Tho Weather
PONTIAC PRESS
PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. MONDAY, OCTOBER 12. 1064—44 PAGES

Homev
Edition
Larry Hartman and. Lo-President Don Johnson
Now1n Its 18th day, the strike	■ “fair and **&*" *■
against GM locals was author- tlement was reached on local Truck k izedSept. 25.	issues at Fisher Body, where
Recommend Selling County Hospital
A recommendation to sell the Oakland County Tuberculosis Sanatorium Was adopted this morning by the ways and means committee of the Board of Supervisors.
The recommendation was included in a lengthy report submitted by a special committee consisting of Daniel T. Murphy, chairman of the county board of auditors; Dr. Bernard D. Berman county health director and George H.
Williams, social welfare director.
The committee’s recommendation was based on a study of the costs at converting the TB sanatorium Into a facility far the care of nontubercular patients.
The .1
Local $94 President ’Andy Wilson, representing some 7,000 employes at GMC Truck 4
See Story, Pago C-8
Coach, also reported a satisfactory agreement on working ted* ditions there.
Local 063 at Pontiac Motor Division has about 15,000 members.
WALDKMAK A. P. JOHN
Death Takes
MJ&A Founder aBWxtsw*
number of TB pa Heats.
Birmingham Man Is Comrerthig the sanatorium to -JSiil * wbacuta hospital, without Heart Attack Vicnni emergency, surgery or obstetrical faclBtiaa, has been considered became of a steadily Jn-treasing caseload of aging and chronically ill patients who are being cared for at county ex-
Waldemar Alfred Peal John, whoee 1MB article, “I Have a Scar on My Heart," was widely reprinted ton the Saturday Evening Poet, died yesterday of a heart attack.
■ ♦ ■ * .* .
John, 10, was a cofounder of MacManus, John anS Adams be., In Bloomfield Hills.
He ratfrei as chairmen la 1966, tad lived at IM Testing
New Location
for UF Torch	»- -*•—
SIGN DODGING — President Johnson has to duck signs 1 •	greeting his arrival in Phoenix, Ariz., airport yesterday. One
Lighting Vittremon j	boosting Goldwater, swatted the President’s hat. The
_vA-J	Lu.ll' sign carrier was arrested, but later released. The President
Tuesday <** Ha" wis unruffled by the incident.
The towering , torch which burns each year at Oakland add North Saginaw during the Pontiac Area United Fund campaign will again blaze forth tomorrow night, but at a new lo-
Theodore F, MacManus and Jamas R. Adams, the other founding partners, died in UM and 1366, respectively.
* * *
John, the sou of a New Albany, Ind., minister, graduated from the Unhrertity of Michigan in till and want to work as a clerk-writer to the advertising department of the then automaking Dodge Bros.
WORLD WAR I
I in the Balloon Corps of the American Expeditionary Forces* then returned to Dodge Bros.
From Ml to WS he was with Brooke, Smith ft French, be.; from 1923 to 1925, with (Continued on Page 3, (M. 4)
Seven alternatives were considered by the apodal committee, six of which kfckided various types of remodeling of the 188-bed main building, nurses’ home and boiler bouse.
COSTS RANGE Goats ranged from a high of 9789,040, which would have brought all throe buiidta0i up to state and federal standards for a
In Today's . Press
Pulaski Day Dignitaries flock to Hamtramck for celebration - PAGE A4.
Conference NonaUgced nations issue blast at U. S.-PAGE
M. \
the capacity to 880 bade, to a low. of (SUMO, which would have improved the mofti building only and decreased capacity to 188 beds.
ft #	4 j.
The seveath alternative, end final recanuneadatlen of the committee, was to "phase ear carnet sparelfse of the saaatortam, disposing 4f it when feasible, aad f convert the proceeds of Ike sale to construction of a new medical care facility in the county Service Center.
$e ways end means committee wfll^ask the buildings end grounds committee to obtain an appraisal ef the 80-atre site, which is located at 7350 Ceoley Lake, fa, Waterford
EDDIE CANTOR
Comic's Funeral Like Final Years: Apart From Fans
HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Eddie Cantor will be buried as he spent most of the last 11 years of his life — apart from the public that made him a top star during a golden era of American enertainment.
* * • *
Groman Mortuary announced today that funeral services for the 73-year-old comedian, who died of a heart attack Saturday night, will be private.
Cantor was the last of a trie ef great comedy figures to pass from the Hollywood scene in recent weeks.
Grade Alien of the Burns and Allen team died Aug. 37, gnd (Continued on Page 3, Col. 7)
This year’s UF torch will stand in front of City HaO on East Wide Track Drive. The torch-lighting ceremony, expected ta take place about 8:30, will climax the 1914 IV campaign
kickoff celebration.
The drive will run throutfi Nov. I. ThiS year’s goal is $115,-508.
ft ft' ft
Tomorrow’s kickoff celebration. slated to begin at 7 in the Pontiac Central High School auditorium, will be followed by a parade to City HaO.
There will be introductions of campaign leaders, followed by family entertainment.
Bud Guest and his WJR crew will tape'their Wednesday show from the stage ^of the auditor!-
The parade, with Ralph Allison as marshal, will leave Huron and Franklin shortly after 8 p.m. and proceed along Huron to Saginaw, to Auburn to Wide Track Drive, ending in front of City HaU.
LIGHTS TORCH Runner Robert Wiggins, 1984 track team captain, will hand a torch to Bruce Annett, general campaign chairman of the United Fund.
.......__A...*	*	• ....
Annett will light Urn huge UF torch to end the ceremonies and officially open the'1964 Pontiac Area United Fund drive.
Johnson Bodyguards Worried by Incidents
LOS ANGELES UP — Two anonymous telephone warnings and a brush with a placard bearer worried President Johnson’s bodyguards during his. western campaign swing, but no trouble materialised.
A youth whose Goldwater-MiUer placard grazed the President’s hat in Phoenix yesterday was released by •	, ««	.
police after questioning. A|TPm YfllltlK Police found a revolver in a “*,*I VUIIIJ pocket of another youth. He said t ■ a vf he was carrying it to protect the m I D I JhraaT President. Phoenix police re- ||| LDJ llllvUl leased him later oiLbail.
As the President ifode through	,_
the Long Beach, Calif., area CASPER, Wyo. (A - Two later ta the day, Secret Serv- teen-age boys were arrested last ice men were aware that local night on a charge of threatening authorities had received re* the life of President Johnson. |«fli of two telephone calls,	ft .ft	ft
oqe warning directly and the Casper police and Secret Serv-othcr Indirectly that the Pres- m .gents took the pair into ideat’s life was in danger. custody after they received a A Secret Service man stood in report that someone had over-the car following Johnson’s, heard them threatening to take holding an automatic rifle. Nor- the life of ftte President, due maily such weapons are carried here on a visit today, out of sight.
In Phoenix, detective Andrew Watzek said that on Johnson’s airport arrival he noticed a bulge in the right trouser pocket at Clarence R. Fetzec, 18, and
found a .33-caliber reviver in- Larry Rush, 17, and Ray Ed-side.	ward Smith, 18.
U.S.foMoon
- Powerful New Rocket-Said to Be Booster in Historic Launching
MOSCOW UP — The Soviet Union rocketed a spaceship into orbit today carrying a pilot, a scientist and a doctoT -— the first space vehicle to carry more than one person. An official announcement said it was sent aloft by a powerful new rocket.
As the spaceship circled the earth every 90 minutes, the pilot messaged that all instruments were working well, the physician examined his colleagues, and they had lunch. The spaceship is named Voskhod — sunrise.
Aboard wereCoL Vladimir Komarov, the pilot; Konstaa-tine Feoktistov, scientist; and Dr. Boris Yegorov.
The booster rocket sent the spaceship into an orbit that ranged Iran 255 miles to 110 miles above the earth, an official announcement said.
Some scientists abroad considered this one more big step in the Soviet race with the United States to the moon.
UJI. VEHICLE
The United States plan} to laiinch its first two-man vehicle some time early next year.
There was ao indication hew long the spacecraft — Its size aad weight not given — would remain aloft. Bat the official Soviet aews agency Taos said the first manned orbit by the Soviet Union since the summer of IMS was designed to test file effects of weightlessness and other stresses on man on a long flight.
This was a hint the craft, might break the old record of almost five days.
Usually reliable sources, however, said the craft might stay up only two days.
Later in the day, the three atiiard said they had dinner on their fourth orbit around the earth.
In the last flight, in June 1988, LL CoL Valery F. Byko-vosky stayed aloft $4 minutes short of five days and later suffered from various ailments from the long period of weight-
ed KOMAROV
DR. YEGOROV
Two Arrested in Abduction of U.S. Officer
CONCEALED WEAPON	ft * ft
Fetzer, booked for carrying a A police spokesman said the concealed weapon, was later boys admitted in a statement released on $300 bail.	that they had made the threats.
Thirty minutes later, Thomas They were held in life! of $25,-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) 000 bond each.
A police spokesman said the two boys were visiting a patient at a hospital when a nurse overheard them make
the threat.	Scientists in both the Soviet
Police identified the youths te Union abd the United States have been working on the problem.
Jubilant crowds filled the streets of Moscow as the radio announced the launching.
Cards Leading
Tba 8tate of Michigan offered $1,750,000 for the facility in IBM when it was being considered ter use a
Warmer Weather Win Follow Rain
A warming trend is predicted by the weatherman as October’s bright bine waathef gives way to chmds and possible showers fids SjtaWMSft and evening. Highs wlfl range in foe 90s with tbstows tatbe-tos.
ft	♦
Thasiay w$ tbs cloudy with tbs warming ttwod continuing, bib tabsta tts Ms.
The mercury .reading before 8 s.m. today was 36. At I p.m. the tamparaftm had climbed to
a
NEW YORK (AP) - The St. Louis Cardinals combined two hits with some sloppy Yankee fielding to score two runs ta the fifth inning today, and hold a 34 lead over New York in the fifth game of the World Series.
First inning
CARDINALS—Flood wafted. Brock called on strikes. White struck out. K. Boyer grounded to Lfoz and Flood whs safe at second on interference call against Howard'for tipping Boyer’s bat. Boyer safe at first. Groat walked. McCarver struck out No runs, no hits, COS error, three left.
YANKEES—Line struck out. Richardson sluftid. Maris bounced iota double play. No mas, one (ft, no errors, none left.
out Shannon. Maxvfll singled. Gfosoo struck out. Flood forced Msxvill, Lins to Richardsoo. No runs, one hit, no errors, one left YANKEES - Mantle Walked. Howard hit by a pitch. Peptone grounded to Gibson who stepped on first for the putotft, Mantle and Howard moving up. Treat) intentionally passed. C. Boyer struck out. StotUemyre struck out. No runs, no hits, no errors, three left.
grounder. Richardson popped up. Maris filed out. No runs, no
CARDINALS -Cheat and McCarver grounded out. Maris made an orcr-the-shoulder catch on .Shannon's 480-foot drive. No runs, no hits. ,
YANKEES - Mantle fanned. Howard grounded out. Peptone Struck out No runs, no hits.
hm i—«f	«■■*
CARDINALS—Msxvill fanned. CARDINALS — Brock out try- Gibson singled and weqt to seeing to bunt White fled out and when Richardson booted Boyer grounded out No runs, us Stead’s grounder. Brock singled hfrf	Gfeaoo home sod Flood went to
third. White forced. Brack at sec-YANKEES - Lins out on a and with Flood scoria* Boyer
forced White at second. Two runs, two hits, one error.
YANKEES - Tresh filed out. Boyer struck out. Stottlemyre singled. Linz fanned. No rani, one hit.
Sixth Inning
CARDINALS - Groat fUed out. McCarver singled. Shannon grounded into a double play. No runs, one hit.
YANKEES - Richardson singled. Maris filed out. Mantle and Howard fanned. No runs, one hit.
CARDINALS—Maxvill grounded out Gibson called out on strikes. Flood singled and went to^hfad on Brock’s siityta. White lined deep to left. No rune, two htts.'
YANKEES—Pepitone sk«led. Trash fanned. Blanchard batted for Boyer mid pepped up. Lopes
CARDINALS—C. Boyer ttnw Yuk»BBQDQflBHMBIBBMMHI NmwLNo mmTow’ET’
Cards BBIBBttEIDBBtttttt BUI
Later a taped television broadcast from the spaceship showed the occupants smiling. The film was dim and it was impossible to tell the size of the space cabin. AH three men wore helmets.
Making the most of the first launching of s spaceship, carrying more than one man, Voskhod sent greetings earth want as it sped along its orbit, including greetings to the Olympic* in Tokyo.
SHIP’S ORBIT
Tass said the spacecraft was sent into orbit dose to the route laid out by Soviet scientists.
“Two-way radio commnai-cations are maintained,” said, Toss. "The skip’s crew report they withstood quite well the launch aad the transition to weightlessness. Ail throe feel fine.”
Tass said purposes of the flight Included: Test the new "multi-seat guided spaceship,” check the opacity to work together during spaice flight of a group of workers, scientific, physical and technical investigations in file conditions of space flight, study the effect of space flight on cosmonauts, and’ “carry out extended medico-biological research ta the conditions of a long flight.”
CARACAS, Venezuela (It -*>-Two SpanisR-born members of the Castroite-Communist armed forces of national liberation (FALN) were arrested in a polico raid today on a charge of helping to kidnap LL Col. Michael Smoien, Interior Minister Gonzalo Bargios announced: The two were identified as Arsemio Pasarini, about 35, and Alberto. Trooija, 20. They were seized hi a downtown apartment as members of the five-man gang that seized Smoien Friday.
the ethers and the deputy chief ef the UA Air Force Mission to Veaesaeta remained
Bargios said he hoped for a full confession from the two prisoners, whose apartment contained weapons, bombs and a big wdl sign in Spanish: *H)ut With the Assassins. We Doo’t Want the Yankees."
A force of 3,000 police and National Guardsmen pressed the search for Smoien.
A caller identifying himself as V leader of the outlawed pro-Castroite Armed Forces of National Liberation (FALN) said the terrorists would try Lt. Coi. Michael Smoien before a secret tribunal on charges of interfering in Venezuelan affairs.
they have no does ta the ah-dnetten of the 46-yearroU Chandler, Ariz., officer from in front of hi* Caracas home Friday morning by flV4 armed terrorists.
Identifying himself as Commandant TuHo of the FALN, the caller said the kidnaping was in reprisal for a military crackdoftn on the FALN guerrillas.

A—2
Lacks Dramatic Punch
THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1964
Barry Seeks Big Issue
' k by JACK BELL .
PHOENIX, Arte. <AP) - Sep. Barry Goldwater of Arizona hotels into the final three weeks
efforts to dramatize the back-to-the-Gonstitution stand he calls the overriding issue in the presidential contest.	*
In wide-ranging attacks on President Johnson in Ids coast-
to-coast journeys, the RepuhB-can presidential nominee has tried out a variety of approaches to the voters with results thst do not seem to have satisfied him fully.
' * * * *•
He has assailed the President for promoting coexistence with the Communists. He has argfod with administration officials
Johnson Says Goldwaler Runs. Against Presidency
RENO, Nev., II) - President Johnson cries crossed the west today, saying Barry Gold water seas the government as such a terrible thing it seems “he is
*;; ■ it It
President Is Hit by Sign During Visit to Phoenix
(Continued From Page One)
lie Wilkins, 17, ofoPhoeoix, was arrested when two policemen sate him twiag a Goldteater-MiDer placard that brushed the President’s hat is Joh walked along a fence shaking hands.
•Tbs President fended the sign ell with his hands and
ft wasn’t hit,” he said. “They just push. They always do.’ WBkhis was released after questioning by Secret Service
ip Los Angeles, the sheriff’s office issued an all-points alert yesterday after it received an adbnymous telephone call Hut a 1 with
n’a views was missing from his home, along with trig rifle.
FOUND AT HOME
The man was found in his home later. He said he hadn’t gone near the President. He gave no explanation for tee rifle fo>Ms car, deputies said. The min was not arrested.
Long Beech police said Friday a telephone company operate* fold them she received a call frlftn an anonymous man who «# ,
‘•‘President Johnson will not Hvfc through his trip through Lflpg Beach.”
' ★ * *
Police checked the area in-nearby Los Alamitos from wl^d) the operator said the can
running against the office of president rather than fbr.lt.” Johnson’s first stop of a busy 90-hour day was Reno, wbbre a large but somewhat reserved crowd greeted him.
♦ te
Sheriff Bud Young estimated and said it was the largest in the, city’s history.
COUPLE OF STOPS Riding into die downtown section in his......
Johnson stopped a couple of
times and literally had to coax curbstone watchers into the street to shake his hand.
Once the spectators got the kies it wax, okay, however, they swarmed around him as they have, without invitation, at other stops.
Johnson slapped directly at Gold water, his Republican rival, in a speech delivered from the steps ot Reno’s pink stucco state office buildings.
He did so without naming GoUwater. But his target was unmistakable.
“One candidate,” he said, “is roaming around the country saying what a terrible thing the is. Sometimes think he is running against die office of president, instead of ter it” ■ „
QUICK DRAW
"We here in the West,” said Johnson, “know how the West was won. It wasn’t wan by a man on a horse who thought he could settle every argument with a quick draw and a shot from (he Up. * *
"We here in the West aren’t
out to turn -in our sterling silver American heritage for a plastic credit card that reads. ’Shoot now, pay later.’ ”
* * *
And, Johnson saU, the West wasn’t settled “in .saloon fights or by galloping vigilantes” out rather by sober pnd responsible men and- women.
The President spent the night in Nevada, talking to local .politicians and resting in the pent-
had been received but found house of the Sahara Hotel hi Las nothing.	I Vegas.
over die reliability, deliveraMB-ty and control of nucjear a ons.
Goldwaler has pictured him* seif as a champion, of Social Security while condemning the Johnson proposal for tax-financed health care for the elderly. .He has called for a 5 per cent annual reduction in Income taxes, promising at'the same time to balance the budget
RECKLESS SPENDING
He. has charged the President with “reckless spending” mocked Johnson a» a man who carries a “shopping list” from which be invites voters to select their benefits.
, GoUwater has called for a “return of morality” to the White House. He has sparked some of his loudest applause by jibing at Johnson’s former i elation with Bobby Baker and asserting that “die shadow of sctadal foils across the White House itself.”
While he generally has avoided direct statements on dvil rights, he told rallies in die prosperous suburbs of Philadelphia — where the so-called white backlash is presumed to exist — thst minorities are ruo-
Johnson. He has against crime in die streets.
These issues have been offered singly and in groups, with careful checks made of the reaction to each. Judging from the scatter gun approach die GOP nominee still is using, none has showed up as a sockdolager by
Gold water keep coming back to the constitutional issue of “what kind of a country are we going to have tomorrow?” He charges that Johnson has embraced socialism, which he described in Lubbock, Tex., “not evil” although highly undesirable.
He told an opulent audience at the World Affairs Council in Los Angeles that the people don’t want a paternalistic government such as he said Johnson is
PRESERVE FREEDOMS
“They are not thinking of bow many" cars they have in their garages, how well off they are in a great and prosperous country,” he said. “They are thinking of preserving their freedoms.”
The crowd gave him a big hand when he .,said he wants to 'go back to the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence.”
Foil U.S. Weather Bureau Report	„
PONTIAC AND VICINITY - increasing cloudiness becoming moody cloudy and a little warmer this afternoon with possible light dowers, high today in the Ms. Cloudy and warmer with possible light rata tonight, low in the Mo. Winds are south to oonthwesterly at I to IS miles. Tuesday will be partly cloudy and wanner with highs hi the Ms.
There is some rather widespread feeling among his advisers that if Goldwater had stuck closely to the conservative vs. liberal theme from the beginning, he might have made ifitore .headway in efforts to unify his own party and to chip away conservative Democrats from Johnson. A number of associates wish that such mat-| tors as the control of nuclear weapons hadn’t been brought up' at all.
* * *
Despite the public-opinion polls that show him Tunning substantially behind Johnson, Goldwater and his aides believe that what he calls “the ghosts of j doubt and discontent” with the | Johnson administration are I abroad in the land and are not ! being measured by the pollsters.
Cong Suffers Heavy Toll in Sunday Battle
„ m tovvr urnani n, m i	V .
ft H Hem Y«r* .. ft ft	.
» SI Sniff!8 ft «i SAIGON. South Viet Nam H S wiburs* a 5f(AP) — DR. military sources s * r *5i£5 » sj I said today a Communist Viet 5 3 U."** n 541 Cong battalion left M men dead a u Washington ff 3 on the field and retreated with a 5	U oxcarts filled with dead and
wounded after a battle Sunday near Go Dau Ha, 40 miles northwest ofJSaigon.
Government forces, which captured 11 prisoners, listed losses of IS- killed. 38 wounded and 32 missing in the action.
Twelve miles away, two Americans and a Vietnamese battalion commander who were with government element in
Birmingham Area Newt
City Report Will Define . Resolution, Ordinance
BIRMINGHAM - An fMo-aetion of Me differences be-
— A boat leaves on a trip to evacuate peraaos stranded by flood waters in Kinston, N.C. The boat launching
House Unit Finds Estes Got No Help From U.S. Of
WASHINGTON CTO—A House subcommittee has found that erstwhile Texas business tycoon Billy Sol Estes got no help from government officials through bribery or political pressure.
♦ te •#
But, the subcommittee said in a report released yesterday, the government could have been a lot more conscientious in its handling of the esse.
The report by the House Government Operations
five two and one-half year study of most of Estes’ activities. It said the government did net lose say money to tee Peees, Tex., bey wander. Republicans have made the case a campaign issue, charging the Democratic administration with showing favoritism to Estes. The subcommittee report rejected that contention in the areai into which it looked.
“The investigation did not disclose evidence to substantiate allegations that Billie Sol Estes received deliberate preferential treatment because of bribery, political influence or pressure, or for any other reason involv-corruption of government officials or employes,” the report said.	*
Estes has bees convicted ta federal and state cearts of crimes teat coeld pet him hi jail for 29 years. Be is appealing bate convictions as well as preparing for trials an new charges.
set forth no conclusions
ess is OB toMghfs City Commission agenda.
Definition of the two was sought by the League of Woman Voters from the city’s legal adviser! at Hewlett, Hartman andBetar.
Attorneys declined offering the definition until a request was made by the City Cam-mission.
The definition tonight will come in the form of a report from Assistant C3ty Manager R. S. Kenning. '
The City Charier, Kenning notes, includes in the category of resolutions “official action in form of a motion.”.
NORMALLY DIRECTIVES “The reaotutioh format is nor* malty used far administrative directives, appointments to vari-si j |	|"| ous boards or the formal adop-
Hundreds Flee xtsspo“,'''~
He saM entrant ms ast snty J conforms to the ehartar bat atao to the definition in the I Webster dictionary which cites resolution as a "tensal » River at Kinston Hits pmsion of tee opialm or wfil I ... i . ■ ni, I el an assembly adopted by
Highest Level in Years • vote ->
»	| To become ap ordinance, a
KINSTON, N.C. UB—Evacua- resolution must meet certnta tion of families and property (other quaMkatiom.	.
was stepped up today as swil- Among the steps are pumicn-
raufif (center, below) was once a road leading to a residential area of the flooded city.
Flood in N.C.
referendum charter amendment Ontite April be**.
j The fNpah. calls for action by the electorate on ordinances onty.
Nerses Metzotan Service for'Nerses Metsaian, 88, of UBS Ruffner, Binning* ham, adl be 1 (tea. Wednesday at Voorhees - Siple Funeral Home, Pontiac.
Mr. Metsotaa, who formerly owned and operated Joe’s Barber Shop in Pontiac, (Red tm-
were not made when public I big flood waters from foe rtfv	• tocri mwst»per. re-
hPArinoi hold in ion iswollen Neuse River reached Aordtng in the city arts or-hearings were held ta Itt.* XETtiflmt tovel to i» years in lbmaco book and am of a spe-■■	-	. p	'oBe format for setting np m
like path around Kinston’s ^ M ^n^nce normally ta r» —»—t—1— -i— «- Sesmd by legal pennWes.
The question about ordinances add amendments arose from plans to place an initiative and
MANY INQUIRIES
'An almost unbelievable num-Although the 439-page report	Inquiries and toveriiga-
----tr;— ---------------- lions into various phases af Estes' activities were conducted |\ j» t |----------------before his arrest by agencies of
Death lakes
river exceeded its 14-foot flood mark late Inst week. Observers said property damage to this eastern North Carotins agricultural dty of 25,000 worid be heavy.
Today, tee Weather Bureau reported tee river’s depth at 92.7 feet- Itarec-toatho of a foot above tee modern record set in 1*46 and nmr tee 25-foot level unofficially reported in ISIS. The river is hipected to crest tonight or early Tuesday.
Col. David Spivey, an aid director for the Civil Defense, arid it is “not a real somebody swimming for his life sort of a tiling. It’s s property matter.” HAZARDOUS
“Of course it’s hazardous,” he added, “With all the gasoline tanks broken and floating loose, power lines under water. We are still pushing and trying to get tee people to get their valuable things out.”
Spivey said it was impossible to give an accurate count of the families who have left their homes, but Civil Defense officials estimated that 400 to 500 persons had been evacuated by late Sunday. No casualties have i been reported.
Cantor Burial to Be ,Private
subcommittee described its in- ■ ^ Kijaton ^	_________
quiry as “probably the broadest | Hundreds of residents have | ordinance, in scope” of any investigation moved away from low-lying j ytGAL PENALTIES into the 39-year-oM Texan’s j •[*** the river’s^ snake- j Kpnntng noted that violation business affairs.
/ * * *
Its findings Were simitar to, those of the Senate Permanent Investigations subcommittee, which issued a report on Estes’ cotton i allotment activities recently. The Senate group said it found no evidence of political influence.
GRAIN, AMMONIA
The House panel centered its investigation an Estes’ grain storage, ammonia tank sales and financing operations.
While not accusing any affl-etals of improper conduct, the subcommittee was critical of the federal government’s handling of the case.
Rep. Florence Dwyer, R-N.J., one of two Republicans on the subcommittee, called it a “dismal story of government inefficiency, lack of communication and coordination between and within government agencies.”
WWW
While not going quite as for, the main subcommittee report said the government knew of Estes’ activities long before he was arrested on March 20,1982:
(Continued From Paps One) Haftao Kara of the Man brothers succumbed two weeks ago.
Castor ried at his Beverly Hills heme. Two of his dangh-tors, Mm NataBe Metzger and Mrs. EdM McHugh, were at his bedside. Two other daughters. Marilyn Cantor and Mrs. Jaasl Gari, live in New Yark. A fifth
He was ■ Member of St. Sarkis Armenian Apostotic Church, Dearborn.
Snrvivfag are his wife, Zarouhe; two dtoghtofs, Mrs. Map Teresian of Pontiac and Mrs. Sarah Page of Madison Heights; a son, Edward of Pontiac: two brothers; seven grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren.
Memorial contributions can be made |p St. Sarkis Armenian dpsstaiir Church.
2 From County Die in Traffic
Motoreydo Flips; Train Runs Info Auto
county residents lost their Been Is traffic accidents
which ha was riding flipped Rochester Rood and Bette ta Addison Township.
Dead is John Lee Wingett, 14, n «| Mr. sad Mis. James W. Wingett, 311 Tamarack.
Sheriff’s deputies said the motorcycle was bring driven by Lonnie C. Harper, IS Elm, Oakland Township, when the accident occurred.
Harper told icpltafis lost control of the cycle when K hit loose gravel an *e shoulder of the road as he attempted to tarn right , teem Batts
been the comsdtaa’S secretary, died of rancor May 17, UN. BORN IN SLUMS Cantor was born Edward Iskowitz in New York City Jan-31, M2. He cates sot af Ac slums with a vitality that soon captured audiences whererer hs small man, ha
The evacuees, from farm
M J^A Founder
(Continued From Page One)
Daalap Ward, lac. ef Cleveland, Ohio, and from 1S25, until be quit at vice president and director hi .ISM to form his own partnership, he was with Campbell-Ewald Co., of Detroit
He is credited with writing the first advertisement of tee Pontiac car, and tee grin still handles Pontiac advertising.
★ * *
After his first severe heart attack, suffered on Armistice Day 1948, he became an orchid grower of national note and an authority on the Civfl War and WerM War U naval history. SURVIVORS
He is' survived by his wife, the former HiMegarde Hager-man of Ludtagton. Mich.; two sons, Colin and Jeremy, and a daughter, Mrs. Richard J. Morgan, all of Birmingham. Colin
The body m
i .NATIONAL WEATHER - Occasional rata is expected to-taghi in the upper Mississippi Valfoy, the Great Lakes, the Qms And Tennessee valleys, and the south Atlantic states. It. Ml be ttiolar in the upper Mississippi Valley, the western Ipbs area and the north and central Atlantic states. Warmer weather wfll prevail from tee Pacific Coast to the wari-urn Plains.
reserve were killed by explosion i u ^ pr^aent of the adver-qf a land mine that blew up uency and Jeremy atao their jeep. *	w -	- --	—	•
[ U.S. military sources said tee mine was electrically detonated by s Communist soldier some distance from the road, Similes northwest of the capital. The device was not i J contact mine.
|—The Americans wpra an officer aid a sergeant advising the battalion commander. The toll of American Read in combat hr Vkt Nam fince 1M2 rate toM.
is a member of tee firm in Bloomfield Hills.
I be at the Bell tt William R. Hamilton Co., IM E. Maple,
Funeral service will be 11 am. Tuesday at St.! James Egjacopal Church, Binrtiafihant.
Interment will be private. Oootrteutkns may ha mafia Is the Michigan Heart Fund.
“If yea knew Sexyhe chanted to Me oedtaaee, top-pteg Mb petal together.
areas and low-Mng areas in: “We’re making.whospse,” ha Kinston, were bring housed by mng, with a roll of hie immense relatives and friends or in three banjpeyii teat were expressive .	- emergney shelters set op by wtthrt Wag offensive,
ning as early as U51,” it said, the Red Cross at Stallings Air- “r< ^ to 4*nd this hour “While these events were gring fleid, a recreation center rad I with yost” he ssng to radio — «n-	*“	1 the National Guard armory, tedtsacea across tee notion.
10 FEET DEEP	CRI8P LINE
Water was eight to ten feet	generations hoes me ac-
deep in some sections of King- ] qualified pith tee high-pitched ston and acres of farm land i voice, ftp plsp gag An-were under water ,	Wfih his ideate. Cantor’s great
Terry dine, a Rad Cross rep- efforts for human causes were resentatlve, said more than 1001 remembered. He raised stagger-houses in Kinston, a city of ft,- fog amounts for war tawrff dur-ftH| ft	000, were flooded and that an- fog tee first and second World
cf lhe many federal inveotiga- j oteer 100 might be flooded if the! Wars, tile Heart Fund, Bonds tkxis of Estes’ operations been ' river rose as expected.,	for Israel apd other causes,
prteerty coordinated, it is IS-1	:	r=3c:^:,jyfy| V.‘	——-—
most inconceivable that Ms! fraudulent activities could have ! continued for such a long pa- j riod,” the subcommittee said
on Billy fid Estes’ empire continued to grow."
The subcommittee said that when Estes was finally exposed R was dwe almost entirely by persons who had been tnjnred financially “by his ratkleariy competitive tecties.”
‘4Jfod all — or even s few
MINOR INJURIES Harper suffered minor injuries fat the mishap.
A 81-y/ar-old Highland Township man was kflkad Sunday afternoon when his car was struck by a train in Fenton.
Witnesses said John Oiesky af 3756 N. Milford apparently did net sea the train as he approached the Grand Trunk and.
It
Norte Leroy Street.
Fenton police now are seeking icUUses of the victim, wbo wns dead nt the scene.
U. S. Aida ^ummontd to Hear Spy Chargns
MOSCOW (UP!) - The Soviet Foreign Ministry today ■unman id an Aawrlam Embassy official to repeat to him spy chargee sgriast four UJK and British attschss.
A U.S. spokesman said tee American official denied that the four diptomato had engaged to espionage aboard tee Trans-Siberian Express. In turn, he accused the Russians of violating their diplomatic immunity.
The report said the Agricul* > tore Department conducted two: investigation* of Eates’ use ef government- loans in 1961 and turned the results over to the Justice Department , which |. dosed tee file without action i to 1M7.	r. !
RECOMMENDED EXAM , !
In 1164, an agent of the Iw j ternal Revenue Service recom- j mended Eatea’ income ton f return,be examined, the subcommittee said. Bat none of Mi re-1 turns were examined before his j arrest “despite the fact that Ee- ( tes lived on a lavish seals and deliberately propagated a public ( image of enormous wealth.” I The report said the govern-' tent tiM not act until after! newspapers reported* Estes’ fer-, tank operations in ISO. I “The arrest ... was bsood. 081 ( confirmation of essentially the same toformatton thri had hsea submitted hi 1981,” R said.
WSg
#r
VISITORS lake activity fer most two-legged “animal*,’’ Ate us humans, has ceassd for the year. Howtrar, these three swans fooad the water at Sylvan Lake te their fik-
fog. Thefr Saturday vfsft attracted a delighted ewd of ytrtg chMdraa sad a few cartons
f
m
X ;■


a
Tf*V PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY^ QCTOBgft 1>,1W
. By Both Pqrties
Pulaski Day Used for Political Stage
By lie Associated Pre«* Democrats ml Republicans shared the Mipe political campaign stage Sunday in Mich-
Mrs. Stephanie Miller, wife of OOP yfcse presidential candidate William E. Miller, inarched a mile la the company of both Democrats and Republicans in leading Hamtramck’s annual Pulaski Day parade.
• ★ *’ *
In the course of her Ham* tramck visit, Mrs. Miller was politely declined an introduction of herself at a Polish wedding recsgtito^lEM i
IMs happened Saturday night. The bridegroom,* fending off a representative of Mrs. Miller who broached the idea, said politics/was improper at the ceremony.
SENATOR HART
Among Mrs. Miller’s parade companams was Democratic Sen. Philip ,A. Hart who also made a speech at another Po-lish-Amerloan affair hi be said GOP presidential candidate Barry Gold water “hai proven ha wishes to y lead i country he doesn’t understand.’
* 4 '
Hart told toe* Po|idi Centuryl! Club that Goidwater had cast I reflectisns on American minor*)] ay groups in a speech last week.
*	'* w
He also charged Mrp. Miller’s husband, a New York congress-11 man, with "distortioos of the facta” hi so attack by Miller on proponed liberalization of the UJJ. immigration lawn.
Hart arid America’s tasnrigra- I tjkxi quotas discriminate against people in Poland who wish to I come to the United States.
Hamtramck, Detroit suburb, boms of thousands of PoUsb-Americans, and traditionilbr Democratic in politics, applauded all the politicians fat the Pulaski Day parade.
Puiaksi Day, a big moment in Hamtramck, celebrates the memory of the American Revolutionary War hero, Gen. Cas* imlr Puiaksi, a Pole.
* /* ' 4 '’:, f ^
Mrs. Miller, accompanied by her mother, PoliSh-bom Mrs.
y Novak Wagder, was in* traduced for a brief talk by a Democrat, Lt Gov. T. John
Mrs. Miller tweaked the raus-
VFW Speaker Slated
JACKSON (AP) - Burton B. Tice of. Mitchell, S.D., is slated to be principal speaker neat weekend at the annual faU powwow of the Michigan Department of die Veterans of Foreign Wars. About 2,000 VFW and auxiliary members are expected.
tache of «-year«ld Stanley Ole-jarcsyk, retired tool maker who was I parade watcher. Olejar-czyk grinned as Mrs. Miller smiled.
POLISH WEDDINGS GOP campaign officials said Mrs. Miller’s social schedule called for visits to three Polish wedding receptions.
The bridegroom atom, Henry oSdahich, 22 of Detroit, apologized if be hurt Mrs. Miller's political feeBngs”*but Mid be could not permit a campaign aide’s proposal that she go on the stage at his wedding party.
. jt W # Sr . Bzdziuch, who had bqen wed to Joyce Makowski, 28, ^ Detroit, Mid the aide “wanted to stop everything” to introduce Mrs. Miller.
“that is where I draw the line,!’- Bzdziuch said, though declaring Mrs. Miller was welcome otherwise.
POLITICAL MIXTURE The Puiaksi Day parade's political mixture included,.the presence of Republican Senatorial candidate Mrs. Elly
ill This Week at Sim
m
! C
I Com plate WATCH OVERHAUL | With PARTS and LABOR at I This price your wok* t
disassembled. cleaned and oiled, M I - qd|u>lnd and tbnnd electron'!-	Imm
tally, genuine factory parts used and you get fuN year guarantee M labor Parts Include stems, crown, mainspring or balance
I*Bed>» rusted watch
CVlEHAUrAND^ATQH OUAIHIH Only
SIMMS"!
Peterson—she marched beside Mrs. MUJer-and former Democratic, Gov. G. Mennen Williams and Democratic gubernatorial candidate NeU Staebler.
Gov. George Romney, Republican incumbent and candidate for jreelectta, stayed home in Bloomfield Hills in keeping with his policy of. shunning politics on Sundays.
Sea. Hart also addressed ded^ ication ceremonies at the 81 million Civic Xenter in South-field, provided for in part by an 8879,000 federal grant, and a group meeting at a so-called luxury apartment development (Layfayette Towers) in Detroit.
He told the former that federal money, granted under the government’s Accelerated Pub lie Works pihgram, contributed to Southfield’s economic progress. He told apartment residents that his “truth-in-pack-WwrtHmieiii
DO YOU TAKE I VITAMINS AND STILL FEEL TIRED?’
If you taka viumina and still foal tired, your trouble may be j doe to iroo-poor Mood. Vitamiiu i alone can’t build up iron-poor 1 blood. But Gb»itol can! Because just two Gbritol tablets, or two tableepoous of liquid Obbitol contain 7 vitamin* plus twice the iron to 1-lb. of calves’ liver.
In only one day Gsarroairon is in your bloodstream beginning to. carry strength and merry to every part of your body. Check With your doctor and a you’ve been Neltoc tired becnow of iron-poor blood, take Gnura, liquid or tablets, every day. You'll feel stronger fost in just 7 days or money back front GsafHNL
•Due to ton deficiency
maim
g” MO designed to protect consumers was killed with the help of “high pressured” opposition from companies representing more than one billion doUars'in annual sales.
Fireman Wear Skirls
in Florida Community
A8TATULA, Fla.»-Women here feared that fire break out what stil toe men were at work—so they formed a women’s auxiliary to the volunteer fire department. A recent grass fird saw Mrs. Naomi Wallace chauffeuring the fire wagon to the scene and a mass of fire fighters in skirts in ac-
ora uiilMP:
CLOTHING SPECIALS For HUNTERS OUTDOOR WORKERS & SPORTSWEAR Cost MUCH LESS At SIMMS!
SIMMS DISCOUNT BASEMENT
THERMAL Underwear
MEN’S TOPS Or DRAWERS AAe
APPLIANCE SHOPPERS, 0LLIE FRETTER HAS THE DEAL!
OLUCPnTTKR Oem qflflaMs—*»
OriiWalBlMMaNrt
There am a to* a» paapta much. Net so with Frertet < It. la If yeuVe plewwlHg an
4 DAY DISCOUNT RIOT!
week wholl ha strapping fat and buying appliaacaa, andunfortunately matty af themara 8°'"8 *• I
hern's why. Pva hulh my huohraoshy aiwaytqMne Hm rapdaol — price and sendee, oid»euaranrau
jptaata yautaalf of that, if you’ll just glvo Fruiter's a chaneo.
14 Lb. 2 Cycle	Westinghousa	HOTPOINT FREEZER	All-Channel
NORGE WfSHER	Stereo Hi-Fi	Fost Freese Shelves	
3-Water Tent. Controls. 17800	Maple Finish With AAA/FM Stereo Radio 16900	Door Storage 14800	PORTABLE TV 112°°
NEW LOW PRICE
rca Victor a Hsta
COLOR TV
. e All-channel {VHf and UHF) tuning
•	RCA High Fidelity CokAr Tube
•	Improved 25,000-volt (factory adjusted)
chassis	•
•	Powerful New Vista Tunars
•	r dutocbne speaker	!,	4
e Eesy, accurate colortuning v .
Our Prioa 0*fy , ‘JjJflP*
ggmtfkr naut
NEW LOW PRICE
HI
RCA VICTOR PORTABLE
Newly -developed RCA Grid VHF Tuner . 18,000 Vplt S porta bout chaaeie (design average).. . Topfront "Golden Throat" sound . . Built-In monopole antenna.
Gat Fretters Lett, Low
SSL
APPLIANCE;
.WAREHOUSE
PONTIAC WAREHOUSE
TEUKRRAPR RD. Vfk Mi. So. ORCHARD CAKE RD.
Oao Mila Worth et Miiade Mil*	FI I-1BH
OPEN DAILY 10-9, SUN. 11 to 6
NO MONfY DOWN a- UP TP IS MONTHS TO ftit
FIRROALK STORE-201 §f I MILE-LI 7-4409 Open Men. thru Fri. Bill to Ml - ML •••

PHid^ v'v^-V 7; f*7T‘

112“
- A4* ' ’ v
t —	' ,.	«, ■	"	. n , /„ t.: >	.
THB ppyitAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1964	.
Dixie Governors Begin Ann Today
on the resolution at the finali session Wednesday. ;
OPPOSED TO KUtl-Kentucky Gov, Edward T. Breathitt found faultwith Wallace's plans. If , the proposal “is
space age," said West Virginia: Gov. William Wallace Barron in his committee's report on nuclear energy and space. CREATED N-BOARD He noted the Southern governors’ creation in 1956 of the Southern Interstate Nuclear Board, “The nation’s only non-federal, public-supported, interstate advisory and development agency in nuclear energy and space Adds.”
; SAN AffTONIO, Tex. (AP) -Southern governors began their annual session today,,differing on political issues bid united far their beM the South must rise {a a bigger and better role far gw nation.	*
- The 30th annual Southern Governors Conference formally Opened. this morning after presessMin political skirmishing Sunday. The meeting of 17 chief
executives, from south of the Mason-Dixon Una, Maryland to Texas, ends Wednesday.
The conference quickly stepped into the South’s part in space-age problems.
w '★■<»* .
“We have only opened the door, but I am glad that.we haw not been reluctant fan our preparation to meet the greet -challenges of the nuclear and
Breathitt said he fltvjn federal aid to education “as long as you maintain maximum control at local levels.’’
McKeithen said he would support the Wallace resolution.
On , Election prospects, Mc-Keithen said he is In a neutral role in the preskfontial race Alt it is his fading, as of new, that the Republican nominee, BarTy Gold water “In all probability Will carry Louisiana.” ■s
Barron said that by working •through the board “the Southern region has gained a new dimension for cooperation and accomplishment in the highly competitive areas of science and technology." ,,
,	■ h. dr
Chairman Glenn T.-Seaborg of the Atomic Energy Commission brought a personal message from President Johnson, touching an what Seaborg called “a growing partnership’’ between the states and the federal government
“I believe we are on the right trade in working together to solve these problems," said the President's message, adding ttuit the Southern Interstate Nuclear Board is “a flue example of cooperation to meet the problems of common concern.” VARIOUS TREND
News conferences Sunday brought up tiie various trends of political thought in jhe South.
Breathitt supported the Democratic nominees and said he thinks civil rights is a dead issue in the campaign.
Wallace said Goldwater has more support in Alabama than any GOP presidential candidate of the past. He said he still has not melded whether to support Goldwater.
WASHINGTON (UPIW Medical science does not yet have in sight a sure-fire vaccine against
TIMEWiai
Winter-Tin ht,
TIME to sk
on Your Fuel!
ing authority on virus infections said today.
. In an interview in “U.S,News A World' Report,” Dr.” Igor Tamm of the Rockefeller Institute explained the problem this way:
“There are about 41 different types of virus that cahtd
#pBS9J9£~ FLEX-O GLASS Is the original and ll? WINPU* Amtizm only window material that carries a	if JHw
iMfiBiP 2 YEAR GUARANTEE. Look forthe	[j,	" ~
name FLEX-O GLASS on tha edga.	^mm****"0""*
Gat Genuine FLEX-O-GLASS At Your Lecal Hdwr. fr Lmbr.
Dr. Tamm said tberejare some indications that vinwes may cause certain types of human cancer, although research on that subject is not yet conclusive.
“We know that viruses of different kinds do cause both solid tumors and leukemias in animals,”. he told the magastaw. “Personally, I would think that certain forms of human tumors and leukemias may well prove to be caused by viruses. But this has not been proved yet.”
Alabama Gov. George Wallace said he had the support of Govs. John J. McKeithen of Louisiana and Paul B. Johnson of Mississippi in a states-right proposal to bar federal inter-, vention in public school affairs, e e -w. % • Wallace said he would offer Southern governors a resolution endorsing a U.S. Constitution amendment that would give states exclusive Jurisdiction in operation of public jchools. However, Wallace conceded that he has little chance of getting the unanimous approval needed tor adoption of resolutions by tiie conference.
Wallace said’ he would talk with other governors before deciding whether to force a vote
TALKS TO NEWSMEN - Gov. George C. Wallace of Alabama is shown at a press conference in San Antonio, Ttt., yesterday where he confronted the Southern Governors’ Conference with his proposal to bar federal intervention in public school affairs. The prpposal met with some opposition from fellow-governors at the conference.
Shop Tonite, Thursday, Friday and Saturday Nites Til 9 P.M.
5 important reasons why you should be sure the name
. ZENITH
is engraved on the hearing aid yon buy! *
37 Babies Each Minute NEW DELHI (AP) - Thirty-seven babies are bom every minute in .India. The high birth rate and longer life expectancy, result in si net annual increase of more than 10 million in India’s population of 465- million.
Famous Paintings In Full Color
Ambassador 19" Portable
I SAVE M998
AMBASSADOR STEREO CONSOLE
BRUSH-STROKE
REPRODUCTIONS
hearing aid js made by the quality leader in American electronics.
.Largest selection. Widest choke of models and prices— starting as low as $75.
10-day money-back guarantee: If you’re not satisfied with your bearing aid, return it in lOdays after purchase for full refund. 5-year written protection plan: Ask us for details.
See why it's important to check for the name “Zbnith?” No other name meant to much in a hearing aid! Come in add try a Zenith Hearing Aid today!
CADILLAC
HEARING AID COMPANY OF PONTIAC
Ht Huron	FK 1-271i
Regularly
$229.98
controls. All channel UHF Tuner. Elegant block finish.
Rodio and TV..' filth Floor
Zenith’s Mkrolithic Circuitry, a space-age dfocovery! Zenith offers the revolutionary new ICP Microlithic Circuit, developed from aatellite science. Amazingly tiny, it gives up to 500% more dependability than previous hearing aid circuits, using conventional components -more teal hearing hop. It is available in the new Zenith be-hind-the-ear Arcadia (shown above).
HEAR AGAIN
Contemporary . . . simplicity of fine cabinet work combined with Mahogany or Wafhut finished 6 speakers for extra goad quality sound. A showpiece for any home.
, Radio and TV... Fifth floor
6-Transistor
PORTABLE
RADIO

Convenient, leather carrying corn, battery and earphone included- Radio by Ambassador handsomely designed and precision mode for easy tuning.
Radios... FMi Floor
’livinq SOUND*. HEARING AIDS
Phone Early For
Your Appointment FE 4-2511 Ext. 44*
CUSTOM
BLENDED
CHIGNONS
Extend-O-Metal Garment Rack
tod -sndr 40 to tar. WmssmbM.	Regular 7.98
Is seconds No wens, so bok», 2-piscs body contlruction. HaUic cops protect tndl.	d r- Q q
Notions... Street Floor	f S
DACRON
COMFORTERS
, N't pgre wfradry the coifs you con create with this fashion fakery to match your own hair while you wait:
—-——Miss maqda returns----------
Famous New York Chignofo SfyJist who wftl be at WaReY Millinery Dept, for one wieek only. ....... October 19th thru 24th...
Wool Double Knit Fabrics
THE PONTIAC PRftSS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1964
Meredith tops Treatment in Nigeria
LAGOilt W|g e r t a (UPI) — James H. Meredith,' the man who broke the color bar at the of Mississippi, says ha hap been ignored since he ■ntoad ta Nigeria two months, •fo M accept a postgraduate feilowstHp. .
The fellowship, at the University of Ibadan 125 miles inland, has not materialized, Meredith told United Press International by telephone.
The on|y attention he has gotten has been from the locsl
CONSOLIDATE YOUR BILLS, SAVE TIME AND MONEY, THROUGH THE ASSOCIATES
One loan...one place to pay. Now Associates, one of America's largest finance companies, 4—9 the problsm of too many peat and present bills. Under Aaaodatm Bill Consolidation Plan, you may borrow the amount it will take Dopey all yourbills—in full! This way, you have only one monthly payment...a payment arranged to fit your bucket Consolidate doctor, dentist, boepital bills, installment purchases, retail accounts, or other obligations.
Other "Look-Ahead Borrowing” plena are available for any personal, business, or profes-' sional need. There are over 600 Associates offices cot .o-coest Write, phone, or viait the one near you—today.
a SlMNte Mss ter *mj Wee*
ASSOCIATES
COHBUMIIt FINANCE CO.
* fimrpirtini
IN PONVMC
125-127 N. leghiew Street..........FI 2-0214
North Telegraph Rood....462-2000
if— Mall Shopping Cow
IN DRAYTON PLAINS
4476 Male Hlehwey.........OR 2-1907
press, which keeps gristing the bhe report tbathe was expelled from “Olo Miss,” Meredith saM.
Two parsons were killed at Oxford, Mias., two years ago in rioting over Meredith’s admission to the university. But he stayed there and earned a bachelor of science degree in political science.
He said the Nigerian Embassy in Washington approached him more than a year ago and of-fered the fellowship.
MONTHS LATER
This was followed by nfongis of correspondence before he accepted, Meredith said.
He saM Ms departure from tee United States “was well marked by .official representatives st Nigeria and by worldwide press ooverage."
Meredith, his wife and their four-year-old son, John Hbward Meredith, arrived in Ibadan in August.'
“I have been in Nigeria for two months, and no official of the Nigerian government, high or low, has even given me the courtesy of discussing this matter, or even of writing me a letter,” Meredith said.
NO FELLOWSHIP
“There’s been no fellowship to date, and I have met increas-ingly with undesirable experiences in my efforts to finalize the matter,” he said.
He said lot “have reflected misleading views.
“Each report I have seen has stressed the untrue point that I tiled from school in the
“I have never been expelled from any school anywhere at any time in my life,” Meredith added.
“Tb the beat of my knowledge 1 was offered a place in them at the University of Ibadan solely on the basis of my academic record and absolutely not on the, basis that I could not go to school in my own country.”
Newspaper Week Emphasizes'Story’
NEW YORK (AP) - The 25th annual observance of Newspaper Week was under way today with emphasis on “telling the newspaper story.”
The observance will through Saturday with daily and weekly newspapers throughout the nation urged te Join in educating the public to the history and objectives of the press.
* * *
Hie week-long observance iaf sponsored by the National Newspaper Week Committee, which includes representatives of major Organizations with an interest in the newspaper profession. '
Shop Tonight, Thursday,
Friday and Saturday Til 9
by
^relied
enjoy IMS Invitation w wonting pleasure. So much comfort, so much
Iiylk for such a tel* price. Sins	m a g<j
*.|R NSM widths. Itack or Brown.	Khguwr 0.W
Casual Shoes
N you're on ths move o lot you*!
Shop Tonite Til 9 P.M.
Out They Go Famous Make
Storm and Car Coats
Reg. 29.99
$1997
Throe style* to choose from. Two in Hooksuode and corduroy with pilo linings and one in wool Mahon with quilted lining. Choose from Groan, lodon. Antelope, Blue, Comal and Block. Sizes 8 to 18. Charge Yours.
Men's Warm
Thermal
Knit
Underwear
Reg. 1.99
Warm Wonderful 100% *
Cashmere Coats
Regularly 59.99
Soft wonderful Cashmere coats. Three button styles. Milium lined and hand tailored. Choose from Green, Sable, Black, Bamboo or Marine Blue. Sizes 6 to 18. Charge Yours.
\
USE YOUR CREDIT
it's Easy and Convenient bn Waite's Easy Terms... Charge All Your Purchases’
SAVE UP TO
Assorted Boys' and Girls'
Sweater Sale
Regularly 3.99 to 1Z99
$^97 $297 $397*' $497
• V-necks, cardigans, crew nocks	! 4 Completely washable
4 *100% Mohairs, wool blonds, Ortons 4 Bulky arid Flat Knits 4 Solids, Stripes, Novelties-—4 Assorted colors, 3-4*, 7.1^ AJQ
Children's Wear... Second Floor
$297
TWICE-A-YEAR SALE EVENT Famous Make Girdles and Panty Girdles
Totally worm. 100% cotton thermal knit underwear. Your . choice of tong or short sleeve shirts ond ankle length drawers.
Sizes SAH-XL- ,
Regularly 5.00 to 14.97
Nm'i Worn
,. Street Flour ’
$297 $097
Nylon power net girdles and panty girdtosjhat failed to pass th^ most rigid inspections because Of tiny ttows"fhaf)3o • hot impair the wear . . .“WRite,'Sizes S-M-L Assorted Styles.
Men's Vinyl Driving
GLOVES
Reg. 1.99 $147
Teasty worm* glove has fleece
Wen'e Weer . . . Street Floor
It
THE PONTIAC PRESS
rVniUeat
MONDAY, OCTOBER 12,1IM
id ^’^^mMatTud SOtoe 9m tmm>
ClrcuUtlon Miuiftr
Pontiac, Michigan

It Seems to Me .*•..
:• » ♦ " - * ' '*_ 1
JFK Assassination Report Spotlights Security^ Services
Few people understand the relationship between the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Secret Service. However, the subject is in * the spotlight just now because of the voluminous report on Ktimsmr’s assassination.
Baker's Case Stalled •««
Has the Bobby Ban* case been swept under the rug until after election?
Apparently, it has.
Johnson couldn’t facalt.
^	^	^	it	ft	it	r/j|
Actually, the FBI haa central	.__.	..
' government control over thine,	,“ta
of a general nature, except for	T,	,	^S**. *^
the actual In* of pardtaf th.	f"1 wlU“’t *	*
Chief Executive. This resta with	■£*?'	*"d tiwiJr?2S
‘ Ut. Secret Servke although	'hV™“	"g
million, have believed It to be a	Mto “7 ***”?*,“ ** «*
duty of th, FBI. But that iau’t	g»*
ao. And the Secret Service ban-	d»? TWa tta-htda ytot h a
dlea counterfeiting.	**—»•«
a \7r x	4he damaging mess carefully
’ _ . WWW	pigeonholed last spring, bot the
. Perhaps this may be a right smart	GOP revived it. Now the Denis
time to incorporate the £ smaller stall again until the votes are Secret Service Into the FBI with J. counted.
Edgab Hoovxb the top administrator	+	it	it
of both. There’s no one as well quali? _
: fled to handle the dual re.pon.ibU.	conch*™,
ity. Hoovur j. the greatest single au-	)rou	party?
tborlty In the world on crime, crime	' -..•- „ „
prevention, investigations, and the .	. ,	*	. %	*
suppression of Communism. He has Altu 111 vOllClllSlOll • • « dpne more to thwart Communism Jottings from the well-thumbed than any single individual, any- notebook of your peripatetic re-where.	porter:
P.,,„J. 0 * . .	The Journal of the American Op-
Periodically, the Red rats try frL.LJ.,_ ,_. ,.	"	, "
to start an dhuanla, back.	Aoodatton suggeata phone
fire against Hoover. They're «™nl>en be Uatod to the Immediate really after him. Usually they	°* the names In the books. This
work through some “ooft”	Places the two Important items next
branch of government, but the to each other............ . Overaction is usually smoked out	heard: ’’Budget or no budget, our
promptly, labelled exactly what	tumble is having too much'month
it Is and tossed back Into the left over at the end of the money.”
teeth of its perpetrators.	............HoMmIMM,
t - ,,	„ *	* - _	Jnst shot an 82—his age—at Chevy
a»Sl LT’T'7,. , ,T Ch«.nmM,hMdJaSl,c«; £5£L£tS?.!: -^-^^alithn,
ssr-rnSsr
SSt°"“ "u*n“n,,MdOTr ^m^tm‘g^S“*nd
President was relatively safe wher-	.
ever he was. But with crime in a	★ it ..it
, new state of ascendancy and increas- mm|M|H Purely per* ing much faster than the popula-	sonal nomination, we can’t be too careful. This is	tlou for an
an unhappy conclusion and one ar-	El ■ttractive maid
rived at reluctantly.	-1of the links:
But It’s inescapable,	^	iT:	Carol Sorenson,
Shouldn’t the two be together?	wLm	~Jti	Wfacon8in fM
*	.	.	who won iho
*	*	British an«> .
nr a, _	jfT-y , tear. Carol 'is
Weather Forecaster ..,	an “A” student
Gather close	CAROL at Arlsonn
Mathon K yritsis speaks	State..........% . After Rom-
it ir it	«*y was here the other day
In esse you live In abysmal	“someone” said “he hud it
ignorance of his identity, I . straight” that the Governor hasten to explain that Mathon	wouM run for the U S. Senate in
is the oracle of Waukegan and in	1966 against Pat MacNamara.
comparison with him, the fabled^ *	-----Overheard: “Today
oracle of you-know-where tore	three ‘R’s’ stand for Ro-
down his shingle and became a mance, Romance and Romance.” professional discus thrower. For	^ it ' it'
years, the Waukegan soothsayer	u ,	„	, ,
haa been the moil accurate win-	Norman Thomas, six times social-
ter forecaster extant. He’s the	*** candidate for the Presidency, an-
champion. He never	misses. He	Bounces he’s so satisfied with John-
scorns crystal balk,	tea leaves,	'*# and Humfhhby that the Social-
magic wands and	“Confucius	lets won’t enter a candidate, Moat
,aay.”	Democratic candidates should be
Mathon banks on the perch. labelled “Socialist-Democrats” any-
"‘“’i	*	*	”y'..............Overheard: 1
T-ir-	can’t teu how many accidents I’ve
I^ke Michigan perch are hi. >TO,ded m m, life. When I drive, I touted guide, and he confidentially i(son ^	^ auggeettona."
iZT.ZZT r“r' ••••' • • Current bridge relea*. Bmte n months ^go he predicted a Aow	jAcon	_
^MeeterPotaUbymbrethan He alwav.^i,	a thouiand. Oaaia ta the champ, the
pure, unadulterated top bridge au-t Kyrfteis bases his prodictiona thority and local players are lucky on the depths to which the perch to have him In The Pbibb. ds^darUg the fall. Th. W	Cheent «d Man: the
foot level means comparative ».	... ___	, ■ . -	. _ ■ ,
—anath ahead bat the Klld. Old ®1
300 foot depth means a Minger. “* 74th birthday Wednewlay; the And now the perch are very	thaj, $50 top for tickets to the
shallow.	Liston-Clay “fight.” They aren’t
Trust Kyritsis.	worth fifty cents. .
All Waukegan doe*.	—Harold A Fitzobhald
:1I1
#<Who, Me?”
Reviewing Other Editorial Pages
Mistakes
Barry Goldwater
Architects cover their take* with tvy, bridei with may-omaite — and the Democrat with welfare program.
Campaign lie
The Shreveport (La.) Times
The whole Johnson-Hum-phrey-McNamara Democratic Party castigation of Senator, Goldwater as a man whose nuclear weapons policies might burn the- world into one huge cinder have been blown sky-high and President Johnson himself has been directly Charged with having “Ued" to die people of the United States. ♦ * * -
Both lime magaziae and : U. A News A World Report revealed that under Presi-
de employe* work with dig-aity, and that management must change ita way of handling its employes.
* ■’ # ‘ *
A man on strike was interviewed on television and was asked what the men were dissatisfied about. And he “cried” the following reasons:
•	The floors' could be cleaner A Longer relief periods
•	Time in which to wash their hands
•	The bosses could be pleasanter
•	Time to tell their committeemen about their problems. (And this on company time.)
If these men were small, confused children, we would pity them and try to protect them from shouldering responsibility beyond their tender
l only
fte Supreme Commander ef NATO but the Commander of the Nerth American Air Defease always have had authority ta ose nuclear tactical weapons at their dberetka
are tally
even thousands et such weap-
But many of them are family men who are raising children, voting and tnMag active parts ia their communities.
They speak of Ipuman dignity as thoigh it were something you could buy in a can on the gro- < cert’ shelves, or that cm be given to them by General Motors or the UAW.
The union has done wonders
for its members by securing for them a decent wage, decent working hours and better working conditions safety-wise, and comfort-wiae. GM granted ail these requests and in so doing, the employes were given a “chance” to carry themselves with dignity.
But human dignity cones from within a person. It to not handed out like a pay check.
* * *
Heather said that GM was always Waking ef production and mere production. Well, why shouldn’t it? It is a hotness and a good one- judging from the many people it ern-ploys. These people are eating/ regularly, wearing dothes sssl driving cars that workiag far GM has Blade possible.
We need GM and they need GM and the Union pods GM.
If these men, who; we repeat, are fast becoming mflkapps, cannot find dtgdly within ||Wb-selves, then, we can only pray that God save file nation before it goes down the drain.
Voice of People:
Michigan Highway Sptee Increases Death Rates
\ On a recent trip from flint to Pontiac f drw* the speed limit, 70. fifteen cars passed m3 on the highway. If this Was an average number of Violations and we have 100,000 miles of streets and highways, in a year it would be One million and a half in Michigan alone. It all adds up to the fact we are killing one person in the U.S. every 15 seconds. ,
'	ir .
When is our President going to declare n national emergency? Some 40,000 people killed a ; year in the U.S. Should he caO out the grated forces to |»itrol our stroots sad highways?
v '''★ Or ★	•
U the car ahead is traveling the nhudMtta limit we should hot paw and should'keep a safe distance behind. Perhaps our speed limits should be changed to read, "No Pawing Over 25,” “No Pasaing Over 50,” etc. - ' *rf ■ * iPlf^ •	■ ■
J. C. V PONTIAC/
'Contents of Lost Wallet £re Needed* v
I was unlucky today; my wallet was either ififfjgi or lout. The finder probably tossed it into the field or a garbage «•* after taking what could be used.
I guess people aren’t ktndhearted enough to rotifii the
papan-	I
MRS. JANET I. BEATY flflWP 780 STERLING ^ 4 / /
■ ;	' i./:■/'*■>•
Favors Extremist for the White House
I am sick and tired of hearing fiuTBarry Goldwater is extreme. We need someone extreme to clean up the White House.
T ASM IImmJ mI	inwMH Ia mismIu Hia fWlMWIItUf udtik flWinot/
am tired of paying taxw to supply Idie Cc food, arms, ate., not to mention the w
xwmmJHKBF**' ■■
H T____________■_____ 1m|m of (koraMliktitoiioyed
in the U. S. government. I aip'also fed up with the no-wfo policy. This false front is costing fives. It coat ene mart two sons in the Bay of Pigs, and how many Uvea are being taken in Vhu Nam. Why must we fight to lpM?
W
■ who art afraid to fight far something will wcome a Commuaist! If yon tMak wa are aat ia are badiy intstalnea I qaeto frem “None “It haa already claimed toare fives, ea-, aad cast more aieary thep aay ‘hot’ ear to ear is real aad .we are toeing. “America hae real victory la If years ef W war.”
■/'*'	:	AN EXTREMIST
Baby Sitters
The fadanopoHe Timet An old-timer is lomtone who remembert when parents and baby sitters were the same people.
The two magazines brought out that General Lemnitzer, the American commander of NATO, haa mote than 1,000 tactical nuclear field weapons on bmvj and that authority to use them against aggression without further orders from the President of the United States hu reeted in hia hands and those of his predieeeeor commanders since the days of President Eisenhower.
% * * *
The original charge against Senator GdKhrater was that he wanted to. scatter authority to use nuclear weapons bare and there promiscuously ’ among “field commanders.” Ha never made any such statement. He did say that the Supreme Commander of NATO should have authority to use small, tactical, field nuclear weapons at his discretion, if attacked, because delay might prove fatal. , I j * * ^
The misstating ef Us poai-,fi*a se this point was breaded by Senator Goldwater as "The Number tew Lie of Ae Cash palga.”
After the revelations of tbo two weekly aews magazines, Oufinuaa Deaa Burch ef the Republican National Committee flatly stated before the National Praaa Clab in Wash-
Bob Considine Asks:
Where WiU the GOD Be Sending Ike Next?
CONNDfNE
“Nat only has he (Senator GoMwater) been victimized by this technique bat Prrni-deat Johnson haa patetoiy Ued to the people of the United
Human Dignity
Lake Qrion Review Ike UAW is fast making mift-sop* out of ita members! When General Motors plant employes walked oat on strike last weak, Lobor Loader Walter Reuther said ft wa« because of “human dignity” twt*
# , 14 : *.
He aaBeaaeed over teJev!-(ion that GM was not letting
NEW YORK - It’a getting ao that Gen. Eisenhower is afraid to read Us morning newspaper. There’s no tolling where the R e publicans will ha sending him. nsxt (The longest trip he’ll be making horoaiter ta from Gottys-burg to Augusta j to Palm!
Springs. Lit Sen. Goldwater go to Viet Nam himself, if he’s elected, Ike seems to bo saying.
Back in the lfSS campaign Ike was reading a speech written for him by Emmett Hughes and learned, perhaps to his surprise, that, If elected “I will go * to Korea!” t
He read toe fine something like RoaaM Cotnsaa recited eae ef radto’e greatest paa- ■ sages. Iatredaetog toe next week’s show at toe eeadmiea ef s radio drama, Coiman road tor Us cultivated Westminster-Abbey organ tones, “Oar guest will bo that hril-Uant star of stage aad . screen .. .”
He turned thlT’page and, finishing the sentence, he cried with horror, “Sonny Tufts !?!*?!
It would be interesting to learn wherei Ike would like to send Gold water, or LBJ for that matter, if a third term was suddenly pressed upon him. The reluctant kingmaker must have some beauts in the bade of Us mind. Miller to Malaysia? Humphrey to fiw Himalaya*?
We’re fresh from a talk with David L Wolper, the young ex-
ecutive producer of “Four Days in November,” the feature-length re-creation of President Kennedy’s trip to Texas, his assassination in Dallas, and ton bizarre and still hardly believable events that followed.
The picture attack m at toe start as aa btvasha ef « grieving family’s privacy, and
American tragedy haaBwch as there is it fida time, at least, no thought of alartag the impressive box office receipts with the Koaaody Library or say ef toe ceases President Kennedy chans-
But as the film unwound I sensed the brilliance of Ha conception, dhe clean writing of Theodore Strauaa, the dutin-guished narration by Richard Baaehart, and the role the whole effort will assume aa the years
“Four Days hi November” would seem to preclude tbo necessity af all future efforts to spell oikt too Calamity U pictures and prone.
It’s. all fiiare for your children’s children to ■«*, rad wonder at Would that there was < such a escort of Lincoln's passing, or Caasar’s. / f
New Reader Enjoys Press Editorials
We started taking The Press and plan to continue our subocrip-tion as wa foal it is far superior in editorials. Wa always enjoy David Lawrence’s column.
H. LANG FARMINGTON
'Socialistic Proposals Are in Operatton’
What wUl it be — Goldwater or Johnson? Do you want the free enterprise system or socialism by leaps and bounds?
. People are awakening to tbo fact that the proposals of the Socialist party of yesteryear are the operating programs of today. These programs are approved by those who vote for increasing federal debt and taxes, federal power and spending, and give-away programs here and abroad. They vote for anything that pill put more power in Washington. When enough power ia there, th* U. 8. will be Socialist, Communist or totalitarian.
•w ★ Sr	-
Think before you vote. Unteas you art Socialist or farther left, you have but one choice. Don’t throw it away. r LEON R. GR0GG WATERFORD TOWNSHIP
‘Molcpter Alerts Prevent Recurrence1
Wc srnrn all mothers to keep their children away from open fields, especially^ file one between East Boulevard and Sterling. We thought ntemng of letting* our buys play there until one was recently molested.
"■ * . 4 *	,J'
Why weren’t we warned when this happened before? HaW can mothers protect children against such as thte what we kaasr nothing of the events? New sse remain knowing bat...
FEARFUL MOTHERS
Press and Carrier Receive Compliments
After mpving to Lake Orion from Detroit ws started tefcfog The Pontiac Press. We think it’a a fine paper, as do many others: We intend to continue for good. Our paper boy to one th*’ nicest.
MR. AND MRS. J. J;
LAKE ORION
'Final Step to Socialism Approaches'
There is n«ich talk of preservation of our freedoms and da# ocratic wsy of life. The U. 8. Senate ia controlled by the Dam* o-ats. If the Democrats win fen more seats in Congress it iw be controlled by ,DanMcrafe who take their orders from t£J wifi we then have a democracy or is tote the final stop to R.O. PASCHKE ________	UNION LAKE
The Better Half
TM AmcMM Prats k tamke MrtaslaSk la M* at* tor NriHK onion of tM tout mm ertoOS fM, rnymmm m mm
tm Ponttac Praw h eitharae m enrriar tor » canto a 5&T3B !"!»««< •» BaWaa*. G*na*at, Ltv-ingiton. AAacamto LaMar and WaaManaw Countlaa It la SISlSI a vaart .itatoai in SMMwi and
&£sjrzfJZjrS
ywmna pavaMa tos advanca.
n. "- f
mm
century recalled the courage of I beings.
the other Italian navigator of
the 15th century^> ~	^ ipakie.
Oakland County's Largest Mortgage Lending Institution
SPECIALIZING IN HOME LOANS
WE BUY LAND CONTRACTS
[AM NEWS
If you are planning to buy or build a new home or to,.improve your present home, come in add see us today.
HAND WASHABLE
VELVETEEN
PONTIAC
THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER lit, 1964
NonaUgfied Confer^ncs Ends With Blast at U S., Slap at China
CUBQJQK) - The eeeond Conference of Nonaligned Nation! ended Sunday with an attache on the United Statee’ Policy in Autheast Asia, 91* final communique alao rejected Rad Oiins’a dp* that force ii necessary to defeat Imperial. Ism,' ■v tat.’ v..
•JN	Or. *	’	'	.
The conferedce recommended negotiations to neutralise Laos, Cambodia and Viet Nam. It callad for the withdrawal of all
knign troops to South YM Nam, where the United States has about 20,08ft military adffe trying to prop up the Saigon regime against guerrilla attacks.
■ '•it; > •’ it 1
It also asked for resumption of toe nine-nation Geneva Conference on Indochina to work out a peaceful solution to the strife-tom area.
In addition' to
KEEPS PRICES DOWN
SPECIAL SALE!
Mm's 10.95 new dressy slip-ons
TMtota leather upper* stay bright, and new lookmgl Lew sweep moccaiin toe styling. Rubber sole and heel. Choose Cordo, or black, sixes 6 to 12, B-C-D-EEE widths. Buy 2 pr.l
OPEN EVERY NI6MT TO •*
attacks on Ae United States in
toque called for toe*
States hppdt!'f|B Guantanamo Naval Base in Cuba. It* Cuban
jH'-hifl
would have preferred a much strong* expression.	~M -
PUERTO RICO __
The conference him gave a plug to /tbe ttny Puerto Rican Independence movement It
asked'* tod United Nations to investigate the situation to the V&. Commonwealth of Puerto Rico. PUerto Rico has the high. r«at living standard in Latin -'America. , M	-
As expected, tfo gpfercnce
Will End 'Anti-Italian Wall -Humpfirey
NEWARK, NJ. (API — Ben. Itobert H. Humphrey of Minneeota pledged today the Democratt wow tear down an "anti-Italian wall” in the- nation’s tmmigration laws.
The Democratic vice pcea^' dential nominee, in a speech for a Columbus Day rally, declared, “the wall to a disgrace to our country's'goqd name,” and “a blot on ooriiiNge abroad.*V v1|
jfcwW ft
His arhspfs called for ap» pearances at 'Ojumhua' Day parades here and in New York City and attendance at part of toe World Series gams at Yankee Stadium. _ f -,	>
Humphrey said the immigration law "discriminates against many would-be immigrants — against those from eastern or southern Europe, including Ital^i f NOT ENTITLED |
“The law decrees that these Italian and other immigrant* are not entitled to equal oppor-•y to job) their kinsmen to our land."
These provisions, the Minnesotan said,- art “offensive to millions of Americans of Italian and other extraction.
* * *
“Fortunately, Christopher Columbus did not have to show an immigration quota number.
"Fortunately, the gate of America was not shut in Enrico Fermi’s face. Twenty-tie years ago, from Chicago, a message flashed on , Fenni’s. achievement.
JUST LANDED
“His genius had made possible the first atomic chain reaction. What was this message on his historic achievement? It was “ The Italian navigator his just landed to the New WoHd.’
"Unis, the brilliancft of the
Hutephrey promised Mao that the Democratic AdtiMstratioo would fry agate to make Columbus Day a national to-day. He recalled that the Senate had. passed suchl'Nll this year; it died in toe Jtatoe.
in Washington television toter-views, addressing a rally spom sored by scientists and engineer f* Johnson-Humphrey and attending the Eleanor Roosevelt memorial dinner. POSE THREAT He told the rally that the views of Sen. Barry Goldwater "pose a grave threat to America’s continued leadership in science, technology and medicine.-” <JM ' L At the dinner in tribute to Mrs. Roosevelt on the 80th anniversary of her birth, Humphrey said bar life was "like a great symphony. It bid many varied
.and WtacdMto. Friday in liowa and Indiiwa, and Saturday to Tennessee and Florida.
asked for the admission of Rad China to the United Nation, but other' resolutions were aimed directly or indirectly at curbing the <>ina— Rads, reported on the verge of testing their first atomic device. -
*• it f,.
Included were resolutions supporting coexistenqg and calling for peaceful settlement of all disputes and recognition of each state’s present borders and sovereignty. The conference apparently had to mind China’s 1962 frontier war with India.
Though the. Anal resolution was markedly unsympathetic to the West, it wm clear that tiich states as Yugoslavia, India and President G«mal Abdel Nasser’s host United Arab Republic
to blunting many proposals by such nations as Indonesia and Cambodia. PLEDGED SUPPORT The 48 member-nations, rep. resented by kings, presidents, premiere, foreign ministers and lesser delegates, pledged (heir support to the proposition that “peaceful coexistence is an indivisible whole."
The conference also adopted a resolution calling for: A blockade of South Africa because of its white supremacy policies, a end to all nuclear wfcapOn tests and production, and disarmament
★ *0 *
An Indian proposal to send a mission to Peking urging the
to cancel their plans for atomic, tests was killed when Indonesia tasietod that similar misptnns be ssnt to Moscow and Washington.
Millionaire Withdraws Naples Mayorship Bid
Naples, Italy (I) — Italy’s leading monarchist, millionaire ship owner Achille Lauro, withdrew yesterday as a candidate for mayor of Naples in next month’s municipal election.
The 77-year-oki fleet owner said he would not run because the right-wing Liberal party refused his offer for a joint front to the elections against the country’s center-left govern-
underlying theme which always
Get a Horse, Mailmen Told
MOUNT VERNON, Ky. »-Applicants for a rural mail carrier’s job at Mount Vernon needed one unusual requisite—, a horse.'
The job became vacant when Clifton Boone onnoanced he would quit.
The route covers only 15 miles and is carried three days a week bug it’s over a toad which no auto can travel.
B
enneus
A/AY8 F1R8T QUALITY m *
Before you spend more .
COMPARE
THIS IS A ' CORDUROY YEAR!
PENNEY’S PRE-PLANNED THIS LONG AGO TO GIVE YOU THE WIDEST SELECTIONS OF TYPES ft COLORS
PENNfrS PEN-ROY PINWALE SOLIDS
TWO DOZEN RICH COLORS
Two - dozen - ripe rich colon to pick for your every need!, Cotton corduroy is to vena tile you can aew bedspreads, drapea, pillows, then turn to sportiwear for Junior end shift* for lister 16 rib pin wale machine washes, machine’ driee like new! 36“ wide.
CORDUROYS IN fVIVID PRINTS
PENNEY’S EXCLUSIVE DESIGNS
Oh-h-h-h-! ike colon! Exciting shades in the most ale pint designs from plaids to stripes to flora is,,, yes, even provincials! Mata them up with Pan-Roy solids for fashion freshness! Cotton corduroys wash with ease, colon stay vivid!
FASHION FAVORITE IN
, LUSH WIDE WALE
6 RIB
WIDE WALE
Hera is a finer quality, heavier weigh t,‘6 rib wide wale cotton corduroy, deeply penetrated colon that machine wash, to sew into high fashion sportswear and Outerwear for all the
This Httla card dots the trick
MATELASSE
BROCADES
2.29,	1.98
1 Count on Penney’s to make | 1 good things better! Now that | [ cotton Velveteen is washable § | the iky is the limit on uses r | for this rich fabric! Sew;
? sportswear, decorate, use i it for childrens wear! 36** jg i wide in a dozen colors- |
Just pick the prettiest pattern around match it to our .Matelasse* brocade (so rich in rayon ’n poly-ester) - so very beautiful,' so very smart because you make it yourself! .
| LUXURIOUS |
| Rayon Velvets |
| 2.79, |
| It's bound to be a fashion | | original when you make it 3 i yourself - choose dra-1 1 matic to the floor or after- 3 I noon lengths for any ele-| | gant occasion. Crush-1 | resistant finish in precious | | jewel topes!
PENNEY'S MIRACLE MILE
STORE HOURS 9:30 AM- to 9 P.M.
THE PONTIAC PBESS, MONDAY ^OCTOBER 12, 1964
WESTERN FIELD 6 SHOT PUMP REPEATER- ^ 12-20 GAUGE
SHOT?
WARDS 12-OAUGI RID HEAD SHELLS
Extra power for extra die-	ADD Of]
Lance, at Ward* low |{nH| price! Non-corrosive, non- ML mercuric primers Ignite in-	m
stantiy, positively. Even-burning, smokeless pbwder.
Get on target fast with this solid-frame, Western Reid beauty I It's lightweight, with rapid fire hammerless action and top reteiver safety. Walnut pistol-grip stock, forearm; 20-gauge handles 3-inch Magnum shells. Choose full, modified choke.
{WARDS 31.95 SHOTGUN IN 12,'
16, 20 AND .410 GAUGI
Wards own, single-action Western Reid shotgun I Features- streamlined hammerless action with automatic safety for top protection. Tough walnut finish on pistol-grip dock and forearm. Full choke barrel. Hurry in, enjoy Wards special low price I
HEAVILY PADDED FOOTBALL HELMET
a 4”
6-pt. suspension In helmet for safety, com-fortl Padded aar piece, adjustable chin strap. Pace guard.
COAT Rugged water repellent cotton army duck with triple stitched seams. FuH rubberized game bag, 2 shell pockets with flaps.
PANTS Water repellent cotton army dude with triple stitched seams. 2 hip pockets; large slash pockets on side.
Comfort:.. law price! Cowhide lining over foam Insulation. Curved side seams prevent ankle chaffjpg; rubber sole and heel deated for traction. Sixes 7-12.
Riled with CEIACLOUD* acetate fiber for warmth. Water-repellent cotton dude' cover; cotton flemnef lining. Single-double style. Size about 33*x75".
PuH cbt with UCLA, style inserts. Ribbed neck; long sleeves. Choice of Blue or red with white inserts.
M ONTGOMERY
WARD
7 NO MO—T DOWN
Wards top-performing power saw with all the most-wanted features at an unheard-of low pricel Double diaphragm carburetor for opposition cutting, even upside down; 5.8 cm. in. enjdne; 21-inch roller nose, chain; pressure-type oiler; fast-idle hold button; air filter, •industry rating
The most versatile ever—entire smoker hood, motor, spit rotates back into main hood to become conventional grill! Loaded with deluxe features...see Bat Wards!
PHONE 682-4941
Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Road
*""*..GIANT SAVINGS-’33 OFF!)
DIRECT-DRIVE 6-HP*
CHAIN SAW-REG. 162“ J
SAVE OVER *8
29-IN. LAWN tWEEKR—RED. 24.99
R doesn't pay to rake toe ledves when Wards sweeper cods so Itriel Sweeps an area 28 indies wfdp, holds a big load...and folds tor convenient storage!

