QHl COLOR McNamara: N-Attack Could Kill 149 Million in US. WASHINGTON (AP) Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara said today that a massive Russian nuclear attack on the United States couW take 14S million American lives. McNamara told Congress it is unHkely that a Soviet nuclear attack would spare American cities at the start and hit only military targets. The defense chief thus discarded thf no - cities theory aouM U,S. strategists antertjilned, I ............. which have enterttlined, hopefully, in predicting the form of any general war. In his annual military posture statement, prepaid as the fonndation for his testimony before the House Armed Services Committee, McNamara did not name Red China as an immediate menace to American targets, despite her detonation of a nuclear test device and a U.S. prediction that another may be forthcoming in the near future. But he did not rule out the long-range menace of the Chinese Communist power. “Although results may be slow in coming," he said after discussing China’s economic and industrial difficulties, “there is no reason to suppose that the Chinese cannot in time produce medium-range and even long-rapge ballistic missile systems and arm them with thermonuclear warheads. Given the hostility the regime has shewn, this is a most disturbing long tenn prospect.” CALCUI^TED CASUAL’TIES McNainara calculated U.S. casualties as proportional to the force, and the time to use it, ready for response to a Soviet first strike. If Soviet nuclear fire fell •n American nrbhn areas si-mnkaaeeusly with fire « UJS. missile and air bases amf ether slrategie retaHatary systems. up te 141 million wouM be killed; if city attack were delayed until after the blasting of military bases, the fatalities might be held to a top of IfZ million. McNamara said there was no Pentagon program “within this general range of expenditures which would reduce fatality to a leva! much below M million unless the enemy delayed his attack on our citim long enough for our missile forces to play a major damage limiting role" by destroying enemy missiles at their source. He looked also at the other side of the coin, what a U.S. retaliatory blow would do to Russia. He said that, based on a projection of the UureM inia the early IfTO's: “Our caknlations show that even after absorbing a first strike, our already authorized strategic missile force, if it were directed against the aggresaor’s urban areas, could cause more than IM million fatalities and destroy about M per cent of his industrial capacity. “If our manned bombers were (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) Tha WboHit Warmer Tomorrow VOL. 123 NO. 10 THE PONTIAC PRESS ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MIC HKJAN. THI RSDAV. FEBRUARV 18, 1905-52 PAGE.S ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL Home Edition BLAST-OFF — The Atlas-Agena rocket is shown lifting away froiw its Cape Kennedy launch pad yesterday in an attempt to boost the Ranger 8 spacecraft on its trip & the moon to take pictures in the area of the Sea of Tranquillity. U.S. scientists expect the mission to mp moreTtonr 4,0Dtr phblds. US. Moon Shot Steered to Path PASADENA, Calif, 1^)—Ranger 8 streaked on ward the moon today after what scientists say was to- LBJ Urges Businessmen to Cut Foreign Spending WASHINGTON CW — President Johnson appealed to business leaders today “to join hands with me in a voluntary partnership’’ and help attack the gold-dollar drain by slashing investment and lending abroad. Johnson, who called 350 industrialists and bankers to the White House to discuss the country’s nagging __________ balance-of-payments prob- ___Jem, said in remarks pre- 1-Man, J-Vofe .. • PN • 11 offices and call in your in Dem Bi on your vice \-rii presidents. I want you to ask I I n I consult every time IfOm© KUle *^®y f»ce » decision that involves sending money abroad. . , . , And I count on you ... to cut A^ewnty tome rule bUl^dl-^^^^^ the bone.” caHy different frora an onginaT Wayne County bill being sup- Johnson noted that the flow ported by Oakland County, was Pf*v«te capital to other introduced yesterday by Sen. increased by |2 bll- Terry L. Troutt, D-Romulus. l«^ The entire Backed by 14 Senate Demo- Wnent* deflclt last year crats, the bill provides that any "’•* ^ billion, county legislative body must be in asking the business lead-elected from districts appor- ers to cut sharply their in-tioned on a strict population vestments and loans overseas, basis. Johnson said: It docs not require each city “i know this will involve appears we have a figlit Hudson opened the twe-benr or township to have a repre- some pain. And it will nwan hands,” Mayor.Pro Tern meeting by stating that the sentative on the county legis- passing up a few opportunities H. Hudson told 71 mem- object of the tax reform com- latlve body. for proffu But in the end your appointed Clt- mittee was to (coordinate the Delos Hamlin, chairman of the country, your industry and your ^ income tax campaign. HELICOPTER BURNS — An overturned from Saigon during a recent troop assault. U.S. Army helicopter burns after it was shot - One crewman was killed and thre« Injured in down by Viot Cong ground fire about 35 miles-the crash: ‘-‘- ~ --- To 'Carry Ball' for Income Levy Citizens Tax Group Organizes May Not Need Provocation for New Raids LBJ Cites 'Continuing Aggression by Reds/ Warns of U.S. Actions WASHINGTON (ifl — The United States evidently has d e c i d e d tq_ strike military targets in North Viet Nam without waiting for specific attacks by Communist forces in South Viet Nam to retaliate against. This is understood to be the meaning of President Johnson's statement yesterday on ^Tiet-namese war policy, a week after the first series of air strikes against North Vietnnmese inffl-tratioil targets. Johasm told a conference of basiaestmea here the people of Sontl^ Viet Nam are under attack “That is controlled and that is directed from ootside their conatry,” a reference to the U.S. con- 1./CIUS ndiiiuii, ciiairman (N me a»u jruui Oakland County Board of Super- stockholders will all be better 9 ____________.u- off for it ” me widely n widely representative cit- He pointed out to the group apparently successful maneuver designed to send it visors, declined comment on the <>« H " ‘hat taxpapers would not have cr^hing onto .he lunar surface ear,yS,U.rday»r„. .. . ' ceunty torn, rule) banked mr»a,t. earn in In- " ,'If'2'’,T '’’’’’’”’’’’' Scientists at Jet Propulsion Laboratory said pre- tin said. Merest advantage of a fraction *"come tax. of I per cent, Johnson said: liminary indications are that the camera-carryjng wayne county bill spacecraft will land on or near its target, a broad Oakland County, through its balance if the state were to also pass an income tax. Job Accident Cost Is Estimated in Report and dusty plain called l«8*slatiVe program has been “For every million dollars Tno-e. T -11 supporting the original Wayne of this drain on our balance of mare iranquillatltis, the county bill which is almost payments, you are earning an Sea of Tranquillity. identical to one that died in after-tax return of approxi- It will be 3 p.m. however, House committee last.'year aft- mately $2,500 a year. I ask you before they can calculate Rang- Psssing the Senate. er’8 new path precisely. With- The apportionment of the Kent. against tha nation’s Organized by the City Commission, the group included " " citizens from the seven com- Hu'lso" ss'd c‘‘y '"come tax-mission districts and repre- ®s would probably be voided by sentatives of three city em- ®"y *®''y- ploye organizations. DETAILS PROGRESS ___ Joe G. Benson; 43; df 46 Chip- City Manager Joseph A. War- to"'balance thir“‘smal7'‘ga'in new com- ren defiled progress in the city . ... ............urhils Mice TnAnno Van. end cltfkd Pnntiac « “fnr'o lift. I mittee, while Miss JoAnne Van- and cited Pontiac’s “face lift- CmCAGO (AP) - The Na- out the cot^^ioIi'this’s^i'cec'rMt County Board of Supervisors Only yesterday, the Presi- y®«"*- «nn I c r’n ii ij ^ouW have missed the trailing unconstitutional last dent announced plans to cut **!"®*“ secreta^. Warren said the city’s optional Safety Council said today the U36 S September under the one-man, business taxes by more than P"bl>c «c- „.ting fund has Mien behind, that deaths from work accidents - one-vote interpretation of the $700 million this year through ® campaign Headd«ltliatdperatingmon- totaled 14,200 Ust yedr and the _ mwaver at 5 a.m. 14th Amendment. administrative changes in tax ^ mapped out and the ies are hobbled by the 10-mill cost to the nation’s ciconomy * * w writerfiff rules. members notified m ux llmitotlon In the city ch from on-job accidents was $5 loornev 234.000-mile j[ j^y disclosure, at a meet- ter, J y- Michigan Supreme Court, as ing of the National Industrial INFORMAL MEETING maneuver involved a long most observers believe it will Conference Board, failed to Miss VanTassel and ............................ ........, series of commands to make the be, it will become necessary to-spark applause although the are slated to meet with the com- levy, Warren said a hike . spacecraft twist around in space reorganize the entire county gov- size of the cut went well beyond mission at its next informal property tax millage was re-wv tax I and fire a direction-changing emment setup in Michigan. earlier expectations. meeting Wednesday. jected last April ^ I rocket for 59 seconds, enough to JOE G. BENSON guerrillas are directed by Norto Viet Nam. The President also spoke of “continuing aggression ” by the Communists and “continuing actions” by the United States. * *. * He said: “We must all understand that we will persist in the defense of freedom, and our continuing actions will be those which are justified and those that are made necessary by the continuing aggression of others. These actions will be measured and fitting and adequate.” CONVINCE REDS The U.S. strategic objective jn strikes at bases in North Viet Nam is to convince the Conunu-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Other points mentioned by Warren included: • There are definite advan- „ , . . . ’ semor citizens — most , Explaimng why the City Com- „{ their kinds of income are ex-VanTassel ®nd Benson missmn decided on tije uKtune empt and they would benefit fvi tn ITkAPt untn fnA AAITI. lAt/l/ U/oPWAn ea««4 a in 4Ua « ^ V’® from the promised 3-mill prop- Mercury Will Drop, Then Bounce Back' I change the spacecraft’s course j I by more than 1,600 miles. Officials Hit Land-Fill Plans • The income tax is really Don’t be discouraged by to- tax reform because the city is night’s low temperatures, for the gaining a major new source of mercury will be peppier tomor-revenue. ' ™w, says the weatherman. A • Taxes are levied on equal- If ‘® = « f ” . thl9 PVAnifUr 1a Ka f/\llnnr^ Ktr I was not. I SHOULD TELL Later, a spokei^an for the* laboratory said temporary fad- ' _____ _____________ _______ _____________________________________________ ing of signals prevented scien- j, m m a m mm a a m a M M a ff WI f ^ assessments does not change lists from learning whether the 4 ,-1. . n ' | -the equalized value. craft was poMed exactlyTn W- ,,/^’^'**^ /oUotwnp statement and MichiganVWghway dcvel- pr«Ktoce idaslta dtortile wall recreational areas for the coun- • General Motors will oav a right direction when the rocket 1^. Township opment, industrial expansion, food «k1 beverage coaulners. ty. goJd dSl more S ^v StnZiTu ‘‘•versification of one of me^uJf “ they had rw reason to be^eyt it in t^ ^ ^ ^ the gravel interests built the “Water poUution is another .Any state income lax cuiy JSiStagI' ♦ * “The proposed land-fill would Sea have to recognize city in- At 2 p.m. ttle thS^ter reg- ^ "A rf ae .Lk mate ^ » k, da.-... erSt 0^1? w “ very apparent that it is un- « to 50 years of future mining ^ * * * , area is at Oxford. Mahy of the !®n ^ B) allow the Detroit Metro- and its irreplaceable benefit to . .w j streams and creeks flowing Area Regional Planning the county. down thmugh Oaklid c3 pact ^ ftimni^on to transport mU- AFFECTING GROWTH uefgai^ MtioIS dfaWlnS ^ave their ^ * a ★ Uons of tons of garbage and this beginning here. In a 13-minate-46-secoad pe- i? 8"bage to the Oxford aL is PBTOELAND CLOSE TO SURFACE riiHl before craslntandl.* 'on^ SST ^ ‘® ^ible is close to the mooa’s east ceatral por- viuage of Oxford. 1 „ d u s t r i a 1 and residential developed p r i m e «« d^^l the .surface and the porous nation, Ranger S’s six television Oakland County cannot af- growth. The future of the Coun- jand surrounding beautiful Ox- the soil add to this pos- "alt its economic ty’s mosf important tax base lord Lake. sibility of pollution. than 4,IM pictiires of the sir-face. The photos are expected to be I better than those obtained last I July by Ranger 7. . m J SM. t» I p.m. HI growth in its most potential area. ’This regkm now contains its richest natural resource. It is khowu as the pavel capital of the world. , “It has been, and in the future should be, most, important in tbo gFosrth of Oddand County important I improvement is being severely hampered. “Before this became knowa, Bopp-Deefcer be., having outgrown its Royal Oak and Bir- dUties, began constmetion of a M.MI square foot ptaat to of this and moch more was done as part of tbeir. planned rehabilitation of land as the gravel supply is exhausted. “It Seems the sanitary land) fill group would rather turiili these projecta into nmtaxabla sibility of pollution. “The Los Aageles land-fUl plan that the Detroit group is pushing u a model has very different conditipas than exist here. They are using dwyous approximately 3M feet deep which have little other eco-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Hawaiian Tour Attracts Many Initial response to the proposed Pontiac Press Hawaiian Tour has been excellent. It has encounu^ The Press to proceed with plaia and complete arrangemepte for the tour. Current plans call for at least 40 persons to participatf The Hawaiian tour will leave the moraiag of April 2 aad return April 17. Approximate cost for the trip, including transportation, hotel, most meals, island hopping by plane, and many other extras, will be $895 per person. _ For adklitiooal informatioa Press — Hawaiian Tour Dept. tserv^oas, c THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1965 'Many Would Die in N-Raid' (Continued From Page One) then to mount a follow-on attack against the urban area, fatalities would be increased by iO to IS million and industrial production by two. McNamara also detailed the war in Sooth Viet Nam for United States cannot pnli out. “The present situation in South Viet Nam is grave but by no means hopeless,’’ he said. McNamara stressed that the outcome in South Viet Nam is the key to stemming Communist expansion throughout strategic Southeast Asia and other emerging areas of the world. GREAT STAKES “Considering the great stakes involved in this struggle,” he declared, “I see no other kltor-native for the United States" than continuing to support South Viet Nam against the Red guerrilla onslaught. He diacnssed the war, and its wide implications, in a 217-page statement. There was no mentkai of such developments as (Communist mortar and bomb attacks U.S. installations in South Viet Nam, nor American retaliatory air strikes against North Viet Nam. w * * McNamara’s public statement was a censored version of a much longer secret report he made to the committee. It covered his estimate of the world situation in general, and his proposals for strengthening U.S. military power under a 149-billion defense budget. Oime in Pontiac rose by nearly 12 per cent in 1964, but jthe number of offenaes clewed per cent arrests atoo rose by 6 per cent during the year. ’These figures were revealed' in the year-end crime report released recently by the Pontiac Police Department. Increases were noted in five of the seven major classifiea-tions of crimes —criminal homicide, forcible rape, aggravated assault, larceny and aiito theft. The number of robberies and Pontiac Crime Up 12 Per Cent burglaries .were down during 1964 when compared with 1963. TV pnll/v» twmrded 3,928 mS-jor crimes during 1964. In 1963, 3,500 were listed. Looking at each classification: Recreation Director to Leave City Leonard T. Buzz, recreation supervisor for the City of Pontiac for the past 13 years, is resigning March 12, to become recreational general supervisor for the city of Dayton, Ohio. Buzz of 417 Kuhn is a native of Chicago, ni. He wttendechcoh^ lege and worked in various recreational activities in that city before coming to Pontiac. During hit years with the City of Pontiac, Buzz has teen the department doable its activities. He has been instrumental in adding clubs and hat increased adnK activities and youth programs. Buzz has worked closely with the Pontiac Board of Education in advancing participation recreational activities. Under his supervision and guidance, the Hayes Jones Recreational. Center was opened last year. STF?P UP “Naturally, I am sorry leave the many friends 1 have made in Pottiac. The new job, however, offers more opportu- for me,” Buzz said. Buzz, 39, is married and has three children. , Austin Yields to Lee on State Auditor Post LANSING (AP) - Detroit accountant Albert Lee cinched the job of legislative auditortoday job of legislative auditor, today with the withdrawal of leading contender Richard Austin. .......... _ _________ _____ House Speaker Joseph Kowal- crashed into a mountain near ^ *1. D-Detroit, said today he re-Big Pines, Calif., yesterday, ceived a telegram from Austin She was known for having gsking that House Democrats completed the same around- , “withdraw njy application in fa- the-world course that claimed ' vor of my good friend A! Lee.” t “We' cannot afford to take AVIATRIX KILLED-Avia-trix Joan Merriam Smith, 28, was killed along with a companion when her small plane CLASSIPICATHm * A total of TS homicides occurred in ’64. Nine were committed in '63. Of the IS, trine were murder or non-riegligent manslaughter. 'The remaining w were classed manslaughter, by negligence. Seven forcible rapes occurred in 1964. Five were jr-corded in 1963. Robberies dropped from 174 in 1963 to 166 in 1964. Aggravated assaults increaaed-22 from 144 in 1963 to 166 in 1964. LESS RURGLARIES Burglaries, including breaking and entering, decreased by nearly 100 from 073 in 1963 to 784 in 1964. The number of larcenies rose from 2,113 fai 1963 to 2,552 during 1964.. Auto thefts jumped from 176 in 1963 to 231 in 1964. * ★ ★ The value of property reported stolen during 1964 dropped nearly |20,0lto in 1964^ Vyfi,UiEDOWN Police reported that property with a value of $242,667.19 was taken during 1963, while property valued at only $225,101.61 was stolen in 1964. In 1963 goods with a value of $23,281.91 was recovered, year the police reported property valued at $!K,278.06 was~ recovered, an increase of 2 per cent. Students Enter Site Squabble Hills Pupils Prottst Mayor's School Stand mt ninnmflny HHin ei^ttfi elementary school. Students at Bio«nnoia -iuuB|^ ^ ^ Junior High School have entered the battle over the site of a new high school for their district. * ★ . ♦ Mayor Louis J. Colombo Jr., one of 10 property owners objecting to the site chosen by the school board, yesterday re--ceivezffrom the school’s shident council a letter of protest. He replied in form today. Colombo, a Detroit attorney, and his wife are among five couples who live on Lahser fioad and do not want toseeiha district’s second high school built there. They have taken their objections to Oakland County Circuit Court, where the case was postponed until March 2, thus holding up the board of education’s construction schedule. CAN’T BE BUILT*'IN TIME Officials Rap Land-Fill Plans ((Continued From Page One) nomic value. Low land costs are important and they feel jMl_ utilizing depths of less than 111 feet makes it too costly. “In Oxford the'^areas are not near as deep, and they are being filled as a result of continuous operation and reclamation. Therefore, the potential value and tax base is much greater. “It is important to note that with the completion of 1-75 the Oxford area will be just 40 nun-utes from downtown Detroit. COUNTY REFUSE “As many oT us know, much of Oakland County’s refuse disposal is being taken care of by Birminghcim Area News Contracts Awarded for New Hills School BLOOMFIELD HILLS - Contracts totaling $541,936 have been awarded for construction of the Bloomfield Hills district’s $625,000 bond issue for construction of physical educatid) facilities. The school board has awarded ■ yasna pnntfjipt fw « portion the lowest of five bids, will con- estimated cost biit may be pared by yet-to-be investigated variables. E. E. Powell General Contracting Co. of Pontiac will construct the EUsabeth Taylor Traub Elementary School on Square, Lake Road between Eastways and Squirrel. The firm’s $338,072 bid was the lowest of six. * * Mechanical contractor will be the Edward McDonald Plumbing and Heating Co. of Detroit, which submitted a $133408 bid that was the lowest of nine. ELECTRICAL BIDDERS Electrical Maintenance Service of Orchard Lake was the lowest of 11 electrical bidders and was awarded a $53,864 contract. Also awarded was a $16,692 contract to Gold Star Products of Detroit for food service equipment. School board members were uncertain about whether this of this work to Lind Asphalt Paving, Tray. a * w The firm, which submitted struct five tennis courts and a track at each of the district’s two junior higli schools and add one court to the present four at the high school. _________________ /tnly Here At SIMMS -6rand New Am vals In Speoaf Plifchase's ToBrina Vai Speaa/5ay/if9S__ “If your .. school continues^ it means that our school cannot be built on time, and that consequently the j from ttie con- educaUon of over 1,500 students | gtruction fund# or those re- wiU be d council wrote jo Colombo. “TIk school is needed no later than Sept. 1, 1966 . . . The present senior high school cannot possihly handle the entire student load daring the 196647 school year. “Therefore 400 to 500 students would have to be shunted into a makeshift high school in some other building.’’ * a a In his reply, the mayor assured the youngsters he is interested in the educational needs of his neighbors’ children. But he also is concerned, he said, with their safety. LANE INADEQUATE The 14-foot-wide lane, he said, is not adequate to handle 1,800 additional vehicles expected with the opening of the school. ^ Schoal buses, ftare tracks and p viaced, Naada said, that the Commnaists posed a craeial threat to “vital interests el Ae nation.** Nanda said the Calcutta area of poverty-stricken West Bengal was the area where Guevara’s “gueiTilta wartare“inanml was circulated. The cbargOs were made in a 4Si>age statement Nanda before Parliantent. the government decimated the Communist organisaticn to pro-ent the from winning what appeared to be a sure victory March 4 in elections in Kmla State, their stronghdd on the southeast coast. Law Hdpir Outflow DUSTON, Ei«land (UPI) -Firemen took 90 minutes early yesterday to release a man fouad' trapped between window bars at Shnton post <^Bce.-The 24-year-oid man later was ordered held in custody on a charge of breMcit^ into the building. His name? Anthony Law. \ Colds and pneumonia caAse about a bOIiaa inpeanea.a year in the United States resulting in an economic loss of |3 billion, the National Institu^ of Health discloses. T—:—■ Sixty airlinesAre now serving Africa from Cairo to Capetowp Air traqsp^ is vital because of the jun|^, mountains and deserts which make land travel in many areas difficult. Fiidiy & Saturday Hours; 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. You'd Need a WheeUtarrouj to Lug Home the Money You Save at SIMMS Every Day— ‘Causo YOU Can BUY... At a ‘DISCOUNT PRICE’ ^At a ‘REDUCED PRICE’ At a ‘CUT-PRICE’ At a ‘LOWER PRICE’ No fnattar whot you cull it, 'a a fact you do sovo money on each and evWry purchase at Simms. Since 1934, it's been Simms policy to reduce the price the minute an Item arrives in the store ... and our buyers search the nation for the lowest prices to pass on the savings to you. Here's more proof. American Made Quality and Faahion w maioc candidate—Detroit acb^tant Richard Austin, co- author of the legislative reap-portiomnent plan which cow* tributed to the Denoocratic sweep ai both bouses. INTERVIEWS CONTINUE A House-Senate Republican Committee, meanwhile, was to continue its_ interviews. ^ interviewed Austin, E. Mikrut, director of the State bbinkipal Finance Conunia-skn, and Deputy State Auditor Franklin Gregg Jr., Wednesday. - - ■ it ..it ■ ■- --- Lee and Detroit accbuntdnt J. Irving Grant agreed to appear before the RepuUkan commit- tee, said Rep. Amell Engstrom, R-Traverse City. * * * Republican committee members questioned need for immediate announcement of tiie (dioice. “Time and deliberation must be givoi to the choice of a man for this Job,” saM senate mi- nority leader Emil Lockwood, R-St. Louis. “We feel no need to Inirriedly rud) into this and choose a candidate without giving careful study and consideration'into the candidates qualifications. The eight-year post, which carries an annual price tag of about |2$.000, has been the spiiU in Democratic and labor The Eskimo curlew has not birds used to fly southward each fall from Newfoundland and were killed by. die fauadrsds si. thousands for food. 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Assorted wcxtlt, modes, corduroys, pile Rnad and leatfieretle. Self and pile Irimmad, Orion pile lined. Choose from blue, green, gold, beige, loden and bbek. Sizes 8-1 & Sportswear... Third Floor SALE Misses Nyl< SLIPS 4.00 Value 100% nylon Irkot In fancy styles. Full cut, for perfect I satin trime Assorted colors. Average and short CHOOSE FROM 2 STYLES "FROLICS" Reg. 8.99 $690 In Sandstone ond block. Choice of two ^ias shown. Stacked h Sizes 3 to 10. N and M widths. Shoes... Street Root Men's Washable Long Sleeve SPORT SHIRTS Regufar2.99 $]97 Choose from 100% cottons ploids and strtpac bgulor col* lorL Sanforized woshable. Sizes S-M-L40. Assorted cokrs. Men's Wear... Street Root DRAPERY aEARANCE Reg. 6.9 f to 9,99 Regular 18.99 to 24.99 Regular 10.99 $788 Regular 28.99 to 37.99 88 . 9xl2-Ft. Reversible Wool OVAL BRAID/RUG Shop and : $0“777 Compare • Green and Brown • No rug pod -needed '• Approximate size *12" *16 Group Indudes single width, width and o half, doiAle width, triple Width, In 84H'nch lengths. Choose from solids, prints, blends.ond fiber* Droperfes ... Fourth Floor Hoover Dial-A-Matic UPRIGHT SWEEPER ^69®’ Now dial the power you need with th^cleoner that 30% more efficient Cleons rugs os only o Hoover con bacouse cm a sweeps ft beats the rug. King size throw-owoy bog, Svmspers... Fifth Floor Misses 100% Nylon Half Slips & Petti Pants Reg. $1 3.95 I 87 Embroidery trims. Reportlened for perfect fit Rnk or Belga. Sizes SWU. FWtl Fonts 4-7. Ungsris... Sseond Floor Famous Make Girdles & Ponty Girdles ’/2 OFF Many ossortsd ityiai to ehoees from. ChoM from whb and prinU. Many sizse Ckorge Yourt Boys'100% Nylon SKI PARKA $488 Reg. 10.99 Boys' ski parka has concoalod hood. Jumbo zippsr for long lifm Block only. Odd sizes Boys'Waar...Second Floor Infants Corduroy CRAWLERS Reg. 1.99 88' Infants corduroy crowlars hove snop closing. CompiMly washable, Rnk, Molzs. Sizes M4. 52-Pc. Terra Stone DINNERWARE Reg. 29,95 $2488 Choose from 6 lovely patterns Ideal for ony occasion. Full ssrvka lor 8. Chorge Yours. Chino Dept.. lower level Our Entire Stock TABLE LAMPS 20% OFF Choose from o wide selection of modem, traditional or contemporary styles. 