The Weather U.S. Weather Bureau Feracatt Sonny, Warmer CDataila m Paga t) THE PONTIAC PR PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9! 1966 —48 PAGES fM4$0VfltPfflfS VOL, 124 NO. 184 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Congress Moves oh LBJ Inflation Curbs WASHINGTON (AP) - Amid talk of new taxes and some sharp complaints, / Congress moved today to speed consideration of President Johnson’s new proposal for/lighting inflation by suspending some business tax incentives. ★ ★ The House Ways and Means Committee/ announced hearings next Monday on the presidential plan — outlined in a special message yesterday — to suspend for 16 months the 7-per cent tax credit for business spending on equipment and the tax-advantageous fast depreciation rules on business real estate. Hie legislation was quickly introduced yes today by Rep. whbur D. Mills, D-Ark., committee chairman, who said the first witnesses will include Secretary of the Treasury Henry H. Fowler, Secretary of Commerce'John T. Connor and Budget Director Charles L. Schultze. In the Senate, Majority Leader Mike Mansfield announced that Democratic leaders in Con- gress had been consulted in advance of the message and had assured the President of their cooperation. * ★ And Sen. Russell B. Long, B-La., bead of the Finance Committee, said that group will consider Johnson’s proposals at an early date. The House must act first on the legislation. In his surprise message, Johnson said the stimulus to the equipment improvement needed a few years ago now is overstraining supplying factors and clogging capital markets with excessive demands for credit. The business tax credit applies not only to equipment and machinery purchased by industry but to such farm production equipment as tractors. It does not, however, apply to livestock investments. Johnson announced his new anti-inflation proposals at a news conference staged yesterday just as the special message arrived on Capitol Hill. The conference dealt mainly with economics, but the President- made another point: The question of troop withdrawal from Europe and other North Atlantic Treaty Organization problems are matters “more wisely handled” in NATO discussions first. Congressional action on U.S. troops abroad is not necessary at the moment. Shot to Death Pontiac Police Hunt Customer Trouble Discovered as Astronauts Sleep After Killing Witnesses Claim CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) A pinpoint leak spotted in -a rocket fuel system by an electronic “sniffer” forced a postponement today of at least 24 hours for the flight of Gemini II. ★ * ★ The leak was discovered by a technician examining Gemini II’s Titan 2 booster rocket just three hours before astronauts Charles Conrad Jr. and Richard F. Gordon were to wake up and start getting ready to blast off this morning. Astronaut Alan Shepard, crew co-ordinator, said Conrad and Gordon “took a rational point of view” when advised of the trouble after they woke up at 4 a.m. “They were glad the trouble was discovered before launch,” Shepard said. “Both said they waited a long time for the Gemini II flight and another day wouldn’t make a big difference.” r* ★ * The astronauts went back to bed and awoke again about 6 a.m., then went to the launch pad. BY TECHNICIAN Air Force officials said the leak was spotted by a technician carying a lunch box-sized safety device commonly called a “sniffer.” The instrument— technically referred to as a toxic vapor detector— detects chemicals in the air and reports their presence by a needle moving across a dial. The leak in the first stage, was first detected by a technician checking ordnance devices on the rocket after its tanks had been loaded with 13,700 gallons of fuel and J5,-900 gallons of oxidizer. He noted a tell-tale reddish-brown wisp of vapor that indicated a leak andJeported it to the blockhouse. About the same time, it was noted by instruments in the blockhouse. JIHMMilMWHIHWlW In Today's jj. Press Asia Report I !§ Reporter from The | I Press writes from Tokyo. | 1 — PAGE B-6. Faulty Figure I Pentagon admits war 1 ; contract figure off $200 I million. — PAGE A-3. | Bowling Section 1 I Highlights of upcoming > I- keg season listed.—PAGES I C-5-C-9. | Area News.....i.. A-4 § | Astrology ....CM 8 Bridge .........1. CM § Crossword Puzzle ... D-ll I Comics........... C-10 I Editorials ........ A-6 1 Farm and Garden ... C-ll 8 Markets ............ D4 f 1 Obituaries ..........B-4 a < Sports ....... C-l—C-9 | \ Theaters ....... D-2-D-3 p ; TV-Radio Programs D-ll / Wilson, Earl ...... DJI, X Women’s Pages B-7—B-II I Youth Beat.......... B-l >g-................:v Barmaid Leak Grounds Gemini Flight WASHINGTON (AP) - President Johnson signs into law the auto and highway safety bills today before an audience of congressmen, auto company officials, safety experts and auto industry critic Ralph Nader. One bill gives the secretary of Taubman Due at Luncheon Pontiac citizens will have the opportunity to question A. Alfred Taubman personally Tuesday when his plan for downtown redevelopment is explained at a public luncheon at the Elks Temple. Open to all Who are interested in learning about the proposal, the noon luncheon has been scheduled by city officials who also have set a Sept. 27 hearing on the matter. Taubman, an Oak Park developer, is seeking the authority to build a mall-type shop-ing center in the southern end of Pontiac’s central business district. Luncheon tickets can be purchased for $3 downtown at the Pontiac Chamber of Commerce office in the Riker Building or Dickinson’s Men’s Wear, 31 N. Saginaw. They also are available at the Community National Bank branch office at 584 N. Perry; Hughes, Hatcher and Suffrin at the Mall; ahd Osmun’s at the Tel-Huron Shopping Center. Commerce authority to set safety standards for 1968 model cars, buses and trucks and to set standards within two years on tires and used cars. The other provides funds for comprehensive state safety programs including driver education, vehicle inspection, highway lighting and traffic control. Nader, 32, the attorney whose book “Unsafe at Any Speed” helped spur congressional action, said last night he hhd been invited to the afternoon ceremony. ★ ★ ★ He said in an interview the final auto safety bill is “much better and stronger” than he had expected and that the Senate-House Conference Committee “accepted the best provisions of each bill, immeasurably strengthening it.” » BOTH FACTORS The conference committee accepted the stiffer enforcement provisions of the Senate’s bill while adopting the broader coverage in the House version, including the authority for the government to set used car safety standards within two years. “The bill gives the government a fairly adequate grant of authority 'covering establishment of safety standards, research and development and disclosure of information,” Nader said. The auto safety law almost certainly would mean that 1968 cars will contain safety features such as head rests, dual brakes and {additional interior padding which the government already When Sunny Gets Blue. .. Woman Was Slain During Argument A 30-year-old barmaid was shot to death early today in a crowded tavern at 465 S. Sanford, ending what witnesses told Pontiac police was an argument with a customer. Roenehl L. Nash of 201 Prospect, an employe at Harry’s Bar on the city’s south side, died on the floor of a rear storage room minutes after police arrived at the scene. Sought in the slaying is a Negro described to police as in his 20s, between 5’-8” and 5-10, and weighing from 165-180 pounds. Fourteen men in the bar when police responded to the call were taken to the police station and questioned, but according to Detective Sgt. John I. Williams, none was able to identify the killer by name. ★ ★ ★ Police were told, however, that the man, who fled after firing “five or six shots” at the victim, was a “familiar” figure at the tavern. PRIOR TO MIDNIGHT Twenty-five-year-old John Lan-don of 539 Nebraska told patrolmen that he had entered the bar p r i 0 r to midnight and ordered a beer when he saw the victim hit a customer in the face with a shot-glass. “The barmaid picked up a gun from behind the bar,” Landon sai^ “and for a mo-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) Poets write about October’s bright blue weather but what about September? The weatherman brought sunny skies every day this week to the Pontiac area, and be is still predicting sunny and mild for the weekend. The day-by-day forecast looks like this: FRIDAY — Sunny and cool tonight, lows falling to 48 to 54. Light southerly winds. ** * * SATURDAY - Sunny and warmer with high 78 to 84. SUNDAY v- Sunny and warm. Precipitation probabilities less than 5 per cMit through tomorrow.' RATTLED RATTLER — William Miller Jr„ *"**•« Wwtu 15,>9115 Sashabaw, Independence Township, shows and his father caught the snake and preserved it rattlesnake to his Dyearokl sister, Jime. Miller to ajatf 0^ alcohol *-* ■ “My dad was a captain in the Army and gave lots of orders. That must have been before be was married.” , V'' • ' 1 , BARMAID KILLED - A 30-year-old Pontiac woman employed at this tavern was fatally shot in the neck early today following an argument with a customer. Pontiac police said Roenehl L. Nash Pontiac Press Photo of 201 Prospect died shortly after midnight on the floor of a storage room at the rear of the bar. At least 15 persons witnessed the shooting, police said. AP Wirephoto SEEKS SLOWDOWN - President Johnson is shown at the start of his news conference in the White House yesterday where he explained his special message to Congress calling for suspension of certain tax credits to business. The President said he felt it was time to slow down the economy by curbing plant expansion among other things. m,\msurnm w. memmmmmm „ 1 Reptiles Increasing Snake^attleand... \ U’L ONES Safety Bills Law Today By LOIS MANDIBERG William Miller and his son William Jr. pickled the fifth rattlesnake — just for variety. They had killed and discarded the other four found nesting in their back yard during the past three weeks. The abundance of rattlesnakes at 9115 Sashabaw, Independence Township highlights increasing reports of reptilian visitors in Oakland County. While seventeen years ago, a rattlesnake in Michigan was considered a phenomenon; today it is treated almost nonchalantly. ★ ★ ★ Jacob Anspaugh of 985 Reese, Independence Township said he killed more than 10 In the last month. He also reproted that two of his neighbor’s farm hands quit after discovering they could make more money catching ad selling rattlesnakes. It