Mark in Drive Campaign Chairman Emphasizes the Need for Citizen Support ^ Death Takes Herbert Hoover at Age 90 After one week in full swing, the 1^64 Pontiac Area United Fund campaign has reached the 29.4 per cent mark in its drive toward a goal of J815,500, UF officials announced today. Barry Asks About Jenkins; LBJ Schedules More Trips WASrilNGTON (AP) — Sen. The Republican presidential Barry Goldwater wages hi|^ nominee planned to spend the presidential campaign on three recording a television Bruce .1. Annett, 1964 general today alter asking for an dealing with foreign campaign chairman, aald nvcr- mp»n »" •!»»» securily fef.'!?. "" g>ii ropointc t t I factors'” involv^ in the case of Communist world all . receipts to date total resigned White House aide Wal- ville, Md. I*e canceled a speech in Baltimore and postponed until Oct. 26 another at Salisbury to prepare the television show. Commissioners to Act Tonight on Income Tax 1240,325. ter W. Jenkins. He hits the road again tonight for an address at Pikes- Along with the announcement, Annett emphasized the need for citizens to get behind the drive which supports 55 health, family, youth and research agencies serving the six township areas included in the drive. The industrial division received a boost late last week U.SKeeps Eye-on Russia for Signs of Furfher Shifts He is due to appear on nationwide television for a half-hour tonight to talk about morality in government. Public Hearing Set Before Officials Vote on City Ordinance Meanwhile, President Johnson is reported scheduling a series of l^me-stretch campaign trips. WILL APPEAR Subject to the priorities of the WASHINGTON (4*)—U.S. officials are watching for presidential job, he is iinder-with the General Motors cor- possible further upheaval in the Soviet Union’s lead- campaign porate gift of $150,000 bringing grship as they consider what steps the United States he will attempt to industrial totab to 27.5 per cent should take in the comine weeks tn Heal with nbanonH appearances in internafe„Vl co„d.rn^^ Action on a Pontiac city income tax is slated for tonight by the City Commission. The tax ordinance, similar to that of other Michigan cities, was introduced last week. paign division, according to _ . Charles F. Brown, UF industrial "resident Johnson, who conferred with congres-chairman. sional leaders for 2V bad — as businessman, provider for the poor and hungry, president and elder statesman.” Goldwater said Hoover’s death was a profound loss to the Mr. Hoover was one of the most imminent American public ;;;rr‘ago"in ^hrsamrehuVeh" figures of his time, said "And his,life was marked by broad interests and many constructive contributions.” "I share the universal sad-less over his death," he added. Gov. Nelson A. Burial will be in a national park at the site of a small cottage where he was born in West Branch. Iowa, in 1874. SAME CHURCH The St. Bartholomew service win be similar to that conducted for his wife, Lou Henry, , years ago in the same chi Stevenson 5^^ gj 7^ Those close to Hoover said he was stoic through his illness, never complaining of pain. Only one other' former president, John Adams, lived longer. Adams, the nation's second chief executive, was 90 years and 8 Rockefeller months old when he died; CommentihB on the commis to the of New York said Hoover’s Hoover 90 ye^fs and 2 months. involving a power the Jenkjns-matter for the.first William H. Taylor Jr , cited the ^ ^ * struggle in the Kremlin, must time in a letter yesterday to city’s financial plight and said g Stevenson U S Am be borne in mind. FRI Director J. Edgar Hoover. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3f bassador to the United Nations' throughout the world for his The announcement of Hoover'.s concern for his felloW man was de^th was written on Waldorf-an inspiration for all human Astaria Hotel stationery by his It/ In Today's ' Press /ke Takes i^ook at Recent World Events personal physician. Dr. Michael J. Leoort. It said: ' * ★ * "President Hoover died Oct. 20, 1964, time 11:35 a m." SUCCEEDED BY FDR Hoover, a Republican, was Jenkins Case Johnson promises information on probe — PAGE China Says U. S. trying to belittle atom blast — PAGE 11. AF Probe Board clears fliers stiqf down over E. Germany— PAGE 3. Area Newt............4 Astrology ..........23 Bridge ........... 23 Comici ..... . . . . 23 . 2M2 Marketo Obituaries Sports ’Theaters............. 1$ TV t Radio Programs 31 Wilson,.Earl .• ... 2$ Women’s Pages .. U-U 1965 if he were elected to a second term as governor. The legislature ditched his 1963 tax reform program. Staebler assailed Romney’s mental health policies in an appearance at Benton Harbor where he spoke to Whirlp^l Corp. employes. He said Romney has causetl delpy in mental health efforts by impieding organization ot community health clinics which, be called the best method for handling mental illness. The Republican governor, he said, has increased the local financial si^port necessary to get such clinics started. Staebler also pledged a stepped-up traffic safety program with more emphasis on secondary roads and tighter licensing restrictions. He supported compulsory automobile inspection. Of taxes, Romney called (Continued oh Page 2, Col. 6) fEDirOR’S NOTE-Major ner of a man »ho has been could envision polenlial trouble 'to wS'bn« K H ‘r* "" " upon the Communist world. ^‘scussion. velop a sizable nuclear eapac- Former President Dwighi D. SEVERAL YEARS itV- Eisenhower, in this exclusive The former president said he AP interview, gives his views believed it would take the Chi- tension begins to mount. “As it begins to develop, the He was succeeded by Franklin D. Roosevelt, but he continued to live an active life ((Dontinued on Page 2, Col. It on the developments.) By RELMAN MORIN and MARVIN ARRQWSMITH GETTYSBURG, Pa. (AP) - . . Former President Dwight D. h would Eisenhower says “I am not one Hve years to be a really of those who feels too good about significant thing, because one Khrushchev being removed.” ' t*>® big things they have to- With the momentous change in work on is a means of de-the Soviet government, he livery. And as for a means of added: “The Russians can go delivery, they haven't any either way. They can move plane bigger than a fighter or closer to us or closer to Red a light bomber. China. nese Reds several years before tause now you have a country they become a formidable nu- "“that very definitely said it was clear power. going to take over Formosa, Answ’erilg a question, he s't® of the Nationalist Chinese ■ ■ - government and they will be delighted to do it by war,” Eisenhower said. “That/was one of the big troubles between Khrushchev and Dreary Prediction Calls hr Clouds, Rain, Cold—Ech! Gray, dreary skies will hdver themselves. He says. "You can’t over the areg through Thursday, do this by war.’ But I tell you. it'll be mostly cloudy tonigiit if that situation develops, tjien 1 with lows expected from 37 to think Russia wduld be a little 42. Ae PkelMx MAKES POlNT-8-Former President Dwight D. Eisenhower is shown during an exclusive Associated Press' interview on the new leadership in Russia and Chiba’s explosion of an atom bomb. I'l’® 0 nl y place they c a n more scar^ th^ we^ Considerable cloudiness is Eisenhower discussed 1 a s t reach with that would be their * * * forecast for tomorrow. Light week’s developments in t h e old friends, the Russians. India Asked whether he thought rain is also predicted for 60 Soviet Union and Red ;China would be the only other place I there might have been any con- p^r cent of the area, mostly in an interview with the As- can see .where they would be nection betw^n the a t o m i c in the morning Highs will be fociated'Press'in his Gettys- any good. And everf there you explosion in Reck on next April. Telegraph In Bloomfield Township. Dead is Henry ,C. Aubert, 43, of 2324 Pine'Lake. Bloom field Township police said the accident occurred about 500 feet south of the .Maple intersection. BiRMINGHAM - A proposal man and previously was responsible for the celebration’s Government Day program. He is a member of the American Society of Civil Engineers, American Society for Personnel Administrators, National Con- gress of Parents and Teachers and the Birmingham YMCA. He is a former president of the Birmingham Rotary Club. The City Commission last night approved a recommendation of the retirement board to place on the ballot a new formula by which annual benefits will be computed. i prior to joining Birmingham, The cost of implementing Kenning was employed with the i the amendment to the City ; Bass Construction Co. of Troy ! Charter has been estimated at as a job engineer on large con-I 25.5 cenU for each 11.000 of [ struction projects dealing with ! ------j sewer, water and power plants. assessed valuation. collided with another tanker, the Sirrah (left). One crewman is missing and two injured. (See stor}', page 10). The gravel truck, which was j According to Russell T. Berg-driven by John E. Carrier, 22, er, secretary of the retirement ^ •stepnen KsyemsKi I of 1938 Garrick, Warren, was system, this would be reduced i Service for Stephen Ksycinski, slowing for a red light when' to 21 cents over the next five i 55, of 124 A 1 i c e, Bloomfield 6M, UAW Vow to Settle ^oterhrd Knocks' Tax Proposal ---- Aubert’s car skidded Ato the : years because’ of the city’s in- [Township, will be 10 a.m. to- rear end, officers said. ’The creased over-all assessed valua-"morrow at the Vasu-Lynch Fu- REACHED ACCORD various other tasks. One of his last excursions out of his apartment was in May 1963, when he spurned his doctor’s advice against it, and spoke at a reception honoring astronaut Maj. L. Gordon Cooper Jr. Hoover equated the early Waterford Township Board members last night took formal action opposing the City of Pon- try for speedy settlement, say- ■ Motors and the UAW tiac’s proposed income tax levy ing continuance of the strikejof the city. “will jeopardize the conUnuous^"'/°"‘''""‘ * . .* * . , upward thrust of our economy.” Pj.y" ‘ T agreements The resolution oppo^ng the thor, inn non Supplement It have been tax levy, which passed unani- 360 000 production workers have UAW mously, was offered by Town-j (Continued From Page One) joo.ooo prwuaion worKers nave s h i n Sunervisor James E. See- tnt»i finnnrii pavement was wet at the time tion. neral Home, Royal Oak Burial of the cras< ★ ★ * | White Chapel Memo- ♦ ★ * The tax increase would pro- •'‘M C^etery, Troy^ Police sold Aubcn, wb. sof. ™ “ ^ fared head and chest injuries ® Present contribution of alter a Drier illness. waT^kiS instenUv Berger said. Surviving are his wife. Agnes; was kilM nsUntly. miwpiiTiNr FACTOR ® daughter, Mrs. Sandra G. The vehicle was a total wreck. COMPUTING FACTOR Murdock; a son, Gary, stationed officers said. _ To provide more adequate with the U S. Army in Houston. benefits for city employes, the Tgx.; a brother; and a grand-proposed new formula increases by two-tenths of one per cent ____________ the computing factor upon retirement, from 1.0 to 1.2 per cent for general city employes 'No State Need for Income Tax' been idled The President sVid l>argaining units in GM. ship Supervisor James E. See- Sis “ Slrll,, dead. pact on production and 'Michigan’s total financial picture” different from what Mrs. Carl Metz Private service for Mrs. Carl a^ from* 1.5 to 1.7 per*^ cent )^'P''yBue) Metz, 63. of 1590 for fire and police. T^lly Court, Bloomfield Town- ^ ship, wqs held this morning at Based on average annual Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home, salary of $7,000 the increased pontiac. with burial in White benefit would be about $420, chapel Memorial Cemetery, said Berger. i xrdy. Members of the police and Mrs. Metz died 'Thursday ment in other industries. an im- • ^ , * ber of Waterford residents who: w.. ...... Members of the police and mrs. wieiz aie employ- I'"® ‘^e union called out and w"iW b^ “ department currently have after a long illness, its members, excent ih GM ana wouia De ___f____ ' ___ ,,. its members, except in GM plants selling parts and accesso-ries to Ford and ChrJ'sler which already had negotiated new national econqihic packages with the UAW.^ She was a member of the Pair of Dems to Tour City Action Due Tonight on City Income Tax , , „ ^ . Sh^iff Warns Area Hunters: (Continued From P e One) Democratic cohgressional candidate Billie S. Farnum tomorrow will be accompanied on a lour or Ponlioo b, Mrs. J«n« Hart, wife of U.S. Sen. Philip poverty. A. Hart. The pair will visit ‘city offices in the civic center at 10 a.m. and then attend a noon luncheon at the Zonta Fair in the First Federal Savings & Loan Association building, 761 Huron. country. There could be no greater tribute Than this to any man and no greater service to our people.” ^ * *, * I the present tax system, based The late President John F. | primarily on the property tax, Kennedy paid Hoover a brief i was inadequate. / vlsIUtlhellrto. I GAVE STATEMENT /'Use CaUtlOn' Kl^WPOVEETY Taylor lssu«l a -PonUOc ai The son of a small town. the crossroads ” statement say- “A tax approach based on cur- 5 per cent of their earnings ' . , ^ ^ ^ I placed in the retirement fund First Presbyterian Church. Bir-i tha ' 8®"®‘‘*‘ employes pay 3 mingham. Bloomfield Heights P®r cent of their fi^^^^^^ Club and Pine Lake proposed in 1963. he said. Country Club and was a past *■ * * , $4.200.'The city matches all con- president of the Newcomers I factory workers in Kalama-, tributions. Club of Birmingham. I zoo gave Romney friendly greet-! * * * Surviving besides her husband mgs. Shortly before he ap- i Berger said that this is the are two sons, Robert F- of I peared at one plant. Presi^nt first propo^ increase in allow- Brooklyn, N.Y. and Don P. of I. I i„u_„ Milwaukee, Wis.; a sister; and a brother. Memorial contributions can be “It appears that the Pontiac City Commission is attempting to shift the burden of running its municipality from the shoulders of those who benefit to those who do not, namely the nonresidents,” Seeterlin said. ^_____________________________ ,ui.i p.v|~s«uv, . '’He added that the proposal to ! Lynd®" Johnson pins had been ance since 1954. tax nonresidents is another ex: distributed among workers. ----------- ample of taxation without rep- Several men wearing the pins . Birmingham’s assistant city resentation. | Romney he had their votes, manager Robert S. Kenniqg last made to a cancer fund or jiny ’’This c 0 n c e p t has always basketful OF BILLS .night was named by the City other charity, been forfeign to our American' A Kalamazoo women’s group Commission as With the opening of pheasant iiccii^gc of democracy,” Seeter- presented Romney with a bas- the city's chief SIi^^'”a^th^°^a^of7o" andi'"®‘ ’ hS "MasOT"t!da” Zblk- add’ed! ketful of $1 and $5 bills-total- a d ministrator. pnanea at me age of 10, and I our city will move forward or | land County Sheriff’s Depart- '(^® supervisor said that the | ing $912-for use against cam- effective Jan. 1. fall back worked his way. ! community." through Stanford University to | implementation become a top-flight mining engineer and a wealthy man at second-rate ment urged' all area hunters to commission must be shown : paign expenses. use caution as the^ take to the passage of the income jj,g jg Romney fields in search of game tax on nonresidents will be more^ Staebler’s trail in come tax, he added, would be Specific warnings were issued harmful than helpful to the city i Harbor, accompanied by a reduction regarding the careless use of m the long run. « the property tax rate. Es- I firearms and against hunting in Seeterlin suggested methods timates now put the property ®'®sed areas. of fighting the nonresident tax Then he turned to public affairs. i tax cut at about $3 per $1,000 Hunters should stay away When he visited his birthplace i assessed valuation. from residential areas where * * ♦ at West Branch, Iowa, bn his! ,, r„. ‘here is danger of stray shots Coffee receptions will follow at, 88th birthday in 1962, a crowd of _nn.. ^ homes or play areas, 1:30 and 3 p.m. at the homes 1 25.000 hailed him. ofJi ®«*®®^s ' of the Joseph Spadafores, 345 "One of America's great j r between Feb 1 Nimrods should also be wary j Iroquota. and ^bert Tur- men,” former President Harry: 20, J965, delaying the ! h® i r weapons, especially | S' ®«“®<> him. effecUve date 6f the tax until when hunUng in groups J . J , Officers said it is illegal to . ■ damage buildings, signs, fence * * posts or similar objects along In other business tomorrow the woodland paths. At that time. Kenning, 41, will succeed City Manager L. R. Gare, who Supporters of Barry Goldwa- announced last ter, the Republican candidate week that he including’court litigation, at-l^®'' President, tamed out at a would retire in temntina to lure business and i Remney rally in Benton Har- three months. .... . .• • j * industry away Kenning, a graduate of the a^nt to the automotive ^stry boycotUng city 1 o c a t e d busi-! waving Goldwate^r signs. University of Minnesota, with a General Motors KENNING Louis J. Schneider Service for Louis J. Schneider, 74. of 1430 Inwood Circle, Bloomfield Hills, will be 4i p.m. tomorrow at Christ Church Cranbrook. Cremation will follow in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Schneider died Sunday after a long illness. He was a manufacturer’s degree in civil engineering and pins, 108 Franklin Blvd. 3 Young Girls Learn Life Has Ups, Downs Romnev who has refused to business administration, joined ^ member of the Detroit Ath-i .iSoSTV Ar?i Sto?. Ih. city in 1»1 « »»Jnt | '.ho Club. Mr, Sctoldor ... perintendent of the Department' “longed to Orchard Lake I said he was not bothered by the The Weather EASTBOURNE, England (UPI) — Three girls ages 11 to 14 had night, bids oh an urban renewal They also reminded hunters , their ups and downs for 45 min. Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC mAND vicinity — Increasing cloudiness this morning, mostly cloudy this afternoon and tonight. Not much change in temperature today. Highs 46 to 52. Not as cool tonight. Lows 37 to 42. Considerable cloudiness tomorrow with light rain over 60 per cent of the area mostly in the morning. Highs tomorrow 48 to 55. Winds are west to southwest at eight to 18 miles, increasing to 12 to 20 miles tomorrow. Thursday’s outlook is mostly cloudy and cool with possible light shbwer^. I parcel will be considered, I tract for planning a master plan I for city storm sewers will be up . for approval as well as the sale of a city-owned lot in Perry Park subdivision. that the townships of Bloom- ; utes here yesterday due to a -field, Avon, Farmington, Water- j faulty elevator switch, ford and Southfield are c o m - j The girls said they went up > pletely closed to hunting and i and down the seven flights 59 j specific areas in othei- townships times before rescuers cut off the I are either closed or posted. ! electricity and let them out. ' News Flash ST. LOUIS (AP) - The St. Louis baseball Cardinals announced today that Coach Albert Red Schoendienst is their manager for next season. Country Club, the Tuscarora Club of Lockport, N.Y., Tau Beta Phi fraternity and the Society of Automotive Engineers. His body is at the Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co., Birmingham, but there will be ! A resident of Berkley, Ken- no visitatiMt. I ning is married and has three Surviving are his wife, Ger-sons. ’ ' aldinc," and two sons, L. James 1 This year he served as Bir- of Birmingham and Rev. Ed-! mingham Michigan Week chair- ward N. of Washington, D.C. of Public Works. Two years later he was ^ named head of the depart- ( ment. In 1956 he assumed the | duties of assistant city manager. ‘ Eisenhower Reviews Recent World Events Hiilwtt L*w«t Twnpardurti ^ Thli D*t* in n VMrs „ M MllwaukM .. .. H 31 New Orleans M 39 46 35 New York 64 47 61 39 Omaha S3 3( 64 35 Phoenix 14 63 4i 4S Pittsburgh S4 39. ” " *-lt Lake C. 46 M Prenclsco Merle 43 M (Continued From Page One) i can determine the correct rea- has officially informed me Eisenhower at that time recoup d’etat on awfully short no-' so”, (ben we would know how to j through Ambassador Dobrynin j ferred to the “violence and in- ^ ^ ^..4 XX.... ........ 99 I thaf it nlnnc nn /»/>onaA in Kocin ___a six. _ ... J ^ ! v;ui UUl uwii i;iuui. tice, m a rapid time.# # ★ ★ COINCIDENCE i Expanding on his statement - ;......- Knowing well ^ the develop- jj ---- ment, this might have happened good” about Khrush- Manda»^Ttmpar«urt^c^rt^^ by coincidence right at the same I chev’g dismissal, Eisenhower •f S tinft. “But I don’t think this particular explosion and this other thing were very closely connected.” . _ The former president pointed 60. 45 out that considerations of the Soviet economy may have I said: * ★ ★ “Until I am persuaded by something that I can sk that is concrete, and specific evidence that the. situation has been improved, I will continue to think that. On the other > and, I can hope that it will be good, that is played a part in Khrushchev’s all.” dismissal. • NUCLEAR WAR * * * He said he does not believe He spoke of “the lack of con- the Kremlin wants a nuclear impr 0nnH«" anH “(ha fani that ..._ ' that it plans no change in basic | accuracy’.’ of Khrushchev’s out-foreign policy. I spoke frankly burst, as always to the Soviet sador ... 1 believe this was a good beginning on both sides.” FAINT SMILE Musingly, and with a faint smile, Eisenhower said: “I would like to talk to Khrushchev now. I believe if he could get out of Russia, with his family, he would like to.” Eisenhower said he would like to talk over with the expremier some of the events that had arisen in the past— and once brought the two men into a violent confrontation. NATIONAL WEATHER — Light rain is forecast tonight (or the upper Great Lakes area. Temperatures are expected to warmer from the Gulf states and along the lower West Coast. Little change is anticipated elsewhere. sumer goods” and “the fact that war. they had to byy, and did buy, I from the free world a lot of ! wheat, this may have had something to do with it.'” j POSSIBLE FACTORS ! He indicated that Ift has b«en | examining a number of possible I factors in Khrushchev’s expulsion and said; “I know that he expected to I stay. He constantly told me he ; would be there much longer I after I was gone, and I would say,‘Yes* that Is true.’ But Eisenhower said in the interview: “You know, he had streaks of frankness with me. He told me things and 1 asked tiie CIA to check on them and it turned out to be correct.” CHINA RECOGNITION Turning to the question of the atomic explosion in Red China, Eisenhower was asked whether he thought this might neces^-tate a change with respect to American recognition of Peldng. lie replied: “No, I would not think that. After all, this would be recognition under black- Asian states. “And to top it off, they are still saying they are going to take Formosa by force. U.N. CHARTER “Let’s look at &e charter of the United Nations. “Do yon take someone, in who is a brigand, who has two pistols, one on each hip, ready to pull them out and shoot it out? “There has to be some kind of a cleaning of their own record before I would consider it. 'That ,is the way I see it ” “At the time they were i building the H-bomb, which I | believe was a result of espionage, they also i That developed in Paris, May 18, 1960, when Khrushchev torpedoed the .proposed summit conference. | with respect to bringing ^ He took the action United Nations, age, iney aiso were oniiamg prancis Garv Power* Rvinv - great public works that could ! i “Well, I would still say this- be destroyed by one bomb. I Sovie^Mil a^ "*''**‘ “So I have the convicUon that the United States denied he was I ^ thCT would not start a nuclear, on a spy flight. I rfnn’i h4»iipvp iiipv will- u i. * . | released them. They have bruin- start one even if we have^ seri-i 9 iS™*^***^’ ** * 1 washed them. We saw the ef- start one even 11 we Mve scti ,2.000-man news conference re-ifects of that Thev have never ous. difficulties wiOi them,” Ei- o, Piqpnhnwpr as “mu ‘ uiai. iney nave never <»P^0WPr said r U 4 • J» themselves of the . fishy fnend, and likened t h e condemnation that is still stand- * * , * president to a thief. i„g against them as an aggres- President Johnsoh said in a He also withdrew an invita- isor in North Korea. They are “There has to^ some reason televised statement Sunday, tioo to Eisenhower to visit the still causing and formulating for throwing the man out. Ifwe|“The new Soviet government' Soviet Union. T' I and giving the supplies to carry out the civil wars in Southeast lieve a group of experts, headed by Gen. Elisenhower, could provide/that advice.” Goldwater called t h e former president “this country’s foremost military man and foremost statesman.” Eisenhower last Wednesday celebrated his 74th birthday and he said it would be “quite a chore” to go to Southeast Asia. He said he would be prepared to assist the administration in any way be could, but that he would want to talk it over first with persons in authority. He said; “Mr. Kennedy asked The United States, he s a 1 d. ®® whether ,! would be ready to “should be watchful and wary. chores.” and firm as to our own rights.” i His answer, he said, was that VIPT NIAM TRIP dqiend on his health , * u.- . ! and th^ adlvce of his doctors, n the interview, Eisenhower 1 _ _ ruled out all questions pertain- ™ GETTYSBURG ing to the presidential campaign 1 Eisenhower’s office is in Get-or domestic nolicies tysburg, several- miles from his farm. or domestic policies. However, he did comment on the statement by Sen. Barry GoMwatpr, the Renub-Ucan presidential candkfate, that he might ask Eisenhower to go to Sooth Viet Nam. On Oct. 5, Goldwater said: “If elected, I intend to come to grips with this vital question (South Viet Nam) gnd at that time 1 want the very_____________ „ _ ^ soundest advice availably. 1 be-1 Lincoln. He gets in before I a.m. every day, works on speeches and on his next book about his second administration. With the assistance of his staff, he handles an average pf about 600 pieces of mail daily. *4 * * He s(ts at a desk above which is a photograph of Abraham THE PQNTIAO PRESS, TUESDAY. OCTOBER 20. 19G1 AF Clears 3 Riers Downed Over E. Germany WASHINGTON (AP) - The Air Force has cleared tor further flying duty the three offi-cers whose reconnaissance plane stray^ over Communist East Germany last March and was shot down by a Soviet jet, it was disclosed today. A flying evaluation board bljimed the RB66’s border crossing on failure of the plane’^ compass and recommended that the crewmen be “kept on flying status,’’ the Air Force told the Associated Press. Press. ★ ★ Air Force headquarters ap- proved the ,»boa«!’s recommendations. A spokesman said that closes the case. After the plane was downed on March 10, the Russians and> East, Germans charged that investigation of the wreckage “established t^yond a doubt’’ that it was oh a spy mission. PLANE WANDERED ’The United States' said the plane had wandered into Communist air space by mistake. The Air Force Command ordered widening of an upper zone along the East-West boundary in Germany and Air Force planes flying in the area were GOP's Miller Sees Inflation Under LBJ SAN FRANaSCO (AP) -Businessmen backing-^President Johnson may dine at the White House if Johnson is elected but the main course would be crow, says Rep. William E. Miller. The Republican vice presidential nominee said Monday night that those who expect continued business prosperity under the Johnson administration would be sadly disillusioned. ★ ★ ★ In an attack on the President’s spending policies, Miller painted a picture of rampant^ inflation with “printing-press' money’' — dollars so devalued that they would be “handled in bushel baskets.” Miller resumed his verbal pununellng of the Johnson administration in a statement issued as he arrived here from San Diego, where he had en- Jet Fuel Blast Injures Five EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. (AP) - Five mqn were injured when a fuel truck pumping jet fuel from the XB70-A bomber explode and burned. The fuel was ordered removed after the huge boml>er’s scheduled fourth flight was canceled Monday due to ah engine malfunction. ★ ★ ♦ The blast critically burn^. two civilian truck crewmen and seriously hurt a third. An Air Force sergeant who tried to rescue the injured men suffered less serious injuries, as did a fourth civilian. ’The explosion didn’t damage the plane, one of two built under a billion-dollar Air Force program. MEN INJURED ^ Chester E. Pernula, 44, of nearby Palmdale suffered a skull fracture and burns, and Ivan Mayo, 44, of nearby Lancaster suffered burns over 75 per cent of his hpdy. Earl Smith, 43, also of Lancaster, was seriously burned. joyed a two-day rest from campaigning. His schedule in the San Francisco area included - speeches today at San Jose and Oakland lieftore flying east to Qeveland, Ohio. . Addressing a crowd of about 2,000 in the San Mateo High School Monday night, Miller evoked laughter and applause with barbs aimed at Pierre Salinger, the Democratic candidate for U.S. senator, w * * Salinger, former press secretary to Johnson and the late President John F. Kennedyr has been the object of “carpetbagger” charges since he returned to California to run for the Senate. Miller said that Salinger would not be able to vote for himself in California because he could not meet residency requirements. CANT VOTE “If he can’t vote for himself I don’t see why anybody else would,” Miller declared: He called Johnson’s plan for “The Great Society” a “blueprint for the most powerful government and the most expensive government and the most„ regulatory government in the history of the United States. ★ ★ * Earlier, in San Diego, Miller told reporters he was inclined to agree with Johnson that Communist China should be brought info the nuclear test-ban treaty. “But,” he added, "this should not open the door to recognition of R^ China.” directed to be under “positive radio control” at all times. , The board held that a major cause of the Incident “was toe failure qf electronic navigational equipment on board the RB66 plane.” “The board found that weather conditions which obscured the ground to toe crew contributed to the navigational error,” the Air Force said. Two members of the crew have been on ^ound assignments at the Tom-Rosiercs Air Base in France pending toe outcome of their cases. Thoy are Capt. David L. Holland, pilot, from Holland, Minn, and Capt. Melvin J. Kessler, an instructor navigator from Rilla-delphia. t The third crewman, Lt. Har- old W. Welch, navigator, of Detroit was badly hurt in the downing of toe plane. The Air Force said he still is hospitalized at Chanute Air Fprce Base, Rantoul; 111. * * * All toree officers were held by the Russians in East Germany after they parachuted from their stricken plane. Welch was Changes Job at Firm MIDLAND (AP) - George Hillman, Midland area manager for Consumers Power Cto., has been appoint^ to the position of Area Development Engineer with the company’s headquarters staff in Jackson, effective Nov. 1. freed March 21, Holland and Kessler Match 27. On April 3, a board of inquiry reported that “a gross navigational error resulting from erroneous indications” from an electrically driven cwnpass led toe-plane’s crew to believe they were on the correct course when they were not. However, the inquiry, board reported that .additional factors “appeared to be lack of complete crew coordination and failure to cross-check the plane’s position by other navK gational means available,” the Air Force said at toe time. The Air Force then convened a flying evaluation board of officers to study the case. It said such a board is set^p “for the purpose of developing and considering evidence as to the qOalifications'of aircrew person-nri to be retained on flying duty.” _ Minnesota Governor I Dem Dinner Speaker j LANSING (AP)-Gdv. Karl F. Rolvaag of Minnesota has 1)000 announced as the keynote spwff^ at a^ testimonial dinner for Democratic gubernatorial candidate Neil Staebler and Sen. Philip Hart tonight at -Reed City. Democrats from 14 northwestern Lower Peninsula counties will attend. Rolvaag was declare elected governor of Minnesota by 91 votea^ollowing a longt/ecount fight. Easy to Install ACCORDIAN Style Vinyl FOLDING DOORS $5.95 yalue • -- , space s doors in cloudy white or benje ’’colors. Fits ony 32x80 inch door SIMMS Is Blowing Their HORN... . . . ond for a good reoton. Simm. ho. b..n terving the Pofllioc area linca 1934 and wa re .lilt going ttrang. Simm. ha. 3-(loar. pacitad with bar-goint of all kind., and that', rooton WEDNESDAY STORE HOURS; 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. 2nd Floor HARDWARE DISCOUHT ’Auto Headlights /.OM V Sealed beom bulbs for 12 volt, dual systems. .400! cfnd 4002 series. Limit 4 per person. 88^ 2nd Floor HOUSEWARES DISCOUNTS ,PABT or 2-DOCn HATlOTOe The Dodge-size compact. Dart. If you like to live a little, we'd like to tet you In on something big. Dart is the fun compact with big ideas. About beauty • Comfort • Ride • Savings. Styling is crisp, clean and so boldly sculptured that you almost forget this i& an economy car. Choose your brand of spice from 10 exciting Dart models. Everything from the hold-on-to-your-hats Dart GT convertible to the trailblazing 4-door wagon. Power ? Choose one of 2 thrifty Sixes or 2 hustling V8's. Go Dart for '65. You won't miss any of the fun. Dodge comes on big for '65 ... Dart • Coronet • Polara • Custom 880 • Monaco 'BS Dodge Dart ^ 103/4x123/4-Inch lat protects sink from scratches and chips —cushions dropped dishes and glasswore. Perforoled for fast, cldg-free drainage. SnkTAN DODGE 211 SOUTH SAGINAW STREET, PONTIAC —FE 8-4541 - D0D04 COMIS ON BIG ON TV. BOB HOPE SHOW - FRIDAY AT l:M CHANNEL 4 MASTERPIECE MOVIE - SUNDAY AT S:M Cl Walnut and Rosewood— now *1’29» Second Actress Is III Filming New Movie Hollywood (JPi — When Joan Crawford became ill ai^ forced a lengthy delay in filming of toe movie “Hush ... Hush, Sweet Charlotte,” she was replaced by actress Olivia' de Havilland. Now, Miss de Havilland is ill. She is confined to her hotel with a respiratory virus, a spokesman said yesterday. Production of toe movie has been halted until she can return for toe last two days of shooting. Fodoiy ItoaraaBntaHvB Hm WIDNESDAY-.I to 3 P.M. REMINGTON Oil Grained Walnut with rich accent of Ebony Rosewood inlays on the drawers. Mr. and Mrs. Dresser, mirror ond fullsized bed. Sole priced $129, Chest $55. Bloomfield Hills - 2600/ Wcxjdword Near Square Lake Rpad FE 3-7933 OPEN 10 A.M.-9 P.M. WED., THURS., FRI., SAT. — MON. ond TUES. 10 to 5 — ices. Provides extra Cushioned wryk S| Maple Carving Tray Moulded maple tray with rust-proof spikes to hold roasts, hqms. •and all types of fowl w E-Z-V’Roast Rack 7 Position Oven Rack 1 29 SIMMS DISCOUNT BASEMENT Carpet Runners 2^® 449 599 099 6-FOOT Runners 9-FOOT Runners 12-FOOT Runners 15-FOOT Runners Choice of leool or nylon Viscose or Cut Cotton Pile 5x6-Ft. Bathroom Carpeting 3" 099 KKUHIHiE HEAD & SHOULDERS Shampoo 57' Hecivyweirjhl vi; or cut cotton pile rubberized or ’ bucks. Washable. Extra Heavy Carpeting Washable with toaiti rubber or lotex bucking. Lo or cyt cotton pile; 8?c value — .FRE-E shampoo I brush When you bu^ Head [ and Shoulders to help fight and ■ control do'ndruff. In RIGHT GUARD Deodorant SI.00 value — the deadar-ant far the ,whale far sprays on, never touches _y6ur ski 66’ SCHRATZ Bath Crystals 39' 69c value — .your choice of woter-softener bath crystals or bubble bofh„cr>'stal5. WOODBURY Gold Sl.OOvoluk — _6^>unce joX'U? ft -fieautifies os it cleans, moisturizes and softens SIMMSlf.. Foim _X. THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. OCTOBEft 20. 1984 Planning Avondale's Ne^s K Citizens to Help Schools AREA In the ^lidst of plans for the i tablish the new committee to second phas§. of a 1961 build-J make the S-year study. . ing prof'ram, the Avondale| School Board is already looking i ’’ ahead to the fpture, and will' ask citizen help in prediciting that future. | A dew citizens cbmihittee will I be< organized to study the build-1 ing and curriculum needs and | to project enrollments over toe ! next five years in the district j The School Board voted | Also being considered is toe unanimously last night to es- I possible use of "outside" con- sultants to direct toe efforts of toe chere Ig reassurance in that a formidable totalitarian power can indeed realign its top governmental regime without the chaos and revolutionary upheavals generally related to such shifts. On the other hand, threat lies in the knowledge that communism in the world’s leading exponent of it can achieve such an imexpected degree of political capability. ★ ★ ■ ★ In short, it should be a warning to all free countries that opposition to communistic ideology cannot for one minute be relaxed. great big beautiful doll, turned out in the style to which it needs be accustomed, would be comparable to taking a live doll to dinner at “21” and the theater. t ir ir if The big breakthrough came a few years ago with the birth of the Barbie doll. The innovation zoomed like an astronaut and Barbie’s basic-chassis cost of $1.92 along with it— to a total of $106.84 for the 48 dif- ’ ' ferent ensembles needed to accouter the foot-high female for all occasions. Barbie is not a talking doll, hut if she were her favorite words, needless to say, would be “I haven’t a single thing to wear.” ★ ★ ★ It seems that Barbie now has a sister, Skipper. So far, she has only a skimpy 10 dress combination running to a paltry $20. But none smartens up faster than a doll, and if you think Skipper will stand or ^t still for the status quo you’re headed straight for her doll house. One last thought — a dire one— is passed on to apprehensive parents. Skipper stands just nine inches —three shorter than her sister— and the chances of passing on some of Barbie’s hand-me-downs are ^ about as good as the flea getting the * canine vote as a dog’s best friend. With Certain Le^rnfrigs Davi(i Lawrence Says: Real Perils Jlidden From People WASHINGTON - These are days when people around the world are constantly being "brainwashed.” The phraSes of euphemism hide froin/the people the r e a 1 threat to the peace of mankind. If you don’t worry about what you think of yourself, you won’t worry about what others may think of you. Press ‘Schedule’ a Bomb to Rivals Fallout of Contestants . Follows Gridiron Tests Some of the cover-up is politically motivated, and somei of it is de to gloss ominous devel-' opments by I.AWRENCE wishful thinking. The world is told, for instance, that a treaty which bans certain nuclear testing is a great achievement, and all that is necessary now is to persuade Red China to join the signatories of that pact. But not a word is spoken about the graver danger involved in the actual use jf nuclear weapons. It is the continued existence of an arsenal of nuclear bombs capable of destroying in a few minutes hundreds of millions (Tf human lives which is the menace to civilization. Not a word is being spoken, moreover, by the heads of government anywhere, including of Sen. Barry Goldwater’s pres- munity of fraternal Socialist countries on a fully equal footing .. . “The Soviet Communist party will uphold the general line of the world’s Communist movement.” This means a continued infringement by the Soviet government on the sovereign rights of the people of other countries. Tt is a reaffirmation of Moscow’s determination to rnie the world throngh Communist infiltration of the governments of smaller countries — the true ohjective of Communist imperialism. The oppressed peoples Of the Soviet Union and of the Communist bloc are helpless today as the dictatorship group in Moscow changes personnel but not its absolutism. This is a time when the outside world can tell the Soviet people, by radio and by word of mouth through travelers, how freedom’s formula can bring a new government through a free system of elections and assure the citizen^ of the Soviet Union that the fruits of their toil can be used to improve and sustain a better economic life. But the rest of the world somehow is strangely silent. Never was there a more propitious time to emphasize the contrast between the way the Soviet Communist party imposes its tyrannical rule and the way Great Britain add the United States, respectively, choose their governing bodies. It is an opportunity sadly missed. (CfmrrlfM, IM4, Ntw YwH Bob Considine Says: Doolittle Tells Reasons He's Backing Goldwater NEW YORK - No champion Cole Porter Pontiac never saw a brighter nor more exhilarating day than last Saturday — but for 446 Press Football Contestants it was a gloomy and dispiriting date on the calendar. The hapless «ges, you see, had laid it on the line that eiWIfr Penn State would take Syracuse or the Outcome of their grid clash would leave the two fit to be tied. ★ ★ ★ But, alas, it was not to be. Leading at intermission after a first-half splurge, the Nittany Lion thereafter subsided— exhibiting about as much ferocity, football variety, as Ferdinand the Bull. On the other hand, the Penn threat must have made her foemen see red—orange, then, if you’re going to split colors. The “Boys From Syracuse ”—to run in the title most deeply implanted in the song—showed signs of spirited re- country’.s musical consciousness. 'The melodic hand of one of America’s great composers was stilled when death claimed Cole Porter at age 71. Considered one of the century’s preeminent tunesmlths Porter, p though bom a millionaire, amassed another fortune from a brilliantly successful musical career that embraced both stage and screen. » His song hits were almost countless, the . unforgettable “Night and Day” being perhaps the United States, about the terrible power possessed by a few governments. Today there is no conference going-on anywhere on genuine “disarmament” — no effort to insure the'destruction of all nuclear weapons and a prohibition against any resumption of their production. MAINTAIN ARSENALS There are proposals instead to j,g „,3y take maintain the present nuclear enough them idential hopes is more candid and realistic than Gen. James H. Doolittle, cochairman (with Clare Boothe Luce) of the Citizens f o r Goldwater drive. "G 0 1 d w a-ter might not win a and more dependence on Wash-in^on probably is too great by now to be reversed. But I think it can be slowed down.” Voice of the People: ‘Present County Hospital ' Site Is Best ior Patients* An article announced that a committee had recoln-mended the sale of the Oakland County Tuberculosis Sanatorium on Copley Lake Road. It was also stated that a new hospital might be built at the county center on Telegraph. ★ ★ .