Th» Weather U.». WNHitr ■urMg.Pm«eiM Warmer, Light Rain THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition VOL. 123 NO. 5 it it it it PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. W^DNESDAV. NOVEMBER 10, 19«5 -60 PA(;ES KK Power Is Restored to 'Blacked-Ouf Northeast Slate Financier, 15 Others Indicted lor Alleged Fraud DETROIT — Federal fraud indictments against financier and Democratic fund raiser Ben Levinson and others stirred Michigan political circles today. A federal grand jury, acting after a reported 3-year-old government investigation, indicted Levinson and •-------------------------<15 other men for alleged criminal conspiracy and Last Week's U.S.Tollls High for Viet SAIGON, South Viet 1 (AP) — American casualtiea in the first week of November were the highest ao far in the Viet Nam war — 70 killed and 237 wounded, a U.S. spokesman reported today. fraud in government agency home loans. The Veterans Administration and the Federal Housing Administration were alleged to have, been victimized In connection with $4 million in loans. A minor portioii, or was attributed to Uvlnson and his mortgage company. Most of the Americans were killed in actions around the Special Forces camp at Plei Me, in the central highlands. The week before there were 42 American dead. Thirteen persons, employes of the companies, were named coconspirators though not defend^ The figures released today did not iacinde the major battle Monday in the D Zone north of Saigon between U.S. paratroopers and Communist troops. The casualties brought thi total number of Americans killed in action in Viet Nam to 933, according to unofficial tabulation. A^total of 4,901 have been wounded and 92 are missing. HOME LOANS The government charged fraud in applications to the VA and FHA for home loans. Levinson, 11,’long known for Democratic fund raising and who has called himself a friend of presidents, was not available for Immediate comment yesterday. An employe at his Franklin Manage Co. office here said he was out of town. Twenty Americans are known to be detained by the Viet Cong. 144 VIETNAMESE Vietnamese killed during the first week of November totaled 144, twice as many as the Americans killed. Two months ago one American was dying to every four Vietnamese. Viet Cong dead were estimated at 536, giving allied forces a 2.5-to-l kill ratio In their favor. In Today's Press New Program Oakland^citizens group okays school proposals -PAGE B4. Hearing Derailed Klan probe sidetracked after U. S. mIx-up-PAGE C-12. W. Germany Erhard rejects De Gaulle's plan - PAGE B-13. Ares News ........... A-4 Astrology C-9 Bridge C-* Crosswonl Puzzle . . D-13 Comics C-l Editorials ! A4 Food Section C4-C-7 Marketa D-7 D-l-D-4 TV-Rodio Pror*»w I>*1* Wilson, Bari D-II Woaun’s Pages B-l-B-l T ■TBT NEW YORK (iW —- Lights flashed on in New York early today and transportation systems began to move, signaling the end to a massive and frightening power blackout that crippled the teeming Northeast. After 10 hours of worried waiting, the lights came back on at 3:35 a.m. in the heart of Manhattan one of the last areas BEN LEVINSON Seven real estate and Bwrt' gage companies, including Lov-inson’s Franklin Mortgage Co., also were named defendants. On Levinson’s office walls hang autographed pictures of Presidents Roosevelt, Truman and Johnson. He has a distinguished record for raising money for the Democratic party 'over a period of many years. He has been honored for civic endeavors. - FT. GORDON, Ga. (AP) -Former President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s doctors reported today he has had a mild attack of angina pectoris, or coronary insufficiency. They said he might be well again in wo^. While the heprt condition that put the five-star general back in the hospital at age 75 was related to a severe heart attack in 1955, the doctors said that this time it was not a heart attack in the same sense. Their patient v from an oxygen tent this morning and told he could sit up during the day. There has been no more chest pain or discomfort since the original attack that struck around midnight Monday. Reorganizing Secfel Service WASHINGTON (AP) - A major reorganization of the expanding Secret Service is being put into effect, with the titie of James J. Rowley being changed from chief to director, a Treasury official said today. The change gives Rowley a title ^ual in rank to that of FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover. The Treasury official said the designation is normally used for heads of intelligence services.’ The official said the changes First word of the reorganization came with White House disclosure of a change in the detail protecting President Johnson. White House press secretary ill D. Moyers confirmed that RufUs .Yoiingblood, who has headed the detail, has been designated as an assistant director under Rowley, his specialty being protective services. WHITE HOUSE DETAIL The new iiead of the White House detail is Lem Jones, who has worked under Youngblood. Ike's Ailment Termed Mild affected by the nation’s worst power failure. New York’s mammoth subway system staggered back into operation and commuter train service was slowly restored. The city remained crippled because hundreds of thousands of persons could not get No Nood for Oxygon; May Soon Recover Another way of putting what has happened to the former President, the team of physicians agreed, is hardening of the arteries which shi|t-off some of^the blood from the heart. Lights Go Out for 30 Million Coming on with alarming suddenness during last evening rush hour, the blackout at its peak enveloped 80,000 square See Stories, Pages A-10, A-11 miles, affecting up 1o 30 million persons in eight states, scrambled transportation and communications and stranded hundreds of thousands in stalled subway cars and elevators. Through the night, the Texas White House reported progress of experts trying to pinpoint the trouble that drained electric power from New York, Boston and hundreds of smaller cities, towns and hamlets. Reports were contradictory, although President Johnson was advised the experts were “pretty well agreed’’ no sabotage was involved and the Pentagon said military communications and the Washlngton-Moscow hot line were not hampered. As the night wore on, power began seeping back into most of the blackout area that at one time stretched over New York, Pennsylvania, Massa-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) JOHNSON CITY, Tex. (AP) — At first word of the great Northeast power disaster. President Johnson began to ask questions and issue orders. Johnson was driving north of his ranch home near here when he got the first inkling of trouble — on a news broadcast over his car radio. Hustling to the ranch house, he phoned the White House in Washington. The first person he talked to —special assistant Joseph A. Callfano Jr. — had no word of the mystery blackout. But Califano found out in a burry and remained on duty long into the morning hours — acting as a link between Johnson and the disaster. Youngblood becomes one of four assistant directors under the new aotup. . ‘ • vi START CONSTRUCTION—Ground was broken yesterday for the first pnits of thei Bloomfield Townhouse Apartments, loot Woodward. ’Tuifdng the first shovel of dirt are (from left) Mayor William k Taylor Jr. and Developer Charles L. Langs. Some 290 nbusing units, costing |4 million, are planned for the 30-acre site across from St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. ^ t , fit LBJ Heard News Over Car Radio AP PlwMax MAYOR BY CANDLELIGHT - Mayor Robert F. Wagner of New York City is shown at his city hall office last night, carry- his duties as chief executive during the mass blackout. A burning candle and a flashlight are on the desk before him. Within minutes, White House press secretary Bill D. Moyers assembled newsmen at the press center in Austin, 65 miles east of here, and began probably was a record-breaking news briefing for any presidential press aide. It went through the long evening hours, and into the morning today. Alternately clenching a cigar between his teeth and using it as a stabbing pointer as he gestured, Moyers said first Johnson had got the word on his car radio and hhd hustled to the !h headquarters to place calls to Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNaiHara, Director luford Bflington of the^ffice of Imergency Planning, and Cali- UTM08T HELP All, he said, were instructed to offer the utmost federal assistance to all officials of the areas concerned. Later, Moyers said Ellington had told the President he had word from utility people that Officials Grope for Answers Military Questions Draw Prime Concern WASHINGTON (AP) - Struck with a kind of crisis it’s never known before, the federal government groped today for answers to a mounting array of questions. Foremost; how did it happen, this terrifying blackout that gripped the busiest corner of the United States for most of a night? And then, immediately: what can be done so that it may never happen again, this sudden stripping away of electric power — the lifeblood of 20th century America? And overshadowing all of the immediate questions, the ing military one: could one man Pontiac joined the antipoverty war last night as city commissioners voted 4-3 to contribute city funds to lease downtown office space for a projected community action center. The second floor of the building located on the southwest Corner of Lawrence and Saginaw will house the action center,' one of two proposed for Oakland County. or group of men, secret agei^ of" an enemy power, secretly throughout the Northeast in 2 (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) throw the switches and cut the ines and smash the machinery to paralyze the nation,. setting it up for a devastating thernqo-nuciear attack? The administration’s reaction was swift and emphatic. Presi-Johnson ordered an all-out investigation of the power fail-and picked chairman Joseph C. Swidler of the Federal Power Commission to direct it. But the national security im- plications of the disMter be- ^bout the antipoverty F>lAiir whton thto ¥>raaiH*nf Rising Mercury, Falling Rain Due in Area Tonight Pontiac OKs Funds for Poverty Center 'Hte city will pay the $4,800 to lease the office space for six months. Voting for the city’s partied pation in the antipoverty effort were Commissioners Wesley J. Wood, John A. Dugan, T. War-Fowler and Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. ' Voting against last, night’s a c t i om were Commissioners Robert C: Irwin, Leslie H. Hudson and Jam^s H. Marshall, all opposing the action because they wanted more time to study the proposal. An earlier motion to table the issue for two weeks lost by an identical 4-3 vote. Irwin offered the tabling tion. He thought there was some doubt on the part of the com- came clear when the President! j ... . .. ordered the Federal Bureau of Investigation to take part in the probe. FBI agents were or- Cloudy and warmer with a little light rain likely is the weatherman’s prediction for tonight. Lows will fall to 34 to'^S. Showers are expected to end! sometime tomorrow morning I with partial clearing late in the I day. Temperatures will climb into the 40s. Friday will be cloudy and a ttle cooler with a chance of light rain. A chilly 26 was the low In downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.ni- The mercury reading at 3 p.m. wasi 37. ' r dered to walk with power crews along the lines between Niagara Falls and Syracuse, N.Y.. to seek the .source of the blackoqt. And while White House press secretary Bill D. Moyers (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) far-reaching effect. FEDERAL PROGRAM Like any federal program,’ added Irwin, “you don’t get rid of it.’’ Cancels December Call WASHINGTON (AP) - The Marine Corps today canceled its December draft call because volunteer enlistments in the armed forces have risen almost 60 per cent. 1710 Corps said it would not need 5,024 draftees it had asked for*December because its enlistments had ^hot upward. man of the cotmtjrOEO commis-for 90 minutes. 2 CENTERS Two community action centers re planned for the county; one in Pontiac and the o t h e r in Royal Oak Township. The two centers are to reach about 48 per cent of the county poor, according to Ingraham. He said there are about 30,-000 persons in the county living on less than 63,000 per year. / , Commissioners reflected concern that local participation costs might rise from the present 10 per cent and that the action program could cause a flood on local welfare and service agencies. Ingraham said that the impact of the poverty programs on existing services wasn't known. 98-10 SPLIT' He said that present legisla-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Hudson, who had previously indicated a favorable position on the antipoverty program, said he had been presented with nine pages ot facts with little time to study them. Marshall said that once the rental motion was approved, the commission had “passed the point of no return.’’ City Commissioners last night quiz^ James M. McNeely, executive director of the County Office of Economic Opportunity, l and Carl F. Ingri^am, chair- 2 IJne Want Ad Played Pretty Munic . . . “Delighted with results of our ad. Plenty of calls, fast sale," states .Mrs. C. C. PRESS WANT ADS produce the sweet music of profitable sales. They can for you, too. Dial 33241181 for atd^n. A—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10. 1965 Power Blackout Ends (Continued From Page One) chusetts. Maine, New Hampshire, Connecticut, Vermont, Rhode Island and even struck Toronto and Ottawa in Canada. Johnson, however, ordered] the Federal Power Commission to launch a sweeping investiga- frighteningly to a halt. Elevators stopped between floors bringing cries of dismay. Operating rooms darkened. News tickers fell silent. Airliners scrambled to other ports. Convicts in a Massachusetts prison rioted. later, the doors opened. I can tell you we were glad to, get out.” A commercial airline pilot winging in for a landing at “ ton's Logan International Airport at 5:21 p.m. witnessed “a startling sight. There below is a brightly lighted city and sud-Immediately, off-duty police Ijenly it plunges into darkness. tion and gave it all the facilities!were called back to work. Na-|You don’t know what to think.” of the federal government — tional Guardsmen were put on ‘"“8‘he FBI. in ^ ,„nti„ The blackout came with a i • j • . flickering of lights at about 5:30 f p.m. (EST), the peak of the hospitals. . , rush hour in teeming cities. " elevator in a Manhattan office SUBWAY SNARL ibuilding:'“The lights sputtered Subway care speeding ah estr-|oul. The three of us pressed the mated 850,000 persons through alarm button. We waited and There was a heart-stopping moment at Manhattan’s St. Vincent’s Hospital when an emergency generator failed during a brain operation. A police generator was pressed into action and the operation was completed. Patrick’s Cathedral on I ----New -^flrk'« aubway ground heard nothing. A few minutcS|Fifth Avenue-are nearly filled I 1 jwith worried worshipers. j ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Officials Seek Answers I But with the grimness and ifear. there was also excitement' land humor. I GIRL DELIGHTED A young girl with school books !under her arm walked through^ [darkened 1)11168 Square and| refused to speculate about pos- I He did not suggest the reno-*explained in rapture: "This is (Continued From Page One) sible sabotage, and Johnson was advised by experts that dirty work was unlikely, the question remains: could it happen? and what can be done to prevent If? At the Pentagon, the national defense command center and headquarters for all U.S. military communications, the immediate questions raised and answered were not of sabotage and future precautions but of the existing status of those communications. "A rapid check of major military installations, including the Strategic Air Command and the North American Air Defense Command, confirms that communications are Intact,” the Defense Department said within an hour of the blackout. PENTAGON CALM No air of crisis was apparent at the Pentagon, where lights went out at the usual -time in the offices of key officials. Secretary of Defense Robert S.|NO CONSIDERATION vations. But ironically, an in- exciting. Oh, this is exciting.” tricate, government-urged link-i ^ woman in the lobby of a ing of Northeastern power systems intended to assure electricity in an emergency may have been a key contributor to the blackout. If so, the blue-ribbon investigation is sure to raise searching questions about the national power grid that links power lines across the nation. The grid was born in recent years for economic and defense to cut consumer costs and assure power in an emergency. The theory was that a failure in one area would be automatically remedied by a power flow from another area. East Side apartment building whose elevators were immobilized observed! ‘‘My husband is up there with two quarts of Jack Daniels and a baby sitter, but I don’tleel like walking up 19 floors to join him.” Despite the darkness and the tangle of communications and transportation, the mood generally seemed to be one of calm with a grin-and-bear-it philosophy. However, some 200 inmates at the Massachusetts State Prison took advantage of the excitement to throw a fumiture- But a spokesman for the Po-| breaking riot until guards and . . tomac Electric Power Co. herei state troopers herded them intoi She is Mrs. Frank (Geneva) all that saved Washington!one cell block. iMcKinnom 38, of 22439 Liberty, Birmingham Area News Book Controversy Leads to New Police Policy BIRMINGHAM - From now 6n, city police will buy copies of books they suspect of being obscene. This will be the major change in the city’s policy as a result of recent controversy involving police Investigation of a novel sold locally. Mayor Robert W. Page em-I phasized this point in a press conference called by city officials yesterday afternoon. Page, with Police Chief Ralph He noted that the books In question were not removed from the book store to prohibit their sale,, but-that they were bor--rowed for review by the police chief and city attorney. I Robert S.’ Kenning, called the I session to clarify action for which Moxley has been dty officials determined they did not have a case for obscenity against the book and they dropped the matter, considering it closed, Page said. CHECK PROCEDURE Police procedure In checking books against which there have been complaints is toISe re- The controversy was sparked last week when it was revealed I that Moxley had taken two copies of “The Last Temptation I Of Christ” from the Doubleday iBook Shop. 239 Pierce. WHERE POWER DIED - The shaded area indicates parts of the northeastern United States and Canada hit by a massive power blackout last night. Power went out at 5:28 p.m. EST and came back on at 3:35 a.m. EST this morning. Some sectors within the area were not affected due to independent power sources. There were accusations of “confiscation,” “book banning” and “censorship.” “Censorship, in effect, does not exist here,*’ Page said yesterday. “It never has. And it never will.” Chief Deputy Register of Deeds Named A new chief deputy register of deeds was appointed today by County Clerk-Register of Deeds John D. Murphy. - and Pennsylvania. DelawareinatjonAL GUARD and Maryland — was the closing off of an interconnection be- ^husettVand^NelsT tween those states and the area' that was blacked out. McNamara did not return to hisl Govs. John A. Voipe of Mas-Rock- iefeller of New York called out their state National Guards. In New York, some of the guards- office during the Northeast blackout. But despite normal communications within the mili-taiy establishment, the fact remained that a single failure somewhere had shut down power in a cluster of states and a part of Canada. What would happen to troop movements along public highways if they were thrown suddenly into darkness and an enemy attack became imminent? given, he said, to attempting to| sands stranded in the subways, supply the enormous needs of| Traffic, a tangle anyway in There was no consideration men helped evacuate the thou- rush hour, became a born-blaring nightmare in some of the bigger cities when traffic lights abruptly blinked off. New York police installed two antiaircraft searchlights at Lex- the Northeast from its neighboring states. As Swidler, who will be asking most of these questions in months to come, stated the problem: “Hie power industry in this ington Avenue and 42nd Street country has an excellent record and at 43rd and Broadway and of performance unmatched any-;bounced their powerful beams where. But neither is depend-1 off buildings to illuminate the ence on continuous service! Grand Central and Times matched anywhere. This inci- Square areas. I dent demonstrates what everj’- Police also banned the sale of body realized all along but nev-| intoxicating beverages, er thought about; the absolute PLASHUGHT BOOM 'indispensability of electric pow-; -o.i, er and the fact that we can’t tolerate a systemwide interrup- ^ --------- ------tion under the highly developed perhaps some fairly important power conditions we have to- glowed in skyscraper technological renovations.” day.” St. Clair Shores. The post presently pays an annual salary of ^,600, but will be increased to |8,1M on Jan. 1. Mrs. McKinnon, a clerk in the register of deeds section since Sept. 20, will assume her duties Monday. She succeeds Mrs. Helen J. Hoskins, who was fired by Murphy Oct. 25. Ws. McKinnon was chief deputy register of deeds in Monroe County for two years, 1959-60, and later was secretary to the Mcnroe County Veterans Administrator, Earl Sharp. She has four daughters, ranging in age from 9 to 14. Swidler, warning that too few e facts were in to make any firm ir judgments, .said the crisis calls e for a great deal of “careful b ___________________ study and industry thinking and tion under the highly develop^ I J! windows. From Broadway’s The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Variable cloudiness and a Itttle warmer today. Highs 46 to 52. Cloudy and warmer with a little light rain tonight. Lows 34 to 38. Light rain with partial clearing later Thursday and little temperature change, highs in 40s. Winds becoming south 10 to 18 miles today. Friday outlook; Cloudy, cool with chatice of light rain. “Great White Way,” it looked as if thousands of fireflies were I lighting up the darkness as New Yorkers trudged along I carrying flashlights. With the power flowing back, the problem became what happened and how to stop it from happening again. T(0*y In eontinc prncndliVfl i i.r At I n.tn.: wind VniMity 5 n Dirnctlon: Southnait ' -........... It 5:17 p.m. I On« YMr Ah In 'jHlghnl tnmpnrilura I I Lawns! tampyratun Pleads Guilty in Kin's Death I Wnaihnr Sunny Pontiac Joins Poverty War (Continued From Page One) jion calls for the 90-10 split on costs to continue for two years. After the (wo years, the antipoverty programs would have to be evaluated and their cost related to any increased as expected benefits from the antipoverty program were a reduction in welfare rolls, a larger group of skilled citizens, coordination of services to the poor and a reduction in “Our goal,” explained In graham, “is to provide coordination for a network of social, education and occupational services to the poor.” A ^rmlngton Township man!CITY’S ROLE yesterday pleaded guilty to man- Thieves Strike, Fires Flare, Inmales Riot in Darkness BOSTON (AP) - Two ddi- cate tracheotomies were performed under fire department lights in a hospital corridor. Convicts escaped from one prison, and 300 of them went on a rampage in another. Scores of fires broke out. Stores were looted. Homes were left without light and heat. These were just'some of the consequences when the nation’s worst power failure plunged New England towns and cities into darkness. It happened just as inmates of the Massachusetts State Prison at Walpole were returning to their cells from dinner. Before guards and state troopers quelled the uprising, the prisoners smashed furniture, ripped out plumbing, broke windows and ripped off ceil block doors. policemen in Boston. Many offl- Most of the hospitals in the area affected — Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, Vermont and New Hampshire — shifted to emergency power equipment. But at Boston City Hospital,, the auxiliary equipment was being converted from direct to alternating current and could not be switched on immediately. When the lights went out, two patients were undergoing tracheotomies — surgery that involves the cutting an opening in the throat. The patients were moved' to corridors ancT firemen rushed in battery-powered lights flashlights. The surgeons completed the operations. With no stoplights to regulate rush hour traffic, tieups were monumental despite the efforts of the nation’s best dressed cers wore badges pinned to tuxedoes while directing traffic. They were called in for emergency duty while getting ready for the annual policemen’s ball. Air travel was interrupted only briefly. Car lights were used to light one runway until auxiliary power was turned on. Office workers were marooned high above the city in stalled elevators. Nine men and nine women waited 2Vt hours | before they were fr^ from an elevator at the 52-story Prudential Building here. The darkness shielded thieves who broke Springfield jewelry store and stole watches and wedding bands. James A. Brown, 75, of Chelsea, Mass., died of an apparent heart attack after battling burglar at his home. In Boston, two looters were arrested as they attempted to flee from a store. proved to be ill-foniided. The press secretary said he could say nothing about possible sabotage, nor could he pinpoint! the cause of the trouble. Scores of house fires were attributed to candles. Fire of unknown origin raced through a Dedham business block during the blackout, causing heavy Some subway trains were stalled in outlying districts of Boston in the early stages of the blackout but most of the system which has an independent power force, was unaffected. Some 3,200 Massachusetts National Guardsmen were alerted. Forty of them petroled downtown Wakefield, but no others were reported to have been ordered to actual duty. LbJ First Heard Disaster News on Auto Radio (Continued From Page One) tV» hours. That advice viewed, Page said. Specific details will be determined later. The request of the police chief to review a book carries with it the implication of coercion, whether or not he bans it, some residents alleged Monday night. ■ Page said new procedures would be aimed at insuring that “no one even has a feeling there is censorship involved.” The mayor noted legal counsel will be sought on any such cases in the future, to determine whether the city should proceed toward court action. ‘The court will make the determination of obscenity,” Pago said. The Birmingham Education Association yesterday became the negotiating agent for Birmingham School District’s 720 teachers. Faculty members approved the move by a 544-31 vote. The BEA, \ihich had applied to the State Labor Mediation Board for the election, wak unopposed in yesterday’s balloting. Then came the announcement that Johnson was ordering a sweeping Investigation of the whole affair under the direction of Joseph C. Swidler, chairman of the Federal Power Commission. Moyers said FBI agents would p^icipate and “the full resources of the federal government” would be thrown into the breach. LATEST WORD Meanwhile, telephone at his ear, Moyers was tellii men of the latest word reaching Johnson from Washington: Power service restored here and there, traffic jams easing. Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York finally landing after being hung up when airport landing lights failed at Albany. Still no word of how it all Official recognition of the advisory function of the Pontiac School District Citizens’ (Committee on Human Relations may be {iven to the committee by the ward of education at its regular meeting tonight. Finally, Moyers said, “Severi al of the persons working on the problem believed with tentative conftdence that the probable cause of the problem was a remote-control substation at Clay, N.Y.” Members of the two groups meeting jointly last night at Madison Junior High reached tentative agreement on guide lines for committee proposals to the board and by-laws for the committee. However, he hastened to add there was contrary word, that other experts doubted the (Clay substation had anything jo do with it. “It is safe to say no one knows what caused the power failure,” Moyers concluded. ★ ★ ★ Baker, who said the guide lines drawn up by Supt. of schools Dr. Dana P. Whitmer were “commendable,” told board members the committee now felt it “had its feet on the ground and had something to work with” in the field of human relations. Five Airliners Caught in the Darkness Downlawn Tomparalurti TutiHr't TtmpHdur* Chart sna 34 1* Jackwnr ■ onabA 35 3t Kansas ..njr uu . . , (iap«ii 41 34 Ui Angriai 73 57 Of his brother-in-lsw thrc ghion 31 34 Miami Bracn 10 75 NEW Y0RK*-(AP) - Runway r* *1 slaughter in the fataf shooting! !*t„^****r*jl^*l '!?***^ *’*<**'' blacked out in « »Ti*"«inot be asked to furnish anythingterrifying instant with five Ihan Ilia nfflaa anaaa tna. * 37 iM. 37 31 , „ months ago. -------- - ■ ■ --'---Done lerriiying insuni wiin live ' more than the office space for ajriiners maneuvering to land the action center. • -..........• - 5; 34, TuaWay In Pontiac (at rocorOaO domlnfown) « 55 plea as his trial on a first (i Hlfhatt an* Lowail Tamaorali It Data In »3 Yuri -luikogon - ............. Pnlltton 33 30 Omahn Travw»» C. 37 37 Phornia Alboquarqua M 37 Pitijburgh 43 Atlanta 74 SI $t. Louis 3S Boston 55 3t Salt Lake C. 35. Chicago 43 34 S. Arancltco 51 33 S. S. Marla 30 33 ,45 7» Saattlo 40 30 Tampo 31 35 Washington or take off at the John F. Ken- 13 41 25608 Farmington entered his CIncinn ; Danvor “ ” gree murder charge was to be-^ gin before ^ouit Judge Fred- Duluth n lt13uPort Worth 41 4 53 43 erick C. Ziem: The plea on the “ reduced count was accepted by the prosecutor’s office. Fleming will be sentenced Dec. 7. He faces a possible li»„ year maximum prison term. I Fleming was arrested by sher-iiff's deputies on Aug, 14 afterjthing to help these people.” shooting (,eorge Henry, S3, in,' the chest. Dngao said be thought a 'nedy International Airport majority of Pontiac citizens wanted something done for the poor. He thnugh the commission shonid not put off acting. Fowler, who said the antipoverty program would have “to make a showing’’ or be ended in six months, said “I hardly know anything about It, but realize somewhere we are going to have to do some- Tuesday night. The vital operational aids at one of the world’s bualeat.airports went dead at 5:28 p.i Using an auxiliary power generator, the center advised all Inbound planes to divert to other airports including Philadelphia, Montreal and Bradley Field, near Hartford, Conn. Battery operated lights were , The apparent motive for the crime was that Henry had allegedly propositioned Fleming’s wife, Carrie, about a month {earlier, according to Assistant j Prosecutor Richard Rossman. Death Edges Near for Human Torch a general power failure swept the Northeast. It was a funny feeling,” said an airport employe. “It was a good thing traffic was light at the time,” said an airport official. FIVE READY I Two jetliners were coming in and three were warining up for takeoffs. Tower controllers switched to a battery-operated emergency transmitter and told the two inbound pilots to detour to New- NEW YORK (AP) - Life AP Phololax NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers are forecast tonight for the Pacific Northwest and part of Texas. Rain is expected along the southeast Atlantic states. Snow flurries are expected in the Midwest extending as far west as Montana and ing's sister. WyofDing. Data to and from the Weather Bureau necessarily Fleming had told deputies was abbrevia^ because of the massive power failure last (Ib«t he didn’t remeniber pulling —I yiroughout much of the earl^ morning hours the trigger of the 3J^aliber re- The shooting occurred at the ebbed today from a young paci-'Upper_Straits Lake Resort Club, fist who made a huntan torch of 9140 Richardson. Commerce himself in front of the United Township, where Henry his wife NaUons building to protest the |and their four children had been I war in Viet Nam. , j living during the summer. 1 *‘He’l still alive, but jie’l sink-! Before that the family lived ing fast,” ssid s spokesman dt 'in Detroit, Mrs. Henry is Flem-lBellevue Hospital. LaPorte, 28, ignited his body, ark airport, which was not af- Muscovites privately ex- fected ^ the power failure.. to4iy.| vblver. clothing in the predawn hours Tuesday. The flames hunied 16 per cent of his body. 4 An airport car to the runways and warned the three pilots waiting to take off to stay put. About an hour later, paasengers were removed by bus. The Federal Aviation Agency ah traffic control center, at McArthur riald air route traffic control at Bohemia on Long Island, picked up the burden. set up at one of the main runways at Kennedy for emergency landings. Similar lights at New York’s LaGuardia Field made it possible to handle some flights there. Soviets Told U. S. Fearful in Blackout taxed by the diverted flights. But despite delays of up to an hour, the traffic at Newark returned to normal shortly after 8 p.m. Many planes were forced to wait two to three hours before landing^ there SHUTTLE TRIP MOSCOW (UPI) were told tonight that Americans caught in the East Coast’s giant blackout r e a c t e d with "panic and unreasonable hysteria.” praised both incredulity and amuiement at the newt - incredulity that a major part of the most modern nation on earth could be knocked out by “one small lever” and amusement at reports of Americans’ fears that "The Russians are coming.” f Izvestla, the evening govem- their first official word of the blackodi Passengers on many flights were brought from Newark to New York by bus of taxi. The International arrival building at Kennedy jammed with passengers. As the blackout continued, there was a rush ^ obtain hotel rooms near the airport. a short time, hotel rooms in the area were reported filled, and there was a scramble to obtain roomi tat Manhattan. Hotels In Newark also renorted they were filled. By , bound landbw or been canceM^i 180 I or takeoffs li at Kennedy, Unit's Function Before Board Pontiac Group May Be Approved Tonight The committee, headed by Samuel Baker, was created In December of last year when the school board set down iti policy on public school integra- Accord between the two groups, however, came after a compromise settlement on a point raised by Baker and (Clarence Barnes, committee member and president of the Pontiac Urban League. GENERAL SUGGESTIONS At issue was a suggestion In the guide lines that the committee could give “greatest help” to the board by submitting “gen- heHVttyjwar wggeMdny faTItorWf specific plans of action. Baker said the reference — lining the committee’s “ttady and proposal function” — was “nnaecetsary.” He requested the reference bo deleted as “rather restrictive” on committee activity, stating committee members fully realized the board would consider any specific proposals In light of the board’s general responstblll-ties. Monroe M. Osmun, board president, said the committee should seek a “general overview of the whole problem” of race relation! but alM said tha board “would not overlook any specific pro- Board and committee members finally agreed to let the reference stand, but atrength-aned a previous provision do-Kriblng the committee’s purpose ei ^elopment of general aW specific pj-oposiH-” THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 10. 1965 Party Squabble In State Unit Rift Centers on Hiring of Insurance Prober LANSING (UPI) _ A party-Une squabble between members of the Senate Insurance Committee over thfe hiring of an in-vesUgator has added a new strand to an aiready tangled web of charges and countercharges. The latest dimension w a S: added by Senate Republican leader Emil Lockwood, St. Louis, a member of the committee, who charged in a letter Tuesday Committee Chairman Bernard F. O’Brien, D-Detroit, - had illegally hired an investigator. Lockwood charged O’Brien had acted on his own, instead of with permission of the committee as required, when he retained investigator Peter BilL He snggested BiU retam the |4,NI in state funds that he had been paid on a $45 per diem basis. O’Brien denied the charge, I 8 a y 1 n g te personally advised I both majority and minority I members of the committee he I intended to hire Bill. However, [ he refused to go into details of | the hiring procedure before the | date of the next committee [ meeting, which has not yet been i set. •k if it Bill has been active in two I probes into the business affairs I of State Insurance Commission- I er Allen L. Mayerson, who was I appointed by Republican Gov. Ronmey. PROMOTE SALES ’The Insurance Commission, in J turn, has been investigating re- * ports that Bill used his position ^ as insurance investigator to help I promote Insurance jsales for an I Illinois firm. la his letter, Lockwood also asked O'Brien to confirm or deny several “hearsay items” ceacemiag Bill such as reports he was recommended by President Johnson, is a former agent for the Central intelligence A g e n c y, and “he was year (O’Brien’s) private valet" Lockwood was en route to s National Conference of Legislative Leaders in San Juan, Puerto Rico, and unable to be contacted for hn elaboration on these latter questions. WWW O’Brien, meanwhile, concluded his rebuttal statement by asking, “I wonder why there h a question in Senator Lockwood’s mind at this time?” He would not expand on the inqwrt | of that question. A—>8 SIMMS Discount Annex 144 N. Saginaw $t. Downtov^n Pontiac-Next to Sears These coupon specials are only good at the New SIMMS Discount Annex Look 'em over and see the special low prices on wanted items. Prices good with coupon 'til Nov. 17th. Store hours: Mon., Thurs., Fri., Sot. 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Tu,es. and Weds. 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Discounts All Over the Store-Simms, 98 N. Saginaw Tssionsw 0|ly-Stsrts at 9 a.n. 'til 9 |ul Sa “kM" Simms is a swinging storo and you con bo a winner by joining in our Price Slosh A-Go-Go. Swing into Simms and Check these bargains, you will find many more unadvertised specials too. We reserve the right to limit quantities and all prices subie^ to stock on hand. SIMMS Is Giving Away 50 Turkeys --------------------. ' one of the 50 h • * “ When you come ■'*1^ Simms just fill out a ticket, you may bo the lucky winner of one of the 50 turkeys for Thanksgiving. Drawings start Nov. 15. Watch Simms Adv. for winner's names. Japanese Fight Korea Treaty TOKYO (UPI) - More than 70 persons were injured last night and about 75 arrested in | leftist demonstrations by about 100,000 persons against the Japan-South Korea normalization treaty. The outbreak of violence was the biggest since the 1960 riots against the U.S.-Japan mutual , security treaty, and more, pos- j sibly bigger, demonstrations j were scheduled for tonight. The treaty would settle out-standlng bsnes betweeu South Korea and Japan that have been pending since World War n. The leftists oppose it because they beUeve the United States wiU try to promote a Northeast Asia military pact, Involving Jnpan, if it is rnti-fled. The treaty has already been ratified by Korea aiiii is now pending in the Japanese parUa-ment. The ruling Conservative party rammed it through a spe- j dal committee and onto the floor of the house last Friday, touching off the demonstrations. ★ ♦ * Last night’s demonstrations got out of hand when mobs of students and unionists started snake-dancing through the downtown area from the parUament building, They clashed with about 7,000 helmeted riot poM The CJonservatives aeemconfi-dent of raUfying the treaty, but SodaUst member! of parliament are employing stall tactics. DOCS asthma T*Md kr *tok A-4 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1965 CARPENTER CAPERS — Three Orion township Carpenter Elementary School pupils advertise the PTA-sponsored fair to be held from 3 to 7 p.m. Saturday, ^arl Burcham of 3772 Joslyn and Mary Bates of 3712 Grafton hold a poster proclaiming the country store while Tanuny Oss of 3830 Grafton holds one of the stuffed animals to be given away. The fair will also feature games, a^grab bag and a lunchroom.^ Agricultural to Residential Milford Twp. Oks South Hill Rezoning MILFORD TOWNSHIP - In line with the trend of develop-ment there, the Township Board last ni^t rezoned property on either side of South Hill Road from agricultural to suburban residential. Affected by the reclassification were SOO-foot strips on either side of South Hill from Buno to Maple. Not incladed in the action The application of Lyle J. Walker to expand the operation of the Walker Sand and Gravel Co. at South Hill and Moore roads now is being considered by the Township Zoning Board of/ Parents Invited to Visit Claricston Elementary CLARKSTON - ahrkston Elemetitary School PTA will hold a “back to school” night for parents tomorrow, beginning with dinner at 6:30 p.m. Parents will meet In their children’s rooms at 7:40 to participate in demonstrations and die* cuss the curriculum. was the property covered by an application for a gravel residences built oa sites of at least one acre. There now are several homes of that type along South MI. F Appeals. ★ The board of appeals has the authority to grant the permits for property in agricultural zones. WALKER PROPERTY Regents who sought the change from agricultural to single-family residential had Included the Walker property in their request. Walker opposed the move. The suburban residential clas-siflcation covers single - family Walker is seeking expansion of .his operation to extend north of Moore for a total of 466.' acres. APPLIED FOR PERMIT He also has ai^lied for a permit to enlarge his mine at the southwest comer of West Maple and South Milford roads to a total of 200 acres. w ★ * Action on these requests “ doubtedly will depend on what safeguards can be afforded with respect to reclamation and utilization of the land after it is mined,’’ according to Township Supervisor William L. Mainland. In Romeo Schools Board 0Ks3 Bargaining Units ROMEO — ’Hie board of education has recognized three groups to represent its school personnel in future negotiating sessions. * w * The Romeo Education Association will negotiate for the teachers, the International Union of American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employes for maintenance, cus- todial. hot lunch workers and bus drivers. ’The secretaries wiil re| On Dec. 1, the board will take bids on additions to the Junior and senior high school and construction of a new elementary school. A $1.4-million bond issue for the building was approved by voteri in June. Formington Election Picture Schools Must Move Fast to Keep Up (EDITOR’S NOTE: 'This is the first m a two-part series on Monday’s special election in the Farmington School District. ByPATMcCARTY FARMINGTON - Keeping up with the children of t h e Joneses is an expensive proposition, Farmington Board of Education members are learning. They currently are seeking |6.1 million to build enough classrooms for the children the Joneses and other families are bringing into the district at the rate of nearly 1,000 a year. The bond issue is one of three proposals on next Monday’s ballot, the other two being for operational Lambs Win for Area Girl A p p r 0 V a 1 of the package would not raise the tax rate, according to school officials. ★ -A W With increases In the d 1 s-trict’s property valuation able to support a large portion of the b u 11 d 1 n g program, the board of education proposes cutting the debt retirement levy from 11 to 7 mills to allow for a 4-mill boost in the op-erationai tax. NEW STATE LAW They would make use of a new state law which allows rapidly growing districts to borrow from the state bond loan fund to meet interest and principal payments on outstanding and future bonds for building construction and site purchases. ’Therefore, if the three propositions on Monday’s ballot are approved, the total levy would remain $32.56 per $1,66# of valnatlon as ’Tracing enrollment figures since 1960, school officials note the number is expected to be doubled by the end of the dec- From 8,723 In 1960, the enrollment jumped to 9,794 In 1961, 10,684 in 1962, 11,728 in 1963 and 12,665 in 1964. PRESENT NUMBER Some 14,431 students now are attending classes in the district. Projections described as conservative Indicate school enrollment win reach 17,3#6 In September 1976. An additional 98 classroonu will be required to acconuno-date this ii^ux. Sr ★ ★ For the first time )n the history of thq district, the classroom shortage is being felt on the secondary level, where construction ^ts are higher than for elementary units. TIME NEEDED Schools Supt. Geriild V. Harrison noted it takes two years ph - ■ a school after funds for it have been approved. Thekstof a$S-miIlloa bond issue approved In 1913 now is being put to work. Already completed under that program are Laikshire Elementary School, 24-room additions at North Farming-ton High Scho(d and East Junior High School and a total of 17 rooms added to Gill, Bond and Middle Belt elementary schools. ★ ★ * Fairview Elementary School, now under construction, is to be compieted by September, 1966. Scheduled to open the following year is the district’s fourth junior high school, site for which has not yet been determined. The school board also has purchased new sites with funds trom the lf83bondis^- Highlighting the proposed construction program is a $2-million high school, which would be the district’s third. Needed by 1968, the unit would accommodate 850 to 900 students. AVAILABLE SIGHTS TTie two sites available for the building are on 12 Mile just west of Middle Belt and at 12 Mile and Drake. Some $1,725,666 would be allocated for the district’s fifth Janior high school, to be buUt by 1969 or 1976. It would house 756 students. Harrison noted there is no way of determining which areas will grow fastest. ’Therefore, the exact locations of future buildinga have not yet been decided. WWW The budget for the proposed building program, which Harrison described as “extremely tlght,”cnlls for $700,000 to be spent for a new elementary school, $400,000 for two elementary additions, and $550,-000 for an addition to Farmington High School. OTHER PLANS Also pknned are $475,000 for new school sites and $250,000 Library Group Book Sale Set THOY - The Friends of the TToy Public Library will hold a book sale tomorrow, Friday and Saturday at the Troy National Bank. WWW It will be conducted from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. tomorrow and Friday and 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday. w w w Proceeds are used to buy new books for the library. Troy School Board Hires 2 to Start Pilot Program ’TROY-’The board of education last night took the first step toward setting up a pilot community schools program with funds from the Oakland University Center of the Mott Foundation. ’Two directors were hired to conduct programs in the north and south ends of the district Put under contract were Ronald Morse of the Chippewa Valley Schools and Charles Heikkenen, who has been working with the Mott Community School Program in Alpena. The district is receiving $10,- from the Foundation and must contribute matching funds. Schools Supt. Rex B. Smith said the board has aticed the City Commission to participate in the program, but has not received a reply. Hw matter was tabled at Monday’s Conunission meeting. VARIOUS UNITS 'We’ll have to figure something out if the city doesn’t participate,’’ he said, “but the foundation likes to see various I of govenunent particl* pate.’’ Smith said surveys will be condncted next monfli to de- temtine what types of activities the residents favor. ’The community school concept is designed to involve residents of the community in their schools. Its aim k to provide ipcreation and education for adults and enrichment for children. In other action, the board approved the Ttoy Education As-aopiathm as sole bargaining agent for the district’s teachers. WWW A decision had been postponed iffitil a ti#d p^ signed an affidavit proving the teachers had authorized the TEA to rep- for site improvement and unexpected costs. The 1963 bond issue was designed to carry the ditsrict through 1967, and the new proposal would take care of building needs throng 1976. Harrison emphasized that bond issue approval is needed now so that planning can get under way. WWW “If it isn’t voted now, so we can start planning, we will get behind,” he said. ‘"Then our students will find themselves on half-day sessions In two years. _ _______ “I’m not trying to threaten anyone.This is a fact of life.” NUXTi A iMk (t uKriM ind wH**. ★ ★ ★ Board Given Bond Sale OK FARMINGTON-With the vote on a $6.1-million building program less than a week away, the Farmington Board of Education today received authorization to sell $2.5 million in school building bonds. Schools Supt. Gerald V. Harrison cited the move as an example of the time involved in a school gilding program. The $2.5-million issne is the second half of $5 million worth of bonds approved by district property owners in 1963. “It takes at least two years after a bond issue election before you can start moving youngsters into a school,” Harrison said. WWW The bond issue approved by the State Municipal Finance Commission yesterday will be used for Fairview Elementary School, now under construction; the district’s fourth junior high school, now being designed; and new school sites. The 1963 bond issue was designed to meet district needs up to September 1967, whUe that on the ballot Monday would take care of buildings to be needed through 1970, Harrison said. FARMINGTON ’TOWNSHIP - i Jane Marsh, 11-year-old daugh- j ter of Mr. and Mrs. Guy Marsh,: 28600 Halstead, won three ribbons with her pen of lambs at kst week’s Detroit Junior Live-: stock Show. I 'WWW Jane, a member of the Hi-Lo 4-H Club, took a blue ribbon in the 10-13 age group on a middleweight market class lamb. WWW She also won a third-place ribbon on her pen of kmbs, lightr weight division, and a third in junior showmanship. A Good Way to Begin! This yoniig man*# beghming coin collection is more than an interesting hobli^. It also serves to teach him the valne of money and the rewards of sovisig. Another way to do this U open a SavtngB Account for your child at Fir$t Federal, oidhUaskA 761 W. HURON STREET DOWNTOWN PONTIAC - CLAHKSTON - DRAYTON PLAINS ROCHESTER-WALLED LAKE-.LAKE ORION - BHLFORD THE PONTIAC PRESS. VrEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1963 A—5 UNDER GUARD — Nepalese police guard the land cruiser of some globe-girdling American photo adventurers while they are registering inside the police station in Kathmandu, Nepal. Later, on arrival in East Pakistan, the Americans stumbled into the beginning of the war with India. They were arrested, and their cameras and film were confiscated. Camera Angles By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK (AP) - Are you middle-aged? If you are and don't Jcnow It, ime of your ~ best friends won’t tell you. They think it more kindly tO| let you go on kidding yourself. But here’s a handy guide to tell i^ether you have left the pasturts of youth bdiind. You probably are tniddle-aged if: You know that Gaili-Curci is not a new Italian mouth wash but the name of a famous operatic soprano. ★ * * ' It seems like only yesterday War Hailed Photo Trip By IRVING DESFOR AP Newsfeatures THREE American adventurers, circling the world to make the longest photographic . auto expedition, prepared for innumerable emergencies in many different countries but overlooked one contingency; A sudden outbreak of war! By a freak chance of unfortunate timing, they happened to be in the path of drastic government action In East Pakistan in the first days when friction with India turned Into a-shooting warr-It seems incredible from the safety and distance of America but an official emergency act was passed in East Pakistan early in September 1965, forbidding the taking of pictures during the time of crisis. WWW Even before the law was passed, A1 Podell, leader of the American trio, was arrested for taking pictures from a public building and his film was confiscated. EVACUATION PLANS “Street mobs demonstrated with anti-American and anti British slogans before the foreign consulates,’’ Podeli wrote. “Our Consul General, in the face of rising tension and unruly mobs, made plans to evacuate American civilians. “An evacuee was permitted to leave on a special plane with only one bag but it was forbidden to depart with any cameras, photo equipment or films of any kind, processed or unprocessed. I left behind, therefore in the possession of government officials our movie and still cameras, all our films and our Toyota land cruiser with all its ★ * "We’re negotiating, of-courseV to get all our posessions back. Podell reports, “but it may take months and literally depends on the fortunes of war.” stMd“ extra cooperation for privileged filming in certain areas. “In Spain,” Podell recalled, “laws prohibit taking pictures of the Guardia Civil, its national police force. BRIDGES TABOO — Egypt does not permit photographing its bridges. Jordan will confiscate the film if a photographer is caught taking pictures of. its Arab refugee camps. And we were aware that -Pakistan prohibited photo-ling its border ^tions and defense installations in the Khyber Pass. “We,obeyed all the rules but our schedule and timing were unfortunately synchronized with the unpredictable but sudden turn of events. HEADED FOR BURMA “Actually we were headed for Burma hoping to get permission to drive across that country. “Starting from Calcutta, India, we had to get to the border post and cross East Pakistan to get there. “We made a wrong turn on the road and blundered Into an Indian troop buildup near the border. We were arrested and our.exposed film taken away. We were released next morning, however, and sent on our way. ★ w ★ “We crossed into Pakistan without incident but when we arrived in Decca, the capital, a government radio broadcast declared that India M bombed Lahore and that the nation was at war. ‘The borders were closed and we could not go forward to Burma or back to India. “Trying to make the best of the sitnatton, we applied to the Pakistan government for permission to cover the war as foreign correspond- TRIVIAL PROBLEMS In the light of these experT ences, some of the prior problems seem trivial in retrospect. Some countries on the itin- more than II rolls of film without paying extra duty. But when Podell contacted the tourist bureaus of these countries, regulations were waived and they received in- "We were shunted frqm official to official and agents t assigned to follow usr That’s when I was wrested for taking pictures and this was followed by the ban on all picture taking. But I got out safely even if my cameras didn’t.” A1 Podell was in Singapwe when last heard from and his half-finished 40,000-mile auto trip of the world is temporarily halted due to circumstances ‘Mieyond my control.” Slow Rs a fifterlat delivers tie taste] ,a)idl1faMi*lat.'’', ■. i - (i| Hal Boyle Offers a Handy Guide for Defecting Middle Age BOYLE that you used to get a balky car engine started on a wintry morning by hand-cranking it. You are so used to hearing the children call your wife “mother” that you start doing it, too. MORE MUFFLERS At Christmas you get more mufflers than bright neckties as presents. At the office you ask the supply clerk to put a seat pad on your swivel chair to make it more comibrtable. And you no longer lean back so far in the chair—for fear it will tip over.. .* * * You no longer can read the fine print in the telephone directly with the aid of a single lighted match. It takes you two matches to look up a number. . Your dreams become grimmer. Instead of being romantic or full of fanciful adventures,!—You are slower to pat strange they usually are woven around ■- ‘ ‘ the problems of your job. SHOES HEAD LIST Somehow your feet get tired earlier in the day, and shoes become t|ie most important part of your wardrobe. It takes you longer to pick out a pair of shoes than it does to buy a new suit. After you put the sock on your right foot in the morning, you pause, sigh, and brood almut what the dpy will bring before you put on the left sock. Amid the growing number of credit cards in your wallet is person to call in case of i emergency. dogs on the head or to try I make new friends. FUGHT INSURANCE Whenever you travel by air you take out flight insurance and brood silently over the fact that you are worth more dead than alive. You’d rather give a blood transfusion to the Red Cross than have to go to a nightclub. ♦ * You think modem literature died with Ernest Hemingway. The only books you read are your bank book and suspense novels about international in-' trigue. pins a flower in your lapel on your birthday, you brag about it to your wife all week. You also start a campaign to get the girl a merit raise from the boss. You wonder why young people want to talk so much about the bomb.” You have lived under its threat for so long you jare numb. If you overhear a group of school kids chattering on the bad habit nor the moral fiber to give up an old one. By such si^ come the middle age. But weep no-more. AM you can do is buck up and face C';yp^Mhe'£cT~d3 you are allergic to, and what Statue Now Offering Friendlier Greeting . . . - , J WASHINGTON (UPI) - Vis- ^ f to the Rayburn House of- half Withou even understanding!, the subject of their conversa-.g^^^,^ gam’s There are only two kinds of ♦ * * food on any menu—those you ^ , like but shouldn’t eat, and those CaPitol workmen today turned you should eat but can’t stand, f, , statue of the late House speaker around so that LACK STAMINA it faces the main entrance of uninterrupted hour^ of sleep. BRAG TO WIFE you no longer have the physi- the huge congressional building If one of the girls in the office cal stamina to acquire a newkhat bears his name. 2,000 Pair! Nationally Advertised Labels! Our Giant Annual Women's and Misses' Casual and Dress . . . SHOE SALE! Almost ovary Imoglnobla slylal Stilatto-thin to broad walking heels, and all silhouettes in between. Hi, Mtd-Hi, Medium and Low dress shoes, stacked heals, medium and low wedgies, regular flats.., you'll find 'em all. Glove leather, calfskin, pigskin, suede, ruffgrain, patent, lustres ... in a wide variety of cloulc and current fashion col<^. Charge Yours ... at Waite's. • Shoes sized by rocks and tables for easy selection • Some below maker's cost • Special.purchases and reductions from stock • Shop Thursday, Friday Saturday and Monday.Nites 'til 9 Women^s Shoes. . . Street Floor MORE THAN 30 STYLES TO CHOOSE FROM THE PONTIAC PRESS «WestRimmStraet Pontiac, Mlchlg«B WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1965 UKOLD A. PmSOnULD PmUant am PubUdMr Jom W. Pmunuu* Jornm A. Bon TIm PTMlduit ud Mitor Bcentery and AdmUaint OtriHcf An TmaaMoii O. Ifunioi. Joaa« A Grateful America Honors Her Defenders Tomorrow we honor the living and the dead to whose heroism the American ^ay of life with its traditions 0 f liberty and freedom owes its viabUity. The Day, once known as Armistice Day in memory of the date that brought World War I to an end, was changed in 1954 to Veterans’ Day in recognition of those who have answered their Country’s call to the colors, whether in war or peace. ★ ★ ★ Veterans’ Day this year has an added note of solemnity as America’s involvement in Viet Nam has intensified, and our onetime advisory role there now wears a different face. We are again at war. On the home front small but vocal pockets of disloyalty have screamed opposition to the Nation’s honorable adherence to the cause of democracy and our commitment to defend a beleaguered people against the enemy of the free world—communism. ★ ★ ★ We may rejoice that the ravings and demonstrations of the blackhearted represent but an infinitesimal segment of American people and has but served to evoke coxmter proclamations and demonstrations that sweU by the hour. On Veterans’ Day—and- every day should be Veterans’ Day —-we render a humble salute to the stouthearted men and women in the military and to their loved ones at home who bear the trials of separation with such fine fortitude. Tomorrow, let’s say it not only in our hearts but with flying colors. written off as just an isolated instance if it hadn’t been too typical of a mounting trend. What to do about it? Well, you can’t stamp out bad taste with laws or regulations. And after the television demonstration the other day, you apparently can’t stifle it by education. So perhaps the best way to restore good taste as an “in” thing is for everyone who believes in it to be very careful to set a good example, and to voice open opposition and resentment to displays of bad taste whenever they occur. ★ ★ ★ one thing seems certain. We aren’t going to really achieve that Great Society as long as bad manners, bad taste and bratty impertinence are given featured biliing on a worldwide screen. Decline of Good Taste Leaves Own Bad Taste What’s happening to “good taste?” What’s happening to It, obviously, is that it’s going the way of modest modes, subtle sex, gentlemen who gave their seats to ladies, and other old-fashioned customs which are now too generally regarded as quaintly kooky. The subject comes to mind because of a recent television program in which “students” in London, Paris, Belgrade and Mexico City were given an opportunity to ask questions of three distinguished Americans in Washington via the Early Bird satellite. ^ ★ ★ ★ The eminent panelists were former president Dwight D. Eisenhower; Arthur J. Goldberg, American ambassador to the United Nations; and Solicitor General Thurgood Marshall. The program was billed as a “documentary” and could have been informative, dignified and extremely worthwhile. But it turned out to be a worldwide opportunity for the “stu4ents” —and the term is used loosely—to display unconcealed anti-Americanism, youthful impertinence, brassy disrespect for the stature of the panelists—and, above all, bad taste. The tone of the questioning was argumentative, prejudiced, bitter and smarty-pants. The youths with the long hair and sideburns didn’t ask questions as much as they made little soapbox speeches on behalf of the Viet Cong and our enemies in South America. ★ ★ ★ The program could have been Verbal Orchids to- Min Mary Turner of 2100 WoodWard; 92nd birthday. Glenn WalUm of 2115 SnelllMXMk; 82nd birthday. Up In Smoke! “It is unbelievable that the American people can afford to live as well as they do,” says a visiting foreigner. It is also untrue. Tie China Decline to Viet Buildup “People who suffer from athlete’s foot should wear nothing but undyed cotton hose,” says a physician. But in puWic places wouldn’t they appear rather conspicuous? 