~ "fy The Weather UiS, WMhtr Buruu Fortcitl Cloudy, Colder (Otlilli M Pag* ]) THE^M TIPR^ESS Home Edition VOL. 122 NO. ( ^ ^ ^ ______________PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, FEBRUAIJY 13, 1964—56 PAGES united^preWternat.ohal Peace Pursuit ----,_...Ae..Pho»ofa.)L„.. bRAMA — Actor Leon Ames of television’s Mr. Ed” show and his wife, Christine, tell newsmen of being held at gunpoint at their North Hollywood, Calif., home last night in a $50,000 extortion-kidnap attempt that ended im arrest of a young mechanic and his wife. TV Actor Laughs Off Real-Life Adventure NORTH HOLLYWOOD, Calif. W—Veteran actor Leon Ames, released after being held at gunpoint for four hours in a $50,000 extortion attempt, laughed it off. “I’ve played a lot of these parts before,” he said. "Amesr"who-^se-isn-arflfomin- Burned Store to Relocate Downtown City Site Sbught by Owner The owner of the Big Value Furniture store, gutted by fire Tuesday, said today that he will attempt to relocate the business downtown Pontiac. “As it now stands,” ^aid Burt Gold, “it is just a matter of finding the right-sized buUding. “We yvere very successful in the old location,” said Gold, who only four months ago opened another Big Value store in Roseville. ★ * ★ Gold opened the Pontiac store last March after the building, owned by the Walter 0. Briggs Trust, was vacated by the Yankee Departipent Store. URBAN RENEWAL? “I was told yesterday,” Gold said, “that the building would Dot be rebuilt because it might be part of urban renewal in three years.” There was about 18,000 square feet in the building, Including the attached warehouse and balcony area, according to Gold. The fird, which did an estimated $103,000 damage to the building and $35,000 to the contents, was to have been investigated by the State Fire Marshal’s office today. City Fire Marshal Charles Metz asked for the assistance after being unable to find the cause of the blaze or where it started. ★ ★ ★ Fifty Pontiac firemen battled the blaze from 11:30'p.m. Tuesday to shortly before 4 a.m. yesterday. ent auto dealer, his wife, Christine and two others were involved iji the real-life drama yestejrday that ended. wijh the capture of a- young mechanic who had fled with Mrs. Ames as a hostage. ; She was released unharmed after police, directed from a ' helicopter overhead, surrounded the car. Ames, 61, plays in the “Mr. Ed” television series and was a star in the series, “Life With | Father,” as well as many movies. He said the action, reminiscent of a gangster movie, started when “1 heard the doorbell ring. It Was just after 8 a.m, There was a young fellow standing there with a gun. He said, 'Back up and shut up.’ COULDN’T BELIEVE IT “He said, ‘This is a holdup and a kidnap. Don’t try anything funny i’ couldn’t believe it. He said one false move and my wife would be dead; “He asked for $50,000 within two hours. I pretended to be sick, thinking maybe I could get the gun, but then I realized that was silly.” Pledged by LBJ, Sir Alec Joint Communique Stresses S u pi p o r of Asian Policies —WASHING-T0N3_-(#)— President Johnson and Sir Alec Douglas-Home, Britain’s prime m i n i s t e r pledged today to seek ways of reducing tension* and said they were determined “that the pursuit of peace should be unfalteringly maintained.” A joint communique issued after a two-day Anglo-American summit meeting emphasized that Britain is supporting U.S. policy in, South Viet Nam, while the United States pledged support for “the peaceful national independence” of Malaysia. Saying that last year’s limited nuclear test-ban treaty “marked an advance on the road to the peaceful resolution of the problems which divide East and West,” the President! and the prime minister stressed the need “to go forward from there and . . . search for other ways of reducing tension.” The two leaders expressed the hope that the Soviet Union 'will examine with the great-ist seriousness” the proposals the United States and Britain put forward at the Geneva disarmament conference of 17 nations. Cease-Fire Broken When Ames told the man he did not have $50,000, the suspect told him to contact his partner, Ralph Willianis, and tell him to come, to the Ames’ home for a business conference. When Williams arrived, the gunman held him, Ames and his wife, and a house guest, Herbert bl'. Baumgarteker, 50, at gunpoint until nearly 10 a.m. when the Bank of America branch opened. The gunman ordered Williams to get the $50,000 from the bank in small denominations. “Bring it here by noon or I'll (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) The communique did not mention the crisis in Cyprus but said that the two leaders “reviewed the events of recent months, during which sudden tensions in many parts of the world have made unforeseen calls on the resources of the United States and the United Kingdom.” HEARING CALLS The two nations, the communique continued, “are responding to these calls,” seek-M simultaneously through political action to diminish the causes of tension. Johnson hnd Sir Alec “gave > special consideration to Southeast Asian matters and to (he problem of assisting three states of the area to maintain their-independence,” the communique said. Douglas-Home, it-added, “reemphasized the United Kingdom support for United States policy in South Viet Nam,” and Johnson “reaffirmed the support of the United States for the peaceful national independence ol Malaysia.” The communique failed to mention U.S.-British differences on trade with Cuba. It only said that Johnson “stressed his concern” at the present situation in the Caribbean area and the subversive and disruptive influence of the present Cuban regime.” FULLY RECOGNIZED Sir Alec, the communique said, “fully recognized the importance of the development of Latin America in conditions of freedom and political and economic stability.” When the White House session broke up at 12:20 p.m. (Pontiac; time), Johnson escorted Sir Alec to a limousine wafting In front of the mansion and told him, “1 certainly enjoyed our meeting.” DERAILED . — Twenty-two cars of a Chesapeake and Ohio freight train derailed when the Detroit-to-Flirit train jumped the track at a Flint crossing yesterday, No injuries were reported, but highway traffic was snarled around the scene. Record Year for Chrysler 1963 Profits Top '62 by $95 Million NEW YORK UP) - Chrysler Corp., third-ranking automaker, reported today record earnings and .sales in 1863. Profits totaled $161.1 million, or $4.35 a share, compared with $65.4 million, or $1.81 a share in 1962. The previous record year was $132.2 million in 1949. ★ ★ ★ Sales rose to $3.5 billion from $2.37 billion. OTHER RECORDS Earlier, General Motors Corp. and Ford Motor Co. reported record earnings and sales in 1963. General Motors earned $1.6 billion on sales of $16.5 billion. Ford had profits of $488.3 million on sales of $8.7 billion. Chrysler's sales totaled 1,518,-586 units, including 253,053 Sim-cas, up from 892,299 the previous year. ★ ★ ★ This gave Chrysler 13.1 per cent of the domestic marke against 10.3 imr cent in 1962. RETAIL SALES Retail sales of passenger cars increased .38 per cent over 1932 and Dodge truck sales were up 30 per cent. Defense atid space sale; taled $263 million, or 8 per cent of total sales, compared with $252 million, or 10 per cent, m 1962. Find Dynamite on Tracks Boys Foil Train Sabotage The identities of the boys Were withheld. ‘ ’ Deputy I/Cif Larson of the 1 j r.1 ij w in. Brevard County sheriff’s office gyd wi44h»dynamlte was electric. CAPE KENNEDY. Fla. UPi An a 11 e m p t to dynamite a freight train of the Strike- Railway was foiw last night by four boys, authorities said. The youths were walking along the tracks when they discovered 45 sticks of dynamite hooked to a rail. They coolly dismanlled ( h e charge minutes before the south-bound train passed. The train whizted by, unaware of Us close call with disaster. 1: l,;,„ ally wired to the track and . „_- , . ,. would have explodedjindoF--thrplaced on the locpmatlyo’swhefelsr DEATH THREAT "If the hoys liad not taken their quick action, .somebody might have been killed,” Larson said, . Last Sunday, an FEC freight train was derailed by dynamite north of Miami. The line Is operating with nonunion labor and supervisory personnel- In last night's^ incident, the Earlier this week, railroad union pickets appeared at Cape Kennedy atul Merritt Isla^ to protest movement of Ihc line’s freight trains into Merritt Island with construction materials. Praise Is Growing for Music Festival By JANET ODELL Women’s Editor “Wonderful” is the adjective most individuals use when asked for their comments on the Meadow Brook Music Festival scheduled for Oakland University this summer. Milo Cross, president of Pontiac State Bank, had a reaction that was definite: , “It’s wonderful for Oakland County and Oakland University and all the people of this area.” B. M. Este.s, general man. City Blanketed I by Inch of Snow I During the Nightj More than 1 inch of snow fell gently during the night in the i Pontiac area. The U.S, Weather Bureau , predicts tonight Will be clear and cold with a low of 22. Temperatures will shoot up to 28 tomorrow afternoon. There’s a chance of some light snow in the morning. Today’s southwesterly winds at 10 miles per hour will diminish tonight and become 8 to 15* m.p.h. tomorrow. ★ * . * Twenty-eight Was the low reading in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. By 2 p.m., the thermometer registered 35. ager of Pontjac Motor Division said: “Wc in the Pontiac area are very fortunate in having the Meadow Brook Music Festival to enjoy so near us at Oakland University.” Said Leslie Gillain, manager of the Pontiac Mall Mohtgomery Ward store: "This will be a fine asset to the community. There is sure to l>e a very good response to this sort of thing.” KNOWS ADVANTAGES Mrs. Charles Hlmelhoch of 35 Lakeside, Birmingham, who is a musician, said she grew up in the Tanglewood area and knows what that sort of or- In Today's Press Lesinski Lt. governor blast.s Mackie for statement — PAGE B-6. Assassination Warren commission "i»ay~t?all-iBore"Wtti|essa( ^ truck about five miles north of | Titusville and about 1.5 miles All construction halted vyhen from where the FEU tracks Join workers refuserl Iq cross the a governrnent-oWned spur trackj picket lines but was resumed leadingNJnto the Merritt Island | after a tem|x>rary federal court moonporXarea of the Cape Kennedy launch complex. PacilltlM are under construction thjsrc for a modn launch. injunetkm was issued yesterday. A hearing ^li scheduled at cir-Jando today on. whether to extend the Injunction. , Vacations Steelworkers f i htf 13-week vacation enjoyable - PAGE B-14. Area News Astrology Bridge Comics Editorials Food Section . Vlarkets Obituaries (M2 (M2 C-12 ganization can do , for the surrounding countryside. “It’s the type of activity Iwt really ought to have,” she said. “We’re delighted it’s going to be out here. IThis Is an art area to begin with. There are many untapped re- Felix Resnick, director of the Pontiac Symphony orchestra and a member of the Detroit Symphony orchestra which Is giving the concerts thi.s summer, gave the orchestra’s viewpoint aS well as his own. The piusicians of the symphony (Detroit) are very excited a^ut the festival and are 100 per cent behind it. BIGGEST TIHNG When I hhard about it in the planning stage, my reaction was that It’s the biggest thing to happen in the area, both for the symphony and the northern rural area.” Mrs. L. L. Colbert. 491 Martell Drive, Hloomfleld Hills had this to say: “I can’t think of anything nicer. It’s been needed for a long time and I hope everybody cooperates. I wish we’d had it when my children were small. It's the most wonderful thing that’s happened to the com-munlty inalong time.” ^ Japan Leftists Push China Tie Pressure Government to Follow French Lead By JOHN RODpiCK TOKYO (AP) -'^an’s left wing and some businessmen applying the pressure on. the government to follow the example of France and recognize Red China. Prime Minister Hayato Ikeda, an Asian friend of (he United States, refuses to be stahipeded Into ubandoning his policy of nonrecognition. But he shows signs of wavering on some points. In debate with the Socialists and Communists in Parliament yesterday, Ikeda conceded that a new situation would arise should Red China be seated in the United Nations this fall as the sole representative of the Chinese people. normalize RELATIONS If that happens, Foreign Minister Masayoshi Ohira told Socialist Chichiro Hozumi, Japan will “normalize” its diplomatic relations with the mainland. He did not use the word recognition however. This position leaves the government room to maneuver once the issue reaches the decisionmaking stage. Ohira said Japan has yet to determine what policy to follow toward the question of seating the Red Chinese in the United Nations. RETREAT This appeared to be a retreat from declaratiohs that Japan and the United States would :onsult closely with the view of staving off Red Chinese entry. Americans here and in Washington are reported to be reeonellcd to the likelihood (hat Japan cannot long resist If the dam breaks and a torrent of recognition by other states results from France's move. Business pressure for closer tics with Peking has come from firms that believe a considerable expansion of trade between the two countries .is possible. Such leaders of Ikeda's Llb-eral-Democratlc party as ex-Prime Minmter Tanzan Ishi-bflshi and ^ex-Mlnisters Kenzo in Struts ot Coastal City Evacuation Ordered for Br.itiih Fomilies; Pact Work Goes On (lebrgc Putnam, supervisor of Tatsunosuke (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) 'Takasaki share this view. NICOSIA, Cyprus (^> — Fighting between Turkish and Greek Cypriot com^ munities broke out again today in the coastal city of Limassol as diplomats conferred here in an effort to land an international peace force on the tr-ou-bFed island. An uneasy cease-fire which went into effect this morning was broken less than three hours later and Sir Denis Barnett, commander of British forces on Cyprus.,, ordered the evacuation of all 104 families of British servicemen living in and around the embattled area. British^ troops remained on the outskirts of the city because of renewed fighting........ Six Royal Air Fore? ambulances began to evacuate the wounded and dead from the Turkish quarter. The exact number of casualties was not known. An Associated Press correspondent said he saw five Ttirk-lah dead in a Turkish Cypriot area of Limassol overrun in the battle. He said the total could be determined^ only after officials gained access to the surrounded quarter. ■k it ★ Greek Cypriots said they lost one dead and several wounded. NEAR MOSQUE The worst fighting centered near the Arnaup Mesjid Mosque. A British military source n»uld the Greek Cypriots used armored bulldozers, an old tank and homemade armored cars. Before the original cease-fire was established last night, the Greek Cypriots had insisted that their Turkish fellow townsmen lay down their arms. * * ★ The Turkish Cyprlot.s were said to have refused without a guarantee of protection by British troops. LAST RESORT British troops moved in as a last resort to try to separate the combatants and were themselves fired on. Such hazards are one reason Britain wgnts to surrender its police role to an international truce force. * * * The British said it appeared the fighting had stopped at 11:30 a m. For a time the Greek Cypriots seemed to be on the verge of wiping out the Turks there. The eruption of fighting broke a cease-fire arranged in Limassol by the British last night. Maj. Gen. Peter Young, British commander of the Cyprus truce force, had flown to Limassol with the Greek Cypriot Interior Minister, Poly* carpos Yeogadjis, to talk to the combatants. 2 Commissioners Back Story on Carter CZ-C-3 D-7 B-IO D-l-Dd (M3 'PV.Rb(Ho Programs D-13 Wilson, EnrI D-t3 Women’s Pages ( (iports Theat I (’-♦--c-nj Two (3ty Commissioners to i day sup|)orted statements published yesterday concerning the ; re.signation of City Manager j Robert A. Garter. The statements were attributed to official sources at City { Hall who wished to remain I anonymous. ' Tile remarks were attacked today by Mayor Robert A. Landry as “lies that are part of a f smear campaign . . , being conducted ... by The Pontiac Press.” Commissioners William H. Taylor and Charles H. Harmon both agreed today that yesterday’s story was not inaccurate. NOTHING WnONti Harmon said he 'could sea wrong with the story.” They Idenlifled themselves s the anonymous sources and said that U the mayor “wants to make g big issue out oi this” they would stand behind their statements. Landry, in opposing the story, said “t contacted the commi,s-si^ «)ver the weekend Individual " in reaching a decision to discuss Hie resignation Tuesday night. , * * . * Taylor today said, "He didn t' contact me at all” Ar- 9 THE PONTTAC PRESS. THURSDAY, Fi&BRUARY 13, 1964 Whangs Self in Cell; 2nd Dies in 8-Slory Fall FRANKFURT, Germany (At») —Dr. Werner Heyde hanged himself in his jail cell today, five' days before his trial as chief defendant in the killing ot 70,000 of .200,000 mental defectives murdered by the Nazis in World Warn. BoardOkays College Vote Preliminary Budget Approved by County A June 8 vote on a three-part community college proposal and a preliminary general education ^und budget were 4ipproved yes-, terday by the Oakland Schools Board of Eklucation. TTie coltege TOte, recommended by a citizens cora-(idttee, wiii be on (1) estab-^hment of the college, (2) a ' I tpx levy to finance it, (3) election of a six-member board of trustees. The Counfy Sehool Board okayed a preliminary 1964-65 general education budget of $525,491, increased $163,401 over me current year’s eimendltpre^^ The new budget incorporates a balance of $81,195 from this year and calls for a balance in June 1964, of $122,260. ACTUAL EXPENDITURES Thus, actudl budgeted expenditures will run $403,231. County Supt. William J. Emerson,, who said the budget la-cludesi two entirely, new pro-gran^ said the idea of a running Mlance was created to carry the school district between tax collections. He said that a vbcational education department and a research department had been added for, next year. The need fot more vocational education in public schools, and a county director to coordinate efforts in this field, were a recommendation of local school board designates, he said. PRIOR TO ADOPTION These representatives of the 30 county school boards will pass on the preliminary budget prior to final adoption by the Oakland Schools board in June or July. Emerson said that $22,930 was set for the vocational education department, while $19,920 was budgeted for research on new educational processes and techniques. The No. 2 defendant in the case, Friedrich Tillmaiin, 60, died yesterday in- a fall from an eighth-floor window in Col-:figiM!. Dr. Fritz Bauer, chief prosecutor for the state of Hesse, said that llso was a suicide. Tillnfimn, 60, was office chief of the-euthanasia center in lin during World War II. Bauer charged that there is conspTracy^'t^^^^^ which was to have begun Limburg next Tuesday. He did not elaborate. PUBLIC PROPERTY Karl Heinz Zinnal, prosecutor on the case, told a newsman “I suspect there are many doctors who are interested that their names and work during the Third Reich do not become public property.” A third defendant in the case. Dr. Hans Hefelmann, lives in Munich. A fourth, Gerhard Bohnc, disappeared late last year and is believed to be in Latin America. Cases against 10 others are in prepa- A spokesman atButzbach penitentiary said Heyde, 61, hanged himself with a belt. Court officials said the trial vrill be post^ned. NEW INDICTMENT Some officials said a new indictment probably will be filed against Dr. Hefelmann because of the death of the chief defend- ant. Guenther Johanns, the director of Butzbach prison, said: ‘‘Heyde hanged himself with hill belt from a heating pipe betiyeen 9 and 9:10 a. m. today. Drug Taken Off Market. WASHINGTON 141 - A Food and Drug Administration spokesman said today a drug used in taking X-ray pictures of the gall bladder has been removed from the market after apparently being linked with possibly 11 deaths. The spokesman named the drug as Orabilex. He said it was recalled from the market about a month ago by its manufacturer, E. Fougera ,& Co.. Inc., Hicksvllle, N.Y. The recall followed approval by FDA of a request by the firm for withdrawal of its new drug application covering Orabilex, which was approved by FDA in 1958, the spokesman said. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Snow tapering off to flurries by afternoon with around 2 inches total snowfall, high today 35. Clearing and colder tonight, low 22. Friday increasing cloudiness in the afternoon, high 38. Winds southwest to west 10 to 20 miles becoming northwest this afternoon diminishing tonight and becoming southwesterly 8 to 15 miles Friday afternoon. Vediy In etnIUc M WIM vfloclly )0 nn.p.i Dlrncllon; $oumw»«t Sun Mil Thuridny «l 4:03 p.W. Om Ytir Api In Pinlinc HIgheil Intnpai-nluri Lownit l♦mp•r»lurl Mnnn Inmpnralur* Wnnllwr; Sunny II.S DPwnWwn T*mp«r«tur*i , lunny; nlpht, IS Inch ZiPnso W«Un«Minr‘i~ Ttmpnralurt Chart „.,..ina \1 a AoMMu . « 70 Dalroll 30 5l Jackionvilta SJ -------... „ „ Clly 40 31 33 II Las Vagas SI 30 3S 33 Los Angolas 43 43 34 33 Louisville 40 33 34 33 New Orleans 44 S4 S. S. waria 34 31 New York 41 30 Travaraa C. 34 31 Okla.- Clly 30 34 Ooslon , 33 3k Omaha , ^ 33 “ Brownivll/a <4 43 PhoOnls 44 . Chicago 3» 33 Poniand, Me. 33 II Denver .14 14 SI. Louis 3» 3S Deo Moines 34 33 S, Prantilsco 43 44 Diiiiiih 33 13 Seallle 43 33 44 43 Tampa 43 50 51 41 Washington 34 33 NATIONAL WEATHER - Rain Is forecast tonight for the entire central and southern Atlantic Coastal states westward through the Tennessee Valley and the east Gulf Coast region. Light snow and snow flurrie.‘tfular .Setter!.' You muU com# ond »««... wojh 'n w#arS, Arn«li, coHorti, acetal#* ond olh#r popular fabric,!. Choos# from imart Tf^#r in clV#ckl, prinn, nrid d#»tgni. In a brilliant array of eobri, chic lrlm», collar!, in these’imarl faiihioni. Six#! 10 to 24%, cut to th# American flgur# by Am-•rlcon workmen. ‘Molly Goldberg’ 'i' Actual $4.98 Regular Seller! WondBrful dr#!i«! cut for comfort ond fr##dom of mbvament. Chooi* from gay printt; ch#cki and poHefni. Woih 'n w#or cottoni iit#i 15% 32% f/ ''ilutnni. Why »hould you p< Five superior ratings were inadvertently omitted from yesterday’s article on results of the Festival. High School, the,students were: Mary Beth Belanger for a flute solo, Nancy Wirth for a Bb clarmet solo; David Rath for a. Irombone s o 1 o; and Mark Boothe and Kenneth Bryson for their snare drum solos. Federal government "agencies last year adopted mofe than 100,000 suggestions submitted by All from Washington Junior I employes. 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S2.00 yalpo — Famous Federal Stamping . porcelain enamel stedl fry pan In choice' of 4 colors. , DuPont Teflon ccsoted for non-fot frying of fo^s. SHOPPING CART LINERS OCC Denna Film liner for shopping carts, holds loose items, fragile packages. 12-FC. LUNCHEON SETS DCC $J^-vtilue — nulk while glassware 4 cups, d saucers, 4 dinner plates. . ' ' , 2od Floor |63 96< W m m Electric Defroster 097 'Chromalox' electric defroster unit removes frost and Ice build-up 'In migutes. Safe and efficient to use. 1 Floor-To-Ceiling-Chromed r 1 3-Shelf Space Saver h K..,I ^1111 p - /V«Vr> , # OO '/2-lBchDRIVE 16-Pc. SOCKET SETS Regular $22.76 Value - ,\aw As shown — carefully, selected set of I'u-Inch square drive sockets and fittin’gs for the horn# hobbyist, auto mechanics and fur fiirm use.'American ‘ made select steel. Onl/'I'i V8 North SoQinav Street 1288 THE PONTIAC TRESS, THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 13. 1904 Soft Whiskey can do anything any other whiskey can do. It just does it Mter. *2” PROOF. BLENDED WHISKEY • «5% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS © 1964 CALVERT DIST. CO., LOUISVILLE, KY. Public Notice! For general iniormation concerning BIG VALUE FURNITURE Immunize Your Baby for Some Diseases By DR. WILUAM BRADY So far as the welfare of babies in North America is concerned, every baby should be immunized against smallpox and d^htheria. Immnnizatton agailist smallpox is vaccination. Best time to vaccinate the baby is at the age of three months. In any event, it must be done before the baby is a year old. It is for your physician to decide whether vaccination should be Best time ^ Immunize the baby against diphtheria is at the age of 6 to 9 months, by an injection of diphtheria toxoidj Two months later a second injection of toxoid. Six months later a Schick test to determine whether the baby is immune. If the baby is Immune^ttere will be no redness at the site of injection four days after the injection. If redness shows four days after the Injection, the baby is not immunized is still susceptible to diphtheria and should have at least one moro injection of diphtheria toxoid to acquire sufficient inununity. • WHOOPING-COUGH It is questionable whether whooping-cough vaccine gives the child protection against whooping-cough. I don’t know of any convincing statistics upon which to base the practice of giving such injections. On the other hand, I know of no dangerous or harmful ef-—feets-^-three-injectiomL. of whooping - cough (peftussis) vaccine, a week apart, to infants at the age of g montbs... So my advice about this is, do as your doctor says — or change doctors. It is good practice, I think, to give tetanus (lockjaw) in the^ same injection with diphtheria toxoid, when the baby is & to 9 months old, two or three injections a couple Of months apart. The protection this gives against tetanus is jiot absolute and not j>erinanent. Has Hepatitis LONDON (AP)-I>. William . Harvey, expelled from Ghana for alleged subversive activities, arrived in London Wednesday night-------- 1______/ The University ».pf Michigan professor was immediately taken to the Tropical Diseases Hospital for treatment of h(ipa-titls,* a liver ailment. The hospital would not comment on his condition. Harvey was the last of six western professors to be deported. ^ Charge d’Affaires Oliver Trox-el led a delegation from the U.S. Embassy to see Harvey off. Vice Chancellor Conor Cruise O’Brien, faculty members and students frpm the University of Ghana were amqng other well-wishers at the airport. EXCLUSIVE INTEREST ‘My exclusive Interest Ghana has been the university (of Ghana) and the welfare of the university will continue to be my interest,” Harvey said. President Kwame Nkrumah is chancellor of (the university, where scholarship requirepients . * , , , ■ AP piMMtx -tSWEET MISS SWEESN — Ch^L Sweeten, 19, of Denver, makes a lovely valentine. Hie girl was named Mis? Colorado of 1964. She was a semifinalist in the 1964 Miss ^America contest and plans to become an actress. But it minimizes the ( India wfll need 18 million tons (ment.^Riexotmh7’s five plants : steel annually within four are now producing only six mil----------------------- Ions a-yea^ — are being revised to tighteii con-.................."'uir trol over students. Educators expressed belief the government purge is fdr from finished. Harvey, 41, is a member of the University of Michigan. He took a two-year leave to come here in September 1962 with his wife Mary and son, Kenneth, 13. He is working on a book about Ghanq’s legal structure. OTHERS EXPELLED Expelled along with Harvey for what the government termwl actlyities prejudicial to the security of the state” were Prof. Louis H. Schuster, 56, an American Negro teacher pf business administration from New Haven, Conn.; Robert Seidman, 43, law professor from South Norwalk, Conn.; Wendell A. Jean-|)lerre, a Negro French teacher I rom New Orleans; and Rev. J. Stewart, an Anglican chaplain from Britain; and Gaston Greco, a French instructor from the West Indies. of death from lockjaw following a slight wound, and this effect may be prolonged for years by a “bdroter” injection oTb^ntis toxoid at any future tirtie. DOCTOR IS JUDGE When the baby is thus immunized against smallpox, diphtheria and tetanus, any other immunization treatment may ■ left to the judgment of the at-tend^g physician in any circumstance. Immunization against typhoid fever, generally advisable If not mandatory for persons going out of the United States, is only rarely necessary for infants at home. So-called vaccination against influenza of whatever type is unwarranted, in my judgment. Immunization of children against infantile paralysis (poliomyelitis) with the Salk or Sabin oral. vaccine has recently come to be routine practice whenever or wherever polio is epidemic. signed letteri, not more than ont pago r loo word! long pertaining to personal ealth and hygiene, not disease,’ dlagno-s, or treatment, will be answered by r. William Brady, It a stamped self-addressed , envelope Is sent to The Pontiac Press, Pontiac, Mlchlga,n. (Copyright, 1964) 7^ 0 »'*f,AYPr,s, ISASV OVCN Ct!r„:ANlNO Reefer-Gailer's OVEN CARE KIT t $2.58 Valu« f Chbrg* Yourg For lha first tima, d complala kit to claon your ovan. Givai it a protactiva ahield thot mokas futura claonii;ig fast and aasyl A boon for aye-leval and gioss window ovans. Shop tonita for this spaclol money-saving kit. Open tonita 'III 9, Notlom D«pt,.. Main Floor SHOP TONITE TIL 9 47 SOUTH SAGINAW ST., PONTIAC SHOP WAITE’S MON., THURS., FRJ. and SAT. RITES TIL 9 All OVBRALL H«OHT6'10* Please (Urecl all inquiries to our ROSEVILLE STOR^ 28705 GRATIOT AVE. ROSEVILLE, MICHIGAN TELEPHONE: PRESIMin 28360 nWOUS BRAND Large Size Gym Set with 7-Ft. Free-Standing SHde . Shop ahd Comtawir* 1 YEAR GUARANTEE Flaatwlng gym tala dlra uBeondltlanolly guordnlaad ogalml all dafactt in mote-rialt and waAmonehlp for one year. $3.00 HOLDS a Conalructlon df 3-inch tubing throughout • 9' bar and 7*4“ lags. D • 2 awingt, aoch with gym rings tragaia bar riiop €ym Sotr ,.. Fifth Fli< »20m Chpiw Ytwlrg ~ xinfelpoyTI^C PRESS TTIURSPAY. FEBRi ArV 'A—5 Professor Upheld in JFK Criticism ' CHAMPAIGN, 111. (UPI) The right of a University of-Illinois classicist to attack the late President John F. Kennedy in a John Birch Society periodical was upheld yester-, day by a top school official. Dr. Jack W. Peltason, dean of the college of liberal . .arts and sciences and acting provost of the university, said he considered the attack by Prof. Revilo P. —©Hver"^“ba(Haste and^-* fensive.” But Pelatson said his own reaction was “irrelevant.” " ★ ★ ★ ■ The ^tor"^ the student newspaper^ an Illinois con-' gressman and the president of the university board of trustees all defended Oliver’s right to make the attack on Kennedy, which appeared in the current issue of the John B i r c h^ Society magazine, American Opinion. _ FELLBEHmS - Oliver, a professor of the classics, a member of the Birch Soelety’s national council and a frequent book reviewer “tor the Birch maga-zine, said in his article that Kennedy was assassinated because he fell behind in a Communist timetable for turning over the United Sts^tes to the Russians^ 1 Oliver said Kennedy’s memory would be “cherished with distaste.” ' Howard W. Clement, president of the university’s board of trustees, said he disagreed with Oliver “headon” but added that Oliver “Ijas the right as a private citizen to express himself and is so guaranteed those rights by tl^statutes of ^the university. ^ , Rem/I^vin Price, D-Ill, Ijliver’s ideas were “re-Tettable” but that as long the professor’s political •views did not color his teaching, his job should not be in jeopardy. ‘BASE ATTACK’ Robert Ebert, editor of the Daily lllini, said Oliver’s article wps a “base and unwarranted attack” against Kenne- dy, but said he saw “nothing wrong with his speaking out.” “Only a strong and free society ' could permit Prof. Oliver his own freedom,” Ebert said in an editorial. Peltason said he had been assured Oliver “does not use his classroom to promote his own pditical views.” ★ * ■ Nearly four years ago, a University of Illinoi.s biologist was fired after he wrote a letter to the student newspaper j advocating premarital se^Aial relations for “mature” persons. Draft Said Unlikely hy^onmey SAGINAW (AP)-Gov. George W. Romndy described remarks that he might be drafted as a Republican—presidential 'candidate as “presumptuous, remote and unlikely” Wednesday night in an address to a Saginaw Lincoln Day dinner. * A * Romndy told the overflow audience of 500 that his widely publicized statement that he would accept a draft was “misinterpreted” and added that prior to his election as governor he stated that he would not be a candidate for national offjce in 1964. “I’ve kept that pledge up to now and I don’t expect to change,” he said. “I’d be more likely to die between now and JNflvember than be drafted.’’ FUTURE PLANS Commenting on his future plans — including running for .governor again —Romney said he “probably will have kome-ting to say about that in a few weeks.” In a speech focused generally on Michigan finances, Romney said national confidence and faith in Michigan have been restored because of the state’s improved financial condition. WASHINGTON (AP)—In the urged'"to dedicate themselves news from WastuRgUm: POVERTY DRIVE: In a letter President Johnson has given Sargent Shriver his orders for mounting the administration’s campaign against poverty. You will direct the activities of all executive departments and agencies involved in the program against poverty,” said the President, who also expressed his gratitude to Shriver for agreeing to take on the job. ♦ ★ ★ ShhverT Brother-in-law of the late President John F. KennedyT SHOVELIN' SECRETARIES - Kassy Benson" (left) and Rita Machakos took a break from secretarial duties at the Capitol yesterday to show off their snow-shoveling form. They attracted numerous photographers with their brief appearance. PolicrAffest Cuban Exile JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP)-A Cuban exile, said by U.S. customs agents to be an arms carrier for an anti-Castro organization, was held today after police discovei'ed 10 cases of bazooka ammunition in his car, ★ ★ ★ Customs agent W. B. Lankford identified the exile as Juan Miguel Rassi, 21, of the anti-Castro Alpha 66 organization. Rassi was arrested near here Wednesday night after a-Florir da Highway Patrol trooper stopped to help him with a flat tire and spotted- the explosives. j>olice also found 24 hunting knives in the vehicle. ★ ★ ★'* Lankford said Rassi-was on his way to Miami from New York. He was charged with illegal transportation o^ explosives. BUSTCR BROWN Shoes for Childron Butter Brown thoei give you good looks, fine workmanship and long wear. • We u'o the 6-point Fitting Plan which ■furei BOTH feet, e Why take a chance on foot misery for your child? Be safe with Butter Brown Shoes. Spring Comes for Little girls in PATENT LEATHER I" Bldck (I"*""* "'('••e <.il( trim, or Ombio Ixiid" tones, Mid Mfifi'finfitfln 'MSs S W Widths. $1399 B.'"Allure" Block patent with n calf trim or Ombre beige tenss. I tfeel. Sizes 5 to 10 In AAA l widths. Matching Handbags Avolldble. 0. "Zenhh" Black or Heavenly blue, sey Dawn Pink, Yellow, Novy, RefI, white lightening. Sizes 5 to 10 AAA to B vitldtht. ALSO A LARGE VARIETY OF OTHER STYLES. shot' Uopt. . . Stroot Floor Today in Washington Shriver to Lead Poverty War GUANTANAMO WATER: Cubans temporarily piped water to the U.S. naval base at Guantanamo, but the Navy said the base kept the valves closed ati its end^, holding to the U S. deci‘ sion not to accept any more water from the Castro regime. ships are. on the way from Nor- Port Everglad^7TFTS-rto on water and carry it to Guantanamo. end nnd was running at an an-nual rate of a little more than $1:5 frilltinr in—the^ finaF^ix^ ~ months of 1963. NEW PEAK: The crew of a U S. Navy plane has discovered a new mountain range in Antarctica and dropped the Stars and Stripes bn its tallest peak. Union Official Gets 2-Year Sentence GRAND RAPIDS (AP)-Kala-mazoo union local official Albert L. White was sentenced Wednesday to two years in, prison and two years’ probation after a turnabout plea of guilty to violations of the Landrum-Griffin Labor Act. White, 43, was secretary-treasurer of Local 640, International Hodcarriers Building & Common Laborers Union, AFL-CIO. He pleaded guilty Jan. 3 to a 15-count information but lasti Fridays sto'od mute and a plea of innocent was ordered entered ipr him pending trial. The prison term was handed down on the first count and sentence was suspended on the others., will also carry on as Peace Corps director. SIT AT CABINET The President asked Shriver to sit in on Cabinet meetings and to serve as his representative in presenting to Congress the administration views on ' islation for the program. All department heads and their personnel, Johnson said in the letter Wednesday, have been U. S. Opera Star • Is Treated After Fainting an Stage LONDON UPI—American opera star Anna Moffo, still feeling woozy from her dramatic fainting spell in the second act of Rigoletto at the’ Royal Opera House last night, underwent treatment in her hotel suite today for an inflamed windpipe. / The 2S-year-oId soprano collapsed soon after she made her first entry as Gilda and while she was singing a duet with Peter GIossop, playing the huntchbacked Rigoletto. He continued the s 1 n g i n alone, cradling her limp body until the curtain came down. ★ ★ ' “It^as near the end of the duet,’,’ Miss Moffo said. “Suddenly there seemed to be three or four Rjgolettos, I got very cold, even though I was wearing a heavy costurtie. Then I can’t ' remember anymore.' DOLLAR FLOW: The United i States made headiVay last year i in its anxious efforts to ease the i balance of payments problem. i Since 1950, more dollars have * j been flowing^^tfroad—than i Pressure built up in the pipes I li^Tning. by 9 a;m. 'Tuesday, the Navy | In 1962, the U.S. balance of ‘ annouilCfid—Sednfiaday, then}.payments-was434*bill«)n4ntho--j- „r .- „fOueen dropped again indicating the red. By last spring it reached f" nL?' nf the pumpf^gain J«n ramed an alarming annual rate of (5.2 . oft on the Cuban side. . j bdbon. ! Srson of Pocateilo, fdaho. LATEST REPORT I DFJ'ICIT CUT i ———--------------------- The Navy said that as of] Figures issued by the Com-j The number of coal miners in Wednesday morning, the Nayy l merce, Department Wednesday the nation has declined from base had 11.2 million gallons of | showed that the deficit had been 1875,000 in the mid-1920s to about water on hand and two water I cut to about $3 billion by year’s' 150,000 today. The Navy~announced.4he discovery Wednesday, saying the plane had located the 4,000- to 6,()0P-_foot range, three, days ago VALENTINE'S DAY IS FEBRUARY 14 ’■■'x teiMANT parfum de ^OT7 Make your move on Valenline’a Day ... give • Yragrant gift of L’Aimanl. No otheririgranco makes a woman more feminine, more ettractive. Naturally, ahe’ll get the message. And when the’i wearing L'Aimant-^atch It. Measured Mist 5.00 Toilet Water 4.00 and 6.00 toilet Water and Creamly Skin Perfume Set 4.50 All »,ltw alM NM CuwuUuiWuS ky CuW (A* USA THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 West Huron Street Pontiac, Michigan THURSDAY,. FEBRUARY 13, 1964 HAROU3 A. rmOERALD . ' Pre«tdcnt r ‘ ..■- Howarp h< FmonRU n ____.President Business Manager .John a, Rarr Secretary and AdVefnsIJSjTWriCtW Managing Editor Circulation Manager Local Advertising City Manager’s Exit a ForeseeaQiiteome City Manager Robert A. Carter weald be aUewed in all income brackets up to the maximum where, after the second yew, the rate on the former would be reduced from 91 to 70 per cent, arid”oh the latter from„ 52 to 48 per cent. indicted in the Flint land scandal, the reputation of the City of Pontiac suffered another blow. ^ American principle of innocence until gruilt is proven, No one has said Carter isguilty. ★ He has denied any wrongdoing, - repeatedly, gven -suspension fr<»n his position ^ntil the matter was cleared would not hhi^ indicated his guilt, or his Innocence. ____ Pending the outcome of the proposed “investigat ion’* of the “ police department. Police Chief Joseph Koren was suspended. He wasn’t even charged with any crime. 'j But when the man they had appointed city manager was accused, certain commissioners wouldn’t hear of suspending him. ★ ★ ★ Mr. carter is In the hands of American justice. Economists and business analysts are virtually unanimous in predictions of the great stimulating effect the diversion of the tax cut to private and business channels would have on the national economy.* .... ...★ ★ ★ ■ As a result, the current business expansion now in its 35th month-topped only bj^4^-45-m(mth upsurge that coincided with the Korean War — may well be prolonged indefinitely. Terry’s Olympic Win RealLife Fairy Tale Nearly as fictional as the half-century old “Hans Bricker and the Silver Skates” Is today’s tale of Terry McDer-MOTT and the I # gold skates, Fiction and re-' allty, howev.er, meet strangely. Neither the fictional Hans of i Holland nor our flesh - and - blood Terry owned the sh^ates that bore them to fame. MARI.OW McDermott For Terry, the Hkates were golden, because they brought him and America the only gi^ld medal won by the United States in the Winter Olympics just completed at Innsbruck, Austria. ★ ★ ★ The eletJtrlfylng 23-year-old Es- rowed skates to a world’s recprd 40.1 seconds for the 500 meters did much to balm the wounds suffered by U. S. contestants In the advance division of the 1964 Olympiad. ★ ★ ' The modest, yi^brant herojiyni-Imlizes fine and exemplary American youth in every respect, and Michigan and the Nation Join in acclaiming his brilliani performance. By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON - President Johnson has a thin skin and some of his critics are getting under it already. He hit back. He called them “bellyachers,” although he didn’t identify them. This evidence that Johnson can be irritated so early in a. presidential campaign year will probably just encourage Republicans, who have been criticizing his handling of foreign policy, to do more of the saTne: The degree of Johnson’s irritation can be glimpsed from part of a talk he made Tuesday to agents of the Internal Itevenue Service. > “When I became a Democratic leader In the Senate when President Eisenhower was president, f took the position politics stopped at the water’s edge,” Johnson said. “We had but one president and one commander in chief 1 would support his policie.s and give him strength and comfort, and I would / not be aligning myself with any enemies of the United States in criticizing him ” ' A ■ ★ ★ His talk at least had the effect of 1-aising a pertinent question about himself. If ho can get this hot this soon, w'hat’s his tern-, perature going to be when the presidential campaign really gets rolling? CRITlif'AL OF POLICY ( In the. 1960 presidential campaign years— before he got the Democratic vice presidential nomination on the ticket with John F, KennedVr-Johnson was critical of Elsen-hower’s haljidiing of furelgh policy. And he was critical before that, during those years of his majority leadership, which he mentioned Tuesday. If Johnson runs for election this year, n.s expected, and former Vice President Richard M. Nixon once again is the Republican pre.sidenlial candidate, as he was in 1960, this will l)e the 4960 campaign 4n reverse. Liong-Awaited Break Seen foir^axpayers No\y as certain as the proverbial death and taxes Is the cut in taxes that has been shuttlecocked in Congress for a year. ★ ★ ★ A $11 billion reduction in income tax proposal cleared the House last ! September and, upped $500 frinilnh, has emerged from the Senate. It is now in IloiiHe-SenHic Committee reconrilinlion, with likelihood that the agreed-upon Irut could became law by March 1. Reduction of ijorsonal and corr jxtrate taxes would be effected In two stages. The first,-affectl^ 1984 Income, would drop the minimum personar tax rate from 2p to 16 per cent, and to 14 jter cent on 1965 income. The mlnin/ium rate for oor- In Hint I960 campaign. Nixon, after two loi ms as Eisenhower’s vice president, wa.s in a iMilitieal Ixix. He had to defend the Eisenhower-Nlxon foreign policy while Democrats were fi*ee to hang nt it. DID 111$ SHARK .lohnstm did hi.s share of banging, til-lliough Kennedy did the most of the talking. Now Johnson will have to defend hip policy while fftxon^khee^^ Recently Nixon snid some areas of H.S. foreign |M)lley need a “new direction.'' He mentioned Lutin America, Cs-pecinlly I'nnama, nnd .Southeast Asin. in 1060 Johnson .said “we need a new, vigorous and different foreign policy," and he e.specially called for a “positive and dynamic’’ !pol|cy for l.alin Aiperica. He was also critical of American Aslan poltcy. Voice of the People: ‘Help, Hope Are Avaikhk for Alcoholics’ Families’ Many famiiips nf alcoholics have taken beatings and _____mmijf AdlAlAAACa UX ---\ ' I verbal abuse as die alcoholic changes from gentle Dr, Jekyl* to vicious Mr. Hyde. It’s a nerve crushing, heartbreaking agony to iive with a person who’s aico-hoiism gets worse. The alcoholic and his family need and deserve help. There is help and hope fo| the entire family even before he begins Jo^ Ihink of needing it, Alanon and Alateen are the best sources. These — -areTeno^liipy"Yrhere-one--eait^ o-u.r-a-g£,............. strength and faith. ★ ■ ★ ★ . -If- there-is-a -drinking problem m your home, don’t wait until your life is in complete chaos. T^ Alanoh, Alateen and AA located at the Oakland Cojinty Alanon Center and other meeting places in the county. A Recovering Family Wants Athletic Competition at OU LBJ Gets Mad at Policy Critics Going To Quite Atu Act! We have watched with pride the development of a fine academic institution at Oakland University. Mhny members fte commiinitv favor i«»a»‘«!>»hniastic athletic competition for a schoor otthe stat^rf Oakland University. Interscholast^Wm^ltto^ would increkse community support and improve student pride and (Editor’s Note: Don't you mean “intercollegiate athletics’?? Wu”~provide surely be, intercollegiate athletics.) Capital Letter: ‘Talented Sophomore Being Mistreated* By RUTH MONTGOMERY WASHINGTON - Nineteen-year-old Lynda Bird Johnson can be glad that she’s the daughter of a president, rather than of a queen or king. If the dimpled brunette charmer goes through with her pre-White House plans to > marry her Roman Catholic fiance this summer, no Cabinet crisis will erupt — as in the Netherlands. She will not haye to live in exile abroad, or even to renounce her rights to the presidency if the voters choose to elect her someday. Congratulations Pontiac Northern High on your upcoming “niciahnma.” but aren’t you mistreating a talented^sophomore for a post-graduate? You admit the sophomore qualifies yet discredit her until her parents removed her from the cast. Why i)0t let college students compete with other college students? What about dren in the faith of her hus- the’ election chances of her the tickets that have been sold for this sophomore’s performance? No Woes for Lynda*s Romance- Far from causing a cabinet crisis in America, such a union could actually give an assist to father, who Succeeded to office through the tragic assassination of this nation’s first Catholic president. i by King Ftihiret Syndicato Suggests City Install Home Incinerators Bob Considine Says: California Aerial Tram Is Engineering Wonder Why can’t the city underwrite a program to install garbage grinders and incinerators in hdmes? The city could buy them from the manufacturers and sell them to the home owners, ^reading the cost over 3 years on the tax roll. This has been done in many cities. Even a can crusher could be made out of two short-hinged planks. Ortonville ’ A. Arnason , Claims Trash Containers Mishandled Lynda Bird, like any other red-blooded American teen-ager, lia.s been avidly following press reports of Dutch Princess Irene’s stormy road to romance with Spanish Prince Carlos de Borbon y Parma. The 24-year-oId bjlonde princess, second ini line to t h e Dutch throne, stirred up a rumpus by becoming a Catholic convert and] announcing her] engagement to the dashing princa-w4vo « e 74 - year - oldMONTGOMERY father heads the Carlist brancih of the Spanish royal family. PARENTS APPROVE Princes.? Irene's parents approve the match, but although Queen Juliana is the richest RUTH PALM SPRINGS; Calif. -Any additional reason for visiting this area) where the sun maintains a year-round residence, is redundant. Palm Springs has what must be the finest spa in the world to-d a y, built around an eternal gush of liealing and soothing water that nutured life and mended aboriginal aches cen- CONSIDINB turies before the Spaniards came this way. Its desert sands are sprinkled with dazzling carpets of glorious little flowers where prospectors once died. It has 16 golf courses in and out of the city, and 3,100 swimming pools — one for every five residents. I read in Thd. Press that the city is going to crack dpwn cn trash violators because of improper containers. We’re ready to that may be what an astronaut crack up at' the way our containers' get throwin around. It’s nice will see as he hovers over the having weekly trakh pickups, but would be nicer to find contain- There is suddenly snow below, now, and timeless rocks, trees and \yildlife. The other tram passes,* on Ms way back down, and it is like, a susupended flying saucer. The last leg, all but vertical against the precipitous face of the mountain, is 714 feet of sheer and uplifting wonder. ers on your property rather than In the street. Maybe people would use proper containers if they were sure they would" get them back. Summit Street ‘Gain Child’s Confidence at Early Age’ Then the docking, and 33 de-g r e e temperkure, and men • shoveling show down on th*e heat-waving desert so won-drously far below, It’s difficult to know who to strike out against—“Bobby-Soxer” or Mrs. G, H. Erickson. I agree with “Bobby-Soxer” that we learn by examples. It appears that she does know the difference between right and wrong. We are going through a phase where it seems to be right to blame everyone but ourselves if we fall. Mrs. Erickson’s letter is of the same vein. Do we have such poor understanding with our children that we don’t know when something is wrqng? The time to win your child’s confidence is before he enters school. We must teach children that we can listen to their problems and help them in making decisions. Lake Orion Mrs. C. Robbins ' In Washington: •t,: monarch in the world, she js not.......... the boss of her own cabinet. Those august gentlemen, re-ininding that the Dutch royal family has been Protestant for .too years and recalling Dutch hostility to the Franco regime in Spain, turned thumbs down on the marriage. I Rather than give up her Catholic fiance and religion, the princess renounced her rights to the throne and has agreed to live in exile in France after the marringr. Die relatlon.shlp between Johnson and Nixon, Judging from what they have said about each other, eoulil hardly he calhxl clubby. Nixon recently called John.son a “past master of a political •hell-game " with “something for everylKidy — liberal to the liberals, conservative to the con«ervatlve.s,” In I960 Johnson called Nlxoii"d8ngeroiis” and “deceptive” and accused him of rb-~ sorting in the campaign that year “to the kind of language little boys write on felice.s." jioiatlons would be cut from 30 to 22 itep/ per cent In one step/ ir ic . . i(e to bring up jier diH- Orange, grapefruit, lemon and date groves abound, and on^’s eyes reach upward from them to a snow-capped peak of Mt. San Jaeinto presiding a? austere as a bewigged Brit-Ihb magistrate over the markable oasis. To all these wonders now has been added what must be the most entrancing ride on this side of the world. AERIAL TRAMWAY It Is the recently opened , Palm Springs Aerial Tramway, the largest and longest (and. I'd guess, steepest) single-lift passenger-carrying apfiaratus ©f it© kind in the world. It alone is worth a visit here. The tramway cost $8,150,000, privately raiski by a bond issue. It is under the jurisdiction of the Winter Park Authority. Incredibly, not one j life was lost during the construction of one of the engineering wonders of our time. - _ The trip must be taken to vulidato the use of the word “Incredibly,” IS IT NECESSARY? The moment the ear eases away from the valley ba.se station (which Is reached by a new 4-intle road that wIiIkIs up from the city) the rider Is inclined te ask bimselL asTlM the CTew© of World War ,11 bombers, “la lhi.s trip neces.sary?” There Is a bit of a dip, and the car dips gently as the 814-foot hlgh first tower Is negotiated. Everybody gives off his special lyfie of gasp, then laughs. U.^. Set to Meet Red Challehp By RAY CROMLEY WASHINGTON (N E A) -American troubles in Africa are certain to increase in late 1964 ind in 1965 when sizeable numbers of the 5,000 African students now being educated in Soviet Russia and| 'E a s t c r n ^u-orpe begin returning to Africa. CROMLEY Even if the Soviet Union is successful in lining up only a tenth of that 5,000 as agents in the Castro style, these few can be extremely dangerou.s at the right time In a listful of, the weak African countries. Forty Castro-trained agents probably swung tlie balance In the Zanzibar revolt. Very smalt numtW'rs of British troops — 60 Jn one case, 100 te 200 in anoth-er — put down the revolting troops in Tanganylke and Kenya. These figures indicate what small numbers are required at the right time In the right ■pot to control the situation or swing It one way or another In many places In confused nomic resources, their lack of business training and experience, (heir low level of education, they are likely to remain weak and a prey to small Castro-type revolutionary groups for more than a decade. In a number of cases the-Irend is already toward one-party .systems. Most of the emerging native governments of Africa are trending toward what they call socialism. If the Communists consolidate their hold in Zanzibar, they’re expected to try, Cas-tro-llke, to spread their type of revolution to the continent# of Africa. So Africa may al-ready haVe* its Cuba-type training base. But with all_ this, say U.S. diplomats, the Copimunists have real problems in Africa which the United States and , the West can exploit If we play our cards right. ism in Africa means racism. The Africans are also fed up w,i t h “colonialism.” This means, the experts reason, that the Africans will shy away from being satellites of any power—especially any non-African power. The Red Chinese are working on this very point. They’re accusing the Russians of being “white’” and playing on the strong African racist feelings. They’ve attempted to exclude Russians from Afro-Asiatic* meetings. , The U.S. experts reason, too, that when Russlandrained agents return to Africa In numbers and when and If Zanzibar agents begin to Infiltrate continental Africa, there will be a strong reactfon against them. -Red-^iin© -i© 4uw • ©Hklng, scholarships to Africans. There are reports that Chou En-lai has made prcigress in his good will trip ihroiijih Africa. Tlie car gocji on, smooth as silk, climbing over a terrain * There are $1 number of other cadres in Communist hands. Most of the governments in Africa arc weak now. Because of their inexperience In self-government, their shortage of eco- Thcre’s an open and froree fight between, Mao Tse-tung’s Red China and Nikita Krushchev’s Soviet Russia for control of communism in Africa, In some ca,ses they may cooperate, but In most areas they’re apparently out for each other’s blood. • U.S. Government experts seio Africanism-rather than na-(ittnalism, oommunism oi^eapi-lallsim—as the -dominant force now in Africa. On one occasion an avbwed Marxist • African ruler threw out the Soviet am-liassador on the ground.s the Rus.stan,r()inmunists were, inier-ferring "^In his country’s Inter-, nal affairs. ■ i The U.S. policy will be, they suggest, to be always available to help African governments when we’re called on. We’ll bend over backward to not even seem to Interfere. We’ll train as many and educate more Africans than the Russians. The U.S. government’s hope Is that when there’s trouble, as in Tanganyika and Kenya, the Africans will call in the West, not the East. Though tWi^’re still arguing the point, experts dre tending to agree that Xfrlcan- Th* Onw It •ntHM exclusivdy to - * esrrier for M conlt t w r" ContMt, 1 nguon,' Mttomb, Uptcr r vy«>Won*w Counlitt It It lll.oo y*ori Vixowlwrt In Michigan i U*.w a ynarj All mall • Jirlbilont payam In aOvan Poalaga hat bam OaM M iha i OPEN EVtPY NIGHT TO 9 K Monday through Saturday Comfi sejC our spring c^llecfic of lots', girls' and juniors' COATS Tots’: 80% wool / 20% nylon 1$ laminated to Nopco'^ foam, lined in rayon acetate boasts perky collar, mock pearl buttons, rag* Ian sleeves/ Sires 4~t6^xr Cirlt’l 100% acrylic crepe bonded to polyester foam has linen-look rayon collar/ pocket detail raglan sloeves and sunburst back. *1^99 Sizes 7 to 14 In group. I ^ Young funion’r 80% 4ool/20% nylon lamjf* noted to foam boasts raglan shoulder, gian^bogus pearl button, inseam pockets. Blue, gold, white. Subteen, 8-14. j| FMI ALTBRATIONS ON FASHIONS 10.99 S UP DOWNifoWN AND DRAYON PUINS A—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY; FEBRUARY 13, 1964 Graham Says People Rebel Again^ Cross ANN ARBOR tAP) - People dislike the cross because it tells 'ibem they are wrong, evangel-ist Billy Graham told more than 4,00(1 .University of Michigan. students WeSlni^ay in a'lecture I on “The Cross and the Secular World.” “People rebel when they hear about the cross because it says to the world ‘your racial; prejudice- is-wroRg?