★ Since the type of patient treated in the county hospital tends to have a (^ronic illness, it often means that a prolonged stay is necessary. Extended visits to hospitals are depressing. It is necessary to do all that can be done to keep the patient cheerful. The Oakland County Tuberculosis Sana&rium is located on a hill overlooking Union Lake and takes full advantage of the scenery. The proposed new location does not offer these natural advantages. ' In this era of goodwill to the senior citizens and 'those who are ill, let us not sell out oqe of the most beautiful sites a hospital can have. RICHARD E. OLSEN, MTIv/ \ BLOOMFIELD HILLS ‘Can Distingruish Non-Factory Workers’ You can tell who are factory workers and who are not. It was plain to see the “eggs in their heir” bit signed “anonymous” should have been signed “not a factory worker.” FACTORY WORKER ^ ‘Freedom Lovers Will Vote for Barry’ I would like to comment on Mr. William Lyman’s recent prediction based on “facts.” * The majority of voters have too much good sense and integrity to return a man of questionable character to the White House. A ★ ★ They will, instead elect a man of high character and purpose, Sen. Barry Goldwater. His electloo would prove a national disaster to those few Americans who clamor for a welfare state; his election would prove a global disaster to our enemies, toe Communists, who are counting on Lyndon Johnson’s support in their plan to take over the world. ★ ★ ★ Newspapers dose to the feeling of the majority of voters (such as the Birmingham Eccentric and The Pontiac PreSs) support Sen. Goldwater. Those newspapers and periodicab whfch stand to lose most by a return to the free enterprise system and unmanaged and uncensored news support LBJ. I apee that the choice b between sanity and insanity, and discerning, freedom-loving Americans support the only candidate who will return our country to a sane, responsible position bi the world today—Sen. Barry Goldwater. MRS. JOHN L. CORDES BIRMINGHAM Says Union Officers Would Settle Strike If bbor union officers missed their salary pay checks, like the thousands of workers miss their hourly pay checks each week, the union officers might be less ready to call strikes and quicker to effect settlements. NORMAN BUCKNER 209 NATIONAL BUILDING Asks Why LBJ Pushed Civil Rights Bill If toe President truly felt that the Civil Rights Act was for the people, he would have asked a^Negro to run for vice president. Did he feel that a Negro would not fit the job? If thb b so, why did he make it bw that private business must hire someone they do not feel fits the job because of race, color or creed? W.D.M. Sfhe composer was a cospiopolite and numbered the celebrities of the world as his friends. The world lost a great artist when Mr. Cole was taken from his mortal sphere. His passing will be mourned by a legion of friends and admirers to whom he brought entertainment and spiritual uplift. It’s Rags to Riches for Dolls Dolled Up Problems of childhood seem to deepen with changing times. Once, the eyes of the Little Mother glowed at sight of a homemade ..rag doll, assembled from odds and e»4b-Of leftovers and remnants. Expense of bringing the “baby” into j:h€ world was roughly that of mailing a letter. But the role of young motherhood has risen in cost like every-thing else. Today the tag oh^n was rgsumied, rendered two encores of their opening touchdown for a 21-14 win. As might have been expected, that preeminent pigskin prognosticator, the self-effacing Major Hoople, hit the winner right on his bulbous nose. ★ ★ ★ How do things look for next Saturday’s elimination — the seventh of the 15-game-schedule for the newspaper’s annual contest? Well, Purdue’s BoOermakers are pretty popular — Dothbg to do with toe drink — with 4N entrants rootbg for them, while IM wi)l cheer themselves husky for the Iowa Com Huskers. . . , We thought that wras a little corny too.. Only^ 10 forecasters couldn’t make up their mindly and will have a private victory celebration if the game produces no winner. . ★ ★ ★ As the number of contest survivors lessens, your chances increase of snuggling up to the winner’s award of a $500 U. S. Savings Bond. So, you might tentatively start doing a little early Christmas shopping. arsenab intact, though not to increase them. Tips, however, has only stimulated France and Red China to try to develop nuclear strength of their own as a measure of self-protection. President Johnson, in his address to toe nation on Sunday night, deplored toe nuclear testing by Red China and urged toe smaller nations not to become frightened by “nuclear bbckmail.” He offered to use American power to offset any effort by .Red China to use her nuclear potentiality as a means of ex-w erting pressure in diplomacy. Mr. Johnson called on Red China to sign the test-ban treaty. But of what avail b such a step if nothing is to be done to ban the possession of nuclear bombs? In Washington: Editors Differ on Senate Races to win the elec-Uon. ” the fa- CONSIDINE bled airman and technological engineer told us. it * -k “I’m for him because he heads a crusade for something in which I believe.” Did he feel that Goldwater was the nation’s last chance? ★ ★ “No, I don’t” he said. “But some do. NOT READY? “Maybe we’re not ready for conservative government, but I think that we will be when it becomes apparent that the next step we take will make a So-cialbt state of us. Verbal Orchids to- Mrs. Abigail A. Jones of Goodrich; 80th birthday. - NOT CONFINED ’The use of words to convey unrealistic impressions b. of course, not confined to this country. Leonid Brezhnev, toe new chief (rf toe Communist party In the Soviet Union, said in his first speech after Nikita Khrushchev was removed : “If the governments of other states, for their j>art, dbplay a bower. Striving for peace, if the sovereign right of every nation, big and small, to settle its destiny itself b observed, then peaceful labor and progress will be assured ... “The Soviet (fommuipt party will strive for the consolidation of the unity of the great com- “What Goldwater offers, it seems to me, is an opportunity to slow down a bit on toe federal handout, put some morality back in force, let the whole blinking world kndw we’re every bit as strong as we are fair and homane. By BRUCE BIOSSAT WASHINGTON (NEA) -'Sharply divided opinions exist among Newspaper Enterprise Association client*’ editors as to major party prospeds in the 35 separate U.S. ‘ Senate races now reaching the climactic, stage across the| country. Of the seats at stake" (two in Tennes- BIOSSAT see), 26 are now held by Dem-ocrato and nine by Republicans. Among the 380 editors who responded to NEA’s fall election survey, 127 or Just about one-third thought the Republicans would gain seats Nov. 3. Only 91 made specific guesses as to the number the GOP might pick up. “nie average gain suggested was roughly four scab. Thb response matches toe widely held notion that the coattaib of a winnbg presi- - that the presait Democratic advantage of 66 seab to 34 would be exactly maintained after the balloting to ovec,» Twenty-four hazarded no forecast. ' Editors in their respective states predicted that Democratic tnenmbents (or their ware, Hawaii and Maryland. Independent evidence beyond this survey suggesb-that Sen. Hiram Fong of Hatoaii and Sen. J. Glenn Beall of Maryland are in serious trouble foam Democratic rivab. Not b Gny. Paul Fannin, running for the Arizona seat being vacated by Ooldwa-ter, free from d “For 30 yeats the trend toward ever larger federal government has gone unchecked, except for a temporary slowdown under President Eisen- “I just happen to believe that we can get along better in the long run with the smallest possible federal control capable of doing the job. Goldwater prom-toes Just toat. magic carpet lofting lesser candidates to victory. For only 51 editors tobi Sen. Bnrry Goldwnter ^ defeat President Johnson, yet 127 believe Repnblicaa seutorial nominees can best Democrats ' h Johnson. ^ On toe other hand, alipost as many editors — 122 — think the GOP will lose senatorial seats thb fall. Just 69 made specific guesses, and the estimated average loss Fas three seats. “The momentum toward more Another 107 editors conchided to their seats In Z| states: California, Connlbticat, Florida, Indiana, Maine, Massa-chpsetb, Michigan, Minnesota,«Mississippi, Missonri, Montana, Nevada, New Jersey, Oklahoma, Rhode Islanl, Tennessee (two seats), Texas, Utah, Virginia, Washington. West Virginia, Wiseouin and Wyoming. Responding editiu’s frohi Ohio believe that incumbdnt Democratic Sen. Stephen Young will .be unseated by hb GOP challenger, Rep. Robert Taft, son of a famous father. ’There were too few responses to make a judg- . men! on the Democratic seat held by Sen. Quentin Burdick of North Dakota. , # *• * Editors from the areas involved predicted that Republicans in Nebraska, New Mexico, Pennsylvania and Vermont -would retain presently occu^ Senate seats. . ^ Despite contrary evidence of carrent polto, the editors think formeg^ttorney General Robert F. Kennedy will take away Republican Sen. Kenneth Kcattof’s SMt in New York. Evidoice was too limited for judgments on seats now held by RepuUicans in Arliooa, Dela- NEA’s client ediU^ nbo were asked to weigh the impact thb year of the major party vice presidential nominees. A bit more than 61 per cent of toe responding IN editors — 154 — thought Johnson’s choice of Sen. Hnbmrt Humphrey would do hhn more harm than good. Bat another 122 tho^t toe Minnesotan Would help toe Democratic ticket, and 102 said the choice would have no material effect As for the Republican vice presidential choice, Rep. William Miller of New York, a whopping 219 editors — 57:6 pel-cent — said be would have tto impact at all on Goldwater’s race against the President Ninety thought he would hurt the Arizonian’s chances, and 71 thought he would help. cmrttr ter St nwited In Oiktend, *ng>ten, Macomte Laowr ana WaUtenaw Counttea Itla tISJI a Stataj SM.M a yaw. All man wb-payabte bi advanct. THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 19R4 ;Odp Hits at Security Issue Johnson Assures Future Reports on Jenkins Case SEVEN Though destructive, earth-. Mountains'are constantly erod-! would become an uninhabitabla quakes arfe essential to life, the fng and if they were not raised 1 place of stagnant seas and National Geographic says. 1 again by quakes, the world I swamps. I WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Johnson has assured congressional leaders that they will be kept informed of progress in the FBI and Secret ^rvice’s investigations of former White House aide Walter W. Jenkins. Johnson was said to have giv-cn the assurances voluntarily IPS DUCK SOUP or ui to procott on Auto Loon or you . . . lot u« prove thoro’t diHoronco in Auto Finoncinf. FAST. FRIENDLY FINANCING TROY NATIONAL BANK AT YOU* SERVICE UNTIL 5;30 P.M. MONDAY Thru SATURDAY FRIDAY'S 'TIL 4:00 P.M. IIVERNOIS AT MAPLE ROAD (15 Mile) Telephone 682-4200 yesterday at a bipartisan session with House and Senate leaders. , None of the legislaltive leaders questioned him about Jenkins, who resigned after his arrest on a morals charge had Republicans continued to hammer away at the Jenki|^ case, questioning whether the inci-de^ raised a serious security question at high levels of the Johnson administration. Sen. Barry M. Goldwater, the GOP presidenttel candidate, sent a letter tol FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover yesterday asking why Jenkins was not. “subjected to a Uiorough security check and ipv^stigation upon moving into a highly sensitive position in the White House.” SECURITY ISSUE Republican National Chairman Dean Burch termed “pat- Burch Hits Johnson, Says GOP ill Sue FCC for Equal Time Nerve Deafness Gan Be Helped! Nerve deafness is the principal cause af hearing imp>airment. There is no treotment or surgical operation that will cure Nerve Deafness. People that say 'T can hear bpt con't understand" usually suffer from nerve deafness. We have available a brochure teiling the inside story of nerve deafness. Write to The Pontioc Press, Box No. 33. WASHINGTON (AP) - Republican National Chairman Dean Burch says President Johnson’s nationwide address Sunday night was "purely political” and the government’s refusal to order equal time for Sen. Barry Goldwater amounts to informetion “suppression and manipulation.” The GOP will sue the Federal Communications Commission in an effort to overturn Monday’s ruling that the President’s television-radio broadcast — on air time provided free by th^ networks — does not fall within the equal time provisions of the Communications Act, Burch said Monday night. ★ ★ ★ The Republican chairman charged the administration with news suppression and appealed for funds to finance a half-hour broadcast by Goldwater, the GOP presidential n o m i n Wednesday night. Johnson’s “free program” was worth about’half a million dollars, he said. Burch spoke on NBC on time ! provided without charge by the , network after it. CBS and ABC ^ had rejected his request thal Goldwater be given equal time to match Johnson’s broadcast on free time — and the FCC had baG||ied up their decision. SENT TELEGRAM After Burch spoke. Democratic National Chairman John M. Bailey sent a telegram to William McAndrew, NBC’s vice president in charge of news, saying The GOP chairman had “talked about extraneous issues and made a plea for contributions to the Republican campaign.” “I would like a response as to whether NBC believes the Democratic party is now entitled to time to respond,” Bailey said. ★ ★ Johnson was given time Sunday night to speak as president last week's important foreign developments, which inclu(|ed China’s detonation of its first nuclear device, the change in the Soviet Union’s government and the Labor party’s victory in Britain’s election. Presidents customarily are given free air time to report to the nation on matters of moment. However, Sbetibn 315 of the Communications Act provides that radio and television, stations must give equal time to all candidates for an office if it provides time for any of them. WAS POLmCAL Burch said that anyone who saw thp President Sunday night would^ave to agree that “the sole purpose of the program was political.” j ----------------------------- ently ridiculous” a statement by Democratic vice presidential nominee Hubert H. Humphrey that Jenkins case did not involve any security risk. Burch charged that the Johnson*^ adminlstratioii was tr>'ing to suppress the facts in the Jenkins case, which he said “had grave significance insofar as our national security is concerned.” Jenkins, . 46, resigned last week as Johnson’s aide after disclosure that he had been ar- last seen at the party. rested twice on morals charges at the jWashington YMCA, first in 1959 and again last Oct. T. Sources said the President re-viewedJor congressmen his long association with Jenkins. They said he told them that Jenkins and others^ from t h e White House had been attending an informal party at the new offices of Newsweek magazine on the night he was arrested. Two plainclothes policemen arrested the White House aide, less than an hour after he was • RESIDENTIAL • COMMERCIAL • Operator and Radio Controlled We Initoll and Repoir Free Eftimotei 24 Hour Service Very Reoibnoble Prices Sales Ml 6-891T Service Al*s Overhead GARAGE OOORS 2020 W. Big Beaver Rd.____________^ Troy ONE GIFT WORKS MANY WONDERS GIVE TH| UNITED WAY AUSTIN! NIORTELL Agency, Inc. 70 W. Lawrence St. — Corner of Cass Ave. c *e ^ -5 K ^ a S if CQ Use This All-Rite p^t Pen Until It Runs Dry-FREE! leeu cetstr. mmm sue lun lenesr n»n enit ener pen et even twics Oils erk»-« went pen Is trp IS-FRfei Here'S aN imi Re Srse In le the Orseery, Marsr ane Them sSsts HsM kalew enS sslesi Me aster anO paint at tks All-Rita Ran la suit ; trteJ?'l!51'3a'irraSm1^V'eellIir*"(!aaSa!'TriIIfa*7ir%^ RltaSenTern-** *ly**"'l!L?'wtwlwp""* *** Gregory, Mayer & Thom Bvtryhodj’i Stedeser Stuct /IFF Birminghom 167 N. Wopdword Charts are dull. CAR MAKE AND MODEL POWER STD. 6-CYL. DISPLACEMENT LENGTH WHEELBASE WIDTH CURB WEIGHT PRICE* PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE 1 (2-door sedan) 145 hp 225 cu. in. 203.4 in. . 116 in. 75.6 in. 3222 lbs. $2226 CHEVELLE 300 DELUXE (2-door sedan) 120 hp 194 cu. in. 196.6 in. 115 in. 74.6 in. 3015 lbs. $2231 FAIRLANE (2-dobr sedan) 120 hp 200 cu. in. 198.4 in. 116 in. 73.8 in. 2915 lbs. $2230 ^Comparison based on AMA specifications and Manufacturers’ Suggested Retail Prices for models designated exclusive of state and local taxes,-if,any, destination charges, whitewalls, wheel covers, and other optional equipment. — ‘ But with a couple thousand dollars of your own money at stake, we thought you’d Hke to see how the 1965 Plymouth Belvedere . gives you more power, more length, more width, more weight, more car for your money than Fairlane Or Chevelle. Plymouth Belvedere I (2-door sedan) AMI Plymmuth is ths Miljr mm mt the three with a f •year/fO,0«0>mdle warrenty aa the parte thmt keep jraa gMng. Chrysler Corporation warrants for 5 years or 50,000 miles, whichever comes first, against defects 'in materials and workmanship and will replace or repair at a Chrysler Motors Corporation Authorized Dealer’s place of business, the engine block, head and internal parts, intake manifold, water pump, transmission case and internal parts (excluding manual clutch), torque converter, drive shaft, universal joints, rear axle and diffarential. and rear wheel bearings of its 1965 automobiles, provided the owner has the engine oil changed every 3 months or 4,000 miles, whichever comes first the oil filter repiKed every second oil clumge and the carburator air filter cleaned every 6 months and replaced every 2 years, and every 6 months^furnishes to such a dealer evidence of performance of the required service, and requests the dealer to certify (11 receipt «f such evidence end (2) the cer’s then current mileage. ^CHRYSLER THE ROARING 65s . FURY BELVEDERE , VALIANT, BARRACUDA Tlymoulfi 7 . EIGHT THE PONTIAC PRESS, T i'ueI: DAY, OCTOBER 20, 1964- WEB]^ESDA\^and THIRSDAY AT POAiTiAC MALL • • • 2VO PHONE ORDERS ... big values^ budgei-»ireiching prices! G*r ptinii in 80-»quire . cotton iwrcale. Fiords, NH novelties, teometri' " ■ steles. Sfrinch width. pillow case print fabrics ^rder-print designs in b|ue, pink, lilic, maize or green on long-wearing coKon. 36 - inch width. versatile knit jersey Fashion • knits in manv colors! Make dresses. Mouses, slacks of this wool, blend fabric. 12 to 60-inch tubular widths. taffeta satin fabrics 2yy,.^I Acetate »eases in a rainbow of colors! 42 and 45-iiT widths. For fa.shinn /lie or linings in skirts, coats, dresses, slacks. one, few-ofra-kind sample fashion fabrics Full bolts of a twell-known maker's acetate, rayon and blend fabrics. Novelties, solids, fancy patterns. For dress, children's fashions. 43-in. 2„»1 SECONDS! Thick cotton tenr ia 22x44 or 24146-in. bath size. Absorbent, toft to the touch. l ong - wearing muslin cases in a variety of border designs. 42x.l6-in. standard size. M-square cotton percale ( with handy zip closing. Washable for easy u keep. Fits ttandard-si decorative lamp shades, pictures t'M(/y Lamp shydft in drum, ballerina stsles; many colors, fa, $1 Piclurti in wood frames of enpealing doe -eyed children. 10xl9-in. panel decorator fabrics 2,^‘I Drapery and tlipcoser weights in assorted fabrics. 43, 4*-in. w-ide. ffeaitcr u eights, yd. $1 gall arePHt pllloitM Kapok-hlled, approx. I2x . 12-in. Choice of cotton , corduroy, rayon-acetate, ravon-cotton covert. tmmltarg napklaii 48-count box of our own , ’Hudto’ brand. Soft-wrap | or gauze coverings! Lock-ed-in deodorant 1 save on toiletries Face tissue, S Toilet soap, 1 fflidso bath sn Hair brushes. Rub. gloves, Stationers, 2 Occasion cards Note paper, 3 Hand mirrors boxes 81 O for $1 IP 10/31 2 for $1 lec. 2/91 boxes $1 2 hxs. 91 boxes 91 91 plastic dress ba^s */ Protea your fashions in these jumbo 34-inch garment bags. Quilted fronu and c'ufft. Pink. aqua. •>f«rfoii*« emmdgt 2 Ibo. Buttons of pure milk ^ chcKolate arc panned with > | bright sugar shells. Stock ^ I up for Halloween. J| COMPA\tOX DOLLAR SALE SAVINGS AT PONTIAC MALL lmSS‘VS*u. door mSmrit .t-SSsshl polo Sompo I4x34-inrh size it clear-refleaing, comet with 6 dipt and acrewi for easy irmtlling on doors, walls. *3 2x8-ft. size scatter rugs Cmpet idmpite in a variety of ibera and colors. 7Scrged. ready to use! CyUym lymp piie style • rainbow of colors. Lat. ex-hacked, washable. ; Adjusts'from 7l/z to 8'/^ ft. White pole and shades J with pumpkin Of wrqu-oise trim. Decorative!', 5: nylon, wool broadloom % •f • . Some seconds, discontinued btst-quality atylas. Long-waarthg nylon or resilient wool pile carpeting ooma in many tex-, mrcs and astorted colors. oxtra-ielSo drmporloop pr. White rayon-acetate; 60x-43-in. sbortia' aixa. pair: ,4/sa, 60x84, 94; 90x43-9S tnd 180x84, 919 2 boys’ tapered corduroy slacks Cotton corduroy for warmth. Taperedfortlim appearance. Adjustable tab-waist stvic with cuff-lea a boftoma Regular, slim liaca 6 to io. 24x$9dneh rug runners *2 Heavy cotton pile, latex backed. In tangerine, antique gold, green, roae. Machine washable. kmmd • hooked 24x34-tnch s colorful floral pattern. Thick, long-wetrint- / Made in lapan. spori 9hirt9, 3 lor Long sleeve style in easy- . cart and long-wearing , Ihogs* i ohirtoy 3 lor Turtle- e IRREGULARS! nccli style ia cottons. Assorted colorful stripes ia bora' sizes 6 to 1& THE ]»QNT1AC J’RESS. TUESDAY'. OCTOHKR 20. ltM!4 NO PHONE ORDERS ON DOLLAR SALE tTEMS! WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY ONLY! FREE PARKtNO AT PONTEA0' 3EAE.L Jcircfrif, 2 pen., pm. (>ne • and • lew • of-a-kind . neckItcM and earnnsa. ^ Plajlic and ilaas beada ^ in eacitint cnlora. 1 ft- a i ' colorful misses’ \ / "" A imported cotton shirts ■ * / \A wool mufflers headhunters */ 1/ */ */ IRREGULARS! Wash able, little care, tailored stale* to team with Caprii. skirts, jumpers. ttpptrh strap bran rollou panin girHIm Cozv wool* come from a Belgian manufacturer’s discontinued stock. Plaids, solids, stripes. White, warm red. blue, beige or black in cold-day hat*. Orion* acnlic or wool knit*. Hot not Slight miiweave*. Pastels; sizes 32 to 30. IRRhGULARS! Well - IRKfcGl LAK.s! Slnmiiing li? known bras. White. A. B. C f]) 1 .stretch in white. One size »j) I cups. 1 from selection; pic- ■ lits waists 24 to 3t) in. 1 ture not mailable all stores. Very slight miswtaves. two-tone pattern*. .Some blend* of warm fabric. available in every .sta le. womens nylon gloves IRREGULARS! Double wmen oylont in black, white, color*. Stretch iizes; aome aiie* 6V2-O, but not every alove in nylon petticoats *1 inlloH sHugflfi, 'J fir. 91 ■ Cotton slips, irrrg. 91 F.iJtrlos^ cotton ■ rayn'^ hrifis...........* fitir 91 r rib h I a H k r t 9 ShCONDS! 'Oi'arm blend, stitched edge*. VC'hite and r>a«tels; 36xSO inche*. 1 savings for tots TRAINING PANTS .ot-ton; 2. 3 and 4. .1 pr. 9t S(K!KS: knit; white, pastel*; 4-6'/j, 4 pr. 91 mtu C.otton coriluroy llannelette linings, piive, brown, medium, navy, blue gray; 4, 6. 7. COMPANION SPECIALS Convenient FAMILY NIGHT SHOPPING MONOAY through SATVHOAY tUI 9:90 P.M. ' ' ' . ' t ■ V THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUP:SDAY. OCTOBER 20. 19G4 AT UST . . . invisibleliEARING AID! for those that hear hut do not understand ^ Better Nearinc Service IM N. ta|iM«-nu II4-IHI " Miut. tefM* rt*a Mm : I amm lea. ; n~ ~| tj_| 2 Petroleum-Filled Ships Collide in Alaska Harhor a quiet roiiiiiider According to the National Safety Council, 80%ofall automobile acci-/^|^ |Sl. dents happen within 25 miles of home. A/ways bucAle your seat belt. ^1^ Published to save lives in cooperation with The Advertising Council and the National SJifety Council. ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — Two sea-going tankers loaded with petroleum products slammed together in the harbor Monday. The resulting fire spewed flames skyward hundreds of feet. Authorities said one man was missing from the two crews, and two others were hurt. ★ ★ * One of the vessels, the Santa Maria, of American registry, was abandoned and burned to a red hot hulk.* I The crew of the other vessel, I the Sirrah, of Dutch registry, I stayed aboard and, after the two shi^s drifted %ether for short time, managed to pull away and sail up Cook Inlet, away ’'from the burning Santa THE PONTIAC PRESS WOULD YOU^IKE A FAMILY ROOM LIKE THIS? BIG BEAR Can Design A Family Room That Reflects Your Personol Tastes and Comforts., FREE PLANNING SERVICE AAany Custom Designs /t^oiloble To Select From Free Estimates BANK TERMS 7 YEARS TO PAY BIG BEAR FE 3-7833 739 North Perry Street-Pontiac Complete Home MoHernization Service , Modern Life Is Studied at Council VATICAN CITY (AP) -Questions of war and peace, love and marriage, science and progress, and brotherhood and justice came before the Vatican Ecumenical Council today as the Roman Catholic assembly turned' to a study of the church in the modern world. * * * The study being undertaken by the 2,500 council fathers in St. Peter’s Basilica is one of the most sweeping ever to be considered by an ecumenical council in the church’s 2,000-year history. The opening lines of the schema on the modem world struck I the keynote of the document. NO LESS i They said: •'The joys and the I griefs, and the hopes and the j anxieties of modern man, especially of the poor and the afflict-I ed, are no less the anxieties and ; the hopes, the griefs and the i joys of this council.” i * * * Some council officials warned I against expecting too much [ from the long-awaited docu-j ment. They said there is much | j it does not do. Others termed j the document a brilliant exam-' ! pie of the church's ability to j think and speak in fresh, mod-[ ern terms of significance to men | I everywhere. j I * I I The schema is a direct appeal I to the world s half-billion Catholics to work for brotherhood . with all men. It calls on Catho-i lies to take a continuously active part in the formation of public opinion, in science and culture, in programs to improve community life, and in movements aimed at ending racial, social and economic discriminations. The schema acknowledges-the growing pressure of questions in the minds of many Roman Catholics about birth control. While it proposes no drastic turnabouts in church bans on contraception, it'holds out the prospect that changes may be in Ihe offing. Maria and the flame-licked water around her. FROM OREGON Officials ■ listed the missing man as Eugene Hughes, about 35, a fireman from Portland, Ore. They identified the injured as Hank Leland, 28, Bloomington, Calif., ,a maintenance man,-and Edmund Oliver, 36, Long Beach, Calif., a fireman water tender. ★ ★ ★ Oliver broke both ‘ankles when he jumped 12 feet from the Santa Macia to a rescue boat. Leland * also suffered an ankle fracture in jumping from the stricken ship. Don Walter, acting port director, said the Sirrah apparently dragged anchor and rammed into the Santa Maria, which lay at anchor about a half mile off the Anchorage waterfront. FLAMES SPREAD Flames spread out for a couple of thousand yards on the water. For a time it was feared the incoming tide would sweep the fire to the docks. ★ ★ ★ Myron Rosser, Compton, Calif., a crewman from the Santa Maria, said "The other ship struck us. There was a sheet of flame. We fought the ‘ fire for a little while—10 or 15: minutes — and then abandoned ship.” I • * w ★ Walter said the 550-foot Santa Maria, owned by-the Union Oil Co., anchored Monday afternoon with a load of miscellaneous petroleum products. He said it could carry 135,000 barrels. The Sirrah, on a voyage for Shell Oil Co., was carrying a cargo of 141,000 barrels of jet plane and turbine fuel. Texas Governor, Lady Bird Sub for the President FORT WORTH, Tex. (AP) -; Texas Gov. John Connally and j Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson ! stepped up to bat for the President in campaign speeches yesterday. “There is no choice between the men who have offered themselves for the highest office in this land,” Connally declared at a $100-a-plate Democratic luncheon attended by 450. * * -k “By all odds Lyndon B. Johnson is the man who should be the next president of the United States.” Connally, confidaftt and campaign consultant of Johnson for years, and the First Lady appeared as substitutes for t h e President, who called off a Texas trip because of global developments. Divorces Sylvester Elizebeth _ . .. Letitis A. from Phillip B. Velma E. Thum Tommy R. Dean rl A. Pomeroy ard M. Haynei .. . loaded with features that ARE All important WfCC IS 108 NORTH SAGINAW 2-SPEED ... NEW DELUXE SPEED QUEEN WASHER with exclusive LINT CATCHER and SOAP DISPENSER • Double Wall Construction • Sealed Transmission • Tangle-F’roof Agitator • Bowl-Shaped Tub • Super-Duty Aluminum Wringer • Speed Queen "Time Teller" • 5-Yeor Transmission Guarantee SMALL DEPOSIT HOLDS IT IN LAYAWAY UNTIL CHRISTMAS! SPECIAL AT . . ms t CREDIT The privately owned United 122 per cent between 1951 and I world merchant fleet grew by StateTs merchant fleet shrank by >1963; in the same period the 144 per cent in number of ships- IT’S PLAYTIME IN THE BASEMENT! With cold weather on its way, the youngsters will be spending more time indoors. Act now. Let POOLE LUMBER turn your basement into a fun-packed playroom. For an 'at home' estimate and complete details on our 1 -stop home improvement service, coll, this week. Jim McNeil will come to your home at your convenience. r MATERIALS AND UBOR TO REMODEL THE AVERAGE BASEMENT FOR AS LIHLE AS $31.19 A MONTH LUMBER _ fSt OAKLAND AVE.^PONTtA^ Fi4»tS94 MUUCLi MILS SM^0kMtSb,TtL£6flAPHRP. • TIL FEB^96I9 • 90 Day* $«m* At Coth y> Uj> t» 36 Months to Pey / M 7&rm ^airy Stores There’s Sheer Magic In Every Spoonful of RICHARDSON’S • ENJOY THE UNIQUE FLAVOR OF Pumpkin Pie e HERE’S A “SUNOAE-IN-A-CARTON” Raspberry Choco-Chip ICE CREAM.........HALF GAL. C • THIS MONTH W| ALSO FEATURE • BANANA • BUHER CRUNCH • MAPLE NUT • CHOCO-CHERRY APPLE CIDER Old fashioned “sippin' cider" flavor. . conveniently packaged in o fhrow-owoy carton. 39c HALF GALLON CARTOH n r/fti lire ni nll Rivhnnho IHANOY LOCATIONS 4342 DIXIE HIGHWAY DRAYTON PLAINS 7350 HIGHLAND RD. M-S9 PLAZA 3414 W. HURON 5838 M-15 CLARKSTON • 2486 ORCHARD LK. RO.' SYLVAN UKE ra thru Siiliirduy, Ortvbur 24,1964 OPEN Daily & Sun. 8a.m.-10p.i THE i^UMiAC FHESS, 1 Ui^SUAV, OCTUBJ1.K 20, 1964 ^EEVEN Red China Says US. Is Trying to Belittle A-BIqst I States Dean Rusk I prestige-undoubtedly would be 1 Chinese achieven»ent “is a atnm^l^h hnH “ahAnir S ^ battle” faiscd becayso it now is a nu- heavy blow to the U.S. policy of *S its si^icance. clear naUon"^ I nuclear monopoly and nuclear hanStf, ^ **“ television The New China News Agency blackmail.” that both President Johnson and I statement Oct. 18 that China’s 1 dispatch from Peking said the! « said Johnson pretended to Compromise Sought On Peace-Keeping Dues Support Grows for U.N. Opening Delay UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) — Support is growing for a move to postpone t.he U.N. General Assembly opening to give the United States and the new Soviet regime time to work out a compromise on the issue of paying peace-keeping dues. Diplomats predicted the opening would be delayed two weeks, until Nov. 24. The 19-nation, Latin-American bloc gave virtually unanimous approval to the idea at a meeting Monday after the United States announced it was willing to consider a*-postponement. Informants said a number of Asian and African delegates also haVe signified approval. The Communists apparently are willing to go along.' Before the Soviets dumped Nikita Khrushchev, the United States had warned that at the assembly opening Nov. 10 it w(wld invoke a U.N. Charter provision that members two years in arrears on their dues should lose their assembly vote. It would affect the Soviet Union and nine other member states. MIGHT QUIT The Soviets indicated they might quit the United Nations if they lost their assembly vote. They have refused to pay for peace-keeping forces, contending the assessments were illegal because the General Assembly made them instead Of the Security Council. The United States reportedly believes i>that the new Soviet leaders should have time to study the issue before a showdown is called. The shake-up in the Kremlin continued to generate repercussions. Polish and Hungarian leaders, who refused to join in the Kremlin’s denunciation of Khruschev, issued a joint appeal for talks to heal the rifts in international communism and reiterated support for the Moscow limited ling medical treatment 25 miles test-ban treaty. The commu- New York Crowfl Said Largest to Welcome Peggy nique was signed by Polish party chief Wladyslaw Gomulka and Hungarian party boss Janos' Kadar, who has been visiting Warsaw. ★ ♦ ★ The British Communist party expressed anxiety at Khrushchev’s ouster and called on the Kremlin to give an explanation. The London Daily Telegra|4), quoting “trustworthy sources in Eastern Europe,” said Khrushchev is reported to be receiv- NEW YORK (AP) - An aide from Moscow. The Soviet press Mrs. Barry Goldwater says has given no hint of the former crowd of women that turned leader’s whereabouts. West German St.qmp Will Mark JFK Death BONN, Germany OPi — The West German post office will put out 27.5 million stamps commemorating the anniversary of President Kennedy’s death. The 40-pfennig (10 cent) stamps will carry a portrait of Kennedy and the date of his assassination, Nov. 22, 1963. out to greet her here was the largest of the campaign. Thousands of women formed a line Monday that wound through the foyers and lobbies of the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, out the Park Avenue entrance and down 49th Street a full block. It was drizzling part of the time. Mrs. Goldwater, wife the Republican presidential candidate, shook hands with the women who were invited by the Federation of Women’s Republican Qubs of New York State. be concerned about the well-l PakistaiiL officials in Karachi I seeking Red China’s immediate being of the Chinese people, ‘in | said the Chinese blast had rein- admission to the ‘ United Na-spite of the fact that the United forced the position of countries | tions. States has conducted hundred's - ^ r of nuclear tests.” j LB> REJECTION ! Peking also attacked John-i son’s rejection of its proposal for a world conference to outlaw nuclear weapons, saying: While , villifying the Chinese government proposal, Johnson revealed that the U.S. govern^ ment was not interested at all in the complete prohibition of nuclear weapons. In New Delhi, Indian Prime Minister Lai Bahadur Shastri warned that “the Chinese are trying to build up a mighty war machine and thus create fear in the minds of all.” He spoke in a broadcast marking “solidarity day,” the-ppening of the China-1 India bor^r war in 1962. * ★ I Malaysia’s deputy prime minister and defense minister. Tun Abdul Razak, said the Chinese nuclear test had “strengthened the Communist portion in Southeast Asia.” PONTIAC MAU jOPtiCAL eSNTER I »30 PJW «2-im cur HEHnNG COSIS! Use Ashland Fuel Oil with S.C.A. With Ashland Fuel Oil, your burner operates more eflBciently and you use less fuel oil. S.C.A., the exclusive Sludge Control Additive, in Ashland Fuel Oil, keeps fuel lines, filters, screens and nozzles clean and free from clogging. You get a free-flow- ing fuel supply. This all adds up to - lower heating costs, savings for you! This winter enjoy the comfort, economy and convenience of dependable Ashland Fuel Oil with Sludge Control Additive. 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HURON Nikita's Era Showed 3 Major Changes (EDITOR’S NOTE—This is-the second of three dispatches^ in which UPI’s chief diplomatic correspondent in Europe sums up and assesses the 11 years of Nikita Khrushchev’s rule injhe Kremlin.) By K. C. THALER LONDON (UPI) - Three, major developments characterize the 11 years in which Nikita S. Khrushchev led Soviet Russia: • UberalizaCioo at home, including the fostering of science and Russia’s" triumphant leap into the space age. • Tlie policy "^f coexistence with the West, especially the United States. • The fragmentation of the world Communist movement by the split with Red China. Khrushchev’s liberalization of the Russian people themselves from the steel dictatcf-ship of Josef Stalin brought . sweeping reforms in the secret police system. Tens of thousands of “political” prisoners under Stalin were released from prisons and concentration camps. Chief of Secret Police Lavrenti Beria, Stalin's top agent of terror, was run out of office and shot. twins” of Khrushchev’s early years in powef — went to Geneva in the summer of 1955 for a summit meeting with then president Eisenhower, Britain’s Anthot^r Eden, and France’s Edgar Faure. Stalin had never left Russia except for his wailime meetings with Franklin D. Roosevelt and Winston Churchill. But Khrushchev started as a traveler and kept on being one. VISITS BRITAIN After the first summit in Geneva, he visited Britain in the following year. The United States eventually was to see him, as were most of the coun- the good life to come. He promised to meet, and eventnally surpass, the American'* standard of living. One his drivifif aims was to overtake the American econo- my. that month. Everyone showed up, but Khrushchev’s fury over America’s “spying” spilled over, and the summit colfapsed in bitter invective before it began. DIDN’T LAST Khrushchev’s sulk didn’t last. He had stormed out of Paris to East Germany, where many thought he would in his wrath sign a separate peace, treaty with the Communist regime. He didn’t, and as time went on, peaceful coexistence grew again. other Asian countries. He became one of the most traveled leaders in the world — and in doing so, even where he ■was feared or mistrusted —made friends by the sheer force of his ebullient personality. He was something new in Russia, a handshaker and kisser of babies. The Khrushchev grin and the jokes that went with it also warmed the Soviet homeland as Russians came to know for the I first time a relatively free and The StaUnist grip on individ- [ easy kinship with their leaders, ual citizens was loosened. Cen- Economic triumph was not to be his and his experimentation caused setback after setback. His most complete failure was in agriculture. His pet project to develop the vast virgin lands of Asian Russia flopped. He pushed it against the advice of many expefts and political advisers. He was to suffer ^ bloomed into a partial mi-in the waning months of his re- clear test ban treaty with the pme the i^ommy of having to united States and Britain, and ... .. ir buy wheat from the West. i step4>y-8tep approach to fnr- : SPACE PROGRESS I ther easing of tension with the But whatever his economic United States nnder the presi-faiiures, Khrushchev more than John F. Kennedy, surpassed them, in Soviet pres- Khrushchev’s peaceful coex-tige as well as accomplishment, istence was by no means a sell-in the field of space develop- out or surrender to the West, mdnts. His was the. honor of Throughout the Khfushchev hailing history’s first space sat- era the Soviets took advantage ellite. Sputnik I, that sent the^f every opportunity to underin Oc- mine or weaken western power. world off into a new age ii tober 1957. Russia went on from there to put the first man in space, the first woman, and to send the first multipassengered spacecraft out of the world. sorship over foreign correspond-! And the slow but nevertheless they came, but never conceded Com Pain Stops Uania.n... D.IUI I. ___* ents’ dispatches from Russia was ended. improved flow of consumer | that the United States was any- burned in Africa and south- ART FREEDOM Freedom in the arts was encouraged. Efforts were made to increase the flow of goods to Russian consumers; the housewives of the land began to get a break with both the manufac-ture* and import of more “nontechnical” goods. In the area of coexistence, Soviet leaders led by Khrushchev emerged from the isolation of the Kremlin. 1 starter in space. something every Rus-1 thing but sian could '^hppreciate. Short shrift was given to the consumer under Stalin. Now for the first time, the shift in Soviet industry was Ihrgely to making things for the people. ENVIED STANDARD Khrushchev, in his concern with the domestic economy, made it plain that ’>he envi^ and admired the American high standard of living. He remained a staunch enemy to the end of the American method, but the | ed States in September 1959, and Khrushchev, accompanied by j results were something else his Camp David talks with Pres-his then premier, Nikolai Bui-1 again. I ident Eisenhower, marked the Through it all, with some false starts and an occasional serious reversal, Khrushchev talked up peaceful coexistence. He rejected the Communist dog-of the inevitability of quarreled openly, nastily and all die East by giving arms to the time with Red China on. the question. HIGH POINT Khrushchev’s visit to the Unit- Egypt’s Gamal Abdel Nasser. When U.S. Secretary of State John Foster Dniles turned Nasser down, Khrushchev helped Egypt build the Aswan Dam. ganin - the famous “B and K' He preached to Russians of ! high point of his coexistence pof- i hiS _ _ icy. He returned to Moscow im-1 pressed with what he Kad seen, buoyed up by the friendly i-Junibr Editors Quiz on KANGAROOS "■m AT GRASS LOOKS aOOD-UTTUE JOEY 15 THINKING * among other things of “adventurism” — when he gave the . , XU West an ultimatum to get out west b.