STORE 8&0 A.RL to 9:00 PJL HOURS: MOHDAY thru SATURDAY
Riverside
4-SMAKt MMANTH
Only tte Clamps test Riverside tires . . Roger Ward and Pamelli Jones, both Indianapolis 500 winners.
Riverside
BATTERY CHARGER!
CHARGE YOUR OWN BATTIRY— EAYBl
Cor starts oE winter! Brings	'm ^
batteries ta ful! charge in 9 Qm 7-9 houtsl Tapering charge I # me to 3 amps protects against ■ H •*» overload, fasy-fo-read dial. UL listed!	shorty 17.S9
Riverside
BATTtBY GUARANTEE
M eervlt* guoronto for th« *p«d:
iitaliffih
mm
30-MONTH
THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, UCXUiSJSK twe
A SALE SO GIGANTIC IT ONLY HAPPENS TWICE A YEAR I
M ONTGOMERY
WARD
COMPLETE ENGINE
100% REMAMOPACTUREP PORN V-BI
Polly factory-rebuilt with 4 AO/ over 200 new parts, sden- 0 ■ I /A tHkolty testedl Get new ■ WF /w valves, timing gear, heads , ah and bearings. New rings aeoperfom ordinary typel Reaetar behen*.
YOUR BEST OIL BOY
warm mavy-oott mw w
KepiMfl^t kl 1OW, 20-20W, SO
STORE 9c30 to 9:00 P.M. HOURS:	R0EBAY thni SATURDAY
ANTI-RUST, TOO!
Prevent troublel Wards permanent anti-freeze with rust inhibitors upwards against rust, (gaming, corrosion* Hon evaporatiofl ethylene
149
BUY FIRST RIVERSID* SAFETY NYLON AT REG. NO-TRADE PRICE
7.90-14/4,70-1 MMm bid dwell	N ,
Full 4-ply nylon cord teamed with husky tread delivers positive protection against road hazards. ;	•
.AND GET	jmmI 0
2nd $4
TIRE FOR	t
BUY FIRST RIVERSIDE ■ NYLON ST-107, AT REG. NO-TRADE PRICE
440-13 tub»l«§* bloclcwoll
Over 3300 individual, read - hugging tread edges conquer wet, slippery pavement, add traction. 4-ply-	—
AND GET
2nd 55
TIRE FOR
	Price Without Trade	Second Tiro
7.50-14 6.70-15	20.95*	$4
7.10-15 8.00-14	23.50*	64
. 7.60-1 A *	26.10*		15	
8.00/9.20-15	28.65*	65
♦Plus tsetse tax. Whitewalls, IS mere per tire.		
		
Tubeless Sixes	.Price Without Trado	Second Tiro
6.50-13	20.75*	65
7.50-14 6.70-15	JW°*	66*
7.10-15 8.00-14	28.45*	67*
• 8.50-14 7.60-15	30.50*	$8*
8.00/8.20-15	34.30*	69*
*Hus axels# tax. Whitewalls, IS mere per tire		
TRUCK TIRE SALE
WARDS HEAVY SERVICE NYLON TRUCK TIRES
6-ply rating
Here is Wards low-priced Riverside nylon truck tim that's built up to quality ... not down to price! Full-depth tread gives positive traction and skid protection. Nylon cord body resists impacts . . . wear* longer. See them now at Wards!
HI-WAY COMMERCIAL NYLON CORD REINFORCED
MM, •-ply rating
Riverside Hi-Way commercial has become one of the most popular truck tires on the market. Rugged nylon for longer wear, tower cost per mite of service and greater protection against blowouts, and heat flax breaks. Savings-pricedl •
i* excite tmx
6.50-16,6-ply rating . 7.00-15,6-ply rating .
6.50-16,6-ply rating............ 21.1B*
7.00-15,6-ply rating ........... . 25.81 *
NS, DO
WARDS BATTERIES ARE 5 WAYS BEST
RIVERSIDE 30-MON. STANDARD BATTERY
Chevrolet	40-64
Chevrolet	55-63
Dodge-Plym.	56-63
Ford-Marc.	40-53
FordMerc.	56-63
Rambler	5643
Olds.	54-63
Pontiac	5543
Buick	59-63
Ford	54-55
12.46
15.66
15.66
12.66
17.66
15.66
16.66
15.66
16.66 13.66
•-volt with treds outright. 18.99
Built to equal the* performance of new-car batteriee—gives dependable start power In hot or cold weather. Exclusive silver cobalt coat* ing locks powor in, adds extra life.
RIVERSIDE 42-MON. SUPER POWER
18“
Outperforms new-car bat-
teries-delivers •-von with trade 46% more eutrtgMM.il storting powor.
Chtv. 40-94
36-MONTH Outright Exch.		42-MONTH Outright Exch.		
19.99	14.66	24.99	18.66	
22.99	17.66	26.99	20.66	
22.99	17.66	26.99	20.66	
19.99	14.66	— —	- — — .	
25.99	20.66	29.99	23.66	
22.99	17.66	26.99	20.66	
25.99	20.66	29.99	23.66	
22.99	17.66t	26.99	20.66	
25.99	20.66	29.99	23.66	
Pontiac Mall
Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Rd. PHONE 682-4940
Ar-1Q
Tljg PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, 6cTOBBR 12, 1964
Rowdiness Drowning Out the Issues as British Election Nears
LONDON (AP) - Britain* rmrity national election campaign moved into its final phase todtty with subtle political arguments drowned in * rising tide df noise and disorder.
Prime Mincer Sir Alee Douglas-Home, ll^tbe Conservative party leader, and Harold Wilson, 46, the Laborite chieftain, shouted themselves hoarse in an effort to be heard above the din.
■ .	*	*
Their	lot	and	that	of	their
colleagues was hard, hi meeting after meeting, attendants have „ had to frog-march hecklers faun halls and .toss them out of dgore.
Tempers shortened with the approach of	the	voting	Thurs-
'djy.	*.
IS MILLION
About X million British men aid women will elect a new 630-seat House of Commons apd gare either die Conservative or Use Labor party a mandate to govern this country for the next fiye years.
iff the Conservatives Douglas-Home will remain prime minister.
. Wilson will replace him NO-10 Downing St if the Labor party wins.
Both men are leading their parties hi a national oyipaign
KUHN
1$ THE MAN FOR
I.S. Congress
REPUBLICAN
Paid fer by Kuhn for CM|r»
ANDERSON
SALES M SERVICE 230 L Pik* St. re 2.8309
HARD
OF
HEARING?
VISIT
MONTGOMERY
WARD
Call 682-4940 for Appointment
for the first time. Douglas-Home i3 trying to give the Conservatives their fourth straight triumph. Wilson hopes to end the Lahoritec’ 13 years in the wilderness.
Hie campaign'beg*n sedately enough following the end of the old Parliament Sept X. Wilson argued: “It’s time for a change to get Britain moving.” Doug* las-Home countered: “Protect your prosperity by keeping the Conservatives in power.”
MOST DISORDERLY Now the two leaders, living on their nerves, deplore the degeneration of this campfign info what some experts regard as Britain’s most disorderly political contest of this century.
“It would be a national tragedy if vital issues are muffled by oise,” Wilson said.
* * *
Douglas-Home said ordinary heckling —- foe give-and-take between a speaker and some member of foe audience — is traditional and has a place in British politics. But rowdy behavior is something else again, he said. '/It must stop.”
Extra police guards now march into meetings addressed ' by Science Minister Quintin Hogg (formerly Lord Hail-sham), flie Conservative fire-' brand.
MAINTAIN ORDER The Labor party has recruited beefy attendants to maintain order for Wilson. Douglas-Home keeps plowing on, even .though his words may gp unheard.
, No one knows' why the mood has changed. One newspaper writer said: “Suddenly it’s like the night the fox got in foe henhouse and dad was too drunk to find his gun.”	. "
-- *• ;* *
For election purposes Britain is divided into 630 districts, each averaging about 50,000 voters and each sending one member to foe House. The districts have their rival Conservative and Labor party headquarters and sometimes a Liberal party one as well.
R isn't these local headquarters that the grass roots work is done. There is something surprisingly similar about ail of them — a paint peeled atmosphere, a mixture of discomfort, undying optimism and tea.
GET TO TOLLS Just as .in an American congressional district, the aim of foe volunteer party workers i on election day is to make sure all the known party supporters I get to foe polls.
The prime minister is sharing much of the speaking burden with Hogg, 57; Foreign Secretary Richard A. Butler, 61; Trade Secretary Edward Heath, ♦8; and Defense Secretary Peter Thomeycroft, 55. Reginald Mau-dling, 47, conducts a daily news conference in London. As chancellor of the exchequer, Mau-dling beads the nation’s treaa-ury.
the Labor party’s prospective I in Smethwick, outside Binning-1 lenient about letting Ih immi-| None of the leaders is cboeen
foreign secretary, Patrick Got-I ham, Some voters there have grants from nonwhite Common-1	.  ________—i. ah-Dou*.
don Walker, 57, is In a hard race-f said they fed Walker is too I wealth countries, v*	Mm flrXtTiiil Wiioon
— run to individual districts like all the other candidates.
' yjk-? ! W **.	- / '•>
Douglas • dome’s district is West Perthshire, Wilson represents Hdytoii, east of Liverpool.
Both Douglas-HoMt and Wilson are regarded as certain to be r e t u r n e d to Parliament. Their larger aim is to win the prime ministership by leading thdr party to coptml over the HoqseotCfaimene,
:*
Many of foe grqst men- of British politics ere not in the arena this time. Sir Winston CfaorchiB, 90 next month, and Harold Macmillan X, have retired from Parliament. Both are former Conservative prime ministers. Two towering Labor party figures — Hugh Gaitskell and Aneurin Bevan — are dead.
‘r Jjj. ..«* it
» At dissolution the old House of Commons had M0 Conservatives, XI LaborKas, 7 Liberals and 2 Independents.
The new Parliament will have a statutory tamr of five years but an election can take place earlier on the decision of the prime minister or if the government loses the support Qf ttp' own party members in tito House on a major issue.
WILSON MEETS PRESS — Labor party leader Harold Wilson (left) is interviewed as he stands in front of 10 Downing St. in London. At his ride is Patrick G. Walker, who
is likely to be England’s foreign secretary if Wilson gains foe prime ministership as a result of Thursday’s election.
Pakistan Confab in Policy-Making Sessions
India Chiefs Hold Talks
Episcopalians Hear Unify Action Plea
ST. LOUIS (AP) — The Epis-| But there were teutons and said Ejpisrapaltons "over and
KARACHI, Pakistan (6) dia’s Prime Minister Lai Bahadur Shastri and Pakistan President Mohammed Ayub Khan, met.today for the first time to] discuss the bitter 17-year-old
copal Church, which regards itself a “bridge” between Protestantism and Catholicism, went into policy-making sessions today after hearing a plea to act, not just talk, in behalf of Christian unity.
The church’s presiding bish-
feud between their neighboring op, the Rt Rev. Arthfc Lichten-utiriis.	berger, aim urged Christians to
returning to New Dd- translate their principles into hi from the nonatigned confer-1 deeds on contemporary issues of ence ih Cairo, stopped off for i social justice, more than five hours at Ayub’s
invitation to get acquainted and ) talk over lunch.
The Pakistani president, Foreign Minister Z. A. Bhutto, and a crowd of officials and
Wilson conducts his own London news conferences. For him the campaign climaxes 40 years of single - minded effort going back to his decision as a boy of 6 that be would like to become prime minister.
Other Labor!tes campaigning on. a nationwide scale ere George Brown, 50 and James Callaghan, X. If the Labor par-ty wins, Brown expects to enter foe cabinet with broad responsibility far directing a national economic drive. Callaghan would become chancellor of the exchequer.
Shastri’* Indian Air Fence plane.
The diminutive Indian leader, rearing a white Gandhi cap and traditional dhoti, and ruggedly handsome Ayub Khan in a western business suit drove to the presidential residence for three hours of talks and a vegetarian
Boy's 'Tummyache' Halts Big Jetliner
DENVER (AP) — A jetliner flying from Chicago to Los Angeles made an emergency land-fog to Denver Sunday so a child could get hospital treatment.
The bpy, Craig Hitchins, 4, wu found to be suffering from j tives. only a stomach ache.
dissenting voices both matters:	I
There Also were signs of change as the 3.5-million-member denomination’s triennial general convention began work in an era of mounting fraternity among different churches. CATHOLICS ATTENDING
For the first time, three Roman Catholic priests ere attending the two-week meeting as observers. So are several Eastern Orthodox churchmen. An “ecumenical day” has been scheduled later this wupk in which Episcopal representatives will meet at various seminaries for discussions with Catholic, Lutheran. end other church theOfogMs.
Proposals before the convention call for continued reunion discussions with various Protestant bodies, and also invite “formal and informal” talks with Roman Catholic represents-
concerning I over again for many years” have declared their belief in cfonch unity, but don’t do enough about iL Meanwhile, severer moves, like others in foe past, are bring pressed to get the denomination to withdraw from the National Council of Churches, a cooperative body embracing most major Protestant and Orthodox churches.
Critics accuse H of to veMilg the dutches in controversial social reuses, such as racial integration.
One pamphlet circulated by an Episcopal jaymen’s group also accused its town church of a' ’wholesale invision" into poll-' tics.
Christians, the
Hie convention is ie toe governing congress.
At ttfedpening service Sunday night, *Bishop Lichtenberger
The United Air Lines jet set The Episcopal Church is a down at Stapleton Field when1 branch of the worldwide Angeli-| the son of Mr. and Mrs. John can communion off 44 million
The most troublesome issue J Hitchins of Chicago was be-is Kashmir, the disputed Him*. 1 lieved suffering appendicitis, layan state the two countries waa hospitalised over-have been quarreling over since [	m	.
British India was partitioned in I 1647.	1
BORDER CLASHED
The, Indian and Pakistan armies are strung out along a U.N. cease fire line in Kashmir and are clashing almost daily.
More foaa IN soldiers ware believed killed la a flurry a( incidents last month alone.
India holds the southern half of Kashmir, including foe picturesque Vale of Kashmir and Pakistan the northern reaches.
★ ★ *
Moslem Pakistan insists the predominantly moskm Kashmiris should be allowed a plebiscite to choose which country they belong to.
India insists just as strongly that Kashmir is rightfully hers and that self-determination does not enter the picture..
J Comic Rort jLahr Enters Hospital for Checkup
HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Comedian Bert Lahr canceled an appearance at a suburban theater Sunday and entered Cedars of Lebanon Hospital for a checkup, a hospital spokesman said.
Lahr/ 69, had been ailing for foe last three days, a spokesman for the Melodyland Theater In nearby Anaheim arid.
• A wren house that may be attached to a windowpane with adhesive has a transparent end through which the birds may be watched.
65
OR OVER?
WE WAVE INFORMATION ON j Continental Casualty Company’s
GOLDEN 65
I Health Insurance Program
a No physical —am 1 a No health question,
• Everybody accepted
a Up to 515,000 in benefits for
both in-and-out of hospital
e GROUP PICTURES $2.00
•	NON-GLARE ELECTRONIC LIGHTS
•	CHOICE OP several poses » Plat 50< Miff* & Mfltiint
• NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY	iRmwHwg « nwmij
TWO WEEKS ORLY... OCT. 13 THRU OCT. 24
Huttonloehcr Agency SOI Riker Bldg., FE 4-1561

10 ML Tit 7 P.M. DAILY
U. S, Korean Leader Honored W&h Degree
_ SEOUL (Ri—Gen. Hamilton fi Howze, commander of United States and United Nations-forces in oKrea, was awarded an honorary doctor of Jaw de-
gree today from Cfcungaag UN"
yerritytoSeouL^ ^	/
The four-star general was eked far bis contributions to free-dom and peace of the world and
tliis understanding in the promotion of friendship between Korea and the U J.
NEW METAL .POLISH/ DISSOLVES TARNISH
contact!
T0RNITE
Instant-Acting
METAL ROUSH
|	* mNew.itoyWhyteWh* ,
MUSS/com/BAMS CHROME/STAINLESS STCEL
/TARNITE is the tabor-savins polish that tafcaa the dradfety out of asatal care. Vbu actually see stains and ear-
TARNITE comas in contact with tarnished surfaces. No heavy rabbins needed. With TARNITE, you can easily restate that brilliant, lustrous look to your brass, copper, bronsc, chrome and stainless steeL
si STAMTCWOmOMI OH CONTACT
•	CUTS VDUR LAMM AMOUTX HALF
•	NO EXHAUSTING RtMMNQ
la tin. foatfoM i
AT MOST HARDWARI STORES
ALL NEW
1965
COLO-
The HANDCRAFTED Color TV
THJE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 12,1964
A—II

r«ir
LINOLEUM
RUGS
•395
RUBBER
BASE
Armstrong
•You've seen it,g« the Danny Kaye-Show CBS-TV and in leading magazines.
•	Six-foot-wjde^ rolIs for
virtually seamless flpor beauty. *	,. V
•	Nubbly te)ctur|ct surface hides heel anddcuft marks.
•	Come in for free estimate.
24-pqge ifcoloi! I IK
let of dflcpr&ting;BlHp ideas f suturing In-ternatioqal rooms HH from the AhnstrongWorld m Interior Design. *t ■ “ ’
FRONT
BOOR
Authoriti	es Disagree on Publishing Delinquents Names
NEW YORK (AP) - How do you prevent a Juvenile delinquent who has committed an adult crime from becoming an habitual offender?
In the continuing debate over juvenile delinquency, experts have corns up with two diametrically •»» opposed proposals. Some experts claim the only preventive is widespread newspaper publicity, induing the neme of tin juvenile for AH to
Others ssy the best method is to shield the young offender from the glare of publicity.
In Montana, District Court Judge Lrater H. Loble claims to have cot crime, carrying out * law he lathered in 19H, which provide* fer open court heelings for juveaflss accused of felonies. This includes newspaper coverage which nasties names. CASES REDUCED Judge Labis says that juvenile feioiqr cases are down 41 per
cent compared with the three-y«*r period before 1961.
He asserts, “The twin enemies of crime are fear of pun-ishment and fear of pufflldty.”
. k. *, . *
Most of the police' chiefs and prosecuting attomcjp# * interviewed around the cohntry by The Associated Press agree with Judge Loble’s view that Juvenile . offender’s names ■bould be published. They claim such publication has a deterrent effect.	... gjfcj-
Probation and parole officers generally oppose publication of hemes. Juvenile Court Judges ate split nearly 50-50.
Reason divided
^l»oee who oppose publication of young lawbreakers' names do hot agree on a rSaacm as db those favoring publication.
Some think names of Juveniles should not be MibHsIwd because it would be too.harsh a punishment. Others think publication should be withheld because it is
NOTICE
TO TUB MANY THOUSANDS OS .MOPLI HIM IN MICHIOAM
who usi o-jib-wa firms mtv pwl Trs that rmi
A®AIN. AND YOU CAN’T BUY A MTTIR HIRS MIDICINI.
TO THOSI WHO HA VINT TIT TUBS -THIS FAMOUS MIBICINi. ASK roue priinm and uutivss WMAT IT IIAS SONI FOR THIM.
AT Ail DRUG STORKS
AVAILABLE
GOOD NEWS . . .
for those who have been experiencing difficulty IN obtaining automobile insurance , . . and,’for those who recently cancelled out. . . whatever the reason.
1*1 out of 10 situations we can provide first line coverage and protection equal to your requirements. Granted, at the beginning, this type of insurance might call for a somewhat higher rate than usual . . . BUT, the policy carries provision fee yearly premium reduction merited by a good driving record.
We write all forms of INSURANCE and are qualified to plan a complete program of Insurance Protection.
Our 50 years - three generations in the in-sura ace business in this area qualifies as for dedicated, personalised , service to our clients.,. Let's talk ft over... we*0 gladly work out a plan which might he the answer to your problem.
AGENCY
- INSURANCE *
1044 Joslyti, Pontiac Phone FE 4-3535
exactly t what the offenders want; !;	w “ *‘.'"
Juvenlle Court Judge Prank Breitenbach of Los AngeleS says he knows of Juvenile gangs who try to top cadi other for. space, in the press.
■ ■ ♦ . > .*
Donald E. MacFarlane. referee in Hennepin County (MkK neapolis) Juvenile Court, says. “Many kids . are looking for somebody to give them publicity on anything, even their trouble* with the law. 4 feel that when we publish names we only give them a little chance to gloat over their so-called accomplishments. Many of those kids carry their clippings with jfride.'’ Milwaukee County Judge Christ. T. Seraphim says, “there is no question in my mind that id serious crimes the name should be used.
DOESN’T BUY IDEA “I don’t buy the idea that if you give the young hoodlum love and understanding he will stay out of trouble.
“My court is ttfe busiest one in Wisconsin. And I have seen the effects of certain groups who tell the young crjminal, ‘I’ll give you another chance, Johnny,’ and then he commits a second crime while awaiting, trial on the first charge."
Authorities, even in the same city, do not always agree. In Dallas, Tex., for example:
Diet. A tty. Henry Wade says some offenders use the juvenile law deliberately, to avoid stiff prosecution and publicity, NUMBER TRIPLES “If you look at statistics on .car thefts in Dallas, you’ll see what I mean. Three, times as many IJS year olds are arrested for .car theft as 17 year olds. They know they’ll be hauled into District Court if they’re 17."
George Looney, chief probation officer at the Dallas County Juvenile Department, points out that of 69 youngsters in the county detention, home recently, only II were living with their natural parents when arrested.
“Where were the parents? They were in hospitals or jails or down and out somewhere.
“It's hot going to help the I situation to hurt these kids, to get them in trouble with school authorities, to pin-point them." I DOES MORE HARM
"To publish the names does more hum than good.”
Arthur L. Harding, law pro-I feasor* at Southern Methodist University:
___ » ♦ * *
“Nothing is to bf gained by concealing their names. Many juveniles seem to think they have almost a license to commit crimes.”
In Miami:
Police Chief Walter Headley says; ,..	".'V
“Juvenile crime is growing by leaps and bounds. tired « this attitude. I’m not 17, capper; you pqn’t do anything to me.’ Publicity would help. It writii have an effect'on the p«$Mito,.too.”*
MIAMI JUDGE juvenile. " Judge-elect . Don Stone* Who takes office in Dade CatitiW^fMlenti) in January, sayiP-' ■
"Publicity means that the burton ttkistbe shared by other ydKDgators at hem*. What about th|<|lmder who hie an honor-studknt brother or sister?"
,r. k * ar'-jjb And ktv Wani Writs, Wash., Judge Albert N, Bradford of Superior Coyrt conducted a study. For two years, 1913 and 1963, he released the names of juveaU^ toer 14 in sH traffic, liquor and delinquency felohy cases. He released the names untor M if H wqs a second offense. 'vl','
“At the end of two years,” Judge Bradford, says, “I couldn’t discern any apprecia-
ble deterrent insofar as delinquency acts were concaved. Not a factor
“Also I never discovered s tingle instance tyfatet ttotorjefy in the newspaper was a factor in a youth’s repeating an of-fense. I was unable to find that any harm was done by publishing their names. ,
“Publishing their names did not make am iota of difference.” i In Boehm, Juvenile Court Judge John J. Connelly said the whole purpose of juvenile courts is “that'Childfen are immature and prone to make mistakes and vulnerable to outside influences and from within themselves. Their Chances In later life should be protected.”
S0UD CITIZENS
William Cribbens, youth services consultant with the Chicago police, agrees. “Too many people who are jetoraed up as kids turn Into good solid citizens. I’ve seen too many young people who would have been irreparably hurt If their names had been given out.”
Asst. Prof. Abraham Alcabes, Department of Social Work at
FLOOR
COVERING
GKCIAIG
GENUINE FQRMpA
Discontinued Mg patterns £ else-«
Random Asphalt Til# O^fr'xVb** 4 i.v
VINYL ASBESTOS
i OCA to T C carton. 9"x9" f m.
ARMSTRONG INLAID
6»
We Will-Even. Lend Yow the Tie Butters!
VINYL-RUBBER TILE
SeM Vinyl |JC
&*„«««. mmimsiii
Bidders Sent Sales Zoo-ming
PORTLAND, Ore. UR—Some 1,000 formally dressed bidders put down $129,300 'over the weekend for such items as homes, aircraft and cars at a benefit auction.
The fifth annual auction for the Portland Zoo and the Oregon Museum of Science and Industry brought in a record amount of donated merchandise valued at $200,000.
•	if it v 'ir '
Two homes up for auction went for $44,250. A two-seater light plane brought $9,300.
The Democratic candidate for secretary of state, Alfred Corbett and his wife, successfully bid for one day's use' of a columnist’s space in the Oregon Journal.
New York University, says, “The youngster is better dealt with as a parson who needs help. When he Is defined as a delinquent by the press,,he is more likely to act that way."
, it w'y. ♦ '	»
Bernard Pyle of the Georgia Rhrdoo and Parole Board, says, “Where children are protected i by not publishing names, often I they are not afraid to commit another offense.
“If nameg are used, the fami-lies might supervise children ihqre."
ANOTH ER VOICE Another comment hs to the; efficacy of social pressures on parents and offender whose | name is published comes from i Judge Elmo Holt of the Pulton I County (Atlanta) Juvenile! Court: .
“Under certain	circum-1
stances, I think publishing the j names would have a good effect.
' . *	#	4
"It might, however, have a better effect in small towns, where everyone in town could read the names.”	■
In Detroit presumably of 8 size where social pressure j would be minimal, Wayne County Prosecutor Samuel Olsen J advocates adding monetary I pressure. “In the case of savage, unprovoked attacks on \ citizens, extreme publicity1 should be given to * the' case, especially to parents oif these young toughs." Olsen said he [ thinks, further, the laws should be amehded to make parents | liable for damages where as-I sault by a juvenile is intention-al,
| DISAGREEMENT
There is disagreement over a
policy of publicity when juvenile is no stranger to delinquency.
Miss Marion Brennan, deputy probation officer in New York Juvenile Court, says, “Our purpose is predicated as rehabilitation and rehabilitation is not accomplished l>y publicity. Children have to be handled differently from adults."
* *■
When the jtivenile is a repeat offender, she says, “The court still has the jurisdiction over the
I offender as a child. I’jre been working with the Juvenile Court for 2$ years and I agree with [the - policy of withholding names."
j. -----------------------
Crime to Hash Over
HORDON-ON-THE HILLS England (UP!) — A truck stolen in Londto Thursday was found abandoned in this Essex community yesterday- Its $11.-200 load of corned beef was missing.
Are YOU getting the most out of life?
Not unless you have a
RCA VICTOR
COLOR TV
There is still time to get your FREE Walt Disney place mats.
Hurry!
Supply is limited
(0*Ct
589 Orchard Lake Ave, FE 4-0626
A SPECIAL YEAR... EYEN'FOR CADILLAC OWNERS!
|No one knows better than an experienced Cadillac owner bow each year sees Cadillac excel in all the qualities that make a motor car desirable. But in 1965, marvelous new smoothness and quiet have been added to Cadillac performance— already recognized as the standard of perfection. There’s even more brilliant response from an improved Turbo Hydra-Made transmission, already the industry’s most responsive.
^ New luxury now graces the world’s mo*t luxurious interiors... and Cadillac's falmous ride and handling • have both, been noticeably improved. Cadillac for 1965, for its long-time as well as its . firstitime owners,, promises a driving reward that is truly dut of the ordinary. 4
So neyvl So right?.So ohyiously
SEE THE toes CADILLAC-THE STANDARD OP THE WORLD-AT YOUR AUTHORIZED DEALER
t Jerome motor sales company
276-260 5. SAGINAW STREET • PONTIAC, MICHIGAN
t
n
h-
tt
is
t-
15
e.
I
d
r
y
}
i
A—1*
L
THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1964
Last Great German Offensive Launched dn Dec 16,1944
(Editor’s Note: A noted correspondent who covered the (Battle of the Bulge'and other major actions of World War II reports ogam from the > Ardsmoo, whan the last groat German offensive on the western front wot launched during the early morning hours on December 8, 1944.)
By PAUL MANKNG - BASTOGNE, Belgium—1Twenty years can age a nun cfoud his mqjnory bat here in Bbstogne it is easy to remember
The snow is not on the ground as it was in the winter at 1944.
The rhiMrrs whose eyes wee reflected fear ss they moved about within range of artillery searching far scraps of food are today, many of them, Ml grown and opulent The wreckage of war has long ago been replaced and the town square, which served as the center of the perimeter defense that was established «nd held against overwhelming odds by the brave soldiers of the UJ5. 101st Airborne Division, again has trees and flowers.
★ dr -p
The air here is clear and dry. and die couples who slowly circle the sqbare on these summer evenings laugh with a lilt because life is good.
LONELY TRIBUTE Outside Bastogqe, the Mardaa-son Memorial, wMdi stands on a hill in lonely tribute to 8,000 Americans who fell in defense of this Ardennes battlefield, is a magnet for parents who still come from the United States to see where sent made the su preme sacrifice.
The German attack was launched before dawn on December II, 81 years eg*.
It waa-the dimax to months of intensive preparation which went largely unnoticed by the Allied forces despite the warnings of a few. »
. a ^ ♦ . d
The full front stretched from Monschau near Aachen east; wards to Echtemach on (he outskirts of Trier, but the main attack came in the Bastogne area. PANZER UNIT It was spearheaded by the German Fifth Panzer Army under General Haaao von Manteuf-fel.
Hitler, who personally planned the second Ardennes offensive la August 1944, did so in order to buy time and stabilize the weatern front.
. With his armies in continual retreat except for small counterattacks to permit organized withdrawals, Hitler had at last realised his forces in France and the low countries had. been defeated.
*	★	a •
Only a full scale counter-offensive might again swing the tide in his favor.
*	**	*
He ordered German divisions pulled from the eastern front, and other divisions reequipped for an early winter offensive. SHOCK TREATMENT Although a sick man who dragged one leg behind him as he walked, the assassination attempt on his life in July had served as a shock treatment and the German generals who heard him lay plan for the coining Ardennes offensive in /eg., 1944 said he had *ain become lucid; listening once more to military suggestions by Model and von Manteuffel, and replying to their comments in a voice that had regained the compelling magic which had
forces time' they could not Afford.
It enabled Gen. Eisenhower to move his reinforcements north, and to instruct Gen. Patton to come to the defense of be-leagured Bastogne where the (J.S. 101st Airborne Division was locked In combat with the German 86th People’s Grenadier Division.
At one point durbig the encirclement of Bastogne the German Held commander, lew in sheila himself and with weary troops behind him, asked General MacAuliffe to
. The defense of this small mountain town of Bastogne, which Is a converging point for seven highways and one railroad, had a strategic infport-jaqce to the world it may never have again.
I; .-. Cjfc"; :* g ■*
By holding Bastogne, American soktters created a suction which eventually drew into battle nine German' divisions and siphoned off units from the Sixth SS Panzer Army which bad been held in abeyance for a new forward thrust.
But the meaning of Bastogne ties best summed up by Gte-von MantUeffd, who-eortmand-ed the attacking German Fifth panzer Army. He said:
•"Hie defense of Bastogne, undertaken in apparently hopeless circumstances, was decisive In
foiling our offensive plans.’
• Not much can be added to that as the reason forbattie by brave men, whose memory to marked by a memorial which stands in lonely grandeur on • hill where yellow heather now blooms.
COURSE OF OFFENSIVE - Ibis map shows the general course of the German offensive that was launched qver the vast front of the Ardennes before dawn on Dec. If, 1944. Hitler’s strategy was to capture
May Change School Choice
luci Wears Student's Pin
WASHINGTON (UPIV-Lucl Baines Johnson may be geW ting ready to shift her affections from Wisconsin to Washington, DuC.
* , * •
The dark-haired “first teenager of the land” had been going out with Jack Olsen of Maiden Back. Wis., end waa considering attending Marquette University.
Marquette is Is Mflwan-. kee, a shirt 89 mBes from Madison, where Olsee was S student at Am University ef Wisconsin.
Now the 17-year-old Luci has acquired a fraternity pin from Paul Betz of Washington — end is thinking about picking a college in the capital
She wore ^ the fraternity pin the two days the was With her mother on the whistle-, stopping tour of the “Lady Bint Special’’ through the South. But Luci was coy about actually being “pinned” to anyone.
STILL DATING
She still dates Olsen, and it appears that she hps just added another admirer to the string. Both Betz and Olsen escorted Luci around at the Democratic National .Convention in AJIantlc City.
Led is in her sealer year eg the National Cathedral School, and mis talking
for its nursing
Now she it thinking about applying for admission to the mining school at Georgetown University in Washington. Both Marquette and Georgetown are Catholic Universities, run by the Jesuit priests.
★	-ft
When Marquette seemed favored, Luci’s main argument was that she wanted to get outof the capital.
She said she didn’t want to go through college the way her sister, Lynda Bird, ID, does.
Lynda Bird is 'a junior at George Washington University which is only a few blocks from the White House. Her coinings and goings cause a stir, and it’s no secret that it annoys her.
British Protest Small
LONDON (UPI)-The London committee of 100 — the capital city arm of the campaign for, nuclear disarmament—minaged to get only <6 marchers out for' its demonstration urging voters to reject the British general elecion as a fraud.
once electrified the crowds in the days of long ago at Munich and Nurelflburg.
He told them that success in the Ardennes would have a profound effect on both German and Allied morale “and bring about a decisive taming point in this theatre of operations and to the war as a whole.”
Such conferences ran from August to Dec. IS and the essence of his plan was to capture Liege, bypass Brussels and seize the Port of Antwerp, cutting the supply and communications lines of the British 81st Army Group under Field Marshal Montgomery, and the U-S. First Army commanded by Geur eral Bradley, “and thus surround at least 25 Allied divi-
was bold strategy and _ it have worked if the dock oouki have been turned back to this'days when German armies were fresh and on the march. Yet preparations for the offensive went on.
The German field commanders knew the terrain well. They had advanced through it in 194| and had recently retreated over it. Now they were again faced with the logistics of moving men and tanks and guns over the narrow mountain roads made doubly dangerous by top snows of winter.
GIGANTIC OFFENSIVE
This was to be a gigantic offensive on a battleground over which the legions of history from Caesar and Napoleon to the present had fought and died.
The key to Hitler’i plan was surprise. Germans security measures included the movement of troops to the Aachen sector by day, and their retnrn to the Bastogne area by night. Luftwaffe night fighters flew low over the front during the night hours of movement to camouflage the noise of moving tanks.
The soldiers of both sides were tired. As the hour for battle approached, weary veterans of both the attack and the defense who had fought from Normandy to the Ardennes were resigned to the fact that the<war would now go into another winter.
The U.S. 2nd, 4th and 28th Infantry were moved into the Ardennes. It was the quiet front where men could rest.
The reply, now historic, was ca simple, “Nuts,” and the battle was again joined.
. On Dec. 18, Gen. Patton informed Gen. Eisenhower he txHild come to the relief of Bastogne in four days with three divisions.
In one of the most spectacular and skillful field movements of the war, he moved three armored divisions — which .included 88 battalions of 156mm * *_	.,	.	-	. u ' and other guns 4- a distance of
Arrtwerp, drive to the North cut the - 125 miles over ice«overed roads communications and supplies of toe Allied .	.	^ d
forces and surround 85 diviflons com-	y
manded by Gen. Eisenhower.	ahead of his estimate.
BOMBERS LOW The weather suddenly cleared,
teHn Wh . tl* tide	"*	•*“ *"
flowed over or around them.
The American garrison at St:
Vito held for five days before withdrawing in one of the bravest actions of the war..
Bastogne was soon surrounded and bypassed by German armor, which had learned on the Russian front that strongpoints can be neutralised by a holding action while the main force cMtinues ahead.
NEW!
up
REDUCE
CATandLOSi
. TO S LBS. A WEEK
CAPSULES! Easier to taka and more effective then the powdered and IIq-uid food supplement; and colts less including Capsules suited to you INDIVIDUALLY by Lie. Physician, M.D. No Gastritis or irregularity with Medic-Way cape. DON'T DIET —JUST EAT! As thousand!.have done, you can lose 5, 50 or 100 lbs. and KEEP IT OFF! MEDIGWAY
MEMO-WAY 335-9206
Field Marshal Montgomery, perhaps to bolster Allied morale along this front, issued on Dec. 15, his own personal appraisal of what tho war would be like in tbe period ahead.
He wrote, as published this summer in an authoritative biography of Gen. Patton, that “the enemy is at present fighting a defensive campaign on all fronts; bis situation is such that he cannot stage major offensive operations.
PREVENT MOBILE PHASE Furthermore, at all costa he has to prevent the war from entering a mobile phase; he has not the transport or the petrol that would be necessary for mobile operations, nor could his tanks compete with ours in the mobile battle."
* > ★
The next day, 13 German infantry divisions and 10 full divisions of armor moved onto the offensive. The attack was not signaled by an artillery barrage.
It was ■ qaiet, deadly forward movement of soldiers ever unbelievable terrain who gained their initial objectives quickly and then regrouped for farther action as tbe Pan-ser divisions moved past them into the forefront ef battle.
The narrow mountain roads were soon clogged with German artillery and tanks. Bitter resistance by U.S. troops would' stop the forward movement for a time„ and then the flow would
COSTTIME
-Yet each of these defensive strongpoints cost the G e r m a n
offensive began American fighter bombers of the 9th Air Force ranged low over the front -adding their destructive power to that of the Third Army.
The high water mark of the J German advance was reached on Dec. 84 at Dinaat in tbe Mease Valley.
It marked the end of toe drive by the Fifth Panzer Army; to reach the Meuse River and beyond, and the Battle of Bastogne then became the bitter. conclusion to the German Ar-i dennes offensive of 1944. . I
NOW'S THE Tt/HETO

Complete Modernization Licensed • Insured e Oarages
#	Cement Work a Family Rooms e Room Additions
•	Porch Enclosures e Recreation Rooms
[V-WAY
CONSTtUCTKM COMPANY
GALL 87l*M0t
NEW
PORTABLES FOR 1965
New "Stereo Serenade" |s|ew 12" UHF-VHF TV
Enjoy true stereo performance wherever you go! This ail new portable has solid-statt amplifier,
4 speakers, MlCromatic record t player with Diamond Stylus guaranteed 10 years & 45 rpm adaptor.
Downtown Pontioc StoreN
13950
Pontioc Moll Stars
The last word in portables This	v
new 12" Magnavox UHF-VHF ONLY will perform brilliantly wherever QO50 you taka it Amazingly light end 77 compact, has 82. channel tuning.
EXTENDED ACCOUNTS AVAILABLE.
27 S. Saginaw St.—PI 3-7168 Elizabeth lake and Telegraph Rd.—682-0422
WKC
108 N. SAGINAW
We Bought A Truckload of
MAYTAG Automatic Washers & Driers
- Note Buy Maytag Dependability for the Lowest Price Ever!
you will find most models in stock 5 at FRAVER'S. The largest single independent ■ color TV dealer in this area.
WeHMsney *
FREE”
Just for coming In for I o color TV demonstrate! I tion.
Heavy—supply Is Umttod. ij

FRAYEL
881 foetard take foe. FE 44626 ■ I
MAYTAG
AUTOMATIC WASHER
•	Warm and Hot Temperature Control.
e Wader saving feature
•	Perforated tub for cleaner
rinsing	i
•	Maytag agitator action
•	Zinc • coated cabinet guards against rust
•	Porcelain tub, top and lid O Virtually indestructible
pump
•	Rustproef lid hinges.
*178
MAYTAG
ELECTRIC DRYER
hotspots
• Lets you dry even delicate lingerie
0 Efficient lint filter 0 Big-family load capacity O Zinc-coated cdbinat gudrds against rust d Safety doorstops action
e Now Safety Restart Switch •128
KRS0N TO PERSON CREDIT • NO MONEY DOWN e 3 YEARS TO PAY ; e 90 DAYS SAME AS CAWt
IS"
PARK FREE IN WKCS LOT AT REAR OF STORE J OPEN MONDAY. THURSDAY FRIDAY NIGHTS TIL 9

SMALL DEPOSIT HOLDS IT IN LAYAWAY UNTIL CHRISTMAS)
SAVE 11 i ON 2 LOAVES — JANE PARKER
149. 4-OZ, LOAVES
iANI PAEREk fresh, CRISP
tOMFLI^
Toilet ggjB fhws»r
«y* "fst *"**• we*?
wooyTiwjWtoEinli Lm» »
tfctyufc mm cloning
MILLIONS ARE SAVING DURING A&P’s GREAT 105"'
No Coupons, No Gimmicks, No LimitsJust Quality Merchandise at Low Prices!
‘PJ$uper Markets
W - AMERICA S DEPENDABLE FOOD MERCHANT SINCE 1S59
Winter Wraps Set for Pieta
No Plan* to Display Michelangelo Statu*
NEW YORK (AP) - After being viewed by more Rmui IS million World’s Pair eWtora, Michelangelo’s prioeleel Pieta «01 be slipped nett we* into a protective steel and doth cocoon for the wider, under present plans.	•-
Officials at the Vatican pavilion, where the 10th century sculpture has been oh display since the fair opened. Hi first season last April, aaty numerous group* had requested nit the work I* displayed when the lair is' closed for the whiter . Sunday. •
There were Suggestions that, tiie marble likeness of the Virgin Mary cradling the body of ber dead eon be moved to the Metropolitan Museum of Aft or St. Patrick’s Cathedral for display through the winter.
“Each time R is moved the risk of damage is increased,” said the Rt Rev. Magr. Timothy J. Flynn, spokesman fir the Roman Catholic Archdiocese cf New York. 4 RESPONSIBLE ACTION “The only responsible thing to do la what oafra doing,” ha said. , V.
A pavilion spokpman said the statue, brought hare from the Vatican by ship for display during the two sts-montfa fair seasons, will be corned with a super-soft synthetic fabric, hidden behind a drop doth and enclosed in a win mesh cast connected to aq ultrasuiic alarm system- '
'•‘W	*	* /
Ail locks on the paviHon doors will be changed starting this week and private polka will stand guard night and day.
Electronic predations wfll be taken against damage by a sudden temperature or other climatic change.
Christopher Kieman, pavilion executive administrator, said that only one Of the pavilion’s many doors wfll be to use. The three keys to that door, ho said, will be given t* himself and two clergymen affiliated with the exhibition.
NOTBOUGET,. r “No thought'hfd ever boon given to II gotof any plact away from here,” Kiaman said.
Among those who hod urged that the marble work not be hidden May Rem public view between the tiro fair seasons was Jamas J. Rorlmer, director of the Metropolitan Museum of Art KjgBBBjf “I said it the time that it wodld be wondsrful if it were sent to tbs Met" ha laid Sunday. “IstiS think as.”
Meanwhile, a source dose to Francis Cardinal Spellman hinted there might be a switch in plans. -"T He said thera might be an announcement about the Pieta Wednesday when the Cardinal speaks at the annual Alfred E. Smith memorial dinner.
No D*nv*r $1 for LBJi Wif* Already Got On*
DENVER (A$) — No Denver Dollar will be given President Johnson on Ms campaign visit to Denver today.
The silver dollar, encased in plastic, traditionally is Mvea to visiting celebrities. But a spokesman to*. the welcoming party said one won’t be gfren the Pieaidttt Because his wife got one racengfl when she viftt-ed Denver.
Capri Deter^jjgt
nr-t*/
PRINT
AJMfa PI NI QUALITY
Silverbrook Butter •.
A&P Apple Sauce. .7 * 1
LUNCHION SIZE If	- PA •*, |Ar
Kleenex Napkins 50 f- 10
6™* 89*
'NUTLET BRAND
Margarine IN QUARTERS
YELLOW CLING — SLICED OR HALVES
iexo
dexo Shortening
AGE'S Own Pur* Vegetable Shortening
359
AOS'* FINE QUALITY IALAD AND COOKING OIL
dexola Oil . ... . W 49
TILLUW vLIPEto —- hulvEU UK HALTU	__
Iona Readies...4=95‘
STOKELY or DEL MONTE YELLOW
Com S5T":3 -4T
Cream Sty I*	.
"SUPER-RIGHT" CORNED BEEP HA£H, 15’A-OZ. CAN OR
•vriii"iiiwn g wiwiBip iisr nAjrif .1/ yi*VA» VAn vr
Luncheon Meat. .3®r
AGED WISCONSIN CH&SE
Sharp Cheddar
FEATURE
VALUE
THE GREAT ATLANTIC & PACIFIC TEA COMPANY, INC.
A-PENI^UQUID
noon
HALF
WAX
BALLON
CAN
Nweuub T«mA|, Oct. Utfc In eN leMeni MkMaen AW Sm— MneknW
Early Bird Values-Prices Effective Monday and Tuesday Only
jfofoiAl PRfeSig, itONDAY?OCTOBER^ia, 1964
A—ia.
For 105 Years We’ve Saved Money For America’s Families! Join Them During This
SmSSSS
OFQUflufy
"Super-Right" Quality
Govt. Inspected
FRESH
FRYERS
Whole Chicktns
.25'
# ;
Cut-up Fryers u 29*
JANE PARKER—HAMBURGER
Sliced Rolls
-lUNGMin* OllCOO	• 4 r
Beef Liver 				
Fryer Up ......	• 49*
with nine .ttachOd Fryer Breasts	■ 53*
.HILL-ON—MIDIUM OIZO Shrimp	“ 79*
MPK JOHN'S. OKOADIO , Shrimp	W 69*
SEMI-BONELESS HAMS
59:
10 In it Found Sixes
"Super-Right"
Fully Cooked
Wfcolt or HoH - No Cooler Slicos Removed
"Super-Right" Quality
ALL-BEEF
Hamburger
34>. Pkg. or More
c
39
fb. 43c
ANN PAGE QUALITY
Blended Syrup
12-02.
BTL
2*849
HUNGRY JACK. AUNT JEMIMA OR DUNCAN HINES
Pancake Mix , 2 & 39c
SAVE ON LAYER CAKE MIXlS
Ann
Page
REG.
PKG.
25
Punciin Hines 1 BOO
RIG.
FKGS.
Jiffy Frosting Mixes rkf 13*
romm hmm tuna ‘
OOCCED TOILETS
t
V
9r
ie
# a
f
y
0
1
r
1
*1

THE PONTIAC PBBSS; MONDAY, OCTOBER Ig,
Hurt t'mhmah
WM MAP
TO PLAN VOIR WANT AD
• ••
with this easy-wajr-to-do-it form
Be your own Want Ad writer. To sell. To buy. To Rent.
To Swap. To get a job. To find a lost pet. To find help.
To do almost anything. Just write your ad on the form below .. circle the number of days you want the ad to appear... fill in your name, address and telephone number... fold... mail.
No postage necessary.
Your Want Ad will start working for you the very next day after we receive it. .
CUT ALONG "DOTTED LINES
POSTAGE FREE
WMIT AO ORDER R1ANK
Use this Handy Postage-Paid Order Blank or Telephone 332-8181 BLANK FOLDS INTO ENVELOPE...NO STAMP IS NEEDED
FOLD BACK ALONG THIS LINK FIRST
WRIT! YOUR
FIRST CfcASS PERMIT No. 99 (be. 34.9 StM) PONTIAC, MICH.
ONE WORD TO A SPACE PLEASE (PRINT)
THIS SPACE
BUSINESS REPLY ENVELOPE
No Porto*. Stamp Nocomoit if MaiM in Mm Unlta. Statao.
THE PONTIAC PRESS
PONTIAC,
MICHIGAN
WANT AD DEPT

Send bill to.
Street.
|	.9*................................................................................................................................................
| My telephone number is.
The Pontiac Press

THfe P0NT1&C PRESS,* MONDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1&4
TodoyV Newtin Washington
3 GOP Senators Demanding Ba Hearings Before Etection
You ore living m j flit ago of color ■ why not enjoy it? { Get DfiA COLOR ■
want to question William N: McLeod, former clerk of the House District of Columbia Commit-Reynolds said McLeod about the alleged kick-JnmBk. ~ if ' WP Reynolds, a termer Bake* “"date, said McCloskey made a 185,000 overpayment on a performance bend for construction of the $14.fcmillk>n stadium end that $25,000 of it waicbaaQ-[•lad through Baker to the can^ paign fund when die lata John r. Kennedy fas running for president with Lyndon B. John-
ington reception.
Republican presidential can-
and remember for the best buy if* FRAYERS
all me for an teppointmmnt • . 4 I'll meet you there. -
w me nmuun is dh| mum 10 ■ __ _	.
start practically from scratch ” ■ FR« Disney place /nat« *	*. *	5 for coming in for a dam-
M&TESwt	■ ""•ha,io" <* RCA VICTOR
for about one million Jobless I COLOR TV.
y<Setary is taking a leave of g Harry, .apply U Umifd. absence from the university to ■	■ . ”	1	1 j
take the appointment, which •	/
ends in February 1916.	■ H am m mm m mm f
MISSISSIPPI NATIVE • EDA VED/ y
Singletary has a wife and J FVIM W F lw / three children. He is a native of g ■ ■■■■ ■	JA
Gulfport, Miss., and held poets ■	f
[at Louisiana State University 11__________ .	"
and the University of Texas' 5589 OrcHdrO LIU AVii
***** faaallna g ---------------------------------
Wiring Sold Cause of $1,500 Home Hie || Fire caused approximately $1,500 in damage to an apnrt-
| Oer Ibarty depend* aa H freedom of the proa*, and feet
*	t/iifmk w lindud withee^
LINOLEUM
FT. ORD, Calif. (A*$ - The Army has taken drastic measures to curb Incidences of' spinal menlngifepat its basic teaming facility at Ft. Old. The measures Include the discontinuation of recruit training at the base for four weeks.
The Defense Department said
Brown and Salinger, as well as other political leaders, had asked the Army to quarantine (he base ^ the	had
been eliminated. Eighty-four persons, either stationed it the camp or relatives of soldiers, have been infected with the die-
Patricia Aranaul of Mfflbrae, Cain., a pretty ftyearold fiancee ot a FL Ord soldier, died of ft* disease; and Mrs. Veronica Smith, 17, the wife of an- j other soldier, is in a San Fran-cisco hospital, infected by the
The department said these steps will be taken:
will b£ interrupted for the
month of December. The sail ighment of new basic trainees to the facility will bn suspended immediately.
•	Trainees at the poet now will not be given the usual two week’s leave after basic training.- They will proceed*immediately- with advanced training and leave will be given later.
•	Only parents will be allowed to visit bade trainees at the fort! The department said parents will be allowed because meningitis seldom infects older persons.
*. * a
The department said the measures wffl be put into effect immediately.
Leathern-Knit... the big BIG style news in jackets. AM this at its handsome in a laminated jacket that's a powerhouse of long wear. Acrylic pile lining, rayon quilted sleeves. The color: haze. 36-46.
The department took the precautions, but noted* “the very favorable trend in the incidence rate of meningitis at Ft. Ord.” The Army has not reported a case of fee disease at fee base this month.
APPLAUDS ACTION^
Rep. J, Arthur Younger, R.: R.-Calif., one of fee congressmen who bad requested action by the Army, applauded the action yesterday .
Younger said: “This action will . . . greatly relieve the minds of parents of boys being drafted. I am pleased feat the administrative heads ... are responding to the welfare of fee public."
Tomorrow. I. Today
B. F. Goodrich KOROSEAL Rigid Vinyl Doors and White Clear Through Non Conductor#
Call for appointment
“Charge IP’-lf you wish BOND’S Pontiac Mall Shopping Center, Telegraph
SPECIAL
Enrich Your Life with Muaic
Pattern*
V9 Sq. Ft.
DO IT YOURSiLF!
Wa will talL you hew and loan all ^ tools FREEI 1 .
f'* SPECIAL^
Any 9x12 Kitchen Floor Installed in Solid Inlaid Vinyl
«* ’39“
Any necessary
JOINING THE SCHOOL BAND?
12x12
Acoustical
IfetMlI
A NEWGRINNELL PIANO
/ SPECIAL > BEDROOM LIGHT FIXTURES
A TRUMPET, CORNET, TROMBONE. FLUTE.
clarinet. Snare drum dM* violin
PONTIAC’S LARGEST TILE CENTER
Our Own Installation Work Done by Experts
Opee Mee., Fti ’tU 9t§» O. M, Tees.. Wpd., Sat. 'til 6 P. M.
IA MONTH
• Rent for os long or you wirfi!, o Unlimited foturri privilege If ygu<fawy« itf payments apply. • Com. Olds & other fine makes!
: 3-7I6R Ethtofaefe Lake owd Teieyoph Rood—602-0422 COfA'tNieNTjj^d&U^ AVAILABLE
SMITH’S TILE OUTLET

1075 W. Huron Si Phono 334-9957
ST^HaniilgeRowl	
	AT BOND S
11	"Man-you look great! (it's true!)
»l	“Must have cost a lot” (just looks it!)
	Elegant imported
IgB	velvety-smooth
a	Suede Leather plus look-of-Shetland pure wool knit.
	Pile-lined body.
,BB	Quilt-lined sleeves.
	All this: $21.95

t
»*y.
h-
'be
er
is
it-
25
e.
J
r
F
is
iy
y
t
la
r
d
I-
0
1-
V

*THff PONTIAC PRESS, MONPAY> OCTOBB& 18, 1964
Valuable coupon
COlU BELL
WJJH THIS COUPON AND *5°° PURCHASE
CHICKEN PARTS SALE
*	CHICKEN LEGS "ssr .....39
*	CHICKEN BREASTS "tar.... 49
*	CHICKEN WINGS . *..... .19
*	CHICKEN BACKS & NECKS 10
Hygrode't
LUX UQUID............
ptuciom
CONTADINA TOMATOES
CORNED BEEF
59® i*
j weHwozwlubi
1* I SQUASH
10e
REMUS BUTTER
VAN CAMP'S TUNA
APPLE JUICE
COOKIES
mm*ii
mmkahmm
amaUj^SlK^"

	■	1 mrrrkfmrrr.nn rm%irm>rrrvm	
Cf) FREE GOLD BELL i«|| Staiaps Willi Purchase of any BEEF ROAST	!		Efl FREE GOLDBELL •Ilf Stamps With Purchase of any 10 lbs. or mors of POTATOES
	j ! *	| 1.	
•"OhM Mpn—lhMSalilMt State# atMaNl ! ■. Cw*M te|»i 1 WU.O*. 14,1964.			W»(l^ii'»iiiliM>i»lO*iOw» fttallQtai WM, Ota 14, l«i£
| M5 L ME ST. 1	I 7m ms w st. |	I MNaUniMEML 1
k lOpw»AM.-M4P.M. 1 ■ I	I tAAIWPX 1	CV~ t AJd. H » PA. I AMYSAWfK
1 —hmqmum 1	| I	swOMtefftteS
jjTi]	Ijfl frW7T*Ti	wu
BwhMM-l ■ - «M>Q I [ wnwww I	1	iaOtHhyuJSH IMahb orpisuMPAr |
To Discuss Bandwear
Personal Jet
; Your<own personal jet to transport you in-seconds anywhere you want to go,. .that’s ope of the many roles the telephone plays in your life.
Yort* telephone is always ready to speed your voice for a friendly chat with family or Meddle to take you on a whirlwind shopping
AuctioijfCard Party
| Satinjpva^e La
WOLVEftlty^ LAKE — A sert card party and w
supervising the course in
Michigan Bell
at Stone Gratt, at Barnston sod Market in Walled Lake.
THE PQNfTJAC PRESS
,	- ']■[/	* 'fHiNTI AC. M Ft il 1 tiA N ^	~
WINS OUEEN TITLE - Chris Collins (water) was crowned Homecoming Quqen wring halftime ceremonies of the Rochester-Fltzgsrald football game Friday night. Flank-Ihg her are the two other contestants for'the crown, Lynn Hinkle (left) and Ruth Zum-
wak. Karin Eriksson, Rochester High’s exchange student from Sweden, bolds the football helmet, symbolic of the Occasion. She was an honorary member of the court. All four girls are seniora.
Miffing Is Tonight-
Romeo Will Air School Issues
ROMKKIte need for add!-
contemplated bead Issue to peg for them wffl be discuaaed by the adtoOl board at its regular meeting tonight.
jAjhfc • * ' «M *• Ajft
N# concrete action h expecV
ed on a building program tonight, but board members expect to further outline the needs of tbs district and prepare for a decision-making meeting probably early next week.
PetyUjf the Mgifogjra-

mi-
By The Associated Press A young couple and their
of carbon amnmrids potoonhy in •mb’ parked car In a roadside ’ CSso in IHcUgna’s
sir
And n youth and Ml girlfriend wttta found dead of the sinn cause In ft* ear at a drivers movia at Big Rapids on the other rids of As state.
■' '% ‘ #' ♦ ■
Hie five who died in the family tragedy were Gery Lee Mus-cott, 24, and Ms wife, Charlotte Kay, .a, of St Charles and their children—Mark, I, Kimberley, 2, and Tommy. L the victims at Big Rapids were Bonnie Bailey, It, of Beam, and John Boop, 21, of Hersgy.
MOTORIST FINDS FAMILY ■ A passing motorist discovend
the Mucott family d Ends Pirk, on M46 about"-Id miles southwest of Caro and JO miles from St Charles.
A trailer loaded with tortal-ture was attached to the oar. The car engine was nmnhig. .
Sheriff Hugh Marr of Tuscola County aaid the Mnscotts apparently had left home Saturday night.
Muscott’s father, Filton Mua-cott, said he bad talked with hM son Saturday but the latter hail told him nothing of making B trip.
gram under scrutiny are projected enrollment figures covering fail 1M4 to fall 1916.
These projections envision an increase of 240 students hi the etynpntaiy schools in that period, and a jump of 199 students at dmsshnndmy level, r , - <* * All told, enrollment should rise from the'preaent 1,154 to s total of 1,144 ip the high school. RENTING ROOM The district ip already renting one ipim at St John Lutheran Church for two kindergarten sections and is in qped of classrooms fo r art instruction as Well.
AihUag present needs to the projected rise in elementary enroOments, the board said that eight daswooms are
weekend Road Toll Is 20
for the kindergarten and three for art instruction.
In its official report to the district’s residents, die board spelled out additional needs.
★	★ w
These include a senior high vocational shop building, construction of a multipurpose room at South Elementary
-s^	v svuiu at ovum immmnmj
m sheriff’s department sakf School and more sc 1 ence, lithe Mnscotts bad changed real-dence a number of times. <
Miss Bailey and Bopp were found by the drived theater ger, James Chipman,
1 am. The car engine naming, ‘Chipman said.
An autopsy placed the time of death at BtSim.
tmry and hot lunch facilities at |hs junior high.
*	i *
The board fans, also outlined king-range needs through the mil of 1969, and came up with an estimated requirement for 25 additional classrooms to handle growth to that time.
"'ijrTbe AfoMried Press ,M least 20 peraoUtweTO killed in Michigan wcakeM traffic ac^ cidents—incldding two Chicagoans and a Mexico City man Whose station wagon ran out of Control and dswrturhed, injuring nine others in the vehicle. k’\	W
; The Associated Press tabula-Hon of weekend fatalities began «t 6 p.m. Friday and ended at midnight Sunday .
'*	w.'-	- *
The ‘victims:
Lopls C, Garda, 35, nnd James Martinet, 41, both of Chicago, -and -Join Hernandez Losaao, 57,of Mexfco City, were ' “ d, in the station wagon crash on 144 between Bridgman ad Stevensville Sunday.
•	# Jr itr
Slate police said they were ; among 12 persons rising in the six-passenger vehicle. The group; as.no an outing in Michigan
*	W_ W-
Marguerite Zein, 21, of LanW tag, was killed Sunday when the car in which she was riding went oat of control and struck a light pole in Lansing. TWfcCAR CRASH Juan Jimenez, 23, of Pullman, and Gregory Sanchez, 23, of Byron Center, were killed Sunday in .a two-car crash on Marsh Rohd in Bprry County.
*	w *
Robert B. Van Camp, 32, of Hillsdale, lost M| life Sunday whan his car veetyd out of coo-on a curve i^d hit a tree ’ Hillsdale. The car burst Info flames after', the crash.
Barry Pollard, an 9-year-old Detroit boy, was strode by a car and killed while crossing a city street Sunday, police said.
*	*. *
John Olesky, 61, of Highland
in Oakland County, died Sitaday when his ear edlfled with Grand Trunk Railroad encasing hi Fenton.
Chester J,. Dobies, 44, of Sooth Lyon, 'Was killed in a crash in DhaMfota Heists Sunday. Police said an auto went out of pbntiM While biasing and sputa into the path of the jpifties car mk parsons were tajurad in the collision.
IMS OF INJURY Odelia Conners, 22, of-Qraiijtf Rapids, died Simday of injuries suffered Saturday night when die was strode by a car while walking on U.S. 131 one mile •outh of Rockford.
John Wingett, 14, of Oakland Township, was killed Saturdly
when a motorcycle on which he was a passenger went out of con. trol St a curve tar Oakland County’s Addison Todndii^
,T* ★ * c ’ •
Donald Kindier, 21, of Union-ville, was killed Saturday when his car ran off a road Ip Akron Tbwnddp, Tuscola Coqpty, and overturned. .
Robert Huff, 27, of Dearborn Township, died Saturday after he lost control of his car and it struck a parjcqd auto in Dearborn.
HIT TANKER
Lawrence H. Robbennolt, 33,
of Ithaca, %as killed Saturday when his car strode the rear of a propane gas tanker .on U.S. 21, seven miles pestifvsi St. Johns In Clhrtdi County.
Anne H. Hillary, 20, of Clermont, Fla'., lost her life Saturday when her car rolled over on M21, west Of Hudsonville in Ottawa County., She was a
student at Grand Rapids Junior
coder, i 'Jh ■ t t,
'p P : *	*	-+■
Martin EwaldJr., 28, of Bridgman, was killed Saturday when struck by a car oo U.S. 31 near his Berrien County home.
John R.	Kuzmich,	21, and
Lawrence KflUay,	55,	both of
Detroit,.were killed Saturday in a two-car crash in Detroit.
• #	*	w
Shirley E. Jergens, 35, of Clinton Township, was killed Saturday in a two-car collision one mile southeast of Mount Clemens.
Comedy Set as 1st Play of Season
Skin Divers Find Body of Drowned College Student
MARQUETTE ?AP) - Skin divers, probing chilly Lake Superior Sunday, recovered the body of Michael Mbrcom, 20-
University student who drowned with a companion Friday..
Morcom’s body was taken from waters off the Presque Isle Point breakwater near the spot where a Coast Guard boat Saturday found the body of Kenneth Ostlund, 23, the other victim. Both youths had lived in Ishpeming.
.	★ W
The youths' lost their lives after they had dared James Worth, 21,'of Negaunee to watt: the breakwater during a gale, authorities said. Worth was blown into the tey water, but-he seised a line thrown by his companions Tmd was rescued by a freighter’s lifeboat.
In the Interim, the wind
FAMILY CRISIS—Marsha Martin, J. Michael Blovits (center) and Joel Hepner rehearse one of several explosive scenes which keep "Come Blow Your Horn” moving at a laugh-packed pace. The comedy about a bachelor’s
exploits in bringing up Ms brother ia. scheduled foivFnday and Saturday and Oct.‘23,24 Mid 25 at The Farmington Playhouse on 12 Mile. , .
FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP-A bachelor’i°*life as Viewed by the bachelor, his younger brother and their parents will be exploded in.the season opener'* at the Farmington Playhouse.
‘‘Come Blow Your Horn” is scheduled for Friday and Sat-unlay and Oct. 23, 2} and 25 at the barn theater on 12 Mile.
J. Michael Blovits of Royal Oak appears as the merry ♦ bachelor whe takes hi .his younger brother, played by 'Don Catiatt of Farmington, for a bit of coaching.
Cast as the parents tare Joel Hepner and Marsha Marita, both of Farmington.
. TWO GIRLS
Bonnie Goeman of-Farming-ton and Myra Junke of Livonia are two of the girls in the jolly boulevardier’s life and Mary Aim Perry of Farmington is a last-minute visitor.
“Come Blow Your Horn,” written by Neil Simon, kept New York audiences laughing for 85 weeks in 1961 and
mtf
The Farmington production is being directed by Nancj^G. Har-rower of Southfield.
* * ★
Curtain time is 1:30 p.m. Fri-days and Saturdays and- 7:30 p.m. Opt. 25.	p
TICKETS AVAILABLE
Tickets for the performances are .available at the Welsby House of Music, 33317 Grand River, Farmington, or by calling the box office between 7:30 and 9,p.m. Monday through Fri-. day.
	9HK
	
/•V .l:". ; 77 J iS -- •?v	
trip Around town, or to help make last-minute plans. Your telephone jet is always ready in Rn emergency, too, when speed ia so important.
It’s hard to imagine what life would, be like without the telephone to help get things done the fast, easy way. And it’s still one of the biggest bargains in your family budget.
THE PONTIAC PRESS MONDAY^ OCTOBER 18, 1964 *
Dirksen Hoping Today for Hospital Release
CHICAGO (I) — Sen.. Everett - M. Dirksen, MB, held hope of being released today from Pas-savant Memorial Hospital, after three days of treatment far a
swollen right ankle and emphysema, a lung ailment.
★ fir fir ' Harold Rainville, Dirksen’s secretary, said yesterdajr the senator continued to improve and was “in very good condition" with hopes of leaving be hospital today or tomorrow.
They Wed Silently
LONDON ION) - Neither' the bride nor the groom said “I do" yesterday at St. Peter’s. Italian Church here. The entire 10-minute wedding' ceremony tor.the deaf and dumb couple was conducted in silence.
Air Attacte on N. Viet Unlikely While Khanh Regime Unsettled
■itli EXCLUSIVE TWIN NR STREAM DRYING
The air stream in any dryor hoe two different jobs to do - cradle clothes while they dry, and cany away used, moist air. That's why
air streams—a Cradling_____
for gentleness, a Condor Current for drying speed. IPs the difference In dryers today.
and OTHER FEATURES
• Bool Cycle Timor* Temperature Guide * Double-Pass Lint Collector • Deer Window • Satin Smooth dram • Zine-coated stool
Te “Spotlight” this era 1965 HAMILTON HAS OUTER we’re offering it, for a HmKod Him, st s spoof el be, introductory price-including installation. .,
Onk *199“
28 West Lawrence Street
Tala phone 333-7812
CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY
By MALCOLM W. BROWNE SAIGON, Viet Nam (fi—The possibility of Mr strikes egsinst Communist North Viet Nam and Viet Gong bases In Leoe and Cambodia appears to havs fad*
FBI Says '
Picketer
Extortionist
DETROIT (AP)-A man described by the FBI .as an employe of the rTeamsters Union was to be arraigned today In UB. District Court on a charge of attempting to obtain $10,000 for labor peace at a picketed Detroit trucking firm.
He is Marvin W, Thorns, as, of Detroit, who the FBI atid was an employe of Teamsters Local 299, home local of James R. Hoffs, international preaidant of the Teamsters.
Charles (Chuck), O’Brien, business agent for IRL told newsmen “nobody ever hoard of him," but added ^“we’re checking him out to see whsthir he was a worker for Pecan (Motor Freight, Inc.) or what.”
Bernard C. Brown, Detroit FBI chief, said Thorne was caught Saturday in a public telephone booth demanding 910,000 from Arthur Pecan, sailed representative for Pisan Motor Freight be., in a telephone conversation.
Brown did not disclose whether e conversation was overheard by someone outside a booth or via a tapped line.
Thorne is charged under a criminal section of the Taft-Hartley Act.
Brown said Thome bed been a picket at Pazan offices since July and quoted officials of the trucking firm as saying Teamsters bad been picketing in an attempt to become bargi * * agent for the company’s
Pasan Motor Freight -mm were quoted as saying they u«u received annonymous call since Sept, is demanding payments for labor peace at the firm, j
ed until 8ou& Viet Nam can resolve its political crisis.
Premier Nguyen Khanh was asked at a nears conference Friday whether he still favored retaliation against North Viet Nam for its support of the Red guerrillas. His reply was much more cautious than statements he has made previously on the1 subject.
dr it
While South Viet Nam already has the means for carrying out air .raids against <he North, Khanh said, “This is a very important decision and we have to consider it when the time comes
within the framework of the situation. You must do It In tha right place and right time.
This is an Important decision that will involve complications on the international side and also on the national side," he said.
NOT RULED OUT
The United States has not ruled out the possibility that Khanh’s planes might just take off and bomb Hanoi at some point. In the current circumstances here, almost anything pould happen.
★	* dh
But the American position was to hold off an expanded operations until some major political house cleaning is completed m ~iigon.
American policy in fighting the exhausting war against file Viet Cong is still predicated on file idea the war must funds-* mentally bd won within South Viet Nam.
*	* *
Other measures have^bcan considered, and eventual action against Viet Cong supply lines and even North Viet Nam is possible.
For the time being, the United States is becking to ttw hilt ft general retrenchment of the sweeping pacification plan propounded by Khanh early this year.
You can’t buy a finer Scotch Why pay more?
Big TAX SAVINGS
w« IMPORT DIRECT In CASKS
Scotch shipped in bottles is taxed on a 100-proof basis, even though it is less than 100-proof. Imported McMaster’s Scotch, shipped in barrels and bottledln UfLA., is taxed on the basis of actual proof in the bottle. This snbetantial tax savings is passed on to you. If McMaster’s were bottled abroad it would cost far more.
McMastar’s Imported I Year Old Canadian Whisky RAO McMuter* fine 6-year old Canadian Whisky b die- w QUAKT tilled, aged and blanded in Canada and imported direct. If it ware bottled in Canada, it would ooet yon Car more. Why pay more?	rmT
SCOTCH WHISKY . A SUMO > 80 PROOF . MfORTCD IH ORIGINAL CASH BY McMASTU IMfORT CO, OCTHOIT CANADIAN WHISKY t A BLEND • I YEARS 010.80 PROOF • IMPORTED IV McMASTER IMPORT CO, DtTROtT
iebardson
^7arm IDairy Stores
UL' RICHIE SAYS ...
When The Frost Is On The Pumpkin, That's The Time To Drink More
Richardson’s MILK
For Safety . . . For Warmth ... For Comfort
YOU CAN DEPEND ON GEE!
RUING IS TO ANY RICHARDDOH STORE AND OH A FREE ICE CREAM TRIATI
i
5 HANDY LOCATIONS:
DIXIE HIGHWAY m 7350 HIGHLAND HD.
DRAYTON PLAINS
M-69 PLAZA
m 1414 W. HURON • AT ELIZABETH LAKE •
SSSS M-15 m 2466 ORCHARD LK. HD. CLARKSTON* SYLVAN LAKE
OPEN Daily & Sun. 8a.m.-10p.r
Quality in tha product. . . Quality in tha oarvk* . . As dependable as Gee... throe phaeee urith one result COMPLETE HEATING SATISFACTION. For ever 39 yean Gee has been servidag Pontiac and the surrounding area with’ better feel, better service and a personalized attention to every customer's needs with the result that more families in this area enjoy added warmth and comfort regardless of the weather with dependable Gee Fuel Oil Service.
Every customer's fuel needs ate recorded on our modem ’Degree Day* chart. Wc know just when you need mete fuel and before your present supply, of fuel is Exhausted our courteous driver It at your home to quickly and efficiently replenish your fuel oil supply.
GEE’S MODERN GMC TRUCKS
<w«u Radio Equipped
To Give You Quicker Servlet
Remember...
YOUR FUEL OIL IS ONLY AS DEPENDABLE AS YOUR FUELOIL DISTRIBUTOR!
Ha matter wbsra yes In...
In Pontiac, Drayton Plains, Waterford, Clarkston, Ortonvllle,
. Orion, Oxford, Rochester, Auburn Heights, Bloomfield Hills,
Koogo Harbor, Walled Lake, White Lake, Milford or the surrounding area, you, tee, can on|oy the warmth, comfort, safety and dependability of Gee fool oil service as one of ' our modem GMC trucks (motor equipped for accuracy and radio dispatch for quicker service) is in your neighboriiood.'k
You, Tte, Can Eajoy Complete Heating Satisfaction
NOW IS THE TIME TO START TO EHJ0Y COMPLETE HEATING SATISFACTION FLOS HOLDEN RED TRADING STAHPS! - NOW IS THE TIME TO SWITCH TO DEE!
An Important Message
To Ton, Who Heat With Coal...
—He* ef all iwgefer grade* of coal. Including
GEE F0GAH0NTAS
“UYni’-JOE”
The All Purpose STOKER COAL
SET
Pontiac’s eldest sud largest L sad epersted New Mobilheat



Tgfr TOyTrAC PRESSv MOljgDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1964
PPpi thousands switching to Wards!
	
