gita^ of Cody Schoed students] from Detroit, one of the stu- DIVIDBD OPINION “We are of divided opinions AMKRICA’S LAWaCST FAMILY CLOTHINS CHAIN on this," Kowalski responded. ‘But other groups—the Christian schools, the Lutherans, the Catixdics-we required to i in their ads and do in fact meet them.” ■ ★ ★ ★ ’Well, how about religloas freedom?” the student adeed. STATE STANDARDS “It’s not a question of religious freedom,” Kowalski said. “It’s sinqily a question cd educational standards and of whether we can allow exc^ tions to them.’* The House Education Committee, which bottled up most of the proposed relief to the Amish, had expressed the same fear of weakening state standards by allowing the first exception. The Legislature shelved three bills and two amendments in the past session to grant an exemption. None of them mentioned the Amish by name. After a year of toying and of waiting for the Legislature, the State Board of Education last month erffered the parents of the 23 children involved what it con-sidvqd “a fair, just and reason-^le prc^iosal.” SUPPLY TEACHER It pre^Msed to sui^ly a certified teacher to teach secular objects in the one-jrom Amish school, with a member erf the sect providing the religious instruction. The school was to become part of the Camden-Frontier School District. The Amish do not believe in education beyond the eighth I grade, and have tried and re-; jected non-Amish teachers as' being “too wcH-ldly.” Aussies Make a COAT WITH BEAVER-LOOK COLLAR pltis FURRY HAT ■wdey Ihey ge bock t# lb* isguhE 19.97 Beautiful ensemble! Diagonal weave woolen coat with man-m^ beaver shawl collar, patch nodeets, inverted jdeat back... rayon lined and intedined. Escorted fariuonably by an endianting man-made beaver hat Oiey or tan. 50% reused wool, 20% reprocessed wool, 20% rayon, 10% odierfibm. Remember, tiiis is a2-day only price leductionl both for only 16“ GIRLS' KNIE HIGH SOCKS add up to the total lode. Hi-bulk stretdi in Orion* aciydic and wooL Assorted new fall patterns. gQc H»rS WHY YOU SAVE AT ROBERT HAU ’ Thar* art no credit chorsMi PONTIAC: 200 N. Soginew St. Clerkston-Waterford: On Dixie Hwy. North of Waterford Hill. Both Stores Open Sunday Noon to 6 P. i By Science Service MELBOURNE, Australia — A relatively simple and cheap solar still developed by Australian scientists can easily produce 344i gallons of pure water a day. I The still works on energy from 'the sun to evaporate fresh water' from brackish w salty water. It was developed by re-I searchers of tiw Meduudcal Engineeriiig Divisioii of the Anstrailian Commonwealth ; Scientific and Industrial Research Organization. . The stiU is designed to use water available in arid lands, I the researchers said. | j Most arid regkxis do not lack [moisture mr water supplies, but the water is usually too polluted with minerals or salts for humans or animals to drink. I ; SIMPLE DESIGN I The design of the solar still is‘ so simple that it can be built to any size by unskiUed laborers I carrying out simple instructions. Ten shallow earth trencha, each 130 feet kng, are dug on slightly sloping ground. They are lined with pMy-thene and covered with sloping glau roofs. As brackish or salt water flows through the troughs, the heat bf the sun, intensified by the glaas roofs, evaporates pure water that condenses on the inside of the glass and drains off the side into a storage tank. i With virtually no maintenance or attention, a test-run still has averaged 344 gallons of fresh water a day. | Not even Canada has it so good! STcarOldWhlaky I wMi Crala Noetnl Spiritt M imr — liim rrnrrm i-— — - A BENSON liM 549 H. SIHIMW NKED A GARAiXt AU Lumber to Build a 14x22 STANDARD OARAGE o Spfuca Siding o SmvIco Door and # 2 Windows, ttoNonoiy O 23S# Skito Swfacod O All Fromino Figurod for 16* Conlors O Not Including Ovoifioad Door or Slob 358.23 ECONO-eAMBE o Spnico Siding • 2x4Raflora o Soivko Doer and HoRKrero o 2 Stotlonoty Saih • 90# Roll Roofing o All Framing Figvrad far 24* on Conlor e Ho Ovothood Deer er Slab 298A0 OPEN S-5-SAT. 8-12 A Few Thing$ You Might Need This Fall and Winter • Basement Waterpreefina e Insulation • Basketball Bockboord a Aluminum Storm Soih • New Floor on the Porch e Aluminum Storm Doors e Rock Salt lor lea contiel a Pine Paneling a Rock Solt for your Water .crti^iTii. ^ ^ • Wall Boards p|p, a House Point e Cement and Mortar IH ) BEHSOH HmHiij b CiNitai0 DiyUiwi LUMBER FE 4-2521 Salts Ibridheet Senriet UCENSED CONTRACTORS AU MAKES INSTALLED and SERVICED FURNACES - BOILERS - CONVERSIONS HEATING & COOLING FE 3-7i71 24 Hour Sorvico CARPET Liiniteil Qaantity... Hurry!! IVEEK ONLY! Extra Hea^ Patterned ACRILM" Avocado, Beige, Gold and Honey SPECIAL ONE ROLL ONLY SALE! PARFAIT BEI6E MLON BROWN and BEIGE NYLON TWEED BLUE GREEN TWEED ACRILAN GOLD and BROWN TWEED NYLON SPECIAL RUSSET HEATHER MIX WOOL SPECIAL BLUE HEATHER MIX WOOL HEAVY SCROLL GOLD ACRILAN* BROWN IWEED ACRILAN* RED TWEED NYLON *8’® REG. »89S *995 KEC. $895 REG.. $1295 REG. $1295 $1295 REG. $895 $895 .SALE SALE .SALE SALE $lt95 SALE SALE SALE $lt95 SALE $C9S ROLL END SPECIALS 45Sq.Yds.HeaiyWool Twist 12x20’-9 Mn Acrila Martial Scroll 15i25’-4 Heaiy Plash Acrilaa* Rosset Color 12x23’-15 Mylo8 Commercial Arocado Tweed 15xl5’-8 Heaiy Scroll Acrilai* Rosedast Color 12x15’ Nylon Oanify Stripe REG. »152^ REG. *122®. REG. *102®. *12i®„ REG. *122^, •U9®® SALE $37900 $19500 SALE *249®® SALE *179®® *1495® SALE *75®® MANY MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM See The Largest Selection of Draperies in This Area Custom Mkde, Mural, and Ready Made OPEN MON., FRL, TIL 9 P.M. C OVERINCS 35U Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 4-7775 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRU3AV. 0(vrOBjflR n, B—5 Americans. New tales tiiis year |ra expected to total MOO mil-jloo in value. ? Married Men Close lo Stale Draft Call LANSING (yPI) - Married men probably wfli be called lor the first time in early 19M to fill the stepped-up ^aft quota because of the Viet Nam War, Col. Arthur A. Holmes, state director of Selective Service said yestertay. Holmes also said 7,000 men were being requested to report for preinduction physical examinations in Decembw. Cy the Walled Lake Board superintendent of Oakland ^ ^ ^ I ^Is a^ cha^an of t h e| reaffirmed at the Oakland County^School Distnct^^^.^ Reorg^uon will Edua^tim is contact school officials today. ^ ^ Althongh only eight of the tion of its district in the south- ation of the Dublin School dis-; trict. It members of the reorganiza-tiog committee (not enough to constitute a quorum) were present at yesterday afternoon’s meeting. Dr. Emerson said be recognized it as a meeting of the committee of the whole. | Walled Lake school officials, did not appear at yesterday’s l meeting, reportedly because of east comer of White Lake Township to the Walled I^ke district. Novi District Independent? County School Head Encourages Officials illness, but Dublin was repre- A spokesman noted that the majority of those in attendance at a Dublin School PTA meeting Tuesday ni^t indicated they are in favor of annezation to the Walled Lake district. STATE RULING Dublin offers a program only for kindergarten though graders and must cinnpl/ With a state law passed in 1964 to NOVI — Now planning expansion, the Novi School District may be given the chance to go it alone as an independent system. Dr. William J. Emerson, Oakland Schools superintendent and chairman of the Oakland County School District Reorganizatimi Committee, yesterday gave encouragement to the hopes of local school officials. He said he would attempt to schedule a meeting of the reorganization committee here Nov. 4. Bonp Issues Replace Two Millage Bids'' Organization Meeting Set tor Citizens' School Unit SHELBY TOWNSHIP - Vot- BLOOMFIELD TOWN-fthis year, they are limited and rs will be asked to approve two'gHjp _ jjje problems of a rel- will not stretch fpr, Hougen said. 11!? *1.!^®'^' * ’^**lapvely small, rapi% growing • BOND ISSUES I'instead of two millage propoa-LphQoi diatrict — now oneratingi * n * als as originally planned. L„ , I" answer to enroHment TWnship CTert Mrs. Mae'“ ,orJfS .^Sns’ciiJ Stacker said that in order to sell ^ bonds, thus avoiding a delay inj ^ ^ ^ 'bond Issues In the U»t IhrM obtaining tax monies, the pro-llposals must be presented at bond issues on the ballot. The new proposals will ask I permission to borrow $2N,1M I to erect, furnish and equip a new township hall, and a like l| amount to acquire a site on I which to erect, furnish and II equip a fire station. 11 The original requests were a half-mill for 11) years for each. Mrs. Stecker said the amount to be borrowed was reached by figuring the half-mill tax on the I assessed valuation. I She said the taxpayer would pay about the same amount with M yw". one ®*“*on In Organizational meeting for J ^ ^ the gi^ formed operating tax is 8.3 nulls. COMMTITEE DEADLINE | ^ ★ ★ W Deadline for the committee toj An extra voted operating levy make recommendations is Ap^i of 2 mills will expire in 1966, 15,1966. .while another for 9 mills will DUtrict enrollment, which * run for a year beyond that. was 2,247 last year, took a j --------------- record jump to 2,642 this year. A . would prediction that the figure ^mart JuniOf HioH d skyrocket to 10,000 by| JlHai • JUIIIUI lll^ll Slates Annual Fair Citizens Due to Learn Cost of Sidewalks WALLED LAKE owners soon are State Seeking Apple Pickers ta? .al“y I fall apple crop. ! La^tag^^'pwtta^ h^i VVhil* “bool officials are ” been named as the areas need- ^ assumption that'Planned around a Halloween ine the moot heln • |tbat projection is high, they nev- theme and featuring a spook Z Z , 'erthelesi have had to take it house, CUfford H. Smart Junior s into consideration, Hougen not-'High School’s annual fair will persons is needed right now, be held tomorrow, even If only for a few days | ' ★ I or even half-days,” Lt. Gov. I NO PREDICTION ctndent Council-snonsored The time-honored i*ilosophy,|^mmta^^^ by a governing wiUlam MiUiken said. No prediction yet has b e e n even? ta scheduled forTto 8 7 Prnnprtv united wc Stand, divided weiboard (rfmember states will pro- muHn far mmirz hut thr hnnnt ^ fa"hP^S tolI,” has been adopted by the vide financing. Milliken, who b acting gover-lmad^fo^ i»^^. but^^^^^ ............Mirhioan DpnartiTwnl nt Aori. Kor aYOmnlp with ths “r while GoV. Romney IS OH a Michigan to Join Other States in Battling Plant Pests Spread of their share in tiredtyVferiMi^^^^^^^ Agri-| For example. ihe com-'™/w^^v. sidewalk program. [culture. I Pact m effect, a western wheat. . dividual costs were to be mailed' today or early next week. They will have five days aft^ i er receiving the letters to file and we have much more insighti"* any protests, on this issue than we did ini OTHER SYSTEMS The city’s first sidewalks are August,” asserted Dr. Emerson, Annexation to larger districts'to be installed along Pontiac who noted that Walled Lake'has been |xvposed for the otherlTrail between Market and school officials have converseditwo systems affected, Dublin Spring Park streets, open-mindedly and have shown and North Oxford. | Cost of the project has been mterest. I But Novi it in a “unique l^^bnated at 89,200 phis 10 *h ciLi hn»rHci »itun«on” because it it dote P«r cent for unexpected coats. cm’s SHARE ...Id nol^nerbel. coJ^nMe compact. The federal government like- muic. “• ciickji, d wcdiciii W8icai ^ ^ \ ^ Public Law 187 (rf 1965, knownlstate could help Michigan fight,,*"' not only tae awto| The population boom, con- - - - I linHn.fav K,tf fa. ^ gg^^^g, cgnicuhmi improvements, is held responsible for the |50,888 defidt anticipated in the 198648 bndget. ... . . .. • . I f UUII8; iJOW 104 19IHI, JVlIUWll dtaic 4.UUIU lic:iiy IIKIU,. , .... 1 Lettera idormmg them of in-^g^ Compact Law, al- cereal leaf beetle on Michigan '"'“‘toy ,but toe entire state ivi la no C w.r« o mai department to joinjsoil. Both states would benefit, forces with other states to fight since eradication of this seriousi pests wherever they gain a foot- grain pest in Michigan could *:' , !* ■8r*™'tore ex-h^. 'save millions in prairie wheat i~lemCTt , fa eipe^ to be considerably j„g to live and recorded music — A— .U-_ AUl t. I ^ I Chibt at the school wfll be fai charge of the booths and I will be benefited by the pro- hold. Sponsors anticipate longterm savings of millions of dollars in battling insects. A little early prevention they say, is often worth milliogs spent later on a core. Sometimes plant pests take hold in states that do not have Activities include skill games. ^wld*“th"e"Vs’t sme^ wert-'*“toer and a continuing tight « cakewalk, country store and shcHdd the pest spread west hamp^:iM>»7. while expenditures will refreshments. I harvesting the crop. ibe 11,219,292. For the youngsters, there will Th. K51I K .1 4k.' Agriculture experts said morel ♦ * * |be a fish pond, hula ho(HJ, Tte peri ^pact bill had the^|.gjg serious-l Although surplus funds can be, bumper car and other entertain- ___________________________ sociation of State Departments of Agriculture, both the Michigan and U.S. Departments toe funds or the inclination to Agriculture and state legfala institute eradication measures, (jvg Judge to AAUW ,, itoey may decide to skirt thejProperty owners involved. , connecting the district Charge to the property own-IW I 4-11IV another one after hearing I «■« will be 12.50 per front foot. another one after hearing! testimony from Novi officials, j j Novi now fa developing a high days to file 0 per fi Three Area Surgeons Inducted as Fellows Three area surgeons were «n- ____ school program of its own, add- toe city office. ROCHESTER — Circuit Court ing a year at a time. j--------------------- Judge Arthur E. Moore wiU bel ™ guest speaker at the WednesdayF**®®*^ i oi c a* I meeting of the Rochester! A new secondary school! otOry reStiVal Branch of the American Asao- September, 1964, was| ciation of University Women. | constructed after the. Judge Moore will discuss “The.Bo^d of Education [lenis WIU nave nvc u ' inree area suraeona were mi- written Ptete,!, at !S.“'!rrint1.SlS, K “ “ »' 9UUC wiiii uie uucauiiiuii. HAraui* . ;•* a« meat..., nre Ita. .tala- , J I I Among 34 Michigan inductees I ENTER INTO COMPACT were Dr. William E. Siebert, I Under the new law, Michigan whose office is at 23023 Drchard - ’ > .LAI, «"tor into compact when'Lake, Farmington; Dr. James Northville fQ MOTK LGQQUQ S ”wre other states haveT. Mimura, 31815 Southfield, warned it| |passed similar legislation. An in- Beverly Hills; and Dr. Peter A. Novi now has a kindergar-j tea through 18th grade pro-* * * I gram and is ptanalng to add Hostesses'for the evening arei ■ senior high wing to the Mrs. R u s 8 e 11 Corbin, 622 S.| “«w»dary school next year. Eight-Day Affair Law and the Citizen” at the g out of space for Anniv^r^nr\/ surance fund based on a care-1 Duhamel, 444 w! University, p.m. meeting in^ auditorium Novi students. ^ fyUy worked out fwmula and Rochester, of the Woodward Memorial Pub- Novi now has a kinderxar- Ik Library. i tea through 18th grade pro- WALLED LAKE — Celebrat- ' I ing its 15th anniversary, the , Walled L^e Stonz League will hold a story festival tomorrow. Brllliker^llSMai^I rir“uSj:?^sMary?r^ ert Skrivseth, 165 Birch Hm,|and coordinate plans for toe ad- to at- Oakland Township: , IfO^OiS THE ONLY COOK, RAKE SERVE GENUINE CHINA SO DURABLE THAT IT IS BUARANTEEO 3 YEARS AGAINST BREAKUiO, ORACKINO ... EVEN CHIPPING! Imprompta, the beantifni Enduh4>odied china you’ve alwayi dreamed of owning . . . with COOK, BAKE ’N’ SERVE STOVE-TO-TABLE VERSATILITY and enchanting (hapei add* new ease and interest to Uble setting, to festive dining. It’s so remarkably dnrable, yon can use it every day in every way. Completely dishwasher-and-deter-gent-proof. Enjoy the luxury of Impromptu genuine china without dollar extravaganee. 4-PlECE PLACE SETTING $ r 95 Reg. $9.20 Value O DIXIE POTTERY 5281 Dixie Hwy,__________OR 3-1894 Pantile P^Hi P Mrs. Jack Strong, Dixie Highway (lep) admires the coat Mrs. Gordon Graybiel, Bufnham Court, is wearing. Mys. Graybiel modeled this coat from Alvin’s Thursday in an unusual fashion show held in a flying airplane. “Fashions in Flight” is sponsored annually by Clipped Wings, the Detroit Suburban chapter of United Air Lines Stewardess Alumnae. This Fashion Show Was Up in the Air Fashion shows often have unusual themes. But there aren’t many that take place in a flying plane. ★ w ★ Thursday, 65 women boarded a United Air Lines plane in Detroit and settled down for some three hours. They enjoyed luncheon, then watched models present clothes from Alvin’s of Pontiac. ★ ★ ★ This is the second time that such a flight has been sponsored by the Detroit-Suburban chapter of Clipped Wings, an organization of former United Air Lines stewardesses. It was Alvin’s first participation. PHILANTHROPY ! The group uses this flight to raise money for its philanthropy, the Detroit Association for Retarded Children. I This is a national project to which Clipped Wings organizations all over the country have I contributed 1114,000. I The first chapter pf Clipped Wings was organized in 1941. I There are now 23 chapters. Because the airline has a ruling that stewardesses must retire if they marry, the av-, erage age of the club members is low. Most of them live in the Bloomfield Hills-Bir-mingham area. WWW In addition to their contributing to the mentally retarded, they participate in annual recruitment programs for new stewardesses. They’re still a high-flying group. Another former airline hostess and model for the high flying fashion show is Mrs. Robert M. Schafer, Southfield. She wears a three-piece knit ensemble. Mrs. Kinzier Hosts Unit Newlyweds Honored at Reception The Italian-American Club ' was the setting for an evening’ reception honoring the Gary Richard Rollimns who were wed recently ih St. Benedict’s Catholic Church. The former Alice Jo Sutton of North Ortonville Road, ' Groveland Township, is the | daughter of the Lawrence T. ' Buttons of Afton, Mich. LACE ACCENTS Re - embroidered Alencon lace accented her chapel-length gown of white silk organza over taffeta, worn with silk illusion veil. Yellow rosebuds centered her bouquet of white Fugi chrysanthemums. * ★ * Carol Cisk) of Detroit was maid of honor and bridesmaids were Mrs. James Hutchings, Ortonville; Mrs. Robert Brooks, Highland, Sue Terry and Sue Smith. The bride’s niece, Valerie M e r s i n 0 and Gloria Sutton were flower girls. Daniel Rollison was his brother’s best man and James Rollison was an usher. They are the sons of Mrs. Richard Rollison of Riviera Terrace and the late Mr. Rollison. Completing the usher list were Roger Bomsta, Robert Smith and Andrew Hollibaugh. The thi^ bone of the ftrachl-osaurus measured seven feet. Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Lange of Grey Road, Pontiac Township, announce the engagement of their daughter Ruth Ann to Pfc. Michael Ray Wood, son of Mrs. Richard Nicholson of Transparent Drive, Independence Township and the late Ray Wood. Her fiance is stationed with the U.S. Marine Corps at Camp LeJeune„ N. C. Look Your Loveliest Tonight In Your New Hair Style From CoifliK Par Ane 4713 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains Let one of our stylist create a new you, for that most important engagement, quality service and merchandise is always guaranteed. KIKLEY Stuff Pockets A good trick: When washing raincoats, stuff the pockets with tissue to permit air to ^ circulate and to dry out puddles in the pockets. Mrs. John Kinzier opened her Salmer Street home recently to members of Alpha chapter of Beta Theta Fhi sorority. Mrs. Alice Sinclair was cohostess. Plans were made for a benefit sale scheduled for Nov. 13 in the Unity Center Building at the corner of North Genesee and West Huron Streets. I ★ ★ ★ I The group will entertain their, husbands Saturday evening in the Watkins Lake home of the Harold Davidsons. | Bringing Up Child Cost Staggering NEW YORK (UPI) - It’s a hard figure to pin down because of differences of family income, number of children and spending habits. But the Institute of Life In- ^ surance estimates that today’s ; family, with an average annual income of $6,000 may spend $24,000 to bring up one child to the age of 18. TTie estimate is based on consumer spending reported by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statis- i tics. SERVING . . . A BUFFET BRUNCH EVERY SUNDAY 10 A.M. Until 2 P.M. You’ll find a variety at the “fabulous buffet’’ that will delight the most fastidious appetite. SUNDAY DINNERS 12 Noon Until 11 P.M. A la carte Until 1 P.M. PHONE: MI 4-1400 and 564-5143 Stamp Collecting Is Big Business NEW YORK (UPI) - The trading stamp business is becoming a billion dollar busi- The ’Trading Stamp Institute of America says that ih 1964, more than 275,000 retailers in all sorts of businesses obtained $950 million in stamps to distribute to their customers. DIAMOND BRIDAL DUO « I7.JEWEI BUIOV* Conviniint Tirmi Diamond solitaire with match- . ing 14K white or natural gold * wedding ring. (Size of diamond * determines the price.) * ^ $1.00 Wiilcly Nationally famous make watches at this low price. Dainty lady’s dress, watch or man's wafer* and shock resist Don't Put It Off -Put It on Credit A Special Purcha«e Brings ^ A SpMial Value For You! " Bedroom Group byDREXEL Regularly Priced at $434.50 . $369.52 Saldom doM one got fh# opportunity to purchase Diex.1 fumlturu at such Mibstanttal sovingsi Includud aru tha 54oot bud and framu, drussur and mirror and ckust as iUustratud. Thu woods aru handsemu buttumut, ond maplu structural ports. A traditional dusign that will blond with any docoratlng plan! OUR 40th ANNIVERSARY SAVINGS! 108 NORTH SAGINAW BUY NOW WHILE OUR PRICES ARE DRASTICALLY REDUCED n Friday Until 9 I Parlrinr Colors JLsfrtiV PURNITURB Choose from Compete Selections Now UYAWAY FOR CHRISTMAS CLEVER CREATIONS IN STUNNINC CHARMS 11 Pc. CORNINGWARE COOK-SERVE-STORE SET •1" •19“ ....,______________idividuility o in fascinating charms whether o just beginning or adding to your o , $1.00 Wctkly ' Take it from freezer,' to stove, to table all in one dish or vice versa. Made of magic missile material—neither heat or cold can mar Its beauty.. 2 DIAMOND LINDE STAR SAPPHIRE RINGS FAMOUS MAKE HAIRDRYERS ^ *69“ :: - 50* Now she can wash her hair ' e she wants to—and *"]t flanked by the glow of 2 genuine o o diy quickly and easily rt^me diamonds in exquisite men’s and o o with ■professional speed and ladies’rings. o o convenience. FAMOUS MAKE EUCTRIC SHAVERS 50* n^EWEL t PENDANT WATCHES r ; SOc Waakiy ^ _ Woakiv • • W. have them UL Newest -Sth matchtar •*'***’ *4 mm hr • * Balionslly advertisid shsvirs ana cnic can m worn many _ • hciuriinv th* mm ways. See our large selectioi. • - - ! small weekly or monthly terms arranged \ ' ; B—IO THE PONTIAC PRgSS. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1965 Mont HMD $4.4 bOIkn pariinutad betting tot laA yew in 31 Kites. Enroll NOW! Enrollmonts Taken Daily at Your Convenience POIOTIAC BEAUn COLLEGE 16% E. Huron Phone FE 4-1854 Study the latest techniques and hair fashions. Call Miss Wilson for further information This Molasses Cake Is Family Favorite By JANET ODELL Poetise Press Food Editer Old fashioned molasses cake was one of the contributions Sarah Van Hoosen Jones made to the country store booth at this week’s Zonta fair. She makes it from , a favorite family recipe. Miss Jones, a lifetime resident of Oakland County, maintains her interest in civic affairs. Reading, traveling and good conversation are all pastimes that interest her. MOLASSES CAKE By Sarah Van Hoosen Jones 2 eggs Vi cup soft butter 1 cup New Orleans molasses Vk cap sugar 1 teaspoon ginger 1 teaspoon soda 1 cup boiling water 3 cups flour Beat eggs and butter with molasses and \sugar. Add dry ingredients and water. Mix thoroughly. This will be a thin batter. Pour into greased 9x13 greased pan. Miss Jones says she bakes her cake 35 minutes at 450 degrees. This may be a little high for some ovens. We bake a similar type cake at 350 degrees and you might compromise at Open Tonight Until 9 »50»*135 Solid luxury fabrics in all wool or wool and fur blends, or your choice of imported tweeds. Mink Hats $2/50 The delightful complement to your foil wardrobe in the popular pill box styles. SPECIAL SELLING CLASSIC OPERA by Mr. Easton and 12.90 Reg. 16.00 All time favorite opera pump in high or mid heels. Its classic good looks ore basic to any shoe wardrobe and of our low price it's on exceptional value you won't wont to miss. Sizes 4 to 10, Widths AAA-B in Block colt. Block Suede, Brown Calf, Red Coif, Blue Coif, Green Coif, Block Ostrich, Brown Ostrich. EXTRA SPECIAL OPERA PUMPS-HIGH OR MID HEELS Block Coif Block Paoude Stile Red Calf Blue Coif *9.90 Si. HURON at TELEGRAPH y prided myself on feeding my Mrs. Victoria Glenn of Troy and Raymond F. Glenn of East Princeton Avenue announce the engagement of their daughter Wanda Kay to Pvt. William Glenn Mill-mine., son of the Henry Millmin^s of Cone Street, Avon Township. Her fiance is in basic training at Fort Knox, Ky. Put a Touch of Courage in Your Cuisine^ ByMARYFEELEY .omwlatioD, What you call the Consnltaatin j""ew high prices” sUU haven’t Moiey Management ireacbed the levd from which Dear Miss Feeley: I’ve alwaysrfy dropping/.ver two family of four so well on a limited income ' they how in th world 1 do it But these weeks I been doing ell. & thing — peciaily meat to cost more than it did So you have a choice: _ family purchasing agent, you can go into a slump, too. Or you can rise to the challenge and continue to feed your family well. Maybe facing up to the who had many mouttis to feed and practically no cash to do it with. They used interesting seasonings, and experiment^ with what they bad on hand. And so we, in this generation, can still benefit by some of their truly excellent recipes. , Some I’ve enjoyed Include a high price of meat wll inspiregouth American Hash - in ’^iwhich you can combine bits of meats, including sau- i jem of the high hf meat gggg bacon, lamb, beef, pork— treat. iw“ ^ a dash of red pepper. Also go sil I cail.^ do is to urge you to broaden ton In a bouillon cube or t any vegetables you like. Then there’s n Norwegian Flab Pnddlag - not sweet, a main dish — which it a casserole, starting with a -package (approximate cost) of frocen pets, and the recipe wiU feed three people. You add a little cream or milk, some seasonings, press the fish through a sieve, and pot it into a bnttered baUag dish for slow cooUag. It’s • real I ways: cheaper cuts, plus longer cooking. , This basic “recipe” was a month or two ago. How come? evolved hundreds of years ago, I Is It me, OT toe supermarket, jby women who had to feed their Mrs. G.B., Jersey City, N.J. |famiUes off toe land. Some of , toe moK interesting codebooks we have inherited over the years were inspired by farm women Color Film Tells About Preserve Leaves Fall leaf arrangements will keep indefinitely if you pretreat the leaves with a mixture of two parts of water to one part glycerin. The idea is to soak toe leaves in the mixture for a week, let them dry and then arrange them. i Dear Mrs. B.: It Isn’t yon, and it isn’t your market. It’s that thing called Food Prices. Predictions are that the prices of beef and pork will contlnoe to hover around the ones yon ran into yesterday. An economist with the Agricnltnre Department said recently: “If housewives don’t like toe' prices they have been paying fori i o . j red meat, they will not like toe' DUUQ6t prices they probably will have ^ to pay ail summer.” He might have added: And toe prices “Spending Your Food Dol-they’ll probably be paying pos- ‘“‘s, ’ a newly revised ahd isibly to the end of 1965. 1 expanded 35mm color film- ^ ^ . I Strip, IS announced by the The experts who study price. Money Management Institute I tables tell us that the increased; q, Household Finance Cor-:prices of beef seem dramaUci poration. The 77-frame, cap-I because homemakers got used tioned fUmstrip organizes the to relaUvely low prices during entire food shopping*process a two-year slump in the Uve- into a logical sequence. IcatUe market. The slump, it It begins with toe food budg- your horizons as a cook. One of your best bets for family dinners is to originate your own casserole, made of vegetables with a little meat mixed In. An exceUent cook in Alllana, Ohio, used to charm her family with a gorgeous looking casserole made mostly of summer squash, with bits of left-over breakfast sausage mixed in.' Plenty of butter or margarine, of course, with black pepper and paprika on top. Nobody ever, went to bed hungry in herJiouse. I (You can write to Feeley in care of ’The Pontiac Press. Questions of widest interest will be answer^ in her column.) Early winter vows are planned by Elizabeth Katherine Levering, daughter of Mrs. Clara seems, has ended, so the cost et, then'illustrates how to of Maurer of beef has gone up. If it’s any manage the family’s time, en- j Street, and Gerald Dr. E. D. Van Deusen Foot Specii^ist S648 HigMand Rd., Pontiac — OR 3-1335 Open Eveningt ergy and money to carry out budget plans. “Spending Your Food Dol-, lars” emphasizes the impor-I tance of planning meals and snacks to supply a variety of foods daily in the amounts needed by each family member. It gives pointers on organizing a food shopping list based on weekly menus. David Kandt, son of Mrs. Elmer Kandt of Palmer Drive, and the late Mr. Kandt. KINNEY'S SHOES For tho Whole Family PONTIAC MALL MIRACLE MILE ITiis timely filmstrip shows how to shop, where to shop and when to shop for food. Experienced as well as new food shoppers will gain useful information about buying today’s fresh and processed foods. Buying guides are given and a new study guide accompanies each filmstrip. “Spending Your Food Dollars’’ is available on free loan or it may be purchased. For details about obtaining the new food filmstrip, write to the Money Management Institute "of Household Finance Corporation, Prudential Plaza, Chicago, Illinois 60601. Bill for Florist Take two terry bath towels and one hand towel in the lively new pink, add a zipper, and you have the makings of this gracefully flowing hostess gown. It is one of five fun do-it-yourself fashions shown with step-by-step instructions in a new booklet, available in towel departments of local stores. Not in Order— Thank Heavens The Store Where Quality Counts ORLANDO, Fla. (if) —There were orchids galore at toe wedding of Joan DuBms and Brinley Carter — but no florist’s bill arrived. SPECIAL SUNDAY BRUNCH Hie bride’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Qarence DuBois, have made a hobby of raising orchids, and th^r hobby provided a beautiful and unusual setting for the wedding. BUFFET Served Every Sunday and Evening Prime Rib '« Lobster Tails Frog Legs Included PRIVm R00N.1 mium ;».COURSE LUNCHEON BUFFET Served Mondar ihni Salnrdar M:.10A.M. Io3:.10 P.M. Aflullf Sprays of orchids covered the altar, and orchid arrangements with pastel bows marked ail the pews. ’The bride carried prize orchids on an antique fan, and the bridesmaids carried bouquets of orchids in blended shades. Curly and Crispy CHICAGO (UPI) - ’The firK hair curling irons came from the laundry room and consisted of 16th centi^ pressing tools such as crispers and crimpers. The curling lotions included flour and water, fruit juices, honey, sugar water and tree sap Mled with water. FPED}^Pcudi CO. Pontiac's Oldest Jewelry Store Grand Tmiik Railroad Watch Inspectors for More Than 5B Years! 28 West Huron Street FB 2-7257 JNeumode ' TWICE-A-YEAR ^ Children 4 Dmitpkifml F.mrlr4meritmm Atm, Out»ide Caleriwg Service AI»o Avilable 3230 PINE LAKE ROAD ROUTE 2, ORCHARD LAKE, MICHIGAN Phone 682-0600. 82 N. Sofinaw St. A delight to sso as well at hear, this lovaly new Isriy . American Howard "401” brings en Meant of warmth and lovellneM to any room. A pleasure to play beeeiiM It's Baldwin-bullt quality throughout. Cherry Finish. SPECIAL!' , _____^ - USED HAMMOMD ________ SPINET ORGAN $fiQ|S Walnut Finish ^wwV OPEN FRIDAY and MONDAY EVENINOt TIL • P.M. CALBI MUSIC CO. 119 North Saginaw FE 5-8222 KK FABKINO MAR Of STOM THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1965 B—11 January wedding vows are planned by Julia Christine Morris, daughter of Mrs. James L. Morris of South Til-den Street and the late Mr. Morris, and Gerald Robert Denton, of Hudson Street. He is the son of Leslie A. Denton of Auburn Avenue. The bride-elect attended Aquinas College, Grand Rapids. 'Fitting' Idea Choose a stretch garment that fits well. Stretch Is not an alternative to fit. It Is a refinement of fit Make Bewitching Centerpiece THck or Treat is the only traditional Halloween bfs that must be left to childhood. The costumes, the party games, and indeed the party itself are as much for ^alts as for children. If you are planning a party here Is a do-it-yourself cent^iecf that is easy to make, and will give your table a truly festive touch. ★ ★ ★ The materials needed are simple. The amount needed will vary, depending on the size of the centerpiece. The one pictured measures 12” X 14”. • Base: block of styrofoam, boprd, or several pieces of cardboard glued together. • Castle: two inner tubes from gift-wrap paper. • Flag: a 12” pmudl. Four pipe cleaners, transparent tape, paste, an assortment of colorful pieces of gift-wrap. Cream Eyelids Most women have dry skin around their eyes. Avoid dry, papery eyelids by gentiy smoothing a moistener or lotion around the eyes before applying make-up. Use an eye cream when retiring at night. Roofs are made from paper cut into cones. Decorate with ribbon strips of contrasting coin*. Cover pencil the same way for flag base. Trim with cutouts (rf windows, a horseshoe. To make witch, use a clothespin for the body. Wrap two black pipe cleaners around the body and give ends a few twists, so that they turn into hands. Take two contrasting colors of tissue paper, crush slightly in middle, and cover body. Leave a flare of paper on top of body for shoulders, and at bottom for skirt effect. Cover ball with vdiite tissue. Cut features from gift wrap. Paste on. The witches hat is a paper cone. Her hair is made from shredded ribbon. CAT The black cat has a body of pipe cleaners and a paper cut- out head. The body is filled out with crushed black tissue papier. Toothpicks will do fw whiskers. The witchw brewing pot is a small ball with gold-colored foil cut into thin strips, and pasted to the ball. The strips are secured on the bottom of the ball, but shaped to flare out on top. The brew is made of ribbon strips in contrasting colors. The flags, wishbone and other embellishments are made of cut-outs secured with paste. * w ★ The base may be covered with a contrasting color of gift wrap. If a styrofoam or card-boa^ base is used, the mountings can be secured with a few straight pins, or thumb tacks if a wooden base is used. These figures have been designed so that they can stand by themselves. The New York Stock Ei-change was established May 17, 1792, and moved to Wall Street WHAT HllSm TONES WODLD “YOU” UKE TO HEAk FEOH AN ORGAN? • A rich low flute • A mellow clarinet • A imooth sliding trombone • The brilliance of the trumpet • The beauty of the • The higher flute tones I as well as the known I tones of the; : -)- +French Horn -t--I-Viola nu i. Il»-Uwkt” HUu» + + EnglishHom Model Orgao — ■nezcelled io . . v-l— k.prie.r...eor + +Diapuson Voice »695“® This easy-to-make Halloween centerpiece is made from gift wrap paper, cardboard tubes, pipe cleaners and a few household props. No intricate patterns, or directions are needed. All these wonderful sounds grouped into two dimota manuals and 13 bass pedak complemented by the vibrato aettings plus the tone color which ean bo created only by the revolving “Leslie Speaker.