Tho Woathor THE PONTIAC PRESS Hofne Edition PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1865 —88 PAGES on.ti^JS^wt.SSRkjhal Some Towns Wiped Out in Louisiana Area Baton Rouge Mayor Urges Residents to Be Calm but Alert 25,000 Sheltered From Floodwaters; Death Total Grows GNC BEAUTY — This new intercity boa, the “Luxury Liner,” features high-level seating for nurtmwm passenger visibility and' greatly increased under-floor baggage space. The 35-foot vehicle was unveiled today by flMf! Ttuck & Coach Division. 'Luxury Liner Bus Unveiled by GMC Area Woman Dies in Crash BATON ROUGE, La. W —Army, Navy and civilian divers searched tjie murky depths of the Mississippi River here today for a missing barge loaded with 600 tons of deadly chlorine. Two Navy antisubmarine planes swept the area from air. A destroyer er’s bottom with sonar ucvwca normally used to spot enemy submarines. As federal authorities pushed a hunt for the barge, ripped loose from its mooring by Hurricane Betsy last Friday, Mayor - President W. W. Dumas urged this state capital city's 160,000 residents not to be alarmed. NEW ORLEANS, La. W — Authoratative sources said early today about 400 bodies had been counted by law enforcement offi-. cers in flooded regions in the New Orleans area. The Red Cross said Hurricane Betsy wiped out some towns in the marsh country south of here. Dr. Nicholas Chetta, the New Orleans coroner, said he had been alerted by a ham radio operator that 250 bodies were en route here by truck from Plaquemines Parish. A deputy in the Plaquemines A new intercity bus featuring The first fully-autom&tic tram- More direct routing of air con-high-level seating for maximum mission offered in the division’! ditkming ducts and an increased pesaenger visibility and greatly intardty buses, the Super-V, number of outlets improve air increased under-floor baggage will be optional in the “Luanry circulation. Temperatures are space ipe unveiled today by Uro*” GMC Truck i Coach Division. Besides passea- n* 35-foot “Luxury Liner" ger comfort, thisnewtraas-w« be tfmwn.for the first time mission has the advantage of publicly at the two«lay conven- wider naftlaafisas of grade tioa of the National Association ability aari lop speed. It Mils of Motor Bos Owners opening aader fall power, with no Wednesday in Chicago. throttle redaction required. FTort aeata of ^ “Uaury Other engineering Advantages Dumas told them to go about their duties, but to keep tuned to their radioes in case an evacuation had to be ordered. Col. Bruce J. Bowen, Army district engineer from New Or-. _ , leans, La., assured residents the 4 Others Injured in sunken barge and its cargo ... . , , _ . posed no immediate threat. Waterford Collision divers failed Two civilian divers failed in a . . . f . . I An Independence Township first attempt to reach a sunken regulated by theJatest type elec- woman wa> uued and four per- object spotted by Army engi-tronic controls. sons injured in a head-on col- neer*lat* Liston at 11:50 last night on Wil- Eight omJdentitfed objocts-llams Lake Rond near Maceday Lake Road in We t e r ford NO TAKERS — There were no takers for an .apartment offered for rent in the flooded section of New Orleans. The occupants of the upstairs apartment elected to rema&i after it appeared the floodwaters were subsiding, but they were in need of food. A National'Guardsman sent to check on the family relayed the request for food to a passing Army vehicle. Parish sheriff's office at Port Sulphur said five bodies were being sent to New Orleans by - boat because all roads there Denied by Pakistan The Tlmes-Picayune, In its final edition, quoted a spokesman for the Orleans Parish . coroner’s office as saying 250 bodies were expected from Plaquemines and St. Bernard parishes. India Claims Victory “All I know is that we are expecting a hell of a lot of bodies,” said a weary official in the coroner’s office when asked about tbs report. tW passenger safety, two eefltag grab valla art provided, together wMh eye-level procaatioBary lights at each in oae fixture located hi too aisle end Lln^” *** tt**1 Lbeatar-atyle, incite a new high-visibility in- °* PMkage rack. pnnhlina nnstanonro ono nvor . w. z TownaMp. All victims were taken to ( strument console, Improved air Decor is smart and con tern- Pontiac Gener- !^.taJE!!f‘^0brva?0n coodw<^^«LttpHnad porary with fresh new patterns . rSL, wteteTp.,. ward and upward vision. ★ * * panels. Lower side paneb are ,D?ad 00 «r- f* dm* ixt Johnson to render aU possible ” ’ ’ ” ~ 'i^TTr" The instrument console is to Sd with a pasteUtoyl ma- ^ 19 Na^y art W Planes then bombed the s 11 cated direct^ in front of the terial. 09,16 Smith- of 4841 Rock- Army divers were flown to the Indian forces to keep them Oakland Highway Toll in '65 been located by midmorning in toe NEW DELHI, India UR - India claimed today its 159 M0RE 1,01)11:8 tanks scored a victory over Pakistani forces in a major battle near the West Pakistani city of Lahore, pected Bom New Orleans itself* _ . Pakistan said it repelled the attack, inflicting heavy one of a score or so barges that losses on Indlan armor- Hminary survey showed MS either sank or washed onto The Pakistani government radio claimed an entire h®n“* destroyed, *M88 with sandbars during the storm. Indian armored division was wiped opt in the fight- * * * ing near Sialkot and that two infantry divisions were aiana. Vnd6r ?rders from ^President R ^ Pakistani _____ Johnson to render all possible .uffr. aiigigi gw i» .*■*«««» tea _ nearly a foot higher than in pre- driver. It haebeen designed for Windows are glazed with heat- crofl vtous intercity buses. bettor visibility and sp e e d 1 or absorbing, grey-tinted glass that identification of switches transmits colors in their natural rid6„md, vWbSi* through color coding. shades, ty, this extra height permits - scene. Army Engineer spokesman from regrouping. The broadcast called the fight- graater baggage space. To handle ever increasing package express forties t, a early IN cubic feet Is provided in two ander - floor tightly-sealed baggage ce*n-partments—a M per cent increase over previous compart- The “Luxury Liner" is powered by a new V-8 diesel engine City Grocer Kills Bandit During Blazing Gun Battle Mrs. Smith was riding in a car tag fierce and said the Indians driven by Ralph J. Hopkins, 53, ti? tata suffered their heaviest oi ote. .t r sejmst0 'n,»«*• , a car driven by James Hodge The barge, owned by the, 1In°*a8 government radio Jr., IS, of 7165 Howell, Water- Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co., had ,afaned however, that Indian fort Township. been shipped hero from Lake forces made gains in * it, w Charles, La., via tjie Intracoast- 80me ■octws of the western Hodge was reported In satis- al Waterway. fr“t; 11 ctaimed two Pakistani factory condition this morning. A 40-mile stretch of the Mia- g0*1™"8 “ captured in “• * A * sissippi at this busy port was M"*0* sector. Hopkins and the two passen- closed to shipping. Dumas said Secretary Rusk Warns China The coroner’s office had mhre than 50 bodies, many unidentified. Betsy had earlier left fix dead in Florida. ' The Red Cross said it had 25,-000 evacuees in two Mg shelters, end expected many of them to remain a week or two. SETS EXAMPLE Gov, John McKeitben appealed to residents in other towns to open their doors to refugees and set an example by WASHINGTON (AP) - Sec- 1?,1three famUi« at the rotary of State Dean Rusk ad- ““lton-dollar executive man- Wants U. N. to Settle India-Pakistan Fight gers ta Hodge’s car — Richard 100,000 gas masks were being A Pakistani spokesman said vised Communist China to “stay 61011 at Baton Rouge. Hodga. U, brother of the driver stockpiled. 45 Indian tanks were destroyed out" of the India-Pakistan war The damage toll left bv • , and Daniel Morris, 20, of 7100 Though highly poisonous in its in the Sialkot fighting wMle “and let the United Nations Se- *■—•* - . A 33-year-old gunman WAS fatally wounded Satur- HoweU — all were treated at the basic term, chlorine is one of Pakistani losses “have been curity Council settle it.” that boasts bettv rod economy jay night in a blazing gun battle with a grocer he hosPltal rsMand. the most useful industrial chem- substantially less.’’ “I think that there are those and more complete combustion . . ^ . , . . ® * ★ ★ ★ icals and is used in the manu- for deaner exhaust. na® awempwa io ron. Police are investigating cir* facture of many plastics, explo- It delivers 2M horsepower at Ex-Convict Raymond Lee Scott of 283 S. Jessie cumstonces of the accident. slves and dyes, its factoiy-governed i^sed of l,- was hit at leaat five times by pistol and shotgun blasts .............. ■' ■>.---------------—----------------- 800 revolutions p«r minute. Max- ... IjI or imum torque is 770 foot pounds "pe“ by Charles Law, 25, at 1,200 r.p.m. son of Rep. Arthur Law, icals and is used in the manu- ACROSS BORDER who feel that China is fishing in I MMHIi I Sialkot is Just over the borter th6se wat6rs-” from Indian Kashmir art La- retary toM new,men’ hore, a city of 1.5 million, ia 20 On the other hand, Rusk miles inside West Pakistan. In Today's Press Ryl§ of law U S. chief justice in topm to conference — PAGE I. RM Aftermath L- Little done to clean up Watte area ta LA-PAGE u. f Now Sottas Writer glvee tlpe oh entering college—PAGE 38. -Astrilijy Bridge :.' Comics ...... .» ... ...M .....M Sports n« ■HI D-Pontiac, owner of the grocery store. The gunfight took piece at about 6:30 p.m. in the nearly empty Law’s Super Market at aoOEarlmoor. Police Seek Area Youth in Shooting Reports from Lahore said fighting raged 16 miles away art artillery fire could be heard inside the dty. Scott was feoai dying In a car which he nsed to flee hem the store and then crashed Police were still into a heme at 171 Howland. Mar Stony Creak this He was dead on arrival at * Shelby Towns! Pantiac General Hoapltal. who allegedly fired f t ,aLi _________ ... . at hie girlfriend’s father yester- wtolTliliit mtoSif toy '•8tolen car. r60 entarad Urn store he gbgjbp police said Dennis S Aity 0,11 PlcktaMn- H. Of 43561 Star-with frooeries and meat. Ught, Shelby TbwneMp, shot at Law J tmwm. Walter Young, of 47420 PhUIjtee. .. ^ Shelby Townslity, then stole a 7 •nd Rocha,Ur' Youw wm n°thurt- goto* to boid op the store. A| FIRES AT 8COTT The grocer pulled a 38-caliber pistol from a Ulster he wore was callrt off tart police at his side art fired ones or ttanad to patrol the twice at Scott, police said. where be was last seen. Betsy’s howling winds—150 “ P-b. near tie coast, 125 m.p.h. ia New Orleans art 94 “-P-k. at Baton Rouge—remained a matter of gnesswork with estimates at abent a billion dollars.. said “I think the Soviet atti- Insurance adjustors were tade has been helpful so far.” flown Into the dty from faraway Rusk briefed members of the S?1®18. *° ^Ip handle claims. Senate Foreign Relations Com- ^n® maurwace official said it mittee on the India-Pakistan ^gbt take tour to six months Almost 760 American women 8tru«f and the war ta Viet to procros aU the claims." and children were awaiting per- Nam ,or ■« *•>“ hour- st; Bernard Parish, which mission to leave Lahore. The . u * * * , . stretches along the Mississippi Pakistani government has In what amounted to an tator- River south of New Orleans, clamped restrictions on entering news conference afterward, was largely still under water. . „„ Dom , r . he told reporters “we hope very High waters also remained in (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) much» that U.N. Secretary- suburban areas on the southern _________L General U Thant will be able to side of New Orleans. bring the two sides together. _ . . if ^ * Water was receding throngh- He said the United States was #at tb6J™®ad tat tau pleased that Security Council JJ6.1 “tremety slew to New actions so far ta the crisis have 0r,e"w it,e,f-where low-tying (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) CONFLICTING CLAIMS _______ As for the course of the war, Sun to Reign # - * jL? ICUODB 80 ior in u tor Few Days, h**®unanlmous- A “ rYiMin imvn n Prepare To enjoy a few days . . of late summer sun punctuated there have been by light rata or scattered “*9®®®^. clalm8 ^ will range from 55 to 62. 1h« ha pulled Ms abler la Roadblocks, which bad teen albt.toW Wto tap atti amp- set up ahortiy after tte early tied the rovMverptteflaaiag morning ahooting, were lifted terttt. Police said Scott Med bp night whan police said It EMMY AWARD Jerry Van Dyke And actress Mary Tyler Moors bold the Television Academy Emmy awarded hist night to Dick Van Dyke, Jerry's brother, for outstanding individual achievement in the 1964-66 aeaeon. Next to Min Moore, who plays Dtck’i wtfe in “Die Dick Van Dyke Show,” Sunshine will return in the morning bringing fair skies with little change ta temperature. Highs will fall between 68 to 75. have not been deep penetrations by either side." Asked whether the United States favored a plebescite ia Annual Grid 'Kickoff in Press Tomorrow The annual “Kickoff’ football section of the Poetiie Prow, filled wttk starlet, pic- the United States has always feit this should be considered as part ef an over-ell escaped from the area. sentation. (See story, Page 2). Partly cloudy ikies will bring . .. ... higher temperatures on Wednes- Itela-Psktotan oettlemeiit. day. Pakistan tea insisted that • Low mercury reading in down- plebescite in Kashmir be part of the pee-—towp Pontiao before 8 a,m. was any-aettiem................. I 50. By 2 p.m. It registered 78. oppoeed it. midgets to tte pros b earning year way tomarrtw. 3E2- THE PONTIAC T*RESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER M. 1W Parley at M Signals GOP Drive MACKINAC BLAND (AP) -Mfehigan RapUMtcnne have « new positive victory formula— but (he hard work ahead is to sell their ideas la independents, Democrats and even some doubtful Republicans. What Gov. George Romney ceded the party’s most realistic effort over to identify problems and recommend solutions came out of a 4bree«iay Mackinac Island conference. . Hie recommendations may not all be popular with every- one. But they’ll be taken into the field by GOP leaders for a sort of test marketing late this year as Republicans begin a lengthy drive aimed at reversing lMfa SHUN DISUNITY In a convention almost remarkable for its candid recognition that the party is in trouble, some 750 participants were told again and again that they cannot afford dtenity, that attractive candidates mint be located and Quit positive programs—not just negativism — must be de- Harmony indeed did prevail. Not one major fight developed. No slate of candidates was trotted out but leaders acknowledged they want to settle on major office-seekers early and try to avoid bitter primaries on- it it it it it- ly three months before the general election. Efforts at a positive program cams in the form of £ pages of recommendations developed by four task forces. FLAT RATE TAX Heading the list eras endorsement of a flat rate state income tax as part of a revenue-raising fiscal reform program. The recommendation paralleled the program Romney and some legislators from both parties will submit to the legislature. Although in February Romney had to make an impassioned plea to prevent a GOP convention from gutting his tax ideas, this time be faced only a handful of. mild inquiries about the program. Birmingham News Foiym to Draw Fran ManyV -FRANKLIN — From far a*d Wide, and from rigid next daft the Franklin Forum vwlll draw Ifo speakers for the MBAS sea- She will be fuUowed Feb. It by author John. Q* creator of I Peter Trees. The series of five programs will begin text month and extend throu^F^rueryattifo FrankUn Community Church. . Friends of the Franklin Li- ston for ticket nlas at the heme sf Mn. R. J. Bampseu, Leaders Hope So aggressive civil rights declaration said industry and five programs directed toward Romney to Shun Senate? recruitment and training of citizens of all races to opportunities for employment and promotion within the industry or union structure.” MACKINAC ISLAND (AP) Visiting Republican leaders all gave Gov. George Romney an expected pat-on-the-back acknowledgment on his 1968 presidential possibilities — and obliquely let him know they thought he ought to run for governor, not UJS. senator, in 1968. Rhode Island Gov. John Cha-fee, Colorado Gov. John Love and Republican National Finance Chairman Gen. Ludus Clay each visited with Romney at the weekend Mackinac Island State GOP Conference. Chafee, Love and Romney are three of the five governors on the new Republican Policy Committee- Romney’s administration and implied that the party ought not take a chance of losing its Michigan state house control. ANOTHER HINT Love said he’d like to see Republicans win at both state and national levels in 1188, but that "If I had to choose, I'd pick the courthouses and state houses” for the more necessary victories — possibly another hint that Romney ought to stay In Michigan. He said, "hot too many people” are being discussed in Colorado as 1168 presidential possibilities, "but George Ijtomney is certainly one of them.*' One brief dispute flared with the task force declaration supporting "the position that no person may refuse to aell Ms house to a buyer because of the eMor of Ms skin or his religious ' beliefs. At a news conference, Chafee said there is “a lot to that argument” that a governorship is too limited a base for a presidential bid. GOVERNOR BUSY “A governor is so busy run- ning complicated state machinery that he doem’t have much time for other fosuaa,” he commented. But he added that the GOP Policy Committee is fttr-nishing "a vehicle that did not candidates’ study of national "The governors aren’t out of the (1MB) picture,” Chafee said. Chafee later declared in a speech that Republican-governed states should be used as showcases of what the GOP can do when in administrative control of government. He was lavish in praise of Clay, with a smile at Romney, spoke of "outstanding leadership available in the Republican Party.” But he said he’d "hate to lose a state governor to gain a senator.” Romney has left open the question of whether to seek a third term in 1188 or the UJ5. Senate seat of Democrat Patrick McNamara. STATE CHAIRMAN State chairmen Mrs. E Peterson said, however, she giving no thought to Ms running for the Senate. She said leaders hope to select their candidates by mid-November so be can be long exposure and development. "In view of this, are you real-. seriously considering the Senate,” Romney was asked. “I Uke to give people room to speculate,” be laughed — sounding like a man not, repeat not, about to shock “ The Weather Fall U.S. Weather Boreas Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Mostly cloudy sad mild today. High! 78 to 71. Variable cleodiaaes with chance af light rain er scattered showers tonight. Laws 15 to 82. Mostly fair aad little change to temperntores tomorrow. High* 17 to 71. East to Mrtheast winds 6 to 14 miles boeomtag reriheast 8 to 18 mOes fry afternoon. Outlook far Wednesday: Partly cloudy SENSES PROBLEM Sen. Robert Huber, R-Troy, said such a statement would present “a problem in my district" — some of it wealthy suburban area. He advocated substituting “should” for “may. But John Feikena, co-chairman of the Michigan Civil Rights Commission and author of the statement, retorted that “if we say ‘should’ instead of ‘may,’ we will not win the respect of people in our state. A Republican problem has been watered-down such statements.” He warned that until housing problems are solved, the racial drisis will remain. Romney, House Minority Leader Gerald Ford, R-Mich., Colorado Gov. John Love and Rhode Island Gov. John Chafee alternated toapeaktag for unity, attractive candidates and a posi- 2-PARTY SYSTEM Chafee told the conference Republicans don’t deserve support if they can present nothing more than a plea for strengthening the two-party system. “The people have tittle fear of a one-party country if that party provides honesty, leader-sMp, dignity and drive,” he said. Kelley Talk to Democrats State Atty. Gen. Frank J. Kelley will be the principal speaker tomorrow at the quarterly meeting of the Oakland County Democratic Committee. The 8 p.m. meeting will be in the supervisors’ auditorium at the county courthouse. Among the items to be discussed will be the record of the recent session of the legislature, and a review of the party's position on fiscal reform. FRESH U.S. TROOPS - Elements of the U.S. 1st Cavalry Air Mobile division fill a landing craft as they approach the beach at Qui Nhon during the weekend landing of 20,000 fresh troops- The beach is 260 miles northeast of Saigon. The division will shuttle hi fast-strike attacks on the Viet Cong. Count 400 Bodies in Louisiana (Continued From Page One) areas normally protected by levees and an elaborate pumping system held die water like a bowl. Officials wouldn’t has-ard a guess as to how tong it will take to drain. Cong Blasted in Day, Night I by U.S. Craft SAIGON, South Viet Nam (1)1 —U.S. warplanes kept, up round-the-clock bombings today of aj Mekong Delta area where a| Viet Cong regiment is believed encamped, a U.S. military spokesman said. The doffeo hour, to which interested residents aw invited, will begin at 10 a.m. Pop art will be the topic of tiw Brat 1:11 p.m. forum, ached-uled for Oct. V. Discussing the controversial trend will be Ellen Johnson, professor of art at Obprlin College ; in (Ado. INTERIOR DECORATOR I The Nov. 17 speaker will be ! Milka Iconomoff, Interior decorator for the J. L. Hudson Co. Mist Iconomoff, a member of tiw American Institute of Interior Designers who is involved io the Archives of American Design, win pom the question “Why Interior Designing?” and off er some answers. “Where Is Bvi Gotog” is foe title ef foe nonpolitical tafe to he gives to January by Mrs. Elly Peter inn, ttepsiMeaa State Central 'Cematttoi The world traveler and author # best eeltors makes hia home in Orchard Lake. bonusprogram Another well-known area personality, Bud Guest of Bingham Farms, will present a bonus program for the holders ef season tickets on St. Patrick’s Day. The family event wB be held to the evening. W| H One levee beside the industrial canal was cut to an effort to, speed the drainage. Power failure, still a major problem to the city, hampered operations at the Mg pumping stations. J. DUNCAN SELLS The planes were trying to hit canals which can be used as Physicians assisting the Red Cross screened refugees for possible communicable diseases. Administrator Resigns at 0U The first woman elected as a state chairman of the Republican Party, Jin. Peterson will apeak here Jan. 18. Gunman Dies in Holdup Try There was no confirmation of the Indian claims. However, diplomatic sources to New Defiti said it appeared Pakistani forces had been hard hit. SNAKE SERUM Extra supplies of snake bite serum were on band. Snakes are a serious problem in some south Louisiana areas during and after a flood. Oakland University’s assistant provost, J. Duncan Sella, hat accepted the position of director of student organizations, at University of Michigan. Commission Meets Tonight Because of a Michigan Municipal League convention this week, tiw City Commission will meet at 8 tonight instead of the normal Tuesday night meeting. Among the items stated for consideration tonigh t is a request from the county for off-street perking space for employes at the County Annex Building on Lafayette. The County Board of Auditors seeks to reri ■ portion ef foe city’s effstreet parking •u the west side ef Ptoe, between Lafayette aad Feneley. In other business, a petition is to be presented for a water main on East Sheffield between Highwood and the Jaycee Park. Separate resolutions also are to be proposed to advertise far bids for an aerial platform truck for tiw fire department and to plant frees to both urban renewal projects. Public bearings are scheduled on vacating several streets and alleye. He had been on teave-of-ab-sence doing graduate work at U. of It Selto came fa Oakland University to foe summer ef INI as dean sf stadcats. He was preawtod to associate dean of foe adversity hi 1M4. Last summer’s administrative reorganization changed the title to assistant provost ASSUMES NEW TITLE Frederick Obear has assumed the title of assistant provost, deaa of freshmen and head of the charter college. He handles all advising programs and records of freshmen and transfer students. Thomas Dutton, dean of students, is responsible for records of upperclassmen, reinstatements and questions of academic standing. A Real (S)Crap Table FOREST PARK, HI (UPI) — Mn. Sharon Berryman Hked her worn out Renault sports car so well she couldn’t bear to part with it. Saturday aha had a ■crap dealer compress it into a coffee table for her living room. escape routes by the guerrillas in the region 50 miles west of Soc Trang. U.S. officials said they behaved foe guerrillas were trapped by foe kemhtags Ground trespn ware set committed to the action became af heavy rains awl too forge rise af foe Viet Coag force. A Communist regiment usually numbers 2JM men. The main, pvt of tiw U.S. Army 1st Cavalry air mobile Divirion began landing at Qui Nhoa today. Adva&cegroups were already ashore. * * * The arrival of the 20,000 “Fly-tog Horsemen” pushed UJ3. troop strength to Viet Nam somewhat beyond 125,000. The exact figure was not disclosed. 8ECRET AREAS As foe troops came ashore from the ships Buckner and Darby, they were taken by helicopters to their secret I areas. The Buckner brought 2,110 men and the Darby S.7M. . Tha dlvtstoa, trained aspa- wns expected to be deployed to South Viet Nam's central highlands. The Sait's home haw to Ft. Bearing, Ga. Qri Nhaa fa IN miles nsrtitoast af In air action Sunday, B&2 bombers of the Strategic Air Command carried out their 22nd announced strike of the war, hitting the Ho Bo woods M mfiw north of Saigon. The planes flaw to from Guam. Garner Top TV Awards 4 Shows Dominate Emmies HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Dick Van Dyke, the Lurie,* Barbra Streisand end Leonard Bernstein - and an almost two-hour parade of television’s technical experts — dominated tiw 17th annual Emmy Award Show. The television academy, to an announced drive to etreunline the award presentation, dropped the number of categories from 29 to I. Moot of the winners, unknown to the general public. NATIONAL WEATHER — Rain and drizzle are forecast for New England tonight with showers and thundershowers predicted for the upporliieriarippi Valley, tiw mid-Missouri Valley and to sections ef tbs Pacific Northwest. Warner Valley with little c The show, presented over NBC-TV Sunday night, lasted more than two hours. Than were only two major entertainment categories: outstanding program and individual1 achievements to enter Four Emmies were _ MK§ They went to “The Dick Van Dyke Show,” “My Name la Barbra,” a special with Barbra Streisand; “Tha Magnificent Yankee,” with Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontaine, and “What la Sonata Form?,” a Leo Philharmonic young people's CAME GROUP WINS The second major category • achievements W paralleled the first. Tha Loris, Miss Stretonad, Van Dyke and Bernstein also won to tide category. In the outstanding program achievements to news, documentary, information and ■ports, “The Louvre” swept the field. The loving took at foe M 0 The only other to rate a was “I, Leonardo da Vinci,’ part of the ABC ‘Saga of Western Man.” Final icon: NBC 14 Emmtee; CBS, 11, and ABC 3. ’ *•- . Tha Emmy show was beamed simultaneously from Hollywood end New Yen. " Gary Lewis - son of Jerry appeared with Me rock V roll group and a bunch of teen-age TRIES TO AD JUB Producer John Guedel tried to of tiw presenters — to Me er- Durante said: “8toy on John. You nudfe me look good.” Guedel to preridatt of the Hollywood branch of the Televisioe Most of tiw winners were to New Yack; 22 of them. Only « of tiw winners were to Hollywood. Ae usual, many of foe actual winners were not present to receive their awards, tarry Van Dyke, brother of Dick, accepted one of foe awards for “The Dick Van pykn Show.” _ Crawford and Mrivyn Douglas accepted the awards for the Lurie. Denny Thomas .wie master ef ceremonial te HoOywood and Sammy Davie Jr. was emcee to New York. Thomas, of Lebanese descent, said to Dnele^a Negro convert to fo* Jewtofet frith: “Oily to Jew be on the nine program." (Continued From Pag* One) fracas aad dropped his gn as be nw out tiw rear doer ef foe store. Lew said he grabbed a 12-gauge shotgun which he kept behind foe meet counter end fired once at Scott before foe would-be bandit got outside. Polka said Law fired one or two more footgm blasts at Scott ae be tawte a car down Luther toward Howland. LOST CONTROL Scot t lost control of tiw vehicle as he turned onto Howland, struck a car driven by Barnie Smith, 22, of Detroit, then veered into the house, police said. was to life haww when It was struck by foe ear, received minor tojwrfes when foe impact knocked a cabinet ever, afrfotogher. Oakland County Prosecutor S. Jerome Bronson said tide morning that he could see no reason to call, o coroner’s inquest to investigate the shooting. Police arid Scott had a long police record, with convictions for burglary, forgery, unlawful flight end car theft. They arid he has served time to several penitentiaries. India Claims Major Viory (Continued From Page One) and leaving the city but American officials were pressing for permtorion to start evacuation today or later to the week. The Indian radio said reports from tiw front indicate tiw Lahore battle compares to intensity with tank dashes fought in foe North African desert by German and Allied armies in World War H. TANK DAMAGE Since Sept. 1, Indian forces have “immoMltoed” 248 Pakis tani tanka, destroying or damaging 212 and capturing M, the It was estimated that Pakis- taaks at the beginning ef the conflict India claimed Pakistani plaben raided the Sikh holy city of Amritsar to Punjab State and the city of Jobodpur to Rajasthan State lata yesterday. Milliken Due I for Address j at GOP fete Lt Gov. William Milliken will be the featured guest when tiw Oakland County Republican Party bolds its kickoff meeting of the Ndghbor-to-Neigbbor run Drive Wednesday. The meeting is scheduled for 8:90 p.m. at the Bloomfield Hills Junior High School, 4200 Quar- Finance vetarieers from all over Oakland County wM attend foe meeting to low aad to GOP County Chairman, Dale A. Feet. Mn. Edward T. Downs, campaign chairman, said tiw yearly drive is the Republican effort for broad barn financial support. This year's Neighbor-to-Neigh-bor Drive will begin Thursday and run through Saturday. NOTICE! CITY OF PONTIAC COMMISSION MEET1NQ The Pontiac City Commission meeting which would normally 4* held Tuesday, September. J 4, 1965 hos been rescheduled to meet Mondqy, September 13, 1965. All hearings scheduled far Tuesday, September 14,1945 will be scheduled for Man-day, September 13, 1965" starting at 9:00 P. M. in the ComitiJesion Chambers, City Hull.:';"’ (signed) Olga Bgrfceigy % M m THE PON TT AC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1965 Honors to Kansas Girl wanted to become a pedtatrid- mother, Mrs. Hurley DTeryant, p since I was IS years old. I who looks more Ilka a tightly Just love chfldrsn.” ' t**V ■ The new Mbs America also rRI,nrr m unif said tie would like to work with LKBOIT Mm. Bryant sizzled when her tear medical organisation In daughter said: “I, hare to give Southeast Asia, ppmued hr ™y mother most of the credit the US. Junior ^mwW of foF my winning. She makes all Commerce. my clothes, and she coached me * ★ in flie drama skit.” 1 would like to teach tie na- Debbie’s father is a dvil engi-tives to treat themselves,” tie near working for tie U.S, Air said. Force. He Is stationed at Clark Debbie said mostof tie credit Field hi tie Philippines but is for her victory should go to her currently in Viet Nam. SUNS and only SIMMS has aH these goad bays in the Camara Department Soft-Rich-Luxurious Fabrics 100% Wool Yardgoods HERE'S A TOAST — Nineteen-year-old Deborah Bryant, Miss Kansas, who won the coveted crown of Miss America in Atlantic City, N.J., Saturday n%ht, raises a glass of orange Juice in a toast. The five-foot, seven-inch brown-haired beauty won the title over 49 other contestants from all states of tie Solids; herringbone and checks in most popular tones for fall and winter sewing. Variety In this wide assortment in 54” to 60” widths. Marine Recruiter Wrong: 17-Year-Olds May Fight DETROIT (AP) - A U.S. Marine Corps recruiting sergeant Saturday said he Inadvertently misled at least one mother by saying her 17-year-old son would not be sent Into combat untiLbe was IS. Stone, Rep. John Conyers, D-Mich., and MaJ. James Kline-dinst, officer in charge of the Detrott office. S SIGNED WAIVER Sgt Richard Stone said he had been under the impression that 17-yearoids would not be ordered into combat when he enlisted Karl Hubert, spn of Mrs. Blanche N. Hubert of Detroit. 6 Ft. Carpet Runnfers .,^1 Simms Price 2 For Hi or Lo-Cut Styles Kodak‘Instamatic’ Cameras j ■BB Instamatic 300 Sets S5EE3) $49.50 •l.ctrk-.y* canwro /*ith i jj2^KSBdKA.built^ flash, rapid film ;$ doubla exposure praranNoe. Com- [t; Klinedinst has issued instructions to recruiters not to imply that 17-year-olds would be exempt from combat duty. Insurance Cost Too High? Instamatic 400 Sets pW Soldering Gun Free with the purchase of '‘Wen’ Electric Polisher and Sander $15,000 1.500 6JOOO ..3,000 Industrial rated for heavy duty use, 1fi h.p. motor, heavy auty all gear construction, rugged needle point bearings. Converts to polisher for furniture, floors ■or cars. Gat a $4.95 pistol type soldering gun absolutely free. ‘liability with powerful pound. With bah- Physical Damage of French Ambassador PARIS (AP) ,_, . The United States has approved tie selection of Charles Lucet to be new Frendi ambassador toWatilng-ton, Fiend) sources said today. Lucet, who has bean director of political affairs hi tie Frendi Foreign Ministry, succeeds Herve Alphand, named secretary general of tie ministry. (CITY Of PONTIAC) » Similar Savings on all amounts — anywhere. 4-Qt. Mirro-Matio Pressure Pen B Qt. Electno lee Cream Freezer 11 Simms Priest Call fin• fiM dmtaiUr Revange Was Sweet CRE8CO, Iowa (UPI) - Burglars netted only $S0 from, breaks into 11 Arms over tie weekend but they took a sticky revenge. They opened the valves on a storage tank, releasing a ton of molasses. 52 years of servicel 20 Pe. Socket Set Not Inferior Imports-But Genuine American Made Quality In These ft Children's 2-Piece 10-Pemr Hand Telescope cold nights Gripper wpist, non-slip plastic feet, napped rib kntt fcr d«» drsn h sizes O-l -2-3-4. Colors of canary, blue, pink IS&flB’1’ 20 piece set Vi" 3 wwm and %” drive, folly guaranteed, chrome plated, exceeds .government torque‘specs. The toof set of T001 uses. . SfMMS DISCOUNT BASEMENT CAMERA DEPARTMENT DISCOUNTS 2nd FLOOR SPECIALS SIMMS 51 SIMMS."* — BROTHFRS oil 1.4? 98 H. Sarin aw St.-Mail Floor fl SIM M 5 1 ear bi ItO 11* V RS v WM, 8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY^ SEPTEMBER 18, 1965 2 Double fatality Mishaps Meeting Held Charles, and her daughter, Erin, 7, were killed yesterday hi a two-car intersection coiltoton in Mootroae Township in Genesee County. In other accidents: Two doable fatality accidents helped push Michigan's weekend traffic death toil to 19. Two north of Sagtaaw. Lkiytl Robert Johnson, 29, Jackson, was killed early yesterday when his car rammed a roadside tree Just east of Jack-son. He was a well known Jack-son television personality who was on a children’s show on which he was called “Taminy." CAR HITS 2 TREES Carl Davis Hots, 24, Grand Junction, was killed late Sur-day when his car went off a Martin Township road near Martin and hit two trees. Roy Daniel Freshour, 14, rural Union ia Cass County, was killed Saturday when a car hit the bicycle he was rid- Norvy Jenkins, 17, Huron Township, died yesterday from injuries suffered Saturday night in a three-car accident in Li von-1 FAILS TO MAKE CURVE Anthony Bauman, 19, Remus, was killed early yesterday when Us car failed to make a curve on MU. Mary Patricia Garthmd, 21, Johnson of the Detroit Housing and Home Finance ‘"Agency office; Ed Brudpr, acting director Of the Chicago region of HHFA; and RrJ Alexander, director of the Oakland County Department of Public Works. DISCUSSION LEADERS - Members of a panel discussing federal aid for sewer projects in a meeting at Lake Orion yesterday were (from left) Congressman Billie S. Farnum, D-W^terford Township; Owen Need for the system has been brought about by the pollution of Paint jCreek. program facts Assisting Farnum in outlining the various federal programs were Ed Bruder, acting director of the Chicago region of the federal Housing and Home Finance Agency (HHFA); and I Paul W. Reed of the U.S. Public Health Service construction division. Also on the panel were Owes Johnson, engineer from the | Detroit HHFA office; and R. J. Alexander, director tf the 3 Area Gir Win Nursing Scholarships Timothy Reed, 16, Livonia, was killed Saturday afternoon in a motorcycle-car accident in Livonia. George Bushaw, 17, Detroit, who was riding behind Reed on the motorcycle, was injured. CRASHES ON I-M Preston Payton, 19, Chicago, was killed Saturday when his car crashed on 1-94 in Wayne County. Lawrence Mills, 29, Royal Oak, died Saturday of injuries suffered ia an accident in Detroit Friday night James Waterman, 16, Canton Township, also was killed Friday night when a car driven by Stanley Traskos, 59, Inkster, hit the bicycle he was riding. The accident happened in Plymouth Township. George L. Crump, 19, Muskegon, was killed Saturday morning in a Wear pileup in Muskegon. KILLED ON M-69 Jack I. Daugherty, 21, Jones, was killed Friday when his car was strode by another vehicle on M60 in Cass County. * * / *_ John Jayko, ,M, Detroit, was killed Friday in a hit-and-run accident in Merritt. acts under which the village, could qualify for federal aid: the construction grants program of the Water Pollution Control Act and Section 702 of tbe recently passed Housing and Ui> ban Development Act. But Renee A. and Richard G. Thibodeau soon will be working on opposite sides of the world. She is in El Salvador and he will leave for the Philippine^ WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP -The Peace Corps has enlisted the services of a brother and sister team from White Lake ROCHESTER — A snapshot contest will be sponsored by the Avon Photo Chib during the Art V Apples Festival Thursday through" Sunday. ALMOST — The Women’s Auxiliary of AJmont Community Hospital has awarded its 1965 registered nurse scholarships to Linda Stone of Romeo and Maryann Preifauf of Allenton. Linda, who lives with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Gaffney at 414 N. Bailey, is a June graduate of Romeo High School. Maryann, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Pfejfauf, graduated from Almont High School in June and plans to start her training this month at Harper Hospital, Detroit. Another area girl, Sherry Hamilton of Leonard, was awarded a nursing scholarship from the Tri-County Nurses As- Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Gerard Thibodeau, 1296 Oxbow Lake. Reed said tbe pollution act would provide up to 60 per cent or*9600,000, whichever is smaller, toward the cost of a treatment plant, interceptor of Public Works (DPW). . Plans for a village collection system and treatment plant were designed early last year by Hubbell, Roth and Clark, consulting engineers. SYSTEM OKAYED The system was approved by the DPW, which would act as contracting agent, and the Wa-ter Resources Commission. A 1964 graduate of St Michael College at the University of Toronto, Miss Thibodeau attended WaUed Lake High School. COMMUNITY RO^E She has been in El Salvador three months, working on community development in San Jose La Majada, about 90 miles from the capital city, San Salvador. After serving in the Peace Corps, she has her sights set Anyone attending the festival may enter the contest with the exception of camera club members, members of the photographic profession or their fairi- H ALF EXPENSES The new Housing and Urban Development’Act will eventually provide up to 50 per cent of the cost of such projects, Farnum said, but Congress has not yet made any appropriation for Si program. One point was emphasized by all the panel members — further delay of the project will result The Photo Club will exhibit two phases of photography during tbe festival. A continuous color slide travelog of the United States, and nature slides, all taken by members of the dub, will be shown at 7 each night except Sunday, when the festival closes. tare must be no larger than I”x7”. Each contestant may enter no more than three pictures and each picture must be accompanied by its negative in a separate envelope with name, address, phone number and “student” or “adult” on the back of each entry. the project was halted by a suit filed against the vfllage by the Lake Orion Homeowners Association. 1 Tbe association charged that the estimated cost of the system, 91.96 million, is too high, and that the statue permitting assessment of taxes to pay for the project is unconstitutional. Sasha bow School PTA to Moot on Thursday INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP - “Who’s Who” win be the topic of Thursday nighfs PTA meeting at Sashabaw Elementary School. The program is scheduled for 6 p.m. at the school, 5275 May- Her brother, who plans to become a priest, studied at Detroit’s Sacred Heart Seminary and St. John’s Seminary to Plymouth. COSTS RISING Johnson estimated that con* struction costs of such projects are increasing from 9 to 12 per. cent annually. JUNE GRADUATE A June graduate of Oxford High School, she win enter Harper School of Nursing, Detroit. Sherry is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hamilton, 475 Forest. conservative in his estimate of an annual increase of 1.5 to t percent In the Philippines, he will teach English in a secondary school. Huron, Michigan Both at Exact Chart Depths The levels of Michigan’s Great Lakes and Lake St. Clair arc following a seasonal downward trend, according to the August bulletin of the Corps of Engineers Lake Survey Division. With the exception of Lakes Michigan and Huron, however, all are still above the planes of reference shown on navigation charts. Lake Ontario, which showed a steady rise from January to mid-July of this yew, Is presently 17 Inches above chart levels. Lake Erie is second highest wife a reading of 10 inches above chart depths. Lake Superior shows a reading of plus-seven inches and Lake St. Clair Is six. inches above chart levels. Oakland County’s , Largest Mortgage Lending Institution SPECIALIZING IN HOME LOANS WE BUY LAND CONTRACTS planning to buy Of build a if you are new home or to improve your present home, come in and see us today. regarded as one lake by the engineers, are now at the exact navigation chart depths, according to the bulletin. LEVELS TO DROP Ttm monthly survey predicts e 2-SPUD, 2-CYCIE auto. Washer • l Wuh. Uw Water 761 W. HURON—PONTIAC PONTIAC WAREHOUSE miMAPH RD. 16 MW f. ORCHARD LAKE MX I mu Nuk tfMtrmcU MlU Open Daily 10-9—Open Sunday 11-6 — FES-7051 APPLIANCE BUYERS: OLLIE FRETTER SAYS: FRETTER APPLIANCE COMPANY 4 fjp 2-Dr.' Hot joint, FTSSt Frss Refrigerator Seettes. tjgjg pup Family She Hoae Freeior, NoMe 999 »e* Nee Bean Storage to deer. Fag 'Faotory COLOR TV • All *2 OWMl tWf ? Ofn-rSftiir Warranty, in $dJQ Original Crate ™ *' msmrs'iow, uwiMima ’349” 1666 AN Channel Felt-Okie Zenith, $AQ Sutteaee ctyle. W No Money Down Boys 26" 3-Speed Lightweight Bike Lerge 72x90-lnch size has nap-loc and extra left for more puff and pile resistant. Machine washable. Sold In fine stores coast to coast. Choice of blue, pink, beige, white, gold am^ $>een. Use your credit... It's easy and convenient. U» : Blank*.... Fourth Floor THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1965 FIVE The La nd of Lyndon Texans Reaping Tourism Harvest From LBJ Country JOHNSON CITY, Tex. (AP) — You cen buy a 6-ounce bottle of murky water far 99 cents. The liquid ig labeled “Presidential Nectar” and it cornea from a nearby lake* called Lyndon B. Johnson, a non* that means tourist dollars around here. For this Is the "President's Country,” where the LBJ brand has the Midas touch. ♦ P . of There are T-shirts with Lyndon B. Johnson this or that at the souvenir stands and corner drug stores. Rocks from the LBJ ranch near Stonewall are going for a cents apiece. Land prices in the 19-mile stretch of central Texas that's considered Lyndon’s L are rising. So is attendance in the area’s parks and campsites. •LBJ NEIGHBOR And for $1 you can become the President's neighbor. That’s the price of one square inch of land in Bluebonnet Acres, which adjoins Johnson’s 450-acre ranch. The tourists keep pouring in, the cash registers keep ringing and businessmen keep smiling. * * * “It’s been wonderful,” said Harold Settling, a Fredericksburg banker and president of the town’s Chamber of Commerce. Said one service station operator in Fredericksburg: “If we get too much more business, we won’t be able to handle It.” TOURIST TRAFFIC Tourist traffic through the area has been likened to a train, "one car after another.” .Motorists are especially attracted to Ranch Road 1, a four-mile loop which passes 200 yards from the President’s ranch bouse. Parents and kids strain to get a glimpse of Johnson himself on one of his frequent weekend trips home. The oddo are they front, The Secret Service now seals off the road when the President returns to the ranch. In Stooewall’s only restaurant, owner Kemltt Hahne, who has worked for Johnson as a laborer and a vote-getter, watched the tourists file in. “The important thing was to get Lyndon elected,’' he said. But he adds, “things, should be good (Tom now on.” BOOM PERMANENT? Hahne, like most businessmen in the "President’s Country,” thinks the LBJ tourist boom is At Austin, the state capital, Four Rescued as Copter Falls LEAMINGTON, Ont (AP)-A U.S. Navy helicopter plunged into Lake Erie three miles east of Pelee Island Sunday during a training exercise. The four Naval reservists aboard were rescued by another helicopter. The crew, Lt. Cmdr. Fred Gyuhler, 96, of Detroit, Lt. Cmdr. Kenneth Drew, 96, of Dearborn, Mich., Hans Hart-kops, 24, of Toledo, Ohio, and Richard Fletemeyer, 27, of Detroit climbed out of the craft after it hit the water with its tail section ripped off. * * ★ Another helicopter from the Grosse He Naval Air Station near Detroit, also on a weekend training flight, rescued the men. The men were taken to Lighthouse Point on Pelee Island, 20 miles south of here. Officials said they did not appear to have suffered from tbeir dunking. contractor , Bil terms the tourist potential of LBJ tremendous. He noted that between 8 and 10 million people visited former President John F. Kennedy’s summer home at Hyannis Port, Mass., in 1969. *' * * Tom Perkins, a Chamber of Commerce staffer in Austin, said, “the best indication of the increase of tourism is motel occupancy.” He said at least two major motel chains are looking over Austin as another possfide site. / ' The boom hasn’t come with complete \harmony, though. Johnson City and Stonewall have a low-key feud going over can claim the Presilt as its "own.” CLAIM JOHNSON About a month after Johnson became President, Johnson City erected a large sign reading “Welcome to Johnson City, Home Town of Lyndon B. Johnson.” A tourist information center followed quickly. Then mer-the town, population 700, began passing out car bumper stickers with the President’s name. _ * ★ ★ At Stonewall, population 200, this sign meets motorists on U.S. 290: “Peach Center of Texas, Home of LB.J.” Johnson was born near Stone- wall and went to school at Albert first, but then finished high school at Johnson City. His parents had a home at Johnson City, which was named for ancestors. NO FUSS WANTED Fredericksburg got into the argument when its newspaper, The Standard, said, “We see no reason for all the fuss and flurry. Personally, we think President Johnson is a big enough man to belong to all three of our sites are skyrocketing. Near the LBJ lake, Fred Wood, fbo’s in the fishing business, said: "My conscience has been bothering me ever since I sold a fellow 1% acres for 14,500. But guess I can rest easy now since he told me the other day he had resold it for |8,000.” While some haggling goes on, buildings go up. And “almost every store in town carries some souvenirs,” says Charles Matus, president of Johnson City’s Chamber of Commerce. The top sellers are dishes with pictures of the President and Mrs. Johnson. * * * Several otter commercial ventures have yet to see a profit. At Stonewall, for instance, a community center with a restaurant, ballroom and lounge has never left the planning stage. And a motel and tourist center proposed for the LBJ ranch area were dropped last year when the State Parks and Wildlife Commission designated 240 acres of farm and ranch land as Lyndon B. Johnson State Park. PRICES SKYROCKET Prices on available building BACK TO SCHOOL BICYCLE SALE Our Entire Stock Reduced Boys or Girls 20" DELUXE BICYCLE Roys' or GW 24" 26"-Ligtoweight BICYCLE tx)cuf& Shop Waite's Mon., Thurs. Fri. and Sat. Nites till 9 Your Choice of DOWN or DOWN . and FEATHER PILLOWS 90S Down. 50% Feather ■ 100% Dawn ^Vigubrly I0.V9 each. “ * Regularly 12.99 — 2 far *16” -____-______ gfartiq” Imported French Down for years of sleeping comfort. Lovely down-proof ticking in pink or blue. Charge Yours. Pillows... Fourth Floor angier by Callaway 'The Label of Luxury Bath Towel *1.99 Stripes with a difference! Tangier, shinning throo-co1* or toweling with wovep |acqvard border and silky 85% Rayon, 15% Acrylic BELLEAISTVALMOR BLANKET Huntramck, Mich., is a 2.09 aq. mile politically independent community entirely surrounded by Detroit. VUt The HEARING CENTER in the MALL e tests e aids e satteries (In with Pontiac Mall Optlcel Center) Open Evenings -HI SiM 40-1111 Thos. B. Appleton. Conwnant JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS WANTED HIGHEST PRICES PAID We Pick Up FE 2-0200 SOLVE YOUR FIGURE PROBLEM! MERE ME RESULTS YOU MAY EXPECT AFTER 2 TO 3 MONTHS AT HOLIDAY HEALTH CLUB If You Are Too Thin ... ‘If You Are Overweight. Round and Softon Angular Shouldori Uppor Arms Trim Your Walstlfno By 2 to 4“ Firmness In Your Thig Add 1 to 2 and Reshape HERE ME A FEW EXAMPLES OF HOW HOLIDAY HEALTH CLUB FITNESS PROGRAM WORKS . n Develop e firm Bu.t-*• line . . . Slim and Trim piece* .pedal em- 3. Correct Flabby Up- MEMBERSHIP INCLUDES • Figure contouring for women • Ultra modarn health club for men • Luxurious figure contouring aalon tag machines • Patanted clootrieal reducing ma- • Mild progressive resistance ax* ereiBing apparatus • Completely ahr conditioned • All tNo-Turkish steam room • Private ultra-violet beauty ray aun booths • Mechanical massage and spot reducing • Private dressing booths • individual programs and com-plat* supervision • Private lockers E-X-P-A-N-S-l-O-N S-P-E-C-l-A-L We arm expanding to full facilities and a LIMITED number of PREFERRED MEMBERS arm now being enrolled at.. . 5U% QPP OF UUR NATIONAL RATE . CALL 334-0529, NOW OPEN TONIGHT TILL 10 P.M. I SEPARATE FACILITIES SEPARATE FACILITIES FOR WOMEN FACILITIES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT Call 334-0529 NOW! MEN-W0MEN LOOK and FEEL BETTER REGARDLESS OF AGE Our affiliated Prestige Clubs are located in major cities throughout the U.S., Canada, Latin America and Europe. OPEN TONIGHT TIL 10 P.M. THE PONTIAC PRESS It Seems to Me... Humphrey’s Observation Could Well Live Forever Vice President H. H. Humphrey fathered a sage observation that deserves a place in the American Archives of Perpetual Truths. Said the Minnesotan: “The right to bo heard does not automatically include the right to ho taken seriously." All too often, people everywhere leap into print with solemn pronouncements that they offer as “gospel truth" something a waiting; universe should accept with thanks and humility. Often these speakers expect listeners to how. However, I have a word of warning: Don’t confuse seal with intelligence. These "truths" can be 100% wrong. They may be mere hqgwash. ★ ★ This Nation accords its citizens the right to speak in public to their hearts’ content as long as the "messages" aren’t indecent, libelous or palpable falsehoods Too often this constitutional prerogative is glibly associated with Implied importance and profundity. Vice President Humphrey issues a waning that deserves as much publicity as the original declaration. Today’s self-starters are almost frightening in their monumentally swelling ranks. A dizzy indivklnal sounds off in Vermont and prompts an equally irresponsible character to break into song to Oregon on an entirely different subject. Both expect acceptance. ★ ★ • • ★ American individuals must analyse, dissect and reach their own sound and sober conclusions. If an inflamatary message deserves compete rejection, let it receive the full ash-can treatment. And I Immediately hear a chorus of strident off-stage echoes proclam-ing: “and this goes for you, too." , 80-0-0-0-0, O JL I bow before the inevitable. Worth Remembering.. Rep. Ono E. Passman, Louisiana Democrat, told a Chicago audience we should keep in mind that a government big enough “to give you everything you want is also Mg enough to take away everything you have—including your personal freedom.” Some of our Socialist-Democrats should ponder a bit on this timely Democratic warning. Rapid Service. During the recent Gemini flight, the Associated Press evolved a (Worldwide telegraphic hookup that shows the tremendous advancement news services are making. For a period of 19 minutes, beginning just before blast-off, all AP systems (except a small number for special reasons), were hooked together. Hence n “stogie wire" connected the entire globe simultaneously. Identical words were flowing into Portland (Mato# and Oregon), I N. Y.), Bir-1, Min-Phlla- Paris, Pontiac, Prague, Orleans, New Delhi, Topeka etc. etc. ad inf ini-“inflnl- The universal theme song of today seems to bo: “Whatever it is, do it better, more rapidly and morn easily tomorrow." to our mad race for breathless advancement, the Associated Press is n front runner. Editorially, technically and mechanically it Uvea steadfastly in the outer fringe of tomorrow along with the Nation’s most advanced and far-thinking leaders. The Finer Hungs.... With the summer waning, national park re-checks show sorry conditions In many places. Vandalism has been rampant. Furthermore, litteibugs quite outdid themselves. In s few places the conditions are so impossible, one authority suggests all national parks be closed for s few years so the areas can be .saved for later generations which should have a finer appreciation of the nice things to Hfe. ★ ★ ★ Is action as drastic as this-necessary? As some sage remarked: “Our parks have become wreckreatlon areas." And in Conclusion.... Jottings from the well-thumbed notebook of your peripatetic reporter: Castro finds this a tough world. Several years to a row.his methods produced poor sugar crops and now with a bumper yield, world prices have almost collapsed......... Roberta Albibs, 1965 collegiate golf champion, completed her freshman year at Miami with straight “A’a.” At five feet four, 118 pounds, she’s a long hitter and a great competitor . «...... Purely personal nom- ination for one of the all-star amateur chefs to the area: Louis H. Cols. ★ ★ ★ Trusted J 1 scouts advise me Brenda Moore rataa mention as one of th e area’s vary attractive young ladies ., iff lb ...This In JM may amnia you: n surpris- BRENDA ingly large number of private homes are being sold at auction.......... “Bank" and Mrs. Knudsen tell me our picture of the Lions players and their wives was the finest color work they’ve ever seen in any newspaper anywhere...............Insider’s Newsletter says Logan, Utah, has modernized its “most wanted” files. They’ve eliminated John DUlinger.......... , Westerns will have a big revival on TV this faU. “Hogan’s Heroes" and “Wild, Wild West" have big advance ratings. ★ ★ *~~ Overheard: “President Johnson’s beagle will become a father. Anything to .escape the army draft.’’ .......Several large stores are dropping trading stamps—and lowering prices to consumers accordingly............The N. Y. Giants had a bad year in 1964 but their season ticket sale shows all reserved seats gone ......... Overheard: “Russia is building a new, gigantic hotel and they’ll probably call it the Comrad Hilton." .. .......f Dept. of Cheers and Jeers: the CM—Mrs, 8. M. Dudley who played the wed-march for her granddaughter grand years of age; the J*s — boring, tedious and stupid 'We Are Going To Find Live And Work With David Lawrence Says: China Stirred Up India, Pakistan WASHINGTON - Red China is really the aggressor new war in Asia. The government took the long - time hostility between India and Pakistan to pour fuel on the smolderln g flames and precipitate a n e conflict. Appar the Red viuucbc at last became LAWRENCE convinced that American troops would stay in Southeast Aria indefinitely. This made a countermove plausible, on the theory that America would continue to have tta bands full in Viet Nam and would pot, of course, intervene as between India and tala. The Peking, sok advantage of 2 So far as America is concerned, the immediate problem is how the India-Pakistan war is going to affect events in Viet Nam. The Red Chinese are today the chief source of supply for the North Viet Nam gov- If Peking becomes preoccupied with the India-Pakistan war, there will be less munitions and supplies available for the Communists in Viet Nam. As for manpower, the Red Chinese can send la plenty of ly in the air, the Peking government could find It difficult to keep the Norte Vietnamese position from deter! rating. It certainly is also time to take a second look at the foreign-aid program as it affects Asian countries end to consider a policy designed to increase military aid to allies while withholding military supplies from any neutral opuntry on the Asian mainland. iLl3TiStLl%iSLY^ i Says Dominican ] Safe for Castro’s Re<$|r The Dominican Republic seems safe for the Castro Reds. That is the word from anti-Communlst* Latins and Latin American experts who have followed the pro-Communist rebellion since last April. The U;S. sent the marines down to prevent the Red takeover but the double-minded men of the tl jS. State Department in Washington have allowed the tHf( take-over by the Red rebels. All that is necessary to understand the situation in ‘Dominica is a study of the characters how in charge there. Under U.S. pressure the Imbert Junta resigned to make room for an ex-aide of Juan Bosch; Hector ' Garcia-Godoy. Ex-president Bosch has been directing the rebel activities from a haven in Puerto Rico. One of Go^oy’s first acts was to free 2,800 pro-Com-munists including General Wessto y Wessin who kept the country from the Communists until the U.S. Marines arrived. Castro has nothing to worry about in Dominica. He and his dan can direct their attention to some other place in South America. ARTltlUR L. EATON 5 UNlQN LdXE . Let’s Not Make Michigan a ‘Hobby State’ Some men play golf as a hobby, other* flab, and many others enjoy good, dean hobbies. But now bobbies are seeping into . politics -*• playing with the taxpayers’ money. Men who have “everything” are tarring to politic! as a bobby. Democrats Dan Blocker and Steve Allen, and Republican Ronald Reagan are going to run for some office in California. w -dr dr Let’s net tarn Michigan tote a “Hobby State." We need mere men in Ugh offices like my township —psrvlsir, Edward Cheys, who works for all the people and gets a dollar’s worth eat of every defier allotted. ":idr ★ W-,j. Screen your candidates and then vote for the best man. Don’t let the same bee sting yon twice. MERRILL J. DEEM UNION LAKE ‘My Good Intentions Were Misinterpreted’ Because I called the dog warden for assistance in keeping the dog tied up that attacked my child, I am accused of befog mean, cruel, nosy and a busybody- Some days you just can’t wh! \ ANONYMOUS (Editor’s Note: If the writer of a letter signed “A Motorcyclist” will send his name and address for our files, we will be glad to publish his letter). 'J. ,'S^ The Better Half Bob Con&idine Soys: Meanwhile, the Red Chinese, in ewthig Pakistan, are counting on the letter’s Modem following inside India to stir up friction there. It’s basically a struggle for the domination of the Aslan continent. Red China today has on its border with India at least 100,000 troops which could eventually get into the war. But It wfl to argued teat New-Type Clipper Ships May Revive US. Fame psteetlal to carry ea a major - r very bag. The objective n up a wholly ime when most i One thing the Red Chinese If. It is the leverage that tee United States can apply through Nationalist China. The FormosaWernment would like nothing totter than to to given the go-ahead for an attack on the mainland ik view of tee Nationalists’ tolief that the populace there would mri-cotne the chance to rise' up against the Communist government in Peking. PARTIAL VICTORS Perhaps tee Red Chinese may have taken this into account and will be careful not to involve themselves too heavily in Pakistan. They could to content with a partial victory. Coocessfom to Pakistan to a peaks aegetbtba attained either through tee United Nations or seme steer diplomatic appwatm. Ito end re. •alt could to u increase to . tee prestige af the Reid China government ta Asia. Ah escalation Into e larger war is always possible, but it seems unlikely to view of the hazards the Red Chinese face. It is significant that tee Soviet government has already been calling for peace talks as between India and Pakistan. “Emmy Award" program on TV Sunday night. Did anyone, anywhere alt through more than., 40 minutes of the two hours? —Harold A. Fitzoerald NEW YORK-Spyros Skouras, who made a towering name for himself in , the motion picture industry, has taken up a wholly new career at a time when most men would be content to call for their slippers * sharp with which to clip coupons. He is chairman of the board of the P ruden tial Lines, Inc., a CONSIDINE subsidized American flag line which is now engaged to tee hotly competitive business of carrying cargo to Europe and the Mediterranean world. Competitive lines pay their crews only a modest fraction of what tee crews teat sail under tbs U.S. flag must pay. “Well stow ’em,”-the old Greek warrior told us. “My country (America)tad tee fastest cargo stops to tee world, once ’way back— Yankee Clippers. Wen lave tee fastest again, if 1 get my w* Any man who would stak ftf million into “Claopatra,” and sweat, out four dying swan acta put on by its star in tee course of Its production, is not sfrrid to tackle a new job and bring to it a tot of zing. * * * Skouras has launched the first of what to confidently predicts wiO be U ships that wUl nvria-tionize that industry. She is the 8. S. Prudential 8enjet, and eras sent down the ways, at the Bethlehem Steel Corp.’s Sparrows Point shipyard to Maryland — all S44 feet and $11,500,000 of her. COMPUTERIZED SHIP The new ship has hatches galore, computers teat keep track of where every article is lurking, and bargee (hat can to fified at leisure in New York, let’s say, carried foil across tee ocean aboard ship, put beck in tea water at - say - Naples. If there is no pier space available when tee ridp arrives, and unloaded later. la tee meanwhile the stop wfl have toned areaad and been well en Ml way buck to “We’D do to IS days what every other ahip in the claae needs SB days for," said tee man who stood up to Khrushchev to a showdown ovur “Can-Can” on the 20th Century lot “We’ll put the U.S. Merchant Marine back on a paying bails, stow tee flag as it hasn’t tom shown for a century!” “It says it grows healthy bewes..; New, what to the world would I do wlte more booes?” Reviewing Other Editorial Pages A Mother's View The Machinist "I do hops the weather is rice today,” tati one lady kangaroo to another. "I fust hate it when the children hone to play la* Federal Tentacles Michigan Out-of-Doort Behaving for all the world like a gigantic octopus, the fad-, eral government hiu extended at least teres tentacles designed to strangle the activities of hunters. Extremely serious attempts are being made to take all fish and wildlife controls away from tea states and five them to the federal government. What controls from Washington could do to Michigan native wildlife is horrible to ooutem-pfartr. Otis now “tmfads" from the octopus would give full say' so over Ml wildlife on federally-owned lands to tea feds. This would give Michigan’s Corner* vation Department the heaus-ho from almost one-ninth of the state’s land area. Par-fetched? Don’t believe it for a minute! The third tenacle is the one known as the infamous Dodd Bin. This would trite the shortcut and make it is tough for sportsmen to own guns that hunters would be cut to t mini- You thought that the Dodd Bin was dead? Well, Ally. Gm. Nicholas Katzenbafh doesn’t buy that. In fad hs came out with a strong stetemont to the effect that his bon; President Johnson, wants the Dodd Bill and Katzenbach isn’t shout, to •Sttls for anything loss. O’ It. "6 f There you lave the battle toes laid ad to bhek and white. Right new tbs sperto-men ef Mtohigas aid all of toe net ef fee United States ■re to flava danger of taring ast only their right to awn gato tat fee right to hunt anything even if they do save fee guns. There’s • lot mors Involved hare than just guns or wildlife. We’re talking about freedom. director of tee Federal Bureau of Investigation, 8m, Everett M. Dirksen, the ItopdHttUt leader in the Senate, has altered a proposal dealing wife fatdre appointments to tea VfKhlrector-ship. What Ion. Dbtsensski to that the appointment ta anbject to Senate confirmation. As matters stand today, me attorney general could qtjpiotat Mr. Hoover’s successor without seating Senate approval or advice. The Dirksen maaatun is similar to one offered by Rep. Writ Baring (D., Nev.), except teat Rap.. Baring also proposed that the (ftmtoe ham at Mast 10 yean’ service a* a member of tea Federal Bureau of Investigation. t H Beth thi Dirksen and the Brnfeg MBs ata tomfrfl, by a H coovkMtou that tea FBI, aritaf Mb’. Heaver’s cem- even farther. Disguised as a move to give the federal gov- FBI Successor! The Cincinnati Enquirer Anticipating the day when J, Edgar Hoover step* down as ana af the awfl significant •gaaatoa ef the federal govern-DNift. Us exhaustive files, to tbs right toads, m hrilfiai aMttaab for effoettvstow •»-formfe* to aH phrta af tea efeiubft la tea vnrntf toads, tear esaM to laafruaiiato of primes! pressure sad buck- native fish er wildlife Whieh might to eearidared “endangered,” twe MBs could really wreak havoc if enacted. Note- ggpip ■owNw ¥ wait—1 mi Congress should give serious and sirly attention to mating certain that tea FBI directorship fe moved Clearly beyond the reach of unqpallfled political hacks. J Once it Enough The Charleeton (W. VajGamtte Overheard: “The puty time my checkbook balanced uxu the ■ day I got #.* ■■ W.*e THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, Vm SEVEN He one/ Timber Wolves Will Leave neighborhood children pet them. 'r ■:r■ ' * * However, neighbors readied for their shotguns last week when one wolf escaped far two nights and a day before returning voluntarily to his pen Satur- Tbe neighbors have been frying to get rid of the animals since June, when oorof the wolves bit a 9-year-old girl, fhe board of Alderman, in answer to a petition, ordered Wilson to get PRE-SEASON SAVINGS FOR HUNTERS SPECIAL SALE Correct Step® ipg. 6.99 cushioned arch casuals with a stacked heel Smart iookiWg .., cushioned for comfort! Raised seam overlay strap trim on medium toe pumps. Fashioned 9/8 stacked heel. Plus, cloud soft cushion ardi. Slack or fall tan'. Sizes to 10 in narrow, medium width. me aa Weatherproof coat Heavy, water-repellent cotton army duck coat has full width rubberized game pocket, shell holders inside roomy front pockets. Warm cotton flannel inner yoke. Duck field pants Brush-brown color to match coat, four big pockets, zip-fly. Burr-proof for added protection. Cotton duck. HUNTINC CAS, V/%, 7Vi ....Ms COMPARE THE FORMULA AND COMPARE THE PRICE! Save on either brand . . save more on Federal brand TUUK, WnUILE! Shotguns and rifles at outstanding pre-season savings! TOP: 24.95 Mossbwg 410. Single shot, 24" barrol, A A full choko. Chamborod; for 2Vi inch, 3 inch shtlls. Hwryl ^wXg BOTTOM: 21.95 Twenty-two. Single shot, drop-in loading platform with automatic safety. A precision gunl | jj jj Sale! Koratron Kant-Krease shirts and pants need no ironing 5ALEJ Seven-foot pool table with new persimmon billiard cloth, all accessories! Reinforced table has pew molded plastic corners and double framed pedestal legs. MF TF Fk Adjustable bed levelers over entire play- AK " ** SHIRTS surface, double side returns. Complete witff PANTS Work all day—stay neatl Koratron* cotton/polyester twill keeps creases in wrinkles outl Machine wash, spin dry, never iron . • . If Is self pressing while drying! With Koratron Kant-Krease the Compere the savings on Federal and Crest toothpaste Federal Stanpou* < . A Fluoride, 6.75 oz. *4“ Crest Fluoristan Shirt* with trim dress-shirt collar, two button down flop pockets, shaped smooth seams. Bottle green, grey, (4lge. 14V4-17. PanC* in matching groan, grey, beige. Tunnel loops, pre-cuffed, full cut, 5 pock-•H, zip-fly. Waist 30-44, 29-32 leg. SALE! Soya' and girls' 26-inch deluxe bicycles SALE! ABC approved bowling ball and bag set Drilled, eteeswrad 12-16 lb. boll with AM zip doM bag. Rad, I W BIGHT THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, lQgfl Warreri Says taw N&&$afy to tlons today, nationally and In* temationally, ten ever befeke In the history of mankind." CITES NECESSITY Commenting on the quest tor a world ruled by law, the chief justice of the United States spoke of “the necessity that we succeed in order to survive.” “The only provqHe harness deration of Independence Jnj the National Archives Building- The world conference which ends Saturday is sponsored; ty Washington’s World Peace Through Law Center. The center stemmed from a committee of the American ter Association and became an Independent organizatkm in IMS. Membership is restricted generally to attorneys, judges and legal scholars. of more then ISO Supreme Court Justices from around te world — including many chief justices — wearing their varied robes Of office was to open the inaugural session. About 3,ooo lawyers were expected to be on hand. individuals in the world community is no more dreamy, impossible or impracticable thaugu the idea of splitting thmajjffw putting a man on thsMBon, or sending a missile to Mars a few yean ago,” Warren said In an Warren will speak again tonight when cherished historic documents from France and Here is proof that United Home Outfitting brings yoi) unmatched prices and top quality merchandise United Home Outfitting invites you to come see and compare our never before heard of low, low price!! FULLSIZE NAMEBRANDS 1-POUND OF COFFEE * INCHKir Ml HUH anna urn (rati MODEM BEDROOM, 0-PIECES UNITED HOME OUTFITTING SPECIALIZES IN ROOM GROUPINGS AT FANTASTIC SAVINGS + FREE ILUTELY THE TALK OF IKE PONTIAC AREA! 1 i M II i ! \\ d H m i Ml ill FOLLOW HI AMI MHflT ■ BUNITBEDS 8-pieoei including ort hoped i< and iu ■iMil mviw < . . «I-IU ifr, - . ? “ U1 t.’ booidt i 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1065 NINE uaisfi fwm ,* 'fM t j§’'^ S I1 I ONTGOMERY luxury yarns atari exciting low price YOUR CHOICK FOR THIS EVENT ONLY REG. 1.19 100% WOOL knitting worsted in jiffy pull skeins that you never have to ball. Mothproof, 4-ply. 27 wanted colors. REG. 1.09 100% MOHAIR yam imported from Italy. Beautiful brushed mohair in a rich, luxurious yam—washable, too. 40 gram ball, 16 lovely colors. WARD SPECIAL! 'MOHAIR fluff yam ... a silken blend of mohair and Orion® acrylic with the soft look and feel befitting your finest knits. 10 colors. 1 -oz. ball. Sew up big savings In Sanforized* flannel 3 fo"®1 Reg. 49c e Timely fabric buy for warm winter nightwear e Soft machine wothabfo cotton flannelette e Gay patterns: florals> juveniles and staples Smart sewers choose their warm Sanforized® flannelette prints from Wards where they're priced extra low I These high quality best-sellers are napped 5 tints* on front, twice on back, come 36" wide. Come in now! with toe. Smooth uppers. New draped Composition soles. AA GLOVE SPECIAL FAMOUS MAKER NYLON IN SMART SHORTY STYLES |33 Reg. $2 and 91 A wonderful buy at Wards special low price . . . and just in time for the fall season soon to come. Washable double woven nylon shorty style gloves . classis or novelty, Some hand embroidered trims. Tapered fingers. White, bldck, beige. 6%-8. Reg. 2.19 quick-dry gauze diapers Ixtro-abjor- bent, wrinkle- M QQ resist. 21x40". AiU« Infants’ veg 2/1.29 receiving blankets Medium-weight * machine wash QQC cotton. 30x40". OO Button-down or spread collars. Tapered to fit a young man. '65's top campus style in Sanforised® cotton. 15 to 16%. Shop early! 2*4 Reg. 3.99 mnnirwarn sets SAVE HI 4S PIECES TO SUKVI S Hard-fired, lustrously glazed semi-porcelain In drake of two drarming patterns. Dish-wodter and detergent-proof. Eight 5-piece place settings , and 5 serving pieces. yy io-Ft. non Reg. 1.99 Excellent transparency—best see-through of any jplastic. Heavy-gauge, 4 mil. type-use inside or outside, durable—gives satisfactory service to 20* below sere as outdoor storm sash. Practical— easy to dean with a damo doth. 36-inch width. Mf. Ml Ts S.H Strong, healthy bird with bright feathers makes a cheerful companion—delights the entire family with its songs Seamless mesh sheen with smart nudle heel 3**1 01 Rag. 9 Pair 1.17 jpl e Smart dress sheers in microfilm mesh e 100% nylon with reinforced toes e Nude heel perfect for evening, sling shoes Another great faddon buy from Wards I Fine quality hosiery has nude heel for 0 sheer, bore-leg look. Reinforced toes, micro-mesh knit giye you long Wepr, great run-resistance. Smart new colors In sizes 9 to 11. REVERSIBLE! 4” V-RROOM Attaches quickly, makes bike look, sound like motor bike. Starts, revs, idles with key. Batteries extra. IpoduHy prleedl mat 88* Sap US NON-SKID Diamond throad, safe-cushiony and long wearing. ■17x30" BRENT JUNIOR REG. 9.99 QUILT PARKAS 844 It’s almost like getting 2 jackets for the price of 11 Water-repellent nylon quilt reverses to smooth nylon, warmly interlined with Dacron* 88 polyester. Drawstring hood buttons down to form collar, 2 zip pockets. Loden to It. green, blue to maroon. Sizes 4 to 10. STORE 9:30 to 9:00 P.M. MM —PHONE 682-4940 HOURS: MONDAY thru SATURDAY E*OB1TECBC IwlCBBB Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Rd! THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18,. 1965 Custody Fight Strains Child iiuiiming D.C Self-Government Foes face, House Blockade > bring 19 on leaf! against Mississippi MB' entitled to contest the result ■dminietretion- gressmen by a largely Negro showdown vote fa expected Is ipf/ YOUR BUSINESS! JOIN YOUR CHAMBER OF COMMERCE Call FE 5-6148 ’ ; W one of the twice monthly "Dfa* trict Days” for consideration 04 D.C. legislation. But House Speeher John W. McCormack has told Rep. John L. McMillan, D& C., chairman of the House District Commit' tee,i that be would not recognise him on the floor, and instead will schedule seven other bills of equal priority. Th* plan was to thus bury District Day In a heap of other legislation. ALLOWED CHANCE That gives House leaders a Instead erf In School Worry of RENT, LEASE, SELL. BUY HOMES, PROPERTY, COTTAGES, GARS, GOLF CLUBS . use Pontiac Pram Adi. lb place yours, call 331-8111. The House Elections subcommittee has scheduled a long-delayed hearing today on a chal- That bill normally would have bad priority in the House today, Here...THE SPOTLIGHT IS ON J CREDIT 90 DAYS SAME AS MSS No Money Down! Open Your Account in 3 Minnies Her grandmother aits at Gerri Lynn’s side. An Emmet County Sheriff’s deputy is at the door. He is there to carry out a court order to return the child to her natural father. “This is far from ready to be turned over to any deputies,” said Dr. Joseph Conti, chief of staff at the hospital. *! understand that laws have to be obeyed, but, from a medical standpoint, her mind and body | can’t take much more.” RESIDENTS' SPLIT Petoskey residents are divided into “Ernst” and “Flynn” backers. One group sent a petition bearing 1,443 signatures to the Michigan Supreme Court asking reversal of the court’s order returning the child to her father. Others say this is a device to evoke sympathy for the Flynns. All Appliances Include Delivery, Service and GENERAL ELECTRIC BARGAIN SIZE *158°° FREE DELIVERY, SERVICE S YEARS WARRANTY DRYER FREE EDISON INSTALLATION Save 341 JO installation coat— and get our new low price tool Piefaried featuree include aatin emooth drum antnmatic temperate re •election for regular or wash-o-wear fabrics — 2 drying cycles. No Honor Down lO-FOOT NO MONEY DOWN ONLY 31.00 MONTHLY Built to fit anywhere, Generous Freezer Across Top, Porcelain Crisper, Stainless Shelves, Egg and Batter Door Storage and much more. Come Seal GENERAL ELECTRIC 11” Special Close Out *88 REVERSED DECISION The Flynns won custody in a lower court but the Supreme Court reversed the decision. Thursday,’ Emmet County Circuit Judge Charles ^ Brown ordered Gerri Lynn turned over to her father. When deputies went to get the child at the Flynn farm outside Pehwkey, she reportedly became nysteri- m WHIRLPOOL (iltVT 2-CYCLE ELECTRIC DRYER 2-DOOR Another of oar big sale .price reduction*. Roomy True Freeaer With Its Own Door. No* Frost Refrigerator Section, Big Vegetable Crisper, Door Storage, Magnetic Door, etc.. Come Seel Billy Graham Has Bad Day in Hospital GENERAL ELECTRIC 2-DOOR ‘BARGAIN’ *218°° UHF-VHF 1966 Model ROCHESTER, Minn. (AP) -Evangelist Billy Graham, recuperating from surgery on his prostate gland, had a “vary, verv uncomfortable day,” after suffering complications, an aide said Sunday. tllliKaE FREE DELIVER, W I :IVIVO SERVICE AND JLtllf PARTS WARRANTY Pay $2.00 Weekly — No Money Down If you’re looking for a full-quality, ail cImmmI TV bargain — here it it! Famous Zenith TV with bigger S by Mach Speaker (front-mounted, too!) — 17,500 Volt Chawia — beautifully molded cabinet back, ate. Stead i* optional, extra. Fra* Delivery, Sendee, f.faar Warranty POO MONEY DOWN PAY $2.7$ WEEKLY First time ever. A Mighty IS-Foot, 2-Door Antomatia Defrost, Zero Zone Frooaor with 103-Pound Capacity. In White or Copper. Two Crisp-era, Sliding Shelf, Magnetic Door. A red big family refrigerator. Coats seal last Thursday at the Mayo Clin- EASY Delivered • Serviced - Warranted Two tuba allow your to wash at big 14 pound load in ons tub as you rinaa and spin damp dry in the other tab — suda saver features — deluxe casters. No Money Down |1 OQ Pay MB Monthly PHILCO Deluxe 560 lb. FREEZER Super Slso IS Foet GENERAL ELECTRIC WASHER W NEW21* " W : • COLOR I Fro* Delivery, Service mud Fmett Warranty UHF-VHF ALL CHANNELS Come tee the new, improved 1966 color TV of everyone’s dreamaivTba color Is brighter. The pieture is iherper. Tberen no roedfadiee of lbs ehenueb eoe# sat sad there Is all channels. (Channel S3 loo). Cams' Giant 14 pound work horse delivered, serviced, warranted. The No. 1 rated washer everywhere — 2 speeds, I wash temps, 2 rinse temps, {roil control, soak cycle, lint filter, everything -come see. \ , \^PP £bl9995 No Money Down Pay g,g$ Per Week Easy Credit/ NO MONEY DOJjENl 3 YEARS TO 90 Dm* Same As Cash! The GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP OF PONTI AC, MICH. ~ r - . g - |U FE 4*1555 - Open lion, and Fri. Till 9 P.M. Wm % 3 Pontiac, Michigan Satisfaction liujranleed THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1965 ELEVEN Boyle's Bag Yields Some Facts to Forget .IJJ By HAL BOYLE ' Jfd NEW YORK m - Things a columnist might saver know if he didn't open his mail: A modern child today eats, about p,Nt worth of food be* tWeen infancy HH his lift birthday. His n,ar«nts also have spent more than $3,700 to Ping those years. Clay dolls are supposed to __ bring good hek HOYLE in Japan. They often aft presented as gifts to Mtoriywadi.' jWr * A ■' You can’t sneeze this fact away* 'Colds and other respire-tory ailments cause Americans to spend 302 million days in bed add) year with toe sniffles. Household hints: Eggs will stay fresh in the refrigerator longer if they are washed in lukewarm suds. WHEREFORE MONEY? Where does toe money go? Weil, last year Americans spent $13.9 billion for liquor, $17.3 billion on autos, and $6.1 billion in religious and charitable contrib-utions. *. If you think Big Ben is the name of the clock in Westminster Hail in Lopdon, you’re wrong. The name applies only to the clock’s ISMi ton beO. Whenever a king or queen of Britain dies, the age of the monarch is solemnly intoned by Big Quotable notables: “I would rather live in a world where my life is surrounded by mystery than live in a world so small that my Nariman of India were wed at the age of I in' 1363. He1 died in 1940. NO ONE KNOWS One of the conjectures of the ages is what Jesus Christ really looked like in Hie. What were bis features? fu he short or till!, slender or powerftdly built? No One really knows tor sure. The rehson he is .pictured as bearded is that it was the custom in his lifetime for all Jewish men to wear beards. Why do men retire? One study Light Plane Crash-Lands on School Football Field; 4 OK it” — Harry Emerson Fosdick. How long can a marriage last? 8ir Tefhuljii and Lady SAGINAW (AP) —r A light plane with four persons aboard crash-landed on a high school football field Sunday after hedge-hopping over trees and a row of homes. The four escaped with minor injuriea and authorities complimented tot pilot, ex-Montanan Thimas LaTourette, 22, for his skill. LaTourette, former Butte resident who starts active duty as an Army Air Force pilot in January, and three friends went up in a rented Piper plane for a pleasure flight from nearby Midland. The group included James Striebel, also formerly of Butte, and his wife, Bonny, formerly of Helena, Mont., both 22, and Wayne Ostermiller, also 22, formerly of Billings, Mont. All toe group are June graduates of Montana State University. The three men are employes of the Dow Chemical Co. of Midland. At 3,000 feet, the plane’s engine conked out, LaTourette said. He brought the craft down through a limited amount of flying space between the houses and trees and landed on ar football field behind Arthur HiU High School. The only damage was the plane’s loss of Us- nose wheel. 'Tom did an excellent Job of landing that plane in that small an area considering toe obstacles that were around him,” said the plane’s owner, Charles V. Badger of Midland. Eisonhowor, Truman to Address Conference KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) -Former Presidents Dwight D. Eisenhower and Harry 8. Truman win appear before delegates to the National People-to-People Conference in Kansas City, Oct. 7-10. Eisenhower, chairman of the board of People-to-People, will address the opening session. Tinman will talk to the group the following day at the Truman Library in Independence, Mo. Group's Founder Dies SANTA ANA, Calif. (AP) -Dr. Ralph C. Smedley, 87, founder of Toastmasters International, died Saturday. He founded the organization, a nonprofit corporation through which nearly 1,000,000 men have trained themselves in public speaking, to 1924 in Santa Ana. It claims more than 3,600 affiliated clubs in to countries and territories. Phm (All fEdrnl Fft*" showed that tour out of 10 do so unwillingly because of ill health. *" * * History lesson: Do you know which president pastured his' horse on toe White House lawn? He. was Zachary Taylor. After his math, his horse, Whltey, _J had carried Taylor through the Mexican War, followed his master’s body in the funeral procession. Burglars are among the busiest of all crooks. They break . 3,000 U.S. homes every day, or an average of 12S an hour around the clock. coLd weather Folklore: If you hoar a cricket chirping to your homo, expect cold weather eoop. A dream about the dead is a sign you will hoar good news from the livirig. When the devil appears on earth, he usually takes the shape of a black cat, a black dog or a black pig. If your nose itches, you soon will have a quarrel. Worth remembering: ‘‘Among the things that money can't buy are the things it used to,” BILL OF FARE Gourmet’s paradise: Oskar Davidson’s restaurant to Copenhagen believes it has the longest bill of fare on earth. Its menu, stretching nearly four feet, lists 177 dishes. Quickies: The Vatican to Rome has .4,000 rooms. Lento, j the Soviet leader, is the top best-seller among 20th century authora. His works have sold more than 300 million copies. Tjie sun may be shrinking to diameter some 400 feet a year, j At this rate it could become a cold cinder to another 33 million years. ‘ .* ★ * . It was Hans Christian Ander- j sen who observed, “Every mpn’s life is a fairy trie written by God’s fingers.” 108 NORTH SAGINAW 2 resinous AUNAY8 HB8T QUAUtYi_ POPLIN IN UMPTEEN NEW COLORSI TO” wide 198 30” or 38” long fpalr Valance... 1.29 Take your pick, we’vp colors galore In this tailored tier curtain buy I They’re wrinkle resistant, machine washable* cotton poplin... need mere touch-up Iron; Nofe the Penney quality, 5" Wind-stitched hems I White, pink, red, ds$td. LOOK CORTEZ, TRIMMED OSNABURG TIERS 198 Valanca ...1.29 Give your windows newest tailored tiers, slktant, rough-weave colorful braid and browns; gold/groan, i i fringe, i, tangerine; gr PENNEY'S MIRACLE MILE STORE HOURS X 9:30 A.M. to 9 P.M. A BEAUTY BUY! "RHAPSODY". ,. BRIGHT, AIRY BATISTE TIERS // 68” Wide ^%9B Valance 24” or31”long ^Ci pair ...2.29 Take lighthearted Avrfl* rayon batiste. It fairly sings of fresh breexesl Mate It with enticing eyelet embroidered borders. What a heavenly outlook for your windawsi Easy care. In a serenade of soft hues... white, pink, geld, aqua. Tuesday and FAMOUS BRAND STEREO PHONOGRAPH COMPLETE WITH 3 LP RECORDS True 2-speaker stereo sound, including extension spanker. Has 4-speed automatic record changer. Includes 45 rpm adapter. Attractivocaitylng case. Regular 59.95 2 DAYS ONLY ... NO DOWN PAYMENT 1 TERMS TO SUIT YOUR INPIVI0UM. NEEDS J Wednesday NORDIC, FLOCKED tyARQUISETTE OVER POLISHED COTTON TIERS 98 Valance pair ...1.91 Frothy, cplor-on-pattem tiers to give windows an extra-special dress-up airl Beautifully, finished to felsify's exacting specifications . . . yours to decorate with in white, sandalwood, pink, yellow. Hurry in for this top buy! 50" wide, "M 36" long gfg THIS WilK ONLYI Our own Penncrest® vacuum cleaners RED UCED! ' ' • Penncrest* deluxe triple action upright Reg. 54.50. > . NOW Beats, sweeps, deans, ad at one timel Penetrates deep into carpet pile with its 2-speed motor, adjusts for Individual thickness of rugs. 2-posltion pistol-grip handle lets you dean under furniture, has full wrap-around furniture ered outer bag takes big-inner bag. Converts for with attachments. $5 a month twelve thb poyTiAc rams. MoyolAY.8xr»,v*«w»fc mw Key Assaults AimedalCoftg WMk Featured Bomb Stop^Up, Big Attacks (EDITOR'S NOTE: How did* Hie war in Viet Nm go Uut week? Here are the high potato.) SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — It was a week during which US. and Vietnamese troops launched big operations against the Communist Viet Cong as American Jet bomba’s stepped up their air offensive. As the fighting went on, the United States bolstered its forces to more than 125,000 men with the arrival of the 1st Cavalry Division in air mobile force from Ft. Benning, Ga. The unit has been trained in guerrilla warfare. * * * The largest actions took place in the northern coastal provinces where thousands of Leathernecks and Vietnamese troops clashed with Communist guerrillas. Military sources said more than 300 Viet Gong were killed. Most of them died on the sandy Batangan peninsula, 330 miles north of Saigon along the South China Sea. The Leathernecks assaulted Batangan by sea and air but the main Viet Cana force apparently had fled. The operation was not as jpectacular Marine offensive three weeks earlier at Van Tuong peninsula, 10 miles north of Batangan, in which 000 Viet Cong were killed. MINOR CONTACT Elements of the U.S. Army’s 101st Airborne Division continued to engage the enemy in the central highlands. The paratroopers, deployed around the mountain town of An Kbe, skirmished with the Viet Cong in several minor engagements. In the air, Strategic Air Command B53Jtambers from Guam pounded Viet Cong Jungle strongholds four times as the big planes began an expanded role in the war. Three of the strikes were (tarried out less than 30 miles from Saigon. * * * As die week drew to a close, U.S. Jets Dew continuous bombing missions against a Viet Cong fortification in the Mekong Delta described as a regimental headquarters. About 3,000 guerrillas were believed to be in the area but their fate was not known. Die Viet Cong kept up pressure on government positions ringing the capital with attacks against outposts. One attack was a mortar barrage on a pro-vincial capital 40 miles away. J* U.S. MARINES Of VIET NAM (AP) - Ten black rubber boats glided through the South China Sea toward the dim shoreline. A foil moon slid slowly from behind a large cloud; its reflection wavered .in the water. The sounds of foe sea muffled the swishing of paddles. * * a' Suddenly, the boats stopped in a pyramid-type formation about 900 feet from shore. In each boat were seven men of the U.S. Marines 3rd Reconnaissance Battalion; secretive, versatile and daring. Their mission was not to make contact with the Viet Cong but to gather as much information as they could. NEAR MIDNIGHT It was nearing midnight. Pfc. Baird Sewell of Anaheim, Calif., and Lance Cpl. Ken White of Birmingham, Ala., wearing /^fcfwcry Mishap at Nebraska Fair Claims $r fos Viet Cong drew closer to West, they spotted the other Marines behind him and Started to run. One guerrilla was killed, the other escaped. A. small Navy ship that carried the reconnaissance company out to aea reported later that it had watched 36 Junks head towards another island when the shooting broke out. The Junks apparently were filled with fleeing Viet Cong. The Marines’ Job done, they returned to foe beach, quickly j moved into their boats, and pad- dled out to sea. When they v out of sight of foe shoreline, foe Navy ship that hit! brought them fo .foe same point picked them up with their boats. The man went to sleep on dpek, arrived back at their encampment am hi Da Nrng at 9 a.m. Sunday, and washed up for liberty call. . Tomorrow, it would lie another operation.' ■ ■<" Indonesians Wreck . India Xrrfifru'i Office . JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) -About 300 members of the semiofficial Youth Front wrecked foe Air India office today and than made a bonfire of the broken furniture and files. The Indian airline’s office is located at tha government-owned Hotel Duta Indonesia. Tha office was sacked by hotel workers who are members of fot YOuth Front LAKE HEATING LICENSED CONTRACTOR FURNACES & BOILERS OF ALL MAKES - Now and Used Furnaces SPECIAL Thin Month . FURNACE CLEANING $14.95 CONVERSION BURNERS FOR ALL MAKES SKILLED MECHANICS Check Our Prices Before Biying How People 66 Is 80 May Apply Fsr Life Inarasei If you’re between 86 and 80. you may aMU apply for the umeidndof life Insurance available when you were younger. You handle foe transaction entirely by midi. No one will call on fan. No obligation. We’D tall you how to apply to put this policy Into effect at an Introductory rata for the first month. Just tear out this ad and mail it today with your name, address and year of Mrfo-to Old American, 4900 Oak, Dept. 3331A, Kansas City, Mo. 64141. OUTSTANDING SELECTIONS IN ALL 33 GR1NNELL STORES NEW HAMMOND CONSOLE ORGAN Dramatic theatre sound gives you the professional touch! Six new theatrically voiced presets, new rhythm & percussion voices, new "harp sustain" control, plus the famous Hammond drawbars add variety to every note. 25 pedal keyboard. In red mahogany, $2,3IS Introducing The 1966 HAMMOND ORGANS with new automatic VOICES! grinneil? WORLD'S LARGEST HAMMOND DEALER NEW HAMMOND SPINET ORGAN Create automatically the sounds of Hawaiian guitar, banjo and harpsichord! ■ With a touch of a finger you play marimba, mandolin, you-name-it! This new Hammond has 28 tone control tabs, a new sound system and reverberation unit. In red mahogany, $895 COLOR TV-Stereo SPECIALS FROM OUR MUSICAL INSTRUMENT DEPT. Gibson 'Melody Maker* Greatest value ever in a solid body electric guitar with Gibson Vibrola lever. 136.50 Amplifier, 89.50 Wolverine Guifar Outfit American m a d a flat top g u 11 a r, with cover, cord, pick and book. 32.50 Dynamic Microphone ’Shure" new style compact mike with latest adjustable frequency response. 34.50 Stand 10.50 Never before color TV like this! New 25" rectangular tube is half again brighter than moat others. TOTAL remote control lets you change channels or volume right from your chair! All this PLUS a fine Stareo FM-AM radio and Micromatic record player with diamond stylus guaranteed 10 .years. 1-year service, 1-year parts & picture tube warranty. turn Extra Long Playing 3-Record Sets Yew receive fed S hewn per ■ lb him ef fineet stereo listening pleasure. Recordings by famous artists Include: Festival Music from Italy, Festival Music from Spain, Country & Western Guitars, Motion Picture & Lov^ themes. Journey'Around the World. (66 international hits). Your Choice STEREO ONLY *4.29 START YOUR CHILD IN MUSIC WITH A PIANO FROM GRINNfLL'S The "Holly Special" Spinet Compare with Pianos selling at $100 # M more! This lovely spinet is styled in luft-trous walnut today's most popular finish. UU 7 88 note keyboard, fast repeating action.. Bench Included PONTIAC MALL, 682-0422 DOWNTOWN PONTIAC, FE 3-7168 SPECIAL PIANO VALUES CELEBRATING GRINNELL'S 86th ANNIVERSARY The Grinned ,>Lyric" Console The Stock "Classic" Spinet Crafted by experts in our own Piano factory, the Grinned is acclaimed by the nation's music schools. Save now bn this attractive consols in antique white. *655 Bench Included The George Stack, a piano with tradition uyO $166 and distinction—the choice of Wagner in . _ his day) Now one of tha finest pianos * / 4 K you cart buy. Full 88 riot# keyboard. ' “w Beautiful hand-rubbed mahogany. Bench Included . . Use your CHARGE 4-PAY PLAN (90 days Mint at cash) or BUDGET PLAN mm:. TUB PONTIAC PHK8S, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1963 THIBTMMT IwwdiWy low priced famous fronds . iVTrus loftwfy at HIGHLAND SPECIAL! RCA VICTOR EKRSSN STEREO Hffl SAVE ON THIS ■ BIG BIT/ WW'TCMiTH STEREO HI-FI CONSOLE ft* PoSiWis Tin* Nmi Mm! *0*mImHm ot a a m isncsrt kail qualHyl Mlaq-teudi 2-0 lorn aim. 4- MAAQl ipMd pmWn automotlcmcord dnnasr. 4 '»”■ wW ipsaksn for Ml fonal ***)*, Daniil* msdsm styHng l>Hhll**»N«n«!MM4. M>PU MtCB 3-YEARS TO PAY APPU ANCE C5 ■ff r SUNBEAM Proctor 4-Slicr toaster REGINA FLOOR Uga stas wMh AntnicHc 4-sllcs. POLISHER Twin brash with Camalataly 1*. SMM 64-PL wp—«i*si*t |iw- ante*. •*•» at this low prlcsl MO9* *10" *16" ^ tL w jl< si \V\.^l\ r -a Bill pti 1 *•• S; .a.«Li> llll^ uJ Nat Wt. 14Vi-0i. SUPER-RIGHT NIT WT. 15»/a-0Z. Del Monte Corn Ann Page Blended Syrup Siinnyfield Pancake Floor Suanybraok Red Salmon. .... Sultana Rice • • •. . • • # Spaghetti or Macaronirm< SULTANA' 4 V p— Salad Dressing 2 491 a rape ragi — mat wt. ihm Sparkle Gelatin 4 Pineapple Pie THE F0NTIAC yRflS&,rM9NUAVr SEPTEMBER 18, 1005 Legislature Stark Work Tomorrow Effective* Monday am "SUPER-RIGHT QUALITY—GOVERNMENT INSPECTED Df QUAUT? not Added yet whether fiscal reform wffl be on the agenda. House end Senate Democratic caucuses delayed a decision on the subject Friday and said they may make up their minds Tuesday—the opening Ay of the Whole Flyers Split, Quartered or Catnip Fryers Fiscal reform recommenda-. tions closely parelieling the {dan developed by Gov. George Romney and a bipartisan group of legislators were adopted at the Republican leadership conference on Mackinac bland Saturday. Hie recommendations include a flat-rate statewide income tax, relief for low income families (for instance, through rescinding the sales tax on food and drugs), property tax relief and “repeal of taxes which would duplicate or conflict with personal and corporate income taxes—such as the business activities tax.” TOOK ACTION While delaying their fiscal decisions, Democratic lawmakers did decide to take action to ensure senior citizen property tax relief in 1M6, the presidential disability amendment to the U.S. Constitution, highway sign policy, executive reorganization, welfare department merger, and establishment of a legislative council STEAKS The House wants to take up refinancing of the Mackinac Bridge and lowering the tolls; the Senate wants the agenda to indude senior citizen property tax relief for renters, milk pricing, increasing the jurisdiction of common pleas courts and the licensing and regulation of second mortgage firms. The majority of both houses must agree an the subjects to be discussed at the session. SESHON HARMONY GOP approval of fiscal reform came in an unexpectedly harmonious session completely unlike the spring, IMS, GOP state convention in which Romney bad to pul] out all stops to stop a conservative drive to call for The fiscal reform recommendations were among task force I reports on 17 major issues; adopted by GOP leaders Saturday, and praised by Romney as “one of the most realistic Republican approaches to problems in recent history,’’ They will be forwarded to the GOP State Central Committee for official action and possible use as raw material for future platforms. “They represent a realistic effort by the Republican party |, to survey the problems of the! people and to do something about It at the state and local level,’v Romney said Sunday. BASIC IDEAS Legislative sources at the Mackinac Island conference | said, they expected House and Senate Republican caucuses to approve the basic ideas of the task force report—although not | all members would back fiscal reform. Lt. Gov. William Milliken said later the task force’s tax! report resembled the recom-j mendations of Romney and the legislators because “we kept it open as late as we could to see What direction they were taking." Romney, meanwhile, sought to reassure Republican legislators that championing foe unpopular subject of a statewide income tax is not an automatic ad of poRtical suicide. He said repeatedly at the conference thXt “history shows that the legislators who tried to obstruct such progress are no longer with us.. .and those who supported responsible fiscal pot'll in the leg- ides are mostly s islature.” “SU MR-RIGHT" - SUrIR-RIGHT SLICED i f ^. Beef Short Ribs » 43* Beef Liver . . 49* "SUMR-RMHT" BONHJSS mam HMD AND eiVIINIO A mm Delmonico Sleeks* 1” Medium Shrimp ■«39* "SUPIR-RIGHT" RON mss m«m SUCID _ A Fully Cooked Hams • I19 Halibut Steak *59* No Coupons, No Gimmicks, No Limits... Just Quality Merchandise at Low Prices! ANGEL SOFT Facial Tissues 200 2-Fly Tissues J *o*« WINS FAVOR All Groon Cut Asparagus 4u~79< Red Delicious APPLES 3 39 SPECIAL tom VACUUM PACKED A&P Coffee 39 2 “• 1 DEL MONTE Yellow Cling Peaches Helvai or Sliced ■m Wi wt CAN Paw Paw Grape Drink • • • 2 AGP Cherries A&P Freestone Peaches Fruit Cocktail MA Corned Beef Hash POPULAR ASSORTED FLAVORS Popsicles 39* Mervel Brand Ice Milk DOZEN IN FKG., Vj-GAL CTN. 10c OFF LABEL—GIANT SIZE FAB 3-LB. 1-OZ. PKG. 10e OFF — GIANT SIZE Rinso Blue GIANT SIZE — POWDERED Sail Detergent it EfiC« nee. iP 'uM - 4 , b JAM! PARKER, TWIN PACK Golden Loaf Cake Net Wt. 10’4-Os. Each 2 £8S 49* 6 1-LB. CANS # 3 t-LB. aa. UrOZ flOC CANS 09 4 1-LB. i-ez. CANS 99* 2 CANS 69* 4 frU, 1-OZ. CAN 6$ e 1-PT, S-OZ. BTL 49* a 5-LB. PKG. 49* 1 -LB, CAN a 3 U. PKG 39* 1-LB. PKG. 19* I ro*nfegar Mrs. Rqymond Dix (left), came from Detroit to speak to the Pontiac League of Women Voters on the annual financial drive of the organization; she is jtate finance chairman. Checking the budget with her is Mrs. Mitchell BacawK Cherokee Road, local finance chairman, and hostess for the planning ses- Marbachs who now live in tlmlpurst, III., were honored for their golden wedding anniversary Sunday at first Presbyterian Church after Dr. Marbach conducted the service. . Alkfi Monroe, Cherokee Road (right), enjoys irblijfcffyirt' /^C#r''jhwttoc residents, \br. and MfS^WilUdm H. Marbach (center). With them also is B, B. Kimball Lahser Road. The THE PQflTIAC PRESS*MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, Mary Jo Pauli, daughter of ^W.anAMH. Theodore Pauli oflllinofa Avenue and John Phillips Landry, son of the Arthur B. Landrf/sof Bloomfield HUlspdf* toed Saturday m St. Benedicts Catholic Church. Marcee Merrill Wed in Candlelight Rite Jobn Clinton Martin Jr. vere wed to a candlelight o#re-ony, Baturday, at Christ tiara and bouquet of 'whit orchids and Stephanotis. Reception j ham Masonic WRh Starr Merrill, bar silt With Starr Merrill, her ala Ift the Birmlnf- tar’s honor maid aw Mary ‘ * ' Jo Sehaetzel of Daover. Colo ap'kidesmeid. TtMMMlUht r of Osndonfa, w. Va., was MR&. JOHN PHILLIPS LANDRY hAdfy Jo Paul i Becomes Bride of John P. Landry WatictNafe. The WjUap W. Merrills, North Fish'Lake Road, Rote Township, and the John C. Martins of Charleston, W.Va., ara ^areata of the newlyweds. LACK BODICE A bodice of Imported JUeo-con lace highlighted the bride's princess gown Of white organza with taffeta train. Completing hor ensemble were an illualan vail with pearl A rw»f>tioo ta the Village Womai^r Cluh followed the marrlags of Mary Joe Pauli to John Phillips Landry, Saturday, in St. Benedict’s Catholic Church. Their parents ar Dr. and Mrs. Theodore Pauli of Illinois Avenue and the Arthur B, Landrya of Bloomfield Hills. ♦ gjrfty ’.jk. Re - embroidered Alencon ' lace fashioned a mantilla com- Calendar TODAY dance workshop, 7:SS p.m., CAI Building with instructor Bob Lodge. TUESDAY Oakland Canty Die-Met, Michigan Practical Norses AsssdiHsa, 7:30 pan., Pontiac General Hospital auditorium. W1L bemina Dowd will show shdes and discuss her trip abroad. PBX Club af Pontiac, 1H0 p.m., Pontile : m p.m., Mark TwakfSchooL The meeting is opsn to any handicapped person over 18. WEDNESDAY Vetoran of Fare If a p.m., American Legion Hall on Auburn Avenue; plementing the bride’s A-line gown of Ivory silk organza with scalloped hemline. STEPHANOTIS BOUQUET She carried Stephanotis during the rite performed by Rev. James Farrell JS. J. of the University of Detroit High School, before the immediate families. Sharon McAleer was maid of honor. Attending their brother were Arthur W< Landry, best man, and James W. Landry, Robert H. Landry and Richard P. Landry, ushering with Dr. Frauds J. Pauli, the bride’s Completing the usher list were Norman J. Fredericks and 0. Kenneth Oxley. GHen Martin was best man for no brother. Ushers Included Robinson L. Broooel, William W. Merrill, Henry Cassidy, Daniel wilking, Mark Arthur apd Barnard Thorap-kins. • After a northern honeymoon the couple Will return to Ms home on West Walton Boule- Marcee Ethel Merrill, daughter of the William W. Merrills of North Fish Lake Road, and John Clinton Martin Jr., son of the John C. Martins of Charleston, W.Va., were monied Saturday in Christchurch, Cranbrook. Toby-Lynn Stern, daughter of Mrs. W. H. Kraus, Bloomfield Village, exchanged vows with Ernest Albm Jones II, sonofMr.and Mrs. Ernest A. Jones, Bloom field Hills, Saturday at Kirk-m-the-Hills Presbyterian, For the candlelight rite, she held Phalaenopsis orchids and Stephanotis.' MRS. ERNEST ALBIN JONES II About Madame Chiang vows at Klrk-in-tbe-HHla Presbyterian. Some 400 guests attended a reception in Birmingham Country Chib hosted by Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Kraus, Bloomfield Village, for her daughter and the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest A. Jones,' Bloomfield Hills. Hand-corded Alencon lace applique covered the bride’s Empire gown and train of white silk pera tfc sola designed by ^ritfcilla of Boston. A pearl tfera held her pouf veil of illusion. Honor maid was the bride’s twin, Terry-LynnStern. Another sister, Roma Stern and the bridegroom’s sisters Janet and Crystine Jones were bridesmaids, along with Janet Clark and Kathryn Flatley of Detroit, and Kathryn O’Rourke and JoAnn Ross of Birmingham. Attending their fraternity brother were Donald Hays, best man and ushers Jeffrey Cook, Robert Dixcy and Gary Cutset. Completing the usher list were Michael Stern, Stephen Jones, Theodore MacManus and Paul Irvine. Mark Kraus carried the rings. The couple will return to Michigan State University tor senior year studies. Washington Is Wondering MRS. JOHN CLINTON MARTIN JR. Reader Sets Abby Straight —n-------dfer-i---- • aBM Concerned Has -a roint Alpha Phi Meets The* North Suburban Alumnae of Alpha Phi Sorority will meat for h 11 a.m. branch Sept 21 in the home of Mrs. T. Dl Sheldon, South Cran-brook Rond,’ Birmingham; Members planning to attend havfftnp/foked to contact Mrs. C A. Lecklider or Airs. A. R Winfield. ;>A t. ' r*> -i—— Film, for Teachers NaMtto ^jBorsvold' showed films df bar stay in Japan for the.fMchon Exchange Club’s Saptonbar meeting in the home of Mra. Lewis Cornell. Guests were John Ctopse, Elton Cornell, Pamela |iast, By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: You recently quoted from Socrates to point out that today’s teen-agers than those in the Fifth Century, B.C. “Our youth now love luxury. They have bad manners, contempt for a u thority; they show disrespect for 1 ABBY Let’s give that misleading quote from Socrates (who was forced by his fellow citizens to drink the hemlock) a rest. ^ While we’re contemplating today’s youth versus those of early Athens,- let us recall another quotation: “Those who ignore history are doomed to repeat it.’’ CONCERNED DEAR CONCERNED: Merity Carta, Gretdhen Creltoy Sharqn Hampshire. their eiders, and love chatter in places of exercise. They no longer rise when others enter the room. They contradict their parents, chatter before company, gobble up their food, and tyrannise their teachere* ' Every time the subject of youth, immorality, The Bomb, or Ik* PUT comas up, someone trots out that old quote from Socrates. Doesn’t it occur to them Oat Athens fell because their society had degenerated to a new tow? Homosexuality was rampant, slavery ruled, only the elite enjoyed human righto, women, were abused. /Model' Meeting forPTA Council Set at Baldwin First fall meeting of the Pontiac Council of FTA will be at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday In Baldwin Elementary School. A “model meeUftg” will be presented and a sample council delegate report, given. Delegates will be Informed Of the PTA Blood Bank recommendation for their local units’ consideration. Reports by the budget, program, magazine ahd membership chairmen are slated. (Guty.) You may have something there. „ DEAR ABBY: if woman wrote to you a while back and complained because her husband "tort” four handkerchiefs in a week. it * * . Well, I have her beat. My husband lost two pairs of underwear and a pair of socks in three days! He comes home plastered and claims lie doesn’t even know where hfr been. ‘ h: it * ■; If I even dare to suggest that he’s been running around, he tells me I am out of toy mind. So what should Ido? MACS WIFE DEAR WIFE: Go with him and see that ha doesn’t lose his shirt. V .. *'• ★ * CONFIDENTIAL TO “BERTIE”: Talk is not al- ways cheap. You can be sued for slander. * * *1 Problems? Write to Abby, care of The Pontiac Press. For a personal reply, enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. By ESTHER1 VAN WAGONER TUFTY WASHINGTON /* Royalty, dethroned and. otherwise, is less important than in the old Roosevelt days. Out-of-date and power is Madame Chiang Kai-shek, who arrived in Washington in one of the few private Pullman cars still on the rails expecting, no doubt, the red carpet treatment for her retinue of military aid*,, her personal secretary and some 11 retainers. EXCESS BAGGAGE It took'two trucks Just to wheel her baggage to the seven room suite at the Shore-ham Hotel, not Blair House, the guest house for Presidential guests located across from the White House. if A A She’s unofficial and her visit is private and of uncertain duration but some Semblance of official welcome was accorded the wife of the President of Nationalist China. Mrs. Dean Rusk, wife at toe Secretary of State, Mm down with red roses,.vfria United States Chief of Fitoto* col and Mrs. Lloyd Hand Wire at the Union Station and she rode hi a White House limousine to the hotel. YOUTHFUL, SLIM As toe came down from the Pullman steps, she didn’t look her 17 years- She wore no hat and her hair was as glossy Marik as ever. She’s slim and her gray braided Cbhose suit, slit at the sides, was elegant. No state dinner at the White House will be given in her honor, but Mrs. Lyndon Johnson will entertain for her at a tea on September 17. it a a No doubt she will be recalling the effusive reception giv- en her in the 1940s by President Roosevelt. But the mood of Washington toward Nationalist China has changed and this will be reflected in her reception. There’s little enthusiasm to invade Red China as the Nationalists on Formosa so desire. ★ A * ■' The question asked here is: “What does she want this tima?” MORE VISITORS More oriental visitors, also unofficial, will be the Prince Takahito MIkasa, youngest brother of the Emperor of Japan, and his wife and. daughter, Princess Yasuko. The Japanese Embassy will give top honors and the Prince will call on President Johnson. j a A A WOMEN’S CLUBS A highlight of the meeting of the Board of Directors of the G e n e r a 1 Federation of Women’s Clubs will be a visit to the LBJ ranch on September 14th. The First lady will not be in residence because her schedule #es not allow hof to be in Taxes at that time. This is a first. The Commissioners of the District of Columbia have set Friday, September 17th as Dorothy Goldberg day. ★ A it The commissioners want “to recognize officially” the impact on the life of Washington toe has made during the years her husband served here as Secretary of Labor and then as an Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court. • j&gfc The wife of the newly appointed Ambassador to the United Nations is a recognized artist. She gave up that career professionally and plunged into leadership in the Urban Service Corps, the Widening Horizons program for teen-agers, and toe founded the Friends of the Juvenile Court and the Friends of Public School Art. BOOK OF MONTH EUa Gales (the wife of Richard Doughton of Birmingham) is the author of a forthcoming October book, “$$$ and Sense,” called "Your Complete Guide to Wise Spending.” .* * * The farmer Washington resident, an expert on consumer questions, has Just learned her book has bem chosen by Kiplinger as the “Book of the Month.” '• A' * it Senator Philip Hart, quite appropriately as the author of the Truth-in-Packing bill, has written a preface. Herb Progranri Opens Series A discussion of “Growing and Using Herbs” will open the Women’s World Series at Pontiac Mall Wednesday at 10 a.m. in the Community Room. Mrs. Mabel Schultz of Walnut Lake, whose herb cottage was a featured attraction at the Michigan State Fair, will be the speaker. The free educational programs, sponsored each Wednesday morning by the Mall merchants’ association, hre open to all area women. it it A Members of the Women’s World Committee include Mrs. Card Kurth and Mrs. Mary Hardy of toe Michigan State University Cooperative Extension Service; Dr. Paul Fetnberg and Mrs. Ruth McCarthy, of the Mall; and Mrs. JMfct Odell, women’s editor orthe Pontiac Press. League Drive Under Way for Financial Help The Pontiac League of Women Voters begins its annual financial campaign today. Both Gov. George Romney and Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. hava» proclaimed this Week as “Lea|iie of Women Voters’ Week.” ■ . . A . * ★ Established to promote political responsibility through informed and active participation of citizens in government, the nonpartisan League holds candidates’ rallies and distributes voter! guides at election time. It asks for public financial . help each September. * * A ' /Other services to the community include informing the , public about ballot issues, encouraging voting and publishing a booklet, “Know Your ' Oakland County Government.” KICK-OFF 8ESSION Mrs. Mitchell B a co w of Cherokee Ro«d was hostess^ for the drive’s recent Idck-off meeting. Mrs. Raymond Dix, finance chairman of the Michigan League Of Women Voters Mrs. Charles Robbins and Laura Belz presented several skSs oo toe forthcoming cam- hour at 10 a.m. in SL Paul’s Methodist Church. This la open to all interested women. over the reins as president of the Pontiac League qf Women Voters. She succeeds the late Mrs. Robert Anselmy. THE PONTIAC PRK88, MONDAY, SBPgBMHKJt 18, 1985 EIXTEEX Married in New York Lmnon Bleaches Go-Go Suit for Ids Is1 'Uhsuitable' Weeks Of Back Pain Now Relieved lypnMac r ■« with out inrhrttof bladder wane* that caa cauae physical distress. If pain persists, sea your doctor. Dewitt's Pills oftea succeed where others fail— quickly relieve minor muscle aches and pains, too. Insist oa the genuine Dr Witts Pills. Over 1M million DeWhft Nto are sold by druggists day after day after day, die world over-a tribute to their The Gerald V. Browns of Linwood Drive, West Bloomfield Township, announce the engage-ment of their daughter, Suzanne Mary to William Arthur Longhrake, son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur 0. Longhrake of Fiddis Street. November vows are planned. NOW AT OUR NEW LOCATION NEWEST HAIR CREATIONS BY OSCAR BLOMQUEST and 7 Beauticians • BRY HAIRCUT *2"v • SHAMPOO & SET *2" SCHOOLGIRL • Pennaient Waves *7" THE PARISIAN BEAUTY SHOPPE »1 N. SaahsawSt. FE2-49S9 ww/ ■ Ills A ■ STARSWM AON AT SINCERl NtwiR Touch tSa/lM ttwisf MchiN in Ask! Ill Mdy aachiat that ins ail I IMs el sewia|-strai|M. z« m gad ctoiattiteh. bclitivg Patb-littei Rabbin. Slgat-Nctdlt! 0n,>f, $04 Ask about our Easy Budget Haul FIRST TIME EVER! PRICES REOUCEO on ill Portable S Cabinet model Sewing Machines! WmAueuMdumrm but Bl NCI ft itdoyf SINGER DOWNTOWN PONTIAC 102 Naotfa Saginaw PkoM 333-7929 PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTER PliatM 682-0350 The Irving W. Allerbands of New York City annonBCt the recent marriage of their daughter Suxahne to Mehrin Noeanchuck of Detroit * ~ * ★ The ceremony was performed in the study of Dr. Julius Mark, Rabbi of Temple Emanuel in New York. Mr. Noeanchuck is the aon of Mrs. David UUey, Henry Clay Avenue and the late Dr. Barney Noaanchuck. He is a graduate of Wayne State University and holds a master of arts degree from the University of Wisconsin, where he is a candidate for a doctorate of philosophy in psychology. LIVE IN CHICAGO Hie bride will continue her New Officers for Putt-Niks Members and guests of the Putt-Nik Golf League recently closed the season with a golf event and luncheon at the Pontiac Country Chib. * ★ * ■,' New officers introduced by outgoing president, Mrs. Robert Pack included Mrs. John Combs, president; Mrs. Robert HacketL vice president; Mrs. Jack Doyle, secretary; and Mrs. Robert Lohff, treasurer. . * * * Winners were Mrs. Harvey Shoener, Mrs. Charles Hitchcock, Mrs. Floyd Post and Mrs. Hackett. Jack Welch Married in Royal Oak Gsye Westerby exchanged recent -vows with Jack R. Welch, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray E. Welch of Silver Lake Road in the First Presbyterian Church of Royal Oak. Daughter of the M. E. Wester bys of Royal Oak, she chose a bouffant gown of Rochelle lace over white taffeta with train. A petal headpiece beM her' illusion veU. ★ ★ * With honor matron, Mrs. A. A Sage, were bridesmaids Barbara Bpddy, Mrs. D. M. Scott and Pamela Patelson. * * # Lt. R. H. Smith assisted as best man. Thomas Berry, James Faxon and Brace Westerby ushered. The bride is an alumna of Hillsdale College and her husband will be a senior at Michigan State University. DAYTON, Ohio » — Most motorists aren’t suited for driving, says Mrs. Frieda Baugh. She proposes do do something about h, with a driving suit she designed. NOT ENOUGH Mrs. Baugh, a Dayton mother, contends that seat belts aren’t enough to protect drivers. Drivers — and passengers — should be firmly protected by a special suit, the 35-year-old Mrs. Baugh contents. She has patented a desip for just such a suit. It would be attached to die car seat and a driver or passenger would snap himself into it. It would have a helmet to protect the head, too. ENVELOP BODY Because it would envelop the body, there would bo no danger of injury from straps cutting into the body during a sudden shock caused by the impact of a collision. She thinks the suit could be made of some sort of tough plastic. Mrs. Baugh, who is. separated from her husband, grants that she hasn’t solved all the problems. * O / t Such a suit might be very warm, but she says, “Cars should be air conitioned anyhow.” An unsolved question is what to do about two-door cars, in which the back of the front seat tilts forward. Members of the Oakland County Medical Assistant’s Society, Mrs. Jack Welch of Otter Avenue (seated) and Mrs. Ernio Bisogni of Aquctrma Street, model regular uniforms supplied by the MamseUe Shop at Miracle Mile Shopping Center. Later, the members will show how these uniforms can be changed to street clothes by adding accessories from the Lion Store. Medical Assistants to Be Fashionable The Holiday Inn'Will be the setting for p 7 p.m. dinner and fashion show for members of the Oakland County Medical Assistant’s Society on Wednesday. Models include Mrs. Enxio To Attend Annual GOP Conference Three ares members of the Pontiac Republican Women’s Club will attend the annual fall meeting of the Republican Women’s Federation of Michigan at Lansing’s Jack Tar Hotel Sept. 21-22. . * * * They are Mary Rupert, Dwight Street; Mrs. A B Leddick, Seminole Avenue; and Mrs. Harry Henderson, Franklin. Wed recently tn the First Presbyterian Church, Royal Oak, were Gaye Westerby, daughter of the M. E. Westerbys of Royal Oak and Jack R. Welch, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray E. Welch of Silver Lake Road. MRS. JACK R. WELCH Bisogni, Phyllis Rife, Mrs. William Borland, Nkncy Ka-chadurian, Mrs. Jeanne McNair, Sharon Terrill, Mrs. George DuQuis, Sue Maki, Mr. Robert Cartoon, and Mrs. Jack Welch. Mrs. Virginia Doyle will act as commentator and Mrs. Patricia Hermoyian fashion coordinator for the uniforms from die MamseUe Shop. Guests will include Dr. Glenn H. Sanford and Dr. Ervin G. Pear. Mrs. Robert Carlson, Pine Knob Road, Independence Township, wearing her working uniform, checks over the list of members who plan to attend the society’s unique fashion show on Wednesday at 7 p.m. in the Holiday Inn. Mrs. Carlson has transformed her work-a-day uniform into a going-out ensemble by simply mg the regular top and replacing it vrith this one. Program by Group for the Retarded The North Oakland Association for Retarded Children wUl meet at I p.m. Wednesday in the Community Services Building, Franklin Boulevard. The film “Beyond the Shadows” wUl be shown. An election of officers also to planned. Interested parents and friends may attend. Weavers Will Meet The M1 c h I g • n Weavers’ Guild win meet at the Women’s City Club, Detroit, at 1 p.m. Thursday. The program will feature a series of slides on the Howk Coverlet Collection and a display of hand-woven coverlets. Members may invite guests. She Gives Pesky Snake the Brush UMATILLA, FIs. (AP) — You should fight snakes with whatever you have in hand, believes Mrs. Elisabeth Palmer. She used a scrub brush a small Indigo snake that vaded a bedroom in he and a shovel on a hognosed snake that to play in front of her home. Men! Date Your Wife By DR .GEORGE W. CRANE CASE W-441: Jimmy Young War H who to i South Ina ad- rbve that took me over to address a convention of industrial editors at the University of ALL PERMANENTS NONE HIGHER 1— New Lustra Shampoo 2— Flattering Haircut 3— Lanolin Neutralizing 4— Smart Style Sotting HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY Open Merutags at IAJL t N. Saginaw Georgia In Athens, Georgia. En route we discussed such things as the future of television and newspapers. “Dr. Crane,” Jimmy asked, “what do you think has been the psychological effect of tri-vision on the problem of divorce?” Television has had both a positive and a negative effect, but the positive outweighs the negative. For example, prior to the popularity of TV, many married men would desert their homes to patronize taverns. There they gossiped about sports and politics. .But now those same married men can stay in their own hones to enjoy current athletic contests, entertainment and politics. So TV has bam a boon to millions of homes in fids respect. But on the other hand, it has also made millions of wives more frustrated. For In former days, the husband might occasionally take his wife to a movie or a dance. Now that husband is disinterested in leaving the house after he returns home from work. Between the newspaper and TV, he is usually content to it in an easy chair till bedtime. * * * In tact, a great deal of snoring to done in front of TV screens! row Old ? tJoSePNtM* loMUAA? For many years, many things In a woman’s life must be postponed. When she has children to rear, a husband, and a home to manage, it seems almost impossible to find any time for herself, for hpr own Individual interests or for beauty and health cars. However, if she to deter- realise that a wife begins to feel stifled if she doesn’t get away frond her boms at frequent Intervals. “Yes, Dr. Crane,” you may reply, "but my wife goes to the Supermarket on a shopping trip almost every day. nttnnrntmi ivrmrmmnru HOMEMADE Vj CANDIES • •THIS WEH^FEARJRE Milk Chocolate RAISIN l 2740 Woodward Av». * CLUSTERS * Open Evenings 'til 6 x_ _ _ The Pbntiac Mail *1 a • Open Ewmtogs Hf 9 IT-50 lb. J >ylb. j rest periods can be arranged. She' can leave cream on while doing her housework, sod if baby sitters are impossible, her husband can assume fiie responsibility a couple of nights a week while she goes to a movie with a friend or attends a class of Instruction in some subject or art in which she is interested. This will pay Mg dividends to the husband and children as well as to the mother. ■* it a Later when the children are grown and have left home it to such s waste when the woman does not find her new leisure a blessing Instead of a burden. Today more and more women are making those years good years, when they find that they have time for themselves. Then a woman can enroll in a university course if she wishes. She can enter Into civic and philanthropic activities she had no time for before. Perhaps she can travel a bit or vlftt relatives or trice up a hobby or just Invest more time In self-improvement at home. SELF IMPROVEMENT The best way to start self-improvement at home to to begin with physical Improvement. An increase in personal attractiveness gives a woman a tremendous boost and bee lifted apngr a one pot of the doldrums. The increase in energy which comes with a regular routine for good looks and health is also a wonderful bonus. From here on things are very likely to brighten in myriad unforeseen ways; unexpected doors will open and the horizons will expand. ★ W Sr The way to begin is to look at yourself in a mirror, preferably a three-way mirror. Do not bo discouraged if yon see that there is plenty of room for improvement because today there is an answer for almost every defect in beauty. Be honest with yourself and lei what you see be challenging rather than depressing. What about your hair? What about your complexion? What about your figure? What about your posture? Start with these and tackle other problems later on. Make a list of the defects which you would like to banish or Improve. Then get busy! This cm be a gay sad rewarding project GOP Gals Hostess The Bloomfield Republican Women’s Chib will meet at ; 1 p.m. Tuesday in the home of ‘ Mrs. B. D. Batumi, Ardmoor Street, Bloomfield Village. "Urban Renewal” and "The * Fine Line Between Serial Justice and Socialism” will be discussed by Jack Manning, former editor of The Detroit Times, now contributing editor to The Detroit Free Press. The world’s most expensive drink is said to be NapoUoti brandy. A vintner in Mldtexe, England, soM a bottle for fiJOt in 1963. . It lipiwrtt Ym| Sipport Yoar Cominityl ^ ' JOIN YOUR CHAMBER OF COMMERCE gr^Cril—FH 3-6148 RwWMMiinmuril THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1965 SEVENTEEN Linda Dunn ortSaturckiy Linda Sue Dunn of Drayton of Eugene Cline, Saturday, in the Drayton SUghts Free Methodist Church. . Parents of the newlyweds are William W. Dunn, Martina Ferry, Ohio, the we Mrs. Dunn, and the Roecoe Clines of Arils Street, Commerce A v«0 of Alencon lace with seed pearl tiara complemented this bride's tiered chapel-length gown of Chantilly lace over white satin. She carried white carnations. Elizabeth Lydia' Dunn was maid of honor and Marcelene Fox, bridesmaid. :A A A Jerry CUne assisted his brother as best man. Gregory Cline and Rev. Howard Harr were ushers. A reception in the Clarkston Township Hail followed the rite performed by Rev. Thomas E. Dunn. Mad or Happy? She's Not Sure ARCADIA, £an. (ft - An Arcadia woman doesn't know whether to be angry or flattered. While fishing near her home she was arrested by a state game warden and taken into a Justice of the Peace court. ★ * * Um officer charged her, with “Ashing without a license” and said she “looked to be about 41 years did.'' She calmly reached in her purse and produced evidence that she wae over 70. bn Kansas, persons over 70 need no U- A I* WASH UK 20< 1ft U. WASMtS 25« II IB. WASMRS 15< ECON-O-WASH mjsistvvn mu RELIEVE [ ( BACK PROBLEMS ffiueemewe Get relief from poMural many back coaddw a- degree of comfort. Three sett of M> juetmeni etrepa permit "form-fit” control tp suit individual nceda. Elattic inaeta allow fine movement tor the w eater. "Cushioned for Comfort." thi* fine Freeman prment featurea downy •oft Dacron-riau Colton. Eaay t walk and dry. Cuahioned ataya. IT mSCMFTION ONLY! AMERICAN ORTHOPEDIC SEIVIOE, INC. 10M W. Horen, Pontiac DIAL 334-2529 Off on a Cope Cod honeymoon aftor recant vows in St. Benedict's Catholic Church art the Kirby Jeffrey Meaghers (Janet Marie Shell). The bride chose white psou de sole for the nuptial Matt offered by Rev. Richard Thomas and the reception in the American Legion Hall, Auburn Heights. The newlyweds’ parents are the WUliam Shells, South Josephine Avenue, and the Peter E. Meaghers, Ona-gan Trail. The Donald Robert Weyers (Mario Beth Pawley) chose the Pint Presbyterian Church for their Saturday vows followed by a reception and Niagara honeymoon. Their parents ore the JCetth R. Pawleys, Silverstons Lane, and the Stanford J, Weyers, West Fatrmount Avenue. Alencon lace accented the bride's gown and train of white peon taffeta for thorite performed by Rev. Galen E. Her they. Saturday votes in the First Presbyterian Church, Holly, and reception in the VFW Hall marked the vows of Arlene Stayton of Davison to Richard Lynn Coot. Her gown and train of white organza over tdffota was overlaid with Chantilly lace. Parents of fhe couple, presently on a trip to Yellowstone National Park, are the Lyle Staytons, Bald Eagle Lake Road and the Cyril Coves of Davison. Birthday Is on Thursday for WNFGA A tenth birthday celebration will open the season for Oakland Branch, Woman’s National Farm and Garden Association Thursday. The event will be a cooperative dinner tar members and their husbands at Birmingham’s Community House. i i 'i A special guest wfli be Mrs. WUliam McCollum of Birmingham, original sponsor of the branch. She currently is Michigan Division, WNFGA, historian and is an honorary member of the association. * * a Three charter members Mrs. P. E. Wilson of Birmingham and Royal Oak residents Mrs. G. E, Clark and Mrs. J. F. Gierhart also will be honored. * A A Speaker for the evening will be ! “Mr. Grow It An’’ whose topic will be “The One Way Street.’’ ' ■ * * ' 4U - Branch officer* are: Mrs. A. J. Coran, president; Mrs. Chester Wells, first vice president; Mrs. Donald Austin, second vice president; Mrs. Lawrence Smith, secretary; and Mrs. Fred Hornfisher, treasurer, all of Birmingham. Poll/s Pointers Sticking Yourself? Refinance Mortgage Only if Necessary By MART FEELEY Is it really quick and easy to rafinancs my mortgage?’’ ~ get this question in every matt. And it’s no wonder, since lending Institutions am fond of making such statements as “We can arrange to refinance your present mortgage within M hours." All right, maybe they can. But people get the impression that they can get any amount of money at low Interest rates with no pain at all. One mortgage specialist said to me: “The borrower is in the driver’s seat today. Mortgage money is ‘easy.’ ” It la. And that’s the very reason you should proceed with caution. “Easy money’’ can get you into trouble unless you know what you’re doing,.arid have a' good reason for doing it AAA I’m the first to say there are times when refinancing your mortgage is sound business. But keep in mind that refinancing wipes out the progress you’ve made toward really owning the home you bought. It’s like starting all over from scratch. But if you must, you must — and please do keep these points in mind: Fraternity Cooks UpCook'N Farewell LOS ANGELES, Calif. (AP) — When Mrs. Scene Kenyon retired after 40 years as cook for the University of California at Los Angeles Beta Theta Pi fraternity, her “boya" cooked up a surprise tar her, A A A , Members of the local chapter and alumni gave bar the gift of a pension that will continue throughout bar life and eventually -Will jwsgrt^to the fraternity as tiwScena Keri- F£ 2-6921 DEAR POLLY—I make needlepoint md do both the background and the design with the wool yarn. The tapestry needles are hard to thread and the little metal threaders do not last long and break very easily. I worked out my own threader. A Sr A I cut a rectangle out of lightweight cardboard and rounded one end. It is about tt-inch wide *and VA indies long but must be narrower then the eye of the needle. In the rounded end I made a hole and ran nylon thread through it with a long loop extending out at the end. I put the cardboard through the eye of the needle, then yarn in the nylon loop and pull it right through. This costs nothing and works like a charm—LOLA DEAR POtLY - When your foa become aader hot water and right before your eves they wfli return to their lateral alre.-LOR-RAINE DEAR POLLY ** Umbrella-type clotheslines' which have been replaced by dryers can be made into beautiful and colorful shade areas by planting one or mors climbing rose bushes in a bed made around the pole base. |. I replaced the clothesline with wire to give the bushes a more permanent trellis to cling to. AAA Madras garments tend to have an untidy rumpled effect even after pressing because this '’bleeding” material cannot be sprinkled. Cut a square from a brown paper bag, about twice the size of the lion or larger, place on the garment while pressing and the material will iron beautifully and easily.-MRS. L. P. A 1 A ■ A DEAR POLLY — I have often sewed into ■ finger as I held material to guide it precisely through the sewing machine. Recently I discovered that using an orange stick (either end) is vary helpful in guiding the material vary close to the needle. -ANGIE GIRLS — I liked using the slanting end best.-POLLY. DEAR FOLLY - When my daughters had outgrown her walker, I removed the doth seat and repfitead it with a square denim bag. The bag was made larger than the seat and, of course, had no lag ppanlngi. This bag was whipped on so it could be easily removed and the seat replaced for furthsr tee as a walker If need be. Sty daughter has learned to use the walker ns a portable bag to pick up bar toys and return them to her toy chest It is a back saver for me. The walker has bumpers which protect furniture and walls.—SHIRLEY. AAA Share your favorite home making ideas . . . send them to Polly in care of The Pontiac Press. You’ll receive a dollar if Polly uses your idea in Polly’s Pointerl. AAA Want some help with your bomemaking? More than 200 cbore-shorteners are featured in Polly’s 32-page booklet. To order, send your name, address and SO cents to: Polly’s Pointers, in care of The Pontiac Press, P.O. Box 489, Dept. A, Radio City Station, New York 119, N.Y. PRINTED PATTERN Closing coats will probably be involved again in any refinancing arrangement. The interest rate you get will usually depend on how ipuch equity you have in the home. The mere money yea wait to borrow, the higher the Interest rate yen’ll be asked to pay. If yen want a N per ceat toaa, say, yea might get the advantage of an interest rate of itt per cent If you need aa amount of money over N per cent of the appraised value of your home, you may have to pay 4 per ceat. Lending institutions make re-| financing attractive by offering prompt appraisal service. Remember that the appraisal price isn’t the market price of the home at the going rate. It’s usually lower, so don’t let this shock you. If you need to refinance* your mortgage at a time when “mon- ■ ey is easy” you will get a lower! interest rate. Otherwise you’ll! have to pay more. GET DETAILS Before you get into any refinancing arrangement, discuss your problem with the lending institution that now holds your mortgage. Its interests are involved, too. You may have an open-end mortgage, which allows you to repay it or re-! adjust your payments over a longer period of time at a lower cost. Also, you may have a very attractive interest rate on your present mortgage and may pos- j sibly be altowfed to keep it in' force if you extend the payments. Otherwise, of course, you’ll want to shop around for a leader who will offer you the best deal. Refinancing the home mortgage is becoming s popular way of getting hold of a sum of money, either to consolidate debts or to provide money for the children’s education. If the need is great and the cost can be handled comfortably on your budget, then well and good. But what distresses me is to see families refinancing for such doubtful advantages as a daughter’s expensive wedding,|ley in care of The Pontiac the purchase of a boat or a Press.) new car. It's yopr money and yourj business. Just never forget that even when you borrow a small amount of money, you pay for the privilege. (You can write to Mary Fee- McLeod Carpet Sale FE 3-7087 |anaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaanaaaaaaaai FREE Area-Wide g ! DELIVERY SERVICE 5 A spring wedding in 1966 is being planned by Karen Lynn Smith, daughter of the Charles E. Smiths of York Street, Avon Township, and George J. Pressley Jr., son of the senior Pressleys of Royal Oak. She is a sophomore at Oakland Community College. Her fiance attends Michigan Christian Junior College in Rochester. 4626 SIZES Look — no strings! Buttons nip the waist ofr this snazzy style that’s smartly side slit. For the pure dash of it, stitch it up in gay cotton. Printed Pattern 4611: Misses’ Stye Small (10-12); Medium (14-16); Large (18-20). Medium takes 2 yds. 35-lnch. Fifty cents in coins for each pattern — add 15 cents for each pattern for first class mailing and special handling. Sand to Anne Adams, care of The Pontiac Press, 137 Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th St., New Votk, N. Y. 10011. Print Name, Address with Zip, Size and Style1 Number. Be Alert to What’s New! Send for excitement-packed Fall-Winter Pattern Catalog. 350 design views — school, career, glamor styles. Plus coupon far free pattern — choose it from Catalog. 50 cents. PHARMACY, MG. | 880 WOODWARD-Medical Building i Alumnae Unit Begins Season The Detroit North Suburban Alumnae Club of Alpha Gamma Delta will begin its fall meetings Tuesday in the home of Mrs. Narlow Alsager, Morn-ingview Terrace, Bloomfield Township. “The Challenge of the Blank Wall” will be the program presented by Mrs. Charles Modrack from a Birmingham decorator shop’s picture frame department. \ Members new to the South Oakland area have been invited to the meeting which starts at 8 p.m. . Cohostesses will be Mrs. Burnell Richardson and Mrs. Ronald Harwood, both of Royal Oak. wave You'll go-go for this value! Regular $1Q. cold wave with your ehoice of our conditioners — FREE. So necessary at rammer's end for lustrous, lively hair. 5* I FLAIR Cold Wave with your choice of Conditioning Treatment cut V act lael. NEISNER’S Beauty Salon 42 N. Saginaw, 2nd Floor FE 8-134S JXeumode SEAMLESS ::dependablesm SALE Plain hr Micro with Miracle No-Bind Tops and reinforced hells and ton. 77/ 2 pain $1.50 12 N. Saginaw St. let us REUPHOLSTER your worn furniture in the SEASON’S NEWEST DECORATOR COLORS! Choose from our wide selection of fine fabrics, in-iciudlng deluxe nylonsl AU Workmanship Guaranteed 5 Yoars EASY BUDGET TERMS OR 90 DAYS CASH EIGHTEEN Socialists'Hopes High in West German Elections BONN (UPI) — The campaign for Sunday’s Wait Ger-m a n parfiamatary ele went Mo the stretch today, with the Socialists apparently 1 . ful of victory for the first time since World War n. The ejection is the first since Konrad Adenauer resigned Chancellor. West Berlin’s Mayor Wily Brandt, Socialist standard-bearer lor the second time, appease to regard the new chancellor, Ludwig Erhard, as as easier fee to beat. Brandt is coraffcg an vetera radar 0 te sappert hfan. Be hep*a also to find ne'er The election campaign has been under way lor live weeks. Until last week, domestic issues Awihfitj tfrf bU French President Chutes Gaulle’s latest press moved foreign affairs to (I fore. SAID INCAPABLE The Socialists ray De Gaulle's threats to withdraw from NATO and to revise the Common Market treaty prove Erhard’s government is incapable of dealing firnriy with its French partner. De Gaulle’s apparent support of Poland’s claim on Germany's fanner eastern provinces also has given the Socialists campaign ammunition. fo—m rfStoauttB CLOGGED TOWS in aJHhrl H sa we will get these voters, and fey are re nigh to posh waver fee tap.” No one Democrat became the first in tory to win a parlln jority in a free election. •8 YEAR PROTECTION PLAN! •taMSMt ftfedfea ttSfear ***** torn mm. Oimvm Bto fSatuMM ]c!^ ^ to fee toEBSUB » tom espwfe ill FUMY SIZE 2-MOt FRIGIDAIRE With 120 Lb. TiP FREEZER Efp Shelf for Igpsl •niter Cempartmentl E*w Deep Deer Shelf) A BEST 1 YEAR PROTECTION PLAN 1 AT NO EXTRA CHARGE! Automatic Soak Cydd plus Jdt Action features galore! eJet-Away Lint Removal —no lint traps! e Jet Spin cuts drying tone, taevra clothe extra light and dryl m ana easy ev* strings sekiom snarl! REDUCED TO Jet Action For New Deap Cleaning ggn O “iffSB!* VttHSn 8 1 1 THE POfrTIAC F1BSS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER IS, IBM_._____ • / - Wpkra year W “Steto Wanty** larabyii m yew tmmm Wws ife iW»fei ranhpaatfee eddtoM he. Mh«diMu»|to la Mkeaw -MeU Man ay" lavfesi behalf *1 e"Mato M—y" hA-tth-WO, $I00,$M,$10.*J aril Jeve. fetohSl Mb. Mwe yes *a bft eai right had af ttoie Mb, yae afea* Staawaalhi asfeTSrawswUSpfefei laaqiiaplaraw and awed- a* d& WHOLE FOR WHITER WASHES SAVE 11‘-KROGER CRACKED WHEAT, WHOLE WHEAT OR •yjrmwur lu can $1.29 savi w ISTAMPS THIS COUPON ON H STAMPS HI ITH THIS COUPON ON | U SLICED OR HALVES FROZEN APPLE, CHERRY OR PEACH Ml MONTI MORTON PEACHES FRUIT PJES Aft ml ■ save m ■ *• ~ 29 THE POKTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 18. W5 NINETEEN riot, says be may stay but wants more police protection. Looting was kept to a mtal-imim because Heath opened hie doors during the riot and then stayed on the premises to try to argue mobsters out of bttag bis goods. He was stffl shocked at the violence.. :l *: street — and a Watts resident. Heath, lounging 1n slippers at his one-story department store stSi dark arid empty Jrom the FREE RIFLES WE CARRY 22% 30-30% 30-06% 32 AND 35 SPECIALS. PUMPS, LEVERS, BOLTS, SEMI-AUTOMATICS IN SINGLE SHOT AND REPEATERS. FREE SHOTGUNS WE CARRY SHOTGUNS IN 12, 16, 20, 410 GAUGE. PUMPS, BOLTS, SEMIAUTOMATICS IN SINGLE SHOT AND REPEATERS. BIG SAVINGS &M AWNINGS FOR WINDOWS PORCHES • PATIOS • ENCLOSURES • CARPORTS Your bedroom will »hine with this modem-ensemble that comes complete with a full sized bed, double dresfer and mirror and matching roomy chest, j ',l* ‘j$ it’ii.x i1 Modernize your living room with this suite which comes in many colory.in 100% nylon frieze. All Foam Cushion. Go Colonial with this whole houseful. Sofa and matching ’ lounge choir, complete set of tablet, 2 table larpps,'"fulj *'*• panel or bookcase bed, huge dresser, mirror ond chest, box spring and mattress and 5-piece dinette set. Includes brand-new Westinghouse Refrigerator and Detroit Jewel Gas Range. Sofa, Chair, 2 Step Tdbles, Cocktail Table, Lamps, Bookcase Bed, Dresser, Mirror, Chest,! Box Springs, Mattress,* 5-Pc. Dinette plus ypu get a brand new Westinghouse Refrigerator ond Detroit Jew*i &a* Range, (empletsly lnst«ll«d—Includes Dear mmm pIMiNCTMg 15 Locations All Oyer Michigan ATTENTION HUNTERS!!! AT ALL 1 5-GIGANTIC WORLD WIDE STORES WITH THE PURCHASE OF A LIVING ROOM, BEDROOM, SECTIONAL, DINING ROOM OR A HOUSEFUL WORLD WIDE'S 15-GIGANTIC STORE VOLUME BUYING AND SELLING MAKES THESE FANTASTIC few SAVINGS POSSIBLE ^ ’jun ContrgT FREE GUN INCLUDED BUY NOW NO MONEY DOWN PAY NOTHING UNTIL 1966 GUTTERS INSULATION ROOFING CEMENT, STONE and BRICKWORK CORNER OF DIXIE HWY AND TELEGRAPH RD MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER 2215 TELEGRAPH RD THE PONTIAC PMCS& MONPAY. i. h>m Ifs A Pleasure to and Save At Coupon ExpiraWod.,S«j*. -W W»IH Owpon J»rOf j*i U.S. CHOICE 1st CUT BLADE CUT PORK STEAK CENTER CUT r GRADE A m- LARGE « £3^ EGGS ROMAN ^ CLEANSER % V2Gallon ORADEA LARGE 0Qe ■« EGGS w DOZEN WITH PUROHASEOFISJO ORMOAE ROMAN CLEANSER ■' ' . JA WIlllCNfM SUPER MARKETS FOOD MARKETS BONELESS CHUCK ROAST 69* ROUND BONE pps SHOULDER k||V ROAST Ulfik. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1960 THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN TWENmONE Washington Takes Exhibition Finale Lions Blow Third-Down Chances in Loss to Skins, 20-3 HyBRtlNOL. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press CANTON, Ohio — The Detroit Lions Just can’t come up with that dpteh play which would keep ah offensive drive moving. Th|t'a been the-story of tbs five games of their exhibition season completed on a losing note; yesterday to the Washington Redskins, 20-3. A dampened crowd of 12,900 in flie annual Hall of Fame game left Fawcett Stadium as befuddled as the Lions who must be wondering when they are go> big to start crossing the god Again they had .the opportunities and again they felled. Wife Sonny JurgWaen going most of fee way, the Redskins had a touchdown fat fee first Mo minutes of play without gaining a yard from scrimmage. They too* fee kickoff, and when the Lions’ defease led by Joe Schmidt and Alex Karras pushed them back to fee five, Pat Richter had to past.. on fee Skin 40 and on fee first play, Milt Plum’s pass was intercepted by middle linebacker Sqn Huff and he went SO yards for fee touchdown. . * i dr A • On the next series fee Lions moved to Washington’s 30 but had to try fee a field goal and it felled from the 47. Just at the start of fee second quarter, Detroit had the ball on fee Washington 16.' Three plays failed and Wayne Walker had to settle for three points from the If. ,* W When Tom Vaughn returned an Intercepted pass 43 yards, Detroit started on its own 4, managed two yards and had to punt. Then Washington made it Giants Hold Best Margin in 16 Months 10-3 when B. B. Jencks booted a 49 yard field goal. MOVE AGAIN After fee ensuing kickoff the Lions moved from the 2 to the Redskins 31, took a 26-yard penalty when Jim Simon was ejected from the game and lost the ball on downs on their own 43. Early in the third quarter, fee Lions muffed another chance. Dick LeBeau intercepted a pass and gave Detroit a first down on the Skins’ 28. Four (days netted eight yards and the Skins took over. *A ' Midway in the third quarter on the Skins’ 25, a pass for Jim Gibbons was intercepted by Jim Dodgers Drop 2 Games Back for 1st Time San Francisco Takes Twin Bill From Cubs; LA Loses to Astros . By The Associated Press The San Francisco Giants are twice as well off as they have been in: nearly two seasons while the Los Angeles Dodgers am in twice as much trouble as they’ve been this season. TTie Giants’ advantage and the Dodgers’ adversity evolved from fee action oh fee fourth-to-last Sunday of the season. San Francisco swept Chicago 44 and 0-3 while Lbs Angelas dropped a 3-2 decision to Houston. The double victory, extending their winning streak to 10, shot the Giants into a two-game lead fit the National League and a unpredictable Om- ened up the team pennant face. Not since May 12,1101, have fee Giants enjoyed such a big margin. On days when they led file league both last season fnd this, ttpy had no mom than a one-game WQgs. The Dodgers, od the other hand, had not trailed the feeder by more than one game on the handful of days thsy were not in first place this season. 12 DAYS The Giants’ lead also is the greatest any team has had since Aug. 14. And it was just 12 days ago feat fee first five teams in fee race were within 2% games of each other. Now, Cincinnati la In third, 2tt behind; Milwaukee is fourth, four games back, and Pittsburgh is fifth, 6% out. The Giants have a chance to add another half-game to their lead tonight when they open a four-game series at Houston. The Dodgers toe idle, before Starting a three-game sat at Chicago Tueaday. In other NL action Sunday, New York edged Milwaukee 1-0 in 10 innings while rata washed out Cincinnati at Pittsburgh and St. Louis at Philadelphia. The Giants gained their longest winning streak of fee year wife the help of five Chicago errors. Miscues by Ernie Banks and Glenn Beckert fed to all four San Francisco runs In the Port Huron 9 Wins Tourney in Waterford Emery Lanes pt Post Huron knocked off Brown Derby of Midland, 3*1, yesterday to win the second annual Waterford Invitational Softball Tournament. & s in the tiftbdAy tourney, 4 wife tlm Mpet Valuable and ttemmato j Winfield (shortstop) cap-Alba Most Valuable Player Defending champion Top Hat of flint was eliminated Saturday by Spencer Floors, ?4, and IfenKilry Service of Waterford, Pontiac Rolls 74-0 Q$ Sparks Arrows Karl Sweetan Is a nice young map who Hkeo to play football. Anywhere; But he arraU prefer to play, say with fee Detroit Lions or one of their rivals in fee NFL.. '*£. A At be, moment, fee 5-1, 196-pounder is displaying his talent at the helm of fee Pontiac Arrows, who have suddenly blossomed as the power of fee Mid- TASTEFUL QB - No. 14 of fee Pontiac Arrows to Karl Sweeten and while he to g “hooey” of a play cellar to them, be leaves the opposition *“ different taste to their fee Abrews geared across 11 toadb-dswas Saturday aight in routing Stergb. 7441. It WW a non-conference vie- !sft,"2nSSJfJL: romp was a bitter pill for Slur- ton Colts on the Wisner turf. «*■- NMU, Northw Conquer Grid Foes By The Associated Press The kicking of Tony Richardson and fee running of Bob Benjamin gave Michigan teams two victorias in three games as fee 1965 college football season opened Saturday. Richardson’s 31-yard field goal wife two seconds to play provided northern Michigan wife a 10-7 victory over State College of Iowa at Cedar Falls, *>wa. Benjamin scored three touchdowns in leading Northwood Institute past Northland at Ashland, Wls. 40-12. Wisconsin State Teachers dumped Central Michigan 95-13 In fee other game at -! After a scoreless first half SCI’a Randy 8chultz capped a 96-yard drive wife a one-yard plunge to give Iowa a 74 land. A two-yard plunge by Northern’s Bob Erickson knotted the score and set the stage for Richardson’s last-second heroics. Benjamin scored on a 28-yard pass and on touchdown runs of 16 and 66 yards. He gained 124 yard in 18 carries and caught five passes for 57 yards. BIG HALF Wisconsin State blew open the annual Rad Feather charity game against CMU wife a 26-point second half. Ron Ganount scored three touchdowns for the visitors and Tom Knoblauch two. Walt Hampton and Greg Hoef-fer bucked for two CMU scores in fee first half.; The Arrows beat Flint’s Blue Dfoib to their opener a week ago, 614. Then fee Sturgis de-ba.Ie. But fee game wife Day-ton promises to be different. GOOD TALENT Dayton has a crop of ex-col- Postponement Halts Bengals Tfgors Carry Drive for Second to East Detroit (ap> - stui pushing for a shot at second place, the Detroit Tigers rested at home for a day today after Sunday’s game at Cleveland was postponed because of rain. The Tigers swept two games from Cleveland and are within two games of both the Chicago White Sox and Baltimore Orioles, now tied for second. Detroit opens a two - game series to Baltimore Tuesday and Denny McLain (124), recovered from a bout with fee flu, is expected to start fee opener. The Tigers have won five of their last seven games, mainly on fee hitting of Norm Cash, Don Wert and rookie Mickey Stanley. Cash has hit .286 since fee All-Star break and now Is batting fill. CLEAR WEATHER Manager Charlie Dressen was dlSilipototed at the Cleveland’ club’s cancelling Sunday’s game. It was called at 10 a.m. But the weather cleared by by game time. “This Cleveland dub isn’t hitting so good' and I’d have liked to {day since we’re going good,” said Dressen. “I thought it would dear 19." lege talent on its ’65 squad. The Colts knocked off defending chantalon Lansing, 26-7, in their opener a week ago and they ran into field problems Saturday night and postponed a scheduled meeting with Milan. A ★ * Flint made its debut before the home fans and suffered its second setback, a 354 loss to Lansing. Retaining to Sweetan. The former Wake Forest quarterback bad quite an evening. He tosped five touctatown passes, scotadf once on a 33-yard run and booted seven extra points. A A * The Arrows shoved across 21 points In fee opening quarter, 14 in the second, 18 in the third and 20 more in fee finale. TD PASSES Sweetan connected on TD tosses of 19 and 32 yards to BUI Leonard, a defensive back who was moved to flanker by coach Lyle Wells. He hit halfback Bob Hill with a seven-yarder, tossed another seven-yarder to Willie Jones and pitched a 34-yarder to Art Avedife. 1 A A A Jones added another score on 22-yard run, Mike Schott idled across on a four-yard run, Hill went over on a three-yard dive' and Jim Johnson caught a seven-yard pass from BUI Harrington. The other score came on a 23-yard return with an intercepted pass by Jesse Parrish. U5. Bids Adieu to Top Net Prizes FOREST HILLS, N.Y. (AP) States had coma sway ompty-America’s two pdsed tennis hfoufed LAST SET ’ “The trouble with top American boys id feat they haven’t learned to play the mg point,” Observed Charles Hare, former British Davis Cupper. "They Sever seem to rile to the occasion. They play fee feet set wife fee samp casualness they play fee first.'* : This seemed true fe the case of 22-year-old Arthur Ashe of Los AAlotataaid 21-year-oid Charlie PasafPU of Puerto Rico. I vgfm Thtfpe two; youngsters emereW as the new Mb* of Amenoih’ tennis when PasareU upset Fred Stolls of Australia and Ashe won over Roy Emer-y rated fee world’s No. 1 toqay, and UB. fens turned the crank on an old, over-playsd ant: 'When ere we going to get some Winning tennis playenT” * The outlook is bleak — as it has been fof the pirn few years. • ♦ ■ A- •■ - Tatam* Taagaa mm Owraal MCI Cigarette and Alcohol Proofl 29°» Across from THE MALL FRONT 00011 PARKING 22S5 ELIZABETH IX M>. FE 4-5216 Wfc LOAN THE TOOLS! THE PONTIAC PRESS, MQNP4Y, SljffTEMBEjjt ^ 1M5 pushed by Alyea, a 14-year-old right-handed swinger iq> from Hawaii of the Pacific Coast League, when be tagged a pitch fcy Rudy May lor a three-run homer in Washington’s 7-1 victory over California Sunday. Alyea had been announced as a pinch hitter ia Saturday’s Skowron drove in three runs with a bases-loaded double. Hodges sent him 19 to the plate In the sixth inning with tiro men on. May threw, Alyea swung — and the ball sailed into the Washington bullpen. PINCH HOMERS Alyea Joined 34 other players who have hit homers in their first trip to the plate. Eight of those hit pinch-hit homers, but only Ed Morgan of the UN St Louis Cardinals ever had done it on the first pitch. The Twins, meanwhile, rode Jim Grant’s four-hit pitching and 19th victory to a 34 victory over Boston that sliced their magic pennant-clinching number to nine. Any combination of Minnesota victories and Baltimore losses totaling nine will bring tiis Twins their first pennant The Orioles were rained out CHANCE TAKEN Frank Kreutser got the victory with Dean Chance taking the loss after five straight victories. Chance now is 13-10. Grant, 1H got the only run he needed when Tony Oliva, tripled in the first faming and ENSHRINED — Seven former pro football stars where enshrined info Pro Football’s HaQ of Fame ft Canton, Ohio Local Men Share Firkf inMPGA Exhibition Play , Ends Vikings, Colts Perfect Rhome, the ex-Tulsa University wfalx, returned to the field of his collegiate exploits and passed the Cowboys to victory over file Bears. He struck for three touchdowns, tbs final one to Olympic *rtat champion Bob Hayes. * * ★ The Rams clicked behind the quarterback combination of Bill Munson and Roman Gabriel. day highlight for the National Football League’s 43th season. Tarkenton, the helter-skelter dervish whose backfield runarounds make adventures of many plays, rallied the VfldngB to a 24-9 victory over the New York Giants at Omaha Saturday with three second-half touchdown passes. COLTS ROMP Unitas’s passing sparked the Colts as they whipped the PHla- Package Includes Everything Every Car Needs Twice-A-Year Complete Services Worth $24 Next 10 Days For On ly BRAKE ADJUSTMENT Stop safely! Co safety! We’ll remove front wheels; check all components; adjust brakes; add fluid and check entire system. Available separately, $1.19. Carl Ward, Rick Volk, and sophomore Ernie Sharpe scored the other touchdowns. 8harpe’s came on a 64-yard run. Gabler appeared to have the edge on Dipt Vidmer at starting quarterback. Ha scored twice aad hit 00 five of six passes for 80 yards. Vidmer hit on three of five for 36. End Jack Clancy caught four passes for 42 yards. Ward picked off two for 47 aid Craig kfarfay caught three for 30. mark; tjie Cleveland Browns, S-1, scored a 28-10 victory over the Pittsburgh Steelers, 63, at Akron, Ohio; and rookie Jerry Rhome led the Dallas Cowboys, S3, to a 34-21 decision over the Chicago Bears, 2-3, at Tulsa. On Sunday — the Washington Redskins, S3, beat the Detroit lions, 1-4, fay a 304 scon in the Bril of Fame game at Canton, Ohio; and the Lol Angeles Rams, 3-2, trimmed the San Francisco 48ers, 2-2-1, 34-14 at Los Angeles. When the firing starts in earnest next Sunday, in addition to the VfldngKtalt*, the schedule will be — file defending league' champion Browns at Washington, the Packers at Pittsburgh, the Cardinals at Philadelphia, the Gianta at Dallas, the Rams at Detroit and the Bern at San Francisco. LATE STARTER Tarkenton sat out the first half of the Viktaga-Glants game, while third-stringer Bob Berry performed, then broke a S3 tie early in the third quarter on a FRONT-END ALIGNMENT Easier driving! Less wear! We’ll align front and by correctir caster, camber and toe-in;check all parts; AND SAFETY-CHEC ENTIRE CAR! Available separately, $6.50l Mora power! Better mileage! We’d check, dean and adjust spark plugs, points, condenser, ignition wins. Available separately $6.66 6-cyl.; $838 for 1-cyL cars. Mary Mills Rallies to Win Golf Tille Township Gridders Have Scrimmages FRONT WHEELS BALANCED Smooth ride! Reduce wear! We'll remove front wheels; balance to high-speed precision; check tire condition. INCLUDES ALL WEIGHTS! Available separately for $5.00. Manpower White Gloves Separate the Best from the Rest in Temporary Office Help REPACK WHEEL BEARINGS Prevent expensive bearing replacement We’ll clean off old gum and grease; repack with new summer lubricant; checked grease sals. Available separately, $2.00. Giri in the WMt# Glow adapt* quickly and work* efficiently. Back to School Special ATLAS of then Ac “ MANPOWER* by 4:18p.m.-Thursday. There ia at team entry fee, but a player rdgMbltioa fee of fIJlpdr man is charged. Any new team that can’t make the practice tonight should contact the recreation office at OR 44KI a soon !i possible. CALL 332-8386 1338 WM. Track Pontiac Full color official photographs, election maps, and Ufa story of each president Fine educational gift for tchool-ago youngsters, or any library. Hard cow, MICHIGAN MOST EXCITING NIGHT LIFE! HASEEJX. PARK goodAeab SERVICE STORE Monday thru Tksrtday UNITED TIRE SERVICE 1007 Baldwin Ave. TWENTY-THREE THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1065 Player Pockets 'Series' Pot then Jets for Home Total of 139 Beats Jack * by 3 Shots Local Stock Car locwr Finishes Fifth Sunday Bob Messenger of Pontiac took fifth place In the feature race at Jets' Star Namath Watches as Club Flubs Opener, 27-21 Pistons Open Drills Minus Three Players Bill Buntin Unsigned but Is Expected to Come to Terms Branch's Mel Schwerin took third. Proctor’s sister Joan Aldridge was th Powder Puff Derby suddenly became expendable when Werblin drafted Namath and John Huarte, came off the bench to lead the Oakland Raiders to a decisive 17*10 victory over Kansas City at Oakland. BILLS WIN In AFL season• openers Saturday night, the Buffalo Bills whipped the Boston Patriots 24-7 and the San Diego Chargers nipped the Denver Broncos 34-3L For Your wks founded. Trull, somewhat of a disappointment in his first year in 1984, hit Willie Frazier with touchdown passes of 57, eight and four yards while Blanda provided the scoring difference by booting two field goals. Sonny Werblin, a veteran show business magnate and owner of the New York Jets, saw his team literally fumble away a 27-21 decision fo the Houston OUers Sunday in the American Football League opener for both teams. “Louis B. Mayer built the mighty M-G-M film studio on the star system; Werblin once remarked: “It’s a lesson that has stuck with me.” . DETROIT (AP) - The Detroit Pistons of the National Basketball Association opened practice today without their top scorer, Terry Diacbinger, their No. 1 center, Reggie Harding, and their top draft choice, Bfil and then excused Buntin of Michigan’s Big Ten champions. Dischinger, who averaged 18 points a game last'year, is in the Army. Buntin, according to a club source, ‘wants too much money” and has not signed a 1981 contract, and Harding, who was fined 82,000 for misbehaviour last week, has been suspended indefinitely for more “All I said was: Show me a filter that delivers the taste and I’ll eat my hat round 70 in caphiring golfs biggest Jackpot. . The U.S. Open champion, never behind from start to finish in the final round, put the issue beyond any doubt when be craned a 50-foot birdie putt on the 17th green, ruining Nick-laus* hopes of a final charge. BOGEY TROUBLE Actually, it was all over when Nicklaus, who birdied two of the first three holes on the final nine, took back-to-back bogeys on the 13th and 14th and fell three strokes off the lead. Player’s brilliant golf was like shooting day pigeons. He forced Dave Marr out of contention on the second hole when be carded a birdie four while Man* was Werblin learned fiis lesson Well. The Jets drafted Joe Namath, who has that star quality “when he walks into a room” and also has 8400,000 Werblin reportedly paid to get him.' Buntin probably will come to terms as did Indiana's Tom Van Arsdale oa Sunday, but Harding’s return is a moot question. “He’ll be on our suspended list and it could last forever or a year,” said Pistons’ General Manager Don Wattrick. Harding, 28, was arrested in a police raid in an after-hours Namath stood on the sidelines at Houston and watched bargain-basement (a TV set) bonus quarterback Mike Taliaferro direct the Jets for the entire game. On the same day, a New York castoff, Dick BIRDIE HOP — Garry Player dances and bops around on the 10th gram in the World Series of Golf at Akron yesterday when his 10-foot putt dropped for a birdie-3. He won tha tournament with 70-89—130 three strokes ahead of Jack Nick-, laus at 141 y is charged vrith loitering and is free under 825 court bond. Harding was found guilty last Wednesday of assaulting a police officer in a hassle over a parting ticket last Aug. 8. IBs sentence was suspended but the ALL SYSTEMS "GO” ALL WINTER LONG1 End downs on runs of 29, 28 mid 3 :ated yards as he piled up 88 yards >cern in 10 carries. Cotton got 84 yards in, 11 tries andv Lee, a Detroit Team Golf’Winners Local Driver Posts Victory FLAT ROCK (UTl) - Vet-eras stock ear dMvsr Jay Fair qaaMflsd for a trip to the Char- In a season and a half with the Pistons, he has averaged about 11 points and 11 rebounds per game. Buntin, who starred at Michigan, is the last Piston holdout. Vaa Arsdale signed for an un- showad little sharpness despite Jay Law and John Kurach, the lopsided score. We also both of Detroit, posted a record found out that we will behandi- 88 to win the second annual capped against UCLA by the Davdsburg Golf Course Best-Ball finger injury to Washington.” Tournament Saturday. But Daugherty’s search for a _ . * * . running game to go with senior ^7^1.5. ^ii^nT second string defense tor huge chunks of yardage. Pontiac entrants Pi|| Bara land George Hammitt had 18 for THREE™ ; third place. A reoord field of S3 Jones scored three touch-{teams entered the action. This Is a Ian belt tension check-an Important service to protect your cooling and electrical systems at your GM dealer’s. There’s no room for guesswork! If the belt is too tight, critical parts will wear prematurely. Too loose a belt adversely affects water pump and generator performance. Accurate, specialized tools such as this belt tension gauge help Guardian Maintenance technicians take care of all your pre-winter car needs in one quick, economical yi$it, Radiator, water pump, heatdf, battery, belts and hoses are thoroughly inspected, tested____________fl I i*Trl™ end serviced for top performance \ 5 5— ail winter long. Your GM dealer is ' ]35h | / mb equipped to give you the best kind ” of service for your General Motors Car or truck. •Fanous hand-sewn fronts. Supple leathers, relaxed good looks for the nan who loves > the good life. f (left) Brown or Blaok VT grained Calf Mmm (right) Penny Moo, Antiqued M ■ im, < Imm / il'mi m The Style Comer <^f Pontiac Saginaw at Lawrence toen , Friday Night ifll 9 P.M- TMp. p^^*C Ri^css. MONPAy. SSrTB*iBBR IB, im ^Ten^l lwiS So Fresh Crispy ■ POTATO CHIPS 14-Os. MIIW VnMM S § OtwKIwMVafll Sliced Bologna. . 