*. th. hi. American people and the American President. This was the period that the Sino-Soviet axis began to bend, then crack. Peking generated a campaign through the Communist world, just a whispering one at first, that Khrushchev had sold out to capitalism and imperialism. first major challenge blunderbuss method he came j to use on occasion. The last was over Cuba. Under Khrushchev, the Russians embraced Fidel Castro, helped him with mqn, money and .arms — including nuclear-capable arms. And this brought Peaceful coexistence, took a the confrontaUon of October hard blow when Russia shot 1952 between the White House down an American U2 recon-1 and the Kremlin, naissance plane in May 1960 and! while the world held its arrested and subsequently tried i b r e a t h. President Kennedy ^its pilot, Francis Gary Powers. | stood firm before Khrushchev’s I The timing could not have | threats — and it was Nikita been worse, with an East-West | Khrushchev who backed down, summit meeting set for Paris in (mixt: th. tiw* •• (mivim) QUESTION: Why does a mother kangaroo carry her baby in her pouch? ANSWER: A little joey or baby kangaroo, is only about an inch long when born. He’s small, but he’s possessed by a tremendously strong idea, Vhich is to climb into the big comfortable pouch his mother has waiting for him. Once inside, he’s happy. For weeks he stays there, feeding, resting and ^wing rapidly. Finally he pokes his head out and takes a look at (he world. One day, as in the upper picture, the joey will see something tempting and hop out. He has the comforting feeling that his mother is around and if he loses his nerve (bottom picture) he can always take a flying leap back into his safe little home. It may be months before he is out on his own. Young animals have a great need for security when they first grow up. Nature provides many methods — birds have nests, many animals bring up their young in caves or inside thickets. Kangaroos belong to the large group of marsupial mammals, who havtfe developed their own way of caring for their young by carrying them around in a soft warm pouch. FOR YOU TO DO: Most marsupials live in Australia, but we have one kind in America, the opposum. Mother opposums have pouches like kangaroos, but they also have a most unusual Wipy of carrying their young around when too big for the pouch. Try to find out what this is. DRAFTIN8 SUPPLIES Drawing Instrument Sets •3*\»25«* Behind many “For Sale" signs there is a sad story: A family borrowed more than they could offord to fmy for a home or payments and interest rates were loo high: the home hod to be sold . . . often at a loss. Thi^ tragedy could often be avoided if the families would seek help frpm a home loan specialist . . . such as our Association. We work with you to arrange for a loan that's as easy/to handle as monthly %nt. French Cury** — Protractors Architect and Engineer Scales Beam Compasses, Pantographs Dsofting Boards 3.50 Slide Rules75c to 26.50 75 West Huron Established 1890 FE 4^1 CUSTOMER MRKIN8 IN REAR OFIUILDINB ISD! *209” • All channel UHF included • Big 23" picture tube o Stertfb piwno with sapphire styUis A MmvJtflAP ^ o Transistorized stereo amplifier ’ • Cabiitet of Walnut vonoor opd selected hordwoods SO bONFIDENT ARE WE OF THESE VALUES THAT WE MAKE THIS 6UARAMTEE . . . SYLVAN STEREOS IV SALES Open MonHuy, SednetHay nnd Friday Ftmingt 'HI 9 2SU Orchard Lake Read (Syhran Csntsr) Fhon# SII-S1M By wooing the so-called neutral and unaligned nations with aid and arms, Khrushchev strove with considerable suc-to stir trouble in what was Khrushchev saluted the Amer- of fhe British empire, lean space accomplishments as fanned the flames'of revolution anticolonialism wherever ehst Asia — and, as Cuba was to prove, in the Americas. THREATENED BRITAIN At the height of the Anglo-French invasion of Suez in 1956, Khrushchev threatened to blitz Britain with his new nuclear power. He forced his way into the strategically important Mid- AUTO LEASING NEW »65’s ANY MAKE... ANY MODEL "Dii'ect Lease” includes maintenance, insurance coverage and loaner cars. You are never without an automobile. NATIONAL AUTO LEASING CORPORATION 334 ttvirHiis • 1 Block North of 8 Milo RoaE ForiEilo 20,Michi|oi • Phoao: LI 6-1707 OTie.. ... when if comet to greeting cards choose from our complete selection of fabulous Award Winning... CAROS PERRY PHARMACY PRESCRIPTIONS I 1251 BALDWIN Near COLUMBIA FE 3-7057 T 689 E. B^VD. AT PERRY FE 3-7152 ■ ttBNeftSiaiinwSL ^fE3483| Member Federal Home Loan I Sy... IR,GR>tR y R QbH Ri‘‘ H “ t::~ ■\ THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUE;SDAY; OCTOBER 20, 1964 TIIIIITKEX Luncheon and Hat Show Benefit for Scholarships A luncheon and hat fadiloo s h o'w at Edgewood Country dub Thurhday will benefit the sdiolarship fund for the Brook-side Branch of the Woman's National Farm and G a r d e n Associatkm. Local members modeling include Mrs. Asa Drury, Mre. MitcheU Calbi, Mrs. P. D. dawson, Mrs. Clifford Dick, Mrs. Charles Galloway, Mrs. T. L. Harris, Mrs. Adoiph Magnus, Mrs. Eugene Nieiens, Mrs. Sherwood Nye and Mrs. John Dickson. June Taylor MacGregor is coordinator and hat fashions will be from ‘Lizbeths’ of Bir- Chairmen of the day are Mrs. E. Gillnour Winn, Mrs. Galloway and Mrs. Nieletis. Name Editor to Committee of Press Group Janet Odell, women’s editor of The Pontiac Press, was named a member of the constitutional committee for the proposed Michigan Women’s Press dub on Saturday. ★ * * Some 50 new^per women met at Mit^gan State University to discuss the formation of such an organization. Chairman of the day was Sharon Nelton from the department of information services, MSU. George Hough, instructor of journalism at MSU, addressed the newswomen on the subject, “Women, The Press and the Future.” Mrs. E. Gilmour Winn (left) and Mrs. Charles Galloway (back), both of Pemberton Road, Bloomfield Township, join with Mrs. William McClure of Illinois Avenue to admire hats which mil be modeled in the Brookside /Branch, Woman’s Motional Farm and Garden Association scholarship benefit luncheon Thursday noon at Edgewood Country Club. Serving on the representative committee in addition to Mrs. Odell are Elaine Mor-risey, Coldwater; Barbara Komar, Detroit; Doris R. Madi, Gaylord; Marion S. Grattan, Jackson; Virginia Redfem,'Lansing; Luise Lesi-mer, Petoskey and Aryls Derrick, St. Joseph. Music of the Past Entertains the Present Show Is Cancelled The show is off! Many Girl Scouts, Camp Fire Girls and Boy Scouts have purchased special tickets through their organizations for “The Wonderful World of Sports" at Olympia Stadiuth tonight or Wednesday. Due to injuries to the cast, the show has been cancelled. By GEORGE V. CRIPPS Associate Professor oj Music Oakland University A‘ feeling for 17th and 18th century music for. strings came alive Sunday afternoon tpn the Oakland University campus through the fine efforts of professors Wilbur Kent, violinist - violist, and Clive Henery, harpsichordist, of the Oakland University music department. Second. Load Soap When you use a suds-saver washing machine, put some additional soap or detergent in with the second load to produce adequate cleansing pow- In a lecture - recital, Mr. Kent, teacher of strings and director of the Oakland University Orchestra, gave commentaries on the development of the violin, viola and the bow, and pertinent information about the music and the coniposers^ of this period of music. VHHJt SOLO -The first composer to be heard was H.tl.F. von Biber whose Passacaglia of solo viola was impressively played by IWr. Kent. A beautiful veiled quality of tone produced on his early 19th century viola and a fine command'of bow made the counterpoint sound as if it were two instruments playing^ instead of one. Five old French dances for viola and clavier by Marin Marais (1656-1728) introduced Mr. Henery, teacher of piano, whose skill at the harpsichord was An attraction of the program. * ★ ★ Rather than the usual solo and accompaniment style, here was a poetry of sound of delicate fabric, color and balance played in a light-hearted manner inviting you to dance. Mr. Kent switched to violin for J. S. Bach’s Sonata in G minor. The compelling motion of Bach's music was not always precise in the allegro movements but the vitality of the performapce never faltered. Shape Up Berets He Wouldn't Be a Convict , If Pqcents Had Convictions ^ By ABIGAH. VAN BUREN Norfolk jCounty Home of Correction and Jail, Dedham, DEAR ABBY: I have never written a , letter like this before, and I do so now hoping it will help other young _ people to get r- ^ ’ on the right track. I am |f20. ABB\ and from what could be called an average middle-class family. I have been doing a lot of reading lately, including your column in the Boston Record-American. recognize myself in so manK of the letters other young people have written to you, such as, “My parents won’t let me have a car,” or, “My parents want to know^ where I am every minute,” or, “My parents place too many restrictions on me.” Well, I had my own car at 16.1 kept any hours I pleased, and r got what I want^’About 90 per cent of the time. If my parents refused me anything, I either argud, or I su^ed until I got my own way. How wrong I was. I wish you would tell parents that they would do their children a tremendous favor if they learned how to saj^ “NO”, to them . . . and stuck to it. A few months ago I would have laughed at this, but my outlook has changed. I love and respect my parents, Abby. But I didn’t be- Garden Unit Sees Slides of Flowers Following the intermission, when many of the audience came to the stage of the Little Theater to examine the harpsichord and the violin and viola, a Concerto in G Major for Viola and Clavier by Telemann was performed. STRING GROUP The program concluded with the appearance of the Oakland University String Consort, a group of six violin . students, a bassoonist, Mr. Kent and Mr. Henery. They played rvigtttms and charming work by William Boyce (1710-1779), Symphony V in D naajor, edited by Kent. ' Here’s a good way to block those popular knit berets for children; after sudsing, rinsing and blotting the beret in a towel, insert an unbreakable plastic record of correcV size. Pat the bere| smooth, then let it dry to a perfect circle. Gayle Fuller, daughter of the Ernest Fullers of Qrten Lake was named queen of the 36th mnnual homecoming, Friday, at Ferris State Collage, Big Rapids. .'Sponsored by Tau Kappa ‘Epsilon fraternity, the 18-year-old Commerce freshman was crowned by Ferris President Victor ' F. Spathelf after she topped seven other candi-.dates in a campus-wide selection. More than 90W alwnni attended the^ree-day weekend^. BETTER PERMANENTS *10 up HAIR CONDITIONING, TIPPING FROSTING AND TINTING $7.50 UP AppoimUitent not necmttary Specialists in Scissor Hairentting FREE PARKING /V-BEAUTY ^ SHOP Biker 35 W. Huron FE 3 / come a spoiled, self-centered brat all by myself. I had plenty of help. Sincerely, R. J. E. IN CELL 63 DEAR INTERESTED; Ask him to light, yobr Bunsen burner. It could start a low flame. DEAR ABBY: I am a college freshman and there is a young man I see every day that I would like to get to know better, but I don’t know how to go about it. He is a foreigner, and hasn’t been in this country too long, but he looks like he would be very interesting. We are both in the same chemistry class. How do I strike up a , conversation with him? INTERESTED Designer to Appear at Party DEAR ABBY; I pm writing in hopes that you can help this young couple who are on the verge of getting a divorce. They were married just after the boy graduated from high school. One month later their baby boy came. 1>e following year the girl finished her, senior year of high school. Her mother cared for her baby during school hours. Now the, young husband wante “out.” He says he C’oesn’t love the girl and never did, and no one is going to make him stay married to A recent celebration in their Greenwood^ Avenue, Avon Township home honored the 50 years of marriage of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Tuckef. They were married Oct. 17, 1914 in Scottsville, Ark. Their children, Doyn Tucker and Mrs. Willie R. Berry, sponsored the event. They have six grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren. Colendor of Events her. “Japanese Fantasy” is the theme for the Thursday evening card party sponsored by Sylvan Manor Branch, Woman’s National Farm and Garden Association. He refused to see a minister or anyone for counseling. He went to a lawyer and is determined to get his freedom. The wife ia heartbroken. She says she still loves him and will do anything to save her marriage. Can you help them, Abby? B(3GGED DOWN Setting for the annual evening affair, open to the public, will be the club rooms of First Federal Savings of Oakland. Mrs. Glenn Bedell who will speak on Japanese floral arrangements, lived in Japan for nearly six years. She volunteered to teach conversational English iq Sthuda Business College and the Toyama High School in Tokyo. DEAR BOGGED: No one can help unless the parties involved, want to be helped. The young wife can make it difficult for her husband to obtain the divorce, but she can’t force him to live with her. Assuming she could “save” the marriage, a young husband who feels trapped and bitter would make a poor husband and a worse father. TODAY Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital Guild; 8:15 p.m.; doctors’ dining room of the hospital. ★ ★ ★ Fashionettes: 7:30 p.m.; Adah Shelly Library; Halloween party. Beta Sigma Phi, Phi Gamma Eta chapter: 7:30 p.qi.; Baldwin Road home of Joyce Hoppe; “treasure hunt” will acquaint rushees with members. WEDNESDAY Zonta Club of J»ontiac: 11 a m. to 8 pm: First Federal Savings and Loan; annual fair; open to public. Luncheon and dinner served. THURSDAY Fashion Your Figure; 6:30 p.m.; Adah Sheto Library j short business meeting followed by tour and demonstration at Consumers Power Company. Welcome Rebekah Lodge 246; 8 p.m.; Pythian Hall, Voorheis Koad; Past Noble Gi*ands to be entertained. ★ ★ ★ ^ Ladies Guild, St. Stephens Lutheran Church: 5 and 6 p.m.; annual smorgasbord dinner at church, corner of Sashabaw and Kempf; tickets available at door. ' FRIDAY Women’s Association, First Presbyterian Church: Til:.30 | a m. to 1:30 p.m.; salad luncheon; program at 12:30 p.m.; tickets available at the door. Chairman of the card party and demonstration is Mrs. Albert Hulsman. She is being assisted by Mrs. Wayne F e 1 -barth, ticket chairman, and other branch lumbers. Problems? Write to ABBY, care of The Pontiac Press. For a personal reply, enclose . a stamped, self-addressed envelope. Hate to write letters? Send one dollar to Abby, care of The Pontiac Press, for Abby’s booklet, “How to Write Letters for AllOccasions.” Alcohol for Steel An expanse of stainless Steel in your kitchen or bath to keep bright and shining? Gean it with rubbing alcohol for a fast, smudge-free job. J}{eumode^ tWlCE-A-Y6 SALE OF “CAREER GIRL”' SeAMLfcSS r.!AMLES5 MICRO WITH TIN/ SEAMS Mrs. Harold W. Dudley was hostess Monday afternoon to the Pontiac branch. Woman’s Natibnal- Farm and Garden Association, in her Long Point Drive home. She was assisted by Mrs. Robert Armstrong, Mrs. Eldward Bqckley, Mrs. Robert Dunlay, Mrs. John Livingstonc^and Mrs. Walter Willman. Mrs. 0. H. Lundbeck, Mrs. Victor E. Nelson of the Pontiac branch and Mrs. Clifton Hill from Northville showed slides of world famous gardens they visited, recently. Starting with tlie tulip gardens of Holland, their tour included such famous spots as the Kew Gardens of London, the rose gardens of Versailles and many colorful flower markets. NEW MEMBERS Welcomed as new members were Mrs. William Cashin, Mrs. Mahlon Benson Jr., Mrs. Donald W. Martin and Mrs. Edward P. Dalton. Civic improvements chairman, Mrs. Lundbeck, announced the awarding of citations for this month. Cited for making theii grounds attractive were Pearce Floral Company; Grovecrest Convalescent Home; the new medical building of Dr. Harry L. Riggs; and Huron Medical Center. * ★ ★ Plans for the annual Holiday Tea on Dec. 9 were announced by Mrs. Kenneth Vandenberg. Members will arrange tables in Christmas and New Year’s mo’ifs. Highlight of the annual card party sponsored by Sylvan Manor Branch, Woman’s National Farm and Garden Association, Thursday evening at the First Federal Savings of Oakland club rooms will be Japanese flower arrangements. by Mrs. Glenn Bedell of Sylvan Lake (extreme tight). |Wrs. Allan Monteith (from left) and Mrs. Wayne Felbarth, both of St. Joseph Road, West Bloomfield Township, are corrmittee members. Remove Yellow From Fabrics A leading manufacturer of automatic washers suggests this way to restore whiteness to yellowed fabrics: presoak in hot water containing some dishwasher detergent, then wash with youi’ usual laundry soap or detergent. . Wash-Day Blues It’s the retailer, not mother, who’s singing the wash-day blues. A Texas merchant recalls that mothers used to buy six sets of shorts and tops per child in prewash-wear days. “But now they buy only two and run a wash load every day!’! Tough-wearing boots for school or pl^y! Our Hawheyes are proportioned to (it perfectly... to wear comfortably through roughest wear and'weather! An outstarid-ing buy for busy boys! Your Good Toste Deserves the Finest Custom Furniture Wp creife our custom pieces to subtly blend with your home and preferences ... for comfortable, smart living. -fimt Fmndtmn alU QmalUy Store 5390-5400 DIXIE HWY. OR 3-1225 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 EASY BUDGET TERMS BUmtmtkmm Cml0mmCmU SS4^9§I - Mm TM Otora# '^ewis ^ JUNIOR BOOTERY (Hunr C*«to. Nwl to CWto CM Daily Till 6, Mo> TUSON CARPET SERVICE 5400 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-8866 ^ 'Belt 'D ^kTE or CLASS I.ESSO>S • CHA CHA • FOX TROT • SWING Introductory Special 5 Private Lesson Hours . T5 70 Chamberlain St. A PROFESSIONAL (AREER CLASSES OPEIS FOR EISROLLMEJST ik ORA RAiSDALLf B^auiy AuthoritYf DireeUtr Ut tt ftiftg.fi gfiB g a tt g ttfi tt fl g tt g g fl g fl AJLiLlxmi B g Lace Accents Bridai Gawn at Ceremony French lace accented a gown of white peau satin for Eleanor Belle Carney who became Mrs. Ronald Bruce Hetherington, Saturday, in the First Congregational Church. ■k * * Securing her illusion veil was a headpiece of satin roses touched with seed pearls.-Gold roses were combined with white carnations in the bridal bouquet. Parents of the couple are, the W. Robert Cafneys of West Yale Avenue and the Bruce Hetheringtons of Clark-ston. ★ ★ ★ Kay Pierce of Grand Ledge attended her cousin as maid of honor along with bridesmaids April Hetherington, Mrs. Thomas Cox, Sharon Harsch and Martha Madison. Tamara Carney was flower girl and Guy Pierce carried the rings used by Rev. Malcolm Burton in the ceremony. On the esquire side were ■ Jerry Powell, best man, with ushers Jeffery Hetherington, James and William Carney, Thomas Cox, and Roger Jack- The couple left tor a trip to Niagara Falls and Canada after the church reception. Ahtn's DISCOTHEQUE that's the jazzynoturol habitat for these yeoh-yeoh crepes. Junior sizes 5 to 15. October magazine — this skimmy little Poisley print n really with it! In very sheer Wool ending in ruching oil around. Bright green. J'unior sizes MOW this skirt ondover-. bloySa With o shell-/uikyed Ironl. In ivory crepe of rayon-n*'s lamns. and other “snocialt'’” lighting fix* — either origiral antiques or reproHuctions — are especially easy to keep clean because they are made largely of glhss. ★ ★ • * Shades, globes, chimneys, and shields can be immersed in soap or detergent suds for thorough washing, then rin.sed in hot water and wiped with The Russell Garners of Da-a lint-free cloth. visburg were hosts at a Ma- RICHARDS lUiiiiii MRS. E. W. JENkS . Holly Rite Unites Rair | From Area St. John’s Episcopal Church, Holly, was the set* ting for the marriage of Julie Wilson to Edward Wayne Jenks recently. f The John Wilsons of Susin I.ane, Independence Township were hosts at their daughter’s ; reception in the Oakland ' County Sportsman’s Club. Cascading red. and white roses. Step''Pn'ifis and ivy comolemsnted the bride’s gown and chape! train of ivory peau taffete and Chantilly lace. A pearl tiara topped her silk illusion veil. Mrs Harry Jahn attended her sister as honor matron, along with bridesmaids Diane Moller. Mrs. Roger Jenks and Brenda Hutchinson. Debbie Lee and Nathan. Miller were flower-girl and ^ ring - l>ear°r at the r rer-forr e^i bv ^-v J-nnos A M^- Bes* •n-n Fr hi.s brother - w « P'h-'i- ’’’bo ’ ; re the 'T f M " and Mrs Pearl Jenks (f Bridop ': ke Road, Independence Township. Ushers were Johnnie Wilson, Harry Jahn and Ronald Swayne The couple is in northern Michigan for the honeymoon. Carol A. Garner Weds Stanton A, Richards CHRISTMAS SPECIAL KENDALE’S . . . Photographers 45 W. Huron* St. Opposite Pontiac Prest Phone for Appointment, FE 5-3260, FE 5*0322 THIS OFFER ENDS IN 30 DAYS FALL FESTIVAL OF MESSAGE AND MUSK - WHITE SISTERai^j appearing ot all services • SINGERS BILLY GRAHAM New York Madison Squore Gorderf Crusade • WINNERS - ARTHUR GODFREY , "TafenI Scout'j (program • NATIONAL TELEVISION AND RECORDING ARTISTS • DR. T. E MARTIN. Pastor Nashville Tennessee First Church ol . the . Nozorene, Spooking Wed. thru Fri. only. . • MR CHUCK BRUCE. PRESIDENT ALEXANDER HAMILTON INS. CO. Speaking Sot Eve OcT 24 BEGINNING TOMORROW Wed., Oct. 21 thru SUN., OCT. 25 Week nights 7 30 P.M.,.Sundoy 10 A M., 11 A.M. ond 7 RM. * ot the WILLIAA4S LAKE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE 2840 AlliPORT RD.. DRAYTON PLAINS Poul Colemon, Minister )ei*y KirV, Ori)pnisl . Direttor - Stoll'Orgonisi W.J », TV Flint Heut itw ChofKel ChOir ond “Sing Alpng ' with Bob Grimes, Chorister sonic Temple reception following the marriage of their daughter Carol Ann to Stanton Albert Richards. Rev. Harold Johnson officiated at the recent evening ceremony in the Davisburg Methodist Church. A sequined Sabrina n 'b c k -line accented the bride’s chapel - length gown of white Rochelle lace over taffeta and formed a headpiece for her imported illusion vgU. Red ipiniature roses centered her bouquet of white carnations, and ivy. From-Davison were Judy Prose, honor maid and Barbara Walker who attended as bridesmaid along with Arlene B i g e 10 w and Mrs. David Blumenschein of Holly. Flower-girl and ring-bearer were Debbie Richards and Kenny Macadaeg. The bridegroom, son of Mrs. Helen H. Richards of Holly and Albert Richards of Utica, had Jan Prior of Holly for best man. Ushering were William Richards, Holly: Loren Richards, Highland and David Maguire of Davisburg. ^ Tio Appointment Needed! Beauty Salon 11 N. Saginaw si. _ , PHONE FE 5-9257 Arthur Godfrey says: ‘Here's real energy for people on the go!'* Kretschmer Wheat Germ gives'you 30 nutrients believed beneficial to good health, stamina and vigor-more all-around nutrition than any other natural cereal. It also acts as a “spark plug" to help the body use other high-energy foods more fully. Get a jar of Kretschmer Wheat Germ today, plain or Sugar ’N Honey. Delicious as a cereal or added to other cereals. Tisten to Arthur Godfrey. CBS Radio Network DonH Throw It Away REBUILD IT TODAY! Oor axportt wit! rettor* new coml . higher quality into your pretent mof- tre«* or' box iprinq . . . c-**- koforo you buyl ONE DAY SERVICE 24« Guaranleed in Writing 7 Years OXFORD MAHRESS CO. 497 North Porry St., ^ntiac FE 2-1711 SERVING THE PONTIAC AREA OVER 41 YEARS WOMEN’S LEAGUE for NEW ROWLERS Bowl On A League'. $2^0 Includes^ PER WEEK for 26 WEEKS FREE 4Uui(U| lOfUA, • NEW CUSTOM FITTED BALL • BOWLING BANQUET • TROPHIES STARTING THUR. Oct. 22 at 1:00 P.M. 4825 W. HURON (M-59, / ,, TRUCKLOAD WALLPAPER BARGAINS OVER 1500 PATTCINS IN STOCK CLOSE- lAc s. R. OUTS Ilf -R CLOSE-OUTS Birg* Quick Patlad ... 69c ». r. lire* Trophy .69c i. r. Dip-N-Ang 19c ». C»m»o .....89c ».r. E-Z Du ...99c i.r, VarUr .....99c i. r. ACME QUALITY PAINT 3 N. Saginaw, Comar Pika St. FE 2.3308 Wo Daiivar JHE PONTIAC PUESS, TUESDAY. OCTOPER 11)04 ------ ^ SEASON TICKETS for DOWNtOWN PONTIAC KIWANIS CLUB 1964 - 65 TRAVEL & ADVENTURE SERIES Series of 7 Sforts Oct. 27 Pontiac Central Auditorium KIWANIS CLUB 1132 Voorheis Rd. Pontiac, Michigan or Coll FE 4-4516 (hit odraitiaamanl apoaaorad hr General Printing and Office Supply Mr. and Mrs. James Knowles of Club Drive announce the engage--ment of their daughter, Judith Ann to Gerrit B. Lemmen, son of the Benjamin Lemmens of Grand Rapids. She attended Michigan State University where her fiance is presently a member of Sigma Lambda Chi national honorary fraternity. A wedding in June 1965 is being planned. Picture Backing If pictures won’t stay straight on the wail, brush a film of ordinary rubber cement along the lower edge of the back of the picture. Quality Training by Lopez Sterling Beauty School Walton Blvd. at Dixie Bwy. Drayton Plains OR 3-0222 p:sLo Use Shopping List Use a shopping list when doing your food shopping, experts advise. Impulse buying can wreck the food budget. EIFIEKN Double Purpose ‘ A half teaspoon of cream of tartar in the water in the bottom of a ^double boiler will keep the water from%oiling over and help remove tarnish. To Polish Brass'*' • If yod want to remove the lacquer from a piece of brass, apply lacquer thinner on a coar% cloth. . . MEET to EAt mtn FOUNTAIN m the lobby o< tiju R.ker Bu.ldmr, 35 W. Humn S». Needlework Kif Gay Holiday Towels By DORCHEN QDLLINS '^eM special Christmas towels are a nice way to say “Merry Christmas’’ to your family or friends. And they make wonderful guest towels for your own bathroom. * ♦ V Hemstitched hems are always desirable and these beautiful,towels have them already finished for you. You do tte fun part — the amusing appliques and the cross- NEEDLEWORK KIT SERVICE P. 0. Box 767 Dept. 235 Greet Neck, N. Y Enclosed is S..Send .... Needlework Kits 27A, the Christmas Towels. stitched holly and the twinkling gold stars in just a few hours. ★ • ★ * ' ’The towels are of cream col- ! or imported linen and the ap- i plique is red and white with i black boots and belt for Santa. * * ★ The embroidery is red, green, white, black, old gold I and metallic gold for bright ! stars and Santa’s buckle. Just ■^’the jolliest towels ever. And you* will appreciate the mod- ! I est price of only $2 for the I i pair. ‘ *■ * * To obtain Needlework Kit j 27.A, fill out coupon beldw and send it with a $2 check «r money order for each kit desired to Needlework Kit Service at address given. in carpeting that looks twice the price HARDWICK’S I J "Autocrat” 100% Acrilan Pile BROADLOOM Cater to your elegant taste without straining your budget. Choose “Autocrat” — the Acrilan pile carpet from Hardwick that look.s, wears and enhances like carpeting twice the price. You’ll find .“Autocrat” a marvelous^ddition to any room — without adding a strain on the budget. See “Autocrat" in Hardwick's “Tomorrow's Colors Todey" Royal Red Cocoa Banquet Green Martini Caramel Cream ArJjorGreen Liberty Blue Avocado Cork Golden Horn Antique Gold Other Carpets Mads WHh Acrilan ............... \ MoHs OPEN MONOftY AND FRIDAY EVENINGS TIL 9 P.M. 1GB6 South Telegraph V Busy? Call FE 4-0516 for our Shop-at-Home Service Our trained representative will bring car|>et samples to your home. He’ll measure your rooms, give you a free .estimate and decorator advice at no rust or obligation to you. Quality Carpets and Draperies for Over 20 Years (HillMtll Sill final clearance! SAVE 20% to 50%! This is the wind-iij) of our floor sample elearaiice sale . . . there isn't iiuieh left, l)ul we have added a few more disj)lay items to llie sale “roup. Kverv piece is drastically reduced . . . all are for immediate deli\erv ... and all sales jjire final. PONTIAC STORE gk^ONLY! uphousVered CHAIRS $2995 FI79 Lounge t lisir, gold Mri|« . ..»er, foiini/.lacrun ru'hion r....... . *119 Lrriic li Pro. sgjjso S.59.95 Lame Colonial Plairorm itocker, print rover. >149.93 b.i (.hair. Colo eaiile print rov( m MAPLE, PINE, AND CHERRY FLRMtlRE >105 4(1” Plartic-Top Solid Maple De.k.................. *85 >179 ,',(l” Krui ....I. Knerhol De.k........... ' *143 y our opiKirtunity to . own fine quality, solifl clierry beilroom furniture at real savings! Superior eraftsman-ship, skilled hand-finishing, and authentic detailing are outstanding features of this elegant Early American group. Special Savings on Our t'OLO.\Y HOISE I'HERRV RI^DROOM liROtl* >139 42x62” Drop Leaf Exieniion Dining,., Table in Solid Maple (42"x-2.>” rioted, extendi to 82”)........ *119 • Full Size Betl • 32” Doiilile Dresser Ref!. S519 • Large l.andscape Mirror • 6-Drawer (4iest >89.30 2«”x3tr Marble Top Coffee Table, double ped-rtlalbateinanliqiie white, imported Italian marble lop. $^950 DRASTIC REDUCTION ON I,AMPS. TABLES. PICTURES. IVnRRORS and WAUI. DECOR! .SolitI .Vntitpied Pine DIIVINt; RbOM Reg. 683.50 • 40“ X 60“ 0\^l Extension ,Tahllon., Thun, and Fri. 'Ill 9 SIXTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. OCTOBER 20, 19«4 Today's News From Washington No U:S. Increase in Fallout Noted Yet From China N-Blast WASH1NGT6n (API - The Weather Bureau says, radioactive material from Red (China’s atomic test blast last Friday may already have started to pass over ttie United States, but lack of rain could mean very, little will fall to earth. Atotpic Energy Commission scientists added Monday that any fallout from the “low yield” test would not be* likely “to cause any undue health hazard” in the nation. Ffllout spwialists of the Weather Bureau said if the explosion tossed any radioactivity into the atmosphere the cloud would have been expected to enter the North American continent just north of the U.S.-Canada border “sometime between noon and midnight” Monday. As of Monday afternoon, Public Health Service officials said they had not detected any increase in radiation. WASHINGTON (AP) - The FBI said Monday that its investigations in the year that ended June 30 led to 12,921 convictions and actual, suspended and probationary sentences that totaled more than 38,100 years. record level - $210,771,402. He said that represented a return of $1.43 for every dollar appropriated for the-FBl. Director J. , Edgar Hoover noted that fines, savings and recoveries in cases investigated by the FBI reached a new It also noted that the Communist party had “wforked unremittingly to increase its influence in the racial struggle; gain new members through an intensive youth recruitment campaign; and promote the false impression that it ^ a legitimate political party.” The report said that the number of civil rights cases handled by the FBI increased to 3,340, which it described as “a substantial rise over the previous year.” WASHINGTON lAP) - President Johnson says Ids administration spent $41 million less during the July-September peri-1 od than the late Presidehl John F. Kennedy's spent during the same three months of last year. At a news conference Monday, Johnson said there are now 21,000 fewer persoijs working for the federal government (han when he became president last Nov. 22. The employment level is the lowest in two years, he said. ‘ , KfCU/l REDUCE lATaadMK OP TO 6 LBS. » WEEK CAPSUL ES! Easier to take and nnore effective than the powdered and>liq- uid food supplemertt, and costs less jpplement, including Capsules suited to you INDIVIDUALLY by Lie. Physician, ____ No Gastritis or irregularity with Medic-Way caps. DON'T DIET reguli ^ 'J'TDIEt -JUST EAT! 'As thousands have done, you can lose 5, 50 or 100 lbs. and KEEP IT OFF! MEDIC-WAY. MEDIC-WAY 335-9206 7 OffloH In OaklNiX ind Wiyn* CoubIIot — 0»» In Mlrsd* MIH Aposlles of Radicalism Running GOP-Hubert TULSA, Okla. (AP) - Sen. Hubert Humphrey launched one of "his hardest attacks mi political extremism today and said “the responsible Republican leaders have temporarily lost conthol of their party to the apostles of discord and radicalism.” “By its refusal to condemn the lunatic fringe .of American politics,” said Humphrey in remarks prepared for a rally in this predominately Republican city, “the Goldwater party has permitted into its ranks tho^ individuals and organizations whose stock in trade is the politics of hate, the politics of dis-pair.” Hero Gets Jail Term Shortened LONDON UPi - John Day, who rescued a child from drowning while he was on the run after breaking jail, is back in his cell but a hero with his sentence reduced. He’s also been adopted by the parents of Mamie Watts, the 8-year-old boy he saved. Day is Mamie’s mother. 42-year-old Violet WaUs, told the Court of Criminal Appeal yesterday: “We can never hope to repay John Day for saving Mamie’s life, but at least I’ve sliown a little gratitude. When he comes out of prison, he will come and live wito us." Mrs. Watts said she took her children wading one day last May. FELL INTO POOL "Mamie fell into a pool that was six feet deep,” she said. “Suddenly, John appeared from nowhere and jumped in without a moment’s hesitation. I’m sure he saved Mamie’s life.” i The Democratic vice presi-{dential nominee centered his I fire on the John Birch Society, Gerald L. K. Smith’s Christian Nationalist Crusade and the Minutemen, whom he described as “a wild, right-wing group which trains its members for guerrilla warfare.” Humphrey quoted Robert B. Depugh, national head of the Minutemen, as having called FYesident Ji^nson “a political opportunist who would sell the United States out to the Communists or anyone else who would pay the price.” ROUGH PLAY American politics, declared Humphrey, has “often involved a goixi deal of rough play. But nevpr on this scale — never with this venom and personal invective.” For a generation, said Humphrey, “these extremists and radicals have been pushing th6ir accusations, their innuendoes, their attacks in the back alleys of American politics. Day had been serving a four-year sentence for theft. After he was caught two more years were added to his sentence. On the basis of Day’s heroism, his Jawyer appealed against the extra sentence. After hearing Mrs* Watts, the three judges sqjd the extra two years could run concurrently with the longer sentence. With time off for good behavior, Day will get out in 1966! Negroes comprise 50 per cent or more of the population in of Alabama’s 67 counties. ■‘Now they have captured the Grand Old Party and transformed it into Goldwater’s own party.” Humphreja returned to campaigning afmr breaking off his Florida barnstorming to attend a W’ite House meeting -of congressional leaders on the international issues. Flying directly from the capital to Ardmore, Okla- Monday night, Humphrey told a rally there that he and other legislators'were briefed on the swift changes in the world picture — the new governments in Moscow and Londem, Red China’s detonation of 3 nuclear device and “not too long from now a further development,” Humphrey did not amplify the latter remark in his address, but later on the plane flying to Tulsa, told newsmen he referred to the possibility the Red Chinese will conduct a'nother nuclear test. Dominion 12" TEFLON-COATED BUFFET SKILLET High dome cover. Cooks 12 lb. roosts/ roasts 2 chickens. Detochoble hebt control. Completely immersible for easy washing. $ 21 NO MONEY DOWN 108 NORTH SAGINAW :/■ ■ THE PONTIAC PRESS TUESDAY.. OCTOBER 20. 1964 POKTIAC. MICiriUAX SEVENTEEN Invite Townships Into Sewage System Bombing Trial Starts in South MAGNOUA, Miss. (UPI) - A white man goes on trial today on charges stemming from a raciai bombing. Officials were expected to disclose seven more indictments by a grand jury which investigated the violence. Ernest F. Zeeck, 25, one of four white men indicted in con* nection with the bombings earlier this month, will be tried in the old brick courthouse, shaded by giant magnolia trees. The four indictments were announced before a week’s recess by the Jury, which returned-yesterday and handed down seven more sealed indictments. A totai of 11 per-s^s had been arrested by Judge to Hear Dismissal Bid for Teamster CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. (AP) —A defense motion to dismiss a jury tampering indictment against Detroit Teamsters Union official Charles (Chucky) O’brien will be heard here today by U.S. Dlst. Judge Frank Wilson. ‘ O'Brien, close associate of Teamsters President James Hoffa, is charged in connection with the jury which convicted Hoffa here cf jury tampering earlier this year. Three co-defendants also were convicted. Hoffa has appealed. The defense contends the statute under which O’Brien was indicted is uhconstitutjpnal and the grand jury was improperly selected. The indictment charges O’Brien indirectly offereil $25.-000 to Mrs. Callie T. Key, a woman member of the Hoffa jury on condition she would testify that Hoffa did not receive a fair trial. Frank Ragano, a Tampa, Fla., attorney, will represent O’Brien who has pleaded innocent to-the charges. Dies After Collision IONIA (AP) - Mrs. Marj-Whitney, 33, of Beldlng died Monday in an Ionia hospital from injuries suffered when the station wagon-school bus she was driving Wednesday collided with a car. Seven of 13 children in the bus were injured. state, federal and county officers in the violence. Indictments are kept secret until the person is arrested. The grand jury, which investigated a number of local cases, said in a report yesterday that prior to the arrival of civil rights workers here, there was little violence. CALLED ON CITIZENS “Since these persons have been in our country, they had sought to divide our people and acts of violence have occurred,’" the jury said. It called on local citizens “to continue to be peaceful and to leave the enforcement of our laws to the law enforcement officials.’’ District Attorney Joe Pigott said he expected Zeeck’s trial to be completed in one day. Circuit Judge W. H. Watkins, who empaneled the grand jury which indicted Zeeck, was presiding. Watkins was expected to_ set 4rial dates for three other men indicted along with Zeeck—Jimmy Prinston Wilson, 38, Billy Earl Wilson, 22, and Paul Wilson, 25; all employes of the Illinois Central Railroad. Zeeck, married with one child, was employed by the Western Auto store in McComb. SINGLE INDICTMENT He and the three Wilsons were charged in a single indictment with unlawful use of explosives. The state law/arries a posable death sentence upon conviction, with a prison sentence of any length to be set by the jud^e if the jury fails to spell out the penalty. Othfrs arrested were Emery Allen Lee, 35," a former Army demolition expert whom the FBI accused of supplying bombs for the various incidents; Hilton Dunaway, 36; John Paul. Westbrook, 20; Charles Avery Womack, 26; Gerald Lawrence, 21; Sterling Lewis (Bnbber) GiUis, 35; and Murphy J. Duncan, 44. « Gillis and Womack were freed on bgnd and the others remained in jail. Gillis, son of of McComb’s wealthiest men, was arrested by the FBI a day after posting bond and charged with robbing the Monti-cello bank March 2. He later was released under two $10,000 bonds on state and federal robbery charges and taken to Whitefield State Hospital for mental tests. See Trend Toward Pontiac as 'Core City' JUDGES FOR HANGING - Children at the University of Michigan hospital look over art reproductions to determine which ones should hang in their ward. The art jury was . Know What They Like formed when children complained about the pictures on their walls. In the judging, it was found works by children their own ages were most appreciated. Hospital Children Art Critics ANN ARBOR, Mich.. (AP) -Those young whippersnappers in the children’s ward at University of Michigan hospital just don’j appreciate some modem art. They had a chance "to have a Say Cuba Ordered Raid in Guatemala GUATEMALA CITY (BPD -Armed raiders, apparently acting on orders from Communist Cuba, killed three soldiers and* wounded two in a predawn attack Saturday on an outpost at PanzQs in northeastern Guatemala, the army announced today. A communique said the bandits fled in the darkness, taking wjth th«n unspecified “booty” from the army post. Authorities in the nearby port of Matias Galvez reported hearing a radio Havana broadcast at 12:45 a.m. Saturday—before the raid on Panzos occurred — saying Communist elements in | Guatemala “would attack vil-; lages in the northern part of the country J’ Only the one attack was, reported. print of Georges Braque’s “Still Life — the Table” hung on their walls. And do you know what one of them said? “It looks like a junkpile.” * ★ ★ They had a chance to have Maurice Utrillo’s famous “Cathedral at Rheims” hung on the wall. And do you know what one of them said? “If he’d paint some ghosts coming out of the walls, he’d have it made.” So an art committee of the hospital’s Volunteer Guild this week -is installing paintings more suited to a child’s obvious tastes. JURY ONvART The more weltfbme paintings include about a half-dozen works chosen by an art ju^ of nearly two (Jozen young patients from a selection of paintings done by pupils at the Forsyth Junior High School art classes in Ann Arbor. These were the ones they really liked, especially if the painting had words on it that told about the subject. “Hickory, Dickery Dock,” for example, won unanimous approval. “Little Jack Homer,” also was accepted unanimously. With some seated in wheelchairs, others displaying bandages and all in hospital garb, the critics aged 4 to 12 watched while Volunteer Guild members lifted each painting for judging. “I get sicker the more I look at it,” said one juror, scratching her adhesive tape while exhmin-ing Renoir’s “Patinage a Longchamps.” QUICK APPROVAL A junior high painting of a rhinoceros, done in red, yellow and orange, won prompt approval. The only one of the masterpieces deemed more acceptable than the rhinoceros was Georges Pierre ,3eurat’s “The Seine at Courbe-Voie.” It beat the rhinoceros by two votes. City officials have extended a welcome mat to Pontiac’s neighbors, inviting nearby townships to submit requests for sewage services. The invitation signals future * development of Pontiac as a S "core city.” ^ City Commissioners- decided. j at a recent informal meeting i to give favorable consideration to requests for services, particularly sewage services, Pontiac has provided* s u c h I services to some areas outside i the city limits for almost 30: years. However, the present de-1 cision will broaden this policy to! include all areas adjacent to the ' city: ★ • * * City Manager Joseph A. W’ar-ren de.scribes Pontiac as offering a complex of services which have “become -. . . identified as neces.sary for urban living.” i ACHIEVE PROMINENCE I Some cities, according to Warren, because of their location 'eloomc in thei a center for regional governmental activity, medical services, legal services, cultural development, social facilities and commercial and industrial complexes. ^ Since new communities can not offer such services, they must rely on the older community and revlolve around it. “This is quite understandable,” Warren said, “in the case of Detroit attaining development that can’t be achieved by any of its suburbs. and develooment. achieve prominence in their areas, offering The Veterans Administration has forclosed 140,650 mortgages since its home loan program started 20 years ago. “To a lesser degree,” he added, “but still following the same concept, Pontiac is a central city for Oakland County and must, on a scale that is cast, be able to fulfill the same role as Detroit in Wayne County.” INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX Warren said that Pontiac al-' ready has the industrial complex and medical and legal services. “Our present city Commission is well aware of our core city significance and is quite willing to move in the direction of enlarging the status of Pontiac as a core city.” Sewage services are seen as the, big area that Pontiac can be a “good neighbor” with many mutual benefits. * * * . City Engineer Joseph E. Nei-pling said that waste disposal is already a joint operation in some areas of Waterford Town- ship and the city of Sylvan Lake. . FORMAL AGREEMENT j In 1935, Pontiac and the township signed a.formal agreement to furnish sanitary sewers in the area of the city’s west end, said Neipling. Sanitary sewers in the city of Sylvan Lake date back, to 1945. Prior to these two contracts, however, sewer connections were made for individual property owners, but no formal agreements were made with the^overning bodies. Neipling said that Pontiac has the ability to serve outside areas without any damage to city I residents. In fact, city residents might benefit, he noted. The sewage treatment plant is sufficient to handle all present areas and has the capacity to handle more, according to Neip-1 ling. • ^ I CAN BE expanded’^ | The plant can be expanded gradually up to 100 million gallons per day. It now handles about 14 million gallons of waste per day with a rated capacity of 19.5 gallons, Neipling said. On a test basis, he added, the. treatment plant has run at 30 million gallons. Expansion of the treatment plant, if outside ar^as were to be served, could be done at the Plan to Dig Out Sewer Trench in Search for Boys CINCINNATI, Ohio (AP) -Police Chief James Finan of suburban Fairfax plans to stark excavating a 20-foot deep sewer trench today in an effort to find two boys who disappeared Thursday. James McQueary told police Monday his son Jimmy, 9, had been scolded for playing in the hole Wednesday night. Jimmy and John Hundley, also 9, vanished about 4 p.m. the next day. ♦ ★ ★ Workmen filled in the excavation some time tliat evening. Chief Finan said his men spent Monday searching empty buildings in the village of 2,500 on Cincinnati’s eastern outskirts. Police have received dozens of calls from people all around Greater Cincinnati who think they have seen the boys. expense of the entire service area, not just city residents. In addition, the plant can be -expanded at much less cost than construction of a new one, he said. , , NOT CAPABLE Some of the-city’s sewers are not capable of carrying more flow as they are already overloaded. However, revenues derived from serving outside areas will help install new needed .sewers. “Thus,” said the engineer, "Pontiac residents would obtain assistance in solving some existing problems/’ The cost of furnishing sewer .service to outside areas will vary with the type of service ; requested. The city of Sylvan and Waterford Township currently pay 30 cents per 1.000 gallons. j ♦ I This charge includes an ap-! portioned co.st of: • Treatment plant construction and operating cost. • City sewer operating and construction costs (the portion • carrying flow from the outside area) • Cost of meters; reading and maintaining them. • Billing, clerical work and a share of the cost of services furnished sewage agencies by other city agencies. COST TO RESIDENTS? And what would the cost be to residents of outside areas? First, lateral sewers would have to be constructed to Pontiac’s city limits. This cost would be borne by the users involved. Pontiac residents currently pay $3 per front foot for lateral sewers with the city kicking in an additional $1 per foot generally. ★ * ★ City residents now pay $150 per residential sewer connection. The cost for outside areas would depend upon the lengths of lines required. Low density suburban areas would require longer, more expensive lines than relatively dense population areas. Neipling points out that city residents without the present out-of-city users would be paying at least 10 per cent more for sewage service. Meanwhile, present outside users would be paying double their present rate for the saihe kind of service. DAWJI DOJmiTS 804 MORT] Pontiac, Mictiigan PERRY Phone 334-9041 Every' Sunrise Everywhere This Week’s Special ALL I BISAAARKS - |Zl • Bluebtr^ • Str^wber^^^L^^ Rad and Black Raiabarry iUo Featured: Deliciously Different OLD-FASHIONED HAND-CUT FRIED CAKES PLAIN • GLAZED CRINKLE-CUT DAWJI DOiiraiS SQUARE LAKE AT TELEGRAPH ® MAPLE AT LAHSER Only Michigan Bank offers ^ these spe^al advantages: INTEREST Or^REGULAR SAVINGS ACCOUNTS. Paid every quarterdepoeita' remaining for four conaecutive quarters (12 montha)\ CHECKiNG\ACCOUNTS. Simply maintain minimum balan^of $300 or mora each month. Un balance of leee tham^300, pay only 10^ per check. Michigan B NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OAKLAND COUNTY’S ONLY BANK OPEN ’TIL 4:30 . V THE PONTIAC PRES^, TUESDAY. OCTOBER 20, 1964 Niriiac’i NMUM THUTER Nmmm 11 U. It II MW II •• II Mk EAGLE •niEt.,WED.,TIIUIH. DEMI MARTIN ASKS THE HOTTEST QUESTION Of THE DAY: "Wholi BtEh Sleeping in My Bed?" Incumbent Keating vs. Kennedy N.Y. Race Is Still a Toss-Up (EDITOR’S NOTE - This is the second of five articles on key election contests for the U.S. Senate. Future articles will deal Mh Ohio, Oklahoma and Pennsylvania.) By RELMAN MORIN NEW YORK ,(AP) - N«w, York’s senatorial election at this iate stage is still a guess-i ing-game, based on the effect of elements as elusive as quicksilver and the answers to some key questions. Will the ‘‘magic name” carry Robert F. Kennedy to' victory over his Republican opponent, Sen. Kenneth B. Keating? ★ ★ ★ Certainly, it has brought out huge, emotionally aroused crowds. In Glens Falls, -at , for example, people were still lining the streets, some wearing night clothes, to see Kennedy. He has had tremendous" exposure to voters jince the first moments of his cam- It is anybody’s guess a how much of this frenzy will translate into votes on Nov. 3. Kennedy thinks a fraction of it will. NO SUPPORT FOR BARRY What has been the effect of I I I I I LET ifcWOy’J COLONIAL lANTERM I BE VOUR GUIDE TO GOOD f OOD | AT REASONABLE PRICES g Make Every Wed. Night ^ Family Niffht I At HARVEY'S COLONIAL HOUSE I Chicken | served ■ FAMILY STYLE ! Includes crispy golden brown lip- j imockin chicken cooked to per- | lection, with soup, vegetoble, | whipped potatoes, biscuits ond | hoi chicken grovy. g I • DINING ROOM • COFFEE ^HOP • CAR SERVICE • CARRY OUT __ ALL YOU CAN EAT | 5896 DIXIE HWY. ,l\Tm WATERFORD | f| 75 Join us in Istanbul—we'll cut you in on the theft of the century! FtLMiAtfySereMnt* M[iii(i;oyrP[i[RisiivMAii[iSci[[[ IS united MTISTS STARTS TOMORROW! LAST TIMES TONIGHT '1RMA lA DOUCE” - 7:00 P.M. ONLY! “PINK PANTHER” - 9:30 P.M. ONLY! Keating's refusal to support Sen. Barry Goldwater, the GOP candidate for president? “There are fundamental differences of viewpoint,” Keating said when he declined- to endorse the national ticket. it * it Democratic leaders in two communities of upstate New York toW this correspondent they believed jCeating’s action would win over some Democratic votes. “You hear a lot of talk from people who say they like what Keating did about Goldwater,” they said. President Johnson is expwted to carry New York by a mighty margin. The New York Daily News,.announcing the first findings in its presidential straw poll last week, said the survey showed Johnson running three-to-one ahead of Goldwater. STRAIGHT TICKET Question: How many New Yorkers who vote for Johnson will simply pull the lever for a straight Democratic ticket, thus also casting a ballot for Kennedy? And how many others will split the ticket to vote for Keating? Said a Ntw York City technician: “In our family, we’re Irish and Democrats but we’re for Keating as a matter of principle. Bobby