“ All thoao tones deliveirad by30 wattt of transistorised gennratod power. COidhOT Mnrfe C*. fanto rM W Me ew eMdhM mImUm af at a»lw ■■SIWihMert—wy. SBIALL BABY GRAND PIANO Cem^rfy anniMCeee. LeeleBmwIIWw. AEeellew*Fee The SMicM IBeded Hwle Lmm. Cmm» ImAmdAthtu S^ ltT0emy j Presented Caps Yon Will Enjoy Shoppfaig at Ifs- Annual capping ceremony for American Red Cross vol-i;:ii unteers of Pontiac General Hospital was Tuesday evening in the hospital auditorium. Mrs. W. C. SprouU, liaison chairman of h^tal volunteers in the Oakland region, and Mrs. Harry Winkley, local unit chairman of PGH, presented caps to 12 area women who had completed 30 hours of service. ★ * ★ Cap recipients were: Mrs. Gary Boe, Mrs. Charles Cupp, Mrs. Enoch Eley, Mrs. Smith Falconer, Mrs. Ruth Atm Gol- try and Mrs. Rebecca Harris. Others were Mrs. Marion B. Holmes, Mrs. Wesley Roberts, Mrs. Jerry Sanders, Mrs. Theodore Schwarz, Mrs. Quentin Sweet and Mrs. Gorde Zittle. Rev. Gus Tsompanas, chairman of the hospital’s chaplain service, was guest speaker. Serving at the coffee table were Mrs. Hagop Konsuzlan and Mrs. George Alexander. Women, listed above, receiving caps were members of the first class to be capped under the title American Red Cross Volunteers, rather than Gray Over a million guests a year! Bloomfield Hills... WOODWABD at SQUARE LAK^ RD.... Ph»n« FR 4-66S0 Piiiil Roon-Mee Shop-Car Service RESTAURANTS Families e W our good food! Pontiac Mall... Open Monday thru Saturday Cafeteria and Dining Room VMtlK Prtii Photo Mr. and Mrs. Joseph L. Scarlatti of Watkins Lake Road will celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary with a family gathering in their home on Tuesday. The couple was wed in Caspian, Mich., Oct. 26, -1915. Children of the pair are Vida Scarlatti, Mrs. Howard Fincannon,' Louis J. and Richard. There are nine grandchildren. BONANZA BUYI RCA VICTOR SPORTABOUT TV with FREE Rollabout Stand MANY STYLES TO CHOOSE FROM! GET OUR PRICES BEFORE YOU BUYI We Service What We Sell STEFANSKI ELECTRONICS 1157 W. HURON FE 2.6967 Pythian Unit Hosts Official, I Mrs. Lewis Mrs. Robert \^wis of Three , Rivers, Mich, chose Thursday’s meeting of Mizpah Tern- i pie No. 7, P]^ian Sisters, for | her official visit. i ★ ★ ★ A report on the recent dis- ■ trict convention in Lansing , was given by Mrs. Reino | Perkio before the membership in Fellowship Hall on Voor- ' heis Road. ★ * ★ Among the guests were Mrs. Harold Burke of Sturgis, Mrs. Joe B. Davidson, Mrs. John ' R. Schock, Mrs. Harry Snure and Mrs. John Simetz, ail of Birmingham. ★ ★ ★ Assisting Mrs. Karl Erickson, refreshment chairman, were Mrs. Delos Nicholie, Mrs. Delbert Ayres and Mrs. Alan Leach. ' Scatter Pins Make Buttons Make your own clothes? Buy three scatter pins just alike, preferably round ones of simple design. Instead of making button holes and sewing buttons on those nice woolen dresses that button to the waist, just use pins down the front spaced at equal intervals. They are all the jewelry you will need if good taste is selected in buying the pins. BURR SHOES Formarly of Birmingham NOW AT NORTH HILL PLAZA IMS N. MAIN ROCHESTER Phono 651-1022 GRAND OPENING &tfuuei .^ubuAban/ -SflAxi 4966 Highland Rd. at Crescent Lk. and M-59 Satinlay, Oct. ?3rd 5 ’til S P.M. Everyone Welcome • Free Gifts • Refreshments Gerrie Miner Owner & Operator 674-2527 Open Mon. thru Fri., 9 ’til 7, Sat., 8 ’til 4 B—U THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 92, 1965 AmerFcan Husbands Still Humming the Lunch-Money Blues BOYLE By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK (AP) - One of fte biggest unsolved problenis oi the American husband today b how to get more hudieon money from his wife. Here andl fliere you still find an old-fashioned male who controls the family finances and puts his wife on a skimpy household allowance for wdiich she must render to hinn strict accounting. ★ ★ But in most homes, it operates the other way. The husband meekly brings home his weekly paychedc in his mouth. His wife, after patting him on the head, dqxisits the check in the bank. llien she is in charge of~lhe spending. Some wives on Monday give their husbands the fu^ that are supposed to last fiiem through the week. NEWLYWEDS? Such wives usually are newlyweds. Older wives know this system doesn’t work. They have found out from experience that if they give a husband his full allowance on Monday, he’ll be broke by Wednesday morning and whining for more. So they dole it out daily. ★ ★ ★ But some husbands seem to be in a rebellious mood about their luncheon allowances, judging by a bull session at an office water cooler I overheard recently. ‘Tve been married 25 years and, in that time, the boss has given me five merit raises, volunteered a marital veteran. ‘But how many merit raises has my wife given me in that time? Not one. STILL 51 CENTS “A quarter of a century ago, she started giving me 50 cents a day for lunch, and it was okay then. I could get a three-course dinner for 45 cents, and that left me with a nickel to buy a cigar afterward. But she still gives me only four-bits a day, and nowadays you’re lucky to get a peanut butter sandwich for that.’ ★ ★ ♦ “I know what you mean,” remarked another husband. ‘‘The only way I’ve been able to stay alive is.to shake a couple of quartan out of my Ud’a piggy bank every night and put in a couple of washen to re|daee than. But that can’t go on much longer. ‘Ibe Ud’a getdig wise.” ‘‘kty wife thinks I’m keeping anoQ^ woman on the d o u g h she gives me for lunch,” said a third. ‘‘But if I had a mistress who ate like a bird, I couldn’t afford her — because I dmi’t have enough to su|^ her with birdseed.” "I don’t see wbat you guys are griping ab^” broke in a fourth. “Ity doesn’t give Rw a luncheon allowance at all. She says idut she jeats should be good enough for me, too, so she just slips a can of tuna in my txriefcase «very morning.^ * ★ ★ It is obvious that wives don’t know the facts of office life. They know that the {urices of bats and fur coats and automo- biles and brassieres and theater tidcetshlivegoneup. ♦ ★ ★ But they don’t seem to realize that a 1940 luncheon allowance won’t fill a man’s stomach in 1965. It won’t even take out the wrinkles in it. The socalled tbreoHnoartini, five-course, two-hour businessman’s lunch is a myth. The luncheon altowance many wives give their husbands wouldn’t 15 minutes on a Bowery beanery stool w ★ t In the long run, however, the wives are really hurting them-sdves. If the average husband isn’t passed out a little more folding money to buy himself a decoit midday meal, he soon won’t be idile to bring home the bacon — because he won’t have the strength to tote it. | Cannon Act Is Repeater SAULT STE. MARIE, Mich. (AP) — This community’s cannon is missing again. Somebody swiped it from a local warehouse Thursday. For the last couple of years, the French-made World War I field piece has vanished at just about this time. Both times, it showed up with a bang at Halloween on the Soo campus of Michigan Technological University. Soo residents figure that will probably happen again this year. ALL NEWI GIANT SCREEN 21"' PORTABLE TV 21’ ovarall diag. maas., 212 sq. in. rectangular picture area DULUXn QUALITY HANDCRAFTED TV Built Better to Last Longer TV-RADIO SERVICE OsM frUtr I*w- 'HI 9 C«H 335-6112 770 ORCHARD LAKE AVI. NowINewChevelle New ChevelU SS S96 Sport Coupe— with ckan-eeulpted aU-new Body by Fisher. by Chevrolet Vwo new Super Sport beauties for ’66~a h^top and convertible—propelled by no^g less than the new Turbo-Jet 396 V8. Their SS black grille sets them apart right oil as a special breed of car. And their new Turbo-Jet 396 V8 is right behind it ready to second the motion. This remarkably efficient power plant, with aircraft-type valves, deep-br^thing ports and other advances, developa 325 hp in the stand- ard version. And you're wdcome to order more —in a 360-hp version—if you're so inclined. Both Chevelle SS 396 models ride on a special chassis—with flat-cornering suspension and large-size (7.75x14) red stripe tires. A fully synchronized 3-speed transmission with floor-mounted stick shift is standard. Or you can order a 4*9peed or Powerglide—also Strato-bucket front seats, center console and full SS instrumentation. Impressive credentials, sure. But to really appreciate what Chevrolet's performance specialists have cone up with here you've got to get into one of these Chevelle Super Sports and see for yourself. And the place to do that, naturally—or to see and drive any of the ten other new Chevelles fw '66—is your Chevrolet dealer's. He's always been a great believer in letting the cuetomeri handle ] the merchandise. See the new '66 Chevrolet, Chevelle, Chevy n, Corvair and Corvette at your dealer’s MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES, INC. 631 OAKLAND of CA$S PONTIAC MICHIGAN FE 5-4161 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. OCTOBER 22, 1963 KOOIS C-1 YOUNG AT HEART — Veteran Gordie Howe, the “old man” of the Detroit Red Wings at the age of 37, led the National Hockey League All-Stars to a 5-2 victory over the Stanley Cup champion Montreal Canadiens Wednesday night. Saturday night he begins his 20th season in the NHL as the Red Wings return to the Montreal Forum to meet the Canadiens in the regular season opener. In the All-Star game, Howe had two goals and two assists. In was the 17th time he has played in the game. Sunday night the Red Wings will open the home season at the Detroit Olympia when they entertain the Toronto Maple Leafs. Spartans Put Mark to Test Boilermoker Aerials Biggest Danger What is at stake when Michigan State and Purdue tangle Saturday afternoon at -----fcafayett^ question should stake? langie ^aiurudv aitci -iafayette, Ind.? Maybe the question be - What Isn’t at s The lead in the Big 10 race, a high nationaK ranking and a stronger scentXpf Roses — what else is ther^ The two are part of a four-way tie atop tl^ Big Ten standings, along with Minnesota and Wiscoi^in. State has a 3-0 conference slate. The others are M each. \ However, both the Spartans ^ and Boilermakers are undefeated for the season to date, something which the other two cannot say, and rank in the top ten nationally in both wire service polls. ★ ★ ★ Such high status is exactly what had been forecast for Purdue in the pre-season guessing game. But Michigan State has been a surprise even to its own partisans. A middle-of-the-pack Big Ten finish and no national rating was the general augury for State. AERIAL ARTIST State (54) and Purdue (4-0-1) will afford an interesting contrast in the styles of play. The Boilermakers love to throw the ball, and with talented quarterback Bob Griese flinging the pigskin to a whole squadron of receivers headed by ace end Bob Hadrick, they do it very well. ★ ★ State, on the other hand, is essentially a running team. Sophomore fullback Bob Apisa with 390 yards and junior halfback Clinton Jones with 302 yards are the main legmen. Michigan’s pass defense, riddled by Purdue’s Bob Griese in the second half last week, is expected to get another workout Saturday when the Wolverines play Minnesota at Minneapolis in the annual Little Brown Jug game. John Hankinson, the Gophers’ quarterback, is rated a major passing threat. ★ ★ ★ Although he didn’t get much chance to throw in the 14-3 win over Iowa in the rain last week, the Michigan scouts are warning the Wol- BACK ON TRACK - Dick 'Night Train’ Unb. one of the all-time great defensive backs of the NFL will he back on track again Sunday when the Detroit Lions face thV Chicago Bears. The Lions reactivated Lane after a series, of injuries depleted 1^ir defensive backfield. Wings at Montreal Saturday Howe Starts 20th Season Big Stakes for MSU-Purdue By JERE CRAIG “Gordie Howe is the greatest of them all!” All Detroit Red Wing fans’ hearts warm immediateiy toward any National Hockey League enthusiast who would admit such sentiments. His boosters in Canada-even among ardent Toronto and Montreal fans— are considerable. ★ ★ ★ Undeniable proof of this acceptance came three winters ago when a Canadian recording group’s vocal rendition of those sentiments became an i m m e d i a t e hit record . . . even before “No. 9 of the Red Wings” set two of hockey’s most cherished records. It wasn’t until the following fail that Howe broke the career, regular-season goalscoring mark, and it was last autumn that he surpassed the career total goals record. Wednesday night at Montreal. “Mr. Red Wing” played in his 17th NHL Ali-Star game and he led the All-Stars to a 5-2 victory over the Canadiens with two goais and two assists. Tomorrow night he will Huskies Start Prestige Duels THC LINf.UPS PNH WATERFORD Lorenim (liS) LE D. Chirter (170) Lafferty (1W) LT L. Ballard (170) Jim Dunn (1«5) LG Sundwall (175) Troy Bell (740) C Jim Joseph (170) M. Souden (155) RG M. Lewis (1151 T. Kelley (220) RT Steve Main (ISO) C. Giles 050) RE D. Farris (IMI Bill Curtis. 055) QB Rick ZIem (100) Dana Coin (190) HB D. Kline (170) K. Denton (150) HB McDowell (155) D. Couture (155) F B S. Rogers (170) The Huskies of P o n t i a c Northern have four games remaining on the 1965 gridiron schedule, and although they have lost 13 games in a row, the team couid make it a successful season with three wins in the next four outings. Three of those four opponents are in the prestige class — Waterford, Kettering and Pontiac Central. And wins over those three would make the fans forget the current losing string. The Skippers of Waterford come first—t o n i g h t at 8 o’clock at Wisner Stadium in PNH’s Homecoming outing. The meeting will be the seventh in the series between the two schools. The Huskies hold a 3-2-1 ed^e. SCORING PROBLEM The Huskies have played good defensive ball, but the team has had its trouble pushing the ball across the goal line. ★ * ★ In five starts this season, the Huskies have produced only 14 points. On the other hand, Waterford has been held scoreless only once this season in a 2-3 record—a 14-0 beating inflicted by Walled Lake. In their other two losses, the Skippers were in the game all the way before losing to Southfield, 12-7, and they were stopped just short of the goal line last week in the closing minutes of a 13-7 setback at Roseville. return to the Fornm where the Detroit Red Wings open the season against Montreal. The game will mark another milestone for Howe. The 6-0, 200-pound right wing wiil begin his 20th season with the Red Wings. GOOD START Howe is ready for this campaign almost without a perceptable dimming of his taients from his initial appearance as an 18-year-old newcomer in 1946. In the Red Wings’ recently concluded exhibition contests, he led the scorers with IS points (including nine goals). This included two hat tricks (three goals in one game). The six-time winner of the league’s Art Ross Scoring Championship Trophy and, aiso, the Hart Most Valuable Player Trophy — both NHL records—is highly respected by opponents not only for his s c 0 r i n g but also his equally efficient rugged body contact, carefully honed with 19 years’ playing experience. Howe’s physical condition is a m a z i n g. He has not missed more than six games in any season for»the past 16 campaigns. Ticket Kickoff Set ATLANTA, Ga. UP) - The top names on the Atlanta Braves will be in town next week to kick off a ticket drive for the 1966 major league baseball season. Pontiac PrcM Phatet RIVAL QB’s — Pontiac Northern’s Bill Curtis (top) and Waterford’s Rick Ziem will be opposing quarterbacks when the two teams meet tonight at Wisner Stadium in their annual rivalry. Two-Platoon Takes Longer NEW YORK (4V-The Eastern College Athletic Conference said Thursday that the first 106 football games played in its circuit this fail under the new two-platoon rule averaged six minutes longer than the games of last year. Average time through games of Oct. 9, the ECAC survey showed, was 2 hours, 13 minutes. Last year the average time was 2:19. In 1950, last year of the original two-platoon era, the the time was 2:25. Michigan Will Face Strong Pass Attack verines that Hankinson is a > dangerous passer. He holds virtually every passing mark in the Minnesota record book. ’rfie victory oVa* Iowa gave Minnesota a 2-0 Big Ten record. Indiana was the other victim, 42-18. ★ ★ ★ In non-conference tilts, the Boilermakers tied Southern California, 20-20; lost to Washington, 14-13; and to Missouri, 17-6. ★ * ★ Michigan has possession of the Jug on the strength of a 19-12 victory last season. Saturday’s tilt wiil be Minnesota’s Homecoming. THIRD LOSS ’The Wolverines were greatly improved against Purdue last Saturday, but still lost, 17-15. The (lefeat by the Boilermakers marked their second Big Ten loss and their third straight of the season. ★ ★ ★ Previously they were downed by Georgia, 15-7, and Michigan State, 24-7. Despite the loss to the Boilermakers the Wolverines played their best game of the season. Wally Gabler turned in a topflight job at quarterback, running the team well and firing a 40-yard touchdown pass to Jack Clancy. He completed nine of 28 passes for 137 yards without interception. ★ ★ ★ Clancy continued to iead Wolverine receivers as he gained 125 yards on eight receptions to bring his totai for five games to 25 for 369 yards and two touchdowns. HAGGERTY HAS IT! THE OFFICIAL ARMSTRONG CERTIFIED CEILINGS CENTER IN YOUR AREA FRI.-SAT., OCT. 22nd and 23rd TRUCKLOAD SALE Fiberglas OWENS-CORNING FIBERGLAS INSULATION Arnntning SuspiraM (Mlings )i5ve special ^ Installation (aitures that inaKa It easy to lower * ceilings, conceal ugly pipes and joists, or coyer complete price for all celling n» terials for x 14’ roon—" Temlok’Ceiling Panels complete price for all terials for ir Tamlok Celling Panels FREE ESTIMATES • FREE INSTRUCTIONS far de-^"x15" ALUM. FOIL 1.5, 70-Ft. Roll......3.95 6” FIBERGLAS BAHS for Sill7 Perfect Ceiling-45’ Bundle........... 4 6-FT. WORK BENCH _ $C95 D per W SQUARE CASH & CARRY UNEITY Only *9” LUMBER & SUPPLY GO. 2055 HAQQERn HWY. Wallod Lako~MA 44551 •ttwMR W. Mapla and Pontiaa Trail "MICHIGAN'S MOST MODERN LUMBER MART" Opan 7:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.-Fri. Nita to 9 p.m.-Sot. 7:30 o.m. to 5 p.m. c-s THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 22. 1965 Beais Not Hibernating-Await lions Name's the Same, but Game's Different BUFFALO, N Y. ^AP)-"Cards May Start Humphrey At QB” read the headline today in a local newspaper. “Johnson Is Doubtful." read the sub-headline on The Associated Press story from New York. But neither political play nor gallbladder surgery was involved. ♦ ♦ ★ The story, en the sports pages of the Buffalo Courier Express, was about Buddy Humphrey, who may start for the St. Louis Cardinals Sunday in their game with Washington. Charley Johnson, the regular signal-caller, was listed as a doubtful starter because of a bruised left shoulder. There was no mention of President Johnson, recovering from gallbladder surgery, or Vice President Hubert Humphrey. Just a similarity of last names. HUNGARIAN TIGER - The top scorer in the country by galak of the Princeton Tigers of the Ivy League. Gogalak who has nine field goals and 10 extra pojints this season for 37 points, is a busboy in the Princeton dormitory. With him is teammate Ran Landeck lower photo. Gogalak uses a soccer kick (top photoi. Rookie Leads High Scoring Chicago Surge Speedy Gayle Sayers Spells Trouble for' Ailing Detroiters j Those Bears of Chicago justj aren’t doing what Bears should i be doing these days — going! into hibernation, and this may be unfortunate for the Detroit! Lions. I All pre-season forecasts figured the Bears would be in hi-1 bemation long before this and, after the first three NFL games' it appeared that’s where they belonged. , However, a r. |*>y ‘he Leafs dtr trade with De- The team manager, Fransl^roU ^ings last May, was Pauwels of Portland, said be- sent to Tulsa of the Central fore leaving Thursday that this!‘^®8“e. will be a guinea pig project to-' ward the 1968 Olympics. Members of the U.S. team representing the bicycle league in Mexico are Harry Backer, San Diego; Dan Butler, San Jose, Calif., Pio Lenzi, Los Angeles, and Stuart Pray, Dayton, Ohio. Arrows' Quarterback league's Top Passer Quarterback Karl Sweetan of|jured knee, leads the league in' body, «loVing the champ down, and then worked his punches up. It was a jabbing lead or a thumping right to the ribs that started off most of Tiger’s barrages, but it was the jarring, accurate left hooks that shook up Joey consistently and enabled Dick to hammer the champ to the ropes. The defeat snapped Giardel-lo’s victory streak at nine for a nearly three year span.' His record now is 98-23-7. Tiger, a pro 14 years, has a 52-14-3 record. Giardello weighed the class limit of 160 pounds to Tiger's 158 'The loser was guaranteed $50.-000 or 40 per cent and could come up with better than $65,-000. Tiger, guaranteed $15,000 or 20 per cent, may wind up with more than $40,000. 8,000 Attend Track Opener has scored seven louchdowns,! ^ rpifS all on passes, and he has hauled in 22 passes for 356 yards. released today by the league commissioner HOCKEY AT A GLANCE NATIONAL LMOUt ThwndAy'i KMuHt No gomes scheduled. Tetfer's Games No games scheduled SiMdey's C Montreal at New Yor Toronto at Detroit Chicago at Detroit partment with 21 catches for 267 yards. And in third place is In guiding the Arrows to a the Arrows’ Bill Leonard with 5-1 loop mark, Sweeten has 1233 yards on 19 receptions, completed 55 of 99 passes for | Lansing’s Tom Afoubray leads 691 yards and nine touch- [the ground gainers with 236 downs, patting him well ahead yards in 75 attempts. Rick An-of runner-up Pete Mikola- drews of Dayton is second with jewski of Dayton who has hit 217 yards and Flint’s Jim Long on 48 of 96 for 581 yards. holds down third place with 216 In the punting- department, | y®*'*!®-'Sweeten has booted the ball ‘8Z times for an average of 42' yards. Dayton’s Billy Barker, I owns a 40.6 average on 10 punts. ! Dayton’s Keith Smith, who {sat out last week’s game with the Arrows because of an in-! eluding many from Michigan, watched horse racing’s revival here Thursday night after a .30-year absense. Windsor Raceway showed off its new all-weather track and million-dollar plant with a card of harness races against the handicp of a cold drizzle. Girls in black berets took bets in the carpeted clubhouse and plugged headsets into wall outlets to relay the wagers to mu-tuel headquarters. A chemically treated surface material covers the track. •UMKi) musttV. m wof, w stiaight whiskey-ckain neutral spirits. GOODERHAM t WORTS LTD., PEORIA, n Announcing A Consulting Service for Industrial and Commercial Building Projects Why not lot 28 ywors construction txporionco "pockogo" your building probloms and insuro that tho building you wont it dolivorod at a price you con afford? ARCHITECTURE AND EN6INEERING SELECTION SITE SELECTION COST ANALYSIS PROJECT CONSTRUCTION From $5,000 to $5,000,000 wo offer a complete construction service — and you are spared the headachesi I BUILDINQI BUILDINQ CONSULTANTS DIVISION \ r\ n I SchurrGf Censtrwctioii Company V I / I / L/ 3431 Pwitioc Rood V-JJ-l-Uy Pcoflae, Miekieon 49057 TGlopkena; 335-9491 MIOWISTEEN FOOTGALL LfAGUE Ll -WMkIv Itamtkt NHL Retirement Rule Keeps Lindsay Idle TORONTO (API , Dtylon an, Pont lie ATT YDS LG AVO. Smith, Doyton HIM, Fontfoc Leonord, Fontloc AAcIntoih, Flint l*ryn»S!'’M rule TO FAT TF concerning voluntary retirement in the National Hockey League is keeping veteran Ted Lindsay from rejoining the Detroit Red Wings. Lindsay revealed Thursday in an interview with the Globe and Mail from his Detroit home that he wanted to return to the Red Wings, with whom he played last season after fbun years of retirement from the NHL. ! But he found he can’t play for a year. “It must be a new rule or something,” he said. “I asked to LGTo P* placed on the voluntary re-« ][ I tired list last season because I M 4 was afraid some team might 37 J draft me and I knew I wouldn’t iJ 5 report. That would have meant .suspension and I didn’t like the p *«!!b r*®® spending the rest of my « «.4|life on the National Hockey I League’s susperi estate.broker well known for hiS|l*ro^) ^l****^’ early development oi the field Hills residential area, diedi*J 1P ®- Monday vesteidavattheageofW. | Funeral Home with burW in Bradway was a resident of Clinton Grove Cemetery, Mount Noted Land | Developer Dies Trip for Grofk Royalty Deaths in Pontiac Area' iQueea Mother FTedciika of Greece will leave Sunday for a fOur-day private viatt to Jordan, I I»Mce hM announced. ■ She wlU be accompanied by her ^ofPonliK, Arthur a- vounaeM dauihter. Prlncem Grosse Pointe Farms. He was president of the Detroit - Windsor Tunnel Co., n former president of the Detroit City Plan Commission and a member of the 1113 Detroit Charter Revision Commission. A graduate of the University of Michigan and the Detroit College of Law, Bradway was instrumental in die adoption of the first real estate licensing law in the United States. In 1905 he started a real estate business under his name and was a charter member of the Detroit Real Estate Board and the National Association of Real Estate boards. ORGANIZED BANK He also organized and served as president of the Birmingham Savings Bank in 1926, was former president and chairman of the board of a tool firm and served as a director of the Dime Savings Bank and the Guardian Trust Co. Bradway was a member of numerous Detroit civic and social organiutions and Corinthian Lodge, F & AM. Funeral arrangements art pending at the William R. Hamilton Co. in Detroit. * * Surviving are his wife, Florence; one son, Douglas; and a daughter, Mrs. Henry A. Braun of Pasadena, Calif. {‘all Colors Reportod Fading Fpst in State - DETROIT (API—no Automobile Ch* of Michiiaa r«- Gemou. Mrs. Aldrich died yesterday. She was a practical nurse. _ Surviving are two doubters, grandchildren. Mrs. Ruby Champior Tt Waterford Township and Mrs. Ruth King of Pontiac; 17 grandchildren; and a sister. Si!* of King Constan- *^.*y,*j*^’ tlna. Tliey will be gueots of Klngi Mrs. Otto Bdinke of Gladwin, ' Mrs. CroweUvW. Wilson of Wa-terford Township and Mrs. Arthur Webster of Au Gres; 22 grandchildren: and 38 great- a peak last weMwnd-wre fading fast ^ chib saM the eelorihew has ended In nortbeni Mfchl-gan and la the Upper Fenln- sula. It said color was expected to remain over the weekend in extreme sonthem Dartmouth Tuition Up HANOVER, N.H. (AP) -Dartmouth College Is increasing tuition charges by $128 a year In September 19M and anotber $180 a year later. DarUnouth’s current tuition fee is $1J#0. Cow Has Saxtuplats;? > O’NEILL, Neb. (^P) - A 5-year-oW Holstein cow on the James Corkle dairy farm haa given birth to seirtuplet heifer calves, an occurrence extremely rare In livestock, says Dr. G. R. Cook, O’Neill veterinarian. He said the six are normri calves. He was guardedly optimistic about their survival. MRS. MARY A. JONES Mrs. Mary A. Jones, 73, of 109 Florence died yesterday. Her body is at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. MRS. EMMA E. BOOSE INDEPENDENCE T 0 W N-SHIP-Service for Mrs. Enuna Edith Boose, 82, of 5624 Clark-ston will be 11 a.m. Monday at Allen’s Funeral Home, Lake Orion. Burial will be in Attica Cemetery, Attica. Mrs. Boose died yesterday after a long illness. She was a member of the Baptist Church. Pro-Peronist Unionists Launch Argentine Strike BUENOS AIRES (UPI)-Pro-Per-mist trade unionists launched a 24 - hour general strike today to protest government firmness in crushing a four-hour token walkout yesterday. Two strikers were shot to death and at least 32 others wounded and injured in exchanges of gunfire througlrout the city yesterday. Two policemen were wounded. Today’s walkoat appeared effective in the industrial area and shut down operations of two of six railroad lines. Workers on a third railroad were on a slowdown strike. 34 Mutineers Slain in Africa BRUSSELS UP) - The Belgian radio reported that 34 mutineers ere executed today on the sports ground of the Burundi capital of Bujumbura, after being sentenced to death by court - martial yesterday. Two escaped shortly before the mass execution. The group included five officers, two noncommissioBed officers and 27 privates of tte B n r n n d i state police (gendarmerie), the broadcast added. It said all were involved in the abortive mutiny early this week in which Premier Leopold Biha was seriously wounded and a dozen or more gendarmerie Otherwise, mercial transport and business in general did not appear affected throughout the country. There were no immediate reports of violence. PRESIDENT CONFERS President Arturo Hlia conferred with military leaders last nigbt on measures which may be necessary to deal with to day’s natkm^wtoe strike. The effectiveness of the new strike call will not be known Official Peelected to Planning Post R. J. Alexander, director of the Oakland County Department of Public Works, has been reelected chaii*man of the executive committee of the Detroit M^opolitan Area Regional Planning Commission. until midmoming, when most Argentines usually begin work. Federal police using tear gas, nausea gas and truck-mounted ‘water cannons’’ dispersed yesterday’s rioters after a four-hour battle during which three policemen suffered gunshot wounds and four more were injured in various ways. TRIGGERED BY DECREE The strikes were touched off by a decree Hlia signed Monday empowering the government to outlaw any union engaging in militant partisan politics. Labor Minister Fernando Sola promptly invoked the decree a g a i n s t the food handlers’ onion, whose M,IW members work u cooks, waiters and maids. The union’s office was used as a coordinating center for Peron-ist riots Sunday, the 20th anniversary of ex-dictator Juan D. Peron’s rise to power. Police found a cache of arms, anununi-tion and "Molotov cocktail” bombs in the union office and arrested 14 of its members, one of whom was cari7ing ammunition to the rioters. The CGT denounced the government’s action as ajUtmeon-stitional “repression . . %f unions’ rights and liberties.” An announcement signed by GCT Press secretary Luis A. Angeleri said today’s strik was called “in memory of the workers who fell Thur^ay and r^Hidiation of the vandal-like repressive tactics of the police.’’ The groundwork for t h i week’s violence was laid last week, when the arrival of Mrs. Juan D. Peron, the former dictator’s third wife touched off street brawls between Peronist officers of the Hutu tribe lain. AUGUST G. BEYER raOY — Private service tor August G. Beyer, 70, of 363 Gier-ry, was to be 3:30 p.m. today at Price Funeral Home. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Mr. Beyer died yesterday after a short illness. He was a retired tool designer. Surviving are his wife, Agnes, and a sister. MRS. STEWART BRADLEY DRYDEN TOWNSHIP-Serv-ice for Mrs. Stewart (Anna) Bradley, 66, of 4200 Calkins will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Church of Inunaculate Conception, Lapeer. Burial will be in Dryden Center Cemetery. Rosary will be said at 7 tonight at Muir Brothers Funeral Home, Lapeer. Mrs. Bradley died Wednesday after a short illness. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Lorrain Holmes of Dryden and Mrs. Joyce Springbom of Warren; two brothers; one sister; and four grandchildren. JOHN R. CARR COMMERCE TOWNSHIP Service for John R. Carr, 84, of; 8091 Commerce will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at Schrader Funeral Home, Plymouth. Burial will be Riverside (Cemetery, Plymouth. Mr. Carr died yesterday after ^ a short illness. He was a farm-r. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Arthur (Helen) Homer of Union Lake and Mrs. Arthur Marabelle) Finney of Livonia; four sons, Ralph of Nankin Charles of Plymouth, George of L1V 0 n i a and John Delbert of Union Lake; 18 granddiildren: 25 great-grandchildren; and five The radio added that new troubles were reported north of Bujumbura. The tiny kingdom of Burundi, a former Belgian colony, lies between the Congo and Tan-iiua. It is ruled by the minority Tutsi tribe, and the Hutu majority has been restive for years, since fellow tribesmen in Rwanda succeeded in getting rid of their Tutsi lords and setting up a republic. Rule Heart Attack Killed Man in Field The coroner has r u 1 e d that a 43-year-old Pontiac Township man, found dead in a field yesterday afternoon, died of a heart Jack W. Stoops, 43, of 416 S. Squirrel succumbed while ting in a vacant field south of Perry near Giddings. He was dead on arrival at PontiSc General Hos|MtaI. * * * Pontiac police reported he was found lying face down on top of a shotgun, by Michael Tessman, 16, of 1060 Kewadin, Waterford Township. Alexander wUl begin his fourth consecutive-year term as chair-H »nti-Peron«t groups. Enrollment Up 30 Pet. MARQUETTE (AP) - A rec-.rd fall enrollment of 5,551 i! reported by Northern Michigan University. Officials said the enrollment was a 30 per cent increase over last fall. The school’s enr leans are killed Or injured in power lawn mo' BOSTON (AP) - “My son.Elm Street artery where Kenne-would have wanted not a statue dy was shot on Nov. 22,1963. Since that day, tourists have visited the site by the thousands. Tt became quite obvious that the need for an explanatioy marker was absolutely essential,” L. B. Houston, parks director, said. HEADING FOR HOME—Actress Jayne Mansfield is escorted by her husband, director Ottaviano Cimber, and her -four older children as she left Hollywood’s Cledars of Lebanon Hospital yesterday with her new baby. The latest addition, Antonio, was born Sunday. or a fountain but a vital center of thought and education,” Rose Kennedy t(dd a Massachusetts legislative oonunittee. Mrs. Kennedy, 76, before the committee to apress her family’s support of a proposal to use the site of a railroad yard near Harvard Square In Cambridge for the John F. Kennedy Memorial Library. ★ ★ ★ r- “My son never thought in terms of a memorial for himself,” she said but added that if he had, a memorial in the form of a library for active young scholars and their teachers would have been just what he’d have wanted. Massachusetts has under consideration legislation enabling it to buy the 12 acres along the banks of the Charles River and oi^ite Harvard University dormitories. The land would be First Aid Course Will Open Monday A 16-hour course-in advanced flrst aid instruction will open Monday at 7:30 p.m. In the American Red Cross Oakland County regional office, 118 Franklin. I Open to the public, the course will consist of eight two-hour classes taught on successive Monday nights. I Richard Thalacker, 7374 I purchased from the Massachu-, Woodridge, West Bloomfield setts Bay Transportation Au-a volunteer Red Cross thority for an estimated |6 mil- certified first aid Instructor, wilL Tarzan Made Him, Broke Him Lex Forced Abroad by Image International Smorgasbord “Ckildren Vx Price on Smorgasbord” SPECIAL BUFFET MONDAY NIGHT “BRING A FRIEND” SPECIAL One Dinner Full Priee — One Half-Price BUSINESSMEN’S LUNCH SPECUL PRICES By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-TV Writer HOLLYWOOD - One of the reasons Lex Barker left Hollywood nine years ago was be-produc-ers couldn’t see i^'him as doing ’“imuch I than swinging I from trees. I Another rea-| , son was that hisj marriage Lana ’Tumerl had just broken! up. He had also THOMAS b^n divorced by Arlene Dahl and first wife C^tance Tbur-ilow. I - ★ * * Barker had succeeded Johnny IKTULS 4 „ 6 DAltV..