seems that the Massasau-gua, Michigan’s only native rattier, is a sun worshipper. As the hot sun lures humans to beaches, it also brings slithering snakes out basking in open yards, roads, and woodpiles. ★ ★ ★ And what happens when the human and the snake meet en-route? The human gets either a punctured skin, which can be fatal if not treated promptly; or earns a dead snake and a new toy “rattle” for the baby. These 2-foot-kmg, gray-brown, black-blotched reptiles , crawl in the most unexpected places. - Miller found (me in his rowboat. Last month an area man found one waiting for him on the front walk of his house. * ★ * In 1965 a small rattler bit a barefoot girl near a school drinking fountain in Waterford Township. She told the doctor it looked like a discarded bicycle chain. This year’s rattler reports have fortunately been sightings; not bitings. Mao Has Cancer of Throat—Paper HONG KONG (AP) - A Hong Kong newspaper said today that Mao Tze-tung has cancer of the throat and has lost part of his voice. The newspaper report could not be confirmed here. has decided to require in cars it buys that year. ’ ★ ★ ★ Hie other measure is directed at states. Under it, those that fail to put programs into operation by Dec. 31, 1968, could lose 10 per cent of their federal highway aid. The secretary of commerce could waive this provision. SAFETY BOSS Both the highway and auto safety programs are to be administered in the Department of Commerce by a presidentially appointed national traffic safety administrator. Both are expected to wind up later in the proposed Department of Transportation. THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1966 North Korea Proposes Reunification Confab \ Layoff of 74 Asked to Hike Police Pay The Pontiac Police Officers’ Association (PPOA) today re1 quested that City Manager Joseph A. Warren implement a layoff of 74 city employes in order to meet the PPOA’s wage demands. In a letter also sent to the City Commission, Police Chief William K. Hanger, and city personnel manager Nicholas Santiwan, the PPOA said the large-scale cutback “appears to be the only solution” to the pay problem.. The PPOA wage committee, headed by Sgt. Herbert €. Cooley, had been told by Santiwan last week that the $1,076 pay boost sought by police could be achieved only by laying off 74 employes throughout city departments. “It’s certainly refreshing to see that the policemen understand the seriousness of our problem,” Warren commented, w ★ w The problem, he said, is the “unbelievably steep” ($1,000) pay increase granted to Detroit policemen earlier this year. The Detroit pay hike triggered similar increases in suburban police departments. ‘NEED NEW REVENUE’ “Pontiac will be u n a b I e to meet these demands until the city gets a source of new or added revenue," Warren said. The city manager did not comment on the actual possibility of laying off employes to finance a wage hike. Hanger, who supported the PPOA’s initial demands, declined comment on the association’s most recent move. Threat Suspect Gives Self Up Witness in Court Case Makes Complaint Curtis Lewis Sr. of 353 Howard McNeill sought on a warrant for simple assault, surrendered to Pontiac police last night. ★ w w - Lewis, whose son faces trail on a charge of second-degree murder, was to be arraigned today on a count of “pointing and aiming a dangerous weapon” at a witness in the preliminary. examination of 23-year-old Curtis Lewis Jr. Charles Threkeld, 18, of 10 Utah signed the assault complaint against the older Lewis. Threkeld told Pontiac police that Lewis and another man had pointed a shotgun and rifle at him and two friends on a city street. Thirty-seven-year-old L e v o n Lewis, also named in a warrant for simple assault, is still at large, according to police. w w w Threkeld also told. police he had been “threatened” following testimony at preliminary examination of Curtis Lewis Jr. in which Trekeld said the defendant fatally shot an 18-year-old youth in the neck with a rifle. WWW The younger Lewis is free on (100 personal bond pending his circuit court arraignment Sept. 13. City Program Is Approved —Unofficially Unofficial word has been received dial Pontiac’s workable program for community improvement, which expired April 1, has been recertified by the Federal Housing and Urban Development agency. ★ W W Informed sources from Washington indicate the important document, which is subject to recertification annually for continued federal aid, has been approved. ★ w w City officials, who have repeatedly sought information on the status of the workable program since the city met 1966 requirements set by federal authorities, say they have not received any official word on the approval. w w w The workable program recertification is necessary for a variety of federal assistance, including direct financial aid. AF Construction in State Proposed WASHINGTON (UPI) - The House Appropriations Committee today recommended military construction totaling $473,000 in Michigan during the fiscal year ending next June 30. - ★ ★ ★ The total included $358,000 at Wurtsmith AFB, Oscoda, and $115,000 at Sault Ste. Marie Air Force Station. The Weather ,via. „ TOsaz ,t*”'....rwrMM Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Sunny and mild this afternoon, highs 75 to 80. Clear and cool tonight. Lows 45 to 54. Sunny and wanner Saturday. Highs 78 to 84, Light southerly winds. Sunday’s outlook, sunny and warm. Precipitation probabilities less than 5 per cent through Saturday. Direction: Southerly Sun sets Friday at 4:54 Sun rises Saturday at ( Moon sets Friday at 3 Moon rises Saturday al Highest temperature . Lowest temperature . Weather: Sunny d Lowest Temperatures Date In 94 Years 37 In 1183 Weather: Drizzle rain .2 it Thursday's Temperature Chart 1 56 Los Angeles S4 9 44 Miami Beach 84 l 58 Milwaukee 74 ‘ * Orleans 81 luskegon Pellston 75 40 I 75 48 Omaha 84 57 Phoenix Bismarck 81 52 S. Francisco 49 88 55 S. S. Maria 74 75 48 Seattle 75 74 55 Washington ft ■ - I* _ CRASH KILLS THREE-Two Youngstown, Ohio, residents and a Diamond, Ohio, girl d^ed instantly in these cars yesterday afternoon when the girl, Peggy Wiezen, 18, tried to pass a truck on busy Route 18, near Youngstown. She was driving car At left. This road has been scene of 1,700 arrests by the Ohio State Police tactical squad since May. Under Estimates County Job Bids Opened Bids opened yesterday on the new Oakland County courthouse wing and on courthouse remodeling were under the estimated cost for each project, w w w Low bids on the east wing, estimated to cost $3,005,100, totaled up to $2,857,096. Low bids on the courthouse remodeling totaled $303,300, compared to the estimated cost of $390,000. Bids were r e f e r r e d to the county’s architect for,review. A recommendation by the archi- Viet Objector Found Guilty FT. DIX. N.J. (AP) - Pfc. James A. Johnson Jr. was found guilty today of refusing to obey an order to go to Viet Nam. The seven-man military court delivered the verdict after 16 minutes of deliberation. ★ w w Johnson, the second of three soldiers charged with refusing to go to Saigon, appeared to smile nervously as the board returned from deliberation. tect to county officials is slated Tuesday. * * ’ W A county bond issue application of $3.5 million for the two projects is now under consideration by the Michigan Municipal Finance Commission. STARTING DATE Construction is scheduled to begin when the bond issue is authorized. Low bidder on the wing general construction job was Barton Malow Co. of Oak Park with a proposal of $1,918,785. Bids on mechanical, electrical, elevator installation and food service equipment also were taken on the wing project. ★ ★ * Low bidder on the remodeling project for the courthouse was the F. H. Martin Co. of Detroit, whose bid was $193,400. OTHER BIDS Mechanical and electrical proposals also were taken on this job. Several of the bidders submitted proposals on alternate construction work, according to Joseph Joachim, director of engineering for the county. w ★ ★ County officials will decide later whether to accept any alternate proposals. City Police Hunt Killer of Barmaid (Continued From Page One) ment I thought they were both Williams said a 32-caliber pistol registered to the owner of the bar, Harry Chambers, was found by police near the scene, but had not been fired, w w w The murder weapon, which police have been able to identify only as a small-caliber pistol, will not be known until completion of an autopsy scheduled for today, Williams said. ‘FAMILIAR FACE’ “Everybody says the face of the man was familiar,” William said, “but nobody knows his name.” “We’re going tB have to wait, inquire, and hope w e get the information we want.’ Patrolmen John K. Hedrick and Richard W. Blower said people and cars were leaving the tavern rapidly when they arrived at the scene. ★ ★ ★ While questioning witnesses inside the bar, Hedrick said, a 12-gauge shotgun was stolen from a patrol car parked on South' Sanford. Involvement Breeds Controversy Social IIIslSpHt NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers and thundershowers are forecast Friday night iter the Gulf Coast region, the southern Plains, the extreme northern Plains and parts of the Pacific Northwest. If will be warmer in the western region and the mid and upper Mississippi Valley. (EDITOR’S NOTE - This is-the fourth article in a five-part series by the Rev. David Poling, associate editor of the Christian Herald, who has been appointed a special miter and consultant on religious news for the Newspaper Enterprise Association.) By DAVID POLING Newspaper Enterprise Assn. NEW YORK - Americans have been properly alarmed at the fires and explosions from Harlem to Hough to Watts. Burn, baby, burn” is no longer something to be cured by suntan lotion. But long before the flames hit the wastelands of Watts, churches have been burned throughout the South. Not gas stations or furniture store? or appliance shops, but churches a jwhich placed themselves at the 54 j head of the civil rights protest in Dixie and the mid-South. And as this is true in the leadership of the civil rights movement, with clergymen at the front (and we have the graves to prove it), it is also true of the war on poverty. Said Saul AKnsky, the fiery professional agitator, damnec and hailed across the continent for his persotial war on poverty: ‘The only major institution! fighting for justice, decency ant equality in American are the churches.” . w w w But with this new breed of clergymen, deep division have surfaced within the churches- Social action mean! controversy and a