3 way light All Channel UHF23" CONSOLEHE TV tt59 Walnut or mahogany fbibhes. Qootlly Charge Yours. IVDept...Fifth Floor Assorted Group Children's Shoes $388 Selected group of children's shoes. Sirope, oxfords, dylas for beye and girls. All dzot eol in oil styles. , Oikken'sShoes...SecondFloer' Men's Nylon STRETCH SOCKS Reg. 1.00 3-^2 Famous Moke CUFF UNKS and TIE TAGS Reg. 1.50 88' Ret KELT. from. Charge yours. Men's Wear... Stteet Roar Famous Maka Assorted BRAS Reg. 2.00 and 2,50 laadeoM Uyla bra's eM beck beefc. $p3 Girls' Stretch PANTS Reg. $-100 1.99 1 Elastic weW bond. 100% eylae Urel slocks. Block only. SUM 3 le f OtorgsYoteiu GkVWoar...Sa(Midflear Girls' Mohair SWEATERS Reg. 7.99 $000 and 8.99 choose from vmeck puBovert or cordlgon slylas. Astortod esieri. Complatoly washobhy 3-de, 7-IOl Girls Wear... I Boys' Long Sleeve SPORT SHIRTS Reg. 1.99 $K)0 ond2.98 I Boys'Wbor... Second Fleer Famous Shetland Rug Cleaner & Floor Polisher ^38°° HouMworae... lewer UmI 9x12'virgin Wool Ovgt "Braid Rug Your choke of two colors. Ne rag pod L._--------^ 27x48" Cotton RUGS Reg. 3.47 199 27k484nch scottor rvgi In e wMe tosartmenf ef feraly eelcre Nets* skid bock for safety. Assorted Women's SHOES $388 Values to 10.99 of droM floli In bUsIzetlaallslylM. THE PONTIAC PRESS 41 WMt Huron Street THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1«, 1965 ' luadLo A. FirzonuLO . rrW6«ii -‘- ClrcuUUon U»n>t*r Pontiac, Mchi^ b. Muniiu. Jon^it AdrertUtni Leg:islative Outline Brawn^itOeffl M In a convention noteworthy for brevity and harmony, Michigan Democrats last weekend drew up a * blueprint for guidance of the legislature they now control for the first time in 30 years. It required Httie more them 90 minutes to: • Call for a state income tax. • Propose sharp spending increases in Gov. Romney’s budget that would wipe out the anticipated $105-million treasury surplus in one year instead ot the two as envisioned by the governor. • Pass resolutions providing tax relief for low-income senior citizens and in the consumer-taxes category. • Urge enactment of county home-rule legislation with governing boards elected from single-supervisor districts on the “one-man one-vote” principle. • Advocate abolition of the bipartisan State Highway Commission. ★ ★ ★ The Dem’s income tax plank agreed to an initial flat-rate concept, mandatory under the new state consUtution, but with subsequent submission of a graduated-scale form to a voter referendum. Spending in excess of the Rom-NXY budget was mainly in the educational area, with heavy increases ' in aid ^ state colleges taking priority. ' Delegates disposed of party business expeditiously, as Zolton A. FxHXNCY was elected to a second term*as chairman of the State Cen-/tral Committee and ADELArox Habt / as vice chairman. ★ ★ ★ Left for further determination was selection of a national committeeman, a post soon to be relinquished by former Oov. John B. SwAiNsoN sdid sought by ex-state chairman Neil Staebler; and action by the legislature to fiU the new post of legislative auditor. The eminent position Michigan has assumed among the Nation’s commonwealths, with the tremendous development within its borders, calls for statesmanship of th^ highest order if its full potentialities are to be realized. Therein lies a challenge to the new legislative regime in Lansing. How the challenge is met will be watched with deep interest. Missed Reel of Film Makes Movie Real Hit Memo to authors of 600-page books and producers of three-hour movies: At the recent film festival in Sweden one rnotinn pirhirg^utflii spe-cifically praised by critics for its brevity. It was then discovered that the ' projectionist had unwittingly failed to show an entire roll of film. —No one Tmd nilKed K Any comment? Nat King Cole $10,000 a week, Nat’s gentle, uhpre-tentious nature remained xm-^Rang^ed—despite racial antagonism that he sometimes encountered., His benevolence was always on call, and many worthy causes knew his generosity and helping hand. Over half a million sympathetic letters came to his hospital bedside during his fight for life. ★ ★ ★ There are too few Nat King Coles in the world. This one will not soon be forgottMi by the countless friends and fans who now mourn his passing. Are Viet, V.N. Events Linked? By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON - It looks too slick to be an accident. Briefly, the point of what fpllows is two events oceans apart: Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin was in North Viet Nam when t!te United States bombed it; and Red China’s ally, Albania, tried to force an American-Soviet showdown. The Soviet Union and . Red China have been on bitter outs, supposedly because of their ideolog- MARLOW ical differences: China insists on far more aggressiveness toward the West; the U.S.S.R., preaches peaceful coexistence. Red China would be the gainer, and look the wiser, if something happened to drive the ^viet Union into a renewed hostility toward the West Remembering what this would mean to China, look at this: Kosygin, after stopping off briefly in China, made his first trip to Communist North Viet Nam. He had hardly arrived when an extraordinary event happened. ★ ★ ★ Red guerrillas, warring in South Viet Nam but with their base in North Viet Nam, pulled their most spectacular exploit in years: tj|ey attacked a U.S. air base, killing and wounding Americans and wrecking planes. ORDERED BASES BOMBED President Johnson promptly ordered some bases in North Viet Nam bombed.------ If the Red Chinese and North Vietnamese wanted to put Kosygin on the spot-Jie went to North Viet Nam to state Soviet support — could they have figured Johnson would respond to Ae air base attack with a bombing? The answer is yes. When North Vietnamese PT boats attacked American destroyers last August, and he ordered their bases in North Viet Nam bombed, he told the American people: Acts of violence against American armed forces “must be met with ! . . positive reply.” ★ ★ ★ All this could have been an accident. PRODUCT OF SCHEMING Or—it could have been a product of Red Chinese and North Vietnamese scheming. Then something else happened Tuesday at the United Nations where Red China b not a.member but its little European ally, Albania, is. The Soviet Union had not been paying its full U.N. dues. The wanted it to. A showdown could wreck the world organization. The showdown would have to come on a vote of the . General Assembly. To avoid a blowup earlier this year, the assembly decided on a simple device: it wQuld transact its business without voting directly on anything. ★ ★ ★ Tuesday Albania demanded this end and that voting begin. Adiai E. Steven&on, U. S. ambassador to tha United Nations, said it looks as “if some people warjt to wreck it." Asked if he thought Red China was behind it, he said, “I guess so." All this could have been coincidence. Maybe. In the untimely death of Nat Kino Cole the entertainment world loses one of its top performers and mankind a warm and gracious personality. For a quarter of a century, he was a show business legend — a nightclub, TV and recording star whose discs sold in*i,he millions. The Hon of an impoverished Aiabama preacher. Cole began life aa Nathaniel Adams Coles. His mother was a choir singer and gave him early training in music. Although his earnings rose to Verbal Orchids to- Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Toohey of Davisbuxg; 60tb wedding anniversary. I Mr. and Mrs. Frank L. Bereff of 3055 Pontiac Road; 54th wedding.^ anniversary. Dora Filmore qf 1200 N. Telegraph; 89th birthday. Mrs. Jaihes Brooks ^of Oxford; 80th birthday. Mr. and. Mrs. George Steveas of Dryden; 53rd wedding anniveriary. Mr. and Mrs. Frank McGregor of 226 E. Inx^ois; Slst wedding anniversary. Edgar Howland of Lake Orion; Slst birthday. You’d Think That Was Food For Thought David Lawrence Asks: Voice of the People: *Power of Communist Evident in Our Country* The people of this country are constantly told we’ve nothing io fear from the Communists. If is true, why do we hear no protests in our land when the Reds in Viet Nam have killed hundreds of American servicemen? On the other hand, when we retaliate and bomb North Viet Nam, demonstrations break out all over the world. Even in our country misguided college students demonstrate against our fighting men. ★ ★ ★ It is sad to realize the power of the Communists 1b thla country. Arnica should wake up fast and - reaUxe tbesr are ot^^^nKHfho are dying. IrOHN NICHOLSON. J CLARKSTON ‘Conduct of Students Sets GoodExample’ We hope the act of good citizenship as demonstrated by the students of Washington Junior High School will serve is an example for Mr. O’Brien to foUow while ih Lansing. LYNN ALLEN no WENONAH ‘Thanks for Waterford’s Water System’ We wish to thank Mr. SeeterUn for Waterford Township’s new water system. For the same service we received under the adequate subdivision pumping system, we are privileged to pay an increase of 123 per cent in the cost of water. Mr. SeeterUn, please give us enough time to prepare for your next “lib cost” project. J. H. PERSON C. E. UHNAVY JR. HIGHLAND ESTATES SUBDIVISION Is LB J Keeping Public Informed? ^sl™ where is courage oI Americans? A oiri in Tas AnirnlM wa.<( recently assaulted while otm WASHING’TON - President Johnson has come in for some caustic critidsm lately from various newsmen because he hasn’t conducted more press conferences. But much of the comment misses point. For it isl not the oUiga-l tion of a presi-' dent of the lAWRENCE United States to perform his duties in such a way as to en-Ughten the press promptly on every subject of importance, even when a policy may be in the course of evolution and final conclusions may not have been reached. Die very discussion, however, tt the relationship between die press and President Johnson emphasizes a se-rions omissioB in the whole American system of government. ■Die Congi^r of -tire United States comprises the elected representatives of the people, and presumably it is their pri- mary responsibiUty not only to keep informed on what the executive branch of the government is doing but openly to criticize poUcies and official ac- One would assume from some of the criticisms expressed concerning the lack of the presidential press conferences that it is the fiffiction of the newspaper-men to constitute an “opposition" and to cross-examine the chief executive. Some presidents have liked the idea, but others have felt they would be hindered in conr ducting some of the delicate negotiations that arise in foreign policy because the press demands answers to specific questions. If these are ignored, they are immediately reported to have undue significance. If the leaders ia both houses of Congress were to set op a system whereby the executive branch was regularly iaterro-gated on the floor of the Senate Old the House, die Tres-ident could not very readily brush aside their questions. He would have to furnish a very persuasive explanatioB if if he tailed to respond. He could delegate to his own party iuaders the task of reply or even appear in person if he felt so inclined. The main issue today is whether the President is ^ving out the news of the executive branch of the government. NOT RELEVANT Whether he does if through a press conference or prepared statements or information transmitted to the newspapers and radio and television by his own press-relations secret^ is not relevant, as long as the public is duly informed. Mr. Johnson, in his relations with the press, is accustomed to tLe informality which prevails on Capitol Hill. But im-promptn answers and qnips— as he walks along with reporters at his heels or makes his remarks at meetings with visiting delegations — can hurt the President’s prestige Bob CJoBsidine Says: V. S. Space Effort Is Study in Compartmentalization The problem Is really whether the President fumi^s adequate Information either in person or through his aides. Naturally, a president wants to make a favorable Impression and will cultivate the press. But reporters feel that his real obli-^tisB- is to the public as a whole, and most of the writen here are not inclinded to become mere press agents of any administration. A girl in Los Angeles was recently assaulted while others ignored her pleas for help. What has become of the American’s courage? People watch murders, assaults and robberies lyit ignore pleas for help because they don’t want to become involved. ★ ★ ★ A Boston disc jockey has started NAAG (National Association Against Gutlessness). To join, you tope a dime to your coUar to be used to call the police whenever you see someone in trouble. I am trying to get this organization started in Pontiac. BRIAN BRESNAHAN 2768 CHRYSLER Gives Advice on Hearing-Aid Purchases Recent letters in which the writws allege to have been cheated and robbed in the Pontiac area when purchasing bearing aids have made a great nnany hard of hearing people suspicious of an entire profession and industry, and less amenable to help that might be available. The only way to |»t>tect yourself is to do business with an established organization. See your fan^y physician or Otologist and write to your State Representative demanding licensing for dispensers of hearing aids. I will assist the persons, who have been exposed to this improper treatment, in recovering their losses. THOMAS B. APPLETON PONTIAC MALL HEARING CENTER ‘Laborer, Capitalist Support Each Other’ Neither the laborer nor the capitalist can permanently prosper without the prosperity of the other. Let each care for the other and both are benefited. WESLET J. SUNGERLAND WATERFORD TOWNSHIP Comments on Award Given Modern Art In reply to B. Bachand’s wondering why first award went to whatever it was in a recent local art exhibit, one nd^ say that it was a slap at the intellect of an entire community. Harry Triiman called modem art “the vaporizing of half-baked people,” and Dwight D. Eisenhower remarked “To be modem, you don’t have to be nuts." When there are people who pay up to $5,000 for modem art, one who produces it cannot be said to be “nuts." , L. N. KRAMER 480 JORDON NEW YORK - In the matter of space, we are like children grappling simultaneously with the ABC’s and the remotest calculus. In order to stay abreast oL or, as is prob- ans int fantastic new dimension of man, we must work in a more compart- CONSIDINE mentalized manner than ever before. For example, we must put the finishing touches on the Lunar Excursion Module, which will take two astronauts from moon orbit to a moon landing and back into moop orbit to link up with the command module, before we know if nd hew we can get there. That’s some other department’s headache, not LEM’S people. Before that partkolarly hatr-raisiog proidem is licked we mast mra hew te achieve a readeiveas if twe independ-eat qrece vehicles in earth eihiL Before the Rangers are able to map the moon properly—a terribly difficult maneuver involving changes of course in outer space and the proper functioning of a machine made up of many thousands df delicate parts—we must be spending money building something that will iand od the moon. It must be “taught” to Mte hunks of the moon's surface with its big iron teeth, munch the stuff reflectively, and radio back the information about what the moon’s made of. ANOTHER WORRY It will be built. Let somebody else worry about how to lift it up there and keeg it Jrom ‘ Si n fakes 16 at the Man ip the Moon, tailored a |IS,M6 (one pair of pants) taooa salt seven . years before we will have the properly tested Saturn V booster which will take the wearer of the suit to hfe ap> In Washington: Reds Not Ready for All-Out War We have worked out the system whereby the two U.S. moon-men, having browsed about the moon for a day and night (during which there has been a 5(X>-degree change in temperatures) climb back into their module, check their watches, and blast off to rendezvous with the invisible>to-the human-eye command module. Once they are hooked tq>, the remaining rocket 6 fired and everybody comes bwiety-buck back to earth and plunges into our thick atmosphere at .25,000 m.p.h. ★ ★ ♦ What’s missing, as I know, 6 the hardware that the men will need, and tire know-how to perform these wonders. BIGGER AND BETTER We’re planning something in ' tire nuclear fuel field that will be bigger and better than Saturn V. But we’re still worried about engineering bup in the rudimentary Dton H, whidi b tire booster for Projed Gemini. By RAY CROMLEY WASHING’rON (NEA) - Despite Russian and Red (Chinese promises of support to North Viet Nam and shouts against “impertoUstic" U.S. bombings, the evidence here b: • Peking’s Mao Tse-tung isn’t prepared to get into another Korea in Viet Nam. • Moscow’s Brezhnev and Kosygin are not ready tq jump into a Cuba-type showdown in Asia. Moscow statements after the raids were milder than , Premier Kosygin’S speeches beforehand. ’Translated of tire peculiar! code language! used by the|______________ Commlinist CROMLEY powers, Peking’s reactions have bean equally cautious. Neither Red China nor Soviet Rnuia can afford econemically er militarily to that in case hb Chinese do enter the Viet Nam war with Korea-type “volunteers," he can expect bombing raids on mainland China’s industrial and military installations, Induding her nuclear plants in the northwest. ’The Russians can’t risk getting bogged down in Viet Nam, so far from home iogbtically. Neither can they risk now an open confh>ntotion with the U.S. militarily in view of defense and economic weaknesses at home. Nevertheless, reports reaching govenument analysts here indicate die Communists will step up the war in South Viet Nam. . These step-op decisions were made before the Koiygia vbH to Asia — and before tire U.8.* tiea ia South Viet Nam. The Red Oiineae today can’t be'certoin of the safe-haven ar-rangemmit they had during the Korean war of the 1950s. Then they bad received assurances that China woiddn’t be bombed. Peking has received no such assurances in thto war. In fact. Unto have been dropped to Mao DoagHoiaadViBhlinh. Some thnd bade, U.S. govern-ment analysts hhd dedpeed from/ the composition of the Kosygin delegatim to Hanoi that Moscow was gettihg ready to give North Viet Nfm antiaircraft weapons and possibly fighter planes. As in Cuba* the Russians may well put in modern ground-to-air (anti-aircraft) missiles and provide Huasian troops to train North ViAhamese in missile use. It b even possible the Russians will temporarily man some of the anti-aircraft instaliiitiODS around Hanoi. There is alaCk Evidence the Rnaatons have ofiwed the' North Vietnamese a variety of technicians, including a limited number of advisers for the Viet Cong. 'jror additional e«eet, It ^ conceivable Brezhnev nnd Kosygin could cancel ont President Johnson’s projected vbit to the Soviet Union and a possible retarn vbit by one or another of the Soviet leaders. Captured documoito nnd prb-oner interrogations indicate the Red Chinese some months ago committed themselves to stepped • up aid for North Vbt Nam. The number of Chinese advisers serving with the Viet Cong has Increased sharply. There are reportedly a grov)[ing number of Chinese technical advisers in Hanoi. Btit these step-ups Win' be a far cry from another Korea invasion by Chinese “volunteers” and far less than the Soviet missile crisb in Cuba. Th* AMMiatM Pr«M k «n •xcluilvtly to ItM UM tar m ewk* of (II local nawt prtoh_ .. tak nmpaptr aa waM at aU AP nawt Okpalchat. Tito Pontiac Pratt k MIvtrad bf ctrriar lor M canh a watoit — mailed In Oakland, Owwaat, _ IngsMa Macamk Laptar and Watiitanaw Countki HkillSO • ytart dtaawlwra In MWdoen and ■II alitor piacat In Iha UnUad Slatai SMJIO a yaar. All nwH ^ •cripllont payaMa bi advi I . n THE PONTIAQ PRESiS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1965 A—7 > C Junior Editdrs Quiz < COLLEGE QUESTION: What is the difference between a college and a university? i ★ ★ ★ ANSWER: Originally, a college meant one group of scholars in a large teaching organizaUon called a university. The name university comes from the universal or general kind of knowledge taught. Universities have a long history. Oxford University, the oldest hi England, was founded in im. and has II departments or colleges, inch as Magdalen College, the tower of which we show in oar lower Colleges in America began with the founding of Harvard University hi 1636. The word college has come to have two meanings. It can be a department of a large university teaching a special subject, such u a dental college. But It can abo be a large school by itself, specializing in one general area of knowlege, snch as a liberal arts college. Univeristy generally means a Ihrge grouping of colleges or schools of higher learning. FOR YOU TO DO: Find out if there is a junior, or community college in your area. This kind of college allows students to complete their education two years after high school —or they can then transfer to a regular college if they wish. Negroes Back Detroit Police DETROIT (AP) - The DetroH Police Department, which has been under fire from a segment of the Negro community, Wednesday received a ' ' support from Negro Baptist leaders.. Three officers of the Baptist Minister’s Conference of Detroit and vicinity, which represents 2S0 Negro Baptist churches, told Police Superintendent Eugene A Reuter Wednesday that the-“overwhelmlng majority of policemen are fine men doing a good job." -------------- ------- They also said the Rev. James E. Wadsworth Jr., president of the Detroit branch of the NAACP, was “wrong in continually harassing and attacking the police department.” They said Mr. Wadsworth “really doesn’t represent the heart and soul of the NAACP.” The ministers, the Revs. C.H. Williams, Charles E, Glover ani J.E. Moss, added that their conference was “100 per cent against” a proposed civilian r^ view board for the police. The precise causes of allergy are unknown. Ilie National InjjjKite of Health reports that Stf^nvestigations on the illness are under way at medical research facilities throughout the nation. * NOW EVERY COAT in (cpr entire stock-on sale •EVERY FUR-TRIMMED COAT! •EVERY UNTRIMMED COAT! Dim View of Speech STOCKBRIDGE (AP) -Earl J. Hill arrived at the Stock-bridge Lions Gnb for a speaking engagement to find that a ALL OUR FORMER 69.99 FUR TRIMMED COATS, NOW 55.99 Power Co. substation had caused the lights to dim. Then a fuse blew at the substation. mu spoke 1. “Winning Yoiir People.” Oh, yes. Hill’s an administrative assistant in the public re-Jations dqmrtment of Consum-ers Power Co. ALL OUR FORMER 39.99 UNTRIMMED COATS, NOW 31.99 "CHANSE-OF-UFE madw n at my ALL OUR FORMER 29.99 UNTRIMMED COATS, NOW 23.99 If you auffer froia the irritable, nstleM feolinch hot flaahes of chanco-of-lifo-IisteBl In ENTIRE STOCK OF CAR COATS, ZIP COATS AND RAINCOATS distreas in 3 out of 4 easoitl Roiearch ahows that this medicine ia thoroughly moi' in the rtiief it gives uose voua, "out of aorta" feelings of mid-life "change"! Get Lydia Pinkham Compound today! 20% OFF Plus every other price - line oF fur-trimmed and untrimmed coats included! While they last! MIX 'N MATCH PLAIDS TO WEAR MANY WAYS Smashing coordinates by Russ 3”-7 99 SALE A young look that goes everywhere! Dacron* polyester 'n cotton easy-core separates in sharp blue and maize'm^' plaid. Sizes 8-18. RUFFLES TURN DEMURE FOR A SOFTER SPRING Crepe shaped to mod perfection 8.99 7.99 'Correct Step'* walkers 00 W^ge heel tie oxfords; cushion insole, arch support, soft cushion crepe soles. Whitt, block glove leather; to size 10, N-M-W-WW. e. .Poke tab-pockets set off V-neck vest. 4.99 b. Skinny slocks taper for loggy look. 7.99 e. Bermuda collqt, classic blue skirt . 3.99 d. Slim bolted with on hry flair 5.99 •Re#. r.M. DuPomt Corp. JUST SAY . . . XHARGS IT' STROLLER SALE! Famous 15.99 Welsh strollers 12" Sure sign of a beautiful springl Acetate*rayon crepe splished in double nylon ruffled Wear beft high, low, or not dt oil! Bonding always keeps the shape! In block or navy with white ruffles. Sizes 7 to 15. Classic: Hos spring actioni Winkie: Has swivel wheels! Both, chromed steel frame. e. Ruschmg ruffles dramatize keyhole neckline and cuffs, end in dork Wges to occont sheath. b. Double stond-away ruffles ouriino envelope node-hno ohd^lossom in regal cuffs on shtft. •R«#. rji. CeUitest Corp. JUST SAY . . . 'CHARGE IT' JUST SAY . . . 'CHARGE IT' OfIN IVItY HtOHT TO 9 ORAYTON PUmS OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9 Monday through Saturday DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PUINS THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 1 Will Probe Be Halted? Baker Case at Another Key Crossroad (EDITOR’S NOTE: For more than a year, the Bobby Baker case has been in and out of the headlines, rtdsing the uncomfortable specter of shenanigans in high places. Now the mfuity seemi to be running out of steam. The following dispatch by a UPl in-vestigative reportenteUs why.) By STEVEN GERSTEL WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Bobby Baker investi^tion has reached another moment of agonizing decision. To stop m not to stop. Once before in its IB-month nandal and business dealings, the Senate Rules Conunittee decided to bring the investigation to an end. The decision backfired bad- ly. Sen. John J. Williams, R-Del. arose on the Senate floor to dra-maticaUy unveil a new phase td what has bectmie known as the Bobby Baker case. * ■# The Senate, in effect, subsequently told the committee: “Get back to work — clean up the investigation." DEAD END Now the committee again has reached the same kind of dead end as last fall when it felt the job was done. It has no firm new leads. But what the committee does not knew is whether WiDiams is preparing some new bomb- sheD in his chosen role of one-man investigator. And Wil-Uams won’t say. One Democratic committee member when asked about Williams said; “That’s the prob-lem.” He said that if Williams doesn’t c(Mne forward with new information the rules group probably will write a report and submit it to. the Senate in mid-March. ★ ★ ★ The current inclination oaong committee Democrats at least is to turn the investigation and all its problems over to a new ^mmittee 6h~SfWC8 Which " been authorized but still is not in operation. ONLY A TITLE The committee was created last fall. It is supposed to consist of three Republicans and three Democrats. At the moment it consists of a title. It has no members, no staff, no money. Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield has said he will appoint the Democratic members after the Baker investigation is complete. The reason — publicly unstated — is that no senator is anxions to get mixed up ^th the Baker case if he doesn’t have to. Whether the end of the investigation as far as the rules committee is concerned would allay those tears is questionable. There is always the presence of Williams. The -senator from Delaware was noncommittal when asked about serving on the ethics committee. FINAL DECISION “I never cross a bridge until I get to it,’’ he said. Before final decision Is made to chose shop, the committee msM dean up some loose ends. The investigates must go over answers to be given in writing by former White House aide Walter W. Jehkins to a se- Tbis will take place Feb. 24, when the committee next is scheduled to meet. ★ ♦ w It is possible a new lead could come from these answers. It M more tikefy they will only roimdi oqt evidence gleaned fi»m old testimony. NEAR COMPLETION Still out, although reported near completion, is an FBI report on testimony given by insurance agdnt Don B. Reynolds in closed session. What he told the senators has never been made public. In its report last year, the committee fcsM Baker guilty of “gross improprieties." The next report can do no more than substantiate die original. In fact, some committee members have given the impression they may be more anx- ious to discredit the testimony of Reynolds than to uncover av-idace about Baker. WWW Even so. Baker’s problems are far from over. SIFT EVIDENCE The Internal Revenue Service and the FBI are also investigating his affairs. A federal grand jury is now sifting evidence in connection wi& the Baker case. In a recent letter to constituents, Chairman B. Everett his feel- “We uncovered a nasty mess,” he said. “There is no doubt about that. “Very often when such a case as the Baker case comes about, there is a feeling that the whole story isn’t being told and those engaged in wrongdoing are let go free. “But if history has taught us anything, and U our system of government has provoi anything, it is the fact that those who are engaged in wrongdoing ultimately pay the penalfy. “t am certain this also will jioid true in the Baker case." Kosygin to Make TV Report Mclbow (UPI) - PrenUer Alexei N. Kosygin will make a television report to the Russian people on his trip to the Com-muiilst copntries of Asia by the end of the week, reliable sources said today. It will be his first “fireside chat" since taking office. Western observers in Moscow said Kosygin may outline Kremlin policy on the Viet Nam crisis and give an inkling of the mili-taiy aid the Soviet Union promised North Viet Nam following retaliatory American air strikes against the Hanoi regime. Kosygin recently retumed to Moscow fnmi visits to North Viet Nam, Communist China and North Korea. Moscow and meat to strengthen North Viet Nam’s “defense potential,” but no specific measures have been dlsclooed. Soviet leadoE usually appear before the nation’s viewers following a trip abroad. But Kosygin’s rep<^ to the people will be his first since former ih-emier I Nikita S. Khrushchev was ousted last (Xrtober. WWW, It has been reported unofficially hT Saigon that Soviet ground-to-air missiles already have reached North Viet Nam. WWW Authoritative sources in London said ^terday Russia has indicated its willingness tp take an “active part’’ tf a meaningful peace conference on Southeast Asia can be arranged. The sources based the repwt on informal diplomatic exchanges involving Moscow. Kessler is one of many light whiskies. Is it yours? Depends on how you feel about water. If you use water to “kill the taste” of the whiskey, the answer's no. Because Kessler is the light whiskey you can taste under water. Or ice. Or anything else. Kessler the Smooth As Silk whiskey o oa I Full 86 Proof $2.48 a. KEMU uMMFr. m now. nuK m PANCAKE TIME - Kiwanis Club of West Pontiac is sponsoring its eighth annual Pancake Jamboree Saturday from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. at First Federal Savings & Loan Association of Oakland, 761 W. Huron. Admission is ewiliac PrtM rimn $1 for adults and 50 cents for children. Preparing for the big event are (from left) Kiwanians Almon Austin, Peter Metes, general chairman; and John Stefanski, president of the club. FRONT DOOR PARKIMI last Ten Days ot our February Clearanee! MORE (MEET LUXURY AND STYLE $Q$g THAN YOU EVER DREAMED 0F...0NLY w. persq.yi NEW BEAUFORT BROADLOOM CARPET BY MOHAWK . jy,.Pliuh, springy pile made of wonderful Acrilan*act7Uc and mod-acrylic toleek better...loBfcr! ic Elegant new carpet in rainbow of lovely, fresh colors that will enhance any decorating Kheme! 'k Incredibly resistant to soil and stain, here’s a carpet that’s ingly easy to clean...and heep clean! 4 Rugged construction minimixes traiSc lanes...gives you years of Wear with lasting beauty and strength! CLAYTON’S *^u>here quality furniture is priced right** 2133 ORCHARD LAKE ROAD 90 DAYS SAME AS C. OR BANK TERMS PHONE: 333-7052 Mon. and FrL ’tn 9—Tuen., Wed., Thure. HO 6--Sat. HO 5:30 P.M. THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAV,^EBRUARY j[8. 