2 Ways to Fight Big Business By JAMES MARLOW Aasociated Preu Newi Analyst WASHINGTON - Two presidenta-Lyn-don B. Johnson and John F. Kennedy — smashed head-on into a big Industry when it suddenly raised prices while they were trying to keep prices steady. But the way they did it —Johnson with aluminum, Kennedy with steel — is a study in contrasts. Kennedy did it with his chin out, full of denunciations, and, although he won, the victory cost him dearly for his relations with business were sour for i afterward. So far, Johnson has done it quietly and indirectly. Johnson, a shrewd politician who knows the importance of having big bnsiness on his side, wants to win bat he isn’t using the Kennedy tactics. On April 10, 1962, U.S. Steel informed Kennedy it was raising prices. Immediately, on Kennedy’s orders, his aides began phoning other companies to dissuade them from following U.S. Steel. But they did. ★ ★ ★ The next day, at his news conference, Kennedy denounced the industry’s action. He began to apply other pressures. His brother, Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy sent out subpoenas to the heads of steel companies. The implication was there might be price-fixing. INCREASES REVOKED By April 13, two days after the price boost began, the steel industry revoked its increases. Johnson’s case with the ahimlnnm industry had a longer history. After World War II, the government began stockpiling various metals and supplies, including aluminum. Now it figures it has on hand, above its stockpile needs, about 1.4 million tons of aluminum. ★ ★ ★ The government wanted that much returned to the commercial market over the next 10 years. Twelve days ago, the aluminum industry began raising prices on what it is turning out. SUPPLIES RELEASED Then last Saturday the government announced it would release bXUlOlUfns of the 1.4-miIlion-ton surplus. The 200,000 tons were twice as much aluminum as the industry wanted the government to dispose of in any one year. But the Johnson administration was still playing this whole thing deadpan. ★ ★ ★ The administration said the extra supplies on the market should "relieve price pressures.” There is still no indication the aluminum Industry will back down. By LE(m DENNEN UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (NEA) Red China’s prestige in Asia, Africa and in the Communist world has declined sharply since the United States decided to check her aggresrion in Viet Nam. Even Asian and African diplomats not noted for their pro-American views attribute Peking’s setback to President Johnson’s historic decision. “The Viet Nam conflict exposed Mao Tse-tong as a tiger without claws who wants other nathms to fight his battles,” an Asian diplomat told me. A young African offleial, once a fervent supporter of Red China’s revolutionary brinkmanship, pointed to Mali and Kenya as the latest of former colonial nations to turn against Peking. ★ ★ * Mali’s President Mobido Keita recently decided to visit Russia and Yugoslavia, Peking’s chief enemies in the Red camp, to underline his break with Mao’s imperialist policies. ‘DISHONEST FASCIST In Kenya, Red Chinese agents now castigate the nationalist leader Jomo Kenyatta, former head of the fierce Mau Mau, as a “dishonest fascist.” Ihey have organised a secret organizatioa which calls itself “People’s Front of East Africa” for the pnrpose of undermining Kenyatta’s regime. More African nations now realize that Red China intends to use them as pawns against the United States and West Europe. ’This was indicated recently in a long doctrinal article written by Peking’s Defense Minister Un Piao. Asian and African leaders were especially irritated by Lin Piao’s blunt statement that Red China regards their rule merely as the first stage before Communist revoluHions in which, presumably, they would disappear. Each day, in fhet, hrings new evidence that Mao Tse-tuag’s friends, like Communist North Korea and Fidel Castro’s Cuba, are deserting his camp. The pro-Chinese parties in Indonesia, Japan and India are now fighting for their existence. Only' a year ago. Red splinter , groups in EuroM, especially in ‘ Norway, Italy, Wance and Belgium, saw Mao’s revolutionary brinkmanship as the wave of the future. against “Peking’s adventurists.” Tlie Chinese are obviously aware of their deteriorating international position — even if some of their supporters among American professors and beatniks are not. That is why Peking worked hard for the postponement of the African-Asian conference In Algeria. It was Peking’s contention that Russia was not an Asian or Afrlcaa nathm and was, therefore, not entitled to a seat at the conference. However, with Jomo Kenyatta, Mali’s President Nasser backing Moscow, Russia’s seat was assured. There may be no speedy end to the conflict in Viet Nam. But in the view of specialists on communism, the diplomatic tide is now running decidedly against Red China. Bob Considine Says: Space Plans Often Seem to Have Bay of Pigs Look NEW YORK - One gains the impression now and then that our manned spacecraft program is being run by the same crowd that masterminded the Bay of Pigs invasion. The national apace agency had a bad break when it__________ not go CONSIDINE through with Gemini 6, the attempt to link a Gemini capsule with an Agena rocket that was to have been put in orbit one lap earlier than the Gemini’s takeoff. The Agena eemmitted spatial harMurl, and the most t ef our astro-project hod to be Today they are rent by dissension and quarrels over Red China’s failure to give more help to North Viet Nam and the Viet Cong. More important Is Russia’s deebiou to stiffen her opposition to Mao’s ”anti-Marxist” policies. After Nikita Khrushchev’s faU a year ago, the Kremlin’s new leaders, Leonid Brezhnev and Aleksei Kosygin, decided to soft pedal their quarrel with Peking. But pressed by disgruntled marshals and generals, who fear Russia’s Involvement in the Vietnamese conflict, the Kremlin has once more emeeged m the leader in the struggle But rather than try-try again, which could not have been in-suimountable, NASA swiftfy and brightly announced that it was going forward with Gemini 7, whose chief program is to test the effect of 14 days of weightlessness. ★ ★ * Just how Gemini 7 applies to that project has never been made clear to this reporter, particularly since astronauts Cooper and Conrad proved that man can function quite well over the eight days needed for the lunar round trip. CRITICAL FACET Gemini 6, on which the critl-eal understanding of positive rendezvous in space depended, was to be held at some indefinite later date. But, lo and behold, we sod-dealy were told that the two good men who had trained so hard for that flight, and wet* ' " to carry it out— mind about Stafford’s visit. Not time enough to get him outfitted. Umbilical cords for extravehicular activity between spacecraft don’t grow on trees, you know. Dec. 8 was coming up very soon, and that’s when Gemini 7 was going to go. Just a moment. Make that Dec. 6, NASA amended. Got to get those boys back to earth, and shaved showered and debriefed in time for their Christmas shopping. Right? All in favor of buying a new Agena for Sefairra s^ Stafford to chase in space and rendezvous with, raise their right hand. That’s what they trained for. That’s what the whole moon project is based upon, a ♦ * We still don’t know whether we can pull it off, and the multimillion dollar ad-lib on Dec. 6, if that’s to be the date, simply won’t adequately give us the answer. Voice of the People; ‘A Nationwide Program Needed to Train Drivers' Recent questions in the Voice of the People concerning driving rules and regulations point out the need for a nationwide training program. For these people there is hope, but the know-it-alls are the ones we'll have trouble with. Until such a training program comes up, a few suggestions may save a few lives or crippled bodies: • Fretend the officer that was with you when you took your road test is beside you now. Would he let you have a driver’s license? • Pretend the lady who’s having trouble breaking into that long line of traffic is your wife on urgent business. • Pretend the street you’re driving on is your own street ^and it may be your child that runs out from between parked cars. ____• If you’re one of Aose who care only for their own hide, pretend that your steering wheel just came off in your hands and your brakes failed. RALPH F. MONROE 505 THIRD Two RepUes on Use of Cats as Fertiltecr Three times last week I saw pigeons tag. Would Green TTiumbs please tell me what kind offttUUw pigeons make? I think everyone should pigeons as fertilizer. Robins, blue jays, cardinal^ wood^ei^ martins and two dozen other birds are sacred, but the dirtiest things nature produces. But If they make better row bushes and better dahlias they may be their purpose here on earth. STANLEY In. this controversy over the value of cats as fertilizer, I should tell this. v u • i A man knocked at the door. “Ma’m, Ibate to tell you but I Just ran over your cat. I’m very sorry and! would like to replace The woman of the house nodded. “O.K. Don’t just stand there. Hurry into the kitchen. ’There’s a mouse there.” FELINE FLOSSY Comments on Township’s School Taxes In connection wtih a recent Voice of the People Iriter on the State’s stand on education of the Amish, why do 82 innocent chUdren who have been abiding by the law have to sacrifice because of the excellent tax value that is now being paid to Waterford Township school district? Waterford Township taxpayers, call your school board m^ bers and find out how you as taxpayers can afford to lose 408 (18,856 per child) yearly, when next spring taxpayers wiU be asked to renew school bond taxes. Tiis isn’t a school district boundary dispute that could be straightened simply, affecting the least number of children. CONCERNED MOTHER OF TWO Discuss Appointment of County Treasurer I, too, believe there must have been a qualifled assistant in our County Treasurer’s office. Our laws must be changed now before this happens again. Because this is an elective offlee, I feel that the person who fills this appointment should be classified as an administrator until the next election so that people truly understand what action put this person in the office he holds. Let’s make our government by the people and for the people, with people responsible for our laws and their enforcement. It’s timp to take this matter to our lawmakers and see what can be done. MRS. RUTH KADELLA UNION LAKE I wonder if Waterford ’Township Republicans noted the vote of the Waterford Township Board in their November 5 meeting resulting in Mrs. Dorothy Olson becoming the new Township Supervisor. Five members voted—the Gerk and four Trustees. ’The Pontiac Press reports all five voted for Mrs. Olson. ’This can only mean that our two Republican board members, Loren Anderson and Frank Richardson, voted to place a Democrat in the position of Township Supervisor. Is this what we elected these two men to do? A DISGUSTED REPUBLICAN Has Questions on Common-Law Marriages What is selective service doing about the thousands of com- . mon-law marriages? Are these marriages recognized by the government? Why doift they draft these men? How are their offsprings registered on the birth certificates? OLD-FASHIONED MOTHER Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Resemblance! Tht Tulaa World Henry Smith, the St-year-old DaUat garbage man who resem-blee Lyndon Johnson, eays, “Remember, money doesn’t meon anything.’* He talks Wee Lyndon, too. Enemy Comfort The San Diego Union' It takas an uninitiated amount of brazen effrontery on the port of the neurotic and gullible who staged the latest series of demoMtrations that serve the enemy of the United States to call themselves for dedsion aor sense to apply it. It will be determined by the civilian and military commanders whose hands are gnided by acenmn-latod knowledge and expert- flag is there. We are conh mittod ... If we tack tail and ran now, we will leave there the heritage of great-aen, f r e e d o m and ceerage that has marked this coentry slice Its birth” Onr moral oMigatlon to the fighting In Viet Nam re-qnires that we take every step be wutod an a mnch less nsefni mission: a game of tag with Gemini 7. But hold! NASA had new plans calculated to jam up the doubleheader — which the Russians smoothly achieved three years ago. * ★ ♦ Stafford would get out of his seat in Gemini 6, “walk” over to Geinini 7 and visit for a speU. l^t, apparently, would force the Russians to their knees, whimpering for mercy. Suddenly — signals off. No, said NASA, it had changed Hi By their actions these dupes by design or stupidity that have roots among some faculty members uid students of our campuses only give encouragement to the enemy. In so doi^, they irolong the war In South Viet Nam, postpone the inevitable day of vlc-tpry for the U. S. and must take direct responsibility for the needless loss of more Ameri- The ooadnet of enr defeasA ef freedom la Soatheast Asia caoMt be gaveraed by the caeepheay ef the radical and by the miaorlty rabble. ★ ★ ★ After last weekend’s demoo-Btratlons, the People’s Daily, official organ of the Peking Communists, emblazoned on ite front pages: “Panic stricken authorities used Une numbers of policemen, FBI agents and hired hooll-'gans to obstruct and sabotage the demopstrations.” "Americans ashamed of America,” trumpeted the Moscow party newspaper Isvestia. It la, of course, arrant non-■ense as the majority of pa-trimic Americans realize. However, as the Presidont correctly Mys, the enemy cboodes to misread and use tiie antics for his - _ I, by ail mesas let as put more teeth into them. *■ ♦ *■ ' As Seik Richard RasaeD da-clared about Viet Nam: “Onr No Worse... Thi Register (Dit Moines, la.) A woman who drives from the back seat is no worse than the bum who Otoke from the dining room toMs. SmTSIBSSm.** ** ** **’ ns"*.’? THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10. 1965 A—7 Project Revisions Approved Grant Increase for R44 Plan Detailed Details were presented las. night of a haU-milUoiHlollar increase In the federal grant for Pontiac’s R44 urban renewal project. The City Commission received a report from James L Bates, city planning and yrban renewal director. Bates reported i visloiis in the R44 pli bees approved by leoerai Honsiag and Home Finance Agency (HHFA) officials. The city’s federal grant for R44 was increased $580,06. This increases the city’s total grant to $1315,092. ★ ★ ★ Bates reported that the bulk of the gr^ increase was in the form of noncash “credit’ for the Clinton River Tunnel project HHFA increased the “credit’ on this project fr-om $236,600 to $671,984, which was still short of the $684,000 sought by local urban renewal officials. Other changes reflected in the revised R44 plan inclnde an increase in some administrative costs, a decrease in the cost of certain site improv- ★ ★ ★ meets and a redaction in the sale price of some project land. Bates said the revised plan incorporates a change in the completion date for the R44 work. Originally scheduled for cpmpletioD by Sept. 1, 1965, the project now has a closeout date of March 31,1967. , ★ ★ ★ Bates also reported last night that the latest changes in the R44 project should be sufficient to see the project through to completion. He added that no actual caahj Cameron to Emerson, was up-paymenl was anticipated. The held, city has sufficient noncash ★- ★ Added Sewer Lines for City? “credits” to account for _ . tion of the project’s cost.. In fact. Bates said the city has an excess of credit totaling $168,016. This, however, can not be transferred to the R20 project, the city’s other urban renewal work. In other business, a public hearing was held on the necessity for construc^tion of a side-jwalk on the south side of Ken-nett betyreen Alsott School and ‘Stanley. ■An ordinance was introduced last night to prohibit loitering, disturbances and d a m a g i n g property in public and parochial schMls. Final action was set lor next Clearing Is Set on Boat Law Cost estimates were also pre-. sented. Total cost of the side-' The Oakland County Board of walk was put at $8,030 with the'Supervisors yesterday approved Added sanitary sewer services will be made available to two ■reas in the city under terms of a proposed master plan to be unveiled next week. City Engineer Joseph E. Neip-ilng reported last night to the City Conunlssion that a joint dty-county proposal has been worked out to provide a sanitary trunk sewer across a portion of the city’s north end. Sewer service would be available to the northeast and northwest sections of Pontiac. Details of the joint proposal are to be announc^ Tuesday by Roy Alexander, director of the Oakland County Department of PubUc Works. ★ ★ ♦ Alexander has called a meeting of municipalities affected by a proposed Olnton - Oakland Sanita^ Sewer Interceptor. SAME SERVICE Neipling said the Clinton-Oak-land trunk sewer in the city is the same service the city planned to provide with its Galloway Creek trunk line. By participating in the joint proje^ Pontiac wonld cut its cost by half. The previous es- _ said that conatruc-tioa coots, which would be baaed on the sewage flow contributed by each community, are to be apportioned among eifdit units of government, including Pontiac. 0 ★ Or In addition to getting the Galloway Creek sewer constructed, Neipling said the dty would gain right-of-entry to the interceptor as it cut across the northwest corner of the city. AREA ADDED The dty engineer said would give Pontiac residents in Waterford Report on Water Volume A total of 31,678,000 gaUons of w a t e r was pumped throu^ the Waterford Township water supply system last month. However, the figure is 9,478,-800 gallons less than for the same period last year. So far this year, 460327,000 gallons of water have been pumped through the system. Say Regulator Caused N-Reactor Shutdown CANOGA PARK, CaUf. UR -Sdentista say the premature shutdown of America’s first orbiting nuclear reactOr after 48 days in space was caused by failure of a voltage regulator. Spokesmen for the atomic energy commission said yesterday that tests run by scientists at the atomics international division of North American Aviation Indicated the failure caused a spurious signal that commanded the reactor tp shut down. timated cost of the Galloway Creek sewer was $1388,808, he added. the Silver Lake area sanitary sewer service. In the north and northeast section of Pontiac, the proposed interceptor wonU follow Galloway Creek from about Joslyn and Collier to the dty liidts along the north shore of Galloway Lake at Commonwealth. The Interceptor would then follow the creek to the Clinton River east of the city. ★ It it Neipling, who said he did not yet have the cost estimates, said Tuesday’s meeting was set up to explain how the cost of the interceptor would be ^portioned. WORK IN SPRING Construction is scheduled for the spring of 1966, he added. U there is some d^y, the city can go ahead with those portions affecting the city. Neipling explained that one of the reasons the dty had previously planned to build the Galloway Creek sewer alone was that the Clinton-Oakland interceptor was thought to be too far in the future. er, this is no longer the case, he concluded. ' assessed cost running $4,344 and the city’s share $3,685. TRANSFER APPROVED The transfer of SDD and SDM licenses from 663 Joslyn to 118 Baldwin was apjiroved with the understanding that certain de-fidencies wiii be corrected within 30 days. Other business saw the com- rezoning for a lot on the west side of East Boulevard north of Auburn. A City Planning Commission reconunendation to deny the vacating of the alley parallel to and north of Mount Clemens, a Dec. 21 public hearing on a ■ ipting the recommendations of the Michigan Boating Control Committee. The recommendations include speed limitations for boats and prohibition of the use of alcoholic beverages on county lakes. ★ * ★ Also yesterday the board authorized the drain commissioner tp take the necessary action to raise the level of Duck Lake under a special assessment district. This would involve 6-FT. MODERN CABINET RCA VICTOR MwUsta SOLID STATE STEREO / • Solid State stereo amplifier, 56 watts peak power • 8 speakers; Two 15' oval duo-ebnes, two 7" oval mid-range, four tweeters • RCA Solid Copper Circuits • Solid State FM-AM-FM Stereo Radio • Studiomatic 4-speed changer, muting switch • Feather ActiorTtone Arm, diamond stylus • Frequency response: 45 to 20,000 cps CHECK OUR LOW, LOW PRICE! Layaway Naw for Christmas Delivery! FRAYE 589 Orchard Lake Ave, FE 4-0526 pumping facilities to raise the| level to 1,016.63 feet above seal level. I RENT, LEASE, SELL. BUY HOMES, PROPERTY, COTTAGES, CARS, GOLF CLUBS - - - use Pontiac Press Classified Ads. To place yours, call 332-8181. Teen to Stand Trial in Killing of Neighbor A teen-age boy was ordered today to stand trial on a first-degree murder charge in the slaying of an 80-year^ld Farmington Township widow. ★ * ★ William D. Sleeper, 17, of 20819 Pearl, is accused of the fatal stabbing of a next-door neighbor, Mrs. Ethel Van Wkklin. Sleeper steed mate te the (Aarge at Ue armignmeat this rneming and Cirenit Jndge James 8. Herbam entered an innocent plea on the record la behalf of the yonth. No trial date was set. Mrs. Van Wkklin was found in tier home Oct. 16 with “at least” 10 stab wounds, according to State Police and Farmington Township detectives. ♦ ♦ ★ Police said the youth admitted the slaying two days later after he was taken into custody at the funeral home where the body of the victim had been tak-». Bond was set by Thorbum at $25,000 on the request of Chiaf Sleeper was returned to the county jail after failing to i bail. I believe that every right imidies a responsibility; every opportunity, an 0 b 11 g a 110 n; every possession, a duty. — John D. Rockefeller Jr., American capitalist and jM-vnthropist. STIFFEL For Enlightened Gift Ideaa... Bsantifnl lamn for evwry pnrpoae abound in onrssloo* tion hf loadina asakont YonTl find our gmboutlqno brimming over with wall aoeoMoriei, ehina, glaa^ pletnrm, mirrors for nnusual VISIT OUR GIFT BOUTIQUE f Jlr U. laaoa.'MognipiiRomi --------- Pro. PaHUng FE 8-8848 [ This Is The Total Amount Mailed To Our 1965 Christmas Cluh Owners WE ARE OPENING 1966 CLUBS NOW $1.M tytiy other week builds 25.00 $2.00 every ether week builils 50.00 $4.00 every ether week builds 100.00 $10.00 every ether week builds 250.00 $20.00 every ether week builds 500.00 National i Bank MtMhCa II» tHl fliHRtl lUPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION 18 OFFICES SERVINO OAKLAND AND MACOMB COUNTIES THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 10, 1965 FEDERAL DAYS... GREAT FURNITURE RDYS! ALUMINUM FRAMED 6-FT. FOLD-A-BED 8.77 Rigidly braced frame suppoHi 23" wide reversible urethane foam mattreu. Comfortablel EARLY AHERICAI MAPLE MILE STOOL 2.77 Authentic maple finish copy of an original . . . ideal for your Colonial rooms. COLONIAL MAPLE GICARETTE TABLE 4.77 LHtle maple finish tables designed to put next to every choir you have. Buy a poirl NEW MAPLE PLANTER SPINNINO WHEEL 6.88 Add a touch of the Colonies to your home decor. Warm Salem maple finish. Ideall OOLOHIAL LAMP HAS HARDY TRAY TULE HHOY lOOKOASE DOUILEt At HUTCH EHEEHOLE IttIGH T-DRAWEROESK 11.88 28.77 29.88 Handsomely shaded maple finish lamp with tray won't ' tilt or rock. Boy now, sovel AAaple. of walnut finish. wHh sNding doors. Use in Hvlng Seom or den. Hurryl i Maple or walnut f top work surface, tiurdyl OPEN 9:45 A.M. TO 9:30 P.M. Wednesday through Saturday rm. DOWNTOWN PONTIAC ONLY THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1965 FEDERAL DAYS LimiMd guontitiat ... on mIo wkilo Hioy loit A—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 10, 1965 / I Nations News Media Hub Faltered Briefly in Blackout on NEW YOpK (AP) — In oneipower went out* so d shuddering instant, the hub ofj Television network program-the nation’s communications in-j„,ing jo the rest of the naUon News shows were handled by staffs in Washington and Chica- dusUy l^t power, falter^, without interruption, cau^t Itself and began talking agam. Throughout the Northeast of|_ the nation — where more than one out of 10 Americans live — ;BIG SHOWS television tubes loaded with] Most of the big evening shows children’s programs and late were on films or tape — and afternoon movies went black, jdupiicate copies were aired Some radio stations fell silent.[from Los Angeles and Holly-★ * * wood to the still-functioning net- Newspapers quickly searched!works, out alternative presses to put| Officials at all three networks out abbreviated editions. said that the losses of advertis-The Associated Press made ing revenues would probably be emergency shifts in its vast net-1 enormous, but none would haz-work of wires, and kept thelard a guess as to how much news, even of the blackout it-money would actually be lost. At its headquarters at SOI Sbnilar innovations kept the Rockefeller Plaza the lights news flowing to AP members went out, telephone lines died around the world. San Francis-and banks of garrulous teletype co AP sent the U.S. news 4c Tokyo for far eastern relay: Sphinx Background for Shrine Ceremony CAIRO (AP) - Some 300 Shriners, garbed in fezzes and colorful robes, gathered recently between the massive paws of the Sphinx to initiate 32 mem-the ancient arabic Or- der, Nobles of Shrine. the Mystic The Shriners, mostly from the United States, went I9 camel caravvi to a tent city provided for them by the Egj^ptian government. There they were entertained by belly dancers and whirling dervishes. Egyptian Cabinet Makes Port Said Free CAIRO (AP) — The Egyptian Cabinet has agreed to make Port Said a free port. It is the northern terminal of the Suez Canal, on the Mediterranean. Ihe deputy premier for cul- ture, Abdel Radar Hatem. said more than 20,000 ships call at Port Said each year, and a vt» port could be a source of foreip currencies for Egypt. Hired farm workers earned an average of about $7.15 a day. They averaged 80 days wort for a yearly average wage of 1578. self, flowing without interruption. ADVER’nSING LOSSES Advertising losses from all media ran into the inillions. Television was the first to feel It. At NBC-’TV’s headquarters in Manhattan’s Rockefeller Center, the awful moment came at 5:16 p.m. EST when power levels fell too low to telecast. There is no insurance to cover such losses. machines fell silent. The AP supplies news on a cooperative basis to approximately 1,200 daily new^pers 2,400 broadcast stations in the United States besides sending and receiving news from more than 100 foreign countries. ★ ★ ♦ A quick series of emergency measures kept the news and photographs flowing without in-teiTuption. Outgoing phone calls were impossible, but incoming calls from AP staffers and member newspapers quickly apprised the New York staff of the extent of the blackout. Newspapers were hit hard too. In New York, the Times worked out a hasty arrangement with the Newark News-across the river in New Jersey—to publish an eight-page edition. The Times expected to run off 500, 000 copies for delivery in the metropolitan area and in key " 1 centers around the country, movie, ’’Buck Privates cijftoi, Danie, managing editor Come Home ” being telecast lo-|„( ^imes, said that about cally over WNBC-TV, stopped,7 apparent there would not be enough time to publish the full 96-page paper short. A couple of blocks away at WCBS-TV, a scheduled spy movie called “The 49th Man,’’ suffered a similar fate. AUTOMATIC SYSTEMS Both WNBC and WCBS -flagship radio stations of their respective networks — were luclder. Automatic systems switched them to auxiliary power and broadcasting of local news and music went on. didn’t miss a lick,” one official said. Not as fortunate was WABC— Keystone station of the Ameri- for Wednesday morning. Telephone calls to the Newark News and to S. I. Newhouse, owner of the Jersey Journal, brought offers of both printing plmts. Proximity and the chance of a larger newspaper run led Times officials to take the invitation from the News. COPY TURNED OUT In city rooms —desp candlelight and flashlight—copy was turned out. Officials of the New York Daily News said they were can Broadcasting Company. Itlstanding by to publish when the dropped off the air for 20 minutes beginning at 5:28 p.m. until it could telephone its programming to its transmitter in New Jersey. power went back on. The New York Herald Tribune-standing by with an abbreviated edition—also awaited the power to run its presses. On WABC-’TV, local viewersj For an instant at the moment were watching a Japanese filmiof darkness the vast apparatus called “Mothra” — the story of of the Associated Press, the a giant moth that terrorized the world’s largest newsgathering population of a city. When thelorganization, faltered. FLASHLIGHTS By the flicker of scores ot candles and the unsteady beams of flashlights. New York writers began pounding out the stoi^ and feeding it by unaffected rect telephone extensions to the Washington AP bureau, which rolled it out on teletype to the rest of the nation. AP photographers took to the darkened streets, then rushed tlieir pictures by motorcycle across the Hudson River to the Newark AP buneau where they were transmitted onto around-the-world wirephoto facilities. Washington AP also took over monitoring the wirephoto net-normally a New York function, and the only news media lacking pictures were those within the blackout area unable » receive them. The Los Angeles AP bureau took over transmission of pictures to Europe via a relay through Montreal. Pacific transmission also continued, but out 0* San Francisco instead of New York. NA-nONAL NEWS The Chicago bureau took over, filing of the AP’s national news> wires which normally are filed from New York with other bureaus sending regional news at: certain periods each hour. Somej ' New York radio stations which had emergency power continued receiving AP copy from Chi-icago. Chicago and Washington filed the news to London. At about 9 p.m. a new cable connection was established to London, providing a direct two-way news exchange. ’The London file was received in Washington and put on the national wires there. Fortunately the Viet Nam war front was relatively quiet. Even so, Saigon AP was directed to send its news to Tokyo for transmission to the U.S. via San Francisco. Normally Saigon and New York are linked directly. Miami AP dispatched news via cable to South American points; Dallas protected Mexico City. The result of all the improvisation was an uninterrupted worldwide news flow — while at the hub of the whole operation, the AP’s New York news department, was completely cut off from news from the outside world. United Press International had emergency generators which provided dim but sufficient power for lights but, like the AP, was unable to transmit news from its New York headquarters. ’The power loss did not affect 1 northern New Hampshire, Ver-I mont and Maine, where there are a number of morning newspapers. APPLIANCE BARGAIN HUNTERS; OLLIE FRETTER SAYS; irs MY MVERSARYri I’M CEIiBRATING BY BLOWING THE LID OFF! MY PRICES lOO’S OF MY APPLIRNGES TV’S I lOR TV’S AND STEREOS HAVE HEW LOWER PRICES Boy Oil k6y! Evory to efton I got o mol chenco to colobrato and tkit wook it on# of thorn. It's my onnlvoraoryl And It's you that goti tho praiont. Right from mo to you. It's my lowor brand now diicount prkoo on ovorything in dvoty ono of my 8 groat otoroo. If you oorioutly plonnod on purchoting on opplionco, TV or otoroo this yoor, thii it tho wook to do it. You’ll octuolly tovo monoy. Btor Hunfort SfteitI Homo Eroour loMi 111 Mt. in •riginal Faetwy eraftt. M4r Daluia Eataraan tiaraa mniMnatian witk AM FM Bg-'ia and tiaraa 4 tpaad ghana in all Walnut cafei-aat.lMIMadal. Ultra lar(t family tito rafrigaralor kanui ihalvat a daar. Eilra larga eraii lap fraaiar lull width vatatakla pan. M4r U^Adaiirallakla madalTV M37” Mmirai 21” PORTaTV a AH 82 ChtnntI Tuntr a Now ChtnntI Srltclor a 8ullt-in Monopoti Anttimi a Poltrittd Lrnt Cord Frattar'a Low Sala Prka M59” NO DEFROSTING DUPLEX REFRIGERATOR FREEZER III Sin 23A.lb. Frttitr Hurry in Far Frattar'a Stnaatlonal low. Law Sala Pricai On Thaaa RCA VICTOR I COLOR TV I • Big 21* Scraan j • All Channal UHF I • Auto. Color Purifiar j FRITTER'S LOW, LOW I SALE PRKE I Console Stereo FM/AM, FM-STIHEO UDIO Btautiful mater' r, grtintd flnl* Nardteard illdir.] top Dual Chanwl llneo Amplifltt Faur laadur tyttrm Praultian far dBdmg radial ipaaka ‘"S209»» I Ault fringt Lock Cifcuit t IrpM SiPt Sound t S-Sltgr IF Amplilitr *99® RCA WHIRLPOOL 14.1 n. H. 2-flr. g REFRIGERATOR ■ a Twin Ciioport | a Big loa-lb. Capacity rrooM* ■ a CUda-Out Bhalvap g a BuUor and Zgg Btoraga g a Magnotle Doom || niTTER'S LOW, LOW lAU PRKI * .209-_| PONTIAC WAREHOUSE miGRAPH RO. Vi AAILIS. ORCHARD LAKi HD. 1 MIU JferA ofMlnuU MtU Opwil Doily 10-9-Opon Sunday 11 -6 - FE 3-705 MOiMONir BOWH-UP ID 18 MONTHt TD PAY Annual 4-H Club Beef Salel YOU BUY THE VBY BEST IN BEEF! Tha baaf yo« tta aw ditglay in your Ta gut rich, dallciaiii fla«ar on your ntighborhood Food Fair Start must always family's dinner table, may taa suw** that maat tha same rigid raquiramants as tha you give U. S. Choice Beef from Food Fair 4-H Club Oand Champions. This means a try. You'll find that there really is a dif-that the baaf you buy at Food Fair is tha faranca in ^ood Fair Beef and you'll louo It. FAMOUS FOOD FAIR U.S. CHOICE lEEF Round Steak INSTANT ENERGY . . . GRANULATED Big Chiaf Pure Sugar BREAKFAST REFRESHMENT Ardmora Tomato Juico MAKES A TASTY SALAD! Domings Rod Salmon yellow CLING-fOOO FAIR OR Town Prido Poochos RICH CHASE & SANBORN OR Hills Bros Giffoo PHILADELPHIA BRAND Kraft Croam Chooso SWEETMILK OF BUTTERMILK Puffin Biscuits CYPRESS GARDENS FRESH CHILLED gg am. Florido Orango Juico 69' 20 FLAVORS . . . QUAKER AAAID OR M e*L V V, Fon^y Ice Crsum Z * CHEF CHOICE CRINKU CUT f Of ft Frozen Potatoes 3 29' "prwluce UJA l^seKoll^! THE FRUIT THArS RI6HT FOR ANY MEAU Golden Ripe FRESHLY GROUND, JUICY „ t.n. All-Beef Hamburg<' MAKES GREAT MEAT LOAF Freeh Ground Round FOOD FAIR Choice Rib Steak PETERS GRADE I Sliced Lorge Bologna ASSORTED LUNCHEON MEATS Eckrich Smorgos-Pac LADY LINDA DELICIOUS Rich Dutch Apgl# Pie RICH SALAD DRESSING Kraft Miracle Whip TOWN PRIDE BRAND Rich Peanut Butter SPECIAL LABe. Liiie liquid Detergent FOR A BRIGHTER WASH i'? ’•Sud“-iO‘ !jS inm , a!r? _______ BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER THE PONTIAC PRKSS. WEDNESDAV, xNOVKMJiKK 10, 1965 Ultimate in Engineering The System That Failed Was 'Brilliant' NEW YORK (AP)-Hye teeming, deiuely populated Northeast of the United States was plunged into darimess and confusion by failure in an electric , P^r system considered the |1m word in sophisticated en-ering and the products of SEE US FOR GOOD PAINT ★ Expert Service LATEX WALL PAINT MTUUY House of Color llSf Huron SIM42T Distributer of DON'T BUT INT NEWfvDSIDCJm UNTIL TOD SEE MBI LLOYD lINKS Boattio Mftof SalM OR 3-1291 computer science. Ironically, the interlocking power grid designetf to assure supply of electricity in an emei gency helped spread the blackout Tuesday night over a huge ares, including ail of New York City. About one-fifth of the nation’s population was affected. ★ ★ * Today government and utility engineers are trying to find how to keep the system from failing again and spreading chaos. The system is part of a power pool in which a number of independent and pubiic utilities link lines for economy, efficiency, national defense and — ironically — for dependability. FAILURE TRACED The initial failure was traced, one source said, to a power Junction 10 miles west of Buffalo, N.Y., where the integrated system normally receives 40 million kilowatts of power for redistribution. From there the blackout ★ ★ ★ spread—Just like power normally would be distributed— throughout the system. It could not have occurred 30 years ago when power lines were not so united. But the lines today are joined as tightly as telephone lines. * * * A spokesman for Consolidated Edison C(Hi>. said New York City might have been spared if the utility could voluntarily have released itself immediately from the interconnection. The blackout result was, by mttiy standards, the greatest technological breakdown in modem times. It could not have happened to a less intricate, less precise and scientifically conceived system. UNITED PARTS This system is the epitome of sophisticated technology. It op- out gripped the city, erates almost automatically. Because its parts were so united, they drop^ all together, like a tree felled by an ax. That'stheWay Cookies Crumble NEW YORK (AP) - In the midst of the citywide blackout, familiar wail rose fimn one Wall Streeter: “1 sold too soon. Explained an unidentified staff member of the New York Stock Exchange: “I sold 37 boxes Of Girt Scout cookies for my daughter around the exchange, brought them in this morning. The price was 50 cents a box. ‘T should have held on to those cookies, i could get (2 a box tonight. It’s the old story.' Sold too soon.” Ecumenical Decree on Laymen Okayed VA-nCAN CITY (AP) - The Vatican Ecumenical Council finished its 12th draft decree today, voting final approval of SUBWAY RESCUE—A woman passenger climbs out an emergency exit in New York last night after being stranded underground more than 2t4 hours when an electrical black- 'Policemen' Brought Out by Darkness NEW YORK «-With traffic signals dead In the power i blackout, NesH York’s key in- I tersections were manned by a ' variety of traffic “cops.” * ★ * There were uniformed po- \ lice, off-duty officers showing badges on their coat and a variety of civilian types in suits or sweaters. ★ ★ ★ On Sixth Avenue in the 30s, just north of the huge department stores like Macy’s and Gimbels, a Franciscan friar in a flowing brown cassock directed traffic with hand sig- j nals. He was from the nearby , Church of St. Francis of Assisi. I CEREBRAL PALSY? SPEARS rttearchert have developed corrective methode lor the treatment of cerebral palsy, menUI deficiency, epilepsy and kindred afflictions of children. ________' possible when the patient under|oes I after the first symptoms appear. If YOU are interested, write SPEARS for free literature aa this tubject, and see your local chiropractor. MONTHLY ILLS OF WOMEN The system was part of a nationwide power grid in which 97 per cent of the electric industry’s generating capacity is joined in five large networks. The federal government, mindful that the nation’s electricity needs have doubled every 10 years for the past 80 years, has encouraged and prodded utilities to intertie in this Such pools include private utilities, municipal plants, public power, cooperatives, federal power systems, all of which contribute to the pool of available electric power and all of which benefit from the pool. STRICKEN AREA One of these systems covers New Yoric, New England and other sections ork, of Chicago, i„„w,p, e,w rwjvrtX'C .................. S'Mjra".''iri!"SLS"s saM Board of Truefoes bit tha successlyl bldderfw the bonds sMhki forty-elWtt hours after the Owarding of,the bonds, and (2) may accapt appoRitnwnt for such purpose on raaasnable and customary terms and ba_acc*ptabl* to sakt Board of Trustee*. Tha Beard of Trustees may nama any ana ar more at such paying agents In absence of any dsslgnaflon or accaptabla daelgnatlan tlwreol by such euccassful bidder. * Each proposal tor Ih* bonds must slat* tha amount Md tor tha bonds, which amount mutt not be lets than I7AOEOOOJB and must state ki a muF tipi* ofW or 1/30 of 1% the ekwi* rate of kiterost per annum (net exo^ng 4%) which the Mnds maturing In aach year ar* to baar. BMdart may state a single rate of kiteretl or several rales of In-teraet tor Ih* bonds (without limit ei ' the numbar at such rates), previ that cilly on* rate of kiteresl to sts— tor bomb hMlnB Hk* malyrity. and pro-vMad that iw ouch rate w imoratl shall exceed 4% par annum, and provided further that fite hlgheot rate of kilerest slated In any priSotal tor tha •“■"*-shall not be mar* thon Iwnm the rate of Interest per annum therein for Ih* beimb. In addNbn to tha i bid tor lhabondi, tea suec^l nwst pay an amount equal to tha ki-tersel on Ih* teMs accruad from Octo- sMeratlon 7 hlf proposal, each M M ar£r STn'^MWi^ trkt of Parts of the Ceuntbs M Oak- Mr contomniR iy»*'prlBelp*l anriewnt ^ rl^i* raoarvod to ratect any w Uniat* all bWs ar* relected, Ih* bonm WlH be awarded to the bidder (Mreln called Ih* "tuocesaful bidder") oftortog sudi kilerest rale or Interest rates as win produce Ih* lowetl cost of loan to Ih* community eeliM district over the Ilf* *f the bonds. luch lowest eo*l,of r AJ'.sn:« asns December 1, 1M5 to Ih* reapeellv* maturity dates, and by deducting *— sum 10 obtekM Ih* amount of . Hw suecsisful Hddir may be sated tel, In such mannor as said Boi Truoteas may determbw. It ft I In such c 1 Will .ba I The communHy colbg* district was rested end established pursuant to the .rovbtons of Act No. IN of Ih* Public Acts of 1*55 of Ih* State of Michigan, at —mded and supplemented. The bonds Issued tor the purpose of meeting the fs of eroding and equipping buHdbigt ___ structures and making other permanent Improvements necessary tor the purposes ol said community college die-trict St Us Orchard Rhtgs Campus, In- reverse thereol. of ttw approving legal opinion k referred to printed on Ih* raven It shall be a condition of .... ... cetsful bidder's obligation to accept the ■—bidder be furnished, ....... —.........Ji (a) the approving legal opinion of Ih* firm of Hawkins, Oelatlekt A Wood *- •—* gallons of Ih* ( (district and legally binding mmunlly College Oh I Count!** of Oak ■ ■ leer, lortord vTownshto » uful Mkler wllh a r In the minimum be pro^ly returned by the “inl any suc-I to complete ihip BMrd hereby r reject any and all b llqyidated ( The Towi « the right to walv* any Irregv-s In Ih* bide that uld Townahlp may deem to be In Ih* best kv of IM townshtp. property I*, being told sublect to ... .aaemantt inb restrictlont of record, lonkig ordinances and all applF The Waterford Township Clerk will have available tor Inspection by the pub- "" *ail!i*J*auto4d”**"* erty and Ih* THI* Commitments thereon, sf Ih* atoredoKrlbed preperty It va-and Is being told as It and the nthlp of Waterford makes no warrants to Ih* tuHabllHy of tots tor con-dlon purposes or for any other uses xted by Ih* bidder. ’ Order of Ih* Waterford Township erd ELMER R. FANOBONER Waterford Township Clerk November lg, i*45 WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING h*^l?f^to-b*^S3 ^^'^R*"^yhrte'‘l:5!<'5 tWNS?"??, iVd.’^al *cj.?lte&'"k;tjl!2iSrn?^^ From Agrkultural to Conunercltl: *1 parcel of land on part of N.E. V4 of ;t’,a."'?Sm*.hrba:irffJo£f/j;i diigtn. To wit; b*(Hnnlng at a point lantll* ft. mtttursd weal atong the -*-W*st 14 lln* of tec. 20, and center-1 of M5t from the East 'A corner ot; nion 20. Thence North 0 degraas 1*. n. 30 sec. east, a dlstanc* of 1341 .ST ii};.;jS!2i&Tt{ai!c*"'«.si n, to a pekiti thane* East a distance I of 425 ft. alono the centorlln* of MS* to ^iMlni^ jxeep^ MS* right-of-way. Total **Thl* ’prap^ h’ iouM on‘North of M5* at Ih* Intersection of Bogle l Rd. terete from Thompson's OardanI-- Ptrtont kitereeltd are requested to be present. A copy of Ih* Zoning Map to-gafher with alltt of the proposed changes It on file at Ih* offk* of the Townahlp Cterk and may be ------“■— CHARLES HARRIS, ■VhH* Itk* T--- Manning Con ANLEYFRI NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Notk* It hereby given of a public f!*W by the Whit* Lake T^'Xlp Township .— .. --- NIHIF -------------IIARIH. It hereby given of a. puMk cJimga^n Hm ZenKJTU. **** Description: T3NlLlBt*e. 7 Tha 1. Mt fl. of Ih* W. 1044 V of tha N, 4M tt. of Ih* w. to *er** of ttoe N, W if MJ. V4 Okcapl Ih* W. 132 N. of R'&ll'Ji.'ll.TS.Ii.'S.af fl. of W. OM of N. W of N.1.14 ipl W. 132 ft. of N. 3*4 fl. alia oxeopf 132 fl. Of W. 344 tt. of N. IN tt. iriMs art raquMtad to ka I A tm OT fha Zoning Mop to- I may bo oxtmhwd by Nioa* | BUDGET ZIG-ZAG SEWING MACHINE Mends, dams, appliques ... sews buMons, makes buttonholes. 2-tone slimline design.... $58 SAVE ^31 • • • Signature Zig-Zag sewing WITH BUILT-IN BUTTONHOUR OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P,M. SUNDAYS 12 NOON to G P.M. • Sew plain or fancy, from simple domino to intricate monograms and embroidery e Moke buttonholes automatically! Sew buttons; moke patterns, blind hems • Pushbutton reverse for back-tacking; e Convenient built-in sewing light Pontiac Mall REQ. 130.00 TELEGRAPH ROAD CORNER ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD TELEPHONE 682-4940 A—U THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10. 1965 ORDINANCe NO. 10 . VILLAGE OF LAKE ANGELUS ZONING ORDINANCE An orOmwiot to Rromot*, protect, rcgu-,i lato, roNrlcI, ind provMo lor ttM um of ‘ lond ond Uilldiniii wlttillt 1H« Villoo* ol Lako Angelui; to ostabllah zones or dit-trlcts wHhln sNilch tha usa at land and strocturas la raoulalodt to provide rapu-latlont and rastr let Ions relating to open spaces and tha damity of davelopmwti to provida for the aetabHahmant of a Board of Appeals and Its powers and ------ ------- 1,^ admlnlstratlor d and lor panaltlai to provide tor the •onaMy and customarily Incidantal J subordinate to, and exclusively relat to tha principal usa of the premises. 1.3 A Single Family Dwelling is building used lor residantlal purposes by not more than one family. Without -iling the extent of tha exclusions, term shall not Include any tent, tri or vehicle used for living purposes, i not Include any camp, club, nursli^ homa, convalescent or rest home, boarding housa, or other building In which any room or apariment. Is let for hire or made available to persons other than members of the resident family. 1.4 A Family Is one person or a group of two or more persons living togetlwr and related by bonds of consanguinity, marriage, or legal adoption occupying a dwelling at a single housekeeping unit with a common set of cookir* — houtakoeplng unit, that a family will at such 1^ the en unit, provided. character ____________ .. domestic temporary entertainment It and uses customarily Incident including ope------------- *"• It than those llf A NivContormlng Use Is a law- It a use otherwiM m Sw of 1.7 Essential Sarvkat i ____c utilities or municipal s or commlttlont of under- ----- — —ctrIcaL steam itrlbutlon tyt- .... ...d accet-„ awlth, but nd‘ Including bulMlngt or fteraga yards avei though reason^ necessary for tha fur nlthl^ of aarvlca by such utilities, di partmants, or commissions. 1.1 A Front Yard It an open apace e uniform depth extending the full width c the lot meaturad at right angles to th front lot line. I.t A $Ma Yard It an open space t uniform width measured at right angle to and extending along the tide lot lim.. Article 1. Zona Districts and Zoning Map 3.1 Tha Village of Lake Angelut Is hereby divided Into Zone Districfs tr known at Residential, Agricultural, Si title and Educational, Recreational, Public Property. 2.3 Tha Boundaries' of the Zona Dlt- Incorporatod m Zone DIstrIctt shairbe~ior7iiies, center lines of streets, and the Village limit ------------ ambiguity as to District boundar 3.3 Tha Z the care e. Clerk, wi mile copies I Ic Intpactlon. '"cutt^ *0?" II make the Zo be kept the Vlllai ling Map i vallabN attar be used or occupied and no tl XI Residential Zone District property he permitted prl IT tingle family ermlmKl Accetsi '1.1 Agricultural Zone District property Is subject to the following — raguloffm; t permitted principal u I farming, gardonlng, i imal husbandry. Incidantal to the terming con- 3 Sclentifk District following ------------- A. The permlttad principal use It a single ettabllthmant. Including fhe nacMsary buildings ct propel owing I Bar Judge jArthfitis Embrdces several Different Diseases in Cnemical Firm Strike DETROIT (AP) - Wayne County Circuit Judge Thomas E. Brennan was barred Tuesday by a colleague’s ruling from taidng any further part in Wyandotte Chemicals Corp. strike litigation. Judge Victor J. Baum, chosen by fellow judges to act in the case, held that Judge Brennan had disqualified himself by certain actions though his motives were “highest and most honorable." Wyandotte Chemicals, whose plant in downriver Wyandotte has been struck lor six months by the Oil, Atomic and Chemical Workers Union, complained that Judge Brennan had made prejudicial public statements about the strike. Brennan, who has is junctions against both the union and company, had assumed a role of informal mediator in the strike. Baum, in relieving Brennan of the strike litigation, turned it over to Judge Benjamin D. Burdick. He kept Brennan’s injunctions in effect, however. One restricts union picketing. The other forbids strikebreakers. Brennan, conunenting home, extended his “sympathy and support” to Judge Burdick what he called “a difficult case." He said he respected Judge Baum’s judgment. (EDITOR’S NOTE: This is one of a series of articles supplied by the Oakland County Medical Society in observance of third anmial Community Health Week, Nov. 7-13.) Man has always been plagued with sore and aching joints. This often-painful condition Is medically known as arthritis, which literally means “inflammation of the Joint." Actually, arthritis is a general term embracing several different diseases, the most conunon of which are rheumatoid arthritis and osteoarthritis. Rheumatoid arthritis is a disease of the whole body. ’Three times more conunon in women than in men, it usually begins ... -jy Agricultural on a lOt or parcel -■ ‘—' in 3 acret, and no •— be ar“ _________ __________ S.I The VlUaga 'Commli^ ahall act li a Board of Appeali pun ‘ - *"-irovislont and authority of let 207 of tha Public Acfi 5.3 The Board of AppaaH ihall hear when a person is between 20 and 35 years of age. * ★ ★ Early synqztoms may include weakness, fever, loss of appetite, and loss of weight. OHiD, CLAMMY The skin, especially of the hands, may be cold and clam-Mental depression is common. Hie patient both feels and looks below par. One or more joints become inflamed and swollen, the s m a 11 e r joints being affected first A rheumatic attack often follows an infection, an operation, or an emotional upset, although these are not the causes of rheumatoid arthritis. An attack may begin with a gradually- increasing discomfort; a sudden, dramatic, confining illness; or somewhere in between. ★ ★ ★ Attacks may also come and go for no apparent reason. After many attacks, the characteristic joint deformity of rheumatoid arthritis becomes established. REDUCES PAIN Treatment reduces the pain of an acute attack and usuaUy increases movement. Often an attack of joint pain will subside by itself. However, in a few weeks or months, inflammation always returns. This tendency to finctnate from better to worse and to better again plays into the hands of qnacks becanse flie vtetims nsnally give the credit Osteoarthritis is a less dramatic illness. for a natural remission to the treatment being need at tiie quieter, When it does develop In a lint, however, it is less likely to go away. Rest relieves the soreness and discomfort at first, but there comes a time when relief is not obtained so easily. PERMAN^ CHANGES This is hecause the joint is injured, the smooth lining membrane and the cartilage pads are damaged, and permanent changes within the joint limits its movement and make any motion painful. - Everyone will develop osteo-arthritis if he lives long enough. It begins in middle age, nsnally in a hip, a knee, a shonlder, or in the back. Overweight people whose work requires standing or walking, thus overburdening the knees and hips, are especially susceptible to osteoarthritis. WWW Very often osteoarthritis Is firkt noticed after an injury to a joint. It may occur in the injured joint, or in joints of the other leg or the back which have been strained while trying to compensate for the injury. REASONy^LE COMFORT One’s ability to get around in reasonable comfort depends an understanding of his arthritis and a wUlingness to work with his physician in developing a way of life compatible with his illness. The physiciaa iadividnalizes his management of an arthritic patient. It is common to prescribe drugs to reduce pain and inflammation. He may recommend exercise and physical therapy, and supports or braces to prevent deformity. An arthritic patient must learn new ways to do common daily tasks and assume considerable responsibility for his own care. He has a problem that will be with him for life and should develop a tolerant attitude toward his disability without surrendering to it. Through peaceful coexistence, his chances for a longer period of reasonable comfort are improved. Bloomfield Miracle Milo Shopping Conior - S. Telegraph Ttl-Huron Center, IS. Telegraph - Pentiao Mall Shopping Center, N. Telegraph Birmingham, Maple at Woodward - Reehester, 1451 N. Main ir'i2r*-REB.M« WELCOME DOOR MAT .IMIT-1 A with a »upoN m am Gunniugliam’s COUFON EXPIRES SUNDAY NOV. U.'SS. Guuuingliams Clip & Save JUMBO IFIFTH WEEK T.V. WIRMEg! CHARLES R4C0IS. 144 SO. PARK ST.. ISOIBAB. MICHtl of Apgcalt shall dafarmlna »>- proposed location of bulldlin,. location, surfacing, and scraanlng of parking faclllllea are such that the proposed use will hot causa undue traftic probtams or dangers, will not Croat* any nulsanc* trom nolsa, dust, or otherwise, will not causa any throat to tha public safety and waHare, and will b* consistent with tha general character of the Village. Artkl* a. Nonconforming Uses S.I Any lawful nonconforming us* existing on the effectlva data of this Ordinance may be continued, provided, however, that -......- --------*“ ———• Ihlrty parsons engaged activltin at any lime. B. Permitted Accessory Uses ln| ^clude on* single family dwell-'Ing lor each establishment, not more than one private ga--— - -h outbuildings as to the scientific il activities con w ortn' ___________ _.n DIstri I subject to th* toll egulstions: I. The permitted principal us* for privet*----------“—' — Such at at. sites, picnic i effective date o s building or •hldi It Is 01 has been discontinued for a period on* year or more. Article 7. Admlnlsti 7.1 No construction any building shall be out first tiling with th plan of such work In i Indicat* compliance wl------------------- and obtaining a permit authorizing such B. Recreational Zona District and before occufiancy and use of any new or altered struch - — Clerk shall conduct a of th* premi— —■ ■ that s^ woi "^certlfSort*” of ,.n....-J us* of th* the absence of the Clerk, S upon determining public but only to those per- ‘ " sons specifically Invitad by the owners of such property. . Recreational Zone District,---^- ■ property fronting on or provW-1 Ing access to Lake Angelut i wMwii fexA wxwiiwbxiA BBoA DWTITlitB MOd CMftlltCL.. ,. The provisions of this V apply to repairs or Ir.--------- ------------ p! which are not In violation of this Ordinance and which cost no mof 3.5 PublVc' PriSrtTTs ■ wblect to the Thousand DoMars (»l,0j)0.»J. folKiwing uiw rtgulMtions: A. Permitted prirKipai i txclutivt UM of ptrions i n shall not 19< mEEBESS 7.2 Any violation of ----------, shall constitute a misdenwanor punish' ! schoolSr littrarivss fwin.* S?o"u‘;xtr'“'' SSli ____________________________ a '^ino nf nrooartv m Tlw rights and remedies provided by s -H-Sz-a SB not be deemed to waive or for- Ofwenot. Ka.iMifMi ««nsr lei any proprietary right l« ' estsbll^ rules and r*«uI»»iont i P^ 2T tK. ^ ““ SlJa'SSlI «ltror* rnTbe^r?:^^ Article 4. Ganeral ^rovltloot such'vtela'ti^shal! 4.1 No wall, fence, or shrubbery *h*IM be erected, maintained, or planted which ^a wraie often shall unreasonably obstruct or Interfere ! *». *he f«n«lfN« Proyl^ hereln. with traffic visibility on a curve of any , •• „‘^ooptto public highway, or at anyinteri either of public highways A'bf a highway and a private way. . 3.3 in interpratliw and appiyir provisions of this Ordinance, thay be held to be the minimum ragulri adapted tor the------------- health, * ' ' time to time but , Y«lTas'afneoded, and ifta Charter of th* Village of --- ------ 'ciSito™ Kf^«nvmi™c*?'J^i'''v'‘*'o^- cTT?** '£!!:vistel.*St*8!'it SyS: general welfare It 1s not Intended by ! ^ii*"i?ot“i«lef’ fid, Ordinance to Inlerfer* with, abrogate J; 'th. STdln^ii if a^Se « Of onnui ony easemonfs, covonants, or: other apreemenis between parfleSt P’’®-1 videdz however, that where this Ordln- mmrt* nf ance Imposes a oreeter rettrictlon upon ••S the uses of buUalngs or land, th* pro- o"*** O' visions of this Ordinance shall control 'conflW ' 41 Fiiantlal services shall be per- • authorized and regulated by , the provisions hereof are .. ....X,. ...» ..r»v...™ », I This Ordinance shall be given law and by the Ordinances of th* Village I “P®" PoP'lf-ofon of Lake Angalus and shall be exempt' '*• *-^lus w______ ._ . ___ hall be partitioned o therefrom non-rlparian lots < 4.5 On all Is bulldinn Xhall I (50) f n th* I VaM Is ahall have a frpnt yard, free of any siructures above grade, of at least forty (40) feet. Every lot shall have side yards fra* of any structures above gra of at least fifleen (15) feet, except I a boat housa at th* water's edge r-lot line may be permlttad by the Of Appeals wHh the cor ■ ‘ " iTfiora ingelus, having been approved setors of th* Village of Lake It the regular election held ___________ 4, ISM, by a vofa of 57 (or and 7 against, is hereby declared to be - effect with this publication In the Pon-c Press of November 10, ISM. that I STATE OF MICHIGAN — The Probata , . the Court for th* County of Oakland. * Board { Estate of Roger Lee Christian, Minor, adjoin- It Is Orderad that on December 7. ISOS. 59t. REC. 1.41-PACK U'E GILLETTE nAIRLEU ITEEL Doiblt Edge Blodts UMIT.I COUPON ' 87( OKAl-DEX TOOTHBRUSH LIMIT-2 VITH COUPON 2~49« QUART-REB. EM RI6KTERID NANB LIRUIR DETERGENT 47< IN FT.-REG. m KITONIR OHARM WAX 01212!) paper LIMIT-I M a COUPON Gunninjgliainsg FEVER Thermometer COUPON a a “ JUMBO BLACK and WHITE FROM VOUl I A W NEGATIVIS 01 ROUS (STANDARD SIZES) NO LIMIT WITH THIS COUPON allow teven le ten teeipany Ilia, •n Jeyt lee at 21"-1 ROLL PACK CHRISTMAS WRAP PAPER LIMIT.A PACKSWITH COUPON ^100 ksH Guuninghams REG.N4-QBILTE0 JUMBO GARMENT BAG . 8.tl Fosterio STEAM afld DRY IRON Gunninghams I Gunningliams HAMLTOB-PUITICCOAnD PLAYING CARDS LM4IT44 DICKS WITH COUPON Gunninghams 1. ON EXPIRES iV NOV. I4,‘*l CARTOB OP M BOOK MATCHES Guniiinghamj Gunninghams Gunuingham*s 1P0UH0-REG.2M MOTH BALLS LIMIT.2 WITH COUPON I Gunninghams REGULAR 1.21 S«wiBg&KRiltiMg| ton IAS 99* Gunninghams N EXPIRES NOV. I4.-M Gunninghams COUPON IXPIRIt UMOAV NOV. 14,^55 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10> 1965 A—15 Word Power to Success—27 Learn Meaning of Words From Context (EDITOR’S NOTE: This is ..the 27th in a 30-pqrt series entitled "The Word Power Way to Success." The series is designed to help bring improvement in spelling, grammar and vocabulary.) By The Laboratory, Inc, Written for NEA Special Services For nnknown words the cines abound ^ In words and phrases that In our preceding article you were all alone on a deserted island with a sfrange book. You determined to read this book if for no other reason than to shut out the loneliness. You had no dictionary, no spellers, no grammars. How were you to learn the meaning of the many strangej Other Clues to Unknown Words means “together wHh’’; text is the book, the words “woven” by the author, as textiles are wove means whatever goes “together what you are reading. words? I what precedes and what follows From that situation we de-|what you are now reading), rived that the first logical place GO TOGETHER to go in order to add new words| j, ^ sentence is to make any to your vocjulary is your oW ‘ense, each word must go with knowledge. We showed you n every other word in the sen- #hof oHi/sIa knur «n moirn n1#l that article how to make old words work for you to give you new words. What is the uext logical step in seeking to enlarge your vocabulary? Go back to your island, and now picture yourself confronted with woMs which you don’t know and your old knowledge fails you. What to do? You have no place else to go but to the book that lives you the problem. And so the second logical method of learning new words is from context. fence; each sentence must go with’’every other fence in the paragraph; and to the paragraphs of every chapter. Learning from context Is precisely the sam« procedure you followed in trying to find the value of x in mathematics. All they gave you was this problem; 2:4 - 8;x. Stare at X all day — or stare at a strange word — and you’ll learn nothing very well. Look at the surrounding num-|bers — or the surrounding text llearn that x equals 16 merely Context (con, from words you I from the problem itself j j know beginning with con or co,l In the same way you will! tell a soul, sneak off to a late .. movie, but Marvin will be iii; crunching hard candy in the ?:• seat behind you. You can’t fight S this ubiquity! Let’s see how you per- j:§ formed, learning only from context. Check your answers here. 1) i-:-anachronism; an error in as- :-:; signing persons or things in time; 2) unconscionable; feeling i;!