Kennedy may be a good man but he doesn’t belong here.” * ★ ★ Said a printer in Wantagh, L.I., “everybody in the shop and the union is for Johnson and Kennedy, but most of my neighbors say they’re for Johnson and Keating.” Republicans hopefully recall some notable instances of ticket-splitting. In 1962, Democrat Arthur Levitt was elected state controller by 790,000 votes while GOP Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller was winning by 530,000. SYMPATHY VOTE If Kennedy receives a “sympathy vote” as the brother of the assassinated president, Keating may be the recipient o1 sympathy vote” on other grounds'. Said a woman in an electronics plant on Long Island, “Keating has done a good job and I don’t like seeing a youpg whip-persnapper come along and try to take it away from him.” ★ * ♦ The “carpetbagger” issue is a handicap to Kennedy. He was born in Massachusetts and lived in Virginia before moving to New York, where he had lived for a time many years ago. Keating twits him about this, saying “it’s difficult to become an instdnt New Yorker,” and, there are people who have been waiting in line at the World’s Fair longer than my opponent has been in New York.” CONSERVATIVE PARTY But Keating has another handicap in the form of the Conservative party ;which has put up a senatorial candidate, Henry Faolucci. Paolucci, 43, is a professor of history and political science at Iona College, New Rochelle. In the 1962 elections, the Con-(Seirvatives cast 141,877 votes for their candidate for governor, and 116,151 votes for their senatorial candidate. ♦ * -ik- if the Keating-Kennedy. contest is dose, these lOO.OOO-plus | votes could spell the difference. In a wealthy section of Long Island — and at a reception for Keating — a woman said, “Vir- tually everyone I know is for Goldwater and so they’re furious at Keatjng.. Some of them say they’re going to vote 'for Paolucci but I think most of them will just stay home.” MINORITY DEMOCRATIC The minority groups in New York are generally believed to vote Democratic. Thus, Kennedy should be the beneficiary of most of the support of these groups. But here, again, there may be a question in this election. Keating has been active in the field of civil rights. ,He authored the Civil Rights Act of 1957 and aides say he contributed substantially to other such bills. * it * “Sure, I know that,” said Negro in Hempstead, L.I., “but most Negroes don’t. They know what Kennedy and his brother did." However, a Negro attorney in Harlem, Mrs. Cora T. Walker, said, “that was true earlier in the campaign but we’ve been getting the word around about Keating. There’s a good deal of rethinking now.” Mrs. Walker is a Republican. NEGRO NEWSPAPER The Negro newspaper, New York Amsterdam News', ' has endorsed' Kennedy, saying he was “a great attorney general and we believe he will make a great senator.” Keating also was one of the early proponents of recognition of the State of Israel and his aides say he has worked consistently for assistance to the new nation. it it it At a meeting in a Jewish center in Flushing, L.I., which Keating attended, a Rabbi cited these efforts and said, “we Jews do not forget our friends.” In the hills outside Jerusalem, there is a grove of trees d.onated^ by Jews of Rochester, N,Y. as part of the Israeli reforestation program. At the request of the donors it is named “Keating Forest.” KENNEDY DRIVE Kennedy is 38, trim^ tailored, with all ^e Kennedy arive and determination. He took his pre-legal training at Harvard and then was graduated from the University of Virginia Law School. He went immediately into the criminal division of the Department of Justice. In 1954, he became chief counsel for the McClellan committee. Its hearings on labor-management problems brought Kennedy a good deal of national attention. it * * He managed John F. Kennedy’s 1952 campaign for senator from Massachusetts and the 1960 campaign for president. In the present election battle, Kennedy has referred often to what he considers the principal achievements of the Kennedy-Johnson adnriinistration and to the actions of hi» late brother. KEATING IS B4 Keating is 64. He has a ruddy complexion, blue eyes, grey hair worn long, and an incandescent smile. Possibly to minimize the difference between his age and Kenney’s, he walks like a man late for the train. In one build- ing, Keating sprinted up a flight of stairs, two steps at a time, leaving the rest of his party far behind. * ' ■* ' * At one time. He was a Latin teacher. When he Was 20, He entered Hacvard Law School -and later joined a law firm. He has been in Washington 18 years, first as a congressman and now as a senator. STATEMENTS ON CUBA He attracted national attention in the summer of 1962 when he began issuing statements about Russian activity on Cuba. On Aug. 15 of that year, he WTQle the State Department calling for action. Later spoke of the situation in Senate speeches. Keating does not attract Kennedy-sized crowds. Where they have appeared in the same places, persons who said they saw both meetings said Keating’s audiences were srtialler. At a service clubs’ luncheon, with places for 200, only half were filled for Keating. ★ * ★ In a speech, Kennedy can stir explosions of applause. Keating doesn’t seem to try. He speaks in a dry tone, seldom shouting. Both men have a dry. wit and use it to good advantage with their audiences. Where does the race stand at is stage? KENNEDY AHEAD The New York Daily News poll had Kennedy ahead, three-to-two. Herbert Brownell, former attorney-general, now Keating’s campaign director, says the senator is ahead by “a hair’s breadth.” One of Keating’s aides said 50 registered Democrats in a Long Island community had been reached by telephone. He said 23 declared for Keating, 13 for Kennedy with the remainder not saying. Another such telephone survey in north-central New York, the aide said, showed Keating with 43 per cent, Keii-nedy 28 per cent and the re-rhaindeyiot saying._____________ HURON BHORTS — YiBB - Bill Buffet Slated for Candidate The McGrath for Circuit Judge Committee will hold a buffet supper Thursday at 7 p.m. at the Community Activities life, building in Waterford Township. Hr ★ it , Activities including square and round dancing are planned for the evening. Dress ts informal. it it it Robert Forster, 7073 Desmond, Waterford .Township, is,c h a i r-man of the event. Lions Club to Hear Official of Detroit Speaker at the Pontiac Lions Club tomorrow noon meeting at the Waldron Hotel, will be Lions District Gov. George F. Roberts of Utica. He will be the guest of Robert Anderson, president of the Pontiac Lions Club, and wil' discuss the goals and ideals of Lionism. He will also confer with Tom Kent, cinb secretary, on reporting club activities in state projects of leader dogs for the blind, welcome home for the blind and white cane educational week. As district governor, Roberts directs 56 clubs in Oakland, Macomb and St. Clair counties with a total membership of over 2,-000. He is one of 420 district governors in 126 countries representing 718,000 Lions in 18,495 clubs. Frenchman Shuns Nobel Nomination STOCKHOLM (APf - Jean-Paul Sartre, French author, playwright and ejoslentlalist philosopher, has asked that he not be nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature, says the Stockholm newspaper Dagen Nyheter. ■ ’The newspaper, quoting in formed sources, said'Sartre had made his request in a note to the Royal Swedish Academy of Letters. The academy report; edly already has chosen Sartre for the aw^, to be announced Thursday. A spokesman for the academy _said he couldn’t confirm or deny the reports. Bolivia has 12,000 miles ot riv^ available for Uliipping via light-drought, vessels. Luebke to Ethiopia BONN, Germany Ifi — President Heinrich Luebke of W#st' Germany left Bonn today for a six-day visit to Ethiopia. He’s returning a state visit to West Germany in 1954 by Emperor . Haile Selassie of Ethiopia. RHIMES DELICATESSEN AT NYI DAIRY FsatudneOlirfamoM Kothar Comad Baaf SPECIAL UUMCMEOM EVERYDAY tiMHei* - »<>w Coii-f the city’s 3.5 million residents. About .55 per cent of the stale’s 10.1 million citizens live in the Chicago (Cook County) area. , in I960 by a slim 8,858 votes. Kennedy, aided b a 309.0JO vote pliir^ily in C^ok County, won Illin'jfs' 26 electoral votes VOTE NOVEMBER 3rd HUBER FOR STATE SENATOR REPUBLICAN Hubei's Qualifications for State Senatoi: Experience in Local Government 6 Years, Mayor of the City of Troy. • Experience in County (iovernment 4 Yeijrs, Member Oakkuid County Board of Supervisors. • Experience in Business 12 Years, President of Michigan Chrome and Chemical Company. Experience in Education Chairman, Oakland Citizen.s League Issue.s Committee, Studying Higher Educati'in and the Community College Program. • Experience in Solving Tax Pi-oblems Troy’.s. tax rate is the low'^it in Oakland County. A founding member of the V'igilance Tax Committee which has cut Detroit.’s iticoma " tax on nonresidents in half. GREYHOUND BUS SMASHED - A bus wrecki^ near Dorchester. Mass., shows .severe damage after a'collision with an oil tanker eslerday in which 12 persons were injured. 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LOW, LOW PfHCES ON e BDOFINQ e ALUMINUM flUTTENS AND DOWNSPOUTS • OUSSED^t SCREENED-IN PATIOS • ALUMINUM A CHAIN LINK FENCES e INSTALLATION 682-4914 TWEiiTY TPE PONTIAC PRKSS, TUKSDAY, 0CT0BEB~ 20, im Little Known German Scores Upset in Winning Single Medal Wofi Monday by Marksman ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Ex-Cowboy Gibbs Reported Strong Possibility Lions May Find Solution to QB Problem in ilFL Long American Hold on Decathlon Endsj After 32 Years i TOKYO (APt—^ American marksman Lones Wigger produced the United States only medal — a gold one -- while little known Willi Holdorf of Germany scor^ an upset in winning the decathlon and Bos-ten’s John Thomas qualified for the high jump final Jn the Olympic games today. Hiomas then sounded a rare disquieting note in these Olympics by blasting American sports fans. Wigger, an Army first lieutenant from Carter, - Mont., produced the United States’ only medal Tuesday when he scored a world record 1,164 points in winniiig the small-bore rifle three-position title. M^AL BREAKDOWN His medal was the 72nd col-' lected by the United States in these 18th modem Olympics. Russia added six to its collection and now has 55. The bre^-down between the two dominant nations stows the United States witii 82 gold, 21 Sfiver and 19 bronze; Russia wp 17 gold, 15 silver, 23 broiwe.' * w * Stealing the spotlight from the team struggle between the two titans, however, was the spectacular stow of Holdorf, a sturdy, six-foot, 200-poiipd^r-man physical education student. He had to fight off the continuing dhaDenge of countryman Rans-Joadiim Walde and Russian Rein Aun, then withstmKl the closing rush of the favorite, the 1960 silver medalist and world record^wldm' C.K. Yang, before nailing down Uie decathlon championship and breaking America’s 32-year-old domina-ticQ of the event. w ★ * Holdorf scored 7,887 points under a recently chained scoring table for the gruelling, 10-event, twoday test. SLIPPED BEHIND Walde, in second most of the way, slipped to third when the Russian Aun won the 1,500-meter run, the final event. Aun finished with 7,842 points and the'silver medat, Walde with 7,-809. POSSIBILITY — Sonny Gibbs, former TCU All-America quarterback noW playing witti Toledo of the United Ftotball League is considered as a possibility to be Earl Morrell’s replacement with the Lions. By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press Faced with the serious problem of finding another quarterback to replace the injured Earl Morrall and getting an understudy for Milt Plum, the Detroit Lions were reported looking to the United Football League for a replacement. The quarterback who has caught the Lions’ eye is former TCU All-America aind the No.fl draft choice of the Dallas Cowboys in 1961, §onny Gibbs now with the Toledo Tornadoes of the UFL. Gibbs, who stands 6-feet-7 and weighs 230 pounds, was cut by Dallas this year after he failed to play in a single play daring the entire 1969 season as a rookie. Currently, Toledo is in 3rd place in the four-team Western Division of the UFL pnd Gibbs’ passing has been fat* , from impr^ive in seven games. LOW PER CENT He has thrown 122 passes and completed only 48 for 759 yards and four touchdowns for .393 pCT cent and he has had 14 interceptions, the highest percentage in the league, w w * The UFL has some top former collegiate quarterbacks in its ranks including former Western Michigan star Ed Chlebek at Grand Rapids; Roit Miller, former Wisconsin star once vAth the Los Angeles Rams now at Charles-^ ton; Ron DeGravh) formerly of Purdue at Indianapolis and Ivan Tonck, ex-Pitt star at Wheeling. w W w W Chelbek has the best passing mark in the UFL having compieted 130 to 25tl passes for 1,299 yards and 10 TD’s in seven games. * Another possibility could be former Bay City Central and U. of D. ace Jerry Gross, a former Cleveland di^t choice, who was one of the nation’s top passers while in college. was readily admitted be was one of the meet accnrate Gross w caiise of his height, but it qaarterbacks hi ciAege. bther possibilities & the hat could be George Borfc outstanding Northern lUiiiois passer now in Canada; Galen Hall, ex-Peim Stater who was with Washington one season and is now assistant coach at West Virginia; Glen Griffing, released this year by the Giants. Of course the Lions could always try to lure Bobby Layne, Eddie LaBaron or Lamar McHan out of retirement but this is highly Improbable. Ihere are a few teams in the NFL with three f|uarter-%cks, namely the Rams, Giants, Eagles, Steelers and Redskins but again no trades can be made after the 5th game thereby eliminating such a possibOity. To add a free agent or player from another league the Lions will have to drop four players. Mcarall and possibly Didc Lane would be on the injured reserve list, leaving two others to be trimmed. ★ * ★ Under the new NFL 40-player rule, any player who is placed on injured reserve cannot play for the season but he must be counted as part of the roster. A team can fJvTI Yanks Name Keane Skipper , Paul Herman of Santa Barbara, Calif., was fourth with 7,-787. The big surprise was the decline of Yang, the veteran Nationalist Chinese by way of UCLA, who was the heavy favorite. He started the final day in ninth place and made a gallant run at the German before fading. ★ * * Yang closed to sixth on a 15-1 pole vault, then to fourth on a 223-7 javelin throw, but was'fast too far back and finished in fifth place with 7,650 points. Russ Hodge of Roscoe, N.Y. was ninth with 7,325 and Dick Emberger, Oceanside, Calif. 10th with 7,292 * * * Wigger’s rifle record produced the seventh medal contributed by a surprisingly -strong U.S. shooting team and marked his second medal. Earlier, he had taken second irf the small-bore rifle prone position. PrepGridder Is Rattled After TD BAMBERG, S. C. OB- | Bambe>'g High School | i tackle Donald Pressley fj did a hand stretch to the Q ground just before his I team kicked off to Black-I ville Monday night after a p third quarter touchdown. & He found himself grabbing a rattlesnake by the middle. Pressley let go in a burry with a yelp. The rattler, about three ^ feet long, was dispatched with I down marker. RINGSIDE HASSLE—Officials discuss the casd of Korean flyweight boxer Don-Kih Ctoh, sitting in^the ring, who refuses to leave the ring at the Ol^pic games in Tokyo yesterday. Choh was disqualified in his bout with Russian Stan Sorokin for holding his head too low. jHe finally left after a 50 minute sit-in. John Thomas Takes Aim at Win-otElse People New York Position Test for Field Boss NEW YORK (AP) - Johnny Keane, who qualified to manage the New York Yankees by whipping them in a World Series, is a poised but fiery Irishman with a knack for knowing ball players. He is more in the mold of the brisk, business-like Joe McCarthy or Ralph Houk than Yogi Berra, the man he succeeds. ★ * w His talent for commanding the loyalty of ball players will be tested in New York as never before in his career. He takes over an uneasy club in which TOKYO (AP) - An embittered John Thomas said Tuesday American sports fans are “blood-thirsty” and can be compared to the thQmbs-down galleries that cried for death in the days of the Roman gladiators. "They, have no use for losers,” the Boston high jumper added. “They don’t give crtoit to man for trying. They have appreciation only for the champion, the man who finishes first.” The towering Negro ^admitted he feels deserted going into the Olympic high jump finals Wednesday when he will seek wipe out the memory of I disappointing showing at Rome in I960., DOESNT CARE “I don’t care what the people think,” he said. "I am on my own. I can’t trust fans and supposed well-wishers any more. They are fickle and vascillating. “If I win, they’re with me. If I lose, they’re the first to desert me and call me a bum.” •’Thoma? goes into the high jump the underdog to the two Russians, defending champion Robert Shavliakadze and Valery Brumei. * * * It’s different than in Rome Tour years ago when he was regarded as the biggest cinch of the Games, a man who cleared seven feet as easily as stepping off a curb. Instead, Shavliakadze won at 7-1, with Brumei second and Thomas third, although both cleared seven feet. . “I felt proud at getting a bronze medal,” Thomas said. “But everybody else thought I was a goat People who had been slapping me on the back ignored me as if I had a plague. I was called a quitter, a man with no heart. It left me sick,” PUBUC CHANGES Thomas said he had night-, lares for months after this but soon learned to accept it as the changeable character of the American public. “American spectators are frustrated athletes,” he added. “They’d like to be champions, but can’t. So they sit in the stands and cheer the champion and ridicule the loser. .“In the champion, they see what they’d like to be. In the loser, they see what they actually are, and they treat him with scorn.” Thomas recalled that he was only 19, competing in his first Olympics, when he failed at Rome. “That’s why I want so hard to win the high jump. I’d like to show those people who criticized me. But I’m not worrying about them. I’m worrying only about myself.” DEALS HIMSELF OUT - Branch Rickey, whose resignation last night a player consultant for the St. Louis Cardinals followed closely on the heels of ^e resignathn of manager Johnny Keane, is seen relaxing in the Florida sun. player dissatisfaction helped ease Berra out of his Job after one year and one pennant. Keane’s faith in his players helped bring the world championship this season to St. Louis. Bob Gibson who won two games in the Series for the Cards credits Keane with the faith to make him a starter after he faltered in his first major league years. Keane’s faith brought 89-year-old relief artist Barney Schultz out of the minors and into a major role in the Cardinal rush that won the National League pennant. Keane recommended that the Cardinals obtain Roger Craig from the New York Mets in a trade after the pitcher had lost 18 games with the Mets. He remembered Craig from the minors. ★ * ★ Oaig returned the favor with a brilliant relief victory against the Yankees in the Series’ fourth game. ’The 53-year-old former In-fielder, who never played in the majori, spent 35 years working for the Cardinals. At the height of his glory, piloting a Cardinal team to a World Series, he dictated a letter of resignation to his wife, Lela, and Waited to present it to his boss. August Busch, Jr., after the Series ended. Keane, who let his players make the noise during the Series, took the play amy from them with his abrupt act. He was .a .300 hitter in the low minors. W)ien he reached Houston in 1935 a Sig Jakucki pitch struck his head and put him in the hospital in a coma for dx weeks. Brandi Rickey Also Leaves Cardinals ST. LOUIS (AP) - Branch Rickey, baseball’s old warhorse, resigned Monday as special consultant to the world champion St; Louis Cardinals and went into seclusion at a Florida hotel. * * * -y It was another astonishing develqiment in a ser^ of..exec-utive changes that have roCM the (Cardinals smce mid-AugUst. Neither Rickey nor key Cardinal personnel omld be reached for comment, and there was little information in the terse, 15-word announcement of his exit’ T have received Mr. Rickey’s resignation as consultant to the St. Louis Cardinal baseball club,” said General Managw Bob Howsam. RECOMMENDED IronkaRV, Howsam is the man Rickey personallv recommended to replace die fired Bing Devine. ^ Rickey, 83, was contacted in Hollywood, Fla., but declined comment. He was understood have spent much of the afternoon watching a workout of the CJardinals’ Hollywood farm team and dictating to his secretary. * * * Howsam'chedted out of his St. Louis hotel. Cardinal President August A. Busch Jr. let his telephone ring unanswered as speculation soared over whether Rickdy resigned or was fired. The move had St. Louisans wondering. What next? Busch had brought the toshy-browbd. cigar-smoking Rickey back into the Cardinal organization about 19 months ago. No, sooner had the cagey old-timer arrived, than small diqHitesj developed between him and Devine. FINED DEVINE On Aug. 17, Busch fired De-vine. Devine, general manager seven years and affiliated with the Cardinals ^ years, had been named baseball’s Executive of the Year in , 1963 by the Sporting News after the Cards finished second in the National League race. Business Manager Art Rout-zong also was fired. Busch explained that he was disappointed and fhistrated over tto Cards’ inability to win the pennant. Devine went to New York as-assistant to President Gewge Weiss of the MeU. He had hard' ly settled into his new chair when Eddie Stanky, the Cardinals’ director of player development, resigned to join Devine in a similar capacity with the Mets." The jiezt day the (Jardinals announced that three veteran scouts had resigned. ’Ihey. also went to the Mets. (Cardinal Manager Johnny Keane, at the time, wad reported on his lyay^^out. ’Ihe word was that Busdi had arranged to replace Keane with Leo Duroch-er, then a coach with the Los Angeles Dodgers. But the 53-yearold Keane, a 35-year man wlQi the Cardinals, led the club to an amazing lltlv hour surge and St. Louis’ first pennant and wwld cbanqdon-shjp in 18 years. Friday — just 19 hours after the Cards won the Worid Series firom the New York Yankees — Keane resigned. He said.he was leaving'because of "a lot of Jitfie things, none of them ta-portant.” Pirates, Reds Tab Managers News Gatherings Set Concerning Braves NEW YORK (^-Johnny Keane was named manager of the New York Yankees today. Keane, whft resigned as manager of the St. Louis Cardinals only 19 hours after leading them to a World Series victory over the Yankees, succeeds Yogi Berra, who was fired despite winning a pennant in his first year as manager. ★ ★ ★ Keane is the 18th Yankee nuinager and their fourth in the last five years. General Manager Ralph Houk, who announced Keane’s signing at a giant pr^ conference at a midtown hotel, said the 52-year-old i%ane had been given a one-year contract. PAY BOOST Terms were not disclosed but it is believed Keane will receive around $45,000. The greyhaired Texan was paid $35,000 by the Cards this past season, when he led the team to the Series championship, ciimaxing his 35th year in professional baseball. '' The Cards won the Series in the seventh game last Thursday and Keane quit the next day in a stunning move. * * * “This is a great day for the Yankees,” said-Houk. “We are mighty happy and proud to have John join our organization. We hope he will be with us for a long time to come. In rapid fire . developments Monday, Fred Hucthinson resigned as manager of the Cincinnati Reds and was succeeded by Dick Sisler, and Harry (The Hat) Walker was named manager of the Pittsburgh Pirates to succeed Danny Murtaugh. ★ * ★ the Milwaukee Braves move to Atlanta? Tlie answer is expected to be forthcoming Wednesday in a meeting of the Milwaukee board of directors in Chicago. A news conference has called for 11:30 a.m. EST, Wednesday. The St. Louis Globe-Democrat said in its Tuesday edition that Red Schoendienst, former star second baseman, is expected to be named the new Cardinal manager within three days. * * * The resignation of Hutchinson and the signing of Sisler was not a surprise. Hutchinson, fll with cancer, took a leave of absence on Aug. 13 and Saler managed the R^ the rest of the season. Officially Hutchinson’s resigaa-tion does not take effect until next sprii^ so he can draw a full pe^on. # ★ w Walker, in signing a one year contract to rqriace Murtaugh who quit because of 01 healOa managed the Cardinals for part of the 1955 season after Eddie Stanky was let go. add a player only if the squad is down to 36 and the added plpyer vrould make the roster 37. With the powerful Baltimore Colts, leading the Lions in the Western Divi- * sion by only a half game, coming to Tiger Stadium Sunday, the Detipit offensive line must now set up a solid screen around Mum to protect him from the rushes of Gino Marchetti, Ordell Brasse, Don Shinnick and othm. Tile Lions and the Colts are on the opposite sides of NFL statistical columns. Detroit’s defense having given up only 71 points in six games, has run roughshod over opposing quarterbacks, while the Colts offense is rolling over foes with 203 points in six encounters. ★ ★ * Among the Baltimore scalps are two Green Bay Packer triumphs, both of which came as result of missed or blocked kicks of Paul Hornung. Hornung missed the extra ; point in the first Baltimore game won by the Cfolts 21-20 and last Sunday with the Packers leading 21-17, his field goal attempt was blocked in the final minute and the Colts then scored to win 24-21. With the offensive unit hampered by Morrall’s loss, the rough Lions’ defense is planning to put forth its utmost effort against the Ckilts. ★ “We’ve got to have the supreme effort from everyone, offense and defense,” said veteran cocaptain Joe Schmidt to his teammates en route home from Chicago on the United charter Sunday. Shaken but not demoralized by Morrall’s injury, the Lions know their “supreme effort” may have to resemble the famous Turkey Day roast they enjoyed against the Packers In 1962 and as Schmidt indi- , cated they may be due for an encore. Kent Douglas of NHL Leafs Regains Form MONTREAL W»-Kent Douglas, who won rookie of the year hemors, two years ago with the Toronto Maple Leafs but slumped so badly in his sophomore season that he had to be fanned out, lea& the National Hockey League sMrers, statistics showed today. \ * * ★ Douglas has one goal and seven assists for eight points, two better than last year’s scoring champion, Chicago’^ Stan Mi-kita. Four other Leafs are among the league’s top 11 point makers. Red Kelly, a membepwof Parliament who was Canada’s official representative to the Tokyo Olympics and returned just in time to open the season, has three goals and two assists for third place. Frank Mahov-lich, Dave Keon and Don Mc-Kenney are tied with five other players with four points apiece. : Vn t. Mlkltt, Chi..“ V 5 ; J. Kally. Tof..... j 2 s 4. (tW) N»vln, M.V. . 114 MatovIWi, Tof.... . . . : t i 4 K#on. Tor. ... 114 Howo, Oft. ........... 114 Dflvecdilo, Dtt....... 114 . 1 I i McK^nnay, Tor .....t 4 4 A OLANca .to........ S52I3?' i! 11 i i Ctiicago Ottratt ( Syracu$e Tops in gait NEW YORK (UPI) - Syracus University got a perfect ratin to lead in Lambert Trophy bal ioting, the symbol of easter ** 1 football supr^ac) of second-plaM >fillanovs TUBi*OM’lAC PRESS, TUESPAY, OCTOBER go, 1904 TWENtYOyE ^Buffalo Shows -Statistical Edge Bills' Perfect Log Backed by Figures NEW YORK (AP) - Ttie Buffal^ Bills, who professional football’s ootbai.l nwht schiduls WiBnMji^Bf Wlyy ttoMwn 44;M LI«M«Wlghtt vt. •.m.-Wlinw Lwti. vi p.m.-W4biMr «l Lwt*. » VI. qj*nwm-cr 44;M P.I WpW .... pjn^^Mpft Twain Lwls. ' p5i!-aagiav Lwft. vi. WIU Mug Hunt Golf Meet Paced by Californian RENO,^Nev. (AP)— M. 0. Johnson Jr., of La Jolla, CUif. shot a four-under-par 68 Monday to lead the field in the seventh annual Mug Hunt Golf Tournament. Hank Sauer, the former baseball slugger,. had the lowest gross score of the sports celebrities entered, a 74. Canada Takes Lead of Penn Horse Show HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) -Canada soared into the unoffl-cial flam lead.in international jumping competition at the Pennsylvania National Horse Show Monday night behind 18-year-old Jim Day, aboard The Comet. Day rode the brown gelding flawlessly around an intricate, serpentine course twice and edged Mexico’s Rafael Jiminez, riding Gaylor by a heartbreaking four-tenths of a second. , Placing third in the Pen^l-vania 28th Infantry Division trophy competition was Day’s teammate, Jim Elder, on Beefeater. The 1-3 finish gave the (Radians 24 points in the unofficial .team standings, 12 points above the United States. Three other nations are competing in the week-long show. Bill Robertson, 23, of Darien, Conn., a former Golden Gloves boxer, rode TheNSheriff to a fourth place finish to save the United States fropi a shutout in Monday night’s competition. ★ w a Day, a freshman majoring in architecture at the University of Toronto, could do no wrong, cleiuring eight hurdles in the nrst round and six more in the second with only one close call. Racing against time and cutting comers when it counted the most, the youngster came up with a spectacular 26.5 seconds on the second round when time as the factor. He was followed by Jiminez, who knew the time he had to beat. Comii^ to the lart series of jumps, a difRcult ih-and-out barrier. The crowd sensed the Mexican had a chance, but on the approach, Jiminez’ horse PNH Jayvees Now 3-1 Pontiac Northern’s junior varsity football record has growth to an attractive 3-1 leyel after defeating Waterford’s reserves, 130, last week on long touchdown runs by Mel Coles and Rick Rhoney, plus linebacker Ted Peak’s safety. hesitated momentarily and lost valuable time, finishing in 26.9 seconds. Day, who finished second Saturday night on Mr. Dunahee and tied for third on The Comet, tocrfc over the individual lead with 20 points. a * a' Jiminez and James Saurino of the United States, Saturday night’s winner, were tied for second with 10 points apiece. Brazil made its first appearance Monday night after its four horses were brought to the United States by emergency airlift. The ship on which the horses originally were to be transported to this country was struck by a hurricane off the coast of South America. The debut of the Brazilians, however, was disappointing. Dr. Gianni Samaja, aboard Mr. Jim suffered eight faults, knocking down two barriers in the first round. Mexico on the strength of Jiminez’ ride nailed down third place in over-all team scoring with 10 points. Argentina and Brazil were both scoreless after the sicond day of jumping. ^COMPLCTB BOWLER By RAY BLUTH I ity—both mental and physical— Newspaper Enterprise Assn, give me that wonderful ^and-For bowling poise and stabil-1 daddy of them all. Buzz Fazio. He is as well balanced as an apothecary’s scales throughout his entire delivery. Careful study of Buzz’ form over the years has convinced me that his smooth swing and delivery stems from a sound beginning. Before he even begins his pushaway Fazio looks smooth. His standing position is well night perfect. Buzz stands easily, with his feet pointed straight ahead. The weight of hjs body is ‘ evenly distributed. He is firm, but not rigid, relaxed but not limp. Before hq, even begins to swing Buzz looks as comfortable as a statesman in a rocking chair. Operating from a start like that, it is small wonder the li^ tie guy has been dominant on the bowling scene for more than 30 years. BUZZ FAZIO takes the perfect position for the start of his delivery. 'M' Gets Cage Pairing NEW YORK^IDPD-First-round pairings jp the 13th annual Hou-day Basketball Festival in Madison Square Garden Dec. 28-Jan. 2 pit LaSalle against St. John’s, Princeton agaiiut Syracuse, Manhattan against Michigan, and Cincinrjiti against Temple. RELIABLE Transmission TB>N.NrySt._______ field events plus two relays^’ he expldned. “That means there are 30 gold medals to be given out. It also means there can be only 30 truly happy individuals out of the thousands competing since all have the same objective. CONSOLATION PRIZES “In a sense, the silver and bronze medals are consolation prizes. When one of our fellows wins one, I never know whether to congratulate him or console him. You know these boys are heartbroken but gentlemen don't show it.” Despite what Giegengack sayr, that isn’t always the case. Blaine Lindgren of Salt Lake City, Utah, admits he cried after finishing second to' teammate Hayes Jones in Sunday’s 110-meter hurdles and Ralph Boston of Covina, Calif., was precariously close to tears after having to settle for the silver medal in the long jump. ★ ★ ★ “It’s been a long time since I cried, but I’n) not ashamed to say I did after Jones beat me,’’ '^the lanky, 25-year-old Lindgren confessed. “What hurt was that I lost the race because of a stupid mistake. I started leaning toward the tape too quickly but I’ll never make the same mistake again.” AFL Game January 16 NEW YORK (UPD-The fourth annual American Football League all-star game will be played in New Orleans’ Sugar Bowl stadium on Saturday, Jan. 16. iSS-i S*n Frwiclico at DMrolt Notre Dame Sought for Sugar Bowl NEW ORLEANS (AP) - The Sugar Bowl is seriousty considering Notre Dome as we of its teams^for the'1965 classic here and plans to send a committee to South Bend, Ind., this Saturday to see the Irish play Stanford. ★ ♦ “I’d vote for taking Notre Dame and Louisiana State right at this moment and gamble on their records in the last half of the season,” said one member of the Mid-Winter Sports Association, sponsor of the Sugar Bowl. Another Sugar Bowler said that the y-walk — K4n Mathaww Woman'i hl Korin Bailer, Germany Men's 400-meter run — M Fillmore, Calif. SWtMMINO Men's 100-meter freestyle - Don Schol-lander, Oswego Lake, Ore. • Women's 300-meter b Galina Prozumenschikova, “,----- "srlngboard - I, Germany DO-meter breaststroke "•■r''sSTl;ie‘. Graef, Verona, N r freestyle — Di ■r treestyleyelay — U — Donna de Varona, Santa Clara, Callt. AAen's high diving — Bob Webster, Santa Ana. Callt. women's 400-metar tracstyla - OInny Ducnkel. West Orange. N.J AAap's ^metar-’^Wtarfly - Kevin Bern^ Australia " ROWINO Elght-oarad - Vesper Boat Club, Fhlla-lebihla - Stanford Craw Single sculls — Russia MOORRN PBNTATHI.ON Individual — Fareitc ToroK, Hungary Bantamweight — Yollru Uetake, Japan Featherweight — Osamu Wstanabe. lev, Blil- Llghtheavywelght — Alaxandr AAedvsd, WATBR POLO Team — Hungary FRNCINO Men's toll — Egon Franke, >WH(,„s. Teepee - Grigory C I rifle — Gary Anderson, , Clay Pigeon — E ^;*?ln. Sitzberger, River Forest, III. Women's too-meter backstroke - Cathy Ferguson, Burbank, Callt. f Men's aOO^tiT Individual medley — Dick Roth, Atherton, Calif. Men's 400-meter freestyle — Schollan-der I Men's 200-meter breaststroke — Ian O'Brien, Australia , Women's high diving — Lesley Bush, Princeton, N.J. ' Bantamweight — Alexey Vakhonin, Featherweight — Yoshlnobu Miyake, Middleweight — Hans Zdrazlla, Cztchoslovakla « Light heavyweight — Rudolf- Plyukleld-it — Waldemar BaskowskI, Middle Heavyweight — Vladimir Golo- j»nOfV, Russia I Heavyweight — Leonie _ ‘ Russia NIGHT I 9 Races Nightly Rain or Shin through November 25 JACKSON HARNESS RACEWAY “■mv KING EDWARD” America'4 lafQast Selling Cigar KEEP ALL THE FAMILY COMFORTABLE WITH A I warm air heating system A & H SALES M19 losoAWN, auaaiM, mkh. - ma s-isoi GARWOOD HEATING SMS UKE RA, ORCNAM LAKE, MKN. EM 3-20M 10 TOP NECKED miYS 1962 BUICK WILDCAT 2-OR. H.T. ft 1 9U **w^r**' Turbina driva . . . radio and hbotar . . . powar ataaring and brakaa . . . buckat aaata and con-aola . . . burgandy finish with whitn vinyl top. 1961 BUICK $1CQR SKYURK 2-DR. 1 D«I9 Twin turbino drivo ... radio and hoator... powor stooring . . . tintad gloss . . . buckat soots . . . . block finish... whito top. 1963 Buick Electra $01 OR 225 4-DR. H.T. 2795 ‘fJS.T' Turbin# drivo . . . radio and hoator . . . powor atboring and brakaa . . . tintad glass . . . ramota control minor... baiga finith and trim. 1961 CHEVROLET $1 OUR IMPALA2-DR. 1395*^J[s:"* V-8 . . . automatic trant. . . . radio and hoator . . powor stooring .. . tintad gloss ... whitowolis ... fawn finish with boigo trim. 1963 CHEVROLET $i1flC Monza Convertible 1 I afu aJel^sia^ Automatic trana. . .. radio and haatar..'. whita-' woWk . . . tintad glasg . . . ona ownor . . . low milaaga . . . light blua with block top . . . bluo buckat aaots. Standard trOns . . . radio and Iwator. . . Skyloriz trim ... whitawollt... tintad glass... rod finisk. 1963 RENAULT $| flllR R-64-DR. 11195.:.*^!:^ 4-spaad trana. . . . radio and hootar . . . whita-walls . . . vinyl buckat soots ... tod finish . . . 35AAPG...oroalbuy. 1963 RAMBLER $10||R CUSSIC 2-OR. 1099 Standard trana.... whitowalla... radio and hoofer ... 6 cyl. angina ... a rool miloos# iirakor. 1961 Thundarbird $1||||R 2-oR.H.T. 1995.::;^^ Automatic trant... . radio and hoator.. . powor stooring ond btokot . . . whitowolis . . . grsoti finish. 1963 BUICK $OCQR LaSABRE WAGON ftDaKi Automatic trant . . . radio and hoator . . . powor stooring and bratcos . . . powar roar window . . . boigo finish... loothor intaritir. Wouldn't You Really Rather Buy Your Used Car from /r 210 Orchard Lake Ava at Williams Open Mon., Tues. and Thurs. Nights TUI 9 O'Clock fE 2-9165 S': ':'i 'x'. TWlSlfTY-TWO THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. OCTOBER 2a. 1964 ROYALTY IN RACE - Norway’s Eram III (N27), skippered by Crown Prince Harald, maneuvers past Australia’s KA14 in the fifth race of yesterday’s 5.5 meter class Olympic yachting race at Enoshima, Japan. ’The Nolr-wegian craft finished 10th. Northwestern Ready to 'Bounce' at MSU EVANS’TON, III. (AP) - The Wildcats of Northwestern, saddled with a three-game losing streak because of a leaky pass defense, are aiming to get back on the wiiuiing trail at Michigan State. Miami of Ohio and Ernie Keller-mann 28-27. “We’re going to bounce back somewhere along the line,’’ said coach Alek Agase. “I don't know if it will be this week or not but,we’re going to catch up to somebody.’’ Northwestern opened its season with a 7-3 victory over Ore-State and then edged Indiana 14-13. Since then, however, the Wildcats fell before Illinois and Fred Custardo 17-6; Minnesota and J(^ Hankinson 21-18 and MSU Defense Knee High in Leg Injuries EAST LANSING (AP)-Injur-ies, particularly of the knee type and especially to the defensive unit, are bothering the Michigan State football squad this week. The accumulation of hurts, gathered over four games, means the Spartans won’t have either top “go” or “stop” power against Northwestern in the 'homecoming game this weekend. Those bothered ^y knee and leg injuries on unit include end George Webster and Doug Roberts, linebacker Ed . Macuga and linebacker-center Buddy Owens. Halfback Harry Ammon still is" bothered by the heel injury that kept him from making the trip to Indiana. Ailing Wolverines Return to Squad BIG PROBLEM Pass defense has been the big problem with Custardo, Hankinson, and Kellermann helping boost the averge of completions against Northwestern to 61 per cent. However, the Wildcats also have been plagued by a lack of conversions. Missed extra points were costly in both the Minnesota a^ Miami defeats, forcing the Wildcats to try for two points and fail on several occasions. Agase indicated that he will replace Dean Dickie, the kicking specialist, with Dave Milam who is also the team’s No. 2 -quarterback behind Tom Myers; Myers is not enjoying a good season. He has completed 43 of 95 attempts for 611 yards and two touchdowns but five of his passes have been intercepted. BEST RUNNER Stevie Murphy, a hard-hitting fullback, is the team’s leading ground gainer with 264 yards in 70 attempts and 3.7 averages^ He also leads in scoring with 30 points. Ron Rector is the No. 2 runner with 170 yards in 40 attempts and a 4-2 average. Cas aszek is the main pass catching threat with 15 receptions for 193 yards. Ohio State-Now Tops AP Rating Baseball managers aren’t the only ones riding an un-merry go-round this fall. I^e nation’s college football powers have been playing musical chairs since the season’s opening whistle, with Ohio State the latest to claim a precarious perch the shambles. Promoters Renege on Las Vegas Title Fight Middleweights to Delay Bout No Quarantees Paid Giardello, Carter LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) The world’s middleweight title bout between champion Joey Giardello and Rubin (Hurricane) Carter scheduled for Friday night has been called off and the possibility of a fight between the two remained, in doubt todav. In essence, the local Silver State Boxing Club failed come up with a guarantee of $55,000 - |42,500 for Giardello and $12,000 for the challenger. All in all, it was ai^mpllcat-ed three-way promotion between the Silver State Club, Nationwide Sports, Inc., and Telescript, Inc., which was supposed to handle a national closed circuit telecast of the fight. BASIC ISSUE There were many ramifications presented before the Nevada Athletic Commission Monday night, but the basic issue was: The local promoters had been told last Wednesday to gpme up with certified checks but did not produce. Ohio State’s fourth straight victory, a 17-0 shutout of Southern Caltfomife, coupled with Arkansas’ 14-18 upset of top-ranked Texas pushed the Buckeyes into first place in The Associated Press weekly poll today and dropped the Longhorns to sixth. The Buckeyes, No. 2 a week ago, drew 35 of,^ first-place if^g of votes in the ballding of writers and broadcasters for a commanding lead over fast-rising Notre Dame. Ohio State netted 447 points to 380 for the runner-up Irish. Third-ranked Alabama received five flrst-place votes, Notre Dame and fourth-ranked Arkansas, two each. Corner Jones Effigy Victim NORMAN, Okla. (AP) -Gomer Jones, in his first season as head football coach aj the University of Oklahoma,'^ was hanged in effigy early Monday.. University police cut the dummy loose Monday morning after it was discovered hanging from a tree about 30 feet high. FOUR STRAIGHT The^Irish made it four in a row by blanking UdA 24-0 and Alabama trimmed Tennessee 19-8 for victory No. 5. Of the top ten teams in the AP’s pre-season poll, only four — Ohio State, Alabama, Texas and Syracuse — remain on the select list and only the Buckeyes and Crimson 'Hde still are unbeaten. Mississippi, No. 1 in the original balloting, has slipped from contention along with Oklahoma, Illinois, Auburn, Navy and Washington. Texas, its unbeaten string snapped at 15 games by the rugged Razorbacks, felt a notdi behind fifth-ranked Nebraska, which walloped Kansas State 47-0. Ark*n»« (2) . ANN ARBOR (AP) - Michigan's offensive guard Dave Butler and halfback Jim Detwiler returned to practice Monday, helping restore some balance to the injury-riddled football team. Butler had suffered bruised ribs and Detwiler a bruised nose in the Wolverines’ 21-20 toss to Purdue Saturday. Meanwhile, doctors reported knee injuries suffered during the game by starting guard Rick Hahn and starting linebacker Barry Dehlin would keep both players out for the season. Three other Wolverine starters earlier were lost for the season because of injuries. The team worked out Monday in intermittent rain and hail, stressing its ground game to prepare for Saturday’s contest with Minnesota. The Sooners have won only one game in four outings this | season, but still are among the | favorites in the Big Eight Conference race. j Jones, who served for 17 years as OU line coach under! Bud Wilkinson before moving up I to the top job this season, did not appear to be disturbed. | "You’re not a coacb unless you have been hung twice and fired once,” he said. . Florida Statt Helms Hail-of-Fame Selects Al Wistert There were late-minute compromises, but the Giardello forces insisted on the complete terms of the contract, namely the $55,000 in certified cjiecks. “I will not let my filter go into the ring without the money,” said Arnold Glovanetti, adviser for the champion. “We have a (XMitract and we demand that it be fulfUlpd,” argued M'ke Del Collo, Philadelphia attorney. FIRST CRACK Del Collo represents Nationwide Sports, which had a share in the promotion. Giardello’s adviser assured the commission that Carter would be given the first crack at the title when a new date was agreed upon. The closed circuit television company had promised Giardello $60,000 if the fight went on, but Executive Secretary James Deskins said he had been vised that the telephone line charges for such a hookup had not been paid, although they had been ordered. Bay^ City Centi;al Tpps W Dryden Moves in Prep Ratings By the Associated Press Portland captured first place in Class C-D and the races remained tight for high ranking in the other two classes in this week’s high school football poll concjpcted by The Associated Bay City Central continued the leader in Class A, although thi^ other schools are threatening. Kingsford remained the l>est team in Class B. The standings among the state’s smallest schools (C-D) once again had the biggest shakeup. All 10 teams either were in new positions in the top ten or were new to the standings. DOWN ONE Akron-Fairgrove dropped to second and Middleville advanced a notch to third in C-D. Adrian Catholic improved by two places to take fourth and Dryden leaped from fenth to fifth. St. Charles, Watervliet and Homer took the last three places, replacing Galesburg-Augusta, Frankenmuth and New Haven. &aist Lansing, Traverse (^ty an Flint Central continued their fight to dethrone Bay City. The AP’s statewide panel olf sports writers and sportscasters give Bay City a 17-point bulge in the voting. Traverse City was just three points behind East Lansing for second place.’ Flint Central was solidly enh'enched in fourth. LOSES PLACE In the only moves in this ss, Lansing.Everett jumped Many Sidelined Injuries Hit Big Jen CHICAGO (AP) - Midwest football briefs: Indiana—The Hoosiers will be without the services of lineback-er Tom Erickson, who is sidelined with a fractured leg, for Friday night’s game with Mi-^mi, Fla. Wisconsin—Tackle Bob Richter suffered a dislocated elbow and will be out of action in the Ohio State game. Either junior Duncan Hoffman or Bill Weher-spann vrill fill in for Richter. Minnesota — Halfback Bill Crockett, tackle Fred Nord and end John Najala returned to action for Minnesota after being sidelined with injuries. John Hankinson, Gopher quarterback This, however, according to the commission, had nothing to do with the basic agreement concerning live audience gate receipts for Giardello and Carter. Carter deserves a fight and we will give him a first crack at ■ ■■ Giovanetti told the commission. Cassius Will Win, Says His Trainer North-South , Golf Veteran Setting Pace was back running with the first team. Iowa - Halfback Jim KaU-breath was promoted to the varsity because of his running and blocking. Other Hawkeyes nursing minor injuries were expected to be ready for the Purdue game Saturday. Purdue — Middle guard Bob Hopp will be out of action for the Iowa Hawkeyes. Hopp suffered an ankle sprain. Otherwise, the Boilermakers are in good shape for Saturday’s game. Illinois—The lUini are in top shape for their battle against UCLA. Players who suffered minor injuries against Minnesota will be ready for the Uclans. Notre Dame — Quarterback John Huarte was given the game ball and was among those praised by coach Ara Parseghi-an for their play against UCLA. The Irish expect little trouble I from Stanford Saturday. Ohio State—No. 1 in the na-' tional standings, Ohio State i worked to stop a rejuvenated'^ one spot to fifth, Lincoln Park went from ninth to sixth and Saginaw Arthur Hill dropped four places to ninth after bowing ito Bay City. ’ Kingsford (7-0) and Hillsdale (541) made if a two team race in Class B. Cadillac, Buchanan and Albion rounded out the top five. ★ > S. LtiMing Ev«r*n (S4) ............. M *. Lincoln Pork (5-0) ........... M 7. Battio Crook Control (4-1) ....... 45 I. Groue Pointo (5-4) .......... 55 9. Saginaw Artliur Hill (4-1) ....... 17 10. Grand RapMa Catholk (4-1) )5 Ottiara, In order; Oalrolt Southoajlern, Kalamaioo Central, Muakegan, Walled Lake, Royal Oak Kimball, Dotrolt Cattie-dral, Ann Arlx>r, Portaga,, Waterford Kettering, Dearborn Edsal Ford. Claaa • Team, Record Pell pl<- 1. Kingsford (7-0) .............. ' 144 i. Cadillac (54)1 93 4. Buchanan (5-0) .................... M 5. Albion (50) 72 4. Manliflquo (441) ................. 57 7. Dundee (5.01 54 I. SI. Johni (5-0) 41 9. Detroit St. AmbroM (5-0) ......... 41 10. Jackaon St. John (4-1) 25 Othert, In order: St. Lotili, Bad A«e, Iron River, Eoorio. Port Huron Cottiolic. Clou C-D Toom, Record Poll ptaC I. Portlond (541) 104 1. Akren-Folrgrove (50) ............. 90 3. MkMIovllle (50) 44 4. Adrien Catholic (54) ............. 40 5. Dryden (50) 53 4. Elale (50) V ......................39 7. SI. Joaeph Catholic (51) 37 I. St. Chorlea (L.)) 30 9. Watervliet (51) ' 23 10 UAm«r 1CJ)) 30 order; Galeaburg-Auguata, Fenn- _____________ ..-.ghion, Jamea, Hickory Cornera While four teams polled more than 100 points in Class A, only Kingsford and Hillsdale got that many in B and Portland was alone in C-D. The voting, with points based on 10 for a first-place vote, 9 for seepnd, etc. through 1 point for a lOth-place vote: For the Highi of Travel Values. Chevrolets ^ Pontiacs • Buicks At The Only Showroom In Oakland County Where You Can See All Three. HOMER RIGHT MOTORS, INC. Isp 8, WaehlnEtoii 8t. Oxford • Flying Letdont • Air Ridet • Rentals-Chartert • "T* HongM • Insid* Steraqe Safe* Service BARBERS Pontiac Airport S7MIH itSmWfwnsB SUPER-SERVICE TURNPIKE TREAD With Super Durable Polsyn Rubber and 5p520 EXTRA-DEEP DRIPPING EDGES FULL ROAD HAZARD QUARANTEE pliu tux anri rrIrrndaMe eating WHITEWALLS '1 8i00x14 muttlnaa Key Interception in Waterford Play MIAMI BEACH (UPD-Cassius Clay’s trainer, Angelo Dundee, said Monday that Clay will beat Sonny Liston in Boston Nov. 16 matter what shape Clay is ors Monday. Dr. John C. Mercer of Fitchburg, Mass., and George PINEHURST, N.C. (AP) m.1.1 in first round of quabfyuig for the, ‘ North-South Seniors Invitational! (3olf Championship was a natural for Howard Creel of Colora-1 do Springs, Colo. Creel was 1961 and 1962 World Seniors champion and is captain of the 1964 U.S. World Seniors! team. His one-under-par 71 over the 7,051-yard No. 2 course at Pine-hurst Country (Hub set the pace as an original field of 356 was whittled to 96 for today’s second round of qualifying. The low 16 scorers in today's qualifying will play in Wedn^ day’s first rounjj^f champion-lip flight matchplay. Roland MacKenzie of Pine-hurst shot 72 for runner-up hon- . invitee you to him pefeenolly wMi your meckani-col probleme. Hit fear* of mockankol oxporionco plot guorantood Xhoteie fngi-nooring Sofvico* will Mve you money on J many miloe of KC Chiefs Ask Waivers KANSAS CITY (AP) - The Kansas City CTiiefs placed defensive back Charley Warner on waivers Monday. LOS ANGELES (AP)-Al Wistert, star tackle of the university of. Michigan 1940-41-42 fiMtball teams, was elected to tii'e Helms Hall (College Football Hall of Fame Mondav. Wistert was among a dozen to be honored, including Angelo Bertelli, Notre Dame quarterback of the 1940s, and Johnny Lattner, Notre Dame halfback of the 1950s. j iston made two bad mistakes in his life,” Dundee said. ‘The first one was when he' fought Clay before and the second one is fighting him again.” { Dundee said the heavyweight! boxing champ without a crown I —removed by the World Boxing; Association—was “not available' for words.” But he stepped into! the Louisville Lip’s role wijh! flying colors. K. Whyte of Norotan, Conn., had 73s. The GLK team defeated the Oakland Raiders, 19-14, as Kirk Zuelch scored on a last-minute pass interception in Monday night Waterford Township Flag Football action. Other results last night included a 264) shutout for the Nerds against the Viteigs as Bob Sleva passed for all the points, and a 21-7 win for the Bruins over the Scrubs as Dave Giles scored two touchdowns and two PAT’s. Mike Williams scored twice in the GLK’s close victory to offset the 14-point effort of Chuck i Lee for the Raiders. . o9id, hall to* to it that BRAKE LIIVIIVGS 20,000 mlla gwaron- WHEEL ALIGIVMENT Y • Scicntifleally mtaiurod and corroct costgr and cambor EOF Tour Best Deal On ALUMINUM SIDING STORMS, AWNINGS AND VINYL SIDING JOE VALLELY FiRish high school AT HOME—IN YOUR SPARE TIME _AS LOW AS _SEND FOR FREE BOOKLET MONTH AMO HAVE LBFT KHOOL AMBKICAH SCHOOL FO Bea 43 Allen Fark, MIcMgen Seae me year FRCC tt^eg. Hlg* tekeel B SIVOW TIRES NEW NYLONS Not • Recap ILA0KWAU-TUIELE8I rliailiSS’iffiSi ‘rSOTTj iS)4ll14 Special STANDARD ENGINE > REBUILDERS 6 Cyl..........W V-8's ... .M15®® This includas . . . Rings, Rod B*or-ings, Main Roaring, Grind Valvws, Fit Pink, Dwgiaza Cylindnr Woils, Gaskats, Oil and Laborl -ALSO^ FACTORY REBUILT ENGINES 695 AUBURN RO. 138-MI f SI8-N12 T'l : . . : - i I . __ _ ^ ^ , Like Old Times for Alice Faye THE PQNTtAC PRESf TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1004 T\V7:XTV-TIIl(Ki: By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-Television Writer HOLLYWOOD-WeU, it looked just like old times with Alice Faye smiling as she walked down the runway and singing, "come on along, come on along, to Alex-a n d e r's Ragtime Band." No, t h 1 5 wasn’t another of the endless television replays of the great 1938 musical she made with Tyrone Power and Doit _________ Ameche. This was Alice Faye 26 years later, looking just as THOMAS blonde and beautiful and sounding the same mellow notes. " ★ . ★ ★ Alice was back for one of iier periodic excursions from the great American desert to appear on a Hollywood Palace show that will appear on ABC Nov. 14. She seemed to be happy to be back in action once more, but the weather made her wonder: Wps Jihis trip necessary? “Oh, the smog,” she grganed. “I ddn’t know how you people stand it. Yesterday I was crying all through rehearsals. And the heat. Nothii?^ is air conditioned here; there’s no escape.” ★ ★ ★ But she admitted that she enjoyed getting back into the Jacoby on Bridge ¥ 108543 ♦ K88 WWT KA8T 4QJ184S *76 VQ876 ♦ 7*4 ♦QJOa ^ATI *865 80CTH-(D) * ASS V AJ ♦ A 10 3 * K Q 10 9 2 Ho one rulneroble Booth Weat North Eaat ^ V P«** 2N.T. Paso 3N.T. Pat* Paaa Pass Openlna lead—* Q a principle of bidding that all j players should learn. That I principle is that you don’t hang one trick short of game when you have '^uiy excuse whatsoever to go on. N o r t h I really had to look around to ' find/ that excuse, but it was there. His partner had opened the bidding with one club, and | North felt that his Jack of clubs might turn out to be a key card. North was right oij all counts. I The jack of clubs insured four; j club tricks. Four club tricks plus three aces and two kings gave South about as easy a three no-trump as anyone ever routine, even though she was “pushed"* into the Palace date. By whom? “By Phil,” she said, referring to her corn-pone hubby, Phil Harris. He likes to see her keep her hand in the entertainment ^ne., PALM SPRING PIONEERS The Harrises were pioneers among the Hollywood expatriates who have settled permanently in Palm Springs. Phil and Alice landed there 14 years ago. She admitted the danger of living year-around in a resort town — friends from the city are apt to drop in any time expecting to party.; Alice left the homestead three, years ago to make her first film in 14 years, “State Fair..” It marked a return to ,20th .Century-Fox, where she had made all her musicals — “On the Aven-“Sing, Baby, Sing,” “Alexander’s Ragtime Band,” “Rose^ of Washington Square,” “Hello, Frisco, Hello,” etc. NEVER SAW FILM “I never saw ‘State Fair’ so I don’t know how the picture turned out,” Alice commented. “It was fun seeing the people I used to work with in^ the old days — the ones who were left. But 1 didn't enjoy working the | way I used to. Everything is so cut and dried no\r,’’ j ★ * ★ Alice, now thrice a grandmother, says she and Phil will continue living on the desert —; at least, until the smog comes. I “I see it hanging over the mountains,” she said. “l suppose it^will get to us eventually. | Then 1 don’t know what we ll do.” BEN CA8KY THE BERRYS Noted Biologist's Kin IsJA/orking on Form' KANSAS CITY - “I’m the black sheep of the family,” said 20-year-old Susanna Huxley, j “I’ve ajways been nuts for animals.” i * * ★ * i Miss Huxley, granddaughter; of Sir Julian Huxley, famed! British biologist and author, ‘ was explaining why she’s work-1 ing as 7 hand on industrialist! Cyrus Eaton’s farm in Ohio. She’s in Kansas City to help groom cattle for the American Royal Livestock Show. "JACKIE, STOP BLXSaMG ME./' •fr. ^ WRONG, ADMIT" 1"^/ J RERRY’S WORLD 11 1l 1 ^ 1 i 1 1 M By OSWALD JACOBY Newspaper Enterprise Assn. The jump to two no-trump over partner’s one over one re-1 sponsejs just as much a picture bid as the one no - trump rebid. Needless to say, the picture is ^ u i t e different even though it doesl show a trump distribu-' tion. JACOBY The one no-trump rebid shows lets than an opening no-trump; i the jump to two no-trump shows I 18 or 19 points, which is just one or two points mo^e than a ^ ^ maximum opening no-trump. ! In this situation, if responder ^ doe.sn’t like his hand he must! pass and let his partner suffer at two no-trump, since opener will bid again over any below game call. South’s jump trump is the perfect r e b i d with hit hand. North's raise ■ to three no-trump illustrates Q—The biddinf hat been: North Kaat South West 1* Past !♦ Past 1 * Past ? You. South, hold: *86 VKJ7S 0KJ7S *932 What do you do? A—Bid one no trump. Ton have a ao-trnmp pattern and don’t Uhe either ot year part-aer't anita. TODAY’S QUESTION Your partner continues to two dlantonda. What do you do WEL'., HOWf rrSUPTDHXJ, ^ ABOUT ( OSCAR " Asfrologicai i,. Forecast ARIES (Msr. 21 - Apr. rKclvtd due to mooi FRIENDSMIR. Oev It n.™......... — •con oein tnelotit, reeeon, purpose. Specl-(icellv. CO.MPLETE PROJECTS. Leeve "*TAij?un3i»r. 20 - May 20); Kottilne hetiway occurs. All ,0)0 waiCT-or noOilna. interpretation Ts €0 utmost ImpiDrl----- — sonsiblo ReoMze )----- 1 TAURUS mossoeo. t imiiicct Drovtdos valid ans bamd Ouial wHMn. Don't truini CANCER (Juno 21 of ntads wMcn allt. . yond Immadlato J^oft ous yssIMIIIlw. On^ejo practicalllv. lions, nnow mis oim raaci aw.oroifn Your sonsa o* fair play provides y« perceptive. Adtiera la SOI - ^1. 22||_ Persons ^ ------------------ TOka____________ Stress INTROSPECTION. VIRGO loval to V—--------------------- ---data surroundinev pareans cleia . Cltanea. your atmuda. Ba j*a liS&Kleil Ba oeiginal and ENTHUSIASTIC. CAPRICORN (Oac. 22 lARIUS (Jan. 20 - Pat. ID^ycN I uo. You can oaln lavoraWa.al-n (ram hlo*iaf-«. Oatva deep Into '°5S2*"ara >*a«acti^ atartj :torvtUsrj?.va;a ERAL f^NotNCI^S: Cycle hMi MARIUS. PISCES, ARIES Soaclal to CAPRICORN: Purebasa Ham cant of HUS nenvfPPPT- •«; P* I WKN rV-FOl R THK PON'riAC' 1>RKSS. TUESDAV, OC'TOBP^R 20, 1964 and Finance ... -4' : .:.i MARKETS Coppers Continue Strong , The foUowing are top prices | covering sales of iocallv grown | ' produce by growers apd sold by i them in wholesale package lots j Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Monday Morf Shows General Advance New Proposal in Dock Strife- Forecasters Limiting Outlook for Business NEW YORK (AP) - Coppers of Markets as of continued strong and other in dustrials joined in a general Produce F»UIT*. AdoUs OeWtin Delicious, bu. tel•l. KM D«licleus, bu. Its.' GretnloB, bu. Aapits. Jontthtn. bu. telts. Al Swlts. Si Bttts, toppM, bi a^ralli. di.^bc Carrots, topped, bu. Ctulitlotvtr. dr. CtKrv. Ptsctl. di. Ctltry. Ptsctl, crt. Ctltry, Root, dot. Onions, pickling. I Ptrtity. cu. Ptrsiry Pool Rtdlsties, red Squttti, Oeliclout, bu. Squtsti, Hubbtrd, bu. Tomttoes. Bskt. Celery. Ctbbtge. lx Endive, bu. Endive, bletcbed. e Esctrolt. bu Esctroie. bietched, LeHuce, Hetd, bu Lettuce, Hetd, oei Lettuce. Lett, bu. Rome me stock market advance early this afternoon. Trading was fairly active Stock market averages were heading into record high ground again and trading for'the year on the New York Stock Exchange passed the biliion-share mark earlier than last year, which was a record for turn- The coppers were resuming their rally of yesterday on peak world prices for the red metal. The auto stocks perked up following a piedge by General Motors and the auto union that they will try for a .settlement of the 2S-day GM strike as .soon as possible. OTHERS ADVANCE keels, rubbers, tobaccos, airlines, building materials and drugs joined in the advance. Aerospace defense stocks — aside from United Aircraft which rose a point — simmered down following their recent advance on fears of increased international tension. * ★ ★ The Associated Press average of 60 stocks at noon was up .4 at 330.2, with industrials up 1.3, rails up .1 and utilities off .2. Both averages were moving i’ above their latest record closing : peaks. AUTOS UP By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW VORK - The business hprizon has moved in a little closer of late. And many for^-BritishvGovernment|castet*s and planners are now I saying their vis- Seeks to Avert Strike ibility docs not go beyond next LONDON (UPI) — Employers j spring. ,p P«y proposal to-1 e c o n o mic Chrysler tacked on more than a ; “fy « i growth should point. -- ■ , crii^ling one-day wildcat strike ponfjoue until Prices rose in moderate trad- GM edged to the upside and ^ Ford rose fractionally while : by Britain's 65,000 dock workers j (hen at least, se in moderate trad-} (hat could seriously embarrass ^ ( mg on the American Stock Ex- j (he „ew Labor government. ! "t, * “u-change. Eastern States pre- ^ ® ferred ’'‘A” rose more than 2.1 “ to this expecta- Up a point or better were Lou-1 The offer was secret but was, ((on of further DAWSON isiana Land, Duval Corp., Crown reported to include a pay in- j records, they are taking into Central Petroleum, Capitar^Sity ! crease for the 2,300 dockers who account the General Motors Broadcasting and APL Corp.; earn less than $33.60 a week and . j(pj|^g beginning to be fejt Corporate and U.S. Govern- increased fringe benefits for the (jy some other industries, the ment bonds showed a generaliy rest. nervousness in the al Motors shutdown, but the farther-reaching effects that the auto labor contracts might have in other industries. Businessmen also are eying carefully the recent price increases in several metals and the growipg insistence of steel mills that a general price increase is needed. PRICE-WAGE SPIRAL • Memories of the.price-wage spiral that followed the war are meaningless if figured in con-nomic statistics a boost. But It left many bu.siness firms as well as individuals the victims of an inflation that made the statistics largely meaningless iff igured in constant dollars. * ★ * Right now ^he industrial production index is showing the higher trend. The New York Stock Elchange However, informed sources marke- while a new British I said, the employers held firm government sets its fiscal to their original offer of a course, and the general uncer- ^ Pf^* J Z $1.75 per week pay raise for tainties born of%he political Ibl wil t arger all dockers. The union is de- upheaval in Russia and the P ku manding. $3.50 raise. enVance of Red China into the nondurable . NEW YORK lAPl^Eollswing it ol tcIccIM iKicIt trtnsKtIont on Hi York Slock Eichtngc with noon Union leaders have been authorized to call a nationwide of- nuclear club. Businessmen don't like uncer- goods increased, mining activity. sq did This was up slightly to a record 133.9 per cent of the 1957-59 average. FRESH aiMB When the GM labor trouble is out of the way, a fresh climb well into next spring is expected. The nation's total output of goods and services is expected tQ rise at least 5 per cent above this year's record total, now estimated at $623 billion to $625 billion. What Great Britain may do about interest rates under a Labor government also has American businessmen watchful. A further rise in interest costs there might well trigger one here. And many fear the maxinium growth of the U.S. economy would be unattainable if money and credit tightened. The betting odds are still with the optimists: an early settlement of the GM strike, a steady course in international and domestic money rates, little change in U.S. relations with Russia and Red China. , But the fresh uncertainties of recent days are breeding caution. And foreca.sters are limM- il Chp. Admiral Air R»d 2.K Alco Prod ) Alleo Cp ,)2t Al^^.20 ^ AB^*".50g^ AmBdest 1.40 C«n 2 Cy«n 7 21 14‘/* 13H 14W + U 4fH 49 49H -f 36 43H 43'A 43H + 17 62W 62»/B 62’.^ + 16 46 45314 45«4 + Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (AP) — Prices paid per pound lor No. 1 quality live poultry; heqvy type Iwni 14-17; lir‘ -- AmSmelt. 1.M Am Sid 1 Am TBT ? Am Tob l.M Am Zidc 1.40 AM Pine .45 Ampex Cp Amph Borg 1 Anacon^l.SOe G Accept 1 G«n Food$ 2 GdnMiili 1.20 GtnMot 2.45« GonPrec 1.20 GPobSvc 33« GPobUt 1.21 'iGenTei&El 1 GenTIre .50 GettvOii .10* GMIett* l.lOa Glen A Id .S0« GOOdrch 2.20 Goodyr 1 15 GroceCo i.io GrandU .60b Granites 1.40 GtAAP 1.20a Gt Nor Ry 3 AiiRrt' DETROIT EGGS DETROIT (AP) - Egg prices paid per large 3M0; medium 29-31*-j; small 19-24; I * $ S7H S6H 57H +1'^ 6 12’/« 12^ 12^ 18 73’4 72J4 73J4 + Va 14 aO't '60H 4 3f7i 39^ 3934 40 34 33H 34 + H 1 II II II + V4 '5 63^ 63H 44 2V4 1 2\4 + V4 161 16‘T 15H 16V4 +V 39 27711 2l'a ’'i 21 24\i 244t 24AH 4 3 Sm 51H 51H 13 l3’/t I3W 13'3 10 23H 2344 234« 41 iV/4 607« 61*4 + 5 16 I574 15^1 - 74 60W S97/4 60'4 + ’-4 a 13’ii 13 13 + Vw IS 43^ 43'4 43*4 + 6 41 40’i 60’^ + '/4 42 33^ 33U 33'^ + V4 —G— 3 31^ 3l"i 3l>/i 91 3S'/4 3S’/4 35V* + 5 no 23’/4 22H 23 + ’ 6 57'/a 57H 57V> + ’ S6 43)4 427» 43V* 15 66’^ 66H 66H 77 12H 12'* 12'* 11 23^1 23N 23^1 12 49*4 49'k 49'/* 10 53 52*4 53 PfiierChas 1 Pheipa Ood 3 Phlla Et 1.32 PhllaRdg lb PhilMor 3.60 PhiiiiosPet 2 PItn Bow .90 PitPlate 2.40 Polaroid .40 ProctAG 1.75 RekhCh .20a RepubAv .50c RepubSteei 2 RichfOit 1.80 Rohr. Corp 1 RoyOut I.73r Royal McBet Ryder $ysf 63 62H 61H 6Vt - —R— 76 33H 33V4 33>Xs 4 32'/i 32W 32'^ - 11 40H 40 40 xl 13'/9 13'/i 13'/a -f fidai strike if necessary t6 back ^ traders. But emotional decisions i their demand ,^3, criki CP, trSrLv h . , , ■ . ‘ corporate board rooms. Biisi- been called a step toward anarchy " by Labor Minister Ray Gunter, a former union leader himself. enough to pull the entire index ing their horizons. In Saigon Chinatown executives are more inclined to watch cautiously rather than to panic. DEVELOPMENTS AT HOME Such a wildcat walkout would Developments at home could ‘ djadly hamper efforts by Prime pose a more visible threat to the Minister Harold Wilson^s four- American economy in the ‘ day-old Labor governrnent to months ahead than any now ' Britflin'S $310 ^mnnrpnl in fh*a />nnfiieinrr 4i>Anrlo balance of payments deficit' Raid Cong Uniform Plant ScottPep . Scab AL 1 SearIGO 1 45)4 45*4 I 33'it* 33'/y 33)4 34 I 9)4 9)4 > 72H 227a I 65)4 65'/^ 65)4 Soybean Price Up in Grain Trading behind the Iron Curtain. What business planners are , . . ^ most fearful of today is that price inflation might upset the steady climb of business after next spring. SAIGON (UPI) — A small I near a canal where the Corn-clothing plant in Saigon's China- j munist guerrillas were trapped wasfou^ making camou-:^(,^„ , bullet passed through ..agu battle dress for Commu- .. ... . ... ,, T ' nist Viet Cong guerrillas, it was «“‘'y and police kis call. Smith r Co 1 *0 B *r C 57',.; c*r l« C 5»'. Eggi About -ttetdv; wt>o Qf'ces unchenged; 70 per c Ufn* 27Vj, stenderds 30' i, Bucy Er We ' ' inlandStl l.AO ' ) Interik Ir 1.60 I intBusMch S ' ' InHHATv 2.10 IntMIntrils 2 , IntNick 2 20a intPack .50P SoconyW 2 SOUPRS3 6 I 3. SowCalE 1.: i. Southr>C 1.: ' SouNalG 2. SouPsc 1.4 South Ry 2. 4- H . Sper— " 5 103)4 103Vk S3 S2H 52'^ 37 85H IS “There I was,” he said, "in The new.spaper Saigon Post the position I've been trying to reported that the factory owner get into for eight months and 1 ' They watch not only the %r- couldn't take a picture in be- rent slowdown in industrial rested. Enough camouflage tween the throbs of pain. 1 was production traced to the Gener-1 '*** confiscated to outfit cussing a blue streak." CHICAGO (AP) —, Commer-,------------------—------------------! 600 men, police said. ________________ ! Tk* newspaper said the: terest firmed soybean futures' ai . p , i governinent rec7.tly seized a ll6WS 111 briBl : of paratroop uniforms at a Viet Cong supply base Linzie Sherrell, 39, 219 Crystal | >nd traced it to the factory. 5,x._|, --- ^ Lake, yesterday reported the Viet Cong units up to battalion' About an hour after the open- strength a|d Communist patrols ing soybeans were ’.i to Us f'*''* recentiv operat- cents a bushel higher, Novem- Police are investigating the '*'8 '^e green camouflage uni-, ;; and prices moved up a cent o I ‘ more a bushel on moderately active dealings today on the : Board of Trade. Expect 400 of Dinner for Local Exec Rand 139 15’^ I 220 ' her $2.71A«; wheat"was % to H recent theft of a 40-foot exten- i ^‘»nns, similar to that worn by ' higher, December new grade s*on ladder valued at $87 from South Vietnamese paratroopers, ; $1.51U; com W to ^ higher. 86 Seneca. I December $1.21^: oats to H rangers and Marines. I , SWOilOh 1W I S( PACkigIng , St»u«Ch l.« , St»rlDrug 70 , , . . , Sheriffs deputies are investf- , rye was unchanged to V* lower, ^3(j„g ; December $1.26V*. i presses and $94 in cash from Over 400 transportation and industrial officials from all over Michigan and the United States In fighting yesterday, free- will gather at_ lance photographer James H. jhe Statler Hil-| Pickcrell, 28, of Wilmington. *^(„„ ■ Business Ngtes Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP)-iUSDA)-Cattk --- — stcMv to 25c st»r$ anq or tully^5 ta strong; t 2X26-25 15; 14 57». 57"J «0 27»s 27'. -c— 7 59Ui 59 » 2t Roland S. Withers. 371 Martel, at $75 was reported tb police : Bloomfield aHills, will be a fea- yesterday by Harold Tucker. ' tured speaker at the three-day ^281 Windiate, Waterford Town-annual convention of the Flori-^ ship, I da Automobile Dealers Associa- ; Lapeer at 4^ Hag-! Ohio, became the first American Igerty, We.st Bloomfield Town-: journalist to be wounded '''"P- combat. Theft of a 10-foot boat valued SHOT IN I.EG Pickerel! was shot in the right leg while attempting to photograph the capture of Commu- jows slf^y; , Cent SW 1 2t '♦ 5o'*2'4*3 I ' '* 1 >**-3*> '•> I CessnaAirc lOO-WO sows ' ChampSpk 2 sows 11,25- Chmplin l,2( classes steaOv, CniRkisPac 1 71 22 Good and ChnsCHI Ml goOd slaughter Chrysler 1^ CievElill ' 2« CHICAGO LIVESTOCK Coca Cola 3 IHICAGO lAP) lUSDA) Hogs CoIgPal 120 100, butchers steady to 25 Ngher, most Col'inRed 40 1-2 l♦0•220 lb butchers 14.25 - 14.50; i Colt Indust xed 1-3 1*0220 lbs . 15.5014.25; 220-240 I CBS 1 15.25-15.75; 2-3 24(L270 lbs 14 75-15.25; Col Gas L22 12*0 lbs 14.00.14 75; mixad V3 300-350 CotPict 1 021 I 12.50.13.00; 500-400 lbs 11.75-12 15. ComICre 1 M . „ M’y 44'T - '/III 3 44S. 441i 441. I I 3*H 2*1. -1'4l ■ 13»i 13H I3S. night at a testi-l monial dinner| honoring J o seph A. Mosser,| 84 N. Genesee. Mosser is r ~ nist rebels by a force of about '‘ring the endB J i. .u c! A camera and topcoat valued i 8^ Vietnamese government sol- of this month ’ Oc" 25-27 aSS to an^J-1 I Sal- after a 40-year career with the ... ,.. FI^r^r«.,..„.,c™r., 3984 Sashabaw, Waterford tioned behind a thatched (,„( He has been general traffic sti-^^^^H m chotca 19.50-2UI0; c 1 64>s -H'k lOFGIs 3.Ma 1 17’i + s. Lib MCN .40* 1 2*’ 1 -I- >* ! LiggettGM 5 1 LonaS C*m i I ! LontS Gas 1 ! LOpglSlLI *2 s Pae 1 40 MM . .... . .L ! Unit Cp .35# 35 74’s 75'l 74’l -t S» Un Fruit .40 ^ ?! • ' UGasCp I 70 3 15H 15'. IS'. : UnitMGM t 30 2t’. 2I’» 21’/* ] USBora* Ma ■ "■ H?! IS'. . X. ! USGypsum 3 t Can 2 , 2.40 5 1301. 130'J 130r. I 21'a 20*. 2l'k -I-I 52*. 52’n 52»* MackTrk 1 'A 1 MadFd 1.4: Mad Sq G -t I MagmaC .7 MartinMar 1 I MayDStr^02.1 » AAcDofUkir .60 ' AAerck .72 I Merritt Chap • 32’a iV‘3 32’* 25 3|)<. 38H 3IH + . Withers is general sales man- xnwnqhii*' ager of Buick Motor Division. A ; 31-year veteran with General I Motors, he served as general I manager of United Motors Serv-! ice Before joining Buick almost ; four years ago. I uSPiyyyd 1.20 i US Rob' 2.20 i US Smelt 2 , US Steel 2 ' Unit Whelan American Stocks ‘ VendoCo .40 ] Contt*©! Data Stocks of Local Interest Figures after decirnal points are etghths | .75f . OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS ( CmlHIl Z#m''2 The toHowing ouotetipns Pp not reces* i CrucSteei .10 sariiv represent actual tragsaeftons but j Cwdahy Pk are tntenoed as a gu»de to the approxi-' Curtis Pub ^a*^K( 15 35)6 35 V* : 16 18V* 177/i live -f 2 13)i 13»/* 13»4 + 25 2C7% TO^yi 20)4 14 50'* 50 50'/* + —wu. 3 7«/% 7'/% 7^ - SO 7V^ 20^4 20*6 17 30»/i 30V% 30'/* - 36 33 37% 33 + ♦-1 39)i 39)6 39)6 + « NOON AMERICAN in®Petro?AM5 2 •iO Al ^'"(uittfert tet Class A Diamond Crystal Ethyl Corn. MoAawk Rubbar Co. il'iS !5S DeltaAlr 1.40 .lil IT.; 25.6 27.6 lS.1 OetEdls 1-Det Steel. M Disney 40b Dist lea I N 32 32 -1 • 43*6 43)6 . I 36'* 36'/* - ^ 1 23)- 23% + I ' 36'^ 36*6 + » I 14H !$'/• + t Monsan^ 1.20b Nat Bisc 1. NatCan .401 NCashR 1.2 NDairy 7.40 NatDist ^.7^ NatFuel 1.3 Nat GenI . . NatGyps 2b fstgAB 1.60 ISfel’2“ t 31*6 : 6 ^77H 27 26 96H 94 -N— Lead 2.2St Nat S I Tea J 14.0 157 gow Ch 1 Zinc 1 MY Cent * 4iagM P «o^olk V I duPool 4.50r Chemical Fund 9:34 10.10 14.07 15.38 18.72 20.46 f J6 10.77 17.37 1198 IS AS 17.05 15.97 17,M East Air EastCF 1.49t EasfKo 2.20a Eaton Mfg 2 ElBondS 1.40 Ei A Music Elect Afsoc EIPaaoNG i Emeasohli 1 EmerRad .40 End John ErieLack RR -EvansPd 40r Ffd iMog IJ* 24 51 2 41V* 41Ni 41*4 -f V) 5 31*4 21*4 21*4 40 22’/. 21*4 21*4 - ** 4* 77*4 77 77H + M H 37'^ 37 37V. -HiA ______________ 17 274VI 275*4 274'4 + *4 NorPac 2.a ) 34 ^ 34 34 - *k NSta Pw I *E— '. 41 37*4 17*4. 17*4 * 2 74H 74'/* 74Vj - 21 12**4 111*4 11*V. -........ 45*4 45*4 - ' NorNatGat NwslAirl OccidanI JOr 14 3*4 “3*4 1*. -F V 4 22*4 22*4 22*4 -F * 17 20*4 24v* 20'/> - '/ . 1 41*1 41% 41% F * 1 10’* 10'* 10'^ 1 24’/* 24*4 11*4 -F V Outb Mar .40 I PacTGT .1 20 —F— 57 22% 22 275 t0>« 17 12i« tl 4 l|'4 l»i 12 71% 70* 21 47> 44' I 63)6 61% 63)6 -fi 3 19% 19% 19% -P S4 38% 38'/k 2816 1 SI'/9 51'/i - S4 52 51% 51% + 7 57% 56)6 $7% + If 137% 136)6 137% + 33 53% $3% S3'6 + 10 53)6 53)6 53)6 + 13 39% 39% 39% + % 17 33% 33)6 33% 6 58 51 58 “f % 4f 43)6. 43% 43)6 + % I 48% 48'6 48% - % • 15% 15% 15% 1 30% 30% 30% % — 20 32*4 22'* 32*. I -■ 11'q 11'* ll'l J 21*4 2IH M*. 242 X’. 2**4 30 -t *4 3 S4*« 54'/* 44*. + i4 213 X 2*1........... 35 17'# 17*4 17’* + I* 4 41*4 4044 4)1* F - , I 17*4 17*4 f •OS 41*4 41*4 ^ F. 43'/* 43*4 - I I 40*4 47*4 40*4 F I I 31*4 31*4 31*4 + I ; 40*4 40*4 40*4 F ’ 27 2**4 «'* 2*1* 7 40V, 40'4 40'* F ' —X— 1M 111'* to* 10*'* -)i , Cinerama I F#lS P« .1 GM d«5!Ti Gen Plywd Giant Yel t Wlowlng nnual dividand 4-0*cUrad or paid In 1*42 plus stock dividand. t-Oqciarad or paid so far this year. I-Fund In slock during 1*42, estimated cash value on ei^dlvldend or ax-dlstrlbutlon data. g-Paid last yaar. h—Daelarad ar paid afteC-stock dividand “ ...........- k—Daelarad ar paw this ------- --------,. Daelarad or 1*44 phis stoek dividend. t-Pev-itoek during 1*44. eetlmated cash I ex-divWend or ex-dlitrl0utlon Noble Warstler of Portland, Ind., told police last night that clothing valued at $171 was stolen from his car at Airway Lanes parking lot, 482.S W. Huron, Waterford'Township. Mom's Rummage; Thursday, 9 to 12. Indianwofld and Baldwin. Adv.' Zonta Fair, Wednesday, Oct. 21, 11-8. First Federal Savings and Loan Bldg., W. Huron. —adv. Rummage Sale: Lutheran ... . ^ , Church of the Redeefller, 1800 ’lit ”1^ - *4 W. Maple, Birmingham, Thurs., •\V;''JV’V*I.V;’IJ Oc' 22' 8-5; Fri., Oct. 23, 9-2 ’S^ 'sw 's?; + '*' P'™' Adv. 47'* 44’/# 44’/. - '* I Rummage Sale: October 22, 9 -12. 'St. Andrew’s Church, Hatchery. Road. ' —adv. 30*, XV, 30*4 n I 39Va 39% 39% - % ‘ 'ii;^ I 3% 2% 3% - ! 13 1% 1% 1% “F ^ Pincst Pet 4 RIC Cr^ 3.251 I Scurry Rain 1 1 Signeioil A 1 7 3 Sperry R svt .* Syntax Cp 20g 54 4 Tcchnicol .» * li Un Control X 4* , WebbtKnapp IS 1 STOCK AVIRAGES GTW Trainnto Chicago Will Leave Hour Later Grand Trunk Western Rail-jjpad's train No. 21 to Chicago will leave Pontiac daily at 1:28 p.m., one hour Igter than at present, effective Sunday, Oct. 2S, when much of the nation reverts from daylight to standard time. GTW commuter tchednles will remain the same, according to a spokesman for the railroad. NOON AVERAOES South Lyon Firm Declares Dividend The board of directors of the Michigan Seamless Tube Co., South Lyon, today declared a 25 cent per share cash dividend on the ^ per value corporation stock payable Nov. 20. 1964, to stockholders at the close of business Nov. 5, 1964. * * * The board also declared a 10 per cent stock dividend payable Dec. 18, 1964 to^tockhoiders of December 1964. Fractional shares resulUng from the 10 per ' stock dividend will be paid in cash. This brings the total dividend for 1964 to |1 — the same as last year. manager of Fisher Body since 1959, capping a career which began ia Cleveland in 1924. Appoint^ plant manager there in 1945, he was transferred to the Pontiac plant in 1949 where he was in charge of production and material control and traffic. ★ * * In February 1956 he became senior staff assistant for material handling and traffic activity at the GM Technical Cen-I ter. In OctSber 1959 he was i named to his present position. Treasury Position WAIHIMOTON (AP)-Ttti CINI pmltkm t ttw Trtuury ooxnparqd with c4rr*t-ondhtg dett i y—r 4oo: Oct. IS, t*44 Od. II, I 4,l3],*e*,2HJt t Sa2*.SII,S01.ll Dcpetlt* FIkiI Ycir July I- “•■J,474,ll4.S* 31,122.431,114. FIk4I Year— ---------- 3r43*,32*,**l22 WlttMi X-Totil ,1M,34S,4|J.I2 IJ,Sn,3)*.2t*.M 1 S;M los 41*4 41*4 ^ F '* Act. or MCurltm cuumeO bV iueb^ tl 43*4 ^ «V* - H P«nm. fn-Foretgn isiuq .tubitet tg. Hi « S4l{ »*4 Ml* F ttiicrnt cquaiiutkM t«x. ^ 443.2 IM.I 141.. _____ ________ T42* IX.2 3X.0 « BwWi ....... "i SI:' Iftf m X seSxw 5F» r- Iffi IS;? 'HT^rSr” . 113.41F«.X «*jl*F0.St I3J0-0.M *2XF0.1S M.« . *4.22-0.04 ■OND AVURAOes W by The Agsociawd Prtu N I* I* I* I* Railf ma. UtH. Fo*. L. V Wwk A« I2.t IM.J Monm Aga |24 !«.* Year Age 11.4 101.4 1*44 hwb It.* tOJ IS? til; 8:! Hi 8:1- 8.; _ 8:! oT? **.S S7.3 M.4 Snowsuif Lost jn City Trash, Owner Sought Pontiac's Department of Public Works today found itself in the strange position of seeking the owner of a snowsuit. Clyde Christian, DPW superintendent, said the light blue snowsuit, size 12, was collected accidentally along with some resl-dent’s trash. * ★ ♦ The resident called the DPW about the suit. Workers searched and found it, but no one got the resident’s name or address. Hence, Christian has requested that the. owner of a lost snowsuit come to the DPW and claim it. THE rONTlAC PRESSriLESDAV, OC’TOWKl^ 20, 1064 TWKxrv-i- rvE Says Barry, Keating Hurl JFK Policy in Cuba Crisis NEW YORK, Oct. ,20 (UPI)-Rqger Hllsman, former state department intelligence chief, yesterday accused Sen. Barry Goldwater and Sen. Kenneth B. Keating of almost upsetting President Kennedy’s policies during the Cuban missile crisis. Hillsn^n said that Ooldwater, the edP Republican aspirant, and Keating, running for reelection to the U.S. Senate, had engaged in "drum beating,” criticism and belligerent calls for action throughout the Cuban ' crisis and on into the following year when the missiles were already removed. Hilsman’s charges were in reply to an article by Keating in‘the current Issue oi;, Look magazine. In his article, Keating claimed siles crisis, from October on into 1963, long after the missiles were gone. Sen. Keating and his coHeague, Sen. Goldwater, joined at every opportunity in criticizing what they termed ‘do-nothing’ policies and in issuing belligerent calls for ‘action.’ “In fact Sen. Keating and Sen. Goldwater's drumbeating more than'^once came close to upsetting President Kennedy’s policy of firmness and restraint - a policy that succeeded both in getting the Soviet missiles out of Cuba and in doing so without war.” Hilsman took the opportunity to praise the role of former attorney general Robert F. Kennedy in the Cuban crisis whom he said had “eloquently and persuasively argued against precipitate ‘action’—against surprise the Kennedy administration had bombing of the missile sites and done nothing about detailed in-' favor,of blockade ...” formation he said hte-had ob-| Kennedy is. Keating’s Demo--nained as early as OctJBehl 1962, ^ratic opponent in the race for about the Russian missile bases ^ Senate seat from New in Cuba. * ; York. “The facts that were avail-1 able to me at that time as di-| VV 017100 11071 rector of intelligence of the state 1 department were somewhat dif-' in Aiifo C"'rncn ferenl,” Hilsman said. 'wfUifl NO EVIDENCE Dismissal Denied in Baby Death GRAND RAPIDS (AP) - A motion to 'dismiss a murder charge against Mrs. Irene Lau-benthal, 39, of Grand Rapids in the death of her 3-menth-oid daughter, dill, was denied Mon-.day in Superior Court. Judge Claude VanderPloeg gave no explanation for his ruling which ended approxinjately 45 minutes of oral argummt by attorneys for prosecution and defense. Mrs. Laubenthal, mother o^ six children, remains free on^ $10,000 bond to await arraignment. Court-appointed defense counswl Harold Sawyer Jr. indicated he would appeal the denial to the State Supreme Court. Pro.secutor James K. Miller said, meanwhile, that arrlTign-ment of the woman would be sought next Monday. NO CAUSE OF DEATH Sawyer contended in his motion for dismissal that the prosecution presented no cause of d^th, no evidence that death resulted from a crime and no showing of probable cause ■against the mother. The burned body of the baby, seventh child in the Laubenthal family, was discovered Sept. 16 of 970 ; in a trash box outside the city’s northeastern limits. Mrs.' Laubenthal was bound Candidates Set to Talk Issues Gov. George Romney and Congressman-at -large Neil Staebler, candidates for governor, plus senatorial candidates Elly Peterson and incumbent Philip A. Hart will discuss campaign issues tomorrow at the Oakland Citizens League’s Political Forum. The session begins at 7 p.m. in the Gold Room at Oakland University. Others scheduled to appear include Ihth District Congressional candiates Frank Sler-awski (D) and incumbent William S. Broomfield (R), and 19th district candidates for Congress Richard D. Kuhn (R) and Billie S. Farnum |D). Brodmfield, however, will not attend the forum. He will leave tonight for Washington for a personal briefing by Secretary of State Dean Rusk on the crisis in Ru.s.sia and Red China. * ★ * ' A telegram from Hu.sk to Broomfield said; “I would be most anxious to give you the full benefit of our views ” on the Khrushchev overthrow and the detonation of an atomic bomb by the Communist Chinese. FORUM SPONSORS | Eighteen organizations are sponsoring the forum, designed to give citizens* the chance to discuss issues in a two-way exchange with the candidates. Break-In Try Deaths in Pontiac Area Icity; THOMAS BOSQUEZ Requiem Mass for Thomas Bosquez, 62, of 380 Judson will be ’offered at 9 a.m. tomorrow in St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church with burial in Mt. Hope XJemetery. The Rosary will be recited at 8 p.m. today at the Melvin A. Schutt Funeral Home. Mr. Bosquez, a member of St. VincenMe Paul, died unexpectedly Sunday. Surviving are his wife, Juanita, and six children, Mrs. Mary Gonzales in Florida, Raymond of Clarkston, Joseph of Detroit, Jessie, Mrs. Francis Tibbits and Robert, all of Pontiac. A sister also survives. RONALD A. GREGORY Service for Ronald A. Gregory, 46, of 1749 Scott Lake, Waterford Township, will be 11 a.m. Thursday in Voorhees-Siple Chapel with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Gregory, an employe of Pontiac Motor Division, died yesterday after a three-week ill-ne.ss. Surviving are his wife; Patsy; his mother, Mrs. Cora MacKay of Pontiac; two daughters, Mrs. Nancy Buttram of Royal Oak and Bonnie S., at home; two„ grandchildren; a brother^ Donald of Keego Harbor; and a sis- Suh'iving is his sister-in-law,! Mrs Floyd Guernsey, with /Y\en lieiO whom he made his home. i Actor Jack K«lly Divorced by Wife LOS ANGEI.es ijn - Actor Jack Kelly, once costar of the television series “Maverick, t ^ satisfactorv cuo- suspected that the Soviets might Cenerai Hos- putting missiles in Cuba pU,, ^jth injuries suffered In, there was no evidence available accident yesterday at! ovqr to Superior Court after po- to the U.S. government or any ^^lizabeth Lake Road and West j jice court examination Oct. 6. pn of its officials demonstrating^ Huron in Waterford Township, i the murder charge. Sawyer won this until the U2 flight on Oct. 14. Hofman's car, traveling | her release from custody on a “Second, to my knowledge, ®^st on Elizabeth l.ake Road, I writ of Habeas Corpus heard a Keating made no effort to give I collided with a westbound auto I week a«o by Circuit Court the U.S. government the In- driven by Isorne Farmilde, 22, Judge Fred N. Seari. formation obtained by him... : of 339 S. Jessie. . ' r>i,i u .u information whichwould have farmilde told police that Mrs. ^'^'fboma University ^as the -------------------- ------------------- helped enormously in guiding “Hofman’s car turned in front of i»st football team to win the divorced yesterday by ac-the U2’i. his at the intersection. The worn- national college «bampionship tress May Wynn. ’ . ! an was unable to make a state- two years in succession in 195.5-1 Hie couple married Oct. 14, "Sen. Keating has refused to ment at the scene due to in- -56. No team has since been able 1956, and separated last Feb 24 give anyone the source of his juries. , to repeat. i They had no children information, although if his in-i— -------------------- . . . . ------ _ __________^ formation was in fact something I more than nimOr, knowing the I ,. n • r source of it obviously would | Orlo N©WS Bri6TS have helped ofiil an urgent na-■ tional security need to. do all we can to improve our intelligence gathering efforts." Hilsman said that the Keating article hints that someone down the line had kept higher officials in the dark. "This is a serious charge,” Hilsman said, "yet he refused to identify the official with whom he claimed to have ‘verified' his information. "Throughout the Cuban mis- 2 Jailed for Smuggling Arms STOCKHOLM, Sweden lAFl — Two Swedish lieutenant^ of the U.N. Cyprus peace force were sentenced to two years at hard labor Monday and stripped of their rank for . smuggling arms to Turkish Cypriots. They ^ said thev acted from idealistic i Oct. SO, the Foreign Miiiislrx motives. announced Monday night. A l.ars W. Lindh, 27, and Helge I spokesman said the visit is Hjalmarsson, 28, were caught in! "aimed at improving economic the act in northwest Cyprus late | and cultural relations, in September and brought home | ‘discUSS EVERYTHING’ for trial JOHN HAYDEN PONTIAC TOWNSHIP - Requiem Mass for John Hayden, 79, of 2272 Dexter will be sung at -11 a.m, Thursday at St. Michael’s Catholic Church, Pontiac. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Hayden died yesterday after a brief illness. The Rosary will be recited at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the William R. Potere Funeral Home, Roch^ ester. Surviving are his wife, Anna; a son, Joseph of Pontiac; two daughters, Mrs. Kenneth Har-bron and Mrs. Lee Wilcox, both of Rochester; a brother, Lawrence of Attica; six granchil-dren; and nine great-grandchildren. I-EO J. HOPKINS ROSE TOWNSHIP - Mr. Leo f Hopkins, 77, of 6779 Big Trail died yesterday after a short illness His IxkIv is at the Dryer Funeral Hpme in Holly. JOSEPH MtCONACIHK INDEPENDENCE T 0 W N-SHIP — Service for Joseph Mc-Conachie, 79. of 4405 Oak Vista will be 2 p.m.. tomorrow at Sharpe-Goyette Funeral Home, Claj-kston. Burial will follow in Lakeview Cemetery, Clarkston. i Mr. McConachie died unexpectedly Sunday.. Several nieces and nephews survive. FREDERICK W. SCHULTZ OXFORD 'rOWNSHiP - Serv- i ice for Frederick W. Schultz. 72, of 9.57 Malone^ \vill be 2 p.m.! 'ITiursday at Bos,sardei Funeral Home with burial in Chri.stian Memorial Estates, Roc-hester. Mr. Schultz died ye.sterday after an illne.ss of several months. Surviving are his wife, Myrtle and six daughters, Mrs. Leona Posey of Breckenridge, Mrs. Shirley Pielack of Utica, -Mrs. Doris McKinney of Detroit, Mrs. Eleanor Cardona of Milford,; Mrs. Lorraine Smith of M u s-kegon and Mrs. Dorothy Price i of Oxford. , Also a brother, Otto of Mil-1 ford; two srsters; 22 grandchii-j dren; and five great-grandchil-1 dren. Ponflac Police discovered a break-in attempt in progress early this morning and after a running chase arre.sled two suspects Held at the County Jail for investigation of breaking and entering are Frank John.son, 37, 569 S. Je.ssie, and Clarence Montgomery Jr.,., 22, of 473 S. Paddock. Officers were alerted to the break-in attempt at George's Market at 462 S. Saginaw at l:t8 a.m. Upon arrival at the scene they saw three suspects run from the rear of the store. Offic>ers fired warning shots in the air in ^heir efforts to stop the trio. Two were caught and t h e third member is still being sought. Officers found a 13- by 16-inch hole in the rear of the store. A crow bar. tire iron ,and brass mallet were also found, at the Romney Son Has Fund-Raising Skill George Romney's 17-year-old son. Milt, has picked up $2,000 for Republican campaign efforts by the simple measure of handing but letters to the Romney's Bloorhfield Hills neighbors. Romney told newsmen yesterday that Mitt had passed out the letters in .September. * * * The letters had return forms attached s|>ecifying whether individuals want to donaie time or money to the campaign. The Governor said that Mitt stopped by campaign headquarters last week and offidafs told him $2,000 had been donated as a result of the 50 or 60 letters. “Seeing how the Turks werei j rp. , . 