	
	
M
ONTGOMERY
WARD
SINCE 1872
...SATISFACTION GUARANTEED OR YOUR MONEY PACK*
OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 9:30 A.k H 9:00 P.M.
Wards Is growing faster than over, now serving and satisfying a growing America with over 1100 retail and catalog stores from coast to coast. See why thousands of families are switch* ing...come right on in. enjoy the friendly at* mosphere, the warm greeting in store for you. Treat the ^iiiy, too...they'll love the one-stop,, quick in-out shopping trip through Wards— everything they'll ever need is Tight here! And you will Tind. those down-to-earth prices so extra easy on your budget. So th* next time you're out, visit Wards—it's the friendly place to shOp, where quality doesn't cost a penny morel

» WARDS...for sensible prices year ’round, shop
Wards, you'll pay low prices that are competitive anywhere at any timeWards is one of the largest chain store operations. We buy right, pass the savings on to you.
WARDS... for one-stop family shopping, over
130,000 items for you, your family, the home and car. Shop over the counters, page ^through the catalog. You’ll be delighted with the selection (hat's here for you!
WARDS...for higher quality standards. Exacting spec-
ifications and thorough testing in Wards gigantic laboratories assure you of outstanding merchandise. 92 years of experience go behind every item Wards sells I
WARDS...for expert service, whether you live m the heart
of town or out in the country—just call us and a Ward-trained service expert will come out to your home to service your Ward appliance. We service what we sell..
WARDS...for no-money .down shopping. &joy your
purchase now, pay later on Wards "Charg-all" credit plan.. . use it as a 30-day charge account or take up to 2 foil years to pay. Up to 3 years to pay On major appliances and home furnishings, up to 7 years on home improvements.
Pontiac Mali
CORNER TELEGRAPH ROAD AND ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD — TELEPHONE 682-4940 —

l'
m
THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, QQTOBBR 12, 10<M
frkm effective threofh loeadey, October IS. W» reserve the right to Itarit feentifres.
U.S. Choice—Table Trimmed ■
Naturally Tender—Tabla Trimmed
I US DA
CHOICE
Tirtn amm n m

Michigan U.S. Na, 1
lotce
Wrigley
Food Club
Too Busy, She Says, Dawdling Over Drink ^
Politics Not Big Concern to Stripper
By LOWRY BOWMAN DENVER, Colo. <VPI)-“LJ§-ten, sweetheart,” said Kathy Dodd, whose reel name is Malle. “Strippers don’t talk about politics. I never beard anybody mention politic* backstage."
But there was some political iplc out boot in Denver’
Club Where gasses clinked and Bkky Shaw (die sign said she was “sensational") glided about on die tiny nightclub stage.
Kathy want using the aaiM Marie tonight sat of def-trlplaaei 1 as Marie. Kathy patted her stiff, beehive hair-do and said,, really, she had as idea who was running fsr president.
“I registered to vote one time but I left that town before election time,” die said. “What do I care about politics, sweetheart? I don’t have for that sort of thing. I do four shows a night and then I have to spenQ all day at hairdresser’s and the dressmaker’s.’’
David Bata of Estes Park, Colo., a political actonco major at an Illinois College, joined the group. The drinks, wh|ch started out in the 50 cents range, Otoe getting fancier ' each. The strippers ordered ’’champagne cocktafls.'
EOT ’EM DRINK “Look, sweetheart,’’ said Toni, the faftreMi strippers bare that earn up to KM a week, and we * rent to pay. You wanna talk to the girls? Buy’em a drink.’’ “This country’s bonded far racialism,” Ban, n ex-Marina, laid. “I don’t knew who res going to vela for, but Johnson killed it with me with that dvfi rights MIL “It’s a sorry choice,” be said. “You either live with Johnson end the Negrpes or you put Goldwator in add work'for 10
cents, an hour. I guess Hi have to go with Johnson, but you can bat Goldwator ftotdd do sum-tblng about Viet Nam.”'
#<■*' # -
Kathy tired of the gacurion and inged everyone to applaud Ricki Shaw, who was finishing fier dance.
VERY SENSITIVE
“She’s very sensitive,” Kathy said. “She’ll go back there and eg if nobody Applauds”	,,
Two blocks away a mode was |	_
playing hart to the l?th annual convention of the Governors’ Interstate Indian Council. Delegates were invited from 19 states drat have
They included the Navajee of Arisons, Barry Gold water’s home state.
Raymond Nakai, chairman of the Navajo tribe, said he had met Goldwator “casually” several times.
“It would be pretty hard to say definitely how he stands with the Navajos,” Nakai said. “But as far as tiie Navajos are concerned, I don’t believe the positions be takes would be accurate. I would much rather not say how I fbd, but I would say “ “ ‘ Johnson has
some influences among the Nav* Jjoa.”
JUW AS RETICENT *	.
George Herqo of Salamanca, N.Y., president of the Seneca nation, was juet as reticent. He said he bed supported New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller for the Republican presidential nomination.
“I don’t think you’ll Had much Goldwator sentiment in New Vork - or Join meat either, tor that matter,’ hesatd.
Out on the street corner, Hem Gilleland,. a tall, blue-eyed old miln with white eyebrows, was distributing to anyone who would stop, copies of a letter he had written to President John-m.
His -letter praised Johnson for “the mag fine things you have done for the life and welfare of ion.” It said that GUIs-land would support Johnson “but for (his one thing we call communism.”
Did that moan ha was for Goldwator?
'You jdst read that and then, do what you think is right,” he said.
(TeuMrrow: Grant’s Pass, OlW. — It’s getting dele in JeeipMae Ctomty.) *
---MEMO TO MEN AND WOMEN
JOB HUNTING?
TRY
International
PERSONNEL SERVICE
We represent an unlimited number of but and national firm, ssaklng qualified applicants In all f la Ida of amploymsnt. Starting salaries for these positions range from $3,000 to $15,-000. If you are Interested In Investigating these opportunities —call us or walk In to your nearest IPS office.
690 East Mapls, Birmingham—Ml 4-3692
17544 W. McNichols, Detroit, KE 7-1004
"Offices in Major Cities of B.S,"
Call us today . . . discover Sun Control quality
‘I0WER PRICES!
USDA
US DA
USDA
CHOICE
CHOICE
CHOICE
Canter Binds Cute
Cnnter Round Bono Cute
Cute
Canter Bind* Cute
Cnnter
Save
Assorted Fruit Flavors
JELL-0
Sate Sc
on 3 3-ox.
Fkgs.
With purchase of any Food Club or Top Frost Merchandise
IstaOwM
nsss
the diStrsaca. Set for Central Stem ad Trio Cdl today for a FREE,
Cream nr Whale Kernel
7s *1
Sava
Corn
Monas -savins
on 7

Green reds
Peeled
Tomatoes
M\jmi GAS or on.
FURNACE
WINDOWS and
Sava 40c ”7 No. 303 $100 ant / Cans I
Topco
Permanent Typo
DOORS
road Oak
Fruit Cocktail
Papd Ouk
Catsup
Food auh Sliced or Kalvoa
ANTI
Sava 30c £ No. 303$l00
on 5 J Gins I
Windows
Save
19c 7 i4ox. $100 ? / Bottles I
Sava
ft $100
Peaches
Cling
Cana
FROZEN
6ft ready fur Wliter Kbw Protect yesr loved ones from icy, slippery fills
SALE
PORCH AWNINGS
•	Peas N Carrots
•	Cat Coni
Sun Control Quality Aluminum
SIDING and TRIM
RO MOREY DOWN S RO PAYMENTS V.
$un Control
Cookirig OnionslOS9*
Gauntry Kitchen Crtamod ■ Savo 9e	—_
CoWoaa Chaaaa	19*
w
GET FINER GIFTS FASTER WITH GOLD BELL GIFT STAMPS
THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 12,,196*
descriptive Designation
LOUISVILLE (Ap) ugThere is no pariting" space in front of one small grocery here. Entrance from the sidewalk is up
2 NEW LOCATIONS IN MICHIGAN
HOUSEFUL SPECIAL COMPLETE ROOMS
SOFA. CHAIR, END TABLES, COFFEE TASK, LAMPS, BOOKCASE BED, BOX SPRINGS, MATTRESS, DRESSER, MIRROk, CHEST, *4* DINETTE SET. AND	, ./A	.,
INCLUPES BRAND NEW
WORLD If IDE v*
HOME FURNISHINGS *•*
4 The YF12A unveiled by our government is .. a-a supersonic aircraft b-a submarine o-ait aircraft carrier
2.HH	»
HILDA (d) a Canadian visitor
SKftSSj Contnftt to Quebec Reception
honest or has it sense of humor — or both. Hanging over the door is a sign: “Inconvenient food market.”
'English' Canada Hails Queen Elizabeth
(1) considering trip to India
0) non-aligned nations conference
WEN
NOW I GIGANTIC LOCATIONS IN MICHIGAN
4-rUMT 1-PONTIAC 2-LANSING 1-SAGINAW 6050 Dixit Hwy., Drayton Plaint Shoppkif Center
HOW DO YOU RATI t
(Score hch Side of QU* Separately) 16
6 The Ecumenical Council approved the idea of allowing Roman Catholics to attend services of other church! groups. True or Falae? (True)
PART II - WORDS INTHI NEWS
Take 4 points for each word that you can
match with its correct meaning.
1.. ...autpmation	a-to search into
3.. ...1avestlgate	b-lack c-replacing men with
OTTAWA (AP) —Queen Elizabeth II, with a cool and separatist-marred Quebec reception behind her, arrived smiling' Sunday night to a warm Thanksgiving hdiday welcome to the heart of English-speaking Canada.
She was welcomed, after 33 hors in French-speaking Quebec, by Prime Minister add Mrs. Lester B. Pearson. The queen add her husband, Prince Philip, flew to join to Thanks-glying celebrations in the Canadian capital.
y't f ■■ A ft A
Thousands lined the 10-mile route from the airport into the capital, engulfing the queen in a hail of cheers as she passed.' Obviously pleased, the queen waved repeatedly from inside her brightly Ut limousine.
The cheering continued until die disappeared into Government House where she spent the night. She will be to Ottawa for two days. Extra security precautions will continue. GRIEVOUS INSULT
The British press lashed out at Quebec for what was called “the. most massive, the most grievous insult ever afforded the monarch.”
The Daily Mail calle dthe capital of French Canada “the city which insulted the queen and placed the future of the Canadian confederation in hazard.”
ft ft ft
The Daily Mirror said the Canadian government blundered to allowing or advising the queen to visit Quebec.
There was no repetition Sunday to Quebec of the demonstrations there Saturday. Before boarding a plane for Ottawa, the queen spent a quiet day aboard the royal yacht Britannia.
BULLETPROOF CAR
Small sporadic demonstra^ tions broke out all over Quebec as the queen moved about the city Saturday in a bulletproof car, convoyed by a mass of police and troops. Despite the demonstrations, she stu(& to a
separatist demonstrations that resulted to toe arrest of X persons on charges of vagrancy and disturbing the peace.
However, during a press re- , ception aboard the Britannia Sunday afternoon, members of the royal party talked pf+rately of the demonstrations. The queen and Priffce Philip received 2S0 newsmen and circulated among them, chatting informally for an hour.
POLICE BRUTALITY
Charges of police brutality were made by some newsmen.
Blair Fraser, Ottawa correspondent of MacLean’s magazine, submitted , a detailed con-plaint to acting provincial Atty. Gen. Claude Wagner, charging brutality against an American freelance reporter, Mark Schliefer, 28, of New York, ft ft. ■ ft
Fraser said he and other newsmen saw police beat Schliefer after a separatist" demonstration near the provincial legislature building.He Was' reported bruised abopt the body and shoulders.
Worry of
FALSE TEETH
SlIpptRf or IrrHwtfog?
YOUR NEWS QUIZ
part i - National and international
Givi yourself IQ points for each correct anewek.
1 East German Communists threatened to cancel their new agreement to permit..... a-Western air flights over East Germany e b-East Berliners to visit West Berlin c-West Berliners to visit East Berlin
3 A major campaign issue Is the question of how much control over nuclear field weapons should
be given to the Commander of the.forces.
a-SEATO; b-NATO; c-CENTO
3 Amin Hafei became Premier of a-Lebanon; b-Syria; c-Iraq
The Pontiac Press
October 13,1964
7UonVwyuuH,
Match word clues with their corresponding pictures or symbols. 10 points for each correct answer.
4....
(a) automation an la-sue In this dispute
<2* a~W (b) a British activity this week
vl. Jli (c) honored Ooto- 7. ber Il-IT
RECLINER
Vinyl and
$24M
full schedule of appearances that lasted far into toe eight. Most of the demonstrating was done by about 2G0 college students.
■ ♦ - Jt ft ■
Referring to the unprecedented security arrangements for her Quebec visit, toe London Daily Telegraph said: “The
Miller Sufficiently Recovered to Resume Campaign Schedule
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Rep, William E. Miller /vas reported today sufficiently recovered from a *severe head odd to resume Us campaign schedule to-morpow^n Pennsylvania.
.ft /★ ft.
' An aide said tbe Republican vice presidential candidate was feeling better and that his fever was almost* gone yesterday. Miller spent yesterday at his Wash ingtoo home conferring with advisers.
The illness forced the New York congressman to eat short a tour of northeastern Ohio- Saturday and fry back to Washington to rest and seek treatment for a high fever.
Miller, who had no appearances scheduled today, plans to fly to Pennsylvania tomorrow for speeches at Scranton, Wilkes-Barre, Reading and Philadelphia before going to Richmond, Ind., to spend the night * ft ft
Oh Wednesday, toe GOP nominee will speak to Lafayette and Terre Haute, Ind., and fly to ChfcagtPfor the night On Thun day he will speak to the Chicago area and then fly to Duluth,. Minn.
' * ft 'ft ' ft
AN Friday schedule calls for appearances to Dufiito and St. Cloud, Minn., and Milwaukee aodVRggtoe, Wis. He flies. Fri-day ngpH from Milwaukee to Ontario, Calif.
On Saturday Miller has speaking engagements to San Bernardino, Burena Park and San Diego, Calif. He is expected to spend the weekend to Calif6rnia-
GOP Defectors Will Return by Election-Nixon
FORT WORTH, Tex. (AP) -Former Vice President Richard M. Nixon says he believes Republicans will return to the party fold to boost Sen. Barry Goldwater’s chances of beating President Johnson.
ft	ft	ft
Nixon said Sunday one of the aims of his 36-feta te tour is to cut down on the estimated-X per cent of Republicans who reportedly are switching to Johnson, ft*	ft	ft
“People are becoming assured that Goldwater is mft a reckless man and they are going to come beck,” he said, ft	ft	ft
The former Vice president said he expected Goldwater and Johnson to be neck and neck by Nov. S.
FAIRER PRESS
Nixon also said he beMeves Goldwater has received fairer treatment from the. press than he did during hi* bid fop toe presidency four years ago.

queen had the humiliation of having to be guarded by a mass of soldiers, sailors, ainnen and police such as even a Hitler did not need.
, ft. ft ft
"Yet the abiding memory is of the queen serene and brave.” It was not dear whether the quen actuajjy saw any of the
V F-A-S-T
MIMEOGRAPH SERVICE Churches—Schools Groups
' CHRISTIAN LITERATURE SALES
55 Oakland Ave. PE 4-9591
PONTIAC Ri PAINT SttRI
ROCKCOTE PAINTS WALLPAPERS .
2 South Com 332-4641
INCLUDES
FREE
OUR
‘L”	««X»Y1 JOY
STAINLESS STIR ||4N.
COVERED RTR nw 4~ n 4* ' ■ARC N# SERVE DISHES
BOOKLIT COUfONtl
U.S. GOVT. GRADED CHOICE TENDERAY
Selections for All Ages
VEGETABLE VARIETIES
CAMPBELL'S Soup
6~79c
KROGER
iLUABLE COUPON
tHB PONTIAC PltESS, MONDAY,‘oCTOBKB 12, 1964
Foreign News Commentary
Peking Is Expected to
By WILLUUt J. FOX
Red China wPl make its annual bid to win a seat in the United Nstkm when the General Assembly convenes In New York. Some day It may make it Bat net this year.
The battle If keep Peking eat ef the U.N. may be a let deeer thaa baa been anticipated. Bat ebearme feel it stffl wfll fall short It will be ebeer because the Red en-
thusiastic about such a force ita hitter at thie time.
France's former .toMes :
Africa.
The Congo Republic, whose capital is BrasnviQe,
Central African Republic both have established diplomatic ties with Peking. Senegal has cut its links with the Nationalist Chinese on Formosa. And five other African Nations — Cameroon, Gabon, Mger, Chad end Dahomey—ere reported considering Peking's diplomatic overtures.
Cameroon is believed to be the key. If it goes over to the Communist Chtoeee, the others jut expected to follow. If this happens, then Red fM— will be recognized by more nations in Africa than Chsing Kai Shek’s Nationalist r*ime.
That still won’t he enough, for moat of Ass rest ef the world still backs Chiang. And one ranking official in Taipei rays flatly that Malaysia, which abstained an the issue hi previous general assemblies, will vote far the Nationalist! this time.
BRITAIN AND MLF:
There is growing informed speculation in London that Britain will haye little choice but to Join the American projected mixed-manned Polaris nuclear surface force, when the time
.If the United States decides to go Ahead with the MLF, ae it k called, Britain wfll follow no matter which party wins this week's poritamentary election. Only West Germany seems en-
the prospect of an American-German nuclear arrangement of any kind is rated sufficiently alarming in Loo&b to prompt any British government to Join up promptly — no matter with whid misgivings.
DE GAULLE-AS CANDIDATE: AO indications reaching Paris ire th«t President Charles tto Gaulle has stood up far,, better then expected to the rigors of his exhausting South American tour , of 10 countries in K days.
it it It
If he returns home by the_____
of this week in good physical1 shape, there will be no remaining doubts that he wiU run for a second term in December, 1065.
, If tact, it already is generally conceded that be will run — with the proof of his physical endurance lagnlappe for his supporters.
ROMANIA AS MEDIATOR: Romanian Premier Ion Maurer is winding up his seoond visit to Red Chine in seven months with new prestige for hie country’s independent line between Moscow and Peking in thalr bitter ideological fight.
★ * * • Observers in Hong Kong the British Chins coast colony that serves as a diplomatic listening post on events inside the Communist mainland — feel Maurer has been trying to mediate the fight between mandat giants and at the same time /tap up economic cooperation between Peking and Bucharest
to wta a compromise between MsSesw’s caB far aa bnmedi-
Pektng’s demand that It be pat off for at least five years.
He may have’made some progress on that scare, but there is little likelihood he persuaded Red China to
On the econom may have been ful. He would Hk with petroleum technology, two Peking badly neeas.
Letter by GOP Brings
Dem Gift—to Hospital
WASHINGTON (AP) - Assistant Secretary of Labor Esther Peterson, a Democrat, said yesterday she received a. letter at her Washington office asking
the Republican national tcommit-'«.
She said she was so amused by the solicitation that she wrote to Rep. William E. Miller,
GOP national chairman, saying she woukkeontribute a bit extra to children’s hospital “in appreciation for the entertain-
Poet-Anthologist Dios NEW YORK (AP) - Oscar Williams, poet and anthologist, died Saturday after a long Ql-ness. He was 64. Williams prepared the little Treasury series of anthologies, ”Im mortal Poems of the English Language,” “Pocket Book of Mod-ora Verse" end “New Anthology of American Verse.”
AMBASSADOR iuw twanuBui native of Pontiac and former reporter for The Pontiac press, U. 3. Ambassador to Nicaragua Aaron S. Brown is surrounded fay children of San Dionisio, a town in the Dqiartment of
Mitagaipa m central Nicaragua. The picture was taken during the inauguration of the new, six-room John F. Kennedy School, built rnder the All ance for Progress ‘Program.
WMU Asks 60 Per More Funds
KALAMAZOO m-k request for a 60 per cent increase in State funds for Western Michigan University for the 10*46 school year was on Its way; to Lansfag Saturday.
The WMU board of trustees, a needy independent group under the qew state cohstttuttab is attdng taa state for $12.3 mll-lion. This comperes to the $7.7 million for the 1064-65 school
WMU has a proposed total budget Of $15.5 million for 1966-* as against the present $10.6 ilDlon budget.
The trustees said in wpportj of the request for larger funds that wfafie Western Michigan has a reputation for a low cost per ] student to operations, this is j 'false economy which in the long run ttnH-changes the student!.”
EXPECTS M00 MORE WMU, now with 13,770'ita-dents, anticipates an enrollment, increase of 2,000 for the 190M0 school year. Last fell the enrollment was 12,614.
Some 15 species of ragweed ■ hairy stems and divided leaves, i dwarf or common grow in the United States. They I Five of the 15 cause most of] lanoe-leaved ragweed, western are chiefly coarse annuals with] toe trouble; flant ragweed,] ragweed and giant western.
Hm raaport dtp of Oulu Ife Finland was nearty
destroyed hy a flw in 1822 and almost wiped out i the Crimean War.
SPECIAL
PURCHASE
SALE
Julie-Easy Waster
and
8sis Dryara
17-lb. Whiripaol
*159»°
Whirlpool
It Cm. Fi;
Freezer, Dork- Copper or White
*249“
*■■■ TSRMS AVAILASLS
mMamphtCb
825 W. Harea ELECTRIC FE 4-2525 UMPANT
SAVE ISO PLUS 275 EXTRAS STAMPS
WITH 5TH WEEK COUPONS IN KROGER MAILED BOOKIBTI
New Books at the Library
New books have recently been added to the (helves at the Pontiac Pubfc Library.
Offering selections for every age group, the new titles at the main branch, 66 E. Pike, include: ■
FICTION — DeForest, “Kate Beaumont;’’ Kazakov, “Going to Town and Other Stories;” McNally, “Dragon in Paradise;” Malamud, “Idiots First;" Mrozek, “The Elephant;” Quei-rozi “The Threq.Marias;” Rees, “Jacob Have I Loved;” Ribeiro, “When the Wolves Honri;” Sar-ton, “Joanna and Ulysses;” Sharp, “The Turret;” Solzhenitsyn, “We Never Make Mistakes;” fwadoe, “The WiU;” Szabo, “The Fawn;” Vining, “Take Heed of Loving Me."
MYSTERY - Gilbert, “dose Quarters;” MacLean, “Ice Station Zebra;” Hoffman, “With Murder in Mind;” Trench, “Beyond the Atlas;” William, “Dead Calm.”
BIOGRAPHY - Bishop, “Petrarch and His World;” mbpe1 pie, “September Child: The Story of Jedn Dalrymple by Herself;” Denis, “On Safari: The Story of My Life;” Platter, “Beloved Son Felix: The Journal of Felix Platter, a Medical Student in Montpellier in the Sixteenth Centuiy;" Pogue, “Georgf C. Marshall: Education of a General, 1886-1931; Rixqy, “Bamie: Theodore Roosevelt’s Remarkable ter;” Samuel, “Little Did I Know: Recollections and Reflections;” Snralrtn, “A Long Journey”
GENERAL SUBJECTS — An-, dersoa, “Electrical Power Cu-culatione;” Anderson, “Gas Engine Manual;” Brooks, “William Faulkner: The Yoknapa-tawpha Country;’’ Fall, “The Two Vietnams: A Political and Military Analysis;” Flores, “An Anthology of German Poetry
From Holderin to Rilke, in English Translation With German Originals;” Gullick, “Malaya;” Hadley, “How to Travel With Children in Europe;” Highland, “Painting and Decorating Manual;” Hostetler, “Amish Society;” Livingstone, “Living-stone’s African Journal, 1563-1856;” “Provence;” Sheean, “Dorothy and Red;” Smith, “A Short History of Fingers (and Other State Papers); Staley, “Improving Individual Productivity;” Swann, “Art of China, Korea, and Japan;” Wolcott, “The Yankee Cook Book.” REFERENCE — Berenson, "Italian Pictures of the Renaissance: A List of the Principal Artists and Their Works With an Index of Places, Florentine School;” Butler, “Britfah Political Facta, 1966-19*;” “Foundation Directory;” “Guide to the Performing Arte;” “Yearbook of Science and Technology;” Miller, “Encyclopedia ofAnimal Care;” Schnapper, “American Health Directory;” Shores, “Instructional Materials.”
TEENS — Burack, “A'Treasury of Holiday Plays for Teenagers;" Greenberg, “So You Want to Be e Dentist;” Janas, The Oldest One;” Morris, “Voices From America’s Past;” Redman, “Nuclear Energy;” Stevenson, “Fletchers End;1’ Wood, “Arts and Flowers.” CHILDREN’S — Alexander, “All Things Bright and Beautiful: A Hymn;” Evens, “The Lend and People of Korea;” Fax, “Tasty Adventures jn Science;” Hofsinde, “Indian Bunting;” Land, “The Quest of Johannes Kepler, Astrooomer;” Margolis, "Idy the Foe-Chasing Cow and Other Stories;” Ba£ lauer, “Good Times With Words;” Shields, “Mary Kate;” Snedeker, “Lysis Goes to the Play;” Welch, “For the Kb*;’* Worthington, “Bouboukar, ChUd of the Sahara.” '
ANSWERS
TO TOOAT’S NEWS QUU
PART 1:1-c; 2-0; l-to; 4-a; 5-Trua ’:MRT III t-e| 2-a; I-a; 4-b; N PART III: 1-a; 2-a; 3-d; 4-b; 6< SYMBOL QUIZ:	S-c;
• 41 r** M] 9-fj 10-h
SERVE H SAVE
SLICED BACON
COUNTRY CLUB
WIENERS mm .
SAUSAGE SALE
98
SPARE RIBS
SHANK
PORTION
SMOKED
KROGER LARGE 13 EGG ReGPE
SPECIAL LABEL
KR06ER FIOURI
11069
SAVE
14
KROGER
100 TEA BAGS
kt
SAVE 30’
79
SWEET POTATOES
13
KROGER
LOW
PRICK
ANOa FOOD CAKE
^ |
SAVE
m
SAVE 17*—KROGER TASTY
TOMATO
4-99* ISPS 1
J'-AVGNDALE	» WITH THIS C^RWWBSS-SSSdKs SHERBET OR !
PURPLE PLUMS :«""™ICE CREAM;
WHITE POTATOES I
20-65
i BEE
SO EXTRA vAiur * STAMPS
WITH THIS COUPON AND
$5 PURCHASE OR MORI
I	Hi”	Mkh wmv fsiiEiin. Mtt I tetejiM «te taw% gu I WiateMi Mkfc. «U Mite aI tTTrun	- T?2frite. I
■WEBBBeDEHHHtoii, Pawte^l, ifte- ■ v VP I OwAw is. to*4	IP ■ OeAwUi me	©g|<|| jjMES 1
We mm Ibe right te BmH qm^Nea. Prim and Hem. JMte e» Kw>er tePemWaJ BeteS	Way, CtetebTl"frSs.
A/'}]	■ :,.!
TMM BONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1964
VALUES NOWAT YOUR SPARTAN STORE! COME SEE
It-AOLL “SOSTHEAXMAIS”
TOILET TISSUES
SSL 50*
Aborted oolort, poly-boggedl AM It retie per tmtmm
FAMILY-SIZE
GLEEM TOOTHPASTE
SSL 50«
Me VALUE, KG. OF G
GILLETTE Stainless Steel
BLADES
£& 5<K
Double-edged for extra shaved
Shampoo
with FREE SHAMPOO BRUSH!
PerdwSd
PorcNiw t t ' Comp Cleans and beautifies ytUr hair!
I.as size
JERGENS LOTION
Sped*1 CA( «». Perch**! Jf T«
ISO-PCS., BOXED
STATIONERY
Special * A,
Purchase! JO' BOX
100 sheets, SO envelopes! Fine-quality paperl
JOHNSON’S FLOOR WAX!
KLEAR
Gold tone and antique filigree frames! Walnut and gold tone combinations!
Keeps floors brighter! Perfect non* yellowing floor wax!
Keeps hands younger looking).
10-PACK, FINE-QUALITY
WASHCLOTHS
5-row stitched for extra strength! Point-
Premium thick, thirsty wash cloths!-Gay solid colors!
ROYS’ EASY-CARE COTTON
SWEATSHIRTS
ARIES’ HOLLYWOOD BRIEF
PANTIES Ipedal! 3 S 50<
SIMULATED PEARL
NECKLACE & EARRING SETS
Fits any standard-size crib mattress! Reinforced at stress points. White.
Sparkling peart sot to flatter every outfit! Finest quality!
SHOP SPARTAN 9:30 A-M. TO
TjttB PONTIAC PMj$S,
MONDAY, OCTOBER
club house followed the bus trip. Shown here at tiredkfast until the Johnsons are their son and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Johnson of Warren (far tight and far left)*?
Mr. and Mrs. Hairy Johnson (center) of Cedarbrook Drive, hosted 22 friends for breakfast at Pine Lake Country Club prior to Saturday’s game. A dinner dance in the
Mr. and Mrs. R.L. DeSellier of Normanwood Drive,- West Bloomfield Township, sit in the lobby Of Pine Lake Country Chib as they wait ,for buses to arrive for the scheduled trip to East Lansing and the traditional game between the two big schools.	»
Boarding the bus at Forest Lake-Country Club for the Michigan-Michigpp State game Saturday'are Mr. and Mrs. Jack Sbhmitt of Nottingham Street, Beverly Hills. Forest Lake .was one of tite country clubi serving breakfast before the buses left.
Workers Planning for Autumn Sale
Friend Hurt Over Not Getting Cbl I
By SIGNE KARLSTROM
The much anticipated rummage sale at Christ Church, Cranbrook takes place on Oct 19 from 9 aJia. to 2 p.m.
This is tiie 33rd rummage sale put on by the many tie-voted Episcopal church women who service various charitable projects in our area.
Perhaps we should recall whot the Rev. Gerald B. O’Grady has to say about this tale which takes place in the fall as well as in the spring, every year.
“A rummage sale is a bargain - hunter's delight and a budget - stretcher’s assistant. A rummage sale is aim good Christian stewardship and an exercise of cooperative rela-
classroom, the cotwtyard, and even in the furnace room . . . any place we can find an inch of space!
“You may see for sale a mink stole, a washing machine, ski boots, or a mateless earring. Lunch, stand-up style, is served to the workers in the kitchen, while coffee and Sandwich wagons supply refreshment to shoppers. Come and behold the semi-annual miracle!”
By The Emily Post Institute
Q A friend and her husband have been living abroad for several years. I received a letter from her last month saying that they were returning to this country within two weeks. .
I expected her to call me when she arrived but I heard nothing from her. I ran into her the other day whits shopping and she was hurt that I hadn’t called her.
I thought it was up to her to let me know that they were back. Is there any rule as to who calls who first in this
Cochainnen for the sale are Mrs. Robert A. Green and Mrs. Calvert Thomas. Assisting them will be Mesdames:
Robert Bates; Joseph Wright;
Jack Klarr; Robert Weir;
SpencerHershey; Richard JCeltyand Russell Robins.
ALSO WORDING Others are Mrs. William F.
Graham; Mrs. Ormond Weasels, Mrs. Edward Krauss,
Mrs. Carl Nepper and Mrs.
Robert Hackett.
Completing the list are Mesdames: John Gilmer; James Barron; Donald Jahncke; Iraq Caldron No. 70, Daugh-Richard Darragh; Garrett ters of Mokanna, will install Mouw; R. C. Oglesby; Howard officers far 1964-06, Oct- 30 in Steggall and Fred Sanders. the First Federal Savings Mrs. Kent Barclayisin of Oakland dvics room, charge of refreshments.	ft *	*
Mr. and Mrs. Andrelb Seed of Farmingdale Drive, check their tickets for Saturday’s U. of M. vs. Michigan State game. They shared breakfast with Mr. and Mrs. Wiitiam Roberts (not shorn) prior to boarding the bus at Pine Lake Country Club. *
Club. Three buses of Forest Lgke Country Club-members and guests Joumeled to East Lansing for Saturday’s game.
Mr. and Mrs. John M. Gillespie (left) of Darcy Drive check tiieir reservations with John Maher, manager of -the Forest Lake Country
Planning an Installation
Session in Providence, R.I. were given by Mrs. Walter Shelton and Mrs. Kugler.
Hostess for the evening was Mrs. Victor Bodamer.
He Wants to Stay Pure
what toe was trying to talk ties, but she doesiPf make me into.	frieods easily. I believe I am
Abby, I want to be pure for her only friend, the girl I marry, but if this A few months ago I became ooe is any example of what acquainted with another girL I have to put up with, I am I will call her June, going to have some fight on June is a very likeable per-my hands.	son and has many friends.
How can-a fellow act like Mary tot me know that she a gentlemen with college girls did not care for June, but I without getting the reputation didn’t see what that had to do for being a square or a cold fish?
SAVING MYSELF DEAR SAVING: Don’t identity all college girls with the miss yob got mixed up with at
By ABIGAIL VANBUREN DEAR ABBY: I am a college freshman. I drew a girl's name for the freshman mixer. Wien I mmaatu called for her	4
at'-her dorm.
Mrs, Albert Kugler was elected Mighty Chosen One at the annual meeting in the dub'room.
« Reports oatheSnpreme
The Past M.C.O. Club and officers elected and appointed will meet Thursday at 7:30 in the home of Mrs. Mae White on Voorheis Road.
COMFORT is a “FEELINGV
Now Mary haa told me that if I don’t give up June’s friendship she ud I can’t be friends anymore.
1 Bke them both, Abby, but
.	don’t want to make a Choice.
Haqa onto your gentlemanly We are not kids. We are ail instincts and your reputation young married women, will take care of itaeU.	What would YOU do if faced
—1—	with such archdce?
DEAR ABBY: I have a	TROUBLED
friend with whom I went ell DEAR TROUBLED: I’d through school. I shall call choose June. No One has the her lory.	right to dictate who your oth-
Mary has many good quali- er friends shall be.
during our annual
MpWMm Let Us Renew Your Fdvorite Fall Fashions
Get ready to go places and do things. Have your whole Fall wardrobe fresh and clean and ready to wear. Empty your duets of your best dresses, cuts and suits, and call for Canful Dan. He’ll see they get our gentle cleaning treatment ttafs safest for each fabric. And the expert finishing that mates them look lite.a page out of Vogue.. But don't wait, the season's here now.
Fall vows are donned by Sharon Louise Daniels, J daughter of J Mr. and Mri.l Claude E. Daniels of I Perry Lake I Road, and ] Michael Andrew , Barton, son of Dr. 4 and Mrs. Byron Barton of • Tern Haute,} Ind. Both are alumni of
Siittfoll, AAAA-B
9.N
540 South Telegraph	FE	2-8101
8153 West Huron	FE	5-7211
983 S. Hunter Mvd.	Ml	6-7633
Furniture Umhmrt and (/pMitmn 870 Orchard Lake o Ft 4-0558
Shoes
SHARON tOVISE DANIELS
^4 ' ^ATTENTION :3ir!D,K ALL HEARING AID USERS
S not und#r»taftd? Jtany nervs typshsaring losses require extra help to keep wPf?.f?*P>nni?y tppether. Now the new Telex
Vor tell information cell, write, or came hi today
TELEX REARING AID SERVICE
, .	*1W P«»ttoe State Bank Blit.
!	Pontiac
After the concert, the Brothers Four entertained at the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity bouse, as the quartet were Phi,Gamp at Washington State University.
i ★ ♦ .
Attending this affair with their dates were Phi Gam John Kerns of Lake Angelus Drive and Carolyn Gaeasbau-er of North Hammond Lake Drive.
WYMAN, THE ACTOR Steve Wyman of Ottawa Drive is playing the lead role
ed as many stddents were hi East Mnefaig, cheering the Wolverines to victory against the Michigan Skate Spartans.
%4	*	*
The campus ratify went wild e week ago after NHchi-gan’s decisive victory over the Naval Academy.
Among the spectators at this exciting game were Doug Anderson of West Iroquois Road, Tom Jackson of James K Boulevard, MkU King of Norton Street and Jim Bilker of Navajo Hoad, who transferred to U. of M. from Al-
bion College this year.
8UY/TA/OM
Patented DeepAction Agitator!
up out of way. Cook • Master automatic oven eoptroL Roll-out cooking units. Controls right on cooking top. .
Open Fri. Til 8
lisbeth *
-	'•	303 E. Mopl.
The “Washingest” Washer Ever!!
Auxiliary Has Its Inspection
, 1964
B—9
Mrs. Katherine Green, 6th District presidsat, inspected the City of Pontiac Auxiliary to Post Uto, Veterans ofFor-eign Wars, Friday in the post hsO.
The local auxiliary alao initiated Mis. OsD Moras and Mrs. Elbe Nolen into mamber-ship. :■
MTs. George Pappas was appointed chriiman of the fish fry dinners fat the post hall on the first and third Fridays, beginning in November.
Guests were Mrs. Earl Covert, 5th district treasurer and Mrs. Edward Finn, past president of Auxiliary 1407.
Mend'Pocket a Quick Way
A quick and assy way to mend worn pockets in man's and boys’ clothing hi to cut off the worn bottom put of the pocket and sew across the bottom t couple of times on a sewing machine.
this makes a shorter pocket, but a strong one that Will probably last as long as the already partially - worn garment.
TH3E PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 12,
U. of M, Students Active Socially
in Chayefsky’s Gideon, presented this week by the University Players of the Department of Speech.
Stove is d junior majoring fa speech and drama and had significant roles In University productions during the summer session.
Fraternities and sororities held their formal rushing period* during the first three weeks of classes and pledged several students from toe Pontiac area.
• ★ • * ♦
Fraternity rush was conducted as usual, but toe pp-ority rush was an experiment hi fall upperdaas rush. The major rush period will still be hi the spring, for freshmen only-
Among the area (dodges are Tom Smith, Chi Psd; Linda Scott of Hupp Cross Road, Alpha Gamma Delta; Lynne Bovs of Cranbrook Cross Road; Collegiate Soroais; and Pam Gilbert of Avonhurst Drive, Kappa Alpha Theta. I
QWM iyiaT Nwtr to *
Kappa Alpha Theta sorority sponsored an after-game open bouse featuring the Amblers, a popular campus dance band.
Saving as hostesses for this affair were Thetas Erma Livingstone of Berkshire Road, Jane Leader of Cranbrook Road, Diana Goridck of Lone | Pint Road, and Kay Van der Meer 6f Interlaken Drive.
■* ♦
Alpha Gainma Delta sorority also opened their doors. Karen Kessler of Desmond Drive and Dorothy Cataklo of Conchmsker Drive assisted
SAVE 2.00 ON PLAYTEX GIRDLES
Nationally known tlimmtrs, but hurry - tim« it |ftttit&!
fingertip panels that control yew tummy as never before . . . all wfth soft, ceoi lining. Hurry far yours at semafianal strings. ES-S-M-L
Regular 6.95 Hayte* Mold to J§9S Hold girdles, party girdles, now H
Reg. P.99 Playtex Magic Controller party girdles, now only
•.PS Mold 'n Held sip girdles.............6.9$
faPI Magic ClMroltor sip girdles MS
U# OUT experify trained corsefierss fff you cerracfty for rtartst comfort and figure floffery.
. SEE IT NOW
NEW!
Jet-fast spin leaves wash extra dry! I
NEW!
Jet-AwayRinsing ends lint trap k cleaning! >
Ns gears, h pulleys, so belts to cause potato satYiMproMeasl
Automatic Soak Cycle Ideal for dianera, jeans. Patented Deep Action agitator creates jet currents to help /remove heaviest soil! Jet-Away rinsing “jets’* away lint and scum. Spins clothes extra dry. 4 water temperature choices for correct washing Jet-Simple mechanism!
Iistalled Free
NO HONEY DOWN-FREE DELIVERY
65 Models
are Not Far Away
Mere WeP JVi
pfu Hi
ERIGDlIltfi DRYER
NtW convenient Fabrics dial Gentle Flowing Hoot dries bnewdesh, safer
ion of dr. Easy-reach,
FREE DELIVERY - ND MONEY DOWN
eo the dew. Neeaag no mUs Enameled drum harm delicate fUbcfce. Automatic Cycle Control. .
Only A 1 Few Left
w
FREE DELIVERY
Special fast-freea* shelf refrigerated mi three sides and bottom. 2 SlWU-Asidv baskets for easy loading, sorting! Bulk-In Md lock and two keys rarntohed Safety signal light Magnetie Hd seal!
Miser economy.
184 lb. ZERO ZONE FREEZER
i ‘
See H today at only
with
trade
14 CD
ft.
While
They
Last
490 lb. Capacity 90 Days Same As Cask
Cook-Matter control# oven - automatically!
Owe it STwids, holds even holiday turkey. Broil to perfection fat deep radiant hast Haw
(towing up.
20 CD. ft.
GIANT SIZE .
CHEST
FREEZER
^964 2 Speed 7 Cycle WASHER
Set Fabric dial for right washing combination. Ask m about Frigidaire underwater Action Zone wmhingJielpt get ell your wash fabulously clean! t Fresh running water rinsesento-malic lint dispoaaL Dependable! It’s the Study Frigidaire washer! .
' OPEN FHDAY and MONDAY EVENINGS Ml 9 P.M.
GOOD H0USEKEEPIK
of PONTUC 51 West Huron
PE 4-1555
-OGILVIE.
coloratura
is as simple to apply as * combing your hair!
Lighten your hair, darken your hair or cover gray completely and nammlty whh now Calamtnri. h’s toe fiat tad onty permanent hair<color cream designed to ghrt salon-perfect results at home.
It’S self-timing, hu built-in dathbers, shampoo and conditioners. No complicated patting or sectioning, no dripping. No worry about overlap or color build-up even when retouching, Just cream it in, foam, rinse out and let your hdr dry to a coloc so nemnd it looks si if you wtse boot with it 2 full applications, only 2.00*
Vww> .	• HURON STREET
> 148 N. SAGINAW
Conw Ttiumpli
• 4895 DIXIE HWY.
m

B—10
THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTORRfl 1% 1004
Want to look yptir
best
flis
year?
your { figure to look lovely? ; f
3
becoming
kctlpr
style?
want a clear
look?
Now's the time to get reody for winter . to look your best, to get ready for fun. Conte loom the charm secrets of famous models .	.
today at the Wendy Ward Charm Center.
Just $7.50 Claisses Start Oct. 17
iagittof Mow Ik tho firiW Dapaitmanl
ronuc IIU
<12-4940
PaternalObligdfionto
By MARY FEELEY Me—lenient
Dear Miss Feeley:
I have a daughter who wiD be M this month. I would like to know if I must still contribute to her support.
She (dans to go into nurse’s training. I do not live with my wife and daughter, and have been paying than voluntarily, not by a court' order. G. K., Tamaque, Pa.
Dear G. K.: As for any legal THIS WEB'S SPECIAL
TBOUSIHS 39c
CLEANED end PRESSED ECON-O-WASH
MV CL—Ml— CSNTSk Mirada MU, (nut«*
Smooth Out * Wrinkles
Wrinkles are riverbeds of dry cells because the plasma colloids or water carriers of the sldn have been <? dried old through harsh weather. You can bring life again to your sldn and protect it against wind and the drying effect of powder. ' Ask your Druggist for a little oil of olay and before you make up smooth over the face, neck and hand* to nourish the sldn at depth and give it a new life and delightful dewy bloom.
. . . Margaret Merril
demands that could be made upon you
to cut off all MART > support over-FEELET night? Yoflr whole idea, I gather, has been a voluntary decision to take care of your daughter until she’s able to earn her owp living. And for that you’re to be commended.
But if she needs this training in order to prepare for a worthwhile career, your paternal obligation still exists, doesn’t it? I think you’ll be a lot happier in the long run if you finish the
job. •	~
Dear Miss Feeley.
There are four adults in our family — three men and myself. What I want to know is, bow I can limit my food expense and still live as they ei-pect?	6
I get $50 per week but I don’t feel I should spend that much each week for four people, especially since we are all over 50 —two over 70.
Can you tell me how much it really should cost per week, per person, with steaks and other good items? My husband is sure I spend entirely too much. A Reader, Southeast.
HARD OF NEARING /
This	is Valuable
it will bring you
FREE INFORMATION
about the amazing new CONSUL
Behind the Ear Aid
ADDRESS...............y...........,
CITY....i. .STAll. ...X.	......
Make Detroit Co., ‘ Mako Medical Village
522 OavW WfckMy Bldg.	* 31 SI 5 SoutMwId Rd.
Detroit 20, Mick. .	IbroiMkcm, Mick.
WO 1-2—1	*44-2175	\
KEEPS PRICES DOWN
MOJUD	SU
SUPPORT NYLONS
Regular Mojud support stockings for lonjfer lasting beauty and comfort
Seamed or no*seam Supp-hote, perfect support while you work, stand, walk. Fashion tones, proportioned sizes. 8VH Ity.
Susy km dune * 5.95 gr. OWN EVERY NIGHT TO *
Muddy through Saturday
95
Dfear Reader: You can bold the weekly food bill to $16.40 and still do royally by the household. This is .according to the Department of Agriculture’s liberal plan which breaks down like this:
*	tf\' *
' A week’s food at home for a man aged 35 to 54, $10.30; for a man aged 56 to 74, $M0; for a woman 35 to 51, $$.50.
So tell your husband he’s right — and use the balance of the $50 a week for something else.
Dear M^s Feeley:
We expect to sell our home and have beat wondering Just what taxes we will have to pay. We expect to buy a- lees ’expensive home. Cary-you give us this information? Mrs. DJ.M Lafaette, Ind.
*	■ •* ' ' ] Dear Mrs. M.: There’s a new
tax law this year which may possibly be to your advantage. If, for instadbe, you are ever 65 years old, and the sale price of your home Is $30,000 or less, there is no taxation. In order to qualify for this exemption, the owner must have lived in the home for at least five of the eight years Just prior to the sale.
If you are under 6$ at the time you sell your home, you must pay a tax on the profit
the sale — unless you buy a more expensive residence.
Dear Miss Feeley:
, I read your article on “Who Handles toe Monye” and. would like to tell you how my husband and I manage.
When we were first married, he handed all the money. But his handwriting is bad and nobody can read ii So I took over the check-writing and balancing the account. ,
’ * * * *
My weakness was that I’m a sucker for any sales pitch. I’d buy anything from anyone who came to toe door. My husband and I talked it over ind agreed that I would write out the checks and he would sigh them!
Now we both know *here and how every cent is spent. He checks the records I keep when he signs the checks. I don’t buy everything offered any more. Our creditors can read our checks. And our account is always in good shape.
We have been married for five years now. I’m 35 and he’s 35. We never argue about money. I hope other young couples can get ideas from ours. Mrs. E. J., blip, N.Y.
(You -can write to Mary Fee-ley in care of The Pontiac Press. Enclose a, long, stamped, from^self-addressed envelope.)
MRS. MORGAN'MOSS
Golf Gloves... Grip Better . *
New golf g 1 o v e s feature leather palms for tom grip, with ventilated stretch backs for comfort and flexibility.
★ * *
These fit-all-hand-sizes gloves — with complete or short fingers and elastic wrists—need to be washed attar each round.
ww*
Use soap or detergent suds and e soft brush to remove mud and perspiration.
The George Biebels of Sarvis Street announce the engagement of their daughter, Judith Anne to Jerome G. FreybttrQher, eon of Mrs. James Frey-burgher of Saner oft Street, West Bloomfield Tovmship, and the late Mr. Freybutgher. Her fiance attends Lawrence Institute of Technology.
Hold Home Reception
A reception in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harry V. Tom on Hamlin Street, Avon Township, followed, the marriage of their daughter Mary Jane to George John Leslie.
The ceremony was per-formed in the University Presbyterian Church, Avon* Township.
* *' *
The bride’s gown of white peau satin was styled with Kabuki sleeves and scalloped chapel train bordered with lattice-work. A pearl and crystal tiara cradled her bouffant sift illusion veil. She carried cascading gardenias and ivy.
Mrs. C. Wayne Isbell was the bride’s only attendant. BEST MAN "
With best man Dale Man-erteff, Royal Oek, were ushers John Werner and John Friedly. •
★	★	*
7 The couple	left,	for	a	trip
to northern Michigan.
*	*	t
The bridegroom	is the	son
of Mrs. George J. Leslie of
1009 ROLLS IN-STOCK This Week's Special We Have 28 Patterns but there are 10 or lees Rolls in Mali. ,
i» ONLY 29* Si
lul was $241 sew Mb Pre-Fasted
wastt.M.......new tut
Jfh
was S2.N...... sew $I.TI
2Mh Century
Mwti.ee
Wallpaper Bargain Center
lilt WmI Huron
» be emmet-leek amort
Quern as country am
-USB OUR WINER 1
Conroniont Pickup and MifWf Sarrica
Tl 4-1536 719 WmI Iiiob
Quality Clowning tinea 1929
Bloomfield Hills and the late Mr. Leslie.
MRS. G. J. LESLIE
Healthy'•Scalp-Beautiful Hair
Striving for a healthy head of hair? Make certain first that the scalp is healthy—not too dry and scaly nor too oily. Both of these conditions can usually be corrected by giving the scalp the same attention one would give a similar condition anyplace else on the sldn.
The simple truth is, toe scalp is skin. Itrequires washing, ventilation, exercise and cosmetic attention’ the same as the skin of the face or arms. A professional beautician or cosmetician can advise on most scalp conditions .
Traditionally, the too dry scalp responds to cosmetic oil or other skin lubricant; the oily scalp requires frequent shampoo with-*-film-cutting final rinse in good quality witch hazel. Persistent itching or eruptions or too much hair loss should be referred to a skin specialist,,
The; Leather Look
Soft cotton suede is doing its bit to promote this season’s popular leather look.
-Jantsen cotrasts quilted and smooth suede with cotton knit for a wearable collection of slacks, easy skirts. Jerkins, cardigans, and shirts. The colors: fawn or olive.
JNeumode
Junae-CL-UeaA,
J
"CAREER GIRL’'
Area Pair Married in Ortonville
Reception in toe Holly Hotel followed the marriage of Karyn Lee Morgan to Morgan Taylor Mom, Saturday, in the Ortonvjlle Baptist Church.
The Clarence M. Morgans of Holly and Mr. and' Mrs. MU* ton M. Mom of Tripp Jtoad, Groveland Township, are parents ’of the couple wed before Rev. Roy Botruff., Imported hand-corded applique accented the bride’s gown and fan-shaped train of, white pebble peau de sole. A Swedish tiara secured her silk illusion veil.
White cattleya orchids centered her cascade of ivy and Stephanotis.
OTHER ATTENDANTS With honor matron, Mrs. Milton A. Moss Jr. were bridesmaids Mrs. Joseph Cav-agan of Flint, Mrs. John Clark, Bettylou Drewett and Junior maid Chari Edick.
The Edick twins, Nancy and Bradley, were ring-bearers. Julie Edick was flower girl , With best man, Milton A. Moss Jr., were groomsmen John Woodward, John Clark and Craig Bom1 Lee. Ted Wagoner and John Barton were Junto ushers.'
polymer
TRAVEL SERVICE CRUISE
1-CONSULTANTS
SmmmJI
pontiac mm satyia
m WMI NWWI	« **»»
Storage, %*!*&?*/ Repair, Restyling By Ex|»erU.
Pmn Arr ttmr Only Knollwan, 12.1 W. Maple. Birmingham *44.7936
the original and
. GENUINE RIPPLE* i SOLI!
HACK SHOE CO.
235 FIERCE ST. BIRMINGHAM

HI-RISE GIRDLE
"1590” fen* (that's the stylo number of this really wonderful girdle) are as loyal aa the day ie long. And with good reason! This design does an amaa* ing slimming job, right before your eyes. Finn front paneTSattens; lane elastic smooths back, hips, thighs. The hi-ris* waist cuts at lead an inch and a half off your waistline measurement. Comes in tone 26 to $4. $16.10.
SPEND 5 MINUTES IN OUR FITTING ROOM AND SEE THE DIFFERENCE!
SEAMLESS
SEAMLESS MieftO I WITH YIMY SEAMS J
82 N. Saginaw St.
Pontiac’s largest and most complete foundation department with graduate I	corsetieres to assist you.
I BOBETTE SHOP
Fm, Pirldnt r	Char,e Account.
I	16. N. Saginaw Street

THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1964
B-ll
Ninety** of the Wands and toOl of Mlcnmete In the Pa-:ific art Inhabited.
McLeod
Carpet Sale
FE 3-7087
Greenfield	V
Reception in DaarbstB la) followed tbs mar f ill g *of Diane Ruth Erskine to Mart; Richardaon, Saturday, to Martha-Mary Chap*!, Graenfldd YUtofe.
[I
Zlfi-
V wwv
SINGER
ZIG-ZAG SEWING FESTlVALI
VW^AMV^AMAl^AA^VVVVVVWW^VVVW
6-piece home sewing centerl
R Zi|-Za( SMriae
I 4. >W«Hnll|im twr 250 pn«. gj* BK* owing1 tel-
Mortf Moral Moral twlia M all Ui-zm nw-v ISO chinn, Ron-cnrc producti, TV Mil, records and notianif
Wfut'x new for Tomorrow Met RINGER todeyf
SINGER gs
SEWING CENTERS ^ 3
Tbelr/parent• in the Roboft A. Etakinee of Ifct-amora aM Ilia James Richardsons of Royal Oak.
?♦-. ."A / '•*.
A gold-throated -White orchid cantered a bouquet of white dnmatilans and Stepban-otis, complementing the bride's chapel-length gown of
feta.
Her bouffant illusion nil was secured by a circlet af soft si]k roses and seed pearis. HONOR MATRON
With matron of honor, Mrs. Edward Erskine ef Oxford, were brideamaida ton. Robert Erskine Jr. of Calumet and Sharon' DeVuyat of East Lan-•tog.
On the esquire side were Gary Richardson of Royal Oak bast man, and tubers Karl Chapman, Grand Rapids and John Rennels, Royal Oak.
The couple will honeymoon to Upper Michigan. Ha is a graduate of Farris State College. ,
MRS. J. M. RICHARDSON
hipUne in bonded crepe ie an obvious solution for fall, here shown with side deep inverted pleate in the A-line skirt. Sue Brett's elegant sleeveless with the' flattering jewel neckline accents the figure. In red, black, brown and blue in sizes 5 to J5, about SIS.
The So up's On in New Bowls
A novel touch for Informal meals is a set of soup bowls with a single short, stubby handle at one aide.
★ ★ ★
The American version of this French staple is made of stipple-finish plastic in sea green, blue, amber, and wine..
The flecked sttfface Will not show scratches, and the bowls are safe in the hottest suds or in a dishwasher, the ifianu-facturer reports.
Polly's Pointers
Can U$e Pin as Lock
By POLLY CRAMER Newspaper Enterprise'Assn.» DEAR POLLY—We had trau. Ue keeping the children’s school lunch boxes dosed until wp started to use medium tee sate ty pint aa locks on the catches. —MRS. E. G. M.
DEAR POLLY—My husband complained that I spent too mudi money on can openers. I had to agree with him. After using one. for a while it would slid and become hard to turn.
I corrected this by holding the opener under bot’running water for about ten seconds. This has saved time and money .r-CIMDY DEAR POLLY - I have a largo family so I cannot “repair sew’’ and iron on the same day. Sometimes it II several days before I can do this repair work.
On ironing day I keep a ' scratch pad and pencil handy. When something that needs repair work la farmed. I Jot it' down on a scrap of paper, pin the paper to the article and put the garment on a rack by the sewing machine.
On sewing day I can toll fit a glance what needs t3 be done to each garment. I hang them in groups as “buttons missing,”
“patches
“ripped
do not have to change the at>] tachments so often. — MRS. •L.I. F.
DEAR POLL Y-Tbe top of • pear-shaped canned ham can makes a nice electric iron tend. Cut it off with a can opener, smooth the edges and there it is,—BLANCHE
Share your favorite homemaking ideas . . . send them to Polly in care of The Pontiac Press. You’ll receive a bright, new silver dollar if Polly uses your Idea to Polly’s Pointers.
Party Idea Is 'Plum' Good
A favorite centerpiece at a child-’* party it. a “Jack tyr-
ner” pie. Ust a large bowl, cover it with aluminhm fdL Place tiny foil-wrapped gifts inside. Cover with a losst fit-ting foil crust Each child should get a turn at reaching in and pulling out a “ptum.”
geeeBMWMeeetfeeeeeeiiiwSiiEiiig"
I FREE Area-Wide
DELIVERY SERVICE
880 WOODWARD-lledieal Building I "SrtSSI* FE 2-8383 FE 4-9918

[EVERYONE COMES TO 7
The Home Of Roby Spareriba
j # /<T^ COCKTAILS LOBSTER TAILS STEAKS
BaRestau rant
998 West Huron - Pontiac
ON8 »tCCK WBT OF TEKMAFH Phcm. 332-7561
|t’s new
7. new
new
cold wave!
PREENOL neutralize—Proteinized waving lotion—and even proteinized end papers eliminate frizz of dryness. Luxury features never offered before at this price.
ON SPECIAL SALE
Reg. $10.00 Miss Zotoe incL cut 'n set
NEISNER’S
Beauty Salon 2nd Floor
PHONE FE 8-1843
GET READY FOR
ALL F’U’N NOW!
TRIM DOWN for FALL FASHIONS PAY ONLY...
CALL
334-0628 TODAY
Fo, a FREE Trial Vl.lt And Private Appointment No Obligation... Ivor
You'oajuid win as 1005 Mustang (on display at Dlok Lurie Ford) or one of 082 other prizes!
...TO WIN ONE OF THESE PRIZES IS TO CALL YOUR LOCAL OIL HEAT DEALER
. FOR AM ENTRY BLANK
Bight now, before you miss your chance, call the modern oil heat dealer in yoi^fc neighborhood and ask him'to send you a free entry blank to en^er the big Oil Heat Contest!
Then, when you receive it, simply fill it in and drop it in the mail* That's all You do. Nothing to buy. Nothing to^ compose. The contest closes October 31st All prizes will be giveh away in the Wayne, Oakland, Maoomb area, with the prize drawing to be held in Pontiac on November 10th.
YOUR MODERN M. HEAT -DISTRIBUTOR
({he nan who supplies the sorest, safest, swfojest fuel ef all!V
nofl
THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAT/OCTOBEE Yj.1064
HELPERS!
rm
' THU 0
WASHDAY**
W	FREE DELIVERY/ V,
FREE INSTALLATION! FREE SERVICE I ORDER BY RHONE , N-, ^ NO MONEY DOWN ^
SAVE *41” ELECTRIC DRYER WIRING COST
NORGE 2-SPEED 14-lb. CAP. AUTO. WASHER
Washes tip to a14-pound load, 2 speeds far wash, spin and rinse. 3 cycles. Water temperature selector. Automatic took eyeU. Timor controls, lint filter
PHILCO 2-SPEED 4-CYCLE FULLY AUTO. WASHER
RCA WHIRLPOOL 2-SPEED 12-POUND CAPACITY WASHER
a > poods, a cydot, pint now 8UWI0MC cycle.
HOTPOINT ALL PORCELAIN AUTOMATIC WASHER
RCA WHIRLPOOL DELUXE 2-CYCLE AUTO. WASHER
HOTPOINT DRYER AT SPECIAL LOW PRICE I
Porcelain proloctlon — dufablo psrcsloli
PHILCO
ILUXE 2-CYCLE AUTOMATIC GAS DRYER
©lent 12-lb- capacity, 2-cycle for wpciar d
RCA WHIRLPOOL 2-CYCLE AUTOMATIC GAS DRYER
NORGE GIANT 14-LB. CAP. AUTOMATIC DRYER
lot op la a 14-lb. load WRINKLI-FREII Larged
Fret delivery, installation and service. Full guarantee.
RCA WHIRLPOOL 2-SPEED 6-CYCLE GAS DRYER
Select It, pro sot It, feigetIHCltaese year speed — each wttih 6-cydo selections plus S boots and flex-
RCA WHIRLPOOL 12-LB. CAP 2-SPEED, 3-CYCLE WASHER
HOTPOINT 2-CYCLE AUTOMATIC WASHER
*\ NORQE FAMILY CAPACITY 2-CYCLE AUTO. WASHER Water temperatV selection. Hogttlar and oon-
Ho cycles. S fresh water rinses. Lint filter
•++V. Kdoty sidnXd^c^Zj^; ^
free delivery, installation ' % and service. Full guarantee.
RCA WHIRLPOOL 2-SPEED 6-CYCLE AUTO. DRYER
PHILCO
RCA WHIRLPOOL 2 SPEED IMPBUAL /MARK XII DRYER
Tap Iw pc del Ufatiidt electric automatic ntelsture winder. Automatic dryness selector, 2 drying speeds - geode and sepor speed. Automatic -elly shuts off at “dry enough” Ultra violet lamp.
RCA WHIRLPOOL 3-SPEED IMPERIAL MARK XII WASHER
Tep of. Hue Insperkd Modi XII. 10 cycles. New
i ^ppUAHCE
^ppUMtCE
THE PONTIAC PRESS, MOXDAY, OCTOBER 12,1964
Grand Slam Halts N.Y., 4-3:
Cardinals	Follow Trail of Good Luck in World Series
NEW YORK m—y ft____________
Brandi Rickey, now a consultant with the & Louis ebb. who once said:
“Luck is the residue of desire.” ■	.
The Cardinals must hare a lot of desire because through the years they have had a lot of hid hi World Series play.
It is this residue of desire that Helped the Cards win the World Series in ISM, 1930, 1934, 1M1 1944 and 1946.
The *1 triumph over fee New York Yankees Sunday which squared the 1964 World Series at two victories apiece demonstrat-
ed anew that the Cardinal hick
—	ballplayers ceil it “breaks”
—	is still holding out.
HERO HAILED
In Missouri, they are singing the praises of Kenny Boyer, whose grand dam homer in the sixth inning overcame a 3-0 Yankee lead.
In Lakewood, CaUf., and Toronto, Canada, they are rejoicing over the brilliant relief pitching of hometown heroes Roger Craig and Rq4 Taylor.
In Houston, they ate happy over Johnny Keane, who Is managing toe heck out of toe Cardinals, seeking his first
world championship in his 27th year of managing.
★ ★ *
But in New York, .they will tell you that it took a break for the Cardinab'to win the fourth game — ram miscue by die usually sure-handed Bobby Richardson on a sure-fire double play ball that would have ended toe. inn lug without u score.
There were two runners on bass with one out when Dick Gnat hit a routine grounder to the right of sdcond base. Richardson fielded toe ball, tried to shovel It oyer to Phil Lins for
what looked tike toe start of a twin killing.
Bet, Richardson explain what happened:
"ft get stuck in my web. As Phil came across, I hesitated, ferowinghim off his timing and when I threw it wife my gloved hand, Cart Flood hit Lins and be couldn't handle toe throw.’
Instead of the inning being over, the Cards had toe bases loaded. Boyer unloaded them two pitches later with a smash into toe left field stands. ifetfl then, young A1 Downing had a three-hit shutout.
Thus, Instead of toe Yankees
having s chance to end it at Yankee Stadium today, they must return to St. Louis Tuesday for a sixth game Wednesday, and perhaps a seventh game Thursday.
The Yankees’ Mel Stottlemyre and the Cards’ Bob Gibson, who clashed In toe second game, renewed their rWllry in the fifth game. ' V ‘■'t .
Stottlemyre qame putthe winner in toe first meeting, limiting toe Cards to seveta hits in an 64 triumph. Although he lost, Gibson was impressive, striking out nine in eight innings, permitting only two runs unto he
tired in toe seventh.
Sunday’s victory was credited to Craig, who handcuffed toe Yankees with Just two singles In 4 24 innings of relief pitching.
The 33-year-old right-hander took over with one out in the first liming after toe Yankees bad raked starter 'Ray Sadecki tor four straight hits.
Craig permitted a run-scoring single by Elston Howard, then allowed only one more while fanning eight before retiring for a pinch hitter in the sixth.
Carl Warwick, came through with a stogie, giving him three
pinch hits so fqr for A share of that Series record, igniting the winning rally. +
Taylor polished off the Yankees without a hit over the last four timlnga
"I like our club’s changes better now than I did at the start of the Series,” said Keane. “Whining this game set us up goad. Our pitching is set for toe final games, even if it goes the limit of seven. I sure like the way we stand.” *
Keane admitted that Richardson’s fumble of Dick Groat’s grounder was the big break of the game.r ,
Viking Quarterback
Lions
Detroit Takes 1st Place Tie on 24-20 Win
Tarkenton Hit Hard by Rushing Linemen 11 Times „
By BRUNO L. KEARNS Spirts Editor, Psatlae Press MINNEAPOLIS^ MINN. -Fran Tarkenton, toe scrambling quarterback of toe Minnesota Vikings, must have learned yesterday how the ancient captives^ felt when they were thrown to toe Hons.
* *
Tarkenton
FUMBLED TD — Detroit quarterback Earl Morrall (14) charges through the Minnesota Vikings’ line near the end inne to yesterday’s NFL game (top) and fumbles as George Rose, right, tackles him. But toe Lions’ Gail Cogdffl (bottom) grabs the ball as It bounces across to* goal line for a touchdown. The Lions won, 24-20.
Aayway, the Lions earned their first place pssMsn Sunday with a steady, but art
. saw Tarkeat— get Mt 11 and Viking smeared six tones far the yardage.
AO told, the Lions led by Sam Williams, Roger Brown, A lax Karras, Joe Schmidt and Wayne Walter wen in the Viking back-field 17 tones to take away IIS of the 399 gross yards made by
The Vikings up to yesterday wen the No. 1 offensive teem in toe NFL, averaging 3S7 yards per game. They did match this yesterday in groes yards, but after toe 17 tones Tarkenton and Co. wen hit behind toe Hne then were only 211 net yards left to Blow for their effort * * *
“Our defense was gnat” said coach George Wilson,” and I know it wasn’t p good field for running, hot I still think we would have contained Taifcen-too Just as good on a dry day.” FINE BLOCKING
“Our offense also did a real good Job. There were some fine blocks thrown and our runners did well on that field,” he added. He afe> pointed out that toe Vikings really bad only one good sustained drive in the game, and that came in toe third quarter when they soored their first touchdown on a 72 yard march to nuke toe score read IMS for Minnesota.
Vfti Vikings made it 94 la the first period on a St yard field goal by Fred Cat after recovery of a fumble.
The Lions came right back after toe ensuing kickoff which Tommy Watkins took in the sod zone and ran back 97 yards to tba Viking 4ft.
♦ * *
With Danny Lewis and Nk* Pletronionte eating up big chunks of yardage, highlighted to • 11 yard statue « liberty play between Earl Morrall and Hrtropaute, toe Lions went the 41 ydrai Jp seven ptoya.
Lewis, aided by two good
blocks Orem John Goody and Bob Scboits, went toe nbto yards (Continued on Page C4, CoL 1)
CHICAGO m — Bill Wade hurled four touchdown passes, two each to Johnny Morris and Mike Ditkag as the Chicago Bears snapped from a two game losing slump and walloped the Los Angeles Rams 39-17 Sunday.
W 4
The National Football League defending champions, now 24 for the campaign, turned three four Bill Munson pass interceptions into scores in fee first half for a 944 lead.
At.. *	*
In
Redskins Win, 35-20
QB Routs Ex-Mates
WASHINGTON (AP)-Samy Jurgensen bombed ids eld Phil-adelphia teammates with five touchdown passes Sunday as Washington whipped the Eagles 1940 to snap a four-game losing streak.
Os new Redskins teammates, meanwhile, did a good Job of containing their former quarter-bock, Norman Snead, but bad a tough time urtfe Eagle balftack Tim Brown, who morid' all thrM Philadelphia touchdowns.
Jorgenson and Snead rbaagid teams hi • major Na-
Jurgensen connected on 22 of 33 passes for MS yards, wife two Intercepted.
■This foefodfd 12 peases to Bobby Mitchell for ltt yards and two touchdowns.
The most mectacular play of toe grate came on Jargenaea’a 99-yard scoring pass to rookie Chariay Taylor, who tack the ball near the Hne of scrimmage and weayad’bis way down&Nd through most of the Eagle team.
HE T . 1	^
DALLAS — Don Meredith ran IS fords for a touchdown feat propelled Dallas to a 1S4J Na-
tional Football League tie wife the New York Giants Sunday. J MISS 2 CHANCES
The Cowboys- missed two chances to win when Dick Van Raaphorst missed a field goal from toe Giant 49-yard line with 2: IS left and another from toe 39 with three seconds remaining. J
Don Perkins ran for iJf yards before being injurtd in toe fourth period and took over the NFL rushing load wtto 49S yards. HapasMd Jimmy Brown of Cleveland, who got onto 99 yards against Pittsburgh Saturday night to make his total 410.
Ar ★ ■ *
New York took toe lead in the second quarter with two touchdowns, one set up when Dick Lynch intercepted a Meredith pass and ran to the Dallas 15, and the other when Y. A. Tittle passed 12 yards to Joe Harrison.
Van Raaphorst kicked two field goals and the extra point after Meredith's touchdown to give Dallas the tfe.
CLEVELAND (AP) - Parading continuously on the ground, the Pittsburgh Steelers beat toe
Cleveland Browns 23-7 before a crowd of 00,939 Saturday night.
NFL Standings
Orttn Bty Lo» Angelas
SATURDAY'S RESULT auroh XL Cleveland 1' SUNDAY'S RRSUWTS
“-“a» ityWg .
Chicago it Dalles
Richardson Takes Blame for Miscue
A break deckled Hie Cards’ first World Series triumph,'in 1926, against toe Yankees. That break came when Tony Lazzeri drove a long foul that missed being s game-winning grand slam homer by a hair, Just before Grover Cleveland Alexan- . der struck him out * • ★ ■
In toe 1931 World Series, two fluke hits and erratic support behind George Earnshaw accounted for four early Sf. Louis runs that gave the Cardinal* a 44 victory in the seventh game against the Philadelphia Athletics.
The Cards also won in seven games in 1934 when the Dean boys, Dizzy and Daffy, turned in two victories apiece against Detroit But the Series would never have gone the limit had not the Tigers committed 12 errors.
Ar '.Af ★
In 1942, a rookie right-hander named Johnny Beazley turned
NEW YORK (AP) - Bobby Richardson stood in front of toe cubicle in toe Yankee dressing room taking all fee blame for foaled up double play at-I led to fee St. Louis 44 victory over New in fee World Series Sun-
PhH Linz, however, refused to accept the plea of guilty and ruled his double plar partner innocent.	*
Richardson, Jammed into his cubicle by the mass of reporters, took one look at file gathering crowd and quipped:	k
“Poor Ken Boyer, he hit fee ball pretty good, and it seems everyone’s here.”
Then, quietly, and apparently without emotion, he explained his error -on Dick Groat’s grounder that loaded fed bases and set up Boyar’s grand slam' homer.
. “It was a ground ball hit to my right and I did not field it cleanly,” said fee Yankee second baseman. “It got stuck in my web. As Phil came across, I hesitated, throwing off his timing and when I threw it wife my
CA/cago fnc/s Losing Streak
fullback carried toe load after running mate Paul Homung limped off fee field wife an apparent groin muscle pull in fee second period.
Taylor, who scored on a one-yard plunge in the second quarter, seat fee Packers in front to stay wife a 27-yard burst.
However, the 49ers promptly surrendered the ball as John Brodie fumbled while trying to pass and Dave Manner recovered for the Packers at the 25.
Taylor, running wife reckless abandon, finished the day wife 133 yards in 23 carries.
A, A ★
Hornung missed field goal attempts from 19 and 35 yards out before he was injured on Green Bay’s 59-yard march for the first touchdown.
The Bears
Roman Gabriel bombed Bucky Pope on a 79-yard TD' play and later piloted ah 80-yard thrust that he capped fay fee opening minute of the fourth on a three-yard roll-out.
TAYLOR LOOSE MILWAUKEE (A-The Bay Packen turned Jimmy Taylor loooe for a fourth period touchdown and then cashed in a fumble recovery in rallying for a 34-14 National Foot-baD League victory over fee stubborn San Francisco 49ers Sunday, * .
..* ■ A *
A packed crowd of 47,390, fee largest ever to witness a pro football game in. Wisconsin, cheered ftyk* as the Jarring
in fee unprecedented feat of beating the Yankees twice in the Cuds’ four-out-of-five success. Joe Gordon threw away fee last game for the Yankees when catcher Walker Cooper caught him off second in file ninth inning, spiking New York’s final threat.
glove hand, Flood hit Linz and I he couldn’t handle fee throw.
“It was my fault all the way.”
Richardson also said thought had run through his mind to run to the base and try i and get Curt Flood unassisted, but “wife Flood raining, there’s always a chance be beats me.”
Richardson also said it was his fault when Linz was hung up between second and third in fee first inning. Linz had opened wife a double,-then looked like he was trying to steal third.
“I called the hit and run,” said Richardson, “And I did not < swing. I can’t think of any spe- ■ cific reason. I Just didn’t swing”
Linz said. Richardson had , made a “desperation^play” on Groat’s bouncer.
“Richardson made a heck of an play — 95 per cent of the second" basemen around don’t even get to the ball. All I had to do was catch it. There’s still some doubt whether he would have been out anyway.’’
Linz said Richardson’s throw “came up high over my left shoulder and at the same time Flood came in low and to my
right. I was caning across ____________
trying to go for the double play;
maybe if I could have reacted —*m.
quicker I could have given E by a better target. But I 1 already committed myself.”
Two years later, a wild throw by shortstop Junior Stephens helped the Cards score three runs feat gave them a filial 3-1 triumph over the SC Louis Browns. The 1944 Series will be remembered for Enos Slaughter’s mad* dash home from first on a hit to left cotter by Harry Walker. Slaughter scored the winning run in fee seventh game, much to fee chagrin of Boston Red Sox shortstop Johnny Pesky, who delayed relaying fee ball from fee outfield.
Slmmone r S • 1 Whinner 1 • I Schultz p III
T«Ml 111 tlx Tetats HUT