~you^ ini-i morality is wrong, your envy, I hatred, bitterness and lying are ^^”1iesaidr“Anrwe don’t like to be told we ere wrong.’' Graham, speaking in the second df three lectures sponsored by the U. of M. Office of Religious Affairs and the Michigan Christian Fellowship, told his audience “a time comes when you must decide.” “One day the-race problem will come to your neighborhood, your fraternity, and you can no longer be neutral,” he Marriage Licenses Brown, Waterford ' vin R. Bruce, Bloomington Karan A. Walker, BloomfielL ......- William H. Ingram, 18) Judson and | Grace M. BlrreH, Rochester { Arley J, Lowe Jr., JWO Lakewind and i JESUS ENTERS JERICHO little man in the sycamore tree was a rich and rather infamous persph in Jericho. He was Zacchaeus, chief among the town^s publicans. ~~ ^f/dring^hat Jesus was coming on His last, momentous journey to Jeru-m, he had climbed up for a better view. “Zacchaeus, make Jiaste and come down,’* Jesus called out to him, “for today 1 must abide at thy house.” The crowd mur^mured about Jesus staying at the house of a sinner, but He used the opportunity to show He had come to save all mankind. “This day is salvation come to this house,” He said, “forsomuch as he is a son of Abraham. For the Son of Man is come to seek and to save that which was lost.” (Luke XIX:9-10), Gordon J. Douglas, Southfield and Mary A. Allen, Southfield Thomas R. Authleh, Union Lake and Alice J. Sewick, Milford. Kenneth R. Koonce, Union Lake and Sue E. Fuller, Union Lake Lithuanian Day Slated LANSING (AP) - Gov. George W. Romney has proclaimed Feb. 16 as Lithuanian Independence Day in Michigan as a salute to the former Baltic nation taken over by the Soviet Utilon. WKC, 108 North Saginaw Street... 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(AP)-The jury in Mississippi’s touchiest murder trial was deadlocked at an, angry 6-6 when a mistrial was declared, a juror said today. w ★ ★ “It was hell in there,” he said, STUDENT RENTAL PLAN $5:00 P*r>4mtli TRUMeETS-VtOUNt-OltUMS CORNETS-CLARINBTi With OptlM M Buy Xthtal Appilut on Purchatp EDWARD'S SA6?NAW recalling the 11 hours in which 12 men, locked away in a small room, pondered the fate of Byron De La Beckwith. ★ . w ★ Beckwith, 43, a militant segregationist from Greenwood, Miss., was accused of murdering a Negro civil rights leader, Medgar Evers, 37, of Jackson, in an effort to'suppress integration activities. A juror, who asked that he not be named, said the opening ballot was 10-2 for acquittal. On this point there was some confusion, howevCT. Another juror agreed with tee 10-2 opening ballot. Two others Pupil Dies After Fall fflGHLAND PARK (AP)— John Malcolm, 6, of Highland Park died Wednesday of injuries recced Monday when he struck his head ajgaink a gymnasium wall*while playing basketball at Barber Intermediate School. said they thought the opening vote was almost the same as tee final one, 20 ballotings later. All agree the ar^ments in the jury—room, adjoining^ Circuit Court courtroom, had reached the flash point. “We got so niwd have to stop talking 15 or 20 minutes and simmer down,”' one juror said. “It was pretty bad,,^ We knew it would never change.” The jury was seated in glowering silence around tee rec- tangular oaken table when Judge Leon Hendrick sent the Hint Smooth Traffic in Busy Area of Sink The area around tee sink is the busiest place in most kitchens. To make the most efficient use of space under the sink, a sliding towel rack mounted under the sink, roll-out shelves lor soaps and cleansers and a caddy for paper bags will help keep tee area neat. bailiff to pound on tee door and bring teem out for polling. The mistrial came last Friday. It astonished almost every-bpdy in this segregationist stronghold, including Negro leaders who-had pr^icted a “whitewash.” Quick acquittal had been free- ly predicted. The case had aroused strong passions. It was generally agreed that the jurors were in an unenviable position if any adverse verdict was returned. ■ The hung jury left the case right where it started. Beck- with's lawyers go before Circuit Court March 23 to determine the date of a new trial. Three-fifths of tee conqwnents of smog conie from automiteiles and buses, burning of trash and the heating of h<»hes, stiwes and office buildings. A Let Penney's Help You Redecorate! 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Mack is free w |2!,00fbond and will be'arraigned March 3. SIX COUNTS Veneklasen is charged in six counts with' receiving stolen cars transported from Ojicago to Holland. Mack is charged in ttree counts wiRi transporting stolen cars from Chicago to Holland jrnd Chicago Jo Grand Rapids. Both also are named In another count charging that they, conspired to transport stolen cars in interstate conunerce between August, 1962, and last October. Armed Forces to Be Unified British Defense Budget Higher for 1964-65 LONDON (^Prime Minister Sir Alec Douglas-Home’s gov-enfmenr announced t o d a y . a slightly increased defense Budg-. for 1964-65 and said all branches of the armed forces will be unified in a single department April 1. Emphasizing its desire to keep up Britain’s nuclear arsenal, the government proposed military expenditures ' 1,S98JWr.«r~poimdr billion), an Increase of 166,800,000 pounds ($450 million). The British defense budget is slightly more than 10 per cent of the $52.4 billion sought by Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara for the coming fiscal year, Mrs. Kennedy in NY Jotmcuff fy TTie government allocated $1;5 billion for the Royal Navy and nbout $1,4 billion for the army and Mr ioi^eJlbe renmind^ set aside for defense-related projects, including secret weapons research. UNIFIED DEFENSE Plans for-setting-up ^i unified defense ministry under a single secretary have been afoot for months. The defense bu^et, is-sue(i as a government white paper, said the point had now been reached where, subject to parliamentary approval, it was possible to name April 1 as the effective date. ■ NEW YORK fAPl^Mrs. John F. Kennedy, widow of the late president,-arrived-Tuesday with two secretaries for what was described as a visit of several days. Mrs. Kennedy is to discuss Mans for the library at Cambridge, Mass,, which will be built as a memorial to President Kennedy. . Warts, a virus infection of the outer layer of the skin, are most conunon on hands, fingers and soles of the feet. They are contagious, but often they just disappear.- The white paper reite^d the ^nservative government’s determination to make and keep in readiness Britain’s own nuclear armory. 'The opposition Labor party contends that this is a waste of money and that outlays for nuclear weapon; should be permitted to dwindle away as Britain’s means of delivery — mainly its jet bombers — become obsolete. ' “It is the government’s policy not Mily to contribute forces to the main Western strategic deterrent but to maintain an independent British deterrent,” the white paiper sMd. Tfie jble of the jet bombers eventually will be taken over by British-built nuclear sunma-rihes capable of firing U.S.- built Polaris missiles. An initial force of four submarines planned and their missiles will be under British control, the government added. BUFfiT EVERY NIGHT 5 P.M. fb ♦ P.M. 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THURSDAY, FEBRUARY Vi' 10f)4 Ar^ll Report on Baker Probe Witness Pentagon Delay Likely ^ Force Memo WASHINGTON (« - Unless the political heat becomes unbear to sb-lng out indefinitely its “seardi” for a purported Air Force memo refiecting adversely bn a key witness in the Bobby Baker probe; Assistant Secretary of Defense Arthur Sylvester promised yesterday to check on whether snch a It appears likely the Pentagon may try as long as it can to answer all inquiries on the matter by saying it still is checking. ........★ Whether the Defense Department and %e Johnson administration can withstand the pressure in this campaign year remains to be seen. " ALLEGATIONS OF LEAK —-jphi^ have been allegations that the IVliite Housn~w. some other source in the administra- tion leaked to columnist Drew Pearson a memo contain^ derogatoiy matei^l mi fiie milr-tary career of Don B. Reynolds, a Silver Spring, Md., insur-nace man. Lawton Serviceman Dies From Injuries SUMTER, S.G. 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Iks 60-minuleTinirir. #763D Gat Range, 36-inch................. 129.88 "Satisfnetion j^uaranleed or youi' inoncy back* SEARS Dountowii roiitiac IMioiic I F r>-1171 THE FONTIAC/ PRESS. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 13 1964 M Intends to Win Big Barry Sees Calif ornia as HIS Golden State WASHINGTON (J) — Sen. Bar-, Two of Grddwater^ rivate^for ry GoWwater, apparently stak- the RepwbUcan presidential ing much of his presidenUal! . ^ o * „i Nelson A. Rockefeller and Sen. hope on California, aims to turn ^^rgar^t Chase Smith of Maine its primary into a bandwagon that would carry him to the Republican nomination. Panning for votes ft the Golden State, the Arizona conservative says the victor in the June 2 primary “wili be the Republican nominee.” -^braved l^ew Hampshire’s be-low-zero weather ft pursuit of votes in that state's March 10 primary —- the first in the nation. ^ ^ ★ ★ ★ Shaking hands, and trooping his cavalcade through stores AhrGoIdwaftmd-a-OTc-Sft- and.~^t^-^eUe£. crilk. cized President Johnson for his Day dinner ft ^cramento last night that he expects to be the one, declaring: ”1 fttend tfr wft ft California —win big, both ft the primary electron and in the general elecUim ft November.” Californians, he said, “have repeatedly demonstrated that when they are given a choice between conservative principles and ultra-liberalism, they vote for the more conservative can- didatcJ’ - -- — ____ DESPICABLE ATTACKS At a news conference earlier in San Francisco, Goldwater said the John Birch Society tacks on the late President John F. Kennedy were “despicable’ but repeated that he will not disavow the organization’s support. He declared that the Americans for Democratic Action, the United Auto Workers Union and its president, Walter Reuther, are a “greater menace” to the American system than the John Birch Society. “These are ihe people who advocate socialism,” he said. foreign policy and chided Gold-water Jor^mderrating the importance of the New Hampshire primary, bwportantpbihary Rockefeller wiled it a very important iirimaiy i'because it is the first opportunity for the people_^-T-.-f^learn-where^ thfr various candidates stand on the important issues of the day.” Rockefeller, who even climbed a ladder yesterday to Flight of Minuteman Described as Success cape KENNEDY, Fla, (AP) —A Minuteman missile plunged back through the earth’s atmosphere after a 5,000-mile test flight Wednesday night, firing several rocket-powered dummy warheads designed to deceive enemy defenses. ^ The Air Force announced th6 intercontinental range weapon successfully flew its planned trajectory after blasting out of an underground launching silo at Cape Kennedy. LEAP YEAR ’64 AT WKC VALUES GALORE CHOOSE AN ALL-NEW 1964 QUALITY WATCH BY BELFORTE greet secretaries leanings out the window of a shoe-making plant, has stepped up his per- -son-to-person campaigning, His advisers believe Goldwa-ter’s popularity has slipped in the Granite State and that Rockefeller can win some of his supporters with more sidewalk politicking. -Mrs. Smith, meanwhile, was running pretty much the same kftth^-persomft-person cam-leveiyTi noicm KiiF Fa fliomo shnillHI a\ paign but pitched to the theme that “I’m not against anyone. I’m running just the t/Yay 1 do in. Maine, pn my record, and I challenge anyone to match it.” In the 23 years she spent ft the Senate and House, Mrs. smith said-she missed tmly.jone roll call Qiit of 1,591. "Not TOO OLD “I stood up to be counted" time- hut one------ should answer those people who say I’m too old to run for the pfesldency,” declared the 65-yeaf-old widow. Like Goldwater and Rockefeller, former Vice President Richard M. Nixon was pounding at Johnson’s foreign poii- Nixoh, who says he would accept a draft but isn’t seeking tbak|fte^4Cff»-^residential nomfta-tion, told a Republican Lincoln Day dinner in Cincinnati that Johnson’s policy is ftcbnsist uncertain. and appears to be weak. “It is dffflcult to name any place in the world where the United States is not being blackmailed," threatened, insulted or knocked around by some pipsqueak dictator,” he said. Italians Get a Raise for Cost of Living Hike ROME (AP) - Nine million Italian workers are getting 5 to 17 cents more a day because of the latest rise ft the cost of living. The cost of living index for the past three months rose three points. This meant automatic pay hikes for industrial, farm and store^ployes far the current quarter. Engineering Week LANSING (AP)-Gov. George W. Romney has proclaimed next week Engineering Week Michigan. 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SAGINAW. — mail ORDERS FILLED Bariietts 150 NORTH SAGINAW — Downtown Pontiac ~®lWTBirarMilTTFLlT»Ji: SATURDAY TIL 5:30! ••• AliCHtt GARNETT BameftrAII Powerful RACKS and RACKS of 1 MEN'S FAMOUS BRANRS I Suits and Topcoats /Values from $50 to $79.50 All from Our Regular Stocks REGBOOFED 3 FOR III |/iiiy 3 for Yourself or Share the Bargaim Wilh n Friendlj lYou Can Save MOO And More!| ^ FAMOUS BRANDS you know Klngnrtdgit Dunbrook Rocklyn Wornted-Ti^x atul (hlifm Extra Pants with Soma Suits $10 Wcmcroibcr—l'«»M Don’t iS'ood the C.onh jutt toy CHARGE IT! Bamett’s 150 N. Soginaw St. Noxt to Sears . Velour., ^'P-Coof., Too I foo"”*n*' Open Friday and Honday ISi/(htii 'til 9 t*.M. ^ M-: THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, ld64 ---------,----------,------^, ■ V , V-' * A-^13 Fa$hion Leaden for Over^ 30 Years THRU fEBRUARY 22 BUY-THE-BOX SALE “Sheerio Panties jj® Now4 SlMf Eich tor iiily *White nylon THE TRUNK........5.7....$2.00... $R.TR tticot 8-9....E2.S0....II.B0 Ponlin, lirmln|ham, R«yal Oak, ParnUala, Roohaalar North Hill Plata happily and helpfully a in jRimpin^-Jacko H , Originale with one* . p^ heel and sola. Shaped by nature to fit precious little feet. hmm hr tl Ihna^ the femtiln fsm Famous Jumping* Jacks fit and special “heel hug” feature make this moe perfect for graduate walkers. --------NEW STONE HOURS Mon., Thurs., Fri. anil 1st. 9i00 to 9; Tues. and Wed. 9i00 to 6)00 SECURITY CHARGE ACCOUNT SERVICE Tel-Huron Shopping Center FE 4-0269 '‘Oakhtnd County's Largest Shoe Store" GHOCOUTE HEARTS 10‘ (0 69° N Bulk Candy 39.1 Boxed Chocolate Hearts^ ^ 49' .. Valentines Cards > Traditional Valontlnei , • Sontlmontal Valtntintt • Numorouf Valontlntt Good Soloction of Cards • Boked Card! • FerMnal Valentlim O' ^LkJlL sportswear All Weather COATS Be it spring showers or a day ablaze with sunshine, this a|l purpose, all washable "Weather Winky" cotton coat , is weather stport and fashion-wise. Convertible collar action back, pearlized buttons and flap pockets add attractive details to this Easter Parade plaid. Colors: Pink and Maize. Sites 4 to 6x $]298 with matchtng Beret Open Every Night 'til 9 ^STldRens' A ^ VAsaai •AWSaeMu OkmwM hand knit mohair blendcardigans $Q97 From large collection of Imported mohair blend bulky knit cardigans. White, pink, blue, aqua; 36 to 40. slim-fit stretch parits $597 From large collection of wool/nylon, royon/nylon' solid, novelty stretch pants, black or skipper,- sizes 8-18. •WTNKRTMAIsrs TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER Telegraph at Huron Rds. Amid Palmer Sweaters Are Here! See otir great collection of cardigans In comfortable, luxurious qlpoco and wool. Foihloned by. "Mr. Golf" himself, and mode by Robert Bruce, leader tn fine sweaters. 10 popular colors... S, M, L, XL. Arnold Painter Alpaca Cardigans $9195 by Rebsrt Bmee - Am I FREE PARKtNQ ALL STORES 0|Mn M«n., mS )SMUN’S STORES FOR MEN AND BOYS NOW! 20% OFF ON FAMOUS WISS PINKING SHEARS Come in today. Get subitontiai reduction! dn World Famous Wist Pinking and Skol-r loping Sheort, Choote from a complete aiiortment of the finwt quality Shears made. REG. 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FE 4-9567 A—14 \ --------%__L THETFONTIAC PRESS. THUliSDAY, J?TOR!JA11Y 13. I9ru - V , . A ’ 77*/ 7*' ■'77 '§ ' "t \ 1.\^i 7~T- ! "TUI 7 j. take your of famous labels These ore just some of the famous ^fothing bfofldsrwe corry. And what do they meorf *fo you? Lots of things: like croftsmonship beyond the ordinary .. . for these are makers who have built yheir reputations on excellent tailoring. Fabrics that are fine and distinctive . . , for these are makers who travel the world to find wonderful weaves, unusual shades, luxurious blends. They mean styling far above average ... for these ai;p the makers who set the pace, and keep it. Above all, they mean sound volue . . . for these are makers who boy in quantity, to sell at the lowest possible ptice. These dre the reasons we carry, so may famous brands: because they help us to bring you the best ideas, the best tailoring, and the soundest volues - and that's what we're famous for. THE PONTIAC PRESS jL-n: THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1964 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, Caucus Set in Clarkstofr 4 Area Primariesto Narrow Fields Voters in four area donununi-" ties, two.cities and two villages, wilMimit the field of contenders in spring, elections with balloting in primary elutions next week. . A'Caucus in Clarkston is also scheduled. Monday, ii]ualified electors of "“-^^VrOxf0Pd4mdJ8omeo.willre-l duce the number of candidates for office. In Wpcon voters will cut the number of-office- ___seekers from 11 to nine: with balloting Tuesday. WIXOM Two of the six candidates vying for two city posts will be - eliminated in the Wixom pri-. mary election. Incumbent Wesley E.. Me- mayor. Opposing him for the two-year term are Justice *of the Peace William Welke and City Councilwoman Mrs. Lottie Chambers. The other trio, one of whom will be moved off the ballot, is competing for the 4-year position as justice of the peace. They^ ai^TofmefTJayof Joseph Stadnik, 48438 Pontiac Trail; Elwood Grubb, 29201 Beck; and, Harry Mmiiier, 1742 Wixom. seeking tj8e!ection"'to~iheir seats on the council are incumbents Oscar Simmons Jr., Gun-nar Mettala and Fred year terms are Gene KohUiorst, 1412 Morning Dove, and Eton Nisses, 3980 W. Maple. The three council candidates ^*eceiving the highest number of votes in the April 6 nonpartisan election here will wuuthe vacant Transportation.” council seats. Lucas Miehl, general mangg- TROY In Troy, six candidates have the two three-year posts on City Commissioni The terms of Commissioners James F. Carey and Robert J. Bargert are expiring this year. Bargert has decided not to run for health reasons, but Carey Is seeking reelection. Other candidates seeking to fill the commission vacancies are former Troy Police Chief David E. Gratopp; Ronald Rounsville, 1516 Muer; Robert L. Doolin, 151 Tacoma: Clancy A. Fonseth, 314 Lyons; and Gerald R. Hershberger, 285 E. Long Lake. j Two of the extenders will be eliminated in Monday’s nonpartisan balloting. The top four vote-getters will face each other again in the April 6 general election. ROMEO Although the purpose of Monday’s primary election In Romeo is to eliminate one of the two Republican candidates for clerk, four declared Write-in candidates promise to make it a political battle. Vying for the clerk’s position being vacated by Mrs. Dorothy Carl will be Coiincil- Church in Union Lake to Be Prayer Day Host UNION LAKE - Commerce Methodist Church, H55 W. Commerce, will be host for a World Day of Prayer service for the Walled Lake area. The service will begin at I p, m. tomorrow. man Norman Engel and Mrs. , Phyllis Mellen, 254 E. SL Clair. Only two names will appear on the ballot for the three vacant two-year council terms. Incumbents Tony Galan and Jack MgPadden are seeking reelection.. The third incumbent whose wm- aypiriw^ j,«f u*.ngel, now running for clerk. Although Martin Durham 27h Beniamin filed nonrinatiBg {letitions for office as a DemdT crat he learned this week that hL^ petitions were invalid because a Democrat has not sought (rffice in ftie two previous elections. All others are Republicans. Durham is one of three who write-in candidates for the council vaelHcjpT'Othere^ are Ihiines C^ Burke, 355 N. Bailey and Thomas S. Raymond, 197 Washington. Opposing Incumbent Village President Wayne N. Black is another write-in candidate, former Police Chief Edgar Welsch. NEWS OF THE AREA Municipal League to Air - ^ ConsfifuffOR, Home Rule TROY — Discussions of constitutional implementation and' county home rule, will highlight the program for the Annual Re: gional Meeting of Region IV of the Michigan Municipal Lea^e here Feb. 20. Attending will be’ mayors, village presidents, councllmen and other elected and appoint- ^jerrfoar villages in Oak- land, Macomb and Gehesee counties. The program will open with two c(«icurrent sessions, one of which will be devoted to “Mass er of the Detroit Street Railway CommisrioH, will s^ak _ "tliie problems of’THeSilpoKan area transportation and their possible solutions. FUNT MANAGER , „ rru Another speaker will be Esley J-lmt’s C#J«an^er_lhoma& - director, Cditr will dtc/>iiG« fhA nnprfltmn _ . . ... .. Kay will discuss the operation of a bus system by a transpor-tefion authority in that city. —TModefltorwIRbi! W tx W Mayor Wesley E, McAtee. -In the concurrent session,' a panel will highlight various aspects of municipal problems. ★ ★ ★ A. C. Sherman, director, local government division, Michigan Msfr/teithite Set Race, Relations Series ROCHESTER — A series of discussions on race and human relations is scheduled for presentation at five Rochester area churches, beginning with a talk on “The Nature of Prejudice” Monday at ^t. Paul’s Methodist. |Dr. Robert Frehse, executive director of the Detroit Round Table of the National Conference of Christians and Jews, will speak at the 8 p. m. event. A Congregational minister and a member of many civic organizations, Dr. Frehse is former coehairman of the Detroit Board of Education’s Special Committee on Equal Opportunities in Education. ★ * ★ Last year, Dr. Frehse was awarded an honorary doctor of humanities degree by Wllber-force University, Ohio, for “statesmanship and pioneering in human relations.” MEETING SPONSOR Sponsor of the public meetings is the Committee on Human Relations, a group of Rochester area residents tern-porarily organized to bring speakers who are authorities in human relations to the community. Mrs. Alex Duffield of 6681 Winkler Mill, Avon Township, is chairman of the group. Future speakers and their topics include Mrs. Rita Scott of the Detroit Community Relations Committee discussing “Free Choice on Housing” on March 2 at St. Philip’s Episcopal Church. ★ ★ ★ “Population Trends and Movements” is the topic of the March 24 talk to be given by Detroit Councilman Mel Ravitz at University Presbyterian Church. EMPLOYMENT TALK Fourth lecture of the series* will be “Fair Employment Practices,” presented at St. John Lutheran Church on April 6. Speaker for this event is yet to be determined. Rounding out the programs will be the movie “Walk in My Shoes.” Dr. Morrill Clute, of Wayne State University, will lead discussion at this ...session, in St. Andrews Catholic Church on April 28. A * All meetings will begin at 8 m. Purpose of the series is to help residents determine the course the Rochester area will follow in combating racial prejudices. Monday’s ballot will include Pred Ebelu^Tv^T^^ for election as assessor. Ebeling was appointed to the post after the death of Elgin Anger. Library board members Edgar Priest and Thomas J. Schultz also are unopposed for reelection. . - ............ After Monday’s primary elec- *..-flamefr-appearmr-8n- tToTi^arTp^rWTieiarifie^fe: mainihg contenders will vie for office in the March 9 general election. OXFORD In Oxford, eight political hopefuls are vyi^ for three council vacancies, including the three incumbents whose terms expire. Village President Allew E. Valentine is seeking his fifth term on the council. Incumbent Trustees Lionel J. Kamm and E. Wayne Converse also will seek reelection. Monday’s pfimary election is necessary b^ause more than two have filed for each office. State Highway Department, will review the accounting and ad^ , reqiFeiihenTs oTTb- cally-shared highway fund revenues. For County Farmers Study Set on Migrant Labor County fruit and vegetable growers have taken another step to “keep our own house In order,” according to W. L. (Larry) Mainland, 2173 E. Commerce, Milford. Pontine is one of 10 sites across the state whore adult study courses have been started to help farmers meet the problems praed by mlga-tory farm labor. Mainland, vice chairman of the year-old Michigan Farm Labor Management Committee, said 300 farmers had enrolled in the unique classes statewide. Sr * ♦ He said the Farm Labor Marwigeroent Committee, sponsored by fhe Michigan Slate Horticultural Society, was con- i ceived more than a year ago to try to do something' toward solving some problems of the migrants. NONGOVERNMENTAL Tha group Is nongovernmental, he added, although aqv, eral state agencies have given advice and the Michigan Department of Public Instruction helped set up the study classes. Mainland said (he aim Is (he over-all Improvement of conditions for the migrant worker. “We’re attempting to keep our own house in order.’t he added. working conditions, poor productivity, earnings, local law enforcement problems and the like. ROPE FOR SOLUTION The farm labor group hopes to solve some of these and help both the migrant laborer and the producer. Mainland said he was pleased with the response to (he study classes, which are entirely voluntary. He said that previously they thought a hundred in the first classes would have made a go :*»- PTA's Join in Program The Avondale Schools PTA Council is joining with local PTA’s to present a combined Founders Day program at 7:30 tonight at the high school. . ..*.. .* ... * In addition to the presentation of awards, a film “The Innocent Party” will be shown. The movie deals with social health problems.^ Mrs. Ellen Lippert, a registered nurse on the staff of the Oakland County Health Department, will discuss the film after its showing. deadline. ASKS RELIEF Decker yesterday submitted a request that he be relieved of fire department duties until the City. Gouncil makes 'a decision would be scheduled to ride with the full-time patrolmen. Present village officials whose terms are expiring are Robert C; Waters, president; Art Papt^^ pas, clerk; Mrs. Prudence Dun-stan, treasurer; and Lloyd Sibley, assessor: and Herbert Beach, Harold Goyette and Earl Terry, trustees. and Mrs. William K. Hamilton of 8740 23 Mile announce the recent marriage of their daughter, Linda L. Hamilton, to James W. Dunseith.. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and, Mrs. William J. Dunseith of 1124 Crooks, Avon Township. The couple has been attending Central Michigan University. on the operation. We are no^loser to^in an-ilays ago,” the chief said this morning. “Either they want me to take this thing and run it like it should be run, or they don’t.” City Manager Frank C. Derby also is getting impatient, 4aut is unwiffirig to let Decke* quit. * “I have no intention of reliev-ii.g'Jhilil^’of any" duties pertaining to the fire department,” he said. “I think he’s a good man, I have confidence in his ability and I know he could work out a syst^ to the satisfaction of the city.” VOLUNTEERSHELP Since Hamilton’s resignation, the 13 volunteer firemen hav,e A base operator could be hired to work either with the strictly volunteer system or the police-fireman combination. ANXIOUS FOR START Decker said he would be will- ing to head a program once was chosen, but he is anxious to get started. '' . w * The volunteer firemen who have been pinch-hitting in their spare hours also are anxious to see a decision made. ' ★ They have indicated they will cooperate "under any system established by the council. Extra Registration Offered for Voters KEEGO HARBOR - Voters li|ours will be offered two special periods to register for the city’s April 6 election. ★ ■ ★ Mrs. Edward Windey, deputy registrar, will be at the City Hall from 11 a. m. to 2 p. m. Saturday and from 5 to 8 p. m. one remaining full-time fireman. The firemen also have served as radio dispatchers for the city’s four-man police department. “I’ve been in this business 1(1 1 years and I know what I’m I talking 'about,” Decker said, j Wednesday. “The department could be run | ♦ ★ * a lot more efficiently than it has j March 6 is the last day to ibeen and for less money.’’ i register for the spring election. ROSE ROSE ROSE ROSE ^ SMI N nin MRIB nnHSNEIIHBSI YOUR Choice • tlLF-WINOma WATOHIt • DIAMOND WATONIt p MvmrMmn . _ • OALINDAR WATOHIt • wAnROROor watohis tHOCK-RltlfTAirr WATONIt TEENAGERS ROCHESTEH-The Rochester Lions Club wilt present Its third Travel and Advenlure-Serhw’” programof 4hc legjion Saturday JU !?l. John Luthei'.an Church. The turnout, however, pf the Tlie film. “I.ehrtmm Hclrul to { Tlic farmers. Mainland explained, realize the problems I Indicates the farmers' that exlsL •- poor living and | for the problem. 300 fartners mul growers proved j Baghdad" will l>e shown by j a surprise. Malnliiml said Uiis | novelist John Weld at ,71.30 p. m. ■oncern 1 Tickets will be available «l the I i d«s)r. •I D*uU« OtMnintMa ... ly Of^ anS si^ /i lone 01 Com, Crown and Crynol Romoln intact PAY NO MONEY DOWN ONLY »1 A WEEK PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTER 3S7 N. Talagraph, Pontiac OPEN DAILY 9 to 9 jmwmLmmn M ROSEI^OSEROSEROSEIROSE w JL ^ _ THE IHJXTjAC PKKSvS X^URSDAY, FEBRUARY 43, 196^ Cuba Ruled Aggressor in Venezuela NEW YORK (DPD — Inter-American investigators have found Communist Cuba guilty four counts of aggression against Venezuela, UPl learned today from diplomaUc sources. The Venezuelan charges against Cuba, filed Dec. 3,1963, with the Organization of American ^States (GAS) and substantiated by a five-nation investigating team, include: • Subversive propaganda sent to Venezuela, from Cuba. • The training of Venezuela perrilias and terrcHists by HCubav. ^^iban^finahcing of insurrec-tiohary acts in Venezuela. Cuban dispatch of arms and instructions to (he V«iezuelan underground for subversim and terrorism------ 30 PAGES The report of the investigatorsruns about 30 pages and includes sev^al hundred pages of annexes and documents. The final draft is being pirepared in Washington now and should be distribute before the end (tf the mon^. After niember nations have IiaiHrohanee^^itady and di- SPORTCOAT SPECIAL Hi-BUnON CADET or CARDIGAN BOYS' and MEN'S rgn WOOLS-DACBm DARKS and LIOHTS CONN’S CLDTHRS T1 N. Saginaw sion’s report, the OAS council may mbet to act directly on it or summon a conference The OAS, acting as a body a lOi^e-cable was ^nt^Cuba i at Brazilian insistence advjsing Cuba of the nature pf the Venezuelan charges and inviting a written reply to. them although Cuba was expelled from the OAS family of nations a year ago. ^ ■Hie Cuban reply was a torrent of vilification including •Castro classification of tiie OAS as a' “ministry of colonies” for the United States. The rejectiwi by Cuba of the OAS invitation.left the way oj^n far publication and distributirai 4)f the inveatigatorsLj-epact. submitted by Venezuela-and which the OAS investigators based their findings on the four included, among other things r unto proyfelons PROPAGANDA^ mutual aid pact of Rio De Janeiro, then could apply one or more of the following sanctito against the Castro "regime= Cuba. Withdrawal of ambassadors; Cuban training of Venezuor rupture of diplomatic relations; lan terrorists. Docnments rupture of consular relations; showing more than 60 key parflfil nr total interruption of (tf ftp Venezuelan economic jelations or rail, sea, rninmimlBt party and its card-air, postal, telegraphic or tele- carrying affiliate, the revolu- toroi4sm."^4JovT4rl963, Venezuelan police raided the home of Luis Eduardo Sanchez Ma-dero. Community party member known to have travel^ to Cuba in 4962 and {H-esumed to have been trained there. ★ ★ ★ They found a large number of documents showing well drawn plans to seize the City of Caracas. ARMS FOUND Arms shifted for use in the planned Communist takeover of Caracas included mortars, ba-zookas and recoilless rifles^ nol^ usly used by Venezuelan terrorists. Only two days previously, Nov. 2, three tons of arms Subversive propaifanda. 100 hours of magnetic tape of Cas-tr^ and other anti-Venezuelan ciffnwwinlat broadcasts from were found cached-ow toxe-mote Paraquana Peninsula - Jerry Bergastrand, 19, of Rawlins escaped serious injury recently wdien his car collid^ head-on with a washing machine. Investigating officers ing machine from a nearby signboard and placed it on the highway near Rawlins. Bike Bandit Mits^ain CLEVELAND, Ohio W — A masked gunman took $20 from the night manager of a sei^ ^ica statl(»i early today am then sped off the same way he had awived-- on a bicycle.' Police asked the manager, DensU StopaU, if he^ecog-nizedtte robber “Come to think of it,” Stop-all said, “he was the same guy who held me up last night.” StopaU lost $60 in that robbery. The U.S. Navy’s first airplane uary 1911 from the battleship USS Pennsylvania stationed in Sail Francisco harbor.' • use of armed force against Cuba. 1 PRIOR INSTANCE There has been only one prior instance in the history of the inter-American system of collective sanctions recommended in line with the Rio Pact. In August 1960, the foreign ministers of 20 American nations voted at Venezuela’s request to break diplomatic relations with the Trujillo regime in the Dominican Republic, suspend trade in arms and war materiel and a partial economic boycott. The five-nation committee which investigated the Venezuelan .Miarges against Cuba comprised Argentina. Colombia.^ CoSta Rica, the United States and Uruguay. It spent a week in Venezuela (I^. 8-15) in an on-the-spot investigation of the Venezuelan charges. CABLE TO CUBA On its return to Washington, as having received subversive training Jn Cuba slnce 4960. Thie training In Cuba In guerrilla warfare in the past two years of more than 400 Venezuelans * * * Cuban financing of insurrectionary acts in Venezuela. A search of the luggage of deputy Gustavo Machados over his protest at Maiquetia Airport in the spring of 1963 on his return from Cuba and Moscow turned up iRiat is described as a huge amount of dollars in a false bottom in a piece of luggage. OTHER DOCUMENTS Machados is currently secretary general of the Venezuelan CdmmunlsLuarty^ther docu4|-ments described as of “embarrassing nature” were found in his brief case. He apparently had counted oh his tolia^ immunity to avoid search. Cuban dispatch of arms and instructions for subversion and IF YOU ARE FACED WITH THE PROBLEM OF MEETINC MONTHLY PAYMENTS ON YOUR BILLS Let Us Show You How To PAY OFF EVERYTHING ‘ YOUOWf!* REDUCE YOUR RRWSENT , PAYMENTS UP TO SO% MICHAEL ALLEN'S NEW "CONSOLIDATED PLAN" MAKES *1000 TO ‘10,000 AVAILABLE ON A HOME LOAN - repayment schedule Amount ’ lOYra. 15 Yrs. S1.BOO ' 16.60 : 12.66 2.200 * 24.40 18.57 3.000 • 33.30 . 25.32 5.000 • 65.50 45.20 10.000 110.00 84.39 1ST MORTGAGE REPAYMENT SCHEDULE LOTS OF MONEY AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY IND MORTGAGES AVAIUIIE HOME OWNERS! WITH OR WITHOUT MONEY BE FREE OF CARE AND WORRY • PAY OFF ALL YOUR BILLS ^PAY YOUR TAXIS-, • PAY OFF YOUR MONTHLY BILLS AND LOANS • BUY WITH CASH AND SAVE • PAY OFF REPAIR BILLS AND GET EXTRA CASH FOR WORTHWHILE NEEDS au THI omci WAHST YOU FE 4-4508 PONTIAC AKEA WO 3-1913—353-2623 COMMERCIAL LOANS >5,000 TO $100,000 MICHAEL ALLEN MORTGAGE SERVICE Coast-to.Coasl Private Coirsultution K-costs us 70. 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M ONTGOMERY £3 for bonus sinangc on Oiverside Riumrums n TYPES OP RIYERSIOI CAR AND TRUCK INGlinS 134“ 1t54-’(t Chty. I Cyl. Short Bloek fortes Cyl.,’S4-'gl 169— Dodco,nyiii.,SCyli'a" ICIN’"* hofd, 34$->5S iDr Every Riverside remanufachired engine is.lQQ% dismantied, then Teq«emWed~^wC^w new parti, Here’s what goes into every enjginei reground crankshaft, new rings, pistons, new bearings, recon* ditioned rods; xylmders reboreck— *Exchengo leu head Exchange MO MONIY DOWN Woven plastic seat coven add new-car elegance to old car interion I Extra tight weave withstands wear of daily use; resists stains, fading. Choose, blue, green or black. lOOX NYLpN SI^T BIIYf Metal to metal buckle. Moots SAE, ASBC standards. s -.5. ..V -.V.--. % X •• ^ ^ SURE STARTS! $A1E PRICED! 5 REASONS WHY RIVERSIDE IS YOUR BEST BATTERY BUY! 24-month Riverside Economy Bollery... there's good reason to buy Wards Riverside batteries I Two yean of dependable starting power plus Silver Cobalt coating protects larger plates for more reliable service life. Nw It's youn for Wards budget price I 12-VOLT AS LOW AS 10.88 EXCH. 88 2O-MONTM mVIRSIDI fTANDARD -Better quality than most new-car LOW AS batteries. Dependable long life service. Wards low orlce.low as 12-VOLT AS LOW AS 13.88 EXCH. 34-MONTH HEAVY DUTY 20% more capacity than new-car batteries for surer starts and longer life. Save at Wards I Low as 12-VOLT AS LOW AS 18.88 EXCH. 10 LOW AS 1488 I EP I-VoI! WARDS FINEST 42-MONTH Power plus! With 49% more start power than S.A.E. standards, Super power delivers when you noed it. You can rely on Rivoreide... Words quality battories. 12-VOLT AS LOW AS .......20.88 STORE 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. HOimS: MONDAY thru SATURDAY Pontiac Mall PHONE 682-4M0 Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Road SIGNATURE 3-IM-ONE IRGN WARDSflNISr-^POR DRY, | STIAii, f PRAY IRONINtt 1488 NO MONIY DOWN 17 steam vents, 32 sq. In. soleplate, and full-view heel make Ironing faster than everl Automatic touch-ond’spray button, color-keyed fabric dial (Including wash 'n wear settings), plus extra-brPad steam range for safer wash 'n wear Ironing. Chromed finish. (j REG. 12.99 IRONING TABLE WITH COVERand PAD SET 8 CHARBE IT Signature table hat off-set curved-leg construction to provide more knee room. Top vents direct steam, heat away from your lap^ Swivef front foot gives stability'on''-uneven floors. Rollers on rear foot. Buy now and save at Wards low sale price. QUICK COMFORT, lOW PRICE SIGNATURE FAN-FORCED NEATER, REG. 9.99 CNAROI ITI On-the-spot heat-perfect for small, ^'chilly" rooms. Circulates Rbt instantly, yet it operates quie)tly. 2-tone gray, ever-cool case with convenient osrrying handle, safety grill and no-mar feet. Powerful, 1320-watt colled heating element, switch. ALUMINUM COOK SEtl 10-ga. aluminum, thick as a stiver dollar, spreads heat evenly with little water, saves vitc|mins. Set includesi 1-qt. and 2-qt. sauce pans; 10' chicken fryer; 3-qt. combination cooker and four -covers. Black Bakelite handles. ^ i STORE 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. HOURS: MOMDAY thru SATURDAY PoMtiac Mall PHONE 682-4(i40 Telegraph at Eliiabeth Lake Road I -V- HB PONTIAC PHESS, THTRSDAT. FEBErARV I'l'. 1 .'X * • --»»•- _^^ .._ *-------------------"CHARGE IT”.. _ j.-'..—1.- ---- USE THESE BARGAINS NOWI r CLEARANCE CLEARANCE Montgomery WARD BOYS’ ASSORTED WASH’N’WEAR COTTON AND FLANNEL SHIRTS , Leave it to Wards fo"■t>rnig"~7S>tr HFinC~ ^ quality shirts priced so low! Carefully I tailored in warm oreshrunlc cotton and flannels that rarely need ironing. Assorted colors ancf" sizes fd chooser from. Other shirts sale priced from $1 to 1.99. 199 999 I Jr. mm ^*p . Save how oh boyi' corduroy slacks for school or play. Choose from belt and beltless models While they last. Assorted-colors and sizes. And romem« ber, just say Charge It when you shop at Ward's. CLEARANCE BOYS’ZIPPER FRONT AND BUTTON CARDIGAN SWEATERS 299 Save ]now at a Ward low price! IdepI for school or dress Shop early while selection is best. CLEARANGE BOYS’yW^TER COAf ASSORTMENT Buy now/dnd save art boyi',. coatiy'^hooie from a wide cela^tion of cdl^t and styi«(. sizes 1 But early :tioiKj* best. Cap Assort-»urChoice....... SPECIAL BUY MiEN’S 4NSUUTED WARMTH SHORT SLI|¥E S^ORT ^ FOR THE ACTIVE ^ . OUTPOORSMAN ‘ JACKET ’H PANTS |88 Here’s a value yoy can’t offord to miss! Classic and ivy-look sport shirts finely tailored in easy-care cottons, rayons and cot-/''" ton-rayon blends. Choose plaids, checks, stripes, solids, all-over prints, embroidered motifs. Latest colors. In sizes S-M-L-XL. y ■ You get triple warmth from Words quilted underwear! outer shell of Nylon taffeta; Da-cron*polyesterfill; cotton thermal-knit lining. Washable. Buy now and save! Poy no^ money down when you chargo it at Ward'll LOW, LOW PRICE HEAVIEST DEHIM POWR-HOUSE WARMLY LINED TWILL JACKETS 588 RIO. y.ta Tough 8.2-oz. Goley & Lord combed cotton twill jackofi with warm Orion* acrylic, rayon, cotton, wool blend linings. Sanforized* for perfect fit after every washing, mercerized for extra strengths Concealed zip front; Vat-dyed colon. Sizes 36 to 46. Save now I MIN’S RIG. 2.98 WiSTIRN-STYLID SADDLE PANTS 244 Corral this bargain nowl Extrh rugged Sanforized* 13%-oz. coorse-weove cotton denims hove copper riveted front pockets, reinforced bock pockets and belt loof>s for I longer wear. Popular wieitem-stylirtg...snug-fitting seat and legs. Zipper fly. Save now I *M.». thrlnk. 1% STORE 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. HOURS: MONDAY thru SATURDAY Pontiac Mall PHONE 682-4940 Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Road \ THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 13, 1964 Says Dem Primary Is Still Open l^slnslu Blasts Mackies Unity Statement LANSING (UPIl—, T. J]{ksb. THLRSDAV. FEBKL’ARV, lii. 1964 -ii;- Versions OAS Probes Panama Rift PANAMA cm (PPI) - A “task-force” of inter-American kivestigators visits the sites of last month’s bloody anti-American riots today to investigate conflicting U.S. and Pananm-nian versions of the trouble. ' A sonrce close to flie five-man investigating committee sent here by file Organization of American States said it wfll “leave no stone unturned” in its effwts to determine exactly what happened. The committee is looking into Panama’s charge that the U. S. d e le n se-of the Canal Zone against armed marauders amounted to “aggression.” Four Americans and 21 Panamanians were killed in the riots. TO VIEW FILM Today’s schedule for the five L,,a t i n American ambassadors making up the committee included a look at a local television station’s film of the riots -Well as . the Ait-.to. of violence in the zone. Ihe investigatm began their wwk yesterday by conferring for two hours with Foreign Minister GblOeo Solis and for 4$ minutes with former Assistant Secretary of State Edwin Martin, U. S. representative in the investigation. They also interview^ the principal of Panama’s.national high school, chief source of the students whose protest against the raising- of the U. S. flag at Balboa High School in the zone started the disorders. The committee. has already. Quads Are Bpfn to Womajr^in Mexico Town MEXICO CITY +- Quadruplets have been born to the ^e of a Mexican farmer — the received Written reports-,, from | first and last child arriving 40% > hours apart. All girls, the quads were the United States and Panatna giving the two countries’ varying versions of file violence. FULL COOPEEAmON A committee spokesman said Martin had Promised Ml^ cooperation-in the wortrof”thr - ■' investigates. Tlie“s^ prolonged births, how- born to Mrs. Juan Mendez, 35, in her home in tiny Sieira Gorda, ISO miles west oP>Mex-ico City, between 6:30 indicated that the committee ever, did Hot set a record, may confer witii tiie -U. S. Mrs. Mendez and the quads were taken to a civil hospital in nearby Jalapa and cared for at government expense. The infants were placed in incubators. Their weights were unavailable. Burma Chief and Chou to Air India Dispute RANGOON, Burma (JV-Communist Chinese Premier Qiou En-iai is scheduled to arrive tomorrow for a four-day stay that has taken on added significance with the recent flying trip to India by Burma’s, military ruler, Gen. Ne Wiiv" Diplomatic murces say Ne Win was briefed by Prime Minister Nehru on India’s position on the India-China border dispute whidrTiared'Into a shooF ing war in late 1962. Ne Win is expected to pass on Nehru’s views to the Red Chinese leader. RCA VICTOR . ZENITH • NORGE • ADMIRAL • MOTOROLA • HOTPOINT • SUNBEAM LIMITED QUANTITIES SPECIALLY PRICED L Bathroom leolot. Largo ... I SUNBEAM Shavomaitor doluxo I moh't fhavori. Including $12« I Ironing Board Foam pad & hoover rug thampooor. Brand now $2|66 HOO^ WASHERS hRCA WHIRLPOOL 2-eydo fully automatic. Lint filtor. Top foaturoi. Prov. yoar^»' modol . ^133 HOTPOINT All Porcolain, 3-cyclo Supor Doluxo. A tontotion at . ^46 RCA WHIRLPOOL wringdr waihor. Lorgo capacity. Prov. yr'o. mod. »69 PHILCO 2-ipood, 4-cyclo outo.__ wathor. Doluxo modol. Prow yoart floor modolt............. DRYERS I HOTPOINT automatic oloetric. -Prov. Voor'i modol*. A *tool at . $92 RCA WHIRLPOOL fully automotic doluxo. 2-cyclo. Prov. yr's. modol*................... m9 ni8 *142 REFRIGERATORS $229.95 natlonbtly *old 13 eu 2-door rofrigorator with largo top froozor. Now in crato* . *159 *147 *156 RCA WHIRLPOOL 14% cu. ft. boHom-door Frooxor-Rofrigorotor combina- *276 Nationally odvortiiod 15% cu. ft. 2-door rofrigorator with giont, 190-lb. bottom froozor. Vory doluxo. Rog. $299.95 ............................ *199 2 cu. ft. rofrigorotori. Idool for offico* and cottogo*................. *88 RCA WHIRLPOOL 12% cu. ft. 2-do« rofr^orotor-froozor*. Prov^ yMr’*^ *207 NORGE 12 cu, ft. doluxo rofrigorotori, 5-yoar warranty ........................ *157 WESTINOHOUSE 14 cw. ft. 2-door rofrigorator with largo froozor on bottom. Fow loft.............. *277 HOTPOINT 2-door rofrlgorator-frooz-or*. Prov. yoor** modol*................ »197 $629.95 AMANA 16 cu. ft. 2-dr. rofrigorator with giant 249-lb. capacity ^ttom froozor ....................... • »487 imm *168 PHILCO 10 cu. ft. cho*t froozori *152 WESTINOHOUSE 18 eu. ft. top doluxo upright froozor*. In eroto*. *226 ADMIRAL 10 cu. ft. upright froozor*. Out thoy go.......... ............... *127 NORGE 12 c S-yoor watra ft. upright froozor*. , Solo-prlcod . . . *177 AMANA 12 cu. ft. upright froozor*. Supor doluxo. Fow loft................. *198 *199 NORGE 15 cu. (t/cho*t-typo froozor. I Solo-prlcod.......................... *156 GAS • ELECTRIC RANGES DETROIT JEWEL SO" go* rango*. Ovon control. Full warranty .................. *69 ! HARDWICK 30" go* rango. Doluxo *97 I^APTr^ SHE go»^ coltago*. Brand n RCA WHIRLPOOL 36" 2-ovon go* rango*. Motchlot* doluxo footuro* *197 RCA WHIRLPOOL 2-avon oloctrk *177 ADMIRAL 30" fully automatic oloctrio rango. Doluxo footuro* . *121 *157 Philco Food Disposer mil t-TIAH IlllViOl IN NOMI PROCTOR Stoam-Dry Iron* in corton*. Foctory tocendi .’ . , $499 LADY EMPRESS Hair Oryor*. tC97 ZENITH 21" color TV *ot*. Atov. yoar-z $07A. DoluxoPlirbw Hi carton*......... . “ - floor mcd^ol* 0/0 CLEANERS • POLISHERS || CLEANERS • POLISHERS $69v9»4fOeVER oloctric floor wa«h- $27^ I •r. $2399 HOOVER poli*hor. Doluxo modol $^Q87 5460. Now In corton* ... . . . . — COLOR TV PRICE SMASH :*353 $1987 ;*25’^ HOOVER ' upright vacuum cloanor. $>1/177 Di*count talo-pricod................. :*83‘ Comploto with all ottochmon LASTS DAYS THURS. FRI. & SAT. Why chancu paying mor* •iMWharb? Heiw'a the top brandf, quality, ••rvicu, and prlcat Hera's big selections, ! easierterms, immediate delivery, and guaranteed satisfaction! . . . Plus the guarantees and warranties you'd PORTIAC Mall Store DAILY 9 a.ni. - 9 p.m. oxpoct on nationally advorti dvortisod famobs brand appliancosi Many, many moro not advortisod. Most now In cratos or cartons. Somo floor modols. Sqnto in limited quonti-tios; Fow ono-of-d-kind. I All prices F.O.B. store. I Merchandise subject to I prior solo. Hurry in! ' No Money Down! ELECTRIC HOUSEWARES • SMALL APPLIANCES O.E. 9-cup coftaa makSr, Fully automatic........ *1Q76 WESTINOHOUSE 4-*llco too*tor. Top doluxo .............. *16^^‘ G.E. HandMlxor.3-*pood. Discount ta1o-prlc*|d . . . $798 UNIVERSAL Con Oponori. Top footuro* . ...... $899 BVI Can Oponor - KnKo Sharponori. *11* WESTINOHOUSE Wafflo-Makor*. *1786 WESTINOHOUSE Combination I •r-Frypon. Top doluxo.. *1497 SUNBEAM Hand-Mixor*. 3-*i $784 WESTINOHOUSE Doublo Btonkot *10/6 *2’2 GENERAL ELECTRIC Stoom, ipray, dry Iren. Now In carton* *1397 O.E. battery operated toothbruth. GENERAL ELECTRIC teattor ovon. $799 VOGUE combination blond-hand $799 mixor. Doluxo feature*. . ....... / PROCTOR-SILEX toa»tor-ovon. Boko, $093 brail, grill. Tow loft ..... . ..- w SUNBEAM oloctric fry-pon. Largo $1199 tizo.' With covor and control* ... 11 Sunbeam *toam-dry iron. Flnoit $787 mode, fabric diol. Lightweight . . / WESTINOHOUSE portable oloctric $1177 mixor with bowl on ttond.............. 'll WESTINOHOUSE roo*tor. 18 qt. $0^96 egpoelty. Cook* comploto mool . SUNBEAM oloctric egg cooker. Tor- $1199 rifle item. Fow loft............. 11 , GENERAL ELECTRIC automatic pop-up $1199 tooitor. Ditceunt priced......... I I GENERAL ELECTRIC hair dryer. $1077 Multl-hoat, with hat-box............ IjC WESTINOHOUSE top doluxo hair $1 C97 dryer. All foaturoi...... , . r. . Id GENERAL ELECTRIC top doluxo hair $rT99 dryer, Sultco*# stylo............' ^ I / 1964 GENERAL ELECTRIC 21" color *329 ADMIRAL 21 "colorTV. Supor-doluxo. $OOA I Proviouz year'z modol*............. OOU | $995 RCA VICTOR 21" color TV-*fereo combination with AM-FM radio, FM ttereo ro«fin._D«lii.q etihinatry »669 -OrrRrPIC2I" color TV comb, with *teroa. Hi-Fhdoloxe wood lowboy. . .. ‘398 1 TELEVISION GENISAL-ELECTtHC poHbbfe TV *et*. "TTandle & Ant. Prev. year'* model* ... ‘84 WESTINOHOUSE 19" portable TV *et*. Handle end ant. Deluxe ‘107 ADMIRAL 17" portable TV *et*. Handle end antenna. Deluxe .' , . *105 RCA VICTOR 23" TV Lewbey*. A J149^ ZENITH 19" portable with ant. nno. Previeu* year's model* . . *121 PHILCO 19" portable. Prev. *102 PHILCO 2b" lowboy *ets. Fabulou*ly low price ‘138 ZENITH 23" TV con*olette*. Prev. year's models *161 GENERAL ELECTRIC 23" TV Sets. Swivel style *157 PHILCO 23" upright console*. Prev, year's mcdel* *135 ADMIRAL 23" TV-*tereo combination with AM-FM radio. Very deluxe. . ., *238 PHILCO or GENERAL ELECTRIC 16" portable ,TV. With built-in handle and antenna. Your choice *97 CAPEHART 23" TV. Wood lowboy cobinet*. In crate* . *129 OLYMPIC 23 'TV-Stereo-AM.FM com-blnotien. Beoutiful weed lewbey. _‘23Z I STEREO - Hi-Fi Portable HI-FI sets with automatic changer. 4-speed. Luggage type. New in cartons : . 1 *26 Console STEREO. 4 speakers. Danish oiled walnut wood. Beautiful lowboy style . . .- *103 RCA VICTOR Stereo combination with AM-FM Radio. Wood lowboy. . . . . *139 Portable Stereos with outometle record changer. 4-speed. Detachable speaker. New In cartons *29 Beautiful wood lowboy*. 4-speed *138 ADMIRAL stereo with AM-FM, FM-multiplex stereo radio. 4 spedkers, 4-speed changer. Weed con^le lowboy *137 $59.95 SYLVANIA portable storoo With detachable extended . speaker, deluxe feature* end cose ....... *39 RADIOS - TAPE REG. GENERAL ELECTRIC 6-tran*i*tor pock- . et radio. Complete with carry cose, earphone, batteries $897 GENERAL ELECTRIC clock-radio. Deluxe. In cartorit PHILCO 6-tran*istor pocket radios $977 ond batteries. Powerful perlormer PHILCO 5-tube table radio. Attractive cabinet. New in cartons. WOWI $799 4-tronsistor tape recorders. Includes tape, mike, carry case and batteries. Lowest price ever $897 8-Tronsistor radio. Pocket-size. Complete with batteries, carrying cose and earphone speoker $6«4 AM-FM portable radios. Powerful 9-transistors. Includes carry case strap, earphone and batteries *18’^ ZENITH 8-tronslstor radios. Shirt 1 pocket size. With batteries, carry $0 A/7 1 case, earphone. Deluxe. Gift box. ibO | $119.95 .BELL carlcidge jnonaural tope rocorder. Complete *59 $I99.9S BELL cartridge stereo record, stereo playback tope recorders. 5-Itqck, 2 mikes, complete *69 $179 95 NORELCO stereo playback tope recorders Complete *89 NORELCO 6-transislor completely portable tape recorders. Complete with mike and tope. Pushbutton controls. Carry handle. Deluxe *66 $399.95 NOPELCO 4-track 100% Irantlsloftzod 4-*pood tope record »o record, ttoroe playback. Mo< 400. Camploto with alt occi »orlo*. Very deluxe.................. ‘197 im SATISFACTION CUARANTEEO MAI $24” Phon* 082-2330 ■llcatKim L«l(« fCcf., Oornar Tetlagraph Neill Door to J. k. Nuoeen Co. . / a Save *2 to »5 off comparable values.- WASHABLE BLEND STRETCH SLACKS Jiid 2,09 comparable value 4.95 i Tailored of a rayon, acetate, stretch nylon [ blend . . . water, stain, spot resistant. . . stiituped for trim fit. Spring colon, 10-18. FOAM LAMINATED* NYLON SKI SHELL special I: H r comparablo value 10.95 Ounces light, pounds, warmi Zip front jacket of waterproof nylon, laminated nylon lining ... bold and colorful prints, sizes 10-18. Our entire stock! LADIES’ VflNTER COATS 20^^ OFF already roducoil prlcosl Ivsry oi»*l Nr trtmme4 end choow yours, llmn deduct 20*... see wiiai y HUM'S WHY • We lell for coih onlyl . YOU SAVE: Phnty of Frvp Parking ’ ClurkitoN Store Open Sundays 12 Noon to 6 P.M. IN PONTIAC, 200 North Saginaw Street. IN CLARKSTON-WATiRFORO en Dixie highway, Nerth ef Waterford Mill w THE-POMTIAa.PRESS, I'HURSDAY, FBBRUABt 13, 196« TMore^ Witnesses for Probe?^ WASHINGTON (AP) - The Warrai commission may call on possibly two new wltmsraes next to build its growing pile of evidence on^ the assas* sination of I^esident J<*n F. Kennedy. Warren said the testimony of the plump Fort Worth practical nurse was u^ul “in some respects,” but kid it did not pro-tide“anjL facts that wmtld change the picture as we knew it up to die time she testified.” BULK OF EVIDENCE Chief JusUce Earl Warren told newsmen he did not fedw whether one would be a janihar who reportedly saw shup^ioot-er Lee Harvey Oswald en route to a snipo'’s hideway ^rtly before the deadly rifle shots were fired in Dallas last Nov. the totrovert^ ra-Marro fore the cwnmissioh-inCl^ihg' a five-volume FBI report and the testimony of (hmald’s youk widow, Marina — indicates the 2^year-old Marxist killed Kennedy unsiidk- The chief justice said tiie commission has received noth- charged with killing Kennedy, finished ttiree days of voluntary testimony Wednesday by statii^g she believk: " WAS INNOCENT —That Oswald was innocent, but “I realize that as a human being he could be guilty.” —That despite lack of any specific supporting evidence, agent of the UjS. Central Intelligence Agency who was “set up _ to take the blame" for the slay- —That the assassin “is still at large." lief was based on no proof, fact, or statement of her son, but asserted: “I have as much circumstantial evhtence Utat he was4an agaitL as_flie DaUas police have that he was the tiate the mother’s belief thal Oswald ever was an intelligence agent or worked for any federal agency. Mrs. Oswald admitted her be- She said she had not been in ♦K- touch with her son for a year the^assassination; _ THE JANITOR The Dallas News reported on Tuesky that one of the adtness-es who mi^t soon -be called was a janitor hi the Texas School Bo<* Depository, where Oswald worked f^ a few assassin- That was the building, OVer-lookhig tfe route of the presidential motorcade, where police found an Italian-made carbine beside a sixtii-floor window. Oswald’s widow identified'’ the weapon as his. The News said the janitor has reported that Oswald spoke to him on the fourth-floor stairway. The commission may also call a witness, the News said, who saw a slender man with a rifle at-a--sixth-floor ~ window bm^ thwlhtlrwar* Secret-SCTvica agent posted Oiere to protect the president, Warren told reporters that one or two more witnesses may be brought into the closed hearings next week, but said no, definite schedule has been fixed. When advised of the Dallas, repaTIhB'chfefiiisaee'^a^ and smiled before repjying; “Well, maybe thejLJmow =_r don’t.” Romney's Adviser to Talk on Children A sp^ial adviser to-Gov. Romney vrill be the speaker to^ night at 6.30 at the aimuafmeet-ing of the Oakland Child Guidance Clinics at the Village Woman^s-aub,^J?D„E. JUng vlser on mental health, will dis-0^, the effect of marital dis-hannony on the developmkt of children. An a $ s 0 c 1 a t e professor at Wayne State University, Dr. Dr. Peter Martin, sp^ial ad- Lake Road, mobmfleldIHIitor—^Marfimis-al^ of the ^tate Advisory Council on Mk- tal Health Services. Ex-Federal Mediator “Dies of Lung iHnesSi ^ WASHINGTON- (AP)-Joseph F. Finnegan, 61* director of the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service from 1955 until 1'961, died Wednesday of a lung ailm«it. After leaving his federal post. Finnegan joinedrtHe New Ywk State MledlaUra Board but resigned last November because of illness. He was bon to Norft Adams, Mass. Midland Woman Dies MIDLAND (AP)-hfrs. Viola Richards, 54, of Midland, was Ttaied-Wednesd^ whk- hja-.car was strode by another vehicle. Went wit d cttotfol areHut » tree on Midland Road nMtt in SMM MovIm EXPEBT'S CAMERA SHOP 57 W. Huron ». FE 5r^l5 SPECIALIZE INEVnYDAY Ex^Engineer Leader Dies in Philadelphia PHILADELPHIA (AP)-Fran-cis De Sales Frlel,69ra former president of the American Society d Civil EngiMera. aM of-the American Institute of Consulting Engineers, died Tuesday. He retired recently as chairman-of.- Um> board of Al-bright and Ftel, Incy a consulting engineering firm. FURNITURE 861 0OBIS RD.-PONTIAC (JUST EAST OF OPDYKE RD.) WAREHOUSE owsonv STARTS FRIDAY, 12 ROOH TILL 10 P.M. SATURDAY 9 AM. to 10 P.M. - SURDAY 12 to 7 New • Freijlit Domo|ed • Distressed ATTEHTIOR; Apartmont House Owners, Homo Owners, Motel Operators and Renters FURNITURE • CARPET • APPLIANCES SAVE! SAVE! SAVE! *50,000.00 Inventory - Thousands of Itoms! 