49* SO HUSH TASTY # . Fish steaks: 2 *$1M Risdon Creamy Rich Refreshing POPSICLES er >> (|p^ Shurgood DaMdau< Vanilla OJ Sandwich Cookies ITOC C,#on* UP Dirt To*», Daal rack 37 Lestoil liquid.. ■a*. Cinnamon Suffli It Nabisco Cookies. t% N» Maid To Oat Ov* Dirt xO Roman Ammonia Wm SumMimPimIi ft Krispy Crackers. AAV. v VonMa Wafer* // Weston Cookies i Mr. Bubble... .. Now Waeli Day WWtoninf Fluid Mirade White.. Hcif Qminii Command Dressing NO COUPON NEEDED NO COUPON NEEDED NO COUPON NEEDED WATCH YOUR NEWSPAPER FOR ALL LUCKY WINNERS IN THE BIG NEW CAR GIVEAWAY frHE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1965 TWENTY-FIVE 46 NewCourses on Oil's Fall Continuing Education List Beginning the week of Sept. 87, Oakland University will launch the fall term far Its Continuing Education Division. Some 46 mw courses will bring the total number of classes to ISO. DWmmIM Catoatea. Functions and maxima and'minima' with applications to -VTwff j«||r M. gCtia IMapral Calcutta. Muthudi of Uon, differentiation, fte dufkilt* u thu limit at a awn, tka fund topics asr product design for study, sa executive reading trial hydraulics, biology of man and amateur ornithology. Registrations are being accepted now in all courses. Deadline far registration is Sept. 24. ♦ Or Or A catalog describing all 150 courses can be obtained by contacting the Division of Continuing Education at OU. Following is s list of classes, including instructors, meeting days, hours, date of first class session and cost: USUAL ARTS AmHmHc* (Colloquium in tho Human I-Sumlnar SMcumIwi of MgnMeant —il------y| OSK of tho croatkui, a evaluation of art. AHrtd I.D., Tuoodoyt, otarto Sopt. I. JM (125—couplo). Ana Ptapfe (Colloquium In ■^raT Science.). Examlno. to communicate llnqulitlco' applica- otarto Sapt. M. Pautoqp PuL lal Sctoncut). npNvut pvalL ____ .. unnn nim In VIP Nam at way of davalopiM framuxof rtf-•rune* far intelligent ranoMuraflli of SSlft Belton ■Xfe. TpWfe* In Tho Saclal tcloncoo. For tho layman who with*, to avalyala mart critically tha mounting body of ramarm findings In tha aaclw •clancas. Aharon KupannM, M.5., Thurv ils on teeming principal* of bob ivlor which apply 1 group ilfuoflont. William sdillcfit. Ph!b., Thursday t. if art* So^t. pV ais_ (36 co^ioi. 5-session roofing of Intereoto, ablllfloti aptltudoa and valuoo. Part o' -*“ r"“-tmuum Cantor for woman program. Kamrth Coffman, I do^jtort, aopt.JE W«J mlt of a mm, _____ M cSjcoam. taPjlrHtoni fa araga. lonmno, center of griivly, ate. Sami Tburita* iterti Jept. M, bwIntM^tocnnlcag: sr^^ofher iproblem. ^MWwMtJA^lmnaieiyi, itefta Applied ftaHMIc*. .Introductory course aFaragZFfaft theory, wanaWcaf Inforonc* tochnlquas, sfc. Goorgo' Gomolikl, M.S. Tburoouyi, jftknMftm^asei* pjn. M»1_ . _ Prapara. itudant' to at-of physical mslhsmaflcs —_ fhepretlcal work. Sarhis Wttm M.S. Wodnosdoys, starts _____Mies Vshoihir I. pint osyrss sf two ssmaalar saguonc* reviewing km-domontol Idass at msthomotlcs. Plrst form rovtows exponent., radical., graphing, logarithms, algtbri and trigonometry. (Saesnd farm win cevar analytic fSS, “ ...................... 6Ids. Helene cTusmsey, M.A., |«mC session for both porant. Monday, Sapf. 27, 7:300:30 pm. at Oakland University. 10 morning soMiont for mother and child at First Baptist Church, Birmingham. J « Sapf. », »:3fl):30 4 Year Old*. Helen* , evening tasslen far both ___________...jy, Sapf. » of Oakland University, to efternoen sessions tor motfwr and child at First Baptist Church, jPIrmlnanem, Wednesdays, starts Sept. WWertsheimin *Fl’*»le« Writing. Step by •«m cr«gflon of • story lit workshop r. .t- _ — FrfiClM Jtckeon, drawing VMM various fachntaues and media. Jqhn Beerdmwv M.FA., Tue»- ous types of subloct matter. For begln-rfm s^iiyUlffffi W|t!>srTnssi**nf 3ra s. atari. Sapf, fa B-W p.m. HI H Mn5 Institute at ictonct, Bloomfield Pnyalaa* Par The Layman. Lectures and demonetratlans for thOa* with iTttto msthomotlcs or actoncg background an prlnclplaa of traamanal ana modem physics which affect space exploration, warnor, the operation at modem machinery Mir appliances, otc. Richard E. Mlchol, Ph.O., Tuesdays, starts Sopt. 30, wmw£» McGoan, O.D.S., Mondays, starts Sapt. 7:gMl3S pm. $30. SMNry at Man. introduction to human biology tar Ihoaa who havt not studied it aT the canape level. John Heckett, M.AV Tueedaya, atarto Sapt. M, 7:30d:W jiffiParsy it. Structure, Mnd-actortstics and behsmtor at atoms HiiB Wednesdays, ffsrto Sapt. ftTHl-ia pjyi! PunOamsatals at Tha Heal Treatmmt p&WW ^ iKit tnanS as appllcabia to steels and other Important torraus alloys. Fradark* a. cepts of the nature ot vtrueas and their Mia as Boaaativo agents of dlssats. - Retirement. For aMCutlves, Industrial and bualnasa aersannal who face retirement within the next few years. JerryW. Munro, M. AjMendeys, starts LhnHa- •lane. Informal lectures anffwarotlcpl and practical aspacl of psychiatry In msdam Ufa. Emenuol Taney, ML D., Wednesdays, starts Sapt 2». 7-1:30 p4h. Creative TMakka. A mriu, s« ptore the facets of cru relation to personality ..-________ i-. letre Beet Ian To Mseipsmiet. Basis at supervision, functions at the supervisor, fir and staff authority, me; AtoCK ■ r r* Saturday s, lent Phllesephy, FrtncMea And Practice In utilising skills and managemsnt tor those Introduction to Manege1 pan L-----------Jant h experience. ML C. Schnoor, Jr., MVS A. Wedneedeys, starts fipt- 2». 7:30-»:30 p.m. WT Manpiernem Principles. Ex- Mttonel problems faced by middle men-Mart. Louis E. LatsH, M.BA., Wsdnev dsjs, starts Sept. », 7:3M:JO pm. $40. Psw^W'KUe, l article writing for the busy i-™,— .levlew si tods peychotogkai ptjnclptos Os thsy apply to ampkwa Tslsttons. John H. McCsnnsR, M.Ed. Wednesdays, starts Sapt. », 7-4:30 p.m. PsgcbsHplcil Aspects w Van ASKfffmanL Psychological toctyraa crease student's awareness of aa aptitudes and work relationshlpi wtv xm COMMERCIAL ART Pundementols at Cam mere tal j apipu amL designing (nod i techniques, use of filters, light meters, lenses with emphasis an composition and llphtlng. J. Elwood Armstrong, Tundays, sKrtTW- VTyara-jo pjh..Mk a, s:3D-io p.m. $40. Learning And Msmsry. Study pf learning and Its basis to psychological principles. John H. McConneTT M.Ed.. Wodnosdays, starts Sapt. V, S:3M0 p.m. ihy. Demonstratl i motion plctun COMMUNICATIONS SKII circuits Indmtrlal controls am Cotchpol^ RIIl)!^w5levfVslarts Sopt-.beginning prtodptot1"and tholr ■JrplIcStkwi'Tfo static Braw^%OTVfi?y a JL“ssss And Stmt Analysis, asflinniny cou»*e with emphasis on aatvlna problems of engineering significance incounlsrsd In ^—‘g^l P**|W|jtt‘* “* "*• MUL, ThursdeysV Sarto Sept. 30. 7:JM:30 p.m. $40. . pSft mSkB «*d ft* Births standing at tha symphonic raMrtolri of the classical, romantic end modem periods. Arthur Daniels, Ph.D., witones-days, starts Sept. 8, 7:30-*:W p.m. »». Plane Class tor Baahmers. Group In- to £ monlietlon. Thursdays, 7:30-0:30 pm. IIS wPtapo Cto^s ll.^Oras piano. Tussdeyi, starts riTpjnrBr s Isstructton tor ome training to Sapt. 20. 7:30- to begin a mins toaMmiomT wiibur KsntVM. Av Tuesdays, /Marta Sapt. H, 7string' MT*dwiewt.' Assists thges currently olavlng on toetrumant with baw> and, vlbratoy reading and ir bnderstandlM and appllca- LPiSPfe.fesS ssr.“d«K»',sr»Ba d to is but span to auditors, iwiecne Koftter, Wednesdays, starts Sept. JO, t:3B—il:30 a.m. Mir (Auditors «). Opera warBsiiep. Study at pit various 27Vtoce!° fundamentals of Md vole* l±tMnT rx. —‘-rad mend jjiich wfti sina .maaiar ral works wah symphony/orchestroo. "'SmSSa — - ~n.. ar Taasaiw, >tS» am aTUB Panaha VSFi Ironch. Rtnoa Rothschild. Pint Tone (Audla-ytouat) Wednesdays, Itsrn lsaf. 2», 7:2a4jlS p.m. or starts Sept. }I/7:JM:J» kM, ar days, HifitJiim. a, 7:3M:30 p.m. $sT pranch nr ovtrasas tada.atrtai Pan sennil. Intonetve study for the student Intorastod lh acquiring Immediate urn at Mia languaga phis technical vocabulary Ksftrjry— y. T«s.Wi eivm^ 4|WiSS,iS3fcv% } hlSarlcal * and SSflSaT'beci _ )t Speto. Ona hour tochPfl ene MATHEMATICS provldS wnifvto# Mtoma far study of op-aratton, verisbls, aquatton, bvsqueirty, aEmaftSa saw preparttos at a atoft coatoa, OK. The following is * list of recent Pontiac ares births as recorded at the Oakland County Clark’s Office (by name of father): jama* M. Rom. IN South Roches-%oe*r B. Nicety. 30043 Rock Croak °MMl$S$HuMar, 1400 Omlth, Blrmlnp-"^Man R. Davis, 10201 Rushton, louth Otarto* J. Chtador, 202 Mhaven. Tray ■ (mH L. Kersbinbevm, 4»43 Wood-ttdtr Birmingham ^ Rd^dTino Emtoort, Trw y ianald P. Mkallc, vm Rad Leaf,, L. aromiey, 1110 Chancery, TNn B. Holnbokol, 2011 WlaaaMln. Tfiy. Jr jban R. Phinip*. %wrd S. Arndt, 4iil» Mwnphls, MsBjgM.-R. Tampto, M230 Orchard Lake, ^HarST"l*. Martak, 2WS Olsnardan, FoSSTp. Hallman, 30430 W. 0 Mila *1itrlan A?*SSrltt, W0 Pyrin CL. MIL ^Ronald L. fftop. 22011 Millard, Soulh- tl-montary prat™.... .... _______ business. James McMonaptov MLA., Than day*, start! Met. 30, TijSf:20 p.m. Oil. Ovstoau English And Corrospeadonca. Essentials at buslnats letter writMi selection and organization of Ideas, types of letters. RaMrt fa. Beltwood, MA., Wednesdays, starts Sept, ft, 7:304:30 pjn. S2i Executive Rtedlna Imprevement Pig. pram. For Industrial and business executives who read extensively and went to do so more efficiently and effectively. Harry T. Hahn, mp.' Wednesdays, •tarts Sopt. 20, 7:30-10:00 p.m. OOtV Rffactlva Csmmanleaitae in aetitwso And Industry. Technical and practical skills nscsessry for ottecllvo oral end written conununketton by thaee In su-pervlsory end management positions. Ahrca C. Schnoor, M.BVa., Wednesdays, —aihiBwrp.— 10 p.m. on. lementery Procedure. Mx ___x rule* of practical par- procodu-o. hnw r* Alyc* starts Pw^litouirtfy.” Theory' end procike’ oi discussion os used to policy and looming groups, commlttoee. Rdwprd J. Pappas. m.S. end staff. Tuesdays, stains Sapt. 2a, 7:3M;M p.m. SIS. irtatbaae. Easy to loam method of aL sssr «s dy,f»tst1s SeptV fal,772M:38 pj~ — ..... tog reedtog speed and cossgirah etc. Hernia Abrams. MA. end Saturdays, starts Oft, % t s.m.-noo COMPUTERS AND DATA PROCBSSIMO starts Sept. It, 7:300:30 p.m. S4I. ' Intredvcttoe Te Mattel Cempetsrs. Mow fipmSaulm > storage, cantrel end onwmoMrwUtffaftrtitrtg#x~ ESIiL *n| program are aniftad bale, manipulated and gotten out of a computer system. fanguagas. DaSTVaMa!* ^!^rw*dm£ ads at analog computation to which computing dSMCM measure changes In Digital Csniputar Proaramsning: For-Wan. Actual programming at proMoms In Fortran tosiguege for prasmn running an computer. Srnkfit Mann, BJk„ Tuesdays, SPA introduction to ttw IBM IdSt-computer end symbolic programming ianffuge. Students will program gramsmp to OPS for rumtan 8, compsitor. William G. Ramsay, Thursdays, Marta Sapt. 30, 7:30> ‘Sab Psagtattop Par Niaaapamam. Haw tmmmm patsannal aaCT Wire tha meat Ittocttva use al .Rata processing gnd._aamputor Instelbttons. Russell L. Whitfield, M.BA.-C.PA., .Wednesdays, Marts Sopt. M, 7:3Mt» p.m. 017 .Part Aad Critical Path Mtotbaa Tocto ntaues aai Appfleatlaaa, Ttwchanifa of both manual and computer beaad pert JPBBHMP at neL t tathnliwaa to gtokntog, sctisduttog control at Unis, coot and lafiamjl ------------------ h basic pracadures required to achieve efficiency, high employs moral and —t public relations. Mondays, Marts I. 27, 7:3M:3t p.m. 040. technology, manegnmont. problem solving tochntauM and mo rioting now cheL 1—|M II J. luttoam. St. Osorgo Tucker ______ill, M.SA« Mondays, Marta MM. 27, 7:2M:30 p.m. S4S. Doctslon Staking Par Saairvliars la faOMrV had BuMms*. Problem solving procedures: problem selection from a —‘tlpie complex, problem IdentHIcatton, RU Robert p. Huddy, Thursdays, Marts Sept, th 7:30-0:30 p.m. $40. Dynamics Ana Development Of Execu-■■M Par managers who — ilr ettectlvonoss — .. --------arolln, Jr., B J 9. Yegor, BA., Mondays, S7, 7:3M:30 p.m. S3S. Preparation Par Proto sol anal Advance MM. Help* the Individual explore end laxlmlze his opportunities tor success In corporate enterprise by developing an Insight tor realistic personal objectives. '----jjumrnm Thursdays, starts Sept. 30, S3S. _____ _______ess Mansasmset Seminar. Ten lecture-semIners by specialists on management planning, marketIml, advertising, law, taxatton, ate. With am c. Offer, ILS.-C.PA. and lecturers. Thurs-, days, starts Sapt. 30, 7:3M:30 p.m. SS0. Eagljwiiing Administration. Lear——-motivation and utilization of h -------M, fie. for ongtooertog supor- ______Clark W. Cooley, MA. Wadnes- do^s. Marts Sopt^Tt, 7:304:30 pjr — AdmlnlMrotton Marts Sapt..3A 7:304:X p.m. S4S. 8^*de8ntog JHH— and making simplifying assumptlom Sarkis Barkhoudsrion, kLSV Wsdna at smalt bystoass. Doubto entry rMiJWh Aniaattoa il CamtoaMton of InglTPbM osoatsaoproci*tod the small buoasoos corporation _— _ a partnership, otc. Luclll* Ramsey, MAAI-CVpaVTTuoideys, starts Sopt. 21 7:304:30 p.m. S4B. Is processed and financial notsmsms are pmS,. MT&MSWS t5S! tha^mity1™' ■ ‘ or private SS^MMfaWr^hW:* pjiL MARKITINO AND SALES Csatamor Markallng. Consumer mar-ketlng rotaarch, dacHlan needs of management, making factual and opinion sun-veys for manuiacturtog and Hwrcantlio concerns. Cpii J. Parsch, BA. Wednesdays, Marts Sapt- *7 7:jD4:3t p.m. $40. Industrial MaillMtop. Market research, SardcasttoEi salat planning, pradud. Manning, ate. Donald R. Young and Milton Sto^rfcMjS.,jThursdoys, starts Sopt. 30. vetopmont at.Wgtfa fasdltjtffW*n| ii national rMptlmppwmwema M d business abroad, etc. Robert Chi LUb., Tuesdays, slerts Sept. 2L J f:jB pjn SM.. I___rShS nBly fiUMgp96. Recruiting, traln- ssfiirw^M^ir Harris, ■Vs. Jmi 7:304:11 pjn. S40. finished odvertlsement. Al Ott. Wi < granting concepts; overview M credit. Loon Spantor, BA., Wodnos Marta Sapt.», 7l$*4:10 pjn. SSL POOD MANAOIMBNT Nifara *i Flrst’court* "in compio/o CLU™ gram to be xr^ r------------- B. Groonbli Sept. 2t, 44 Sept. 9, 7:11 INDUSTRIAL OPERATIONS ' -------------Bushy > Sept. responilwlltlei. K BiS-/ Twidiyif i »'xw.nssn"V«sKri».sT M^sdeye. Marts Sspr. V. 7:104:30 pjn motion M product quality, tochnlquos, coots, risks. E. C. Carpenter, Thursdays, Marta Sapt- 1A 7:104:30 pjn. ML s^ttt.................. rtth^smphas's *on * i, employs aduc swsrao m design ana aparanan ar an alr-cendmonlng system wim smphaMi an automotive systems, william L. „4UdtWL B.S.E., Mondays, starts Sapt. », 7-JL Applied Tamparatura Cantrat. Practical application of cantrel systems for heating, alr-condltionlno. humidity and ra-trlgoratlon. George Trevethen, Tuesdays, Marts Sept, fa 7:304:30 p.m. SIS. AutesnMlua Dynamics. Covers basic engineering concepts, Which dynamics and power frenamlsslen. Martin G, Gabriel, ...................|| Sept. 17, 7:304:30 PPVIMPfa, menoger who wouM .— to axpreet Me Idoos In freehand drawing and tor Ihoaa who want seriously t* pursue Industrial design. George Schmidt, Tveedeyt, Marts SeptT fa 7-11 pjn. S4S, Body Layeot Daslpn. Problem countered In autosnotfv* design: tip tom dovolopmont, InMrumont clusto .... bIHty. Me. Atohme Slngor and Lawronc* Sulllns, Thursdays, stem Sopt. 30. 7:30-f:is pjn. SSL V-' Product Design Par Plashes. Introduction to SM design and and products of molded pfasiic ports. Ronald D. Beck, P I a a t MaaamaMBt. Organizational structure of a typical Industrial company Including manufacturing, engineering, personnel ftnr— ---------— —- oMm functions. A. i forming necessary work. I. B. M.S., Tuesdays, Marts Sept. 2t, 0;30 p.m. S4I. Motion And Time Study. Basic principles of motion end time study os MpP~* to determinations of cost, pay and f duct ton Rtfklency. Clyde Altonby, M days, starts Sept. 27, 7:304:30 p.m. $40. Menetecturtsig Process. General procedures and problems from "perts-prlnt" Production And InvenhNY Central. Techniques used to obtain effective production end Inventory central In a variety of Industrial situations. Worron Chnstell, HI k„ Wednesdays, Marts Sapt. fa 7:10- - characteristics, selection; applies-*t lews of physics In peck ego do--*'-n writing, shipping regu-—Leo B. Ghostln, W. Emory. M.BA., Wotfn* Sept, fa 7:304:10 p.m. S4S. Statistical DeMaa And ■ ludy M. ____ w W ___________ JlrllbiH we — measured characteristic in a variety at Industrial —•• *--------------------- metals, coKreto,~plaMICfc™M. 'PhilMp •"■“ion, BA., Wednesdays. ......... 7:304:30 pjn. $35. Maditotoa Prtadptos. w M *- machintoa t iraments. FI oemonsirerigni. n. j. Oglevie, J starts Sept. 27, 7:304:10 p.m. S40. through to aetottop a _ n*ld Horn, Tuesdays, i 7:304:30 p.m. S3* tPuais I practical working knowiodgo of th. „ Stan, - malntononco, construction and application at complete hydraulic systems and components. R. L. Thompson, MA., ““-‘-lysTstarts Sopt. 27, 74 pjn. S2L Richter, BA., Wodnovtays, starts Sapt. 2$, 7:30-4:30 p.m. at Bloomfield Hills High School, or A. O. Viorel, BA.. Thursdays, Marts Sapt. 30. 7:304:10 p.m. Oakland University. S4S. Real Estate Business II. (Reel Esi Brekeraae). For those Interested in operation of a real tstal* office. co\ hiring, training, etc. A. O. Viorel, b]M Wodnosdays/ starts Sopt. 24, 7:10-4:30 p.m. at Oakland University, or Gordon Walkar, Thursdays, Marts Sopt. 30. 7:3L * “ — M ,n=—*High School. r R. Cox, J.D., Tucs- appraisai tochniqup win. , ___ Roger H, Blackwood, BA., Tuesdays, -lefts Sopt. fa 7:104:30 p.m. S4S. Real Estot* Sates And SalHea. Apply, Ing tha newest sales methods to real •slate selling. Wednesdays, Marts Sept, “t, 7:30-4:30 p.m. S45. Residential Construction. Choosing/ th* Tt small Investor. J. Rodney Layton, M.BA., wedneedeys, starts Sapt. fa 7:304:10 n. SIS. , Engineering i ktstcal toodtegs ______________ ■to. F. Leonard Coventry, R.tv rs. Marts Sept, fa 7:304:10 SPECIAL SEMINARS •ration Of Nurslpb Homos And ______ or The Aped./FlrM term qt three-term sequence covering *11 sspacto of odminlstrotlon. Bosly F. Boyce, Tuesdays, starH Sept- fa/r-lO p.m. at Oakland University or / Thursdays, starts Sept. 30, 7-10 p.m. /M YWCA, High lend Fork. S49. / Marina ManegeMant. Lectures by cl«llsts_ on operation of dealership Tu*sdsy*y s l. 2S, 7:304:31 tlnonclng, operating c o„I, «„ mm of tho long-term a mobile leasing business. James W. Dm B.S., Mondays, starts Sept. 27, 7:1$ PONTIAC lUJALL OPTICAL CENTER IkBmBMmitfalg Open (vontags HI StSS SSt-fllS ARE YOU DOING YOUR SHARE? JOIN YOUR CHAMBER OF COMMERCE Coll - FE 5-6148 rAlA ★ ★ ★ ★ ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ 1 OT»TnrrrrmTmrrmrmTnTnrrrmTrrTmmTTmrrnTnnnrmmTrTrrmTTrrnnnnnr> lew especially related to Michigan cases 1 end statutes. Hugo C. Edberg, J.D., Mondays, starts Sept. 27, 7:304:30 p.m. ugal Aspects Of inteMechsM Property. Survey of the legal protection available under the PMent, Trademark, Copyright end Unfair CompMIttan laws. Harold W. Milton, Jr., LL.B.. Tuesdays. Marts Sept, fa 7:304:30 pjn. SU. - - AND ^IN»Nf.^|( ^ tessionM.Sacratery*» Pragrem. survey courses emphasizing basic economics, fterionntl, Iwor rvlitlons# Invwito^f coo~ trol, purchasing, etc. CPtM WshceL MA., Twmtoys. starts Sept, fa 7:3047* pjn. • AnelyMs of .too ^Srkmt nfisfcaus I disposition m wM me KfaulllaM,TUBM Sopt. V, 7:304:* pjn. dlvtduol pay determ Im ______ ____I .——r — faNBto ft lit Isy UMhirars1 Wain Patron Budget Executives Institute. L. L. Gean, Coordinator. Tuaedhyt, starts Sapt. fa MS Managerial Bcanamlcs. Application at quantitative economic tochnlquos to busL ness management. Paul F. Gaecke, B.S., Twsdoys, starts Sep*, fa 77*47* pjn. lilanr Aad Wane AdmlMstrettee SwnL ■ ■nBSuaRCTsTt ---- Momteys, starts Sap*. 27, frrhidftia ot Pastoral lacama ..jarough analysis M the law to assIM Individual with proparatlon af hit Psporel lncome tax. Edward J. Fletcher, LOe Monkeys, starts Sapt. 27. 7:M- 'fttSSplaa'Of Taxatton Far Tha Safa SmpSeyeP did SmaS Business Man. fwaa seN smalsyed and smell bustnaas man andarstending of problems arising •M^M Income fax. John F. Mayer, LLJL, wadnsidayt, Marta Sapt. 24, 7:*-FT* pjil sisT^ ACCOUNTING I. Paaisnad tor thp needs | (5^'^/illi^fatf Bathfaw | Michael T. MacOuaen, *M Kehler, Kenneth O. Mabntob, 22* I jamfv ■• LswruriLBi ft ttOIlt Raymond W. Nun**, *27 ,Minton Circle Michael H. Benedict, 1M2 Falaraan, ...... Spicer, ll* Oakley Park, ^TRIchartfafalfarp., Robert Mitchell Jr., 5} ITwltoeil Rpbart B. Deoiser, SMMJItr SllSt O. Reynolds, *»T Penltae Lake KD*UlBa R- Moody, 1*1 Queens, MIL "Serf M. Snovar, I* I. Madison WMter T. McCullough, SO W, Polr- "'Sonoid L. Marrow, tin Canterbury Jamaa Wabaylift, 40 S. Mtoiand" Rabort J. Brttpos, 42* Mum Oton Richard p! IWfaMII, 74 E. Blvd. S. 1 Arman P. doopas qKidL'L?*Ss^l5afc'»4''i7 Hater, l&rrtt'sxv&i lm* BKSlKl; White J. Pander, 247 Howard McNolii Cloud* A. Calhoun, 24N Willow teach, K^ar wT Site/ 27M Hickory RMNfa vrSt l. Jordan, n l, Ygoligntt. . Roy <3. Kahar, 170 MapitHni, Naehao BIPW'&WE Unton 4bftart L. Buchanan, f* Falrvtow, H Irvin P, Boynton, SITS Svttofa Unton Michael L. Gorham, lMjL RiwlMw JKn -fa W* MMatmra, Trankltn D. Hvrko, M* BraaWtoW, ^tWtMtSSrna Ufa tt-A'TVMft*. Arthur T Wylla, SMI Shoddlck Get The Cash You’ll Need Right Nov At Associates! For back-to-«chool Bipmss, the first place to go is Associates. Money is available for tuition, clothes, books end other educational expenses. Consolidate other biljp st the same time and cut your monthly payments. Whether your money need is large or small— business or personal—Associates can help. Associates has nearly fifty years of experience and over 660 offices coast-to-coast throughout the UJ9. and Canada* Visit or call the one near youl 4 Itoaailif Plea tor ffuwy UtaoM ASSOCIATES /A CONSUMIR FINANCE CO. XljHA flf PONI1AC 149*117 N. foglnansr Street..........FI 14114 989 North Telegraiph Rood.....682-3000 Pontiac Mali lheppt|sg Conner m mayton mum UH Dixie Highway..............OR 3*1207 .4v.r "■ .. ' / 'meQutptiuiq & IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC ^Complete Floors of Home Furnishings / Elevator Service to All Moors Provincial • Colonial D Traditional D Modern—All by America'! leading manufacturers! KROEHLER fancy-free "AVANT" designs Aeg. 199. NO MONEY DOWN-MONTHSTOPAY. EXCITING DECORATOR FABRICS and COLORS Look at this sofa and chairs from any. angle. They're handsome furniture, pure contemporary with the graceful, curving lines to prove It. Note the trim Lcfwson backs with a low-set row of buttons and the gentle sweep of the arms. ThS Mr. Chair has an extra-high 36" back. Seat cushions are super comfortable, foam, zippered and reversible. You have a choice of beautiful prints, textures and tweeds that really sing with color. It's very special furniture with our very Special price. OPEN TONIGHT 'Til 9 P. M. Phon. FE 2-4231. ^ ‘>b nimbi td lalloflmd—thio im ffeipetee** Open Mon., Thurs., Fri. 'til 9 P.M. llKiItllllinitmntlgIlllifttp,ilitiistsiM>es«tefsttsBs.sBBSRR»Baeeefaaes^ap • ’K ” ■ - 1 \i ', ■ * $ ,&v." f TUB PONTIAC PRESS* MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1965 Revealed in Memoirs 200,000 'Fun' Bools Registered in Florida JACKSONVILLE, fie. 01)' ^ UP TO 6 LBS. A WEEK **• CAPSULES! Easier to take and more effective than tho powdered ind llq-» Up food supplement, Ind costs less I including Capsules suited to you I INDIVIDUALLY by Lie. Physician, ' ,1 M.D No Gastritis or irregularity with Medic-Way caps. DON'T DIET —JUST EAT! As thousands hive done, you can loee 5, SO or 100 lbs. and KEEP if OFF! MEDIC-WAY 78 NORTH SAGINAW STREET PASSES TEST The book, to be published by Doubleday k Co., describes how “Coalitions in the'past have always failed,’* be said. ihe United States has 43 deep-sea vessels of less, than 500,000 tom under construction. AIL CENTER CUT PORK C| CHOPS H! MEDIC-WAY 335-9205 Anglers in the U. S. spend $300 million annually on fishing tackle and gadgets. In the Sunday Times, Eisen- IT’S EASY TO All Center Slices U.S. Choice Boneless £ ^ Beet Cube Steaks *1 Refreshing Ginger Alt Vernors Heim Ketchup 214-00. Save 20c Wlfl Bottles Thl» Coupon tee eewNss i Weshdey Mind# | ear um, im ben* ene emupm [Wmmmmwmmmmmmm TWKWTY-S1X 39 Mode Cut Pork Chops • Rib Cnntar Pbrk Chops • Fresh Pig Hocks. ...3**1 of doubts that he could hoar the burden of office, the New York Times said today. ★ * ★ The former president made foe disclosure in his new book, “Waging Peace, 1960-1000,” foe second volume of his presidential memoirs, “The White House Years," and expanded on it bi an interview at Gettysburg, Pa., Times reporter Robert H. Phelps. . *, * * He recalled that he had fold only his wife, his son, Us doctor and dose associates of a plan to test his capacity to carry an after foe stroke. The test he set for himself was to attend, over the protests of doctors, family and friends, a conference of the North Ameri- QgANNOUNCES WERE MOV SAL PRICES SLASHED OH IH CHAHDISE. ARMSTRONG CORLONS • MONTINA U Sq. Yd. • Tessera • Terrazzo .Yd. CARPET In Stock Rolls DRASTICALLY REDUCED! ARMSTRONG INLAID EMBOSSED LINOLEUM KENTILE VINYL ASBESTOS CASE OF 80 PCS. *649 ASPHALT TILE LIGHT COLORS CASE OF 80 PCS. CERAMIC TILE lxi....... 49c SQ. FT. CRYSTAUNE 54c LINOLEUM 9x12 $395 ADVANCE 3700 Sashabaw Rd. (2 blocks North of Wahon) 4 . , OPEN MON. THRU THURS. I FLOOR DECORATORS Drayton Plains 674-0421 • 6 PM. I to 9 SAT. 9 to 5:30 THIS WMK'S GRAND PROS Mink Stole THI MAY WIN THIS MINK! IND GRAND PWB Win FRlt Food JfFMI Ibis prtae, you get 10 •* IF YOUR ADDRESS IS POSTED, YOU WIN! Over 150 Addresses now posted at every Wrigley . . . This week’s winners must claim thair prizes by Sunday midnight. I<\ '&/J J/ Naturally Tender - Table Trimmed Beef U.S.D. A. ||§ CHOICE ■ ~ Tfaittd Steaks| TeUe TrieeW Beef—AM center Cat* I Beef Mb Steaks Club Steaks $109 US. Cheka Bee* AM Center Cat* ' Chuck Steaks ®9*ib Lb. Bag GET FINER GIFTS FASTER WITH GOLD BELL GIFT STAMPS m 4- 1 i THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1965 Is It Socially Acceptable? Success Depends on Garbage Can “I also was delighted to learn that a way has been found to make your garbage can a lot more ‘socially acceptable.’ ” THE SECRET According to the press release, the secret is to make sure you UNWANTED GUEST The press release went on to say, “there’s something about a garbage can that makes it the unwanted guest —.the social i flop — at any back yard, porch dr patio get-together.” “Generally, garbage cans are jest not very pleasant items to be around,” it added with excrnciaUng frankness. | Being told that your garbage jean is a party-pooper gives you “AH I said was: Skew me a filter that delivers the taste and II eat my hat." TRANSFER UNDER WAT - Water pours from a transfer tank near La Jolla, Calif., yesterday as the first crew of the Navy’s Sealab 2 was brought to the surface after 15 days under the sea. The transfer tank was mated to a decompression chamber in which the men will stay about 38 hours. Romney Proclaims Law Day for State good time. The next time we entertained, it was even worse. Most of the people we invited sent regrets. Others accepted but didn’t come. The few who did show up matte excuses and left before dinner. LANSING (AP)-Gov. George Romney proclaimed World Law Day in Michigan today, saying ‘It is essential that the minds and hearts of men of goodwill of all nations be focused upon the necessity of world peace through law to avoid human annihilation and disaster as a result of the ever-accelerating arms race.!’ Astronaut $turi& My wife and I were terribly upset. I began losing weight and she developed a rash. The worst thing was not knowing what had damaged our reputation as host and hostess. ! FOUND OUT WHY We might have gone on like that indefinitely, brooding over some unidentifed faux pas or contretemps, had I not received a press release from a chemical company in California. LA JOLLA, Calif. (AP) - M. Scott Carpenter — unscratched in three orbits of earth in 1982 as a astronaut — was stung by a scorpion fish during a tricky transfer of crewmen of the Navy's Sealab 2 aquanauts in ^06 feet of water. Plans calling for Carpenter to stay another 15 days in the laboratory on the ocean bottom were almost scuttled as the 40-year-old astro-aquanaut, his left hand and arm swelling painfully, was brought back through Sealab’s escape hatch. sule-like tank which maintained1 the pressure the crewmen had grown used to in Sealab: seven times that of the surface. The transfer unit was attached to a decompression chamber on the support vessel Berkone on the surface and the pressure slowly The first annual World Law Day will send 2,000 lawyers jurists and legal .scholars to Washington, D.C., this week “to draft plans for new courts and procedures to strengthen inter-national law as an effective force for world peace,” be said. George R. Thornton, East Lansing attorney, is chairman of the Michigan committee. Try new Lucky Strike 1- Filters bJoSfP % The nine must spend 18 hours in the decompression unit before (hey can step out — early Tuesday morning — without suffering the diver’s disease, bends, caused by bubbles in the bloodstream. “Is your garbage can socially acceptable?” it asked. Instantly I knew that this was Nine new crewmen took the place of the men who ascended Sunday. The first three went down before Carpenter’s accident. One of them, a Navy medical corpsman, attended Carpenter when the other aquanauts left, The fhrat group broke the surface late Sunday afternoon when a crane lifted their personnel transport capsule from the water after a 10-minute ride YOUR CHOICE "Early Bird9 Special 75mc&;<2o«4i&yDELUXE CHAMPION WINTER TREADS NEW TREADS RETREADS ON SOUND TIRE BODIES OR ON YOUR OWN TIRES Same tread quality as NEW Fireetozte tires at about HALF THE COST! Limited time only. JQUY NOW! GREATEST WAY Wl KNOW TO OKT YOUR SLEEPY HEADS BACK ON AN SARLY MORNING BREAKFAST SCHEDULE! JUIT TOP THEIR FAVORITI CEREAL WITH A SCOOP AND SEEI v • Butter Crunch • Dutch Apple * Maple Walnut Fudge Mattie • Choc. Almond • Toasted Cocoanut ALL Mo THE HALF QALLON AT NIARBY ... {Richardson «Mt Dim manway tiw nimmand m. MUTTON SUMS MM-ilPUU 140 N. SAGINAW FI 4-9970 Mon., Thun., FH. hr 9 FARM DAIRY STORES CHARGE PAY ONLY $50.00 75.00 06.00 $5 Per Mo. 7 Per Mo. 0 Par Ma TWENTY-SEVEN CUT YQIIRSELF A SLICE OF SAVINGS DURING WICKES Ulth ANNIVERSARY 1854-1965 LUMBER t BUILDING SUPPLY CENTER Wickes Own! Waldorf HOUSEPAINT Sale Outside White Latex.Reg. $5.50^4e44 gel. Non-Chalking House Faint.Reg, $5.50 ^4o44 gal. Primer House faint... .Reg. $3.95 Sole ^3o33 gal. (x Paint...Reg. $4.35 Sale^3e55 gal. V*—WICKUS Cr iff* •^^■ANNtVmBAWV 2* Wickes Heavy Gauga aluminum SIDING .025 Gauge, not the usual lighter gauge. End paint wdwte*. In white. (Accessories not IncfododJ Reg. $24.25.........Sale *202! Per square 5 Inch, Stylo K PAINTED GALVANIZED GUTTER Already painted! Easy to initaH. Wo slock all neces-saty fittings. Rag. $2.05 par *1.85 EX"- Sale «* Wickwl ,, LJ*** fffM ANMIVWBABV ■< Genuine Certain-Teed ROOFING SHINGLES Add beauty and weather-tight protection with super tough Certain-Tead shingles. 235# TUF-TABS 231# SEADONS Rag. $7.55 \' ^ *7" SALE § wickes: established <004 LUMBER t BUILDING SUPPLY CENTER 0d Highway M53, V/i Miles S. tf | ROMEO Phone 752-3501 Store Hours: $-5 Monday Him Friday I -»7:30-4:00 Saturday — 1 v W. TlftillTV^ElCHT THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 10M Sommer School Programs Are Successf ul * LOME J. NASON, Hi. ft, There wort many programs lor the disadvantage! add educationally handicapped children this ameer. And enough of them nere successful to point the esaqrto future progress. The Head Start program to provide preschool training gave evidence that this nan, indeed, a prime area for future efforts. Although it ia too early to me anas the effect of the short summer program on the children's success as they enter school, teachers and volunteers in the program seem convinced that this is a vital point of at- tack, they can sae results even In the few short weeks. the Head Start program, to* gram, and gained in aersery schools over the past years, can now guide the development of Were pro* tress for the preschoolers. Besides die nationwide Head Start program, there were many individual and local efforts. For example, 27 University of CaB-fomia of Lot Angeles students carried on tutoring programs for the. younger difldren in a California farm camp. Nona is ♦ 1085 V Qtt ♦ K5 4 ♦ QtTJL WEST 14ft Mft + ft 17ft 17ft 4- ft WarnPkt WomLam WnAIrLbi Siji vs Wmartir i.8 Whirl Cp l.io WhtaM 140 ififtM Co a WhMOIx lj| Woolworlh l Worttilngtn I Zanfih 140 V-- la MB 24ft Mft + ft 4. 30 45 47ft 47ft wft — ft —W-X-Y-fc- 2 7ft 7ft no + ft lalft — 851» ajrK5 8 2ft SS 8ft Jiff iff iff 37 Bft i ’li SB 1 m M j Wft * uift ibh lnft 40ft 40ft 40ft fThtster Of dlvh dynds 01 M forogalng labia ar* annual illliwimOhft bMM on tha last quartarly or mwR jiiiioM daclaratlon. tauetal ar oxtri dlvldandt or paymanti hot datlg-notod as jggulgr art Worn mid in «ta following hakim. CJMH viwf (M iMiVpM Of VsKUiJS jjMta. wl—Whan lasuod. nd Wont day belle l"*orgenS8CLtJir tta'^wSrCptcy Act. or HCorHiga uoouitad bV ouch com-Krast SiSr tax’ 10 10 SSTCffh OMITTOD Mtarkta mt™? RS 5-M 5-30 Ready Lines Dispute Inside Local Still Perils Peace KENOSHA, Wis. (AP)-Start-up crews returned to work at the American Motors Corp. today, although a dispute inside United Auto Workers Local 73 still threatened the peace reached after a 20-day strike. The company would not say how many workers had been called to prepare assembly lines for resumption of work on 1966 model Ramblers, nor how many resumption of work on 1966 model Ramblers, nor how many reported for duty, but said toll production would start again Tuesday. There were no pickets, as. the union’s dissident faction had hinted. A union steward mailed a protest of the ratification voted, to the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) Sunday while United Auto Workers Local 72 President Richard C. Thiel instructed members to return to their Jobs today. FOUR BALLOTS The steward, Elmer Beatty of Racine, charged multiple voting at the ratification meeting Saturday and wrote the NLRB he had been able to cast four ballots himself. American Motors said it intended to resume toll production Tuesday. ★ ★ ★ But Beatty, opposed to the settlement, filed his protest after the Local 72 executive board postponed until today a meeting to consider a petition by about 50 members calling for second vote on the ratification. He wrote the NLRB, the union’s headquarters at Detroit and the Wisconsin Eniployment Relations Board that membership cards were not checked to the voting and that workers were able to obtain more than one ballot. SHOWED MEMBERS He said be signed his name to “four ballots, marked them all and showed the (loori) board members that no one would stop me from depositing them to the ballot box.’’ Beatty called for the vote to be declared Illegal, but said dissident workers would return to their jobs while awaiting a ruling. Thiel could, not be reached for comment after Beatty’s charges, but he said earlier, “to a democratic union, the minorities always have the right to protest.’’ He predicted the settlement would stand. An agreement was reached to e 25-hour bargaining drive that ended Saturday only 22 mimitsa before the scheduled meeting for a ratification vote. NEWLY OPENED - This new discount annex has been opened by Simms Brothers department store. Located a few doors north of Simms’ present store at 144 N. Saginaw, the annex features automotive accessories, appliances and other items. rigMne -ft SilTHTlS OpGflS E«lln a New Annex By ROGER E. SPEAR Q. “I never have had the opportunity to make any sort of investment. At present I can afford regular payments of $199 a month for this purpose. I am set with retirement j funds, end the insurance problem is taken care of. Please tell me how to begin. “ R.S. A. I think the answer to your Simms Brothers department problem is the Monthly Invest- store has opened a new discount ment Plan offered by certain! annex a few doors north of its member firms of the New York I Present store at 144 N. Saginaw. Stock Exchange. * Under Ita plan. you con Invest your !1M a '“T, month in an. ah*k. MV-1 tael yon have accumolntnd ^ auto. motive accessories, appliances, News in Brief Livie L. Hanepard, 35, of 192 Wessen yesterday reported to Pontiac police that clothing valued at $240 had been taken from her home. Rummage Sale: Monday, 5-9; Tuesday, 9-5. 4367 Midrow, Drayton Woods. —adv. Bg Fairly Active Selling Weakens Grains CHICAGO (AP) - Fairly active selling weakened all Commodities to the grain futures market during the first several minutes of transactions today. Wheat was tt*% cent a bushel lower after about an hour, September |1-M; corn % to 1% lower, September $1.21tt; oats % to % lower, September 87 cents; rye % to % lower, September $1.1744; soybeans % to 344 lower, September $2.4844. Stocks of Local Interest change throughout the day. Prk include retail markup, mark AMT Core. . . . . Auodaftu Track ...... .._ jEWta^gB a'::::8.4 jj.o Bm Mohawk Ruhter Co. . Hurakr Flnanca ______ — Printing ....... MUTUAL FUNDS dwreka) Fund Commonwaalth stock .. Kayston* Incom* K-l . Kaystont Growth K-l -. Mass. Invtstors Growth Mass. Invsslors Trust . Putnam Orewm Ttltvllson Electronics . . 10.11 11.U . 17.13 If .45 . 14.34 17JI . 5.23 10.04 . 15.31 14.71’ Noon Mon. Ilj 101.1 04 51.5 Frau. Pay 52.0 101.1 04 51.5 X^hToo S2 iol:? SI ;\i && :8* 82 tt 8:1 8S«.-:U Xf ft § 1554 Low .. MJ 100J 17.2 50,1 enough of that issue. Or you may have more than one stock under the Plan is you so wish. For a single purchase, I suggest Sears, Roebuck. If you wish another, I advise F.M.C. Corp. As a beginning you must call several member firms and ask if they will accept your account. * * ★ Q. “I am a former nurse, now disabled with cancer. 1 have $22,008 in savings and $1,000 in Puerto Rican Ce/ meat. My expenses are high and my income is low. Please tell me how to invest $2,090 available so I can get at least five per cent.” H.N. A. Your Puerto Rican Cement is satisfactory for good income — which appears well-secured since the company enjoys a mo-onopoly in a fast-growing area. I suggest that you buy Maytag, an excellent appliance-maker with a record of rising dividends. Your field here would be 5.7 per cent, including an extra of $0.40 paid tost year-end and likely to be repeated.. As another good yiekfing s t o c k I recommend Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Rwy., selling on a 4.0 per cent basis with comfortable dividend coverage. Roger Spear’s new 41-page Guide to Successful Investing is now reedy. Far your copy, r clip this notice and send $1 JO with year name and address to Roger E. Spear, in care of The Pontiac Press, Box 1118, Grand Central Station, New York City, N.Y. 18817. - (Copyright, 1885) juvenile furniture, sporting goods, fitys and games. George Duncan will manage the new annex. Strike Deadline Set Thursday by NY Times Guild NEW YORK (UP1) - Hie American Newspaper Guild announced today it will go on strufe at the New York Times at 8 a.m. Thursday unless an acceptable new contract to agreed upon by that time. The Publisher’s Association of New York said tost week that ail other major newspapers in the city, with the exception of the New York Post, will suspend publication if the guild goes through with a walkout at the Times. The Association negotiates on behalf of ail the papers except the Post, which la not a member. Negotiators for the Association and the Guild met Jointly tote this morning with Federal Mediator Irwin Gerard in an-, other attempt to write e new’ contract to replace one which1 expired tost March 36. Negotiations have been going’ i on since March 8. Gerard said there were four * major issues yet to be solved— automation, the question of : guild jurisdiction, a union shop, and a combination of pension and severance benefits. American Stocks I of MtataoU stock (raRMcHlMq “rkan Stock Ixctangu with noon Iwa.5*! US'S 1£?S tint* .ii ii IS 4ft JftT. La Gas 1.M 4 43 41 4—ft --.wra B 4ftIMS lft+1-l* 41? “I %a •rlt Pal 15 75-14 ntrjMH’ft a * ’?v l i.au 2 41ft “ Rttj'.JM 17 jft [1 ffl- i,g,Sv I m- ft if! 4ft 4ft , _______ ... Mi Uft+ ft **l .40* 7 14ft 14ft 14ft- ft Ed ' 1ft 1ft' 1ft .... m Tft Cl;:" Maad John .41 14 Bft Mk Mft - ft Midi Sugar 7l0g 1 4ft 4ft 4ft - ft "K. A f 2 ift >ft |ft iiiS'liisn i 4ft 4ft 4ft-ft Volunteers Restrain U.S. 1 Dollar Drain By ADREN COOPER WASHINGTON (AP) - Until a few years ago, most Americans, including most businessmen, thought of the U.S. balance of payments as some numbers game played only by international bankers. That is, if they thought of it at all. * * * Now, some businessmen and bankers are directly Involved to the campaign to reduce the almost continuous flow of dollars abroad. Their voluntary actions played a large part to the achievement of a slim surplus to the balance of payments in the April-June quarter—the first surplus in eight yean. Secretary of the Treasury Henry H. Fowler end other government officials are intent on attaining a balance to the international accounts. The nation collects $120 billion a year to taxes; international accounts have amounted to a dollar drain of $S billion e year. U.S. 18 BANKER Since the United States la, to effect, the banker for the non-Communlat world, a one-year dollar outflow of 13.1 bUUon oo* curred to 1164. (If public and private payments to foreigners exceeds receipts from foreigners, there to a net outflow of dollars, or deficit). But the number of dollars overseas has been building. The total to 327 billion. Half of them are in the hands of governments, which have the privilege of cashing them to for U.S gold. * * * While the number of dollars outstanding has been Increasing, this country’s gold stock has declined from $22.8 billion in 1957 to $13.85 billion. Whenever officials of foreign governments believe there are too many dollars floating around, they will cash them for gold. Thus, the amount of the U.S. gold loss depends heavily on the attitude of foreign governments. ACHIEVE EQUILIBRIUM Fowler emphasized this at a recent congressional hearing. He said the United States could achieve an equilibrium which would not necessarily mean a “aero balance.” He indicated that the United States might be able to run a deficit of llbUllon annually over e period of years without damaging the dollw. ' A government-sponsored committee has those dollars which ere to foreign government coffers, since other dollars outstanding are used by banks and businesses to normal trade operations. In moat cases, this revision would make the deficit appear $1 billion a year smaller. * * * The part the policy of foreign governments plays is illustrated by the experience of the peat It ^ months. In 1984, the payments deficit was 83-1 billion but only $125 million worth of dollars were turned in for gold. ~.-.i A large pert of the deficit was incurred to the tost three' months of the year and foreign,, officials apparently decided the U.S. payments problem was getting out of control. They started cashing in their dollars ', -some $1.2 billion worth in six * months—even though the payments picture had improved dramatically. More than half were converted by cot country —France. CURB FLOW; That is why Fonder said bin goal to to curb the flou of doi-tors aa much as possible until mously that the payments figures be changed to count only M gold.” it the dollar ii “ae g THIRTY THE PONTIAC PRESS, MOffPfY, 8]$PrjSHBER l8, 1068 Accident Victim Death Takes Mrs. Themes Jack, », of M Fourth it IM in fair condition * Feoffee Osteopathic Hospital • cur, driven by har husbsnd, which chided with a vehicle driven by Rufe L. Smith, 21, of Ike Smith woman, Jack, and two Jack children, Dianna, f, and Anita,' •, mere all treated at fee hospital and released. Bullet Fired Into Church During Night Services HOLLAND (AP) - A ballet was And Sunday night into Pine Creek Christian Reformed Church here while services were in progress. Ottawa County sheriff’s men believed that the shot came from a passing auto. No one was injured in the church and the services Gun metal, a kind of bronze, is an alloy of copper and tin which gained its name from use of broom for ordnance. MEN WANTED "Aiwort bon fob* lor Uf, Gradual*! (baa wt cam ixpply" • Mi and Port Thus • toy and Evening Sessions • Tertian b law • Pay os Yea to ELECTRONICS CLASSES NOW FORMING ELECTRONIC INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY 2457 WOOOWARO AVE. DETROIT 1 WO 2-5660 Ex-Teacher, Dean at MOUNT PLEASANT (AP) -Dr. George H. Nelson, ton «iai> of eraduate studies Central Michigan University, died in a hospital Sunday. He was fl. Nelaon, who had resigned from his poet as dean last Monday to return to teaching history, entered the boepital Thursday with an asthma condition. Os death was atrfiwted to Mood dots. A native of Iron Mountain, Nelson was a graduate of Northern Michigan University. He earned Masters and Ph.D. degrees at the University of Michigan. He taught at high schools in Gladstone, Iron Mountain and Ann Arbor and went to CMU as a history instructor in 1835. He is survived by his widow, Catherine, and two sons, Lt. Cmdr. Geoffrey Nelson of the U& Navy Air Corps, and Paul, a CMU student. Service is scheduled for Wednesday with burial in Mount Pleasant. Panic Starts —Afterwards MILWAUKEE, Wis. (AP) -An estimated 300 persons were evacuated from a downtown theater Sunday as fire broke out in the stage area and curled up a movie screen. Manager John McKay dropped an asbestos curtain in front of the screen, isolating the flames from the seating area. No one was hurt. "The only panic," said bos office cashier Sharon K. Pat-trick, 22, "was all of them trying to get their money back.” Dies in Baroda Fire BARODA (AP) - Mrs. Minnie Gitersonke, 00, died Sunday of smoke inhalation, state police reported, in a fire caused by defective electrical wiring at her home near this Berrien County community. ATrmrnirnrrrii n irrnrrrnnrrn»»»i »>. | May We Serve You...j ■ H COMPLETE : ■ INSURANCE : 1 iSeeti i BANIELS. "SST i 56S Watt Huron FE S-1111 • ^flttltlllllllilUBHIMUl.MiiiHHUV Beauty, Quality, Craftsmanship in ENDURING MEMORIALS INCH MEMORIALS, INC. 864 N. Perry FE 5-6931 Bronze Plates for Memorial Park Cemeteries at Below Cemetery Prices Famum Backs School Bills By B. VAN WAGONER TUFfYi WASHINGTON - Rap. Billie S. Faraum, who was often called the watchdog at the tax dollar in i jnfing sometimes nxllx it "fiscal idiocy" NOT tospend money, eipedatly for education. A ♦ Or Still watchful of any excess spending, he recognizes it will tike federal fends to make the elementary and secondary education progrun come alive. He says "leek at edacatiea Man Crushod to Docrth THREE OAKS (6»i John SflL of Threw ■ Orito was j i to death Sunday ta a timber-cutting mMttft State Police iidd. He wasffflped by a large limb of a tree he was helping cat down at fill rural home of his son-in-lav. Elliott Crockett.,..:,: Card ef Ihanlw SPORTY LOOK FROM SAAB - The 1906 Monte Cario IM Sports Sedan, introduced today by Saab Motors, be., features oil injection front disc brakes and Pirelli sports tires. Saab’s three-model lineup, including two new power options, is on delivery to some 270 dealers in the United States. Deaths in Pontiac, Neighboring Areas MRS. JAMES D. HALL Service for Mrs. James (Viola J.) D. Hall, 69, of 6396 Hatchery, Waterford Township, will be at U30 p.m. Wednesday at the Lewis E. Wint Funeral Home, Clarkston, wife burial at Drayton Plains Cemetery. Mrs. Hall died unexpectedly Saturday. She was a member of the Ferndale Assembly of of God Church. Surviving are three daughters Airs. Richard A. Logan of Clarkston, Mrs. Steve Karpovck of Independence Township, and Mrs. Dean .Griffin, Mo.; five sons, Robert G. of Waterford Township, James J. and David J., both of Pontiac; Kenneth E. of Kansas and Donald J. Stevens of Byron; two sisters, a brother, 16 grandchildren and a great grandchild. CLIFFORD B. STEFFEY Service for Clifford B. Stef-fey, 69, of 2860 Woodbine, Waterford Township, will be at 11 a.m. tomorrow at Sparks-Grif-fin Funeral Home, wife burial at Oak Grove Cemetery, Cold-water. Mr. Steffey died Saturday. PHILIP STENMETZ PONTIAC TOWNSHIP—Word has been received of the death 25 of former resident Aug. Philip fog rioting in the Watts area at Los Angeles. JOSEPH E. STOVALL Joseph E. Stovall, 67, of 256 S. East Boulevard, died yesterday. His body is at fee Huntoon Funeral Home. Mr. Stovall was retired from GMC Truck and Coach Division. He was a member of fee Columbia Avenue Baptist Church. Surviving besides his wife, Edna, are a daughter, Mrs. Barbara Dunning of Pontiac; James of Ludtagton; two brothers; a sister ; four grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. MRS. HARRY M. BOORN Service for former Waterford Township resident Mrs. Harry (Aruba) M. Boom of Boscobel, Wis., will be tomorrow afternoon at the Thoni Kendale Funeral Home, Boscobel, Wis., wife burial following. Mrs. Boorn died Sunday. She Was a member of First Presbyterian Church, Women’s Club, Pontiac Literary Club and fee churn January-March Club. She was a life member and matron of the OES Lodge 3f‘ » 3)o*alJ OC Johm * 7 You May Select Every Detail... Wt will conduct tbs funeral exactly ••you direct. The (election of lbs detail* of the funeral la for you, tbs next of kin to decide. Everything will be done exactly as YOU wish. rhs families we serve Ilk# end appreciate ibis policy. The music, flower arrangement, bearers, and cere of a hundred details are performed by us : — exactly as you direct. 'Phone FEDERAL 4-4111 (.VaxLuiq A On Our (Premia MRS. HENRY BRITTEN GOODRICH—Service for Mrs. Henry (Mabel C.) Britten, 74, of 6209 Kearsley will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at fee Assembly of ttoTica oe public hsarino immimun t» lie raw Tuesday, N. His all •'clock pjn. ... the Commission Chamber. CHr m Wide Track Drive list, tor gag errinth IDT. PONTIAC "t*1 "0*' t* MgaJr.ragc.'Lae praparty: ''Cat I axe the sesWrty we test, jayw.iv cKi I 7 cp Cammlsilw God Church. Burial will be in Goodrich Cemetery by fee C. F. Sherman Funeral Home of Or-tonville. Mrs. Britten died Saturday after a long illness. She was a member of the Goodrich Assembly of God. Surviving besides her husband are one daughter, Mrs. Walter Gruenewald of Ortonville; a sister; and one grandchild. MRS. WILLIAM H. BURKE . TROY — Service for former resident Mrs. William H. (Frances E.) Burke, 67, of Oak Park will be 11 ajn. Wednesday at Price Funeral Home. Graveside service will be 2 p.m. Wednesday in Oak Hill Cemetery, Owos-“X Mrs. Burke died Saturday after a long illness. Surviving are two sons, William H. Jr. of East Lansing and Frederick B. of Washington, D.C.; two brothers; a sister, Helen Kent of Troy; and six grandchildren. CHARLES FRED CAMPBELL ORION TOWNSHIP-Service for Charles Fred Campbell, 79, of 3931 tadianwood will be 11 a.m. Wednesday at Allen’s Funeral Home, Lake Orion. Burial will be in East Lawn Cemetery. Mr. Campbell died yesterday after a abort illness. He was a retired employe of Sparks Wife-tagton, Jackson. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Joseph E. (Margaret) Mendoza of Lake Orion; four sisters; two brothers; five grandchildren; and 15 greatgrandchildren. MRS. GARFIELD E. DAHL HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP -Service for Mn. Garfield E. (Shirley Ann) Dahl, 2S, of 4031 Hillcrest will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at fee Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Milford. Burial will be in Highland Cemetery. Mn. Dahl died Friday. She was fee proprietor of White Lake Hair Fashions, Highland. DEWITT G. HELFERICH SHELBY TOWNSHIP - Service for DeWtit G. Helferich, 77, of 55109 DequJndre will be 1:39 p.m. tomorrow at the Milliken Funeral Home, Utica. Burial wfli follow in Prestonville Cemetery. Mr. Helferich died yesterday after a brief illness. A former Shelby Township treasurer for II yean, Mr. Helferich had been • draftsman at Ford Motor Co., Detroit. He was a member of Birmingham Lodge No. 44, FAAM, and the Rochester Senior Cttl-zens Club. Surviving an Ms wife, Sarah E.t a daughter, Mn. Myril L. Kitchen of Southfield; a son, Donald B. of Rochester; four brothers, Harry of Glendale, Calif , Elmer of Scarsdale, N. Y., Walter of Florida and Omar of Utica; a sister; four grandchildren; and two greatgrandchildren. JAMES KALLAS WATERFORD TOWNSHIP -Service for James Kallas, 56, of 3469 Plains will be I p.m. Wednesday at St. Georgs (freak Orthodox Church, Pontiac. Burial will -be in Mount Avon Cemetery, Rochester, by Ptxley Memorial Chapel, Rochester. Trisagkm will be 7 p.m. tomorrow at fee funeral borne. Mr. Kallas died Saturday after a abort iQness. He was a produce trltimen Surviving an hJa wife, Marie; Hwo daughters, kin. Theodore Sapeiak of Rochester and Joan* at home; two listen; on* brother; and two grandchildren. WALTER MARKLINE COMMERCE TOWNSHIP -Service for Writer Markline, a, of MSI Pickboume will bo U «.ta. tomorrow at fee Elton Black Funeral Home, Union of potential soldiers and these rejects have children rise unable to poos fee draft tests unless we break fee cycle." The Pontiac Democrat la backed by two equally economy-minded groups who supported .educational legislation because unemployment is mostly caused 1 by lack of education. , The U.S. Chamber of Corn- Lake. Burial will be in Com- 2*"* and. 00 merceCemetery. Economic Development are Mr. Markline died Friday af- JML ^ ter a short illness. He was em- ««atIonshlp of ubemploy- Alaska’s Kodiak Island is inhabited by fee world's biggest ployed by Consumers Power Co. Surviving are two grandchildren. CHARLES F. PHELPS ATTICA—Service for Charles F. Phelps, 43, of 3300 Greenwood urns to be 1 p.m. today at fee Price Funeral Home, TYoy, with burial in Cadillac Memorial Gardens, East, Mt. Clemens. Mr. ment to vocational education, but they recognize it5s essential to attack problem nearer its beginnings in a good general education. BILL SUPPORTED So they support the Elementary and Secondary School Act of 1965, authorizing 91-3 billion annually for the support of a school syztem aiding children of families wife incomes under 93,- ADS RKSIveD Uf ! PM. Urns. It wfll M isswnd « * f » tha^chara** IHr"** £38 •f the first Instrtlsn mt Tha MMm tsr cancsllatlon m translsnt want Ads Is * a.m. the W ot publication star the first Insertion. Wlun esnesta-tions ara made be svr» to get your "KILL NUMBER." Mb ** MWsXr agSta kgs f tata a*v **• —. . j. . — | . imiuiics wiui uKuiucs uuuer po,- 000 * to Vo- foreman at Jentzen-Miller Company in Troy, be was a member of Milbnan’s Local 1452 AFL-CIO, Detroit. Surviving are his Wife, Lu-cile; three daughters, Mrs. Albert Cash and Jane I. Phelps, both of Attica, and Linda J. at home; one son, Stephen C., at home; and two sisters. MRS. ROBERT WILSON WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN- catkmal Education Act of IMS and the Manpower Development and Training Act of 1962. i ranks life _ Mpar capi- ta income, ranks life la fee cxpendttnrc per pupil in the elementary and secondary school system (111# annually as compared to 9719 per pupil in New Yerfc). teach-sec- Death Notices BRITTEN, SBPTRMBER it, tfO. MABiL c., m mar*tar Straw, Goodrich. Michigan; *9* m beloved wtta of Honry Britton; « dsor sistor of Mrs. Flora Ackar-soni also swrvivod by *n* grand-chlHk Funoral sorvlco will ta hold rtrajsj'iutssi Goodrich. Mich., with kov. Georgs ltan»ton one Rev. Frank Alsx-ondor omclotlng. Interment In Goodrich C o mfto r y, Goodrich, MllWisn. MfC iHnM will lie in stale it the C. F. Shormon m ^sSSETSKiSS JtggJg*? D^’wedoSSv' a 'lhfnioo lM,ry 11 ,*'7® “““"y Lake. Burial will be in Com- j w w w ■E StaSfdUii ujnsisrdoL of Michigan has less than 190,000 Mn. WQsoa died yesterday ri- ta vocational programs, aided by the federal government, as compared to more than 300,999 taNewYoric. ter a abort Ulness. Surviving are three sons, George Starick of Orchard Lake, Daniel Starick of San ntn,rwi„n„. Jose, Callt., and Markei Starick BA8IC PROBLEM of Redfonl; six grandchildren; | The problem is education and and seven great-grandchildren, i training. Then are ta excess of wnm vrank wnans 110 million families in the United MRS. FRANK WOODS states with incomes of ten than ROCHESTER —• Former rest- $3,000 a year; over 6 million dent Mn. Frank (Victoria) ha* family beads with eight Woods, 79, of Ortonville died years of schooling or lew. •»•*« **•.*«at, deficiency is fee failare * ac- Bstovsd wHo m Gorfletd I. Uohlt belovsd dstuhtor of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Alton; OOOr mothor of Jomos. Mtchool, Torrl Lynn and Gordsn Dohl; door stator of imt —' Mrs. Chortas Irwin; HIM af wsMor Her body is ri the qaire hi early yean fee enpa- eaable them to benefit Item fee edacatiea, experience, and OCC Officials, Educator* Talk on Development bar tone unprepared for . Officials of Oakland Commun- „ ^ preparable for ... fee My College bald a wetkend madam technological world meeting with visiting educators | never acquires a feUl or forms to dtacuaa long range plans for a lasting job connection. He development of the OCC instruc-1 lacks general education, tionri program. 1 ★ * ★ Participants included Dr. Congressman Farnum, who. Samuel N. Postlethwait, pro- serves on the Appropriation feeaor of botany at Purdue subcommittee dealing wife the University; Col. Gabriel Oflesb, Health, Education and Welfare! specialist ta programmed ta- Department, did not have • lot struction for the U.8. Air Force of formal education himself,! and Dr. Desmond Wedberg of which, ta part, explains Ms ap-fee National Education Asiocia- predation of Ha importance. | Uon- : # # CCCDAY8 Others wore Dr. Don O- Ta- j trot, superintendent of Water- ” ajaggajgg Education ri UCLA; and Dr. hi Robert Corrigan, rice oresldanl I r of Litton bduririos EducaUon Uon •e,Wmpo,ed Division. ' The Michigan Democrat re- Reprao anting OCC wore Dr. John E. Tlrrell, president; and Dr. Albert A. Canfield/rice Mr*. Ctajrton Joitnsen, Mrs. Frad GtaBsMwta and Bustar 0. Mills; •tad survived by W orondchlldran and ui* Braaf uutttaMId. Fuitsral (orytos wilt bflMM WsdnssdfV-S«pt. 11. at 1:3* RJN, at nw Low's i. Wlnt Funeral ' ------- WALTER, 9021 Pick bourne, Com-morco Township; ogo *2. Survived by two nsMtoto Ota- on api Mae Thampaan Jr. Funeral . sarvle* w*» ba bald Tuasday, Sopt. 14, t» 11:*B a m. al tha itton Black Fvnaral Hants, in Uttton ijc-ino-Tn. paw i non millIL. JACK I tafe jnBraTi Smith, and brottwr af Mrs. HblUl Fur, ft S'wSwKthta--byJas! . erahdthiwran. Comgtatad funarsl bvrr. r& whsra Mr. Mlttar wilt tta In stats flK’jtvkJlw Orahtahtriur Ing hours f:3d i»~m, to fTj* p.m.) SMITH, iVOflMili IX H WILLIE, WS Highland; ag* 01 bolovad husband of Bust* smith; bstavM sen af Mrs. Soldi Smith; door lithor of awtltatata Fradu-kk C., Floyd C., Hubert U ond Lostor M. Smith, Orm R. Thom-BS, Fhytta J, Hup ana Isaata M. laoy and ASr*. Fotriclo Iponni do«r brother of Kdnnstlt C. ond Tobv Smith, Jeeaphlno Quines. AnnM Moo Armatranf ond Raofhtt-lo Shoppoord. Also survived by tot •randoilidran. and throe ' graot usitidiijinWL rFtiwrBt sorvlco will 5* hold Tuesday, Sdgtombu ta ot 2 a.m. at the. Mocodenta BoplM Church wtfh |0p l M. MTHu oKklellng. Inlormonl In Oak Hill cemetorf Mr, imNh win lie In stota ijjbo William P. Davis Pv- TTTiFfiMiiinrw Woodblno, Wdtorlord Town-ago Mi tatovad husband «f «T*rsjwwx.rs Mrs. Blluwlh SnMNu dsar brathor iffy. Mferto* »mw mm ■ur-by pir arandehl idran. Pi-wrvlc* win ta haw Tuesday, ta *f ffiiB fJn, at Rw -OrMnn wsdsi Hama, lull ta Oak fliraw Cunttory, __..Jtor, Mkh. Mr. BMNay will II* ta d* *fTaW-iBuis-GrMln president-instruction. Womon Hospitalized ■ After Crash In City A Pontiac woman In in satisfactory condition at Pontiac Gsnarai Hospital following an auto accident Saturday afternoon at Booth Saginaw and Wilson. Clara Hatchett, 31, of fifl Gram was tha driver of a car which collided with a vehicle driven tar Richard Gfenn, N, of IIS E. Wilson, aecordtag to Pontiac police. tfea wffl be a ranady. William J. Driver. Veterans Affeiry administrator, says G1 Bill of World War II fee loudest knock of opportunity ever beard ta America. Nearly I million veterans of WWII Improved themselves by advancing their education and training under fids bill. ; f e ■ 11-la addition to the professions (teachers, doctors, lawyers, and sngtassrs), the labor toroa, as a result of fea GI hm, has been enriched by 381,000 veteran-trained oonefruetton workers; 300,010 metal workers nod thou-Saginaw Fair Mark Sat Mnd*01 ikined workers., SAGINAW (AF) - The Sag- The Committee on Economic itfew County Fair opened Sun- Development concludes It is not day and sot a oaaday alien- sufficient merely to improve dance record of 91,791. The pro-, ucation; the improvement (_ rious record wm 71,549, set ta | proceed nqiidly to koop abreast m. | of fee forces ta the economy. BOX REPLIES H M e.m. today there aero replies ri lie Press Office ta fee fet lowing boxes: 1, 7, 19, 24, 39, 49, 47, 49, 49, n, m, U, % N, 199, 111, IN. THE F Mootfy Bf JSSx. Hunioon D. E. Pursley FUNERAL HOMS _________FE A1ITI SPARKS-6RIFF1N “ FUNERAL HOME ' ll Sarvkt*' FE M2M Voorhees-Siple (Bpawliry Irii ^ PERRY MOUNT PARK, AP LOT tat, ran. fsettan 3. plot 92. Atom «y*-iin. Celiaci. Wjtiffe7CHA^iu»ORAVg ''CI'mI- lira tatai. LI 4477*.__________ WHITE CHAPEL CEMETERY, tato, ran. rtHM._______________ Texas. Return Oct. 1 Sift - 4-PIECE COMBO Available tor club werk. ra-cap*Iona, wacWlm*. partta*. etc. fe tmt Stir i p.m. any girl or woman needTng • friendly adviser, *b*ne Ft cBfpt*jsfa.y„&a„sr ~‘OAINTY~MAID IUPFLIE9 r» Mmommm Ft 9-raes S ofYdgrlk FaMHky Commercial Osmettk 24 hr*. Service MtoLkmnd tonded ■Wfeto ■ . tl* .pATI. tiPY. •0, iMfly I will not bt rtiooniibi# tar ehy debta Wher than myiaH. Lyell Jenk«, --J29T C Invar lawn, Fwdtac. Mkh. AOjPWLPAWU CHIHUAHUA. CALL b e AS-lets acheoi area. OR *•) Lltof: CLZIkiTOii ligy 0LACK. .tamale Labrador RWrW jr,- ChHdran'* pal. Reward. MA LOfTpRRqyyN, MALI fMBOT, *h—V. FE 9»1 tq*jT SLACK WALLET |V M~. ‘MScShai- ►ark. Ito-1199.________________ LOST: 2 BEAOLES. tOOTH ILVb.-Eaaf Rlvd. area. Reward. PS THE MM CIVIL RIO.... I LAW PROHIBITS, WITH CERTAIN EXCEPTION*, DISCRIMINATION fib 1 CAUBI Ota SIX. UNCI f SOME OCCUPATIONS ARI OTHER, ADVCRTIBS- I MENT* ARK PLACID I under th; mauPor FEMALI COLUMNS FOR CONVENIENCE OP IREAO-EM. SUCH LirriNOB ARE NOT INTSNDSp TO SX-CLUOE PS R BO NS OP f EITHER BOX. I ASOVE-AVEtoAOE YOUNO MAN. H4I year*, «*r abev* *v*iig* ep- VSMJSrtT **■’'•» i AttociAtif* finance maHAoe'-mml tralnaa, immliiaii opening tar young man MtorMpd in a ca-w h finance. Must ba high Khod jrnduato; draff axampf, age •Bmmt SsXQBt $480 PER MONTH iMo^ort^Vime 12 MEN S475 GUARANTEE - WMbni*|irtd»y ISAYS’ itaWMank* ATTENTION HIOHSCHOOt ANO g taUE*Fl* — tavtafl mm jg STfSSt rjrr?pi- rwri y mmIMM wj 'BafcSrw* m itPW'/IMHnpmBgppp*1 Ndlp W«rt#4 MMd AJ [1 1 f P Aa SALESMEN ATTENTIONI CHECKER ' DRAFTSMEN Bvpjrlsncas In small oroctatan ahr ' jnSiiXR^ - M. C. MFG. CO. 11^ indtamrasd^RjL, Laka| Orion ¥£F%svxt ZiKlzilP aS^KSftrbtadT ™nW| SBB PRANK SCNUCK AT JOHN McAULIFFE FORD ME Oakland Avs. Psntlsc ■|PP}y In fjsrajn. Cootay Lanes/7S7S . Designers , Detailers i Pwr^prasa tsom equipment. Ovdr* SAHLIN END: CO. ..JO May AMBtTICHJS INTELLIGENT YoUno SgwSjnfltt Ex^isnnomVi!^: DIE REPAIR MEN Muat hays smsrtsncs, Thames Ota and Stamping Inc. SITS Baal Walton Boulevard/Pontiac. , _ . . OISthbAiHIH ~ mu tUSuSni'isL s BOPO WwlMlp COfMIVHNIf Mtft flMMIV 100 bRIVEWAY SALESMAN, BXPBRf- sa?i IMMEDIATE 5rivIr Pick-up and delivery. mackOs 140 W. Meple, Birmingham. OPENINGS dBaptsmcn Tor tool amb nX- ■ chine defelltag. Design sxperlance net necsssery. Levell Extrusion Ca.. s#*w!MspisTHr Tray. RUN ONLY ROOMEN DRIVER AND MAN TO WORK IN ' IMlill.TARiN' 7740 Cootay Lake Ra Uttien Lake. EXPERIENCED f66FIRS~0NLY, StrixSl SJv.TOa.^ w K X P B R 1B N c l D SBMi-TRUCK | drlwtr^ tsr work In scrap yard. fin. naartna Sarueytap Assistont») BXP?RIBNCED tAEINBTMAKBR, 47S-im. | asm Orehlr^LS* and'tlM^MIaN^*'1' ENERGETIC MAN TO SBLL ELEC-tric appliances and water seNanai's. Plenty Of fleer time and Made. Exponent*# preferred. Aft IS and over. Mud neve own car. Apply only if ns art Intafeefed In wanting. Call PB 4-3171 far appointment tor a personal Interview. MB OP TRIE VEAPL THOSE HIRED SHMIuTm WILLINO TO WOBiT UNTIL TERMINATION DATE. INTERESTED APPLICANTS report”?® the follow- . TO TAKE MICHIGAN CIVIL SERVIC1 Tin: DETROIT ARIA - PERSHINO HIGH SCHOOL, SQUIH ENTRANCE. ROOM IMf PON* TIAC AREA - PONTIAC ffORTHfRN HIGH SCHOOL, IMI ARLENE ST., CAF|-TBRIA. MUST HOf M UN- -- EQUIPMENT ROOM MANAGE R, boys' ochoel gymnasium.. Cran-briak. 444-IMI. tut. 1:30-0:00, Monday-Pridey. EVENING DISHWASHER PERMANENT POSITION MEALS—VACATION—INSURANCE cabnecesiary v APPLYINPERSON HOWARD JOHNSON'S woodward st 13 Mil* RE. EXPERIENCED LOCKE OPERATOR OR WIT? - DIR IE YWAISgP AGE AT TNI TIME OP 1UBMIT-TINB APPLICATION. ALL APPLICANTS Will Bl IN- MINT BECAUSE IP AN IN- EXPERIENCED AUTO MECHANICS MMHftf. MMy lull tlma work . and wags, Blua Cross, unltarms •nd other fringe benefits. Wt new have mar* sarvta* work than wa can handta. Apply Superior Ram. Mar. sss Oakland Av*„ fe SP42I. SUFFICIENT NUMBER OP EXAMINEES PASS THIS TEST, TO MCETPRISBNT NEEDS, THOSE PAILINO WILL STILL IBM CONSIDERED POR ASSIONMINT TO CIVIL SBRViCf STATUS. ALL WHO AR* APPOINTED ASA RESULT OP HAVING PASSED THE TBST WILL *« OPPERBO REEMPLOYMENT IN THI EARLY SPRING WITHOUT MING REQUIRED TO TAKE AN-0 TH IB EXAMINATION. THISC ROOMEN JOELOP- «8m^5nYalATT"cAaCrTe'evS MINTMAN A, ANO BRIDOI CONSTRUCTION AIOI A. EXPERIENCED MAN FOR INDE- ar Sundays. Can*'Mr? Cataman! Ml 4-I41S between M EXPERIENCED MAN .to sarvlcs hundreds of local as-, tabllshad accounts. SIM weekly potential earn tags. Phene FE 3-72S4 tor nopelntment. Expcriencsd-Auto Biller 1 One ef the beet paying poeltiene of Ita bind, wonderful warklnp con-dltlane. Immediate emplaymant. If you have had any automobile experience 1 would like to talk to fid. Cants Cl RsbertScsft at Sper-tan^paags MS Osklsn* Ay*. FB fckcittlONAL OPPORTUNITY — tar Ml tlma satasman. Floyd Kant, Ranttor. PI Mtn. CWN (t Ml Wf GRBINHOWTBBflf* EXPEBllNCED WOOL PRKUER. Steady stark, tip wegep. Apply Watkpr*» Ctaanars, Lake Orton. A FART TIME JOB Par S men who art staady, dependable and have auta. Must ba IfM from M pjm. EHpEBiE|*ti6 ’ wiNgbw^ clean^- $200 MONTHLY Tstaphone 474-7231 bstwstn 4-7 PJW. tonight FULL TIME PORTER WANTIO FOE ONE OF BIRM- i INGHAM'S FINEST WOMEN'S APPAREL STORES. MANY COM-1 Attention PONTIAC AREA PANEL TRUCK DRIVER TO PICK UP ANO giLIVIR ORDERS PROM OUR llOULAR CUSTOM-BRfc PANEL TRUCK PUR-NISHBO WHICH YOU KEEP AT HOME. PREFER A MAT AP- PANY RENE PITS ANO GOOD phonc MR. CARSELL AT Ml 7-13SO FOR 1 PERSONAL INTERVIEW. •ULL TIMk REAL ItTATI SALES- 1 man. pbana tar anpi. OR 4-ssa. Ray O'Nall Realtor 1 SdSWT^ ATyRtSOANT BX B8s3t«SWft3sS!S;; fir'ft. ■ I oaTT^^iT?imNT, Mon ba sagtaftenced to mbtar rapalrs-I tCtfincil. fuM or part timi. ASSISTANT MANAGER, WANtkp. N# uNsrimts tatasaaary. Cell » Sunoco, Tetapreph et Mapta Rd. QOOO inside jm. part time pr Ml Nn», raid be at .total. <1 years eld. Custom Service Laundry. iaSS South Adams Rd* Blrmtag ham, mi aias. ATTENTION! 8o srlnjsrs, turrttf lithGi - mill fWi jSdSpG QrlndGfB. bj ®sw wddcsr tat, fuN flmd. lead THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1963 THIRTY-ONE imp wanted m+ 8ft Apply . Sl asrs&t ■dp WaoMd Mob 4RipWwMhw* Tire Chongors Maintenance Electricians ,ww Jttjrta y.fcSL*_„ •feafeB&gs P% Apply at Eton'tiwil Service! mi ana Eton, Birmingham. MAOflNE OPERATORS IaMcM on pH mschtadk (toady smatarmont. Hawk ToM pm Engineering, Clariutan. Mich. fBiStR, evenings. a Jooiyn, Ha-Pi*. Attention Auto Solosmon wart la PanNac'S naweat. Mat modern faclimas, expansion cresiot sssfea man aworaaa ll^Ot par month. SPARTAN DODGE BiUBBFrai jmfl&K- a XuVomStivi mam to tRAiR-Wi STroBur arte Auto lump Assistant SA'SrgTfcSlg srW'jrAr'BK Pent, we Oakiondi Police Officers Pontiac Police Dept. Salary *6M* • VJm, excellent fringe benoflte. Age min. trwf, mSt school diploma or equivalent. Apply Pdrtanml, City Hall. 4W wide track Drive East. r right n ir. In PORTIR WANTED. PONTIAC N join the county's fastest g> office. New homes, resales. ^uiVUme^^&irlanced aratorrad or win tram. Contact Mr. Smith. YOUNG MAN FOR PARTS DRIV- shipping. Aero Dynamics Inc, Hoc Municipal Alrppr YyttO MAN^l* ^R OVER, OUT heur umek. MghMhlN. A#pty in parson. Ad p.m., TIN Cracker Barrel Orlvn-ln, mi union Lake Rd. Hdp Wontotl Peowde 7 LUNC GENERAL HOUSEWORK, G —lldren. Weekends Mr. Celt ewer i, *274311 GIRL NOR TELEPHONE SURVEY —** —“'OPS*1 »f early* wp A NEW PROGRAM Of opportunity with fktxlbie for quaifftod women as apodal part tltno futter Brush dealers, serving £cSwM^ltaryl>l|»r3flts sv par hr. Call OR MOM. AMBITIOUS GIRL JAVINO PO rrr ALTERATION LADY COUNTER GIRL SILK FINISHER Apply Drayton Martintalng ‘471* Wotion Blvd. AMBITIOUS YOUNG GIRL TO AS-slot with child cere and light houtakeeplng, whit# mother worn. Live In, weekends oft. (477SM, ovonlnpo. ATTENTION HOUSEWIFE!: EARN monoy for Christmas working port tlma. SM to SSI or more. No In-vootmont, nothing to carry. Exporloncod-Auto Bill s*«f a.** ■***; HVdjThava tied aiwMsmobtio sxpsrtonce I would Ilka to tail M you. Contact Robert Scott at Snarton Pod—, ass Oakland Atm. xperienced hostess, top {tarvoy's^Colonff rHawi,t^ylOt!!. Dinar, 31 E. Walton Blvd. XPERIENCED HOUSEKE________ Oanarai and plain ceding k tountay. Llvaln. SM/MWIS*. OL 2-3751 WAITRESSES COUNTER GIRLS Par feR ar earl tlma work an bath day and svsntaa shift*. peasant working captations, paid vocations and Insurance plus many other benefits, exp. not necessary at tea train. Apply In poroen ~~ '^HOWARD JOHNSON'S TiNgrg* at Mspta Rdt. wJTfliai; "lx^llsc*6 ’ Wi toed and bar. I nights. SMS pgr Naur. ExcsHswl working candRtona. work, Reece's, tm OWs Hey. WAITRESS WANTED, DAY SHIFT, jgrt Ojn^lstand. s. Tata- EXPERIENCED WAITRESS, PART- lo*fi» H^ing end Cooling Co! 413 ininiw Glkut 1740 PbR WAITRESS WORK. URLS IP-4 ppv: ••Apply tap rtn, MSI Stic HOSTESS Do you enloy meeting the public? ettreettve s dining row working hoi TED'S PONTIAC MALL HOUSEKEEPER, IMMACuTaTET dey e week, tale. FE 742*7._ HOUSEKEEPER AND COMPANION r elderly lady. By In. Ft tor** IMMEDIATE OPENINGS KEY PUNCH OPERATORS SECRETARIES-TYPIfts PROFITABLE PART TIME WORK FOR KXP|IU>NCE0 WOMEN CALLMANPOWEB NOW—F« WAITRRSSBS, CLEAN UP HELP. at pKto. I EXPERIINC ow ledge gT h or nights. Ml 4 * pay, tips b Rppsy jn p l. la 1 p.m. No S WAITRESSES Days, also even mgs. Dining room or cMttan room. Staady, alee part- WAITRESS, NEAT, STEADY JOB. No Sundays or Holly -full time end pan tl Restaurant, Mirada Mil ___ wanted i Bull time wait- In parson. Town A 17 South Telegraph. H#V Wbr**4 M. or |. 1 MAN OR WOMAR WITH LATE model ear minim ta deHvertaf newspapers la subscribers home fi EARN $350 PART TIME MAKE S11M avorags sata-WRIT- K&TcVL? The Panttac Free*. Pentlec, Mich. ING UP ORDERS tar REVERE CHEMICAL CORPORATION ICE MCLTSR. Pastaat tailing wtntsr graded bt Nstary, PM par cant ■lirintasd. NRCOCD by auary ra-tail stars, aftka building, factory, school, church. Unique demonstra- menf. No* caSlratta^’cmnmimSan P*m In full immadlatdly. Cash a anus. an*, start at oncal Gat commission checks awry wapk mis Fall and winter. Man, write tar PREOamPLIS and cemptat* 1 satas k». Revert Chemical • Car- KTSSiaS/5" ct^ malborbeMali MonogBrncnt Troinsts Immediate epenSmp Etta a rmtdly - txpandint arganUaBM tar man- Housewar* and Hardware, drugs and cosmetics, leys and sporting goods, min's and beyr wear, ladies' raiBMMibBPr mmtrw* tsser, demesnes and werahsuss. All mala applicants must haw completed their military esmmitments. Excaltant fringe benefits, rapid advancement, salary basad on txeert- sparVan DEPT. STORE MSS DM* Hury* Pontiac WejhavaMogjnlrw^ta^dsres through- KxtatRIBNCEO CLOTHING SALSS-rnan. Bxcsttsnt chanca tar ad-vancsmtnt. Apply la Mrs. M. Goar-•« a ~ ® SALESMAN WNh spactaRy ar. IntanglM* sales background SIM wtukly guarsn-tee ta man maaNng our raauka-mants. Write Mmiger, Box 4117, Cleveland (13) 5hte^ NAMB TAKERS TO HELP GATHER tatarmaftan for new Birmingham CNy Directory. No experience nec-sesary. WIN call an bytlraes' and rmldanc*. No salllnt. Approximately » weak*. Apply In person. 117 MuPt Woodward, Room N7, Blr. NEEDED^ MAINTENANCE MAN tar dur church preperty. husband and wH* prafarrad, live an premises Mlary plux 3-roem apartment. THE STEREO ANO MUSIC Division af Readers 0 least Sates and Sarvlcs* Inc. hat a career opportunity for ttw right manl Currtnt and auaNttod toads turntafiadl H YOU havt the Inlltaltv* and drtw to earn a rndnapamant position, you wHI bo glwn tha opportunity vary raptaiy. Pair Interview cell • 772-0140 In Werran, ar OMtN In Pontiac. AN rodtae kant confldon-tlal. Church, 114 t. Genesee. Pontiac! or call any e.m. ta S p.m.. InstmctioRf—Schools 10 ACT NOW TO GOT THAT JOPI ■ DIESEL TRUCK DRIVERS Train an all new dtotal tractors DIESEL ENGINE MECHANICS Fuel tntactton-Engln* Ovarhaul CRANES Dr tel Int-Back Ho* Gparots Spocltlind Equipment "World's Largest Trad* Sdwqi" QREBR TECH. Call UN 44MS | Public Welfare Worker OUTSTANDING OPPORTUNITIES 1 Immediate Vacancies | in Oakland County Area Salary rant* *5,575 Is MAM an-nunlly. AN Mich lean civil servlet benefits. Including an outstanding 1 stats contributory insuronco pre-gram, excaltant retirement plan, longevity bonus, unllmltad opportunities tor personal advancamsnt, and liberal vacation end skfc leave ’ POSSESS' A BACHELOR'S D E-1 GREE PROM AN ACCREDITED COLLEGE. Call 3M-4701 for op-point ment. AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY !, EMPLOYER WBfk Wwlid Mils 11 A-1 CARPENTER. WANTS WORK of all kinds. OR 4-1(74. •RICK ANO SLOCK WORK, FREO, S5MSM CARPENTER WORK PB MIM CARPENTER WORK, M YEARS axgartancs. rough and finish. 335-144*. ■ INbuSTRIAL ELECTRIC SERVICE — panel wiring. FE H4SI. . LIOHT HAULING, HAN6 DIGGING and town work. FB 4-J34S. cement; llrtpleces. FE 3-7527. Work Wanted Female 12 .! WOOL PRESSER Apply Liberty Ctaanars. Ask for 1 GAY IRONING SERVICE. DONNA Holcomb. FE 5-7717. l Mr. Mltchatl, Ml 4-om. WATKINS DEALERS NEEDED. CLEANING AN6 WALL WASHING. 4174453 or SSSSSM Call Mr. Laeeatt. FE 2-3053. S to • i | EXPERIENCED GOOD DAY COOK.' Reply Pontloc Pros*. Bex 34. / webklV Aamily ironingSTonb -tv service. PE 1-4*74. DrttswwidfH A TMtertf 17 SEWING A N D RftjlATidkE Ctarkstan area. MA HM. L til N WARTS »ar day. rrM. ironing^in gjfy homT IRONINGS IN MY HOMS S37MB iRONii^jfAwfto Martin md TrutMag 11 AA MOVING Careful, ancleaad vara. Insured, law rotas, free astlmetss. UL 7-3SW or rtHSia._____________ BOB'S VAN SERVICE. PataHMf A PKawthg II A>1 PAINTING DONl NOWI It years axp. Work guar. Rasldam XI Fainting AND ~ PAPER HANGING THOMPSON___________PE ARM* A LADY INTERIOR DECORATOR, EXTERIOR DECO.. ***$^m8S ”* EXPERT PAINTING, DECORAYiNG PAINTING ANO PAPERING. YOU Pro next. Orvel GWcutnA tnimL PAINTING, PAPSRII Tuaaar. or watt PAINTING AND WALL WASHING rtasanabla rates. 3S4-14U. ROUTE SALESMAN Nssdsd due to amanstot. PsasLCalt Co. MO PwwNlir- SAUTSMAN, PULL OB PART TIME. Jjaads furnlshad, training program. TiJ-mo tor appointment.____________ SHOE SALESMAN, WOMEN'S RET ter Sheet, must ba sxperisncsd, tap wsgts, apply W W. Mapta, Blr- STOCKMEN BIG *’D" FOOD STORES ImmtMata epantags tar ' exp encad full llnw stockmen tar d in>uw ta attar retail read chain experlen_ Excellent starttng weaee, ■ fringe igniiWs, good storking cond^1™* and raald advancomant tar I fled man. High school grad gratarrad. Araly at any Big Food Mara listed below. 071 Orchard Lake Rd. Ml teet Btvd. Mil Ellubeth Lake Rd. ION Caetay Lake Rd. STOCK BOYS PULL*TIMI POSITIONS Hudson's PONTIAC MALL BABY SITTER, OWN TRANSPORTA-tlon. Sday week. Ironing. 335-7004. BABYSITTER, J DAYS A WEEK! own tronspertstlen, OR 3-MS3. BABY StTTBR TO LIVE own transportation. — Ktiaat CtTKaaia I LIVE-IN HOUSEKEEPER, COOK.! JgSi;* ^Ivouwn^jyr LOUNGE WAITRESSES NEBO AP- JJf Searing, experience not necessary, J? we will train. Call after s p.m. a**a*.____________JS MAID - wigg's___ MARRIED BABY SITTIR, RELIABLE WOM-an, night work. 343-3S15. wrakiy. Car needed. Report to Mr. MdXlty Turn* Wed. or Prl., 3 p.m. no., union lsxs. ySuNO LADY TO HELP IN SMALL rest homo, live In. 625-0271. BEAUTY OPBftATOft WANTED# for bu«r shop In Witt Bloomfiold V&.&?»£?"*" tM- ** Michigan Employment Security Comm., 343 Oakland AW. tor Interview. ,I«lp WEEtsd M* *f F* > EEAirnc^L^^^L Time MATURE WOMAN, BABY SITTING, E days. Muat- have awn Iran*, aerianen. MB3317. ALUj H WBRLFJVIL^ TEACH YOU Salary giw esnuntaatan, haapllalh uttan^ aamn^Nan. Barnard Hair BILLING 'clerk pod ‘ b#^ICt. Apply between it and A Pontiac perlenced preferred. Birmingham tree. Call Mar t pm* MA *4147. APPLi pickers - lie needed In Detrott. Pontiac. (mlay.CIfy areas. flJs per hgur or 15-20c MIDDLE-AGED WOMAN TO LIVE in wlfh elderly widow. PB S-7735 after 5. per bushel with I cents bonus. Transportation . . . housing pyall-abN. Apply Mlchlgon Emptoymsnl Grand Rlvtr. Phono *14-5500; Pontiac. 242 Oakland. Phone 332-0171; LawtdrT and Dry Ctaanars, 140 S. Tslegreph. MIDDLB-AGEb WOMAN TO LIVE |h * dev* n weak, houtowerk. baby sitting, raL MAMtIL MATURE WOMAN TO .00 OBN- BOOKKEEPER mtsoofor any other MESC Office in Oetrott or Thumb brass. i days a week. "SBra *«exlMe,' must knew dMMb. minr. Located In Bdwiiiwn Pontiac. Reply Ptn- iex ji, ^ Write Tos? Ot?ic*' Bo?l&, 'JontLx!' giving age, education, family sltur-tlen end lob ond pay kilormeflnn. ATTENTION COLLEGE AND HIGH school students: Summer employment. Now taking applications. Openings In til Oepertmants- Part- women 30 wars ar -pldar, apply ^K^tlilw Tl^ylin BNr, knowledge of nudifiil insurance time end hwi-time. Apply In per-nan, Ella* Bros. Bl* Boy Orlvs- formt^ helpful. Apply Pontiac Press Ins* 20 I. Totagraph and 2400 Dlxta No phona calls accepted. CLERICAL, NEAT APPEARANCE. 16-4*. Panttac Ostaopathlc Heepttal. MONDAYS. TUBSOAYS, ANO Wednesdays, housawork. cl*am BARTENDERS, 3M BOWL, IM/S-Cast Lake Rd* 4*2-4300. b'Rn)f-sinSable. bard working mum man Sggje^r*- Drive, i IS7S, PiNTAL ASSltf^NT. PW»»P oos in sgtvics stutlon. Must Si Bxpari#nc«d, with local rtfs, fhilt, Woodword I Long Lok« Rd„ Bloomfiold wSl ’ ' \ -H?AL ktCIPTIONIST, OVIR II. mature, neet, talelllgent. good typ-IsT Drayton fG&irlendpicture with resume ta Panttac Frees Rex DENIAL SRtRlfXRY-RBCBPtlON-let, matvra parean with bustaaaa txpertones, write wart axparl— Mta RWIM e.n rata, a raqulrwnentt ta irr ; as esaistent taraman, Wal KSTEwir*1* Expgritnctd Housaktbpar sg^Tt.gyhrsi tog™ fKaTwaskT Mm3 n*M Swn transpartatien. Rater one- J—““ mFs-issi. ^; ----- ALUMINUM storms from SMf. Dssl direct, gMta Marty Meesn, SStdWl^^M kaiser Alcoa GIFT WRAPPER. styaaM llttai OFFICE CLERK WITH FIRESTONE Tire and Rutbtr Comasny. * " tlma ana Band benefits, call IS ta * aan. tar tatanlew, Flra-stane Retread, FE bNiS. o?Pici oiIl wANfttK if5i Hem baakkaeplni. Typing neces-sery. Retail bustaess. Ml a-30«4. OLOBR WOMAN TO CARE POR child brmy home days. Own transportation. North sMs of lawn. — FBS-SMI. ______ PART-TIMR iUAUTICIAN — 4305 Rochester Rd., near South Blvd. WMSM, UlTTin aflarT RELIABLE WOMAN POR BABY smbig and hsusskssatat, 4W days. OR A17BB after i:». RILIAtLfe iAlY" lijftEfc, OWN transportation, rsf. 474-1S47. RitSFrlOhiiT - TVRilY, IkARlFi- snesd, 1:30-5 tar rsel estate office In Birmingham, profit snarlnE. Ask fcr Miss visrsa. Ml HSOI, RECEPTIONIST POR AVIATION SALES CLERKS iRKERS-INSPECTC .... ...no. 1 shifts, f s.n.. , - II SfMjni, Apply ta parstai ta: Orasham Oeanars sis Oakland SALES LADY WANTED, APPLY m parson. Mamsaija Maternity Shag. Miracle Mils Canton excel- ■mrwmmmt 1 1 ALESWOMEN. SOmTBXPE-rlence, fuN time and part tlma. ¥55*00 Chlldran Sheas, MAI S. Tslegreph, MkKIe Mile Shop-ping Cantor, ,, ALlSLAbY POR 6lkll ClIIAlifl Danuts. OR »Mts. ALhiLAOY OV$R M counter work at dry clean tag i S noun ear day. Janet Davis Ctaanars. Lahser and Mapta iALISLADIES Exparlancad Hi better nady-kH* and SO Oft* wear, full tlma ar p time. Bloomfield rashlon » Pontiac Mall. liftI'Sta HvwyClwSlln!*1* ■“HiV jPwrWTRCTJ S^!^aKy76IT^l yBHICKj IBHBy OMiour weak. Jill vacation and SHIRT WASHER OR PACKAOBR ast a%JM S. Woodward! Slrmlnaham. itffiSWlySta{:lV:l5:,t£ . real oafat# office ta%lrmlmdiam. wal office. Apply 7140 Cooley Lake LOTS AT BBAUTIPUL WALTERS BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED 1SS. Cats thru PrL, f odn.-d SM,I mlJ aib. SCAR GARAGES. SS'xSS', SS7S. Cl- ----- work. No money mmi . rough bt houses. Free mates. Sprtoffietdiuildlng Career Opportunities Attendant Nurae B Male-Female SCAR AarAOIC. SOUS', SITS. WE " lid any Use. Cement work — roYissr To lljl Immedlsts _____________ Howtll Stow Hospital. Salary range SUM to ISAM annually. ABB, ml yndtr tl nor guar st. Air Michigan civil service benefits Including en outstanding stats contributory Insursncs pragram, excellent retirement plan, longevity bonus, unlimited opportunities, lor Personal advancement and liberal vacation end sick leave allowance. Obtain eoetlcoHdn ter examination at Psnannal Office, Hawaii Heapltal, Hawaii, ssichtiun I nearest Michigan Security Commlesta CARPENTER WORK, GENERAL repair, mBMPlilBEillSSi NjBPWillR|i additions, pdnttapk die. Free eat! SS7-441S. CARPENTRY AND REPAIR WORK _________OL 1-SMS COMPLETE AMAOKLINg S^RV-Ice. PHA terms. PE 44m. DEALER TO SUPPLY RAWLEIOH products ta tamlHM. If Infs rested In a good income with eeeurlty tar Hit future, write RewtaWl Dept. MCi-sfsim, Freeport, in. bliiyiRJ WANTBD, Pi MMI ar Pildfst. FOUNTAIN SALES PEOPLE WE OFFER YOU UIRRAL BENEFITS Those 1S-1I yeere af age Bring proof of age APPLY IN PBRSON e.m.-ll e.m. or 1 p.m.-3 p.m. 4SN Telegraph at Maple FRED SANDERS An equal opportunity em» tells ta Pentlec Preee Eax LL O« NAlT tlaOr sales ■Star our autaf— e doeortment. Nljx^Hvd^ ft.WChll‘ iNTibviiwiiii, I71>f liilUCI mo. Work any hrs!! any days. Coil before L Mery Sueta, 171*1411. TECHNOLOGIST hwnwe|eta bawnaa tar AKP Technetaglstt, Hematology end NNBL o|pT!; RAL HOSPITAL. ING. GUTTERS. STORM WINC DOWS - POORS, CEILINGS. AWNINGS. SUPERIOR. FE 4-3177. ASPHALT PAVING Tog Asphalt Paving —tie! w 0----i FE >157 IRKING DRIVES# PARKtNO LOTI WHAT? Raitabet Cantaacta. Inc. PE SriVbwaV Spec Proa Eatlmatae. TshHALT PAVING CO bkl first, Iras estlmatos on erntaways end asphalt — coating/OR 3-1757 or PE1-7371, /ALT IriBBR ASPHALT-PAVING Bosamairt WBtsrprpoflHg AND CBMBNT Lake tar Mack taytab a labor ar matortall SUMS SYLVAN ^^WtlOlB so Alum, wlndotys, doors, siding. GRAVES CONTRACTING - UR 4-1S11 k BBAUTIPUL FAMILY 1h gloss I* |-------- ' swwBng. gsr_.. ..._ i saadaMy. PHA terms. ENCLOSURES, PATIOS, AbOONS. EXPERT REMODELING AND AD-d It tans byCreftsmsn. OL 1-3774. «Uil RaIsino aND MdVlNO, cement work, R. McCsIum. Pi 41 years txporlsnco S53ITk wantad, PB I4M, CEMEhTWdRK lesnaad Cement Csnlractar FI 4-767/ __ CBMMBk THfn ^ Dsi^al** THortaf W—Mm md ALTERATIONS ALL TYPES, KNIT SliPpliCS drasaas, lasthar peal*. OR 3-7I7L RETAIL PLUMBING AND HEATING. SUPPLY Raaalr Pans and R«ptoc*m*nta 37 Oakland Ay*. 33*44*7 Eavastroughing ' BRYAN F. FBNCH CO. Estimates freely given. FE 5-4173 loRtEllylgEMit MI.S GUTTER COMPANY Cemplata eavastroughing servlet. Galvanized or aluminum. Fro* estlmatos. 47S-SM*. BROWNIES HARDWARE FLOOR SANDERS - POLISHERS WALL PAPER STEAMERS RUG CLEANER - POWER SAWS *S1 Joslyn Open Sun. PE 4410* Excavating BULLDOZING AND GRADING. PE 5-2020. Mlltard 4*5-2081 attar 4. R!R! Mslvln b bon. WALLPAPER STEAMER Floor sandors. polishers, hand lenders, furnace vacuum ctaanars. _ Oakland Fuel A Fatal 43* Orchard Lk. Aw. PE 541 sa EXCAVATING, TRENCHING. EASE-mants, axe. Work guaranteed! trw •stlmatss. Call 47S-U70 or 47B-2310. Ewdi RmlmEmH DRAYTON FENCE CO, ^ 338* Addis St. 4744531 SIQ BOY DRIVE * IN, DIXIE AT Sduar Lake—Ttlsgrtph at Huron. PONTIAC FENCE CO. STB Olxta Hwy. OR 34575 Road MaintERdncd PRIVATE and SUBDIVISION readt^ maintained year around. FIBOI* Sciflrflll J CARL L. BILLS SR* NEW AND aid floor sending, fe 757SV. 1—Mr J6HN TAYLOR, FLOOR LAYING. Sanding and finishing, is yasrs •xpartanes. 33M77S. A-1 NEW, RER00F7REPAIRS — CM^Jdok. Saw th* tack. OR R. 0. SNYDER, FLOOR LAYING sanding and IbilsMno. FE S-M72. NEW ROOFS, REPAIR! INSURED •nd guarantaad. Call Tam, **7*5*3. Eetbecb IggElf BRYAN F. PBNCH CO. Estlmatss treaty given. FB 54773 ROOFING AND StDING. ALL WORK ^Mta-^rW.l.yr..^ OIL ANO GAS SERVICE. FURNACE CLEANING. MOREY'S - 4*71110. ROOFING AND REPAIR. TH—li| Swvka and loading retaining wail*. Broken 4-Inch sktawaik, OOta by toad. Free atnmaia*. fe 4071. ML TREE TRIMMING, REMOVAL Proa aatlmufe. PI 74447, *74-3510. EXPERT tree iiRVICE. TRIAA-mtag and removal. 334-004*. BLACK DIRT Tap tell or Mack dirt, grading raas. OR 4-1*4*. Laka's Trea ta., Trimming Rsmovtl, free estlmstas. *171414 MERION SLUfSOb. PICK UP OK delivered. 3*01 Crooks. UL 74443. Ray's trea Sarvica trimming planting and removal Jraatfnam tar Dutak Elm Disease. 1* yrs. axpartanca. 3*7744*. SODDING, liSDING, END LOAD-Truck, Top Sail PI TONY'S COMPLETE LANOSCAP-tag. Marlon Mu* or Kentucky sag WMJf* M THwfdf Lgmbgr HAULING ANO RUEEISH. NAME yeur price. Any time. PI 70071. TALBOTT LUMBER Glass taslanad ta doors and wbv dows. Csmptota budding sarvlct. IMS Oakland Aw. PE 4-4SH -■-LtaMTrucktajyndHsulltw “KSSmT*® LIGHT TRUCKING ANO HAULINQ *771*75 Moving Gad StorafB SMITH MOVING GO. PB 44*44 LIGHT AfjO HEAVY TRUCKING, ryMMihr fill dirt# grading and grav-fl mid front-and loading. FE AMS. LIGHT HAliLlNG, GARAGES AtRl be laments ctaanad. (77170. Nhifiiif wM 1-A PAINTING - INTERIOR - IX* tartar - P I 75734. T R 01 k HAULING, LAWN, QA* nge. bassmsnt cleaning. UL 7ME TrmfcRaiid A1 INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR gtaft*d. WILL BUY ANTIQUES. FURNI-lure mm estate. Bluebird Auction. oil wtt mi mw.______________ k tor Mr. Grant. wymon Furniture. DESKS. FILES. OFFICE FURNI-tun, portable end office typewriters, adding machines, drafting tables, ale. Forbes, ON SON?. We W—M » twit VCAR GARAGE WITH ELECTRIC-fly. prefer daa to Wlonor Sta-dlum. Call altar 3 p.m. FE 4-UP. ‘l-BEDROOM HOUSE S SINGLE WORKING MEN DE-SIRE AFT. PREFERABLY FUR* RISKED, BIRMINGHAM, ROYAL OAK. NUBL PARK AREA. EL S-tlSt AFTER S:30 PJA. 3 ADULTS; t OR S BEDROOMS, basement and.or garaga, west side, ref. Call collect. Ftncoming, 179- touFLE AND I CHILDREN UR- EPISCOFAL CLERGYMAN DE-slres 3 or 4-bad room untum. house, Sept, is to Jane u. Call days, mi Htr GARAGE FOR BOAT, STORACnr mother and s-year old de- working LADY DESIRES 3-RODi unfum apt., dose In PonllBC area Reas. Write Pontiac Frees Boa 44. 1 TO 50 Dally Til »LE LISTIN ALL CASH FHA AND 61 EQUITY ad tape, no delay*, caah Immot tety. DETROIT BR SGtto. Aimzn" ■NEEDS LISTINGS BOTSFOKDHAITT Hat cuotoman waiting - net Hating* an noma* — Rto an acreage, lor quick ante MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ‘fe»ywSS- AT OXFORD. FURNISHED LOVE-ty Stent wartmiM Nr l months. -----------APART MENT, 1 Mac Motors. Pvt. en- t BROOM APARTMENTS, FRI-vate bath, almoat downlowa. In-, quire 2335 Dixie Hwy. Ecanomy Used Cart. mUB. ROOMS AND BATH. APPLY 13 SpBERM 4 ROOMS AND _BATH, I for retired couple, nursing WBBMG, lEWllhBl 19 CLARKSTON. HOUSE IN COUNTRY. Furnished. 3 bedrooms, library. Available Oct.-May. S13S par month PR 44443, ova. ________ MOOERN LAKE FRONT - FULL 3-0134. towt Hbesbs, UflfBrtoriiiS 46 3-BEDROOM HOUSE, ADULTS, SIM a month, OR fif. 1177 CURRANT STREET, PONTIAC. OR 30071. BOULEVARD HEIGHTS Applications now being accepted LAKE FRbNT - 3 BEDROOMS. 3 Ask^Nto^BeSnanMtE Efl*L°’ OAKLAND HEIGHTS - l-BEDROOM brick, full baeemont. Indnorator, adults, im. ORB3M1._________ REAL NICE 3-BEDROOM, NORTH CLEAN AND QUIET. FACTORY narhars only. Day diMt only. No drinkers. 330-13H. , . CLEAN SLEEPING ROOMS. NEAR Room, private en-IruaB, no drinkers. FE IJWS. DORMITORY FOR BUSINESS WOM-an In beautiful Franklin Blvd. residence (former location of YWCA). Call Pontiac Buslims Institute. FE $4,850 y In Nds d-rote^ jjnndwr h^r WWI^tciled** In'me'norit! and^tUM win handle, no ctoriag Oakland Lakt Privlfeots mmSigSr' drive, large lot wRS frvN UJN dawn. NM CLARENCE C RID( REALTOR. MW.TlS!8\tlTING SERVtcf $8950 I mom, sanarale dHv raal tand buy. Can $16,400 Lake Orion. iTraomwltti Good j»ndj $9990 Ranchor on your M. Lovely 3 bad-room*. full basement, eefc floors, FULLY INSULATED. Ool-Mar finished cabinets. No money down. Y0UNG-BILT HOMES BY OWNER, 3-BEDROOM, PARO- :R: 3-BEDROOM HOME, CLARKSTON MOOEL FARM HOME m DRAYTON PLAINS Id PAULINE DRIVE room brick. Bum la MSS, lvb ear Baraga, heated family r— 70x219-11 riot, priced at 415.F04. HOMER ____________VE_4-3i40 ELIZABETH LAKE FRONT Elm Stmt Brewer RggI Estate . Gregory M E. Huron St. 449T_______________PBJ1— 4 kitchen, b rad hat aw _____HOT car attached garage, paved driveway, 3 large earner lots, largo shad# trees. Owner retiring to Florida. Must sail Immadlately. $31,000 — Cadi to contract or martgag*. * ROOM. KITCHEN USE, FOR LADY. ROOM AND OR BOARD. ISSVk OAK-land Ava. FE 4-1IS4T__________________ 4351 Hatchery and others. 3 par cant dawn, NORTH POINT READY st04 s. MAIn Clarto..... MA 5-2341___________ MA MR| SLEEPING ROOMS. GENTLEMEN, SLEEPING ROOM FOR GENTLE- SLEEPING ROOMS. MEN ONLY. 1-2 room and bath apartment. Can ha aean Sabifday Jfitir t:30 or Sunday tram IM. ti Frai. Rd., (Sun imTi Highland of Ariflac FOR LEAH - 1 condBtonad opao age. emple partem. loonur mat-tor, Insurance orMlSr type businesses. 3445 Woodward. Bloomfield Hte^Ce^te-3301 or 334-MM from AIMMWRTEMIB service, Mf utnities and wnple parking, ideal lar manufacturing rep. - SMS Woodward, Bloomfield HMo. Can <■“*“* - ■— ~ am. tg S KEEGO HARBOR. PRIME LOCA- 3-0321 or 343-7474 CASH 48 HOURS LAND CONTRACTB-HOMBS WRIGHT SB Ookland Aug. FE mmi CLIENT WANTS 3GBDROOM SUBURBAN HOME NOT OVER M MILES FROM PONTIAC. WHAT HAVE YOU? W. H. BASS REALTOR FE 3-33M BUILDER DO YOU WANT TO SEU? A. JOHNSON & SON REAL ESTATE * INSURANCE ITto^jL Trtojjrtgh PrtpErty 67-A SMALL WAREHOUSE ANO OFFICE. Ida taw 49 I NEED A 3-BEDROOM Wl bnsomant and garage. Largo yi In or around me Clerkston or Will pay 111,000 9o sso.ooo. / Elide. FE 4-12M. RAY O'NEIL REALTOR 3520 FanHac Lake Rd. OR 4-2222 or FE 4-1704 NOTICE I QUICK CASH FOR YOUR HOME OR EQUITY Wl BUY, SELL TRADE B LIST VACANT LOTS WANTED In Pritlac we pay mara. lmm#_. AfrjigMMW.ygrteteid 17 t ROOMS IN PONTIAC SM PER iH. M danaaH. UtlRttai Mahad. Na dilldran. 4JB-1975._ 2 ROOMS. SIDE ENTRANCE. UTIL-It US drinkers, quid atom. ■Huron. ■r elderiy lady preferred Id par m»„ SSI dapaaN. US-1311. I K60MS. UtlLltlES. FORSOilft, n.------— ---|. Ft 41549. STTSfiC' jg; lAfHT~NiCiLV E^KfwjSSwf *S SB^rsssjrh FLATTLEY REALTY f COMMERCE 3-BEDROOM COLONIAL BRICK, Seminole Hills, fVeplece — f-cer pereee. FE Zi707._ 3-BEbROOM RANCH HOME, ALU-mlnum storms and screens, CO SntbS^r1 *lr ^w I jedrooms. family room, Jw halhs, fireplace, beswnetd, .. Tini.*MS Sa?ubdr' Troy SOUTH OP MAYVILLI, 74-ecr# (arm with « reams, hath, ana * ---- Attached perege. good I1S.00S tuft ik Ice. Term M ACRES uacard lend, with SUSS dawn. . Many athar^Wga and email terms '> RE i CARO 1* WRIGHT REALTY 3B Oakland Ava. FE b*Mi Eva*, aftw s PE s-im NO DOWN PAYMENT NO PAYMENT THE Iff MONTH Tamprrery modd heated at Lu-thar and Bloamfldd. BEUIRE HOME BUILDERS NEAR OAKLAND AVE. an, living. bam, M _—— I priced M sail quick. '' 3-BEDROOM 2-story — . HOT_______ tral High, dlvorcq case, mud sail InWMdMMy FHA or e! forms. PAUL JONES, Realty ---HURON FE ant NEW 3-BEDROOM ALUMINUM SID-Bd homo, on Pleasant Lake canal, ode floors, got had, 112,500. 403- nEw S4I6R66M h6MI fenlal 'elevation, largo 3^ar ga- Terms com*r M* mM<> Silver Lakt Const. Co. WE TRADE 2t0t diawnee Lane______S7W5J1 OFF BALDWIN On Wed Cdgdo St. modem home with gas had. 3US0 - move* you In. ITS par moral*-J. J. JOLL REALTY FE 2-3410 02-0801 M EASEMENT, 1 BATHS, SCREENED PATIO, BEAUTIFULLY landscaped n canal, A HOME FOR: YOUR FAMILY, PRICED TO SELL AT S3M00. 02-2300 SYLVAN *35-1004 month. Includes fixes and Inaur-ance, « roams, bath and utility, gas heat, vacant, 4 years old. Side drive, dote to schools. RORABAUGH SYLVAN MANO* -0bBgr~tiff btWk ronidS roor yards. Storms and tcreawk ■ i-—yMog, 11iYajji i. Ihowit by air-*** LESLIE R. TRIPP, RitHor 15 Wbd Huron Strgd Pi 5-W4I TivtninMMr¥s»P>) HAYDEN 3 Bedroom Tri-Level $12,900 Gas Had ANacMd Gsrege lib baths Family Raor- Ovtr U50 sq. ft. d Living Arts THE ECON-O-TRI S Bedroom* Lot IncJudo AT $11^00 Family Room Attached Garage Will duplicate on your M J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor 943-4404 10751 ftighlond Rd. (M5 BLIdEaBI -W*hWl EAST SIDE OF CITY. Madrtom I big ovor pk cabinets In . Full AVON TOWNSHIP. 4-room brick OPEN 3 MODELS floors, plootorod walls. Ceramic bath. ffuS boogmont, Kar gi rag*. I wall ighdicopid lots, i . plea sura to show d only 11 ASM. GILES REALTY CO. FE M171 221 bnldwbl Aw MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE TRI-LEVEL-RANCH-COLONIAL McaGtratlSlAm plus Id Fadura* In thato brick and aluml num 3-bed room hemas art famlt room, Scar garage, gat tied, mar Me dlls, Mb bate ceramic ■» good fagrigMMiHg. Sought tor oniylO Drive out MSO to Thdf| ^ NNItom Lata milt to Cator- GIROUX BIRMINGHAM large THRBB-GEDROOM ranch With Hbrary or 4th bedroom. Fam-"V mem m4 first flaor utility >. Walk to East- "sdwol'Slro" * WEIR, MANUEL P/rVMTJT7Qrri7P T SNYD£R & ***** RUOHbbILn \3&r*mablm ,,rwaS5 ROCHESTER AREA-WILL TRADE! NIX REALTY. UL S-I131. UL KBH ranch. Ceramic tile bam, glass well-door, full haoa-mont with mmmm wafer aoftan-tr. Excellent neighborhood. Poved | streets and sidewalk. Ctowi to Nit, village d Rochester. $14,900. Sislock & Kynt, Inc. 13d Pontiac State bank KENT VACANT GY OWNER. NEAR MALL, to] ^us^t^Tot'busteJ! bedroom, toll basement, ceramic bath, alum. $jdngnand ^>rtm. .blayk- WATERFORD - Pleasant 5-room top street. IIUK ISO Watkins, home with tor dTOte ffil Lata Rd. OR 3-1WS or FE 5^441. baflL Garage.l WATERFORD HILL. 3-GEDROOM | buy d $5,750 - HIITER OVER 3,000 SQ. FT. — In beautiful Sbadroom rancher buMHns, 3 baths, large living r and Sway fireplace, family it attached Scar garage) mo So apartment. Sacra tot. Saa this today. NRAR CRESCENT LAKE -------^ - ^ *cjSl afe HurKf xEAuvm, 3793 Elizabeth Lake Road. FE 3-0179, aftorl pm. MA 4-3195,____■ . ■ , HOME ALL OVER, ALLY PRIVATE, USA Broker. 473*701. tov- OVER 4 ACRES - Ranch, 1-bgd-____ ______ room home. 31' carpeted living AL PAULY, Realtor I ™ DIXIE, REAB ___________________Eve. PE S74441 WEST BLOOMFIELD QUAD-LEVEL. I 3 baths, mot iiris». undw-jround^ sprinkling ayslam. $39,000. 0. IliSN —Torms. Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor 23M Dixie Hwy. d Telegraph FE Sdia Of FE 3-7342 GILES rar. -W|M- "BUD" Bloomfield Township 4-Bedroom Ranch Mod large family 'Mi M— Mg landbCMBd yard and Jew garage; laaturee carpeted living foonC drapes, fireptoapT built-in HI FI, combination Mfchgn and Its A Beauty rx's.'gi - with largo vanity, clooats and ' atoraga galara, cavarad patio, to zoffoat sans $23,500, iet us show you today I “BUD" Nicholie, Realtor 49 Mt. damans Bl. FE S-120L AFTER $ P JA. FI 44773 around property. Nam docorsting Inside, end lrllSHs*|BTlB-tng tor 14,950,14N dov- STOUTS Best Buys Today 4 Bedrooms id' family home, all an one •r, carpeted living and dining Mb roomy kitchen, basemen) sink, almost new gai briewwey and Scar huge langacgpoS lot, w taneb to grade school iRUna d Only all tomact partially I family roam, to-ecra l« tot.—Only 30403 w ARRO WE BUILD—WE TRAOB NEAR TEL-HURON. Cecy carpal Ing In to living room, full base-awjwet, piemTafspace Ttatton room. walkto^jMs- ONLY ONE YEAR OLD. Sbtdrwm id, lib-car attached garaga, blacktop drad, doia to ochoal did mopping. 3hr- ------^ man! only. THREE • FAMILY INCOME. Cam- pletaly fumlstad. toll t--* gas heat, 3 to with bese- SajmS twSXmZ LAZENBY NORTH SIDE heme In quite IIXIM PI your Id. BirLtvel •quart 1 $16,500 a \ nw I price tor this a home an aad gat hod, dalr-- finished attic. Warrsn Stout Realtor » N. Opdyta Rd. Ph. FE 54145 Opan Evoa. Till I PJUL i ana, run aaeaunvn If living ream, gto i, comfy oil had, r. $10,500-4350. Now HOMES BY BOOTH, INC. _____ . - *r aara, Amel OR SOW HAg/tROM REALTOR. 4900 W, HURON, OR 4«5S. EVENINGS1 OR 34229._____________; IRWIN iFrushour Struble HONEYMOONERS Sharp 1-vaar-dd lhadrai with toll baidnad. g .tancad yard, city uwfar m $13,900. SHEPARD'S 651-8503 FIRST IN VALUE RENTING $59 Mo. IT MAKES SENSE $10 Deoosit LFZi 1Sb52' «“ ^SnS: I WITH application about SUM it wnr mdu WARDEN REALTY 4-AaT COUNTRY ESTATE •rpa traa* and plnao. Paint Craak laritort back d proparty, privacy md camtort, $39,50*. Raaianabli n. WEBSTER, Realtor MY SERI OA 3-3315 IN LAKE 06I0N carpeted living and dining room! large lKfxlW beautifully land- HUMPHRIES REALTY Oxford OA M417 IN THE HILLS , OP WALTERS LAKE Cozy ibadragm htoa away, fira- Just Far Enough Away TOfgive yea jrtyqcy ^aijd eactetai. between twin spruces, yw will azjtf'&xr Mi HAGSTROM REALTOR 4900 W. HURON OR ■ EVENIHOS OR 3-4229 For Immsdiots Action Call FE $3676 626-9575 LOVELY 3 . GEPROOM bildk MOOERN 1-4 GIDROOM HOMti an LatavtHe Lata, tarma. 90 acres an rail with double read frentaga. S4SM0 15-acre exclusive home site terms. Call lor gfhara. t. W. WoHe. 443-2300 SYLVAN Phone 332-8181 An ExptriMMd Ad-Visor Will Gladly Help You Word Your Want Ad Mixed Neighborhood Na down payment First month traa TAYLOR MODEL OPEN DAILY 2 to 9 Any flmt byippolntmant 79ffimGHLA^RD. PRICES START AT $11,700 LOON LAKE PRIVILEGES EAST SIDE SUBURBAN Three bedroom ranch hama. Six •ooms, near Oakland University. ISPr living room, large kitchen with plenty of cupboards. Pull bath —Driveway to flbCPr garaga — $14,950. 116 ONEIDA uraet side ranch near schools. tfanipgridloB. This 1 -room home With toll 'TBOTT- ■ . ■ ____to TSoolTend area. Hto 3 Urge becroo ly decor pled MB room, *dhtlng room and lovely to am kitchen, tdto ample WMCe. Also has toll batamem ana 'EtwHyMY* bnf gjj___________________ Large 2-bedroom home an 1 tot COMMERCE TOWNSHIP VCT'f Ahwod rqw frHavd. 3 ^bjdrooms.1 cSt z - JTttifWft UUwiSr%»r OManvilto with irontat* on sTtakaai barddt btock? jttm. INDIAN WOOD SHORES NO. 3. An large lots, wdl restricted, reasonably priced. Call today tor ddails, w| AM JR JWtft d S and 4-bedroom homo* wllfi I Si 5 aergs, ALBERT J.rB&OES, Broker MILLER NEAR 1-75, 3-BEDROOM ranch. » rooms and bath, aluminum storms and screens, 2-car garaga,' lard* tancad earner tot, pauad street Md drive. Only SIGNS Wttb EASY terms. AUBURN HBIOHTS. Cute llftld MMb IBM, tor retired couple. All 1 fleer, toll bpaamant, new tomaca, garage, toncad yard dnd toll more. Priced to gat at 37,951 arllh $750 NORTH PERRY AREA I * pried living mom and dining re » tofge. bright hadmamaTlJH b „ maoL gas Iwgt, large garage aad toneed yard. Juaf $10,1* on **ty WATER PRONT HOME. 4 room* and bath, baaufltol living ream with JHS'X* '"“Fri bedroom 13x14.7. Fun wnMiad baiwamnt, $ car aaraga, 9x10 jeraanad patio. AH mta In on* *f the moot Stwfltol ••flings you'll ever find. SfMSI an Miy ttrmt. AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR FE 2-0262 47* W. HURON OPEN 9 TO P BATEMAN Mart yiljp.Sgkg region. 4 Mm •ytomaflc haat — twin natural Jjlck fireplace. Pull price onto SUM with payments Hk* rent. AAjSg toflb Nkla sMto flMAV r‘ atolrwpy. to. unflntohad rittc. Enclosed front porch, largo living 350m, dining room amTMcHm! Qjmc ranga and carpotlng Its. MlS tarma to ttmant NOW. Prlcad 1 tun. NO. If SIX ROOMS ON 1 ACRE Wtlh lake ctoee by. 3 bedrooms. privileges trick fir* •tonally n 13*x34’ al iH carganng,« extra half i WHY NOT LET Ivon W. Schrom Joahm Ava. PE 5-9471 ROY LAZENBY, RtoHor John K. Irwin REALTORS - 313 W. Huron - tine* 1925 ____Phono — PE SF444 CLARK INCOME. ST. MIKES AREA room homo wttb 1 tporimtnl____ separate fumacea and onlraneas. Large living rooms, aeporatt 4ln- I jrtaS3lCP| CLARK REAL ESTATE 3111 W. HURON ST. PE 3-7W or OR3-IWS ANNETT ' North Ana Ranch Large tot WtXUf an pavad strati. Living roam ifMK torpo bMtewHb '5JR sftStG MODEL OPEN AFTr*NOONI |.| And Sunday WESTOWN REALTY 545 Bloomfield Near Luther FI 4-2743 jtt0rnaai>4, L i 2-4477 Ivw FIRST IN VALUE MODEL OPEN DAILY tw to willlani* Lata Road, tom right ana mile to Catorham, than left to GIROUX RBAL BSTATB 4SH HlghtondRd~ (MS»F 473-7337 MM NMl) HmttMl a nl~A LEWIS REALTY — PS 44344. posal, $1500 worth *f carpeting, Iwge lot. Ba aura and ••• Nih.1 Pncad at km than coot. room, dining room, carpeted, largo 1 Chermlng .*4^ant^Jrt^i and kllchtn, utility rganb tVVcar garage, large fenced tot. 13x34 pa-llo. GI nothin, down , GI $500 DOWN Beautiful lhadroam frMaval, Ito- lata frontage. HIT acmgt baths, built-in even and rang* with' smaller him In trad*. — hoed. Land* ri built-in clooett, S32.500. torms. largo Imniratmand dining rmm. 1 25oc*!!Si tm^lwinderitSdsc!Ld $0 Acres - Metomoro W. Scenic rolling land, L™ ■ Detiril lay Icari Camp. G WHITE LAKE SSh* Baaufltol modern ypar araynd SgllrfL— ocraatlon room To thj 49-Acre Estate Nddr 1-71 _md convenient Ip Pent lac, Detroit and Flint. owts. ”taalnts. OXBOW LAKE FRONT Baapflfat madam lata franf hama, 1SS fit of sandy hatch. Studio dying room wfNi flrmleco, Shod-roomt, bQioonVf nwiwf biOfOOMi 3 tod caramk Nto tadhs. fhar-mig»n« windows, anal air and HW haettng aydtoiw, MnN screened parch, 2W-car parage. Over 1 aera wHfrjhffi, ppwM~d|jd aartond CRESCENT LAKE PRIVILEGES ___ dying room, kltdwn, OTPjrBiwpT* farm ham, t flit bafha and gat staam baal. Swimming kltchan and bath. Al$a 3-' mwn and oath guaat muM ssf *snsr biTuriMt ■andscapad and toncad. Tyo w*,h' WE ,, WIU. TRAM Realtors 28 E. Huron St. Open dvening* and lendgyi 14 FE 8-0466 Catt today — maybe you'll a to trade. MNne tor SISMG , IT kltchan, Vxlt* « Waterford SILVER LAKE AREA \ PRIVILEGES baaufltol 3 bedroom brick ranch, torn* cameled living mam and dining all. kltchan wlto bail! In*. TIMES 3.5 ACRES Ftoa hodmomi. older farm ham In ggad condition, wdH to wgll carpaflng, huifl-ln Taapan "404" range and avon. Lof is Mealy tread, pidwy df traRlli»4i jinpaL Blum, etc. lorn oul-bulkllngs, I— i bought pa • land cintmd llh aubatanflal down ptymtnl. Irot offering to cm early. IM. Priced to sell al BUM. Term* WEST SUBURBAN Largo tamlly homo. 3 bedroom* and room Ior t mom. Caunfry — •~,7r "‘g Hn rr ichad 2-car braaiarwav • ragn too l fwnf. Large a Crescanf Lai n^dlnlnj erejN^rgpMMiy this tatting < oil'd axpad I n 414400. is 3RU 3jra*.«* milo Struble REALTORS MU MSI HIOHLANO RD. (W. HURON] PE S4j» dSUwi 2-FAMILY INCOME hattbath. 'sho StJKTiJ • of a badrM KCh, Large comar lot, ull$%ic8, ASSSST1 ' WILLIAMS LAKE PRIVILEGES IDEAL FOR RETIRED COUPLE H Carpaflng and drapery Indudad! Oaa PA haat. Scar paraf*. » manf drive. Patio. Nice Iri. fit JOS mIn?I *• APPOINT- SMITHS WIDEMAN REALTORS taka privibga* an Craw Only 4I4JM with 41,700 d IMMEDIATE POSSESSION Htak |____M| gS~dlnina.main, en, oak Itoari, nlencet, IVS-car g nllvslie kill nar tot, 3 badraom* 1 anartmant, faatora* Ilka ptadp. inrgp raqms.„ $ LAKE PRIVILEGES ClarksSan schools, 3 pavad drtva, lovely I prito, lake acroes the WATERFORD REALTY D. Bryson, RaaBar OR 3-1371 ~34» Dbito row, ygn WM4 lite rTM7T .FIR COLONIAL QUAD-LEVEL to exclusive nelghkirtuBd. W flying raank excrilent kWchaAr 3 or possibly 4 bedrooms, TV* baths, 34' mcroman room jritti flraptoct, 3 coned ^heaftog^^ Tharmoyne ^wfn- tfllTand^rrSlrw^'axtrai. TacThugt tor owner, will trade tor tmluer Times Realty I MSB DIXIE HIOHWAY (taulh of Watartord Hill) “ 44*394 Opan M Drill NO. I 20 ACRES BEAUTIFULLY WOODED w LiU m m own er may do aroken up Into parcel*. Wendarfyl vatoa at I49.SN wNB tonma. This may fia Ite oiyVaSpdSSwS*11 w,***n® NO. M 3-BEDROOMS . TWO BATHS makes this specious rancher f * “ ideal tom • tchaalt. Yours tor |i MODEL HOMES BEAUTIPULLY furnished In LaBi Oakland SMraB. Rancher, iritoyM and CatoMM g4M>''-ftbM M9NI plua lot. Other modal* at tow as 411.300 atot tot wffll plenty *f jMd^Jbufldtop Mtoto Dam^ Salto Dixie Hwy, to Saehabaw', right'to Walton, right to fatonwn sign, ton to modal*. MAKIHG MONEY cm%m ia#i ar PETriri ti ----- ^„Dwa to anaMng na PONTIAC ROCHIITEI PE 1-7141 OL 1-441 3-LAKE FRONTS _____had. Quick Bdaaaaalan awner'a year-round laka-frqnl Jx l large b 4 W lata r.”S2. vssr-' Tcntege. paneled rrrtn bar, tool for a tor t ZONED COMMERCIAL leal and (torn I ream m-siory •ma, fuN beiemmt and gee hari, bedrooms, full dining room. Wx-V garage. $1190*. FHA tonito. JOHN KINZLER, Realtor 4*19 DM* MW. 474*2235 MoH&mrog ienScT* *8»in M Val-U-Way Government Representative OFF BALDWIN Itotoi Mas cRy”iervlce!*,k price at 44.777 't FOURTH ST. closad breeiewey wt*! OT matlaae wall-to-wall MnMtog make M* hama in excel lent buy OLDER HOME Amam larger hama off ftoto St. OH FA haatThardwood ftopr$,mw- f*R jritoe 4MJ44*'en*FHA torms! 4444 dawn will move you In. Omr^SUOTTSTlES Lest Hsrt - AH Cosh For Your Homsl R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 44S31 KAMI^EN Your NMMlBdr Traded — Why Don't You? Near Cass Dodgt Park NIC* wooded W Jp Mg tailing for IhU cute tlx-raam houtr Llvkw mom. dkHng arte kite Fanalad $wSS& uMHIy and Oxbow Lake Area 4 way tram Mia hat MIy by a lata. Wa haw a spot la** mote room homo with atfachod go-’ogoaHon * nica lof. igaufltol torn* kttchan, atoa SmwT * Drayton Plains^ um ridtoG m « miOgHR yeu._... *■• Mia hama. Thraa bitawwnf wjjj fMnfly , nio. thin an on* gem of dandy iand wifli i cost*. Or tp* i WtJL XT- O'NEIL TRADE MAGIC MOMENTS AWAIT YOU Whan you InepocI this spacious four tadroom CatoMM MJNpndWd, It hat over Sm sq. fl. of fnprvriqw Hvlng arte formal dining roam, large carpeted Wring mom wlfh fgagtoc*. eWracilva kflehon, br«*k-fa*T nook, tarn* screened.in porch «n mgr, bgiUtNul dan, pa«gad oak ftoorlite M beftis. largo toyar entrance, two-car attached garaga. Divided basement, paneled racroaflan mam wllh natural fir#-Mpca, aaparato Sundry and wark 9»aca._ Paw^torgg badnoame and two lama ceramic bafha an flw second floor. AbUMdanaa ri dotes and extra# tea numerous to monflon. Approatototoly t acre* wooded tot. Nile to truly an outstanding home, priced to ate af S4USS. LAKE FRONT -,JAYN0 HEIGHTS ' . rnmr Ml.— latM wish tq Wvt In • preitlgo traa, among doctor* and rifar thl* lowly Rome, built By BaaMy RIM. ew^* .... jw it .hut tound If** luat toa far mm Item BISflil’fllBl! MWt In INS, Ma lowly thraa bedroom ranch bteto Mfl-fli awn and rente ttebeut humdM, riadrte — ~ ■ ‘ —‘— garbage dbpaaat. now carpaflng Wlisnii • hama at a much Mghar ____ __ _______ .m MW at fha moat bmMMMMng view* of SCfteihoUM Lain. ?MI erica only 43SJS4. Coll Today. DOLL HOUSE Cut* 2-bedroom homfi In Drayton wgado frith parquet floor* In fha baWmama aw gentling throughout. Tvnxer aarbte MS k 144 trot-•haded W. Full pric* $10,754! TMg MM won't lari Mng. AMONG A SETTING OF TALL OAKS IN DRAYTON WOODS tawdry kltchan with electric buiii-in*. toads *f cupbwrdo, dkiino and Nrina rooms carpeted. 7 2-wey tinplate oak fleers, pltatoraa warn, 3Mi ceramic baths, family raom. Ml bMMwaflf with finished rdcraaflon roam pm flrapHca. Da* hof watar zoned hari. An Mte home for a growing toMMy. 