m
taKt*
i

SMILING HERO—St. I Cardinals’ Ken Boyer was all smiles after cracking a grand slam homer that carried Cards to a 44 win over the
Yankeek yesterday. The win ,mr, ............. ,
evened the Series at 24.	*	*
NO DOUBT ABOUTIT--Umpire Al, Smith (left to quite emphatic aa he calls Yankees’ Mickey Mantle out la first inning of fourth World Scries ball game yesterday. Second baseman Dal Maxvill (looking at Smith) took
throw from Cardinals’ right fielder Mike Shannon and put tag on Mantle who was trying to stretch run-producing single into
i
*
C-r*
THE PONTJAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCtOBEB 12, 1964
Schollander s Swimming Gold'Medal First for Ujnited States!
TOKYO <11— Blond Don Apo&Mdw brought tbe United Stfctae Hi first gold medal of tire Tdkyo Olympics Monday, winning the men's 100-meter freestyle convincingly in Games r$ord time of 58.4 seconds.
I : ★	■ tr-
ite United States also added i \ twee silver and one bronze medal on this -second day of ! competition, while Russia’sI blende young Galina Proaumen-1 scaikova acquired her country’s j second gold medal.	•
pchollander, an 18-year-old YOle student from Lake Qswe-j| ga Ore,, forestalled any possl-1 bli repetition of the 1960 dispute ! * inj this eyent with a clear-cut1 j ane oyer England’s Bobby Me- i
Gregor and Germany’s Hans Jqachbn Klein, second and third respectively in 53.5 and 54 flat. -’ The 100-meter freestyie produced one of jte major disputes of the Rc«ne Olympics, with j Austrslia’s John Devitt finally 1 being declared the winner over | tiie United States’ Lance Lar-sen. POURS IT ON Schollander, the world record	holder at 200 and 400 meterr freestyle, held a slight edgf at the turnMonday, then poured it on to the final 50. "It’s the greatest feeling of my life," .said the youth who to the outstanding favorite to win the 400-meter freestyle and also’ to scheduled to swim in the 400 and 800 meter freestyle relays and possibly the 400-meter med-! ley relay.	“I think to tha lut tow meters t was more tired than l ever have been to my lifo,” he said. "It was the greatest feeling to my life. I can’t tell you how happy I ton.’* ‘ ' He sold he was Confident he would win the gold medal. “Nothing bothered me at all," he said. "But I didn’t have a thing toft at the end.” Gary liman, San Jose, Calif.,	who had sat the Olympic record of 52.0 In the semis, was fourth to 54 fiat, Mike Austin of Rochester, N.Y:, sixth la 54.4. OTHER WINNERS 6ther U.S. medal wbutoro ■ were Jeanne Collier and Patsy Willard, second and third in WoroeD’s springboard dlqlag; bantamweight Isaac Berger second in weightlifting, and Kolb, second to Miss ProaUmen-schikov# to the women’s 200-	l old from Phoenix, took second in apriiVMUrti diving on the strength of an outstanding effort tm^ finM divief ^ving her a 'total of 1|0.20 points and a paper-thin edge over Miss WB-lard, Meaa, Ariz., who had 120.11. ■ to/ 'w- h ■ v Germany’s Ingrid Kramer-Engel, the defending champion, wen tbe geld medal with 145.0 points. > ■' ' ■■ In gtonral, American swim-	file M^meter backstroke within minutes of each other to winning their semifinals. Grad got it first, at «:1SJ, and moments lata* Dilley trimmed a tenth of a second off. Bob Bennett, Long Beach, Calif., also made it into tbe finals. ■ ff. a Sharon Stouder, Glendora, Calif., woo her heat in tiie women’s 100-meter semis to 1:01.4 and Kathy EUis, Indianapolis, also qualified for the finds to
| XVIII Olympiad			I The 15-year-old Russian girl was tilted to 2:46.4, a Games record, while Miss Kolb, from Santa Clara, Calif., finished to 2:47.0, •. ' j 'Miss Collier, a pert U-year-	men advanced as eqwetoti, with Miaa Kalb’s second place to the 200mrier breaststroke si' pleasant surprise. . Jed Graef, Perona, N.J., and Gary Dilley, Huntington, Ind., bettered the Olympic record to	1:62.5. -„tlr • • W f f Australia’s veteran Dawn Fraser, however, led the parade with a time of 50.0 seconds, breaking her own Olympic record. Jeanne Hailock, Arcadia,
Olympic Scoreboard
* OLYMPIC GAMES SUMMARIES Women's Springboard Diving Final — 1, Ingrid Kramer-EndOl, Germany, 145.00 poptii 1, Jeanne Colliar. Phoenix, Ark.. ISAM; X Petty Willard, Mete, Aril., 4. Sue GosstcK. Taring, C-H, 120,70; s, TEWiWE WktmH. Rbttl*. I2A33; A Elena AmMltBA Russia, Its AO;
Double Scull*
1st beat — l. u.S. (Seymour CremweH, New York CNy and Jim Storm, San Dla-
vancos to flfMI/
[kanaka Mabuchl, Japan, 125.2»i t, I lit heat — 1, Germany, 5:54.03 ; 2, U.S.
---- Hilbert, Germany, 123.17; t, 5:54.3#;. J, Italy. 4:#2.13; 4. Yugoslsvtl
—----■	4:02.43; S, Australia, 4:04.14.
FIELD HOCKEY
Pakistan J, Kenya t India 1, Germany 1, lit New Zealand I, Great Bril
talahim 2, Ham Kong o Australia 3, S. Rhodesia
1—1, Don Spare, L . I .
Cexed Fours
it Britain, 7;
I U.S. 7:1252;
I record I : 3rd haet - I,
1:21.30; A : 42.23; 4,,
Borman, Oeoewo____________
Us; tr Larry AnErEMEn, Los CEgfv 24.27; A Franco Cagnot-. .. BUS; 4, Kurt Mrtwtcka, Aut-SLE0; A Mlunxukx Kanalo, Japan,
A Kan SHibtrgtr,: River Forest, i 2nd Ha Mb % Mlkhe* Setonov, Russia, qhv 741 A L. L wSrUpilA 23.01; t,
Candler, Great Britain. tXUi 10.1 PoHillakh. Russia, 22.72.
—100-MITE R FREESTYLE teMtfBMJi— (fastest ,r“ ——-torfruiei) OwW
CalXl^reTS
- ifwjBi In teat, 2.;(.„____- — 1	, ,
llnr Rochester, H.Yj Ml S, Vuklakl1
Okab*. Japan, Siii 4. Denial Sherry.	_____
,Canada, UL 5, Tadanacy Bads, Japan.	..._____»
SSJTa Ranald Kroon, Netherlands; ftj; I .	YACHT
TTHorot Lamer. Germany, MJ)7 A Fig- I . . ,	Rite Clea*
IroiBotcenl, Italy. Ml.	•	1st Race — 1, Peter Barrett, Mequon,
■f lid — V Don IcsNahder, Late , Wls.. IASS 11 Iblll A WIBlbbn Xhweida. Oswego. Orev 54.#; L Alain Gottvolles. Garmony, 1,310; A-CdM Ryrlg, Australia. Fraica, 54-3; 3, Uwe Jacobean, Germany, 1,142; 4, Hans tWBUA NettertateA 1r MX- 4, Par-Ola Llndberg, Sweden, ss.h 017; A Ponogthtotts “rffillll Greece, A MnirlOb Vagner, CMdisitendtlo, 5SJ; nil A Midi ail McFaddan, Rtwdasla, Ml; L Barerd Gropeli. Prance, 55.7; 7, John j 7, Gyorgy Fnaczy. Hungary. 774; A |fi| SMtelrt, Canada, 51.4; I. Robert Lord. Mender, New Zealand, 714; I, hm pritam BJ.	- I	--- -1 - -
3rd Itaat — 1, Robert Mcregor, Brl-1 tain, 54J; A HERO Joachln Klein, Ger
Vladimir Shuvalev. U.A5.R., 55.0; L1 Frmca. l.in; X RMi#|lA Tatsua Fuiimofo. Japan. 55.1; Bangt. ••7. Oil; 5. Canada, 724; L Danmark, { Olot NordvalL Swedan. 54.4; A John *«>'?• Wswte. 0*1 A Great Britain, 520; Ryan. TSgiSk. SEA.	A Japan, 44»; IA UJ.
QUALIFIERS: liman, Austin, Scholtan-Per. Gottvalles. Jacobsen, McGregor,
Kleni. Patel.
MEN'S 10AM E T it BACKSTROKE haul* fastest M oueltfy Z 1st hear — Robert Bern Beach, Calif., fUAi A lit., k 1:17.3) J, Ralph Hutton,
Calif , made it into tha semis but no furthar, being timed in l:tt.O and failing to make the field of eight finalists.
■ ■	|	g
The United States ac|vi the maximum three' r into the finals of the individual rpedlw with/ C a r Robie, Drexel HiU, P*.J|m the way with a time	1
Since tw wps the firsttime event ted been teldilh Olympics, his time a record. .	'	■ '
. n ★...
Dick Roth, Atherton, Calif^ end Roy Saari, El BsgwndtM Calif.,-also reachad tha yH* with -times of 8:^,and liSLD
ImBI
WINNER CONGRATULATED - Don ^chollander (right), of Lake Oswego, Ore., is congratulated on his victory in the semifinal heat of the 100-meter Olympic freestyle swim in
t. MS; 1A T. Pochoco HUM-
t. Long I OsumT,
IfiSAiJ A HunrC Vain 'bschi' Ngfhorlandsi * ‘— i-------------I----- Pawmork,
ssns:
.. -
A Jurgen	-
___I WteWIng. _______ MB
JWSSTL«RWite, *:I7.0;
Ahos Gulyas. Hwigm MteFl. M. Eltol Chenaux, Puerto Rico. 2:33.1.	•	1
3rd hoot — l. Jad GrMf, Verona.
I: %
ousts Ferraro, Fury, |S.*.
. ff,	»VJW* OHIO Savio, Italy,
BrndT-^uppart. Odrmin, 3:17*; A Ivan Farak. Crachoslovakla. |:SAA <A Frladol $uda, Austria. 2:20.7;
S. Ronald Jacks. Canada, AflJ; A Geof-ffy jhapaBm JMdiTtiltA; 7, Kami Hand Chan, HM Kteir2:44J.	i
3. Jotsaf Calkany. MunSry, 3:1B.3. yy®IJ*b"B wregnar, Germany, 2:10.5: Carlos Von Dar Moath, Argentina. 2;|y.e;
A Robert CMpgM FraniSy 2:224 E	®kley,Oragl. Bennett.
Puktshtannjlip,. Reynolds, Mia Savin. “"hWjjli,. BBa Hjdtei. Kuppers. MY. Wagner. Van Osch. Van Der !
Mate* eiter Individual Medley (PeetdM 0 qualify fer final):
*- 1—1	VW** Rablg, Drexel HIM.1
Dr^n CM„
<, ,ea; "~2, UJURM; ii_
-. Jreal Brlteln, 744; A Rustle, 4M: 7, Argentina. 411; A Germany, Ml *. Australia. JOA IA PprtugaL 443.	<
5.5 Maser class tof Oacg — A Au'trMia.
A Italy. *74; A $4vlfiarl|nd. M __ an, 475; A Danmark, M> A Finland, 4W; 7. 'Hamby. Ml A Great Britain, 04; A Bahamas, 323; M U.S., 277.
Mar at _Ht race — 1, Bates Finland, lAM; A Rusal.,
Wl A Germany, 432; A U.S., 414; A Auxtt ■
177) IA Braill, Ml.
Cslkeny,' Maatn.
Dan Brand. OnRNmd. CaRf. and Man-
LIGHTWEIGHT—1
Gregory Ruth, BaBlRmni, no., oeteat-ed Mattl Pollkala, Ewadon. f . WELTERWEIGHT—171 pounds Ismail Ogan. Turkey, pinnod Charles TrlbbM, San Bernardino. Colli., 4:t1
Oravalnon. Australia. SitfJt; , Siefag Walnrtch. Garrnany, 5:07.1, A - CtMM Pare*, Pwerie JOoo, |:io.»; a , Vellte MmK Yugaalavto, jui.O; 7, on MHOa. HiteS JQIA Somchal ,
LIGHT HEAVYWEIGHT—2I]A pc
■. Gray SlmatiA Norfolk. Vav and A Jlev, USSR, draw.
BANTAMWEIGHT—125.7 pounds
HtaCA - “	‘—
*••141 A Taryy tuck. Auttrolto. S:ttJr H. Edo* CIMiwua PuWla Rlcu, 1:11 J: 5, Juan Fortuny, Spain. 5:11.1; A Man A lent*. Mexico. JWfj 7. Antonio Basto, Portugal, 4:1».7; A Luis Pat Fare,
Poland A US. a
FIRST GOLD MEDAL—Alexey Vakhpnin of Russia (colter) wears tbe first gold medal awarded in the 1964 Games at Tokyo. He lifted 357.5 kilograms (about 788 pounds) in the combined press, snatch and jerk for a new world record. Imre Foidi (left) of Hungary was second and Janpan’s Shiro Ochinoseki finished third. Kimono-clad Japanese girl carries the medals.
Olympic Ring King Loses Title on Cut
WATER POLE
•xlco. 5.00J; ' 7,
5:05.2; .. ...___________  „
A Rafael MMMdlA	Mpb
Charles Pox, N. RtedoetA 5:'___.
4th teal — I, Earhard Hell. Germany, 4:57.4; A Caaba AA Hungary. 5:05.4, i Sven VFerm, Sweden. 1:104; A 4 Flem-'no Alexander, Audrella. 5:10.1; eadmim dur Gltleson, Iceland, Y 15.5; A Perm Vaahtoranta,	FlnlanA	5:144;	7.	Guillermo Davila,	MBxtcp,	5:27.1;	A	Nareng
Chok-Umnuay. Thailand. 5:44.1,,
ROWiNg r4
Coxad palm winners MV final lei I teal-1, U.SJL Ed Ferry. Sealtef Conn Findlay. Bolmont, Calif.,- Kent Mitchell, Berkeley. CaW. 7:53.17.
CaxNax Four* winners Into teal and i i heet-2?‘U.S.A. Ted Mittal, Seettle; Dick
BAIKETEALL iy i<A Korea 44 t, Puerto Rke 44
' SOCCER 1, U.A.R. 1. fie ‘ -rgantlno , lie Ala A Korea
j TOKYO Cut eyes played , a major part during the first I day of the Olympic Boxing | Tournament Sunday and contributed to the elimination of one reigning Olympic champion, | Hungary’s GyukrTorok. i The flyweights sod miter-weights take to the shining new riqg in the Korakuen Ice Palace Monday with the chance others may suffer the same fate.
WELTERWEIGHT—147.7 P
M^TpHtrSZjrs&	In action will be welterweight
Genealogy:
Imperial
presents its
credentials:
•—-......•
Hiram Walker & Sons
Character:
86 Proof
Jhav;
Smooth
tujerenm.
Price:	J95	Z49
HCMIB MMKtr • M FRaV-MSieUiNT WHIJMrl • 70* MUX XfUIRAl SHbtll • NI04H W4U£* « SONS HOC «p^f m.
Maurice Frilot, the 3>-year-oId Marine corporal from Denver. Colo., who is looked upon as a likely candidate for a gold medal. But he may find the first round hard going against Ernest Mabwa of Uganda.
The United States was one of four nations to draw a first round bye in the flywei^it division so Bob Carmody of Brooklyn; N.Y., will ait it out Monday. His second round opponent will be Thapa Mansing of Nimal.
A dark horse m the flyweight division could be Walter Henry, an Irishman born in Hong Kong now boxing for Canada.
The first-round clash of two reigning Olympic dhampions, Torok of Hungry and Oleg Grigoryev of Russia, came to an and in the second round with Torok being led from the ring with blood streaming down his face.
An acciental butt by Grigoryev’s head after 1:46 of the round opened an inch-wide split above Torok's' right eye. He threw up his hands as blood spurted from the cut and he walked to his comer in tears.
Torok won the flyweight title at .the 1960 Rome Olympics while Grigoryev took the bantamweight crown. ■
Bantamweight Louis Johnson gave the United fitates its first victory when he scored a unanimous point victory over Jan Huppen of Holland.	*
, Johnson, a 25-year-old airman first class in tha Air Ferae from Portland, Ore., was twice warned to the second round by Finniafa referee KatoVa Sampila lor hitting with epeti gloves. He was also told to keep his head
AP-PteMei
Tokyo today by runner-up Alain Gottvalles of France. Schol-lander’s time was 54.0 seconds.
U.S. Cage Team Wins 40th Game in Olympic Play
TOKYO (AP) - Jerry Shipp topped the scorers tor the second straight day, collecting 18 points as the Untied States reeled oft its 40th consecutive basketball victory to Olympic competition today by whipping a tall Finnish team 77-51.
Shipp, 6-footO cornerman from Bartlesville, OHa., received support from Joe Catd-Arizona State, who scored 16 potots.
FOULED OUT
The Finns, who battled op equal terms with the U.S. Olympians throughout moat of the first half lost their precision when Martti Huhani Liimo, their top player, fouled out with three minutes remaining to the first half.
The Americans, who had been having difficulty passing and rebounding against the Finns, then broke out to a 36-27 halftime lead. The Finns were held scoreless for the first six minutes of the second half and the United States built a commanding 46-27 lead.
At that pdint, Coach Hank Iba began to clear his bench.
The United States won tts'first game 78-45 over Australia.
BFT^^T <11 Barnes	2 1 5
*11* Bradlty	4 B t
(ft Bream	a a a
liar |fi
• 44 Davit	ooo
0	0 0 Hanard	2 1 S
1	0 3 Jackson	204
------I | • 0 McCaffrey J • 4
Plklevaara -SOW Mullins	2 o 4
i i 1 Mag	I 11|
0 0 Wilson j|l
Says IOC Official
No CoM War in Diving
TOKYO Hi— The American member of the International Diving Committee said Monday there was no Untied States-Russia cold war to diving at the Olympic Games.
”1 think the judging so far has been better than at any previous meet," said Jack Smith of New York, the vice chairman of the group.
# •' ★ * ★ ■
Smith was commenting on remarks by Olympic gold medal winner Sammy Lee that the Russian judge to women's springboard diving was giving American divers poor marks and Russian divers abnormally good ones. ~
. • _ "I don't want to get into an argiqnent with a fallow countryman, but I think it’s the fairest judging I’ve ever seen,” ■ Smith said. "We have no cold war with them. These people are our friends.
'“We’ve been trying for 24 years to eliminate the element ' of country to judging,” he said. “We want the judges to judge the dim—not the country. Stories like the -one about the Russian judges being unfair can set ua back M years."
Olympic Schedule of Events
) (AW -mt Otyn
*	yf
— —n't MB. etejlBB .
CAGE SCRIMMAGE - Walt Hazzard (10) and Bill Bradley (5) scrimmage for a loose ball with Australia’s btodsay Gaze during the UB. basketball team’s 78-45 victory to the Olympic Games at Tokyo. Tito United States later defeated Finland for its second win of the 1954 games and 40th straight to Olympic competition.
Injuries Posing Problems for U.S. Olympic Team.
|:M ml, Mon. — Man's MB. * tens (Larry AnteteTpr —
Skirt tea tea. Scaredaia.
Caten, Breekhm. N.Y.it—_____________ ,
Memo n.v.; sgwm Eicteres. Break*
Hre. Mass.)	^	^	•
7 p.m.. Mon.4:3k ML Tuat. — BaaBEG toll: I p.m., UAL rare I l:M g.m.. Fm-lana Urejuati IB fjil. My Relate) 11:30 p.m.. Mtxlen-teprM RMi 1wj» Ruosk Hunetry; 1:31 are.. Aurtralte YugoalavlB; 5 a.m.. Canado Jagan; 4:10“ are.. Karee-Braili
_____IVraiEi^Oarman. Hsiw VtrkTiSrtl
AtereaattL Loo ARmteA. CaW.; Kaa BStargar. River FareaL tl)	~ “
7:3a are., mm, — 7MmV* <00 mefarv. froostyle iwlmmlim relay (BIN MMmrr' Mot*. Aril.; Ed Townsend. Santa Clare,. Coin.) Mite WotL tan Jaaa. CaW.i Dave Lyons. KeteMrflL IN.)
BOWINB BBMIFINAL
0	are., Man. - Rowing npechmo and
oamteidb.
1	ore. Mon. - wowmiming. IlgM-.
USA Nrltirlsnds.	.
land. Laanti. M. Lllmo.
TOKYO (AP) - A question j i s j mark still surrounds the status ' of pole vaulter John Pennel, marathoner Buddy Edelen and discus thrower A1 Oerter, three key members of the strongest U.8. track team to Olympic history.
And although Coach Bob Cie-gengack has been minimizing the injuries to several athletes, there is no doubt that the UJS. showing could be affected. LINGERING PAINS * Pennel, one of the two vault-ROME (B — Despite its disap-1®11 “	to **•« 17 *®®».
pointing showing here, the continue* to be troubled by a United States still rated es a top1 lln8erin8 pato to Ms bade end favorite today for tha next I skipped practice sessions. World Amateur Golf Champion- , ‘*I *,B’t1know "°w “d®" ship to Mexico to 1906.	(is,” Pennel said. "I had planned
Players and officials who took; part to the fourth champion-
ship which wound up Saturday	^mrialf^'u.iitL.jL
with Britain first and the Unit-	hf* *
ed States fourth behind, Canada
and New Zealand, corded ^|SbtaSuJT	*
wMfm;tooearlyto make really | ..Jh.ndsMike beck .U the
Britain Takes Amateur Title
accurate estimates about the fifth championship.
time I’m running,” Edelen said of fajs back/ “I’ve just got to gut
era; Bob Schul, 5,000 meters and Rex Cawley, 400-meter jumlles.
Lindgren rammed into a hurdle Sunday and bruised Ms right knee. But the trainers minimized its seriousness.
, * \ * ’ *
Siebert has been weakened to his workouts by a virus. Carr is just beginning to shake off a twinge to hie back. Schul has •ore calf muscles and Cawlty has been bothered by scar tissue to his thigh that sometimes acts up.
are. Mon.-5 are,, Tuts.—VaBay » * p.m., NaNteiateMUBA; II are.,. —*— '-Tjary; j a.m. mmT nirnmwf > wiC BrazILBulaarla JR> . pan-Korea; I are. Bamanla-UtA warn on.
.2 ML MML — VBMBk . T .	-	-,.i
u * «.m. Yuaotlavlo Morecca.
i 1 Tu«i!
Tims__Water paH.
5 a.m.-7 are. Ten.-ML
7 are. Tuaa. Map'*
Sculls Team Posts Victory
But few seemed ready to play it out. The other day when I ran down the U. S. potential. The » miles Twas tempted to quit Americans entered the tourna-1 three of tour times. TB try to ment here as defending chain- rug me more time and thed just pion. But a quartet of British rest up to file Mg one“
golfers, playing superbly Glega«ack told Oirter’s rib through driving rains and gusty injury was “showing improve- j winds, easily displaced them, ment, "but he still is to pato. He Weather was considered an to reporting to tr*toh« quarters i important element to the out- every few hours to teat treat-come even by the Britons. ment. We’re keeping hitii tightly j Non-playtog British team cap- trussed up and that’s the way be j tain Joe Canr, from Dublin, will compete." said,’ "I thought that this weath- f Other UR. stars with snorted **'	....hnito.
SETS RECORD—Don Schol-lander of the Unfied States won a gold medal in the 106-
. ..	- ..	... meter fTOestyle ewtanihtag
er would do our team no harm., ailments are Blaine Lindgren, competition at tha Otynmie We’re fairly used to it. And I j high hurdler; Mriy Siebert, 000 Games today in a record tkme must say I have no complaints.”1! meters: Henry Uarr. 100 mat-1 of 58.4 seconds. ' ~
TOKYO (to- A United StatolC * j double sculls team moved tatnr.2 the final round of the rowing event Monday with an easy vie- -" tory over a German duo as flit X second dty of the Olympic' Games storied to -dear, crisp I weather.
i’ '.	♦ w '■* r<- ‘
Seymour CromweH of N e w “j ' York and Jim Storm of Sui,:i Diego raced to tiie finish lfito ‘ four, lengths ahead of Helmut Labert and Joseph Steffes-Mies. to the first tend on (he 2JWJ '’-meter Tods regatta course. ;
The U J. pair jumped to front it tiie start and never relinquished the lead, -as they r#^ ceived an en^nistostic ovation from several tiiotiaand specta- - r tors.	B .frilf*
A1 Rosenberg of PhUadriphto, coach of the U J. rowing team, immediately gave Cromwell anK-. Storm a big chance to win itf: the finals Thursday.	’18*2
“This pair is perhaps the , strongest In Toltyo," Rosenberg,, taid. ^fhty are really 8tnef“-Wd have good combination."
K i'.	-'’m	*»>•
Hard-Charging Una* Slows Huskies
By JERE CRAIG Waterford Township’s defense wanned to its task Saturday night in numbing cold that saw the Skippers give coach 8tu Thorell Ms first win over Pontiac Northern, 96.
Playing on their own gridiron for the first time this year, the Skippers pushed over a third
BACK IN SKIPPER HANDS - Waterford’s SUppers surround Amvet Post No. 12 commander Larry Saxton after winning the. Jimmy Dey Trophy Saturday night fay beating. Pontiac Northern, 90. It ii the first time the
The Skippers’ only other conquest over a Northern grid teem came in lNS, the first time the
It was all the margin needed. Northern only made Skipper territory once in die second half. Speedy Mike Samuilow took the opening kickoff 41 yards to the Waterford 42. The Huskies did not move the ball beyond the 40.
They were eventually pushed back to their own 90 and punted. Waterford took poeseeskn and drove for its seven points.
STATISTICS
Ron DuQingham rah 10 yards in the fourth quarter with a .pats interception for Emmanuel’s score. The Lancers (1-2) also had die ball three more times in the quarter but lost it on fumbles and a pass Interception addle attempting to go ahead.
8L M)ke took a 7-0 third quarter lead over Farmington OLS after Mike Backes took the kickoff to the visitors’ 90. Roger
and Systems Representatives
North Farmington’s Raidas* routed Birmingham GrgfVav, 98-0, and Livonia inadtad Off Detroit Thurston, 19-7.
The -R f id a • S broke a M deadlock with 21 patata hi fluf
'OFFICE PRODUCTS blVISION'
John McDonald, Bin Otder-ahaw, Tom Traugch, Jim Cock-els and Andy La wing posted star-pointers for the. Raiders. Trausch closed dm scoring with a 15-yard fleM goal.
To Arrange for dm Interview
CALL MRS. VANN
THE font'sIAC PBEgS./ MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1964
With eight minutes in the quarter, Bobby Thompson made a fine over-tbohead interception of a Tarkenton pass and he IS-turned 24 yards to the Detroit 40.
township team has won the trophy since 1959. Identifiable Skippers are Steve Main (49), Tom Hoke (39), Mike Elwell (66), Larry Schiesel (54) and Jim Mason (68).
NEWPORT BEACH, Calif. (AP) — Requiem mass will be said Tuesday for Walter Podola $0, who skippered the yacht Columbia jn the 1964 America’s Cttptriala.
★	* w . .
Podolak suffered a heart attack Saturday while sailing his 16-meter sloop Coquille off Newport Beach. Aboard were his wife, Charlotte, mid son, James.
The coroner’s office said die vessel radioed far help, but a lifeguard crew's efforts to revive Podolak with oxygen and heart massage were futile. „
He was president of the Piast-icon Products Corp. in nearby Santa Ana.
Podolak lived on Balboa la-
St. Fred, FOLS Win
O LSM Trims Lakers, 25-6
Detroit St. Agatha and Orchard Lake St Mary continue to move toward a last-game showdown hi die Northwest Catholic League rape, each posting Sunday victories.
St Frederick, meanwhile, went outside the league Saturday night to nab Ha first win of the season; and St. Michael lost a tense battle to Farming-ton Our Lady of Sorrows Sunday.
Orchard Lake St Mary rallied from a 44 first quarter deficit far a 264 trhunpb aver Waterford Oar Lady of Lakes
Cook, ran to the two-yard-Une and then plunged over.
Backflaid ace Miles Kearney of FOLS intercepted a Mike-men pass at Us own 20 and ran 49 yards to start the Lancers’ comeback. Four plays later Kearney ran seven yards to score.x Trailing 7-6, FOLS caught Backes in his end zone after he retrieved a bad snap from cen-, ter in a punting situation with five minutes left in the game.
The Shamrocks then drove to Farmington’s 15-yard-line; but time ran out.
Rick 8t Louis scored on a 32-yard pass May from Tad Mot-stager as Waterford OLL took a 96 lead over OLSM, but Ed Ignacxak’s one-yard plunge tied the score in the same period. SCONNGPA88 Dennis Wilczewski collaborated with Bob Lacklnaki for a 96-yard touchdown pass in the second period that gave the Eaglets a permanent lead.
Fred’s victory1 was sparked by Mike Dean’s 72-yard second quarter punt The boot put Emmanuel on its six-yard-Une, and Darrell Hutto was spilled on the first play in his endzone by John GuiUcan.
The ensuing free kick set up a 47-yard drive by the Rams wUek was culminated when Deaa sad quarterback
Total Not Yerde Gained Pauoi Attempted Panes Completed Penes Intercepted by
Detroit Country Day built a 13-6 halftime lead and went on to. a 996 victory .over Warren Woods. Jon Marks scored twice and Steve Tarczy and Mike Dunn once each fbr the Yellow Jackets, who are now 9-1.
Royal Oak Shrine’s Jim Seymour missed a 12-yard field goal from an angle in the final' 10 seconds of play as the
Knights settled for a 6-6 tie with Detroit Holy Redeemer.
Ferndale St. James remained unbeaten and untied by pounding St. Cecilia, 46-7; and Birmingham Brother Rice remained winless with a 296 loss to Harper Woods Notre Dame.
Pierre LaPrarie scored two touchdowns and an extra point for the Dales.
FOUNDRY PERSONNEL
Chrysler Corporation's new foundry facility is under construction. This modern, efficient, Detroit hosed plant offers immediate opportunities to exporiencod gray-iron foundry ,ptrsonnol. Attractive salary, pensions, insurance and rtfated personnel benefits.
MANUFACTURING ENGINEERS
•	TOOL AND PROCESS ENGINEERING SUPERVISORS
•	PROCESS ENGINEERS *
•	TOOL ENGINEERS
•	PATTERN ENGINEERS
•	METHODS AND STANDARDS ENGINEERS
•	PATTERN DESIGNERS
•	SKILLED MAINTENANCE FOREMEN
QUALITY CONTROL
•	QUALITY CONTROL ENGINEERS
•	METALLURGISTS
•	LAB TECHNICIANS
PLANT ENGINEERS
•	Facilities	,
•	LAYOUT
•	MECHANICAL
•	ELECTRICAL.
•CIVIL.
•	MATERIALS HANDLIfJS
•	DRAFTSMEN
PRODUCTION SUPERVISORS
•	CORE ROOM FOREMEN
•	FOUNDRY FOREMEN
(cleaning, moulding, melting)
SAFETY ENGINEER
Send complete resume, including salary requirements toi
CHRYSLER CORPORATION
MANAGEMENT EMPLOYMENT DEPT.
341 Massachusetts Ave., .Highland Park 3, Michigan 48203
As Equal Opportunity Employor
EXCITING 64th ANNIVERSARY OFFERS FROM FIRESTONE
(wear
mwl-DI
Go To Orion
For Your
G TO
Md SAVE at...
BBSS JOHNSON MOTOR SALES
f\\ lUim liwUi	I
ANNIVERSARY PRICES
'firestone
^^^lNinter Trends
f	___ ./nun nitfkl TIDPC
N RETREADS ON SOUND TIRE BODIES OR ON YOUR OWN TIRES
Immediate Openings for Salesmen
For those who qualify, we.offer challenging and Awarding opportunities to participate In end solving business problems. IBM is interested In , persons with a collets degree, under BS. who I desire « earner In antes. Previous experience In the office equipment field is not required.
ja aiif 017C WHITEWALLS ANY olLt or Blackwalls
All Tires Mounted
Buy on	OPEN . EVENINGS Imrtitin	firestone double guarantee
		Our rebeade. identified by MedaBton and shop me* am WtafinSeed by tfcaMeende and thousands et Pbaetam
NO MONEY DOWN		Dealars and ateree throuohowt the U.t. and Canada |. nendSeataeaJS', 2. taetae Ita of tat sesd. pm etr un tar tt montms.
TSia —e—*•** •W wlnr/tan	bouri hen	on Ffreetone prioe ourrent et Sm oT edpnw^nt* Wmtaee Uat-Cheme o/eSeSta et taerae Oaptayini pm Hietaeae Oml
Priced as shown at Firestone Stores, competitively priced at Firestone Dealers and at all service stations displaying the Firestone si
OPEN TO SERVE YOU Week Days 'Til 9-Saturdays Til 6
146 W. HURON
'	. FE 4-9970,
140 N. SAGINAW
1 ^ 333-7917
* O-f
tigs PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 18, 196*
t'SW#
■ w|WU EHfltl [ilji
srs.; t ji 8 rjj IS
E? I; Hi 1.1:18
P—COUPON-i
This Cowpow Worth
5t
Toward Oar 9 Hole Par ) ' o Oar Hf l^ia Caarat
WATERFORD HILL COUNTRY CLUB
6633 Dixie Hwy. MA 5-2609
Bump Elliott Gets
OSU Passes Mini in Big 10 Grid Upset
By the Associated Presa
See! Thli really IS unbeaten Ohio State’s year to pass! Why, Coach Wood/ Hayes doesn’t even get air tick Anymore when Obe of his quaterbacks cocks an arm.
Sharpshooter Don Unverfeth •is Hayes Exhibit A in his defends against charges of ultra-conservatism. A nationwide television audience can serve as jury Saturday when the Buckeye Big Ten leaders play host to Southern California in an intersectional test.
TRADEMARK
With judicious use of the forward pass, the option threat of
the Unverferth rollout and the play axecutioff which has become a Hayes trademark, fourth • ranked Oh jo Slate stunned Illinois’ No. 1 forces 28-,0 in the big conference showdown this past weekehd.
The Bucks threw for more yards than they ran, ISO-116, with two completions going tb tackle • eligible Jim Davidson. And this is the team where it was once rumored a pass call in the huddle was punishable by benching.
★ . ★ *
With Ohio State an exception, most football powers get down fo grass-roots campaigning this week led by top-ranked Texas,
SERVICE
SALE
Package Includes Everything Every Car Needs Twice-A-Year
Complete Service* 6 Worth $24 to $27 ▼ Next 10 Days For Only
1095
■	CMKE-IT
■	NLYSU9/VL
BRAKE ADJUSTMENT
Stop safely! Go safely! We’D remove front wheels; check al components; adjest brakes; add fluid'and check entire system. Available separately. $1.19.
FRONT-END ALIGNMENT
Easier driving! Lass wtirfl We’ll align front end by correcting aster, camber and toe-in; check all parti; AND SAFETY-CHECK ENTIRE CAR! Available separately. &50.
COMPLETE MOTOR TUNE-UP
More power! Better mileage! Well check, dan and adjust spark plugs, points, condenser, ignition wires. Ayaitable separately $6.66 6-cyL; $8.88 for 3-eyi. can.
FRONT WHEELS BALANCED
Smooth ride! Reduce wear! We’ll remove front wheels; balauct to high-speed precision; check tin condition. INCLUDES ALL WEIGHTS! Available separately for $5.00.
RADIATOR FLUSH A REFILL
taH.lfMMMMaUlal.riKa> latsd rust; refill with Goodyear Permanent Anti-freeze. Available separately, $150	\
REPACK WHEEL BEARINGS
Prevent expensive bearing replacement. We’ll clean off eld gum and grease; repack with new winter lubricant; check all grease sasls. Available separately, $2.00.
f Aati-Freete litre
SUBURBANITE RETREADS
WHITEWALL PAIR DEAL
2 ro«
Any 14 inch Six** No trade-ins required
fo goodAear
SERVICE STORE
SO S. CASS Open Mm. A Fri. TM 9 P. M. FE 5-6123
_£L
which faces nioth-ratad Arkansas. If the Longhorns are to be tackled short of a second straight national title, tbs Ra-zorbacks are given the beat rhsnrs to do it.
Texas beat Oklahoma 2B-7 for its 15th straight victory while Arkansas downed Baylor 17-6.
After two straight intersectional defeats. Oklahoma opens a bid to regain lost Big Eigrt supremacy against awakening Kansas; Nebraska, ranked eighth and the conference defender, draws the most stubborn Kansas State eleven in years.
If Mississippi has suddenly found itself kayoed in the Southeastern Conference race, pre-season favorites like Illinois, Auburn and Washington already are back to the wall. Meanwhile Florida, Florida State, Syracuse, Georgia Tech and Louisiana State are pushing for rank.
Alabama, voted third in the most recent poll, knocked off previously unbeaten Ndkth Carolina State 214 with a little help from ailing Joe Namath and now takes its 3-0 SBC mark against defensively tough Ten-
Georgia Tech comes off its conquest of Navy to tangle with Auburn, which is minus the services of All-America quater-back Jimmy Sidle due to a dislocated shoulder.
UNBEATEN TEAMS
Undefeated LSU visits fifth-ranked Kentucky, picking up the pieces from its 46-6 pasting from Florida State. After handing Ole Miss its second SBC defeat, 36-14, Flordia takas on South Carolina.
Syracuse bombed UCLA put of the undefeated-untied class 36*6, stopping national total, offense leader Larry Zeno cold, j Next for the Orange: Penn State.
Powerful Notre Dame, ranked sixth, moves from its 34-7 victory over Air Force toward a date with the Same UCLA has threatened to do more pass-Bruins.
Although Hayes frequently ing, Ohio -State usually resorts to a tried and true quaterback-fullback running attack.
In three gamee-one-third of the Ohio State seasoo—Unverferth, the dandy Dutchman, has completed 26 of 51 passes for 350 yards. That’s just 56 yards shy of the entire aerial output in 1963 when four different Buckeyes completed 46 of 103 tosses.
W Victory b 1st Since'55
Wolvarlnai Rally for 17-10 Victory
ANN ARBOR (AP) - Michigan’s football team awarded the game bell to Coach Bump Elliott, Saturday after soring two touchdowns in foe last eight minutes of play, defootmg Michigan State 17-16. ,
*1 guess they figured it was a long time coming * the smiling Elliott said.
It marked Me first time an Elliott-coached Michigan team had defeated MSU and the first Wolverine victory over their arch-rival since 1955.
Unbeaten Michlgaa’s next opponent is Purdue. * ■ INSPIRED TEAM An inspired MSU c the Wolverines to 124 yards rushing. Michigan had averaged slightly more than 391 -yards a game in its first two outings.
Jim Detwiler, Michigan’s top _ wind gainer entering the game, finished with a minus one-yard 4n seven carries.
	
C% 4^* i A	' 'NWF FWkf ,
* v ' £ Jr * ^	* ■
	’•m ^
MANHANDLED - Michigan State Quarter-- beck Steve Juday is caught in a Michigan vise : by Wolverine Jim Conley (left) and Berry Dehlta (31) after the junior from Northville	gained three yards on a roll-out. The Wolverines rallied to the fourth for a 17-10 Mou fory.
Orchard Lake St. Mary 15, Waterford Our Lady of Lakes (
Farm Mg ton Our - Lady a
• ■ GRAVES
| fl Cmll t/« Anyth** OR 4-151 lj|
■ 66IU6I6IIIIM6
Miming*Id* 4t Sooth Dakota t*
Utah State St, Wichita 7 Miami (Ohio) 17. Kant State 14 Bowling. Green St Weetem Michigan I
■I Augustin* 77, New Belli-St. Mery ft >
Mr Shore* St. Gertrude it Marine fleiy Creie 7	•
Northern Michigan It Central Michigan t
Stopped on the ground, the !
Wolverines went to the air. j They scored both of their touch- h downs, and two extra points on t suiShl .
noccoc	Wayne St. 6, western Reserve o (tie)
passes.	*	■ ,	.	■ Omaha it, Bradley ■
Quarterback Bob Tlmberiake cermii 7. E..tom Michigan > hit Rick Sygar with a five-yard | I^inglm it Mo^"unioii 1* scoring pass for thtf Wolver-toes’ first touchdown.	j Aantaae u. wtmWj* 7
Sygar took a pitchout and, Uramu* n. wapkjna » threw to John Henderson for 31	*
yards and the deciding touch-
■	tijM	Wta^itk 11 ~	-
Temple 44, Beetan U. 1
VFI St *
Florida St	■ .
South Carolina Freehytertan 1
■on a
Virginia St VHU W Ooh* 14. Maryland 17
Fumble*
m
■ 7-IS4-17
:H4
down with less than three njjp-utes to go.
^ N t	|	* v—ww«
Michigan, trailing by a point,	t«
went for the two-point conver-1 Amhen* w. bwmomis sion after the first touchdown.' SflMtA>Fel!nTM:'
But Mel Anthony was tackled i yffSST*, inches short of the goal line, j Muhlenberg 7, Fonn Militant 4 A Timberlake-to-Steve Smith ' **ww!?Sva»eo* st Trenton stole 7 pass gave them two more points after the second touchdown. r “We went for the two after the , first score because we wanted j to win it right then and there,”
Elliott said, “we weren’t that, __ confident of scoring again.”
MSU Coach Duffy Daugherty f1*6?"** ?■- Wor1!,^c*r°lin* su said “it looked like the turning, !S»si point would have been the two- owK w. point conversion try. Maybe **»»•" *2 Michigan should have made it mSS*u . -We at least would have had1 v£3Sm»fcwSwIwd more time to try to come w.minm.n st^»T?itLity w
back” ‘ igg&aSE
FIVE PLAYS
Michigan State scored five j plays after recovering a Mich-1 t«u* si. ohmm!.- . igan fumble on the U-M 17 on I ftg™*• the second play of the game. I w*jt T***» **•*• n> "®r* T"“* *t*1 Steve Juday went to from aUrhanadair.epytard.. . _ .. yan| out.	j Tww> TdA sTtCw tmmrn y «
The Spartans twice got doee enough to toy for field goals later to the game. But Dick —the bare-footed kicker t |
46-yard, three-pointer last week led foe Spartans to an upset victory over Southern California
Michigan finally got on toe scoreboard when Tlmberiake booted a field goal from toe 16 on the last play of the first half. He had missed earlier from the 32.
Tht Citadel JJ. Richmond t
Tula* St, IlmiltaSS
Southern California JI, Tax** ABM 7
lie fl. Dayton 7 n Mlatliaippl SB I
TRUCK DRIVER
Itima o .aml frutk 4rl»ar. Training an NSW AND MOM M WHIT! DIHU ANO OAS HO
9IOS. Terms, Rlocement Aid.
TRUCK 6RIVH SCHOOL ’
Red Wing Hockey tt Olympia OPENING GAME OF THE SEASON THURSDAY OCT. 15 AT 846 P. M. WINGS re. TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS SEATS $4.50 - $3.75 - $2.00
ALSO SUNDAY 00T. 18-CHICA80
CALL TT 5*7000 FOB TICKIT INFORMATION
Red Wiag Hockey it Olympia
BOWLERS f
10-DAY SERVICE
WE QKIATE OUt OWN LETTEIIHG SHOP
SELECT FROM* OUR COMPLETE LINES OF BOWLING SHIRTS' ON HAND!
"Stef h or Oiler by PImm ... We Will Deliver
if a fetichA
MY 3-5191 LAKE ORION
*., Detroit ServIM 15. OfM* *■ MKmf • * Harper Wood* Naira Dame M> Sirmlng-
M | DaJrolf rSala*laif	Detroit U of D k
PataS Inti hmli
■	4» . »| I
mm tohM.
: Jil : g.»j
: 1 JI
441	5-40 )	Shrlna	ft
J	f	Cantor	Un
M	44	Cathorino a
»	14—17	Horpor	Woada
i >—It1 Dearborn *t.
I Detroit ft. Itanllaua IT, DaWott «. Roto I | Detroit St. Philip 41, Detroit jt. Charle* *
Detroit l i Detroit
r. Philip 41,
I. Martin 71, -latlvlty 41, Do

mm pets from TM A tteodeoco—71,234.
SwdScidt
Safi:—^	** '
DON'T WAIT.
THE TIMS |§

TAKE-OFF TIRES	1 These Tires eff 1 j
35% off 1 Cimriaifarl Dafail	1 naw ears whose 1 j H immhi changed ■ j 1 to GENERAL 1 1 DUAL Ns
luppBma KGTOii rnCi	. ™ ' 1
AUTO PAINTING
DIAMOND GLOSS I SUPER DIAMOND GLOSS
«ntf-= >snt5'-=
swmt MAMONDGLOW'
UNCONDITIONAL LIFETIME GUMMTEE
KS
GENERALT
mSr
ED. WILLMMS
451 S. SAOMAW 6t RAEBURN, Pontiac
4Sc/ee<&
147 S. SAGINAW
FEderal 4-9955’
'Tv
Al Geiberger, a PGA veteran who probably 'had the beet chance of overtaking third-round leader Roy face, saw his short pine fall apart as he finished tied with Claude King and Bob Batdorff at 384.
McCallister and the rest of the PGA cast took off for the $77,777 Sahara Invitational GOB Tournament, starting Thursday at Paradiae Valley in Laa Vegas.
CORVALLIS, Ore. (ft — An Oregon State University varsity football player, Gary Dale Casey, 84, Concord, Calif., was killed Saturday night in an automobile acei-dentist Corvallis.
>T. 1-75 AT htfitsstae 00. EXI
EAGLE
THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1964
Homer Wipes Out Miscue
I Series Goat Now Hen
NSlf YORK (AP) — On Ken and the Yanks went on to their “It’s an emotional feeling you
eyflb‘»	^ ar	MMtoMffmjtitagygfcfod
aauch 'asai
goatliorni.
• hero’s mantle looks «on appropriate than
|M1
! The St. Louis Cardinals’ All-Star tidrri baseman is a hero today, but he could well have aeon a bust. He propelled a ehangsiul from Al Downing into Yankee Stadium’s loder left field seats for a grand slam home run in the sixth inning Sunday, giving the Cards a 4-3 victory over the New York Yari-koea and e we n i n g the World Series at two games each.
In the first inning, Boyer made * bad throw in a rundown
three runs. And before his four-run homer, He had gone l-for-is in the Series, and was on 'a string of U hitless appearances. GOAT TO HERO
But that one swing turned goat into hero and hitting flop into hitting star. And even for a 10-year veteran like Boyer, it was'a tension-filled experience.
"I remember ducking into the dugout and Johnny Koaite Card manager saying aomething to me. 1 couldn't hear him because of the din, and I tried to ask him what he had saHj, But my mouth waa so dry I couldn’t say any-
ln NHL Opener
BruiRSr Rangers Paired
BOSTON (AP) - The reetyled Boston Brains, skating for the playoff berth that hat eluded them the past five ydars, will have three new facet in the National Hockey League opener agatoat New York tonight.
Condemned to the cetlfr for four * straight campaigns by fodr own defensive ineptness, $ia Brains now have veteran toft wing Ab McDonald, right
MissJessep Wins Hillside Open Golf
SANTA BARBARA, Calif. JAP) — Pour consecutive toirdiea in the last round brought dtuth Jessen in with a 388 in die *8,508 Hillside Open Golf Tournament Sunday, giving her the $1,300 first prise and making •her t h e second-place money Winner on the Ladies’ Professional Golf Association tout.
I Her 87 broke the course Record for the tournament. Kathy Whitworth and Marlene Bagge took 80s last year on die 1,304-yard, 73-par course. Miss dessea foot 71-71-67-109.
" * * *
1 Second was Shirley Englehom St 73-71-78—314, followed by 9Um Hagge at 78-71-70-317. wMIckfor Wright, who scored AM in the tournament. is the leading money winner with 883,-186 thu year. Miss Jessen has won $ltJ77.
INrV”*SwwS*X.MO . 7^/17*1 IM
winger Murray Balfour and fiery handyman Reg Fleming — all acquired from Chicago.
Boston alao is counting on rookie Ron Scheck, called up at the end of last season, along with continued improvement from other young forwards like Gary Domboefer and Orland Kurtenbach.
WWW
The Rangers will have Marcel Paille in the nets in place of Jacques Plante, sent to the minors. New York also have rookie defenseman Rod Selling, for whom tbo Rangers gave up Andy Bathgate to Toronto last winter. Veteran Dick Duff opens his first season for Now York on left whig Earl Ingarfield and Bob Nevin.
The "Rangers return home to meet Montreal Tuesday pigbt.
“I feel confident that we’ll finiah higher than two clubs and posaibly throe," says Brains’ Coach Milt Schmidt.
w w w
Schmidt , hopes Saturday night's AU-§tar game was an omen of things to come when the Stars edged the Stanley Cup champion Toronto Maple Leafs 3-1
Boston’s Murray Oliver scored the winning goal with an assist from teammate Johnny Bucyk. The game’s first goal went to Boston defenseman Lao Boivin aided by Oliver. -
■imply can’t describe."
Although he is the Card s’ cleanup man and leading power bitter, Boyer doesn’t rate himself a slugger.
w. w w ' _ "I’m no home run hitter,” the 33 - year - old Missourian told newsmen crashed around him in the dressing room. “I’m a line drive hitter. I don’t get the bell up high enough.”
There was no question that' Sunday’s decisive blow was high enough — or far enough. But there was some doubt about ft being fair.
, "I knew I hit it good but I was afraid it would go.foul. I ed to hook but the wind it and kept ft foir. ,
So in be classic battle of wits between pitcher and hitter, the bitter won.
w w w •
Yankee catcher Elston How-yd toad celled for a fast ball
but
went to the change-up.
And Ken Boyer was., looking for that change-up.
Eastern Michigan Falls
Albion 11 Stilt Unbeaten
By The Associated Press i to an undefeated M1AA record, Albion College passed a ma- whipping Kalamaxoo College jor hurdle Saturday on its-way 124-0.
1 ‘	j . /.*'■' * . *;
Albion and the University of
NFL Statistics „
j Michigan became the state’s ■ only undefeated teams as Norji-j wood, Eastern Michigan and . . . Kalamazoo bowed
nK .
M tl-fl 3 f ■
tory. Junior quarterback Joe *
Karam passed ft yards $> James Long for the only WM$) touchdown. '	' *
Irv Sigler threw two scorifft passes and helped Olivet overcome an eariy Adrian lead. V ,„n ano Michigan Tech spoiled SL wLkernl Cloud State’s homecoming few ' tivities with its first victory to Northern Intercollegiate Confer-
ence action this year. The Hush-
Mi
Dallas
NY—Gilford t run. Chandler kick. Dal.—FO Van Raapkcirsl It.
■NY—Morrison II p**» from. Tittle, lallad. ,
Dal—FG Van Raapdortl It.
Dal—Meredith M run. Van Raai
Attendance 33.374.
VIKING DOWNFALL - Minnesota’s Rill Butler heads for 800 r a nose-first landing after being hit by Detroit Lions’ Nick-Pietrosante. The Viking had grabbed a field goal try that was short and returned it to his 24. '
Denver Ambushes Chiefs
'Praying' Broncos Pull AFL Upset ®
Rushing Yardage 1 (jesting Yardage»
laferceafed by
____.. PH EMU fell before Cleveland | jes had lost two earlier
J j 'John Carroll 7-3. Northwood lost games.
4 i iil * Ohio Northern 33-6.	w ♦	*	*
» 3 to s-il! western LOSES	Unbeaten Villanova scored ah
' -1	,	..	•» . .	_	! its points in the first half Jin
km ! I" °*«r «5n^8ts’ ®°^Ung I shutting out Detroit.
• Green beat Western. Michigan | m ____________ ...
hor»t! 28-8, Villanova clobbered Detroit 34-0, Northern^ Michigan i wfflpped Central Michigan 12-7,
MlftjHope beat Alma 21-8, Olivet jfl took Adrian 20-7, Hillsdale .tri-^ j uipphed over Wisconsin -State »w> I (Stevens Point) 7-0». Ferris «! State lost to Findlayr Ohio 47-0, fc.*;Michigan Tech beat St. Cloud,
Minn. 16-6, and Wayne State man. fought Western Reserve to a
from Jurgenwn scoreless tie. -	,
luB*rum 'snead.^kick	Doug MacDonald kicked three
M» tram jurganwa. *xtra points and a field goal for sakar kick. - I Albion and helped shut out last | >asj Iron ji»rgtn$an. year’s MIAA football co-cham-pions. Albion remained unde-
*	*_______ „ feated in four starts, two of
"jj | them conference games. Kala-
Fun for Alt Agasi LEARN TO DANCE
Far Information Call
FE 2-0558
Tarry MeGIong. Imiiuclor
By The Associated Press
The Praying Colonels of little Centre College down Kentucky way astounded the collegiate football world by beating mighty Harvard 6-0 in 1931.
Now, ft may be the , Praying Broncos of * Denver who will surprise the American Football League.
Beaten in 14 straight games the Broncos opened the regime of new Coach Mac Speedie by whacking the Kansas ' City Chiefs Sunday 33-27 before 16,-285 Who, Speedie said, "sounded like 50,000 yelling for us.”
■ ★ * ★
And just as the Center Colonels prayed before each game, so it will be for the Broncos from now on, Speedie said.
“We weren’t praying 'for victory,” Speedie said of the team prayer Sunday^We asked for spirit of unttyTthat we would look good and toy to win.”
The Broncos looked good all - right. They came from behind a
jr.:
73-	73-73—711
74-	71-74—J31 73-73-73—311
Honey
a T0NI0HT 7:15-9:30 «
I FORUM THEATER
| imMWriiHtii | ' • Starts Wednesday 9
“Th$ Ffnk Panther" * Pius -“tone La Pence”
HURON
it 7:08 and 9:10
California Pro Rallies to Win
SUNSET CITY. Calif. (AP) -Bob McCallister headed for Las Vegaa, Nev., today 83,300 richer, after coining out on top in a wild scramble for first place in the 825,000 Sunset-Camellia Open Golf Tournament.
* * * .
The 30-year-old Corona, Calif.,
ro hadn’t won a PGA tournament since the Orange County Open in 1881. Trailing by two strokes going into the final round Sunday he said he knew “I had to break par to win.”
*. *
He just barely did ft, with a one-under 70 for 281.
Stan l&onard of Vancouver, B.C., and Pete Brown of Los Angeles utied for second at 282. George Bayer, of Incline Village, Nev. “
ATLANTA (AP) - Leo Caldwell, who finally was declared winner of the Peach State 200 race for Indianapolis-type cars Sunday, said be predicted the victory “but I didn’t think it would take two hours to find
Lee Caldwell Awarded 1st in 200 Race
out.
' + , * *
It was well over an hour after Caldwell came in that Atlanta International Raceway officials ruled the finish official.
Several drivers protested, contending that Caldwell finished well back in the pack.
Clair Lawicki of St. Clair Shores, Mich., was second and third.
Caldwell, of Perrysburg, Ohio, finished the 150 miles with an average speed of 117.490 miles per hour. '
I m mazoo, which defeated Ho^e'34 13 ” last week, stands 1-1 in MIAA1 ’•"l1 play.
4 J . •	+	*	*
1 tfZ]4 An offensive pass interference Plunge d»vii kick ‘ { penalty cost Eastern its gam*
____w ■	. _. lori piunm, w»5f kwk.- ; with file Cleveland squad when
Jack Kemp threw three touch-1 iF^7&?«Tryn.nt»visirt* . |a fourth-quarter touchdown Was down passes in Buffalo’s rout of I osK^JwSr ”	nor- j called back and John Carroll
Houston. He completed 14 of 16	<7.m	.retained its four-point lead: A-
S INTERCEPTIONS	passes for 37$ yards and gained I .-e it it	I field goal by BUI MacGiUivray
Three pass interceptions by 22 yards in fiveiteeper. plays for I »«m	, {.?.!	1 accounted' for the ohly EMU
Goose Gonsoulin and C bar I ie a total offense of 400 yards. Mrs
13-12 halftime deficit and roared < 4-1, fell Out of a tie by losing to, San Frflnchco to a 33-13 Lead ih the fourth the San Diego Chargers 26-17 ;®'een ,,v quarter on Lionel Taylor’s sen- priday	:	1	—
sational catch of Jacky Lee’s 39- ^	*’
yard pass as he fell into the end aone.
tf»VSf3cM)len6th,hibrta*ftliT>
St AN FLYNN
Mitchell’s 58-yard touchdown run helped in the Denver triumph.
*	*	*
“This waa a victory by 34 players and four coaches and Jacky Lee was the general,” Speedie said.
w	*	*
The Buffalo Bills walloped the Houston Oilers 48-17 in Sunday’s other AFL game for undisputed possession of first place in the Eastern Division with a 5-0 mark. The Boston Patriots, now
v- W	1	it	'it ’
Cllitofs Broncos
Matt Snell reeled off ltyt yards in 26 carries to lead the New York Jets to a 35-13 trouncing of the Oakland Raiders Saturday night. Marshall Starks, a New York back, suffered a broken leg in a pileup during the second period.
5 T 17 14 tfc-31	*•
1 from Wtde SCOTe.
* * *
tumble in did Hope quarterback Harlan Hy-n w«d« (Juncki ink passed for two touchdowns m w*d* i jencks an£l a conversion and plunged in
. . .. ___ far another tally in Hope’s
j homecoming, game against Ai-
KC-FG 17 Brooker KC-FG 4* Brooke. Dag.—Taylor 13 pai kick) >
Dan.—Mitchell SI ri Dan.—Taylor 14 pai
Wafer
First Place in Pro-Am Pays for Golfing Holiday
CINCINNATI (AP) — Mike I par 70 course in 66-68, while the KraR^ andLwrOehmig did pret-j Finsterwald-Littler team had a ty well when they came to Cin- 67-67—134 score. Snead shared dnnati for what they described! in the championship last year, as a golfing holiday.	I Wayne Timberman and Pete
*	*	*	| Dye, both of Indiaf&poiis, were
Krak, a pro* who plays out of | sixth with a 66-69—135.
Oceanside, L.I., picked up $3,000. ^Pontiac pro Gene Bone »rem La* (Mingo	Sunday. Oehmig, a | teamed with Pandel Savic, Co- L
’i/wilTe»k (Mingo	golf equipment manufacturer i	lumbus, Ohio, to place 10th	with I
u	iram	oawian	f<‘om Chattanooga, shares in the	a 67-69—136 for $800. Walter
••	trom	Diuuiun	1320.000 U.S. Pro-Amateur Golf	Burkemo and Ben Smith,	both.
*•	mm	*waon	|	Toumaunent chaunpionship.	of Detroit, were seventh	with
1 FOURTH STRAIGHT ; Bowling Green won its fourth straight game from host West-j ern Michigan. It was the 'Broncos’ third loss against one vie-
Tuesday Only Special!
Tee Caa Eatl
FOOD
LIQUOR
1650
SPAGHETTI » With .
. Mast Santa
136. Placing T6th with a 138 were Grand Rapids’ Glen Stewart agd amateur Roger McManus of! Hartville, Ohio.
The pair won the 36-hole event, on the Loaanuville Country Club’s 6,490-yard layout with a 10-under-par 130, three strokes ahead of their nearest rivals.
They shot 64 Saturday and 66 Sunday.
tad PLACE TIE
TWo teams tied for second. I ^ ***”■
One consisted of veteran pro ..°ow. /l,!»,yw»ld-.^c*><y*g?. iGogo- 'Tommy Bolt of Crystal River, 4747-114
Fla., and John Fischer of Qin-! vy.X.	ctTmu
cinnati and the other included |	m n*w oy*. ban.
Joe Campbell of Perdido Bay, | ^'.‘STburJUS- ttfu? imm,. bom Fla., and amateur Don Albert of | oanjjt.
Columbus, Ohio. Both pros col-j i lected $1,800.
.	, -	_ ,	The Bolt-Fischer team had a
Stock Car Driver Dies score of 6M7 - m Campbell1
FORT WAYNE, Ind. (II - Ho-! “J 4A,bfrt comPi,e<i a ^ “ j hart Nod, 34, Logansport,. Ind., |	.
.. , stock car driver, died today in ! *** was	.
Oregon Gndder Killed Lutheran Hospital from injuries 1 deadlock for fourth and fifth received Sunday in a race at El! mvoiving the team of Dora Park, Roasburg, Ohio. Sam Snead of White Sulphur Swings, W.Va., and Dr. Jack
New 7-Foot Vacuum Cleaner Hose
Braided Cloth, All Rubber
Com* in or Froo Dolivory Ports and REPAIR SERVICE on ALL CLEANERS Disposal Bags*Hases-Brushas-Btlts-Attaehmants-EtG. "Rebuilt by Curt's Appliances Using Our Own Parts"
WE MINT Typewriter* I SEWING ‘
FULLY GUARANTEED Attachments Included $1.25 Wo,ok
Free Home Demonstration OR 4-1101
W ithin 23 Mile Kniiiu*
CURT’S APPLIANCES
NEW LOCATION 1411 HATCHERY ROAD	OR 4-1 III
We*( on M-39 to Airport Rd., North to Hatchery Turn Wart 2 Mock* an Hatchary Rd.
Opart Monday and Friday ‘til f P.M.
Noel wi on the ninth lap; Leer of Indianapolis and the when his super modified stock team of Dow Finsterwald of car hit a restraining wall and' Colorado Springs and Bob Lit-ieaped a double guard rail. i tier of Athens. Ohio. Each team Death waa attributed to head had 134. ' injuries.	1 Snead and Dr. Leer toured the
“833 SQUADRON” and “THREE STOOCES IN A DAZE"
Pontiac’s POPULAR THEATER
8TEAK HOUSE Serving Fine Food andLiqitor MONDAY - COUPLES NIGHT
1 Dinner at RepnUr p*4ee, 2nd Dinner BAIf-Priee
business mens* lunch
COCKTAILS 4 to C DAILY, SPECIAL PRICES ’ We Cater ie Special Parties!
is N. CASS AVENUE - FE 4-4732
“UNFORGIVEN
BURT UNCASTER
Her money
mmQIM
TOA/iSlT
MAE

' Vmm September
C—6
Or. Wayne G. Brandstadt Says:
THfe PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCtOPKIt 12, 19B4 BEN CASKV
Nature Does Pretty Good Job of Healing
. “I.dressed his wounds and God healed him." Thus spoke Ajnbroiae Pare a famous surf-ion of the 16th century.
V	*
Whenever you have a wound, whether accidental or surgical, v your chief, concern and that' of your doctor if that it heal as, rapidly as possible and
’ leave the smal-
spicuous ^carl possible. I **■ Given half a chance, nature 1RANDSTADT does a pretty good job of this.
After any woum^ there is an inflammatory or'-lag period, in which the tissues nearest the
wound poor out blood .and lymph is form a dot and seal off the wound frofn outside Irritants.
! At this stage, two teams go to work.
WHITE BLOOD. CELLS
Hie white blood cells break down the dead tissue cells and eventually the clot itself so that they can be carried away., by the circulating blood. They |lso help to combat any infectious germs that may have entered the wtiund*.
Meanwhile the repair crew, consisting of the bdldlag materials in your blood, is busy predating scar time. The e*-sential dements if this pree- , ess are circulating proteins, carbohydrates and Vitamins.

The inflammatory stag* lasts .about five days—longer .if Infection is present—but bow long the entire healing process will take depends’on many factors.
* it *
Since there is little that can be done to speed healing, yoyr doctor must rely on preventing those things that will delay the PJpeess VITAMINS
Vitamins , B. C, and K all play an important part. V one or more til these is lacking healing is slowed.
Every effort must be made to keep infection out. This means removing any foreign body that might set up an inflammatory reaction including your own dead tissne.
Authorities warn against pour*
Gentle cleaning with- Warm water is tha best first aid measure, then let your doctor put on the refining touches if*the wound is severe.
JiBALING DELAYS Anything that interferes with'1 the normal blood and lymph supply to the injured part, such! as excessive'swelling or- tod| tight a bandage, will delay healing.
if I trumps, < slipped, to there any reason to prefer one line of play to the other?”
considerable reason
which assumes the club lead was a doubleton and my correspondent has given the reason for the preference. He points out that the play of ruffing two * hearts is sure to work if the i clubs go aroufid twice, while the 1 play of attacking trumps will only work if the clubs are 4-1 and the defense slips.
JACOBY
By OSWALD JACOBY
When Gilbert and Sullivan wrote. “A policeman's lot is. not I a happy one,” they might well have been re-ferring to bridge column-, ists as well.
Some of the questions are tough.'
..T o d a y ’ sd North • South! cards were sent| to me by a California reader.
Hr wrote, ‘‘Maybe my partner and I bid too much, but-without a club lead I would have had no trouble with my four-epade contract. West’s chib lead was surely a singleton or a double-ton, my phiy was to win the ( trick in dummy, lead a heart to] my ace, ruff a heart, come back i to my hand with the nine of chibs, ruff my last heart and, wind up making my contract.
**U the chib lead were a singleton that play would pat i me dawn two, while I would i ''hive a chance to make the
#■** •*' -V-
Astrological
M- xgj|6*CT *
■i Forecast
&
|} tv STONEV OMARI
V*CflRDJ?/>*'A+
Q—The bidding ho* boon: North Boot loote Wert 1*	Bam	Id
'*	Faao	T
You South, bold: dim VIMS VAIJ dt! What do yon do?
A—Bid two spades. Ihia hi
ewreaeltan tor M favors. Key •* :
iglifin, consideration. Fine eve-j MM WMo out. oHert»i due or ‘ CmaBt I Jen* II to July at:. Op- ! gay i----------*—	—177 —■
—	---,------ SHch j
to -ttiitlc IMormotion SCORPta (Oct. a to Nov. Ill:	Yeu
rjui.	r'mXf ,c
mt. JHf eo tho focn Mwr i» pooi-'wn te eM vour cewoe fddi "tocdoiw. stron tSoiCAL pitins*	■ I
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. B N
' 5l!m*iSSSmTm'i
it
disovOe. >
"»fus (Jon. M to MS Ml: I r(Fefc. If to (L,	_
—*»	i
*—» you ere fiwre of your ■o Mtoal./ *7^.*M_*reM j
.> t
if TwtsoAv n you* smthoay . . veu ore eewIRve to Oto mods of
&WKJ2STvTUrr. SSSh&i. R-S*,
I Fooforos Core.) *
h
THE FPXTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, IBM
It warn* until 1929 that the President of the Untted States had a phone on his White House
Manufacturing
W
A^anagar
Ive producer of ipe-•hoy* in \Mattom il«*n seeks strdM men technical end metellur-
gicel teeckeround. Wroufht prodrtif experience desirable and <J. M. trtlnin* helpful.
trslnin* helpful. Excellent, permanent opening for right man. Reply In confidence giving racotd of' education and work experience^
We% Meerge.6
425 Cherry. S. I..
Deaths in Pontiac, Neighboring Areas
VISIT YtyMt NEAREST
MICHIGAN
BANK OFFICE
MfeMMEM
INTERE