71 Maple Finish Bunk Beds,.,.. from *29.95 39 Two-Piece Living Rooms_from *77.00 16 Sectionals.............from *139.00 EARLY AMERICAH - MODERH -PROVINCIAL 2,000 yds. of 100% Continuous filament nylon Carpeting - to be liquidated. At $3.97 per yard. Come early for best selection of colors. 200 Pieces of bedding - all sizes FREE COFFEE, DONUTS AND GIFTS! NO MONEY DOWN!! NO PAYMENTS TILL APRIL!! PISCOUKT PIUCBS S-A-V-E E0% AND MORE Some Items Bcloiir Dealers Cost Where to Go?? 861 Doris M (Former Rbller Rink) Savon Furniture Co. DRIVE OUT A Limil SAVE A LOTI WALK, RUN,/ FLY. HOLD YOUR PLACE IN LINE. YOUR DIRECTIONS FOR SAVING $$$ WALTON BUVft PRESCRIPTION TRUSSES FILLED BY US QUALITY DRUGS LOWEST PRICE Huron Struut 4895 Dixie Highway umiEitimfiTn THE rbxVTIAC PRKSS, THURSDAY. FEBRl ArV 13. 19(51 R-9 Costume Jewelry SALE! Sp«ciall Your Choicol 2Jt Oxford & Hi Shoe Styles! I MEN'S AND BOYS' I CANVAS SHOES K-mari Dlicount Pricedt Enjoy Wakins Up to Music! General Electric Clock-Radio Sale RpfpUarly parihl Sav« on new conlume jewfiry - nock-1hco», hracetfli, farrlnui. Set nilh nimrkliiiK brUlianU and colored •loiiri.. I Kpc. 1761 Whitfl ranvto 'I pyni nlioen Willi molilrd ^5 oiirtioii nolai), rueliion 'f iiioole. Mi and low 3 olylri. Mrn'o 7*ll,|>oyK' f :i-6. ^2 Specially Pricfd, 2 Dayi! Radio turn* on at limn »ni, auioiiialkaliy. (5|l!! elock is itlfnilarlinf. Save!' ' , COTCHGARD ; ^ ? | Trim Brushed Pigskin "BQWLERINA" i BOWLING SHOES I Se0tehgtu^d^ TrMtmd! Riittod! Rf«i»U noil, aliada walor, waaliaa clean and drica oofl. Black, bluo, while, red and areen. 4-lQ. ^2 GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD B—10 - THE PONTIAC PRESS THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, County Tops Metro Area in Housing Unit tnaease ' Oakland County showed the largest gain 4a housing units last year throughout the five counties-that- comprise Uie De_--.. troit metropolitan area. Figures released today by the Oeb^t Metropolitan Area Regional Planning Commission listed a net gain of {B,N3 units in Oakland County. Macomb County followed with 6,026 units. Wayne County, including-Detroit, was tiiird with 2 Admitted for Injuries i in Crashes A 9-year-old girl and a Pontiac man were admitted to Pontiac General Hospital following ...............i yesterday ; this morning. They are Cathy Ann varre, 1590 Transparent, Inde-pendenca, Township, and Rich-”l?a Br OariE, 21, of »24 Mc-Cllntock. The youngster is in fair con-~l dition with facial lacerations. " Clark suffered internal injuries and facial lacerations and is in “ satisfactory condition...... ★ -k k • " Cathy was injured at 4 p.m. yesterday near her home when she ran into the path of a cai 2 driven by Richard A. Brown, 31, - of 6399 Eastlawn, Independence : Township, according to sheriff’s ", deputies. : CAR SKIDS - Clark’s car skidded on Tele--H- graph at the Orchard Lake Road * overpass and slid sideways into : an oncoming car driven by j: Chester K. Murphy, 38, of 110 - AUen IjSc, lln&nlSKeTr^ Murphy was treated and re-' leased after the 1 a.m. accident. ; Murphy told Pontiac police it appeared that Clark, lost control on the slippery pavement, was snowing at the time. Asks Hearing on ‘ A 19-year-old Holly youth yesterday demanded a preliminary hearing after being charged with negligent homicide in the traffic death of 12-year-old Brandon Towpship girl. James A. Coak, 4650 McGinnis, was arraigned before Orion Township Justice Helmar ; Stanaback, who scheduled the ' examination for March 10. . Coak was the driver of a car that smashed head-on with a car driven by Eva L. Balmer, 31, of 995 MIS, Brandon Town--ship, * ★ ♦ A passenger in the Balmer car, Sharon R. Morgan, daugh-’ ter of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Morgan, 1895 Perry Lake, died two days after the Jan. 29 crash. ★ a ♦ ' The accident happened on Perry Lake Road near Sherwood in Brandon Township. * * * Coak was released on 3200 ^nd pending his hearing. Deaths in Pontiac, Neighboring Areas 5,402 units. Washtenaw County gained 1,637 and Monroe 495, —The number, units in Oakland County r sented a 40 per cent gain those in 1962, according to the planning commission. NEW UNITS Altogether 7,188 new units were built in the county. The net gain is achieved by subtract- of demolitions in the county last The Oakland County gain is the largest since 1957. The ^inJs largely attributed to an‘increase in multi-family housing units, said the planners. ★ ★ ★ Non-single family units accounted .for 31 per cent' of the new construction in Oakland County last year, they said. SOUTHFIELD LEADS Southfield led the county in new residential units with Royal Oak was second with 848,^ and Bloomfield Township third with 829. Other municipalities having -tte- bulk of new housing DRIVING DEMOCRATS-Mrs. George Kallackey, of 832 Duke, Milford (left), Tony Pappas, of 2642 Littletell, West Bloomfield Township (center) and Mrs. Shawlene Stan- ley of 1167 Dudley, are coordinating the Democratic party’s 1964 membership drive in the Pontiac area. They look over a list of prospective members at $3 annual dues each. struction in the county were: Beverly Hills, 236; Birmingham, 305; Farmington Township, 321; Pontiac, 270; Royal Oak Township, 563; Troy, 243; Waterford Township, 385; West Bloomfield Township, 328. Avon Township, 148; Clawson, 109; Commerce Township, 126; Farmington, 134; Independence Township, 135; Orion Township, 141, Md White Lake Township. 109. lO-Year-Old Gives Birth in Chicago CHICAGO (AP)-A 10-year-old girl gave birth Wednesday night to a 5-pound, 15-ounce girl, and became the youngest mother on record in Chicago, ★ ★ ★ ; . The child-mother, a fourth: grade pupil, and the baby were reported in good condition by the physician who delivered the infant by caesarean section at St. Bernard’s Hospital. The child had been taken to the^ hospital three weeks ago after a parochial school teacher discovered the girl was pregnant. k . k Hospital authorities said the baby was taken to St. Vincent's orphanage. They said there is little chance the young mother will ever see her daughter. , ★. ★ k A 16-year-old boy was said to be the father. The girl, whose parents are divorced, had been living with the boy’s family on the l^utli Side. Names of all the individuals involved have been withheld. The boy. ruled a delinquent by family court, is in custody of relatives. The disposition of his case awaits « psy^latric report. > * * Health department records show there have been 15 births In Chicago by 11-year-olds since 1950. The youngest known mother on record was a 5-year-old girl in Peru. OUT IN COI-D — Mrs. R. L. Sliepherd, 70, Is led away from her biasing AsheviUe. N.t:.. homo yesterday. It was o< -oupled by Mrs. h'bepherd, her 79 mr-oid husband, a son, his wife and Uieir four children. All neaped the burning five-room structure/Wlllhout Injury. / called to testify would be cumulative — that is, would simply add the same sort of testimony already heard. NEWUNESONIT Brown said he did not want to hear any more testimony unless it was along new lines and then set the time for his decision. Earlier, the state had presented a number of exhibits with which it hoped to bear out its contention that Ruby can get just as fair a trial in Dallas as anywhere In Texas. Attorneys for both sides agreed tliat the exhibits included all Issues of the Dallas Time Herald, the Dallas Morning News and the Oak Cliff Tribune from Nov. 22, 1963, when President Kennedy was killed, until today. The exhibits also included a fries, “My Story, by Jack Ruby,’’ from the Houston Chronicle. Written in the first person, the series has been syndicated in a number of newspapers. ‘TRIAL IMPOSSIBLE’ Defense lawyers claim a fair (rial in Dallas County is im-posarible for Ruby, They cite “saturating publicity’’ in Dallas on the crime, along with what they ^hll a high - level conspiracy to cleahse (he image of Dallas by making sure Ruby is cxe- Solons Ask Voting Age Drop to 18 LANSING (AP)-Two Didroit area lawmakers asked the Senate Wednesday to go along with their proposal to lower the vol-Itig age from 21 to 18. Sons. William I). Ford, D-Taylor, and John T. Bowman, 1)-R(*sevllle, IntnHlm'cd a resolution to set up a state constitutional amendment on tho is-le. A -similar pr«*po##l waa filed) In the House Jan. 30 by lte|>s. Harry Demaso, R-Bottle Creek, and Paul Chandler, K-Livunia. Their resolution is now before Mouse ('ommittee. Gov. George W. Roinney has Indicated he supp«»rta in princi-I pic tlie pntposal to let 18 year olds enter the voting booth. I If the 1‘esolullon wins two-thirds supiHirt in both legislative chaknbers, Michigan voters would have the final say In voting on a ttonstitutional amendment. When the hearing recessed at 9T30 p.m. yesterday, they had called a total of 42 witnesses Monday morning in a small courtroom not far from where the president was shot. Of the^e witnesses, 28 testified DALLAS Ml — District Court* Judge Joe B. Brown safindday he' will announce at 2 p.m. (3 p m Pfflitlac time) tonuirrow whether he will move i^ack Ruby’s murder trial away from Dallas. Brown set the time for his ruling and then recessed court until that time. He acted shortly after the hearing resumed on the defense other city of the murder trial for the kiher of Lee Harvey Oswald, accused assassin of President John F. Kennedy. The judge called the recess .when defense attorneys said tes-=|itim®^ feom-moi« 4ban-l()0 wit-, nesses subpoenaed but not yet —-FRESNO, Calif. Mt — The fa- CARL J. LINSENMAN Requiem Mass will be offered for Carl J. Linsenman of 3346 Pontiac Lake, Waterford Township, at 10 a. m. tomorrow in Catholic Church with burial in Mt. Hope Ceme-4ery, The "Rosary "wiirbrreeitedTit 8 p. m. today in Voorhees-Siple Decision they thought a fair trial for the former strip joint would either be difficult or im-since the proceedings began possible in Dallas County. Thirteen said they thought a fair trial would be possible and three either had no opinion or were not asked. bulGrabs Back His Life! ther of a young man who was reported to have leaped off the Golden Gate Bridge early Tuesday, ^id today his son grabbed a girder and climbed back to safety. James M e r r 1 ih a n, 22, caught a Cab at a Sixth Street bar late Monday night and asked to be driven to Marid County. Near the bridge's south tower, he told the driver to stop because he was ill. He leaped from the cab. Tlie driver said he saw Merriman run to the railing and jump. telephone call from his son 13 hours after the reported suicide leap. WALKED BACK His son had walked back to San Francisco, back to safety, Merriman said. “We were so glad to hear from him that we didn’t do much thinking for a while. He’s home and he’s okay. I don’t think he’ll ever want to try it again,” the father was quoted. Highway patrolmen from Fresno went to the Merriman home in Firebaugh last night Jack Merriman, a farm sup-1 and verified that the younger porting a stolen car over the ply dealer, said he received a | man was there. | state line. GEORGE T. ACKER George T. Acker, 59, of 817 St. Clair died yesterday after an illness oPtwo months. His body is at the Hun toon Funeral Home. Mr. Acker, a carpenter, leaves two daughters, Mrs. J. W. Jones of Memphis, Tern), and Mrs. James Lwdress of Michigan. City, Ind.; nine grandchildren; and a brother^ Robert of Lake Orion. Also surviving are three sisters, Mrs. Mary Broge of Lln-Weyde- \ "ft-oy. Mr. Breckenridge, chief of the Pontiac Township Fire Department and an employe of GMC Truck and Coach Division, died Tuesday after an illness of several weeks. He was a member ot Spirit No. 60, Metropolitan Club; St. Trinity Lutheran Church, Pontiac; and the fire briga^le of GMC ’Truck qnd Coach Division. “Surviving “are his wife, Evelyn; his mother, Mrs. James Breckenridge of Pontiac; a son. PAUL RATIBORSKY _Sefyifie_iorJPaul Ratiborsky, 3, of 20 Rose Court will be 1 p.m: Saturday in the John T. Chrastka Funeral Home, Ber-^operator yyn. 111. witli burial there in the Woodlawn Cemetery. His I will be at the C. J. Godh Funerdl Horde, Keego Harbor until 10 p. m. today! Mr. Ratiborsky, a retired carpenter, was dead on arrival yesterday at Pontiac General Hospital. He was a member of the three-month illness. MnuJarvey-Flam-^Auburw Heights; a sister, Mrs. Florence Honhart of Drayton Plains; a brother; and seven erandchil- Plane Stealer in Kentucky An airplane thief, who walked away from Pontiac State Hospital four months ago, is being held in Lexington, Ky., the Oakland .County Sheriff’s Depart- ment was informed today.______ Being held in custody by the U.S. Marshal there is LaVern A. Anderson, 23, of Belleville. Anderson walked away from the hospital five days after he was committed Oct. 14. In May he pleaded guilty to stealing a $65,000 plane from the Pontiac Municiptd Airport. The FBI notified police that Anderson has been held since January on a charge of trans- District Council of Carpenters in Chicago, nj. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Robert Gallo of Pontiac and Mrs. John O’Donnell of CTii-cago; a son, Frank W. Roty of Chicago; 11 grandchildren and 25 great-grandchildren. • JAMES BRECKENRIDGE AUBURN HEIGHTS-Service for James Breckenridge, 56, of 3421 Squirrel will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at Moore Qiapel of the Sparks-Griffin Funer Home. Burial will follow in LORI ANN WARD CLARKSTON Graveside service- for Lori Ann Ward, 6-week-old daughter of fornjer residents Airman l.C. and Mrs. Christopher R. ward of Fair-field, Calif., was held at noon today in Lakeview Gemetey, wito burial following. The baby died unexpectedy Sunday. She was a member of the Holy Spirit Catholic Church, Fair-field. Surviving besides her pa Randall, both at liomej and her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Betts of Lake Orion and Mr. and Mrs. CTiristopher M. Ward of Warren. STANLEY R. WATKINS aVoN TOWNSHIP - Service for Stanley R. Watkins, 3-month-old son of Mr, and Mrs. Stanley Watkins, 2372 Auburn, -will-be 3:30 p.m. tomorrow at Moore Chapel of Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home, Auburn Heights. dren, MRS. PETER G. GRATE Service for Mrs. Peter G. (Geraldine K.) Grate, 67, of 84;H Knox will beJl!pjmRatur3ayjit Sharpe - Gpyette Funeral Home, Clarkston. Burial will be in Lakeview Cemetery, Clarkston. A retired public schoolteacher, Mrs. Grate died yestei%by after a brief illness. She had taught in Hamtramck for 42 years. She was a member of the American Association of University Women and Drayton Plains United Presbyterian' Church. • Surviving bekdes her hus-, band are two sisters. MRS. ROBERT KENYON WALLED LAKE-Service for Mrs. Robert (Frances J.) Kenyon, 4(), of 2031 Decker will be p.m. tomorrow at-Riehardson-Bird Funeral Home. Burial will be in Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens, Novi. Mrs. Kenyon died unexpectedly yesterday. She was a meih-ber of the Church of Christ here. Surviving besides her husband are five children, Mrs. Linda Hall of Elkhart, Ind., and Lee, Suzl, TerrIe and Robert Kenyon, all at home; her parents, Mr. and Mrs. William B. Wyatt of Walled Lake; a sister, Mrs. Dixie Jacobsen, of Walled Lake; and a grandchild. MemoriaL Cemetery, Troy. The baby died yesterday. Surviving besides his parents are grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.. RlcharffCross of Auburn Heights and Mr. and Mrs. Sudeth Watkins of Avon Town- SPRINGFIELXL TOWNSHIP—^ shipf -and great-grandmothers, Mrs. Olga Mazurek of Avon Township and Mrs. Clara Dob- Chapfer Formed fd Replace Unit of State Charity A new state chapter of the National Multiple Sclerosis Society was organized in Detroit last night to replace a group left without a charter. Dr. Phillip Moore of Owosso, new state chapter chairman, said it will apply for the Michigan United Fund (MUF) membership held by its pbede- cessor. - ___' Hfelejrosis-Soci^ officials say the old chapter, headquartered in Detroit, recently lost its national affiliation for backing unapproved research investiga* tions and failing to remit its full share for national operations. ★ ★ ★ Society activities in Michigan are indirectly supported by the Pontiac Area United Fund and other community fund drives through a package contribution to MUF. SORRY! Rut This Set Is Not for Sale (Unless You Are A Girl Retween 3 and 23) • T. Dresser & Mirror I3!r^ • llilA ...... .. tr »Trundle or Rank < ,. sr • Uhest on (M . . . Sir 9 Bachelor ( hest . . . ir • (ihest (Not siiowii) . .. ir • I’orner Desk . . . .. \r • (Canopy Red.... . , S9*“ Pi>tit(‘ Frent'li Provincial At l(s llainti(;st for (iir|s! Avniliililr ill I'lnirli HIiic^im'(miIiI iriiii, willi wliilc! iiiiir-pnior iiIunIh: lops. Moit lliaii Iwf'iily optMi hloi'k pirccs on ilispluy. Hotuieof jicbroomiii *>o HAIM No <;iiak<;»: kxtf.noko tkbium avaii.ari.k l(Wi2 South l'rl«>||rN|»h lloml —I’onltoc l’hoi«» .‘1S8-4400 IIAII.Y 9 lo 9 SAT. Mil 3t-fO - t i ^ 7^ -;-. ,'?5^ ■ " ;t-.,7' -I f n mi FONTtAC PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY U, 1964' US; Trade With Cuba ZeTo^ butiMhes Don't Follow Suit WASfflNGTDN MI-U.S. shipments to Cuba totaled |37 million in 1963 but have, dropped to virtually zero since the last delivery of ransom goods fOTj Bay of Pigs invasion prisoners,] U.S. officials said today. The trade figvres listing the | United States as by far the largest free world supplier to Cuba last year have been cited abroad by critics of Washing- ton’s effort to keep its allies from dealing with the Castro Havana i>y the hundreds, i of the allies differing wit Britain, now selling buses to| Reportedly Killed by Cannibals I of either Prime Minister Alec I Douglas-Home or President Johnson altering course on this issue after they took it up at their White House parley yesterday. Mystery Still Covers Fate of Men Lost in Amazon . United Press International .Tbe ^ct fate of five Michi-gan missionaries lost in the jungles of the Amazon River valley to hMtfle isa^^ has never” been fully established. While it is agreed by many that t^ five members «f tte~ Bible Tabernacle Chnrch were killied by savages they were trying to convert to Christianity, how fliey met Qieir death has bepn'a puzzling source of conjecture for the last 10 years. Thejnen were^Rev. Cecil A.^ Dye, 34, former pastor of Bible Tabernacle and head bf the ex-—pedition his brotlier, "Robert, 25; David R. Bacon, 23, and El-den L. Hunter, 20, all of Saginaw, and George Hosbach of West Branch, Mich. ------■ They were part of a group of 17 mai, women and children who left Saginavy in November 1942, bound for the special tricing that would eventually take them to the Bplivian jungles. They left for South America in early 1943 to set up a mis station at Robore, the last outpost of civilization, some 300 miles east of Santa Cruit. After about a year at this station, Rev. Mr. Dye decided that operations had been established enough to push on in the direction of Jhe Brazilian frontier. Dye wished to make an attempt to ccmtact the primitive Yaniquas Indians, complete strangers to Christianity Up for January Waterford Issues Six Fewer Permits Despite a slight decrease in building activity last month compared to January 1963, the valuation of January 1964 building permits in Waterford Township was higher than a year ago. The township issued 28 permits last month compared to 34 in January 1963. Valuations of the permits were $165,157 $136,681 for the respective months. Last month, nine permits for houses were issued at a valuation of $123,537. This compares to four housing permits in January 1963 valued at $83,740. A total of nine permits for housing additions and remodeling valued at $21,030 were Issued last month compared to 18 at $36,503 in the same month a year ago. During each month, January 1963 and 1904, three garage permits Were issued. Valuations were $4,400 last month and $2,-550 for Janbary, 1963. with whom previous missUmary parties had failed to make contact. Tbe Michigan group was spon-Mis- sion, a Baptist organization. BRD IRffiES Dispatches sent back from the at the scene wrote, in his diary that the natives acted cious and guilty." EQUIPjMD|NTF(HJND Pieces oHhe-eqimment c ri^ by Dye and ms party were found in the camp, but canm said the MHfurtheiLjcace_of the men plunged into a region inhabited " by wild Indian tribes which are completely untouched by civil-imticar.’^ There is evidence that Dye and his groim were waraed by Bolivian frontiersmen of -the-danger-in pushing-on into the jungles, but Dye disregarded tiiis advice. Observers at the scene pleaded with the party to carry weapons so they might defend themselves against hostile Indians, but Dye refused because he did not wish tor antagonize the groups he was trying to convert. The area to^ which Dye was proceeding is known as the Mato_Grosso or great forest. It lies along the BdSvia^razII border and covers an area of 487,000 square miles. It has never been fully explored. HACK NEW TRAILS Three hard, long months were spent in hacking out new trails through the jungle with machetes and hatchets, Robert C. Collins and Wallace Wright accompanied the Jive men up to the point where they were close to native villages, then Dye sent the two men back to Robore with the burrOs and heavier pro-visions. Dye instructed them to^ stand by and await further orders. Dye told Collins and Wright that a search should be started for his party If it did not return within a month. A native guide with the party became terrorized when he said he realized that they were near native villages. He said he believed thdt the natives in the villages they were near practiced cannibalism. Hr * Dye and his group were never seen again. After a month passed, Collins and Wright left with an Indian guide to look for the five men. GUIDE RUNS OFF But the guide ran off as they came near to the place' where they had last seen Dye and his party. Collins and Wright continued on alone for a few hours before they realized that they would ne^ a skilled tracker to aid thipin- They returned to their village and an armed search party was organized under the leadership of a skilled, trusted tracker. lit ★ ★ After several days of tracking through the great jungle, the search party came upon an campment of natives. They were dispersed with .several shots fired into the air, and some of the natives were captured and questioned. They denied any knowledge of the five missionary men, but one turned up. Further searches and inves- tigations failed to reveal any added clnes on the men. Several years passed and one ct tile natives who Iive4 in the village, where the pieces of equipment were found, came to live at tim R SIZES 3',: - 40 ■Tf NEW! LADIES' HAND KNIT FASHION SWEATERS • Hand Knit • Cardigans and Pullc) • Imported from Ita • Expertly Made • Small- MedeXlarge CLEARANCE WINTER MILLINERY I AND KNIT HATS 50‘-1" i CLEARANCE CHILDREN’S SLIPPERS 50' ANTIQUE FINISH FLORENTINE LIGHT FIXTDRES 99' EXTI rp^TURDY /3STEP WOODEN LADDERS 99° ENAMELED COOKWARE • DOUBLE BOILEH • SAUCEPANS • OOVEREO POTS 77' BOYS DENIM HOODED jtcuns 58° SUtes 3 to S 3 PC. JEWELTONE PLASTIC BOWL SETS 99' NEW! SEAMLESS STR| PANH STOCKIHGS 158 • ALI^ONE r pn SPORT AND CASUAL COMFOHT | 100% NYLON SIZES S-M-L MEN'S sunns SHOP SPARTAN 9:30 A.M. to 10 P.M. DAILY .. . SUNDAY 12 NOON to 7 P.M. 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All Parohases Don’t mist this onot in a lifatima to lava on many of Amarioa’i finait maka applianoat. 28 West Lawrence Street Telephone 333-7812 ‘-f.; B—14 — f THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13. .1964 'Llr^. Steelworkers Find 13-Week Vacations Afe Enjoyabid (EDITOR’S NOTE-it used to be .that only school teachers and a fend other lucky people got long vacations, No more. Senior workers in the basic steel industry were granted 13-week paid cocalions in the labor contract signed last ..year. The ffiVf»oing tells what they ore doing and how they^- -~feet about U.) ---------- By BOB VOELKER PITTSBURGH (AP) - Vetpr-lire -Inir^ wt of,mill gates these days with an extra bwnce in their steps and smiles on their faces. has his eye on Florida, too. He has never been .there. ★ ★ it Said Bowen: “Pm going just to look around. I’ve always thought I’d like to^gouJown their.” Anthony Strinich, 50, a steel inspeetor U^. Bteel’s Clalr-ton rolling mill^ te dividing his vacation between home chores and a trip.. A UTTLE-TRIP T’m doing odds and ends. Washing walls. Already painted Outside . the gate, there is back-slapping and laughter. Hie old-timers then head home to enjoy something few of them could envism for themselves years ago. They are starting, for the first time, 13-week paid vacations Ced in the •current steel contract. tACATION LAND ■ Many scatter to tar-off vacation spots. Othe'rs stay home, kisurely tackling odd jobs dround the house and perhaps ” jflanning^a triplater. Some just take it easy, relishing the simple luxury of doing nothing. ‘ “Best thing they could do for workingman; it’s wonderful,” Said James L. Parker, a laborer at U.S. Steel Corp.’s nearby Claifton coking plant. * it it * A mill worker for 41 years, Parker added, “It’s a relief. You’re getting paid for It and you feel, good.” Machinist Harry McKee, is another of those staying home, watching the world go Dy hE’S HAPPY • “I’ve got my wife, grandson dnd dog. We’re haRpy,” said McKee. “I hope the rest of the men are enjoying their vacations as much as I am.” [ McKee works at the Pittsburgh works of Jones & Laugh-]in Steel Corp. He has been in (he mills 45 years, through bitter strikes and layoffs, * ★ ★ He said: "If someone told us 40 years ago we would get 13-week vacMbns.we^^^^w^^ 1iave told them they were crazy. We never looked for this years ago.”. *nie urge to travel hits many vacationers right away. Most say they want to see old friends or new places. OFF TO FLORIDA George Visnick, 53, a roller in the J&L plant here, headed immediately for Florida. He is staying in a Miami hotel and plans a leisurely return trip to his home in nearby McKeesport. ” A maintenance worker in the same plant, Cecil F. Bowen, 61, State Bill to Allow Selection oi Doctor . LANSING (AP) - A bill that would enable a patient in any public hospital to be attended by the physician of his choice —whether M.D. or osteopathia ready lor introduction in the House. The sponsor. Rep. James Ka-roub, D-Highland Park, said his bill could “remove » -barrier ” that he says has. In effect, "denied the use of public facilities to many persons.'’ Normal procedure in public as well as private hospitals, said Karoub, is for patients to be attended only by doctors on the hospital's own staff. ELECTRONICS CLASSES NOW FORMING # INDUSTRIAL ELECTRONICS (On* Nl0hl WmUkI * COLOR T.V. (OntNIghlWtMy) ” ^ ENOINEERINO (Ml nm»,Dmy»rSv) FOR INFORMATION bihI FREE lOOKLET NiOMmSAOO vnn iCMooi *i nS25f.OllANir BLVD. (Near Ml, OlM) R.I.T.S niCTaOt4IC SCNOCHt one room,” he explained. “I think I’ll take a little (rip next month. Have a sister in Detroit I haven’t se«i for awhife and a daughter going to Dayton University.” ^ The vacatipp program was worked out in negotiations last year between major basic steel producers ar0“thel?nr fnited SteeP weeksW: 450,000 workers in basic steel and has since spread to other steel-related plants. The plan prQvMes lPweek vacations each five' years for the-50 per cent of the work force with the most seniority. It is figured on a companywide basis, not plant by pl^t. ^ * ■ * V '* When the plan was first announce there was talk that maybe it wasn’t a good idea. It was argued by some that 13 Wcatlon in a row was too much, that men would become restless” Oiatlhey wmEcT get on their wives’ nerves. Interviews with men on vacation failed to support these views, Walter Ream, 61, a 33-year mill veteran employed as a heater at the J&L plant in Pittsburg, spends his time “^ing ip and out of the house, watching television and helping my wife around the house.” He said, “The time is going too darn fast. But I’m really enjoying it,” ■ ■ , it.... * ★ "Tartefrthrtborer^aid, r’T cot^ stay on vacation ’till I die.” About-his wifer he said, "We have it nice. She is happy and so am I.” McKee, the machinist, said, “Time never jlrags. You always have something to do. After you've been married as long as us, you’re glad to have someone around.” - - WENT QUICKLY Strinich said the fir^t five weeks of vacation went guickly.' “As long as they pay me I cotdd stay borne fiffever. 1 got a good wife. She doesn’t push me around or nag me,.” One complaint was heard, companies haveJbe-&taPs^ on when a man takes his vacation. The workers make preferred choices, but they don’t always get off vrtien they want Ut The vacate program perhaps, was best summed up by Leslie J. Sabo, 56, a bearing repairman at U.S. Steel’s nearby Irvin works. He said: “It all boils down to the old joke about getting-a job with a payday every day and you don’t hayeja.jtmrfc-eftjari] get paid for it. My' Boy Diesr in Hospital; Was Struck by Auto TRAVERSE CITY (AP) - A ft.yearrold schoolboy, Richard G. Skinner, died Wednesday at Miinspn Hospital shortly after being admitted with injuries suf-Tered when he was. struck by a car. State police said the boy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Skinner of Traverse City Rte. 5, apparently stepped into the path of the car. Ihe northernmost post office in continental U.S. is Penasse, Minnr,-on^erican Point, a 50-acre tract located OT Lake of the Woods. StartiH Mm at Stli hUmSttnt At htllae 7 HNMmUl SHIM DHS « iUm HUBS H« TK HUM Of TH niH Ml OUH HKB TO oun Mnoii SHom me nnw hmmb WUnOR WOOL LADIES' SKIRTS Hip olilchad box Black and coloro. SiMO 22 to 30 ohd 32 to 38. 4-OZ. VIR6IN WOOL WORSTED KNITTIMS YARN oors’MOOED PARKA JACKETS OIRLS’ DOILT-UREO MEirS IS.S5 KOBEHNSIIATED STHTOI SKI JUKETS Amosing tubular stretch quilt allows freedom of movement without binding ... 100% nylon shell and lining. 100% virgin Kodel polyester Iniulotlon. Zip front ond pocketti^oneeeied roll hood,^ Block or reyoL Sites SWM-L-XL. CLEIRMCE! 300 GIRLS’ BEBER DRESSES URGE ROBOER 0 NniL n-oi- OISN DralMr ROYS’ REOOLM CORDDROV SLACKS cotton corduroy. Ivy and coninon-tai (tylo. Sizot 6toie. |9I) O-OOME UTtUTV SIZE PLASTIC THMRLERS 41 PUT MORE MILEAGE IH TOUR SHOE BUDGET MEN’S t BOVS’ 4 BUCKLES 200 PAIRS MEN’S SHOES PLUS WITH KVtRY PAIR TOE |c RUBBERS I WHILE SUPPLY LASTS MEN’S Insulated < MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER AND PERRT AT MONTCALM • LOADS OF FREE PARKING /: A '../r i ONE COLOR C—1 Demings - Red SOCKEYE iAlMON Tall Lb. Can Hunt's 14-Oz. Btl. CBW watlEIBB“W “ 10^1 Genuine PiNCONNING CHEESE SALE FROZEN DEPT. mCi..... .49.1 12-OZ. franco-American — rmconnin^ MEDIUM...........59 ,t Pinconning SHARP.... . 69 flttETS FISH lb. Birds Eyo STICKS is Bordon's or Seoltest [fPlOUR 5-Lb. flag Halts Half Hellmenn's g.,, TARTER SAUCE 25‘ BIRDSEYE - Pillsbury CAKE MIXES |. Chocolate ' 'F'Chocolato Fudge • wnirs Your ^Choice Mueller's Thin or Regular SPABHEni Mueller's Elbow or Regular MACARONI Fleischmonn't CORN OIL MARCARINE 3 lbs! I lO-oj. CUT CCRN PEASio-oz.1 CUT GREEN tEANS Puffin Sweet or Buttermilk IrOZeJkl,,. BISCUITS Your lor 1-Lb/ Pkgs. Oven Fresh BIG 300 m A Banquet TUNA W ^fflESrr.T Nabisco CHOCOLATE PINWNEELS. ^9* OvenFraih MEW^^ PIHEAPPLESTREUDEL. 39^ Hunt's 6-02. Can Hunfs TOIMmi SflBGE .r. ir TOMWO PASTE ^10" Maxwell House with Free Cdrafe WSIAHT COFFEE Large 10-oz. Jar Hunt's California sucesor PEACHES S PDQ Chocolate Tali Beads DRINK'» NSDA CHOICE STEAK SALE! US,^ Choice Lean and Tender ROUNOjnM I^DA Choice Lean and Tender Dole PINEAPPLE GRAPEFRUIT DRINK 46-OZ. Can 45^. m siBtoiw mg ■M^i^ I IICHA Eatmord HOHEY — USDA Choice Lean and Tender noodles' «2P I T-ew war SMM=39« n • D • D' b M dk I Ground Salmon 49^ ||imbur6er Green Giant CUT . GREEN DEANS “ Campbell's 46-oz. Con TOMATO JUICE V-8 JUICE - Young Steer a^UIBEffUVEB U.S. No. 1 U.S.No.1 Cello Golden Ripe Package Maine ban AMS CARROTS r POTATOES SPARTAK SLICED j USDA Choice BONELESS Rolled BACOH I Rump Roasts I Loan and Tondor 1-LB., TRAYl IF'e rea«rv« th» right lo llmlt^ or mlnorMt SALI OATH TNurt.. Fsb. tS, thru Wsd., Pcb.< It, IIM, Inelttdini Dsn., Pcb. ID, I Stew Meat Vwi. Froth Loon SPARE RIBS Saloy's Mich. Grade No. SAUSAGE 20 E. WALTON obWiard Men. Hmr Pit. I le R let. I M R leN.lle R LAKE ORION Men. lliru let., • le • limdey.Dlel 1116 W. HURON Men. IhrH let., • le ID | Innday, D te ID 3S15SASHABAW Men.llirolatHllel Sunday,! tel C—2 PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1964 Robust Stew is Economical Hearty and flavorful, a stew is a traditional favorite among hungry families on any chilly day. TTie robust blend of meat, vegetables ~and seasonings al-' ways hits thrnspotr Tmd“ scents from the kitchen will mean no coaxing to the dinner table. - Stews are acclaimed the world over as well, and there must be thousands of varieties. It’s always fun to add a new idea to; your present store of “fecipesr" ' •'For instance, this new beef stew is bound to be a winner. It reveals a few unexpected ingredients . . . kidney beans and sweet pickles that a add a slight nip to the taste. HieFand Kidney Bean Stew 2 pounds boneless beef for stew V* cup flour 2 teaspoons salt V4 teaspoon pepper 2 tablespoons lard or drippings 1 teaspoon oregano 1 clove garlic, mincwl 1 can (16 oum^ tomatoes 1 medium onion, sliced Vi cup sliced sweet pickles 2 cans (16 ounces each) kidney beanr, drained Combine flour, salt and pepper. Dredge meat In seasoned flour. Brown in lard or dri|^ pings. Pour off driiH>ings. A( oregano, garlic a^ water. Cover tightly and co<* slowly two hoars. Add tomatoes and onion and cook 45 minutes longer, or until meat is tender and vegetables are done. Ad^'* ^*^^*'^ *'* * 79NIIWda«dlU. | l2MMdwiiiA«t. | l275CMlnLalMM. OPtUrUNDAY OrtN SUNDAYS W« r«t«rv* right to limit quantitios 69^ Choice SIRLOIN STEAK Porterhouse or hone steak Rolled RUMP RDAST Tasty HEEL DF ROUND Dartmouth ... Frozen ★ PEAS*CUT GREEN BEANS ★ CUT CORN ★ FRENCH GREEN BEANS Fresh, Ground HAMBURGER 39t Chase & Sanborn Fresh, Crispy Instant Coffee POTATO CHIPS 139 Jar 1 ,.g„d 000 King Bird PINK SALMON Tall 1 Pound Can 39« Petchke't Vi-lb. PKG. LUNCHEON MEAT r ( ^ W-BRAND FROZEN UKE Vk'S; SMELTS 2!F Singleton - Froitn SHRIMP $|99 PEELED and DEVEINED 1<4 POUND Hollywood ICE CREAM Half Gallon 39« FARM FRESH-GRADE A LARGE EGGS 1 —V9KMUC M 39!t FOOD CLUB CAKE MIXES cXsi................... Evaporated PET or CARNATION MILK... Zfitee Pkg. Tall Can FRESH CARROTS 1 POUND Tt CEU0BA6 f FRESH-NEW CABBA6E POUND EVERYDAY LOW, LOW PRICES 25^1 14^1 PEANUT BUTTER. .........3iJr79^p SAUD DRESSING..........r 29^ Strained BABY FOOD......3..25^ ;t| PURINA DOG CHOW . ..25^2^^§| TOMATO SOUP............ c. 10^ Campbell's Tall ||A PORK & BEANS........... "Cf lr ^ Hunt's large ^ PEACHES....; 25' M X': THE POyyiAC PkESS^TriUBSKAY,^FI^UARY 13, 19^4 ‘ M Leaders inOSU Protest Studenh Demonstrate Against Coed's Arrest CqUTMBUS, Ohio (AP)--Offi-cials at Ohio State University were looking today fdr the ringleaders pf a rowdy demonstration by several thousand students ^at included a mardi on .. clty-polica-beadquarteFS^- Dean ay of Prayer in bUchigan” urges all citizens to pray on Friday for ‘wisdom, courage and strength to face the profound concerns of our time." SAVE MORE on YOUR TOTAL af LOWPRIOEO EVERYDAY onEpejything WHOLE OR POINT CUT Boneless Brisket . . >‘> 59*’ BLADECUT Chuck Steak ..... ><> 48‘ CHERRY RED Fresh Hamburg .... "> 38*’ bath size bar Camay Soap Limit: Three bars with this coupon and $i00 purchase beer, wine and elgarettei. Valid at SAVON through Monday, February 17th. Limit: One coupon. GOLDEN RIPE BANANAS HP ib. Fairmont, Large or Small Curd Crsamad | Cottage Cheese...19° Amorlcon Pimmlo or Swin, Daluxa Kraft Cheese Slices 8 ox. Pkg. 29° BIRDS EYE Ocean Perch or Cod 12-oz. Pkg*. 29‘ 8| Aiiorted Flavors H Hollywood Ice Cream' Orod* A, Frsth CnKimary Daily Rich Butter 59° 49* [ijilUi] CAMBELL'S Vegetarian or VEC. SOUP bmkr i. PV'«''a*A •xcludlng at SAVON* e'oareHes. Valid at SAVON throvgh Monday. Feb-n'ory 17th. Limit: One Coupon. Mueller's Vermicelli^Je SPAOIDETTI 17th. Llmlh One Coupon. IMPERIAL BLUE DRESDEN Soup Plate FREE With coupon no. 5 from our mailed coupon booklet and $3.00 purchase excluding beer, wine and cigarettes. Additional plates available for only 29c with edch $3.00 purchase. Reg. $6.95 Value SAMSONITE FOLDING CHAIR $399 Dad’s Reet Beer.. Stem, and Pieces 2 OS. can Penn Dutch Mushreems 10° bo. 38° All Puipese Fleur bag Kraft, 7V4 01. Pkg. Macarpni Dinners 4 ^k 69° Dole Hawaiian' • .Crushed Pineapple t.°29° 4S« JJt Dixie Hightfay in Drayton Plains At Williams Lake Road and Walton Blvd. Dolly 9-9, Sat. 8-9 — Sun. 9-6 Chiffen Liquid Pontiac Mall Shopping Canti On Tf legraph in Watarford TowntHiip Daily 9-9, Sot. 8-9 Sun. 9-6 Glenwood Plaza in Pontiac South Qlf nwood at Parry Daily 9-10, Sat. 8^10 - Sun. 9-7 IT'S EASY TO FIND WITH THE HELP OF A .. . CLASSIFIED AD PERSON TO PERSON Check the list below! □ ANTIQUES □ AQUARIUM □ BABY BUGGY □ BABY CLOTHES □ BABY PLAY PEN □ BABY STROLLER □ BED AND SPRINGS □ BIRD CAGE □ boots □ CARPET SWEEPER □ CHAIRS n CHESTS □ COOKING UTENSILS □ COATS □ CRIB □ DRESSES □ FORMAL WEAR □ FURNITURE SLIP COVER □ GLASSWARE □ HAIR DRYER □ LAMPS □ LAMP SHADES □ LUGGAGE □ PICTURES □ PICTURE FRAMES □ RADIO □ RECORDS □ RECORD PLAYER □ ROCKER □ RUGS □ SHOES □ SILVERWARE □ SOFAS □ TABLEiS □ TELEVISION SET □ TOASTER □ TRUNK □ TUXEDO □ WARDROB^ □ BADMINTON SET □ BAR BELLS & WEIGHTS □ BASEBALL, BAT, MITT □ BASKETBALL, HOOP AND NET □ BOWLING BALL, BAG, SHOES □ DECK TENNIS SET □ DRYER----- □ FISHING TACKLE □ FOOTBALL □ QUILTS □ IRONING BOARD □ JARS □ LADDERS □ MODEL TOYS □ REFRIGERATOR □ ROLLER SKATES □ SPACE HEATER □ STOVE □ TABLE TENNIS SET □ TENNIS RACKET, BALLS □ WASHER □ AWNINGS □ BARBECUE GRILL □ BENCHES □ BICYCLE □ BOAT □ CAR SEAT COVERS □ GARDEN IMPLEMENTS □ LAWN MOWER _ □ WATER HEATER □ OUTBOARD MOTOR □ PAINT SPRAYER □ POWER TOOLS □ SCREEN DOORS □ SCOOTER □ SCREENS □ SLEEPING BAGS □ SPRINKLERS □ STORM WINDOWS □ tent— I • — □ TILES □ TIRE CHAINS □ TIRE PUMP □ TIRES □ TOOLS □ TRAILER □ WALLPAPER STEAMER DIAL 332-8181! BE SURE TO ORDER THE THRIFTY 6 TIME RATE IHE4>ONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT / C—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1934 _____--------------------------------------- Birmingham AAUW Announce Style Show An afternoon of f a s h i o n, beauty and music will be provided by- the Birmingham chapter of the American Association qi University Women (AAUWJ in their “Gallery - Wednesday— Mrs. Robert J. Whitney and Mrs. Stephen Williamson. Daughters of members modeling ^ub teen fashions are Tracy ThMnson-and Diane Dickerson. p.m. in Cranbrook Auditorium. Mary Morgan will act as commentator with fashions, hair styles and stage settings being provided by Jacobson’s. Serving as cochairmen for this year’s spring benefit are Mrs. Richard Lindgren and Mrs. John P. Thomson, assisted by a committee of some 21 women. , . Models have been recruited from the membership by Mrs. Richard Kendall and Mrs. Douglas Gettel. Among those Tnodeling are Mrs. H. K. Berg, Mrs. Ralph Mrs. James Olson of Bedjord Road checks her jpose in n mirror with one ^own by_ Mrs. John P. Thomson of Middlebelt Road. They Richard Hartle, Mrs. Donald Herbein. and Mrs. H o w a r d - «re preparing for the annual benefit fashion show and tea sponsored, by the Birmingham branch of the American Association of Univer^ sity women. Kehrl.' Others are Mrs, James Olson, Mrs. N. J. Rakas, Mrs. Wilson Richards, Mrs. John Sirich, Mrs. Preston Weir, Local Women Are Busy BETA SIGMA PHI Mrs. William Killen opened her hdme on Glenwood Avenue T u e s day evening to members of Xi Beta Beta , chapter,of Beta Sigma_ Phi sorority. A program on music appreciation was presented by Mrs. Park Buchner and the hostess. The group plans a progressive dinner on Feb. 25 and a visit to the flower show in Detroit next month. ALPHA DELTA KAPPA A w^ite ^ephant^^ provided entertainment at the Monday meeting of the Epsilon Chapter of Alpha Delta Kappa sorority. for a cooperative luncheon, bake sale, and the sewing of cancer pads. Members will meet March 4 at the home of Mrs. H e n r y Right, Whittemore Street, for luncheon and sewing. TRA^^SATLANTIC BRIDES A demonstration of furniture and wood finishing was given Tuesday evening by MrsrL. H. Wyckoff of Brown Brothers to members and friends of the Transatlaniic Brides and Parents Association. On March 20 the Pontiac branch of TBPA will host an area meeting at the Commu- Mrs. John Landon opened n i t y Services Building on her home for the meeting with pranklin Boulevard; where fu- rs. H. A. Mitchell as cohost- Guests of the chapter were Mrs. Dorothy Hills, Mrs. Dolores Mack and Mri Lois Grice. GOLD STAR MOTHERS Chapter Nine, American Gold Star Mothers, met at the Holbrook Avenue home of Mrs. Sybella Stevens Tuesday Conversations on Painting at PSA Meeting ture club meetings will be held. Mrs. James Mitchell, club president and Mrs. Gordon Gray served as cohostesses. FASHIONETTE Mrs. Joseph Thompson was received as a new member of the Fashionetle dlub at their Tuesday evening meeting in the Adah Shelly Library”! Mrs. James King was in charge of a Valentine party, BLUE STAR MOTHERS Mrs. James Gilbert was installed as a new member of the Pontiac Blue Star Mothers, Tuesday afternoon, in the YMCA. The group will observe its 22nd anniversary, Feb. 25, in the Second Avenue home of Mrs. B r^» c e-Smalc who^ is serving as parliamentarian -this year. OMEGA MU SIGMA Plans for a March rummage sale were made at the Tuesday evening meeting of Omega Mu Sigma sorority in the Manderford Street home of Mrs. Irene Snyder. Mrs. Elaine Springer \yas cohostess for the meeting at which plans for a salad luncheon were made. Mrs. Chris Kurzweil of Port Huron, past president, was a guest. NEWCOMERS A dessert bridge meeting was enjoyed Wednesday by the Pontiac Newcomers Club wlio gathered at the home of Mrs. John Holmes. Plans were made for the club to attend the Thursday performance of “Oklahoma” at Pontiac Northern High School. Thd annual men’s night will be held March 14 at the home of Mrs. Gerald Berry, president. . Town Hall to Present John Ciardi Pontiac OES Has Dinner Soropfimists Peter Gllleran. painter and teacher, will present sTldes oT Rl IQV paintings with a critique at r\/l the next meeting of the Pon- ___r ik. n't tl.c socwy ot Arli,U (PSA. agenda at a dinner meeting Monday in ,the Mayfair Room of the Waldron Hotel. at 8 p.m. Friday in the Coi^t-munity Services Building. Gilleran receiyed his bachelor of arts degree from Colorado College and his master’s at the Cranbrook Academy of Art. He was an instructor at the Albright Art School in Buffalo, N.Y. before returning to Cranbrook as a member of the faculty. At the Pontiac Mall Art Exhibit now in progress, 11 members of the society received awards. Including four first prizes. Any working artist would like to become a mber of PSA should contact Mrs. Bernard Selber. Members will join the Ham-tramck and South M a c o ni b County clubs at a dinner meeting, Feb. 26, in the Gros.se Pointe War Memorial. Many plan to attend the annual dntique .show sponsored by the Ferndale Club, |'"eb. 28-29 in the Ferndale Community Building. M. Virginia Sink of Clarks- ton, the first Michigan president of the Soroptimlst Federation of the Americas Midwestern Region, will be featured speaker at the April 17-19 conference. Some 63 regional clubs will attend the, affair in Toledo. Mrs. Kenneth Wright and Mrs; Howard Decker will be Pontiac club delegates. Taimee .Surola and M r s. Wright visiliHl Pontiac Stale Haspital patients and made a contribution from the club fur the social evening. Pontiac Chapter No. 228, Order of the Eastern Star, served the annual subscription chicken dinner preceding Monday's meetingdn the East l.awrence Street Masonic Temple. Past grand officers of the Grand Chapter of Michigan will exemplify the degrees on Friends’ l^ight, Feb. 14 in the Roosevelt Masonic Temple. Mrs. Robert I. Gilbert, Mrs. Robert Byrnes and Mrs. Clayton Randolph will conduct forthcoming degree ceremonies in Oak Park, South Lyqn and Ferndale, resp<'cl-Ively. ' The program closed with refre-slunenls served by Mrs. J. R, Shelton arid Mire. Gib bert Betrothal Grocery-Purchasing Hubby show support the AAUW’s fellowship program. Each year more than 80 American and foreign women are assisted in graduate studjr with these funds. -QKs Use^Hoi Fiance's Car Deserves l^ifcTien KF,n^66 Thirteen local teachers benefited from grants for advanced study this year. “JILLS"'TO SING Music by the . “Jills”" of Bloomfield Hills High School —Joan Aitker, Connie Booth, Carol Dameron, Linda Fegley, Carol Fullerton; Candy Hersh-bUrger, Kris Jeynes, Julie Rupe and Carol Sarnes—will be included in the program. By The Emily Post Institute By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN perfect. Leave the poor kid Q: My fiance, wtarlives-on——DEAR-ABBY^ Fve^ust beem. -9.lQne.____:__________ the same street as I do, re-,^ robbed! My husband bas de- Following the fashion show mder- the cently bought a new car. He goes to business during the day Ind does not \^e the car. He has told mr that anytime I want to use his car I may do so. He has given me an extra set of car keys. . My mother does not think it would be right for me to use his car and that I will bring unpleasant criticism upon myself if I do. - cided to take over the grocery shopping. direction of Mrs. Lynn Town-.,,send. * DEAR ABBY; Regarding that married woman who used to run home and cry on her mother’s shoulder every time she and her husband had a little spat. Well, for the first couple of years of my marriage, MY wife used to run home to cry on HEB mother’s shoulder about once every two months. Then I found out that her miother had' been, dead for Tickets are available from Mrs. Thomas F. Sullivan Jr. and Mrs. Robert W. Whitall or may be purchased at the door. May T have your opinion, please? , A: If your engagement has been announced, it is perfectly proper to use your fiance’s car if you have need for it. Birmingham Town Hall will present professor John Ciardi Feb.^ and 21 at 11 a.m.TS the Birmingham Theater. He will answer the question, “What Good is a Poem?” Professor Ciardi is the editor of Saturday Review and host Of the weekly TV show ‘Accent’. A graduate of 'Tufts College with an honorary degree of Doctor of Literature, he has receiyed many awards for his contrlbu tidn ' to " t^^^ literaiy world. Mrs. 0. F. Pearson, president of Town Hail will introduce Professor Ciardi and announce the program for the 1964-65 season. LUNCHEONS Following the lectures there will be celebrity luncheons at the Village Woman’s Club. Birmingham Town Hall is sponsored by St. Anne’s Guild of St. James Church in Birmingham. Q: I had dinner in a very nice restaurant with a friend last evening; ’The bus boy came around with a basket of garlic bread la specialty of this restaurant) and offered it to the patrons at each table. ” I took a piece with my fingers but my friend used her fork. Will you please tell me never use. Marketing wasr my only out-ing and I really enjoyed being away from him and my three children for an hour or two every Saturday. He says I am welcome to come along (with three children). I say, NUTS! 1 have seen men marketing and they iaU intO"^one:of “three categories; 1. Henpecked husbands. 2. Bachelors. 3. Penny pinchers. How can I change his- mind? _ .___: bobbed DEAR ROBBED: He’s strutting. It won’t last. To bring his corner-cutting ex- years and my liftle wife "was OCCASIONS;’:^ crying on somebody else’a.. shoulder. I " "Bettertefi-that husband -it— doesn’t hurt to check once in a while. “ “^‘DUMPED4IER” Get it off your chest. Gor a personal, unpublished reply, write to ABBY, in care of The Pontiac Press. Enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. Hate to write letters? Send one dollar to ABBY, li^are of The Pontiac Ihess for Abby’s new booklet, “JIOW TO WRITE LETTERS FOR ALL Clothes Expert Tells Good Fashion Secrets By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Women’s fiditor Tall, slim, poised Lileth MacKnight practices what she preaches. She wears clothes wh>chorieof us was righff pg^iment to a screectog halt. A: You were. One helps oneself to bread with the fingers. > Q: I was supposed to have been married in two weeks, but my mother waS taken ill a few days ago and is irt the hospital in critical condition. The wedding has been postponed, and 1 don’t know when it will take place. I have received quite a. few wedding presents. What do I do about them? Should they be returned now that the wedding has been postponed? has to cook it. Hand him the whole assign*, ment, complete -with KP.. And let the kids climb all over him while YOU read the sports section. A: If, as your letter indicates, the wedding has been postponed temporarily and will take place at a future date, you need not return the presents. It is only when a wedding has been permanently canceled that presents ,are returned. The Emily Post Institute offers readers booklets on a variety of subjects concerning etiquette. If you would like the booklet entitled, "M a n n e r s in PubliQ,” send 18 cents In coin and a self-riddressed, stam^ envelope to Emily Post Institute, In care of ’ITie Pontiac Press. DEAR ABBY: I am 15 and “M” is 17. “M” is a real doll. I heard that “M” thought I was cute so I managed to be ..outside the door of his classes whenever I could so he would see me. * Then I walked past his house about a dozen times a day, but he still didn’t notice me. I did a real dumi^ thing and wrote him sort of a crazy love letter and stuck it in his locker, but nothing happened. Then one of my friends got the bright idea that I should call him up and tell him 1 got a message to call him. Well, that bombed, too. I really want this guy. What do I do to attract his attention now that I have made a perfect fool of myself? PERFECT FOOL mize her figure faults and are accessorized to personalize them. Wednesday’s Pontiac - Oakland Town-^ll.spaa ker-jKMight and: sold clothes for a small shop in the Chicago area before she began to lecture. She still does commentaries for a few fashion shows each year. Mrs. M a cK n i g h t loves clothes and loves the fashion industry. She had a number of amusing incidents about the Seventh Avenue sales rooms —like the compktelj' bald man who tried on all the bridal veils he showed her. STARTED YOUNG Mrs. MacKnight’s interest in fashion goes back to her youth when she made a pink and white dress for 8th grade graduation. “r didn’t quite finish it in time, but I wore it anyway!” right-ancLin-Whichj^ou. ieeL, good. , REPEAT SUCCESSES When you have that kind of l_'ien in doubt*’X (When in doubt what to wfear, this is it)—study it and then go out and get a similar DEAR FOOL: No one is When women go shopping, they want something a little bit like what they’ve had, but also a little bit new. Why do women dress as they do? Most of them dress to please themselves, or if they don’t, they should. Nothing gives you a better feeling, said the speaker, than to wear a dress that is just Mrs. MacKnight pointed out that? several parts of a costume are particularly important. Each woman has a type and length of sleeve that is just right for her. Every woman has a neckline that is most becoming to her. Every woman has a skirt length that is best for her height and figure. Good design doesn’t change. If it is good now, but out next year, it wasn’t good in the first place. NEGLECTED . Mrs. MacKnight thinks the woman of 40 and older is the forgotten woman in the fashion- industry. Statistics show that most women are shorter-walsted and narrower of shoulder than the clothes put out by the majority of designers. But she’s hopeful that some -of the experts are beginning to be aware of this. "Color and fabric make all the difference between a so-so wardrobe and one that is outstanding. Consider them when you shop. The Emily Post Institute cannot answer personal mail, but all questions of general interest are answered in this column. Gallon of Starch When laundering drip-dry curtulnH u.se n gallon of starch water for the final rinse. Hang curtaiiui u|Mo dry and shape with thebandrWavoMiiajaii^ i' After Concert Steam Finish Pocial Artistry If you like to experiment ■ with make-up, try this trick used by many models: Apply your makeup before bathing instead oi afterward. . Just wash your face thoroughly at the basin, apply your cosmetics, and then shower or bathe last. If you shower, protect your -Jrtiatry wl|h a brimmed shower cap or a large rain bonnet which extendi out over the face. The advantage of this j “order of the batli-' is that Ithe^ steam Imparts a natural, luipiuus finish to make-up -In keeping with today’s “natural look,” I May vows are planned by Janice Stephens, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Duel Stephens of St. Clair Shores and Russell Hibbard Jr., son of the senior -of !!'. Lake Angelus Shores.^he_ Honof And res Segovia Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Mcl.ean will host a rccepllon honoring Andres Segovia at (heir Formajn Road home. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Swan-.son, Mr. and Mrs. Stephen L. Goodale and Mr. and Mrs. Albert H. de Salles. ’The world renowned classical guitarist Is giving the fifth concert of the Oakland University Community Arts (YmiucU Saturday at Pontiac Northern High School. The rewi)............. ceptlon will follow the ettn- cert. JANICE STEPHENS Tliose nTlendlitig from Bir-iTiingham include Mr. and Mrs. John rkmios, \(he l^: headmaster of H r o o k s I d < .School, Cranbrook), Mr. and Mrs. ' .S<'mon Kmalsen, Mi' nod Mrs. James Mwin. Mr. and Mrs. Charles B. O'Neil, IVIri and Mrs. Eliot Robinson, FROM OU Coming from Oakland University to honor Segovia will be Chancellor and Mrs. D. B. Varner, Dr. and Mrs. lowell Eklund, Mr. and Mrs. ' James C. Iladens, Dr. David Dl Chlera and Mr. and Mra. Joseph L. Fria. —BtherfMnelude-MrHBid Mrs E. J, Windeler. ishe Is chair- man of the Community Art.s Council) (ho Russell Grlnnells and Norman Cheats of Pon-llac, Mr. and Mrs. J. I. Walters and Mrs. RoiHut Harrli of Rochester and , Mr. and Mrs. Zora Arlius-Duntox of Grosse I’olnie, Jody Schmuker of West Sheffield Avenue and Gary Shelton of Edist Tennyson Avenue li«pc hows poised, waiting for Don Schroeder of Soiith Edith Street tb ring in their cues. They are part of the city- j wide junior high school orchestra which will present a concert at 7:30 p. m. Monday in the Pontiac Northern High School gymnasium. They will be joined byfsOQ singers from the city's five junior high schools. . I 'Fallout' Problem Soluble It’s time to bring out. the big napidns and throw away the diet charts- The turkey season has descended upon us. But a lusty appetite often causes a near miss of the biggest napkin. And it’s gravy-fallout time all-over again. But fallout first aid is as near as ' yftur drycleaher. Here’s a "first hand account of how a drycleaner administers professional fireL aid — • a- Natienal^-lnstitutc of-l^=y— -cleaning prescription for vie* tims of gravy fallout. First the garment iis dry-cleaned. This removes all oily and greasy substances. However, the albuminous part of the stain still remains. So your cleaner uses an enzyme to digest it. This makes the albumen water-soluble; so the drycleaner then applies natural detergent and flushes away, the remainder of the stain with a steam gun. See ... it’s really very simple. Cranbeny stains-eause-a-sugar as well an a dye problem, says the institute. And’ this can be difficult. Your professional drycleaner has a remedy, but he will appreciate your getting your cranberry stains to him promptly befpre they set. Sugar Soft Slip To restore the stiffness of a nylon net petticoat, dip the petticoat^lnto a solution of equal parts sugar and starch a^ hang it to di^r, bottom side up, stretched between two lines. The sugar should be added while the starch is cooking. THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, FEIUIUAR^^O, Mother's Depression Robs Child of Love By MRS. MURIEL LAWRENCE. We DO disappear, so far as , that we slap a hysterical person no condition to believe me when t Dear Mrs. Lawrence- It is | children are concerned, when we j sharply in the face. i I say that this mistreatment by' nine months since our daughter’! go into _ depression. - A -dull, | Nine months is long enough her boy is a form of love — a i ’.eft her husband and moved; P^coccupi^, listless stranger i for your daughter to remain in demand for a return of the -A4)riLmws planned by Oralia Anita Cruz, daughter of Mr. and MrsTTCicdr^TXruz ^of Keegb Harbor and Jose Eleazar Flores of Oakland Avenue^ son of Mrs. Alejandro Flores of Mercedesi Tex., and the late Mr. Flores. Quarter Hour Chicken Brqil into an apartment near us with her two children. She is still in a very depressed state from the years of abuse she had to take. Her SOB is nearly 11 and yon wooM think he is big enoui^ to understand this. But his treatment of her iis disgraceful. He argues with everything she says and is so full of backtalk that she has to call her father for help with him... ANSWER; Your grandson, I think, is howling for the mother who has disappeared into this depression. He’s lonely for her. He’s trying to rouse her by needling her. our place. ’This depression. & I hope you will familiar mother he misses and frightens children, w ★ If; in addition, they have been recently separated from their father and subjected Dp. the many other mystifyhig changes which follow die break-up of their honm, motiier's d^nresslen can be very scary inde^. Under such circumstances, a child will badger, backtalk, disobey and generally harass her in the desperate hope of - arousing-some familiar show of life froni|her — anger, affection — an^ feeling that is vigorous enough to convince him that she is still in connection with him. a i resentment of the depressed stranger who has taken her place. I suggest a psychiatrist because psychiatrists don’t try to convince us of our value and actually seeking; lovableness. They arrange mat- we discover them in Iron Horizontally ourselves. ^ " (NtWW*P*r CnMrprlM Aun.) persuade her to .consult psychiatrist. SELF ESTEENS ' It is unlikely that she can now believe that this belligerent child ot hers with ' break-up leaves damag^ self-<»teem. All our failures to makC-onrselves understood by other people can combine with it to convince ns ttat we are worth-iess and iinlpvabie. The' angels from heaven could descend to try and persuade us that we .pave done the best we could and we wouldn’t really Cleon Blue Jeans . To remove lint from a_ -ijchild’s -blue jeans, was_h them, separately, rinse twice, then add one tablespoon of-vinegar to a gallon of water for a third rinse. When dry, there will be no 'Navy Showef' Saves Water If you live in an area where water is scarce, be sure to fix leaks and close faucets tight. Also follow these directions for a “Navy shower”: ‘Conserve water. WeMown—soap up — rinse off.This technique requires only two quick flows of water. To make cotton drapes hang straight after laundering, iron them horizontally, instead ef with the side seams placed up and down. WOMEN'S WEAR HoiA/ SALE 48”nBEC©l»TOir“ $394 E. Originnlly 8.95 FABRIC FAIR MIRACLU MILE SHpPPINO CENTER C—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1^. 