1. ky ,up.rk,r ‘Everything will be dis- Star Sees 'Regular' Men as Blessings of. Nature By EARL WILSON PARIS-^’An actor cannot be a man ... he cannot have real masculinity,” Melina Mercouri' the Grecian sizzler of “Never .on Sunday” and “Topkapi," declared with a defiant toss of her chin-chilla hat as we were lunching-h er e at tt)« Relai.s-Plaza with all heads and ears turned to f ^ » ..see and overhear the courageous star. “An actor must be a monster. To m^ke 8 life with one would be two monsters living together. Imagine an actor doing a woman’s work, always looking in the mirror. You look in your mirror if you’re a woman and the man’s looking in your mirror at the same time. UGH!” Brave Miss Mercouri admitted that several prominent actors may resent her re-WILSON marks. She admitted that to her, masculin- ity and man may be different than by other people’s definl-' tlons. “To me," she .said, growing enthusiastic, “a real man is the greatest thing God ever made. “By masculinrty, I don’t mean having a lot .of girls Mround you . . . being a Don Juan. “I mean loyalty, courage, honesty. I mean a man putting his arms around you, making you feel you’re a woman ... not punching you on the back like a pal.” ★ ■fP' ★ Miss Mercouri then mentioned Tony Perkins and Sir Laurence Olivier as among the loyal, courageous, honest friends she would place in the masculinity class. Other stars she has worked with \>r known well she shrugged off as “phonies” or “being unhappy” or “egotistical.” | ★ ★ ★ H I THE MIDNIGHT EARL IN NEW YORK . |. | Van Johnson’s Lftln Vi debut brought out Joan Crawfeaif, Bea Lillie, Jill St. John, June Havoc and Jean Pierre Aumont Van, sprightly and boyish and showing off his bright red sox, told the audience, “I proposed to Esther Williams in swimming pools in so many films that | got water on» the knSe.” He answered applause with, “You’ve made one of June Allyson’s old boy friends very happy.” Sack Carter replaced Gordon MacRae (a laryngitis victim) in the Empire Rfn. show with an hour’s rehearsal, and was great with Sheila MacRae. Carter haijalso subbed earlier for Johnny Carson at a luncheon) . . . Carol mrnett’s sister Chris will marry actor Will Hntchins. ★ ★ ★ , »k WISH I’D SAID THAT: Rock ’n’ Roll is good for kids. By the time they’re through twisting and shaking, they’re too pooped to go out and steal hubcaps.—Bob Orben. REMEMBERED. QUOTE; “The human race has only one really effective weapon, and that is laughter.”-Mark Twain. EARL’S PEARLS: ATocal man says he’s definitely in favor of pay-’TV; “We certainly ought to be paid for watchinjj some of those shows.” A restaurant owner tells us he believes in reincarnation: i “You ought to see some of my waiters come to life at quitting { time." . . . lhat’s earl, brother. I ^ (TM.HM IrnSIcalt, IMc.) I ' ■...... ' ■ , % I . (Greek Cypriots), it was like ■giving help to drowning people or to starving children,” Hjalmarsson said during the trial. Soviet military aid to' Cyprus will probably come up. 'Sgt. Bijko' Fall Guy Dies After Illness SARANAC LAKE. N Y. (UPI) MANILA (AP) - U.S. Ma rines landed at Leyte Island! today in. a reenactment of the | landing 20 years ago that began the liberation of the Philippines from Japanese occupation. * | President Diosdado Macapa--------Maurice Goiifield, the roly- gal said the anniversary re-1 poly comic, who gained fame as minds Filipinos that they could , pvt. Doberman, a member of not have regained their freedom q. ,, ; without the United States and ^^ *" ! the late Gen. Douglas Mac-j^«‘- television series, , Arthur. . I yesterday after a long ill-1 * * * j ness. He was 51. Macapagal said the Philip-j * * * pines has the assurance of Pres- { Authorities at the Will Rogers ident Johnson that the United ; Memorial Hospital said Gosfield States will respond immediately! had suffered from a series oT to any attack on this country. | ailments including diabetes and ----- heart trouble and other compii- ROME (AP) - The last Sun- cations, dav of next month, Nov. 29, is i In a career covering 32 years, the day English is to he substi- Gosfleld had appeared on ra-tuted for Latin at Mass in most ‘••O; television movies and the of theTloman Catholic churches IcgitinOate theater, in the United States. — ter. MRS. EDWARD JERSTAD Service for Mrs. Edward i Ida M. I J e r s t a d. 67. of 6685 Win-diate, Waterford Township, will be 1 p.m. Thursday in the Coats Funeral Home, Waterford Township, with burial in Lakeview Cemetery. Clarkston. Mrs. Jerstad died yesterday after an illne.ss of two weeks. Surviving are her hu.sband; a son, Homer Squire of Pontiac; seven grandchildren; four si.s-ters, Mrs. William Preston of Waterford: Viola, in Indiana, Mrs. Marion Biggie and M r s. Frank Truett. both of Pontiac. Two brothers also survive. THEODORE STRONjB Service for Theodore Strong, 92. of 1665 Inverness,' Sylvan Lake, will be at 1:30 p.m. Thursday at Donelson-Johns Funeral j Home with burial in Ping Lak6 I Cemetery, West Bloomfield Township. Mr. Strong died this morning. MRS. CECIL E. WEBER The Altar Society of Our Ijidy of Refuge Catholic (!hurcli will offer prayers at 7:.30 tonight In the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor, for Mrs, Cecil E. (Hdvel M.i Weber, 65, of 1382 Hiller, Waterford Township The Rosary will follow at 8 p.m. ” Service will be at 10 a.m. tomorrow in Our Lady of Refuge Church with burial in Lakeview Cemetery, Clarkston. Mfs. Webhr died Sunday. JOHN BARNOWSKY | LAKE O^ION - Service for John Barnowsky, 64. of 688 Case-mer will be 11:15 a m. Thiirs-1 day at St. Joseph Catholic i Deviating from its general pol-, authorized the clerk to adver-(Tiurch. Burial will be in Ox- icy of accepting low bids. the!li'*^ for bids for furniture for liird C-metery. Walerfcrd To»n.,iijp Bi«ird la.sl I "" admini-' Mr, Bprn6»,ky died Sdndey;„, ,„ i »lr.li« bdi^^^ after a long illness. , ,. , lumpletion Dec. 18. Parish Rosary will be recited “ town.ship car to the sec-1 7j,e bids will be opened Nov. at 8 p.m. tomorrow at Alton’s ‘ Funeral Home. er warranty 4erm.. Sicily Paintings Stolen PALERMO, Sicily (UPI) -Two valuable i4th Century paintings have been stolen from a corridor of Sicily’s regional parliament building, once a palace of Norman kings, police reported yesterday. Adjourn Examination i for Accused Ax Killer Examination in Trhy Municipal Court of accused ax slayer William G. Gravlin liegan yesterday and was adjourned until Friday at 1:30 p in. Gravlin is cliarged with first-degree murder in the ax. hummer and shotgun killings of his wife, their 4-year-old daughter and five children on Sept. 29. NOW-SHE’S "SPECIALLY-TRAINED* Look for the Trxining Certificite (zrned only by Manpower White Glove Girls.'I'hij certificate meani you liave (lie very best in temporary ortice lielp, MANr’OWER Tha vary Iasi In Tamparary Nalp 14 S. CASS 332-8386 Important News ... for Pontiac Investors! Walling, Lerchen & Co. now brings you the Dow-Jones Closing Averages, plus closing prices on sixly-sia leading stocks, daily, at 5:54 P.M., over Radio Station WHON. Pontiac. . .I4e board a sister; a brother; and nine awarded the contract for fleet grandchildren. coverage for a one year period to the LaZelle Insurance HERMAN L. GUERNSEY Agency whose bid of $li,873 was HOLLY—Service for Herman the lowest of five submitted. L. Guernsey, 87, of 6710 Elm * * * will be 2 p. m. Thursday at the j Board members approved re-Dryer "Funeral Home. Burial| zoning of a 2-lot parcel on Eliz-wiil be in Lakeside Cemetery. ! abeth Lake Road near Cooley Mr. Guernsey died yesterday; Lake Road from Commercial 1 He was a member of the Fen-tort Bible Church. 5 planned o In other business the board STOCKS, BONDS AND MUTUAL FUNDS CALL FE^-9117 ALL ORDERS EXECUTED AT REGULAR COMMISSION RATES , “PilMliac't Oldmit Firm” 818 COMMUNITY national 6ANK BLDG. Gear. Department Manager Qualified by experience to successfully supervise over-oil operations of gear depxjrtment; cutting, lapping, green and hard testing of hypoid, bevel, spirol and ongle gears. ThorougK background in geor development most essentiol. Attractive position, with excellent benefits, for quolified man. All inquiries treated confidcntioHy. For information, telephone Mr. Morth, 826-6000 or opply Rockwell-Standard Corporation Clork Are. neor W. Fort St Detroit, Michigan ) An Equal Opportunity Employer periiKl .so that you can have your (jue.stions an.swered then and there. Piefre.shment.s will' be .served. But our limited .seating capacity means that you must mako your re.servatioiis early. Ileturn this coupon or call MI 7-.‘5:iOH or JO 6-6.”>()0 today' to reseiwe your seats. }so cost or obligation, of course. ' ' • Please reserve ( ) .seats for v'our MUTUAL FUND FACT FORUM to be held October 28. 1964, at 7:30 ' o'clock in the Birmingham Community House. GOODBODY&CO. « ONOWN STRCKT (CQnNCR OF FIKWCO) oviB n emess th«ou«hout tnIi nation 1 -y ■ TWKXTV-SIX ’ Births THE PONTIAC ^RESS. TUKShAY, OCTOBER 20, Death Notices Tile following is a list of re- barnoaskv cent Pontiac area births as re- « corded at the Oakland Count\ * Clerk’s Office (bv name of father); , k.r'wr‘* ehllllp w. Nokir. 313 Scott Lakf rwwtk> Rot I AnnouncaiiMBts 3 M •i SHO REWARD FOR INFORAAATION 7 3Q p.m.. Auburn HcIgMi art*. •37 CoughlM Orjvt. UL f wi. ET OUT OF DEBT ON A PLAN you can a or MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS • 33 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG. 6 Htip Wonted Mole ^l| EXPERIENCED GAS STATION AT-|piZZA SOY, ttndani, muit ba abit to do llohl lu I- rapairs. 473 WSI. 5f»5 Highland Rd. Apply In ,parun, _ Da Lltai Nolp Wonted Fomolt ^ 7 Holp Wonjtd BEAUTY ■"‘OPERATOR, RXPERI- . For Information < Pace, FE 5-43 tonight only. BOOKKEEPER, ,r V ol Dei A Diet Tiibleli Only w,-! CiiO'O It Simms Brothers Drugs . i, c . 1. 1.^ brick layers, dls^ S'^' I BOX RFPIJES I -Her 7, M7 asec “r’^ci Mri''"\Car'J I .At 19 a.m. today there | b “ I '•'‘P''es at The j B''..??' j Press Ofiice in th- ' ' ■- (or Intervifw. OR 4-0427. g GAS station attendant with |. Mechanical experlenco. . $1.75 an c hour, vacation, ^spitalilatlon, re-'isTso *W.' 9"*'Mife“" MobHr'sieluwi Orion. MY 3-U3I 3 I E LEADERS, s end machiny exoerlmtntal ma- Fomolo 7 loitractiMi Schi^ r 12 Mila, LI 74S3S. _________MIPS BABY SITTEB, OVER II, REFfS ancai. rallatna. days. OR 3-4XI4. | BABY SITTElC N(6hTS, 4 DAYS. Will taka aonwona^to Ilya In, 2 chlldran. 343-0843. ■ BABY SITTER, DAYS, I C H I U fa. 474-0403, aWar 4:20.____ ___________ apply Blll't. : STEADY V GENERAL MECHANIC FOR LARGE 3-3443 < Nor-West Tool . & Machine Co. rand Itiver _ I rIal estate ooH salesman Need 2 full time sales pm Plenty of leads and fkxtr time. SUB perlenced In bus--------- BABYSitTER, ............... union Lake area, ^f764._ BARMAID DAYS," GOOD WAGES, SANDERS-NftDS SALESLADIES FOR OUR MARKET OUTLETS IN; Union Laka svivan Lake d Township attention „ DAY CLASSES START NOV. 2 AUTO MECHANICS Automatic Tronsmissions ENROLL nOW-BEJERKING mechanics NEEDED Wolverine School :_Spart-A-Rama Lounge, SS4 Oakland BEAUTY operator, WALLED J.ake iollowing. a34-4MI a^34jU02 janoERS STORE 23 apply in person lliam E. Frenklin 734 Gen mar L. Jeflerj, 343 Rutgen iri Fortier, 354 Whillemore. Donald L. Woodin. 34 Florence. Thomas E. Amos, 37 Haiel Gary A. Ertourjh, 3015 N, Squirrel. '—ier 45 N..Paddock. Press Ofiice in the fol- i I lowing boxes: ui iC’/l aK a'r^ I J. J, g, 10, 13, 14. 16. I j 24. li. 33. 44 . 46, 57. 59, . i 64 . 65 . 70. 72, 84 . 85, 87. I G^'elr ^!?°ri,^h“ i 91. 95. 97. 101, 103, 105. I i ! Funeral Directors 4 , C. J. GODHAROl FUNERAL HOME Keego Harbor. Ph. 4I3-02M COATS FUNERAL HOME - DRAYTON PLAINS OR 3-7757 CHANGING JOBS? luld thi, be you? Married, under Bood work record, not enough 500 up annueUy.*Vhon'e’oR*3-4M5 CIVIL :nginei off Sunday i ,, encev S40. Ml c- CAREi^R OPPORTUNITY i. i qualified woman insurance F E oftlce rr I Pontiac. ... TO SERVICE WA-i dertianding in „ Bloomfield area. . i vacation benefits. i ---tending of insurance I Reply to PonHac_Press Box CURB GIRLS be 21-45 years ot steady full-tima 4:30-10:30, guarantead Municipal development In a p TVea" ;?Ser?inre"?eq”l7’tS“w suDervIsorv ability In design 4 _ CONTACT C I T $50-4100 weekly. Call alter 4 pm. Mr. Rounds OL 1-301).__________: HANDY MAN FOR CARPENTER' • part lime work. Write box »6 Pontiac Press. _________ ’ iNSTALLAtiON MAN WANTED, TN-stalllng water soltencrs, good pay working conditions. Ap p I y .....................- '.0., 2)4 W. Bl^lnoham; ' (^ RELIABLE YOUNG MEN INTER- Free maals ' L esied In becoming waiters or bar- Apply In person. Ellas Bros., Big tenders. Contact Union Office, Lo- Boy. Telegraph and Huron, also col 7»4, 313 Community National 24« Dixie Hwy. a„u --- .» ---------------------.. EXCELLENT WAGES AND OPPORTUNITY TO WORK NEAR HOMEr FRED SANDERS Candy • Bakery affti Ice Cream TELEPHONE SURVEY * 3»*Years!'Sam# Location 1400 W. Fort, Datrpll, WO 3-04W finTsh“high SCHOOL At Hg^ Diploma awarded. Write or ptiona lor FREE booklet. Nat Iona School ol Homo Study, 3T7fl Wound u Road, Dept. PP. werran, Michigan. " Phone_SL 7^342»._____________ I Work Wontod Molt H :a i CARPENTER > AND . ALUML num siding, kitchens, iddlt^i and reatkm rooms. FE 443?0 and A C C 0 IS of accounting, taxes, c tuiramants. Box 7,' CARPENTER VKDRK ^k. Pontiac area EXPERIENCED TRUCK- DRIvtR wv Hollv. aopiv In lent work. FB 2-5W.-- Cooley Soft Water. i Cora MacKa i. Nancy BulIra D. E. Pursley Roy W. Mabry, 3 Max R. Main. 3054 Aut M BLOOMFIELD HILLS Russell H. Fisher, 44f5 Allison B. Eicher, 1415 Lenox. BIRMINGHAM David A. Mortimer,. 1575 Shipman Joseph B. Oepmean, 160e0 Buckin Joe E. Mariana 1591 Humphrey ^uglas Herbert C. Ashcraft Jr., 1803 Bah L i^ockenour, 1630 H Joseph H. Schmid. 1901 Yosemite DRAYTON PLAINS John $. Shanks. 3720 Embarcadero ion Biggio, Mm Cohrs/ also ' I Qrandchildren. rm irthe DONELSON-JOHNS ' ' with Rev. funeral HOME fo*m Pi'rk "Designed tor Funerals" HUNTOON Road Lake FUNERAL HOME ed wile ol Serving Pontiac tor 50 years molher ol ’* Oakland Ay#. FE 2-0ll» ‘Tn'elm°a' SPARKS-GRIFFIN a Bennett. FUNERAL HOME' in Flaherty: "Thoughtful Service"_FE 2-5*41 anS^rren ' VOORHEES'-SIPLE sry will be FUNERAL HOME FE 2-»37l I the Flum- Established Over 40 Yearly J 'l5 'J'm"*aN f®f* A-A --- --- ^jmetery, oak. $150 a grave. a84-47l5.__ y. a GRAVE LOTS - $400 I- Perry Mount Park Cemetery >f____, FE 4eM2 aHer 6 p.m. WHITE CHAPEL C E M E f E R Y : — Garden of the Messiah, 4 lots, J $250 each. FE 4-1519 or •3a-2439. n Goodrich. _ M WHITE CHAPEL-dAKLANO HILL^. 1 Choice gravA. $50 op. TYIer 4'-8040. James D. Prokos. 3611 Breaker FARMINGTON David W. Johnston, 21797 Waldron 33911 Macomb L Scott, 29601 Middlebelt Worden, 33541 Rhonswood .hoenbero, 33515 Stale I. Reske. 21632 Jacksonvii and Charles R. Kiebi er'^dnd nine grandchildr service will be held October 21 at 1 p.m. at Funeral Home, 2125 12 chre Cemetery, South ly Beach, Flori-pd husband of dear father of Ann) Retztatt WjKinesday. Road, Sepul- I PIECE COMBO Not fock and roll. Availabla for club work, receptions, wedd^ings, parties# etc. FE ^Y gTrl OR “woman needing JOSEPH. 4405 Oak dence lownship; a by several nieces Wednesday. October I, indepen- dances. Classes i nephew. Phone 335-0372. _ .. .. -.’*2 p.m“ lost and Found 5 Govette Funeral “* * ATTENTION PRIMROSE BOWLERS CAN YOU WORK A PART TIME j JOB^AFTER 6 P.M., $200 PER MONTH. CALL OR 4-0666 5 P.M. TO 7 P.M. FOR INFORMATION_ Offset Pressmen Immediate Openings': At LTV Michigan Immediate openings ovoil-oble for Chief 24 Offset Pressmen. Must hove minimum of 2 years, experience and be able to do own set-ups and make-ready. Stripping experience helpful but not required. Day shift only. U. S. CITIZENSHIP REQUIRED Apply in person, Monday through Friday, 8 o. m. to 3 p. m. ot LTV Missile Plant, North Gate, Von Dyke near 16 Mile Rood. h mechanical abilit ichine shop ex^rien II 41220 ^ Ext. I. Immediate Opportunity for Executive Salesmen SALESMAN Full time men's clothing, e.per benefits!’ * * APPLY IN PERSON 4:30 TO 9:3 ROBERT HALL CLOTHES _ 200 NORTH SAGINAW_ Salesman Building ji^oteriols (Home Improvement) Plumbing ond Heating We need experienced salesmen who need to earn good money on o full - time year - around basis. Many company benefits. Paid vacations, mony opportunities for advancement. A p p I y personnel deportment between 9:30 0. m. ond 9:00 p. m. doily. Montgomery Ward COMPETENT MIDOLEAGED WDM MUST wlklTRESS, FULL -TIME EVENING CASHIER. BOOKKEEPER, have bookkeeping and lyp,.,» «»- - perlence, knowledge ol relalllno J>F*V">n . ____ helpful. Excellent working condh WAITRESS WANTED NIGHTS, ' nonj. Call Ml 4J^313Jor Interview. , joe'» Coney Island, 1451 S. Tele-DENTAL ASSISTANT: NO EVENING graph, FE 3-9120 CLEANING ■ ----- ----- to wAifREss WITH grIll cooking ODD JOBS, PART’tIMI WORK. •« 483-0995 _ _______ ' Work Wanted Fenwlt^ 1$"' CHRISTIAN MIDDLE-AGED LADY - •---‘'^Ing or caring CaM OR 4-1234. ILL WASHING. Pontiac Prats Box li Go^ working hours Dining Room *SKCc7 wor?'-WAITRESSES ..... 73-709$^ and recepWo» w To do f. 2 or-3 rr TED'S WOODWARD .at SQUARE L DOMESTIC: 5-OAY LIVE INi IRONINGS IN MY HOMETTSRAY- PART- Ion area. Or 3-4731.________ ONE DAY IRONING MRS. McCOWAN Fg *-1471 I’bir Son» washing; ironing IN HOME. AL-«, baby .ming. FE_M»I4^_______________ write f. u. DOX ov, Rochester, VVHITE LADY WANTS HOUSE Mich cleaning by hour, Exp., Ref., a*2- WANTED: TRAINED LABORATORY 5454 .........._________ !nT'ofnce,'“«mrci"?ic.LV?“ Building Scrvico-Svpplitf 13 bookkeeping e aling i , GENERAL II 434 7443. BUILDERS SUPPLIES AND STRUCTURAL STEEL CINDER AND CONCRETE BLOCK ^ TRANSIT MIX CONCRETE f 1993 PONTIAi;.^^ORIVE, PONTIAC ' fM9$- Bridal consultant. Earn- - Call Collect WO 3 . EXCELLENT MULTI ■ MILLION DOLLAR GROUP EXPANDING in the .must be i> or older and mecnani catiy inclined. 5999 Andarsonv"' B Rb.a Waterford Pontioc area. Positions —sHOE SAIeImaN “ open for 3 men. P/evious ^sm'olrS^anJTri-t?™"^^^ S.I., .xp,ri,„c. h.ipf„i -||xeSMAN but not necessary. Our p.rt time, men s Clotning exp, enced prelerred. many employ present men ore averaging $200 to $400 per APPLY IN PERSON, 9 3B9 30 ROBERT HALL CLOTHES 4) DIXIE HIGHWAY, CLARKSTON Rejeri^es required. 424rt797, DUE TO RELOCATION OF NEW .. , ,,, . , store we can use 3 wonwn who Help Wanted • . . _-r_________ I'l’t!',, ‘/1m"* « Boiineii Sendee 15 Fus'»"*r»' «ll rE A GOOD PERMANENT BOOK-3-3*53 HO a.m.^r 3-5 p.m. keeping position available DIGNIFIED POSITION-PLEASANT Peloskev. Michigan (in (he - • ■ • - ■■ ■ - ol the ski areal Must be vwii p"Kni,.-c'F''4jieV versed on ell phases ol generel _ Ehone^e 4^L_____________ snHe''*w"® seirrr«pec1id!''^^ Dreismakiii)| I Tailoring 17 experience and relerances. Reply ELDERLY" LADY TO HELP WITH :_____ * Light hou^work and 3 smaii^. BLOOD UONORS pVe1swiak.N^^TaTl6r.n6- AND tn«. wages. 4.3:4751. ””” URGENTLY NEEDED EXPERIENCED WAITRESS, APPLY RH Positive | 4 OO SEWING AND ALTERATIONS in person 1745 N. Telegraph RH Neg. S7.00, SIO.M * SI3.M Clarkslon area. MA 5-2393 “EXPERIENCED SALESLADY *^"^"9947 Lnndscaping “ 18-A For ready and custom made drop- 14 S. Casa ' . ~ ary dept. Apply personnel olllce Mon. thru Fri„ 9 a m-4:30 p. m. TONY'S CUSTOM LAWN WORK — Waite's, Inc. Wed., 1 p. m.-7 p. m. ______anywhere.................. EXPERIENCED'SALEsIaDIES FOR COUPLES - FuLl'o'R part time 334-4934.. sportswear and dresses. Full or tor laniterlal s ' * ' part-time. Apply in parson. Bur ------- Ion's Apparel.'75 N. Saginaw. ___ _________ .. EXPERIENCED BEAUTY OPERA- »r over. Full gnd part time. Hourly CAN TAKE ONg P tor. 332-4IM. rale 334-«31l. Iwnar or parmane, Housewives" mov.SK ™;S5-so». A l'-^U.oC?W 1 V omy Cars, 2MS Dixie Hwy. Rochester. Licensed. 4I3-350* retired"or SEMIRETIRED MovIng and Trucking 22 LTV Oakland, 1-10 a portunities. Lead Program. Complete training pro-' We are taking applications for port time and Christmas help. If you can work 5 to 9 in the evenings and all day Saturdgy.-we will troin you for soles work. Apply personnel department between 9:30 o.m. and 9:00 p.m. daily. i,o!!iiP .WANJEO: APF E PONTIAC PRESS MOVING SERVICE.' REASON-la raJ«J=E J-^._FEJ-3*09._ Bob's Von Servica MOVING AND STOIMOE REASONABLE RATES Complala Insurance Seles Help, Mole-Female 8-A pointing t Decererting 23 Ful?Or‘'pa*rt‘fimr"^ '^FeSw5 n, A-t PAINTING AND OR 3-M^ DALE HAMPSHIRE . HANGING, "full time SALES PEOPLE Loft of floor time end leods. ' ‘ CAREER OPPORTUNITY THOMPSON FE 4-1364 It, 4 LADY iNTFRtOR DECORATOR, y' Pooering. FE •-•343 - ERNIE'S SERVICE ' -PAiNTING decorating and ramodallng. ••2-4132 E XPE R T PaYnt'|NO^”&E’c6R AT I NG ________... .-..3,...,. OR 3-73W, of nationally - " ORIFFIS BROTHERS" -flings Commerclal-Rwidtntlal [• 1:: Painting and Decorating OR 3-004 PAINTi'nG AND .CAULKING lualty reliable HUSBAND AND WIFE are neiTj^vHCildCor^ >r an over 50. to do thorough |ani(or>XTNTING PAPERING. WALL work from 2 a m. to 10 a.m. WASHING, MINOR REPAINI. ~ inc^ire at 50 N. Jessie, 9 30 a m. _R^EASONABLE PRICES. FE 5-2401 .^®5p.m QUALITY WORK ASSURED. PAINT- ■ UNUSUAL SALES CAREER *'»• ,inhi. i *n!^oi*kT‘^'^ilil^^ Televislen-Rodle Servica 24 ■Using " to RAOID AND TeVeviSIDN can^y^iL "EPAIR WDRK DDNE WHILE ‘t1*‘&^r"m^,'''?;S'!J’l rtasbiiabi* ''Sl'’"J.rArTnSr’>-"®^'"w“." 9441 lor • parsonii TronsportatiSn 25 FREE transportation for i malura woman to hOip drive to Florida aboul Npvambar )sl. Ral-erancas exchanged FE 2-1*12. ANNUALLS VuK ^ Quality Automobila ~ Risk insuronce ~ BRUMMETT AGENCY ^ Miracle S^e....... FE 4-05*9 Deer Preceuing 27 ' GAME PROCESSING ler meets svillcbl*. BASHAW'S MARKET 54M^ooley_Lk, Rd._____M2-3M) Wonted Ckildren to loar628 IMA COMPEER ^PROGJtA^^ i sSkooTarea. ORMW?. lU>tRLY MAN WANtl COUPLE. »es^ECTABT~Touw-li6<8A9i THE PONTIAC PRESS. TITESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1964 TW i \ SKVEXr 1TO50 HOMfll. .(AR. FI MUS WRVICi I GET RESULTS Wl Nlip IWkif*. Call M MNMV •»R nwrktl vahM. If ri raal aatala. wa can DON WHITE^INC. llww^aSS' viAVB'ibyKf AMvnnTrD of proportr far quick Mia, call; FaulJanaa iMlfy - FI aasso. HoiiMS-l^anns-AcriaM CLARINg^l^lWAY Listings NiiiBid Cwfainart waRIna, Waaf SMa af ^llac, only Hockitt Riolty EM 3-6703 TO BUY RfeASONABLI, fJoiWE ‘—wnant, all haat. largo lot I. ZonaC manufacturi^ - vacant lots wanted a pm mara. Imr, RIAL VALUE JAMES A. TAYLOR, Reoitor 77M HIglllana Id, (MW OR COM WANTED TO EUY. FARM. N TO 10 ---- ^--------------^ j, aeraa wmi li af Anflac. O Apirtwwh, Fiinlslud 37 l-ROOM EACHELOR AFARTMINT, 1 AND EATH, UPPER, WEST SIDE garaga^ adulta. FE MiW._________ 1 R06m$, ■ PftiVAti BAtH, ALL utlimat and gat Iwal, in, mlxad nalghborhood. 111 Orcliard Laka> ~imar latninola. ~~ * — rTiooMJ AUB fcXtH. gVIW. thing prlvatoi 111 Olawi^ I ilOOMS AI^6 bath, adults. 111 a waak and in dapoilt. FE ^ 3 NICE. CLEAN, LARAE R60MS, 1ha bast, lor rafinad younn man ything W«. ROOM ANb BATH, PRIVATE, downibwn. Inquire 33U DIxIa Hwy. Eeonemy Cara. I ROOMS, EhILA WelMAiE _____________FE mm______________ 4-ROOM, BATH, WORKING COUPLE prafarrad, 3M N. Saginaw. ^ r"*bfiMs, m Eaths. «BntEr StrMt, off Auburn, M5 month and ihara utltltlaa. R. J. VALUET, RMitor, 345 Oakland. is NEWBERRY. 3 ROOMS AND bath, watt tida. _____ *anartifflt^ ^,**prl5il.*^ie*Md unpins Alatal, ifil Oadyka, FE BACltEL6R, PRIVAtE, EUlEf -Carpalad, nka, N. End. FE M37I. CLARKSTON-3 rooms, BUILT-IN thurchat. tM HUS auw. i?nat^ETTF^jwRX5iT1?o?Fi PRESS WANT ADS ARE LIKE HAVING YOUR OWN "MONEY TREE" B Mill 5^^j£^^rtiy-f S ROOMS, WEST SIDE, NEAR ■ ■ M>h Rd„ utllltif- -------- - only. OR 3-144? boulevard heights -3-Badroom umt-175 Par Month Contact Ratidant Manager S44 Bait Blvd. at Valencia FE 4-7133 I-A ALUMINUM SIDINO. STORMS awninga. Vinyl tUbiB. inatallad or matarl^ QualRy-law coal. FE MS4S VALLBLY OL I-MI3 KAISER ALCOA ALUMINUM SIDING. AWNINGS. GUTTERS, STORM WINDOWS—DOORS, PAT-—. ROOPINO. SUPERIOR FE •OS. I 4dR77. MEW HOUSE AND REAAOOELINO E BSTIMATis,*^'^AYS irking MM. SSMSIS apan Til t DIU.VBWAY SPECIALIST %Rg.SJ^T,S KAR-LIFE BATTERY Ca BLOCK LAYING AND C E M AddNIani, Haute R*t»ino lUL GRAVES CONTRACflNG , Ettlr-^- FrM Etflntafaa CUSTOM REMODELING AND A^ 6 UNUMiAL lU CallOL l-W ONE CONTRACTOR FOR EVERY- ———1— r«n. Z,VSxr>‘rii ettlmalb^^BM " iHtiRi6fc'?iWI*ii kiTtrflHi; BRICIC BLi IStOKTW BRKK, BLOCK AND^ CI^EY - PATiSs ALTERATIpNS AIX .rggtn«*'^ MM GUTTER COMPANY . Camplafa iavaitrau»lwB sSTvIcm Oalvanind or aluminum. F r * a SMlmalat. SIMMS. HERCULES ENGINE REBUILDERS MOTOR EXCHANGE CO. ENGINE REBUILOING-ALL CARS AND TRUCKS EXPERT TUNE-UPS a S. SAGINAW_____FE 3-7433 DREDGING, TRENCHING, BULL -doting, grading, loading, hauling. Fret atthnatat. 3^11 ________H. Excavating.^._______ nrBpIswB Wbg6 LARRY'S FIREPLACE TAYLOR, Flq6r LAYING, and llnlthlng. 3S yMrt a. 33^a^7S■ HoEtiRf SGrvicB Home Improvaments Pqrehafc addhlont, .•*?P»jj — madam, dallvartd to your lot. DTiandl Wrackbig Company, A-l MERION laid or dal dratiing .oh. .... attlmatti. Brtaoa lawnt,. patlea. Fra k-l LANOKAPING, TRUCKING -Broken tldawalk for retaining walls - by M of Inttallad. Old cow artistic LANDSCAPING NUS-SBRY-OESIGNING AND CONSTRUCTION. Chaota your guar- ' S6bOIN^-Si|DINO^RAOIN6 TALBOn LUMBER Glait Inatallad In doort and win- ______MeII Nx ?yi A-1 TUNING AND REPAIRING PlasttriRg S#rvic« k-l PLASTERING AND REPAI Raatonabla. Gaerga Lea, FE 3-m3 MacKAVICH PLUMBING AND HEATING CO. Wa do Inatallatlr- ~ ------------ comrrwrclal or . yatltlactlon guara tervica. 403-4Mf. :. Frta estlmatai. Radifltor SBrvicB Wallpaper Steamer Floor sand art. pollthars, hand Mnders, furnace vacuum claanart Oakland Fuat S Paint, 434 Or chard Lake Ava. FE »4ISB. Tree TrinmiEg Service A.E. DALBY TREE SERVICE Tree, Hump ramovaL trim, tran planting. FE 5-3005, FE S-JBSS. Tessner Tree Service Ul 1ypat of trM work. Free .. nataa. Topping, Cabling, cavity verk, fartlllilng. 437-l7a. TREE TRIMMING AND REMOVAl TrucUng LIGHT and HEAVY TiUCKINd ruoblih, fill dirt, grading and grav al a^ front arid lemiiy. FE 3^ Ll6Hf”HADLlir0T (U»AOli' ANC baiemanti claaoad. 474-I242. ■■ LISHT ThUCKING, ANY KIND, REASONABLE. FE 5-3570 lichT'haulin6,~€larkston wa tarford arm. 435-lB4f. ,____ ___ Tnidt ReeIbI Trucks to Rent Vk-Ton pickups Ivy-Ton Stake TRUCKS - TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks — Saml-Trallart Pontiac Farm ond Industriai Tractor Co. Mi S. WOODWARD PE 4-1442 UphEhjMEg^ 491 Sale. Hovses ^ ^Sylvan Shores Sharp 2-badroom homo locaftd In that hard to gat arM at Huron end Voorhels. Thh homo. Is like — ark) the carpet and -drapet Included. Largo living room, modern kitchen and ... 'JKituras 'al. this, Im- "'"dON^HITE, INC. Hwy. OR 404S4 I PAIL'------ eludes alactrlclty, heat, tioning, janitor Mrvict parking area. K. H. Realtor, ISS Elizabeth to IfOO SO. FT. AVAILABLE Parlmater Road near CauAva-I at Huron. Phone Laslla R. pp. Realtor, FE 5-5141. FOUR ADJACENT 0 F F I C R S, Ishad, all utllltlaa, ample parkin tha ^Ivan Shopping Can- Sflle Hoeibs_____________^ BY OWNER, CLAWSON. 4-YEAR- Raat JesIeess Preperty47-A 30X70 BUILDING, FULL I ment. Fontainebleau Plata, Pontiac Lake Road. FE 3^7103. FOR RENT OR LEASE 20,000 Sq. Ft. Fo< Wtrehovst or InOustriot utt. ^'*FE4gt.i BY OWNER - V Lea$a--Store or Office middle ol irking fro ind cold •nf pays HOE OF ' at goM shops. Parking rsar. HMt, hot and -< FURNISHED. Tenant alactrlclty. EAST SIOL _. WARD BETWEEN NORMAl and 14 MILE ROAD. tl3S momn. Snyder, Kenney & Bennett, INCORPORATED Birmingham, Michigan LEASE (WITH OPTION TO BUY) lusinau corner with garage irehard Lake Ava. S7S man loyd Kant, Realtor, FE S-4105. I-BEOROO/M, LANDSCAPED ACRE, Bloomflald and St. Hugo's basamant. $37,000. 314-2114. - basement — ga- UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE 0645 Dixie, Clarkston 425-2415 Evas 425-1453 2-BEDROOM RANCH Ltrgs living room and d'ning ara< Utility room In basamant, 1'.f-car rage on 30')tl00' fancad-ln yan I1S500, to per cant down. FLATTLEY REALTY 0247 COMMERCE 343-4081 BEDROOMS. 2 FULL BATHS, largo anclasad patio, ... haat, 2Vk-car garage, lake .. leges. Must saa to appraclata. Reduced tor quick- sale. tIO.OOO. Call 5 rooaAs, basement, garage, East skta, W.500 cash. OR 3-4000. _____ gas haat, garage, fa yard. 111.000 full price, 10 cant down. Clarkstan school an... Hilltop realty 473-5234 Gas furnace, *in!_______ I and Kraans. Vacant. Fi.. 17,750. AAonthly paymants aa al 210 South Pontiac Trail. “I didn’t necessarily mean your Jimmy was leading the class when I said it was impossible to get ahead of him!” carpalad. xillt-ln ovi om^letal^lni paneled family room with Franklin stove fireplace. Panalad dan with bullt-ln bookcase, desk and sewing area. Intercom system throughout. Partial basement, 2-car garage. dUjon. stita. $2 Commerciai end Home Almost 2 acres on Dixie Highway 1 mile past 1-75 -------- has largt cobblastona HAROLD R. FR^NKS, Realty 2503 UNION LAKE ROAD EM 1-3200 341-7101 rinch home. Is of amras. iT'RMlly'"''fi02-24?0** mOMS Enrich Your Future xcallant practical design for . idroom. Dramatic mtrble tlre-ace wall. Big storage closats, jllt-ln cooking equipment, brkk Id stone eaterlor. Ladgest~— lanters. 3-car garage. Estate Crisp And Inviting For anioyable living — 3-bec------- low upkeep masonry ranch. Living room, fireplace, carpeted floors, HAGSTROM REALTOR n W. Huron OR Evenings cell 402-0435 HIITER SYLVAN LAKE PRIVILEGES. -------—. fjnriiiy VwVrri,iv«: ch, 1W-car I kitchen, r garage. Is today I Clarkston schools. See 3 ACRES. S place, full ...................... tion room, breezewey and attached garage. Call todayl B. C. HIITER. REALTOR. 37y3 Elizabeth Lake HERRINGTON HILLS $350 DOWN 3-bedroom ranch, basement, hard- RORABAUQH Woodward at Square Lake Road ■ 370 WHITTEMORE 305 HARRISON 4-reom madam, new S*s furnace, dryer, rugs and drapes. Only $4,500 Bank terms. PAUL JONES REALTY FE 4-B550 $9,990 Rancher on your let. Lovely 1-bedroom ranch • typo home, fu' basement, .birch cupboards, oa floars, FULLY INSULATED. 0< signed far batter living. No mono down. WE TRADE YOUNG-IILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER-BILT RUSSELL YOUNG, 53V» W. HURON 4704 ALLINOHAM, 3 - BEpllOOM rtn^. Nttural firaplaca, utility roam, swimming and boating privilagas. On White Lake, 3kar j^araga, large- lot, beautiful condl- gI^'O" down HILLTOP RGALTY Brick ond frame 3-bedroom ranch home. Full basement, gas heat. Built-in oven and , range. Terrific buy, $300 down. Dan Edmonds A-l WALL WASHER FE 2^114___________ BLOOMFIELb WALL CLEANERS walls and wlndgwi. Reas. Satis faction guaranteed. FE 2-M31. aads fixing up, only S2,gog. X REALTY, UL M121. UL ^537S AT ROCHESTER COUyTRY HOME brick ranch. MILTON WEAVER INC.. REALTOR Itl W. UnIvanIty Blvd. ROCHESTER_______________OL 1-1142 Cleta te Sylvan Shopping Canh largo 4- or 7-room bungalow, goad sized badroomt, ball 473-5234 _______________SESSION NEAR TWIN LAKES TrI-laval. 3 bedrooms with den or fourth badroam, large family room with firaplaca and bar, l• '' IMMEDIATE POSSESSION 7-room rth vUIi ^ bedrooms. Plastered waHs. L»n ve». z-.. basamant. Newly r »-car garage. Ikjng dlstanca to W, terms, GILES REALTY* CO. iE 54175 2t1 Baldwin Ava. MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE . painted outside. Quiet street. W " schools. Only S4 rose garden In rear yard. Vacai and Immediate possession. Sacr flee price of only *8,500 **' OR 4-0358, evwTlngs 482-04M. SMALL 3 ROOMS AND "BATH FE 2-18*8 ■hese. homes alto Include large et-1 stalpsize lots, blacktop driveways and sliding door-walls to patio. Itn basamant and gai ip streets. Northern sd really budget prlcei ir decorating and soma i Frushour Struble IB on 3 Sh'’'lrM, Huron Gardens l\ SYLVAN LAKE 2374 RENFREW Sam Warwick has 2-story, 4-bed . room custom-built house. Heavy! aTp.« cT don w Lake privileges. n7,M0. Terms. 2851 Dixie Hwy. Open Sunday 2 to S. 482-2Sr 4*2-1714_________________R SAUNDERS Si WYATT REALTY FE 3-7041 * 482-2820., _______OPEN DAILY TO 8 P.M. _________ to everything. Dandy 2bedroom with oak floors, plas- , _____ ______ ... ______ ____ tered wells, gas heat, 21' living *430 down and tSf per month with room, carpeting throughout. *8,950. no mortgago cost*. CALL TODAY. Will trade. YOU CAN TRADE Bateman Realty will guarantee Wooded Lot i with excellent lake privileges on i77 < T^MPJiah RMitor FE I Crescfnt Lak6/ this ranch has fire-loen 5-9 MLS. Sunday 1-5 . K ----------------------- iv,-car garaga, lall- SQUARE LAKE ROAD AND WOOD ward. 3 bedroon ^ ‘ with 2-car garagi $I5,0D0. FE 2-7423. IN AUBURN HEIGHTS 3 badroomt, gas htal, storms and scratnt, full batemtnl, lot S2x145. Only *5,000 with (2,000 down. H. C. NEWINGHAM IN ROCHESTER 4-badroom home. 2 baths. Screaned In porch. Full batamant, gas haat, dost to schools, *I1,M0. 451-3154. lly room, carpatlna, water softener Coppertone appllancpt. *11,500. 4734141. LAKE PRIVILEGES This lovtiy n*at spacious 3-bPdrpom brick and aiphalt ranch with 22'x24' garagt Is juM svhat yo UTICA Nice *bedroom home. *1.000 to move In. no * month. HILLTOP REALTY 473-5234 r. Alumlnuin ana icrttni, lak* privi IT Macaday Lake. Radec Inside, attractlvaly land ar rental. (}t^lda sommar cattage aquippad far Barbecue and eut-slda tnlartalnlng. Near Unlan Lake an wida paved road. t>7,*50 .Yarms REALTOR PARTRIDGE . "I* THE BIRD TO SEE " Mixed : Neighborhood FI *4511'FE Iftm MOOILI OPEN AFTERNOONS 1-S WESTOWN REALTY 45* Irwin aff Baal Blvd. ------- LI *4477 Eva*. This Week's Special! 7ery nice l'/i-$tory h----------- Lapeer. Has 2 b and I umlnished about 2 acres ol price only M.500. Pruciential ' Real Estate B* $. Main Lapaai 664-8484 WALDDN AT ALM( Clarkston — Brick, 1,300 sq. $17450. ARISTOCRAT BUILDERS WATERFORD-CASS UKE 2-bedroom bungalow. Oak floor*. New gas furnace. Lake privlleoas. Vertical blinds and drapes. Call after 4 p.m., 473-^17. _ _ WHEN $75 rill put you in a 3-ly decorated gas heat- PIKE-EAST BLVD. 4 CITY OF PONTIAC Mixed Area' WHY RENT? NEW 3-BEDROOM HOME ALL WORKERS ACCEPftD WIDOWS, DIVORCEES, EVEN PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PROBLEMS ARE O.K. WITH US SEPARATE DINiNd AREA HAYDEN NEW HOMES 3 BEDROOMS TRI-LEVELS RANCHES l5VC*r Garage BY Lot Inc.udad Family Room Gas Haaf FROM $10,500 to PER CENT DOV5N MODEL AVAILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE POSSESSION -WILL BUILd'^ YOUR LOT ,■ OR DORS Open 'Man. thru. Sal. 54- S«m. *S J. C. HAYDEN, RtaHor EM >4*04 I07S1 HlWiland Rd. (MS5 Joy no Heights (OFFICE) 2909 SHAWNEE LANE Open 4-BEDROOM COLONIAL New. Really advanced living, large well lecsted let, sodded, with lake privilagas on 4 lakes. Double food service, flratllM, pegged Hoar in family ream, qow windows, plastered walls, hot water heat, marble sills, plastered garage. Really a bargain with extra value. Fine mortgage plan. WE TRADE AND TRADE Open LOOK 2 OVER TODAY In Silver Lake Sub — 3-oedroom brick with firaplaca, 2u and 1 Dedroom. Loeds spece. Cheery kitchen ALMOST 2 ACRES with this cozy * bedroom ranch, new gas furnace, breezeway to Ivy-car garage with plastered walls, aluminum stormt and screens, partly lancad yard. Excellent garden soil, $10.50*. AUBURN MANOR. Ideal E. Subur-f>an building site In excellent neighborhood. Ptioty ol space on this 100x400 tel. We have many others suitable ter building PHQNE'682-2211 . 5143 qasa-EtIzabcIh Road MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE KENT Established in 1516 WEST SUBURBAN - Attractive S-bedroom home In excellent condition. 21 ft. carpeted 1'------- ----- garage lovely ho bedroom, gss heat, baautiful 10O ft. lot with beach, dock and 2 • ^ts Inclgded. $25,000. farms. Floyd Kent Inc., Reoitor 3200 Dixie Hwy at Tilegraph FE 24123 Open Eves. MA 5-1741 RHODES 4-ROOM ranch HOME - Interior work, large terms. OXFORD - Laiye^ I bedrooms, gas heat. S7J00. *1.500 dovm, 8*5 per month land contract. BRICK HOM* in excellent epndi-spacious rooms, s, 2L» baths, tell base-heat, 1-car garagt, baau>. “a'l'W^S hk|^y. TWENTYElGHf THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, OCTOBER ?0, 1964 49 S«l« Hmmm NORTH PONTIAC AREA $29 DOWN' COVHS MX CASH NEEDED ALL APPLICATIONS ACCEPTED IMMEDIATELY WIDOWS^ DIVORCEES, PROBLEMS ARE 0 . WITH U . FEATURING •CHOICE^LOCATIONS SEPARATE DINING AREA CALL ANYTIME DAILY, SATURDAY AND SUNDAY NEAL VALUE REALTY ;r^,gooq clean moo- Msy nnni ana priced ' fonia an ettate Ideal fof aenan wim large family. • INCOME-Near Oakland and. Flor- ance. Idaal renting —*— “------ rented. SMO menlh ______ large rooms for you. Good clean condition. Aluminum siding ' sforms. Low maintenance. Pr at only tlLMS. • MORE FOR YOUR MONEY-II n. Country styla kltch-i-ln panfry, ivi baths. Id famlh^rgim. Plus itorms and acryans. i' lot with lake pnvl- Alumlnum Large M'x leges. Hen .... Easy terms Sure, It Is bi Price only ll«,S00. WE TRADE-Llst wHhj^ and vicinity sinci Listing Service. Op L. ft. BROWN, Realtor •ANNETT gas furnace, nicely land scaped, near schools, bus lln aiW stores. Only SI.000 down. In Waterford with privileges on Van Not man Lake. Ideal rotirement home, has 2 bedrooms, or Srd bedroom, kitchen dining area, bath, ivs plastered garage, compact HW system. Nw Myers pump. Vacant, S»S0 f City loar 1-75 baths, family room, »car anached earaM, low heat costs. L^ TRADE _ 2^>edroom cottages coiyletely furnished on 100x700 ft. t»r- WE WILL TRADE Realtors 28 E. Huron St. open Evenings and Sunday 1-4 FE 8-0466 O'NEIL CLARKSTON MEADOWS Open 3 to 7 Mon. Thru Fri. 1 to 5 Sat. and Sun. 6808 Bluegrass > 72 BEAUTY RITE models. One 4-bedroom colonial, 2W baths, living room, formal dining room, family room with fireplace, kitchen witti dining space, electrified ^ilt-lns, tiled and painted basement, 2^r BIRMINGHAM GILBERT LAKE PIVVILEGES « with this S-bedroom colonTal ranA. family room with secortd tlre-Jalovsied, heated porch. ' Many bullt-lns. Beautiful lot with loMs of froes. Vacant, IM,»00._ ^ ROCK SPRING TRI-LEVE^L. Thrs* tine bedrooms. 244ool family room, t'/y baths. BulH-ln oven end raim. Very attractive. High rolling site. SSLMO. . WEIR, MANUEL, SNYDER A RANKE 444^^- ^Hgakr^'"'"^5y232s CLARK TO SETTLE ESTATE - 24>edroom bdngalow In Elizabeth Lake Estates with oil furnace, baser—‘ quick possession. Extra lot t make wonderful building sit*, ner lot. Only SEtOO. WIFE SAVER SPECIAL-Exci ■ ■-—room rancher on one excellent 12'x12' kitchen with recreation room partially finished. Fenced rear yard, lot TS'x- c?uded"*«*:?th''^sSo*'Sois; and SSf per month Including taxes NEAR UNION LAKE VILLAGE -Nice 3-bedroom trUevel with two tlreplaces, carpeting, IVy baths. wind Manor on paved road. CLARK REAL ESTATE 101 W. HURON ST. FE 3-7HS TO BUY, TO SELL, TO TRADE Multiple Listing Service LAZENBY PONTIAC MALL AREA y Cozy t—______ . ______ basement, car W earage, ---- num siding axcellant condition Inside and out. Largo lot 10x12*. Idaal location west of Pontiac. Closa In, Sl,000 down plus cost. CALL FOR APPOINTMENT. mt. This Is nor type older homes, ipt. You must sea It Multiple Listing Service MILLER 0 PAYMENTS - LIVE FREEI pay ft* large < pletely privet* Ih firaplaca unit Everything com-and on^ *12,500 GAYLORD SAAALL HOME with good kltd 2 bedrooms, 44x230 ft. lot, ' car garage, concret* drive, floors, plaster walls. Priced to now. MY ^2I21 or FE ST. MICHAELS CHURCH only price (0,500, terms. Call FE *-0403 or MY 2-2*21. LAWRENCE W. GAYLORD A-1 BUYS Watkins lake PrivHeges Owner tcansterred — Immeu_____ possession. 3-b*droom brick rancher. Full basement, bm<—....... attached 2-car garage, landscaped yard. Price *14,050. Low down pay tor appointment. Bargain lee*... IMITM _ 4.,^.. q«'i WATERFORD REALTY D. Bryson, Realtor Van Welt BK ~ Dixie Hwy.________OR 3-i: "SMITH" CRESCENT LAKE PrlvIlegtM An imutuAi knrhMi f • low pricod t5SS,G IS Steel sink. Dining ..It living I----- — lot. saoool* Near 1-75 _ ________ and scenic. *4,200. Terms. ROLFE H. SMITH, Realtor 244 S. Telegraph Road FE 3-7*4* __________Eves. FE 3-7302 WEST SUBURBAN — 3-BEDROOM h In 1st clan shape. Only Mrs okt. Family kitchen, full ment large lot. Brick le and priced to mov STOUTS Best Buys Today Lakewood Village _______________ combination family rom and kitchen, encloted porch overlooking water, attached 2'.y-car ga-rsm. Priced at only $32X00 with easy $1500 Down — droo. Luxurio Oath, finished basement, to bus line Priced at 3-BEDROOM RANCH . FHA TERMS ON 1-ACRE LOT, suburban Large kitchen with dining Large family room, gas FA 2Vy-car attached garage, paved drive. Many other features. CLOSE TO WATERFORD HIGH. ATTENTION! HANDYMAN WANTED to conveH this summer cottage Into year 'round home wOOD-HULL LAKE PRIVILEGES. FULL PRICE, S5,M0. Smith & Wideman KAMPSEN Your Neighbor Traded Why Don't You? THINKING OF SELLING?' \ Cash7 We wni^peMt It^ yw terlor, brings Ice tor S9,500 utilities. Including decorated, comphite terms towllt. I^1*-W45. 5-FAMILY APARTMENT BUILD-Ing, gas heat, good Income, rent. ' by the weke. S21X00. SHEPARD REAL ESTATE FE *-3473$_____________451-*5 LAKEFRONT INCOME 3 Houses Here Is the nicest >unit Incor we have ever ottered. Located c extra nice shaded lot. These hom.. are Immoculete. You can live In ■ rSavM Kate OaaMiOTlmiiwsi OnwrteaHlH 59 Septic Tank Cleaning l« VAur mem htm In 1, . MICHIGAN Business Sales, Inc. ■nuN LANDMESSER, BROKER -E 4-15*2 IMALL, NEW BAKERY WITH great ootentlal. All first clau equipment Including a Ug plua oven and coffee bar. *4,5** Is all you'll ns«i to go Into business fer yourMO; Good lease available for as long a* you want It. Call Mrs. Bette hr appointment. OR r\r today; DON WHITE, INC. ASK FOR DON GIROUX 2*91 Dixie Hwy. OR 44494 OPEN DAILY TO * P,“ 11,*** (Sown and *45 a month WARDEN REALTY , Pontiac___333-7157 ALL LAKES "SINCE 1925" NORM RICE-ON GREEN LAKE EM 3-3311 - EM 34412 7070 Commtrc* A.* a^s. a-•*_*„.* 5.7744 Val-U-Way A BIG KITCHEN It wttat the housewife wants thasa days. This ana has a pleasant dining araa by the window with room OFF EARLMORE t feels like home the minute yn itep thru the door ot thi* STOP PAYING RENT CALL US FOR LAKE, SUBURBAN AND FARM PROPERTY. CRAWFORD AGENCY ^ 31143____________MY 34571 HOME SITES, •*' X 1**-, SUNNY Beach ovorloaklr ters. Lake prh beaches, docking. nklno btouti pHylligts. king. S ACRE SITES OR MORE IN THE hills overlooking Weltors Lake. Also 5 lots tor tl.25*. SYLVAN LARGE LOTS WITH MIRROR pond, roadway In, private beech on Pine Lake, nicely wooded WII EM 333**. 10 ACRE HOME SITE $4950 $6430 $70* Down PARTLY WOODED Excotlent locetion comer ot White Lake and Ormond Road. AL PAULY, Realtor 4S14 Dixie, rear ------ Evenings FE 37444 I* ACRES WITH U MILE KEAR-sley Creek frontage, hills, woods end many pleasant views on property. S2Xt* down. 3* acres ot rolling land with many beeutitut home sites. Just 1 mile oft M-14. Only S31* ptr oert. . I, boat docks. FE 4-4509, 5. Bloch Bros. WALTERS LAKE North shorey neat 3-bedroom, block from lakOy 17,700. LAKEFRONT LOT-«OxlOO wH ment dock and cute cabaru cellent buy at IlfSO. 683-2300 SYLVAN 625-1886 WHY RENT, BUY FOR LESS PER month. A6oblla homo lots 65xt3a $2,485. $25 down, $25 oar monr Bloch Bros. FE 4-4508, OR 3-1285. presswey. SSX4S with forms. area ot hills end woods. S2X9S with only 1270 down. Baeutiful ^rolling . OVkMCre parcels 1 TO 50 LAND COf.'TRACTS urgently . wanted. See us beta WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5lr«14S Open Eves, 'til » p.m. ACTION ^ on your land contract, largt or small Call Mr. Hllltr, FE 2-0179 Brokar. 3*4* Elizaoath L*kt Road. SEASONED - WELL SECURED - —--------------------------I 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently wonted. See us betar* This ALFALFA I . ___j it growing s hang Inside your car , SCGeore term gr rtXs?| _________________________'i\ WARREN STOUT, Realtor em term home. 3* - stanchion |4S* n. Opdyko Rd. FE 3*145 born. 12xX coment stave siki. 30x4*1 ry, OR 31295. ATLANTA. MICHIGAN. HUNTING i and fishing area on Thunderbay, River. 3 modern cottages end 2; yeer-around home*. Ideal tor group I or rellrad couple, rtasonabta. Cell i owner, CR 32415. Firmrngton, Michigan. ' inch with IVi baths, living rc imlly room with fireplace, kite ith electric buiWns. Full bi wnt tiled and paintad, 2-car Me. Our models have many fine I tatures. PLUS, WE WILL TRADE, j Irecflons: Vd mile North ot Clerks-1 xt, left on Bluegrau Drive. Mr. ilsele. FE 317*4. I 3156 Angelas Drive | dining rot sttxtl and levilotY, gas heel, ■ nice comer tot, ivy-eer geri— Yours tor only (11X** wMh e lly kitchen, oarport. Full price *9,45* reconditlonad. R. J. (Dick) VALUET ! REALTOR FE 4-3531 i 345 Oakland Open 9-7 After hours. FE 3441* or FE 31344 1 LIST YOUR HOME WITH US___________I North Side Income Three lovely apartments. 3room and bath, 4 rooms end bath lur-nishad, 2 rooms end bath. Private entrances Basement, gas heat. Price S12,9««, S3,*** down, *95 NEAR . *15 dn. I. Bloch Bros. OR 31295. * Cell after 5 fOn. 4231922. 150 ROLLING ACRES OAKLAND COUNTY FRONTAGE ON 3 LAKES Ideal for vocation or sacond hom building program Located withi 4* minutes of Cobo Hall vie I-; GORDON WILLIAMSON - GALLERY OF HOMES 944 W. MAPLE 44325; BIRMINGHAM YEAR AROUND MODERN CABIN AT m6rGAN lake. BALDWIN and I-7S txpraasway, 1*0x15* swim, fish, boating. I* mlnutas to Pontiac S1.99S, S2* down *20 month. Bkr-Bros. FE 345*9, OR 31295. BLOOMFIELD HILLS SCHOOLS I-7S X-way, 1*0x15*. swim, fish,; boating. 10 minutas to Pontiac. SI,995, S2* down, 52* nsonth. Bloch Brethars, FE 34509, OR 31*95. , ROUND LAKE, IS MINUTES TO FE 31331 Pontiac, near 1-75 expressway. No motors altowod. Lots 50x15*. 