investors!
WE ARE OPEN TONIGHT
... and every Monday Evening from 7 to 9 p.m. for Your Added Convenience.
Goateln and Discuss Your Investment Problems with a Registered Representative.
Watling, Lerchen & Co.
Mmdtmtkb York awl Kxchonf
2 North Baginaw St
JOHN E. BOTTOM
Service for John E. Bottom, 70, n WMttemore, will be held at Sparka-Grlffin Chapel at 2 p.m. Wednesday, with burial at Whit* Chapel Cemetery in Troy.
Mr. Bottom died Sunday after a short Illness. He was employed at General Motors Truck and Coach Division.
He was a member of Hie Senior Citizens League.
Surviving are four children, Wlnford Bottom and Max Bottom, both of Pontiac. Jdhn E. Gottorn Jr. of Jacksonville, Fla., and Jack Bottom of Hollywood, Calif.
Aim surviving are two. sisters and three grandchildren.
ELMA 0. BROWNING . Service for Elma 0. Browning, 61, of 307 Fernberry, Waterford Township,'will be held at 11 am. tomorrow at foe Sparks-Griffin Chapel, with burial at Perry Mount Park.
Mrs. Browning died Saturday after a king illness. She had been employed at foe Oakland County Medical Care Facility.
Mrs. Browning waa a mei her of foe First Methodist Church,
Surviving are three children, Grant J. Browning, Mrs. William Ramin and Mrs. James Gatton, all of Pontiac.
Also surviving are five brothers and Bisters, Mrs. Paul Hawkins, Mrs. Beatrice Troxell, Mrs. Merlin Hastings, Mrs. Harry Cherrington and Basil Wethy, and 14 grandchildren.
MRS. CHARLES KOMON
Service for Mrs. Charles (Psnagiota) Komon, 91, of 164 W. Pike, was 3 pm. today from foe Sparks - Griffin Funeral Home, with burial in Oak Hill femetary.
Mrs. Komon died Saturday after a brief illness. She was a member of Ct. George Greek' Orthodox Church.
Surviving are a son, James of Athens,* Greece; a daughter, Mrs. Kay Poulos of Pontiac with whom she made her home; a sister in Greece; and a grand-hUd.
PAUL V. MILLER Service for Paul V.JdiUer, 46, of 60 Ardmore will be 10 a.m. tomorrow at St. Vincent de Pad Church, with burial in Mt. Hope Cemetery.
A Rosary will he said at 6
p.m. today at the Melvin Ail- ANDREW M. WOJCIK
u Service for Andrew M. Wojdk Mr. MUfa-dled jfrturday. He | gr.,-01, pf 646 E. Tennyson will 9“° **** *, be# a mi WeMay from St. Wyiskn, and wars mem- viacwrt de Real Church, with Jw* * V1" c e ®4 44 ftul; burial in Mt.Rope Cemetery.
Surviving besides hla.wIfe,L* ,^!Siw?-stba^nifks.
Steven and Mark, all at home; a daughter, Anne at home; two
Griffin Funeral Home.
Mr. Wojdk died Sunday
. ..	.. a long Illness. He .waa a mem-
brothers; three sisters, Mr*. . "i vllin- , j. - .
and^Mrs. Robert Hancock of	<***Detrdt
White Lake Townahip. SlJrKtffiSft ALBERT A. PARMENTER ! Pontiac^and Mrs. Lillian J. Service for Albert A. Parmen- Bates of North Carolina; a son, ter, 60, of 36 East Boulevard Andrew Jr. of Waterford Town-N„ Will be 1:30 p m. tomorrow ship; and eight grandchildren, •t the Donslson-Jotans Funeral
Home, with burial in Waterford Center Cemetery, Waterford Township.
Mr. Parmenter died Saturday. He was a checker at Ftyfoer Body Division. *
Surviving are his wife, Thet-ma; a son, Charles A. of Ox-ford; a brother, Kenneth R. of Waterford Township; and grandchild.
Bacteria Eats Metal From Ore
VANCOUVER (II — Dr. P. C. Tuasell and a team of five University of British Columbia scientists are working on the problem of getting mineral-eating bacteria to extract metal frbm low-grade ere.
The bacteria have been able to get 80 to 80 per cent of the copper and almost all the nickel from test samples during laboratory experiments, Dr. Tus-sell says.
He explains that the bacteria — thiobacillus ferro-•xidaas — change metal sulphides to sulphate form by the addition of oxygen.
In the sulphate form the metal can be washed from the
WILLIAM a HATHAWAY ELBA TOWNSHIP-Requiem Mass for William H. Hathaway, 76, of 3729 Hunt will be 10 tomorrow at foe Church o Immaculate Conception, peer. Burial will follow in Mount Loretto Cemetery, Lapeer.
Mr. Hathaway, a retired employe of Bufck Motor Division, died Saturday after a long Ul-
The Rosary will be recited at 6:30 tonight at Muir Brothers Funeral Home, Lapeer.
Surviving , are a son, Richard Sr. of'Lapeer; a sister; three grandchildren; and four greatgrandchildren.
JOHN G. RUTTER
ROCHESTER —Service for former resident John G. Rutter, 71, of San Diego, Calif., will be 3 p.m. tomorrow at St. Paul’s Methodist Church. Interment will be in Mount Avon Cemetery.
Mr. Rutter died Friday after a long Ulness.
He had been choir director at Bt. Paul’s for 27 years prior to moving to California three years ago.
He was a member of Rochester Lodge No. 5, FOAM.
His body Wifi be at Pixley Memorial Chapel until noon to-
Surviving are his wife, Elsie; two brothers, William of Rochester and Thomas of Flint; and a sister.
Our detailed Monthly Letter reviews all segments of the construction industry gnd ap-
praises their prospects for 1964 and beyond. Also discussed are the factors which indicate
increased' profitability for building materials companies, notwithstanding the prospect of some further slowdown in residential construction. We believe a number of building equities are undervalued today relative to other industrial issues, and we offer specific recommendations on 17 stocks in the grow; six of these are recommended for purchase. For a copy Of this Monthly Lett#, simply nail this advertisemjEnt.
The bacteria will eat a very low grade of.ore which would, otherwise be uneconomical to
LEONARD E- THOMPSON WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Service for Leonard E. Thompson, 86, of 1526 Maddox will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at D.E. Pursley Funtral Home, Pontiac. Burial, win follow in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, use, he says. And they can ex-, Troy, tract tin, iron, molybdenum and j - Mr. Thompson, a retired real silver as Weil as copper and estate salesman lor Baxter nickel.	Realty Go., died Saturday after
MINE WATER	M illness of six weeks. ”
“These bacteria have been	,Har;
working for us for centuries LvJS,	°f
assays
“lie sulphates came eat 13 groat-grandchildren, dissolved in mine water
foe companies extracted the metal.
“Now that we know it’s foe bacteria we can put them to work more qffidmtty,”
The scientists hope to come Up with a system in which the bacteria can be sprinkled over a pile of ore at the mine site and save shipping the ore to the smelter. This would enable mines to operate economically in remote areas.
Bandit Robs $235 at Cleaning Firm
{ Pontiac Police are investigating the Saturday evening armed
robbery of Flash Cleaners at 330 W. Huron.
Flash employe Janet Spires, 17, 47 S. East Blvd., told police a lone bandit came Into foe cleaners brandishing a chrome Dialed revolver.
JOHN L. WINGETT
OAKLAND TOWNSHIP-Service for John L. Wingett, 14-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. James Wingett, 319 Tamarack, will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at Pixley Memorial Chapel, Rochester. Buriaj will be in Mount Avon Cemetery, Rochester.
The youth was fatally injured in a motorcycle accident Saturday afternoon. He was an eighth grader at Eastern Junior High School, Pontiac. .
Surviving besides his parents are two brothers, Jerry and James’Jr., both at home; five sisters, Mrs. Kenneth Kirkwood, of Rochester, Mrs. Burly Gillette of Pontiac and Cheryl Lynn, Kathryn and Pamela, all at home; grandparents, Mr. and Mro. John Wingett of Pontiac and Mrs. Ollie Clifton in California; three aunts; and. four uncles.
NEW ESCAPE COCKPIT - Mechanics William- Hester (inside) and C. F. Baldridge work on a new jet plane escape cockpit at McDonnell Aircraft Corp. in St. Louis. It is
AP'PDtMm
for the' supersonic F-lll being built by General Dynamics at Fort Worth, Tex., and will replace the old seat ejection system.
World News
Belgian Progress Party Gains
BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) -Scoring heavily in the cities, foe. opposition Party for Liberty and Progress scored significant gains Sunday in elections for 23,-000 municipal council seats.
Incomplete returns from around foe country showed the Progress party making inroads into the strengfo of foe Social Christian and Socialist coalition government of Pfemier Theo Lefevre.
More than five million per sons voted.
LICHTENFELS, Germany
(AP) — West German Transport Minister Hans Christoph Seebohm renewed today his call for a return of Czechoslovakia’s Sudetenland to their former German-speaking inhabitants.
Addressing a ratty of Sudeten-landers expelled from Czechoslovakia after World War H, Seebohm said he does “not change a comma” in the dr mands he voiced in a widely publicized speech last May.
Seebohm also said appeals by Soviet Premier Khrushchev and Czechoslovak President Antonin Novotny for the Bonn govern-
Charge Security Periled by Lack of U.S. N-Tests
WASHINGTON (UPI)-A Republican “task force” has charged that the Johnson administration is endangering U.S. security by’failing to conduct
“More than a year has elapsed Jince ratification of the treaty,” the task force report said. “The administration has shown a dangerous reluctance
underground nuclear tests on I to proceed with the underground
weapons systems.
The “Peace Through Pre-redness” group, headed by former Defense Secretary Neil H. sMcElroy, reported to GOP presidential nominee Barry M Goldwater that the administration failure had led to a “critical slippage in our weapons development program.”
test program.
‘MOST SERIOUS*
“The most serious deficiency
ment to renounce the 1938 Munich Pact formally “do, not do justice to the historical facts.” • The Munich Pact forced Czechoslovakia to cede the Sudetenland to Nazi Germany. Seebohm says he thinks it is still valid. Chancellor Ludwig Erhard said the pact was “torn up by Hitler” and therefore a formal renunciation is not needed.
LONDON (AP) - A dispute over subway schedules threw London’s rush hour^Jfaffic into chaos today.
Service was stopped on lines that normally carry thousands of commuters into the capital. Other lines were running a skeleton schedule.
The dispute started when the London Transport Passenger Board sought to run fewer trains because of a shortage of guards. Drivers wanted to stick by the old system by which occasional trains were canceled when no guard was available. This gave the driver a paid rest.
Court to Eye Dixie Vote Procedure
WASHINGTON (AP) -ThO Supreme Court agreed today to review a decision that Virginia’s certifies te-of-residence plan for voting in federal elections violates foe federal Constitution.
The- decision was given’by a special three-judge federal court in Richmond. It was appealed to the highest tribunal by Atty. Gen. Robert Y. Button at Virginia.
voters who do to file certifl-cates of residence before elections. Voters who pay poll tax in state elections are not to file the certificates. BURDEN
In ruling against the plan, the special court said tt placed an invalid burden on voters in elections for president, vice president, and Congress.
Virginia’s Legislature adopted the certificate plan in anticipation of adoption of the 24th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. That amendment bars the poll tax as a requirement for voting in federal elections. it	it
Button’s .appeal to the Supreme Court said the plan was adopted because “a new means of checking the residence qualifications of federal electors who chose not to pay their poll taxes had to be found.” He contended the plan pas designed to preserve fair elections and prevent irregularity afthe polls.
Chief Justice Earl Warren on June 24, 1964, rrfused to stay effectiveness of the lower court decision. Button had asked a stay pending action by the full Supreme Court on his appeal.
City Man Held in Stabhing After Auto Accident /
Car-Truck’Crash Puts 5 in Hospital
in the execution of the ‘safeguards’ is in the field of weapons effects testing. There has
Five Oakland County residents are in satisfactory condition at Community Hospital
not been a single weapons ef-1 near Almont following a Sunday fects test conducted since the afternoon auto accident in Addi-treaty Was signed.
The panel said tint foe program of weapons effects testing that had been allowed to. “slip alarmingly” daring the .year since the nuclear, test-baa treaty was signed.
The Republicans said that senatd ratification of the treaty was predicted up an assurances by the Kennedy administration that four “safeguards” would be carried out. One called
“These inadequacies subject the security of tin United States to serious military disadvantages and risks that are not inevitable consequences of the treaty, for they ceukl, with diligences, be avoided.0
The GOP task force said the apparently “has
no intention of vigorously tacking the weapons effects problem.”
Injured were: Qoher.t Mi' Jones Jr., 2650 Kingston, Addison Township; Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Hoard, 40 Marquette; and Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Nique, 5519 Hadley, Brandon Town-ship.
The Hoards’ vehicle, in which the Niques were passengers, collided with a dump truck driven by .Jones on Rochester Road near Howard Lake Road.
A 21-year-old Pontiac man Is being held at the Oakland County Jail on a charge of attempted. murder in the Saturday night stabbing of Arthur Lee Beil, 21, 184 Cedardale.
Police said Phillip Walker, 348% Raeburn, stabbed Bell far the chest with a knife during ah argument following a minor auto accident at Midway and 8. East Boulevard.
‘ Walker was arrested by officers shortly after the incident, Bell is in satisfactory condition at Pontiac General Hospital.
Director Will Succeed Long-Time Associate
MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (AP) -Douglas Campbell, who succeeds Tyrone Guthrie in 1906 as artistic director of the Minnesota Theater Company, is a longtime associate of his prede-
The two joined fprees in 1164 when Guthrie was head man at foe Stratford, Ont., Shakespeare Festival. Campbell directed several plays there, and came along with Guthrie when the Minneapolis project was established.
Meeting Will Feature Candidates, Ballot Issue
1965 for folk purpose are patently inadequate to do a satisfactory job, although there' is no doubt that Congress would, if requested, appropriate any amount needed for this essential work,” it said.
Other members of the Republican panel included former Sen Prescott Bush of Connecticut, Rep. Gerald Ford, R-Mich. former Asst. Defense Secretary Wilfred McNeill, and retired Adm. Arthur- Radford and retired "Air Force.Gen. Nathan Twining.
Beard Backfires
Developing the pros and tons in the Massachusetts Ballot dis-cussiqji will be Republican Charles Lyle #d Democrat Sander Levin.
MASSACHUSETTS BALLOT Republicans are working for adoption of tile Massachusetts Ballot Nov. 3 and Democrats are laboring against,it.
Council Chairman Millard! Jamas said that the meeting ires scheduled as a service to the community. He urged that an votars attend.
- '
on Auto-Fixer
LUDLOW, Ky. UR — William Boese’s beard, grown far Ludlow’s centennial parade, kept him from taking part In the event.
'Bad Start on Paper Route'
Leopard Attacks Boy
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. <B — “I ran across the street when, I saw it,” said 14-year-old John Edwin Sealey, startled when a spotted leopard appeared as fop youngster was delivering his Sunday newspapers.
For the nest few minutes, the defaqged pet leopard mauled the teen-ager who had the presence of mind to remain still. » From his Cathode church across foe street, foe Rev.
John O’Brien saw foe scene.
. couldn’t quite believe it,” satejfor. priest who called police. “The leopard’s tall was twitching mid he apparently was holding something.” ’	k.
Shots fired by four policemen cut down the leopard, who had escaped from his cage behind a tourist court where his owner, E.. L. Honeywell, an animal trainer from Fort Worth, Tex,, was staying.
He was driving with his wife and son when their car stalled. Trying to start the vehicle, Boese poured gasoline into the carburetor. Swoosh! The gas flamed, setting fire to Boros’s whiskers.
CUTS AND BRUISES	<
Young Sealey suffered only cuts and bruises.
Honeywell, who valaed foe leopard at 6>#0, said he «U net know how foe animal escaped. Hoaeywel! aad foe*, leopard, which had teeth hat no fangs aad clipped daws, had bjlsea appearing at a fair here.
It was also Sealey’s first day as a newspaper carrier.
Sealey’s mother quoted her son u pointment was that “it had to happen the paper route.”
i saying his chief disap-on my first morning on
! PRfeSS,
, OCTOBER :
MARKETS
He following an top prices covering safes of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations an furnished,by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Friday.
Produce
Many Banks, Firrps Cloted	. FulHiet Delay
Mart Stays Even; Trade Slow Seen at GM
NEW YORK (AP) - Selective gains kept the stock market on an even keel early this afternoon in dull Columbus Day trading.
Many banks, insurance companies and commodity exchanges wen closed tar the semi-hoUday and Wall Street was thinly populated.
* f *
Fractional gains among key stocks seemed to have a slight edge over losers. A few of the higherpriced or man speculative Modes advanced a point or better.
The strong demand for steel is likely to ease if the strike against General Motors doesn’t end soon, it was reported by
steel producers. GM stock shaded to the downside but Ford continued strong, rising nearly a point, and Chrysler was up a fraction.
The . Associated Press average of 60 stocks at noon was up .1 at 339.3, with industrials up .1, rails up .4 and utilities off .1
The launching of a Soviet space ship was not accounted as a particular factor in trading. Although Boeing slipped more than a point, this was ascribed to profit taking. United Aircraft shed a fraction.
Prices were higher in active trading on the American Stock Exchange. Gateway Sporting Goods, recommended by an
advisory service, spurted more than 2 at the start then settled back to a gain of mofe Own a point before trading was temporarily halted. Salem Brosius was delayed in opening. AH* State Properties, up a fraction, made another big percentage gain. Up around 2 points were Driver-Harrls, O’okiep Copper and U.S. Natural Gas and Vogt Manufacturing. Up about a point were L. E. Carpenter, Geophysics, General Foam and Unexcelled Chemical.
BOND TRADE Corporate bonds were mixed in light trading. Ihe Columbus Day holiday eliminated most trading in U.S. Treasury bonds.
U.S. Buying Lures , Being Used Abroad
The New York Stock
f IS H* 8* + *
IPP-S
34* 149* 140 %+*
it a* a* aw
54 41* 4IW 41*.
11 » ii«B
m is* 1$* Ji
lillr u
iJEH-*
! 8J S3 B3tS
W 51* M* 54* + “ SI UW 14* 14* . ..
21 11* 11* 11*-
Spurt Dies Out in PlanNLevtl Talks
DETROIT (AP) - Hopes fur an end tills week to tifb Ui“ * Auto Workers’ strike against General Motors Corp. all but vanished over the weekend as spurt in new at-the-plant working agreements died off.
Only two local-level agreements, which supplement the national contract, were reached Saturday night and yesterday, leaving tt still to go out of 130.
His came in the wake of a Friday-Saturday spurt, which lifted local-level agreements to 36, and a forecast by UAW President Walter P. Readier of a thaw hi an at-the-plant freeze ever Ik weekend.
GM and the UAW readied settlement on a national contract last Monday. It carried widespread gains for UAW-rep-resented production workers,
DETROIT (AP)—American Motors Corp., today proposed to drop profit sharing with the United Auto Workers Union and to match pattern-set-Ing economic packages reached with the automotive industry’s big three Ford, Chrysler and General Motors.
e being added to ition of cteisum-
1
Poultry and Eggs
___DETROIT POULTRY
mmui wi — Prices paid per MM *or No. 1 quality liva poultry: Hun typo hm 14-11; light typo hens 7; broilers ado fryers 3-4 toe. whiles 14-30.
DHTROIT sees
DETROIT (AP) - ass pricss paid par toy first raotlvers (Including U.S): . Whites Grade A Jumbo 3444? extra tor»eJlfcarlgut 37W-40; medium 37*-
"•Sriiel A extra large 34-41; ‘WO* 3MJ; medium 3M0; smell 14; cnocha son*.
CHICAGO SUTTRR, COOS CHICAGO (AP) - Chicago Mercantile Exchange — Butler steadykWfwIesale buy
'Zrr&xzwt s*? WHS
CHICAGO POULTRY ..CHICAGO (AP)—USDA—Live poultry:
Rode fryers 14-It*.
including higher pensions, earlier retirement, longer vacations, more holidays and higher wages over the next three years.
Eleven days earlier the union had called a nationwide strike against GM in support of its national contract demands, most of which it won.
In passing a Sept. 25 walkout deadline nationally, the UAW gave local unions an okay to strike on their own until at-the-plant, working agreements wen wrapped up.
Now no back-to-work order is anticipated until the bulk of local-level disputes are settled. These include such items as ventilatiqp, with workers at some plants complaining it's too cold, others that it’s too hot; relaxation’ in smoking rates; more drinking fountains, company-provision of coveralls and the like.
The walkout has idled almost 300,000 of GM’s 350,000 production workers, with 32,000 laid off in the United States and Canada since the start of the strike, now in its third week.
Livestock
(toady to iMWIto He luwur; around baud high ctoica »toer» 26.40. A dwtaa (toon 34.50-25.75; goad to _ thole* If**r» 2250-34.25; tow toll choice heifer. 22.54-23.00. 5lx head (hole* 23.25; good to low choice hetton 21.00 - 22.50. court ttoudy with toft weeks decline uf ito cow. 12-13 Calmer Md cutter. 10.3 12. tow 1110; earn* thin earner. MO.
Moo. loot. Barrow, and gilt* und 240 lb fully 75 cent, lower Heavier weight I* ID canto lower; am IS tnM tower. 31 head u. S. I aram 315 lb. barmwt end oil
iyj-335 lb 15.25-14JS; 2	___
I17l.l4.10. 2 4 3 230-260 lb lS.4Mi.75. 1,1 4 J 300-400 lb |ow» 13.00-14.25;
,2^ 3 44B40. to mw. 1I.7M1H * Veeler. 250. Steady with toft HM close choice and prim*' 24-34. Standard and good. 15-30 call and utility 10-10 I— ligd culls down to 1 Sheep 1000; ne aatiy tales.
CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP)—(USDA)—Hogt 9,000; butcher, a to 71 tower; macity 1-1 *** as lb butcher. 14.25-16.50; around ’ heed at 14.75; mixed 1-3 194-330 hi 15.75-14.25; 230-240 DM 75.25-15.75; 13 250-270 lb. 15.00-15.25; mixed 1-3 304-354 lb tea* 14.0014.75; 3HF4Q0 lb. 13J4-14.00.
Cattle 7Ml calves none; slam
J* ** tower; twa toad i_v.. ).304-1,15* » otoapitor steers S7JS; h*B
mb “* -^“ i.iso-i^eo too
m amx ana few MMl 24.25-24.50; tour toad mixed
ne eoo-uwo to haHart 24.00. wotod .laughter tomb* and i. etotOy; chute* and prim*
37.00; choice 1.100-1^50 II
Stocks of Local Interest
Figure, after decimal paints art a*
• fTOnU 04 ARIA INTEREST figure, altar decimal point, era el) OVER THU COUMTRR STOCKS The fallowing gmNtHni do not au— ewOyropment actual tranuction, but urajWended at a guide to the aF—
Aeeaclatod Truck .'
SrESrilll
■ ■ —awF&mm "  *
Ethyl Cora.	144
AAahawfc Eubbar Co. ...	34.2
Michigan, Seamiest Tuba Ca.H.4
By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK - Lures for impulse buying ere being added to the Americanisation of cbnsum-er habits ill many tends.
European merchants ara showing in* creased intefat in this and other American methods of mass merchandising and advertising; Their DAWSON Japanese counterparts are reported showing even more.
Not everyone is happy about the invasion by Yankee consumer products, Supermarkets, and buying and credit methods. A U.S. envoy to the Common Market has fold a National Association of • Manufacturers trade expansion mission that many Europeans fear their old ways of Ufe may disappear under the rash to imitate American customs.
But here at home the Point-of-Purchase Advertising Institute (POPAI, pronounced Pop-Bye) reports that its overseas membership has quadrupled in the test five years and now represents ag continents.
EXPECTS VISITORS It expects more than 100 foreign visitors at.its annual show next month in New York. The lure: how to get their customers to spend 33' per cent more on impulse because of new advertising and market-place displays.
In addition to ita 17 Canadian members, there are 35 institute members scattered through Japan, South Africa, England, Switzerland, France, Italy, Mexico, ^Belgium, the Netherlands, Sweden, Venezuela, Iran, Australia and New
southern California is indoctrinating a Peace Corps volunteer who can spread1 the idea in the hugimm community in Pern*
American* manufacturers, exporters, salesmen and design-trs have been learning the hard way that what creates the buy* Ing impuiRQ hi an American may backfire abroad. The ap-proach now is to adapt advertising and product displays to local customs and idiosyncrasies. PATIENCE NECESSARY
To Europeans, for example, newness isn’t the most Important thing, and the hard sell to falls flat over there. Timeliness in launching a selling campaign is even more important in Europe than hew, and patience is a top requisite for any selling campaign.
But the institute reports that its overseas members aw beginning to do some fine designing of displays on their own, with a more lighthearted quality of approach.
In many tends advertising and display must mind the local-color charts. An International Air Transport Association official notes that colors can make a lot of difference in promoting sates. Red is a lucky color to Chinese, while yellow is to the Thais,
In several Asian countries tite
combination of purple and green is acceptable because Shinto religious leaders once wow them. But the combination of black, -white and blue suggests only fo-nerate to the Chinese.
RAPID CHANGE
Jade-A. Wlchert, president of POPAI, says Europe ia now it the stage in retail distribution of products that the United Mates knew Just prior to World War H. changR is coming rapidly now, however. Supermarkets aw flourishing over there. Hat old American custom, oo-tho-cuff buying, 1> catching hold fast.
In countries newly throbbing with prosperity, merchants aw watching and imitating American methods. So now they're studying the inpulse buying which American merchants say moves much of their stocks.
★ ★ *
Retail outlets 'hard. aw growing ever mow mechanised. Self-service has replaced an estimated total of li million sales darks since 1645. His takes into account the increased sales volume and number of outlets opened since then. *
Replacing them, along with the customs own legwork, have been display techniques for products and prior idling of the shopper through advsrttee-ments in various media.
And one POPAI member in
DETROIT (UP!) - Elly Peterson, Republican candidate for the U.S. Senate, today maintained her husband’s complete innocence in ihe National Guard scandal and charged the Democratic party with “gutter politics.1’
“Obviously the Democratic leaders, speaking through their state chairman, singled out my husband from hundreds of others for only one reason — gutter politics,” Mrs. Peterson sate.
"Heir techniques have even
* By ROGER E. SPEAR Q)'“We would like to invest
stock that Is net priced toe high. We have been considering Chrysler Corporation, even though it has had a big mn-np. Do yon consider this stock speculative, sr one with fnture growth?"	JJ.
(A) Since the management changes in recent yearn, Chrysler’s performance has be-en spectacular. I Uke the stock and believe earnings will reach |6 per share in 1664, at which rate it sells for only about 16 times earnings. The stock is volatile, however, and could be hurt badly whenever have a bad automobile year.'
If you have a list of other stocks, a good backlog of savings, and can afford some market risk, I think you could buy Chrysler.
If the reverse is tbs case— as seems likely from your letter — I would buy a 1 stable issue with good growth possibilities, suqp as Consolidated Foods.
(Copyright, 1664)
U.S. Report Cause of Soybean Selling
CHICAGO (AP) A larger than expected government crop estimate resulted in heavy soiling of soybean futures and prices receded sharply on the Board of Trade today.
Grain futures also declined.
Soybeans wew down as much as 6 cents a bushel shortly after the opening on liquidation by longs who had looked for a crop estimate well under the 666 million bushels forecast commercial buying appeared on the de-
reporting that my husband was one of the three officers dismissed by Gov. George Romney.”
Mrs, Peterson became an is-sue in the scandal that broke last week when it was learned she and her husband. Lt. Col.
Merritt Peterson, had purchased 23 lots of state property which the state had no authority to sell.
The land the Peteysons-bought .	■ _
was among about. 3,000 lots the 1 J#hn F. Stefahskl, 1157 W. Guard has disposed at at Camp Huron, Water^ TownsMp, Grayling since I960. The money!	.	P.”0*!
received from the sale of tend along Lake Margmthe across! ijflH St from the Guard’s summdrtrainJ
ing headquarters was used	**	■
purchase privately owned prop-] 1
S MI  .................... 070.01
a Ram ...LaSaHKiaL... 221.77-0.35
II UHto .................. 154.H-t-0.00
41 Kidis ...........SIRu. ata-s.it
.. flinMt'rrtia "
jjai&fe.::
Rato lies Recera afeto
•"5*% »»
-telle tat UHL 4«r. i. VI
M«4,
533iSS 3.1 ISH
MuRto Ag* fij W3.9 YMr Age IM liu 1044 High . 03.9 103.i
IS-B'S
Elly Hits Gutter Politics. Claims Husband Innocent
HM 6f m > tote-owned -tends,” she snM.
“What my husband did was honest, fair and in tbs open — which is mors than I can say for my opponents in tills affair.” Elly said when she undertook the challenge to run against incumbent Democratic Phflfc A. Hart, “I did not count on seeing rotten politicians attempt to ruin my husbateTa career. Hat is a pries I will not pay.”
She added, “My^husband is an honest man Who can aland proudly, on his long and honorable record as a soldier and who can, weather all the Ues and slime you can sling at Mm. And as for me, I am going to continue to hammer at my opponent’s record in office.”
Kiwanians Name New Leaders, Board Members
erty located elsewhere on the military reservation.
ACCUSED THREE The land transactions were a major part of the misadminis-tration practices Romney accused Mato Adjutant General Ronald D. McDonald, State Quartermaster General Carson Neifert and the tetter's executive officer, Lt. Col. Versel Case of when he fired them from their fulltime jobs with the Guard.
Zottou Penney said a fell Investigation of the had purchases should be made to see if the Petersens have been given preferential treatment to the sale.
Mrs. Peterson countered today:
“My husband was an innocent purchaser and in no way involved in any of the iiiagRiiHf or irregularities disclosed last week by the auditor general *	* w
“No one solicited his bid. No one suggested how much he should omr. No one gave him any information about any property or procedures unknown to other officers and enlisted men of the Guard or to many residents of the Grayling area," ahesaiil.
“At the time of the purchase, my husband was plans, training and operations officer for At Guard July I960.
“Neither b that position nor in any parities he has held rinse has CoL fester— had any JmMtotkn sr esatnl
and
a Waterford [Township radio ^^^land totevtokm
Other officers elected war0
Quentin Sweet, tint vice president; Peter Metes, second vice president; Glenn Smith, oacre-tary; and Michael E. Dontete, treasurer.
Newly elected to serve on the bond are Dr. Kenneth Dick-stein, James Scribner and Jay Young.
News in Brief
Kenneth Paataae, 17, MS Bay, yesterday reported the theft of 6115 from his home.
Police are hvosttgatfaw the theft of a stereo, portable television and phonograph records, total value 6405, from the Theodore Tademy residence at 521 S. Paddock. -
Michael Dfedrick,. H74 Liver-
ote, Hoy, yesterday reported the theft of 9M2 worth of construction equipment from tt building site on Harding near Uvemoia in Troy.
Antique Show an! Sate: II a.ra.-lO pm., Oct IS, 14, 15. Cram of Chritt Lutheran ChuNh, Telegraph and L— Pine Rd., Bloomfield Hills.
*dr.
Rummage Mat Grito *Al Batata Church. T—., Oct 13,4 PA Exchange St entrance.
-Adr.
.1.0^ WCTKXt
*ssr
4-PltCB COMIO
THE PONTIAC PRE8S. MbNDAy, OCTOBER 18, 1864
Submit Low bid on^ Section of Telegraph Road
Dm stats highway dspfcrt-ment has announced • low bid of $17,411 for improvement of the intersoctjon of Telegraph and Maple roads.
Hie J. C. Sachs Co. of Detroit submitted the low bid on the Job, which, is scheduled for com* pletion June SO, 1966. There were three other bidders.
WWW
The project will consist <jf straightening a slight curve which runs north (ram the intersection on Telegraph. The general traffic pattern at the intersection will remain the same, according to state high* way department officials.
The project was one of 10 on wjiich bids were taken last Wednesday. Total estimated cost of the projects is $1,589,490.
Experts believe that the old* est varnish in existence Is that on wooden mummy cases found in Egypt. The varnish is about 9,600 years old. -	, •
Death Notices
Cr-ft
CANDY CHECK - Pontiac City Manager Joseph Warren (seated) buys the official first sack of candy hi the Junior Chamber of Com* roerce Halloween candy sale. The salesman is Ron Holland, Jaycee candy sale chairman.
The Jayceas will sell the candy at shopping cmters and door-to-door through Oct II. Proceeds will be used to support various youth activities in the Pontiac area.
Mahalia Jackson Waging Toughest Battle of Career
CHICAGO (AP) - Mahalia Jackson, who struggled from poverty in Louisiana to international feme as a gospel singer, is now waging the most critical battle of her career.
The onetime washerwoman is recuperating slowly from a serious heart ailment in a Chicago hospital. She’s doing It die only way aim knows how, she says, “with faith and cheerfulness.1*	* .
“I never knew eo many people loved me, I never knew so many - thought so much of my singing/’ Mias Jackson, 60, said Sunday in a bedside interview.
Her tiny hospital room has overflowed with a daily stream of cards, letters and flowers,
many from Europe and Asia. ‘There were go many flowers,” she said with a soft laugh, “that one morning I woke up and thought I was dead.”
The SOPpound singer entered Little Company of Mary Hospital Sept. 16. “I had a terrible pain in my chest," she recalled. "The doctors told me my blood
Doctors have ordered Miss Jackson to remain in bed indefinitely. Visiting is restricted and no telephone calls to her room are permitted.
The heart trouble came after an exhausting year of touring. Long a favorite in Europe, she completed a lengthy and successful overseas trip in May.
-Junior Editors Quis ©n-
QUESTION: What do knots mean when speaking of a boat’s speed?
* ★ * .
ANSWER: The land mile was a unit of measurement fint used by file Romans and fixed by the English in 1690 at 5,690 feet But fids land mile did not agree with measurements being used atsea, which were based on the 360 degrees encircling file earth. Cakolatkwis by navigators gave a nautical or sea mile MM99 feet — slightly longer than a land mile.
A knot is a SUB mile, tat it is used to measure speed, net distance. Yea wouldn’t say “that island is hur nets away” tad yea might say “this boat Is traveling at tear
kaoto” — meaning moving at a speed which would take it 4 set miles ta one hour.
“Knot” used to this way comes from old sailing ship days. A small weighted board, the “chip lag,” attached h a Itoe, would be dropped over the ship’s stern. The line wy knotted each interval of 47 feet I inches, one knot tor the first interval, two for the second and so on.
The ship floated on the same spot •« tke fine, m-adtatom from a reel, and was drawn eat as the ship sailed MM*A sailor tatned a sandglass arranged to shew whoa 19 ascends passed. *
* Tina it would-he noted what group of taotamta passing the rafl. In the pidture it is nine knots, so the ship is sailing at nine knots.
* * * „
FOR YOU TO DO; The old clipper ship Lightning made a famous moortl ^7 4M sea miles to hi hours. Figure cut hew
fast per hour she must have Bailed on that da®.
‘I’ve been working too hard for too many years,” she said.
’m tired.”
UTILE SLOW Her normally booming voice tinned by exhaustion, Miss Jackson spoke hesitantly. 'Tm she said, “I feel a little slow today.”
Sr W W A heart condition is even more trouble than an operation,” she said. “It takes so long.
4k ~ dr W
thought Fd be able to get Up and out after a little rest, ‘ ‘ it's not so eagy. I’ve never felt like this before."
Her agent, Lou Mindling of Los Angeles, told newa when Miss Jackson’s iltoees first *** revealed that she had canceled 15 concert dates for October. He said then that he expected her to begin singing again to November. -NOT USED TO IT Mias Jackson, however, eom-“I Just don't know— I’ve never been sick like this.
“I don’t think I’ll be able to make any concert dates in November. This is one of tboee nothing hurts but you’d better not stir too much. d[ ' 4 ' I
“I’m not used to being inactive; I'm not used to being tired.”
Born near New Orleans, the energetic stager was working ipgulaiiy as a scrubwoman whan she was IS. Later she moved to Chicago where she became known for her singing at Baptist conventions.
FIRST RECORDING She made her first recording to 19M end by 1948 she was celebrity, to recent years die has devoted much time to the civil rights movement.
♦ * ♦ *
Although a Baptist, Miss Jackson said she “is sure glad to be here,” at Little Company of Mary Hospital, a Roman Catholic institution. “They treat me like an angel. j 'The Baptists may Joke about me turning Catholic.” Miss Jackson said, “but there isn’t one God. And we sure can't do without tha Lord.”
Explosion - puffing, a I— treatment for fruits and vegetables, has been found to man them easier to ship and quicker to cook.

- Wl
Jems* Oeftanand Grant J. Inn tag; dear Mtar o4 Mrs. P • Hawkins, Mr*. Beatrice Prox. Mr*. MCrthl Halting*. Mr*. Ha Charringtan and Bull Wethay; «
wrrtagton rvlvei by
ir
Chapal. Intarmant In
LOST: PIMALB BLACK POODLE, untrlmmad, vicinity af Franklin and Lang Lafca Ed. Reward.
iMT-IBB WALLIt. MiNTiAt
Lfipi 'IfiWfiNiTY.be 1L*A AH6
Llagtacatt Rds., I mala Brtgllah

‘ .HYILLAOi Vlllaga era-...—J. 4*24054.
l6*T: i n«UL6 lAttirrrrx: bit and wMta. Lo»l In araa of John Wlnftr* »ubdlvl»lon, Laka Or-,
W rewefd. MV 1-1 if*.___
Loit’- HEavy ilAOLirViCiN-
, n. Y«. • pLO ^nt SXPANOIHO
IAYOUT ENGINEERS
.nsmto
Emin sT armitrono.inc.,
iSr FBNKBL AVIm DETROIT, MICH.IniIWlVpORTUNITY EMPLOYER.
curb a>!6 "fLiAn-ursgyriu-
par Chief. Teleeraoh at Plait.
~ DESIGN LEADER
ffiMAN, MfMIk IV UU. PAN*-
0 IOTA, UN W. I mtfhir af Mr*. I Jamas Kaman, ai

nil the Sparks-Grltfln
wu. rw Jtsy. ejj
Teompana* efticiating. f Wffr •I service will ba Raw today at 3 pjn. if % George's Greek Orthodox Church. Interment In Oak Hill
NERSES, IMS Ruffnar, Birmingham; aga Mi b*loved hutband cf Zareuha Mbtnlan; dear father of Mr*. May faraaian. Mr*. Sarah Pag* and Edward Matiolan: dear brother at Caspar and Harebsd Mefaeiani aha aunrtved* ww grandchildren and twa erotaysna-chlldran. Funeral awvjca'. will b* haM Wadnasday. October 14 at 1 p.m. fMnaVoorhaaa-SIpl* Chapal
SS Kav, Sauran Papahhlan WL
elating, intarmant In Oak HIM Cemetery.	“5*rl,y,SS
may ba made la the If. Sarkis Armenian Apostolic Church, In-valopes evallebt* at the Funeral Ham*. (Suggattad visiting hours S la S pjn. and 7 to a p.m.)
ytiLLft,. OCTMiS itoi WPl
VT 40 North Ardmore Strati) w»
ba loved hutband of Clarissa
brother of Mr*,, drank Dattaen. Mr*. Margaret Pierson, Mrs. Robert 11 an cock, william and Arthur Millar. Radiation of Bid Smafy —	-—nlng at I at *“
t Funeral Ha
Saar brataardf Kenneth k. Far-manttr; alao aurvlvadbyon* grandchild. FundrM aarvlea win ba haw Tuatdw, October lial 1 :W p.m. at tha Donation-JahnaFu-KSiel Mama InftmmnsMit In Wltlf-
U21
t BJII.1
InTSTit
_______■ SUOSNE, ISM Madtaa
--------JESS'“ »i*7
aha survived by alfht ran, 13 graat-grandchll-fdtir great-greal-grand-Funtral *evk* win ba
grandctaM
^»ntag0hour**T*torV ^m."and 1 M f ML‘
At 16 sjb. today there were repliea at The press Office to the foi-lowjtog boxes: t, 6,14, I*. SJ, 44, 44, 17, 71, II, 16, «7, US.
glfflUV	ONl
you can afford. ^ ^
MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS
MS PONTIAC STATE BANK BUM).
Liftt WifbHTSAFBi-V Wl+H Mai A MM Tablet*. Only N cant* afSliMiia Brothers Drugs.
C i. OOOHARDT FUNERAL HOMt Kteao Harbor. Ff>. SBMMI
c6ats
DNAVTb:UmM0,% BMW
D. E. Pursley
FUNERAL HOMB Invalid Car Service FB4-1S11___■
^IWON.JOHNS ; .
FUNERAL HOME “Owiandd Sir FunwdM»_. ’
huntooN
funsral home
StMKS-MimN
FUNERAL HOMB . .
VOORHEES-SIPLE
IRAL HORRb FB M BstaMhhad Over at Year*
Drayton Plain* area. MMN
S LABORERS, OOOO FAV, STEADY work tending brick muon, SS7-4SA. Call evening*. .	'
“	15 YEAfe 6U) “
Profitable, well established bu»l-nat*, will employ manaagr on salary and profit sharing Mai*. Write Pontiac Fr«*» Sox if. __
ALL' VIA* AfcbiiNb 'ConStSuo
lion haMar wHh car.
AN INTERNATIONAL fitLiS 0R-ganliation need* a man for pro-tawlanal “	J ■
aflwwaneiv i
i live i iwn lrava
* prate but not required. Aft IS k with some callage. Reply
AWMffltTURAL dra^tImAU
me aoia
Auto Mechanic
“hSjpnSl”
portunlty to
plenty uallftad m
CALL SILL SOODBN
SPARTAN DODGE
Ml S. Saginaw	FB SAMI
Xuto iALfeiAAAN TO WORlt SOT of Utica area, prefer Chavralal and-or Olds experience. Excellent zs— * good worker. Bnge ILUtle*,______________________
Automobile
Salesman
piete our sole* force . for nei CHRYSLERS, PLYMOUTHS, VAI I ANTS, RAMBLERS, and Joep, a
AUTOMATION MACHINE BUILDERS
FOR PRESS ROOM EQUIPMENT, FRINGE BENEFITS, OVERTIME, LONQ PROGRAM. APPLY IN
“■Ion.
SAHLIN SUPPLY CO. _
overtime. LI Htt f
Tsteady Jok
MKwXri
month. 6ar* tafarmathw call Mr. Face, FE HM, S p.m. le 7 pJlL tonight only.	*
* Afftt 6 p.m:
PART-TIME USB ■ am monthly for euaS M
evening. Cell Mr. Dele ter fermetfai W p.m. OR f aaie,
OEW COMPANY
HIRING PART-TIME New factory brihchtr ——
*3
age one neve e ereaay run-rime day Mb hour* «;30 to Idilj, guaranteed salary phra share ef , profit*, earn MB le Silo weekly. I Call OL l4M1<Mr. Murray or MS-tHl. Mr. Round* alter 4 p.m.
IaRSeR Sh6A. A6A.TiR». 4>MB
tide with experience,. lUCKUtk FINANCE COmRaHy
ha. an waning for an aggn ypy"B man lnAre*t*d ln faSW!F.CATWfS Age II to M High Sched gi College dtalrol
Military eervlc. ---_
Experlancepreferred but net r—-
6iiClir^|LAYBRt^A)fD. UAigfl.
sahl!n*enoinbbrino CO.
>M w. Magte	Trey
Designers
Detailers
Checkers
al5MWJ«jrJg
tied personnel. Opportunities for advancement, Btfilllj — Lane
HeHan or Mr. launders.
Koltanbar Eng. Co.
fM MAPLE AND 1SSS MAPLB CLAWSON U4-M11
--—biVisiON iAili
ChwiL Calt tC Wee «er_eppeim-
g^ae^sreio^1" COLLECTION MM * .with vidakiiiinun «outtr **r
S^^SlcSlMS'wortlJjl condltlwvi teg maneeerl*l eodtlon In e few
aas.'S'JB.'gaj
ie-3LrMas..,«:
DESIGNERS
DETAILERS
Teels, gauge* and ledy future*. Steady evertlm*
CRAFTLINE, INC.
24141 John R, Heael Perk
detailEr for EROoREssiVe Co., 1*00 E. Maple (wool of JMM
Electrolux Corporation
Needs • man for sales end service work. Apply 11*7 Elisabeth Lake Reed, Pontiac.	____’
EXTRA
INCOME
10 houra, weekly pay SIS. A greet part time le*. Cell OR S4S45. ivsnino Dishwasher, perma-nent position. Meals, vecatlon, ta-surance. Car necessary. Apply In ■arson. Howard Johnson's Re*. Want, Wosdemrd at IS Mil*
ilrman_lnciedlng retrigeretlen
lICHANIC
palrmt ____
Phone FE BM*I.
hour. gSuantaad steady etork. Inaulre SSO Oakland Ay*. EXPERIENCED AUTO SALESMAN
helpers .wattled.
Lake Rodd. _______________
EXPERIENCED car washEr
gXRgRiguciir^iViR '.wonp
men — helpers for sett drink route, apply M p.m. only at Fay-ae*lg Feethamfene. EXPSRllNCED full time
uleamen batsmen U and W. _
THE GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP SI W, Huron U.	FE 4,ISIS'
EXPERIENCED SERVICE StAtidFl men. Top weget end working --r*“—	-—'—k
CSf *Met
finest lines of ttareek piano*, and organa. Famout brf names such as Magnavex, St*...-sray, and Hammond, for Michigan's outstanding quality rafallar. If you knew hew to sail, we will train you with' adieu at* areduef knowledge. Musical background MnfuL but net eteentlel. Guaranteed salary against cemmlulon. Apply Grinnell Brothert, an aqaOl opportunity employer, Pontiac Mall. 442-0422.________..v i'ul/
£XtftA inCGMI' - parT TIMe
urday.
•Ion program affara appar illy far quelMad part-time saefk-i in qteurerea. Our expending
{Hefting w
M© ..wring end Saturday time aveilabM. Cad the Fuller •ruth Co. OR HW tor Informe-
CIVIL ENGINEER II
S7*M to *— Graduate anglneei
aiENT CONTACT MAN
First NeHanel Credit Bureau U
plicant must have ta* ability te -------1 ca» *P«n. eyatnam^and
EULL-tlM«' SEXYoW WITH JANi-toriei experience tor large church.-Ml 4-2040.
OAS STAtilU AfttUIAUt. Ml-chanlcally bicltned. _	“ “•
NIOH SCHOOL GRADUATE, PRfe-
m KSw&Br’cTMllI
It. Rocheatar, Mtcblnen.
IBM MACHINI OPERATOR
Experience on 4S7, 4SI, 51* and o*L Able to arira boards. Apply . .Ptrsenhsl Ottics. Pon-

£uf^YMAN FLUMMR WANT-ad. &II f*2-4fS*.	-	.	_
LONG PROGRAM ' -/ > TOP RATES
"'BEACH" ENGINEERING
234S W. MAPLB WALLED LAKE
LUTHERAN LiFl
(BsteHlshed bt USD , r
NEEDS DISTRICT AGENtS
DONALD S. McKlLVBY AGENCY
ftiN ta W6Rk IH AUT6'7WFH
Jan 25-si, with sales or busi-
re take prar If*-
n'0"' W7 9">?d * krtM-V^f?
4pfUl. MA I
MECHANIC
Local manutacluring eempewy he*
‘jr!>• tpitaKtj?d to h^ta phases of mechanical werk on c—i trucks. This wfll be »ymr
^rurt^ttTU'rt»
ssa
p. o. Box 10. RoctaMter, Mich lean.
MANPOWER, INC USagrA^m»«ffC.bta!r^
no Experience necESsaW
Altered BiCBtaftF wadk With attort, siM par weak With work, *300 per waak “•id work, BlSi gar waak , traveling (absolutely!
*lrm (largest In nattai) »n* (permanent) w appointment, phene
retell R*r yeer. Must he wniHir with ell central* tadudtag dally operating central. Teg salary, bonus, group taeurance. Blue Crow end dram sharing glen. AH new
s&siaajLra
SIL PUINAdl IIRVMb AMBIT
ttwwrjjare
Standard Oil. M W. PR* It. FB
irar
replacing summer help, employment, Muet ot II «
Elies Brat. Blg. Bqy. Te.^.-, end Huron, 14*0 Dixie Hwy. App in eersen tm. _____________.
ovUr » ~ ~
National Credit firm neddt matu salesman te esteMMl eerYlgf J
Tuiktaiijrefoeswnsl —	—1
adlus Pontiac. If y
PIZZA MAKER, MUST HAVE iOM experience, call attar 4. Pasqual* Restaurant, Lake Orion. MY >l4n
" PHARMACiSt
Regiitsrsd, BSC degree, IwmedL
III gp,t— as hr w4t. Itaaril
fringe
omra._________________
BARKING LOT ATTENDANTS, 16 -i—— or eider. Must Be good Apply perking let across
PARTS man "Y6 GRBRATrWKT department ef young, growing John Deere industrial equlpman dealer. Good opportunity tar^eg gresslve person. Phone 4144445 -— Eves., FE j-0344.
:*r*pharmeewIlt^*N^taRlra * a career opportunity for a
Ccaffon physklana ta ta* Detroit ere*. Collage education or equivalent preferred. Satary end tonus plus company car and liberal benefits. All ramies treated confidentially. Send complete resume te Box u. The Pontiac Praee.
PHARMACIST
Registered or Intern, complete fringe benefits. Cell Jack, Robinson;=E J-Tin or EL S-22S5. Party Pharmacy, Pontiac end Slrmlng-
PROGRESSIVE D I E 1-feAofefcs, surface grinders and machine
Machine bands muet knew die work, tool work and experimental me-
, Nor-West Tool & Machine Co.
H4I Grind River	. Nc
Product Risaarch and Davatopmant
kl. was “•
Machine Designers ’
Layout
Draftsmen
W* invite yw te eaalera the aw gtneerthg growth opgsriilMme ot-■ (brad by fll* loading company In tha spaclal mwhlnsry Raid. Ap-
embb.	’ /
The
Cross
Company
14 MR* at Groaaboek HHtawey
TED iMMEDIA'
__ ^la at work.
MS.
WANTED IM
1 ~m. lata ef etarb, roofinu end i. Apply I *jb« 541. Caw l
Reply kf confidence, Btvtag salary raqulrsments and quoKflcaHana to Pontiac Press ^Box A ^
An Equal Oppdrtunlty Employsr
ofmirMxrTswonHJiB
operated launder.^Fert * ttaWJ Ap-
Metropolitan Airport, Inksfer, Mkh
RESTAURANT MANAGER WANJEO ter test erowtaq cheta. .Good start-
FOREMAN, OUTSTANDING OF-PORTUNITY WITH ALL FBI Not BENEFITS. RBFLY IN WRITING TO PONTIAC PRESS BOX NO. 111.
fflULL" BiE AND AUTOMATIC
WANTED
ExpBriwiCGd used cor porter for HILLTOP Auto Sotos 962 Oakland No Phone Colto
•Welders
Steady Work Excaltont Benefits
Employment <0ffict
AMERICAN SHIP BUILDING CO.
2BM Front It.
(41*) 4*14471 I e.m. te 4 p.m.
6V
YARD MAN WANTED"
For lumber yard, ewperHtace neete-urj^ epply 7*41 Cdfiey Lek* Rd.
YOUNG MAN,
Work. im*H It
Welled LM>. taP —
Bm^Vi
handwriting ta PonttaC Press I
Rd., Tray
^rwror
THIS IS it
Add up te tm * weak ..
---Y Income by doing sper*
&
$40 Gucrontetd Salary
Work s to » pjil. S evenings • week. Cer n*osenry. Cell Ml 4-*2*2, ierv* Blegence C*.
A BEAUTY OPERATOR, TRAINED
Administrativ* Clark Traaturor'i Offict
«SS?5rrbS
hwvHf- civil service. Contact City i Office, m W. WeNIe*
AMBlTidUS wdAllN wim pieesing personality. Sarah , Coventry he* openings Bar full er part ttme, high earning*, weekly paycheck, no Invest men! or deliver In*. After 3 p.m. phene OR 544B.______________'
all-around countVr SiUE Apply 7 I* * e.m. Paul's Cleeis-
baTsy rEiffiHftmTH Y HgDie-Werk. must live ta Oxford, tam-
porery, *2e*«23.	-___________
BABY SITTER, NIOHtS, 4 DAYS.
2 chlldran, $20. 24MI61 betora A BAiYilTYlfc AnC HdUilkfEP-■r te live In. Mi «a*5.
BABYSITTER WANTED Tb LIVE ta, car* ef 2 chlldran. no objection to 1 child. OL 1-15*4 or 451443%T BAKERY SALESWOMAN BETWEEN 25-40, tall ttata. no evening* or
r—- Teftory, m w
, Ml 4-7114-
BUSY BIRMINGHAM HOUSEHOLD needs help. Uve ta or stay S nights, S days. On Due line, S40. Ctll 444-9376.
tAk V6u USE U AVIltA&rTdR
3 hours dally? service feed, drug and ceeroetK customers. Phone Mrs. Awn It a-m. te 1 p.m., Thursday only FE 3-3053.
CASHIER r“
Experienced NCR cashier tor per-
«rB
salary and other benefits. Goodman. Tues. only. *:3B-Rase Jewelry Co., Pontiac
CURB WAIT1____
Super chief. .
DEPENDABLE YOUNG MAID, UVE
roundings. Cell p.m. Ml 64332.
Call between it *.m.-2
DEPENDABLE, MATURE EAEY
7:30 ta 5:30 N toy. Must he., — .—
Hon end furnish reforencus. FB MlBt 7 am le * pjw.
DRUGSTORE, EVENINGS, GIRL OR woman, same experience preferred or datlro le learn. Franklm Drugs,
. u jwli* and Middle Balt MA 4-35*1.
experienced h6usEke«>1r, awn ream, bath, 1-LI 4*447,
EXPERIENCED WAITRESS, FULL time evening* The Harbor Ear, Keego Hfrbor, 412-0330.
EXPERIENCED SAL^LAbY
Far ready end caaSam made drop
EXPERIENCED SHIRT OPERATOR. Apply Mitchell Cleaners, Orchard Lake end Middle Belt, Ft MS71.
EXPERIENCED silk finishEr. Apply Mitchell Clemen. Ottftini Lake end Middle tell. FE *4571. IXPIEIkNcBb nuEsbs'S XiDE, 3rd tm and raOdf. apply m aer-een, 1225 W. Sltvair BeH Road.
EXPERIENCED TELEPHONE CAN .
ta our office Salary and cammla-
stan. FE 54487.	___________ ..
GENERAL. 5 DAYS/3 NIGHTS. 25 to 45, otaar help. Mfc 42Mt*Si general HOuiEwokX. " f & r
wertdhd mother, 2 chlldran, a school. Mon.-Frl.. 7:30 t* 3:30 Have reference*, transportation. OR chard Lake end walnut Area. 436
tta*«lSr>^l»^M*L^, '_________
GIRL WANtED FOR LIGHT tELe-phon* work. Salary plus eommla-slon. 473-1277.
GIRL FOR '"GENERAL OFFiCl work, must hay* cashier ekperl-enca, ba able to type an dbe will-tag ta werk asm* even tags. The Good Housaksaplng Shop of Fen-ttac, ti W. r— “
children, re*
___________iraa. 647-043.
HAVl dflNINOS POR 7 WOMEN
Truck Drivtr Sototmon
PONTIAC AREA .
KITCHEN H$L?
Evening work. 1171 Dixie HUf. Preytae Ptetaa. Receeta.
’	LAbVisTom .
homas. PonHac. Trey or tlrtnln*-
hens erae*. Wime wu SOUR ___
LADY OVER M, EXPERI%NC«k.
ta eaaftt ta kBchen, new ■ end dean. Con. FE BdBft ^
LAW CEE ICE NBEOS RecEptTSn-tat. ptaeae atata eg^^aimcjaima
light housework. CHILO car!, • 'Eve ta er earn kua*. ORMSS7.
'
C-- ' "'4. ■ .-v ! '■ .. 1:	
9+mm* Frasah 7	jhlg WofaM FbbnBb 7 WAITRESS^ AND ORILL^^EXPBRI-
faANtCURIST WAHTED^ H* PRft	
imSM	WJii" Sply Encore Restaurant. Miracle MR* Shopping Center A 1
	Wanted LoungB Waitress ■kperfanc* not neceseenr, geod wages and workfc^cendMPM. For ayfatmant cell 4744MM at 474 WOMAN to TAKE OVR MOtHW-lass home, 1 school ag* girls. LIBtatSarOE 34474. WOMAN +0 BAB1T SIT 5 DAYS A week. 4(3-57*4.
■Mg. 10 e.m. to 3 p.m.	
■HEB’tPSSSSJ gem (IM taSMM during the Hytstmas selling season now fa tat serfag. We cen beip.jreu.eem this kfad at money wUh Avon. Writ* PO Ben *1, Dreyton Plains Sr Phone FE 47341	
PARTTIME SALES GIRL OVER 35. ' tBS sSTPSaSi MmriRSham.	
	WOMAN FftR PART-TIME 6#Fldk clerk. Pontiac Laundry. 44S S. Ta4 egraph Rd.
dinner |*H% S deys * week, to-' aladBw Suntary^We I^ HBtei ■ ^hfafatTSrtiton 1SuhsfaoJl. G o o d aentak* Flan, goad nreftts. Call	
	You 4 6 WOMAN TO L 4 Aft n areas top, apply fa person. WaRcar's Cleaners. Lake Orton.
	NB^WoUfl % 8
j»y LXinri «5e qualifications and salery expected. Reply Pontiac Press Box 41.	(ISO A WEEK ' In oemmlestoKs to average tor ■qrt time dietrlhutors tor PROPELLANT 47 Dadctr. Close sales fa 1 m tout as vdth amazing . 10 second demonstrator. Only De-Icer aeMWMi laboratory esrtmcstlon. Biggest users buy.season .altar season. Full aretecltw on repeat omen. Write tor prevan sales Men and gfaWloyi FREE samples. PACE PRODUCTS. INC.. OatiTV. 72nd and Wyoming, Kama* City. Missouri.
ttHHRARY WORK FOR EXPERIENCED TypWl, Stems. Demonstrators and Buafaaw Machfa* Operators. Interviews. and w Tuesday . Friday • Manpower Inc. 14. S. CASS	
	DRY CLEANER and ffalshar tor new operation. Mata b* abto to da tap quality team. RManncae rafadnd. Apply 4714 Walton Blvd. er CaN MA 31441 tor appointment.
waitress wanted, knapp'3 Oaky Bar. Rechastar.	
WAITRESS — MUST E«_4^IHIfcl-tncad, neat and dependable. Apply fa parson only at WHkfaa. dressed a* you wuuld tor wartuAffar 4 p.m. ask ter Battle D. It* Phone calls.	
	HELP WANTED - COUPLES: mo tori, unencumbered couples and women, ages 35 to 60, as houseporents in a privat* school for socially maladjusted boys. No smoking or drinking. , High Khoal education or equivalent. Excellent salary plus maintenance/and pleasant working conditions. References required. Write to $torr Commonwealth For Boyy, Albion, Michigan. /
htAitklsiki Mt day aF% night taint, part Mmt and full ' time. Apply et BI* Bey Drive Inn. ' Telegraph and Huron alio Dixie . Hwv. and Silver Lake Reed.	
WaitrEsI NIGHT SHIFT, in-quir* chief Pentiec Bar. 71 Bald-wln. .	
WAITRESS WITH GRILL COOKlHO • experience. N* Sunday or holiday work. Mtolt Lunch, * E. Pike Jt.	
waitress wanted for k^ulL tbne employment, apply fa parson Sty, Frank's Restaurant, 3413 Orchard Lake Rd., Kaaie Harbor. N# phone calk accepted.	
WAITRESSES WANTED. aApLY fa person after 3 p.m. Huron •owl Restaurant, 1313 EHubeth Lake Road.	
THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1PQ4
HOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED
BH Positive	• v Ml
i^Wjrrfcn1 bu»dVb?v|ce^' 14 4. CM
Mm. thru FrC • a. rn.-4.30 p. M_
, Wed* I p. m.-7 p.m, .
txsffAkfr ittORi f6"MAii
wrassrayisr -
| Experienced. References rfa i Reply Pontiac Press Box U.
iwSfoW'WHitioi *0OiH-
Oerald Rom, 444 Fourth It. tlpc or writ# Rawtolgh, D«pl.
, mmt. FwiB»rt. il.
{hort order cook, male or
WOOL PRESSER,MALE 6* H£
COUPLE TO TAKE OVER FUR--*■- ■ - roeteurant. Dam wry •*•* n. RmI nronesltton Hr right WWW.
Caratr Oportunity
Insurance • draw - qualified leads J year training program. “ Mr. OXonnall.1 FE 30573 tor
full 6r parT timB
Sw Opportunity
For aggressive sataemop. National manimownr #f 0#rda»i Supplies Interested In sales raprasantatlv# for Detroit, surrounding area. SaL ary, complete 'company 'benefits Car furnished. Exciting opportunity. Send resume to Box M Pontiac
UNUSUAL SALES CAREER
a fleeting III staff
r beautiful Florida community .
SeIos iigip MbIo^FomeIe R*A
SALESWOMEN $6,000 Plus Annually
mmtMlen basis. MM a lucre-
‘JOB
HUNTING
TRY 7
International
PERIONNEL SERVICE
tunnies cell us or wait fa I# your nearest IPS PMC#.
BIRMINGHAM
470 E. MAPLE	Ml MM
EVELYN EDWARDS
join this new office can be yours, ft your spec lefty sales background h'WarthkSnjM or mere ^yearly.
slon and tonyies?* Call mT™Aji-dsrson at PR *4*41 for a personal confidential Intarvtew.
WATKINS RD. PULL OR PART
....._. Building
TELEPHONE f E 4-0584 hstrwctlBES-SdiEoh 1
i age I, BWl
f barrier, call PE
M ALUMINUM SIDING. STORMS awnings. VjsM siding. Installed ar - materials. Quality-tow cast.
PE 37545 VALLELY OL VMM KAISER ALCOA ALUMINUM SID-ING, AWNINGS, GUTTERS,
/ MBS GUTTER COMPANY Comploto oavostroughlng servl Oalvsntoed or aluminum. F r
NEW HOUSE AND REMOOELINO
MOTOR EXCHANGE CO.
ENGINE REBUILDING—
ALL CARS AND TRUCKS EXPERT TUNE-UPS 403 S. SAGINAW____FI 3-7433
3 0*1 CONSTRUCTION FEB ErnssATM. driveways
lE»t«EE|iN>wpr*«ElER
'^JOHNST*^
\ KAJMJPE battery^co.
Batteries $5.95 Exchange
PE AlW	*	SMAMum
Mock Dtrt
■LACK PIET AND TOf_IOIU PE>
WEEklEyhf
BLOCK LAYINQ AND CEMENT
BCAE GARAGE, MM Ind. OH Doors, Concrete floors
FAtit^U^eiO^R>CTl?NG Free EsHmetae	ON AlStl
ALL TYPES OF CONSTRUCTION Faaae Builders. FI EeSW ■ CUSTOM REMODELING AND AD-
BetaRa*, rooting and —IPNPS FT at Seeldnlng ahd_wttmMtnc Best rets. Easy tortns. FE 3-2471. ONE CONTRACTOR FOE EVERY-thing. Woodlleld Construction Com-
tjftag and alw se designing i
• CALL INOU-CRAFT MA 311*4. Fine' cabinet work. Free sstRnel carpemtIV, NEW, REPAIR, AND
CEMENT WORK' - DRIVEWAYS „aNer I pm. Ft SMdf.
Cement Wort
FE Mm
"UMiNTWORK, RIASONAiLi.
Free estimates. OR 3-44SS after S. CONCREti. BRICK, BLOCK. RE pair Worii. PE S-WM.
EUBANKS CONSTRUCTION CO.
-----^ “
wits. FE BJB31.
CHIMNEY AND FIREPLACE
A-l TUNING AND REPAIRING Oscar Schmdt FE *7317	
PlosteriRg Senric	O
A-1 PLASTERING ANO Reasonable. George Lea, P	REPAI C 37732
DREDGING, TRENCHING, BULL • NT Eat#
adIng.’ tieulin
ig Col**”
PONTIAC FENCE CO.
tm Plate Hwy.	OR 3-4575
B LARRY'S FIREPLACE id. FE SNd or am
Hyer Saadh|
Hr nIIne *---~
neaiing jsi vim
Home Improvements
■ Kras
OA MISS. It S. Washington, Ox-
IE OMAN CONSTRUCTION, COM-plete service. Frse estimates. FE 37744, day or night.___
HOUSES FOR SALE TO BE MOVED — AM modern, delivered to yeur M. Ojtad Wrecking Company,
A-l MERION OR KENTUCKY EOO laid ar daffvarad. Seeding ar ra drawing aid lawns, patios. Fro
estimates. Branca L—----------
3-0141 or FE S-33DI.
kNOSCAPING. TRUCKING -an ildaatawwc retalntoa ewMB ' -Old
manure. FE 43371.
ARTISTIC LANDSCAPING NUR-SERY—DESIGNING ANO CONSTRUCTION. Chaasa your guarantied plants from our large selection at aesctoiens. am Lake Ra, l>4-lSSf.
MERION BLUE SOD. PICK UP OR delivered. MM Creaks. UL 34443.
REMBACH'S BULLDOZING AND
yard fradtop- Rawr—*~	----
estimates. OR 3-S303.
_ __________ saa-1324
THE COMPLETE SERVI«tw<
Sows. Complete buHdSt*4**^** 1035 Oakland -Aita	FE 4-437S
Me! BraPostT
INSTALLED 3“ GALVANIZED PIPE
COAST WIDE V SMITH SHOVING
M INTERIOR ANO EXTRRIOR painting, trot estimates, wc J guarantied. Rsesonsbli rates. 4
__ _	Roa».Twaa es-
tlmates. Ph. UL 3-1371.
pdiMrinruLWf.^
Guaranteed. FE 34433, FE 3-tl0f.
A Better Income'
by Learning
IBM Machines
LEARN IBM KEY PUNCH, MACHINE OPERATION AMO WIRING. COMPUTER PROGRAMMING. 4-WEEK COURSES, FREE , PLACEMENT SERVICE. NO MONEY DOWN.
General institute
SMS Woodward	Ferndale
MbHE| > teiorollog 21 wpBK«Kin;A‘St Sdnflcd 24
Quality Automobile ‘ Risk insurance BRUMMETT AGENCY
WEEtei Neoiefcetd Goads 2»
AUCTION-SALE EVERY lATUll-dey et Blue Bird Auction. We'll buy fumltum,>nmBRd appliances. OR 30147 or MEIrose 7-S13S.
CASit PM FURNITURE an6 A^-pllmcos- 1 Piece or houseful. Pearson's. PE 4-7SS1.
CASH FOt» YfkiR FURNITURE or lot us sell It for you on ma-signmont. Hell's Auction SeKt, MV Min, MY 34141. ,
GOOD ukBb LATS m6dSl bou-
3 OA 1 SINGLE OIRli, NUaM ---------~4 Hospltol. FE Wl». *
___0 XF 0 R 0 COMMUNITY
auction, tro-ins.
WANTiO: GAS AND ELECTRIC STOVES. Hlghtst prices. Little Joss SergObi Heuso, Ft "***
I. Call 4SMV70 attar 4
It ba reasonable. I
CASH PAID FOR V0(JR OSSD furniture and epplisncee. FE AIIM. Days only, aak Mr ear. Grant. Wyman Furniture.
SHOWCASES;
morchandla
OR 34747.
MULTlM ' Ttlfc
PRIVATE PARTY WANTS TO BUY antique dtahee hand painted Mi
end glau. Mir* --■*--
MS-HM attar
UifeD COUNTER STOOLl FO* lunch ream, good condition. Raa-tonshls. Reply F.O. Ban ISS.
Weem » tmt U
3 OR 3-BEDROOM. FURNISHED heuaa outside of “ontiec. PnMbn-able. Call batwaan 13 and t pA no ufku	'
ATTENTION MEN LEARN TO LERATE
dozers, graders, drag Unas, bach
55St..*W.	<58
135-IMS ar ewRa lai_ 	\
ASSOCIATED \
• HEAVY EQUIPMENT SCHOOLS Viioo W. McNICHOLS, DETROlt \
ATTENflON
BE WORKING—LEARN NOW
AUTO MECHANICS Auto Body Collision
WELblNE
Are Haadad Enmli Now
WOLVERINE SCHOOL
Appravad by
State Board of Education jf veers, seme location 1400 W. Fort, Detroit FINISH HIGH SCHOOL AT HOME. Diploma awarded. Write ar ahone tor FREE booklet. No final at Hama Stwfy, 1774 Dept. PP, Warren, A
IBM TRAINING
Learn IBM, Keypunch, machine ■garstton and adrtna, t~ ~
puter programming. Mt— ----
Board of Hucatlon appravad. Free placwnant service. Free perklne. Campi' ~~—	““
BROWNIES HARDWARE ‘LOOR SANDERS - POLISHERS WALL PAPRR STEAMERS DRILLS - POWER SAWS 753 Joslyn	'V Hi ddW
WwfcWEHMMElE 11 Alt CARPENTER and alumi-
■urn sidlne. kltdiens, eddmens and recrnntlan moms. FE 4-S33S and FE 34010.
Oakland Pair 3 J
io Ava, PE MIN.
ISAM TO SBtM SQUARE FEET OP WAREHOUSE SPACE NEIOBd. IMMEDIATE OCCUPAMCT Oi-SIRED. CALL JOHN SMOTHER-MAN. 444434B 1:3# TO S P.M.
cCuPlI bisiRi house east of
Show LMog 9mhm 33
ELDERLY COUPLE OESIRES TO •hare living quarters with adhar elderly ladv or oMerlv cot Die FE 3367S.
ELDERLY COUPLE TO SHARE home with elderly man, aa rant, no utility hull. 3731 HnNitt, wa-tortord Twp. Ptwna 4S34M7.
ELDERLY WOMAN TO SHARE
caiaitarSJS
or vsrr p
as
kcu, rnxmr, nuaincw rnur-ERTIES AND LAND CONTRACTS Urgently need tor knmedleto salel
WARREN STOUT, Rsoltor
1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE MISS MULTI PL BuItInG SERVICE
aaa Investors byiLL' iAY sMi
FOR YOUR EQUITY EVEN IP EEHINO IN -PAYMENTS. DE-
JWff*
ATTENTION OWNERS
We need list bigs an homes acreage. We buy and sad
^PONTIAC REALTY
37 Baldwin_______ PE 3SS7S
T BM VfltH PICKUP WANT* OOO
lobs, ft 44331.______
S JOSLYN mahEOID MAN WANTS STEADY ,	. work. OR 314S4.
ODD JOES OR PART TIME WORK.
Pmi2e fJ
REBUILT ANO GUARANTEED TV* Ilf .75 up. CM TV and Radio. 34M EdsaBaMUM PE 44741
Trti
S.E. OALBY TREE SERVICE stuma removal, trim, tm I 33SSS, FE MSB.
1-DAY IRONINO SERVICE. MRS. McCawaB, reNrencsi. FE 31471.
BABY SITTING IN MY HOME
AIM STRUCTURAL STEEL u CINDER AND CONCRETE BLOCK TRANSIT MIX CONCRETE 1773 PONTIAC DRIVE. PONTIAC F1-4-7531 ________________
basements cleaned. 474-1S4L ' LiohT fROCRmo, aNVKIHBT
REASONABLE._________FE MSI
ughThauling. CLARKSTON WA terford oroo. S&-IBW. .____
COMPELTE LAWN SERVICE DAN'S LANOSCAPE '	3S3-3M
TONY'S CUiTOM LAWN w6*K
Track RoNtoi
Trucks to Rent
Vk-Tan pickup#
TRUCKS
1W-TM Stakes ■■H TRACTORS ANO EQUIPMENT Dump Tmais — Bain-TraEare
Pontine Form and Industrial Tractor Co.
OS S. WOODWARD PC BMM „ . . „ .FE 4-l4fl
Ufboktdriof
anywnam. s 3344734.
21
CoEralBBCBBl'NlirslBg
A LOVELY nursing HOME for wemen patients. OR 34BS4.
CARE POR seaman, art OA 31147.
stOHKycroft HuRkiHO Iiome
Mowif B»d Tracfckn
I. FE 5-3451. FE 33707.
xi guaranteed. PE 31411.
" WlMi--------------
WELL SERVICE, DRILLING, RE
Bob's Von S#rvk*
MOVING ANO ITORAOT REASONABLE RATES Cemplete inearmce ROBERT TOMPKINS	OR 41513
lighY“'hXuling ANb MOVlilO, diedp. Any Klnir FE HOR
■ i-i— m •	-i	**
raiimRg m ublbi Biiivg ss
A-l PAINTING ANO PAPER HANGINO . THOMPSON_________Pi 443S4
A LAOY interior oEcoratOr, Pe>erfna. FE 3QO. glNIE’S SRRVKE . -PAINTING 'MIT*** 'E"IE7l—■ 4134133 EXPERTPAINtlNO, DECORATING , paper removIna. OR 37354.
CASH
48 HOURS
LAND CONTRACTS — HOMES ' EQUITIES
WRIGHT
3M Oakland Ave.	FE 3041
GET RESUlt$
WE NEED INttaBt. Cell ae k tor quick sale and top mi value. If N't real estate, we
"" "don WHITE, INC.
3*71 Dbda Hwy.
Phone 4744474
If . . ...
You oro trying to sail ] home, but havt had succbss thus far, givt Dan Edmonds a tall. Chances art ha has a buyer waiting for a home Just like the one you own. Call tpday, and get results.
Dan Edmonds
Listings Needed
Cuttomers welting, Weet Sk
Hacken "Realty EM 34703 NOTICE]
PROMPT ACTION On trades or exchanoes
A GUARANTEED SALE IN
48 HOURS
W. H. BASS
REALTOR PE 3
____'RYE Rar+V, witH mB
wdhes to huy aquRy In Pentlec oroo. .Oatrelt 1734441.
WE NEED Lt$tlN6S
AUGUST JOHNSON
REALTOR
Bar .
WE NEED LISTINGS!
LIT US LIST AND SELL „ YOUR HOME. * ft j WE HAVE BUYERS WAITING.
t&Ewup 141,	ral
----—v w 4‘LiiNipwrvdR'i *tfe«66iyun»
is/'rll^tw i PAuI7|ONbT^1ALTYVVFE 4-4550
WANTED TO EUY - LARGE 3
!*nge' W°or anSSTwwNiaf'li
WANT TO Saif
V GIVE US A TRY _ PROSPECTS GALORE
JAMES A. TAYLOR, Rtaltor
from General Heap Hal.
Phone 343374S.
3 CLEAN ROOMS, Id PER WEEK AdufiirPfV
BABY WELCOME,JfXTRA CLEAN,
mgm An6 tPkieiENCY apaTtownta, new. prices. MM and up. King Motal, 1300 Opdyke, PE 37W4.________________ .
HOLLYWOOD APARTMENTS: TWO
MIXED NEIGHBORHOOD, l-t , epertmant. FE S4474.
MODERN L6WBR LAKE FRONT
m'l's Ham Ml
Saje Nrasey " 1ST TIME AO
Only MjM Itr lMa ow pled. |MNM- irara|il Huren-Ttlearegn area.. I._ shaded Wxisr fat wRh garden.
Pin* traaa, lilac*, s4iZmpr_«!f‘ peted living ream. IS’xlf’. dhibie room. 14-tf kdchen. 3041. front glassed perch. Ptpeta—■ throughout, get futttaos.
r***- MS MONTHLY
ishibew Meyhss a lance. OR RdM7.
>»»W»OWUlCK ■gAESMfc 525.500. Fermlngton 1-GR 4-1073. ’
3 E*D*66S«; WALCSd LAkE grWBgiii «gwgllikjra“‘ Oigfdewn. MA 4M44
4 BEDROOMS Drayton Plairis
A reel bargain at only S13.M0. Located near shopping canter. Be-IfaiM r or hat this hem* he# 4 bad roams, living mem, > dining roam, kdchen, MeakfeM nook, many closets had full basement, at mb low price. Home Is fa
it. MN heat. jmmet
or add wee far I year »im w to buy at SIM per manth. See cad WM. B. MITCHELL.
aWIUIS m. brewer REAL ESTATE
4.E. Hurei FE 44W ar MBf
Apfeits, UafgrMdbefM
1 BEDROOM UNFURNISHED,.SIM por month. Fontainebleau Apart mints. 77S N. teas Lake Read
B I-----------fa FE 3S07fc
NB, UYIl-
M ORTON NEEDS MAJOR REPAIR, $100 dwm and (20 par iitnWMs first year. Owner out at town, i Datrolt 8374414.
AVON TOWNSHIP
****** mam—| mim
ner tot, fl«n Terrific veto lie lleelty

3 ROOMS, UTILITIES FURNISHED coupta only. OR >1731.
3 ROOMS AND BATH. XBuTfS. tT>
- * — *----PE 34MS
3-ROOM B!
IMENT, i drinkers. PE I . BEDROOM APART-■nts bi RachaNar Arm*. Rafrig-ttor and stove. slr-condbll»«»-g. Cad Nine Martin. OL 37711.
> R00Ms7 MIDPLk
Mikfb "-"i kick r66WT anI>
ONE BEDROOM. MOBERN. ON Pentlec Lake. EM 3717S or EM 34MS.
ORCHARD court apartments modern in every detail
■ “	—FE S47U
A Winner!
like a megedne picture. Everything mam wants .Mafadfag fireplace end sunroom tor flowers. Has cemplete dvbig quarter* ever garage with outs Me entry. Screened summer faMM wtth kitchen .fade ties' far an lay able autelde dining The bargain of your Ufa for mt pleasure at yeur family at 037,500. Liston la the BIRDI The dm* It now. .
REALTOR PARTRIDGE "tSTHe BIRD TO SBI''
ON W. Huron.	Ft	44M
BALDWIN AND 1-71 AREAS. PON-tlac II RUnutta. 4-badreom f
■ WjTBfcr,M-
XI IntorET 47M73S.
per cent morlEiaa Phi* I7M da“ >1.4
iWRE«^^rawEWON^
RAY O'NEIL. Realtor
MM Pontiac UL Rd. OPEN 7 fa ■ OL T4M0 MLS ,P> 371M IMMEDIATE POSSESSION OF beautifully landscaped alumbtum
—
Trl-lovol, 3 bodrooma
jiaJ
nlceiy Tendswed.**?*" bp
.mm
HILLTOP REALTY
MEDIATE POi.--
WATE R TORDHIOH gas heat, 3W-cer »erege. fer Price SI4MS. IS par cant «
HILLTOP REALTY__4»
NEED 5 BEDROOMS?
A lake front near Commerce that can ba had tar only SIMS down and payments of only 111 a month. Needs seme fixM'. fad a real bargain. Sa* It today.
WARDEN REALTY
3434 W. Huron, Pentlac	3P-71P
NORTH SUBURBAN. 3-BEDROOM largo carpeted living room. Bear garage, with pauaa drive, etdu madegas MatToniy MBITS.
REAGAN
RIAL ESTATE . MM N. Opdyke Read Ft 3*134_______PB *4157
HAYDEN
NEW HOMES
3 BEDROOMS TRi-uvas RANCHES
lW-Car Gsrage ST L»lMWj Family Room	_..D»S
FROM $10300
« PER CBNT OOdfN , ■ MODEL AVAILABLE roi IMMEDIATE POMBSStON
WILL BUILD OH^YOUQ LOT Open Man. thru.'fat, P4- SWL *4
c HAYDEN, Rodtor
BM 3Mp4 W7S1 NMBfaBB OOt JIBW
UTICA
Our current selection |7 hamgs and commercial or fadWRIal. pi* .fa the Utica sre# Is yai«f variety, six* and prk» f ***** the wfawfaE as *“■
BARGAIN
MODERN COMTSMPORARY, 3 BEDROOM RANOMR, RECENTLY rVbH[cqutIo. automatic i . __^ „ _______ „
HEAT, EXCELLENT NEIGHBOR Bkadroam fud jstamsnt, fas HOOD, MB CLOSING COSTS I	”***r e»r,e"e •»'
MOVES YOO IN.	I
WRIGHT
3H Oakland Ave.
Need o Home?
dfera
Rout Hemes, FMmishad
2| BIRMINGHAM
3-BEOROOM, FURN SHED S75 mo. rounded by laraar ham** near MSS Basumant White Lake area. est Lake Country Club an* 7
------------------- I In kd. Pan* ltd racraatten
with tlranlac* fa baeamont. F roam. PruR traaa and M^_ Ideal country dee* far. only ML-
. JRNISHED
....____ Creekt Rd.
R*fat Homes, UnferBisInd 40
3BEDR00M TERRACE, EAST BOU *A*°f|eY ■■(y*-0yiA{- • fauaeW. Gas hmL tow UtdltlM. car £“**,£* & erty. Kids Wtd torn Ik*
| FAMILY - I ROOMS EACH, GAS lactose k... Ziuu. cb iim	fr.KJU
mesoneht* rent, gas heat, recently decorated, wo a No hav* other rant-. at* evallehN.
REAL VALUEREALTY 4fa Township, coupki anty. FE 33745.
oTTGS
WEIR, MANUEL, SNYDER & RANKE
37* S. Woodward. Birmingham 1443*0 PHONES SM-MM
. ROOMS. dOOD LOCATION, Adults, rataranca*. 335-3515.
S75 Par Month Contact Resident Manager 544 faat'JUvd. at Vefanda FE 47133 -
EAST BLV6. IM SOUpt PONTJAC
BRICK RANCH
CLOSE TO SYLVAN SHOPFINO CENTER, LARGE 4-ROOM BUN-. GALOW. ALL GOOD SIZED BEDROOMS, Ilk BATHS. OAS HEAT, mm. *ND SCREENS. CARPORT, (AROE LOT. (13JM -TERMS. ^
J. J. JGLL REALTY
ROOM ANO OR BOARD ISSVb Oakland Ay*. FE 4-MS4. iLEEPING ROOM, S13 PER wdEK with $31 depoed. inquire STS win Ave. Cad 33*4*54,
CLEAN, PRIVATE ENTRANCE,
FOR CARPfeNTER IN CHhli+IAN hem*. Writ* Pontiac Prate Bex tf. GENTLEMAN, CLEAN ROOM WITH hem* etyfa meafa." *"—
IO DfalNdiRS. -- -iMOWa Bfajpi. ff« 3i
JMrtL plus llw 4th fireplace, tail dfafaa compact kitchen, 3 full
bakfa, recraaRaa ream and Mmk dry ln full basement, screened and laNuafad perch. Detroit water, nice lot. BMN «a*-S477.
■Y OWNER - YEAR AROUWj
Rofaf OWjcB SfafaBB 47
MO tOUARE FEET OF OFFICE
Honing, lenitor service parking SmT K. u • Realtor, IM Eds
use fd iiw so. ft. aVaiiaeL! on ParMfatar Read near Com Avw-nua at Huron. Phono Lesha R. Tripp, Realtor, FE 54141. ATTRACTIVE OFFICE SPACE, l35»
.	_ _______ ample parip
fag. In the Sylvan Shopping Confer. M* par aft lea.
“ -JM SYLVAN 43* •*“ LIVONIA SUILDING M.H.
!,hcT,®
-TTfr Wfw—
4ACRE FENCEO YARD ' 4-CAR R.R. SIDING ATTRACTIVE RENTAL
Phone icbom BESJ^OCAjiatf,
fElGO
Phone
tom >Oto»n-,tof|Wlyr4lf4
30X 70 EUlLDtNO, POLL BASE-
---- —-imbleau Pleu.
Reed. PE 37103.
MALTA-TEMPLE
Church, aoott . IM. lodge i
i meet fags, i B 4*344Bor 4
MOMd prtvakL Me-tfat grSBS.Hii;
Just Dail 332-8181 to Placa ft Low Cost Rims CLASSIFIED ADI
Colonial 4 Bedrooms
Cerpotod throughout, tlfc baths baautdul oak dearths. Plenty alar eg* coatoatl. Cvpkpsrdl. Family type kitchen. Attached Bear ga
‘^IMMEDIATE* POSSESSION ti ,750t dawn buy*. Lot 7S'x140’. Full sta* high bsiement. Only minutes west of Pontiac. Convex j*M la several schools. Phan* 473 7734 or Ml 4-4500. _-	,
; C SCHUETT
‘‘POE SPECIAL VALUES'*
CL^IxAfON	-	7-
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION 3 bedrooms, bath and a halt, Bateman!, gw heat, carpaffaa. fenced |h yard, garage. Prlog *11,700, 1700 dean plus caats. Iff a month gkrs
takes and bMuranca.	__
HILLTOP. BBALTV	0734BS4
t-ftEOROOM-HOMft. 'Wt Lake prKttaEaa OR 373*3,
IT scraanad parol
__________yard. Paved straafs
and mK Ponttec schools. Largo carport, loads of storage end MM, efares lor lust «17.7M. Owner 4*3-
• EAST SIDE—MIXED
newly dacoretad. now reef. • MJM ISO* dawn.
RAUL JONES REALTY
Model at 61 Court St.
N. of Mt. damans Call FE 4-6683
tW TRI .- LftVBL, BASEMEN^
~ NO DOWN PAYMBWT NO PAYMENT- FIRST MONTH
4, 3 bedrooms. SO*
family refan*. brlM . Open J.fa * doth
BELAIRE HOME BUILDERS
PS BETEfc t:Mta«
EVENINGS AFTER 7, L - — 6r? joslyH « I SLOCK TO Northern High, » bedrooms. Mm*
n.	tllUTMU Mlrf
__________PM 37*41
SftUAfti LAkO fcOAD AN ward. ) badrooms, brkfc nwdi
VEST'
SREOAi
*300 dawn on land m maMMy 3 hepreem b u need* seme ' rgieir*. 7 — Strubl* Realty. Ft 4*141.
Sylvan
Shores
mWjRs > ‘‘J" DON WHITETiNC
II Dixie Hwy-	O
OPEN QAILY TO O f.
■«(P*
SAVE $1,000
Owner reduce* price be. . to rL7S0 end pefatad exterior. 3 bedroom ranch, close I* school! Md shopping. Was* suburban. ymmmm wRh axtros. Radiant
e-h
CITY COMFORTS
PMfaW.
•ed-us fr—     — .
garage, swimming
setting. ; klfckai Nb -
L OtAOO. No down
BOO W. Harm _ L OR 4«fa Evan fags CaH .4414434
moves fa. ISSJI month plus tax
saAUTrdn;
Woterford-Clorkston
NO DOWN PAYMENT ITO CLOilHa COST Bbadraam ranch newly dacaral— carport, Jaffa let, payed street, vacant. Pried *7,500. *7* monthly.
RORABAUGH
rSAR AROUND HOME. J4IW 3 PrtyV
CITY OF R0NTIAC Mixed Area WHY RENT? $55 MONTH
All WORKERS ACCEPTED
AND PEOPLe ON SOCIAL MCURrlY AND PEW‘“;“
WINOOWS, DIVORCEES, EVEN PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PROBLEMS ARE OJL WITH US
SEPARATE DINING ARIA
5 UMJ
REAL VALUE RMM-TY 41*457
SMt Hawee	r gj
NORTH PONTIAC AREA 4 '	$2f 06WN .•
COVERS ALL CASH NEEDED
*$55 MONTH „
ALL APPLICATIONS ACCEPTED IMMEDIATELY
featuring
CHOICE LOCATIONS SEPAJU^T^Vn INOAROA ORAL VALUE REALTY 4I44S7S
TAYLOR
INT
IrSmms.' it*1
•Kh. Only 1
MACEDAY LAKE FRONT
wr~
NOTHING DOWN VIP resoles. JH hemes, city and
RBAL ESTATI—INSUtUL______
7733 Hlghfand Read (M4t)
*	-	. Bvanfagi BM 37S44
Sweet Heart Homes
Wb Hoys 4 Hew Loti at ■	_
Judah
Lake
Estates
FHA Financing Only $295 Down Only $81 Month
D'Lofoh ..........6244200
New Models
Open Daily 124
PRINCESS
tensity ream and fame Bear garage. Priced at turn factadeg lot. 14% dawn.
VIRGINIAN
This exception*! ^[Colmlel^^leetixres Ink**paneled family raem, t bjd-
and large Bear garage. Priced a* (17,77* Including laf. I* par cent dawn.
Thma hemae afa* Include large •*-state-size jots,^bl*ckt<sp drivers
Lacatadtt Eta new Maced ay
DON WHITE, INC
Dixie NMV.	OR 4-
OPEH DAILY TO » PAL
Joyno Heights
NEAR KETTERING n HIGH SCHOOL
DRAYTON PLAINS DANDY
1 bed teem bungefaw, full BMamfair
WE TRADE AND TRAQO
IN SILVER LAKE SUB.
«b*dmem coleplat tat ffaar laun-ptece. Peerless kitchen vmh win-
WE TRADB AND TRADi
IN SILVER LAKE SUB.
N nearly ready. Buy new ahd
WE TRADE AND TRADE
IN JAYN0 HEIGHTS
KKCPm
plastered, M fa value fa Mile ba