1964 Oieumode, fmt\ SHEER STRETCH SEAMLESS FOR THE GIRL IN f yOlJRT^lART" L Ftce Gift Wrajppins 82 N. Saginaw St. Village Yarn Shop 311 V^. Univertity Drive' R0CHEST6R OL 1-0371 Large Selection of YARN and SWEATER KITS f:30 to S Daily You'll Make Friemls Sit in Front, Stranger Xaadlelight Ceremony Unites Pair By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE R-448: Bill 'Austin served for 25 years as the president of the Bible class which-I teach at-tiie Chicago Temple. I devout chrisflaa.^ and had a wife who was one of (he mainstays of the church^ But BiH~was-a traYeltof ale?;; man. One'Sunday in his early marriage he dropped into a big ! church at Pittsburgh. ★ ★ * ' He sat down near the rear and listened to the sermon. B u t when it was over, nobody greeted him or asked him to come back the next Sunday. So when Mrs. Austin arrived the-following week, Bill said: CHILLY RECEPTION “We better attend a diffw^nt church this Sunday. For last week the people were chilly and unfriendly.’ But his wife,couldn’t believe Bill’s report. “I’m sure they .are not like that,” she protested.'", So she insisted they go back to that same supposedly chilly church. She went far down front. for a pew, with Bill following. And at the conclusion of the service, people shook hands invited theni back. ' In fact, some of the ladies asked Mrs. Austin to join their ladies aid, and Bill was invited to become a member of the men’s club. “I just don’t understand this must have been your attractive personality, for they ignored me last week.’’ “No, Bill, it wasn’t the fact that I was with-you,”_sh.e modestly disclaimed h i s compliment. “Instead, it was just a matter of where we sat!” Poll/sPamfers Then she went on to explain to Bill that people who occupy the rear pews are usually strangers or shy folks. “So you were surrounded by other visitors just like your-r self,” Mrs. Austin, reminded him. 'They were visitors so they,] The East Pike Street Church of God Was the setting for the recent marriage of Mrs. 4laiKy^^lade Crews of N^h-Anderson Street to Robert W. (Coad of Chrysler Avenue. Mrs. Anita Slade of Atlanta, Ga. and the Grant W. Coads of Auburn Heights. With her floor-length gown of .,pale- blue_sUk brocadi^and silk bolero jacket, the bride wore a short bouffant veil secured by a blue floral head-piece. She carried pink and ‘White carnations. » The Kenneth Walkers attended the couple at the candlelight ceremony. .........*.....* - ★ A small wedding reception was held in the home of the bride’s great - grandmother, Mrs. Georp D. Barker, of HNorth Anderson Street. Cover Old Piano Keys By POLLY CRAMER well. No muss or fuss when" they DEAR POLLY - Our piano tire of painting. Just ttirow away cost of having it done professionally was prohibitive. bon^t 15 4^^-incli square white plastic wall tiles, cut and glued them on the keys and they look very nice. , ’The store lent me a cutter which^^mT Eight key tops were cut from each tile. First trim away the curved edge from TWO sides but leave on the other two so they come down over “the fronts of the keys. Sand the cut edges with very fine sandpaper. This costs around a dollar for both tiles and glue. — MRS. C.E.B. Polly in care of The Pontiac Press. You’ll receive a bright, new silver dollar if Polly use your Idea in Polly’s Pointers. DEAR POLLY Here i manicure help; First paint the left little fingernail and then the right one. Next the left ring finger and then the right and continue in this manner nntirthe ihumh-naiis are painted. There is no waiting for one hand to dry and I haven’t yet Invitation to Mothers of Twins Area mothers of twins are invited to attend a meeting of the Twins’ Mothers’ Club ofOakland County, Thursday at 8:30 p.m. in the ‘300 Bowl.’ Mrs. Fred Willockx of Davisburg will review “T h e Story of Life” by Ellis W. Whiting. '----- “ A clinic will be conducted to discuss problems relating especialiy.to twins. Yankees Come Soap in Hands Don’t forget to carry along , that other ‘;jewel case” when you go traveling abroad— the plastic container that holds soap! An American travel writer describes the soap supplied -in European hotels as “the size of an aspirin and the thickness of ” By comparison, Araericj made soap is indeed a precious jewel. Better that tourists run out of money than out of soap! , ’ I me rs ibi e PdnS" ~ The most efficient electric fry pans are" completely im-mersible m hoF sbiap or de-t suds. final days of Ladies^ Better Dress SHOES Formerly to $12.99 $497 $999 ....... nihI FRIDAY KVL. coop H0U(EKEEPIN(XX STIH KON FE t-IS5.» THE PONTIAC PRESS THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 13. 1964 C—9 An August wedding is being planned by Janet ~-^arot&€tmmr;-dmgh--jl^'2^^^ ter of the Joseph A. O'Connors of Birmingham and Joseph Carl Herr, son of Mrs. Joseph C. Herr of Auburn Heights and the laU Mr.^ Herr. Six Live Cheaper Than One—Per Person By MARY FEELEY Consoltut in Money Dear Miss Feeley: How come some of your readers talk about feeding a family of five or six on $30 to $35 a week -r- when I've seen it stated that it costs $10.60 to feed one person? I’d sure like to see some of their menus! Mrs. J. W., New (k'leans, La. Dear Mrs. W. They don’t puli^ any rablyts out of the hat. The fact is simply this: when! big family, thej cost for each individual is’ less. Wl.ilO .t MARY , may take $10.60 FEELEY to buy groceries for a week for one person, the ratio goes down with, each person added to the dinner table. MOMS Unit HasTuncFieo^n" Mrs. Worth Eastman was the Tuesday hostess to members of MOMS of America, Inc., Unit No. 2, at her Pine-grove Avenue home fqr a schoolgirl luncheon and business meeting. A donation was sent to the national board for their project for peace prqgram. It )was announced that the Berkley MOMS Unit No. 9 is Sponsoring a dessert card party at the Triangle in Royal Oak Feb. 26 at 12:30 p.m. ’ It is open to the public and jjFOCeeds will be used for the veterans’ fund. * -k it The March 10 meeting will home of Mrs. David Edwards. The total laundry bleach market, is close to one billion (quarts annually. Security. I drive my own caf. Whaft do you advise? / Mrs. L. C. H., Dallas * ★ Dear Mrs. H.: I think you’ve already decided that' being independent financially is not enough. By all means try to arrange your life so that you’ll have the companionship you’ve begun to realize is the most im- portant thing in life. ★ ★ ★ The cost of living in a Senior Citizens set-up varies widely, according to the community. Why don’t you shop around, so to speak? Look over the possibilities within driving range. Then have^ talk_wlth your banker. He will be able tolielp yoiH-estimate iiow much money you. would have, if you converted everything, including your house, into cash. See if there would be enough to buy an annuity, to guarantee you a life income. As I see it, your main objectives would be to have this income, to allow for board and personal expenses, and to have enough for final expenses. Age is a factor, too, in figuring the grocery biil. For example, the U,S. Department of Agriculture estimated it costs $5:50 a week to feed a woraan~*^'^W b«-«i^^H’Fevoeiri^ 35 years old, bas^ on a low-cost food budget. But on the same budget scale, it cost $7.40^ feed, a man the same age. A six-year-old child cost $4.50, while a 19-year-old boy cost-$6.50^--- You have 4o be a real matbeihatician these days to hit it right on the button. Just try serving them ail stew. You can always throw in another carrot. Dear Miss Feeley: I am a’ widow 75 years oid, and live in my own modest home alone. I am living within my income. But is this the best way? I have been advised to sell my home and move to a Senior Citizens home or some live alone. I have $5,000 loaned out on real estate at 6 per cent. And $3,500 with a savings and loan company. I own 208 shares of stock. I get $62 a month Social step, of course. But exchanging property for people isn’t a bad deai. Dear Miss Feeley: Could you please tell me what the average family with four children (three ^flslielweerr 5 and Idjears oldr one boy 2) spends a month, on an average, for clothes? M. S., Smithtown, L. I. ■« .A ★ it Dear M. S.: The usual allotment for clothes is from 8 to 15 per cent of the famiiy income. Whether you take the low figure or the high depends on what other expenses are involved. In your case, you might find the low figure quite adequate, as your girls are in an age range that makes hand-me-downs ioglcal. As a mother -witit^our^hlldren, you might as well resign yourself to getting the small end of the deal, where your own clothes are concerned! You’ll find that dressing of you in wash-and-wear outfits actually saves a substantial sum. Fewer changes are necessary when clothing can be washed and dried within a couple of hours. And the cost* of upkeep is cut right to the bone. - Dear Miss Feeley: X -am-a-cardiac patient who has had two heart attacks, and also has arthritis of the spine. I am unable to work oif doctor’s orders, and have not worked since July 1962. I draw a disability Social ' Security check and have ' -come_Jrom a flat and my^ wife has a small job, Is^ei^ any certaio way of filling out our income tax return? • And am T entitled to any other deduction, such as sick leave time, and do I state my condition on my tax return? We have always filed a joint return, even though this is the first time my wife has worked since 1945. J. S., Toledo, Ohio -Dear J. S.: Fill out your income tax return just as you have in the past. Your Social Securifty benefits, are not subject to tax. (You can write Mary Feeley »re bt~The' Pontiac Press, washed Enclose stamped, self-addressed envelope for reply.) - Cleaner Start, Cleaner Stay The people who run the largest commercial office building in the worldr-New York’s famous Pan Am building-know that there is nothing like keeping things clean right from the start! A crew of workmen armed with plenty of spuds, sponges, and cloths have already ForTovWcddte QUALITY andQwnitiqr • l2PhMMhiSS7Albai • FlTMCoaiiMlIuit a A MiBUiira MMifiqp iCntifieale mural that dominates the al-most-brand-new lobby. C. R. HASKBLL STUDIO t Mi. taemraTSt;;--—— Or*ukn KAnr\/4ni/ Tkiirt Frl Qnt 'ftl O m m T..^. va/. J u-i MaesTroi Colois.^ ovRr a Ihousand lovoly colors to choose fioni MIXED INSTANTLY Pontiac Olass Go. 23 W. Lowrencd FE 5-6441 $319 BARBIZON SLIP SALE THIS WEEK ONLY. Two favorite styles; specially pricedi RIO, shadow-panelled Zephaire batiste with eyelet embroidery . . . and ENTHRALL, In crepe Remarque with French nylon lace. Both In complete size ranges for juniors, misses, women, half-sizes. White. Ragularly 4.00. . Rvnllat Til-Hurtii, lltminiliisi, Roy.) Otk, F«m4.lt,a..htttir N.rth OJateixtlMy ^lohe'...Ux' at'4-44-4'3 BRUSHED CARDIGAN 000% mo-70% l.rtibswool/20% fur-flber/-10% iT^lori, completely silk-lined. In while with white or gold beading. Blue/while chalk or m.ise/white; tixas 36 to 42 ..............14.91 lUZZARD LIZARD shoe tota with matching llzard-handia umbrella (lizard Is grained water-proof plastic). In rad, truffle-tan and black . K .$5 Add 20e Ftd. lax SCARE AND PURSE SET, triangle-ahaped head scarf and matching purse In madras, denim or sailcloth. Choose from solids, plaids or stripes .... $2 Add 10c F»d. lax PANDORA SHAOORA CARDIGAN 75% wool/29% mohair. Craw link trim around neck and border. White, It, blue In size. 36 to 40.1.91 SWAGGER CARRY-ALL, simulated leather satchel bag. Doubla handle, loldover Hep. zippered eomparlmeht. illtehed trim. Spice, ten, chestnut, bUck, bone ...............:. .1.91 Add 10% Fsd. MX SHEPPIELD PENDANT WATCH, dlK-clrffllng welch on a long link chain. Elegant brushed Florentine finjsh Jts_„ allver or iold.....................$17 Add 10% F»d. to* , TERRY RORE, towel-thick cotton terry with luscious ripe ^rewt^rrles ap-iRg neckllna and pockets. White, pink, inelze.' Sizes Pel, im , ' med., Ig........................ 10,91 BULKY-KNIT SHRUG, of soft 100^r Orion®. In white with beige, rrSaize, pink, blue or orchid. In sizes medium end latBe .. , ,, ......S.9S PITTI-PANTS In gilt boa. Each box contains two pairs of JO0% nylon pelll-panti with a special Valentine look. White with red embtoldery, black/red; 5. 6, 7...., .3.91 OUR PONTIAC MALL STORE IS OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9 P.M. THE PONTIAC PRKSS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1964 LAST 2 WEEKS SAVEISO^ AND EVEN MORE On Nationally Advertised Merchandise Friday, Saturday, Monday, Charge It, George’s is going out of General Dept. Store Business . . . Will Remain at Same Location, Specializing Only in High Fashion . . . Will Remodel to Change Store! 19.99 Man't 3.00 Parma Lift 3^K:KETS A LADIES' BRASi $7«»| $1*® Man't Work SHIRTS 10.99 Ladiai' Ski JACKETS $%97 f $g88 8.99 Man't SWEATERS 10.99 Ladlai' DRESSES $3«* I $4» GEORGi'S 74 N. SAGINAW ST. , .pr-«5 Lef's Knif Want Tunic or Vest? freshness end flavor that's 'way out front serve our COTTAGE CHEESE COTTAGE CHEESE WITH SCALLOPED EGGS 6 eit>, hard cooktd Ml cup cottage chccie Sweet red and green peppers Paprika or cayenna 1 ttpn. butter 1 tapn. flour 1 cup milk Ml tapn. salt Quarter the egga and arrange a layer In a buttered baking diah. Add a layer of the green and red peppera cut >n thin atrlpa or chopped, then another layer of egga. Make a white aauce of the butter, flour, aalt and milk In dou* bla boiler. Cream cottage cheeae until amooth and fold Into the white aauce. Pour over the egga, aprinkle with but* tared bread crumba and paprika. Drown in hot oven. VIENNA TARTS IVi cupa cottage cheeae IMi cupa butter 1 cup flour Jelly or preaervea Malt butter and blend with cottagn I cheeae. Stir in flour to make a amooth dough. Cut into amall piecea and chill uiitil quite firm. Roll and I piece into a aquare. Place a teaapoon of iaily or preaervea in center of each, pick up the cornera and pinch together, or fold Into turnovara and ai ‘ the adgea by denting with tine of fo Bake In hot oven at <50* until brown, 10 or IS mlnutea. • COTTAGE CHEESE DUMPLINGS 2 cupa Cottage Cheeae Ml cup flour 4 egga, beaten 2 tablaapoona butter teaapoon aalt by CUP bread crumba Beal the cheeae until amooth or prewa through a line aieve. Add the other in. • gredienta, mixing well, then form Into*' balla, Drop Ihtb a kettle of aaltad boil. ; d cook lor 20 mlnutea. Re. | “•*“ •*" 'h browned ‘4 Mapfie.Le4 20 E. HOWARD STREET For Homo Dtlivtry - Phono 4-252T Anyone who can knit a stitch and purl a stitch can fashion this tunic. Knit it in a match- -SurrUgbt Can Hurt Furnishings - -..CHICAGO,JUEn: “ JSindm shades provioe protection to lahricsligainsrf alf I h g and other effects of direct sunlight. This holds as true'for upholstery and slipcover fabric as it does for curtains hung directly at the window. ★ if. : Sunshine, as wonderful as it is, can be damaging in large, concentrated dosages. Ultraviolet rays are believed by some experts to be the worst offenders. That’s why fabrics set at easteni or northern exppsuros fare better than those that receive sunlight from the south or west. Tests made by the U.S. Bureau of Standards demonstrated that all fibers placed in direct sunlight deteriorate much more rapidly than those that have not been so exposed. Consequently, curtains wear better when shades protect them. Dyed fabrics are particularly susceptible. In some cases the colors wash out. In others, even in the best vat dyes, the dyes themselves may not be affected but they tend to accelerate the sun damage to the fibers. ★ ★ ★ The Fine Hardwoods Association reports that, “Wood furniture standing in the line of direct sunlight^ daily, will also change color. Walnut and mahogany tend to become yellow. Other dark woods also bleach in constant strong sunlight. ing or contrasting color or even a tweed mixture to give a special lift to that favorite skirt and blouse of yours. Also, do you realize that if this tunic is- worked 11 inches in length, you would have _a vest. ★ * * Trimmed with a matching or contrasting woven bias- band, obtainable in any fabric store, you will achieve that smart handmade look. —Instructions --fw- - thifr - tenio-are i^»zes 8 through 18. All «zes Are ihcTuded“on one pat-“ tern. # ★ ★ Pattern for Tunic .No. 26 may be obtained by sending 50 cents in coin, check, or money order to: Ursula du Bois, Hie Pontiac Press Pattern Dept., Box 3307, Van Nuys, Calif., 91407. The engagement is announced^ oyMarg'aret Bateman,—daughter of Mrs. Harold Bateman of Lowell Street and the late Mr. Bateman to David George Mitchell, son of the senior William Mitchells of South Marshall Street. Hospital Gray Ladies Honored at Ceremony Gray Lady capping and pinning ceremony was held Tuesday evening in the Pontiac State Hospital staff auditori- Administration of the Gray Lady pledge and the capping responsibilities were handled by Mrs. William C. Sproull, Oakland County chairman of Gray Lady Service. She was assisted by Mrs. George M. Sherriff, Pontiac State Hospital Red Cross volunteer coordinator. ★ .★ ,v ★ Recognized for their achievements were the following new Gray Ladies: Mrs. Jerry Crossman, Mrs. Russell Hayward, Mrs. Robert Carlson, Mrs. Victor Green, Mrs. William Mercer, Mrs. Miriam Archer, Mrs. Clare Charron, Mrs. Lee Voe- 1555 UNION LAKE ROAD EM 3-3912 UNION LAKE VILLAGE R & M Department STORE 40% off and more Gomplele Slock of WITN PER DRESSES llowii <>!• Kvon tin- ,*'»lfi l*i-l4Ti« al K At M Rnvi. Sale Priee Reg. Sale Pi-ir e $10,98 $M,98 •8.99 $17.98 • 10.99 *19 98 • 11.99 It m i:itanxl ItiMM III I Local feoy. Performs in Concert Les^ Utterbadk, a Pontiac ^eshman, is among 34 student musicians performing in the Albion College Symphonic Band Winter Concert, S^ay, on the Albion capnpus. trumpet, is Qie son of the Lester Utterback of Middle-belt tload. ★ ★ -k Martha Burke, daughter of the William P. Burkes of West Hamlin-Boad -has named to the dean’s iist^at Milwaukee-Downer College, Milwaukee, for h^ hl^ academic record in the first se- THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1964 yi'T-- - ■ ■ t- li^li r Here are a few rules ndiich wBl help you avoid nervous tension, which 'wastes so much energy and leads to chronic fatigue. 1, When life becomes very (^m^ez take toe out to :elTlewT5S7 Writedown wlu|t yon fed yon nunt ac-coindith during the'next few days or week and ton divide to activities up into days. The feeling of having mmre to on can do is tiring. see raiiKck Md white, if yon have jplanned in a oealistic way, yon will feel On the dean’s list at University of Detroit, is Michael J. Brady. s(m of the Harry Bradys df LaFay Drive. He is a sophomore, majoring in liberal arts. 4605 SIZES 10-20 HAT-2214 New fashion wizardry! Sew blouse, beret to match — dramatize suits, transform skirts into smart costumes! Easy-sew in silk, pique, wool. Printed Pattern 4605: Blouse in Misses Sizes 10,12,14,16, 18, 20. Beret one headsize, 2214. w ★ ★ Thirty-five cents in coins for this pattern — add IS cents for each pattern for first-class mailing and special handling. Send to Anne Adams, care of The Pontiac Press, 137 Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th St., New York 11, N. y. Print plainly name, address^ with zone, size and style number. ★ ★ ★ Do you know how to get a pattern absolutely free? It’s simple — order our Spring-Summer Catalog including tree coupon to get any one of 250 design ideas. Send 50 cents today. Learn About Christian Science by otttnding this FREE LECTURE entitled "Cliiiftiaii Scitnce: The Revelation of Spiritual Law" by Panl Htnrfc O.U.R. of Portlaiid, Oidgoi Mombor of tho Board of Ltcturoihlp of tha Mothar Church, Tha Pint Church of Chrlir, Sclantlit, In eoiton, Mauachuiatti. Svnday. Ftbratiy 1( •I 4 p.«. !■ - PONTIAC NOPTHENN HIGH 4CNOOL 1051 Arkna aff North Parry Undar AuryUai af PIrat Chartli af Clirirt, SclanlUt By realistic 1 mean, don’t planjnore than you can do without strain. ★ ★ ★ If you an>roach your lists froni this viewpoint you will discover that lots of the things you had in mind can wait a little you7 Half of the time, ttie person did not mean to be rude or they didn’t mean it as it sounded, and if they did, why become upset! Many women ahio spend priceless energy tAich conld be used in snch liaiqty ways by reaching for perf^on in housekeeping and entertainment. They wait to extend hospitality until everything is longer; that some of them are not absolutely and ihunediataly essential; that the old world and your family and ttiei^s will go along in much the same way wittiout Rich franttc efforts on your part. - DONT FRET 2. Learn not to fret over non-essentials. Energy and hi^i-ness are' wasted in midling over a possible rudeness or wonder- ________ ing whaLgomeone-thinks-abent IniHleS' 'Dus feeling rather than perfect and* even then they are not relaxe^ hostesses. - < If the lamp shade doesn’t get fixed bef(x^ the party, forget it If a membor to family spills something oa a rug just before the occasiot, just don’t mention it It is certainly praiseworthy when a woihan is interested in providing a well kept and well run, attractive home for hw family, but it is a full time career to keep every detail of any home-im NO 3, Avoid the feeling of rush. Even if your day is crowded and you must go from duty to duty or from appointment to appofitt-it doesn’t heln:-to-feel to hurry, is to-factor which exhausts you. v4. Organize your housework. 'This saves lots and lots of time and energy/ 5. EVeryme should have some privacy each day. Try to grab a few minutes a day to be alone, to dream, to think, to lax, to straighten out values, to get in touch with the sweep of life. MEGGY’S MIRACLE MILF_ tomorrow morning 10 A.M. SKI WEAR Vs off rd Parkas were 50®® nowSS®* were 40®® now 26®^ were 30®® now 20®® were 20®® now 13^'‘ were 16®® now 10®^ were 8®® now 5^“* Ski Pants were 15®® now 10®® were 20®® now 13®* were 30®® now 20®® hoods mittens sweaters reduced 1/3 Final Close-Out all reniaininij; ^^inter blouses skirls slacks sportswear Y: off one group early fall and winter DRESSES many wearalVIc ihmiigh 8pring and eiimnwr off EEGGY’S MIRACLE MILE ilOw! our Tel-Huron store has a fashionable new look Yes, we've a brand-new decor from top to bottom, from exquisite wall coverlagOa4dush new carpeting! In fact we're so wonderously iO fashion you'41 wont to come see us just to browse In an aura of elegance and fashion—shop in the leisurely manner you love. And, then of course to take advantage of these exceptional fashion values thursday, friday 'n Saturday onlyl SPECIAL shimmering pure silk dresses just arrived fpr spring '64 »I3 regularly H9.98 Incredible! Brand new pure silk dresses !n one and two piece styles your now at this one low, low price! You'll find sheaths, blousons, A-lines, princess sheaths an’d long torso styles in a brilliant array of new for spring colors. In misses and junior sizes. save 50% on country tweeds luxurious cashmere/vicuna coats $67®° regularly ^135 It's fhe chance of a lifetime} Big 50% savings on our most luxuriouscoofsl Beautl* fully tailored and detailed styles In tho season's best silhwettes and plush butter-soft cashmere/vicuna. Many style* In favored fashion colors. Misses sizes. bright faille print ski parkas that reverse to cozy quilts »10’7 regularly »14.98 Now, the pick of our most popular ski porkai ere yours to choose at remarkable savlqgsl We've lots of hooded reversible styles In warm waterproof, wlndproof .royon/cotton follle prints that reverie to solid color nylon quilts. In sizes S-M-L. AA^TTSTTCThIT .1VT~ ATST’R shop every night monday through sdjurday tp 9 p.Fn. Tel-Huron store only! -1 Telegraph at Huron Roads ■ 7'■ " ■' ■ ■■ ■ ■ -■ j■ THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1964 Deadline Approaches in Lansing Constitution Changes Need Caucus OK LANSING (AP) - Supporters of a series of proposed amendments to the new constitution still waited today for the go^ ahead from both parties in the Hause—and hof^ it would - come before the long weekend _ adloumment. ________________________ If caucus action on approving the resolutions is delayM until Monday, it will cut to about eight legislative days the time left to get them through both The resolutions would freeze existing legislative districts if no new apportionment plan is approved by the Michigan Supreme Court, and make other important changes in election provisions of the new document. State. elections officials say -thr resolutions almost certainly-would have to be passed by Feb. 28 to allow the 60 days necessary to put-* them on the ballot in a special April 28 referendum. The tnree proposals had been MOBTH (D) 4AK<8 1TAK88 ♦ 54 4AQ7 ■AST 4JT1072 4|«4S ^98 V74 ♦ AK83 ♦QJlOOa 410 8 5 4864 SOUTH 4Q8 VQJ1068 ♦ 97 4KJ8I No one vulnerable North Bast South West 14 Pass 1¥ Pass •t4 Pass 84 Pass 4tf Pass Pass Pass 5T Pass Opening lead~4:K By OSWALD JACOBY Quite a few people today play a' convention known generally as "the short club.” There are < almost as many Is not likely to acquire any popularity. / North certainly hopes that his partner will respond to his 20-point club opening, but if his partner does pass. North does not expect to be missing a game. South’s response of one heart is most pleasing and North jumps to two spades. South bids three clubs to await further action and North jumps to four hearts. South feels that his hand is worth some sort of slam try and the natural slam try is a bid of five hearts. North certainly wants to go to six, but „ j^Jorth-4S-.looking~aLiwo losings ^ diamonds and the bidding indb cates that South also has no pro^ tection in that suit so North settles for what can be made. slated to go to Republican and Democratic caucuses Wednesday, but the meetings never matorialized because of a long Rouse debate over a school prayer resolution. Leaders of both parties indi-cated-.they would, try to sched-ule the caucused again today. '.Unless we can, it certainly will delay action on the resolutions at least until Monday," said House Speaker Allison Green, R-Kingston. Rep. E, D. O’Brien; D-Detroit. a leader of the bipartisan group which sponsored the proposed changes, admitted he was worried about the possible delay, He said, however, that there was no reason why the xesolu^ tions could not be expedited through the Senate if time grew short after they passed toe House. Neither Green nor House Mi- between 90 and 100 votes when they reach the floor,” said the Detroit legislator. Kowalski said earlier the reso-iutions might tun into trouble among Democrats' because the Senate districts which one proposal would freeze were de-clared unconstitutional in apportionment suit in the Michigan Supreme Court 1% . years WASHINGTON (AP) -• An $18,400 c«Ura!rt4ajd£signLaL forest engineering laboratory for the U.S. Forest &rvice Houghton, Mich., was awarded Wednesday totoe^fieeoLGOT^ jlon Cornwell of "Tf-averse City, Mich. _________±____W ^ W The General Senrices Administration said drawings and spec-hdn^ Eeater^Joseph-KowalskL. Jflcatjohs for the building are to D-Detroit, were willing to guess whether the proposals could get caucus support. But O’Brien said he was confident. ‘T predict they* will get the support of both caucuses and JACOBY bids three-card club suits on occasion. rib experts bid the “short club” or the "forcing club.” When an expert opens one club it is not a forcing bid and partner knows that he has at least three clubs to an honor. There areacorporal’s guard of experts who do use a formalized club convention in which toe club opening guarantees a certain minimum of high card strength and shows nothing about clubs at all, but this so-called “big ' has no relation to the "short club.” It is a legitimate bidding system althoi^h it has very few followers and Astrological. * \ ForGCOst ^ ty tYDNIY OMARS Per PrWay "TM wlw man conlroti hli . . . Aalralo«y palnit lha Ames (Mar. 11 fo Apr. achlava ORDER. Find or* ara — whnre you r— concrata aniwar*. aki^iclim — frlan poial may not be »ura or in. TAURUt (Apr. JO lo May_ M on Impulia provai cotlly. Em|; SON ApoMfk 4«oiH:latlY 00 HEART, f__________ you praparad to W .*•»., maWra, wlta - and CONSIDERATE. tlSMINI (May Jl to Juna 1|): (orcai appaar^ »Mltarj>d, V+CIIRDJV/itr-40 0--Th6 bidding has been: Sooth West North ~ ' Pass a V You, South, hold: 4KJ104STA88 ♦AS2 4Q6 What do you do? A—Bid toreo hearts. Tonr partner either has at least five hearts or wlU return to spades. TODAY’S QUESTION YOur partner mntinues with four clubs. What do you do now? ^ '-j. ^ /I' -v--'f "^THErTn^nTAcTTOESS. ItHUR^DAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1964 C—13 LOOKWHATS UNDERTHE ORANGE ROOF! SEAFlfoD DINNER SHRIMP niXETS PreiKh Fried Pontoei Creamy Cole Slaw r - - €effee,Tea^Milk --- Freshly Bak^ Roll and Butter Choice of Howard Johnson's 28 Famous ke Creams or Sherbets UOUARDjOHniOn'K LENTEN SPECIAL Strvsii ff bruary 12 Threu|h Fs bruary 22 BIRMINGHAM ROYAL OAK Maple and TaUg^pb Rdi, Woodward Near 18 Mllft^., DRAYTON PUINS SOUTHFIELD ObDIale Hwy. (U.S.-10) Northweitem at 10 Mila mH FRY EVERY WEDNESDAY, $<| 00 AU YOU CAN EAT JL— THIS COUPON WORTH Itowardthe 50< PURdHASE of any LARGE PI22A ^.::?uinLE caesars OLENWOOO PLAZA at N. PERRY . Good'Til February 20, 1964 , ' FE 5*^151 FIFTY CENTS Uphill Battle on Solon Plan LANSING (AP)-A legislative redistricting plan sponsored by Sen. Kent Lundgren, R-Menom-inee, appeared today to face an uphill course with the Oom* mittee on Senate Business. The committee failed to vote on the proposal at a meeting Wednesday sdtow and said committee m^bo’s believed no action would be takeh this week. This would run out the clock on the Lundgren plan, which in the form of a resolution telling the State Appor tionment Commission to con-sider it and passiblv forwai‘d-it to the Michigan Supreme Court. The court, vdiich took over the legislative revamping job from the commission Eeb. 1, has set next Monday as the deadline for submisson of plans. Uindgren, a former delegate to the Constitutional Convention, drew up the plan in hopes of giving the legislature the initiative in reapportionment. Committee member Raymond Dzendzel, D-Detroit, said he be^ lieved the Lundgren plan will die in committee “and it ^ould,” : ^ r - - “ Phis constitution gives tiie legislature no prerogative ii apportionment. Lundgren wa con-con delegate and that’ e way con-con wanted it,” said Dzendzel, the Senate mi-ority leader. Ludgren had argued in vain at the convention against crent-Ing the commission. NO PREDICTION Chalrmn John Fit^eMd, R-Grand Ledge,: would make no prediction on whether the apportionment plan would reach a coitimittee vot^ ^ He said the committee, will be niieeting again this week and that Luridgren’s plan is “fair game for a motion. Xdon’t make the motions.” Lundgren told the comm that lawmakers are closest to districting,,; problem and know most About it, and said he felt the commission and the court should know they had their own ideas on it. ,/ FRIDAY ■SPECIAL- Delicious Pied Piper Restaurant Th* Pied Ptpwr invites you to come but and have a ring side seat, to view the constructibn on M-59 while you dine. (Check Map Below for Detailt) ■— SOAO CLOaCO emaa construction zone IS ALL YOU CAN EAT I Sunday After Ohuroh Sptoial Roast Turkey Dresiing 3 Tuaos I lOAO .1 i 1 H., OONYtA« /J\.hM, / 4370 AA-5^ Pontiac ^E 8.6741 VcwcySJ COLONML UNTCRN • DINING RCX)M • COFFEE SHOP • CAR SERVICE • CARRYOUT 5896 DIXIE HWY. SE YOUR GUIDE TO OOOD FOOD ATREASONEDLEnrCES Rain Every Tuesday & Friday Includ** Froneb Frloi, Colo Slow, Croomy Tartar Souco, Rollt A^iurtorl ALL YOU CM EAT w OR 14IM0 WATERFORD Beffer Grade Movies Bring Boom to Theater Business By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-Television Writer HOLLYWOOIX-Por an industry that was supposed to curl up and die the moviS theatw business is Rowing amazing life. ■ Eugeae V. Klein, president of the National General C o r p. i which runs 2Qi theaters — Fox West Coast-in 16 states, de-1 dares: THOMAS “We feel the theater business bottomed out some time ago. The climate has been extremely good for theaters recently. There were times at Christmas when every one of our theaters was sold . out| and that hasn’t happened for five or six years. A ir - ★ “What has caused the theater revival? Better product. The major reason for the increase of theater business is that Holly- t people want to see. “Mostly, it has been good, sophisticated pictures that audiences can enjoy. Like an Trma La Douce,’ not a great picture but lot of flm. GOT THE MESSAGE "I think Hollywood has gotten the message. Pei^le won’t go see any Grade B garbage, They won’t ga to message pictures. They’ll pay $2.50 withiwt com-pruning to see something they want to see. But if they don’t want to see it, you can’t get them in on passes.” -Gene Klein is a plain-spoken man with the fram^ of a pro footbaU fullback and a sense of what the public will buy. That knack is demonstrated in National General’s latest statement; earnings in fiscal 1963 at $3,469,600 vs. a loss of $6,605,919 two years ago. The veteran film chain had suffered a sodes of red-ink years befde bouncing into the black in 1962. The change in fortune resulted from a modem- wood has hem making pictures izatimL.iaunpaiga-ihat-now-hafr the corporation selling not only Sonic Boom Tests: Residents Adjusting OKLAHOMA “ClTY7“^la. (AP)—The nation’s sonic boom laboratory, a long slice through Oklahoma City’s residential area, is taking the jarring in stride—to a point. Most folks are getting used to the booms, which sound like thunder. 'Hiey’re eight times a day. ★ ★ The Federal Aviation Agency reported it received, 655 calls during the first week of the tests, which started Feb, 3. Many were complaints, officials said, but most were just from persons who wanted to know what was happening. The most serious objection ime Wednesday when a plumber, Woodrow W. -Bussey, hied a suit in federal court seeking to halt the tests, EAR DAMAGE Bussey, 46, named FAA Administrator Najeeb Halaby in the suit filed in behalf of his daughter, Julie, 5. Bussey claims the tests have impaired his daughter’s hearing, and have aggravated an existing condition in his inner ear. * * ★ ‘A sonic boom that can shake a house can do nothing but harm to the delicate membrane of the human ear,” the suit contends. Bussey claims the tests started without his consent, so they gre unconstitutional. WWW U.S. Atty. B. Andrew Potter said he isn't sure what the government’s action will be. He said it is the first Mch suit to be filed where sonic boom tests have been conducted on an announced schedule. Weather permitting, the booms are heard at 7 a m., 7:30 a.m. 9:30 a.m., 10 a.m., 1:30 p.m., 2 p.m., 4 p.m., and 4:30 p.m. An Air Force F104 jet fighter makes a precisely controlled pass over the city’s northwest residential area. TESTS CONTINUE The tests will continue for six, months. The FAA wants to see if the publjc can adjust to re-)cated sonic booms, which Will a by-product of the supersonic transport flights of the 1970s. The FAA says about 60 damage claims have been received, but only two of the parties signed complaints. Neither claim is significant, the agency says. Several homes have been out- Titt«l-with sojrfiisticated electronic equipment to measure the strains tiie booms are exerting. The FAA reports the equipment has shown a sonic boom puts less strain ng National (Jeneral’s new enterprises: Concerts, Inc., which produces live attractiops, including si seasoa.of musicals at Santa Monica Civic Auditorium; Mission Pak, the fruit sellers; theater color-vision, for closed-circuit television; mobile rentaisr frailer supplie^^ and housing and commercial devek opments in Marin, San Francisco, Orange counties, etc. “But theaters will always be the major portion of our business,” said Klein. “We have shut down or sold some and cut the seating capacity in others; some had 3,000-4,000 seats while 950 is a more smsible number today, ________________________ w w.......W ■ “Llke nny^otherhuslness, we have had to take our merchandise to the public. We are now half-way through our building program of 50 new theaters, mo^y in new suburbs.” BETTER SUPPLY National General is also moving into film fihaiidng—to assure a better supply of product. ’The government has consented, as long as the corporation allows its competitors to bid for tile films. What if their bids are hi^er? “Tliat’s all right, too,” said Klein. “We make money either way.” Ferndale Attorney Gets State Post Ferndale attorney Maurice F. Cole was one of two men appointed yesterday by Gov, Romney to a board governing the state veterans’ facility at Grand Rapids. ^ . w w w Cole, an Oakland County Circuit Court commissioner, was named along with retired Grand Rapids (]hie7“PfoBaflqn officer Robert Gaunt to replace Peter Bommarito of Lansing and Robert Mathieson of Detroit, whose terms expire Feb. 28. WWW The appointments are subject to approval hy^the State Senate. - „ OPEN % THEATRE 5 6:48 12N.Soaww.w - FE S-6211 • LAST TIMEI TONIGHT • The cmsiimption of frozen vegetables has increased ^by about 1250 per cent within the last few years. UST TIMES TONIGHT "tlttlES OrTHE FIELD* “SODEM and GOMORAH* im MORS IHUi]| DEVI PMuvisiiM-TECHliiW ALSO 'TNI MOST TiRRIFyiNti' MOTION PICTURE EVERCREATEDI VINCENTPRICE «H.IMOStMIUlRyFSRTR*YH,S!F^^J PZS3KEECO ALL TECHNICOLOR SHOW IRANX snuiM TBW ON THE SAME PROGRAM Friday and Saturday 3:30 P.M. to 7:30 P.M^ TEENAGERS with jhi«2|||q UP T0 20 InternationalBuffet An exotic urrey of uea I FRIDAY EVENINGS ^ 5 P.M. to 9 P.M. cittdini .eledu and^^ • aucet renowned' throughout Iho worldj^i I275J Call for RaMrmtiona DORMAN’S S'r' ^ OPEN L Tlwrt. 4 M II OM, Art, wW M. I Newi Nl MU Nw')!i *7 PM. CHIC-N-SEA 4S5 AUlURN AVINUI Cr-14 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13. 1964 ONLmOR De Gaulle's Getting Gleeful Over Recent World 'Conquests By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Analyst Hie air of jubilation and confidence emanating from President Charles de Gaulle’s Elysee Palace was taking on an almost physical force. The breaks were going his wiy, and his cup was running West German objections and forced agreement on a farm policy which promised to benefit French farmers and relieve the pressure of agriculture surpluses. ★ ★ * As for the world and France’s place in it, especially as it eon-cemsd the United States, be had mov^ back into a place of prominence in Asia without the firing of a shot or the use of a soldier by the .simple eigiedient-of granting diplomatic recognition to Red China. Cbiang Kai-shek then removed a sitnatiofl which might have caused some embarrassment by breaking teiations France. « Ahegd lay the rosy vista of de Gaulle’s, visit to Mexico next month and visits to Argentina, Brazil, Ecuador and Golonfoia in the fall , ★ ★ ★ A possible portent of things to oome was a suggestion - fronr Panama, deeply embroiled in a quarrel with the United States, e r n m e n t of Generalissimo Tho.Na^nalist Chinese gov-- -tbat that nation migbt..also wel^ on the, idealistic: scale» :wa8,Jto. come attention from de Gaulie in the form of French economic OPERATING BASE De Gaulle’s operating base was France’s great prosperity and the suggestion that French aid, previously channeled almost exclusively to former French possessionsi might now also be extended elsewhere. In Asia, for example, de Ganlle pursned twin goals. restore the glory of France. Hie other, somewhat lower State Resolution As|an markets to Prayer Issue Heads for D C. LANSING (AP) ■- Over the protests of some members that it was either wrong or unneces-cfinttoversiai legislative resolution on school prayem was on its way to Congress today. The resolution—asking Congress to initiate action to amend the U.S. Constitution to assure a right to offer prayers In public schools -r rolled througinfie House on a 76 - 26 vote Wednes- ^ The proposal earlier had passed the Senate, where it originated, with 18 affirmative votes and an unrecorded number of no votes. Sponsored by Sen. Milton Zaagman, R - Grand Rapids, the resolution specifically asks that the constitution bejimended fo provide that “the free exercise of religion shall include the right to offer prayers in public schools.’’ (XARIFY RIGHTS Zaagman said hr seeks to “•clarify’’ this right in view of a U,S._ Supreme Court ruling fiat year”TCf an offW prayer prescribed for public schools in NeW York was illegal. In 45 minutes of debate preceding the House vote, opj^n-ents of the resolution argu^ it was unnecessary because the high dourt ruling concerned only a “government ■ prescribed’’ prayer. .... ¥ ¥ ¥ “The right to offer prayers in schools now exists,’’ declared Rep. Joseph Gillis, D - Detroit. “A yes vote might be construed to indicate this legislature does not believe this cixistitutional right now exists.’’ Rep. William Ryan, D -Detroit, galri____he feared an j Tax Tips r f (EDITOR’S NOTE -The follomng informa-^ fion concerning income S tax ^oblems is submit-ted by the liitemal } p Revenue Service os a I- public service.) ■ Question: During 1963 I I 5 received $220.00 income m from funds I have deposit-, ed with a savings and loan ; association. The savings I and loan association calls -these payments “dividends.’’ Am I entitled to i i the dividend exclusion and ; the dividends received credit on thisJncome? , Answer: Amounts which g you receive froffi'a“sav- 3 I ings and loan association are in fact interest, not I’ dividends. As such, you f, are not entitled to either • I the dividend, exclusion or f the dividends received 1 ' credit. "This’5^come is ful- !' ly taxable and must be re-, ported as “interest” on line 3fbTbFTorin 1040. ’ For the answer to YOUR ; r-. question call your local Internal Revenue Service Office/. amendment such as-proposed by the resolution would pose a threat to religious freedom. ^FEELTfUUT—------------ “If you spell otit permission to pray,“you^^-s^fing anything not spelM out as being permitted is prohibited,” Ryan said Some supporters of the proposal, among them Rep. Roy^ Spencer, R - Attica, said they viewed the question as fundamental in Ammcan gdvtrit ment. ★....* ■ ★ Spencer said, “we’re not injecting religion into the sdiools. We are merely eliminating a ban against...prayers.” Hiere was a brief smattering of applause when Rep. John Sobieski, D - petroit, said Congress should tell the U. S. Supreme Court "oui;' people are still for God and country,” EFFORT FAILS One effort to sidetrack the resolution by sending it back to committee failed, debpite a plea by Rep. Jerome Traxler, R ■ Bay City, that lawmakers needed more time to make up their minds. Traxler, an attorney, got a little angry when House GOP floor leader Robert Waldron, R-Grosse Pointe, also a lawyer, retorted: **Hiis issue is a basic one in American governmeht. If you haven’t got your mind made up by now, maybe you shouldn’ be sitting here.” Rep. Raymond . Baker, R Berkley, one of two Republicans who voted against the resolution. One Week Only ! FINE SHOES BUILT ON AUTHENTIC U. S. NAVY LASTS Importnnt-thesc lasts are AUTHENTIC, not "navy type,” not “navy atylo.” You,get the aamo fine shape and ease of flt specified by the Navy. Plus auimr-lino Goodyear weltconatruction, aupple leather uppers, oak-bend leather soles, split cowhide lining, flexible fibre insolt^. *6.99amir Bhtihbfhnum. M*0 end pkpns orders promptly <^682-1010 r PONTIAC MALL, PONTIAC , 1 fSHT TH8iH«9H10ieHllll| 11 X X X X X X IlL XX XX XX X X X X ir XXXJCXXXX X X X X i- XXXXXXX XXX lii XXXXX XX XXX BOND'S said he.feared its passage would create “dissension” by forcing formalized, public prayers upon people. _____ VOTE SPLIT On the vote, 54 Republicans and 22 Democrats supported ' proposal, 24 Democrats and two GOP members opposed it. Four members who were present— Democrats and one Republican — did not vote. The average life of a hurricane is about nine days. French industrial goods faced with increasing competition and problems of qyer-prodnc-tion. Red China had little that France dbuld use ahd less mon-QT. But she could sell to the underdeveloped nations of the French African community and thereby earn the francs which could be spent in France .on .hfe. . dustrial products. ★ ★ ★ Th Southeast ~Asia, the twin goals became one. ★ ★ ★ - ©espite-thfr shock-with-whieh' the United States greeted de Gaulle’s decision to recognize Red China, it was part of a plan long in the making and one which began to take form last August when de Gaulle called for a neutral and unified Viet Nam. The idea quickly gained adherents. North Viet Nam, under severe economic strain and desperately in need of rice from flie South, reacted enthusiastically. Cambodia, when it decided to reject JU.S. aid,, turned to France and received a warm reception. “We are coiiviiiTOd that OHly France can build a bridge be- tween East and West,’* declared Cambodia and a unified Yiet Nam.- , In Laos, French representatives have been equally active, promoting a state visit of the king to Paris and a l^-tm-m program of ecmomic aid. pe Gaulle, promising his ideas bn a beUef the United States eventually must withdraw militarily from Southeast Asia' describes Red China as a forve in iKing. So, undoubtedly, is de Gaulle. 34 Latins Die in Bus “RIO DE^ JANEIRO, Brazib (AP)—A bus went out of control Wednesdayjiight on ttie road between Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo and plunged into the Guandu RiVer, killing 34 passengers and the driver, police reported. They said one passenger survived. 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HURON at Elfiaboth Lake 4342 DIXIE HIGHWAY Drayton Plains 5838 M-15 Clarkston M THE PONTIAC PRK$S, THURSDAY, FKBRUARV 13, 19(?4_i, D—1 Seek League Title Shares in Friday Action forW-Olead; PCH on Road Rice Beaten itvXRarrTpionshtp^THt— by Notre Dame Pontiac Northern and Clarks-ton will be attempting to gain shares of basketball champion- In non-league play, Tri State, | running one-two in national coir ships in their respective t^agupa Ind., whipped Olivet, 62-51; | lege scoring. • Fridavnicht Findlay, Ohio, bounced Central! Toledo, which has faltered! ^ ^ . . ^ , . Michigan, 93-78; Windsor, Ont., I without suspended scoring acei second place m e hurt the^JVestern Michigan^as- ^tlasted Lawrence Tech-, 109-1 Larry Joi\es, trailed Western,! ^dginaw Valley Conference will. Injured Hand F79:95^ $5.00 Down 9'x9' UMBRELLA TENT $24 J5 $31.60 9'sir UMIRELLA TENT SmMd-ln floor, 3 nylon KFOtn windows, aluminum fr $49.96 joE^i^sumus 19 N. Saginaw IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC FE 24)022 Geoffrion Sparks Montreal Attack Bight Cars in ’500' Powered^ hy^^ard DETROIT (UPI) - Eight of the cars that will attempt to quaUfy for the Indianapolis 500-mile race tills year will be pow-eredhy-fljra Mofer^Company’s hew double overhead cam racing engine, the company* re- classlcs, heads the list of those switching f r o m conventional roadster s^ t^ew - ' ' mounts, the company said. Watson, Ford said, has bnilt a_ttew car for Rodger Ward, two-time winner of the race. Mickey Thompson, who last year entered rear-engined cars powered by modifi^ aluminum versions of Chevrolet engines, also will use the V-9 Ford pow-erpiant this year in his cars. BUY NOW BEFORE SPRING PRICES.. SAVE! dfThe PoMdc ReTatt^fcnre” On New 1964 PONTIAC TEMPEST PONTIAC • ON THE SPOT FINANCING QUICK CASH FOR YOUR PRESENT CAR TMERE NUST 6E 4 RE4S9II: Thft fyiiM Retail ^re 65 Mt Clemens St Downtown Pontiac FE 3-7951 bpan Mon., Thuri., FrI. 'Ill 9 P.M. Toti., Wad. Til 6 P.M. Sot. 'til 5 P M. Lindsey Ifopkins, who has entered cars at the brickyards for years, will enter a Lotus-Fofdf this year _and Ted Halibrand, in Point Lead NEW YbRK (AP) - Nick Werkman of Seton Hail and Gary Bradds of Ohio State each are putting on a late season surge, but Howard (Butch) Ko-mives still is the leading scoret in major college . basketball. The 6-foot-l star of Bowling Green held his No. 1 spot for the fourth straight week with la 34.6 average according to the latest statistical released today by the National Collegiate Service Bureau. If he stays there for the remainder of the season Komlves will be the first ever to jump from 45th to the championship in one season. NEWSOME SECOND Manity Newsome of West Michigan is second with a 33.1 average followed by Workman’s 31.9 and Bradds’ 31.8 for i fourth place tie with Princeton’s Bill Bradley. ‘ Tli« scoring loRders through gamoi of Fob. 11 —« FO FL Fti. XVjr." 1. Butch KomtvM, Bowling Orton 14 171 140 444 14.4 2. Manny Nawsomt,.....----------------- ...... ,j ff jj, U 1V1 1» 510 11.0 4. Bill Braowy, ________ Princaton ... It 314 173 463 31.0 3. Gary Braddt. ' Ohio State . . .II 311 137 373 31.1 I. Rick Barry. Miami, Fla. ... 21 343 173 443 31.7 7. Jim Barnai, Texas We»tam 31 334 174 433 3t.t I. Stave Thomas, Xavier, Ohio ... It 313 131 331 3t.O t. Wayno Estes. Utah State ....It 301 143 345 20.7 TOTBIIt Aostlnr ------- ----------------- ----- Coll. ... 14 150 t3 3t3 31.4 under the direction of Walter Meskpwski, is building a rear-engined car for driver Eddie SSchs. BACK AGAIN Other Ford powCTed vdiicles by world driving champion Jimmy Clark and Dan Gurney — tiie pair that piloted the Lotus-Fords last year to a second and seventh place finish, respectively. .-..A ★ Dave McDonald, a rookie at Indianapolis, will head Mickey Thompson’s team of drivers. Hopkins' car will be piloted by Bobby Marshman,‘who had driven in tiiree BldlanapoUs races. All of those planning to enter Ford-powered cars met with company executives and engineers today. .... D. Innes, g e n e r a 1 manager of engine and foundry ........iefeS t them on the division, brieft new engine. ■■ * ★ ★ Inries said it provides greater horsepower and speed potential and added that tests conducted ful. “The data and know-how generated by the development of this ^gine could be of substantial help in future engine design,’’he added. NMt^taffdmgs Chicago 38 14 11 47 149 125 Toronto .......... «30 » 33 134 132 Dofrolt ........... 20 23 9 42 132 134 Now York ...... 18 21 I 44 131 181 Boston 14 30 11 38 122 152 WIDNMDAY'I RRSULTt ASontroal 4, Toronto 0 Chicago 3, Now York 2 TODAY'S OAMI (Boston at Detroit FRIDAY'S -OAMBS . No games schedulad. lalliesTwice ia 4-0 Win Chicago Keeps Pace With 5-2 Decision Over New York BRAND NEW TIRES (d, changaover or « Instont Credit I fi AA psii___ tlons will be determined by handicaps. Bit of Nostalgia in New York Meet FREE Wheel Balance with Every Set Tires Purchased MINfi tiregerter ri W.KmIoiIm-FES-TM« U.S. ROYAL TIRES NEW YORK (AP)-A spectacular field for the two-mile, a blazing personal duel In the half-mile and a bit of nostalgia are likely to steal the show from the traditionally^ featured mile run tonight In ' the 96th New York A.C. Games at Madison Square Garden. ...★.... The nostalgia will be provided by Princeton’s Bill Bonthron, Penn’s Gene Venzke and Kansas’ Glenn Cunningham, who finished in a near dead heat in the NYAC Baxter mUe in 1934. They’ll don running clothes and jog a lap in the 30th anniversary of their race. Jesse Owens and Harrison Dillard, who collared eight Olympic gold medals oetween them, also will talj^ a turn around the Garden/iack. WORLD FLAVOl The two-mile^as a definite international flwor in this Olympic year, wi^ entries from Canada, Australia, Ireland, C^sta Rica and/the U.S. Toronto’s 20-yeaiM)l(y Bruce Kidd, who has (ost on the Gaitien track, could^bO hard-pressed to defend. 716 half-mile features the re-iphtch of Villanova’s Noel.Car-ioll and Toronto’s Bill Crothers, each a potential record-breaker. Crothers beat Carroll by a yard in their only other meeting this winter, clicking off an American record 1:50 in New York’s Millrose Games. it * * ' Little Tom O’Hara, the Chicagoan with the unorthodox style and the killing kick, is favored in the mile. He Is unbeaten in four major mile cup races this winter, with a 4:00.6 effort in the Millrose Games. High jumper John ’Thomas’ and sprinter Bob Hayes* like O’Hara are unbeaten this season but each faces serious op- ’Thomas, from Boston, has been Over seven feet consistently this year and had to go 7-1% lo beat Australia’s Tony Sneaii, well, 7-0V4, in Los.Angeles laifd; week. Sneazwell, who has gone over 7-2, and Southern California’s Lew Hoyt, another 7-footp er, will challenge again. it it it Hayes, Florida A&M, has equalled the world indoor mark of 60-yard dash six flat three times this season and may have to do it again to beat the good dash field arrayed against him. Tiger Scout, Wife Die in Auto Crash CHICAGO HEIGHTS, 111. (AP) — A Detroit Tigers baseball scout and his wife died Wednesday in an auto-truck collision. ★ ★ ★ Theodore Pawelek, 43, and his wife, Dorothy, 37, of Chicago Heights di^ in the celli-' Sion, on U.S. 30 in Chicago , Heights. ' ★ ★ ★ Pawelek had served as a scout for the Detroit Tigers baseball team for several years. He caught four ^ames for the Chicago Cubs in 1946. 2nd ANNUAL ^ FREE BOAT SHOW! Comini Maroh 2nd!! See Over 200 • Boats • Motors • Boat Trailers All sIKos wiTd typos from eanoOs to cruisers SPECIAL SAILBOAT DISPUY WIN! 20F^. SANPAN CATALINA PONTOON B0AT» oomploto With stoorihg. Dal. anywhere in Oakland County Frao Coming! March 2nd thru March 7th 9:30 to 9:00 Daily—at The Pontiac Mall Prti$»nted ifyi Pontiac Indf pandant Marina Daaiari Aiaoo. Telegraph at Elii. Lk. Rd. Free Parking for 4600 Cars , Dayton (Ohio) , w, Mn>lt m •'' ■’■«"** 'Ohio) t ££25i. ‘ifwi VL «'«*>'««> f WbKtoor (Onl.) in, LaWranca Tacit 9 Albion im, Hope N i«»t » Adrian 71, Kalamazoo 61 Eastern Mldtlgan »t^\Nafn» State 63 / THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY . ,i , _Dp3 PNH Swimmers 'Double 0)> on Pontiac Central 9y BRUNO L.KEARI«S Sports E^tffir,P(MBtiac Press Pfflitiao Central wafe seeing double in its swimiaiihg pool last night. The Chiefs lost a swim nieet to Pontiac tor the secoid time this seai^ and a pair of PNH twinis .eonMbuted highly to the winning cause. ■k k k It was a night for the Jbhp- KettmagJdas-Sights on Ittlr 97c 89c 35c 95c 35c 89c uifs $19.95 $7.88 HEATER $17.88 MINNOW BUCKET $3.19 S. 6. ROGERS SPORTING GOODS 24 E. Lawrenc* FE 2-2369 Kettering and Romeo t»!11 find—nct“tmp‘ove their positions much improved in the Tri-County League basket ball conmetRion Jf they can triumph Friday night. The Kettering quintet could lost and not fail from its lofty perch atop the race; but a victory over visiting Oxford would clinch-a tie, for the league championship. Lapeer has a non-league clash with Davison and cs^ Hoover Takes Bowling Lead Detroit's Stampe 2nd in Qualifying Round Fiberglass, Clinker Built; Aluminum Lapstrake to a Prop Exhaust ] MERCURY MOTORl oi thf Arntofy ml Hoover of Akron, Ohio, rolled ..........the end of the first qualifying round of the Mobile Professional Bowling Tournament Wednesday night. ■ k k k Hoover, a two-time lyinner of 2472 ptai in 12^88^, He had the night’s highest series with lines of 222, 213, 248, 258, 246 and 202 to total 1,389 in the second round. .Detroit’s Bob Stampe followed with 2,639, while Wayne Zahn of Atlanta rolled 2,603. Jim St. John of San Jose, Calif., had 1,333, a bare one-pin margin over Tommy Tuttle of Little King. N.C. • fowling Bags 20% OFF! eclal..— |all>Purpose Duffle Bag| AssN. Colera ^1 HOCKEY STICKS WELDEN SPORTINQ GOODS 98 W. Huron FE 4-6211 Wtitoww Onltr Omw M. Ill I son twins with help from the Chambers twins. / Dick Jidinson was part of the winning medley relay team and he took fint place hi the 100-yard butterfly. Rick ■ Johnsoa was second in the in-dividual medley and he wim the 100 backstrrtie hi an easy time of 1:03.9. » SWIMMING SUMMARIES PNH 71, PCN 33 ... Ifseslyle - Ervin (PNH), Cham-b«r» (PNH), Reiter (PCH) Time: MI3.9 100 breaststroke — Cascaddan (PNH), Warner (PNH), CoppersmlOi (PCH), Acre (PCH) Time: 1:07.3 tJO treaatyle relay - PCH (Chasa, Hubbard, Miller, J Howard) Time: 1.1J.4 (pool and school record) place position, unless Oxford can snap flie Captains* win-ning streak at 10. Romeo, meanwhile, is oiit of the title chase but stiB-mui pel Mount Clemens L’Anse Creuse’s bid for third place. The Bulldogs are 2-3 while their Friday night hort is 24. Should Romeo again prevailr-the first game ended 81-60—best the Lancers could do would be a tie. Kettering will be out to extend not only this season’s: perfect record, but strings of 11 straight league victories and 10 in row at home (both spread over two seasons). The Captains scored a convincing 74-37 success the first .. , .. time the Wildcats cOJxTbfJ at-~^heHMarimont-Baptist^A-squad tempted to halt WKHS’s well balanced attack. An upset win for Oxford and a defeat for L’Anse Creuse would leave the two tied for fourth place in the Tri-County standings. Oxford has dropped six in a row after squaring Its overall record at 2-2 with a December win over Romeo. It was the Kettering shellacking that started the Wildcats’ slump. NBA Standings EASTERN DIVISION Won Utf Pci. Bohlm _o»ton .......43 15 .741 - Cincinnati .. 