controversial clergyman can split a church from the cellar to the steeple. For a priest, minister or rabbi to be honest to his calling, incere in his study of the Scrip-ures and faithful to his vows, he is going to find active involvement on the world. It may vary from writing a newspaper editor, asking the community to live up to a fair lousing code, to being killed in a Southern town after leading a voter registration drive. It may be considerate and cautious as helping an elderly parishioner to sign for Medicare or as explosive and unpleasant as leading a rent strike in Harlem. It is all social action and when the reaction sets in congregations experience tension, discord, injury that may never heal. Perhaps one result of this social upheaval is a wider recognition of the seriousness of today’s problems. Too long the church seemed to be lost in its own choral *music, safely established behind stained glass, speaking softly in cathedral tones about love, justice reconciliation. DOUBLE TALK Challenges Saul AMnsky again: “For centuries you’ve talked one way about all men being created equal in God’s own image; you talk about the mystical body of Christ knowing no color line and sd forth, and. you've had the damnedest, most segregated operations going on. ‘Your ministers became public relations men on golf courses and brotherhood picnics and the church became so sterile that eventually it had to face up to the question of whether it believed any of its own stuff . There’s a new tide running in the churches. It’s strong and it's going in the direction of decent Judaic-Christian objectives.” If Mr. John Q. Churchgoer is getting a little displeased by the clergy leading a war on poverty, a sit-in at Selma, or a march on Washington, he’d better fasten his seat belt — or pew cushion. If his anxiety level is rising fast after learning that the major religious film went to “Nothing But a Man” and “The Pawnbroker,” with ‘‘Darling’ winning superior reviews to “The Greatest Story Ever Told,” he is going to have to take plasma when he sees the next major bomb break over his beloved church. If Mr. Loyal Layman has endured new morality along with the new math, swallowed hard at the God-is-Dead debates, wait until Viet Nam and the Asian crises scramble in. , NEW LEADERS For it is coming, and it will be led, not by pacifists or professional pinks Or “known” Communists or Fifth Amendment Americans, but by the clergy of the United States. _ The Viet Nam crisis is emerging as file largest thundercloud on the church horizon. The energy, emotion and force of this issue will last for years and bring a soul-searching to equaled in our lifetime. (NEXT: bissent of Doves) South Regime Not Interested in Reds' Plan TOKYO (AP) - North Korea today proposed an international conference of the nations involved in Korea to restore peace to the divided peninsula. WWW The proposal by Vice Premier Kim Kwang Kyup appeared to modify the Communist government’s previous stand that the only, solution to the Korean question is through talks between North and South. Korea only. However, Kim repeated his government’s stand that Korean reunification must be achieved through general elutions arranged and run by the North and South Koreans without outside interference, w w w The South Korean government brushed the Communist proposal aside. A Foreign Ministry spokesman said it merited no consideration in view of past experience. The vice premier also repeated the North Korean demand that United Nations troops must be withdrawn. However, he did not say that this must take place before the international conference is held. BROKE AWAY The North Korean proposal came a month after the Pyongyang government declared its independence of both Peking and Moscow. This was viewed as a break away from the tough Chinese Communist line and a move toward the Soviet policy of peaceful coexistence. ★ w * The proposal also preceded by 12 days the opening of the U.N. Gertkal Assembly with its annual discussion of Korean unification. Kim reiterated the North Korean position that reunification is no business of the United Nations. * * W Whether by accident or design, no Chinese representative the platform when Kim advanced the conference idea at big rally in Pyongyang honoring North Korea’s 18th anniversary. A Soviet official was present. The Chinese absence could indicate that Peking did not approve of the conference propos- BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -The Township Library Board last night approved the selection and purchase of a site for the new library. The land is an eight-acre parcel located on the southeast corner of the intersection of Lone Pine and Telegraph roads. It is vacant at present. John Rumsey, library board president, said the purchase price has been set tentatively at $80,000. He emphasized, however, that the final cost will be considerably less than this figure. The present owner of the site has agreed to subtract from the $80,000, half of the cost of installing water and sewer facili-es on the land. No estimate of this expense has been made, Rumsey said. FINAL PRICE The contract stipulates, however, that the final purchase price shall not be less than $40, 000. The board decided on the large site to allow room for future expansion, parking areas and landscaping, Rum-sey said. Total cost of the library is expected to be near $1,410,000, of which $1,160,000 will be provided by a bond issue approved by voters in May. Rumsey, said the board is pro- Delay of Trial Is Explained Bronson Says Case Was in Several Hands Birmingham Area News Site for New Library Is Approved by Board ceeding on an application to the Michigan State library for adr .......funds under the Federal Library Services and Construc-tion Act. A grant of as much as $200,-000 might be possible, he said, with tiie remainder of the money coming from private gifts. Plans call for construction to begin early next year, with completion set for spring of 1968. The architectural firm of Tar-apata-MacM a h o n Associates, Inc-, was selected in July to plan and desip the new facility. Pool Claims Bloomfield Hills Child An 18-month-old Bloomfield Hills child drowned yesterday afternoon in a swimming pool at the rear of his parent’s home. Dead is Frederick W. Braun, son of Mr. and sjfBsLm Oakland Drowning Toll in ’66 Mrs. Alfred Braun of 769 Se-rtA bago, B loo field Hills. Police said it ippeared the child crawled from the house to the pool and fell in. He was discovered there at 1:45 p.m. and, according to Police Chief Walter Sluiter, had been dead for about 20 minutes. COL. MORTON M. JONES Colonel in Area May Get Star A Beverly Hills U.S. Army Colonel has been nominated by President Lyndon B. Johnson for promotion to the grade of brigadier general. Col. Morton M. Jones Jr., 48, lives at 32200 Arlington with his wife and four children. He is currently project manager of general purpose vehicles at the Michigan Army Missile Plant in Warren. Promotions from the list consisting of 68 olher colonels, are expected to begin next month. A 1941 West Point paduate, Col. Jones saw military action in Europe during World War II and served as an adviser to the Philippine Army during the Korean war. A 10-month delay of the Oakland County Prosecutor’s Office in setting trial for a man charged with breaking and entering was termed “unfortunate” yesterday by Prosecutor S. Jerome Bronson. w w W Hie prosecutor ordered a trial date yesterday for Harvey Abramson, 39, of Oak Park. Asked to explain the long delay, Bronson said that more than one assistant prosecutor has had the case file over the 10-monthperiod. He conceded that action on the trial was long overdue, w w w Abramson was arrested last year at the scene of a Hunting-ton Woods break-in with a companion, Charles Fields of Detroit. WAIVED EXAMS They were arraigned in Huntington Woods Municipal Court, later waived examination and were bound over to Oakland County Circuit Court. They stood mute at their Circuit Court arraignment last November before Judge Philip Pratt and the $5,000 Municipal Court-ordered bond was continued. The matter was then returned to the prosecutor’s office. WWW Abramson, of 10441 Dartmouth, has a record of 16 arrests in three states since 1944, according to state police records. Bronson lives less than a black away from Abramson at 24540 Seneca. . w • w w “We live very near one an-other but I do not know this j man,” Bronson said. 3 GOP Candidates Plan County Swing Three top-level Republicans^ Gov. Romney, Sen. Robert P. Griffin and Lt. Gov. William G. Milliken, will launch an all-day campaign swing tomorrow with three Oakland County stops. The three GOP leaders are scheduled to be at the Oakland County Market, 2350 Pontiac Lake, Waterford Township, from 7:30 to 8:30 a.m. greeting shoppers. N?xt they wifi visit Clarkston with an 8:55 8.m. arrival time scheduled. The last Oakland County stop is slated for 9:20 a.m. in Orton-ville where the candidates will ride into town on an did fire engine. WWW Several other stops are scheduled in southeastern Michigan during the rest of the day. The campaign tour will end in Wayne County with a scheduled 9 p.m. appearance in Redford Township. Romney is slated to return for a tour of the White Lake Township area Monday. HE’LL WATCH THIS ONE - Jimmy Easier, 13, of Indianapolis, Ind., proudly rides his latest bike. His first bike was stolen at school and Jimmy worked hard to save up for another \one. When that was stolen too, a relative gave Jimmy a\ new one. He's guarding it closely. The teen-ager is the son of Maj. James H. Kasler, a fay flier shot down and Captured by the North Vietnamese. A—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1966 ■K7Fr7^r"’.-- ONLY i||i^;IIO' PHONE, C.O.O. ajpvf.-j ILPKRS ^ AU REMS ON SALE WHILE THEY LAST! I Style House 100% SAVE 52c Save 33c SAVE 22.99 Cotton Muslin Sheets Easy-fit Cotton Bra Spacious Wallets Chair or Rocker T 18 8 • FITTED ■ 2.19 r« 147 1.99 | 'sT 77* ■ 69*99 Woven 134 threads per square inch after washing. Flat style has 3-in. hem at top, 1-in. hem at bottom. 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RE0*13,99 SPECIAL Assorted Photo Frame Unusual group of easel-type metal frames for this price! 