^ busiest film actors in Rome. He then married a Swiss girl who bore him a son and later died. Wife No. 5 is Carmen Seguras from Barcelona. Lex moved on to France for a series of films. ’Then the U.S. government asked him to appear at the Berlin Film Festival. He went and there he met a German producer who said he would like Lex to work for him if only he could afford it. “Let’s talk,” said the actor. SPY YARNS A deal was made, and Lex began starring in a string of spy yams and comedies. ’Then sMneone had the notion: Why can’t we make Westerns in Europe? Lex starred in the first one, ACMMm ■■ ©»«*: The Jimmy Smith Trio iffiureonthe - GO- V B Go- iNMoBiaf fllAoEvEREnJoANO’BRIBI Nancy Sinatra '^THE TRAIN WILL CARRY YOU TO THE PEAK OF ADVENTURE! MUSBAJCKCN BURT LANCASTER m JOHN fRAmeNHElMeKS I lion. nNAL BARRIER I “If this land can be obtained, the last barrier to the construction of the library will be eliminated and our dreams can become realities,” she said. “T«ot long before Kennedy’s death, he chose a site on the op-and it was a rousing success. He.porite side of the river for ar-repwts that he has been the No. j chives for his presidential 1 star in Germany for the past papers, two years. His nKxithly fan maili * ★ w harvests 25,000 letters, which! But, after his assassination, ar^M^wered by four full-time the plans were expanded to include the library and institute of Harvard Graduate School of Public Administration, which supplied Kennedy with many key members of his administra- conduct the classes. secretaries. ★ * ★ The actor returned to Hollywood last week for a brief visit. On his final day here. Lex RUSINESSMAN’S BOFFH Daily 11:30-2:30 SEAFOOD BUFFET Friday 6-10 P.M. PRIME RIB BUFFET Wed., 6-10 P.M. SUNDAY BRUNCH Noon-3 P.M. IMI S. TMpaph FE •-N23 COMPim MTEMNG FOD AU OCCASIONS went to Warner Bros, to lunch ^tion. with his old school chum, Wil-| In Dallas, Tex., Thursday,' liam Orr, son-in-law and aide to'park officials announced that a J. L. Warner. ’They arranged tojbronze marker with maps and| sit near the dow where Warner descriptive material will be would make his entrance to the! placed near the point on the executive dining room. Finally { Warner entered. “Hi there. Lex,” said J. L. ‘Still swinging from trees?” ITarzan, and that was both the ! making and the breaking of him. After playing bits in films, he suddenly b^ame an international star as Tarzan No. 10. ' Bora Alexander Quidilow Barker Jr. to a welLto-do family of Rye, N.Y., he possessed none of the primitive aspects of the famed jungle dweller. But he was the right size — 6 feet 4,200 muscular pounds — and he carried the role off with skill. OVERSEAS FAME Tired of Tarzan roles. Lex turned in his loincloth and moved to a contract at Universal, where he was thrust into Westerns. The films did well, cashing in on his overseas fame as Tarzan. At the time of his breakup with Lana, Lex drew an offer for an English film. He grabbed it and didn’t return. An Italian producer offered a movie. Lex went to Rome and stayed to become one of the 'Call Off Your Computer, I'm Spindled and Mutilated' FRESNO, Calif. : ■.4T. «nd St rr. .1»aml.TUl. 1 1 M-59 and ELIZABETH LK. Roads — - _ 1 TMIGHT • SATURDAY • SUNDAY . and more Suddenly he began getting bills for the books . bills... and still more bills. , ENDLESS STREAM , “I received an endless stream of these documents — always in duplicate — under every possible combination and permutation of my name and for different amounts and under different account numbers,” Kauffman said. “One day, I received four bills.” ^ FinaUy,^ desperatioii, Kauffman fired off a plea to the company. “Dear computer,” he wrote. “I know that you must be a computer because you have hounded me inexorably with a mechanical obstinacy and an unwillingness to listen to reason.” ★ ★ ★ The letter concluded: “Are you listening, computer? I don’t owe you any money — honest to God!” ELUDED COMPUTER In some strange manner, the letter managed to elude the computer and fell into the hands of a human, the trea^surer of the New York firm. The firm offered “humble apologies” and offered, to send three books — free. “I promise that I will send them secretly so that our computer won’t ^ aware of it,” the treasurer wrote. “We are attempting tq calm the machine and make it forget you.” WWW Kauffman's composure has improved steadily. He’s been opening his mail again. CVUIMSI -158 WED. I THURS., NOV. S-4 W 4 TIMES ONLY! W MATINEE A EVENINO AN ENTERTAINMENT EVENT OF MAIOR IMPORTANCE! THE GREAf ir^AU OPERA AN ACTUAL PERFORMANCEOF PUCX^jNI’Syl^MOiyfAG m IN THEYWMCST l^«CtH,RC)BJT^ EVER RECORDtb ON FILM F(»i Sindrnt and Group Psrly DiM-ounlF, Contact Theatre Manager BConvsoiant AAoit OrdorCoopooB I Enclotad $ ......................OmcIc or AAonoy Ordor for. for Hi# . .. Addmi.. HURON There'^ a New Sound for the FRENCHMEN • Ronnie ScaH on the Sax Bob Rutzen on the Guitar Randy Davission on the Drums Wayne Davission on the Organ Every Wednesday, Friday and Saturday Evenings .HOWE’S LANES 6697 Dixie Hwy. 625-5011 TIIK PONTIAC PHKSS, FRIDAY. OCTOBER 22. C—9 For Dancing Pleature RICK GAMBINO AND THE OTHER 4 Danoini Evary Wa4.* Fri., Sat., Sun. ENTERTAINMENT A BIG ALL-STAR SHOW Court Action Threat in Boycott of Schools^ that illegal auto driver Uceiues had been provided to unfit persons. MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UPI) -i District Atty. Hugh O’Con-The parents of thousands of chil- nell earlier declared the boy-dren who joined In Milwaukee’s cott illegal and said parents longest public school boycott to-' who kept their children out day fac^ the possibility of pros- of classes could be prosecut-ecution. | ed. a controversy in Roman Cath- I f olic ranks over participation of the clerffv snd brouffht a threat that segregated and un-from boycott leader Lloyd Bar-tee. of selective actions against individual schools in the future. systen^ Barbee, the only Negro in Hamtramck Suspends Licensing Examiner Hamtramck (ap)-a Ham- „ . , , „ , . , . Patrolman Leo Borkowski, 53, tramck policeman was suspend- Thursday in connection with an officer for 22 years, was sus-an investigation of allegations!pended. TRICK OR TREAT - This fierce-looking gorilla isn’t really a way to frighten children. It poses an invitation for children to call on Mr. and Mrs. Edward Witles of Baltimore, Md., this Halloween. Mrs. Witles, looking at the beast, said her husband made it to encourage youngsters' interest in . r.,, Hall».een, The gorill. will shortly b. l«lLl by . Illeolsed I witch and a bat that runs on an overhead cable. the state legislature, said the civil rights activities would be continued until the school system “gives evidence of implementing a clearly stated pol- > icy of desegregation.’’ The immediate problem facing the schools today was what to do about the thousands of children who stayed out of classes, some of them attending “freedom schools.” The boycotting children, out of class for three and one-half days, were given certificates yesterday noon from "freedom schools" to carry to their principals. The certificates read: “On Oct. 18, 1965, war was declared on unequal, segregat- No more boycotting was expected before Nov. 2, the date of the next scheduled school board meeting. JOIN THE FUN at Pontiac’s First and Foremost Gn Go Club Discotheque Dancers Plus DANNY ZELLA ami the ZELLTONES Wed. thru Sun. 9 P.M. to 2 A.M. Hef an4 finckct 4195 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains LAKE . COLOR wbRANAVISION mpleta with horn, cow bell, drum, symbols, drum stick. No muskol talent needed, just ploy ond hove fun. 66* SMALL DEPOSIT HOLDS IN LAYAWAY PLUS HUNDREDS OF OTHER TOYS THAT WE DONT HAVE ROOM TO SHOW ANDY GUARD TOW TRUCK Sturdy tow truck « 66' ANDY GUARD BULLDOZER Just lika tha dozars. Grae young moka - baliava I 66' BAYSHORE GIANT RACER Built long, low and slaok, just lika tha big Q racors. Wondarful hours of fun for young- Taffy’s Game Assortment Tramandous gamo os-sortmant, including Toffy's Shopping Spra* OJid. many MILTON BRADLEY^MES OB' • Milton Bradley’s Hollow* Hoad o Milton Bradley’s Qet'the-Mossate o Milton Bradley’s Outer Limits o Eberhard’s Scribble*buc o Handy Dan Tool Set o Army Helmet with Net • Army Walkie-Talkie Set o Embroidered Western Sombrero • Macnetie Alphabet Board o Bobbins Head Monsters • Lido Knock*em Down Dame All Items Subject • Lido Pinball Machine Games • Transofram Tic-Tae-Toe • Tieo Little Majesty Telephone o Bayshore Giant Racer • Barbie and Ken Shelves • Erase-o-Sketch Gams • Shirley Temple Beauty Bar • Kenner’s Bafpipes • Macnetie Checkers • Little Tyke Tools • Transogram Bowling Pin Set GILBERT BANSHEE ROLLER SKATES Sturdy plastic skates ... completely unbreakable and rust-proof. Adjustable length, toe-strap and ankle strap. REDUCED FOR THIS SALE ONLY 6P Hoad, Gat Tha AAat-saga, Outar Limit*. Hour* of family funi » V. TEA SETS or KITCIffiN SETS... Choice ArioM Palnor ROLF FAME Absorbing* intensting, entertaining and educational. This is a torrific valuo, ospociolly roduced for this TRAIHEHGINEAHD3CARS Durablo plastic snop-togothorcors and train ongino for tho budding train onginoor. Unbrookoble. POOL TABLE BY LIDO QUN AND HOLSTER SETS MARYPOPPINSRUB-ONS 66' tioMfon ... n’t 4rr, na mmt, M •tain, oa cloan up. Ttw «a*t oKciting 66' DOLL AND CRADLE SET TIM. STURDY DOLL BED, V* VALUE 16 Anothor wondorful addition to dolly's nursory. YOUR CHOICE OF THESE BARBIE ACCESSORIES ]49 Value Barbies scrap-book, diary, auto-■■■■n graph book, dictionary, clutch bag, ■MBMy wallot...yourchoico. IF 2 YAMKEES IM POMTIAC... MIRACLE MILE SHCPPING CENnR-PERRY AT MCRTCALM-RIGHTS to 9, SURDAYS to T THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1965 D^l Hanoi Link to China Rails Are Main Bomb Target WASHINGTON (AP) - U.S. bombing hai b«en concentrating heavily in the past several weeks on railroad line North Viet Nam’s capital with Red China, U.S. officials said today. What gives this pattern of attack si^iificance is that this single track line is the major rail connection betwera parts of Cong Capture U.S. Civilian Communist China. Trains bound from one part of southern China to another must travel through Hanoi. ★ ★ w Thus, in addition to impeding the movement of Chinese aid into North Viet Nam, the U.S. bombing may also be disrupting Chinese, conununications ‘ some extent. ★ ★ ★ U.S. jets have been hitting Curtis E. LeMay, retired Air repeatedly at tracks, bridges" ........................ and yards along the rail route extending to the northeast and northwest from Hanoi. Hlgh- Porce chief of staff, that not enough air power is being used in the Viet Nam war. ^ - LeMay, former head of the «lso strategic Air Command, told a " ‘uncheon Thursday honoring have been smashed. DISPUTE CLAIM Officials discloaed this while disputing allegations by Gen. ★ ★ ★ SAIGON (UPI) - An Amer-lean civilian has been kidnaped by Viet Cong guerrillas while on a daring attempt to travel 200 miles up the South Vietnamese coast by motorscooter. U.S. Embassy officials identified the miss^ man as Joe L. Dodd, 24, whose next of kin was identified as his stepfather, Homer Dodd of PaoU,Okla. Dodd was born in Lockney, Tex. Dodd, an employe of the Raymond Morrison-Knudsen Construction Co., was reported missing after leaving Saigon Oct. 13 ed by guerrillas on a highway in Long Khanh Province, about SO miles north of Sai^, and was last seen being led across a rice field. His motor scooter was later recovered. The police did not give the exact date of Dodd’s capture by the Conununists. Seething Marine in Viet Blasts Antiwar Protests MOLINE, ra. (AP) - An angry young Marine lieutenant fighting in Viet Nam said today be has “bepm to develop a hatred for some of you" antiwar demonstrators. am speaking to those of you who carry idiotic placards denouncing our stand in Viet Nam and march in circles that closely resemble your pattern of thinking," wrote Lt. Ward S. Johnson. ★ ★ ★ "And I am speaking to you iteUectiials,* college students and professors, who undermine our efforts with your teach-ins. And I am speaking to those of you who have called the Marines in Viet Nam animals, butchers and killers of women Between 70,000 apd 80,000 families are di^laced each year because of public construction projects, including urban renew-|i al work, public housing and road building activity. Johnson, 24, wrote to his wife, Stephanie, and asked that she offer the letter to their home town newspaper, the Moline Daily Dispatch. The newspaper printed the letter today. BROAD GIUN The lieutenant suggested that ‘you do not offer your remarks" about butchers and kill-Ts of women and children ‘directly to a Marine who has returned home from Viel Nam.” ‘I’m sure that he wHl have a He said a ‘‘feeling inside of me has nearly reached the boiling point for another group of you — the ever-increasing group (rf American youths that practices the art of draft-dodging. ★ * ★ Johnson criticized hurry-up marriages to beat draft deadlines, adding, ‘Til bet you’re real proud of yourselves,” in a direct reference to young men. TEEMING WITH RATS He described conditions in Viet Nam as filthy and said the “countryside is teeming with rats every bit as large as our corn-fed Midwest variety.” Ifis platoon “of war babies and high school dri^uts" fighting in the Chu Lai area since May has been “tremendous.” A University of Illinois graduate who enlisted in the Marine Cforps, Johnson directed another portion erf his letter to “the rest of you Americans” who are only observers of the antiwar demonstrations. “Doesn’t that group ot bab-Uing nitwits that denounce our stand in Viet Nam arouse your anger? “How in the hell can you permit the voices ol a few thousand broad grin of satisfaction on his to be heard above your mil-jfade when he appears in court lions? to answer to charges of assault* “When are your demonstra-and battery.” Itions and teach-ins being held?’' him as winner of the 1965 Collier Trophy that because of a holdback in air power “there are people still getting killed who shouldn’t be killed.” The U.S. officials defended U.S. bombing policy, saying it I has been directed at destroying' military targets and trying to* stop the flow of men and arms South Viet Nam, rather I than being an offensive to destroy North Viet Nam’s economy. ! These officials described the, bombing as pursuing “limited, objectives.” Citing results, they said 130 bridges — important links on roads and railroads — have been nuKle impassable. I WWW About 90 per cent of the traf-| fic in Communist soldiers and weapons bound for South Viet Nam travels over North Viet Nam’s rail and road network,! these officials estimated. Thursday, officials also reported: I More than 20 sites for Soviet-| built antiaiiipraft missilees have been spotted in North Viet Nam. I Most are not operational. I About 25,000 Viet Cong soldiers have been killed in Viet' Nam this year, but despite the losses the number of Commu-, riist regular and irregular troops has increased in the past^ four months. Last year’s Viet' Cong losses were placed at 17,- Twenty-eight American servicemen were killed in action in the week ended last Monday. Since January 1961, 830 Americans have been kilM. And, in a Senate speech. Sen. Thomas J. Dodd, D-Conn., said' there are clear signs Viet Cong morale is beginning to crack. I The Communists, he said, now realize they cannot win the war* and “hope to achieve at the conference table the victory which has been denied them on the field of battle.” | The more you drink Soft Whiskey, the harder it gets to drink anything else. It’s easy to develop a taste for the easy life. (Especially after you’ve had it hard all your life.) ^ It's the same story with SoftWhiskey. It's .a lot easier to swallow. And a lot easier all the way down. It’s like having that “taste of honey.’’ But don’t get the idea thatSoftWhis-key’sforsoft people. Uhuh!lt’s86proof and doesexactly whatany86 proof does. It just does it softer. So take it easy. While we’re on the subject, one way f---------—I- „ -I we soften Soft Wh iskey is by doi ng some distilling in small batches as opposed to large ones. The rest of the process will have to remain our secret. Other distillers have been searchingfora Soft Whiskey for years now. And even we failed thousands of times in year after year of experiments before we got it Forgive us for seeming so cagey. But quite honestly, after all our work we wouldn’t want to have you drinking^-thing else. Calvert Extra $1085 $452 $285 IncludM All Taxes BLENDED WHISKEY- 86 PROOF-65% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS ©1965 CALVERT DIST. CO., N.Y.C. D-« . THE POyflAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBJER 22, 1965 P ' X .X 0" ' MARKETS The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by tbem in wholesale (nckage lots. Quotations bre furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Thursday. Produce Motors Are Strong Appl«, crab, bu. Appt«. Dtllcloui. GoWen. bu. Appm, Deikiout, Rad, bu. Apples, Jonatlian, bu. Grapes, ConcorO, p Caullflowar, di. Celery, Pascal, dz. s Celary, Pascal, di. c Celery, amitc, di. cn Celery, arbite, dl. c Eogplant, bu. Gourds, pk. bskt. Horseradish, pk. bsk Kohlrabi, dz. bchs. • eaks, dz. bchs. IS, 1^^^ M Potatoes, 30 Iba......... Potatoes, 25 lbs......... Pumpklnt. ton ........... Radishes, Mack, Vi bu. Radishes, red, dz bchs. Radishes, srhlta, dz. bchs Squash, Delicious, b Mart Continues Record Way NEW YORK (AP) - Motors and other heavy industrials put on a strong showing as the stock market continued to roll on to new records. With trading very active, key st^s were up from fractions to around 3 points. ★ « ★ Trading interest continued' very eager in lower-priced isles. With sales of 1966 auto models reported to be off to the fastest start in history, auto shares bought vigorously, so much so that General Motors was delayed in i^ing. Its first trade was at a new high of 111, a gain of IH on blocks of 24,000 and 13,800 shares. EYE DIVIDEND In addition to the booming sales in the auto industry, GM had the further stimulation of hopes for generous dividend ac-|tion or possibly a stock split when directors meet Nov. 1. The stock rose close to 2 points. Chenokals, coppers, office equipments and drugs were mostly higher. '' ★ ★ ★ The Associated Press average of 60 stocks at noon was up .5 at 352.2 with industrials up 2.2, rails off .8 and utilities off .2. The Dow Jones industrial average was up 3.62 at 953.90. These and Standard & Poor’s After Mild Slowdown Business Picking Up Beautification Bill Is Enacted Backers Join LBJ at Signing Ceremony WASfflNGTON (AP) - Gon- By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK - Economy watchers are reporting si^ today that ^ business pace is quick-ening again after the mild slowdown in recent weeks. Few expect the gains to bei 500-stock index were working yalescing President Johnson. “ marked in toward historic highs on an in-li,,,,^ ^ome at the White House,l“)e m®"** terim basis. One lir more ofi . ^ . ^. .. . . .. of 1965 as in these averages has made a.®*®'*® highway be*hU-lpj.gyjj,jjg record closing high every daylficaUon bill passed by the House t e r s of the DAWSON this week. ' just how much longer steel cus-iat the Morgan Guaranty Trust tomers will go slow on ordering (]o.. New York, point out that more metal is debatable. In the transportation equip-lent field, orders have picked up markedly. Much is traceable to ordering of commercial airliners and to big government Prices were irregularly higher on die American Stock Exchange. (>)rporate bonds were mostly unchanged. U.S. Treasury bonds were higher. The New York Stock Exchange on the eve of his gallbladder operation. Many of those who helped get the bill through — his wife Lady Bird, congressmen, conservationists and garden clubbers — were invited to the afternoon ceremony in the East Room. year. But even fewer look for. ‘recent statistics, particularly relating to the labor market, contain strong hints that the economy is operating rather close to the limits consistent with over-all price stabil- contracts for both qircraft andity." missiles. I what they mean Is that too * * * big a jump in the rate of in- The backlog of unfilled orders'crease of the GNP might trigger for durable goods has jumpedjan inflationary rise in the cost by $750 million in the last month'of living to a total .of $58.9 b “ ing busy weeks ahead for many producers. Economy watchers are now 'predicting that the Gross Na- any pronounced or prolonged tional Product should rise by $8 ,,ere and there slowdown. ,bilUon to $9 bilUon in the final ^hj. The labor figures the bankers cite are the drop in the jobless rate to 4.4 per cent of the total labor (o^, and the shortages , ★ three months of the year. This Hie stock market has brushed .would bring the nation’s total off the drop in industrial output output of goods and services fo as of little importance. Traders an annual rate of $685 billion by have their eyes instead on what year’s end. In the third quarter, they think wUl happen in 1966.1 the gain was $11 bilUon. The President had made this ^ “iS ‘JjlL^^lJSlkNOTHER JUMP ------- his last item of business before I Bankers are saying that an-been remarkably well balanced his surgery Oct. 8, and he made ^ mereiore jy„jp might be during its 56 months .of almost his first official ceremonial®. ._______ . .,j la dubious blessing. Economists continuous upturn. act on his return to the White' home build-j----------------------------------- scales to rise pressure und^ raise prices. But a moderate ness activity, likely today, t stride by an economy that has NEW YORK (APi-FollowIng h ABC Con .70 ing have been blamed for the .slackening in total activity in AC Cp 1.20 irdMot 2.40 Kate. bu. Muslard, bu. Spinach, bu. Turnip, bu. .. Endiva. HaactMd, bu. Escarola, bu. Eicarolc, bleadiad Lattuce, Bibb. pK. bile Lettuce, Haad, bu...... Poultry and Eggs lain Nat Ford7 _ . bds.1 Hlfb Law UsI CliB.lFora Dair JO 42 42V5 41?b 42 - WilFreept S 1.M 20 25Ni 2SH 25H - la.FruettCp 1JO 47 44M 4444 44^ - W 150 62ZU «1H <1^ 242 53H 51Va 52 - H Gam Sko 1.20 II TOVk 49H 70 -M G Accept 1.20 31 104k 10H lOVk - Vb Gen^ 1.20 23 4744 47Vk 4744 + 44|GenDynam 1 44 21 270 % 0 '0^' .........i II lading C tkhCl) > 13H 13\4 13k 35ik - ik 7 542g r .70b ow .40 3.40 .... BigelotrS IJO Boeing 3 Borden 1.11 'SersWDr 2.20 'Briggs Si- 2a Brill My 1.21 Brunswick Bucy Erie 2 Budd Co M CHKAOO UVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP) - USDA)—Horn 5JOO; --t -botcher* 50 to 75 lower; 1-2 TRm lb Burrough* butcher* 23.25-21.75; mixed 1-3 H0-3« to 22.75-23JO; W 240-3*0 to 32J0-33.M;I —1.^ 1.1 100-350 lb sow* 21.00-21.75,- 2-1 Col Flnonl 3Sw& to W^lfljorboer* 17JO.10.00.1^1 Pick -W Cattle 5JO0; sleiigtiter *t^ 25 tower; 15 load* most prime 1.200-1,375 Celum H M lb MauWtiar steer* 2S.25-2IJ0; htah choict CompRL .45* pFime 1,150-1,375 lb* 27JO-2I.25; Camp Sp .10 iw. an. ,«odiCen Dry 1 21 444b 44>k 4 -16 106 1 041k 10444 - 1 :iK? iniurNoA InfarHcSt 1.60 Livestock 5 64Vb 63 43'k 4 1314 41 41 -1'k 7 avk t'k 114 — IbijohnsManv 2 F 4b|Jon^an^.N Joy Mtg 2 % " I”" 1-7 ' ,7'Sinclair 2.20 i MW 75H 7* - Ik '•» 27 311k H'k 311k -F V, 1 671k 67'k — ( 54 l3'/a 114b 1 1* 704b 70'k 1 774b + 3344 3344 - but announced no i^ans. Coming home Thursday afto- two weeks in Bethesda By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “We are in oar 59e and would like to invest some of our savings. Our only holdings But even the decline in steel at present are American Teleproduction and the sharp drop' phone and Commonwealth Ed-v».,„i zi«» 1 j * i“ *>®w orders for the metal ison. We would like to invest ^®®‘f"* couldn’t keep the rest of the du-| in Toledo Edison, Lehigh Val-™ i , “^f'lrable goods makers from regis-| ley Industries or Indian Head on intematioMl recovery in volume of Mils. Do these have growth Ck neyTorden. Th^aren’t back to potentials?’’ D. M. Treasury Henry H. Fowler from !i!v’re**^mDriE*”aEafo^ Ami' difficult for the his bed they re improving agam. And „„trained investor to differenti- er growth, I suggest Northern Dlinois Gas. Roger Spear’s 48-page Investment Guide is available' to all readers of this column. Clip this notice and send $1.09 with yonr name and address to Roger E. Spear, in care of The Pontiac Press, Box 1018, Grand Central Station, New York, N.Y. 10017. (Copyright, INS) His chief surgeon, Dr. George. C. Hallenbeck of the Mayo Clin-Rochester, Minn., had come -to stay with Johnson at the White House as long as “the President is there.” The doctors had given Johnson “the full green light” and sent him home witii just a “lean and Ughtweight ba^ge” over the portiem of the incision where the last of three drainage tubes had been removed. _ The President kissed his Navy 4^ + 0-g ) Mary Carroll of 341 17 ~ 1*44 ^ + 14 Cleveland, goodby, told fellow S mJ ^ t,S'patients left behind “Now you J 751b 7414 fU S P"** ® ■ 311% 211b 0- CoroP Lt 1 ______1,100-lJCO 23J0-24.75; tour loH* nign ennee m prlmt 03M75 lb *tought«r MHer* 25._ „ 25J5; choice 75M75 to 2UO-25.00; mteed.Cerrto l.M oood and choice 23.0O.23JD; good S’S!’ rUlTT! ■'*** &.00; utility and oemmeretol cow* 13.75- C« Jl 15.»; utility and commercial bull* lM«Fl£?.'!I..”*' IStdOllOh 1.M) _ Vb'st Packaging f. StanWar 1.50 f 44lStauffCh 1.40 f Vb StarlDruo .75 .Steven*JP 3 251k 3444 25Vb 40 774b 77'k 77»% 31 414% 404b 404b 330 ll'/a II 1144 20 *344 *2'k *24b -44 visit to a ward of Marines wounded in Viet Nam fighting. ,Kay*arRo M iKannacott < . )u!lCamCLd I 344b 3414 344b -F 44 324b 3314 324* -F torr/wc IJO n 6m 61'4 61to -F1Vb| 3 634* 6344 634*- 16 454b 4544 454% II 71 7014 71 10 Il4k ll'k 104% -F 130 114b 211* 211* - Shaap 600; ilauWitor tonto ,-jJ II*ugrito®l4»rto**oTSS-OO; miI^"wiod giffO^P '’2 ^ ^ and^ice 23.00-24J0; cull to good wooled ^-tart .70 24 204* 144b 114* *lau|ttter ewa* 4.0M.00. i 11 I5'k 0444 05 II 3l'k 374b M c 13 44Vk 441% 4IVk -F Vb LtogettfcM 5 137 4B1k 341k 144* — l*'!-^' “TL LaarSiao .60 LahPorCam I Lah Val Ind Lehman I.l2g LOFGI* 2J0a Vk'Tampa El .5 3 65 644b *44b - Vb|T»»C« 13 3144 311k 30Vk '^iT^SiSUn*, ---1-— ITexPLd .35g 45 221k 22'4 2244 -F 1% Textron IJO 31 171k 174b 17Vk - 1% Thiokol .571 1 331b H Ik TImk RB 1.00 iLHtonln 41'k -F u LivIngaO 16 77H 761k 77 -F American Stocks NOON AMERICAN NEW YORK (AP) - Foltowtog li*t of lalacted *tocfc tramactlon* o micollinRad JO I4l 464* ; M*.) HMl L; 13 iTk : Nat,Col Ga* 1.20 1 t'k 74b-F Ml 4244 4“ ■ m 3ovb 244b 244b 2444 31 304b 11 ,^.Lan*SG* 1.1 ulLono 1*1 Lt 1 vZjLorniard 2J Mack Truck* MacyRH 1.30 '.70J I Trantitron _ .... jTrICont l.lto 14 lim 114 + 4* Twant C M> - ^ .. , Un Pac IJO MS 404b 401% 404b 44% 44»-F « Cameb C Canto Pi IConEdi* 1.M 1% ConElacind I .1* CnNGa* 2.30 1 221% 221% 221%- Ik ConsPow IJO 53 74* 74* 74% Containr 1.20 4 I 5-16 I 5-161 5-16-F1-I6 Cont Air JO 31 14 13V, 14 -F 1% Cont Can 2 JO - “ 5'k 54%-F3-1* Cont In* 2.60 T SlwcKnAZSb :K*m 1.70 tadCp 1.70 TTSiSSSX: ” 4?* 414* 42'*' + _ II 124b 3llk 324b -FI4b —M— 4 2246 2244 2244 142 5744 561k S6H 425 7014 674b gV% ~ S 40 514b 57H 574b - Ik 42 31 3044 104b-4b 231 164b 16 ■ I 511% 5 > aVk 6714 671% - 44 I 1534% 152 152'k + 4% I 204b Il4b 2014 -F V% I 7414 724* 734, *- 44-16 UnAIrL IJO UtBorax JO* USGyptm 3a n l4Vk 131% 14 -F 6 61'k 6244 63'k -F 12 I 54k 14% . 104 264% 261% 26'k - 44 2446 241% 341k If 2044 3t1k M'k - 11 304b 304b 30H .. 41 70'k 6l'k 6IH - I 404b 411% 404b -F 4b UnMatoh JO I 174b 1 I 501% -FI I 4'/% - 1 I 171k II 2 1 15-16 Cont Oil 2 Ctryw RIty .30d Craola P 2.60a Equity Cp .151 Fargo Oil* Felint on .15* Fly Tiger S7«ar.4o 42^^14 *74* ^ + 14 34 264k 26H 264b -F > 240 254* 24Vk 251% " x1 431% 42Vb 421% 41 144% 334% 241% I 131% 134* 1344-F 1% } 11% 14% Ilk I 14% 11% 11%- 1% Dan River 1 I 124% 121% lP/%-M lOaycoCp .4«b ! 414 4 f'4-F 14 Day PL 1*4 ) 014 OH CM (Deere IJOa I 4H 41% 4'k— H DellaAIr 1.60 I 23'4 23 23'4-F H ClenRIoGW 1 I 5514 54H S4H-F11k DetEdi* 1.30 ■ SH+ 1% Det Steel .40 31 1'% l'% RIC Group 12 1 1 -Dlsiey .40o Scurry Rain 6 15H 15Vk 15H-F H DonieMn .lOa SbdW Air 231 IIH II 11 DougAir .6b0 Signal OilA la 20 27 37 27 -F H DoeTCh 1.00b . Sparry R wt 1* 6H *14 6H-F H Draptr Cp 1 Syntax Cp .SOg 106 116'% 114H 136H-F1HiDrasiar 1 60 Taehnicol .75 21 IIH » it - W DukePowar i UnCantrM .20 27 4'4 41% 4'k duPont 3.75d CdOyrigMad by th* Ataociatad Pra** 1165 Duq Lt 1 ao _______________________________ DynamCp .40 E*«t Air Lin Prlday'* lit DIvidtnd* Daclarad |E**tGF 3.47t ' Mohaaoo .70 ' Monsan 1.40b ; MontOU IJO VI an. taiv m. MonIPow IJO S IS- m3 I 3:MonlW*rd 1 g ’ll NiorrallCo lb imZ a *3 , A4otorola 1 l05f T ~l AAKt TT 1 H 47 It'4 IIH IIH ---D-------------- Let Alrl 1.20 3 2IH »H 2IH NatBitc 1.00 27 22H »H 22H -F H NalCan JOb 4 35 14H 35 -F HLCaihR 1.20b 64 43 41H 41H - HlNatDairy 2J0 15 1I4H 114H 114H -F H Nat Oi*t 1.40 13 20H 30H 20H Nat Full IJO 26 37H 37'4 r'k Nat GanI .30 33 15H 14H 15H -F HLatCyp* 3b 56 7H 70H 704*-'k |NL*ad ITSfl 1 513 l!3 5J'‘ t.3 *2 «4 STk t v%' 23 1Mb 1041 34'k . iVanad Cf I* 21 52M 52H S2H — 40^*71*'' ^ 1* Sh 101% -F HiVaacoMt IJO g ^ 60H -FIH It t*k an *H -F H VaEIPw 1.30 .. — 'T 151* 151* W4 + H _W-X-Y-Z— 2 S3 23 Sh ? S'walwdrth Co 1 7H 7H 2 Si Si 4«k ^ ";WamPlct JO * 1* 14H ! Sh 5* n 43 M 17H 37H 3 24 24 24 . ~ 37 136 13614 117 - H i; 2714 27>4 27'k —N— 25 IttH 10644 107'k 47 SN4 5114 WH I JK Z H '^'iAIrLIn JO « 1 3 WItBanc 1.10 M17 ZhI!S«*2«- '•« ?iWOnT#l ’•.WtatoEl IJO Iwayarhr llo V^iWhlrlCp 1.10 60 40H IIH 40H -F1H News in Brief Paul Wilson, 29, of 381 Josiyn reported to Pontiac police last night the theft of $350 in clotii-ing fix>m his automobile, which was parked in front of 185 Orchard Lake. Rummage, St. Benedicts Church, Huron and Lynn St., Sat., Oct. 23, 9-12. -AdV. Rnmmage, Congregational + ^ Church, Fri., i-7, Sat., 9-12. I^mage sale October 23, $ a'.m. to 4 p.m. Oakland County Society for Crippled Children and Adults PTA. 1105 N. Telegraph Rd., Pon^. —Adv. Rnmmage-Bake Sale: North East Community Church, Mt. Clepiens at Featherstone —Oct. 23, 9 a. m. -Adv. Rnmmage Sale: Saturday, October 23, 9-12. Our Lake of the Lakes, grade school all-purpose room, Waterford. —adv, Rammage Sale: Orchard Lake Community Church, 5171 Commerce Rd. Sat., 8:30 -12. -adv. Rnmmage Sale: Fri., Sat, Sun. and Mon. 569 N. Perry. —adv. I 7IH 77H 77H ^ Jl r'k % -F1HI M-WInnOIx 1.32 »* -I; H I* -4 'k k -4h 4 -F' 'k 'k - H|Newb*rry JJ 10 Illk 43 32H 32 33 46 lO'k lOH lO'k _E— mCREASEO AwEwny I Mahawk R JO Q 12-3 13-21 EdoaGG Jta ElBondS Til lEIPaioNG I EmarEI 1.20 EmarRad JO J I10H 110 1I0H -F 23 56H 5514 5514 -F 12 26 25H 36 -F 7 37H 37H 37H -F -.JEnoEl 1.31 - H NJ Zinc I* INYCant 1.30* - H NiagMP 1.10 ^114 Nodolk Wt 6 - 'k NA Avia 3J0 - H NorNatOa* 3 INofPac 3.40* NSt* Pw 1.44 -•JlJOTr. 'j. Band* In th* toragaing tabto are annual idiiburianiantt baaed on ih* tott quarterly ler **mFannu*l dactaratton. Ipaclat er 13 137% 12514 127 Parke, Davis Reports Record 9-Month Profits AskHighCourtij toOKVoteAdii I ate between growth, cyclical' and speculative issues. If you' want growth, Toledo Edison] |is the only one of your suggested purchases that would qualify.! |Lehigh Valley Industries is a I low-priced speculation which I has risen rather sharply on in-I creasing earnings. I would buy Ithis issue only if you are pre-WASHINGTON (AP) -- In a|pgr^ assume considerable rare legal move, the federal government has asked the Su-, Head is an excellent, preme (^urt to declare ^Utu-Leii.managed textUe, but this tional ^ controversiid provi-Uock like others in its group is siotu of the 11-week-oW voting subject to variation in earnings rights law. rather than growth — because!^ ® federal judge is dead for And the Justice Department cyclical changes in demandl^‘® session of Congress, but the urged the court to stop what it for its products. I advise Toledoh^ite House says President called efforts of three Southern Edison, or if you wish even fast-'*^®**"®®" f*®® "® P*®" *® ofatoo __ Alahoma Tniiioiana dr3W H Still, after Sen. Edward M. Morrissey Bid Down, Not Out LBJ Still Planning to Resubmit Nomination WASHINGTON (AP) - Fran-'cis X. Morrissey’s nomination to states — Alabama, Louisiana and Mississippi — to obstruct enforcement of the new law. ' Big Draft Call Set for County in December Kennedy, D-Mass., electrified the Senate yesterday by moving to send the nomination back to the judiciary committee, some senators said they would be surprised if Johnson resubmits it next year. Kennedy i« chief sponsor of the Morrissey nomination. After Congress quits for this Becanse of the importance of the case—and in order to assnre a final decision before primary elections in the three states next spring and snm-mer — Atty. Gen. Nicholas Katzenbach asked the So-preme Conrt yesterday to as- serf original jnrlMliction. | Michigan draft boards yester- _______________ In effect, diis short-circuits, day were ordered to deliver year, the President can give the federal judicial process by 3,3M men for induction during Morrissey a recess appoint-ikipping U.S. district and appel-December, including 237 from ment. late courts — where litigation Oakland County, could easily consume a full year * — and placing the case immediately in the hands of the highest court.. The Justice Department dfically asked the court to affirm the constitutionality of those provisions of the act suspending literacy tests, authorizing federal registrars and requiring local registrars to oiroll those voters approved by the federal officials. Treasury Position 10 dal* a year Oct. II IMS OaRpatt* Flical Year July Oct. W, 1M4 t 5J24J4ljaj| 3M17,l3Un.l4 41,244,751411.22 X-Tetal DaW- 330JMk17XB4IJI Stocks of Local Intonsf Elovr** attar decimal pelnl* or* alglithl OVBE THE COUNTEE ITOCKt _jotdttoM tram th* NASO art rapra-(antatlvd Iwtar daalar ptleo* of appraxF inataly II azn. Inter .dealer marMM ctiang* ihraughout th* day. Rrk** net todud* rataU mar*—------—— AMT Carp. 34 54H S3 ‘ 44 25H 24H 1 —F— 234 143H 13tH n -IH Oufb Mar JO -F HlOwamlll IJ5 OxtdPap liO tissue DETROIT (UPI) -Parke, Daxis It Co. yesterday reported ^lar *F* MantHlad to t* ^ _____ ... h^e* _ ^ . .sales of $160J million in the «i Sv: Sh raSrX SSSf dTIidJSd'*l-LteM first nine months of 1N5. , ^rX'^elLiSto. 11 is git Profits were 16.4 per cent&'gtoVu “>e comparable period cry^T^. ^ dand *r ipiit ug. k-Paci*^ or Mid Mill Cent ahead. Earnings during the 43 35'k 25 25H -F H dand* In i**u*. p—Paid pcriod totaled $1.46 per share. 12 2t 2t 2t -F H thi* year, dhrldand omittad, dafarrad er s US ss ss: s r-^rai*^ WnW-prtai 150 liH IIH IIH -F H dividand. t-PaU to (tock durino IM4, 25 57 M 56-1. aitimatad caah valu* on *x-dlv(d*nd or *x- 4 4l'4 41 41 — H dUlrlbutlen data, p , z-Sala* to tuM. I ” - ........ ' ::;:i« 334.n-F0.4l FadOStr IJO •J.^J7^rn22;’r 0*11_AM « 13 IIH IIH IIH - HLac Petrol II 10H,10H 10H 43 70 41 61 -IH'POCTST 110 21 26H 16H 36H » Sh Sh Sto-H PiShSP i% ’S Sh g gi* L hinkin'bonkritotey or rpothmntm orlvw'/^ 4 44H 44H 44'4 -r H PoromPIcI 1 7 6IH 65H 45H - H bttof raorgonizod under the Etnkiiiptcyl IMS HiSh “ fi?* r *• ft JL. IL, .. Act, or ^rHIy^^eaaumM ----- ““ ' 1 41t x37 24 23H 23H -F H Paab 16 — H p*nl*«. m-Feraign Itau* 14 - Hltar**: aquallzatton tax. It was the largest December] The Senate would have to pass call since the early days of the on the nomination next year, Korean campaign. are 119 from the three PontUic boards, 45 from Farmington and 1$ from Royal Oak. Draft boards were also requested to speed up classification actions, including the review of all previous deferments, in an effort to make sufficient! !t'l though, and Morrissey would have.to.j£Sign M|2QJ)0I):^^ pdst as' a ■'Boston “MunicipaJ Court judge with no certainty he would be approved. EMOnONi^L SPEECH In an emotional speech asking Uun the nomination be returned to committee, Kennedy said its -compilation of “a full and corn- manpower available to m e e t'plete record” on McHrissey will current calls. On a statewide basis, Oakland (founty’s quota was second only to Wayne County, which was given a figure of l,(fi9. MEN 19 OR OLDER Col. Arthur Holmes, state director of Selective Service, said the December call will be filled with men 19 or older and men who were marriod after Oct. 36, 1965. The largest previous monthly request this year had been 2,625 for November. The lowest figure was 284 for Felniiary. Business Notes result in his confirmation. And, Kennedy said of the old friend of the Kennedy fnm-ily, “he will be n credit to the federal jndfciary.’’ But, there was widespread feeling backstage at the Senate that Morrissey’s nomination for the U.S. District Court in Massachusetts may be dead forever. Johnson nominated Morrissey largely on Kennedy’s strong recommendation. SENATE MATTER White House' press secretary Bill D. Moyers told newsmen Kennedy had informed the President Wednesday night it R.»tnA«4 I n7 n - « . «4 J4« *«®®ed best to have the nomi-Rapond J^ W i I cox of 44(B nation returned to committee. Barchester, Bloomfield Township, has as-i fumed the position of porate vice] president ofl American Met-j al Products Co. Wilcox, 49, is former pres-j “The President toW him,” Moyers said, “he hfouelf was very much behind Morrissey’s nomination or he wouldn’t have 'submitted it, but ft was a Senate matter and he would abide by the senator’s judgment.’^ Corp. eenity was presidoft of Norri^ Thermador Corp. in Lot An- THE PONTIAC PRES& TRIDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1965 Jacoby By JACOBY & SON Both South players had a bidding problem on board 135 of the international match. At each table North had opened with one diamond and ' rebid t( spade after South responded one heart. The American I South s 01V e d| ^his problem JACOBY p e s s 1 m i s -| tically and merely bid two hearts. This wasn’t the worst underbid of all time or even bad underbid. If North should happen to have a bad heart ' holding the chances are that two hearts would be the correct bid. Unfortunately for America North held ace and one heart as part of a slightly better than minimum hand. North passed and South bad to |riay two hearts. The Italians put up their usual good defense. The seven of cltabs was opened and East won with the king. He returned the deuce of diamonds to his partner’s king. Back came d diamond. East took his ace and played ace and another chib. South discarded a spade And the defense had five tricks in before South NOETH (D) AAQJ6 VA7 ♦ Qse «JS42 WEST EAST A97S4 A103 V J10 9 49 4 2 ♦ K1093 4A942 «7I «AK1096 SOUTH AK82 49KQ8693 ♦ J 7 Both vulnerable See article for bidding and opening lead. Astrblogii By SYDNIY OMASa UrSHerSty ... AlltelWWHmt Ww wyy." ^ lvoriTw#’'tlI*i 'for''tr7veT ’•pJelir ARIES (Merch 11 to .tarll If): Go cymyiting unuiuol frlend^iB. Yo« •>•, with Iho.lldo. MImIo with pooplt. Bo ,blo to pcrccivo outlino d futuro. Gain •lort tar tlp% hinft., Imoortant indicatad Ihroogh atudy of yoor papar, opmanti may ba hatehin*. Kay If dljplay wrWan word. LIST^NG*^' ^ '*'*^'* ” - Pci:^lrSrE£a-S »• irtoU 55. AtLSTtr'bir^i.kXi'i!-^^^^ """< taratti. Kay la baing eniatlva. y^JT .tart rprolaSt CANCER (Jona 11 to July GENERAL fENOlNClgS: Cycia hM tallf,. dlractlon^ Inrtn^loni. Sa 'fo, ubra, SCORPIO. SAGITTARIUS. LEO lJuly n to Aug. M): Fprtonata tima If you are willing to •"•k* . cattiont - and diangat. adlyltj^ Don't fall Into trap of “^*^^"’>.-5*21;, plata ona aiitgninant at a tIma. Concan- "^yrROO^AUB. n to Sapt. 11):_, Don|t( attampt to force to -- * and laa" la fine II this did him any good beci ||North simply ran off the rest of r; iniemaiionai maicn mmts. could make a move. Of course, he did make the rest of the' Q_The bidding hu bew.: tricks for his part score con- south Weat Nertb tract. ^ ^ Pbib 3 ♦ At the other table South®***“ jumped to three hearts and! You, South, hold; North made the winning deci- AAKQjsss 49AKJ PSS 4 slon. He went to three no trump! do you do? The play at three no-tmmp was short and sweet from the Italian standpoint. West opened the ace of c continued with the king and ten to set vp two more club jtales of the green berets D--8 By Robin Modra WHAT APS1 g>OPTOaP1pP©— eWBTHeMA'THKP peofoee whilc ■mey'Re blecpinqz "uavriSiir^. od. M).-cy^ ImmoJilP ^leotlon.. *KtynoU BPtln»<»m. i.rsjs'WM.t.'a.'Sw charltpblp proiPCta. Yw work wall l»-hlnd lha acanat now. Pra^ rlaaa. SAGITTARIUS (NpvJB h Excallant for tocial actIvHy Dpr^la^l (Dac. n te WSUloAsk for Find Hike DETROIT (AP)-Wayne State University will ask the Legisla-, ture for a 42 per cent hike— $11.26 million in operating money for the 196647 academic year. Hie school’s board of gover-nws Wednesday decided to sedc a $37,947,167 sUte allocation for 196647. This was compared with the current, 196546 allocation of $26,683,847, the school said. * * * If granted, the additional money would provide approximately $9 million to increase salaries of faculty members and other employes and would allow the hir-:=1B| wMtttkmat emirfoyet, a Wayne spokesman said, w ★ ★ In other action, the board named Dr. Tommy N. Evans professor of obstetrics and gynecology in the Wayne State School of Medicine. DOCTOR RETIRING Evans, formerly professor of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Michigan Medical Center, will replace Dr. Harold C. Mack as chairman of the school’s obstetrics and gynecology department in January, 1966. Dr. Mack is retiring from the chainnanship on that date. ★ ★ ★ Dr. Qement A. Fox. of Milwaukee was named professor and chairman of the Medicine Schools Anatomy Department. Fox, farmer associate diairman of the Marquette University School of Medicine Anatomy Department, will fill a vacancy caused Iw the death of Dr. Fer-dlnando Morin. The Wayne governors also accepted gifts, grants and contracts totaling $1,778,195. D—4 THE PONTIAC PKESS. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1265 ■ones OP niouc himiino *'4«53SS!ll'^'£r*‘Rt»weml«l (NMNM DmHMvi) District: s (M S4 St Engllsti VIM * - ~1 pmpwfF ta"^ •» bnary. “Hfsttsd «rt Ch*n« Harris. Owlrinm............- - Two. Planning Conunlsslon. Stanley Fre-villa. Planning Commission Secretary. October B and November 1^.1 8tt*^>.L.R.R. to Orchard Lake nue shall constitvte the special asi ment district to defray I1.M7J0 ol estimated cost and expenses thereof and that S«Jt2.S0 ol the estimated cost and axpanses thereof shall be paid from the Coital Improvement Fund. Notice 1s hereby given that ttia Commission of the City of Pontiac, Michigan, will meet In the Commission Chamber on hear suggestions ai Dated: October If, 1965. OLGA BARKELEY NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Notice 1s hereby given that a pi_ hearinR will be held by the Pontiac C^ IMS, at I o'clock p. East Boulevard, ------------------------ following resolution adopted by the Pontiac eny Commission Oi^ber 19, 1965, beino Resolution No. By Comm. Wool feet of Lots 21, 22, 23. Now therefore be It resolved, that a public hearing notice be given In accordance with Section 2, Chapter XIII at the City Charter, as amandad. of the proposed vacating; Be It further resolved, that a public hearing be held on the proposed vacating above described on Tuesday, November 23, 1965, at l:M p.m„ E.S.T., in tha Commiuian Chambers, of the vacaM alley. I9,'*?9« OLGA BARKELEY City derk October 22, Oatad: October -------- ..Jl, 571 S. Lapeer Road, Lake Orion, Michi^, for the purpose o' — sidaring the rezonlng ftlom "Busines____ trict" and "Residential District No. 3" to "Multiple Family Residential Oistricr the foao«rlnB described two (2) parcels o Part of the Northeast quarter of Section 35, T4N, R10E, Orion Township, Oakland County, Michigan, described as beginning on the E^ line of M-14 Highway distant N 2° 41' E 6dlL64 feet from Intersection of said 2T W 996J2 feet to beginning, containing nine (9) acres. Owrter of the above property Is Dora Looney and the land b on the East side ot Hi^ way M-24 (Lapeer Road) South of East Sllverbell Road. Also the Northerly l«25 feet of -.......HI village No. •" 6 of Sectir-.jwnship. Os —-.......according tu .... It thereof recorded m Liber M o Corp. and the lan_ _ _ . ____ side of Highway M-24 (Lapeer Road) South of HHtIH Drive. A copy of tha toning map and t... prosnsed change it on file in the offica of tho Township Clerk and may ' October 22, 1965 NOTICE OF HEARING ON ESTABLISHING NORMAL HEIGHT AND LEVEL OF WATER IN WHITE LAKE IN HIGHLAND AND WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIPS OAKLAND COUNTY, MICHIGAN locatod In Sections 12 and 13 of Highland Township and Sections 7 and 11 of White Lake Township, Oakland County, Michigan. You Are Hereby Notified That the Oakland County Board of Supervisors hat caused to be filed,|- ------------------- plaint praying for this Court of the noi_____________________ of White Uke, said lake being localed m Sectiont 12 and 13 of Hlf^' ----------- ship and Sections 7 and li o Township, Oakland Counfy. Ybu Are Further Notified IT the County of Oakland If Court ... ...._____ „ te Oakland County Court House r, 1200 North Tetegraph Road. Pon- he m le optn- You Are Furttw N the normal height at 1019.10 feet aL. . you desire to appose of the level at 10)9. * d nof be granted to Complainant. S. JEROME BRONSON Prosecuting Attorney, Oakland County, Michigan By: ROBERT P. ALLEN Corporation Counsel HAYWARD WHITLOCK Ass'S Corporation Coc for Oakland County Attorney for Oakland Co. Pontiac, AUchigan Id November 5. 12 and Id! 1965 ,, CITY ELECTION To tha Quallfiad Ebdors; Notice It hereby given tha Election wlH be held In the City of Sylvan Lake. Caunty of Oakland, State of Mlchi-gan, on Tuesday, November Z IMS, ' nt place of holdlna ttw rlemnn b. City at Ifldicafed EOSALINO WILDGEN City Clerk Odabar <1 Mid 2L <961 NOTICES Cord of Thoqks ............ 1 In Momoriom ................2 Announcoments...............3 Florisi* ..................34 Funeral Diractors...........4 Cemetery Lots .............44 Personal .................4-B Lost and Found..............5 EMPLOYMENT Help Wanted Mole............6 Help Wanted Female......... 7 Help Wanted M. or F.........8 Soles Help, Male-Female...8-A Employment Agencies Employment Information ...94 Instructions—Schools.......10 Work Wanted Male ..........11 Work Wanted Female.........12 Work Wanted Couples_______124 SERVICES OFFERED Building Services-Supplies... 13 Veterinary.................14 Business Service...........15 Bookkeeping' and Taxes.....16 Credit Advisors .........16-A Dressmaking and Tailoring..17 Gardening .................18 Landscaping..............18-A Garden Plowing........... 18-B Income Tax Service ........19 Laundry Service ...........20 Convalescent-Nursing ......21 Moving end Trucking........22 Painting and Decorating....23 Television-Ro^o Service....24 Upholstering.............24-A Transportation ............25 Insuronce................ 26 Deer Processing............27 WANTED Wanted Children to Board..28 Wanted Household Goo^...29 Wanted Miscelloneops.......30 Wanted Money...............31 Wanted to Rent.............32 Sharo Living Quarters......33 " (d Real Estate...........36 RENTALS OFFERED Apartments-Fumished........37 Apartments—Unfurnished ...38 Rent Houses, Furnished ....39 Rent Houses, Unfurnished.. .40 Property Manogement_______404 Rent Lake Cottages.........41 Hunting Accommodations 41-A Rent Rooms.................42 Rooms With Board...........43 Rent Farm Property Hotel-Motel Rooms .........45 Rent Stores................46 Rent Office Space..........47 Rent Business Property.. .47-A Rent Miscellaneous.........48 REAL ESTATE Sale Houses ............. 49 Income Property............50 Lake Proj«^................51 Northern Property .......51-A Resort Property ...........52 Suburban Property..........53 Lots—Acreage ..............54 Sale Farms ................56 Sale Business Property_____57 Sale or Exchange...........58 FINANCIAL Business Opportunities.....59 Sale Land Contracts........60 Wanted Contracts-Mtges...60-A Money to Lend..............61 Mortgage Loons ............62 MERCHANDISE Swaps ....................... Sale Clothing ............ (A Sale Household Goods ......65 Antiques................ 65-A Hi-Fi, TV & Rodios.........66 Water Softeners..........66-A Tor Sale Miscelloneous_____67 Christmas Trees..........67-A Christmos Gifts .........67-B Hand Tools-Mochinery.......68 Do It Yourself.............69 Comeros-Service ...........70 Musical Goods..............71 Music Lessons ...........71-A Office Equipment...........72 Store Equipment............73 Sporting Goods ............74 Fishing Supplies-Boits.....75 Sond—Gravel—Dirt ..........76 Wood-Coal-Coke-Fuel ....77 Pefs-Hunting Dogs .........79' Pet Supplies-Service ___79-A| Auction Sales .............8D Nurseries .................81 Plants—Trees—Shrubs ....814 Hobbies and Supplies.......82 FARM MERCHANDISE Livestock ................ 83 Meats ...................83-A Hoy-Grain-Feed ............84 |oultry.....................85 t Equipment .......'....87 AUTOMOTIVE Trovel Troilers .............. Housetroilers ............89 Rent Trailer Spoce......... 90 Commercial Trailers.......90-A Auto Accessories............91 Tires-Auto-Truck ...........92 Auto Service ..............-93 Motor Scooters..............94 Motorcycles.................95 Bicycles ...................96 Boats—Accessories ..........97 Airplanes ..................99 Wonted Cars-Trucks.........101 Junk Cors-Trucks.........101-A Used Auto-Truck Parts ...102 New ond Used Trucks........103 Auto-Marine Insurance ...104 Foreign Core ..............105 New ond Used Cars ......106 Diol 332-8181 ‘ Pontiac Press Want Ads AOVBNT____ ABB teCBiVBD BY • I9JB. --- " —bliimo Death Notices ALDRICH, OCTOBER 21, 196E SOPHRONIA, 104 GoMner, Waterford Twp.; age 04; beloved mother of Mrs. Ruby Champion and Mrs. Rofh King; dear sister of Mrs. B. B. Alford. Also survived by 17 grandchildren. Funeral service the funeral home. h; belwedrother of 0 Futseral Home held Monday, Oc-a.m. at the Allen Lake Orion, waner C. Balla(^ of-rrtermant in Attica Attica. Mrs. Boosa (Clara) Kelley. Funeral aervica will be held Saturday, October 2X at 1:30 p.m. at the Hunteon Funeral Home with Rev. Theodore Allebach officiating. Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mrs. Boulier will lb in state at the BRIGHAM. OCTOBER 2A 1965. CHARLES E., 10206 Huron Street, (kXKtrlch, Michigan; agi 94; beloved father of Mrs. Marlorie Bright, Mrs. Ray Perry, and Charles M. Brigham; dear brother ?’AXr‘ Arthur (Marabelb) Finney, Ral^, Charles, George, and John Delbert Carr. Also survived by 10 grandchildren, 25 great-grandchll----------------------- —^at^rand- p.m. at the’ ^riSir ____________ Home in Plymouth. Inbrment in Riverside Cemebry, Plymouth. D V A R I C H, OCTOBER 20, 1965, MARY 0., 1660 Cooley Lake Road, Milford Township; age 15; beloved mother of Mrs. Flava DeRush, Mrs. Eva Urman, Anthony Dvarkh, Emil and John Schuster. Also survived by eight grandchiUren and ten great-grandchildren. Recitation of the Rosary will be today at 0 p.m. at the Richardson-Bird Funeral Home in Milford. Funeral service will be held Saturday, October 23, at 9 a.m. at St. fMairt Catholic Church in Milford. Interment In Milford A6emo- JONES, OCTOBER 22, 1965, MJ A., 109 Florenct; age 73. rangamants are pending at SparksGriffb Funeral Ho LONG, OCTOBER 20, 1965, LUEL-LEN, 95 Draper; age 60; beloved grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Saturday, October 23, at 1:30 p.m. at the Spark^GrHfin Funeral Home with Rev. John W. Burgess officiating. Interment in . White Chapel Cemetery. Mrs. Long ■ the funeral Loren, Rowley, and Marvin Carpenter. Funeral scrvlca will be held Sunday, October 24, at 2 pm. af tha C. F. Sherman Funeral Home In Ortonvllb, wHh Rev. Roy Botruff officbting. Intarmant in Ortonvllb Cemefery. Mrs. Luma-den will lb in stab at the funeral SMITH, OCTOBER 20, 1965, MRS. LENORA C., AAanton, Michigan, formerly of Walbd Lake; age 7b; bebved wHe of Imvranea Smith; dear mother of Mrs. Eugene (Betty) Hllyard and Cbrcnca Smith. Alto survivad by one brother, seven grandchlldran, and three great-grandchildren. Mamo-rbl service will be held today af 0 pm. at tha funeral home under the autpicet of the VFW Auxiliary, Uwranca A. Sims Post No. 3951 Funeral aervica will be held Saturday, October 23, at 10 a.m. al the Rktiardson-BIrd Funeral Home b Walbd Lake, with Pastor Robert' Shade officbting tnter-mant b Oakbnd HHb Memorial Gardens. Mrs. Smith will lb b SMITHSON, OCTOBER 20) 1965, ALLEN C., 2914 Mott SIraef, Waterford Township; age 05; husband of the late Catherine Smithson; dear father of Mrs. George (ASargarot) Scott, Richard E. and Robert A. Smithson f ... sisters, II grandchildren, and _________ ______ greaf-grandchlldren. Funeral serv-ka will be hold Saturday, October 21 at II am. at the Coats Funeral Home b Drayton Pbbs, with Rev. Wilbur Courier officiating, inlar-menf In Perry Mount Park Cama-bry. Mr. Smbhaon wlU lb In slab Death Notices WEIBERG, OCTOBCR H 1965, EMMA MARIE, 31 Onen ttrSeli age 69; balovgd edb af Cbra twiiiv t“'‘f iTT'Ti.'?* w *Mi? vivad by throe chlMran. neral sarvtai wHlbe hold la day, October 21 at 2 p m. gt .._ Coats Funeral Home b Dragbh Pblns. with lha Rev. Gbn MelMt of the Sylvan Lake Ourrh* ai Christ oltlctatlM ....... In stab .. __ rTf Laka Church* of a. Inbrmenf Ih ___ _ k Camatarv. Mrs. will He In ARE DEBTS WORRYING YOU? MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS f^bc't.oMast and largest "Avon calling"-1por service In your home. FE 4-4501.______ LO^ WEIGHT SAFELY WITH Dex-A-Dbt Tabbb. Only te cenb at Simms Bros. Drugs.___________ BOX REPLIES At 10 a.m. today therei were replies at Thel Press Office lit the fol-j lowing boxes: 2,10,18, 32,4S, 11, $1, I 02, 70, 79, 100, 101, 100, 107, 108, 117. COATS funeral HOME DRAYTON PLAINS_____j D. E. Pursley FUNERAL HOME OONELSON-JOHNS , Funeral Home "Daaignad tor Funerab" Huntoon ' FUNERAL HOME 7>Oa^Ar'"*"”g%M SPARKS-GRIFFIN _ FUNERAL HOME "Thoughtful Servica" Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME, FE M378 Established Over 46 Years Cametery Lets ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING a frbndly adviser, phone FE 2-5122 before 5 p.m„ swer, call FE 24734. person. Pumpkins for Mb. Meals and snacks at tarm kitchen. Taka Walton E. ta Adams Rd. N. to Stoney Creek Rd. Faltow signs it be responslbb ntreebd by any oiiwr man myien. WIHord T. Wood, 2903 Holdan St„ OraytM Pblns, Parent-child, chlWachool dWIcultbs. Merriage and other edult problems. Profewbnally trabwd and axparL 21 Buttab Clarksbn MA 5-1249 POUND: IKD TABBY KITTEN, bought carpet. Call EM__________ LOST - 2 FEMALE BEAGLES, very small, arebebty tagefhar. Vicinity Hass Rd., Wtxomor Orton-VHb. Ojild's JiiMf Reward. Wixam 437-2613 or Orfen^lb 627-3014. LOST: SMALL A6ALE DOG, BLACK with white on Ih—' "— 3-2967. LOST. PEKINGESE, MALE, years. Answers b "Mr. Kay." V cinlty of A St P on Parry Sf. R LOST: MISTY'S HER NAME. MON-grel Schnauzer and Poodta. Short, •hoggy grayish black fur, whitlah head. No colbr. Watarford Hlll'vt-cinHy. Chlldran pbbg. Call 674-1196. Reward._____________________ H'yft; 6B» 43; b^vad husband of Corbne Stoop; beloved eon of Mrs. C. R. Shepherd; dear fothar ^ Brende ond Jack Stoop; dear brother af Airs. Juno Whitafwod. George, Houston, Wllmof. and Melber Sloop. Funeral arrange-m^i an pandbg from lha Harold R. Oovia Fbiwol Homo b Auburn Hai{^ wlwro Mr. Stoop will lb b stab. Tsw^ad .W# ly hours art 3 to 5 p.m. and 7 HOLD IT! OTHER FOLKS DO . . . Other folks moke money from Pontiac Press WANT ADS If you haven't . . , try onO. Hundreds of others do . . daily I It pays .. . ifs quick, simple and productive. Just look oround your home, 0O''O0* basement and list the many items thot you no longer use. Hundreds of readers ore searching the Press's clossified coIutihis daily for just such orticles. Perhaps the piggy bonk itself would bring more thon the chonje thot it holdsi Try HI YOirU BE GLAD YOU OIDI Just Dail - 332-8181 THR 1964 CIVIL RIONTS LAW FWOHIBITS, WITH CERTAIN eXCEPTlONI, DISCRIMINATION OR-CAUSE OF sec. SINCE SOME OCCUPATIONS ARE CONSIDERED MORE ATTRACTIVE TO PERSONS OF ONE SEX THAN THE O^ER, ADVERTISEMENTS MR PLACRO UNDER THE /MALE OR FEMALE COLUMNS FOR CONVENIENCE OF READERS. SUCH LISTINGS ARR NOT INTENDRD TO EXCLUDE PERSONS OF EITHER SEX. I BUMPER. CbH mi 44 1 PAINTRR, tat CLAU, 2 Men Wanted for light jonitorioi and maintenance work. 50 to 65 years old. Good pay, paid vacations, hospital C. P. LEDFORD MAINTENANCE DEPT. Pontiac Press I WELL DRESSED MEN, S15 PER avmlng. Car necassary. 625-2641 10-12 a.m. or 5- jp.m,______________ 12 MEN HIRING PART-TIME Naw factory branch it taking ap-pllntbrn for Immadlab avonbg work, mutt bo 21 to 45 yaort ol yo and have a atoady fulMIma day lob. Hours 6:30 to 10:30. Guar- am S50 to tfoo waakly. Call ba-*---1 4-7 a.m. 651-0424. M CARPENTERS, ROUGH aIiO fbith, yaar around work. Call any-tlTO. FE S-7II3. Aik for Bill AMBITIOUS MEtL a68$ 21-65, guarantoad yaar around Work 60-vear-old firm, let your own poy. Retlrof^ plan and NoNtRallia-tbn. Call or apply In parson bs-; twom 7 - 9 to the morning. 33^ ^''s5it*sgXu£“i;n.iiab'?v".“’ A part-time . JOB ------- Expansion of Pontbe betory branch requires addition of fivt men. Must bo avilbbb nightly for ftjreo hours. Wo pay a hI^ of ^ moofhly tor thoso who quillfy. Tebphonc 674-2233 befwttn 17 to- 6 SATURDAY PART TIME j6b A perfect comMiwtlon tor tiV Pbyod fictory workers, coibgt sti $100 PER MONTH C'lllornb?” '**'****" assembly worker in MANU-uel, JOrden 4-6165, ext. 6._ ASSISTANT MANAGER ^r large growing restaurant —--------■---necessary, n. Call FE Attention Auto SolesmOh : In Pontiac's newest, most 3 men average tl4M0 per manfh. SPARTAN DODGE 11 V Saginaw________Fi 1-9227 AUTO MECHANIC FOR CHEVRO-bt deabr, experbnead desired. Pbniy of work, vacation ond fringe bonofib. Van Camp Oievrebt, MB- AUTO PARTS /MANAGER, FORD Inc., MIHord. 664-1715.' SALESMEN - NEW AND AUTO SHOP MEN —We Are Gresvlng Fast— NEED IMMEDIATELY ORDER WRITER A-1 MECHANICS A YOUNG MAN TO PUMP GAS 5S4 FRANKLIN ROAD BARB4r3 - STEADY, REPLACE or FE 2-7271,_________- BARBER, PART TIME, 4 TO 6 p.m., all day Saturday, »6 N. Woodward, Birmbghem. 644-9645. BODY MAN E X P E R I E N C E 6, guarantoe plue be-"'- ““ —■ er, FE 3-7026, ask B^KEEPER WITH GENERAL BUS BOYS WANTED. FULL TIME. '^--**anjfl ron Coretr Opportunity CARETAKER FOR 30 UNIT APART- marifat status, prtvbui txptri-ance, snd ssjary raqulrwti^i^ell CAB DRIVERS, FULL OR FART time for days and ntahtt. Sat-arbd. Apply af 1351 Ifoftnar ki Combination bumB anO man. Haskbt ChevreM, 6751 Obb Hwy., Cbrtuton. “ COMPUTER OPERATOR ^ ditk eyttom. 4N bid gmerA ho^l, tractive fringe ftneflb befode paid pension snd IHc b-» PW cent peld hoe-oltolizatlon, axe. tick snd vtcaftan benefHs, exptrlancad spsrstor pre-torred but will frtb ttw ribit mtn. Outstanding ogportunHy. la Pwiflac Prase Box 166. COdKS-GRILLMEN EXPERIENCED Oood wsgsi fringe benentt, sp-^ to person to O. vick. Unde Johnb Pancake HouM, 1316 lauHi COOK WANTED COlJfffRri(rtCHEN Aabum Cenwr sf Opdyfce CULLIGAN WATER CONDITIONW6 V OP PONTIAC NEEDS MEN PULL OR PART TIME IMMEDIATELY H Orchard 4Wf44 CHRISTMAS MONEY DIE MAKERS Days, 58 Ifr. Wk„ Steady Work 25 yeert. LIBERTY TOOL 1 ENOR. CORP. rRd.rbn^. ’ DRIVER * year aroi It 216 W. W ELECTRICIANS MACHINE TOOL DESIGNERS DETAILERS Progressive Welders 915 Oakland Ava. (U.S. 16) Pontbe PE A9S16 ELECTRICIAN WANTED Engine Lathe Operator Experbnead or tralnas ASSEMBLY MAN FRINGE BENEFITS OVERTIME Brlney Mfg- Co. 116S Sobs Rd< eW W. M59 good frbiot boneflts. -----)EOOR UF6. CORP. W. IWapb Rd., 1 4-jue pointing. 61 lENCED I E N C E D MAN WITH EXPERIENCED WINDOW CLEAN- EXPERIENCED USED CAR CLEAN \ up, $100 por wfc. 336-3514. ByPERIENCED REAL SstATE h . FIELD \ REPRESETATIVE piy m porion. L TIME RBaL «StV^ lALii-m. Phono tor appl.\OR 4-2222. • Ry yNotl Lj OR^&22' GENERAL KITCHEN HElA FUa tauront. 4376 Highland Rd, M74I.______________________\ GENERAL /MAINTENANCE M^N-musl hava broad background and an undarstanging of machinfry ^ Mole 8 MAN TO DSLIVBR AND INSTALL wflanariNWtl bs ^ llAN T6"1h»fl >1 iLtCTffIbiL •ppranHca. UL mUhaNiCS NIlPIAT'^ ^'^■SSb poHtiac sales unHonni bsnm "vacitlonA SSbhf ^ Oakland Ava, Supartor Ramb- MEh WANTED FOR FABRICATION and atsambly. Nu-Freducb Indua-240 MF. Aubum Rd< Rod)- ACTT'wKyBP P6R WlHPBW ^^^lny7axparbncad-------- MEN i>6R iNsihi 'wMk,"'5^ 11 Abe for Iron railing and con-crato atop Inttallatton. Conersto MIDDLE - AGED HANDYMAN -, Board and room, moro for her ~ lhan wiBw. FE itut, momlnBi Milk Route Salesman Whoiatala and ratal/, must ba pa-^w^oldar, marrbd pratom room, laml-rttirad preferred. 3i NIGHT CLERK FOR MOTEL, FULL time. Call Ml 6-1646.____________ OIL COMPANY NEEDS -EXPERI-onesd transport drivtr. Ssnd ra-plbs to PWlac Prtss Bex No. 45. Immadlata epaningt al Gtnaral Hasdai. A^ F Oipt.,.Samlm)b af W, Hu OPeiflNO POR DRIVER SALES- OPENING NOW AVAILABLE TO ab Lbting Sarv tuIR Pontiac. FE 5-1665.__ OPPORTUMiW IN FIBERGLASS range af industrial pr^ucts, havo epaningt tor —— b advancing b Pbata only Ihota wl PERMANENT POSITION If you ore on aggressive young man with on ambition to get ahead, you may be interested in the position we hove to offer. OUALIFICATIONS: 1. Must bo batwaan 16 and 2S years of age. 1 Ba a high school graduato. 1 Ba msdwnicaHy Indbad a In your reply, pleose state age, educational back> ground, moritol status, draft status and other general information obout yourself and previous employment. Address yaur reply to BOX 61 THE PONTIAC PRESS Rochester Aerosol Corp. 667 Woodwifd.____Rochas.- GOOD OPPORTUNITY FOR ENEfo ss Ic store, musk tbs abllHy b GOOD BRICK LAYER GRILL MEN w Mnbg thlfls. Abo I work. Tap a 8J"SH,'TKrDr«W.5l GUITAR INSTRUCTOR - APPLY at MInchalb Musk, 217S Aubum. Uticu 731-1646 aflar 2 pjn. HELP WANTED AT CAR WASH, 92 ialdwb, Pulaca>t Auto With. RADIO OR TV MLEl U4-52M. INSURANCE - TRUCK ANO COM-marcial tptcblisf to rsprawnt '—" •------- txchanoi, *“* . 527-25lir INSURANCE AGENT TRAINEI -cun aualify tor full tima agancy with tour months parl-tlmt frsb- LABORERS TO WORK POR COfi-frsdor making repairs and da-llvarbs. WIN trab right man. —------------------------ LOCK OPERATORS ANO GAllh- iilie MACHINE DESIWERS Lathe Experience Preferred PERMANENT POSITION SALARY OPEN Dafrstt Emsdi'^nd*MtcMna Cl LATHE pIVIIION MALE HELP WANTED, HIGH school graduato prtfarrad. Apply . 9 a.m. - 5 pjn. Rochattor Pspar MANAGEMENT TRAINED Train 9 months to 1 yaar bambg 111661611666 6 yaM- tab. Ram I12S to 1156 whito frsbbg. fair personal 16565. huTiTpoirPAff-tTija &n filil. ^ariBJSf'aaa: niiiKflANK. I ciiMm. lili P6SITI0N Open for Man to Work With Bfiiw os 0 District Manager Salary, Cor Allowance and Usual Beriefil ulowonce Berief|ts Permanent Position \ for the Right MoK APPLY IN PERSON TO \ Mr. McCully, Circulation Dept. Pontiac Press Croti naw dtmi food boanfim progranv to fan RamMar, Trl partonabla, atoady and rttpandbb, knewlate of machanlcsr fhlnga vary hafoM. W. P. MHar Ca„ I5H S. Wbadwsrd, BIrmlnilwm. Ml 66051 ask for Cart Hawatt. SUN OIL COMPANY Soles Marketing 6*^7nSniesniinr^irtliw SUN OIL COMPANY ATTN; R. R. SMITH JR. Help Wonted I SERVICE 6TATION, PART-TIME THE SUN OIL COMPANY r j'jsL’ajisia#, b tha sarvlca sfgflop busbaas. A only a matter of di SUNOCO OFFERS: . _ . , . 1- An axcaibnl 7 waaks P ■ I d trabing program. 2— An axclusivf and grawing Cue- malbn —---------- I 66674 da^ dr UiB6 CAfc ULilA(iAi!l,.H(WWT. ancf praferrad, must ba dip^ abb and aagsr. lap PW Pl*i Call 236-5967, Mr. Atassy for b-tarvlaw. •xr?n«INM. riwiwimwsF Wfsit meWb ctaaiHM axporlaiwa. ham. Ml 61930._________ ____ N. Sagbsw St. _________________ WANTED w ami fixture dadgnari iu:iH5yrl ^5; p*^ ”"»• «i m-. gg’,!;a:'*^u.srr"vTriA 7^w5^irffi''gNe»AL noust. o'^E^Ati o^earoora Tri-Level _^Sl'uAv.ce $12,900 »n,rTC 1 flgurn JfPlM. Mitur* wgmwi pi^trrtd. ^ CMT^flt TMUItM to PON. tTaC PRfti >OX M. EXPERtENCED WAITRiSS, WEEtc! MMte, apply In pprton Joy G*"^' Rottouront, 21M Dlxlo Hwv. MANICURIST Dd pepotunity, hMi 'w«oE'“* BERNARD HAIR STYLISTS ________Ml 7-3M3__________ MATURE WOMAN POR OENERAI EXPERIENCED WAITRESS. ___________01 i-3751 EXPERIENCED ORO.... .. Htm.. In public Mpblo. EM ^,... ,xp,,u„C ---- -----lypins rtquirod. W... ^•lac^ProM Box SI giving ago WANTED - SALBSLaSY^PoS ._»«» clilKIran. ____^ wallpapar dapartmant. Call Mrt WOMAN EXPERIENCED IN • Winfield at WarflaM Paint. Ml •tal officp. Send retuma. I aoio._____________________age, marital Statin ar^ — 'wanted: secretary, SHORT- -ig-^*^*'** **”“ A»» * ... .... .. . _________ jfftSM after i. (Illation moving to WOMAN TO CARl~P6S~n:Hlt. aan^'^^aw^e^ IWj {*'■•'’•1 from t:M d.w. to 7 a.m., I. OR 3-»7S4. International Personnel Service, Inc. gentleman NEAR,g„ h inetrvctieM—Sclieeb Ava., Rochattar. ‘ WAITRESS POR S/WALL RESTAU-_____________________________________ ...... »—•— - « .. .. ^ young lady wanted WITH Ex- perlance on ca>h ,-egltter and gen-—. Cooley Lake HAVE BUYERS FOR ANY KINO ol orooerty lor quick sale. Call:i .'i!*'’? _Paul Jonas Raatty - JE adSM ROOM I NEED A THREE-BEDROOM _________ _! with basement and garage. Large SLEfPINO ROOMS FOR MEN. OAYl yard In or around the Clarkston workers only. No drinkers. 33t-i area, .Will pay tll.OOO to IJO.OOO. 1715. _______ iA ^ ray'o'n^i'l ^ALTOR ' RooiBS With Beard 43 '• J5» Pontiac Lk. Rd - NORTH Attached Garage Family Room t. of Living Area . No Sun, a74-»l4. » Pontiac L... _or PE^ <-17M, gentlemen ON Wii! J BEDROOM WEST, end. PE 4^)112.__ 0 SIJ.OOO. Also 7- t ■ ' ^ - GENTLEMEN. •gf<»!,.«««„chlloran. Mutt GENERAL HOUSEWORK, LiVK llJ ' MOTiF^>ii 1 PMf ■it........mA~mr Thurt. and Sun. oW, SSS. SSHTSt ^ " T GENERAL OFFICE, SWITCHBOARD „ eno camier, oaaicrtnip #xparianca;*^Klmil5rt''s preferred but not naceeeary. lUS JeSSZ? * Oakland Ave., Pontiac. , nacaetary. ._ ____ .... preparation and. have the ability to work with figures, H. A R. will train you. Tuition courses start October 2S, -.. ------------------------YOUNG LADY~FOR~GEITERAA. SChOOL^'FlInL' loof S.°Kh, WAITRESS,. NO NIGHTS OR SUN-j Jit*',, “'"g longer Hwy. CE AMSS lor details. | F'E J.ir5l*"‘"®' '■*" '■‘*^ ;ROOMnrND~BM^^^ Ray O'Neil Realtor J'L'?*" f E ■10 Pontiac Lake Road SLEEPtN ----- ------ _______________________________ graduate, ll-JS, able to type 45 - WAITRESSES - BARTENDERS I !;?‘'Xie"''Awiy*"^L!bl!r%‘ T^; Work Wanted Male In person, XO Lounge | Corp., WO w. Huron. Pontiac. ——................. - WAITRESS-NIGHTS-FULL TIME . Apply Huron Bowl Raetau-' « p Wanted M. Or F. S t, iSs Elizabeth Lake Rd. | * WAITRESS WITH SOME GRlLL APPLE PICKERS WANTED. NORTH lav. nr -■ Rochester, 615 E. Buell Road. 11 GIRL for' DRY CLEANING Ok-partmant. See Mr. Matrick at 540 S. Telegraph. | Thurt., only. 5M Orchard Lalia_>ya.| HELP WANTED IN CANDY FAC- I lory lor 1st and 2nd shift. FE —--------------_______________________ I 2-2S0». PART-TIME DAY BABY SitTER ON --------------------------------Walton near Perrv. 334-iaiS. I CEMENT WORK EM 3-4174 EXCELLENT TYPING DONE my home. 343-3244. >r FE 3A234 NOTICE! If you have acreage parcelt t lale - smaH or csiTiw sicenen Harrison, Rochester. Near John R URGENTLY NEEDED and Auburn Rds. , , Positive U.OO CIEANING -NO wall washing Neg. S7.00, tl0.00 - S12.M 4«2-4433 or 482-5534 BLOOD service i ron | ng$ WANTED. FE 2-3223. ,,/OR YOUR HOME OR EQUITY After 2 p.m. WE BUY. SELL. TRADE A LIST. A ^ «ils" A m ai»s IDOMIMA^ IN VOIlP HOME £X- CLARK REAL ESTATE w^.v',i:m*7 1 DISHWASHER, DAYS, AAEALS AND IRONING DONE IN MY HOME.------------ ^ NFFD riCTiiar.c uniforms furnished. AdoIv In per- Utica-Rochester area. 852-3721. «n oniv. Howard Johnum's 3450 UGHT' HOUSiWORITlkHD^AB^ 2251 N OpdAe OT 0154 ---^----------- NEED 200 LISTINGS Saunders A Wyatt _ F^ 3-7041 ,^ '5 SOLD 90 PER CENT OF' OUR PRESENT LISTINGS available car L' lease. FE A131I ai 'mjiLDEP Sale ifousca L Business Service I BEDROOM, NEWLY DECORAT-gas hMt, $5200e terms. 863 Stanley, Pontiac. OR 3-2627. 2’ BEDROOMS. FULL 'BAS^MENT, THE ECON-O-TRI Bedrooms Lot Includoc. AT $11,000 smlly Room Attached Garage Will duplicate on your lot OFFICE OPEN 4 to 5:M J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor i.1-4404 J075t Highland Rd IM54I HIITER NEAR THE NEW COLLEGE - This ' —ms end bath, large lamlly finished in knotty pine, gas attached garage, two nice' lots with lake privileges on Lake. 412,000. terms WEST SUB - 3 bedrooms and bath, large kitchen with dining area, aluminum siding, nice screened-in porch, 2-car garage, large shady lot, overlooking the lake. $10,400, terms. CALL B. C. HIITER, realtor, 3742 EHiabeth Lake Rd. FE 2-0174. Alter I o.m 682 641^ IDEAL FOR RETIREES' OR YOUNG YOU CANT TELL If You Just Oriva By HAGSTROM REALTOR 1400 W. HURON OR 44>3S8 _____EVENINGS 442-0435_ Waterforci Hill OPEN SATURDAY AND SUNDAY ^S BALMORAL TERRACE IMMEDIATE POSSESSION » - 10 M fireplace, full baseme d at only $2t,675 I ting. Hurry, it may DON WAITRESS, FULL TIME, EVENING MALE WAITRESSES. MUST E ^hSs *^*"*’’ I shirt PRESS OPERATORS. PON- IN'^srucTg^o" WORK WITH L'.'SnirheTi ladlet at Holiday Health Club | aeeary.' I ?l2h». 4 whnni .n. nin. n, have' litSd'itoule' ai^ »j2in2llit* ORDER COOK, EXPERI-' tSFifl"* CallW'2 P ^ly N. Parry or phone 334- lunch. G^ jiay^^^^ OR PENSIONER ,F ( mWEsflNO WORK FOTTmaI glSlXMVS;ra'pl?l'*^"^"'^'', . . .......................-........- - tur. rWH, 4a»JU„ Fln«,... iMn STENOGRAPHER I . MOn Qnd Wl f toe^^r l!Sde*A^S°°lc^^^^^^ flag Mall. KITCHEN HELP. I Competent et ehorthand .,v OL 3-37S1. Ihfl' for a permanent position of . , OressmaKlag A Tailoring 17 to sort, package and non- -----------------.... . . die bulk coin in vault of ecli.?"^ bank's main office. Steody I employment, good fringe Landecaping 18-A benefits. Prefer mature soo, peat moss, top soil. mnn tn SS "" girt, crushed limestone, gravel, --- man, JO to OJ. bulldozing. Tall Timbers Nu sery, OR 4-0344 ............... Itemplating a change -I us, we will handle saies people stop out Jc“e“ .n^,............. — Times - GIROUX 2 BEDROOMS Possible 3 with basemen -y on blacktop, needs t ^"“FLATUrY REALTY 4511 Hi,hianl\S“’,M«, ajj-teat you will like our Commerce _ 363-6981 IMMEDIATE POSSESSION, IW* rice, and remember 2 BEDROOM HOUSE IN VICINITY Marlette Cadet 10' wide, 2 bad-| *K--imm . Rochester Rds. ^ooms, panel bottom, excellent of. Sell or trade condition. Call FE 5-852-3342. brick; AL PAULY, Realtor 4SI4 Dixie, rear OR 3 3000___Evet. OR 3-7243 TAYLOR MODEL SEE THIS OUTSTANDING VALUE 7424 Highland Road at Elizabeth Lake Road 3-BEDROOM TRI-LEVEL ALSO 3-BEDROOM, FULL BASEMENT, RANCH PLANS PRICED FROM $11,700 OPEN DAILY 6 to 9 SAT. and SUN. 1 to6 Anytime by eppolnimeni NOW IS THE TIME TO TRADE HIGH ON A HILL Clarkston area — walking distance to high end grade school, 3 bedrooms, IVj baths, utility, extra --- —....— --- fireplaca. Times Realty __ _ _ ^ CC J.CTm 5890 DIXIE HIGHWAY (South of 0396 upen URGENT NEED FOR houses! Any local multiple listing i IN LAKE ORION home. Carpeted livin|| *roon ‘‘‘e privileges. S9?65Q. $1600 -------on land < ] estate size lot. $ Oil; KITCHEN. APPLY os part-time cleaners for ^-tree cutting and trimming. IN^ Community Notionol Bonk................ ??2^lSrt.t!S,‘,'777^'v‘m;iD2 r-i; of Pontioc branch office i„„^ry Service 20 ?.F**ged.to Pontlec Preet Box t07. .^ jat could live in. 333 7535 ph(,ng pj 2-8171, Ext. 280 651-8437; ofllM FE RESULTS GALORE FROM PRESS WANT ADS ALBERT J. RHODES, Rea _ 2458 W^^alton BJwd^ VACANT LOTS I Pontiac * 2-cer garage. FE 4-5707. 4-H REAL ESTATE ere plus - lerrillc buy - 4 . Balance on ______________ :??g7bo?a 7^^.d-:enrs'ir?e"^ HUMPHRIES REALTY I close In — very little upkeep Oxford_____________OA 8-24l7i ............... IN ROCHESTER ' om bungalow. SSxllO, alu- WATERFORD AREA 4bedroam tri-level lor less duplicate. IW baths, I ih'sisi: lor details. I Nwy a-ROOM HOUSE II . - at experience end personal data to Janz-Knight, C.P.A'* N. Woodward, Birmingham. 