41 19 .663 3 Philadelphia ..25 32 .439 I7W .. ... - WESTERN DIVISION .. Pranclaco .. St. Louis ....... .593 January to Defend Tucson Open Title TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) Lanky Texan Don January opena de-'fense of his Tucson Open Golf title today on a desert layout where the weather could have as. much influencb as good driving and good putting. k k k The weather man expected it to be warm with little wind for the 72-hole event, but it wasn’t that way foy Wednesday’s pro-amateur prelude to the |30;606-tournament. Gusts whipped the 49brs Country Club course, where the two lowest scojes were a 67 by Jerry Edwards of Ft. Worth, Tex., and a 68 by Al Kelley of Orlando, Fla. Each teed off in the relative calm early morning and finished before the winds reached full velocity. k k k Edwards collected $250 and Kelley $210. Winner of the open gets $4,000. .557 2 ___________j .... 33 29 .532 V/t Baltlmora ....... 25 34 .424 10 Detroit ......... 15 42 .263 19 • WEDNESDAY'S RESULTS Barnmore 121, Philadelphia 115 ------ ' -J Angeles 97, overtime Detroit 121 >D/IY'S (3AME ___ Prencisco FRIDAY'S GAMES Brigade Loop Leaders Meet Challengers Sunny Vale Chapel will agai have the opportunity to catch by upsetting it this week in^the C3irlstian Service Brigade basketball race. Marimont A ha? a 10-1 record with the only Wss coming at the hands of Sunny Vale Chapel the first time the league’s top two teams met. . Vale has a 9-2 mark following its 33-23 upset Toss to Waterford Community A last week. Marimont took sole possession of first place with a 7249 win over United Missionary behind Paul Oliver’s 32 points. Other results last week found Waterford B losing to Oakland Avenue Presbyterian, 98-17, and Marimont B ^ging Perry Park Baptist, 37-28, as Ron Price hit " points. . CHRISTIAN SERVICE ERIOAOI Thh Chambers twins, Ron and Don, took points in the 400 freestyle and in the 150-yard freestyle relay. Pontiac ‘ Central’s biggest event was the freestyle relay in ’^icih the team of Chase, Hubbard, Miller ukI Howard set a pcKd aiKl school record in 1:15.4 eclipsing the oM mairk of 1:17.1. TWOFIRSTO The Chiefs managed only two firsts. Other than the free relay, Jim Howard won the 40 free- style defeating Northern’s Bob Basinger in a close race. Howie’s time was 18.9. He. avenged the earlier season lost td Basinger in the 50-yard event at PNH. Carl Cascaddan and Skip Ervin were other double win-, ers for , Northern, Cashadilan taking the individual medley in 1:53.4 and Ihe breaststroke in l :fli7J. Ervin went 2:03.3 in the Wi and 4:30.9 in the 400 event. The individual medley race was , an exciting event. Cascaddan took a short lead in the but- Fllnl Northem ........ Bay City Handy ....... Bay City Ctntral . . ■Ildland ... ....>.... •Won championship. 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Hazel Park Mount Clemens ...... Almont .... Anchor Bay , Birmingham Brother Rice . W L W L Detroit Thurston ...........5 0 10 3 ■■ •• ■ il(^ton Livohia’Fr'anw'ln'’*....... i Oak Park ................. 0 terfly, but (Central's Dave Shad-ley vaulted ahead in the back-stroke by four feet. In the breaststroke CaScaddan’s specialty, he surged ahead again and at this point Rick Johnsim made his gain. The Northern duo then shot far ahead in final freestyle part of die event and gave PNH a 1-2 finish. ■ Northern now stan/4 ton? Surel »A ton? eertainlyl % ton? Why notl And how it works! The 'Jeep' Universal was built to stay on the job year after year-^ without losing its usefulness or value. Test It today—see why the 'Jeep’ Universal is the world leader in its class. Three power ta,ke-off options. Available with half or full cabs — or convertible top. Also available in 80 , 81" or 101" wheelbase. YMRSATILEt POWERFUL^ VIRTUAUrjRDESmUCTmLM KAimmm Jtosp coRRomATiaN 1, Ohio I 210 Orchtrd Ltkt Av^. OLIVER MOTOR SALES H 2-SI01 BILL SPENCE, Inc. (Jeep Division) MA 5-586I Pontiac. Michisan 32 S. Main St. BEEilBSI snow n SUnS” (Taaiday S p.n , Ci. 7) Kansas City Issue at Showdown Stage Lwisville and by a 9-1 vote ordered him to sign a lease In Kansas City by Feh. 1 or face expulsion from the league. The deadline was extended to Saturday after Finley i^Tie might take his case to court and hired Louis Nizer, fam^ trial attorney. It’s ^ubtful a lease ndll be signed befort-the-deadHne^md the league bf expected to call another meeting for next week? Finley obtained a firm commitment from Oakland, Calif., Jan. 27 and it’s likely he’ll ask the league for pemibslMiJo move _ TWO CHOICES The club* owners doubtless will first try to get Finley and the city together on a compromise ^ee-year pact. Failing tl»l, tThe^owners^^^^^ seem to have only two other choices: 1. Grant him permission to move the club to Oakland. 2TIiMow dimUi|dr"wM^ threat to take over-franc^ise" thereby risking a law suit. * ★ ★ The ownCTs want to avoid a lawmt ff "possible'because they fear a change in the baseball’s exeihption from antitrust laws. All talk of a comprom^ evaporated at the Wednesday when Finley insisted at the outset he couldn’t and wouldn’t sign for mor^4han two years ... you can sit here No Dissension on Team, Says Red Sox Manager BOSTON (AP) - Manager JOhnny Pesky of the Boston Red Sox says there’s no truth in reports that his American League team is riddled, or even bothered, by dissenskwir—-★ A A Pesky talked with newsmen this week after it was learned that a national sports magazine has an article due out next month saying the Boston club is the most dissension-ridden in baseball. “Ordinarily I wouldn’t honor this kind of story or report,'* Pesky said. “But this thing seems to have been building up ever since last season ended.’’ Pesky said the charges are “ridiculous’’ and so are accusations that he doesn’t get along too well with two of his best players, first baseman Dick ^8contfnueil design...every type BUY NOW... Supplies Umited! Our greatest value on quality nylon Long Miler tires! 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AndJ know Carl doesn’t r^nt the criticisms and suggestions I have made in our private discussions.” AAA Pesky said Stuart came to him twice last summer with complaints and the two discussed them behind closed doors. “I admire. Stuart for doing that,” he said. “The air was cleared and we understand each other perfectly.” j The Red Sox manager, who is beginning his second year at the helm, said he has seen “no particular friction” among his players. TH admit we have personal differences, and even disagreements,” he said. “But to say these add up to dissension is a far stretch of the imagination.” until midnighr One of Finley’s attorneys, Gerald Phillips, charged Mayor Ilus Davis took advantage of Finley because of the league’s lease-or-else deadline jand asserted the inayor hadn’t “r^_ treated even one inch since since Jan. 16.” Davis denied H, citing his modification giving Finley the first two years rent free on a five-year pact, instead of the last two free on a four-year lease. Then the mayor asked Finley “Would you like to tell us what concessions you’ve made since Jan. 16?” A A A “I haven’t made any and I’m not going to make any,” Finley retorted. The meeting ' adjourned on that statement. Joe Cronin, league president, declined any comment.,.......... Councilman Sal Capra, noting Finley’s contentions he would risk bankruptcy by signing for more than two years, offered a bankruptcy clause covering only the club’s operations the last two years of a four-year pact. Heads Golfer Group PHILADELPHIA (AP) -David S. Moote, 36, of Toronto, Canada, was elected- president of the Golf Course Superintendents of America W^esday night at the organization’s 35th ’Turf Grass Conference. He succeeds Roy Nelson of Chicago. L. R. (Bob) Shields of Rockville, Md., was chosen vice president by the 2,591 delegates attending th^ five-day , conference. It ends Friday. Pirates String Ends Cap tain Jeiry Mondy’s *‘Pirate«,” «4io had won 111 straight games since entering the Waterford Townsh^' Rec- reatira women’s volIeyhB^ league in 1912, suffered thdr first setback this week when they dropped ttree ont of six games to Catherine FOka’s Volley Bdles. SMUFFLERS mTAIUD Chevrolet-1949-53 Ford-^ 1949-53 Pontiac^ iJ!3A^4i Our B§st Quality Haavy Doty AUOr COAUD MafflanI iMfoffiod at fhoM sofo pncos. ^AtCOM 1960-42 ,..,...7.99 COMET 1960-62 .... .7.99 CADIUAC-.1957-60...10.99 BUICKySor. 40,1954.5813.99 CHIV. truck-1950.59 7.99 FORD truck-1948 61 7.99 iMLPIPES Whon/mtoOoe approved hy WIBC was scored by Mrs. Charles Fahning of Buffalo, By The Associated Press Hoyt Wilhelm chuckles when he thinks of baseball’s scholarly rules committee, draped over a catcher’s mitt, tape measures out, trying to legislate against Wilhelm, who signed with the Chicago White Sox Wednegay for his 13th season in the majors will be lobbing his knuckleball t»p to the idat^jndjntp a king-size catcher’s mitt for the last time—although he expects to be pitching for at least two more years. A 40-year-old right - hander with the most impressive reUef pitching statistics in major league history, Wilhelm became the center of a major control versy this winter when the .'.‘So. rules makers decided to ban Winner of Pontiac Sales Award HIS EXPERT KNOWLEDGE CAN SERVE YOU WELL Courtasy, reliability, service — these qualities are essential for a salesman to reach the top and stay there. That's why our Moster Salesman is a good and experience can mean a better c( value for you. Ask for him by n He'll be pleased to serve you. NOW THERE ARE TWO KINDS 0E PONTI ACS FOR Alt KINDS OrPEOPlE; THE PONTIAC PONTIAC, AND THE PONTIAC TEMPEST. TRY BOTH WIDETRACKSI ^HELTOIh ^Nnu-BUICK ' 223 S. MAIN the over-sized mitt developed to snare his flutterball. ONE MORE ’TIME After announcing their decision, the rules makers relented decided the big mittr4ft-§ft^ inches in circumference, could be used for the 1964 season but would be banned thereafter in favor of the standard 34-inch glove. “I don’t think it will pffect me either way,’’ said Wilhelm. “After all; Tve onlrbeentlffow. ing to the big mitt for about three years and I had some good years before it ' came along.” , Wilhelm had a 5-6 record laat season, but his 2.65 earned run average was more indicative of his work: He alsoHbeeam^ftfr^ winningest relief pitcher in history Tirith 75 victories and the most overworked with a record 1,123. innings pitched. •The only pitcher ever to win the earned run . title in both leagues — 2.43 with the New Yffl-k jGiants. of_ the National League in 1952 aiid 2;i9' with jymont Entertains Capac Almont will have the chance to give New Haven’s .Southern Thumb basketball title hopes a boost Friday when the Raiders are hosts to. runner-up Capac. The latter has a 9-1 league log compared to New Haven’s 10-0 with four games to play. Almont,. meanwhile^ restsL^ in fourth place after splitting 10 circuit contests. Other action this week will have New Haven entertaining lowlj' Armada. Jtoi»JLjClty4j will visit third place Memphis, 6-4, and Dryden will travel to New Baltimore Anchor Bay. The latter will 4e faVor^ to take over sole possession of fifth place, providing Memphis is not upset by Brown City. New Haven’s Dwight Lee—an all-state football halfback and INDIANAPOLIS: Raceway Parks “To«t Track, U.S.A.”—Report §2 ' '/: . . PLYMOUTH BEATS FORD AND CHEVROLET IN 9 OUT OF 10 T^STS OF SHOWROOM CARS- Wins Acceleration, Handling, Braking, Gas Economy-'^thlngs you buy a car for.” Plymouth also costs leastt-and carries the only 5-yei^r/50,000-mlle warranty.*^ OFFICIAL RESULTS KILOMCTKR RUN PLYMOUTH...... .32.72 MC. CHEVROLEIT..38.74 Eac. FORD.......... 34.90 MC. KGONOMY RUN PLYMOUTH.....17.49mp8. CHEVROLET.....14.38 mpg. FORD..........18.7|S mpg. QUARTER-MILE PLYMOUTH......t7.30MC. CHEVROLET........I7.9B*m. FORD.............18.B4 t.c. CITY PAttINO PLYMOUTH...,......176 ft. CHEVROLET............. 184 ft. FORD..........■...202 ft. HIGHWAY PAttINO PLYMOUTH..........285 ft. CHEVROLET.........310 ft. FORD............ 334 ft. 2.1-MILE CLAttIO PLYMOUTH.....2:38.03 min. CHEVROLET..2:43.14 min. FORD.........2:44.86 min. HILL CLIMB CHEVROLET..........14.82 MC. FORD..............14.91 MC. PLYMOUTH........16.80 MC. QO-tTOP-PARK PLYMOUTH.......2:17,35 m|n. EMERGENCY tTOP PLYMOUTH......161 It. FORD. ...........183 II, CHEVROLET......191 II. lERO-TO-tlXTY PLYMOUTH..i..ll.75MC. CHEVROLET.....12.76 MC. FORD..........U,20Md. PRiCEt PLYMOUTH...........32706 CHEVROLET......,,...,$2786 FORD...............$2794 I t8iu4 on MMUficlurtri’ Sunoilod R« I'BOO" V-$i, oi(oludlni Hilt md locoi i y, Chovrolol Impolo, ond Ford Ooloxlo tnal tquipmonl. Ftlcti lor Chovrolol ir with oppropriati prico odlutlmonl. At Plymouth's request, Natlonwid# Consumar Testing Institute txiught the comparably equipped V-8b directly from dealer showroomf, hired the drivers, supplied the officials, made the rules and supervised the entire competition. IRAIN WAMANTV PSOTICTt TIHli Chryilor Corporotlon warronli (or 0 voiri'OT M.OOO niliti, 'whichovor comoi Urol, oiilnot diltoU In molorlolil ind worknjonihip ond wIM rtploco or ropoir il o Chryilor Motori Corporotlon Oulhorliid Doolor'o ploco ol builntio, Iho onflno W^jii hood ond (nlornol S.,i. iBl'oo monilold. wolor pump, Ironimliolon cooo ond Inlotnol porli (oocludlni moduli dutch), lor<|uo convortpr, Sflvi'iUt^nlvoroil lolnlo, roor i«lo ond dlfloronllil, ind riot whooi fc.irinii iirTW nw*l[ii^^ lha ownor hao Iho onilno oil of 4,000 miloo, whichovor ci Id ovary E • inco ol Ih curroni m SIE YOUa FLYWOUTH DEALIK AND DNIVE TME CHMAf^Vlymoutfi OAKLAND CHRYSLIR-PLYMOUTH. Inc. 7M Ouhime, PonlloCf MklL Clerkoteei Ml '"f- ROCMUTIRi Prtt.rMd Menr lele<, lec. MilNroli llrd fdlei anfi $*f»lce NMtl I. Main II, WALLIB LAKIt AUi Meten m NOVI jSd. now a basketball candidate — needs only one field goal against Armada to hit 300 points for the season. Hd^as a 27 point-per-game average. The Rockefs are in a third place tie in the weekly Associated Press Class C prep^ • poll. ,______ ^________ Capac whipped Almont, 79-50, on its home court in December. The Raiders lost four of thqir first five starts; but since that loss^tq,, ihfi Chieftains, Almont has taken five of seven. Dryden has a three-game losing streak in the circuit while the Cardinals’ Friday host. Anchor Bay, has lost four straight league games. ___________________ Baltimore of the American League in 1959 —Wilhelm figures he still has a few years left in his rubber arm. “I didn’t Win too many games in 1963, but Ipilqbed as well as 4^EWer^haVfe-4=k«4-Ei lot of saves, and that’s what really counts,” he emphasized. “Anyway I feel I can pitch' for a while yet. The knuckleball isn’t really hard on my arm.” After this season, however, it’s going to be harder-rsMi his catcher’s fingers. Besides ~WiIheTm, Sox also signed another pitcher, rookie Tom Hoagland. Law Would Cut Hunting LANSING (UPI) - Hunting would be prohibited in Clinton and Harrison Townships in Macomb County under two separate bills, introduced yesterday Jiy. Sen,_^hn. T. Bowman, D-Roseville. " Passage of the law would need a favorable yote of the people in each township. • Another hunting m e a s u r e Would repeal the bounty payments for red (ox and bobcats. The legislation is sponsored by Sens. Arthur Dehmel, R-Union-ville, and Frederic Hilbert, R-Wayland. V Quitting Ofympic Rost r^‘er"ational Olympic Commit-> . tee 4ince 1946, announced today LAUSANNE, Switz. (AP) — | j,g ,,^1] up ji|g post on N.Y. during the 1929-30 season. Otto Mayer, chancellffl: of the ] Oct. 1. Wont 0 Boigoin? NEW 1963 FACTORY CLOSE-OUT RAMBLERS FULL 2 YEAR 24,000 MILE WARRANTY Limited Supplp-Eere’s 2 Good Examples Classic 4 -JCJafJMc_.46P _V8 4 door sedon Radio, Heater, large wheetdiscs. Radio, Heater, wmdsftietd~WdsH-back up lights, vinyl interior, ers, Dowguard, yisabilify group, and. reclining segts^ Was light package. Was $2587.20 $2789;93,now now ^997 '1897 Drive! Compare! RAMBLER Gives You Morel Exclittent Financing, Immediate Delivery^ Bank Rates 75 Select Used Cars On Display.MOSTLY ONE OWNER NEW CAR TRADES FRESH IN ON NEW RAMBLERS *64 PONTIAC CATALINA FULLY EQUIPPED ACTUAL 3000 MILES $2595 ‘63 CHEY. 1MPALA WT. CPE. FULLY EQUIPPED, 12000 MILES $2307 SUPIRIOR RAMBLER 550 OAKUND Pontiac's Only Rambler Dealer FE S-9421 \ If ifoa'tfe driym 20,000 nllos m oo ym is foryou4 AifTO STORES ' Ott iS* ' zmtrm fm 09r Adf •kir CtrAvra lOOi NYLON! 4-Hk TIRES! ”$nftty Mylon”“-27 Meaffc Ceereiifee- ■ *t«9-24,000 Mile GuoranlM WovEwoKi *gn*u!or No 2nd Wro TrOdod* Prkt Prkt* You Sovo Op 2nd Tiro 1 7.10-14 Tubolon....... 18”’ IV’* 7« 8.00-14 TuboloN 20”’ l2”* 8^ I *4(M3 §1^ JVw740 •AlfMwtSAewe erw WwFvderallxvfMi Fn °»"dovam- •P4cieV(f, It y,lll ^ ’ ♦ prlc#. Cordovan ^VOYAGER” Foil 4 My NYLON CentlrMctioN 0.70.11 siockTvh. 2nd JL59* Typ.-l.gulor Mq Q t«v, Tr«d»-ln FriM $ 10,00 !»• MF $4.4« 7.10-14 Hock TubvikM 2nd "W 79* Rooular No Trodo ln _ M lo«o frico $11.00.....liro # •No Trodo-W PUn FW. I.dit Toxl SEAIED BEAM C.«|MaWortfc7lc If ‘IVIMJ Slnglo or duol. With O'—r bulll-ln HtollloMI I'l RogvMydHI.59 wllli Cwpafi J VHiil’wRuicH ’ ^ -r cw FLOOR 14 Inch (lit—lof qvlrk ivnidval of , _ Zh.vllvg. Sovol WrtfcCoopoo 5-CaA rUSHLIGHTi I Olan(SUo-l4Mln.lonf wM S $4710011$.., I Ooomod. . . Rogi^ jl I . Teat belt ______ Retractor 'trof*. In 11"" cholcoofiov. 4(91 colon. I < li-^ , ^ logolor $2.M Good quol- 11 moikoliyl Kotgt II_, J W "7 'vlil'V'Ij ijollod oH o< Iko way. la. Co«|Ma WorlA U4 Aoowfar $2.9t 2^2 J & R AUTO STORES 115 N. SAGINAW ST. TI^E PONTIAC PRe!sS, THURSDAY' FEBRUARY 18, 1964 Molterer Wins Pro Slalom Race at Pine Knob BChainpion Is Runner-lip at RneKnob Austrian Gets $ 1,300 ' for First Place in Two-Night Event THE SPOILS — Anderl Molterer received the championship cup from Pine Knob’s Stanley Leske after winning the pro slalom races complied tNfere yesterday. Molterer won 11,300 as the champ. Good Ski Conditions in Pontiac Areas Michigan’s legion of skiiers were not disheartened by i today that there wasn’t much of a snow forecast for the state. Snow flurries feirwfTy^toctay and it was much of the sarnie for the rest of the state, but snow machines were in operation in most areas. Highs in lower Michigan ranged from 30 to 38 while readings in the upper peninsula ranged from 27 to 33. HIMi, Clintoo; Vtry good on i. 'Brlghtan, Brighton: Vory good to oxcellfnf. Mf. Ch ^ Mt. Holly. Mt. Christie, Oxford: Very good, 'tolly, Pontlec: Oood to very go> Knot), Clerkilon: Viry good. WBST MICHIOAN : AVilanche; Boyne CUy; >10 eocked Mte, Very gddd....... .... Big M. Menisl inow. _Good. Hertxtr Springt: 10 Briar Hill, Mnldt: « bate, OKcetlant. Caberfac, Caditloc; Packed bate, hew — torecast, good. tOUTHBAST MICHIOAN ^^Ine^ Valley, Pontiac; Very go Carousel Mt.,^ioiland: >1} maivfnade '^ysloMMt., Thonpeonville: bese, very good.■ > Echo Valley, Kalatnano: Skaltng excellent, tobogganing good. Eskar Skrsiopae. MkMIevlllc: l-ll Dryden, Oxford; Good to e; McGuire's ’ .'^s“s"a'C?e.’= .. wi. %lancehMVk. WMier Perk. Cadillac; To- SKI... ■Afcpiiie NEWt xe^jjKi JWnW^Park, Nawa^V ' pack^' ba^'axcelimt. Harbor Springs; 12-M Pando, Rockford: i - mdar Mt„ B< iv?Si !■ Wallow Rmsi W ^Vf?*paci 6-10 ■ City: ....- ------- take: 6-10 base. Ward Hlfls, *ffranch; U base, 1-3 powdered, good to excellent. BAST MICHIOAN Orayllng Winter Sports Park, Grayling; base, good. Ml. Frederick, Frederic: S-l packed ■•Tiv.rgh.b. Sylvan Khob. Gaylord: 6 base, good. Houghton Lake Snow Bowl, tfough Lake: 2-3 base, poor. Mott Mt., Farwall: Good skiing on ba pinner slope only. . Au Sable Lodge Ski Area, Gaylord; '-10 base, good. Skyline, ftoscotnmon: 14 base, lair to goW to excellent. Otsego Ski Club, Qaylord; ' . ...ro Ski Resort, Comlns; Beginners' slopa open only, poor. Silver Valley, Tawases: Good. Wall Favored in Maracaibo Golf Tourney Important News ... for Pontiac Investors! Wiilini, Ldrchcn A Co. now l^brinit you tht Uow-Jonet Clos- ing Avcrgget, plus closing prices on likty-tlk lending slocks, dnily, •I 5:25 P,M. end 6:25 P.M., over Ridio Sutlon WPON. Poniiic . . 1460 on your dial' For the Inteet, up-io-ihe minute news (Vom Well Street, tune in todiy nnd everyday Maracaibo. Venezuela-XAPU-Art Wall of Pocono Manor, Pa, shot a four-under-par 68 in a practice round Wednesday and became the favorite for the 72-hole Maracaibo Open Golf Tourney which starts Thursday. The Maracaibo Open Is the first slop on the annual Caribbean golf tour which also in-ludes tourneys at Caracas, Bogota and Puerto Rico. Wall's feat han been geidom accomplished pvcr the rugged Maracaibo course. Last year when George Knudson of Toronto won with a 285 only three players broke par for tlie 72 holes. Watling, Lerchen & Co. iltmSfrs Ntm York Hlach Birrfwhg. Pontiac StatB Bins Btag., Pontiac. Mich • FE 2-9275 PINi; KNOB 7777 Pliw Knob Road riarkaton FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE WE ARE NOW OPEN EVERY SAT. 9 to 12 Noon GALL FE 2-9117 0. ‘7'oiffffic’x slnccxiiiK'fif I'hm" 818 COMMMN'iiy NATIONAL BANK BIDO ----- By JERE CRAIG Skiing expertly, Anderl Molterer showed why he is regarded as the world’s top professional slalom skier by clearly winning the Pine Knob Dual Slalom Cup Wednesday night. The 32-year-old, two-time Olympic medal winner from Austria captured the second night’s race by 1.2 seconds over runner-up Adrian Duvillard of France under good weather and slope conditions. Molterer hadiniomblnednnie of 57.9 seconds for his two runs. Pepi Gramshammer, the Tuesday night winner, was third with 59.2, one-tenth of a second more than Duvillard, who was the 1963 winner. Three County Skiers Score in Regionals A check of the final results from the regional Junior Alpine meet last weekend at Thunder Mountain reveal three Oakland County skiers qualified for the divisional meet. PILE UP — Max Marolt is given attention from other skiers after hitting the timeT post in the pro races at Pine Knob last night. Combining the times for both nighU’ races, IPSRA of-flclab awarded the Pine Knob trophy to Molterer, who now skis ont of Aspen, Colo. ahe:^ of Duvillard and Gramshammer widi 107 seconds for his four runs. Laid out by Ernst Hinter-seer, last night’s course was considerably tougher than the first night’s. Hinterseer tied Gramshammer for third place last night. TOP WINNER Molterer was, also, the top money winner in the two-night cornpetition. He pocketed |1,300. His 28.6 timing on the first run Wednesday earned him $3M for the best Individuai time. Gramshammer was second in total money winnings with 1937; while Duvillard, last year’s Pine Knob hhampion, collected $990. The fourth best money earner at Pine Knob was popular 0th-mar Schneider of Boyne Mountain. He finished fifth and sixth in the two nights’ races, and also pocketed $250 in prize winnings from the "styling” con-. !8ts with his smooth skiing. Schneider won $600 in all. Mt. Holly’s Herbert Thayer finished eighth both nights and collected $200 total. FIRST AID •— Ernst Hinterseer (left) and a first aid person from Pine Knob carry Marolt frdln the slalom course to the first aid station after the accident. He was examined and there were no serious injuries. Junior Wings Meet Chatham BORDBR CITIES LEAGUE STANDINGS TMm W L T P Chatham ................ 21 4 0 42 Wallacaburg ........... 18 10 0 34 Laamlngton . ......... 15 13 0 .30 DETROIT ........... :....14 15 0 30 Windsor ..................9 17 0 18 Dresden ................• 4 22 0 0 The Detroit Junior Wings and Chatham Junior Maroons will stage what may be a preview of the Border Cities Hockey League' playoff championship when they meet in the Wings filial iregular-season home game at 8 p.m. Friday in Olympia Stadium. ■Or ■k ★ A victory by the Junior Wings would end their season-long slump against (;)hStham in which they have failed to win in five previous meetings and would allow them to break even for the seasoh with a league mark of 15 victories and 15 defeats. Thr crowd of more than 1,000 spectators received a ^care when American entrant Max Marolt crashed into a timing post at the conclusion of his last run. Marolt spun to the ground and was carried from the area. A quick check indicated, however, that he was not hurt and, in fact, was more concerned about his skis. The victory for Molterer'was his first win after capturing the North American slalom and giant slalom championships at the first IPSRA Me(*t this sea- Pine Knob was the fourth stop on the current tour. The pros departed early this morning for Minneapolis, Minn, where th8y will compete Saturday night and Sunday. PfHB KNOB iPIRA Amitrl MolUrfr* Adrian Duvillard PapI Oral.......... PmalhraM 6475 11300 Olharl; Chrlillan Prtvda (44.21, Man-rad Obarmowr _(44.3), K^rtialt^^ laim (dnil, Max Marlot >0)! Chii'’w NFL Club Owner Talks to Gillman SAN DIEGO, Calif. (y)lP) --Tile San Diego Chargers are offering Coach Sid aillman a new contract, perhaps to keep the Philadelphia Eagles from luring ‘ ‘m away. Gillman said Wednesday he has talked to Philadelphia owner Jerry Wolman bii| would not say what they dtsciissed. ITiero .were reports, unconfirmed, that Wolman offered lo maki^ 0111-miRn general manager and coatrh and give him a five-year contract at more than $40,000 a year, Gillman still lias a yeaf to go on ' a thfee ycar cohiraci wllji the Chargcr.s, but club own er> Barron llllt(Hi confirmed Wednesday that a new contract Is being offered. Prep Skieis Are Ready Again Cold weather and light snowfall have brightened the prospect for weekend skiing in the area.Vincluding the Mt. Holly High School Invitational Meet Saturday. Mt. Holly officials yesterday Youth Quintet Keeps Unbeaten Record Intact The Schoolcraft Pistons kept their unbeaten • streak intact with a 16^5 victory over Lutes Rams in Waterford Township youth basketball play. Craig Whetstone led the winners with 10 points. Joe Bescan’s long basket with moments remaining enabled once-beaten Monteith Trotters to edge Paul’s Barber Shop, 21-17. Buddy Allen’s 14 points topped the Trotters. In otlier games, Huntoon Lakers edged Houghton Top Cats, 15-12, and Monteith Walkers boat the Bombers, 13-8. Bloomfield Hills is listed for the annual Lower Peninsula Regional Ski Championship event at “Big M’’ at Manistee Saturday, also; but coach Don Gregory reports the Barons will coin-pete at Mt. Holly instead. MAV SWITCH Should a weather change wipe out the latter, the Hills teams would then rejoin the 18 others scheduled for the state reglon-als. Baptist 5 Clinches Share of Crown Lake Orjon Baptlat clinched* (he league championship In the YMCA Church Baaketball men’s division with an 84-58 rout of 1st Church of the Brethren Monday. Urry Leach hit 27 points to paL*e the undefeated champions' win while Jan HIrn had 24 for the loaera. The other loop game this week saw Oonelnon Baptist top Pilgrim llolinesR, 8M7, os Dave Voyer bit II tallief for l4ike Orion will now play a league move into district competition. YMCA mAn'Oi OIVIOION 1 lOtMlI IV r«nll«u; Mlnl«l»r« ptntiMM Bimiui ! ! ., O'"' 0 reported good skiing. They advised the preps would begin their once-postponed competition at It a.m. Saturday as scheduled. Only one team of Hie orlg-/ Inal SMeam field has dropp^ from the high school meet. Waterford Township had a conflict with a school-planned trip and withdrew. No other Oakland County schools are in the "Big M" event, although numerous ones will compete at Mt. Holly. A frequent winner at the latter races, BloomCeld Hills ■gain Is considered a lop chal- lenger for the boys’ and girls’ Pontiac Central and . Walled Lake’s boys are both rated, possible winners; and the Waterford Kettering girls are drawihg support, also. in a meet early this week, Detroit Thurston picked up victories in both the boys and girls events. Geoff Smith of Bloomfield Hllis, Cheryl, Luther of Roches ter and Dave Clark of Roy a Oak were the teen-agers who advanced to the Feb. 22-23 Nub’s Nob competition. Smith and Clark qualified in the Class I boys field, while Miss Luther placed among the Class IV girls. Her brother Don won the Class I independent boys slalom event last weekend but did not outpoint enough other competitors to make the83^ualifiers. A similar fate Tbefell Dick Kraatz of Birmingham who boys downhill race at ’ilumder Approximately 30 boys and girls from the cental division (Midwest and points south) of the United States Ski Association -wHl qualify in the Nub’s Nob races for the national Junior Alpihe~ championships next month. SWISS CHALET lodge DOUBLE CHAIRLIFT ANNUAL HIGH SCHOOL INVITATIOHAL RACES SAT., FEB. 15 nlAI-MOUt SKI RESORT Regional Ski Meet Slated at Manistee The nth Annual Lower Peninsula Regional Alpine Ski Meet, sponsored by the Michigan High School Athletic Association will be held Saturday at Manistee’s^"Big M” ski area. The meet will begin promptly at 9:00 a.m., and will involve approximately 200 of Michigan’s best prep skiers. Both Boyd’S and girl’s teams from all over the State’s lower peninsula will vie for honors in the State’s largest ski meet. ★ ★ This meet is the finale of the racing season for the young skiers of Michigan High School Ski Teams. FULL MYS 4Mywlmro8 in fAe Woriti ^$400 IB^ AeoMvnttl Dtitli $BN Mtdioal yvaioN Hnt9>s 4ht> Avallnhh “Bud” NICHOLIE IRSURiUlOE 4^ M». CUmant FE 3-7858 POOLE SKI SHOP announces End of Season Cloarsneo Salol fomous maker's ski wear • SKI lACKCTS • STRETCH PANTS • SOTATEBS # 4® OFF um s«8 Piic*4—skis, boots. Ntisi r—3- HARPWARK THE PONTIAC PRESS. THT’RSDAY. FF#RUAR’' MARKETS I The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Wednesday. ... Produce Apples, Mclntftih, t ;urly, bch.........................1.M Cabbage, standard, t Parsnips.........................y-- Potatoes, 25-lb. bag .................. .M Potatoes, 50-lb. bag ... ..... l-« Radishes, black . 1.25 Radishes, hothouse .................. 1.25 Rhubarb, hothouse, box ......... .25 Rhubarb, hothouse, di. bch........1-50 Squash, Acorn, bu.........\1.25 Squash, Buttercup, bu. ...,l....... 1.25 Squash, " -------- “..................”* Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (AP)-Prlces paid per'pound at Detroit for No. 1 quality live poultry; Heavy type hens 18-19; Roasters over 5 lbs. 23-24; Broilers and fryers 3-4 lbs. Whites 19-20; Barred Rock 21-22; Ducklings 26. . DETROIT EGOS DETROIT (AP)-Egg prices paid per dozen at Detroit by first receivers (In-eluding U.S.). Whites Grade A Jumbo 42-44; Extra 34-39; Large 33W-32; Medium 31'^-32. Browns Grade A Large 33'/j-34; Medium 30W. .... CHICAGO BUTTER, EGG* ; CHICAGO (AP) - Chicago Mercantile Exchange-Butler stee'*"' «/4; Eggs about steady; wholesale buying prices unchanged to V) higher; 20 per cent or belter Grade A whites 32'/2; mixed 32; mediums 30i. standards 31; dirties 29; checks 28. if-; /<^4ICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (AP)-(USDAl-Llve poultry; wholOsale buying prices unchanged; roast- Uvestodc DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP)-USDA-Cattle 150. Slaughter classes steed obulkearJy^^^^^^^ cows, utility cows 13.50-14.50; cinner end cutter cows 11.00-13.50. Vealers 25. Not enough to make a market. . . Sheep 100. Not enqugh sold to deter- 0 early receipts, compared ^Tnsk’j ' STma... ;es 125, h lest steady, sows 2 Monday. CaWe i CHICAGO LIVESTOCK , CHICAGO (AP) (USDA) *- Hogs 4,000; butchers steady to 25 higher; ’ “ 200-220 lb butchers 15.50-15.25; mixed 190-230 lbs 15.00-15.50; 230-250 lbs 14 15.00; 2-3 250-270 lbs 14.00-14.50; 220-3 lb 13.M4.0O; a load mostly 2-3 350 (b It no ; mostly steady 900-1,000 lb heifers 21.00-22.00. Sheep 200; not enough lor an adequai price trend; few lots good and choK 80-110 lb slaughter lambs 19.50-21.90. Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AP)-The cash position of the treasury compared with corresponding date a year ago. Peb. 2, 1964 Feb. 2, 1963 Balance— t 5,100,515.258.48 t 6,152,429,616.93 Deposits Fiscal Year July 1— 63,480,334,529.22 40,184,040,222.14 Withdrawals Fiscal Yaar— _ 24,792,501,342.28 22,312,120,889.22 x-Total Dabt- , 310,222,494,940.06 304,812,423,231.21 led to statutory limit. Sf&ek^ of local Intorost Figures after decimal points era eighths OVER THE COUNTER 1TOCK8 The following nuntatlons do nof necessarily represent are lntr-*-" *■ re Intended a lalf trading • Bln-DIcator Broun Bnglheerlng Charles of the Rllz Frito-Lay, Inc............... Maradel Products ............ Mohawk Rubber Co. .... ... Michigan Saamlass Tuba Co. . Pioneer Finance ............. Safran Printing ............. Vernors Ginger Ala .......... Wlnkelman's ...... .......... Wolverine Shoe ,........... Wyandotte Chemical ....... mutual FUNDS Affllleted Fund ...... Chemical Fund . ............. Commonweslfh Stock .......... Keystone Income KJ .......... Keystone^ Growth ............ s Tr ;ft?er i5;l t 321 ■M AsKad 8.3TtM2 13.00 14.21 I/.I3 18.72 19.33 10.19 5.49 4.00 8,52 9.37 15.82 12.34 Mass, investors Trust .......... is.or ir.« Tale"vlsloi?'2ledronlct ■ Ji!'S Welllnalon Fund , 1450 Wednesday's 1st DIVIDENDS INCRBAsllD^ Am T.IAT.I . Oen Free Equip .30 C dPrecEq 4,71^ I.tl2{ ( Sor Nat Gas .45 ( orNatGas 4,«pf , 1,43 J NorNalGas 8|.4p( 1.40 < NorNalGas 5.5pf 1.325 ( ' Ind. RrM Util. StMks SIl'W..ji;| w Si isl |i §! 1943 44 Lo5 .. 341,1 12I.S 54.9 142,7 l*« High 372.1 W.S 42.9 M S 194S Low 2S4.8 97.0 110.3 200.4 DOW.JONBS NOON AVERAGES STOCKS 30 induslrlals Ttstatals M MaMa '• . . . Il3.4|4'9r4| 15 UtiMtlai JJJ'K.ilt 45 Stocks 274 00 1 0,11 BONOS „ M 4h Bntuls ■ W.M 10 Higher grade rails , JJ ** 10 Second grade rails , . JJ}? ® * 10 Fubllt UTIIHIas / »• 45 10 ihdusittals fs.ia Mart Trade Fairly Active Rights Issue Slips to Dull Pace NEW YORK (AP) - Excitement dwindled in American Telephone’s rights Issue and the stock market moved irregularly early this afternoon. Trading .vsasJairly. active^. _____________ Gains and losses of most key stocks were fractional. AT&T, trading “ex” its rights to purchase one share of common at $100 for every 20 held, was quoted up more than , a point. Trading in the shrank to a dull pace after yea-'^ terday-s huge total of S,37S,000. The rights were unchanged. STOCK SANK Chrysler, as expected, announced record earnings and the stock sank more thaii ji point now that the news was out. Another element in the Chrysler decline appeared to he that, although Chrysler’s directors were not scheduled to consider a dividend,. Wall Street was disappointed that they did not announce some dividend action, since the Finance Com* mittM had iihet. ..... Little leadership was shown by the prominent stock groups. Rails, cigar manufacturers and a wide range of selected issues jwere mostly higher. Steels, oils, drugs and cigarette issues showed a somewhat lower tone. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks at noon was up .1 at 294.8 with industrials up .3, rails up .4 and utilities down 4. AMERICAN STOCKS 1 mich s . Prices on the American Stock. ““ ; Exchange were irregularly h— higher in moderately active i trading. S}7ntex eased fractionally in heavy tradiog. T^hnical Measurement fell a couple of points. New Process rose nKH« than _3, Up a point or so werq^ GENEVA* (JO — The Soviet esBmpn^rssfcaas. taiaiy'I^ iJnion pnpisetf today-tiiat-^-tronics, Pall Corp. » dmiiifoni O’Okiep Copper. (Corporate bonds were narrowly mixed. U. S. Government bonds were unchanged. American Stock Exch. Figures after decimal points are eighths Stock Ex Cou Elec .. Creole P ... Hall Lamp . The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK (AP)^Followlng Is a list if selected stock transr-*'— — fork Stock Exchange AbbotfL 2.40 hds.) High LOW i 5 123VJ 123 1! 1 13'A 13'/4 1 AftTXan 2 AmCyen 1.80 AElPw 1.14b A Export ,37e AmFP .44 AmMotors la’ Am.NG 1.40 AmOptIcal 2b AMP Inc .45 Ampex Cp AmpBorg .80 Anacon 2.50g AnkenCh .40 35rmcoSt 3 AssdDG 1.40 Atchls 1.20a AtlRef 2.40 Atlas Cp AutCant .lOg Avco Corp 1 AVCCorp 2 x5 5754 S7'/4 ! 11 40 39% ; 5 50% 50 - 1 49 54% 54% ! 5 57Vk 57 ! 9 14 15% 1 37 28% 28%' S • 15 75% 75V4 ; 82 "78'/4 77% ; 41 39% 39 ; 21 15% 15'/4 1 4 51V4 51 i 51 32% 31% : 41 4t% 41 - 20 40% 60% 27 42'/4 ' 41% 45 36V4 35% 3 lOVj lOVj 19 44% 44% ( 7 22% 22%_) 25 18% 10V4 ' 37 40% 40% i 32: 17 14% 1 12 42% 41% ■ 10 49 40% 1 j 21 10'/4 10% S 2 92% 92 I 1 34 20% 20 X432 147V4 144% L 0 43 20% 20% : 5 12 28“ 27% : 34 15% 15% 14 20;/4 19 % ; 9 44V4 44 - 4 19% 19% .112^4? : x3 109 109 1( 5 33% 33% : 42 - •' 35% - 9 28% 28% 28% .... ’‘ 54 54 54 .... 2% 2% 2% — T Balt 81 Oh Beaunit l.i Beckman 13 14% 14 38 22% »% : 23 88^^ 87% I —B— 5 54% 53% 1 13 13Va 13% ; 15 35% 35% 35Va - tl 37% 37% 37% + 25 40% 40 40% -t- 10 49% 49% 49% - 29 44% 45% .45% - % 20 10% 10% 10% .... 12 39 30% 30% — % 34 24% 24% 24% -t- % 25 15 14% 15 -I- % 8 18% 18% 18%-t- % 38 27% 27% 27% ........ 44 43% 43% 43>/4 ... '1 34% 34% 34% ... 4 44% 44% 44% - % " 70 TOVs - % DilHud 1.250 iLr'Tw' ^t Ileal ,40 blsney .40b &*i’| §uP«y 7.W llPai^q" 78 42'-4 41% 41% - % i5 u ]i gs .iriis + is 23 42 4IV> 41% -i- % If 45% 45 44% . 'WfJ: Tfi: i SiJ r4lM.?i ,1 l P,5S 15^ 7*:^ M 19% 11% 19 . —D— 3 17% 17% 17% 1- % 1 30% 20% 20% 1' % 3 M% 31% 3i% -I- % »2 Itn lt ,1 Si gJS't; t 4?% 41% 41% + % min Hill ; k fB L ^ 1% 1% ivi + % , ,us% rT, t ;? 's 3% 3f 1 ]t% it% 11% % [k itut % Foote M .15g Ford Mot 2 Forem 0 .40 Fost Wheeler FreeptS 1.20. Frueht 1.50a' taleo ~ NiH R it But this dividend obligation, even if only Implied, often deters corporations from offering New Tax Guide Being Mailed to Area Employers Pontiac area employers will receive the new federal Income ta:^wlthholdlng fables In a tax guide Ixilng mailed them this week. « R. I. Nixon, Detroit Internal Revenue Service district dlree-lor, said the 32-page guide Is based on the 14 per cent with holding rate on wages and salaries agreed on by Congress. He sVid effective date (ft the reduced rate applied to employe payrolls will ^ about a week after President Johnson signs the tax bill on or about March 1. e a ♦ - Nixon requested employ ora to watch for announcement of the new rate through news media and warned that the change has no effect on Income lax refums being prepared for calendar 1963, * * * F.mploycr.s seeking additional Information can contact the l«-cal IRS office In the Pontiac F«>(leral Hulldlng fit. Second, eventually the loan must be repaid. And the money found to repay it. R R R ATIliT, on the other hand, is under no obligation to repay the $100 to a stock owner who-buy/^-one of the new shares. Except for the dividends and the spreading of assets over more outstanding shares, the big new ’The phone company has used Tnanjrway^xjf financing its huge growth. Its last offering of common stock was some 11 million shares in February 1961 at $85 a share, at the same ratio of one for each 20 already held. ALSO BORROWED —It-also has: borrowed through , debentures, both straight and convertible, and has tapped the market for short-term loans. It all depended on the state of the money market at the time— and the state of the stock market. R ♦" R ' In today’s bull market, with popular stock average indexes hitting record highs, sale of more common stock couldn’t help but look attractive — to a company whose stocks are in demand at well over the $100 mark. Judge Hits GM on 'Cadilldc' GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (A?4 —A federal judge told General Motors Corp. W^nesday it does not have a monopoly on the word “Cadillac” and ordered it to pay $41,000 to another company defending its right to use the name, too. R R R GM sought to enjoin Cadillac Boat Co. from use of Cadillac as a trademark, but U.S. Dist. Judge Noel P. Fox noted that the defendant started operations on the shore of Lake Cadillac and the name had geographic meaning. Fox ofdered GM to pay the boat company $41,000 in attorney fees, holding that GM had attempted to place an economic burden upon “a small corporation of limited assets so that it would be forced to yield to the unjust demands of plaintiff.” ' News in Brief The Oakland County chapter of the National Association of Social Workers will meet at I Tuesday with the Lapeer, Oakland and Macomb County chapters of the Michigan Psychological Association at Pine Knob Ski Lodge, Independence Township. ' An undetermined amount of change was taken from vending machines early today in a break-ln at tlighlaiid Gulf Service, 5420 M59, Waterford Township. Mrs. Arthur Gray, 1338 Park,' White Lake Township, told Waterford Township police early today that a basket of children's clothing was stolen from her car parked at Airway I.ancs, 4825 M59. 81. Andrews 'nu'ift Hatchery Rd. God Spring clothing wanted for consignment. Every FrL8;304 p.m. Hidv. BasemeuK Rummage i February 14, IS.ml.. and Sat., at 10 a m. loM I ni. 4042 Woodmere. Drayton PlWos. -adv, Illlnolii contains t,251 municipalities within its border.s. more than any other stale., Pennsyl vpnia ranks third. N'orul Rtul Iowa ' Issiws % Sixcessful %: f Invesf/ng * By ROGER E. SPEAR | Q) “I am a widow, age M, ^ have $7,000 in savings and $3,-; 000 in series E bonds. Last! month, I bought $10,OM in mutual lunds to supplement social security when I retire. Now some Iriends tell me this was wrong and I may lose my money. I am worried skk. Do you think mutual funds afo'. too risky for me and that I should do something about, them? What is your advice?” > A. Y. A) I strongly advise you to relax and stop worrying. Some peo^ have criticized mutual funds on the basis thai their sales load and management fees are rather high. No sensible person believes that they are risky to any greater extent than the stock market as a whole, whfch Is subjwt to the risk of fluctuation. Mutual funds diversify among a wide variety of issues and are usually capably managed. 1 think you should hoM. but If your worries persist, I would sell your funds — or any stock holdings ~ and buy more Series E bonds. R R R Q) “My present stocks were purchased some years ago and left to'‘stagnate, to to speak. They do not present a pretty picture compared with my cost. I would like to Invest lor future growth. My holdings are Hydrometols n«l^ Une Star Steel. What should r do with these, also with $10,000 I have tree for Investment?” (J. A. A) if you will allow me to say so you .seem to have lessons In investing successfully. Hydrometal has Just reported - for fiscal 1963 - iU fifth deficit In a row. I believe it should be sold. Une Star Steel is a better situation and has shown a profit of $104 a share for 1963 vo^ siiH a deficit n year earlier. Nevertlielcss. this Is a cyclical, not a growth fltuation, and with your objectives, I would dispose of these shares. Fqr new investment, I advise ('orn Products, Texas Utilities,' PriK'ter & (ramble, and General Electric ' all strongly growing (Copyrighl 1964) D-8 THE POyT^AC PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1964’ A new method of determining the water vapor in the atmo^^ phere above 50.000 feet has been developed. ^>ectrometers wre carried aloft Iqr balloons and aimed gt the sun, and can indicate the vapor when examined. PUBLIC SALE PUBLIC AUCTION ^ cfc switr B '”^awary 13 And H 1»M NOTICE OF REVIEW To th«-0^« or orntr , F^towinq' P»iefS& ' L»i« tvlna SWIv Of SWIy Mws of Dynf ♦ .w’ GRATE, FEBRUARY ALDINE, (KNOX); Road, Clarkston; V- - wile of Peter 0. Oralci___ - - ..............(Emily) Besrds- SeclionX'.Bloom- Lofa *L 157.15 W7.30 314.13 beolnnlno ill > Held Township. Loti 1 Ihru 3S -ij. el2.lJ?'“‘oN 3M'*th;" sirincTuVv., iiMn south Blooirtlewt^ljlamii *"^ division. Section 3, Bloojtw*W ' ship. Oakland County, Mtchlqan. Please Take Notice That i Special Ap lessmant Roil has weh frepared and Is w *?ile In the otflce of the Township Clsrk for public •xomlnafion. SftiQ del Assessment Roll has been — for the purpose of Mwssing th ^-^vT'Sescrlbed propertlaa which kins; also survived by several nieces and nephews. Funera' vice will be held Saturday, ruary 15 at 3 p.m. at tn* si Goyelte Funeral Home W. J. Teeuwlssen Jr. _________ Interment In Lakevlpw Cemetery. KENVOli, FteBRUARV 13, tf04, FRANCES J., 2031 Decker, Walled Lako; toft 40; br*— Robarf Kanyon; bf of Mr. and Mri. Wl ff'^beSinn!n”af°}l»*V at tt^W comer of S^re Lrte hit, t^ce'^rth'w *ooVSro'* ran.TiU.?*{S!'tt’“h,^3i&^^^^^ kiTlo Somemet 1^. {! Somerset Road NWlY rn«a^*«^Tr2^r:^^^ RSsd*to Vha ^E ramer ,o* *outh dfloom' i Highlands Subdivision. ij foltowi: Also, SWLY In l.-.•- -feel to Devonshire Roe^ tl 3« tael In Devonsltlre Roai NWly I -‘-Ire Ro— - _ _ My In Marlborough Road from Roa' ‘"* IfW 3M h BtoonTli'ald Hlghiands Subdivision NWly 500 feet on the bark line of Uts 33 thru 3» Inclusive and Lpjs J* J,'ir„“ Ing 8!y In Uncaatar Road 705 taai. I5i,%.xr-N«iy;ig;’a';d aTal5^.ii2?hM.,.._ All located In Section 3, Bl<»m(leld Township, Oakland County, Michigan-Take Further Notice That ihO Township Boards will n^ « ai 4300 Telegraph Road, In the Township at a oo o'cl^ p.m., on February 34, l*«, lir tha'purpwe of reviewing - and hearing and oblec- PiLORIS V. little February CITY PRIMARY Bl^CTION NOTICE, Mjrch t i;*4j^ Monday, Mare To the Else llac, Mkhlgat Precinct I Piecinct I Precinct I DlstrlCf No. 1 ». 1-Jefferson J ,, i_Flre Slatloi -i:8;rn. High School Precinct No., 37-Jefienion Jr. High District No. ,2 Precinct No. Christian Precinct No. 5-W8Sh|ngton Jr. High Precinct No. i-webster SchMl Precinct No. 3»---Wafhlnoton Jr. Htah Precinct No. 40-Washlngtop Jr. High Precinct No. 41- Webster School District No.. 4 Precinct No. H-Wlsner School Precinct NO. 13-Llncoln Jr. High Precinct No. 14-Llneoln Jr. High Precinct No. 11-Owen Sciwl Precinct No; 33-Wever .School Precinct No. 43 -Owen School District No. 5 - - - -. T_ Herrington School . .. cinci No. ll-McCerroll . „ Precinct No. le-SI. Michael's Hall Preclncl'No. 35--I eBaron School Preoinct No, 4.t-.Malklm School Precinct No. 44-Merk Twain School District No. i Precinct No. 30-Y.M.C.A. Precinct No. 31-Central School Precinct No. 23- Clly Hall - -....... “ Death Notices ___ brother 'of ............ Honharl and Francis Bredunrldgaj .grk.,r^ar..ji!s? wfii-a held Friday, February 14 at 1:30 f.itr. at fha Meora Qta^l of flia ^parks^rfffta Punaral Home, jum Heights. Infarmenl In B Chapel Ctmttmy. ‘iism^R, the Voorhees-Siple Chapel wlttt Rev. Clyde Jones oHielatlng. -torment In Perry Mount l Cemetery. Mr. Gelsinger - wit. ... state at the Voorhees-SIpfe ---------------(Suggasig vlslt- Susle, Terry, ji doe- ' |ratWMl'( ir, WalK wtk i'k± Mved. by one ____ . ____ service will eld Friday, February t4 at I. at the Rlchardson-Blrd Funeral Home, walled Lake with Rev. Carson Spivey officiating, interment tno&airi Hills Memorial Gardens. ^_________ tmSENMAN, FEBRUARV II, 1M4, CARL, 3340 Pontiac Lake Road, •-----lord Township) age «) *“ husband of Agatha Liii a Morris, Id Clifford Iter Blakley, I Robert M» X the Voorhees-SIple Funerel H Funeral service .will be held day, February 14 at 10 a,m. -St. Benedl^s Catholle Church. Interment In Mf. Hope Cathote Cemetery, Mr. Ltnsenman will lie In sratc ar Funeral Home. ftAfiB3WkT,-FlbftuARV'11,'W4, PAUL, 30 Roso Court) age 03) dear falhar of Mrs. Robert (Ps"' In^ OalTo, Mrs. John (Anr --------" ' Frank ““ also survived by II grandchildren and 25 graat-grandchlldran, Funeral ieiYfta wiir be held Saturday, f«llll«rtt cemerery, gerwyi boriky will He In---------------- .. Godherdt Funerel Home, Keego Harbor until 10 p.m. this evening, el which time he will be taken to Berwyn, III. for service and burial. iMS; FEbRUARV- C'fMi; "SXIV LORI ANN, FalrflaM, California) Ealovad Infant daughter of Airman 1st. Cleat and Mri. Christopher R. Ward) - beloved Intent grenddai—■ ter of Mr. and Mrs, Christos 'snddaugh-Ihrlstopher Mrs. SsM ichtel and Baby . Betts; dsar t— .......— Randall Ward. Graveside service w«« held fodey at 12 noon ■ ' tetholle Seetiu.. .. imatory, Clerkston wirn K»v. rather F. J. Oelany ol-tlclatlng, Arrangements were by the Lewis B. WIrit Funeral Home, CJ^rkHon^_____ __ _ __ watkIns,' febRuarY’ i2, mi, BABY STANLEY RICHARD, 2372 Auburn Road, Avon Township) b* loved Intent son of Stanley er Susan Watkins; balovad Infa... ^randson^of Mr. and Mrj. Richard Watkins; balo’v grandson of M and Mrs. Clara......__________ service will ba held Friday, Ftb- Chapel'f^rks-Gr^l Precinct k PracThcl No; ra- uonpiniww »,."u Olslrlet No. 7 Precinct No. 2$-McConnell Schoc precinct No. 34-McConnell Schoi Pracinct No. 27-Wllson School Precinct No. 2S-Wllson Ichoo Precinct No. 2e-.Wlilon School Ma 13—U.S. NOVOI Training Center ... ...---y Electic....... I ol nominating ., i and 7 two r the oltlea of City Com- Tha saw City Primary I "e haw for tr-------------- 1 Districts 1 Notice ralMIva 1 closing of Pollii-^Tl Primary B taction t Is for tha City a opened at > St shall remain present and In line el I o'clock p.m., the hour deacrihed lor the cktalng ol ■ 0 polls, ahall b» allowed * February " '* _________ haW Monday, March 3, IF hereby certify thal fha i ----' signed h" ‘— r ol lha City ol ■oniiac, wicmgan; OTY commissioner - DtiTfifi no: 1 Pobarl Bowens ssr'i..'"'®, lanluei J, WhIWri OlilrICl NO. 3 Dial 332-8161 Pontiac Preti Want Ads FOR FAST ACTION NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS JI? tP’taS.At Hli POLLOWINO DAY. All arrora should be reported Immediately, ,«»r no later then the day fOHowIng publication. If no notllleetlon --- Is made by that be cisumed tha The getditne tor < of trwiehml Went Ads v tha day of publication after tha first Inierflon. When cepcelle-(lone ere made be euro to gel your "KILL NUMBER." NO ed-[ustmente will bo given withoul Ctoilng time tor 'edvertlig-menu containing type eliee larger then regular agal# type Is II o'clock noon lha day pra- vlout to publication. _ CASH WANT AO RATES ; i" n IS 4 3.44 A4I 10.N : !;ii iiit t s.4» e.n Jill 10 4.10 10.N 1S.M jsisrsrusxis Ponflao Prasa Box numbara. Tht Pontiac Pr«w PROM I A.M. to I F.M.^ n, (9( LOVING MEMORY HERMAN —Wife wid Family. ^ OF DEI afford. MICHIGaII'CREDIT COUNS^ORS 702 FONTDU Sk^Banfc BM POntlac'e eWttf and le'""* n-astlsfanea company. Poy Off Your Bills — sHthwif a loan _ Paymanto tow ai $10 week. Protoct your job and Credit. City AdiBOX REPLIES-^ At 10 a. m. today tbere were replies at The Press office la the 3,12,21,25,61,03,70, 73, 80, 98, 100. 30HAROT FUk ..lego Herber. Pt... DONEliokobHNS FUNERAL HOME -------- — SPARKS-GRlf^lN D. E. Pursley VOORHEES-SIPtt CHINA PAINTING' LESIONS, Supplies. Wave Warner, FE 44400. i ri N ¥ V MAlb' iOPF Menominee. FB FTlOi. by any other than myself. Charles M. Sheftuck, Jr., 4704 R------ Drayton Plaint, Michigan._____ WE CbLLdtt MONOV ANV-where tor end from anyone. FE 0-3902.______________. « WAT«»F6fitt crtdbit....BUIklAO, Credit -------- 330-7134 330-7137 Witness to Accident formation concerning haad-on colli slon on WaHon Road, last Thurt. February 4, Involving pick-up truck Lost and Found FOUND; 3- TO <)LD 44442. Reward. f: MALE SLACK-TAN GERMAN ...aphard, choke chel- *"• Avon Roed^^Mw^ LOST: BROWN DOG, VICINITY Drayton PTetni near Hatchery an' MeplecreSI Roads,, license No. I 40st, ens. to "RSk". OR 44311 «URSW AT L'Bif~Rf'rjOTr*“BM iffriM! love him. Smell, black, wavy Name Tulf^ Reward 130. 2-99S1. lost mixso brown MALB dog, vicinity of Auburn Heights, Ticense 9020. Reward.; UL 2-207!. LOST - LAOliS BLUB B|'lLP6LO vicinlly ol Pood Town Store ;' MS9 Pleie. Reward. OR 3-5270. l5sT: i ?ImaLI BdAdOli, lASt ^f^Leke »r' c. Irwin W. Jeckwig R. leuer _______; Lorent Wlllkop blslrlct kto. ; Wintord B. Bott^ Genrga N. Orbe OlOA EA.^KBL|y,^ Feb. 13, 14, and II, 1944 To Buy, Rtnt, Sill or Trodi Use Pontiac Prsss WANT ADS Office Houm 8 am. to S p.m. Concsllotion Dsodllne 9 a.m. Day Following First Insirtlon THEY'RE LOOKING FOR YOUR WANT AD IN THE Pontiac Press Phone 332 8181 , black _ . .. ^ . Answering to Cookie. MY 3-1490 alftr 3 LbST“MALi“ B ASSB tt~ Bi RMINO- ham-BloomtiaW erar ----------- Society- FE 5-9290.___________ Lbsf; OMYIIMMIt) ? ? ? By mislaka, 'l placed o pair ol ladles' black' k topped boots and soma ku supplies In the wrong c lord Elementary School toachar. Any Intormatlon regarding thaia Hams will ba gratafully rectivtd at 473-1*79, MEN DVBR )kN Billings I YEARS FOR Hf^SIMMS 1 Nlit AF«Al»INd'MIH'«yiTN 4ato9 eaF*rlanea to sail wid't Jtfgest^saii^^pf|N^ training. For Inlarvlaw call FB ’ 3-7S37. ” aFKV John McAuiitli Ford Bump Shop. Foh m Afiterlcen and toraign care. Must heve S veers ef experlenee, wIllbM to work 4 days, year emund itojjdy to 9 p.m. ’ No Matter Whot tht Need, o Press Wont Ad Is Always AvnlloblB to Help You Fulfill It and Fasti Just Dial rib 8181 S SHARP DIRECT ^SALES- ----- •’'10 per wee" I 473-1245. iLL AROUND AAACHINBST WITH small shop er—'-------— part-time. Call Help Wanted IWele RECORD DEPARTMENT SALES-' ‘-'-^'-“-llme, knowtodge of music kpply Grlnnalrs.^ Pontiac REGULAR REAL ESTATEI EXPERIEI charactor. Age 27-50. College education preferred. Accustomed-to earning above, average income. Muet be rrady to eecept position by Feb. 17. For toeal Intoniew ^11 Logan 444-1144 Thur*. BUMPER " Ttonesd-i cant or Ssli. eivd."E. FBoesw.' BENCH HAND Comer'BrWtr itoborrr fbllih brectilon alreraft ^__ blueprinto and plan eat up. 7 and HD BH Naaativa If you have equivalent. I __ rROiTTOTOinBimes-------experience. If SOUTH CASjl, ^ ^ PB 44947 CAREER minded YOUNG MAN •ales exparlanca end a TO meet the public, futt ,n workJn_jtore anil oulLjnusyii good fransportation. Call Mr. i vent, 3354134, eAcrbiiveKs ii (>«i orsiR: , „ PE 2^5 ____________ CARETAKER FOR 14 APARTMEfit BUILDING. Must be married w"" wife willing to help with ee toklng; rOnfy-T»tIfed people .-w performed, we supply an epert-ment, heated, free utiliflet, '• - * water and tetophona. Give phone number in raolv to 44, Pontiac Pi enr OF PONTIAC PLANT OPERATOR SALARY t4983-S4049. .„ns: Between. JS-^ Graduation from, — r trade school, exparlanca vy duty pumps and Olhar oparsttons. Apply r* 9apt„ City Hall 35 CAB DRIVERS WANTfeO. 3. . "ir. Day and night shifts. Apply >f Cab Co., Waldron Hotel, T00| BORING MILL OPERATOR, DeVLEIG OR LUCAS. DIE MAKER! ----1»ONCH FINISHERS TRY-OUT MEN All benefits, top rata, lournayman, steady employment. Day and night — 53 hour wa4k .IBERTY T(>OL 8, EHGR- CORP. 250 W. MAPI^ RO. WALLED LK. tar, axperlancad, for qualHy ,0a-thax dry cleaning plant. Douglas Cleaners 534 $. Woodward, Btr- EXPERIENCED GLASS . and home ownara. Call FB 4-3317. iXPERIENCBO WATER SOFT- FIXTURE BUILDERS TOOL lyiAKERS LONG PROGRAM, PLENTY OP OVERTIME, FULL BENEFITS, DAY AND NIGHT SHIFTS. ALLIED WELDER CORP., 445 HOWARD DETROIT 14 THREE BLOCKS WEST OF JOHN LODGE EXPRESSWAY AT HOWARD EXIT. 35. Salary, ;-- tiac Prase Box 92. IMMEDIATE OPENING $129.50 In Pontiac area for dapandabla married man under 45 with gaod car and home phono. Our S3 man •varaga $135 weakly. 4139.50 guar-•ntaad during training. Also two part-time opening* at S3 hourly. OR 3-St4i.___,_____________ LAY0Ufl«N Detoilers and Che^lcers Special machine and i"-"-- frlnga banefllt. Good opportunlly for asilstanl man-------- - raitauranf. Reply Box 110 sfe—- -lelery axpac_____ AaW ?8R " CCKinbAl smell fectory. Sand com lory Including iica^ _____ oil. Post 01- SlAN^6^B®nN$TALLAfl6N ANO sarvlca of water toflanara and •lacfrlcal appllancaa. Must ba over 25 and able to supply rafaraneai. Full time only. If you ere eflreld to work er cen'l lift, don't reply. Cell tor eppolnimeni lor perionel Interview. Crump Bleclrlc, Inc., 3443 Auburn Rd.. FB 4 3573._ MEN THAT WILL WORK WANTEDi 6 MEN TO START WORK IMMEDIATELY IN THE FOOD INDUSTRY. ALL APPLICATIONS GIVEN EQUAL CONSIDERATION. EXCELLENT IMMEDIATE IN-COM E FOR INDUSTRIOUS PEOPLE. OPPORTUNITY FOR EARLY PROMOTION. CALL MR. SMITH, 338-0438 FOR INTERVffir^LfPOtHTMENT. AAN~«ANTiO fW wareHbusl work. Stole age. tES hour. Apply In parson. Cracker Barrel! Drive-ln, 3051 Union Lake Rd. at Thornes Rd. ______ eSUNTER “girl. BOB'S CONEY Island, 747 N, Perry.__ cXii~F5r"6iiriHnnrT.Tsw housework, live In. FB DEPENDABLE BABYSITTER If preferred S deyi with Set. end Sun. oH. Oood pay, no housework, except clean up after youreell. inquire 723 Slenlay. (3 blocki off Mont- DIVISION MANAGER Growing notional cosmetic c earn, will select (1) one won.,., axperlonced In contact with public, ei Division Manager tor Pontiac. ExacelWnl apporiunlly ---- writo commission. PUasa c. _____ apply unlass you anjoy working wifh woman. Cor-'-*- ----------- mant training al co.. This Is NOT a parsonnal sailing opportunity. CbtT^Mr. •'-------- ■rturi., only. Ft_ 5-9214. i)(flKiRNci8 "mIoIca^ tory-nN-tpllonlil. FI 4-4535. “ixeeiiiBN^geiAWienor lOTiRiiNeiB'TiiiiNiBHrnitt- slaty end comm'---- Can I* to I p.m. FULL OR FaIT-TTmI OFIniNG ^ houiawivfs 81 solas paopu tar terah Covaniry. Na Invasimanls, no dativarU*. c*H Sally’MA 4-31117, •* 8IRL pointments tor saUsWan lei aiy end commlishm 473 134$, ” dm iMs : IlM office 3 shins, 9 >, Room 14, 34V* ««i8'“lARNlH6! PA»r TlMl, *- ving spring cioihing el >110(119 f “^nefTAve wy.i Drayton hoifeis. Apply Work Wanted Female usual oaxass-. Our bitema-ilzatkxr If you Thuj^ay, 7-9 p.m, HOUSEKEEPER, OWN ROOM. 333 LIGHT DELIVERY WORK, MUST have car and know Pontiac area. „ CelLEAliSOSTJII MEbiCAL Bwildli^i^ SerB^ai3|dle^ WRECKrNG 20 BUilOINGS Used doors; windows, plumbing, fixtures, furnaces, automatic hot water tonka etc. For sale at low Hrlc« tor quick sale. ,Nor-W«f Jjanber jnd Salvaga Co. Field -Ijy -g; —------- - sn-bkiiAGEb ON =SundMf momlnoe with elderly lady. OwmranaportaTkxi. Retorencae. UL Electric co. fb fiaai. -^- Pres-Mnaking A Tdleriiif 17 DRESSMAKING needed for geriatric rehabilitation nursing, 3357153. 8PARTONS DEPARTMENT STORM 44AUONAL BANIILGP ROCH; sr Is now readying ItsfacHitles and expects to open soon. We ' openings tor experienced k Interested persons may app , 524 N, Main St. or caU OL 1-4S47 WAITRESSES CURB GIRLS Must be 18 Ol time. Meals with pay, Ilf ^ . pitallzatlon benefits. Apph Boy Drive-ln, Telegraph ar Streets. Also Dixie Hwy. Convalescent-NurBing 21 Bob's Restaurant. Keego Harbor. 