-no remorse or regret; 3) anti- S pathy: aversion, dislike, the op- S; posite of sympathy; 4) incredul- x| ity: refusal or inability to be- :i:j lieve; 5) ubiquity: the ability to be at more than one place at ig the same time. learn the meaning of a new word from the way it is used, from the way it fits in with the rest of the sentence or paragraph. Let’s try this method: A QUIZ From the following sentences determine the meaning of the bold face words: 1. His so-called drama had several anachronismi, the two worst being the ringing of the alarm clock in Caesar’s tent and the nylon stockings worn by the Roman virgins. If we were not so unconscionable, we should show more remorse for our crimes. 3. No matter how sincere and successful my work, his antipathy toward me shows up in his never-ending criticism. | ______ 4. If all the wise men of thel (nsxt: •»« ages swore to him that two plus I two equals four, his unflagging! governments | hicredulity would remain. 5. Take your girl to a secluded glen, qnd Marvin is there; plan an ocean voyage, and you know you’ll run into Marvin; don’t collected $12.5 billion in taxes during the first quarter of 1965,':j: an increase of 4.4 per cent over I :^i the same period in the preced-iij: ing year. ^ a cnnetif ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY » FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE Starting November 15th Penney'* store hour* until Christmas will oe 9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M. MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY for that mated "Part-of-a-pair" look <30-T0GETHER SWEATERS in the smart fashion Scandinavian style A When you're together, wear sweotera that go together. These smart date-motes ore smoothly brushed 78% virgin orlon acrylic, 20% Mohair wool, plus 2% Lycra Spondex. Ivory body with colorful Scandinavian yoke pattern. His sixes S, M, L, XL. Hers 34-40. 45**^ Anniversary There, very simply. Is how ■::: you learn new words from con-text, how you let the problem give you the answer. 'There is J-i caution, however, especially since you are not really on that | deserM Isle: whether you learn g: new words from old words (first |:; method) or learn new words from context (second method), always check with the diction- ?• ary. g ★ ★ w g First, do all you can without » dictionary; secondly, never leave your ^ucated guesses un-}^-checked. Anyway, choking with :S the dictionary will probably f-prove to you that you are a ?• very smart person. Probably, i-ii but not certainly. Entire Stock Men’s Suits Kovin-Stuort, Exocutivo, Embassy Row, Gronodior and Hommonton Pork. regular *50 to *100 *44 *88 Boys’ Corduroy Parkas regular 15.00 1Q99 Boys’ Sweaters regular 8.98 5” .. 6” Girls’ Dresses Sizes 3 to 14 regular to 10.98 099 CT99 D to D Men’s Heavy Pile Ski Jackets regular 25.00 1999 Ladies’ Fur Trim Coats regular 125.00 *49 •• *99 Ladies’ Winter Coats regular to 59.95 *29 “ *49 Ladies’ Sweaters OUR FAMOUS BRAND regular to 18.00 599 and 599 Matching Skirts - Pants regular to 18.00 699 Ladies’ Fanois Naie Shoes High, Mid, Cuban, Stack Heels Discontinued Styles Reg. 16.00 ^90 ..a {Q90 Ladies’ Snow Boots High and Low Cuts Reg. to $11 744 ..Hi J44 Men’s Porto-Ped Shoes Discontinued Styles Reg. to 23.95 15“ THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 10, 1965 Dr. Wayne G. Brandstadt Says: Drinking Fluids Helps Stop Bladder Ills Q — My sister suffers from gravel in the bladder. What causes this and what can be done for it? A — Since bladder stones may be of different chemical composition, your I sister’s doctor should determine what kind she has and whether they I are originating I in the bladder I or merely pass BRANDSTADTthrough thej 'bladder after being formed in the kidneys. Some types of bladder stone -j can be prevented by avoiding j foods that supply the cbemi- ’ cals needed to form them. Some can be prevented by taking salicylates but this should! not be done without medical supervision. I ★ * ★ ! Dririklil i totat Of 7 or #] pints of fluids a day helps to! prevent the concentration ofj salts in the bladder that would tween an injury and the later development of a cancer in any location. When a cancer is found, a person can always recall some time in the preceding weeks or years when some sort of a blow was incurred in that part of the body. Q — There are a number of antiacid preparations sold over the counter that contain aluminum hydroxide. Is this ingredient harmful if taken over a period of years? | A-No. (WiINm tar Nmnowar autarprtat Ann.) j i form' favor precipitation in of gravel. The drug, hemiacidrin, will dissolve bladder stones but can cause serious difficulty if used in ah attempt to dissolve kidney stones. Q-I remember reading about, a new treatment to st^ hair from falling out. Do you know what this is? ★ « ★ A — Although too much testosterone in the blood can cause baldness. Dr. Papa of Philadelphia has found that a cream containing this male hormone when applied to the scalp will prevent baldness in men. ★ * ★ Regrowth of hair was observed i in men as old as 78 who had been bald for 30 years or more. I have not heard of this treat-' ment being applied to women. | Q — Can cancer of the breast! be caused by a blow or injury to the Ussues? | A — All (evidence points toi there being no connection be- DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Offers REI PARKING RK-SHOP furnished by the following merchants 41 N.Soglnaw St. URNITrS OLOTHEt SHOP 1 SON. Saginaw St. 16 N. Saginaw St. ULUdHER'SMUSIOlHOP •t7i.HuranSt. otmnmiiinwEiui 51 N. Saginaw St. PREON. PAULI JEWELERS 28 W. Huron St. PONTUe ENOUII JEWELRY 00. 25 N. Saginaw St. IHIPOlinAO PRESS 48 W. Huron St. OLOONAN DRUO 00. 72 N. Saginaw St. SHAW'S JEWELERS 24 N. Saginaw St. WARD'S HOME OUTPITTINa 00. 17*19 S. Saginaw St. OUR PONTIAC MALL STORE 0 EVERY EVENING TO 9 P.M. OUR RIRMINGHAM HORE OPEN TNURS., AND FRI. TO 9; SAT. it 5:S0 SEALY’S SALE OF MATCHMAKER HOLLYWOOD BEDS at no extra cost-you take yoiff choice of 8 decorator headboards with any sleep set ^eobf. the ashley-deep tufted mattress, plus box spring, headboard and metal frarhe A piece twin set just ’69.95 • Lukuriousty deep tufted mattress and box spring • Heavy woven cover for years of extra wear • Famous Sealy innerspring coil construction • Pre-built borders to protect edges W Sturdy metal frame and choice of headboard CONVENIENT CREDIT PONTIAC 361 S. SAGINAW’ FE 3-7901 j DRAYTON 4945 DIXIE HWY• OR 4-D321 OPEN MONDAY AND FRIDAY ‘TIL 9 J OPEN MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY 'TIL 9 THE BLAINE-INaUOES. FIRM, BUHON-FREE MAHRESS, MATCHING BOX SPRING, YOUR -CHOICE OF DECORATOR HEADBOARD AND ■ STURDY METAL FRAME. 4-PIECE TWIN SET. COMPLETE.....,........... $79.95 THE CAPRI- INCLUDES. titALTHFUl EXTRA FIRM QUILTED MATTRESS, MATCHING EXTRA FIRM BOJ^ SPRING, CHOICE OF DECORATOR HEADBOARD AND METAL FRA^E. 4-PIECE TWIN SET. COMPLETE........... .... $69.95 r THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC. MRHK;AN WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 10. 190.5 B-1 Hats from the national Girl Scout Roumfup in July were'filled with potlatch (gift) items and used as table decorations at the Tuesday luncheon of the Northern Oakland County Girl Scout Council. Two adult participants told the group at Pine Knob Resort of their experiences. Left is Mrs. Rex Kelley, Lake Orion; and right, Mrs. Jack Riley, Sedum Glen Street. Father Is So Literal ByABIOAILVANMmBN DEAR ABBY: Last evening, around suppertime, while I was in the kitchen helping Mother, the telephone rang. My father fl 1:^1 petty. If habitual with him, clue your friends on how to ask for you. But I think it wili pass. (Perhaps your father had bet against the Dodgers, honey.) lYoubied? Write to ABBY, care af The Pontiac Press. For a personai repiy, enciose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. Girl Scouts Hold Annual Meeting - Board members were elected and an adult volunteer honored during the annual meetmg of the Northern Oakland County Girl Scout Council Tuesday at Pine Knob Resort. * ★ w Mrs. Hayward Gullatte of Bagley Street was given the Thanks Badge, the highest recognition in Girl l^uting, for her "untiring efforts in promoting Girl Scouting in the Pontiac area.” ★ * ★ Mrs. DuWane Jones was elected treasurer of the council and Mrs. Albert Latendresse, first vice president. ELECTED Members at large named to the governing body are^Mra.- Joseph Grayson, Mrs. Fred Hoppe, Mrs. Loyal Joos, Mrs. John Marshall, Mrs. Richard Morgan and Mrs. Gary Ushman. ★ * ★ Other adult members of the organization receiving special recognition at the luncheon were Mrs. Jones, Mrs. Gerald Schultz, Mrs. John McNeely, Mrs. Odes Case and local executive director, Mrs. Donna LaMacchio. ★ ★ ★ Senior girls who participated in last summer’s Roundup in Idaho and the two adults who were there presented a program of memories. Konnie Parks, described the alternate patrol’s experiences at the regional camp. * * * Making arrangements for the luncheon were Mrs. K. V. Keener, assisted by Mrs. Leonard Methner, Mrs. Homer Richmond and Mrs. Morgan. To Hear Fornum Congressman Billie S. Far-num will speak at the ^:30 p.m. meeting Friday of the Pontiac Area Council of Senior Citizens. --The meeting will take place in the Community Services Building. Violinist, and Pianists Perform Anne Kavafian, 17-year-old violinist from Royal Oak, was guest artist when Pontiac Tuesday Musicals met at Central Methodist Church. * * ★ Mrs. H. G. Woolcock was chairman for the day. * ★ * The Tuesday program also featured duo-pianists Mrs. Ferdinand Gaensbauer and Mrs. Walter Schmitz. Mrs. Gaensbauer is the musicale's chorus conductor; Mrs. Schmitz, the group’s accompanist. * ★ * A report on the recent Southeast District meeting at Oakland University was given by Mrs. Schmitz. String students from the Pontiac schools were guests. * ★ * Hastesses were Mrs. F. M. HatRaway7'Mfs. E. 13.' Wihnr Mrs. L. S. Salathiel and Mrs. C. E. Galloway. ★ * * Tea chairmen, Mrs. Andre DeWilde, and Mrs. R. B. Wood, were assisted by Mrs. A. E. Buehre Jr., Mrs. L. G. Cox, Mrs. Donald Dawson, Mrs. Herman Dickstein, Mrs. W. G. Race and Mrs. D. E. Kigali. w ★ ★ Also assi^ng with the meeting were Mrs. J. F. Radenbaugh and Mrs. J.-O. Radenbaugh. Flea Market Is Scheduled The Episcopal Churchwomen of the Church of the Advent will hold their annual flea market on Saturday from 10 a m. to 5 p.m, in the church. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Prescott Jordan, chairman of the event, has announced that a special feature this year will be booths set up by several antique dealers. * ★ ★ Other articles to be sold Include baked goods, white elephants, toys and handcrafts. ★ ★ ★ A luncheon will be served and the sale is open to the public. Bloomfield GOP Group Hears MSU Professor The Bloomfield Republican Women’s Club combined its annual meeting with a luncheon at the Village Woman’s Club Tuesday. ♦ ♦ ★ Dr. Leroy G. Augenstein, professor and chairman of the be-partment of Biophysics at Michigan State University, spoke. ★ * ★ Dr. Augenstein pointed up to his audience the responsibility in decision-making that each individual faces as scientists come closer to being able to manipulate heredity and control population. * ★ * Chairman of the event was Mrs. John Thomas Miller. The cochairman was Mrs. William H. Spinning. Others on committees included Mrs. John Costello, Mrs. Donald C. Somers, Eleanor Patton, Mrs. Harold Rubel, Mrs. Robert A. Fargher, Mrs. Robert Rugg, Mrs. William Route, Mrs. Robert Gibb, Mrs. Robert 0. Field and Mrs. Samuel Vettraino. OFFICERS Officers of the group are Mrs. Spinning, president: Mrs. Rubel, first vice president; Mrs. Barney D. Bannon, second vice presi-rent; Miss Patton and Mrs. Richard Sloan, secretaries; Mrs. Donald R. Hagge, treasurer; and Mrs. Rugg, council delegate. Tell Engagement The Milton C. Bradys of Hazel Park announce the engagement of their daughter Patricia Ann to Daniel 0. CIcland, son of the Frederick J. Clelands of Clawson, formerly of Pontiac. A Jan. 8 wedding is" being planned. On hand to welcome guests at the Bloomfield Republican Women's Club luncheon Tuesday were Mrs. William H. Spinning of Birmingham (left), and Mrs. John Thomas Miller of Bloomcrest Drive, cochairman and chairman of the luncheon, respectively. I heard him| say, “Ves," then he hung! up, bang. Just I Uke that! I asked who it was for, I and he said iti____________ was a b Management Is it ever right to do wrong? I’m talking about budgets now, not morals. And I’ve found that sometime^,, where money is concer ned, a] person can break all thej rules and still have everything come out right. A man asked' me today If he should go ahead and buy a certain house he and his wife wanted very much — and which he felt was more expensive than his income justified. We put all the fi^es down on paper — and the figures said NO. I listened to his reasoning, studied his financial record and his history of personal responsibility, and said YES. Usually when a .family buys a house it shouldn’t pay more than two and a half times its annual income. This is a rule of thumb — and a good one to hold to.-But this-particulaF guy had many extras going for him. He had gotten regular raises on the job and he had saved an impressive amount of money, considering his salary. And this is important — he and his wife see eye-to-eye on what they want their money to do for them. So I said “Go ahead and buy this house you want. ' on your income couldn’t swing it. But I believe you can.” Now — here’s Your attitude toward money is more important than how much you might have in your pocket. ’The wife’s attitude, the husband’s attitude — if the synchronize, this is what makes money jump through hoops and perform miracles yon never thought it could. Hie couple who just can’t agree on anything will find that any house they buy, even at the approved price of two and a half times their annual income, is going to prove too expensive. A letter from Mrs. G. B., in |Lake Bluff, Illinois, points up the basic reason why this couple shouldn’t take on any major investment. She says: “The latest blow has been over who should pay for a repair fm the washing machine. Neither of us will accept it. I paid for a new dryer and dishwasher out of my household money, which I could not afford.” Here we have the marital ;hip on the shoulder - the Mayhe you’ll have to change your attitude. Maybe you’U have to do a little homework, figuring out the limitations o( money and also its rewarding possibilities. But I promise you this: if you will just look at your Income feels driven. She thinks in terms of “What’s for dinner?” And he thinks in terms of “Who’s going to pay the mortgage?” I wish couples like this could stop being adversaries and just sit down and ask each other: What do we really want? And how can we get It?” Money is really very flexible, if you just take the time and trouble to learn how to use it. In front of many houses in the United States, there is a shiny metal box with a small metal flag affixed to it. Varying only in size, these mail boxes are utilitarian in the extreme, but hardly attractive to an artistic eye. The Society of American Florists has come up with ah interesting and colorful idea in keep-iijg with the “Beautify America” program.' The Society suggests that attractive wicker baskets — available -at very little cost in most variety stores — be attached to the mail box. One basket is nice, but two—one on each side of the box — is even nicer. _ Early summer vows are planned by Margaret Ann Fife, daughter of the E. M. Fifes of Waldon Road, Independence Township and Pvt. Thomas J. Bass, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Bass, also of Waldon Road. Miss Fife attended Michigan State University and is studying languages at the Alliance Francaise in New York. Her fiance attended Flint Junior College and is stationed with the U.S. Army in Boston. with respect — no matter how much it may be — you will see more ways to make it biiy what you want. (For Mary Feelfy’s new booklet, “Make Every Dollar Count,” send $1 to Dollar Book in care, of The Pontiac Press.) Decorate Your Mailbox The baskets should be filled with fresh flowers. These, o f course, should vary with the seasons. During the cold winter onths when fresh flowers might freeze, the baskets may be filled with dried flower arrangements, outdoor ivy, or with hardy evergreens and holly. At Christmas time, tiny Christmas tree balls are an attractive addition to the greens and holly. A householder In a small town outside of New York has been decorating her mail box in this manner for many years. If, for some reason, she neglects to fill the baskets for a week or so, the postman has been known to leave plaintive notes. Bake Date-Nut Bread in Beer or Pop Cqns By JANET ODELL Poptiac Press Food Editor Fruit breads are good to have on hand. With just the, addition of butter or cream cheese, they make fine sandwiches. Toasted slices go Wtell with coffee any time. And children like this type of bread for an afterschool snack. Mrs. Raymond Gartley bakes date and nut bread in beer or soft drink cans. ’These little round loaves make attractive gifts or donations to the next bazaar. Of course, they freeze well. Mrs. Gartley belongs to the Fashion Your Figure Club and an extension group. DATE AND NUT LOAF By Bitrs. Raymond Gartley I 1 cup chonied dates 1 cup raisins 2 teaspoons soda 2 cups hot water 2 tablespoons shortening • 2 cups sugar 2 eggs 1 teaspoon salt 2 teaspoons vanilla 4 cups flour 1 cup chopped nuts Pour hot water over dates and raisins. Add soda, stir to dissolve and let cool. Cream sborteniag with sugar, add eggs and vanilla and beat well. SHt floor and salt and add alternately with cooled fmit mixture. Grease and flour beer or soft drink cans. Fill half full of batter, using a jar filler to make job easier. Bake 50-55 minutes at 350 degrees. Makes 7 cans full. ND OPENING Come to Stein^s Fashions, Bloomfield Miracle Mile See our collections of fhis-minute fashion featuring DRESSES for daytime, cocktail and formal occasions (including dressy separates); MAGNIFICENT COATS heaped with marvelous furs, smart silhouettes in untrimmed coats and, of course, sportive cor coats (a go go!),- SPORTSWEAR separates and smashing 'total look' coordinates. Remember, whatever is new on the scene is at Steins; so come browse often I And don't forget to register for the 3-day drawingsl OPEMMG SPECIALS! • FUR TRIM COATS, luxury woolens collared wifh natural mink or fox. Sizes 6 to 16. Regularly $110 to 119.98...........SALE! $77 fm pra*Ml( M«li4 !• tHw Mwitry $1 Hlth ¥ imptrtti Ian. U • UNTRIMMED COATS, narrow, suhttyntjaped to flared silhouettes. Variety of textured wools. 6 to 16. Regularly ta 49.9^V.. SALE! $33 • ZIP-LINED RAINCOATS, balmacaans or chesterfields,- just in time for nippy weatherl Sizes 8 to 18. Usually 17.98.....SALE! 14.90 • BENCHWARMERS of sturdy wool melton lined with warm acrylic pile (cotton bocked). Sizes XS-S-M-L................SPECIAL! $14 • COAT COSTUMES, long coots with matching dresses,- also some 2- and 5-^jiece suits.'Reg. 59.98 to SALE! $30 • DRESSES in a variety of styles, t^osual, dressy, wools, royon-ocetate crepes. Sizes 5 to 15. Usually 19.98 to 22.98 ....SALE! $14 • 3-PC. WOOL KNIT DRESSES, versatile double wools, embroidered trims and piping. Sizes 8 to 18. Usually 39.98 .MLE! 29.90 • SPORTSWEAR, Famous Make sweaters, skirts, slacks, jackets, jumpers. Regularly 5.98 to 17.98........:.........SALE! TO Vt OFF • PROPORTIONED STRETCH PANTS, Royal Adagio® rayon-nylon; petite, typical, tall, 8 to 18. Usually 8.98.....SALE! 0.00 U»e your SECURITY CHARGE freely at Stein's! THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1965 B-a , Linda Clark Becomes Mrs. Wayne M. Beach A candlelight ceremony in i> the First Methodist Chnrch, Milford, marked the vows of Linda. Maxine CSark and Wayne Merrill Beach of Dun-Jiam Road, Highland Town-ihip. Their parents are the Verne Clarks, Grandview Boulevard, Highland Township, and Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Beach of Laingsburg, Mich. ★ ★ ★ Oriental sequins accented the bodice of the bride’s gown of white Chantilly lace over taffeta, styled with full gathered tiered skirt and court train. ROSETTE HEADPIECE A crystal rosette held the bouffant illusion yeil. White MRS. W. M. BEACH orchids and miniature white roses rested on the bride’s white lace-covered Bible. With Sherry Smith, honor maid, were bridesmaids Mrs. A. B. Fowler, Sharon Mickel-son, Sandra Clark and Wendy Beach. Amy and Danny Blackledge were flower girl and ring bearer respectively at the rite performed by Rev. Harold Short. Attending their brother were Gary Beach of Milford as best man with Darrell and Donald Beach ushering with Mark Clark and Daniel Giegler. After the church reception the couple left by plane for a week’s honeymoon in Miami Beach. Baseball Mitts Will Stay Soft 'Die youngsters’ baseball gloves will keep supple over the winter if they are stored clean. Use A thick soap and scrub the glove, but don’t soak it. Wipe with clean, damp cloth and buff the leather with a dry cloth. A leather dressing can be used just before storing. Sociologists Slate Dinner Oakland County Chapter, National Association of Social Workers, plans a membership meeting at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday | in Devon Gables. Speaker for the evening will be Dr. Robert E. Waldon recently appointed psychiatrist-director, Mental Health Services Board. "Problems in Administering an Integrating Mental Hospital’’ will be Dr. Waldon’s discussion topic. Much of the content of his remarks will be drawn from a paper he presented to the National Medical Association last August. Wash Load Was Mony Hours Work Good Old Days, Never! VFW Auxiliary Plans to Work Dr. Waldon also will inform the group of this area’s activity in the mental health field, since Qakland County is Michigan’s first to come under the new Community Mental Health Act. Dryer Danger Never use the clothes dryer for articles still damp from cleaning fluid. Heat and flammable fluids form a combination that might cause fire. r COBBIBS ENJOY COMPLETE COMFORT. Let ovr tkillod tho* axparh fit your foot in this fabulous Cobbi* tio wHh tho cuthiorting, wofor-thin platform. You’ll ditcovor ooso yoq’vo novar known boforol And its trim classic look wtfh your fall tailorad fashions will make you lovt its famous Cobbia fit and foaling allthomoro. TUDOR TIE, 13.99 Antelope Tan—Black Suede PAULI’S Family Shoe Store 35 N. Saginaw FB 2-3051 tTMi ptWwl kM w cmimcSm (Mwsr «Nk Tkt AimilcM NMIomI M CiiNi m Knitted' in one piece from neck down, including raglan sleeves. Use knitting worsted. Pattern 567: directions, sizes 32-34; 36-38 included. ^ CuitiA WkuQ;i Thirty-five cents in coins for each pattern — add IS cents for each pattern for lit-class mailing and special handling. Send to Laura Wheeler, The Pontiac Press, 124 Needlecraft Dept, Box 111, Old Chelsea Station, New York, N, Y. 10111. Print Pattern Number, Name, Address, Zip. NEEDLECRAFT SPECTACULAR - over 200 designs, 3 free patterns in new 1966 Needlecraft Catalog. Knit, crochet shifts, shells, jackets, hats! Plus toys, embroidery, quilts, more! Send 25 cents. "Decorate With Needlecraft’’ fabulous book, 25 patterns for decorator accessories shown in 5 idea-filled roonu. 50 cents. I Send for superb Quilt Book — 16 complete patterns. 50 cents. SAVE on smartly styled hoots... regularly NOW ONLY $997 Brisk weather just doesn't All dressed up in Block or Chocolate Brown glove leather uppers. It's snugly lined in fur-like fleece and sat ^ for ony occasion on a mid heel. The Manley F. Stein-baughs of Cherokee Road announce the engagement of their daughter, Sharon Sue, to Thomas Allen Greenlees, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold S. Greenlees of Margaret Street, Pontiac Township. The May bride-elect attended Ferris State College. Her fiance was affiliated unth Phi Sigma Epsilon fraternity while a student at Missouri State College. Being a lady in the Victorian era required stamina as well as taste. Because fashion Insisted that Great Grandmother be wasp-waisted and bustled in back, she wore whalebone corseting, bustle-padding, petticoats and dresses that weighed, all together, as much as 40 pounds. Wearing so many clothes was a labor, but laundering them was something worse. The typical 19th-century laundry as depicted in The Maytag Encyclopedia of Home Laundry (Popular Library, New York, 1965) is one today’s homemaker will find quaint but frightening as well. FULL DAY’S JOB ' Washing alone was a full day’s job, just as it was when the Mayflower pilgrims put “washday” into the American vocabulary. It was done outdoors, usually in a kettle of boiling water. A clothesline or fence was used for drying. Luxurious, warm! Wear this all-year, cable jacket oVer slacks, skirts, dresses. Above is a sample of the Christmas cards currently offered by the North Oakland Association for Retarded Children. Donations from sale of the cards—in red, green and blue hues— will be used for activities for the retarded sponsored by the NOARC. Orders may be placed by contesting Mrs. Robert McClendon, 1334 AM Street or the NOARC, P.O. Box 561, both in Pontiac. KEEPS YOU INSULATED FROM THE COLD, CRUEL WORLD Your feet have no need to fear winter's blasts if you own a pair of these Hush Puppies* boots. Their anti- r seHing points include water-repellency, fleece Brushed Pigskin* twhich keeps you both warm and dry—perspiration passes out through the leather but cold air can’t sneak in), a weather-proof crepe sole, and a minimal need for upkeep. Keep the winter out in oomfortabla style, with Hush Puppies* boots. Hush Pkippies* from $13.99 Man's from $15.99 BREATHIN’ BRUSHED PIGSKIN* CASUAL SHOES BY WOLVERINE 20 W. HURON Opan Monday and Friday Until 9 Sanring With Quality Foetwaar Since 1919 broomstick for stirring and retrieving garments from the bubbling kettle. Washing machines did exist (about 2,000 patents were already on file in Washington), but most were crude mechanical devices that worked by scrubbing clothes between two hard surfaces. They weren’t really suitable for a lady’s finest clothing. According to the Maytag Encyclopedia, these primitive washers passed into history, along with the stuffy Victorian fashions and customs, at the turn of the century. AGITATORS used by the great majority of today’s automatic wqshers. The 40 pounds of Victorian clothing is reduced to as little as two pounds, including foundation garments, dress and shoes, in the street dress of American moderns. The work in laundering that used a full day in 1900 requires less than an hour now. Both the bustle and “washday” have become part of the national folklore. Members of the Auxiliary, Oakland County Council, Veterans of Foreign Wars, will stuff envelopes for the T. B, I Association at their 8:30 p.>w, ; Thursday meeting. The Pon-I tiac Post on South Saginaw ! StrMt will hold the gather- Gifts will be collected by hospital chairman, Elizabeth Kendall, to be distributed to senior citizens in n u r s i n g homes at Christmas. Anna-Marie ^ By the 1920’s new, styles were laundered at home in washers that used the agitator washing principle — the same SPECIAL BUDGET $^50 WAVE ^ Callies’ ™ us N. Perry SI. FK Z-S3SI HAIR FASHI0.\S Personality Shaping and Styling All PrrnunrnU (.uiranlrrd Complete Beauty .Service 3860 Elizabeth Lk. Rii. 3.32-5052 iru .Sat. The laundering aids w lye soap (shaved into flakes in the washwater), starch, bluing, a flour-and-water compound for dirty spots, and a We’ve itathered treasure from Europe, Asia and the Americas to make your Christmas shopping a one-stop delight at Wiggs. You’ll find gift items for use in every room in the house, plus many personal boutique items. A. Cornini Ware for renfo-lop or oven cook! nr — for freeiini an;l elorinii -for the table. See the coUection et Wina. Theaa 3 caiaarole^ 1 qt, IVk qt, lA.9tr ‘ B. Fraaer itainlrN ateel eollection in- F. Daeoralive old zona, to han. In the den er fenaily room. 60 to 100 yeira old. 30.00 to 100.00. Copper trn kenlee from Pomiimrae vllle^ 1 to 2Vh qk aliea, priced from 10.00 m hero Soft and atrri topa. Table aiae. 3.95 Pr. C. Carbone, crinkle rlaaaware. Croon, bloc, topaa. pink or amelhyat. Water tnmblera, each 85r. Goblelt. each 1.50.Sherbeta.tarhl.IO. D. Copper Fonda Dlah one from a cob lection of copper pleeea for the table. Ideal for bnffeU and entertaining Priced from 6.00 E. Fondue FoikSel.6 Ibilu fai aufaileea ctrri with wilnSi hendlea. Nradjr boxed 5,00 H. lee bnrkria, aarorted IrealmenU: Wood laminated pattarni and aa ahown in aimnlnted Iralber, from 15.00 K. Reprodpetiona of Colonial boltlea In colorad puaa. Jnat 3 atvlea from an aaaonmani ahown. Priced from M. Steak aiiilar and tray aeL ainlera in ilainlaaa atari for nan on the broUer. Seta on wooden tray. Many tiiea. In* dividual lervlea forona, 2.00 FURNITURE CHINA GIFTS BLOOMnELD HILLS MOO TELEGRAPH RD. At UmgLakm ltd. 644.7370 Mom., Thmrt., At Fri. *iil 9 PONTIAC 24 WEiaUlWON STREET In Domiimni Fomtimt FR O-Jllt Mon. a FH.'HI 9. )\ THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 10, 1065 M /life II iiii • WATCH BANDS nMVp NCISNER’S Watch R«|Mtir 42 M. Htmmuw li 8-3593 (d Muiilt, Muno9*r P0R1UIT For Limilfd Time Wax Below ?iormal Coi Suds for Fluff Orion pile mittens for winter are so fluffy that they even look warm. Since the surface fluff acts as insulation to hold in heat, such mittens should be sudsed out often to prevent matting of the pile by soil. f^lI^yunVl Talk Keeps Son Dependent «iin. n. t> ^ By MURIEL LAWRENCE^ i opinions is to disparage him. r the good will of genuine concern We have to question the valkl-dear MRS. LAWRENCE: I As your mother did you. for our growth and our recog-llty of the product of lil wUl. fk .i”” *was presen^ ® When I married my husband two. By telling you that your broth- nithm of some shortcoming weiAbout the mother who’s calied IH! rinh moth- er wouldn’t take what you take need to overcome. ius a Caspar Milquetoast, we But if his accusation leaves.have to think, “Maybe anyone us feeling anxious, depressed who isn’t a bully looks like Cas- Turks drank 11,000 tons of tea during 1964, 2,500 tons more than in 1962. 49^ 8x10 • Only ehf ••c*' * "* • Orwpi, cmiumtt and , 12yaanilia!>tlradditioi a MMmoia Aga: 3 Monttn t i' [ Is ■ KENDALE . . . Photographers 45 W. Huron St. Fri.andSal.VlaS Phone for Appointment, FE 5-3260, FE 5-0322 THIS OFFER ENDS IN 15 DAYS the Waterford Child Study Club ^ problem. She from a boss, what she said was, lean depress him so that he can’t “you are an incompetent. Participants were Mrs. Nor-| eat dinner. i You’re a contemptible Caspar man Cheal, Mrs. Richard Kuhn, j can always tell when he has! Milquetoast.’’ ^s. James McCoy and Mrs. I talked to her because he gets^ And you fell for this nplnlnn Thomas Spragle. * ★ * Mrs. Julian Greenlee opened her Lenox Road home. Cohos-tess was Mrs. Robert Lewis. Mrs. John Alfes was welcomed as a new member and Mrs.. Ray Imig the guest of the group. so irritable afterwards. I though this kind of disparaging accusation never expresses and helpless, then we can be sure that it expresses in will — the accuser’s desire to build himself up as a much better person than we are by making Join 2 Scarves Fasten two small silk scarfs together by a corner and you have an unusual neck scarf. Use one-half-inch wide ribbon of a matching color and short length to attach. He has been having some trou-| genuine moral judgment of us us feel like a nothing, ble with his job as supervisor‘s * ' ■ i and last Sunday when he was telling her about it, she said, "your brother would never take that from anybody. I’d like to |see anyone try to treat him like'ojose opinions, that.’’ He was so upset that but is used by dominators to| maintain our. dependence on their opinions by making us feel so weak, so useless and wrong I that We dare not even question par to you. ★ “Maybe I and hot Caspar at all. Maybe you just see things crooked and I can’t trust what you see. night ANSWER: You want to resist her for him, don’t you? It won’t help. It’s his battle. If you make it for him, he will only feel so ashamed that you could resist her* where he could It stands to reason, doesn’t it? How else could we keep another person under our thumb, under control by onr opinions except by Polly's Pointers Dog Quiets Kids Keep a set of measuring spoons in the medicine cabinet for measuring dosages. _ DEAR POLLY-When friends.normally placed and that way him feel such a wash-out that ^ring small children to visit us, many papers are in sight that he dare not trust his own? | j put a lifelike stuffed poodle | might otherwise be forgotten. You know, we can always tell dog on the end table in the living LAVERNE not that he’ll start picking on „hat an accuser is up to by the i room. you. jway his accusation makes us' Th® smailer children are at- Then he’ll either start defend- feel if it makes us feel sobered, I tracted to it so they are dising his mother or transfer his thoughtful but undiscouragedJtracted from other things in the dependence on her opinions to y,en his accusation springs from room that are not to be played /)A5l 12th ANNIVERSARY A 3-Day Trunk Showing Thursday - Friday - Saturday EMBA* I Minks JOHN ROSS ORIGINALS Exelutivtly ours in Pontiac Stoles, Capes, Jackets, Coats At Special Anniversary Prices »399 .o *3,999 Come in and see the internationally known collection of exclusive furs . . . created for the woman who insists on the ultimate in for fashion. Meet Rom Miu Rondell is fashion stylist and consultant for OaVinci' and John Ross Originals. Sh« acts as liason between the world of for foshions ond the Americon won^n who wonts The cWore tolteeTtonj of fatls, Rome and London tronslotwd into garments she can understand and oppreciote for the American way of life. See the entire John Rett eollectien in Ahtin’t Continental Room. *TM EM8A Mutation Mink Breeders Astpclotion fur products labeled to show country of origin of imported fori. HURON at TELEORAPH your opinions. Let me speak to him directly. .. Young husband, one of the most efficient ways to keep another person dependent on our! Will Continue the Humanities on Tuesday The Episcopal Church-women of Christ Church Cran-brook will continue with their training of the human sensitivities at Tuesday’s meeting. In addition, the first lesson in a series of six will be ottered in crewelwork and needlepoint at the 10 a.m. meeting. ★ ♦ ★ Following the noon luncheon, the program will be de- voted to a workshop on flower arranging. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. John Ingold and other members of the Altar Guild will present a demonstration on general flower arranging jwith. This keeps their parents j from having to correct them. You’ll find 162 holiday hints in Polly Cramer's new booklet, “Polly’s Christmas Pointers.’’ This 32-page, illustrated book gives clever ideas on such topics as decorating, wrapping and gift-giving. To order your copy, application to altar work. Mrs. Maurice Garabrant will show colored slides on floral arrangements. Vinyl Is Vivid Look for the shiny look in many of the young fashions for fall and winter. Many are made in vinyl, and white is a favorite color. One vinyl though is a bright red poncho lined in blue polka dot poplin. No Needling You will not need a needle to string those beads if you smooth a little nail polish on the end of the thread and allow to dry. It stiffens the thread. MRS. D. L. TARKET Tarket, Wetzel Ceremony In Northern Michigan for a honeymoon are the Daryl Lee Tarkets (Mary Elixabeth Wetzel) whowere wed recently in St. Benedict’s Catholic Church. White Chantilly lace over taffeta fashioned a chapel-length gown for the daughter of Mrs. Paul A. Wetzel of Mark Street and the late Mr. Wetzel. ^ Completing her ensemble were an illusion veil and bouquet of white carnations and lilies of the valley. Elizabeth Levering attended the bride at the noon rite performed by Rev. Richard W. Thomas, followed by reception in the Wetzel home. ★ * * Terry Tarket was his brother’s best man. They are the sons of Mrs. Oscar Tarket of Atkinson Street and the late Mr. Tarket. Paul A. Wetzel Jr. and Patrick Tueman ushered. ^ I do not have to put every- send your name, address, zip ,thing m high and everyone has code and 50 cents to: Christmas '•a more pleasant time. — MRS.'Pointers, in care of The Pontiac R. K. Press. i DEAR GIRLS - I have a ----------------------------- | I Pointer for you. Recently, when i {attending a fashion show, I no- ■ ij ■ tl'ced that one model appeared; KUl©S ri6iP wearing a large heavy-looking ' hat and in just a few seconds ClJ-l-Ai* reappeared without a hat andj DQDy OITTCI a perfect, rather bouffant hair-' 'since I knew there could not' With Job have been time for a recombing | I asked how she did it. She gy the Emily Post Institute was amazed that I did not know q. ^ ithe trick of putting a sheet of . , . ... slightly crumpled tissue paper »«11 will be engaging our first ^ inside such a hat to protect a baby sitter. Can you give me| hairdo. some idea as to the customary If the hat Is worn a long pe- rate of payment for such serv-riod of time some work on the ices and also any other helpful hair is required.—POLLY information on the subject? DEAR POLLY - I am a ^ * * * mother of two teen-age A;-Hie rate of payment varies daughters and an 8-year-old son different localities and no set and I know how hard it often is schedule can be fixed, to get children to perform theirl However, the customary rate daily responsibilities without of your community should be nagging and arguing. jobserved and the sitter should Each morning after break-'be paid at the end of the eve- Announcement is made of the engagement of Linda Lee Mathews, daughter of Mrs. Vernette Mathews of. North Shirley Avenue' and Vern E. Mathews ■ Jr. of Penna Avenue, West Bloomfield Toivn-ship, to Theodore Larry Taylor, son of the Irving Taylors of Pompey Street. Her fiance attended Ferris State College. February vows are planned. Zip Tip Close zippers well before waging a garment. Open them before drying. This helps to keep the lepers working well. JHeumode SALEI "FIBERLOCK* RUN-LESS SEAMLESS fast, 1 sit down with the children ,and make out a list of chores each is to do that day. They are numbered and I al-wi^ write a big “Thank you’’ at the bottom of each list. When they have finished the tasks listed, they are checked off and ning. ’The sitter should be told that after the children are asleep she may use the television set or play the radio, read, or homework. In other words, it should be clearly understood what she is 77‘ IpainSlJO Reinforced Tom end Hnnle 82 N. Soginow U. Quickies Chocolate MILK Add a flair to your Hot Chocolate Milk the list returned to me and, ifjexpected to do and what she necessary, I can inspect. Imay not do. It is thoughtful to At that time (but not always) fobve ii snack in the refrigerator I may reward them with a little - the hours can become long suivrise or treat. ’This has prov- and tiresome, en to be a wonderful time saverj Be specific about where you in our home and his spared me are going, leave address and that unnecessary nagging we so telephone number, as well as often hear between parents and the name, address and tele-children. I hope many mothers phone number of the children’s will try this. — MRS. D. H. M. doctor. i GIRLS - This would certainly, Always tell the sitter when do away with the excuse my you expect to be back-and try children often gave; “Oh, 1 for-to be on time. ' got.” — POLLY. ) Adequate transportation mustl DEAR POLLY — I find a he provided for the sitter’s safe' brass record rack makes a very return home I serviceable letter and clipping' „ I holder for my desk. Things thatl®^*^^**® need attention are stuck between! Q: Will you please tell me the ithe wires where the records are correct way to refer to my employer’s wife when speaking of her to him? Do I say, “your wife” or “Mrs. Jones?’’ ! A: “Your wife” is never incorrect, but in speaking to your employer, “Mrs. Jones” is preferred. ★ w * ’The Emily Post Institute cannot answer personal mail, but ail" questions of general interest answered in this column. i CUSTOM MAM SUP COViRS AvMe«Cholr$31.95 Avw0g«S«ta$5Z9S FABRIC FAIR lisi IWALHR Delicious Sausage Corry Out!-682-9811 Oitrn Etrninitt MIAMI BAKE SHOPPE Open Evenings THE PONTIAO MALL ► top it with marshmallows ’ ► stir it with a peppermint stick ► add a dollop of whipped cream » sprinkle it with coconut • spoon in manhmallow fluff • shave on chocolate • add a dash of nutmeg • place in s punch bowl for holiday company IT’S DELICIOUS ameridaTi dairy association TRY IT TODAY! w Swing Into Fall With a New PERMANENT and HAIR STYLE Tinting—Bleaching Cutting IMPERUL's^iS? 158 Auburn Ave. Park Knw PE 4-U7S Edrlh SlMton, owaar $ W\ The best dressed wedding parties select their formal attira at...^ Harmnnh Om auWaaSim wllgill— hdwfee Sw MmI fworal faSiloM •nS MCMNrtM for sN Moil-fenMl mS taraial Ami bi IMi aMSwii at* of tlasaOM, fooMt wmf fmW b Ni« Mart way ta took your bMl. IcMOMkalaiiS convMlMt, tMl MODERN RENTAL SIRVICE BaFsttonh CLOTHIERS — TAILORS — UNIFORMS TUXEDO RENTALS 908 W. HURON AT TELEGRAPH. PONTIAC THE PONTIAC PKKSS, WEDNESDAY. XOVEMHKR 10. 1905 Fashion is Laughing at Season's Taboos One homely chore usually approached vith dread twice a year may soon become a thing of the past. That’s the he«rto store away one season’s wardrobe to make closet room for the next. I don’t mean we’re all going to be blessed with bigger and better Closets. But fashion itself comes closer each year to standing on its own two feet and Special Purchase Sale SUITS Choose from many styles and colors. OPEN SUNDAYS 10:30-2:30 DAILY 9:30-8;30 EM 3-3912 laughing at seasonal taboos of the past. Look at what has hap-/pened already. __________* ^ .*............... If you have pale bone or navy shoes and accessories in your spring - summer wardrobe or pastel cotton-knit jacket dresses, they can now be worn right through all reasons in good taste. A fashion revolution seems to be gradually taking place that could eventually eliminate the seasonal apin-oach. Once, except in sunny climes, white and pastels were not worn until after May 30 and were put back in mothballs on Labor Day even if the thermometer was in the 90s. Navy, once the harbinger of spring, is now a year-round favorite. Cotton and cotton knits formerly “for summer only,” crop up in fall and winter collections and the synithetics span the seasons with ease. it it ir Air conditioning has made popular summer dresses with long sleeves and has also kept many a small fur out of summer storage. All the little foxes and minks now enjoy the light breeze of a summer night along with the crisp air of fall and the balmy winds of spring. And raincoats have become all-weather coats, ready to repel the storm if necessary, yet vying for topcoat style honors on clear autumn or spring days. ★ * ★ The time seems close when, except for practical purposes (a warm coat when it’s cold outside), we can be well-dressed without giving the season much thought. diamond splendor,.. ^ for her to treasure It Omega diamond-aet watch ii one of the most magnificent treaiurea a woman can own. Every diamond ii individually inaperted for color, cut. clarity and brilliance. The higli-preciiion Omega movement... checked at 1497 manufacturing itagei...in one of the moat accurate in the world. Models from 1125 to over 11000 F.T.I, Redmond’s Jewelry - 81 N. Saginaw St. Free Paridng in Reir of Storo ^afc/er/hea OnMgn Style BiwcAiuw Lake Orion Pair Is on Eastern Trip Like mother, like daughter. Frilly, fancy granny govms are favorites this season and Kid Duds styles this popular version mth lace magic. Print is an English sprig floral against red, pink or blue background. About $4 sold locally. Visiting Syracuse, N. Y. on their eastern honeymoon are Sidney G. Hawley of Lak^ Orion and his bride, the former Carol Ann Parrott. ★ ★ ★ A reception in the Veterans’ Hall, Oxford, followed their recent vows pledged before Rev. Robert J. Hudgins in the Methodist Church of Lake Orion. it it it Parents of the couple are the James F. Pearsons, Heights Rpad, Orion Township, and the Sidney A. Hawleys, South Beaumont Road, Highland Township. SLIPPER SATIN White slipper satin with Chantilly lace bodice and Dramatic Change The make-up for moderns designed by one cosmetic firm shows a dramatic change from a natural look. ’The focus is on smoky, -smouldering eyes, and pale skin with a beige-ivory make-up base. The lips are rounded and ripe with brilliant shades of pink, red and rose. skirt applique fashioned the bride’s colonial gown. She donned an illusion veil with lace Juliet cap and carried cascading white and red roses. Mary Catherine Pearson attended her sister and David Hawley was best man for his brother. Theodore Hawley of Milford and Calvin Voorheis of Holly were ushers, ★ * ★ The bride was a former student at Ferris State College. 7 FOOT HOSE AU CLOTH NO PLASTIC > Smirt All Mmkn mmd Mwlrb Att Wmrh Ypmr** PICK-Ur $si NLfVIIIY « FMt ItTIMATn Wl imiALUI HI HMVCM OPtN 9 A.M.-6 P.M. DAILY MON..THURS, •ihI FRI. NIGHTS TIU 9 P.M. 335-9283 S. G. HAWLEY The special charm of beautiful Haute Couture design by Martini, is the softly shaped slim sheath. ’The shoulder curves away from the neck. It has slightly bell shaped sleeves and is unusually darted. i The panel effect front has conceal^ pockets in the seams. There is a zipper fly back closing. To really stand out in your crowd, make this in a crisp white fabric. Spadea’s exclusive ready-to-wear sizes produce a better fit. See chart for size best for you. *—Prom napo of nock to wolot. Misses Size 12 requires 2 yds. of 50” fabric for Dress. To order Pattern No. N-1364, state size; send $1.25. Add 25 cents for first class mail and special handling. Pattern Books No. 23, No. 24, No. 25, No. 21, No. 27, No. 28 are available for 50 cents each or any 3 for $1.25. Duchess of Windsor Pattern Book with 55 designs is available for $1.00 or all 7 books for $3.50. Add 10 cents postage for each book. Address SPADEA, Box 535, G. P. 0. Dept. P-6, New York, N. Y. 10011. I bet some of the men who read this Column will mutter to themselves, “What will she think of next?” Nevertheless, the experts say that a cry is good for us once in a while. They do not mean to suggest that a woman’s face should droop like the leaves of a weeping willow or that she should be a perpetual sponge. Nothing is more unattractive than a weepy female. SAFE OUTLET However, strong emotions can be damaging if they have | no release. These change the ^ entire body chemistry. Our glands go into action to prepare us for the emergency. If we have no outlet we more or less “stew in our own juice.” Since civilized conduct prohibits face slapping and hair pulling and such, a good cry is a safe outlet. it it it. It is so true that if you have been living in a state of tension, if worries have been nagging at your mind and spirit, a good cry can be a great relief. It is relaxing and blows off steam. It can make you feel lots better. The world will seem much brighter after you dry your tears. So, howl when you feel like it — unless this is too often. If it is more than about once a month, or at the most once every three weeks, stop and evaluate your condition. ARE YOU TIRED? Extreme fatigue ot nervous exhausObh can make'ySircfy' at the drop of a word. If you are sensitive in a way you never were before or find that you cry like you never did, seriously consider your physical condition. See your doctor for a chqckup. ★ ★ ★ The poor men have the worst of this deal. For seme reason they are supposed to suffer without the relief of tears. It is not thought to be manly to cry. This probably began in childhood when parents said to their young son, “Now don’t dry. Be my little ' man! Boys don’t cry.” , Anyhow doctors feel that it ' will not detract one whit from manhood for a man to cry once in a long while. Many strong and famous men have wept unashamedly. You might remember how medicinal a cry can be when-someone comes to you for comfort and wants to cry on your shoulder. Don’t tell the person not to cry but rather urge her to cry good and hard and get it out of her system. However, cfying is npt beautifying to the eyes so | don’t overdo it! BUY, SELL, TRADE. USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS. Flewart that odd th« spaclal touch to ontortalnlng . . flewort that •ay "woleomo" to your guost*. 5.‘)V ORCHARD lAKE FE ? 0I?7 STAPP'S . . a step in the right direction that's . . MOST FITTING j ^trideRtte SHOE THE SHOE THAT UNDERSTANDS CHILDREN Mother . . . buih Into every pair of famous Stride-Rite shoes is quality, comfort and fit But fit of the shoe must depend upon the core, skill and knowledge of the people fitting the shoe to the child's foot . . . from bab/s very first pair to daughter's college size loafers. This-fi the cdrei “1^ fif ybu gtrt of Shoe Stores, from trained, experience shoe folks. Where your child's feet are our concern ... we think it most fitting. And . .. your Doctor's prescription accurately filled at all our stores too. STAFF'S JUNIOR SHOES 928 W. Huron St. at Telegraph (Open Fri. to 9) (Sat. to 8:30) ROCHESTER MICHIGAN STORE ... 418 N. MAIN STREET. .. Open Fri. to 9 Bobette Shop EXCLUSIVELY OURS IN PONTIAC ...and the livin’ is easy White, white, white is the color of BalTs airy mermaids— Longline: B and C cups $4JO; DeuptSJOO Bobette Shop 16 N. SAGINAW DOWNTOWN Free Paricing FE 2-6921 Charge Accounts and happy-go-lucky in every way. Drip-dry cottons that bring young lift to the bosom—love a good dunking, come up sparkling white and smooth-as-ironed every time. Even the straps are touch-up free! Bali’s famous bow shapes the clear-cut separation. Bandeau:A.B and C cups $3.; Dcup$3.S0 B—« THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1968 Proposals Receive Citizens Group OK New sdwol irograins — cen-|ln a readinc room stocked withjbeglniring and end o( the courN t^ on impiwj^ the ability of il,W paperlwck classics on a'woukl measure the amount «f children in reading, writing and | wide variety of fubjects. speaking English — have been ★ * ★ endorsed by an Oakland County The students would be i citizens’ advisory committee. couraged to read extensively. Approval of proposed pro-SPEECH PROGRAM I improvement made by , child. grams by the citizens’ commit-1 - ■ j u , f j A speech improvement pro- tee w^ required before funds ^ could be sought. schools also was proposed. Oakland Schools officials _ ( apply today for a federal grant to undertake the programs. The money Is made available under Title HI of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act. It would be directed to teenage boys and girls with slovenly articulation and poor speech The speech improvement teacher would not be a speech correctionist or a qieech teacher, but a skilled English teacher with extra training. First program scheduled to be| enacted is a training institute for 16 to 20 teachers who will become resource people for learning improvement services in local school districts. Tape recordings taken at the Members of the cltisens’ advisory committee are Sister Mary Catherine, princ^ of Our Lady of the Lakes Sdhool, Waterford Township; Dr. Ha^ ry Hahn, professor of education at Oakland University; and Ted Pearson Jr., president of tte Oakland County Association of School Superintendents. Also on the cmnmittee are Evelyn Kidneigh, director of school nursing at the Oakland County Health Department; James McNeely, director of the Oakland County Office of Eco-I nomic Opportunity; Dr. D a n a Iwhitmer, chairman of the su- TRAINING PERIOD An eight-week training period beginning next Monday will consist of courses on the diagnosis and treatment of reading disabilities, patterns of reading instruction and lectures by specialists in psychology, speech and special education. The teacher ■pend part of each day in directed research and working with children who have been referred to Oakland Schools reading improvement services. Upon completion of the training program, the teachers would help develop pilot programs in their own school systems. perintendents’ committee on Title I; Fred l^th, president of the Oakland Schools Board of Education; Robert Taylor, pres-lident of Local 504, United Auto Workers Unim, and Dr. Wilfred Webb, chairman of the superintendents’ committee on Title III. The proposal for Title III was to be submitted by tomorrow to the U.S. Office of Education and the State Department of Public Instruction to be ^gible tar grants to be made the last two weeks in December. John A. Macdonald, chairman at the Oakland County Welfare Board since 1039, yesterday v^s reanwintod to a new three-year term by the County Board of Supervisors. New T#rm lor Welfcirt Unit Head Reapfyoirii County Officials torm as dog warden was Dr. Prank R. Bates, 10. His post pays $10,310. Present members of various boards and commissions also were reappointed. Macdonald, 77, was returned to the |U,S00 office by a unanimous voice vote M the board $0 a one-year JUNIOR MISS — James McIntosh, 21 Monroe, places a spotlight on Lynn Tarlton, 3285 Airport, Waterford Town-^ip, the winner of last year's Waleiford Towh^ Junior Miss contest, and Ronald Milbum, 379 Elizabeth Lake, Waterford Township, chairman of this year’s Jaycee^ponsored event. High school seniors attending school in Waterford Township are eligible for the contest. Hi0 finals will be held Dec. 11 at Waterford Kettering High School. Entry blanks can be obtained at township high schools. Named to new three-year terms on the planning commis-■e J. Robert Swanson, Ralph A. Main, Alexander C. Perinoff and Harlan Ritze. PUBLIC WORKS Delos Hamlin and Hpmer Case both were reappointed to three-year terms on the board of public works. Board members reappointed Elmer R. Johnson to tlMi Jury commission about 10 mMptes after he resigned the posf. to enter the competition for «the $3,500 per year board of motors post. _ ’• Whoa his bid was unwccess-fui, the board unanimously moved for his reinstatement on the jury commission. Named to three-year terms on the board of institutions were incumbents Charles B. Edwards Jr.; Maurice J. Croteau and Thomas H. O’Donag- Douglas H. Hoard was named jto a three-year term in the department of veterans affairs and Lyle Baker was appointed to A four-year term on the retirement commission. The supervisor s also reaffirmed the appointment of Corporation Counsel Robert P. Allen. This action is required by law every second year. DR. FRANK R. BATES FERNADO PENABEZ Children with poor reading ability would be identified for special instruction which could be given in their own c' rooms or in small groups. RESPONSIBILITY The trained resource teacher would be responsible for helping other teachers utilize the knowledge and materials being developed on the frontiers of educational research. Set Saturday Reading extension and progress, to be known as REAP, is the title of one of the two programs proposed specifically (or junior and senior high school students. Castro's Rise Topic of Ex-Cubon Lawyer An eye witness account of Fie-del Castro’s rise to power be delivered Saturday by former Havana attorney Fernando Pen-bez at an anti-C o m m u n i s t rally in the Pontiac Central REAP would require a teach- auditorium, er to meet twice weekly with' P "*• sman groups of EngHsh students fored by the Christian Cr^^ _— —------------- ;-----------the anti-Commumst ministry of Billy James Hargis. With headquarters in Tulsa, Okla. New Buildina ***"“****- I vv ganizatlon as a special advisor (^Valuation Up in Waterford The estimated cost of new con- -- -- -------i struction in Waterford Township Cuban-American affairs for the| last month topped valuation for National Committee during the same period in 1964 by al- election, most $300,000. ★ ★ ♦ The building department re-J" “is law port indicated that 131 permits were issued last month for con- o'- America’s struction valued at $969,400, far exceeding the October 1964 fig-u * ure of $6W,376. . broadcasts daily, by tape re- on Latin American affairs last November, served as a special assistant to vice presidential candidate William Miller during the Republican campaign. He was natinani chairman of Last month, 21 bansing permits were granted for con-stmetioB valued at $443,913. cording, over 110 stations in In addition, a permit was Issued for a $182,000 26-unit apartment building on Vooheis Road. Latin America. He Just Can't Help Appearing in Court Total estimated valuation was SIOUX CITY, Iowa WV-Glen^ $198,450 for the nine commer-H. ’Thompson, a county jaill cial building permits Issued. trusty, serving a term for va-PHn.iiiTT« 'grancy and intoxication, made, . .*7*® , „ an unscheduled courtroom ap-l Included are the Oakland pearance and landed in a ho*-County Credit Union building on Tele^aph, $60,000; an office ★ * * building on Elizabeth Uke He was sunning himself on ^d. ^000: a restaurant on the foot when he fell through Dixie Highway. $34,000; a serv- ^ skylight while a hearing was ice station at M59 and Pontiac progress. He dropped about Lake Road, $30,4100; and thre«i4o feet and landed on the floor aircraft slorige buildings at i„ front of the judge’s bench. i Pontiac Municipal Airport. $15,- I Clinical experiments on drug! I addicts with a new drug metha- ^ Total valuation of building per-1 done show encouraging results. | mits issued the first 10 months!’Those on this drug do not get this year is $12,925,082 compared the same satisfaction from her-with $9,040,841 for the same pe- oin. The results so far justify riod last year. 'further study. JUNK CARS WANTED USED AUTO PARTS FOR SALE FE 2-0200 ■ I eONTIAC SCUAP !■ The average size in men's suits is 40. •f Meet some of Osmun's average men. Take Charlie there, oh the left. Charlie makes life easy for Osmun’s tailors. Cuff the pants, half-inch off the sleeves, and Charlie’s got a suit that looks like it was made for him. ___ It was. Charlie’s a 40 ngulMT. Now, how about Ron, Al, Tom, BUiot,«nd you? Come to Osmun’s and look at the 40’s ... 40 regular, 40 long, 40 short, 40 axtra long, 40 portly short And look at the labels, too. Names like Eagle, Botany *500’, Petrocelli, Martinelli, etc. Combine Osmun’s lineup of America’s famous bwiBd names with our hu^ range of sizes, and you’ve got quite a combination. See for yourself . . . it’s way above average. a part ol Fontioe $tne» 1931 SMUN’S •TONES PON MEN A VOUN* MEN FREE PARKING at ALL STORES ■ Downtown Pontiac ■ TaLHiiron Center in Pontiac ■ Tech Plaxa Center in Warren Opwi Fri. A Men. til 9 Opsn IvSry Night'til 9 Open Every Night til 9 / THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1965 B—7 DISCOUNT PRKES PLUS VALUE STAMPS! TOP VALUE SAVE ON ALL HEALTH mcL BEAUTY AIDS KROGER! 4- _______ fisai ^ \ BLUE I HALO SHAMPOO..>!!t!.73* ‘ BEGULAR OR HARD TO HOLD - ADORN HAIR SPRAY CAN *||v3 HAIR SPRAY SUDDEN BEAUTY.'^i^69* PUSHBUTTOHRiGULAR ' LILT PERMANENT....:!?..!.!'* JOHHSOH BABY POWDER...H50* HAIR DRESSING BY BRYLCREEM MENHEN SKIN BRACER.____ .99* ?!»' FAMILY SIZE AKUiTm COLGATE REGUURHOME TONI PERMANENT..'.':;.!!*' GILLETTE STAINLESS STEEL RAZOR BLADES *■19 10-CT ■ PK6 ■ SCHICK INJECTOR RAZOR BLADES ,.e.W PKG PERSONNA STAINLESS STEEL RAZOR BLADES PK6 SCHICK STAINLESS STEEL RAZOR BLADES AO* PK6 PLEASANT TASTING MICRIN.ANJjSEPTIC EFFECTIYE CONTAC CAPSULESH?!** COUGH SYRUP T/,-OZ^^a VICK'S ”44’.!.........;:;..72« EFFECTIVE 3% VICK’S VAPORUB..r..79* FAST ACTING REGUUR OR HARD TO HOLD HAIR SPRAY ^ ^ . HIDDEN MAGIC....i'99* SUPER SPRAY^t OFF SECRET. DEODORANT can MZTUBE SHAMPOO ^ H«ad &Should«rc...69* S-OZJAR SHAMPOO Whbv H«ud & Sheuld«rs....!!^' SMAMfOO ^ HaadASheuldOTs.”!!