5795. UPPER LONG LAKE text to ittractlvo homos Pavod-«7X*0-Tonm A 37321 ’ kitchen, 2 bedrooms and bath on first floar, ont large bedroom up. Carpeting end drapes. Basement, gas heat. Good conditlan. Nea- - • focal iwints ot I counter and cupboards. Mein tio laundry teclllfies and levetory. T garage Is oversized, unlimited st( age. 3 large bedrooms and on o; standing master bath In exquis mosaic tile with a luxurious sur en tub. You must see this dres home befort you finalize your pis to build or buy. West on Walh turn right on Angelus Drive. N Proksch, OL l-«575. TRADING IS TERRIFIC SHARP 3badroem homo, Silvtr La area, full basamant, gas tuma; . Pontiac school system. Northern High. Natural fireplace, one-cOr garage and a beautifully landscaped lot. Priced at 115,9**. (155* dawn buys a lot ot houae < »11,95dr 3 bedrooms, o bath i e halt, an extra large utility roo a t be c h e d garage and e h u i screened summer petlo. All this a Mg, Mg lol with fruit tre rasp berries,. steewberrlos , i grapes; the gordM Is Igvely h This nice couple-------- ■—- - - so let's leoki PIONEER HIGHLANDS ... The nicest 3badroom home In Ilke-neW " i El , MACEOAY I Thrqe • be _ svNh e 22x34 garage. You’ll Use baautllully Iqndtcopad ____ toitdad comer W. CampleMlY rp tftoram InyMt, gas Mot, indn-Meiar and lake prtvllegae On Moc3 2w LoM. Prtoad at SISJH. RAY O-NEIU Rwltor WARREN STOUT, Realtor Opan Eves, till • pjn. *. Opdyka P- " large kitchen, 3 baths, fireplace, recreation room, 2-cer garage Priced at S22.90*. Shown by op polntntent. John K. Irwin S SONS REALTORS 313 W. Huron Since 1925 Phone FE 5-9444 Evening C4II FE 3*5*3 SCHRAM CUSTOM BUILDERS ARCHT. - SERVICE - FINANCING Your Plans On Your Lot Of Ours Or Ours Brand New ' Beautiful 3badraom ranch home with irxIS' living room designed tor family comfort, ICxIS' full basomont with unlimited possibilities, thrifty gat heat, extra nice 13'x3r recreeflon area for hours of retaxed enloyment. Price only — Sll,**0 plus closing costs and use your lot as down payment. WIU duplicate on your lot or ours' Bt^ T Mammoth throe - bedroom tri-level home with long - tatling melntp nonce-treo brick front. Also, targe recreation room designed tor hours of I e m 11 y pleasure, sliding door-well to patio oOt-ot-doors PrM M only snltM^us ctotlng twyment, w 111^duplkalt on your 'BUD" Sparkling Cleon Crescent Lake; Includes Priced at *9,5**^'w^ukimeto^ 1* per cent down, plus costs. available WITH LOW DOWN PAYMENTS. DOWN PAYMENTS S.TART AT APPROXIMATELY Carpeted 2-Bedroom Homo hot oxpaneten attic bedroom, tltod basomont, g Near Eastern Jr. Three bedrooms, ir x t4' living room, ICxll' dining room, rxlf kHchan. garage ■--- IVAN W. SCHRAM REALTOR FE 5-9471 942.40SLYN COR. MANSFIELD . MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE Long, Low, Lovely Clerkston a shopping; fi, ------------ - . _ tached 2-cer garage, fireplace. "Bud" NiAoTie, Realtor 49 Mt. Clemens St.' FE 5-1201 After 6 P.M. FE. 4-8773 NICHOLIE HERRINGTON HILLS Evn. Cell Mr. CosletL FE 2-7271 FE 345*9, OR 31295.__________ SuburbEE Pr«ptrty 53 38 ACRES NEAR LAPEER Large 3bearoom ranch-type home. Carpeted living room, fireplace. Full bath. Tiled basement, recreation area. Bam, garage, 2S acres of good timber. tS,00* down. Clinton Heights Sub. 14 building lots, I at S4S* other II of 54*0 each. On Ee^ .. and Hillsdale. See or coll WM. B. MITCHELL. WILLIS M. BREWER REAL ESTATE FE 35UI or M2-W4I CANAL LOTS building sitae — 4 with Sylvan Lake. JACK LOVELAND 211* Cass Lake Rd. Country Living FOR Hprse Lovers AT THE Clarkston Hunt Club Estates Gracious, exciting living with all thesa axtra faaturas: 20x30 bam. Builder Includes fraa America riding horse. Fenced i»rrall and approach ’ CHOICE l-ACRE LOTS IN SUB division near Oakland University Also near 1-7$ Interchengo. Sl,200 SIJO*. Boautliul rolling country side. BUY NOW-BUILD LATER TROY REALTY ___________S«»440* EXCELLENT INVESTMENT. a Spacious kltchor. wHh M For additional intormitlon cs C. PANGUS, Reolty Call Colloct NA 7-3*11 43* MIS Orto.. OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK COUNTRY Living HOME SITES A good seloctibn ot cholco building sites In many locations: Build your own home or make the down pay ment to hove o Mmo built. 125x400, 51,250, *25* down 1**x4**, wooded, IMM down 1*0x14* p*v4d, (2*0 down LADD'S, INC. MS Lapoer Rd. Perry (M24 FE 39291 or OR 3iai attor 7:3* HAVE SEVERAL LARGE LOTS In Northern and A^MIson tchqol area, between Perry and Opdyke. Will build to--------—----------- Waterfclrd Hill Manor Large estato- lots on on* of ( land County's most baeutiful i divisions. Priced from *1,75*. DON WHITE, INC OPEN DAILY TO ( PJM. 191 Dtele Hwy._______OR 3*494 WATTS REALTY NA 7-295* WEST WALTON r Dixie Highway, large cor cM comer. TTVk'xl**'. Good I I3ACRE SITES QR MORE IN THE Kill. Welter* Laht SYLVAN - iOO* Dixie Highway Between Waterford end Clerkst 260' Mt. Clemens LOANS L 0 A .-s S S2S to *1.*** Insured Payment Plan BAXTER B LIVINGSTONE Finance Co. 401 Pontiac Stata Bonk Building FE 4-153G-9 BATEMAN New IS X 2* paneli office with 1,40* TO -.zoo square feet shop ares suitable tor light manufacturing nr warehousing. Heat end light* fumlNied. Will partition to suit. Cell JO 3435*. N D U S T R I AL ACREAGE AND PROPERTY. For good Invastmenl ” TaiTeLAND AGENCY VA and FHA approved brokers 314 N. Pontlec Trail WALLED LAKE WA 312»2 OR 4131554 Anchor Bay Bar Roy Stewart Vte 3390* 11932 W. McNICheh BEER-PARTY STORE city of Pontiac. Only tUIO* plus stock down and you're In tr --- making money every day week. A reel opportunity WARDEN REALTY 1434 W. Huron, Pontiac 3337157 FOR LEASE; LARGE RESTAUR- grocery, beer AN6 WINt. REAL ESTATE FE 24)154 FE 2-0157 KRAFT MILK ROUtd - Chevy 4* lOflei li — Milk box, 3who*l traitor. I years gross *23,9*0. 1954 G Midi InquIrt 4(4* Stoning R< Sterling Mlchl^ or KraH 4 Plant Plnconnmg, Michigan. I LIQUOR BAR-PROPERTY Ju«t west ot Pontiac 1*0 ft. tool.. ago on main hwy. Lots of parking. cfioi businau. Prica bicluda* 3 badroom txxna. All tor only C- doxm. The price Is right. ROY STEWART VE 3SM* 13932 W. McNI Chopin Motel Brokers 271M west 9 MHe 2S7-M ________leuthfleld, MkWgan MACHINE SHOP AND HDUSfe PARtY-BEER STORE No. S14S. In Orton arse. Ext- tocoHon arid Ms at parking. Nice l^edroem home on proporty. Largo, waR(-ln, S largt dry ceolors. Very goad flxturaa. Pricad at WMt ki-ctuWng real aetata with only *4.- STATEWIDE-LAtf ORION aJBttOe Attor S, OR 3700* PARTY-Pid^KA/ STORI--------- FINANCIAL WORRIES? Let Us Help You! BORROW UP TO $1,000 34 mone«s to pay credit Ilf* insuranot avaDsbl* BUCKNER LOANS TO $1,000 _ _ . _ ____ FE 3*121. HOME & AUTO LOAN CO. N. Perry St. FE 31121 9 to S Dally, W. 9 • ■ Loans To $1,000 \ Quick, OAKLAND LOAN CO. 2*2 Pontiac State Bank Bktg. 9:1* to 5:3*-Set. 9:3* to 1 WHEN YOU NEED $25 TO $1,000 Wa will M glad to Mia you. STATE FINANCE CO. so* Pontiac Stata Bonk Bldg. fE 4-1574 BANKERS PAY-OFF PLAN 1ST AND 2ND MORTGAGES CASH NOW ERASE THESE fAYMENTS Loan Co. AS LOW AS $25 Per Month M avorything sal and application Ponslontrs ollgibto CALL BANKERS^ FE 4-6141 CASH - CASH FOR Home Owners WIDOWS, PENSIONERS CAN EE ELIGIBLE. CHECK, LOWEST RATES si«i .............. *c._ ... ............... SI2J9 tan XI "Hhf ..rrowtoor ANY uattol purpt_ ConsoUdoto Bills Now Cor FE 8-2657 . CASH $1200 TO / $7500 OR MOREr ON 1ST OR *ND MORTGAGES COMBINE YOUR BILL* tadue^wir morthly poymoot* u *" "no APPLICATION FEE SYLVAN S3 ORCHARD LAKE ROAD 682-2300 IF NO ANSWER FE 3*211 23HOUR SERVICE AAbRtGAGt ON ONE ACRE UP. With 153too1 frontago. No_pppr*ls-al fee. B. 0. Charla*, Bqol»*Wa Farm Lean Sarvica. 4*24170*. 20 gauge browning, 3SMOT —'----- Poly choke, tor water. FE 3402*. GARDEN tractor, and IfSI --------- - 42(-3)74. MODERN, NEWLY DECORATED, small, comfortably fumishad home White. Lake, betemant Large nicely shaded frontage. Will trade I Srtivini > «rty.______________________________ OWENS CRUISER, 21 FMT, Excellent condition, tor building lot good location. UL 32342, Lake thorn . _____________J Bo* dotcripllon ot prop- WE BUY SELL AND TRADE. SMOt-guns, nth*, porting gpoids. Bprnos-Horgrevo Hordwero. 741 W. Huron FE 5-9101. Open Sunday. WANTED -'T|I(£ CHANGER AND air compri - -............... FE 2-5154. Sale OoHiIiig 64 3 LADIES FALL-WINTER COATS, Ilk* n*w, a--*— CUSTOM-AAAI ITS. DRESSES, eno casual. Terrific buys 1312. AAA 310*3. ____________ JREEN WINTER coat set, size 4. **c*ll*nt condl- tkw.SI* EM 37257._____ HUDSON SEAL COAT J2- COAT ^ iTpiintteie Preea Boiridor AI-FORAAAL, WORN ONCE. S40 I swsetors 3*. Bargains. EM Sale HoEMhcM Goads 65 IRONRITE IRONER, GOOD CO{l 34*11. OR 3**«9. ME. him CASH Lexms to $5,000 CanaelWal* your Milt wIR- enn oiw peymant. N* ctotlng eotls oM IIM kiturance bsetudod on unpak bolanc* at NO EXTRA cad. Family Acceptance Corp. 217 Noltenal BMg: 1* W. Hura Temdiene FE *4*12 " 1 Week Specials 3 Rooms New Furniture Modern or Coloniol Nice Range and Ref rig. $317.00 $3.50 per Wk. everything you ftEBO 3pieca tormka dlaette (37.0* 7wleca tormic* dinette 14*.** 3plac* badroems 179.**. 5 Ptattorm‘roekars, clasaeuta *15 *a. 3-pl*ca colonal llvkig rooms, *129 2-piecf modtm living rooms, M3 Tpbl* tamps «mrt (9.93 new tS.** Table lempt were *19,** now tU.M BARGAIN BASEMENT Plenty of used furniture, trade-ins. and raiaett. Coma ki arid see the ***1?Z*™erma-floy, Sell. Trade LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE 144) BALDWIN AT WALTOto FE 2-4*42 First traffic l^i* •uuth of 1-1 2 OIL STOVES, AAAOIC CHIEF. DUO FE 332*7,___________________ 3AA0NTHGLD itX If S*l NYLON rug with rubber pad. 3195 4*2- ^* after 5 p.m. 3PiECE SECTibNAL, VERY o6<» SeIb LIneL 371 E. Pike. :______ ------BASiMENTlALl OR 34491_________ bunk beds • o' J.* COLONIAL WA5HS%“'SSg"5S?lRS FIRESTONE STORE 144 W. HURON .3337917 GOOD SELfclitlONS OF USED"! .frigerators* wishfrt Gu«rantMd. Ttrrm HAMPTON ELECTRIC GRAY'S FURNITURE WAREHOUSE NEW AND USED FJUWITURB bankrupt STOCK DISTRESSED MERCHANDISE 3pi*ce chrome dinette tats, m Bunk bed set3 complete witn met-Ireu. *39. OanM AtoJierfril’ Modem - French Berhf"luner*c«r^lK i%. hShidtta 4 chairs. M9.95. Big 3pioce badroom i h huge drttier zsf. Priced to sell. *99 Murry en this one. THIS WEEK ONLY: LAMPS, Early American w AAod-am. Taka your pick, *1.95. Com* n tor the beet leleclkm. BFY YOU TO BEAT OUR DEALS. NO fancy FIXTURES. LOW OVERHEAD Drive out a little and save a let. Ml Doris Rd., Formerly Doris Rolltr Rink, near Corner el Ftath-trstane. 338-0851 OPEN DAILY OPEN SUNDAY II TO * KIRBY VACUUM, LATE MODELS, m6VINO. MUST SELU F06^ ramt retolgtrator, autoi—------ tr and dryer, rtngar « MISCELLANEOUS" FURNITUBE 3 ROOM OUfFITS BRAND NEW FURNITURE $288 $3.00 Weekly MORe WAREHOUSE BARGAINS Platform rocktrs 3year-«3rlka — * Wet preot crib matresset .. * 12x15 l*0« nylen rugs . . * Colonlat love seat S 5 pc. round bronze dinetto $ 2 pc. caMlel living room Tilt-beck reclining chalrt S-------- Cedar chest * 29.50 tabto lamp * 1.95 epertmtnt size gas ranj|* .«219.*0 >109.0* *11*.** 2-Oo^ b 3*" largt oven gas ra 1*" tIactrK rangm^ PEARSON'S FUlWlTJNE 21* e. Pika FE 37M1 Opan Mon. and FrI. 'til 9 p. m. Between Peddeck and CRy Hell 9x12 LINOLEUM RUGS .... ^ SIJ PLASTIC TILE 1c Ea. VINYL ASBESTOS (Rendom) Sc E* CERAMIC TILE SC Ea ASPHALT TILE (RANDOM) 4c Ea THE FLOOR SHOP 2255 ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD A 1963 Cabinel'towd*l, zig-zag ttwing machine, used. Hat buiK-ln die tor makl^ buttonhol*3 MWing en but- (us?” oy telling*' e*"dtafr S5j*8 per CASH PRICE $40.20 APPUAJ^PECIALS^d* FRETTERI WAREHOUSE —*1 Reed — Mt mil* south ot Orcherd Lake Rd. Innersprlng mattree* ... 3drawer oiM ............ 2-pleca living room suit* m.fi ---^ bedroom suit* Iff.fS NIANY OTHER BARGAINS Open 'tH 4 p.m. Mon., Fri. Til 9 pjn. BEDROOM OUTFITTING CO. 4470 DIXIE HWY. Droyton Plains 673-9441 AUT()MATIC ZiG-iAO StWINO MA lind hams, etc. Modem Webiu ■bbwt - take ewtr paymenti of 1 per month tor 7 months or O cash batone*. Unhtartal Co A 1964 SINGER Rtohnwii Brolhi 3339111. CASH PRia $112.00 MISCELLANEOUS _ _ HOUSEHOLD SILVER. FE 1-741* attar 4. BEDS, CHESTS. Retrigerttor 51.4$ ptr w*ak *nd up, TVs, at 11JS per woM end up. Ranges at S1J9 per etogk and uw gat and electrk drytrt at 11.19 ‘seeTjs mr'terrific buys GOODYEAR STORE M S. Cess ___________FE 34121 PLASTIC WALL T __ BBC TILE OUTLET. K7S W. Huron PbNTiAb KiTb'Hfetl iABdACYifes >ibta *9. Heutaf St FE 334S*. ^.RECONDITIONED APPLIANCEr Weetlnghousq Dryer ss(.a* Maytag Washer Refrigaratort, Ranawad SI*.** Frigidairt Automatic Washer - GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP OF PONTIAC • “ ----- - FE 31SSS SPECIAL a* A month buys s rooms or FURNITURE - Consltls el: l-plaet Hying room atrito srilh I *too> taMat, 1 cocktail tabto and 2 tab* mjfult* with dM I, lull tlza bad V SiPlact dinetta sat. 4 chroma chtIrB Formica tap taoto, 1 beokcast, 9x11 rug ktetodad. All tor S399. WYMAN FURNITURE CO.'' 17 E. HURON FE 349(1 W W. PIKE___________FE 321SI STUDIO COUCH. 1^1 ICt tfeC- USEO TV's . ..... *19.9i REFRIGERATOR 139.91 Swatt's Radio B AppHane* Inc. WE TAKE TRADEIK.. ______ “---Fumlihingt. 2I1S Dixie H WYMAN'S USED BARGAIN STORE ........ " Only Guirmteed electric i 65-A wruKic: •lAVtl^iH. ShiGBR SSWINO MA- j aueranlt*. Demelew Inc. FE S-4H1 *, S»17S9 alter s. THE PbNTl'AC PRESS. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1964 TWEyTY-NINK W-W, TV > KMIw 6« OOdD SCLEcVfa*rOp'^4B^^ tolor, iM porttMt TV-» . —front $3f.fSt OALBY RADIO li.TV . ■“ ' FB AWW Johnson's Radio & TV 4S W. WALTON FC AiSM stfel»66.-etiXa6H. S^iAktR. Prp-AWF. Amp. Ft Ugl. _ COMPO-ETBLY AUTOMATIC, 3N WATB^ SQflTBMBR RINTAU UN- tn-IOT. For Sih MsmDwmms H Nrkle Mkwlem^ 47 LUXAIRr OIL FURNACE, jn TMrAoM. Now bl iw*, t7A jpX INSULLIB OIL HEATBR >OR YlkAiLf R *15. vts«« ONE ROUND SWIMMING POOL, A. ALUMINUM Sl^NG. IktOrtMS, •wrtlnot. Vliwl iMbiA ------- matarloU. Quality low E STS4S VALLELY- OL E HiXTeft, ------- J- WRlNOEit; tyPE WASMIE'R r «. ^.Il«. It up ---- __________t. FB Asm._______ anirFB"*a!;y»rff;»^.rs; 30-GALLON FliH AQUARIUM AND FINi and al‘ —----•- 1. EM S-WM. .’'wi-^Tach trie oultar __ _______ , and dMil motar, S2S. Brodtlyn. ______________ 1,000 gallon ^u^l tank used (or Phllpat. All or*-----* • partaci condition. BTU Ui ^ORCeb-AI ComplaMy Initallad. ralvmi. S5I5. Aca Haatin A SINGER Dlal-a-atndi aawina mat cOMnal, uaad. BullFIn dr uw. SS.S0 par Fiva • yaar t___________ _______ Broltiart Sawing Cantor. 33Af3t3. , CASH PRICE $58.80 sawing machlna lir walnut consola. . ________ C.FE0-4S3I. BLACK WROUGliT IRSn SIDE rallingt lor two alapa. Spiral da-sign, FE IT004. BARGAINS - NEW LUXAIRE GAS ------- __ <00X00 B’" ______ -......_..j UMI la t-3S37,........ loom BTU L A ii M * — fixt0r#s, oil and al luppllat. Crock, i , Mack and galvani; Saninr t I pabit. Supar Kam-Tono HEIGHTS SUPPLY lats Lapaar Rd. FB as43l ~BEEF ANb FMlI-tULP AND-quartars. Opdyka Mkt. FE 5-7041. Bottle Gos Installation Two lOOpound eyilndan and aqulp-mant, SIS. Graat Plaint Gas Co., FE ioon._______________ Corlood Prefinished 4-xr AND 4‘xr MAHOGANY 4'»r AND o-kt birch MANY OTHERS ON DISPLAY PONTIAC PLYWOOD _ 1410 Baldwin FE ^SS43r roMPLdIffsfOCK 0# t»l(kB AMD (Ittlngt — Dto^ coppar and f-* Iron for draint. Plastic, cop is^ganaiTsiSsr-iS' Montcalm. FE SAm. . OR : DEEP WdLL PUMP WITH YaNK and littings ra&^Mc 403-0053. DON'T MERELY BRIGHTEN YOUR carpatt. Blua LAra tlsam. Ellml-nata rapid raaoHlno. Rant alactrk snampaear SI. Advanca Floor Dac-oralort. blAMONO ENdAAEMENT RING, appralaad vawa U7S. Prica S400 Plaata tand rapllaf to Pontiac D. & J. CABINET SHOP Custom cablnatsr Formlka top A solas at Formica. slnkA hoods an" taucats. COMPARE OUR PRICES. “■ ■■ HURON . .. Excallant 4- 1504, _____________________ engagement an5 wedding ring, matctiad tat. Slie. 333-TOW. Fuel oil gUn. aCoustiCal Ilia, 33 ritia, PfIauW rod and raal. wadarA army cot. tarp, car top carriar, wira whaal oovarA FE 5- 4030. FO« dusty CONCRife FLOORS Uta LiRuld Floor Hardanar SImpla inaxpantiva BoLlis7ELEC-irlc taw. viollna. FE 5-5403. OARMe SALt, KTbBdft 33, t*. House claaning days. Hams too goad to throw out, tirad at tham all. Anttauas, curtaint, chlldran't toyA cloininw mltcallanaout Itams. 9 to 5, Friday and Saturday. 1419 Cola St., Birmingham. (Balwaan *--------Td Eton Road.) GAS FukNACB, UsiD LHCt MtW ___________FB 1-3144_________ GE ELBCTRIC RANGE, 4-FlECE room chalTA chaat, hookad rtm and~mltc. Ilaitis. PE 5-0900, nOO Hill Road, aocand hauta on BaM- HAGGERTY HAS IT I CALIFORNIA REltWoOD FENCING 1x4 Radwood Roatadt .onoc lln. N. _____ 039,95 and S40.95, marrad. Mlchi(|an Fluoraacant, 393 Orchard HAND RUG LOOM; ALSO AAAtB-- - ter uta. FEO-SSOa. , TERRIFIC THE WAY WE'rI Blua Lustra tor doanhw d u^lttary. Rant alactric lar 01. McCandlaw. Carpats. JIM'S salvage OUTLET, EVERY-Ihlng brand naw. FIra talvaga. Prtoat wholaaala or lowar. Comar , Airport at Hatohary. OR 44MI0. OitaakdayA IM Saturday, M UDOiR; M-Pbb+ EXTENSION. Old Easy 9Mry waahar. 110 aa. ^40 onawa. Pontiac. AOanomlnaa S Ufi£ mv»t mit wMkd 9m Mvtrtyp ltl»ll4Sa LUMBER PHILCO TBLiVISIDN, OOGALLdN. -------- ------- 114.95; SBgallon haatar S47.95; splaca batlT^A 050.95 Laundry tray, trim, 019.95; showsy stalls wHh trim, 033.95; RfeFRIGERATbR, LlQObil CAbl-nM, braaklast sat and mhc. FE ROOFING Y 33 glat I Brush' straat. FE SIGNATURE, ADDING A4ACHINE 9900 Elactric 9 column, 10 kav. 5 months old. HtlllcrattarA C. B. radio, Atodal CB-7. 4 months old, ^htnnal transmlttar and racalvar. tISO. PE MOM. STbUFFER PDSTUfc* R#ST A(t6 tank, SI5; multigraph, S3S. SW^Q77. TWO-LAMP, 4-FOOT FLUORES-cant lights Idaal tor work banchOA shops. 019.95 vahM, 010.90 marrad. Saa lactory showroomA Michigan FluoratcanI, 393 Orchard Laka 10. TALBOn LUMBER Paint cknaout Sola. Intarkir Laytox, anamal and Plastra Tana, 01 to 1035'Oa8tond‘Ava.________FE 44595 _ SALVATION ARMY RED shield STORE 110 W. CAWRENCE ST. Everything to moat your r Clothing, Fumltura, and Applla___ USED GAS AND OIL FURNACES. Chandler Haating, OR 3 ' “ USED RAILROAD TIES, SI 0 EACH. W ANTE D: 3 AUtOiMATIC GASa ima noi3la...V0|jgj. *— ----Wt bARE ANY FdbD SERVICE TO MATCH THIS. Syhy buyatraaiart" WEDblMG AttltoUNCEMENTS AT discount prieoA ForbeA 4500 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-9747. WALL FURNACE, HEATS BOTH r 0 U T H BED; CHIFFERSSe'; domes traa; ITWxll graan IwaaC carp ft; Royal watar aoftanar. toy's clottm. Us _ 4»S. EKCOllant cooditlon. FE Christmas Trees _ 47-A 15,000 SCOTCH PINES, 5 to r. WHOLESALE: FIRST QUALITY traOA 5-7 tool lhaarad. L--- Mllterd: Phone FE 3-399B. HomI To#IS"MacliiiMry 48 CoMBros • Sarvke 35 MILLIMETER ENLARGER, 030. -■» S750B ids 71 AT GALLAGHER'S Brand naw Lowray Organs at tow at 0495. Brand naw Spinal Pianos at tow at 0399. No money do ne payments till January. Wa oi the most tor the toast. - CONN MINUET WITH LESLIE CaMnett. Sustain and parcuaalon, damonstrators. LI90.00 Value OIJSO.OO MORRIS MUSIC FINE VIOLIN, 050. REPAIR AND GULBRANSEN MidDEL B TRAN-slstor organ, mahogany, axe. condl-tlen. 4730743. dRGANS ■ CONN ORGANS FULL LINE Used CONN Caprice — Walnut PIANOS SOHMER CONN (^ERICA'S HOME PIANOS LEW BETTERLY MUSIC CO. Across from Birmingham Theatre Free Parking________Ml 49003 PIANOS TO RENT WITH OPTION *- buy at tow H 00 par rnenm. GALLAGHER'S MUSIC . Huron_________ FE 4<544 PIANO SPECIALS Floor Samples Reduced Up tL $185 SPINETS Priced as Low as $388 USED UPRIGHTS FROM $48 LOW, EASY TERMS ^GRINNELLS PONTIAC MALL OPEN DAILY 9:30 TO 9 P.M. 682-0422 ORGAN. TAKE OVE* PAVMENtS. FE 49031_ RENTAL PROGRAM AVAILABLE VNa clarinatt by Lablanc. Drum ----------- Pontiac lb Ptoaewa n oamani (Above In M w m Burmeister's EM S-4I7I ^ ajfi. to I P-m. Mtol ' one of AmiMica's greatest values. Full $pii.et organ, starting at $495. WIEGAND MUSIC CO., 469 Elizabeth Lake Road. Piano tuning and organ repoir. USED 0RGAn$ PRICED TO SELLI CHOOSE FROM LAWREY. WUR-LITZER, BALDWIN AND HAMMOND ORGANS i GRINNELL'S 27 S. SAGIN/VW FE 3-7’68 SALE GUITARS . JM . ACCORDIONS' It. FE K~~ STB INWAY GR/^D; WALNUT FtN- WHITE FENDER JAZZlVlASTiR GUITAR, FENDER TELECASTER CUSTOM EPIPHONE ELECTRIC GUITARS B BASSES ' AMPLIFIERS _____________4790151 71-A ACCORDION, GUITAR LESSONS. tolat-SorvIca hilanackL OR 3-.'*" 4-DOOR REACTh-IN COOLER AND ngacallbnaous restaurant aouip-mant, 4-ft. Narga and 3w^l Sper^t Geeds 74 UtED 13-GAUGE AUTOAAATIC shotmm* ftn« •h«p«. Evans Equip-mtnf. ir 30 GAUGE STEVENS, 13 GAUGE Single, I Baglay. archBry bovYs -:r-Mseb."Tjiw 30 per cant off. 51" “ 43" - 37 lbs. 451-3009. BANKS ARCNBRY SALES Complato Archary Suppllat GUNS-BUY-SELI^TRADE ■>a mounting and tct“— “ " I, 375 S. Tatogragh. NEW 10 GAUGE SHOTGUN ONLY 179.95 - GUNS-GUNS-GUNSI Wa carry tha oomptola line of BROWNING-WEATHERBY < REMINGTON WINCHESTER-COLT PISTOLS ---Try mem bafora you buy—• WE DO ALL OUR OWN Scope Mounting—Gun Smiming RIFLE RANGE-TRAP FIELD Opitn to Iha Public CLIFF DREYER'S Gun and Sport Cantor 15310 Holly Rd., Holly ME 94771 —Open Dally and Sundayt-PICKUP CAMPER - SPECIALS, 3-usad 1943 Apache pickup c ort S195. Choice ALcDonald up campers $199. up. A new 1944 Apache camp trailers at used traitor prices. Apache Factoiv Hometown Dealer. BILL COLLER, I mile east ot Lapeer 'sHtSfbuNi And DkER AiFlBs ___________FE ^4339 __________ USED HAND GUNS ANO SH6t guns. Opdyka Hardware. FE S4404________________________, USED GUNS IN GOOD CONDITION 1430 Parkway, Sylvan___________ Sand-Gravel-DiH 1-A TOP SOIL, BLACK DIRT, FILL, •amt- gravel, dallvared ra- Farguton, OR 34339. -------RM S6l~ 4135740. SHREbbEO BLACK DIRT, •dsd or dtllvtrsd. Also ’svtl sno fill 1700 ~“350^or Or"&447. “* bill MALE'S PIT, SAND, GRAV-el, beach sand, till. EM 3-4373. BLACK DIRT siO FOR 5 YAROs. FE 30S77 BLACK DIRT, PEAT, FILL DIRT gravel, sand, tod, etc. 3359573. CHOICE RttH BLACK DIRT! 7 -------- «<3. Dallvared. FE_4^. DARK, RICH CLAY LOAM TOP toil, 7 yards. 515, dalivarad. FE 94500. 'i GOOD bLEAN BLACK DIRT, DE-llvarad. tIO par load, OR 91944. PONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS SgP-ply. sonde orsvti. fill dirt. OR 3-1SS4. SANbe GRAVEL BLACK DIRT ANO monurt. WANTED FRiSH HbRSE'MANURE wim straw, minimum at 15 horse stables. Wa will haul all manure out. Call 731-3343 or 731-4515. Evas 731-1195.__________________ FIREPLACE WOOD, SOLID AND wall taatonad oak. maole. aoole, FE 37701. 'SALE: BObY SPlaca. 3339577 KILN DRIED FIREPLACE WOOD, all types, S17J0 card. 403-5444. ilYASbNib OAK AND HICKORY. SI5 card..FE 04145_____ 7-WEEK-OLD MALE MINIATURE Dachshund, AKC ragUlarad, llghi browns son of s oismpion. csll IS4-Sm fttr 5. .. . DACHSHUND PUPS, TERMV Stud dogs. JAHEIMS. FE S-3530. AKC DACHSHUND PUPPIES,"STUD dogs, ESTELHEIMS, FE 2-0109. AKC registBrBd beagle PUP-plas, 4 waakt. 1-731-5341. kd ■ R'EGrSTfREb - 1-rt o Cl $' Pointer, mala, AKC raglstora mala English settor, 3 months old 493-5373 attar 5 BOARDING-CLIPS, WALLEb LAEE, Orchard Grove Kemwlt. MA 91113. CHAMPION (POODLE), FlELb-■’earn Buccaneer's grandson. coliTie pups. DASHCHUND, 3 YEARS, GOOD wWh chlldran, tpayad. 4^9534. DACHSHUND, miniature, aUC, vary small pupptot. 4034304. E N (t L I $ H iETfBR, MALE, 5 years old. Good phaasant dao. rao-(storad. MA 91394. English springer spaniels, i mala 7 months, 3 puppies S wks. eld. AKC. 731-331S. __________ FROZEN BRINE SHRIMP, ALl Pat Shop, 55 .......— ----------- IRISH SETTER CHAMPION, AKC raolttarad. T-7il-534l. Ki^tot ErEE f6 bCiE$, S3i • trade. OR S-II90. Aoc^ $glBt 6pen daily 3 to 8 Haw and used turaltura ot a« klnd9 wa buy, tall, irada. 7 days. ‘^FIALLT’AUCTioN SALES •Y >-1071 or MY 34141 WHATEVER YOV WANT TO DO, USE A PRESS WANT AD . TO vO IT! 10 MARMADUKE EVERY FRIDAY EVERY SATURDAY ..„ .... EVERY SUNDAY 3:00 P.M. : SpertbM Goods - All Typos Do^ Prizas Every Auctim Wa Buy—Sall-Trtda. Ralall 7 days i (^onslgnmants w ■*— * BBB AUCTIi _________, daak, laM tor, Slava, ale. Mllqii— — bla-top draasar, commode, i desk and olher choica “— Lakavllto Rd., Oxtord. man, Auctlonaar. 430-131. stXH-pEEkInIi:------jtucTldNlEii B? Anderson & Lecminff W^t^ Csn-Tniiki ■ M&U MOTOR SALES "If wa got rid of him, we would . . MANSFltLb AUTO SALES Wa'ra buying sharp, lah art . . . NITWI Bulcb-Pantlac Salat ARABIANS. QUARTER HOESES saddle brads and grade horses m are tailing 30 hp show and ptoatura horses. All reasonably priced. Call tor Informallon, HO lirmatlon, act. Goldien r GOOD HAY "CorrailT EM >4Svi. TEAM WiTl NICE 14-FOOT ALUMINUM TRAIL-er house, tiaapt 4. Full bad and dInaHa, cooks, heat, lights wim etoctrle IJohls. CiMn —" ull. 0475. FE 5-3175. 1944 Open English Plaasura, Saddle Seat - --------------■“ ” Blua-Blacx geioing. ex< tormation. Completely PICK-UP CAMPER!. From $109 UP . . - „ BAMPER MFG. CO. 5330 Aubumdato, Utica 731-12« SAAALL CAMP TRAILER, NEEDS PIGS, SO TO $13.50. INQUIRE 015 BROWN ROAD. QUARTER TYPE THOROUGHBRED . For experlancad ridor. h. Ortonvllto, NA 7-3430. W. D. RIDING RANCH will have horseback ridat-undar Iha llghts-hay rWas any evenings. CALL OR 3-5437. 4900 CLINTON-VILLE RD. Farm ProdocB . APPLE LAND It III’. Coma an- many slias. $1.49 I ktk tor traa apple — zed pure apple elder W...... CORNER OF OPDYKE (Ml ____AUBURN (M59) phoenix TRUCK CAMPERS 0-10-10.4, Iron! and tida models Pioneer Camper Salas. FE 3-3909. WINNEBAGO New 14 and 19-topt -trallart and pickup campers. Alto pickup cabs. Plus used traitors and campers. TRUCK CAMPERS ------- Naw and used , $395 up. Jacks, Intercoms, telescoping bumpers, ladders, racks. LOWRY CAMPER......... .......... __________COLONIAL. LIVED IN months. Taka over payments. FE 5-5B5I.___________________________ 954 PONTIAC CHIEF, 34 FOOTER. $995 Baautitul. OR 90344. drapes. Will tall aqui^ at reasonable price. No. 1 Square lake Traitor Park, 3354301 ------ -- ANOTHER FIRST 35'x0‘ wide. With living root pansion. “ ■ Hutchinson APPLE LAND CIDER PRESS TMir.»ot«'*^'"^ dWf APPLES-PEARS op«i - ---- Auto SorvicB ^^^FALL Specials MOTOR TRANSMISSION AND BRAKE Overhauls AND Minor Repairs ON .Any Make Terms OAKLAND WE NEED CARS I TOP DOLLAR FOR GOOD CLEAN CARS Motthews-HorgrBoves 431 OAKLAND AVE. 1954 PONTIACS. 1954 PLYM-luth, running condition. 053-5333. “ always BuViNb UsBd Auto-Tnick Ports 102 1954 BUICK MOTOR. GOOD SHAPE ________FE 0-1053 ______________ 1954 FORD V4 FOR PARTS OR AS is. Exc. mechanically. 4034017. FORD 392 OR CHEVERLOT FAC- Now and Uttd Tracks 103 1953 CHEVY WRECKER, ^TON, all Ashton equipment. Telescope boom, 525 Elizabeth Lake Road. Call FE 2-3544. 1953 FORD F400 VO ENGINE, 2-»i.. S25 liras, 13 ft. hoOv. 5550. JEROME- GUSON Inc., I— Dealer. OL 19711. FORD .,53 CHEVY Vt TON PICKUP, RUNS t GOOD, GOOD RUBBER. DON'T AMSS THIS ONE. 0125. *DcnDi EC Aiirn NORTON-BSA 5-SPEED DUCATI ^ PONTAC CYCLE SALES 3>3 S. ^Inaw —" ' YAMAHAS 1945 AAodeli At CYCLE 1939 GMC PICKUP, 1943 MOTOR, 5100. Call FE 5-1373 alter 4 p.m. 1949 CHEVY Dump truck, me- tlras. Cab needs t 1951 FORD TANDEM DUMP S1,0(XI excellent condition. Call Milford, MU 5-3137 svenlngt.______________ 1950 FORD 19FOOT VAN, MODEL Commerce bolwoan B Bums and Duck Walton 1 block a APPLES: YOU PICK OR WE PICK. Marvin MMdtolon, Sr. 1510 Prt^ more Rd., Laka Orton, Mich, (alter ■ - - ' Saturday "" ------------- Delivered and sat-up. Many n on display lor your shopping Bob Hutchinson 4301 Dixie Highway OR 3-1303 Drayton Plalni 871 bixto ' I 3-1303. USED WHEEL HORSE TRAC-tort starting from S350. Used chain saw. Evans Equipment. 435-I7I1._ ■..j,.. McCULLO(JCH'(fHAIN'SAWS | early AMERICAN DiL .. t104I CONTEMPC. -.... Priced as ^BS $1305. | FRENCH PROVINCIAL Cranbroe* ir wW# 54495 KING BROS. WE WILL not be undersold Rd ai'oodvkf Midland TrbilBr Sales PontiAC “d. •? Opdyw j havc a ONE USBD I.H.C. TRACTOR Mbb-lnsT DIXIE ----- el No. 440 wHh Henry loader and mfw s wum backhoa. A-1 shape. 03,995. Credit KING 1 TON utility ir hunters. FE SEE OUR LINE OF HOMELITe| chain taws. Davit AAachInery Co., Ortonvllto, NA 7-3393. Spoclalist tor| farm tractors and machinery psHt. | 40 tarn. . Featuring Buddy and Nomads:, catad halfway between (Trion and FIRST Hardware. DEERE. HARTLAND ARE TratwIJTis^rs 17-FDOT ALUMINUM TRAILER. Stoeps 5. Excellent condition. 1450 EM 3-3B45. AIRSTREAM LIGHTWEIGHT , TRAVEL TRAILERS Sine# 1933. Ouarantoad ' Saa Iham and Mt a F* tion at Warner Traitor I ___ Frolic Trotwood, (iarway, W^ Comanche, OrHtwood, Tour-a-noirM and Baa Lint. Truck campers and uttd traitors. Storagt. JACOBSON TRAILER SALES ANb RENTAL, 5490 Wllllamt Laka Rd., Drayton Plains, OR M9SI. ALL NEW 1964 Avalairs, Hollys, Tbwas, CfBB fravBl Trailers ELLSWORTH AUTO and TRAILER SALES 4577 Dixie Hwy. MA 5-1400 BY OWNER,' WA-WA TRUCK CAMP Colonial DIPLOAAAT NEW 1945 rktas and 50 and 40 foe HEADQUARTERS One of finest ; units. 1 I ColtoM Heights Atobilepsrk MARLETTE, VACABONb, GARD-ner, Skylinq, GenersI, 10-13 and 34 wMa. 40 floor plant. See (3em, Martotto, and Yellowstone Open dally 94:M — Closad Sunday Oxford Trarler Sales _______________MY 3^1731 WANT A GOOD 9 traitor? Call Rent Troibr Sfoca NEW SPACES. NATURAL GAS PONTIAC MOBILE HOME PARK ALE: ^130 FT. LOT IN (MOBILE 7HY RENT? BUY FOR LESS PER month. Mobile home lots, 40x134, $3,49$, $35 down S35 ear month. Bloch Bros. FE 9 914" MT MAG. wheels. WITH tJO-14 Goodyaar tires for Ford. SITS. 3314 Frombes. Drayton Plaint a variety of floor plans. Every trailer carrtot a lull itCtory warranty. Here's where you really tavt and gal a custom buIN travel traitor. ■ WIntor Storagt Ayailabto .vr.'TJSSilS'S,,.. *"■ *■ ^ Truck Tir, ^iob . .. -----------. gj ..... igx33.s-t0 ply mud and , snow nylon' r Ask tor spacltl doal ! on tats of tour ' FREE MOUNTING B4I. CREE truck camper, owilainad, was $1,995. “““ -extra ipaclal daal on h a tacrOliai STOP OUT II mtota U4 W. Huran FIRESTONE HONDA AND TRIUMPH ANDERSON SALES St SERVICE ' 30 E. Pika________FE 3-4309 Boots - Accessories 14 FOOT OUTBOARD CRUISER; S?,19L IMAZUREK'S LAIKe'^k sIa MARINA, 34S S. Blvd. E 99507._______________ 11-FOOT STAR CRAFT HOLIDAY i LAKE & SEA ALL 1945 MODELS AVAILABLE AT FALL PRICES MICHIGAN TURBOCRAFT SALES 3527 Dixit Hwy. OR 90304 ALWAYS A BETTER DEAL BOATS-MOTORS MERCURY-SCOTT MCCULLOUGH Trallert-Marina Accessories CRUISE-OUT BOAT SALE BOATS AT A GREAT OISCOUNT-Glatlron, Lone Stars, MFG boats, tom# very good used rigs from SI50. AAarcur/ Motors 3.9 to 100 ^ -STILL THE BEST DEALS AT^ CLIFF DREYER'S Gun and Sport Center 15310 Holly Rd„ Holly ME 94 *1pan Dally and Sunday— CLOSE OUT JOHNSON MOTORS 1959 GMC l-TON WRECKER, NEW 3-7T«i^nt s. PlJjft 402-: •r FORD Dealer, OL 1-9711. 940 FORD C-400 WITH lit .... 3-speed axle, VO angina, 025 tires, 30,000 miles, Ford Co. trucki JE-ROME-FERGUSON Inc., Rochester FORD Dealer, OL 1-9711 1941 C O R V A I R 95, RAMPSIDE pickud, red and " ‘ " cellent _________________ LOT, 1104 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM. Ml 93735. HURON Motor Soles 1962 Ford F-lOO '/2-Ton Pickup This one has heater, washersy si< nalsr only BEATTIE Traitors EVINRUDE MOTORS Boats and Accattortos food. Aluminum, Flbarglas d to find but easy to deal w DAWSON'S SALES Tiptico Lake_____■ MA 9-3179 _____ - Sea-Ray ------- Johnson Motors and Boats STORAGE-REPAIRS PINTER'S-FE 4-0924 n rwwk. Tues.-Thurs. to t. Clemens Rd. Exit) Inside-Outside Storage Boot Repairs—Refinishing HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS "Your —■"* ■ 5. Teleg____ -MERCURY OUTt___ Starersft—Soa-Ray — Cruittrt In -BOATS- BIRMINGHAM JOHNSON MOTORS WINTER STORAGE INSIDE OR OUT Michigan, Turbocraft Sales 3537 Dixie Hwy. _____OR 4 condition. 51,195. . VAN CAMP CHEVY AAILFORD MU 91025 1943 CHEVY CORVAN 95, OWNER driven, under, warranty, Ilka new throughout, private, 11,375, Ml 7-3491._______________________ 1943 FORD f-700 WITH 154 WB. Vt, 5-tpeod transmlulon, 3-speed axle, 900 rubber, many more extras, Ford show truck, must see to appreciate! JEROMEfFERGU- row seats, 4 to choose fftim, from S1495. JER0ME-FER6US0N, Inc. Rochostar FORQ Dealer, OL t-9711 G.M.C. Factory Brunch New and Used Trucks HUNTER'S DELIGHT 1944 bODGE W-ton town wagon, 9,000 mlto^ extra size liras, automatic trani-mission, other txtras, must tall, will sacrltlce, 415-1934. JEEP "Your Authorized Oaalar" OLIVER BUICK and JEEP 310 Orchard Laka WoBted Cor^Traeki_^101 ALyyAYS BUYING AND PAYING *^-e FOR GOOD CLEAN i-x-x FOR BERNIE AT- BIR.AINGHAM lYSLER-PLYMOOTH, IN NO DUES OR FEES. AVERILL'S o- I FE 3-9171 3020 Dixia FE 940M CORD CONVERTIBLE, 6ruSEN- Califomio Buysrs Did You Know? VILLAGE RAMBLER t mort for ANY make uttd car: TRIUMPH Call tor Ap^altal Auto insurance FOR cancelled AND REFUSED DRIVERS OVER 15 YEARS EXPERIENCE IN HELPING PEOPLE SOLVE THIS PROBLEA*. Stop in Today! ANDERSON AGENCY FE 9t$l5 _______1044 Jos Foroiia Con 10S 35 NEW SPORT CARS 333-7917 HURON MOTOR SAUU U' UCK tiRES, 9B0xib. j J CRANKSHAFT GRINDING II car. AMIar riBulldtni ami vMlna^awk MacUta SI rloqd. Phoni PC t*IMSa place a PRESS WANT AD-SEE THINGS HAPPENI sunbeam MORGAN FIAT JAGUAR AUSTIN HEALEY SUPERIOR flAMBLER • '{ 550 Oakland Ave. FE 5-9421 -'|9S7—»»GA RISAbSTER, HEtbS I soma work. 4435. FB 44493. '~rTi*£c NeW Tbp, iNblNE Nfoifa Cart ROAOSTBR. 4 Iv0p good condf GOOD MOTOq. 5”EX-$230. C0il Ml i-7m. Now and Uttd Cart 106 W STATION WA(>ON, 1943, GRAY and wMto and a 3-taat basuty. EquippM with ryllo^nd^^^twstj warranty, 195 down and .low bank rales. Autobahn Mbtors, Inc. AUTHORIZED VW DEALER mile north ot Miracit Mile . Telegraph__FE 94531 1999 CHEVY STICK V-i, Jf, Wl I95S Pontiac, all poww, B7S; 1954 Chevy V-4 ttldr, $235; 1957 Ford 2-door auto. IU5. 3935 Baldwin Rd. REPOSSESSION - 1999 CHlVY, No Money DowA. Will brtng car to your home, Call Mr. Johnson, MA 5-1444. Pastor. _______ 159 CHEVY 7-4, BtL AIR l-bbOR .. . filea. Fi 3-7543, 9 Dealer. ____________ 1959 CHEVROLET, ^cylinder, automatic, black, new tires, txcoll^^ Mb^ and UtBd Cotb 106 1957 BUICK 4-OOOR HARDTOP, RA- 1944 CHEVY 3-OOOR, RADIO, HEAT-ER iiTKi V 6k/% DOWN. 127 44 r MGR.e VILLAGE RAMBLER 47 E. Maplt V TROY, MICHIGAN JU 8-0536 1951 BUICK SUPER 4-DOOR. POW- 1940 CHEVROLET V.-4, AIR CON- -------- -~?oon, a 11 K,—., • -....... 151-1774. 19M CH^Vjr^CONVI^^^^^^ autoniatlc. Ml 4-3751. 1940 ELE^RA 335 CON-lies full power, iharp condl* $1,375. FE 5-5549 wMkdayt 1962 BUICK INVICTA CONVERTI onl/ $1,995. PATTERSON C.-. ROLET CO.y NOW AT OUR NEW LOT, 1104 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2735. f63 BUICK LaSABRE 4-DObl HaFd top. Excellent condition, doubli 1944 BUICK ELECTRA HARDTOP sportfi coupe, full power, tow mlle-ege 6>2-5515. After 6 pjn. COUPE OE VILLE CADILLACi 0 motor, new muffler. FE 441333 195P CADILLAC FLEETWOOD 13S0 CADILLAC, 1960 2" series sedan with elect: _ tows and 4-way seal. In silver gray ind matching Interior. A line ' wner car tor only $1,4f5. WILSON pontiac-cadillAc Mlchl; U 4-19M- CADILLAC, 1963 4-wlndow sedan DeVlllc In st metallic gray and matching tcricr. All Cadillac power accessories. Only $395 DOWN WILSON I^ONTIAC-CADILLAC vertible, .... ____ _____ ... spare never on ground. 50 other to choose from. SUPERIOR RAMBLER SSO Oakland FE 5-9421 portal!.... ,. EM 3-0715. 1957 CHEVY CONVERTIBLE, --------condition. OR 3-4447 al- 1957 CHEVY BEL . AIR V$, AUTO-matic, full price only $495. BU'' HERE, PAY HERE. Cooper Fine I ie 0 ! Coooer =E 5-33; 1954 CHEVROLET 4-DOOR, RADIO, and healer, 4-cyllnder engine, excellently well-kept. 55 down and 24 months on balance. Ask eboi * our money-back guarantee. VILLAGE RAMBLER CHEVY 4-DOOR HARDTOP 1958 CORVETTE. 4-SPEED 327 __________8$2-1$63 195$ CHEVROLETT500R, RADIO and heater and automatic trans- VILLAGE- RAMBLER 47 E. Maple ^ TROY, MICHIGAi; ^ JU 8-0536. I CHEVY WAGON I Bankers Outlet ^ 3400 Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 1-7137 IwTCHgVYTbOOR HARDTOP, NO money down, payments ot 55A0 weekly. Call ... 5-1404 Dealer. 1959 CHEVY IMPALA, 3 - D Call Mr. Cook ot FE 84088. King Auto. Y No.l .1964 AMBASSADORS RADIO, HEATER, POWEI STEERING, POWER BRAKES ........ATOR, ■ ---- DOUBLE ACT OIL FILTER ____ ...... N BRAKES. BACKUP LIGHTS, VISIBILITY GROUP ANO OUTSIDE MIRROR. $2283 (99 down, J4 months an balanca VILLAGE RAMBLER ■ I TMlllTT THE PONTIAC >RESS. TUESDAY,. OCTOBER 20, 1964 Wtw mi fM Cm____________106 mi CHkvKOLIT (^VERTlCTf ondltton. »a««rgMlk, EOiMr bnkn, radio. tiM« or, laltiy baHi. original i ti matching kilonor. $2195 RUSS JOHNSON PONTIAC-R AMBLER a* In drlan MY 1H3 CHEVY II CONVERTIBLE, R ' Ss.nSioiS’a’irj; to go. Its doiM and 36 moni on Balance. Atk about our mar VILLAGE RAMBLER 1964 CHEVROLETS hnpala Sport Coupe. Red and Unpala Sport tedan. with blue Interior. V power stooring Impale convertibla. Palomar red. black Interior and black top. V4. Powerglide, power iteering I Patterson Chevrolet Co. I1M S. Woodward Ave. Ml 4-2735 BIRMINGHAM tM3 SUPER SPORT CHEVY In warranty. JMuat Mil. 11,795. . ; 1-1793, Clawnffi.-___________ W MAC.BU .SUPER SPORT, 3 ove^pymenti. T964 CHEVELLE, 3-Do6r SEDAN, Acylindar, Powerglide, pc . KUl.e 1 WUed nui? ntr LOT, 1104 1 WOODWARp AVE. BIRMINOHAM. Ml A2735. t CHRYSLER 4-DOOR, POWER stetrtng _ . wallte r«(^ ar miulorie Ixc. 83a^3.__________ IMl CHRYSLER ' w!ll*^r«r?or tt to ’onzf top. T r ti tailorai New «mI Uied Can 106.j New ond Uied Can .101 W57 FORD STATION WAGON, *,| 1941 FORD GALAXIE “NO'.' STAN- 1957 T-BIRD, EXCELLENT ( I topi, a^nw ooT-flWT. 195^ FORD STATION WAGON. V-l. Good condition tlie. Call after 4 19N FORD, SBOORTTCYLINBil automatic. Good tranaportatton. Phone 435-IM5 anytima. 1959 RDRD FAIRLANE SOO, AUTCF n offer. 674^336. 3 FAIRLANE CON'^RTI- accept., reatonable ______ 4 p.rti. On 3-7249. 1959 F08d' 2-DOOR, radio, HEAT- Jard -...- . ------ ...----- I9« t^AIRiJkNE, i-bOOR, 4, StAN-dard. Ml M943 ' kOiiOOR 1943 FORD FAIRLANI 1963 Ford Deluxe Cluo Wagon, with a blue I with five new whitewallc, heater, carry the whole fam,,, this one with eaM. Just S13.l7l weekly, with No. t Down. Call I Mr. Darrell, Credit Coordinator — New end Used Can 1964 PONTIACS ond TEMPESTS 106 NOW OPEN Additional Location 855 OAKLAND AVE. (Outdoor Showroom) Demonstrators Mileoge Cbrs Trade-Ins WIDE SELECTION. AT TERRIFIC SAVINGS Spartan Dodge' CALL CREDIT V Crui»e-o^atiCr FALCON 4-6CXJR, AUTOAAATIC factory official car, almost ..— ..awl II49S. JEROME-F E R -GUSON Inc. Ro^estar FORD DON'T BUY UNTILL YOU SEE US FIRST OL 1-9711.^____________ FALCON FUTURA W Sport Coupe. Whlje^jjrlth ^ .17 Salesmen To Serve You I console floor s Cooper $1575 ^WILSON .PONTIAC RETAIL STORE PONTIAC-CADILLAC 65 Mt. Clemens St. FE 3-7954 4 1930 CONTINENTAL MAAk Fine Used Cars! I I Dixie OR 3-1253 Drayton See Cooper before you buy__ 1^63 Ford Convertible mission, only 11,9451 T-BIRD, 1960 Factory olr-condltlonod. beautiful turquolM with metchirtg Interior. 9 LINCOLN Premier, 4-door, $1395 WILSON Homer Right Motors,, Inc. [ tires, battery. Excellent condition. I Best offer. 674^034.___ _________ 1953 MERCURY, GOOD TRANSPOR- ,1943 GALAXIE < I, S2,095. FE 2.4189. I CONVERTIBLE! PONTIAC-CADILLAC 1963 Ford te, 6^1714. _ M E R C U R Y MONTERiEY 2->r hardtop. 473-011$ aftor 5. I960 Ford ;i94l COMET. RADIO, HEATER, NO MONEY DOWN. Take over I payments of 427.44 per month. Cell CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at Harold Turner Ford. Ml 4-7500. Wagon, 6-Passenger Wlth^ 4j^llnder^ 39®00o'actual *n car'I*'only*4445.* ' *' ““ BEATTIE I 1943. 4-OOOR SEDAN rer. New tires. Orlglhal 1,800. Cell alter 5 p.m. BEATTIE .....N WATERFORD >f SERVICE after the sale" OR 3-1291 941 FORD T-BIRO HARDTOP with radio, heater, power steering, brakes, wlndowt all leather trim, tu-tone paint, Only 81,994. Call Mr. Al Peters et8 JOHN Your FORD OfcALER . ... ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD “Home oFSERVICE attar the sole" McAULIFFE McAULIFFE '‘only 81,495. BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymooth xxS*l’***^lth noVdown' Mr. Darrell,' Credit .Coord(ne- NOW OPEN Additional location 855 Oakland Ave. Spartan Dodge “ 1942 DODGE LANCER FE 8G998 _____ 1943 DODGE DART CONVERTIBLE, tton^*M471 ***" 1964 Dodge Oarf — Chrysler aconomy car ----- transmission, car w car warranty I LLOYDS LIncoln-Marcury-Comat New Location 1250 Oaklond Ave. ____________FE 3-7843___________ rt)RD FAIRLANE 500 4-DOOR AU- tomatlc power steering. Mat belts. In warranty. Ml 44>704. »57 FORD CONVERTIBLE, HAS radio and heatar* automatic transmission. $125 WIT price. $5 down, 24 months of balance. Ask about our moneytteck guiranlee. VILLAGE RAMBLER 47 E. Maple TROY, MICHIGAN JU 8-0536 BUY YOUR NEXT OLDS OR RAMBLER FROM HOUGHTEN & SON 528 N. Mein St. SEE US FIRST BOBBORST » S. Woodward Birmingham MI.6-4538 Visit Our Outdoor Showroom At 855 OAKLAND AVE. SPARTAN DODGE Credit or Financing Problems? FORD 630 oaKiano nve._____FE 5;£l FORD 1941, 4^000R SEDAN, rvMfwtor. auto fransimitsion. wht »4M33. FORD Tve._______he »4ipi I S DOOR HARDTOP. brakes, almost like ntwl JEROME FERGUSON Inc. Rochester FORD dealer, OL 1-9711. J944 Falcon station bus, good 1941 FORD HARDTOP, NO MONEY ' condition. 474-S274, down, paymenti of 88.50 woekly. -—-------- — Call Mr. Johnson, MA 5-1404 Deal- K ■0T'T’/^T LLOYDS LIncoln-Mercury-Comet New Location 1250 Oakland Ave. ____________FE 3-7843__________ 1959 NASH METROPOLITAN, VERY good condition. 343-7732 after 3. 1958 OLDSMOBILE, 2-DOOR, AUTO- ---1C trensmisslon, radio, heater, er brakes and power steering, price 8197, no money down. Estate Storage Co. 109 E. South Blvd. Nbw and U«6d Can VALIANT 4eD00R, RADIO, heater. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Take ovor pay-mants of 124.07 par monfh. CALL CREDIT MGR., Mr. Parks, at Har old Tumar Ford. Ml 4-75(10. 1943 PLYMOUTH “SPORT FURY' hardtop It....................... out. Original metallic finish p HIvaly sparkles. The bucket a Interior (• '-“ ........... —* h Console) Is cust^ black carpet and black p dash. It has a line V4 ei automatic 'transmission, po steering, power brakes, radio, ar, whitewall tires end other a This low mileage Mteauty w.... . NEW CAR GUARANTEE TO 50,000 MILES can be yours today to- BIRMINGHAM Chrysler—Plymouth 1951 PONTIAC, FAIR CONDITION. 475. FE 4-1288. tRI>OWEh, 2- 1958 PONTIAC, ), good a ■ OV?204 959 PONTIAC* CONVL. cellent condition, ana hyd*r”'^1Snled* win fibster tires. Cell FE M174;_____________________ 959 PONTIAC 4-DOOR I^ARDTOP, r, call 85M247 oi L 2-4342 1940 ponTiac, sharp, power. 4900. 138 Glenwood. FE 2-3449. 1940 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE power steerlhg and brakes, radio, good condition. $725. MlJ:9425. I960 PONTIAC CATALINA CONVER- llble, power, go----- ■ '.E 4-9073. d condition, draft- 1940 PONTIAC STATION WAGON, "), heater, power brakes and Ing, new tires, exc. condition. 827.___________________________________ lit Coordinator. NOW OPEN ADDITIONAL LOCATION 855 Oakland Ave. (Out^r Srwwrt^) ^ ^ ^ (Jus Spartan Dodge 1961 Tempest LLOYDS Ltncoln-Mercury-Comet New Location 1250 Oakland Ave. FE 3-7843_______ PONTIAC convertible. DoubI power. Automatic, radio, heater whitewalls, glistening midnight blu with white top. 100 per cent pr* delivery guarentoed. Full Price $1,299 STARK-HICKEY FORO It Road E. of Woodward 0 MILESr FULL Auto Sales rjSiSnTMji-s-'t'Sie.'DMi:, $197 SPECIALS! ; ; 58 Ford $197 i' 2-door wagon r l!5.!l‘57Ford .............$197| 158 OLDS 88, BODY DAAAAG& good motor and, transmiulon. FE 3-9157. j19S9 OLDS HARDTOP, RADIO, HEATER, AUTOAAATIC ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Take over payments of S20.82 per month CALL cfREOIT MGR., Mr. Parks at Harold Turner Ford Ml 4-7500. TEMPEST, 1942 SPORT COUPE. ~ ' srt Floyd. Ml 4-1000, 9 e.m.-S MU 4-72S2 evanings.__________________ 1960 OLDS r vote is this r( 1962 FORD XL . Darrtll, Credit Coordina* NOW OPEN Additional Locati'on 855 Oakland Ave. almost llkJrnesrGjMaxIa^^'SOO-' Xl' 2-door hardtop haTdtop. Dealing polar white with 57 Plymouth . . $197 red bucSiets, 390 engine and power. SKioor wagon wi'th’^1 iSLn'“c.*'J^'. 58 Chevy Impala , $197 Credit coordinator. 58 Chevrolet iJ $197*^0 X T^ J NOW OPEN_________ xdoor stick shift opartan JJodge I NO MONEY DOWN j 1941 OLDS sYaTION WAGON, SU- ' per 88. FE 54)3« 312 W. Montcalm FE 84071 repossession Outdoor Showroom At 855 OAKLAND AVE. SPARTAN DODGE C0RVET1ES 1941 Convertible. Tuxedo black with black Interior, black top. fuel Inlectlon, 4-speed 82,495 ex mile north of Cass A ADDITIONAL LOCATION 855 Oaklond Ave. (Outdoor Showroom) (Just Spartan Dodge; | ) Money Dov your door. I 1943 OLDS F- REPOSSESSION-1 .... .......... automatic trans-; Isslon, V8 engine tool 41722 Call r. Glenn Colgan at — j JOHN ' McAULIFFE A 5»ia06rDaator. baiance. FE McAULIFFE 430 Oaktend » FALCON FUTURA, 2-DOOR ' ________________________ _____ .. .. dan, automatic transmission, mileage, best otter. Ml 4-2507. j- l jj engine, m, S5 down a ik about our money back guar- VILLAGE RAMBLER l^RAMJ^ER AMBASSpDOW."3(t,- 1943 RAMBLER 778 SERIES, VILLAGE RAMBLER uvnT .9r««n rin tool Standard tr $1495 RUSS JOHNSON PONTIAC-RAMBLER M24 In Orion MY 3X244 STUBEBAKER CHAMPICIN. w rubber 8125. Sava Auto. FE Outdoot Showroom At 855 OAKLAND AVE. SPARTAN DODGE BIRMINGHAM trades Every used car offered for retail to the public is a bonafide 1 - o w n e r, low mileage, sharp cor. 1-year parts and labor warranty. 1944 BUICK RIvk 1944 BUICK 9^assenger 19ZrilUICK wagon, 7.000 mitot \fU BUICK LeSabrt. CAHtMirflhlw 1H4 BUICK HARDTOP . 1963 BUICK Electro Convertible 1963 BUICK Hardtop 1963 FORD XL Convertlbl U79S U4I5 U395 $2.m 1963 BUICK 4-dOOr 1961 CADILLAC $< OeVilf 1961 BUICK Hardt 1961 BUICK 4-dOOf BUICK 515 S. Woodward VILLAGE RAMBLER TROY,’ MICHIGAN JU 8-0536 WILL ACCEPT Credit or Budget PROBLEMS? We Can Finance You! 100 Cars to Select From! Call Mr. Dale FE 3-8765 _______LLOYDS____ $1,598. 