1965 A—9 World News Roundup Uganda Says Congo Is Violating Border KAMPALA, Uganda (A - Internal Affairs Minister 'Felix na charged Congolese forces Ux»y with two now intm-sioos intol Uganda. He said the army is stiffening its defenses in Uie north and west. Onama said a Congolese patrol crossed the Ishasha ^ver j Britirt and Guri^ forcw ^ yesterday, then withdrew. He said aMtber patrol entered north of the Rnewiixori Moutaias and exchanged shots with a frontier army ★ ★ ★ potrol. No caswiltles were re- SINGAPORE,- A 100 . man squadron , of aack Australian paratroops arrived in Singa-pm« last ni^ to help defend Malhysia. * * ★ , The unit is eiqiected to fly soon to Malaysian Borneo where ! guarding the l60-miie border with Indonesian Borneo, ladonesiaa guerrillas have made repeated strihes across lering a IW million, interest-the jangle frontier. free Chinese loan to Pakistan. The Australian government | A Pakistani'official said the recently announced it would | loan will be used for importing make about 1,000 troops available for combat duty in the DR. HUBERT H, CURSON — Foot Specialist — _ Announces the Removal of Hta Qffken iiO 536 WEST HURON STREET (aext to poiUag M of Bethaay BoptM Charch) liours by Appointment FE isi29 KARACHI, Pakistan - Pakistan and Communist China signed an agreement today cov ip***a ton^tration ^ 5,000 African Leaders Said Slain persons protesting U.S. military aid to the Congo. BRAZZAVILIJB. Congo Re- pubHc TUPI)—the government A resignation' TOPIC IS PEACE — United Nations Secretary General U Thant (ri^t) and Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey hold a discossion last night at the opening session of a fout-day meeting on ways to mainUin peace. More than 2,000 persons from every continent are attending. U.N. Seeks to Hall Move to Force Vote Showdown „ yesterday^ announced Jie date of AprO bttn « ggjassination oi three leading the British Medical | government officials, presuma- for family ^tors giy t,y political enemies, quit Britain’s socialized health, ' ' ^ service unless ti« government, ,j,j^ grants them better pay a no ^ ^ Congolese Rev- working conditions. olution, said an unidentified the reaignatimis would be commando group killed Atty. effective July I- -Lazhre Matsokpta, Su- . „_____.V00.1 preme Court President Joseph ■ The BMA s Pouabou and Anselme Massoue- i«ve council yesterday endorsed * * the threats of hundreds of gen-\eral practitioners to quit the National Health Service and treat patients on a fee basis. The doctors rejected a recent pay raise, bringing their pay up| to an average of $168 a week,' and demanded a minimum of $19t. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. i to quit the U,N. if its vote is Uk-(AP) — U.N. delegates made j en away, feverish efforts today to block * w w Albania’s attempt to force a Diplomatic sources reported U.S.-Soviet showdown over vot- that some Western delegations ing rtghU in the General As- had urged the United States to aembly. But the little Commu- withhold its challenge while the nist st^ stood fast. [assembly voted on the Albanian * * * I mytion only, with the stated un- Informants said if assembly dersUnding that the vote would President Alex Quaison-Sackey' not set a precedent. ’The source' is unable to legally sidetrack said the U.S. delegation seemed ml. director of the Congolese Information Agency. R-said'tile triple assassiaa-tion was on Monday night. The radio said the bodies of the attorney general aqd the ACI.directm' have been found. There was no inunediate indication whether police had found Pouabotfs body. The station said the motivation of the triple crime could only be politicsJ--- Desirable Positions ••• Prepare Yourself NOW FBI Evening Division . 'The demand for stenographers, secretaries, typists and other trained office help is are larger than ever before. There are good opportunities for advancement. Review Students in Shorthand and Typing May Begin Any Monday PONTIAC BUSINESS msimriE IS, W. Lawrence, Pontiac, MIcMxan KE S-7SZS Blaze in Mobile Home! Is Fatal to Girl, 3 ' FEBMUY CUMIMCE! Whirlpool 14 Cubic Ft. Bottom Froexer OSCODA (AP) - Three-year-ild Jaqueline Pender died the demands b^Altenian det favorable but had to refer ^e Wednesday in a fire that swept gate Halim Budo for an end to suggestion to Washington. . her family’s mobile home here. the voting moratorium, he may --------------------—— j Her parents. Air Force Sj^. postpone the assembly session Some 10,000 students from de- and Mrs. Cart Pender and their scheduled this afternoon. , veloping countries in Asia, Afri- four other children, aged 9 to 16, w * * ca and Latin America are now I required treatment for minor Budo sought to>dispel the gen-j attending Soviet universities. ; bums, eral suspicion that Red China; pressured its small ally into the | move which disrupted plans to^ recess the assembly uqtU Sept. | Budo demanded On ^Viesday that the asaembly^vote to elect j Its steering committee, adopt an agenda and get to work. Quali-| aon-Sackey averted a ^wdowni by adjourning the session. SOVIET BLOC The Soviet bloc, from which Albania defected when the dispute between Moscow and Peking erupted more than two years ago, was reported incensed over the move. The Soviet Union and 12 other nations are more than two years^ behind in their U.N. assessments because of failure to pay, peacekeeping dues. They con-; tend the dues are illegal because the Congo and Middle East operations were approved by the assembly instead of the, Becurity Council. - w a * The United States says it will invoke Article, 19 of the U.N. Charter if a ndlcall vote is called in the assembly. The article specific that any nation two years behind in Its lawssment shall lose its assembly vote, and the Soviet Union has threatened 1964 REFRIGERATORS •249" •249" 3 WAYS TO BUY: CASH - 90 DAYS (same as cash) -> UP TO 36 MONTHS Furniture BLOOMFIEUII MIIUCbE MILE - Telegraph at Square U. Rd. - FE 1-Mil PENNEYS MIRACLE MILE •'T'1 ■ r THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 18. im Things We Can Do Without Everyday Quirks Enough to Make Man 'Boyle' By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK OP -Some things we could do without:. Girls over 10 who wear dresses above their knees. Esthetes who can’t appreciate anything written or painted before they were bom, Nightclubs so crowded that if, your applaud' your arm knocks a steak off the next table. Ladies who think it is cute to smoke a jeweled pipe in Tc,biir«peer BOYLE anything smaller than a $50 bill on them. Any politician anywhere who wants to rai^ a tax on anything for any reason. Automatic dishwashers that always overflow so you have to mop the kitchen. * * * Hostesses who insist on their guests playing charades. Fond mothers who hand yoii babies to hold that have queasy stomachs. Poodles with haircuts like teen-agers, and teen-agers with haircuts like poodles. STRANGE CAUSES Strangers who rap on your door to ask you to contribute to strange causes — such as a lighting it for them. * ★ * Prophets who say the world soon is come to an end. Millionaires who never pay the cab fare because they never have campaign to wipe^ouTEetel p chewing in Burma. Television commercials that hold out hope you can solve all your major problems by switching deodorants, hair goos, toothpastes or mouth washes. And fat ladia who believe they can lose weight through hypnosis. Drunken old buddies who call you up after midnight from far places and want to relive the past. Anybody who tries to sell you anything over the phone. Stenographers with fingernails an inch longer than their fingers. * ★ A The conversation of skiers, bullfight fans, and people who collect the witty sayings of surly taxi drivers. Any man over 21 who still wears his pants cuffs more than six inches from the floor. Old grads who are always trying to,get the scalp of their alma mater’s football coach. the favorite recipes of movie stars who actually couMn’i cook a three-minute egg in a year. 1SELLGUNS All dealers who sell pistols, rifles — or guitars — by mail. Bores who spend a whole evening bragging about their knowledge of French wines or telling you how many shaves they can get out of a razor blade. Authors who write long novels about their tortured adolescence. The tormented dramas of avant garde {daywrights who think life is just another dirty fouHetter word. Drugstore sandwiches made of cardboard smothered if |lJBuniifreTTBa!~TJin^^ your collar no matter how many times you tell them you don’t want starch in your cdlar. Executives who clip their fingernails while bawling out under, lings. Magazine articles giving strong you can tear a deck of cards in half with one hand. From these, and many another {>est, let us have rest. All people who insist on telling you about their divorces, their dreams, their diets — w a new series of isometric exercises that will make you so Premature Quads Live for Few flours VENTURA, Calif. (AP) -Three boys and a girl, bom Tuesday to Mrs. i. Gary Gwil-liam, 28, are dead. The 3-months premature quadruplets, each weighing 114 pounds^lhred. 1^ th«L a day, * * it They were the only children of Mrs. Gwilliam and her husband, 27, a Ventura County deputy district attorney. The Gwilliams have been married five years. You Can C'ount on I Is . . . 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FREE ALLSTATE TIRE MOLNTINC; MO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan 4uto 4cce$$orie$, Perry St. Butement ALLSTATE Passenger Tire Guarantee TREAD LIFE GUARANTEE TREAD WEAR GUARANTEE AGAINST ALL FAILURES Every ALL^ATE tire is guaranteed against all fsilurea frooi road hazards or detects for. the life of the original tread. If tire faila. we wHI-at obOoptioa-repair it without coat; - If. lor4ha it. In . charging tha current eichanga price Icia a aal dollar allowaacaS. ♦Firhanga Prioa la sagMlar rateU price plus Padarat Exqaa Tax laaa trade-in at time of retgm (no trade-in dedUctioil oh tqpw tiree). here’s Kecular $65.00 9 mill 9 Monday Tfiunda). Fri. and Salarda} REDUCED *15 . men’s high style all-wool suits 4988 NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Paymenl Plan These 100% wool suits meet all occasions; business meetings, fuirties, church going affairs. They’re finely tailored with your comfort in mind and priced tp save you 115. 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Save during Sears nylon sale choice of 2 styles seatnless or full fashion Support Hose for women, perfect Parfait knits in Cotton Candy colors Charge It 3.Piece jacket, sleeveleu over* blouM and slim skirt of pebble rollon double knit. Navy, turquoise. In miMes’ sites IO to 16. Styles Not Shown S-Pieec check sheath ekirt, cotton knit vest bonded to acetate. Ace-late and rayon blouse with tie trim collar.Black and while check, comes in siieiT-lS. Z.Piere overbloute snd slim skirl of OrlonS scrylie Knit bonded to acetate. Double contrast bands on the blouse. While with red, navy or aqua. 7 to IS. 944 dud aeic reg-$2.99 Charge It High faabion aheer aeamleM atockinp of nylon and Lycra* Spandax in beiga and whila. Choose mMium and long sitea. Fnll Fnahloned (seamed) nylon support hose in vrhite and beige. Short, medium end long siies. Better Support Hoae Business ihcer in "I-seamless slyia White or beige. ■ -*' Seamed Sapp-Hose 4.95 Hotlery Bar, Main Floor e Feel We’re Tops Sears Repaired 1,000,000 Watches the Last 12 Months Bring your watch to Seara where master craftsmen will thoroughly Inspect your watch at no charge and advise if repairs are needed. .5-Day watch repair serviee 24 hours If desired F'alcfi Repair, Main Floor 1 Year Guarantee W» will at no coal tc you repair or replace any flclcrtivc movement part ar workmanship fumUhed by i^s lor 1 year fram dale af rtpair. SEARS THE PONTIAC PHESS. THUHSDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1985 A-H > oii ( an ('oiinl on I s . . . Iily Costs i\o Moi*o at Sc*ai s SEARS OKIUICK AND CO ONLY Down Holds Your Choice Until May 1st. here’s 10 why pay more? Tonight, Friday and Saturday! Shop 9 \.M.‘lil 9 l\M. I ^Ioiim I liiifs., Eri. and SA 11 Kl) Shop I lies, and Wod. 0 \.M. 1 nlil •”>:•»() PRE-SliM ONLY •! 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The heavier the steel, the longer yotir muffler will last Get the best — gel an Allstate! Tail and Exhaust Pipes sshI Installation Availahle "Salisfacllon guaranteed or your money back” SEARS Downtown Pontiac Plu)iie FE M 71 A. A—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 18. 1963 More Evidence Due Slate Guard Hearings Are Recessed , LANSING (AP)-In M days, state attorneys will present their last witness on land transactions—just one of three items involved in Gov. George Romney's hearings for two suspended National Guard generals. iRomney called a 20 jntei^^t Wedne^ay in a hearings Wednesday becauL of i Joseph Bihto some commitments of his own attorney general’s office and because of a military duty McDonald then (^arterraas-assignment for one of the de-1‘*‘‘ Keneral. McDonald later be-fense attorneys. adjutant general and Nei- ^ ^ ^ fer became quartermaster gen- Romney set March 9 for re-; , opening of his inquiry into a . tht«HMunt charge accusing 1McDonald that land Maj. Gen. Ronald McDonald/hose in and Brig. Gen. Carson Neifert iGrayling were - not authonzed. of "gross neglect of duty, mis- Romney himself took over questioning of two witnesses to develop information on the advisory letter, saying "this gets at the heart of the matter." CONTACT MAN One was Maj. Harold Clingen-smith, who said he acted as contact man in the land transactions, representing the quartermaster general's office. * * w' Clingensmith said he had asked about the letter and it was discussed in the office. ‘I don’t recall who, or how many persons were there, but it was decided It was all right to go ahead With the exchanges," have not ^n paid since last j Romney read a portion of the October and add^: In a fed-1 jgjfgr and asked if it described! eral ^-maiUl, a J^d|^the method beinj used in one of pay until thr day heiquestion. Romney promised to look into j UNDERSTAND the matter, saying it would ‘‘Yes,’’ Clingensmith replied, have to be settled by the State ■ fqasance and malfeasance" in Starting that Tuesday, “I suggest we stay with it through the end of that week to see if we ran button this up as far as testimony is concerned,” he said. ON NAVY DUTY Russell Noble, Neifert’s attorney, will be on Navy duty from Feb. 21 to March 7. In 16 hours, the hearings already have built up a transcript which, when typed, ‘' would amount to an estimated 500 { pages. Nine witnesses have testified. McDonald’s attorney, Thomas McAllister, said the generals adding, "at the time I didn't understand it that way." Answering a question by Assistant Atty. Gen. Russell Searl, Clingensmith said an aide in the attorney, general’s office had told him “we should have a written opinion" on the matter. State law permits the guard to exchange lots for property with-fin the boundaries of Camp Grayling, and there has been debate over the definition of “exchange.” Romney'has asked why McDonald did not seek a clarification of the attorney general'a letter to make certain transactions were proper. LEGAL TRANSACTIONS McAllister told newsmen "the i mechanics were not perfect, but : essentially the transactions ; were legal. No crime has been committed." The defense also has been attempting to show that the State Militai7 Board, which it says approved the deals, was aware of the nature of the transactions. ★ ★ ★ ' It put emphasis on bids by Maj. Gen. Cecil Simmons, a cosigner of charges against McDonald and .Neifert, to purchase some of the state lots. ★ ★ ★ The second and third counts against McDonald and Neifert deal with bookkeeping matters. Searl said he will call about 15 witnesses to testify on those counts. —Robert Hoveyr an aide th the' Auditor General’s Department, j will be Searl’s last witness on j land transactions, Searl said. I Seek State's Best Biology Teacher A search is under way for j Michigan’s outstanding biology | teacher. Nominations for t h e i award may be made by school administrators, depart m ent i heads, supervisors, teachers and students. | Further Information may be; obtained by writing to William, Matson, Douglas MacArthur I High School, 505 N. Center, Sag-1 inaw. Deadline for returning nominations is March 19. The winner will be aimouDced May 3. Waterford's Firemen Respond to 51 Alarms Waterford Township Fire Department answered 51 alarms during January, 18 more than in the same month a year ago. Damage from fires last month amount^ to $13>I13 compared to $21,065 from fires in January 1964. YOU CAN BUY ... “Everything At Mays” to owe MAY!" MAY’S 18 & 20 N. 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TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! frrnrrrrrrnrTmrrryrrmTTrrrrnnryiTminrnTrrrrrinrrrrrrrryTTrm’rryrr^ H u I'Fm 11 iTVinnnnnnfY Open Tonight 'til 9 P./^ S PARK FREE IN FRONT OF S’YORt ^ *Free Interior Decorating Sorvico Call FE 2-4231 IN DQWNTOWN PONTIAC | 4 COMPLETE FLOORS OF HOME FURNISHINGS : * Elevator Setvice to All Floors ■ wAlilMA^e V 11 0 ProvinciciT • Colonial • TrddttTonol • Modern — All by America's Leading Manufacturers! OPEN STOCK MAPLE Lamplighter Grouping free ! r11'l With Westinghouse "Micarta" Tops C. $39.93 your choice E $39.95 F. $39.95 NO MONEY DOWN - MONTHS TO PAY Authentically styled, quality crafted Early American bedroom pieces in the worpith and charm of Salem Maple. Heavy Colonial hardvvare. All pieces have center drawer guides and are dust proofed throughout. Simulated pegged bases. Adjustable tilting mirrors. Choose the pieces to fit your room .. . your budget. A. Roomy Dresser Bose (Fram^ Mirror $ 10) B. Bookcase Bed in Twin or full size C. 4-Drawer Chest D. Twin or Full Size Panel Bed and Nite Table E. Bunk Bed, ladder and guard rail F. 44-inch Rancher Desk (Chair $10) famous Kroehler Sleep OR Lounge Reg. *199 Designed expeclally for comfort lovers,' this handsome sofa opens to provide a comfortable full size double bed with innerspring mattress. Truly spacious, supremely comfottoblel An abundance of seating comfort too — thanks to cloud-soft zippered foam cushions. Value priced! 2.00 WEEKLY mmt ive p^Uaranlee'^ ^ PhonaFE 2-4231 lAll A11 R.R A.|A Ai R HR 111 ft IIR RJUA RJIR ft m f 1111 t.H g.t U.Uf ■iJ.t.R.M.RJUL OPEN AAON., THURS., FRIDAY TIL9P.AA. THE PONTIAC PRESS THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 18. 1965 POXTIAC, MICHIGAN. R-1 Negotidted Viet Peace Risky—Diricsen WASHINGTON ecause, she said, “No useful purpose could be served by prolonging the controversy." Miu Fitzwater, who came to Stanford in 1961, said in her w, I «,wi hnfy bum quMlnnH ter of resignation that “an un-‘* ... small' group of students has resulted In the abrogation of the rights of officers of the university.” Her resignation is effective at the close of the winta* quarter Marchli^.^ - At school board headquarters, policemen were pelted with sandwiches, and half-filled milk containers. More than 50 policemen restored order. It was the first violence in the school protest, which has spread to 26 city schools. Leads Waning in Area Murder Suspects Are Cleared in Boucard Shooting As the investigation of the murder - robbery of Maurice Boucard moves into its second week, leads are dwindling as : jawtpecte^ cleared. “This Is going to be a tough chief of detectives, Cspt. Leo Hazen, commented today. The facts concerning the case are fairly concrete, according to police officers. Boucard, 47, of 8650 Dixie, Springfield Township,^ was shot and Mlled on the night of Feb. 8 during an apparent holdup of his Independence Township party store. Officers have pinpointed the time the store owner was shot as within a Kkminute span. QUESTIONED Persons who saW Boucard just prior to the shooting and just aher the incident are known If demands are not met, tokl a mass meeting at a Negro church, “we must engage in broader dvil disobedl measures to bring the attention of the nation on Dallas County.*' ‘FILL THE JAHS* ------------------ It may well be we. might have to march out of this church at night. We may have ■to- ■ ffli ■ jaife cd Selma Dallas County,” King said. King, still suffering from a cold and fever,' scheduled a morning flight to Atlanta today along with several of his aides. He said he plans to return to Selma Sunday night to intensify the vote drive. The 1964 Nobel Peace Prize winner told the meeting that voter registration procedures are far too slow and Negroes will not be content in Alabama until they “can register to vote without a single stumbling block.” King said, “Until Sheriff Clark is removed, the evils of Dallas County will not be re moved.” Sheriff James G. Clark, 42, is the symbol of. resistance to the Negroes. The officer arrested more than 3,000 during the first four weeks of the campaign starting Jan. 18. Another rights leader, the Rev. Ralph D. Abernathy, outlined new Negro demands fori appointment of Negro policemen and sheriff’s deputies, Negro tax^^lectors and gro tax collectors and hiring of Negro clerks by Selma merchants. “If Negroes are to shop in those stores, we must have Ne-gro clerks there," he said. “The stores belongs {p them, the money belongs to us.” The leaders of the drive object to a state law which limits registration to two, days month,in most counties. Probe Murder of Woman From Shores- DETROIT (UPI) - Twenty detectives from Detroit and St. (3alr Shores were assigned today to track down clues in the hope of finding the person who administered a fatal beating to Mrs. Irene Auhl, 41, and locked her in the trunk of her own car. The body of Mrs. Auhll, who had been missing from her St. Clair Shores home since last New Yearns Eve, was found Tuesday in the trunk of the car, found in a parkin* lot Jfe-hind the plant where she. had worked. . An autopsy showed that Mrs. Auhll was alive when put in the trunk, but had been beaten about the head and her jaw had been crushed. She bled to death while trying to escape frpm the locked trunk. DEFENSE EVIDENCE-Mrs. Lucille Miller, 35, of San Bernardino, Calif ., accused of burning her dentist-husband to death in their car last October, talks with her attorney behind a tire presented in evidence at her trial. 'The attorney, Edwart P. Foley, submitted the tire, claiming it was faulty and the reason the car lurched off a country road. U.S.AidetMves SyfiiT BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI)-An American diplomat expelled from Syria as an alleged spy arrived here by car last night. He left Beirut 4oday in a plane bound for Rome. The diplomat is Walter Snowdon, 46, who had been serving as second secretary of the U.S. of Damascus. R a d I • Damasen charged yesterday that Snowdon offered |2 million to a Syrian army officer for information about the Syriap mili||ary. He was given 48 hdurs ta get out of the country. The State Department in Washington said the charges were unfounded. In Damascus, U.S. Ambassador Ridgway Knight’s only comment about the spy charges was: "1 don’t intend to get into a spitting match with a skunk.’’ NO MENTION ’The official government ordered expelling Snowdon made Embassy in the Syrian capital no mention of any espionage ac- tivities. latest in a series of anti-Ah can accusations by Syria’s Baathist regime. The incident brought relaticms Syria to their lowest 1957 when the country was virtually under Communist control. These were part of a series of speeches obviously designed .to influence President Johnson’s course in what the chief executive told the National Industrial Conference Board iy“the Tery up to Its commitments.” Long serious situation in Viet Nam.” Johnson said that in South Viet Nam “we will persist In the defense of freedom and our continuing actions there will be those which are justified and those that are ma^ necessary by the continuing aggression others." FITTING ACTIONS “These actions will be measured and fitting and adequate.” he said. “Our stamina and the stamina of the American people is equal to the task." In such a situation, Dirksen said he finds it “difficult to understand why members of the President’s party are suggesting negotiations and other measures which would definitely diminish our prestige, weaken our position in that part of the world and have a definite impact od the thinking people In' other areas of the world.’’ llie E^blican leader said it would be “dangeroiia to our security and that of our free world allies” to negotiate with the Communists who, he said, “have a long record of brdeen “There Is no need of a new, agreement," be added. "The Communists already have agreed not to launch aggression, subversion and Infiltration in South Viet Nam. This is Just another in their long record of broken pledges.” GOP LEADERS Dirksen joined with Rep. Gerald R. Ford, R-Mich., and other GOP leaders in a statement Wednesday °dv<»*ng thf Preai-dent not to enter any negotiations “so long as there is Communist-promoted infiltration of South Viet Nam in violation of applai^ed the GOP statement and added some elaborations of his own. “This nation proposes to live said. “When the Communists strike our forces in a place wbere we have a right to bp, we propose to strike li^ stronger than they do. “If a second power gets into it, we propose to strike that second power even stronger. If a third power gets into it, we propose to strike that power harder. In each case, we propose to strike each with greater force than they strike against this nation, so long as they do not abide by the (Geneva) agreement.” RED CHINA Sen. Gale W. McGee, D-Wyo., urged the President to "call the hand of Red China and the Com-munkts” even if that meant full scale war. “If Red China is prepared to go to war to expmid ita sphere of influence in .Southeast Asia, we might as well find that out right now before it’s too late,” McGee said. “To liegotiate now is as unthinkable as it was to negotiate when the Communists threatened to take West Berlin and Germany, when they attempted to take over Korea, when they camp of Cuba,” he said. Sens. A. S. kflke Monroney, D-Okla., Frank J. Lausche, D-Ohio, and Stephen M. Young, D-Ohk), all voiced opposition to any American withdrawal from South Viet Nam. Sen. Stuart Symington. D-Mo., said there ought to be a “major reappraisal” of the foreign policy that leaves the United States “so niHclr MofSf IfTTefftwe of” thp West" around the world. Snowdon’s expulsion fas ^ Geneva agife- lihe Republican leaders said they support Johnson’s course between the United' St^jjjgJ^ |MMering aif sMkes agalhat ebfli^im Viet Nam supply bases. San. Russell B. Long of Louisiana, acting Democratic leader. The 'Eyes' Hove if TOPEKA, Kan. h-en and Dawn, both at home; and grandparents, Mr. and ifrs. Arthur Webster of Pohtiac and W. and Mrs. John Teplick of Detroit. MRS. FRED HEWETT POhmAG-i LAURA ANN CHARTERS Prayers were to be offered this morning at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home for Laura Ann Charters, infant daughter of Mr. and Mn. George Charters of 193 Coleman, Waterford Toifitihip. Bio-ial was to be in Mi Hope Cemetery. Laura died shortly after birth Tuesday. Surviving are her parents and a sister and dvee brotbn-s, Theresa, James, Gregory and Daniel, all at home. ARTHUR J. CRIVEA Service for Arthur J. Crivea, U, of 136 Oakland will be at 1;30 p.m. Saturday in the Hun-toon Funeral Home with burial in Roseland Park Cemetery, Berkley.. Mr. Crivea, a press operator, at Fisher Body Division, died yesterday after a two-year illness. Surviving are his wife, Wanda; two sons, Leo of Pontiac and Arthur L. of Union Lake; sisters, Mrs. Leonard Keeley of National City, Mrs. Austin Sutton in Fiorida, and Mrs. Howard Schlusler, Mrs: WilUam Gatton, Mrs. Raymond Martin and Mrs. James Green, all of Pontiac; and four grandchildren. Two'brothers also survive. JOSEPH R. FISHER , „ ClUp died yeelerde, .Iter a I" E.*tawn Cenetery, L.ke long illness. His body is at the J).> E. Pursleye Funeral Home. Mr. Fisher, a retired employe of Consumers Power Co., leaves ice for Mrs. Fred (VWa M.) Hewett, 76, o^ 25 Hillfield wUl be 1 p.m. Saturday at Harold R. Davis Funeral Home, Auburn Heights. Burial will follow in Lakeside Cemetery, Port Huron. Mrs. Hewett di^ today after ah illness of several weeks. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Geneva Rutterbush of Pontiac; two grandchildren; and six great-grandchildren. THOMAS ROE COMMERCE TOWNSHIP — Requiem Mass lor Thomas Roe, 71, of 403 Anaconda will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at St. Patrick’s CSiurch, Union Lake. Burial will follow in Mount Hope Cemetery, Pontiac. A rigger, Mr. Roe died Tuesday after a short illness. He was a member of Riggers Union Local No. 575, Detroit. The Rosary will be recited at 8 tonight at Elton Black Funeral Home, Union Lake. Surviving are his Wife, Lillian L.; a son, Irving E. of San Diego, Calif.; a daughter, Mrs. Donald J. Miller of Santee, Calif.; three sisters;* and six ROY L. UTLEY MILFORD - Service for Roy L. Utley, 72, of 756 Manordale Court will be 11 a.m. Saturday at Richardson-Bird Fune Home. Burial will follow in West Highland Cemetery, Hi^ land Township. A maintenance man for the City of Northville, Mr. Utley died yesterday after a long Judges Eye Request by Blue Cross Hie Oakland County Circuit Court bench has taken under advisement an attempt iQr the Blue Cross medical service to ‘vtae in auto negligence cases started by its polic^ld-ers. Blue Cross claims it has the right to become a coplaintiff so it can recover medical payments to an injured party if a judgment is awarded. Six of the seven judges listened to arguments during an hour-long hearing yesterday and then said they would meet sometime in the future to discuss the matter. The hearing was called be-cauM five case^ are pending in which Blue Cross wants to intervene, and not all of them are before one judge. Some-bod/s Mistaken 'Man Alive, Davy Jones' DETROIT (UPI) - Able seaman Steve Sujentic of River Rouge is trying to plrove he’s, not a dead man fished out of the water at Erie, Pa. The dead man was found, encased in ice, in Presque Isle Bay, in Erie-County, Pa., and Erie restaurant owner, Frank Merva, and two waitresses, Hazel Miles and Mrs. Ruth Miller, identified it as that of Sulentic. Sulentic, 51, a veteran of 36 years at sea, was dumbfounded when Erie County authorities uotified him that the body had been identified as him. The body was found Feb. 7 and an autopsy determined that drowning was the cause of death. Suientic said those who identified him as Sulentic s h o ilI d know better, because he worked H was intended to give the judges an opportunity for collective thinking. Several of thelat Frank Merva’s restaurant judges wid, however, they did last December and “they saw i ness. : not know if a uniform opinion | me every day.' DANA LYNN KERCKAERT j Surviving are a daughter,' would he written that would set | w OXFORD - Private prayer j Mrs) Raymond Michaels, with future policy, service for Dana Lynn Krt«k-1 whom he made his home; a son. aert, ID-week-old daughter of j Myron of Northville; a brother; Mr. and Mrs. James Kerckaert a sister; and six grandchildren, of » N. Washington, will be 10 a m. Saturday at Boeaardet Fu- Orion. The baby died yesterday after a long illness. She was a tmmber of St. Joseph Church, Lake Orion. Her body will be at the funeral home after 2 p.m. tomor- his wife, Bertha, and four sons, Richard of Lake Orion and Robert, Wayne and Joseph Jr., all of ^uIk. j Surviving besides her par- Al» suryivmg are 11 grand- „e a sister, Bobbie J., at children,^ fwr great-grandchil- gnd her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kerckaert and Mr. and Mrs. Howard In each of the pending cases, the plaintiff has rejected any attempt by Blue Cross to enter into the law suit. Waterford Man Is RobbedolWir dren and three sistdrs. MRS. VIRGIL R. PERRETT Service for Mrs. Virgil R. (Pearl M.) F^rrett, 67, of 3965 Motorway, Waterford Township, will be 1 p.m. Saturday in Coats Funeral Home, Waterford Town- ship, with burial in White Chap- W. 14 ^e wiU be 9;30 a. m. el Memorial Cemtery, Troy. Mrs. Perrett, a member of the Lutheran Ctauxh of the Ascension, died yestaday. Surviving besides. Jier husband are a son. Dale of Waterford Township; a grandchild; and two brothtf s. Sandy, all of Oxford. MRS. 2. C. OUTUND BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP-Requiem Mass for Mrs. Z. ( (Cecelia) Outland, 65, of 23301 tomorrow at St. Regis Church. Burial will follow in Holy Sepulchre C«netery, Southfield. Mrs. Outland died yesterday after a six-month illness. The Rosary will be recited at 8 tonight at the Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co., Birmingham. Surviving besides her husband are a daughter, Mrs. Eugene B. Emrick of Waterford Township; a sister; two grandchildren; and a great-grandchild. City Man Given Prison Sentence on Check Charge A 42-yew-okhBontiae man was sentenced yesterday to 3-5 years in the state prison at Jackson for attempting to pass a forged check. Th* prison term for James Cole. 559 Montana, was ordered Service Station at 328 S. bv Circuit Judge James S.' Telegraphy Thorbum. (kile had pleaded guilty to the cha-rg^of attempt- ^ ed uttering and publishing on Plains, told police he was tov- But Merva and the two waitresses said they were positive. They said the man they knew as Sulentic had a slightly hooked nose, several lower teeth missing and a tattoo of a cross covered with rosebuds and scroll on which is written “In Memory of Mother” on his left forearm. Sulmtic said he had shipped out on the SS Jeau LaFitte last Nev. 28 at River Rouge, hut became iU when the ship stepped at Erie, Pa., to pick up cargo en route to Burma. The ship left without him and Suloitic said he was treated at tile U. S. Public Health Service HospiUl in Erie. * * * When he was discharged from the hospital, he said, he had no money and Mrs. Miller got him a job a( Frank Merva’s restaurant as a dishwasher. PICTURE SENT Suientic’s picture has been sent to Erie authorities for a checkout with the witnesses who had identified the body as his. * ★ ★ "It is like a horrible dream,” said Sulentic. “You keep hoping somebody will pinch you and wake you up.” Clothes Burn, Injure Youth A youth is in fair condition at Pontiac General Hospital with bums following an accident this morning at Sam Allen and Son, Inc., scrap yard, 22 Congress. Larry Freeman, 19, of 289 Oomm was warming up by a barrel when bis caught lire, ofBcials at scrap yard said. The acddent about 7:15 a.m. Woman Killed by Car DETROIT (AP) - Ruthle L, Adams, 36, of Detroit was killed Tuesday in Detroit when she was hit by a car and slammed against a building. AMERICA’S LARaeST FAMILY CLOTMINO CHAIN To See How It Looks in 'the Driver's Seat' . RICHMOND, Va. (UPI)-Gov, wbertis S. Harrison yesterday announced the creation of a commission on the status of women but added he hoped the iageocy wouldn’t produce even “the slightest change” in the female status. “They already occupy the superior status,” he said. A bandit last night robbed a Waterford man of 1878 in cash and checks belonging to the give him a doubly endorsed check to pay for his fare. Later police recognized tiie check as one stolen in a break-in of a car-repair garage. Jan. 29. Pontiac police arrested C^le Nov. 9 after they were flagged down by a cab driver who was chasing Coleun Mill Street. Hie eabbie^aid Gde^ied-Ie-Aended-to Be a police officer ing to deposit the money in a bank when he was stopped by the thief. ★ ★ ★ Dommer said the bandit pre- and demanded his driver’s license. The robber took Dom-mer’s wallet and the bank deposit and fled in a car, police said. Iftf MW tlithkim htk hr. meal Yoer KINDY eyewear is your moat important aeeeaaory —■ a deiDninc. diatiiietive pert ef YOU 1 So come in today. Let KINDV Fashion Experts guide you U •yewear right for your faee. your dothes, your aetivitiett 13 N. SAGINAW ST. WAYNE E. RADDE Prayers will be offered for Wayne E. Radde, 61. of 4922 Rossiter, Waterford Township, at 11:30 a m. Saturday in Case Chapel, 409 Adams. Saginaw. The Rosary will be recited at IF p.m. tomorrow at the chapel. Requiem Maas will be offered at noon Saturday in St. Peter and St. Paul Church with burial there in St. Andrew Cemetery. Mr. Radde, a member of Our Lady of thie Lakes Catholic Township, j ‘Si;i;;taT“iidVsychiafefe diedyest^ayaftwalong .Il-jce„j ^ Township, He had retired from P«-, ^ Robertson died yesterday tiac Motor Division where lie i 3 ^^jef illness, se^ed as a toolinaker 25 years.; surviving are a sister a n d Surviving are his wife, Mary , brothers. C., and two sisters. I _ __________..._______________ WKC DIAMOND FASHIONS^ for SPRING, 1965 MRS. VERN ROBERTSON ROCHESTER — Service for Mrs. Vern (Mamie) Robertson, 74, of 307 Baidwin will be 2 p.m. Saturday at Pixley Memo-1 rial Chapel. Burial wiH follow! in Mount Avon Cemetery. I A retired employe at the Ha-; DIAMOND DRIDAL DUOS SUuk, «l*nd«r, •lagontly ilylcd and avar-pepular diompnd lelitaiiut mountad in 14k gold. Matching 14k gold wadding bond to ba chariihad foravar. NO MONEY DOWN »49” fIrfBV 108 NORTH SAGINAW WHY WAIT? COLOR’S GREAT! THEY’RE HERE! THEY’RE HEW! 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MANY PILE-LINED! $' Ic.n.p—'”!:""*' • 19.SS to 23^ • Pure wools, wool blends • Some wool-interlined • Classic tailored styles • Favorite dressy styles • Solid colors, checks Sizes 8 to 16, 5 to 11 STRETCH SLACKS j save now for tHe ^ fun-season ahead • cotton-nylon dunims • double-knit cottons • oxciting colors; 1-18 Torr/Bc buy/ Buy two pairs for yourself... or bring a friend, share the sav-ingsl HERE'S WHY • YOU SAVE ! AT ROBERT HALL • ra bacouta wa saval PONTIAC: 200 North SafiBaw St. CLARKSTOM - WATHFOID: ra Dixie H«t-Jut North d WaterfuA Hill Rath SterM Qpe> Seedays 12 Nee« te ‘1 B—4 THE PONTIAC PR|tSS. THORSDAY. FEBRUARY 18Tl9B5 I People/nff]e News] By The Associated Press Twice is enough for Patrick Gordon Walker, who resigned as foreign secretary in the British Labor government after two straii^t election defeats. He turned down a third chance yesterday to win a seat in Parliament. A trade unioil invited him to contest the vacant Welsh seat of AbertiHery, which the Labor party won by more than 20,000‘votes in the October election. Astronaut to Hove Surgery Today SnrfOT >■ schedaled today in Houston for astroaant M. Scott Carpenter to remove a bone spur from his left wrist. The Navy commander suffered moltiple fractures of / -the ana hi a motor bike accident last snmmer. A doctor / said be broke the same wrist while a schoolboy in BooMer, Colo., and that it had not healed properly. h , W. Berlin Burns Over Fiddler Soviet violinist David Oistrakh is running into a protest by the West Berlin government because of his planned concert next month. A spokesman for the city administration said yesterday if opposes concerts in West Berlin by Soviet artists whose appearances are not covered by a West GernauhRussian cultural agreement. As a result, the city government is hoping plans dropped for Oistrakh’s concert Mardi 1-13. DISCUSS CHURCH BURNINGS-A photograph of a bumed-out McComb Negro church (foreground) is the point of discussion of the U. S. Conunission on Civil Rights meeting in Jackson, Miss., this week. Michigan State University President John A. Hannah (center at front table) is chairman of the commission. ! Wffl be -I- Groucho says: ^IF THEY DONT SERVE BRING YOUR OWN! It leaves you breaihlss^ Filtered through 14,000 lbs. of activated charcoal, Smirnoff is crystal-clear and flawless-n^txes with anything that pours. n WMU Always ask for 7 VODKA w m MOW ORTHKO FMU CONN tH Wok SMWNOH flS IDMSIMW MMUMI. NMTFOW. COM May Operate on Cardinal Cushing |n Boston Hospital for Tests BOSTON (AP) - Richard Cardinal Cushing is reported St. Elizabeth’s Hospital where he may undergo surgery. .* w ★ No indication was ^en of the Protection Is Sought for Rights Witnesses $1.6 Billion Set for Growth Staleindustiy M Confident of Future S^year^M prelate’s^: when he entered the hospital of the Roman Catholic archdiocese said doctors would conduct tests 'in order to make a decision on surgery.” ★ ★ * Also hospitalized is .Albert Cardinal Meyer, archbishop of Chicago, who entered Mercy Hospital in Chicago Wednesday night for what was described as JACKSON. Miss.‘ (AP) -(Siairman John Hannah of the U.S. Civil Rights Conunission wants Mississippi officials to see to it that Negroes appearing before his panel are not harmed when they go home. Recalling Gov. Paul Johnson's statement to the commission that racial violence would not be tolerated in this state, Dr. Songwriter, Wife Shot, Son Is Held Hannah ielephoned th4 governor’s office Wednesday to ask protection for witnesses. “We have no indication anything will happen,” Dr. Hannah told newsmen. “It could easily be that nothing will. It is an insurance move. “It would be embarrassing to the conunission and the state if anything did .happen, however.” Cardinal Meyer’s personal physician, Dr. John Keeley, said he advised the prelate to enter the hospital “to cure a sinus ailment.” TREATED AT HOSPITAL Cardinal Meyer, 61, was treated at the hospital last month for gall bladder ailntent and was released Jan. 16 after a 12-day stay. He has been plagued by recurrent gall bladder trouble in recent years. ★ ★ ★ In Boston, Cardinal Cushing was described by his chancery as hoping for a brief stay in the h(»pital. The chancery said, “His doctors have no reason to think otherwise even if there is surgery. If surgery is indicated it will be done as soon as possir ble.” The cardinal prtsided earlier Wednesday at a meeting of the hospital’s board of trustees. WWW (Cardinal Cushing was the youngest archbishop in the world in 1944. He was 49. Spiritual leader of more tlm^ million and a half CatheUKThe was elevated to the rank of cardinal in 1958. The matter of protection for witnesses arose Wednesday dur-the second day of the six-member commission's public hearings here into Mississippi’s racial problems. The commission poncentrated I its efforts today on charges by ' Negroes of discriminatory law BEVERLY HILLS, Calif, enforcement. The first two days (UPI) — Songwriter Jerry Livingston’s son was under psy-cMitrfe observation today, M-lowing the shooting of his parents because they “were bugging him,” police reported. Gary Livingston, 22, was booked on suspicion of assault with intent to commit murder and then was taken to Los Angeles County General Hospital for observation, police said. The elder Liviagstou, S3, who wrote such hit songs as “Mairsy Donto,” “Talk of the Town” and “Ctose to You,” and his wife, Rath, SI, were shot yesterday in the family’s fashionable home here. were spent mostly checking complaints of violations of vot- LANSING (APMdichigan in-dustrias announced plans last year fw new capital expenditures totaling $1.6 blUkm, showing confidence ia the future of the state, reports the Michigan Economic Expansion Council. The report on activities of the State Jk»nomic Expansion Department was made Wednesday to Gov. George Romney and the legislature.._ * * # The report said 299 Michigan companies announced expansion Donald Valley of Detroit, council chairman, said the expansion programs announced by General Motors, Ford and Chrysler in 1964 exceeding $1 billion. This will be spread over the next three years, indicktlng a continuing growth of Industiy and jobs for this period. Valley said. DIVERSE PLANS A wide base of industries other than auto manufacturers announced the additional $600 million in expansion plans. Bernard Conboy. department director, estimate 125 AM ne^ jobs will result fromlhe expansions announced in 1964. He said 50.000 jobs will be directly in the companies involved and 75,000 in service and other areas. * ♦ ♦ Attraction of new industry is a very comprtitive business among the various states, Con-tw>y «aiH He said favorable legislation plus availability of skilled labor and practical and well-developed plant sites have helped Michigan maintain its position as a leading industrial state. The auto in^stry. he said, will continuCTo be a major influence on Michigan’s economy. CONTINUE PLANS State and local governments, business and. citizens mpst con- that area, the report said. I factiping and raining is Mng (keatm- use of mineral and [emphasized in the plannlai of wood producU and tourisa,|the future of the Upper Pealn-ro^etry. pulp making, mami< [saha,^ LASTSnaYS^ Dr. Hannah, president of Michigan State University, said he “was particularly concerned about the witnesses from Tallahatchie County.” Three Negroes from that county complained of harass-ments in connection with efforts to register to vote. NO INFORMATION Dr. Hannah said he has no information of any threats agafaist these particular witnesses. But “we have had problems in the past when witnesses have gone back home and been Both were taken to UCLA harassed,” he said. Medical Center, where attendants said they were in “satis- Tactoi^ condition.” Llvlng8to?r aide assured Dr. Hann^ how- had a bullet wound in his left arm and his wife was shot in the chest. Police said young Livingston barricaded himself upstairs in the house and defied officers with a cache of arms — a 12-gauge shotgun, a 22-caIiber revolver and a 22-caIiber rifle. youth into distody. * * * Polcie Chief Ginton Anderson said young Livingston “claimed they (his parents) were bugging him” about getting out of bed 1 at 1p.m. Johnson could not be reached for comment on the request. An ever, that the state would do what it could. * * * Johnson told the commission Tuesday law and wder would be upheld in Mississippi and violence would not be tolerated. Aaron Henry, Clarksdale druggist and state ptesident of Tear gas was used to take Ha: the Watfamal Association for Advancement of Colored People, said: “I’m not at all convinced the chance of heart by Gov. Johnson is sincere. “Wait until the Gvil Rights Commission goes back to Washington.” cles, but the economic future of Michigan seems clear and bright,” Conboy said. At the end of last year, the department reported, it was working with 38 companies interested in locating new plants in ifichi-gan. A special drive was made to attract electronic companies and a similar one is being aimed at chemical companies. * * ★ The department also is working with Michigan communities and more than 100 local industrial development corporations throughout the state to assist them in organizing properly to develop new industry. Most of the $750,000 made available by the legislature for research programs to develop new products and aid economic growth has been allotted to Michigan colleges and universities for 13 projects approved by the legislature and the governor, the report said. SPECIAL EMPHASIS The departm^ is placing special onphasii en programs to aid economic development of the Upper Peninsula because of greater need for employment In ^not 11, but 13-in^ 1 mwr Regular 1134.95''^ personal at a tacky S3.% aaiinp NO MONEY DOWN 9995 Lowest price ever on populer Truetone room-to-room 13’! 30% more picture ana than ir littytt uket eo mr* space! All 82-channeI reception. Private earphone, bein and white cabinetl 20C351I \SIZ2LERl \SIZZLER\ Spark Plug Set Offer Scaled Beam Headlight C.K.! Hiiill-in •potliehl. l2-\oU. Duel. UI20,22 162 N. SAGINAW Phene FEtferel 2-H53 - R. E. Kinney, Manager Store Open MOMMY end FRIOAY Until I Pdl. 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THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1965 B—5 dcks bn U.$.^uilclings Abroad Unabated * HE KNOWS THE FEELINO - BiU Sands of Kansas City, » Kan., was a “boss con” 22 years ago in San Quentin prison, r Today he helps other cinvicts make the transition to civilian f. society throu^ Freedom House, Inc., a rdudniitation center, I he founded. lEx-Pnsoner Helps Others Go Straight f WASHIN(?rON (AP) - Attacks on U.S. buildings abroad apparently arc a ta hm high de^te statements bjf Ptesldent Johnson and Secretary of State Dean Rusk qiQiag for respect More than a dozen assaults have damaged American can-hassles and other U.S. govera- iioaugurd address JaiV'4. One 'unoffldal count lists 14 such attacks, y i state Departtnent recoids ' show S3 cases "damages to U.S. government buildings overseas throu^ mob vioimce or other causes” in the M years ended December 1964.•’That’s subtly less than two attacks a month. I . * * * : Johnson said: “We cannot be indifferent to acts designed to injure our interests, or our dt-izw, or our estaUishmeits .abroad. The community of na- We shall extend H sfiail eapeetit” VOICED CONCEKN Jtosk, -at a news conference last 23/ voiced concern over fbreiilh violation of the “d-cndBtary ri^ of legaUoiis" and said: “We itiall be sensitive on.these matters.’* After the Feb. I attack on die American Bmbnsiw hi Moscow, Rusk said the Unued ^$URes is going , tp “press very sharply” for full protection of its embassies. Among the incidents which prompt^ offlcial U.S. concern as 1964 drew to a close was violence by leftists after the U.S.-Belgian paratrbop rescue mission in the Congo. ★ ★ I A mob burned down the 25,-1000-book John F. Kennedy lib-; raiy at Cairo. Another smashed 56 windows In the American Embassy at Moscow, set a car afire imd toe thn U.S. seal ofifi the wall. • Feb, 0 Moscow mob smashed SM windows in % wake of UJI. «air strikes on North Viet Na& Other attadcs followed oo^ U.S. Legations uda^ and Sofia. Wedass-day d^nstraters stoned and ' Md ink on the Amwiean Msay at '9/snxw. . XI5 Has Safb Landing Despite Flight Mishap EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. (AP) - An X15 rocketed 3,500 miles an hour above 90,000 feet when one of the two main landing skids popped out Wednesday, but Air Force Maj. Robert Rushworth brought the ship in safely. Rudiworth sud later he was unaware of the test flight mishap until just before he landed, when a chase pilot told him. Some AfHcans have been emonstrating their distaste for Beged U.8. compik% in the bombing of Iwd vffla^ in Uganda. Deqiite Washington’s protestations of Innooeoce, a crowd pulled down the U,S. flag at (he U.S. Ehnbassy pt Kampala Feb. 16. In ladoneda, the Sukarno regime contlnu^ to seise U.S. libraries. 1110 20,00dVDlume Ub-rary at Jakarta was stoned and taken oveF last Tuesday. Its windows had been smashed and about 20 per cent of its bodes burned in an attadi Dec. 4. * * V Of the Am^can government libraries in ^ Indonesia, three have been mobbed and closed ,while two smaller ones are still | Operating. | What is the United States: doing about these attacks? | Mainly, it appears to have i resorted to diplomatic protests and demands for embassy pro- CHICAGO (AP) — Twenty-two yean ago Bill Sands was a “boss con,” a convict rulw of San Quentin Prison society. Now ha At hewing tough exHm-victs become tough enough to wrvive In cMUan sedety. WWW Creator of Freedian House, Inc., Kansas City, Kan., a rehabilitation canter for ex-convicts. Sands, 45, gets “down to the gutter right quick” when counseling convicts. w W w “I know how they think,” he said Wednesday in an interview, ♦*and ffiey don’t buy the do-gooder approach.” WWW Sands says the philoso|Ay he attempts to indlll in convicts is: “If I can do it, why cad’t you?” GOOD AVERAGE Compared to a national average of tour out of every five ex-eonvlcts, only five out of 172 VVeedoin House graduates, have Shun Armed lict-Pope * Mtssago to GJobal Peace Conference NEW YORK (AP) - Pope Paul VI told a global peace conference today that all nations have a duty to foster friendship end shun armed conflict in “the present grave international crisis.” Failure ot do so, he said, “would have incalculable and frightful results for all mankind.” WWW His message came as eminent scholars and statesmen from around the world met to aeA practical steps for preserving peace in an era of tension aiid nuclear weapons. The gathering, inspired by the encycli^. Peace on Earth, of the late Pope John XXm, brought together an illustrious congwny of intellectuals and PRIVATELY SPONSORED About INW of them, from the West and the Communist East, were registered for the three days of discussions. TTie affair, privately spon-swed by the Center for the Study of Democratic Institu-tions, was titled “International Convocation on Pacem in Terris (Peace on Earth).” WWW Nobel Prise-winning idiysicist Linus Pauling told an Initial working session the “injustice and immorality of the great wars of the p^ would be far ranacended by a great war in he nuelm age. “Instead of tans of millions, lundreds or even thousands of nillioas of hunuui beings might to killed. Great nations might . exterminated. Civilization night come to an end. There is ven the possibility that the hu-nan race would not survive the {Pope Paul, in a telegram re-1 through Francis CanUnal nan, archhishop of New , voiced a “prayerful de-thit «e deliberations here positive acthm for gone badt to prison, said Sands. Why? WWW Jack a jfoung,^ SUp orator colored bulittt, ad|uMq|bla Haight up to 8-ft. 3-in. txttniionl 1.49 SIZE 12-OZ. VITALIS I HAIR TONIC ^pBCloil 1.50 SIZE YO 5 HAIR SPRAY Qptaoll 1.75 SIZE BRICK SHAMPOO 1.19 SIZE 50Z. , PERTUSSIN 1 VAPORIZER N»wl 98c SIZE AIKA SELTZER I FOIL 36 Individual pock- 1.39 SIZE EXCEDRIN |S| II lOO’f 1 For fanl^ ofiodlva KINC-SIZE TV TRAY TABLES 59 ctiwd Sturdy %" bro»i Itod Ntntkid. non-KTotd pod hfd Hurry 09d MMi THICYCLE Eioir I OYalPlastic LAUNDRY BASKET H*avr-d«1v plaitic 20-fial.Plasllc ! 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YOU'LL ALWAYS FIND SUPER DISCOUNTS AT SPARTAN CORNER of DIXIE HIGHWAY & TELEGRAPH ROAD IN PONTIAC B-8 THEi PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1965 Friendly Visits Cheer Shut-Ins “PleMe come bsck soon!” is the most frequent plea heard by each of 40 volunteer - visttera - feear- tlieb adopted' kind of response, but to them there are rewards in terms of a look, a smile or loving Mrs. John Bills, newly appointed c h air man ^ tte Friendly Visitor committee of the Pontiac Area United Fund Women's Pivision, said; “I was amazed to learn just how many older citizens in oiir community are spending their remaining years without friends or relatives.” Mrs. Fred Hoenstine calls on 8 e V e r a 1 "confused” patients at a local nursing hqme. “I sometimes wonder what I will say to each person that can be understood, put it always works out. Mrs. Bills has been active in the volunteer visiting program since 1961. At the present time, she is calling on an alert 80-year-old woman confined to her home by a heart and arthritic condition. "How they brighten when compiimented or when you notice something like a treasured picture! My visiting day Is w^ spent because they know someone cares." Several men visitors are "We have had many stimulating conversations and I have benefited from the wonderful association.” LESS RESPONSE AU vUtors do nc« enjoy this also active. Harvey Sandberg found a fellow cribbage player in the man he calls upon. Other visitors relate experiences where they have discovered mutual interests in gardening, knitting and recipes. Humor, sadness and other manifestations of people are a part in varying degree of each life touched. Benefit Show Planned by Local Clubs OWN SCHEDULE Each visitor pays visits ac- cording to her schedule an^ that of her hriend. Six area sororities will sponsor a fashion show at the Huron Theatre on April ^ Alvin's will dress the models. All proceeds will be turned over to the county to be used to help fumii^ the Oakland County Children’s Village. Some visits are maintained on a weekly basis while others may be once or twice a month. Between visits the visitors maintain phone contact and send cards. Mrs. Wallace R. Williams of Voorheis Road was hostess to representatives of each group Wednesday evening where Maxine Smith, supervisor of personnel at the Village, spoke. Mrs. Margaret Evans, vol^ unteer coordinator at the Oakland. Medical Care Facility, was asked if a visit opce a month is really significant. , ,. She reported that “any time given to these visits achieves amazing results. For instance, many of the older patients look forward to and prepare for a visit two weeks in advance and talk about it two weeks afterward! Sororities represented were Psi chapter of Sigma Beta; Xi Eta and Iota Eta chapters. Beta Sigma Phi; Beta chapter, Beta Theta Phi: Alpha Alpha and Beta Chi chaptCTs, Epsilon Sigma Alpha. “The main thing,” she added, “is not to disappoint them when a specific visit has been If any other sororities in the area are interested in helping with this project, they may contact Mrs.'Williams. Mrs. Virginia Loveland women's division director, said, “We have several dozen unfilled requests from referral agencies — the Source of each request. There is no limit to the additional number of visiting needs that could be met if more volunteers were available. Will View Rumania A picture-story tour of Rumania wiR be the atRaction for the February Armchair Travelers’ program at the Village Woman’s club. NEED MORE VOLUNTEERS "We certainly would be happy to hear from anyone int^-ested in the visiting program if th^r will call the Pontiac Area United Fund Headquarters. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Bton-gardner will present colored slides of their bus tour and a glimpse of Budapest at the Feb. 25 meeting in the club on East Long Lake Road at 8:15 p.m. There is an admission —ebarge-te the iecturr whictr is open to the public. Advisory board members to the Friendly Visitor committee include: Mary PauU, Visiting Nurse Association; Mrs. William Coulacos; Rev. Theodore R. Allebach, pastor of Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Church; Mrs. Alice L. Stone, Oakland County Nursing Home coordinator; Roy " tor, Pontiac Housing Comntis-sion; and Mrs. Ja<^ L. Van Wagoner. ■ENROLL NOW! Town Hail Announces Next Series Mrs. Ralph H. Backto, pres- ident of Birmingham Town Hall Series announces the program for the 196M6 season. This is the Uth series sponsored by Sf. Apne’s Guild of St. James Episcopal Church in Birmingham. • SUtch Henderson will be at the Birmingham Theater on Oct. 7 and 8. • Appearing next, on fjlov. 