** ^Sfr I PUII IB a M RENTER THE "PASSPORT TO BEAUTY” BAYER ASPIRIN....H:73* KROGER LOW PRICE _ _ . DRISTAN TABLETS.H.99* ANACIN TABLETS..H:B9* FOR HAIR GROOMING , SCORE 72' FOR COMPLETE PROTECTION ^ . MUM DEODORAHT.i»63* + FAMILY SIZE SWEEPSTAKES FIILST IHUKi] S-KEIMiXillHUiSUS • 110.000 CASH • An tll^xptnM paid trip for two to Naw York. Paria. and Roma. • AtSOOOwardrobowfnchyeuwfllao* Itct from'tho aalona of famous dasignars. • Atwe*davt|aautv:rsatmantatHatona RuOinaMin's in Now York. • *1.000 CASH I • An alNoxpsnas paid trip for two to | Now York. • A 11.000 wsrdroba of your own as-Itctlon from ths finait houaas of fashion. • A baauty traatmant at Halsna Rubmatain'a aaion m Now York. GLEEM TOOTHPASTE 63^-OZ TUBE i MHNi THiiui nmm a *25 * Baa»:ful You" Baauty Kits by Hsiana Rubinitsin. SEE OUN DISPLAY PON DETAILS W# roaorv* th§ rl0 fo limit ^uanllthi, Prlet$ and lfm$ •Ihetiv of Krogar In Oafro/f on«/ Eattnrn Mtch. thru Sot, Wov. 13, 7965. Mon* told fo c/aolar*. Copyright 7965 Tfc# Krogor Co. A TURN PAGE FOR KROGER lOW MEAT, GROCERY & PRODUCE PRICES 4 a- B—« THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 10, 1065 U.S. CHOICE _ CHUCK STEAK______________ 69< FROZEN All BEEF. CHOPPED, CUBED, SHAPED FAMILY STEAKS HYORADE'S TASTY WIENERS BALL BARK. I 69* KROGER *r BORDEN'S COTTAGE CHEESE ^SAVE 10 1-LB. CARTON BRISK FlAVORFUl KROGER 100 TEA BAGS C 19 V *^69 SAVE 20‘ HEINZ TOMATO SOUP TEllOW CLING SLICED OR HALVES HUNT'S PEACHES:-22‘ SLICED SWEET DOLE PINEAPPLE.S".^'! / DOLE BRAND KROGER BAKED CRA(KED,WHOLE.r WHEAT BREAD 2'^"39* SAVE 11 KfOGER SANDWICH OR Sandy doll DRESSED IN PLAY SUIT AND SHOES REG. ‘2.00 VALUE ONLY C EASY TO PREPARE>MARK>'S FROZEN LASAGNA.............wi. fko 75* sav^p to z^s^al i^ PINEAPPLE JUICE....3' •Qt. 14-Os. CANS THICK A FRESH TASTINO-CONTADINA TOMATO PASTE..............2 wt. cans 27* embassy brand waffle and FRESH FRUIT OOODI ______ _____________ WELCH'S GRAPELADE............mb. 4-ot jar 41* special label-kroger ,elbow GOES FURTHER-TASTES BETTER HEINZ WHITE VINEGAR..............pint btl 19* LUNCHEON TREATI PACKED FRESH TO STAY FRESH! SWIFT'S PREM ........ . . . 13-OZ. WT. CAN 45* VEC-AU BRAND TASTY MIXED VEGETABLES..............2 l u cans 39* MARSHBURN BRAND-FROZEN CRINKLE CUT CARROTS ... m i oz pro 29* STOUFFER'S FROZEN ROAST BEEF HASH............hh-oz wt pro 89* STOUFFER'S DELICIOUS FROZEN-ESCALIOPED CHICKEN & NOODLES. . . IIH-OZ. WT. PRO. 79* KING SIZE TIDE.. EMBASSY BRAND WAFFLE AND " ' PANCAKE SYRUP ‘vr39< .....2a34< MACARONI. SPECIAL LABEL FAB WITH BORAX it DELICIOUS TASTING MUELLER'S MEDIUM HOODLES NO COUPON NBCESSARYI SAVE 30* I ■ tm« coupon on any •!.»■ I SANDY ENSEMBIE I SANDY ENSEMBLE I i 69* I 99* i _ ValM at Rrapai Ihrv SMwfHay, Nav. 20 * VaHd at Rrapai rttrv Satw«4ay, Na*. M, * nw^aa par famHj^ ^IfAS. limtl an* MtiiBy. A RALSTON PURINA CAT FOOP 1-LB. 41OZ. PKO. CAT CHOW SP 4-lB. PKO. CAT CHOW 99* 1-lB. B-OZ. PKO. DAIRY OR ORAVY MNNIR 49* i-LB. S-OZ. PKO. SEANIP DINNER 45* FOR DEUCIOUS,NOURISHING MAIN DISHES TRY PILLAR ROCK RED SOCKEYE SALMON 7«|.0Z. WT. CAN 59' SO sTAMPSDSO STAMPSijSO STAMPS H 50 STAMPS WITH THIS COUPON ON II WITH THIS COUPON ON ANY 2 PROS. EMBASSY I PECAH OR i WALHUT MEATS ” ANY 2 JARS PICKLiS WITH THIS COUPON ON ANY TWO 1-lS. PKOS. I I4B. 9-01 PKO. COUNTRY OVM COUNTRY OVIH | ORAMI COOKIES CHDrOHURI i WAIRVT MEATS ^ I tOOMBB UlWPini LAM THE PONTIAC PRKSS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBljlR 10, 1965 HERE ARE A KW OF THE RECENT ''MAKE MONEY" WINNERS! Mri. M. Faderuk. 1229 CocKcux tMid, OrotM foint* Ml*. Nonnon Wihen^ 2)1800 Tw«lv« Mil* Rd., Soulhfidd Mary lou Sylv*tt*r, 20440 S*into Ro*o, 0*NdH Mary Sisk, 16438 Zioglar. Toylar Haul McCoy, 22315 Holstocid, Farmington Mr*. Oorothy Faacoo, 34660 Chop* FIcko, Mt. Clomons Blanch* McCabo, 2961 Corinlthlo, Rochostor Mr*. bonoM Wright, 19830 Shody Uno, St. Cloir Shoio* Mrs. Cora Soohnor, 1314 E. Twolv* Mil* Rd., Royal Ook Albort Gohinigor, 8145 Fifth St., Doxtor Connio Kazmitrtki, 555 Orchard, Wyondotto Juno MancuM, 15841 Losuro, Ootroit Mrs. J. VanOvelo, 20414 Caniff Dr., Mt. CUmons Mrs. Mina Cook, 3337 Coolidgo, Royal Ook Foorl Davit, 410 Fithor Rd., Grotto Point* Formt Mrs. Gloo Cook, 11553 Broodviow, MiHord YOUNG TENDER iWikiTING CHICKEN.. .49* leg O'LAMB PIAIN OR PIMENTO KRAFT'S VELVEETA CHEESE 2^79' ARMOUR STAR 79' CANNED HAM .. 10 ^<7** FROZEN BEEF, CHICKI^N OR TURKEY COUNTRY CLUB POT PIES 8^Z. PKO. 16 SAVE 4* KROGER BRAND PIE PUMPKIN........... HOMESTEAD QUARTERS MARGARINE....... 5^9* FROZEN BREAKFAST ORANGE DRINK ^ BIRDS EYE awake.3*'»^»»^1 CM AM BARS.ia-89< TWO FKOS. OF B BARS lABCi NESTLE MORSELS.k^38< FUVORFUl SMOOTH ^ HELLMANN'S MAYOflllAISE. MR 5^ SFfCIAl IABEI-9H" X Bli" 2 FIV PUFFS FACIAL TISSUE 200CT. FKO. REFRESHING N* NUTRITIOUS KROGER ORANGE JUICE ASSORTED VARIETIES KROGER CAKE MIXES 1-QT. 14«L CAN NABISCO SANDWICH COOKIBS OREO CREMES.......... . . . . IIOZ. WT. PKO. 39* OUT-TASTIS TNBM AU SUNSHINE KRISPY CRACKERS . i4s. pko. 28* C WHITI OR COIOREO-WITH 1000 SHEETS SCOTT TOILET TISSUE.......... 4 tout 49* V C lASY-TO-HANDlB SCOTT ■ W CUT-RITE PLASTIC WRAP .... .oo-rr rau 29* SCOTT CUT>RITB PUSTK SANDWICH BAGS............... to^. pko 29* PROZBN-WnH ONIONS OR CiURY BIRDS EYE PEAS ....... . . UMZ. WT. PKO. 29* BIRDS lYI FROZEN CRINKLE CUT POTATOES.. 2 mz. wt. fkoi. 35* VACUUM SEAUR) IN iUHEE SAUCE-BIEDS EYE FEOZEN PEAS OR CUT CORN..............looz. m. pko 29* ASSOETBD VAEITIES WHITENS .YOU* WASH CLOROX BLEACH............ h oauon am 34* ALUFURFOSE HOUSEHOlO CUANEE PINE-SCENTED LESTOli.. . l-PT. IMZ. STt 6T* KROGER ALL WHITE GRADE "A" LARGE EG6S 47 ALUMINUM COOKWARE IOVa'VFRY pan REG. *3.99 ONLY EUMINATES AU STARCHING PREPARATION JUST SPRAY, THEN IRON 15* OFF SPECIAL UBEL STA-FLO SPRAY STARCH 61' [ COUPON GOOD “J FOR iwm'MR twowkksi * “-‘•■fw tehwley, Mjw^W, ■ ANY FKO. IaNY 2 FKOS.COUNTRY OUtl 2 PKOL CUT-UP FRTIRS, |1 . PORR CHOPS OR I . WtIRERS OR | |p*oi PRTIR PARTS os 1^ I ^ Ml. I * koastimg chickins ■ B—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10. I960 World News Roundup British JFK Marker Defaced LONIXW » - The Runny-mede Memorial to President John F. Kennedy, dedicated last May by Queen Elisabeth II and Mrs. Kemedy, has become a target of vandals. M. J. Rogers, area agent for the National Trust, confirmed that hooligans have scratched names and initials on the stone and daubed it with mud and paint. The seven-ton rectangular stone rests in an acre given to the United States. Nearby, King John, seven centuries ago was forced to grant the Magna CarU, one of the fonn-dadons of Western liberties. In Washington, Rep. Bernard P. Grabowski, D - Conn., proposed special legislation to protect the memorial unless steps are taken in Britain. BANGKOK, nuiland ~ In- • for one-slop family shopping and saving' Portable Phonograph by Decca • Deluxe Four ^ed High Fidelity Automatic Portable • Solid State Amplifier • Battery or AC Operation This four speed automatic monaural solid state high fidelity portable AC/DC phonograph operates on 110/120 volts 60 cycle, AC current or 6-11^ volt batteries. U.L approved. It also has a shut off feature after the last record has played. For good sound you have one (1) 5-inch speaker one (1) ounce magnet. Cabinet is molded luggage type available in charcoal and red. Carrying weight is only 19 pounds. twnmiw I TEL-NUMK BRAYTON "CHARCen" AT KRESGE’S terior Minister Praphas Cham- I sathien said today the Thai gov- | emment foiled a Communist | plan to “create distuitances” during armed forces day cele- I brations Monday. Praphas said be placed all | security forces on the alert i soon as intelligence sources told ' him of the plot. ♦ ★ The alert still was in force today, Praphas told a news conference, but he did not elaborate on the Red plot. ■k it He also reported that two I Communist agents were killed in a gun Inttle with police last week in northeast Thailand near | the Laotian border. RANG(X»I, Burma - Floods I in northern Burma have killed 34 persons and driven 5,000 from their homes, press reports I said today. ★ ★ The Guardian said the Yame-thin District, 350 miles north of Rangoon, was hit hardest. With 12,000 acres of ride flooded, property damage was estimated at more than $1 million. GLASGOW, ScoUand ^ Andrew Quinn was sent to prison for life yesterday, the first murderer to be sentenced since Britain abolished the death penalty Quinn, 44, a brickyard worker, pleaded guilty to shooting his boss after bei^ fired. Postal Machine OKs Boy's Stampless Letter ANCHORAGE, Ky. -A I postal clerk looked at a letterj I with this address: k k “From Ben to his grandfath-|er. Evergreen Road 1, Box 92, I Anchorage, Ky.“ The chiid had drawn a picture in the comer where the stamp should have been affixed. But the postal clerk sent the letter through the cancding ntachine and it was ddivered without any difficulty. It had been written by 5-year-old Ben Siebert, of Fort Worth,| Tex. f tt- ^ ... Cumulative sales of whdesale 1 ftiercbants for “the first six months of 1965 totaled |94.7 bil-I lion, an increase of 8 per cent I over the similar period in 1964. OMns bottir thip old-fashlonod' granular claanaral use DEEP SEA BUBBLE—Physicist William the deepest parts of the ocean — and may M. McLean, who developed the Sidewinder be realty for first tests next summer. Mc- air-to-air missile, says this two-mah glass Lean serves at a Navy test station in Pasa- bubble is capable of diving to 36,000 feet — dena, Calif. Wf(C H 108 NORTH SAGINAW INTRODUCTORY PRE-HOUDAY VALUES! BRAND NEW EUREKA Polisher • Ult jm <• Soon 01 oftoo 01 *oy •iMuld.otoulbM yov hopod soar diryovoNiM • Bif ooorilit kroikoi clou oMorpotk 0 Spociol ro| MIp tots poo thompoo ro|t loo, wltkoot harsh terukUie or 19“ EUREKA UGHIWEIGHT CLEANER • rockod orith Iho llvatp tloaoiiii powtr that holpspou doM bottar hi loti lima. • SMopohonSooribat- wjitn.Cliomipmtr iMalt,aftorcklMfM, • Dislurbulator cleaning action • Special Sanitized* treated dust bag • Vinyl dust bag cover • Step-on toe switch • Adjustable 3-position handle • Soft-vinyl bumper • Rolls on 4 wheels • Only 6' high • Lifetime lubricated motor • All metal construction DELUXE Automatic Upright Vacuum Cleaner Money Back Guarantee Eurolu britifi you tlw Mduiivo now footuro that takao tho klnki out of vacuumini. Introduclni culusivo, pot-wted Vibri-Bcot Cloining Action CLEANS 3 TIMES AS . *'f-<»f'|;w^;yib(»-Boilori" shiko rut l«o«« sitd 4is-fodgeemboddiddin • A SmaU DoBOsit Noldt m Layaway UaW ChrMniat. Buy Now aad Sava • Ofou Tkatfc, Fti. and Moa. *W 9 pji. Imp Brictl Chock Iboio fMturw; ............ lubrieitod moior • Hau bmdi ind twiiti without broikini • DitpooiUo SMitizid* Iroatof duct bo| t Ooluxo 6- ^ pioeo tod ul • AN OilVO itool conttrudion. THE PONTIAC PKESS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 1965 B-11 Scotland Yard Gets Set to Move LoJjDON (AP) - Scotland Yard is moving soon, and somehow the world-famous police headquarters won’t be ' same.. AlthjBUgh the name Scotland Yard , is being retained, the police jsre leaving their strange old building, with its distinctive roundcfd comers, and moving into i 20-story block of glass and concrete in the nearby Victoria ^tion of London. : ir it it Under a new telephone dialing system Scotland Yard will lose its famous number Whitehall 1212. the new number will have only digits, something like 451211, The name Scotland Yard is traced to « legend that an area of land at Whitehall was known as SOotland because buildings there were set aside to accommodate the kings of Scotland when they visited London. POU(X HEADQUARTERS In 1129 a large house. No. 4 Whitehall Place, was taken over by Sir Robert Feel as headquarters for the police force. Hie men were soon speaking of their station by the name of the little street-Scotland Yard —which it faced. The name stuck. Curiously, Scotland Yard almost became a national opera house. In 1875 foundations for such a buildings were laid alongsida the police headquarters, but funds were lacking to c(Hnplete it. Sir Richard Pennefather, receiver for the Metropolitan Police, purchased the incomplete building in 1877. It was demoUiAied Norman Shaw,' one of the leading architects of the day, was commissioned to I design a police headquarters overlooking the Thames River. NEW OFFICES The commissioner of police and his staff moved into their HT oflioes in 1890 along with » Qrlmlnal I • - I Investigation De- the partment. The yard had really arrived. ■k * it Sco0ai4 ^ quarter! bf London's Metro-poUtaa Police but as iloy Sherlock Holmes fan knows, is best known for its detectives. The CID was set up in 1878 and today about 1,700 plain-clothes officers are engaged solely in crime investigation. Also boused at Scotland Yard Is the London branch of the international criminal police organization —Interpol — whid) keeps in touch with police forces throughout the world. Balloon Used in Heart Cases By Seieace Service REHOVOT, Israel - Doctors confronted by cases of heart failure often open the chest cavity and massage the heart by hand until the organ resumes its normal beat. A novel method has been devised by Israeli scientists to replace the surgeons hand with— a balloon. A balloon Is introdnced by means of a catheter into the cavity of the heari. Tha arterial system is then in-Hated and the expanding and ' contracting balloon replaces the surgeon’s hand in massaging the In this manner adequate quantities of blood are forced into the area where the failure Is occurring. FIRST RECORDED USE The first recorded use of a catheter took (dace in 1129. when Dr. Wemer Forssman opened a vein in Ms own arm, inserted the tip of a two and a half foot long catheter (a hollow flexible tube) and passed it up his arm vein until it reached the chamber of the heart, which was the target. ★ ★ ★ Si no e then the catheter method of readiing the heart by way of the veins has been used to cany drugs directly to the heart, to explore narrow passages and abnormal communication between heart chambers, to diagnose congenital heart disease and to carry out research on what is happening within the heart'*' -rf ar * Thf new method has not yet been tasted on human beinipi, but (tomonstrations on dogs have imUcatod that tt is faoaiUa Isr s well. DOWNTOWN PONTIAC TEL.HURON CINTIR DRAYTON PUINS OaiN SUNDAY l2reCa.m. ROCHESTER '‘BLOOMFIELD I PLAZA MIRACLE MILE | PONTIAC MALL OaiN SUNDAY i2H4a.iii SHOP WITHOUT CASH - "CHARGE IV AT KRESGE’S - PAY ONLY ONCE A MONTH B—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBEB 10, 1065 Wont Resist Dirksen Bid on Districting Plan, Says Mansfield .. . . ____* A. At.. t. ■ At. . « . ■ • t 1 ^ -» Aaa WASHINGTbN (AP) ~ Sen. Mike Mansfield said today be will not resist any effort to bring up in tiie Senate early next year a proposed constitutional amendment on state legislative reaih pbrtionment. * ★ * Mansfield, the Democratic leader, made it clear, however, he does not expect supporters to rally the required two-thirds majority for passage of an amend- ment which would overturn the Supreme Court’s one-num, one-vote ruling. The Moataaa senator spoke out in an interview after Senate Repnblican lei^ Everett M. Dirksen accused the Shh preme Court in a “Republican report” of charting a daager-oos coarse by holding that both houses of state legislatures must be apportioned on Dirksen said that adherence to the onaman, one-vote prin-d]de in this case “indicates either a basic misunderstanding of, or a blatant disregard for, the unique workings of our fed-earl system.” ■........ir.........."i * He noted that his proposed amendment would permit state voters to decide whether they wished one house of a legislature apportioned cm the basis of geography and political sub- With Democratic liberals leading the charge against it, the Senate shelved the amendment in the last sessioii after a 97-39 vieite^^^i^^ to yield the required two-thirds nujority. not end the story. final chapter has not been written,” he said. “The battle will be continuexl. The goal is to restore to the pec^e of the states the right of self-determination and by so doing to, restore balance within the fe>l-eral system. * * * “The question is not one of rural domination or urban domination or ethnic domination or any other type of domination. The issue, simfdy, is whether the peiqde of a state are to be allowed to determine for them- selves the manner in wbidt they would be governed.” GREATER OPPOSITION Mansfield said he thinks Opposition to the amendment will be even greater in the next session. He noted that many legislatures already have been reap-porti(med on a population basis. ★ ★ ★ “The question seenra to be somewhat moot at this point, with so maiqr states already having conformed to the court’s dictum,” he said. “Under these circumstances it would seem to me to be extremely difficult to get any constitutional amendment ratifled.” Motorist, 79, Killed MOUNT PLEASANT (AP)-Russell E. .Campbell, 79, of Mount Pleasant was killed Tuesday when his car and another auto collided on M20 west of hwe. Pancake Flour SUNI4YFIELD BRAND 2*^27* ANN PAGE —Pancake And Waffle SYRUP.. SPECIAL OFFER — A&P Vacuum Packed COfKE.. 2-4” Sperial Sale! ALLGOOD BRAND SLICED BACON 69* |29 I-LB. PKG. 2 LB. PKG. "SUPER-RIGHT" COUNTRY-STYLE Thick-Sliced Bacon "sum-aiGHr' mgkm Fancy Sliced Bacon «£■ #9* "Super-Right" Mature, Corn-Fed Beef CHUCK ROAST Center BLADE CUT ARM CUT................u 59* ENGLISH CUT ... >*^ 69* "SUPER-RIGHT" m Beef Chuck Steaks 09 "SUPER-RIGHT" SLICED A A Beef liver ..... -39 No Coupons, No EVERYDAY LOW PRICES marvel Club Crackers .... 39 CHILOaSNS' BUBBU lATH Ota iP« Mr. Bubble.............35* ■CTTY CaOCKIR—lOc OFF LABtL ^ Ke Crust Sticks ... 35 Sweet Peas . . . . 2 41 Stokely Com ... 4 Ow 44* 59* 59* 35* 27* 41* W.«OUS,U CHIM, --- I I ,j.S. Iir I I J ^ Sharp Ch«dd‘ 49* I-LB. I-OZ. CANS I HIT WT. F IS'/i-OZ. I ~ CANS NIT. WT. •-0Z. CANS Tomato Sonce . . 4 "M' 45* Mashed Potato Buds 69* •RTTY CROCKIR NIT WT OWm.. Mnsi^ Potato Buds 31 Oder Vinegar . . . . 37* HEINZ Whtte Vinegar .. . Vx? 27* HilNZ A 0% V Vegetarian Beans 2 ca'ns 27* WYUR'S A Parsley Flakes . . 37* Garlic Spread . . . T^ 37* FROZEH FOOD SALE ABrP Iraod — 0«r Finast QaalHy Peas, Peas & Carrots Cut CtMii, French Fries 2>%39^ Mlxtd Vtgtttbitt I 9 Fordhook or ^ ^ II 49‘ CHOCOLATI FUVORIO U.S. NO. 1 WESTERN Red Delicious Apples 113 SIZE, |Q‘!Sf‘59* Bananas • • 2»^25‘ Anion Pears 2 39‘ Spinoch 19‘ Hershoy's Syrup 2 ^ 39* Hl-C Orange Drink 3 89* KITCHIH CHARM 12” WIDI Waxed Paper 2'^ 39* 15c OFF LABEL Hidden INIngic Rufvlar or Extra Hold - ^7 FL_ Hair Spray ez. sin omiTea Bogs 100-79* ANN PAGE PUIN OR KRUNCHY Peanut Butter ® 59* ADP GRADE "A," Tomato Juice 4'<^'99* THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 10, 1963 B—13 Was 'Fox in Box' Freeloading Surfer? SAN FRANaSCO (AP) -The FBI says that a Berkeley, Cain, aurfer shipped himself in a box from Australia to California. •k ★ ★ y Assistant U.S. Atty. David Ur dan authorized issuance yesterday of a summons calling Richard Earl Fox, whose last know address was in Berkeley, to appear on stowaway charges Nov. 24. FBI agents said that Peter and Phillip Jackson told authorities in Sydney, An- stralia they pot Fox in a box and shipped him air freight to the United States. San Francisco airport em- Voters OK Bond Issue HAZEL PARK (AP) - Property owners here Tuesday approved a $2.2 million bond issue fbr a school building program 2,163-1,945, and a 3.5 millage increase for operation and maintenance 2,226-2,113. ployes noticed that the crate, shipped via (iantas Airways, was considerably lighter than its original weight and inside was scribbled a note: “Thanks for the ride. Dick the Fox.” The box had been shipped collect to a nonexistent address in San Francisco. Charges on the shipment — $447.54. This year marks the golden anniversary of the first transcontinental telephone across the United States. Student Cards to Salute-GIs LUBBOCK, Tex. (AP) - Residents of Men’s Dormitory No. I, housing 538 Texas Teclrstu-dents voted yesterday to send 5,000 Christmas cards to U.S. fighting men in Viet Nam. “Because of you,” the cards will read, “Americans breathe a little tiasier, sleep a little sounder and walk a little taller. Merry Christmas and Thanks.” Erhard Rejects DeGaulle Plan BONN (UPI) - CJiancellorl The 18-year-old chancellor Ludwig Erhard today rejected made only a passing and gen-to West Ger. ties with the United States and , ^ j demanded an end to “unjust” ^eaty of friend- NATO discrimination against *hip with France. But he de-West Germany. voted a major portion of an Erhard pledged to conUnuel par- the closest political and miliUry! to explain why he re- cooperation with the United Stat« while he denounced point-l «' ‘ ■ " ' * ^e Uid^ by-point French President Stotes; military - incinding ChaVles de Gaulle's plan for un- "ucleo^integration of NATO; year about 3.4 million ravelling European unification! ■“ ““ton of Europe, persons worked on farms for and replacing it with “old-fash-j De Gaulle is opposed to all cash wages or salary. , ioned” alliances. ithese ideas. Erhard outlined West G e r -many^s foreign policy alms for the next four years. NUCLEAR PLANS Of most immediate interest were his demands for nuclear partnership. Erhard intends to put these directly to T ‘ ‘ Johnson in Washington later this month. He will make these views clear to de Gaulle in Paris in January. „ “We have repeatedly declared' that we do not seek najtional. control over nuclear weapons*,” Erhard said. ★ ★ * “But we should not be denied all nuclear participation' just because we are a divided nation.” “The division of Germany is unjust. A second injustice must not be added to that by making it more difficult for us, who already do considerable for the Western Alliance, to defend ourselves from the obvious threats from the East,” Erhard said. KING OF ROASTS! "Super-RigM" Mdure. Coni>Fed Beef STANDING RIB ROAST FIRST 5 RIBS FIRST 3 RIBS 75i 79! 4th and 5th Ribs 60VIRNMINT INSNCTID, WHOLI Fresh Fryers . . . » 29' SWIFT'S PRIMIUM All-Meal Franks 59' HYGRADl'S WIST VIRGINIA lb Sliced Bacon • # 89^ Perch Fillets . . . i>49' -SUPtt-RIOHT BONILBS 189 A Cc '<>« or frying Delmonico Steaks .. “ ■ Beef Short Ribs... “ Salmon Steaks . .» 69' Just Quality Merchandise at Low Pricesl VtGtTA«« SHORTININC doxo 3 ^ 65' LABIL I H eaa 14,,^ ItORIN HOOO Flour 77* I aotmvFiui-* Flour • domino lox SUGAR f Cc 1-LB. PKG. I ^ UBHTorDARK BROWN SUGAR 1-LB. PKG. sm ON ami foods SULTANA IRAND 2-27< U CHOY—MIATUU Chop Suey U CHOY CHOW MIIN Ok urr wr Noodles 2 U CHOY MUSHROOM Chow Mein « »« U CHOY CHICKIN ^ Chow Mein « LA CHOY IIIF Chow Mein RI-PACK 2-LR. to-oz. CAN 32* 29* 79* 89* 89* Cherry Pie » 39* lAVI I0»-JAHI PARKIR l-LI. 1-OZ. RINO ' Angel Food Coke . . JANI PARKIR Vlfhob Wheat Bread iS* JANI PARKIR PUIN OR SUGARID V Homestyle Donats i JANi PARKIR DANISH PICAN RINO Coffee Coke i 6-PL OZ. CANS — 3 FOR 25c Pet Milk . . . = JANE PARKER OVER Wt FRUITS fr NUTS FRUIT CAKES Light latter B9 |49 2” 1 69 tBLF-aillNa-4t OFF LABIL AOP ORAOI ^ Pineapple Juke • eeeo# ANOIL SOFT 2-PLY i'/4"a9H" ^ Fodol TIssms ....... 3 49* WHOLI AND ULIT ' — ^ ^ Oasis Figs .5 ^ 99 Head and Shoulders Lafion Shampoo |19 NET WT. 6 FL OZ. EVERYDAY LOW PRICES INSTANT—25e OFP LAIIL urrwr Hills Bros ^ffee . . 1^' AUNT NaLII'S _ _ _ Sliced Beets . . . 2 39* Margarine.............42* Fruit Cocktail ... 3 »89* KYRA LARGI wit WT M Gloom Toothpaste VuV. 65 REGULAR OR SUPIR - _ Kotex Tampons ... 45* Baby Food . . . 10 ^^ 99* SAVI AT AGP . Dromedary Dates 29 CARNATION CHOCOLATI ..rr «^ Instant Breakfast 79* CARNATION CHOCOLATI MALT instant Breakfast IF 79 Famo Flour.......... ii* 48* ■iLv-aiiiNa-H. #FP LABEL m aa F«w Fhwr............. r* Pillsbury Biscuits 3 "v°r 29* Grape Juice . . . 3 v>i: 89* PIRSONAL SIZI - am cm Ivory Soap . . , . 4 33* GIANT SIZE ’ _ Oxydol----------... 79* SAVI AT AGP Spic & Span ..... 82* Ivory Snow .... 33* ...!S74‘ .. ^ 64* Sofognord Swp . 2 — 43* WASHDAY OITIRGINT ak A Joy Liquid ..... '?^ic80* .................. GIANT SIZI—10« OPF UIIL Cheer . . . . DiOOORANT—lATH SIZI B—14 THg PONTIAC BRESS, WEDNESDAY, XOVEMBER 10, 19M Royal Couple Bids LA Adieu Hie total U. S. popiilatkiB u of June I. 1^ was 193.M4.000 — an increaao of 1.8 cent over June IWi Ijps ANGBIJBS (AP) » Brlt-|Kaye,. Steve McQueen, Hock|roj^ty’h interest in the i Marpu^t wound! Hudsoh, Natalie Wood, Jean age^ w^ they_ stretched ftelr attention to a fuUscale model of Mariner 4, the cratt that televised 21 pictures of Mars to earth last Ju^. Lord Snowdon, a photographer by profession, questioned till a hectic tourist’s holiday in;seherg and her busbaild, vUt to the Callfomia Institute IpoKy Hollywood aad space- French author-diplomat Remain of *Technology’s Jet Propulsion craft centers today, then Gary, Shirley MacLaine, Qau-Laboratory, which has built abruptly changed pace, looking dia Cardinale, Gene Kelly, pro- such spacecraft as the Ranger,. , . _______ forward to a strictly private ducer Richaid Zanuck pnd the Mariner and the upcoming scientists closely and knowl-rest in the desert serenity of Sharman Douglas, the princess’ Surveyor. ledgeably, they said, on the Intri- Tucson, Ari*. [girlhood friend and guide for the The princess paid greatest'cacies of Mariner’s cameras. ’The princess and her hua-jU.S. tour, band, the Earl of Snowdon, end- ' ★ ♦ a ed their three-day visit ^herel The four-day stay in Tucson is with a tour of the new Los An-lbilled as absolutely private. The jjeles Music Center and a court- Snowdons will be guests of esy visit at City Hall with May-lsharman’s parents, former Ann-or Samuel W. Yorty. Ibassador to Great Britain Lewis i ★ * jDouglas and his wife on their| Prh*i^ Margaret . Was still 20(kicre ranch, taking Medkatiop foir laryngitis shft>eontracted during the frene-tio^pace she has maintained 8in^^b^nnihg her U.S. tour in San FrtRfcisco last Thuri MortCo«foHWMrln« FALSE TEETH HwtespteMMitwwtogSSgS.* loOM put* dlMSomnct. FA8TWm ner n thM odor broatb". Oot last Thursday. The royal visitors’ scheduM ly Mclud^d:, an iirly-eve-■ on at the GOLDWATER’S ON HAND-Barry Gold-water and his wife, Peggy, are show arriving at the Hollywood Paladium forUhe annual WAIF baU at which Britain’s Mkoss Margaret and her husband, the Earl of AP PktMox Snowdon, were honored guests. Goldwater is clearing the decks for a political comeback. He wants to represent Arizona again in the U. S. Senate. Foreign News Commentary ^dged Bril ' Sierrd ‘ her husband set the ci^rstone for a British motorcycle sales firni in Duarte, a few miles "awaiy. . —.................... BUFFET SUPPER The Snowdons bade Hollywood gbodby Tuesday night at Nigeria Getting Its Share ol Headlines a huffet supper given by Hollywood publicist Rupert Allen and Brig. Gen.; Frank McCarthy, a The Snowdons showed modem V^jihyxiation Blamad in 3 Detroit Deiqths^ DETROff^Jp) - Tfewom* en and a man were fouhd dead; in their aaM side flat Tuesdajjfcj The Wayne County mwiical e»v aminer said they had died of asphyxiation. The cause was! being investigated. I ★ ★ ★ The three victims, seen through a window by a nelghboTi, were identified tentatively as' Mrs. Ida Little, 70; Mrs. Carrie Robinson, 55, and Albert Mc-NeU, 70. Butterflies and moths formi one of the.largest orders of in-| film executive who was World sects. North America has about | By PHIL NEWSOM i program with $225 million in UPI Foreign News Analyst loans and grants. Back in October 1961, during I ADDED FUNDS a visit to the United States, the j Conservative Swiss and Dutch p r e m i e r of Western Nigeria, added their own Chief Samuel! A kin tola, marked with more than a I kernel of truth j that “in Africa today the good hoys attract I very little notice. It’s the bad boys who' get the headlines.” Looking back over the headlines of that time we see that Ghana’s P r e k i d e n t Kwanw Nkrumah was throwing his po- cratic party, litical opponents into jail, the Congo was in a total mess and President Oamal Abdel Nasser of the United Arab Republic just had broken relations with Syria. NEWSOM I private funds to investments in iNigerian cocoa, peanuts, sesame seed, oil and natural gas. ; But of late. Chief Akintola and Nigeria have been getting the kind of headlines they do i not want. PROPERTY DAMAGE Weekend headlines proclaimed “50 dead as strife grows in Nigeria.” , ★ * ★ Two of the dead were prominent members of Western Nigeria's ruling National Demo- „ ia, on the other hand, after jnst a year of independence already was a repotatioB for moderation. Not much more than a year ago, one newsman wrote of' PROPERTY DAMAGE Property damage from looting and arson ran to more than half a million dollars. It has been said of black Africa that no rnling party ever lost office through the . . she stands as a Western Nigeria, one of the four regions that make up the federation of Nigeria, proved no haven of stability in a increasing political turbulence.” | Because Nigeria was a “haven of stability,” the United States ^ agreed in November 1961 to ^ back her five-year development! election officials were canght with thousands of illegal ballot papers, ^llot boxes were found filled before the voting began. As violence mounted in the aftermath, rampaging Action Group supporters burned courthouses and attacked court officials. Newspaper offices were burned. As usual in such situations, the story is not without its ironies. DEMAND JUSTICE Leader of the Action Group which now demands justice is Chief Abafemi Awolowo. Awolowo cvrcsitly is serving a 16-year prbM sentence for plottinf ta ararthrow the central gove He and 17 victed of sending 200 recruits to nearby Ghana for guerrilla training and of importing large quantities of arms and explosives for a coup timed for September 1962. Akintola and Awolowo are old political rivals on the Western Nigerian political scene. s e r V e d as deputy leader of Amlowo’s Action Group until May 1962, .when the latter suddenly fired him from his, party job and demanded Iris removal as premier on charges managed also to form his own party War n aide to Gen. George C.I700 species of butterflies and Marshall. 'more than 7,000 species ofi Hie guest list included Danny [moths. ! DIXIE BUILDERS We Guarantee to Save You Money! lalt^HENS Attics FAMILY ROOMS REC. ROOMS GARAGES ALUMINUM SroiNC FREE r NO PAYMENT UNTIL APRIL 1966 ROOnNG, GUTTERS, ST^RM WINDOWS -GET TWO BIDS AND THEN CALL USt DIXIE GARAGE 5744 HIGHLAND ROAD M-S9 EAST OF AIRPORT RD. CONSTRUCTION COMPANY poifiuc OR4-0S71 uiS?6 SPARTAN tHIS WEEK ONLY! ISSnuemmm SNOWn RGBOUn WIDE, BJU TRACTION RW^ mm ’bourboM THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 10. 1965 TWO COLORS C—1 It’s A Pleasure To Shoo and Save At T SALES FOOD TOWN f PEOPLE'S SUPER MARKETS V FOOD MARKETS 1IN Hlgblaml R*MI I i2n laMwi^ Avt..l n» Cetity Laki Rd. I n» tMtako ium I i J «5 E. PIKE Sr. I 7M AUlURRST. I m ORCRARR LAUlffTI 1 THRU ■ *Om.WMk I I *0AYIA\«IK OPEN SUNDAr I OltN SUNDAY I OffNWNDAY DfptCt Mias These OutsUxnding Food Toivn-People*s Exciting Bargain Buys! 6 EXCITING WEEKS OF GOLD BELL VALUES GALORE-BUY NOW AND SAVE! Delicious... CfNTER CUT CHOPS HOT DOGS FIG BARS 29^ 2-Pound Pkg. ★ ★★★★★★ Pound Can U. CORRED BEEF BRISKETS u.;unR SAUSAGE PPTPD^Q H ' / ^Wa Assortod rlovors rCICKO 3-Ounce Pkg. S'LICED BOLiOGNft ■" ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ HART BRAND :0 AMERICAN iGHEHl ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ JELL-O TOMATO JUICE ★ ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★■A** COUNTRY KITCHEN BISCUITS w A C—I THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, m5 Ask Testimony of U-M Regent University-Microfilm Tie Is Eyed by Group State Probers Seek Answers on U-M Student Fee Hike LANSING (AP) -Eugene Power, University of Michigan regent, b being invited to explain the relationship between his University Microfilms and the U-M to a House subcommittee. Power will be invited to appear before the Higher Education subcommittee of the House Ways and Means Committee Dec. 8. said Chairman Jack Faxon, D-Detroit. The Michigan Daily, the U-M student newspaper, chargi ’ last month that Universif Microfilms has violated university copyright regulations in filming documents in the U-M library. A team of auditors from the auditor general’s office were checking the relationship between the firm and the university before the newspaper report was made, Faxon said. ' PROBE CONTINUES They are continuing ‘ their probe, he added, and the attorney general is being asked to investigate legal aspects of any possible conflict of interest. Auditor William Wood said the investigation so far showed no evidence of collusion. The university signs a contract with doctoral candidates to film their dissertations, charging them a $25 fee. It then turns the film over to the company, which sends copies to the Library of Congress. It also compiles indices and abstracts of doctoral theses in the U-M library and most other university libraries across the country. Filmed copies, indices and abstracts of the theses are s by the firm to interested indi-| viduals, companies and schools. | Before Power became regent, his firm signed the con-1 tracts with the doctoral candidates and collected the $25 fee, Wood said. LANSING (AP)-What b the .University of Michigan getting —or giving—for ite,$1.8 million student fee hike this year? That was to be the basic question posed by a legislative subcommittee to U-M officials Wednesday. Armed with an audit report prepared *by the auditor general department, the Higher Education subcommittee of the House Ways and Means Committee ilanned to ask the reasons for likes in tuition and dormitory "What important new service b the university initiating it could not have without the fee hike?" asked At Ballard, technical assistant to the Ways and Means Committee. SPECIFIC ANSWERS He said he did not expect university officials to be able to give immediate, specific answers to the question. ★ ★ ★ "The prime result of this investigation will be the subcommittee members will have a greater understanding of uni-1 veraity financing ami future budget requesb," he said. * The U-M Board of Regenb last July approved tuition hikes ranging from $5 to $100 a term for resident studenb. Rates were hiked $50 for outHif state studenb. Dormitory room and board fees abo were raised $50 per academic year. The charges now range from $895 to $1,010-the highest in the state in terms lof flat rate charges to students. No comparison has been made, however, with the quality and cost of services provided to the studenb for their money. EXPLANATION "We also want the university tp explain whether it knew, «t the time the increase was voted, that lb general fuiid balance was going to increase by $446,-to a total of $2.38 million at the start of the current fiscal year," Ballard said. "Was there any talk of ing some of thb balance to, defray the cosb that were used to' Justify the hike? he asked. ★ * , ^ At a subconimittee meeting Tuesday, he quoted Regent Eugene Power as saying the hikes were necessary to pay for so $2.7 million in “unmet needs. Tf the unmet needs came to $2.7 million, and the fee hikes bring in 41-$ million, why did the university ask the L^la-ture for $2.8 million to make it of the $900,000 dif- ferenoe between the two figures?" iBallard asked, adding: ‘LOGIC, CONTINUnr “There should be some logic, consbtance and continuity in such university requesb from year to year.” Rep. Jock Faxon, D-Detrolt, chairman of the subcommittee, said the full U-M picture probably would not be clear until a complete audit is performed. “It is due to start next June, and would take 30 men about six weeks to complete," he said. Four studenb were to present prepared sbtemeirts on their living cost problems, Faxon, said. They are Gaiy Cunningham, president of the Student Government Council; Bob Goy-er, chairman of the Graduate Student Council Housing Committee; Don Resnick, president of the U-M Student l^ployes Union, and Steve Daniels, a member of the Student Government Council. About 1,000 of West Germany’s 320,000 engineers are women. Army Center Asks for Help on Recruiting WARREN (APl^ — The U.S, Army Tank-Automotive Center, reporting a critical skilled-manpower shortage that could affect the American defense effort, asked the aid of Michigan colleges and universities Tuesday in the problem. Tank - Automotive Center of-ficiab invited more than two score representatives of about 20 educational institutions to a "recruitment" meeting designed to encourage job applicanb from talented young people. The milibry installation here is one of the nation’s top procurement centers. Col. William J. Durrenberger, commanding officer, told the! educators of a need for a “con-1 sbht influx" of new, young people to assure what he called the effective continuance of the military effort. ★ ★ ★ The nation's thriving economy was cited as part of the government’s problem in competing with private industry for workers. Donald H. Wittwer, t h e Center’s civilian personnel chief, termed this competition Defroil to Receive New Urban Cranf WASHINGTON (APl-A new kind of urban development' Ip-ant was announced Tuesday .ioT-Detroit_________________ The new Pepartment of Hous-; ing and Urban Development! said a $2,009,000 grant wilij finance two-third.s of the cost of' the city’s program of demolition of structures that are unsound or unfit for babibtion. The city’s program calls for. demolition of 1,435 structures as part of an over-all attack on blight. The city’s share of the cost is $1,004,500. Kentuckians Lose Assistance Benefits FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) -The State Department of Economic Security says about .500 Kentuckians lost their public assistance benefib in October-because of a 7 per cent increa.-e in Social Security payments vot-i ed by Congress. The department said 3,300 recipients of public assistance benefib received reduced monthly checks. THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10. 1965 C—3 * Guinea Claims Coup Smashed blotters Attempted to Overthrow President ABIDJAN, Ivory Coast (UPI) —The government of the West African republic of Guinea claimed today it has smashed a plot aimed at overthrowing President Sekou Toure. A government broadcast from , the governing Democratic party in Guinea oidered the arrest ol several coup plotters. The report followed recent indications of political trouble in Guinea. On Oct. 13, Toure talked to trade unionists about an antl-govemment plot and condemned what he called “counter-revolutionaries supported from abroad." ★ ★ ★ “Guinea will be able to force respect for its national sovereignty on those who want to trample on it," Toure said in the October address. He sale subversion was being organizet from abroad with marionettes and puppets in the service of inq>erialism in Africa." GOVERNMENT STATION Today’s broadcast on the plot was made by “The Voice of the Revolution," the official goV. emment station. It said a com-m it tee has been formed to “safeguard the revolution ac- Guinea is independent. Prior to 1958 is was the territory ol French Guinea in French West Africa. It is bounded by the Atlantic Ocean, Portuguese Guinea, Senegal, Mall, Ivory Coast, Liberia and Sierra Leone Toure has been president since Oct. 2, 1958. He was reelected for a'seven-year term on 15. 1961. Commuter Saw Death in Window CHICAGO (UPI) - Salesman Herbert Jones drove with his wife and daughter to the Illinois Central commuter station yesterday, kissed them good-% and bWded the train for the ride to work. Moments later the train pulled out and Jones unfolded his morning paper. After going a few blocks, the train stoppfsd. There had been an accident. A car had gone out of con trol, crashed through tho the path of the train. There was a Img delay. After 35 minutes, the wreckage , was cleared off the tracks and I the train started for downtown ' again. Jones glanced out the window as the train passed the crossing. ★ ★ ♦ The car in the accident was his own. At the next stop, he got off the train and raced back to the scene of the crash. There, he watched firemen pull his wife and daughter from the wreckage. ★ ★ ♦ His wife, Elinor, 46, was dead. His daughter, Kathryn, 10, was critically injured. ★ ★ * Police said Mrs. Jones was driving Kathryn to school when the accident occurred. Marriage Licenses DeraM Tuelc»r. IM Bdnt Swbtr* Onm. 7J1 IiMniin liaiMrt Frtttnborojgh, •Mdra KHiFlrlna, JW* AMn Taylor, Dofi BMChgrevo ind Ot%i ■ "aryon'wSnmiii, UnloB L«ko ond IM Faught, union Laka ^llly Milam, 7» LauniborY and AAarga C. Lavaring, m Lanoic William ToUon, S* k Thlrtla, Kaw Oardana, ^ICrnaiv'^lA^an Prandaw, Cam. • a iurllndama. Union Laka naan, Blmlngham and Joan ei^iark^ icwSS i “*“-aoiw m CaHIr-'- Jamaa Oraet, Birmingham i taeoa Cadingham, Troy Sir3s,SLr~ FMIIp Mack, LaIhroF Villa Sa < La la Cool, n Colllngawod ai Laanard ______ Saur, toulh LVan ^ Caudill, South iw m Mmt wrvfivn riwinp CMU Faculty, Superiors Exchange Charges Before State Senate Probers MOUNT PLEASANT (API-Five faculty members who were denied normal pay raises , attacked Central Michigan University administration at a Senate hearing Tuesday, ewe ..Their superiors then hit back at several of the dissident professors in a seven-hour series of charges and counterdiarges at the investigation of faculty-administration relationships. ★ ★ ★ ■ Climax of the hearing which began last spring will come next Tuesday, when CMU President Judson Foust takes the stand. * * ♦ The five professors each testified he was shocked at hot receiving tor the current academic year the routine pay raises which came with increased legislative appropriations. STALWART CRITICS Each had been an administration critic in the past and blamed this in part or in whole for the salary loss. Both academic and nonacademic reasons were used by administrators as factors in the pay raise denials. These were highlights from the mountain of ‘ testimony; w * * Asst. Psychology Prof. Dr. Thomas Smith said; “The present administration at CMU has faUed miserably. In the 4% years since I have been here, there have been student demonstrations about freedom of the press, faculty complaints to the old State Board of Education, resignation of a scholarly department head because of conflict with the administration, unwarranted and unjust denials of promotion, tenure, -and more recently, salary' increments, and, worst of all, departure by around 50 excellent university-type faculty.” BACKS DENIAL Dr. K. C. Pratt, chairman of the Psychology Department, said Smith was denied tenure and a raise because his “professional integrity" was ques- tioned and he had taken classes to a coffee break. Pratt also said Smith misrepresented his progress on a doctoral dissertation by claiming it was in the hands of a University of Wisconsin faculty committee when the committee said it was not. Smith said the committee had delayed, then asked for more work on the dissertation but that it had now been accepted and nominated for a national award. Associate Sociology Prof. Charles Westie told the com- mittee he had been denied his raise because he flunked "institutional usefulness” and “cordial cooperation” standards. ★ ♦ ★ Dean Cleon Richtmeyer of the School of Arts and Sciences said he agreed with the decision not to increase Westie’s pay. He said that in 1962 Westie showed “lack of courtesy and respect for his colleagues and lack of concern for problems” by resigning from a faculty committee just before it was to ,.on-sider an item Westie had asked the committee to discuss. - FAMILY DEPARTMENT STORES |SHOP SPARTAN 9:30 A.M. to 10 P.M. DAILY.. SUNDAY 12 NOON to 10 P.M. Corur of Dixie Highway aad Telegraph Road—IN PONTIAC ACRES OF FREE PARKING Be ttatst tVSi^ »fti> Iw ippiEsnittHO »I>TM & 2-«I. 1 A* Oxford Royal Mushrooms Our Favorite Peas Hunt's Tomato Sauce Dole Pineapple Juice Progresso Tomato Paste White Cloud 2-Ply ISSK Hershey Chocolate Syrup Koxy-Kitten Cat Food ' ^ _ I Live Vets Dog Food Regu Connors Kippered Snacks Ramona Sardines Pioce* & 2-o«. St«ni Wf.Caa Co* Wt.Caii Assorted Colors Liver Of Regulor 5Vi-o«. I f\* n.Cea Wt. Con Wt.Cee • Patio Roasts Skinless Franks mick &ISi JJ. 99* Book Matches Bab-0 Cleanser Borden's Moola-Koolo Martha's Flap-Stax Corn Muffin Mix Pork & Beans 10V2-OL FI. Can Chocolote Mortho't Umit 7w$ wHk Ct9ptm m PpfMite PI.8^0L Bolfles Pint Deposit Mel-O-Crust Bavarian Rye Bread 2-39* 15-ox. Wt. Can Stokalys Colonial Salt Red Cherries Paw Paw White Vinegar Premium Salad Mustard North American Franco American 1-fc. 10^. 10* 2Vi-ei. 1 n* Wt. M. • ^ frie$$ •fftefive thrw Saturday, Mat. 13, IMS. Wa rasarra tka riffcf fa fi Canned Milk - Save 13c! Steok Souee or Brown Grovy 15V4-OX. Wt. Can Circle Limit Twa wHk Caapaa aa Oppatita Papa ' INO COUPONS! NO Hygrade Potted Meat------- Red Kettle Noodle Soup Mix Butterfield Potato Sticks Hi "C" Drinks Jergens Facial Soap Assorted Fruit Flovors FI.Cee SIVE OVER S0‘ Canuina Impoitad Porealain China This Waak*s Spatial Each $5.00 - Purchasa Canuina Porealain CHINA White or Assorted White or Assorted For Children Adult—AAed. Of Herd While king Slic Shut Good Crisp Lock Top CHARMIN TISSUE PUFFS FACIAL TISSUE PepsodenI Toothbrush Pepsodent Toothbrush Pepsodent Toothpaste SANDWICH COOKIES Hekman Club Crackers 4-roll OQe Pack 00 200-ct. riCc 2-ply boK ZO .. 39- „ 69* 5-0*. Tuba / 0 .1 . • 1 1 i£59* . j, • . . , . ‘ ^39* Specie! Additivat MIRACLE WHI1E &69* tr*"' . ^ -“'•11^19 . K" -lb. CilOO - e l Canned Hams ^H Canned Hams 5 c- *4 Breakfast Links 63 4% -k. S^99 Sil89 Co«ifnr Kifeli.li Su,.r C»i*j IV CainMd Hom 3«“ *Z CmNad Ham 5«~ *4* Sliced Bacon #9^ fricM •ff0tthr$ ffcro SoTordoy, Nov. IS, 1965. W« rMom ffct Wfkf ft limit fwmtiflM. Special Label - Save 30c! Plus 100 Extra Gold Bell Stamps with the purchase of any Wendy Doll or Fashion Outfit KING SIZE wM CtoitM Itftw New Crop Sweet Juicy Plain Of Pimento SItM Bonnat SpkIoI Lobd Big Shot Special Label KRAFT'S VEIVEEIA MARGARINE CHOCOIATE SYRUP 3c£: 88* ’’cS-59* . .. f ■ OATS COEAL m7,*39* 50-ft. cc. Roll 00 In Heavy Syrup Heavy Duty Aluminum ROYAL PRINCE YAMS ALCOA WRAP 1-lb. 1-oz. 21c 25-ft. r o* Roll 07 ^ . Reg. or Drip CoffM CHASE & SANBORN Mb. $lSf Can 1 c-« TUB PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 196fl New Cookbooks Are Colorful BY JANET ODELL PmOu Pms Food Editor Today, let’s talk about books — cookbooks. First to come to our attention was Betty Crodcer’s latest book, “Dinner In a Dish.” Published bv the Golden Press, this is another spiral bound $1.96 cookbook. Like its companions, it has a wealth of appetizing pictures. The homemaker who loves casseroles because they are time-savers and economical will like this book. She will find a number of new and different ideas. He book also goes into ipiick maia counes, be they done in the oven, in a skillet or under the broDcr. There’s a section on hearty sandwiches, on leftovers and on soups. You'll also find a number of tips on food and cooking. Here's a sample of a casserole Aat's different; BOLOGNA BISCUIT BAKE V4 cup sliced onion 2 tablespoons shortening 2 tablespoons flour % teaspoon salt % teaspoon pepper 2 cups (1 lb. can) tomatoes % lb. bologna, cubed Y4 cup diced carrots, cooked and drained % cup green beans, cooked and drained Bologna biscuits Cook and stir onion in hot shortening until tender. Remove from heat. Blend in flour, and pepper. Cook over low heat, stirring until mixture ia bubbly. Remove from heat, k in tomatoes. Heat to saK newest Boil 1 mtainte. Add bologiia, carrots, and beans; return to boiling. Pour into 8x8x2 pan. Place in oven to keep hot while making bologna bisraits. Drop 8 or 9 tablespoons of biscuit dough on hot mixture. Bake 26-30 minutes in degree oven, or until biscuits are lightly browned. Makes 6 sert'ings. Botogna Biscuits 1 cup flour 1% teaspoon baking powder % teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons shortening V4 lb. bologna, cut into V4-inch cubes 'A cup milk Mix flour, baking powder and salt in bowl. Cut in shortening witii pastry blender until mixture looks like commeal. Stir in bologna cubes, then milk. VEGETABLE KNOW-HOW Better Homes and Gardens' addition to the cookbook shelf is a Vegetable Cook Book. Priced at $3.95, this is also picture pretty. From artichokes to turnips, there’s a batch of recipes for every vegetable. Beyond these, there are recipes for sauces, soups, salads and garnishes. Concinding the book is a section on canning and freezing. Behind it all is the famous test kitchen that has working with recipes (or decades. ★ ★ ♦ As a sample of what BH&G does with acorn squash, we offer you tills recipe. Glased Squash with Penny Soup, Stew Slice frankfurters into split pea or navy bean soup; or add to creamed potatoes for “penny stew.” Makes a quick, substantial dish that a child will finish in short order. Cut three acorn squash fai half lengthwise; remove seeds. Bake, cut side down in shallow pan at 350 degrees for 35 to 40 minutes or until amost tender. Turn cut side up; season. Fin cavities with two cups drained cooked or canned small onions and Vt cup broken wainnt meats. Melt % cup butter or margarine; add % cup molasses, V4 teaspoon salt and V4 teaspoon cinnamon. Spoon over squash and filling. Continue baking 15 to 20 minutes, or until squash is tender, bru^ng occasionally with sauce to glaze. Makes sen’ings. s/. Everyone in favor of rust free soft water say.................. Germans Cook With Caraway i pound sausage j tablespoons ins^t minced CARAWAY SAUERKRAUT SOUP - There are all kinds of good and satisfying things in Caraway Seed Sauerkraut Soup: Spa^ ribs, sauerkraut, sausage, sour cream. Carw-way seed gives this soup the final authentic Gennan flavor. Good cooks the world know the flavor fillip of a sprinkling of caraway seeds, ■ their _■ Iroma. Caraway’s fame as a spice is particuliu'ly widespread through North and Central Europe, the Balkans and the Near ^ast. In Austria, Hungary and Germany these little half-mooned ' . d sheds go ' meats, goulashes, breads, cookies and into vegetable dishes Caraway Seed Sauerkraut Soap 1 pound sauerkraut 1 pound spareribs, trim off (cess fat 4 cups (1-quart) watv Ml cup (H stick) butter or margarine V4 cup flour 1 teaspoon paprika 1 ■■ -% pound sausage) au" • ' % cup sour cream Simmer together in a covered kettle for 45 minutes, sauerkraut, spareribs and water. Melt butter or margarine in a 6quart saucepan. Blend in flour and cook over low heat H minute. Stir in paprika and caraway seed. Drain stock from sane^ to flour and butter mixture, stln^ constantly. Pick lenn meat from spareiib bones and Brown sausage, cut into Mi-inch pieces. Add. Stir in instant minced onion. Sinuner 15 minutes. Serve hot topped with a dollop of sour cream. Yield: I servings. I IkM M wrtM'. IdghtT light kai, who Hkot nifty watorT No ono. Thio it what RMkoa row Mortoo PoNoifs so woIcohio In high Iron eontont aroas, sacNos yonrt. PoNons anowor hath proM^ at onoo. Thoy-rochargo wator softonors, Just Uko Morton SaH Polloto do, and most offoctivoly romovo rust . PoHons eontain a spoeial patontod addithro that was indopondontly tostod and found most officiant for rust orsoftanorroehafBodudthj Pollons oliminatos tho nuisanco of rush stainod laundry, sinks, tubs and bowls. By controlling rust your softonor givos top porformanco,ro4uiros fowor sorvloo calls and has a longsr Ufa. Pollons work in aU softonors oxcopt tboso svith silica gd zooiKo. Got rid of rust and onjoy doar^ soft waton oay, ‘^I’d liko soma tostod, provod and patontad Morton Pollons, pioaso," whoa noxt i you soo your wator softonor saK doalor. Morton SaH Company. Cantor Gut SWISS ROUND STEAK All our boaf is cut from U. S. Gov't, inspoctod Motura Groin-Fad Staar Badf. r/RUMP ' ROAST Small Lean NilATf , AAEATY SPARERIBS V- M.O.., -V > STATE HEAT KING > M Ring or Chink ^ BOLOGNA 39 Skbihee IWT MfiS 43 TASTY ALL-BEEF HAMBURG DalUxa - Bonalass BEEF rSTEW STEAKS • Ribs • Clubs • “Butehor Boys” i Choice > Gbiquila BAMABAS OR ' Faney Red Enprem GMFES only Porkorhonso SnoWhUe . CHITTERLINGS 10 lbs. BUDGET SPECIALS 33 lliead BEEF LIVER Fancy BEEF QQ HEARTS QQ Short Ribs of Beef 33 ^33 FIQS FEET FORK NECKBONES 1 Slieod PORK LIVER CoKago QQ FORK STEAKilll 29 Pertirhoiti HOG UAWS . 33* PARK FRtf IN REAR HOFFMAN’S PONTIAC FREEZER FOODS, Inc. ■ ITAIl 0*VIV»O*4 •< OAJUAN* fACRINC QUALITY MEATS AND PBOOUCl AT WHOLESALE PRICES 526 N. PERRY ST. Wl RISliiVf THI RIOMT r( FE 2-ViOO THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 10, 1965 C—7 Cook Duckling Quarters in Sweel ’n'Sour Saute Regarded by peoples in the Far East as one of their great delicacies sweet ’n sour duciding prepared in the Oriental style provides a measure of elegance to make your dinner party a notable success. w * ★ Easy to prepare in trie skillet or roaster, oriental style duckling, served with hot or iced tea, is appropriate during any of the four seasons. Available all year in snper- Liquid Diets Can Have New Variations NEW YORK (UPI) - : calories per pound per d needed to maintain y weight, says a liquid i manufacturer. ★ i For instance fy^ou weigh 120 pounds, you I a 1300 calories daily to maint that weight. f makes these is for varying the serv' ice of i^e^uld diet food: B a cool day, heat a 10-I can of chocolate^oco-t liquid diet food ntfl lag hist not bollilw. rve wift cinnamon stick Bddler. - For pink frappe, mix a 10-ounce can of strawberry ' . ‘ ‘ diet food with % cup of pine* apple Juice. Freeze in ice trsy until almost Arm in Blend to frappe. ■k it * To make cherry cheer, pour Vt can of chilled cherry liquid diet food into a tall glass. Add Vt bottle of chilled lemon-lime dietetic carbonated beverage. market frozen meat display cases, dsckling is easy to prepare and serve. A high nutritkxis food, duckling can be served with an innumerable variety of accom-/ panying foods. Its versatilitif provides new opportunities/ to demonstrate your creative flair as a hostess. / H/ieaspoon ginger cup sugar tablespoons cornstarch 1 cup water % cup vinegar 1 small green pepper, cut in 1-inch squares M cup (1-inch pieces) green DUCKLING ORIENTAL STYLE - Frozen duckling is found in the store the year around, nils delicious fowl goes well with fruit which makes a sweet and sour sauce a natural accompaniment. Cook it in an electric skillet. Tomato wedges, optional Hot cooked rice Wash, drain and dry duckling quarters. Brown both sides of quarters in oil, turning as needed to brown evenly. Drain pineapple slices; save syrup. Add cup idneapple syrup, soy sauce, garlic, salt and ginger; mix and pour over duckling. Cover; cook slowly until duckling is tender, aiwut 1 to 1V« hours, turning once. Remove docklisig from pan. Draia sff excess fat Combine pan drippings. Cook, stirring il clear and New York Distributes Taxes 1b Local Units7 ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) - Tlte State Tax Department says it has distributed 16352,117 cities, counties and other gov-il units that levy a local sales or use tax. k k k Tile state collects the tax for lem along with its own 2 per cent levy and turns back the local share. The latest payment represents collections for Octo-bCT. U. S. to Sell Materials Reserve 4 pineapple sUces for, WASHINGTON (AP) — The garnishing; cut remaining slices,General Services Administra- Multiplicity of Teachers TRAVERSE CITY TAP) -Approximately 400 mathematics teachers of Northern and Central Michigan are expected to attend a meeting of the Michigan Council of Mathematics Teachers here Friday and Saturday. MixKheeses for ^caroni Mom/ will get a big hand whence bakes these for the kids. Pecan Cinnabars IH cups unsifted regular flour 2 tablespoons plus W cup sugar H teaspoon salt % cup butter or margarine Vt cup warm wafor 1 package active dry yeast 1 egg yolk V4 cup updiluted evaporated milk 1'.^ cups chopped pecans 1 teaspoon cinnamon In a large bowl, stir together the flour, 2 tablespoons sugar and the salt, Cut in butter until particles are fine. In a small bowl, dissolve the BMt in the water; add to flour linure along with egg yolk and evaporated milk. Mix well; cover. Refrigerate for 2 hours ’ overnight. Mix together the pecans, cup sugar cinnamon; sprinkle about V4 of the mixture over lightly floured board or prepared pastry cloth. Tarn out dough over pecan mixture on board; sprinkle both dough and a prepared stockinet-covered rolling pin with more of the pecan mix- i ci ture. Roll out dough to the rolling, sprinkling and folding slide or lift dough onto large! tomatoes taste partlcu- size of a small rectangle; process until all pecan mixture accompanied by a, --tag «r. Fold ends over dough. Repeat] by 8 inch rectangle. Carefully!cookie sheet. Cut into 24 bars. |rag«> vinegar. MOCHA FLUFF ALASKAS - Cut four slices of pound cake about one inch thick and place on baking sheet covered with heavy paper. Slice pint of chocolate ice cream into four slices and place on top of cake. Beat 3 egg whites with Vk teaspoon of salt until frothy. Gradually add U. cup sugar and teaspoon instant coffee, continuing to beat until stiff peaks form. Spread meringue completely over tops and sides of ice cream-covered cake. Bake at 450 degrees until lightly browned. Serve immediately. Makes 4 servings. into chunks. Add pineapple chunks, green pepper and grMn onion to sauce; hMt. Serveduckling on rice and top with sauce. Garnish with pineapple slices. Yield; 4 servings. tion has announced it wants to, sell about 33,552 pounds ofi chromium metal and about 20,-000 tons of chemical grade! chromite. Bids will be remved; on both materials until Dec. 6. Every dog begs for baixin. Now RED HEART announces B.ED I a NEW dog food with : “ '„"Tnit! Dogs can’t resist the taste. And it’s a complete food for -at no extra costi Now Red Heart has the three flavors dogs like best: new Bacon, plus Beef and Liver. , Every dog thrives on Beef t Liver, tool :oiyiPLETE m f'lr rinf?? Great NEW quick meal idea from America’s favorite— Broadcast Corned Beef Hash INDIVIDUAL SIZE MAKES 2 HASHBURQERS They’re taking the country by storm Hashburgers! made with Broadcast Corned Beef Hash So easy to do: Individual size-zip open and form into patties. Larger cans -remove both ends, slide hash out and slice. Brown both sides on lightly greased frying pan over moderate heat. Serve on buns aivd enjoy Broadcast Hashburgers. Delicious for the whole fam- ily; special treat for the kids; □ You'll want to serve Broadcast Hashburgers often because they are economical as well as appetite-appealing. Good reasons why people all over America are making Broadcast Hashburgers the new addition to their menu. □ And remember, only Broadcast Corned Beef Hash comes in three convenient sizes -one to suit every family’s need. delight your family with Broadcast Hashburgers tonight! 17388344 C—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NQVE^ER 10, 196g Jacoby on Bridge iTAIJM Og THE GRBEN BERgra ttrtohtaMoore By JACOBY ft SON Hie Jacobys discuss their artificial two no-trump response today: Jim: “I think we should make it very clear that i^en an ponent acts over tn openbig suit bid, the two no-l tru^ response reverts back to* oormaL” Oswald: “We also should make it clear that the same applies when you have passed originally.” Jim: “In both the iweceding situations you need to have a normal two no-trump bid at your disposal and can’t afford the luxury of an artificial one.’’ Oswald: “Today’s hand is a perfect example. South has passed 11 high card points and the sort hand that cries out for a Jump to two no-trump af- ter partner opens one spade in i third seat.” Jim: “If South happens to fool around with a twn dta^ mond bid, North will probably pass. In fact. It takes AAQJ83 V104 ♦ J09 ftAJS WB8T EAST A107 AS854 VAK883 T72 ♦ 82 ♦AKSd A7S82 AQ84 socnrH (i» AK2 VQJ86 ♦ Q1087 AK102 Both vulnerable Q—The Mddiiic boo bow Narlb Baal South Weal 2ft. Pom 2T Fan 34 Fan 44 Pan 44 Pan t Yoo; South, bold: V Astrological _ Oy tYDNSY OMARR "TM wiM THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1965 C—9 SlowRetarns^,€harges^hiudiyutajmex)fPhiHpphK^hction .MANILA (AP) - -n»e decUon l«ad of Sen. Ferdinand Marcos over incumbent President Diosdado Macapagai was clouded today by charges of ir-reguiarities and delays hi vote counting. Marcos, a war hero, in various unofficial tallies, was maintaining a lead of from votSs to 245,000 after 24 hours of counting. ★ ★ ★ But at that time only from 25 to 30 per cent of the vote had been unofficially reported and official Election Commission figures were insignificant. Sen. Jose P. Diokno, the legal troubleshooter of Marcos’ Na-cionalista party, told newsmen he would file a formal protest with the Election Commission if returns were not speeded up. U SILENT Election Commission officials admitted that 24 hours after the polls closed 11 of the 56 provinces in the Philippines had not been heard from at all. These included Macapagal’s home province of Pampanga where|completed. It would enable ei- were cast in Tuesday’s election raising nervousness in bothlwhere eight seats are at stake' *'**ij**^*'^ II* ^the official figure has notjcamps the personal rivalry islindicate the twd parties will could practically dictate his ma-jsignificant moment, with been announced by the Election Am,n..aK «i«. Ik k ‘ lenwgh votM 10 swing the Ilmr&iminiMioii. being Intensilied. Although elec.|break even. I It ,«! generelly oooceded "™ jority. Liberal party officials coun-results. tered Marcos charges with similar accusations that the Na-cionalista candidate was holding back vbtes in his home area of northern Luzon. ★ i Impartial observers said the hold^ back of votes in more or less controlled provinces could be critical in an -election as close and bitter as the one just Both sides were confidently predicting victory as the counting inched on. Perhaps significantly, however, the'Macapagai camp scaled down its original victory claim of a 400,000-vote majority to a more modest 250,-000. A Nacionalista spokesman, on the other hand, said Marcos would win by 300,000 to 400,000. More than eight million votes before the voting that this would “s"®' violence, the danp won’ be the closest national paign in Philippine history. It was also the dirtiest. With both candidates generally in agreement to maintain the Philippine’s pro-Westem and liberal economic policies, the campaign resolved around personal issues. ★ * ★ With the slowness of returns be over until the vote is known and accepted. This may now take two or three more days. The one fact to emerge from the totals so far is that the Philippine voter has reaffirmed his independence and lack of regard for party lines. 