444-1004. Use a Poritiac Press Want Ad portation. FE S4I271. ™*b‘i°3^9a ^ PTYMOuT^-fOWltAflON WAGON. JEROME OLDS ond CADILLAC New Car Savi.igs—Today CALL FE 3-7021 9 PLYMOUTH, POWER STEER-ig and brakes, automatic, 8295. 'ontlac Auto Brokers, Perry at Easy Bank Financing STARK-hlCK«Y FORD 14 Mile Road E. of Woodward 1959 PLYMDUTH 2-ODDR HARD- SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK 885 Rochester Road OL H135 1945 MUSTANG HARDTOP FORD , executive's car, loaded with extras. 473-7184. ei^nlngs. _______ 1958 JEEP STATION WAGON, X ‘ ■ ...... niles, original IN STOCK Reaciy For Delivery! condition. Ml CoordJnetor. Visit Our NEW AND USED CAR Outdoor Showroom At 855 OAKLAND AVE. SPARTAN DODGE ^DE^WTfH Houghten & Son NOW OPEN Additional Location 855 Oakland Ave. (Outdoor Showroom) )e nortti ot Casf Ave.) Call Mr. Yale 651-8558 Credtt or Budget PROBLEMS? We Can Finance Youl Call Mr. Darrell FE 8-4528 Spartan Dodge Oldsmobile-GMC—Rambler RcicHESTER________OL 1-9741 Visit Our Visit Our New end Used C Outdoor Showroom At 855 OAKLAND AVE. SPARTAN DODGE Outdoor Showroom At 855 OAKLAND AVE. SPARTAN DODGE We're wheeling and dealing ' the all-new 1965 Ramblers. OVERSTOCKED! , ,„c .tuj numuic.y. f*’*™ "O''''! cars CHOOSE FROM 5( 75 Cho)ca-Used Cart VALIANT-pODGE TRUCKS Public Notice The new Wide Track is now open to our new lot at 254 S. Soginaw. 75 hand-picked cars to choose from-all priced to mJI immediately. No money down, bank rates, immediate delivery. Call , FE 4-1066 or FE 3-7854 Lucky Auto - 254 S. SAGINAW j CAPITOL: Auto Sales $397 SPECIALS $397 $397 $397 $397 $397 312 W. Montcalm FE 8-4071 Easy Financing — Bank rates SUPERIOR RAMBLER | 550 Oakfond FE 5-9421 60 Chevy Corvair Stici 59 Ford 2'Door auto black 59 Mercgry b^Door automatic 58 Chevrolet xDoor eutonwgc 58 Dodge Credit or Budget Problems? We Can Fina.nce You! 100 Cars to Select from! Call Mr. Dale •FE 3-7865 _______LLOYDS______ ore being sold at wholesale to make room for the new car trades. ROSE RAMBLER 1 Lake HAUPT HunterDodge ^ PONTIAC Where the Hunt Ends! Hilltop * Auto Soles, Inc. where you can Buy Credit or Financing ,/i Problems? Wa Can Financa You. Call Mr. 'Yale 651-8558 75 Choloa Used Cart ' 1965 • Mustang 2x2 "Fastback" BEATTIE as Partial Payment GUNS, BOATS, MOTORS, DIAMONDS Sunshine From a Beanery Echo From a Steamboat Whistle Exhaust Fumes From an Outboard Motor or Almost Anything Movable as Part Payment Toward Any New or Used Carl SEE BILL SPENCE FOR YOUR NEXT ‘ CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH RAMBLER-JEEP 4473 DIXIE HWY. Clarkiton AAA 5-5141 SUBURBAN OLDS BIRMINGHAM TRADES 100% WRITTEN Guarantee Every cor listed carries this guaror.tee. Take the guesswork out of buying. Used cars! Credit No Problem I ALL CARS FULLY EQUIPPED 1943 OLDS . "8a" ConvartlWe 42295 1943 OLDS Super Wagon 42495 1943 OLDS "98" Coupt Bucket! 1944 OLDS Starlire Coupe 42995 1943 ''I8“ Dynamic Coup# 42295 1942 BUICK LaSabre, Power 41795 1944 COTLASS Hardtop $2495 1941 OLDS ''9T' Holiday Air, 41495 1941 TEMPEST Coupa 4 995 1942 OLDS Hardtop 4)795 1944 OLDS “tr' Convertiblo 4avi 1944 OLDS M>oor Hardtop 4279S 1942 “98“ XOoor Hardtop 41998 1943 “98" 4-Ooor Hardtop Air 1943 STARFIRE Coupt. JUST ARRIVED FRESH STOCK-1965 TRADES ALL MAKES, ALL MODELS-50 CARS, TO CHOOSE FROM 2 YEAR WARRANTY FREE SEE STUB STUBBLEFIELD, BOB MARTIN 565 S. Woodward Ave. BIRMINGHAM MI 4-4485 "Your FORD DEALfR SInca 1930" ON DIXIE HWYi IN WATERFORD “Home of SERVICE eftor the Hie" OR 3-1291 OLIVER BUICK NEW IMl Dodge Oort IMl Dodge Wagon _____ 1940 F^ Falrim 8M 8 788 W41 Old! “OT' Xdoor 41.295 4Z39S 41,298 I 4 995 1 • 895 i 8»5 1943 TEMPEST LtAAANs No Money Down and Our 100% Pre-Delivery 1943 Tempest wagon Automatic, radio. I Guarantee ms SAVE $1,000 M Chavy »2 Ptymiautli Fury X U Dodgt Dart _________________________ 81,195 ! 1942 Dodge Dart Wagon 81,295 ; 1948 Plymoulh Bolvodtrt 8 895 Home of Trophy Boys Hunter Dodge m S. Huntor Blrmii^hwr MI 7-0955 1940 PONTIAC CATALINA -gg CATALINA Wnwr. ‘‘S?*' CATALINA XOOOR ■akt! and H^ratr^ic traOAml!- ,g, CATALINA HARDTOP %\.m on, act It today. Only 899'«wm. ,g|/ytEpcuRY MONTEREY 8lil5 '42 PONTIAC WAGON, 3 from lli45 ■41 BONNEVILLE HARDTOP 41,395 '43 FORO GALAXIE, 'Bauto/ 41,898 '43 CHEVY BEL AIR / 41,498 ;'44 PONTIAC, 4 from 43,195, 1941 TEMPEST 1964 Rambler Classic 1M3 TEMPEST UAAANS •a wMte-: VILLAGE ^^^. .j kt color; atto o.^ 962 Ooklond , HAUPT PONTIAC ,pp 4-QQfiQ r -L—< X \J\J\J\J\ 444 S. Woa8wan|^lrmlngliam CLARKSTOif 1959 PLYMOUTH 9-pau. Wgn 4 495 1957 BUICK Super Hardtop 4 495 1943 MERCURY Custom Bdoor 43,195 1942 BUICK Wlldcet ......42,195 1943 RENAULT R4 4-speed 41,885 1944 PONTIAC Convertible 83.H5 1944 STAR CHIEF ,4-door 83X95 1944 OPEL Wagon ^ 81,59S 1943 BUICK Wildcat, ConHia 83,795 1943 $PECIA|L Wagon, Auto. . 81X95 1943 MONZA Cenvartiblo .. 81X95 1942 VALIANT "300" Hardtop 81,395 IN3 RENAULT XOoor ........ 8 795 IMl BUICK Skylark 3d«or . S1.895 IMl OLDS Xdoet 81,595 1943 SKYLARK Hardtop « IMl T-BIRO Hardtop ..... 1942 BUICK Special 2-door . 1939 KARMANN GHIA-Bdoor 1942 BUICK Eltctra TU 1943 RAMBLER 2-door 1943 LaSABrA 2-door ,I948 CC(^ET Custom 2-door OLIVER BUICK EVEN IF YOU HAVE HAD: CREDIT - BAD CREDIT You Gan Buy a Car at MARVEL MOTORS ,NO 1957 Chevy »I-Air with stick thift. V-»0in«4 a btautiful hardtopl $395 ONyrjjjiwEjm^Y 1957 Lincoln ,$495 1957 OMs dtopa This is a beautiful c Me radiOg haatare tap sha $495 ONLY 44,48 WEEKLY ni958 Pontiac l-Ooor, wHh automatic 1(pntmit- $295 ONLY 82.48 WEEKLY - BUY HERE - PAY HERE - 1956 Chevy Bal-AIr, club $195 ONLY 81.78 WEEKLY '56 Plymouth ' a, club coup iharpl $95 ONLY 81.00 WEEKLY 1959 Chevy Wagon, 9 pattanger. CIttnl $495 onlV u.m weekly 1956 Lincoln tramlar, full powtr, very sh^l $195 only 81.70 WEEKLY 1958 Buick Ibto, with radio, hNt roughouti $495 . ONLY 84,48 WEEKLY 1954 Ford Pldcuo Truck, with ri $AVE ' ONLY 113.00 A60WTHLY ' 1958 Ford with radio, htal $195 1959 Pontiac Nice lliroughclrtl Stick ahlft, V4 $395 ONLY S3.48 WEEKLY MANY MDRE OUTSTANDING VALUES AT MARVEL MOTORS 251 Oakland Ave. FE&4079 AHENTION GM EMPIDYES ) PAYMENTS UNTIL AFTER STRIKE" TEL -A- HURON AUTG Sove-Savel Wolk In-Drive Out All Mokes ond Models Buick 1957 Hardtop $97.00 36 MONTHS TO PAY Cadillac 1956 Hardtop Full Power $295 WE HANDLE Chevy 1959 2 one 4-Door$ Hordtops $595 AND ARRANGE ALL Olds 1957 Fully Equipped $197 Absolutely No Money Down NO CREDIT PROBLEMS I ----m— Chevy , and Fords Wagons Low as $295 Falcon 1961 Fully Equipped $549 Plymouth I960 Ready to Gol $395 Pontiac 1959$, All Models Low os $495 Fords 1959 Hordtops $249 OR MONTHLYI Pontiac 1958 . Hardtop $197 Chevys and ^ Pdntiacs 1957$ to 1959$ v-et, SNcks, Automatics Hardtppt, I and 4 Doors . - Yogr Cholco-Ro4Mtv Id Gol Low g$ $197 TEL-A-HbRlN AUTO SA.ES 60 S. TELEGRAPH . FE 8-9661 . / ' IF -'"'--r''- THE PONTIAC PRfesS. TUESDAY. QCTQBER 20. 1964 THIRTY-OXE i| TV Features Sinjdng of Lusitania By United Press International •0 p.m. (2) e examin^. oy vDiiea iresi W^RLD WAR II, 8:00 p.m. (2) Sinking of the isiiania, use of U-iwats are (----- ' THAT WAS THE WEEK THAT WAS, 9:30 p.m. (4) Scheduled events include reports on British efections, Summer Olympics, a look at U. S. automobiles and a / review of ’64 television season. SUMMER OLYMPICS, 9:30 p.m. (9) 10:00 p.m. (4) Taped highlights, with scheduled events including the decathlon, fencing, judo, Greco-Roman wrestling and gymnastics. OTHER VOICES, 10:30 p. m. (9) piolk singer and labor pioneer Joe Hill is topic of program “ Iceland’s parliament of* 601 bers comprise the Upper House members is called me Nm me remamoer sii in me “Alpingi.” One-third of its mem- |l^er House. $$ CASH FOR YOU NOW!! Begin enjoying the things you need! Pay all your current bills ami have money left over! (ionsoli-date! Make one easy loan! Make only oiie convenient nionthiy payment by mail! No obligation, re«l tape or unnecessary fuss! Homeowners can borrow up to 100%' of the value gf your home! First and second mortgages. • Original llousr Cost a Prearnt I Balanrr 1 a 16u ( '.an t 8 7.500.00 S 5.800.00 $1,700.00 1 9,000.00 6.500.00 2,500.00 t 11,000.00 8^00.00 1 2,800.00 14,000.00 10,000.00 1 4,000.00 1 PHONE FE 8-3030 OR IN DETROIT AREA, CALL WO 5-4644 ^ Southeastern Michigan Mortgage Coni|>any I 2930 OrrhartI Lake RJ., Keego Harbor, Mirh. I Name_______———,------------------- I Address------------------^—------- City . Phone b ( SPECIAL CALL FINANCE PUN £hi ^ d* •Ka l•"l•d•l>l>a 1" FE 4-41S8 M por- Ha iMM, dawn Matitata apd kaali Open Daily and Sun. 1 CALL DAY OR NIGHT | • ADDITIONS • ATTIC ROOMS • KITCHENS • PORCHES • BATHRMS. REMDD. • QUTTERS • WATERPROOFEO BAtEMENTS I WILL COME TO YOU WITH FREE estimate and PLAMS4i0 CHARGE ALUMmUM SIDHK REC. ROOM FOUNDATIOHS , ROOFIHQ-SIOING STONE-PORCHES WOODFIELD CONSTRUCTION WINTER PRICE NOW IN EFFECT TO APRIL 1965 ONE CONTRACTOR FOR EVERYTHING — Radio Programs— WJR(7601 WXYZg 870) CKLW(600) WWJ(950!i WCAR(t 130) WPONQ 460) WJ8K(t 500) WHfWM(9f7i wwje m S ins-CKLW, Eya Opanar WWJ, SpSrt* WXYZ. A)*« Dralar WHFI, MwlC RD SKELTON th« uncinploymunt offica fallf. Clam Kadlddlahoppar’t cousin trias to gat him a lob. Bobby Rydall guasts. DONT Buy Any Water Sofleser Till You Invostigote KLEARE)^ MIRACLE WATER FE 2-9892 F. F. Smith Silei & Survice tinea 1030 $41 N. Parry ALUMINUM SIDING ALL AWNING • storm Wlpdawd & Doors • PATIOS ENQOSED • DOOR WAUS SiMwraaig Opaa 8 A. M. tg 5 P. M.. Lalgr a« Raggaat • ADDITIONS • DORMERS • FIREPLACES • REMODELING W GUTTERS • RECREATION ROOMS • INSULATION • CEMENT WORK • PORCHES • STORM WINDOWS FE 3-7S09 AH PICK UP ANiyblLtVntY AFTER HOURS ARD SUNDAYS WEEDON COMPANY FE 4-2597 Phone 1032 West Huron Street AAombgr Pontiac Arga Chambgr of Comniorco WALLED UKE MA 4-1N1 11:15-VM PATRICK Van. tha TV votes of tha Uona. knmrg all tha sports stars. Watch for him at II onTV2. wm-TV PONTIAC 882-8841 UNION LAKE WATERFORD EM S-2S85 S7S-2S42 :1 THIRTY-TWO THE PONTIAC PRE^S. TUESDAY. OCTOBER 20> 1964 yumm RCA WHIRLPOOL DELUXE 2-CYCLE AUTO. WASHER of tfSTs n«M HOTPOINT ALL PORCELAIN AUTOMATIC WASHER All porcaloln inild* and outi Lotting baouty and utility. Watar tamparatura talaction. Partial load control. Doop^dip watS and rinto. NORGE 2-SPEED 14-lb. CAP. AUTO. WASHER Wothat up to a 14-pound load, 2 tpaadt for,wath, PHILCO 2-5PEED 4-CYCLE FULLY AUTO. WASHER Giant 12-pound copacity. Hondlot biggar loadi sa daltvary, instollotlon ». Full guarantee. e delivery, Installoti ». Full gu( ill cycle. Timor controls, lint filter ond other deluxe features. delivery, installation ’ond service. Full ■guarantee. , ciaanar. 2 ipaods and tinea. 4 cycles. Automatic wotar-sovar. Exclusive undertow washing octien.n_oBiiwpHi|| Free delivory, installation T Full guarantee. HbbHhH RCA WHIRLPOOL 2-SPEED 12-POUND CAPACITY WASHER 2 speeds, 3 cycles, plus new SUPER-SOAK cycle. Damp-dry spin tpe^s, 3-temp, water selector, 2-level water saleKtion and lint filter. Top deluxe « delivery, installation B. Full guarantee. RCA WHIRLPOOL 2-CYCLE FULLY AUTOMATIC DRYER HOTPOINT DRYER AT SPECIAL LOW PRICE! NORGE GIANT 14-LB. CAP. AUTOMATIC DRYER PHILCO DELUXE 2-CYCLE AUTOMATIC GAS DRYER Electric drying. Automatic temperature selection, lint scseen, satin smooth drum. Safe for all fabrics. Sensational new Porcelain protection - durable porcelain drum and top Automotic temperature selection. Large lint filter. Low price! Big volual Dries up to a 14-lb. load WRINKLE-FREE! Lorgast / capacity of any dryer. 3-heat selection. 5-way venting. Giant lint screen. Free delivery, insfallotion gnd service. Full guarantee. Giont 13-lb. capacity, 2-cycla for regular drying and air-fluff drying. Criss In* nrHinnnpP i» 00 loreigo poiicy 10- international, led to the over- There, he will he in state un- throw of Soviet Premier der the rotunda of the National Absolutely no highLY TENTATIVE approve the tax ordinance, it would go into -effect Jan. 1 un- morrow. MAN'S wir 1^** the President’s sched- legg electors petition for a ref- MAiN !> wiu ules remain highly tentative. He erendum on the Meeting the'challenge. Miss is reported committed to visit By ’Ihe Asaociated Press Hughes stuck her long brown New York, California and Mich- Gov. Gemge Romney says hair under a man’s wig, applied igan before the Nov. 3 voting. Michigan has “no immediate a stubble of beard with theatri- might expect. All in all, she decided, there’s really no realm ii 1or other girls to her example. In Michigan, the Democrats are worried that a lengthy strike ot> Detroit newspapers may hamper thejir local candidates and Johnson’s chances of carrying that state with its 21 electoral votes. year s Romney talked about taxes PonUac, Waterford, Independ- ^ conference in .Kala-ence, and Orion townships. ^ he said he could INSIGNIFICANT RETURNS “gee ' no immediate need’ to Advance gifts and other cam- recommend an Income tax. paign units have not had signifi- ★ ★ ★ cant returns thus far. Report He said Michigan still needs sessions for these groups will be fiscal alterations thou^ part of held later in the week, Annett tUs had been secured this stated. year and that recommenda- ★ ★ * tions from a legislative com- The drive, which began Oct. mUtee are expec^ to s^est 13, is scheduled to end Nov. 6. diversion of posrible funds to local governments. - ' BEFORM ^ Romney’s comment was in I .1 response to a question whether In TonriV S ' 3 he wouW propose tax reform in III I J W ^ ^ ^ ^ Dp>acc I ond term as governor. ’The leg- I r“55> 1 islature ditched his 1063 tax re- form program. ‘ Goldwater dealt openly with the Jenkins matter for the first ^ommenUng on the commis-“In fact,” she said, “even the time in a letter yesterday to “oa’s proposal last week^ Mayor mert should forget about them.” FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) This group of prominent Kh™shchev. Capitol, private citizens will be given The briefing is also under- FINAL SERVICE detailed' reports on world de- stood to have brought out that Following the service there, velopments and asked to con- while Leonid I. Brezhnev, 57, his body will be flgwn to We.st sider various possible actions, seems to be the top man in the Branch Iowa where the final Johnson told newsmen that he Soviet ruling group, the actual service will be held as he is had met with the congressional post-Khrushchev pdwer struc- laid to rest in the national park leaders. Democrats and Repub- ture is not yet clear and the at the site of the small cottage licans, but gave no details of the possibility of further changes, where he was born in 1874. information jH^sented to them, possibly involving a power This would mean M33 signa- He said the reports he and sev- struggle in the Kremlin, must Kepeatedly, and sometimes tures, according to figures from eral Cabinet members gave be borne in mind.. ali^st miraculwsly in h i s the city clerk’s office. constituted'^a highly classified ★ * * latter years, he had fought off ★ ★ ★ briefing.” ...„ _______________ ...■ But time, and its wear, fin- City residents have until Dec. IS to request a vote. Petitions must be signed by 10 per cent of the total vote in the immediate past municipal election. Ike Takes Look at Recent World Events Jenkins Case Johnson promises information on probe —^ PAGE 7. ^ China Says U, S. trying to belittle atom blast — PAGE 11. AF Probe Board Ik^rn fliers shot down over E. Germany-PAGE a. Area News......... 4 Astrology ......... 2$ Bridge ..............*$ Comics ..............*1 Editorials' ..........• Markets .............t4 Obituaries ......... tt Sports .............aw* Hieaters ............ U TV & Radio Programs SI WOsoB, Earl ....... II Womea’s Pages....IS-ti Staebler assailed Ronuey’s meatal health policies in an appearance at Beaton Harbor where be spoke to Whirlpool Corp. employes. He said Romney has caused delay in mental health efforts % impeding organization ot community health clinics Which be called the best method fm* handling mental Illness. •k f *■ ’ ' The Republican governor, he said, has increased the local financial support necessary to get such clinics started. MORE EMPHASIS ' Staebler also pledged a stepped-up traffic safety i»o-gram wiQi more emphasis on' seomdary, roads and . titter Udensing Testrictions. He supported compulsory automobile serious ailments. Khrushchev’s formal authori- It is flfiderstood that admin- ty was divided between Bre- . ^ ^ istration officials told the leg- zhnev, as first secretary of the h islative leaders they are not (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6* the nation’s siond cWef ‘ executive who died at 90, had reached such an advanced age. Adams' lived 90 yeSrs and eight months, Hoover, 90 years and two months. Hoover, who passed that mark .. ' Aug. 10, 1964, said in a birthday the Soviet government, he would be the oi^other place I be. You see, the reason is that message that the key to Ameri-added: “The Russians can go can see wherj|^ey would be they must have engineered a ca’s abundance is its freedom. GETTYSBURG, Pa. (AP) either wav They can move good. An cVen there you coup d etat on awfully short no- .ripirN wTNrwiw' Former President Dwight D. , . ' , . couldn’t use much of a fighter tice, in a rapid time. .u .i Former President Dwight D. Eisenhower says “I am not one ^ plane. rmNnnFiurF ope" window -......................... of those who feels too good about , , , , ^rough wh,ch pours the sun- Khrushchev being removed.” Eizenhower discussed last “No, I think that unUl tHey get Knowing well of the develop light of the human spirit and With the momentous change in week’s deVelqpmeutg in t h e any real nuclear capability, jnont, this might have happened of human dignity. Soviet UnhMi and Red China they might build defensive right at the same in an Interview with the As- weapons.” sodaW Press in hU Gettys- potential TROUBLE ..o * , u .u bnrg office. „ ,, u -j u “But I don’t think this par- However, Eisenhower said, he tJrnlar i>xnin Lake C. « J’ I Francisco IF t Eisenhower Reviews Recent World Events NA’THWAL WEATHER — Light rain is forecast tonight for the upper Great Lakes area. Temperatures are expected to warmer .from the Gulf states and along the Idwa West Coast. Little change is anticipated eisewfaere. (Continued From Page One) ! son, then we would know how to ! cut our own cloth.” I * ‘ Expanding on his statement that he is “not ono of those who feels too good” about Khrushchev’s dismissal, Eisenhower said: “Until I am persuaded by something that I can see that is concrete, and ;specUic evidence that toe situation has been' unlived, I will continue to think that. On the other -I and, I can hope that it will be good, that js all.” NUGxEAR WAR He said he does not believe the Kremlin wants a nuclear war. “At the time they were building the H-bomb, which I believe was a resali of esphm-age, they also were building great public works that could be destroyed by one bomb. “So I have the conviction that they would npt start, a nuclear war. I don’t believe they willj start one even if we have seri-! ous difficulties with them,” Eis-: erhower said. ' President Johnson said in a televised statement Sunday, “The new Soviet government has officially informed me through Ambassador Dobrynin that it plans no change in basic foreign policy. I spoke frankly as always to. the Soviet ambassador ... I believe this was a good,beginning on both sides. FAINT SMILE Musingly, and with a faint smilie, Eisenhower said” “I would like to talk to Khrushchev how. I believe if he could get out of Russia, with his family,, be would like to.” ' Eisenhower said he woqltf like to talk over with the expremier some of the events that had arisen in the past— and once brought the two men into a violent confrontation. U2 reconnaissance plane, was shot down over Soviet soil and the United States denied he was on a spy flight. Khrushchev, at a massive, 2,0B0-man news conference referred to Eisenhower as fishy friend,” and likened t h e president to a thief. He also withdrew aa Invitation to Eisenhower to visit the Soviet Union. Eisehhoww af that time referred to the “violence and inaccuracy” of Khrushchev’s outburst. * ★ But Eisenhowm- said in the interview: “You know, he had streaks of frankness with me. He told me things and I asked the CIA to check on them atd it turned out to be correct.” CHINA RECOGNITION Turning to the question of tte atomic explosion in Red Chino, Eisoihower was asked whether he thought this might necessi-o (tate i change with respect to He took the action aftw r^**^"* Peking. Francis Gaiy Powers, ^ying a! He replied: “No, IjrooM not That developed in Paris, May 18, 1900, when Khrushchev torpedoed the proposed, siaamit' conference. J think that. After all, this wobM be recognition under biadt-mail, or under threat” With respect to bringing Red China into the United Nations, he said; “Well, I would stffl say this-they have never given a satis-tacAory explanation of what they have done to our prisoners, nor released them. Th^ have l^aih-washed them./We saw/the effects of that. Ibey have never yet purged themselves of t b e condemnation that is still standing against them as an aggressor in North Korea. They dto still causing and formulating and giving the suppljes to carry out the d^wars in SouUieast Asian states. ^ “And to top it Off, they are still saying they are goiilg to take Formosa by force. UJ«f. CHARTER Let’s look at die charter of tte United Nations. “Do you take someone in who is a brigand, who has two pistols, one on each hip, ready to poU them m and shoot H oot> . “Tliere has to he some kind of a cleaning M their own record before I would consider it. That is the way I see it” ir W it The United States, he said, “should be watchful and wary, and firm as to our own rights.” VIET NAM TRIP In the interview, Eisenhower ruled out all questions pertaining to the presidential campaign or domestic policies. However, he did comment on the statement by Sen.* Bany Goldwater, the Repnb-lican presidentiai candidate, that he might ask Eisenhower togotoSonthVletNam. On Oct. 5, Goldwater said: “If elected, i intend to come to grips with diia vital question (South Viet Nam) and at that time I want the very best and soundest advice available. I believe a group of eqierts, beaded by Gen. Eisenhower, could provide that advice.” Grddwater called the former president “this country’s fore-moM military man and fore- Eisenhower last Wednesday celebrated Ms 74th Mrthday and he said it would be “quite a diore” to go to Southeast Asia. He said he would be prepared to assist the administration il any way he conM, but that he wonU want to talk it over first with persons la an-thority. He said: “Mr. Kennedy asked me whether I would be ready to go on some chores.” His answer, he said, was that it would depend on his health and the adlvce of his doctors. IN GETTYSBURG Eisenhower’s office is in Gettysburg, several miles from his farm. He gets to before 9 ami.' every day, works on speeches a«d ba his next book aboot his With the asMstance of staff, he handles an average of about 800 pieces of mail daify. ★ ■aw, He sits «t a desk above which is a photograph of Abraham s: J THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. OCTOBER 20. 1964 GIVE YOUR CilRPEt A NEW LEASE ON LIFE Have Your Carpet Cleaneil NOW! K 8' TUSON CARPET SERVICE MRS. HETHERINGTON Story of Loch Rio Seen at Women s Club “The Story ct Loch Rio in Pictures,” presented by Mrs. Ralph Main, was the program for Pontiac Women’s Club on Monday. ' Statp Federation of Women’; clubs. Mrs. b^ain is a mem-^ ber of the board. ‘ * The local club will visit Girlstown Nov. 14. Loch Rk) is Girlstown, a home for girls - away from home. Located in Belleville, it is a project of the Michigan PTA's Working on arrangements for the day were Mrs. Fred Gibson, chairman, assisted by Mrs. Russi McCully, Mrs. Grace Sleeves and Mrs. J. 0. Radenbaugh. " Lace Accents G se. FI. 5400 Dixie Hwy. OR 3*8866 'Bett Vom .Studio- PRIVATE or CLASS LESSONS • CHA CHA • FOX TROT • SWING Introductory Special 5 Private Lesson Hours . 70 Chamberlain St. m2 A PROFESSIOm CAREER CLASSES OPEN FOR EmOLLMENT ^ "k (M4 K4NDALL, Bmmmty Aulhori^, Dirtetmr HaiAll»tt>H»B«SS»StBSBSie8BBHHt010eaS Bridal Gown at Ceremony French lace accent^ a gown of white peau satin for Eleanor Belle Carney 4ho became Mrs. Ronald Bruce lletherlngton, Saturday, in the First Congregational Church. Securing her illusion veil was a headpiece of satin roses touched with seed pearls. Gold roses were combined with white carnations in the bridal bouquet. Parents of the couple are the W. Rdbert Carneys of. West Yale Avenue and the Bruce Hetherington.s. of Clark-ston. Kay Pierce of Grand Ledge attended her cousin as maid of honor along with bridesmaids April Hetherington, Mrs. Thomas Cox, Sharon Harsch and Martha Madison. Tamara Carney was flower girl and Guy Pierce carried the rings used by Rev. Malcolm Burton in the ceremony. On the esquire side were Jerry Powell, bestman, with ushers Jeffery Hetherington, James and William Carney, Thomas Cox, and Roger Jack- The couple left for a trip to Niagara Falls and Canada after the church reception. DISCOTHEQUE that's the jazzy natural habitat for these yeoh-yeah crapes. Junior sizes 5 to 15. , As seen here—and on the October cover of Seventeen magazine — this skimmy IHtle Paisley print is really with iti In. very sheer wool mding in rwching oil OVound. Bright green. Junior sizes 5tol5, The "Jamaica" begins v real world record-holder C.K.' Yang, ' before nail^ down the decathlon championship and breaking Amoica’s 32-year-old domination of the event. WWW lloldorf scored 7,887 points under a recently changed scw-ing table for the gruelling, 10-ev^nt, twnday test. SUPPED BEHIND tfalde. in second most of the w^ Monday. Produce ApDiM, Rad Otilcleui, Awlit, CrMOIng, bu. AppiM. Jonathan, bu. Applat, Mcintoth, bu. VIOITABLSt Baaat, Roman, bu.- ...... Baali, doi. bchs. ....... Ctlary, Patcal, di Catary, Pascal, ci eatery, Root, doi Celery, white, cr Kohlrabi, di. bchs. . pS»i:;'r Pepoert, Red, twaet, I PaBRort) ewaet, bu. Polaloat, now, M Ibi. Potatoes, naw, IS lbs. Puntphlns, bu. Purn^lns, Ion Radishes, bl. Radlshas, rad Radlshat, white Souash, Acorn, bu. Squash, Buttereut, bu. Squash, Butternut, bu. Squash, Delicious, bu. Tomatoes, bu. Turnips Turnips, topped. ' Lettuce, Haad, qoi. Poultry and Eggs Fairly Adtive Trading Stock Market Moves Higher New Proposal in Dock Strife Forecasters Limiting Outlook for Business By SAM DAWSON AP Busin'^ss News Analyst NEW YORK (AP)-Thc stock market moved higher in fairly active trading early today. Fractional gains were made by a broad range of industrials, including most coppers, steels, airlines, chemicals, drugs and electronics. Chrysler, up a fraction, was the only gainer among the top auto slocks. General. Motors was changed following news that GM and the United Auto Workers have pledged President Johnson they will, strive at quickly as possible for settlement of the 26-day-oid strike. Ford was easy and the other motors were unchanged. Parke, Davis was off % at on 10,300 shares. Opening, blocks Chrysler, up <4 at fiO on 5,400 shares, and GM, unchanged at 100 on 3,300. % I al Motors shutdown, hul the I up slightly .to a record TXl.9 per I farther-reaching effect.s that the I cent of the 1957-.S9 average. NEW YORK - -n,e husin.» ^ horizon h>.< moved Jo a little | when (he CM l.ibor Irouble-Tm closer of late. And many fore-1 recent price in- the. way, a fresh climb British Government casters and planners are now in several metals an<\ . j saying their vis-, __ | ,Hp omwino inqistem-e of qIppI Seeks to Avert Strike i ibility does LONDON (UPl)-Employers Monday the Ass^iated Pre^ a new pay proposal to- average of 60 stwks rose 1.4 to effort to head off a 329.8 a new high. crippling one-day wildcat strike Prices were irregularly high- - j,y Britain’s 65,000 dock workers er on the American Stock Ex- j fj,at could seriously embarrass change. the new Labor government. The New York Stock'Exchange NEW YORK (API-Fe|k)wlnp Is T MlKltP stuck trwisbcflqns on ItM 'ork Slock Exchri^ with 10;N P Allcg Cp .lit AIMg Pw 1 Alltgb Lud a iirflq UM Kh .308. Ctn 2 Cvtn 1 AElPw l.ltb AmEnkt l.tO AExpor l.llr l.SAt Hotp .30 ...Jf Cl LM AmAAolors U Am NG ).M Amtr OptIctI AmPhoto .» AmSmtIt 1.M • I $10 1 I TBT 1 . .1 Tob I.M Am zme 1.40 AMP Inc .43 1 43 43 43 - ( I7>* 17 17'/t 3 U>/» 4*tb 4*4X -f 11 34«I 34H, 34H — I 17W 17W 17W - ArmcoSI 3 3 73 73 73 . Armour 1.40 / 37 53 53 33 Armsi Ck 1 / 7 404X MM MM - W Atchison IM)/ 10 333k 31H XM + « AtICLInc It ' 1 it II 01 + fc AtlRo4 1.40 3 AM m 03W + 3t Bistlow 1.10 Botina 1 BoroWtr l.K •• Ibt. av»-14; smltn It-IB; lurktvt hntiry Ivpt youflB bins lJJ>n; httvy tvo# younp toms 11W-21. ^ ' DBTROIT COS OBTROIT (APt-Epg wicts p_ . itoitn by lirst rtcaivtrs (hKluOlnp U Whittt Crttft A lumbo JBW-43; t.... , Itrpt 3t-41VSi Itrpt 17.40; mpdivm ITVi- I IIW; snwll 10-21. Brawns OrtOt A (umbo larpt 17-30; m Oium It; small ItVs-lC; chacks 10-llv>. CNICAOO BUTTBR, BGaS ! Cam Sp W CHICAGO (API - Chtcago Marcanlllt COnPac I.SOt Ei^npa - bulltr staady; wholasala Carriar I.M buytag prkt* unchanpad lo W hMiar; CarttrPd .40 tl scora AA Ml; tl A Mi W B 38*0; I Catt Jl m C 571*» cart M B ItVi; It C 3B; Ctrro Cp 1.00 si^rdt-lO'/i; dinitt unquottd; chteks CerJetd^^M) H'-j. , ChampSpk 7 CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (AP) - (USDA) Lhi POuHry: wteltiala buylnp pricas w cMngad to 1 highar; roatlara ll-M: spi cm fad Whilt Rxk Iryars It-ltW. Livestock CHICAGO LIVISTOCK ChPnau 1 l|l3; ‘'i»230 ibs I's.OO.ii'lir iV lilTO ll| U.lS-13.00; 270.100 Ibt 11.73-14.23; nixad ■' - - ........... ) (AP) - (USDA) - Hogs chart 13 to 30 towar, mostly lb bulchars U|13-lt.30; around I 14.73; (nixtd'l-l ltO-123 Ibt I lfO.113 I 12.0012.30; j 1.300 lb M.50; high I. 2001,415 Ibt 25.73 J. I0OI.400 Ibt 14.75-13. ^bs 24.0024.73; good .......... 4.23; bulk cholct hijtort 14.00; : 173-1,(100 Ibt ; I and cholct .10.0021.30; | trttoly tcllvt ttotdy to motlly 13 ctnti towar. Cows modaralely acllvo ttoady to strono 4 11 3lto lOto 30to ■ ■ 2 31to llto llto 2 57to STto 57** 2 14to 34to 14to ■ r?; 3 10*4 lOto 20*4 1 12 M 12 - to 1 Mto Mto Mto - ■' I 41*4 tito 41«* t 3 11*4 11*4 11*4 -f Stocks of Local Inforost F1»orti aHar dtcimti points art alghlht OVBR THI COUNTBR STOCKS The toMowIng Quotations do not raees-(raniaclloos but •» the aor-lacuru., ■ Six ..................... Braim Enginatrina ...... Chtmoton Home Bulldtrs ... Cillians Ullllllat Clast A . Olsmond Crystal ........ Ethyl Cora. .......... Mohawk Rubbef Co........ Pkma^piiJance'" Salran Printing •-----, cingar Ala...... Truck . A Musk tosoNG I ..leriontl 1 irIaLack RR dvansPd .40r ivarShrp .73 FaIrCam ,S0g Fad Mdg 1.00 Ftdd Coro 1 FadDStr tJO Flltrol 1.00_ PIrtstna 1.1# FstChrt 1.411 . FItotkott .00 I Fla PL I.M . 2 41*4 41*4 41*1 S 11*4 11*4 IIV iJ ^ ‘TiTifJiTito'iTJitrs I 14 14 14 - S Oto t«i 'Oto t , ~E— 1^ I2t*4 12t*4 + 1 4414 45*4 4J*4 - I Mto Mto . 14 iS* 1 — M Uto 21 ■15 47to 44to 15to ISto - to 3tto Stto - Vk Gulf SU 1.24 (Mt.) Lem Uit CIM. f 4W4 4T/J 4W4 - ^ 4 5» • i W/» 30% 30^'! »tf 1.3 ,40b McOonAlr .6 Morck .72 -N— .10 5 51 SI 1 70 13 63% 63% J Hl^ U I Mto U 43 61''. 41 II 04** *4 1 It** - 14to .... .. . 14to 14to 34to 14 4*'4 44 4fto 3 SOto 30to 50'/* S 4to 4 4 beyond next spring. Econo mic growth should then at least, continue until then al least, most agree. I While holding ,, to this expecta- The offer was secret but was tj^n further DAWSON reported to include a pay in-1 records, they are taking into crease for the 2,300 dockers who gj-puuuf General Motors earn less than $33.60 a week and strike „ow beginning to be felt increased fringe benefits for the f,y „((,er industries, the Hal nervousness in the mo However, informed sources marked while said the employers held firm government sets its fiscal, I 14to 14*4 14** - to their original offer of a course, and the general uncer- the growing insistence of .steel . mills that a general price in- ^ ^ cent above crease is needed. PRICE-WAGE SPIRAL estimated at $62.1 billion to $625, Memories of the price - wage billion, spiral that followe^lhe war are What Great Britain may do meaningless if fibred in con- about interest rales under a nomic statistics a /tioo.st. I,abor government also has But it left Tnany business American businessmen watch-firms as well as individuals the; ful A further Vise ip interest victims of an inflation that costs there might well trigger made the statistics largely one here. And many fear the meaningless iff igured in con- growth of the U.S. slant dollars. economy would be unattainable * ★ ★ if money and credit, tightened. Right now the industrial The betting odds are stilt with production index is showing the the optimists: an early settle-new'" British effects of the GM shut- meni of the G.M sVrike. a steady- down. Output of durable goods course in international and slipped in September from Au- domestic money rates, little gust. The decline this month change in U S. relations with II I I 3«to s —U— I 111 127 ij J?to li I1.7S per week pgy raise for tainties born of the Political | ^ . all dockers. The union is de- upheaval in Russia and the ■ ^ ' 1 ^ j d . .k f u . . 1 . _ < D J ou ' . .u Production of nondurable But the fre.sh uncertainties of entrance of Red China into the ^ ___ . iiiiiiiiiK , acuviiy. This was tion. And foreca.slers are limit- Businessmen don t like uncer- ^ ficial strike if necessary to back, - - * - — ' their demands raders. But emotional decisions ; B., ,h. - I manding a $3.S(r raise. Union leaders have been auth- olub. orized to call a nationwide of- ets usually aren't duplicated corporate board rooms. Busi-jwjarchy.” by Labor’Minister Ray "ess executives are more in-r "! Gunter, a former union leader ^cautiously rather than to panic. 5] _IJi strike set for Thursday ha 1 aw Mto + to ^ called a step toward "an- 3 Mto Mto Mto I I2to llto Il’A 1 I4to 10)/* lOto himself. * 41'A 41** + '.* 'In Saigon Chinatown R^id Cong Uniform Plant VwiM Cerp Varltn At VenPoCo M VtEIPw Ml 38 I.'m El I.IO WhiltM I.IO Woeli«oiiti,1 WtiTklng f.SO * DEVELOPMENT.S AT HOME 33to ik Such a wildcat walkout would Developments at home could 'JMiadly ham^r efforts by Prime pose a more visible threat to the m* iTto ^ ^ Minister Harold Wilson's four- American economy in the ir T town was found making camou- when a bullet passed through » « +’-! wipe out Britain s $3 0.8-million apparen in the confusing trends .. .... for Commu- the hut and stn.ek the fWhv balance of payments deficit. behind the Iron Curtain. 14 llto 31H llto + 2 Mto Mto Mto tr 44to 44 44V* + I 47*4 47*4 47*4 - S llto 31** 11*k 13 2M* Mto If** + 3 4lto 40to 4f*h —X— 11 111 IK —Y— 14 52to 51 —z— 3tlM llpurrs art unoHkItl. Unlt*> offtorwls* noltq, rtli Mndi in m* tartgolng laW* «r* annual I dlibuFianiant* baiao on ma latt quarttriy o# oeneca. or iaml-annual qacMrttlen. Spoclal — News in Brief 5 + l.inzie Sherrell, 39, 269 CrystST Lake, yesterday reported th/^ theft of two radios valued at ] - to 1"®- ^ ^ Police are investigating the recent theft of a 40-foot exten-» divi- sion ladder valued at $87 from ara ’ kiinmiaq in'Vnr Sheriff’s deputies are investi-i>-Anooai sating the theft of five drill piu» truck oivKMns. c—ciquiqating presses and $94 in cash from ttSck *dTv?5X'!**--Stcf*TiKi or ^k Lapeer Products at 4440 Hag-kumaliJ «M^X'on’«iiSwJnd I gerty. West Bloomfield Town- - ...•qlttrRitHloo daw. 9-PaW latt year; ■ _uj-h-0*clarad or paid afltr Hock diu^klend ! Theft of a 10-foot boat valued at $75 was reported to police *dtoid*‘J^'V.!eayi | yesterday by Harold Tucker, .‘IdiHHbJtten' 4281 Windiate, Waterford Town- SAIGON (UPIi — A small near a-canal where the Corn-clothing plant in Saigon’s China-; munist guerrillas were trapped town was found making camou- when a bullet passed through flage battle dress for Commu- the hut and struck the fleshy What business planners are 'IS S^errillasy it was part of his calf, most rearful of tSay is price inflation might upset the ‘‘ "There I was, " he said, vin steady climb of business after--------------* the position I've been trying lo next spring. newspaper Saigon Post get into for eight months and I ^ ★ reported that the factory owner couldn't take a picture in be- ( They watch not hnly the cur- and four employes were ar- tween the throbs of pain. I was Tent slowdown in industrial rested. Enough camouflage cussing a blue streak." production traced to the Gener- cloth,^ was confiscated to outfit---------------------------- V 600 men, police said. The newspaper said the n 1 ^ government recently seized a LXOGCi 4UU stock of paratroop uniforms at a Viet Cong supply base and traced it lo the factory. ’i $ % t $ [g^Successfvl % * InvBatin^ li _______Hr 11--“ i—DKlirtd' e ilaMvf liw, ..... _ p-Paid this yaar. divi “—**------action tat»n -Declarad Ir __________-..id * “ ' during 1664, e NatOisi 1.20 NEnget l.li HJ Zme 1.2 NYCtnt 1.30 PoRwLt 1.40 Pton RR I Ptiwizoll I.M I 51to $1to Sito - '< M 32 32 52 + '4 7 57'/* 34*4 37to + '4 3 134*4 )M*4 1M*4 -- to II 53'/i 31'/> 51'/i + '/I 3 33*4 31*4 31*4 + '4 13 50'-] SB'.Y Jl'/V 4 1444 Mto M'/V - '4 6 21** IIH llto - to 4 57H 37** 17** + V| 5 2*'/* 3T'/4 Itto 4 32** »** 12** -r '4 *34 SB SI to M 43to 43to D'-. 3 40*4 M'/4 4lto k to 3 13'/4 llto 15'-. + to 1 17** 37*4 in* + 40 42 4lto a + 4 41*4 43*6 41*4 - 7 53*4 33*6 35*4 3 Mto 4SV4 Mto *- 2-5*144 In 'fuir cM—ColM. X—Ex Oiviq* Hnd ond gales In lull. i-« Ion. xr-Ex rigMi. xw. ants. «n*—Wjm wirrtnts. bting rnrganiieq u Act. or sacuritlas ai f/r- ship. By ROGER E. SPEAR Q. "f own stocks, many of which I received from my uncle, now deceased. I would like to keep only two stocks. The money received I would put into one of the stocks you consistently recommend. Viet Cong units up to battalion strength and Communist patrols ^ have been seen recentiv operating in the green camouflage uniforms. similar to that worn by at Dinner for Local Exec A camera and topcoat valued , together at $65 were reported i-Nexi Ray yesterday from Richard Which of the following would BankVupicv Biroo’s Car parked in his garage be most favorable to sell: Sashabaw, Waterford Township. American Stocks if seltctdd stock trsnisetions on tht PtillMor 3i0 Baldwin - Lima; Iowa - Illinois Gas & Electric; Florida Power Corp; Iowa Power & Light; American Natural Gas; St. Joseph Light & Power?” E.C. ‘‘2! *T"r! t Ser''R;:5rSvS;n,o;;'™'; Unes parking lot, 4825 W. Hu- ^ generous an diers 70 miles .southwest of Sai- Motors Corp ron, Waterford Township. unce. gon. ^ He has been general traffic Since most of my recommen- Pickerell .said he was sta- manager of Fisher Body since Mom’s Rummage; Thursday, dations are growth stocks, I pre- tioned behind a thatched hut ,grq ..anninu . ,.orM.r -hi,.h 9 to 12. Indianwood and Baldwin, j sume. that growth is your ob- . • PP K Noble Warstler of Portland, Ind.. told police last night that clothing valued at $171 was Over tdo^ansportation and „ ■ . industrida^ffidals from all over Michlga^nd .he Uhiled S.ale, rangers aiM Marines.^ .IN gather a. In fighting yesterday, free- Statler Hil-F lance photographer James H Ion, ballroom to-l Pickerell, 28. of Wilmington, night at a tesfi:B Ohio, became the first American monial’ dirinerB journalist to be wounded in honoring *^”^*’^* seph A. .M().s.ser,B ■SHOT IN LEG g4 X. Genesee. Pickerell was shot in the right .Mnsser i„ ., leg while attempting to photo- ,jrmg ,he "en.j| graph the capture of Commu- rriont h MOSSER nisi rebels bv a force of about an * • i. pu ■ui ________ after a 40-year career with the i 1 20% 20% 20% + 2 13% 13% 13%-111 4% 4 11-16 4% + 4 3 1-16 3 M6 3 1-16 Pirgo dlls Pilmt P«t * Fly TIfftr 67% 6I%+ % I 1 1'* Itol’tojCh r ♦’'^'^!w. Zonta Fair, Wednesday, Oct. I 21, 11-8. First Federal Savings - and Ixian Bldg., W. Huron. —adv. Rummage Sale: Lutheran Church of the Redeemer. 1800 Maple, Birminghanv Thurs., Oct. 22. 8-5; Fri., Oct. 23, 9-2 p.m. " Adv. Rummage Sale: South Lyon Firm Declares Dividend jective. Your Baldwin - Lima is a cyclical issues with a rather erratic record of earnings. I would sell this issue since it does not meet your apparent goal All of your public utility holdings are good but rather slow as to growth, with the excep- The board of directors of the tion of Florida Power. I would Michigan Seamless Tube *Co.. retain this stock and also Amer- South Lyon, today declared a ican Natural Gas, which appears 25 cent per share cqsh dividend October 22, to me to have the best pros- on the $5 per value corporation began in Cleveland in 1924. Appointed plant manager there in 1945. he was transferred to the Pontiac plant in 1949 where he was in charge of production and material control and traffic. In February 1956 he betame senior assistant for material’ control and traffic. In February 1956 he became senior staff assistant for ma- «RMg Co ..jlchCh .204 RopubAv .SOp RopubStcol T Rovlon l.ltbr RcxallOr .Mb RtynMM .30 RcyTob I.M RhcomM Mt • IrKfAil TiA 21 43% 43% i 5to’^'' 9-12. St, Andrew’s Church. Pects for future appreciation, stock payable Nov. 20, 1964, to te^iai handline and traffic 2W-Pinriao Pnf/or otncirhnirforc al iKg. ci«=» K...: "'•ooiing ano iraifit Hatchery Road. g .lit 31 Sto Sto Sto R|C Group 1.23« Business Notes 11 loto Mto 30to-F to i Roland S. Withers, 371, Martel, 114 40*4 stto lototito: Bloomfield Hills,” will be a fea-21* ’si* '**4 'Jto+'to speaker at the three-day 0 to )<. to-i-i41 annual convention of the Florida Autoniobile Dealers Associa- next to Florida Power. stockholders at the close of busi- V ★ * ness Nov. 5, 1964. Q. “I own Standard Oil of * ★ ♦ California and Transcontinen- The board also declared a 10 tal Gas which have done noth- per cent stock dividend payable ing in (Recent months. Other Dec. 18, 1964 to stockholders of oil companies, such, as Stand- ---------'— ----* ‘-----' tivity at the GM Technical Center. In October 1959 he was'* named to his present position. STOCK AVBRAGBS sa:; ___loolgy I Schgrg 1.404 SCM .431 ScottPip to —b AL I.M —burg .M Sorvtl SIwM OH 1.30 SIncloir 1 SInotr Co 1 SmWiK 1.104 SeconyM I,M SouPRS 3.404 J’S SOUN4IG 1.M SouP4C I.M SeutbRy l.N Sperry R411R Spl4S4l I.M SRuarM3 I.M StBrpnd I.M SIR Kolltm4n SMOII C4I lb SraillnR K4W StOilNJ l lte Svfj. 2 4S*4 4S*4 4S*4 1 33V4 llto Mto II nw 11*4 ii**,+ to 14 t'A **b «** 3 12** me Mto ard oil of New Jersey, have moved up in the 80’s during the same period. Why the disparity? Should I sell? If so, what slocks would you recommend?” W.S. ]■ .. . 4 lS»/» M'A -I- ' 4 SSto 55*4 + ) 4 OSto 05*4 -L I 4 114to 114** -L I 10 43*4 43to 41to - ’ fS IM* - 4 »'/* MV* Uto 14 47to OTto 47to » 41 M 42 - ) ’I r r .‘.r ^ r 7 6S% 45 45% + 1 15 ^ y L. S'tSitl a'^'A Mto M'A . . Pros* tion at HoUywood-by-the-Sea, toR. r*’hs uw. snL. Oct. 25-27, according to an an-MS i IM4 103* /IM 2 i.nounce^ent by Gporge William- A. I should first like to correct 444.0 iioio 14X4/3M.’41 son, president of the association. 6 misapprehension, if you will 4m!4 1M.I iMii Si j Withers is general sales man- “•■o'*' Z \ lit! iS’4 S i I ager of Buick Motor Division. A Transcontinental Gas is a pipe St iSl Itt 1 ml 31-year veteran with General l*ne company operating under Mill 1214 114:* 141.7 Motors, he served as general the regulation of the FPC. It is --------- manager of United Motors Serv-; not regarded as -=■ *>— December 1964. Fraction! shares resulting from the 10 per cent stock dividend will be paid in cash. This brings the total dividend for 1964 to $1 — the same as last year. Crosby Son Convicted of Disturbing the Peace _____________________________ „ Because BEVERLY HILLS, Calif ifu- ice before ji^ng Buick almost ■ strict government regulation. Lindsay Crosby, 26-year-old son four years ago. * would switch this stock into of singer Bing Crosby, was con- _________________ ’ M 0 s I e r Safe where g^reater victed by a Beverly Hills jury growth can be anticipated.\ last night of disturbing the • b'a I T */• *• California Standard oiw of peace Rites tor Tractor Victim tj,e great oils, but its earnings * * ♦ Funeral slowed down, Crosby had b^n charged with ' somewhat because of intensiW battery after Mrs. June Palin-kas, 46. accused him of pushing aONO AVBRAGBS H4RB|r2---------- R4M4 VaR. U Pr4*. Dpy 81.4 W44k Ago B2.4 iH.j m. mm Abo bi.7 ibi.i m.: Vt4r Age 11.4 (1* M.l 1*44 High Bl.« MU H/ 1*44 Liw» BB.S MBJ 17.. IM High tl.l IBL4 If.3 8:1 ;i:l **.3 17.3 M.4 *1.1 OOW-JONGS NOON AVBRAGCS stocks N IKRUt ...... M R4lh : 'rX GTW Train to Chicago Will Leave Hour Later Grand Trunk Western Rail-road's train No: 21 to Chicago will leave Pontiac daily at 1:20 p.m., one hour later than at present, effective Sunday. Oct. 25. when^muefa of th'e nation reverts from daylight to standard time. GTW commuter Schedules ^ will remain the same, according to a spokesman -for the railroad. BARRYTON (AP) «ivice was heW Monday competition on the West Coast, Dale A. Root, 55. fanner a«l operations are Barrylon school bus driver who I advise you to hold was killed Friday in a‘tractor' jjjyg relatively good acckJont. Police said he was | yield ^nd expected resumption »^^M+B.B1, crushed under the tractor which of powth, as well as for its hti-«a+B.ii! overturned on a road near , his quent stock dividiends ":m1J:£ ' F*rm. Copyright 1964 Treasury Position WASHINGTON iAP| Th» c. Ber off a bar >stpol in a Sunset **'»'k^-^ Strip restaurant. The jury de- D»posti* i liberated five hours before find- wiit.444 43 dob* i)««