1100 WOMAN FOR GRILL, - >n.-Frl. FE 4B274. Men and Women Canvalescent-Nursing ROOM FOR PATIENT _______Phone 427-3223 _ STONEVCROF1 NURSING I AND Closing, REAL VALUE REAL-i *Mk, Davis. 'r Want Listings I Will Travel ~ Taylor OR 4 2296 iR 3-2391 PONTIAC FE 4-6195 21 A HOME ON ONE ACRE Oil beat. lr experienced! ■ CLARKSTON ROOFING COMPANY, Insurance an6 own. 473-4247.___ BRYAN F. FRENCH CO. ROOFS, REPAIRS,' INSURED Estlmatts freely given. FE $4473 _!?? Busrantead. Call Tom. 4^4543.1 ^ ROOFING AND SIDING, OLD, NEW and build-up. Gutter repair —^ leaks. 20 yrt. exp. All work p. Cushing. FE S-4441. ROORNG^AND REPAIR. _____ t» tm, OL 14441 ROOFS NEW, REPAIR' General M^idsnan^ J^-***^ S'E> R 0 0 F I N C. COMPLETELY bonded and Insured, guaranteed. 482-4S47. WOMAN'' . HOMEOWNERS INSUR-____________________________________ $nles Help, Male-Fcmaie 8-A scales, fe 2-3011 or fe 4-3403. apartment with patio, TOTAL ABSTAINERS CAN GE' special low cost auto Insurance. Just phone FE 4-8284. K. G. Hemp-______________________ peed.___________________LOWER 1 BEDROOM, UNION Tree Trinuning Service' B*L TREE TRIMMING, RiMOVAL Movingj^^tor SMITI^^tW Cl A-1 PAINTING--- PAPER HANGING THOMPSON____________Ft »e384 !l INTERIOR AND palnthia, ssi':^- ________ AAA FAINTING AND OBCORATINO INTERLAKBS PT^TING ANO PAINTING, . _____________________ lne> rttt. ralBt. Tom. 341 4880 or Hey, Ndvl,— Pintoriiii Sorvica ReBtBitBble. GbW Lab, PO I-IWB PLASTERING. PREB iSTIMAtdi Lakes Ttee Co., Trimming Removal-Free Estimates Flrsplsce W^-425-1414 PAINTING AND PAPERING. YOU - next. Orvel GIdcumb. 473.Q446 PAINTING, PAPERiNG _________Tupper. OR 1-7041 _ PAGERHANGInG - PAINTING. -Plaster repairing. UL 2J7C. QUALITY WORK ASSURED, papering, wall wathlr sonai dlwTsion" Oakland'^'county I Courthouse, Pontiac. ____________ /ILL TRADE ■APARTMENT FOR IF YOU'RE GOING TO CALIFOR-lanitor work, couple. FE 4-2521 -- • -------- •''' oib lig'ht HOUSE-0 do chores on prem- 407. Opportunity to grow pending governmental d cessing unit. Salary open. ROOMS, PREFER CLEAN.'QUIET ( middleaged or retired couple or bachelor, all private,' semi-lurn.,U, 2740 Judah Lake Rd„ out Baldwin, j - ROOMS, MODERN, PARTLY F nished, MA 5-5000.____ 5 NEAT ROOMS, LOWER LlVEL* J. J. JOLL, Reolty 2-3488_ 682-0282 _M^ ^S AVAILABLE At ONCE ” 380 JEFFERY, ROMEO tarty new 3-bedroom ranch, $ equity $1,346.70. apartment. Only legal age adults $58.07 i Intment. OA Brewer Real Estate M. B. MITCHELL, Sales Mgr. TED MCCULLOUGH, JR. BROKER _____482-4054 j Mixed , Neighborhood First month free Payments like rent MODEL OPEN 4F--r-NOONS 1-5 t. 752-2734 eves. BEDROOM AND SHARE LIVING 1, kitchen and bath. Call attar P.m. FE 8-844T__________ j FURNISHED 3^r50M APARTMENT. | Gentleman. Birmingham. Ml 7-0292. _____«lll Cl l Y, USA B R 0 k'e'r, O^bOWN homes. 673-— - ^4677 VALUE________ PONTIAC AREA LEWIS REALTY - FE 8-3366. grounds. West of Pontiac. 644-2518. ' MODEL OCCUPANCY 30 DAYS BI-LEVEL *1,250 DOWN RANCH SI.3S0 DOWN INCLUDING CLOSING COST Telegraph, Transportation 25 Apartments, Unfurnished 381 M&M Motors, 2S27 0 plus' wages. 335-4473. 26 L 2-14»3. . *33,400. WEIR, MANUEL, SNYDER &: RANKE Birmingham Commarca Rd., 0 Com- 'n"right at Glem .08 Arboles Rd. 4 BEDROOMS. 2-itory brick, near Auburn Avenue, lull baaement, ge« heat, attached garage. Take ever mortgage. NO MONEY DOWN, PAYMENTS UNDER *45 PER MONTH. We have 10 nice 2- and 3-bed room Tucker Realty Co. 903 Pontiac State Bldg. 334-1543 *^‘ 298 S. Woodward, PHONES 566-2323 " ; carpeting i DAILY Burroughs______________ Corporation - TODP DIVISION 27 . *M dep., EM 3-5543 Has An Immediate Opening For a Creative Salesman Which Offers: MODERN 1-BEDROOM, STOVE, RE-DEER PROCESSING. MOOSE ANO frigerator, air conditioning, ba|— bears. Call FE 2-41SS. overlooking lake. On US 10 j. ._ aJ j na ohlv. 425-2451, It*!*!'*" ^'”**** ” neara ZE QtjiET, carpets “t-bbdroom apt. *135 per month, no children A RELIABLE LICENSED HOME no pets. FE 8-8092. Opportunity for advancement. Security of employment. Planned training program. Home office seminars. Retirement and Insurance Program. Interesting end creative v - —- -J little lor v„. _________ >r appliances and what have yo We'll auction It or buy It. B & B Auction Birmingham. A_______________ MIXED - SMALL DUPLEX I adults, deposit. FE 2- ~~~ '’^25!S^S:' I of land. With fruit t.__________ lots ol garden space. Oxbow privileges. " RENTING $59 Mo. $10 Deposit iOCKINO^yANO HAULING AW HEAVY TRUCKING, I, fill dirt, grading and gray- -------I^ma- 3-0803. ____. GARAGES AND cHawad. 87AI242 or FE Th'uCK HAULING, Trxdt kaotal Trucks tp Rent W-Tan pi IW-Ton Staka - tractors' AND EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks - Saml-Trallars Pontiac Form and Industrial Tractor Co. 82S t. WOODWARD FE 4«48) FE A1A 0^ Dally Including Sunday Wall daoMre Wl^ fjrf Ng^cae WIOI at.H to 8300, HAIRPIECES privafa*aliowlnd, *call “fe" 84214 RECENTLY MODERNIZED llder home on Fairgrova w nany new features. 1st floor: I with natural fireplace, g room, modern kitchen, Bdrooms with bath. 2nd -ga badrooms plus child's bath,------ 2*7a*| b floored attk, high y oasement with outside an- ______ Large lot with Cyclona fence. Circular drive and 2-car garage. Owner moving out of state. 3 BEDROOM HOME GAS HEAT LARGE DINING AREA APPLICA- _____ . ........ WORKERS, WIDOWS OR DIVORCEES. PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PROS- -LEMS AND RETIREES ARE R OKAY WITH US. For Immediate Action Coll FE 5-3676 626-9575 OPEN DAILf ANO SAT. AND SUN. OR COME TO 290 KENNETT NEAR BALDWItf ;aL value REALTY FHA REPOSSESSION ^ you are Interested I reposseislons « 'PontTac, Oxford, Lake Or-n, welertord and Holly. NORTH POINT REALTY „ I S. Main Clarkston 5-2341 ..... Brewer Reol Estate WM. B. MITCHELL, Skies Mgr UNION LAKE AREA Beautiful- 7-room brkk ranch, 3 bedrooms, radlent gas heat, 2-way fireplace, wall - to - well and drapes. This lovely available. i Everett Cummings, Realtor 2583 UNION LAKE ROAD EM 3-3308 383-7181 Terms available. Owner 474-2111. WEAVER AT ROCHESTER 5 ACRES with brkk ranch lx family room, cuvarad patio, 3 places, oil hot wotor hoat, l attached garaga, graanhousa, many shade and Tult traas. IS4,f«i M*LTmjyEAV» I.NC.,.R^LTOR tSl-8141 REA 4 brkk. ___dio In I14.f«. 335- WEST SIDE DUPLEX A lovely brkk dupMx on N. ilefh*hiirb«!imenf new"*” naces In aach unit. Takas S3.S00 to handto. WARDEN REALTY HIGHLAND CAMPUS West Bloomfield ranch. 3 bednx nice Hiving room, dining room, ( port, 9Sxl00-ft lot Why pay ri LAKE PRIVILEGES Crescent Lake retirement or sta er home, 2 bedrooms, nke kttch and utility. *9.250 on land contra LAKE FRONTAGE Pontiac Lake, 3 badrooms, I baths, lamlly kitchen, bullt-lns, u1 Ity room, lull storms and screei TUCKER EAST side. *150 down. 3 bad- basement. gas heal, garage, large lot. On prospect. OPEN 3 Models 2 TO 8 P.M. DAILY TRI-LEVEL-RANCH—COLONIAL Priced from *13,990 plus lot room, 2H:ar garage, gat heat, marble sills, 2'/S baths, ceramic and good workmanship. They can be bought for only 10 per cant down. Drive out A459 to Williams Lake ROed, J ... - GIROUX REAL ESTATE GILES NORTH OF CITY. 4 IN CITY. 7-room frame h NEAR ST. MIKES. Large S-reom, 1-Baautlful « Ing room, 3 large bedreomt. Oak floors, plastered walh. baiamant, gas heat. 3-4lMrtlaf 9«f< 77 AikUmi Salt M Farm THf LAKOMT 19 iMtt-AcMUMrin i dooi''^STELHifiM's'''FE'MM'POS!^SSSD: Blood bodroom --------- ...,.... ...... complolOi.ifCllOn.1 lofoi, ook luo- chinory Co. Orlonvlllt. k I ?JiL****** •p*' wlHi Chino coMnot. 7 vouV'5rnnSATjr*A\«T*T^^ I OW ««B«9H «o hunt- MV 3-PM. largo choot of drawtro, occailonal O^D CH^N MW ^WRTH AIRDALE, < MONTHS, MALE AKC, «•“'«. vacuum Claanw, gaa r<----- mo ano up on any 1,001 cnain I all ahota. wondarfvl parwnallly. relrlgarator, portaMa TV. Alao hpvt lon»nalrad klltan, Irae. '»« Chevy f- *'■— L" PARM laai CONESTOOA, KTyJO*, . . .. Igan. John balha, S-badroomi. axcallant condl-M'Ja »•; lion. BiliO. OR 3-»7»._________| Davli MaI.'*^rj^*CETTE, JI'xM', 7 *" 97|lhndyAaH.TnKfc NrH tM U 1054 PORO CAB AND CHAMIl, lor storage at Tony'a Marine. BOAT STORAGE. KARS BOATS glaaa illding door ). pre-hung door S ^ikENCH WI«L_„ . __________ , gaa atatlon Caka machine, so bot- < Tie capacity. EM »4SS1 ?!* **.• Mahogany d f-PlfCB DWIC^WHVrt 6iNI#IG tvf * p|,"ta“5i^rXt aat, gardan looSa, canning lari, li„m mlK. llama. TU Waat Walton. Salw. ^ **■»* No. a c^mort"naiir'M Iba.' s‘a« ---"e WaM IHa Ic aa. ?•>«"?"* |a«S poati s 5.t5 B i"» — wall paneling, cheap. JO x3'0" Alum, eliding window SU.aS ~ a. PE *005?, 1075 W. Huron Stf'xrv Alum, illdlng window tO.n : GLASS LINED WATER •'0"kW' Alum, illdlng window 535.95 ' bT'KH*'S' Burmeister's MirturJS''^* B*r«; wo-'lvar B Co., Detr”t, Mfch. °R*" ♦ P«T» • 'all'FIT SHflF. 55 wiluaMs. SX*'**’jack“w'®^*’oww“'ll!S Trowel Tronars ■ f*?*!"****’* *"P auctliwwar. MY J-litl or MY ' - ------ y„_ ,n Detroiter products meet or, BASSET pyppjfcs, AKC, 9 WEEKS, j-aui. 13* BEE LINE TRAILER, G A S ‘VCPW* *t« riold Blue Book stand-| .tudaarytca.SB7.4a33,----SPIECIAL AUCfiON’Sm^ aVtra'a^ii&l "n,*;y»7ol“"’.Sv"?rTamK:l FRIDAY, 7 P.M. t?“cadeT"sI¥ipr7“usEo' a i" BEAGLE PUPS USED ... ... SCHOOL OP ______ ____ MER PROGRAM. DRASTICALLY REDUCED. lalety, comfort and — Open dally until 9, Sat. and Sun. ___ - . . , until 6. BOB HUTCHINSON SALES, ceryi, packagad catKiy and gum, 535-4493 ajol Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plaint. BRITTANY SPANIEL. EXCELLENT CHRISTIE CARAVAN, TELE- HoUSEt^rER.TxTL^NEW'TIRES hynur. 3W yra. okt. .5.. PE oir'^^^atC’7%, r'rr'ra'ta‘r*^lJtr.S!£ --------- 1 YARDS I K3! "* _ t PURL OIL .... , .Jh l^t. PE 3-3351. 1*4 TmLlon oil tank . -.jL town Tabja. 333-3345 Thomai _ I old. M95. > water beta- keyboard, 5395. GRINNELL PIANOS AEAOOWBROOK MUSIC SUM- a-oraa. ' CANINE /^T-iTTvtatt-it t ir't ' COUNTRY CLUB IDO'S of Items not listed GRINNELL S | v'rr-ssi;?:;*’?..?n.‘co5ss^ DOWNTOWN ---------- -------- 27 S. Soginow CLOSE-OUT SALE or 1965s LONE STARS-GLASSrONS and MFQ BOATS that are on^iolay— showroom — now In construction! '55 Mercury Outboards Cliff Dreyer Gun and Sports Center 15310 Holty Rd., Holly ME A577 ''■nnJJally and Sundays— POOL TOWN j. __miracle mile ARCADE __________ o^,o> the best baseboard " yard, I I able, convenient, bathing, grooi Ing, boarding. Pickup and dallvai I 3 To « ltdlly^ B53.4740. CHIHUAHUA, 7 MONTHS, SS __________PE^5153 ,. _ CHIHUAHUA PUPPY, 150. ___________535-1171. SUNDAY, 3. P.M. IM4 PROLIC, IS-FOOT, SE contained, sleeps 5. 3003 Galoi Cl., oft Commonwealth. _ _ 1964 VOLKSWAGEN Now on Disploy Landcruiser by Stewort, Inc. 60x12' Boats Canoes Mo Lawnboy mowers OWEN'S MARINE SUPPLY 396 Orchard Lake_• PE_3- I CORRECT CRAFT . FIberglas Inboard speedboats priced from $3,095, See — ^ -! these quality boats at OAKLAND MARINE d, heat with ancloture and Oulbransan lull size organ, 11,795 ........ ......... . .. .WM mSvT **' ®' *■ MODELS AND*0?HER TR^VlNS , .Tg^.UlgK '. »*»>*» - ZHoT-xcaiiant *« OR ^-^bing.^bargain^^ pr_„ \Jack Hogon ' ,VAN CAMP CHEVY I 2-Bedroom 391 S. FE MIDI 81-A oyER wale evergreens - UPRIGHTS _________ snots. ■ spreaders. 10 trees $15. You dig. ie«~FAN~9r—ST5 SAVING, FI- "1'" “mo™ lamin.ieo inem wani. We speciellze In Evergreen trees available MA 5-1431. I kitchen model, carpeting In for Kreens around suburban as f®®"*' *"• *1®®"* tales. Cedar Lane Evargraan Farm >W5 CRK 15 SELF-CONTjklNEO, yifchgn, dining room and bath. 1970 Dixie Hwy., Clarkston. 535- '®"?P'***:,*''3»»- *<35 Highland Rd., Double door auto-lrost refrlgera-1933. _.<>'■ J’J-Tf:________________ tor, ovtrhead lights. , EVERGREEN AND SHADE TREES,''»« NORRIS ^TRAVE^ TRA^^^ uii t tr- L 1 ...... "• south Blvd. FE I Holly Travel Coach, Inc. I CABOVER Holly Rd. MB 4*^771 mt'^FORD Pickup,” automatic, da- .—=5E!!Lj°^‘'jT,?!lll®!!days- ______________________ CUTTER 19' FIBERGLAS, 1960, 40 ^se^^^Evinrude, trailer. Bargain. DON'T TAKE CHANCES We Don't! Mor« your boat with a qualtflad Inside-STORAGE-Outside Boat retlnlshl^ »M repairs WATE R FOR D-OR»930 .rr-r,nni,.u .MALE BASSET, 5 MONTHS OLD, ,.*lE5?J*P.L°N „oyjTAR le.ssons. ,1 $50,^ __________________ Uveitock • MINIATURE ( ES, LOVE- CREE 15' SELF-CONTAINED, mplate, $1,395. 6435 Highland Rd.. 473-2491._________________ NORRIS 23' TRAVEI TRAIL-, Mif-contalnod. full bath. MY 3-3571, used 3 months.______ - prir'h? r ~' HARRINGTON BOAT ford Rochestar FORD Dealer. PorkhUTSt TrOller SoIbS "Your Evinrude Dci QL 1.9711 FINEST IN MOBILE LIVING 15 to 1*99 S. Telegraph Rd. jj/-au.*j SHADE-T«ESrw-HTT^-BmRCH,'A-^^ , S’udJ ” ""gf.:P;„brd.S,^6^^ ^ . Tjmy'.,L.ndac,pe, jjM16L___. /nd^■su'T'irsS 8SX 8SusrMY"J Brookside Place In Counif« p<-------------------- fates. 7 miles west of Noi 1953 409, dif CUBtd INCH .BN- 1955 409, 433 HORSEPOWER, COM-plete with txtre chrome; 1955 Corvette In lection, complete; complete Hydremetic trensmiselon, brend — OR 4-1579. FORD 5 ENGINE, TRANSMISSION, Nbw -iBiid U»Bd TrackB 103 A-TON PICKUP, 535-3517 CHEVY PICKUP, GOOD otor, good transmission, bast of-r. 33H197 after 4 p.m. 195S~ CHEVY M-TON, 3 - SPEED transmission, runs'good, good tires. tSa CHEVY Vi-TON PICKUP, EM 3-3513 after 5 P.m.___________ 15* CHEVY PICKUP, FLEETSIDE, 960 GMC 'VTON PANEL, BLUE and white finish. 6-cyllnder, automatic. Only 5495. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1104 S. Wood-■ ■ ■ Birmingham. A"-------------------- 83 FORD, matic, Saars space haatar, 3 burn- ----------- -------- -.w.-n. ar, used bt season, 335-M15. SPRED-SATIN” PAINTS. WARWICK 3»I««-Servlce PulanackI A-1 I HAVE A NUMBER OF VERY SuPPlV. 3«7* Orchard Lake. 5B3- DERAE STUDIOS OF MUSIC' satlffled cuitofTiers for whom I 2820.__1* 'teacheri on staff. Enroll tiww «hot< m un asi-iiei * r*v/K.BE4. pni9%^i r\bn.ei wra.^... ^ — HAVE INSTALLED THE NEW lab- STEEL BUIL01NGST”^ OfILI- *®7 l«a»n« on all instruments and -.2^' very reasonable to good home, TRAVEL TRAILERS ............ ulous solid VINYL siding. Looks ty house 5109 30 v»Ky. 4130 Dixie Hwy. 574-1700. PART COCKER PART BEAGLE 42000 13 Mile Rd., Walled Lake. Since 1933. Guaranteed lor life. on e discount special .... d. FHA terms. / TALBOTT LUMC-R _JJ!:yy.- --------- rnnAi^ m ,r.-nF—a,n,.,,-----17F;nTF-l ^atly Byam's exciting caravans). WE GUARANTEE A PARKING | 1035 Oakland ORGAN LESSONS POODLE, BLACK MALE, AKC, $50. BAY MARE, RIDING HORSE, ASACOtrA'C I AD'-CCT SPACE. «J3 fAPPAN BOTTLE GAS~Tfovl~iI/. 33B0514__________ _______________________________good disposition, to good home AMER!CA S LARoEST Large selection ol 13' wides. aiorms. winoows. ewninos. ouners AI«:- t____I______ ^4 REGISTERED AMERICAN ESKIMO - MA 9-45*5. ________ CM I IMf^ TAMPINR TRAII FR^ HOLLY PARK, CHAMPION ' AA BARBife, TAMMY OR SKIP-' tlms “fit F?ltin? usJd”’ __________puppies, (Spitz) <55. 5*3-1340, eft. 5. BUNNS"BOARbTNG“STABLES, BOX itLUNb^LfllVirmi^l^lLCKJ wmo AND PARK ESTAfES complett wardrobes, *4. 547- seasons *5 ee. 535-9533. scratch and tt PE 5-9545 Joa Vallelv *' 3 PLEASURE HORSES, WESTERN, AIRSTREAM LIGHTWEiGHT FREE WINTER STORAGE GMC 'VTON PICKUP, RUNS . d, Iqng box. 673-3042. iTol ENGLISH THAMES FORD loints. Will sell lor $135. 3300 Elizabeth Lake Rotd. 1963 GMC, W-fON PICkuP, V-6, re^o. lweter^ $900. 333-1757. .1963 RAN'CHERO PICKUP, 6-CYL-Inder, engine, automatic trensmls-I Sion, custom trim. Ford lactory I car. $9*5. JEROME FORD, Rochester FORD Dealer. OL 1 9711. 163 CHEVY PfCKUP. NEW -flRES, radio, custom box $1095 Autobahn Motors, Inc. AUTHORIZED vw DEALER tA mil. .mrth of MIracIa Mile FE *-4531 ________________________________, THE THRIFTY SHOP ADDING ^MACHINE - 10 KEYS,| Meny used apollances 4‘ enS"***" I Corona Elec., Smith Corona stable typew er, new 139.50. Cash reglster-a Ing maehina combination, racoi tkmad (75. Beverly's 775* Aub Rd., Utice 731-54*0. deposit will hold or we finance. BjJdwIn at Rundell. THE YalVATION i photo COPIERjW; folding "oS^”t4k,°coo“''tolilrt end' machine, *75; electric mimeograph 5497563. J jVPawrltar^ MB. Pg ^GtSTERED CHIHUAHUA” n Stort EquipNMnt 73 »w fox Tarrlar| pupMat, C ----------------------------hua and Toy Fox Terrier COMPLETE BEAUTY ^HOF BOUIP-|- ^ cainBiyiir* stalls and standing, whole NO . SELLING CAMPING TRAILERS NIMROD I M'DllND^RAILErSArE? I 3357 Dixie Hwy. 33B0773. PINTER'S (40. Saddles ANCHOR FENCES wo MONEY DOWN_________E''*''Y ATTENTION HUNTERS! 15 CUBIC -----Sl«i®i_____________ ft. dyt-type *reezer, RED SHIELD STORE " ’^^LAV^RBICE ST. I Sporting Good* tending, who ■ ^hted rin 1-M3NOW ON DISPLAY Tf^ex.c ........! IMMEDIATE DELIVERY CRUISE OUT, INC. --- - ,--- 63 E. Walton Blvd. FE ( pack. Free_de-_____Open Dally 9-6 AUTUMNSPECIALS '0 Opdyke pE 4-0934 75 at Oakland University Exit) Inside Eloot Storage MOTOR REPAIR BOAT REFINISHING-REPAIR Ask for EARL or DALE _______________________________ Wide Trock Auto Croft Oxford Trailer Soles w wide Track fe 5-1311 1944 MODELS, 15 to 40 ft., (-10-13-30 NOVV ON DISPLAY! 19M CHEVY VAN, 4-CYL IN0F9 pessenqer seat, 3,000 miles, like new throughout! *1,595. JEROME FORD. Rochester FORD Dealer, OL 1-9711._______________________ 1964 DODGE >'1 TON PICKUP. *74-3563. 19M FORD ECONOLINE. EXCEL-lent condition. Has windows all HUNTER DODGE, 1'945 CHEVY EL i horse. 4 speed, hetv condition, 637-3393., GOOD , featherweight 343 ' -------- ... — fE (-4463. ' condition, OR 3-3306 after 5. -----,,, AUTOMATIC WASHER, DRYER, USED GAS AND OIL FURNACES. »100 Call FE 5^534 after 6 p.m. ------- ---- ------^ 493-444* after Chandler Heating, OR 3-5533. 13 GAUGE AUTOMATIC REMINi TINY WHITE TOY POODLES __________Ml 7-0393________ TINY WHITE FEMALE POODLE PONY, SADDLE, BRIDLE, 30 -------/. Marlettes, Slew- SKI DADDLERI arts, Belvedere and the famous snowmobile until lightweight Thermo-panel Wlnnebe- • Also so I guarantee trelle _____________MMiot:— ~ | ELLSWORTH AUTO R!®JiTFPED,_QUARTER_ HORSE, AND TRAILER SALES ' years of good merchandising a 3,600 satisfied customers. Ooen 9-*, closed Sunday Several new boats and motor; In stock and going at rock-tx ! prices. Take M59 to W, High Right on Hickory Ridge Ru. . . .......... Demode Rd. Left and follow signs '**® GMC 13 welk-ln van I to DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO t-AKE. Phone MAIn 9-3179. Attention Hunters trlcel lupplles. Crock, i block and galva—" ~ tinge. Sanfry a.._ ------ - a I n t. Super Kam-Tona lufteleum. HEIGHTS SUPPLY Bottle Gas Installation Two lOGpound cyl mcnt, %n. Great PE S^*73. - wim permiT. 67-A Point Realty, i ' --------------- ---------- GOOD I " 4-5431 HAVE A FRESH TREE THIS " ‘ Christmas. Perfect shape. Densely ------ -----’. Ap- old goods, tools, ____rer, Phllco relrlg- e new, good clean lurnl-.. J, rins, diehes, utensils. Frank Caryl, Prop., John A. Cox, Auc- /llnderi end equip- “l«ct n. t Plaint Gafc Co., *',**, branched. Dark blue-gr« . „.D CARRY - _ -------- V-Grooved . 4x7 AAahogany V-Groavtd Opfn MON. and FRI. Evtt. 'til * O'clock DRAYTON PLYWOOD 4113 W. Walton _______ OR 34913 CONE'S PE (^ CHILDREN SKUDDIES HOUSESLIP-ers, fur trimmad, size IG3. Llb- g w Hoirf Ttol^aeWiw^^ 68; r, 4*17 J( BODY-HARRISON EQUIPMENT CO. IS MOVING TO PONTIAC New Location: 151 S. Cass Lake Rood (Acroea from 300 Bowl) CLEARANCE OP USED OFFICE furniture end machines. Forbes,___________________________ 4S00 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-9757. We DELTA 24-1NCH JIG SAW, ATLAS Guns-Gups-Guns of the meef complete lln ■ - • d Countyl complete line --WEATHER* ____JMGTON winchester-colt pistols —Try them before you buy— WE DO ALL OUR OWN Scope Mounting — Gun Smithing RIFLE RANGE-TRAP FIELD open to the PuMIc CLIFF DREYER'S AUCTION SALE - HOUSEHOLD APPLES, JONATHANS, RED DE-end equipment. Lecated 5 ml. east llclous. 334 N. Lake Angelas Rd. Lapeer on M31 to 3470 Imlay City {Applies m A BUSHEL, 435 E. ROM jM31). Fermell Cub tractor .'''j;iit*Rd*‘oft Rochester Rd. with blade, plow and cult.; 1964 .-oi cc~ oirir vniTB rwuu npVipe Hummer Lake Rd„ 3'/i mllet east of Ortonville. - I ____ . APPLES AND CIDER, MAHAN OR-' ______ _____ appll-i chard, 41* E. Walton, 1 block ol stove, retrlgeretor, deep Joslyn. No Sundy teles. _______________ dining room suite, 3-pc. bed- APPLES luite, plus much more. Sat.,' Delicious, AAcIntosh, Jonathan, CoiT- I AtICHIGAN BEST D Close-Out Streamline for 1965 24', 26' Models . PREMIUM P R I C - , . 1) MILEAGE AUTOS. i ^NEW SPACES WITH NATURAL GAS 45^ D^^E^ HV^Y ^ ^ OR^ 3-1355 . Ptmtlyc M^lle Ng^^^^^ .... backup .ights, large Diesel tractors, tandem ixlet; ploAj with wet lines to pull company —Prices Are Born trailers, Detroit area. 946-7636. , -And Raised Elsev.... “ Houghton *■ Son ’1 ! Craftsman * worn tarn sTding end timbers; gar-! den tools; 5 rooms complete of . home furnishings which Includes a * St Co., ______________s. Fresh pweet cider Oakland Orchards, 3305 East Com-I merce Rd., 1 mile east of MIF ________Oxtord-OA 8-3159_ iAUCTIONEERS: BERRY Spek; PE 44743 er FE 5-707t AT MIDDLETON'S ORCHARDS and adding machine. '3o0,'"irto cutting toreh'HYORAULIC JACK, t *40. OL 1-0533 after 5;30| spray gun, *15. tanger, *25, |l I bug, *35. UL 3-1150. f' tARGE BOAT TRAILER AND 11- |5|i5X E?|P,tn ® pp EVERY SATURD—. --- ------ EVERY SUNDAY a 3:00 UP CAMPERS I Sporting Goodt-AII Types ie« 1^ .. rio-' O®®’’ Every Audlw 1945 motaH 1^ at^s* yy, Buv-Sell-Trade, Retail 7 ( t. Dw Hunters check Conilgnmenti Welcome '?**• bI-b auction !ls with 44 ' C4fbover bed 50*9 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-3717 y equipped Inetudlng gas ■-------------------- through Sun. 151 Open I FrL All COMPLETE STOCK OF PIPE AND Musical 8 flHIngs. Custom threading. Imme- » "■ -1e service. Montcelnj Supply, 156 ^ 71 ; NO SALE THIS WEEK AT OXFORD *' rbodel,'S345.'i-usid'i0' m^l $5*5. We are dealers lor DelRey, -**!»«' Hhge or email. *7*-35Z Camp Mata, Travel Queen, Wlld-j PUBLIC AUCTION wood. Coachman A Anarha nick.! mus. 1 iwn r Gibson end Fender guitars amps. Guitars starting at *24.95, *39.95. DtRaa Music, I. BILL COLLER, 1 W. Montcalm. _ _ _ DISCOUNT OF to PER CENT TO 25 par cant an ptrtonallzod Christmas cards. Forbes Greeting Card Stxip — 4500 Dixie Hwy., Dray- njxie* Hw'*'*47Pvroo' ton Plaint. OR 34767. *'4U S7|_»'y Hwy. 674-ITIX)._ - —----------- -....________________ • «pi. size rerrigerarors, apt. size P« ‘T4m“bix accordion, GUITAR, PIANO, OR- POOL TABLES, PING PONG AND elec, ftovea, combination gas and ®t'i^^"p«lJ^*printlnYl. MlS ?•"' “r®'" '•*«"•' “'** •"<* *®'^- ’’O*'*'' - '^01- TOWN.1 coal stove, mm. anllnu. furnltura. ‘ ica-Mloehalla Music, 3375 Auburn, 333-2246. Miracle Mila Arepdt misc. Items ... -------------- .. PI P^TRii^ -^Sv-^ M __________________RiFLE. I MM, MOUNTED, 4X.I Tike 1^ EM ^‘’■'USf^BLE BONGOS, IMPORTED power, scope, complete, hunting 3-3404 ™ from Mexico. *35. OR 3-5370.____| js^et. 334-7903. Call after 5:», DODD'S ORCHARD, 2330 CLARKS-, ton Rd. SPECIAL last call for Pick your own apples, red dOr I llclous, steel reds, sp'- *’ “ * bushel, taing containers. GOLDEN AND DELICIOUS APPlBI sprayedy $1 upr 3034 Squirrel mile off Walton. GOOD APPLES, $1.25 PER BUSHEL, pick your own. 1051 Perry ' Rd„ Clarkston. DONUTS. MADE WITH ^chman nradels Dressers, vanities, half-size ’ ............ • • full size beds ~n refrlgarators, --------iblnatioi. .________ antique furniture# _____ ____ .... vegetable shortening, fresh filtered cider, quality applet, wholesale and retail, Diehl's Orchard and Cider Mill, 1478 Ranch Rd„ 5 miles S. of Holly, lust POTATOES, GRADE "B", 75 CENTS grade outs, SOc a bu. Windy ' 1215 Stoney Creek Rd„ ‘ NOW ON DISPLAY -The Twin Bed Models-—Luxury—Ouallty- Holly Travel Coach Inc. 15210 Holly Rd„ Holly ME 4-4ni -Open Dally and Sundayt- lAuto Acuiseriei HARDTOP FOR SLIDE WINDOW./-nlJCnr-j- n, ' ---- -r Midget, 6*3-1133 after 5 LalltOmia BUyBrS Jires-Aiito-Truclr Iattention truckers I tread 900x20 truck tires, ^ dition, set of 4, S99.9S 1370 Wide Trepk Drive 1 92 buying SHARP CARS End-of-Model Clearance! CENTURY-GARWAY TRAVEL MASTER-SAGE Two 24-tt. Centuries TOM STACHLER AUTO & MOBILE SALES 3093 W. Huron St._____FE 3-4931 FRANKLIN Truck Campers HONDA BENTLEY, ____ CLEARANCE MALLARD TRAVEL TRAILERS HEILITE CAMPERS RUPP'S - Telegraph at 12 Mile Tuet.-Sat„ 104, open Tuet. eve. For the Finest m Top-Quality Merchandise Shop MOKlTGOMERY WARD PONTIAC MALL 9. Used Plano S50. GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. ---- -------.Jelghts, Michigan I After tlx yeOrs of successfuf business Mr. Harold Smith It tellng out complett modern tfalnleit steel . ------- r«t>urant equipment, end retiring butinatt. Everything must be BULLDOZING - SAND, GRAVEL' told from ^ , O 1 ^nd fill. OR 3-5730._____^ MODERI Close Out Sale ‘ ■ r***®?® CHOICE BLACK DIRT, 6 YARD* MODERN STAINLESS STEEL RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT all Clock — Duo Therm Heats GREENERD ARBOR PRESS NO. 3W, $70. I Gam lathe, 10" swing, 3' tahveen centers,, threading dial S29S. 1 Blalsdell lathe. 34" swing, 7' 6" center, good shape $475. 1 Foster, IB, geared head, 4-way , cut 0 ruT______ ... .. jt^^any 375 gal. tank. ... .___ ____ rtatonabla otter "'““^MORRIS MUSIC 34 S. Bd FE 54106 Across from Tel-Huron FE 3-0567 ------ top toll, 7 yi —.. gravel, f|ll. FE S40S1._______ !godd driveway gravel, 5 I yards tor *10, Del, FE 4-5500. . ----- ------- ---- ~... 7 yards SIS. Delivered. FE OIL CONVERSION COMPLETE LINE OF STORY AND 44500.___________________ ' -....... *“ - ■ ..... .... .......- -* PONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS SUP- -....... -nvel, fill dirt. OR dA^AOE SALE, ANTIQUES ANdI orgenr’wHh if-' ~ S-'fsSO.”'"" lljbMtiold Items, Set. 9 e.m„ 2204 techment stirtlnfl «!, SAND, GRAVEL, Harwood, Royal Oak. 1 block south Music, 4130 DIxTa Hwy. 574-1700. „n_ Lincoln, 3 blocks east of Camp ORGANS and PIANOS | ' ......... uOAHMt SALE: ADDED TREA^ wras, quality clothing, tall ar- rangamantA 3595 Oct. 33-a. 10 ai .TOP SOIL, SAND, GRAVEL, FILU . ...____ conn Dealer tor m.' bulMozIng, Clark^._MA 5-1339, BIRMINGHAM - PONTIAC area. |tOP SOIL, PE^ SAND, CLAY Kl Conn. Spinet organ, walnut, GARAGE SALE FRIDAY, OCTO-ber 33 7 to 9 p.m. runt 1 ■ I. to 9 p.m. 3520 War- Used Conn Serenade, 35 pedal, i« grading. OR 4-1945. BLACK DIRT: AUO GARA6F DOORS SalM‘ ca. 33a6'~Ceit sfftA. ... mlngtiam, FI 34303 or Ml 4-1035, SA* STOVE, *30, REFRIGERATOR, 135, 54lac* dining room sat 55^ ,....... 320^1100 oil expert piano TUNING, A-t RE- LEW BETTERLY MUSIC CO. (across from B'ham. Thaatar) 9 $55, Frta Parking ' "" Wood-Coal-Colia-f «al 77 CHERRY, OAK AND MIXED, saasonad. FE 2-7774. . WELL 1 FIREPLACE WOOD 5744744 SEASONED FIREPLACE trta dellvary, OR 3-3105.' WOOD, Pats-Hnntiiif Dogs 79| 14'/!i tt. by 2r/4 In. table - salt and gepp Napkin h ' gineering h tars, $400 0-3700. !, $575. 1 Staple e 5 1953 TD4 international BULL- Sar^t mixing tube Serial No. 3501524 - Kalvlnator Refrigerator -t'wpdoor refrigerator - ' aire chest type deep I Cory Presh'nd Aire I 30" Fen /Model C77 BODY-HARRISON EQUIPMENT CO. IS MOVING TO PONTIAC New Location: 151 S. Cass Lake Road 330-4000 (Across from 300 Bowl) a*mer - FARMALL MODEL A TRACTDR Freth4-I WITH PLOW AND CULTIVATOR, - 1 open' RECONDITIONED, ‘ ----------- to. 737141 *395. . PRICE MANY OTHERS KING BROS. 1-YEAR-OLD GERMAN TOLK|I HAGGERTY HAS IT! gr.4^p PiANbJp-BciAr ’ K. 0. workbench with drawer,i ' wilt up, only (9.75. HAGGERTY LUMBER I » H WtlNii ^WEik-OLD DACHSHUNDS FE S-5373 .JUND PUPS, ....... ■ JAHEIMS FE *-353*. J/KOTrUiEP WELL PUMI*, tank and contrele, *35, OR 3-3037. JAWITROL. UfcOflO ■Tl^O'g "llto'Sp^ ptalS, ’aTRwiA^'ViAuYipuL'Dte wrlght piano with mirror. *»y poodle* 7 weak* rtd UL ^3i94. Pfiyar plane, naadt. small AKC REGISTERED FRENCH POO-*95. Old plai“ ' •'* — - —■— — ■ --- Etna 3^91. GUITARS GUITARS OUiYaRS i *hjitlna ttocl MUSIC CENTER CRAOI lACk:' liitt^^UNION.^LAKyR^ At^POOD^I, **5 AND UP. I >misriMv tief n>S4e $*7 '' ' ' mU« SflOtOnt a standing fl^laca, 19« havt tta naw attachmant if- ----- ------— wagon, IMS yt^n, daap wih maka any piano Into 4 jjayi ^1 will "rSa’Ja'iVSin;'lis;,*?Hy-— -tt. «'N OR 10 WE NEED CARS! TOP DOLLAR FOR GOOD CLEAN CARS Matthews-Hargreaves 531 OAKLAND AVENUE FE 4-4547 Junk Cars-Trucks 101-A Free tow. OR 3-2930. K CARS - TRUCKS 250CC. Take M99 t....... right on Hickory Ridge Road Demode Road, left and folio stone to DAWSON'S SALES A TIPSICO LAKE. Phone MAIn 9-211 ALWAYS BUYING JUNK CARS-FREE TOWS TOP SSS-CALL FE 54143 SAM ALLEN *■ SONS, INC. SUZUKI Used Auto-Trvck Parts 102 MILE WARRANTY. ’""^^^K'S'sArES.NC; 027 E. U 319 PONTIAC ENGINE, TRI-CARB, E New and Used Trucks 103New and Used Tmcb 103 HEVY - FORD-COMET-FALCON 6-cyl„ factory rebuilt motors. 599 can Install. Terms. Other makes low priced. 537-1117.__ GMC FACTORY BRANCH New and Usod Trucks FE 5-9405_____575 Oakland FORD ECONOLINE VAN, 1963, good condition. Can bo seen at 1738 W. Maple, Birmingham, after - 500-3300. JEEP, 4-WHEEL DRIVE PICKUP, runs good, 5495. Office at 170 N. Opdyke. AUTO INSURANCE FOR ANYONE CANCELED REFUSED Young Drivers? ierylce — Payment plant. , CALL today FE 4-3535 Anderson & Associates 1044 Joslyn Avenue Foreign Cars 53.M down ond 53.M per week. Real good economy. We handle and arrange ell financing. Cell Mr. Den^af Capitol Auto G.M.C. Final Clearance RooB, Union Lake. U' BOAT, MOTOR AND trailer. Good condition, $395. Attar i p.m. ptiona 574-0055. OCTOBER CLEARANCE SALE: V5, 000. Intcrost tree to Spring. Now and uaod tractors, plows, discs. • .....................- JACOBSON TRAILER SALtS I, RENTALS 5590 Wllllims Leka Rd. .wT i^hSr*Ot.^^ ELUiTa BIG! BIGI SAVINGS! UP TO 30% OFF ON 1965 I MODELS NOW IN STOCK! | PONTIAC'S ONLY MERCURY i MERCRUISER DEALER FOX SNOWMOBILES NIMROD CAMP TRAILERS Marino and Sporting Goodo CRUISE OUT, INC. i53 E. Walton Dally 9-5 FE 0-4403 5 New 1965 GMC . Pickups . . . . $1864.00 MODEL 1-1000 includts State Tax and Fodtral Excisa Tax G.M.C. FACTORY BRANCH 675 Oakkmd fjt Cou Ft 59465 D—« THK PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1965 NtdjpCm HiNwip Cm IKlNtw mdlhuiOn 1M Nm md Um4 Cm 1M TIZZY By Kate Omni mr vw, oogg ^cowmtiom. tm. r ***’—-------------------------- CADILLAC HU. W4-W3. _____________________________ IM* VIcMrta Ford » KAkMANN OHIA CCMJMb l6w ISS* ' ‘ ‘1 tainitr »nd JJJJ f down. M monthi on boMic* 'SS!‘ tm 1959 OPEL JbUICK 1M» eLtCTRA, BLUE I doar. hardhiB, cloon, all 00»> »l «-5M1 affof t I HAROLD ^ TURNER < FOOD, INC. [- 4M S. WOODWARD AVE. „ 1- BIRMINGHAM_Ml A7«t ^ INI CHEVY I MR ALA MOOR hirdtat, « (Nek. ra«w Iwator, now tirii, tWB. gum._ id . LOW MILEAGE, INI ChIvV II,! Nova Adoor, all rad, Hiam, many I \Wrtm. tNI or baal tdir. OA U Autobahn |j Specials Nm w< iyi Cm W 1 INS CADILLAC COU*»E ^VILLE, II Mr. Mur^y at Capitol Auto ' 312 W. MONTCALM ?M0 VW CONVeRTIBLEr EXCEL- 1f«e VWr RADIO, HEATER. EX-CtlM condition, 1650. 67>5I30, or OR 4-1» oftor 5._________________ mt VOLVO, EXTRA CLEAN, 1695, wcoRty. Col 4101. McAuli_________________ mi BUICK ELECTRA CONVERTt- WE FINANCE King Auto 377S W. HURON ST. FE 84088 Repossession gold, blai Honing, ci iJM't ■— dock l„ I A37ti. SPECIAL ChoviM, l»S7-l«l, tl4S up ISt Plymoutn wagon, t^pasionger, w motor tlrao, carburetor, tItS. A - CLEF __________=E 4-M4S._________ INI VAUXHALL DELUXE, EXCEL- Call '»M CHEVY GAS CAR, l-PIECE tiberglasi front end, plexlglen B and M front axle, I" sliclu, Amerl-can Meg front wheels. OR 4-I5W. 1»S5 CHEVY, g-OOOR SPECIAL, 1»« INI BUICK LcSABRE MXX)R, JJI®Mrtorman^4W*?r'^/»’'^;o ” power steering end brakes, full price Sl,»5. steering ...... - - - --- _____l,»5. otter, msadt._______ i OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH VW CONVERTIBLE, I^EBUILT Oakland Ave.____________3M-»150 engine, tSSO. FE M14S /, EXCELLENT E, REBUI >S eWer 4, CONDITK mi vw BUS, GOOD CONDITION, «»dMl Clerkston.____________ tail VOLKSWAGEN SEDAN, EX- 1957 CHEVY V4 CONVERTIBLE, down. CREDIT NO _ WE FINANCE BANK RATES. LUCKY AUTO’^ Oitvy Bol Air Adoor. Aul Ic, rodio, now tlroi, lint m Ileal condition .S < .— Chavy II Neva Sugar Spot Dark bhw flniib, lull powtr at -lutomatic transmlaalon wllb V'B «. I"0 SI7IS Autobahn Motors, Inc. AUTHORIZED VW DEALER GLENN'S 19«3 Chovy station wagon, Bel Air, power ateering, posvar brskss. Aik L. C. Williams, Salesman 952 W. Huron St. FE A737I FE AI7»7 Many more to choeat from 1 CORVETTE STINGRAY WITH ■“ 327 engine. Aspoed. extra I S1.M5. JEROME FORD - S5Ti5S"V.,“«^<{Sg - *f9 rufeEMR'R«.T,Sr cti^ut wnti a wMta big /stg'yE i INt FALCON TWO - DOOR V.lEV^"B,OLt(TTL« A^EY MWN, waakly pay-CREDIT^MO(?*Mr. ^ Pa^ HARO^ turner FORD, H ENGLISH FORD, CONSOL, A 19«3 BUICK ADOOR 9-PAS- 1, buckets, 14,000 Repossession 1957 imperial, full power, luxury car. Just released for public sale. No tS needed. Full balance, $297. Call Mr. Cash, 331-4520. Spartan. 1943 VW. 2-DOOR. IN ALMOST NEW CONDITION. 1-OWNER TRADE. t95 DOWN, BANK RATES. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY - VILLAGE RAMBLER, 444 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMING- TRADE, S1475 FULL PRICE, BANK RATES. VILLAGE rambler, ........— 1950 CHEVY ADOOR, AUTO- SHIFT 1944 VW $1,150 CALL 451-0444 ’»«,OPEL extras, exc. con- ;»« “"'S' GLENN'S 1954 CHEV 34t. NEW ENGINE A , auto, trans. Runs excellent, m< new parts. 1250. 334-2327. I VOLKSWAGEN CAMPER, 'KSl miles ' — g, 11795. --------, --------------- 332A150 factory ottklsrs, full power, tec-torv air coodilioning. Ask tor— L. C. Williams, Solesmon 952 W. Huron St. FE A7371 FE A1797 Many more to choose from. 1944 VW, $1295, EXCELLENT ditlon. 1930 Adoor Ford, 1300. 474 2724, eves.____ 1944 VW MICROBUS, iljm Ml. 1965 MG 1100 SPORTS SEDAN NORTHWOOD , AUTO OUTLET transportation, $99. BUT HERE-PAY HERE CREDIT NO PROBLEM I Dixie Hwy, FE A9239 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM _____Just east of Oakland 943 CHEVY SUPER SPORT COI vertible, 11495. OR A04N efN Grimaldi 1945 SUNBEAM MINX. CAN BE seen between f:X e.m. and 1 p.m. 37M Suniet, Orctwrd Lake. Ml- snd a difference of— $1597 NOW OPEN 855 Oakland Ave. (Outdoor Showroom) (Just la mile north of Cass Ave.) Spartan Docige 1965 FIAT SPYDER 15M *‘^^^[|^''®^jLl66*mile'' t Grimaldi Imported Car Co. 1943 BUICK WAGON. SPECIAL DE-luxe, excollant I owner, steering, brakes, $1495. Cal 1964 VW 2-Ooor wtth heeler, radio, whIN or. Whitt. Only S1J95. 1962 VW ami rodio, hooter, whi Id Mack finish. $1,095. Crissmon Chevrolet Grimaldi Imported Cor Co. 1959 CHEVYS FIVE TO CHOOSE FROM, _ shifts, and automatic radios, and Wa handle and arrange all financing, call Mr. Dan at: FE 84071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM _____Just east of Oakland 1959 CHEVY, A-1 SHAPE, I OWNER. 1-& CHEVY, A-1 SHAPE, 1 i GLENN S RADIO AND t n, READY TO GO, NEW CAR TRADE. 195 DOWN. BANK RATES, IMMEDIATE DELIVERY. VILLAGE RAMBLER (TROY LOT) IS MILE AND LIVERNOIS. JU S4IS3t. CHEVY IMPALA. POWER Bkas, seats, steering end ws. Air conditiongin. Speed GLENN'S L. C: WilTiams;"sa FE 4-7371 ialesmon FE 4-1797 1943 CHEVY BPL AIR,y-l. VERY Clean. $1,295. Opdyke Hardware_________FE M416 1943 CHEVY IMPALA CONVERTI- Teter wanted to form a singing group, but his mother wouldn’t let him wear his hair ^t way!” New wJ Used Cot 1919 FORD WAGON, tlOO __________334-7511______ Repossession Just released lor public solo, 194 T-BIRD, hill power. No $4 naedai payments of lust 17.97 weekly. Wi bring car to your homo. Call Mi Cash at 33B45». Sperten._ 1940 FORD FAIRLANe M, LIGHT 142 DODGE DART ADOOR, Automatic radio, hottor, ' ■-—-* now tlrei. Extra claan, ..... ROME FORD, Rochester FORD Peeler, OL MTIl,________________ 1943 DODGE DART OT, BUCKET --------------------------------- “■ 7-0955. I FINANCE 1954 Dodge sedan 1957 Ford end Plymoulh 1954 Buick I. Pontiac Plenty of toto modob, ECONOMY CARS 2335 PIXIE H DODGE 2-doOr hardtop. VI on-lotic tronsmisaton, ra-powor sMorlng, whlto-—.. .vJ finisb with 2'— matohing interior. Very clean 1940 T-BIRD HARDTOP, FULL power, orlglnel owner. 199* A3774.