11 and 12, will be Drew Pear- Mrs. Virginia Loveland, director of women’s division of the Pontiac area United Fund (left) and Mrs. John Bills, Watkins Lake, go over cards of people, waiting. to be included in the Friendly Visitors program. Mrs. Bills is the newly appointed chairman of this program. • Dec. 2 and 3, Dame Alicia Markova is to speak. • On Jan. 13 and 14, Watson S. Simms will speak. • Dr. Lois Lundell Higgins will be on stage Feb. 3 and 4. • Dr. Woodrow Wilson Sayre will be the last to ap-. pear in the series on Feb. 24 and 25. Boy's Behavior Doesn't Please Worried Mother Officers of Town Hall include Mrs. Warren T. Olson, Mrs, ^ D. Hitt, Mrs. Bmi Ragland, Mrs. Colin Stewart, and Mrs. OiarlesH. Kass. BY ABIGAIL VAN BUBEN DEAR ikBBY; We have^ three sonis, 13, 12 and 10. l' am worried about our eldest boy. He is about, thef same size his l^year•old brother. In fact, they,^ are often tak-,. en for twins. | The t younger boysj gang up on the I_______ older one, who" abB^ just stands there and lets them beat him He doesn’t cry, or hit back or Oven ask for help. This doesn’t seem normal to me. I know all brothers fight sometimes, but this is no fight. He won’t even try to defend himself. He is a good student and a very quiet, obedient boy. Could something be wrong with him? I can’t figure it MICHIGAN MOTHER DEAR MOTHER: Don’t try to “figure it out.” Adt your family doctor (or pediatrician) to recommend someone who specializes in child behavior problems, and take the boy there. Something IS wrong with a boy who will not defend him-seU, or retaliate when attacked. P.S. And while you are about it, find oid what is making uiq>rovoked aggressors out of the other two boys. DEAR ABBY; My daughter is divorced, has two small childm aind reedves no help from her former husband. (He has remarried and left the state.) I have been taking care of her children days while she works. She makes very good mon^y, but I have a small pension and don’t take anything for helping her. My daughter is very quarrelsome. She curses me and the children and treats me like a hired hand. She has been getting me so nervous and upset lately that I can’t eat or sleep ri^t, and my health if h«»glnning to fail I have had a proposal of marriage from a very nice man I’ve beCn going with for two years; but he wants me to promise him that after we are married I will not take the responsibility of caring for my grandchildren any more. He says that is the only way we can be happy. I care a lot for this man, Abby, and want to nuury him. But is it fair of him to make me choose between him and my own flesh and blood? Hard to decide DEAR HARD; Marry the man. If your daughter had to face the responsibility of rearing her own children, she would find a way. You have earned happiness. Help yourself. For Abby’s booklet, “How To Have A Lovely Wedding," send 50 cents to Abby, care of The Pontiac Press. Tickets which are sold only for the entire series may be ham Town Hall, Box 3, Bir- Sf. Anne's Mead Group Raising Funds By SIGNE KARUTROM Mrs. Edward Codner is publicity chairman for the newiy formed Auxiliary .of St. Anne’s Mead. She says that their organization will provide transportation, hobby.helps, 'ectures an l entertainment or whatever is needed to make the heme a pieasant piace for its residents when it opens in the tali. At present the auxiliary Is raising funds under cochairmen Mrs. Albert Crawford and Mrs. George R. Squibb Who are planning bridge parties and a theater party. OFTICERS Mrs. John Giiray is president; Mrs. George Cary, vice-president; Mrs. Victor Sutt, secretary, and Mrs. David MacFhrland, treasurer. Serving as membership Are You Bride-to-Be? Tour for Medics A tour of the Parke Davis Laboratories was on the agenda for members of the Oakland County Medical Assist- Later Parke Davis hosted Qw jgroup at dihner in t h e Sheraton Cadillac Hotel. Are you planning a wedding in 1965? We are interest^ in having your engagement and wed-umg news. But we need your cooperation. !The Pontiac Press has printed forms for both engagement and wedding announcements. But you may send in the details, (pving full names and addresses (husband’s names for a marrie^ woman) and other pertinent details. Please incHide A telephone number so that we may check if necessary. TIME LAPSE. i There nmat he Iwn mnnths hetween fngaymwif and I wedding stories, if there is to be a picture witi) boUi7 No engagenoents are announced less than a month be-. fore the wedding date. I We prefer to receiyp wedding stories and pictures be-* fore the cerenwny. If pictures are taken at the wedding, we must have Jhenuifl later than two days after the-ceremeny (that is, I by noon Tuesday for Saturday weddings.) if Ihe -wedding takes place out of tbVni, th&^eadline is extended. rhalrman is Mrs. J .a me 8 Gass; hospitality conunittee, Mrs. James Bragaw; arts and crafts cochairmen, M e s -dames: Jerome Ftaik and W. Lloyd Kemp; entertainment Mrs. Frank Prather, and par-lamentarirn, Mrs. Ben Rag-Irnd. Fr;ends of Carol Rcsenberg-er are looking forward to her concert at Oakland University on Friday evening. Her parents, the M. S. Ros-enbergers of Bradway Boulevard, .will have their daughter at home just for a short time as she now resides In Mallba, Calif. In the audience will be Mr. and Mrs. Roger (Xidini, the William Carpenters, Carol Warner, the Max H. Fruhaufs, the William Hartmans and Mr. and Mrs. William Saef-kow. The David Stiebers will be here from Milwaukee and with Mr. and Mrs. Edward Gray wiU be the Chick Baileys ofGrossePolnte.. DINNER Prior to the concert, Mr. and Mrs. Jordan li Stover HI are entertaining in tbeir home for dinner Mr. and Mrs. Nathaniel Coch, the Harry Barrs and the Oliver Kellys. Scout Night Be , BEST PICTURES Pictures should be black and white, preferably glossy Hammond Organ inners Class Begii prints. Snapshots cannot be used. Color and tinted prints are not acceptable. While The Pontiac Press makes no promise to use every picture submitted, some printed mention of the event will be made. There is no charge for editorial q»ce, but it cannoi-be -reserved nor can we promise the size of a picture or its position. Engagement and wedding pidbres are kept for two months, then (Bscarded. They may be called for any time after pubUcation. International Fun for adults and children, too, to tsarn to play the Hammond. No previous musical training needscl: • CUSS STAITS MONv FD. f2 • Plocs: Grinnell's, Pontiac Moll • Time: 7:00 P.M. GOLORIAL BOUSE ^^dining at its finest’* club Plans for Gala • 10 Lestoq^ ond Supplies, $10 Complete. .» r« leeislar, Cmm te er Can Mr. Mmrk. 8I2-N22 5896 Dixie Hwy. WATERFORD The jabot comes into fashion significance this season tn Dalton of America’s little Dalsoie sh^l. Knit in a fine boucle pattern, it teams up beautifully with' suits, separate skirts or slacks. Its soft ruffled style makes a perfect addition to this season’s new tvave of feminine fashion. Line carried locally. Born and Wedlh~ Brit a t n, adored and adopted in America —the Chelsea influence is expressed. in^ this linen-like skimmer. The Chelsea collar, extending almost to the toaistline, is accepted in a big way here. Bobbie Brooks accents it vhth a contrasting colored neckline inset and an outline of cording. Line carried locally. International Night will be 'spdnsMed^by Ihe s^r scouts of Northern Oakland &4rl Scout Council. Feb. 23, 7 p.m., at Girl Scout Headquarters on Oakland Avenue. The annual event features foreign exchange students from the area who will speak on their ^ntries. (Countries represented by spieakers will be Germany, Unigu^F, Japan, Sweden, and Finlaitf. Senior and cadette scouts and their parents are invited to attend the dinner. OR a-OMO A nautical theme will greet memben of Oakland Hills Country Club Saturday evening as they gather for cocktails and dinner. Tlie tuinmittee fW ihrgalr " includes the Gary Hogans, the James Rathers, Mr. and Mrs. Don Curran, and the Mike Finns. ' Don KiterUss wiU provide ^ the music for dancing in tbe aboard-aUp afmo^bve. . Tfu «8sp and Avril almgs------ looks pretty with pin tucks and lace inserts^ The long sleeves stop with lace etching at the cuff. Belt it high, low or where-you-wUl and take your place in Sue Brett’s junior fashion library. Colors in natural, sky-blue, coral. Available in this area. M ' i 4 UKgWTJACTHi;iiSDAY. FEBRUARV 18. 1963 B—0 U. of M. Area Engineers Named to Dean's List Some laz students in The Univerrity of Mlehlgn Col-l««e ef Engineerii« «nid« the Dean’s boMor list for the faU term. From the Pontiac ard| are Thoflus D. Jackson of luaes K-liiutevard aMt Charles G. Uligian pf Starr Avenue; Pe> ter F. Lambcx;k, Bkwmfiald Hills; John M. Brovm, Curtis A. Hiurison and Janua K. Posther, all of Birmingham. Ot^ are Donald W. Sweeney, TWuess Drive; Norman C. Otto, Farmington: Jrfm E^. Matalaitls and Robert E. Win-kel of Franklin; William G. MacBeth, Devlsburg; Gary J. Powers, Highland; Richard D. Bawol and Charles R. Cornell, of Ortonville; and WiUiam H. Pollock of Rochester. NURSES TRAVEL For the next 15 weeks, seniors in the U. of M. Schod of Nursing will don blue uniforms and jaunty overseas caps and travel to nearby Cities to j«t in two demanding days as public health nurses. ★ w ♦ Included in a group of six girls are Lynne Ashby of North Elder Drive, West SPADEA designer PATTERN Hr. and Mrs. Glen E. Moors of OrtonviUe, announce the engagement of their daughter, Joyce Joanne to Spec. 4 James Chilton Pyle, son of the John C. Pyles also of Ortonville. Her fiance is stationed with the 15th Infantry in G e r man V-Miss Moors attended McAuley School of Practical Nursing. Bloomfield Township* nn d Margaret Chamberlain Birmingham, who were assigned to the Dearborn City Health Department; ' ♦ * ★ This is one of five different ‘rotations’ to give on-the-job knowledge of major phases of nursing Including pediatric, medical - surgical, psychiatric and obstetric care. NEW PLEDGES Albion College Greek letter fraternities have welcomed 2^ ~"iRW~m: 12 requires 1 yard of 54” fabric. | o To order, state size and j correct pattern number (No. | NS-2M Jacket, No. NS-248 , Skirt); send |1.N for Jacket ^ and 58 cents for Skirt. Add 25 cents for-first chns mail and ; •> special haadltag for each pat- i tern ordered. I v Pattern Books No. 23, No. 24, $ No. 25, No. 26, No. 27, No 28 are available for 50 cents each i or any 3 for $1.25. Duchess of Windsor Pattern x Book with 55 designs is avail-able for $1.00 or all 7 books for 33.50. Add 10 cents for postage on each book. j x Addroas 8PADBA* 3ox J85 J G.P.O. Dept. P-8 New York. DistiHitive, (^oddlv BABY GIFTS from ARTHIR'S Adorable 5-Pe. Angel Print Gift Set by Carter Inrludra malrhlnx receiving bUn-kcl, •arqur, Irelking bib, bonnet nnil pair of booliet. I)apper-I)ng Kupemble ^*HOME from the HOSPITAL” Speriallr made "of l.nxthn, dneny-voft brushed nylon, rdi with embroidery. Mniae or whi Arthur's After Inventory CLEARANCE Beautifully ^ Gift ^ Infant*’ Uept. - fairer Floor New Seasons, New Ideas When the bouse is stripped down to cope with the s mer heat, interesting new'decorative window shades will counteract that “bare” look. Once the curtains have been put away, colorful shades will perk up the room scheme. A ★ * If the shades match the curtains taken down, they maintain the color point moat ef-fecUvly till the window trqat-nmit is completed again to the fan, A A ' A For a special high-fashioned twist, you can store your winter window shades — and put up others that are laminated ♦n match the slipcovers ex^ actly! Special Purchase Spriig HAl BAGS CHILDREN’S SHOP MIEACEJS Mn.E Roomy, efficient casqal ^ handbags for now and aAy season. Finely tailored _ with interestrhjr' delail. |4i^' Excellent for travel and 1 hard wear. Black, fawn i or bone, double strap or t shoulder strap style. Hand Bags - Main Floor WINTER COATS FUR TRIMMED Were to $99.98 *77 Were $69.96 A $79.98 m *10 - *50 z (OATS ai JACKETS W ere to S799 W- ‘389 -'68S MLVKSTOLFS Worm to S799 \ow JR. HlliU Irem Jimpers Wereto$l4.98 W'eretoS14.9$ Sweaters W'eretoS8.98 .Now I-M59- CIRLS' {Dresses Sweaters I Were to S8.98 Warm to S7.98 Now ^ow S^M . SJM S2M . $411 Crawler >ow Sets s.)M I Warm to S3.93 — “ <1 s ■ a J -S' W'mrm 4 $14.98 $10.98 $16.98 RETTER Were $22.98 $24.98 $29.98 *5 *7 *9 *11 *13 *15 Hats Hals from Bar ^ Were to $12.98 Were to $5.98 J A.W .A.W '1 © V SPORTSWEAR Roles *^re to $24.98 Now Ski Jackets to $24.9$ Now 5^1088 J|28« Sweaters How Skirts Wore to 812.88 How 5g88_^$^88 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, EEBRUARY 18, 1965 South America’s leadfaif min-| in BoUvla, and ih» ore, In Van-erals are copper, in Chilie; tin.leniela. EYEUNERS! chic as a wink,,. with flirtatious cutouts rimirwd In black. Snippy toes and fun-skImming haels giva you an eyeful of fashion in subtle colors done In dreamy snrsooth leather uppers. These little Tempos appeared In Irtgcnue. :MR»OS’ TOOAV„TOMOimOW...TERRnC Where Faddea It a leek. Net a Fdcel (fee Tear Alberts Cfcorpe Accoui Cr. aniTMrs. Donald E. Fraser of Niagara Avenue, announce the engagement of. their daughter, Ma rgaret Ann to Robert Lynn Morrow, sbn of the Russel Morrows of Ledge-stone Drive. The wedding date is Oct. 16. A small contoured electric ped-te fit knee, shoulder, or elbow—is thermostatically controlled and has a removable fabric cover. Proudly Sedates the Great Good Looks of S-Piece Spring Suits Line for Line British Adaptations Simply Smashing at CHELSEA ENSEMBLE LONDON BOBBY Full length box pleated Chelsea coat with matching skirt and blouse. Looped diagonal wool In white, yellow, pink. 8-16. There's* Alternative to Full Bankruptcy lyMARYPECLEY CeasaltaatiaMeiiey We are wonderii^ if we should give up and Ae bankruptcy.” A distressing statement like that ends many a letter telling roe about hardships, overspending, roismanagement and dis- remedy for anything in fiie long ■un. TUs reader wants a leek at both sides of the questlan: Dear Miss Feeley: I’d like to know if you think it wise for a married couple, heavily in iiebt, to file bankruptcy? Could you explain the bad pints and the good points of lis action? Also, can you file bankruptcy on part of your debts? W. B., San Antonio, Texas, NO HALFWAY________ MARY FEELEY Filing for bankruptcy is a form "^relearn and relid Uiat can build up a lot of future pain. Much thought should be devoted to whether it’s really a The George Walkers of Sedlock Street, White Lake Township, announce the engagement of their daughter, Linda Mae to William Klem, son of the John Klems of Detroit. A June 26 wedding date has been set. DearW. B.: To answer your last question first, no. It’s all or nothing. The very fact that there are such things as federal bankruptcy laws indicates that certain extreme situations are thou^t to justify this action. But even so, the penalties remain. There’s the stigma the bi£ rapt must live with. He walked away from bis debts. Maybe family and friends will take a sympathetic view. But his presont and future employers, retail stores, community associates, and lending institutions, may not. He’s tagged as a bad risk — at least for quite awhile — if he wants to obtain credit again. While the various states have statutes exempting certain goods from being sold, the bankrupt is certain to lose valuable pos- Another appealing foature is the simple procedure involved. Legal procedlings, if the case is uncomplicated, can be carried through in about' 90 days from the time the initial petition is filed. While I’m a firm believer In looking for another way out besides filing for bankruptcy, I have known of cases wUch did appw to be justified. a amill^hi^-nessman whose wife to<* the profits to 8U{^rt her mother. Then the wife qpmt everything that was left, as well as accumulating a number of loans. Finally she skipped out, leaving the man with two small children. His only hope was an oppor- Most eoMly of all U the loss of the IndividBal’s pride in be-. Jng..ahle..ta stand, on.his .«n. feet And the lingering thought that a better solution might have been worked out As one court official remarked wryly: “People have discovered the bankruptcy laws.” As for the s(H»lled “good points” of filing for bankruptcy there is, as I mentioned above, the immediate relief from a monumental burden. Once the bankruptcy ytition i» filed, the-debtor is no longer obliged to make any further payments on his debts. Exceptions are state or federal taxes, alimony, or sup- port payments for his wMe and children. Also, he stfll is not free of debta iririeh were caused by fraud, such as em- Take time to look into the W^ fAVnUon Earner plan first. ... tunity to make a fresh start. However, in another case which seems just about ^as desperate, the couple has ‘decided to reject the relief of bankruptcy and instead is investigating ^ hairier aUmwtive — fin Wage Earner Plan, known as Chapter XUI of the Federal Bankruptcy Act. This couple had been living on two incomes. Then the wife became ill. Added to this expense was her mother’s illness, wliich forced them to take out loans with payments amounting to 91M a month. Their rent is $140 and the husband’s income — thdr only one now — is $280 a month. But they still want to manage somehow to -me^ 4hcir. obUgatkos. and stay afloat. AU SMOiS fUdM OUR Ri6UlAR STOCK FASHioH-aii You'll always savo at. Plan they hope to do this. This plan provides that under court supervision, the individ-nal toms over part of his pay check eaand easy to operate. Has 4 and 2 track record play-back, horizontal or vertical operation. Mike, tape and tab-up-reel included. Downtown Pontiac, 27 S. Sagliww St. FE 3-7I6g Pontiac Mall, 682-0422 IimSOAY, \ THE PONTIAC PRESS, TWimSDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1»85 B-ll Mr. and Mrs. EOrl L. Hodge of North Telegraph Road announce the engagement of their daughter, Kathy Lynn to Pvt. Michael James Snyder of Fort Gordon, Ga. He is the son of the James A. Snyders of Putnam Street. Sorority Sow Film on Lifesaving Officer Harold Hedges of the Oakland County Sheriff’s Department shovrwi a film entitled '‘Pulse of Life” before Beta Mu chapter, Epsilon Sigma A^a sonority, Monday in the ‘300 Boiil’ Lounge. Methods of artiflclal resuscitation and artificial circulation were demonstrated on a manikin. Correct technique was shown to each member. * * * Mrs. Fred VoUrath, welfare chair man, announced the chapter’s cash donation to . the Bororlty’s state project, the Penrickton Center for Visualiy Handicapped Children located in Taylor. Mrs. John Keller, social di rector, will host a card party fM- members, March 2, at her home in BloamfMd Hills. Beauty Care Takes Minutes For beauty’s sake be sure to cleanse and tone the skin every night before retiring. If cleansing cream is used, tone the skin first with a witch hazel facial. If soap and water is used, rinse with clear water, dry with a soft towel and then nuusage with good quality witch hazel. Let the solution dry by itself. It dries quidcly, im^rt-ing a cooling, refrmhlng sensation as it does. If skin is naturally oily, do not cream the face. If skin is dry, cosmetic oil or other face cream is a must. Rub in well and tissue off the excess. This eliminates the greasy look and feel. Turtleneck Tip When washing a turtleneck ; sweater, open the collar so ; suds can penetrate to get aU layers clean. When nearly dry, fold it ’ back in place and tuck a twist of tissue inside. This will help reshape the damp collar to its original contour. the look you love it $799 Will-O-Way Theatre to Hold Open Houses The opening of ^>ring term at Will-O-Way Apprentice Theatre ^ will be previewed with (q)en houses beginning Friday at t:30 p.m. announced Celia MerriU Tum«, director, WWW The hours wlQ continue Sab; urday at 2:30 pjn. and 8:10 p.m. and again on Sunday at 4:30 p.m. * ★ * The public is invited to tour‘ the theatre and meet the staff after the curtain goes down on the free performances. Interviews for students en- rolling in the new term can also be arranged at that time. YOUNOPLAY^ Featured at the open house win be a group of siz-to-nine year-dds in a miniature musical written by Mrs. Turner from the legend of “Bre’r Local students iWtidpating from Pontiac are Beth Gregory and Patti DeU. Bloomfield HiUs participants are BeBe Brady, Jerry and Jim H^, Dorothy MitdieU and Patrick HaU. Others are Barbara Aodnn, Jeanne Uchthwardt, Linda Applequist and Audrey WIr cm. Reservatioas may be made by caUing WBHi^Way. New Jump Suit A new one piece Junq> suit, vfiiidi comblnm stockings and a kmgsleeve top, comes in fig-urehugging teztanred lace. Made of 100 per cent stretch nykm, it is as easy to Ihim-der by band or maddne as it is to wear. No blocking need: ed! Hunt Graduates Charles Paul Ibnt, son of the Charies P. Hunts of CUr pewa Read,neeKM » bachelor of sdenos degree in biology from Centrd MlcMgan Uidvenity at the reeeat commencement. He was with Sigma Ftd Ephtfoo fraternity and a member of the Varsity tennis team. CHARI^S P. HUNT Logic Prewils The best ,Wiqr.,to clean dirty stucco walls is the logical way — with plenty of or d^ tergent sohition and plenty of "elbow grease.” PEGGY'S MIRACLE MILE A SALE FRIDAY-SATURDAY-MONDAY Guaranteed Savings of 50% and More On All Advertised Items As gay os spring, crisp wrinkle-frew Orion*. Weskit jocket, with embroidered blouse detailed in a matching shode; slim skirt. In turquoise, green, coral. Sizes 8 to 18. OUR COLORFUL EMBROIDERED 3-PIEOE KNITS OF EASY-CARE DU PONT ORLON® 16 fur trimmed winter coats were 119.00 to 169.00 35 untrimmed casual coats were 49.95 to 99.00 19 wool car coats were 25.00 to 40.00 21 ski jackets were 17.95 126 dresses-aU types were 12.95 to 89.95 11 long formals were 39.95 to 110.00 41 jumpers - wools and others were 11.00 to 27.00 • ^ 37 robes arid housecoats were ILOO to 30.Q0 fall ahd winter skirts blou^s, jackets, bags Sony m Lay-Aways or l£)ld8‘ now 59“ to 84“ now 25“to49®'' now 12“ to 20“ now 900 now 6“ to 45“ now 20“ to 55“ now 5“ to 13“ no^ 5“ to 15“ now 50% off All Sales Final Toss winter cares to the winds in this Orion* qnsemble. Classic cardigan, with embroidered blouse; slim skirt. In coral, light blue, and navy. Sizes 8 to 18. m PONTUC MAU STOM 0PM iVlIT iVOIII* TO t PJL I___£. THE 1»QNT1AC PKESy THURSDAY. FKBRUAKY 18. 1965 August vows are planned by Shirley O’Neal Morgan and Robert ,D. Hassemahl, son of the Fred H. Has-senzahls of Alberta Street, Pontiac Toton-ship. Her parents are Mrs. Vester Morgan x>f Chattanooga, Venn., and the late Mr. Morgan. Mr. Hassemahl attends General Motors Institute. Poll/s Pointers Hang Rugs With Hooks Exhibition for Artists in Spring Artists are reminded that March 31 is the deadline for entries in the S5th Exhibition for Michigan Artists, which will be held at the Detroit Institute of Arts from May 19 throu^ June 13. All entries will be juried on April 12 and 13, announced Robert D. Kinsman, associate curator of contemporary art., Jurors win mdude 'Tetsuo Ochikubo, Samuel J. Wagstaff Jr. and James Wines. Prize money total M.565.00. * * * The exhiUtion prospectus and entry forms have been mailed to all artists on the museum's mailing list. Other individuals wishing information may call the Detroit Institute of Arts. Airs. Shaw Was Speaker Mrs. Howard Shaw presented the program “The Great BeUefs” before Xi Pi chapter of Beta Sigma Phi sorority, Tuesday, in the Bloomfield Hills home of Mrs. Harold S. Cousins. The gnxq) completed plans for the annual county children book benefit card party, March 24, in the CAI Building. DEAR POLLY - After washing throtr nigs, put four or five drapery hooks in one end of each rug as you would put them in a curtain and hang with hooks over t^ clothesline. This will eliminate those turned under ends that result frmn folding an end over the clothesline with clothespins. — VIRGINIA ♦ w ★ DEAR POLLY-Do not throw away that nail polish that has become too stiff to spread evenly on your nails. I use such polish for printing our last name on garden tools, some things the children take to camp like brush and comb, camera case, inside Of belts and soon. The protector for the head of my husband’s electric razor is clear plastic and almost invisible so he had difficulty finding it after it was removed. A stripe of this red polish solved his problem. Gear polish also smoothed and held down 'scuffed threads on a pair of satin bedroom slippers.—MARGARET * * ★ DEAR POLLY - Many times 1 have been irritated by a desk drawer tbit would not open because a .tablet or notdtaok was caught at the edge. ★ ★ ★ , I solved the problem by slipping a wire coat hanger and sliding it along the top of the drawer until the offlending object was loosened and held down until the drawn- could be o(>ened. ARLENE . ♦ ★ ★ DEAR POLLY - There are approximately 15 children in our neighborhood and for each of them to have an individual birthday party would break us all. Once a year, nsnally in August just before school starts, we put all their names la a box and the children each draw a name of the child they are to give a gift. Hie mothers share the cost of refreshments, favors, balloons and so on. Hiere is one grand joint parta that is not too much expense f^ any of us and no one mother b overworked. By having it in August it can be out-of-doors which also lessens the work". Every neighborhood should try this. - MRS. C. Albert Hdys Choosejrip to the North The Albert John Hays (Mar-June h ■ McConnaughhay) cella left for a after their recent marriage and reception in the Mari-mont Baptbt Giurdi. Their parenb, the Elvb Mc-Connauf^ihays and the William Hays, reside on Amberwood Str^, Pontiac Township. ‘ ★ ★ For the evening ceremony performed by Rev. Philip W. Somers, the bride chose a chapel-length gown of white satin with Giantilly lace applique. A Swedish crown of pearls and crystals held her bouffant veil of nylon net. She carried white carnations. With Mrs. Sue Reece, her cousin’s matron of honor, were the bridesmaids Janie Giism and Patricia Marcum.' Attending their brother, were best man Herbert Hay, and Donald Hay who usher^ along with Arnold Chism. MRS. A. J. HAY Wash Before You Paint tt's official! The National Paint, VamUi and Lacipier Assocution advisea using soap or detergent suda to scrub dirt and grease from wafis befoK ■ “A clean surface b a must for k successful job,” explains the Asspdatloo. All Together Now The plump new 1965 profde of upbobtered furniture with deeply soft cutaioning of resilient latex foam rubber is reflected in the new high-pile lush carpeting. One comple-menb the other in lavishn^. Underbys of iatex foam rubber add comfort and dura- Latin America’s principal crt^ exports are coffee, sugar, cocoa i and bananas. . S OPEN MONDAY and ERIOAY 9 to 9 1^ COOD HOUSEKEEPINCC^ of PONTIAC THm 51 West Huron FE 4-1555 ^ General Electric 30" Range Very Special — Very Deluxe The LHtirnpte in a Oekixe fionge— full Width Deluxe Back Panel With Light and Automatic Timer Automatic "Sens! Temp" 8 inch surface burner (Thermostatically and Automatically Controlled) plus 1 8-inch burner and 2 6-inch burners. Full Width Oven-With lift off, removable door for Easy Cleaning. Roomy full width storage drawer. ; $]9990 Complete with Roll-Around Stand Tuesday, presented 15-year pins to members of the Happy Hour .club. Service pins were awarded to Mrs. Loub Howell, Mrs. Manley Leach, Mrs. Albert flutter t jvm. vccit ruK, iftn* Elmer Maiden, Mrs. Orion Hettinger, and Mrs. Glen W. Johnson. ★ a 65^ > B~ia; lnveilfo^tSl0H^ Occypafion IsnT^ but a Profession By AP insw YORK?; Theodor* RH, who bai <7 IM^U, ny> lt*i time ttMt ta-vcoUon «M JHtrded a uiofmlea lnrt*ad^^>lta.-“People i^ilak of m loteirtar as a kind tf nqf wh9*tits in an attic dreamtai ^ la too-BniGh an|)lMMl» an flNyiia of putting t|ioi«ht of 15 yaara ago. Nov H that inudj of our buainess ^ mnum fropi itiveotort, vhy shouidn’t invenfioo be negarded ‘*hi af^ ooBspangr Ikh aay*i ^^idMiit ur prodocta ivc. ha Bkaa ta ricaldi Ifittl DIACaNAnON Invaotlan. ha taata. Ja more fani^^ thn liiGu- We’ta living ip an age of Bia’ dov ____________I. ‘To invent, y«i hav*. to taka a chance on hthig Ridi sa^ “A profeadonal ia- . ventor doaan’t fven rata a tUla as such |> Indnatry.” Rich, a aankiMiKinaar at the Gooeral Blictrte Oft. advanced technology laboratoriea at Scheneotaify, N.Y., la one of the most prolific iovantora in the company's hidh>T" In additioo to patents already granted, ha baa about IS morp pending. Nov H, Ridi has aver-a^ more than tvo patentaUa inventions a year since he vas a IllSfta-vedt tedmidan at GE'a Lynn, Mass., laboratory in 1986. RICH'S INVENTIONS His inventions have ranged from a World War II submarine detector to a device for keeping electric clocks on time. Most have been complex measuring devices for gauging radiation, electric current and the siK and electrical charge of air particles. His vork vith air particles has gained him vide recognition in atmospheric physics. Rich s^ in an interviev that he feels industry should encourage development of more idea men like himself — researchers are aBsentiaHy btventorl rather than technirai experts. While invention hi industry .-/ />, nr*; ftftrPQNtIAC VAESS. THtlBSPAY. tf’s news when Arrow conies out with a new dress shirt. And the Trump Club Is destined to be a sure winner. It^s JailQj’edJii the Arrow tradition, and the combed premium cotton broad- cloth is ‘‘sanforized*’ for lasting fit. Featuring anchored buttons and Arrow’s special collar wear. See it in long or short sleeves in the new Glen collar, a soft, short^ointwithf a narrow spread; Inlong sfeevesmthe^p^ ■ p—— ——, ' f: ' { ^t«Me oontf m« the lelto«lnf Arrow Trump Ctub j oMrH: ,1 HUMIt HATCHIR tUPMtlN - PHONI «U. an. Ml N. TILtMAm, MNTIAC IMCHICAN ! |Ca«w I Colter 1 Steow 1 Ihort | , ^.Jjy^'i,-iiSgte -L ■ ^ . U ■ ! ! 1 1 1 ADDRESS f ' fi^'l "S Chtitu l» mil Kcwmt 'OChKk OCOO- ‘ ' ’ OtHrntyOr^ -1: '■ ■ :i’i CITY , ITATI V- » r on rONTIAC MAU STQK B om EVERT EVMW 10 t rjL f.. THE PONTIAC PHESS, THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 18, 196.5 m COLOR C-1 Frozen Food Featuros IMNUET FROZEN CHERRY 22-oz. Size PIE TREESWEET FROZEN a ORANGE JUICE APRIL HILL READY to BAKE BREAD DOUGH JIFFY BEEF STEAKS JIFfY CHUCK WAGON STEAKS JIFFY BREADED VEAL CHOPS 89« F SPARTAN APPLESAUCE TASTY RED 2 lbs. 3-02. Glass Jar HAWAIIAN PUNCH ' HUNTS CALIFORNIA BARTLET PEARS Can Size No. 2V2 New W^;lghf 1-lb. 13-02. MIX OR MATCH CANS $|00 USDA GRADE 'A' FRESH WHOLE 27? FRYERS CYPRESS GARDENS 1-lb. Can |||A GRAPEFRUIT SECTIONS 19'^ m >mi Imstzz HORMEL SPAM .r 39° s. BEEF STEW 39° CENTER CUT ilk CREAMETTES 7-oz Bo» « nr • ELBOW MACARONI ^ HUNT'S 8-oz Con TOMATO SAUCE HUNT S 6 oz Con TOMATO PASTE Z ^ LOINInCt RORK F«S8StlCE0 COUNTRY STYLE S«iia«0 ROASTSDi# SIDE PORK 39.i★ PORK RIDSm Produce Dept. Specials U.S. NO. 1 MAINE POTATOES •siir PACKAGE ^ _ TOMATOES .k15° Ov«n Fr»sh New Tost Treotll Hb. 4-oz. Loaf BLACK BAVARIAN RYE BREAD r4y BUDDIG Roady to Eat SLICED SANDWICH MEATS • Nam • Beef ^ • Corned Beef ’ Turkey PETER'S Mictf Gfod. 1 3-lb. PKG. HOT DOGS $100 SPARTAN SLICED BACON tnoPpirid Papkagf BORDEN'S or SEALTEST Cliociriflfli Milk FHIUDEtPHfA fey Kraft Ruart Gorton No Solo* to Dooior* or Minor* Wo Rosofvo tho lUght toJJpNQuantitio* 3>oz. Nokagi 48^ KH 10^ Smart Shoppers Specials BOM CORN REUSH 29* BCMOVENBAKED BEANS.. 29* : MARZETTil6-ENN. DUTCH Pincni & Stnrrrs E 1 lUSHROOMS 4^>^0en. i» for ^ GLAD SANDWICH BAGS.... ClAOWRAP mr»>..29* GUD UTILITY BAGS JELLY'S AH Now FLEiSCHAAANN'S A Whip & Chili 2"^^45^ Wargarine 2^1^79 f V THE PONTIAC PHES8; THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1965 Add Wheat Germ fo Gingerbread for Warm Dessert Cake By CECILY BROWNSTONE Atswiited Preu F«td Edit«r De yout like iobm eooki «• know, htye a special caUfory In y«ff «cipe IHe for thoae rules that include wtwat germ? makes a health-conscious cook feel virtuous because' wheat germ offers high-quality protein and it is especially rich in. the B vitamins and vitamin E.