4 sizes and 6 styles. Save! jnwEpssNi i M SPECIAL PLASTIC Woven Seat Covers £88 Nowl Worn out upholstery can look new againl Rich coloring goes clear through. SAVE *2 Little Red Wagon Your little boy or girl will PP08 love this 36-inch bright red £ wagon made of steel. CHARGE IT ik:: SPECIAL Flat-top Guitar 188 Good, resonant tone. Fast, iu easy fret "action" Includes B carton, instruction "book. CHARGE IT Jflw SAVE 1.80 House and Trim Paint 5 SPECIAL DELUXE Vacuum Cleaner Non-chalking, high-gloss C99 alkyd white. Save nowl Latex house paint 5.99. j ^ Three-way "super” cleaning action. Greater suction. Complete with attachments. *48 CHARGE It SAVE 4.99 Twin Beam Bike Show off the chromed fenders BP and trim—it's a dazzling red ^ beauty. Girl's model blue. Reg. 39.99 STORE 0PEN M0NDAY THRU SATURDAY 9:30 A,M-,0 9:00 P-M- HOURS: SUNDAYS 12 NOON to 6 P.M. Pontiac Mall PHONE 682-4940 Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Rd. THE PONTIAC PH ESS FRIDAY, SE PTEMBER 9, 1966 Former Exec for GM Dies IL^H, A retired General Motors Corp. executive, Charles B. Stif-fler died Monday. He was 75. Memorial service will be 3 p.m. tomorrow at St. Phillips Episcopal Church, Rochester. Burial was Tuesday in Wood-lawn Cemetery, Detroit, by Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co., Birmingham. Surviving are his wife, Virgil; two daughters, Mrs. Bruce Craig and Mrs. J. S. Richmond and three grandchildren. Stiffler, of 1720 Tiverton, Bloomfield Hills, retired 10 years ago as administrative to the general manager of Fisher Body Division. He joined GM in 1919. He has also served as assistant to the *' president of the Oakland Mo-4 tor Co., which became Pontiac Motor Division, and as assistant to the president of the Buick Division. He also served as general manager of United Motors Service Division. Memorial tributes can be sent use to Camp Oakland. '.TE.-C Cfrsa&FXX* Deaths in Pontiac, Nearby Areas Motel Robbed by Armed Trio pmmmhk Capt. Alberto Corwin Word has been received of the death of former Pontiac resident Capt. Alberto A. Corwin, 82, of Bridgeport, Conn. He died Saturday after a brief illness. Service for Capt. Corwin, now retired, was Tuesday. Burial was to be today in Arlington Cemetery, Va. He was a graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy at Annapolis. Surviving are his wife Natalie; two daughters; a son; and several grandchildren. Herbert M. Bishop ORION TOWNSHIP-Service for Herbert M. Bishop, 85, of 960 Leidich will be 2 p. m. tomorrow at Flumerfelt Funeral Home, Oxford. Burial will be in Eastlawn Cemetery, Lake Orion. Mr. Bishop died Wednesday. He was a toolmaker with Dodge Motor Co. « Surviving are a sister and two brothers. Lawrence J. Kinstle MILFORD1"— Service for Lawrence John Kinstle, 61, of 405 E. Commerce, will be at 11 a.m. Saturday at St. Mary’s Catholic Church with burial in St. Mary’s Cemetery. . Rosary will be said at 8 p.m. Friday at the Richardson-Bird Funeral Home. Mr. Kinstle, general foreman at Buick Division, died Thursday. He was a member of St. Mary’s Church, its Altar Society, Men’s Club and Ushers Club. Surviving are his wife Agnes; one son, Dr. L. M. Kinstle of Milford; one daughter, Mrs. Francis (Jean) Bain of Hart-land; two brothers; and four sisters. T. Bert Carpenter Mrs. John G. Lafnear KEEGO HARBOR — Service for Mrs. John G» (Eliza J.) Lafnear Sr., 66, will be 2 p.m. Monday at the D. E. Pursley Funer- Ouster Upheld A suit charging that a Sylvan ike Councilman was illegally moved from office by other council members was dismissed Wednesday in Circuit Court. Judge Clark J. Adams issued no cause for action judgment ifter hearing arguments. The suit was filed by John D. McKinlay who was removed from office last month after a year and a half dispute over his eligibilty. It has been alleged that Mc-inlay did not meet the resi-lency requirement of the .city barter when elected in 1964. BIRMINGHAM - Service for T. Bert Carpenter, 64, of 356 Pilgrim will be 3 p.m. tomorrow at Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Carpenter died Wednesday after a long illness. Former owner of the Bert Carpenter Co. of Birmingham, he was past president of the American Society of Tool and Manufacturers Engineers, a member of the Birmingham Country Club and the Elks Gub of Pontiac. Surviving are his wife, Ruth; two daughters, Sharon and Cynthia, both at home; four sisters; and four brothers. Memorial tributes can be sent Adams said the council had ie right to rule on the eligibility of a council member. Joseph T. Brennan, attorney for McKinlay, said an appeal will be filed next week on the court’s decision. Editor Expires NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) Francis W. Bronson, 65, editor of Yale Alumni magazine for 29 years until his retirement last June, died Thursday. Bronson had worked as a reporter on the old New York Tribune and Newsweek City Man Injured Cleaning Shotgun Injured when the shotgun he was cleaning discharged accidentally, a 57-year-old Pontiac man is listed in satisfactory con-today at Pontiac General Hospital. Thomas E. Wilson of 137 Dresden was admitted to the hospital about 4 p.m. yesterday with pellet wounds in the left elbow. Wilson told Pontiac police he was cleaning the gun on the second floor of his home when the weapon suddenly discharged. to the Research Fund Joseph Mercy Hospital, Pontiac. A Bloomfield Township motel was the scene of an armed rob-of St. hi Home, Pontiac, with burialIbery early this morning. ' .... H - - Township police said the Mo- in Christian Memorial Estates Cemetery, Avdft Township. Mrs. Lafnear, a member of the Keego Harbor Baptist Church, died Thursday after a short illness. Surviving besides her husband are eight sons, Donald of Lake tel Lee, 2551 Telegraph, was robbed of l19S at 12:55 a m-today by three men who entered the motel asking for room.s One of the men pulled a revolver on desk cleric Max Per- Orion, John of Auburn Heights, Gerald of Keego Harbor, and Merle, James, Everette, Claude and William, all of Pontiac; four daughters, Helen at home and Mrs. Don Yerk, Mrs. Mary Cris-man and Mrs. Ruth Kinsey, all of Pontiac. Also surviving are three brothers, James and John Schram of Pontiac and Edward Schram of Lake Orion; a sister, Mrs. Grace Clement of Pontiac; 52 grandchildren; and seven greatgrandchildren. Mrs. Howard Shain AVON TOWNSHIP - Service for Mrs. Howard (Viola) Shain, 64, of 271 E. South Blvd. today after a long illness. Her body is at Price Funeral Home, Troy. TYPEWRITER VALUES! HOME OF FINEST BRAND NAMES 108 N. SAGINAW-FE3-T114 WKC'* Is Your Studer . tiuadquartors for Quality Typewriters at Special Back-to-School Prices! 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Persinger said the gunman was wearing a light overcoat. The other two, he said, ware about 5-10, of medium build and wore dark jackets. AMERICA’S LARGEST FAMILY CLOTHING CHAIN 30% OFF comparable values MEN’S WORSTED 2-PANTS FALL SUIT SPECIAL! l i m 88 comparable value SPECIAL The extra pair of pants gives you double the wear, double the value SPECIAL The fabrics are rich worsteds loomed of exceptionally fine wools SPECIAL The selection spotlights 2 and 3 button smartly-tailored silhouettes. SPECIAL The patterns and colors you want are here... in regulars, shorts Jongs m COMPLETE ALTERATIONS INCLUDED ■ on additional saving in itsoif! Pi ■ Pontiac, 200 N. Saginaw—Clarksten-Waterford on Dixie Hwy., Just North of Waterford Hill DOTH STORES OPEN SI — PteRM Refer to Our fl| » Van Dyke, Detroit f|l USE OUR FREE LAYAWAY PLAN THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 9, 1966 1966 PONTIAC OPEN BOWLINO CHAMPIONSHIP MEN'S ^INGLES HANDICAP TOURNAMENT (Sencnondd hy Tlid American Bowling Cong ret?) Qualifying: Nov. 27, Dec. 4, Dec. 11 Finals: Dec. 18 SITES: Huron Bowl—300 Bowl-^Airway Lanes—Cooley Lanes (PIcam Orel. Preference of Dete end Sire) Name .. Address (City—Port Office Milling) League ........................ House . ............. Final' League Average of 1965-66..................... (Give Highest Final Averege—Note Rules 1-2 Below) ABC Sanction Number ................................. Tournament it bated on 70% handicap of 200 scratch, open to all sanctioned ABC male bowlert who live in Oakland County or the immediate Pontiac zone area, Deadline for final entry it Thursday, December 8th at midnight. Deadline before each qualifying it Thurtday prior to. qualifying date. All entriei should be left at the qualifying sites listed by deadline date with entry fees attached. TOURNAMENT RULES i I-. Bowlers must present their highest final league average of the end of the 1965-66 season. 2. If bowler has no final 1965-66 average, highest 18 game average of current season must be presented. If current average is 10 pins higher or more, than final 1965-66 average it must be used. I. Falsifying average will mean disqualification and forfeiture of entry fees and prizes. 4. Tournament manager reserves right to reject any and all entries. 5. Tournament in adherence with ABC rules. 6. No substitute entries. ' 7. No post entries after deadline. Bowlers failing to qualify first week can try ggain on 2nd or 3rd qualifying date. 8. Bowler is eligible for only one monetary prize in handicap tournament. ABC requires that prizes of $300 or more won in past 12 months must be reported. Please do so on reverse side of entry blank. i semifinals and-or finals of the GUARANTEED PRIZES 1st—$800 2nd—$500 3rd—$300 4th—$200 5th—$150 The top five prizes are guaranteed and the entire prize fund is j returned 100% from the purse. Trophies will be awarded to winner and runner-up. Ten per cent of qualifiers of each house assured of going into finals, and all of those reaching finals assured of 10. Times and squads to be published ii Of tourney. Press on Friday of each week Entry Fee Bowling ... $1.65 Expenses ... .85 Prizes ..... 