WE TRAD* AND TRAOE
YOU WANT t0 BUILD?
YOU WANT ue TO DMLOf
. Sihftf lok* Const. Co, 6734511
' c~
Wantcd CMtricHrMtf. 60-A
IMMEDIATE CASH JO* YOU*' rind contract! or any good land crntrstajupto tmtaattery appraisal
K. L. TempUton, Realtor
«g» Ortotr* UW Raid < 0fMS
jM WJN* v 41
^ (tR**aB*ftih«r uyti
FINANCIAL
WORRIES?
Let Us Help You! borrow UPTO $1,000
34 months to pay end* Ink Insurance available
BUCKNER
FINANCE COMPANY
. Offices NEAP YOU
LOANS
*r» .07$1,000
___	WW MIS.
HOME 4 AUTO LOAN CO.
9 N. Perry ».	PE Mill
fw«0W»«■»•»» < ~n»S n s
ns to si.ooa
LOAM td $1,00C
usually on flret visit. Owls • friendly. Btapful.
FT2W2W
* the number to cad.
OAKLAND LOAN CO.
M Pontiac stata lank Bldg. t:3> IP SiSBr* Sot. 9:31 te 1
WHEN YOU NEED $25 te $1,000
We wW to glad to halp you.
STATE FINANCE CO.
M Pdntlac State Sank Bldg,
Fl 4-1574_____
Mertfayi'liMMi^____ 42
CASH- CASH!
PON
Home OWners
Widows, frnsioners can be eiioniE.	_ _ _	|
. CHECK, LOWtST RATES |
We HbnuHibU leedsiS Sib HnnMI EnA.
1 PAVtNPOWT. CHAIR AND OT-tomMr ll'xtat carpet, bunk tods, eaudv table and Nietoae.
i"ViMw6ir~kANGt. T wEst-dlto Va ||t*egjf6. mf"m- w*
»H^WwoewyXKEPtELP YAtLBi,
WNou*htiron bed* and mattresses, usable as trundle tingle ar anpKtode. EM MtaS..	.
JJ*T«ifiMpE A EFR lOE R ATOR
3-DRAWER MAHOGANY DRESSER ytth hdrrer. 0.444-I44S.
miti BLOND SINGLE B1D-
tar
SWIVEL BA* STOOLl HA lb
toll LINOLEUM RUGS ... «M
V^Yl'ASBESTOS (Random) Sc'Ea CERAMIC TILE	Sc fa
ASPHALT TILE (RANDOM) 4c Ea , THE FLOOR SHOP 2255 ELISABETH LAKE ROAD
tmiliC poor prS11E*. s7L i electric sWcar, MS, 1>R Stofr,
I Only-RepossessEd
3-ROOM OUTFIT
$159.95	$2.00 Watkly
includes comelele todrtont sal, 2-Plsca sectional and end tables and
Clean guaranteed. A
sis*
3 ROOMS
PyjINITURB BRAND NEW
$317	$3:50 Weekly
Includes Vplaca ebdroom suits with . box Spring «ltd mattress and 1 boudoir lamps, nlct (rail* living ream with alii tables end . beautiful lamas. Formica too dinette with s chairs, and nlct range and re-
JUST ARRIVED
BEAUTIFUL GROUP OP ROCKERS Dandy to rack toby. Only S17.SS. .
BARGAIN BASEMENT
Just iwrclwMd.^1 camlpet* house-end sat ths bargains.
' EZ Terms-Buy, Sell. Trade Man. thru PH. *HI 1 p.m. Sat. 'til S
LITHE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE
1401 BALDWIN AT WALTON FE *4141
First traffic light south of 1-75. ocraos tram Atlas Sapor Market.
GE J-OOOR 11-FOOT RtPRlGER-’ ( V • k 41", SltS. Pfilte* 2-r, IS-loot, SSSS. Whirlpool IF I. 1-door, lilt,
TERMS AVAILABLE ,
HAMPTON ELECTRIC
w. Huron ' pe 4-ms
CRAY'S
FURNITURE WAKEHOUSE
NEW and usrd furniture
BANKRUPT STOCK * _ DISTRESSED MERCHANDISE
J plece chrome dlnatto SMS,. SN Bunk tod salt, complete with mattress. S». '-	> *
1-plece living room suites.	-
Danish ttotorn • Modern - French Colonial, M Ms at IB.
Early American «place Maple dining room suHos with mor-erool tops, mmi il Wigfra. MMI- Tr Big 4-etecs bedroom suites, book-cese headboard with huge dresser phis matching chest. Priced to
THIS WEEK ONLY!
LAMPS, Early American or Mod-Tato Mdf gtokTyi.**. Come
wfiltfv v8S(* tt mTat our
DEALS. NO JAMCY FIXTURES. LOW OVERHEAD.
Rink, neer corner of Ff“— —
338-0851
OPEN DAILY j OPEtT SUNDAY 11 T<
3:30. 331-4705.
chairs. 111. C
KIRBY VACUUM, LATE MC New portable typewriter Necchl console . -iaK.ftMLe Singer console auto, ils-ug . •
Consol# chord arnan ..:.......
smgor a Curt's A
KIRBY VACUUM CLiAMIR lad Kirby, gSS, Bead condition.
LAZY BOY CHAIR WITH OTTO-mon, excellent condition. $40. Ph
FE 3-300*9 S.________________
MOVING—MUST SCLL AUTOMATIC weshor and dryer; wrlngar washer; Food-a-Rame refrigerator; gos stove; 11 'pr. maWMd drape*, other miscaltonaoue Hams.1 Ff 2-4374,
gas and altctrlc dryers at SI.N par weak and up.
SEE US PON TERRIFIC BUYS
GOODYEAR STORE
It S. Cats	FEJF41W
OIL FURNACE HORIZONTAL,
condition. FE F44W-
THE PONTIAC PRESS, SfONDAV. OCTOBER W !#fl4
Bfr Dkk Tarwr
Fy Safc WwlMim 47
SINOBR SEWING MACHINE
191 Him IgeipiMEt
Pats—Huhting De|s
3 BRITTANYS, I FEMALE,
- FE 1*3174 attar 4:30 p.m.	I Wo hdva the lull I
'l ARC FEMALl FOODlCS, Stol , ?	..
sseh. OR F7311.	•	j Prlcdd nWuljk^^,
1 MONTHS OLD aTc BRITTANY	* yuifc |2£k*
pubples. OR 3 3114.	AINU BKUb.
4 BEAGLE PUPPIES, <10. FE 4K734
_____„_JAHEIMS. PE DIM. ONE USED
AKC POODLE PUPFliS, TOYS S100 RJEo^a Minlatura ISO. Fertecl confirmation, t
kd. tt OpdyXe
I.C. TRACTOR MOO Ih Henry loodor end shop*. StWS. Credit
maum-*	kinq bros.
COLLIE' JuFpfBS GUARAN PE 4-07J4	PE 4-(44i I
I to 451-SMS.	Panlisc Rood tl Ogdyko	,
AKC BLACK POODLE PUPPIES, j FOR SALE; 4 USED W M E E L champion background, ressonobie i horse irsetors starting .from SIM _OA F3177. .	I	t and up. Evans Eguipmotit. StFIlll
akc dachshund PUPPiii, sfuo f see our link of homelite dogs. ESTELHEIMS, PE bOSS*	chain taws Dkvto Machinery Co .!
A - i POODLE stYliHg AND	Ortonylllk, NA 7-3W1. Spoclillst tor
grooming, gTFMES.	.	term trectorttndmochineryperia.
iATHiNdAiro GtWiRiRarpiCK- sbs.us first and save, john
UP ANDMLIVERtTuI-MB. | o E E R E.^HARTLAND AREA , BEAUTIFUL "AKC PCkOOLfS.	,
wMkte HIHf*	USED FRAZER ROTOTILLERS,
•bxiR Fu?pin, AKe Regis	parts and «*Rvice.
tered. Terms avallabls. 473,7115.	l. ve. avis
COLLIES At<C SAlLtrirTRISi so Studs. 7M-174S.
CUSTOM JSODLE TRIMMING. ■
- • -	- ,	. Pi FSWB^^
“OOS.TRAINiO	| FFOOT T^K^AMPBR.	|
COLONIAL
' Moollhonpe Sales l> Servko, Inc.
RAVBLO^-	'	'
RITZ-CRAFT . DIPLOMAT l models, W and It* wldt
• NEpre. F4 Oaky ~ -MARlETTE. VAGABOtfD, G*RD-ner, SkyUne. Gator at, Ik-11 and M wide. «tlear^ptona.
Man dally M:M — Clasad Sunday
Oxford ‘ Trailer Sales
INGUSH' POINTffRi AKC. 3 Old. 47F1S47.
Snclish setTers. i7 months PE F1SM
FROZEN BRINE >• SHRIMP/ ALL Pel Stop. Si WllHems, PE 4-sell. GOLDEN RETRIEVER, I YEAR eld, hunter, S7t. l-TU4to».
german shTfhWd fups, Rio*.
ISM Opdyke
I Travtl Tr*H*rs
•-FOOT Ti cooking
mild south of Lake Orion on* Mil MYFdWI
MOBILE HOMi, 1PX45-, SI,'7to • 4W-1SEI
Porkhurst Treibr Sim
INEST IN MOBILE LIVNG IS Tfl
Buddy end Nomads.
■dN Id—y between . Orion one
Klf TENS
1 etc. 74S Orchard
davenport for reception
room, toy s clothing. 14-Mi girl's Ev«
coM, tWT4. OR FWS.	l"‘-‘
DOG HOUSES INSULATED M IJL, -------- 41f A.
La___________________
0. 4 j. CABINET SHOP
Custom ceblnatt,(.Formica tops, talas gf Formics, sinks, hoods and fauetto. COMPARE OUR PRICES.
M4 W. HURON ,	3344tl>
THE SALVATION ARMY REO SHIELD STUyt ’ IIS W. LAWRENCE ST. ■yming to meat your ne< Ctottwng. Furniture, and Appllatk
TRIPLE BARGAINS
Recandlllanad guaranteed U • TVs SIS and up. no money po
condition, S71
REEZER; KENMORE IRONER: power loolr. ME 7-1114. FURNITURl. 477 E. BEVERLY.
__FE 4-4471 attert a.m._
FURNACES, NEW AN6 USED, GAS gMAgatodato immediate
:URNACES, NEW AND I or oil, long terms. Service. FE MSB._____________________________________
GOODYEAR STORE
» S. Cost	Pdntlac, Mich.
USED GAS AND OIL pWHaCES. Chandler HtoWto, OR >S4M.
Used HtQtipg Equipment
Gat — Oil conversions and furnaces. blowers, toilers, space best-r betters, a
Wayna Haatbig. OL l-ttl1__
WE DARk AN'Y FOOD . SERVICE TO MATCH THIS.
FOR DUSTY CONCRETE FLOORS
Usa Liquid Floor Hardknar Simple inexpensive Application
Boies Buiwors Supply Fi nn# I	.	,
FLUID HEATOIL BURNER. REEM	Use our leanor troonr It needei
(1-gallon eMCtrk water	Taka advantage at these grai
itotosut	said—* -'-‘i--	*- ---- *-—
___________ M.7S.
. ™ Rochester, OL 1-4371.
71 PkblOREib BOXER, GOOD With ■ ChMdren. FE 4-7MT.	;	'
_ , , , ACCORDIONS PObbCl CUP - lOAkblNG. OR !
___ lessens. PE S-44M. [ chard Grove Kennels. MA 4-1H3
SEVERAL USED YFiNET ORGANS POODLES, CREAM STANDARD such femeus names at:	I AKC chemplen stack, '4 months.
Lowrey	clipped, farm raised,	reasonable. |
Gulbrensen	Collect Holly 434-4041._
Estey	|REGISTERED ENGLISH POINTER
Hammond _	| puppies SIS, Call SM4I3|._ _
N. mo!»y“lZ - « i™nb «4®'VtBRE6 CHlfHJAHUA PUP-1 until Novamtor.
QALLAGHlR'S
II E. HURON	PI 4-Wll .......... ... __ ____ , .
SPINET P I A N O, MAHOGANY, I 3-7741 after S pjn._
ilka new. Sees, mbuim.__Siamese kittens FOR sale —I
THOMAS ORGANS Foil W iSrf^^ailB. I one of Arntnco i^lftottst 7 weeks aid, rtatanakla. PE nn?. , voluss. Fun spirT organ, j^cACJIgWrow™
storting ot |495. WIEGAND m.	_______
MUSIC C0-, 469
Lake Road. Piano tuning ' ' . i	\
and orgon rtpoir.	AdeHde Seles ;	••,
WANTEO USED L|SLI*.IFEaK»I. | AMTIOUC AND HOUSEHOLD AUC-
1948 DODGE BUS CONVERTED into camper tor slopping I. Moke on offqr. Cad PE M7M alter S
~ AlhSTREAM LIGHTWEIGHT ~ TRAVEL IWHllRS Sine* 1932. Guaranteed tor ilto.
rS'En^H.^!
Welly Svam-t exciting ekgavans). I AIRO-FLOW LIFETIME'GUARAN-i tat. PraMe, Trotwood, Gurway. ■■ Comanche, orimaed, Tot- 1
Irollors. PE NWS
Rent Troiltr Space
I CHEVY ENGINE, X end solid*. Dwt oi 15 total Lake Bd. .
4.Home and El* Lin*. Trdck camp-1 Tires-AutO-Truck
...	___ uuun tlnreoe HISS neie-lieve
wm ..™ traitors. Storage-JACOBSON TRAILER SALES AND RENTAL, M4g Williams Lake Rd„ Drayton Plains, OR 1-SW1.	_____
ALL NEW 1964 Avaloirs, Hollys, Tawos, Cree Travel Trailers
14 to M ft., ttIPtonlilned Order now and hove It lor yocallon
ELLSWORTH AUTO ond TRAILER SALES
4677 DixlO Hwy._____ MA S-140*
BOOTH CAM Ft R 'OR 1-5JM.
Truck Tire Specials
nsxSB-lf pH. highway ... S4 OSkSB-11 ply. highway ... S3 125x10-10 ply, mud and
’ snow nylon ............... 14
MSkSB 10 ply. mud ond
snow nyiwi .....’.........aJN
)0x2l.5—Cl ply mud tiRd
i» pickup.
FIRESTONE
: tires;
MD-MI7 FE44193.
CRANKSHAFT GRINDING IN THE car. Motor rebuilding and valve ' grinding. Zuck Machine Stop. 23 Hood, Phone PE 2-1343.
Cab s
Guitar Class
PRIVATE LESSONS FE 4-4700
Beginning Orgon Classes-Now Forming
ML BACKGROUND NBDUIRKD COURSE INCLUDES:
IS group lessens
Office Equipment
Ttee J ELECTRIC COMPTOMETER MOO-
* ** I .1 IT ..r.llenl rwuSItinn'. S10S.
________ tor R iTm a.m. It B. L,
I Oxtord. Centsnta at this 91-y*er 71 I parson's toms Includes 7 reams * '""i lumltura. Also largs. attic
Octo- 1

Slorsgs )
9M SVlCHLER A MOBH.- *“
Packard SMan, i
1 2224.
. Call OA 1-2119 o
EVERY SATURDAY	7:Jk P.M.
EVERY SUNDAY	2:M P.M.
Sporting poods — AH Typos Ooor Frlitt Every Auction ~ '—Sail—Trade. MjgN 2 days '-'Sants Wtlcoms AUCTION.

IBlLi SALKS Din »t.	332-492G
_____ TRAILERS, iS-PdOt.
lights, heattr and cooking h let box, good tiros. *135.
g 4>S»1f1So	w____
'g TRAILER, SLEEPS 3
struction matarldls	kinds. Wo buy
$10 COMPLETE	^a^Tal
HALL'S AUCTION SALES
|MY>1S7J ar MY >4141 — |7W W. Clarkstan Rd„ Leke Orion «I Saturday Ota. IF 1	T1~a.m.
O. Judd Farm Sold
___________	MH4N
Special Wedntsday, 6 P.M. GUNS and NEW TOYS
EM 3-4128.	_
COMPLETE SET OF MECHANIC'
11, hand and electric. '
.. . larvtok. 1145 taldwlnj
FOiTlR NO. J TURRET LATHE, 30-30 CASE ANO SHELLS. Ml., 301 WWcn Tuet. paper tor 1 14-Inch, collects and chucks, hand holt action cat* and shells 140 guns. Acctpting guns tor feed, cheap. Ml 4-8220, Ext. 2.	22 toll repeater S20. Bullet trap	______
---------------------------M ” auttatotic.tM8toi..s4s..N9 | HAIL'S AUCTION SALES !
Province Town Kd.,. Bloomfiold f UY . ia„	„	My m a.i, :	for hunte
_______PITTy^^****	___u i 70S W. Clarkstan Rd. Lake o'tol
SS4M Glendale | 30-06 . Rf yitoDTON^	qct. ff _ hTOK
at Stotts, stse. 4234M4. '	-
30.06 REMINGTON WOODA6ASTER!Stan Perkins.	Auctioneer
----	635-9400
>N TRAILER teal tor nuniars. rt 2-7216.	_
PHOENIX TRUCK CAMPERS -10-11.6, front *J
{ 5320
JL*Ctof» t^cTISl PlRRts-Trsss-Shrvks bailors, boats j .
October 15
kK>RtoK^ 9r Otoi 'ItHM' OF.
t 150-toot from ago No aparait--	- Chariot. EwAt.bt.
n SwwSrafaMgr
AT GALLAGHER'S
PI ■	I ...............
ginning Thursday, Oi_
«... . ...ww.r	P .. DILL COLLER BOATS It
GALLAGHER S	TORS. I mile east of Lapeer on
E. HURON	PE 44544 __•****.	_________.....■.
ATTENTION FJARO BUYERS 7 |
24 Michigan Ava. •__PE 5-6244 : s;—i
big seleSTion, usk6i shot]-
GALLAGHER'S I •“"* "*
IS E. HURON ____ FE_4-0S»4
TREES — SPRUCE, P smlock, Birch, nuigho
SI-A
t PINE,
Slaath. 3- miles watt of Commorc Village. Daily 6644635,
NURSERY CLEARANCE Evergreons, shad* trees, shrub About 76 varieties. Landscape sin

Pioneer Comper Saltt. FE >3969. PICK-UP CAMPERS _
From $189 up CAMPER MFG. CO. idal*. Utica _73l-!2«0
WINNEBAGO
FALL
Specials
MOTOR
TRANSMISSION
ANO
BRAKE
Overhauls
AND
Minor Repairs.
ON
Any Make Terms
OAKLAND
Chrysler - Plymouth
724 Oakland_'__335-9434
Motorcyclas	95
1952 TRIUMPH 6M. GOOD CON
dltion, >300. 332-7749.	_
1961 TRIUMPH 6(7 tC. U50. Ft
4-72(1.
IX-
r 16 and 1 lup campers. /
purchase. Ben's
> f E | LivditDck
joo savage for 30 06 M-l. Mt-4)03 Cation mattress Mlttord. - ’	| Inharluring mat
fciiiwva'BdWH ~ w?M»wr. j	finm PUIM
6 plan Mdraom suite .	I
MANY OTHER BAROAINS
S3 I
6ADDL
SALES—RENT F. E. HOWLAND
>2S5 Dixlt	> OR 3 I4M
WOLVERINE' TRUCK CAMPER^ and sleepers. New and used 6375 up. Jacks, intercoms, telescoping . bumpers, ladders, ratot. LOWRY CAMPER SALES. EM 3-3ML_________
19 j
WHEELS.
CC. ALL STATE,
' BO”1- DR X1SL
1764 HONDA icRAAlLBlSr 4 months eld. MA 4-7364 attor 6.
'')964 NORTON ATLAS 7S6CC FINE Street Cycle. FE 4-2147.
* HONDA AND tAlUMPH ANDERSON SXLES A SERVICE 230 E. Pike_• ■	. FE 1-7307
NORTON—BS A 5 SPEED DUCATI
PONTAC CYCLE SALES 371 S. Saginaw ■	. FE AMIS
. Tamahas ”~
Housttrailtrs
1414
ttmgtory lots with I taon. OR WWL Bd(B iXCHANGE: PHEASANT HUNTING privileges to prmjto" U sr PwRiiiula r~ eccommodor1
-saeA
HUNTING AND CAMPING HOUSE
MOdfRN, ifEWLV DtacodAtib.
BEDROOM OUTFITTING CO.
4470 DIXIE HWY. Droyton Plains 673-9441 APPLlANa SPECIALS
tar tv Storea^omes ... S249.00
t7" Portable TV , .... f_re.#j
CAMPBELL — Wide selection. Store Hours Dolly 7
MOyiHG. MUST SACRIFICE TWO ______________M
complete double bads, 4g-lnch tong-Free Forking drapes, with traverse rod,- fire-1	-
place fools, redwood picnic table
,—5:30 p. m
______I . ..^	P.m
LEW BBTTfeRLV MUSIC Cl Across from Birmingham Thai
____________________ - t00T X’ 26 FOOT,
BRUNSWICK Sfctt ANNIVERSARY I WELL TRAINED SABDL I	_____ -
snookerJable. S650. 6SS-1SII._ horses - I Mock end -1 Pal* I 17x56 FOOT SHULT COLONIAL,
SMITH'T2"GAUGK DOUBLE mlno.lt 50 and SI2S.J\A4-S0S2.	Ilkenew.oest oiler. FE 6-5156.
Ilka now, (lit. MA 6-7123.___3-YEAR-OLD STALLION OUT OP I !3FOCiT GAR R6 WAY MOUSE-
LIKE NEW BROWNING 3-INC Apaloose stud and quarter horse trailer, tletos 5. With heeler and ever and under. S2S0, new light 1 mar*, btsf oiler over 1250. MA | water tank. OA I-3H4.
1150. 363-2536 after SI 4-3264.___ ____ . i Up X 17 SKYLlftk, COMPLETI
HOLSTEIN HklPERS, &UE f<P 61,771. 17-ft. B7*m*r, seH-ConU'—* reshen, PB and Bangs tested. Car'	* I
K A W CYCLE 731-G27*
-Accessories
Utica
97
FRETTER'S WAREHOUSE Telegraph Read — )* mile south Orchard Lake Rd._________
oil spa(4 heXter with Ilow-er tor gat space heater with biowor, ntgtm. -TIMKEN Oil POAkKCi, 12S,kto
shotgun, ar statot have you I OR T5JM after 6 gun.
... igKIKTBpi ■■ini■ hi
home Igr camBt black addition !? ttnad teaaw, muta topud* boor tod bath. Reply Whits Lake,
WE EuVigu. ‘Mb TRAfeirlie©f-
SSLSWS.W'w'RC
FE L7I01. Opto Sunday.
DASHER ANO DRYER FOR SPACE ’ • h**tef prldntato. PE Mlto. ’ WILL TRADE EQUITY IN l-kiO~-
$*»> CfatMig ~~ BARGAIN BOX
6*5 S. Woodward
(Mlt south gf
FULL RF-0PENING
MONDAY SEPTEMBER 14 . , ,J0JA.M*
' With s gatarobl* toltectlon ot ti ■ »nd wlntor «tod»to» Dally 1* *• n
idling. Doti ■y 1-7 p.m
inents. Must be (total and bl c
^^-y; Wittniidsy,' Thuredsy to a.' CHILDREN'S CLOtrflNO SliETT4 Sse** ItF*	N*a. W 4,_17l
* die 14®i MEtFs AND LADIES SUITS, COATS ^*nd dresses, reasansbte. FE Hass.
6witiNSi/{U<iltt'>0lY aeaajwT.. t -^jfcwsHMbesta .ts
1 l*pW<|TE IRQHER, GOOD CON
| Hi-Fi, TV A Radios
AN AUT0MAJIC SINGER
Dial a-stitch sewing machine In cabtota, used Has bald In dial tor reading buttonholes, taw . m buttons. Mind hams, masngramt. ate. Just sat tha cist and saw. Payments o« ss.oo oar month. 5-yeer parts guortolss. dtehman Brothers Sewing Cantor. 2267113.
CASH PRICE $59:40
iaoV dRik toiHCdMTtRRU anD
dreeeor. MB. FE 6-6SII. kEDROOM SUITES. LI VINO
r5Lt~~‘ Whix ■*•“*
selection, ovorythlng ter your tom* Pandty Home Pumtebtogs. itto Dixie Hwy„ car. Ttaarbgd.
COMPLETE ek'OdOOM SUITE, -Tin ttaL atol. chests ^, and
gastamre/teavlng, taato Oct.
I 'Mim.iMipfvxi f:
freeier across tap. •W.9l gu*r*n-teed. O.E.. 747.95 |»7rinto7d. BMI - Petrusha 6 Sons, Tet-Huren Shop i otonCMRta, . 1 . •	. .
lLicfRlt *ANO*r LIKE NlW,
. sr*. MjL 4SS-5>64.
*L«eTW^tWAt« HiAtiff.
WAV
FIRESTONE STORE
141 W, HUdON 901717
stdvE, gg#'"0*-
MnrwAr
ptou toner. OR >7444.
GOOD SELECTION OF NEW, USlO COLOR. iLACK, WHITE AND PORTABLi TVs PROM 617.75
4*AWc6" iflREO PM A Atoll
RECONDITIONED AND OUA ANTEED TV'S. SEVERAL 1 . CHOOSE FROM. .
JOHNSON'S RADIO A TV
45 B. WALTON A PE S-4M7
MEDICINE CABINETS LARGE mirror, (lightly marred, SL.w. large selection of caMhtas with or without lights, sliding doors. Tar-rifle buys. MIcMbot Fluoraseont, 193 Orchard Lake 24.	.
! NEW AUTOMATIC WATER StfiFT-1 ‘ > removes Iron. 8249. G. A. I __________n, 7B65 M59 Wett.
[ DlL WRtrtR^ANP^TANIL ^EATj
ORNAMENTAL IRON PORCH and stop railings, comers and posts.
AVISCABINBTS
1570 Opdyk#___________FE 4-42BB
NK. USED, APPROXIMATE-1 gal., make otter. Good con-
____ 67S-179B.
PFAFF AUTOMATIC ZIG-ZAG SEW ! Ing machine. Deluxe (re* arm: model for embreldorlng, -ofc. Pay an account to t months ot S7I per month ar SS6 cash balance
Uwlvarsta O. PI *dd. ______|
PORTABLE KERWOOP WASHER.
f PIANO
SPECIALS
Floor Somplos Reduced Up to
$185“
SPINETS
Priced as Low as
$388
FE 6
Water Softeners ____________64
WATCR SOFTENER RENTAL, I Hmftod goltoiae*- ft par mot *73-1277. Unlvorsat tori Water.
For Salt MiseeMoneeus
PLUMUMG fARGAINS PREE -Stending toilet, S16.95; 30-gellon heater 847.95; 3H>l*C* b*th eets,' 150.95 Laundry trey. trim. •JJ'*!'
threaded. IMfWmiMO CO* (4i ktadudn. fe 4-151*.
. r066N0GMI~JSALET~FRIDAY AND
USED UPRIGHTS * FROM
$48 ,
LOW, EASY TERMS
GRINNELLS
PONTIAC MALL OPEN DAILY 9:3k TO * P.M.
682*0422
o plaT faJikiNEt: ujftb i’ Band
NEW 10 GAUGE SHOTGUN * ONLY S79.95
GUNS-GUNS-GUNS!
Wa carry tha cMhptete line at browning-wBatherby REMINGTON
1klNCHESTER*COLT PISTOLS
Tfl DO ALL OuSmOWN Scape Mountdto Gun Smithing RIFLE RANGE-TRAP PIILO opto to thg Public
CLIFF DREYER'S
Gun and Sport Cantor »i( Holly Mxf ttoRy
I I	OoCemp's Crees
lS-tt. Dure, sleeps S, 11,295. WSO’ • Great Lakes 51,MS. Centuries. De-
NEW AND USED BOWS. OR >2277, alter 4 Bdtoqy Hljhltaid R*.	| iiiiitosnir'oik itoi.
USEO HAND GUNS ANb (HOT -guns. Opdyke Hardware. FE1 M6B6
$—4 Irswl Mrt 76
1-A TOP BOIL. BLACK DIRT, PILL,
r Soles, 6
SYfiS1&3HS Colonial
1 gelled walk trots end eguitatio.1 |	MOBIL HOME SALES INC
Dorses. Several good quartor hersos Trnvoln registered ond grade. I grew IIUYe,u ,
jumpar. ho S-1M6.	_	Vagabond
black Angus cows. HiiPER
and bull. RtesohaMa. NA 7-1191. iXCELLKNT TEAM FOR HA ride horses with wagon and hi _ ness, broke lha best, ho (-3516.
FEEDER PIGS, liB WEEKS 6lD.
5960 Hosner. OA fift ■_
HOLSTEIN COW 1'YVaRs OLO.
Drydto____________ 7*6-3221
HORSES, BOUGHT ANO SOLO.
— —- EnkRm lntoucJtto.
Richardson Ritz Craft Diplomat
I O' end 12* wtoes and J6- and *6-teeters
1965 Modtls
I S. of Dixie.
- ----- ______ I.OtoBtato.
BLACK DIRV, pfejtt, PILL) OfTf, gravel, sand, sod, ate. (27-202S ar 3364573.	,	_
■Lack dirt, top imC sand, Nit and gravel. Mai's Trucking. FB 2-7774
CHOtCfe RICH, BLJkCK OIBT. 6 yards tor SI0 or 7 yards tor *13.
cattle. IB17R
Hoy—GraiR—Feed
WANTEO - USED BURLAP BAGS I Any witoBIto. MA S*I*S^_______
Farm FrsJece	86
Colltgk Heights
Mobile Pork
One el Michigan's newest and fr ast mobile home parks (140 units Reservations now btang accepted. Cantor of OpdyfcMM24 and Auburr
ANOTHER WST
prunes, plums, swear cmer. mso pick your. awn applet new <n aur young orchard. Oakland Otckaidi, 72*5 E. Cam kwreg Ed. between Bums and
Sboo CLEAN SLACK OIRT, OE- de?'
iivsrad. tl* par toed. OR 4-1*64. r"*,W MANujOP
REO-YELLOW DftLI-
OR >»to, :
FOR ~Wf m\ cioui'cl
APPLES AND CIDER APPLES 5

I KM.
ANCHOR FENCES
NO MONEY DOWN	PL.
attention mortmereI b
Twntrs and MtembL
Stectrlc radiator hooters.-
OR 3-7533. 6514 tfmmons IJrivs.
, SAND, GRAViL BLACK DflT AND FE 2-4547 j manure. 674-H64.
tBp“soil, LOADED OR DiLIV-
Oftto. FE 2 2965	_ _ ■_________
TOP SOIL, SAND, GRAVEL. FllL.
Wee*Ce*Cefce*wf
A-l FIREPLACE WOOO JME STACK WOOO DELIVERED	FB HIE
FIREPLACE ftpOUL DELIViREO
2337 CtoitrStoh lN, east
POTATOES, If A tappiL AND UP, Keith Mtodteten-StlB Stonay Creek Rd., 3 miles east at Lake Qrion.
4* ELECTRIC EVINRUbl. J|W controls^ ^end^ battery. ^ S32L .
•ring, windshield -and aver B. Beth, in tap shape, *540 or It toll separate. 673-0244,
___ 19-FOOt-CHRISCRAFT SEA. skiff sportsman, 145 h.p. Alt cto-■ vas . tod many extras. Itew this spring. Hally t-ME T-7337.
ALWAYS A BETTER DEAL
B0ATS-M0T0RS
MERCURY—SCOTT MCCULLOUGH
CRUISEdWT BbAT SALS , 43 E. WdWon 9 to 6 FE 54442 BOATS AT~k GREAT DISCOUNT -Glattron, Lana Stars, MFG beats, some very good uMd rigs from S1S0. Mercury Motors 3.t to 1M h.p STILL THS BEST OffALS AT
CUFF DREYER'S .Gon ond Sport Csnttr ‘
15210 Hally Rd., Holly ME 44771
“■ ond« Sundays-.
t. 1744.
CHRIS CRAFT INBOARD. Good condition, many at
9-6. UN 59624,___
CLOSE OUT DN 1*44 JOHNSON MOTORS
____ E 2-S034
EVMRUOf MOTORS '
OLDS TROMBONt. GOOD'
Man, SIS. Ml G1767.	■ *
OLMT’+Rpaftfr- Li«*“im*
worth $251, 0 catat will buy “
__________ ■
FIREPLACE tjtOOO. SOLlb AND P?>77dl
I AMP. GE WELMR, *4" ,GE Shaper, toreargrem tap tall mm. Clovtland Pitch alggor $i. 0 vemoer ditch dlMr. ton yard IStomta, wrapor ME AtRsChal mars orator, Btlltonsin s cyttndar ■a driven engine. I* wide aheap
AMERICAN STONE
MA HIM
PONTIAC CHIEF .. IO*-12'-20'-WIDES a and price tor gvaryant.
Open t to 7 Dtity ‘	. Set
___SUNDAY 62-1
EXPERT MOBILE HOME REPAIR servlet. Iras athmatos. Alta port) and accessories. Bob Hutchinson Mobil* Home salts, lnr„ 401 Dixie Hwy. Ortyten Plains, OR
s-tm y ^	\_______;
FALL CLEARANCE
PAKKWOOO ANO(jCRANBRCOK^
In J styles EARLY AMERICAN
CONTEMPORARY
FRENCH PROVINCIAL Crtnkreak IT wM»	. SA47S
WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD
Midland Troiltr''5alDS
*-* 7 DAYS A WEEK 3033 PIXIE	B»4m
wXnt a good priceJor Your
SakrirpR tgj| Qelen^he ^ Trailer
Fiberglass
nara to tniq but my to deal wHh"
DAWSON'S SALES
Kldki LaM	MA
Expansion Sal*
Starcratt — Ste-Ray E||
tor your convenience!
PINTER'S MARINE
Opto Tubs, and Thurs. Evas.
1374 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 0924 (1-75 at ML Clemens Rd. Exltl
FALL CLEARANCE /
16-foot outboard cruiser, 44 h.p. aloe*
trie, miter'.
Vary ctoan	sues
WALT MAZUREK’S
LAKE & SEA MARINA
244 S. Shut. E.	PE omt'
Inside-Outside Storage Boot Repairs—Rsfinishing
HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS "Your Evtnryd* Dealer"
IS99 S. Telegraph Rd.	BMP)
-MERCURY OUTBOARDS-Starcratt—Sea-Ray — Cruisers Inc.
—GOATS—
BIRMINGHAM
-	Beat Cantor '
North at 14 MW* a> Adams Rd. TONY'S 'MMlUfFOR JOH96BON.MOTO*S7^M'
Ml
'it -
THE PONTIAC PUfrSS! MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1964

971 New mV Ustd Tracka
I Fgraign Cara
lOSMARMADl'KK
PALL DISCOUNT PRtCBS an ri Ml MAN tjd traltef
^tSdSali TurtSnwR Wn no mill* Hwy. OH MW ■. wVVMulitAT AUVMaV
KWl Eggte-Mater*. L*kg OWOB
WINTER StoftAGt INSIDE OR OUT •Miehigon Turbocraft Solas
! FfflTo5arance!(^
) SALE Sport Cars
IMsM Cars-Tncki 111
Cojitomio Buyers
Did You Koow?
VILLAGE RAMBLER
Fxys more tor ANY mate usad car Call tor Appraisal
444 t. Wdodwird	Ml 4*3>00, ■■■ge
HURON MbTO* SALES IP MYING lap S tor pood uaad ca— UAL Baldwin. | blocks north of FE MM1
LATC model carp
in Bulck-Pontlsc Si
M & M
MOTOR SALES
W payhighar prlc«» tor aharp
BB M»a Hwy.	or raw
MANSFIELD AUTO SALES
Wa'to buying aharp, Tbto modal cara.'..N0an
\ IMS Baldwin Ava.
FE £5900	____
; RUSItt CARS
Tap S paid tor rusted cars « runt. NallXlk. MlBr ■
SPECIAL PRICE paid por 1*55-1*43 cars • VAN'S AUTO SALES
aw canditior^
____ „.,juf. JEROME
■PRRMHR. —	,	| «RGU»Nt toc-’Rathaator PORD
always buying anO paying
MORE FOR GOOD CLEAN CARS !
ASK POR PIRNIC AT— .
BIRMINGHAM	______
CHR VSLER-PLYMOUTH.INC.	| VAN CAMP CHEVY
• Sit 1, Woodward	Ail Mill I ^i^wwn
'	AVhllLl'S ~	! CHEVY VAN. IM4. tARI ' #v¥r] Corvette itaa £*peia'*i!w*
jf wr nava ordtrt tor	payments. MA S-IWC.	Corvette toll 4-speed, lists .
MB Into madali	I rTepOSSRSSION—l*IS PORD PICK- Corvfto 1*43 Coupe *3, its
“Chock tha rati	up, payments of $3.40 weakly. Call c?Tff!>*,.1H4nn Sp^fl! SfPf ..
but pat the Baal"	Mr. Johnsod, AAA 5-1404. Dealer.	ALSO W MORi SPORTS CARS
Now and Uaad Cars IM
1 Ml ■imw
Sdoor Montorky, va aaWHa, autom. Ic. power atoarthto heeler, radio, whltewalh. cater af blual Only
* CRISSMAN CHEVROLET
S. Rechastar Rd.
ROCHESTER	OL »*m
fNT COMIT SDOOl SEDAN. Whitt, stick, radio, mm mm,
gad condition. Make after. 447-
Aufp Intcrnnc* *■
AUTO INSURANCE FOR CANCELLED AND REFUSED DRIVERS
OVER II YIARS EXPERIENCE IN HELPING PEOPLE SOLVE 1	THIS PROBLEM.
Stop in Todoy! ANDERSON AGENCY
PE SEE -■ ISM Jaaly
iM4 pontiac Catalina
Public liability, property damage
------ Cantorahawali---
> collision at I
and worth Ml Can 442-5341. IT2f~§VlCK LaSABRi 1-bOOR Si
datoCeorada araaa wH*
NO DUES OR PEES.
I BRUMMETT AGENCY
I dMrtlo MHa	■ PE 4-awl
I Foreign Cars
OUR NEW LOT. _______ _____
WARD AVt.. BIRMINGHAM. Ml
MA 5-1 <04, ONler.
Hi BUICK SPECIAL. PRIVATE
pfty. PE *?m.	___
962 BUICK. INVlCtA CONVERT I* bit. Raven black finish with rod
GLENN'S
WE NEED CARS!
TOP DOLLAR POR OOQO CLEAN CARS
MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES
Ml OAKLAND AVE.
It57 VW DELUXE SUN ROOP BUS SIM. Good candRten. ltd] Deluxe, bucket aeahk aea baiter bui. Excellent cendltten. II.4IS. MA d-IITS. It* VW MICRO STATION WAOON bua. With aun root. Garaaa kept Pine candltlen. Runa exceptionally
fine. Stoi.. TY 7-4137.	________
TRIUMPH TR3. tfSP. BLACK, EX-cattant condition, no mat. Colt 852 3573 alter i p.m.
EXCELLENT
totlT Cff, NOW ...
-OT, H04 S. WOODWARD AVE.. BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2715. ttol bU ! C
PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. MGWATOUE NftoB BQT. list S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM
FIAT . IS
I. 447-34
WANTED: Wto-WM CAR*~
Ellsworth
AUTO SALES
JpEk Cwb-Twcha TI1-A
t OR IS JUNK CAES AND'TRUCKS tree taw anytime. PE B-SM4,
1 m S JUNK CARtu— lRULtLS toWBad. Tap defier. OR my Ir-TB^JUHK faUtl - TRUCKa WANTED. PtdB taw. OR MBS. : /MfUtilMAULlO AWAY _
EHBB
Used Adt#-Tr*ck Psrts IBS
1 CNEVy ENGINES. 1*55, »10*( ttSL Biss, coma Ion. pb S-iobb. ~~~ CLOSE OUT
IttO SI MCA 7-DOOR HARDTOP. RA-J *375. EMt>7tStEl<C*ll*nt CBn*l>lwl |
WBS totOLtaii PORD ANGLIA, HW . cellent coadRten. S47J. Last grill.
Call OR MB It.
Ittd VW. CLEAN, RADIO. SACRl flea. Can OR S-SSM, attar S a. m. 1 ltdO ALPHA ROMEO. GOOD CON o- m3Z
dlttan, Cah Mjia._______________
ttaa ANO Nil VW. BOTH PRICED
1964 BUICK RIVIERA
malic transmit factory'warranty! This h
1&395
family car. Only BIJK Raw wmta. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. NOW. AT OUR NEW LOT 1104 S. WOODWARD AVt., ■ that INGHAM. Mi 4-2735._
REPOSSESSION, Jt»2 CHEVY V-l •Hex, no I down, call Mr. Johnaan, MA 1-1404, Dialer.
1142 CH'BVY TI. 3S4 SERIES. RA-tllo, heater. 2-door, green with IBM to, DON'S. 477 S. LBiddr Rd„ Orton. MY, MB41.
CHEVROLET IMPALA CON-irtlble, v-a engine, pdwaffjtoA
I. Ml.. SERIES, t-Palomar rad With i. 6-cylinder, Pow«r
\H3 CMlEVY
S. WOOOWARD AVK. BIRMINGHAM L MI 4-2735
1963 CHEVROLET BISCAYNE door Bodan. Ermine “*‘u‘ ‘
6-c Under,
..	||fi| H
$1,395.
PATTERSON
£HRYILER"PLVm6uTH valiant-dodge trucks
Mil N. Main ft. POCHESTER OL 1MSSI
1*41 OODGi "440" STATION WAG-on with VI anglne, auto, tram-mission, power steering and brakes
vinyl Interior trim. This
1962 Dodge
FALCON DELUXE 4>OOOR
----'	------Be. radio
I i_J,-top (wt
______________447-iito.	.
.... FAIRLANE. 2-OOOR HARltTO II* Crvte*4)Wlatlc. power steering. I radio, .wheal cavers, clean. PE j 2-174*.
1*44 FORD dALAkli III ^AST-Y-4 tngJne. CruisO-Matk, ra-
1961 Metro
-dear hardtop, thla oga can b brought with ng money dawn, ya can tana* about Bvylnn gas to thla baautyl Miles ahd mvaa, a Ceretree driving ahead tor ybul
PATTERSON
1962 M«rcury
A bronze custom Mantgray hard-
jnjj^ beige. ^Only ^atl.aj^ wnMy Credit Coordinator.
LLOYDS
L lncoln-Mtrcury<om*l
. New Location •
1250 Oakland Avi.
________ PE MW
ItiS OLDSMOBILB. toobh, ,AUTS ~ tHc trenemiaolon. radio, heater, war brakes and power • tearing, II prim 11*7. no money dawn.
Eitot# Storage Co.
M* I. South Blvd.
Ft 3-7141_________
THERE IS REALLY ONLY ONE
Tel-A-Huron Auto Salts
PE SMSB1
l. burgundy tm-. low mileage.
JEftOBMt#IK>l
almost Ilka nawl. JEROME-FE GUSON. Inc; Rochester FORu j Dealer, OL 1-»7li.
t*» HUDSON STRAIGHT |, 4-DOOR wire wheels, fair condition. tSSO. Hartland, 432-7533.
1*» LINCOLN PREMIER, 4-DOOR. 1 radio, haatcr, power windows, i vants, s*6ts. brakes steering. New tires* battery. Excellent condition. Best offer. 674-0336.
Credit or Financing
Problems?
m Finance YbbI
i heater, whlSweft, one-1 /n hi# tn i I h In mbit condition, .^qII Mf. Ddle
PATTERSON
ROCHESTER I i*n Eoslu 6odO CdffbitifiN i
*350. UL 2-2044 attar I p.m.
1*57 PORO STAtlOM WAOON, *>|
651-8550
is Cholca—Used Cars . Patterson ot Rochester
Credit or'Financing
Problems? ’
We Cen Flnence You.
Call Mr. .Yale 651-8550
75 Choice Used Cut ' Patterson of Rachaatar -CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH VALIANT-DODGE TRUCKS Bl N. Main 01. ROCHESTER
"Select"
Ustd Cars
-v 1-Owner * j New Car Trades
Rambtor. Classic Wagsa^adla.
New End Used Cars IN
r brakes, I
*Ducky Auto
193 or 254 5. Saginaw FE 4*2214 or FE 3*7853
(Access span to tote while strai uiwar eanatructlpnl "
1*1* OLM, BADIOL hMatA. AU-TOMATIC TRANSMIMION^AJ-SOLUTRLY N0> MONEY DOWN. Taka aver paymants at *14.3* per m!mi. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks, »t Harold Tim*
U 4-7SB*.
*11 6lDB SUPER Jl drDOQR POW-ewtoTtflto. M**4-i3i or*FI *e~OLDS	tr' COMvE'RTIBLB
that Is ana at tha mast beautiful car* w# have aver aftorad. ax-capHenany taw miiaana Hkr p paw Bar. both Tn apaapranm and gWMNBMI. Tha IdlfwtWN Burgandy tegtotr Interior I* tha jkOcnsiffNl to tha white ax-terlor finish. Mllto top JM- Wtofit-wpll tires. Equipped with Hydra-
t to buy HI L PRICE I
oav'T'special 1
*1,4*5.
. BIRMINGHAM
Chryilar • piwnaum *12 S. Woodward
ski us pi At
BobBorst
m S. woodward
MI 6-4538
Credit or Budget
PROBLEMS?
We Cpri rinonce You! 100 Cars to "Select From I
Gall Mr. Dale FE 3-8765
• LLOYPt
BIRMINGHAM
TRADES
' Every used car offered for retail to the public is a bonafids 1 * o w. n a r, low mileagf, sharp car. 1-year parts and labor worranty.
1966 BUICK Riviere. Rawer,
ansmission,
.1.995. Besy terms. rATTtRWN CHEVROLET CO. NOW AT OUR NCW^ LOT. 1104 S. WOODWARD
1944 BUICK 9-puung«r tsTPuiCK Wagon. 7.000 LaSahra
msTbuick HARDTOP .: n r.- , 1*43 BUICK Etactra
-SIM* i Canvwtibia .........
! It43 BUICK Hardtop PnvartIMe I 1*6 FORD XL Cfhvarttoto
Lucky Auto
193 or 254 S. Saginaw FE 4-22I4 or FI S-7B53
KARMANN-GHIA 1*41 CONVERT I bte. Mae. =— —- —-
ape ».000.
1*44 BUICK SPECIAL. A A DI O. “ ' llck.^suparvlsor's car.
1963 Cadillac
Surely this “standard of It world1' never had a mare baautlfi expression locally owned 0" malntolnad In nth* amauim. tn
1*41 MERCEDES BENZ
A truly *

Ot.t). OALSY PE
■ JtfBL'
PATTERSON CHEVR(£if ' CO NOW AT OUR NEW LOT, IIB4 S. WOOOWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-7745.	•
MG, FIRST CLASS
PEOPLES AUTO SALES *
se oafctand .	, PE 2-M5II
1*54 CHEVY, STATION WAGON, AU-’
New fd Bead Trtchs 103
1*44 CHEVY V5-TON PICKUP, GOOD
SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 Oakland Ave. FE 5*9421
1*43 VOLKSWAGEN SUNROOP.
NW DODGE W-TON PICKUP, !
3PS0 FORD PICK-UP. A GOOD^ ONE GOOD RUBBER. REASONABLE.
PEOPLES AUTO SALES I
<1 OAKLAND	PE 2-231
WS1 CHEVY TRUCK. M-TON. -speed with power take elf. 1*i Lloyd, and David Bradley tracto
Nil ’ FORD. PICKUP. Vt-TON. 4- ! cylinder, stick sMtt. clean) IBM. JEROME-FERGUSON, me. Rach-• apiar FORD Dealer, OL 1-*7II. . • I 1*SS PORD Vi-TON. GOOD. *250. i FE 0-2434
mi FoRb l»tckuP7~Gobo tire*.
motor and brakes, OR 3-1*47, *25*
**.„XDrk±°" P,CKUP ,M
i*57 CHEVY PICKUP V-S. HEAVY duty throughout, long box, runs PM drives aartoett *3*5. Ideal tor truck camaer. JEROME-FERGUSON. Inc.. Rochester FORD Paatar, OL IPTIt.
1*5* CMC WRECKER. 1-TON, VERY goad Ihopa. 473P4N. J _ 1*5* GMC l-TON 7V5NEL, GOOD tires. 474 S. Saginaw, tiai CORVAIR *5, RAMPSIOE pickup, rad and while finish. Ex-caHent condition. Ready to work. Only S*tS. PATTERSON CHEVRO-, LET CO.. NOW AT OUR NEW LOT, 1104 S. WOODWARD AVE..
BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2735.____ j
1161 FORD ECONO-LINE VAN. RA dio. heater, extra goad condition Over stead tiros. Western mirror Rnar daw Mass. «7*B. Ml 4-toTl. _ Its* FORD V-4 PICKUP. CUSTOM'
TRUCKS
AREOUR
BUSINESS
SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 Ooklond Ave. FE 5-9421
1144 VOLKSWAGEN klOMBI STA SONASLeToR 3*334? ' "*** "**
1964 Opal
GM's line Import, and In a S-aaat station wagon. Mat la showroom new in each detail and atW In erranty! Only S1IJ7
237 •>!
Dal«, Cr«
it rimf discrimintflpg buyer!
LLOYDS
Lktceln Marcnry-Camat
"New Location 1250 Oakland Ave.
PI 3-7963
, $3,795 $$,695 $3,395 $2,695
LATE 1954 BEL All WAGON. LIKE
E^S..Sur,^r I Lucky -Auto
I” or 254 5. Saginaw 1*44 CHEVELLE, mMtor SEDAN. FE 4-2214 or FE 3*7853
4-cy Under, Powerglid*, power steer-1	- -
I CHEVY. STICK.
SAVE AUTO .
Ff«
MI 7-0955! SUPERIOR RAMBLER ,
BUICK Hardtop
-nr.,	, BUICK 4-daar Sedan .
SIM* 1*4* BUICK Hardtop
FISCHER
BUICK
515 1 Woodword
Cooper
LLOYDS
Lincoln-Mercury-Comet	. I
New Location 1250 Oakland Ave.
• - PE s-teo -	__l
1*44 CHEVROLET IMPALA SPORT COUPE. Saddle tan with M beige — matching saddle Interior Pcwargllda. Power steer
WMkb IJJOCHt Vi fflClc. Wa-«d candRten. *3*5. Can n-FE 3-7051.
• FORD 4-OOOR STATION WAG-n with an excellent 4-cylinder online. automatic transmission, ratio. heater and ether extras. Light Put finish and blue Interior trim
BIRMINGHAM
a.aw	m S. W^aTd' Ph"~U,ML'"-»’4
PATTERSON i <**• ■‘DUO 2-DOOR. RADIO. HEaT-5 i ER. AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION.
1*14 CHEVY f-OOOR HAROTOt,
salt t ----- ----- --------- —
1-4452.
i*sr ca6illac har6top. skAU-
NEW LOT, 1M4 S. WOOOWARD AVE- BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2735. 1*44 Ct4iVRCM.iT; STATION WAG-on, excellent condition. V-l Power-1 glido. Mi 6^101.
lonth. CALL CKCDIT MGR., H erks, 09 Harold Turn II 4-7599. __
1960 Ford
PAY NINE.
Cooper!
1L0YDS
L .ncoln-Mercury-Comet
New Location 1250 Oakland Ave.
. - FE3-7SO ~	_____
1*44	VW. 6,000	ACTUAL MILES.!	Needs’.
still .has new	car -warranto.,	ra-l	iSwM. ............   i
dlo. heater, whhawalls. bast d- ^| CHEVt V-4 WAGON, GOOD .... ...»	cendltten, best attar takas. FE 4-1
SUPERIOR	RAMBLER	!	Mir	i
550 Oaklond Ave. FE 5*9421
English ford coupe, tost.
'Fin* Ustd CorsI
1471 Dixit OR S-1SIS Dl Sat Caapar kafart you buy
11*17 CHEVY STATION WAGON 4-l	M powergMa. radio and
ir. Runs good, good tires. ----------- ^ prict mi
1*91 CORVETTE.
____(if only *1.5*5.
.BIRMINGHAM
^Chrysier-Plymoufti 2 S. Woedwerd______Ml 2-391
1962 Chrysler
PATTERSON
CHRVSLBR-PLYMOUTN VALIANT-OOOOB TRUCKS
I New Locotion
1250 Oakland Ave.
- . fe s-iess ’ • ■ . ,
It4b FALCON. EXCELLENT CONDI tlon. new tires. S49*. 4*3-10*1 attar
I t^FORO-I^DR^ STICK, OVER-
; lMl~FALCbW'l - OoiM, RADIO.
1 HEATER. ABSOLUTELY NO MONET DOWN. Take aver payments of S77.44 pgr me. CALL CREDIT MGR.. Mr. Parks, at Har-—-~)
BANK RELEASE!
TK FOLLOWING CARS LISTED BELOW, HAVE BEEN RELEASED FOR IMMEDIATE SALE TO THE PUBLIC ONLY ... NO DEALERS.
'59 Pontiac
Bonneville Hardtop with sower /■’’weekly p*WmenHj!4«
'59 Chtvy
' Sal Air SOoar WEEKLY PAYMENT *2.44
'59 Buick
LaSabrt 4-Door with radio, heater, whitewalls and power steering. WEEKLY PAYMENT *4.G
'59 Ford
Country Sed*n wbom wihi o«irk.
1 At
..aw
$597
$297
$497
$197
'58 Imperial
----------- -"i___
W” W¥eKLY>AVMEI
'59 Plymouth
2-Ooar with automatic, radio am ’"‘weekly PAYMENT SI.4S
'60 Voliont
4-Door whh stick, radia. haato
W"wlllKLYW$iAVMENT *3 41
'58 Olds
4-Door whh,,aawar steering am ^"wlfKLV plfflSSlNT 11.41 *
$397
$197
$397
$197
Bankers Outlet	—-	FE 8-7137
No Money Down-We Finance All Our Gars
3400 ELIZABETH LAKE RD., ONE BLOCK WEST OF HURON (M*59)
Autobahn
Motors, Inc.
AUTHORIZED VW DEALER to mite north of Miracle Mile 745 S. Telegraph	FE S-453
, Cleoronce Salt
OL I-SSII
4 CHRYSLER, 4 OCX I. Attar L 4»S4445.
ROCHESTER | '**' 4DbOR FALCON. LOW MILE-
to*. HOW tires. SWS. 4SS-M41._
t_¥6RD 4-DOOR COUNTRY SE
REPOSSESSION - 1*9* CHEVY. NO money dawn, caR Mr. Johnson, MA 5-ltte. Doatar. _
1*1* CHlVROLET. 4<yllnder. auto-1 mafic, black, new tires, axcallent mechenkei condition. $445, Oft
.__30391 or 474-1312. Dealer.
1959 CHEYRQLBT HARDTOP, ft A DIO. HEATER, AU|a.^lUM. MISSION. ABSOLUTELY NO MON
1963 Chrysler
JEROME-FERGUSON' llic- Roch-
EY DOWN. 1 *24 *7 par m
r. Parks, i
ter payment i :all CREDi. . __ jl Harok) Turn-, rare. Ml 4-79SS.
B CHEVY V-f. GEL AlR rDOOR rery nice. FE 3-7543. a Riggins
REPOSSESSION, 1*4S CHtVV. NO
fiful brenza finish. $2,1*5.
PATTERSON
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH VALIANT-DOOGE TRUCKS Ml N. Main	ROCHESTER
ttto CORVAIR, RADIO, HEATfk, *"TOMATIC TRANSMISSION. AB -UTELY NO MONEY DOWN.
Crsdif or Budget
Problems?
We Con Finance Youl 100 Cart, to Sllect From!
Call Mr. Dale FE 3-7865
,	-	LtOVPt ‘
almost like n€W $6.17 weekly, with tao « oown«
Mr. Dale, Credit Coordinator -
' LLOYDS
L Inceln-Marcury-Carnal
New Location 1250 Oakland Ave.
FE 3 7143
ItoFFORD-GALAX IE, MftVAfE 4
If SI CHfeVY 2-OOOR. CLEAN
MARVEL
1962 GMC
TM cto diesel. Mytader. tandi drive, ghtosa goad ItrWxSI fir tractor nil*Ml It.
GMC
- Foctory Branch 675 Oakland at Cost K 5-94B5
34 Others la chocBe from Easy PinenelftB Bank Rates
i SUPERIOR RAMBLER i 550 Ooklond Avt. FE 5-9421
I KARMAN - GNIA CONVERTIBLE, 'adto hMteFmlnM'wsWlTaii.*I?jMI . MG»^I*44 4AH MILES. w"h i t E
VW. 1*94, RUBY RED. EOUIPPSD With radio, whHawatlt. Excellent franspartatlbn. full prka BIBS.
Autobahn
Motors Inc.
AUTHORIZED VW OEALER to mile north at Miracle Mil*
174I S. Telegraph ■ FE *-4Sft
Renault ’
Zidharlied Oaator-
OLIVER
BUCK and JEEP
earner af Pika and Cass FE 4-ISM . ■ |
... —Infartor. New-car rraoe, si,2*5. PATTERSON CHEV ROLE TCO- NOW AT OUR NEW| LOT, |N4 S. WOODWARD AVE.,! BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2729.	|
INI CHEVROLET BlSC A YNE, 2-door sedan. GrIMM rad extorter with immaculate gray trim. 4-cy*-| Mac. Powerglide. power staar-SST radio, heater, whitewalls, ex-1 tra nice at only tl^fj. PATTER SON CHEVROLET CO.. NOW AT OUR NEW LOT. 11*4 S. WOOD-1 WARO AVE, BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2735.	*
1961 Monza
Count, a speed, ragtos heata car trade In. and to ertoad tow, law ptfee af *1,3*5.	i
PATTERSON.
Hilltop
Auto Solas Inc
Buy.
Wilh
No Monty Down Spot Delivgry
Attention!
Hunters
- Wogons Golors
'9* CHEVY AUTOMATIC . .. • 9*9 •41 FALCON, AUTOMATIC ... IMS ■42 PONTIAC. (UffjUfr ... M '42 CHEVY. AUTO. POWER . *14*9 '42 PONTIAC. OOUBLE PWR 114*5
Other
RBady-TfrRgill j
Specials
' Vallanl-Oodga Truck* |
N. Main St. ROCHESTER j •
CHfcW	1 ^e CHf VY. <31 FROM
CATALINA. STICK-* (13*5 ■JVS CHEVY. AUTO-4	, ||]ps
*dl BONNEVILLE. HARDTOP SIM
;	CAfALHiAT* *flCK*
SwTtufe. FEs-ySL^' l:“CMWyy. AujnCM
I WAGON. S-PAS
wpQjevv. like HbW, st.wt. Can j
962 Oakland
FE 4-9969]
PRESTIGE OF QUALITY
Every department ot Pontiac Retail Star* commands admiration for exctlltncG in the job thty perform io that deportment, whether it be New Car Salts, Used Car Sales, Automotive Parts or Service. The thoroughly trained staff with their years af Experience, are experts in the jobs they perform. One visit to Pontiac Retail Store, and you'll come away 0 completely satisfied and npppy "Return Customer" So, regardless what your' need jnay be ... A new car. Used Car, Automotive part or service, you can shop with confidence at PONTIAC RETAIL STORE, 65 Mt. Clemens St., down-tewn Pontiac,
EVEN IF YOU HAVE HAD: NO CREDIT - BAD CREDIT
You Can Buy a Car at
MARVEL MOTORS
- BUY HERE - PAY HERE —	/• .
1957 Pontiac
i£^C’?uHCra.'S&^
$195
1957	Chevy
$195
Only *1.74 Waakly
1958	Buick,
Converflbt* with full »fwtr, nrw top. Very iharpl FgHfrld Only
$495
Onto «3.7| Warn tv
Plymouth
Batoadara Hardtop with radia. haalar and baaixttot tu-tana finish. Full Pttca Onto—
$195
1959 Chevy
$495
I960 Ford
fOaar with Nick, radia, haalar. k rail bargain. Putt Prtea Only—
$395
Onto S3.75 Waakly
1959Chevy
9-ftimnBir WBB90I wtth radio m hoaftr. FuM ftrict Ontv-
, $595
Only S4.2I Waakly
1956 Chevy
$145
Onto *1 waakly
1959 Ford
Automatic V-l, radia. haalar. Al moat win now. Fun Prica Onty-
$295
Only *2JS WaNily
1957 Lincoln
upa Hardtop wtth iro! Full Frlca O
$395
1959 Pontiac
$595
j Duty $4J$ WmMy
1956 Mercury
$195
Onto SIJ( Waakly
MANY MORE OUTSTANDING VALUES AT
MARVEL MOTORS
251 Oakland Ave.	FE 8-4079
ATTENTION GM EMPLOYES “NO PAYMENTS UNTIL, AFTffl STRIKE"
John-
McA'uliffe
FORD
1963 Temiiest
2-Door Sedan
$1393
1964 Ford
Galoxie 500 4-Door
/ $2491
1963 Ford
Convertible
$2295
1964 Ford
Econo-Van.
With 4-spaad transmission, rad haalar. dark btua to cater,
” $2494
1961 T-Bird
Hardtop
With radia* haalar, power atai Ino. brakes and window*. -teether trim* to-ton# pah Ontv—
' $1896
1965 Mustang
2-0oor Hardtop
I v-a and *a*-tha>
$2545
1961 Chevy
Convtrtiblft
and hraha*.
$1494
1962 Chevy
Convertible
$1797
$1595
1964 T-Bird
2*Door Hardtop '
Landau with snwar slaanng and fcrakdt. radia. haalar and whtta-waHx. klua with a whha topi
Onto-
$3493
1963 Ford
Galoxia 500 4-Door
$1997
1962 Ford
^Country Sedon
‘ Door wtth v-» angina, auto malic, sowar .tearing, radio haalar and adritewnlto. Onto-
$1592
1961, Ford
Galoxie Hardtop
$1091
John
McAuliffe
630 Oakland FESvtltri’

t*ONYlAC F^jESS. MONPAy, OCTOBER 12, 1964
MI4-7500
TURNER
FORD
'64Ford
2-Door
$1388
'62 Corvair
Monza
$1044
'62 Comet
$919
'61 ford
2-Door
$788
'62 Ford
4-Ooor
$1288
'63 Ghevy
Station Wagon
$1865
'61 Ford
+—.—At.
$888
'64 T-Bird
Convertible
$3595
'61 Falcon
2-Door
$744
'59 T-Bird
$1085
'63 Falcon
Station Wagon
$888
'61 Comet
2-Door
$788
'60 Ford
Convortiblo
$792
'59 Chevy
2-Door f
$388
yAOO AVt„ b'lRMINQHAALMI
KESSLER'S:
DOOGf
CAR* AND TRUCKS
HAUPT
PONTIAC
•.•Try Nnrpf in
PONTIAC CATALINA
.WHfOWTIASCATAUNA
nniOU»itr~ fcOCHisTf wirwHit* FEYMdUfW puwy
door, auiomatlc, iMr staff-lna, perfect coMItim	Mv Oln»
low mileage. St,110. MA 1-7177 .ef-
wr rfwwYH’	mtioh
«™ •lipw nrtT. Allwtdta outoidt with a neat Mae Interior. A «lc*
srsFsF#n3wT
r*"*"d BIRMINGHAM
■W> *■ biSMSflt*'
1962 Plymouth
A beautiful onaowifC with th»t ever-luting ^cylinder engine. Alee of court*, i ttanderd tranamlulon. - No monty down, C-Zltranl
PATTERSON
CHRYSLIR-PLYMQUTH
___VALIANT-DODOR TRUCK*
HM N. M*tn *t, ROCHESTER
1W7 ro*6 iOMWlTlCCI'. no# w A .....,i......... ti«
RCONO^tARtJwISlRflR *mi»9!
ItWVoliont
ChryNer'i "Seat an araund Com-Mcf'JJ stowing blue and Syaar ®f IMR milt warranty aoaa with thla carl bp hag many miles to ■U fit SI 1.17 weakly wfttl M t Sown. Call Mr. Dale, Credit Ctr
Now oni Wood Cor* 1B6 *»evmpuTH, "Purv
17* PONTIAC CHIEFTAIN,
b-VooD.
Lucky Auto
193 or 254 S. Saginaw FE 4-2214 or FE 3-7853
Catalina S^oar RirMh Origins metallic bronn with contraatln rad Interior. Hat V4 automatic radio, and haatav^WWWWB.
rufiftM ^	...
$695
Eaay Bank Flnanclnp
STARK-HICKEY FORD
IMS PONTIAC*"dkTALlfi, tilCt, MIS, Pontiac Auto Brakers, Parry at Wattan. PR Aim, ■ • RiPOSSESSlbN.’itJt PpNtlAC, NO J-lwToMle?"	**
k|P6utuToN — 17* POtlTIAC. No money down. Pay manta at
efchf. Call Mr. j
tJ^XinSvIll
mw mt ‘ mb
^--iaa...Planty at. nuainy ^
i. KEEOO PONTIAC SAI
“BIG JOHN"
—F	nmamoo FE 3-7043 JIZ W. MOnTCOim iEPOSSESSIONS— BANKRUPTCIES/ STORAGE CARS, ETC TAKE OVER PAYMENTS WITH MSOIUTELV NO MONEY DOWN'	
'57 BUICK '57 CHIVY .. '60 RAMBLER '59 FORD ..	Ertcp woe* $397 $3.14 W*r %m*' $297 $2.35 SOoor - Stick . .. $297 $135 IO*r - Stick $397 $114 WORM	.Car PH* Week '57 MORRIS MINOR .. $T97 $1.63 '57 -FORD $197 $1.63 '56 LINCOLN $135 '58 CHEVY $297 $135 _ <4DHr — Automatic
CAPITOL AUTO SALES LIQUIDATION. LOT Located i Block off Oakland, 312 W. Montcalm FE 8-4071		
- ABSOLUTELY - NO MONEY DOWN We Handle and Arrange Financing—Up to 36 Months to Pay FINANCING NO PEOELIM - ALL APPLICATIONS ACCEPTED		
'59 PONTIAC . . . $597* Full Price Mai Nice Car — Partly Egulpaad * '58 PONTIAC 	 $295 Fulfprict Hardtoa 4i Fully EqMbBad '57 PONTIAC 			 $195 Full PHct Hardtop - Ready to GO '60 MERCURY ..... $495 Full Price , Fully loutgpod - Ready to E* '57 BUICK 	 $139 |U2- Hardtop		'60 FORD 	 $395 Full Price SOaar — stick. Fully Equipped — Ready to Go '59 CHEVY .. , : r . $397 Full Price Station Wagon - stick - Fully Equipped '60 PLYMOUTH .... $397 Full Price Fvtlv Equipped — Ready to Go '60 RENAULT .. $499 $4.,17 i Ion and Hardtop '60 ANGLIA . . $495 $4.72
BUY NOW, NO PAYMENTS UNTIL AFTER STRIKE 1 WALK IN . . . DRIVE OUT! TEL-A-HURON AUTO SALES 60 S. TELEGRAPH n&B&'t&w* « 8-9661		
Now on* Boo* |gr> 196
—y-
No. 1
IN4 TEMPEStt JtlftTOM, SM A
•.% 196#:
■ AMBASSADORS
RAD I a HE AT EMPOWER
STEERING, POWER BRAKES, TURN INDICATOR, OIL FILTER, DOUBLE ACTION MA(CR£.iACK-U»f LIGHTS, VISIBILITY OROUP ANU OUTS I DR Ml RROR.
•	$2283 * 1 *
ttt down, M month! on balanca
VILLAGE
RAMBLER
i
power steering and brakes. <1,0 wll prlca with no money down. .
Lucky Auto;
193 or 254 S. Saginaw FE 4-2214 or FE 3-7353
(Acceti open to MV «mne ttrea ■ under C^^^tn)el^pr,l ~
. Automatic,, radio, heater
t white h delivery guarantaaa.
Full Prkpti.lTO
STARK-HICKEY FORD
14 Milo Road R. of
lMf tEmFesY a-door 1 iWte RA die and heater, UH full price wltt no mon^y down.
Lucky Auto
193 or 254 S. Saginaw FE 4-2214 or FE 3-7853
(A*”Ur<
iMt pOi/tiAC doitVlktiSLi' -
.. Tnsmfs*lon!
brakes, Hydramatlc
Tni
with harmonlnng Interior trim ai._ a white tap. Pull price only *1,S71
BIRMINGHAM
Chrysler - Plymouth til t. Woodward	Ml 7-M14
1962	Pontjoc Bonneville Convortiblo
Now or4 Used Con ,
PONtTAC, 'IMS GRAND PRIX/ AU-
Aomatl-	-----------
H.450.
____ N sharp bucket seat modal.
Only HAH. Eaay terms. PATTIS SON chevr&St co. NOW AT OUR NOW UftLltM t. WOODWARD avrTrpmTnohaaa m ppm
Autobahn
Motors Inc.
AUTHORIZED VW DEALER
a arranged. Trad* ......	—.
fr. Straman 333-7M1 Or 135-4077
______Private. ______________...__
_ TOMP1ST CVtTOM 4TAYiOH wofiir. V4 angina, hypraanatlc
>64 Rod LeMANS CONVERTIBLE. Lets of extras, MA S-ltt7.
M4 TEMPEST «. CUSTOM t-ftOOR
1964 Ternpost Custom
7-door with V* .angina, ttMdard transmlsslln, radio, haatar, 7,000 actual miles, all white with blue Interior! Only $7,115.	>
Homer Hight
HEATER’. ABSOLUTELY HO MOW-BY DOWN, Taka over payments at SMJt par menth. CALL CRBD^
1959 RAMBLER CLASSIC WAGON,
sticRTmany extras. wiFf'*
CAR, >495. EM 3-7074.	®
tsngw
WAOb'N,
_	_____ tcEllMt
condition, MAOO.mliM. Automatic, radio and haatar. Extras.. S4JD.
RUSS JOHNSON
PONTIAC-R AMBLER ON MI4 in Orton,	‘
1947 TEMPEST C die. haatar. am,
ling tM7fgtMjgMNMt 1---top. $1,715. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., NOW AY OUR NEW
Pllyd. M U 4-7757 at
Ws'rs whstling and dtaling the all-mw 1965 Ramblers. See thtm nowl Used cars art being sold at wholesale to main room for th« now car trades.
ROSE RAMBLER
•144 Commerce. Union Lap __________EM MtlS
NEW
Ramblers
SAVE
$1,000 1964 Rambler Classic
radio, haatar, automatic
VILLAGE
RAMBLER
Bis s. Wsodwan^BIrmingham
TURNER
FORD
4MS. Woodword
Birmingham
MI.4-V500
HURRY—While They Last! Only Y7_Brand New 1964 FORDS
Custom		Custom		Custom
,, , 4 Doors		”500" 2 Doors		”500" 4 Doors
With Full Paatwy EqalpmpM		With Factory Soutpmont		WIN) Factory Equipment
As Lew As		As Low As		As Low As
$1949		$1959		$2029
				