442-9857. _____________ WANTED DINING ROOM HElE, cell Devon Gables - Ml 44800. WAITRESS Exp. Full timo. No Sundoys. FQRTINP'S STEAK HOUSE Mevlwfl ngd Trucfciwg ^ 22 l-A MOVING SERVICE, REASON- ____________ ______ , UL 24999, RESTAURANT 3518. - ' lounge TRASH, JOB-CLEANUF. I and AAA^I A _ .w. r\a i.iAAA REASONABLE RATES ROBERT^^|!^KInI“'^*"‘oR 5151X LIGHT "TIaULING AND m5v(NO. Cheap, any time, eny kind. ,FE 59393. Peiiiting A Decoretiiia 23 •1 PAINTING-DECORATING, if sonable — res., - oommert Free estimates. ESTABLISHL- ........ ....— earning above everege. FB 2-3053. HAIR OrESSER WANTED. $100 guarantee tor ityllst. Mr. Thomae' Hair Fashions. FE 5^. scH90LiuT5KIVEir ol oaraj ham areas. Have brick home pro|-ects, 414,000 to 430,000. Good pay. For conlldtntlal Interview, Ml foiei HelprMe^ $400 Month Guarantee •arn SM per day or more I property consultant for a n K ___ rail- call parsQ r?.'?^iiSa.T;;sino k .... ----- -.....al their convanl- -■----Tollcltlng. .'’i-io'to 440 'per weak* For -----------------g 5.4733. l»tl8n„.FE 5-4733. Agenciei EmploymBnt Agei CAREERS BY KAY Full Charge Bookkeeper ... $350-$375 Car Biller ... ,...$240 4PBCIAL DISCOUNT to ( llac area girls who raoliti ui during month of FabrOl gardlais of whai within 4 months. Ml 6-3663 240 W. Mapla, Suita 321, B'hiim ....eVElYn~EBwards GLAMOUR RBCEPTIONI4T * Typing, light bookkaaplng 3 anyllmt TELEPHONE FE 4-0584 I4V2 East Huron 4t. Sulfa -------cAftiiirnrrRxy— Ml 4-3T‘ To IBM TRAINING Learn IBM, Kaypundi or china oparallen and wiring. 4 . gouraa* evaUablat>;:Jkpproyed by Michigan Slala Board of Bduca- Ihm. Free plaeomant aisl.....- Frta parking, financing art tvSTBMS INSTITUTE 42 B. Nina Mila, Haial Pa 147 «MI ' MEN WANjIBI DRAFTING - BNOINaBRI... AIR CONDITIONING • RBFRIG. AUTO MBCHANICS Study at School or at Hama Phone PB 44107 or wnia AliUd insmuto. I340 S. Michiti Chicago, III. U405 W^l^nHd MbIb APPRBNTICJI BARBBR t«fANTI potlllon. M 4-3413. A-f eA»F|HYRV k!fCHINi;“>e dlll^i- Retteaflon Rooms all Re Wbnilng. FB 5-4414 or OR t-4414. Ri WALL wawiho.: e*iwm mschtne cUOM. FB 5t077. (kLioF stuobnT - MAjcSiTNo iVafli Waited Female WOMBN WANT WAIL iVASk snd hewsa sltsblnff FB 57MI. WbMIlM WAHT MAriL WAsHiNb and housa cleaning. FB 4 55M. ----------A-t iUbMlH® Busiaest Sarvica 15 ELECTRIC JIWTOR, SERVICE-;RE-V|^3ML $3 and $S avg. FE 5-3876 INCOME tax: $5 Up H & R BLOCK CO. Nation's Largest Tax Sarvica 30 B. Huroir^ FE 59225 Weekdays, Mi Sat., Sun., 9-5 _________ TAX, accounting, notary. By appointmenf. R. Polley, -4023- Baybrook, Drayton Plains. 473-8843._________________ INCOME TAX REPORTS PRfe-pared, Baldin-Walton area, Mrs. .Hayward. FB 57035._____________ EHLERS' BUSINESS^SERVICES ' 239 Voorhels-oft street parking. 2 ROOMS, PRIVATE EkITRANbi, Raeburn St FE 54495 2 ROOMS ANO BATH, CHILD WEL-come. $20 per wk. with $25 dmsit. Inquire 273 Baldwin Ave. Phone EXPERIENCED PAINTING ANO ----Ing. Free ertimates. 482-0774. PAINTING, PAPERiHo, WATl washing. Topper, OR 57041.__ LADY INTERIOR DtCORATbR, Papering. M 8<343. ihibn-Radle Service 24 HAVE YOUR RADIO AND TELEVISION REPAIR WORK DONE WHILE YOU SHOP Trained Service Men, ----- Free Tube Tesfln T ronspertntlon..... 2J CALIFORNIA DRIVE-AWAY Planning to go west? Drive one o our sharp lofe nxidel cere. We wll share expeniet. M & M MOTOR SALES 2527 Dixie Hwy. 9 and Orchard Lake HOMEOWNERS S1S.SI ANNUALLY ^Scelei Agency, PB 3-3011, 53403. INSURANCE Fire am 20 per d storm Iniurence > ponies. K. G. Hempstead, 343 W.. Huron, FE 4-8285__ Wanted Children tBjB^BaH DAY CARE FOR CHILDREN IlcsnsMl home. Ref., 334-1474. __ 6Ar”CAlE b« BbARblNd'-TI 5 ysari, 533 N-PSrty. all ... 1 PIECE OF FURNITURE appliances wanted quickly. Lllfle »'t Berigaln " -**-*- blTfALI 4t Blue AUCtT6lT|AL|Til!W day at Blue Bird Auction. We'll buy furniture, tools end appllencat. OR 54447 or MBIroet 7-3139. iAST^bR""¥^orTuRSTfOJSf, appllenees, miK. Itomi. Or Itf us If for^'you. Hills Auction. MY 51471 or MY 54141. (JAlsSbl ■ FUijjltUBi AMb *¥- tes-UWl." AUCTION. OA 53441. _____30 OBTAIN- INTERBSTBD 30" uitd site summer college. 432-2734. riib cFFif miHmwiri»iriii perlab'e lypewriler and other b • w^r^ineei OR 39707 er Wi^ te^wt 3i 55SEOROOM, NORTH END OF ....................... BEtfkbbM. rbnT 6¥fi6M fb buy, North side. FR 51231. f1sth¥r AND BaugHYIS blsiRI SMALL HOUSl“T}lAT”?llRdl Junior High In Drayton Flelns. OR 50723.____________ Share living OBartan 33 WOMAN FOR COMPANION -------Y iwma. OR 3^- WOMAN TO SHAli¥'APARf|ijiiflT ' sxijenM^^naar General Hop YOUNG WOR KI NG" ' W Realtor 1430 N. Opdyka Rd. FE 54145 cash 41 HOURS LAND CONTRACTS - HOMES EQUITIES WRIGHT 1 Oakland Ave. WE NEED Listings on homes. Have bt wantino to buy on land con with reasonable down paym All locations. Call us. PONTIAC REALTY PAUL JONES Rl HILLTOP REALTY Apartments-Funffshed 37 791 Doris Rd., at Featharstone. I-ROOM tepFICIENCY Alberta Apartments N. Paddock FE 2-2094 1- AND 2 - ROOM eFFICieNCY apis, on Pontiac Lake and Highland Rd. All utimias Included. Ph. Mr*. LIley, 473.1190......... BEDROOM FRAME, CARPETED living room, large lot, elosa-OMTC. Nice buy. FE 55001.___________ 2-BEDRbOM, BASEMBnT, RECRE-•tlon roo- —— 5BEOROOM B1-LEVEL,1'A baths, - -----* 415,200, 32,200 down or - —4751524. 5BEDR00M, FULL BASEMENf, aluminum siding. No down pay. men! on your lot. Fast possession. Full price $10,700 up. Can build on our lots with small down payment. HACKETT realty; 7750 COOLEY LAKE RD., EM 54703. . no children, no drlnk-I ulllitles. Located down-lO to right couple. 54 Pine 3 ROOMS ANO BATk(, . 320 weekly. Adams Realty. 3 ROOMS AND bATH ON SILVEr Lake. 24' knotty pine living room with fireplace and bar. Adults. Utilities paid. OR 51372.____ ROOmS, BATH, GARAGE. INTB-qreted. FE 54180. 5ROOM-AND-BATH, * i' Tralnlnf NEIORICK BUILDING SERVICE -Homa, paraga. Cabmats, Additions. FHA TERMS. FE 4-6202. » TALBOTT LUMBER Glass installad In doors and win- Melnttnonce Strvice COMPLETE JANITORIAL SERVICE Rasidanllal - Commarclal Michigan Bldg. MalnlanahM____ 54H00 Evas. PE S433I A‘TI'‘«3««TtMARCI ' Rasidantlal - Commarclal" Complela Janitorial Sarvica „„ . ui«iie. carpats PE s-aasi ' COAST WIDE VAN UN|S IMIIH MOVINCI ^ PE 4714 A1 PAINTING AND PAPER hanging THOMPSON / AXA“MTKffTNr^AN6^R jind, 26 VM", •* tlmatai. Ph. UL 2-1121. ^ m L-wA'ifiiHa ' MTheirm palri. Raasonabla pricas. PI 5-l4(^alter 5. ____ ... Plwe ____ AAA PIANO TUNING . l^ijefiiiii lervici plastering, PREi ■•TIMAm, S'.JW*':*... PLO^R**itWoiM HARDWARE POIISHERI 'EAMERt - SAWS Ft 44l« Television, Redio and Hi-Fi Service 3480 Elljabath Laka FB 4-4245 Tree Trimming Service General Tree Service /al-trlmming, 335-7S50 NEED PRUNING? It traas or flowering shrubs. uwrwerHiAW"iTioCK(tio. KSing! f'b iKeoa Trucks to Rent Dunw Trucks - $aml-Trallari Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. 12 S. WOODWARD re 44441 PB 4-1442 Opt! • M^etitering TKn$fwALTm1lKVDF~~ FE 5-8868 Pi 5 2t2l Free Bstlmetes FE Pias4 ------“Witt BIUOMFIRLO WALL CLIANBHS. Wells and windows. Raas. lallstac- “That Eddie Tibbetts is a drip. I used the 3ame brand of shampoo as Sophia Loren, and he didn’t PERFECT FGR small FAMILY Neat and claan, newly decorated. cabin type home. and warm, plastered i Garage, extra lot, b 2 taka privileges. . .. and.electric stove Included. Would prefer cash, but will taka land contract It credit warrants —$1,500 ' wInTER BAROAINl LAKEWOOD VILLAGE ly large lot. BaautHul bull New 3 Bedroom Full Basement Nothing Down-$62 Mo. Gas heat — hardwood floors Model: 40 E. Brooklyn 3 biks. N. of Walton off Baldwin Model Open 12-7 FE 44683 SpotIHe Bhtrs. LAKE FRONT HOME, 5-room, 2-bedroom, walk-out basement, oil heat, has 2 fireplaces, aluminum siding. For year 'round enjoymenf, this one can't be beat. $11400, terms. COMFORTABLE 4 ROOMS* suburban homa, claan and neat. Wall to wall carpeting, 2-car garage, large 2W-acre lot. Ideal location on 1-75. $10,500, terms. NIC E COMFORTABLE 5-ROOM HOME, good sitod bedrooms, neat and clean. Gas heat, 2-car garage, extra large lot, close to school and shopping. $2,500, tarms. CRAWFORD AGENCY 258 W. Walton FB 8-2306 602 B. FLINT_______ N6 Money-Down MODEL - now avaflabla. THE BIG HOUSE - Large 3-badroom, walk-in closets, oak floors, FULLY INSULATED, family size kltiban. $62.76 par month. TRI-LEVEL MODEL — Oft Joslyn featuring large sliding glass doors, spacious closets, birch cupboards, FULLY INSULATED. A big T on your lot or ours. YOUNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER BUILT RUSSELL YOUNG, S3Vi W. HURON __________FE 4 3830 OPEN DAILY ... 2 to 6 SHAWNEE LANE - NEW COLONIAL. Live Ih luxury In a nice 2700 square foot Colonial with 4 bedrooms, 2W baths, formal dln-llng room, large living room, finished basement, built-in oven and lanoscepeg lui nonr mv — Drive out to Jayno Haights- 2215 Shawnee Lane. wa'II be happy lo talk trade. Your host, Mr. Tony Slsala. PB 4-1706. RAY O'NEIL, Realtor $00 DOWN large 3-BEOROOM HOME WIDOWS, DIVORCEES, EVEN PEOPLE WITH A CREDIT PROBLEM ARB O.K. wall-to-Wall CARFBTINO FEATURING. OAS HEAT PERMANENT HOT WATER FURNITURE FINIIHBD CABINETS ALUMINUM WINDOWS SEPARATE DINING ROOM call anyllma. Dally, Sat. and Sun. RBAL value 6267575 “ MixlO Wo«b ■ 3 hMirooms — ftlnlng exirai — Only S300 down la qualify buyer. $40 par month. 4 rooms and bath - Close to Plsh- ■ WRIGHT •2 dak land Av« re 22141 EvfS. after 6:30___PB M64. MODERN" HOMES Moved lo your lol, trom IJ.OOi NOR-WEST BLDG. MOVERS 22846 STEFHeN$ HWY. HAZBL PARK, MICH. 547-9546 OR 334-2240 NEWHOMES Full Basements $00 . DOWN $68 OPEN 10-8 DAILY NO MONEY DOWN rl-levol cr ranch starter ho I your lot. Modal opaiUO-6. G. FLATTLEYV BLDR. JOHNSON BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP SCHOOL DISTRICT, seeing is Del- this outstanding 6-room LAKE PRIVILEGES, another ou standing homa In beautiful Sylve Lake City. 6-room brick, .madai to the jBlnuta. 2-car garage. Wl soon be vacant ana r—' • A. JOHNSON & SONS FE 4-3533 ~ Mixed Neighborhood 3-Bedroom Full basement Many locations Nothing Down-$62 Mo. TAYLOR CLARKSTON AREA - S2J0 moves you In. 3 bedroom rancher. Handy to Khools. Large hit, Payments less than rant. Only 62,700. WATERFORD AREA-S250 I you In. Ideal (or children, room rancher with brick and . construction. IW baths. Extra Iga. lot. Dead and pavtd street. Pav-manti lass than rent. Only $10,- In all areas ; with recreation ro______ (amlly style kitchen, 10x17'. . . biths, 24ar garage an<3 paved drive. Extras include carpeting, drapes, dishmaster, water v>ttaner and hooded vent ton. $14,200. DQLL HOUSE, Ideal home or starter tor yo Aluminum sided 2-bedr low, carpeted living roc onioned master bedroe ^aj^endpave BEVERLY STREET DIAMOND, neat and clean and In top condition Inside and out. 3-bedroom bungalow with new carpeting over oak floors. Sparkling kitchen with built-in electric range and largo eating space. Gas heat and aluminum storms. 110,250, FHA. Realtor ] 7732 2536 C "SMITH” Lake Oakland Heights Lovely 4-bedroom brick ranch o a large nicely landscaped tot. LIv Ing room 12 x 14. 1W tile bathi black top drivt with large' 2-ca garage. t17,200. By appolnimant. Clorkston Villoga Older family home with naturi slope fireplace. Sunroom, full dli Ihg room. 3 bedrooms and bath u( Basement, gas heat. $2,300. , Rolfe H. Stnith, Reolfor 244 S. Talagraph :E 3-7S4I_ _ FE 3-73C CmElL MODEL OPEN 10 to 6 EDGELAKE COURT PLEASANT LAKE WOODS: Over 1700 sq. ft. of living area plus the many laaluras that Beauty Rr to Ofikr. No storm wlndoi flvlng room with_______ dow. The newly' ftaslf has formica cupboai d dishwi baautltul • _____ family room with fireplace and paneling. Basamant Iliad and painted. Gas'heat arid community water. All this on a large wooded lol end a thorl distance lo the community beach. Drive out Ellr belh Lake Reed lo Baycreil, rl( on Bdgeleke Drive. TRADING IS TERRIFIC REAL NICE POLKSI This Is he . you will dascribt your neighbors whan you move Into this 3-bad-room brick rancher, localed lusi outside the Village of Clerkston. seltlngs that offers almost privacy. Situated In Elizabeth Lake Eetetas. 3-bedroom, lull bese-ment, separele dining room. 2 car garage. Lol ISO tl. frontage. IIS, 500. E.Z. Tarms. crowd t« your party. 10 or 20 p plA can be aniarlalnad with l Elasi at ease, lllualad on I ,?r'io.*M.Sifc^:..!;UT. If you have enough children a bleniy of Income, Do Nol M teeing Thii Momei . ___________ - . - .. (/replace, lakeside grade entrance lo base meni shower end dressing rooms. Outdoor grill, beeulltui low market Enlhus/asls, MORE 7 it netgjibarhood. Be RAY O'NEIL, Realtor IRWIN BLOOMFIELD ORCHARDS - 3- alumlnum siding. ___________ ily room, beautiful large kitchen with butlMn range, oven and hood. 2 baths. Attached 2-car garage and i. Automatic oil heal and large DOCTOR'S CLINIC - Large doctor's clinic with living quarters overhead. Or could be used as more office space. Has Ideal setup fnr a laroe nneratlon and caii be DORRIS FAMILY HOME. DRAYTON PLAINS -^1s Is a hot one. 3 larger veraga bedrooms and possl-of tourf- •————* OFF BALDWIN, uniquely decorared *'— -----'-ungalow with flnlshe-* nd new gas furnaci t lanced and haata workshop. St,200. DORRIS S SON, REA! Complala I fCAMPSEN YOUR NEIGHBOR WHY DON'T FOUR BEDROOMS Brick homa, built In '51. Located In Waterford on a 123x300' lot, 20' living room, natural tlraplaca, basamant, oil heat, 2 porches, 1 Vicar garage, recreation room, water softener, carpets and drapas, near schMi. Asking $17,250 — Terms or ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES Is 10 per cent down plus closing LORRAINE MANOR n brIckr’Hie I kitchen, utility ro I 1 ,-cer garage, 50x150 e privileges. Asking SiO.sir ' $500 DOWN * ■ r 2 years old, four-room, 2-bfd-n bungalow with utility room, forced a1r heat, storms and ens, located op a pavtd street It city oft Baldwin Ave. V. Huron SI. FE 4-0221 I call_____________AAA 5-1S82 EAST SIDE ovely • Ion. I7» Living L dining bath on (Irsl lioor, . ---. basement, gas heat, lW-car | faga. Low price at $14,500. JAMES K BLVD. A baauilful view of Sylve Irom the picture window _ spacious living room at this brick size'l^roomij dining room with built In china cabinet Wall-appelnl-ed kitchro with Formica work sur face, full basamant with 44' racra atlan room, many other quallll John K. Irwin & SONS REALTORS W, Hwan — Sbwe less Phona; PB 5-2444 Open Irpm 2 a m ip 2 p m. Val-U-Way $250 DOWN IN.TE0RATED AREA n hmn%, Mil Hoorn. w#Mi. good locoHM prlc« .Iirffit A BARGAIN It Is diriy but how aita cat _ gal a 2-btdroom homa tor only ls.4007 And mova In tor only 12507 And have peymenle of only 188 par month Including Texas and In-suranteT M's In Hortharn High jjrea loo. 8^r call new. It's '"Rn.loick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 345 Oakland Ava. Opi 'BUD" Beauty in Brick _____ ______ „....i attached 2^ar garage, close-in suburban loca-“ 1, carpeting and drapas, 2 fire-..........”-‘s dining room, IW places, baths. --------------------- —. big lot with fanetd rear yard. Offered el $23,200:110. $750 Down eltan, neat 5-room brick terrace, handy east side location; with full basement, gas heat and hot wa ter, separate dining room, 2 bed rooms, full bath, dishmaster enclosed front porch. Quick Pos “Bud" Nicholie, Realtor 42 AM: Clemens St. FE 5-1201 After 6 P.M, F7 2-3370 BATEMAN Gets Results LAKE PRIVILEGES ON LOON LAKB; With boating ac-—- to (Iva other lakes it you In this nice 4-room ranch-type home In good ctoiarln north —i, .:kar.fe ARRO We build - WE TRADE LOVELY 3-BEOROOM RANCH IN BLOOMFIELD SCHOOL DISTRICT —Roman brick tlraplaca, *-wall carpeting and drap< . t?y * tonetd *vai iborhood, paved t------ ' ■" taka land contract ge, pertly ;e nelghboi •eel. Wout 3 bedroom, iva end ratrigarator, I ...--------- carpeting, cedar dosats, 2-car attached gai large lot. Nothing down It are a qutllfltd Gl. BEAUTIFUL 3-BEDROOM BRICK ranch In axcallant locaf “ " * place In large living heat, aluminum storms a*___________ 2-car allachtd garage, spacious lot, nicety landscanMl. Loads at traas and shrubs. Floor" NEED SPACE,7 Over S I this neat 3-bedroom hem Ing, drapas, oak floert, . walls, lull basement, oil lurnace, storms and screens, 4-car garage, (enetd yard, Will contidar taking land contract at (town paymei Total price 121,508. PHONE 682-2211 5243 Catt-BHtabelh Read MULTIPLE LISTINQ SERVICE NICHOLIE WILLIAMS LAKB RO. Thrae-badroom bungalow, and dining area. Klldian ai room. Carport, Gqs HA h WEST SUBURBAN Thraa-badroom bungalow. Living and dining area. Kitchen and utl"*" room. Carport. Oil HA heat. Vaci newly decorated. About tap moves you in. IMMEDIATE | alow. Living a niant* oTi ’hA heat. Vacant. Nav dacoratad. About S250.00 moves y bungalow. Living dining area. Kitchen and ullllly n. Atlachad garaga. Vacant. About $250.00 moves you In. LISTINGS NEEDED BUYERS WAITING Iva. call MR. ALTON FB 4-5236 NICHOLIB HARCBR CO. 3W Huron St. FE MI83 Elizabeth.. n bungalow with five largii Sparknng condition through-istarad wallh toll baaemanl, LW- Cl' . LAKB PRIVILBOIS 'r vary bast lak»“ "* I handle. West Side ... FOUR BIDROOMS, 1 _ _ „ down; 2 up. Bloek tram Pontiac .... In the City. New carpeting Ing room and dining room. OA* PURNACB. Prlrola 8BMINOLB HILLS to IW-car garage. This home excellent f-—— ........... " LET US iirepiace. In living room, 2 big bedrooms. 1 $12,250. Now Is the 11 first with your offer. "ATTENTION Of,'' any of fh AUBURN heights LAKE ORION AREA — Brick 3-bad-room ranch homa. Tiled bafh. Full basement wtfh ree. room. Patio and garage. |l2,500. NORTH SIDE INCOME — 3 apts. S200. 3 stoves and :ludad. Clean and - “ ‘mant with Large lof. Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor 2200 Dixie Hwy. af Telegraph FE 27123i>r Fg 2-I204 .trot hd aT garaga. All aluminum _ _ _______>• wim tonetd In yard and barbecue. Only IIJOO down plus costs and full vice just $12,250. Whan you sea It you will dutch COLONIAL; prox. twelve mlloa norm or Hoc. Homa In axcallant cond I'-y baths, tlraplaca, bateiywnl 2-car garaga. Ideal place In country for fha children. Bv small building that can bt as a Bony bOrn. The price Is $15,000, with low down payi IMMEDIATE POSSESSION. 'ijMMLK TO WORK l-BEOROOM; soma carpatlng, gas beat and eonvanlant to Pontiac Motors. Ponced yard with shade trees and outdoor fireplace. Close to Narthara High and Madison Jr. S2,4S0 with only S300 plus closing costs on new PHA mortgage. CALL TODAY. WILLIAMS LAKE AREA WITH ffXTRA Nice Ukt prlvIlMM- ^----e_ ........ Convtnlpnt t 5!ISY In 1257. LAKE PRIVILEGES AT PRIVATE PARK; on Creacenl -■'t makas this neat and claan 2-■oom extra daslrabla. BIO 20 kllchen with all new ctblnals YOU CAN TRADE THE BATEMAN WAY COAST TO COAST TRADES ' S. Talagraph Realtor FB $-7161 Open 27 M.L.S. Sunday I-* . OR TRADE - LARGE ---- m-car . I. Plaitarad walls. Easy- FHA nants. Only SI0,7S0. COUNTRY LIVING — Hart 1s ( you can afford. Large 7-rgem bi galow with basamanl. Oil lli TEN ACRES OF Lnnu. rteer new 1-75 Nor"" ' Clarkslon. 20 minute drive to Mac. WE TRADE. tUST BE SOLO QUICK-Bloomtleld Hills , arte. Large Colonial "— ohiy about 10 years old. Ida* hoyst, Ovtr rorlng 000. AI f*1and°wlll Priro only $3l! LIST WITH US - Wa accept ind In this wey iftony lelei _ hel would nol otherwise. Open 1:30 a.m. to 2 p.m, Mulllpl* Listing Service. 1. H. BROWN, Realtor 102 EllMbalh Laka Road Ph, FB 73504 or PB 1-4010 MILLER Templ^iDn WALTERS LAKE - _ . 2-bedroom wHh nice den._ Faces lake. OH hot water heel, ......, Zcor affaenaw ga- >nly $11,250. Terms A-I BUYS RBody to SubdividB .. jcras tlighfty rolling, |(— of Airport Road, with as Otter Hills Large lot on BoW Lane, lake privileges on Otter Lake, only $3,500, terms. Many beautiful' homes in area. . _ " ' - ■ Golfvtew Estotes Lake An^us*^Mvtow"*5Mfii! lever lot-with many trapa, priced WATERFORD REALTY HI WaltJulldtng. 4.540 Dlxla Hwy \ Tryson Realtor. Call 673-1273. monmiy income azoo. 3 ralrigarators Included. In good condition. Bait oil heat. Good toeatton. SCHRAM Big T - pedraom TrT. Tavel with b r | - front, racraalion area, alMIng patio door-wall, gat heat PZleSd at $12,230. Completod and ready to Near Pontiac Motors dining room, nov.., ., k lichen: and _bath.jNalklp-.____ pating, toll basement wim gat heat -also garm. Priced at $12,000, SlOO down. Plut ctotino cotta. Will Tro(Je UCTa* STjodroom house w IVAN W. SCHRAM Realtor FE 57471 JOSLYN COR. MANSFIELO STOUTS Best Buys Today Woterfront Delightful 3-badroom aluminum ranch home, carpeted living room with firaplaca, klMh«n, din- Peoce and Quiet size bedrooms, tpackiui kitchen and dining area, SW-caf garaga, lOOxJM^pareal. Priced at SI1,»0 Family Home Roomy 3-badroom iVi-ttory home in Draytpn. Near edioolt _ and •Family mlnulat^ to downtown. Tarma Warren Stout, Rjeoltor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. PE S-II4S Open Evas'til I p.m. Mulljpla Listing RaaWor IncemE Prefierty SO 3 APARTMENTS AND STORE. edroomi « ospiral ams brick In Its dining 'room, h braaktasl nook. I, tlaam heal. 1 1 up. Ideal tor $13,26. _ /rXrz r kllchen Alum, storms and MU basamanl rac room, gat , A Ion notch home In a good . 11,500 down plut dosing , RARE VALUE city north skM. S >ms and bath, 3 nice badroomi. I betemeni, 'pat heal. 17,250 FE 2-9236 wm cohsidar eaoJ down "mrAXir L i. MULTIPLE ^ING SeRVICB Reg^ Fi 2-0263 drivt to IW-car garage. Is In sharp SHOW YOU! City . . , ........ _ ..Kmm’’pavmiinls,'*in- ilUdIng laxat and Insurance. House n A-l eondlllOn. Nylon --------- ng In living erMI dining )ek floors. Beiemenl hot t ecreellon room. Anchor iown, xmi\ Humohrigsi’ elweyt occupied. Rochester 114,000 lotei price. 1^400 income. Could be Improved. Requires $4,-000 down or mey teke centrect or late rzMMtet car on trade. Bv owner. 651-1427 after 6 p.m. No cells on Friday.__________ LAR(JE h6mB. north WDE, Walt kept. Raaeonabto. Fi 5-0377. lifai Prt|W»ty SI LAKe-LIVINO. EXCELLENT LOTS, Prlvala sand beach. Swim, beat-docks, fish. IS minulae to Hat, S7*e. SO aowiv so mo. or 3-IWS. BLOCH BROS., PI 74502. On Cedar homes. Nlte irwx. mne, veevn, , bwiroemt. 21' newly carpatod Hv-jne room with fireplact, family basamant, new oil lumact and 36' ------ten room. Ideal tor growing Owners Mavlng sttfa. Only nlly. Own# I.SOO, 12.10 . 0125 n HAROLD R FRANKS, REALTY 2503 Union Laka Road EM 3 3IOa EM 3-7101 lOI On' uHiON“if6TfH"LAKE, II.MO. terms. SI.IM ernh. 474 M24 CANAL F «8«Y 'iJjMMll CO!- taga. near 1-7$. 3372114.__ Nerriitrn Property KALKASKA 7ACRI CAMP SITI, ■ ■ vllh S25 down and Adams Really, FI TRADE Northern High Area Trade In your homa or equity i this 5-zeam bungalow with eSrps ad living room, toll basement or S-car gerege. Salting tor $10,200. 6 Room brtcil tern tkwrs. all Frushour ' Struble CLOSE TO SCHOOLS SHOPPING and CHURCHES Is this Praam bungalow with lull basement, new furnece. l-cer ge-reoe. Nice tot, ONLY M,J0R I4N D()WN, or II you prefer, hauH end 2 tots, ONLY V.Jtf, $$6 DOWN, call USI 3 BEDROOM BRICK RANCH ITYll with beeuIHuliy terpelqd living; roam and hell ceremie tile be* en first floor, plus extra levetory * basement hesL“^Si*TO SCHtmT*AND 5MOFFINO. Smith & Wideman 2 SIX LOT PARCiLS, 1 ------- 1 Is 150x300', I mito Her* of clly timitl oft BlMwln. FB 78622 $200 bOWEf* Irees* *tg o' tanwimllv o't Qr LADD'S, INC mi Lapeer Rd. (Perr'y M24I FE 72121 or OR S-I2JI after 7:3l Opizn Sunday 12 to 7 ' •i(i'''LAiri' AoAB -T*4.tr*i;iii lust off *0 Dixie near 1-71 Beeutitui bulWtna spot Frkad lor, quick sale. Cell Orv FrokKh. FI 77103. OL l OO/t, RAY O'NEIL, Reoltor FE* ml's8T*'l-8l»l D—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, j;964 __________) NICE BUILDING LOT with well and taptlc,. $2150 —" MA S-2152 ‘ BLOOMFIELD Woodward-Square Lake i Over loo large rolling, woo to chooee from. Most have provemente, i RORABA^QH af Square Lake. Road 40 SCENIC ROLLING ACRES, some woods. $300 per acre. ‘■— Orfonville. beaofjSf buMlrqi 10 NICE ACRES, ( o Clarks- C. PANGUS, Realtor Mill St. . ' NA 7-2815 TWO ONE-HALF ACRE LOTS, 11 OX :E SCENIC FARM ............. lake frontage — Near Holly — Large home-— 2 bams — Suitable for recreational purpose Substantial down. LARGE OPERATING DAIRY FARM — Attractive country home — Barns In top repair -- RIvf------- width of property — $65,000. 63 ACRES WITH FARM BUtLO- UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE 0665 Dixie, Clerkston DAIRY QUEEN Perfect location and parking. Large volume. Easy terms. Hurryl MICHIGAN Business Sales, Inc. JOHN LANDMESSER, BROKER 1573 Telegraph , .- FE 4-1502 MODERN COUNTRY HOME reatlon room and fully carpeted. Outside ■- 6 large maple *•“■ 0 apple trees. This will be at first ilOht. The price Is $17,500 GAYLORD FARMS-FARMS-FARMS g sites on 1-10 at . ^------- res with 10-bedroom home, I J, 7$ acres with private I We also hove W4€¥» ___ ______ lots. For your farm needs . .. Call Gaylords. FE 0-»6$$ or MY 2-2121. LAWREN« W.^GAYLORD FE 0W3 or MY 2-*8!|1 Silt Pri)wrly 57 IN EXCELLENT LOCATION WITH APARTMENTS. ONLY $4,000 DOWN PAYMENT ,r-INTERBSTEO PARTIES - CALL FE ^51la FROM 12 •!''’pric^*l 1»3 FOOT FRONTAGE -...........- HIGHWAY near Old Mill Tavern. Excellent locellon....... mants, Restauranl. _ quick talc. Mr. Proksch. OL RAY O'NEIL, Realtor 2520 PONTIAC LK. RD. OPEN »-» —................. *■'. 1 0575 Commercial Building Beneraf s . _ commercial purposes, of Pontiac near Perlmete ............condition.______ V6 ft. frontage $31,500, $10,000 dn. Annett Inc. Realtors FE l-04( Sunday 1-4 21 E. Op- ------ S«le «r ixchEnge FOR SALE OR BID. SINGLE GA-ra^. Ii^ulra 654 -------- _____________________________59 . BEAUTY SALON, COMPLETE, ' reasonabla, 6SM630. Bvet, FE 2- Of63,__________________ ■ BATfMAN CHURCH OR LODGE HALL Outgrown your churcht tiS?*l INTERNATIONAL TRADERS CLUB COAST-TO-COAST TRADES 367 S. Telegraph loca- Pont. FE 0-H4I BREWER REAL ESTATE FE 4-5181 CLASSTonH SDM No. 2067-A. With 6-Unlt Motel. 3 ft. on Torch Lake. Buildings ai equipment In pood condition. Lei.. frontage alone worth $15,000. Seats 150, large perking lot. Reel Estate and all gees for $5S,000 and or $10,000 down. State Wide-Lake Orion 117$ LAPEER RD. DA O N OL 1-3603_AFTER 5 OR 3 7000 GtrSET ' location, r t more buUdlngs. 300' frontage, deep. Plenty perking area. $$( $10,000 down, balance easy. HAGSTRCM REALTOR aeoo W. Huron 663 ____Evenings call OR 3 6226 FOOD AUTOMAT ' 10 plus per year. •tantlal security deposit required. SENO FOR FREE NEW MICHIGAN aUSINEU OUlOE REALTOR PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" 1050 W. Huron FE 4-3l$l 6wNfrRlTiRiN(Si" Well established general store -SOM - Located on popular Oakland County lake. Pavad parking, rental college and 136' of lake tronlage. Terms with $10,000 down. NATIONAL Business Brokers GARTH MBlIiCK broker 1043 Orchard Lake FE 0 7S4I ISkrMdbiMtf lUileiHd IN THE new Fontalnebleeu Plata. RAY O'NEIL, Realtor 2120 PONTIAC LK. RD. OPEN 6 to 6 PE 2-7I0J M.L.S. OR 4-0427 MAJOR OTTTIiSMPANy"ha$ '$EV-eral excellent industrial locetlons available. Good leases and Im-provemeni arrangement, Addlllonel JTIKSrigagi tDiii^ — ---------- Plenty of parking. For details call. BREWER REAL ESTATE FE 4-5181 PARTY STORE Main Street location. Very business: $4,000 plus stock Exceptional opportunity. WARDEN REALTY 333-7157 QUARTEitS -wner. $1,000 6044435. RESTAURANT , DOJtUT " TO BUY-SELL-TRADE A bar, bowling alley, restapran grocery, party stor»;“taondryrnar( ware, sporting goods, motel, ap bldg., and many other going bus ness or commercial. (WE HAVl PROSPECTS TO BUY AND P"''' ERTIES TO SELL) give US I for details. Salt Land Contraeta 1 TO 50 _LANO-C0NIRACTS t wanted. See i rou deal. ^ Warren Stout, Realtor so N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-S165 Eves, 'til - $1381 Discount Balance of $5,723 at $65,00 per month, sold In 1662, secured by 6-room city homo. Can be han died for only $4,342. Warren Slouf Realtor, 1450 N. Opd '-- Rd. FE 5-0165. ___________ CONTRACT DISCOUNT r cent. Inquire $15 Brown R ACTION 1 your land contract, I nail. Call...... _________ large < ......... Hllter, FE MI7 Braker. 3060 Elliabeth t -- UNION LAKE.^ A! 4-2555 Wanted Codtracte-Mta. 60-A 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently wanted. See us belore you deal. Warren Stout,lledTt6r 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE S-S165 Open Eves, 'til 8 p.m. Cash for land contracts -H. J, Van welt, 4540 JJlxIa Kwy., NeLPI we NBEb USED HbMBi— IN 2-2252 ■; CASH For Land Contract, egulilei «»■ mortgages. Don't lose that home. Small mortgages available. Call Ted McCullough Sr., 602-1820. ARRO REALTY 5143 Cass-Ellzabeth Road NOW SECURED BY EQUITY Trailer Park. Good payment Old. Present balance $2,576 at $70 month. Pay off lest than 3' j — Good discount. Call Mr. Wardei 333-7157, . , , ..... ""QUICK CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS Clark Real Estate, FE 3-7888. B.r ce AAr riM-k. 'Ret. FE 4-4813, Mr. Clark. Money to Lean BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY WHERE YOU CAN _ BORROW UP TO $1,000 OFFICES IN Pontlac-Dravton Plalnt--Ullca Walled Lake-BIrmlngham_ LOANS to FE 2-9026 I the number to call. OAKLAND LOAN CO. LOANS $25 TO 81,000 COMMUNITY loan CO. 30 B. LAWRENCE FE $ 042 MONEY T" WHEN YOU NEED $25 to $1,000 We will be glad to help you STATE FINANCE CO. 50$ Pontiac Stale Bank Bldg. FE 4-1574 LOANS TO $1,000 consolidate -tlhly payment 1 courteous e tenors. Credit life insureiu.v •von-able. Slop in or phone FE 5 8121. HOME & AUTO LOAN CO. N. Parry SI. FE 54121 6 to 5 Dally. Sat. 6 to 1 "TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 202 N. MAIN ROCHESTER ROMEO 214 E. ST. CLAIR loan, ^$» JO ,1.000 _ LIVESTOCK HOUSEHOLD GOODS •7011 OL 1-6761 -3518 PL 2-3510 BAXTER B LIVINGSTONE Finance Co. 401 Pontiac State Bank Building FE 4-1538 9 Mortgage Leans 62 cash”” Loans to $3,000 Consolidate your bills with only one payment. No closing costs and Ilia Insurance Included on unpaid balance af NO EXTRA cost. *?hane*''or App!y"*ln'Parson Family Acceptance Corp. 317 National Bldg. 10 W. Huron Telaphona FE 8-4022 QUICK CASH LOANS UP TO $3,000 You can gel a monthly payment caA loan of $3,000 or lets ort your home even though not fully modern HSTTdie HewiehoM 6«Mli 65 mortgage on one ACRE UP. 5. Telegraph. FE 4- HOME OWNERS CASH UNLIMITED Exclusive plan. Remodel your ■■—t. Pay past or current bills, olldale Info one low. monthly nent. And extra caUt If you tome. Call anytime. Big Bear ---------- pg ? Construction Co. Swaps 3-7833. 63 GUARANTEED USED SWEEPERS, We“b'uY^^SELL^^ TRADE CLARENCE RIDGEWAY REALTOR W, Walton FE 5-7051 T^pE 2 CHOICil ACRES At LU: L-:r:^_LA^J| SECLUDED _________________ -iTlBlnlle radtOlTifHHtn- -MAHGGANYL_CRQP-LEAF DINING " ...... ■ ■ . tdcfefary-destfT WILL trade-vacant Jlice large lot in cloon'quiet neighborhood On the north side has "" WANTI-VACANT • Property out of city limits from Vs acre to 5 acres. Prefer north of Pontiac or toward Rochester or Adams Raait area. Pl>a«« rail FE^54615. SolEXlotliing BUYER'S PERSONAL WARDROBE 9-10. 626-5006. ___ iCOAL GRAY LIGHTWEIGHT . COMING SPRING and EASTER OR JUST AROUND THE CC.. NER. SO THIS IS THE TIME TO START BRINGING IN YOUR SUITABLE SPRING CONSIGNMENTS -FOR THE BRIGHTER DAYS AHEAD. MINK DYED MUSKRAf"^APl Stole, S50. 674-1812. opPSStunitV shop, stT jamFs Sale Houtehold Gooils 65 form rockers a af half price. Bu,,______ .. ______ Easy Terms. JBL Mart, 4186 Dixie Hwy., open fill o. 673-1421. "BLiCtSiC' MAN^LTS WifH Jtend, $25. t TV set, 515. FE 0-8604. ArtRfMFflt GAS SANOE, $15, ' ■ ■ "1, TV stand - ----$5, springs aa, weinar $29, bedrooms Or living rooms $26, clean .guarentead tiovat and refrigerators 516 up. BARGAINS IN FACTORY SECONDS 4-pc. sectional foam cushion nylon cover, $166 4-pc. bedroom suite 567' 3 rooms of furnllur-----' ---- . ______ Sanderson _ Johnton_or Oaklandjojf. Cass_ ROOMS oF BRANb NEW 'FUR- 4-CUBIC _Betl qf- BRkNO ______ . . living room, bedroom a ... - an lor,$265. $3J)0 w Pearson Furniture, 210 I FE 4-7181. REFRIOERATOR. _......... l-Pi'ECl~BEbR66M OUTFIT WiTh Bprlngi and mattrais, sell tlngly or aft; alactric dryar, IIKa naw; llvlnd room chair. EM 3>494«. .Piece CH^ kitcHEN sif' l-pitce dining room sutta. Blond drOAiLar and night ^tand. EM 3-3062. M.65“Fa. VINYL LINOLEUM ........ , PLASTIC WALL TILE .... Ic 0 BSiG TILE OUTLET, 1075 W. Hun 6x12 LINEOlUm RUOS"* " 53J PLASTIC TILE . 2 FOR I TILE, CEMENT. TRIM FOR BATHTUB AREA $6.6 ASPHALT TILE (RANDOM) 4C 6 THE FLOOR SHOP 2255 ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD 2inNCH USED fV. $3irWALT6I4 TV, FE 2-2257. Open 6-6. 515 E. Walton, corner of Joslyn. AB'60t" aNyYHj NO YOU WSllY FOR THE HOME CAN BE FOUND AT L and S SALES. A littia out of the way but a lot lass to pay. Furnliura and anilancas of all kinds NEW AND USED. Visit our fradt dapt. for real bargains. hone 5-6241. to Sat. 66i FrI. .. .NTHS TO PAY E. of Pontiac or I n I UL 2-3300. AUTOMATIC WHIRLPOOL WASH-te, $15. Dresser, 48 Irt. with attached mirror, $10. Metal top kitchen fable, $2. 2 steel drums, $2.50 ea. 3365 Bloomcrest Dr. Oft E. Long'Lake Rd. near Squirrel. HQtPOINT 36 INCH RANGE, I... 5 piece faroaktost set, S20; GE KENMORE AUTOMATIC WASHER $30.00. Maytag wringer —'— $35.00. FE. SrMYl. -KIRB.Y VACUUM, LATE MODEL 556,50 Singer portable ............ *•* '* New portable typewriter ... Necchl console Singer console auto,, ilg-iag .. ^. Constle chord organ ........ S44.50 Curt's Appliance OR 4-1101 KENMORE automatic WASHER, LAWTON SOFA I NORGE CUSTOMATIC REFRIGER- isEW AND USED CARPETING FOR sale. Many assorted^ braids to choose from. Arso severarroTT arias and remnants. Select from our stock. We also specialize in carpet and ‘furniture cleaning. We take trade Ins. Avon Troy (Carpet Sales, 1650 E. Auburn Rd., Rochester, past John R. 052-2444_________ QUICK-FREEZE REFRIGERATOR $65. 3666 Donley, Rochester. REFRKJERATOR, $25., eLECTRIC stove, 135; 21" TV, $25; washer, $25; refrigerator with top freezer, $46; ^as stove, $25. V. Harris, PHILCO REFRIGERAtOk--,^Ot>D PORCH FURNITURE, ( OUR NEW LOCATION BEDROOM OUTFITTING CO. 4470 DIXIE i:WY. DRAYTON PlAINS-673-9441 3 TAKE ADVANT- AND MATTRESSES-LAMPS AND TABLES - HEADBOARDS, BEO-F RAMES AND C R I B A6AT-TRESSES._______________ SCRATCHED FLOOR MODEL slereor-good buy for $86.65 or 81.50 per week. Deluxe electric Tange model (demonstrator 8177. Terms, $2.50 per week. Scratched floor model electric dryer, 2 heats, $127, Tarms, 42,00 per week. GOODYEAR ?T0RE . " " CASS FE 5:6123 SACRTFICE. 56 SQUARE YARDS Royal blue tweed 501 Dupont nylon carpeflhg. Cost $7:65 «r- Vd;, Installed 1 week. Must sell 55.50 _sq. yd. 332-6307. STftbER AUTtiMATlC BG-YaG sewing machine, modern Walnut SPECIAL'' $20 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS furniture - Consts'-2-piece llvr ....* 7-oiace bedroom ti dresser, chest, fu Innerspnng mall springs to match lamps. 5-piece dinette Istsof: no room suite with z step cockteil' table and 2 table double'’ Formica top table, l boo 6xli rug Included. All tor 5 WYMAN FURNITURE CO. 17 E. HURON F 4-4651 2-2150 ■. 626-7220 alter 3 SWEET'S RADIO 8 . _ J-4886_____25^0imun St. U^blOFA, DiNINli ROOM‘SUITE chroma table, odd chairs. Rafrlg- 7®w.,n I Mosaic vanity WESflNOHdlj'SE " WASHER; tabla^ Call altar 5, 682-0703. _ WRiSGlR WASHiR, QCKJD" CON-dlllon, 830. PE 5-6631. Wis'TlNOHOU'iSE f'CiefRie range, excallent condition. OR 3-5505 attar 6 p.m. WYMAN'S USED BARGAIN STORE AT OUR le W. PIKE STORE ONLY Chrome *Olrtelle Table .. 5 6.65 Apt. SIZ6 gat stove .... 516,65 2-plece llv[ng room suite . . range relrigeri . jj, ^j easy”t¥rms" ' FE J^eee WASHER, SPEED QUEEN AUTO-mallc, excellani cond., must sell. 550. FE 0-3441. _ WKCr WE ilRvieS' WHAf w6 sell. 20 W. Alley, FE 5-7114. WROUIJHf' iRONi AND CHROME ■■■ "sn set, barrel back chalFi, bad, mitc. OR 3-6644. TV i Rodioi 66 AMERICAN-MADE STEREO REC-ord and play tape recorder. 5166.65. Walton Talavlilon, 515 E. Walton. FE 2-2157. e. ’p?lce* FLEA MARKET AT DEVON 6 Barn, 1135 W. Long Lake at Telegraph, across (rom Devon Oables. Fine antiques, prlm-lllvas end Bric-A-Brac. Admission Irea. Healed. Fob. 14, IS and 16. WATER SbFfiNER RENItaI,' UN-d gallonaga, 51 par mo. 652 universal 50(1 Water. For Silt MUctllantotts $7 COMBINATION WINTER healer and summer air con-ir. Parloct lor Ihot added 1 WEFK 6NLY W' llaildard u CARNIVAL By Dick Turaer “But, Mom, you SAID to teach Junior something useful ^ I taught him where to hide at bath-timeli’:' — For Sale Miscellaneous 67 For Sale MisceRaneous A Valent I ne Special GItt wrapped sinks, dishwashers and faucets. 334-6326. PONTIAC KITCHEN SP.ECIALTIES "" Ohcbehd Lake Rd. At^^AN STANDARD BOUEH,-150,000 BTU, cast ■— AMERICAN CHROME FOLD I whtelchalrr-llktr new. 602-4708,r AUTOAAAUC ZIG-ZAG SEWING Blond cabinet Take ments of $5.50 Bottle Gas Installation Two 100-pound cylinders and equipment, Sl2; Greet Plains Gas BEEF AND PORK - HALF AND quarters. Opdyke Mkf. FE 5-7941. BATHROOM FIXTURES, OIL AND Brothers -Paint, Super Kemtone end Rustoleum. * HEIGHTS SUPPLY ...... PE 4-54at 4x7 Pre finished -............... ...... 4x7 Pre finished Birch sec .. 53.65 DRAYTON PLYWOOD COMMERCIAL FRENCHTRIEN COMPLETE STOCK OF PIPE AND fittings — plastic, copper and cost Iron tor drains. Plastic, capper and-galv. tor water. Black tor gas. Montcalm Supply, 156 W. Montcalm, FE 5-4712. 15 per roll; step ladders, ,. $2.46 to 10 ft. size, ..........vrwlck Sr/roly Co. 2678 Orchard Lake Rd. Ph. 682-2820. IJiSCbUNTS" NOW ON TYPEWRrf-ers, adding machines, desks, '*■■■'-* flies, mimeographs, - ‘ - ] Pontiac State Bank, ( DO V6u WANT TO DO ZIG ZAO sewing? We have a Singer swing needle sewing machine that makes buttonholes, monograms, appliques, etc. Take over monthly payments price of $65.40. to writing. Mlchl- $5.25 or fi »ar guerer.— ... n Necchl-Elna. I EXTRA HEAT.FOR THAT COLD room — gas tired baseboard tits y^er^i^ndows, $120. Thompsons, FIREPLACf^FUfL FIREQUETS, 15 LB. BAG - 45^ package COAL, 6 PKC. - $1.10 PINE COMBINATION DOORS COMPLETE WITH SCREEN AND STORM . 30"x80" OR 36"x80" - 113.65 WOOD STORM SASH NEW, 13.65 BLAYLOCK COAL 8. SUPPLY CO. " Orchard Lake Ave, FE 3-7101 FREEZER UPRIGHT, LAST YEARS 1662 models. Guaranteed tor 5 years. 8226 value, 8156 scratched. rooms $12.65 value 86.65. Call factory showroom. Michigan Fluorescent, J63 Orchard Lake—35. ' FORMiCA counter lOPS' sExperl Inilellatlon Free estimates — Fast Service Sheet Formica, metals. 3127 W. "HURON...... FE 8-8iil3 for" OUiSfY CONCRETE "FLOORS Use Liquid Floor Hardener Simple Inexpensive Application Boice Builders Supply FE 5-8186 GAS FURNACE, USED, LIKE NEW. Call FE 2-7164. GAS SPACI hEATERCall" SiZES at bargains. Thompson's, 7705 M-56 (iOLF CLUBS, WiUsoN "staff woods (t-3-4 ) 550, OR 3-1361, HEY\V(J6d "WAKfFiELB" "BMnQ drop loaf labia, )wo extension, twin bed spreads and mlicallaneous. PE 8 0037. _ h6t WATER 'HfAtER", M GALLON i't's" terrifTITThe "way wb'RE; selling. Blue Lustre lor clean rugs and upholstery. Rent aleciric sham-l^r. It. McCanditis Carpets. ladies 6(3LF"‘CLUBS,""CL6Till¥0, BlK.^appMancti^.^mlsc. 71 Bloom- MiATS "■ano"'OR6c1r|IS" ............... up lo 40«i,. Soap, sugar, cotiea. Hour, butter, cake mix, cereal, soup, vegetahlei. trull lulces. Baby Food, 34 lor 66c Cut-Up Friers, 16c a Lb. Dog Food. 13 lor iH Free Home Delivery Call (or (ree catalog 5..Wa reserve the rights to (imll Muanllly. Cell 647-1577, MOVING SALE sink rims 53.50, Della Faucet 5-nota $15.46, Amartcan mado kitchen 401 Baldwin FE 2 2543 and SXrWAiClRlI 3 INCH ' rente Ml drainage pump; 5135.1 I00,db(i*6itli BBtiND 8X«: i40Ri ' on turnace - Bxc cottdillon 1501. A $1 H tales. POwiRriiTe jind^ table **^i*cWi ' t, Mi, I l.1\ lot 2*122 vanity complole 162.40. Slalnteii stea hoods 552.00. IW" x IS" magle chopping block 55.50 a running tool. D & J CABINET SHOP 1055, W, HURON 354 0616 after 6 P.M. 361-3343 OENAMINYAL lEON FOKCH' AND *'*^ '•J?vl* c»Vs*™' 1570 Opdyke FB 4-4300 6irvufiNA?i,"eirTANif:"iiiFE5 and controls, 65,000 BTU, like new. 5150. F.O.B. my baiemMt. 68l-34Ji3. FLYw5QB"bT$fRlBUtdRS J75 N. Cats Avt. Ft 2d)436 AluMEiNii"..lAroATRi ■ lYEtl, standing toilet, $1$6S; SOgollon healer. $46.6$; 3plec6 bath sets, .aundry I; ay. trim, lie 6$, •tails with trim, 512,6$, PIUMBINO CO.. C k' Bt'ICtRA: HQdSI. IrCA c6l6E tv, "EKflllENf. St . Inquire 521 WhlltomorO. RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT, Electric sign, soda fountain Formica-top counter, steam ti fryer, malt mixer, chairs, and dishes. CLARENCE RIDGEWAY REALTOR 68 W. , WALTON FE 5-7051 RUMMAGE SALE Barnes-Hargraves Hdwe. 742 W. Huron value $34.50. Lavatories ..... plete with faucets $14.95, toilets $1.6.95;.Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard Lake-37, Clothing, Furniture, Appliances. TOILETS 524.50 VALUE $17.95 AND $19.95; Lavatories $14.65- complete. Stoll shdwors complete $68 value, $32. Michigan Fludtescent USED 70,000 BTU GAS SPACE heater, 1 year old, excellent ; Jdmon^ 363-4373, morning only. VANITY AND HAND BASIN SET up, complete, $59.95. B toilets $19.95 gas automatic water heaters, $45. Thompson's 7005 M-59 .... ------- 4500 01) Hwy., next to Pontiac Sts Bank, OR 3-9767 or Ml 7-2444. Hqinl TooU-MachliiEry AIR COMPRESSORS New - Used. Rebuilding Service. Lowest prices, any size. EM 3-4123 ________54 WELDER GENERATOR, GE 200 amp. with large reactance coll, $125. 4059 Woodmere St., Drayton Bounce-flash bracket lor flash Metrawatt light meter WInk-llght (with battery) and filter tor converting ASA 3000 to ASA 200 Deluxe all-leelher Polarlod com- Certmented gadget bag sed very seldom — excellent conditloii. All must go-no Items sold separately. 5100.00 tor com-plolo ouHIt. Call 602-2579 between 6:30 p^m -■ ■cAMgsirwiURTirM Muiical Goods 71 B-FLAT CLARINET. ARNOLD'S, $50 FE 4-1360 BABY GRAN6 PiANO, AS IS7$i00 603-2176 BLOND, modern JANSSEN" spinel piano, 5450. Call attar 4:30, 662-1767. __ BRAND " new" "cable' WALNUT Spinet, this months special at 5521, no money down, no peymant till April. See us before you buy. GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. Open ever^ Mon. and FrI. night 15 e. HURON FE 4-0566 ■" CLARiNErAND SAX LdSSON ' B Flat, Alto and Bait Clarinet; Alto, Ttnor and Barl-Sax. Quality Inilrucllon Including basic theory. FI 4-8537 alter 6 p.m. 1 ’ YOU WANT t6 S^orv'd u> piano call Mr. Buyer at OHn* natU, PonMac^MalL^2^(Maa^^^^ guTbr^nsVn SPrNTToMSN' Demonstrator, nsw organ guarantee $930. WIEGAND MUSIC COMPANY, 469 Elizabeth Lake Rood, FE 2-4924, Piano Tuning and organ repair. RENT A NEW ORINNELL PIANO $2.00 PER WEEK Grinnell's PONTIAC MALL W2'04» OOWNTOWN STORE ^, FE $716$ A FEW LEFT FLOOR MODELS AND DEMONSTRATORS Plahot end Organs $50.00 to $300.00 ott MORRIS MUSIC I 34 S. TeieoreOti Rd. ' A( foss (rom Tel Huron FI 2 0567 | ORGAN! tdlWRlDOIjStV- RE “--M I owery Gulbransan, i ri. Come In to see us - I give you a real nice buy PIANO, WALNUT CONSOLE, LIKE new. Take over payments. Coll Mr. Riggs, FE 5$545. .................accordions Loaneri and lessons. FE 554M. IMALL ESTEY REED ORGAN, n^fiargain. Ideal tor occompanF UPRIGHT PIANO GOOD CONDI-tlon $50. 12 Marvina off E. Pike. After 5:00 p.m. T H P M A . easiest to play!; no lessons necessary when you own a THOMAS COLOR-GLOW Organ. May be seen at WIEGAND MUSIC COMPANY, 469 Elizabeth Lake Road, FE 2-4924, Piano Tuning and Orgoin Repair. Leonard Console, reg. $595, $499. Vose Grand, reg. $695, now $599 Grinnell's Pontiac Mali 682-0422 LIKE NEW, LOWREY SPINET OR-gan with separate Leslie Speaker. Large savings for quick sale. . GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. Oipen every Mon. and FrI. night. GRINNELL'S DOWNTOWN ONLY USED GRAND VOSS .......... $54 QRANO STARR ...... . $3! GRAND HARRINTON .... 549 GRAND KIMBALL ...... $ 9 Used upright — Twenty t choose from, $49.00 each. Ott ers in good condition, only $99.0( GrirmeH's"— store 27 S. RENT $5.00 A MONTH Rent tor as long as you wish. All moneys apply If you buy. UNLIMITED RETURN PRIVILEGE^ Grinneirs NEW 55X30-INCH ART METAL" typewriter desk, gray. Regular $250.50, now $199.95. GENERAL PRINTING AND OFFICE SUP- REMINGTON RAND TRANS-COPY ■ ■■■■ stand. Very good con-Mary's College. 682- duplex ditlon. Sfore EqatpuiNit large walk-ik produce coolers, complete with colls, compressors, etc. Can be seen at 63 W. Lawrence. FE 2-838$ from 7 Sorting Goods Aparhe COLLEI APACHE TRAILERS nd usedy all 1964 models )lav In haatarf ahAvurnAfn. LER, La^r,i MTchigan. EoNTIAC LAXE DtiiLC ply, sand, gravel, till 3-i534.____________ Wood-Cool-Coko-Fuel - --- FE 4-0350. SEAS6¥iD"nFrRfPLACi wooB, 330-0291. A. H. Coulter. wAWD-^enruY^iAOMOR PotB-Hmitlgg Pogi 79 3-YEAR-OLD, HOUSE BROKEN, registered AKC Dachshund, good with children, reasonable. 335-9353 1492 attar , ,. AKC REOiStiREO AIRDALE PUP-Em'3 ^l'*'’'*'** **'*'■ AKC""WHitE ^MXLE“~‘p6bbLE, 2 yrs., brown mala and female poodle puppies; 1 brown female miniature, t vr. p* s..14m. AKC"~b -----THu¥"b PUPPilS, at stud. Terms. FE M»W. AKC BrAC'k "¥b5"BLf," T wlf ks old, FE S-6530. AKC bACMSHUNb PUPS'ltO bbwN. JAHBIMS KENNELS FE $-353$. iLACk" pUSEBRlb tbck#¥ ii^A- nlal, $10, ytar-old. IJ1^2-5I90. BLACk'"'MiNlATURfe PbbbLt, male, 4 months. OR 3-3652. boxIAs;..'$30,"'" BiAoLSl'"'iTs, DACKY'S $35, POODLES, $75 AND MOTTS, TOO, NO MONEY DOWN COMALEti P666Lte~'ORbOMINO; Also other breeds. 673-5604. DACHiHUNbS AkrAlblSTlkib. OL } Rr(>iffifiib‘intrei«flUA'"'isut*. pies. Toy Terrier and Chihuahua stud servlet. FE 2-I497. tlHV ■■ CUIHOAHUA. ALSO TOY terrier. NA 7-3931. wHitfi Miei"ANb sUAAiLli. All Pet Shop. 15 Williams, FB 4$433. WHitf " tbY "POOblfS, "A; alio rtud_ servIct.^ FE $4344._ ^ JO auction SALE, 1 MILE NORTH and <4i mile west e( Novi at 44100 II Mile Rd., on Saturday, February 15th It 10:30 a.m. Farm Implamants and antiqua car an- RInai, truck chaiili. large quan-ly of lunk and many other Items. Term* CASH. Ervin T. Al-veri. Proprietor. Pauli Hillman, Auctioneer. 7S21616. A¥efibNfiirjW~rNFoSMiF. tien. B, N. Haekatl, EM 3$701. AUefibNS l*iCBNfSbAVr"7"T¥l. Wlll O Way Country Mart, 113 W. Lon^ Lake Rd. Mi /$4e9. SATjkOAvT....'febr'ua'rV"" iifh. 16 a.m. Rastnan's Service. Garage ST'XsJJlT.Ate* Z bbn, Sun . Elecirle , , . . sent, B\jJl ness cloied everything goes. In> Wiion $:30 am. day ol Sale. Terms Cash and Carry. George ReieyanOwner. Duane Meyer AOclioneer. Phone Howeii Tte. B $; B AUCTION SALES EVERY FRIDAY 7:30 P EVERY SATURDAY a Buy-Sell-Ti'iM?nkatail 7 Days Cansiginmants ....... 89 DIxIa Hwy, ■ OB 3-2717 Flagtr Pi SATURDAY, FEB. IS, BEGINNING at 12:30 p.m. ASsets of Wr'-“ Siieat Metal Co. (warm «ir r Ing) 5604 Dixie K llmass forces sal. __________ — ----- 1top. Power equipment I' fqlding brake, 22 ouage; ttsburg Machine; Niagara Shears, foMars, Tomlee nrm press. Dayton portable air compreSserr Dayton Arc Welder; Burring' and edging machines. Plus much more; Luxaire Heating Furnaces; Large $nventory of heating supplies, Sfore shelving, fixtures. Office. Equipment; John Beil Tractor, New Idea 12-A Spreader, •1962 Cunningham Hay Conditioner, New Idea 7' Power Take Oft Mower, Allis Chalmers Chopper and Allis Chalmers Blower, two "farm tools. Metamora Bank dmr John Kile, prop.; Buc HIcIhtk Auctioneer. OA 8-2159.______■ ‘ .NOTICE OF PUBLIC AUCTION * ■ ■■ F-9-322 Control 63174-A8iB '—------f given that -at lay, February 25, fjfi c c—u— I S. Stephen-ak, Michigan Public Auction will _______________ for the. sale-ot-fixtorea owne regardless of cost. 10 PONTIAC ........ !0 io FT. EXPAND... 85,495 1/ 2 ana 3 oaaropms. •»*** •• $200 down, 7 years on balance. Bob Hutchinson MOBILE home: 1301 Dixie HlQhway OR >1202 Drayton Plaint Jpen 9 to t^^OaJjY- Set. 9-6 fnstanrtiving - Oxford Trailer Sales eii. sisu. wi-SHORTS MOBILETtum^ •{Sood Used Home Type Trailers 10PER CENT DOWN. Car^lred and hitches Installed. Complete line of narts and bottle gas. *^Want'“'^ 4-l-«e* Trailer* » esTimaies. pom* ISTA'S'S rayfan Plalnse OR >1202 e Acceeioriei -------- 1 600x14 WHITEWALL AqtHjrn Heights. ew, $70. UL 2*10435 .. $14.95 . . $18.95 .. $22.95 6.00x16 Thru ll.OOxxT CALL Dick Cur/an --------^... Horn, CRANKSHAFT GRINDING IN THE car. Cylinders rebored. Zuck Machine Shop, 23 Hood. Phone FE tor everyone. Saturday, 1 15' FIBER GLASS BOAT AND 45 horsepower Mercury motor. Call - etlar 5:30. OR I-'"**'' all-ways a better deal BOATS-MOTORS MERCURY-SCOTT MCCULLOUGH Trailers — Marine Accessories CRUISE-OUT BOAT SALE - - .. - FE 0-4402 ^ CLOSE-OUT* Johnson' Motors, Sler Cra alt and Gator Champ trailer OWENS MARINE SUPPLIES 396 Orchard Lake , FE 2-8020 ICE BOAT. SKEETER CLAS57~2-passengor, 2 sails, (Iborglassed, 682-3428 dfter 7 p.m. _______________ Chris Grafts SPORT BOATS I FT. Cavalier Custom ski, 185 h.p. r FT. Chris Craft custom, 185 li.p. > FT. Chris Craft super sport, 210 hr$),--- I FT. Chris Craft super sport, 210 MAZtjREK MARINE SALES !. Blvd. at Saginaw FE 4-9587 Cliff Oreycr's GiJh and Sports Center LONE STAR BOATS Arriving Dally tor your Inspection! I USED OUTBOARDS Many Models and Makas In llp-tog Condition. 15210 Holly Rd„ Holly ME 4-677I -Open Delly and Sundays-, ......JET BOATS : * REAL GOERS MICHIGAN TOkBOCRAFT :|^7-DIXI£ KWY. OR f0308 1964*WILL OfNrZoO more Fun in the Sun! BUY NOW FOR SPRING Larson-Duo -Hydrodine BOATS Evinrude-Homelite MOTORS Harrington Boat Works Boati—Accetiorlei 97 1919 IVINHUPE. 80 HORSIPOWER motor end confroli, axe. condition. FI 4-5436. - ~.. Ill THi NlW 1964"..... OORSBTTI AND THOMPSONS — Here Now on Dlipley-. JOHNSON MOTORS arid BOATS PONTIAC IWaIiI'^OAT SHOW March 2 - March 7lh Paul A. Young, Inc. ^ . . Oraytoo Plains (Marina Lake) TONY'S MARINE ■VINRUOi MptORS, BOATS, ^RlNG LAYAWSf~ Sea-Ray-Thompson-Slortratt ' MPO -Johnson ASohirsr-laay to ■PMd, Pleasant to Deal VNth- PINTER'S MARINE "Wlwre Service Counts" pdyke near 175 F| 4-gs24 ISBD 18 POOt lOttI ITAN Aluminum run a bout. A tool buy ol $295. Big dlMxwnls on romtfning 1983 40 h.p. Bvlnrvdes. Toko M il to W. Highland. Right on ‘ Nidga Rd to Oemedo Rd. L 1370 " THE 1»0NTIAC PRES^THtJRSlXATTFEBR^^ 13y 19C4 iLli ■.I""" ■. I.;, ii’’' Wanted Cwi-Ti^clci 101 1»5«-7 BUICK SPECIAL OR CEN-tury eoay. fe *-*w. . AVERIU'S "Cheek tw ' ut get the II iVERIO LLOYDS BUYING Good Clean Cars 2023 Dixie Hwy. ■ We pay more becausB' We tell more ^ _____FE MI3I » -Mansfield HEW iOR COURTESY CAR? WE WILL BUY YOUR LATE MODEL CAR WE PAY MORE. 1104 Baldwin. Ave. WANTED: l»59-l»eLCAR Ellsworth AUTO SALES «S77 Dixie Hwy. MA 5-t4(IC ALWAYS BUYING AND PAYING MORE FOR GMD CLEAN CARS. ASK FOR BERNIE AT- BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH INC. Ml 7-3714 M&M Motor Sales “Since 1945" Yi/i want shi >lxte?!wy. r model! mr Dixieltwy." ’’"or a-osi GLENN'S Junk Cars-Truckt 101A R 50 JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS ee tow anytime, FE 2-?665. ALWAYS bUYING JUNK CARS - FREE TOW TOP. $» CALL FE Ml« SAM ALLEN A SON INC. Used AutO'Truck Parts 102 New and Used Truc^ 1755 CHEVY VS TON PICKUP, flrtMU^taket it. Runt good. Lee, IMO CHEVY %-TON, STEP SIDE, ..........>. Eves. FE 2-S450. ______________J. »81 Marlington. Drayton Plaint olf Hatchery. 1»5« FORD PldiKUP. rtUNS 4000, good tirei, $325. 36 Moreland. 1»57 FORD 1 TON STAKE TRUCK. OR 3-$65y.___________________________ 1954 For(d F-600 V8 Engine Cab and chassis, blue llnish, shor. wheelbase. $25x20 tires, perlect lor dump or wrecker and It In ex cellent condillon. $595. BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930' ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD —Home o( Service alter the Sale— OR 3-1291 f6RD Vi”fon pickup, with 6 cyl. engine, standard transmis slon, onu owners c It $450. JEROME FERGUSON, Rochester FORD Dealer, OL l-»m. ... picf(0>. adioTReaU 1956 Ford BEATTIE r FORD DEALER 5 e 1930" OR 3-1291 . T9i9~FSRB >'^“t9j6 Chevy, dump. EM 3-6373. i«M~FORD 'F-iOO' ',5 TON WITH brand new TiR $' camper, complete sell contained, truck It rad, . and the camper Is white, a beau-tllul outing outfitl Buy one—or buy at a unitl JEROME FERGUSON, Rochester F^RD Detijr, OL I-97II. ...1957 Chevy '/a-Ton Panel Truck BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER iince 1930" ON DIXIE HWY, IN WATERFORD —Home of Service eller the Sele—, OR 3-1291 power eoulpmenl, OMC ^ ' beiore 5 p.iir 1?6$ Jlil»,“WI«rM6TB4r has winch, attachment ‘ FJ5 5-5663. COnja T 1956 Ford ’/a-Ton Pickup with eleclrlclan utlllly body V engine, beaulllul red tlnlsn. --Only $395. BEATTIE OR 3-1291 -i«rjnp, 6X4,'$675. UL ^1017 Better Used Trucks GMC Factory Bronch OAKLAND AT CASS ____FB 5-96$5 ,„_._ JEEP "Your Aulhorl«ed OLIVER BUICK ond JIEP . ...07jH.rd^^el.. 19M WlLLYS JilP - Ion Pickup. 6 - wheel drive. months on helence. FULL PRICE $1495 OAKLAND ewt W6IMH Tivcb 103 lln, ie6 MM Cwi • BIDS WANTED! 1962 GMC UX 350B 197" Wheelbase 18' Van Body 124" CA . ’ Truck may be Inipected. between 9:M a,m. end 9 p.m. dally, tuhmlt wrlttm .hldt. to attention of m._ Louehart, Operatlma AAanager at ad ^ -*^$a balowt Montgomery Word Pontiac Mall ,----iB2494Q-^-^..-^ I960 BUICK 2-DOOR HARDTOP, lull power, $1,695. Hilltop Auto Soles ■“ Oakland Ave. ... ..... .... paymehT" SALE PRICED $1095 a YEAR 6. W. WARRANTY SPARTAN DODGE an S. Saginaw___________FE9-6561 Ford station' wwon) Must sell both. OR 3457$. 9$1 bUiCK ELECTRA 225 CON, vertible, full power, $a095. DON" 677 S. Lap6Mr Rd., Orkm. A ^206^. NO CREDIT? WEAK CREDIT? New 1966 Chrytlers. PIvmoutI yillanta. AH n^lt. and coldi Full 5-year warranty. $50 or c.. ' ■' I application rejected. surencei Add them upi* ^ If jiou have a GOOD driving ord — call us to inquire a_________ AETNA AUTO-RITE with broad pTofection «t loW-cosf with or The l^rld's largest Insurance Miracle Mile fe 6 _____Next to Pontiac State Bank CAR AND HOUSE INSURANCE one package at 20 per cent t.. Ings. Ed McNamara, Agency. EM 3-7410, ^ GOOD NEWS For those who have hem Canceled or Refused We can provide firat-llne covered and .protection plus yearly pn mlum reduction based , on In Tsroved driving record. ^ CALL NOW FE 4-3535 F^rank A. Anderson Agen^ Foreign Cart 105 OLIVER RENAULT Are you looking for a car that will glve^you up to 60 miles per gallon, RENAULT DAUPHml* RENAULT R$ $150 Down on abo $1660 OLIVER , RENAULT 60 E. Pike ________FE 6-1502_____ 1960 SIMCA 2-DOOR HARDTOP, RA dio, haatar, whiiawalle, one owni new car trade I No money dow 126.63 per month. Patterson 1959 SIMCA SEDAN lies per gallon. Full price— $295 SPARTAN DODGE 211 S. SAGINAW . FE 5-6561 ---VOLKSWAGEN BUS, R~E H mileage. $695. FE l-07e3. 0 CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE, Ir conditioning, full power, must se to appreciate. New car trade II $190 down. Payments of 107.63 er month. LLOYD Llncoln-AAeFcury 232 S. Saginaw St. . FE 2-9131 195$ VW SEDAN $600, VW GOKART SHARP, FIRST $650 .3 KARMAN-OHIA CONVERTIBLE 195$ VOLKSWAGEN, NICE LITTLE car. $695 full price with no m-™" ‘^Yucky auto sales I Lot" FE 6-3216 BIRMINGHAM IMPORTS OPEL wagon .... 1961 RENAULT, radio . I960 VW sunroof ... FISCHER BUICK 515 S. Woodward WILSON ..-.... .... clean, priced to selll JEROME FERGUSON, Roch- '.‘I’’!!;., l'950enaijit boupH^ Gas saving economy car, only $169 Russ Johnson In Lake Orion 19^0 Triumph TR-3 oadsler. 19,000 eclual miles. Radio, healer. Beaulllul yellow with a '' ;k top, 6-speed transmission, lewalls. 11,19$. Homer Hight PONTIAC - BUICK - CHEVROLET OXFORD OA $-263$ Naw and UiBd Can 106 Liquidation Lot I S. SAGINAW . WHITEWALL TIRES, STONE SHIELD. THIS CAR 15 IN SHOWROOM CONDITION. UNCONOI - -............ ‘“ANTED. »*■ $150 . $195 LLOYDS $lD to $1,000 No Money Down! No Credit Problemtl Cor for Need We Hove in Deed I 1955 CHEVY (2) From 1951 OLpi (3) From —' -ORO V-$ 4-door jMC Pickup ... 1957 MERCURY (2) . . 1957 OODOB 9-paiianetr ''.r. m EDIBL . . ...,.... (HiVV wagon MERCURY III IrOm DelOTO Sporlsmani 2 dr. 1695 FALCON 2 door .....*791 A$k for Stu 2023 Oakland -“-"lL0Y-D“- LIncoln-Mercury 232 S. Saginaw St. 3 BUICK LESAB_RE .6 IS 17 other factory options. Heege, excellent con""---owner, $2,5t5. 6$^23 1960 CADILLAC 2-door hardtop. This car; i pwnet-baaul,. „ has a crisp white pipped, ^our old car down, 30 "“‘ full PWCE $2295 GAfOLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 726 OAKLAND PHONE 335.9636 1959 CADILLAC SEDAN. A REAL buy.:._.......... '■ $1595 WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC 195$ CHEVROLET BEL AIR CLUB SEDAN, AUTO. TRANSMISSION, RADIO, HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. PAyments of $5.75 per week. See Mr. Parks el Harold 195$ CHEVY, STICK, 327 ENGINE UL 2-560$ 1959 CHEVY PARKWOOD STATION WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC 1350 N. Woodard Mi 6-1930 Birmingham. Michigan LLOYD LIncoln-Marcury 232 S. Saginaw St. FE 2-9131 1959 CHEVY, V-e, B^LAIR, VERY FE 3-7562. H. Riggins, Depler. ________ .._.)smisslon. Lots ol additional equipment. SALE PRICED $995 .-2.YEAll-G_W. WARRANTY SPARTAN DODGE 211 S. SAGINAW_________FE 8-6 WILSON PONTIAC7CADILLAC 1350 N.' Woodward Ml 6-19: Birmingham, Michigan_ 1956 CHEVRSlFT, 6-CYLiNbER food tires. $16" “ Isslon Service. 1957 CHEVROLET 2:DOOR, stick, good condition. Call 6639 after 3 p.m.___ ____ 1958 CHEVY IMPALA CORvERTI- Buy Your New Rambler or Olds FROM Houghten & Son WE ARE FLOODED With New Car Trades Mostly One Owners SEE AND COMPARE OUR PRICES AND CARS BEFORE YOU BUY No Fair Offer Refused Must Moke Room ANYTHING OF VALUE WILL TAKE ON TRADE SEE "VAN" THE AAAN 1963 Comtt, red, nict .. ......$1195 1962 Rambler, Auto.$1195 - - Rambler Clesslc . $1695 Rambler Wagon .... $1195 Fleet-Side pickup.$1395 .... Ford Galaxle . $1095 1961 Rambler - Classic .. I 895 1961 Chevy, 6-door . $1095 1960 Bel Air, nice . S 095 I960 Rambler Classic .... $ 695 1959 Cadillac hardtop .. . . ..SI695 1959 Chrysler 2 door ..........I 795 195$ Chevy 2-door . $ 695 50 MORE SELECT USED CARS EXCELLENT FINANCING ' EASY TERMS SUPERIOR RAMBLER i50 Oakland _ FE f9621 LET'S GET ACQUAINTED BE HAPPY WITH VILLAGE RAMBLER FABULOUS BELOW COST DEALS I BRAND NEW 1963 TOP OF THE LINE RAMBLER Ambassador V-8 Power Steering, power brekei, radio. heater. Individual rfcllnino seals, whilawalls, turn Inplcators. chrame whaal caps. LIGHT PACKAGE (Back up tighta, courlaiy, trunk, glove compertment, front end rear) VISIBILITY GROUP (variable speed wipers, weshers, ouiside mirror. Inside mirror end venlly mirror). $1,998:90 CLASSICS , . . . ,$1,597.27 AMERICAN................