< But no raaBer how virtuous you enjoy feeling, we suggest that you carefully choose the recipes featuring wheat gam, making sure titat they are the.< ones your family and friends^ will relish. ____With taste bads as wdl as . notritioB la mM, then, we have no hesitation in rec-ommwidlBg that yon add the foUowiag homey recipe for gingerbread to year fOe. When the rule was tested at our- house, our tastars rated it high. * * * / Another plus — this recipe is extremeiy simple to ;u«pare. Regular fleer Is xaBed far, butter or margarine and sugar, eitiwr, because the fat is melted. The batter is just beaten together in jigtime. Wheat Germ Giagabread 2 cups unsifted flour 1 cup buttprmilk : % cup light molasses % cup butter or margarine, melted 2 eggs n a mixing boi flour, baking bowl stir together soda, salt, cin- sifted neither does it need sifting with the leavenlngs fhaking soda), iaR sad spieei — afi yon have to do is stir. There’s uo creaming of the Vi teaspoon salt IW teaspoons cinnamon IH teaspoons ginga^ V4 teasp^ cloves Ik cup sugar % cup wheat germ namon, ginga~ cloves, sugar and wheat germ. Add hutter- ■qnare cake pan (• by t by . 1% inches). Bake in a moderate (SM degrees) ovea for SS to 40 minntes or ontil a cake tester iasated In the center comes oqt clean. Cut Into serving-size portions and eggs. Beat just until batter is smooth. TnraNpto a well-greased in pan hnd remove with a wide spatula; serve hot. Or cool gingerbread in pan placed on wire rack for 5 minutes; loosen sides with a small spatula; turn out on wire rack; turn right side up; cool. Store tightly covaed at room temperature or in the refrigerator; reheat whole or as many portions as are needed, OR foil in a moderate oven, before serving. —a servings. Note: This gingerbread may be served for snacktime “as is;” or for dessert at mealtime with whipped cream or a foamy-type or lemon-flavored pudding sauce. Avocado Just One Ingredient in Unusual California Salad BUDGET SAVER - D.B.P.D. casserole is a meal in the bank ... A wonderful tuna, rice and green bean casserole with tomato soup sauce — ingredients all bought in the beginning of the vnA — guarantees you a good meal on the day before pay day. Look on Shelf for Ingredients Santa Barbara is a California Pacific coast city whose beauty and eleganqe never fail to impress visitors. “Santa Bar-.bara Salad’’ is named after it— and not without good resnon! It’s an elegant combination of cubed California avocado, green peas, diced Cheddar cheese and celery and all manner pf other tasty ingredients tossed lightly with mayonnaise. The Santa Barbara area is just one section of southern California whae avocados thrive in the fertile soil. Seven counties in that part of the Golden State produce the avocados that grace recipes ranging from salads and party dips to desserts. Santa Barbara Salad 1 California avocado V* teaspoon salt “Itabl 1 package (10 oz.) frozen green peas 1 cup diced Cheddar cheese % cup diced celery 2 tablespoons chopped onion •> 2 tablespoons sweet pickle relish 1 tablespoon dwpped canned green chili peppers (optioo-al) 2 tablespoons chopped piiiK lento H cup mayonnaise Crisp salad greens Cut avocado lengthwise into halves; remove seed and skin. Cut fruit into cubes. Sprinkle with salt and lemon juice. Cook peas as package directs; drain aixl cool. Lightly toss together all ingredients except salad greens. Arrange greens in serving bowl or on individual plates; turn salad onto greens. Makes 4 to 8 servings. Clarify some butter aiyi keep on hand (in~i“t®illy oav^ ered jar in the refr^rator) to use for greasing the pans for hutter cakes and cookies. The result? Double butter flavor! Oven-Fried Fo\(rl Bakes OnWaidied There may be some chicken left over for a next-day lunch. Oven-Fried Chicken Breasto 2 large chicken breasts, keel bone removed and split 2 tablespoons flour % teaspoon salt and % teaspoon white pepper Ml cup butter PaiHika Wash chicken and drain. On waxed paper, stir together the flour, salt and pepper; turn chicken in mixture to coat well. In a shallow baking pan (an 8 by 8 by 2 inch ovenglass cake dish is fine) melt the butter in a hot (425 degrees) oven; place chicken in pan, skin side down, in one layer. Bake in the 42S-degree oven for 28 mbiates; turn so skin side is np; sprfaikle with paprika. Continue baUng for II Serve chicken with butter and drippings in pan over rice. Makes i large servings. Dessert Is Light, Airy, Lemony Here’s a version of Lemon Snow that is held in high favor. Lemon Snow 1 envelope unflavored gelatin 1V4 cups cold water % cup sugar Ml teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon grated kunon rind V« cup lemon juice 2 white eggs ♦ * ♦ In the top of a double boila, soften the gelatin in Vk cup of the water; place over boiling water; stir until gelatin dissolves. * * ★ Add sugar, salt, lemon rind, lemon juice and remaining % cup water; stir until sugar displace upper part of double boiler with mixture hi It la a pan of ice cubes and cold { wata. Stirring often, chill un- til it heghis to set; romovo pan from ice water. Add egg whites; with electric beater, beat at high speed until i^ure begins to hold its shape. Turn into a 1% (|uart molB. ChiU unUI firm. Unmold. Serve with Custard Sauce. Makes 8 to 8 servings. Crumbs Coat Ham Both Browned Ever fix ham this way? Butt half of a ham % cup each fine dry bread crumbs and light brown sugar V4 teaspoon each grouhd cloves and dry mustard Bake ham until cooked through; remove from oven. Mix togetha the bread crumbs, brown sugar, cloves and mustard; add 2 tablespoons of fat well. Spread mixture ova top and sides of ham; return to a hot (425 degrees) oven for 15 minutes. Hae’s a t e r r I f i c tuna casserole that’s a treat to a slim pocketbook and a treat to the taste. Designed for the day before pay day (d.b.p.d. — that’s right) this casserole is a real piggy-bank pleaser — because when you’re down to your last nickel, you can hang on to that nickel, and leave the piggybank unscathed. All the ingredfonts can be pur-dused abe^ of time at the supermarket when you stock up for the week. This bit of foresight will stand you in good ''stead later on in the week when your wallet develops that lean and hungry look. You’ll find that the D.B.P.D. casserole is a good habit to acquire. And D.B.P.D. casserole couldn't be simpler to make. Tuna and the vegetable oil in which it’s packed (a source of desirable polyunsaturates), condensed tomato soup, canned green beans and rice are your main ingredients friends all. budget Thyme, Worcestershire sauce and salt are the seasonings. The Worcestershire combines with flie thyme to give a lovely, simmered - in flaw to the casserole and makes it something very special you might even serve proudly on the day after pay day. D.B.P.D. CASSEROLE (Day Before Pay Day) 2 cans (8Vk or 7 ounces each) tuna in vegetable oil 1 can condensed tomato soup 1 can (1 pound) cut green beans Water 1 teaspoon salt % teaspoon thyme 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce 1 cup raw rice Turn tuna with qil and soup into sauce pan. Drain liquid from green Iwans into soup can fill to top with water. Add to sauce pan with remaining in- gredients. Place over modaate, heat and bring to a boil. Turn into 2-quart casserole; cover and bake in a modaate I 375 degrees) 30 minutes. Remove. A' * ★ Arrange green beans in band around casserole; cova and return to oven 15 minutes longa. Yield: 8 servings. Top Broccoli Spears With Can of Spaghetti For Sunday supper in a hurry, just reach for the can of spaghetti with meatballs. But flnt; j Arrange a Kkiunce package frozen broccoli spears, cooked and drained, in a buttered shallow baking dish (9x8x2’’); sprinkle with garlic powder. Spoon the contents of a 15-ounce can spaghetti with meat-balls over broccoli. Top with H cup shredded sharp' cheese. Bake at 350 degrees for 30 minutes. Makes 2 to 3 servings. Super Mirkit Open Weekly 8 te 9-^ri. I Sat. 9 to II 608 W. HURON STREET NEAR WEBSTER SCHOOL Prices Subject to Merket Price roiMBES EGGS FARM FRESH EXTRA LARGE GRAt>r 6RAKFRWT INDIAN RIVER D0Z.DyT SEEDLESS Crisp Pascal CELERY RED RIPE TOMATOES fkj- 19® Calif. Juice ORANGES Large packaged CARROTS No. 1 Mello Ripe OANAIIAS lOf Gr. 1 Skinless HOT DOGS 3^89* •\ THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY; FEBRUARY 18. 1963. C—8 Pasties Are Good Hearty Foods By JANET ODELL PonUac Press Feed Editor Publishing a pasty recipe in Michigan is just asking for trou- Np two 1 pasties should be made. It’s even diiflcult to determine exactly which immigrants in the «*rly c o p p e.r mining day s brought the first pasties to the Upper Peninsula. Bat everyone who has eaten good pasUes knows what delicious food they are. In Cornwall, England there is a saying, “The DevU does not show himself in ComwaU lest he be baked in a pie.” One advantage of pasties is that they are good hot, warm or cold. Because of this, they make excellent lunchbox fare. Don’t try to send warm pas- ties; they might spoil. But cold ones keep perfectly. Here’s our first recipe. Cornish Pasties 3 cups sifted enriched flour IVi teaspoons salt cup shorl {pnning a “torpedo,” and edge. Slash pastry near top to allow steam to escape. Place on ungreased baking sheet Bake in moderate oven (350 degrees) for one hour or untQ' meat is fwk-tender and pastry Oioia tablespoons COM water Beef-Vegetable Filling Sift, together flour and salt. Cut or rub in shortening until mixture is crumbly. Sprinkle with water, mixing lightly until dough begins to stidc together. Press dough together, wrap in waxed paper and refrigerate while preparing Beef-Vegetable Filling. Divide dongh in hait. RoU out each half to square inch thick. Cut each square into fonr circles, 7 inches in diameter. Divide filling evenly among circles. Bring two sides together. 1 can (10)4-0unces) condensed cream of mushroom soup, undiluted 2 tablespoons chopped pecans 1 tablespoon lemon juiM 1 teaspoon curry powder 2 caqs (6% to 7 ounces each) TUNA CORNISH PIES CORNISH PASTIES 3/ This Pot Roast CookedWifh Wine, Olives Country kitchen pot roast is enriched with ripe olives. Brown a 3H to 5 pound beef chuck roast on ail sides ip 2 tablespoons of hot vegetable oil in a very heavy pot. Add V* cup of chopped onion, 2 bouillon cubes, Vi cup of dry red wine, 2 teaspoons of salt^ V4 teaspoon of pepper, H teaspoon of dried fine herbs, and % teaspoon of gariic powder. Cover and simmer m hours. Add m cups of pitted ripe olives, quartered, 2 cups each of choppnl celery and diced carrots and simmer, covered, about 45 minutes more, or until carrots are tender. _____ ’Mix i~n psffiar cm or saiif pack tomatoes with 3 tablespoons of cornstarch. Remove roast to heated platter and keep Stir tomatoes into meat gravy. Cook, stirring constantly, until gravy is thickened and clear. Serve over roast. Makes 8-10 servings. Cyfry fhe Wd “ If you are planning to serve creamed chicken over ripe, you might giv# tbe ripe extra flavor by adding curry powder to it. For a cup of riM that is to be boiled, add a teaspoon of the curry powder. Orange Swirl Ever try swirling frozen orange juice concentrate through softened ice cream and then storing in the freezer until, firm? You can ttse vanilia qr chocolate icS cream — choc^ late is surprisingly compatible with orange flavor. Beef-Vegetable Filling 1 pound beef stew meat with fat, cut into V^-inch cubes % cup finely diced potato (1 small potato) % cup chopped onion y» cup finely diced carrot 44 teaspoon salt V* teaspoon celery seed Dash pepper Mix together beef, potato, onion, carrot, ialt, cele^ seed and pepper. Makes 8 pasties. Recipe nnmber two is a bit different It has cheese and mushrooms in the filling and shredded wheat cereal in toe crust ^ CORNISH BEEF PASTIES Filling Vi cup finely chopped onion 1 tablespoon butter or margarine 1 pound ground be^ % cup (2 oz. can) mushroom pieces and stenu, drained V4 cup grated extra sharp Cheddar cheese 1 tjcaspoon parsley flakes 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce % teaspoon salt Dash pepper cup catsup Crust 2 cups sifted enriched flour 44 teaspoon salt V4 teaspoon marjoram H cup bite size shredded wheal biscuits crushed to V« cup 1 egg, beaten Vs*cup soft butter or mar' #garine cup warm milk Heat oven to hot (400 degrees). Qx>k onion in butter until clear. Add groundheef. Cook thorou^ly. Drain. Add remaining ingredients. Mix well. Sift together flour and seasonings. Stir in cereal crumbs. Add egg, batter and milk. Mfat until smooth. Knead several times on floured boardi Divide dough into 2 equal parts. Roll each very thin. Qit into four 6-lnch cbrles. Place heaping V4 cup of filling on one half of each circle. Cut slots for steam to escape in other half. Fold dough qver filling. Bring edges together and seal. Bake on cookie ^eet 20 minutes or until brown. Serve with sauce made by heating V4 cup itiilk and 1 Can 0044 ol.) cream of mushroom or celery soup. Yield: 4 large servings. TJiSFTasIfei en before or after baking. Bake without thawing according to directions. If baked before freezing, heat without thawing in a hot (400 degrees) oven wrapped in foii for 10 minutes and uncovered for 10 minutes. Then for Lent and all meatless days, there are pasties made with tuna. These may be your favorite of them all. Remember, how . . haven’t said any one of these ■recipes is THE recipe for pasties. Tuna Cornish Pies 1 package (10 ounces) pie crust mix 2 tablespoons toasted sesame seeds, optional 44 cup chopped celery V4 cup chopped green pepper 2 tablespoons chopped onion 1 tablespoon butter or margarine flaked Mushroom Cream Sauce Combine dry pie crust mix and sesame seed. Proceed to prepare according to package directi^. Roll into six 7-incb pastry circles. ★ ★ * Cook celery, green pepper and onion, in butter until crisp-tender, about 3 minutes. Combine cooked vegetables, 44 cup cream of mushroOTi soup (reserve remaining soup for sauce), pe- cans, lemw juice »and curry powder; blend. .Stir in tuna. Place about 44 cup tuna mixture in each pastry circle; fold over and seal. Slato tops to allow steam to escape. Bake in 425 degrees (hot) oven 20 to 25 minutes or until lightly brbwnedT Serve with Mushroom Cream Sauce. Garnish with parsley aiid radish roses, as desired. To prepare Mashroom Cream Sauce (Makes about 2 cups): Cook 1 tablespoon chopped onion in 1 teaspoon butter. Stir in reserved undiluted soup, an additional 1 can (1044 ounces) undiluted condensed cream of mushroom soup, 1 can (6 ounces) sliced mushrooms and 44 cup of the mushroom liquid. Heat to serving temperature. t Sour Cream Tops Fruit A combinatioi of fruit juices with sour oeam and brown sugar forms a caramel-like sauce in this easy-to-make dessert. Caramel Fruit Campote » drfed figa. qiiirttaad_ Water 44 teaspoon grated lemon peel 44 fresh pineapple, peeled and diced „ 1 cup dairy soar cream 44 cup brown sugar Cover figs with water; add lemon peel and simmer for about 5 minutes or until dried figs are tender. Drain and cool. In large dessert dish, place figs and pineapple. Cover with sour cream; then brown sugar. Refrigerate, covered, for several hours. North Europeans Have This Salad This recipe is an old favorite, but It may be new to you. 1 jar (744 oqnces) marinated herring fillets 2 cups diced co<*ed potatoes Feups diced apple 1 cup diced pickled beets 3 tablespoons salad oil 1 tablespoon wine vinegar nSalt and pepper to taste Salad greens 2 harckooked eggs, sliced Drain herring; dice, removing any bones. Toss the herring with the remaining ingredients except the salaif greens and eggs. Add more oil and vinegar if needed. Serve on salad greens; garnish with egg. Makes 6 servings. Liverwursf for Snack Men usually go for this nackl Aaa’s BaheuMaa tomcks Liverwurst, not sliced Fine dry bread crumbs Butter Tomato Cocktail Squeu__ Shape chilled liverwurst into 1-inch bails between the palms of your hands; roll in crumbs, pr^ltaig down slightly. Use about 2 tablespoons butter for 1 pound liverwurst; heat butter in skillet; add the Uver-wuTst balls and brown thoroughly, turning as necessary. Serve at once with the Tbma-to Codetai] Sauce as a dip. The per capita inerane bi the RepuUk of Toga is only f78JO a year. SteakSale ROUND STEAK...! w SIRLOIN ooe STEAK... 09 T-BONE STEAK MILK GRAPEFRUIT 4-29' 44 Sal. 29*^ RV Reaertw Thm Ri/tht to lAmit Quunitit coriMimiTrsoPEiriKrl] Mr. tuid Mr$. Ai Spadaforo 3286 Auburn Av«. Auburn Heiehts TELEPHONE UL 2-132Q, Open Daily and Sunday 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. THg.POyT^iAC PRESS, TfltURSDAY, FIlBRtrARY 18, >»65 2 See Senate OK on Negro Voter Bill WASHINGTON «l -Jacob K. Javjte, R-N.Y.. and AtMinii' 'A. itiWcBftriKJMm;," aaid today the door nuiy J>e opening for early Senate pas-aage of a bill to further safe-guW N«gro votfi^^nj^r The two senators api^uded in separate interviews a statement Wednesday by iSen. Russell B. Long of Louisiana, the assistant Democratic leader, that he would be willing “under certain circumstances” to support a measure to set up federal reg-i islrars to register any Nelgroes who say they are discriminated against by state offtoials. reflects something UaiwZ. PUJii OR BVi’-OZ: ALMOND NESTLE OR Hersheys 2» SUaD for SANOWKHiS ^ Lady Linda White Bread ^ 1 9^ lAOY UMDA V HotBakedXhoriy PLe SNACK DEUGHT Potato Chips WITH COUPON AT RIGHT Razor Blades HorshoyBan ^ PONTIAC MAU 425 S. TEIEORAPH OpM Ddif e-e, sm. i-e ■ GLGNWOOD PLAZA 29 S. GLENWOOO opMi D^ 9-ie.SM., «-ie DRAYTON PUINS 4BB9 DlXn HWY. OpM Mr *•*. SA R-f 'ltd NO ON mnnnra ^' V ■ / ' THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, FBfeRUARY 1 1, 1963 C—5 Foreign News Commentary Language Issue Stirs Most of India l^gazina Exec Dies ST. LOUIS, Mo. (AP) -Charles L. Holt, 69, advertising sales manager of the St. Louis office of Time magazine since By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Analyst - India’s 'IMl...census disclosed' that in the huge subcontiimit there are 845 different languages and major dialects. Of this polyglot, Hindi and its dialects are . used try somethlhg less than half of the population, mainly in thej north. Among them all, the single unifying factor has been the English language, an inheritance of years of British Colonial rule. P a r t i c u-larly this applied to the civil service. Hie great diversity of lan-gnage made hopeless tiie task of unifying state and national NEWSOM administrations with o ai « pBieatataof Madras in the south, mobs began taking to the streets. AniTTO-lt-waa Uiat itMtirl^ stltuthm of 1960 directed that English should be the official language for the first IS years and on Jan. 26, 1965 should be replaced by Hindi. * a a In 1963 Parliament passed a law saying that non-Hindi speaking states could, if they wished, retain Etnglish as an “associate language” for another 10 years. But it failed to appease the fears of millions of Indians who feared loss of their jobs to Hindi speakers or the resentment of those states proud of their own native tongue. RULE BY RIOT Rule by riot not bring uncommon among the ezplosive Indian population, it was not too surprising that on Jan. 26, in Special Diet Needed for Low Sugar Level state, a language used by about 14 million. The rioters attacked trains, burned stations and cut telephone lines in an iftrienpr td halt oon>munic8tion. The mobs seized two policemen and burned them alive. Seven persons burned themselves to death in protest suicides. RIOTS SPREAD The riots th«i spread to Mysore and Kerala states where students attacked trains and post offices and stoned Hindi teachers. In Cakutta where Bengali is the principal tongue, student demonstrators smashed of 1946. died Wednesday of cancer. He wds bom in North Carolina. Of the nation’s currait population of some 192 million, 2SV5 million are aged 90 or over. Seeking GOP Post KALAMAZOO (AP) - John W. Keeslar, 20, of Bronson, president of Ute Western Michigan University Republican Chib, has announced his candidacy as viM chairman of the Michigan Federation of College Republicans. The federation convenes Feb. 26-27 in Lanstaig. Driver Killed hi Crash ST Clair (AP) -MiMoB Berw nard, 56, of Mikado, was killed Wednesday when h|s car struck a tree in St. Oair. By DR. WILUAM BRADY “After 25 years of dragging around haff d^ my sister read Dr. E.M. Abrahamson’s ‘Body, Mind and Sugar,” says a reader. She had been, to some of the best advertised “clinics” in the i^untry. Then the reader goes on to say that her sister consulted a physician. Now there’s a good idea for guUlible ones to consider— . consulting a physician who practices under his own name instead of getting mixed up with racketeers who exploit customers under (he impersonal guise of “clinic.” The physician who was alert to the possibility diagnosed her trouble as hypoglycemia, which means low level of sugar in the blood. In a healthy person there Is between 80 and 129 milligrams of sugar in 100 cuUc centimeters of blood, approximately % grain to the fluid ounce. ♦ * ★ If the blood sugar level becomes much lownr than this, the individual is certain to suffer serious consequences unless he or she gets sugar, candy, sweetened drink or other food immediately. QUICK CONVERSION Preferably glucose, dextrose, fruit sugar (levulose) or sucrose (cane or beet sugar), because the pure sugar is most quickly converted into blood sugar. The doctor prescribed a diet Scouts Stage 'Polar Push' 175 Taka Part 'o Camp Agawam Evant j M S pretty much the same as the diet Dr. Abrahamson gives in his book. Dr: Abrahamson gives credit to Dr. Seale Harris, professor of medicine at the University of Alabama, who devised the diet which Dr. Abrahamson advises. Incidentally i^ calls for seven or eight, well, not meals but partakings of food or drink daily. wee Probably a lot of persons who “drag around” for years and years would be found to have hyperinsulinism, hypoglycemia, low blood sugar if they were' given a six-hour glucose trier-ance test. EXTRA TROUBLE The test for hypoglycemia (hyperinsulinism, few blood sugar) is more trouglesome. For this the patient takes home the glucose solution, chills it in the refrigerator, drinks it at 5 a.m. (flavored with lemon juice perhaps), reports to the laboratory at 9:30 ajn. Bleed samples are taken at 19 and 11 •.■!. althen^ the diafnesis of hypoglycemia is confirmed If the 19 a.m. blood shows less than 79 mg. sugar per 199 e.c. On the other hand if die 19 e’olock and 11 o’clock both show more than 79 mg. of sugar the patieat does not have hypoglycemia. The reader’s sister found following the diet not quite so easy as rolling off a log. For instance you have to avoid absolutely the following items: Sugar, candy, sweets such as cake, pie, pastries, custards, honey, puddings, ice cream. Potatoes, riM, grapes, raisins, plum||' figs, dates, bananas. Spaghetti, macaroni, noodles. Coffee, tea and beverages containing caffeine. Wines, cordials, cocktails, For mild-mannered Prime Minister Lai Bahadur Shastrl, the language riots were just one Ml many burdens but they threatened to have widespread repercussions. ★ we Neither the Indian president nor some members of Siastri’s cabinet epproved.^of his handling of the situation. NEW strains The rioting put new strains on the ruling Congress party, already bursting at the seams as result of the loss of former Prime Minister Nehru. In Kerala state, electhms are schedttled for next month, and the Commnnists who made po-Utical profit out of the food riots of last November seem likely to make further gains out of the language riots. Kerala is the only Indian state where the Conununists ever have held power. They were m office from 1957 to 1959. It is a tragedy of India that Nehru left it with a heritage of 17 years of democracy but failed to solve any of its other majw problems. FALTERING ECONOMY The greatest of these is faltering economy unable to feed India’s exploding population. Hand in hand are inflation and mounting unemployment. Widi an of these facing him, Shastri seemed ready to compromise on the language issue. AZLEY BETTER NEATS 5 wee 1931 78 iorHi Saginaw DOWNT0WN NNTMO nFftforEMfiinetWiVrAA. 4346 Dine ffichmir Diurroii PUMi Open WadnaMlay's 9 A.M. le 6:30 PA4. Opwi Thundinf dw P.M. > 9 A.M. to A P.M. • SWISS CLUB BAZLEY famous lean, tender, juicy Arm or English Cut Lean Center Cut 491391 YOUR CHOICE S. Beef Hearts 'mm' Bologna Short Bibs *£ Sliced Bacon BUY mw ANB SAVE! m Fresh, Lean HAMBURGER PORK LOIH Fresh Ground 3 i *1“® ROAST Grade A Grade 1 SKINLESS LUGE HOT ACC EGGS DOGS 4wib. 351 31 wWflV 108 NORTH SAGINAW REGARDLESS OF YOUR BED YOU WILL SLEEP AND REST BETTER ON A FIRM SEALY MATTRESS ____More than" 19 boys from 17 Scout troops in the Pontiac district, Boy Scouts of America, took part hi a simulated “Polar Push” last weekend at C a m p Agawam near LAe Orldn, according to Norton R. Graham, PonUac District camping and activities chairman. The Scriits, in patrols trf ^ -boys each, encountered various problems at ewh base of “Antarctica,” designed to test their knowledge of various Scouting skills. At one stop on the journey one member of the patrol became separated from the rest of the party on a simulated iewfloc. :-r-: tying short strands of tope together with the proper knots and throwing the line to the drifting member of the party. a * ★ The boys were aTso required to build fires. Food cached nearby was located by compass in another test. OTHER TESTS There were several other tests before the diyr was over, with the Lone Ruilner Patrol of •rtuop 64. St. Luke’s Methodist (%urch, scoring 37 points out of a possible 40,’.to become the winners. Graham said (he event was a huge success and would be repeated next winter. (Copyright, 1965) City CD Unit Sets Medical Tfoinmg Class The Pontiac Office of Civil Defense will present a medical emergency course in survival and disaster training beginning Tuesday. | Offer^ in cooperation with the Oakland County Office of Civil Defense, the course prepares persons for any medical m&gmr Whetnar snsaeirir" disaster or enemy attack. Jriin Reinedi, civil defense director, said the course M 'by doctors as Two similar courses will be presented from 8-10 p.m. one evening per week for 12 weeks, be said. w ★ a The courses will meet on Tuesdays and Thursdays in the county civil defense office at 1 Lafayette. FIRM Smmly Goldui Sl««p Q«lox« NOW ONLY $9A95 Tbb federal Government esti-lahtes that the UB. labor force will rise to an estimated 190 million in 15 years, from the current 74 million. T%f. oulaUndinf mattraa vaKir of tiw yoor! Now oflered at nrit Uu than tha low price nationally ad-/«rtiaod laat year! Identical foaturaa. Identical (uarantae. Only tha price haa chaaged ... H'a Iowa* than avari U Dwa naata kaapt tarfaM aaaaaUi ■ SaotyCdeaUarrc) 39? SmIst Q«ilf 8npr«m« Yoa’d eipect an ordinary mat- NOW ONLY treaa at thia low, low prica—not ___ ______ Bnatra-Snn,quality-liuiKSealy! A MM Af tha mart buyinfdeciaiaa YouH altap happily ever after. H Edsa Oerds* prevent eaiehii edfes •49? taday. fumptr ymrmlf for tha 8«alY BmB Chutfd NOW ONLY $rA95 59? OPEN THURSDAY, FRIDAY and SATURDAY HI 9 P.M.... PARK FREE in WKC’o Ut Rear ef Store PONTIAC FitESS, TIKJBSDA:^. FJ^iiKUAKy 1»> ■ Washington News In Brief Lagging Enlistments Boost Draft Quota WASHWGTW (AP) - Lag- proved active Army rtrength. ging enlistments forced the Pen- Some officials said the num-tagon Wednesday to nearly dou- her of voluntary enlistments A^ to 13,700 men compared with 7,900 for March. A Defense Department aib nouncement said the April draft toUl is needed “to replace enlisted losses not c^pensated for by enlistments and r^enlist• ments so as to maintain ap- of the realization that the Defense Department has been conducting a study looking! toward possible elimination of Ae draft. All of the April draftees wiU go to the Army. As usual, the Navy, Marines and Air Force will be able to meet manpoww needs without drawing on the WASHINGTDN e. South led a club to dummy’s ace and ruffed a third diamond. Then he ruffed a second club with dummy’s last trump and expert West who apparently had become exhausted by the strain of making that brilliant ftun^p lead was cardul to conserve both his king and queen' of clubs. Now South ruffed a fourth diamond and played out his two remaining trumps: West discarded a heart on the last trump lead but South was in control. He simply led a third club. West took his king and queen of clubs and then had to lead hearts and give South a trick with the king on the second lead. Q__The bidding has been: South West North E— 1 # Pass 1A Paa* 2 N.T. Pass 3 A Pass Pass 3 A Pass You. South, hold: AAIWKQIMI♦AQIAKin What do you do? A—Bid four spades. It appears that your partner has a lot of black cards. Three no-tramp is a close seeosid ehelee. TODAYS QUESTION Instead of bidding three clubs your partner bids three hearts over your two no-trump. What do you do now? Congress take a look at it every two years. WASHINGTON (AP) -’Ihe time may be right for U.S. trade overtures to foe Soviet Union because of failures in Soviet economic policy, according to a study sponsored by the Committee for Ecomxnic Development. In order to remain leader of the world’s Communist bloc, the trump and from this point on perfect defense would have doomed South to defeat. Smith did Mt know this right away. He was pretty sure that the ace of hearts was reposing snngiy in the West hand, but he could set the diamond salt if it would only break 3-2 so Sooth led foe ace of diamonds and ^sfrologi^/J Forecast ^ THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 18. 