4.50 Total. $7.00 City Meet Highlighted By JERE CRAIG Bowling has two important variables: the individual competitor and the conditions. All too often it’s the latter that takes the brunt of the criticism. Either the lane conditions are too tough or too soft. Ocassionally, the pins take more knocking from the bowlers than from the balls. One of bowling’s top critics two or three times each year mails his addressee tion on the sport’s cancer: per soft conditions. St. Louis Picked for'67 All Star CHICAGO UR - St. Louis has been selected as the site of the 1967 all star bowling tournament. The $100,000 tourney will be held May 18-28 at the Skylark Lanes, with 288 men and 144 women bowlers expected compete for titles now held by Dick Weber and Joy Abel, the 1966 all star champs. The tournament is sponsored by the Bowling Proprietors Association of America. The American fowling Congress is the game’s watchdog in this respect, carefully checking the lanes and equipment each year to maintain uniformity. Of course, the big variable is the surface coating of the lane itself and this can change daily, making it very difficult to control. Totsky Averages 215 Mike Totsky of the Stroh’s Beer team set the record average for the Detroit All-Star Classic with his 215.1 tempo last season. Alexander-Hornung, however, won the team title. READY TO SERVE CLIENTELE - Huron Bowl’s corps of well qualified instructors is available at no charge to help both the beginner and veteran bowler who seek advice. The New Classic Begins smiles come free, also. Among the Huron instructors are (left to right) Gloria Bonfiglio, Laura Chenowith, Mike Samardzija Jr., Shirley Pointer and Joe Bonfiglio. Pontiac area btiwlers don’t differ from most. They have ready explanations about the conditions where their neighbor is scoring well while they can’ dent the pins at their particular place. NATIONAL SCORES This all came to mind recently while reviewing the final national men’s leaders from last season. The list of 800 series included 48 names — not one from Michigan. A A A' Yet, the Wolverine State noted as a bowling hotbed—particularly in our corner of the Midwest. Detroit and Oakland County had some extremely high scores last season, but only one instance of the ABC disallowing those totals can be recalled. Certainly, some establishments consistently report high scores. Obviously, the conditions aren’t “super soft” or the house would be getting publicity that wasn’t always so favorable. An overlooked aspect of the situation is that too few good scoring sites consistently publicize their best results. AAA Thus, they don’t attract the better bowlers regularly and the scoring potential of their lanes isn’t realized. The high-score ratio continues low. AAA Those other establishments establishments aren’t “super soft” in the ABC’s viewpoint. Perhaps, then, more emphasis should be focused on improving the other variable. The Pontiac Open Men’s Handicap Bowling Tournament, with its 600 pin target in qualifying, which proved so popular!: list year, will get under way j Sunday, November 27th as then first qualifying date. Qualifying for three Sundays |! will be held at Huron Bowl, 300 Bowl, Airway Lanes and Cooley Lanes and the finals are slated Sunday December 18th at Huron Bowl. A A A A first prize of $800 will go' to the winner with all places! from second through fifth on the guaranteed list. The tournament, sanctioned i by the ABC and based on 70 per cent handicap, is open to all I area handicap bowlers. The target for reaching the semi-finals Is a score of 600 including handicap. This format was accepted by bowlers last year as a welcomed innovation to the tournament. Huron Schedule Big The home of the Huron Bowl Classic has turned its attention to the women this season. Huron Bowl introduced its Ladies 9 o'clock Classic last night, and the premier men’s league opens its season at the same time tonight. Hie Pontiac Blind Bowlers League will begin Monday morning and the members invite any new interested bonders to attend the 16 a.m. session. ' Abo, the blind bowlers need sponsors for the season. One foonsorship costs $30 and covers one member’s bowling for the campaign. Interested backers should contact Huron Bowl. The establishment next May will be the site of the State Blind Bowlers Tournament. Huron also will have the Michigan Bowling Proprietors Association Invitational Singles Tournament for 185-and-better-average men and women with 160-or-better averages. Qualifying and tiie finals will be in November. In December, Hum will be host to the Pontiac Open Bowling Tournament finals. Hie establishment has an extensive junior program su- pervised by coach in Roise starting Sept 17. Boys Bowling at 90 A 90-year-old, twice-a-week bowlerette from New Orleans, La., Mrs, Sarah Kuchler became the oldest ever to compete in the WEBC Championship Tournament when she rolled the ing ball in the 1966 event last April .. and girls 8-15 are included in the Saturday program. Youngsters bowling for the first time or needing more training are eligible for the preleague instructional session. Hum also has a Christmas Tournament for its juniors. Huron’s Father-and-Son League will have sessions at 12:66 pan. aad 2 p.m. Sun- Stroh’s Beer team member Mike Samardzija Jr. will have instruction clinic each Wednesday afternoon. League bowlers will be able to compete in the “Beat The Champ” program, during the league play, and there also will be squads Saturday and Sunday afternoons. Qualifiers will appear on the Detroit late-night show. Hilltop Ready With Doubles Moonlight Doubles competition will begin 11 p.m. tomorrow at Rochester’s Hilltop Bowl. A A Manager Ray Ludwig reports full rosters for all his leagues and open bowling will be limited generally to weekends. Dates Chosen for Handicap Men's Tourney Target Score of 600 Again Is Format of Qualifying Round County Keg Directory LAKEWOOD LANES—Manager: Bill Kut West Huron, Pontiac. LIGHTHOUSE LANES-Cpmanagers Bill F_____ 673-7464; 4443 Dixie Highway; Drayton Planes. LUXURY LANES-Manager: At Cousins; 16 lanes; 544-0530; 600 East Nine Mile Road. Ferndale. MAPLE LANES—Manager: Ben Bundo; II lanes; MA 4-3081; 1265 West : Maple Road, Wallad Lake. MAVIS LANES-Manager; Elmer Mavis Jr.; II lanes; 637-3521; 2430 Grange Hall Road, Holly. MELODY LANES—Manager; Southfield Road, Southfield. MONTCALM BOWLING CENTER—Manager: Tom Mayes; 16 lane 335-2221; 30 East Montcalm Avenue, Pontiac. NORTH HILL LANES-Manager: Les Williams; 32 lanes; 6514544; 1 West Tlenken Road, Rochester. NORTHWOOD LANES-Manager: Jim Milford; South Hunter, Birmingham. NOR-WEST LANES-Manager: Tom Langan J 32605 Northwestern Highway, Farmington. : OAK PARK LANES-Manager: Ely Rose; 41 Coolldge Highway. Oak Park. ; ORCHARD LANES-Manager: Bill Meadet 24 lanes; 335-6263; 645 OPdyke, PLUM HOLLOW LANES-Manager: Jerry Navritet; 24 lanes; 3534540; 21600 West Nine MUe Road, Southfield. : PONTIAC ELKS-Manager: Howard Fields; 12 lanas; 334-2501; 114 Orchard Lake Avenue, Pontiac, i RED RUN BOWLINO—Manager; Fr Rochester Road, Royal Oak. I ROCHESTER LANES-Comanagers: Along with the handicap part of the tournament will be the annual Actual’s Invitational yvhich produced many exciting finishes in past seasons. DEFENDING CHAMP Defending champion of the Pontiac Open is Pontiac Motor If employe Joe Sawyer who rolled § a total of 720 to earn the $800 | first prize. | Runnerup was Ken 'Bresett-ll with 688 total for $500. ★' ★ ★ r Actual’s defending champion i the Invitational division is Bill Johns, veteran bowler who rolled a 701 at 300 Bowl last] year. j Each qualfying date will have, deadline. Numerous other features and awards are expected to be part of the 1966 Pontiac Championship. Wonderland's Boss in 1st Full Season Bob Stein, a veteran bowler and former chief mechanic at Star Lanes in Southfield, begins his first full season as manager at Wonderland Lanes in Commerce Township this month. The Pontiac resident took the reins at Wonderland in May. A Texan, Stein has been bowling 20 years and carries a 185 average. He currently is busy preparing for the start Monday of the Wonderland Masters League. The circuit of 180-average-or-better bowlers has 12 teams, though some roster openings do exist. Competition- in the establishment’s premier league will start Monday. The heavy bowling schedule at! adult leagues have complete ros-300 Bowl is rapidly reaching its ters, there is room for additions peak with nighttime open bowl- in the youngsters’loops, ing limited mostly to Saturdays a large item on the schedule and Sundays at the 40-lane Cass1 this season at “300” is the city Lake Rd. establishment. j tournament of the Pontiac Wom- The weekly Saturday nightjen’s Bowling Association next Moonlight Doubles action will March. The Windsor, Ontario, Grand Terrace Bowl team broke its own Canadian single game record this year when it hit 1272 to better a 1964 effort by 80 pins, Prime Times Filled at 300' commence at 11 o’clock tomorrow night. Noteworthy among the 300 Bowl’s leagues are the Ladies’ All Star Classic 9 p.m. Fridays, the Thursday Men’s Classic at ”:30 p.m., and the 6:30 p.m. Monday Pioneer Women’s League. The Pioneer Women comprise the area’s oldest continuous circuit, organized in the 1930’s, and perhaps the biggest league for wo.men bowlers, having 28 teams. Junior bowling at “300” includes Saturday morning-after-noon action for the 7-14 years olds, and after-school competition for the teen-agers. The latter program features the busing of the students from the schools to the establishment and back again. While almost all the 300 Bowl Although the specific dates for the 34th annual PWBA meet haven’t been arranged, the competition always requires several weekends to complete. PWBA officials and the 300 Bowl owners already foive had preliminary talks concerning the tournament requirements. ★2 ★ In addition to its busy bawling schedule, “300” has one of the area’s largest billiards setups and extensive lounge and pro shop facilities. Monroe Moore handles much of the instruction. Newest Keg Has Openings for Leagues Savoy Lanes enters its first season of bowling with coowners Dick and Bobbie Scribner enthused over the early response to their 24-lane establishment on Telegraph Road. ★ ★ * Emphasizing open bowling after 9 p.m. each day, Savoy has only a few openings for individuals in its 6:30 p.m. leagues — mostly in the Friday right men’s League and the how framing Sunday Night Mixed 7 o’clockers’ circuit. e ★ ♦ The Scribners will t)e announcing the details shortly for their ladies’ morning learn-to-b o w 1 program for novices and the Saturday night Moonlight and Scotch double* competition. * * * Savoy’s juniors program will have the 12-and-older youngsters bowling Saturday mornings and the younger children in the afternoons. GETTING AN EARLY START - 300 Bowl coowners Larry (second from left) and Garry Crake may be getting an . early indication of the work ahead for them when their house is host to this season’s Pontiac Wpman Bowlers’ Association city tournament. Apparently happy to “(tile” the work on the follows are PWBA officials Gen Bradley (left) and Margkret LaBy. Opening '66 Season All Star Lanes in downtown Pontiac will reopen for the season this weekend. Owner Don Burria it looking for leagues any day after 8 p.m. '4 jp f | 1 l y ; ' "TUp THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER », 1966 H'i TWO COLORS The Peril of Emphysema—4 Tests Can Evaluate Lung Condition EDITOR’S NOTE - In the battle against emphysema, a dread lung disease, doctors are using such diverse equipment as treadmills and plastic table tennis balls. Bid, thus far scientists don’t even know the basic cause of the ailment. This is the last of four articles. By FRANK CAREY