$1,499.66 These cars have e new ter, 16 month leclory werrenly. VILLAGE RAMBLER Ml 6-3900 )6 S. WOODWARD BIRMINOHAM HOME OF T^I^TOTAL VALUE MAliMADUKE ' By Anderson & Leeming "Marmaduke, come and help me explain to Phif =■ how we couldn’t pass up these bargains!” (W and Used Cart 106 I CHEVY DEL RAY, _________ . loor V-$, floor shift, good condl-------V Ml-6391, 195$ CHEVROLET tMPALA^OOOR hardtop. V-$ engine. Power--- power steering, radio, heater, i walls. Extra clean. Only $895. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1880 S. WOODWARD AVE BIRMINGHAM....Ml 6-2735. . 1958 CHEVY 6j^2-OOOR, ST^DARO FB 3-7562, we FINANCE ' NO CREDIT - WEAK CREDIT Over 188 '59s thru '66$ to choost from. All makes apd models. All carry full 5-year*^werr"enfy. $58 Or ATtf Mf-dowii. eatf credit ^nan*-ager, Mr. Hill, 335-9636. Oaklend-Chrysler-Plymouth. LUCKY AUTO SALES 8 GHEVHQLET_2:PqOR 761 CHEVROLET BEL AIR 2-DOOR sedan. V-8 engine, Powergltde, radio. heater, wh|teWalls. Light blue finish. Only $1,395. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1880 S. WOODWARD" AVE., BIR-MINGHAM. Ml 4-2m;___________________ CORVAIR Like new one own-. ---- Bloomlleld Hills resident. Always kept In a heated garage. Redur"' SALE^PRIGED $975 2 YEAR G. W. WARRANTY SPARTAN DODGE 211 S. Saginaw FE l-6541 .682-1878 after 6. 1961 CHEVrOlRT IMPALA 2-066r hardtop, 6 cyl.. standard ' n^lsslon. SI ISO. Private owner LLOYD LIncoln-Mercury I S. Seglnajw St._^ 6 2^9131 12'chevy -SUrt'R SPORf,_Re0, il,B50. FE 5-7731.______ full 5-y9ar werrenly. Your old ci down. 36 mos. on balance. FULL PRICE $1695 OAKLAND ... SAGINAW _ ^ M541 1962 CHEVROCif IWiPAtA 7 666k hardtop, ^ V-$ •”8^1’*' with red Interior. Only t3J95. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1800 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2735. HEVY II NOVA, mi' AUTd-metlc, radio ' and heeler, bucket seels, wbitewells, ---- OR 4-1692 ---- ' WE FINANCE NO CREDIT - WEAK CREDIT Over 100 'S9s thru '66t to choose ft). Cell Credll Main-1, 335-9636. Oakland ry'slr . . ... WiNTErSPEtfALS 6 Chevroleti. ‘53 lo '57, $35 up 5 Cedlllecs, '52 to '57, $95 up 9 Fords, '53 10 '5$, $35 up Olds end Ponllecs, '54 lo '59, $35 up 1963 Pontiac $1795 $1195 $ 991 $189$ UiJaBrS 4doo? " 1961 tPECIAL Wagon 7 1959 BONNEVILLE hardtop 1960 aONNBVILLE heri^lop 1962 Lc---- ---- •*" FALCON 2-door BONNEVILLE 1 1961 BONNEVILLE 6 Lincoln 4-deai CATALINA 4do IMPALA Idoor ..CORVAIR Wage mi CATALINA idoi SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK 223 N. Main OL 1-8133 ROCHESTER, MICH. 1962 Chevy Carvair Greenbrier, I owner, low mileage. Economy wagon, has the third sear. Radio, neater, nitp;.— Russ Johnson 1962 CHEVV IMPAU 2----------- —'*~iPa rilrtiftir -s(«eriiMp 4t53-40^wnd p«y-of $57.19 p#r month, LLOYD LIncoln-Mercury 232 S. Saginaw . FE 27^31 1962 CHEVY IMPALA 2-DOOR hardtop, V-l, stick, "■ $1,795. FE 5^3554, 1963 CHEVROLET Ir, 4-door, 6-cyllnder, automat-'ansmission, solid aqua, $1,795. VAN CAMP CHEVY MILFORD MU 4-1825 1963 MONZA SPORT COUPE, AUTO-ma'tlc transmission, flp-top condi-tlon, sell lor $1,708. FE 2-3344. 1958 CHRYSLER I ____ heater end m» sharp. jR636 1961 CHRYSLER "300 - G" COtiVER- "HotesF' car built by Chrysler end "EVERYTHING IS SPECIAL" In-375 h.p. engine, Good Year premium safety while-wall tires, Individual leather bucket seats front and rear, full length consul with glove compartments both front end rear, tachometer, lots ol other "goodies" Including 4-way power. A little cesh (or your own car down) and easy monthly payments. Full price only $2,177. BIRMINGHAM Chrysler - Plymouth 912 S. Woodward Ml 7-3216 CROWN IMPIRIaT 1963 2-deor hardtop, has lull p< OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 762 Oakland _ 33M636 ms'oobo^ har'dtop One-owner hardtop that Is elm like new. Reduced. $1795 2-YEAE G. W. WARRANTY SPARTAN DODGE 211 S. SAGINAW FE $-4. 195$ dOdge 4-OOOR HAhbtOP, $ full price only $97. Wttkiy p mtnts $1.18 with no money doi King Auto Sales ............ One-owner. Low lleege. Only $1,895. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1800 S. WOODWARb AVE. BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2735. ' no CREDIT? WEAK CfEOiT?-New I9$4 Chryilers, Plymoutbi, Valiants. All models end colors. Full 5-yeer warranty. $58 or old car down. No eppllcallon relecioo. Cell credit mineger, Mr. HIM, 335-9636 tor Mismtdlell dtllvery. Oakland Ch^sler-Plymoylh, Delivered NEW 1964 PLYMOUTH-VALIANT $1754 Heater-defrotter, electric w I n d-shleld wipers, duel lunvlsori, directional ilgne'- ‘—‘ — —■-cigar IlghINir, cylinder engine OAKLAND CHRYSLER ■ PLYMOUTH Oakland Ph. BIRMINGHAM TRADES Every used car offered for retail to the public is o bonofide 1-owner, low piilc-oge, sharp car. 1-yeor ports and labor worranty. )63 iulck Wildcat 62995 F63 iulck ItallAfi Wmaan tVMI Hi 0ukk C< Now and Used Cars 10« 1957 dodge HARDTOP, SI3S SAVE Auto.; FE 5-327$. I960 (X7DGE 4-OOOR WITH 6 CYL- UwMr >nrt «ORTA- tlon $58. FE.^S4I22^ - ■ 1956_ FjQRDu- -V$, AUTOMaTTC, power steering. $68. Call Fg 6-5703. 1958 FORD 6-OOOR HARDTOP, Marvel Motors 251 Oakland Ava. King Auto Soles '275 W. Huron S* FE $-6088 959 FORD CUSTOM 380, V-l, . deerT^-goed citan car. Priced right, PEOPLES AUTO SALES $ OAKLAND FE 2-2351 9S9 Ford 6 cylinder, sTanO- ard transmission, exc. mechanical condition, exc. transp. $395. EM ' FORD CONVERTIBLE, NEW LUCKY AUTO SALES "Pontiac's Oiscounlf L -..... .......... FE4-2216 1959 FORD STATION ,WAGONTT^-chantcally perlect. Slight damage In front end. Runable. OR 3-8659. 1959 FORD GALAXIE Y-DOOR hardtop. Take over payments. Reel clean. 232 Bishop. Clyde, Mich. Phone M7-503T____________ 1960 FALCON, WIFE'S CAR, EX-ceilent condition, deluxe interior. Un, I87‘4395e after 5 or wetk< 960 FORD FaIXlANE 508^ITH 6-cyllnder engine, eulomellc - mission. Sharp throughout! yours — Only $895. JOHN McAULIFFE .FORD 638 Oakland Ave. FE 5- - leio FALCON 6'OOOR, EXCELLENT condition. Including tires, auto. dIo, healer. 626-6605. FALCON 1960, 'YOoOST'STANbAlO transmission, radio, exc. condition, tires and batlery, one owner, FE 6-8032. mo "ford 2-d08r, v$, radio, lOVERDRIVE, WHITEWALL tires: absolutely no money DOWN. Payments pl $6,95 per week. See Mr. Parks at Harold Turner Ford. Ml 67500. I960 t■ BIR D ■ MINT CON0it iON, original owner. Cell J63-663I alter -.l.E;"'- \ ... . 1961 Ford Galaxia vs engine, automatic transmission, radio, heater, whitewalls. For only $1395. Crissman Cheyrolet Co. ROCHESTER ‘ - - 'it BuIMt Invieta herdtea -,2 Buick 2 dPor hetdtop ,2 Buick 40oor hardtop 2 Buick e-daer sadan .... 1962 Pontiac I'vllle cenv. .. 1962 Pontiac 6 door ladan .. " M iulck Elfctra hardt^ M Buick Invicta hardtop . 1 Buick Edoer .. it Buick Ikylark ,. « Buick iltciia 64oet « BuKk Lalabra « Buick Cenvartlhla . 19 Cadlllae OaVlIla 19 iulck nation Wagon 19 iulck hardtop ..J9 Ford (ielexif. new I9» OMe 9$.hardlep I9N QmI snihM Wegwt 1957 Cnryiler N#w York#. . FISCHER BUICK ^E FINANCd NO CREDIT - WEAK CREDIT Over too ‘Ml thru '64e to choose from. All makes and modelV. All carry lull l-yeer werrenlyl $58 or old car down. Cell Credit Manager, Mr. HIM, 335-9636. Oakland C nr y 1P lyrmuth. "UP f(5 ' $5 A MILE YOUR $AV|NGS^^^Y^PRiyiNO T STARK HICKEY° FORD 14 Mile Rd. E. of Woodward 516-6818 LLOYDS ■ for Continentals 1963 Red seden, lulher Interior, el condMIonInq. 1963 Pink Frost stdan, elr cond llonlnql >62 Convtrllblt, while with a blac top, red leather trim. ALL ARE IN EXCELLENT CONDITION, STILL UNDER WARRANTYI LLOYD 232 8 Seolnew''si/'^*''*"''Ff 2 913 SAVE $$$$ WATCH THIS SPOTI WE ARE DEALING ONE-OWNER TRADES $5 DOWN 1959 CHEVY 4000R STATIC WAGON, RADIO, HRATBR POWiROIlOB , sn 1988 FORD 1-OOOR, OR 6 DOOR, RADIO, HEATER, $695 1961 ITUDIiAKIR LARK 6 CYL.. 2D0q1 radio, HIAtIr 1765 ’ CALL Ut FOR CRIOir APPROVAL AIK FOR OINB OR JIM VILLAGE RAMBLER Ml 6-3900 $$$ I WOOnWARO, ilRMINOHAM MOMi OF 1HR TOTAL VALUI Naw and Used Cart. 106 " SALE PRICE $1195 2-YEAR G. W. WARRANTY ,, SPARTAN DODGE 2H s. SAGINAW_____FE n6561 WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC toodwerd—— mingham, MIchl’gen 1961 FALCON ^DOOR, RADIO. HEATER, ECONOMY ENGINE, WHITEVVALLJILES. ABSOLUTE- of S7.95 per week. See Mr. Perks at HaFoM Turner Ford, Ml 4-7580. 1962 FORD FAIRLANE 500 4-00<5i', V8 engine, automatic transmission. New and UiajJ Cars 106 54irb« n 5-8 p MERCURY 2-OOOR SEDAN with $ cylinder and automatic JreasmltskxL—radio and heatar-and real clean. Full priea $397, ■weekly ^^ymenfs S3.16 end no King Auto Soles 327SW. Huron'St. FE $-608$ 1961 COMET STATION WAGON — Radio, heater, eutor "* ——'■ skm, whitewalls, one owner, naw car iraoe prica, S795. LLOYD I960 COMET, 4-D 6$2 Howland, stick. FE 2-l$$7. . 1959 PLYMOUTH VELVEDERd i radio end h FuM'p^e $397, weefcty^yments King Auto Soles 2375 W. Huron St.________ 1963 VALIANT, 33S4S63. _____________ 960 WHltii-%EO VALIANt, ^X-collent buy, ^^>wnar■ EM 3<9i8, way steering wheel, automatic irensmisslon, radloi heater and excellent whitewall tires. You can save hundreds ol dollars on - this gorgeous prestige car at our low price ot only S3,288. Easy payments 1963 KaLCON CONVERTIBLE, A-cyl. engine, automatic transmission, radio, heater, beautiful champagne finish, black top, whitewalls. ■ - JEROME FERGU- fOrO 9-PASSENGER SEDAN, radio, heater, eutomatic transmission, power steering and brakes. Yours for only $2,695. JOHN MCAULIFFE ^ FORD 630 Oakland Avr. mission^ ______ solid red outside and n JEROME 'fERGUSON, Rochester FORD Dealer, OL 1-9711. ____ 1963 FORD 2 OOOTFiiCTORY'W-fMMel car, 6 cyl. engine, eutomatic, radio, heater, power steering and brakes. $1995. JEROME FERGUSON, Rochester FORD Beeler,- OL 963W FORO, 627, 6-SPEED. TAKE over payments, $2,288. 852-^56. 3276 Longview, oil Auburn Rd. LLOYD STATION /e Auto, f MansfieM Auto Sales 1962 ’A-ton pickup, 66 box ... 11695 1968 CHEVY >,1i Ion fleet side , box .........IT095 1959 EL CAMINO, only S 995 Mansfiel(d Auto Sales 1104 BALDWIN FE 5-5900 HASKINS Used Cars 1963 CHEVY Bel Air 2-dMr, gas saving 6 cyl. engine, standard tranimlislon. radio. 962 CHEVY Blsceyne 2-d<>or, 6 cyl. pbwergllde, power steering, power brakes, radio; ilka new,- frwn engine, standard IransmI HASKINS Chevrolet Olds "Your Croiiroadi to Savlngi" US 10 and M IS MA 5 1606 LLOYDS Aufo Super Mart CLARKSTON You Pey-N«thlnf tor parte end leber under our "OOLO CREST" Ouer- give thousends of miles ol Irouble-Jrae driving. REDUCED IN PRICE... NO CASH DOWN SPARTAN DODGE 3-YEAR G. W. WARRANTY 311 S. SAGINAW PE •'4 Sr OLOS 4-dOOR HARBrOP* Radio, heater, lutomellc, po5... Steering, brakes. Whitewalls, SI65 down, payments ot $56.69 LLOYD LIncoln-Mercury 232 S. Saginaw SI.__FE 2-9131 )61 STARFIRE' CONVilRflBti, power, $2,095. Owner. OR 3-5851. ~ 162 OLDS STaSFTRI eOU?i, lull power, radio, whitewalls, low mileage. Brown with matchlr- " terlor, Celt FE $-86$$ or at p.m., FE 2-6689. 1962 Storfire Olds II power, like new, pvt. e\— icrlflce. FE 2-2119 er FE 1M)219. PLYMOUTH BlLViolRE, nas $ cyHnder ,v .......... transmission, radi. .... end whilemir tlFfS, full lied MquMetlon price on., __ ESTATE storage COMPANY, ■" ■ South Blvd. ■ ■ $595 FUU PRICE 2-YEAR G. Vt. WARRANTY SPARTAN DODGE 211 S. SAGINAW . FB $-6561 OLIVER BUICK IS. 1961 BUICK LeSebre 2-door .. 6151 1962 BUICK LeSebre .... 1211 mi PONTIAC 1-door Cetellne H6< ,1963 GRAND PR IX Hardtop .. $3t 1956 PONTIAC 6-door. Hardtop $6 1961 BUICK Special 6-door ... SI3 1963 ENGLISH FORO Carpi .. tl3 1961 ENGLISH FORD 2-dOOr ,. $ 6 1968 BUICK LeSebre 1-door .. $11 1963 BUICK Wagon, stick ... m 1963 BUICK LeSebre 4daor .. lie 1963 BUICK Skylark Convert .. $241 1961 PONTIAC Cetellne . $161 1961 BUICK LeSebre 2 door L $151 1961 BUICK Special Wagon .. 1171 195$ OPEL Wegon, etlck . . $ 6; 1968 Ol BONNEVILLE 2-door .. SI19S 1968 CORVAIR rdoor "788" -- S 881, SKYLARK 2-door, white $1695 1968 RAMBLER 6-door, slick $ 795 68 PONTIAC Catalina il695 68 FORD Convertible $ 995 OLIVER BUICK . . FULL PRICE _ _JJi*AR-4»;--AM.--Y»ARRANTT SPARTAN DODGE I S. SAGINAW . FE B4561 MANSFIELD^ AUTO SALES 1104 BaldvYin FE 5-5900 1963 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE, red, white top, power, nnegne slum wheels, 421 engine, 11,888 miles. ---- -...ranteE, 12,895. BEL AIR 2-door 6. Au-ILY 11,695. 12 PONTIAC STAR C H I B P_ * : 1961 CHEVY IMPALA . i II PONTIAC CATALINA CON-/ERTIBLE, Powtr, $1,195, U CHEVY 9-PASSENGER 6-neslum wheels, 421 i-ngine, 11.080 miles. FULL OUAR-ANTEI, $2H5 7961 PONTIAC CATALINA CON-^ VetlflBtt. Newer, $«M , 1961 CHEVY 9-PAS8fNqBR $ 1962 CHBVY hPI AIR 2 Door, 1 6, eulornalK, ONLY $169) owner, reel $h*rp. only’$169$ ; 1969 PONTIAC STAR CHIBF 6-^ $2T9$, '■ * ' '' 1968 VENTURA, PONTIAC, 6- j 1962 CHEVY IMPALA 2 Door mi I960 VENTURA, PONTIAC, 2-Door ^Merdloj.^^Full power. m2 FIT OIOS COUP*, v$, '**1 ®NLY $1$$$. I960 CHIVY IMPALA lOoor Nerdlop, V I, eulomellc. $169$ 1961 FORD CONVBRTI8LB. V i, llick. Only $l$95 I960 CHIVY IMP6LLA 2-Deor Herdtop. 6, automkiic, white with red Iniorlor. ONLY $1395 1961 BONNIVK I If HARDTOP t6upP|^Fowtr, dark blue Im- 1941 CHIVY IMPALA 6 Door ‘ Herdtop. Reel inerp. Double I960 FORD STATION W6LOON. e-oassenger: V-$, »uhm$»ll«, _ ^p.wer,|,«« m.l.N ww ow. 1968 PONTIAC BONNBVIL'le $-Door Herdlup,' Power, $1591 1968 PONflAC l-Doof STAR-CHIEF. Power. Reel nice. $1395 I960 BUiCK 1 N V 1 C.T A CON-, VIRTIBLt. Full power. $1595 powtr. 11695 194} TIMPtST LiMANS COUPI^^^ Automellt, 12,008 1961 CHEVY IMPALA CON-VIRTIBLE VI, eulomebt, pow«r. $129$ 1104 BALDWIN FE 5-5900 T>-^2 ■ 4 " . ■ : r- , rr "■■■' \ :. .. I - THE PONTIA€ PRESS THURSDAY,. EEBRUARY 13, 1964 liMV imi UmT Can M whitewall tin (ith a chrome rad immacutate beifle lertor. A fin# fami ir (teeriny anS-iter and "Vxeel-n. Light beige BH(MIN6HAM Chrysler-Plymouth »M PONTIAC. GOOD mrni JNI^G »» PONTIAC SUPER CHIEF. FE MI6M Wi PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE. RE- -HAUPT.. SPECIALS HAUPT PONTIAC mile north of O.S 10 on Ml5 Open MONDAY-TUESDAY and THURSDAYS 'til » P.M. MA 5-55«......-■ Now aa4 UsmI Cm less PONTIAC SUPER WWl doer hardtop, extra clSan, Irlc'wIndowsV'flnted gSs”'hydfa' mafic drive. FE S-1JJ0. > BONNE^^ILLE WAGON, FULL ^. Hilltop Auto Sales , H7 Oakland Ave. F^ e-tew (959 PONTIAC 4-d60R I^RDTOe, POWER STEERING, POWER brakes, RADI 0, HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO money DOWN, Paymentt of S7.95 per week. See Mr„ Parks at' Harold Turner Ford. Ml N«w and Und Can v $1195 EAR G. W. WARRANTY SPARTAN DODGE Sn S. Saginaw • - FE S-4541 I960 PONTIAC CATALINA 4-OOOR Hardtop. Radio, heater, power steering ^and brakes,^ automatic ^42.1J down, payments ot NO CREDIT? WEAK CREDIT? Jlew 1?44 ChryH*I»L Piymouths,, 'Vallahts. Ail niodels ahtf colors. Full 5-year warranty. $50 or old car down. No application relected. RAMBLERS-RAMBLERS . Under the Flashing" SATEttITE" Used Cars Wholesale Prices Special This. Week: HI Sharp '41 Rambler 4-door» se- "*GREEN GIANT (auto.) BLACK BEAUTY (auto.) SILVER LINING (standard) Come In and sea these outstanding '"’'.‘'"■rose rambler 1145 Commerce, Union Lake EM 34155 LLdYD I960 BONNEVILLE WAGON, FULL power. $t,495. Hilltop Agto Sales »« Oakland Ave.> FE A9949 (940 PONTIAC CATALINA. ttlOSO. Has 5 new- tires, 34,000 miles. Like nepy. FE 1-04M. 1941 PONtlAC .^4-DOOR SEDAN, 1941 PONTIAC 4-DODR; AUTOMATIC transmission, radio and heater. A real nice car $t,095 full price with no money down. . LUCKY AUTO SALES DEMO ® 1944 OLDS JET STAR ’ 88, new car warranty JEROME Motor Sales, 280 S. SAGINAW FE 8-0488 - ABSOLUTELY-NQ MONEY DOWN SPOT CELIVERY4UST*MSKETAYMENTS 'Cor PrrceC AAWoek Car 1956 CHRYSLER Hardtop $ 97 $1,02 1958 1 1957 CHEVY $197 $1.63 1959 1 1957 PLYMOUTH Wagon $297 $2.35 1960 1 1957 BUICK Hardtop .. .$397 $3.14 1959 1 Price A Week ..$497 $3.92 .,$597 $4.72 ..$697 $5.56 $6.39 ..$797 IN PERSON . OR BY PHONE LIQUIDATION LOT 60 S. TELEGRAPH FE 8-9661 ACROSS FROM TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER N«w and Usod Con •m 1941 -PGjNTtAe CHSTQM-’CONVER-tlBe, somrBedv-wpck, ^M G-4373. 1941 POhriAC CATALINAr WHltl, 4-door, stick. ..>1,MO. Olt 3-7S89. 1942 PONTIAC CATALINA 9-PAS-. senger wagon, car toi> carrlar, all . power, go^ rubber, one owner. EM 3-M52.______________• TEMPEST SWRT COUPE DE-■ n. 81,375. 338- i|N>y oi^Uead Cart 1061 1943 BONftEVILLE 4,» Marina Aqua. $2288 Roae finlah, end haa a vinyl top. $2545 block tap and a iparkling |et black finlah. $2095 wall liras end a beeutllul finlah at Saddle Tan. $2485 1962 MONZA 4-Door Sedan Haa Fowtrgllda lraniitll>»lon ehd iHicktl teail. radio and Jwator and In the beat at running condition. Tha color la a aperkling all- 1962 MICK ' LeS^re Sport Sedan ' Hea well Urea, and a real nica Antique Roae finlah. A real aharp 1963 CHEVY Bel Air 4-Door Sedan with 40f HIGH PGRFORM-ANC«-eNOIN«-end 4^peed trena- whltewall Urea, the Hnlah la a beeutllul Beige and Brown finlah. 1963 CHEVY Bel Air 4-Door Hardlod model with 4tyllnder enqtot/md. PawerglldL JreBunla-. alon, radio and healer and e Finish lhal la Woodland Green and beaulllul. ^*il488 " $2^ $2085 $1388 1963 CHEVY II Nova Wagon mo and* haater. a a cylinder en-gina and II haa whilewtil tirea, wheel diaca end ,e beiutltul Aqua-marine rtnlah. 1963 \ PONTIAC ^ Bonneville Convertible Ilea iMickel aeala, iwwer brakea end power alearing, radio and . heeler and whitewall Urea, Hea a light turquolaa lop with Marina Aqua finlah. 1963 \MONZA Oub Coupe Wll^apead tranamlaalon, radio and Heatar and whilawall tiraa. Tha Itrtparlai Ivoiy tinlah la ael ' oft with a baauiltui red Inlerlor. 1958 CHEVY - Bel Air 4-Door Sedan wdh radio and healer,' VI enqlna wllh Powargllde. .The (In-lah la a real nice sparkling white, This ana/ Is a raal honey. $2085 $3085 $1888 $688 O CREDIT? WEAK CREDIT? 1944 Chryslers, Piymouths, | —“ *" —-■-'1 and colors. for Immediate delivery. Oakland- Chrysler-Piymourti.________ 1959 Rambler Classic' Station Wagon, Only 8495 Russ Jchnson Lake Orion MY whitewalla, white finish, ---- —ly $1,045 JEROi. _ . Rochester FORD Dealer, Marvel Motors! 251 Oakland Ava. 758 STUDEBAKER SCOTSi $1^57^1W5._________________ 1963 STUDEBAKER/ V-6/ AUTO-matic, will accept trade. $1,495. Call 731-9)02._ Driving an 8 BALL ? "TOP QUALITY" NEW OR _-„:J:AR at KBBGCrSAtES 8. SERVICEI going at ..............8 495 194i CHEVY 2-door, power steer id brakes, automatic 8149S KEEGO SALES & SERVICE 3080 ORCHARD LAKE 682-3400 F E BILL SPENCE "AUTO RANCH" 6673 DIXIE HWY. CLARKSTON MAS-5861 -When You Take A Demo, Ride- YOUR L CHOICE Danny Kaye Album or a Bedutiiul Tropical Inland • Mural (bring this od with you for the Demo Ride E E OAKLAND COUNTY'S VOLUME CHEVROLET DEALER 631 OAKLAND AVE. FE 4-4547 FE 4-4547 Suburban Motors BIRMINGHAM Trades 100% WRITTEN GUARANTEE Every Car Listed Carries This Guarantee. Take the Guesswork Out of Buying. Get One of Our Certified Used Cars I 1962 Olds CutlaSs Canvertible, conscle, radle, h_ aumrnallc, maroan and sharpi 1959 Chevy Wagon Breakwaod, V-8 Autamatic, pawar etoarlng, and brakas, aid ear dawn ONLY $795. 1962 Olds Dynamic Caupe autamatic tranamlsslon, pawar ttaaring and brakes, ONLY Priced ta seUI 1963 Olds F-85 Coup«r V6 engine/ automatic/ dio. ^^ater. whitewalls* let bl« 1962 Buick Electro 4^ daar Hardtap, with all paw( . 1962 Olds F-85'$ 4'doars, 2-doars, Cutlass caupes and cenvartlblts, tram 81495. 1963 OldB 98 Canvartlbli, lull pawer, rat terlar, with a let black li Sharp. 1963^0lds^"Ms" 1962 Chevy Impala Caupa, V-8 angina, pawar steering end brakes, ana awner, ONLY $1,945. 1962 Pontiac Bonrieville canvertible, autamatic, pawer stee Ing end brekei. black vinyl buckets, aluminum whMis, sharp. 196voids Super Ing and brakas, sharp, 1 awt priced to tall. 1962 Olds "88s"-''98s‘ All pawar, tram 81995 1961 Pontioc Hardtop Slarchlel, red with red vinyl Interior, llnled glass, sharp, ONLY 81495. 1961 Buick Special Wagon, V-8 angina, auton pawer. turquoise, ONLY 11,595. 1960 Olds Dynamic SEE OR CALL Don Wilson or Bob Martin Suburban Motors 14.1 8. 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A real bargain '58Ch^vy Impala Convartlbla, Pull pawar. '59 Dodge Royal Lancer. Radio, heatar. Ilka Sharp. Full prica only $195 "$195 A-I condition. Full prica $595 now. Full prica only $395 '55 Cadillac '60 Comet J-Door, like new. Very sharp. '61 Renault Oauphine. Beautiful rad. Low '58 Buick Convertible, lilack. Runs like new. nice? Full price only” ' $295 Full price only $696 mileage. Full price only $495 No rust, full price only $495 '57 Pontiac SlArchItif On« owntr. '59 Ford '58 Olds vary” aharp.**”Full” price '59Rdmbler American. Radio, haator, low '$395 condlllon, l-ownor. Full price. $395 $395_ mlltaga. Full price only $295 '54 Mercury Hardtop. VI, red end while, '57 DeSoto 4-Door. Runs like new. Radio, '59 Plymouth station W«oon. BMutltol black '59 Plymouth Fury Hardtop. V4/ rtdIO/ haator. radio, heater. Full price only $125 healer. Full price only $125 finlih. Full prica only $495 Full prica only, $395 NOTICE Those Who Are Bankrupt - Have No rnpc mTjp Credit-on the lob Short Time-Have Haci ” Repossession -.We Can Put You in a Car PUBLIG With - No Money Down- SURPLUS MOTOR SALES 171 S. SAGINAW, PONTIAC FE 8-4036 \ ^ Tte I^ONl^AC PRESS;^TikURSDAY, FEBRUARY i3>^_ l 'f . —^Television Programs— Programs furnished by sfqtions listed in this column are subject to change without notice. TONIGHT <;N (2) (4) News, Sports Weather „ (7) Movie: “Storm Over Tibet.” (In Progress) (9) Capt. JoHy and Popeye (56) American Eiconomy ts2l (7) W e a t h e r, News, Sports 6:39 (2) (4) National News ------ (9)4IucklebeFry Hound (56) French Through TV 7:09 (2) Littlest Hobo (4) (C!olor) ’ George Pier-- rot- ^ (7) (C!olor) Michigan Out- “■■■■dODrs'-'-^'——.-......-.. (9) Tombstone Territory (56) At Issue 7:30 (2) Password (7) (Color) Flintstones (9) Movie: “Two Guys from Milwaukee:” (1946) Dennis Morgan, Jack Car-son (56) Mental Health 8:00 (2) Bawhide (4) Bill Dana (7) Don, a Reed 8:30 (4) Dr. Kildare (7) My Three Sons 9:00 (2) Perry Mason (7) Jimmy Dean (9) Zero One 9:30 (4) (Color) Hazel (9) Parade 10:00 (2) Nurses, (4) (Special) Perry Como (7) Sid Cdfesar (9)“Wrcstllng , 10:30 (7) News Reports 11:00 (2) (4) (7) (9) News, Weather, Sports 11:25 (9) Lucky Scores 11:30 (2) Steve Allen (4) (Color) Johnny CarsoiL (7) Movie: “A Tree Grows in Brooklyn.” (1945) Peggy Ann Gamer, James . Dunn (9) Movie: “The Go Getter.” (1937) George Brent 1:H0 (21 Peter Gunn (4) Best of Groucho 1:30 (7) After Hours FRIDAY MORNING «:1S (2> Meditations 6:20 (2) On the Farm Front 6:25 (2) News 6:30 (2) Sunrise Semester (4) Classroom -(7) Funetys 7:00 (2) News' (4) Today (7) Johnny Ginger . 7:05 (2) Fun Parade. 7:45 (2) King and Odie 8:C0 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Big Show 8:30 (7) Movie: “D a y - time Wife.” (1939) Tyrone Power, Linda Darnell 8:41 (56) Great Books 8:50 (9) Warm-Up 8:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 9:00 (2) Movie: “Caught in the Draft.” (1941) Bob Hope, Dorothy Lamour (4) Living (9) Ki:Jy Korner Kar-toons 9:10 (56) All Aboard for Reading 9:30 (9) Jack La Lanne (50) Young Artists at Work 10:00 (4) Say When (9) National Schools (56) Spanish Lesson 10:15 (7) News (56) Our Scientific World 10:25 (4) News 10:30 (2) I Love Lucy (4) (Color) Word for Word (7) Girl Talk (9) Chez Helene 10:40 (56) Science Is Fun 10:45 (9) Nursery School Time 10:55 (56) Spanish Lesson (4) Crncer.tratlon , TV Features A Look at Malaysia By United Press Interaatipnal ’ RAWHIDEI, 8:00 p. m. (2) Rowdy hires Indian as— drover,, expecting trouble from Indiah-hating Army officer (James Whitmore). - ^ ' ^—1^. KHJIARE, 8:30 p. m. (4) Kildare is assigned to help novelist ((^na Rowlands) do medical research, only to discover that he can't-stand-her writing. -.- ~ MY THREE SONS, 8:30. p^m: (7) When Steve is offered-‘job in Hawaii, the boys" rebel against idea of I leaving their girlfriends. 1 PERRY COMO, 10:00 p. m. (4) Perry’s guests are ; I Lena Horne, Dean Martin. I NEWS REPORTS, 10^30 p. m. (7) A look at troubled ! I new nation of Malaysia, role Robert Kennedy played in : i bringing about SE Aslan peace talks. ' .tr- 11:00 (2) McCoys (7) Price Is Right (9) Romper Roosl 11:10 (56) Children’s Hour 11:25 (56) Big Picture 11:30 (2) Pete and Gladys (4) (Color) Missing Links (7)' Object Is 11:55 (56) Superintendent R e-ports FRTOAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) Love of Life (4) (Color) First Impression (TTSeVen Keys (0) Take 30 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) (Ck)lor) Truth or Consequences (7) Father Knows Best (9) People in Conflict, 12:35-(56) Spanish Lesson 12:45 (2) Guiding Light 12:50 (56) All Aboard for Reading 12:55 (4) News 1:00 (2) Star Performance (4) Conversation Piece (7) Ernie Ford (9) Movie: “The Flame.” (1947) John Carroll, .Vera Ralston 1:10 (56) Children’s Hour 1:30 (2) As the'World Turns (4) Make Room for Daddy (7) Hollywood Theater (56) World History 2:00 (2) Password (4) (Color) Let’s Make a Deal (56) Adventures in Science ! 2:25 (4) News 2:30 (2) Hennesey (4) Doctors (7) Day in Court VICTIM OF BEATLEMANIA - New York police assist Eileen Hartnett, 17, who fainted while waiting for The Beatles outside the Hotel Plaza yesterday. The crowd reached 1,000 persons who welcomed the mop-haired British quartet back from Washington. The rock ’n’ Roll foursome played Carnegie Hall last night. ' Youths Beat Ex-Ppliceman Now Teacher DETROIT (AP) - A former Kalamazoo policeman who quit police work to become a teacher was beaten' Wednesday by one of two teen-agers he had stopped to question, in a hallway at Hutchins Junior High School. David R. Redding,, 26, of Royal Oak said he was slugg^ repeatedly by one youth but was not injured. The two youths fled. Redding said he thought the youths, about 16 years old, were Hutchinis-students sneaking out of class and asked them for their, halRray“pa»^ ' ' The bovs told him they didn’t have passes but were supposed to be in an English class. Redding said. YOUTH FLEES One of the youths fled when Redding followed his companion into a restroom. A struggle ensued as Redding tried to lea<| the remaining youtlj down the hallway. A second teacher, hearing the commotion, helped capture the boy, who was then taken to ti^ The Beatles Are Drowned Out 2:35 (56) Your Health 2:55 (7) News 3:00 (2) To TeU the Truth _ (4) Loretta Young (7) General Hospital (56) Spanish Lesson 3:irt9TNews 3:25 (2) News 3:30 (2) Eof Night (4) (::olor) You Don’t Say! (7) Queen for a Day (9) Friendly Giant 3:45 (9) Misterogers 4^0042) SecteL Storm- _____ (4) Match Game (7) Trailmaster (9) Razzle Dazzle 4:25 (4) News 4:30 (2) Movie: Bowery Boys (4) Mickey Mouse Club (9) Hercules 5:00 (4) (Color) George Pletrot (7) Movie: “Igmba.” (1949) Jon Hall (9) Larry and Jerry 5:15 (56) Friendly Giant 5:30 ( 56) What’s New 5:45 (9) Rocky and His Friends 5:55 (2) Weather (4) Carol Duvall III PLUMBING III DISCOUNTS ■3-Piece BATH SET! , NEW TOILET I ...X n8«»j I EXTRA SPECIALS! ! ■ Laundiy Tray i Trim... ■ 17ic19CHtNA i1Q95l I UV. W/TRIM..*l«f • I” Italnlau ttaal SInka.... Balk Taka, Irrag.... |I0.«I um ■Ikowar Hall wllk trim .. 84t.Nl llulll-ln Wa»k Basin $t.N hpB ■ I Part Kitakan llnkrf I *U KlkDI WNI ABB _ n I I rimmi. wi out awo thowo j p ISllve PLUMBING j r IT2I.MOINAW ! ! n4-iiii«ni-iiN I 1 ■i Ml MB ila ■«■■■■ ■■ 3 4 5“ r" r* r“ i6 rr 12 13 u IS 16 17 13 2(^ 55 r ■ ss 29 32 u 5T 36 37 38 45 47 46 49 b6 51 52 54 88 5T 87 66 1? 1 Gospel of St. ------ 5 First Biblical female 8 He was tempted in Eden 12 Charles Lamb 13 Rodent 14 Italian coins 15 Dispatched 16 Winglike part 17 Chart 18 Cloy 19 Separate (ab.) testable 21 Summer (Fr.) 22 Set anew, as a diamond 24 Sailor 25 Gaelic , 27 Dill 29 Mount Psilorlti 31 Camel’s hair cloth 32 Seine 33 Hew branches 34 Woody plant 36 Cleave 39 'Article 40 Damsels 44 British money of Account 46 Was borne 48 Masculine appellation 49 Male deer Candlenut trees 51 Period 52 Squire's attendant 53 Tilt 54 Compass point 55 Short jacket M Essential being | 57 Weight of India 58 Departed DOWN 1 Father of David 2 Oleic acid ester 3 Cue-giver 4 Masculine nickname 5 Expunge 6 Valleys (poet.) 7 Russian stockade 8 European mountains 9 Attentuate 10 Mount where Noah landed 11 Measuring device 22 Christ’s mission was to do this for mankind ' 23 Timbrels 26 Without (LaUn) 28 Back of neck 30 Preposition 31 Morindin dye 34 Doubtful apostle 35 Fortifications 37 Marked with spots Supernatural lizard 39 Vestige 41 Assistants 42 Oily ketone 43 Postoffice gadget 46 Emissary 47 Italian city 49 Eject violently Answer to Prevloni Poiile By HENRIETTA LEI’TH NEW YORK (AP) - The Beatles played Carnegie Hall Wednesday night and it was an awesome performance. The Beatles looked like an amusing parody of the worst elements of American rock ’n’ roll music. The word “looted” is used advisedly, for no one. especially the screaming little girls, actually heard The Beatles. The performance—by the girls J-began early in the morning and lasted all day and night, the scene shifting from the Plaza Hotel—where The Beatles are staylnig — to Pennsylvania Station—where they were arriving Some American Longhairs Ad^re English Quartet By EARL WILSON NEW York—Disguising myself as pn egghead, by wearing Yul Brynner baldheaded wig, I polled music-lovers about The Beatles'and found that sohne of our longhairs adored the British Barber Shop Quartet'. ~ Some didn’t, such .as one Jealous guy who said, “Thejr shouid limit their appearances to airports.” He works for a rival singing group.. You know the police who kept autograph fans away? We saw one police lieutenant and one policewoman getting autographs themselves. The Beatles captivated most people who met them. “They have some kind of a spark,” SAid Peter Nero, the young pianist-singer-composer. Of course there was much kidding. “They WILSON have more hair than I do but I sing better,” said Abe Burrows, author of “’The Girl With the 3 Blue Eyes,” himself a soloist with a most resistihle voice. “There’s one thing we should do with The Beatles—spray ’em,” claimed Alan King. “Elvis the Pelvis can sing better at 90,” said Billy Reed of the Little Club. Dizzy Gillespie came backstage at Ed Sullivan’s CBS TV show, got autographs, then shouted, “Man! I’m gonna sell these and then buy me four Count Basie albunu!” The consensus from reporters and photogs was that they’re unspoiled—with a sense of humor about requiring more cops than Khrushchev. “What about Detroit’s campaign to stamp out The Beatles?” they were asked .. . “We got a campaign to stamp out Detroit,” one fired bdek. ★ ★ ★ THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . George Peppard came from the funeral of his mother to N Y. to see IJz Ashley, then heads for Europe for picture promotion . . . Jane Fonda, at a “Sunday in New York’,’ skating party, said she’s going back to Paris to continue her romance—but she wouldn’t say with whom . . . Mrs. Richard Rodgers has finished a book, “My Favorite Things.” Joseph Levine entered Doctors Hospital planning to stay until he’d lost 70 pounds but "lammed” Wednesday for a (rip to L.A. Says he’ll return . . . Steve McQueen’s as big In France as The Beatles; HIk “Wanted—Dead or Alive” TV show’s running . . . Max Asnas, the pastrami pundit, speaks at. the March of Dimes salute to Harry Hershfield Maroh 8. WISH I’D SAID THAT: NonnM Coan of Norfolk visited New York and reports (here’s only one thing wrong here with the two-dollar steaks—they cost $6.75. REMEMBERED QUOTE: “Human nature is harder to change than a hundred dollar bill.” EARL’S PEARLS: NBC’S planning a documentary (writes Sol Weinstein) about the life of Socrates. It’ll be titled "This Was the Greek That Was.” Joey Bishop, performing for the Catholic Press Council, said, I got a great parking space here tonight. I juit told the attendant I was a Bishop.” That’s Earl, Brother. from Washington—to Carnegie Hall. The performance by The Beatles lasted only for about a half hour at each of two shows on the old concert stage. It is doubtful if anyone. The Beatles, the girls or disinterested observers, could have stood any more. One patron of The Beatles’ art who didn’t scream sat in the fourth row, with a child oh her lap and another beside her. When ^e spotlight was aimed at her, it turned out to be Mrs. Nelson A. Rockefeller, the New York governor’s wife. The youngsters were Jamie antf Wendy Murphy, her children by her previous marriage. A Carnegie Hall spokesman later said fte children were ies-corted to The Beatties’ dressing room, where they got autographs. Mrs. Rockefeller told a reporter the Britishers’ performance was “one of the most extraordinary things I’ve ever seen.” •LOVED IT’ “I loved it, it was marvelous. They have a lot of talent,” she said. The children nodded agreement. Another unlikely Beatle viewer was Francis Cardinal Spellman, Roman Catholic archbishop of New York, who was seen watching The Beatles as they left the Plaza Hotel. The police used security measures reserved normally for kings and presidents. When The Beatles left the Plaza for Carnegie Hall, they were taken to the hotel basement and through a subway tunnel to reach cabs which took them to the back dobr of the concert hall. BULL HORNS Police used bull horns to announce to the crowds that The Beatles again had escaped their clutches. Each announcement set up mass groans of disappointment. With all this anticipation, it wa,s strange that The Beatles fans who were iucky enough to get into Carnegie Hall—and waited 45 minutes before The Beatles came on stage—didn’t stop to listen. They didn’t stop screaming throughout the half-hour. Most of them never stopped jumping, writhing, tossing their long manes and grimacing as they watched ’The Beatles’ gyrations and listened to their own screams. The Beatles, as if there is anyone who doesn’t already know it, are four British imports, John I.«nnon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Rlngo Starr, who play drums and guitars and sing and sport haircuts down to their eyebrows. Radio Programs- WWJ. Nwwt m WJSK, N«Wb PON, ioSUwrsnM WWW Horn's**"*'®" WXYlf, T*«i slXtki wwji Hoeniyi Dtiraii v» till- WJN, wvtnmt Canc*rl ♦iSS-WJS', LAvmwvt Ski N«wi IliSt-WWJ, World Nowi ISiM-wwJ, Mink Scon* lliW~WWJ. Ntwi liii'tiW'spr* 1130) WK)N0460) WJBKdSOO) WHri-FM(94.7) WPyN,^NwRt,^Jofry OiMn SiW-WilR, Nowi, Jim wood WWJ, Ntwi Rrlondthlp ciub WXYZ. N«wi, Muilc CKLiFlTor V*n school office The youth fled when Redding turned his back for a moment to talk to an assistant principal. We We’re Left Holding the Bag! Extri Spo oial Prioos toAii GE 30” Range Woodtone Brown, Clock and Timer. Spapial Lew Price. BOWL •| from 9 to 11 avary Sunday Morning ; ai offan at you wish ; I ***1 Come in and Viiif i I ALL STAR ^ ROWLER ^ I Robby Kwieclen ;i I * * ★ I i OPEN BOWLING ii I 7 Days-7 Nights ij I EVERY WEEK ★ ★ ★ I Ladiet’ Day ^ Every Friday 10 A.Mi to 6 RM. Men's Day Every Monday to A.M. to 6 P.M. I ORCHARD I 1 Lanes & Lounge ii 645 Opdyka FE S-9293 ;i ItBsamond Williams SONOTONE 29E.C«nwll FE 2-1225 Sarvfeas amt tapplfas for ALL HEARINO AIDS TRiPil^ HEW i if 23” Mlmi2^ SUMUHE ii •119 VUITH TRADE FREE HOME PHiSENTATIONS USED TV BUYS 17" ZENITH •1495 17"MOTOROU •2495 17" WESTINOHOUSI •24®* 21" AAUNTZ •29®* 21" ADAAIRAL •34®* 21" RCA •39®* 21" AAOTOROLA •39®* 24" PHILCO •69®* 24" RCA •79®* • OASN or TERMS M OTHER SETS ll-OAY-EXOHANQE PRIVILEOE FE 2-2257 WALTON TV 51SE.WaRonBlvd. CORNER JOSLYN Opan 9 to 9____ rRuio7n7Trfp|;if {tubes tested fnEE I Over 400 Tube Types In Stock II .. I Open Dally 9 A.M. to.Ti.W P.M. «• ! JOHNSON RADIO 5 TELEVISION ■ I 48 East Walton Vt Block last of Baldwin FE 1-4819 I itC'A-XKNITII ^ COIAOR TV-*395 IsALEi^saTV nooHS' Chaok our discount prioos btfora you buy ... f ACTOHY AUTHORirtO Op«n Mon A frl. V RCA a HNITM SIRVICI Ivo* *o 9 P.M. Mo 11»9 CONDON’S RADIO & TV 730 West Huron FE 4-9736 ^ ... D—u ...............rr...--'---■-:-^------:t- :--^-:-^ -r.--:-r ^ THE PONTIAC PRKS^, THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 13, 1964 ^T-f- You Can Count on Us ... Quality (’osts No iVIoro at Soars SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO Lay-Away 'Now. Craftsman 20-lii. Rotary Mower i With Self-Cleaning Blade TONTTE, FRIDAY and SATURDAY! Shop 9l»'lil 9 VM. I ^iJIll^s-Moii., I'liiirs.. hri. and SA l l Slioo TiU's. and Wrd. *) \,M. [ ntii ai.AO • Die-cast magnesium housing • Pre-cleaner air filter New light, but extra strong magnesium housing. Craftsman 3-H.P., 4-cycle engine powers nick-resistant blade • . gives clean, crisp cut to grass. No-pull key lock starter. Engine controls on handle. 7 easy heights-of-cut % to 314 in. "iLUCIyEANING BLADE keeps grass from sticking inside blade housing. Assures a cleaner housing, better ajr flow, more efficient cutting,-. Means less drag on engine. Eliminates cleaning after mowing. Power Edgcr-Trimmer, Reg. $79.99! .69.99 Craftsman IK-in. Heel Hand Mowers Reg. »;h.99 28'"" • IlIoM.'iil Apiil 1.1 Our l>r«l liHiid red mower. Steel I'raiiie. Aluiiiiiiiiin wlienl.. bttve so! Cr«»i catdier exirii. Crarisiriaii 22-iii. Sidf-Propcllctl Kolary l-cycie engine. Self-clean- Rea. »l ing Idade keeps grass from slicking "1 ^/| 95 inside housi^ng. Pre-cleaner air filler. Fingertip cutting height adjustment. 'liiAmil Craflsiiian *n-Shop Vaciiiini Nt»w on Sale! Cruftisinan 26-iii., 5-H.P., 4-cycIe Riders Special blade keeps aluiiiiiiuin bousing R*‘** *239.99 clean as you mow. 4 cutting heights. O ^/f ,99 blade (dnicli. Priced to save you-more, •d tj X' flordicnrc Dept., Sears Ufalii llasement Heg. $.17.99 24^'* Ulilirgc it Pulls in sawdust, *lirt, grit, liaif, clolli scru|ts. llse in busenieni, shop, garage, liuiher shop. 1.')-in. drum cleuiis u long lime before einplying. lift. hose, AcecssOry Kll and Dolly. Kcguliirly ii|.!/i-Il.P., 4-cycle^^ngiue. Prc-eleaner Reg, S99.99 Hcg. SB9.99 tSO'*** air eleuiter. 0«ick wheel, roller QQ99 , 1 1 -I'right adjustment. Recoil starter. cl Raise bamlle to Iravcl; lower to Viiliiea m $29.99 _ tdlNi-ge It Orhilal SaiulerhasAiwhfoe S.jiaiiil o|Hir*iioii. Lighl |fur ovri'liead une. lirsvy-uiiiy. $MbrA Saw haa eulra long Ligae plain fof nnhlliiy. Dn-vnlops over Vk-ll.P. SavnI H-lii. Drill lias spInHIn lock. l/it-H.P. for ronltnnniis duly. Buy now, save *l« at .Sear.! . Matt, Giant Gym Sets with 6-ft. Slide Reg. S.39.95 2999 Charge It Rjl"- y-pasnengrr lawn awing, glide ride with 'jet dash pglieh, 2 swings, rings, bar, slide. Similar to picture. Sturdy Gym Sets . . . Action, Fun for All Rugged 2Vti-in. tube steel frame with Reg. *59.9S six leg«. Ra» A-pasaenger swing with ^ canopy, two swings on 100-lb. test chain, glide ride and 8-inch slide. 'll ^ Toy Dept., Perry St. Batement * i,© Mortev bows an Urm E«r Payment Plait Pure-Pure While House Paint Keg. $7.98 Covers in just one coat. Lay-Away yours tonilo at Sears. 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Awnings, Hoods & Canopys 25% OFF 22^=* $29.50 Window Stylo SO” Wide, 23” PruJ., 28” Dro|i All .Siaca Available FIHEROLAS IN.SIJLATION *3..19 PaiMir-Wrap, .A-hteh ... 5.A6* •A,39 Foil-Wrap, .l ineh ... 4.H7* *2.19 Pouring FIberglas . .1.67* 1'.lk».WMhPriw Buililiog Materials, Perry Basemeat "SalisfacUoM giiaraiilccd or your money hmdy’ SEARS DomiiIqwh INmtiar IMiom* I'K 11 < I The Weather i. WMther' Bureau Forecast Cloudy, Colder (Oetaiti on Page }) ' THE PONTIAC PRE VOL. 122 ir ir ir ir -k PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. TIirHSl)A\'. FEB1U'AH\' i:}. li»(!C—5() PAGES Fighting Fierce on Cyprus LBJ, Sir Alec Discuss Arms, Trade Policies Hnd Dynamite on Tracks Boys Foil Train Sabotage CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (.ti — They coolly dismantled f li e j would have exploded under the ' moonport area of the Cape Ken-An attempt (0 dynamite a : c h a r g e‘minute.s before the j locomotive’s wheels. medy launch complex. Talks Are Going Well frelgh t train of the strike-1 ^ , , ,, J train whizzed bv, unaware of its Desoite DifferencesTer"* \ ^oa^ kdose call with cihsaster. Uespire UlTterences Railway was foiled last night the boys had not taken | Facilities are under construc- on Deals With Reds TELL OF DRAMA — Actor Leon Ames of television’s “Mr. Ed’ ’show and his wife, Christine, tell newsmen of being held at gunpoint at their North Hollywood, Calif., home last night in a $50.,000 extortion-kidnap attempt that ended in arrest of a young piechanic and his wife. TV Actor Laughs Off Real-Life Adventure NORTH HOLLYWOOD, Calif. (/P)—Veteran actor Leon Ames, released after beinf» held at gunpoint for four .hours in a $50,000 extortion attempt, laughed it off. “I’ve played a lot of these' parts before,’’ he said. Ames, who also is a prominent auto dealer, his wife, Christine and two others were involved in the real-life drama yesterday that ended with the capture of a young mechanic who had fled with Mrs. Ames as a hostage. She was released unharmed after police, directed from a helicopter overhead, surrounded the car. Burned Store to. Relocate Dowmtown City Site Sought by Owner Ames, 61. plays in the "Mr. Ed’’ television series and was a star in the fcries, “Life With Father,’’ as All as many movies, He said the action,' reminis-, cent of a gangster movie, started When “I heard the doorbell ring, U was just after « a.m. There was a young fellow standing there with a gun. He said, 'Back up and shut up.’ COULDN’T BELIEVI^: IT “He said, ‘This is a holdup and a kidnap. Don’t try anything funny.’ “I couldn’t believe" il. He said one false move and my wife would be dead. "He asked for $r)(),000 within two hours. 1 pretended to be sick, thinkipg maybe 1 could get the gun, but then I realized that was silly.” When Ames (old the man he did not have $r)(l,()()(), the suspect told him to contact his partner, Ralph Williams, and tell him to come to the Ames’ home for a business conference. When Williams arrived, (he (Continued on Page 2', Col, It) The owner of the Big Value Furniture store, glided by fire Tuesday, said todily that he will attempt to relocate the businOss in downtown Pontiac. “A# it now stands," said Burt (lold. “it is just a matter of finding the right-sized building. j “We were very successful in the old location,” said Gold,; whb only four months ago opened another Big Value store ; in Roseville. Gold opened thp Pontiac store last March aflei' the building, owned by the Walter 0. Briggs Tru.st, was vacated by (lie Yankee Department Store. . URBAN RENEWAL'.' “I was told yesterday,” Gold , said, “that the building would not be r('l)uill because il might be part of urban renewal in three years.” about 18.000 (he huiliting, in-altuehed warehouse and balcony urea, ae-eording to Gidd. The tire, wiiicli did'an'esli mated $lf)3,0()0 damage to IIk building and $:).'),()()() to Hie con tents, M'as to have lieen inves tigaled by the Slate l'’ire Mar shal's office today. WASHINGTON (^) --President Johnson and Britis.li Pr i m e Minister Sir Alec Douglas-Home meet today to discuss disarmament problems and i such ticklish economic questions as long - term credits to C o m m u n i s t countries. Wliite Mouse sources reported i that the talks between the two; leaders yesterday w'ent ex-' tremely well The prime minister and For- ' cign Secretary Richard A. Butler told .luhnson and Secretary of State Dean Rusk that the British government wholeheartedly supports the U. S. position on South Viet Nani, British spokesmen re- ■ ported. Sources said Johnson and : Douglas-Home established good rapport in their first formal meeting despite differences on ’ such delicate problems as trade with Cotnrnunist countries in*> general, and especially U.S. re- ’ sentment over the Briti.sh sale of $11 million worth of buses to (fuba. k k -k This topic, informants said, was disposed of quickly when the prime minister did not conceal his annoyance over American criticism of the sale. , , . , ..... • I The identities of the boys by four boys, authorities said. j wepe withheld. The youths were walking | Deputy Leif Larson of the along the tracks when they | Brevard (bounty sheriff’s office discovered 45 sticks of dyna- i said .the dynamite was electric-mite hooked to a rail. ally wired to the tragk abd their quick action, might h‘ave been said. / lion there for a n launch. Last S wh d a y, an FEC freight train was derailed by dynamite north of Miami. The line is operating with nonunion labor and supervisory pier-soiine.l. f somebody , led,” Larsonll’JCKETS PROTEST 1 ' Earlier this week, railroad unioir pickets appeared at Cape | Kennedy and Merritt Island to I protest movement of the dine’s j freight trains into Merritt Is-1 land with construction materi-; als. All construction halted when | In last night’s' incident, the wlorkers refused to cross the ! dynamite was , placed on the: picket lines but was resumed i track about five miles north of after a temporary federal court! Titusville and about 1,5 ihiles injunction “was issued yesterday.: from where the FEC tracks join ; A hearing is scheduled^ht Or-1 a government-owned spur track | lando today on whether to 'ex- i leading into the Merritt Island tend the injunction, Swiss Reject Japan Faces Russia Protest Pressure on China Ties Say Reds Refused to Aid in Defector Case Arrange Truce After Cypriot PortCityfight U. S., British Work on Cease-Fire Treaty for Strife-Torn Island NICOSIA, Cyprus —Fighting between Turkish and Greek "Cypriot communities broke out again today in the coastal city of Limassol to shatter a brief cease-fire. NICOSIA. Cyprus t/Pl— Heavy fighting broke a cease-fire in the southern port of Limassol at clawp today and Greek Cypriots swung makeshift armor into a five-hour battle against the Turkish quarter. Then the British arranged another truce. GENEVA .Switzerland , impli security in the disarmaiiKMit delegate'’,' (lun to ttie United State: FORDS DIVORCED Mr gether at the opera in Detroit i day. Mrs. Ford was granted a (Sec .story, Page 2. i and Mrs. Henry Ford II. to-I 1!)59, wi're divorced yester-divofre at Fairfield, Idaho. The shooting came as Amer-, lean and British diplomats By lOIlN RODERICK pursued talks in Nicosia with TOKYO (AID ~ Japan’s left wing and some bu.sinessmen are: has sharply rejee ed the Soviet troubled island. Union s complaints about Swiss government to follow the exam- ; An Associated Pre.ss corre-ple of France and recognize' spondent said he saw five Turk-Red China, ^ ish dead in a Turkish'Cypriot I'rime Minister llayato area of Limassol overrun in the ikedu, an Asian friend ot thc''Biattle. He said the total could United States, refuses th, ®aly after offi- stampeded into abandoning his ;‘^■als gained access to the sur-poliey of nonreoognition. rounded quarter But he show.s signs of waver- i ing on some points. Soviet di'fei'- Praise Is GrowjrFg for Music B^ivaI Item' llelg, president of the (ieneva eanlonal slate government, yesterday called the .Soviet charges “miloumied, unjust and milriendly.” Hi' said till' Riissian.s had re fu.sed to coopi'rate with Swisi authorities and even liinderec the .Swiss police investigation. STKATEGK GOODS He was reported as having lold Jolinson: • Britain, while barring the export (it slralegic goods to (’ommiinisl ('I'juiilries, intends to earry out peaeetui trade with lliem. i • Tlie l-trilish are at q- loss understand the diilereiiee between till' United Stall's feeding Mu,sic Cominunists ,willi American xiimmcf. wlieat, but objecting to Cubans Mil,, (S' being Iraiisporli'd on British / 1)1,ses.’ rciicfion tlial was (lofimlo 'It's wondcriul for Oakland County and Oakland Greek Cypriots .said they lost e dead and several wounded-In debate with the Socialists : NEAR. MOSQUE ami Communists in Parliament | The wor.st fighting centered * * * yesterday, Ikeda coneeded near the Ariiaup Mesjid .Sein>on K. Tsarapkiii, chiel ; that a new .situation would arise i Mo.sque! Soviet delegate to tlie interna-1 should Red China be .seated i lional disarmament conference,; the United Nations this fall a.s j accused Western agents of “pro-' Hie sole repre.sentativeOif the vocative activity” in the detec- > Chinese people Hon of Yuri I, Nossenko, liti. British military source i said the Greek Cypriots used armored bulldozers, an old tank and homemade armored ByJA^iTODKl.l. SECURITY OFFICER . He has been identified bv U S. iuljt'clivc' mo.sl individuals u.so „f|jeials as an officer of tiie So-KGB seeurity agency. "VVoiidcrfur when asked for Jjfrttir comments on the Meadow Brook Fi'sli^'^eheduled for Oakland University this NORMAI.IZE REI.ATIONS If ttuH liappens Fiireign Min- cease-fire ister Masaymslu Ohira told S«-,^^^ established la.sl night, the , cia i.st Cliichiro Hozumi Japan | ^ I will normalize’ its diplomatic|^ mwnsmen , |)resident of Pontiac Slate Bank, had In a statement to newsmen, i Tsarapkin acensed Svy itzerland ol luiling 10 provide adequate seeurity tor delegutes and de-miincled the Swiss gel Nossenko back. 'latioris with the mainland. He did not use the word recognition howevi ' their Turkish fellow townsmen ! lay down their arms, gei ■ral, that Britaii>’< economy depends on fqrt'igii . , . trade, while Hiat ot thr'Lnited ’'j*' Slates doejt not, University hnd all the pi'o ’* 'I'liere wa s((uure feet ii ['ludiiig In Today's Press City l'’ire Marslial Cliarles,' Metz asked for the n.s.sistaiu'i' i after bi'ing unable to find Hie cause of Hie blaze or where il [Started. I''ifly I’lmUiic firemen liallled I,KAN AM) ilUNCUy III' also repeated Hie British ’ view that a lean and luiiigry Uomiiuinist is ihore cla’ngeroiis Ilian a tal one, a thesis wliieh-' London iM'lleve.s—supporls Britain’s insistence on irei' trade with Hie Climmuni.sts. Soviets Claim Beatles Used as 'Weapon' Estes, if Pontiac iH Nazi Kills Self in Prison Cell 2nd Defendant Dies in Fall From Window Siiinmoning Soviet Amhassa-(jor Alexander l.ochli'liakov to, Ills office In Bern, Foreign Min- agaiii.sl •a|)kiti's iT' ill till' I’ontiae area are very forlunule in Inning the .Meadow Brook Music Festival to enioy so near as at Oakland University.” .Said l,e.slic Gillaiii, inaiiager ot the Pontiac Mali Montgonu'i v Ward store"Tliis will be a line asset to the ciimmiinily. There is sure In be a very good ri'-sponse lo this sort of tiling” KNOWS advantages Mrs Uliarles lllmellioeli ■ of; 70,(100 of 200,000 menial defe FliANKFUHT, Germar; - Dr. Werner lleyde h a him.self in days Ills Jail cell tmla'y, lielore his Ir ■hiei (iefeiKlant in Hie killing of . ^ 'll i.iiii .mil iiiili ........1 liiikeside, Birminghai nuisieian, said stu' i’ the Nai Hie liliize from 11:30 pm, Tues- MO,SCOW lUPI) - a .Soviet grew U|) ill the Tanglewood ai Lesinski day to shorn V lielore 1 am ves- newspapi'i' loday liinled that and knows wiml that .sort oi . 1,1. govermir blasts lerday. Tile Beatles are Hie secri'l gamzation can do lor the s Mackie lor .slalemeiil wea|H)ii ot Hie linlidi I'!,'laiilish- rounding countryside pa(;e r-6. Dnnliar Pl3nl/nlnz4 iiienl. "ll’s the type of activity ' may call more wiliies.ses I'AGE R 8. Vacations Steelworkers find i:i-week viu'Dlion enjoyable PAGE R-H. by Inch of Snow Hie Aren News Astrology Bridge Coinles Editorials Food Seellon Markets . Qbitiinries Sports Thenters I-PI •fV-Radio I'rograms D l.'l Wilson, Furl D-i:i Women's I’nges C« U II HI (:.|'2 ('■I’t C-12 ' A-« C-2-(’-3 D-7 Bill D-l-D-8 More than I inch oi sim gi'iilly during Hie iiiglit i Ponlific area. The U.S. Meallier Bureau I predii'ts lonlght will he eli'iir iiml eold will) ii low oi 22. Teniperaliires will shoot up to 38 tomorrow ailernoon. There's a ehanee of some light snow in the morning. Today'.s southwesterly wiiuls at 10 miles per hyiir will diminish tonight and become It |o 15 ni p II, tomorrow Twenty eight was Hie low leailiii); in dowiiliiwii f'ontiar prior lo It a 111, By I pin,, tlie , thermometer I'egisleml 3V. ('iirdiiig lo Hie newspaper Mos-koiskl Komsoinolels (Moscow Amiiig Commiinisi l.eagae Mcmlieri, "disiracis llrilisli youiigsters Iriiiii poliliis and biller pondering over disgraced /ideals and shattered hopes." After pointing out lluil really ought lo liaye,” she said. “We re delighted it’s going to lie out here, tl’his Is iiii art urea to begin with. There - are many imlapped re- murde World Wi The No. 2 deti'iidant in Hii' ease, Friedrieh Tillinami, 6(1. died yesli'i'duy in a tall Irom an eighih-lloor window in Cologne. Dr. Fritz Bauer, ehiel prosecutor lor Hie stale of Hesse, said (hat also was a suicide. The Turkish Cypriots were This imsilion leaves Hie gov-‘ ^aid lo have refirsed 'without a ('rmiK'nt room to maneuver once ' Kuaranlee of protection by Brit-Hi(' issue reaches the decision-! triKips. imikiiig stage ' PA.ST RESORT * Briti.sh tnsips moved in as a . , ' ’’*‘*“* ■la|)uii lias yet lo ^y,,^ jo try lo sejiarate ^dricli Walilen handed determine what policy to lollow „tants and were them- ........ protest; toward the question of sealing, „„ such hazards eason Britain wants to ,, , , ,,, I , surrender its police role to r" Ml.... llelg .said I sarapkiM wail- i,|.;'|'i,|.;,vr ed 2!) ilours lietore iniorming .Swiss police ol No.sseiiko's disappearance, llelg declared Hid Russians,' refused to give Swiss police ,. , . . „ . photograph oi Nossenko, |,js j "H ited ( hines< hirlli dale or particulars of his i Americans here and in il hackgrmiiid, and refused lo al M'ashinglon are reported lo Iw' ' .....‘......‘ '... reeoiieiled In the likelili.iod that .lapaii eiinuol long resist il the dam breaks and a lorreiil ol reeoguition by other states results from France's ■einarks. j the lied Chinese in the United Gc- Nations, international truce force. 'I'his appeared lo he a retreat * ’ .tmm declarations that Japan The British .said it appeared and the United Stales would the fighting |iad -Stopped at closely wiHi the view of H 30 a rn. For a time the Greek y, .Cypriots seemed to be on the verge of wiping out tlie Turks inspection, of his lielongings i pcrinil (|ueslioning of oilier! ■mliers of Hie Soviet Heh'ga- ”ln these circumsianees, il is' not surprising tliat our iiujuiries led to no posilive resii'll,” llelg | Felix Resnick, director of the l’(intiiie Symphony orelu'strii and a rrH'mher of llu' Dc'lroit Symphony oreheslrii whieli 'Tilltminn, (it), was < id the eulhanasiu ecu Im during World Wai ee chid III Her II News Flash NEW YORK a I'D-Chrys-ler ( orp, loday reported that Itlli.i prolils more lhaii dmi bled Irom a year ago lo the highest level in the Company’s .'ID-year historv. Business piessiire for dos I's with I'eking lias come tm 'ins that hdieve a nmsidi lie expansion of trade lidween e two countries is po.ssible I.lh- SiK h leaden ot Ikeda’ parly ; Minister i'a ha.shi and e.x-Minisleis Kenzo Midsimnn a a n d Talsunosuke 'I'akasaki share this vtj'w The eruption of fighting broke a ecuHe lire arranged in Uimassol by the British last night. .Maj Geii.i/ I’eter Young, Briti.sh commander of ttie Cyprus truce force, liud flown to Liinas.sol with Hie Greek Cy-|iriot Inienoi- Minister, I’oly-caipos ^■eogad|ls. to talk lo Hie combatants Tile savage figliting came as S Undersecretary of State eorge Ball again met with rt'sideni .Makarios in an al-■inpl to get his approval of an (’onl limed on Page 2, Col. 4i 'oneerl halls in IV'HHin rdii.sed giving the eoncerls this sum-H play The Readi's "oven for gavi' Hie ori'lieslra's view point II,s 2 Commissioners Back Story on Carter I'dl as Ills (I hig money," Hie newspnp said. "Whiil IS the allilude oi the Hritislimilliiii'illes'’"’ “'Th,,. musicians ot Hie * * * phony iDelroiti are very It an.swered: ' They do not in- ,>d aboiiHhe fe.stival and ; terfere jlnd moreover the|' en- per cent behind,it iind Hii ing inh :y qpon hearing of their pei'lormanee.s, BKiGEST THIN<; , When I lu'ard almiil it planning singe., inv r liigg^e: BaiH'f charged that Hiere is a cnnsplrfu'y lo prevent the trial, whidr wyis Ii) have tH'giin in l.imimrg ne8l Tuesday. He did not elaborate Tw,, CiI\■ CommisHionei's iii- snieai 'campaign , being eoi)' PUBLIC l•il()l•^:llTV j clay supported statements pill)-”D'''ed , liy The Pmitlac Karl Heinz Zinnal. prosecutor lislied yesterday concerning Hie on the ca.se, lold a newsman leslgnation ol City Manager "I suspect lliere are hiaiiy doc- Hohert A. Carter tors will) are interested that ’ th,. statements were altrlb-and work during ; uii>d to official soiirees al City Hall who wished lo remain anonymous. the I Continued i tiH'ir name; the the Tiiird Reicli do n(il lii' ivas public pi'dpi'i ii' " A third delrndniil in the lioth loi (jj. Helrlmunii, Page 2, Col, 3) (Coiilmued on Page 2, Col,'5) I ' The remark' I today by Mayo j dry as ylies that hrcl part of said that if the mnyor "wants to make a hig Issue out ol this” they would stand beliiml William II their slalements. lor and ('harles H. Harmon Landry, in opposing the story, both agreed today llml ye.sier- said "I contacted the commiij-day'.s story was not inaccurate, j sion-over the weekend individu-NOTHING WRONG > ally” in reaching p deelslqn lo discuss llu' resignation Tu('.«^la\ mgid. Harmon .said Im nmld see 'g,.,! "nllimg wrong with Hie story, ” R(ilif,|i't A, l,an-j • They hlentllied themselves ; 'I'aylor today said, ' He dldn ^as (hif anonymous sources and i contact me at all.” I ■ ' i / mo im Russians Propose Nations Slash Spending for Arms TIIK PON'l’IAC iniKSS. THrilSDAV. FEimtJAIlV 13, 19G4 GENEVA Ip - The Soviet Union proposed today that all nations agree on a simultaneous slash of 10 to 15 per cent in their military expenditure. Soviet dellgate VllU^V VIV I obstacle in the pajh of! I agreement,” Tsarapkin de-Preliminary Budget| , , _ Brazilian delegate josue de Approved by County castro had proposed that the amount of the reduction should be discussed in the subcommittee, but that 20 per cent of the money saved should go to help underdeveloped nations. f[,g symphony and the northeijn ! still HOPE An American spokesman ex-! rural area.” pressed some reservations about Mrs. L. L. Colbert, 491 both proposals,'but .stres.sed that: Martell Drive, Bloomfield the U. S. delegation will give ||j||s had this to say: “I can’t them “careful study ” think o)* anything nicer. It’s * * ★ j been needed for a long time “It will first be neces.sary to | everybody coop- find some means of determining <^rates. 