1965 C—7 Open 10 to 10 Daily, Sun. 1? to 7-THURS., FRI., SAT., SUN. 4‘Day President*$ Sale 4-SHELF ALL STEEL ADJUSTABLE UNITS Reg. 3.44 4 Days Only All steel constructed unit for basement or laundry room. 10x28x42” overall measure* iiient. Four adjustable shelves, coppertone finish. Reg. 2.29 4 Days Only 5Vixl2xl0” strong all metal file box for use at home or at the ofnce. Attractive gray enamel finish. Shop K mart and save! PICK UP YOUR COPY OF THE BIG 12 PAGE/|~^ PRESIDENT’S SALE CIRCULAR AT ANY K mart IT’S JAM-PACKED WITH MORE DISCOUNT SPECIALS! Pretident’M Sale REPUCaiENT I SEAT & BACK 1 CHAIR KIT ' i 2.57 each kit j ^ kit. \ Charge It Vinyl covers. Gold* • en Fern or Flitter ; IMttern. .1 colors! 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I)acgan>'^-*l|id-f.repc Prints .. gTc yiL. , Charge It , Compact design, push*button opera* tiuti. 5V%k7Wxy4"* Charge It Completely immers* ibie. Automatic heat comwl. 18xIVix6“ Charge It Automatic toasting - dial, snapHiut crumt] tray. tJL approved! Charge It With “coffee dial”. GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1«. 196J Ex-Detroit Prep Involved Two Cagers, Chicago Bar Owner Face Bribe Charges SEATTLE (AP) - 'niree Seattle University basketbiiU players, one of them the captain md top scorer, were e:q)elled from school today in a point-shaving scandal. Charlie Williams, 21, the captain, and Pdler Phillips, 21, both guards, were arrested by the FBI Wednesday night and charged with brib^ and conspiring to affect the outcome of a gqme here Jan. 22. A Chicago tavern owner and former teammate of Phil^M at Coalinga, Calif., Junior College, Lee Casale, 23, was arrested in Chicago. PhUUps was as AO-City L League choice while at De- Seattle University announced the explusion today of Williams, PhiHips, and L. J. Wheels, reserve center from Santa Ana, CaUf. [ Tlje Rev, Timothy Cronin, esiisthwt to the university |Mw8i-dent, said Wheeler was expelled becfiuse be knew of the conspiracy but failed to report it Seattle won the game against the University of Idaho W-72, a margin of 17 points. The point qneid was U. Gambling oo basketball games is usually on the point margin. Williams and Phillips were released on their personal rec- ognizance after being arraigned btfore U.S. Commissioaer Walter J. Reseburg Jr. They are adieduled to appear at a pre- hearing on March Casale wu to be arraigned in Chicago today. A W A Neither Williaais nor Phillips would conunent about (he in^ dent, but the Seattle Times said Father Cronin talked with P1}11-lips. Father Cronin was cpioted as saying Phillips told him the bas-ketball-lwibery incident was a “favor to a friend" for whidi he $110. The priest said Phillips admitted meeting Casale in Chicago on a road trip early in the season and agreed “to help him out because Casale was in fmancial troubles.” Phillips reportedly told Fa- ther Cronin that Casale gave him $130 but Williams was not paid a dime to Influence ttie outcome of the Idiabo game, in which Williams itoored 16 points and Phillips eight The Seattle Chieftains loat to DePaul University, 91-77, to Chicago Dec. 23. AAA , The FBI said the arrests were the first under a new law, effective last June, making it a fed- eral crime to infhience the outcome of a sporting event by bribery, or to use interstate commerce facilities sudi as ttoe-phiHie or telegrai^ In such an attempt A A A - The report of the game carried by the Seattle Post-Intdll-gencer the morning after'the !gsme said; I “SU, after being ahead by 24' pointi at 65-41 to the----------- half, came apart and made “Idaho took advantage ef SU taraoveh, caused by lackadaisicai play, Md Idaho Afandals cat the Chlefs'lead to 16 pototo it 7W14 wlto 7:46 to play.” “Substitutes Elzie Johnson, Rick Mathews and Ralph Hey-(Continaed Page I, CM. 2) . Goalie 'Armful to Red Wings CLIPPING THE WINGS—Montreal goalie victory over the Detroiters. At left are Jean Charlie Hodge makes a save against the De- Beliyeau (4) of the Canadiens and Ted Llnd- troit Red Wings last night en route to a 2-0 say of Detroit. PCH in Home Finale Meefs Port Huron PNH Has a 'Breather' Pontiac Norlhem’s basketball team plays one of the few “breathers” on its schedule tomorrow before getting down to work for the “Championship” game next week against East Detroit. The Huskies travel to Port Huron, a team that has a 1-12 record and finished Elastem Michigan League play in last place. . Northern will be a heavy fa- Chicago Star Injured in Win Over Rangers By United Press International The Chicago Black Hawks may learn today just bow much they test Hhy beating the New York Rangers. Chicago rallied for three goats in the final period to nip the Bangers 5-4 Wednesday nidht. down badly when Umeaax but in the process Bobby Hull suffered ano^er knee injtny. Hull, who- Ktumed to _ Hawks’ Itoeup last Sunday after missing four games with an injury to his right knee, suffered a stretched ligament to his left knee when he was checked by New Vork’s Amie Brown. The wtiminggoal forHw Hawks was scor^ by Stan Mi-kita, enabling him to pass Hull in the individual scoring race with 68 points, M motf than nis auing teammate. The Rangers had scored four goals in the secoad period to take a 4-2 lead, but thirditericd ■ - ; Mohns, Fred the Hawks to maintain a four-poiat advantage over the Moo-trtal Canadiens in the National Hockqy LaagtiP standings. vorite to add another loss to the Big Reds’ ledger. Port Huron has failed to come up with a consistant scorer. A pair of regulars. Bob Wedge and Jim Herrick earned recognition in state football circles last fall. Walled Lake hits the road for a match with EML champion East Detroit. Waterford is at Roseville and Farmington goes lb“Mt. Clemens: ♦ ^ -Wftf.Hdiampion of the Inter-Lakes, holds a 2-0 fhark against SML teams. The Huskies downed Roseville and Mt. Clemens in the early going. ONE WIN Port Huron’s lone victory was over Roseville early in January: Waterford’s hopes rest oh how-fast guard Bill Lemeaux recovers from an injury suffered against Clarkston Tuesday. His play at guard is one of the mato factors in the Skippers’ offense. The Waterford attack broke went Mt in the first quarter Tuesday. Roseville started the season in high scoring fashion, but cooled off rapidly and has been s^unbling this month. East Detroit, a tall quintet that has done very well this season, will be aaal^ to-reboirad from its Tuesday loss to Kimball. Reports on the ganne indicate that neither East Detroit oi; Kimball played up to par. Duffy Sets Practice EACTJAWWfi iUPIL-: KodbaB drilli ITMk^ Central Meets Southwesterri in SVC Contest Pontiac Central will conclude another fine basketball season in the West Huron gymnasium Friday in a Saginaw Valley Conference game with dangerous Flint Southwestern. A A The Chiefs — currently rated the sixth best Class A cage team in the state by the Assisted Press — have only one more regular season contest after this week and that is at Saginaw Arthur Hill. Their hopes for a piece of the SVC basketball championship np^e^Weffdisapptoired last Friday when Southwestern was not able fo side-track first place Saginaw. The Colts are tied for fourth place in the SVC; and neither Flint Central nor Midland, both lower, seem potent enough upset Saginaw's Trojans in the final two tilts. AAA' Coad! Fred Zlttel of PCH, while admitting his title hopes were very sHm, refused to look beyond the final two league games to state tournament play. “WeYe playing them one at a time,” he said yesterday. Last season the Chiefs also finished second in the SyC and went on to reach the state Class A semifinals at East Lansing before dre^ping out of the postseason ac^. NEW LINEUP Zittel did admit Central would have a different starting lineup for the second straight game. Jessie Evans, a 62 junior forward, will move to guard and ^62 senior John Hooper will move back into the first five against i Southwestern. AAA This will give PCH a taller jefmsiye Ito^. -in Mftcipitigji Charlie Hodge Blanks Detroit 2-0 shutout Aided by Power Ploy Goals DETROIT (AP) - Goalie Charlie Hodge of Montreal has two arms like any other net-minder, but he uses tiiem as if they were 10. AAA The Detroit Red Wings can testify to that. Hsdw tamed back.26 Detroit assaults on his goal 'Wednesday night as the Canadiens defeated the Red Wings 2-0 in National Hockey League play at Montreal. AAA The victory moved the Canadiens into sole possession of second place in the league, two points ahead of idle Tonmto and four up on Detroit. Chia^ continues to lead toe league. THIRD SHUTOUT Hodge, who returned to the nets over the weekoid, turned in his third shutoiU of the sea-K son and got all the support he I need^ from two power r»ia3^ goals bv linemates Heh'-i Rich-I ard and (Taude Provost. ^ « A A Richard beat Detroit goalie Roger Crazier, who made a total of 26 saves, late in the- first period with Detroit defenseman Marcel PVonovost serving a penalty. Richard’s 16th goal of the y«^ came an ^passes from Dave Balon and Jean Bliveau. In the second period, the Red Wings had just about finished killing a Ted Lindsay penalty when Provost scored, beating Crozier on passes from John Ferguson and Noel Picard just as Lindsay was returning to the ice. It was Provost’s 21st goal, this season. / WINNING BATHS — Pontiac Northern swimming coach Ed Dauw (white pants) hea^ into the PNH pool as the happjnRuM^ Mlebrate“ffieF wm bvdr Fitzgerald last Bight 54-51. It was the first time Northern had ever beaten the W’arreh school. In the water to the right is assistant coach John Moreau who was given the first bath. Pontiac Northern is assured of its best season hr history, -now boasting a-. 12-2 record, with a meet against strong Birmingham Groves Friday night in the PNH pool. Sweet-Revenge Win for Huskies'Swimmers — Carl Hiller's touch (front lane) in the I freestyle relay event was the deciding factor in : Northern’s 54-51 triumph over Fitzgerald last night. It was a dose meet and Northern won both team rday events. All eyes watched (he thrilling finale. Pontiac Northern’s swhnmingj team is getting even with teams which in past years did every-1 thing but drown the Huskies. Last night in assuring themselves the best record in school’s history, the Huskies Detroit Kegler Tops Pro Field Dave Soutar First; 'Mo' Moore Rallies For Post-Gairie Remarks Hoosier Raps U. o/M.'s Struck BLOOMINGTON^ Ind. (* ^ Rraiich Indiana basketball coach, said Wednesday that Coach Dave St rack of nationally top-ranked Michigan show^ poor judgment te an aUercation-after their game Monday night and should have been thankful for victory. McCracken said he s h o o k hands with Strack in the hall after the game and said, '*Dave7 we sure 7fave you uoe^’ McCracken said Strack, in- SASKCrSAUs SCOftES MICH HI«H SCHOOL SASKSTSALL Detroit SoufltMlttm m, Oitom 3> D(lrg« Eutem IL FJnmy iS OMrelt Mwnierd 73, OOTOir iS OMrolt NerthMdem SI, CsnIrsI SO DMroH Clwdwv 71, Cady S7 Datrett MantmaMara M, Wnitm 75 Datrolt Caotty %, W«Sr Wright »-Dairstt SaiiMwaWifit 7t Hsnty Sard Oatrtdt Rad Ford 7B, l»actmaii S3 Dtiran ParWiino 74, Can Ttch IS Rhrtr Raas* Leordtt 74 Harntramdi St. Florlan S3 — ------------------- ^ ■AtT Maly ^ l555!rf"«”’ ^ SOUTH Duka 17, South CaroNaa S7 CaiaUM m. Matin CarallM State MIOWilT , Miami, OMD S bliLlo u: 45, Miami, ________ Notre Dame M. Bowling Groan 73 Chicago Loyola 14, Wattam Michigan It Tolado n, Kant Stata M Indiana Slata 17, Butitr tS Aqulnai UO. LaWnnet Tadt II , Kalamiioo II, Adrian 4f Calvin 107, Ahna M OHvel MS, Oalrolt Todl M • (Chlcagol 14, Waotara Michigan 73 . NHL Standings of toe Colts starting lanky Rick Yuille in the bMkoourt. also normally a forward. Diminutive Jim McClendon in toppirom the starthig ftve. Ex-Minor Pilot Dies NEW ORUIANS (AP) - Ly- greatest miner league managers, died St a hospital here Wedoeaday night at the age of 73. stead of accepting cdhgratula-tions and going on. “wanted, to pdp off about it.” He quoted Strack as saying, “We de--servetL to win H. What are you talking about?” Michigan pulled out of apparent defeat twice and finally beat Indiana SS-fS in two overtimes. ■ McCracken said that after Strack made his remark assistant cijach Lou Watson of Ind>ns reached past McCracken and grabbled Strack by the collar. AAA McCracken told them, “Take it easy and epol off.” Watson and Strack were separated and no blows were stnidL "If Stradk had played it smart he'd have gotten out of there," McCracken said. AAA Reached for comment in Ann Arbor, Strack to3d newsmen: “It wasn’t too bad, and it want too good. There was WICHITA. Kan. (AP),.- Dave-Sxitar of Detroit held a sub-^stantial lead in a 96-man field after two rounds today in the Professional Bowlers Association $30,660 Thunderbird Open Tournament. AAA Soutar pasted identical scores of 1323 for 26« total after 12 games and was 115 pins ahead ul second place J. B. Blaylock of El Paso, Tex. Blaylock had a 12-qame total of 2531. Pontiac's Monroe Moore had to overcome a big early deficit. . His 1249 second block gave him 2414 total, good pliCC. shoved me. I was juM standing there and all of a sudden he gavemc a shove. - They had juit te^F tough qne, but I’ve lost some tough ones too. Other coaches have test some tough ones and kept their poiae.” won their 12th meet in 14 starta by defeating strong Warren Fitzgerald, i team they had never beaten, 54-51. A . A A Friday night in the PNH pool, the Huskies meet Birmingham Groves, another team which they have never beaten. Decisions in both team relay events, and especially in toe thrilling 299 freMtyle relay finale, netted PNH the big p^tmaiiins. Carl Hiller, who set a varsity record with a second place in the individual medley with a time of 2:14 behind Fitzgerald’s Lester McCormick, brought home'the bacon in the laM teg of toe relay event, a touch ahead of Marv Petty. AAA Dick Johnson set a varsity mark with 1:00.6 in the back-stroke, and one of the key decisions was Bob Hayes breaststroke triumph over McCormick in 1:09. Steve Yedlin again posted a double win with a 1:57.$ in tha 200 free and 400 free-style event FNH S4, FMxgmM II 3W AMIn R*I«7 - ^H (D. J< Hayn, R. Jahinan, R. Ch« --------------- HKord) N4 Sr^tlrukc - Hayti (FHMfc Me. CormWi (F), Ltftvar (F), F. V«dtll (PM) 1:07 yFr««tvl« Rtlay _ PNH (HmOUnt, ^ ——'—•(, 0. ---------- ---- ■ ^.w.. ,... S3 13 J13 Cincinnati . 40 33 431 im ClllrvSS'* § S ills 31 - paMaR * M Frandaoa Lot Angalaa.111. Haw YofK M SI. Loolt vTVS ^ Angalaa ^ OatraR^ San Fr....^.. - Friteg^aoiM Tigers to Get New Stands LAKELAND, Fla. (AP) — Takeland’i city commisdon moved Wednesday to build new stands at Henley Field, site of toe Detroit Tigers exhibition games during spring training. A total of $300,000 was''ap' {wopriatod Jor toa,«ew steads expected to be ready for toe 1066 season. We(toeaday*rnctioh tanre wii in hours after Mrs. Lola S«t ' a former Detroiter, was sw« te as tha dty’i first wUm mayor. THE PONTIifC PRESS. THURSPAY. FKBRUARY-18. INTnNATIONM. HOCKIV LI M 4 HTt W*VM 4 ovvllmi 4 Om JAoInn 4 ovMlIm* fM**! ••HIM t^^’oeme TIGER PAW _ HEADQUARTERS — U.S. ROYAL Safety 800 Origiiil EqiipntBt Tibtltu abI NaixBW Whitiwall TIRES Thii Week Only! 6.50x13 165L 7.00x14 S|750 ■ Him tM 7.50x14 ^2050 8.00x14 ^0050 H« »•■ KING THHSeEIITER 31 W. CaN 333-70M HIDDEN MEANING? Detroit Tiger hurler Hank Aguirre could be forming a ieft-handed question mark with his pitching arm as he reports to skipper Charlie Dressen. The qianager hopes A^rre, who reported yes- ' terday at the Lakeland, Fla., training base a week early, can at least reverse last summer’s 5-19 record this year and lead the Bengals into pennant contention. Open Sunday 'Early Bird SPECIALS 12 Noon to 4 P.M. coMnBTE mrao OUTFITS STABCRAn BBd SEmY BOATS Naw, Quiet Mticanr Chtboard SKCIAI BOAT —MOTOR *995 B0A1 •ceWeI IMS S. Wm •M-eJSt MTS at ASimi B4 a-Ml Mhl. 2 Cagers, Bar Owner Face Bribe Charge (Caatiaaed from Page 8) ward boosted the lead to 21 with three minutes to play.” Idaho Coach Jim Goddard said Wednesday night in Spokane where his team and .Gonaaganwtr that about all he could recall of the Idaho-Seattle U. game was his team's performance. ★ * ★ "We got far behind in the first half," Goddard said, "and had so much work to do I really didn’t pay much attention to what the other team was doing. "We did catch up quite a bit at times, but we were pretsiBg and hustUag better, and I Just thought it was a . good Job by Idaho.’' Williams could not be reached for comment, and Phillips's wife said he would have no statement to make. SUSPENDED Eddie O’Brien athletic director and a former basketball star for Seattle, said both boys were suspended from the team and the university for ‘admittedly having knowledge of a bribe attempt and for failing to report it.” But O’Brien added: “We’re , not judging them. That’s not our business.” O’Brien said his first word of the investigation came Wednesday morning from FBI agents who interviewed SU I players during the day. Swedish Net Star Shines l^enWyfoes Will Discover Mean Aguirre LAKELAND, Fla. (AP)-The "Nice Guys Finish Laat Club” picked up a new member this year when Hank Aguirre re--peReaidTheTTprs early camp iB Lakeland. ★ ★ ★ If the 33-year-old left-hander didn’t flnish last in 1964 he came close to it. He finished the season with a 5-10 record and was on pretty unfriendly terms with Manager Charley Dressen. 'This year, Aguirre says, it , will be different. ‘Tve got to be mean. I’ve got to be tough. I’ve got to be mean and tough and just as nasty as I can be out tiiere.” Aguirre says he thought about it a lot during the winter. Much ■ of Ills tiwible,"'he says;"WHS ■_ ting too friendly with opposing players. 4 ★ ★ “You find yourself sitting in front of your locker and saying, ‘well, if I had to lose. I’m glad so-and-so beat me bemuse he’s a decent sort of a guy and he’s got a family and can ude the money.’ “Well the heck with that, kind i of thinking anymofe. I’ve got to do whatever is necessary to win —no matter what it is.” ALSO 5 MID8ET MUSTANGS fiiVEN AWAY FREE! A John McAuliffo Salwamon Today And Why 1965 IS THE BEST YEAR YET TO 60 FORD ... and Why McAuliffa's Is th« Boat Placa To Buy Yours! SAUSBURY, Md. (AP) - Jan-Erik Lundquist, bered by Americans but possibly not outgunned, has moved intb the quarter-finals of the U.S. National Indoor Tennis Championships. ’The tall, blonde Swede is the Richly, lone survivor of 17 foreign en- j tries following upsets of first-seedM Jlanuel^-. Spain, second-ranked Rafael Osuna of Mexico and fourth-seeded Nicola Pietrangeli of Italy. tonight, Ralston plays Gene Scott, America’s fifth-ranked player, and Ashe takes on Ron Holmberg, rated sixth best in the nation. On Friday, Lundquist will play McKinley and FroehHng Crane Sextet Loses Hamtramck St. Ladisi turned in a 2-1 verdict over Cranbrook’s hockey squad yesterday. The Cranes went in front 1-0 in the second period on, goal by Dick Moon, but Hamtramck came back with a pair in the third to take the decision. TowTR^tipIlecXontesh Marred by 2 Forfeits Osuna, the Mexican diamp, was the latest to fall. He was eliminated Wednesday night by young Cliff Richey of Dallas, ^ 4, 5-7, 6-3. Richey’s sister, Nancy, recently won the women’s national indoor title. FOUR SEEDED All four seeded Americans — Chuck McKinley, Dennis Ralston, Arthur As^ and Frank Froehling — have advanced to the round of eight. In two quarter-final matches Players, fans and officials had an early finish to their scheduled tr^le 4ieader at Tierce Jqmor High School in the Wa-j terford Township adult recrea-| tion badcetball leagw. Ryeson’s Market continued its recent surge in the opener with a 67-33 romp past wtelett Duii-| Stan’s Floral. Gus Pantel’s 15 points ior the winners led all] scorers in the National League m. 1 Lakeland Pharmacy and Frushour & Strubel Realty won forfeit games. Dodge HARD TO FIND EASY TO DEAL WITH IPAMA MSWWAMI 211 South Saginaw St.. Pontiac-FI 8-9122 A few dollars more tip the scales in your favor The HSM 100 Suit Hart SchalTner &-M8rx’ HSII 100 Suit is worth the few dollars more it costs. You get what you pay for. And more. You’re well-dressed. Confidently at ease. In any group. The fabrics are premium imports, the style and quality offered by custom tailors. HS&\f tailors them accordingly with such custom details as satin stripe linings with “ oontrasting trim, Bemberg sleeve linings, horn buttons. Look behind the seams. "Underpressing”, for example. The extra hand-pressings that moqld and shape the suit during the tailor-. ing. Not afterwaid. 'The perfect fit you lyiy is the fit you keep. Try on an HSM 100 suit. See how much more those few txlra dollars buy. mcIcinsoztSs^ THE STYLE CORNER OF PONTIAC SAGINAW Qt LAWRENCE BIRMINGHAM—272 W. MAPLE Open Friday Night 'til 9 P.M. ■ ; ! ■ vie have PRICES AUTO STORES J & R AUTO STORES NO MONITDOWR Ml your tiro ooodt, put ooa lol toJayl ns N. M6»tw—Ohs ul Tri. ‘U S Ml. WIDMItOAn MinALL t CMcaflo - C»lch*r J.C. Martin, I Cogers Close With Upset W« Ctfry • Ceapleti Uat d Swift liipcmlus 1 EXPERT CAMERA SHOP •• !!???•''- I HwnT n t-mr The Pontiac Parks and Reo reation Department’s adult rec* reation Class A basketball league' flnished its regular season play last nij^ht, marked by Tte last place Students siv-prised defending city champion West BkKmrfield Heating, 77-«. aided by a 24-15 third quarter «lgr. They had ied by only one point at haUHnie, 3505; Each team had four players Heglaad 17, Bob Quick M and jaaBlodierU. West Bloomfield was paced by Dave Diehm’a 10 fielders for 20. The other tilt saw pace-setting Roy White’s Unbeatablea blast Uoyd Motors 7004. The city championship playoffs will open Monday. -4n- junior basketball, first place Now itope Baptist had a 23-point performance by Bill Smith and beat the Tams, 62-48^ Tc-’Town Five dumpd the Auburn Heights Boys’ Club Hawks, 72-56. GoinmoiN FUTURE! Good crodif it ono of /today's mctt vital pottottiont . . , , / don't ritk loiing it! When big billi //aecomolato and all thingt loom hopolott / / thoro it a tolutioni Oor ' / HOMEOWNER’S LOAN PUN / , / hat offorod poaeo of mind and ronowod con-' ” fidonco to many fomiliot jott liko yourtolf offoring ______ UP TO ^5,000 b On Home Equities Or 1st Mortgagee Thermal) Gibsoii Gains Keg Honor 'MILWAUKEE (AP) -The^ man Gibson, 48, of Detroit, a three - time ABC tournament champion and one of the event’s highest scorers for nearly three decades, was named Wednesday las the 29th member of the American Bowling Congress Hall of Fame. Gibson received 69 of the votes cast by the nation’s bowling writers, sportcasters, ABC officials and Hall of Fame members in a runoff forced because none of nine candidates received the necessary 75 per cent of votes cast on the first ballot. He edged a longtime Detroit teammate, Fred Bujack, now of St. Louis, who won four ABC tournament titles. Bujack receive 63 votes. Twotime all -star tournament champion Connie Schwoegler of Madison Wis., ^ 1. CallToday For An Appointment I FAMILY ACCEPTANCE CORP. FE 8-4022 311 Natienal Building IIWestHiwon Scoring Leader Out DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) -Pat Ginnell, the International Hodcey League’s leading scorer, broke an ankle Wednesday ni^t as his Des Moines teammates blew a 3-0 lead and lost 6-5 in overtime to Dayton. Bloomfeld Hills After Piece of League Title AFL-NFL Meeting Clouded by Rules PALM DESERT, Calif. (AP) - Football fans ne^ not expect in the inunediate future to see a title game between the champions of the National and the American Football Leagues. ’They need not, in fact, even wait around (or an exhibition game between the two leagues. It would take a revision qf^tbe NFli constitutiim to sanction an NFL-AFL champiimship game, along with AFL blessing of course. NEED 14 VOTES Approval of an exhibition game would require a yes vote by all 14 owners of the NFL. who generally can’t agree on anything — not even the ciHor of the jerseys their teams will wear at home and on the road. “As far as I am concerned,” said NFL Comnussioner Pete Rozelle, “I would not favor an exhibition game between the National and American Leagues.” _______ ♦ * ★ Rozelle made his comment as the league resumed its winter meeting and after his position seemingly was distorted by his answer to a question about the lease’s policy involving nonleague exhibitions. The constitution, said Rozelle for btarificatim, does not prohibit a pre-season game with the AFL. Nor does it proUbit, it was pmnted out, exhibitions with the Pakistanian Blue Rifles, Canadian Football League team nor the Eagle Rock, Calif . * Rhinos. * ★ y * The league rdle says simply ithat all 14 clubs must agree on a pre-season schedule. Rozelle made it obvious his league has full schedule of pre-season games and is not inter ested in outside commitments, including any AFL games. One owner, Arthur B. Modell of the chaihpion Cleveland Browns, was even more pointed. He said his club is not interested in associating in any way with the other league — games, common craft, you name it. Bellamy, Havlicek Sharp Subs Spark Cage Wins By The Associated Press Nominations are open for the best sixth man in the National Baskeball Association, and for starters how abodt Baltimore’s Walt Bellamy and Boston’s John Havlicek. Nomnally a starter, Bellamy canae off the bendi and sparked the Bullets’ 125-114 victory over Cincinnati Wednesday night. Havlicek, Boston’s super-sub, scored 31 as the Celtics rolled past St. Louis 121-114. Los Angeles relied on those reliable starters, Elgin Baylor and Jerry West, for its 118-98 romp over New York. Bellamy, the 6-foot-ll center who has been a mainstay since coming into the league three years ago, failed to start for the first time in his career after absorbing public criticism for his recent play by Baltimore General Manager Paul Hoff- Big Walt came off the bench at the start of the second period, scoring 24 points and grabbing 13 rebounds the rest of the Way. Gus Johnson’s 29 points led the Bullets, who jumped off to a 17- 1 lead in the first five minutes. Havlicek, who has replaced the retired Frank Ramsey as Boston’s No. 1 reserve, scored 31 points, one less than Sam Jones, as the Celtics roared from behind against St. Louis. ’The undermanned Hawks, playing without Bob Pettit, Qiico Vaughn and John Barnhill, got 33 points from Zelmo Beaty .and 29 from Giff Hagan. BRAND NEW 1965’s THAT MUST BE SOLD OUTSTANDING SALESEVENT 60 Day Old Inventory Stock Cars All of tho 60 day old stock cars at AAatthews-Hargroavos aro markod with a 60-day tab. This moons big savings for you and you can chooso from a good soioction of colors, body stylos and modols! CItwion *1 Tiw --------"I tMholi_____________ Khnlwll at SoutMlaM M«»l et* M-a«rkl« . ____ . North FarmfeielM at ilfwilngham Cravat Uvonla Franklin at Oatrolt Tlwralan Jana Glann at Oak Fark III al Aknor' Bay at N« C^a^ Oatrott St. Cacllia at Blnninsham Srtlhar --------- . .fghn F. Ktnnady Harbor Beach at Oackarvllla Imlay City at North Branch ■ ■ U S. at Oatrolt Coonti Byron at Ortenvillo Lady at tt .larbor Baaui a, r11.11 WHITE >12.50 CUSTOM RETREAD 000 Mt. CltMont St., Cor. East Blvd., Rontiae Open 0 A.M.4 P.M. Daily-Phene FE 4-0071 U.S. ROYAL TIRES A'Midneervd le keep your $pare in lh» trunk to TBsvelHtd MtNUciD between Friday and Sunday. Some anow flurries are forecast, but the U S. Weather Bureau says rain could dampen skiers’ slopes and hopes during the weekend, ♦ * ★ \ Despite the thawing temperatures, most area ski resorts have remained in operation and report good-to-very-good conditions. Some have curtailed their operations to only nighttime skiing or have limiM the number of slopes in operation. Natural snow it almost completely gone from Teeple Hills slopes and the former Pontiac Lake dtl areas. Enthusiasts are urged to contact the resort of their choice for exact operating times before setting out since the forecast is for a continued warming trend. ALW.NC O-. ,o«. ^o3nt' •RICHTON, Brightan - IM| ^UNt' SrmmpIAN. - ll-M b*M, ilViir-Starved Yanks Favored Roch«ster, N. Y. Sijte of Compotition ^ blenniai competition begins Friday morning with compulsory figures in men’s' singles. The compulsories in ladies’ singles, pairs and ice PIN6 KNOB - 11 hW.' scheduled Saturday, .....jiLYfRSul addle %U four finals will be skat- I good to vtr»_900d. ' W9ST MKNIBAN Four County Skiers Eye National Titles Four youthfuITlaklaiff Cbimty skiers are awaiting the next slope in their bids to compete next immth in the National Junior Alpine championships at Squaw Valley, Calif. ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) - A victory-starved United States figure skating team is looking forward to a title feast in the 1965 North American Championships with Canada this weekend. It’s eben four yefu-s since an Bloomfield Hills passed majAr American figure skater won an hurdles last weekend at Boyne international event and the Falls, strong U.S. team would like performanbel) varibug weikend races this winter plus over-all showing last Saturday and Sim-day in the Region III championships. A flfth skier, Lynne Thorp of nothing better, than reversing Canada’s sweep of honors in 1963. They were among some 56 yoong skiers named to compete Feb. 87-M la the U.S. Ski Association’s central division flnals St hlarqnette. Selection was based on Oielr~ OOYNE HIGHLANOS, Hartoor Sgringk I ed Sunday afternoon. ' FAVORED ■OVNE MOUNTAIN Fill* - IMI b(M, eood. , BRADY'S HILLS, Laktvl«» - ^i«SuSEL MOUNTAIN, Holland -CRYSTAL MOUNTAIN, T>ienH»onvlll« FRY'S *WI»?r??