AP Science Writer MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. Light a match, hold it, ! inches in front of your mouth and blow! and facilities ^are available in your community — you may be referred to a hospital or University medical center where there’s special equipment to help diagnose this enigmatic malady. But, says Dr. Albert Roberts, chief of the U.S. Public Health Service Chronic Respiratory Diseases Program: gauged — that is, how much air you can breathe in and out, over and above air already abnormally trapped in there — attendants test you on: How fast can you empty your lungs — especially, how much can you exhale in the first second? Normal persons exhale at least 70 per cent in that first second; emphysema sufferers score much lower. ANOTHER TEST A workout on a,stationary bicycle is another test. The patient has a tube inserted in an “Nearly one-half of the nation’s hospitals, and even some important medical centers, are not equipped to do an adequate .. ! B ... ijob” in detecting emphysema Make sure you blow with your/ .., teUit mouth fully open. Don’t purse a * arm artery so doctors can your lips A key testing instalment is a ure okygen and noxious y P respirometer used in such cen- carbon ftggx Ws blood upon ters as Minneapolis Mt. Some hospitals usfa HosPltal- treadmill. TANK DEVICE At Triboro Hospital, Jamaica, With a clamp attached to your | Long Island, N.Y., doctors renostrils, you breathe into abated plans to use portable valved mouthpiece linked by respirometers set up-in mobile If you can’t douse the flame, you may be a victim of a potentially lethal lung disease called emphysema — and you should consult your doctor promptly. Even if you pass the match test, but have been suffering, even occasionally, from shortness of breath — and have been telling yourself: “Guess it’s just because I’m not as young as I used to be!” — you'd better see your doctor anyway.' It may save your life. If your doctor is suspicious — tubes to a tank device. The tank contains a hollow cylinder, closed at the top, floating in water. Your exhaled breath causes the cylinder to rise — and a pen attached to it writes lines on a graph paper. ★ *■ * Once your lung capacity is vans ticketed for a community survey of possible obstructive breathing difficulties among apparently healthy working men. i Men showing suspicious sips will be asked to attend a special clinic at least monthly. The Following Courses Will Be Available in the Pontiac Adult Educational Program TRY ADULT EDUCATION FOR A BETTER LIFE BETTER JOB BETTER NOME BETTER COMMUNITY Registration —September 12, 13, 14, 15, 1966 Classes Begin —September 26/1966 -4:30 p.m.—Evening Hours 6:00 p.m.-9:00 p.rr (Closed Friday Evenings) OFFICE HOURS: Monday-Thursday 11:30 a.m Friday 8:00 a.m.—4:30 p.m INFORMATION If, there is a question about the Pontiac Adult Education Program pleose call 332-0235 during the above office hours. PLACE OF REGISTRATION Pontiac Adult Education Office Pontiac Central High School, 250 West Huron Street, Pontiac, Michigan LOCATION OF CUSSES All classes meet in the evening at Pontiac Central High School unless otherwise indicated. TUITION AND FEES Residents of the School District of the City of Pontiac working towards a High School Diploma will pay NO FEES except for Books and Supplies. Residents not working toward a diploma will be charged the regular fee. Non-residents will be charged the regular fee. Basic Education and Beginning Reading classes will be offered on a NO FEE basis. COUNSELING High School credit counseling will be available at the Adult Education office, 250 West Huron Street. For information call 332-0235. To help the counselor in scheduling the correct courses for your completion of high school subjects it is necessary that you bring with you or have forwarded to this office a transcript of grades from the last high school you attended other than Pontiac Central High School. _ , wr HIGH SCHOOL CREDIT COURSES Algebra I Algebra II Algebra III Algebra IV Accounting/Bookkeeping Basic Mathematics Biolagy Business English Business Law Business Math Chemistry Civics HOME ECONOMICS COURSES Cooking Knitting Sewing (Beginning) (Bishop) Sewing (Intermediate) Tailoring/Dressmaking TRADE EXTENSION COURSES Auto Shop Blue Print Reading Drafting Advanced Projection Electronics Joint Wiping for Plumbers Machine Shop Sheet Metal Layout Shop Math Steam Engineering Structural Blue Print Reading • Tool Design/Detailing Welding BASIC EDUCATION COURSES English Arithmetic Economics English III English IV English V (Speech) English VI English VII English VIII (Adv.) Geometry I Geometry II History, U.S. I History, U.S. II History, World Office Machines Physics Psychology (General) Science (General) Sociology Shorthand (Beginning) Shorthand (intermediate) Shorthand (Advanced) .Trigonometry Typing I Typing II Typing III LANGUAGE COURSES German Spanish CREATIVE ARTS Commercial Art l-ll This course will treat problems in commercial -art, at a basic level. Sign and Poster layout advertising illustration, graphic arts and Sculpturing Work in wood and plaster to gain knowledge of sculptor. SPECIAL COURSES Beginning Reading Citizenship Americanization tion office for further information, 332-0235 HOBBY AND SPECIAL INTEREST COURSES Radio/TV Servicing I, 2 and 3; Amateur Radio (Novice, technician and General) Home Management (Income Tax, Insurance, Home Budgeting, Charge Accounts, Stocks and Bonds) ADULT EDUCATION COURSES DESIGNED PRIMARILY FOR (E.I.T.) EMPLOYEES IN TRAINING Electronics I .■ Electronics II Hydraulics I Hydraulics II Industrical Communications Industrical Safety Machine Shop.I Machine Shop ! I Physics II Physics III Machine Shop III . Physics IV Machine Shop IV Rigging Machinery Handbook Sheet Metal Layout Metallurgy Shop Drawing 1 -2 Physics I Shop Drawing 3-4 ADULT DRIVER EDUCATION Shop Mathematics 1 -2 Shop Mathmetics 3-4 Strength of Materials Structural Blue Print Reading • Welding I Welding II Organize School, on the above dates. School District of the City of Pontiac Pontiac Adult Education It the Long Island study works out, the Public, Health Service — sponsoring die study — would attempt to have such preventive clinics established nationally. Moreover, in the future, you might be able to get a breathing test at a mobile station, just like chest X rays are now available. So, now you’ve foimd out you have emphysema. AID DRAINAGE The doctors will prescribe treatment including use of a breathing machine. Ex help drain any surplus mucus from bronchial tubes, and medications to help open clogged airways — the extent of treatment for average, established cases, plus use of portable oxygen tanks sometimes. ' But rehabilitation, even of very severe eases, is possible. ★ ★ ★ The Public Health Service says two pioneering studies in pulmonary rehabilitation — at New York University’s Institute of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation; and Moss Rehabilitation Hospital and Albert Einstein Medical Center, Philadelphia — have suggested: “Nearly 50 per cent of the severely disabled patients of chronic respiratory disease can be help to the point of self-sufficiency, and in many cases to the point of returning to mostly sedentary work.” The breathing exercises are designed primarily to maim patients accent belly breathing — that is, using the diaphragm, the abdominal muscle just beneath the lungs, to a gr extent than breathing by expanding the chest. . * * * In ohe breathing exercise, the patient lies prone, breathes against the pressure of his hand on his belly. Later, he uses a sandbag, or Other weights. al drainage exercises are desiped as important adjuncts of medications you have for dilating mucus-clogged bronchial tubes, or for actually breaking up mucus in a detergent-like action nicknamed 'wetting down the bronchial tree.” ★ k it Incidentally, such medications can be applied by hand operated squirt guns directed at the open mouth, or by hand held nebu' ers powered by a tire pump. The final exercise in every prescribed workout involves lying crosswise and face down on a bed, then lowering the torso toward the floor. * * * All but the last of these exercises should be accompanied by lapping the entire chest surface with the fingertips of both hands further aid in moving clogged mucus so it can be coughed up. TOMATOES 4:T° • OKRA |Fresh Si*!" • PEACHES 4-to ~s* Fresh Picked IFREEZER CORN 4j«$219 BOROS FARM PRODUCE MARKET Stop in and Check Our Low Prices! OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAY 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. 225Q Dixie Highway-Just North of Telegraph FAMILY-TAILORED HOMES f\ A NEW ADDITION in lohreiim lake We> have been sold out for 30 days, but recently acquired 8 more beautiful lots. All with lake privileges, paved streets, central water and gas. All homes qualify for FHA, 5%%, 30-year financing and require as little as $700 down. Measurably Better MOVES YOU IN GO MODERN-GO GAS The Blue Star symbol is your assurance of a quality home. It is awarded only to homes offering the new advanced benefits of natural gas. > ** .ml -FEATURES:- Full Basement, Maintenance-Free Aluminum Siding, Built-in Bedroom Closets with Convenient Storage above, 40 Gallon Gas Hot Water H Tiled Tub and Shower Area, Formica Window Sills, Full Insulation, Exclusive Thermal Break Windows, Paved Streets, Community Water. OPTIONAL: WalMhru Bath, 140 Sq. Ft. Family Room, Garage and Fireplace. LOOK AT THE SIZE OF THESE LOTS!!! #t. 11C wide x 115 deep #2. IN wide x ills feep #3. lit wide x 231 deep #4. Ill wide x 231 deep #5. W wide x 140 deep #1.121 wide x 140 deep #1.100 wide x 211 deep #1. IS wide x 145 deep LAKE PRIVILEGES ! Lots Up to Vs Acre THESE WONT LAST! MODEL OPEN 1-8 EXCEPT THURSDAY SATURDAY 1-6 1510 S. Commerce Rd. a HURRY OUT TODAY FAMILY TAILORED Dlorah Building Co. ,L •T THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1966 The following are top covering sales of locally |. produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Wednesday. Produce & Market Pattern Is Scrambled AmSm, Graham Spy, bu Apples, Greening, bu. . Apples, McIntosh, bu. . Apples, Wealthy, bu. ... Apples, Wolf River, bu. Bhieberrles, crt. ....... Canteloupes, bu.......... Grapes, Fredonla, pk. . Peaches, Elberta, bu. ... Peaches, Hale Haven, bi r cauir., rvaie naven, do. . Peaches, Red Skin, bu. ... Peaches, Rich Haven, bu. . Pears, Bartlett, bu......... Plums, Stanley, bu............ VEGETABLES Beans, Gr. Rd„ bu......... Beans, Kentucky Wander, bu. Beans, Lima, bu. /........ Baans, Reman, bu. ........ Beets, toned, bu. . Broccoli, db., bu. ... Cabbage, Curly, bu. Cabbage, Rod. bu. . I Cabbage Sprouts, bu. Cabbage. Standard, t A Carrots, dz. beh.....................- Carrots, Cello Pk., 2 dz..........2.00 Carrots, topped, bu *“ Celery, Pascal, d; Celery, Pascal, cr Celery, while, crt. Gb|y|| —. bch. mmeem om, v._____________ Cucumber, slicers, bu. . Cucumber, Pickles, b-Com, Sweet, 5 dot. b Dill, dz. bch..... Kohlrabi, dz. bch. ... Leaks, dz. bch. .. Okra, pk. bskt. Onions, green, dz. bet Onions, Dry, 50-lb. Be Onions, Pickling, lb. . Parsley, Curly, dz. bet ParSley, root. . Parsnips, Cello Pak . Peas, Blackeye, bu. . Peppers, Cayenne, pk. Peppers, Sweet, pk. bi Peppers, Hot, pr. bskt. Potatoes, 50 lbs........ Potatoes, 20 lbs........ Radishes, white, dz. bd Radishes, Red, 1 dz. be Rhubarb, outdoor, dz. I Squash, Acorn, bu. .. Squash, Buttercup, bu. Squash, Butternut, bu. Squash, Italian, 1 bo. Squash, Summer. I bu. Tomatoes, . 1.25 l omaiuea, bu..................... Tomatoes, % bu..................... Turnips Topped ........ .... .... Turnips, dz. bch. GREENS Cabbage, bu. ............ Collard, greens, bu. .... Kale, bu................ Mustard, bu............. • Turnips, bu..........................a LETTUCE AND GREENS Celery, Cabbage, dz.................*- Endive, ok. bskt. ................ f- Endive, bleached ....................* Escaro'e, pk. bskt..................*• E see role, bleached, bu............J- Lettuce, Bibb, p. bskt............. Lettuce, Boston, dz................ Lettuce, Romaln, t Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (API—Prices paid per pw ■ : Heavy typo h ftBj SO; smalls 25-26. Browns G 46'/j-47; mediums 3794-38. Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP)---(USDAI—Cattle 100) no^enoujh steers Or heifers for adequate CHICAGO (AP)---------(USDA)—Hogs 1-2 200-225 lb butchers 24.75-25.00; 1-3 300-400 lb sows 21.00-22.25; 400-20-2125) 450-500 lbs 20.00-20.50; ' lbs 11.75-19 JO; boars 17JO-11 JO. Cattle 400; calves none; few lots good end choice 900-1,100 lb slaughter heifers 24.00-24.25; mixed good and choice 2325- NEW YORK (AP)—The stock market showed a scrambled pattern early today in overnight reaction to President Johnson’s proposal of anti-inflation measures. Although some market analysts said they thought the President’s program should have a favorable influence on the market, at least for the near term, Wall Street displayed no unanimity in its attitude toward stocks. Airlines continued to sink, as they" will be one of the major sufferers hum a suspension of the 7 per cent tax credit on business investment Steels, electrical equipments and farm implements—all of them makers of capital goods — were highly mixed. Chemicals, for some reason, advanced in a body. Oils were unchanged to higher. Rubbers were irregularly lower. AVERAGES CONFLICT Even the averages conflicted. Hie early trading of the Dow Jones industrial average was down slightly. The New York Stock Exchange Index was up a trifle. IBM jumped nearly 3. American Airlines lost 2. General Motors was off a fraction. Texaco gained a fraction. Most leading rails showed little or no change. Thursday the average of 60 stocks fell .6 279.6. Prices were mixed on American Stock Exchange. The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK (AP)—Following I* • J selected stock transactions on tbe York Stock Exchange with noon pr —A— 5 549k 54V, 54 Vj + ____I Tjo Amerada 2.80 AmAIrlln 1.25 Am Bosch M AmBdcst 1.60 Am Can 220 AmCrySug 1 AmCyan 1.25 AmEfPw 1.32 AmEnka 120 8 Vi 116 8 Mi .. 13 25% 251k 256k + 29 23 2214 229k — 10 70% 70% 7014 + 12 4996 6914 4914 - 47 5014 4914 4914 — 5 1914 119k 1914 — 3 339k 339k 339k + ■______ 12 47 4494 4414 ... Hosp .40 5 91k 39 39, - MFd .90 23 1414 1494 149k + t 120 AmNGas 140 A Optic 1.25b - “ Photocpy Smelt 3 10 3714 37_ 37% + 2 57% 57% 57% + IS 49k 494 6% + 4 5494 5414 S414 + 11 14 159k 16 ... 174 5194 51 51 - 25 3094 3014 3014 + 53 50 4994 499k + 40 21% 21 21 — 23 219k 2094 209k -... 24 719k 71 7194 +1% 91 1014 10'4 1014 ■' 19 50 499k 4994 15 2994 299k 291k 2 4594 4514 45% 11 249k 2414 249k 2 4794 4794 4794 + 94 29 2094 2194 2014 - 94 ___..id Oil 1 AssdDG 1.40 Atchison 1.40 AtlCLIne 3t Atl Rich 110 Atlas Cp — *5*1 BsbcokW 125 17 3194 31 Sackman JO Beech Air 20 Bell How JO Bendix 2.00 Bendlx wl Boeing 1.20 BolseCasc 25 48 29% 2914 2994 + 94 5 1514 1514 1514 80 5394 52 52% 5 2294 2214 2294 11 319k 3194 319k 14 409k 4094 4094 Gen Clg 1.20 ^—iDynem 1 .. i Elec 2.40 Gen Fds 220 GenMIlls 1.50 „ 1994 1994 1994 -f 2 239k 239k 239k . 9 3914 3914 3994 - 92 119k 019k 0194 .. 7 2714 2794 2714 4 3 2014 2094 J 15 50 50 SO . 40 614 4% 414 + I 7 24 2314 24 4- —H— 1 9 34% 34% 34% + Hoff Electron Joust LP (owmet 4 12 29% 29Va 29% 4 46% 457% 457%..... 16 377% 37% 37% — % 8 33% 33% 33% — % 9 44% 44 44 — " 7 12% 12% 12% + 1 19 19 19 — 11 48% 48% 48% — 3 657% 65% 65% — 7 33% 33% 33Va...... i5 MiS 22 14 3414 3494 3494 6 199k 1916 1916 — Ik 14 3294 329k 3294 . 11 729k 72 724k 4 - 44 31396 31096 311 +114 16 3994 3194 3994 ' 11 25 55% 54% 55% . 20 76 75% 7594 — 44 55 2594 25 25 -In 19 649k 449k 4416 + ' 5 2594 2514 2514 + S JoltnMan 2.20 JoltnsnJ 1.40s Jon Logan .00 Jones L 2.70 Joy Mfg 1.25 KerrMc 1.30 KlmbClark 2 Koppers 1.40 Korvette Kresge .00 Kroger 1.30 LlggatttM 5 Litton Ind Livlngsfn Oil LockhdA 2.20 ■ iws Thast MS Cam l — itSGa 1.12 LonglsLt 1.08 LorUlard 2.50 LTV .50 LuckySt l.40b Lukens Stl 1 2 4794 4796 4796 - 3 14994 149 14994 + IS 4296 4114 4294 4 S 4794 4714 4794 ... . 4 2496 2694 26’6 + 96 —K— 5 359k 3514 3514 5 2814 201b 2814 137 3196 3014 31 11 57 5614 57 3 7116 71 71 — 16 5 4014 4894 40'/, i 27% + 5 3494 3496 34V 7 38 379k 31 5 4316 4316 4316 — 1 35 3396 S3 3396 - 1 311k 319b 311k + ' ,21 171k 17 179k + | 1)44 21 S794 3714 + • 22 2516 2594 25%-— 96 S 5,537,744^59.04 Deposits Fiscal Year j_., | 22,905,273,772.72 19,021,497,914.93 hdrawals Ftsce' X— 324JS4J44,100.99 310,727,930,73140 13,256,507,310.29 134574)1,11940 -Includes 004421,702.21 —* Stocks of Local Interest Figures after decimal points are eighths OVER TNI COUNTER STOCKS Quotations from the NASD art representative inter-dee ter prices of approximately It e.m. inter-dealer markets 1 fta Prices do AMTjjCorp. J....................14 Associated Truck .....\.......\f.i Boyne Products .......1....... Braun Engineering ........... .14.0 16.0 CIHzone Utilities Claes A .... IM fta Monroe Auto Equipment ...... Diamond Crystal ............ Kelly Services ........ Msbowfc Rubber Co. ............204 214 OotaR Chemical ........P......Its t|4 Satan Printing ................144 IM Scrlpto ...................... SJ 44 Frank's Nursery ............... 44 94 North Central Airlines Units ... SJ 4.2 l Chemical . 234 M4 MUTUAL FUNDS DetMOW 1.10 DetEdls 140 Del Steel 40 OlomAlk 1.10 ^rw40*; —D— 5 2596 25 . Jl | MW 1196 1196 + 94 1 1496 2496 + * I 4296 «% S'* -14 )9 91 90 90% *“■ 1 1766 1794 1714 3 2994 2994 2W4 + 16 I duPont 3.75e Dug Lt i.50 DynamCp .40 xl 43% 43% 43% + 2 2496 2496 2696 4 2 43'A 43% 4394 . I 2516. 1 33 17294 171 . -- 9 27% W4 2794 + 96 | 1196 1194 1196 - 16 —E— EestAlrL_.30e 100 71 4* 4996 -116 112 11094.11096. EastCF 3.19f I Kodak 1.40 EatonYa '« EG8.G .20 OJt Erie Lack RR EthyfCorp JO 016+ 1* Affiliated Fund ...... Cham leal Fund ...... Commonwealth Stock . ----------------K.J . .7.1* SJI Ferro Cp 1. tin H03 Flltrol 2.80 * FstoSl 1.1 1 -2094 *094 2094 J *3* J96 Wf IS 1594 1S96 1596 1 2196 2014 2094 - 96 2 1294 129* 154 + 94 5 4194 4994 4194 -96 (31 1496 if + 96 1 M96 M96 2*94 + 94 FedDStr 1 47 45 4596 3796 3796 3796 3394 3314 3394 —M— Mack Tr LOW 6 3344 3314 33% — % Mocygrh 1.40 10 4496 4496 4496 Magnavox .1 40 23% 22% 23% + RheomM 1.20 Roan Sal .35e Rohr Corp 1 RoyCCola .40 Roy Dut .89e Safeway St 1 "lOSLd 140 SanFran 2 - logP 1 “ StRegP 1 JVS Jn ____1 ley 1. Schering 1 12 2794 27% 27% + ' 5 30 38 38 + ' 1 32% 32% 32% + 79 31 30'6 30'6 - 23 S396 51% 51% - ' 12 2094 20 2196 + 1 11 40% 40% 40% + 1 5496 54% + 1 H _ 27% 27% — 24 3596 3414 3tVk — “ ita *96 — ' 106 21 4096 3996 3 Sinclair 2.40 SlngerCo 2.20 SmlthK 1.80a SoPRSug ,50e SouCalE 1.25 South Co .96 SouNGos 1.30 SuthPac 1.50 South Ry 2.00 Sperry Rend Square D .40 Staley 1J5 StdBrand 1.30 Std Kolls .lie $1011 Col 2.50 StOH Ind 1.70 StOIINJ 2.40e StdOllOh 2.40 St Packaging StanWar 1 JO StauffCh 1.40 SterlDrug JO StevensJP 2 8 42% 4296 42% — 7% 7% 7% + I 48'A < 1 3094 ! 2 51 4094 + 30'A + ____ 51 .. ____ 16 2596 2594 2594 - :«! 6 3894 3094 30'A § —T— El J0 11 2514 25'6 2596 .. «* !•»- 41 7394 7194 72 + 17 20 19% 19% + Texaco 2.40a TexETrn 1.05 TexGSul .40 Texaslnst .40 ToxPLd .35a Taxtron 1.20 Thiokol .25a Tidawat Oil Hearing Delay for SNCC Chief Defense Needs Time on Dixie Riot Charges ATLANTA, Ga. OB—A hearing on charges against “black power” advocate. Stokely Carmichael in connection with rioting in Atlanta was delayed today to give his attorney more time to prepare the defense. * ★ ★ Carmichael, national chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, faces Related Story, Page A-8 two charges, including one of inciting a riot — a state charge. The second charge is disorderly conduct — creating a disturb-, ance. ★ ★ * The Negro, 25, remains if) jail under bond of $10,000/on the first charge and $1,000 on the second. / His attorney, Hdward Moore Jr., well-known for his defense of Negroes in /fivil rights cases in Atlanta, was given until this afternoon .before returning to answer tjke charges in Recorder’s Coun. $500 FINE Carmichael could be held for grand jury action on the charge of inciting a riot. The city charge carries a maximum penalty of 60 days in jail or a fine of $500. Detective Cupt. Clinton Caha-fin said Carmichael was arrest-SNCC headquarters Thursday night and offered no resistance. * ★ ★ Carmichael’s arrest came after Mayor Ivan Allen Jr. ordered city officials to initiate immediate action against any and all persons responsible for the riot. Two SNCC members had been arrested earlier. 52 71 7796 7796 + I 37% 3796 3796 - 42 1694 15% 16 9 24'A 24 ! —u— 27 13% 12% 1 In Tank 2J0 JnltAIrLIn 1 UnltAlrc 1.60 UnltCorp .404 Un Fruit J50 372 47% 44% 47 — 6 7094 70 7094 - 29 30% 30'A 3046 + 1 12 4396 4296 4296 — ' 23 2594 25 2594 + 1 Ijrptm 3a USPlywd'MO US Rub 1.20 USSmelt ,75e US Stool 2 13 40 39 3994 — % 3 4494 45% 4494 + 179 53% 5296 53% + 34 54 53% 54 + irquar ,25c __irtinMer MavDStr 1JC McDonAIr .41 Merck 1.20a MGM 1 MMSoUtfl JO Mineral 1J0 Minn MM 1.20 Mo POC A 5 MobllOII tJt ....Can .50 NCooliR 1.20b NalOairy 1.40 74 144 14196 141% —2 S 2096 20*4 2096 -N—■ 72 4296 4l 4196—1 24 4196 40% 4196 + 1 21 21 21 + 27 4996 4994 49% — 44 35 3494 3494 — 7 3196 31% 31)6 ... Nevada P J4 Nawbery JW NEngEI 1.28 NYCant 2.06a Nlagf ’ Norm 7 7% 7% 7% .. 