8 SEATS Results in the senatorial race In the vice-presidential race,, Macapagal’s running mate Sen. Gerardo Rokas was maintaining a clear lead over his opponent Fernando Lopez. This could result in a Nacionalista president and Liberal vice president. ★ ★ ★ The unofficial returns of the Philippine News Service, after hours of counting,' gave; Marcos 1,281,190, Macapagai 1,-;036.393. These included scat-j tered returns from all provinces 'but were heavily weighted by Icity votes. Divorces Grraldin* M. from Otorgt M. LtGiMct Sarah M. from Kannafh R. Ktilay Gaorgatfa S. from Richard D. MlMi Gall M. from Roterf B. CtMwril Loralna J. from Daniel J. Toolan from Shalon R. Bachman fmote NEW DODGE . CORONETS Twill be given i / AWAY TO LUCKY J f BIG 'D' SHOPPCRC! WILL BE GIVEN AWAY TO LUCKY BIG 'D' SHOPPERS 1 FAru \a;ffi^ cod I^C¥¥ N>aMr\ WINNERS! ^ C—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1963. Mel Tome Obtains Divorce LOS ANGELES (AP) -er Mel Torme and his wife, Ar-' lene, each have obtained a di-vorce decree, with Torme gaining custody of their 6-year-old son, Tracy. Torme, 40, charged cruelty and adultery. His wife, 35, accused him of cruelty and having tried to break down her front door. Mrs. Torme was granted alimony for three years. In the decree yesterday. Tonne woir custody of Tracy until at least the end of the school year. Custody arrangements are Sing- subject to review next June 20 when Mrs. Torme may gain custody of the boy. The couple’s home in Beverly Hills was ordered sold to liquidate debts against their community property. Preliminary success in removing cancerous bladder lining, allowing a healthy new lining to grow, has led a urologist to predict similar success with bowel segments, thus doing away with a lifetime need for colostomy bags by cancer patients. Marlene Took Big 'Ribbing' SYDNEY, Australia Marlene Dietrich — with two of her ribs broken by enthusistic hugs by fans — performed as usual ^ at the Royal Theater. * ★ ★ llie glamorous grandmother said her chest felt sore after the hugging outside the theater on Monday night. Xrays yesterday showed the rib fractures. She told Ray Castle, a Sydney colunmist, that the injury bothered her only when she laughed. Apple Growers Lament:1^6^PiGkers LANSING (UPI) - Michigan apple growers lost at least $l.f million this year because they were unable to pick the fruit before it fell from the trees, according to observers of the industry. APPLE GROWERS Ro^rt Braden of the Michigan %rm Bureau estimated between two and three million bushels of apples went unpicked this year. . He blamed the situation primarily on a lack of “competent” pickers. Ole Pynnonen, director of ^5 Grower Service for the Apple ion, termed the $1.5-million loss estimate “very conservative.” ★ ★ ★ He blamed both a shortage of experienced labor and heavy rain during the harvest season for the apple loss. HARD FREEZE Both experts said most of the| 3,000 Michigan apple growers | found a large percentage of, their fruit on the ground after] the hard freeze of Oct. 28. Apples take from the ground are sold for Juice at between 80 cenU and $1.54 per bushel less than apples har^ vested from the trees, they said. Estimates of the apple crop this season range from eight million to 12 million bushels, I compared to the 16 million bush-lels harvested in 1964. Braden and ^nnonen said re-[strictions on migrant labor from Mexico, Canada and ^erto Rico cut into the number of pickers usually available. The high rate of industrial em-| ployment and higher wages offered to migrants, by California growers also cut into Michigan’s labor force, they said. Growers’ profits were further trimmed by an increase in the price of labor from si normal of about 29 cents per bushel to as high as 31 cents a bushel this year, Pynnonen said. "This was one of the worst harvest years in a long time,” he added. Pynnonen said the losses due to inexperienced labor plus work hours lost because of rain during the harvest season, from Labor Day to Nov. 1, more than offset a slight rise in the prices paid by processors for apples. LOWER HARVEST Braden said most growers usually could count on a few migrant workers able to harvest about 100 bushels of apples a day. But this year, most growers reported the average laborer brought in only 30 to 40 bushels a day, he said. SEE HOW YOU SAVE! yAVAWMK NOetTUBNIOmiS Buuch-Nut Stroinud Favoritu Flavors Porfoctly Prosorvod in Glass 4ft BABY FOOD |Top Treat PopiS" \ 3^25 ■tillside Rich Creamery |||||PP0 Butter...... .aOO Parkay Rich, Deal |Hp O Margarine Batty Crocker Sweet or Buttermilk |HW C Biscuits.......... Philadelphia Tasty |.q2. Cream CheoMA# }elicieus Pumpkin er Mince H|Pi^ Pet RHz PIm25 lanquet Frozen Beef, Chicken, Turkey Pot Pies.....'i?/19 Swans Down Assorted Cake Mixes '^ 21 c IVfRYDAr I Natce With Thaf Sun-Up Flavor COFFEE] S$129 ^ ■ ivHro, ■ UMW Pineopplo-Grapefruit dole ^imci DRINK. 2S I Tender Green Giant Com j NIBLETS BvaevoAv .ss. leci 12-OZ. ■ CAN ■ ftwchi . United Dairies Rich HALF 'N HALF .. .„1V ivBmAv Top Treat Assorted Flcnrers J ICE CREAM (0^ Oil 1 HAWAIIAN jmmmc ,5^" zf I PUNCH ’^ 2V Purchase ■while they_ LAST/^ SIDE II ITIVI umwci. TW SMW Wmm IOIICI tonil......Im l»HI SMM . r.. t* ( Rmt • Wakt Mill SNMiWS. ^ . ^ImIFhIW V ■Uiy CRSI INI HIMT . . . Cm’I Itf SiW \ •MH IIT........Im S«ra, («• la lailiif Taa \ UmilSflllMM. . . WSaalfcaSaa IHMI lOtllUNITt....laai ' Caam Oal riTTI IlSl Ika Sraaa lataat af iaaiaw HM lataat llVi Cllll IIVI .... Cat’l Taa taa tka't Mlaa Mr^S|^ircEe?8ChoicrTirox^ Crinkle Cut FRENCH \9-OZ. \PKO, IIES VBeVOAVi lOW Lfauid Vei.'T‘________£s43‘ owe FUN OATH VJA Seoky ....... 59* FUSTIC UNOMncN OAOS jmw Baggies................. DIV-.OIA1 FACX Action Bleach.. . . wr£,59* Mno ANO OMMSMINO-OIAl FACK a_ » Pelmeiive Seep. 4w;47 DBOOMANT SOAF lie# Vd Beauty Bor.. . z 18 BOODOBANT SOAF Polmelhre Cold.. FOB lAUNOBY-OIAl FACK Ajox Detergent. .. AU FUIFOSI UQUW~MAiTaCK Ajax Cleaner.... FOB Fiobi ANO WAUS-OMt FACK Ajax Cleaner.... OBAl FACK-USV SCOURINO WITH Ajax Cleanser... DBAl FACK-WNITI, BRMHT WAINIS WIIN Fnb Dptergent... t-lB. I l-Ot • WT. CAN i THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1965 C—11 Russia, U.S. Conspiring—China LONDON (UPI) — Communist China today accused the Soviet leaderahip of collaborating with the United States on Viet Nam policy. Crash Injury Fatal MARNE (AP) _____________ Henry Roth, 83, of Marne died Tues^ at a nursing home where he was admitted June 10 with injuries suffered in a two< car crash on 1-96 in Ottawa County Just west of the Kent County line. The denunciation was titled 'refutation the new leaders of the Conununist party of the Soviet Union." It was broadcast by the of-fktat New China News Agency in a dispatch monitored here. Ihe broadcast said the article woold be pabiished tomorrow in the official newspapers of the Chinese Communist party and government The article accused the leaders of the Soviet Union of the same crimes for which Peking had repeatedly and bitterly at- tacked, former Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev. WWW The Kremlin leaders, China charged today, are t r y i n g to push collaboration with the United States “for the domination of the world." It said the Soviets were “serving U. S. imperialism by making minor attacks in words, but rendering major help in deeds. The value of work done in the missile and space vehicle industry in 1963 totaled 13.9 bil or double the 1958 figure. SlriveJoMSlrikel at Greenville Plant GREENVILLE (AP) - Negotiators worked for eight hours Tuesday in the effort to settle the week-old strike at Gibson Refrigerator Division of Hupp C!orp. The talks resume today. ★ * , * Economic issues stand in the way of a settlement. The company has offered a 33 cents an hour package covering wages and other items and the union has demanded 49 cents. Average hourly pay is about $2.28. Expect Wilson Rhodesia Action LONDON (UPI) - Prime Minister Harold Wilson was expected to reach a decision today on further proposals for a meeting with Rhodesian Premier Ian Smith on the independence deadlock. Wilson called a meeting of his j cabinet fw later this morning to discuss the crisis. He also p 1 a n ae d to meet with Rhodesian Chief Justice Sir Hugh Beadle, who flew to London yesterday on his own initiative in hopes a solution The 60-year-old chief justice, it was hoped, could help forestall a final breakdown between Britain and Rhodesia on Smith’s announced intention to issue ajdesia, one acceptable to all res-unilateral declaration of independence. Prosecutor Named SOUTH HAVEN (AP) - Don-aid M. Goodwillie Jr., 26, attorney son of a former South Haven mayor, Tuesday was named Van Buren County prosecute. He succeeds Horace Adams, who has resigned effective Jan. 1 to devote full-time to private practice. Beadle made the trip in defiance of Smith, whose white-ruled government governs 220, idents - black and white. Wilson spoke to Parliament after the Queen and said he hoped the meeUng with Beadle could help the ^nse situation. Smith said in Salisbury Wil-white residents and four!son’s hopes of a new meeting million black Africans. , ^^^e “interesting.” CROWN ADDRESS | ★ ★ ★ Queen Elizabeth II, in a crown | Britain insists that the black address opening Parliament yes-i Africans of Rhodesia be given terday, pledged Britain’s “un-> majority rule if independence is remitting efforts” to bring about granted. Smith wants continued la peaceful settlement in Rho-white control by the minority. SEE HOW YOU SAVE D«l Monte Rich Flaverful Catsup........5 Franco-Amoricon in Tomato Souco Spaghetti... Ocoan Spray Whole or Jellied Cranberry s.«?21 Del Monte Slices or Halves in Syrup ^Hj ^ Peaches ....'£■ 24 Gold Modal All Purpose Mjjjk Flour 5^49 Royal Assorted Delicious ||H|| i Gelatin....... Soft Facial Tissues Scotties..... .?19 KraH's Famous Salad Dressing Miracle Whip4o Macaroni and Choose ||H| I Kraft Dinner.’:^l5 For Tastier Bisquick.... ^ 29 BITER HIB FA88I SUBGIVnUEl MAGIC iY $|I9 0MH§0 BY ' Ihidoin magic tPKAV •T PfIltI e SIMM CAIN •%%m WAADROM Lk lXPlNSIft#AlO fAlP FOR two TG VI II • TWO OAV RIAUTV TRIAIMlNt AT Mllll IIM OtNiR IRCIIMIG ARt/ll SAVE MONEY ON HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS S9‘ SU OUK DISPLAY FOP SWiiPSTAKlS Of rAttS* WC AOUIT sn. ITIMDV PepsodentTMihbrMih.. A A ^ MMHV an... mivints cavitos 2 A c 07 PepsodentTMriieMter:^ 09 M NMININI SANITASV 23 Ferns Nopkins . . 33* OMiciout INSTANT comi-MAi racK am . BMuua SIZI Chase & Sanborn. ,’iS o4 Kotex Napkins.. “55T Heinz Ketchup ... 'tS' 21 Delsey Tissue... 2 21 "ua^Yptn i|i^- voue MAit sSAsaiM Amt A SHAMPOO Prince Yams..... 17. Prell Shampoo..". .’s77 Kleenex Tissue... DWONm, NAN0-940U PKO. Kleenex Towels .. TABU-AStOtTW COIOtS Kleenex Napkins. OSUCKMIS INSTANT COPHI^Al PACK THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 10, 1965 luSicel)eparfment CourftfforfDerd^^^ Hearing WASHINGTON (AP) - Two administration drives in the courts and in the Congress aimed at checking civil rights violence have collided after a miK-up. in signals — derailing the House hearings on the Ku Klux Klan. ♦ * ★ Trying to build up to a climax before recessing until next year, the House Committee on Un-American Activities pianned to flash the spotlight on the 1964 nightrider murder of Negro educator Lemuel Penn. In so doing, the committee thought it had the green light from the Justice Department to question Klansmen who chairman Eldwin E. Willis, D-La., said were “involved in the killing” of Penn. It had subpoenaed Klansmen from the Athens, Ga., area, including J. Howard Sims and Cecil Myers, who had been accused of the slaying but freed by a Georgia state court. IN HEARING ROOM Sims and Myers were waiting in the jwaring room to testify Tuesday when the green light suddenly turned to r^. Amid surprise and consternation, a meeting was hurriedly called by Willis to change plans after a weekend letter from Atty. Gen. Nicholas Katzenbach asl^g the committee not to delve into the Penn case at this time. ★ ★ ★ What had happened was that the Justice Department was asking the Supreme Court Tuesday to revive federal felony indict- ments in the Penn case and in the slaying (rf three civil rights workers near Philadelphia, Miss., in 1964. Katzenbach was afraid the congressional hearings cotild prejudice further court hearing and the committee agreed to go along with his request. CALLS RECESS Willis dismissed the Klansmen from the Athens, Ga^, area until Jan. 4 and recessed the hearing “until further call of the chair.” In the 12 days of public hear- ings that began last month, the committee has piled up 1,400 pages of testimony from 52 witnesses — much of it Fifth Amendment pleadings by Klan officials. ★ ★ ★ But all the members of the committee — technically sitting as a subcommittee — have expressed satisfaction with the way things have‘gone so far. In summing up Tuesday, Willis said the investigation had shown various Klansmen and their leaders fudging on taxes and Klan finai^, using front names for klavems, carrying weapons, learning how to make fire bombs and other tactics of terrorism, of enrolling former cinvlcts and setting up secret organizations such as the Vigilantes “for carrying^ut acts of violence or terrorism.” WWW “The Federal Communications Commission has undertaken a study of the misuse of citizen band radios, and I ani sure other agencies ... will want to take action as a result of some of the facts develop by the committee," Willis i Enrollment Up4n N. Y. ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) - Enrollment of full-time students in the State University is up 16.S per cent frmn last fall to a record total of 107,701, the university says. Registration in September 1964 showed a total full-time student population of 92,226 on the university’s 51 campuses. Big 'D' Holiday Poultry I Now at Big 'D' Foods 2 fine brands of a new breed of I scientifically developed turkeys. ELMWOOD FARMS I BUTTERGOLO BRAND and HONEYSUCKLE WHITE... Priirie quality turkeys with a higher ratio of meat per pound... fed and raised under exacting scientific standards to give ^ you more meat than ever before—and most of it white I meat, much more tender than most turkeys too. They're I processed in "Kitchen-Clean" U.S. Government Inspected I plants at the peak of perfection... to assure all "Turkey I Lovers" the most perfect flavorful turkey you ever tasted! I 10 LBS. AND I LARGER I I SO-FRESH BRAND Grade 'A' Turkeys are young and tender. Grown ond selected from the finest flocks in the " northern growing areos. All are processed at the peak of * I perfection... Government Inspected Grade 'A' to assure I I your family a fine quality turkey at the lowest price! | I Broad-breasted, delicate, tender-tasting white meat., I plump and meaty, rich flovorful dark medt. Order your. turkey now at Big 'D' Food Stores! For the finest selection ...see your Big 'D' Meat Manager now and order yours* I today! Every turkey is guaranteed at Big 'D'! ECONOMY YOU GET A CHOICE AT BIG D 20 TO 22 LBS. AVG. LB. Young Tender Gov t Inspected Hen Turkeys -F39 Youh9 S«lttvill« Grad* 'A' -■Turkeys. . . u 49‘! H Hortwig SenvIaM \Turkey Rolls. 89' -■ Fish Steaks. Sa Froali Ocean % Perch Fillets. 49 Se Freeh Grade 'A' Ducks ..... 49' Armewr Star Stuffed Turkeys.. . .59' Singleten'i Femevi Breaded Shrimp. . . .K5 »r*l Fely Bog Peeled & Deveined Shrimp . . .'i? * Valoe-Wey Trimmed Tender Slade Cut CHUCK STEAK . -r 59‘ Value-Way Trimmed Sheulder Col Sound . SWISS STEAK . 69' ■t^59‘ Uan Pro-Diced S Uan OrieHe Free Stew Beef.. e. 79* < Cube Steaks ». 99 Fresh Lean All Beef 3!^^ Hamburgerl 39 I Farm Fresh Gov't. Inspected Whole LB. 3-lEGGED FRYERS . 10c FRYER DRUMSTICKS. . ... 59« Fully Cooked Hickory Smoked HAM ^Quolity-Rite Semi-BoneU** Fully Cooked Homs. Loan Com-Coontry Pork ■ Pork Chops..................w69*| MKH. ORAOi I SKINUSS »||g Hilliidt Frookf .... w 3“ fwm s FMMIUM SBctd BocoU 0 • 0 * * » ■^ NVOtAM'S TASTY W ||( BoN Fork Fnmkt. * • » oonom wwt uw nm BrooktosISoesos. . . 'Y f o o Rib HoH of KOtNACKI MICM. OIAOI I m — , SRced Beltfiio . 49 MICH. OtAOl I A|||. Komockl Fronkf • . • » 49 HIUSIM MICM. OSAO* 1 _ jr ||- PIM.ISH SABSAH . . . . 09 MtCKIIBIMV SMOKIB OB FSBW , LhrtrSousofo . . . . » ■t HHIsid* Hickory SmokocI SHc^ Bocon.. u>. ^ '-I THE PONTIAC PREiSS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10. 1965 There s Even Terror in Silence of Viet Jungle Thun., Fri., Sat. I Sun. ByTOMTIEDE PLBI ME, Viet Nam (NEA)-Every foxhole, it seemed held a deca^ body and the air stank of the enemy dead left to rot in the sun. Some had crawled out of their pits wily to die steps away, their faces frozen with horror, their bodies punctured and burned. Others had escaped. But to where? For days, the Viet Cong had harassed tUs area with death and damaatien. Then they disappeared into the Jungle beyond. Were they still there? We had to ki^. So elements of the First Cavalry Division went searching. I tagged along. Down from the perimeter wire we moved, this forenoon, to the floor of the forest. Each man walked on eggs, the Cong always leave booby traps to tect their retreat and this was no exception. “Hey,” a G.I. bellowed, “you think LBJ toows I*m here?” “What’s your name?” I grinned. “Peterson, Richard,” he said. “Sumter, 8.C." ---------- —* K he knows or nrt, WAR.SCARRED AREA - The silent-seeming Viet Nam ♦ III.I »* "** * *** “*"■*<* battered by Incessant warfare, is filled ..T.***?: u , . with traps set for the unwary. Most of the snares are put a r^*^em^*’alro " ™ by the Viet Cong teitorists --- iHinei, booby traps, -^Iwt The point men blazed trails in several directions. Orders were for the rest to use the footprints of the guy In front. It was slow moving, and un- marked trail can mean being lost in tangled depths, losing all sense of direction and succumbing to panic. eventful. No sniper fire, fewi An hour out, I saw some-boobies, nary a dead V.C. thing silvery off in the under-chained to his machine gun asl brush and left the column to had been the rumor. I Investigate. It turned out to be Sukarno Lifts Restrictions in Jakarta JAKARTA (UPI) - President Sukarno today lifted the state of war in Jakarta and relaxed the curfew imposed after the Oct. 1 Communist coup attenq)t. An army spokesman said the action was tainn because of improved security in the city. The decision was broadcast by Radio Jakarta but there was no Indication if control now reverted to civilian authorities or stayed in the hands of the army. 11m order came J after about 1N,M swarmed to a rally in central Jakarta to demand abolition the communist party and Imposition of a nationwide state of war until all supporters of the coup attempt were cleaned out of public office. Defense Minister Gen. Abdul Haris Nasution issued a statement denouncing unnamed persons who had spread “slanders” that the military was plotting to depose Sukarno prior to the abortive revolt and was in league with the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency. This was interpreted as a slap at Foreign Minister Subandrio, whose “central intelligence body” is being privately blamed by the army for feeding such reports to Sukarno. * ★ ■ ★ Subandrio himself spent an hour with Communist Chinese Ambassador Tao Chung Ming this morning and said afterward th^ had agreed that trade relations between the two countries could be maintained despite the current political trouble between them. only a shell casing and I sat down to drown my disappoin^ ment with warm canteen water. I rested for minutes before realizing that everything had grown ^et Only the breeze and damn little of that — w stirring. My outfit had disappeared. I was alone. I began to sweat. Getting up, I stumbled back to the trail only it, too, had evaporated in the oven of silence. I could see only trees, bent and broken trees, the leaves of which were charred and wrinkled from a hundred bombings. ★ * * My tongue dropped all the way to my stomach with a thud. I was lost in Viet Cong country. Frightened silly, naturally. began to blindly push through the tangle in search of the path. I tripped over vines, branches, roots, logs . . . Logs? Earlier in the day a sergeant had found a log crammed full gie. of explosives. “Good God,” I I picked up my fallen jaw and thought. i followed. tJunior Editors Quiz on— KON-TIKI ■qU/CTO^______________________ . DIRECTION OF ^ ISLANDS VOYAGE THE KON-TIKI " QUESTION: What purpose was back of the voyage of the Kon-Tiki raft? ANSWER: A Norwegian scientist, Thor Heyerdahl, was trying to find out what people originally settled the South Seas islands. On one of these islands, an old man had told him the legend of a chief, Tiki, who had come from a country beyond the sea. Later, whfle ia Peru, Heyerdahl came across a legend of the Inca Indians: that before they came, people had lived there under a chief, Kon-Tiki, said to be a sun king. Kon-Tiki and his people were supposed to have vanished westward over the sea. Heyerdahl wondered if this could be the same chief Tiki of the South Sea legends. The South American Indians used large balsa wood rafts; there were ocean currents from Peru to the South Seas. Could the Soutl. Seas islands have been settled in this way? Heyerdahl determined to build such a raft as the In-dains used, to test out this possibility. He called his raft Kon-Tiki. With five companions, he left Pern AprU 28,1M7, drifted westward for 4,380 mUes and finally landed on a small island in the South Seas. He had proved that such a voyage was po9sible. Other scientists remain convinced that wlSe some settlers may have arrived in this manner,' most came to the South Seas. from south eastern' Asia. ★ ★ ★ FOR YOU TO DO: Although not entirely convincing to the scientific world, Heyerdahl’s voyage was one of the most adventurous and exciting in the history of the sea. Find out more about the Kon-Tiki in» your library. LOOKI MErSorL/WES’ SUITS VCLEANED and PRESSED 79c ettch 2<°'99t with this ad ' Off*r Expirwt Nov«mb«r 19, 1965 PONTIAC NORSE VILUGE 012 Wttf Huron St. SS3-01T0 Then I moved not all all. I | fairly stopped breathing. Punji stakes, tiger traps, trip I wires — they could be anywhere. I NOBODY SCREAMS [ I wanted to simply scream,|| but out here nobody screams 1 for fear. For pain, yes. ★ i At length I got to a bumed-ont area and began to listen. Nothing. I slumped on the j edge of a bomb crater and squinted toward the sun. No helicopters either. They had been blotting out the sky all morning and now there were none. What was the matter with those guys? * ★ ★ Red dust settled on my boots. The heat cooked the backs of my ears. Not even an animal sound, but then, of course, they would be all dead. I drank again from the canteen but this time it was cool, I think. Where was everybody? I felt like a bull’s-eye. MANY SOUNDS I listened some more. My ears heard all sorts of sounds except human nne.s, blood pprnping, much danger lies in the jungle itself. Straying from the thumping, pulse 20. And then a noise. A rustle in the brush. I froze, still as a stake. ' He was perhaps the ugliest j [Pfc. I had ever seen. A tooth missing, a potato nose, rumpled, | unkempt, sweaty. He was chewing gum and humming. LET IT RAIN! LET IT SNOW! We Have A Complete Line of Protective Footwear For the Entire Family! “Hi, y’all man,” he mumbled i then moved on into the jun- CHILDREN'S WARM THERMO BOOTS IN EASY-ON STYLE Charge It 186 ■ 4 Days Only! Red, white or black plastic uppers that Wipe clean, take lou of rough, tough wear! Thermo lined for lightweight warmth. Foldover style with side button, loop fastener. 6-12, 13-2. 4 Days Only! 10" HI BOOTS FOR WOMEN & CHILDREN Charge It Black expanded vinyl uppers, fleece lined. Women: 4-10; Child.: 104. CHILDREN’S DRESS THERMD UNED BOOT Its Red, white. 6-12,13-3. STADIUM BOOTS FOR CHILDREN MEN’S DRESS TYPE 1^ RUBBER OVERSHOE Net lined. Biark. 6-13. GLENWOOD PLAZA -North Perry Street Corner Glenwood C—u THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 196g Gharift It at K Mari! Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, S^urday, Sunday Onlyl Buy How for Christnos! Charge M 30” VENTLESS RANGE HOODS 2487 ^ 51. ? 1 i| ■i 1 \ 1 ' * 1 j ■••I FIREPLACE SCREEN ENSEMBLE ELEQRIC CARVING AND SLICING KNIFE Compare at HIM 14.88 Carvtt and alicea cleanljr, nniformly. Thickneaa aa de-aired. Featurea twin atainleaa ateel bladea, hollow ground with waverly edge. Easy for ovory mombtr of tho family to oarvo tho holiday turkoy. "SHE" THE UDY WITH THE AHACHE VACUUM CLEANER YOUR CHOICE 19°° EACH A-3/i" DRILL KIT B-POWER SANDER C-JiG SAW KIT 14 PiaoMt Foatures Black A Oockar U-123 00' Drill and ^wful accoMorleo In a handy carrying caao. 3 drill bits, wiro bruih, grinding wtioel, rubber back* Ing pad, 3 aanding diacs, wheel arbor, chuck kay and holder. Model U-125 Black A Decker oibHal action finlahing Bander for uao on vraod, metal or plajh tic. Sands "with" or "against” wood grain. Platen extends part sides and front to allow flush to comer sanding, Model U-140 straight; curved or scroll cuts In metal, wood and a variety of other materlais. Model U-183K SHOP WITHOUT CASH ... JUST CHAR0E IT AT Kmart Charge It At Kmart' GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD OPEN DAILY 10-10 OP^|^ SUN. 12-7 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, IMS C—IJ WED., TNURS., FRI., SAT. and SUN. WELUNGTON BOOTS WITH SCOTCHGARD* Charge It Men! Water-repellent, stain, scuff - resistant. Fieece-iined suede; crepe soles, heels. 6Vi-12. In Hound Dog color. Men*8 Scotchgard •-Treated FLEECE-LINED GUNSMOKE SUEDE DESERT BOOTS 5 DAYS ONLY Charge It Jn Petites, Juniors, Misses’ FASHION PRESSES IN NEWEST TONES AND FALL FABRICS Comp, at 8.88 5 DAYS ONLY Wools, cotton bonded knits, bonded back link and ripple stitch Orion® acrylic knits, mohair blends, wool knit jerseys, satin backs. Skimmers, A-lines, sheaths, shiHs, 2- and 3-pc. coordinates and others! ( { NoWf theyVe water • repellent, stain-resistant, scuff-resistant and easy to clean! Ileece - lined for waVmth and comfort. tTiick, shock • absorbing crepe solds and heels." 6Vii -12. ReversHile JACKETS of Warm NYLON OUILT Com& at 6.99. Royal, black «r cranberry nylon reverses to print acetate. Attached drawstring hood, eip closing and 2 neat pockets. Women’s S - M • L Women's Bell-Bottom FLANNEL PAJAMAS Comp, at 2.97. Two-piece styles In assorted colors. Print jackets, ' striped hell-bottom pants. Cot-ton flannel that’s cosy warm. 32-40. PONDEROSA SHIRTS IN PASTEL TONES Comp, at 2.99. Girls’ ‘new-look’ shirts in convertible or tie-front style, %-sleeves. Arnel® and acetate. Smart with -slacks, skirts. Sises 7 -14 ■CrIaMW inermark ALL WOOL WORSTED SUITS FOR MEN AT SPECIAL SAVINGS! Reg. 39.88 • Regulars, Shorts and Longs • 3-Button Ivy or Conventionals Excellent group of genuine *ygn Cort’ brand suits of wool worsted (in browns, blues, grays, charcoal or blw;k. Neatly tailored for belter fit and longer wear. Sizes 36 to 46. Save now! GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD C—16 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 10. 196( 'Eye Disease Nine Governors Return From Viet Nam TourrPredict War Wilt Be Long f Fight Stalled' Say Science Neglects Blindness Prevention HONOLULU (AP)-Nine U.S. governors returned Tuesday from a tour of South Viet Nam befieving the war will be “one of some years duration.” ★ ★ * Gov. John H. Reed of Maine, spokesman for hb colleagues, said he and the other governors were “most impressed with efforts of the South Vietnamese people.” ■k if it In spite of harassment, he said, the South Vietnamese have! With Reed on the three-week spirit, courage and willingnessLjp to Uw Far including to do the ^ ^ [Japan, were Govs. George But he said he and the other|*^«»«»y ^ Viicidgan, Henry state officials believe the warlBellmon of (Bdahoma, Clifford would last “some years.” |p. Hansen of Wyoming, John A. Bums of Hawaii. Jim Babcock of Montana, Cai^ B. Sanders of Georgia, Jc^Chaffeeaof Rhode Island, PhDip Hoff of Vermont and Harold E. Hughes of Iowa. Hoff left South Viet Nam on 1 separate flight which by- Rdtnney told rc| rould “likely get before it gets better. War is terrible, Ibut worse than war is the effort to bqpose fyramv^.ftrough terror.” he said. “-It must be de-Mted.” Romney added he felt the American people were too optimistic about the situation. Science Service ARLINGTON, Va. - W h e n you drop a dime or a quarter into a blind man’s tin cup, or buy a pencil from a blind woman sitting on a sidewalk corner singing a plaintive song, don’t pat yourself on the back very hard. ★ ★ ★ This is literally a drop in the bucket. It is like the charity basket at Thanksgiving or Christmas, or at best, the braille lessons that must be learned after blindness occurs. Speakers at a science writers’ seminar here include many grantees from the National Institute for Neurological Diseases and Blindness, Bethesda, Md., and members of the institute’s advisory committee on grants. The “current science explosion,” which includes research on numerous diseases and subjects, has left eye diseases trailing, the meeting was told. ★ ★ ★ ----Dr^-Jules G. Stein, board chairman of Research to Prevent Blindness, Inc. (RPB), pointed out that “only about $10 million — approximately the cost of the one Agena rocket that was lost in the Atlantic Ocean two weeks ago ■- is being spent “in the attempt to find causes, preventives and controls for diseases that destroy sight." FEARED DISEASE Reporting highlights of a recent Gallup poll showing that, next to cancer, the affliction most feared by the American people is blindness. Dr. Stein said almost M million Americans have some kind of eye tronble, and in 3.5 million the trouble is serions. The poll revealed that the public is badly confused, misinformed about sight and the diseases that threaten it. * ★ ★ Dr. Stein is himself a former practicing ophthalmologist. He and other public-spirited citizens founded RPB in 1960. * * * RPB has been a key factor in the construction of modem eye research centers at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, an at the University of California, Los Angeles. ★ ♦ ★ It also makes annual unrestricted eye research grants to 26 institutions in the United States. Police, Suspect Wage Gun Battle Near Brighton BRIGHTON (AP) - A Police officer and the man he was attempting to arrest shot today in a gun battle at a gas station about five iiyles north of here. ♦ ★ ♦ Trooper Paul Palmer was shot in the arm when he and his partner. Trooper Edward | Hancock, exchang^ shots with an attendant at the gas station, whose name was not immediately known. *** Officers at the Brighton State Police Post said Palmer and Hancock had gone to the gas station to arrest the attendant for several traffic violations. The extent of the other man’s! wounds were not immediately known. ^PPUAMCE CO. ARTY EYE - The late.st gimmick in pop art, decorating pretty girls, may not Jm for the ages but it’s at least i eye-catching. Danish actress Anne Nielsen picked up a third eye in this effort by I artist Novella Parigini. general electric 19" with UHF/VHF ' ^PPUAM5JJ,^s| \ NO MONEY DOWN • 3-YEARS TO PAY OPEN DAILY 9 to 9 b..'W7to“ THE PONTIAC i*KESS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 10, 1965 Oetermiried Bay City After Lost Prestige J*^*>** «U you loyal football fans who clamor for good football, wimiing football, title teams and good caliber ball clubs? We’ll And out this weekend right out at Wisner Stadium irith two interesting games on tap Friday night and Saturday night. It might be a little late, in these the final weeks of the sea-^ to come up with a pep talk and challenge all the loyal football fans whom we’ve heard say year after year, “Let’s have good football and we’ll support it.’’ > FHday night, Pontiac Central, one of toe top ranked t^s in toe state an seasoa hng and the top coni « toe Saginaw VaBey Conference, faces MicUgan’s acfcoolboy team. Bay City Central. We win venture to say that Bay CHy, which has already dis-tawed of 2,SD0 tickets, will come down here with greater numbers than the fans who will he there right from this city. ^ ★ ★ ★ Tnere is interest in tois game all over the state. Writers from various cities have indicated they will be present to staff the game for their respective newspapers. This current Pontiac Central team is the finest we’ve ever Em. They hustle, they work hard and despite the frightening y City offense which has mauled the opposition for more than 30 points a game, coach Paul Dellerba and the Chiefs are more than capable holding their own. Bay City Central is tough and deserving of its No. 1 rating, but the Chiefs deserved better crowd support than they have received for the position they have held all season. If 8,000 fans don’t fill Wisner Friday night in what is Pon-tiac Cwitral’s biggest game in history, you alumni, students,' , mnents,~fiR)tbBB tans ougM Mde yotn* heads before e^^ 1^*" m^g another remark about the kind of football you want! ' IMTURDAT NIGHT I Wlsn»******^ 0* ^ootbaU will take place Saturday night at| The Poi^c Arrows, whose players are out of the amateur realm, vriU be playing the AB-Star team of the Midwest Football League. ’Tte^Amm don’t expect to play to tail stadiums, but the bra^ of footbofl they have delivered against teams from Laasiag, Dayton and Flint has been interesting. tL t?* passed on toeir comments to os utoo didn’t finish their analysis of this brand of football L„ Miss Jones Rides Ksarina to Jumper Win Wolf pack, PCH After Saginaw Valley Title A very determined—though worried and perhaps a bit scared Bay City Central football team wilt visit Pontiac Central at Wisner Stadium Friday night. Any help coach Elmer Engle needed to ready the Wolves mentally for -the Saginaw Valley Conference title showdown with PCH he received from the state, sportswriters Tuesday. BC Central, rated No. 1 among the state class A powers by the prep coaches on the United Press International weekly poll,?—---------------- was dropped down to sec-l passing yards. He has five In-ond place by the Associ- ‘ercepUons against I**™' i j T» 11 X -t. 1 a 64 per cent completion rate. ated Press poll of scribes;! , Uading all season, the Wolves' relinquished that top spot to if"" Battle Creek Central after that ^idders in “hool s team ran up 60 points in routing Kalamazoo Central last week ; touchdowns and I five PATs. Bay City will be out to post | a caravan of at least six a similar pasting of the host ibuses of students (and possibly Chiefs this week and regain twice that many) will follow the toe lost AP prestige. jteam here; and a considerable The Wolfpack has already "umber of parents is also antici-posted the fourth best total of- Psted on the Bay City-side-of Wisner Stadium at game time. Bloomfield Hills Girl at Washington Show WASHINGTON OR - A young horsewoman from Bloomfleld Hills—18-year-old Oystine Jones has won another major championship. Nation's No. 1 Foe Battered Indiana Awaits BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (APV-Indiana, the last stuinblliig block on Michigan State’s path to the Big Ten football charo-pionahip, is a brave but battered barrier. 'The Hoosien, 2-6 (or the season and 1-4 in the Big Ten, will have to tackle the undefeated Spartans with that patching process. ★ ♦ * Missing from the offensive backQeld are quarterback Gary Tofil and left halfback John Glnter, both out for the with injuries. Substitute left half Ray Terry also is listed u doubtful, having sprained an ankle at Ohio State last week. Frank Stavroff, who regained the quarterback job when Tofil was Injured in the Iowa ganM Oct. 30, eparfced Ibe team to victory over the Jfawkeyes but was ,on-and-off against Ohio State. ELUSIVE RUNNER GInter’s loas and Terry’s doubtful status have necessitated the return of Trait Walters from defense to offense. Walters is who sidled on kickoff returns againa Iowa. Backing up Stavroff at quarterback will be sophomore Dave Komowa, a defensive halfback, and Horace Parker, a reserve who has had no game exper^ ence. Probable backfleld starters along with Stavroff and Walters rill be sophomore Terry Cole at right half and senior Jim Smith at fullback. New Coach John Pont started for the Michigan State game by giving’ most of his bruised traveling squad the day off Monday. “We’re playing the No. 1 team in the country, but after 11 weeks of football we thought a day off would help as much as “• “ Pont said. San Antonb S«l«d«d for PQA Tournoy WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. (UPI) » John D. MacArthur, who donated the land for the PGA national headquarters, pn-nounced Tuesday night the IM PGA championship w o u I d be played at San Antonio, Tex. MacArtltur, the mlUtonalre developer of Palm Beach Gardanp, also announced the 1888 PGA tourney would be played in Aftronouts In Raco 'sALTON crrv, CaUf. (UPI) — Astronauts (fordon Cooper and Virgil (Ous) Orissofn are among foo pwsons entered for toe Saltan Qty SOOmile powdi'-bMt race Nov. 12-14. The field ■bto iacludM Rwfo Ramos, Par-nelli Jones, Afickey Thompson and Mike Wallace. Broncos' Booter No 'Barefoot Boy' I KALAMAZCX) (AP) — Unlike i seven field goals to his credit Michigan State placekicker Dick'this season, didn’t play football Kenney, who attracts plenty of,while attending Plymouth High attention with his barefoot style, Western Michigan kicker Dale Livingston does everything in the conventional way. Miss JoonLta bt admer b has:been toe National Horse Show in New York last week, won in the green jumper division of the Washington International Horse Show Tuesday. The 8-year-oM gray mare Ksarina of the U.S. Eqnntrian Team was Miss Jones’ mount. Ksarina performed over 12 jumps in the $500 windup stake. Miss Jones, a trainee on the U.S. team at Gladstone, N.J. since August, won toe MacLay Cup and the Hunter Seat medal for good horsemanship at last week’s show in New York’s Madison Square Garden. Ksarina and another U.S. team horse, Reno Pal, ridden by Carol Hofmann, NorttHBrahch, N.J., actually tied, with one fault each. The riders elected to give the win to Ksarina, which had more enough points — 16 — to take the division championship. Four Seasons, a 5-year-old chestnut gelding which placed ■■ ■ ■ in the stake, won reserve champion for its owner. Pear Tree Farm, Glen Head, N.Y., with a six-day show point total of 12. Tlie rider was George Morris, Glen Head, a former membo* of the U.S. team. tional, that is, except his manner of joining the football team. Livingston, who already has Atop Champion State Elevens Enjoy Success Pitcher Ramos Found Innocent MIAMI, Fla. (y) - Pedro Ramos, New York Yankee relief pitcher, testified Tuesday that he was only trying to help and was acquitted of a charge of interfering with a police officer. Ramos, ^O-year-old Cuban who lives in Miami during the offseason, appeared in Municipal Court. He was arrested Sunday outside a Miami Restaurant. Police had arrested Orlando Ortega, 36, on a charge of being drunk and one officer asked Ramos to translate, testified Ramos, who speaks Spanish and English. One arresting officer wasn’t in court. ’The other said he wasn’t sure about the translating offer. Judge Richard Hickey said he had doubts about what service Ramos had ren-daed, but he found toe Yankee hurler innocent. CAPTAINr FINALE - Waterford Kettering oiHsaptaina Steve Alien (64) and Ken McLean will play their final game Friday Bight. The opponent will be arch-rival Town- ^ , - ■ ship and a winning record will be at stake for the Captains. Kettering is 3-3-2 while Waterford has a 24) record. School and at first didn’t give a thought to trying varsity ball in college. “I guess kicking was just hqbby with him,” «aid WMU coach Bin DooHtfte, who met Livingston after the junior kicking specialist won a kicking contest while playing intramural football last fall. SAW COACH Somebody suggested he should try out for the varsity and he went to Doolittle. “We didn’t need a kidiing specialist at the time,” Doolittle said. “We had a punter and a placekicker returning for ‘ 1965 season, but I told Livingston he could train with the team in the spring.” ★ * ♦ Three weeks ago, Livingston kicked toe field goal earhed the Broncos a 10-10 tie hgainst Kent State. Two weeks ago, his 17-yard boot gave WMU 34) victory over Toledo. Last weekend, he booted a 38-yard field goal that started the Broncos toward a 17-6 victory “ Ohio University. LONGEST KICK Livingston’s longest field goal so far is 45 yards and he is the Mid-American Conference’s 5th leading scorer with 21 points— seven field goals and three extra points. Besides his field goal record, Livingston has a 36-yard punting average and has boomed one kick 60 yards. At Least Manpower Equal in This Tilt SNOOK, Tex. (UPI) - The Snook Jaybirds smashed Rock Island last night, 11638, bat It was not just toe score that By the fourth quarter. Rock Island had fouled out five of toe seven members of its basketball team and had only two left to carry oh the strug-gle. But Snook, being gentlemanly about the whole thing, palled a player off the court every time Rock Island fouled out a man. Tbe game ended with only four men — two from each teany- on the court. lease figure in Engle’s 16 seasons. It is expected to become No. 3 on the list after the PCH contest since its 3,135 yards qt present are only about 60 shy of reaching that plateau. A six-player ground game has I run up most of the total. Fullback Lon Miller is the top run-iner with 678 yards on 89 tries. I He also is the top scorer among " jSVC gridders with 13 touch- ® downs and four conversions for ^ points. -OTHER TOTALS Halfbacks Ron Auman and e John Osborne have 465 and 450 ti yards, respectively, while quarterback Tom Kennell is averag- i ing better than four yards : carry on 33 runs. All are sen tors. Defensive halfbacks Mike Smith and Walt Gruber, both juniors, are the fastest backs and they have seen extensive ~ , i r, . duty on offense recently. At 6-1,,^®®^)® ^®’’ and 195 pounds. Smith is the blg-fc‘“"® gest back and is averaging bS- Football League’s lineman or hpttpr ns thn woonn hjmrfg iiiF-fhiin lA ifArH* An iiairtaw ^ W66k fOF hiS d6f6n8JV6 or better as the season headsftertoan toydrdri»35 tmrttes;|p,^y Detroit’s 12-7 victory Kennell has thrown 75 times over the Green Bay Packers last and connected on 49 for 917 ^Sunday. 13 Colleges Could End .500 or Better By The Associated Press All but four of Michigan's 17 college football teams have chance toiinish at the .500 mark lions Acquire Defensive Back DETROIT—The Detroit Lions acquired defensive back Bobby S ni i t h from the Los Angeles Rams Tuesday, and asked waivers on defensive back Jimmy Hill. Smith. 27, and a four-year veteran with the Rams was obtained on waivers. He will serve as a backup man in the defensive backfield and also will be used on kickoffs and punt returns, the Lions said. obtained from the St. Louis Cardinals last July, has played 11 years in the NFL. into its final two weeks. Top-ranked Michigan State, Michigan and Northern Michigan are the only state schools with games remaining after this Saturday. Each closes out the regular season next week. * ★ ★ After 10 victories in 14 meetings with out-of-state opponents last weekend, the state schools have a 70-60-3 over-all record and are 46-35-3 against teams across the state line. Michigan State, at 8-0, is the, only unbeaten team. Northern i is 7-1 while Albion and Michigan Tech are 6-2. The latter has completed its season, along with' Hope (4-4) and Adrian (J-7). BREAK EVEN Eleven schools are at the break-eved point while rejuvenated (Antral Michigan and Northwood can make it with season-ending triumphs. Clint Jones of Michigan State, with four touchdowns against Iowa, moved into the lead in toe individual scoring race. He has 68 points on 11 touchdowns and two extra points. • WMtarn Michigan Hllltdcla X-Hapa Michigan Easttrn Michigan Wayne Slate ..........lllchlgan .175 115 731 - ;T8 IS n n -.si'isis? 3 3 1 . .4M 15* . 5 0 .444 ISO 140 5 0 .375 73 114 5 0 .IM S3 133 7 0 .115 57 141 70W0 41 — hSTwtaf 'liaH H Michigan Callage S< Bob Aplaa, MSU T. Cunarich, Mich. Tech 0 tuer, Ho^ 0 Kenney, MSg 0 cUnna, Hllladala 7 eilhvMr, Albion 7 in AMk Mich. Tech < Head, EMU 3 NHL Standings ■y "^1 *ASS<^IAtVd'pRIlt NATIONAL LlAOyi , W L f >h. OP 0, Chicago 5 0 l II 31 “—-eel ........ 511 II 33 ! Baseball Exec Fined WHEATON, III. UR - Charles A. (tomitoey, 40, former part-owner of the Chicago White Sox, was fined $500 Tuesday after pleading guilty to a reckless driving charge. ■ ' ■ TDPAlPOPt*. S n 0 40 1 ~ Taatday'e ReMlti WediNidav't a al at Toronto Dalrolt al Chicago Missed Fatal Flight CmaNNA-n, Ohio (Jl - Art Heyman, Cincinnati Royals basketball player, had made reservations for flight 383, but canceled at the lust moment and Was not aboard the plane that crashed near here Mood a y night. PONTIAC ARROWS ALLSTAR CAME Tickets On Sale Sm the BitI in Football Misi, tho "/bTom”^ 1968 ' ClHMHpioiit Sgaiatt flio Top Stan of tho Ollior MFL Toaim ARROWS vs MFL ALLSTARS WISNER STADIUM Sat., Nov. 13fli, 8 P.M. D -2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1965 49ers-^arks Top Receiver NEW YORK (AP) - Davejyardage, gaining 131 In 20 car-Parks, the San Francisco 49ers ries against Philadelphia, and split end, is living up to all the now tops the heap by almost 400 bright h^s of the scouts who j yards. Jim has gained 908 yards drafted him No. 1 in the Nation-1 on 178 carries in eight ball al Football League two years games. The second man is Tim ago. . Brown of Philadelphia with 6*f(»t-2. 195-poun^ whiz yards, from Texas Tech has taken * ★ ★ over the NFL lead in pass re-^ The passing leadership, based ceptions with 41 for 763 yards on standings in four categwies, and six touchdowns. Parks has John Brodie of San Fran-grabbed six of George Mira’s cisco and John Unitas of BalU-passes for 120 yards last week [more rated even. Brodie missed against Dallas, moving ahead of last week due to a shoulder dis- Tommy McDonald of Los Angeles who has 39 for 524 yards. Jim Brown of the Qeveland Browns continues to roll up the Warriors Top Detroit, Build League Lead SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-The San Francisco Warriors, a team . forecasters said would manage to do little besides finish the sea.g‘j"^|j,^ son, are stretching their sur-^ju prise lead in the National Bas-' ketball Association’s Western Di- location and Unitas suffered a strained back in a winning effort against Chicago. Unitas has completed 61.8 per cent of his passes and ha$ the top average gaine, 9.72 yards, and the most touchdown passes, 18. TOP SCORER Fred Cox, Minnesota’s consistent place kicker, ■ leads the I scorers with 69 points on 13 field goals and 30 conversions. Jim Brown is right behind with 11 touchdowns and 66 points. Tom Watkins of Detroit has taken over as leader in the kickoff return department with [a 33-yard average and Johnny I Sample of Washington has tied Wayne Rasmussen pass interceptions. NO. 1 BACK, ANYWAY - Notre Dame’s Bill Wolski (left) stands in front of campus statue of Moses along with teammate Nick Rassas after Wolski was named Back of the Week by the Associated Press. He tallied five touchdowns In Saturday’s crushing of Pitts-urgh. The Irish fans like to think Moses’ pointing finger indicates that Notre Dame will become the No. 1 college football team. Horses, Fighters, Cagers Halted Blackout KO'5 Sports Program By the Associated Press s, harness racing programs at two tracks and a boxing show were among the sports events postponed or canceled Tuesday night because of the massive power failure in the Northeast. ’The National Basketball Association game between New York and St. Louis in York’s Madison Square Garden, harness cards at Roosevelt Raceway and suburban West-bury, N.Y., and Suffolk Downs in Boston were called off as well as the boxing program at Sun-nyside Gardens in New York. Westbury about 35 miles from New York City, was canceled at 7:30 p.m. with a crowd of about 2,000 On hand. Most of the fans had arrived by charter bus from New York where the blackout hit at S;27 p.m. * * ★' High school teams from Adel- Ihe harness racing slate at. phi Academy and Dwight School take the court at Madison Square Garden for the preliminary game to the Knick-Hawks NBA contest when the lights failed. ’The Ghr-den was almost deserted hours later when the NBA postponement was announced. No new date was immediately set. St. SAary Squad Easily Outruns West Bloomfield Gary Collins of Cleveland still is the leading punter with a 46.3-yard average and Rick Harris, Washington rookie, is the punt return leader with 15 for an av- ’The Warriors pounded the Detroit, Pistons 107-102 ’Tuesday night, boosting their hiark to 74 and their lead to 1% games over 3 Los Angeles and St. Louis. The rebounding of center «r«» Nate Thurmond was a big help Brown, ci« to the Warriors, who are trying Ma«n: Mhil? to rebound from last season’s pjr*inl *oii most dismal lost record in NBA Tr7p*eM, “'""l history. Frederickwn, NY Thurmond grabbed off 42 re- Be”; la'* bounds, breaking by two the potion Warrior mark of 40 set by Wilt Chamberlain a year ago, also against Detroit. Player - coach Dave DeBus-schere of Detroit led a with 24 points. ’The Pistons led the entire first half, once by 54-39 in the second period while the Warriors went seven minutes without a field goal. The bowlers in the weekly Hu- exceptional event. Dot Dyker ron Bowl Wednesday Nite “A’ League spread the scoring around last week with three teams showing excellent individual totals. boihbed the pins for a 231—602 effort and Mary McGee also reached the 600 figure with 213-202-600. Gamers Award ’Those were the major casualties on a light sports schedule in New York and New England areas affected by the blackout. The thoroughbred racing program at Aqueduct had been completed before the lights went out in New York, but the last race at Narragansett Park in Pawtucket, R.I., wps can-Maun second at 9:59. celled. I ★ ★ ★ ★ * * ' Helping Dziuba with the scor- A crowd of 21,577 watched the ing were Phil Slatinsky (3rd), nine-race card at Aqueduct Bob Trzeslawski (4th), Richard which had a program starting Walter (5th) and Ron Wetzel at 12 noon. |(6th) Orchard Lake St. Mary’s cross: country team closed the 1965 season yesterday with a 1940 victory over West Bloomfield. ★ ★ ★ John Dziuba led the OLSM (64) team with a time of 9:54, West Bloomfield’s Dave Gardens in (Queens, where heavyweights James Woody and Louis Hicks were to have met in the fda-tured eight rounder, the program was postponed until next ’Tuesday night. The promotes called off the ciml two hours after the blackout uitile wei^ office workers from Mahattan trudged pasted the arena aftier the (2ueensborou|h Bridge on foot. Lue Jock Home First JACKSON (AP) - Lue Jack won the featured eighth race at Jackson Harness Raceway Tuesday night, returning $4.80, $3.80 and $4.60. The daily double of 3 and 6 paid $52.20, and the (^uinella figures of 2 and 8 paid $157.80. Brodto, SF ........ Unitas, Balt Bukicha Chi ....... Tirkthtoha Minn . Another report of top scoring ....... Prayers’ Home Furnishings,was made by the St. William’s M sS *0 3^*^ ® 237-263-684 by Mark Men’s League at Wonderland 115 493 4.’3 i;Bowers, Mutt Morse of TriplelLanes. Thursday Don Smith . . . j 1 ' u- - I lil St S:? Jlxxx scored 235-214^, andtow!^ ^21^^70 and Tom'S«^ in NoiJ J;' * Oxford Mattress’ Bob Davis 256- Green 247-634. SametT69-13 burial^ of S « 371 .3.9 3 200-625 I nfhpr rppont nrp«- Uamc s \b9-l3 DUHai 01 me ' other recent scores. Panthers.’The hard-driving sen- ’The Friday Independent Wom- By The Associated Press No wonder Notre Dame’s Wolski is favoring a sore leg in Irish football practice this week. He probably hurt it tripping over the Pitt goal line last Saturday. Wolski was named back of' 'U|the week Wednesday by ’The om' Albion Team Wins MIAA Harrier Title I Ctm. YBi. TBt Okfii 197 139 1,739 19 I.U 207 121 2,013 10 9.72 193 99 1,310 15 1.09 199 no 1,799 12 9.01 en’s League at Huron had an 09 1,259 0 IJl 93 1,093 7 1.09 .. 105 1,782 15 1.91 152 70 1,290 7 0.19 137 99 1,000 12 7.00 239 120 1,502 9 9.39 39 590 15.2 3 , 35 913 17.5 5 --- Minn Brown, CIO Bikkon, SI. 1 DavVi, SI Saytrt, Chi MIchooU, B Groia, CIO GRAND RAPIDS (AP) -! Defending champion Albion Col-!_____ . _ lege, with Jim Dow placing JlJKSier^^'Go q first as he did last year, ran off '''''•5^ ’• * Tuesday with the 31st annual | ____—---------- MIAA cross-country meet. j It was held here at the Calvin am a e*i I* CoUege Knollcrest campus onl NBA Standings the city’s extreme Southeast Side. I ... 220-519; Ruby Palnw, 513. Convartion—Mary O'Brien, 9-7. Toam ----- ------ Bowl Taam, 29, Tha Hoi I B-Havoo and Tho OwU, Marlene Hagge Third on Golf's Money List QUINCY, 111. (if) - With twe victories in the last three weeks Marlene Hagge has gained the No. 3 spot on the Ladies PGA’s money list, LPGA headquarters said ’Tuesday. * ★ ★ Marlene’s winnings have climbed to $19,498 for the season. Kathy Whitworth continues to lead with $26,058 while Gifford Ann Creed is second with $20,261. d Serlea-Virginia Bran- ___ ______ _______lay, 232; M. H. Lolt, 231; Gaorga Hanry. 219; Heba Ao^,^2J3; Gaorga Mayna. 213, Frad AIRWAY LANH ___I Sana*—Chariot Rlharb, 910, lor ’. T. Slandard loam. Wadnaiday FIrfI Bawlliig Laagaa High Gama and Sarlat—Marbara Chll-dratt, 219—590, lor Pina Knob Pharmacy. PRIMROSB LANCS Friday KUtgi and Onaana Gamas and Sarias-BIII Fair, 293 Ailllt Robarson, 199 ( 99 pint ovar -----,.). Team Polnlt—WaHoot, 20; Pin Spillars and Who-DId-lts?, 19 each, B-Bt, halfback quailed a 42-year-old school point record in little more than two quarters as the Irish bolstered their No. 4 spot in the national ratings. ★ ★ ♦ He scored successive Notre Dame touchdowns on smashes of 7, 4, 6, 2 and 1 yards before resting a pulled leg tendon early in the third period while Irish second-stringers completed the rout. ’The five tallies tied Red Maher’s Notre Dame mark set in 1923 against Kalamazoo. Before Saturday, Wolskl’s best single-game performance was a three4ouchdown effort against Stanford last season, during which he led the Irish in rushing, 657 yards and scoring, 11 touchdowns. GOOD/i^EA^ Albion placed first with 27 points. ’Trailing were; Adrian,| ** “'wm.. 49 points: Cavin. 90; Hope, l(»:|Sl .. Olivet, 135; Alma, 143, and «;L»uT. li S Kalamazoo College, 214. B»inmorq 9 9.30i 9 Trailing Dow in order among, ,3o’*K!?;;ir:*nJ'* top individuals' to finish were: i|*”tSiI!r'*i ’r&w'' Cal Osterhaven of Hope, Rexj s*n F?pnciKoi07, oltroii'^iw*'” Curry of Albion and Tom n«w York*'tt"c!!lTnn»i?“"** Swihart of Adrian. , ^roT'it ANY WAY YOU LOOK I ANY SIZE IN STOCK! TUBELESS CONSTRUCTION TIRE SALE! SLIGHTLY USED, EXPERTLY RECONDIOONEDI 75% OR MORE OF ORIGINAL TREAD DEPTH 'fATilT I. anywsy you look at it, you get a wBgonful of service and protection when you belong to the Auto (Jub and Inaure your car through the Exchange at the Club. Everywhere you travel . . . carry the fineat car inaurancx protection available anywhere! Join now! AUTOMOBILE CLUB OF MICHIGAN FI 5-4151 76WilliomfS». H. E. Hu«monn, Migr. resgit of any normal road hazard within 12 months of purchase date, then a pro rata allowance per month based on selling price will be made by the sellar toward tha purchase of any new Goodyear tire. TO i^oodAear SERVICE STORE , OFSN DAILY Se30 TO 6, fRI. TIL 7:30, SAT. TIL 2:30 WIDE TRACK ot LAWRENCE FE 5-6123 Pontiac Retail Store DEAL WILL BE RIGHT DOWN YOUR ALLEY ON A Still a Few to Select From MSNNIUCS DEMONSTRATORS and MILEAGE CARS. .. At BIG $ $ $ SAVINGSII THERE MUST BE A REASON: Others Talk Deals, But The Pontlae Retail Store M,akes Them Thi PokBm Rdnit Slort SB Mt. Clement St. Downttwn Pentiao PE S-TSBI THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 196fl D—8 Braves Atlanta Move Jeopardized \r^ BasebaU Shudders at Court Ruling By KEN HARTNETT Icoiuin and Milwaukee County in{ position to bargain to keep the! MILWAUKEE, Wis. (AP) —'Braves from shifting to Atlantal Major League baseball faced the choice today of remaining in MUwaukee or riddng an antitrust suit in Wisconsta courts, a prospect that a baseball lawyer said “could lead to die ruination of the game as we know it.” The dilemma, vrtiich left Wis- next season, develop Tuesday! in U.S. District Court. Judge Robert E. Tebaa ruled that Wisconsin courts should de- jcide the antitrust suit filed by Wisconsin’s attorney general. The Tehan ruling, which cannot be appealed, means the antitrust suit will reach the federal courts only after being heard In suit also strikes at die au-|be left without a major league thprlty of the commissioner of team. bAseball and the sacrosanct re-| While the Braves have al-serve clause, which enables a ready moved their offices to At-baseball club to have complete I lanta and began selling season ARNIE DENISON has been an outstanding new car salesman with Homer Right Motors, Inc. for one year now following seven years selling for the P(mtiac Retail Store. Amie, who has lived in Pontiac all his Ufe, graduated from Pontiac Hi^ School in 1952. Interested in a new Chevrolet, Pontiac or Buick? Come to Homer Ifight for a deal and ask for Amie. Homer Hight Motors, Inc. 160 S. Washington Oxford 0A 8-2528 Flagstick Penalty Changed by USGA The state is now free to s Control of its players as a property right. an injunction in its own courts' BasebaU’s peculiar structure NEW YORK (UPI) - After Dec. 31, golfers in United States Golf Association tournaments will not be penalized for hitting the flag stick with shots taken withih 20 yards of the hole but I not on the green. I The -USGA decided on the rule revision for its 1966 Rules of Golf booklet after careful study of methods of speeding up play in recent tournaments. Two other changes were also made. In stroke play, a golfer will play continusouly until he holes out unless his fellow competitor requests him to lift his ball out of the line of a putt. againA the Braves’ shift to Atlanta, planned for 1966. SPECIAL COUNSEL Willard S. Stafford, special counsel for Wisconsin in the case, said he Would start work on the injunction as soon as possible. Should an injunction be granted, it could keep the Braves in Milwaukee until the case clears the Wisconsin courts. That could be well after the start of the 1966 season. * The implications raised by the ruling go deeper than just the Braves’ case. Earl Jinkinson, Braves' torney, acknowledged as much when he told Judge Tdian pri-to his ruling that if Wisconsin could control the activities of baseball “it would lead to thd ruination of the game as we know it. In match play and stroke play, lifting the ball solely for cleaning will be allowed once per hole before the first stroke on the green. A player lifting his ball in accordance with the rules tnay incidentally clean it, however, without fear of a penalty. NIGHT RACING 9 Rarvi Nightly Rain or Shim lho:„ih No/rmhiT 2/ JACKSON HARNESS RACEWAY College Ice League Unveils Playoff Plan DENVER (AP) - The Western Ck>llegiate Hockey Association will be divided into two sections for the league playoffs next March. * * it In opening games March 3, Minnesota Duluth will be at Michigan Tech, Denver at Colorado College, Michigan State at Michigan, and Minnesota at North Dakota. WATiapoao TOWNtHie Every step in crafting the Florsheim Imperial is carried out with infinite eare and skill. The result is total elegance, along, of course, with the extra long wear that makaa every Floraheim Imperial a truly practical economy. has never come under full-scalg judicial review. At stake in the current court fight are millions of dollars — both in the sport’s lucrative income and in what Milwaukee might lose economi-jtling in Wisconsin courts to winj cally if it becomes the first city the new injunction by Dec. 31 to I in modem history of baseball to stymie the move. I 60 TEAMS ‘If Wisconsin can do this, then all4ie other statds too can claim they are being prevented from having teams. We might wind up with 60 teams." Baseball fought to have the case heard in the federal courts. Jinkinson argued that the case should be heard together with a federal antitrust suit fUed against the league by Milwaukee County. ♦ * * ’The suit maintains that the| National League is so organized create a monopoly in the employment of players of major league quality, as well as in the scheduling and the broadcast of tickets there for 1966, the move cannot take effect If^ally until Dec. 31. An injunction iswed in lof;al courts last year forbids the| ball club to leave Milwaukee un-> til its contract with the county: expires at the end of the year. State attorneys will be bat-' ‘All I said was: ^ Show me a filter that delivers the taste and I’ll eat my hat.^ VjRY NEW LUCKY STRIKE FILTERS Illness Slows Spartan End EAST LANSING, Mkh. (AP) —One player will be missing through illness but no new injuries have cropped up to cramp lifidiigan State’s bid for an outri^t Big Ten title against Indiana Saturday. The Spartans, undefeated, top ranked and assured at least a tie in the Big Ten, need only this one to cinch the title and the Rose Bowl bid. Tony Angel, second string offensive end from Utica, Mich., is laid low with mononu-celeosis and will miss the two remaining games of the regular season. Bob Lange, a 195-pound, 6-6 end from Clhicago, is running in his place. Don Bierowicz, a senior defensive tackle from Chicago, is back in the lineup after missing the 354) blanking of Iowa. ’The first stringer, bothered by an ankle sprain, is still an uncertain starter for the game East Lansing. U-M Inspects Wildcat Plays ANN ARBOR (AP)-Michigan footballers ran through Northwestern offensive and defensive patterns Tuesday as they prepared for Saturday’s game. ’The Wolverines appeared in excellent physical condition e.t-cept for a few bruises suffered against Rlinois last Saturday. Tackle Paul Johnson is suffering from a Charley horse, but is expected to be ready for North- SERVim OAKLAND COVNTY OVER 35 YEARS Lozelle Agency, Inc. ALLFORm OF INSURANCE 504 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG. Phone FE 5-8172 OPEN DAILY 10 TO 10 — SUNDAY 12 TO 7 — PLENTY OF FREE PARKING SPACE m Why settle for one lYew Tire when you can get TWO BRAND NEW TIRES for tfceOIVE LOW PRICE of 15»®’ 100% TIKES I'iSK WI.MPSOIt 6.70x15 TUBE TYPE 7.50x14 TUBELESS 2 for f |5»0" Initall it yourioK and save. Station Re-Biillt with Wagon Flaps Sp®I*lt PIll|{8 CASK.EX Protectt ogolntt mud, tiMt, flying rock* told In *ot( of 8 only ||||||||_^ Chargm It at KmortI GLENWOOD PLAZA North Perry Street at Glenwood THE PONTIAC;, X^RESS. WjBDNBSPAY. NOVEMBER 10. 