1 wish we’d had it what constitutes a military! when my chddren were small, budget,” the spokesman said, i ‘he most wonderful thing SOVIET CUT He recalled that a recent cut j (.g supervisor of in the Soviet defense budget was 1 ^.ggg^^^ accompanied by a big increase | ,ghools, agreed with others. to the float (2nd picture), when it flips, partially dunking Taylor (3rd picture). But the tale ended happily when White finally clambered aboard and was pushed back to shore by Taylor (4th picture). Birmingham Area News Sfudenfs Take Up Issue of Board Suspensions Music Festival Continuing to Drav/ Praise (Continued From Page^One) Cyprus Battle Fierce A June 8 vote on a three-part community college proposal and a preliminary general education fund budget were approved yesterday by the . Oakland Schools Board of Education. The college vote, recommended by a citizens committee, will be on (1) establishment of the college, (2) a 1-mill tax levy to finance it, and (3) election of a six-member board of trustees. The County School Board okayed a preliminary 1964-65 general education budget of $525,491, increased $163,401 over the current year’s expenditure. ★ * ★ The new tjudget incorporates a balance of $81,195 from this year and calls for a balance in, . . , ,u June 1964, of $122,260. | wonder how much of the ______________________________________^ I search had a military purpo.se. j ^ terrific opportunity to have | Wednesday dissolved the mar-The spokesman added .that Igood music and everyone will I •’■age of auto maker Henry Ford another possible difficulty igainby it.” |H ^od his wife, Anne- ~ I (Continued From Page One) i modify his ’stand.' Ball post-Iinternational force to keep ‘he departure to continue peace on Cyprus. r- The shooting finally stopped to I allow Ian William, a British of-Greek Cypriot sources saidificial, to enter the besieged Makarios had rejected the pro-1 Turkish sector and bring out posal, but the continued nego- the local Turkish Cypriot lead-tiations lent some hope that thfe er, Ramadan Djemil, for peace Greek Cypriot leader would (talks. I that’s happened to the com-; munity in a long time. ’ in the scientific research budget leaving western experts to j -irs a wonderful cultural opportunity for our community. It Mrs. Henry Ford II Is Granted Divorce BIRMINGHAM—“We have no legal grounds to protest,” a parent of a suspended Seaholm’ High School student said today. But the school’s student body isn’t going to let that stop them, the school’s student body isn’t going to let that stop them. Parents of three of the 18 boys suspended last week for fraternity membership today abandoned their attempt to get" a temporary restraining order . which would return their sons to classes. “The school board has erred —it picked up the wrong group of .boys,” Mrs. Jack Sights, 560 Watkins, said. “But 1 guess by law boys can’t have a club.” The parents who werej seeking Circuit Court action were told by their attorney last night that the board pi^ucation was within its rights in suspending the boys. TAKE ISSUE FAIRFIELD, Idaho (AP)-A ,mandie. Henry, then routine, 20-minute court-hearing ACTUAL EXPENDITURES Thus, actual budgeted expenditures will run $403,231. County Supt. William J. Emerson, who said the budget Includes two entirely new programs, said the idea of a running balance was created to carry the school district between tax collections. He said that a vocational edu-1 cation department and a re-{cut treaty would have to search department had been (,(, approved by all countries— added for next year. j presumably including France * * * l and Red China, which are not The need for more vocational taking part in the talks here, education in public schools, and j ★ ★ * a county director to coordinate efforts in this field, were a might arise through the fact that in the United States, defense expenditure is the ultimate responsibility of the U. S. Congress and not of the executiV^e branch of the government, which would negotiate the treaty. Tsarapkin emphasized that a 1 mar- I riage that was iaunched in glittering style 23 years ago. STIMULATE INTEREST Mrs. Ferdinand'Gaensbauer, a member of the’planning com-1 The uncoptested divorce was mittee, said, “This will stimu- granted Mrs.,Ford on grounds late interest in music and art of mental cruelty by Judge in general which will help ev- j Charles Scoggin. A year ago he i.ssued a divorce decree for “It’s good for the communi- Margaretta Fitler Murphy, who ty in every way. Oakland Uni- later became the wife of New versity is leading in every- I York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefel-tliing cultural.” ler. George Yansen, president of, ,, ,, , * * , , the Pontiac Symphony, added! awarded his reaction. ) .?( couple's only An informed British source said the Turks had been taking “a very bad beating” from the Greek Cypriots and were in danger of being wiped out. The Turkish Cypriots in the area were reported surrounded and the source said the Greeks have launched a complete military operation against them. The government radio said the new battle, the third in as many days at Limassol, broke out at dawn around Beren-garia castle at the approaches ; of the second largest city of ; I Cyprus. , The fighting lent fresh urgency to Ball’s mission. 'The U.S.- [British proposals would keep| in“thrschoorca“feteryar‘&^^ i the U.N. Security Council out of; p o a r d members and parents turning to Yale University after j^ ^ | haVe been invited to the 7:30 a summer in. Europe. Anne, 17, j .............................. P-^i- session. was going back to the Convent | planned to leave last ★ of the Sacred Heart in Noroton, ! Instead, he stayed over I The school board ordered, the Conn. ' I nnd held another conference I suspension of 10 boys last week. The Ford-McDonnell engage- with Maka'riOs this morning. j On Friday, the effective day, ment was announced in the | Makarios rejected the plan ' eight more came forth and said spring of Ford’s last year at nfter two meetings with Ball, | they were as guilty as the oth- Yale. ' I Greek Cvnriot source.^ reoorted. 1 ers f However, Seaholm students have taken up the issue,, arguing that the boys should have been punished in some other way. A student committee has been circulating petitions to have the boys returned to j classes. i The group has scheduled a Monday night forum on the topic Periods of suspension are 10 and 20 days. Smith and Ross A. Wagner, Seaholm. principal, met Friday with nine parents who protested that the penalties were too severe. “Most of the questions raised had been pretty thoroughly considered before the penalties Smith said. Child Critical From Burns in Clothing Fire A five-year-old Shelby Townr ship girl is in critical condi- I Greek Cypriot sources reported. 1 ers therefore and should be sus-He wants U.N. control over the I pended too, according to Supt. I force. I Dr. John B. Smith. insi.sted that the west I “It .s recommendation of local school board designates, he said. I ^oiild be PRIOR TO ADOPTION These representatives of the 30 county school boards will pass on the preliminary budget prior to fjnal adoption by the all Oakland Schools board in June or July. would have to accept the propo- 'fine addition to our area. / j t ' L'lj r-»j i*s* i IlK.di CUllUl'* minor child, Edsel Bryant Ford, ^0^ today, suffering burns she >ms to me to be very i'w*‘*Lright by his received yesterday when her iciple before' thei y detaih'd discussion. COLOSSAL BURDEN “Skyrocketing military budgets absorb $120 billion annually, imposing a colossal burden on •ountries rich and poor,” (ipkin Mrs. Jo.seph L, B, Bennett, father. The couple has tvVo other clothing caught fire as children, Charlotte long active in Pontiac music circles, sums it up this way. i AT .SKI LODGE Mrs, F"ord, the former Anne I flaming rubbish “For .war, we've driven to McDonnell ,,f Southampton, Detroi to hear fine music. Now Long Island, N.Y., was driven to think it can be heard so clo.se to home is marvelous. It will. agreed with de Castro•daho farm community for the * * * ' that some of the money saved ^ ap- hearing. She returned to the Emerson said that $22,930 was i should be devoted to developing for the vocational education! the poorer areas of the world. department, while $19,920 ' budgeted tor research on new educational processes and tech niques. but made no comment on de Castro’s suggestion th earmark 20 per cent of the savings for this purposiv The Weather Full U..S, Weather Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Spow tapering off to flurries by afternoon with around 2 inches total snowfall, high today 35. Clearing and colder tonight, low 22. I‘'riday increasing cloudiness in the afternoon, high ,'18. Winds southwest to west 10 to 20 miles becoming northwest this ntternooii diminishing tonight and heeoming southwesterly 8 to 15 miles Friday afternoon. Laughs Off Extortion Try played near pile. ) Reheeca Barnes, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Barnes, 11069 Rhode, watched her mother bring the rubbish 45 miles from her Sun Valley! out and light it in an old otiage to this soutli-cenlral washtnb the family used as a trash burner. „i..1, I - I J Mrs. Barnes returned to the ^ 1 u 'house. She looked out the win- All property rights had been ettled by agreement at the daughter’s coat and T Jill ‘ ^''Irt as a young playmate stood by helplessly. iSUmiSier,” a court .statement: j said. No details were di.sclosed. ,, , ,, , . , : Hunning out to her daughter, ' Ford 45 grandson of the late; Mrs. Barnes burned her own [Henry Ford, had.......‘...‘ the divorce. He (Continued From Page One , I gunman held him, Ames and his of "whidi ;'oniment on jiands ripping off the flaming as in Detroit: clothes, for a routine meeting of the .She then called Shelby Town-Ford Motor (.0, board of direc- | ship Fire Chief Clyde Schmidt. •hairman. ' who rushed the child to St. Mount wife and a house euesl Herbert a who rushed the child t r 50.' ol BUn- “j,',”"'?j.',”'"' ' K- .......... . . ■the Bank of Arne ' opi'ued. tically with blonde. Italian-horn , l-ohce .said 70 per cent of the Miiria Christina Vettore Austin, [ girl's body i.s covered with .> The gunman ordered WII- 34, the divorced wife of a British - ond and third degree burns. Hums to get the $.50,000 from ' “ the bank In small denomina- lions. ''Bring i he here by noon or I'll •e ol these people, " i» Williams deparled [I DRINK COFFEE Ia The trio .sal in the Ames [!J home, drink'iug coffee under the 'I watchful eye of the yoiing man 1[ with the cockl'd pistol, nulil f Wllli.’uns relurucd will] the I' money ahoul 12 l.'> He handed o\cr the moue\ He didn’t say he had noli-lied police and lhal the place was surrounded bv (dlicers— including one in a helicopter oMTlii'ad, The gunman had Williams tie Ames' mmilh, ankles and wrists, Ihen locked Williams and Baum garlekeV iii Hie Inmk ol Ames' al officei DECLINED (OMMENT .Mrs Austin, in New York, de elined to speak to newsmen. The Ford’s legal separation Iasi Aug 3 stunned ,sociely' circles, j ‘The romaiice slarled in 1936 when Ann,e and Ford met aboard the French liner Nor- [ Nazi Defendant Commits Suicide car aft NATIONAL WEATHER - Bam is forecdsl jonighi for Iho eiilire central iiiid soiilherii Allaiilic Coasla.l slates wi'sl ward (hrough the Tennessee Valley and |lie east Cull Coast region. Light snow and snow fliiirics arc predicicd ha' por lloiiH of Ihe norih Allaiilli; Coasl. the lower Creal Lakes,and Ihe Ohio Vallevi It Will be clear to parlly clonily over the re.sl of the niillon. It will be’odder over the major porlioii of dhe country. The Alliinlic Coastal stales, the norlherii Plains and the soulhi'ni Pacific Coastal region will expen-^l ining trend | ^\ He ordered Mrs drive him in Willimii: er Iclliiig hyr pul a co her hon.secoal and jiaja S’I’OP FOB TBAFFIC Seven blocks iped Ihe md se\cn pcdlc An olficer pointed a I Ihe suspect's head rii'iidered Ihe money Fireman's Home Gutted by Blaze; $5,000 Damage Till' home (d a I’onliac lire man was gulled by fire early lilts nua'iimg Damage to the iiue-slory frame hmise ol Clarence l.lovd, 510 Norlhflehl, was estimated at over $5.tKH) by Assistant Chid Victor Bmlamer. cause has not heen determined. Lloyd \ Ames s! lie lii;h sholian and lie away. s off’ duly when Ihe lire was reported shorlly after ' ! 5 a 111. but was not at home. No 'onewa.sinlliehou.se, Mi;.s.5 * * * traf-j Bodamer said the hmise ap parently had heen hiirnlng for a Imig lime when firemen ar rived hi'caiise the living nHiiii IliHir already had cidlapsed Into Ihe hasyinenl ' nee a W|i ii hud hoidoid Lynn Wayne Be ner, 21, of L;i Mirada on 8us- Tank Irucks had lo he used by incioii ol kidnaping and ndi- Ihe (ire deparlmeni since Ihere ■ Is no Wilier supply in the areii. (Continued From Pitge One) lives in Miinieli. A fourth, Gerhard Holme, disappeared late last year and Is believed to be In Latin America. Cases against 1(1 others are In preparation. A spokesman al B ii t /, b a penitentiary .said 11 e y d e, hanged hini.sulf with a belt. * « * Cotirl offleials said Ihe trial will he postponed NEW INDiri’MENT Some official,s said a new In-diclmenl probably will be filed agaitisl Dr, Hefelmaiin boentise of Ihe death of the chief defend-anl. Guenther JohmiiiK, the director of Biilzbneh prison, snid: "Ileyde hanged himself with his hell from a heating pipe between 9 .and 9:10 a. m, today. Radar Car Location The Pontiac police ra-dar-ei|uipped patrol car will he on Baldwin, Walton. Ciis.s mid Norlli .Saginaw loniorrow Mrs. Sights predicted that’sororities and fraternities will survive in Birmingham despite the board’s efforts. DOUBT RECURRENCE “I doubt very much that they-w,01 ever bring thi»>up again now that people think the naughty boys have been punished,” she said. ••“1 think the law against sororities and fraternities is a good one. I’m against their being sponsored by teachers who also see the students in the classrooms; then it really makes a difference whether you belong or not.” -Mrs. Sights said members of the MSCP, the group in question, met under parental supervision and there was “nothing secretive” about their meetings. A teen club Valentine daiice has been scheduled by the Bloomfield Hills Recreation Department tomorrow night. Seventh through ninth graders are invited to the event at East Hills Junior High School. M il and ll s //<> I Electric Hydrotherapeutic Massag j For FEET and E I .$1 l.or, l alnv As shown -*- UL approved 'Veltron' massager for liydrotlierojieulic beriifitS iJkiI doctors recomiriond: warm woler and massaiie os an aid to relievo poin Miu'ied l>y iheumcitism, aithritis, imisclo l,oti(|uo and pour cuiuloliun I'orloNe nuissmief complete with .MAIN FLOOR BARGAINS' ^KING EDWARD^ 6^ CIGARS BOX of 50 $3.00 value —box of extra fresh, extra mild smoking cigars. 229 Low Tar and Nicotine in Carlton Cigarettes ^ New at Simmsi 949 Ml PER Famous ‘SCRIPTO'! A Bh VU-LITER#! :t.9.S f alue AjA IB 2-Packs of Tobacco with Nob Hill PIPE Chocolate Covered Cherries 13-Ounce Tin CHAMP Salted Mixed Nuts Kraft Chocolate Covered NUTS (9 98 N. Saginaw-Main Moor i: ■II"'' j -!■ vi'.f. .■ ' ^ r()NTlAC 1-UKhS TIiriiSDA^', FKlilU AK^^ iVw B—7 Conflicting Versions OAS Probes Panama Rift , PANAMA CITY (UPI) - A “task force” of inter-American investigators visits the sites of last month’s bloody anti-Ameri-^ can riots today to investigate conflicting U. S. and Panamanian versions of the trouble. A source close to the five-man investigating committee sent here by the Organization of American States said it will “leave no stone unturned” in its efforts to determine exactly what happened. The committee is looking into Panama’s charge that the U. S. d e f e,n s e of the Canal Zone\ against armed m a r a u d e r s amounted to Four-Americans and 21 Panamanians were killed’in the riots. TO VIEW FILM Today’s schedule for the five L a t i ti American ambassadors making up the committee included a look at a local television station’s film of the riots as well as th^ visit to scenes of violence in the zone. The investigators began their work yesterday by conferring for two hours with Foreign Minister Galileo Solis and for 45 minutes wifh former Assistant Secretary of State Edwin Martin, U. S. representative in the investigation. They also' interviewed the principal of Panama’s national high school, chief source of the students whose protest against the raising of the U. S. flag at Balboa High School in the zone started the disorders. ^ The committee has already received Written reports from the United States and Panamagiving the two countries’ varying versions of the violence. FULL COOPERATION A committee spokesman said Martih had promised full U. S. cooperation in the work of the investigators. The spokesman indicated that the committee may confer with the U. S. official again before preparing its report. Quads Are Borh to Woman in Mexico Town MEXICO CITY +- Quadruplets have been born to the wife of a Mexican farmer — the first and last child arriving 40t^ hours apart. All girls, the quads were born to Mrs. Juan Mendez, 35, in her home in tiny Sierra Goi*da, 150 miles west of Mexico City, between 6:30 a.m. Sunday and 11 p.m. Monday. ' 'The prolonged births, however, did not set a record. , * ♦'.. *■ Mrs. Mendez and the quads were taken to a civil hospital in nearby Jalapa and cared for at government expense. The infants were placed in incubators. Their weights were unavailable. Burma Chief and Chou to Air India Dispute RANGOON, Burma 14'—Communist Chinese Premier Chou En-lai is scheduled to arrive tomorrow for a four-day stay that has taken on added significance with the recent flying trip to India by Burma’s military rul-ei, Gen, Ne Win. Diplomatic sources say Ne Win was briefed by Prime Minister Nehru on India’s position on the India-China border dispute which flared into a shooting war ip late 1962. Ne Win is expected to pass on Nehru’s views to the Red Chinese leader. RCA VICTOR* ZENITH • NORGE • ADMIRAL • MOTOROLA • HOTPOINT • SUNBEAM LIMITED QUANTITIES SPECIALLY PRICED Bathroom scales. Large I SUNBEAM men's cordless shgver...................... . $1987 I SUNBEAM Shavemaster deluxe I men's shavers. Including $12^ WASHERS RCA WHIRLPOOL 2-cycle fully automatic. Lint filter. Top features. Prev, year's model . \ HOTPOINT All Porcelain, 3-cycle Super Deluxe. A sensation at . ^46 RCA WHIRLPOOL w Large capacity. Pi Top deluxe features. FI. models . PHILCO 2-speed, 4-cycle o washer. Deluxe model. Prei years floor models....... BerM sponsjl party t Oak F«l HOTPOINT automatic electric. prOCeedtPrev. year's models. A steal at . veteran^^^ WHIRLPOOL fully automatic ifeluxe. 2-cycle. Prev. yr's. DRYERS REFRIGERATORS top frei I. ft. refrigerators. Ideal for and cottages FREEZERS WESTINGHOUSE 15 cu. ft. chest-type freezer. APT. SIZE gas ranges. Ideal lot cottages. Brand new ............. RCA WHIRLPOOL 36" 2-oven gas ranges. Matchless deluxe features RCA WHIRLPOOL 2 oven electric ranges in colors. Fully outomotic ADMIRAL 30" fully automatic electric rang*. Deluxe features........... HOTPOINT 30" fully automotlc electric range with cloth and timer Philco Food Disposer i°FREE I-YEAR SERVICE IN HOME $2499 PROCTOR Steam-Dry Irons in cartons. Factory secdnds . . . 27*= ^33 ^78 ^92 ^119 ^42 ^88 ^68 nS2 WESTINGHOUSE 1 8 cu. ft. top deluxe $OOiL upright freezers. In crates. JL/LO I ADMIRAL 10 c Out they go . I NORGE 12 cu. ft. upright freezers I S-yeor warranty. Sale-p I AMANA 12 cu. ft. upright freezers. $1QQ I Super deluxe. Few left ... IVO ^127 ^77 *157 $499 CLEANERS - POLISHERS II CLEANERS • POLISHERS $3788 $239 HOOVER polisher. Deluxe model 5460. New in cartons...................... $438 $1389 COLOR TV PRICE SMASH :=^353 $1987 • $259, HOOVER upright vacuum cleaner. Discount sale-priced........... $4477 H'^ORGE 14-lb. fully automatic. $11 Q I models.................,....:. M O | ^HILCO )Oa%, folly automatic, top 'eluxe floor models . The tot^ ket is clo^ $229.95 nationally sold 1 3 cc ««2-door refrigerator with large ^159 I ^47 ^56 ^276 RCA WHIRLPOOL MVz cu. f door Freezer-Refrigerator tion. FI. models........... Nationally advertised 1' 2-door refrigerator with giant 190-lb. bottom freezer. Very deluxe. $100 Reg. $299.95 ........................ IW RCA WHIRLPOOL-1 2Vz cu. ft. 2-door rolrigerator-freezers. Prev. yeor's %OCV7 models........................ . . JL\J / NORGE 1 2 cu. It! deluxe refrigera 5-year warranty . WESTINGHOUSE 14 c frigerator with large tom. Few le“ HOTPOINT 2-door telrigerator-freoz- $1Q'7 ers. Prev. year's models............. I Z / $629.95 AMANA 16 cu. ft. 2-dr. refrigerator with giant 249-lb. capacity $^0'T bottom freezer....................... “O / ^157 »277 LAST 3 DAYS THURS. FRI. & SAT. Why chance paying more elsewhere? Here's the top brands, quality, service, and pricel Here's big selections, easierterms, immediate delivery, and guaranteed satisfaction! . . . Plus the guarantees and warranties you'd expect on nationally advertised famous brand appliances! PONTIAC Mall Store DAILY 9 a.m. - 9 p.m. Many, many more not advertised. Most new in crates or cartons. Some floor models. Some in limited quantities. Few. one-of-a-kind. 1 All prices F.O.B. store. I Merchandise subject to I prior sale. Hurry in! No Money Down! ELECTRIC HOUSEWARES • SMALL APPLIANCES G.E. 9-cup coffee maker Fully automatic........ $1Q76 GENERAL ELECTRIC toaiter o' $799 WESTINGHOUSE Top deluxe... $1676 $799 *156 GAS • ELECTRIC RANGES DETROIT JEV^EL 30" goi rongei. Oven $69 G.E. Hand Mixer. 3-ipeed. Di.count lole-priced ... $798 PROCTOR-SILEX toa»ter-oven. Bake, broil, grill. Few left ....... $393 $899 $119 $118 : dial Lightweight WESTINGHOUSE Wofllo-Makor. $1786 $117 $149 WESTINGHOUSE roo.ler 1 8 qt. capacity Cooki complete mo $2491 *41 *197 *177 *121 SUNBEAM HondMixi While they loit... $784 *119 *10^- *ir Battery-operated. *292 *12^ GENERAL ELECTRIC Steam, ipray, dry iron. Nexir in cartoni........ $1397 *15’ G.E. battery opeiqled toothbruih. Rechorgqblii bollery........... $^88 GENERAL ELEC ERIC top deluxe hair dryer, Sullcai* ityl#............... *17” *329 *330 $995 RCA VICTOR 21" color TV-stereo combination with AM-FM radio, FM stereo radio. Deluxe cabinetry *669 OLYMPIC 21" color TV comb, with stereo. Hi-Fi deluxe wood lowboy. . . . *398 1 TELEVISION GENERAL ELECTRIC portable TV sets. Handle & Ant. Prev. year's models . . . *84 WESTINGHOUSE J9" portable TV sets. Handle and ^t. Deluxe *107 ADMIRAL 1 7" portable TV sets. Handle and antenna. Deluxe . . . *105 RCA VICTOR 23" TV Lowboys. A *149 ZENITH 19" portable with am nno. Previous year's models . . *121 PHILCO 19" portable. Prev. years model* *102 PHILCO 23" lowboy sets. Fabulously *138 ZENITH 23" TV consolettes. Prev. year's models *161 GENERAL ELECTRIC 23" TV sett. Swivel style *157 PHILCO 23" upright consoles. Prev. year'* models *135 ADMIRAL 23" TV-sterOo combination with AM-FM radio. Very deluxe. . . . *238 PHILCO or GENERAL ELECTRIC 16" portable TV. With «built-in handle and antenna. Your choice *97 CAPEHART 23" TV. Wood lowboy cabinets. In crates *129 OLYMPIC 23" TV-St*reo-AM-FM com-1 bination. Beautiful wood lowboy. ’237 STEREO - HI-FI 1 Portable HI-FI sets with automatic changer. 4-speed. Luggage type. New in cartons *26 Consol* StEREO. 4 speakers. Danish oiled walnut wood. Beautiful lowboy style *103 RCA VICTOR Stereo combination with AM-FM Radio. Wood lowboy. *139 Portable StereOs with automatic record changer. 4-tpeed. Detachable speaker. New in cartons *29 PHILCO stereo with AM-FM radio. Beautiful wood lowboys. 4-tpoed changer • *138 ADMIRAL stereo with AM-FM, FM-multiplex stereo radio. 4 speakers, 4-tpeed changer Wood console lowboy" *137 $59 95 SYLVANIA portable stereo With detachable extended speaker, deluxe features und cate' ' *39 RADIDS - TAPE NEC. GENERAL ELECTRIC 6-troniistor pocket radio. Complete with carry cose, eOrphone, botteries $897 GENFRAL ELECTRIC clock-radio. Deluxe. In cartons $10’^ PHILCO 6-transiitor pocket rodiot complete with carry cote, earphone and batteries. Powerful performer $977 PHILCO 5-tube table radio. Attroc-tive cabinet. Nev' in cartons, WOW! $799 4-lrantiilor tope recorders. Includes tope, mike, carry cose and batteries. Lowest price ever $097 B-Tronsistor radio. Pocket-size. Complete with batteries, carrying cat* and earphone speaker . ’6“ AM-FM portable radios.'Powerful 9-transiitori. Includes carry cos* strap, earphone and batteries *1896 ZENITH 8 trontiilor radios. Shirt pocket size With batteries, carry cote, earphone Deluxe Gift box *26^^ $119 95 BfLL cartridge monourol lope recorder Complete *59 stereo playback top* recorders 5-truck, 2 mikes, complete *69 $179 95 NORELCO stereo playback top* recorders. Complete *89 NURELCO 6-tran.l«tor completely portable top* recorderi. Complete with mike and tap*. Puihbutton con-troll. Carry handle Deluxe.............. *66 $399 95 NORELCO 4 trock I 00% traniiiloriied 4-ip**d tap* recorder Stereo record, itereo playback. Model No 400. Complete with oil occei-•oriei. Very deluxe..................... *197 Phone 682-2330 100% SATISFACTION GUARANTEED PONTIAC MALL^ Ellrabvih L«k« Rd;^ Cornar Talegraph Next Door to J L. Hudson Co. I Save »2 to *5 off '1 comparable I values. I ___________ WASHABLE BLEND STRETCH SLACKS jmt 2.9-3 comparable value 4.95 •» Tailored of a rayon, acetate, .stretch nylon blend . . . water, stain, spot resistant. . . stirruped for trim fit. Spring colors, 10-18. FOAM LAMINATED NYLON SKI SHELL special 4,00 comparable value 10.95 Ounces light, pounds warmi Zip front jgckct of waterprtwf nylon, laminated nylon lining . .. bold and colorful prints, sizes 10-18. Our entire stock! LADIES’ WINTER COATS 20^^ OFF already reduced price*! ,..l r.r f HEM’S WHY * We lell for coih onlyt vnil (AVI • “'• chorgeit VOO SAVE , AT ROBERT HAU * You Mve b.cavze we level IHoiity of Free Forhitiff Clorkston Store Opon Sundoyi 12 Noon to 6 P.M. IN PONTIAC, 200 North Saginaw Stroot: IN CURKSTON-WATERFORD on Dlxio Highway, North of Watorford Hill " , - ' 1' THE I?ONTIAC PRESS. TI11 RSI)A.\'. 1.3, 19fi4 More Witnesses for Probe? WASfflNGTON (AP) - The Warren commission may call on possibly two new witnesses next week to build its growing pile of evidence on the assassination of President John F. Kenpedy. Chief Justice Earl Warren told newsmen he did not know whether one would be a janitor >vho reportedly saw sharpshooter Lee Harvey Oswald en route to a sniper’s hideway shortly before the deadly rifle shots were fired in Dallas last Nov. Marguerite Oswald, mother of the introverted ex-Marine charged with killing Kennedy, finished three days of voluntary testimony Wednesday by stating she believes: WAS INNOCENT —That Oswald was innocent. but “I realize that as a human being he could be guilty.’ —That despite lack of any specific supporting evidence; she believes he was a secret agent of the U..S. Central Intelligence Agency who was “set up to take the blame” for the slay- —That the assassin “is still at large.” Warren said the testimony of the plump Fort Worth practical nurse was useful “in some respects,” but said it did not provide “any facts that would change the picture as we knew it up to the time she testified." BULK OF EVIDENCE The bulk of the evidence before the commission—including a five-volume FBI report. and the testimony of Oswald’s young widow, Marina — indicates the 24-year-old Marxist killed Kennedy unaided. The chief justice said the commission has received nothing from any agency to substantiate the mother’s belief that Oswald ever was an intelligence agent Or^ worked for any federal agency. Mrs. Oswald admitted her be- lief was based on no proof, fact, or statement of her son, but asserted: “I have as much circumstantial evidence .that he was (an 'agent), as the Dallas police have that he the She said she .had not been in touch with her son for a year before the assassination. THE janitor The Dallas News reported on Tuesday that one of the witnesses who might soon be called was a janitor in the Texas School Book Depository, where Oswald worked for a few months preceding the assassination. That was the building, overlooking the route of the presidential motorcade, where police found an Italian-made carbine Romney's Adviser to Talk on Children A special adviser to 6ov. Romney will be the speaker tonight at 6.30 at the annual meeting of the Oakland Child Guidance Clinics at the Village Woman’s Club, 190 E. Long Lake Road, Bloomfield Hills. Dr. Peter Martin, special ad- viser on mental health, will discuss the effect of marital disharmony on the development of children. An associate professor at Wayne State University, Dr. Martin is also chairman of the State Advisory Council on Mental Health Services. beside a sixth-floor window. Oswald’s widow identified the weapon as his. The News said the janitor has repohted that Oswald, spoke to him on the fourth-floor stairway. The commission may also call a witness, the News said, who saw a slender- man with a rifle at a sixth-floor window but thought it was a Secret Service agent posted there to protect the president. Warren told reporters that one or two more witnesses may. be brought into the closed hearings next week, but said no definite schedule has been fixed. When advised of the Dallas report, the chief justice paused and smiled before replying: “Well, maybe they know — I don’t.” Ex-Federal Mediator J died Wednesday of a lungj Midland Woman Dies J ailment. After leaving his fed-1 Dies of Lung.||lness |eral post. Finnegan joined the|\,.^^™^ (AP)-Mrs. Viola WASHINGTON (AP)—Joseoh ’ York State Mediation I, Mid and, was F'FinnpMn fit dirpptnr nf thp resigned last No-i ^^led, Wednesday when her car F. Finnegan, 61, director of because of illness. He I was struck by another, vehicle. Federal Mediation and'Condli-j ^as born in North Adams,! went out of control and hit a ation Service from 1955 until * Mass. I tree on Midland Road Hpneyweli ^Imo Finest in. 8MM Movies EXPERT'S CteRa SHOP 57 W. Huron Sk FES-6615 Ex-Engineer Leader Dies in Philadelphia PHILADELPHIA (AP)-Fran-cis De Sales Friel, 69, a former president of the American Society of Civil Engineers and of the American Institute of Consulting Engineers, died Tuesday. He retired recently as chairman of the board of Albright and Fiel, Inc., a consult ing engineering firm. \ FURNITURE 861 DORIS RD.'PONTIAC (JUST EAST OF OPDYKE RD.) WAREHOUSE SALE!! DAYS ONLY 3 STARTS FRIDAY, 12 NOON TILL 10 PM SATURDAY 9 A.M. to 10 P.M. - SUNDAY 12 to 7 P.M. New • Freight Domogeil • Distressed ATTENTION; Apartment House Owners, Home Owners, Motel 0peratoi;s and Renters FURNITURE • CARPET • APPLIANCES SAVE! SAVE! SAVE! ^50,000.00 Inventory - Thousands of Items! 71 Maple Finish Bunk Beds....from ^29.95 39 Two-Piece Living Rooms______from *77.00 16 Sectionals..................from *139.00 EARLY AMERICAN - MODERN -PROVINCIAL 2,000 yds. of 100% Continuous filament nylon Carpeting - to be liquidated. At $3.97 per ycwd. Come early for best selection of colors. 200 Pieces of bedding - all sizes FREE COFFEE, DONUTS AND GIFTS! NO MONEY DOWN!! NO PAYMENTS TILL APRIL!! S-A-V-E 50% AND MORE Some Items Below Dealers Cost W to (wo?y 861 Doris Rd. (Former Roller Rink) Savon Furniture Co. DRIVE OUT A LitTLE! SAVE A LOTI WALK, RUN, FLY. HOLD YOUR PLACE IN LINE. YOUR DIRECTIONS FOR SAVING $$$ WAtTON BLVP. ^THSRSTOME" Ul S“ T s & 1 0 Au Bv|Am M-b0 i:.r •. 1„ I y. »■ An August wedding is being planned by Janet Carol O’Connor, daughter of the Joseph A. O’Connors of Birmingham and Joseph Carl Herr, son of Mrs. Joseph C. Herr of Auburn 'Heights and the late Mr. Herr. MOMS Unit ^ Has Luncheon Mrs. Worth Eastman was the Tuesday hostess to members of MOMS of America, Inc., Unit No 2, at her Pine-grove Avenue home for a schoolgirl luncheorr and business meeting. A donation was sent to the national board for their project for peace program. It was announced that the Berkley MOMS Unit No. 9 is sponsoring a dessert card party at the triangle in Royal Oak Feb. 26 at 12:30 p.m. It is open to the public and proceeds will be used for the veterans’ fund. * ★ ★ The March 10 meeting will be at the South Jessie Street home of Mrs. David Edwards. ! r'-" ■ T M,' ■' - ■ f I THE PONTIAC PRESS Till RSDA V, FEBRl AUV IR. 1904 -y- Six Live Cheaper Than One—Per Person The total laundry bleach market is close to one billion qi^arts annually. ' By MARY FEELEY Consultant in Money Management Dear Miss Feeley: How come some of your readers talk about feeding a family of. five or six ■on $30 to $35 a week — when I’ve seen it stated that it costs $10.60 to feed one person? I’d sure like to see some of their menus! Mrs. J. W., New Orle'ans, La. Dear Mrs. W.: 'They don’t pull any rabbits out of the hat. The fact is simply this: whe you’re feeding big family, the cost for eachF j individual is^'*““ less. Whife it MARY may .|ake $10.60 FEELEY to buy groceries for a week for one person, the ratio goes down with each person added to the dinner table. ★ * Age is a factor, too, in figuring, the grocery bill. For example, the U.S. Department of Agriculture estimated it costs $5.50 a week to feed a woman 35 years old, based on a low-cost food budget. But on the same budget scale, it cost $7.40 to feed a man the same age. A six-year-old child cost $4.50, while a 19-year-old hoy cost $8.50. You have to be a real mathematician these days to hit it right on the button. Just try serving them all stew. You can always throw in another carrot. Dear Miss Feelfey: I am a widow 73 years old, and liYe in my own modest home alone. I am living within my income. But is this the best way? I have been advised to sell my home and move to a Senior Citizens home or "Some place where I won’t have to live alone. I have $5,000 loaned out on real estate at 6 per cent. And $3,500 with a savings and loan company. 1 own 208 shares of stock. I get $62 a month Social Security. I drive my own car. WTiat do you advise? Mrs. L. C. H., Dallas ★ Dear Mrs. H.: I think you’ve already decided that being independent financially is not enough. By all means try to arrange your life so that you’ll have the companionship you’ve begun to realize is the most important thing in life, * * if ’The cost of living in a Senior Citizens set-up varies widely, according to the community. Why don’t you shop around, so to speak? Look over the possibilities within driving range. Then have a talk with your banker. He will be able to help you estimate how much money you would have, if you converted everything, including your house, into cash. See if there would be enough to buy an annuity, to guarantee you a life income. As I see it, your main objectives would be to have this income, to allow for board and personal expenses, and to have enough for^ final expenses. • ★ ★ * It would be an irrevocable step, of course. But exchanging property for people isn’t a bad Dear Miss Feeley: Could you please tell me what the average family with four children (three girls between 5 and 10 years old, one boy 2) spends a month, on an average, for clothes? M. S., Smithtown, L: I. ★ ★ * Dear M. S.: The usual allotment for clothes is wool. sleeves witti crew link trim .iround neck and border. White, It. blue in sizes 36 to 40 ................................. 8.98 BLIZZARD LIZARD shoe tote with matching lizard-handle umbrella (lizard IS grained water-proof plastic'. 'v In red, truffle-tan and black . . . . $5 7 . *■ FUR-BLEND completely sdk-llned., white or gold beadinV,^ Blue/While SWAGGER CARRY-ALL, simulated leather satchel bag, Doulilo handle, loldpver tUp, zipperod compartment, stitched trim. Spice, tan, chestnut, black ........................8.9$ SHEFFIELD PENDANT WATCH, disc-circling watch on d long link chain. Elegant brushed Florentine finish in silver Of gold ................ $17 TERRY ROBE, towel-thick cotton terry with luscious ripe strawberries ap-pllqueil at the neckline and pockets White, prnk, maize Sizes P, S. M, L ............................. 10.98 BULKY-KNIT SHRUG, ol solt 100' OrlonX In white with beige, maize, pink, blue or orchid In sizes small. . medium and large......5.91 PITTI-PANTS in grit bo* Lath bo* contains two pairs ot I00‘’o nylort peltl-pants with a special Valentine look While with red ernbroideiv red. black, 6, 7 ....... 3,91 OUR PONTIAC MALL STORE IS OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9 PiM. r,f ■*/: ’/■ . V'' ' •' ' j " , ■' I ■ ' ' ■- "p'. • • ■ I -■■•H' • ' i ' , ■ f " it. TIIK PONTIAC PU1^:SS. rhiniSDAV. FEBR^/ARY 13, 1904. 'r X. LAST 2 WEEKS SAVE ^ m AND EVEN MORE On Nationally Advertised Merchandise Friday, Saturday, Monday. Charge It. George’s is going out of General Dept. Store Business . . Will Remain at Same Location, Specializing Only in High Fashion . . . Will Remodel to Change Store! Let's Knif w ; Want Tunic or Vest? Anyone who can knit a stitch and purl a stitch can fashion , this tunic. Knit it in a match- Sunlight Can Hurt Furnishings CHICAGO (UPD - Window shades provide protection to fabrics against fading and other effects of direct sunlight. This holds as true for upholstery and slipcover fabric as it does for curtains hung directly at the window. Sunshine,.as wonderful as it is, can be damaging in large, cbncentrated dosages. Ultraviolet rays are believed by some experts to be the work I offenders. I That’s ‘why fabrics set at I eastern or northern exposures I fare better than those that receive sunlight from the south or west. Tests made by the U.S. Bureau of Standards demonstrated that all fibers placed in direct sunlight deteriorate much more rapidly than those them. Dyed fabrics are particularly susceptible. In some cases the coWs wash out. In others, even in the best vat dyes, the dyes themselves may not be affected but they tend to accelerate the sun damage to the fibfers. The Fine Hardwoods Association reports that, "Wood furniture standing in the line of direct sunlight, daily, will also change color. W'alnut and mahogany, tend to become yellow. Other dark woods also bleach in constant strong sunlight. ing or contrasting color or even a tweed mixture to give a special lift to that favorite skirt and blouse of yours. Also, do you realize that if this tunic is worked 11 inches in length you would have a vest. Trimmed with a matching or contrasting woven bias-band, obtainable in any fabric store, you will achieve that smart handmade'look. Instructions for this tunic are in sizes 8 through 18. All sizes are included on one pattern. **■ ★ ★ Pattern for Tunic No. 26 may be obtained by sending 50 cents in coin, check, or money order to: Ursula du Bois, The Pontiac Press Pattern Dept., Box. 3307, Van Nuys, Calif., 91407. The engagement is announced of Margaret Bateman, daughter of Mrs. Harold Bateman of Lowell Street and the late Mr. Bateman to David George Mitchell, son of the senior William Mitchells of South Marshall Street: Hospital Gray Ladies Honored at Ceremony SPECIAL! BEBUIIT VACUUM MJ95 CLEANERS NEW T-FOOT VACUUM CLEANER HOSE All Cloth — No Plastic $475 Exchange With Your Reusable Hose Ends 1st QUAUTY All Makes-Models Stop in today! Porti and jorv-ico on all cloanori and towing machinot. FACTORY TRAINED MECHANICS ALL WORK GUARANTEED MICHIGAN NECCHNELNA MIRACLE MILE Noxt to Pontiac State Bank FE 8-4521 Gi;gy Lady capping and pinning ceremony was held Tuesday evening in the Pontiac State Hospital' staff aiiditori- Mrs. Mrs. Lady pledge and the capping responsibilities were handled by Mrs. William C. Sproull, Oakland County chairman of Gray Lady Service. She was assisted by Mrs. George M. Sherriff, Pontiac State, Hospital Red Cross volunteer coordinator. ★ * Recognized foT the i r achievements were the following new Gray Ladies: Mrs. Jerry Crossman, Mrs. Russell Hayward, Mrs. Rob-Carlson, Mrs. Victor Green, Mrs. William Mercer, Mrs. Miriam Archer, Mrs. Clare Charron, Mrs. Lee Voe- bel, Mrs. Kurt Hess, Keith Mazurek and Frank Vydick. ALSO CAPPED Also honored - were Mrs. Mrs. Clifford Dick, Mrs. Burton Erickson, Mrs. Richard Ernst, Nancy Guilled, and Mrs. Thomas Harris. Concluding the list were Mrs. Sid Jeffe, Mrs. Dean Leffler, Mrs. Donald Pierce, Mrs. Earl Sturges and Mrs, Peter Glossop. Pontiac Area Church Units Are Meeting A cooperative dinner and square dancing will be .sponsored by the Women’s Group of the Pontiac Unity Center Friday at 6:30 p.m. Don Newman will lead the group in square dancing for the Valentine's day celebrations. Any one is welcome to join the dinner group or the dancing. vice of Four Towns Methodist Church will .sponsor a square dance Friday evening. Tickets will be available at the door and Wayne Wilcox will be the caller. the look you love is CLEARANCE SALE! WOMEN'S HEELS Valuei fo $9.95 Gbildren’$C4 M Bools Valuei to $2.99 FIRST CHRIS'nAN CHURCH The churchwomen of the First Christian Church were guests of the Christian Women’s Fellowship at a meeting Tue.sday evening in the church prayer room. HOUSE SLIPPERS MEN'S WOMEN'S CHILDREN'S Viluoi to $2.99 KIRBY’S SHOES MIRACLE MILE Shopping Center Open Evenings 'til 9 GEORGE'S 74 N SAGIMAW ST : I ■ , ' ' V ' f " ; .-I'X . '' P, TflE POXTIAC PRESS TirrRSDAV. FERRT’ARY 13. 1004. Markets; Business and Finance MARKETS I The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Wednesday. Produce FRUITS Apples, Delicious, Red, bu....S3.50 Apples, Delicious Golden, bu...3.75 Apples, Jonathon, bu. ......... 3 M Apples, McIntosh, bu............3.00 Apples, Northern Spy, bu...... 3.25 Apples, Steele, Red, bu. ..; ■ ^ “ Apples, cider, case -...........2.50 VEGETABLES Cabbage, curly, bch............. j-SO Cabbage, red, bu. ..... ■■ Cabbage, standard, bu........... l.« Carrots, topped ................ 2.w Celery, Root .................. i '“ Horseradish, pK. bskt........... 2 ™ Leeks, bch..................... f Onions, dry, 50 lbs. .......... L70 Radishes, hothouse ....... Rhubarb, hothouse, box Rhubarb, hothouse, di. b Squash, Acorn, bu. ....... Squash, Buttercup, bu. .. Squash, Butternut, bu. . Squash, Deiicious, bu. ... Poultry and Eggs OEtROIT POULTRY DETROiT (API—Prices paid per po I Detroit for ,No. I quaiity iive pouil . Heavy type hens 18-19; Light type ens 8-9; Roasters over 5 lbs. rollers and fryers 3-4 lbs. While ■ Rock 21-22; Ducklings 31. OETROIT EGGS DETROIT (AP)-^Egg prices paid Bar large 33-39; small 26-29; Browns Grade , 33^3^7T*Medium' 31-31 Vj, 33-35; Mediun ; Checks 2 CHICAGO BUTTER, EGOS CHICAGO (AP) - Chicago Merci Exchange—Butter steady; wholesale 30; standards 31; dirties 29; checks 2' CHICAGO POULTRY .-CHICAGO (APt-(USDA)-Llve poullrv wholesale buying prices l7yel-s/l9-20;^'Barred Rock fryers 21. I ivestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK OETROIT (AP) — (USDA)-Cfittle-4t limit supply slaughter steers steadv .a| In Chester, Pa.' Peaceful Picketing at Schools CHESTER, Pa. (/P) - Pickets marched peacefully al^und eight predominantly Negro Chester public schools today, protesting alleged slow progress in desegregation. The boycott by the Committee for Freedom Now (CFN), a local civil rights group, kept many children home, but a school system spokesman said all classes were being conducted. Stanley Branche, head of CFN, said picketing was the result of what he called de facto segregation, and a failure to improve the physical condition of the schools. ★ ★' ★ John Vaul, assistant superin- tendent of schools, told a newsman: being conducted in the entire city. They (pickets) expebted an absenteeism of teachers today, but attendance is better than usual; THREE fTEACHERS “Only three regular teachers opt of a faculty pf 500 are absent. Normal absenteeism is between 10 and 20.” Vaul said in the Douglass Junior High, for example, where 557 pupils are enrolled, the all-Negro faculty of 35 was on hand for start of classes. At Chester High School, the entire staff of 110 was on the job, Vaul said. As for the pupils, the official commented: MANY CAME “Many, many children came to school, congregated outside. Police told them to go to'school or go home. Some just shot off (went home). Police shouldn't have said that. It just gave them an excuse not to go to school.” Vaul promised a complete count of pupils and teachers later in the morning. DOW-^ONES f STOCKS 30 Indus ..... 20 Rails ..... 65 Stocks BONDS ■■ Bonds ;.. . 3 Second g The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK (AP)-Following I* >f selected stock transactions on tl .) High Low Last Chg: AbbottL 2,40 AtumLtd .60 23 : »g ^ Witness Waits ^ in Hoffa Trial AmBdPar ^ AmGyan l ArmcoSt 3 ArmCk*^ T.80a-AssdDG 1,40 : I ^ i Herc%r‘%e , X IS 4‘'o;hSpp Cp .3lt I In^andS^Tl"*!. x2 109 “ “ 10?'^" + ' 4 J 36»tt 36^« 36 Vb StdOIIInd 2b StdOilNJ .700 StOilOh 2.60b Stand Pkg StanWar 1.20 Testimony is Tied to Further Evidence CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. (UPI) — For the second time in three weeks, a government witness in James R. Hoffa’s jury-tampering trial waited today to tell his story. The government sought to call James C. Tlppens, Nash-ville insurance man, as it neared the end of its case against the Teamsters presi-: dent and five others on trial with him. They are being tried before U.S. District Court Judge Frank Wilson on charges of trying to influence the jury in Hoffa’s 1962 conspiracy trial at Nashville. That trial ended with a deadlocked jury. * * ★ Tippens was excused from possible service on the Nashville jury after he reported he had been offered $10,000 to vote for Hoffa’s acquittal. NOT ALLOWED Called the second week of the trial, he was not allowed to testify after the defense objected on grounds anything he would say would be hearsay — since it was made outside the presence of the defendants. Judge Wilson held then that Tippens could testify only if the government produced evidence from other sources linking the defendants with the alleged bribery offer. This the prosecution sought to do through its chief witness, Edward G. Partin, Baton Rouge, La., Teamster official. vs? others on trial with Hoffa are Allen Dorfman, Chicago insurance man; Nicholas' J. Tweel, Huntington, W. Va., business--- ;•: man; Ewing King, former Nash-T'SIville Teamsters official; Larry AUTO LAUNDRY—Construction has been completed on the new Rainbow Car Wash, which will open soon at 1100 Oakland. The operation is described as one of the most highly automated in the car wash field, using latest Pontiac Prtss Photo machinery for washing and drying. The facility also has a separate waxing area and outside gas pumps. Owners of the franchised business are Frank Slaybaugh and John Sloan. To AT&T Holders Special Stock Sale By SAM DAWSOfV AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK-Mother Bell is out to raise one and a quarter billion dollars by selling more stodk to those already owning shares. There are other ways cor poration can rai.se money. Each has its advantages and drawbacks. And some years one fundraising plan is more in fashion than others. On the face of it selling more stock would seem the least painful. But it isn’t always so. First, the terms have to please the present stockholders. They see each share’s portion of company assets diluted by that much, at least theoretically. And the offer mustn’t upset the market for the old shares. ★ ★ * ' ' American Telephone & Telegraph seems sure to plea.se the present stockholders with its offer. Each one. owning DAW'SON Campbell, Detroit Teamsters of-! shares Feb. 18 can put up $100 '^ificial, and Campbell’s nephew, in ca.sh and get a new share. 5 00 ; 2 3 240-270 I lbs. 13.25-13.75. Ivps none; siflugh 3 higher; high cho ids tnixe dcholce f lbs. 22.50-23,00; bi s. 21.75-22.00; cho Sheep 600; | higher ; nrlme 96- I Treasury Position WASHINGTON (APl~Th* cash (iosillon ol the treasury compared with corresponding dale a ye^ar ago. 60,186,040,727.1 72,312,170,089.7 310,222,696,940.06 304,81 Gold Assets- 15,5I2,37L030 T0^^ ^^15^92 It dividends OECLARtD ampSp 2 Cant $W '1,28 Certaad .60 ChahpS '1,80 Chmplln 1.20 <:hes Oh 4 ChPne^ 1.40a Chrysipr ClavEIIII \‘.70 |.;o(;aCol 7.70 Col Gas 1,22 13'^h 33^1) 3 i7^'^ 37' 2 3 ,9^i 69^.1 6 ) 50'« 50^fl I 51'^« 5I^m i 33*'4 33:>'4 ,, I WsIgAB 1 ; whhPc^p' I j ■ MihlteM" 1 Thomas Parks of Nashville. News in Brief The Oakland County chapter of the National As.sociation of Social Workers will meet at noon Tuesday with the Lapeer, Oakland and Macomb County chapters of the Michigan Psychological Association at P i n e Knob Ski Lodge, Independence Township. The price of existing shares, rose Tuesday on the stock market after the announcement and closed at $146. This makes the offer attractive to the most cautious owner. The directors obi viously felt the spread between $100 and $146 would assure success of the offering. MORE DIVIDENDS Second; when new shares are issued, there are just that many more outstanding on which stockholders will expect dividends—now and in the future. An undetermined amount of And a corporation doe.sn’t get change was taken from vending credit for money paid machines early today in a as dividends as it docs for break-ih at Highland Culf Serv- ai»»ey paid out as interest $100 to a stock owner who buys one of the new shares. Except for the dividehds and the spreading of assets over more outstanding shares, the big new financing is like money found. ★ ★ * The phone company has used many ways of financing its huge growth. Its last offering of corn-stock was some 11 million shares in February 1961 at $85 a share, at the same ratio of one for each 20 already held. ALvSO BORROWED It also has borrowed through debentures, both straight and convertible, and has tapped the market for short-term loans. It all depended on the state of the money market at the time— and the state of the stock market. new stock instead of raising money other ways. These include borrowing from banks, issuing bonds, debentures, or conveftible debentures —bonds which can be changed into common stock—dr issuing lOUs in the short-term money market. EXPENSE CHARGE Interest paid on various forms ' of borrowing is charged as an ' expense before taxes. And since ' in a sense the federal government is paying half of this interest-tax payments can be cut by that much — many corporations find this the most painless way to raise funds—espec-ically when money market conditions make borrowing easy | and comparatively inexpensive. But borrowing has its draw- ‘ backs, too. First, the interest has to be paid, even if half of it can be considered a tax benefit. Second,' eventually the loan i must be repaid. And the money more common stock couldn’t found to repay it. help biit look attractive - to a * ★ * company whose stocks are In AT&T, on the other hand, is j demand at well over the $100 under no obligation to repay the ; mark. In today’s bull market, with popular stock average indexes, hitting record highs, sale of Judge Hits GM on 'Cadillac' I MlnprCh .70 '/», MfnnMngM 1 j Mohasco -50« ship. , 5420 M59, Waterford Towrt-1 AT&T al.so raised the dividend GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. I API —A federal judge told General Motors Corp. Wednesday it does not have a monopoly on the word “Cadillac” and ordered it to pay $41,000 to another company defending its right to use the name, too. GM sought to enjoin Cadillac Boat Co. from u.se of Cadillac as a trademark, but U.S. Dlst. j Judge Noel P. Fox noted that the defendant started operations the shore of Lake Cadillac OPrecEq 4,75()l KI875 Q NorNnIGas ,5.0pl - 1-45 Cj Noi NalOas 5.6pl 1.40 Q NoiNsIGni 5.6pl 1.375 Q .oclaleO ProM Ind. Rails Util. Stocks DrtV -/A“g“«'- Gra.in Prices OPENINO GRAIN vmenis noi ue^ig- ' ^ ** quarter tO identiiipd In tha Mrs. Arthur Gray, 1338 Park, $1. H.s total outlay for dividends extras. b-Annyai White Lake Towiiship, told will ri.se by 40 cents a year on "oV paid'■In‘‘"i96? j Waterford Town.ship police early i both old apd new stocks as long Ikf In sto?k‘’du?rng I '^at 3 basket of children’s | jis the rate Is maintained. The ’'g'’pnVTaT'yra''r''!‘ ^*"1**'’ j directors obviously feel money J'’d 'T'' ?i'd''Thh ' ‘ Airway Lane^J^ai.sed by the sale of new shares wuh dui’' 4825 M59. i can be used to ex|tand facilities St. Andrews Thrift shop. 'he extra i64!ii's'’iimMad MsV : Hatchery Hd, God Spring cloth- P“yni‘‘'''' ^ ^ ^ or ax d,5iribui,on I i,,^ wanted for consignment.' , ,,, ,, 'Every Fri. !):.’i0-3 p.m. adv. i 'hit h.s dividend oh Kat.on, ^ even if only implied, often dc- Busenient Ruimnage: Fehru- tors corporations from offering ary 14, 15, Kri,, and Sat., at 10 | a m. to 6 p in 4042 Woodmere, Drayton Plains. - adv. and the name had geographic meaning. Fox ordered GM to pay the boat company $41,000 in attorney fees, holding that GM had attempted to place an economic burden uiwn “a small corporation of limited assets ) that it « Successful <1 ^ Investing * % s % $ ^ % By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “I am a widow, age 66, have $7,000 in savings and $3,-000 in series E bonds, [.ast month, I bought $10,000 in mutual funds to supplement social security when 1 retire. Now some friends tell me this was wrong and I may lose my money. I am worried sick. Do you think mutual funds are tiH) risky for me and that I should do something about them? What is your advice?” A. Y. 3 20'. 7|0’.i 20'. ;• 1 120 II94» 120 Stocks of Local Inferesf OVFR THE COUNTER 4TOCK8 Boy Shoots Himself in Mouth; Recovering New Tax Guide Being Mailed to Area Employers A) I strongly advl.se you to relax and stop worrying. Some people have criticized mutual funds on the basis that their .sales load and management fees are rather high. No sen.sible person believes that ,. . , , . ,. , i they are rl.sky to any greater would be forced y><‘ld , extent than the .stock market unjust demands of plaintifl, | ^ the risk of fluctuation. IVlutual funds diversify among a (vide variety of issues and are usually capably managed. I think you should hold, but I if your worries persist, I would JAKARTA, Indonesia “ ] sell your funds — or any stock The air force has launched sue-1 holdings — and buy more Se-cessfully a surface-to-air guidwl, g bonds, missile of the type reported * * * Surface-to-Air Missile Launched by Indonesia! iv9(h1 to sh(K)t do^ U.S, U2 spy planes over Russia and Cuba, | Antara news agency reported, I l(Kiny, I , Antara said the .Soviet-made Q1 “My present stocks were purchased some years ago and left to stagnate, so to spenk. They do not present a pretty pii'turc compared with my cost. I would like to I'llPiati. )l.40 I’oMroW '.70 Pro(l& OU,' J f • I KAI.KASKA, Mich. An H- ,. ycarold hunter accidentally* I’'>"lmc area employers will, shol fiWiiv HiK* 1)1 Ills tooth ciiul ^ ***’*’*^^ n(*w fodornl intorno i ........ ...... _ ' mil a hole in his longue with withholding tables in a lax mi.ssile was an improved ver-1 invest for future growth. My 6 'ill tk Wfilil.cr rifle vesterdav Iwi^g mailed them this' sion of the type uswl against: holdings 81*0 Ilydrometals and 1 35 J I:;:, its or^l i.. cS’ Ij"*' The firing near Sura^; star Steel. What should ' R, I. Nixon, Detroit Internal I >>ay« " P'**'' I I 'l‘> with these, also with Revenue .Service district dlroe- the alert program ordered fo - „n,,K)o I have free for Invest- tor, said the 32-page guide is ii meat?” (i. A. based on the 14 |ht eent with |<’'>"ntry’s crush Malaysia earn-, j,, ' dllion. ,5.5 ; K.'dk.Tska County Sheriff Karl ' Woodman said young Itichard ' Tanner's rifle di.s«4iarged acoi-i holding rale.on wages and sal-i denlully and the bullet went «rles agreed on by Congress. I thrqugti the roiif of the Ixiy' Everything Not Gone .. . Except Kitchen Sink DENVER iJt - Somebody did * lake the kitchen sink at Atiron Crowley's house yiislerday. Whoever liroke in by culling a window screen also. carried i;||.a water healer, Nolliing.cl.se was taken. I RWylhn . Roadlng C Rnlrh^i .. 4 45'I 4S'i 45'I . Rhwm ,2' 2 20U M' l M'* ^ '* S-obeOp MUTUAL FUNDS • AitiKMItd Prtu ,1 \ sf: 6 3?'6 m* • ;• ! U ’/lO's 30 30 ,' 1 '4 si i\; '•S’; P'"**" say so you seem to have j lessons in investing successfully. ' llydrometal has just report^ New Year for Chinese for fiscal 1063 — its fifth I deficit in a row, I believe It NEW YORK i)Pi - Chinatown sold, rang In the new year, 4662, the j jg g better year of the Dragon, last mid- gii,„ition mid has sht^yvn u pro-Nlxon rmiuesled emnlovers to firecrackers., ,n „ gbarc lor 1963 ver- Amori-an Stock Exch E’’ S'.lT Ameri,.anj5TOCK cxc^^^^^ through news media' through Mott Street, Nevertheless, this is a cyclical, ........not a growth situaUon. and with , " no effect on Income tax returns I _______ ‘y™r objectives. 1 Would dispose 5'1 being prepared for calendar 1 of these shares, . , . , 4ni, ,g^.| ' ^ . For new Investment. 1 advise ‘ * * * |! Illlnoks conlains 1,'251 munici- (’„rn ITtKlucts. Texas Utilities. Emplovers seeking ndilitional Cn.cler & Gamble, and General formation <'an eontad the U- "'an any ether sM.le I’cnnsyl-, 'llei'lnc all strongly growing In the I’onliac:ranks second ^ mul Iowa ksiies. . . He said effective date of the mouth and lodged In his nose, reduced rate applied to employe I Tanner, of Kalka.ltka. was hos- payroll., will be about a week pilali/ed for removal of the bul- „fter President JohiLson signs (el I the tax 1)111 on or about March 1. i information < cal IRS olfice V Federal Hulldlng tCopyrlghl 19611 - ,:f ) ' Jk±. , - l: ' 1 •*! ' 1 ";’r" / THE PONTIAC PRESS, TIH RSUAV. FEBRUARY 13, TO FE 5 0936 FE 8-8092 =||gi;;r.sr« Leslie R. Tripp, F AUBURN HEIGHTS EVELYN EDWARDS L|KUs“nuY .. ... °'-^“™lng,'’liuM''bSllng Aupip^N^'o^^Mei,1 CONCORD PLACE I WANTED: 6 MEN TO START ' WORK IMMEDIATELY IN^ ^ THE FOOD INDUSTRY. ALL| Ji?;,, ^ APPLICATIONS GIVEN "P|.ly uni.,, ym, nnl^w.nk.ng; ,p^ . 6 EQUAL CONSIDERATION,' " 30| niooMFipD^Hu^^^^^ i , No""n !jv:';j=>:r£x:sr people. ™™TYraR ....:“ '":Kw«Kr.r‘" xr '■’! .2 ,s ,r;:; mr. smith, 33e.o438 TOR 7:rE,r'ai:,, ';s'"i'i: illina ori»tu» llkJTrnwiCU/ a nnni MT AACKIT I ftUT' KO«a, THEY'RE LOOKING FOR YOUR WANT AD IN the Ponliac I-Vrss Phono 332 8181 vu" ■ir!s-;i,,;sv".7 ................. 33 OREATER .ff»«.... i£S~-V|S“ ... ... 3Ri sr2£ f:i'” Nood, (1 Press Wont 1 Is Always Available ' Help You Fulfill M ond Fast! Just Dial FE 2 81,81 PARTJIMF COILEGE STUDENT ......... s’l "£ ” k“5S- xr s„,ns:i ■ i£5irr - reaGAN ’3Ir SrSHE.’-''""" ’ Kswiaartt wr* OMl A^.^|l^r•f^ O'V.VI- / V. ■.' i. „