32 20% 27% 20 — 96 3 3096 3096 3096 . S 1796 1796 1796 . 1 23% 23% 23% . 77 5796 57 57 + 41 29% 2194 2194 + a 2.00 50 4396 4296 42% —1 52 OMoCdlt 1.20 OlInMath 140 Otis Elev 2 OUtb Mar JO OWWISlII 9.35 OxfrdPap JO 22 3296 3294 32<4 1 25% 2S96 2596 15 49% 49% 49% 2 39% 39% 39% , . I 1746 17% 1796 + 94 4 62% 01% 43% ^ IS 1706 17% 1796 —P— 29 29% 2996 2996 - 96 > 1J0 11 24% 1 254 51% 4996 50% . 5 31% 3196 3196 .... 1 #49* 4M4 4494 - V6 » M6 2W4 25% 4 3594 3594 3594 M Koyxtone Growth K-2 . Mass. Investors. Growth ...... 9.47 10JS Moot Investors Trust ........14J0 ISM -------—— ' MJ5 11 JO ... Ul 9J2 1L43 1SJ7 ” nil 7 17.19 13 44 43% 44 \ .171 127 lib 994 9% + % 20 1146 H 14 -96 U 42% 4296 4M + 94 ■■ FoodFlfr .90 JO tm Um |M6-16 PordMW MO \ 1ft 41% 49% 41% — 96 B E Sts FrvehCp 1.7* 1* 2794 15% 17 — 94 WernPIc ,50a 21 40 39'4 3994 —296 9 20% 2196 2196 + 94 15 30% 30% 30% 4- % 79 41 4096 41 + ‘ 13 31 30% 30% — 7 2796 3794 2794 + S 3196 3196 31%- By JOHN CUNNHf AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK ~ Faced with some of the highest interest more and rates in decades, more Americans are finding a lifesaver in their insurance' policies. Loans granted] on policies in the first half of this year jumped 6.3 per cent to $8, " 000,000 from $7,-420,000,00 in the same period of 1965. * ★ At a time when banka charging more, asking more! questions, beginning/to turn down more requests/conducting stiffer investigations, and making repayment t6ins a bit more difficult, the/insurance companies: / -Charge only 5 per cent generally, although the rate jnay/Oe higher in some states; NOQUESTIONS —Ask no questions, conduct no investigation, turn down no legitimate request; ■Permit irregular repay- 343 17294 14t 149%—% 34 3096 30 30 71 41% 41% 41% i unofficial. MMHNP notod, rates of dl i the foregoing table ere enm ______mente bated on the leit querte semi-annual declaration. Special i not om i Identified tit the dividend, d—Declared t-Mr! -Liquidating mi ex-dlvl- ._. ...Is year, f—Pay* Ing 1945, estimated cash gMd or ex-distrlbution daw. g-rai h—Declared or paid after stod or split up. k—Declared or pel — accumulative issue with ______ p-P»ld n—New tssu __ ,___, ______J omlttsd, d to action token at last dlvlden. —Declared or paid In 1944 p Noting, i stock Fly Tiger liif 3 3 Gen Devel 22 Gan Plywd It 2 1 Giant Yel .60a 3 1 Goldfield 5 trlbuted. wl—When delivery, v|—In bankruptcy or receivership .. being reorganized under the Bankruptcy *-* — ——'ties assumed by agtogNMto .......jrelgn Issue sub|< equalization fax. (Sr.____________ Auto Output at Highest DETROIT (AP)—U. S. auto production this week reached its highest point thus far in the 1967 model run as an estimated 112,247 cars were built. This compared with last week’s 86,661 and the 54,021 built in the comparable week a year ago. The trade publication Automotive News, which made the production estimates, said calendar year output would touch 5,682,-969 by this weekend. A year ago, Uie figure was MM.091. Bank Branch Is Planned for Briggs Building A major branch office of the Birmingham-Bloomfield Bank will be opened late this year in the Briggs Building, at the corner of Woodward and Maple in Birmingham. ★ ★ + The portion of the building the bank will occupy formerly housed a Cunningham Drug Store. Complete renovation and modernization will begin within the next few weeks. Bank Chairman, Thomas H. Wagner, said that the new facility will feature an unusual design which will combine classic treatment with new architectural concepts. American Stock Exch. NEW YORK (AF) Jj . ___________ M* of selected stock transactions on American Stock Exchange with i Less Red Tape / Insurance Loans Rfse ments over a period of time that you, yourself, set. Information regarding the loan provisions is included in J your policy, along with a chart showing the cashsurrender val-ue and the loan value of the pol-icy for each year of its life. If, for example, you owned a $10,000 policy for the past eight years you might read under the column “for each $1,000 of face amount” the figure $1)2.54. This means your cash value is $1, 125.40, minus premiums due. LOAN PROCEDURE A recognized procedure in obtaining the loan is to contact , .Despite the ease of a policy s loan, insurance companies cau- i tion that such money shouldn't i< be borrowed frivolously. Your [protection is automatically reduced by the amoupt of the $ loan. / y Borrowing the qatsh' value of a c life insurance policy is a con-; tractual righ/written into most r policies other than “term” poli- ] cies. It gives you first claim on ^ the moriey at the low rate even if the insurer could get a higher rate elsewhere—as he can to-^ ,, day. Term insurance has pro- agent or write to the com-tection value but no cash or loan Is homue officei giving your vajue |policy number. A Form will be, sent to you. ^ This method of borrowing is The nation’s three largest life relatively lacking in restrie-insurers—Metropolitan, Pruden- tions. Nobody threatens to re-tial and Equitable—are among!possess y0ur property, duns those which report recent in-1 you, damages your credit rat-creases in the number of policy ing, asks embarassing questions loans. of your credit references. It is a Prudential, for example, private matter between you and loaned $42 million more through the company. July of this year than in the ★ ★ ★ same seven months a year ago.] There are inherent hazards Equitable’s loans through June though. Since nobody demands totaled 3.75 per cent of its as- payment, many people never sets, a figure that appears small!repay the loan. Instead, they until you find it totals about $450 millions. American Embassy Guarded as S. Viet Voting Approaches SAIGON oto Co MolyMen New Pk Mng Panes! Pat RIC Group Rain Sgnat OH A I Sparry R wt Statham In Syntax Cp .40 Technlcor.75 Un Cgntal “ Copyrighted S?ONSgf“ . 768.31—9.00 . 192.1S-0.35 . 123J4—0J1 . 269.39—2.07 *0.73+0.15 00JS—0.03 04.10—0.04 Change (to ceme) ... (1 eeeme) ... Prev. Day .... 404.0 Yaar Ago .. 1944 High .. 1944 Low .. 1945 High .. 1941 Low .. 104.0 IS0J 134.9 279i 112.9 152.4 I14J ----------- H0.2 US.1 Ml __ 195.9 173.1 BJ 37.9 213.9 17M mJ 00,6 140.1 ijO 274J 33-3 194J 170J 159.4 M9J 142.4 A Bloomfield Hills attorney, William T. Gossett, has been named assistant to Wayne County Grand Juror George E. Bowles. Former vice president and general counsel for Ford Motor Co., Gossett, of 420 Goodhue, will assist Bowles in selecting the legol staff for the jnvesti- Gossett is counsel to the Detroit law firm of Dykema, Wheat, Spencer, Goodnow and Trigg. He is president of the American Bar Foundation and a former president of the National Legal Aid and Defense Association. In 1963 Gossett was a deputy to the special presidential representative for trade negotiations for President Kennedy. ThunOoy'* id DfvtqanOt Dacia rod Pa- Stk.of.Pay-^Rato^ Had Rocord obl« Central RR . . J$ .. +22 10-14 REGULAR utnittM . [B| . -ITS Q +23 1+15 .1$ S 1+3 11-4 Several hundred monks in Hue — the center of anti-Ky unrest — began a hunger' strike. In Saigon, national police said they had discovered a Viet Cong plot to booby trap anti-government election posters so that anyone trying to rip them down would be killed. It was part of a countrywide Viet Cong campaign to disrupt the elections. News in Brief Herbert Swan of 4048 Lomley, Waterford Township, reported to township police yesterday theft of field glasses, a wristwatch, a rifle, coins and cigarettes, total value of $234, from his home. Waterford Township police are investigating a burglary at the WKC Warehouse, 2579 Dixie, yesterday in which at least four portable television sets, valued at $388, and $3 in change were stolen. Burglars escaped with an estimated $62 in change in a break-in yesterday at American Legion Post 108, 3335 Ludwig, Oxford Township, according to * sheriff’s deputies. Bond averages CompiM by Tbc Auociatod M 1* 1* 1i Ran* In*. Util. Fl Change I Thur*. 72J 903 79.4 1 L Boy 72.5 tt§, 79.4 1 k Ago 7t) 90J 79 J 9 lb Ago 74.1 91 JO *1J V— m ■ Ago ili 101.0 .87J 91J 914 High 79J 101.4 tfLI --------- S sis Leonard Piantkowski of 3460 Loon Lake Shores, Waterford Township, told township police yesterday that a rifle, a shotgun and trading stamps, total value of $425, were taken from his home in a break-in. Day’s Sanitary Service New Location — MoVed Across st. to 2605 Dixie Hwy. —Adv. Rummage, Bake Sale, 61 S. Astor, 1 block east of E. Blvd. bet. Pike and Auburn, Fri., 9-7, Sat; 9-1. -Adv. Garage Sale. Sat., Sept., 19, li-4. 104 N. Jessie. Pontiac. —Adv. Bade to school rummage sale, Sun., Sept. 11,11-6 p.m., Temple Beth Jacob, 79 Elizabeth- Lk. Rd. —Adv. I'-H IT#-. HSixcessfuH *.hvestirig.* £ t vma*; By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “Stock ratings in statistical publicationsarea puzzle. What formula do they use? Why is IBM rated A-plus with a debt of close to $400 million, yielding only one per cent, while Pratt & Lambert pays four per cent, is debt free, yet rates only a B? What is book value?” M, Y. A) Book value is the proportion of net assets applicable to one share of common stock. It a fundamental factor carrying some weight in evaluating a stock, but usually much less important than earning power as an influence on share prices. I am sorry .that I cannot give you a single formula by which to rate a stock. Equally reliable analysts may differ depending on their weighting of statistical evidence. The stocks you mention show up the contrast between a low-yielding, high-priced growth stock and a conservative income stock. Possibly your quoted ratings reflect in part that IBM’s dividend is covered 2.18X by estimated earnings of a share for 1966 while Pratt & Lambert’s latest earnings statement of $3.15 for 12 months produces a comparative figure of 1.80X. From these same earnings come P/E multiples of 34.3X and U.9X respectively, showing how investors evaluate future earnings and growth. ★ * ★ Q) “When I asked for financial reports to cover a stock that interested me, the firm said none were immediately available. My brother told me not to invest in anything unless the company regularly released detailed information on its operations.” A. C. A) Yoqr brother gave you excellent advice. Most publicly owned corporations furnish adequate information on their activities. Shares of companies which publish limited financial data are not necessarily bad risks, but they’re harder to evaluate and more difficult to follow when you own them. The more information yon can get before investing, the less are the chances you'll make * mistake in selecting • Mock that (Copyright, Ml) ysj 4 it