1963 with DON VOGEL Outdoor Editor^ Pontiac Pross Deer Season Ops in U.P. Saturday 'Be Prepared, Boys... The Red Coats Are Coming Saturday' Collared Whitetails Roam State Press Derby Also Starts SameDay The Upper Peninsula is expected to receive more opening day hunting pressure than ever before when the deer season gets under way above the Straits Saturday. The annual Pontiac Press Deer Contest opens the same day with a $150 savings bond being awarded to the Oakland County resident who enters the heaviest buck. ★ ★ ★ Reason for the big increase in the number of hunters in the U. P. is that the season opens on Saturday, superhighways i^ake it possible to reach the Mackinac Bridge in three-and-a-half hours from Detroit and the Lower Peninsula season doesn’t open until Nov. 20. This gives nimrods two opening days. U. P. opening day pressure is expected to be heaviest in the eastern half because it is much closer and most of the hunters won’t leave until Friday. However, the biggest racks and the best hunter success ratios again will be scored in Iron and Gogebic counties in the western half. The Press contest is open only to county residents and the bucks must be taken during Michigan’s firearms season and in this state. A weight slip from a state approved scales s h o w i n g the weight of the deer and signed Deer Hunting Perils Abound Police Issue Warning as Season Nears EAST LANSING fAP) - Gunshot wounds, which caused deaths and at least 48 Injured I last year, are not the only dan-Iger to hunters during the deer season, warns Col. Frederick i Davids, state police commissim- lOKN DAILYS-9-SAT.I-6I UNITED TIRE SERVICE IN7 Baldmn A«e. I Uta. tnm IXinrttw* Poa«tac The Conservation Department:' Alma on US-27 and White is hoping to bear from d e e r| Cloud on M-S7; and in Howard hunters who shoot collared City on US-131, whitetails. In this way, conservation field workers can relay urgent messages with time-saving speed. As another means of helping the department in its service of delivering emergency messages, hunters camping on state lands Iby the huhter, weighmaster and one witness must be brought to The Press. The deer must be field-dressed before weighing, and it must be viewed by a member of The Press staff. • DEADLINE SET Entries will be accepted from 7 a. m. to 3 a. m. Monday through Saturday during the season. The deadline is noon, Dec. 6, one day after the regular Through the cooperation of As the fact-finding key to a hunters who bag collared deer, deer movement study in which the department hopes to get a nearly 1,000 whitetails have been better idea of where deer from • . , marked during recent winers, browsed-out yards sped theiri^® required to post registra-state game men would now like summer and fall, how far they to learn where these animals travel, precisely where they' Thesq cards are free at hunt-are taken, the band numbers onyinter and whether their move- >ng license dealers and the de-their collars and other informa-ments follow a consistent pat-Pa^tment’s district offices. tion. tern each year. ----- , • , * # * ______ I “Can I still go afield with a,““®" closes in the Lower Best places for passing along Hunters who h^ to keep in ^ a?Je7teWng^rbIIck“or1nJ U. P. season will end Nov. these details are at the depart- touch with their fa m i ‘ ‘® ^«‘|terleK mima"* ^ ^ |28- Bear will be legal above ment’s roadside deer ch^kmg home in ca^ o emergencies Jthe Straits but not in ttie Lower stations where game biologists should register their northern! is the Conservationp^^.^^__,^ will have a first-hand chance to hunting addresses at the near-jBeps^^**>t’s answer to this examine the specially marked est field or district offices of .Question which many sportsmen animals. the Conservation Department. |are asking now that bear hunt- The stations will be located * ♦ ★ ^ing will be closed this season at the Straits of Mackinac; ; After signing in with the de- in the Lower Peninsula, south of Bay City on 1-75; near partmenti each hunter should Apparently, because of the contact his family, giving the. ban on taking bears, these phone number of the conser-| h n n t e r s feel their shooting vation office where he is reg-j privileges are over once they _____________________________________________________________ I gel their deer in Lower Mich- Peninsula. Hunters may not see as many deer along the Lake Superior watershed. istered. ■I .Vatwal U,er.kiH ' Hondtocn* Appaaranc* Longar Waaiing SAILHSH CHAMPION - Jim Cavanaugh, 2150Q Greenfield, Oak Park, has been declared winner of the Panama government’s 13th annual Marlin and Sailfish Tournament. He is shown with one of the 24 sailfish he caught while fishing out of Club de Pesca de Panama. He also took one Marlin. No Tomorrow for Pheasant Hunters ! The season will open this Saturday in the Upper Peninsula and a week from Saturday in Lower Michigan. ★ ♦ * In addition, Davids said, 18 persons died from heart at- tacks during the past season, apparently mostly from overexertion. Another danger, the police commissioner said, is from carbon monoxide gas. A series of! deaths occurred several years ago during the deer season from faulty gas heaters. ★ * A Car-deer accidents also are becoming more frequent and can result in injuries to motorists, Davids said. lowinc TOfiETHEUnSS AT ROCHESTEB LAKES 430 Main St., Rochester,' keeps 0 family happy, active and heolthy. Children 18 years old ond under, 25c a line. Adults 3 gomes $1.00. 4th gome free. League openings available. OL 6-9341 Conservation Department reports indicate that the 1N445 winterkill may have exceeded 38,8M deer, in this area. Whitetails in the Sonthem half of the U. P. appeared to come through the winter all right. n LI- LI • I It is legal to hunt predators The 1964 hunting pressure in Public Hearing 'and cerSi other sm^ll game!*” Dickinson County aver-, ... , during the deer season. Hunters'*®f*,*®®* P®*" sQU®rc on Lakes Work toUng rifles or shotguns with™”® ‘”® U- P- Dickinson had |ball and buck loads for this pur- Dess than 13 per ceiit Set for Tonipht P®*® ®'‘® •■eQufre110*9072 The BEST In TAXIDERMY At a REASONABLE PRICE!, • Qeesc.......$30 • Ruffed Grouse ... $20 • Ducks, Pheasants $20 c White Tail Deer....$30 to $36 c Fish.......$1.28 Stop Bx Anytime and VUit Our Trophy Roonu BILL HUFFMAN TAXIDERMY Wa'ralnYmirYallewPaoat 3563 AAARK ROAD PONTIAC FE 8*4455 GUARANTEED TUNE-UPS AUTOMATie r*cv I transmissions EASY TERAAS | oUR SPECIALTY MOTOR EXCHANGE 405 S. SogiiMw St. p| 3.7412 IBCMM All Ta.H Why do knowledgeable Ip people stay with Imperial? Someday, someone may make a better whidiey. As of today, nobody has. Montana is three times _ large as New York. It Is equal ^ the combined area of the United Kingdom, Belgium and the Netherlands. _1HE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 10, 1965 D—5 _ YOUCANIAT rritdCkickain* Dorman's Old Mill TAVERN Serving linERNATIONAL BUFFET Every Friday from 5 'til 9:30 P.M. Call for Reservationt k KlUI^LLtii 6838 Oixia Hwy. Waterford OR 3-1907 Eye Proposals at Farm Parley Resolution on Foreign Workers is Included EAST LANSING (AP)-The Michigan Farm Bureau convention planned to begin consideration today of more than 100 proposed resolutions, including a call for legislation to allow use of foreign farm workers where needed, w* ♦ ★ A proposed resolution pared by the bureau’s Rewlu-tions Committee says because of labor problems, “the Michigan pickle industry and the economy of the state suffered substantial damage.’’ It say8r^‘^e 4ise^oMom workers and A-teams, although partially successful, was not adequate to replace the foreign workers that were employed during previous years.’’ Michigan farmers empioyedi nearly 13,000 Mexican farm hands in 1964 to help with the pickling cucumber harvest. ! But Congress banned use of foreign fan iPWOFltfeTis anfxr.sr Labor Secretary Willard Wirtz, who had the power to make some exceptions, did not make for Michigan._________________ AS nwwcx ~ ^TNIEGRATED* SCHOW^irsiiitrFaul—the-College St. Scholastica in Duluth, a S3-Schubert, a graduate of the University of year-old all-girl (whoops!), formerly all-girl St. Thomas at Houston, Tex., and stationed college. Schubert, who is single, is taking with the Air Force at the Deluth, Minn., Air a special course in an effort to quaiify for a Base has become the first male to enroll at major in philosophy. Chancellor at Berkeley Outlines Plan BERKELEY, Calif. (AP) The University of California—I starting point of a recent demonstration against U.S. military! action in Viet Nam—must take! steps to assure good relations with surrounding communities,' its chancellor contends. ♦ A ★ ! In his first major policy statement since coming from the University of Michigan, Chancellor Roger W. Heyns told the! faculty Monday such steps must! ^arantee that educational func-| tions are not adversely affected by campus political activity. , * ★ ★ “I do not believe the univer-! sity must embrace those who' Harvest Special! Laryngitis Victim In an address to the convention Tuesday, Elton Smith, president of the bureau, described Wirtz’ attitude this way: “Since farmers are only i small segment of the population, they can be disregarded, and the economy can go along pretty well without them.’’ A number of the proposed laryngitis, resolutions deal with migrant | That was the labor. One proposes that hous-s»uation thi ing provided for and used only,S "when the! by seasonal workers be exempt*S„~^^ industry gavel Meg Quiet at Filmland Party By BOB UlOMAS AP Movie-Television Writer HOLLYWOOD - What happens when Britain’s princess meets Hollywood’s royalty? Not much, when the party of the first part happens to ha from property taxes. Another promises bureau cooperation “for the improvement of migrant health where conditions warrant.’’ In addition, one proposal calls for exploring any possibilities of obtaining government grants to assist fanners in building or remodeling migrant housing to meet newly established stand- THOMAS its official wel- Princess Margaret and Lord Snowdon at Universal City. Some of the top names of the film world showed up for the luncheon. But the princess, alas. That proposal says: ‘"The migrant labor problem is problem of the entire society. due to unskilled labor, uneducated health habits, and low employer earnings, and is not ^entirely the pr^lem of the I employers.” Proposed resolutions also call [for tax reform-with emphasis on easing farm property taxes —and for a U. S. C^titutional amendment to allow apportionment of one house of a legislature on a basis other than population. had lost her voice. It may have been due to a swinging affair at the bistro in Beverly Hills the night before. At any rate, she was virtually mute. * ★ 'The situation is best illustrated by an encounter with Rock Hudson. Like many of the more notable figures at the luncheon, he had been invited to a recep-on prior to the luncheon. Not a voluble chap under any circumstances, Hudson had been made aware that protocol dictated commoners do not speak to the princess until spoken to. After the introduction, he Hear Charges of Ex-Student EAST LANSING (AP) - A Michigan State University faculty committee listened Tuesday night to the case of former student who says he was denied reentry because of his activities with a students’ rights group. | A written opinion by the Faculty Committee on Student Affairs was not expected for several days, though. The hearing was closed to the public. deliberately and knowingly com-i promise it for personal political advantage,” Dr. Heyns sa^d. j The statement noted there are , “organizations which, while nominally registered hs student organizations, are in fact really controlled and run by nonstudents.” —lir^Heyns said that--"eontent-of speech is not of university concern. 1 “But surely,” he added, Hhere is principir^ -fair Turkey Dimer Beverage dealing with one’s own university that legitimately applies to university employes and students." lient Frenchman tried to keep the conversation going. Jimmy Stewart was Jimmy Stewart. “Too bad she had laryngitis,' Chevalier said afterward. “We performers know how to deal with it; she doesn’t. UVEUER ’HME Lord Snowdon had a livelier of it, being seated between WARREN, Mich. UPl-Thieves Shirley MacLaine and Hayley^who broke into a local tavern Hungry-Thieves Show Preference for Food Mills. Others at the royal table were hungrier for food than they were Greer Garson, Charlton were for cash. Heston, Sandra Dee, Laurence * * ★ ■ Harvey and Mary Pickford, Owner George Heussner told petite and fragile. police the intruders took sau- .................... ..V. ^1*® usual frivolity of Holly-sage, potato chips, beer and waited — and waited. After s“M“ed as whisky. They ignored $50 in a' 90-second period of silence, he'*"® ^ cash drawer and money in a grinned his famous grin and borscht, chicken patties and | vending machine, moved on. small cream puffs I with hnt nh/w*n1otA can/tA SAME AT LUNCHEON And Ice Cream Served November 8 through November 21 Giblet Gravy, Cranberry Sauce, Old Fashioned Dressing Whipped Potatoes Garden Fresh Vegetable Hot Roil and Butter Coffee, Tea or Milk Your choice of one of Howard Johnson's 28 famous ice creams or sherbets. Howard Johnson’a Take-Home Three-Pack: 1 can of New England style baked beans, 1 can of brown bread, 1 can of date-nut bread — all for 8W. , , UOUJARD JounsonJ It was the same at the luncheon. Universal’s Stage 12 had been converted Into an English garden, with stately colunuis with hot chocolate sauce, ac-| 'companied by rose wine, foreign and domestic. In an hour and a half it was ^er, and the silent princess swept off to a tour of the studio and bowers of yellow chrysan-'while the bandsmen played themums against a backdrop of,“Hello, Dolly!” ’Then the Holly-blue. Some of the well-polished!wood folks seemed to release names of Hollywood gathered their breaths. Utey filed out, around; Fred Astaire, Gene,telling each other what a fine Kelly, Dana Wynter, Cyd Char- time it had been. isse, Lana Turner, Robert --------------------- w,m.n, Oe». Au-| 4 Dionn. Quitrtuplrtl -tw..k.ndR.u„ion “Pomp and Cn-cumstance” as| sT. BRUNO, Que. (AP)-The played by the band from Dis- four surviving Dionne quintup- Actress to Remain in Hospital Care MARGOT FONTEYN RUDOLPH NUREYEV The student, Paul M. Schiff of New Rochelle, N. Y., fUed I suit earlier this fall in U. S. District Court at Grand Rapids, contending he was denied readmission to MSU because he i HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - Ac- ® campus organization thatj tress Jill St. John remained in ““ ^SU Cedars of Lebanon Hospital to- «, $2.00 Its on solo ot Olympia and aN I. i. Hudson Ma|or Storos Sonlor CHiions HoH Prko Sot. Motlnoo Nov. 20 only MAIL ORDIRS PROMPTLY FILLED w Ore. le, Sve., Sle«e 1 er S SJe. Show 9UD tIND t........KM .......... MAIN Al DATS CHOICb IN ..........Ui............. M ..... HIAII nUNT MAMS .................................. OLYMPIA STADIUM first run THE NEW height in FRIGHT! J ttCHHICOlOB D-« THE PONTIAC PRKSS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1965 MARKETS Blackout Delays Opening LBJ-Erhard The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by Stock Mart Narrowly Mixed j Talks Slated them in wholesale package lots. QuoUtions are furnished by the new YORK (AP) - Thd Northeastern section of the ^troit Bureau of Markeu as of stock market, delayed in open- country may be expected to Um- changed, rails up .4 and utilities; Friday. Produce ing by a lack of electric power, it transactions today on the part was narrowly mixed early this of many institutions and individ- Ti Spy. bo. __ ____ CM* Pears, bosc, bu.......... Quince, bu. VEeBTABLSt : afternoon. I Trading began af 11:05 a.m. mwIesT, 65 minutes after the nor-iTs mal time, .because of last :: s:w ni(^t'sUackbut. ’•2i Trading was active. Brokers found encouragement uals. Eastern Air Lines, which announced it is plani^ to sell 375,000 common shares to finance the acquisition of new planes, was delayed in opening because of an influx of orders. Bnts, it. bchs. ^^jin fee fact^-that there^ia^been^vhen it did it was off 4% ......i.Ts'dwihdling volume during the • ^5!tWee previous sessions’ decline. il' LIMITED TRANSACTIONS Analysts believed that disrup- at 79%, later paring the loss to 3%. aioo tions of to normal business be- The Associated Press 60-stock average at noon was up .1 to The Dow Jones industrials at noon were ahead 0.28 at 952.00. American Telephone opened on a blodi of 40,000 shares, off V* at 63V4. Its loss later expanded to %. Prices were mixed in active trading on the American Stock Exchange. National Video lost ].7s cause of the power failure in the 353.4 with industrials un-^ Fotochrome were off fractionally. Mead Johnson, Alaska Airlines and Erie Forge made small gains. Corporate and government 'bonds were mostly unchanged. Lfad«ri to Confer in America Dec. 6*8 JOHNSON CITY, Tax. (UPI) — The White House announced today that Presidoit Johnson will confer in this country with West German Chancellw Ludwig Erhard Pec. S-7-8. Acting White House Press more than 2 points. Syntex and sectary Joseph Laltbi said the site of the meetings had not been determined. Onions, dry, Sblb. bag Onions, gr*Mi, 4I bchs. Parsley, Curly, di. bchi./ Parsley, root, dl. bchs The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK (AP)-Followlng ..--iJ selected stock transr-*'— J.K,Vortt Stack exenang* Goodrch 120 ____ Nat Goodyr 1.2S (hds.) Hlfk Law Last Chg. GracaOi 1.W 1 to 40 40 dO f Vk GtAAP 1.» J1 45VS 451/4 45Vk .. Gt West Flnl t1 tits sm + 14 Greyhnd " 04 60H *1 —m c— * 15 » Mtk - W L-i- I ftk r/t tv, - Vb GuM on J 4 ww avk avk - vi guh sut .n a 4W 44H 45«k - Ik U W WH 30 ' a aik a a __________ 4 711k 71 Ik 711k Hanna Co la 15 7J 73 73 — Ik HaclaMng 3s.) HMi Low Clea* I S f3» 17 SSkk 55W 55W . . II «1k 4tVk 4ilk t Vk « ^H?S?iw+Vk 14 33tlCLIne 3a ^reantll* A»| *35?7'^"si3?a^’ IAsi?i*mi iso . rRR.« Cbleago - steady; in^: 03 2 45V4 OSH 4544 x3 It 1» 14 504 43H 431k 43/4 40<4 I 31'k 31'k 31'/4 - 'k 44 231k 2314 32H - H 4 KH 30H 30H -I- 37 ll'k 41 41 ■ -l- 5 4PH 4PH 40H - IngarRan Inland $1 3 lOkk IPH 1N4 1 444 15 4114 411k 4114 - 14 „ 4 431k 43Vk 434 3 )9H tfbb lh Lew Close Che Presnmsbiy, Johnson might want to have the chancellor visit the L. B. J. ranch here where the Chief Executive has been since Oct. 23 recuperating from gallbladder surgery. Thus, it appeared their talks could be held in Washington, at the ranch, at Camp David, Md. or possibly at two of the« places. I 4IVk 41Vk 41Vk — . 21 SN4 S4H 54H — Vk I 75Vk 75H 7Slk -4 H 5 41 41 41 1 10 » 30 4 41Vk 41Vk 41H — Vk 1 1314 33'4 3314 S 451k 45H 45Vk -4 U 14H 14H IM . 5 MH MH tOH- r 71 77H 77H -4 I aik aVk 34H -4 34 37'4 34H 34H - 1 57H S7H 57H 13 30H a M —T— iT m m IM 7 11H ll'k ll'k — V4 45 TlVk 73 73 - Vk 24 141H 140H 141Vk — 14 7 lOH lOH 30H -4 H 5 71 71 “ ■ ■ It IIH 1114 31 aik a avk -4 ' 1 51H ^ S3H -4 V4 2 an BH an — w —C— 14 741k 74 74Vk -4 Vk B 37H 37Vk rvk 7 511k S3Vk SlVk — I 41H 41H 41H 10 4314 43Vk 4ivk — ing is expected to be West Ger many’s role in NATO nuclear This Is point in East-West relations. WARY OF GERMANS The Soviet Uniop insists that the United States, keep nuclear weaponry out of the hands of the Germans. Groundwork for the John-son-Erhard meeting was laid by discussions in Washington earlier this week by the chancellor’s special ambassador, Kurt Bhrenbach, with top U. S. officials. Birrenbach said Bonn wanted full and equal participation in an integrated NATO nuclear force. He made it clear that his government does not regard as sufficient a mere consultative ’The President and Erhard, who won reelection last month in a major political victory, have met twice since Johnson became chief executive. 4 17H ITH 17dCp 1.70 Worlhlf^n I . . XwroK Cp .70 - x B>* IS 43H 43H BH 5 41'k 41H 4lH 7 4SH 45H 4*H _________ 7 11'/4 IP* 13’v 4 '4 N EfwCI . It 71H 71H 73W -4IH NJ fttc 1* 44 40'k 14H B'k - H NVCwn 1.10* 17 M 54 54 -4 H.NiaaMP 1,10 4 13H 33H 33'k-r H’N^Wtt 4a I 34H M'k M'k NA Av>a 3 00 4 HH 44H 44'k -r H NerNatGit 1 14 BH »H BH - H NotPk 3.40* I BH 23H 23H - H NSIa Pw 1.44 O 31H 31'/. 3114 H ttin data. g-0*clar*d oi_______ W year h—Oeclarad or paid attar itei ------------- p. k--^l*r*d or pi NLoad 2.IM IS BH MH 44H -4 H Iti MpI Maoll 1 ^ BH BH - H ra OM Tm Ji I Hh IM !» - H r- Nowborry JJ S 14 If 14 - H dt li irv? 05 BH - h! T^x JT-I.’LR!*!' 'i 'S5 T 5«‘T-lfTrShr ' ronfi. ww—With warronti. wd—Whan dip II 35H 3SH MH -4 H;< I BH -4 H'trlb^. w1-Wh*n li 13 131 131 133 II 3H 3H IH 4 37H 37H 37H 44 34 33H 1 - '4 OuWanlP 40 - H OnioEdIt 1.04 -1 OlinWrth I 40 - H 01H Elav 3 Outb Mar N OvIdPtp 130 i 13'k I3'k I3'k k OomeMn OougAIr h H’ y|—In bankruptcy or rtcalvorNiip _ I B'k B'k B'k |btkt.^ri»|g*n{M^ ' O— 'pan'io* In—Forolflo Ittuo 4 24H MH 14H-4H'(........ ............. 5 BH BH 14H - H B SS'k S4Vk 54H - H 3 44 43H 44 - H -I'— OFTiaAL PITCH - Robert Satin deft), special Peace Ckirps assistant for public affairs, offers infomiation on the corps in Ann Arbor to University of Michigan graduate student Stephan Wyman of 339 Concord, Blootnfleld Township. A prime subject of the meet A RANCH VISIT Erhard visited Johnson at his Texas ranch in December 1963, shortly after Johnson succeeded the slain President John F. Kennedy. The German leader came to ftls country again this year, meeting Johnson in Washington ’There also seemed to be a strong possibility of other high-ranking foreign visitors in the relatively near future. Indian President Lai Bahadur Shaatri of India and President Ayub Khan of Pakistan both have been planning to come to this country during the winter, probably birfore the end of the year. Says It Can't Happen Here Successhhtnvesting By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) *‘I am a widow in my fifties and have a married son in school. I own my home, Mvtngs of about |M,0M, and IM shares each of Detroit Edison, General Motors and Sonthem Company. Have I too much In savings? If so, should I bay a refund auDuity or more good stocks?” H. C. A) In your position, with no apparent need for income, believe a refund annuity would provide you, and later your son, with a moderate return, but it would offer you no protection against inflation, which appears to be accelerating. It would, of course, ultimately exhaust your capital. 'There are some speculative aspects of this present market which I don’t like, and I believe you should invest no more than half your savings In sound tocka with Some defensive characteristics as weU as prospects for future growth. I like —in this categorv—Consolidated Foods, Safeway Stores, Eli Lilly, Consolidated Edison, American Telephone. risk situation, a speculation that an able management will perform a near-miracle and put the company on a firm footing. There is some chance that they will do so, but you can’t afford to take that chance. By all means, keep your governments. Q) “I have been advised to switch my U. S. savings bonds into Stadebaker. I would hate to cash my bonds and take this (tence nnlcM I knew it was Mfe. Do you think this move wooM be wise?” R. C. A) What you are advised to do is contrary to all the rules of investment and of hard buai-le. You now own the itrongeat security in the world. If 70U positively required more income, it would be possible switch your govemmenta into higher paying securities that would be relatively safe. Studebaker is a nondividetid, ANN ARBOR (AP)-A Pea« Corps official said Tuesday tbe agency is including college ardent protest leaders among' persons it is contacting in its fall recruiting drive. To order your copy of Roger Spear’s 48-page Guide to Successful Investing, clip this n 0 ii c e and send $1.68 with your name and address to Roger E. Spear, in care of The Pontiac Press, Box 1818, Grand Central Station, N.Y.C., N. Y. 18817. (Copyright, 188S) News in Brief Frederick Lewai of M84 Drqr-ton. Independence Township, te> ported to Waterford Township police yesterday theft of a tachometer and vacuum gauge, total value $60, from hia car parked in the Community National Bank iotat994 M59. Waterford Towai investigating theft of 18 fire hy-drant caps, valued at $235, from hydrants on Tubbs, Jones, Wilder end Crescent 1 roads. MOM’S Rummage: Faraday, 9 to 12. Indianwood and Baldwin. Dinner: Gloria Dei Lutheran Church, Fri., Nov. 12, from h-7. Reservationa. FE 24D74. —adv. Bake • Pnmitnre Sale: Wed. k Thurs. 69 S. Aator, 1st St. E. of East Blvd. 9 a.m. -8 p.m. —adv. Rnmmage Sale: Thnrsday and Fri., 9 a.m.-? 709 N. Perry. —adv. Peace Corps Eyes'Activists'* "But,” said Robert Satip, Peace Corps special assistant for public affairs, “there's no room for the wild-eyed viaioti-ary. Thia is a serious, soph&-" ticated, demanding job thar we’re asking Americana to par-form." Satin said in the fall recruitment drive “we definitely arc interested in talking to the opinion - formers among the student ,|tody, student journalists and what have been called the activists on campus today.” Referring to students wto have led protests agaimt United States policy in Viet Napi and other demonstrations. Satin said “We’ve always been iookf^ ing for people who have nqt, developed the restraim it takm., to do thia very difficult job of. lityd • HAVE TALKED He said Peace Corps officials have talked with national leati-eri of student protest tnavi-' ments on community develo|)^' Asked wiiiether ^ faflu —adv/ eluded a possibility of having conscientious objectors to the draft join Uk Corps, Satiji said “We’ve made no spedfic HP forts in that direction that I know of.” Satin said he was on the Uni-’ varsity of Michigan campus ill Aim Arbor as part of a "nationwide tour designed to explore the thinking of all student lead< Business Provides Thrust Private Aviation Soars 17 45H M'k 45H - 14 3 II 4H 4H 3'k 3'k r* BoamarSaxat .55 4 24H 34H 34H4 '4 a Oratsar 1.40 ^ , OukaPowar I - H si*"’ 1 i m U 33% 23H 2M4- % E«t» Kod 1.40 I 1 4% 4% 4% ilatofiMf 2.20 ' 4 49 49 49 '1' % .200 12 r/k 5% 5% Ei^ridS 1.55 2 1% 1% 1%+ Vd ElPawNO 1 4 3 2 2 - %'Emar El IJO II 14% 14a. 14 - >s EmtrKod M I 54% 54'w 54% 30 1NH 1^ IW4 -IH|p!nn*RR 'u i ^ »H Sh - HtpJSJi?* IJS “ 85 85 S5.H»"V4lS 3 37H 57'k ITH ''Phlla El ‘ “ 7 MH im iM* vi;||HL^ rT i4i ’in o' 7 HiRlii^'' 3 5*» 5H 5H Etfiyl Cp JO 17 43H 4»v. aaw. _ u.'d»u. M 133H 113'k IM'k-t H EvantPd .40d 4 MH 3 17H ITH 17h- H Evaritiarp' I —^CopyrlgMad by Tha Atioclaiad PraM 1445 43H 43H - H; . .... BH B'k ' 4 BH BH B'k 145 4IH 4l'k 4l'k 17 41 41 41 3 41H 43 43H -4 H 31 lOH 30H 30H -I- 4 40H BH 40H- 4 13H 13H I3H 1 44H 44H 44H — 2 S' S' rt. 5 44'k 44H 44H - H 3 74'k 74 71 - H IS M'k MH MH O’ H , -____ 13 77H 77H 77H + H I El 1.41 11 lOH BH MH t H DETROIT (UPI) - A Detroit Edison Co. spokesman said today it was "Inconceivable” Michigan could suffer a power failure “that even approached what happened in' the East Tuesday night.” 'by“t!3;'“SJr| George Tuttle, director of tubiact to In- pyjjiJc infofmation, said Michigan’s power was generated! . . within the state and would not ,. . . , , Stocks Ot Local Interosf be affected by power failures «■* «>me meetings. Chicago k Fiiura. aiitr oatintii pointi are aighthi Qutslde. North Westom uscs a twin-en- War II, sputtered and coughed!gine light plane and a turbo- By PHILIP J. KEUPER planes. Chesapeake It Ohio AP Basinesi News Writer I Railway has four twin-engine YORK — Private avia- planes to move executives to •antatlv* iniarOaalar p axl- gghgrebv WP have eiMORh ra. maMy 11 *.m. intoi Mtt waerepy we aave cmiaBa ca- ll Plal* 3J0 n iMal : 4% I I 72% 7: 8 14H V Treasury Position Fanslaal M Fadd Cwf . FedOSIr IJO mtt 1.N r,. .oCofP 1 Fldrot Cp 3 FMC Cp •“ 134 II4H 1ISH II4H - I IH 13H IIH 4 t 14 14 14 3 tPk IIH lOH -f 14 70 • 'olorold .30 14 lOOH t-------- ^ 'roctio 1.U 10 70H 70H 70'k - 'ubaind .34t 4 O'............... 'ullman 3.40 4 ifi sa sa flu i?ia _ h sass; 's —p x7 8 I lia ^ 5 '. a IMS I 4,714,B0J47.' DapaoMi Fiical Vr-1MM,177,“ ,1^11 ■* L,4MJI0,414.47 ) X sasa7 ,.... sa j2}7 I tr aa ,r - II ^ 0 4IH OH 4IH 45J1SJ03.340.45 igp Co 1 IIH IIH tIH - H Rfviwp* rj«^ 5 74H 74H 74H Rayn Mol .71 34 45H 44H 13 3IH 31H 31H - HiRohr Corp 1 10 BH BH “ ■ lltJ03,7BJJ4.74 13,151,372,537.04 3l4,3B,l43,1l7.M o ACCOM I ......... - r. *clflc lb 4 ilH 4l'/t 4IH - 'k ”t 5 43 43H 43H H 4 ISH MH MH „ 2a 25i5 ma IH 4|H ^ 4-'k 37 I7h - sa aas'4 5 M'k BH B'/t + 4 SH 5'k IH + “MIchlgaa has a power pool (or years. Today it is booming, inron herebv we heve eiMoeb ea. k___j______ >1 pacHy in onr state to supply aU of onr needs,” Tattle said. “Almost tn those states down there (East) depend upon one another to a great extent. “We are not tied in with any big outside power system. It’s our kind of system we could have anything that even ap-to the Business flying, based on ai a mushrooming use of busi-maxim that wery minute of an.ness jets has attracted military «"^""aN- . age S5i dear brother of Harold Toft. Funeral arrangements are ponding tram the Voor-heas-Slole Funeral Home wher-Mr. Toff will Me In state. (Su gested visiting hours 3 to 5 p.r ISO CASH FOR CHURCHES, CLUBS, organliatlont for selling SO h-“-— or Watkins vanilla jn6 50 c Watkins pepper. C^ll 331-3 COINS. BUV-SELL-TRADE. AFTER p m., Ml-ms._____________ FOR~NUtl>lLlY^ >=000 ment .and Edith Rhenbm Cos-mefles phone FE i99V. lose weIghT safely Oe»-A-Dlef Tablets. Only ft cants GET OUT OF DEBT ON A FLAN You Can Afford MICmOAN CREDIT COUNSELORS isslstance company.______________ MX YOUR FLAT TIRU - ilFARt BOX REPLIES At It a.m. today there were repliei at The Press Office in the following boxes: 5. It, IS; 32, 35, 42, 44, 4t, 48, 49, 5t, N, 99. Pursley FUNERAL HOME ___FE Aim ELT6n BLACK FUNERTL~HdMf UNION LAKE 3*>7IIS SERVICE PORTERS AND 1 USED CAR LOT PORTER. HAROLD TURNER FORD, 4M S. WOODWARD, BIRMINGHAM. ASK FOR MAX JACKSON. NO PHONE CALLS.______________________ WELL DRESSED MEN, SIS. PER evening. Car necessary 1M1 ajn. or 5- Ipjn. Career Xjpportumty. For a man who caras tor hit ..... Ily, wants the finer things In Ilia, win Is not content with SIW r" weak, wants his own butinets. c be his own boss. Phone FE S-Sl CARPET LAYER, 5 YEARS E perlenca, car and tooh nacatsary. 515-3815. ____________ CAA W«HERS. 20-35 Years of Age Move Up Young Men with one el MIchlgan't tastast growing ind largest retail ctwins. No oxForlonco nocessary. 1 or mart yoors ot collega protorroa. Enthusiasm and datarmlnatlon are all Important. It you want to gat ihaad fast, contact ui now. Wo positions. Salasmen, SU. . ----------- plus commission. Sand rotorenees and history ot tducation and am ploymant to D. J. Coteman, DIs trici Sales Mgr., World Wldo Horm Furnishings, Inc., 1135 DIxlo Hwy. ACCOUNTANT Opening for stnior graduato Prefer man with public or - trial accounting background. Apply John Boon DIvIilon, fsos S. Coder, AGRICULTURAL SERVICE DEPT. has . opporhinlty lor young man to handle order processing and corra-spondanca. Collaga degree or aquiv ....... .......rar3."..._. tial for odvoncomont Important Apply John Boon Division, S, Cador, Lansing, Mich. ALL SALESMEN ATTENTION Do you wont unlimited tn-como potantlsl and security loo? Wo have an opening In our soles force for ONE men, ege 15 to 43 to S-E-L-L the lobuloue Ford, AMistang and Thundorbird. SEE FRANK SCHUCK AT JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 430 Oakland Avo._Pontli MocJiiae Shop TOOL LATHE HAND MILL OPERATOR HONE OPERATOR INSPEaORS OVERTIME, FRINGES,-DAYt perlenca. Positions located at Cl dran's Sarvicat Unit In Flint, f panslon of program Into protect services and special prolsct Invo Ing delinquency control and it cart programs w'“' canca and adr-" quant ACSW s adiudlcstad as dalln- son. Sahlin Supply' Co., 750 W. Mapit Rd., Troy. MXCHiNE TOOL AND 'P'ANTI wire man, txporlenct dosirod. Apply 1545 induatrlol Row, Troy, Mich. 540-7100._____________________ AASW,^ QumEMEI^'^ Horiu dogrot. ■I Mchel sclonct t. no txp Jii^ rotiromont pmram, oxc ________ .—1, fcnoevlly and llberti vacation ond sick ~... ■Ilowanco. For furlhtr Information contact MIso Juno Ttwmos, Supor-vlsor, 301 W. Oakley, Flint, Mich, CHEF WANTED.''STEA6y ' w64K. .....----------Rotunda Country CHRISTMAS MONEY. 4an to work 4:30 to 10:30 ings, somt Saturdays. Up to wsak. Must ba aver 11, .... iloytd days. Apply 7:30 p.m., 41040 CLERK FOR MOTEL, PART-TIME CALL FE 54451 CPOK, SHORT ORDER, NO SUN- day’s, paid banafits. Apply r-- Rastsuront, Miracle Milt Sh ' CULLIGAN WATER CONDITIONING OF PONTIAC NEEDS MEN IMMEDIATELY FULL- OR PART-TIME APPLY: tl5 Orchard Lake Read-FE 4 W44 AMBITIOUS MAN A highly rsputabla National Or-ginliatlon and leader In Its field has local opening for ambitious ot unquoftlonabla choroelsr -------- ^ Collogs rrtcT Must IM ready DETAILERS LAYOUT DESIGNERS plan based oi local Intervlev 447-4403, Sat., n machine draft- salary plus Pvartima ExcallanI frlnga bsnafits V In parson or sand rosumo N E. B. Rlockhoff _ EXCELLO CORP. S50 Lsdd Rd. WsMtd Lai gquol Opportunity Empleyer CvIX betwoonf OEUIVERY - STOCK7AAN, VETER-INARY supply firm in DRAYTON PLAINS HAS EXC., OPPORTUNITY FOR QUALIFIED APPLICANT. PERMANENT POSITION. S<^ DAY WEEK, 474-1101 ---*“ POINTMENT. 1 for advancement, e end a retlramanl u A PART-TIME JOB Huntoon FUNERAL HOME DONEISON JOHNS •Tsslgr!id'iaf*Funa»ala'’ j SPARK^WFIff funeral home I I "THouphttuI Servka" FB S41SSi AUTO SERVICE Our Expansion program colls for the Auto Service Unit to double in size. We hove mony excellent opportunities for experienced men in the following classifications: MECHANICS BRAKE AND ALIGNMENT PROFESSIONAL SEATCOVER INSTALLERS Orchard Li ... _____RosaDlsIr.__________ DRIVER SALESMAN FOR ESTAS-llshad route, must ba at k ' ~ years of ago, axcollont oppt lor right man. Apply M I Uundry, 540 S. Tologriph. ORlVdR AND A lumber yard .eke Ro Union ENGINEER M' product anglnoar-in« wim manufocturor of tulomo-tlve strvica'oqulpmont for young enperlenced m^onlcal onginwr-Ing groduoto. Assignnwnt r“"'“-abllHy to lay out and dovtl mechenlcal products and bo rtspon-..... --------.... ---^cotlSs. ilble lor Selsq- - ipocificatk •5. Box ♦. I’liSlv.- ____ _______„ Mlch- irk history ond Cl Equal Opportuidt lEXFERIENCED YOUNG MAN FOR heu’S pslntlng, STl-lSTl._ EXPERIENCEb ARC WELDERS ARTCO INC. MONTHLY EARNINGS FROM $500 TO $650 Voorhees-Siple Ctmettry Leh 4-A I LOT WHITE CHAPEL CEME- tery, IIW. FE 51713. _____ 1 SITES IN CHRISTIAN'MEMORIAL Esietes, Recheslsr, 343-5457. ParsoMb ^ 4-1 ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEOINO s friendly adviser, phone PE 1-5113 belork 5 p m„ or II no en-iwer. tell FE 1-8734 Confidenllel 'OAINTY Part-time evening Khedubs ore ovoiluble. discount privileges. Apply personnel deportment between 9:30 o.m. and 9:00 p.m, doily. Montgomery Ward PONTIAC MALL___ AUTOA4ATIC S C R 4 W NlAfiilNk chief Inspector roquirad far high Glbkok WiST, HAIR STYLIST 343-^ _________ HAYRlbeS 473-7457 PRESS WANT ADS HAVE THE LAST WORD-RESULTS I EXPERIENCED YtklNai MAN FOR houM pelnling. 473-1S71. iXFERliN^O OAt iTATldtrST-land an I, modianlcally Inclined, days. Apply Parry and Walton MAJOR OIL Company Is Hiring part-time steady wo iweod. FE 54f4i. PURCHASING DEPARTMENT tor recant BA gi Administration purchasing or iwnt or BS degr ------J orlantad lav—' col or motollurglcal. man with 5 years purchasing or material nwnoi man! flaM with at least 1 years __ buyer, or spaclaltiad training In foundry operation or casting buying. A^ly John Bean Division, I30S S. Cedar, UnsHig, Michigan. ' Equal Opporhinlty Emptoyor. REPRESENTATIVES NEEDED NOW FOR PONTIAC AREA -_.ss with national corpora- High Income, rapid promotion, full company bonefits. %aS monthly to start If qualHM. ovar II, aomo collega or oqulvslont, naot appearing, novo cor, tar paraonal Intarvlaw call 542-4444. RETIREE WHO WISHES TO SUP-plamant hit Income by working f hours a day In service station; batweon 40 md 47 yoors old. Ml 44454, 347 S. Huntor, Birmingham. Retired Executive Full or Port-Time As roprosanl OlnttrlM CO Of JO Alls ROUTE 50 FREE BiaCLES IMolhers, would you Ilka to got a beautiful new S^lnn bkyda ter your children for Christmas? Al' jwu have to dp Is soil 45 bottles ol vanilla ind 45 cans of aoppor h ggir^ilinds oixl rg^ days par wook, S4I. o'xeo or, rtloroncos. Mli-7443. IMImo or part-tfn I's, 51 N. SagInau ADMINISTRATOR =ar new i ’lortdB's : SM 3-41H. AMBITIOUS WOMAN If you have bean activa In club and church work or have a good education and pleasing-------- tv. and If you havo 0__________ of tjiiw ovalltblg for part- 0 local asalgnmant _____ ----..... organli ~ M. This It not travatlng nor usual canvassing oosi-tkm. Rtf. rtquirad. For locarii-tarvlow Phone Mr. Calnat, 147-44t3, Sat., Nov. 13, botwoon f and A*e V6u dkAkiVt Mave you't.. !?'ta»r'»Inr»7*VoS^5SB profit ky croating at home tor Handlcrgtt ,Sh^ Knit, e -" * Auto Dealership 0 billing dark, tilt par Far our new car and uaad Service Station Managers 1. Salary Plus Generous Commission 2. Four weeks paid training program 3. No investment is required If you ore on experienced and stable resident of your area, and wish to moke o real future for yourselfi SEND COMPLETE RESUME TO SALESIMAN FOR ELECTRIC AP-...----- ... floor tlmo. Draw and Must have car and aema oalllng exportanca. Crump Eluc*rlc, Inc. Call FE *“ —jman to taka ovar ai territory, truck and expo "“*^$140 PER WEEK GUARANTEE PLUS FREE HOSPITALIZATION 5-OAY WEEK For babV iitfkR iH-TitrUBSir' a.m. - 1 e.m., S days, 3 dil dran, FE S-75S7. ____________ BABY SITTER, 3 ittOtitS, 4 p.r... ‘ 11:3t p.m., own tronsp .75 ctnlt 10. AND n il. Sday weak, from 1:30 to 4:30. Near Waterford Village Eto-montory. 473-1745, coll bofort fJO o.m. or attor 4:M p.m.___________ BABYSITtER, CHRISTIAN HOMt, private room, TV, 1 — *’■ * weak, 47341W. BABV SITTER FOR 1 FRE-SCHOOt chlMron, light houtokeoping, i Irons., EM 34734. attor 5:30T PM III BABYSITTER FOR 3 GIRLS, DAYS, ** ' I dMBm ertofiQMrlMklM ftlA tisMlr AD pliancatjnd water t^anart. Good Ivt In. wwir •IWOWWM yww wggwwF HOVi •f—a Dfttf S, 47Mt7l. BEAUTY OPERATOR, PART-TIME, ------------------ ... Salesmen Wa hove well-paying permanent positions for experienced salesmen in 3»45, 4M bod gon-1 •r.i nmsMi.i In Highland Park—I Salary optn - atfraellva Irlnga^ bonaflti Included, paw panslon, llto Insuranca plan, 54 par cant ------ hospitalisation sick bsnofll grim. Excallont opportunity ... right nwn. Reply to Ponlisc Press Box Ne. 51.____________________ MAN WANTBb TO PULL CHIPS *— ‘-urr ports. No txparlsnct nac-r. Uttla ond David Machine ___ .744 PontlK Or. jtylvan Lake) MAh HANDY WITH POWER TOOLS I quality A4AN WANTED FOR INSTALLATION of draporlos at tha Ardtn Draptry Shop at tha PonllK Mall. Phone 4I1II4I. ments: SHOES TV-STEREO FURNITURE TIRES AND ACCESSORIES VACUUMS AND SEWING MACHINES Apply persopnel deport-ment between 9:30 o.m. and 9:00 doily. Montgomery Warci p.m. SALESMEN CAR WASH HELP Taka home pay tllJt par da paw dally. Anly 7 a.m.4 a.i CASHIER MEN (2) with car, avtraga It35-t175 par weak. EstaMlahad route, rapatt cuttomor tarvica, tS-yr.-oW company, nationally advaiilsad ouallty preAfda. Apply t-18 a.m. 143 Oak- land.__________________ 4AN TO WOkK IN AUT( store, moat ba axparli---------- auto ports Clark, Holltrback Auto •alary — cmmiulon plan ana, working c^Hlont. Many company bandits. A^ In parson tor In-torvltw. Ask for Mr, tcoN it Watt-1 ^ Auto tiori, 142 N. Saginaw. | SALES REPRESENTATIVE | Outslondlng opportunity with 101-' year-oM National monutocturor Iwl —- -—0 iilf-ttortor, SALlt 'B ABSOLUTELY 'OEL OIL~B*TVffc' WITH IX-Mrlsnco lor rogular aaosonti work. Will consider and train axparlancad truck driver, now regularly #m-eloyod In soatenal summer work. iFtosso write tor Intorvtow to Box FULL.TIMB OTNfRAL'AMiMkLV NEED PART-TIME WORK? SALES n. IM UW yMr-oW Natlc strong WfXPFRICNCl ____________ production ports, lop waww, friiga AttEMBLY bsndlls. Sand rtsumo to PonllK Press Box No. 43. I prourrod, JO 4-4145, Ext. 5. AUTOMATIC S C > E W MAdMl>lk:*^(!.‘:i-. ** ' MEN - Top notch r _____ ____________S| W'lty taortlM goods store, sot RA 4. Oavonports, Con., I,' and Brown and Sharpes. Slarting rda' ."*9 roquirod. Ml 4-1414. 13.45 par hr. Ftonty of ovortlnw, FULL TIME WOOL FRIsSER, COt^ sll insyrsncf and other fringe brw-1 lino Ctoanors, 45t Woodward 6. Ills. ConiKt Jay Shirty, »• • »••• _______,_Co., Soulh H. AUTO MECHANICS ANL ______________ ks htipors, Kow Solaa and Sary- n basis, Blut Cross If you hove o nice personality, neat appearance, we will train you for part-time soles work. STOCKMEN Day and evening schodulos Apply personnel deport-ment between 9i30 o.m. and 9:00 p.m. doily, Montgomery Ward PONTIAC MALL CaM^^^twaan I p.m. end 4 p.m. SHdfe MAN I, and tatoiv, Sherman's W. Mai^, Birmingham. SHOe MLBSMAN Above avaraoa pay, good hours, stoady jWb, taefcar's Shan, Pon-Hoc Mali, 4114)511. ___________ "StUDENtS tow^hiurs sJorf r^TPowirs at^ln-3in~5 i .m. SUPERVISOR matol labrWolWn doportm$nt.'*'i!i-parlance In malhods and pracon oparatlens towartant. Callaga background dasirabia. Agply J' “— DlvlsWn, 1105 I. Codar, iMni'all tiM at tr^'toa aptr’» tlwLCorjl^^ ^ajjja. S575 5. Cam- CHRISTMAS SALES We ore hiring ond training our Christmas soles help now. If you con work days or evenings, hove 0 pleosont personality and business-like oppeorance, we con train you for our busy Christmas seo-son. Immediate discount privileges. Apply personnel department between 9iw o.m. and 9i00 p.m. doily. Montgomery Ward PONTIAC MALL aftomoon and avaningo, 5 dayA fflrimt iuEb 6iKl TS’WORk BAVI. II g4n.-5 p.m. Emallant pay. Plod {jpr^R^yant, dTS^tokWnd \:&oo ValW Lk nor and roH., help o fired mot wHh big housa, bto.tamlly, rs a weak, Woodward-Long Lai la, 4444444.__________ ACCOUNTANTS TO FREFARE IN-dividual Income tax ratumw ful or part llmt. H. R. Block 1 E. Huron. FE *4315.________ AUTOMOTIVE ACCOUNTANr^ FOR HOUSEKEEPER TO LIVE IN. S--y wotk, OMd — “■* ------- Ing*^ chlMwi. 'Sb-iSs or mAVrW. ________________ HOUSE OF STYLBL CLARKSTON, Its OF STYLEL CLA aning Mr halrsMIst, al o girl. EM >47411. UDIES wllh eosmatic axparlanc, au."tiso'^'i!su,r,« Sran;!?. p.m. 153 Oakland? CHEFS HELPER PART OR 1>ULL TIME DAYS, MOST BE EXPERIENCED, CHATEAU-OAY 15 ' ,E And STEVENSON HWY. LADIES (5) Seasonal help noadad at once. Pleasant salat ssork with tbevt average Incoma. No exparlanct ntcasaary. Phone 331-1053, 4 to " lady to keep house, live in, ■ wtkoma. AAora tor Iwm# ________as. Morninw ^6 LOUNGE WAITRESSES. ti6 KVAI RIENCB NECESSARY. CAL ----- p.m. 4740414. FOR aaanicurist, full 0R_PART -------Me S12 par day plus Matarlals fumisnad. NURSES' AIDES U train, any shift. EM 1-41H. . NIGHT WAITRESS WANTBOj m PART-TIME man to help Wheaton II business, FE tdlS. PERNMNENT POSTION AVAlL^ * - axparitnead taiaa tody, oarson. tea Mr. Smith, Rochaslar. RN'S AND IPit'S or holMays. Reply Pontiac' Box 44, giving roferancaa.____ RELIABLE SITTER APTBRNOONt. Coll botoro 2 p.m. FE 1-1042. R|i9otiiieLi! PIAMN"|iinn to Itot In or boby sit I days a Port-tlmo, sxperlonca prttorrod, turnlturo stars oHko, must bt abji to work somo tvonings. Pham FE 1-4HI tor ippelntmonf. g^^payl oinSrinopuKlOtl****’ SALESWOMBN - SOME EXFERI-tnca, full lima and part tlnia. SECRCTARY Ss?7utt*^to*$wMv58t.*7ieIt hand and dictapham nacasairy. Apply John Bean Dhrlsloa, 1145 t. Ci^,^ UnsIti^ MIch. An Equal \^£>i;£toWarra! startlna Dec. 1. Reply to Fantloc Press Box 4. CLERK TYPIST Full-tlrm position open with os-tabllihid firm. Ntost bo oMa to meat tha pubik wall. Good worktop eondlllons and iltrlltig pay far qualltylng party. Call IW'. Vets tor Itilarvitw. Home and Auto Lean Co. 7 N. Firry SI., FE 5-4515, CHILDREN'S SHOE SALES Lady aver u to ttol chlWran'i shoos, txptrioncod or will train, lull or port Rmo. Apply main fleer shoe dapartmsnt, Walla's. SHORT OR6eR cook, eXI^BRI anca anmeossary, S nWits. Apply batora 11 neon. EM 3-4341. Spiegel's Growing With Pontiac Due to growth and axpanalon, talaotla wlllto apanjng a new cat-atog aalM offlea to flw near tuturo any you art Intortsto^ln growlh CHRISTMAS It Giving time. AVON COSMETICS appeals to avtry mambar of Iht tamlly. Show Ihasa Quolny products and cash In an this great demand. Contact FB 4^ or write F.O. Bax 41, Drayton Plains. ^^O.T’iPooS'sfR^ci”^ ’^•'wtoa Track Dr.,"w.^* ■— thru FrI., 4 ajn.-4 ■«. W4d. 1 p.m^7 p-m. BOYS AND GIRLS mas wreath orders. FB 04005. COOKS DISHWASHERS For ' tvonlng work, good and binttlts. Must havo Ir tatlon. Apply In parson. Howard Johnson's Tslsgro^at “ “ DISHWASHER c.*'a!isSi*5i,vWtU-srK: bistiwASKteiTPULL' Ti>Ae.~iavr. *— mools, must bo dtpondobto Loborotory Technologist Immodlato opmlngt for ASCF Tachnologitt. Jkppty Ptrsonntl Medical Technologist REOUIREO IMMEDIATELY FOE clinical laborttorlts. A4.C.F., A.M.T., ar others qualify. Day and aftomoon shifts. Mximum start-kig salary SS47 par month ptoa pr^bto ovortlmo ot tlmo and a half. Call or write Parsonnal Dept. Pontiac Ostaopathic Hospital- Fan-IlK. Michigan. 130-7171. PIANO FLAYER, PONTIAC LAKi REAL ESTATE tatoaman to aaalat to katptog new modal hetnot optn. Atoe omiNo af-flct floor tlmo. Frafor Ihom with oom lalaa exporlanca and eipabla ^ aarniM at laaat 510450 a year. KINZLER REALTY. 5214 Dlxto Hwy. 474-1115. ijirnnrc— am. to 7 a.m. Mon, ihra^ ft? riTiinr"rernrm'"Tm 5ssr.«r,rtrSrK-.’'a.T Black Ce. 10 E. Huron, FE A4111. SUB$tltUTE TEACHEftS Mi«'to‘i»4::JK: Thurs. or FrI., Nov. II and II. Ad- I, Mile-PeEMle l-A EXECUTIVE SALESMAN PLASTICS "I art leoktoa tor ii THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1965 D—9 t, Tiitrini 1J IM AA MOVING BOB'S VAN SERVICE KOIBRT TOMPKINS *------- I. OfVGl OMcumb, 0iO«i. ^AUTV WORK ASSUREOrmUNH CT* Will Wiihlno. tn «ALi. miHiHdrwnriTiM&tify. Piflin4155. W«iitaBaiildnRtoBMrd28 A-l CARE BY DAY OR WEEK. LIcanaad home. FE F2041. U.5113, ME 7-5193. WwIbB ltd htilt 3> i^NwtjEW■tB, PwrEMwd 17 WANTED grnttrr-Fisri GRINNELL'S I__FE 3-7168 HAVE BUYERS FOR CASH FA ID FOR YOUR USED tomiture and aiwllaneaa. FR AIMS. is™ —“ ask tor Mr. ©rant. Itura. TOR. OR ««SS OR HAVE^URCItAilk WAITIM6 YMt strictod. Call Mr. Lewis. EM >790 Sr OR A21S2. C 0 U F L E DESIRES FOUR-BED-room home, wHhIn “ —— ** Blrmlnsham. Near pi chlal schoela, wMh or to buy. Fhona Mr. S-kioootoS. MARRIED COLLkOB ------------- —untomisheo M rooms ..........1 Daifolt simrbs or Pontiac, no chlMran. FE A5S59 altor S:S0 p.m. EED 3-BEOROOM UNFURN home before January, cowt dOfl, Fontlac area. FE A220. WEST SIDE, FAMILY OF •- — liras > or 3-bedroom home. Good ret, call 134-1371 avanInBe cellacl. WHITk FAMILY NEEDS HOUS^ or largo apartment to rank Nen-drlnkar. Call bat. 4:30-7:30 pjn. 33S-WM. WORKII HEIP-HELP-HEIPI Bvilnaaa la exceptionally owd. Wa need houses, incomes, commercial property and vacant property t sell. Tell evenryone you know I sail. Tell avaryona you know I sea WARDEN REALTY II the want to saN faat. WARDEN REALTY 3434 W. Huron, Fontlac S33-7I57 NEEDED, NEAY, bungalow w.... ——-— a. Close In; S15.000 prico — Ba»e, OR 3-ioa .... O'Neil Realtor 3530 PantiBC Lake Rd. Open . .. . OR A3233 MU OR 3-»3l NEED NOWIII S-BE0R60M WEST. LADY DESIRES TO SHARE 9 Sbadraom home vvlth I or t w fng ladles. 451-0391.__________________ 1 TO 50 lOMES, LOTS, ACREAGE PAR-CELr FARmI, BUSINESS PROP-ERTlks, AND LAND CONTACTS MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE For Land Contracts and Equlttaa Immadlata Action-Call Today A. JOHNSON & SON REAL ESTATE A INSURANCE 1704 S. Telegraph CASH 48 HOURS LAND CONTRACTS-HOMES WRIGHT n Oikland Ave. FE 3-9141 QUICK CASH FOR YOUR HOME OR EOUl IE BUY, SELL TRADE i I jfoi^.'^H^ON fI >]& RES. FE 44r‘* LIST. MCE 3 AND BATH. 3 WALK-IN ctotafs, 1 linen. AH privete. Near ~ ^ required. FE r -»J.’n g I d *W3on, c Ing^tBbo^^ per wl »t; Wrfia rtnKee Pm 3-BEDROOM BRICK RANCHER me. cenditlen, full basement, fenced yard. S400 down plus mort--------ISIS. 394 Linda Vlsfe, 4 BEDROOMS — .»me, but lovely li mlly, living room, dining Id bedroom ere carpeted. t6 OM EMPLOYE, 4 BI6ROOMS, fifsacrwffr matic neat. garage, range. M COMPLETELY REMODELED, bedroom, new kitchen end t_ turn., gao a monHi, avas. MA Lake area, S30 dapeelt, 34>5543. ......... ....... .... > or 3- badroom north up to J13,9n. Cus-tomori waiting. Call Ollbaft Long. FE >4239. Ray O'Nall Raeltor 3S30 Pontiac Lake Road OR 4-2323 or FE 34239 NOTICE! u have acraaga parceN tor - anwTl ~ - ■“ MODERN I BEDROOM, STOVE, rafrtgarator, air conditioning, bal- rryM-TOli?’on!y**435-'a»,!'^'° QUIET, CARPETED l-BEDROOM opt. S13S per moniti, no children no pets. FE >3331.____________ 6n HUGES street. FE >7592. UPPEI RtHt Hovbgs, Funrishtd 39 Want Listings Will Travel-Taylor OR 4^306 vonce. Call FE >5014. Raf. required. >BEOROOM home S135 ito. S125 WE NEED LISTINGS TOM REAGAN, REALTOR It N. Opdyka __________»0154 ApartRMRts, FHrnislied 37 ADULTS ONLY 2 BEDROOMS, basement, auto., beat, SI 00 a mo., deposit, reteroncoa. 403-5035. posit.' Inquirs coll 3Si^54. at 271 Baldwin Ava. 5 ROOAAS, PULL BATHS, ADULTS. apartmant, S30 a wk. S30 utmtias mM, can — o'clock, at Orlando. :ompletely furnished. 0 children, no pets. LOON LAK Ing and h OR >2187 An Experiencad Ad-Visor Will Gladly Help You Word Your Want Ad SMALL i BEDROOM HOU furniture, lake prlvllagas. Si month. SOS deposit. 47>373l. HwiiHiig AccmodatlBiii 4T-A LEWISTON, MICHIGAN S4.00 per day: tnchidas slaap-Inj^and breakfast. Phone 474- ELDCK and cement broken coikretb and top loll. FE 44171._____________ MERION BLUE SOD. PICK UP OR dHIvorod. 2401 Cfooko. UL *-- OODINO, Enow flowinoT _. leader, dump truck. FE >3214. NEW ROOFS, REPAIRS. INSUltED end guarantood. Call Tom, M>4543. Niyn,>ERaa», kekAifts, out Mr work and tooka. All work guar. P. Cushing, FE S-4491. ROBERT PRICE ROOFING, BUILf-up roofing. Froo Est. FE 4-1934. ROOFING AND REPAIR. 4S3-479q OL 1-4441 ROOFS: NEW, REPAIR ACAR OARAGES. 10x30', bulM any ilia. Camqnt Fraa Mimate, Pady-Bull Ca, OR >5419.________ ' iCAR OARAGE, Id99~ ADDITIONS “g*rW?§S^r?!?W" a EaWmataa_______OR 4-1 TALBOn LUMBER asa Inttallad to daera and ira^^_Compjato buHdlng^^arv1gS| SMITH MOVING CO. FE 44S44 Lakes Tree Co., Trimming ^Plentlnga RamovaL Rlraplaca wood - 4SH ____________Ot I-I21i___________ CbMMfE remoi»lII44 ilAV- - lea. FHa tarma. FE »944S. TREE SERVICE, TRIM L TRUCKING AND EXCA-top soil, fill iHrt, sen" — baddiM worfi, lami A-t INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR attic and baiemant recraatlon « AAA PAINViNO and Odk6RAtlN4 LI Intorlor and axtart“ jnates. UL MSS7. INTIRIOfI p I N 11 Hp I 41 VMT» fKpvrrafSE* - CieWI W«H[_________________ C«n«G and Slock Work FE 4-72^"^’ '•’’’TO Sf Mia --------- C----------------;Xr;S5I----- liDgtfc. Trucks to Rent PMatttiiipSBnHM A1 PLASTERING, EXPERT PATCH ________ - TRACTOl,. AND EQUIFMlNT DiMip TrueSa — Saml-Trillara Pontioc Form and Industrial Tractor Co. DRAYTON FENCE CO. N.J^|XIB AT FOR BEST RESULTS! BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANS WIGS S29.95 TO SlOh HAIRPIECES ^ Vil8 SATh. AUT6-IH«n5g,^*nS' ny de< ;r s IMMEDIATE CASH FOR HOUSES, FARMS, ACREAGE LAND CONTRACTS, EQUITIES WRIGHT REALTY 333 Oakland Ave. FE 3-9141 Eves, efter S, ----- BEDROOAAS, 5« QUARTER ST., Rochester, 3 children cllowed, SS5 a mo., $100 deposit. Ml 7-2141 BY OWNER, VACANT, BLOOM- boTng accepted Contact ^Ident Manager 544 E. Blvd. at Valencia BIRMINGHAM homa, 2 bal 1 bathe, partially fi prefarrao, Exc. r Ideal for family with email _ dren. Sudden transfer price 141,500. THREE-BEDROOM RANCH near Kirk on high, scenic elta. FomI"' room, two fireplaces and 21' porC WEIR, MANUEL, SNYDER & RANKE 391 5. Woodward, Birmingham 4444300 PHONES 544-3323 CLEAN ROOM M FOR L St. ft 5 2 SlRISpin6 ftoofiis FOR'ReNT. 344 E. Pika. FE >4374. LAmkS, VERY NICE, NEAR OfeN-eral Hoipltal, FE S90S1. Resit OffkD SpoM AVAILABLE SOON FOR LEASE Rd. In Troy near the I-7S a Inciudai «a I fluoTMcanf''llghtl^'Up to* iToob iquara faat of space avolliblo. Order procatslng tnd totlew up) plus Invoicing and shipping larvicw avallablo. CALL DETROIT VA 2-9466 OFFICE 14x14' AND 2 SMALL OF-flees upper, SS5. H. J. VanWalt-4S40 DIkto llwy.-OR >1355. OFFici spAce 6n west ~mr Tel-Huron Stoopplng Coot»- OFFICES FOR RENT ... all itoipping cantar. Call Tom laman or JKk Ralph at FE 141.______________________ t BvsiiMis Prafarty 47-A BREWER REAL ESTATE 400 s6UARd FOOT STORAGE OA-rega with alterhed office. Ideal lor amell contractor, ISO. FE 2-294$. «6*“BuiLomo,”suirASnr fOT manufacturing heat. FE >MI2. Sole Hoemb >BSOROOM HOME, ALUMINUM siding and storms, walk-out beae-ment, Immadlata poumlon. K.SOi 24 w. Fairmount. Call altar 4 p.m. FE >3244.__________________ 2-STORY, >BEOROOM, BASEMENT, SI2,S00, 9241 HlllcresI, Clarkr-— MA 5 4411 attar 4 p.m.___ 2-BEDROOM HOME Nice ahadad NL IsrxW. 2-car KIcT^ wWpar-'cSnl siown. PeaalBle 2jv^toSSi£!d, tot iBoy FLAnLEY REALTY .20 Commerce S4>d9ii l-AiebRddM, lilWLT'gteSitAt. riBBRtRSS'TAIiMlIsj. rage. lit Lake Orion. OA >2013. A. Bandars, roe. H. Wilson. r3GHntoriiS535iXr Oeocf-slia living room, dining room, largo kltchan with lets ot caWnala, ipacloin bath and vanity. 1- carpatad^ toll toMment, all »i3^'i£lth'^ 1 carpatad, toll . aa a wtiutto, IWcar garag eut-bulldlnnor workshM « ana. Ill Orion Township. WrH.'BASS REALT^*^ m''^V*^SuILOER 49 Sple Hemes ™->m sre carpeted. Large I kitchen. 3 Israe htn-nnms up, tlk near Wetolns baths, bisement,^riStot?^toot corpetod living room, 2>foot family room with flreplact, o dream kitchen with built kis, large welkin pentiy, 2Vi baths, gas hot wa-" heat, attached tear oarage. Watkins Lake among „ ------Botirnnaji aw is In new condition. Owner must sell. Sacrifice, 324,900. Terms. J. J. JOLL, Realty 2-3400 483 0202 M l 4 441 REAL ESTATE dining roe well-fthwel Mrem - excell^ neighborhood After S, FE'4S941, OR > EM »'>"5>7 HI-HILL VILLAGE -----quad-level wiin temiry room 2 ll^lecei. Exc. condition. ^n6 closing COST ^rea Rd. taka Commerce to S. Commirco Rd. turn right ot Glon-gary It. lift to Los Arbolei -AMERICANA HOMES 434-4300 HIITER WEST SUB. Naal and clean, rooms and bath, 3>ft. living rom with new carpel, large kltchs with snack bar, iv>car garag on 3 nice tots, I9,i00 terme. THREE-FAMILY INCOME. Close 1 -—ntowm u) 179x342 ft. lot, zone $9990 FULLY INSULATED, Del-Mar Wied cabinets. No money down. YOUNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER 8ILT RUSSELL YOUNG. S3W W. HURON FE 4-3830________ • VA - FHA HOMES - 0 - 3 BARGAIN t only 310,950. FHA terms. ROY LAZENBY, Realtor 4393 Dixie Hwy. OR 4-031 Multiple Listing Service —McGOLlOUGH^BEAtTY North tido, iborp >bedroom L... gelow, with full bosemont, aluminum storme and scraans, gas haa' Anchor foncod roar yard. Cleia I schools and bus. FHA farms. TED M^I^LI^UOH, JR. FE >9550, It no answer, 403-4054 basement, 1-cer attached garage, 75' wide lot, city water, paved afreets. See any day 1 to 7 p.m. at 1195 Creecant Lake Reed, VS mile north ot M59. E-Z TERMS ON FHA OR TRADE YOUR HOME. C. SCHUETT >0500 or FE >7000 MODEL OPEN AFTERNOONS 1-S AND SUNDAY WESTOWN REALTY 545 Bloomflotd Near Luther FE >043 afternoons. LI >440 Evot. FIRST IN VALUE_____________ MIXED SUBS: ______ LEWIS REALTY - FE >3344. ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES Modern >bedroom homo, toll bai ment, gas furnace, targe corr lot, giM condition, reatonaL.. terms. 3994 Arcadia Park. VI 1-970 Pontiac, FE H»340. NO MONEY DOWNI Tuckar Roalty_________FE 4-1545 NO DOWN PAYMENT NO PAYMENT THE 1ST MONTH Tempr-arv —‘—' " Elizabeth Lake Estates IVS-atory with 3 bedrooms, full ramie tile bath, larga famllY kll tinea to 0^ beach. Full price $13,900. SislocTc BTXenf7 TncT FHA Representative 101 ATHLONE, OXFORD RED BARN SUB — >badraom ranch Witt) baicmtnt »fKl buHt'Int, rwcondltlon«d. $13AS0e I4SD down. NORTH POINT REALTY fM S. twain Clarkston ‘ ----- MA S-15$2 FRANKAAAN ST. room mo non# oor rioorip mriy Awylem kitenon# 11x15 fimlly on Loko Ooklandr . ptr mo. no clot- Clarence c. ridgeiVay REALTOR RENTING $59 Mo. Exctudlng taxaa end Inaurtnee ONLY • $10 Deposit . WITH APPLICATION >BEOROOM HOME GAS HEAT LARei DINING AREA WILL ACCEPT ALL APPLICA---- -10M ......... TIONS I I ANY WORKERS. WIDOWS OR DIVORCEES. PEOPLE wrm LEMS AND R OKAY WITH VB. For Immediate Action Coll FE 5-3676 626-9575 IN daily AND SAT. AND SI OR COMB TO 290 KBNNITT NBAR BALDWIN RIAL VALUe RBALTY GAYLORD is^' WALTBR^Ij^^KE^ Year-rjH^^ wB^ln closet'i.‘^Nuut'bMimianl. This home If In excailent cond' tion. ONLY $14,^599, farms. Call M >2921 er FE l4a92. UWRENCE W. GAYLORD 2 W. Fllnl i8y»,1&W^»44>3 HAYDEN 3 Bedroom Tri-Level $12,900 Gas Heat Attached Oarage IW Bathe family Ream Over use aq. n. ot Llvlw Area THE ECON-aiRI 2 Badreema Let Includa AT $11,000 Family Beam Attached Garag Will dupileala an yeur tat OFFICE OPEN 9 to S;20 J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor WIUIAMS LAKE A diluxt >btdreem lake cottage lecatad on beautiful let svir —-beech. This unusually nice ceuld be winterized tor r much money) has large room with fireplace, dining . . modem kitchen, IVY-cer garage end Is fumlihed. Priced at only sn;450. CALL FOR Airp O I N f-MENT. GIROUX kCAL ESTATE 511 Highimd kOHd (M5») 575-7K Val-U-Way Government Representative — --------- ... more Inlerma- flon call B. C. HIITER, REALTOR, 3792 Elizabeth Lake Rd., FE 3-010, after 8 p.m., 483-4437. HANDYMAN'S SPECIAL large glassed-ln porch. Basement, some furniture. Beautifully shaded let. Across from lake. School bus. (Very livable, but nwds Ine). Only S5.500, 31,50 345.59 nr— ----- —rms, ell furnace, d yard, near Union Lake, r LAZENBY OFF JOSLYN >bedroom home with carpeted llv Ing room end a separata dinini room, nice kitchen, ' TAYLOR MODEL SEE THIS OUTSTANDING VALUE 790 Highland Road 5 Milts W. el City Airport 3-BEDROOM TRI-LEVEL OPEN DAILY 6 to 9 SAT. and SUN. 1 to 6 Anytime by appointment NOW IS THE TIME TO TRADE fllGE BUNGALOW------- ....d In quiet, well ks Pontiac, Includaa 2 Down and room tor oni upstairs, full basement, ... and a new garage. Full p... llOJOg!- Terms. NEAR NORTHERN HIGH List Here-All Cas.h for Your Home I R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 345 Oakland Ave. (3pen 9-7 hours FE 44497 and FE 4-8200 I bargain at 311,t TAYLOR AGENCY 1 gas i 103 Highland Road (AA59) OR 44304 Mixed Neighborhood KINZLER 6-ROOM BRICK Vacant. Near Watarford schools. Lake and beach prlvllages. A" -newly decoratad and complett ne\ K.u. w separate dit I or 3 bedroomt. Idee. V small family. 313,950 ... — down plus costs. AUBURN HEIGHTS ig and tow Early America.. ..... 1 fireplace. 3 bed-....... , baths. Lot 315,909) 10 par cant dew "“**■ BRICK 4-FAMILY Substantial and wall malntilnad. 5 rooms and bath plus glaiaad and scroanad porch nA. Cat fumao 4car garage. 1 apartmant n vacant. Agood horns and Inve mint. 15,009 down on land contra Don't delay. JOHN KINZLER, Realtor 019 Dixie Hwy. «7>3: Acrott from Packers Store Ipla LUtlng Service Open >0 NEW ELIZABETH LAKE FRONT Beautiful king-sized 7-room. IV baths, 3-car garage. Nicely lane •cap^. Perfect beach. Substsntli down peyment. Elwood Realty 483-0135 413-3410 ment, gae hast, gat bullt-ln cooking equipment In cheerful kitchen, paved etreet, city convanlencat. $11,809 S500 down could move you In, 044.04 month plus tax and Insurance. HAGSTROM REALTOR, 4990 W. HURON, OR 49351, EVE-NINOS OR >430.______ Vacant, Immedicle pofietslon, I niomi, 3 lots, total IST lake front age. (^ 510,500 with reasonabli down payment tnd with lend con K.*t‘. TEMPLETON, Reoltor 330 Orchard Lake Rd. 49>099e RANCH-TYPE, ASBESTOS SIDING. __________ large llv.... .. -to-wall carpeting, 1 year ■/repat and shower curtain Inc... ad In aslllng prica, 112,500 - 52,500 down, or cash to existing land contract. MGIC or Convanftonal UTICA AREA—>BEDR#itill'*brtitk -■*r, tVi baths, attached ga-, oil forced air host, fenced er lot. Ooodill Realty. UL VACANt, S fe60MS WitH fuTL VACANT-BY OWNER >badroom brick ranch. Baeament. ^€•r oaraot. Exc. condition. Call 674-0670 aftof 4 p.m. WEAVER AT ROCHESTER lEAR TROY- larga >badroom, porch, paneled lamlly r-*— ’ baths, full basement, 2W rigo, new condition, lust MILTON WEAVER INC., REALTOR ■n the Vlllane of Rochester 1. University 431-8141 E LAKE - YEAR AROUND NEW CUSTOM HOMES "UNDER CONSTRUCTION" TRADE-IN YOUR OLD HOME FOR A BRAND NlW HOME 914,509 INCLUDING LOT - _ Three - Bedroom aluminum tWoC rancher, IV» ceramie tllo^ talti anp oak floortno# kilty InauWa-, asstttorLriraWs: cats, $11,409 9ft your lot. sulth Oeorgltn whjto m-.™ and oountar tops, bullt-ln appll- 8T'dSSKl»'i!!»3M ‘ri»MTD*l! sosM glau wl marble slllt, pelnt heat, a'xif finish driveway, 99'x399 ATE raisBSSlOh HOLLY LAKE FRONT - ftSHallai^'Wwaii^SlrsK: ment, balcony oft dining room, white Formlco kitchen cabinets, bullt-ln appllancat, white with gold Insgrta toatorod In --- bat^doubla Javitorl water haator, ffxlS* Machad .. SUBURBAN LIVING In Orloo Twp, with cl0 con lencasr snarp >bedr!»m h with garage, gas heat, nicely I Kaped yard, ipaclout living re., convenient kitchen, '/,-ocre_lot. I 10 pt I. SII.DO h 51,59 NEWLY DECORATED Hna priced far be arranged living rc BI-IEVEL HOME In mixed arte. Hat 1 btdr------ aptclout living room, recreation room, gas heat, dandy tile bath, recently redecorated. Priced right with 5409 down, roeeonoblo month- ___________n, has toll basement, gas heat, 2 lavaterlas, storage rooms, plus ottoched 4 rooms and bath for living quirtors, 1'/> eir gorage, comar let, prica 111,509 on contract. OFF MONTCALM, 4-room ranch-stylo, ahn utility room, oak ----1, bath, t ------ IS, ■— - . tigh $7400. OFF WILLIAMS LAKE RD. Leivaly >bodroom ranch, brick front, carpeted living room and dining area. Brick llrepleca, master bedroom I2'x14„ tllod bath room, gas haat, onclottd carport. SO'x-209' lot. Prico SU950. Torma. GILES REALTY CO. FE 54175 »1 Baldwin Avo. MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE Waterfor(d WILLIAMS LAKE oqkt surround thesa lot. Smaller home hat 2 bed-— —I., ---1 Income in,.,IV I,V« V la.yV nv"rrv.