___________ 19W T-BIRD HAfc6t6*^, HwER ^RgMI^RocheMer f6. Niw Md UsH Cm. 19* Fancy Fliess 7 USED T-BIRDS 1964's and 196S's LANDBAUS HARDTOPS As low ATI^TDown Payment of $79 Months Credit no problem HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. U4 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml A950B 1944 FORD CONVERTIBLE WITH KVUNOER ENGINE STICK SHIFT, RADIO, HEATER. ALMOST LIKE NEW,’ NEW CAR TRADE. SI99S FULL PRICE BANK RATES. VILLAGE RAMBLER, 444 S. WOODWARD AVi., B I R- 19M THUNDERBIRD LANDAU, door hardtop, oulumn brown, a tomallc, roffio, hootar, full powt kooutiful condition. Just oM ci BOB BORST 1963 F04D CONVERTIBLE with VI angina, auto-matic Iranimistton, radio ord hpetor, whtttwall tirat, 149 or HAROLD TURNER REPOSSESIION -no money down-sraokly. Coll 4 KESSLER'S "lefs Tra* Sol." 1945 DODGE Polara Hardtop. I has a list of oqulpmont tar kmg to detail here, including way power, end factory Air Cot S. We'd like to trade tor . '41 end e difterance of Only $2497 g.997lj hie, 4-speed, Cordovan brown. 1943 Buick Skylark. 4-speed, Cordovan top, power steering, powr~ brakes, power windows. Ask tor— L. C. Williams, Salesman FISCHER BUICK 544 S. Woodward 647-560D 3 BUtC.K SKYLARK CONVERT!- 1964 Buick HAROLD TURNER bundle and arrange all financing Can Mr. Dan at; FE 84D71 "^Capitoi~Sutd“ 312 W. MONTCALM ____Just east of Oakland_ 1966 MG MIDGET Red with black Interior, new i demo, red with black interior, w wheels end ell the accessories, t week only 12095. EASY BANK RATES FINANCING ARRANGED Grimalcdi FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-1 JICK SKYLARK mite, auto,. IM. Ik -GIF»454; ___ 11945 BUICK SKY LARK I 1959 CHEVY STATION WAGON, BIgI rSTJSj OL —I buy at 1275. 1939 J-mib- se^Ajt.r^YI!:5S”gB^»j^'' 1959 CHEVY 4-OOOR WAGON, ONE- S225. F^sS?!. running second c ORIGINAL OWNER, 1940 BISCAYNE 4door, nice condition, outi • transmission. 444-3144, s»k. BOB BORST LINCOLN-MERCURY 520 S. Woodward - 1944 CHEVY SUPER SPORT, —‘ne, double power, extra cla t sell. FE 2-7714._____________________ II, AUTOMATIC arrange ell financing, cell M Den at: FE 84071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM WE FINANCE BANK RATES. ?i LUCKY AUTO « CHEVY BEL AIR 2-DOOR, tires, S495. 473-1391. Strene; 1. Full price,'S495. WE FINANCE King Auto 3275 W. Huron St. FE 8-4088 1940 CORVAIR, AUTOMATIC, door. 2tN E. Wilton. $395. 1940 CORVAIR 4-DOOR AU1 Forbes - OR 43414. Windows; I'»<' CHEVY NOMAD, . 1945 SKYLARK, MIDNIGHT AQUA,' ir, block I -e steering, III wheels i 434M. I Steering and brakes, a ing. sharp, almost Ilka new, mu«, i oaklano*^rysler-plymoutk; 1724 Oakland Ave.______332-9150 CHEVY ^DOOR HARDTOP I .»ry ----- --------- ---------- I 5-1742. arrange all financing, ca '*Ve 84071 Capitol Auto Tn'’‘-iaJ'* OAKLAn'd CHmiER^^PLY^O^^^ 447-3406. NEW 1966 FIATS 4-door seds Id. 12,(100 It Grimaldi Volkswagen Center 1959 CADILLAC 4000R, EXTRA j sharp, S1.19S. I mazurek motor sales . Wee«2word it S. Bird. FE 49507 ;l Repossession i 1941 CORVAIR WITH AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RA-DIO AND HEATER, WHITE-WALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Waakly —.. p^ll Parks at 1 CORVAIR MONZA, 4-SPEED . '♦», FORD WAGON, $200. MUST 11450. Ml 7-1370. VY A4ALIBU CONVERT- 945 CHEVY 3D00R HARDTOP, 4^lfnder stick, red, 3 mos. old. 4,000 actual miles, leaving country. Call otter 5. 334-3314 or 332-4032. 1945 CORVETTE CONVERTIBLE, 1M9 T-BIRO, WITH ALL _______ . , fOWER, EXCEPTIONALLY 19S“CHEvVs(JPE»-ll«5ffrW3P - lrTuLL®%mCE iT—yy.o?*y._Z.- bank rates, ’’ VILLAGE GLENN'S .— Chevy BIscayne 4-door aedar V-t automatic transmission, powe steering, povrer broket, tlnte glass. Ask lor— L. C. Williams, Salesman 952 W. Huron St. FE 4-7371 FE 4-I7W, NOW OPEN 855 Oakland Ave. (Outdoor Showroom) ) W mile north of Cass A„., Spartan Dodge OFFER OVER 1953 I . GOOD TRANSPORTA- S* FORD STATION WAGON, good transportation, 175. FE 50243. '57 FORD CONVERTIBLE, GOOb angina, 1150 " 5-0312, attar 4 p.m. WAGON, NEW TIRES. transp., W5. 'ma 5-1449. 1959 FORD 4-DOOR, V-0 POWER CtAM'lfig, ----- k AUTOMATIC NICE oood fires, runt good, 153-3443. NORTHWOOD AUTO OUTLET Today's Speciol: » Ford, 2-door, VI engine, i etoen' 1197*'* hooter. BUY HERE—PAY HERE CRFmT NO PROBLEM 2023 Dixie P— — * 1959 FORD FAIRLANE 2-OOOR $E-fan, V-l eutometic. Posvar ttoar- ^5. Wl'frERSON'^CH^'^ROLE^ Co. 1104 S. Woodward Ave. minghem. Ml A2735._______ a power, tUt, FE 4-5042. ROSE RAMBLER 1145 COAAMERCE ROAD _____UNION UKB_ 1M1 FORD RANCH WAGON A ilA* King Auto FREE FLORIDA VACATION With the puTchase of any COT duTing the month of OctobeT. STOP IN OR CALL FOR DETAILS 13 CORVAIR 34oor BILL SMITH USED CARS 462 N. PERRY FE 44241 mi FORD HARDTOP WITH FULL POWER, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO . AND HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTf-LY NO MONEY DOWN, Wookty paymmls only SLtS, CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Porks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7520. MUST DISPOSE OP 1943 FORD, h HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD'AVE. BIRMINGHAM r Um6 Cm IM Save Save Save We H^vg 4 1965' Company Owned Demo's These Cars Must Bt Sold NoHeosonoble Offet; Refused 1965 Ford Coloxit S(XI XL Convertible 1965 Ford LTD Hardtop 1965 Ford Custom 500 Sedan 4-Door 1965 Ford Fairlane 4-Door BEATTIE 1964 FORD CUSTOM MO 4'DOORp radia haater# axtra aharpr Only niyic uwy in WATERFORD ViiSk forddealer^si^ iw; Pow-I OR 3-1291 FORD Daalar. OL 19711. 19M THUNDERBIRD. f ar. Bast otter. <93-1441. 14 FORD, CUSTOM SOO, VI, STAN- 1M4 FORD fairlane POOOR, 4-cyl. stick, radio, 14jm milot, SV 2fS. JEROME FORD, Rochtstor FORD Deiltr. OL 1-9711.________ WMkIy poymonts only $11,49. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM__Ml A791. 1944 FALCON SPRINT CONVERTL Ho, tach, 49poad, now tiros, vL CADILLACS MUST DISPOSE OF 1944 FORD -town, paymanls i Call Mr. Murphy i money dov J3 waakly. Ci 14111. McAutW "Let's Trade Sole" 1944 FORD FastbWk In glowing red with a "S$2" mglne, trith laft fit powtr Inltr^. wrd $1597 Buf Make Ut Your Otter and Lot's Trade Call 33MS3I Spartan Dexige COUPES, SEDANS, COUPE DaVILLES, FLEETWTOOS AND CONVERTIBLES. MOST WITH AIR CONOITIONINO AND SOME FULLY EQUIPPED. OTHERS WTH OPTION YOUR CHOICE. THESE ARE ALL TOP-QUALITY MRS. $495 DOWN 1964 COUPES. SEDANS, COUPE DaVILLES, SEDAN DALLES, FLEETWOODS AND CONVERTIBLES. MOST WITH AIR CONOITIONINO AND SOME COMPLETELY EQUII^ED. OTHERS WITH OPTIONS OF YOUR CHOICE. 34 MONTH FINANCING. $395 DOWN SOME FULLY EQUIPPED. OTHERS WITH OPTIONS OF YOUR CHOICE. SMALL MONTHLY PAYMENTS AVAILABLE. $295 DOWN 1962, 1961 AND 1960 COUPES, SEDANS, COUPE DaVILLES, SEDAN DoVILLES, CONVERTIBLES AND FLEETWOODS. SOME ARE FULLY EQUIPPED AND MOST HAVE AIR CONDITIONING. OTHERS WITH OPTIONS YOU WILL ADMIRE. 1-OWNER, BIRMINGHAM TRADES. SAVE WILSON PONTIAC - CADILLAC 1 BLOCK SOUTH OF 16 MILE BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-1930 1941 FORD, V-l, FAIRLANE, FOUR- handto and arrange call Mr. Dan at: FE 84071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM „ _ Just east at Oakland , 1942 F 0 R D TWO - DOOR WITH AUTOMATIC TRANI-MISIION, RADIO AND HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRE!, ABIOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, W4ikly payments aniy M.9t CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7520. werrenty tor your protoctlon. We'd Jike to trade tor a decent "* end e "dWcrancc" of only— $1997' [ Spe'rten._________________ "Let's Trode Sole" 1943 CADILLAC Hardtop, that tlw 1941 CHEVROLET BROOKWO(X>' •* ^*** ™:'>»:^iSpartan Dodge GLENN'S ----- r,-^. .^--..,7 -----------------. - . DOOg'E "HO" Udeo, $1897 It ttetion sragon. 9JI00| ent unconditional war-21,995' 12 Renault Dauphlne. Green fln». ' toNpnt tires, maehanicallir per 2 Kermann chie eoupe. F Ito Msh, rad Intertor, radio. Autobahn Motors, Inc. 1942 CHEVY II ITATION WA^.j 4-door, automatic runs almost Itke' new. Full price, 1797. No itfcw, down, U.S6 par week. Can Mr. I ESTATE I STORAGE! IJutt U| mile north of Cast Aye.) ij09 S. East Blvd. 323-7l4li' Spartan Dodge —iheater. Turquoise, SB99. $1797 [Spartan Dexige QUALITY That's What You Get in an USED CAR HASKINS Chev. Inc. OLIVER BUICK -Double Checkeid Useid Cars- -1965 1965 1964 1965 BONNEVILLE 2-door hordtop, radio, heatdr, power stewing, brakes, whitewolls. Whit# with blue ^2375 LeSABRE 2-door hardtop, with radio, heater, power steering, brakes, whitewalls, automatic, maroon finish with block buckets. PONTIAC Cotolind 2-door hardtop, power steering, brakes, radio, heater, whitewalls. Light blue finish OLDS 4-door hordtop, Dynomic "88," power steering, brakes, radio, heater, whitewolls. Beautiful turquoise finish ................................... $2975 $2745 $2795 1942 CADILLAC FLEETWOOD, . ly equipped with elr conditioning. 22,ig0 mllos. $3250. 4443474. LET'S MAKE A DEAL ON THESE t964 Cadillac aH Mock convartl-Bto. MMI miloa, sharp. 12,495. 1914 eidwi 4wtodow, air oondl-ttanad, Inverness Green, full ppw-4T, <4epy aaat and wbidowt. soft rtV Btom. Ii«l MHOS, privet# •ampr. Can financt wHn 1295 dotan., deH.WP9MnBton.RdyelOak LI 3-4171 or LI 7-2211 I CORVAIR MiOHZA, EXClul _______________ lent condition, l-pwnar. <13-5311. OAKLAnY,.. «-ooo'i;-i.iPEEo, CHEVROLET FOUR. « WITH RADIO AND TER, ECONOMICAL ' “ “ WHITEWAU PATTERSON ROCHESTER Chrysler—Plymouth Imperial—Voliont 1963 CHEVY Hordtop 3-door wffb pewar atadrlng, brakta, dark Huo, automatic 1963 CHEVY Bel Air automatic gas lavarl 1962 OLDS "88" Adoor Hardtop, powtr atoaring, brtkaa, light bluo. '62 PONTIAC Bonneville Adoor hardly wtth toll ptwar, automatic dnn. 1964 CHEVELLE Hordtop 2-door with powtr atoarbtg, brakaa, tutomatlc UgM •raani 1964 OLDS Convertible Powar ataarhig, brUm, rial 1963 CORVAIR Spydtr Canvartibto,' wlffi t fira angtoo rod. 4-wtad. '64 PONTIAC Convertible Powar itoorlng, brakaa, automatic. Extra Met throughout! on US-10 at M-15 aarkston MA5-2604 1 Wildcat 4-door sedan, power steering, brakes, ^T iyD4 rodio, heater, whitewolls. H....................... ........ lipr^i/b 1QO tr BUICK Skylark convertible, power steering, brakes, rfio C nn i C/UO whitewalls. White with blue vinyl bench seats.. i4)^Qy / _ FORD XL convertible, power steering, brakes, rodio, 1 QnS *’*®^*^' whitewalls. Beautiful red finish, with white (Cl QQC IZ/UU vinyl trim and with console ................................ OLDS "98" 2-door hardtop, power steering, brakes, _ _ - ^ power vents ond power windows, and FACTORY AIR 1064 with console. Light green j^2*7Q5 1 /I Sports CoOpe, rodio, heoter, power stHring, r lyUT brokes, whitewolls. Bronze finish. Only ..................... 0O OLIVER BUICK 196-210 Orchard Lake FE 2-9165 r ■ THE PONTIAC Pit ESS FRIDAY. OCTOBER 22^ 1965 I) 9 Nmt «i M Can 1M iS&L C» GO!!^ HAUPT PONTIAC RipgMtMioM ~ mirMClifm. CREDIT AUTO tALKt ync, V-l •nglna, power, t« ms CATALINA ^door hortitap, pow-^^i^lng, prokoi, foctory of- mi CHIVY wagon. Soo ttili i only MS down. ms BONNEVILLI convortiblo, load-ad. lava SM. 1SSS CATALINA 2-door hardtop, p or flaarina, Vaktt, auio., « vonturo trim, only tts dawn. ms CATALINA, 2-door, automatic. Ihw and Ua$4 Cin 106 Ikw aad IM Can AUTO tAL Oaklat^ at W Ft 2-021 iOSi MUSTAN9 STICK, I MO. taka ovar paymantt. EM Pretty Ponies T965 Mustangs 7 USED MUSTANOS TO CHOOSE FROM CONVERTIBLES HARDTOPS 2 PLUS 2's FULL EQUIPMENT As Low As $79 Down HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. M4 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-7500 gold with Whitt hw. radio and tr, automatic. 02,m. OAKLAND CHRYSLER-FLYMOUTH n4 Oakland Ava._______M&ISO ItSS MUSTANO, VI STICK, SILVER gray with rad Inlorlor. 1 cwnar CREDnf*No *fr(Slem,*wb*Ti; NANCE BANK RATES. ' LUCKY AUTO 1740 W. WMa Track FB 4-2214 or FE S7IS4I CONTINENTAL CONVERTIBLI f(j//m/;nr/n’/& OLDS-RAMBLER-GMC -I condition. Cholca BIr-Pricedtoaell. BOB BORST LINCOLN-MERCURY 1750 MERCURY TURNPIKE CRUIS-ar. Good condition. 0250.' 45V - ' MERCURY 1757, 7-PASSENGER 5 - 1965 OLDS BRAND NEW Left to Go at a Tremendous Savings - ALSO - Hera Is a Small List of '66 OLDS TRADES-Save Nowl ms 0L6S Cutidss ta, radio, hooter, 4-apaad tram lulon, rad line tiraa, axtr larpi $2550 1965 PONTIAC GTO trammlMlon, extra aharp through* $2550 1965 PONTIAC LeMans SDoor hardtop with 4-ipeed trana-mlaalon, radio, haatar, whHa-walla, extra meal $2425 1965 OLDS Delta 4-Door hardtop, dark green, only 74m mllat, radio, heater, whlta-wallA tintad glaaa, power ateer-Ing, brakaa, extra neat through- $2895 Town Sedan, light gi low mileage, power brakaa, tilt itearlng, ra_... — er, rear teat defroater, cornering $2995 1965 OLDS “88" 2-Door hardtop, burgundy In $2795 19M PONTIAC Wogon , heater, whltawalla, power ataering, brakaa, and power tall-gatel Only — $2295 1962 OLDS Hardtop 2-Door with a tan finlah, real brakaa, and automatic. $1195 A LARGE SELECTION OF LATE MODEL USED C^. IN STOCK - Prices Are Born' Here -and Raised Elsewhere - 528 N. MAIN ST. ROCHESTER OL 1-9761 CARNIVAL By Dick Turner New end Used Cere 106 IfSS OLDS DYNAMIC It 4«00R aadan. Sllvar blua finith. Automatic, _po«mr ataarlng, brakaa. S1475. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1104 S. Woodward AvOm Blrmlng- ham. Ml 4-27S5._____________ 1744 OLDS M HOLIDAY, A^DOOR. -----prlvata ownar, aacritica, ------jr. 472-2152.__________ 1744 4-DOOi( OLDS MI‘A\)Y6MaY|C, powar ataarlng. brakaa. laooo mllat. FB 2-2243. _________________ 1744 OLDS M CONVERTIBLE -white, power accettorlat, axcallant condition, ItMt. BOB BORST LINCOLN-MERCURY S20 S. Woodward Blrmlnghar ____________Ml 4-4531 1744 OLDS, 4 - SPEED, B U C K E Nbw end Used Can 1751 PLYMOUTH, RADIO, REBUILT engine and ti — 2-SS02 after 5_________________ tSI PLYMOUTH, RED AND WHITE — I automatic, radio and rMd| to go, full eif mMuw.Tjt»win 1740 MERCURY, GOLD WITH GOLb r ataering and brakaa,! I tOcond car for the family. Full prica, S4S7. MARVEL —' *“ “We’ll use the paper cups and plates tonight, Janie. Your father has an appointment and won’t be able to do the dishes tonight!’’ »4I COMET STATION WAGON - IS'^2.T,*i!2v‘^^.'aihJlSNBw end Used Cars down, M.S0 par wmIc. HUNTER'------------------- DODGE, Birmingham, Ml 7-07S5. hyta COMET ^DOOR VI. 1742 COMET SPORTS COUPE, Automatic, radio, heater, buckatl teaft. Omy S14NS. JEROME FORD RocheatarVoRD Dealer. OL 1-7711,1 SEE OS FIRST ,BOB BORST LINCOLN-MERCURY 520 S. Woodward BIrmI MI 6-4538 1743-7-PASSENGER COLONY PARK Mercury wagon, powar. Mr. Rr-* rkk 1-174-3700 offer 5, 444-1244. 1743 COMET CONVERTIBLE, S-22, auto., powar ataarlng, V4, — JEROME OLDS-CADILLAC 210 S. Saginaw St. FE S-7021 173S NASH LAFAYETTE 4-D0( aH black, runa beautifully, col tor'a ItamI tl.OOO. WE FINANCE King Auto COMET, 5^.' Nbw end Ustd Cars 106 NORTHWOOD AUTO OUTIET BUY HERE-PAY HERE CREDIT NO PROBLEM 2023 Dixie Hwy,___FE 0-7237 1959 OLDS 70" 4door hardtop, radio and haa ar, full power, only 04.00 doa and 04.00 par week. We hand and arrange all financing, ci Mr. Dan at: FE 84071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM _____Juaf aaat of Oakland_ 140 OLDS, 1-OWNER, GOOD CON----- - Ill aacrlflca. 4S2-S745. SMIF John McAuliffe Ford LEFT OVER 1965 FORD SALE We Can't Fool Aroundl! We Have Gotta Kiss These Brand New Fords and Like-New Demos Good-Bye - RIGHT NOWIil Save Up to— $1200 Your Car Will Never Be Worth More! Only 33 to Go!!^ John McAuliffe Fond PONTIAC FE 54101 1740 OLDSAAOBILE CONVERTIBLE, hydramatk, power ataering, brakaa and windowa, good tirea, top, exc. GLENN'S 1742 OMa atatkxi wagon, power ateering, pmer brakaa. Aak for— L. C. Willioms, Salesman 752 W. Huron St. > automatic, ■ ■■ ■ ....... I brakes. $I SALE A RAMA LLOYD'S During this sole on insur-j once policy covering cor payments because of death, accident or illness will be given to the purchaser of any car listed below: 3 VALIANT dONVERTIBLE, ( DON'S USED CARS SMALL AD-BIG LOT | 50 CARS TO CHOOSE FROa( 4 Ford Falrlana SOO 4-dr., auto, I, power atooring. 4 Pontiac Catalina 2-dr. hardtop, Ventura trim, 4 speed. 1742 Ford pickup, 1-ton. 1740 Pontiac 2-dr. hardtop, outo. S. 1743 Atonia, auto. 1757 Dodge 4-dr., autoLI. 1740 Ford 2-dr., auto. 1740 Chevy 2-dr. auto. 1757 Chevy stick t, 2-dr. 1741 Chevy Bel-Air 4-dr. 1744 Pontiac 4-dr„ auto., double :k 2-dr. hardtop. 1757 Chevy ... .... power steering. 1741 Pontiac convertible. 677 S. LAPEER F My"2-2041 SOME OF THE FINEST Used Cars in the County 1745 Cadillac 2-door, 4,ooe actual mllaa, < exacullva car full power, AAarInt Aqu down, looking for a preud owner 1745 Plymouth Fury 1, 2-door, V-S, Nick I miles, only 54 Triumph SpINIra, red and ready, sharp, >2 RamMar wagon, automatic. Custom ‘ 1742 T-BIrd, full a , factory air conditioning . S1I75 S1475 ... $1795 $64 Mo, 1963 SKYLARK 1963 COMET............ $1095 $43 Mo. 2-door sedan. 4K:yllnder, stick, radio, heater. $50 down or old car. 1960 T-BIRD .............$1395 $61 MO. Red with matching Interior, power steering end brakes. $100 down or .. $ 995 $45 Mo. 1962 ECONOLINE Pickup. 4-cyllnder, al 1964 OLDS ........$2395 $76 Mo. ... $2595 $82 Mo. Padded dash, steering and OLDS P-S5, STANDARD V-0, ________ 1963 FORD ........... $1695 $56 Mo. 2-door OLbS OS 1742, FULL POWER, LOW mllaaga, axcellant. 42441255. 1743 OLDS, STARFIRE, CONVER-■— I, full powar, bronze with white $1175, FE 4d734, before 4. lardtop. S-cylInder, llo. $100 down or old c CHEVROLETS Lloyd Motors Selected Used Cars 1960 CHEVROLETS power steorlng . 1961 CHEVROLETS I BN Air 2-door sedan. Dark aqua I Ish, matching trim, 4« toothsr Interior, clean at a ^ and It really good looking throughout! JA.T%3 Classic with 4WyiRTII nwiM^ oWiT I 1H4 ^NTIAC MiwR^mALIMj^ 1M4 ^TIAC CATALINA l-bOOR hardtop, auto. trana„ radio, ,ha^>, whitawalla, ooatar brifcin. aiaar^ 1 h^^warraniy, raal oam. il,IM nwiv iTOg i5RHivii OOQT nardioPf with Vil ihQlnwi aw tomatic pewar itatrlnp and torMcat ... H4SI. OR ........ IH4 fBMPE'sT^Le^NS ....' gray w'*" ’"*■ t1,«7 Ml or -.,_OIT NO PROBL NANCE BANK RATE LUCKY AUTO tarior^ powar, of oouria, and the luxury you'd axp-^ •- -motorcar. Wa'd Ilka BIRMINGHAM 4 S. Wooda!a!y'**'^"*°^MI 7-M14 PLYMOUTH l««5 SPORT FURY, ^ radS*' 3«* -.....0.445, AAA _________ IMS PLYMOUTH BARRACUDA, RA-dlo and haatar, automatic, 273 angina. 4hairal, 44W actual mll«. SL2PS. OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH -34 Oakland Ava. 332^130 ia« PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE <*~>r )n wagon. 22,000 mlloa. Private) ir. 432-7101 after 5 p.m. Transportation Specials FULL WKLY car 1954 Mercury, wagon - • • 1953 Chevy, sedan ..f W- .Jl-M 1950 Fonflae, hardtop . - ■ f 2 fi-SS 1931 Chevy, I cylinder ....IW. S2.00 1951 Rainier, wagon - - 1954 Cadillac, sadan .SW. 31.75 1954 0101. hardtop .•'£ !?-2 •755 Pontiac, 3-door .* 2 !! Z! « Mercury, wagon • • |12-S-fi 40 S5fcunr!*Amarlcan ' ig-'w 41 Renault, ladan .W. .54.10 140 Chevy ,ftlck ..«g. «-» 159 Pontiac, sadan .J2J S JJ '59 Olds, Sidan .S397. $4.10 157 Chevy, hardtop .01*7. SS.2f CREDIT A4AN OH DUTY MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM NO MONEY DOWN SMALL WEEKLY PAYMENTS WE HANDLE AND ARRANGE ALL FINANCING CALL MR. DAN FE 8-4071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM BOB BORs/ GLENN'S 520 $. V GLENN'S L. C. Williams, Salesman 9S2 W. Huron St. FE 4-7371 FE 4-1797 MUST DISPOSE OF II No money di weekly. Call 194S Grand Prix, power steering, powar brskci and windows, tinted glass. Ask tor— L. C. Williams, Salesman I W. Huron St. Main, Clirkston. 1945 BONNEVILLE SPORT COUPE, COMI TO/ PCMAC :etail STORE WHERE YOU EXPECT MORE ... AND GET ITI 100 Top quality. One-owner, new car trades to choose from 65 Mt. Clemens at Wide Track FE 3-7954 1945 B O N N E V >, burgundy, 12750. FE 945 TEMPEST LEMANS, 2-OOOR hardtop, Sspaod, V-4, Wua charcoal 473-2039. 1944 GRAND PRIX, BURGUNDY, -------iwor, many extras, 22,000 350. 404-7M1._________ ■GLENN'S 1944 Pontiac GTO, Mack with ) speed. Ask tor— L. C. Williams, Salesman 953 W. Huron St. FE 4-7371 FE 4-1797 4 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE, .tydramatlc. P o w a r alaaring, brakes, windows and soot. S2,2». Call OR 34)917._______ t «fJ7 weakly. Call Mr. 4 at FE 54101. MCAullfta. ^ ^ ^ r—t GLENN'S $2097 ttMTing, powtr tinti glass. Ask for— L. C. Williams, Salesman 952 W. Huron St. Every car listed carriaa thia guarantee. Taka the guastwark out of buying Uaod Caril 194S PONTIAC CATALINA 2-DOOR ■-—nop, whltawalls, low mllaagt, mist, 1-ownar. H4S0. 402-4105. 1945 TEMPEST CUSTOM, 334 V-0, iufo., pow--------------" ‘'“ FE 4-3055. 945 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBl^, full power. White wife Mack top, FE 4-2301 after 5:30, S2J7S._ "Let's Trade Sale" 1945 TEMPEST Custom aidi. marlin aqua wHh all vinyl "324" VI power, and only 3,000 milea, and tartory -- y Warranty. We'd we call these LATE ONES....GREAT ONES! buy one and save 1965 Pontiac 1963 Pontiac 1963 Chevy 1965 Chevy Bonneville ConvortlMa. Powar alaaring and brakaa, radio and hootor, mkt- Catalina 2Door Harettop. Radia heater, automatic, powar atoorlng ond Biscoyne 4-Door. Radio ond heater, automatic, 4-cyllndar. Pickup Wfon, Flaatilda, almoat Ilka new. nlglit Mua, whItt tap. Automatic. $2995 $1695 $1195 $1645 1962 Tempest 1962 Chevy 1964 Chevy 1962 Pontiac Stotion Wagon Convertible Convertible 2-Door Radio and hootor, lulomatic. Super Sport. Rad with whita top, S-cylIndtr, automatic, radio and Impala. l-cyllndar, radio, hoator ond automatic. Radio and hoator, automatic. $895 $1495 $1995 $1195 1965 Camper Block Hawk 1965 Chevy Convartible , 1965 Chevy Biscoyne 1965 Pontiac 2-PIUS-2 rawtoorato^‘**iitwr'^wmi*w aink. pat lighta and alactric Hglitt, atmoat Hkt now. IrnpaU, »ney. ■ Dealer Luting ■ BMu Mk A TV FI 4-S791 letiMor lidie-TV OR 3-25S2 ■ IIW W. Htmii, PtaHa* SSW SaUtakaw. DrayM PWat S Cemlee Redk-TV FI 4-97U ^ ■ CAVTV.Ik. FI4-1S15 ■ Mi OakUHid, NrHk ■ MbyRe«eATVFI4^2 ■ m urn, funm ■ •fWsRedle-TV9tS-216« 2 am CtartuieR ClarMw J Ned's Redle-TV FI S4112 - 5 m otYhard Lake Ave, mmm Trey iv^edle n V4N60 5 INI LNifMlle mW Sweet Redie A TV FI 44977 ■ JebMee Redie-TV R M599 Weltee Redle-TV R 2-21S7 411. mmm, pmnm Bee 9784111^ WKC laCw Service 974-1111 K, A. Thaver ... _N,' Mtwl JohSS^roi tSSiJfTSir Iiis-WXYZ, La* Alan, :I*-WJR, Newt, Kaleldo-News Final WJR, Newt, Spgrtt I1;1»-WCAR, Rx, Health ll!»-WCAR, Carander CKLW, Mutic -til Dawn SATURDAY MORNIN8 WHFI, Almanac CKIW, Newt, Bud Davies l:(»-WJR, Newt. Sunnytid* ll)»-WjnK, Van Patrick n;W-WJR, Newt, Sports, SATURDAY AFTERNOON Sportt, 1T:W-WJR, Farm WWJ, Newt, Music WPON, Newt, Ben Johnson WCAR, News, Tom Kolllni WHFI, Marc Avery, Mutic CKLW, Newt, Dave 1:1»-WWJ, U of M Fl______ 1:2a-WJR, Mich. State-Pur. WHFI, Kaleldotcop* 1:IS-WWJ, U of M Fe StSB-WCAR, Newt, Bee British Pan U.S. Sex in TV Show LONDON (AP) - A BBC tele-, vision iook at the “American Way of Sex” was panned by a critic today as the “most tedious and ludicrous program of the week.” But a woman reviewer found it “madly interesting.” I The British Broadcasting i Corp. program Thursday nighti was a survey on set in the United States conducted by Maicolm Muggeridge, former editor of the humor magazine “Punch.” “All we got were pictures of youngsters curled up together, erotic pop tunes and a dull string of people giving their banal opinions about free love,” said the Daily Mirror’s Ken Es-taugh. “I learned nothing new. ~ nominate this as the most tedious and ludicrous program of the week. Hiere wasn’t a sexy woman in it.” | DISAGREEMENT Mary Crozier of the Guardian disagreed. ^ I “I quite like Muggeridge as a preset of doom,” she wrote,' 'and I found the exploration of American sex madly interesting.” The Daily Telegraph’s L. Marsland Gander called the program sickening and said: ‘Those who know the United States will recognize some familiar symptoms. Yet I cannot by any stretch regard this as a fair picture of life in the Unitedi States. I EVERYWHERE " | “With half-closed eyes he (Muggeridge) saw sex in evmy-| thing. Even cars and houses, were temples and symbols of it. "The college campus, despite disavowals of the students, was,' he implied, the scene of nameless orgies.” | A BBC spokesman said the ^vemment-spe^red corporation had received some plaints because the ivogram was screened at 9:25 p.m. and teen-agers watching it might be corrupted. ‘When aren’t teen-agers watching television?” he said. “This program was not visually erotic at all.* IUIIT9 MY i 1/24 SCUi 0» ■ FREE! 1 HOUR TRACK TIME WITH S AHY KIT OR COMPLETED MODEL ^ W« Carry A Complat* Lin* of 8 Racing Acc«stori«t In Stock I 4471 DIXII HWY.0 ORAYTON PUINS Sape add-m room space WITH TEMC0*GA$ BASEBOARDS • For installation with jalousies or in large glass wall areas • Fits under windows • Comes ready to Install with pre-engineered vent • Sealed combustion chamber-uses only fresh outside air • Fully automatic-easy to operate. Sea us today or phona. A CT heating and ■VMa I COOLING COMPANY 463 S. SAGINAW FE 8>9255 NEW FISHER 440T SOLID STATE STEREO with FISHER RELIABILITY Now At CUSTOMADE PRODUCTS CO., 4540 W. Huron St., 673-9700 SAVE $$$$$ MAPLE BUNK BEDS • CompUto with mattroitosi • Thet* Bunk Beds con be made into two 39" Twin beds. • An outstanding value at this unheard of low, low price. *67 NO MONEY DOWN ... UP TO 36 MONTHS TO PAY LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE 1461 BALDWIN AT WALTON - PHONE FE 2-6842 OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 0 P.M.... SAT. UNTIL • P.M. mARW CUSTOM BUILDING 1NO MONEY DOWN ork >4 V iteed BlfeEAR CONSTBUCTION COMPANY 739 |TK|L|eLLl North Perry tuK2Jb£EJ Operator On Duty 24 Hourt Daily IMPROVE YOUR HOME DEAL DIRECT '^'?UILDER^^ ULHL UIRLUI BUILDER FREE PLANS and ESTIMATES-NO CHARGE CALL FE 8-8173 Open Daily andean. CALL DAY OR NIGHT CABINETS i-Ft. Kitchen $OCQ0 COMPLETE 1-Ft. Kitchen $9QQ0 COMPLETE 4199 INCLUDES Upper an< Lower Cabinets, Counie Tops, Sink with Faucets A ADDITIONS A FAMILY R00M$ ALUMINUM SIDING REC. ROOMS ROOFING—SIDING WOODFIELD CONSTRUCTION I WILL COME TO YOU WITH FREE ESTIMATE AND PLANS—NO CHARGE 15 W. LAWRENCE CALL FI 8-8173 6Monriic Before Flrct Poymont ONE CONTRACTOR FOR EVERYTHING D—If THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 88, 196g omno Word Power for Success—1l l Rule for Adding Suffixes Aff^ts Lost Letter of Verb (EDITOR’S wore. Thu U fV ^exmth in a X-part •erfea tmtMted ’The Word Power to The terks it de~ i to help bring improvement to tpeOmg. grammar and voaUmlary.) By The ReadiBKUbwatory.Iiic. Written for NEA Special Servicen Two g’s in begged, one 1 in coiled, Diqilace the accent, nnd the rule is spoiled, tw^e, twinkle, Uttle star. In marred, I wonder, two or one r? The verb, to mar, ends in a consonant. When we add the suffix, ed, we have marred. The final txmsonant r has been doubled before the suffix is added. Now see what happens with the verb, to soil. Add the same suffix, ed, and you'have soiled. ★ * w Why was not the final conscm-ant doubled, as happened with mar, before adding the suffix? Confer becomes conference, but admit becomes admittance. Why is one final consonant of the verii doubled before adding the snffiz while the final consonant of another verb is not donbled? The answer is all in the riiyme. When a verb, ending with a single cons(Hiant (beg, mar, admit), is accented oo the final syllable (that is, you stress the last syllable in pronouncing the verb), then double the final consonant, the word will have an altogetho- different pronouncia-tion after the suffix is added. loses THE SOUND If we had beged (instead of begged), the e would lose the sound of e, as in met, and would have the sound of e, as in remark. If we wrote mared (instead of marred), the a would be soimded as the a in bare, and die original sound of a in mar would be lost. Admited (instead of admitted) would have its i iHtmounced like i in kite instead of i as in hit. Notice this however: We have been usiaf only suffixes which begii with vowels. We say shipped is order ta keep the orlg^ proBonadatkNi of i in ship; we also say with vowels. FINAL CONSONANTS Why, you should now wonder, don’t such words as sail, soil, cool, haO and the lihe double fiieir final consonants before suffixes are added which begin a vowel? Why don’t we have sallied, sdll^, coolled, etc? The reason is simple: Each of these words has a double vowel before the final consonant, and file double vowel is a strong sound which will not be changed by adding a suffix beginning with a vowel Which brings us back to the! The point is tt which begin with consonants will work no change at all in the proDOunciation of the word, whereas suffixes beginning with a vowel will. ★ *r This, then, will be our general rule: Verbs whidi end in a uin-gie consonant (x equal to ks, would be double) and ubich are accented -on the final syllable, will double that consonant wbrnr SOFT AS AKISS'^ r added which begin wisdom of the rule for doutding the final omsonant: The consonant is doubled only to protect the pronounciation the original verb. Adding ed to cod does not affect the sound of the strong double vowel oo; adding ing to sail does not change the strong double vowel, ai, in pronunciation. DIFFERENT SOUND As we saw, however, words like submit (the i sound like in hit) would have an entiiply different sound if you simply added suffixes which begin with vowels and did not double the final consonant. Submited, with- out the double t, would have an i sound like the 1 in kite. ’Two g’s in begged, one 1 in coiled." Only one little point remains te be added. U It happens that the accent of the original verb (example: confer is moved to another syllable alter the suffix has been added), then do not double the We have refer, referred, referring, but reference. Why? "Disidace the accent and the rule is spoiled.’/Mleferred and referring kept the accent on the same syllable as the original refer, hit reference has the accent on the first syllable, so ’’file rule is spoiled." Before selecting the correefiy spelled words below, check our rhyme once more and keep in mind file solid reaaems behind this rule. Hie words in parentheses are the ones to consider; the woF^ before the parentheses is the original verb. 1. lead (leadder, leader). 2. bail (bailed, balUed). S. parallel (pai^elism, paral-lellism). 4. acquit (acquital, acquittal). 5. tar (tared, tarred). ANSWERS (NEXT: Ends.) ■Tyliig Up SEE WHAT A DFFERENSTSJfE^ A quarter-century of home building and sales to almost 300,000 families in the U.S. have paved the way for a new look in home values. — FAMILY-TAILORED HOMES.. . See them today and you'll understand why more American families have selected these homes over any other single brand home in the past 25 years. THE CALIFORKIAN 1,064 Sq.'ft. Contemporary Bi-Level As Low As *250°° Moves You In *109°° Per Month Includes All WE’RE CELEBRATING Also a year of success . . . since April we have sold 100 houses ... 92 are now under construction or occupied. Performance of Construction, ideol location and good value in these times of booming construction have contributed to this success. But chiefly the great acceptance has resulted from the offering of homes ''tailored'' to your needs. VISIT 1MESE 3 MOOa HOMES THE MOST POPUUR SELLERS IN OUR HISTORY!! You’USeeWhy THE COVINGTON A, Low A, *175 Httm Vo. In $]Q4oo pgjT Includes All THE MT. VERNON . 1,012 Sq. Ft. Ranch with 2-Car Garag* As Low As *250°° Moves You In *105 Per Month Includes All ORAD SihuSiouu H GIFTS! TO VISITORS AT OUR MODEL HOMES SUNDAY •Ilvm-brlfh*. Tamlah-flrM "Shafflnld** Bnmmet DMlpn FREE I TO THI PHUT 100 LADIII ITHIIWIKIND REGISTER FOR W - Americana Homes OPEN 1 P.M.-« P.M. - CloG«l Thundnvu 601 Los Ailioles • CanuiiwM to S. Cauuwiiui t Mr OR S. Crriwiwcr kd., * nr oiMtnnrSk un iuLm Rand, 1624-4260 GO MODERN-GO GAS Thn Mnn Mar tpaM li ynnr aa-anranna tf a qnalH)r baaw. H la awmdad Only to bmya aWariag ibn aaw advanaad banafNa at Tho Weather us. vnatlwr IINIIM l>iracMil Chance of showen VOL. 128, XO. 221 THE PONTIAC PRES&jf it ie it it it PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. FRIDAY. OCTOBER 22. 1965 -^8 PAGES uN,T,fflMHiiliihNALtl W Lif rMIliitfi In Adjournment Push 2 Bills Face Congress WASfflNGTON (AP) - Congress pushes toward adjournment today, still faced with final decisions on federal pay and sugar legislation. Senate Republican leacfhr Everett M. Dirksen predicted flatly Congress would finish its work today, while other congressional leaders said the end would come by tomorrow at the latest. As the sessioa drew near a tion MW moaey denied to start two of its “O^eat Society” progranu when both which has given President Johnson pradically every major bill for which he asked. of Senate-House conferees to drop appropriations requests' at this time for rent subsidy and teachers corps {HWgrahu. But the action scarcely dimmed the luster of a Congress In both instances yesterday, the Senate backed down in the face of House insistence that funds be delayed until details of the programs can be further worited out. ISSUES REMAIN These issues remained to be settled: • SUGAR. Senate and House conferees meet today to work out differences between the two chambers’ measures setting foreign and domestic quotas for the U.S. sugar market. Chaimun Harold D. Cooley, D-N.C., of the House Agriculture Committee indicated he thinks there will be little difficulty in reaching an agreement. The senate bill is mwe in line with administration recom-mendatjiMis. • FEDERAL PAY. Prompt Senate passage was expected today of a bill with salary increases of 3.6 per cent effective Oct. 1 for 1.8 million federal workers. The Senate Post Office and Civil Service Committee scaled down a House-passed bill calling for a 4 per cent raise —more than the administration favcn^. 'Ihe House was expected to go along with Saute action in order to avoid the possibility of a presidential veto. LIVED WANDERING UFE-Blonde, blue-ey«l L^ Lee Ridings, 6, was held in the Orange County, Calif., juvenile facility yesterday after police discovered that she is a girl missing since IMl. She was living with Miss Ramona Doughtery, 41, a full-blooded Indian migratory farm worker. Miss Doughtery was arrested on a charge of kidnaping. Indian Woman Held Find Girl Lost Since '61 SANTA ANA, Calif. (/P)—Blonde, blue-eyed linda Lee Ridings, 6, reported kidnaped in 1961, has been found—after sharing the hard life of a migratory farm worker for four years. Linda, a bright and cheerful girl, was found living with Ramona Doughtery, 41, a full-blooded Indian. Miss Doughtery was* ^ booked on suspicion of kidnaping. Police detective Clarence Boyd said, ‘‘She said at first the child was given to her. Then she admitted taking her.” Boyd quoted her as saying: “Yes, ' kidnaped her as a baby and took her to Oklahoma.” In Today's Press Draft Call Married men in state viewed for quota—PAGE Latin Concern Fulbright says nuny in U.S. object to policy — PAGE A-3. Buses Temporary service will begin for Waterford pupils PAGE A-M. Area News ............M Astrology ......... .D4 Bridge...............D4 Crossword Puzzle ...D-11 Comics ..............D4 .......A4 dea ..i.C-7 High School ........B-1 .......D-* .......C4 . . . G1-C4 . . C4-C# TV-Radio Programs 0-11 WilBOB, Earl.......D-U Women’s Pages B4-B-U Investigators said Linda first taken to Oklahcmu City, where Miss Doughtery was bom. They joined the farm labor circuit, traveling throng the Midwest. Boyd said police have been unable to locate Linda • moth-a, Barbara RhUags, ti, who moved from her last-known address in Los AngelM six Los Angeles Police Department records diow that Mrs. Ridings reported the child ing in June IWl. She told JACKSON (UPl) — A Lear Jet Corp. plane exploded in flight and came crashing to earth “like a Fourth of July fireworks’ northeast of here last night, killing two test pilots. / The jet, belonging to one of Lear’s distributors, Robert Graf of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., dug an 18-foot square, eight feet deep qrater and pushed the dirt before it more than SO yards in a wooded area on the north shore of Eagle Lake about four miles from here. Before turning to the federal pay question, the Senate hoped to act on President Johnson’s nomination of David G. Bress to be U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia. Big Draft Call Set for County in December Michigan draft boards yesterday were ordered to deliver 3,394 men for induction during December, including 237 from Oakland County. It was the largest December call since the early days of the Korean campaign. Included in the county figure are 139 from the three Pontiac boards, 4S from Farmington and S3 from Royal Oak. Draft boards were also requested to speed up classification actions, inclucUng the review of all previous deferments. in an effort to make sufficient manpower available to mee current calls. On a statewide basis, Oakland County’s quota was second only to Wayne County, which wa given a figure of 1,019. MEN 19 OR OLDER Col. Arthur Holmes, state director of Selective Service, said the December caU will be fiUed with men 19 or older and men who were married after Oct. 26. 