42,950 dawn plua daring coats owner awtoua to tel. Wa trill tradl tor your amtiiar horn*. WEST SUBURBAN-UNDER THE OAKS Cuatofn-hulB, tevriy lhodnam Ml brick hama, flnhhad breezeway, 1-cor aftachad goroae. Many Malum* JM/ lieBtmng flrtpioc* In (lying mom. mack wf >•• kttchan, larga finithod memaflon room ten bullt-tn bar MM mMadt, Mrg* woodod IM, wall iMitoigggir priCMl ri 432.540. Will Trad*. If* down. OWNERSHIP Of Ma towly. 3-hadrogm lew ronchar near Kritarlng High wdl give you g real tooling of family security. If Odd want* a a 23 x 34 warilritte mt la fha piece tor him. If Mam want* a nka kltchan, large badraame, laundry mi Aral floor, thli ii tor bar. Bari af ochtet Mid racraafton faofliflat timte M yaw daewtog nr ttw kldo. illjft- CLARKSTON AREA A 3-badroom with full bWMWMif. 2-car garaga, taf IM x lit. Gat haat. LMM room MM kflehon paneled. OwMr Mb bought anriMr home. Wa have a realistic grka ri SUMS on thlo home. Don't Ba Sated. Call now. MODELS OPEN DAILY 1 to 9 WESTRIDGE OF WATBIFORD FOR IVIN OMATBR CONVENIBHCE TO ALL OP 3flM, O'Neil WMffimm, Colonial, the "Trioi a charming and apactoua robot rgtofcwia OPEN 9 to 9 IM $7961 RAY O'NEIL REALTOR 8520 PONTIAC LAKE RD. OR 4-2222 MIS NICHOLE muth s*«t woe - _ SSB 1 f|!w SSdltlon. Callte***. rtm-teii Mf.eamu, ftt-rpt . NICHOLIR HANGER CO. nta W. liPM «. FIWIM SSrnmjSS^ SO INCOME, f-PAMjkY, 4 AND J- ■Y OWNER, 1 BEDROOM FIE At-ant Lake front, jnflairt porch, newly renwdeled, 11-500 down, land fcnlract. Call Chuck, OR 3-1195. HAVE CASH CUSTOMER FOR jrJglgilliBues REPRESENTING F R U IHOUR ,AN0 ttRUtLB. HAROLD R. FRANKS, Reo.iy . lake front with view With RMtoia* _MMM kitchen, en-cloaad porch, floored title, Kir garage, tore* M-acr* let, lawn, fret*. «MM spot. A nice spot on Hit Mkt and only t ml in watt of RMltSc. Prlct, SIMM, 11441 down pin doting cottt. Everett Cummings, Reoltor 2543 ONION LAKE ROAD EM 3-um • iit-Tin s&SLSt'jajris isM,egrmi.es tXkt Uvmrii4. PONTIAC LAKfc FRONTAGE 4 roam, larpt tncMttd porch, full both, t man nlca large lots. tar fronttpt, only I124BB. ~M»»Jirm# of mbcttmitl dltcount far cadi. K. L. TEMPLETON, . Reoltor *»» totaT mo- frentoga. Direction*: Cfcrtcston- Arjwna. It■ ltaiw1ltfUXWM*« north to NH Mohawk Drlva. 4*2-2300 lYLVAtl 4251144 ' WHITE "1 LAKE is sssrtsjrvua an lax*. 55' mora available, six- Mb Parai, XmFliJPSSSSL'tIZ carpotlngr bulil-ln rang*. loads of 0 ACRE* ofa cbANfi - 5 MiLKt HK»y- Sroar-oM ranch with baaomiwt and flrapiaea and tnadath pip* matal boov WMd*. •jiKynsejjw; gmSufis pptiD>r*!S windows. A vtawkig tunroom far your latayra tlmt - alto a ml- ratlrlnp and going north. Underwood Real Estate hhhT COUNTRY HOMES NEW 3 BEDROOM HOME'on I rol 99 aw**, • pleatant country aa mg where horaat and Iiaiittiy chi «r*n live tagrthsr. m baths, i zjemP *-"*■ ■ I SECLUDED WOODED ACRES wtl modern 3 badroam home, full baa mant, 2-car garage, bam, prlvat form cellar. 123,900. Termt. C PANGUS, Reoltor HUNTeRtRETIRIMiNT PARM 20 acre*, Jmd tor beat or dairy IJJj^^a^l, Bruca Creasing, TAYLOR 0RT0NVILLE paii/tltol 10^ acret^ Hadley Road, 24'x40‘ modern bam, nkre building alt* on paved toed. Priced right! 0RT0NVIILE Colonial farm home, f farm kitchen, parlor. HOLLY-ROSE CENTER 2f Xff*1 "J*1 ?.h°ma*> bam, other buildings- Tarrltlc Income potential. Sob BusiiMSs Proparty 57 rt commercial, I extra k W. HURON $T. 55-ft. lot and Sbadmom hot xonod office, ideal tor tatter dentist office. Annett Inc. Realtors iowt. x iimi. - West of Telegraph. BATEMAN COMMERCIAL DBPAETMENT i 5»*-Tatograph ''Specialists In tax free Exchanges" IVliMfl§ Qp|nf|^||||' | |f wmm nS ffflt PONTIAC PR KISS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1965 THIRTY-THREE i LAND CONTRACTS Urgently wanted. See u* bato you dim. . : k -.- - Warren Stout, Realtor ACtrthr On vwr mMm m tk'iiliabitm* uffe: cDnVrAct, goooequiYV, small balance, 43.400 will buy. MY WtoT Aj EMM wlli buy., m s 1 TO 50 UNO CONTRACTS Warren Stout, Realtor " *SKfifvSSlI 8*2“ *** — 'M.......^---- CASH POR LAND COtrrltACTT. Si, iijjr ***** NEED IICK CASH FOIL dark R..I SMS* PE *4113, Mr. Clark. SEAEPRED LAMB wanted. Dal air deal lx Mil. CAPITOL SAVINOS ASSnTw W. Huron. PEI Moaay to Loan 61 (Ll^aadhjtoriayLanjtor) LOANS TO $1,000 Uaually an flrat vialt. Quick, friendly, helpful. FE 2-9026 It the number to cell. OAKLAND -LOAN CO. 202 Pontiac Btatn Bank Till to Sill -ftCTiM LOANS 30 E. LAWRENCi L 0 k N r- Insure?Payment Pta BAXTER l LIVINGSTC 401 P«ntlncT£ Bank I FE 4-1538-9 NEED CASH POR "BACK-TO-SCHOOL" EXPENSES AND BILL CONSOLIDATION? BORROW UP TO $1,000 ______ „ PRONT LOT. Blandish-area, SI.***, be down. 120 month. Bloch Brea., OR 3-12M. HIOHUNO-MILPORD AREA, Vi acre lots, Sl,??5,. SIS down, *14 me. Pad and cMihouM to j* constructad. lloch Brea- OR 3-1245. Uts-Aartaas M ftsjfi'#L*Wt,4o^SS County. IUH to M.500. 153 ACRBI ON UB-1S. With IMP road frwdage. *750 par acre, will d4 bug* bam an preparty wt 0* Pontiac. Underwood Real Estatt •nd 3 acre percale. raesonaWa. CANAL LOYS oka building alM* - BBk14T. nnactad with Sylvan Laka. JACK LOVELAND •»°a. itf*^ .j6LL.ir»^i*L^— ■ HMNLL VILLAOL * Batato SIM BulkUgg Sttas winding Povad meet* Low MKBW. svtth gWdown ; %mwr . lando'plenty (■ACRE PARCELS. (I) IVdllabW, 43,150, 4375 down. 2» ACRE PASCALS on Macktog wWh - read Ihantaga. priced at Mtoo tortus. It BEAUTIPUL ACRES, to wooded — twludad. Mat* land atm* l.5MtoT C. PANGUS, Realtor Ml Ortwin Call Colloct HA 7-toll Near Expressway Metomoro Area N scrag' •* rolling lai 425,000, terms. W. HURON ST. 9. Huron M. PE M4M asWRmEiwto SI- f. Plamimg to kglldl Chick These Lots I I RyxllS', 12,400 each UPPBR LONO LAKB, 73'xl70', 14,- R0LFE.M.. SMITH, Reoltor S. - 244 S. Telegraph PR WON EVgT PE 3-7201 MTERFORb HILL MANOk ptrtocf tor ygur '•■‘•■re h r,Srf^®a’ * DON WHITE, INC. *1 Rtola W . OR <• WEAVER AT ROCHESTER It. sorts with modern Sped room rayjKP bRir ANO WINE SROCIRY SSm'^^uTlnvantcIy FMLMda*3'000 ifeER-WINB-OltOCiRIES Good location tar family operation. Can be purchased on contract with convenient terms. REAGAN ty ApcrtmgMi — 44 unit* tor sal*. IBM mi, *3,404 monthly/ (40472 yearly. Expanse* Including tuiH, nanca, suppllas, vacancy. 121,1*444 net Income — I17j2li4. Ovur 17 par cant return annually on (20.000 down. Price, tIM.OOO, *1400 par month. Charles L. Langs, PE 3»2 or150 3-32*1________________________ d parking. MICHIGAN Businni Sales, Inc. JOHN LANDMBSSBR, BROKER ~ * •==■ Pi 4-1M2 BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY ___.-rICBS NEAR YOU WHEN YOU NElD $25 to $1,000 W# will b* glad to help you. STATE FINANCE CO. frmiea jmom wtchrn sot. 9x12 Linoleum Rugs $3.89 CUSK UPRIOHT FREEZER, --- ---- *—* m v - ■ —— ---ii. lhcR new. tnUr.^^Mftahl mf overMlotvlI — ^fyr*. sm. mo. un- ... jeod condition. ; AIR CCWDlTlONER . Tdlagraph N COUCH AN BRONZE OR CHROME OINRTTE tain, BRAND NEW. Lara* —b small aha (round, drop-leaf, fangular) tabtoa In X I and acts. (24.45 and up. PEARtON'S PURNI Choice of 15 styles, h triple trundla bads anc complete. (44.50 and ui PumWure.ll* E. Ptkp. ■awHrrso *530. Sacrltlc* *230. call 404402. COUCH, QtJBEN ANN S Y V L E. newly upholstered, (Its. 4* bar with shalvas, 2 chroma steal*. *50. MY im DINING ROOM SET, BLOllD OAK, china caMnat, tab I* and 4 chairs, axe, condition. Ml 7-31*2. DReSSER, MIRROR ATTACHED Maptd bookcase, 3'x4' wall ca hat, Etaa* dean, vary good cm tlon. C*B bdtore 4 p m. mim. FRIOIDAIRE REFRIGERATOR - 66 For Sale Miscellaneous 67 HM, JV t Radios 21-INCH USBO TV “'niton JV FE 2-2257 Opon 4-4 i dustrlal porcelain : 515 E. Walton, earner of Jotlyn also, savaral used ’ RCA PORTABLE. REASON-1 CHB* .WILAJ" ’Vxc. ahapo, *30.' FE'mPM. r^lOlDA^RE ^REFRIGTRATbR, *45 slyle'' consoio with doors, *45. 373 W.lwquoU Rd~ PE 4-7314. COLOR TV’S FROM (150. GOOD selection used black and white portPblM. Dolby TV. FE 4- GB AUTOMATIC WASHEX~USBD GOOD WORKING REFRIGERATOR MS; Gat stove, *35. Washtr. *25. Hot water heater, *25. FE 5-274*. GOOD RUNNING A~U T 0 M A T I C “ Electric dryer, *30. ICA 21" COLORED TV, BXCEL- lant condtlon, >240. «5l-t*04._ RECORD PLAYER NEEDLES ANO CARTBIDgSs. *0 PER CENT IN STOCK. Johnson tv - fe mss* " E. WALTON NEAR BALDWIN wither. Sit. HOME FREEZER FRETTER'S WAREHOUSE OUTl¥t 1450 t. Telegraph ' FE 3-7051 iTEkiD COnIolE, AM - FM - FM »•*»"*»> law port* $1.1 •terao rim and phonograph. Wtl* 2,®VX?,2, Alum, sliding window *14/ wt, modem, 0200. PeTcti. xt!£! A!um- ,lld,n« window 022/ s-TVs—--------------—iTtfi *gx4'0" Alum. sliding window *3*.' Sweet's Pa-Mo 0. Appliance Inc ! D#ll2f Alum- combination door *21.1 For Sele Miscellaneous 67 LY5A1*^ OIL BURNER, 240-GAL- MAYTAG 1 LOANS TO $1,000 nmmm Credit II NECCHI AUTOMATIC '44 model In herdwtod consol-used. Zig-zag aqulpoad tor buttoi hoi**, hems, and fancy stitch* New payments of *5.21 monthly < *5241 cash. Now machine guarai tee and Nasons. Call credit mm agar, 3254213. Rlchman Bra*, tav Ing Cantor, this area's ONLY w thorlied NacctijDuator. Nocchi Deluxe Zig Zog SEWING MACHINE - AUTOMATIC CABINET MODEL Embroldara, blind hems, bi |— * INS modal. Taka to-TON PICK UP. ir BOAT. MIJ-callanaout Item*. *200. 232-1444. ■A — i tiAVE a Number of vary satisfied customers tor whom I HAVE INSTALLED THE NEW tobulous solid VINYL siding. Lock* Ilk* mtldl aiding, but no pblnt to scratch’ and much tougher. Call mo now to tt* this real llTt-tlm* aiding Installed or materials only. FHA rasN#j«rsr.5rbL 1-4*23 nation ca*h register, Storm window*, awnings, gutters I condition. Call lr.xlf' TIMBERS, 34' LONGTIO BUM RUGS S2.fS EACH Plastic Wall til* lc ea. '-Una HI* - wall paneling, cheap. 8 Tll«, FE 44*57. 1075 W^ Huron ' INTER-STATE TRAILER,-ELEC-trlc brakes, now tire*, needs repair, *200; 00400 BTU Brevity Lux-air* furnace, *75; 20 gal. gas hat water heater, 010. OR 3-3*90 aft. . _ —_____i balance. Universal Co., PE 44105, OFF-WHITE"CHEST ANb DRES- 7 N. Parry M. PE Still * to i dallv. Saf. * to 13 QUALITY USED FURNITURE. Speed Savllla, 25* Otmun Strati. Swap* RANGE, m SINK, n*. NEW AND used Mm. Michigan Appllanca Co., 1 WHIRLPOOL COMi(NATION washer and dryer, tar refrlgara-taTpp aik ~ , payments on 3- or Xraam bam* i EFSaf*- ww’h’ -M v 4MPwW‘ ■lull kiteb IVTDA 1 At. ReFRIOERATbR. *35. GAS ItOVE *35. Inquire at Till JardIM, Davis- RBPRIGIRATOR, *25. ORYER, *35. ,ra «wa. 1940 MERCURY, SELL *25* OR *175 l6t, 4* foot x no Foot near Casa Laka imyai *-*■- — FE 5-4755. Sok Clulhlaf FOOD - FOOD Fin* Muratton, 4day weak, bual-noas district W. of Pontiac. Ceunt-ar aorvlca Plus banquat facilities, attraetty* new buTktlng 40x40. Rant onto (100 par month. Total prla 04400. POTENTIAL UNLIMITED. NATIONAL BUSINESS * mw FURNISHlb IARSIR SHOP FOR rent or Km. Per Information. Coll 'SBwmmsm lot! ri304*Mt.' ciJnori W, 9K r —.jm iwR i natch. dre*M% good and It Ion. 325-2*2f oroCMV *Tofii-“AN6 -4-To3m •ar“* town northsart of Pontiac, no com-petltlan, lock, tern met barrel. (144M. . Terms. PAUL JONES ItALIY -*- PEMEto. __ "THYESTORS tosw availsM* a bom* aorvlca irafttotfitoJUK Camptot* Invoal-mant. Unlimited potential, axcal-hmTpreftto. Writo *r call - PH. DOWNUkN SUMMERS SALES CO. Ormd rle^Zmat. •000 MAN OR COUPLE OPPORTUNITY UNLIMITED NO SELLING HIGH PROFITS SMALL INVESTMENT A well artabUshad carporatton will ■ft up jrttjiwtomhla m Nil* area, n par cant ^return on your total wmMtAvmi Ladies ihl boy's is-ix uirl'i maVernitV u,k,;6yj,P ______Ponttoc P^Sox-r Sab HeaiEfcaM Goads 6S . 1 BIG PRICE SMASH Factory Closeouts BRAND NOW 3 ROOM OUTFITS Look What You Got fori $317.00 $2.88 WKLY. NO MONEY DOWN Leri* iaubto graaatr. (hut, bad, and tore* mirror, jawHYMR R®9| tnd mtftrMta S MMYrnil boudoir tempi in cbolct of cmn, • Imp wGtrmo nyiofi fnict Gtttcrion), z ||y|| StoU lamia U laantoba mL PHI fMIS________ living rewh rue. NtoiVxlt* kltdwn THIS l$ tHE Bar On cornar at cresting of hug four-WM highways. Aerea «T aavud • parking. 440fraquar*-loel building. Oroaalng mJlgJir toWto* Your* WY *45400 down. c NORTHERN BAR This bu*y b*r ind reotouranl not* S^MTnd*S?il taka your heme, bueln***, or real got at* in trada. 423400 down - mmr*' BRNO PM PEfll C MlUSINMlL TOP bll £6#ANY Needs Dealer- SARD/ * tmrte., i id klNMn Open ureri IROAIN EASEMENT NICE tPIBCB DINETTE, 414.95; SSKSffiES' tffOtoi' — mettraae, ^ 411* 'mtfSLX 3 ROOM $278 (Good) $2.50 Wsskly $378 (Battor) $3.00 Wnkly $478 (8#st) $4.00 V :kly walw tomne. IBWSlI)ROOM EArDAINS " (brand now) (MdreiMMi ^Tb'rl’Md'*ln^.rlR2 P'stJto «S " » trenor, 141. itimjf TV, 425-toharTtolvTwnrlc ■— Harris. Pfe 5-2744. Repossr: :?d Kirby VITH ALL ATTACHMENTS, ONE' yeaiToLo, CALL APTER 5. -4514424. ________ S«ptember Specials OR 11" aartabto TV, now . RCA Cotor IT TV, now 4349.00 RCA ~ Vkjjy^ffi spa I HOUSEKEEPING SHOP SINGER In lovaty walnut conL„.. ____ Zig-zag equipped for fancy towing, buttonnoto*, hams, otc. Ouarantatd. Paymants of UM monthly or 4*4.20 coon. Call cradlt manager. Rich. man Bros. Sawtog CantarT335^243. UNGER CONSOLE !SEWING MA- ^uffl'TkP^LIANCE ioPA AND" CHAIR, Gdob CONDI- Sinosr Diol-A-Matic ZID ZAO SBWINO MACHINE sttrm&p 054 gash • t*7 pgr, me. UnlygrMl Ce< PI*4WS. TV SET, ttS, RiPRiORRATOR, 135, 8uhfc*SSi, mSc/FES-PtoT imIAL *20 A MONTH BUYS 1 ROOMS OP PURNprukl - Conetot* of; t-ptoc* living room suite wNh 2 atop table*, 1 cocktail law# and t tabt* 7-pCS*’ badreem suit* with double drootor, cheat, full six* bad with ^^^•ath-TvU? sXTdbtoN. •to, 4 chroma chplra, formica tap tab)*, T bookan, ‘ (-Xir rug Included. All fir m. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. gfcMP Unc'aimtd Loy-Away Taka Ovar Payments Comp late hguatoWI to fwfhnuray pi and chair, t and tnbtoo. 1 eof-too tabto. 2 tabto Inmpa. 1 pel* lamp* 1 4x12 rug, f ifggo bad-rgam aiiNH, mirror, double drea-Mr. chgto, bgrtitili bad. S-ptoca %4UL m for Mr Hvbbnrd. w Wld* Purnlahlngi. USJD purHitui»: RBFRIOERA- ator, | dlnaito a«ta, many other Brer, I fhtoto itos, many ether llama, prpiTtor quick tala. 4441 . Cailiy LtoiaRggg. ______________ WVWaNPS Sssay*' «:S a. ni By Dick Turner £5* ____ GUITARS GUITAR* GUITARS }sr*» MORRIS MUSIC mwat^Magr^FE 24*47 HAMMOND ORGAN C-3, HAMMOND --‘ ra, percussion, axce"“‘ — *1,404. 5371 Coolsy ewefiMAkaTM top1 “Every time I trip over you it reminds me of that $75 desk you insisted I buy for your room!" IGB QUANTITY OP USBD IN-retrial porcelain 3-light fixtures. “ “ Id chain hoists. . H _ industrial, r1 Woodward. Pontiac. Pi 44441. PLYWOOD ~r Mahogany paneling g i xl' Mahogany panalbig * 3 'xi2' reef bairdi wp m.so K-gutter, galvantiad, l O' 4' glass alWtag to doors 2'0"x6'8" Mahogany doors 2'4"x4'*" Mahogany doors 4' plate glaaa sliding door, to" 4'to" plate glass sliding door Alum. Comb, pro-hung door Burmeister s tractors/ wrecker 25GOALLON PURL OIL TANK, call PE 4-7477, $1X70.__ AUTOMATIC SPACi HEATER, Oaod condttlon. PE 14171. ANCHOR FENCES trlcal supplies. 1 black and galva tings. Stnfry a Bottle Gas Installation n 100-pound t nt, *12. Ore* ........ Great Plain* Dm Co.. pi*4flfc CAR AIR-CONDlVlONING- comptoM apparatus o ------“V«•> ft Halt_ Pontiac 1 I__________ Ford. Bart .......... *25. 41*7 Brockhurrt, wailed Laka, oft Halstoad between CLEARANCE OP USED OFFICE —*— -ig machines, Forbes, Hwy. OR 24747. W* CARPETS A FRIOHT4 /WAKE -----------m m CASH AND CARRY MmmvwiHgi ... rm 4x7 Mahogany V-Grooved .. *2-4* Open MON. and PRI. Eva*, 'til I O'clock DRAYTON PLYWOQP 1 OR 24412 SILVER GREY DYED MUSKRAT I9AT, SIZE 1EL WORN SIX TIMES. COST SIM - SACRIFICE FOR 1111. . OR 24711 SALK, SOUTH Rd. 'Turn" right on --------- r. j yr - |0 j 0 SM4 Cornar to CLOSE-OUT ON ALL OUTDOOR RM ornaments, Llboral Bill's Out-part, 7244 01x1* Hwy., OR 34474. COMPLETE STOCK OP PlRI AND fittings. CUMfh threading, imma- 154 W. Mantotom, PE 54712. DINING TABLE, 4 CHAIRS, tortor doors and mlK. tor PE 44WB. 1ST CONVEYORS, ELECTRIC sawar ctoanarg, Homoilto f— atort, Ford trader. Century CDNE^S * PE 1-4442 DRAPTINO TABLES, 4500 DIXIE Hwy. Forbos Printing X Offlc* Suppllat, OR 24747._______ ELECTltlt STOVE, PULL SIZE, ENCYCLOPEDIA, IMS. COST SIM, mart Mcntlcg *44. 5424515._ EVEXGRlENS, WESTER ELUE CB-d*r, up to 4' fill, dug, ready to OO. 14. 7W-742X _________ For thl Finest in Top-Quality Merchandise jhop MONTGOMERY WARD PONTIAC MALL POR DUlfv CONCRETE FLOORS Floor Uggd|g|^_ bdaoMMislv* ______________ GARAGE DOORS Stool ona ntoca, sectional, wood and tlbargl**- Factory relacts in ____jarneg Ing. PrM aatlmatos. Barry Door Saloa Ca., me Cola street, —-nwntoMan. PB BWB er Ml 4 ■ OAI PURNACES, PlOOR MODELS to dlieount price*. Will inrtr" |a HatoinaT474-2411 or 4*14174. _ GAS WATER HEATERS, f44J*. G. oai W-.N.taU ‘ NOW P6k Dart deal. Call MA S-1001 ar MA FimraHKjga HAmIrty has iti Do-lt-youracH Rtdwood woven fence 4'x5f spettona with port, M.45 K.D./ l"x4" Panca area* RedwoMl itoc L. Ft./ Y'x4" Pence grad* Redwood II c L. FT. HAGGERTY LUMBER WEI NWMrty Hwy. MA Hto H66VERTwffEPE ^^fVPlWIfn JIM'S OUTLET 0Ecwr^^*bnr-*4 COLORED. IR- 71 «- SIZE VIOUN WITH CASE. 4 {ntofrSiraS^DfTMJO. _ I tor jfiW er^ best offer. Paul Flat ton*, classics, and else i------3=^, „ fygoe of g« NMwh| ly 79 S AKC STUD POODLES, 1 PLATI-mlnlrture, 1 Ms nlca. PE 490$. fe Tim AKC CHIHUAHUA PUPPIES. STUD SarvlM. tMATOOtyt. I2S4IW. adoraelA pbopte puppy, sil- pamret, shots, sin. grand slid to nimft top toy dmk Sire at stud: SILVER SEQUEL K SAX SAP RAS, to", SIM or HlSar er-*“ •I'js'iafoisf’ass.""1 AKt MI-C-. .OOOLE standard, 440 up, MY 2-4472. AKC POODLE PUPPIES. MALE. ’ou have to I** to believe It. | ■rlcad at only *599. Comparable > piano* eoaHng much more “1 counted. Sava many dollar*. GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. I E. Huron FE 445*4 BUY NOW ANO »AVt___^ : malT pSbbLirAPRlcbf. » weeks oid. 33XS113. AKC BEAGLE. 3to MONTH*. PLAYER PIANOS All electric, no pumping, ful tomatlc at only B49 to MORRIS MUSIC 24 S. Telegraph Rd. Nw ipilfiiwl 17 HONEY TM4K, rraiNLB** STEEL* Chinary Co. Ortonvlll*. NA 74242. 425-2391.____________________ 945 14' TRAVEL TRAILED 1 NTS. 474-152*. AKC BEAGLE* SCHOOL DAYS Organ — Sohmtr plana i Conn Nm ju»gg| LEW BETTERLY MUSIC CO. | (Across from B'him Theater) ' Fret ' Pprktog | AKC POODLE. 14 MONTHS, SIL-i vor male, houiabrokan, 472-1777. | , BASSETT HOUND PUPPlil, AKc' . raglstored, 7 weeks old. SSS and I *40 each. 959* Dartmouth, oft! 1 Whipple Lake Rd.. Clarkaton. 'BLACK POOOLI POR USE AS I Stud. Champion blood. PE >44(4. I HiJTAi*/ *K?. MS ANb 1966 20* and 23' FAN , gas electric retrigarator, / CANINE COUNTRY CLUB Profess local care. 525 E. S. Beuto- INOS C < r non 1 MODELS AND OTHER TRADE I NS Jack Hagan Music Cinter Clean, comfort. sow, convoniam, bathl Ing, boarding. Pickup ■ * to 4 dally. *524740. _ DOBERMAN PUPPIES. AKC 4M-1W4 DOG HOUSES, INSULATED. ALL sins. 74* Orchard Laka Avg, FREE, FLUFFY KITTENS GRINNELL'S (Downtrwnl 7 8. Saginaw FE 3-714« USED PIANOS CHOOSE PROM SPINET! CON SOLES, UPRIGHTS, G R A N C i AND REBUILT PIANOS. UPRIOHT* PRICED FROM $49 GRINNELL'S (Downtown) 27 S. Saginaw_______FE 3-7141 USED SMALL APARTMENT Pl- PEDIOREED MALE POO-die puppies, paper white. Six waakl old. AKC registered. Call MA S-1517. / awning to protect window when traveling, er to keep trailer cooil NbW ON DISPLAY Holly Travel Coach, Inc. mo Holly Rd. Holly MB 441V1 -Open Pally and Sundays— AIRSTREAM LIGHTWEIGHT TRAVEL TRAILERS. Sine* 1433. Guarentood tor llto. “ them and got a damonstro-at Warner Traitor Sotos, 30** " ran (plan to lain on* of ByanYe exciting caravan*). AMERICA'S LARGEST i SELLING CAMPING TRAILERS NIMROD NOW ON DISPLAY IMMEDIATE DELIVERY CRUISE OUT, INC. E. Walton Blvd. , PE S-44M Qpgn Pialty M NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY At Gallagher's-! 8 E. Huron Open Mon.-Frl. HI * p.m. FB 44564 UPRIGHT PIANO, *40; RficSROL POODLE CLIPPING AND GROOM *25, 473-3544. PWfBREb SIAMtESl' Kl-meto end tomato. *1B a*. 3 BOOTH CAMPER ..Jium covers and camps re for _pOR,fcm ‘•*P#r^' WtHr-CAmper, PicK^iA AND 66At, many axtraa, PE 44273, call attar 5 tiring, all agre tor ■rkaten Rd.,l.aka O REGISTERED MALE COLLIE, *50. restyled pli Si Baby Grar organ, llto. Ci ONE OF THE BEST BASEBOARD dotla In town. Hof water board, heat with enclosure damper, *1.35 par ft. Q. A. T PLUMBING BARGAINS. Standing toftot, *14,45. „ _____ heater. *47.45; Xptoc* bath arts IBN. Laundry tray, trim, *14.45/ shower stalls with trim 1*4.45; 7-to>wl __«WL *2.45/ Cmk. *2.45; tubs, *10 and up. Mm . art and threaded. SAVE PLUMB!"1" " *41 Baldwin. PE 4-tilA TABLES, NEW, USED, A lilt, Brunswick only *250 n REMODELING SALE: I sador overhead garaga r. National radiator bo tub. Call Ml 4-324* or 6S2- RUMMAGE SALE, 1*01 OAKLEY ■Kirk Rd. by Wtltod Laka (apt- IX 1i II. 4 to I. All of Intorarttoa thing* to through, plus toy* and baby tore. MA 4-43to er OR 34424. SPRED-SATIN PAINTS. WARWICK »«^ly. 2*71 Orchard Laka. 4*2- ' 4-*h*lf Tyler b *’ Island and, Athalf dairy com. lust plug it In, a good specialty display, 4- McCray Open self-con-talnad automatic datrest, frozen food or ic* cream case, barbecue machines, globe mart rtkori S' 4" mechanical built check cut. Huff Rgfrtgtratlen Ce., M4-5445. RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT, NICE Mtojjr ■rra. _________________ Sporting Goods JHIlklM RCA 21" TV, MAHOGANY CABINET ALONE WOETH MORE THAN AtKINO PRICE OF *2S. TV NOT WORKING BUT CAN BE RENAMED OR USI CABINET FOR STORAGE, AQUARIUM OR LIQUOR CABINET. CALL APTER * P.M. OR 2-1942. SUPER BLACK HAWKE 44 ---- S In. barrel rtag.gr old. *1*0. OL 1-303. ______DtOWiRS, COMPLETE with faucets and curtains, *44.5* value *24J*. Lavatortoa, com- plete with faueats, *14.45/ taltot*, s“" —Fluorescent.—36 stMKl building*, shur UtiTT- ty hous* ...... *109.31 WxT utility haul* .......... *219.90 THE SALVATiGN ARMY RED SHIELD STORE III W. LAWRENCE ST. EvanrthlM to mart your needs doming. Furniture, Appliances USED GAS AND OIL FURNACES. Chandler HCIIng. OR 3-5422. WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS AT WOOD STORM WINDOWS 11.0* each. Phen* OR xmi. WANTED. USEO^aSMENT BLOCKS Toaoog btu Tharmortrt, plpg* and dud tar 4-room houu. Bought INI ter 15*0. all cement* tar gw*. 444-2047, Caimros • Sgrvict PRE-INVENTORY CLEARANCE Bargains to new cameras: Rxakta VX-Tl B irtth Pancolor auto. F2 and cat*, fl74.lt. Volghtlandar mafic with Skoear 2.1 anc $129.45, Praktlca PX4 wltt Wastanar 3.1 and mm, *44.45 Ic* Lynx MOO with 1.4 mid cat*, *41.44, Exa. with Morltar 2,4 and Casa, 434.45, rttwrs Item *24.50. Portabto transistor tap* regardora from *12.11. Autemrtic i MM movie cameras tar »».*5. Sato tort* on* weak wily canto party, many Item* on* *f g kind. Mee * pood ■> Mmara*. Bloomllald Miracle Mlto, PE »■ 71 1 BEAUTIFUL RESTYLED UP CONN CLARINET, LIKl NBW. : PE Mil* • CONN ELE'dtbifctabAB 6MoaH/ #6Lk guitar/ atoc. matrenoma (timer) tor muwc rtudint*/ translator tog* re- 1 SPRINGER SPANIEL PUPS, AKC. 4 wfcs. Champ, alack. 7*04172. SPRINGER SPANIEL. 14 MO. OLD. 1 OL 6-2209. GUITAR LESSONS DRUM LESSONS Pontiac Percussion Center John and rtltabaHi Laka Rd 335-1130 OffiMj^jpaMEt 72 ELECTRIC POLDER, *135. ELEC-talc mlmaogreph, *125. Mtr "■ »P*c* hantar, *20. fe MOO. 73 74 BOWS, ARROWS, SUPPUBS Gang's Archery, 714 W. Huron USKEMO SPAULDINGS, BAQ BOY Cart, alligator bag. Til-ton. TOY PObDlE, JET BLACK AT tlud. Color brad, champlonahlp line. Puppies occasionally. 424-0473, 30342 Was! 12 Mila. Farming- TOY TERRIER. MOTHER AND pups. Waanad. MY 2-1144. YOUNG ENGLISH BULL DOG, ahdw winner. PB 4-2744. > TbmBm finrto 7M Dr„ Welled Lake. MA 4-27*5, Auction Salas EVERY FRIDAY EvIry SUNDAY ' .. 2:00 PJA W* Buy—Sell—Trad*. Retail 7 C Constonmpnta Walcoma EXE AUCTION ^ 0*4 Dixie Hwy-________OR 3-2717 ^iha1 OPEN DAILY 9 to 9 Consignments accepted, w* flnam HALL'S AUCTION SALES CLOSE-GUT special Silver Buffalos, todudlng etova. sink, legfiox, dlnatta, oversized tires, apart tire, bottle gas, and heater, 4425. Evans Equipment Salas A Service, 45*7 Dixie High-way, CtorfcatonTPh-WTU' OUNS - KUY - SELL • TRADE Burr-Shell, 375 S. Talagreph Guns—Guns-Guns —Try them before you buy— WE 00jSLOUROWN Scon* Mounting.- Gun Smithing RIFLE RANOE-TRAPPIKLO opon to the Public CLIFF DREYER'S Gun and Span Canter 15210 Holly ML Holly FOR SALE CHEAP, 30,MO YDS. OP pur* pant, dry but unscraenad; alto guawffiy at topsoil avallabl*. u-Haul, Will Charles Purvis, 43444*1, Holly. Mich, attar 4 p!m. GOOD RiCH claV l6am top--r 7 yards ill. Dallvtrad. PI .APPLES, GRAPES, PEARS, 1 ban Orchard, 41* E. Walton, 1 E. of Jotlyn. Ne tun. Mias. PONTIAC LAKE BUILDlfii SUP-ply. Sand, gravel, nil dirt. OR SAND HILL FOR SALE, 5-YEAR leas*. Possibly 100,00# yds. 4X300 cash. 24*3 Judah Rd. SAND GRAVEL, FILL * ” soil delivered. *52-2544. ROTTED COW MANURE. Aied straw. Carl Debit and ton Rtf., Rochaator, WudCtil jt>l»hiT 77 .ALL SIZES. DELIV- WQOO. ALL SI] ___jaerK. ffiPiSBl. TAKINb ORblRt FOR BIRCH SEE FOR YOURSELF! LITTLE COST, BIG RESULTS WITH PRESS WANT ADSI SATURDAY, SEPTBMBBR 1* AT pjhv dandy Mg Ml* at Oxterd Community Auction. 470-2522._ SILVER STAR FURNITURE AN-TIQUE AUCTION, SAT* SEPT. IX U NOON. (INDOORS) COLLEC- TORS ANTIQUES: Clocks; lamps; reckorsi bads; dressers; chests; tahlaaf haUWaae, tek,. Wnu. Pasvton allvari copper; ptasi fireplace equipment; abInning wheel. 5400 GREEN RD. (2 ML W. PARtHALLVILLE) 517-5444I4I4. Plants-Trtgs-Shrubt 81-A S. UPRIGHTS, ____ Dixie Hwy. at Maybe* Rd. Khdn» 4!S-5«*4.___________________ grand chanutl . - 4-3710 attar 5. ________ MARE AND 2-YEAR-OLb WALK- BOB 4 BILL'S PRODUCE SPECIALS CANNING and FREEZING PEACHES, $2.99 BU. ALL ONE PRICE. NEW MICH. POTATOES 50 LB., $1.89 Apples pack basket, 44c/ ton to**, ll.f* pack; hem* grown a 44c a dozen. Wonder bread 5 L 4*ci 3 Mi-gal. cartons milk, 44c; squash, 2 tor 2Sci oranges, | da. *1.24. bob and Bill's Product, 74M Highland Rd., 1 ml. wart’ el Air port Rd., tfppaalto Ml* Plaza._ Italian plums, prars and ap- Ptas. nn Drttohdal*. Oft Auburn. Your McCulloch Chain Saw Dlrtrlbu- KINO BROS. MM%-to.R-.*ap-y»^ APACHE CAMP TRAILERS All modal* el new 1*45 camp trail* are on display. A tow factory demonstrators and uaad trailers ail at dose-0ut Streamline for 1965 24', 26' Models NOW ON DISPLAY -The Twin Bad Modela-—Luxury—Quality— Holly Travel Coach Inc. 15210 Holly Ed., Holly ME 4-4771 —Opon Dally and $u~~*— ELLSWORTH AUTO 8. TRAILER SALES Open Sundays at 1 p.m. See th* all ntw Avaltors, Barths, FOR RENT. irtot t*ft. campers e ------pickups. Slot weak an IcStT REnTaL SERVICE 1i3w ON DISPLAY SCAMPER Now I* the time to rewrvt a •m/lor tar »• huMtog season or i toll vacaNtn. JACOBSON TRAILER SALIS X RENTALS 544* Williams Lake Rd. OR 3-54*1_______ PIONEER CAMPER SALES Fkkyp campers by Trevrt Quean Ovarland. Ohranca, Concern treii art, Merit fiberglass truck 334* W. Huron, Fe 2-34*4. PICK UP CAMPfR* r 15 dlftarant modalt to cbooie i. all imw 1*45 modal} at M«rt prices. *1*4 to- mm. Playmate JOHNSON'S of 76&wwfton 4-isn. WE NED CARS! sgsmsb Matthows-Hargroavos OI OAKLAND AVENUE Pi , WE NEED 1965 TEMPESTS AM make* and modal* Avorill Auto Solos 2020 Dixi* Highway EE mis ~ n 'mm S' LAPSTRAKE WITH CONVERTI-bto tap, traitor, Mljn MUM that has teen completely ew*r- s water skiing, fishing or cruMn Priced to A. $415 «r Mat otfi Coll 474054, oftar 4 pjn. 14' CHRIS CRAFT INBOARD. OH HBf ”s aassfisi »n.___________ 1*54 INDIAN rX4S', 1 BEDROOMS. i*S7 Century i STEWART MOBILE HOWE, mi RICHARDSON MONTCLAIR, we. condition, SI'xir. Hoi 3 bedroom*, carpeted living i---- la camp lately tarn. SW 330-3065 anyttna. I CHAMPION 1(7x55'. BIG JOBS Marlottos Stewarts Belvedere Gardners-2-Story LITTLE JOBS Winnebago and • Yellowstone Travel Units USED JOBS ALL Sim Oxford Traitor Sales OBM W Claeod Sun. 1 Milt S. Ol Lake Orion on MJ4 ________MYM711________ UJ°^'.^TFR'|JRAILER' *,m 34-FOOT DAY CRUISER, 04 NOR. bart anftaa and aaHa j to 1 r* auction near, Mad, SI ,7*5 ddHyra H —y lafc* In Oakland County. 1*64 STEURY tof FIBEROLAS RUN-ahaH*. 4t horM Evtnr ' — SI ,400. 615-1534. 1965 REVfcl CRAFT CASS LAKE MARINE BOAT SAFETY CLASSES U. S. Naval Ratarva Cantor, E. Blvd. S., 7 p.m. Thurs* Si K * weeki. u.S. Caul Go Auxiliary. BIG! BIG! SAVINGS! UP TO 30% OFF ON 1965 MODELS NOW IN STOCK! PONTIAC'S ONLY MERCURY MERCRUISER DEALER FOX SNOWMOBILES NIMROD CAMP TRAILERS Marina and Sporting Good* / CRUISE OUT, INC. / _ ---- - y f-t FE Q46M WE BUY Late Model Cars TOP PRICES CASH WAITING Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 Mow and IwdTradM lBBjHZZY marmot w-ton panel, rlui 104 Bjr ty4a OMmu Junh Cen-Tracb 191-A CARS - TRUCKS ALWAYS BUYING JUNK CARS-FREE TOWS TOP SSS—CALL FE Hid SAM aOEN t SONsTlNC. Pood Auto-Tracfc Pom 1B2 GOOD 1*51 DODGE TRUCK MOTOR Now mil On4 Tracks 103 BRUMMETT AGENCY 1*64 MARLETTE. IX FOOT ) HURRY! Tin manay you aava will ka your wan. DETROITERS Supar Savina* 5pm now at Bob HutchlniorV YES* w« h§vt low dn.pymt*. YES, wt htvt flnBMMB up to YEsTtehiava Wi or Madrm jmsEkc =®fjSS«S m atway* en|oy tte ult •My. comfort ad n _,jm1I MVt hundred* i EJm/wtSTs L 2 new 1*66 model*. II wldo. Porkhurst Trailer Soles FINEST IN MOBILE LIVING II I Buddy ate*l5nmii».M** **"" * Located halt way batman Orton an Oxford on MM. *» *»- Country Cousin, 4 PINTER'S 137V Opdyka Open Tut*. Thun. Ill < (1-75 at Oakland Uidvenlty Exit) OPEN 7 DAYS—9 to 9 BEE THE NEW 1*44 MODELS on tte loot financing FREE DELIVERY-FREE SET-UP WE GUARANTEE A PARKING SPwGL Large nlicflm of IT wide*. HOLLY PARK, CHAMPION PARK WOOD AND PARK RSTATRI Law eyartaad — aave real manay MIDLAND TRAILER SALES BB7 Dixie my. 336-0777 one black north at Telegraph harringkhT boat"w3rks ■r Evlnruda Dl agraph Rd. Myktoppad, gat. Used TruckTires All Sins 1*44 ALL STATE, 140. CALL AFTER MB4 MARLEY-DAVISON NO. 74, Cuahman-Eagta. 6XS-X733. t*44 YAMAHA SCRAMBLER, 1*41 CB MO HONDA. mens. IBM. ______ ins moNba (oumAlir, UN ndba, Sill. 4SS4I7S BWor 4. 1*41 TRIUMPH BONNEVILLE 1*44 HARLEY DAVIDSON SPRINT, RMS. UL BUSS. BSA mi SPITFlii, 4S0 CC LIKE • S A—NORTON—DUCATI SALES A SERVICE MB f. Pin FE 44L. HONDA SSI C.C, S MONTHS OLD, Ml Hfll TTwcySET" YAMAHA Tap beaten* la aarva ray. mm fflnUB? *n4 7613 Highland BIMPLIX SPORTSMAN, FON SUZUKI I^^RANTY. IHRSTBA UL UMi You Meet Ibo Nicest People HONDA WOOD'S LARGEST CLEARANCE SALE, M par cent an all Jeknmrn* and boats. TONY'S MARINE Keego Hqrbor I'' TWIN SCREW, w*00 or trad* for r anything of equal /Lawnbay m TEN’S MARIN / aosE-oirr sale OF 1965s LONE, stars-glasstons and MEG BOATS 'M Mwrcury Outboards •r# on dbpiiy now Cliff Drayor Gun and Sparta Cantor SI* Holly Rd* Hody Ml 44771 -Opt Dally and Sunday*— “ CORRECT CRAFT Flbergiat Inboard tp**dt"»H priced from *2.0*5 Sat and thee* quality Ip11 It DON'T TAKE CHANCES Wo Don't! Inside—STORAGE—Outside FIBERGUS SPECIALISTS HARO TO PINO, BUT EASY TO aasH SALES AT TIPI MAIn *-X17*. OWENS CRUISERS Models on Disploy 24' to 42' TRADE NOW PALL DISCOUNTS WAIT MAZUREK'S LAKE & SEA MARINA Woodward a* S. Blvd. P» 645n m WEST MONTCALM (OM block E. of Oakland) 196$ Model Truck Close-Out $ove $400 to $500 on All Remaining Ranchoros-Econo-Vans A*k for Truck Dapt. (One btocfc 1. of Oakland A 16-TON, NEEDS CAM, 1»SX CHEVY' PANEL MeCHANI. caMy^jood, body * T- ------ ----- 1*16 FORD 1M TON DUMP, FLAT *—* canwartawiili fir —■------- ■ Ml 47BS4, aftor S. Orchard Laka Read. 1*51 CHEVY 1M1 CHEVY CORVAIR CAMPER, BOB BORST LINCOLN-MERCURY 1*43 GMC to-TON PICKUP. EXCEL-‘wit running condition, naw Premium fes •• ......si,0*5 Autobahn Motors, Inc. AUTHORIZED VW DEALER 1744 I. Tttograph8* **’’*”** haotar, ”on"ly' wStjEIIOMEI FERGUSON Inc. Rochwlar FORD Dealer. OL Iffll.___________ 1*63 FORD F-100 Wt6N LONG box pickup, Vd andkn, standard tranimlwlon, extra clean, tl Mi. 1*44 PICKUP, EXCELLENT CON-dltton, low mteaga. call night*. FE S-0214.____ 1*46 CHEVY W-TON. FERGUS... __ Paator. OL V*711. Mil FORD 1966 GMC WRntod Cart-Tracks BUYING SHARP CARS IUD MANSFIELD USED CAna It Baldwin, S Macke NT of Walton California Buytrs VILLAGE RAMBLER a mart tar ANY make wad ,'Ca|B tar AfBrahal. HELP! taKto* mm markaiT Tag dollar said MANSFIELD AUTO SALES Nt PI M025 ■^RBORias-------------------- Id for l*S*-1*63 GLENN'S n r box, Inatar, dafrtafara, wa*ter*. $1810 GMC FACTORY BRANCI . »••• and Uiad Trud •74M ___67! Used Trucks From Spartan's 1957 GMC DUMP AUTO INSURANCE TOMS AVAILABLE STOP IN leMV Anderson & Associates FE 4-3535 . 1044 -Joslyn’ FerelfR Cars 105 W^VW^^RTIBLI, REASON- SgKbSrjimn* 1*61 SUNBEAM ROADSTER WITH RAO IQ AND HEAT- CALL °CR^W MGR. Mr. lV62 'TRIUMPH M wm* radto and Inatar an VO aRinat Hka naw, a ra aaertoman dream. B4f or old ca. 4own. payment* af mil par HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC 4S4 S. WOODWARD AVI. hr— Mi 4~~ BWItokBCteTItlnBA BIRMINGHAM “Boys, phoopy! BOTH the downs I dated for last Friday ni^it stood me up!” Sim FE 5-6762. 1*61 TRIUMPH Tfc-41 RED, NEW ■ ex, wmicvvncL TIRES, „.. MILEAGE, no MONEY DOWN. ASSUME CAR PAYMENTS OF S32.I7 PER (MONTH VILLAGE RAMBLER, 646 S. WOODWARD AlOu BIRMINO-HAM, Ml 43PSB. Now gad IhiV Cara. 1B6 Specials Autobahn 1IW TR3 . 1757 AwfNl I 1*60 TR3, re -KO, m 1*64 MODELS IN STOCK Sato* Service and Part* tar lumph, MG, Auatln Hatley, It beam. Jaguar, Fiat, Moqian Grimaldi Imported Cor Co. Volkswagen Center 1N3 Plymouth Moor. Slick beautiful metallic dark bki ML Fine tramportatton . 1*45 Ctavrota* Impale ^ Super : ulmactaraf mltoe T!- Autobahn Motors, Inc. AUTHORIZED VW OEALBR V> mil* north of Mlrscla Mila 1745 S. Totograph Rd. FE 1-6531 wsw aad Uiod Can lot 1959 BUICK No Money Down We Finance FULL PRICE $397 Tel-A-Huron AUTO SALES 60 S. Telegraph FE 8-9661 1964 BUICK Wildcat 1-door hardtop. Gold . Mi, Sarny power, needs a good home. Priced to eell a* 52.306. Sao or caH Norm Danielian af— FISCHER BUICK SS6 S. Woodward to- $7 D0WN-$7 WEEKLY INS Bukk LeSabra Sedan with a* or Mooring, power braka*, a otter* la maragtom. w STATE WIDE AUTO I Mock oaot af Caaa Late Rd. REFOSSiSSlOIV-INt BUICK CO** !SStO*fr-l*6l B , no money doe _______weakly. Cafl k- Pi MW. McAuHfto. 1*42 BUICK SPECIAL CON-VERTliLt. HAS STICK SHIFT TRANSMISSION, R A-DK> Ain HEATER, WHITE-WALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, aotuma ? CALL CReStV? FISCHER BUICK good rut lift In th__ 1595 Flrtl Price 1964 CHEVY Hondi-Von 1964 FORD Vk-Ton •StyHilda body wtlh tte S-ft, comgtota lactory ^quipped i Full Price 1954 FORD 1 -Ton ixpran lu«t watting la make n * m $295 iffOUICK SKYLARK COUI •rmkw whtta, bkn trm, vliiyl tog, VI, automafic,___ •tearing, braka*. window* mmfisr lory Mr cewimanlnB. Jggm aim new. SIMS. PATTERSON CHEV- Repossession INI BUICK Invkta hardtop, kM rele.ted for pvblk tala. No I needed I CifsbfUl bank cradtt wttfc minimum raqylramanN. CM Mr. Ca»h at 330-6184 Spartan. 1963 BUICK FISCHER BUICK Spartan Dodge iwEiarr . fcA SABRE i ♦dear hardtop, doukto pawer, caltont condition. uM. ' VAN CAMP CHEVY MILFORD MU 4 HAROLD TURNER mm, inc FISCHER BUICK , FISCHER BUICK 0 Henry CBy &JGT'1 Repossession Ssraurt>w- ♦DdOR, WHITE, imrr- e,,a*5. FE 4-*SS7. $9 bOWN $9 WEEKLY tfraa, e ■State wde AUTO ____jiBimr Mil Marcury, JtTt. sav. z&jtrzffn Now oad Uiod Con 106 MUSTP See and ukivc. PAYMENTS OF 57S.M PER MONTH AFTER SMALL DOWN PAYMENT OR OLD CAR. SANK RATES. SEE CHUCK FLOOD WILSON $8 DOWN-58 WEEKLY 1M Ctewj^jmpM^XHoor Hard-; tapfinancing arrar Itate WIDE AUTO MSI EUxabath Lake Read 1 buck mat af Caaa Lake Rd. pajwnger, radto and heatar, automatic ATS, beautiful vMom finish, u*wn, ss.1l air waak.. Call Mr. Braum. ESTATE STORAGE 1* S. Eaaf Blvd. 131-7141 corvair^mOnza, ^i*6i. 1IHB6, 1961 CHEVY Bol Air ♦door wMh V-s malm, radto, teator.^whltawallt, color af blue. 1963 TEMPEST 4-Door wtth automatic tranemlaslon, h •r.^radlo and wMtowaD*. 0 Crissman Chevrolet ROCH&E^^TteTXI LOOK LUCKY AUTO ms W. Wide Track PE ♦2X14 , ar FE HG INI IMPAL^COUPE. LIkO NEW. NEED CREDIT? n bankrupt, or had cred . •t t can flnanca you and glvt • delivery. CaH Mr. FE B4071 Capitol Auto 1964 CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE WITH AIR CONDITIONING, 4 - WAV MATS AND WINDOWS, FACTORY EXECUTIVE'S CAR. ALMOST LIKE NOW AND WITH NEW CAR WAR- $244 DOWN RANK RATES SEE CHUCK PbOOO WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC NEED A CAR? Hava you taan denied tte privilege of buytng an MNMi recently became af credit grobtomr* it you have a (toadyJab and eon money w* will deUwr on Ite me we da our awn flnanbtg: CaH M Dan af * FE 8-4071 Capitol Auto Juaf Baal af Oaktond-Ava. 312 W. MONTCALM 1964 CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLR. AIR CONDITIONING, POWER SEATS ANO WINDOWS, NEW CAR WARRANTY, BANK RATES. $239 DOWN SMALL MONTHLY PAYMENTS SEE 'CHUCK FLOOD WILSON ONE OF THE BETTER BUYS AT LLOYD'S 1965 CADILLAC ** $5100 Lloyd Motors 12S0 OAKLAND 333-7863 gay BaSoaIn1 AUTO. SMI W. nimM mM&JSBPStt wsreoavim Lit wii-tiAd- tton, 4-agaad. UL dar engine, Nix , Nan, radto and! kWRTHWOgO AUTO WITM 4-CYLlN-“■—1 frawmle-’, full price WSfCHEyV $4 DOWN-54 WEEKLY teeter, unttHMlmgli, a reel **_car, fjjTprtW dnfr OM. cradtt nt prabten, (mmadfa* imry, ln*i»if ail financing ei STATE WIDE AUTO >1 CNRVY 1961 CHEVROir SEDAN No Money Down Wo Finance FULL PRICE $597 Tel-A-Huron AUTO SALES 60 S. Telegraph FE 8-9661 1*62 CHEVY 4-OOOR, AUTOMATIC, ------------WiTH I yeed, power wln- dow*. 2 toga. Car In tupar-flna 1*62 CHEVY WAGON, 4-PASSEN-—r, 4«yl* radio teatar. Ote am* — Ml—mead to Mil at (E-FERGUSON Inc. ---------------------r. OL 1-*711. ar, lew mHaaga, g $1,150. JEROME-F Rocteator FORD O CHEVROLETS 195* CHEVROirS apj^fr.-fc^s.is 1959 onvuours BN Air ♦dear eeden*, tie* and automatic tranimliaton*. i I cylMar*. Priced from *395. 1961 CHEVROLETS Bhcayna detaar tad an. Whtta fin-gvfcytaidw' with an guaidrlyi. 1962 CHEVROLETS ms. loor ;lffi 1962 NOVA swajShiS^S FISCHER BUICK 1962 FlIETWOOO FACTORY AIR CONQITION- MUST DRlVf' ClATE. , v $186 DOWN SMALL MONTHLY PAYMENTS MB CHyCK FLOOD WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC 1 klarir touth of 14 MNe Ml 4-1BM "MONZA STYLING" at "S0«" price* In R 1*62 CORVAIR coupe. finish, wtth Full factory ' NOW OPEN Spartan Dodge 1962 Chevy Bol Air Wagon 6-POMengar, whtta flnlNi, radio, teatar, FowargHdi tranarmuion — Only — $1295 BEATTIE ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD OR 3-1291 1*62 IMPALA tOapR HARDTOP. "ift sur- J 4-Speed va a tparkilng 1*4) CHEVY i 2-door terdtag, wtth tte \3grat?whl” ^ nt* of inly - $12.87 Spartan Dodge LOOK LUCKY AUTO whit# fintab v-a. StMS, tCw*5G' 1963 CHEVROLETS Imgala aupar (port canugrttMi, imgala Mart coup*, saddl y-(L Pawargllda. extra die a*t.*sLra as.“» conditioning. Immaculats. SIMS. 1964 CHEVROLETS vT%J5^2^a2rrt,2Ltt2' P08f8r BIDfflna. ms M.* 1965 CHEVROLETS towato wiuaiflhto. Sierra win tteSihlntt trim add top, w-^ra-’sr: WIN ltra»7tt**»r »jrutnjnj'3a Ite and atay*SE!ft.' '*** *‘"r' C0RVAIRS - iS^ftttdfSftrWT1 H65 Mon« convert tote, Storre ten, CHEVY II fp«l RSPPfi ■ OP ^ wMlawjCwjfc. JTU PATTERSON ^ CHEVROLET 1*41 CHEVROLET 4DOOR SEDAN WITH AN EC(5f4-OMV f Nome. AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, lUfS . and HjMTEfe, immrwMx TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Stauma gay-manta af 07.0 gar manth. CALL CREPit mmi. iii. ^o.iHSjr?5RM” Hes 6WVV mkik. P 6 WI New Mi UwfCenjfiU « vLas***-4 tdw yne urm BUYS AT LLOYD'S 1965 CORVAIR Coup*, tetamaltc tranwnlnion, ShSl&rSSiiE POH price $1995 Lloyd Motors 1250 0AKUND 383-7863 eV liiiiiilCmi cnOVilIA at tffuT&arijnr PATTERSON' ROCHESTER Chryslor-Plymouth Imperial-Valiant ’iLBTOTSESat sms: I Prestige" an toy in tab 1*44 EunnSyf SK3 $14.97 Spartan Dodge iUHhdSS NICE CONDITION, A OOOO OR I VCR, S1»5. VILLAGE RAMBLER, 664 S. W O 0 0, WARD AVtv EIEMINOHAEC KSj o MATIC TRANSMIT OOOD TRANSPORTATION -•litt. 444 IILWTOOW*ARD AVE- BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4- KESSLER'S 1964 MONZA tar wtth wtamiHc i i*. PUN pries into fl, Norm Dantaben at— FISCHER BUICK 1*64 OfEVftOLET wtth V-4 angina. MU, power, wMtowatt Strata $41 •r (fd car damb payment* af 414.72 paTwtttL HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC ’♦TMS ONE OF THE BETTER BUYS AT LLOYD'S 1964 CHIVY impEls.Mwr terdtod. v* tfandard SCTtaBfcr, $1995 Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKUND 333-7863 Repossession I RSnSiEVf 855 OekleiMi Ave. (Outdoor Stew mam) (Juaf to mil* north af caaa At.... Spartan Dodge Repossession to?182?gjn, hm £2? &trim1m SL&. arts •63 DOOoi DA* t OT, «Woa&n 1*66 DOOOI, m T6*eUI4ll9|. B lOok ipw LUCKY AUr tHAM* SUfcsPS BOB BORST ».. •tab radto and teatar, aawar jgg'Pta-gmdr. ax- ffffrarSta *9. NORTHt^bAyTO SALES INFroji»£taTiniE—mi IMTSa,!-; f*an*l»i» arrangg... STATE WIDE AUTG MyUBgFWiSB R«y>80W. .JBROMB-FERGUSON i-*m FORD Otitor. OL 1962 FORD Attention! 1 FE 3-7863 LLOYDS rap QofcUnd Avo. SSE HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC 4M S. WOODWARD AVI. Ml NO HAM Ml * INI FORD GAL fill FOMT, • I owner, CREDIT USED 1965 MUSTANGS six^^Hr. As Low As $59 Down and $59 Por Week HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC 1962 Falcon Future 2-Door gS VHP* l»t mrim..^ frcfcat yate. $995 ' BEATTIE ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD "Yyr rowo PEAUie Since- "^•'oiTBST . Kwsff Cm jArTMticpity N S) , 4IB1. McAuMfta"______________ ONE OF THE BETTER BUYS AT LLOYD'S ,-1968 T-BIRD • Hsrdtap. Automatic transmission, • - radio, neater, whitewalls. $57 DOWN , Up to 36 Months to Pay ' Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 1963 Ford Galayli 500 Hardtop BdMr with Mis SB VS angina, $1695 BEATTIE IMF 'tdrsur Convertible Mm* emu, rad mtvrtoi $1897' IMF New and ieod Caw 186 IMF 1964 T-BIRP Convertible S$lSp2 $2985 ’ h«rdtopr no monwy down, payments g Maion No MgMySwn, SlijM weekly! Me Transportation 'v PrleooPBfel. ||«V H 1*31 EUICK li»7 11.04 Hf PLYMOUTH ..1)47 11.50 IfN CHEW .....*1*7 01.04 HM FORD ...JBt fi.00 1*6 CORVAIR ...Mf7 17.12 HW PONTIAC ....Br S4.N IM7 CADILLAC ..S 17 11.01 1*43 CHIVY WAOON ... »4f7 04.00 iSy Ml CORVAIR ......n Down w NO MONEY DOWN CALL MG. Han AT! ft 84071 1941 PONTIAC STARCHIEF HARD-W MMw ip&JeEk hr-* *NORT tlwOOyTuTo'sA L E S 1961 PONTIAC CATALINA . No Monqy Down We Finance FULL PRICE $897 Tel-A-Huron AUTO SALES 60 S. Telegraph FE.8-9661 . 1961 TEMPEST 4-D06r, LOW MILE-»g«, malt soe V spp^ ““ O^' VISTA CRUISER V - Vino and'brakes, loan'-* oktraa. onK fb wis. 1945 OLDS 441 HOLIDAY COUPE, 1943 VALIANT STATION WAOON, orandOrd tranamMon, radio, heater, whitewall Urea. New car warranty to WOW. 11,195. BIRMINGHAM ... Chryslor-Ptvmeuth (Just li mile north of Com Avo.) Spartan Dodge ham. Ml 7-0955. Repossession 1944 PLYMOUTH Fury convertible. 5EE US FIRST BOB BORST LINCOLN-MERCUR Y » S. Woodward eimringha MI 64538 LUCKY AUTO _1 -l’*' I Fe 4.21)4 omy. Glowing ermine white chrv»tor's Warranty far your pro-taction. Fay just 549 down and weakly payments of lust 19.47 BEEN DRAFTED, MUST SELL 1*19 sxfts&uFsfft* I tlrss, S595, 447-M9L <999 dONTlAC 6-ODDE dAtALlNA, radio, nice condition. 40S-544B. 1959 PONTIAC CATALINA No Money Down We Finance FULL PRICE $197 Tel-A-Huron AUTO SALES 60 S. Telegraph FE 8-9661 Wn Pontiac catalina 4-door hardtop. F1* ~ F» S-3S07.__________ 1019 PONTIAC 'CONVERTIBLE with V4 snglnr ~------ mission, mE brakss snd pt powsr squlpmiint, immacu-niBllnN blue finish, wtrite- ------—' “ir, full ) prob- sa tom* Immsdtota' credit, wa hand arrangamants. s STATE WDE AUTO two SlboBsth Lake Road 1 Mock east of Casa LakaRd. Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM Just East if Oakland dj OLDI ^QNVlRTl^OfffTl, malic. raSoT heater, aawsr oc-cassarlss. Nlca aar at prir X-wL BOB BORST „ Lincoln- VBack to School WITH A .!• Double-Checked Used Car IN4 BUICK LsSabra Moor HofdMy automatic, yellow finish W.495 1941 CMIVYBOl AirBdSor sedan. V| automatic, BgdB .....$1)95 1944 LeSABRB convertible, otlta-matlc, radio branss finish, white N* ttm 1941 CATalIna 4-daor, radio, blue fintoh, decor groug .SI1W 1944 BUICK jihrtor* Moor Hardtop, powor, booutlful .....5M95 1*14, OLDI Moor Hardtop, powor ataormg, brokas, blue inys 1942 BONNEVILLE 4-door hardtop, automatic, Bgautlful bhto ^thv OLIVER BUICK ’*-Wa3uta i New ooB Used Con 106 WE FINANCE I Cheviot WE to HOI ... INS up nn^STmi ta wot . *w mi i famous Nyta k rs for kist 049 *__■■ _ rts of |ust ntlMpjf. ling V-0 automatic, power stw brakes, tuxodo Mock flnl i matching bucket Mat Intorie Sole Saveli Ml PONTIAC STAR CHIEF - ssi!r!i».n,3!«.r $9 D0WN-S9 WEEKLY a Pontiac Catalina Adoor sedan wtth power equipment, ram and heater, wMtaweil tires, ip extra clean car, tolT pries only mf credit no probiam, Unmamta delivery, Inttant credit, wa handle all ftnanebig arrangamants. STATE WIDE AUTO 3400 Elizabeth Lake Read 1 block oast at Cass Lake Rd. 1962 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE. FULL FACTORY POWER, AIR CONDITIONING. BEE CHUCK FLOOD WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC of 14 Mila J Ml 4-19W COME TO THE PONTIAC RETAIL STORE WHERE YOU EXPECT MORE • - • AND GET ITI 100 Top quality', One-owner, new car trades to choose from 65 Mt. Clemens at WMo Track FET7954 1941 CATALINA CONVIRTIBLj 1942 PONTIAC 4-OOOR CATALINA, 1943 TEMPEST 1-DOOR, 4-CYLIND- 1941 PONTIAC eONNEVILLE- VIS-Si, 2-woy^gwor. INI Catalina Vls- 1943 PONTIAC CATALINA, l-DOOR powor, aH. tinted rUME KWH*5 IM4 S. Wpedwan 4-1735. "T-BIRD SALE" We Have F6ur to Choose From. And Better Buys W« Art Sure You Can't Find Anywherel RED and WHITE Hardtop GOLD HARDTOP with fuH power BLUE^HARDTOP * WHITE CONVERTIBLE NO $$ DOWN 'SST Weekly -YaurChatea- $897 Spartan Dodge MARMADUKE By Anderson and Leesning “I Mid, ‘Fetch the paper, Boy’ ... not ’the paper boy’!” Hew and Used Cars 106 REPOSSESSION—194) PONTIAC 5 ta^^Mrbw. on at PE 5-11 SI, McAulftta. 1963 UMANS Ceupe. Automatic transmission, FISCHER BUICK 54 s. Woodward 447-5600 New and Heed Caw 106 We Bet You Can't Beat Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth's Price on a New or Used Car FE 2-9150 1941 TEMPEST COUPE WITH AUTOMATIC TRANS-M I S S I O N, RADIO AND H RAT E R. WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTEIy NO MONEY DOWN, oosumo poy-monts of .04.75 par month, CALL C|(EDIT MGR. Mr. Porks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. 1943 BONNEVILLE, 1-OWNER, IM--“■‘■rio, taw mitoses, nsw pronylon tlraa, 01MB. Call EM attar 5 p.m. ______________ LOOK 1943 Grand Prlxt, 3 to choots from, all automatic, double power, no monoy down. CREDIT NO PROBLEM, WE FINANCE BANK RATES. LUCKY AUTO 1964 Pontiac Bonneville 2-Door Hardtop PNHNL.__ __, whito- woll tiros, 049 or old car down, paymonts of 012J0 par wook. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. _ BIRMINGHAM -- $2095 BEATTIE N WATERFORD j«Rr — ---altar OR 3-1291 LOOK 1944 Tompoet 4-door, V-B, automatic I----------------------'"oKSw LUCKY AUTO 1964 PONTIAC Catallm coupa. Double power fharpi 02,300. Ask for Norm Dan iolaon. FISCHER BUICK 504 S. Woodward 447-5401 DON'S USED CARS SMALL AD - BIG LOT *0 CADE TO CHOOSE PROM n 4-door, Kick a ■ontlac wagon, automatic 5. :om*t, 4-door, stick 4. _. Julck 1-door harmp-!M| Chevy Moor, ammallc, I. Bukk 2-door hardtop. 677 S. LAPEER RD. Lake Orton MY 2-2041 ONE OF THE BETTER BUYS AT LLOYD'S 1964 BONNEVILLE New ee! Need Cars • 186 tN4 PONT I AC CATALINA, VIN- rm jflwL'1________ 1944 GRAND PRIX, 411 H.P. MO- 1964 Tempest LeMans 2-Door Hardtop With 4 turquoise flnith, 3M VI an-m lapsad, radio, ’hootor, white- $2095 BEATTIE ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD "Your FORD DEALER Slnco 1930" "Homo of Service attar the sale" OR 3-1291 1964 Tempest Wagon INI PONTIAC WAGON, Id^mueP'telMFE New EEd Used Cew "Vk tW fiiYALihA paSV BACK,* i mm. toaded, loop ml. 4M-5S51. 1945 PONTIAC » PLU» I CONVERTI- 1941 .PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CON-vertlbla, automatic transmission, powor flooring and powor Brakot, wNh ’or- . RED BONNEVILLE, ALL POW-r, olr-condltlonod. 1939 Opdyko. Repossessed Cars OR 3-1221 StemS SttS Cwt Hi IM HUMBLER WAOC, fTICH. ffisrs-x: •sf-at IBNhMnM , FISCHER BUICK SS4 S. Woodward 1962 Rombie/' $595 Homer Hight NK7TORB, INC, _ PONTIAC-BUICK-CHEVROLET * S-ISM Oxford, Michigan ROSE RAMBLER 8145 Commerce Rood Union Lake eM 3 4155 EM MUS . $57 DOWN Up to 36 Months to Pay Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 144 LeMANS SPORT COUPE HARD top, bucket inis, floor shift, nsw 1944 PONTIAC CATALINA WAGON, or stoaring-brskss. 425-1932. PONTIAC VENTURA SPORT 1964 Pontiac Catalina 2-Door Hardtop With s maroon flntoh, radio, hoe or, whitewalls. Only -\ $lt)95 BEATTIE on Dixie hwy. in waterpord "Your FORD DEALER Since 1929" "Home of service mar " OR 3-1291 GOfi HAUPT PONTIAC V-S, POWER. AIR-CONDITIONING 25,000 MILES, NEW RUBBER $1900 FE 2-0633 LOOK AT OUR NO MONEY DOWN - WE FINANCE CREDIT BIG ANNUAL * AUTO SALES 125Cktend.t,Wld.tr.ck LIQUIDATION 1945 OTO, RED, 4-SPBED, WALNUT sttorlng, transistorized Ignition, roar dtwggor, 02,393. OL 1-3930. traction, mag whaola and storao! 1 tap* dock, C75Q. 420-2213. { 1945 TEMPEST 2-DOOR CUSTOM | sports coup*. Vinyl top. 4-qrllndor! - onglao. ^automate, raato, nsster, whitewalls and Eaay-Eya glass. OR 4-1104 after 4 p.m. SALE! 1965 Crown Imperial Air conditioning, full powsr $4599 1960 Chevy Impala 2-door hardtop, real clean, only $799 RUSS JOHNSONj Pontiac-Rombler . | USED CAR STRIP ! 1965 Plymouth Btlvadara, 2-door hardtop. 3*3 angina, a black beauty, only $2299 1961 Dodge Lancer 4-door sharpie, automatic, radio $597 1941 BUICK Electro 225 02,395 1942 CHEVY Wagon 01,093 i I960 FORD 4-door 0 995 1944 PONT‘AC H'top LeMans 32,193 1 1940 CHEVY 2-door *795 1965 Chevy Pickup Radio and heater, camper, real sharp, only $1799 I960 Chevv Bel Air > 4-door sedan, radio and Iwator. automatic, bargain prim at only $499 1944 PONTIAC Catalina 4-door *2,495 19M CORVAIR tdoor t 4951 1944 RENAULT 4-dr. sedan .. 11,093 1933 JEEP Pickup *1,295 19M PONTIAC H'top *2,395 1965 Barracuda 4-spaad, radio and haater $2099 1963 Pontiac Tempest Custom coup*, 324 V-S angina, “'“"’$1197 1943 PONTIAC 1-door H'top .. *2,195 1944 CATALINA Wagon *2,395 1H3 FORD Galaxie 2-door 900 $1p9»S 1953 PACKARD 4-door 909.99 1903 FORD Galaxla 2-door ... $1,295 1963 Chrysler New Yorker, 4-door sedan, with *$1699 1962 Dodge Sedan 4-door, radio and haater, automatic. Special priced at $649 1903 FORD Falrlant 900 $1,295 ] 19M Bonnlovllto Vlste 51,99* 1942 RAMBLER Adoor *1,095 SEE US BEFORE YOU BUY WE WILL NOT REFUSE ANY REASONABLE OFFER HM PONTIAC Catalina 01 JOS RUSS OAKLAND JOHNSON| Pontlac-Rambler MM m Lake Orion MY 3-6266 > CHRYSLER • 724 OAKLAND ■ PLYMOUTH 332-4150 1944 PONTIAC Tampa*! 4 1944 PONTIAC Wagon, O-pauarwr, automatic, power steering, brakes. Only *99 down. CATALINA Ppaiaongor wagon, vor, S49 down. 1*41 CATALINA ssd 1*41 STARCHIEF, (OdSn, rod I whit*, automatic, powor stood brakes, 549 down. END OF MODEL -- SPECIALS - 100% Written Guarantee ■vary car Itatad carrh guaranis*. Taka tha out al Buying Usod 1961 DODGE 4-Door Sedan, V-8, Kadlo, Heater Whitewalls, Only — ...............$ 645 1964 CHRYSLBt New Yorker Sedan, Alt Power, Transferable Warranty ................... $2445 1964 BUICK Electro 6-Window Hardtop, Full Power, Only ,Y.. $2695 1963 OLDS "98" Convertible, Full Power, Like New .......................................$2195 1962 OLDS "88"*, "96"t, Hardtop*, Sedan*, Star- fire*, From ............................ $1495 1963 COMET Custom Sedan, Automatic, Kadlo, Heater ttnd Whitewalls ............... $1295 1960 DODGE Wagon, Automatic, Radio, Heater, Power Steering, Sharp ............... .....$ 895 1962 BUICK Special 4-Door, Automatic, Radio, Heater, Power Steering, Sharp ........... $1188 1963 OLDS "9i" Hardtop* and Sedans, Full Power, From.................................. $2088 1964 OLDS "88" 2 Doer Hardtop. Power sticrtne and Brgkac Msrc-OMtolc rgjtot Completely Raved Used Car Lot. — New Car Warranty (Ask for Details) PONTIAC-BUICK 651-9911 855 ROCHESTER ROAD ROCHESTER THIRTY-SIX THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1995 JPeop/e /n fhe News] By Ike Associated Piw Japan’s Empress Nagako received the newly appointed ambassadors from Peru and South Vtet Nam at the imperial palace in Tokyo, today. She «*?♦*«< for about half an hour with Peruvian Am-f jim Chriaa Ferreyros and South Vietnamese Am-r Nguyen Duy Quang. Ferreyros’ wife and daugiter It has become a postwar tradition for the empress to receive new ambassadors and their families. Award Doctor for Heart-Lung Machine Dr. John H. Gibbon Jr. has been selected to receive the American Heart Association’s research achievement award for Us development of a heart-lung machine. Dr. Gibbon, head of the department of survery at Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, was cited for “bold vision, daring, imagination and tireless effort” in development of the machine. Ihe award, a scroll and $1,0M, will be presented at the association’s annual meeting in Bal Harbour, Fla., Oct. IS. Former Viet Premier Visits Formosa Phan Huy Quat, former premier of South Viet Nam, arrived in Taipei today from Manila for a one-week visit to Formosa. Quat headed the Vietnamese delegation to the 11th convention of the Asian Peoples’ Anti-Communist League held in Manila last week. Otter league delegates arriving from Manila included Australia Sen. Leonard Lewis Bosman. VATICAN CITY (AP) - Supporters of the Vatican Ecumenical Coundl’s declaration on Jews were optimistic today that the document would go through as they want it. Reports Saturday that the fe,-500 bishops of the council would be given a voting amendment on whether to keep the document’s famous “deidde” reference or use other wording instead bad caused a stir abroad. The Vatican Secretariat for Christian Unity, which drafted the declaration, has been reluctant to comment on the latest development. Reliable informants said the secretariat drew up the new amendment on whether to retain the controversial phrasing in order to bis fair to a small group of opponents. STILL CONFIDENT Secretariat was said to be confident that again a majority of the council fathers will uphold a strongly worded version and not let it be weakened. The council’s fourth and final session opens Tuesday with a public ceremony in St. Peter’s Basilica by Pope Paul VI and Famous doughnuts served by Salvation Army lassies in World War I were made in cooking utensils improvised from spent shell cases, old wine bottles and tops of tin cans. TUESDAY UDIES’ DAY 18:46 a.