Galaxie		Fairlane		Galaxie ,
*500" 4 Doors		: 4 Doors		“500" 2 Doors
		WEN Factory Equipment		hill factory equipment.
As Low As		Ai Low As '		As Low As'
$2389		$1869		$2579
j BEATTIE FORD
-Yow FORD Diokr Silk. 1990- — “SEIVICE After the Sol,"
OR 3-1291 ON DDUE HWY. IN WATERFORD OR 3-1291
No money down. Payments at t*.40 waakh^ICaH Mr. Johnton, MA
1964
$1595
$95 Down
14 months on bkMnca
VILLAGE
RAMBLER
444 S. Woodward, Birmingham
1963	RAMBLER Wagon
haatar, radio,
RfJML
Crissmon Chevrolet
ROCHESTER ROAD ROCHESTER	OL P9771
»U IAxon mo6el b Roadster
restored to mint condition. 0,770. Ml 44714 or Ml 7»l|P
THE HOME OF _
Goodwill
ond	•
Top Value
USED
CARS
WILSON
P0NTIAC-CAD1LLAC 1370 n. woodward . mi aiotoO Birmingham. Michigan m Credit or budget
PROBLEMS?
We Con Finonct Yowl 100 Con to Select From!
Gall Mr. Dale FE 3-7865
LLOYDS____
lw> aad Nsod Cep1B6
JEROME
OLDS and CADILLAC Now Car Savings-Today . CAU FE 3*7021
BILL SPENCE 1964
MODELS
1964	TYfHOON
2-door hardtop.
1964 RAMBLER '
! 4-door "770" sedan
1964 RAMBLER
CloaaM, 7-door hardtop
1964 CHRYSLER
Wo have IU Moor hardtops
1964 CHRYSLK
4-door aadan
1964 PLYMOUTH
Yov Will
SAVE
$$$$
. HURRYtl ‘
They Won't Laatl
BILL SPENCE
' CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH VALIANT-RAMBLER-JEEP
6673 Dixit Hwy.
ev.
MA 1
SUBURBAN OLDS' Birmingham trades-
. 100%; WRITTEN Guarantee -	Evtry car listsd carries this guarantee. Take the guesswork out of buying. Used carsl Credit No Problem 1 fc.
_ ALL CARS FUI tFdPOLOS'Sopar 4-Door,... tiotj itai OLDS "W CanvarttMo ITM MIS OLDS Sopor Wagon . 1MS INS OLDS “»t“ Coupe Bucket* 	 . SIMS . ism Olds Wtttp coupe .. ntts 1043 "M" Dynamic Caupa .. t»5 1741 SUICK LaSabra, Power 11771 1744 CUTLASS Hardtop -.. *7475 INI OLD* "70* Holiday, Air SUPS	LLY EQUIPPED I7M FORD 1-Door, awtO. S 505 1741 OLDS Hardtop	0177* 1744 OLD* "7*" Convartlblo ttv* 1744 OLD* »0*ar Hardtop . $7775 Md OLDS PSS 4-Door 	SI77I 1747 "77" 4-Door Hardtop Air 	 	*777*. TWI'2*" *Omr Hardtop1 ^ ,1717 FORD 1-Door 	Mop INS STARPIRi Coup#, ^
• JUST ARRIVED FRESH STOCK—1965 TRADES ALL MAKES, ALL MODELS-50 CARS TO' CHOOSE FROM 2 YEAR WARRANTY	
.FREE NTJsra	
SEE STUB STUBBLEFIELD, BOB MARTIN
• 565 S. Woodward Ave. BIRMINGHAM ' MI 4-4485
LARGE INVENTORY' — BIG SAVINGS —
1*43 PONTIAC BONNEViLLE 7-Door Hardtop. PMSf' steering and brakat. Hydramatlc, radio.
1M1 VW BUB. Radio, I
1044 GRAND PR IX. Powar steering and brakes, Hydramatlc, radio, heater, jpmbewalle. 4,000 actual mllet ana naw car factory warranty. .Only 1 M alack . «1»5
1M4 PONTIAC OONNEVILLE Convbnlbw. Demo. Factory alr-rondlttenod, full, gmvor^Humkfum
swlng-away tul blade
r'”US»5
roan hnlati
1743 FORD GALAXIE Convert Idle. Ford-O-Matlc, V-i, beautiful red
steering, brake*
1747 PONTIAC CATALINA Sedan. P«—1r Hearing and bratim, auto-ad to, haatar, whnawails. tr with MAM actual .......................... 11103
PONTIAC BONNEVILLE —Hag iMh haatar. lutomatlc traflamia-ills, Suntlra with
I TEMPEST STATION WAG-
1041 OLDS DYNAMIC I Power ataarlng and brat dramatic, radio, haatar an
1744 PONTIAC STARCHIIP Hardtop. Power «t«crlng and brakes, Hydramatlc, radio, neater, white-walls. White with rod- leather
1744 TEMPEST Sedan. ,
INI BUICK SKYLARK Convert-
dk,. healer Md whitewalls. Slack With white top ...T... SI0H
transportation?
Looking for nka
1744 PONTIAC BONNBVILLC Hardtop. Power ataarlng, brakes and windows. Hydramafk, radio, whltowalis. Naw car factory war-ranty ............w.r...........«#»'
INI CHEVY BEL AIR 4-Ooor laden. Rum and drives ilka new. Power ataarlng, brakes and seats. pyneWiw, rbdwvhadtar.whRowalM
1744 BUICK LaSABRi Power atajrmg and brekatu ................
"!r„«
US'S
whitewalls. Yet, ------------..^al with 17,000 actual mllaa ..................11575
1744 PONTIAC GRAND PRlX. 1 1— air condRlonad, full Hw-ilnum wheals, tilt steering Ms one it loaded mil
1744 TEMPEST Custom 2-Door. Standard transmission, V-I angina, lain used locally as drlvtrt
PONTIAC--BUICK OL 1-8135
855 ROCHESTER ROAD
1965 BUICK TRADES
1964 PONTIAC Catalina Convfrtiblt, Powar, Red $2695
1964 STARCHIEF i6oor, Power, Fawn ...........$2695
1964 OPEL Wagon,.24,000 Mila Warranty . ..$1595
1964 ELECTRA “225" Hardtop, Black ...........$3295
1964 LeSABRE 4-Door, Powar, Blua ......... $2695
1962	SPECIAL Wagon, Auto., V6, Blua ...... $1595
1960	PONTIAC Wagon, Automatic, Blua, Power $1395
1963	LeSABRE 4-Qoor, Air Cond., Bronze ..	$2395
1963 TEMPEST LeMans. 2-Door, Console, Blua $1$95
1961	TEMPEST 4-Door, 3-Spaed	* $ 895
1963 RIVIERA 2-Door Hardtop,. Blue .	$3195
1962	VALIANT “200" Hardtop, Buckets * $1395
1962 RENAULT 4-Door, Black, Low Milaaga
1962	FAIRLANE “500" 2-Door, Automatic ..
1961 OLDS 4-Door Hardtop, Power .	:.....
1960	T-BIRD Convartible, Blue, Power ......
1963	SKYLARK Hardtop, Power, Red Vinyl Top
1961	T-BIRD Hardtop, Blue, Full Power
1962	BUICK Special 2-Door, Red-White Top
1959	KARMANN GHIA 2-Door, 4-Spood
1961	RAMBLER 4-Door, White, Stick Shift 196$ RAMBLER 2-Door, Green, Stick Shift
1962	LeSABRE 24>oor, Red, Automatic
1960	COMET Custom 2-Door, auto., green
$ 795 $1595 $1595 $ 995 $2?95 $1995 $1495 $ 995 $ 695 $1395 $1695 $ 895
7>
it
n HOME-OF BUiCK-RENAULT-OPEL-JEEP
196-210 Orchard Lake	FE 2-9165
THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, facTOBKR 12, 1064
Homes-Fafms
. 1 tamlfy teams wllh take pr Mm» Mdw^-fMM <w -jMM-tMMMMW.
UNDERWOOD REALTY
MM DM* * Ctorkston__
Era* «HM»
NICHOLIE
IAN
«n bengslew. Cematad . KUcMn Md atebto
moment. tMI HA hast.
S®
WORTHEASTJlDg^ mtlfl^Uh
■rara. About WOO movyi ywv m.
■PICK BUNGALOW Iwt SMo locution. Thru# bsdreim - PuR bOuomont. Oil HA bool Vocont. About MM move* you In. fvn. Cull Mr. Cuutoll, Fi 1-7173 NICHOLIE HARGER CO.
Btft W. Hump M.	FE frill
ORIVE-IN RESTAURANT - AU uraiy^moo^dmaker. Tormo*t
MM DOWN - 1-BEDROOM. Pert
prMiueuL Em yrrS!
5 OR 10 ACRES - BOM PER ACRE. , M pur «Mt Boom. Lund cuntruct. 343-4703 or M7riMI,
. LOTS — SIM DOWN. Lara* und
In*1W%onfrucL^S7^Il .^IUMTm!
ta
Boom or lund cuntroct. 303-0713.
1-BEDROOM - 1 fireplaces, 1 bates, water front. Cedar I Bond area.
1-BEDROOM FURNISHED - MM down. MAM fun prlco. Lund — trod. SSMM1. EM 1-73M.
LAKE FRONT—REDWOOD RANCH
S, POSSIBLY 1 BEDROOMS. 0 rape. Luku privileges. Log smarter Mara fit Cyctan* fenced. MAM 7—“ 1 ~tt controct. 36(7700.
. HACKITT REALTY.
HIITER
OVER S ACRES — Hoorn M lVi bottu. ook floon. heutod / porch, lull bOMMMt. 1-cur gor . block top drive, duoo In. Sou to
LOW, LOW boWN PAYMENT —
Moot 1-boBroom homo, taro* c-
M aluminum storms ond to
WEST SUB — lb ■tiitarad woHu,
Wurtu
______	_®
B. C HI ITER.	REALTOR. MSI
|----I Loko	.Hi,	PE SBITt.
MM3. OPEN	SUNDAY 1
BATEMAN
GUARANTEED 'TRADE-IN PLAN
Monty
IN YOUR newly rodi log to mu
POCKET, o
I utruot. 1 bodroom runcnor with tom
noting uru lint u In................
features htdudud. Extra , t-cor gu-
Clouu to Biupplno und to everything. Batter »D|o ono.
Overlooking
SILVER LAKE GOLF COURSE) Bib 1 poor old trHovot b looking tor U now ownor. Cuutom built Bit--*-out wflb muny quollty lot
tedudbw ponobd family ri------
wim flroplucu und country-typu
llvjna ve. ft
n und 3-iono hot wutor hour with wulk-out lowor bvB. Lutgo und mactous. Mo of extra und wundurfutly Inoduougud. win o boa By Bio moot u«uctlng; on to-rancNoh will cortobily convlr— you. Prlco roducod to *14.150 w rouoonubto tormu.
Mr. & Mrs. Rtnter
WHETHER YOU . RENT erwhalt you buy, you pay lor mo hot you occupy. If you pay. why l_. own HI Cota and cacy S-ruom ranch-type built In **“ -**■
Luka privileges' ct___
bnt utartur hum* at o Prteu you con afford. Priaad to toh Bubbly at MAM wim lint MM down p-cocts. BETTER ~LOOK TODAY.
Budgel
CLOWE TO PONTIAC MOTORS..
dragsi. M win lor ml poooi and lorao iBIHty room. Doo toToorm priced at teriOO wl MM down plui coots. BETTER LR9K TODAY.
. I YOU CAN TRADE Ba£hm Raalty--------------
MbSmil111	"
S?'Sundoy8 uF*
Budget Priced
o PONTU— MPVMMpi an wfllk. comtarlabto bring
angud,>nkltchon
Crescent Road
John K. Irwin
$9,990
FULLY*INsSlAUD. Oo-
WE TRADE
YOUNG-SluNOMES
REALLY MEANS BETTERJILT
KAMPSEN
Two-Bedroom Ronchsr
Wim 0 nlct Nvlns room, MMhL, breakaway wim attetotad I Wear gurugu. -Juat walling tor a buyr-M30 down phn ads. or wo w toko a trad*.
Tremendous lake View
Out Milford way. Oorgooua thru bud room pink aluminum MM rancher, lr kitchen wim more Bu •vnrna* cabinet meet. Butf II Ing room with ledgerock flroplacu attacked 1-cor garage. You really mutt MU thb Mint to fully ap-pradatu all Ha AM Matures. The price b low at SI7.SSB tarfnf — trade.
Northside
Exceptionally ntca 1 bedroom ra ar, poor acyipturM living I
carpeting, attractive kitchen fa
fenaoHon room, gat hoof, yard. Only Itun MM d PHA forms.
After I p.m.	GR
THINKING OP SELLING? Want caaht wo wHI not R Mr you. give ua o try. Cm Lao Ksmpasa, Floyd SdBWBMkJjifM. Brad by. Byron Rogora, Hilda MpRAjUM Karr, Rachal' Lovely or Prod Root-
Frushour Struble
last
t Bw boat. Thb <W-
wtm fireplace, attached 1-car ga-raaa. Vacant. Mora rt*t b. Sft-300. Wo wM trade.
Plata wim carpeting, dr ante, ar recreation room. Bntahad breeie-way and anachod 1-car garage. Lucre lot. lolling for IllJs will
lake Orion
And rt on Bw water Mr your winter and trimmer mode. I room*
tartar, mabaat, bra roga. tlUM. Lad's tr
Trade
torn, garage and ahadod tat. S N full prlco.
, JACK FRUSHOUR MILO STRUBLE MM Elisabeth Lake Road
GOVBtNMENT HOUSES
WStMvo
200 HOUSES
M
All Areas of Pontiac
SOME SM INCL. EVERYTHING
CHEAPER THAN RENT
COB "LOO"
SPOTLITE BLOG. CO.
PE SBSM 1S1W. Cornell
O'NEIL
OPEN
Daily —Thro# 'til Seven Sat. and San, — On* 'til Five 6808 Blutgrass
sssr_, _...
trade! Ctarfcafan Maadowt may so readied by driving through Bw village of CtatfloMh and furabw tatt |ua» before the antra*-. 1-75. Mr*. RONS OR S-JOL
3156 Angelus Drive
Perhaps Bw moot dodlncttva l ^ "idea Homos of Oakland Country Booufy Rita, la ““ ~“ uBy ----------1-*—*- “•
room-kBchan	I
r laundry facHBtao and . The garage b overtired. m*ad aforaga. 1 large ■—L nt mt an [OUfttandlng m. i a luxurtoua eunkan hta. You
mi AMmtao
0L 1-0*75
TRADING IS TERRIFIC
IN CLARKSTON GARDENS. SM w brick ranch, IVb caran w, carpeting M lvkis r-----

its
adwob and Marat. Si .700 down
te*?**^ r
CRESCENT LAKE EETATpi. Wwd-
i. lotary homo. Birins 1 ream./ kmdwo kid doom pkw dan. AB ~'v L BbadmwR. Bear gtlochid
MEDROOM RANCH, lorao kitchen wHk eating tpacc. Lind ,uJ“ ream, ttta floor*, aluminum i and atreniw. Sett an a lar tabcldS. Can bn Btuidd wM> m. Mam on 4W par cant nwrtsnsn at SM month pic tad Ing Mam and
RRMOMLlb century farm
HOME. 4 bedreeim. lVh bathe. Hay hpra and tanfing bam wltb pttndwd atari bam. 0mT did build Ing*. make* mb dTIOSM. PLACE to mbs fsadar Mock or
mass Mfih of Pontiac. S MRSol
EiALTDRS	Bteoa mm	RAY 0'NEII REALTOR
/ /	PE (0444 FE 5444]	am PONTIAC LK. RD. OPEN 1 OR4GW 1 MLB KMi;
' / '' ‘		Y * 1 1 -
Bf OWNER
« bedroom cslanltl wim 1M __
and Tear garage. Liga man ana year «B. Leaving Mate, prtaid to aari. EM sjms maTimT
ANNETT
Lake Privileges'
Nut ranch horn# with ! bedroom*, dan or. 3rd bad
pantry and<latlL>Oaa'radiant heat. Ita-car plaatarad at-
' ■■Ml. JlPi	-■—M
area. SlMf i
m\tfts Nrerre /	-	48
Mixed
Neighborhood
MODELS OPjEJ ^APT^^NOONS t-J
WEST0WN REALTY
«B Irwin off Ball Btvd.
FE 117*3 aWorlwtlta.Il MS77
Auburn Ksights -
Ibodreom ranch homo hi bn-mioriota condition. Living room, inodom kltchsn, m borne, utHIty room, scar ot-tachod garsgo. Nearly sera lot. sum terms.
West of Oty ’	*
Only yoor old bHck, a bunt hr owner, oantral cited not for from Proving Gtounda. Pontiac and Flint. PrWiiBli on private Me. Lhring room wflli r
eAUASi
West 'Side — 6 Fomlly
Sd-TE
l, got otaam boat. En-bldg, in bnta of contf“— wo food return an k
nt of 141,500, term*.
FE 8-0466
CURK
UNION LAKE AREA - AM Him 7-room trltavol with 1534
Of living area. Nko living p_
wim carpottaB, 1 fl rap lacs*, tauoly family ream, Ite barn*, patio, co-romk tlta fosturs*. aluminum
Patrick's pariah. Priced at
HOME AND BUSINESS - Attractive Sbadroom home wim tavaly family ream, antra bad roam In batamant. carpet Uw hi Itvtnf and family room, nlca comar tot and aMtlmit'Bcor garage, ntao oT
an|oy your garage. Basement Tt aaf up ter beauty Mop and Oqulp-nwnt can bo purchased. Lot b kr-xlir and b nkaty londtcapid.
MOVE RISHT m -
copSowL._______________________
and ' (xcaBonl largo garage. Can bo puralwaod on tend cdkiroct wim poymonb of Mf pdr monm including texao and Inauronco wim SUM down or hat H your credit b goad and you can make a *■*-*•— —**
CLARK RRAL ESTATE ltd! W. HURON ST. PE 1-7IM TO BUY, TO SELL. TO TRADE Multlpb LIMIng Sarvka
ROCHESTER - Vf RY WELL Constructed hub-bedroom modem bungalow wim full baosmsnt, oak ftaore, corpotlng, Dtahmastor and wntor toftonor. Lorao MxlM lot. Easy forms and priced at only Mr
family room plu* largo two-cor i tached garage. Prkad at only Oil 7M and terms.
NEW TRILEVEL - Ham b home that after* tha most In cor tor-table and convenient Hvlns- Truly. 0 housewife'* delight. Cdrgs country-ityb kitchen with wafkjn pantry. One ttb bam. One fbbslb. Loras ftebbad family roam, oak
ROCHESTER ARRA - Rancher urilh MB baaamtnf. Attachad ivy-car garage. SHuafad on largo 1ST-XUS' lot. Excolbnf condition In and out. Fireplace. Gas host. W “ to-woll corpotlng. Abo MU brootowoy. Excolbnf location A homo Bwt oftara you excel end quiet living. Prtcid at l
US — Wo accept
Open M. Multlpb LIMIng Sorvtco.
L H. BROWN REALTOR
jot Elizabeth Lake Rood PH: PE 4-15*4 or PR B«tS
OWNER SAYS "SELL THIS * ON FHA"
TIZZY
IRWIN
DRAYTON WOODS - Sbadr brick muck typo wim a mm living mom and dining area, I attached garage and tatp* M tavaly vMu m mouilvo Dm
WEST SUBURBAN - Lovely ^ WaHSpu.iitih tun __ Mum siding, recreation bar. ciramli tira bom.
NBAR CRESCENT LAKE - Pbsd-
---- —— --=nfid| dining
WHh flnlihod
Scar garage and completely fenced tat. Can Bo nought on land contract wim rraasnabw down paymant. Nke qutet suburban home.
Office open Sunday LMS MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR M W. Wtetan	PE S-MM
A-l BUYS
Blomfitld Townhsip*
3-bad room ranch, an large tSExMl tat, full «p« NMM M prlvllagas on Square Lake. On I IILMA IS par com doom. Hurr on mb one. .
Home and S Acres
cor gor ago. Prkad at WriN i turn down, sao It today.
Watkins Lake Privileges
way and oHbihod Scar garage. •Mealy landscaped lot. Priced to SOB - *17,100. Eaty tomb ovsJI-abta.
WATERFORD REALTY
4540 Dixie HWV.'DR 3-1173.
I. iryoow. RbbRo
TIMES
LAKEFRONT
Lake Orion. Ovar 100 tost of sate
9 beam A h '-- ----
baths. 1
KrepCcs.*!
water heat. Scar ta wan anil'
In range and ri I appolntmanb
4 FAMILY
Pontiac city location. Bus at door. Gas heat, . soma furniture.. A chance to harm on apotbnanl ter younatf and renters will pay tar the property. Only SI4M0. Terms on uind contract. Oh. yea. aH apartment* ranted. Coll for op-polntment. i ‘
CLARKSTON RANCHER
targe tat. Scar garage. Patio wim aluminum owning. A terrific buy at MIMS.' But WO Will entertain any raooonoblo after. Can not—^
people show 1
REALTY
John Kinzler, Realtor
» Dixie Hwy. MU 474-03*6 _______OPEN f TO 9______
Val-U-Way
PERRY PARK
Mi bam looking h
nmiy payment liar. This St it, targe kite i, utility roam
■ •*■“« lit L. ...
and fteuranca. call
ERODES
UBURBAN BRICK HOME
baaamant. an Iwat. Scar il^. Large shady lawn. It acres of rolling land. ONtOOI. Terms. lAOWAV LAKEPRONT HOME —
shady lot.______ ..
ACRES wim good mm ™»™, 1 bedrooms, rail baaamant. all hoof. $11,350. forma.
NIC! 6-ROOM HOME. North Alt-doratn^J Uryo bedroom*^ lhring
to-wall carpet, brick fireplace, modem kitchen, knotty pins bmok-fat! nook, full basement, all hoof, l-cor garage, largo tat. I1MM. *400 down. FtfA lKo, '
-ROOM FRAMf HOME - 3 bed-
Larga bsdroam. !M0"x23' upstair*.
carp* In living roam and aam, madam kitchen, lull t, BU heat. 1 acres bf tea. SH.500. 14,500 down, 01M JOT monm, land contract. LARGE COMMERCIAL BUILDING — Dixie Maty. Ideal for tha Antique yktP Of ouattar homo, til,-<00. (5.000 down. MIS POT month,
aijerTTrhodes, broker
. pe pens sm w. wtetaRf iRrum
"BUB"
WEST SUBURBAN Sparkling Cbdn
RANCH HOME, 4 roomt, S .hod- T Ihodretm bungalow ta quiet tub-
*—----------- urban tagOttan wWb Rrtwtapot an
Crescent Lobs. Include* meat
rttUty room wfHi storaga. Scar jOtbj|a; Priced aMOMjVappreil-
wMh antrar ploatared w
Smitji
Wideman
DORRIS
SGROROOM COLONIAL, jklM. Homey design But makes * howaa a ham*. 1 bedroom a bate down, 4 badraama and bt ufL Walk-out baasmant wBh fl
modem known wnh built-* Hama located or huge lot I a same's Straw from Bw ta
WBST WALTON - Top taeottan ter Ada brick and trams trltev-wabdng distance to Blrad scKB and as* kmter high at .located luM across tram Mtw. larger m*» ovoraga badraama ir*ir family roam, gas bat Anchor fenced bock yard, sp claus carpsrt aid oakd concre .drive. II5,too srtlh MOO doom.
CtarfcMon Amo (ttvvxir). Out-i (VthitST. t—-
ad m M irxtl
subdivision ta LMng mar
standing kin
plbca and barbacu* grill. Also panstad and Pawai hi raw ■ perrii. l hrighT chaariut bsd-rooma. ted osrsmlc bam and bam. aftedlMd garaga- A i nlcs hams.
CLEAN ANO NEAT AB A I
tssxsz
%m, tor UN
lot; Wx\W, ’for only 99M. m
kitaf known (fxir), badraams, and autdooTiff^wlm
STARTER HOME, B4PM w«h MM down, IN monm. Lltllld It | bum HalQVi. Full baiammt oulald* entrance. Lot ITxtbr.
DORRIS S SON. URAL TORS IWObria Hwy. ' OEMMt MULTIPLS LUTING SERVICI
Spic and Span ■
Moderately nrlpl East sta* Brick am lust rlOit for flta Cloao to ochools eludes ganem.” dining roon gas hast a
"BUD" Ntcholia, Realtor
m Mf. Ctamons St.
FE 5-1201,
AFTER 6 P.M. FE 54)198 “ WASHINGTON
l drive. Priced of
_______“to m!t isquare fmlWtor
the pries. S largo. tod rooms, tara* Hiring mom and gas hoot, (lkfbb.
On S. Mata I
Total price 111,Mb
Prudential
Real Estats
44441 Vbn Dyke	Romoo, Midi
752-9391
ObOnb'tBi	eWLflBP
LAZENBY
mm
urn, t
of 0
Is
INDEPENDRNCE TOWNSHIP q>bb In, I Bodrawna. real q
d'^llanc*
Only tlt*00 wtm S4M UW coM. Call tor appointment
OFF ELIZABETHI LAKE ROAD
i^wautirli
large t craft di
lyssats
By Kmte Osann
CALL US FOR uMgi, bugurran and farm
PROPBRTt.
CRAWFORD AGENCY
MV V114I	MY ■
CLAKifsfoiiTuiBTSNTiTK
SECTION
ant ariBi antfan ta purMiyi Last
SSSSnaWnraH DaEwPeoltaO, WE
4100 MkhaafaGwiBy. home ilTIQp^ W. iuttBY
Beach evariaaklng beautiful Wal-
G wet b MMta tn. aw as hw. OR
“Well, anyhow, put long as AuHSO is running, I’ve learned a little science!”
ARRO
CASH
FOR EQUITY - LAND CONTRACT
WE BUILD-WE TRADE
ENTY OP ROOM FOR THI KID-
i toads of cup-
ttlng 1,100.
LAKE PRIVILRGRS ON
privileges for sun and fishing. A •
Terms.
LAKRS
ascroom pungatow umtaum storms rag*, tel iSO’aiSb’
. But sarvka to
GOING FOR A SONG — 15-room laeamt ham*. 3 spartmant saaalbte am, new steam kaaf furnace, ft mil* from can* Pontiac. 5t. Fred's parish. A
taka pThrUagsk ilblJC. farms.
PHONE 682-2211
5143 Caaa-RHiakam Road MULTIPLE LISTING SBRVICR
GILES
HR FAMILY HOME, I has 15-toot living flraptac*. ] large I Barn, baaamant, a
'BLOOMFIELD ORCHARD!. 7-reatn 4 badraama, hugs
•REM doors, 1ft l____
wim bwHt-bw. gas hast. Mar garage, I ■■ ‘1 -
EASTERN JR. HIGH DISTRICT
Ctean Madraam bungalow wim full baaamant, large living ream wtth ffreplact. dining room. Pear garaga, extra large Isf. Only 4350
Gl SPECIAL
Mora m lor only (SO on mis P room ham* on S. Jaoata St. Pay-manfs only (50 par month Including taxes and bwuranca. Mar garaga, baaamant, corner tot.
R. J. (Dicky VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531
145 Oakland	Open
Bp hours. PE P4410 qr PE LISTYOUR--------	—‘
MILLER
Late man.
(5,aso Pull price a
10x10 living room,
0 everything. P
d yam. tool i
mi* bargain. 1 bedrooms,
id yard, tots r. Carpet and
of ahada. la* mill BRICK RANCH Ilk* drapes go. Laval
LfiMmgRLJMS r„. -------- ,—
fenced yard. Only I13.NS. Terms. NORTH SUBURBAN RANCH vary nice condition. Carpeting, dtalimas-ter, gas heat, tarn* leT H baaamant. Just tom* *t ms features. Only M,*M. Easy firms.
BRICK, WEST SUBURBAN B fin* ' caftan. J rooms, MB Bmsmanf. B hast, nice yard, lite Of tree* to shrubs. Only Write, term*.
IIT INCOME IN ''paraenal home" ndltion. This sharp money maker
STOUTS
Best Buys Today
Comfortable —
n 1-story family
n* mreugiwui, i room, bread I
.'•drsr
and Raw bf ' nont, atlacha .jrogt, convenient la a I shopping area. Pries mediate seta at only h easy terms.
All the Extras -
AreMnjhlt eBrscttve
paved drive, leraly _J mam, gas forced a)r heal, draperies includad at only
Price Reduced —
Par qutab takailMat . lata ibadwam ranch la Oak Manor, brick and
carpeted living ream ahd ______
all. 1ft betas, kitchen wBb bvllf-mt, banminl. Bw hast, attidiad garaga. pavad stre- “— — (llriM wtlh hsa! si.

!nsu.
fssa
Solid BalR 1-bad room
aaaaHfut airdaa. cararad paH
Only HUM Wim term*.
Warren Stout Realtor
m H. Opdyfce Rd. PE W0 wSfteta Usttng (arvlca M
'SMITH"
WEST SUBURBAN
......JS% --
unflnlahad recreation -
mtantly located and situated en a mealy tandacapad tat. Write: Mortgage farms.
WATERFORD
Yaar-'round trams horn* consisting ■ ‘ ‘ J (, living ream wHk bate, kitchen large (nctaaad anal and oaNI
Rolf* H. Smith, Realtor
144 S. Telegraph
B 17IN_________EVE*. PE 173
OFF ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD. S. Ing"1 * * carpeting In
GILES REALTY CO.
PI i«m	in Baldwin Ava.
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE
SCHRAM
CUSTOM RUILDRRS_
ARCHT.—SERVICE—FINANCING Your Plana	On Your Lai
Or Oars	Or Ow* ,
Brand Ntw
SEE OUR FINISHED MODEL Beautiful bbadteim ranch ham* - wBb 14* X 15* living ream bestowed for ftm^ombn, 1r x if step-
' IS' x 34’ retrabftan • of retaxad «F—
(l trite plus cl your tof as < duplicate on ft
Big T
Mammal... ..... WWWBHP wim long-lasting mabitanancaJrea brick from. Also. Ipraa recreation ream designed far haurs of family ptaature. sliding dearwafl la patio area tor out of dear actlvtttao — Thrifty gas heal. Priced at only (11,*SC plus dosing costs and us*
WE HAVE SEVERAL TWO- ANO THRSB • BEDROOM HOMES AVAILABLE WITH LOW DOWN PAYMENTS. DOWN PAYMENTS START AT APPROXIMATELY
wtth gas bate, Ift-car garaga * Includes soma furniture, (1,1 dawnpRM damn! caste wW handl
Off Josjyrf’
IVAN W. SCHRAM REALTOR , FE 5-9471
*a JOSLYN COR, MANSFIELD MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE OPEN EVENINGS ANO SUNDAY
KENT
Donaldson school area
Hardwood floors. Draperies and ruga todudad. New it l»J“ Term*.
WATERFORD AREA—Nice d*
an. Laraa anctaaad parch, paragt. Near store* and i Now at SIMM. Terms*
WILLIAMS LAKE FRONT -.Alfred Nra year around modem ham*. Specious carpeted living roam 4hd djnbig ream. Tiled Bata. Lara*
gwd'sate beed|W(V »00Cer ®*r*®*'
■Floyd Kant Inc., Realtor
nil DM* Hwy. Of Telegraph
fi Mia ww era, mas-1741
___TT
'	50G ACRES
1 miles tram Gsyterd. Has IMS ft. af taka •rtnWRa ■itjBmf jrteiwb mg duo. Uvaral thousand a*— grtens planted. CM Si-MMC ad. Only (71 an acre, makes It
IS THE BIRD TO SRT • W. Huron	PR 4-35(1
ALL LAKR-------------------
NORM RICE—ON GRI ' EM 3-3331 — RM own
• HR Cammarco v Na ted warn Oatrak WO (•77W
“BLbOteFfdLD HTCLTfCHOOLT Canal taf to Upper Lana Lai isrnjar, next la attrndtea ham
P* G1W .	Ml 4-740
* —'— MA 4-7311
______________docks. M 4-4501,
OR SilSM. Bloch Bn*.
LAk< FdONT HOME*._NtW "ANET uaad. J. U Daite S.1M 3-7114.
LAKE FRONt
•rag*. (Jri*0 dawn will handle.
SHEPARD REAL ESTATE
PR >3473
LAKE SHERWOOD
You don't have to be a mIHk
and ktagad our fai models priced from up - Including lot. AL to Lake lharwood. la* community and ludgr The many hraafll* fine living ter Rig wn 35 minute* from Pom lac.
C. 0. BALES
RKALTOR
i* this tavaly far wuratE. B oftara In
FLATTLEY REALTY
Commaroo'	341
WALTERS LAKE
1ft ACRR WOODED CAMP SITE
LAKEFRONT COTS NRAR KALKAB-
mo. ADAMS REALTY. PE Sritel. 35-POOT TRAILER AND LOT N|AR Mio, Mich, gsad tear >■'*— Price »I7B0. Call*74-14f4.
fish, swhn, golf, duhhauoa.
Bros. FE 4-4501, OR 3-I1W.-HARTWICK PINES AREA. NEAR Grayling. IS acre*. (IriRS. 115 dn. Sip mewta. Stodi Srea. OR H115.
HUNTER'S SPECIAL
Cabin located In gsad dear c* try M mllos east af OroyHag M-Ti. This to a good war graupd fumlahad cabin ftmEelWLlB Auaabta Rlrar. Mead B r“ J (2.100. CaH ter direct Ions m taar biterma**—	—1
OR HOT-
LOG Cabin, 4 rooms. narB-weed ftaar, fine too*, water, Hhta 2D icraa af	locatad at
Soufhprinch. CaHaSwf tSTlfll. LAKEFRONT" LOTS NEAR KALKXG — an M44. (115. SM down. SM ADAMS REALTY. FE 14015.
WANTED TO RENT: CABIN FOR L
vicinity
adults. 615-1545-
Ndwkwvy, Nev u.
Ragart Pngsrty
AT MORGAN LAKI BALDWIN I 1-75 X-wmr, 100x150, swim, beating. M mtaufts la rag *1,115, (20 down. S» monm. B Brothers. Ft 44501, OR (-1111. CEDAR ISLAND WATER FRONTS (3,100, m demy (31 —^ "
dawn. Private sand beach or
and MM __
_______	hunting. Laaiia US-
27 (1-75) Freeway *• Harrlson-GIsd-wta Exit. At (tea sign, tera toft am Btodk to aur affle*. NORTHERN development CD/HAi. iliON. Open I days a weak. (Member Chamber of Commerce) SHELL HOME. 3-BEDROOM BRICK MMmanl, 5<ar garaga. HigMand-MIHord Areas. MML lot, *11,113. Black Bra*. PR 44SW, OR HEW.
Country Living
FOR
Horse Lovers
AT THt
Clorkston Hunt Club Estates
4 mils* north af Ctorhsfen la an area af rolling ms* and acanlc beauty. 7
Gracious, ^ txclring^ living wlta Ml 20x30 Bam.
But War Includes free American riding kora*.
Pancad corrall and appreact
3 large bedrooms Spacious kifehah with bultt-lns
3ft miles from 1-71 ■prsiswty. Per addfltami Intermaltan call:
- C. PANGUS, Rsalty
Call CaNact NA 7-JM<
mo Mil___ »	grim
OPEN 7 Days a we IK
' cOunTKy LIVING
wfm tedh^andTa hST nS kltchan! living ream wflk full bwimint and Vcar aaraaa. M (tea M0x440. Just S minute* aN Bw 1-75 Expressway. twill WEB SlriSO dawn.
LAP&R AKA “
MsteL IS unit* phi* madam ham* and restaurant aamhtead. Mil Hwy. fft ndtea BaaI.af Lapeer teg, .liar terms. Soon By appokif
LRH-ArrBE|i ^
1 ACRE SITE* OR MORE El THB
hill* awriama Waflws Lake.
AM* 5 tab ter Sim
SYLVAN
mm»
25 Lots
Bulldars farm*. Imarerad wlJR NaWHiitarrRamiar. ___•
sssss
party. <2.500 down.
• acres af rolling land wM many baauHtel home alto*. Just I ndto Hr M-K Only 1310 gar acre. TYrtlW.
RwS nl
pressway. w— — —— JUST ONE (were parcel tatt
ar, H
C PANGUS, Realty
Cad col tact NA 7-Mil
(M Mil	Orh.
1 -. iAtkd' HOMESiTK. IN wad resfrlctad are*. (3.500 to m
CLARKSTON REAL ESTATE m.v'i wCMain -MA S4M1
4 Ultof L6tf With miRR6R
n Pina Lakt, nleafy weeded V
'''iMMTTgT. „ ~~ Gladafaaa.	P«
T MORGAN LAKC<A13>fiN Ml MS axprassway, 100x150 swim, ah, hosting. M minutes to Pontiac IriM. MS down m monm. Stack roa. FS 445W, OR 1-11H.
buildIw l6Ts
trite
Twin Lahsa - taka from ... 4.
Annstt Inc. Realtors
M E. Nunn St	PR M
cjmTt
COMMERCIAL T ACRES. CORNER.
liwr	—~
Rd., 114
mrough to
BenuvL--	^
IS sere* an Drake Rd. SM fief af frontage. Near riding stabte. SUM an acre. Term*.
HAROLD R. FRANKS, REALTY
MM UNION LAKI ROAD UMI ____________SBG73M
CANAL LOtS T
C ho lea building sites - 10x147. Cannactad wlfb Sylvan Lak*.
JACK LOVELAND
Hl-HIU VILLAGE
Large rolling BulMhin site* an pavad streets. A planned community af fin* hamaa with plenty	“—
between. BUY NOW and aim. Ua* yaur taf as down payment far your tutors home. Law a* SUM wim mm dam.
LADD'S, INC
HI L spear Read Pdfry (MS FR Mill ar OR 1-mi after 7:M Open dally 114. Sunday fS4
ON JU046n. NEAR DOWNTOWE. tat 41x141. Hat ad dfy Improra-manta. OR SMW.
TIN ACRES - 6000 PROTEC-
at araySMM and n*m*_ yaur am fwwn. Aak far Mr. Erawp ST.. F> 3-*ll(. avantags OA G341*.
Watsrford Hill Manor
La roa astata tots an an* of OaklandCounty's moat beautiful «b
1154 MIS «l Said Eagta Lake
CRB SITES Q Is overlooking
SYLVAN
MORE IN THE
80 ACREV
Wad locatad In l.ipur County. Old (ream house and gar am t large Bam*., corn ertte. chlckwi
acres of tfltahte as gsad a* you wld And In Mlchtom. To sattta •stats, MS,fM cash.
CLARENCE RIDGEWAY
RJMLTOR
MS W. WALTON	33S-40S4
. MULTIPLE LISTINGuSERVICE 1M ACRE .MWtK FARM, SBMI-Privafa laka. Orionvllta area. *15.-
MAtarmsTPE 3-4M4.___________
FARM HOME, 5 Ie6A66mS. Iff ■mated. hgT *k!	—|
ssuxr-
m mf> U Hub
Me twibew weperty SI
INDUSTRIAL ACREAGE AND PRppjRfy. For EMto Invaslmsnt
” Takeland agency
VA and PHA aaprevid broke M4 N. Pontiac Trail _ wauJd LAKE MA 41M1	dXtSM
For $0le—Coffimerciol
This vary da*lrahte bmid)M a _
on * lOO'xisd' lef. IuMlna
...__ __ jf IriM square
Plus shad storaga aTiSl a tedf. call ter addINonal inform. Nan.
John K. Irwin
A SONS REALTORS
311 W. Harm M. Phone: - ' Evan mat and Sunday	(Inc* mi RE M444 OR (MB
TradT	
weiMocareu ousinesa Dunging jxx-JT good for many types at bust nan. Will accept late modal I sap.	
tor*11 balT'and*’ wBXt *aqulpm«nfl Pud prica (liriM.
CLARENCE RIDGEWAY
REALTOR
IS W. WALTON	SM Nte
MULTIPLE USTINC SERVlCj
Church BuHdtag and taltowsNp t on top mr Id m oaeaN
section af team. Ptexlbte tar andtaharkw puwt add la Ra tradtan.
PAUL F. WILKE, Broker
fHM Hdk RA (MM)	731-MM
waYerFord TCwnShip^ tBtSSJWMJBIf
ta*** * ar id" ~
(, Otete af _
«. Mf br ffrioa m ft cam,
Stores and Industrial zoned. Will
Broker cUp.^L WO S-mT' reply Bax No. M. Pontiac Praa
ygBgjr—i
TRADE OB SRLL SYLVAN VILLAGE BRICK I Trad* year praam hams ar acgdfy
an IMa daalraota ---
liicikam taha p ____ __,
--------
aad ptanty af c
ornmashar. »b»
estaIs' SM. WBi Rastdanea, PR 44313.
MAY OA* STATION. LEASE, (350
•52,000 VOLUME ^ LIQUOR BAR
idSSSfSrsr^
MICHIGAN
Bashwse Sale* bic. '
JOHN LANDMESSER, BROKER
1573 s. Tmesrii*•»»■
^3,000	£
INVESTED RETURNS
$1,000 PER MONTH ____INCOME
Waridfemousmd Itea aute.chanP mg' Of Or .rite tan wayn.
Pulty^rate^tlfeiitttry-*
factory fralnltw. "-mWi tufty
■’ “A ftat Boy" Sowm BEAUryr1
BATEMAN
COMMERCIAL MPMTMRNT
ANCHOR BAY BAR
Sacra private island wfm si-ram hotel, liquor llcanm boat dock, locatad MI Itarin mamrn Island, Mil H AMM’. Bay Or., acroai from Decker's Landing. H3.0M -dawn ter Burtnaii and aragariy.
ROY STEWART
far J ar 4 agorotor*. Dead taaaa on bultak<B. ilria(. CALL S2, HI ITER, REALTOR. PR 34I7L
WBSf
BUILDING PREVIOUiL' jjira and.amra*rfi;
an Mai tad. Vary madam wim dMtofittw afmaaakare. H you •re oaf miaraMad M rastaurant
«tSSS.5i^’?rUcM
shop, ar wry trap af bustam vou desire Lacavwf af ana af Oakland County* baalmf Inlanac-Nona, Telegraph af Dlxta. Don5!
rat b* mat. _ „ —------
>r adbehifmam ell EM (rilil.
BUSY AeSTAURANT
r In Pontiac, ktab
"'arts15
» juiMted. Wp will train yu ... full monm am pteae you In a madam aarvlca iteftan amt. Minimum Investment required. Par fyr-thar Information call Mobil* Oil. Cm FiJtmh;
pram! • •UILDINO, SUITABLk
- ^nSr
Mary's brauty Mwp. FE I
metal wamartMiRy af a llfatlm Only (lSriatdown.
Chapin Motel Brokers
MACHINE (HOP ANb HOUSE -

i eaymanl. OR (4174 a
PLAN ANRAO. iOPT-MIX IC E cream nd JflW lundi business sal
Hal equipment list: 1 double’ bead Taytar traazars. mufti mraM bav-arag* station, walk-kl coatar, ttor-aga cabfnaf, namberaar brat tar, hot dog sfaamar. Maw to yaur on-arty. CaH PR ftofll dreg cede 111
equipment, seats 50. No food!' dan? tag. 3 new apartment* up. Owner and wife retiring. Only (StriM In-
Want a Business ef Your Own . . . Answer this AB
ALL.YOU CAN MAKE IS MONEY
Midwest manufacturer baa aKtaatra franchise distrlbutormta.. svailaM* In mis territory for IndMBual ready to mov* Into the bfi msneyTtt
you hav. executive ability ar can sail, ou can't ml**.
Dynamic naw gradact to demand nattonaHy -every buriwaaa year a reap act Exclusive, protected territory
jpptbdmdnt wHh Istlra, mlhi
ll
I, JR.
Btobi, Hi
WANTED
•u^wjffcMdMjSm^ '
ua ter teat sMan In taa sala ar trad* af yaur business. ~
WARDEN REALTY
3434 W. Hursn, Panttac 'W71|7
Sole LflnB Cewtract* M
1 TO 50
UND CONTRACTS
you*deal l'MM* *** m M*r
WARREN STOUT, Realtor
'«* w i
AttlbN ’T
mi raw land contract, ipraa at •man Call Mr. Hllfar, PE 34171 Brahar. MM EHtoealb Laka Road.
Hackett Realty
1 TO SO
UND CONTRACTS
Urganmt wanted. Baa as batera
WAR&N STOUT, Realtor
~ I
. JMEJf
it CASuMiStitfiiMia
WWif'
rmb land-C6MYRJ
1
THg PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY,’OCTOBER 12, 1064
C—15
/ -^Television Programs—
Program* fumUhod fay Motions littsd in fftis column am subject to chongo without notice.
' MONDAY EVENING
6:99 (2). (ft News, WMther, Sports '
»	(7) Movie: “War of the
Colossal Beast” (In Progress) .
(9) Magilla Gorilla (56) Casals Master Clas| CV30 (2) National News.
, (4) National News (7) (Color) News (») Bat Masterson (Repeat)
(56) Fuller World 1:4$ (7) National News 7:M (2) (Cokw) America Color of the Old West and beauty of Grand Canyon are focal points of this ' “Arisons Holiday”
(4) (Color) George Pierrot
“The Spell of Britanny” (7) (Color) Adventures Trip from Colombia into South American Jungles in search of kingsise bone-* crushing anaconda snakes (9) Movie: “Always Leave Them Laughing” (1949) MiltOB Berle, Virginia Mayo
(99) News in Perspective 1:39 (2) To Tell the Truth Panelists: Marty Ingels, Kitty Carlisle, Tom Poston, Peggy Cass (4) 90 Bristol Court Against father’s wishes, Karen begins dating
.. • (T) YwHLJjjgP In Antarctic waters for research, Nelson hears mysterious signal that’s apparently coming from within the Seaview 1:19 (2) I’ve Got a Secret Carol Channing has secret for panel
(4) 90 Bristol Court Harrises plan to make former flame of Kate wish he were a happily married ^vman
(56) Great Books 1:19 (2) Andy Griffith
Ernest T- Bass wants some educatidiiK ao Andy persuades him "to. Join Helen’s 5th grade class (4) 90 Bristol Court Mary is sure she Is going to succeed hi finding girl for eligible bachelor-doctor
(7) No Time for Sergeants Will and fellow-recruit are hypnotised into thinking they’re high-ranking officers in World War D 9:00 (2) Lucille Bell
Lucy’s old boyfriend takes over for Mooney at bank, and she tries to talk him into allowance advance <4) (Color) Andy Williams (See TV Features) (7) Wendy and Me Jeff is assigned to pilot plane to Rome and Wendy sneaks on as a stewardess (9) Show of the Week (See TV Features)
9:39 (2) Many Happy Returns Sharp turns siraet with invitation to spend weekend on his boat. However, there is an Ulterior motive to friendliness (7) Bing Crosby Joyce disrupts family when she becomes engaged to shaky basketball player
19:19 (2) Slattery’s People Oldster bicycles to capital to get Slattery's help. The cyclist doesn’t went : a certain state institution closed
(4) Alfred Hitchcock (See TV Features)
. <74 Ben Casey (See TV Features)
(9) Spread of the Eagle 11:11(2) (4) (7) (9) News, Weather, Sports 11:19 (2) Steve Allen
Sftieduled guests are clarinetist Pete Fountain, act-1 ress Pamela Mason (4) (Color) Johnny Carson Comedienne Phyllis Diller will appear
(7) Movie: “The Garment Jungle” (1967) Lee J. Cobb, Krewih Matthews (9) Bingo
TV Features
Juliette Greco Sings
By United Press International
ANDY WILLIAMS, 9:09 p.m. (4) Guests include Phil Harris, Liberace.
SHOW OF THE WEEK, 9:00 p.m. (9) First of four shows produced in Germany features singer Juliette Greco, the Kessler Twins.
" ALFRED HITCHCOCK, 10:00 p.m. (4) Keith Hollins (Arthur Kennedy) and Wife moife Into house by the sea that gives her the creep*.
BEN CASEY, 10:09 pm. (7) Jane Hancock’s increasing influence on Casey, Df. Rogers begins to create professional as well as personal problems for both; with Stella Stevens.
TUESDAY
ROYAL VISIT, 3:30 a.m. (9) Live coverage of departure of Queen Elisabeth from Ottawa’s Upland Air Force Base.
13:19 (9) Summer Olympics 13:39 (9) Movie: “Doctor In the House” (ELgUsh, 1965) Dirk Bogarde, Muriel Pav-low
, 1:09 (3) Pater Gunn (Repeat) (4) Lawman (Repeat)
1:15 (7) After Hours UJ9 (3) (4) News, Weather 1:41 (T) News, Weather
TUESDAY MORNING
•:H (3) On the Farm Front 0:13 (3) News 0:31 (3) Sunrise Semester 0:39 (4) Classroom (7) Funews 0:19 (3) News 749 (3) Happyland (4) Today (7) Johnny Ginger 149 (3) Captain Kangaroo (!) Big Theater 1:31 (7) Movie: (Part 3) “It’s a Wonderful Lite”
(9) (Special) Royal Visit (Sim TV Features)
9:45 (50) English Lesson 9:99 (3) Movie:	(Part 3)
“Above and Beyond”
(4) Living
9:19 (M) Ufa Read 9:lf (4) Romper Room (56) American History 9:SK (56) SifoQtoh Lesson M40 (4) Make Room for Daddy (Repeat) X.
(7) flirt Talk Xx.
(9) Robin Hood (Repeat) 19:19 (M) Our Scientific World 19:M (3) I Love Lucy (Repeat) (4) (Color) Word for Word (7) Price Is Right (!) Coffee Time 19:31 (06) French Lesson 14:56 (56) Spanish Lesson (4) News 11:00 (3) Andy Griffith (Repeat)
(4) Concentration (7) Get the Message 11:30 (06) What’a New 11:31 (3) McCcys (Repeat)
(4) (Color) Jeopardy (7) Miming Links 11:50 (50) Reading for Teachers
AFTERNOON
12:00 (3) Love of Life (4) (Color) Say When (7) Father Knows Best (Repent)
(0) Bingo
12:31 (M) World Traveler 1S:M (3) News
(4) Political Talk 12:31 (2) Search for Tomorrow <4) (Color) Truth or Consequences (7) Ernie Ford 13:31 (40) Spanish Lesson 13:41 (2) Guiding Light 13:50 (56) Let’s Rood 13:51 (4) News
1:11 (2) Jack Benny (Repeat)
. (4) Rows
(7) Movie: “Family Honeymoon" (1948) Claudette Colbert, Fred MacMurray (9). Movie: “Beast With Five Fingers” (1940) Robert AHa, Pete. Lorre 1:M (4) Eliot’s Almanac (50) Children's Hour 1:15 (,4) Topics tot Today 1:31 (50) Arts and Crafts 1:30 (3) As the World Turns
(47 (Color) Let’s Make a Deal
1:51' (4) News
(45) American History 2:10 (3) Password (4) Loretta Young 2:31 (7) News (M) Safety
3:31 (SO) Families Today, Tomorrow
3:11 (3) Hennesey (Repeat)
(4) Doctors (7) Day in Court 2:55 (7) News 1:66 (2) Tb Tell the Truth (4) Another World (7) General Hospital 3:11 (0) News 3:81 (2) News 3:31 (2) Edge of Night
(4) (Color) You Don’t Say (7) Young Marrieds (0) Take 30 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Match Game (7) Traiimaster (Repeat) (0) Summer Olympics 4:25 (4) News
4:50 (2) Movie “Spy Chasers” (1956) Bowery Boys (4) Mickey Mouse Club (Repeat)
(0) Popeye 1:11 (4) (Color) George Pierrot
Trip through Wyoming (7) Movie: “Hell Squad” * (1961) Wally Caaopot Brandon Carrol .5:15 (SO) Americana at Work MM (0) Rocky and Friends (50) What's New 5:41 (9f*Bugs Bunny 5:M (2) Weather (4) Carol Duvall
Pope Asked to Settle Crisis
Progressiva Cardinals
Fight Conservatism
VATICAN CITY (AP) - A group pf progressive Roman Catholic cardinals today sought pope Paul’s Intervention in what an announcement said might be the most serious crisis of the Vatican Ecqmenieal Council.
'Vs	(A
The announcement of the cardinals’ action said conservative prelates were trying to tone down council action on the Jews, religious, liberty* shared papal - episcopal powers and church policy on modern world problems.
Dr. Gaston Crust, director ef the press office for the uttin American episcopate, announced, the ■ action in a statement that brought' into the public eye a behind-the-scenes battle.
Crusat said 15 cardinals, from South America, Europe and the United States had signed a memorandum calling upon the pope to act as a mediator and take measures “for the full respect of council rights.”
★ w . *. •
The statement said there had been “a series of simultaneous facts” that have endangered the most important work of the ctomcil
OPEN CRITICISM Openly criticizing the largely conservative Roman Curia, or Vatican administration, the statement said those directing the- council “and the Roman Curia appear divorced from what clearly constitutes the will and wish of the great majority of the council fathers.
< *\ t. *
For all these circumstances, the progressive cardinals, representing the most important Catholic countries of the world, decided to appeal to the pope, who is outside of all these maneuvers that raise obstacles at the council.”
Births
Answer to Previous Puzxle
Srpssvyord Puzzle'"
DICKENSIAN COMICS
	r	r	r		tr	r-	r		r	2	r	r
12					IS				u			
rr			n	IT					IT			
is				is				20				
»												
												
		Rl										
										sr		
	*1										it	
												ir
u				r								
R					ii							
S3					u				BS			
tr					57				BS			.Jl
1 Sairey------
6 -----Weller
I------Swiveller
12	Tropical plant
13	Tony Weller’s beverage
14	Masculine nickname
15	Wilkins-----
17 Ravine
13 Writing fluid 10 Moulding edge (arch.) 21 Tear
23	Born
33 Contest (coll.)
24	Freezing
25	Let fall 27 Spice
29	Related
31	Company (mb.)
32	Mariner’s direction S3 Grave
35 Hindu month 27 Tree part
30	Blood relative (ah*)
40 Rent
44 Male sheep
46	Powerful explosive
47	Home of a mandarin 40 Owing
40 Minced oath 51 Conscious
53	Singing voice
54	Abstract being
55	Traduce
56	Sharp
57	Female saint (ah.)
58	Otherwise
MOWN
1	Street arab
2	Ranged in line
3	Deriders
4	Green vegetable
5	Sword
I Watchful
7	Worth
8	Father
’ 9 Spanish
10	Hair shirt
11	Water spirit a 16 Snappishly
30 Drowsy 26 Hops’ kiln 30 Top
30	Down (suffix)
31	Indefinite object •—vs, Pickwick
35	Dickensian faecal
36	Real property
30 Rural dlety (Roman) 39 Meat cut
41	Alleviates
42	Catldn
43	Meaning 45 Rhythm
50 SpanishtiUe
The following is a list of recent. Pontiac area births as recorded at the Oakland County Clerk'S Office (by name of father): PONTIAC
.......|	W Blalna
Lacnard J. UK X J. Haskkn WIMUm V’Brownfaw’OW* L«w
Jarrod C. Almaz. 1S41 Opdyka Rustell C. Ran*. 470 Scottwood
wfflwnSlStmslf iWlsanraae
prancizco Moran, 451 t. Andaraon Michael C. Park*. f Doramut MMi v. pari. 405 S. Avary .
Horry 0. CMnrMr. TW Parkwood Paul Brawn. 5U Orchard Lake _ Rabtn e. o«tton. nt e, mrnum
Rodney W. Lyons, 45S» Porasl Richard H. Noon, 114 Airport
EM S. Alonzo. 5445 Hanley Rodder A. A«bury, 114 Illinois
lnw
Charier B. Hall. 145 W. Kannatt Marlon W. Lynch, HI Vernon . ■ Charles A. Main. Mil Depew Clarence K. Smith, M Mitral Warren 'L. Smott. lit Ploranca John R. ailyaau. 1012 Iroquois N. J. Bolton, 14M Dunning
U^nLlddy,jmj
SEK
Wader ..
■a-,:
ptffriv
^*>MM<Tannec Laka —^awTwracp
—Rpdio Programs—
WJS(760) WXYZQ370) CKLWQOO) WWKMO) WCARfl136) WPQM(T466) WJ9H13001 WHW-fMmO)
Met Star's Pay Scale Ups 'as	Career Hits High Note
WILSON
King's Group Backs LBJ for	Preside»
NEW YORK'(AP) - For the first time to Its 10-year history, the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, headed by the Rev. Dr. Martin .Luther King Jr.,'to officially backing a presidential candidate —President Johnson.
*	Or W - ,
King announced the backing
Sunday. He said file group’s endorsement of Johnson over the Republican candidate, Sen. Barry Gold water, in an effort to defeat "not jtizt Gcddwater — but Gokfyrateriam.”
*	ptr
King told members of the Antioch Baptist church to a predominantly Negro section of Brooklyn that the GOP under Goldwater has become “My white.” He said the GOP presidential candidate would “destroy all the great American values.”
*	*• *
The Negro minister and leader in the nonviolence civil rights movement called for a heavy Negro vote “to insure not just a victory for President ^Johnson, but a telling blow agautt Gold-waterism.” *
CRITICAL ELECTION
“This is the moot critical and crucial election -in the history of the nation,” King said.
Despite telephoned threats against his safety received in advance of his church appear-I since, there was no trouble.
MONSTROUS MELON-De-splte drought, Darcel Griffin of Sidney, Ait.', was able to raise a 96-pound watermelon, one of the largest raised ih Arkansas this year. Griffin’s son, Dennis> 6, proudly exhL bits the melon.
Sukarno, Pope Paul Meet lor 1st Time
VATICAN CITY «» - President Sukarno of Indonesia visited Pope Paul VI today and was received at the Vatican with full honors. It was tlxrir first meeting.
President Sukarno arrived at file Vatican eight minutes early for the audience. But the ceremonies were such that he was ushered into the Pope’s private library four minutes late.
There the Roman Catholic leader and the president of to-donesia, a largely Moslem country, had their talk.
But She Doesn't Like Them
Hayley Mills Costar Is Cat
s not at au torn >w she’s starting
m
ML
’IH
■■
TONI4HT
M^jjMlewe wxyi Urn* i
usis
Wft-lXS? wJifStSs *»• T"
*:»-W)CYZ. Alan Draw* cklw, gop Cawyawtliw
atarwar
7)44—WPON, Hob OrllM
riiL-wfikx Rum nmsM
WWJ, Mam Opinion l •tl»-WWJ. Nagro ipaafca fiia-wwj, To la Anmufieaa
t tia-wwj, worn nmr ♦tii-wwj, mm km
MiW-WJR. KalaMaacaM . WWJ. Nawi. Mutlc leana :
•Wia
lliW-WJfi, My*
ruaaoAY mmnnm
"(ftTwTYyiT Opanar. DavM WPON. Jarry WMIfAtn rita-WPON. Haw*. wNliman
•ita-WJa, Haw*. (Man WCAN. Nawt, Martyn i.M-WJR, NjwlC NMI L,,. tiM-Wji. Nawt, Mania .
♦lia WJR, Laa Murray c3,
liKlp Sa_
Wfce,
KMrM r Calling
ss:
l>«Wja,.Naw Owjray CKLW^Rwa k
WJBK. Haw*. A vary II:» CKLW. Joa Van
twmOav aptcrnoon
ItiW-WJR. Nawt. Farm
NEW YOMMtobert Merrill begins his 20th season with the Metropolitan Operand the dressing opening tonight (Monday) . ., but the question is: Cbuld he have made good as a belter of pop songs in a Broadway girlteclub?
“I don’t know,” says Bob, preparing to do “Lucia” with Joan Sutherland for the opening .night mob. |	■
★ W ♦ ' XII.
“Jack Silverman turned me down Ow ■
Job singing at Ms chib, the Old RoumaalaN on Allen St., 20 years ago,” Bob laughs.
“My agent said, ‘Kid I can get you 75 a week and all the mushk steak you can eat’
That was the house specialty. He said, ‘Sing that “Figaro” thing that you do in the Catskills.’
“So I sang ‘Figaro’ and Jack Silverman said,
‘You got anything popular?’ Afterward, he sakl, ‘My people might not unrf«*tand what you’re singing.’ In other wards, I didn’t get the job.”
'	★ dr ★
. Since then, Jack SUvenaaa’s moved uptown ... Ms International on Broadway offers the Minsky Fellies ef "B, with sack gorgeous creatures as Venus Christy.
Everybody’ll admit that Venus Christy is likely to be more enticing to the Broadway trade than Robert Merrill in several departments.
, But Bob’s moved uptown, too, in 20 years.
“When I made my debut at the Mrt in 1945,” he remembers, “we had a black tie family party ... and then the whole gang . . . my mother, father and brother.... . . took the West End subway line home to Bensonhurst.”
Merrill got 099 a week (for 3 performances a week) when he started ... now for one performance he gets $1,750, which is about top at the Met.
THE MIDNIGHT EARL ...
Lis Taylor and Richard Burtoa visited Sammy Davis backstage at “Golden Boy,” and Barton cracked, “Sammy, what are you doing in my dressing room?" (Richard was there in “Camelot." Sybil Barton was across the street, seeing “Hello, Dolly!’? . Eddie Usher has a new 2-year |1 million contract at the Las Vegas Sahara; he’ll work there a weeks a year.
Danny Kaye bought an expensive apt in the Sherry Nether-land . . . Diosa Costello, opening at Uborto, introduced Xavier Cugat from the audience. He announced, “I don’t want to marr} any more singers —this time I want a cook!”
WISH I’D SAID THAT: With all the monsters, ghorts am haunted houses on TV, Soupy Sales figures Hallowe’en fids year will be a letdown.
REMEMBERED QUOTE: “The grass looks greener next door, hut it’s Just as hprd to cuL” — Anon.
EARL’S PEARLS: Sure, it’s possible to get athlete’s foot on the neck. Adc any football ptayeiv^- Harold Coffin.
Spike Jonas reports he’s on such a strict sugar-free diet that 1*4 him read the book “Candy.?*... Thai’s
By BOB THOMAS
AP Movie-Television Writer
HOLLYWOOD r- Fine thing. Hayley Mills is not at all fond tit cats, and now she’s starring in a movie called “That Dam Cat.'
This may upset the feline fanciers of the world, but Hay-1 | ley can’t help how die feels.
Her reasoning is this: “I always feel so—well,- so	THOMAS
unnecessary to cats. They’re terribly independent, not at all like dogs. Oh, I suppose it would be a real conpliment if a cat grew to like you, whereas most dogu will make friends with anyone.
“But I’ve never been able to make a go of it with cats. Trouble is, they know it. And this one will probably claw me to bits.”
This one is a talented tabby who is playing the title role in the new Disney film,, adapted from the book “Undercover Cat,” by the mystery-writing 'Gordons, The cat witnesses a robbery and kidnaping, follows the (culprit and manages to
Latins Getting Adviser in Animal Husbandry
ROME, Ito$ (ft ~ The food end agriculture organization has received a 15,000 dollar grant from the Rockefeller Foundation at New York to establish a post as advisor, on animal husbandry education fat Latin America.
The post will be established in Rio De Janeiro.
cape, bearing a wristwatch back to Hayley. Hayley calls in an FBI man (Dean Jonas) who happens,to be allergic to cats, and ... You get the idea. CHILDHOOD TRAUMA
Upon reflection, Hayley admitted that her difficulty with cats' may hark back to a trauma of her childhood.
“We had a lovable little Siamese who wandered off one day,” she recalled. “We hunted all over for it, but all we ever found was a part of its tail hanging on a barbed-wire fence.” /
She shuddered i brance.
It’s always a pleasure to have the puckish Miss Mills back in town for one of her periodic visits. “That Darn Cat” is her first film in Hollywood since “Summer Magic” two years ago. At the advanced age of 11 she remains everyone’s idea of what a teen-ager should be: lovely, ladylike, but full'of life. FAMILY NEST
Even though she might be able to spread her wings, Hurley continued to stay to the family nest. She lives at home In England, and ‘ she wifi be Joined here by her father and mother, the John Millses. Her father is striving shortly to appear in “King Rat”
“I don’t think I’d like my own apartment, not now,” Hayley reasoned. “It would be so depressing to come home to an empty flat at the end of a working day. Beside being lonely, I’d have to do my own cooking. .That would be ghastly.
’. “There aren’t any restraints bn me when I’m living at home.
I don’t have to be in at the crack of midnight or anything like that. Everything is left up to my own judgment; they know I’m not going to'go wild on anything.”	a
Hayley’s interests are much the*same as any 19-year-okTs: her figure (“It seems I am al-; ways dieting; what a bore!”);'-boys (She has one in particular, but isn’t talking about him); the Beaties (“They’re simply mar: velous”); and driving.
Benny's Mother-in-Lavf Dies in Beverly Hills
HOLLYWOOD (AP) — TBe mother-in-law of comedian Jack Bonny died Sunday at her Beverly Hills apartment. Doctors said death came from natural causes.
Mrs. Esther Marks, 78, was the mother of actress Maty Livingston.
UNLIMITED SOn WATER
^ RUST-FREE
PER
MONTH
Wu Sorvka All Makes
WATER KING SOn WATER CO.
OMtiea of Mick. HaaNne, Inc •• NuwWwy St. fl MMI,
$3,
BIG SAVINGS!
G1 964 Models Must On-^t
i RANGES • WASHERS ' • RITRISERATORS I
SWEETS
Open Daily and Sun.
CALL DAY OR NIGHT
fiflftRoymnnt
I ADDITIONS a ATTIC ROOMS » KITCHENS
#	PORCHES
#	BATHRMS.
REMOO.
a CUTTERS wi a WATERPROOFED -BASEMENTS
ADDITIONS
ALUMINUM SIDING REQ. ROOM
FOUNDATIONS ROOFING-SIDING STONI-PONCNES
WOODFIELD
CONSTRUCTION
LIGHTING THE SKY—The new 150-footMgh control tower it New York Oty’i La- -Quanfia Airport cost ft J mfl-Boa and reportedly it the teat word in airport design.
t WILL COME TO TOR WITH FREE ESTIMATE AND PLAMS-NO CHARGE
ONE CONTRACTOR FOR EVERYTHING
WINTER PRICE NOW IN EFFECT TO APRIL 1965
ft
■.■C-—-TO
THE POfttefAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1964
Could Last Six Months
Power Shift Is Coming in States Education
By DICK BARNES LANSING SB-Michigan edu-catkn is mqving toward a power transfer that could last six months and require legal con-
The yielder of power, Superintendent of Public Instruction Lyntr Bartlett, is eager to cooperate with tiie new State Board of Education. But amidst the hazy ground rules for the transfer, be has firm ideas about what the board must do in pursuit of excellence in education. Bartlett, who’s been in office for 7V4 years, operated as chief policy maker under the ,man-1 date of the 1MB constitution that the superintendent “have general supervision of public instruction in tiie state.”
"But undo’ the 1MB constitution “leadership and general supervision over all public education,
Including adult education and instruction programs in state institutions, except as to institutions of higher education granting baccalaureate degrees, is vested in a State Board of Education.”
The new eight-member board will take office Jan. 1, but Bartlett’s term will not expire until June M>, 1965.
“There’s a question as to who has the authority and responsibility during that six months," Bartlett tola an interviewer. “If I continue — and I have no plan not to stay on — IH probably have to ask- for clarification from the attorney general.”
Ideally, be commented, power would be gradually transferred over the six months , to assure continuity and give the board an opportunity .to familiarise itself with its duties.
“The responsibilities of tiie new board are great and broad,” says Bartlett “Both parties nominated people of integrity and I don’t intend to enter into the political situation of this.” ,.
Bartlett contends that tile first duty of the board will be to
formulate Its operating policies.
“I hope the board will see its duties as that of broad policy
“It should bold the superintendent after Bartlett, to be appointed by the board and shift responsible for carrying out its policies and it should see to it there is adequate staff.”
Then, says the superintendent, the board can move to determine Michigan’s educational needs, suggest financing to meet' these needs and exert leadership over local boards in program planning.
DOING BEST
'“We’re doing our best job now in meeting the needs of the college-bound student,” evaluates Bartlett. “But what about 'the non-college student?”
“As time goes on we must extend our programs both downward and upward.”
★	'★ 'It-'
Free public education is generally considered to range from kindergarten through 19th grade. But Bartlett says voluntary programs are needed for youngsters as young as three years—especially those who are
underprivileged a deprived.
Doubling of futilities jmd leadership at tiie state level is necessary in the community collage program, Bartlett says, to provide statewide educational opportunities through the 14th year.
CAN’T RELATE The downward thrust is necessary because some children “can’t relate when they don’t even know common pieces of furniture or what a sheet is or hqst to use knives and forks.
"They have the native ability but haven’t ban able to develop it. At age 9 we coulf) work with them and give them experiences with other children in preparation for learning.
“School dropouts aren’t' just a high school problem—they're rooted down much farther.”
At tiie other end, the community college Is necessary to fill five community needs, says Bartlett:
1. An academic base for students who will transfer to four-year schools. .
, 1 Vocational anti technical training.
I. Adult retraining.
4.	Cultural center.
5.	Guidance and counseling for undecided students.
Bartlett says studies show that far more young people continue their education in tiie IS areas which now have community cot leges than In those with no higher education facility nearby.
To finance expanding educational services, be contends, the board should consider suggesting tax changes to tiie legislature, which writes the tax laws.
“The property tax is ^rebate,” says Bartlett “It was devised when we were a rural, agrarian state. The amount of property owned is no longer a reliable index of ability to pay*’’
STATE AID DROPPED
Yet, he points out local support of schools — virtually ail from property taxes — has climbed from about 49 per cent of all school costs in 1950 to about 57 per cent , currently, while state aid has dropped proportionately.
Bartlett emphasises that unlike in some states, the board will not develop statewide courses of study nor prescribe
specific texts for classroom use.
“It shduld point out what ought to be done specific recommendations—and make cdo--nsultants available to work with districts. But It must suggest end feed—you'cannot mandate
'Further, tiie board should be the voice of education In the state and interpret educational needs to the citizens.”
The worst earthquake of tide I China, In 19Mk 1M century took pipes In Ka«p,IBvee.
GAS FURNACE SALE
FQRCID AIR RR EST1MATB
100,000 rru ***»
■rim S,
INCLUDlUlO INSTALLATION "*l- OUilWrtUrtl Na Manay Daw* •» 4* MawtHa IS e*V
BUY THI BEST SSJSffS BWST
R. J. HEATING
nuw
GR
NEW LOCATION CELEBRATION!
FMN
RICKMAN RROS. Sewing Center
THE UN WORLD PRIMUS
NECCHI
The World's First Zig-Zag Sewing Machine
MEL CO mm/ RICKMAN BROS. SEWHIfi CENTER
406 EUZAIETl LAKE M, PONTIAC ACROSS FROM IRE FRRYIAO MALL
YES! YOU MAY WIN THIS “NECCHI”
OR ONE OF MART OTHER PRIZES!
HAVE FUN WITH THE EVER ENJOYABLE WORI BUILDING GAME. SEE HOW MANY WORDS YOU CAR MAKE
NECCHI
E pUT OF...
-NELCO
, Placw your wofd| on o shoot of paporand moil thorn to Richman Boos. Sowing Cantor or stop in and pfaco it in our spookol containor. Earliost postmark wjth tho most corroct words wilt bo tha winnar. Decision of the judges final. Richman Bros, em-/-*rployoas and thoir families not eligible to ontor. Plurals, proper nouns and synonyms not accopted. RwWsi —t he pectaitud hf WOOsht SeMIjm.
NECCHI AUTHORQD
LARRY BOWMAN
BANKING
HOURS
Men., Tun., Thurs. and FRI.
II am. la I p.m.
Wed. and tat.
10 am. te l pm.
WE HAVE
MOVED
■ '
AND ARE NOW OPEN IN OUR NEW
Bloomfield Miracle Mile Shopping Center Office
(Formally in the Arcane Area)9
LOCATED OLTT FRONT AT
2205 Telegraph Rd.
In The Miracle Mile Shopping Center H «! ■",'*	' ..
We have every modem banking facility for your‘convenience including 2 . x DRIVE-IM WINDOWS, Safe Deposit Boxes and plenty of FREE parking. We cordially invite you to stop in real noon and see our unusual interior decorations.	-.
e *100 U.S. SAVINGS BOND
Or Ono Of
• 10 SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES
(rental free for 1 year)
NEW KENNEDY 50‘ PIECES
to tho 1 st 100 poo pi* opening a now savings or chocking account of $25 or morn.
it fill mil entry blank and drop in box at the deer. Drawing held Oct. 19th. Nothing to buy, you do net have to be present to v
With tho Sank **On the Grow**
riAC
BANK
If—Dst Federal Drpotit Immrmurt Crp.
|
THE PONTIAC PRESS
u VLh i j
/trio
VOL. 122 m 218
♦ ★ ★ ★ ★
PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1904—44 PAGES
UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
Russia Orbits 3 Men in Spaceship
Fjsher	Body Settles; City	Accord
A contract agreement be- Coach Division reached agree-	A national agreement be-	some 3,700 employes have	been
tween UAW Local 990 and Pan- ment at 8 p.m. Friday. Pontiac	tween the HAW	and General	Idled by-the walkout,
tiac's Fisher Body Plant was Motor Division and Local 653 Motors Corp. was readied a	*	*	★
readied at 11 last night after a bargaining agents settled their	week ago today;	bat the work	Local 594 President Andy
marathon 36 - hour bargaining disagreements last Tuesday.	«t«ppago will	until	Wilson, representing some	7,000
session.	Ratification of the three local «]] divisions have settled local employes at GMC Truck &
AO three General Motors' di- contracts will depend on the set- issues.	Coach, also reported a satisfac-
visions in Pontiac have now set- tlement of local issues in other	T . ,__..	. -----’--- tory agreement on working con-
. UAW international itepresen-
tative Larry Hartman and Local 596 President Don Johnson ■»*« Ktticment, are Now in its 18th day, the strike said reached at GM suppliers. against GM locals was author-iLocal 594 at GMC Truck & ized Sept. 25.
tied local issues. ^ f GM plants throughout the coun-However die 25,796 workers bY-involved won’t go back to 18TH STRIKE DAY
•fair and equitable” set- ^ Z JLt 15°
. tlement was reached on local issues at Fisher Body, where
ditions there.
15^06 MEMBERS Local 653 at Pontiac Motor mem-
bers.
Ceremony Tuesday to Launch Drive
President John Maye said a mass meeting will be called to ratify both the local and national contracts as soon as word comes from UAW headquarters.
» A big kickoff celebration to get the Pontiac Area United Fund campaign under way, including introductions of U\e team captains and principal participants in the campaign, will be held tomorrow.
Family entertainment will be followed by a parade and the annual torch-
Further Delay Seen at GM
Spurt Dies Cut in Plant-Level Talks
U S. to Moon
Powerful New Rocket Said to Be Booster in Historic Launching
WALDEMAR A. P. JOHN
lighting ceremonies.
The three events tgke place beginning at 7 p.m. in the auditorium of Pontiac Ceqtral High School.
There will be introductions of campaign lenders, followed by family entertainment.
Bud Guest and his WJR crew will tape their Wednesday show front the stage of the i
Death Takes MJ&A Founder
Birmingham Man Is “	J*"^.*?***
■	1.8 p.m. «pd proceed along Huron
The parade, with Ralph Allison as marshal, will leave Hnr-
6 p.m. and proceed along Heart Attack Victim to Saginaw, to Auburn to Wide Track Drive, ending in front of the City HaH
Waldemar Alfred Pad Joint,	»insrrn Trmru
whose 1948 article, “I Have a	LIGHTS TORCH
Scar on My Heart,” was wide- Runner Robert Wiggins, 1964 ly reprinted from tile Saturday track team captain, will hand Evening Post, died yesterday of the torch to Bruce Annett, gen-a heart attack.	eral campaign chairman of the
John, 69, was a cofounder of United Fund.
MacManus, John and Adams	*	*	*
Inc., in Bloomfield Hills.
Johnson Bodyguards Worried by Incidents
LOS ANGELES M -
Annett will light the huge UF Apart FfOIT) FdflS He retired as chairman in torch to ad the ceremonies 1955, and lived at 556 Tooting and officially open the 1964 Pontiac Area United Fund drive.
DETROIT (AP) - Hopes for an end this week to the United Auto Workers’ strike against General Motors Corp. all but vanished ova the weekend as a spurt in new at-the-plant working agreements died off.
Only two local-level agreements, which supplement the national contract, woe reached Saturday night and yestoday, leaving 92 still to go out of 130.
This came in the wake of a Friday-Saturday spurt, which lifted local-level agreements to 99, and a forecast by UAW President Walter P. Rentier of a thaw hi aa at-the-plant freeze ova the weekend.
GM and the UAW readied President’s hat in Phoenix settlement on a national con- yesterday was released by tract last Monday. It carried
widespread gains fa UAW-rep- P°^ce a^r questioning, resented production workers, Police found a revolver In a including higher pensions, earli- pocket of another youth. He said * r•	| ya_r«t a retirement, longer vacations, he was carrying It to protect the
LIK6 rinui 1 Gurs. more holidays and higher wages President. Phoenix police reova the next thrte years.
SIGN DODGING — President Johnson has to duck signs greeting his arrival in Phoenix, Ariz., airport yesterday.-Ope sign, boosting Gold water, swatted the President’s hat. The sign carrier was arrested, hut lata released. The President was unruffled by the incident.
MOSCOW W -t-The Soviet Union rocketed a spaceship into orbit today carrying k pilot, a scientist and a doctor — the first space Vehicle to carry more than one person. An official announcement said it was sent aloft by a powerful new rocket.
As the spaceship circled the earth every 90 minutes, the pilot messaged that all instruments were working well, the physician examined his colleagues, and they had lunch. The spaceship is named Voskhod — sunrise.
Aboard were Col. Vladimir Komarov, tie pilot; Konstan-tine Feoktistov, scientist; and Dr. Boris Yegorov.
The booster rocket sent the spaceship into ar#~orbit that ranged from 255 miles to 110 -miles above the earth, an official announcement said..
EDDIE CANTOR
Comic's Funeral
Some scientists abroad considered this one more big step in
fa__	~	. . , the Soviet race with the United
Two anonymous telephone ^ to ^ moon.
warnings and a brush with a placard bearer worried ^ vehicle President Johnson’s bodyguards during his western	statea plan3 to
campaign swing, but no trouble materialized.	launch its first two-man vehicle
A youth whose Goldwater-Miller placard grazed the some time early next year.
There was no indication how long tie spacecraft — its size
leased him lata on bail.
As the President rode through
Arrest Youths in LBj Threat
Lane, Birmingham.
Theodore F. MacManus and James R. Adams, tbr o t h e r founding partners, died in 1934 and 1956, respectively.
HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Eddie 1
John, the son of a New Albany, Ind., minister, graduated from the University of Michigan in 1916 and went to work as a
Wanner Weather Will Follow Rain
Even days earlier the union id called a nationwide strike Canta will be buried as he against GM in support of its spent most of the lari 11 yeas national contract demands, of his life — apart from the most of which it won. public thatmade him a top sta In passing a Sept. 25 walkout during a golden era of Ameri- deadline rationally, the UAW other indirectly that the Prescan enertainment.	gave local unions an okay to ident’s life was in danger,
strike on their own until at-tiie-
tie Long Beach, Calif., area lata in tie day, Secret Service men were aware that local authorities. had received reports of two telephone calls, warning directly and tie
QASPER, Wyo. OB — T w o teen-age boys were arrested last
and weight not given — would remain aloft But tie official Soviet news agency Tass said tie first manned orbit by the Soviet Union since the summer of 1963 was designed to test the effects o! weightlessness and other stresses on man on a long flight.
Ibis* was a hint the aaft
DR. YEGOROV
night on a charge of threatening might break the old record of the life of President Johnson. almost five days.
Casper police and Secret Serv- • Tn the last flight, in June ice agents took the pair into Lt Col. Valery. F. Byko-custody after they received a stayed aloft 54 minutes' A Secret Service man stood in report that someone had over-
'2E'jss& air**agreements were ^ hex ssxz
today that funeral services for wrapped up.	....	...	...	« .T . J from the Inner neriMi nf weight.
Press Search for Kidnaped" U. S. Officer
luuay uuu 1 uncial	em wrapped up.	hnlHinu an niitnmntW*
A warming trend is predicted the 72-year-old comedian, who Now no back-to-work order is	h weaDons ,
rifle. Nor-
clerk-writer in the advertising by the weatherman as October's died of a heart attack Saturday anticipated until the bulk of department of tin then auto- bright blue weather gives way night, wlU be private.	local-level disputes are settled.
Canta was tie last of a trio ThMe inciudq such items as
mally such weapons are carried here on a visit today.
•: the life of the President, due	lon«
out of sight.
making Dodge Bros.
WORLD WAR!
He spent 18 months overseas in Wald War I in the Balloon Corps of the American Expeditionary Forces, then returned to Dodge Bros.
From 1926 to 1983 he was (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4)
of great comedy Agues to	«».u HM» v„	a
pass from the Hollywood scene'’.	airport arrival he noticed a
in recent weeks. *
ventilation, with workers -at
In Phoenix, detective Andrew Watzek said that on Johnson’s
CLOUDY^./
cold, others that is too. hot; bu^’in theritfrttioaaa pocket
2£“*?* “SS rule8: of Clarence R. Fetzas, lCand Gracie Allen of the Burns and more drinking fountains, com- . d 22-calihw revolver in- i .rrv Mien team died Aug. 37, and pany-proviaion of coveralls and M
Harpo Harz of the Marx broth- the like.	'
A police spokesman said the two boys were visiting a patient at a hospital when a nurse overheard them make
Police identified the youths as
WORK ON PROBLEM Scientists in both the Soviet Union nnd the United States have been working on the problem.
Jubilant crowds Ailed tie streets of Moscow as the radio
In Today's Press
Pulaski Day
Dignitaries flock to Hamtramck fa celebration - PAGE A4.
Conference
Nonaligned nations is-. sue blast at U. S.—PAGE A-7.	/ .
Dixie Governors
Annual confab begins today - PAGE A4.
Olympics
U.8. wins first gold medal - PAGE C4.
Area News	B4
Astrology....... .04
Bridge ...........04
Comics ............04
Editorials .......A4
Markets L.....Of
Obituaries L ...,*.04
SptrtoWE&— Ck-04 TV-Radlo Programs C-1S
Wilson, Earl .. . C-18
“ ’S Pages B-8—B-11
i i.iT i v?
17, and Ray Ed- «“««w«d tie launching, ward Smith, 18.	Later a taped television broad-
ftnd.ii.fa .how.p« oni succumbed two weeks ago. The walkout has idled almost CONCEALED WEAPON	*	*	*	from *** spaceship showed
tiO^	SS?	+	*	*	300,000 of GM’s 350,000 produc- Fetza, booked fa carrying a A police spokesman said the tie occupants smiling. The film
Hiffh* will ranop in th. so. wi»h	Canta died at his Beverly tion-workers, with 32,000 laid off concealed weapon, was lata boys admitted in a statement was dim and it was impossible
tietows in the40s	Hills home. Two of his daugh- in the United States and Canada -released on 8300 bail	that they had made the threats, to tell the size of the space cab-
*	* * *	ters, Mrs. Natalie Metzga and 'since the start of the strike, Thirty minutes lata, Thomas They were held in lieu of 425,- in^ AO three men wore helmets.
Winds are southwestaly at eight to 15 mil's pa boa.
Tuesday will be cloudy with the warming trend continuing, highs t obe in the 90s.
The mercury reading before 9 a.m. today was 36. At 1 p.m. the temperature had climbed to 52.
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) now in is third week,
(Continued on Page 3, Co^. 1)	000 bond each.
Clutch Pitcher to Face Yanks
NEW YORK (UPI) — St. only since Aug. 11 when he yesterday’s fourth game,
Louis C a r d i n a 1 s’ manager rushed to the rescue from Rich- many of tie top Yanks were Johnny Keane today sends in his mond to shore up New York’s relaxing in front of a television favorite clutch pitcher — rigid- sagging pennant hopes with a set watchfaig New York's foot-hander Bob Gibson — bran ef- 94 record dowfy the pressurized ball Giants against the Dallas fort to grab the lead in the fifth stretch.	Cowboys.	’	f-
^eS	*	*	*	“Caning back the way We did
against the New York Yankees	^ Ccundinals, says Keane,, does something tor a chib,” said
u/AcuiMr-mM im to. c. *	_	__., . know something now they only Keane. “And it tiows we’re
5:	A	r C!^ls • h o p e d fa wten the s er 17s even in every game. Those s<r	n
KTiSthemJ„bl!?f :n W* * «• LouHlaat Wednes- called odds jiurt don’t mean a view a decision that the Seere- their home grounds when the ^	thing.”	r?1?**
Making the most of the first launching of a spaceship carrying more than one man, Voskhod sent greetings earthward as it sped along its orbit, Including greetings to the Olympics in TOkyo.
SHIP’S ORBIT
Yankee lead achieved in t h e Tass said the spacecraft was
CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) -A force of 3,000 police and National Guardsmen pressed the search today fa the deputy chief of the U.S. Air Force mission to Venezuela who was kidnaped by Communist terrorists. i* A caller identifying himself as a leader of the outlawed pro-Castroite Armed^ Forces of National Uboation (FALN) said the terrorists would try Lt. Col. Michael Smolen before a secret tribunal on charges of interfering ih Venezuelan affairs.
Worried officials conceded they have no clues in the abduction of the 45-yew-old Chandler, Ariz., officer from In front of Ms Caracas home Friday morning by five armed terrorists.
Court to Eye Trdvel Bah
first inning and another to even sent into orbit close to the route the aeries at two games each. " laid out by Soviet scientists.
The Yankees rooted Cardinal starter Ray Sadecki, who had won tie opener at St. Louis, with tie first four men who went to tie p^te.
tary of State may prohibit trav- aeries returns to St. Louis fa el of United Staten citizens to game No. 6 on Wednesday. Cuba.
TTie decision was given by a ________ ___________
special three-judge US. District ”	?
Court in New Haven,’Corm., in
a case tied by Louis Zonel. slam home ran fa a 44 Car-
His counsel appealed directly to the Supreme Court, contend-
day.
STRICTLY BUSINESS	*	*	*
For Ac Yookcoo, wiA Ac W"P™? S
ries  _______at Z4 n . ibey’re as tough and resilient as Yankees favored at 17-10 and
net all square at u as a ^ vastly more experienced 3-1 to win tie series. Keane Yankees, who are competing in shrugged that off, too. their fifth straight World Series TWO COMEBACKS witi a “strictly business” •«!-	^ cardinal* actually fnade
tude-	two comebacks yesterday —
Only minates after Mowing one to overcome
The only man put out while was on the mound was
“Two-way radio communication! are maintained,” said Tass. “The ship’s crew report they withstood quite well tie launch and tie transition to weightlessness. All three feel fine.”
Tass said purposes of the
dtnal triumph yesterday, it was rookie pitcher Me! Stottie-myre, who heated Gibson hi tho aoeond game at tiny Basch
ing;the case raised substantial questions i as to the secretary’s SM^tmtaatThmuday. authority tq restrict fore^A But fids time, it was a dif-travel of. citizens “in peace- ferent sat M Cardinal team Yaaks time, and the constitutionality of fadng the \ 22-year-old right-such action.”	handa who has been a Yankee Cards
Mickey Mantle and that was no flight included; Teat the new credit to the pitcher.	“multi-seat guided spaceship,"
*	A	A	check the capacity to wok to-
The Mick was tossed out fry- gether during space flight ,of a
ing to-stretch a Single, the group pf. workers, scientific, fourth straight Yankee safety, physical and technical investi-into a two-base hit.	gations in tie conditions of
★	*	*	space flight, study the effect of
_ But on came gangling Roger space flight on cosmonauts, and
Craig to bold the bombers “carry out extended medico-mree’ru^ throughthefifthinningwithbiologicalresearchinthecondi-only two more hits and thm Ron tions of.a long flight.”
Taykr to pitch tie last four in	*	*	#
which the only Yankee to reach It was not dear, however, base was Mantle on an eigtyb- whether this latter meant tie inning walk.	flight woald be a long one.	/
Identifying himself as Com-mandante Tulio of the FALN, . the caller said the kidnaping was in reprisal fa a military crackdown on the FALN gna-riUas.
A FALN statement labeled ‘ the 'abduction “Operation Viet ’ Cong.” Hiis was a/reference tb, ' the FALN’s, previous explanation that it was holding Smolen hostage for a condemned Communist terrorist in South Viet Nam.
WIFE HAS HOPE . Smotan’s wife, Marian, of Rockford, IIL, issued a statement saying she “dhms to tie hope that no harm will come to. my husband." Earlier the Smo-len family got a call from an-other self-described FALN spokesman who said the colonel was safe and unhurt.
R H E
Authorities vi calls and tips. Weeding through tie calls has hampered search efforts.