196S. The largest previous monthly request this year had been 2,625 tar November. The lowers! figure was 284 for February. Jet Explodes in Air, Crashes Near Jackson Two Kansas Pilots Die as Airplane Plunges Into a Wooded Area Lear, president of the jet company in Wichita, Kaa., identified the victims as Glen David, about 30, and Larry Banhola, about 35, both from Wichita. The two pilots were the only ones aboard the craft which was bound for Wichita from Detroit’s Metr(^litan Airport. John Kohn, a guard at Southern Michigan Prison here, was on duty when he saw the jet explode “like “a Fourth of July fireworks” and come to earth in a flaming crash. PIECES SCATTERED The area on the north shore of Eagle Lake is owned by the Michigan Audubon Society. Firemen and State Police said they found pieces of the fuMlage about a foot in diameter scattered throughout an area from the spot where the plane crashed. RuueU Morton, who lives on the south shore of the lake and has hunted through the entire area, said he saw the explosion and immediately notified authorities. He directed firemen and troopers through the wooded area. Russell said all the trees within a mile radius looked like a tornado had hit them. He said the smaller trees were uprooted.and the entire area was covered with jet fuel. Lear said the plane had just undergone a major overhaul and was not yet ready to be delivered to Graf. Rain to Stop —for a While What’s the weather prediction? WiU it rain? The U.S. Weather Bureau reports today’s light showers will end by late afternoon leaving skies partly cloudy and temperatures cooler, lows near 38 to 45. Tomorrow will be partly cloudy and warmer, and there is a chance of a few more showas by afternoon with highs about 55 to 62. Sunday’s ':|hfSrecast is partly cloudy and cooler. Temperatures fell from 60 early yesterday 4a 46 at 6 a.m. today. The l p.m. recoiling was 49. Humphrey Due to Talk atOU in State Visit Notes U. S. Need for 400,000 Classrooms in Next Five Years In a prepared speech to be delivered today at Oakland University, Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey pointed to education as the foundation of -the Great Society. Americans cannot live su^ess-fully in t|ie society we are building,” he said in the pr? KICK FOR CONG SUSPECT — A Viet- namese soldier aims a kick at a suspected the Plain of Reeds area yesterday, killed Viet Cong guerrilla in fighting near Xom some 43 suspected Cong and captured 15. Chua yesterday. Government troops raided (See story, page A-2) text. Senate, Governor? Romney Undecided TOKYO UFI — Gov. George Romney of Michigan said today he had not yet made up his mind whether to run for the U.S. Senate nexfyear or for another term as governor. Romney, one of nine American governors attending the annual U.S.-Japaa Governors’ conference ^made no mention of seeking the 1968 Republican Ask High Court to OK Vote Act WASHINGTON (AP) - In a rare legal move, the federal government has asked the Supreme Ctourt to declare constitutional the controversial provisions of the 11-week-old voting rights law. And the Justice Department urged the court to stop what it called efforts of three Southern states — Alabama, Louisiana and Mississippi — to obstruct enforcement of the new law. Because of the importance of the case—and in order to assure a final decision before primary elections in the three states next siting and summer — Atty. Gen. Nicholas Katzenbach asked the Supreme Court yesterday to assert orighul jurisdiction. In effect, this short-circuits the federal judicial process by skipping U.S. district and appellate courts — where litigation could easily consume a full year — and placing the case immediately in the hands of the highest court. The Justice Department specifically asked the court to affirm the constitutionality of those provisions of the act suspending literacy tests, authorizing federal registrars and requiring local re^trars to enroll those voters approved by the federal officials. , presidential nomination. He said some moves within the Republican party to block potential candidates were “suicidal.” Romney, himself a potential candidate for president, did not elaborate. The governor said in an interview he hoped the GOP could “pull itself together” before the next presidential election. He prai^ the new Republican National Coordinating committee for working to provide unified leadership. Looking ahead to the visit he and the other governors wOl make to South Viet Nam after they leave Japan, Ronrney said he will tell U.S. servicemen there that the “bulk of the people” support U.S. policy on Viet Nam. WASHINGTON (AP) - A Goldsboro, N.C., Ku Klux Klansman resigned from the Klan today in a congressional witness chair, saying he believed, God and his country should come before any Klan vows. Joseph G. DuBois, a used car salesman who said he was treasurer of the Goldsboro Klavem, turned over recoi and documents of his unit to House Committee on Un-) can Activities. He said anti-Viet Nam demonstrators represent a small fraction of the American public ‘but create more news than justified.” SUPPORTS POUCY Ronrney declined to the military situation in Nam but said he had ge^rally supported the U.S. far. Quits the Klan, Yields Records He noted, however, tl 000 more classrooms ^ii I needed in the next fiv^ years to care for an additii million youngsters. “Today, 54 milliori young people are in sch^l — one-fourth of our total iMpulation,^ the vice president said. “This tidal wave of enrollment presents a challenge to our 125,000 schools, 100,000 administrators and two million teachers. 'God, Country Come First,' Says Witness “I might add that Oakland is good example of the enrollment - explosion,” Humphrey said. “When your doors opened for the first time in 1959 you had several hundred students; today you have several thousands. in the next few years expect to double your It.” The committee, making a general invc tion of the Klan peoaned the records. In sessions of the investigation earlier this we k, higher leaders of the Klan^ id refused to turn over any rj^ rds or answer any questic Michigan.” The speech was one of three scheduled by the vice president during a visit to the Detroit area. But the gover enough social an is being given to, I namese people. / said not onomic aid 1 South Vict- to feel real hope with our effort Linda and Miss Doughtery, the child’s biby-iitter since birth, diMppeared the previous Mtu^, while she was on a trip to Florida. The rec^s also showed that Mrs. Ridiiigs sras separated from her husband, Hubert, and that she had told police Miss Dmightery ,had wanted to adopt Linda herself and have her baptixed, Linda came to police attoition on Oct. 14, when officar Woody Williams stopped to question a man sitti^ urith Li^ in a parked car. The man, WUfM Leroy Green, 37, Santa Ana, was booked on Oct 18 on suqilcion of child mdesting and released 00 1500 bond. He was ordered to •tiMaHn oeort on Nov. 1 2 Fly to Freedom in BERNAU, Germany (UPI) — An East Gennan aircraft mechanic flying an airplane for the first time and a Czech helicopter pilot escaped to West Germany yesterday in widely separated freedom flights over the Iron Curtain. The helicopter pitot, who Mid he was a former captain in the Chech air force, flew more than 200 miles from Prague to a U. S. A^ recreation center in southern Germany where amazed GIs watched him land in a parking tot He told of hugging the treetsps to avoid detectien by Tbe other hedge4iiq)[dng escapee stole a crop dusting plane in the northern pail of East Germany and flew it eight miles to a field in West Germany vrtiere he made a perfect Hie ptahe burned OoiBmunist sentry posts atong the border. DuBois, eamjtet and nervous, told the comnmtee he had been advised to “stand on the Fifth Amendment’ But he said think thay will not help my record. SECONDARY’ took in the Klan to my loyalty and the nation, (tod is then country. T have no intention to take the fifth no matter what.” This morning he was scheduled to speak at the dedication of the new 84 million Adlai E. Stevenson High School in Livonia. Tonight he is to speak. at the Economic Club of Detroit at Cobo Hall. his Oakland University speech, Humphrey outlined the (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) The Fifth Amendment to the Constitution provides no one can be forced to give testimony that would incriminate him. This amendment was invoked by previous Klan witnesses, including Imperial Wizard Robert Shelton of the United Klans of America, in refusing to answa-questions. Though refusing to talk when in the witness chair, Shelton has been a talkative man when out of it. 'You don’t see me worried, do you?” he said to reporters yesterday. and land at all,” “It’s a nuracle I n the daring novice aviator 4 “I’ve worked on pMes and I read up a lot on flying, but I never handled/the controls before in my life. /flight—Rut’s a bonus ntiracle.” He said he decided to risk the flight because he was “fed up with life in EfM Germany.” The Czech, vdio identified himself as Jan Nemec, 28, made his escape in/a four-soit helicopter of the government-run He said he wanted to be reunited with rela- disappointed people The first persbn that came out, the first night this ad appeared, bought the follou^ item: LIKB NEW 70«n BTU 6AS I hMtar. FE MtM. 7 other people too late, reported Mrs. E. W. n Munich and Graz, Austria. Sell your unwanted items through a c Mid he took off from Prague shortly before noon y on an authorized flight to Budejovice, a Czech city s to the south. (Coutiiiued on Page 8, Col. 5) Press Want Ad FE 2^181 CHING ltion said that “Under leadership of President m we have enacted in this of (tongress the m o s t 'far-reaching education legislation in history. “These programs will help ug to prepare today to meet tomiHTOw’s demands. And they will enhance the ednca- Bad Weather Causes Veep to Arrive Late DETROIT (AP)—Cloudy skies and rain delayed Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey’s arrival today for a scheduled round speaking appearances in the Detroit area. Hie vice {s'esident’s plane landed at Detroit Metropolitan ^irport at 10:40 a.m. Humphrey had been scheduled to arrive at a.m. but bad weather delayed his departure from Buffalo, N.Y. Humphrey had scheduled morning appeuances at Livonia and Rochester and was to appear before Oe Detroit Economic Club tonight. Humphrey extolled the U.N. as a “noble idea” of man capable of resisting all physical force in a prepared dedicatory speech for Livonia’s new $4 million Adlai E. Stevenson High SdiooL The cdremony, originally slated for the school site, wad scheduled to be held in Livonia’s Franklin Auditorium because of rain. "The United Nations today may appear weak in the physical world,” Humphrey stid. IDEA MOVES “But that nation does not exist that is powerful enoogh to kill iLFoctt ■ THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1965 J Klansman's Affom^ Promise^ He'll Drop 'Some Bpmbshells' HAYNEVULE, Ala. (AP) —|oIa Gregg Liozn of Detroit last An attorney for Collie Leroy | March 25. Wiildns Jr., youthful Ku Kluxj FBI ballistics expert Marion Klan member charged wiOi E. imiliains wiil seek to link a slaying a white civil ri^ts 38- I His recommendaticm was a to be presented to the preliminary one with a full re-Township Board for approval, port to follow next month. According to Seeterlin, about‘GLARING NEED’ 230 homes and 30 vacant lotsj In a letter to the board, Heald in the affected township (dted the “glaring need” for an 2 Successfully , Parts of the following streets 'are involved: Myrtle, Lakeview,! [Bostmi, LaSalle, West End, Fremont and PiOTeer. lelementary building in the western portion of the district Fly to Freedom federal grant ^ Seeterlin said the township will apply fw a federal grant. in W. Germany (Continued From Page One) But when he reached the Budejovice area, Nemec said he dropped low and sped toward the West Gorman The helicopter landed about mid-afternoaa in the parking lot of the U. S. Army recreatioo center at Lake Chiemsee, and Nemec stqiped out to announce he wanted political asylum. The escape in northern Germany by the seat-of-the-pants flier was even more spectacular. ican people support this goal, said it appeared the Ckimmunist ^ ■ offensive had been blunted. “This year, for the first time, public opinion polls show that Americans consider educational ^portunities to be their most impcn-tant domestic concern. BURDEN OF Choice “The foundations of this Republic rest on a people capable accepting the burden of But latest reports said the Viet Cong remained in positions around the camp in heavy and were large concentrations of weapons. The 23-year-oid mechanic told West German authorities he slipped into the cropHiusting plane when its pilot left the craft unattended on a collective farm near Gadebusch. U.S. advisers to the canq> reported seeing at least 90 enemy choice — a people who can as-bodies in the barbed wire sume voluntarily the burden of around the camp and on the I ground beyond. U.& officials “Our wealth and power represents freedom’s best hope in the worid. And our people represent the best hope for human, social and scientific progress. said the garrison had suffered light casu^es. NEW BARRAGE The Communists began a new heavy barrage early today, and Humphrey said that two-thirds of all the scientists who ever lived are alive today and this age has already produced twice as much knowledge as all succeeding history. LEARNING MORE “The science student today is learning 400 times the amount of new information that his. predecessor did only a decade ago. “Each new discovery in turn triggers other new advances WMthar, rain .15, day^iigM. “Yet, our ability to harness new progress for the benefit of . ________________all is even more challenging and S U^**^** “ JJj complex than the discoveries K ” I themselves. , Once airborne, the young aviator said he used landmarks to guide tile plane over the border where he landed in a field near Ratezeburg in West German Schle^g- asUng for 50 per cent of the construction cost. He observed the remaining funds will be paid by benefit-ting property owners in the area^ and spread over possibly a 36-year period. The township and city have an agreement, dattog bade to 1958, idiidi says the dty will provide treatment of waste from the west end drain area if and when the township Installs sewers. Just recently, the State Water Resources Commission issued an order to the township to remedy drainage [Hoblems existent in the area. The commission requested complete construction plans and specifications for fadlities on or before March 1, 1966; comjdete financing of the facilities on or before June 1,1966 and to award constructiem. contracts for the facilities on or bdore June 15, 1966. I He noted that the Pine Lake Elementary School area there has experienced a 28Ji per cent increase in home construction during the last two years, while the figure for the district as a whole is 29.6 per cent School trustees have authorized board attorney Lawrence King to begin condemnation pro-ceedbgs on one of four elementary school sites. The 16-acre site is on the south side of Long Lake Road, directly across from Kirk in the Hills. DEED RESTRICTIONS While the board already owns the ixoperty, it is govenied by deed restrictions allowing only residential development. Spokesmen for the cathedral have indicated they would oppose construction of a school turally with the Gothic edVice. Other possible elementary sites are at Long Lake and Tj^ graph, Lone Pine and Middle Belt and Nwtii Franklin north of Club Drive. When science museum officials engage in “attic cleaning,” the castoffs are apt to range from the esoteric to the exotic. Just such a coUection will be offered at the Craninook Institute of Science’s white elephant sue tomorrow. Listed among the items for the 9 a.m.-noon sale are several antique Asian and Mmxi brasses and some Oriental rugs. The Children’s Ballet Theater, Inc., Sunday will present the first in a series of six seminars for advanced dance students. Dealing with Scotch dancing, the program wiU be held at 2:86 p.m. at tiie Village Nursery School, 31195 W. 13 MOe, Farmington Township. Succeeding seminars will be held throughout the area as space is made available, according to Mrs. Paul Pankotan of 519 W. Maple, Birmingham, artistic director M the group. The lectures and demonstrations are designed for yo^g peqile 10 to 18 years old who are already studying ballet, she Duke Is Satisfactory Following Eye Surgery NEW YORK (AP) - The Duke of Windsor was reported in satisfactoy condition today at the Institute of Ophthalmology where specialists repaired a small break in the retina of his right eye on Wednesday. A spokesman for Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center said the former British monarch, 71, would leave the hospital Saturday. S Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St Ted) Enrollment Told HOUGHTON (AP) - A com-He told of veering around a bined fall mrollment of 4,440 on Communist watchtower full of its two <»«nipin>« \s repotted by armed guards. “I couldn’t get too far away from the Communist fortifica-be said. “They told me where the border was.’’ Michigan Tech. The school which has a campus here and ianotber at Sault Ste. Marie,' said the figure was a 17 per cent increase over last fall. He's Got Gardenful of Miracles MONTEPLBER, Vt. (AP) —i Magoon’s nairacles h In, Arthur G. Magoon’s garden, verified by his Montpelier ce grows three feet tall and neighbors. Magoon hi lO-pqund beets jostle each other, baffled, for space - even in autumn. | He attributes it all to five truckloads of fill from a construction site that the dty dumped last May at his re-, quest — on the '25-by-25-foot patch be has been cditivatlng for 28 years. 50 20 WMMngton 74 43 ! ‘We have the genius to soar' far beyond our own hnaginations I into the distant reaches of space. I But we also have the chance I to reach for the human heart —! to do what we must to preserve life and make it bill and freel and bountiful.” j ■ A former political sdence pro-feawr, Humphrey said that he: is careful about keeping his aca-' demic credentials in order by regularly facing campus audiences. I He said that in the past few years he hat fonad significant changes on campas. _____ , “Ten years ago, most students NATIONAL WEATHER—Rain is expected tonight from were primarily concerned with the lower Lakes and Ohio Valley to the Atlantic Coast with their own well-being and secu-■bowers in soutbero Florida. It will be cooler from' New | rity. It was ‘Me First’ Engtend to the Ohio Valley and in the eastern Golf Coast “But this is not true today. Staton. Wanner weather wiU prevail from the noutfaem Plaint This is an era of ,committod to the^jl^ Lakes. young Americans.” “I couldn’t believe K,” Magoon said after pulling the first bloated beet out of the ground several weeks later. SAME FERTILIZER Magoon, who retired from a factory job a few years ago, said he used the same fertilizer this year as in the past. He said he watered the garden twice this summer “and let the Lord do the rest.” Montpelier had heavy rainfall- this sununer. The vegetables grew largcjp and larger. MAGOON’S MHUCLES-Arthur G. Magoon of Moot- pelier, Vt., examines one of the lOinoand beets he grew in his “ "--------------------- • ■ IhrswlBoMiih Wtoes home garden. He also raised t com. ^ “Then it came to me,” he said. “It must have been the gravel that the city had dumped.” But the only thing Magoon found unusual about the fill was the bits of Uadtioiving and wet clay in it. He said the com plants soon grew to 10 feet, more beets and turnips weighing 10 poidids and peas the sise of large maitles up in the pods." [ “Magoon kept me busy, to6,”l said Mrs. Magoon, pointi^ proudly to shstoes of caonsd THE PO|?TIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. OCTOBER 22. A-3 FulbrigHt; Pplicy Vexes U. S. WASfflNGTON (AP) , J. W. Fulbright, P-Ark, said today a larg^ sector of the American pablic shares his concern about U.S. Latin-American policy.. In a prepared Senate speech, Fulbright said be doesn’t like being told that his criticism of U.S. interventimi in the Dominican Republic was irresponsible. And he said he does not take kindly to allegations it gave aid and comfort to this country’s enemies. ir * -k Fulbright, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, added; “An interesting discussion could be developed as to whether it is my criticisms of U^. policy in the Dominican Republic or the policy itself which has given aid and comfort, to our enemies." ■ ^ ★ •* ★ He said that his Senate speech criticLting landing of American troops in the Dominican Republic brought a great deal of press and periodical comment, ‘‘Much of it favorable, much of it unfavorably." EXPRESSED CONCERN But of the ihore than 1,500 letters he .has reeved, he declared, approximawiy 90 per cent “expressed concern about the way in which the wpited States intervened in Santo ingo." “This public reaction suggests that a large sector of the American public shares my concern about the Latin-American policy of the United States,” he continued. k_. k k ' “Many of the letters I received expressed concern about the role of the Department of Defense and the role of the Cen- tral Intellwnce Agency in the of\American foreign policy." V ★ ^ a sheltered workshop at the hospital. k k k The workshop would provide a more thorough training and retraining program f o r t h e patients and enable doctors to learn more about work tolerances and aptitudes of specific patients. ' The Jaycees wwild supply needed materials for the workshop such as tables and chairs. Proposed activities will include gift-wrapping, simple assembly and sorting jobs. ♦ ★ ★ Jaycee groups participating in roject include Auburn Davisburg, Holly, Pontiac, lion Lake and Waterford. r Representaliyes from these Jaycee organiz^ns plan to visit a hospital pre^ly utilizing a sheltered workshop^to develop idehs for the Pontiac ^te Hospital facility. Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw 5 Rsasons Why Yon Should Buy Transistor Radios M Simms IOuarantoo Storts Jan. 1st 4 Isclushr# 3-Month 8u ■ It Bought Now tor Sills. aatoo on Radios. 3 Radios aro Toatad by m Simms Has Riggoot Sole 0 Simms and tho Makors. tion, Lowost Prieas. ■ Esshanga-Suhioot to Inspoolions. Sale! SIMMS TRANSISTOR RADIOS ‘Realtone Jade’ 6-Transistor Radio Simms Lowar Prion A ^werful 6-tronsiitor radio completo with battery and cose. $1 holds in layaway. ‘Realtone Lancer’ 8-Transistor Radiol WHh CasB-Batt«ry-Earphont Comporo to $ 17.95 I sellers—8 tronsis tors, ] thermistor, I diode. 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SIMMS..*!. cause the political opposition, who^ function it is to criticize, was simply not doing so.” k k k ' 'It did not because it obviously approved of U.S. intervention in the Dominican Republic and presumably, had it been in office, would have done the same thing,” the senator continued, “ynder these circumstances, am not impressed with suggestions that I had no right to speak as I did on Santo Domingo. The real question, it seems to me, is whether I had the right !not to speak-” Simms Bros.,-98 N. Saginaw H Holds Your Seloction in SIUUSFREEUTAWW -and all equipment warranties ^art on Jan. 1st, 1966... only Simms \ offers this unique feature SAVEI NO PEC^AX If you buy any Comoro oMipmont now Simmt won't bogin tho guarantoos until Jgn.^ 966, so you'll havo oxtonood covorago on your purchotos. 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As pkturad. $1 holds__________________________ ^K^n’20tlMl..M 8mffl Movie Projector ________capacity, enclosed drive. Built/Into u loined cose. $1 holds, / 8mm Film Editor Splicer American ‘BAIA’ ■Choke of regular 8 ot^uper 8 editor with, newest dry spiker, large viewer for editing film.'eOO ft. reel copocify. $1 holds. SIMMS.'!,. fflMS Ipi hipLIliqirMB Saturday Hours 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. Friday and Saturday at SIMMS Pay More? What for? Simms is Right Here In Pontiac! Visit SIMMS for The Largest Selection Of Electric Razors and Parts in Pontiac Famous Brand — Di.'00 Slisvcr ■| ■! 9$ WESTIMGHOUSE Vacuum Cleaner con 98 North Sagiqaw Straat ‘NieaAEasy’£,Sham|Hie $2.00 value, blends in so easy and gives 1361 you thol noturol, original look. g Nylon Beauty Shower Caps RQc $1.00 volue. Protect your hoir do with a plastic lined extra large bouffont cop. . . . Ceametics AAain Fleer Unlined Bib Overalls Built for comfort and longer unlined for yeor-around o job work eose. Bib style eloslic in suspenders ' Carpenter’s Bib Cveralls Unlined overalls with elostic in suspenders. Mode expressly lor carpenters wear. Sonfonzed. 'M THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1965 Wings at Montreal Saturda Howe Starts mil. NG^Af HEART'^l>^tn'''S"b rclV’r Howe, the “old man” of the Detroit Red Wings at the age of 37, led the National Hockey League All-Stars to a 5-2 victory over the Stanley Cup champion Montreal Canadiens Wednesday night. Saturday night he begins his 20th season in the NHL as the Red Wings nadiens in the regular season opener. In the All-Star game, Howe had two goals and two assists. In was the 17th time he has played in the game, Sunday night the Red Wings will open the home season at the Detroit Olympia when they entertain the Toronto Maple Leafs. Spartans Put. MarktoTesl Boilermaker Aerials Biggest Danger What is at stake when Michigan State and Purdue tangle Saturday afternoon at Lafayette, Ind.? Maybe the question should be — What isn’t at stake? ★ ★ ★ The lead in the Big 10 race, a high national ranking and a stronger scent of Roses — what else is there? The two are part of a four-way tie atop Uie Big Ten standings, along with Minnesota and Wisconsin. State has a M conference slate. The others are 2-0 each. However, both the Spartans and Boilermakers are undefeated for the season to date, something which the other two cannot say, and rank in the top ten nationally in both wire service polls. ★ ★ ★ Such high status is exactly what had been forecast for Purdue in the pre-season guessing game. But Michigan State has been a surprise even to its own partisans. A middle-of-the-pack Big Ten finish and no national rating was Jthe general augury for State. AERIAL ARTIST State (&fl) and Purdue i4-0-1) will afford an interesting contrast in the styles of play. The BoUermakers love to Michigan's pass defense, riddled by Purdue's Bob Griese in tha second half' last week, is expected to get another workout Saturday when the Wolverines play Minnesota at Minneapolis m the annual Little Brown Jug game. John Hankinson, the Gophers' quarterback, is r,ated a major passing threat. ★ ★ ★ Although ^ he - didn't get much chance to throw in the 14-.3 win over Iowa in the ram last week, the Michigan scouts arc warning the Wol- ie balhgpd v u a b a i k^uarTerback Bob Griese^nii)^ the pigskin to a whole a^la^on of receivers headed by^a^e end Bob Hadrick, they do it very well. ★ ★ * ★ State, on the other hand, is essentially a running team. Sophomore fullback Bob Apisa with 399 yards and junior halfback Clinton Jones with 392 yards are the main legmen. By JERE CRAIG “Gordie Howe is the greatest of them all!” All Detroit Red Wing fans’ hearts warm immediately toward any National Hockey League enthusiast who would admit such sentiments. His boosters in Canada-even among ardent Toronto and Montreal fans— Undeniable proof of this acceptance came three winters ago when a Canadian recording group’s vocal rendition of those sentiments became an immediate hit record .. . even before “No. 9 of the Red Wings” set two of hockey’s most cherished records. ★ ★ ★ ' It wasn’t until the following fall that Howe broke the career, regular-season goal-scorihg mark, and it was last autunm that he surpassed the careeir total goals record. Wedhesday night at Montreal “Mr. Red Wing” played in his 17th NHL All-Star game and he led the All-Stars to a 5-2 victory over the Canadiens with two goals and two assists. Tomorrow night he will ★ ★ ★ Huskies Start Prestige Duels Big Stakes for MSU-Purdue BACK ON TRACK -r Dick ’Night Tram’ Lane, one of the-all-time great defensive backs of the NFL will be back on track again Sunday when the Detroit Lions face the Chicago Bears. The Lions reactivated Lpne .after a series pf injuries depleted their defensive backfield , verines that Hankinson is a dangerous passer. He holds virtually every passing mark in the Minnesota record book. The victory over Iowa gave Minnesota a 2-Q Big Ten record. Indiana was the other victim, 42-18. ♦ * ★ In non-conference tilts, the Boilermakers tied Southern California, 20-20; lost to Washington, H-13; and to .Mi.ssouri, 17-6. ♦ ★ ♦ Michigan has possession of the Jug on the strength of a 19-12 victory last season. Saturday s tilt will be Minnesota’s Homecoming. THIRD LOSS The W’olverines were greatly improved against Purdue last Saturday, but still lost, 17-15. The defeat by the Boilermakers marked their second Big Ten loss and their third straight of the sea.son. * * * Previously they were downed by Georgia, 15-7, and Michigan State, 24-7. Despite the loss to the Boilermakers the Wolverines played their best game of the season. Wally Gabler turned in a topflight job at quarterback, running the team well and firing a 40-yard touchdown pass to Jack Clancy. He completed nine of 28 passes for 137 yajds without interception. Clancy continued to lead Wolverine receivers as he gained 125 yards on eight receptions to bring his total for five games to 25 for ^ yards and two touchdowns. ^ THE LINE-UPS PNH WATEKFORD Lorenzm (1651 LE D. Charter (170 LaHerty (190) ‘ ' ‘ --- •" The Huskies of Ponti ac Northern have four games remaining on the 1965 gridiron schedule, and although they have lost 13 games in a row, the team could make it a successful season with three wins in the next four outings. Three of those four opponents are in the prestige class — Waterford, Kettering and Pontiac Central. And wins over those three would make the fans forget the current losing string. The Skippers of Waterford come first—t o n i g h t at 8 o’clock at Wisner Stadium in PNH’s Homecoming outing. The meeting will be the seventh in the series between the two schools. The Huskies hold a 3-2-1 edge. SCORING PROBLEM The Huskies have played good defensive ball, but the team has had its t r o u b 1 e pushing the ball across the goal line. . * ★ ★ In five starts this season, the Huskies have produced only 14 points. On the other hand, Waterford^ has been held scoreless‘only once this season in a ^3 record—a 144 beating inflicted by Walled Lake. In their other two losses, the Skippers were in the gpme all the way before losing to Southfield, 12-7, and they were stopped just short of the goal line last week in the closing minutes of a 13-7 setback at Roseville. return to the Forum where the Detroit Red Wings open the season against Mon-, treal. ^ The game will mark another milestone for Howe. Ibe 6-0, 200-pound right wing will begin his 20th season with the Red Wings. GOOD START Howe is ready for this campaign almost without a perceptable dimming of his talents from his initial appearance as an 18-year-old newcomer in 1946. In the Red Wings’ recent'-ly concluded exhibition contests, he led the scorers with 15 points (including nine goals). This included two hat tricks (three goals in one game). The six-time winner of the league’s Art Ross Scoring Championship Trophy and, also, the Hart Most Valuable Player Trophy — both NHL records—is highly respected by opponents not only for his scoring but aim his equally efficient rugged body contact, carefully honed with 19 years’ playing experience. Howe’s physical condition is a m a z i n g. He has not missed more than six games in any season for the past 16 campaigns. Ticket Kickoff Set ATLANTA, Ga. (iP) - The top names on the Atlanta Braves will be in town next week to kick off a ticket drive for the 1966 major league baseball season. Pwitifc PrtM Plwlos RIVAL QB’s - Pontiac Northern’s Bill Curtis (top) and Waterford’s Rick Ziem will be opposing quarterbacks when the two teams meet tonight at Wisner Stadium in their Two-Platoon Takes Longer NEW YORK WWThe Eastern College Athletic Conference said Thursday that the first 106 football games, played in its circuit this fall under the new two-platoon rule averaged six minutes longer than the games of last year. Average time through games of Oct. 9, the ECAC survey showed, was 2 hours, 13 minutes. Last year the average time was 2:19. In 1950, last year of the original two-platooo era, the Michigan Will Face Strong Pass Attack HAGGERTY HAS IT! THE OFFICIU ARMSTRONG CERTIFIED CEILINGS CENTER IN YOUR AREA ' FRI.-SAT., OCT. 22nd and 23rd TRUCKLOAD SALE Fihergias OWENS-CORNING FIBERGLAS INSULATION Armstron( SusptraM Cttlinp hm ipacUl inslalUtion features thet make it easy to kwrar cetlingt. coTKaal ugly pipes and joists, or cover cracked ceilings. No stapling or cemanling needed. Just hang a simple matal framework compMa price for tH ceHin| nu •4450 He ceiling panels! DT 12- X 14' rt Tamlok-Ceilini Panels HBW wood beam design suspended ceiling 1 FREE ESTIMATES • FREE INSTRUCTIONS for do-it-yaurtalfarg ... or arMpI prWtgiiMal imlalla«M ASPHALT SHINGLES Folding Stairway Our 6 & 3 insulation plan will your heart. And your oudget. 2"xI6" KRAFT FACE 100-Ft. Roll......... KRAFT FACE TO-Ft. Roll......... 1V2'*x1S” ALUM. FOIL 1.8, 140-Ft. Roll . . 2V4"x15" alum, foil 1.8, 100-Ft. Roll . . l•/t’'x1l" ALUM. FOIL 1.8, lO-Ft. Roll . . 6" FIBERQLAS BATTS for -- Perfect Ceiling-45’ Bundle. warm ■ . 1.88 . . 3.4T . . 4.82 • . 4.38 . . 1.98 6-FTe WORK BENCH HEAVY 235 LBS. IN POPULAR COLORS SC95 D PER W SQUARE CASH & CARRY ONLY $<1095 uMinr Only'S” LUMBER A SUPPLY CO. 2888 HAOQERTY HWY. Wallod Uko-MA 4-4801 ■atwMn W. Maoto ood Niitlao Trail "MICHIGAN'S MOST MODERN LUMBER MART" Opon 7:30 o.m. to 6 p.m.-Fri. NIto to 9 p.m.-Sot. 7:30 o.tn. to 5 p.m. TIIK, PONTIAC I’RKSS. FRIDAY. Ori'ORKH ■22. MKi.i f—— — — ^—1 Call For Reservations FE 2-2981 ^ TRICK OR TREAT - This fierce-looking gorilla isn’t really a way to Irighten children. It poses an invitation for children to call on Mr. and Mrs. Edward Witles of Baltimore, Md., this Halloween. Mrs. )Vitles, looking at the beast, said her husband made it to encourage youngsters’ interest in Halloween. The gorilla will shortly be joined by a life-sized witch and a bat that runs on an overhead cable. From Ford Foundation Orchestras to Gel Funds Court Action Threat in Boycott of Schools MILWAUKEE. Wu. IllPl) -i Distf^icl \tly Hugh O’fcon-The parents of thoushnds of chil-; nell e%lier declared the boy-drcb whh joined in Milwaukee’s cott I'Algal and said parents longest public school's boycott to-' who H^t their children out day fac^ the possibility of pros- of elai|||s could be prosecut-ecution j ed.