— - car garage, living Ing room, aultabla Ily. Both homos In oxcallant .... ditlon. Lake privllagat on Wllllamt Lake, $22,590 terms. LAKE FRONT-TWIN LAKES Bay Capri ranch, ftaturat 3 lari bodr^------■— •—-- 25 ACRES Excellent bulkting sift man farmarp Brandon T< r gantta-ininip ~-Mar par era. Cal WATERFORD REALTY D. Braton, Realtor OR >103 ~ C5lxle Hwy. Van Welt GILES ARRO WE BUILD-WE TRADE NEW BRICK COLONIAL, >badroom, —"-art, lamlly room with basement, gas heat, 2--‘"d garage. Located in COZY WATERFRONT BUNGALOW, with 2 bedrooms, full bath, oil heat, storms end screens, nicety lendteeped yard. Only n,2M, terms. 70-1TZ5 R Y ALUMINUM SIDINO ----- -1 rooms, toll basement, . ____ paved street, last 2 years has brought e— ----— -nonlh, F 682-2211 Ted McCullough Sr., Realtor 5143 Cass-Ellzoboth Road MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE OPEN DAILY 9 TO 9 Brown INCOME - Mamlly building In Oxford. Must be sold to settle an estate. Gat convenient heat. RHODES A ALL COMFORTABLE Aroom wma, toll basament, oil hoot, — wr lot. Meal loeatlon, walking lanca to storaa ond Dua. Only NO, Sl.OOO down, S4S par nx lahd contract. \ COMMERCIAL GARAGE, LakO Ion, nice largo buHdlnQ wlHi »_ r**^. 5 ACRES m'Sathabaw Rd. Ideal building spat. 15,599. Tarnn. INDIANWOOD SHORES NO. X ,™. .... -------family, for your ___ „.II railrictad, ____ .My prlrad, call Snrtny ter details. ALBERT J. RHOD^ES, Broker FE >2304 251 W. Walton FE 54712 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE MILLER NORTH SIDE >fw»n hotri# In < collont condition, ntwto decoroti Carpatad living room, toll bos^t, recreation room, 19-lt. wide lot ond only 0,300 on land eontroct. NORTH SIDE >BEDROOM ranch hem# In llke-new condition. '^” poted 13x11 living room, dining largo vtlll0 rooon, tancad beai Handyman Special - —-------Iiyxir each, living rce, irx19', IVk-car WEST SIDE FAMILY HOME, 7 rooms, m baths, toll baiemant, gat 12 LOVELY ACRES WEST of City. A-1 localt, Ideal Tor Iwrso farm, -hurcb, multiple dwellings and many non posilbriltles. River frontage ind blacktop road. AARON BAUGHEV, lttalfor an W. HURON® ”“*OFEN 9 TO 9 Vacant Lots Tsro SO’xISI' tolt, two 40'x144' tote, aide by side. We will for you. List With Schram and Call the Van REALTOR-T MLS Htt JOSLYN AVE. FE >940 CLARK WEST SUBURBAN. Watarford Town- bullt-ln bar — raw wall-to-wsll carpeting - lanced yard, *" garage - owner movliw. In fate possession, SIS,950. Tormt ELIZABETH LAKE FRONT. >bed- KENT party In MIct outright at S14 WEST SIDE - >bfdroom home wH l^cTto^'«rg?r«■»i^li5 31,459 down. Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor scon LAKE PRIVILEGES Ranch home ll-ft. carpeted living c'sa.rijri.ste room, FA gn host, al storms end icreene, >car garage, large lot, 195)dM»«. ShaA and rlull trios. Pricad al $12499. ttrmt. CALL TODAY. 40 ACRES appointment: SMITH 6c WIDEMAN IRWIN LAKE ORION TWP. two badroomt, could bo Ihreo. Largo kltchan, nice tin living room, gat halt, attached 2-car garage. Near schools, churches, end shopping ctnler. Prico 312,900. Tormt. ■ UNHAPPY RENTER cated on a good sized lot White Lake Twp. Needs tame repair. 33,790 li tha prico. Tormt. lohn K. Irwin investment special - right on main street In Oxford, ao-ft. ttoro building with two opts, ebovo. Stora rtnled for $109 mo. Two dpts. rent lor S49 each. Total Income 5229. A atoal at only $13,599. Raaaonablo tormt. . d condition. Aluminum alarms, oil lumaco and attachad carport, paved st. Priced low at only Sl^ and only S399 down L. H. BROWN, Realtor W Elliaboth Lake Road Ph. FE 44544 or FE >4819 SCHRAM Now Doing Custom Building On AyoilablQ Building SitesI Your Plans or Ours ustoiOundeni ANNETT West Side >bedroom, 3-storv homo, lull basement, gat heat, garage, elate In. Integrated neighborhood. 39.590 terms, Includaa carpeting In living room end dining room. North Side Also Bi-Level DO aquiro I r 114488 < 2-car gait of living your lot. West Side I rooms, i bottia, room, 24lory, full bat< 2-car garage, ftitarad WILL TRADE Realtors 28 E. Huron St. Open Evanlnga and Sunday! 1-4 FE 8-0466 TIMES Sack yard. This It a rtjl gam a deal, compute package Ilka walFto-wall carpeting, 1V>car garage, pavad drive, newly daeo-rafad. How can you beat this for only SR930. 19 par cant down plus costs. This It ■ now listing. CHICKADEE Spilt colonial, quid-loval homo built In 1943, feotorlng 5, b^ roomt, beautifully pinaM lamlly room, 2W balba ^imlcl, oak floora, plastarod walls, gas FA haatToft toroa THr'xISV lot. Ttos Is a quillfytum homo with the vary beat In mattrlol and decor. Don't mill IWa ana. Only ^ an Inspection will rovool the Ing wo havo boro. Clarkston Times Realty 5199 DIXIE HIGHWAY (South of Watarford Hill) OR 44094 Open 9-9 Dolly DORRIS OUR LADY OF LAKES.. 'mmKU-lato lamlly homo wllhin wolklry dlitanco of this Powilor porlth, > bodroom story and half bungalow with 2 btdroomt down and a beau- US',!. Wr E- f walTto^li earpaling In oom wllh coved callings, ROOM TO STRETCH an^ftillb tHul comer lol 190x290) Ihal merely one ol the (^stj^lng roSm>**eeirele**dlnri!g TOom,”% TWaBEDROOM t»LL HOUSE. Thie home -to one of the moat appealing hemeeVe nave seen a long ttmo. only the best construction and care went li thto Whitt frame bungalow, t ftoors, pliitered wane, corar bath, iperkllng kttchan with I Ing specs, teperel* dining roc 10x14 family room wllh haatala firoplact, attichod garago i workshop. DORRIS k ION, REALTORS *^u“i:T*l$LniST.N...R»^ O'NEIL wont 0 piano for tha kida, lhara't a 39' studio calling living room to show It off In. Two full baths, with showers. Fully tiled, partitioned basamant. Family room, tool >car gtrago. A tot of oxtros will bo Inchtood it 322,900, lovely carpotlng, wttor sottonar, Inclnora-tor. Why not trado In your llltio homes? FOX BAY AREA- WATERFORD SCHOOLS Just listed this attractive, roomy brick. Walkout bostmont, 3-car ga-riga. Electric bullt-ln range and oven. Look and compara with tha new ones) landscaping, carpeting are all dona and tha racraatlon room la nmshad. Full price only RIVER AND CANAL 194' water front loading Into Cass, keep your fishing boat at your doorstop. Here's t lovoly big, fr--ly polnlod, family homa with 41 .. porch, wrapped around It. There's . ...........40' of rapped around It. There's ----- firaplaco In tha living room; carpots and curtains will remain, nas haat, garage, water, sawar. Ail this at a raalitllc S14,-950 and Immadlata poaaaaslon. Wa have the kty-TRAOE. TRADE. TRADE. I many avallabis, L. Brl^ exterior, attochod'doubjo'g> rage. $17,590 Includot good carpeting, draperies. Incinerator. E a a y terms to quallflad pooplo. /May be ssen inyllma. Trade. GARDEN CITY BEAUTY, near Char- sharptal, you'll aob ai brick ri rago. AAarlon Blue aoddad lasm, loll of shrubs, ftowara. paved driveway. Reduced to S17409) loos PLMSANT OLDER HOME witb SM bodroom and balh down, 2 big bodrooma upslilrs. (3ai hoot. Os-rago. SItoatad midway bafsraan dmyntown and Iba adall. Only Mr 259. easy terms, no down payment tor ollgibto "Vita." MODELS Open Daily 2 to 8 WESTRIDGE OF WATERFORD AN INVITATION II ETttENOBO TO ALL OF YOU to Inopoct our Mur tyrnlibod modal homot, OBCh com-ptotoly dltloront and tocludlDB a SMnM ityto. Wa'II dugileato, Iram S17,900 on your tot or you may sp-It you would raihor >f .Rw four modoto .. A wSL ____________iSKSry'TSS: brook UoMp rlsM Mor Our Loir compMol msdialo i purchoi Ily- land RAY O'NEIL, RmHot IX—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1065 STOUTS Best Buys Today ke Front Income Ideal setup, large 7-room homi for owner, plus modern 5-roonr apartment up, separate entrance basement, gas haat, glassed sur porch, fireplace, patio and boat dock, frontage on Lake Orion. Frushour Strioble APPROXIMATELY 2 ACRES WITH NICE l-ROOM HOME, M * miles north of Pontiac, in' living room, wllh brick flraplace, large dining room and Mg kitchen as twell as J bedrooms, full basement and SM-car garage. Has complela lawn sprinkling system with water furnished by spring-fed pond. tIdJOO with 17,000 to equity or trade In your presan' homo. CALL TODAY. WATER FRONT HOME This MEDROOM TRI-LEVEL In Commerce Twp., has roomy kitchan wllh dining area, large living room with firiplace, i— furnace and Anchor fenced, won't last long at >11,500 ... land contract to equity. Trade'r»crant Lake inyourpr^enthome orequhy. OPPORTUNITY I ......... STOP AND LOOK at this nice furnace, utility room with laun- two-famlly Income with private dry area, tile 1-“- “*• - entrance to each and i-ctr ga- sjofms “T rage, showing a nice return ter Only »,900 wllh your money. Located In e perfect neighborhood for rentals. This IntUS Lake pntoerty Is selling for >12.500___________________. onland contract. A good Invest-' ment for someone. C ♦ L L TO-; CANAL LOTS Cholco bulldbig silos - MkI47. Connected with w>van Lake. JACK LOVELAND nit cast L^ Rd. CLARKSTON “ I- AND 5-ACRE PARCELS - REA-SONABLE. «74-17d0. . Only '>13,000 dining ell, new gas JACK FRUSHOUR STRUBLE "BUD' ,Cass Loke tO-foot canal front lust oil the big lake, spick and span ' — room, 3-level home with b I, 2 baths, loads < Closer ano storage space, 'ga. heat, tall stately shade trees, paved drive. Owner will c— aider smaller house In trade. Low Down Payment Quick Possession Only >750 down, posseulon w ^In^^ 0- — —- north side location near b schools, separata dining >uu2700 with >300 down. LADD'S, INC. FE 5-Wfl or OR M231 after 7:30 JAYNO HEIGHTS Lake and Inside tots, one of Oakland County's most beautiful areas. ' natural lakes, city water, gas, vlng. Only 5 mlnutas from Pon-c. Starts at >50 per foot. Terms. II build to suit or build LET YOUR FAMILY GROW WITH NATURE —■'■d and yme clear. homeslte that tuHllls your children'. "----- - be dose to nature and a ling where the city's hurry Boat Manufacturing grtaMIshod IS years. Requires MICHIGAN Business Sales, Inc. JOHN LANDMESSER, BROKER 1573 S. Telegraph_FE CUSS C BAR li SOf^ Oakland County. Estab-Hshad 32 years. Busy co-“- — pla parking. RESTAURANT Telagraph Rd. near muH BATEMAN COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT 340 S. Telegraph Open 0-5 FE B044I_____________________ CREDIT IS BOOMINGI Be your osm boss In a local credit sers'" ' ---- ' limited futu... -ed. We train you I a. Easy terms or ca^. all carding I halls, 27-ft. kitchen cupboards, built-in LAKE LIVING, PONTIAC 10 TO 15 minutes. lOO'xISO' lots, >1,005, >30 down. >20 month. Blacktop, water, storm sewer, natural gas, beach, fish, swim. Bloch Bros. OR 3-1205. OXBOW AND UNION LAKE AREA, near schools and churches, reasonable tor cash. Please call alter 5 p.m., Mrs. Dertlnger, 343-00f4. Ing room and with lots of blender and mixer, Tormica counter top, base-ray electric heet, aluminum storms and screens, near shopping center, etc. Priced at >13.000 with 10 per cent down. NORTH End . -----»d*^^)rsl**'(. ... and gas heat, situated ... Iter lot, fenced on two sides, rely home In a desirable arhood. Can be bouT' g down to qualified I WALTERS LAKE PRIVILEGES Jholce lots from >500 Also 3-tol group, >1,000 Also Mot group Including garag and well, 02JXW WATERFORD HILL /MANOR Three-bedroom brick and frame EAST SIDE '."■■fiie bath, room, lusi oecoratad. Gat — and vacant. About >400 dosing costs will move you In. EAST SIDE Three bedrooms, full 1 gas haat, hardwood floo fns Included. House hist i ACRES, 3-BEDROOM HOME,, 2-car garage, store 52x54, a" •" 023.000 474-1033.____ family room, situated on large well-iandscAiMd tot with floworse thruir ding, ha water. Ir I in — lll-tD-W tip top GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR 40 ACRES SOUTH OF GRAND MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE . BLANC on a------------------ -------- If) W. Walton___________FE 3-7M3 ■ — Lake Rroporty I 47 acres east of holly n OLDER HOMES IN SOUTH END It you us tor < Eves. Call EVE. OR 3-7293 r. Castell, FE 2-7273 oking beaut prlvDaget. cing, >1000, ' - i acres — bam'; '>15,500.'^*More land available at >505 par acre. 59 TIZZY By Kate Osann Salt MaawlnM Mt I tor Sok MiKeRaaaaM 57 Nr Sab ■s-rir'sa jftaa “asria sas ssrs I be sold. Standard tygewrlt- 2lit. ... ers from OS. Electric typewrlfert from US. Portable fraewrP~-^ Bit JO. AddjnB macMnw 4 Cash reglttart from I kisTAU^h'f b I i M11, i' ' 'AT RiCHMAN BROTHERS iH-a-way ? «INECCHI sr neaisrs, naniwere ana owe-■I supgllei. Crack, talk coapar, k andiaivanlted pipe and Ilf- IfiiOHTS SUPPLY peer Rd. BUGGY, PLAY wool rug and par 1H2, Ml 4-1432. Bottle Gas Installation . wo lOBpound cylinders and equip ment, >12. Greal Plabie Gat Ce„ FE WIT). FE 2-4427. Wtfti^Np Af/^ cut giemondp MSP or best effpi Cell EM 3-I3P1_________ - WBtl2 CHATALLION TOLEDO HANGING Take over paymanto e 1, cepacitf >35. onjw. of SSI lbs.. I ir CLEAN RUGS. LlKB .Nkw, SO '*• easy to do with Blue Lustre. Rent electric thenmoar, SI. Hwhon't Herdwere, 41 E. Walton. "Please don’t make anything for me, Mother. Breakfast always ruins my mid-mmning snack!” SINGER AUTOMATIC ZIG ZAO SEWING MACHINE DELUXE CABINET HAGSTROM RULTOR HURON OR 441351 Mooey to Loan (Lkeneed Menei NEED CASH FOR "BACK-TO-SCHOOL" EXPENSES AND BILL CONSOLIDATION? BORROW UP TO $1,000 34 monthk to pay credit life Insurance evellable BUCKNER 61 Sob HowiboM Goods 65 i 3-PIECE LIVING ROOM SECTION-' Very good condHIon, >4Si 54" Id bench with cushion, >33. 442- h...--------- ------------------ 12x20 WOOL CARPET WITH PAD, 3 yrt.; 2x7 rug; Frinch mahogany and fables; colonial dinatto — other mitc. large Prigideire frigerstor; get stove; auto w er; 2 rockers. Meks oNsr. 5-5243.___________________________ M-GALLON ELECTRIC WATER OFA, COLONIAL PATTBICN, 1 year old. MA 5-2337 er MA 5-1442. SALE DAILY: FURNITURE, SOME ilK gim tor Chrisfmi met cards. Forbes Oraotlng Card Shop - 4500 Dixie -------- ■*-“ ton Flalna, OR 3d747._____________ “OOfe itoUSti, INSUUtIB ost sizes. 741 Orchard Lake Ava. *'mtra Pi SINGER . . In walnut caMntl. used little. Z zag for hams, buttonhotat. a New paymants M I5J0 monthly S3IJ3 cash. 5.yaar gyaranlea. Call credit manager, RIdiman Bros. DRAFTING TABLES, Hwy. Forbes Prlr" ■ Supplies. OR 3-2747. Forbss Priming B 0«lca HURON COUNTY HARDWARE line hardware In tamt . tinea 1205. You can your home on II -lod llvin- ■- -ours*tot uding St \c» Uving WARDEN REALTY LOANS TO $1,000 To contolldala Milt Into ar payrntm. Quia aarv s^6al ENCYCLOPEDIAS, EXTENSION ' LADDERS; INSIDE, -^-Idt doorsislaal »•••< jwga water tpHanar. Ml 4-1504. FACTORY CLOSE OUT WLE, S2B A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OF FURNITURE - CantMt of: Bpiaoa living room tuKt with 2 stop ii FRBTTER'S WARiMOUSE OUTUET 3. Tilograph____FE S-TSSI 7- -ANTIQUE BRASS BED,;^ S3IL 113, pixia glaia, corr In aluminum shatlt, ____ ..jmt, averylMng drat----- reduced, Stor-All praduett Co. 52J4 UA BEAUTIFUL SCOT^ HW Chritimat Iraas, II taeh. In toj ol 2) ar moft, near Popllac, 323 7444 after S er 4142273 anytlnM Hand Tnab-Mncklnnry 61 WRECKERS AND EQUIPMENT. N-ton Chaw 1254,. >ton wlnrt. Buy Now-Save-Save II Just In: Brand new 1244 jphM* piano walnut, 1322 up. Just jr-rivad: 1244 UnrrfV prgpn tM up. Utad piano SM. GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. 11 E. HURON______WB ttm Close Out Sale E & AUTO LOAN CO. Parry St. FE Sd13l 2 to 5 dally, Sat. 2 to 12 ” S-placa dkipltf lal. 4 over >10,000. Excellent l___________ watt of Pomiac. prict Includes -everything, property, resteurent 41 J wedier, >30. OL l-37». 1 ' AI^ARfM6Nt iitt feAS^Wv^- FURI ^t Antiqurooueh! 4sfll14 or 5l>d0>3: jj e HyPON abitiaiib DAIIun AAAUrWlAMV TA. ri^B--- WYMAN FURNITURE CO. Ft 4-42t1 I 3-bedroom bungalow adjoining Misinets. A great opportunity tor lomeone. Total price only 31SJ00. TED McCullough, jr. BROKER FE BfSSO, If no ent. 4)2-4054 MAKE OFFER kny reasonabli offer will be con lidered on this smeN grocery wilt beer and wine. Hat 3-bedroom llv-Ing quarters. Includes reel esfete. National Business BROKERS ___________FE 3-7MI DEVILBISS C0MFR£SS0R, ALL sprey paint equipment, hydraulic preuure cleaning equipment, swap leraMy colonlel or sell. MA 5-1212. WILL SWAP 1245 FORD MUSTANG. Balance ol >132) mutt bt peM. For good VW. 3104 Midvalo, noer eretor, hoeteri. ..., ------- - ---------- many more savings at Stoney't Usm Bargain Start, 103 N. Cast at WIda Track.__________ Appliance Specials Emerson l2" porlaMo TV, now, s eerphonos > ■ GE slsctrlc dryer, new, free Ins ------- Edison .. >H SINGER DIAL-A-STITCH AUTOMATIC IN CABINET Twin ntedit modtl with from-load-Ing bobMn. Dial camrol tor butlon-holet, hems, fancy dttignt, etc. Pre-owned. Must collect >)2.7i2 cash or SSJW monthly. 5-ytar guaranfsa. MORRIS MUSIC ” *• Tjassf “ I trom Ttt-Huron FI Hi CONN SERENADE ORGAN, ptdalt, «--- -....... ■* BETTERI __eCTRic~i_-.......... -- liar both ntw, >125, 473-32SI. EXPERT PIANO MOVIf/O PIANOS WANTED ______________________________ Bob's Ven Sarvla BM S-TSSS FOR SALE: HOUSEHOLP ^URN- GIBSON 40 AMPLIFIER, EXCIl- For thn Finest in Top-Quality Mnrehondise Shop MONTGOMERY WARD PONTIAC MALL WILL TRADE 4 FAMILY FOR on by Edta XI rsflrgsrati SOLID ANTIQUE BED AND DR/ESS- er. FE S-3325._______________ TV SET, S2S, REFRIGERATOR, m gat Move, DS, tNdrlc stave, ill Cnk beds, misc. FE S-PM. UPRIGHT FREEZER, LIKE NEW, Site or bast Mfsr. X Sylvsnia 31'^ color TF, |1 PONTIAC 2 MINUTES, PRIVATE taka, no motors sllowed. S------- tot. IMS. >10 down, >10 1 Cleared or wooded tots. Bros. OR 3-1225 or FE 4-4502. KAMPSEN Northern School District Nice and claan twa-badi hem# waiting your Intpac Ntwiy canitM, anclettd porch, baiamam, two largo — Fricad at >11500 with >1,200 English Colonial For Dm youna exacutivo wt nova. r this Ihraa full alzt badroom i homo. Faaturing a vttllbula tn- ,i2 *0 "M Mohawk Drivt. llwAEmATTXoMoN. .. will taka your old homo Ir ‘ or arrtngt aaty terms. Waterford Schools 1 raa-. 2‘-^S5RvnJJijSr'A.’ USS?* JK!LL" S^a^vtlus or will tall chaap ***"*'' ***’’"*' * ’*’** will sacrHIca this baautltul Mied-room, bath, largo living room w' ttana llreplaco. nearly new, eludes tumlshlngs, on beeuthui Leke George. Clere County. Best; of hunting and fishing. Only >3,5001 down. Plcturss at our oHki. 330-: Ortonville Area—49 Acres Large pine and oak trots sup —rZound f*-‘t —mXiiij farm home. Hat living room, dining room, den or study, all carpeted - end drapes, beautiful sunroom, 4 rooms and bath an 3nd Basement, gat stum heet. had oarage. 1 ramel unit In me. Prlvafa bath and entrance, etrk heat, bisulalad, approx. 2 -rat. Priced to toll. Writo P.O. . - ’*1, Pomiac, Mkh. ' ^hna locallan In Bit Pomiac ai WALTERS LAKE OFFERS d 2 MEN'S SUITl 40 TO 42, EXCEL-„ Jim xondltkm. Em 3.4740- _^J0^ortradaJJLJ^4.________________' I; Alaska seal coat with cuffs. Cost >1,200. Worn 2 times. Sail, >250 cash. Ptiena 334-4272, r. LADIES 14 . LENGTH MOUTON >- coat, 2 12. axe. >50. 33M254. ^iMEN'S SUITS, 40 REGULAR, 3) ' '-ng, 43 long; man's top—' il axcollom condition. 335-2220. AUTOMATIC WASHRR, GOOD COH-after 4 pjn. 34»d5T>. >15. 334-1407.__________________ BED, DRESSER, SPRING A N O, j mattrns, MO: alactrlc rtngt, >' dresser, >10; baby bad and che»*. i ^,,7^.- , >25; refrigerator >24.25; studio with polisher,/ couch, >15; 21" TV, >35; gat rer— >"“■■■ * >10 end nS; piano, >4k 3 to ct from; medicino cabinet, M; coronal 2 pool ( lealor, ac bath. 3 targe bemi, 1 hat • imerly ^ M ' .............—• >20,000. isr of butintst fr— 2 Show you. Foe-llvirm room with burning fireplace, room, largo kitchen with loads of cupboard space. Three lovely bedrooms, tols of cedar lined ctasats. Enclotad back porch, also breeieway atfachtd 3-car garaga with t •'— Hardwood floors ______________d 35. OR 341II. ATLANTA. MICHIGAN. HUNTING and fishing aria, 4 ctbint and all-saason homo, modem, MO ft. on river. First >24.500. Detroit, VEI 7-3474. FURNISHED ! front com 10 minutes drivo from 1-75 at Ctarkston. OTHER FARMS AND ESTATES SMALL GOLD MINE irfy store In up and cofr..... ____________________________________ community of Ortonville, protwitly MEN'S CLOTHING, 4IL42 REGULAR: ^ ivb; lop coat, sports coots. stacks, etc. Cocktail dretses, 1M4. Seventh houtt. white side, r " tamey Lane, Leke Charnwood It cottage, tor seta reesoneble end Plastered well, on a -bv.ly a?'?? at _>ll,50i 0*«AGE AND CABI^, Kg^coeto'iSu IwSta' ' THINKING OF SELLING? WANT CASH? We will get It for you - giv# us e fry. Cell Emery Bufler, Leo Kampsen, Rachel Lovely, Jo Butt, Oeve Bradley, Hilda Stowert, or Leo Kirr. 1071 W. HURON STREET FE 44)221 MLS Atfor > pjn. cell_FE 2-3457 BATEMAN' equity is CASH TRADE YOURS Says BUZZ BATEMAN eve’rything YOU'RE LOOKING FOR: Aoedroom K—l. n Our Lady of LARGE FURNISHED, .MODERN log cabin, on take front, nee Hall, alto 3 adtolning toft, 43* b 200^ MCh, #11 lAfidftcafMd. Phon* F6 M160. .or IN LUZERK, 200. FE 2-9K4. iKtsw^h’ifei^_______________^52 r LAKE FRONTAGE, uittages on lekt, til tumlihod. buertort. RA 1-2174, CBM Secritt, Hale, Mkh._________________ REPOSSESSED LOTS, HIOHLAND-Mllford tree. H to 1 acre iltat. ~ dept., Bloch Bros. OR 3-1225. Lets—Acrengt Terms, make offer. BREWER REAL ESTATE Wm, B. Mitchell, Seles Mgr. 14 E. Huron — FE 4-51)1 -------------ly 15 ACRES IN EXCLUSIVE ROCH- tandteeped lot with sprinkling svt-' osftr arte, terms, fern. Reasonably priced at &2.SM SO acre farm witif excellent building. with excellent terms. CALL TO- Lapeer, terms. DAY. 10 acres with new 3-bedroom home, Snie 6»riiiBss Preperty 57 Central Business District 3-tlory solid masonry teles end service bulldlng-3IJ00 tq. It. Imprtttive telH display room with voulfcd call-in). Presently leased to June 1. 1244. Priced at exactly >55,000 - only slightly over land veluel Offered exclusively by Leslie R. Tripp Realtor-Appraiser 75 West Huron Stroet FE 54151 Coast-To-Coast TRADES Tom Bateman FE 8-7161 .Realtor Exchongor ft very attrectlvt end peP; adlolm. You should net >15,000 on ROOT BEER AND PIZZA Watorford Tow ■ble drice It < WOMEN'S CLOTHES LIKE NEW, w I-IO, Seturday-Sun., 151 5. As- cet. FE 44142. Snb HentefcelJ figedi 1 MORE TIME BRAND NEW PURNITURB 3-ROOM OUTFITS , $278 (Good) $2.50 Weekly Exmj^ $378 (Better) $3.00 Wnkly Iiy drtoe-ta insteM (Best) $4.00 V.'.ekly hangout. >10,000 down and you'll ' hev# It beck the lirst year. , mEW LIVING ROOM BARGAINS lOSoT^nJr^^ livtaTroiT’iulK^^ ubltt, Hwchlno coffM tablef two SEND FOR FREE CATALOG .h «im Snlt Lniid Centrncti 1 TO 50“ LAND CONTRACTS >1 JO weakly, „ NEW BEDROOM BARGAINS * Bpiace (brand new) bedroom: ' "-yblo drosier, bookcato bad heel, box tprlng and bmertprlng fialtraae, two vanity tamps. All >r >132. >1J) sraakly. PEARSON'S FURNITURE - FE 4-7 TALL OAK TREES AND TWO LOT) I. the Meal settln) '»*'^LOT WITH MOS^E HOME. •" “-'s cozy Sbadroom bungalow tl5”*ivlw«^'a.mDuS£d ^ lereot jtM bool houM on; J™ shell. 434^134. WARREN STOUT, Reoltor 450 N. Opdyke Rd. FH S414) Open Evas, 'til I p.m. ACTION On your land contract, targe ar small, call Mr. HIIMr, FE UlTf. Broker, 3722 Ellzabelh Lake Read. Wbh^Cb^^ 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently ntadtd >ta us bs 3-PIECE BEDROSm, >52; ELEC-trk and gas itovn, >15 to >72, re-Irlwator >22 and up, u«ad 'Zenith TV (axcallant) >52, living room >34, Tptace Mint room suNt, >42, Sploca dinatif le I Ml, >14, wrrlnoar 2-' good HOUSEKEEPtHG^Pj^ 51 W. Huron St. USED FURNITURE Grand Plano, WSi droptaPl 4 noidtagolnf ditirs. cMna ounur, sno; rtfrlgirtttr, t)); couch and dialr, tUi waditr, OS; dT — •af, tUi mapla badroom oaf, W^C. Upwink Pi 4-723S. sm t|e>5 >102. 100JM BTU. S122. 125J00 : arti nix m ngr w"r«iif». -xH k only, h will ________________1411 or________ ’ GAS HEATING UNfr, 3 EXHAUST It Moving Ce„ 371 E. BLOND DINING R(X>M SUITE. Fd Hit. BRAND NEW. Largo and small size (round, droo-loaf, roc-langular) tablot In 3, S and 7 pc. , Mto. S24.25 and up. ' PEARSON'S FURNITURE _______ , -------- FE AHII ' BUNK BEDS Chalet el IS atytaa, trund tripta trundia and bii camptalt, >42J0and up. 2 I llghtt far klfdwnt, >12.24 M.2), factory marrtd. Mklv-Muoraecant, 323 * ra ,r4442. CHIPPENDALE sdtFA, toLONIAL | finback chair, >1M. EM 3-3215. COLOSPOT REFRIGERATOR, runs good. 341. CoN tftar 4:SS. FE t-lwT_____________________ DETROIT JEWEL 34" GAS RANOt, good ctnditlon, >35. 33B3332. DISHWASHER KITCHEN-AID. COP- cotton print, swoll mado, oxcal. ♦,asn±v^4.*^ * WYMAN'S USED BARGAIN STORE At Our II W. PSca Store Only nao Hoto DHk .. .... pc. IhtbiB roam sulla .S32.25 pi. ite BM Nova ......mjj r atac. rti«t ...........g.tS _ juar. atac. wtashar ... U2.t5 " Yaur CradR It Oeod al • EASY TIRMS___________PB »31» WASHER laS. GAS STOVE, S3S. rA-M^alor wdlli Im IraMr- “ Oiyar, 134. .TV, M ttacirl SM. V. Marrla. FrM>44; ANTIQUE COLLECTION BY T H E ■-* ' pom, lovo laat, —' paimiiigs, knick-kr ; No. itr Highland, NUMBER 3 DINNER StlLU EB4T offer 44). FE 4045.______________ wainvt chairs; swing racktr, daltdi cut gtatt and ctoOs. Y-Kiwf to* tlquM, 10344 Oakhlll, Holly Vb mlM aaat at Dixie. Ml 7-4124.__________ i M-n, TV 6 ReAes nt cenditlon. OR 4-2022. 3 and Gtrmn Cuckoo-docks. Call n, this w IC^b. 4totf ana place, aactlonal, wn ano flbtrotat. Foclory rojocto -tom tlZM. Goragt Ironf rotnodd-Ing. Fim aottmilM. Berry Door Balia Co., 2340 Cota tlraol, — -----'lam. FE 3<3M or M 4 bar 11 tot. 13, lun. 14, n p.m. A "------ *"'■ —" hold m GALLAGHER MUSIC E. Huron_____________he xmoxo GRAND PIANO, SPECIAL 4174. UP-plane, 450. Pump enan — llko Spinel piano, SST Ra-upright plana wIBi mlrrerx Ptaytr plane, natds imR , 424. OM plana iltal. 414. WMt Van Una, 3)1R. PIkB IF YOU WANT 'fd iiCL“960l plana, call Mr. Buyer at Grlnntlla, Fenttac Mall. 4430432.________ MASON AND HAMLIN PiANO, 66tt-‘ Ddal, wcaltant condmon. lo Mil. LEW BETTERLY Hon, 434, 33)2411. IAS HEATING UNIT, J Bxn, tans, almest naw, FE 4-4147. GET YOUR GAGS AND JOKES al Blll't r"—' oe 3^424. ..iRlSii 42444H. ThomM ipintt. Mm Ihtn a y . _ J'-r Mlactad aconomy Hr, anii 32c etch, cash and carry. HAGGERTY LUMBER 2044 Haggarty Hwy. MA 4-444 HOOVER UPRIGHT, ^Lkcfftl^U) Ilk# fwv# Noov#f floor polfihor JIM'Sl AT 2301 DIXIE HWY., 3 DOORS I SOUTH OF PONTIAC DRIVE-IN. Ntw thlpmnti are on display: Toys, houMhold Itams, books (hlgh- MOOEL4 AND OTHBt . Jack Hagan Music Centtr <:Mrabtlh Lake Road =E 2-1240 ^SSdSM USED ORGANS MMMOND^*^*L^REY?*VyRLIT» ER, SILVERTONB, BTC. Priced from $250 GRINNELL'S (Downtown) 27 S. SAGINAW ~fU vblen, 4400. Harold Tumtr. Ine« 444 4. Woodward Avt< Bfrmin» 323 Orchard Lake. FE 44442. arn kllchan chairs. )72-4225. DUNCAN PHYFE DINING I n and dock 411. 132- ~EUK:TRTc4f6vi7BS~ I" RCA CDLOR TV; EXCELLENT condition. 1224. DA H21I. I-INCH USED TV T!'!' SfSi falton TV FE S12S7 Open r* 414 E. waBofi; coniir it Joelyn 24" PHILCO TV GUA/t- GRILL STAND AND ACCRItORIRlk ilalntaM tfMl link, icelchfflan'g ko flakar, redbotr barrol. PhonB 224.7722.___________________ d?Hi 6t 74 KSa nSSTTSSiI * «>■■« OPFBE —1. I1J0) cath. Alto ---------- ippllancM. OR 32414. NOW OPEN AXON SON TRAILER ^OR sALI, NEW rORAUaUI 41 mens hlddojwd. 4134. OB POria I WJ^ON NEAR y ALL NEW 13" COLOilftb TV'i, iM-madlato ddlvinr. Atao utod Mack and whBt and edertd TV't. Data Radio TV, FE 4din, 341 Lahlf STEP DOWN ! INTO THIS charming living room 334-40a«: with firtptaca and baautltul qud floort. Btamad-calling ACREAGE BONANZA ."M: •’««L. 4t.3)0, 33)) KH59 FRONTAGE Real hd spot, corner location 431' Ironlaga. Ideal lor most any rdall antarprlM. Offtr— -* >37,5)) with aaty term. WARREN STOUT, Raaltor > ShOTM. 43)7 Cog-i Corner parcel, Mr frontage, ecrett^ Opey6ve!!%l I p.mf 5)“---------- LAN6 CONTRACTS ere. weli loceted 13 mllM SJjtaita (^y^ >3mS^*^'17;?.*' ----------- d Wellon Blvd. Nke build- terms. Qp g-iM), "•n.*c'K;inn.t.^“ctar'’m: WARREN STOUT, RBoltor W. Welten. 145) N. Opdyke Rd._FE LHm Don't texa hid "xm.lh.'i modern. BRICT^ ^bta^SdWto.^1 SSjiS! I KIDNEY DESK, WING DAVEN-! port, lamps, table, chairs, rum-Tiago. FE 5-1227. CASH Far your oqulty or land eoniradt. DonY tow Ihd hem, smaltatt 1 WEEK OF BARGAINS Brand New Furnitur# 'tut Bedrooms Nowtl >312 Bodroom Now ill >142 Badroom Now 11 > 72 Box tprlng and matlrtM GE REFRIGERATOR, ui-inT* ________ (iOLOfN BL6ND~l)K6FLCAi blN-Ing room tabto wllh 3 taavoi and ■* chairs, Duncan Phyfo styta. rn"Vwk(tayA *’*****" ^ **W * GOOD WORKING REFRIOtRATm >31, Om ttOM 334. Wathtr, 124. Hd wataf hwlar, SH. FE 4-7744. id06 AuT' gM dryor. It and 3Vi car attachad I atadrk bullt-lns. brick ttrudlon, cloM-ln praatlga arta • "'"'laget and acetM — 7 Just 122,24) wl Keago Harbor. tultaUt tor dllctt , >71 monthly. Can naaus "l^xiford Area 4-ACRE PARCELS, 43.5)0. >4)0 down j5-ACRB PARCELS, >3,200, >40) down 7W-ACRE PARCEL, U,3)0, >7S0 down 10-ACRE PARCEL, >3,2)0. Tormt. w w SIM. fesx "IseasonTTST land ---------- STORAGE A-PLENTY THIS ONE HAB IT) loodt ot drowort|' ir.rc.ruiprMCta?. - to all Wdorford schools ond a II ACRE PARCEL, (3 ponds), >21,- Annett Inc. Reoltors E. Huron SI. fE 4)444 Open Evenings ond Sundtyt 1-4 OXFORD-bRION Rwsoftably prkod ot 413,40) « term. CaLl today. MODEL HOMES I SEAUTIFULLY fumlthod In Lokt ■ktand Shorw. Ranchor, trl-ltvd|i and coMntal prkad from IM,5)) pIuiI id. ONiar moddt aa low as 1115)0 It ptanfy d good building ddly M pjn., SAT. and - • Hwy. I 1117-ACRES, 2>,b C. PANGUS, Realtor ED LAND contracts miEiMy tE Uee 61 ILleaniad Meny Lander) LOANS flfiitH usib TVs, it; 11,'to it/ZH, jiMtabl^ .JYindi,^ Cdv- on ) or d FwOLVfl-------------------- or, 4230. 127B Stdo Park Rd« Of 302 1. Atom, Nofthvlll paint. > ItaT______ ONE OF THd BBiT BASikoARO ...... "wm. Hd — I wllh an M par ft. C taw! IT tamp,' FWy IC., 474)444. ; 1 CHAlkS, 41); road iron,hk; liT.ir^ro^ljg^^ E. ^iSXW F^' ‘ L^r^o ' Cdl Wld^NA 7 3415 ... “ .... ...... 4 42 OIndlf Mit Big boroalne on and whnt oenM. btat. HI FI, ttortM, rdrlearatart auto, wathtrt and dnrart and gd and tMetrk rangN. . 3 Room Outfit! $274 LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE 1441 Baldwin d Walton, FE *4Ut First traffk Mght south d 1-74 AcrM d Frit FarkMa -------------II *- »d. Ill r w FRETTER'4 WAREHOuSl’OUTLET * *------- PB 4-7141 COMMERCIAL WATER SOFTENER 424 W. Huron >T WATli * ■ rldlt PLYWCXDD t"x12' ro 4‘xr Fill 4'xl' Ml 211-ta. Il ~ shot gun and .......... ....... 666b Tiil6 " ~ 'a Loan Oftka, 14 N. I . In llfl . . 4 4.2 ; I DBLCO OIL FURNACE, _ ■T«' Mr i! 2-4~x4'r N-, 4' ptala gtaM il 4'Vb" Plata Bid 4 4.44 •*" *•*••!* KIRBY vacuums Ntw - UHd - EapotamgE -Sava 10 la II ear ciM. Cd HI-4414 bdwaan 4-7 pJiL KIRBY OF ROCHEITEE lIkII new uP'ikjbHV #RIIZIR, Itan. M laWIng chalri. JM---------- BIN iMna, V. Chjyalar-Piym-aulh - Ramblar • imt. Clarkalan, Na. 4 camman Batamnl lack „. .. .. rs"x^ Mum. dMM wMaw ii4.' Burmeister's {,>'3 and aaad). Ovar ana imdinx j.g irnjli laa Iha haw Can AR Ilk m caltaar. Wa apadaNia In mm itSiSla r CLARKSTON AREA bwulMul tats In Hl-wood Sub .i edad and hilly. Idad tor ranch, I 2.S A. INDUSTRIAL SITE 130' fronlaga on M52 near Wa-♦erlord fwp. Hall, 130)00 ROIFE H. SMITH, Reoltor Itr Mia, as we a ^374M ___ IN WATERFORD IjNleely landecaaed bulMIng Id. 'IWILL BUILD TO SUIT, ON YOUR L LOT OR OURS. 2 CUSHION OAVINFORT, GOOD Grd VWI. Eulcfc. frldlG -' FOOL TABLE, 441. yliiyl^ Chair), ” * - 177 4. TaltBFWh M. 734 V **1>L*i3rsl SMITH-WIOEMAN REALTY 11. Each. Rd Idit W. HURON *T. FE 44434 rtfwT FE 2-9026 It iha numbar la caH. OAKLAND LOAN CO. 303 FanNac Mata Bank BM| 2:31 H 4:34 - Id. 2;» tat. tl) Alii mionjm ineurad Paymml Plan BAX TEFB LIVINGSTONE 441 Pgn«aril8a%nk BuM FE 4-IS3F9 .'irx.'wra Wh drawpfi, raund o— I formica tops, tlS. :«;:L.‘T{r3L„. NEconrw World ftfiwyt lor llna lawbi FujiRiiiar^nCuii SlandliiB idid, 414.1 fens. «S: enaa ttyTIrl^Jlt^! yllh trim iS4.2S; 9x12 Linoleum Rugt ^A^SUaflta ........ ‘itaM fHa 2x2" Ftaar snap - 13J4 EHsai "Acrot* From the $3.89 MoIF FngMalra Rdrlgardar Frlgldajra avfomdK wathar .. Uiad idrlgaratari UMd adixndk walar aaflanar 4P^C.CTR.CI.|f.^ .NSTM^ ..._ fabuioui tdM VINYL ddbiB. Lad* PIni, Bk 12 Tram . law M mM. Gun rapair, tgaflB. man XL 13 ahain aaw, 4114. fad Iha Tda Oda cycia Ihd gaaa and aW) 14 and I4W h). CIM Oteyafi Iparl Ctdar, I4ni N. jKicr 4iV^__________ THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 10, 1965 D—11 SS? rclMndla# In stock. 0#vis Au-n#ry Co. OilOnvIll#. NA 7.33W. MANY OTHERS CMjMfiiBLACK DIRT, * YARD KING BROS. FE 441734 FE 4-U*t PonfiM Raid at OpdyKg TrovBl Traibn M oSrbtop. iSls%*. *" •' PICKUP CAMPER, SLEEPS TWO S330. UL H3ig aty 4 p.m, ”w*3*FORO pi^,‘*utomadl^^ kix* cab, au for S1,«*S. JEROM FORD, Rochutar FORD Daalar. OL l-*711. A FIRST IN THIS AREA NOW ON DISPLAY ALIO wWjWculM-fuul 77 CHeERYxOAK AND MIXED. WELL i*MHWd. FE 3-7774. 3PEK 7 DAYS-9 to 9 SEE THE NEW WM MODELS Low dSIM FREE OEU------- WE GUARANTEE . H0LLY*PARK. ?HAMPiSJ PARK WOW AND PARK ESTATES Low ovarkoM — Mvt raal monoy MIDLAND TRAILER SALES 32S7 OlxM Hwy. 33M7» on# Mock nofW> ol THagraoti lliSvilpRSE*SE lANTEE A PARKI Porkhurst TraiiRr SoIrs FINEST IN MOBILE LIVING 15 I M ft. FaatuHng Now Moon ■ uESSf-SoTlCr .. ... “ ' — nut to fJICARNIVAI By Dick Turner I Nrw End Used Can 106 Nrw and Used Cek 106 ROAT. Will Mil 1,.____ WINTER STORAGE "Don't loavt your boat out In the snow— bring It bi haro and ttora down bakiw." Wa are your authorlied dealer fori «arcrafL MJJi., Jhornpsois. Johiv, son boats. Johnson motors. TSou-i Me AA motor rsd«lr r»t'-o PINTER'S (Oakland County's Boatland 13T0 Ondyke i-i , PE i WfEirtRd Cars-TnKks 101 'extra EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Car "Cheek the rut, than gal the but" at Averill ____________________— AUTO SALES" o'»i« We have no gimmicks. Just is'j 1965 CATALINA MODElT” IftK* •“* premium PRICES FOR LOW MILEAGE AUTOS. if Lu?oH!ron N04 VAN'S AUTO SALES i AAYM73J________ 4540 PIXIE HWY. OR 3-13SS Oxford TraiiRr Sales M ASODELS. IS to M It., EW-IS-SO wtdo-ond a ftory. Ma—' arts, Balvadara and 'lfj» CHEVY STATION WACOM, V4, ' automatic. Drivn Ilka a INS automobile. An excellent M car lor the lemily. Full price only t}44. MARVEL____________351 Ooklond Avs. itst cheVy, A t sha^E, 1 owliER. Tel-Huron Auto MansfieW I Used Cm 196 CHEVY-FORD-PLYMOUTH CREDIT progloms? - Will finoneo. TIC Conr. Mr. Snow, Ml AdSW. , 1959 CHEVYS oors, stick shifts and oi priced es low os S3t7, r Auto Sales Corvoirs — laaa to IHJ, 4-spocds ond eulomatics, priced right' ^E FMTS: 1M2 CORVAIR MONZA COUPE* Mansfield hTS!.- new tires end brakes. WM737. nos Baldwin Ave. Wa handia and arranga a nanclng, call Mr. Dan at; FE 8-4071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM ____Juit East ot Oakland ftSt CHEVY WAGON, OOOD~eON- dition, S»5. 335-lTld.___________________________ list CHEVY VS, POWER STEER-'ITS3 C 0 R V E T T E, 1N4 ENgTnE, Ing and brakes. S335. S73-IH53._| take over paymanta or UNO. 1S63 CHEVROLET BIS-CAYNE a -*OOOR WITH AU- t6matic transmission, RADIO AND HEATER. WHITEWALL TIRES, SOLUTE.....- •• - DOWN, menfs o'. _ ____ IT MGR. Mr. Porks a.. OLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. KESSLER'S DODGE CARS AND TRUCKS _ _ Solos ond Sorvico 0»tord ______OA H400 $497 Spartan Dodge 1963 CHRYSLER Beautiful bluo with matchino Interior. power sturtng and Oraku, an axceptlortally nice car, ont owner, Birmingham trada. $1695 BIRMINGHAM .... chrysler-plymouth down, woakly tl4 S. Woodward______Ml 7-3314 -------- 1*43 CHAYSLEft NEW YORKERS, ; STATE WIDE AUTO | IXZ! 3400 EiiiabamLua Road | Ooklond Chrysler-plymouth i|M2 CORVETTE, FUEL INJECTED,_________________________“j*!* 3 tops, red. OR >0003._____! MUST DtSPOSE OF IM3 CHEVY; wagon, no monay down, payments! ol only SI0.S3 woekly. Call Mr.; , Murjphy at 335-4101. McAullHt._ f*63 CORVAIR MONZA CONVERTI-. bla, stick. A.) condition, take overj payments. 2243 Novara* Pontiac. i PE 3";597.________________ t CHEVY SUPER SPORT, OOU l t, ttSSO. A , heater, txcti-1 PATTERSON ROCHESTER Chrysler-Plymouth Imperial-Valiant r, S150. 235 N, Cass “This color doesn’t suit you at all, Pet! It’s at least $15 too green!” HELP! and Used Trucks 103 Foreign Cart onvertibla™th a-spead transmls-),, 1963 CORVAIR^pydBl Sion, radio and healer, whitewall, Convertible, ---- —' ■' tires, only $49 or old car down block lop. and payments ot $11.72 per week. HASKINS CHEVY with I :up coven. We i .—M and Oraw-tlte______ ----------------------------I HOWLAND SALES and RENTALS AKC APRICOT TOY AND MINIA- 3245 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-145* turn poodld pupplu, t weeks, color- Opon * o.m. 'til * p.m. AKC ChIhUAHUA puppies, STUD Strvk*. IMATODO'S. 33^n^». 4kd^s$_wiLU^$.| !Tk CANINE COUNTRY CLUB E. S. Boula-on, cor ■ • '"Wa S d toe DACHSHUND FULL BRED MALE 3 yoon OM. *I3-«451. FREE AUPPIIS. *73-SMO: CALL AF- CLOSE-OUT SALE 1965 NIMROD CAMPERS IRUM O^UT, LNC________ CENTURY-TRAVELMASTER SA6E-GARWAY Evarything on tho lot ro-ducad, only a low lo«. SOMETHING NEW Robin Hood It It's quality, eyo-appeal and ROBIN HOOD TOM STACHLER tor «:3ft_______________________ FUZ2Y TOY COLLIE PUPPIES, NO GOOD HOME.' AUTO and MOBILE SALES PE 3-»a70.----------------------^ i,. 2-4*28 GERMAN SHEPHERD, 2 YEARS--------------------------------------------- oM, friandly and liku children., can batwoon 13 nooo-5, — FRANKLIN Truck Compers MOUSE OF POODLES PERSONALIZED GROOMING SUPPLIES TOY STUD SERVICE RIVER BIND POODLES M10 OiXIE HIGHWAY WATERPORD-OR >030 apoli, fru'le good homo,'*7^ CAlRAdOR RETRIEVER MALE lOWxTW with I .Jr RnglWi Pobilor 335. Call «3S- lU^IS^'irb mrna. nytifU Holly Travel Coach 15310 Holly M.. Holly ME 44771 -Opon Dolly and Sun— FOR RENT: 2 Wotvtrine c«mp«rt on GMC pickups. 1100 wMk 4^“ “scon RENTAL SERVICE 1*0 W, WoHon___________FE Midi GMC HOUSBCAR, SLEEPS A thoimoetatlc haal, all bulN-Int, por-loct conditions HO $-30*4. Ml cram-ons. __________ h6bo manfacturino sales edk _._,^u“X"it“JS«V5N.“.. Rur 334S Aufetim Rd. |al--S< m to 3 p.m, «5t-3t3S7 otiyMmo. Ml *-3*0* RBSisTklEb BLACk an6 t^^Ej^o with houM, IVb yri. kEGIITIRBD CHIHUAHUA AND lervlce. FE 3-14*7.______ ICHNAUZER, MINIATURE A* qualify pup*, OL 144*1. T6y pdtoLIl Akc RE0J4tlRl6. “■ ---------1. «7F33*3. -NOW ON DISPLAY- 22' Monotor Self Contained with Shock Absorbers 20* Monator Self Contained Twin Lunger 23' Fan rllh roundod comtra, Intornotlonal •Jutir, IIV, 110 blowor, 4w"— braku. Shock obeorbore on whuli. Front awninge. Holly Travel Coach 0 Holly Rd., Holly ME 44771 —Open Dolly ond * ----- ns W. Clorlulon Rd., Lak# Orion NOW ON DISPLAY IV 3414* L PROLIC - YUKON DELTA-■ BEE LINE-TROTW(X)D I^MPER______ r a 1 PINTO MLDINO, VERY GENTLE gantla, t1« for Mir. Poodor eat-1 iHifuL^tmLigiTwEstEkN ...... ...,lgr. Aircraft canatruc- tlon. EOlBt AERO lor--------- lou corovonlng — an DlihityM now at - JACOBSON lexN', 1**i MdkILk HOME ON Vau alway* anlw the uifliiMtg bt aaMy> ceimgrt and ratal# vakia. 4ul Unil NtVyw MUyiait Flafllii PLY NYLON SNOW TIRES, *»X-13, Ilka new $20, *33-141*. AiRr'LrkE . n¥w SNOW TIRES, *00 X 14, an Pontiac rimi, S3S, *5141*1, tSI-311*. GLENN'S 1**3 HONDA SCRAMBLER l«*S HONDA 1*0. EXCELLENT CON- ,J Mock* N, of Wt _______ FE Tiui ____________ TOP S F6r CLEAli'CARS OH *—"T. Economy Cor*. 2335 Dixie. K & W CYCLE YAMAHA «o locatloni to urvo you. 243* 24,j Hlg>-—■ TOP DOLLAR PAID FOR SHARP CARS! Gal* McAnnolly'a NATIONWIDE AUTO SALES 1304 Baldwin “* Road, Pontiac. NEW! 1966 HONDAS NEW I 305 CC SCRAMBLER NEW! TRAIL BIKES $295 SPECIAL!! CLOSE-OUT ON ALL 1965 TRIUMPHS LOW DOWN PAYMENTS EASY TERMS ANDERSON SALES t SERVICE *45 $. Talwrapli FE 3-7101 SUZUKI CYCLES SOCC-SSikC. RUPP MlnlMkn a* low n t12*.*S. Taka MS* to W. Highland. Right on Hickory Ridga Rd. to Dtmodo Rd. Lott and follow ilgra to DAWSON'S SALES AT TfPSICO LAKE. Phono MAIn »-3t7*. UsBd Auto-Track Ports 102 14" WHEEL AND TIRES _______S3 UP-FE 4450*_______ l*«S 4-SPEED TRANSMISSION. S150 SUSUKI “SUZUKI Kawasaki—White Big Bad Bultaco Van Teek-Outt Lil' Indian Mini Bikes CUSTOM COLOR W. MONTCALM FE 443 IkyelES^__________1 24", M", $10 UP. BOYS' Soots—AtcMsorles 23' MFO - MOTOR AND TRAILER, 24-FOOT DAY CRUISER, 1SS NOR-borg angina and coniroli, 2 to ' — ducthm oMr, hagd, ll,7*S dal to any lakt In Oakland Co Aik for Kon Johnton, 4*343**. I**S TRAVELER ATLAS AND trailer, )«', padded daih and — panel, new, navtr bam In as::........- —... car. mi. JEROME FORD, Roch-aatar FORD Dealer. OL 14711. 1963 CORVAIR Pickup HASK*NfcHEVY*'**'' 1963 Dodge Vs-Ton ATTENTION Inelda ttoraga, caralul Cuftom wood work. Rafinithing, ' llbarglat, ipaelaniu. Camplata Boat larvica. Pickup af —-- Pay next tummtr. SATL.----- OUARANTEED - AMERICAN BOAT WORKS, 13S Broadway, Uka Orion. Call MY 344U any-time or FE 3743I. _________ BIGI BI6I SAVINGSI UP TO 30% OFF ON f965 MODELS NOW IN STOCK! PONTIAC'S ONLY MERCURY MERCRUISER DEALER FOX SNOWMOBILES NIMROD CAMP TRAILERS Marina and Sporting Good* CRUISE OUT, INC. *1 E. Wilton Odlly *-* PE e-«43E "HARD TO FIND, BUT EASV TO deal with" RInkkar, Staury, Char«-ku boats: Kayot pontooni, Evln-ruda molori, Pameo trailer*, ’r-"* AM to w. Highland, right on- ory Rldgo Rood to Domodo Road, lalt and tallow *lgnt to DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSiCO LAKE, phone MAIn *-317*._______________ »°*£;or?.TO§ilon^.TYgay.* DON'T TAKE CHANCES We Don'tl Insiie-STORAGE-Outsidi harImnoton boat w8rks I.** s.7a!or*.a?tr°^3»34.»» MPtu. ibAVnuSinPsupply Inside Boot Wide Track Auto Craft ijra* ------- INSlDf NOW COMPLBTt -tr*„iiew In ilack - LONE STAR. MPG and GLASSTRON BOATS. Wt are dealing new - ug la ISS day* batora flril payltimti. If yev are lookihg for WINTEE PAiCRS - Slop in now - wa h few 'ts HMrcury*. 3.* rag. NOW ONLY S1IS.SS. Slap Cliff Draytr Martna Olv. IWE Hally Rd., ttally, MS ME 44771 far any help yau may naadl WE NEED CARSI TOP OOLUR FOR GOOD CLEAN CARS Matthtws-Hargreaves *31 OAKLAND AVENUE ________FE 44547______ 277 West Montcalm Junk Curs-Trucks ALWAYS BUYING vUNK CAHS-FREE TOWS TOP ttS-CALL FE 54142 CH£VY - FORD-COMET-FALCON New md Used Tracks 103 SPECIALS FORD T-*00 tandem 340(Lgalloni linker, pump houe mater, power; sturing. In A-1 condition, rudy; for work, SI,7*5. : 1963 TRIUMPH 'l|h wire wheels and 4-speed Iron mission, radio and heater, onl 54* or old car down and weokl payments ot S13.92. HAROLD TURNER FORD. INC. 444 5. WOODWARDJLVE. BIRMINGHAM__Ml 4-7500 1**5 VW CAMPER WITH sTdE HAROLD TURNER __ ______________ MA 5-2*04 i**3 ‘CORVEttE, 4 speed; MINT,. I $24*5, must sell, t*3-*503.________ 11**3 CORVETTE STINORAV WITm| ' the 327 onglnc, 4-spi^. extra *14 S. Woodwi clean! $2.»*5. JEROME FORD '-------------—-----— ! Rochester FORD Dealer, 1 1*711. .--- -------- , . _y seat, t see to oppreclate. Bank ratn, monthly payments. $2495 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH Ml 7-3214 1**3 CHRYSLER 300 CONVERTI , ble, excellent condition, bucket _________ seat*, power windows, braku and 3R, POW- stmrfng, 5 brand new tlru, 10.000 FORD, INC. ----------------------- 5,-.-, 4*4 S. WOODWARD AVE. 5*5. 1-LI 5-443*._______ (MINOHAM Ml 4.7500 1*64 CHEVY IMPALA S P 0 R T 1*M CHRYSLER coyp«4 V-8 automatic. M7-dJI5 after I $66.53 per rr great car at ll*-4-boOR, riTUI SIBTf olua* lots ranty lefn $100 down* for Truck Dept. FE 5^101 John McAulifft Ford Auto-MBiine InEuranca 104 AUTO INSURANCE Terms available STOP IN TODAY Anderson & Associates FE 4^35________1044 Joslyn New and Usud^urt_____106 SEE US LAST For A Groat Daol In your new or usod Pi r other tin# car. KEEGO PONTIAC SALES E SERVICE 6B2-3400 1*53 BUICK, STRAIGHT EIGHT -- 2 WRECKERS AND EQUIPMENT,! V4-ton Chovy l«5«, 5 ton-wlncn. F *00 1*55 Ford, 30 too wine*-snatch biodn, chain*, dollla*, a extra caM*. EM J-WI after $1,300 Ibf all. _____________ IflS FORO’vi-TON PICKUP. 701 Third. Pontiac. * 1054 IW-TOfi CHEVY WkECKER, heavy duty box and winch. 20*5 Wainut Ed. at Inkitar E4. FORD P,10O CUETOM CAB, V- fSO VW PICKUP WITH CANVAS cy^, goad eondiltan. tSOO ipaad, haalar, 750xtS oXfy tf lfgSlE"T0Rr'’R«?*FO-R-D Dealer, OL 1-07I1.__________ 1*« falcon RANCHER^ PICK-I.* pa^erson**8ievrK.e*t 1104 8. Woodward Ava. — ..igham. Ml 4-3735. 1f*3 RANCHERO PidKOP, PuteIse CwE 105 1057 TRIUMPH, 3 TOPS, BUCKET Mats, radio. ------ — ‘ 5375. 3*3-44*3. e, with * cyl. i ----nlulon, only $1195 1964 Chevy '/e-Ton Icfcup, with Iht l{NtiMa bodyl $1495 Crissman Chevrolet ^ (On TOP ol Soulb Him —ihutOf_______________OL a-»731 1**3 CHEVROLET M-TON HEAVY &CT3*5’.‘g!..g!'' 1**3 WILLYS JEEP DISPATCHER. With full motot top. Sail thl* one for only 1405. PAmRSON CHEVROLET CO. I1M S. Woodward Avo., Blrmlnghim. Ml 4-2735. 1*4 FOkb RAN(^HkkO PICKUP, automollc. *74-l35f ottor 5 p.m. 1**5 f6K6 k-iw PickOP, Ve e*i- VW CONVERTIBLE, REBUILT mgino, t500. FE 5-3145 after 4. 1**1 VOLKSWAGEN 3-DOOR, StiARP ‘-'—'I mm, hat 1**4 engine,. 375 _____j, S3*.BS par month. Ooklond Chrysler-plymouth 734 Oakland Avo.____ 332-*i50 duty rur omL ______ _1). TMOO mlM, _________ cash. EM 3-4010, *405 E. Commorca 1966 GMC Vb-ton PICKUP M r box, haoWr. i dofrootm -Prkoi A -And Rtl Hoi^ OLDS-HESTER $1845 ATTENTION HUNTERS Chevy 1965, % ton, heovy duty, custom pickup, 292 horse powir, 6-cylinder, Inileagi 7,500, plus Wolverine deluxe cob ov comp-er, heat, all extras, $4,535. Ml 6-6503. * heavy duty’'^ri^ maw* an back, e*71 GMC FACTORY EEANCH Auto Insurance for Anyone Don Nicholie 53’/2 W. Huron St. FE 5-8183 1*40 MG ROADSTER WITH BRAND NEW PAINT, 4-SPEED TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HEATER, ABSD LUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Auume wukly paymants of S7.*2, CALL CREDIT M6R. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. 1962 RENAULT Jaor with itick ihlft, an axcallant acanamy car, full price only I3*T down paymanti of $4.(10 an weakly paymanti only $4.00 W handia and arranga all flnancliK call Mr. Dan at; FE 8-4071 Capitol Auto I**l AUSTIN-HEALEY 3000, W ROSE ^ RAMBLER ■coifl 0 5*5 Ghla ^vartlbl*. Volkswagen Center tadan, toa blua finlih, ni w mllaaM. (5) to choc 0 and balgt: wnroof a ■ ■■ ..... la baautHul ruby ri I, robuin' angina, hanically parbd Karmann llul rad I VW tadan. Eaautllul tea blue , ipaclal at only . tll*i l**3 Karmann Ghla coupa. Frotl hita finlih with rad Intarkir. Ra-lo, axcallant candltlon . Itws Autobahn Motors, Inc. ■ ......... sharp. 1575. OR 3-0*34. 19*4 CHEVY 1*«0 CORVAIR 4 - DOOR WITH automatic TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND H E AT E R, . WHITEWAU MONEY DOWN, A Slum# wMkIy paymanit of $4.92. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. 0 Ooklond Chrysler-plymouth ! Ooklond Chrysler-Plymouth 1 724 Oakland Ave ________332-flM 724 Oakland Ave._____332-*1M 1964 CHRYSLERS All exceptionally clun In ovary respect, most with lull factory equipment and power, pick the one you wish, some with 50,000 mita factory warranty. Priced Irom^- ____________ $1995 HASKINS CHEVY MA 3-2*0. irdtop, all powai .jiner. FE 2-4*53.____________ IftO CHEVROLET 2-DOOR HARD lop, radio, hooter, automatic, price, S3*5. No monay 0 wukly payments, S4.40. STATE WIDE AUTO 3400 Elizabeth Lake Road 1964 CHEVY Super Mansfield Auto Soles ter. EM 3-3012. lercoated, 12,000 n good molar, best after. OR 3-54M.'lf*0 CORVAJR 4-P9P.R. TOO' _AL 0 BUICK, V-0 AUTOMATIC,! but olfa? FE W*^^ XdtEbH iBiith fWbtEMr f.otl nria-u DW OTTTr ---- factory warrant. Uka new. UL' _________$-5475 before 4 p.m.___________, AUTO-119*4 CHEW II, * WAGON, VERY' — I —- condition, $1,3*5. OL 1-0195. i Ml BUICK CONVERTIBLE -LeSabr* modal, automatic, radio, hutar, double power, fuM price, $595. No money down. Wtakly 19*0 MONZA CORVAIR, STICK shift, excellent condition, 1523. Seer liter 5 p.m., 13* Marquette.__ REPOSSESSION-1940 CHEVY, VO, -------------- payments of $5.87 "Meson at FE Repossession 19*1 ELECTRA Convartibla wit., full powet", no cash naadad and low monthly paymanti. *— --car taken In trada. Call 330-4520 Spartan, Repossession B0lc“*lartr?*i5'tTu l**3 BUICK, ELECTRA ... 19*3 CHEVY, WAGON ..... 19*2 PONTIAC, 2-DOOR ... *1,195 bju smith USED CARS 4*2 N. Parry_________FE 4-4241 444-5030 or KA-TIU. FISCHER BUICK 544 S. Woodward ___ 647-5600 S BUICK RIVIERA, LOADED, SSl- 1965 Buick iabra "400" 2-door hardtop lh< now In every detail. Power i ru and all that bulll-ln Bulc ury. Full price — $2597 (Just V. mile north of Can Ava.) Spartan Dodge CADILLAC ELDORADO, 1*57, AIR, lull powaf, FE 44000._________ W50 CADILLAC COUPE DaVILLE, solid black, full powtr, lha rmht kind of car. $I,6m. JEROME FORD, Rochester FORD Dialer. t CADILLAC 4-DOOR, EXTRi Repossession 1**2 CADILLAC Da Villa hardtop. Any old car taken In trade. No - " - Estabilihed " ' On Ditplay WILSON CADILLAC OF BIRMINGHAM I block louth of I* Mila Blrmln^am_______Ml 4-l*X 19*1 CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE -ExcaHWCT COfXmiOW. EM J<74D. 1962 CADILLAC Coupe, this axciptlonally fine au-tomoblla may bo purchnad for n low u 1145 down. Superior Rambler M Oakland Ava._FE 5-942) 1*43 CAI3ILLAC, SEDAN DBVILLE', air condlH ' -- — STrii ii-way. ___J, AM-FM radio, K.. condition, aiklng $20,- C CONVERTIBLE, k too. black leather 0247S. Shell 1**3 C A D I L L slivtr-gray. Mi Interior. New ______ _______ _____ Gas Station, 42*5 S. Commarc* Rd. Commerce, Mich. i**s CADILLAC. CALAIS COUPE. PLACE A PRESS WANT AO-SEE THINGS HAPPEN I Superior Rambler 550 Oakland Ave. 1**1 CORVAIR MONZA, S 0 01 Corvette 196r“ Black with black top, 4 - speed transmission, brand new tires, in showroom condition. PONTIAC RETAIL STORE Where You Expect More ... and Get It 65 Mt. Clemens St. AT WIDE TRACK FE 3-7954 1**5 ELECTRA 2 1961 CHEVROLET Impel* 4-door hardtop, l-cy radio and heater, standard transmission, sharp. P $895 Homer "Hight MOTORS, INC. PONTIAC-BUICK-CHEVROLET ‘ ■ Oxford, Michigan 604-U75, Milford. Must sell. Call 1**1 CHEVY a CYLINDER, 4 auto., ne" •>'•« n»_ni.i *73-13*1. ! Wukly payments, 17.40. STATE WIDE AUTO 19*2 CHEVY 2-DOOR BISCAYNE *, Lloyd's pra- Thanksgiving SALE GOING FULL BLAST 1964 TEMPEST $1795 1965 COMET Cyclon* 2-door hardtop. *, payments of only ____vcekly. Coll Mr. Murphy at 335-4101. McAulHto._____ 1961 FORD GALAXIE 500 ^DOOR hardtop, automatic, radio and heeler, fuU price. 1095. No monoy down. Weekly payments, 09.41. STATE WIDE AUTO 3400 Ellzobelh Loka Rood __________FE 0-7137______ WILL ACCEPT GUNS, BOATS, MOTORS Sunshlno from a Beanery Echo from o steamboat whistle Hew BjMl Used Can 106 New aad Used Cm REPOSSESSION-1961 OLDSMOBILE -----,. .......... Moion at FE I M101. McAullfto.___________________ 1963 OLDS WAGON, RADIO, HEAT-9r, powtr, whitewolls, ‘ ‘ — Hon, S1741. MA 6-1911. Repossession No cosh noodod - 1963 PONTIAC Bennavlllo Moor hirdlop. Full —or. Just rtleasod for p u b 11 c . Call Mr. Cash at 3»^ - whitewalls tiros. Porftct condition. Ml 6-1119.__________________________ 1964 PONTIAC CATALINA SAFARI waoM 9-potsonger, good conC'"— 51,100. 693-1195._______________ Mansfield Auto Sales 19tS Fonlloc hardtop. Power, OM warranty, Olr-**■ 1104 Baldwin Avo._ . FE 5-5900 _ ___^A_*~*”* TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO money DOWN, AtlUind snokly ptymento of 04.9t CALL CREDIT MOR. Mr. Forks it HAROLD TURNBR wring, power b r o k o a gno with matching In____________ indreds ol I below coat. Wttk- $2487 Mansfield Auto Sales I lam-pocked lull core. 100 to cho 1104 Baldwin Ave. >________I Repossession poaa of ■ 1963 OLD. I, will bring cor to your > OS no^j Cell Mr. 1963 ----NEE0-A.CAR^ m bankrupt or bad crodi tomi, we con flnanco y»v .„,i, gw^rar of your cholco, call Mr. " * FE 8-4071 FOR lASMEDIATE DELIVERY Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM Just Eoat of Ooklond 1964 PLYMOUTH WAGON. 4-DOl cor. Hk. n 1964 VALIANT, 1964 VALIANT REPOSSESSION-1961 FORD WAG-on. no nsonoy downy poymontt of $6.87 wMkIy. Catl Mr. Maaon at FE 5-410). McAullffa._________ mi FORD V8e a-DOOR SEOAN, Autobahn Specials AS PART DOWN PAYMENT ON ANY NEW OR USED CAR I BILL SPENCE 6673 Dixie Hwy. Chryaler-Plymoulh-Vallant Romblor-Jtop CLARKSTON__________MA 5-163S 1961 FALCON 3 - DOOR WITH AUTOMATIC TRANS-MISSION, RADIO AND HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Assume weakly poymonts ol 16.93. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. FORD WAGON, 4-DOOR DE ' 6-OOOA SEDAN. -----------.,»er steering, brekes, whitewellt, radio, hootor. Only S1595. PATTERSON CHEVROLET ----CO.r llor woodward AvoV BTr- mlnghom. Ml 4-1735.______________ 1964 OLDS. 442, RED AND WHITE convortibto, 615-1117. 1964 Pontiac Bonneville Convertible Honey Bolga, bucket soots, povw stoorfng, povwr brakts, powtr wir dows. S4S.OO or your old cor dow Mansfield 01,695: uperior Rambler poymonts, good cend. FE I-1SI9. Mansfield Auto Sales 1965 Tompost LeMens convertible. MrrMS?.' FE S-590o’** *'**’" ***FE S-9915 1945 CATALINA 4-DOOR SEDAN, ------■—■— Vakts, sKhllev -■ _______ at, FE 5-3099. BY OWNER, 1965 CATALINA, 1- sport coupe, all |--- > teoturoa. MA 66930. 1965 MUSTANG 309, 4-tpcod, racing green wl block GT Intorlor. OJMO actu miles, 5177 down. Superior Rambler 550 Oakland Ave. FM radio, 1-door hardtop, M tx-coptlonally, nice car. $2095 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 914 S. woodward_____Ml 7-3114 N AND TEST DRIVE very low ndtoogg, ana owner. Blr-jffinBhanitr^S BIRMINGHAM “• *''*• CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 911 $. woodward Ml 7-B14 ROUTH SPORTS FURY, Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth i964 grand prix sport coupe, 714 Oakland Avo. 33M1S0 roNTIAC-AAMBLee-BUldl^----- n problonwT Will finaii $2197 DON'S ^ ^ US1DCAR8 COM'* 1965 MUSTANG, 6-CYLINDER, : spood, SI675. 67M009._____ 1965 FALCON'SPBiNT c6uPE h engine, 4-spoad transmission, radio, buckets, 6JM miles. Now con-dltlonl Savel JEROME FORD, Rochester FORD Doolor, OL 1-9711. THE “HOT" 64-1 JEROME %*••••' 1950 PONTIAC ^DOOR HAR6tOP, Star Chief, power steering brakes. Full pries only 5149. 1965 Ford LTD Hardtop dor with 151 VS tngino, radka ■tar, Crvls»046atlc, powor stf-U brakes and whitowalls. 1965 Ford Foirlane 4-Door llh the economy 6-Matlc, powor and o iff sooson boy of only - $1497 1955 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL, full powor, oir candHIonlng, Florldo cor, now liras, solid body. 60-1610 - oftor 6 p.m._____________ ' 1960 MERCURY, LOOKS GOOD, runs good, SITS, H6-790I. I960 mercury 4-DOOR SEbAN. ... 77SxU »...., ___________________ loccntly. rebuilt 6 cyl. with au wstic. Wt 674-1999, after 6-.X p.i Torquefllte. power steering, radio, hootor. vary ctoon, IMO, MA 6-56a •> 1961 PLYMOUTH SPORTS FURY -----rtiblo, —------ ---------- ear Ing » flnTal STATE WIDE AUTO 3400 Ellzaboth Lako Rood ________FE 0-7137 1961 COMET .Estate Storage ton! tconomy, no cash down, os-sumo weakly payments of 16.00. wo handle end trranga ell II-ntnclno, call Mr. Dan at: FE 84071 Capitol Auto It Ui milt north of Cast Ava.) Spartan Dodge , MUST DISPOSE OF 1963 ECONO- 71 ■ “E compsr. No mor - - 410010 Of only SI0.I Mr. Mur^y si i COMET. Never boon Is Lit of stoM cor, radio and I____ iw tiros. 31,000 mllot. FE 5-1631. 1963 PLYMOUTH 9t)0ti0ngtr wagon, boautli with tnotchlng rod bttorli automatic thit car It letdi.. extras, must sat and drive to ■pprocloto, one owner, a rtiLbr-goto at - $1595 / I BIRMINGHAM 3- . CHRYSELR-PLYMOUTH t 914 8. Woodward _ Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth 714 Oakland Ava. ---- Mansfield si Auto Sales city lot lom-packod lull of 1-ownor cart. 100 to choott 1104 BoMwIn Avt. |FE S5900________________ I REPOSSESSION - 1961 FORD, NO VI automatic, ri JEROM^6R*Dl"oCHiS »D Doolor, "■ Guarantee gutrantto. Toko the guesswork out of buying Used CortI Credit No Probtoml It 335-4101, McAulW 1963 OLDS ”98'' Convertible, Full Power, Priced to Sell ot ......................$1995 1965 PONTIAC Bonneville Hardtop, Power Steering, Brakes, Air Conditioning.....$2995 1964 OLDS "98" Convertible, Full Power, Sharp Birmingham Trade ...................... $2495 1965 OLDS Delta 4-Door, Power, 30-Day Uncon- ditionol Guarantee . . ^ $2795 1963 BUICK Riviera, Full Power, Factory Air Conditioning, Like New..................$2695 1962 PONTIAC Bonneville 4-Door H o r d t o p. Power Steering, Brakes, Windows. Only 31,000 Miles ...........................$1495 1965 OLDS Vista Cruiser Wagon, Like New, Yoon for Only ......................... $2795 1964 OLDS Starfire, Full Power, Shorp One Owner, Only ....................... $2495 1963 OLDS ”98" Hordtops and Sedans, Full Power. From ........................... $1995 1964 OLDS ”88" 2-Door Hardtop, Automatic, Power Steering, Brokes^,............... $2295 ORIGINATOR OF 2-YEAR WARRANTY 635 S. Woodward Ave. Birmingham 647-5111 RUSS JOHNSON Pontioc-Rombler USED CAR STRIP 1564 CHEVY Impalt 1-door ItlOS 1564 RAMBLER hardtop "770" t1,55S ; 1564 Tompost convortibto . la.IM 1564 TEMPEST wagon 11.055 BJ^MiWHaJw 1561 CORVAIR Menu auto 1564 RAMBLER Sedan "770" l|^ORO 1-door, nka . 1561 FORD 3-door . 1561 RAMBLER 6door 1561 PONTIAC 1-door 1564 PONTIAC hardtop 1561 PONTIAC hardtop . . 1561 PONTIAC hardtop . 01,551 I CHEVY 1-door I 755 RUSS lOHNSON FORD Pastor, OL 1-5711._ 1963 MERCURY Comot. Immoulslt throughout, thi cor can bo purchotod with n money down, poymonts so lew 0 S7.44 par wtok. Superior Rambler 50 Ooklond Avo._FB S541 sCe US FIRST BOB BORST LINCOLN-MIRCURY N S. Woodward BlrmingfiM MI 6-4538 1964 COMET ollonlo wHh vinyl root, radio on trwsmlulwi 045 or old cor down, wookly pay monto only 111.51. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC .iSti.'KooowAW *y«-.... T963 PLYMOUTH Fury 1-deer hardtop, booul bolgo with oil rod vinyl totoi powor tloarlng and brakot, e owner. Blrmln^m trado. $1495 BIRMINGHAM Tronsportotion Specials auto. Irantmitolon, 05 down, U par wtok. Full prico ah I Chevrotot 4-doer station wagon, ...................... -IcolBif lull prico 1 II prira I 1557 Chevrotot 44oor slotlon « LUCKY AUTO Mansfield Auto Sales cyl. Hydramotic. radio, Horn Intorlor. Corpotlng. Good condl OIJOO. FE »n50. 1564 tempest 6, 1 D60R, POWER Itaaring, auto., radio. York Town SMALL AD-BIG LOT SO CARS TO CHOOSE FROM Pontiac l-dr., auto., double pow-wodlo. hootor, whltowolls, light ! Tompost wagon, oute., radio, Mftr, whltowolls, sllvor blua, ..hito top. 1563 Ford XL convortibto, radio, hooter, whitowillt. white, block lop. 1563 Ford wagon, suol., powor stearins radio, hootor, whitr 677 S. LAPEER RD. Likt Orion MY 2-2041 COME TO THE PONTIAC RETAIL- STORE WHERE YOU EXPECT MORE ... AND GET IT! Top quality, one-owner, new car trades to choose from 65 Mt. Clemens Ol WMo Track FE 3-7954 5hil?l;KL*^oo’''dol?^^ ay&congt: arrangt oil finoncing, coll Mr. **'fE 84071 Capitol Auto Station Wagon Specials 1964 Ford $1197 I now. ISSO. EM prico, 0557. No monoy di wookly payntonls, 06-40. STATE WIDE AUTO 5lbto, 1 ewnar, »6d)M Men„ Tuos., whltowsSugS^ R*^ N CHEVROLET CO. 1104 I. Wood-word Avo. eirmlngKom. Ml 6-1735. I56S PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CON-vortibto, deubto power, outom*l-tc, radio, haotw, lull prico, 1055. " ---TV d^ woskly pay- e'wide ..liobatti Lt_ ■ FE 0-7137 jowor Prkad rottni roioil market at 01J75 Ml 60164. 1963 Pontiac angar with »m mitot, i Ic, powtr, and lust Ilka ns ‘"$1797 1963 Dodge Dart with a ptowlng turquetsa f lih, slant ibi, and a standa transmission, for ocanomy. Fi $1097 1964 Ford Fpossongor Country Sodin, tho 1 sngino, CrulsaD-Matk and pewt Full prkt - $1987 1964 Dodw "440" 6«assonoor, VO, automotl po^, shtolng gold tlnlih. Fi $1797 $697 GO!! HAUPT PONTIAC 1560 PONTIAC Catollna 4^oor with automatic, deubto powtr, onh-down. mi CHEVY wogon, V-f, outoi powtr altering, 045 down. 1564 CATALINA 5-p05tangor, | stoartog, brakot, outomallc, thto one at only 055 down. 1561 BONNEVILLE 1-door hoi aulomatk, powor slaorlng, to 055 down. 1564 TEMPEST 6cyl. tflck, 1 radio, hattor, whltawalto, 015 i 1564 CHEVY BIscayna Adeer V-e, only 055 down. 1164 eOMHBVILLB vista. Autg mi BUICK Ltlabra Moor hai Spartan Dodge DON'T MISS IT WAIT AND SEE Pontiac Retail Store AT WIDE TRACK DIAL. FE 3-7954 IF YOU ARE HAVING TROUBLE GETTING YOUR CREDIT RE ESTABLISHED - NOW YOU CAN TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE EM(S mw CALL MR. WHITE: FE 8-4088 nsi@ Mm SM3SS INCORPORATBD aiiiJton' N. MAIN tTRIET , taval I COMET, 1565 CALIENTE, 4-OOOR. •H s»rtt%'ssL.*aaia I 555i_66M6. »lr»» trros.5 II,ml'* IBS S. Woodward iMd walla. lOn catli.l Av«. Mt r.,’: 336-1537. IT'S NEW •WAIT AND . SEE Pontiac Retail Store AT WIDE TRACK DIALi FE 3-7954 W§ MUM MW - BUY HERE - PAY HERE - We finance when others connoti Even if you hove been bonkrupt, hove In garnisheed, ore new in town, hove hod o repossession, hovs bean in receivsr-ship or hovi bsin tumid down by others. OVER 50 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM CAR 1956 FORD ME THIS ONEI PRICK ...$ 97 WSBK $1.01 CAR 1960 RAMBLER .. ■CONOMICAL PRICI ...$297 WIRR $3.03 1961 TEMPEST .. SHARP ...$297 $3.03 1959 PONTIAC .. ITATION WAOON ...$297 $3.03 1959 FORD HARDTOP ...$197 $2.02 1959 PONTIAC .. (HARP ...$297 $3.03 1961 PONTIAC .. HARDTOP ...$897 $9.09 1961 MERCURY .. STATION WAOON ...$697 $74)7 1961 CHEVY .... ilAL NICSl ...$597 $6.06 1959 CHEVY .... HARDTOP ...$397 $4.04 ffMagaMmm MbS& 60 S. TELEGRAPH FI S-96$1 ACROSS FROM TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER V THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10. 