*. to 6:M p.m. LADIES Ns MU Ms EAGLE Starts TUESDAY WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. George Murphy, always the “good guy’’ in movies and on television, has become the hottest political commodity in the Republican fund-raising market. The 63-year-okl California senator, whose silvering hair, blue eyes and ever-ready smile come over big on color television, has picked up where Barry Goldwater left off as the most-wanted speaker at $100-a-plate GOP dinners. IT’S SHEER BEDLAM FROM MORNING TIL NIGHT I W witcti cantmMi mm T dor in day jamett garner poUg Bergen - "mow? JVcr, darling — Actor Murphy Busy as Solon Murphy, who has talked in 15 states from Massachusetts California in the little more than eight months he has been a senator, is getting an average of 60 speaking invitations a day. He has had to assign one staff member to the full-time job of saying “yes” or “no” to these. When be was a student at Yale years ago, Murphy was dubbed by bis classmates as Coast-to-Coast Murphy” cause of his penchant to hopping from one coast to another during summer vacations. “I never thought I’d really live up to that name but I seem to be doing it now,” he said with a grin. Council to Get || ,'v,. ’’i I -Wi( * Amendment? Reportedly Weakens Declaration on Jews all the prelates. Tuesday nig! ly night, all will walk in a penitential procession into Rome’s St John Lateran Basilica, in a religious gesture to seek God’s help. Wednesday, the closed daily working meetings start inside St, Peter’s, with a topic on religious liberty the first matter up for action. From 'Navy Varsity' to 'Admiral' Robert Young Still Trim at 58 By BOB THOMAS AP Mevie-Televisfoa Writer HOLLYWOOD - Back in the 1990s, Robert Young was part of tiie MGM varsity that won those football games to Annapolis in movies like “Navy Blue and Gold.' Time passes, es K RTfl ?e wears the two stars of a vice admiral, commanding a huge! aircraft carrnr. THOMAS At least that’s his role to a television drama that will be seat on the Bob Hope Chrysler Theater this faU. “Yea, It’s getting to be time to the Navy to retire me,” he commented on the set at Universal City. At 58 he remains slim, handsome and unsuited for retirement as an actor. Nor does he have any intention of quitting, although his television fortune from “Father Knows Best” would allow him to do so. “Retire? Not me,” he said. “I haven’t had any movie scripts submitted to me lately, but I do get offers from television and I’m grateful to them. I like to take them occasionally ; otherwise in a year or two they’ll stop sending them. The producers will say, ’Oh, he’s too rich to work.’ MAIN PROBLEM ’My main problem is to avoid being lazy. My wife Betty helps me out on that When I got this [ Junior Editors Quiz on- COMPUTERS QUESTION: How does a computer work? script, I liked it, but I started thinking how it would interfere with mowing the lawn and playing golf. She convinced me to die it” The average working citizen can understand his reluctance to return to work. All but one of ids four girls have flown the nest, and the last one enters junto college in February. The Youngs retain the family home In Beverly Hills, but spend most of their time on an acre In Rancho Sants Fe, a rural community near San Diego. “Our house is on the golf course,” Bob explained. “I have a golf cart in my carport, and a path leads to the eighth tee. I just drive down the hill and start playing.” Bob has earned his leisure. He put in hard duty; first at MGM, then Fox and RKO, later as one of the busiest free4ancers in SIX YEARS „Then came 907 half-hours in six years of “Father Knows Best.” He followed with another series, “Window On Main Street,” which didn’t survive a season. What went wrong? “This sounds off, but I think the main .thing that mitigated aghinst the new series was me. We went on the sir while ’Father Knows Bat’ was still on prime network time. People just weren’t ready to accept me as anything but Jim Anderson. Bob smiled when asked if he would do another series. Helping Others Speak Voiceless Actor's New Career NEW YORK (AP) - Actor William Gargan, 60, robber of his career by cancer five years ago, is being honored to bis real-life role of helping other victims. His larynx and vocal chorda were removed in ION and with it went the voice made familiar by 95 years on the stage, movies and television. As “Martin Kane” he was one of the first television private eyes. Gargan learned to talk again by swalling air and releasing it to vibrate the esophagus, sine* then he has traveled to the American Cancer Society, encouraging other victims and greeting volunteer fund raisers with, “Thank you for saving mar life.” Dr. Charles W. Mayo of Rochester, Minn., said Sunday night that Gargan will be presented the Mutual of Omaha Cross Award Oct. X at a banquet in Beverly Hills, Calif. MANY EFFORTS Dr. Mayo said Gargan was selected for ”his inspirational seif-rehabilitation efforts and his many outstanding contributions to established rehabilitation programs.” The award includes a gold medal and a 610,-000 tax-free stipend. “I was elected into a whole new life’s work,” Gargan told an interviewer. “I found another job — helping people instead of entertaining them. “When I waft in cold and meet someone who’s had the operation and can’t talk, I know Just how they feel — bitter. But somehow when they hear me speak they feel, ‘Well, if be can do it, I can too’.” GoodwilITjip for Astronauts Pair Going to Athens for Work! Conference WASHINGTON (AP) -“Space-setters” I* Gordon Cooper Jr. and Charles Conrad JT. are headed for another long trip. President Johnson has tabbed the Gemini 6 astronauts, who tyst mouth orbited the world for a record eight days, to a goodwill mission to Greece, Turkey and Africa. They will meet the President at the White House Tuesday, report to the National Academy of Sciences that same day and depart Weednesday to Athens, Greece, to an international aerospace conference. Already in Athena are Soviet cosmonauts Leonid Leonov, the first man to take a walk in space, and Pavel Belyayev. OTHER NATIONS After Athens, the American astronauts will visit in Turkey, Ethiopia, Kenya, Nigeria, Las Palmas and the Canary Islands. Cooper, an Air Force lieutenant colonel, and Conrad, a Navy Commander, will wear civilian clothes. The White House said this was because of the U.S. desire to stress the peaceful aspects of space exploration. UH “Or. Twrti'i Nmm at Mwran” « A ADULTS Week Dow 1 to 5. - -1 Nit*, Sunday., |iuC •tel CHILDREN (undar 12) ■. 5Qc BUY, SELL, TRADE. USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS. “A BRILLIANT AND f HILARIOUS FILM!”! I — Jack Thompson, Journal American | ANSWER: Digital computers are the ones we generally think of as computers. To understand how they week, think of the problem, 5 minus 9. Hold up your hand with its 5 fingers (upper left), then torn down 9 and you can get the solution by counting the fingers still upright. In the same way, digital computers solve arithmetic problems by counting the digits left. However, toe computers do this electronically, at amazing speed, using the Many system of numbers, composed only of zeros and l’s. In such a computer are great numbers of electronic circuits. These are either off (open) or on (closed). When off, they may represent zero, when on, 1. Each circuit, called a flip flop, closes or opens according to instructions fed to it on a magnetized tape. By topping and flopping, toe problem is set np in binary numbers and toe solution given In a flash. Aa enormous amount of information can be stored in a million or more magnetic rinp. A 10 millionth of a second is enough to pther information from one of these. Problems are fed into a computer in one place, the input, and the solution is delivered in another, the output, in the form of perforated or magnetic tape or printed cards. | FOR YOU TO DO: Your dock is an “analogue” computer, an-| other type. The hands tell time, but have not counted digits to do it. “Analogous” means similar, and the unwinding of the clock’s spring is similar to passing of time. We use several other ana-1 logue computers in our dally lives — can you think of some? YOUR MEWS QUIZ PART I - NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL Give youraelf 10 points lor each correct 1 The Canadian government oalled for a national election in November. An election could change Canada’s 1—rtorsdrip- Tim preeaat Prim* Mtwtatpr is.. ?.. 2 Pakistan’s reasons tor claiming are partly religious. While India la mostly Hindu, Kashmir ift* Pakistan la mainly..... a-Chrlstlan; b-Buddhist; c-Moalem 3 Our nation fears that war will slow India’s progress In Improving tbs Ufa of her people. India la the world's most heavily-populated democracy.' True or False? 4 West Berlin Mayor WUly Brandt hopes his Social Democrats will Win a parliamentary majority la West Germany's election* Sunday. If ao, he would replace Chancellor .. ?.. 8 Pope Paul's visit hare to apeak to toe United Nations will ha the first time a Pops has set toot on United States soli. True or Falsa? PART II - WORDS IN TNI NEWS Take 4 points for each word that you cut match with its correct meaning. 1...aggression a-goal 3...objective 3 ..aquanaut 4 ...seigniorage b-something yielded la dispute c-unprovoked attack d-praflt from minting e-human living underwater PART III - NAMES IN THE NEWS Take 6 points for names that you can correctly match with the clues. 1...Ray C. Bliss a-Prlme Minister, India 3...Mohammed Ayub b-President, Pakistan Khan o-Seoator from Wiscon- 3..Lai Bahadur Shastrl 4.....Arthur J. Goldberg d-September President, UN Security Council a-Republican National Chairman 0...Gaylord Nelson Vol. XV, No. 1 • VEC, Inc., Madison 1, WIs. The Pontiac Press Monday, September IS, 1968 TUtvdPtop Match word clues with their corresponding pictures or symbols. 10 points for each oorrect answer. A.—^ * Will wage pact affect prtoee? Smrf Democrats choose Mayor candidate here September 14 3..... this mergers will help it 4... Soviet* sell gold to buy VUIIMTM.U. this product UN healjh group links 'alarming" lung eanotr rise Pesos Through Law Conference Is meeting T„„. world mourns Doctor Albert Schweitzer UN Secretary-General Thant our spending forthls Is seoood only to defense wa honor thls'document September 17 . HOW DO YOU RATI? (lews tosh Slds ef QMs Sepsistoh) 91 to NO point* - TOf SCORE •1 »• 90 points - Eaeollont. 71 to MpoMi-Oood. 41 to NfeMs-Delr, 40«r Undsr???-HW THJ* Quiz It pert of tba Educational toapam which This Nowipopar htmhhas to Sohoola In thla area to Mawlato Manet la National as4 VMwM Affair* to a* aid to Save This Praetlc* Examination! STUDENTS Valuabl* Reference Materiel For ban* ANSWERS ffUff ‘0*1 **• J*f 0 fPt tef 4*14*| »||| JLkVd ■ q-| ip-t le-| fu-i Io-l i|| iMU -enjjL-a Ipttqjaf|Mpm Miui-C to-5 (uozjeeg4#jie-H i| XMVd PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1963 THIRTY-SEVEX -^■Television Programs— programs furnished by stations listed in this column ora subject to change without notice. S tiup^A-WiiEMv, 4-wwj-tv. 7-wckto, 4-6dw-Tv, sA-wkifl-W, AA1-WTVi MONDAY EVENING 6:80 (2) (4) News, Weather, (7) Movie: Invisible Man’s Return” (In prof- ; (t) m (50) Movie: ‘’Behind the : Mask” (IMS) Kane Rich- mfUll (56) Creative Person ) CiaW(>00) WWJfrSO) WCARQ130) WPONt? 440) WJSKd900) WWl-*M<»4.7) MMwieet CM,#, min M s . TUSIOAV MO# tiW-WJR. YUM* oD vwmomwm/iLWM &&&8T —J. N«W«, OtW* . ..... J. Nm*. AmwnM , WJSfc. Sab Lm HW-Wi*. WMNIC Mall fiW—WJR, NOW* WCAH. Now* Indon WWJ Now*. *Hoy liUHIM, Own Noun tijewja, lm Hmnmt VMM, Now*. McKamwy NfSt-WM, MOM, Mete Amish Face More Fines Over Schools HAZLETON, lows (UPI) -Thirteen Amish fathers who have refused to send their children to state-accredited schools today face a third round of charges and fines. The fathers were fined a total df $48 each on two previous sets of charges growing out of their dispute with the state on what is best for their offspring. Each day they keep their t of in •f eswtrfbutiag to truancy. The austere Amish religious sect doss not believe to modern Inventions or acquisition of them. Many drive horse and buggies and ttU their fields with horse-drawn plows. ■ # ★ # The sect maintains Its own schools. But most Amish teachers have only eighth grade educations, and consequently do not quality for state certification. Building Wrecker l< Old Book Colltctor HOUSTON, Tax. W — EH* Rudy, executive of a demolishing company, has built up qu‘ a collection of rare old books. Ha to always on hand when his firm demolishes an old home or buUdtng. The first thing ha looks for an books which may bt aacretod in odd plaosa cr Just left behind as worthless. 1 “Let’s go—” I See »■-*— gams 12 Bullfighter IS Great Like 14 Card tame 15 Reach a destination 17 Eaters It Dress goods 19 Raise the tennis — 26 Barley bristle 21 Gambled 24 Form mental image 28 Above 26 Presage 26 Dilute (ab.) 81 Youth 82 Twirl 22 Shellfish 34 Shorn 86 Buy the wife a--- 27 Vase 38 English river 36 Aromatic plant 42 Of a Sicilian volcano 46 Riding academy 47 Skull (comb, form) SATURDAY PLANS r \ r r r r r r r r IS 19 nr r II IT r 19 20 21 a 5 w 9T fr H 91 94 9/ W 40 41 41 44 7T 44 If 49 49 Si 92 13 49 Skeet—: 51 Demolish >2 Snake DOWN 1 Centers of light rays (var.) 2 Persia 3 More tranquil 4 HI will 5 That is (Latin) 6 Negative reply 7 Pith of the marge (law) 8 Alaskan strait 9 Seed covering 16 Reside 11 Dregs 12 Spread, as hay 16 Mountain ash tree 21Roundof—- 22 Grandparentai 23 Andent Persian 24 Chemical compound (var.) 25 Otiose 26 Island, off Sumatra 27 Shade trees 26 Porosity 82 Garrote (coll.) 33 Scalloped, as leaf edges 35 Oregon city 96 Superfluous 38 Home interior adornment 39 Persian poet 46 Proportion (Latin) Answer To Previous Pnzzle 41 Feminine name 43 Grape coloring (var.) 44 Does not exist (dial.) 45 Find constant fault 56 Pronoun Honest JournaKfiit CRESTED BUTTE; Cole ith-Dominic J. CroOa, editor and publisher of the weekly Crested Butte Chronicle, has written at the masthead of his paper: “A Relatively Independent Newspaper.” BIQ SAVINGS! . £1 $QQ9S SWEET’S aSSai 4s: W Hwm 314-5677 SEPTEMBER SPECIALS? FREE-36 SAL MS MI WATER HEATER With Purchase of Wafer Softener City Soft Water Co. PI 5-9407 Star Given Crash Course by Flying Instructor Coffin ue Max” picture it of Dublin, as- i ■ w By EARL WILSON DUBLIN — Movie star George Peppard, who flies three different types of World War I crates in the “Blue Max” picture he’s filming here at an old airport 10 wiHm out of Dublin, assumes that Hollywood skeptics will figure he’s using a ghost-flier. “Actually, I flew so much in learning to California that I had my own instructor ... his name was Sherman Coffin,” George, a middle-westerner who went Californian, told me at luneh at Weston airport. George waited for me to react-and I did. “I took what yaa would call a ‘crash-course,’” George said, “bat fortunately, Acre were ao crashes ... on for. Bat I Jast loved to introduce my holractor to people. They would say ‘Did yea my “Coffin”?’ *>I would say “Certainly, C-O-^-F-l-N as to Casket.1 Mr. Coffin, a veteran pilot who was a Korean War Jet Jockey, with a long record of tutoring to Orange County, taught Gorgeous George, the special beau of Elizabeth Ashley, to fly 11 types of aircraft in three months, and be will look different than be did to “The Carpetbaggers.” ★ ★ ★ Just the ether day George was grounded by 26th Century-Fox till October. That’s when be does the flying scenes to “The Blue Max” — which was the nickname for the German hero’s cross. George also gets to play some love scenes with Ursula Andress, for which he will even get paid. 't ■ ★ ★ Af THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . . Frank Sinatra went to the Friars Club to help celebrate Joe E. Lewis’ return to the Copacabana, but he grew misty-eyed, as did Jade Entratter and others, when 80-year-old Blossom Seeley sang songs reminiscent of her late husband Beany Fields . . . Benny Davis exclaimed to Frank, “I knew you before anything happened to you.” Frank said, “Nothing happened to me yet. That’s all p r o p ag and a” . . . Comic Law Nelson: “Gov.. Rockefeller said, ’Money doesn’t grow on trees.’ When he starts ad libbing, you can’t stop this guy” . EARL’S PEARLS: Vincent Lopez told a witter he wanted a particular brand of beer: “I can’t remember tiie name—but I hum a few bars of the commercial.” That’s sari, mi un CUSTOM BUILDING NO MONEY GOWN | BIG BEAR CONSTRUCTION COMPANY 729 FE 3-7833 See The New NBC WEEK PROGRAMS Demonstrated on fev/w COLOR TV Qpn Evenings Tbit Week mg TV-RADIO Service 770 ORCHARD LAKE AVE. FE 5-6112 IMPROVE YOUR HOME £ DEAL DIRECT W,TbHuSrTHE FREE PLANS and ESTIMATES-NO CHARGE FES-8173 Open Daily and Sun. KITCHEN CABINETS 5-Ft. Kitchen $OCC COMPLETE £09 7-Ft. Kitchen $OQC COMPLETE £%J9 INCLUDES: Upper a Lower Cabinets, Coun Tops, Sink with Faucc CALL DAY OR NIGHT * ADDITIONS * TMULY BOOMS ALUMINUM SUIM6 BSC. BOOMS rooting—stone W00DFIELD CONSTRUCTION I WILL COME TO YOU WITH FREE ESTIMATE AND PLANS-NO CHABGE CALL FE 8-8173 6 Months Before - ONE CONTRACTOR FOR EVERYTHING CARPENTRY Da Building In Pontiac Since 1931 FAMILY BOOMS 5*13951 No Money Down BEAUTIFULLY FINISHED TERMS •BASEMENTS llllll M 12x24 • FmnIoN WaJlo • Wad floors • CoWduTHo *695 • BATHROOMS e KiTCHINS e BEDROOMS ‘•DORMIM* ALUMINUM SIDING -• PQRCHUe HIATINO e STORM WINDOWS C.WED0N-7Z, 1032West Huron Street KWWI WONTS t SUNDAYS PHOHEl XBSBflBBBfll 662-6641 HA 4-1191 673-2142 EM 2-2316 NT 2-1319. Everything In Homo ModenUmtlon i J THE PONTIAC PBBSS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1063 The Door to Higher Education—I Early Application Crucial to Student Hoping to Enter College MUND NEW wffifSS for the student to do * little “reaching” too. Students shouldn’t overextend themselves but neither should they hesitate to stretch up on their tiptoes when filing an application. Since the odds are not with a long shot, the second and third choices have to be much more realistic. Actually, although the student may classify the second choice as “tough,” it should be within reach. It should be a choice that (NEXT: The Human Pricns of Bottles Hiked TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - Price increases averaging S.2 per cent —. or about one-third of A cent a bottle — were announced today by Owens-Illinois, Inc. for glass containers far food, household items, soft drinks, and drugs and chemicals, effective on shipments after OCt. 18 east of the Rocky Mountains. 10 with Cabinet and Acmnoriei Braided Cloth, All Rubber ^Exchan gable With & dffe', »Q R Your Old Re-Use- 9 * WW JKm able Hose Ends ■■ Regular 7.50 ■K . | Come In or Free Delivery PARTS and SERVICE ON ALL CLEANERS ’ Disposal Bags-Hoses-Brushet-Belts-Attachmente-Etc. "Rebuilt by Curt's Appliances Using Our Own Parte* three outstanding values.in casual dinipg from Thomas Furniture 3-PC.and 5-PC. DINETTE SETS by HOWELL (EDITOR’S NOTE: This is As first article in a wins part series designed to adoise those ptawtog to enter college. The series to written hg John C. Bog, who is dean of admit-■ions at Wesleyan University In ConmtkxL) By JOHN C. HOY Written for Newspaper Unlike baseball, it’s ■ring batting average that means everything when applying to college. Most college admissions offices tell candidates if they have been accepted about mid-April, five months before the freshman year be- And each year at that time about 108,000 high school graduates learn that they have not found their college. Then a mad scramble for an opening—oftentimes anywhere — is started. This is the first ef a series ef articles written with hope i yea — er year sen er M not be weal The series is intended to offer advice to anyone who may be thinking of college someday. It should be of particular interest to parents and their children who are freshmen and sophomores in high school. For families with members in the Junior or senior years of high school each article should be of vital concern. a ★ ★ In many cases the scramble for an opening could have been avoided; the candidate, by planning, should be capable of insuring a good batting average for himself. PUBLISH DATE Colleges usually publish a cutoff date for applications. New Year’s Day ia a popular deadline. The best practice is for the student to file applications well before the deadline. - And the arrangement for an Interview at the college as early as possible ia the student’s senior year, certainly prior to January 1, Is wise. It is important to file more Ex-Ballet Master Dies FLINT (AP) - Osvnlds Le-manis of Highland Park, former ballet master of the Latvian National Grand Opera and a dance instructor at Detroit's Mercy College, died of an apparent heart attack Saturday while rehearsing the Flint Ballet Society. He was 82. Sandburg Improving at Hospital HENDERSONVILLE, N.C., (UPI) - American poet Carl Sandburg was reported improving today in his bout with an inflamation in the abdonwn. The 87-year-old Pulitzer Prize winner was admitted to the hospital here Friday. IQs condition was not regarded Htepital officials said the biographer of Abraham Lincoln would be able to return to his goat farm at Flat Rode in about two weeks. than one application. I recommend that candidates file four applications, each to a college that offers an interesting challenge to the student. The following table offers an idea of the way to go about selecting colleges to which applications should be sent. w ★ ★ First Application: A long shot. Reaching for the moon. But worth a try. Second Application: This is a tough one. But there is a fifty-fifty chance. Third Application: Pretty sure of acceptance and it fills the bin. Fourth Application: A clear shot FEE CHARGED One may ask, why four applications? After all there is a nonrefundable applications fee, usuaUy $10 and increasing shortly to $20 for many institutions. There are good reasons. Let’s discuss “reaching for All colleges take gambles and long shots each year. Admissions officers pride themselves on their judgment. They feel instincts about certain candidates who don’t on paper seem to have aU the qualifications. W , ♦ ir And, if the admissions officers are doing a good job, their instinctive judgment can pay off for the candidate as well as the college. DON’T HESITATE Therefore, it is worth-while Youth Survives Car-Train Crash; Cites Seat Belt BANGOR (AP)—A safety belt may have saved the life of a Bangor youth Saturday night. His car was struck by a train. William J. Houdek, 18, of Bangor survived a collision with a Chesapeake and Ohio freight Saturday night. He told officers he did not see the train as he approached the crossing in Bangor. The train Struck the rear of Houdek’s car and spun it around. “I had my safety belt buckled and stayed inside the car,” said Houdek, who suffered minor facial cuts and bruises. East German Guards Halt Freedom Swim BERLIN (AP) - East German border guards fished a would-be refugee from the Spree River Sunday night, West Berlin police reported today. The man was trying to swim from East to West Berlin. Police said the Reds also took a 58-year-old woman off a train at the West Berlin-East Germany border control point at Griebnltz. Her detention was the fourth such reported Incident in the past 10 days, involv-1 ing 10 persons, one of them an1 unidentified youth believed to be British.. i cm be obtained, say, if the breaks are with him. In this instance, a bad break would be for the second school to receive an unusually high percentage of candidates, all having exceptional qualifications. This happens every year. ★ dr * This is the reason for the third and fourth applications. The school the student is “pretty sure” of, the third application, may have an unusual year, too. Thus, the investment of some extra time and dollars in filing four instead of one or two applications, is worth-while faisur- BENEFICIAL FINANCE SYSTEM 477 ELIZABETH LAKE RD.. PONTIAC Phone: 334-4513 • A*k for the YES MANager LOANS IIP TO $1000 Lot Beneficial put cash in yqpr pocket todey. Just drdp in to see us at this convenient now location in our brand-new, modem, comfortable office! We’ll be happy to show you around, and introduce you to your new neighbors—the Beneficial Manager end his Staff. They’re well qualified to give the friendly, courteous, up-to-the-minute cash loan service that has made Beneficial famous over the years. Beneficial today it recognized as the largest system of' affiliated finance offices of its kind. And. right here in our own community, you’ll find that Beneficial is a good neighbor, a good citizen end a good place to get money! Check our new address end phone number-then, call up or come in for your cash. Remember Beneficial is the one place to call tor money the minute you want itl How much can you use...this very minute? BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO. OF WATERFORD Another office In Pontiac Is located at: 10 N«i Fully Guaranteed Attachments Included 1.2S Week Free Home Demonstration-OR 4-111! m Within 21 Mile Radies CURT’S APPLIANCES FWfar.r.f«lA«rfMt S'Ule IPnibr NEW LOCATION 8411 HATCHERY ROAD OR 4-1 III West on M59 to Airport ltd.. North to Italcliery . Turn Wait 2 Blocks on Hatchoiy Rd. Open Monday end Friday Y8 S P.M._ 24"x20" Diop leaf table wHh white heat and mar resistant plastic top. Extends to 24"x42" with leaves up. 3-piece set. *39»* Here's o sampling of the value and the variety you can expect in Thomas Furniture's vast selection of dinettes. All three groups shown here are designed to fulfill your seating needs large or small. All feature mar and stain-resistant plastic table tops and washable vinyl covered chairs and all are priced by Thomas with your budget In mind. CONVENIENT CREDIT • AMPLE FREE PARKING featuring plastic table tops and washable vinyl covered chairs The Weather U.«. Wutlwr iMil Fwtcait Mild (Mali* nh i) VOL. 128 NO. 187 , ■ MAKE Utcn irHiitS THE PONTIAC PRESS ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ r~ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1965—38 PAGES un.t.£s^e.dntPren?t.onal 10c Betsy's Death Toll Climbs to 400 Hunt Sunken Barge Loaded GMC BEAUTY — This new intercity bus, the “Luxury Liner,” features high-level seating for maximum passenger visibility and greatly increased under-floor baggage space. The 35-foot vehicle was unveMed today by GMC Truck & Coach Division of General Motors. New GMC Intercity Bus, ’Luxury Liner,’ Is Unveiled A new intercity bus featuring high-level seating for maximum passenger visibility and greatly increased under-floor baggage space was unveiled today by GMC Truck & Coach Division. The 35-foot “Luxury Liner”will be shown for the first time publicly at the two-day Convention of the _____________ National Association of Police Seek Area Youth in Shooting Major Win Claimed by New Delhi Motor Bus Owners opening Wednesday in. Chicago. Front seats of the “Luxury Liner” are tiered theater-style, enabling passengers to see over those in front. An observation window gives them clear forward and upward vision. Upper level passengers sit Police were still searching near Stoney Creek this morning for a | Shelby Township youth nearly a foot higher than in pre-who allegedly fired four shots vious inter-city buses, at his girlfriend’s father yester- Besides giving passengers a day and fled in a stolen car. quieter ride and better visibili-Shelby police said Dennis ty, this extra height permits Dickinson ,18, of 43561 Star- greater baggage space, light, Shelby Township, shot at To h«.nHi«. ever increasing Walter Young, of 47420 Phillips, package express business, Township, then stole a car and headed for Rochester. Young was not hurt. A general manhunt which involved state police, the Oakland County Sheriff’s department and Rochester police was called off but police continued to patrol the area where he was last sen. nearly 300 cubic feet is provided in two under - floor tightly-sealed baggage compartments—a 50 per cent increase over previous compartments at no gain in vehicle weight. The “Luxury Liner” is powered by a new V-6 diesel engine that boasts better fuel economy Roadblocks, which had been and more complete combustion set up shortly after the early Jor cleaner exhaust, morning shooting, were lifted * * * last night when police said it ’ It delivers 253 horsepower at became evident the youth had its factory-governed speed of 1,-escaped from the area. 800 revolutions per minute. Max- Shelby police said Dickinson imum torque is 770 foot pounds is also wanted in Genesee Coun- at 1,200 r.p.m. ty where he allegedly stole eight automatic TRANSMISSION cars, a gun and some dynamite _ 7T ..... . . . „ and tried to blow up a jail The fUs fully-automat c trans- where he believed his girlfriend, mtasion offered in the division s Darlene, was being kept. the Super-V, will be optional in the Luxury Liner.” I in Today's Press 1 ! I Rule of Law I U. S. chief justice in 1 talks to conference — | PAGE 8. I Riot Aftermath Little done to clean up Watts area in LA—PAGE 19. New Series Writer gives tips on entering college—PAGE 38. Area News . Astrology .. Bridge Comics .... Editorials . Markets .... Obituaries .. Besides increasing passenger comfort, this new transmission has the advantage of wider combinations of grade ability and top speed. It shifts under full power, with no throttle reduction required. Other engineering advantages include a new high-visibility instrument console, imjtroved air conditioning and simplified maintenance W W Sr The instrument concole is located directly in front of the driver. It has been designed for better visibility and sp e e d i e r identification of switches through cblor coding. "AIR CIRCULATION IMPROVED More direct routing of air conditioning ducts and an increased number of outlets improve air circulation. Temperatures are regulated by the latest type electronic controls. Decor is smart and contemporary with fresh new patterns in celling and window post panels. Lower side panels are covered with a pastel vinyl material. ~ *w*»*f** s m NEW DELHI, India UPl -India claimed today its tanks scored a victory over Pakistani forces in a major battle near the West Pakistani city of Lahore. Pakistan said it repelled the attack, inflicting heavy losses on Indian armor. WWW The Pakistani government radio claimed an entire Indian armored division was wiped out in the^ fighting near Sialkot and that two infantry divisions were routed. It said Pakistani planes then bombed the Indian forces to keep them from regrouping. The broadcast called the fighting fierce, aqd said the Indians had suffered their heaviest’losses so far. India’s government radio claimed however, that Indian forces made fresh gains in some sectors of the western front. It claimed two Pakistani positions were captured in the Sialket sector. *' * ■ *JS A Pakistani spokesman said 45 Indian tanks were destroyed in the Sialkot fighting while Pakistani losses “have been substantially less.” ACROSS BORDER Sialkot is just over the border from Indian Kashmir and Lahore, a city of 1.5 million, is 20 miles inside West Pakistan. Reports from Lahore said fighting raged 10 miles away and artillery fire could be heard inside the city. Almost 700 American women and children were awaiting permission to leave Lahore. The Pakistani government has clamped restrictions on entering and leaving the city but American officials were pressing for permission to start evacuation today or later in the week. ★ w * The Indian radio said reports from the front indicate the Lahore battle compares in intensi-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) Object Is Found on River Bottom; Fear Baton Rouge Periled BATON ROUGE, La. iff) — Two professional divers went down in the muddy Mississippi River today to look over an underwater object that may be a sunken barge loaded . with deadly chlorine. The object was located late yesterday by Army engineers about three-fourth miles south of this city of 160,000 persons. It was 26 feet beneath the surface and 50^ feet out from the bunk. Mayor • President W. W. Dumas asked this state capital city’s population to stay tuned to their radios for a possible evacuation order. Col. Bruce J. Bowen, Army ‘ district engineer at New Orleans, issued an assurance at midmoming that the sunken barge and its 600 tons of chlorine posed no immediate threat. WWW A Navy destroyer and a team of Navy diving experts were expected to join in the search momentarily for the barge-sunk by Hurricane Betsy last Friday. BARGE SHIPPED The barge, owned by the Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co., had been shipped here from Lake Charles, La., via the Intracoastal Waterway. The underwater object was found just before dark yesterday near the Mississippi River bridge under construction here. A 40-mile stretch of the Mississippi at this busy port was dosed to shipping. Dumas said 100,000 gas masks were being stockpiled. * * * ‘We don’t anticipate that anything' will happen but we want to be ready,” he said last night. HIGHLY POISONOUS Though highly poisonous in its basic form, chlorine is one of the most useful industrial chemicals and is used in the manufacture of many plastics, explosives and dyes. * * w. Washington sources said the bargeload of chlorine was enough to kill 40,000 people if the gas were released in a, heavily populated area. Floods Plague Louisiana Area NEW ORLEANS, La. (A*) — Authoritative sources said early today about 400.bodies had been counted by law enforcement officers in flooded regions in the New Orleans area. The Red Cross said Hurricane Betsy wiped out some towns in the marsh EMMY AWARD — Jerry Van Dyke and actress Mary Tyler Moore hold! the Television Academy Emmy awarded last night to Dick Van Dyke, Jerry’s brother, for outstanding individual achievement in the 1964-65 season. Next to Miss Moore, who plays Dick’s wife in “This Dick Van Dyke Show,” is veteran performer Jimmy Durante, who made the presentation. (See story, Page 2). Shot by Grocer Thug Dies in Fight Area Woman Dies in Crash A 33-year-old gunman was fatally wounded Saturday night in a blazing gun battle with a grocer he had attempted to rob. Ex-convict Raymond Lee Scott of 283 S. Jessie was hit at least five times by pistol and shotgun blasts fired by Charles Law, 25, __________ son of Rep. Arthur Law, D-Pontiac, owner of the grocery store. The gunfight took place at about 6:30 p.m. in the nearly empty Law’s Super Market at 200 Earlmoor. Scott was found dying in a car which he used to flee from the store and then crashed into a home at 576 Howland. He was dead on arrival at Pontiac General Hospital. Law told Pontiac police that when Scott entered the store he began filling a Shopping cart with groceries and meat. Law said while he was assisting his sister, Juanita, 19, at the check-out counter, Scott pulled a revolver and announced he was going to hold up the store. FIRES AT SCOTT The grocer pulled a 38-caliber pistol from a holster he wore at his side and fired once or twice at Scott, police said. Then he pulled his sister to the floor with him and emptied the revolver at the fleeing bandit. Police said Scott fired three shots at Law during the (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) An Independence Township woman was killed and four persons injured in a head-on collision at 11:50 last night on Williams Lake Road near Maceday Lake Road in W a t e rford Township. All victims were taken ta Pontiac General Hospital. Oakland Highway Toll in *65 106 Lm» Year on ar- to Data 127 rival was Mrs. Doyle Smith, 50, of 4641 Rock-croft. Mrs. Smith was riding in a car driven by Ralph J. Hopkins, 53, of Royal Oak. It collided with a car driven by James Hodge Jr., 18, of 7105 Howell, Waterford Township. . Hodge was reportedMn satisfactory condition this morning. WWW Police are investigating circumstances of the accident. country south of here. Dr. Nicholas Chetta, the New Orleans coroner, said he had been alerted by a ham radio operator that 250 bodies were en route here by truck from Plaquemines Parish. A deputy in the Plaquemines Parish sheriff’s office at Port Sulphur said five bodies were being sent to New Orleans by boat because all roads there -were flooded. The Times-Picayune, in its final edition, quoted a spokes- . man for the Orleans Parish coroner’s office as saying 250 bodies were expected from Plaquemines and St. Bernard parishes. “All I know is that we are expecting a hell of a lot of bodies," said a weary official in the coroner’s office when asked about the report. 150 MORE BODIES Another source said an additional 150 bodies could be expected from New Orleans itself. The Red Cross said its preliminary survey showed 918 homes destroyed, 25,960 with major damage and 131,689 with minor damage in Louisiana. The coroner’s office had more than 50 bodies, many unidentified. Betsy had earlier left six ^dead in Florida. The Red Cross said it had 25,-000 evacuees in two big shelters and expected many of them to remain a week or two. SETS EXAMPLE Gov. John McKeithen appealed to residents in other towns to open their doors to refugees and set an example by taking in three families at the million-dollar executive mansion at Baton Rouge. . The damage toll left by Betsy’s howling winds —150 m.p.h. near the coast, 125 m.p.h. in New Orleans and 94 m.p.h. at Baton Rouge—remained a matter of guesswork with estimates at about a billion dollars. Insurance adjustors were flown into the city from faraway points to help handle claims. One insurance official said it “might take four to six months to process all the claims.” St. Bernard Parish, which stretches along the Mississippi River south of New Orleans, was largely still under water. High waters also remained in (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) U. S. Bombers Attempting to Trap Viet Cong Regiment SAIGON, South Viet Nam IB —U.S. warplanes kept up round-the-clock bombings today of a Mekong Delta area where- a Viet Cong regiment is'believed encamped, a U.S. military spokesman said. The planes were trying to hit canals which can be used as Sunshine to Reign for Next Few Days Prepare- to enjoy a few days of late summer sun punctuated by light rain or scattered showers tonight. Tonight’s low will range from 55 to 62. W A W Sunshine will return in the morning bringing fair skies with, little change in temperature. Highs will fall between 68 to 75. ★ w p Partly cloudy skies will bring higher temperatures on Wednesday. Low mercury reading in downtown Pontiac before 8 a.m. was 59. By 1 p.m. it register^ 75. Related Stories, Page 7 2 escape routes by the guerrillas in the region 50 miles west of Soc Trang. U.S. officials, said they believed the guerrillas were trapped by the bombings. Ground troops were not committed to the action because of heavy rains and the large size of the Viet Cong force. A Communist regiment usually numbers 2,000 men. The main part of the U.S. Army 1st Cavalry air mobile Division began landing at Qui Nhon today. Advance groups were already ashore. The arrival of the 20,000 “Flying Horsemen” pushed U.S. troop strength in Viet Nam somewhat beyond 125,000. The exact figure was not disclosed. SECRET AREAS As the troops came ashore from the ships Buckner and Darby, they were taken by helicopters to their secret base areas. The Buckner brought 2,180 men and the Darby 2,705. The division, trained especially for guerrilla warfare, was expected to be deployed to South Viet Nam’s central highlands. The unit’s home base is Ft. Benning, Ga. Qui Nhon is 260 miles northeast of Saigon. In air action Sunday, B52 bombers of the Strategic A i r Command carried out their 22nd announced strike of the war, hitting the Ho Bo woods 20 miles north of Saigon. The planes flew in from Guam. w w * Twenty-three U. S. Air Force F105 Thunderchiefs blasted the Yen Khoai military barracks 35 miles northwest of Hanoi for the third straight day Sunday. A U.S. military sporkesman reported the planes knocked out antiaircraft site and ' destroyed 23 buildings, damaging 16 others. HIT TARGETS At the same time, 34 other U. S. planes hit various targets in North Viet Nam. U. S. Marines killed three guerrillas Sunday when the Communists assaulted Marine positions near the Da Nang air (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) Louisiana Na^fjl Station Refugee Center Houses Victims Of Hurricane hjjtsy Annual Grid 'Kickoff' in Press Tomorrow The annual “Kickoff” football section ef the Pontiac Pres*, filled with stories, pictures, and schedules from the midgets to the pros is coming your way tomorrow. WWW All football fans will want la get a copy of this Mg Informative section tar reference during the 1985 grid season. Don't miss It tomorrowL $ THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1065 TrHey at Mackinac Signals GOP Drive MACKINAC ISLAND (AP) -Michigan Republicans have a new positive victory formula-hut the hard work ahead is to sell their ideas to independents, Democrats and even some doubtful Republicans. What Gov. George Romney called the party’s most realistic effort ever to identify problems and recommend solutions came out of a three-day Mackinac Island conference. The recommendations may not all be popular with everyone. But they’ll be taken into the field by GOP leaders for a sort of test marketing late this year as Republicans begin a lengthy ★ ★ ★ drive aimed at reversing 1964's election reverses. SHUN DISUNITY In a convention almost remarkable for its candid recognition that the party is in trouble, some 750 participants were told again and again that they cannot afford disunity, that Attractive candidates must be located and that positive programs—not just negativism — must be developed. Harmony indeed did prevail. Not one major fight developed. No slate of candidates was trotted out but leaders acknowledged they want to settle on major office-seekers early and try to avoid bitter primaries on- Leaders Hope So Romney to Shun Senate? ly three months before the general election. f • j Efforts at a positive program came in the form of 32 pages of | recommendations developed by four task forces. FLAT RATE TAX Heading the list was endorse-1 ment of a flat rate state income j tax as part of a revenue-raising' fiscal reform program. The rec-ommendation paralleled the1'pro-j gram Romney and some legUda- j I tors from both parties will sub-mit to the legislature. Although in February Romney had to make an impassioned plea to prevent a GOP convention from gutting his tax ideas, this time he faced only a handful of mild inquiries about the program. a * * An aggressive civil rights j declaration said industry and unions should “adopt affirmative programs directed toward I recruitment and training of citizens of all races to opportunities ( j for employment and promotion i i within the industry or union I structure.'* * MACKINAC ISLAND (AP) -Visiting Republican leaders all gave Gov. George Romney an expected pat-on-the-back acknowledgment on his 1968 presi-dential possibilities — and obliquely let him know they thought he ought to run for governor, not tJ.S. senator, in 1966. Rhode Island Gov. John Cha-I fee, Colorado Gov. John Love and Republican National Finance Chairman Gen. Lucius Clay each visited with Romney | at the weekend Mackinac Island i State GOP Conference. Chafee, Love and Romney I are three of the five governors on the new Republican Policy j Committee. ★ * * At a news conference, Chafee said there is “a lot to that argument’* that a governorship is too limited a base for a presidential bid. GOVERNOR BUSY “A governor is so busy running complicated state machinery that he doesn't have much time for other issues,” he commented. But he added that the GOP Policy Committee is furnishing “a vehicle that did not exist previously” for potential candidates’ study of national! and international issues. “The governors certainly aren't out of the (1968) picture,” | Chafee said. * * * Chafee later declared- in a speech that Republican-governed states should be used as showcases of what the GOP can do when in administrative control of government. He was lavish in praise, of Romney’s administration and implied that the party ought not take a chance of losing its Michigan state house control. ANOTHER HINT Love said he’d like to see Republicans win at both state and national levels in 1966, but that “if 1 had to choose, I’d pick the j courthouses and state houses”, for the more necessary victories — possibly another hint that | Romney ought to stay in-Mieto igan. He said, “not too many people” are being discussed in Colorado as 1968 presidential possibilities, “but George Romney is \ certainly one of them." * 1 * * Clay, with a smile at Romney, j | spoke of “outstanding leadership available in the Republican Party.” But he said he’d “hate I to lose a state governor to gain a senator.” Romney has left open the question of whether to seek a third term in 1966 or the U.S. I Senate seat of Democrat Pat-j rick McNamara. STATE CHAIRMAN State chairman Mrs. Elly Peterson said, however, she is! giving no thought to his running | for foe Senate. She said leaders I hope to select their candidates! by mid-November so he can be i given long exposure and development. “In view of this, are you real-| ly seriously considering the Senate,” Romney was asked. “I like to give people room to speculate," bis laughed — sounding like a man not, repeat not,' aboutjo shock his followers. One brief dispute flared with the task force declaration sup-: porting “the position that no g . ' * * person, may refuse to sell his / OlllCinnn house to a buyer because of the I *-VAV/lOlVwl IVJ color of his skin or his religious beliefs. FRESH U.S. TROOPS - Elements of the U.S. 1st Cavalry Air Mobile division fill a landing craft as they approach the beach at Qui Nhon during -the weekend landing bf Count 400 Bodies in The Weather Fall U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Mostly cloudy and mild today. Highs 71 to 77. Variable cloudiness with chance of light rain or scattered showers tonight. Lows 55 to 62. Mostly fair and little change in temperatures tomorrow. Highs 67 to 75. East to northeast winds 6 to 14 miles becoming southeast 8 to 16 miles by afternoon. Outlook for Wednesday: Partly cloudy On* Vur At* tfl iflhest temperature >we»t temperature ean temperature Teiay la Pent tec SENSES PROBLEM Sen. Robert Huber, R-Troy, said such a statement would present “a problem in my district” — some of it wealthy suburban area. He advocated substituting “should” for “mhy.” But John Feikens, co-chairman of the Michigan Civil Rights Commission and author of the statement, retorted that “if we say ‘should’ instead of ‘may,’ we will not win the respect of people in our staUi. A Republican problem has been watered-down such statements.” * * * He warned that until housing problems are solved, the racial crisis will remain. Romney, House Minority Leader Gerald Ford, R-Mich., | Colorado Gov. John Love and i Rhode Island Gov. John Chafee alternated in speaking for unity, ! attractive candidates and a positive approach. 12-PARTY SYSTEM j Chafee told the conference 'Republicans don't deserve sup-! port if they can present nothing more than a plea for strengthening the two-party system. ! “Jhe people have little fear of a one-party country if that j party provides honesty, leadership, dignity and (hive,” he Said. * * a He further warned that Republicans should not attack programs solely because they are ; federal. “Voters are no longer afraid of the threat of ‘big government’ or 'government interference,’ he said, ! “They have seen that govern-| ment, be it federal or state, can i very frequently help them achieve goals that individually each person cannot achieve. * * * “I do not think this means j that rugged individualism is 'dead, or that the people want everything run from Washington. What they do want is solutions to air pollution, clogged ! highways, blighted cities, dirty ' rivers, and if the only answer is in Washington, they will gladly i accept the federal assistance.” (Continued From Page One) suburban areas on the southern side of New Orleans. Water was receding throughout the flood area but the fall was extremely slow in New Orleans itself, where lowlying areas normally protected by levees and an elaborate pumping system held the water like a bowl. Officials wouldn’t hazard a guess as to how long it will take to drain. One levee beside the industrial canal was cut in an effort to speed the drainage. Power failure, still a major problem to the-city, hampered operations the big pumping stations. Administrator Resigns at OU Oakland University’s assistant I provost, J. Duncan Sells, has * * * accepted the position of director Physicians assisting toe Red | of student organizations, at Uni- Cross screened refugees f stole communicable diseases. . versity of Michigan. * a * He had been on leave-of-ab-! sence doing graduate work at U. of M. | Sells came to Oakland University in the summer of 1961 as dean of students. He was | promoted to associate dean of the university in 1964. ________I____________________ Last summer’s administrative pal League convention this! reo,'8ani*ation changed the title week, the City Commission wifi Ito assistant provost, meet at 8 tonight instead of the I * * * normal Tuesday night meeting. Sells’ job will be shared by Among the items slated for various offices. consideration t o n i g h t is a re- ASSUMES NEW TITLE qpest from toe county for off- Frederick ofe* has assumed s t r e e t parking space for em-, the utle * auiaUml provost, the County Annex 4^ ^ freshmen and head of Commission Meets Tonight Because of a Michigan Munici-1 20,000 fresh troops. The beach is 260 miles northeast of Saigon. The division will shuttle in fast-strike attacks on the Viet Cong. U.S. Planes Still Hitting Cong Area (Continued From Page One) base, 380 miles north of Saigon, spokesmen said. U.C. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge and .Gen. William C. Westmoreland, commander of U. S. forces in Viet Nam, flew to Da Nang today for conferences with Vietnamese officials. * a a Lodge flew &y helicopter to the village of Le May, where villagers received him warmly and presented him with a Vietnamese flag. The ambassador also visited the medical air cen-ter at Le My, the first Vietnamese village pacified by U. S. Marines. LEADER KILLED A Viet Cong squad leader was killed and another guerrilla captured Sunday night in a brief skirmish with South Vietnamese troops five miles northwest of Saigon, a military spokesman announced. Officials announced that government troops have completed an operation against a group of rebellious mountain tribesmen seeking autonomy from the Saigon government. The informants said two battalions of Vietnamese rangers launched the operation Friday in the central highlands province of Darlac. They said 366 montagnards, or tribesmen, with 300 weapons surrendered. Birmingham Area News Forum to Draw Speakers From.Mony Varied Areas FRANKLIN - From far and wide, and from right next door, the Franklin Forum will draw its speakers for the 1965-66 season. The series of five programs will begin next month and extend through February at the Franklin Community Church. Friends of the Franklin Library will hold a kickoff session for ticket sales at the home of Mrs, R. J. Hampson, 26550 Woodlore, Wednesday. The coffee hour, to which interested residents are invited, will begin at 10 a.m. Pop art will be toe topic of toe first 1:15 p.m. forum, scheduled for Oct; 20. Discussing the, controversial trend will be Ellen'Johnson, professor of art at Oberlin College to Ohio. INTERIOR DECORATOR The Nov. 17 speaker will be Mllka Iconomoff, interior decorator for toe J. L. Hudson Co. Miss Iconomoff, a member of the American Institute of Interior Designers who is involved to toe Archives of American Design, will pose the question “Why Interior Designing?” and offer some answers. “Where Is Eve Going” is the tide of the nonpolitical talk to be given in January by Mrs. Elly P e t e r s 0 n, Republican State Central Committee chairman. The first woman elected as a state chairman of the Republican Party, Mrs. Peterson will speak here Jan. 19._____ She will be followed Feb. 16 by author John Q., creator of v Peter Trees. I m W * * ,• { The world traveler and author s' of best sellers makes his home to Orchard Lake. BONUS PROGRAM Another well-known area personality, Bud Guest of Bingham Farms, will present a bonus program for toe holders of season tickets on St> Patrick’s Day. The family event will be held to the evening. India Claims Major Victory (Continued From Page One) ty with tank clashes fought in toe North African desert by German and Allied armies to World War II. TANK DAMAGE Since Sept. 1, Indian forces have “immobilized’’ 246 Pakistani tanks, destroying or damaging 212 and capturing 34, the broadcast said. It was estimated that Pakis- , tan had 406 combat-ready I tanks at the beginning of toe conflict. There was no Independent confirmation of the Indian .claims. However, diplomatic source^ to New Delhi said it appeared Pakistani forces had been hard hit. Building on Lafayette. The County Board of Auditors seeks to rent a portion of toe city’s off street parking on the west side of Pine, between Lafayette and Feneley. In other business, a petition is to be presented for a water main on East Sheffield between High wood and the Jaycee Park. ♦ a * Separate resolutions also are to be proposed to advertise for bids for an aerial platform truck for the fire department and to plant trees to both urban renewal projects. Public hearings are scheduled on vacating several streets and alleys. the charter college. * * He handles all advising programs and records of freshmen and transfer students. Thomas Dutton, .dean of students, is responsible for records of upperclassmen, reinstatements and questions of academic standing. A Real (S)Crap Table FOREST PARK, 111 (UPI) -Mrs. Sha/on Berryman liked her worn out Renault sports car so well she couldn’t bear to part with it. Saturday she had a scrap dealer compress it into a coffee table for her living room, Kelley Talk to Democrats State Atty. Gen. Frank J. Kelley will be the principal speaker tomorrow at the quarterly meeting of the Oakland County Democratic Committee. The 8 p.m. meeting will be in the supervisors’ auditorium at the county courthouse, a -a a Among the items to be discussed will be the record of the recent session of the legislature, and a review of the party’s position on fiscal reform. Moon Ktl Tuesday a Sunday's T*m*ar*t»r* Chart n* M 45 Duluth 55 JO { . nab* U 51 Fart Worth »7 ‘ RapMs 71 II JackaonvIN* N " Kansas City N Garner Top TV Awards Gunman Dies in Holdup Try (Continued From Page Ope) fracas ind dropped his gun as he ran out toe rear door of the store. Law said he grabbed a 12-gauge" shotgun which he kept behind the meat counter and fired once at Scott before the would-be bandit got outside. + a to Police said Law fired one or two more shotgun blasts at Scott as he drove a car down Luther toward Howland. LOST CONTROL Scott lost control of the vehicle as he turned onto Howland, struck a car driven by Barnie Smith, 32, of Detroit, then veered into the house, police said. Beatrice Hardiman, who was to the house when it was struck by toe car, received minor injuries when toe impact knocked a cabinet ever, striking her. Oakland County Prosecutor S. Jerome Bronson said this morning that he could see no reason to call a coroner’s inquest to investigate the shooting! * * a Police said Scott had a long police record, with convictions for burglary, forgery, unlawful flight and car theft. They said he has served time to several penitentiaries. India claimed Pakistani planes raided the Sikh holy city of Amritsar in Punjab State and the city of Johodpur to Rajasthan State late yesterday. I PLANE downed J One of three B57 bombers making the raid on Amritsar was shot down, according to Indian announcements, which said the planes wefe escorted by four F86 Sabre Jets. Milliken Due for Address at GOP Fete Lt Gov. William MiUiken will be the featured guest when toe Oakland County Republican Party holds its kickoff meeting of the Neighbor-to-Neighbor Fun Drive- Wednesday. a a a The meeting is scheduled for 8:30 p.m. at the Bloomfield Hills Junior High School, 4200 Quartan. Finance volunteers from all over Oakland County will attend the meeting to hear and meet Michigan’s first Republi- ever a decade, said GOP County Chairman, Dale A. Feet. Mrs. Edward T. Downs, campaign chairman, said the yearly drive is the Republican effort for broad base financial support. W ' ★ V This year’s Neighbor-to-Nelgh-bor Drive will begin Thursday and run through Saturday. 