- 'The boypott end^ yesterday| court actj-on against the fru-m Its fourth day. It had mforlal)le Rooms— Dancing Fri. and Sat. Nights Metamora, Mich. 678-2560 “Among the Hills ” IP* SUNDAY SPECIAL! PARTIES-BANQUETS Pfivot. Dining Room Sooting Up To 70 Porton. I CLOSED MONDAYS 1650 North Perry At Pontiac Ro;>d Phone 335-9429 Harlow's Step-father-When he married Mama Jean, was it for herself-or for her daughter? CARROLL “TAKE HER, SHE'S MIHE" at 1:15, 5:05, 8:55 "HARLOW" at 2:56, 6:46, 10:36 “The Village Stompers” Coming to UNIVERSITY OAKLAND Friday, Oct. 22 at 8 p.m. in SPORTS and RECREATION BLDG. Tickets Available at the Doorl Miracle MTle ISANEVENTIFASCINJTING! LEIGH SIGNORET FERRER MARVIN WERNER AS "Sex is no[ a forbidden word!" Bm Jerry LIBBY . and (His -TRIO', NOW APPEARING , EVERY MONDAY NIGHT! LOUNGE 2828 ELiaBETK LF. 6D» FI 8-256I . irs MARRIAGE A GO-GO... and it certainly ' WENT-WENT as Dean takes over Frank's wife and Frank takes over Dean's pad and PRaNK GIRLS-GIRLS! SiNOTRA DeoN BEBOnOH KeiminniN IN«CAR HEATERS J HIGHWAY (U.S. 10) BLOCU NORTH T ELECHaPH RD _ HkiRiMaGE%jiecK$ ^ CESAR HERMIONE TONY.. -lOHN mamCV ROMERO’BADDELEY’BILL’McGIVER’Sa’LOPEZ TECHNICOLOR PANAVISION LAST ■eiinnfwo Now' First Run! nil HEW SIGHTSt klL NEtH TO BE FORSOTTEII! THITHREE-HEADB) MOHSttR BAfTiiS GoOBUA.'MoTMR.A awd,rpdan foR the WORLD' jaHH tMElHRfE-HEADED I fHiilWSTEWi] GHIORAH created from an atomic fire-ball! unimaginable terrors that will never be equalled! ; world quake before the unleashed tury of the battle ■ of monsters!. , ■ .. i mi - u EVtll i V&m THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. OCTOBER 22, 1 °«IK! 2100 FAMOUS NAME TOYS AT BOTH YANKEE STORES IN PONTIAC.. YANKEES K.O. THE GIANTS! YANKEE’S KNOCKOUT LOW PRICE EACH MADE MUSICAL TOYS... YOUR CHOICE Your choica of Weitam uka, Swanaa Rivar Banjo, Emanee Parade flute, Lopin Ukalala, Comivdl violin and Carnival Vanity uka. MOSAIC TILE KIT CompUta (at includai i glue, grout, mosaic f tiles, work tray. Easy | to follow instructions. PAINT BY NUMBER SETS Hoot-Nanny Rythum Band Oil painting by keyed numbari. Complete with brushes, paint, canvas panel, frame, instructions. Choosa from wide variety...... 66< Complete with born, cow bell, drum, symbols, drum stick. No musical tolent needed, just ploy ond 66' SMALL DEPOSIT HOLDS IN LAYAWAY PLUS HUNDREDS DF DTHER TOYS THAT WE DON7 NAVE ROOM TO SHOW MOy GUMD TOW TRUCK ANDY GUARD BULLDOZER Sturdy tow truck with crane and hook for picking up other cars or trucks and towing them. 66< Just like the big bulldozers. Great fun for young moke - believe builders and construction man. 66' BAYSHORE GIANT RACER Built long, low and sleek, just like the big racars. Wonderful hours of fun for youngsters. 66' • Milton Bradley's Hollow-Head • Milton Bradley's Get-the-Message • Milton Bradley's Outer Limits e Eberhard's Scribble-bug • Handy Dan Tool Sot • Army Helmet with Net • Army Walkie-Talkie Set • Embroidered Western Sombrero • Magnetic Alphabet Board • Bobbing Head Monsters • Lido Knock-em Down Game All items Subject • Lido Pinball Machine Games • Transogram Tic-Tac-Toe • Tico Little Majesty Telephone • Bayshore Giant Racer • Barbie and Ken Shelves • Erase-o-Sketch Game • Shirley Temple Beauty Bar • Kenner's Bagpipes • Magnetic Checkers • Little Tyke Tools • Transogram Bowling Pin Set to Prior Sale Taffy’s Game Assortment BYTRANSOGRAM Tromondoui. game as-sortmant, including Taffy'i Shopping Sprta and many MILTON BRADLEY GAMES TAMMY NEEDLEPOINT SET TRAIN ENGINE AND 3 CARS Durable plastic snap-together cars and train engine for the budding train engineer. Unbreakable. TEA SETS or KITCHEN SETS... Choice Glitter too aat, battor and bowl tot, 7-pc. Comingworo tot, Pyrox kitchen tot. Little Mitt Muffot toa tot. Your Choica. GUN AND HOLSTER SETS POOL TABLE BY LIDO Miniature pool tablo; completo with cue tticki, bolls, rack and instructions. Active family fun. Choice of miniature 2-gun holster tefs. eter tot. Military patrol pist-l. 66' MARY POPPINS RUB-ONS ■THASDRO Rub-en magic picture tranciofs ... It's dry; no mess, no stein, fie dMn-up. The most axcitifiy thing since celoring. DOLL AND CRADLE SET 66' DYLIDO Unbraokobia doll and crodle by Lido. Perfect ter dellys'nursery. 66' STURDY DOLL DED, 1” VALUE Another wonderful addition to dolly's nursery. You'll save by buying it now. 66( KENNER PUV-A-TUNE MADETDSEUAT3” Insert tune-player. . , turn . ., bu. ... Appin, cM«r, CPM . Grtpu, Cpncerd, ^ bM. raeaTAB Stani, Romm, bu....... Borti, ^ betH......... SMti, tippod, bu...... ......... I, Curty, bu. ... I, rod, bu..... NEW YORK (AP)-The stock maritet rally continued rolling today. Trading was active as key stocks rose from fractions to 1 or 2 ^ints.-f . The usual stron^ading inter-it was displayed in low< priced w more volatile issues. Chrysler, du Pont, IBM, Polaroid, Merck, Xerox and (J.S. Smelting were among 1-point gainers. The top steels were ahout unchanged, motors were up on balance along with chemicals, drugs, electronics and aerospace iasues. General Motors rose Ilk to 111, a new high, on delayed opening blocks of 24,000 and 13, 800 shares. AP STOCKS UP Thursday The Press Average of 60 Stocks; rose 1.0 to 851.7, a new high. ★ A ★ The trend was unevenly higher on the American Stock Exchange. Moderate gainelrs included Molbydenum, Gulton Industries, Western Equities and Aurora Plastics. Down fractionally were Aerojet-Ceneral, Barnes Engineering, Syntex and National Bellas Hess. Cpbbipp Sprauh. b) Cabbage, SM., bu. Canptf, oallo pak Carrota, topM. bu................. .... Caullflowar, dL ..................l» Calary, fuciCdt. alalia Celary, Paacal, dz. crt. Calary, adiHa, dz. r-* Calary, wbita, dz. eggplant, bu...... —-rda,jpk. bikf. ...jaradSh, nk. b Kohlrabi, dz. bdia. The New York Stock Exchange lalH Ml (kda.) High ILaw Laat Chg 7. .Lvi r ii. V. 10V 3; 37 Backers Join LBJ at Signing Ceremony WASHINGTON (AP) - Convalescing President Johnson, back home at the White House, signs today the highway beautification bill passed by the House the eve of his gallbladder operation. Many of those who helped get the bill through — his wife Lady Bird, (wngressmen, conservationists and garden clubbers -r-were invited to the afternoon ceremony in the East Room. ★ ★ ★ The President had made this his last item of business before his surgery Oct. 8, and he made it his first official ceremonial act on his return to the White House. Facing four to six weeks of recuperation, Johnson was easing back to work — with the possibility of a lengthy Texas ranch stay while he regains his strength. NO PLANS 'He would like to go to Tex- ” White House press secretary Bill D. Moyers reported, but announced no plans. Coming honje Thursday — after two weeks in Bethesda Naval Hospital — the President conducted afternoon conferences on international affairs with Secretary of State Dean Rusk and Secretary of the Treasury Henry H. Fowler from his bed. \ By SAM DAWSON Ap Biuiness News Analyst N^W YORK-Eco-no-my watchers are repealing signs today that the business pace is quick-ening again after the mild slowdown in re-, cent- weeks. Few expect the gains to bei marked in the final months of 1965 as in previous quar-ters of the DaWSON year. But even fewer look for any pronounced or * ' slowdown. JLICmmiiA uo Oh 4 ChIMII SIP I '%'ChPntu l.<#g ___. ■ ChRlPgc .J5p iChrltCrft .«8t CHICAOO LIVRtTOCK ci't' CHICAGO (AP)-(U$OA)-Hogt i,m 1-S bufeherz J3 to M kJwgr; 1-2 lb buWjjri ""<•« '•> cSScoU 170 J330-KM; Colli Pal .W 4SO-S00 IDs n.U-20.73; boar* 17.^1I;M. £ ________ ilaughtar gtaart ^traW) 31 Hvaral packagaa mixad good Moo X? ^ ^ tead'moflly cho'ce’lW Ib^^MmlwIfwj i|o 24.MI Cli 4.II044». .Ml cull to g< American Stocks •• Cont Can 3.40 Cont on 3.40 NOON AMRRKAN YORK (AP) - Pollowino I It ot Mitetad Itock tranaactlona m —,----- I Control Data Corn Pd 1.S0 CrowColl .m IfTstfl.sl Amarlcan Stock Exchanga l....... _ Drkaa: DaycoCp Salat Nat Day PL 1 (hdt.) Hlfb Law Utt Chg. Daara ).4( 4 33H 3SH - W DeltaAIr - 1 13W 13W 13W-WDatEdlt 1 - I in TW - Vt Dot Stool ^ m li-U iTli-" m* ”.8 T r ?aWchfb 4 ’15 Cdn JavaMn' 13 t W » t B4W I4« 6 3t 3t 13 4tV1 4tVh 37 40H 40 .. . . - 7 30H 3014 30V* -l-W| 1« 4IB4 4)14 4114 -I- H 3 74H 7M4 7«» 1 45H 45W 4SH -I- 1 1 40'/4 40'4 40<4 - < 1 30Vi 30W 30Vy -I- 1 33 3114 3114 west Walton. Deluxe Alum, combination door SJl.tS r*ir LINDLEUM RUGS p.95 EACH “>'*• ** I Hi Pl^le Wall tIN 1c ea Basement jack posts S S.9S SSw ffla - wall paneling, cheap. 3'0"x3'0" Alum, sliding window II4.9S bJoSiSTFE *9957 IMS W. Hu^ 5-0"x4-(r Alum. sUdlng window SH.95 iV^EAR O^tS LINED WATE-R window S39.9S r^5.r^mruifiia’’r Burmeisters i S a wemc . a.m.^;S 5S™M-S9“"w: _________SundK._1L!«J______r* 41 YARDS NUTRIA WOOL CAR-................... BO GAL_____________ with le Inch legs. FE 1-3161. 2M GALLON OIL TANK AND 1 quarter tank ot oil. FE 3-7509. BB4SALL0N OIL TANK AND FIL- son, 7005 M-99 W. ter. aaeellent condition, SIO. OR PLUMBING BARGAINS. A-11P-_____________________Standing toilet, $16.95. ao-gaiion SObGALLON OIL TANK, EXCEL- heater. $47.95; 3-plece bath sets 1. Inquire 4340 559.95. Laundry tray, trim, 519.95; PIANOS USED UPRIGHTS FROM • $49 US6D GRANDS ^ FROM $199 GRINNELL PIANOS USED AT MEADOWBROOK SCHOOL OF MUSIC SUMMER PROGRAM. DRASTICALLY-REDUCED. ' GRINNELCS DOWNTOWN 27 S. Saginaw SOLE AKC (MINIATURE POODLE PUPS, I voices, male. 6 weeks oM. 1 Mack 1 particelor. 61»9II0. AKC DACHSHUND PUPPittS. SI dogs. ESTELHEIMS. FE bOMt. '■SO BRITTAH MY 3-1711. •0 arm mm tHE LARGEST ;REaI" SATURDAY, 6 P IY, HALL'S A'ic-ION SA’ES 01 .. ____ . „ ClarksM Rd., Lako Orion. RE /lore Goic Bel' slemos « POSSESSED: Blond bodroun s[ 40f»itP Oeeri >itranoi , 14. I I AKC BEAGLES, ALSO BRITTANIES lor dinette Also htyg 'tong-halred kitten, free. UlL PiT iHOP. SS WILLIAMS. , Ft 44433. Hemstert end supplies. BASSET PUPPIES, AKC, 9 WEEKS, ' stud service. M7-46B iutTiorized Dwlar for DETROITER - PONTIAC CHIEF BEAGLE PUPS _________UL M7»_________ BEAUTIFUL GERMAN^ SHEPHERb Railroad Salvage end cwpielV,*’sectionersofas.^ak‘iiln chhiery'co’*Orton**?? NA*7*319j"* '?h2ft rt*drawlTr? TOU" <»-D CHAIN SAW IS WORTH mu?l. claJSJ?' M? JtoSJ *“ “P *"7 •'••I c?«"i -W* 'fuei' Comt In ami let ui. E^ani hSL BRUlpn-wit Salta A aervlca. 4507. fiw uMSTllem* fw nurSrous^ Dixie Highway, Clerkstdn. *25-1711. Top trada allowanca,on your presont mantkm. Consignmonts acctpled moblla lioma. i dally. Jack W. Hall owner and IrOdtl irOiisrs ..<5 „ , i --------- MY 3-1171 or MY • Yos, all Datrolfor prbch»ets ^ ir BEE LINE TRAILER, G A 5 9«9ed rigid BIJ^ Bon haat. gas or slectrlc ralrlgarator, ----•. trical sy You always sloragt shad, axe. Ask tor Kan Johnson, 693 626*. _ ig^”' 4gj'*^'I'Wtri” I9M JOHNSON MOTOR* AND AM '*{L, lor storage at Tony'i Marina. f|Si, t*S. BH7S7. ■ BOAf~lfORAGE. KARS BOATS --------------------;------ ^ Motors. Laka Orion. MY 3-I6M. 3*141. SPECIAL AUCTION SALE FRIDAY. 7 P.M. ine ngiu wiue )r hoating, plumbing an lytlams. You iwvar | Iwayt an|oy tha ulllir ----------------------- stock, ritlei, shotguns BOXER PUPPIES. PURE BRED; 7 guns. Small bow* and arfmas. II 9, Sat. weeks. 5&<>441.__________ BRITTANY SPANIEL. EXCELLENT , hunter, 3W yrt. eld. 56*. 4FE I-03M. 90 Cases bl brocerys, cl . tools, antl-lreeze. HUTCHINSON SALES, gu,m. __ _615-44il ^ 4301 Dixit Hwy„ Drayton Plains, elg- is' CHRISTIE CARAVAN, TELE- HOUSETRAIL^R. txl«, NEW CLOSE-OUT SALE \ 0.- 1965s . LONE STARS-GLASSTONS ond MFG BOATS ^-Ihat are *n dlspley-ta make room (or our new thowroom — now In conatrucUotil CANINE COUNTRY CLUB ProfetslonSI ctro. SB B. S. Boulevard, Rochester. Clean, comfortable, convenient, bathing, grooming, boarding. Pickup abd delivery. 9 to 6 dally. 152-4740. ' scoping trelH 8r 3l^7*7.' * 9, 425 HORSEPOWER, COM-..... with extra chrome; 19*S jCor- Cr.'y«Sn,“Tf?^ new. OR 4-1579._ FORD 6 ENGINE, TRANSMISSION, pickup box, b11 axlo, telephone Tnsleller's box. EM 3-3071 after Olds. LEE - FE 2-26*6. Ntw «ad U««4 Tracks 103 olno^'^Ubte 'mh?' tuml^^^ TRAILER. SELF-CONTAINED. ?lli:'’*^l1e’m?*k.riUf*d.*""'*“'*' 51.SOO. 574-(y4. ' LEONARD AUCTION HOUSE 'Tont.m.S.'-'&.w.l' 6495_Pore*t Avenue ^ Ct„ off Commonwealth. (Four Corners. Leonard) 1964 VOLKSWAGEN CHIHUAHUA, 7 MONTHS, S» ■l«7L _ ACHSHUt SUNDAY. 3 P.M. Groceries of oil kinds, toys, candy, with camper, ice box, stove, corn-general merchandise. Shop now for piota tiotping lecllltles, oxc. con-Chrlstma*. Jack W. Hall, Hall's dltlon. *t,«95. , Auctions. 705 W. Clarkston Rd., wam fAup rUEUY Lake Orion. MY 31«7l. MY 3*l4t. VAN LAWir LtlCVT '•b'f^'s^rsss'SSiS 2-Bew;?*^ittr°*mtcy;renrd —vri»«^vE^c«cA* 5?.* **■ *■ MOoks AnWe°? TrIoI.INS-^W,,terrier male -_U PR I GHTS S97S.J*A sjll. Jack Hagan Hutchings, 162} • - ' -REE _____ _ „ _. ...... . in JM. White Ltkt a Now on Display Landcruiser by Stewan, Inc. 60x12' in Pdlly it CLOSEOUT Doais Canoes Motoi owen's^maIi inI"?upply 396 Orchard Lake FE 2-BO; - corrBctcrafY (4-TON PIC^UP,'*25-2*17 pickup, .. .ransmiulon, b 77 attar 4 p.m. 19S* CHEVY M-TON, transmission,--------- — 4*1 IS. FIbargi prictj from $2,095. Sat and buy inna uuallty botls at OAKLAND MARINE . ......««’•' CUTTER ir FIBERGLAJ, I960, 40 horse Evinrude, trailer ------- *44-3190.______________ FREE Music Center „ ....... "I'lnbeth Lake Ro h trim 534.95; FE 2-090Q' 1957 CHEVY, GOOD BODY AND ............... _ , ..... K.?!?:}* rummage sale, 3517 BAYBROOK ^Ttnltr’Ub.V/'chJiy^irfS *•«<"« 341 engine, 3 carburetor -im floor .?»'■ rj.:-------.---- min *150. 1951 Chevy s?---------------- 2-bowl sink. 52.95; Lavs., 52.95; TENOR SAXOPHONE AT A SAC- -tubs. 510 and up. Pipe cut and rifice price. Usfd very little due ........ ...... ... ,, ^ ...---- 1. .k. %.nsoo free TO GOOD HOME ADOR- .hi. SIH«». 1(9.4441 Cedar iTani Eve'rgrien Farm 19*5 CREE.ISl.SELP-CONTAINEp, pining room and b*th. Dixie Hwy., Clarkston. *25- *— ■---- I, 5250. Reply to Pontiac | UPRIGHT PIANO, 545 POODLES SUPPLIES DON'T TAKE CHANCES xiicnwi, oin. room ano oam ' Double' doo"r"”aut™rast ‘TatrIgarm boM with a quillfM ™nu-, -T'Ovwhaad light.. mside-STORAGE-Outside bath. MY I HoNy Travel Coach, lnc._l 'JIJti*r'’T'un*™' ISI CHEVY W-TON PICKUP, EM 32612 after « p.m. __________ 151 CHEVY PtCKUP. FLBETSIDE, 1300, 651*3I35. ' i*J* Ch'6vy"paneL, GOOD Tires, runs like new, S49S, 15 Virginia St. FE 33*57,_______________ 19*0 GMC WTON PANEL, BLUE „„ ________ _______ _______________ auto- |f?*- ..f.*TTERMN 1 ENGLISH THAAsfeS FORD ...e CB radio, and D 104 mike, SOUP'S ON, THE RUG THAT IS, Muiic Lstsans 71 -A u,4T=Dc?,Dn°y$D^-illL«r**^ 5100. *24-2575. , so clean the spot with Blue Lustre., I#**®"* / •« WATERFORD-OR 3-«92l) < 1.5 ford 4 DOOR. 6 AUTO- R«"t electric shempooer, *1. Hud- ~ iMALE BASSET, 6 MONTHS OLD, matte Seer* space heater, 2 burn-^ «>»'» Hardware 41 E. Wal^. LfiEf pSVlIA? oV*3S»a' *”• *”-2419._______________ UVBStOCk — —d Vi of saason, 33S-M15. SPRED-SATIN PAINTS. WARWICK --^^A^nmNiATURE C 0 L4 L I E S, ■ ....................................... ... —. DERAE Studios of music ' • —■— — EVERGREEN AND SHADE TREES,'’»« I all Jjlnds, *33 South Blvd. FE ___ ^ _____ ______________________________________________________ InBsSsy—CL¥ARAire~E-—EVEft 19*5 3F00T CAMPER, CABOVER 15210 HoHY R0-„ .,...“5 **^71 g* re8dy”tor Eylylpriiw ^cSS“.ir*t“'’51*?5*TER‘bir, -Tn^.ret TeniltTc^ HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS Dig your own. McNtlls Nurse^a FORD Rxhttttr FORD Dealer.) Porkhurst Troilsr Solcs **Your Evinrude Dealer 1 «« D'.«J.9.H,«V. el Maybaa Rd.| ^L"SVllT FINEST IN MOBILE LIVING 15 to 1099 8. TaNgraph Rd. ' Phone 623553b.__________ aiPATBEAM 1962 -'g FOOT SA- {? Jl' **®®" - DRAPED. 1965 STEU SHADE TREES, W H I T E BIRCH, A'RSTR^M 19« ”,Bu«^ erd g|„s, Inboerddutboai_ maple, mruba, spruce, will plant, SLu Ti om. woekdavs‘•'5!!*?.Ot**".h.p. Extras. *3,000. 4*2-0944. Tony'* Landscapa. 0*7*167. , _| p.lTs!l ^ SurlSt^ g"ou.K>vTa„!° ------------------------- panel tr lolnts. Elliabtt 19*2 GMC, V7-TON PICKUP, V-6i BrooksWa Place In S3 tatee 7 miles wnt I HAVE A NUMBER OF VERY ---------whom I M». . 247* Orchard Lake. i LOVE- 13 teachers on staft. Enroll r HAVE INSTALLED THE NEW fob-STEEL BUILDINGS, 5'X7' UTILI-I ukiui willd VINYL sidlno. Looks ty house 1109.30 voice. 4130 DIxH It to llVxP utility house shots. 550 up. 651-3093._______ I70o! PART COCKER PART BEAGLE 42000 13 M Hwy. 674-1700. PLEASURE Norses, western. - 3YEAR-0LD GELDING, ' i VINYL swing. Looks ____________________________________________ I swing, but lyo paint fo IIVxP utilify house 5219.90 IN HOME OR STUDIO — PIANO, -reoDM '^»Kk7,:r„^h7kH—«m( ill ’K>" ■' merner __________d much tougher. Call me io'x7' screen house 5239J0 organ of guitar. Call after 7 p.m.,FOODLE a PPI^ AND GROOM , thoroughbred, contest, 5325. UL „„„„ (p„„ now to UM this real IffWIme sidjng TALBOTT LUMETS | 33*4)034._______________________________________ 7;”'*______________________________________________________________ _______________Wally ------------------- - AIRSTREAM LIGHTWEIGHT TRAVEL TRAILERS Since 1932. Guaranteed *— See them and oat a -i ■ --------- Trailer OPEN 7 DAYS-9 to 9 SEE THE NEW 19** MODELS now on display 19*2 RANCHERO PICKUP, 4-CYL-Inder, engine, automallc tr*nsmls-siOn, custom trim, Ford tectory cir. *995. JEROME FORD, Roch- draf'ed. YviS steury FIBER- s,!,?Hi^°prcKuF °neW YlW^ES glass. Inboardwulboard. 1*'l" 110 «« C”EVY^C^P. NEW TIRES, l!.p. Extras. 53,000. **2-0944. | f“««' »“ ........ Autobahn Motors, Inc. AUtHORIZED VW DEALERS V» ihlle north of Miracle Milo 17*5 5. TeHgraph______FE 34531 1.4. r u' E u Y VAN, EXCELLENT FREE ............_..j. FHA.erms-.i TALBOTT LUMBER Ho monav down. __________1025 Oakland FE 39545 Joe Vallelv OL 1-4423 taPPAN BOTTLE GAS STOVE, Gferma. windows, awnle— —"— ■ - - -------- - ORGAN LESSONS AA BARBIE, TAMMY OR SKIR-eomplalt wordrobes, 54. *47-1 pAd alUVCr I'd ^ mmm ____ _ - condition. 5l25.iOffiC® Snow tires fo fit Fallon, used 2 seasons 55 ee, 6239633.----------.|pHOTO_ COPJER, IM; 5125; - POODLE, BLACK MALE, AKC, 550. BAY MARE, RIDING HQRSE, I ___________3337954____________ good disposition, to good horn* « REGISTERED AMERICAN ESKIMO - MA 9-*5«6. 5'.S;”3bP| JlilMJi’n'iX one ark.ch^^^^^^^^^^ NIMROD ---------- ------ ----------- nable. 15*4 W. Hamlin, WINTER STORAGE On all boat end motor purchasei Tr"^ford."a S^r S'. It mi CHEVY ■VAN.^MF® finishing^ Wejrm.^. Flnance.| iu95."’jrROME FORD, Rochester FORD Dealer, I OL >39711._____;________ REGISTERED CHIHUAHUA AND, ------- Terriers puppies. Chlhau- Toy Fox terrier Rochester. «51-3523. I, reasonable at 434 W. Huron. THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE 115 W. LAWRENCE ST. Call 334-4119. FALL SALE ' I Good broke young horses, *H 5----------------1 prospects, 5100 up. Good kid ponies 43 Richway Poodle Salon I *40^ saddle* .*|W paejt. Fr~_de- Servlce. FE 2-1497. Sporting Ooodi NOW ON DISPLAY IMMEDIATE DELIVERY i CRUISE OUT, INC. ' E. Wilton Blvd. FE 34402 Open Dally 9-6__________ AUTUMN SPECIALS MIDLAND TRAILER SALES ' !57 Dixie Hm. 3330772 ______________ ana blyk north of TgleBreph I BOAT REFINISHING-REPAIR USED HOUSE TRAILER, GOOD' . . P^£>r EARL or DALE 11-* kkk 4441-M-,414, llZUk Tk4.klk A.,4k i verging to Clothing, Fum lumituro. Appliances BATHROOM FIXTURES, OIL ANP| condition. *So! fE 3042). in?t.?7n*5?ri"hn^ WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS AT'_ ?!2? s'ssSiS'. "c*rSSr,*;^n"txSs?:l black end galvanized pipe and til- ----------- tings. Smfnr- and Lowe Brothers Super Kam-Tona and Christmas Trees Gena's Archary, 714 W. Huron FE 35431 HAVE Bottle Gas Installation I Two 103pound cylinders and equip nyt.^tnt Graal Plain* Gas Co., 4,500 trees. Weekends. Phones — 0 4x7 Mahogany V-Groovad _un MON. a......... Eves, 'til g O'clock DRAYTON PLYWOOD 13' ATLAS TABLE SAW, EXCEL-l*h' condition, 13' Thor belt send-4112 W. Wilton OR 30912 er. 4*17 Jamm Rd. ______________ CENTAUR trTaSorTwitJt Movy. BODY-HARRISON EQUIPMENT CO. IS MOVING TO PONTIAC New Location: 151 S. Coss Lake Road ELK HUNTERS . have cabin and |aep, r__ . with permit. MA 315*2. North 67*A Point Realty. MA 32341. - --------'ICOOD USED SHOTGUNS AND Rl „ . ______TRE^ THIS ties. Ben's Loan Office, 15 N. Segl Christmas. Perfect shape. Densely., new. FE 35141. Z’i' Guns-Guns-Guns ne of the most complett lino o guns In Oakland County I We carry the complete line of BROWNING-WEATHERBY REMINGTON WINCHESTER-COLT PISTOLS —Try them before you buy— WE DO ALL OUR OWN Scope AAountIng —Smithing RIFLE RANGE-TRAP FIELD open to the Public CLIFF DREYER'S Gun and Sport Center 15210 Hrtly Rd.,^H^^ ME 3*771 CLEARANCE OP USED OFFICE furniture and machines, Forbes,'_ 4500 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-97*7. (Across from 300 Bowl I CLEAR PINE lewn beoms from 100 year n, UP to 30' lengths. DIAL t MICHIGAN BEST DEER COUN-try. Sleeping room for 2 men. FE 5-0477._____________________ LARGE BOAT TRAILER AND 13 gauge autemetic. FE 31B40. COMBINATION C£^H REGISTER and adding r ' sell tor 5200, and hose. 540. OL 1-0532 cutting torch!hYDRAUU« JACK, *50. PAINT >532 after 6:301 spray gun, $15, sender, 525. Iltter- buq. 125. UL 2-1150. COMPLETE STOCK OF PIPE ANP| Miiairwl GaMi< fittings. Custom threading, lmme-1 diate service. Montcalm Si W. Montcalm. FE 5-4712. _____ DISCOUNT OF ig PER CENT To! | 25 per cent on personalized Christ- ' me* cards. Forbes Greeting .CardI , (hnn _ i(fm nivU Uvnf . Draw.l T!r. . ACCORDION. GUITAR, PIANO, OR-^ O'"- '•»•***■ *"<1 ‘•'Y- I 3 Otfloei ice-MInchelle^usIc, 2375 Auburn, . ___ model eppll- retrlgerator, deep rreeze, gining room Suite, 3-pc, bed room suite, plus much more. Sal Oct. 23, 11 a.m. Lapeer Couhty Bank A Trust Co., Clerk Hertz Mott — Prop. Bud Hkkmolt—Ganaril Auctioneer _________Oxferd-OA 32159 AUCTIONEERS: _ BERRY _ AND PICKUP CAMPERS Only 7 new 1945 models left at close out, prices. Deer K---- ' these prices. New _________ . loot models with 46" cebover bed .irculating heater, 5575. 1—used *■ model, 5345. 1-used KT model 55*5. We are dealers lor DelRay, Camp AAate, Travel Queen, Wildwood, Coachman 3 Apache pickup truck campers. We are closing out complete stock ol travel trailers. New 14' Coachman rr ' 5*45. BILL COLLER, 1 mile at Lapeer, on M21._____________ - Ttrms. POOL TOWN. ELECTRIC STOVE, 1. 525. OR 35370. ENCYCLOPEDIAS, 19*5. COST 51*3 must secrltlce, 535. 5433515. RIFLE, * MM, MOUNTED, 4X, power, scope, complete, hunting lacket. 33379(13. Call after 5;30 SAVAGE 12-GAUGE AUTOMATIC. Heati up to 2(250 dagreas. Conassj tition *700 OL 1*5127 chaftFttr props, **««■ ' 9. m-6m a FIREPLACE WOOD, $15 A CORD, dalivared, OL 1 5741 afiar S._ For the Finest in Top-Quality Merchandise ^hop MONTGOMERY WARD PONTIAC AAALL „ j Buy Now—Save-Save!! Just In: Brand new 1964 spli >, exc. condition. 560. SaMl-8roveM)irt : 1966 Lowray C .Close Out Sale;C^ All Conn ’Organs greatly reduced cHOI ICK DIRT, GRAVEL, II, Las Wtersh, OR 3«*3I.__ - SAND, GRAVEL end till. OR 35730. >, no reasonable ol FOR DUSTY CONCRETE FLOORS Use Liquid Floor Hardener Simple Inexpensive Application ____ a Bulkers Supply ____« 5dlMi Across from Tel-Huron FE 241547, MORRIS MUSIC 34 5. Telegraph Rd Pontiac CHOICE BLACK DIRT, * YARDS tor 512, dal. FE 365M. CHOICE BLACK DIRT, 6 Y._____ 512. Choice top soil, 7 yards SI3 I Del. gravel, till. FE 39151. i660D DRIVEWAY GRAVEL, I yards tor 510. Del. FE 3655* 5 COMPLETE~LiNE' bF"S'TORY ANd'___________________________ ..... — ... ...V — cn .. . ... po^-riAC LAKE BUILDERS SI $595. _S«burg ^^^Sand, graval, till Bfrt. __________ tschment starting at I GARAGE SALE, ANTIQUES ANO' organs with se!«tor ......... .. HousahoM Items, Set, 9 a m., 2204, tschment siarilng at 5595. OeRaa Harwood, Royal Oak. 1 block south' Wuik, 4130 Dixie Hwy. 674 I 700. Lincoln, 2 blocks east ol c*™p CQNN ORGANS ond PIANOS garage SALE: kODEO TREAS-' „ ures, quality clothing, fall ar-rangemants. 2595 Woodbine, Pon-tiac. Oct. 22-23. 10 am. — 5 p m garage sale FRIDAY, OCTO- ber 22 7 to 9 p.m. runs i ......................... y* '* 35M War-|u„o conn Serenade, 25 pedal, wal-, WMd-Coakoke-FMl SANOr WAVEL, FILL DIRT, T< soil, black dirt. Bulldozing, cx( vating OR 35150.__________________ Itop soil, sand, gravel, fill. NOW $14951 77 *1295 NOW 5595 ^ CHERRY, OAK ANO MIXED. WELL seasoned. FE 2 — Friday 'III 9, never on Sun. LEW BETTERLY MUSIC CO. FIREPLACE WOOD 6733744 SEASONED FIREPLACE WOOD, ----------- .R33W3_________ GARAGE DOORS i' steel one piece, sectional, wood! and fibarglas. Factory relects In somt sizes. Garage front remodel-Irig. Free estimates. Berry Door Sdoe Co., 2300 Cole Street. Blr-nUngham. FE 2-0203 or^MI 3tM. CAS STOVE, *50, REFRIGERATOR,' ____________ _______ m *Plece (lining room set 545,iE_r«_ParJUng_____________1 ■ YEAR - OLD GERMAN POLICE ’**' o"| EXPERT PIANO TUNING, A-1 RE- dog. Reasonobly priced. 2335 DIx tank 510, elec. swteMr *20, mangle pair service, pianos bought-soW. le Highway. MT’d" d^sTde'hSTrd'-?^''-!^^^ _____________12-BEAUTIFUL MALE AKC R^ viCtrWK orewr. C^, *W EXPERT PIANO MOVING ' -------------- I bed-steod. FE 4 4914, pianos WANTED Ptt«—Hviitiiis Do|i atttr* 4 BEAUTIFUL ORANGE KITTENS, Clarkston. 623271*. - _ _ Service EW 37*20' OL 1-1672. GRAND PIANO Cannot be told from new, e reel, need new homes 3324547 bergain, this won't lad Iona. '--------------------------' GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. 1* E. Hi built up, only 19.75. HAGGERTY LUMBER INCINERATOR, 555. _____________6237791.____________ JACCUZI DEEP IWELL PUMP, tank and controls, 535. OR J^2027. JIM'S OlJTLET OL 1-1314 I 3WEEK-OLD OACHSHUNDi FE 35372 GRlkNO^IANO, SPECIaU $r75T UP>-UDA^^ rldhl Diono. 550 Pumo oroan - Stud dogs. JAHEIMS FE 32531. LSoics like Spm.it plarS, 5™ Re- AKC BEAUTIFUL OdEP APRICOT styled upright piano with mirror.' 109 poodles 7 weeks eld UL 2-2t94. 1125. Player piano, needs smell AKC REGISTERED FRENCH P06-repalr, 195. Old piano stool, 515. dies, 3 apricot end I dark " “ ' Coast Wide Van Lina, 321 E. Pika 3636451. GUITARS GUITARS Guitars Flat topSr classics, and elcdrM Large stock of ail types of gufta from $28.50. MORRIS MUSIC I AKC BEAGLES, EXCELLENT " nfing stock, I mos. an' t 3S(X)7. AKC registered BRITTANY I pups, 6 me I AKC GERi me., OA 31416. GERMAN SHEPHERD, 575 Across from Tel-Huro^ pjn„ free standing fireplace, 1962 Rambter wagon, 1955 Lincoln, oaepl bw, toys, new, madicina chesi, —“-ns, ladtas coa* - “' It size II, otha and misc. I 5 Little PMc MUSIC CENTER •lANO'S 10 PER CENT OVER COST »5 UNION LAKE RD. 3W105 PLAYEfe PIANOS We have the MOS AKC POODLES, 515 AND' UP. *33 ..Atsoa “ l_^SUmga___________________ altachmeni that AKC p6o0Le PUP*, MINIATURE heueeHoid SSiitfN I size Id, _______ , - X) Into a player. I silver or blue. 61 *“■ CHIHUAHU; MORRIS MUSIC .....-TOYS WITH PAPERi, 34 S. Telegraph Rd. 575 and uBi althar apricol, or wtiHt lAcrosi from Tel-Huron < PE 2-05*7, *230192. ----------------------J9L5:^ EM'\*n4'eveV. Pontiac Lake Rd. SIAMESE KITEENS, AFTER 5:30. | ,nd Taggerdine. ______________________________for sale' REASONABLE' -—3 All '45 HOLLY*, CORVAIRS, SPRINGER SPANIEL AND PUP- ......t ..dtuc asm lusi ixps m puppies. FE 34021. ________ TINY WHITE TOY POODLES ___________Ml 7-0292 TINY WHITE FEMALE POODLE 5*5. FE 32931 Oxford Trailer Sales TOV POODLE PUPPIES, VERY dark apricot, top quality. AKC registered. Paper trained; alto tiny -----------■*. Provert .............. Terrific PONY, SADDLE, BRIDLE, 20 bales ot hey, *100. 412-6109. REGISTERED QUARTER HOllSE, npion reining and pleasure. — Auction Salts AUCTION SALES Saturday, October 23rd, 12:30 p.m. 4(06 Grange Hell Rd.. Holly. Appliances, Musehold goods, Reo power mower, Phileo eritor, like new, good cleai A. Cox, Auc- ELLSWORTH AUTO I AND TRAILER SALES ' 7 Dixie Hwy. MA 31400 1966 MODELS, 15 to 60 ft., 3131320 NOW ON DISPLAYII THE A, wido-and 2 story. Marlottos, Slew- SKI DADDLERII Don't boy arts. Baivadera and "" ----------- ..-m >ki. — Tharmo-pan units. ^Alt^ ^ ''Ridge"'6d'.‘"T(> nd follow signs !S AT TIPSICO —-______________ _______Nil* Ohol Bl Wlnnaba- Several new boats and motors sti.. rutad In stock and going at rock-bottom space.; prico*. Take M59 to W. Highland. We have no gimmicks. Just 15' Right on Hickory years ot good merchandising and Demode dh 1. 1400 satlstiad customers. ' •" Open 94, cloeed Sunday to DAWSON'S SALES A . LAKE. Phono MAIn 9-2179. Hay-Grnin—F—d VAGABOND, reoay sat up,_________________ Held Downs Trailer Park, South-■' Can be seen after ' ,| Repossession 964 FORD ECONOLINE. EXCEL-lent condition. Has windows all around. 51 295 with *99 down. HUNTER DODGE, Birmingham. Ml 7-09-5._______________ condition, *37-2393. Attention Hunters I960 GMC 12- walk-ln van * 495 1963 ECONOLINE van, only $ *95 1963 JEEP C170 pickup, 3whaol drive, ......... $1,495 Ask for Truck Pept. FE 34101 John McAutlHo Fort) 277 Was! Montcalm » FE 34101 Orchards. Mac's. ______X), Kings, red ' n Delicious. Jonathan, ' cider. Apples, 51.50 b» 2320 E. Commerce Rd„ > kLE - HOUSEHOLD APPLES, JONATHANS, RED 324 N. Lake Angelus Rd. '^Alio'^ wed trailer* and e»"W9'T; “,^rje wSrtreeforo^ tendum e!^^^ CorS-Trecki lOlj Pickup coveiT. we sell end Install ----------------------------' HOWLAND SA\H"^a^*^NTA ____' 1965 CATALINA MODELS °'c»B.Ta.m.'tii9p,g.? Trailer Span 90 ’’"^“'““mileageVutos." ------------------------- VAN'S AUTO SALES NEW SPACES WITH natural gas'45^ D,X|E HWY. OR 31355 CONTRACTOR WISHES TO HIAE Auto Aectsi®ri«t 91, SaT trailers, Detroit area. 9437*36. Road (M21). Farmall Cub tractor, I A BUSHEL, 625 E.l off Rochester Rd. APPLES, PICK YOUR OWN, DROPS 50c, tree 51.00. Apple Valley. 3040 Hummer Lake Rd., 2'/7 mllei **** of Prior ■■■ APPLES AND CIDER, MAHAL chard, *10 E. Walton, 1 block of ...___Fresh sweet cider Oakland Orchards, 2205 East Commerce Rd. t mlla east ot MIL ford. I to « p-in. AT MIDDLETOtt-S ORCHARDS ------ You Pick or we Pick. 7079. . .potatoes. Open after 4, Mon. FmTm through Fr(. All day Set. and 7 M P M Sun- 1S10 Predmore Rd. Lake Or- iM. AAV ei.iaAB 2:00 PM. loo. MY 319*1. ! Buy—Sell—Trode, R, Censignmwrtt Wei BAB AUCTIOI , ........ SPECIAL I pick your own aool I llcious, steel i Close-Out Streamline for 1965 24', 26' Models NOW ON DISPLAY HARDTOP FOR SLIDE WINDOW>-ijf0„„--Sprite or Midget. *g2-1123 after 5 WllrOrnia DUyerS 92 ........... Holly travel Coach Inc. 210 Holly Rd., Holly ME 3*771 —Open Dally arid Sundays— Tirts-Auto-Track ^ ATTENTION TRIJCKERS, HIGH, tread 900x20 truck tlrae, A-l condition, set of 3 **9.95 ttrms. 1370 Win* Track Drive W., FE 3*123. End-of-Model Clearance! CENTURY-GARWAY TRAVEL MASTER-SAGE Two 23tt. Centuries Only a taw left, batter hurry 1 TOM STACHLER AUTO & MOBILE SALES Motorcychi ftp i.’niT' Dfing cofwmtrt.__ ^ Huron St 653PEn^and:P^^ tatas, large er small. *70-2523. PUBLIC AUCTION SATURDAY, 11 A.M. 4100 Elizabeth Lake Rd. Dressers, venltles, half-size be I, combination gas and r own. *051 Perry Lake 31*71. MY 34141. __________ RESTAURANT AUCTION SATURDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1965 10 A.M. SHARP .............. (MS9) (hmtltc, Michigan 2 blocks East ot 175 ^pressway Mila east of Opdyke Road Near Auburn Heights, Michigan After six year* of tuccetstur bus. nett Mr. Harold Smith It teling out complete modem stainless steel restaureilt equipment, and retiring from businats. Everything mutt bt —... —.. ---- Clock — Duo Therm with Blower - 20" WIndo* — * Chrome Ber **— “ l4Vi ft. ‘ ..... .... 374*42* — Hamilton Baact., 3 spindle MeH MIxer-l Prigidaire' Chest type freezer — I Sargent Root Beer machine and Slelnlett, mixing tubs Serlal’^e. 2601424 -Bun warmer — 36 - Inch Prizer *........................... Deep] HOMEMADE DONUTS. MADE WITH 100 per cent pure vegetable she-* ening, fresh filtered cider, quel applet, wholesale and retell, DIeh. . Orchard and Cider Mill, 147* Ranch Rd., 6 mlla* 5. of ■ “ ott Milford Rd., 637-40*1._______ POTATOES, GRADE "B", 75 CENTS Ora^ ‘ ............. Knoll, 1215 SI Orion. FRANKLIN Truck Campers 10Vix7'/i with t ■ ---- 1964 HONDA SCRAMBLER, L I K fe Did YOU KnOW? pat?. ». ST'S. S*' VILLAGE RAMBLER .......................... Pay* more for ANY make uaad ear. 1965 HoitDA'SO, EXCELLENT C6n-; *" *----- Holly Travel Coach 15210 Holly Rd., H^^ ME 3*771 MALLARD TRAVEL ____________TRAILER* HEILITE CAMPERS RUPP'S - Talegrtph ' - HONDA BENTLEY, 150, 1900 MILES FE 35507 K & W CYCLE YAMAHA RED DELICIOUS APPLES, *91 N. Squirrel Rd.________ STARKS QUALITY SPRAYED AP plat, Dellclou*, V—*--" ----- Form Eqiipwiit GREENERD ARBOR PRESS NO. y/t, 570. 1 Gam lathe, 10" swing, r between centers, threading dial •“« 1 Blaltdell lathe, 24" swing. FOR RENT: 2 Wolverine <311. Car '45 GMC pickups. 5100 UNI1 BACKHOE PHONE *«2- -...- - Retrigeritor . two-door refrigerator — 1 FrlgW aire chest type deep freeze — Cory Freth'nd Aire Steamer -20" Fan Modal C77 - Frath-t . - _ _______________ 727141 — Fire extinguisher — Upright I flavor Coke Machine — Air Compressor. NOTE: This Merchandise It In w"fWng order and rsw In operation. . ■ SALE SATURDAY, OCTOBER 23, . 19*5 - 10 AJW. SHARP TERMS: CASH OR GOOD CHECK SALE LOCATION; AUBURN AVENUE - (M59) Vi MILE EAST OF OPDYKE ROAD NEAR AUBURN HEIGHTS. MICHIGAN. OPEN FOR INSPECTION - SATURDAY fAftMALL model A_, tkai-^R BODY-HARRISON EQUIPMENT CO. IS MOVING TO PONTIAC New Location; 151 S. Cass Lake Road SALES AT 9:X AUCTION CALL: CARY M. BERRY—auctioneer FE 44742 MIKE SPAK - AUCTIONEER FE 37079 SATURDAY, OCTOBER O 2 locstlont 10 a.m. Butch Home 225 W. Taylor St., Flint 1 PJh. L. Kolth Kelzler 1410 N. Center Rd., Flint PERKINS sale service ALLIS CHALMERS 'DOZE^ «U or swap tor car, duinp tru-* tronl-end leader. SS7-5207. Pre-Inventory Sole Agrievitvral - Industrial Equipment 19*4 Masaey - Ferguson ** loader and broom. 1954 Farguton M tractor motor. Mastay-Ferguton 35 tra 15 205' diatal tractor wl Ollvar 550 DIetal tractor. ^ T04 Intamatlonal crawlar tractor iwartz Croak AUCTIONEERS SPECIAL AUCTION SALE 7:30 P.M. SATURDAY RAILROAD SALVAGE INSURANCE STOCK GROCERIES TpYS-^IFTS PING>0NG TABLES FURNITURE TOOLS-CLOCKS 1 TON OF GROCERIES WATCHES-RINGS NEW MATTRESSES.AN;K BOX SPRINGS, ETCr B & B AUaiOlf m Olxia Hwy. OR 32717 S35.t400 loadar. r oC-4* crawlw tractor and I makes ot truck* Pontiac Form and Industrial Tractor Co. *25 t. WOODWARD t furnace. 6*3 17S2._______________ HUNTING SEASON IS HERE STOP AND SEE PLAYMATE TRAVEL TRAILERS JOHNSON'S - 517 E. Wallpn at Jotivn S 35*53 or FE 444 ON DISPLAY PICKUP CAMPERS, t - W CJ ovtrt, *795 and up. Pickup cpvi *”V3*r“S'amper MFO. CO. PIONEER CAMPER SALES TRUCK CAMPER tAaacepIng, bumper*, radu. Lownr Campar Salat, in* and used tractert, ptewt, diacfc conditlonart, comUnat, com pfe*-,neeaq art and chopper boxes. . fr?*.,« ’ft w savings. 12 tp comWnai. ““ ---- L I BEDROOM, KXC. Holly Tractor SalM ISIS Narth SIXig WIDE, WINDSOR DELUXE Saginaw. 437-Mlt attar * pjn. CaN with front kllchm, 3bodroom, will ME 7-4t21. I eonaldar tmall frallor aa trada M, - - - - ....... • on ■-* —'— -* • — 1966 GMC (or thorp ears. Call ... M & M MOTOR SALES 2527 DIxIa Hwy. UsedwTruck Tires All Sizes Budgat farms avallabla. FIRESTONE STORE Motor Scootara tra*. S300. MA 32327. $1845 —Prices Are Born Hore-—And Raised Elsewhere— Houghton A Son , ^ OLD3RAMBLER-GMC ROCHESTER Ol 1-9761 _______5M N. AAaIn St.____ HEVY - FORD - COMET - FALCON * mvei House $J71 \$048 *±w or. I ^ An or. AaUtmM. MS awo u«n non snft Nur •nr wisdom of the ruip fof doubling out the final oonsonsht: The consonant is doubled o Per Month Includes All THE MT. VERNON 1,012 Sq. Ft. Ranch with 2-Car Garage As Low As *250°° Moves You In *105 Per Month Includes All Sih/USiowei H TO VISITORS AT OUR MODEL HOMES SUNDAY m (r* Americana Homes OPEN 1 P.M.-8 P.M. CloMd Tlwrtday* 601 Los Artioles 624-4200