1965 D—13 ^ —Television Programs— Programs fumlihsd by stations listsd in this column ors subject to change without noticb Clienne>ii2-WJSK-TV,4-WWJ-TV,7-WXYZ.TV,9-»CKlW-TV,S0-WICSD-TV,SS-WTV8 ~~ WEDNESDAY EVENING l:M. (2) (4) News, Weather, Sports (7) Movie: ‘The Monolith Monsters” (In Progress) (9) Dennis the Menace (50) Soupy Sales (56) Mythology f:2S (7) Sports 6:90 (2) (4) Network News (7) News tl) Marshal Dillon . (SO) Superman (56) .Men of Our Time 6:41 (7) Network News 7:00 (2) (Color) Stingray (4) Juvenile Ck)urt (7) Shivaree (9) Movie: “House of Wax” (1953) Vincent Price Frank Lovejoy, Phyllis ------Kirk-------- ---------- (50) LitUe Rascals 7:20 (SO) SporUDesk 7:30 (2) Lost in Space (4) (Color) Virginian (7) (Color) Oz^Ae.and Harriet (50) Wanderlust (56) American Memoir 6:00 (7) Patty Duke (SO) To Be Announced (66) Great Books 6:15 (50) Sid Abel Show 1:25 (50) Hockey: Detroit vs. f Chicago 6:39 (2) *^(Color) Beverly Hill-______ (7) (Color) Gidget (56) Conversations 9:00 (2) (Color) Green Acres (4) -(Color) Bob Hope (7) (Color) Big Valley (9) Musical Showcase 9:39 (2) Dick Van Dyke (9) Festival 10:00 (2) (Color) Danny Kaye (4) (Color) I Spy (7) Amos Burke 10:45 (50) Action Scoreboard 11:00 (2) (4) (7) (9) News, Weather, Sports (50) Merv Griffin 11:20 (7) Movie: “Doctor ati TV Features Wings vs. Chicago By United Press Intemationar OZZIE AND HARRIET, 7:30 i).m. (7) Rick is in hot water when Kris thinks he’s attracted to coed who runs the local tearoom. HOCKEY. 8:25 p.m. (50) Red Wings vs. Black Hawks in Chicago. GIDGET, 8:30 p.m. (7) Gidget and her pais stage boyfriend boycott in effort to revive chivalry. , ------------- DICK VAN DYKE, 9:30 pjn. (2) Petries* former maid wants Rob to find work for tier boyfriend — a former buU-figbter. ACROSS 1 Ubetan ox 4 Aquatic matnmal 8 Julius Caesar’s ox 12 Exposed (poet.) 13 Expect 14 Number 15 Arthurian knight 16 Offshore 17 Borrowed money 18 Marine eagles 20 Condition 22 European animals, in summer fur 24 Be silent 25 Peculiarity 27 Conifer tree Pedal digits 32 Dry, as champagne 34 Accomplish 35 Preposition 36 Employs 37 Encourage 39 Long for 42 Mockery 44 Loyal (Scot.) 46 Gun-cleaning gadget 49 Dismay 51 Zoo equine 52 Jump 53 Too -Cloth-measure-------- Sea” (1955) Dirk Bogarde, Brigitte Bardot. 11:30 (2) Movie: “Mogambo” (1953) Clark Gable, Avi Gardner, Grace Kelly. (4) (Color) Johnny Carson (9) Man of the World (SO) Wells Fargo 12:46 (9) Film Feature 1:10 (4) Beat the Champ 1:15 (7) After Hours ^:90 (2) (4) News, Weather 2:60 (7) News THURSDAY MORNING 6:15 (2) On the Farm Scene 6:20 (2) News 6:25 (2) Sunrise Semester 6:30 (4) Classroom (7) Funews 6:55 (2) Editorial, News 7:00 (4) Today (7) Johnny Ginger 7:05 (2) News 7:30 (2) Happyland 8:00 (2) Captain Kanproo (7) Wally, Lippy and Touche Last of Ziegfeld Girls in Theater's Last Show By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — Sometimes I’m. like just a starry-eyed shmo . from K(d(omo, still awe-struck by the razzle dazzle. Beautiful Connie Towers apprised me over too much brunch at La Potiniere that she’s the last of the Zieg-iarGim.mrrreheartteg Bsw^fw^ musical about Anastasia, ^t when the last curtain falls, Billy Rose supposedly will sell this] famous cathedral of show business at 54th & 6th Av. to skyscraper-builders who will there-! by double his riches. When Connie rehearses now under Ihe directing of “Mr. Ahhott” (whom nohody ever calls George) she’s constantly conseions of that little window four or five stories aloft WILSON where Billy Rose, from his office, can always look down at the show. “Even in an empty theater,” she says, “you’re always conscious of an andience.” Billy’s around there now watching rehearsals and Connie says, “Gee, he’s a nice man!” ★ ★ ★ My, My, My, the terrible gossip . . s about a Broadway star whose dear friends say he’s tired of his show and is trying to kill It by fluffing it now . . .about the three or four stars who won’t get well . . . about the famous wife who moved out and the young girl friend who moved in . . . about the famous happily-married Hollywood Top Drawer Married Star & Celebrity who Just gave up his mistress—he turned her in for a new one. Give credit to Alex Cohen, producer of the upcoming “’The Devils.” He got rid of the “balcony” in the Broadway ’Theater. He calls it the “rear mezzanine.” It sounds closer. ★ ★ ★ THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . . Claudia Cardinale’s been linked romantically with a rich I European — but we hear she made some secret trips here to meet Anthony Ponzini, 28, a Brooklyn-born but now Thompson St. actor who’s on the TV soap opera, “Edge of Night,” and soon to star in a film, “The Crazy Green of 2nd Avenue” ... Richard Aodgers took beautiful Anna Moffo to lunch and talked to her about playing the lead in his next musical about the 14th | Century B.C. Egyptian Queen. Hugh Downs, who injured his back during a Pacific boat! trip, is at Harkness Pavilion, in traction, with a ruptured spinal | disk . . . Laurence Harvey was told at a “King Rat” screening! that the role was perfect for him. “The role may not be,” he laughed, “—but the title is.” i ★ ★ ★ i WISH I’D SAID THAT: Too many girls feel that when they marry a meal ticket they can stop dieting. F^MEMBERED QUOTE: “All human wisdom Is summed up lA two words—wait and hope.”—Alexapder Dumas. EARL’S PEARLS: Statistics show 60% of the country’s wealth is in the hands of women; we figure they’re letting men hold the Other 40% because their handbags are full. (Til* Hall CURIOUS ANIMAI^ i r r 4 r T r r It il 13 14 ;■ 17 nr 19 ~1 y 1 ! ii ■ L \ L ■ \ 11 M y y 34 35 y I ■ r 38 36 40 41 ■ L 43 ii 48 ■ L 47 48 40 60 1 ■ s, Bz l3 54 56 B7 58 59 eA Bi 82 10 Find Mites, Lichens Close to South Pole WASHINGTON — The animal i the sounds remains a mystery, known to live farthest south is Th*y keep their months and I a pink mite about one hendredth' “““'rwater, 'of an inch long. I Depth gauges attached to 1 It is a tiny spiderlike creature seals have registered dives to that feeds on algae and fungi.' almost 1,500 feet - the deepest The mite was found recently ever officially recorded for only 309 miles from the South'mammals. One seal remained Pole by Keith A. J. Wise, an submerged for 28 minutes with-entomologist from Hawaii’s out coming up for air. Bishop Museum. 9 Engaged in a tumult 10 Two-toed sloth 47 Lower deck (naut.) 48 Dawdle Wise also found lichens only 266 miles from the Pole, the closest that life of any kind has been proved to exist. The only animals living per-;manently on the Antarctic con-I tinent are insects and their relatives, the National Geographic Society says. I About M species of anthro- 8:30 (7) Movie; “Wabash Avenue” (1950) Betty Grable, Phil Harris 8:45 (56) English V 8:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 9:00 (2) Andy Griffith (4) Living (9) Romper Room 9:10 (56) Come, Let’s Read ^30 (2) Dick Van Dyke ________ (56) American History 9:55 (4) News (56) Spanish Lesson 10:00 (2) I Love Lucy (4) Fractured Phrases (9) Film Feature 10:10 (56) Our Scientific World 10:25 (4) News 10:30 (2) McCoys (4) Concentration (7) Girl Talk (9) Friendly Giant 10:35 (56) French Lesson ‘ 10:45 (9) (Special) Remembrance Day Ceremony 10:50 (56) Spanish Lesson 11:00 (2) Divorce Court (4) Morning Star (7) Young Set 11:15 (0) (Special) Fields of Sacrifice 11:20 (56) What’s New 11:30 (4) Paradise Bay 11:50 (9) News 57 Noun suffix 58 Heath 59 Diminutive of Roland 60 Asterisk 61 Grain beards 62 Foreign agent DOWN 1 Bonds for oxen 2 Aside 3 Fundamental idea 4 California mountain 5 Dawn goddess 6 Mimic 7 Smallest A NautieaLtenn --------- AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) Love Of Life (4) Jeopardy (7) Donna Reed iULBasle (50) Dickory Doc 12:25 (2) News 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Post Office (7) Father Knows eBst (9) Take 30 12:45 (2) Guiding Ught U:55 (4) News 1:00 (2) Scene 2 (4) Match Gama (7) Ben Casey (9) Movie: “Operation Eichmann” (1961) Werner Klemperer, Ruta Lee (50) Motor City Movies 1:25 (4) News 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (4) Ut’s Make a Deal 1:55 (4) News 2:00 (2) Password (4) Days of Our Lives (7) Nurses 2:30 (2) House Party (4) Doctors (7) A Time for Us 2:55 (7) News 3:00 (2) To TeU the Truth (4) Another World (7) General Hospital 3:20 (56) Memo to Teachers 3:25 (2) News 3:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) You Don’t Say (7) Young Marrieds (9) Swingin’ Time 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Bozo the Clown (7) Never Too Young (50) Topper 4:30 (2) Mike Douglas (7) Where the Action Is (9) Fun House (50) Love That Bob 4:55 (4) Eliot’s Almanac 5:00 (4) George Pierrot (7) Movie: “Stella” (1950) David Wayne, Ann Sheridan (50) Lloyd Hiiudon (56) Invitation to Art 5:39 (56) What’s New k:5i (4) Here’s Carol Duvall 19 Auricles 21 Social sensitivity 23 Kinsmen 26 ^ot kosher (var.) 28 Fruit drink 29 Decompose 30 Plaything 31 Undivided 33 Alkaline land (var.) 36 Single 37 Summit 38 North African tribesmen 40 Peruvian animal 41 Harvester 43 Shaving implements 50 Shut in 54 Not high 55 Male offspring Answer to Previous Puzzle cannot be seen by the naked eye. 'The largest is a wingless A zoologist succeeded in gaining the confidence of mother seals nursing pups on the ice. Then he extracted sampies of the mother’s milk with a large plastic tube. Seal milk is much richer in fat than human milk, and seal pups gain weight faster than any other mammal. A newborn seal quintuples its weight in six Wearing “frogman’’ suits, scientists have explored seas Results in Careless Errors Student Can Overconcentrate fly, about the size of a house-|around Antarctica. Red sea-fly. I weeds grow abundantiy. There DORMANT IN WINTER are large red and white star- Ti, remain llsh, spongcs up to four feet in j active when the temperature ''’PrT's. reaches the melting point of wa-ter, 32 degrees Fahrenheit. Unlike the barren continent, the oceans surrounding Antarctica teem with animals ranging in size up to the blue whale — the largest creature that has ever lived. Scientists lowered a bucketshaped, 6-by-4-foot steel capsule under the ice in 1964 to observe marine life in a project supported by the National Science Foundation. Phone Firm Must Give Free Service for Errors SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-The Pacific Telephone Co. has been By Leslie J. Nason, Ed. D. Why does a pupil who makes A’s on spelling tests misspell those same words in writing themes? Why does a pupil who dem-. on strates his toowledge of grammar on an English test fail to follow these same rules in his own compositions? Why does pupil who! knows his number combinations make so' many careless DR. NASON errors in the solving of prob- the new learning in a different situation. The student’s very concentration results in so-called careless errors. ★ ★ * Consider for example the good p e 11 e r who misspells even simple words in his written work. A’TTENTION DIVIDED When this boy takes a spelling test, his attention is centered on spelling. When he is writing compositions, however, he is no longer primarily concerned with spelling, but his attention now centers on the ideas that he is conveying through written work. He may well be a Hdrd-worUng lad, Intent upon doing a good While these condltioiis generally are considered a lack of transfer of learning from one situation to another, this Is not neciessarily so. It is more a matter of crowding out the possibility of usiiQi ordered to give free phone service to anyone in California whose name is omitted from the phone book, or listed wrong. *1110 State Public Utilities Commission handed down the order yesterday. It applies to p h o n e Tbe me7 took turns ih the cap- "ext year, sule, peering into the cold dark! through six windows. A hy- , iiiivuKii otA Tvmuuno. n plex operation for some youngoutside the capsule ... "ersons and Mme adults, too. aj,ied the scientists to eavesdrop ■ _ ^ Ion the inhabitants of this C 0 n t r 01 of handwriting re-1 utue-known world, quires so much thought that the control of spelling and grammar Motorist Gets Sinking Feeling-ond He Was are crowded even further into the background. If the pupU lacks skill in handwriting, it demands so much of his attention that the tendency toward care-compounded. HANDUNG PROBLEM I suggest a three-pronged approach to the problem; • A pupil, after doing his written exercise in his usual fashion, should edit the work. 7dB bn the taSc at hand; If he were less careful ia his thinking about the subject matter, he would probably make fewer errors in spelling and grammar. Formulating thoughts and placing them on paper is a com- FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. FEW FISH ;IA) — A motorist who got a The observers saw few fish,l®*"*^j"8 feeling as he sat in his but a jelly fish floated by trail- car found good reason for it. The ing tentacles 30 feet long. '*...................... “Gracefully swimming seals were around most of the time, often going to breathe in a hole we had chopped in the ice, and sometimes coming to inspect the chamber,” reported Dr. Carleton Ray of the New York Zoological Society. ’Through the hydrophone came car slowly oozed into a puddle of mud until it was completely covered. Water department officials explained that a pipe had burst underground, causing a quicksand pocket which the motorist was unlucky enough to park on. If it is an arithmeUc exercise, iseal sounds, variously described he should look for the simple as whistles, buzzes, be^ and errors. (cfiiip: One ^efins^rnniOfif In rereading compositions ed, “I’ve never heard such an with his attention centered on underwater racket, spelling, a pupil can* locate and — Radio Programs— ^»(7d0) WXYZn 270) CKlVWOck)) WWJ(»80) WCAIRl 130) WKWIQ 460) WJtKfl 800) WHFI-0M(94.7) WXYZ, N*wl WJSK, NtWi, 0**. T0l*« WCAR, N*w>, Jo* •«o*r*il* WPON, N*W(, Ipojil MmIc »y C*tv «tU-WWJ, Iperti «iSS-WXVZ, AM Ortar CKLW, *------ ItW-WWJ, R«d Whw Hockty IliW-WXYZ, MMcn Murphy Wja, N«wi, KtUMo*^ lli»-WCAR. N*wi, Ipent wwj. N*wi emu llilS-WCAR, MtdlMl Journal DavMt WnoN, Ntwi, B«b l iwrtnc* WHPI, Nwm, AWimwc MUR, Miwt, Muilc Hall sm-wjfc, N*«M, s. Sum wjsk, nm*. adit. •iIS-WISK, San I a* tiU^WJR, N*«m, Opan Houm WCAR, Jack landari att*-Ckl.W, Nam, Ja* Van LEAVES HOSPITAL — Republican national chairman Ray Bliss left an Albuquerque, N.M. hoipital yesterday with his wife. Bliss entered the hospital last Friday after complaining of chest pains. He was in Albuquerque to attend a western GOP conference. correct erroi-s. When reading with only grammar in mind he can correct his as easily as he can pass the grammar test. • The use of scratch paper notes on what he proposes to say in a composition may free his mind sufficiently to eliminate or at least minimize the number of errors. • ’The student who makes careless errors in composition usually lacks skill in hand-\mting. He should practice un-m he writes easily. On the surface, this would appear to call for a lot of hard work. Parents can, however, give their chil-dren reasonable assurance that if these practices are continued, their ability to write their first copies will be satisfactory. The habit of carefully rechecking work as well as the student’s attitude toward perfection in hiS endeavors are things that transfer automatically from one study to another. ★ ★ Thus, the student who fol-| lows these procedures will gain both from the elimination of the immediate errors and the work habits developed. (You can get Prof. Nason’s book, “How To Get Into College,” by sending $rto College Book in care of this newspaper.) The noisy Weddell seals are believed to use the sounds for both communication and sonar navigation. The sonar theory might explain how these mammals find food and breathing holes in Antarctica’s winter darkness. SOUNDS ANALYZED | Sound tracks of seal noises are being analyzed. Some havej such high frequencies and rapid j pulsation they can’t be heard byi human ears. ! How the Weddell seals make Hospital Cornerstone Stores Valuable Coins PHILADELPHIA7*Pa; "(g)^ When the 77-year old Methodist hospital here was tom down to make way for a new structure, the cornerstone was opened. In it, officials found $43-44 worth of gold and silver coins. But due to their rarity, the old coins were sold for $3,500. The money went into the building fund as a “gift from the forefathers.” NOW UHF ANTENNA Installed $29.95 SWEET'S APPUANCa "Wrack” ROOM to "Roe” ROOM CKLW, AuitMi Grant WPON, Nawt, Ban Joh WCAR, Nawt, Tom Kol WHPI, Nawt k) Oapth WXYZ, Nawt, Muik WPBK, Nawt, enar llitl-WJR, Pacut WWJ, thig liW-wjR, Nawt, LlnkMtar CKLW, Nawt, Dav* Ihilar WHF|, Bneor* WWJ, Nawt, Mutic Built-In BAR With Every REC Room • Now Ranoling Soloetions • Nfw Armstrong Coilings • Now Armstrong Floor Tilos • Modern Roeets Lighting IPinler Price$ in Effect * ONE CONTRACTOR • ONE JOB • ONE PRICE a Room AdHilioru • < amily Rooms o Kac. Hooms • Kifehont and Both Remodeling mIIIBbls FE8-92SI FREE ESTIkUUS ■ In V VliWi 0 S cent and tharth^^K!®^®*! pened and how to stop it fronv oVoeram could cause a stoplights to regulate Forty of them patroled down- happemng aga,„. ‘«P» WaMeld,'^b«. n. ice agencies, (monumental despite the efforts were reported to have been or- ir n i, '®F the nation’s best dres.sed dered to actual duty. Ingraham said that the impact^ of the ptcr 10 the fatal .shooting! tipoverty programs would was elected yesterday as the M 7« “ brother-in-law t h r e e have to be evaluated and their parttime member of the Oak- ..- - <0 months ago related to increased pro- land County Board of Auditors, ^ “ Arthur CHeming Jr, 29, of ductivity. and Daniel T. Murphy was reap- j3 4t 2M08 Farmington entered his exoected benefits chairman. 2I 'pIca as his trial on a first de- "‘sted as expected neneiiis _^ ■■ gree murder charge was to be- ‘L Finally, Moyers said, “Several of the persons working on the problem believed with tentative confidence that the probable cause of the problem was a remote-control substation at Clay, N.Y." meeting jointly last night at Madison Junior High reached tentative agreement on guide lines for committee proposals to the board and by-laws for the committee. However, he hastened to add there was contrary word, that other experts doubted the Clay substation had anything to do with it. “It is safe to say no one knows what caused the pc failure,” Moyers concluded. The committee, beaded by Samuel Baker, was created in December of last year when the school board set down its policy on public school integration. Baker, who said the guide lines drawn up by Supt. of schools Dr. Dana P. Whitmer were “commendable,” told board members the comevttae now felt it “had its feet on the ground and had something to work with” in the field of human relations. Fill 2 County Auditor Posts Osgood’s election came on the ) M M gin before Circuif Judee Fred- ^ reduction in welfare third ballot when he polled 53 w ” erick C Ziern The nlea on the skilled'Votes among the Oakland Coun- « « reduced c6unt was ai cepli by coordination of servicesity ^ard of Supervisors. A total the prosecutor'.s office ^ *0 the poor and a reduction in of 44 was required for the ... . crime, election. Fleming will be sentenced chairman for a one-year term Dee 7 He faecA . ikiaaIm i ranked teams in the state all season long and the top contender in the Saginaw Valley Conference, faces Michigan’s No. 1 schoolboy team, Bay City Central. We will venture to say that Bay City, which has already disposed of 2,500 tickets, will come down here with greater numbers than the fans who will be there right from this city. ★ ★ ★ niere is mterest in this game all over the state. Writers frmn various cities have indicated they will be present to staff the game for their respective newspapers. This current Pontiac Central team is the finest we’ve ever seen. They hustle, they work hard and despite the frightening Bay City offense which has mauled the opposition for more than 30 points a game, coach Paul Dellerba and the Chiefs are more than capable holding their own. | Bay City Central is tough and deserving of its No. 1 rating,! but the Chiefs deserved better crowd support than they! have received for the position they have held all season. If 8.000 fans don’t fill Wisner Friday night in what is Pon-| tiac Central’s biggest game in history, you alumni, students,^ residents, football fans ought to hide your heads before ever making another remark about the kind of football you want Wolf pack, PCH After Saginaw Valley Title A very determined—though worried and perhaps a bit scared Bay City Central football team will visit Pontiac Central at Wisner Stadium Friday night. Any help coach Elmer Engle needed to ready the Wolves mentally for the Saginaw Valley Conference title showdown with PCH he received from the state sportswriters Tuesday. BC Central, rated No. 1 among the state class A powers by the prep coaches on the United Press International weekly poll,' STATE’S TOP ELEVEN — This is the lineup Bay City Ccitral will send against the Pontiac Central Chiefs Friday evening at Wisner in a game that will determine the Saginaw Valley Conference championship. On the line are (left to right): end Dannis Wirgowski (225), tackle Matt Czap (221), guard Rick Brown (208), center Les Roseberry, (193), guard Keith Hayward (184), tackle Gary Thompson (230), and end Bob Howse (185). In the backfield (left to right) are halfback Jim Osborne (28), quarterback Tom Kennell (7), fullback Lon Miller fl9) and halfback Rollie Auman (15). The Bay City squad is ranked No. 1 among the state’s Class A teams. SATURDAY NIGHT was dropped down to second place by the Associated Press poll of scribes. Leading all season, the Wolves relinquished that top spot to Battle Creek Central after that team ran up 60 points in routing Kalamazoo Central last week. The Pontiac Arrows, whose players are out of the amateur realm, will be playing the All-Star team of the Midwest Football League. The Arrows don’t expect to play to full stadiums, but the brand of football they have delivered against teams from Lansing, Dayton and Flint has been interesting. Miss Jones Atop Champion In fact there have been very few fans who have passed on their comments to us who didn’t finish their analysis of this brand of football with saying, “Gee, I really enjoyed that game. ” Rides Ksarina to Jumper Win Bloqmfield Hills Girl at Washington Show Broncos Booter No 'Barefoot Boy' After Saturday’s game don’t be surprised to see Arrow’s quarterback Karl Sweetan back in a Lions’ uniform as part of the taxi squad at Tiger Stadium next week. And don’t even be surprised if Sweetan is recalled back Into active roster before the season is out if the Lions’ offense doesn’t start perking a little better. AFL teams .........a------------- KALAMAZOO (AP) - Unlike,seven field goals to his credit Sho^?e fortSi?! Michigan State placekickerDickIthis season, didn’t play football enough gite support to help their existence*^ ° WASHINGTO.N >JP - A \oung Kenney, who attracts plenty of while attending Plymouth High enougn gate support to nelp their existence. horsewoman from Bloomfield attention with his barefoot style. School and at first didn’t give Spectator activities as such are good for anv community Hills-18-year-old Crystine Jones; Western Michigan kicker Dale a thought to trying varsity ball and the men of Pontiac Football Company have ilidicated they “ won another major cham-| Livingston does everything in *" allege, have been very appreciative of the response toward the Arrows. iP>°nship. This is a climactical weekend for local football. It will be ’ State Elevens Enjoy Success Bay City will be out to post a similar pasting of the host Chiefs this week and regain the lost AP prestige. a good test for those claiming to be fans of good football. the conventional way. j “I guess kicking was just a Miss Jones, a big winner ati Everything has been conven-j hobby with him,” said WMU the National Horse Show in New tional, that is, except his man-:coach Bill ^ttle, who met York last week, won in t h e.ner of joining the football team.]“Kingston after the jumor luck- igreen jumper division of the * * ★ ing speciajist won a kicking Nation's No. 1 Foe Battered Indiana Awaits' Washington International Horse Show Tuesday. The 8-year-old gray mare Ksarina of the U.S. Equestrian Team was Miss Jones’ mount. contest while playing intramural Livingston, who already has^^^^^^„ « By The Associated Press All but four of Michigan’s 17 college football teams have a chance to finish at the .500 mark or better as the season heads into its final two weeks. Top-ranked Michigan State, Michigan and Northern Michi- Pitcher Ramos Found Innocent SAW COACH Somebody suggested he should BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP)-Indiana, the last stumbling block on Michigan State’s path to the Big Ten football cham-pjimship. is a brave but battered barrier. MIAMI, Fla. If) - try out for the varsity and he went to Doolittle. I “We didn’t need a kicking 'specialist at the time,” Doolittle said. “We had a punter and a Pedro piacekicker returning for the Ksarina performed over 1 jumps in the $500 windup stake. • Miss Jones, a trainee on the Walters is an elusive runner U.S. team at Gladstone, N.J. ____ ic,u,,uii lui who sparkled on kickoff returns since August, won the MacLay Ramos, New York Yankee re-iiga'^aMn b^'l'Tofd Living^ against Iowa. jCup and the Hunter Seat medal uef pitcher, tesUfied Tuesday]ton he could train with the team Backing up Stavroff at quar- for good horsemanship at last that he was only trying to helpljn the spring, terback will be sophomore Dave week's show in New York’s Mad- and was acquitted of a charge of: * IKomowa, a defensive halfback, ison Square Garden. ! interfering with a police officer. Three weeks ago Livingston The Hoosiers, 2-6 for the sea-'and Horace Parker, a reserve! Ksarina and another U.S.! Ramos, 30-year-old Cuban who jjgj* ’ j son and 1-4 in the Big Ten, will who has had no game expert- team horse, Reno Pal, ridden by lives in Miami during the oH-igarned the Broncos a 10-10 tie The Wolfpack has already posted the fourth best total offense figure in Engle’s 16 seasons. It is expected to become No. 3 on the list after the PCH contest since its 3,135 yards at present are only about 60 shy of reaching that plateau. A six-player ground game has m up most of the total. Fullback Lon Miller is the top runner with 678 yards on 89 tries. He also is the top scorer among SVC gridders with 13 touch-dovims and four conversions for 82 points. OTHER TOTALS Halfbacks Ron Auman and John Osborne have 465 and 450 yards, respectively, while quarterback Tom Kennell is averaging better than four yards a 13 Colleges Could on 33 n«o. All oro son- passing yards. He has five interceptions against him, but a M per cent compietion rate. Big end Dennis Wirgowski, a 6-5 two-way terror and one of the best gridders in the school’s history, has 31 receptions for 662 yards, six touchdowns and five PATS. A caravan of at least six uses of students (and possibly twice that many) will follow the team here; and a considerable number of parents is also anticipated on the Bay City side of Wisner Stadium at game time. End .500 or Better I Defensive halfbacks Mike Smith and Walt Gruber, both juniors, are the fastest backs and they have seen extensive duty on offense recently. At 6-1 and 195 pounds. Smith is the biggest back and is averaging better than 10 yards on 25 carries. Kennell has thrown 75 times and connected on 49 for 917 gan are the only state schools with games remaining after this Saturday. Each closes out the regular season next week. Lions Acquire Defensive Back DETROIT-The Detroit Lions acquired defensive back Bobby Smith from the Los Angeles Rams Tuesday, and asked waiv-on defensive back Jimmy Hill. Smith, 27, and a four-year veteran with the Rams was obtained on waivers. He will serve as a backup man in the defensive backfield and also will be used on kickoffs and punt returns, the Lions said. Hill, 35, obtained from the St. Louis Cardinals last July, hai^ played 11 years in the NFL. Tackle Roger Brown of the Lions has been named the National Football League’s lineman of the week for his defensive play in Detroit’s 12-7 victory over the Green Bay Packers last Sunday. Carol Hofmann, North Branch, season, in Municipal] After 10 victories in 14 meet-igs with out-of-state opponents last weekend, the state schools have a 70-60-3 over-ail record and are 46-35-3 against teams: across the state line. Michigan State, at 84), is the only unbeaten team. Northern is 7-1 while Albion and Michigan Tech are 6-2. The latter has completed its season, along with Hope (4-4) and Adrian (1-7). have to tackle the undefeated ence. .................... ..............., -----... ------- - acamst Kern Mate two wppk«i Spartans with a patched-up * t * N.J., actually tied, with o n e Court. He was arrested Sunday! “ ^ ’ ®|breaK EVEN offense and a defense riddled by Probable backfield starters fault each. outside a Miami Restaurant. |a si victory over Toledo I Eleven schools are at the, along with Stavroff and Walters The riders elected to give the PoUce had arrested Orlandoj Lagt weekend, he booted a 38- break-even point while rejuve-i that patching process. n a charge of beings yard figy goal that started the ^ I Broncos toward a 17-6 victory LONGEST KICK jwill be sophomore Terry Cole at win to Ksarina, which had more Ortega, 36, Missing from the offensivelright half and senior Jim Smith than enough points - 16 — to drunk hnd one officer asked Ra-i backfield are quarterback Garyjat fullback. take the division championship, mos to translate, testified Ra-lgver Ohio University. Tofil and left halfback John] New Coach John Pont started Four Seasons, a 5-year-o 1 d mos, who speaks Spanish and Ginter, both out for the season preparations for the Michigan chestnut gelding which placed English, with injuries. Substitute left half (State game by giving most of third in the stake, won reserve Ray Terry also is listed as|his bruised traveling squad the champion for its owner. Pear ... ............... ...... . , doubtful, having sprained an day off Monday. Tree Farm, Glen Head, N.Y., wasn’t sure about the trans-|^*‘*'A"’®'''‘^^'’^"Ference’s 5th ankle at Ohio State last week. ‘We’re playing the No. 1 team with a six-day show point total lating offer. Judge R i c h a r d **^**“8. scorer with 21 points— Frank Stavroff, who regained in the country, but after H ofl2. __ Hickey said he had doubts about/•**** 8®®*® *bree ex- the quarterback job when Tofil weeks of football we thought a The rider was George Morris, what service Ramos had ren-;**'® was injured in the Iowa game day off would help as much as Glen Head, a former member dered, but he found the Yankee . H®sides his field goal record, nated Central Michigan and; Northwood can make it with season-ending triumphs. I Clint Joq^ of Michigan State, with four touchdowns against! t - • _ 1 , . ,'wuii lour wuenoowns agai One arresting officer wasn’t Livings^ s longest field goal court The other said he ^^individual scoring race. He hasi 68 points on 11 touchdowns and sparked the team to anything,” Pont said, victory over the Hawkeyes but was on-and-off against Ohio State. ELUSIVE RUNNER Teri7^s of the U.S. team. hurler innocent. Ginter’s loss and doubtful status have tated the return of Trent Walters from defense to offense. San Antonio Selected for '68 PGA Tourney WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. (UPI) — John D. MacArthUr, who donated the laqd for the PGA national headquarters, announced Tuesday night the 1968 PGA championship would be played at San Antonio, Tex. MacArthur, the millionaire developer of Palm Beach Gardens, also announced the 1969 PGA^ tourney would be played i n Florida. i Aitronauts in Race Livingston has a 36-yard punting lerage and has boomed one kick 60 yards. At least Hanpower Equal in this Tilt SNOOK, Tex. (UPI) _ The Snook Jaybirds smashed Rock Island last night, 116-29, but it was not Just the score that By the fourth quarter. Rock Island had fouled out five of the seven members of its hat-ketbaii team and had oniy two ieft to carry on the struggle. But Snook, being gentieman-iy a b 0 n t the whole thing, pulied a player off the court every time Rock Island fouled out a man. Clint Jonti, MSU 0. Beniamin, North Bob AplM, MSU T T. Cimarlch, Mich. TKh « Old ‘‘Kamor^SU 0 " ‘""tSF ff^u s The game ended with only four men - two from each team — on the court. SALTON CITY, CaUf. (UPI) — Astronauts ciordon Cooper] and Virgil ((aus) Grissom are; among 100 persons entered for, the Salton City SOO-mile powerboat race Nov. 1M4. The field CAPTAINS’ FINALE - Waterford Ket-alao Includes Rudy Ramos, Par-; tering co-captains Steve Allen (64) and Ken nqili Jona, Mickey Thompson] McLean will play their final game Friday night. The opponent will be arch-rival Tqwn- Baseball Exec Fined sljip and a winning record will be at stake for the Captains. Kettering is 3-3-2 while Waterford has a 2-6 record. WHEATON, III. If) - Charles A.' Comiskey, 40, former part-I owner of the (lilcago White ' was fined $500 Tuesday after pleading guilty to a reckless driving charge. NHL Standings NATIONAL LIAOUI w L T>ti. or 0 Chictga 5 0 1 II M No g*mct tchfdulM). WbWWMlbV't O MonIrMi tl Toronto Bodon at New York Detroit it Chicago Milled Fatal Flight CINCINNA-n, Ohk) (B - Art Heytpan, Cincinnati Royals basketball player, had made reservations for flight 383, but canceled at the last moment and was not aboard the plane that; crashed near here Monday PONTIAC ARROWS uiSTu am Tickets On Sale See the Beet in Foelball AeHeu, the "Anwrn” -1966 Chsmpieue AgaiMl the Tep Stare of Ike Other MFLTeauM ARROWS vs NFL ALLSTAR6 WISNER STADIOM Sal., Nov. 13Hi, 8 P.M. Mti liM 3WIHf THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 10. IDO.) filmf the Outifwf ytail with DON VOGEL Outdoor Editor, Pontiac Pross Deer Season Opens in U.P. Saturday 'Be Prepared, Boys... The Red Coats Are Coming Saturday' Collared Whitetails Roam State The Conservation DepartmentI Alma on US-27 and White is hoping to hear from deer Cloud on M-37; and in Howard hunters who shoot collared! City on US-131, whitetails. / I Through the cooperation of As the fact-finding key to a,hunters who bag collared deer, deer movement study in which | the department hopes to get a nearly 1,000 whitetails have been better idea of where deer from marked during recent winers, state game men would now like to learn where these animals am taken, the band numbers on their collars and other information. I browsed-out yards sped their summer and fall, how far they travel, precisely where they winter and whether their movements follow a consistent pattern each year. Best places for passing along j Hunters who hope to keep in these details are at the depart-;touch with their families at ment's roadside deer checking i home in case of emergencies stations where game biologists'should register their northern! will have a first-hand chance to hunting addresses at the nearexamine the specially marked est field or district offices of animals. the Conservation Department. The stations will be located In this way, Conservation field workers can relay urgent messages with time-saving speed. As another means of helping the department in its service of delivering emergency messages, hunters camping on state lands are required to post registration cards at their sites. These cards are free at hunting license dealers and the department’s district offices. “Can I still go afield with gun during the firearm deer season after taking a buck or an-terless animal?’’ “Yes,” is the Copservation at the Straits of Mackinac; south of Bay City on 1-7$; near Department's answer to thi question which many sportsmen are asking now that bear hunting will be closed this season After signing in with the de- in the Lower Peninsula. Press Derby Also Starts Same Day The Upper Peninsula is expected to receive more opening day hunting pressure than ever before when the deer season gets under way above the Straits Saturday. The annual Pontiac Press Big Deer Contest opens the same day with a $150 savings bond being awarded to the Oakland County resident who enters the heaviest buck. ★ ★ ★ Reason for the big increase in the number of hunters in the U. P. is that the season operik on Saturday, superhighways make it possible to reach the Mackinac Bridge in three-and-aJialf hours from Detroit and the Lower Peninsula sea doesn’t open until Nov. 20. This gives n i m r o d s two opening days. U. P. opening day pressure is expected to be heaviest in the eastern half because it is much closer and most of the hunters won’t leave until Friday. However, the ^biggest racks and the best hunter success ratios again will be scored in Iron and Gogebic counties in the western half. The Press contest is open only to county residents and the bucks must be taken during Michigan’s firearms season and i in this state. I A weight slip from a state approved scales s h o w i n g the of the deer and signed by the hunter, weighmaster and one witness must be brought to The Press. The deer must be field-dressed before weighing, and it must be viewed by a member of ’The Press staff. DEADLINE SET Entries will be accepted fromj| a. m. to 3 a. m. Monday through Saturday d u r i n g the season. The deadline is noon, Dec. 6, one day after the regular season closes in the Lower Peninsula. ’The U. P. season will end Nov. I. Bear will be legal above the Straits but not in the Lower Peninsula. Hunters may not see as many deer along the Lake Superior watershed. partment, each hunter should contact his family, giving the phone number of the conservation office where he is registered. Hondwina Appaoronca ■ longar Waoiing | I Atm laiilk Talagrapli jS rt4^W$ tOPEN BOWUNGt 5 I W till I P.M. i V Evaninii, Im. and i IMMaytdleUNa M W Ul STAII LANIt X Wll H. Nny FI 1-11111^ Public Hearing on Lakes Work Set hr Tonight A legislation committee will conduct a public hearing In Pontiac tonight on inland lakes reclamation projects. ★ ★ ★ The meeting is scheduled for the supervisors room in Oakland County Service Center on Telegraph Road at 8 p.m. Rep. Joseph Snyder of St. Clair, chairman of the House cdnservation committee, will preside over the hearing. ♦ * A Conservation Department geologists and water resouraes specialists will be at the meeting to explain work now under way and to answer questions. Apparently, because of the ban on taking bears, these hunters feel their shooting privileges are over once they get their deer in Lower Michigan. It is legal to hunt predators and certain other small game during the deer season. Huntdrs toting rifles or shotguns with ball and buck loads for this purpose are required to have small game licenses on them. In addition, they must wear ^eer license back tags. everything from roads and section lines to public hunting lands ($1.04 each), are available through the Conservation Department’s Publications Room in Lansing. ■HB ' : : JIGGER k your amwerlU ■ Protect yourself from 5 Fatijiue and Possible a Heart Attack! ■ ■ For Infenootion Colli 5 682-2787 : ! OAKLAIID JIGGER SALES & SERVICE j SAILFISH CHAMPION — Jim Cavanaugh, 21500 Greenfield, Oak Park, has been declared winner of the Panama government’s 13th annual Marlin and Sailfish Tournament. He is shown with one of the 24 sailfish he caught while fishing out of Club de Pesca de Panama. He also took one Marlin. No Tomorrow for Pheasant Hunters Deer Hunting Perils Abound Police Issue Warning as Season Nears EA.ST LANSINC (API - Gunshot wounds, which caused 11 deaths and at least 48 injured last year, are not the only danger to hunters during the deer season, warns Col. Frederick Davids, state police commission- The season will open this Saturday in the Uppex Peninsula and a week from Saturday in Lower Michigan. ★ * ★ t In addition, Davids said, 18 persons died from heart attacks during the past season, apparently mostly from overexertion. Another danger, the police .commissioner said, is from carbon monoxide gas. A series of [deaths occurred several years ago during the deer season from faulty gas heaters. * * * Car-deer accidents also arc becoming more frequent and can result in injuries to motorists, Davids said. FREE MOUNTING Sg ■ open DAILyVv-SAT. 8-6 I UNITED TtRE SERVICE 1817 BaMwta Av«. BOWLING TOGETHERNESS AT ROCHESTER LANES 430 Main St., Rochester, keeps a family happy, active and healthy. Children 18 y e a r s old and under, 25c a line. Adults 3 gomes $1.00. 4th game free. League openings available OL 6-9341 There will be no tomorrow for pheasant hunters hoping to bag one of the prizes in this year’s Pontiac Press Pheasant Contest. The season ends in Michigan today. The only thing allowed tomorrow will be entering any last minute ringnecks before noon That’s the contest line. A 43-inch rooster leads in the competition for the $50 savings bond awarded to the longest entry. ’There will be a $25 bond for the second longest which is 41% inches going into the final day. Grouse and woodcock go on the protected list in the northern two-thirds of the state today, but remain legal in. SouUem Michi.gan until Nov. 18. Conservation Department reports indicate that the 198446 ! winterkill may have exceeded, 30,000 deer, in this are a.^ Whitetails in the Southern half of the U. P. appeared to come through the winter all right. The 1964 hunting pressure In all but Dickinson County averaged less than 10 per square mile in the U. P. Dickinson had 10-19. Less than 13 per cent filled their tags Iri the eastern U. E ’The average kill for the remainder was 13-19 per along Lakd Superior to over 20 Count map books, which show|P«r c®nt in counties bordering Minnesota and Wisconsin. There were 23,380 bucks taken in the U. P. last season and 14,010 anterless whitetails. A record 575,000 hunters are expected to come close to taking * * * 1130,000 deer in both peninsulas. Checks and money orders foriThere were 228,000 anterless them should be made payable deer permits issued for the 1965 to the State of Michigan. 'season. Squirrel season closes today. Grouse hunting reopens in Southern Michigan Dec. 6-31. Ducks are legal until Nov. 19 and geese until Nov. 30. Rabbit hunting will begin coming into -i|;s own as the weather gets colder and will remain open until March 1. Michigaa’s first quail season Wild turkey hunters bagged about 60 birds in Allegan County last weekend. Conditions were ideal with most of the state’s 400 permit holders on hand. The unsuccessful are expected to return for next weekend’s final two days. Grouse hunting has improved in the Caro area with good shooting reported along the edges of woodlots bordering open.fields. The bulk of the woodcock flights have passed through the state. The weather has not been poor enough to push the late season mallard and black duck mJgration this far south. However, good results are being posted on redheads in Saginaw Bay. Buffleheads are making up the bulk of the targets on northern Lak? St. Clair mallard shooting is poor on the Flats because most of the ducks are in Canada feasting on the leftovers from the com harvest. Solunar Tables I The schedule of Solunar Peri-since 1911 opens tomorrow for ods, as printed below, has been' a five-day run. Oakland and taken from John Alden Knight’s Macomb are included in the 151 SOLUNAR TABLES, counties open to hunting bob a.m. p.m. whites. Tm Best shooting* will be in'jrli'.y*'' ,5;” '?;?? liw Jilo ' Lenawee and Monroe counties " ^ » 310 | * » . mi 'Sunday --- 3:15 11:20 4:10 on. Harsens Island. The Monday i3:os 4:is i:2o s:io season ends Nov; 15. n!” jiSS JIm Tlw BEST In TAXIDERM\ At a REASONABLE PRICE!, • Geese......$30 • Ruffed Grouse ... $20 • Ducks, Pheasants $20 • White Tail Deer..... $30 to $35 • Fish.......$1.25 Stop By Anytime and ViKit Our Trophy Koomit BILL HUFFMAN TAXIDERMY Wa'ra In Your Yallow Pag«i 3563 MARK ROAD PONTIAC FE 8-4455 I EXPERT ENGINE GUARANTEED LOW PRICES AUTOMATIC TUNE-UPS EASY TERMS TRANSMISSIONS OUR SPECIALTY MOTOR EX€HA]\GE 405 S. Saginaw Sl fE 3-7432 Meet Nick Pietrotante and Gail Gagdill Detroit'Lions TOMORROW 7;00P.M. FREE '^Jllds The Pontiac Mall lend’a SETS PRO FASHIONS OFFICIALLY AUTHORIZED BY THE NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE WE WILL OVERHAUL YOUR ENGINE Special Low Price! 6 Cyl..............‘ 95“ Y-8's..............>115" This includes . . . Rings, Rod Bearings, Main Bearing, Grind Valves, Fit Pins, Deglaze Cylinder Walls, Gaskets, Oil and Labor! QisorTTFAC^ STANDARD ENGINE REBUILDERS 695 AUBURN RO. • 338-9611-338-9672 Why do knowledgeable people stay with Imperial? Someday, someone may make a better whiskey. As of today, nobody has. [i-iE PMW-3II snumn msnn- m i m H3A0 3WN D-« THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 10, 1965 MARKETS State Man: Can't Happen Here The Mowing are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by; them in adidesale package lots. I Quotations are furnished by the| Detroit Bureau of Markets as of' Friday. i ' Produce I AppiM. Otllcloui, GoMw. bu. Apples, Dellciout. R*d, bu. Applet, JpnattiM, bu. Apples. MKlntoch, Mrly, bu. Apples. Nortbern Spy, bu. Apples, cMr, 4.gal. cast Pears, bosc, bu.......... Quince, bu. vaaiTASLCs Beets, topped, bu. Broccoli, dl.......... Cabbage, Curly, bu. Cabbage, rad. bu. Cabbage Sprouts, bu. Cabbage, Std.. bu. Carrots, cello pak Carrots, tapped, bu. Caulifkwer, dz Celery, Root, dz. Horseradish, pk. btkt. DETROIT (UPI) - A Detroit Edison Co. spokesman said today it was “Inconceivable’ Michigan could suffer a power failure “that even approached what happened in the East Tuesday night.” George Tuttle, director of public information, said Michigan’s power was generated within ^e state and would not be affected by power failures outside. “Mkhigu has a power pool whereby we have enough capacity in our state to supply all of our needs,” Tuttle said. “Almost all thoM states down there (East) depend iqum one another to a gr«at extent “We are not tied in with any big outside power system. It’s inconceivable to us that with our kind of system we could have anything that even ap- proached what happened in the East last night. ★ ★ ★ “We have no one cable or one line that we’re dependent on. We have IS power plants within “There’s a great tendency on the part of the industry to go into these power grids but we haven’t done it yet and maybe we’re lucky we haven’t.” The New York Stock Exchange ?'Sr *• Tw^iy n Parziey, Curly, dz. bebi. Panlry, root, dz. bchs. Parsnips, Cello Pak, dz. Peppers, Red Sweet, bu. Peppers, sweet, bu. Potatoes, 50 lbs. Potatoes, ,Z5 lbs. Squash, Butternut, bu. Squash, Delicious, bu. Squash. Hubbard, bu. S ABC Con .M Ms.) HIgk Lew Last Ckg. 75 40 40H + 'lb 5 »H J3'^ 20 444k 441/S GenPrac l.» GPubSve .51g GPubUt 1.4« GTel El l.tl OanTIre .40 GaPacHIc 1b GerberPd .00 GettyOil — K Address 1.40 53 41H 4 H 41H + 1 43/i aat/b 447k - 4 4471 1471 4471 + 51 29H 29V1 29'k ... 15 SOW 29H 2991 - 24 72 Tin 71H- 27 7211 72W 72'1 - _ X41 40W 5991 5991 - 94 20 2391 23W 2391 - ' 1 44W 44W 44W - 23 5491 54 54 - 33 5471 5491 5491 - GlenAld .50a Goodrch 2.20 Goodyr 1.25 GraceCo 1.20 Granites 1.40 GtAliP 1.20a I 311 1.W;AHofne 1.10a x54 111 I Endive, bleached, bi Poultry and Eggs 41 471 194 I'l + >4 1 4F/1 4591 4571 - 1 57 191 1171 19 - 1 472 441 43H 4391 - 94 II 40'4 40 401 + H 2 311 31 311 + 1 , 101 471 47 471 152 23 221 221 + 1 30 H 494 491 12 351 35>/i 35’1 45 451 441 45 X34 241 241 241 f 1 42 411 401 411 4l1 9 431 431 ““ 1.20a 14 391 391 3 Graybnd .90 Gruinn A .40 1 551 55 551 - I 591 591 591 — 1 HewPack .20 ■■ H Electron IlySug 1.10 mestk 1.40 DETROIT POULTRY __ Armour 1.1 DETROIT (AP)-Prlces paid per pound Ar„,rtCk 1 ..........e poubry; heavy type ^s,Ashl Dll 1 It 24-27; 2094 24. DETROIT EOGS DETROIT (API- " ---- dozen " ■'“* — InsurNoAm 2 aT^So ' large 39.41’.l; mediums 35-37 30-29; Browns Grade A extra larw BabcokW 1 10 ge 39-391; madlms 35-351; ctiacks Balt GE 1 44 Beaunit 1.40 Beckmn .25g -1-2 IntMiner 1.20 It Nick 2.40a itl Packers itPmr 1.30 , -It UT 1.20 251 - 1 'f^CktB .lOb 57 441 441 4 5 491 49 491 - 92 A 421; 90 B 411; 90 B 4247 401 4M 401 7l 441 451 1 I JIa x5 951 951 951 - ' . chicago..00-I.OOOxiavEi||| lb» 2d.00>25.00 CoceCota 1 70 Sheep JOO; tew lot» choice end Colo Pal W 90-100 lb wooled ileughter' lembs 24^ CollinRad 50 4 50 51 51 .. 10 20IA 191 20 -1- 10 141 241 341 .. 1 301 301 201 .. 14 431 421 421 - . 107 431 411 411 -11 341 341 - 1 1331 12T/1 — 9 9 431 431 431 Marattwi 2.30 1 141 141 141-llMerWld 1.25 I 771 771 771 iMerquir .250 LaarStog M LabPorCam 1 .lOgeNEM 5 13 7 -tonal Carp 7 -Ittonln 3.Bf 131 13 -IvtogsO XH 27 I LockMAIre 2 104 4 rfliard 2J0 I 441 441 ; 5 551 551 551 .. » 311 3 Prison toms were ordered yestodey for four Chicago area men convicted last m o n t h of burglarizing a Birmingham fur shop. Sentenced were Richard Pb-nachio, 31, and Josei^i Andriac-chi, 33, both 3 to 10 years in the state prison; and hee Mag-naflehi, 37, and Peter DiFronzo, 31, both 4 to 10 years. Tliey were sentenced by Circuit Judge Frederick C. Ziem- The four were found guilty by I jury Oct. 13 of breaking and entering Furs by Roberts, 550 N. Woodward, on Nov. 23, 1964. ★ ★ ★ All but DiFronzo were released on $10,000 appeal bond following the sentencing, was turned over to the custody federal marshal. He recently lost a supreme court appeal on a 1961 conviction of interstate transportation of stolen property, according to police. DiFronzo had given himself up to Birmingham police Dec. 17. The others had been arrested following a police chase that ended in Beverly Hills. Ttxico 2.40 TtxETm 1.05 TtxGSul .40 Tcxninstm 1 —T— 5 391 29 29 24 241 241 341 - 49 121 111 U - 24 311 211 311 -f TImRB 1.10s ant l.lto It C .M UnItAire 1.40 sCp 1.^ ^MM 1.90 USBorax JOi 11 »1 391 ^ + 'i —u— S3 74 731 731 .. 41 271 371 371 . II Sri 531 531 -t- • 1 411 AT/l 411 -f > I 44<1 441 441 - 1 ll7 Ml 941 941 -1< 25 49 401 Ml - ’ 11 9 11 II - ' 19 341 141 341 - ' 34 141 341 341 - < USPI 'UlS UnAMteb JO rsnsd Cp 14 Itsceiwtf wl ] I?" ^ r T'vt ^V— I 341 341 141 - I 311 311 311 . 51 331 321 131 - 1 X137 S’* Si 541 -I- ijwjKSr 1.70 ?I|MtosrCttom I w MtoAMM 1.10 'aAa T» ... .... .... .... . IWsIwotth Co II 30 191 30 . . WamPlef .50 XB 511 511 501 -I- 1 WiniLsm .M 9 in 311 331 -f 1 WnAIrLIn .00 II 511 51 511 — llWnBane 1.10 39 431 431 431 - llWUnTsI 1.40 1 441 441 441 + 1 WsitgEI 1.40 B 091 491 991 , |W»yerhr 1.» 7 251 251 251 -t- 1 Whirl Cp 1.10 4 M 431 431 - ilwhIteM 1.40 ~ ;wiHon Co 2 —W-X-Y-Z— 5 71 71 71 15 14 14 14 American Stocks ,Com»t Con EOis 1.40 ConEmind I CnNGat 2.x ConsPow 1.00 ng ij s Conisinr I.M s on n» Cent Air 40 Tuesday Corn Can 2.ao Cont ins 2.40 Nat Cont Mot 40 70 371 37 371 ^iMoliaKO .70 25 241 2 Nat Alrl I.M -ttilr^ 1 ox Cp .70 xS 341 341 2 17 311 311 ) 144 43<1 411 4 31 1771 1741 1) Copyrighted by Ths AtibctoMd Prat# 1 SelM figurei are unoNIclal. Unless otherwise noted, rataa of « dends In the toragoing table ara am il 2.40 b Chib 374 41 3 I 15-14 I 15-14 1 15-14 EoullyCp ,15 Fargo Oils Fly TIgar 1.2 Gen Devel iU 41H 40'/t 41 - 15 54»/ii 53^ 53'/f - U S4’k 53’6 - 9 33>/k W* yi’'* 4- U MH 36H - 13 44nis year, dividend omitted, deferred or no action taken at last dividend meeting, r—Oaclartd or paid In 1944 plus stock dlvMond t-Pald In stock during ostimoted cosh voluo on ox-dividond ( 51 29 2t1 3 13 21 Dow Ch i 291 291 291— 1 Dresser ' ’ ; Duo LI 1.40 91-1- 1 41 41-F 1 221 23 -t- 1 East Air Lin 491 491-1- 1 EastGF 2.471 51 5’/i EastKod 1.40 2 11 11 11-f 1 EdgeGG .20g 3 2 2 2 ElBondS 1J5 14 141 141 14'.- 1 EIPasoNG 1 47 111 111 1114 lEmerEI 1.X I 24 2IVa 20 2(14 1 EmerRad .40 23 41 4 4 - 1 End John I 103 1X1 1X1 1X1- V.ErieLack RR 4 XI 291 30'1 4 1 19 531 53 531 4 4 2 421 421 42V« 4 V It 2451 242 242 -2 I 32 BI 32»i - V 51 101 101 101 - '/ —E— 72 X n 031 —ii^mgei i.n 5 113 1121 113 41iIE9« Llg I.X 35 1101 10»1 1101 5 251 25'/. 251 0 Mor JO Pac Patrol 17 45 431 431 -11 371 X — < OVER THE COUNTHR ITOCKS .uolollons from tho NASD aro rt... santativo Itdor-dootor pricos at approxl----------------------------------- mortMs ParkaDtv la lYDCK AVERAdES fitod by The Aisactotod Prats WMk MD Month A0O . TsIS'/JS. .. I \ 1 181 i 39 iul!r’^'*'* jirnT*** S#NDi“ M Sonsi 10 Hlflwr groto rolli rn.i8 II Mt«ntf„rM( rtlll III RuMk loiiidfi 10 IndutlrMli, 90J74I.X 1)» s « 9in-g« Pto Pgw 1JI iPla PL I.M rn 10 331 ISt/S 331 Ptnnzoll 1J0 ___P_ I PepsiCo I JO via ,„T*'“'Lha la ’8 i 41 ^ .'•« p’T li 54 Si; Vi *’181:3^ 8 14 Tifi 85 8515 li 47% 47% 9 m 77% SVV *15. '8 85 85 85 PelaraW .M PraclEG IJS PubNcInd .34* 15 771 771 771-t- 4M137H3I1-I-4 531 ni 131 -F - 7 941 941 941 - 1 19 191 »1 19H 14 411 411 4i1 -t- I 4 741 741 741 - t ! £. S..; 5 SS3 SL a to 1 191 Oil - ■'i feynaMt II aj5.85 4e: 5is:m!r.i. IB uit iT* iT* **4 411 S Ml + 1 X 141 341 141 - 1 19 111 341 Ml - 1 14 39 Ml Ml B 101 Ml Ml Temis Given 4 in V; 4F-t*1t «'W ' Successfuhlnvesftng t > %■ «s 1 1* » * Gecko Lizard Is Noisy Inhabitant JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (JV-For Its size, the aggressive little gecko lizard is the noisiest inhabitant of the Namib Desert in southwest Africa. W. D. Haacke, a zoologist of the Transvaal Museum in Pretoria, uho visited the Namib recently, said gecko lizards clicked” at night by opening and closing their mouths—"just like barking dogs.” itiou, found a new species of gecko, called Pteuoput kochl, which he claimed was the nosiest of the noisy lizards. “He has a range of 11 ‘clicks’ in his call and clicks very quickly.” he said. ★ * ★ Why do geckos click at night? “It may be a love call or one proclaiming territorial ownership.” said Haacke. 'We don’t know yet but there is somebody at the research station tryi^ to find out right now just what makes geckos click.” (MmOAL PITCH - Robert Satin (left), special Peace (krps assistant for public affairs, offers iidormation on the corps in Ann Arbor to University of Michigan graduate student Stephan Wyman of 339 (Concord, Bloomfield Township. News in Brief Frederick Lewan of 5434 Drayton, Independence Township, reported to Waterford Township police yesterday theft of a tachometer and vacuum gauge, total value $60, from his car parked in the Community National Bank lot at 994 M59. • 7tm1ar anT' MatiiMM' bTtiia Waterford Township police are . ...J, «t??*‘ir extra.. b-Am«ai investigating theft of 18 fire hy-drant caps, valued at |Z35, from iMt.jtaar hydrants on Tubbs, Jofies, Bend-Wilder and Crescent Lake By R(XIER E. SPEAR Q) “I am a widow In my fifties and have a married son in school. I own my home, have some good mntnal funds, sivings of about $59,010, and 100 shares each of Detroit Edison, General Motors and Southern Company. Have I too mneh in Savings? If so, sboold I buy a refund annoity or more good stocks?” H. C. A) In your position, with no apparent need for income, believe a refund annuity would provide you, and later your son, with a moderate return, but it would offer you no protection against inflation, which appears to be accelerating. It would, of course, ultimately exhaust your spital. There are aome speculative aspects of this present market which I don’t like, and I believe you should invest no more than half your savings in sound tocks with some defensive characteristics as well as prospects for future growth. I like -in this category—Consolidated Foods, Safeway Stores, Eli Lilly, Consolidated Edison, American Telephone. * * * Q) “I have been advised to switch my U. S. savings bonds into Studebaker. I would hate to cash my bonds and take this chance nniest I knew it was Side. Do yon think this move wonid be wise?” R. C. A) What you are advised to do is contrary to all the rules of investment and of hard business sense. You now own the strongest security to the world. If you positively required more income, it wouM be possible to switch your governments into higher paying securities that would be relatively safe. Studebaker is a nondividend, risk situation, a speculation that an able management will perform a near-miracle and put the company on a firm footing. ’There is some chance that they will do so, but you can’t afford to take toat chance. By ail means, keep your governments. To order yonr copy of Roger Spear’s 48-page Gnide to Successful Investing, clip this n 01 i c e and send $1.M with yonr name and address to Roger E. Spear, to care of The Pontiac Press, Box 1818, Grand Central Station, N.Y.C., N.Y. 11917. (Copyright, 1965) MOM’S Rummage: 'Thnrsday, 9 to 12. Indianwood and Baldwin. !x divtdand. y-Bx DIvF - irtts"' *'^'*““* ****^^ ran(i. ww—WHIi warrants. wG-Whan dli-tribvitg. wl—Whan totuad. nd-Naxt day dellvary. v)—In bankruptcy ar racalvarihip ar fserganl^ ammAlTTy **"y"***^ pan'lat. tn—Feralon itaua aul Dinner: Gloria Dei Lutheran Church, Fri., Nov. 12, from 5-7. Reservations. FE 2-8774. —adv. Stocks of Local Interost Bake - Fnniitnre Sale: Wed. & Thurs. 89 S. Astor, 1st St. E. of East Blvd. 9 a.m. -6 p.m. —adv. Rummage Sale: Thursday and Fri., 9 a.m.-? 709 N. Perry. —adv. DlamoPd Crystal Kelly Girl Mahawk Rubber Co. Oalrax Chemical Infant mortality to the U. 8. is ..about one-fifth of the }j918 By PmUP J. KEUPER AP Busioets News Writer NEW YORK - Private aviation,, an industry that was supposed to take off after World War II, sputtered and coughed for years. Today It is booming. Business flying, based on maxim that every minute of an executive’s tiine means money, is providing the main thrust for the private plane industry. TuaMay't lit DIVIDINDS DECLARED Rata rtod Rawtd aiM ■OND AvenAoes "9 I. RfA. L.Vd S’j IoIj n\ ~'m,’7'~ lirniTaiii ~ rnnii wtak Ago ti.0 igij 17.9 Mj 91.7 pUot liccnses—com| ySTS S;S hi Wj 91J chases of planes ton if:? il« 82 M 1944 IJW MJ 1HJ 37.3 93.1 91.9 The NationsI Better Business Bureau was organized in 1912 under the name National Vigilance Committee of the Associated Advertising Oubs of the World. It took Ks present name in 1925. Market Opening Delayed 1 Hour The massive power fail-nre that blacked ont the northeastern United States forced an hour delay today to the opening of the New York and American stock exchanges. The New York and American exchanges were unable to begin trading becanse direct enrrent which powers the tickers was not restored to time. Becanse of the delay. The Press market page will carry yesterday’s noon qaotallons for the first edition today. Peace Corps Eyes'Activists' ANN ARBOR (AP)-A P ct Corps official said Tttssday the agency is including collage student protest leaders among persons it is contacting to its fall recruiting drive. ~ ut,” said Robert Satin, Peace Corps special assistant for public affairs, ‘‘there’s no room for the wild-eyed visionary. This is a serious, sophisticated, demanding job that we’re asking Americans to perform.” ♦ ♦ * Satin said in the fall recruitment drive “we deflnitely are interested in talking to the opinion - formers among the student body, student journalists and what have been called the activists on campus today.” Referring to students who have led protests against United States policy in Viet Nam and other demonstrations, Sqfin “We’ve always been looking for people who have not developed the restraint it takes to do this very difflcult job of community development.” HAVE TALKED He said Peace Corps officials have talked with national lead-of student protest movements on community develop-lent. Asked whether the talks included a possibility of having conscientious objectors to the draft join the Corps, Satin said “We’ve made no specific efforts in that direction that I know of.” Ar ♦ ★ Satin said he was on the University of Michigan campus in Ann Arbor as part of a “nationwide tour designed to explore the thinking of all student lead- Business Provides Thrust Privafe Aviation Soars This year, there were more than 90,(XI0 nonmilitary, noncommercial airplanes in the United States, almost three times the total in 1946. At New York’s La Guardla Airport, where the concentration of such aircraft is among the heaviest, <110 these planes land or take off at the rate of one every other minute during peak hours. Although rising income and growing interest in flying have fueled the private plane boom 275,000 Americans hold private ompeny pur-have provided sales, particularly in more eipeiuive aircraft. Corporate eir fleets range from sleek light planes to 970-mlla«M)our jets that seat 10 RAILROADS, TOO Even railroads use private planes. Chesapeake ft Ohio Railwfy has four twin-engine planes to move executives to some meetings. Chicago ft North Western uses a twin-engine light plane and a turboprop. A mushrooming use of business jets has attracted military and major commercial airplane producers into the field. Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corp. is building a business jet that will cost more than ^ million. Lockheed’s business jet sells for $16 million. Last month, Boeing announced it would make a jet for corporation use. w ★ # Less glamorous but far more plentiful are small propeller-driven aircraft largely produced by three major specialists in the light plane field; Beech Aircraft, (^ssna Airaaft and Piper. Sales at the factory level of business and pleasure aircraft made by these companies ■oared last year to $176 million. In 1950, they amounted to only $19 million. Increases in plushness and power have brought increases in price. The average private plane today sells for $22,000; the at about $7,000. The two-seater, single-engine aircraft of the 1040i cost $1,700 to $3,000. HIGHER PRICES These much higher prices, ■ay industry people, together with the 0^ of operating an airplane—maintenance, fees, fuel, insurance—make owning a plane a rough go for ail but the prosperous or the “The price has got to coma down before you have a lot pf average pecqile flying their own airplanes,” says William T. Piper Jr., of Piper Aircraft. “Of course, that’s another story; To get the price down, you’ve got to have much heavier volume of planes sold and to do that you’ve got to cut prices.” But the steady exposure of more people to flying, and the growth of the leisure dollar, eventually may bring what many people thought would come after World War II; the use of private planes by millions of Americans for ordinary travel. "Flying,” says Charles Spence of the industry’s Utility Airplane Council, “is a very natu-^ ral way of getting around.” Sam Dawson is on vacation. Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AR)-TM MM potllin .1 ttw Tritwry comMrtd wHh corn- 0. ms iincr- 7^^ 7 ^3 ^ ------- ulfewtirw I;