4 Shows Dominate Emmies NATIONAL WEATHER - Rato and drizzle are forecast for New England tonight with showers and thundershowers predicted for the upper-Mississippi Valley, the mid-Missouri VaBay and la sections of the Pacific Northwest. Warmer tompsritams me expected in toe midlands east to the Ohio HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Dick Van Dyke, the Lunts, Barbra Streisand and Leonard Bern-11 — and an almost two-hour parade of television’s technical experts — dominated the 17th annual Emmy Award show. The television academy, in an announced drive to streamline the award presentation, dropped the number of categories from 29 to 6. Most of the winners, however, were still technicians unknown to the general public. * a * The show, presented over NBC-TV Sunday night, lasted more than two hours. There were only two major entertainment categories: outstanding program and individual achievements to entertainment. Four Emmies were awarded for the program achievements. They went to “The flick Van Dyke Show,” “My, Name Is Barbra,” a special with Barbra Streisand; “The Magnificent Yankee,” with Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne, and “What is Sonata Form?,” a Leonard Bernstein-conducted New York Philharmonic young people’s concert. SAME GROUP WINS The second major catagiffy — for outstanding individual achievements — paralleled the first. The Lunts, Miss Streisand, Vsn Dyke tnd Bernstein also won in this category. In the outstanding program achievements to news, documentary, information and sports, "Tbs Louvre” swept toe field. The loving look at the famed Paris museum took aU swards but one in this category. The only other to rate an Eiggjy was “I, Leonardo da Vinci,” part of the ABC ‘Saga of Western Man.” Final score: NBC 14 Emmies; CBS, 11, and ABC 3. a , a' * The Emmy show was beamed simultaneously from Hollywood and New York. Gary, Lewis — son of Jerry — appeared with hie rock to’ roll group and a bunch of teen-age dancers. TRIES Tf> AD LIB Producer John Goodel tried to ad lib with Jimmy Durante, one of the presenters — to hiS 'sorrow. v Durante said: “8tay on John. You make me look food.” GuHM is presidoat of the Hollywood branch of the Television Academy. . a a a Most of toe winners Wert in New York; 22 of them. Only 6 of the winners were in Hollywood, a a a . As usual, many of the actual winners were not present to receive their awards, Jerry Vsn Dyke, brother of Dick, accepted one of the awards for “The Dick Van Dyke Show.” « Crawford and Melvyn Douglas accepted toe awards for the Lunts. TWO EMCEES Danny Thomas was master of ceremonies to Hollywood and 8ammy Davis Jr. was emcee in Now York. ■ a it a* Thomas, of Lebanese descent, said to Davis, a Negro convert to the Jewish faith: “Only to America could an Arab and a Jew,be on the stone program.” NOTICE! ClfV OF PONTIAC COMMISSION MEETING The Pontiac City Commission meeting which would normally be held Tuesday, September 14, 1965 has been rescheduled to meet Monday, September 13, 1965. All hearings scheduled for Tuesday/ September 14,1965 will ba scheduled for Mon* day, September 13/ 1965 storting at 8:00 P. M. In the Commission Chambers, City .(signsd) Olga Berkeley City Clerk JBVJDfttXMl THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1965 Legislature Starts Work Tomorrow LANSING (AP) - A Republican cry of “fiscal reform now” ringing in its ears, the Democrat-controlled legislature prepares today to open ita fall session. ‘ * ★ * J Democrats as a group have 'not decided yet whether fiscal reform will be on the agenda. House and Senate Democratic caucuses delayed a decision on the subject Friday and said they may make up their minds Tuesday—the opening day of the Fiscal. reform recommendations closely paralleling the plan developed by Gov. George Romney and a bipartisan group of legislators were adopted at the Republican leadership conference on Mackinac Island Saturday. The recommendations include a fiat-rate statewide income tax, relief for low income families (for instance, through rescinding the sales tax on food and drugs), property tax relief and “repeal of taxes which would duplicate or conflict with personal and corporate income taxes—such as the business activities tax.” TOOK ACTION While delaying, their fiscal decisions, Democratic lawmakers did decide to take action to ensure senior citizen property tax relief in 1966, the presidential disability amendment to the U S. Constitution, highway sign policy, executive reorganization, welfare department merger, and establishment of a legislative council. / * * * / The House wants to take up refinancing of the Mackinac Bridge and lowering the tolls; the Senate wants the agenda to include senior citizen property tax relief for renters, milk pricing, increasing the jurisdiction of common pleas courts and the licensing and regulation of second mortgage firms. The majority of both houses must agree on the subjects to be discussed at the session. SESSION HARMONY GOP approval of fiscal reform came in an unexpectedly harmonious session completely unlike the spring, 1966, GOP state convention in Which Romney had to pull out all stops to stop a conservative (hive to call for a statewide referendum bn an income tax. WWW The fiscal reform recommendations were among task force reports on 17 major issues adopted by GOP leaders Saturday, and praised by Romney as “one of the most realistic Republican approaches to problems in recent history.” * w * They will be forwarded to the GOP State Central Committee for official action and possible use as raw material for future platforms. “Th« represent a real effort by the Republican party to survey the problems of the people and to do somet" about it at the state and local level,” Romney said Sunday. BASIC IDEAS Legislative sources at the Mackinac Island conference said they expected House and Senate Republican caucuses to approve the basic ideas of the task force report—although not all members would back fiscal reform. Lt. Gov. William Mllllken said later the task force’s tax report resembled the recommendations of Romney and the legislators because “we kept it open as late as we could to see What direction they were taking.” * * * Romney, meanwhile, sought to reassure Republican legislators that championing the unpopular subject of a statewide income tax is not an automatic act of political suicide. He said repeatedly at the conference that “history shows that the legislators who tried to obstruct such progress are no longer with us.. .and those who supported responsible fiscal policies are mostly still In the legislature.” Churchui— School* Groups CHRISTIAN LITERATURE SALES 55 Oakland Av.. FE 4-9591 Early Bird Values! Prices Effective Monday and Taasday! "SUPER-RIGHT” QUALITY—GOVERNMENT INSPECTED mAmfm Whole Fryers 27: Split, Quartered or Cut-up Fryers............... u. 31 wrw-w.ni mem- 1WH-RNNT" wen Beef Short Ribs 11 43 Beef liver . . ,u- 49* "SUPER-RIGHT " BONELESS -.. PEELED AND DIVEINID ^ Delmonico SteaksLB189 Medium Shrimp V£ 3" "SUPER-RIGHT" BONELESS SLICED Fully Cooked Hams1119 Halibut Steak u 59* Fully Cooked Canned Hams 6-4” No Coupons, No Gimmicks, No Limits... Just Quality Merchandise at Low Prices! ANGEL SOFT Facial Tissues 200 2-Ply Tissues 349 WINS FAVOR All Green Cut Asparagus NutWt. 14ft-Oi. 4 70 SPECIAL OFFER VACUUM PACKED A&P Coffee 39 2-1 DEL MONTE Yellow Cling Peaches Hafvoe or Sliced 25 Red Delicious APPLES 3‘39' Paw Paw Grape Drink 2 ^ 49 A&P Cherries ^............6 89 A&P Freestone Peaches........ 3 Fruit Cocktail Corned Beef Hash Del Monte Corn A&P BRAND GRADE "A" 1-LB. CANS 1-LB. 13-OZ. CANS 1-U. 1-OZ. CANS SUPER-RIGHT NET WT. 15Vi-OZ. WHOLE KERNEL OR CREAM STYLE POPULAR ASSORTED FLAVORS Popsides 39* Marvel Brand Ice Milk DOZEN IN PKG. Vj-GAL. CTN. 39 10c OFF — GIANT SIZE Rinse Blue 3-LB. 7-OZ. PKG. 59* GIANT SIZE — POWDERED Sail Detergent 55* >1*. is-ox. PKG. JANE PARKER, TWIN PACK Golden Leaf Cake Nst W». 10 Vi-Ox. Each 2- 49' SAVE 10c JANE PARKER — 8-INCH Pineapple Pie •3 39* JANE PARKER , ««« Potato Bread.... 145 21 JANE PARKIR—HOMISTYLI JA< Donuts ‘TSS - ”8 ^49* 4 i-w. QQc 2 cams 69c 4 69c Ann Page Blended Syrup . • • S49* Sunnyfield Pancake Flour e • • pkg.’ 49* Sunnybrook Red Salmon............ , B B 1-LB. CAN 39' Sultana Bice .....................3^ 39* Spaghetti w RRocoroni choici lw 19* SULTANA Salad Pressing QUART EC jar ANN PAfll — Nut W». I-Os' _ _ _ Sparkle Gelatin 4 ««• 29c ANN PASS — TOMATO-RICI _ Soup Nutwt. loy.-Oi. 9 B O CANS jf/j' THE PONTIAC PRESS/ MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 13. lini; ■FHIf’W 0 4|: llAff MARKETS i The Mowing are top prices covering sales of Ipcally 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 paurrs Apples, Chenango, bu.........13.75 Applet, crab, bu. ........... 4.00 Applet, Oreenlno. bu. ........3.50 Applet. Graham (by, bu....... 4.00 Applet, Mclntooh# early bu....3.50 Applet. Wealthy, bu. .........1.00 Applet, WoH River, bu.........3.35 Blueberries. 4MI. CrtT%...... 4.35 Cantaloupe, bu................3.35 Orapet, Fedonla. pk. bakt. .. 1.50 Rtachot, I'berta, bu. !;......4.00 VSeRTASLU Beam, green, bu. .....;., Beam. Kentucky Wonder, bu. . Beam, Lima, bu.......... Beets, dl. bchs.........................1.00 Beets, topped, bu.......................3.00 BrocCOlf, dz. ..........................3.75 Cabbage, Curly, bu. ... . . ............1.75 Cabbage, red, bu........................1.71 Celery, Pascal, crt. Celery, Pascal, dz. stalk Celery, while, dz. crt. ■ Celery, white, dz. etalks Eggplant, bu.................... Eggplant, bekt.................. Gourds, pk. bekt................ Kohlrabi, dz. bchs. ............ i etkt. dz. bchs. ............. Okra, pk. bekt. ................ Onions, dry, 50-lb. bag ........ Onion, green, dz. bchs.......... Onions. Pickling .... Parsley, Curly, dz. bchs........ Parsley, root, dz. bchs......... Pees, Slack Eye, bu. • Peppers. Cayenne, pk. bekt. . Peppers, hoi, bu. Peppers, Pimento, Du.. Peppers, Red Sweet, bu.......... Peppers, sweet, bu.............. Potatoes, 50 lbs................ Potatoes. IS lbs. ...... Radishes, red, dz. bchs......... Admiral Air Red 3.50 Alleg Cp.30e AlllsChal .50 Amerada 3.40 Amph Corp 1 Anacon 3.75g ArmcoSt 3 Armour 1.40b ArmstCk 1.10 Athl Oil 140 Atsd DO 1.30 Atchison 1.40 Coiiard. bu. Kale, bu. . Mustard, bu. Sorrel, bd. •• Spinach, bu. . Swiss Chard, t Turnip, bu. Escarsle, bleached........ Lettuce, Bibb, pk. bekt. . Lettuce, Boston, dz. ....... Lettuce. Heed. Jtt.......... Lettuce, ft ................ Lettuce, Leaf, bu........... Rentable, bu. . ....... Poultry ond Eggs MTROrr POULTRY rROIT (API—Price* Bold “ a. 1 live poultry: light type hens type 34-34*; br e whites 3M0*. ORTROIT ROOf rROIT CAP)—Egg prtawtoM by tlret receivers (Including U.5J. mediums avro, w” I Grade A checks 10*. CHICAGO bUTTER, lOOt ago (API - Chicago Mycantlle ige - Butter; Firm; wholesale prices * higher to * Ilowanoi - k 41*; ft A *i*> *0 B 40*1 M * Allika flft r AIU. U 41%; 9i A 41%; 90 » Oto; cere 00 B 511*t 00 C 41* steady to firm; wholesale buy. it unchanged to 1* htaheri to or better Grade A whites 3*; ti mediums 11; etenderde 30; CHICAGO POULTRY CAGO (API—(USDAI—Live poultry i wore unchanged today; demand roasters 33VMH; tpeclai fed White fryers l**-20*. Livestock ORTROIT LIVR1TOCK rROIT. (API—(UfDA)— Cettln 150; sis high good Mr choice eteere TOO-M. 35 00-34 00; a lot Henderd eteere h any one grade I prlcei p 35; n CHICAGO LIVRSTOCK CHICAGO CAP)—(USDAI— Horn 5.500; butchers steady to as lewer; U.S. 1-2 310-335 lb. butchers 33.2535; 40 head at 33.40; mixed 14 200-250 lbs. 23.15-33.25; 1-3 150-400 lb. SOWS 20.75-31 JO; 400-500 lbs. 1t.75-20.7l; 3-3 500400 lbs. 1t.00-20.00; boars IMS-1740. Cattle MOOt calves none; slaughter eteere week to etrong; load tots prime 1,335-1,400 Ip. slaughter steers 2t.2540; lbs. 25.o6-15.25; high choice and prime tOO-1,100 lb. tleughler halters 35JO-34.00. Sheep 500; iprtng slaughter tombs and thorn tleughter awaa fully Heady; taw packages choice end prime fO-IOI lbs. spring (laughter lambs 14.75.25.25; good end choice 00-TOO lbs. 23JO-34.50. Treasury Position WAOHINOTON (API - The cash poal-lion at me Treasury tempered with cor- ^urvitr %t. o, iota >*l”3 MHM1M75J5 0 imilMOO.f* D,PMl *it,&!m,^jtJMlvi7jio,itxoo7J4 1%i2l%IrttjT*r~33,7IO,105,051JO 13,050,015,470.50 11.441,055,31*. (tel - Include# 1211,134,333.34 debt r subject te statutory limit. I Change .... +To 15. X IB n«iAJEpe So.-* Ifli hl=«f si m fU fl8 gwr*m i m StS HE nBUl, Tie.ITTV'M Trading Active Slightly Higher NEW YORK (AP)—A slightly higher edge prevailed on the stock market-early today. Trading was active. Fractional gains outbalanced losers among key stocks. Scattered issues advanced a point or more. The general background of business and economic news was good but the market was laboring under the disadvantage of seven straight daily rises behind it. Profit taking occurred, in various groups. Industrials, rails and utilities all were in plus territory, however, while scant change oc- curred among mail order-re-1 tails, farm implements, chemi-f cals and electrical equipment?. STEELS UNCHANGED | Steels were unchanged to a trifle lower following their feeble recovery of Friday. Autos leaned to the upside. Anaconda, Xerox, United Air Lines and Zenith rose about a point each. IBM gained more than 2. Gulf & Western Industries lost 2 at 52 on an opening block of 4,100 shares following a published report /that it plans to buy up to 2.1 million shares or 55 per cent of New Jersey Zinc stock from Bush terminal and other holders. Opening blocks included: Carter-Wallace, up % at 19% j on 11,900 shares; Fairchild-Hill-1 er, unchanged at 10% on 13,000 and 16,000-shares; Standard Oil (New Jersey), up % at 74% on I 6,500 shares; and American! Telephone, unchanged at 68 on I 5,800. > On Friday, the Associated Press Average of 60 stocks [ gained .3 at 338.3. Prices were generally higher on the American Stock Ex-1 change. AMC Crews Ready Lines Dispute Inside Local Still Perils Peace The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK (API-FPlIPWbtg It all it ol selected stock transactions on the New York Stock Exchange with 10:30 prices: —A— Seles Net (hdt.) High Lew Leal cue. Abbott Lab 1 to 4M* 43V* 43* + to ABC Con <70 i 31H 21'A 21* + to Ad Millie .40a I 14* 14* 14*5 + to 53 35* 34'A 35'A 4 I (2to 02*5 52* + 1 I 33* 23* 23* I 27* 27-A 27'A — 1 I 73*5 73* 73* — 1 I 77* 77** 77** + 1 Am -MFd .*0 AMet Cl 1.50 A Motors .50 AmOptlc 1.25 AmPhoto .30 4 70* 70* 70* 4 14 45* 44* 44* 4 10 47* 47* 47* 4 2 17* 17* 17* 4 12 74* 74* 74* 4 23 32* 32* 33* 4 11 IT 17* It 4 3 40* 40* 45* 4 129 10* 10* 10* 4 I 41* 41* 41* .. I 47* 57 57* 4 “,15 i 32* 32* - -i 72* 73* 41* I 2.40 ,-r«r 5 30* 34* i 3 42* 42* - | 55* 55* i S 1* 1* ___ ..._______ 21 37* 37* 3 Boeing 2 53 03* 03* I Borden 1.11 10 44* 44* t BorgWar 3.30 5 50* <0* I Brlst My lJO 2 15* 04* I Brunswick IIS T* 0* BUCV Erie 2 3 47 45* 4 OUdS Co JO 2 17* 17* 1 Bullard JO 3 23 21* 2 Butova Mb 4 20 30 2 Burl Tnd 1 0 17* 37* 2 Burroughs 1 IS 17* 37* 3 Cal Peck .90 9 30* 30 in 4 * 4 * CampRL .45e Camp Sp.90 Can Dry 1 CdnPecl. 50e Carrier 1 JO * »r .** — CerterW .400 170 19* 19* 19* 4 I 13* SMB 32* 4 1 35* : ij 49* I Cessna A 1.20 Chet Oh 4 ChIMII IIP 1 Com 1C re ijt x3 30 30 3 IS* 15* 1 43 50 49* ' II 31* 33* 3 53* 03 3 41* 41* 1 77* 77* 14 30* 30* 34 40* 40* 39 40* 40* 10 10* 10* 3 24* 34 3 35* 35* 7 54* 54* 1 14 51 50* I 25 45 44* ; 100 35 34* I 'Ti t 40* 4 * 35* 4 * Crown toll 2 Cruc *111.20 Cudahy Pk Del Hud .Wg DelttAIr MO DtnRIoGW 1 DetEdls 1.10 pat Steel JO Diem AmT Dleney ,40b Pitt tetgl I 40* 40* 11 70 70 14 13* 13* I 74* 75* 33 34* 34* ”5 S* 27* 1 30* 30* I 47* 47* 34* + * 40to 4 to 3* 74to - * 34* - to K-* i+w I 25* 25* 25* - 54b lb + * 4 II* 21* 2 15* 35* I 42* 43* 1 30* Wto m i 95* JUk b- 2 f ft i 8* 1 37* 37* 17 17* 37 ti* 43* — * 40* 4 * ¥ If 49 - * « 72 4 * b 44* ... A 240* — * idgeOG if |IPeioNOi EmerRed . End Mo> ErleLack RR EvantPd ,4ld Fair Cam ,30a Pelrch Hiller Fed!)5tfOli,,40 Pad Moo l JO FerroCorp 1 Flltrol Cp 2 Fir#tine M0 PtiariU It PUPOW In pIo Hr >•£ PoodPelr .90 PMC Cp MO Pori Mot i PoreDafr JO Preept 5 1.40 PruehCp 1.50 » J ss TR i lift i f —p— if 54* "J ft 70* 70* 4 * MM, 79* 4- * r r:-: 14* 14*... >5* 35* 4 * 0* I*.... 53* 52* .. S3* 13* M* 19. ay 33* 31* i 47* i 35* I 17* B* 4 1 itto .4 \ 45* I 74* 74* 74* — 1 IJ I P 03- 8* in II hh i 35* 15* 4'* Gen Clg 1.30 4 33* S3* 33* - * BBu ifftM M T|i|t« GraceCo 1.20 GrandU .50b Granites 1.40 GtA&P l.20a Nor Ry 1 .. Watt Plnl GiWSug 1.50a prgyhtM .90 Grumn AJI Gulf MAO 4. Gulf Oil 1 da.) High Li 1 13* I 0 59* 5 5 51* 50* 1 3 34* 24* I 1 24to 24to 2 14 35* 34* 2 4 54* 54* 5 10 13 13* 1 3 39* 39* 2 9 33 21* 2 If 14* |4to 2 1 55* 55* 1 22 55* 58 3 —H— 2 35* 35* 3 4 35* 35* 3 Hoff Electron HMlyiuo 1.10 Homestk 1.50 Hontywtl. 10 Hook Ch 1.30 HOUftLP 1 Howa Sd.40 HuntFds .50b Hupp Cp .250 IntBusAAch 4 14 71* 71* 7 Inti Packers IntPaper I M Hit TAT — ITECktBr JO JohntAAanv 3 Jon Logan .50 JonatAL 2JO Joy Mtg2 KemCLd 2.40 Karr Me 1.20 KlmbClark 2 Kmga 1.40* Ktogar 1.30 Lear Slag JO' Lah Val mo Lehman l.7lg LOFGIt 2.00 LlbBMCN .431 LlgoettAM 5 LtonalCorp Llttonln lJTt LockhOAIrc 3 Loews Theat Lsnaf Cam l LornSGa 1.13 LonaiaiLt i Loral Corp Lorlllard 2.50 LTV .10 Lukent Stl 1 Mack Trucks MacyRH 1.30 Mad Pd i.70g Mar Mid 1.35 Sir ii M ■40b McDonA .50b AAcKaaa MO Merck la AAarChap .40g i 45* 45* 45* 4 9 53* 53* 53* 1 14 14 14 S 24* 25* 24* - 3 4* 4* 4* 4 —I— 5 35'A 35* 15* -1 59* 59* 59* . MO IS 30* 30 2 53 53 I 35 3! 15 03* « 4 52* K —K— II 39 31 I 113* 111___ 7 53* 53* 53* 4 4 59* 59* I" 4 54* 54* J 1 43* 43* 4 14 55 47* 4 4 34* 35* 3 t 53* 53* 53* 14 S3* ! 7 20to ! 4 II* 1 1 25* 3 to- * to - * IS + to A 4 * 45 11* llto 13* - 12 57* 57* 57* - 9 33* 33* 23* 4 4 47* 47* 47* + AAohasco .70 tDalry 2 t Slat 1 N EngEI 1.20 Nj ilnc la NYCant 1.30a Norfolk W1 to NA Avia 3 JO NorPac 2.40a Nerthrop 1 3 34to 35 I I 51* A| l| 5 33* 33 Ira T *T W5 wS To* " 1 (5* (5* 05* 4 5 20* 20* 30* 4 37 13* 05 05* 4 3 39* 39* 39* - 15 32to 32* 32* 5 25* 25* 25* 4 35 113*113* 113* 4 —N— 4 97* 97* 07* .. 5 54 53* 54 - 3 77* 77* 77* 4 3 14* 14* 94* 4 12 31* 31 to 31 to 1 lOto 10to )0to 4 10 3tto 31* 35'A 30 72 71* 71* - 1 53* 53* 53* B 14* 14* 15* 4 2 19* 19* 19* 4 A 4 'A A 4 to 14 54* 15* 55to - 1 7 37'A 37to 27to 4 1 4 124* 134* 134* 10 54* 54* 54* - ' 2 49* 49* 49* — ! 1 37* 37* 37* - 1 19 27* 27* 37* 4 i OeddantP JO OhloEdlt 1.05 OlInMath 1.40 pniilty 1.00 Outb Mar .10 OwanalH 1.35 OxtdPap 1.30 Pac Ltg 1.30 Pec Patrol PecTBT 1.30 POR imB ■m. PanhEP 1.40 ParamPlct i SRv ■lit PhiSVdg L30 PhllMor 1.40 PhilllpaPot 2 Pitney Bow 1 PltPlata 2.50 pMar«Ml.l( ProctAO 1.15 Pullman 1.40 14 3i* 51* 2 47*. 47* 7 15* 15* —p— 4 34* 34* 3 4 39 - 39 1 7 10 0* 5 34* 14to 1 M4 ?7% SS 1 7 41* li* < 20 32* 32* 3 14 34* 35* 1 4 14* 14* 1 13 41* 44* 1 2 J7 j— * 49 47* 4 15 62* 4 9 72* 1 4 94* tow 9 55* 55* 1 IP fw 7 74* 74* J II* lift. 8KS8SS 10 50* to* 31'A + to si* + to 47* 4- to 15* -f * 13* f to 35 + to B —-to + to 4- * k ... k + to » w* 4- * t 51* -'* i 34*-* I 44* - * 41* +1* \kn SiES’c." RctchCh .20a Rapub Aviat .isa?i2 , Rntom AMa i Riehtoii rig Rohr Corp I RoyCCoia .52 RoyDut i.ois RyderSy .sog Safeway ft'1 mn * + * *+* *+* *+* 134 39* 39* 39* + 1 I iii 8* 8* +'i 4 12 12 It .. II W W* » + 1 3 S* 39* S* + * 17 *4 J 41* 45* 4*-Jft ,i|i flf ii m 37* »*'m * 10 It 11* 31* - ' 11 47 55* 45*-' I Mto Mto 35to + t It 33* H* 33* -9* 1 1 74* 74* 74* - ! Schick SCMCorp .85f ScottPap .90 fi| AL 1.N GD 1.30 > Roe 1 ____ Oil 1.70 ShaMTrp Jig Sinclair 3 SlngerCo 3.20 fmHhK l.40a Socony 2.00 SoPRSug lg SouCalE 1.30 SouthnCo uo SouthPac 1.50 South Ry 2.80 *----y Rand -r„_el 1.50 Malty 145 '*“-ands 2.40 ... Kollsman StOII Cal 2.20 Siouind i.50a Sto NJ 2.25g StdOllOh 1.80 s!anWar*T.S? StauffCh 1.40 StarlDrua. .75 StevansJP 2 Sun Oil 1b Sunray 1.40 Swift Co 2 .52 .. .l Gas 1L ixteo 2.40„ ixEastT .90 . JxGSul .40 Taxaalnttm 1 TexPLd .35g Textron 1.00 thlokol .57t Tidewat Oil Timk RB 1.80 Trans w Air Tranaitron Trl Cont .75o Twant C .60b 2 1744 17% 17% 117 60% 60 60% + % 5 64% 65’ 2 65^/4 1 78% 78% 78% - % 22 88 ^ 17% 88 + % 1 23% 23% 33% + % 16 40% 40% 40% + % . Sf 65% 65% 65% .... 9 39% 39% 39% 4 55% 55% 55% + % 61 14%. 13% 13% — % 3 ’ 40% : 40% 40% 10 37% 37% 37% + % 3 78% 78% 78% - V4 *13 20% 20% 2P% - % 30 75 1 76'- 76^+ % 6 49% 49 49% ' ‘ ' m 75% 74% 75% + % 7) 62% 62 62 + % 22 11% . 11% 11% + % 1 35% 35% 35% + %• 13 50% 30% 50%. + % 20 34 33% 33% 70 56 55% 56 +1%. 7 140% 140 140 + \ 63 84 83% 84 +4 10 8% 8% 8%w 12 23% 23% 23% - 4 24 35 35 35 — V 12 27% 27% 27% + V 10 68% 68% 68% - V 8 15 15 15 + V 2 35% 35% 35% 3 42% 42% 42% + 1 2 63% 63% 63% -> V 28 50 49% 49% - l 21 17 16% 17 + \ VendoCo .40 32 26% WestgEI Weverhr whlteM InnDix > 33% 2 39% 39% - % on if 28% 21% — % 22 179% 179% 179% +1% noorani i.ov 11 40% 40% 40% + % enlth 1.40 36 93% 93 93% +1% Salat flourea ara unofficial. disbursement* tx ♦tie foregolno table ara annual “'* *n«ad on fha last quarterly wr iBmi’innvai declaration. Spaclal or extra dlvldandi or payments not tfatlg-nated as requiar are Identlfltd In the following footnotes. a—Also extra or extras, b—Annual raVa plus stock dividend, c—Liquidating dividend. d-Declared or paid In 1955 plus stock dividend, e—Paid last year, f—Payable In stock during 1965, estimated cash valus on sx-dlvldend or sx-dlitrlbu-♦ion data, a—Declared or paid to far this year, h—DKlared or paid attar stock divi-dqnd or split up. k—Declared or paid this year, an accumulative Issue with dividends In errsart. n—New Issue. p-Pekf this yeery dividend omitted, deferred or no action taken at last dlvldsnd meeting, r—Declared or paid In 1964 plus stock dividend, t—Paid In stock during 1964, estimated cash value on ex-dividend or ex-distribution date, i—Seles in full. MgUM" g -Ex Dlvl- KENQSHA. WIs. (AP)—Start-1 up crews returned to work at the American Motors Corp. today, although a dispute inside United Auto Workers Local 721 still threatened the peace reached after a 20-day strike. The company would not gay how many workers had been: called to prepare assembly lines j for resumption of work on 1966' model Ramblers, nor how many j resumption of work on 1966; model Ramblers, nor how many; reported for duty, but said full j production would start again Tuesday. There were no pickets, as the i union’s dissident faction had hinted. A union steward 'mailed a protest of the ratification voted to the National Labor Relations' Board (NLRB) Sunday while | United Auto Workers Local 72; President Richard C. Thiel jn- \ structed members Jto return to1 their -jobs today. FOUR BALLOTS The steward, Elmer Beatty of! Racine, charged multiple voting! at the ratification meeting Sat-1 urday and wrote the NLRB he, had been able to cast four ballots himself. American Motors said it in-; tended to resume full production | Tuesday. * * ★ But JBeatty, opppsed to the settlemertt, filed his protest after the Local 72 executive board postponed until today a meeting to consider 'a petition' by about 50 members callifig^or j a second vote on the ratification. He wrote the NLRB, the un-1 ion's headquarters at Detroit! and the Wisconsin Employment I Relations Board that member-] ! ship cards were not checked in ] ! the voting and that workers | were able to obtain more than one ballot. SHOWED MEMBERS He said he signed his name to “four ballots, marked them all and showed the (local) board members that no one would stop*hie from depositing them in the ballot box.” Beattv called for the VQte to be declared illegal, but said dissident workers would return to their jobs while awaiting a ruling. * ★ , ★ Thiel could not be reached for comment after Beatty’s charges, but he said earlier, “in a democratic union, the minorities always have the right to protest.” He predicted the settlement would stand. An agreement was reached In a 25-hour bargaining driVe that ended Saturday only 22 minutes before the scheduled meeting for a ratification vote. NEWLY OPENED ~ This new discount annex has been opened by Simms Brothers department store. Located a few doors north of Simms' present store at 144 N. Saginaw, the annex features automotive accessories, appliances and other items. . I L, Simms Opens Succe^ulfvestingj , „ew ^ % / v mm*. h * s h % By ROGER E. SPEAR Q. “I never have had the opportunity to make any sort investment. At present 1 can afford regular payments qf $100 a month for this purpose. I am set with retirement funds, and the insurance problem Is taken care of. Please tell me how to begin. “ R.S. News in Brief bivie L. Hanspard, 35, of 192 Wessen yesterday reported to Pontiac police that clothing valued at $240 had been taken from her home. Rummage Sale: Monday, 5-9; Tuesday, 9-5. 4367 Midrow, Drayton Woods. —adv. Stocks oklocal Interest American Stocks Ajax Maoeth .lOr AmPetrof A .11 ArkLaQia 1.M Aiamera Atad OIIAG Atlaa Cp Wt Barnet Eng Buz Tree JO Bril Pat ,12g Brown Ca JO CampbChlb Canto Pat Cm Javelin .) High 3 32* Law Lail Chg. 32* 39*4-* IITHI 10* 10* 43* 43* 43*4- * 13 1* 1* 1* 3 13-14 13 4 21* 3 143 7* 7* 7*4- V Creole f Mi Col. HfwP' • Gan Devtl Gan Plywd Giant Yal .40a 1* 3* 3* ]* . Hoarnar Boxes .53 5 20* {ggmAAta 41 13* AAackay Air > a AAcCrory wt 11 Mead John .40 14 LTx., Scurry Bain Itgnal dfl A la Sparry R art Tacmlcol^ .75°* UnControl JO . 'f m if *i‘ ^* 30 5*. 54 102* 15 17* J* in— * 30* 30*4- * •f f1* S S-.» rf=» 4ft 4*4) * FrMay-i lat Dividend^ Mclar^ IJtlmtoe Gas: Vernor's Ginger Ale ..... Wyandotte Chemical 3 MUTUAL FUNDS Prev. Day 81.8 101.0 87.6 Week Ago 81.9 101.0 87.6 Month. Ago 82.1 100.9 87.9 Year Ago 82.6 103.0 88.4 1965 High 83.7 102.4 88.9 1965 Low 87.8 100.8 87.6 1964 High 82.9 103.5 88.6 A. I think the answer to your problem is the Monthly Invest-[ ment Plan offered by certain member firms of the New York Stock Exchange. Under this | plan, you can invest your $100 a month in one stock, until you I feel you have accumulated 'enough of that isspe. Or you may have more than one stock under the Plan is you so wish. For a single purchase, I suggest Sears, Roebuck. If you wish another, I advise F.M.C. Corp. As a beginning you must call several member firms and ask if they will accept your account. ★ * * Q. “I am a former nurse, now disabled with cancer. I | have $22,000 in savings and , $1,000 In Puerto Rican Cement. My expenses are high and my income is low. Please | tell me how to invest $2,000 i available so I can get at least five per cent.” H.N. A. Your Puerto Rican Cement ] is satisfactory for good income j— which appears well-secured since the company enjoys a mo-onopoly in a fast-growing area. I suggest that you buy Maytag, an excellent appliance-maker with a record of rising divi-I dends. Your field here would be 15.7 per cent, including an extra of $0.40 paid last year-end and likely to be repeated. As another good yielding stock I recommend Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Rwy., selling on a 4.9 per cent basis with | comfortable dividend coverage. Roger Spear’s new 48-page Guide to Successful Investing is now ready. For your copy, clip this notice and send $1.00 with your name and address to Roger E. Spear, in care of The Pontiac Press, Box 1618, ! Grand Central Station, New [ York City, N.Y. 10017. ] (Copyright, 1065) Simms Brothers department store has opened a new discount annex a few doors north of its present store at 144 N. Saginaw. rtf * ft -. The new facility, remodeled by Simms since acquisition from the Home Dairy, has 5,000 feet of air-conditioned space. Featured items include automotive accessories, appliances, juvenile furniture, sporting goods, toys and games. ★ ★ * George Duncan will manage the new annex. NY Times, Guild in New Attempt to Avert a Strike NEW YORK (VPI) - Negotiators for the New York Times and the American Newspaper Guild were scheduled to meet today in a renewed effort to agree on a new contract and avert a strike against the limes. ★ * .★ The Guild said it would notify the Times today' on what day this week it planned a walkout if a new contract was not agreed upon. Guild members at all other major newspapers in the city have said they also will strike if the Gnildsmen at the Times walk ont. The only major paper which would not be affected is the New York Post, which is not represented by the Publisher’s Association of New York. ★ ★ ★ Negotiations with the Timea have been going on since March 8. The issues are pensions, jurisdiction, automation and the establishment of a union shop. Hood's Death CHICAGO (UPI) - Homicide detectives said today gangland associates of murdered mobster Mannv Skar may have had him killed before he could “tell all” at his upcoming income tax trial. Skar was to appear\in court Oct. 11 to answer charges he did not pay federal takes on inore than $1.4 million in income. Instead, Skar will be buried today, the victim of a professional gangland assassination Saturday in a dimly lit alley) behind his Lake Shore Drive apartment. Police also watched airports for a dark-complexioned man they said the mob ordered to fly here for fikar’s murder. A ■ ★ rtr They said he could have come from Kansas City or Wichita, according to a ticket they traced. FRONT RANKS The 42-year-old Skar left a wife, a daughter, 6, a son about to enter college, and a legacf of trying to make it to the front ranks of Chicago’s underworld — and not succeeding. ■ A thrice-convicted felon, Skar’s biggest venture was the Sahara Inn North, a posh 110 million motel. He made it a hangou* for syndicate hoods. Volunteers Restrain X U. S. Dollar Drain By ADREN COOPER WASHINGTON (AP) — Until a few years ago, most Americans, including), most businessmen, thought oK the U.S. balance of paymentsW some numbers game played only by international bankers. That is, if they thodcht of it at all. Now, soLe businessmen and hankers are'directly involved in the campaign' to reduce the almost continuous flow of dollars abroad. Their Voluntary actions played a large, part in tne achievement of a. slim surplus in thft balance of payments in the April-June quarter—the first surplus in eight years. SecretaV °K the Treasury Henry H. Fowler and other government ohicials are intent on attaining a nalancq in the international accounts. \The nation collects $120 MllionX a year in taxes; interaaUonaP accounts have amounted A) a dollar drain of $3 billion a year. \ U.S. IS BANKER Since the United States'is, In effect, the banker for the ndh-Communist world, a one-year dollar outflow of $3.1 billion occurred in 1964. (If. public and private payments to foreigners exceeds receipts from foreigners, there is a net outflow- of dollars, or deficit). But the number of dollars overseas has been building. The total is $27 billion. Half of them are in the hands of governments, which have the privilege of cashing them in for U.S gold. * to * While the number of dollars outstanding has been increasing, this country’s gold stock has declined from $22.8 billion in 1957 (o $13.85 billion. Whenever officials of foreign governments believe there are too many dollars floating around, they will cash them for gold. \ Thus, the amount of the U.S. gold loss depends heavily on the attitude of foreign governments. ACHIEVE EQUILIBRIUM Fowler emphasized this at a recent congressional hearing. He said the United States could achieve an equilibrium which would not necessarily mean a “zero balance.” He indicated that the United States might be able to run a deficit of $1 billion annually over a period of years without damaging the dollar. A government-sponsored committee has recommended unanimously that, the payments figures be changed to count only those dollars which are in foreign government coffers, since other dollars outstanding are used by banks and businesses in normal trade operations. In most cases, this revision would make the deficit appear $1 billion a year smaller. ft rtr ★ The part the policy of foreign governments plays is illustrated by the experience of the past 18 months. In 1964, the payments deficit was $3.1 billion but only $125 million worth of dollars were turned in for gold. A large part of the deficit was incurred in the last three months of the year and foreign officials apparently decided the U.S. payments problem was getting out of control. They started cashing in their dollars —some $1.2 billion worth in six mortths—even though the payments picture had improved dramatically. More than half were converted by one country —France. CURB FLOW That is why Fowler said hla goal is to curb the flow of dollars as much aa possible until foreigners are convinced beyond doubt that the dollar is **ao good as gold.” j&mx WH / ,1 Vi>1; I THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 18, 1965 Mr*. Thomas Jack, S, of 308 Fourth fe Hated hi fair cwaBHon at FoathK OetwyatMc Hospital Matriac an auto ******* at I Mrs. Jack was a paaeoger in a car, hiwn by her husband, which cofflded with a vehicle drifts by Ruth L. Smith, 11, of The Smith woman, Jack, and two Jack children, Dianna, S, and Anita, t, were all treated at the hospital apd released. Buliut Fired Into Church During Night Services HOLLAND (AP) - A bullet was fired Sunday night into Pine Crook Christian Reformed Church her* while services wore in progress. Ottawa County sheriff’s men believed that the shot came from a passing auto. No one was injured in the church and the services continued. Gun metal, a kind of bronze, is an alloy of copper and tin which gained its name from use of bronze for ordnance. MEN WANTED 'Afwwfs am fob* for KJ.T. Gradual** than w* can ■apply'* • Fall and Part Time • Buy and Evaaiag Sessions • Tsftiaa b Law • Pay as Yao da ELECTRONICS CLASSES NOW FORMING Dean at MOUNT PLEASANT (AP) — Dr. George H. Nelson, former dean of graduate studies at Central Michigan University, died in a hospital Sunday. He was n. Nelson, who had resigned from his post as dean last Monday to return to teaching history, entered the hospital Thursday with an asthma condition. His death was atributed to Mood dots. A native of Iron Mountain, Nelson was a graduate of Northern Michigan University. He earned Masters and Ph.D. degrees at the University of Michigan. He taught at high schools in Gladstone, Iron Mountain and Ann Arbor and went to CMU as a history instructor in IMS. He 4s survived by his widow, Catherine, and two sons, Lt Cmdr. Geoffrey Nelson of the U.S. Navy Air Corps, and Paul, CMU student. Service is scheduled for Wednesday burial in Mount Pleasant. SPORTY LOOK FROM SAAB - The 1966 Monte Carlo 850 Sports Sedan, introduced today by Saab Motors, Inc., features "oil injection front disc brakes and Pirelli sports tires. Saab’s three-model lineup, including two new power options, is on delivery to some 270 dealers in ttie United States. Deaths in Pontiac,Neighboring Areas ELECTRONIC INSTITUTE Of TECHNOLOGY 2457 WOODWARD AVE. DETROIT 1 WO 2-5660 Panic Starts —Afterwards MILWAUKEE, Wis. (AP) — An estimated 900 persons were evacuated from a downtown theater Sunday as fire broke out in the stage area and curled up a movie screen. Manager John McKay dropped an asbestos curtain in front of the screen, isolating the flames from the seating area. No one was hurt. “The only panic,” said box office cashier Sharon K. Pat-trick, 22, “was all of them trying to get their money back.” Dies in Baroda Fire BARODA (AP) - Mrs. Minnie Gitersonke, 09, died Sunday of smoke inhalation, state police reported, in a fire caused by defective electrical wiring at her home near this Berrien County • May We Serve You ii' 563 West Huron timiniiniHHiimiHu Beauty, Quality, Craftsmanship in ENDURING MEMORIALS MONUMENTS . ............$195.00 MARKERS $ 35.00 INCH MEMORIALS, INC. 864 N. Perry FE 5-6931 Browse Plates for Memorial Park Cemeteries at Below Cemetery Prices Ctrl Oy. Solution « MRS. JAMES D. HALL Service for Mrs. James (Viola J.) D. Hall, 69, of 6386 Hatchery, Waterford Township, will be at 1:90 p.m. Wednesday at the Lewis E. Wint Funeral Home, Clarkston, with burial at Drayton Plains Cemetery. Mrs. Hall died unexpectedly Saturday. She was a member of the Ferndale Assembly of of GodUhurch. Surviving are three daughters Mrs. Richard A. Logan of Clarkston, Mrs. Steve Karpovck of Independence Township, and Mrs. Dean Griffin, Mo.; five sons, Robert G. of Waterford Township, James J. and David J., both of Pontiac; Kenneth E. of Kansas and Donald J. Stevens of Byron; two sisters, a brother, 16 grandchildren and a great grandchild. CLIFFORD B. STEFFEY Service for Clifford B. Stef-fey, 60, of 2860 Woodbine, Waterford Township, will be at 11 a.m. tomorrow at Sparks-Grif-fln Funeral Home, with burial at Oak Grove Cemetery, Cold-water. Mr. Steffey died Saturday. r PHILIP STENMETZ PONTIAC -TOWNSHIP—Word has been received of the death Aug. 25 of former resident Philip Stenmetz, 22. Mr. Stenmetz was killed during rioting in the Watts area of Lrn Angeles. JOSEPH E. STOVALL Joseph g. Stovall, 67, of 256 S. East Boulevard, died yesterday. His body is at the Huntoon Funeral Home. Mr. Stovall was retired from GMC Truck and Coach Division. He was a member of the Columbia Avenue Baptist Church. Surviving besides his wife, Edna, are a daughter, Mrs. Barbara Dunning of Pontiac; James of Ludington; two brothers; a sister; four grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. MRS. HARRY M. BOORN Service for former Waterford Township resident Mrs. Harry (Aruba) M. Boom of Boscobei, Wis., will be tomorrow afternoon at tlie Thoni Kendale Funeral, Home, Boscobei, Wis., with burial following. Mrs. Boom died Sunday. She was a member of First Presbyterian Church, Women’s Chib, Pontiac Literary Club and the church January-March Club. She was a life member and past matron of the OES Lodge 228. MRS. HENRY BRITTEN GOODRICH—Service for Mrs. Henry (Mabel C.) Britten, 74,, of 8209 Kearsley will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at the Assembly of God Church. Burial will: be in Goodrich Cemetery by the C. F. Sherman Funeral Home of Orton vi lie. Mrs. Britten died Saturday after a long, illness. She was a member of the Goodrich Assembly of God. Surviving besides her husbahd are one daughter, Mbs. Walter Gruenewaid of Ortonviile; a sister; and one grandchild. MRS. WILLIAM H. BURKE TROY — Service for former resident Mrs. William H. (Frances E.) Burke, 67, of Oak Park will be 11 a.m. Wednesday at Price Funeral Home. Graveside service will be 2 p.m. Wednesday in Oak Hill Cemetery, Owos- incomes under 89, year, as well as the'Vo-al Education Act of 1983 and the'Manpower Development and TYaining Act of 1882. You May Select Every Detail.a Wo will conduct the funeral exactly as you diract. The selection of the dotoils of the funeral It for you, the next of kin to decide. Everythin* will „ be -done exactly as YOU with. Dm families wo torve like and appreciate this policy. The music, flower arrangement, bearers, and care of a hundred details are performed by us — exactly at you direct. (Phene federal 4-4511 i (Patkinq On Our (PremiieY ■ Mrs. Burke died Saturday after a long illness. Surviving are liam H. Jr. of EasLLdnsing and Frederiftk'^Tof Washington, D.C.; two brothers; a sister, Helen Kent of Troy; and six grandchildren. CHARLES FRED CAMPBELL ORION TOWNSHIP—Service for Charles Fred Campbell, 79, of 9031 Indianwood will be 11 a.m. Wednesday at Allen’s Funeral Home, Lake Orion. Burial will be in East Lawn Cemetery. Mr. Campbell died yesterday after a short illness. He was a retired employe of Sparks With-ington, Jackson. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Joseph E. (Margaret) Mendoza of Lake Orion; four sisters; two brothers; five grandchildren; and 15 greatgrandchildren. MRS. GARFIELD E. DAHL HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP -Service tor Mrs. Garfield E. (Shirley Ann) Dahl, 28, of 4031 Hillcrest will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at the Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Milford. Burial will be in Highland Cemetery. Mrs. Dahl died Friday, was the proprietor of W b i t e Lake Hair Fashions, Highland. DEWITT G. HELFERICH SHELBY TOWNSHIP - Service for DeWtit G. Helferich, 77, of 55100 Dequindre will be 1:90 p.m. tomorrow at the Milliken Funeral Home, Utica. Burial will follow in Prestonville Cemetery. Mr. Helferich died yesterday after a brief illness. former Shelby Township treasurer for IS years, Mr. Hsl-ferich had been a draftsman at Ford Mbtor Co., Detroit. He was a member of Birmingham Lodge No, 44, FIcAM, and the Rochester Senior Citizens Chib. Surviving are his wife, Sarah E.; a daughter, Mrs. Myril L. Kitchen of Southfield; Donald B. of Rochester; four brothers. Harry of Glendale, Calif., Elmer of Scarsdale, N. Y., Welter of Florida and Omar of Utica; a sister; four grandchildren: and two greatgrandchildren. JAMES KALLAS WATERFORD TOWNSHIP Service for James Kallas, 50, of 3450 Plains will be 1 p m. Wednesday at St. George Greek Orthodox Church, Pontiac. Burial will be in Mount Avon Cemetery, Rochester, by Pixley Memorial Chapel, Rochester. Triaagion will be 7 p.m. tomorrow at the funeral home. Mr. Kallas died Saturday after a abort illness. Ht was a pro- .........-J Track Drive Sait, tar I UP pvrpoaa al aimer— “ j Mae aT Ordinance Ho. Ordinance ta rejma a following daacrlbad r HURON IT. PONTIAC Surviving an bis wife, Marie; two daughters, Mrs. Theodore Sapelak of Rochester and Joanne at home; two .sisters; one brother; and two grandchildren. WALTER MARKUNE COMMERCE TOWNSHIP -Service for Walter Markline, 0, of an Pickbourae wiD be U a.m. tomorrow at SET# ivxTi gm^^cpcmunlMten OLOA BAhKELBY I . -rwr-r > twtand^VNM Bl** Funeral Heme, Ualoo|if«. Lake. Burial will be in Commerce Cemetery. Mr. Markline died Friday after a short illness. He was employed by Consumers Power Co. Surviving are two grandchildren. CHARLES F. PHELPS ATTICA—Service for Charles F. Phelps, 49, of 3980 Greenwood was to be 1 p.m. today at the Price Funeral Home, 1Toy, with burial in Cadillac Memorial Gardens, East, Mt. Clem-n. Mr. Phelps died Friday. A foreman at Jentzen-Miller “ pany in Troy, he was of Mlllman’s CIO, Detroit are his wife, Lu-daughters, Mrs. Al-Cash and Jane I. Phelps, both of Attica, and Linda J. at home; one son, Stephen C., at home; and two sisters, MRS. ROBERT WILSON WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP - Service for Mrs. Robert (Julia L.) Wilson, 76, wiU be 2 p.m. Wednesday at the Elton Slack Funeral Home, Union Lake. Burial will be in Commerce Cemetery. Mrs. Wilson died yesterday after a short illness. Surviving are three sons, George Starick of Orchard Lake, Daniel Starick of San Jose, Calif., and Market Starick of Radford; six grandchildren; and seven great-grandchUdren. MRS. FRANK WOODS ROCHESTER — Former resident Mrs. Frank (Victoria) Woods, 78, of Ortonviile died this morning after a long Ul- Her body is at the William R. Potere Funeral Home. Famum Backs School Bills By E. VAN WAGONER TUFTY Washington Correspondent WASHINGTON - Rep. Billie S. Famum, who was often called the watchdog of the tax dollar in Lansing sometimes calls it “fiscal idiocy” NOT to spend money, especially for education. , e. e u Still watchful of any excess spending, he recognizes it will take federal funds to make the elementary and secondary education program come alive. He says “lack of education has cost this nation thousands •f potential soldiers and these rejects have children also unable to pass the draff tests aaless we break the cycle.’’ The Pontiac Democrat is backed by two equally economy-minded groups who supported educational legislation because unemployment is mostly caused by lade of education. * * * The UJS. Chamber of Commerce and the Committee on Economic Development are more directly concerned with the relationship of. unemployment to vocational education, but they recognize it5s essential to attack problem nearer its beginnings in a good general education. BILL SUPPORTED So they support the Elementary and Secondary School AcT ------------ - - 1 of a children of Mfcn Crushed to Death THREE OAKS (ApVl John Hass, 17, of Three Oaks was crushed to death Sunday in a timber-cutting mishap, State Police said. He waa pinned Oy a large limb of a tree he waa helping cut down at the rural home of ids son-in-law, Elliott C^Mkett. of 1868, authorizing tp billion annually fof* the support of a Alaska’s Kodiak Island Is inhabited by the world’s biggest bears. Dial 382-6181 Pontiac Press Want Ads roe visit action NOTICS TO ABViiTMfit! AM tSCSWSQ *T S PM. Or 7.m iUr ZB 1.44 1144 U »J! SU MS IMS UJt AJKnJFtXt OCC Officials, Educators Talk on Development Officials of Oakland Community College held a weekend meeting with visiting educators to discuss long range plans for development of the OCC fostruc- Participants included Dr. Samuel N. Postlethwait, proof batany at Purdue University; Col. Gabriel Ofiesh, specialist in programmed instruction for the U.8. Air Force and Dr. Desmond Wedberg qf the National Education Association. ♦ * ★ Others were Dr. Don O. Ta-troe, superintendent of Waterford Township Schools; Dr. B. Lamar Johnson, professor of Education at UCLA; and Dr. Robert Corrigan, vice president of Litton Industries Education Division. Representing OCC were Dr. John E. Tirrell, president; and Dr. Albert A. Canfield, vice president-instruction. diehigaa, which ranks 11th among the states ta per capita income, ranks 18th la the expenditure per pepti tn the elementary and secendary school system ($818 annually as compared to 1788 per pupil in New York). The average salary of teachers in the elementary and sec-, ondary schools is (6,700 annually as compared to $7,$00 in New York. ★ ♦ ★ - Michigan has less than 160,000 in vocational programs, aided by the federal government, as compared to more than 200,000 in New York. BASIC PROBLEM The problem is education and training. There are in excess of 10 million families in the United States with incomes of less than 13,000 a year; over 0 mi have family beads with eight years of schooling or less. For most of these, the nuria deficiency is the faOare t* acquire ta early years the capa- enabie them to beaefit from the education, experience, and to tbtm: vocational tratatag, the retratatag of adults, and Woman Hospitalized After Crash in CHy A Pontiac woman is in satisfactory condition at Pontiac General Hospital following Clara Hatchett, II, of 173 Green was the driver of a car which collided with a vehicle driven by Richard Olson, 38, of 312 E. Wilson, aoeMtUng to Pontiac police. Saginaw Fair Mark Stt SAGINAW (AP) - Hi* Saginaw County Fair opened Sunday and set a one-day attendance record of 11,718. The presto* record was 76,549, set In The person who enters the labor force unprepared for . . . or not preparable for ... the modern technological world never acquiree a skill or forms a I a s t i n g job connection. He lacka general education. * * * Congressman Famum, who serves on the Appropriation subcommittee dealing with the Health, Education and Welfare Department, did not have a lot of formal education himself, which, in part, explains his appreciation of its importance. CCC DAYS He’s fond of telling of the incentive to learn gleaned from his experience in the CCC bock in the depression days. After high seboel, he took sepdal courses but Ms higher education is self-imposed. The Michigan Democrat regrets these “rejects” On the draft calls and is hopeful tint tiee win be a remedy. William J. Driver, Veterans Affairs administrator, says tbs OI Bffl of World War II was the loudest knock of opportunity ever heard in America. Nearly 8 million veterans of advancing their education and training under this bill. In addition to the professions (teachers, doctors, lawyers, and a result of the OI bin, hM bean an rlebed by 383,606 veteran- sands of other skilled workers. ■* * * The Committee on Economic Devafopnwnt concludes It is not sufficient merely to improve ad- proceed rapidty to keep abreast of the foroM in the economy. Death Notices •RITTSN, SEPTEMBER II MASIL C., HM Koartloy Goodrich. Michigan; aga 74; ibvtaO wHa of Hawy- -Britten; 74; I Saar alitor of Mr*. Flora Acker-ton; alio surwvad ky ana grandchild. Piawral eorvlc* will kt haw wwnaadey. tart. ft at 2:if p.m. at Ow AtatmMy al God Church, Goodrich. Mich., with Rav. Oaorga IHthptan and Rav. Frank AMx-■if officiating. Informant In Goodrich Comofarv. Goodrich. Michigan. I OAHU SEPTEMBER 10, IMS, *HIR-LEY ANN (MICHELE). 401 MIH* . erttf. Highland Townthlp; ago 24; balovad wffa of OarflaM S. Data; batovtd daughtar af Mr. and Mrs. Gordsn Alton; daar mottiar af Jamaa. Michael, Tarrl Lyrni and , Gordon Dahl; daar tlifar al Jay AM Mrs. Charits Irwki; granddaughter of Walter . Pmoral sarvtct will ha MB ■ Orlffta, and Rshart O., Jamas J., David J. and Ksnnath E. Hall, and Denote J. Stevms. Daar slater of m CWM Johnson. Mr*. Frsd ewiNtaSh and Butter O. Mills; stag aurvteud ky Ta grSndchlWran and ana draw grmdalld.Pungral aarvlca wW ha haW Wadnaaday, £apf. M af 1:1* g.m. w tht Ltwlt I. Wild Funaral Hama, Clarkston. jopt.14, W 111# a.m. at fha Ihisn Black Funaral Homs. Itn Union Lana Rd., Unlsn Lake, with Rav. Paid Acfear officiating. Interment ta Commerce Camwary. Mr. Mark-*■— -‘tTh tjTgtaw w Wj father of Mrs. Patricia (Leonard) Evans, Mrs. Dorothy (Donald) Smite, and Larpy Miliar; daar imihdi af Mrs. Hatan Parr, Mrs Dorothy Kimball, and JdMdti Minor; atad survived by aovon grandestHdran. Completed funaral arrange mania ara pending font the Oi «. Purstay Punarai Hama, wham Mr. MEtar wM Ma in Wafa •-—*=»- -vaning. (visit-ta fiw p.m.) teg hau,,......... .... SMim iiPtlMBSE nr WILLIE, <71 Highland; ago ff; httovpd hvsband of lust* tmltti; botevod am of Mrs. Sofch SmEh; door fofhor of Wldlandm Prddar-Nh C., Ployd C., Mprbort L., and Latter M. Smnh, Erma E. Thom-at, PhyNIt J. Hay at and Zonote M. (gay. and Mrs. Patricia Spann; dear hraftwr of NawMRi c. and TOk/ Smith, Jialdhtea Qulnco, grandchildren an grandchlldrtn. Pun it MM jeMpty, 7 p.m. at ma Macadonla Bapflat »te,^n,&Ak,M6mM^ Camatery. Mr. SmEh will lie m alala at me William P. Davla Pu- sTjffCTidtenAifi! Trim. ana Woodklnt, Waterford Town-ah la; ago W; katovad husband of Mr*. Arwna Bteftey; dear ftfhar af Mrs. niartafta HamHton and Mrs. iHaakWh Imhhrdaar brafhar af Mr. Mavrlc* Staffay; alao survived by four grandcniWron. Pu-noral tarvlco wfH bo hold Tuesday, fdpf. 14, of 11:00 d.m. Of tee IpWIBjlriffln Punorol Homo, in-tariMM kl Oah Drove Comotery, CoMwatar, MM, Mr, tMWy will* W* te ^WjtaW fhaHwrit^rlffte tej_hour* I ta'l p.nV and"7 to * w* -«Jlfufs Dunning, in« timenj^^rlVwell and Mr*! manta ana panting from Hw Hun. kM Punarai Hama, ntaire Mr, ttovafl wHl II* m state, s lasEsfcg fflaST iCTiTJ" SiTr“ BOX REPLIES At IS 4kte. today II •ere replies it The Press OMee la Ihe tel-lewteg boxes: 1,7, II, St, 81,48,17, 48, 48, U, M, «, 71,18, iii, m, m. Huntoon PUNBRAL HOMS D. E. Pursley "W ' SPARKSGRIFNN FUNERAL HOMS "thoughtful A'rt< “PT 1217 Clovorlawn. Ponftec. Mlty» mve^.wwjwp _w\ •boggy fe 5-1271.__________ Lost: BLACK WAU.lt SV MC Voterlnory . Hoopftel, undorgoteg troatmonf for tumor. UL l-Uft LO»T: SLACK MlNI-L THE IBM CIVIL EIONTS LAW PEOMIjlfk WITH CERTAIN EXCEPTIONS, DISCRIMINATION BECAUSE OP SOL SINCE SOME OCCUPATIONS ARE CONSIDERED MOM AT-TRACTIVE TO PRESONS OP ONI SIX THAN THE other, a oyxariiV TINTS ARE PLACED CONvaNIINCi OP READERS. SUCH LISTINGS ARE NOT INTENDED TO IX-CLUDE PEESONS OP BITHIR SEX. Kelp Waited 0ah j 1 ASOVB-AVEEAOB YOUNG MAN, 21-w yoor*, far akava a»araga ap. Portunlty. Ataoctetes, m N. Tate- > proph, PortlPc Mall. I ASSOCIATES FINANCE MANAOE-mmt Irate**, Immadtaf* opening ter young mm Interaated te a carter te fInane*. Mtef ha high rgificaaaaag wmi 4k». Hr tec lory branch that ha* steady, tear around work. No strikos or $480 PER MONTH 5 Men-rort-Tims I note S -------- •W'l li MEN Who art interaated in salsa but a hay* It but unntcaaaary. w* you. You are pair whsfh. ar you am ar not. $475 GUARANTEE Ite Mr. Math M.E4C. 242 Oahiand liw Shara Friday 15 BOYS ‘ d is teya tejmrk te 4:2# ^.' ^teTjl'lS , Sram, fBmf, mUmsfub ATTENTION 4 $