m
A—2
Lacks Dramatic Punch
THE PONTjAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1964
Barry Seeks Big Issue
by JACK BELL PHOENIX, Arte. (AP) - Sen. Barry Goldwater of Arizona heads into the final three weeks of campaigning still thwarted in efforts to dramatise the back-to-tt>e-Constitution stand he calk the overriding issue in the presidential contest.
In wide-ranging attacks on President Johnson in his coast-
to-coast journeys, the Republican presidential nominee has tried out a variety of approaches to the voters with results that do not seem to have satisfied him hilly.
over the reliability, deliverabilf-ty and control of nuclear weap-
Goldwater has pictured himself as a champion of -Social Security while condemning the Johnson proposal for tftx-fi-He has assailed the President nanced health care for the eld-
for promoting coexistence with the Communists. He has argued with administration officials
Johnson Says Goldwater Runs Against Presidency
RENO, Nev. (AP) — President Johnson said today Barry Goldwater sees die government as such a terrible thing that he deems to be “running, against the office of president, instead if tor it**
★ ★ ★
l President Is Hit by Sign During Visit to Phoenix
■ (Continued From Page One)
Lee Wilkins, 17, of Phoenix, was arrested when two policemen saw him swing a Goldwater-Miller placard that brushed the President’s hat as Johnson walked along a fence shaking hands.
The Presideat fended the tipi off with Us hands and aaM f
- “I wasn’t hit,” he said, “they just push. They always do.”
Wilkins was released after questioning by Secret Service agents.
In Los Angeles, the sheriffs office issued an all-points alert yesterday after it received an anonymous telephone call that a man who disagreed with President Johnson’s views was missing from his home, along with ids rifle.
FOUND AT HOME
TTie man was found in his home later. He said he hadn’t gone near the President. He gave no explanation for the rifle to his car, deputies said. The man was not arrested.
Long Beach police said Friday a telephone company operator told them she received a call from an anonymous man who said:
“President Johnson will not live through his trip through Long Beach.”
Police checked the area in nearby Los Alamitos from which the operator said the call . hag been received but found
Johnson took the slap at his Republican rival as the President swung into what promised to be a 20-hour day of campaigning in five, western states — Nevada, Montana, Wyoming, Colorado and Idaho.
★ *, *
Goldwater was not mentioned by - name. But Johnson, speech for the Nevada capital of Reno, left*no doubt about his target. .
“(toe candidate,” he said, roaming around the country saying what a terrible thing the government is. Sometimes ' think be is running against the office of president, instead of for it.”
BUCK DRAW
“We here in the West,"^| Johnson, “know bow^the West was won. It wasnit won by a man on a horse who toought he could settle every argument with a quick draw and a shot from the hip.
“We here in the West aren’t about to turn in our sterling silver American heritage for a plastic credit Card that reads: ‘Shoot now, pay later.’ ”
And, Johnson said, the West wasn’t settled "in saloon fights or by galloping vigilantes” but rather by sober jnd responsible men and women.
The President spent the night in Nevada, talking to local politicians and resting in the penthouse of the Sahara Hotel in Las
Roulette wheels whirred and slot machines played their tinkling melody more than 20 stories below him. But he never these features of Las Vegas life since his route to and from his quarters was remote from the bustlipg casino.
.The President flew to Nevada after a Sunday that saw<him go to church — “The first day of the week belongs to God” — in Goldwater’s home town of Phoenix, Arlz.. Later, he did some speechmaking, 1 which wasn’t exactly, nonpoutical, in Long Beach And San Francisco, C^lif
The	■Wea
'	Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report
PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Increasing cloudiness becoming mostly cloudy ond n little warmer this afternoon with possible light showers, high today in the 50s. Cloudy and ' wanner with possible light rain tonight, tow in the 40s. Winds are south to southwesterly -at 8 to IS miles. Tuesday will be partly cloudy and warmer wiflf highs in the 80s.
tn preceding ! t dvttocijyf | m.p ►
erly. He has called for a 5 per cent annual reduction in income taxes, promising at the same time to balance the budget.
RECKLESS SPENDING He has charged the President with “reckless spending” and mocked Johnson as a'man who carries a “shopping list" from which he invites voters to select their benefits.
Goldwater has called for a “return of morality” to the White House. He has sparked some of his loudest applause by jibing at Johnson’s former i ciation with Bobby Baker and asserting that “the shadow of scandal falk across the White House itself.”
• * * *
While he generally has avoided direct statements on civil rights, he told rallies in the prosperous suburbs of Philadelphia — where toe so-called white backlash is presumed to exist — that minorities are running the government u Johnson. He has inveighed against crime in the streets.
These issues have been offered singly and in groups, with careful checks made of the reaction to each. Judging from the scatter gun approach the GOP nominee still is using, none has showed up as a sockdolager by itself.
* * *
Goldwater keep coming back to the constitutional issue of what kind of a country are we going to hpve tomorrow?” He charges that Johnson has embraced socialism; winch he described in Lubbock, Tex., as not evil” although highly undesirable.
He told an opulent audience at tht World Affairs Counci] in Lbs Angeles that the poople don’t want a paternalistic government such as he said Johnson Is condiicting.
PRESERVE FREEDOMS ‘They are not thinking of how many cars they have in their how well off they-are | treat and prosperous country,” he said. “They are thinking of preserving their freedoms.”
The crowd gave him a big hand when he said he wants to go back to the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence.”
There is some rather, widespread feeling among his advisers that if Goldwater had stuck cloqely to the* conservative vs. liberal theme from the beginning, he might have made more headway jn efforts to unify his own pasty and to chip away conservative Democrats from Johnson. A number of I associates wish that such matters as the control of nuclear i weapons hadn’t been brought up. -at aiil.
* ★ *
| Despite the public-opinion polls that show! him running substantially behind Johnson, Goldwater and his aides believe that what he calls “the ghosts of doubt and discontent" with the Johnson administration are I abroad in the. land and are not | being measured by the pollsters.
Birmingham Area News
Commission Will Define Resolution, Ordinance
RESCUE MISSION - A boat leaves on a trip to evacuate persons stranded by flood waters in Kinston, N.C. The boat launching
ramp (center, below) was once a road leading to a residential area of .the flooded city.
House Unit Finds Estes Got No Help From U.S. Officials
N.C. Flooding Inching Higher
Kinston Residents Are Preparing for More
BIRMINGHAM — An explanation of the differences between resolutions and ordinances is on tonight’s City Commission agenda.
Definition of the two was sought by toe League of Women Voters from toe,city’s legal advisers >t Hewlett, Hartman and Beier.
Attorneys declined offering toe definition until a request was pate by the City Com-„ mission.
The definition tonight w i 11 come in the form of a report' ! from Assistant City Manager R.
. S. Kenning.
j *' #	*
The City Charter, Kenning ' notes, includes in the category I of resolutions “official action in form of a motion.”
NORMALLY DIRECTIVES j “The resolution format is normally used for administrative directives, appointments to various boards or the formal adoption of commission policies,” according to Kenning.
He said current use not only conforms to the charter but also to the definition in the Webster dictionary which cites I a resolution ns a “formal expression of to# opinion or will of an assembly adopted by vote.t ■
To become an ordinance,
referendum charter amendment on the AprO ballot.
t *	*
The proposed amendment .calls for action by the electorate'oh ordinances only.
Nerses Metzoian Service for Nerses Metzoian, 69, of 1363 Ruffner, Birmingham, will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at Voorhees - Siple Funeral Home, Pontiac.
Mr. Metzoian, who formerly owned and operated Joe’s Barber Shop in Pontiac, died unexpectedly yesterday:
He was a member of St. Sarkis Armenian Apostolic Church, Dearborn.
Surviving are his wife, Zarouhe; two daughters, Mrs. May Torosian of Pontiac and Mrs. Sarah Page of Madison Heights; a son, Edward of Pontiac; two brothers; seven grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren.
Memorial contributions can be made to St Sarkis Armenian Apostolic Church.
WASHINGTON (DPO—A House subcommittee has found that erstwhile Texas business tycoon Billy Sol Estes got no help from government officials through bribery or political pressure.
But, the subcommittee said in a report released yesterday, the government could have been a lot, more conscientious in its handling of the case.
The report by the House Government Operations subcommittee covered an exhaustive two and one-half year study of most of Estes’ activities. It said the government, did not lose any money to toe Pecos, Tex., boy wonder.
Republicans have made the case a campaign issue, charging the Democratic administration with showing favoritism to’Es-The subcommittee report rejected that contention in the areas into which it looked.
“The investigation did not disclose evidence to substantiate allegations that Billie Sol Estes received deliberate preferential treatment because of bribery, political influence or pressure, or for any ether reason involving corruption of government officials or employes,” the report said.
Estes has been convicted in federal and state courts of crimes that could pat him in jail for 23 years. He is appealing both convictions as well as preparing for trials on new charges.
Although the 439-page report
■ KINSTON, N.C (AP) - The Neuse River inched toward a set	forth	no	conclusions	that	crest nine	to ten feet above	resolution must meet certain
were	not	made	when	public |nood st*8«	^day and water-	other qualifications.
• h. ioc<i logged residents of this eastern j .	• * • * *	*
North Carolina, city resigned j Among the -steps are publics-themselves to five or six more	tion in la local newspaper,	re- j
days	of the	worst flooding in a	i cording in the city clerk’s	or*
generation.
The rain-swollen Neuse was expected to crest at 23 to 24 feet late today or early Tuesday.
Its findings were similar to I	♦	*. ★ .
those of the Senate Permanent i Chril defense officials esti-1an ordinance normally Is re-Investigations subcommittee, mated that 400 to 500 persons .dressed by legal penalties, which issued a report on Estes’ j Mft ***“' homes and they | ^ question about ordinances
2 From County Die in Traffic.
Motorcycle Flips; Train Runs Into Auto
hearings were held in 1962, the subcommittee described its in-, quiry as “probably the broadest in scope” of any investigation into the 39-year-old Texan’s business affairs. -
Two county residents tost thftr lives in traffic accidents SS bookTand use of Vspe^ | during the weekend, cific format for setting up an| ordinance.
LEGAL PENALTIES Kenning noted that violation
Oakland Highway Toll in ’64
138
cotton allotment activities recently. The Senate group said it found no evidence of political influence.
GRAIN, AMMONIA The House panel centered its' investigation on Estes’ grain storage, ammonia tank sales and financing operations. • While not accusing any officials of improper conduct, the subcommittee was critical of the federal government’s handling of toe cape. .
Rep. Florence Dwyer, RrN.J„ one of two Republicans on the subcommittee, called it a “dismal story of government inefficiency, lack of communication aftd coordination between and within government agencies.”
said more were evacuating and amendments arose from every hour. No casualties were plans to place an Initiative and reported.
The evacuees, from farm areas and low-lying areas in
Cantor Buriat to Be Private
(Continued From Page (toe) Mrs. Edna McHugh, were at his bedside. Two other daughters, Marilyn Cantor and Mrs. Janet Gari, live in New York. A fifth daughter, Marjorie, who had been the comedian’s secretary, died at cancer May 17,1999.
While not gotog quite as far, the main subcommittee report said the government knew of Estes’ activities long before he was arrested on March 29, 1962.
Oakland teen
was killed Saturday when the motorcycle on which he-was riding flipped at Rochester Road and Betts in Addison Township. Dead is John Lee Wtogett, 14. son of -Mr. and Mrs. James W. Wingett, 319 Tamarack.
Sheriff s deputies said the motorcycle was being driven, by Lonnie £. Harper, 156 Elm, Oakland Township-, when the ac-
riacs Tuesday at 6:« a m. n arts .Monday at 11:77 p.m. I* rises 'A^ePday at 1:25 p.m.
Dewntewn Temperetwea
id Laws at Temperatures
Sunday's Temperature Chart Alpena	53	35	FPrt Worth	77	S3,
Escans ba	50	43	Jacksonville	74	58
Gr. Rapids	54	32	Kansu city	52	47
Houghton	52	4i	Los Angeles	71	«l
■ —'	S3	20	Milwaukee	“	“
Death Takes MJ&A Founder
(Continued From Page One)
with Brooke, Smith & French,
‘—------------ | Inc.; from 1123 to 1925, with
11 \ AiHp tn Hoar Dunft* Ward’ 01 ckvtm
U. J. MIUC 1U ntJdl j land, Ohio, and from 1928, oik til he quit as vice president and director in 1934 to form his own partnership, he was with Campbell-Ewald Co., of Detroit.
He Is credited with writing the so - IS j summoned an American Em- first advertisement of the Pon-a bassy official to repeat to him tiac car, and the firm still “ g | spy charges against tour UJ5. j handles Pontiac advertising. to and British attaches.	i	* *	*
£ A U.S. spokesman said the After his first severe heart American official denied that i attack, suffered on Armistice
cident occurred.
Harper told deputies he lost control of the cycle when it hit loose gravel on the shoulder of the road as he attempted to turn right from Betts ' onto Rochester.
MINOR INJURIES Harper suffered minor in-juries in the mishap.
A 61-year-old Highland Township man was killed Sunday afternoon when his car was struck by a train in Fenton.
Witnesses said John Olesky of 3755 N. Milford apparently did not see the train as he approached the Grand Trunk and Western Railroad crossing on North Leroy Street.
Fenton police now are seeking relatives of the victim^ who was
Soviet Spy Charges
organs h 541 MOSCOW (UPI) - The Soli * viet Foreign Ministry today
! toe four diplomats had engaged j in espionage aboard the frans-I Siberian Express.. In turn, he j accused the Russians of vtolat-i ing their diplomatic immunity.
The UJ5. Embassy . acting deputy chief of mission, Mai-coin/ ToOa, met for half an boar with Mikhail Smirnov-sky, bead of the ministry’s American, section.
Day 1946, he became an orchid grower of national note and an authority on the Civil War and World War Irnaval history. SURVIVORS
■ He Is survived by his widow, the former Hiidegarde Hager man of Ludington,-Mfeh.; two sons, Colin and Jeremy, and a daughter, Mrs. Richard J. Morgan, all of Birmingham. Colin
•**""'*» *•
/NATIONAL WEATHER — Occasional rain is expected tonight in the upper Mississippi Valley, the GrdSt Lakes, toe Ohio and Tennessee valleys, and the south Atlantic states. It will be confer in the upper Mississippi Valley, the western l\ Lukes area and the north and central Atlantic states. farmer weather will prevail frqm toe Pacific Coast to the western Plains.	I
i m
cussion ended “inconclusively.” ♦ * *
“Both sides restated their well , known positions,” toe spokesman "
Sea water it being used successfully for the irrigation of /several kinds of plants. S o M e have, been - found to auivive drought better than whenferL gated with fresh water. ) ^.	■
-	4
Using agency and Jeremy also is a member of the firm in Bloomfield Hills.
The body will be at toe Beil Funeral Home of William R. Hamilton £o.t 829 E. Maple, Birmingham.
Fuser a 1 service Vili be, 11, p.m. Tuesday at St. James/ toterment/Wfli, be private. Contributions may be made to the Michigan Heart Fund.
; T «f
Kinston, were being housed by relatives and friends or in three emergney shelters bet up by the Red Cross at Stallings Airfield, a recreation center and the National Guard armory.
18 FEET DEEP Water was eight to ten feet deep in some sections of Kingston and acres of farm land were under water.
Terry Cline, a Red Cross representative, said more than 100 houses in Kinston, a city of 25,-000. were flooded and that an- - BORN IN SLUMS other 100 might be flooded if the Cantor ^ -born Edward river rose as expected.	fekowitz Ne?r York City Jan.
*	* . *	31, 1892. He came out, of the
Col David W. Spivey, a state slums with a vitality that soon
civil defense, aid director, made captured audiences wherever he an aerial survey Sunday and performed. A small man, he said he counted at least 575 possessed enormous energy, buildings in Kinston and its	. .	_ _,, .
,	™	Immediate area surrounded by ■
MANY INQUIRIES	water.	chanted to the antdfeace, tap:
“An almost unbelievable num- “The river rose four inches' pMf his palms-together.
I her of inquiries and investiga- between 8 a.m. and 4:30 pjn., I “We’re making whoopee,” he j tions into various phases of Es- Sunday,’’ said Spivey. “Every	sang, with a roll of his immense	.	.	,
tes’ activities were conducted j inch it rises spreads the flood	banjo-eyes that were expressive [de#d at	SC€ne'
before his arrest by agencies of several thousand square yards,	without being offensive,
the federal government, begin-1 wnj LAST	*	*	*
ning as early as 1963,” it said, j	o ..	... "I’d love to spend this hour
“While these events were going |	* d*y	with you,” he sang to radio
on Billy Sol Estes’ empire con- ™%’*e.added .1*,.got an‘	I audiences across the nation,
tinned to crow ”	otber foot to go and that means !	<
umtta » grow.	another 24 hours before it can CRISP LINE
The subcommittee saM that I ^ <oing down.’’-	| Two generations became ac-.
★	. *	*	quainted with the high-pitched
Spivey	said the	river’s slow	voice'the crisp gagline.
hrrn	financially “bv >riae K’ven ptentyNnf: With his death. Cantor’s great
ET	Smititive	i	*ime	to	frw	but	added,	efforts for human causes were
hlrtk* ” e**^ ctonpettti	e	j	ala0 raeans jt wm	proba-	remembered. He raised stagger-
, cttcs'	I bly be just as long going down ing amounts for war bonds dur-
“Had all — or even a few — jagain. This means a whole loti ing the first and second World of the many federal investiga-1 more damage. It’s a slow and! Wars, the Heart Fund, Bonds tions of Estes’ operations been j deadly situation.” .	for Israel and other causes,
properly coordinated, it is almost inconceivable that his fraudulent activities could have continued for such a long period,” toe subcommittee said * *. *
The report said the Agriculture Depwtment conducted two investigations of Estes’ use of government loans in 1953 and turned the results over to the Justice Department, which dosed the file without action in 1957.
RECOMMENDS) EXAM In 1954 an agent of the Internal Revenue Service recommended Estes’ Income tax return be examined, the subcommittee said. But none of his re-1 turns were examined befoit his j arrest “despite the,fact that Es-1 tes lived on a lavish scale and deliberately propagated a public image of enormous wealth.”
The report said the tgoverp* f ment did not act until after j newspapers reported Estes’ fertiliser tank operations in 1963.
“The arrest.. . was based on confirmation of essentially toe same information that had been I submitted in 1161,” it said. |
when Estes was finally exposed it was done almost entirely by persons who " J
School Bus Turned Info Vocation Van -PARMA, Ohio (AP) - Two families who live a couple of doors away from each other have turned 0 34-foot, 1954 model school bus into a vacation van.
The Donald L. Thorn tort and Alfred P. Wachter families have equipped it with a four-burner stove, a pair of washrooms, re-, frigerator-freeaer, bunk beds for eight, pressure water fau-i cots and screened windows.
VISITORS — Lake activity for most two-V legged “animals,” like us btimans, has ceased lor fiia year, 'However, these three swans found the water at Sylvan Lain to their lik-t
£	-	Tv
tog. Tbeir Saturday visit attracted a delighted crowd of young Children and a few curious
THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1964
Want to look your
best
this
year?
want your figure . to look [\ lovely?

[ . want a.
becoming I hair style?
ENROLL NOW IN
CHARM CENTER AT
MONTGOMERY
WARD
Now's the time to get ready for winter ... to look your best, to get ready for fun. Come learn the charm secrets of famous ■ models ... today at the Wendy Ward Charm Center.
Just $7.50 Classes Start Oct. 17
■•eiatar Now in
PONTIAC MALL
<82-4940
Paternal Obligation to Daughter Still Exists
By MARY FEELEY Management Deer Miss Feeley:
*1 have a daughter who will be IS this month. I would like to know if I must still contribute to her support.
She {dans to go into nurse’s training. I do not Uve with my wife and daughter, and have been paying them voluntarily, not by a court order.' G. K., Tamaque, Pa.
Dear G. K.: As Cor any legal
tMS WEBPS SPECIAL
TROUSERS 39c
CLEANED and PRESSED
EICON-O-WASH
DRY CLEANING CBNTER
Smooth Out Wrinkles
Wrinkles are riverbeds of dry ceils because the plasma colloids or water carriers of the skin have been dried out thrpugh harsh weather. You can bring life' again to your skin and protect it against wind and the drying effect of powder. Ask your Druggist fords little oil of olay and before you make up smooth over the face, neck and hands to nourish the skin at depth and give it a new life and delightful dewy bloom.
1 •	. . . Margaret Merril
demands that could be made upon you for further support, you should take that up with a lawyer.
Hut from the moral obligation, are you sure you want to cut off all support over-al0it? Your whole idea, I gather, has been a voluntary decision to take care of your daughter until she’s able to earp her own living. And for that you’re to be commended.
But if she needs this training in order to prepare for a worthwhile. career, your paternal obligation still exists, doesn’t it1| I think you’ll be a lot happier in the long run If you finish the i Job.
Dear Miss Feeley:
There are four adults in our family — three, men and myself. What I want to know Is, how I can limit my food expense dhd still live as they expect?
jl get $50 per week but I don’t (eel I should spend that much >ch week for four people, especially since we are all over 50 — two over 70.
Can you tell me how much it really should cost per week, per person, with steaks and other good items? My husband is sure I spend entirely too much. A Reader, Southeast.
Maico Detroit Co.
wishes to announce the' appointment of a branch office in Pontiac under the direction of
ROSAMOND-WILLAIMS
29 East Cornell FE 2-1225 \
Mrs., Williams has had many yaars irvtha Hearing Air field and is fully qualified to be of assistance to youe
Maico Detroit Co. 522 David Whitney Bldg, Detroit 2$, Mich. "WO 1-2691
Maico Medical Village 3IS15 Southfield Rd. Birmingham, Mich. 644-2175
KEEPS PRICES DOWN
MOJUD SUPP-HOSE SUPPORT NYLONS
Regular Mojud support stockings for longtr lasting beauty and comfort
Seamed or no-seam Supp-.hose, perfect support while you work, stand, walk. Fashion tones, pro* portioned sizes. 8V4-11V4.
Suea-lio«a shoerett 5.91 pr. OKM KVUY MIOHT TO 9
95
Dear Reader: You can bold the weekly.food bill to $38.40 and still do royally by the household. This is according to the Department of Agriculture’s liberal plan which breaks down like this:
* ★ ★’
A week’s food at home for a man aged 35 to 54, $10.30; for a man aged 55 to74, $0.80; for a woman 35 to 54, $8.50.
So tell your husband he’s right — and use the balance of the $50 a week for something else.
Dear Miss Feeley:	v
We expect to sell our home and have been wondering just what taxes we will have to pay. We expect to buy a less expensive home. Can you give us this information? Mrs. D.J.M., Lafaette, Ind.
*	* a
Dear Mrs. M;: There’s a new tax law this year which may possibly be to your advantage. If, for instance, you are over 65 years old, and the sale price of your home is $20,000 or less, there is no taxation. In onto to qualify for this exemption, the owner must nave lived, in the home for at least five of the eight years just prior to the sale.
*' * ■* .
If you are under 05 at the time you sell your home, you must pay a tax on the profit fftm
the sale — unless you buy a more expensive residence.
Dear Kiss Feeley:
’ I read your article on “Who Handles the Monye’’ and would like to tell you how my husband and I manage.
When we were first married, he handled all the money. But his handwriting is bad and nobody can read it. So . I took over the check-writing and balancing the accounj.
WWW
My weakness was that I'm a sucker tor any sales pitch. I’d buy anything from anyone who came to the door. My husband and I talked it over mid agreed that I would write out the checks and he would sign them!
Now we both know Where and how. every cent is spent. He checks the records I keep when be signs the checks. I don’t buy everything offered any more. Our' creditors can read our checks. And our account is always in good shape.
w w w
We have been married for five years now. I’m 25 and he’s 35. We never argue about money. I hope other young couples can get ideas from ours. Mrs. E. J., blip, N.Y.
(You can write to Maty Fee-ley in care of The Pontiac Press. Enclose a long, stamped, self-addressed envelope.)
MRS. MORGAN MOSS
Gotf Gjoves Grip Better
New golf gloves feature leather palms for firm grip, with ventilated stretch backs for comfort and flexibility. WWW
These fit-all-hand-sizes gloves — with complete or short fingers and elastic wrists—need to be washed after each round.
★ ★ ★
Use soap or detergent suds and. a soft brush to remove mud and perspiration.
The George BieSels of Sarvis Street announce the engagement of their daughter, Judith Anne to Jerome G. treyburgher, son of Mrs. James Frey-burgher of Sancroft Street, West Bloomfield Toumship, and the late Mr. Freyburgher. Her fiance attends Lawrence Institute, of Technology.
Hold Home! Reception
A reception in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harry V. Tom on Hamlin Street, Avon Town-stupT1 followed’ the marriage of their daughter Mary Jane to George John Leslie.
The ceremony was performed in the University Presbyterian Church,, A von Township.
w w W
, The bride’s gown of white peau satin was styled with Kabuki sleeves and scalloped ‘ chapel train bordered with lattice-work. A pearl and crystal tiara cradled her bouffant; silk illusion veil. She carried cascading gardenias and ivy.
Mrs. C. Wayne Isbell was the bride’s only attendant. BEST MAN ,
With best man Dale Mon-crieff, Royal Oak, were ushers Joiui Werner and John Friedly.
WWW
The couple left, for a trip to northern Michigan, w .w w
The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. George J. Leslie of
| Bloomfield Hills and the late I Mr. Leslie.
MRS. G. J. LESLIE
7000 ROLLS IN STOCK
This Week’s Specie!
We Have 25 Patterns but there art 10 or lass Rolls in eaeh»
at ONLY	29° Mil
Other Bargain Canter Specials Odd leal was $2.49 new Me Sanp Pre-Pasted
was $1.90........now $121
Msrlbrourh
was $2.95........now $1.79
20th Century
now $1.99
Wallpaper Bargain Center
s Bo smart-look smart
Oka* AS COUNTRY AIR
-USE OUR FINER <
; OLeaiuitfj.
Healthy Scalp-Beautiful Hair
Striving for a healthy head of hair? Make certain first that the scalpels; healthy—not too dry and scaly nor too oily. Both of these'conditions can usually be corrected by giving the scalp the same attention one would give'a similar condition anyplace else on the skin.
The simple .truth is, the scalp is skin. It r e q u 1 r e s washing, ventilation, exercise and cosmetic attention the same as the skin of the face or arms. A professional beautician or cosmetician can advise on most scalp conditions.
Traditionally, the too dry scalp resppnds to cosmetic oil of. other skin lubricant; the oily scalp, inquires frequent shampoo with'h film-cutting final rinse in good quality witch hazel. Persistent itching or eruptions or too much hair loss should be referred to.a skin specialist.
The Leather Look
Soft cotton suede 1s doing its bit to promote this season’s popular leather look.
Jantzen cotrasts quilted and smooth suede with cotton knit for a wearable collection of slacks, easy skirts, jerkins, cardigans, and shirts. The colors: fawn or olive.
Area Pair ■Married in Ortonville
JXeumode
Twite-ci-Ueo/L,
“CAREER GIRL”
3 Stylai of thi» nylon M famoui
•	SIAM LESS	I
. • SEAMLESS MICRO
•	WITH TtNy SEAMS 1
j PONTIAC ! TRAVEL SERVICE j
Reception in the Holly Hotel followed toe marriage of Karyn Lee Morgan to Morgan Taylor Moss, Saturday,, in the Ortonville Baptist Church.
The Clarence M- Morgans of Holly and Mr. Snd Mrs. Mil-ton M. Moss of Tripp Road, Groveland Township, are parents,. of the couple wed before Rev. Roy Botruff.
Imported Jiand-cohled applique accented the bride’s gown and fan-shaped train of white pebble peau de soie. A Swedish Uara secured her silk illusion veU.
White cattleya orchids centered her cascade of.ivy and Stephanotis.
other Attendants
With honor matron, Mrs. I Milton A.-Moss Jr. were bridesmaids Mrs. Joseph Cav-agan of Flint, Mrs. John Clark, Bettylou Drewett and junior maid Chart Edick.
The Edick twins, Nancy and I Bradley, were ring-bearers. Julie'Eidick was flower girl.
With best man, Milton A. Moss Jr., were groomsmen John Woodward, John Clark and. Craig Bond Lee. Ted Wagoner ahd John Barton wtfe junior ushers.
CRUISE
CONSULTANTS
Uf IM *Mn Yn «
Brochurn — lOMN
"NS
i
Rwian
123 W. Maplr, Birmingham ‘ 644-7955_____________
Storage, Repair, Restyling By Expert*.
THE ORIGINAL AND GENUINE RIPPLE® rf SOLE!
HACKMOECO.
235 FIERCE ST. BIRMINGHAM
UclDMU
“1590” fans (that’s the style number of this really wonderful girdle) are as loyal aa the day is long. And with good reason! This design does an amazing slimming job, right bafore your eyes. Firm front panel flattens; leno elastic smooths back, hips, thighs. The hi-rise waist, cute at lean an inch and a half oiff your waistline measurement. Comes in sizes 26 to 34. $1B.BOt
SPEND 5 MINUTES IN OUR FITTING
'Room andjsee
THE DIFFERENCE!
Pontiac’s largest and most complete foundation v.department ..with graduate corsetieres'to assist you.
BOBETTE SHOP
Free Parking
Charge Accounts
82 N. Saginaw St.
16 N. Saginaw Street


THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1964
Grand Slam Halts N.Y., 4-3
c-i
Cardinals Follow Trail of Good Luck in World Series
NEW YORK UR — It was Branch Rickey, now a consultant with the St Louis dub, who once said:
"Luck is the residue of desire."
the Cardinals must have a lot of desire because through the years they have had a lot of hide in World Series play.
It is this residue of desire that helped the Cards win the World Series in 1926, 1930, 1934, 1942, 1944 and 1946.
lhe'4-3 triumph over the New York Yankees Sunday which squared the 1964 World Series at two victories apiece demonstrat-
»%’ ' 'J
ed anew that the Cardinal luck
—	ballplayers call it ‘‘breaks’’
—	is still holding out.
HERO HAILED
In Missouri, they are singing the praises of Kenny Boyer, whose grand slam homer in the sixth inning-overcame a 3 - 0 Yankee lead.
In Lakewood, Calif., and Toronto, Canada, they are rejoicing over the brillhuit relief pitching of hometown heroes Roger Craig and Ron Taylor.
In Houston, they are happy over Johnny Keane, who is managing the heck out of the Cardinals, seeking his f i r s t
world championship in his 27th year of managing. .
★ ★ *
But in New York, they will tdl you that it took a break for the Cardinals to win the fourth game — rare miscue by the usually sure-handed Bobby Richardson on a' sure-fire double play ball that, would have ended the inning without a score.
There were two runners on base with one out when Dick Groat hit a routine grounder to the right of second baiter. Richardson fielded the ball, tried to shovel it over to Phil Linz for
what looked like the start of a twin killing.
Let Richardjon explain what happened:
“It got stuck in my web. As PhD came across, I hesitated, throwing him off his timing and when I threw it with my gloved hand, Ctut Flood hit Linz and he couldn’t handle the throw.”
Instead of the inning being oveiv the, Cards had die bases loaded. Boyer unloaded them two pitches later with a smash into the left field stands. Until then, young A1 Downing had a three-bit shutout.
Thus, instead of the Yankees
having a chance to end it at Yankee Stadium today, they must return to St Louis Tuesday for a sixth game Wednesday,' and perhaps a seventh game Thursday.
, The Yankees’ Mel Stottlemyre and the Cards’ Boh,Gibson, who clashed in file second game, renewed their rivalry in the fifth game.
Stottlemyre came out die winner in the first meeting,' limiting the Cards to seven hits in an S-3’ triumph. Although he lost, Gibson was impressive, striking out nine in eight innings, permitting only two runs until he
tired to the seventh.
Sunday’s victory was credited to Craig, who handcuffed file Yankees with just two singles in 4 1-3 innings of relief pfy&
The 33-year-old right-hander took over with one out in the first inning after the Yankees had raked starter Ray Sadecki for four straight hits.
CTaig permitted a run-scoring single by Howard, then allowed only one more while fuming eight before retiring for a pinch hitter in the sixth.
Cart Warwick, came through with a single, giving him three
pinch hits so far for a share of that Soles record, igniting the winning rally.
Taylor polished off the Yankees without a hit over the last four innings.
“I like our club’s chances better now than I did at the start of the Series,” said Keane. “Winning this game set us up good. Our pitching is set for file final games, even if it goes the limit of seven. I sure like the way we stand.”
Keane admitted that Richardson’s fumble of Dick Groat’s grounder was the big break of the game.
Viking Quarterback Mauled by Lions
Detroit Takes 1st Place Tie on 24-20 Win
Tafkenton Hit Hard by Rushing Linemen During 17 Plays
By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press MINNEAPOLIS. MINN. -Fran Tarkenton, the scrambling quarterback of file Minnesota Vikings, must have learned yesterday how the ancient captives felt when they were thrown to the lions.
* * *
Tarkenton was U t e r a 11 y “chewed up” on a wet and moddy field by the onrushing Detroit Lions who today found themselves sitting on toj> of the Western Division after defeating the Vikings, 24-30, before 40,-840 yesterday.
Whether the Lions will be in first , place , tomorrow won’t be known until after the big Cardinal - Colt game in Baltimore tonight. A win' by St. Louis would give Detroit sole possession of first place for the rest of the week at least.
Anyway, the Lions earned their first place position Sunday with a steady, bat not overwhelming offense, and a vicious defensive rush that saw Tarkenton get hit 11 times and Viking runners.get smeared six times for negative yardage.
All told, the Lions led by Sam Williams, Roger Brown, Alex Karras, Joe Schmidt and Wayne Walker wert in the Viking back-field 17 times -to take away 118 of the 359 gross yards made by Minnesota.
The Vikings up to yesterday were the No. 1 offensive team in the NFL, averaging 357 yards per game. They did match this yes today in gross yards, but" after the 17 times Tarkenton and Co. were hit behind the line there were only 341: net yards feft to show for their effort.
* ★ ★
“Our defense was great," said coach George Wilson,” and I know it wasn’t a good field for running, but I still think we. would have contained Tarkenton just as good on a dry day.” FINE BLOCKING “Our offense also did a real goftd'job^There were some fine blocks thrown and our runners did well on that field,” he added. He also pointed out tttkt the Vikings really had only one good sustained drive in the game, and that came in the third quarter when they scored their first touchdown on a 73 yard march to make the score read 17-1,4 for Minnesota.
11m Vikings made it 34 in the first period ou a 32 yard .field goal by Fred Cox after recovery of a fumble.
The Lions came right back after the ensuing kickoff which Tommy Watkins took in the end zone and ran back 57 yards to the Viking 46.
• ★ * • #
With Danny Lewis and Nick Pletronsante eating up big chunks of yardage, MghUgh*-< by a IS yard statue of liberty play between Earl Morrell and Pietrosante, the ^ons went the 46 yards in seven plays.
Lewis, aided by two good blpcks from John Gortty and Jlob Scboltz, went the nine yards (Continued on Page ^ Col. 1)
Richardson Takes Blame for Miscue
FUMBLED TD - Detroit quarterback Earl Morrali (14) charges through the Minnesota Vikings’ line near the end zone in yesterday’s NFL game (top) and fumbles as George Rose, right, tackles him. But the Lions’ Gail Cogdill (bottom) grabs the ball as it bounces across the goal for a touchdown. The Lions won, 24-26.
NEW YORK (AP) - Bobby Richardson stood in front of the cubicle in the Yankee dressing room taking all the blame for the fouled up double play attempt that led to the St Louis Cardinals 4-3 victory over New York in the World Series Sun-
Linz, however, refused to accept the pies of, guilty and ruled his' double play partner innocent.
Richardson, jammed Into his cubicle by the mass of reporters, took one look at the gather-
he hit the d it seems
d the bases grand slam nomer.	w
“It was a ground ball Mt to and I did not field it
Chicago Ends Losing Streak
As Redskins Win, 35-20
QB Routs Ex-Mates
WASHINGTON (AP)-Sonny Jurgensen bombed bis old Philadelphia teammates with five touchdown passes Sunday as Washington whipped the Eagles 35-30 to snap a four-game losing streak.
His new Redskins teammates, meanwhile, did a good job of containing their former quarter-, back, Norman Snead, but had a tough time with Eagle halfback Tim Brown, who scored a 11 three Philadelphia touchdowns.
-Jar^anien and Snead changed teams in a major National Football League deal af^r last season.
Jurgensen connected on 23 of 33 passes for 365 yards, with two intercepted.
This included 12 passes to Bobby Mitchell (dr* 183 yards and two touchdowns.
The moat spectacular play of tiie game came on Jurfensesi's 66-yard scoring pass to rookie Charley -Taylor, who took t h • ball near the line of scrimmage and weaved his way downfidd through moat of the Eagle team.
it ★	★ ;■
, DALLAS — Don Meredith ran 19 yards 'for a touchdown that propelled Dallas to a 13-11 Na-
tional Football League tie with the New York Giants Sunday. MISS 2 CHANCES
The Cowboys missed two chances to win when Dick Van Raapborst missed a field goal from the Giant 40-yard line with7 2:15 left and another from the 85 with three seconds remaining.
Don Perkins ran for 137 yards before being injured in the fourth period and took over the-. NFL rushing lead with 458 yards. He passed Jimmy Brown of Cleveland, who got only 56' yards against Pittsburgh Saturday, night to make his total 410.
• Or* ★	★
New York took 'the lead in the s e co n d quarter with two touchdowns, one set up when Dick Lynch intercepted a Meredith paaa and ran to the Dallas IS, and the other when Y. A. Tittle , passed 12 yards to Joe Morrison.'
Van Raaphorst kicked two field goals and the extra point after Meredith’s touchdown to give Dallas the tie.
CLEVELAND (AP)— Pounding continuously on the ground, the Pittsburgh Steelers beat the
Cleveland Browns 23-7 before a crowd of/60,530 Satuday night.
The Browns dropped to second place in the Eastern Division race.
/John Henry Johnson, a fullback who ran like a halfback scored three touchdowns and posted the best single game rushing effort this season in the NFL.
Johnson tallied on dashes of 33 and 45 yards and plunged four yards for another score. He picked up 300 yards in 30 carries.
U. S. Olympic Jumper
Aids Injured Russian
TOKYO (AP) - Vasily Kkznetsov was injured by a spike while training for the pole vault Sunday and the Americans came to the rescue. *
U.S. High jumper John Thomas was being rubbed down by Coach Bill Robertson at the time. Tbopas jumped off the table and Robertson tended to Kuznetsov’s injury.
‘ “This is an example of Soviet-American friendship and cooperation,” Kuznetsov said with a grin.
I CHICAGO UR — Bill Wade hurled four touchdown passes, j two each to Johnny Morris and | Mike Ditka, as the Chicago Bean snapped from a two game losing slump and walloped the Los Angeles Rams 36-17 Sunday.
★	, 'it it ■	*
The National FootbalL League
defending champions, now 2-3 for the campaign, turned three of four Bill Munson pass interceptions into scores in the first half for a 24-3 lead.
★	w* ★,
fa, the period, Wade hit Mor-: ris on a two-yard scoring pitch | to end a 79-yard drive and ’speared Ditka for the same yardage after Roosevelt Taylor’s pass interception.
Bob Jencks, who booted five extra points, added a 14-yard field goal tiuti stemmed from a stolen aerial. Ditka also scored by recovering Morri . fumble of a catch that rolh into the end zone.
The Bears margin to 39-10 in the Wade shot a pass to Ditka at ris in the flat that was good for a 52-yard touchdown play. -
★	*	★
Bruce	Gossett	kicked	a	49-
yard field goal for the Rams in the second quarter, but it was late in the third before they crossed the Bears’ goaL
* ★	*
Roman Gabriel	bombed	Bucky
Pope on a 79-yard TD play and later piloted an 90-yard thrust that he capped In the opening minute of the fourth on a three-yard rollout.
TAYLOR LOOSE MILWAUKEE UB-The Green Bay Packers turned Jimmy Taylor loose for a fourth pe-riod touchdown and then embed in a fumble recovery hrnfiy-ing for a 24-14 National Football League victory over the stubborn San Francisco 49ers Sunday.
♦	+ m :
A packed crowd of 47,300, the/ largest ever to witness a pro football game in Wisconsin, cheered Taylor as the jarring
fullback carried the load after running mate Paul Horning limped off the field with an apparent grain muscle pull in the second period.
Taylor, who scored ra a one-yard phrnge in the second quarter, sent the Packers in front to stay with a 27-yard burst
However, the 49ers promptly surrendered the ball as John Brodie fumbled while trying to pass and Dave Manner recovered for the Packers at the 25.
Taylor, running with reckless abandon, finished the day with 133 yards in 33 carries.
★ aw,
Homung missed field goal attempts from 16 and 36 yards out before he was injured on Green Bay’s 56-yard inarch for the first touchdown.
glove hand, Flood hit Linz and he couldn’t handle the throw. “It was my fault all the way.” Richardson also said the thought had run through his mind to run. to the base and try and get Curt Flood unassisted, but “with Flood running, there’s always a chance he brats me.’ Richardson also said it was his fault when Linz was hung up between second and thjrdinthe first faming. Linz had~c9ftMd with a double, then looked like he was trying to steal third.
“I called |hc hit and run,” said Richardson, “And I did not swing. I can’t think of any specific 'reason. I just didn’t swing”
T ini... said Richardson had a “desperation play” on 'a bouncer.
iMchardaon made a heck of a play — 95 per cent of the second basemen around don’t even get to the ball. AU I had to do was catch it. There’s still some doubt whether he would have been out anyway.*
said Richardson’s throw ip high over my left and at the same time ime in tow and to my coming across the double play; rauld have reacted [ could have given Bob-tter target. But I had committed myself.”
A break decided the Cards’ first World Series triumph, in 1926, against the Yankees. That break came when Tony Lazzeri drove a long foul that missed, being, a game-winning grand* slam homer by a hah*, just before Grover Cleveland. Alexander strode him out
★ ★ ★
In the 1931 World Series, two fluke hits and erratic support behind George Earnshaw accounted for four early St. Louis runs that gave the Cardinals a 4-2 victory in the seventh game against the Philadelphia Athletics.
The Cards also won in seven games in 1834 when the Dean boys, Dizzy and Daffy, turned in two victories apiece against Detroit But the Series would never have gone the limit had not the Tigers committed 12
In 1942, a rookie right-hander named Johnny Beazley turned in tiie unprecedented feat of beating the Yankees twice in the Cuds’ four-out-of-five success. Joe Gordon threw away the last game for the Yankees when catcher Walker Cooper caught him off second in the ninth inning, spiking New York’s final threat.
★ ' ■ ★ ♦'
Two years later, a wild throw by shortstop Junior Stephens helped the Cards score three runs that gave them a final 3-1 triumph over the St. Lapis Browns. The 1944 Series will be remembered for Enos Slaughter’s mad dash borne from first on a hit to left center by Hairy Walker. Slaughter scored the winning run in. the seventh game, much to the chagrin of Boston Red Sax shortstop Johnny Pesky, Who delayed relaying > the ball from the outfield.
Mecarwre nil Troon * Shannon rf 10 10 PawMna I
Maxviii ai site t«Hn
raw wiui • 0 0 • Bouton p Bachak n 0 0 0 0 NNBona p .1 • I I fiiaSiii t o o o .
Schulti p 00 0 0
slam Cards t
Mickey Mantle out in first inning of fourth World Series hall game yesterday. Seated baseman Did Maxviii OooldQg at Smith) took
Cardinals’’ right fielder M Shannon and ptit tag on Mantle who i trying to stretch nm-producing single I
WU HJAOMVH
THE PQNTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1964

MARKETS
' The following are top price* covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them In wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets us of Friday.
Produce
■Will
Apple*, Red Delicious, bu...........13.00
Apples, Growing, bu. ............   2.50
Apples, Jonathan, bil.*............. 2-50
Apples, McIntosh, bu.................2.50
ASP, V N. Spy, bo. ....„.............4.00
Applet Wolf River, bit. ............2.50
Applet, CWer, soal. ease ............2.50
Grapes. Concord, ok. bakt............1.50
FeachOL Berlett, bu................. 3.50
Pears, Base, bu......	 3.75
Plums, Prune, bu..................  3.75
Watermelon ......................    2.00
VeMTASLBO
Beans, green, bu. ............,.....03.75
Beans, Kv. .Wonder, bu..............3.50
Beans, Lima, bu. ..................  5.00
Beano, Roman, bu. ...................3.50
Beane, wax, bu. ..................  3.75
Baolb dot, Bcbs. . . ................. MO
Beets, tapped, bu..................  2.00
Breecolll. dz. belie. ............  3.00
. Cabbage, curly, bu, ..............  1.75
Cshtisps, red, bu. ................  2.oo
Csbbege, CM. ......................  1.75
Cebbepe, sprouts......	 1.25
Cameo, do. no. .....................   MO
Carrots, Cello Pak. ...............  1.75
Canon, topped, bp....................2.15
Cauliflower, dz. ....................2.15
Ctlenr, Pascal, dx. .................1.25
Celery, Paseab crt. ................ 3:50
- Celery, Root, dot. .................2.25
Celery, white, crt. ...............  4.50
Corn, Sweet, bag ..................  1.50
Cucumbers, slicers, bu...............3.00
Did ...........................;....	1.00
Eggplant, bu.	.......... .....	mo
Eggplant, long type, pk. bsxt. ...... M5
Gourds, pk. brief. ................  1.25
Kohlrabi, dz.	Delta. ........ ......	MO
Leeks, dLlxhe.........................too
Onions, dry,	504b. bag .....	...	too
Onions, groan, dt. belts. .......... 1.00
Onlans, pldtlbig, lb. ..............   15
Parsley, cu. .......................   IS
Parsley Root ..........,...............mo
Parsnips, cello pak ...!..........  2,25
Peppers, Cayenne, pk. bskf. ........US
Peppers, hof,’ bu.....	  1.50
Psppars, PiWOBte ...........riff
Peppers, Red, sweet, bu.	—
Peppers, sweat, bu...............
Potatoes, new, SO Me. .............
Potatoes, new, 25 lbs. ............
Pumpkins, bu. ................ .....
Pumpkins, tan ..................... 25.00
Raoiritaa, ted ................
Radishes, white ..................
.Squash, Acorn, bu. ..............
Squash, Buttercut, bu..............
Squash, Butternut, bu..............
Squash, Delicious, bu.,.............
Squash, Hubbard, bu.	....
Tematoea, Britt. ■ .......^
Tomatoes, .bu. ..................
Turnips ........ .......1
Turnips, tapped, bu. ..............
kale. bu. .........................
Sorrel, bu. .....‘...,...R./.v.....
Spbtaeh. bu. ......................
Turnip, bu. .....................
Celery, Cabbage, bu...... .........
Endive, bu. .	...........
Endive, Matched, bu...............
E Karols, bu. «	.... ......
EKarols, bleached, bu..............
Lettuce, Bibb. pk. bakt, ..........
Lettuce, Boston
Uttsea, Head, bu. ...... ..........
Lettuce, Head, doz. .........
Lettuce, Loaf, bu..................
Romeine ......................
Poultry and Egg*
hens 16-11; light type t typo roosters over 5 I irt end fryers 3-4 lbs., whlh Xt Rock 22-23.
r BOO!
>eid nor B O S.): »,»■ largo 30-40:	medium 37-337%; small 17-20:
Brawnt Grade A large 37-37j medium 20*2t: small IMTVk: checks 104314.
CHICAGO 0UTTER, 8001 CHICAGO (AP) — Chicago Mercantile Exchange. - Butter steady; wholesale buying prices unchanged; 93 score AA SOW; 72 A 57 VS; OB (MSI; S7 C 577%; cars 70 B 07; M C SOW,
Eggs steady; wholesale buying prices unchanged to I lower; 70 per cent or better Grade A whites 37VS; mixed 377b; mediums 27; standards MVS: dirties urv quoted; cheek* MVS.,
CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (AP)—UIOA-Llvt poultry: Wholesale buying prlcgs unchanged Ig 1 higher; roasters 23-30; special ted Whits Reck fryers Kioto.
Livestock
CHICAGO LtVBOTOCK * CHICAGO <AP>—(UIOA) Hogs 7,000; . butchers 50 to 75 tower; mostly 1-2 200 '|Bje.lHVP0B 14-25-16.50; around 1M
hood at 14.75; wtbMM JBMM Mo 15.75-14.25; 230-240 lbs 15.25-15.75; 1-3 210-270 Ms 11.00-15.25) mixed 1-1 200-250 M 14.0014.75; 350-400 lbs lOJGMAb Cottle 7AM; calves none; riau__ Hears wak le 25 tower; Two lead sprlm 1,300-1,350 M OlPUBhtor steers 27.25; high choke and prime 1,150-1,440 tot 34.25-27JO; chake 1,100-1,450 Mo 25.00-24.25; a few leade high choice and tow prime 1.425-1,525 Me 24.2544.50; tour lead mixed choice end prime 000-IJM M heifers 2' Sheep 400; woo led daughter lambs
slaughter twee steady; choice and pi___
KIM M woo led slaughter lambe 22.00-
AMHBdO Ml AmAIrlln 1.25 ABoKh .500 AmBdcst 1.40 Am Can 2 Am Cyan 2 AElPw. 1,14b AmEnka 1.60
Am TIT 1
AmTab 140
— fine 1.40 Inc M Ampex Cp .
Stocks of Local Interest
figures otter decimal points art eighths OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS The following owotettons do not no eerily repreeent actum transact lent ... ere Intended M a guldt to the spprnxl mete tradbig range of the aecurlflM.
EM Asked
AMT Cora. ................... 7.1	M
Associated Truck .............14.4	1(1
GbhDicMSr .....................7.2	0.1
Braun InsbweilnB .............17.0	li.7
Champion Home Guilders .......1IJ	20.0
Spent Utiutlee cits* A.........25.4	pi
Diamond Crystal ..............13.7 1|3;
Mohwit^ubberCo^'.X!!!!'.!!! jE|	Sii
Michigan Seamless Tube C*. ..25.4	P
Pioneer Finance ...............ill	114
$afran Printing .............  tfj	'5.0
Wehr Coro.  ..........>.......144 17.4
Winkelmen's ..,**5,1,..,!...  13.4	MJ
Wolverine Shoe .............  37.1	41.4
Wyandotte Chemical ............714	M O
MUTUAL FUNDS
Afflllttod Fund .............V^HLOO
. Cbsmleil Fund	.............. 14.44 1s.1t
Cemmonweelth Block ..........1040»30.43
Keystone InciiM K-1 .........7.03	10.73
Keystone Growth K4.............5.M	4.42
Met*. Investors Growth .......1.25	llT}
Mom. Investors Trust ........17.30	10.77
Putnam Growth - ......>......7J1 10.73
Teleulrien Electronics .......V.. 1.41	Ml
Welllnoton Fund .... ...........US
GnBKrPwr:,,.:.............— isiti
AVBRAatl rhe Asseclatfll F 14	11 ~I4
Week Age Month Age Year Ago
jglJM
^Ralle Tnd.ufll.Fgn. L.~V(
"l2.7' 102.5	*1	7*1.4
12.4 102.5 8.1 *14
02.7	102.2 MJ H 4 Si lip M.4 71.1 , (O IM 10M M.1
02.7	101.5 MJ tli 74.1
MJ 100J	17.2	Ml	72.7
1HB w © *
STOCKS 21 Indus ... 8 *fl|« ... 15 IMS ...
MOON AVHRAGIt
.... 077.14+2.34 .... 221.10+0.35 .... 133.17-0.04 .... 311J1+0.57
Moderate Trading
Big 3Motors Firm on Mart
ghee *
Cong Battalion Is Hit Hard
NEW YORK (AP)—Big Three GM dragged on and a lingering
motors firmed in a mixed stock market early today. Trading was moderate.
The Columbus Day semi-holiday closed many banks and several Commodity exchanges, cutting down attendance in Wall Street.
Fractional gains were posted by General Motors, Chrysler and Ford although the strike at
effect on auto industry sales was predicted.
American Motors and Stude-baker eased while steels were unchanged or very narrowly mixed.
New York Central and Pennsylvania Railroad continued last week’s strength, making fractional gains. Alleghany Carp., company for Centra),
rose • to 12* on a sizable block of 15,000 shares.
Pacific Tin nudged to the up side in a resumption of its big percentage rise of last week.
★ ★ #■ ■ .* Opening blocks included: Radio Corp., up % at 84 on 3,000 shares; American Telephone, up W at 68% on 3,500; and New York Central, up % at 50% on 3,200.
The TJew York Stock Exchange
Allog Corp MM Pw 1 AllledCh 1.00
(Ms.)	High	ls«	Last
7	17vT	177b	171%
2 *57% 157% MV,-1	1271s	127b	127e	-
25	4Mb	45W	4544	+
It	164b	167b	167b	+
(	M	M	M	...
44	247%	(Mb	297%	+
207	13	iMB	13	+
4	2474	26Vi	2474	+
4	53'%	537s	53Vj	-
'7	477b	477b	4Mb	...
27	fft	237b	gjl	+

I ' 4774 4774 4474 + f 14V, 16	W* ..
AmMotors 1«
I 347b 347% 34Vb-B Kb.. 17b 77b +
* ^JL++»
i 2374 33’A 3314 —
Bolt GE 1.32 . 2 SITVJOti 387b + Beaunlt 1.20	3 32 " 32	32	-

Both Sll 1.50
Sj,j#
rar,5*2
’Sf My 1 unswlck Bucy Er .70* Budd Co .40 Bullard .40 Butova ,40b Burllnd 1.40 Burroughs 1
•_____*	«S7%	4—
'15	257%	25	25
3	447b '	447b	447b
15	17%	17%	17%
3	357% -357%	357%
32 41 .' 4074 41 1	..
4	427%	427%	427%	—	7%
1§	447%	44	647%	-	‘
•23	507%	507%	5074	+
1	417%	417%	417%	—
3	4774	4774	4774	+
14	.17%	M%	J74	+
2	3Mb	347b	3Mb	—
7 157% 157% M___________
5	2574	2574	2574	-	7%
CallahM ,20t Calum H .40
CampRL «a
Camp ip m
Celanoso 1____
Cant SW 1.20
" TO Cp 1 Jo -toad J0
27 1274 1$7% lTS% + 7% 12	217%	Mb	2174,+ t
3	1774	177%	177b	....
11	347b	(41%	347%	....
10	37	347%	37	. .
1	417%	40H	447b	- 7
1	40	M	40	....
3	57	577%	59
5	1774	1774	1774	+ 7
12	377b	3444	36H	- f
2	70Vb	707%	70Vb	. .
44. 4570 S '457% + :
2	147b	147b	147b	+ 1
5	3074	3074	307%	....
. 2^1*
ClttosSv 2.40 Coca Cola 3 -HgPal 1.20 (illnRad .40 lit Indust
,JS i
Col Gas 1.22 CMPM 1.02t ComlCra t.M ComSolv 1.10 ComSat Corp Conidls 3.30 Titoelnd I teas 2.30 ilalntr |
* Air .41 It can 2 — it Ins 2.40 CaM Oil 2 Control Data Coppor Rng» Corn Pd 1.50 Craw C .757 Cram cork Cram Zaft I CrucStaql JO Cudahy Pk
I	Mk	M	iih
15	Bib	34	M%	+	7%
II	2074	207%	8*4	+	70
■ 4	4M0	4M'«	K
13	Ini	4174	4iU	,	_
23	4074	577b	4074	t	7b
3	37Vb	37	i7ib	+	**■
4	5574	5574	M*4	+
14	237%	23 Vi	«7%	.,
20	M7b	30	30V%
I	Mb	407b	407%	+
5	2274	227%	22V,	..
I iR no 7*o. .
34	1U0	117%	11%%	—
2 207% 2074 20V* + I
2	44'% 417%' 4470 ... 7 347% 34 SG —7 1 MO. MO 63V%+ '
3	St* mo Bib -
DftEdi* 1
Disney .4Uo	i,	w	WM
Dlst Sea 1.70	1	4174	MO
DomeMln 80	9	31	3074
DoiigAtr 1.419	14	BB	M

East Air LM EastOP 1.49f EastKo 2.20a Eaton Mfg 2 Ei A Music Etoct Assoc , EIPasoNG 1 EmersonEl 1 . EmerRad JO
ErtoLacknRR , iyiraWd .tor “.“——i M ■
FalrCam 50g Falrch Hiller
MEjMFZi
FedDStr 1.50 FerroCp 1.70
para Mot t Forem D J Froopt 5 1.: Fruenf 1.M
GPubSvc ,33e OPubUt 1JI GenTelAEI 1 GonTIre JO GaPocHIc 1b OuilyOII .IM Gillette 1.10a Glen A Id JOe Goodrch 2.20
GreoeCo ’ i'.lO
GrenWCS Lto GtAAP 1.20e
11 35*4 3S*b 35H .
2	n 'W It +
4 1207% 1307% 1307% -1 45V%. 451% 45V% —
25	374	374	374
1 flT fiT aT +
4 207% 207b 207b .....
I	4374 4374 43*4 + 1%
| fl It II + 7B
jfSSt?
II	»7b 177% M% ■
4 217b 217b flH
—F—
12 247% 247% 24V% — 7% I (70 07* 77b ...
1 1774 1774 1774 ... j| 717% 71W 71V. ...
12 4770 • G —
34 4M 4574 « • + .. 4 307b (07% 307b + 7%
3	227% 221% Mb
4	54V. MVb M% ■
JSSfu
i 321b
Mb +
1	(770 377% 077% + 7%
2	207% 20H 204%
31	37V% 37	31
M M7% 1770 M
5 07	17	19
a 1027% 1M70 10 U 12	32 f
"	47%	47% 414
M WTO (774 1*7%
37 141% 3414 3474
32	217% 2170 117%
4 (Mb (47% 547%........
J H
» |H% aw fm
(hds.) High Lew Last Cl
Hanna Co lo
n
12	39V%	377%	39V%	- 7%
5	437%	437%	417%	. .
4	347%	14	34	— 7b
4	177b	117%	177b	+ ■
12 IM IM, IM -I )	417%	4170	4110	.....
1	537%	53V.	$31%	— 7%
2	,517%	5114	511%	+ "
1	11*4	117%	11*4	+
4 . 4*4	4*4	4*4 ..
Tex GulfProd TexGSul .40 Texlhrim .00 TexPLd .35e
IntMinerals 2 IntNIck 2.20* UPeck. .Slip itPeper 1.20
it w iS
I 87’% 871% 871% ..
31 54*% 541% !
Kayaer R.40a Kennecott 4 KernCLd 2.40 Karr Me l-» KimbClark Koppers r Korvette
i 151% 141% 157% -t-

4 611% 617% 417% — I Co 2	2 517% (17% 517% ....
11 377% 3770 377b + 1 7 4Mb 4470 441% -1 2 347% 347b 341b - 1
|j|CB l.jG
USGypsum 1 US indust US-Rub 2.20
InMotch .40
In OIIM .00Jf I M „	, ■
Iplohn 7	* 4 51*4 517b 51*4 + 1%
—V.
Venad Corp ( 111% 187b 1Mb + 7b Vartan As	—
VendoCo .40 VoEIPw 1.12
WomPlet JO
WUnTel 1.40 WstgAB 1.40 WestgEI 1.20 Whirlpool 2 WhlteM 1.20
,	.-	14’%	14’%	.
5	40*0	400	40*0	+
•3	34’%	34’%	34’%	+
5	M%	357%	157%	- 7%
11	41*4	4170	61*4	'
-IU- -
51	34	137b	34
It	»7%	327%	327%
11 Ut% 251% (Mb + 3 147% 14 _	+
I	27’% 271% m* — 1
; io inumt 447b *
II	(Mb 277%327'%
.* 457% 457% 451%
(hds.)	HM	Lew	Lari	Chg.
0	357%	35W	351%	+7f%
S	527%	527%	521%	..
—T—
i 34 227% 221% 221% +
12 047% 147% 84'% -2 0 257	57	-
M	43*4	411%	4174	+
1 347% 34'% 341% -t I 471% 477% 477% -t
I 541% 547% — %
I 2370 23	23	— '%
M 317b 30b 30b + 7%
4	3710 3910 371% — V
40	4070	40	4070	+	'
4710	471%	477%	+	'
3	321%	32>%	327%	—<
10	.	49V.	49V.	49'%	...
2	271%	297%	2Mb	+	'
—X—
28 1307% 1271% 1307% +2
—Y—
5	01% 0	527% + I
—Z—
14 701% 707% 707% — '

i the foregoing table ora a________
------nents baaed on the last quarterly
semi-annual declaration. Special MB Ira divldandm nr neyments not de_.»
i Identified In the
I footnotes
i stock dlvldond. i
’ ex-distribution date, g—Paid
after stock

— .n arrears. w-PaW toll ________________
d omitted, deferred or no anion taken lest dividend meeting, r—Declared " i In *1944 plus stock dividend, t—Pi t In slock during 1744, estimated ce_ ito on ex-dividend or ex-distribution
—Sales in 'full.
i—Ex dividend, v
rlbuted. wi—When Issued, nd—Next day
v|—In bankruptcy or rtcelVbrshlp or being reorganized under the Bankruptcy Act, or securities assumed by such co— Denies, fn—Foreign Issue aubiect to terest equalization tax.
American Stocks
Aerojet .50 — Petrel A .11 La Gat 1.20
____Tiers
Assd Oil A G Atlas Cp wl. Barnes Eng
-Exchange
It.) High Lew Lbet Chg. fig
I 27’% 297% 291%
K11-1411-1411-14 .. 31 4H 41%	4*a ..
6 31-16 31-1431-16 ..
Data Cant 'mrjM luliy cp .in ■rgo Oils .
EW
tt I . M 77% +
Mackey
McCrc—
Mead
McCrary wt 16 314 “—1 •—% .48	23 1K% 1
ybden	1	28
...jPkMiW .10 245	51
Pancst Per Ml 2V ~ ' C Group 3.251 3 31 rry’Ram 30 167 W Air	7	7
signo toil a 1	8	30
Sperry R wt 7 lb m Syntax Cp ,20g 19 587% 57 Technlcol .50	27	177b	17*4
UnConfrol .20 xd 7	4*4	4*4
WebbA Knapp 25 AM 5-16
2714 30	+ 7%
?77b
flH 1% 7b
Treasury Position
Oct. 4, 1941 0 8,014.949,559.0 0 9,099,558.238.18 “■ “—‘ as~ ‘vly l—
. 29,925.5*9,211.42
jact to statutory Nmtt.
55 Dead Said Left in Field After Cattle
SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) U.S. military sources <uiiri today a Communist Viet Cong battalion left 55 men if on ttie field and retreated with 12 oxcarts filled with dead afid wounded after a battle Sunday near Go Dau Ha, 40 miles northwest of Saigon.
Government^, forces, which captured U prisoners, listed losses of 28 killed, 38 wounded and 32 missing in the action.
Twelve miles away, two Americans and a Vietnamese battalion commander who were with government elements in reserve were killed by explosion of a land mine that blew up their jeep.
U.S. military sources said the mine was electrically detonated by a Communist soldier some distance from the road, 28 miles northwest of the capital. The device was not an ordinary contact mine.
BOTH ADVISERS
The Americans were an officer and a sergeant advising the battalion commander. The toll of American dead in, combat , in Viet Nap since 1962 rose to 203.
a separate incident, a U.S. Army enlisted crewman aboard an armed helicopter was slightly wounded Sunday by Viet Cong fire.
WWW
The Go Dau Ha battle was set off by a Red night attack on two government posts. Hit two hours before dawn, the outnumbered defenders were forced from one post. The Viet Cong mad deep 'penetration in the other. But the garrisons rallied, retook the one and held the other.
100 SHELLS
Government-artillery base Go Dau Ha played a major role in saving the posts, lobbing about 100 shells on Viet Cong positions. The Red force pulled out when Vietnamese planes arrived at dawn.
U.S. Buying Lures Being Used Abrdad
DAWSON
By SAM DAWSON
AP Bus loess News Aaalyst
NEW YORK - Lures for impulse buying are being added to the Americanization of consum-habits in' many lands.
E u ropean merchants are showing in4 creased interest in this and other American methods of mass merchandising and ad-, vertising. Their Japanese counterparts are reported showing even more.
- W' *w . w.
Not everyone is happy about the invasion by Yankee consumer products, supermarkets, and buying and credit methods. A U.S. envoy to the Common Market has told a National Association . of Manufacturers trade expansion mission that many Europeans fear their old ways of life may disappear under-the rush to imitate American customs.
But here at home the Point-of-Purchase Advertising Institute (POPAI, pronounced Pop-Eye) reports that its overseas membership has quadrupled in the last five years and now represents all continents.
EXPECTS VISITORS
It expects more than 100 foreign visitors at its annual show next month in Newv, York. The lure: how to get thCir customers to spend 33 per cent more on impulse because of new advertising and market-place displays.
In addition to its 17 Canadian members, there are 35 institute members scattered through jftfapan, South Africa, England, Switzerland, France, Italy, Mexico, Belgium, the Netherlands, Sweden, Venezuela, Iran, Australia and New Zealand.
Apd one POPAI member in
southern California is indoctri-1 combination erf purple and green, nating a Peace Corps volunteer is acceptable because Shinto re-who can spread the idea .in the ligious leaders once wore them.
business community in Peru.
American manufacturers, exporters, salesmen and design- nerala to the Chinese, ers have been learning the hard rapid CHANGE way that what creates the buy- Jack-A Wichert) president of ing impulse in an American popAI Eur6pe is now at may backfire abroad -Riejp- ^ stage in retail distribution of proach now .s to adapt advertts- ^ ^ ^ mieA gtates ing and product displays to local £new just jor to World War
piKtnmc nnn ininqvnprasipq I______	.	.....
customs and idiosyncrasies. PATIENCE NECESSARY To Europeans, for example, newness isn't the most important thing, and the hard sell to falls flat over there. Timeliness in launching a selling .campaign is even more important in Europe than here, and patience.'
a top requisite for (ny selling can methods. So now they're campaign.	-studying the inpulse -buying
But the institute reports that which American merchants say~ > its overseas members are be- moves much of their stocks.
Children Like Safety Gloves
NEW YORK UR - Steelplant workers are setting a fashion style for children without knowing it. Fluorescent orange-colored gloves, worn by safety-minded steelworkers because they can be seen from a mile have attracted attention for youngsters.
“Steel Phots,” published by American Ireland Steel Institute, reports that parents are delighted with the new fashion, because mitten-wearing youngsters can be easily seen by car drivers. Also, if a mitten is lost, it can be quickly spotted.
« * * ★
The bright orange color is the result of mixing a fluorescent pigment with vinyl. In addition to its eye-catching vquality, the mitten is waterproof mid well-insulated.
3	*	»	* t
*	Successful %
i
*
Investing *
i t
But the combination of black, white and blue suggests only fu-
Change is coining rapidly now, however. Supermarkets are nourishing over there. That old American custom, otv-the-cuff buying, is catching bold fast. . * ★ ★
In countries newly throbbing with prosperity, merchants are watching and imitating Ameri-
ginning to do some fine designing of displays on their own, | with a more lighthearted quality of approach:
★ .	*	★
In many lands advertising and display must mind the local-color charts. An International Air Transport Association official	notes	that	colors	can
make a	lot of	difference in	pro-
moting	sales.	Red	is a lucky
color to Chinese, while yellow is to the Thais.
In several Asian countries the
Retail outlets here are growing ever more mechanized. Self-service has replaced an estimated total of 1.5 million sales clerks since 1945. This takps into account the increased sales volume and number of outlets opened since then.
Replacing them, along With the customs- own leg,work, have been display techniques for products and prior selling of the shopper through advertisements in various media.
Berlin Experl Says Russia Still Wants lo Oust West
“BERLIN (AP) — Former U-S. foreign policy adviser Robert D. Murphy thinks the Soviet Union is as determined as ever to drive the United States and its allies out of West Berlin.
Murphy said in an interview here Sunday he believes the present ^absence of pressure in Berlin results not from a Soviet desire for an entente with the West but because of Soviet difficulties with Red China and Moscow’s other international problems.
Crazy Crash, by Thunder
SYDNEY (Jf) - A utility truck was parked in the street, handbrake on and. in gear.
Storm clouds gathered overhead. Then came three great thunderclaps, so loud that houses shook and windows rattled. The utility truck started to run down hill, and kept going for 200 yards until it hit another vehicle.
Utility owner T. O’Dea said he believed the thunder knocked his car out of gear and released the handbrake.
jjs«arr..:
■ 83.95—<1.05 | Gulf Ml 1J4
+1% I im on %
S=!U
B II
..+P +1J +.1
444.7 BU WJ -	465J	144.7	143.2
.	443.1	10.7	10.7	324.0
440.0	177J 141J 323J
.	394.7	142J	144.2	277.0
.	464.2	1MJ	143.2	320:4
.	400J	1507	140.7	. 204.7
407.1	152J' 151.1 . 204J
.	341.1	171J	134.0	242.7
Director Sees Changes On and Off the Stage
NEW Y&RK (AP) - Director Morton Da Costa finds stars and audiences are both changing.
“Stars today, instead of existing in a kind of regal aloofness, want total identification, with audiences,” be says. “Audiences used to want a protagonist to admire—now they want to see a play, in which someone is worse off than they are.” <
By ROGER E. SPEAR
Q) “We would like to invest $2,060 in a good common stock that is not priced too high. We have been considering Chrysler Corporation, even though it has had a big run-np. Do yon consider this stock speculative, or one with ffiture growth?”	J.S.
(A) Since the management changes in recent years, Chrys-ler’s performance has been spectacular. I like the stock and believe earnings will reach. $6 per share in 1904, at which rate it* sells for. only about 10 times earnings. The stock is volatile, however, and could be hurt badly whenever we have a bad automobile year.
If you have a list, of other stocks, a good backlog of savings, and can afford some market risk, I think you could buy Chrysler.
If the reverse is the case— as seems likely from your let* — I would buy a more stable issue with good growth possibilities, such as Consolidate) Foods.
* * *
Q) “I have several * shares of Consumers Power $4.59 preferred. These are not listed on the New York Stock Exchange. Could you tell me their present value and how to go about selling these shans?” .	H.W.
A) Please pardon me for contradicting you, but your Consumers PoWer 4W per cent preferred shares are listed on the New York Stock Exchange. Since they do not trade very actively, few papers — other than the |>ig metropolitan dailies — quote them because of space on the Big Board that trade odd lots (fewer than 100 shares) by auction instead of through an odd lotdealer.
The last transaction. I have seat was 90 shares at i004i. Any dealer will sell your shares for you. If you don’t know of one, ask your local banker to recommend a dealer to you. Perhaps the bank would handle the transaction, making a small' sendee charge for so doing.
Mr. Spear cannot answer ail mail personally but will answer all questions possible in hit column.
(Copyright, 1904)
“I think that their determination is just as positive today as it ever, was to drive us out of West Berlin,” Murphy declared.
Murphy was political adyiser to Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower during World War. II and to Gen. Lucius D. Gay, then military governor of the U.S. zone
that because I believe that this Easern sector has to be opened up in one way or another, and I think, it can be done over a period of time,” Murphy said.
MUST DISAPPEAR “I think this wall myst disappear. I believe that if they un* derstand that to be our determination - and objective, the chance of getting it will °be-much greater than if we just walk away as we have in the
iary governor oi me u.a. zone ~	:----^ —,------;-----
of Germany, when the Russians b,fites of «er^« <****" P™8* blockaded Berlin in 1948. He ™ them, ’ Murphy said. retireffVm the U.S'. Foreign ,.Hte add«*: ‘1	1 ^eve
Service in 1959 and is president !tbat we sh«uld stand bV
.	WhpnPVPr thorn coomr t/% Ha an
of a glass company.
SHOULD BREAK IT Murphy said if the Russians should blockade Berlin again, tht United States should break It by force. '
wide and in Europe would be shattered if we did not,” the former international troubleshooter for Presidents Roosevelt and Truman declared..
1	★	I
Murphy also advocated firm action if the Communist close East Berlin to Allied military personnel in uniform. He said the U.S. government seems prepared to agree to a denial of allied access to the Soviet sector and that this would te “simply
Murphy said he thought now _ may be a good time because of j the Kremlin’s . problems, to negotiate permanent and acceptable access rights to West' Berlin without bringing the East Germans into it:
“I- also think that we should study carefully our own |
whenever there seems to be 3 opportunity . for the rollback which has been talked about so much in the past but has never been implemented.
“Certainly we should not have an acceptance of this whole I think our position world I Eastern European situation
because sdbner or later the wheel will tifn and there will be opportunities to put pressure on the Soviets and cause them to relinquish her hold on some of these areas.
*• * *
“Now East Germany probably is going to be a very difficult decision for them to make, but eventually I would think that circumstances would develop and that would enable the West to either force them out or
another step backward in the j show them the wisdom of get-process of forcing us out of the ting out.” area.” ’	’	. —
“1 think that goes further than
News in Brief
Kenneth Pantone, 27, 912 Bay, yesterday reported the theft of $115 from his homew....,r (_ j
Police are investigating the theft of a stereo, portable television and phonograph records, I total value $405, frpm the Theodore Tademy residence at 5211 S. Paddock.
Michael Diedrich, 5874 Liver-nois, Troy, yesterday reported the theft of $242 worth of construction equipment f r o in a building site on Harding near Livernois ip Troy.
Antique Show and' Sale: 111 a.m.-lO- p.ni., Oct. 13,. 14,
Kiwanipns Name New Leaders, Board Members
John F. Stefanski, 1137 w.
H uron, Waterford Township, has been. elect- -ed president of the4 West Pontiac ' Kiwanis Gub far the m coming year.
|f The new president owns and operates |a Waterford Township radio' and television STEFANSKI dealership and repair service.
m	Other officers elected were
trow ” <rf-“c h r (s t “Lutoeran | Q0™11" Sweet, first vice prod-] dent; Peter Metes, second vice president; Glenn Smith, secre* Acjv „| tary; and Michael E. Daniels, treasurer. -	. ■ ,
Rummage Sale: GniM. 2-AH Newly elected to serve on the Saints Church. Tues., Oct. 13,11 board are t>r.- Kenneth Dick-p.m. Exchange St. entrance:	stein, James Scribner Uid Jay
;•(	. ' • . Adv. | Young. ,
Church, Telegraph and Lone Pine R4., Bloomfield Hills.