^PARK, Kalamaioo - GLACIER HILLS, Oallalra - 4 inchc lata, fair The U.S. goes into the meet favored in three of the four tyentox.but is givsj utUc chance of upsetting Canada’s Petra Burka in. ladies’ singles. Ihe 18-year-old Candaian is one of the leading contenders to win the world title in Colorado Springs, March 2-6. Peggy Flem- from Pasadena, CgUf-. >xiU MT. MAHCELONA, Mancaiona - swithe Canadian’s chid rival. Cheryl and Geoff Smith of Birmingham, was named the Bloomfield Hills, Cheryl Luther ' No. 2 alternate in the girls’ com-of Rochester and Dick Wood of | petition. TRUE CHAMP Cadillac’s Greg Schwarts, the ; defending national Alpine junior j slalom champion, reestablished | his regional supremacy by winning the downhill, slalom and giant slalom over-all titles. ___Smith was third in all three. Bo is the ody local lUer that made the national champion-shipo last year. Bkwmfleld Hilto teammate Dick Wood was fifth over-all. | __Smith, incidentally, was sec- ondTh pdlnls TRB"wliner“ Schwarts irf slalom racing Northern Michigan youngsters dominated the qualifying list ^ with only one out-of-state skier Birmmghain Jumors being named from the Region III competition. , End Regular Season w w ★ ' Now they will go against top | sklcrs from as far west as .■STtgm, “ * - - Louisiana and as far east as Ice Champions Enter Playoffs ing,16,two4imeU.S. champio^ttow^^^ l„ the ___ _t.' __4k:. central division races. FANDO, Rockford Amateur Hockey playoffs this sprinst _ 2*^30! Gary Visconti of Detroit, Mich., and Scott Ethan Allen of Entering the Metropolitan In- GUARANTEES MUFFLERS against Tust, corrosion blow-out, wear-out loro* tong M own your car. Roplacod, X nocBBBBor ter a lorvic* cltarg* only. 43S Seitk Sa|iBAw FE 2-1010 ALPINE'S FMAL H.EUMCE SOME XmU EQDIPnXT OX SUE U CBXXT sxvncs! ALPINE SKI SHOP 4702 NORTH WOODWARD ROYAL OAK, MICH. PH. 64R-T4T4 -------- ■" Smoke Rise N J are exoected tournaments will be the Loooe, Boiioho-^fg^ Yellow Jackets and Griswold’s, to tiwk up m a pPWt of their the Midget and men s singles Utle duel in last juvenile leagues, respectively, week’s naUonal meet at Lake ^ ^ c^een Hornets fin- Placid, N.Y. ■ • ■ - - ----- -- SUGAR LOAF MOUNTAIN, Travers* City — teU bn*. 44 powder, excellent. .^traverse city holiday lake - BAST MICHIOAN MOUNT MARIA. Hubbard Laka - M ban. 44 arWIclal snow, excellant. SHERIDAN VALLEY, Lawlston - 4 mVAn'KlJoS!’ Gaylord - 44 ban. T itaw aiww, fair fo oped. GRAYLING WINTER SPORTS FARK, Orayimg - 14 baia, I ntw mow. goad. MOUNT FREDERICK, Fradaric - I ntw anew, fair lo good. SKYLINE. Roacomman * ban. I NEW Au SARLE LODGE SKI AREA, Otylard - l-ll ban. 1 posxdar anow, good. MAJOR MOUNTAIN. Clara - 44 ban, fair. ____ HOUGHTON LAKE SNOW BOWL, Hougnion Laka - 34 ban, poor. SNOW VALLBV, Gaylord - t-IO ban, M^TT^oJimiN, Farwall - poor to APPLE MOUNTAIN, Freeland - IBIS ^sTlvE?* VALLE'T^Tawn Skiing LOOOE RESORT, Cam- Top Stars Out in Tucson Golf TUCSON, Ari*. 4AP)—TTiere ished a perfect regular season " " last Saturday with a 3-1 triumph Visconti uj^t the defending i over the Yellow Jackets; while champion and Olympic bronze th* Bulldogs'won their first jyy L thTiiiin 0^n (tolf game M ovw the ^i^«s. xoumament got under way In juvenile action, the Tigers -miss^ a chance to finish unbeaten by losing, 4-1, to the Varsity Shop. Griswold’s blanked BirminghaiA Federal, medalist and will be out prove it was no fluke. Donald Knight of Dundas, Ont., is the Canadian champion. The pairs competiUon will feature four brother and sister teams. Americans Ronald and Vivte Joseph of Highland Park, ni., and Ronald and Cynthia Kauffman of Seattle have j or. Homeft the edge over Canadians Paul! ■‘•‘‘fUm and Susan Huehnergard of i TiMrs Agincouit, Ont., and Christo- j pher and Alexis Shields of To-1 _ ronto. S 3 I Fed. MICHIOAN COLLEGE KOREROARD I Hope Moves By Albion; Takes Lead in League By The Associated Press | was high for Tech with 17. For ichigan 26, HOCKIY Thursday jwer the sprawling Tucson NaUonal course, . Although big names Arnold Palmer, Jack Nkklaua and U.S. Open champion Ken Ventin’ were not entered, the classiest field in years was on hand. It included four winter tour winners; Rod Funseth, victor in last week’s Phoenix Open; Billy Casper, winner of the Bob Hope Desert Classic and this year’s leading money winner; George Archer, victor in the San Fran-^see toumevf and Australtan Bruce Crampton, the Bing Crosby champion. AUTO IIVSIJRANCE Hope movad into first place in the MIAA basketball race Wednesday night, defeating Albion 109-92. H^’s league record now is 8-2 and Albion’s 7-3. In other Michigan games, Kalamazoo downed Adrian 82-69, Calvin overpowered Alma 106-56. Olivet beat Detroit Tech 103-76, Aquinas defeated Lawrence Tech 102-81, and Loyola of Chicago whipp^ Western Michigan 94-81. the season. Olivet is 7-11 and Tech is ^20. Aquinas bombed visiting Lawrence Tech 102-81. Gary Few-less led Aquinas with 27 points while Bob Gibson paced the losers with 20. Loyola of Chicago snapped a six game losing streak and handed Western Michigan its seventh straight loss in a nonconference game. Billy Ed Smith led Loyola with 31. High for the Broncos was Dave Anderson with 22. Special AT STANDARD ENCINE REBUILDERS 6 Gyl.,... V-8's... .M15“ This include . . . Rings, Rod Boar- ^ ings. Main Boaring, Grind Valvot, Fit Pins, Doglaxo Cylindor Walls; Gaskots, Oil and Laborl -jdLSO- FICTORT REBUILT EMIINES 695 AUBURNtRO. IM-NTI IM-NTt 23 points paced the Hornets to thalr fourth -MlAA vixt irryflfood and BDb^rg~gcored twd^ Clare VanWieren of Hope was^ the high scorer in the Hope-Albion game with 35 points. Albion, previously tied with Hope for the No. 1 slot, was led by Dim (^iwn with M. , Dumps Spartans, 7-2 _At Kalamazoo, Tom Nicolai s I ^ . U. of M. Hockey Squad against five losses. Adrian’s Mark Garrett dropped in 20. Olivet downed Detroit Tech in a non-league game in Detroit. Mike Rabbers led the Comets with 24 points and Bob Willard ANN ARBOR (AP) - Alex Phone FE 4dSSl W. Huiteilocher Agency, Inc. see RiKER BDiLDiNt;, i>o.vnM:, Michigan BONDS—FIRE—AUTO—MARINE LIFE—HEALTH—COMMERCIAL Canada House IMPOHTi;i) CANADA HOUSE True Imported Canadian Sssssip! 11 Mnut m tutm mm wnuM cs .hit .m i;a«aaai| a special MESSAGE 7 Buyers When you ore in lb* nwiiel to buy a new or uied cor or truck, itop in or give me o coll by phono and TU do gel every conidorolioa whan you _________ Oik for Curt Oowford at Oiovy- CURT CRAWFORD Land. Matthews-NargTDNves Chevy-Land 631 Oakland at Cass FE 54161 goals each to help Michigan 7-2 Western Collegiate Hockey' Association victory over Michigan State Wednesday night. Michigan is 7-7 in the WCHA and State is . 54. 3FUUDAYS Anywhere In the World '$^10 $5,005 AeeidentsI Death $500 Medical Srautn Rair, AUo Avmilabta H. R. NICHOUE MENCY, INC. 49 Mt. Ciemena FE 3^7858 DEAL DIREOT with MANUFACTURER and SAVE! CASS AYE. TIRE ^ BRAKE SERVICEJst Kent - Pk.ni.Mai A wall Ski Jacketsli///, Jr,/, and PAIITS '^OFF Reg. Price^4i^' all SKIS, all BINDINGS 30 to 50% off SKI BOOTS'/3 off SKI MITTS’A off Ski Wall RacksTRUNK SKI RACKS *2*® •f?«iiow *13** ICE SKATES' and TOBOGGANS A«f4M£t£ MiU SUOWfSMOGefttbgir I nuMAPM /DA 7. , . j C—18 THE PONTIAC PRRSS« THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 18, 1965 lilHIJli V SU£ STUTS FRI. 9 to 9 • CONTINUES SAT. 9 to 9 7'tj Goorgo Wo*)iington -....—,---------------- - - low pricoi. Som» floor modol», ropo*. end erofo morrod. Mony Fir»t eomo, first torvod. Morod«. 4 CHOP! CHOP! *189 RCA WHIRLPOOL ELECTRIC EYE-LEVEL •166 RCA WHIRLPOOL FULLY AUTOMATIC WASHER *129 GEN. ELEC. hair QRTER $g99 Mary Proctor Auto. Toattor $^99 STEAM-BRT STuauEst miKiiWiua i *3>* U RCA ViaOR UHF/VHF BIG SCREEN PORTABLE TV *100 NORGE I21/2-CU.-FT 2-Door REFRIGERATOR O/MOEHAS *155 PEW LEFT! COLOR TV ii. pKtM*. ta.1 twyntwlw *247 ppROIT JEWEL 30” GAS RANGE COOKIN' WITH GAS! PHILCO 23” CONSOLE TV . »~n».l MhIc. IJULAIONEY DOWN ^30 To^!i;..rr. freezer 5111^ NOTPOINT PORTABLE Automatic Dishwasher I "“WHIRIPOOL miNQER W4SHER OEORQFS SPECIAL! *100 IT’S YOURS for only *66 THArS RIGHT-JUST $241 RCA Whirlpool FULLY AUTOMATIC DRYER J^cyd. Adwndlc l*i.nsr. irrn'iliT'j ~i^* LOWEST Mice SINCE mi •84 ZENITH STEREO COMB. WITH AM-FM RAOICL ITS THE TRUTH!... *159 SUE STtRTS FRIDAT 9 to 9-CORnWIES MT9RMY9 ta 9' NO MONEY DOWN • 3-YEARS TO PAY 1P6X iAVISPACVli m •VARAHmt ^ OPEN DAILY 9 to 9 , , ____ THE PONTUC PRESS. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 18, 1965 MjamiL.. CEiaun msMiiiiTOii's iiniMf Shari Chocolate Covered Cherries VACUUM PACKEQ MIXED NUTS WASHABLE SHELF LINER 100 ft. roll ALL PLASTIC | Transparent Plastic TISSUE DISPENSER KWIK-WRAP Rosewood Pattern TABLEWARE 6 QT. PLASTIC UTILITY PAIL SILICONE IRONING PAD and COVER Set of Two RUBBER AUTOMATS CANNON STRIPED WASHCLOTHS Ladies’ Brief Style ACETATE PANTIES Ladies Triple Roll BOBBY SOCKS r' D—8 THfe PONTIAC PRgSS. fTHtTRSDAY. I^BRUAKY 18, ip6ft ATBOTH yiDIES’ NYLON SKI JACKETS LADIES’ I 2-POCKET I cotton! DUSTERS] Th«» 2-piM* tklrt- i*tt I w«nt l««l lo«g ^ ' •nd gold. Sim 10 to 16. ' LADIES’ NOVELTY conoN I r JACKETS LADIES’ ITALIAN MOHAIR SWEATERS LADIES’ NYLON SKI SHELLS LADIES’ WALTZ LENGTH GOWNS CheoM from pollsiwd I:-: cotton or cotton print shift powns. Strip*! and floral prints. $: S-M-L LADIES' TEXTURED KNEE STOCKINGS r liriM. Sttoli t* 11. A MEN’S ORLON ACRYLIC KNIT SHIRTS JR. BOYS’ conoN LANNEL PAJAMAS BOYS’ I NYLON i SKI i JACKETS Poriocf quality, 100% ot^ Ion acrylic hnit. Cardigan and (Itpovsr stylas. Artort-*d colon. SiMS S4M-L-XL BOYS’ conoN POLO SHIRTS MEN’S IV 895.1295 WINTER JACKETS MEN’S WASHABLE conoN SLACKS 100% nylon sU loclMts. I;:; oil wMi heads. Com- BOYS’ conoN Shortee Pajamas U^*li«a,*aaM Is*s2«to4l. BOYS' conoN SWEAT- Regular VM. Em-' FanwKsinolMrbr'IfooMi « and middy st)^ Si 6 to Id. Soy now « 2 STORES IN POmiAC.. .MIRACU Mill SHOPfUIS eaiEH MB PHUY AT MOWCMH \ TOE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 18, im D—« PONTIAC STARTS TONIGHT CANNON COnON TERRY BATH TOWELS FULLY UNED 3-PC. PLASTIC DRAPES SKID RESISTANT BACK SCAHERRUGS MACHINE WASHABLE CANNON BLANKHS WASHABLE-ODORLESS Foam BED PILLOWS 6-FOOT PLASTIC RUG RUNNERS Protect your floors and rugs from foul wtntor woothor. 171 MACHINE WASHABLE 36 WIDE 2-SHELF | BATHROOM SCALES METAL FRAMED FURNITURE THROWS METAL BOOKCASE | Made by “DETECTO” MAKE UP MIRROR LADY CASCO Electric FRY PAN In all motol construction. Two sholvos. 24 only Liailt 1 BATHROOM POLE SHELF WOMEN'S FLATS Men’s-Beys’-Youths’ BASKETBALL SHOES VINYL COVERED ADJUSTABLE IRONING BOARDS HASSOCKS ROUND Made By PROCTOR DECORATED 2-TIER UTILITY TABLES Larg^ round hassock with •aty wash IQQ Afi71 IQQ ■ vwtilotod top. ^ ■■ ■ sturdy motol ■ UU :;i: Infihito odjust- ^ construction ■HU ■ montfc Rubber M ^ modewith ^ ■ safety legs. H||| casters. ■ COMBED COnON DUST MOP Two tier table with electric outlet. All sturdy metal construction modewith casters. All combed cotton mop with smooth wooden handle. Easy to wash. DISCONTINUED PATTERNS NO MONEY DOWN AND UP TO 10 HOS. TO P>Y WITH SECURITY BANK CHARGE 1 i ' 1 ■: ^ ■«. ■% 'VI D~4 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 18. 1965 The following ere top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package tote; Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Wednesday. Produce Stock Market Picks Up Steam Ap»m, mnathtn. bu. Appitt. Jona1t<*n, CA. ,bu. . . AppKt, McIntosh, fe». Applos, AAcIniosn, C. A., bu. Appits. M. IPT, bu............ Appitt. SIMit Rid. bu......... "“•v.^KVaST.. BNit, topptd. bu ............. Ctbbtgt. curly, bu. .......... ctbbtRt, Rod, bu. ............ CthbtRt, *M .................. NEW YORK (AP) -• The stock market adyimce picked up steam early t^ afteniotm, with sharp gaWby some airlines and raiis^'Trading was lairly active. , Th^st was ahead only a little aktsi of the morning but be-to make strides of some sections of the list around midday. ★ ★ ★ Gains ran from fractions to well over a point among the favored issues. IBM rebounded vigorously from recent losses on reports of piriiis: nTio jwk competition from foreign p^'ttoS. ION. g JJJj Computers and ran up 9 points dot. pent.........../... I, dry, »■*. boo / . .. Vk V-..... 1.00 . IN . 1.N ■ s ubt / I, bolhouM *■». ! or so. Wall Street’s background included President Johnson’s plan to give business a 1700 million tai break in IMS and a reiwrt that the nation’s output of g^s and services actually grew faster in last year’s filial quarter than previously estimated. Steels and motors were about unchanged and chemicals were muted but aerospace defense issues continued to move higher because of the Viet Nam situation. w * ♦ • The Associated Press average of 60 stocl(p at lioon was up .3 at 331.4 with Industrials up .1, rails up .6 and utilities unchanged. The airlines, favtaed because of booming passenger tibfhc, reflected rotation of speculative interest as Trans WorU climbed about 2 points to a new high. Pan Amerkao, market leader for two sessions, continued in demand, rising close to a point. Eastern, clobbered all this week by sharp profit taking, snapped back with a gain exceeding a point. United gained 1. PHces were higher in moderate trading on the American Stock Exchange. Gp about a point were TWA warrants and Acme Missiles. ♦ ★ w Corporate bonds were mixed. U.S. Government bonds were unchanged. Mystery Man Has No Recall Previous Life o Blank, Psychiatrists Quoted OMAHA, Neb. (AP) - A physician for Omaha television an-nouncea John F. (Fritz) Johnson reported today that two psychiatrists “could find no indication that Mr. Johnson has any recoHection of his life as’fiirry Bader,” ★ Johnson’s attorney has said there is no doubt that his client is Lawrence J. Bader of Akron, Ohio, missing for nearly eight ye*rs. Johnson had undergone eight Squ«th* Buttermrt, bu. .; SouBtfi* Otlictowi, b«. .......... ^uesn. HUboerd. bu............ Turnlps^^^opped, bu, - Poultry and Eggs The New York Stock Exchange Wdr Jifters Tra. » « «>* New York Stock Exchange was exciting. But seven shares eren’t much in view of the nine biUton there. Nor did the trader* that day come anywhere dose in numbers to t 17 millioD Americans who nmv ow" Stocks. most untouched Most stocks stayed untouebed in bank boxes and Investiijenl and endowment funds. The professional stock trader, tun^ to getting In and out of the market quickly, reacted to the gunfire. The general stock-holding public didn't. I atrists — ancTa psychote^. ' ★ ♦ * Dr. Lee C. Bevilacqua, Johnson’s family physician, told 1 newsmen the psychiatrists could find no neurotic or psychotic tendencies to explain Johnson’s loss of memory. PSYCHOTHERAPY He toM newsmen Johnson will commence psychotherapy, probably in a few days. loss of memory in view of the medical tests report. The physiciansaid H would be AsL by any outbreak of war “mere conjecture’’ to ascsibe speciTic reasons for involving the United States. WAR DISRUPTS War disrupts the profitable ; activity of the consumer of stock ' businesses—and these are the; Johnson's attorney. Harry ftajority. It takes time to switch « ‘•'e / Farnham. said the Bader fanruly to production of goods wanted . in Ohio had been advised “in a by the military. During that ®****®^ general way’’ of the contents of time the government usually i‘•'e New York St^ Exchange the report Wednesday nighL^ejan^Tm^wagr aiid price con- ‘ ^ close down for 414 months. K- >n- trois, and stiff taxes on any in- LIKE PEACE But. he said, the medical fixmation would be given the Ohio family in detail Johnson was released from .,(|Bie'hospital Wednesday aRer-noon and after a brief reunion with Ms wife and two children went into seclusion at the home of a friend. Johnson intends to live apart from his Omaha family while legal details of his confused double life are ironed out. * * * - Larry Bader was mkrried and the father of four. Business Notes creased profits. The receiti bombing of North Viet Nam military bases Ixy U.S. and South Viet Nam planes set off a twtHiay drop of 19 points in the cloaely watdted Dow-Jones index ._ ers la the Pontiac area for -tke past 23 years. She started her career here as an operator in 1919 and has held a variety of positions, including long distance training jnslruitor, evening chief operator and assistant chief opera- Car Insurers Seek Fee Hike Mrs. Sorel, of 1616 Alsup, Com-! merce Township, is a member of the Union Lake Business Women’s CTub; Ladies Auxiliary of Gold Star No. I, Poet 562, Detroit; and the Telephone Pioneers committee at Pontiac State Hospital. She and her husband plan to remain in Union Lake, where Gross Revenues Up for Detroit Edison Detroit Edison Co»’g gross revenues were 6345,463.734 for the 12 months ending Jan. 31, while gross revenues for the corresponding period of 1963-61 were 6321,406,936, according to a com- uaroKie nave snown no growui to Since 1957, when 65.70 a share Club of ! her hobbies of painting, knitting, was reported. I would hold, but ^ * cake decorating and fishing. M '■•le increase in the near future,; ---------------- not add to this situation. General Manager Paul Erick- ’ son told a public hearing on insurance rates here Wednesday. Erickson told State Insurance Commissioner AHen Mayerson; “We’ve leariied our lesson. Our rates are too low. We’ve been trying to improve our condition by fate and risk selection, but we tost 64 million in 1964.” Some 60 Michigan motorists appeared at the hearing to protest cancellation of polides. Mayerson said. Each complaint will be investigated by Deputy Commisaioner Walter Olsoi. , mu-, Erickson said the Auto Club’s rut* «>« turn n»r **®™* “ P"™aC and _ ™te was two RN. ,7. IN. Of Its busing. le» than j q ^ „ the figure Secretary of State!chid. WaterfoidT<»nship.U the James Hare estimated for aD phannacist in charge of the new companies. - General Motors has been in a general uptrend for years but it is subject to cyclical variations. Any of your remaining holdings would be worth buihling up, but if I must choose one stock, I advise Southern Company which has a very long record of successive annual divi- (Copyright, 1965) Tfeasury Position WASHINGT0N(A^)~1 ol tiw TfAMUfV comg lOonding dAtt • y««r IIr IHS Pharmacy Opens in Waterford Twp. A new Perry Pharmacy has opened at 3415 Elizabeth Lake, Waterford TownsMp. Formerly Olson Drugs, the store is adjacent to The National Food Store at M59. Jack A. Robinson, who found-j ed Perry Pharmacy^ eight years M,7tS.t7t.47ia( is.Ni.4ii7jnN X-t(KludM taS,4IS,NMI MM not wk-Net to ttoivtorv limit. _ 31. were 652,40^28, or 61-62 per :i;:i^jhare^,theJ»J^ nfarea- STOCK AMAOat CtmoHN ky TM AmctotoR Rmt Nti Clwnt* M. KM Wta. tNMi Rrtv. Our Month Ats . Ytar Aon 1NA45 HI(R 1 1MA4S Low '1N3 High IN] Lim lilt IJtl 1S1 SI Si tZi mm m m TO QUIT STATE Another firm, the Employers’ Fire Insurance Co., will cease doing business in Michigan unless the insurance commissioner grants an 18 per cent rate increase immediately. Russell Kuhiman, iMd Mayerson; “The company will stay in the picture in Midi-igan if the rate is approved. It may be enough to allow Eni-ployen’ to break even.” News in Brief Chkrles HwMk, tt, «f W Third yesterday reported tl^e theft of tools valued at 6180 from his home. mapagin* agent of Empl(^«erxU ,, j \Md Mayerson; “The company ROND AVRRAORt . tin AlMCtotUt Rn a It It It I RaHk tat. UIR. R^. L ii-tY i —ivw,ixn miiwM ■■«i*fiNitiMv^tstanding Jt tile end of the ,, period. 'x!SSi^lir!tr>t?i^ I For the previous 12 months, aTCTSLT.: which ended Jan. 31, 1964, net g| - • -- ----------------'eamtag, w« 646.6«,«. or|a g j U — 1 iS « I P» «n 66.796.0651 shares outstanding at the cMj intS lL n] of that period. ;t;f 19, Aqjvets Hall, 57p Oakland. -Adv. 6(. Andrews Thrift Shop -Hrtchery Rd.. t»iiYltL.i;30i. --AdV. OrtjwNftuaw INCaiAtlD r ,4t aXTOA “"XiSSator :» S - itr, H MW . .N Q ( Friday, |:3p. First Church of the Brethreo, is N. Boselawn. —Adv. Rommage Sale: Febraary 19th, 9 to 1 p.m.-CAI Bldg., by R.I1.D.S. (Church . —A^. THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1 NOTICK OP PUtLIC ULK •Wk* l» OMn bv »• undar^ •Igrwd iAm on Potovary tL «MI at Krpi ofelack a.n>^ at nm Oakland Ava., STRIKE AGAINST CWG - The Department of Defense released this photo yest^ay and said it shows a South Vietnamese Air Force Scyrider flying low in a bombi^ ndi-sion against die Viet^Gong.------ South Viet Boats Shelled North Village, Reds Say SAIGON, South Vi^ Nam (AP) - North Viet Nam charged today that four South Vistnameaa commando boats dielled a North Vietnamese village and that two of the raiding Vietnamese patrol boaU. . “Onomando sh^w of the United States and Saigon administration’’ dieiled Quynh Lap commune in Nghe An Province at 12:30 a.m. today,” Col. Ha Van Lau, chief of the Communist Uaisoa mission, told the International Armistice Commission in Hanoi, * The colonel’s complaint was reported by Hanoi Radio, which said the conunando boats were met with answering Are from the shore "by the local armed forces." The broadcast caUed the attack "a nsw, eatremely serioa JUA of provocatioa by tte United States and its stoo^, a gross Suspect Candy in Mother, 2 Children Die; Third Is Serious ODESSA, Tex. (AP) - Police blamed cyanide pdsoning, possibly in a box of Valentine candy, for the deaths of a barmaid and two children whose bodies were found ip their apartment Wednesday night. Doctors said a third diild Detective Capt. Olen Miles said medical examination detected the presence of cyanide in the body of Kaye Raschke, 24. Fellow employes, checking after she failed to report for her first night of work at a lounge, broke into the apartment and found her dead on the living encroachment on the sovereignty and territory of the democratic republic of Viet Nam and an impudent violation of the 1964 Qeneva agreements on Viet Nam. was not pinpointed. Quynh Luu is on the coast 150 miles north of the 17th Parallel, which divides North and South Viet Nam. In Saigon, niilitary spokesmen announced a search operation for a battalion of Viet Cong southwest of Saigm had been called off. No contact was made. A light (d)s»vatlon plane was shot down today by Communist ground fire while drtgiping leaflets north of Tam Ky. about 40 miles south oi Da Nang. One American and three Vietnamese were aboard the L20, which cniib-landed in a field. Ai the trior fled trom the scene, one Vietnamese was shot and wounded by the Viet Cong. The American and the Vietnamese reached a village where pro-government forces mcued them. Pontiac Man Is Guilty in Knife Death. A Pimtlac man was found pill-ty yesterday of assault with intent to do great bodily harm less than the crime of murder A Circuit Court Jury returned the verdict against €ey-Hop^ kins, 38, of 314 Wesson, following a four-day trial. Hopkins was released on |1,-•90 bond pending Us sentencing by Circnit Judge James S. ThoriMm on March 11. Hopkins had been held in the Oakland County Jail on a mur der charge since the death of Robert Rush, 59, of 596 Nebraska, on Aug. 1. ........—Ir - H....* ■ When the case came to trial, however, the prosecutor’s (dfice bad the murder charge amended to a lesser count because it couU not prove Rush had died of the stab wounds. Seek Others in Plot on National Shrines NEW YORK (AP) — Mean Murphy cited the work of. York police, the FBI and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police sought possible additional mem-ben today of the thwarted ^r-rorist plot to dynamite the Statue of Liberty, the Washington Monument and the Uberty Belt Authorities refused to comment on reports the search had spread to Geveland, Detroit, FIND BODIES Bodies of her dai^ter. Candy 'Moore, 4, and son, Mike Moore, 2, lay beneath a bed. A doctor Said they died ’Tuesday night or Sarly Wednesday. Her son Butch Moore, 5, was taken to a hospital in serious condition. He was lying on the bed. ★ ★ * Miles said a half-empty box of candy In the living room probably contained the poison. It was sent to a laboratory for analysis. Police had not determined whether Mrs. Raschke bought the candy or received it as a gift. PAIR SEPARATED Mrs. Rasdike and the ,children moved here this wedc from Fort Stockton, Tex., after she and her husband, Lloyd E. Raschke, separated. FYlenda raid die children were Mrs. Raschke’s by a prer vious marriage. PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Police raided a North Philadelphia home early today and seised a cache of explosives. One man was arrested. Officials would not say immediately if the raid had any plot to blow up Oree national Washington, Philadelphia, Chicago, Baltimore, Toronto and Montreal. * A W With the aid of Raymond Wood, 31, a Negro undercover ^ dynhinite scheme was uncovered Tuesday. Police arrested three American Negroes and a white Canadian woman and charged them with attempting to blow up the three national shrines. ’Twenty-two stidcs of dynamite, said to have been transported from Canada by one of the four, Michelle Duclos, 26, were seized. OTHER CITIES “We know they have made contacts in other cities,” Police Conunissioner Michael J. Murphy said of the four. "We have no idea bow many people might be Involved.” Wood in infiltrating the pro-Cas-tre, pro-Conununist Chinese Black Liberation Front and gave the rookie policeman another promotion Wednesday. WWW Wood first won a promotion to detective third grade, then later was elevated another step to detective second grade, pushing his annual salary to 18.572 — an increase of $1 J)25 over the 96,647 he had been drawing as a patrolman. 'WWW The four accused, in addition to Miss Duclos, a Montreal television commentator, are Robert S. Collier, 28, said to be the leader of the group; Walter A. Bowe, 32, a supporter of the now-defunct Fair Plav for Cuba Conunittee; and Khaleel S. Sayyed, 22, a former engineering student who also is charged with disorderly conduct for demonstrating in front of the United Nations building last De- AAwcury Monlarty ConvtrtlbM l-cynndM- k»«rliij MMifi nwntor--------------- (mW. tor caih to tti ItMBMIon HtorMf tn«y Oiktond Am., fonttoc ptac* ol itorig*. Th* WrvM nw rIgM to bW. Oatod: pabrwy I. TW5 By A. a. LaPLANTB Pabrvwy W and W, INS board op RKViaw NeNca to harady glvan toal tto W Rayiaw ter Pontiac TowMkIp «* at Hw Townthip HaU, MM Opdylu on Tuatday and Wadn«^, Mai and 3rd, INS and «t) Men^ an day, March Hh and Mh, mi In — a boanf daamt to ba ... ______ ____ itloa furthar, that all raqwnto by Vat- an» and ihoaa raquaitins -----------— UM bt in tha hand* o( ID* itora lha date of ttw nwat LEONARD TERRY ORETA V.*iiSclr Ctori ruary IS, 17 and II. IN Death Notices 4*^vad‘ .. .......S’o» brolhar of Wynne, >lyn and Lortn Babb. Candaca, Carolyn Punoral aarvico km m niw i-n-day, Fabruary it at 1:30 pjn. at th* Huntoon Funaral Noma with ~~ Galon Hanhoy atficlatinp. ....' chartar*) t— c!on»l*on 1 * • Mt. Hepa Camatory. CRIVEA. FEBRUARY 17, INS, ARTHUR J-. 13S Oakland Avamw; ago SI) balovad huiband e- nay Rewind thro* *i*ten; alio nirvlvw by ttva grandchlWron. Ponanl larylc* will b* hold Friday, Fabruarv It. at 3 p.m. at tha SparkvGrlfrin Funaral Homo. Intomont In Acacia Park C»m*t«-y. Mr. Fakanar will II* In (tat* at th* $p*rk»Grltfln Funaral Horn*. (Sugg**ted vhiting houry-a to^S p.m. and r to t p.tw.T~ FISHER. FEBRUARY 17, IMS, JO^ SEPH R.. 131 Cottaga Straat; ag* 77) batovad huiband of Bartha ■ r of Robart, and Richard manti ara ponding from tha D. I Purilay Funaral Horn* whar* Mr. Flihar urilt II* in itata. (Suggadad viiltiitg hour* 3 to S p.m. and 7 to t p.m.)_____________________ Gllchrlit) dear fathar of Mri. Albert (Dora) Barker and Laon “ ------- • 'i door brolhar of Mri. G. Gllchrlit) dear I Lyl* smith and I chrlit) *f--------’ I C. Gll- Funaral larvlc* will b* hald Friday, Fdbruary It at 1:30 p.m. at tt» VBsma* - 5^ wBfi R*v. Jamaa^ W. IDaag offlelating. Intarmant In Parry Mount Park Camatory. Mr. Glkhmt will ll* In (tat* at th* Voorhaai-SIpto Fu- heuri 3 to t p.m. i iJLLPin HEWETT, FEBRUARY II. INS, VIDA M„ zs Hiiifitid, Pontiac TewnaMPf ag*-76r bolovM wH* of -Frad Hawatt) dear mothar of Mri. Ganav* Ruttarbuih; alio lurvivid by two grandchlMrin and (lx graat-grandchlMran. Funaral lar-vlca will bd hald Saturday, Fab- Death Notices tary. Highland Twp. wllf R* In itato -■ ■ Bird Funaral f TO EXTEND OUR ------ ------- — .... Purilay Funaral Horn* tor thair act* of kkidnaia, floral offaringa and mai-lagii of lympathy axtandad to ua In Ih* Ion of our huibM, fathar and grandfathar.—Th* Family of John f HIghlan.______________^ WE WISH TO EXTEND OUR hoarttolt thank* to all our nalgh-hon. ralatlvai and frlondl that aym^y and halp ant baraavamant of Rav. Olann Johnion of Carlton. May God b* witr----------- Huiband and dam S. Hallkor, Mr. (E WISH TO THANK OUR MANY friandi and relatival tor thoir many act* of kindnau and floral bftorlng* during th* ka* of our balovad nn, Gary Lm Hall. Special thanki to th* D. E. Purilay BOX REPLIES At 19 a.m. today there were replies at The Press Office in the following boxes: 2, 4, 18, 23, 25, 27, 36, 38. 49. 45. 47. 51, S3. 56. 17,65,17, 99, 71, 72, 73, 79, 94, 95. Fu^yul Plractari 4 3 LOn^ WHITE CHAPEL, CALL D. E. Pursley FUNERAL HOME Invalid Car Sarvio* FB 4-1311____ HUNTOON FUNERAL i^ME Serving Pontiac for SP yaari 73 Oakland Av*. FE 7^)11 SPARKS-GRIFFIN Eitabllihad Over M Yaari dmcES IN PBOfEssioNAi. imoma 800 tquare feet, ail or arty part, now available in modem pro-ftssiorwri building. Idtbl for physlciph, attomgy, htpuranea, accountants,' etc. Complattiy finished or will remodal to suit tenant. Air cortdi-tioned paved parking. Wtst Pontiac suburban location. 1132 Voorhato. FI 44911 AFTR t fJk Pi 2-9S04 They were held on bails ranging from 950,600 to 9100,000 each. w w w Murphy said Wood, the undercover agent, made hik first contact with the extremist group at a U.N. party givan by the Cuban delegaUon. Collier had traveled to (^iba and bragged to Wood of having met Ernesto Guevera, right-hand man to Cuban Prime Minister Fidel Castro, once apparently when Guevera spoke at the U.N., police said. WWW Miss Duclos, who last mouth sought without success a job at the U.N., reportedly was known [in U.N. social circles. I --------------- Nome Trodter of Yeor LANSING (AP) - Gilbert Smith, 51, of Grand Rapids has been nan^ “Truck Stiver of the Year” by the Michigan Trucking Association. Smith has driven 31 years and 125,900 miles without an accident. JARVIS, FEBRUARY lA INS, La-VERN, *313 Charrywood. SarkW-ftoM Twp.) ag* 77) balovad fwi-band of Hilda Orac* JarvU; daar falKar of Mre. OonaM W. Bancreft, Mn. Robert Koemy, Mrt. Robert L. Tarran. AAri. Robart Rowland, Mrt. Kaltb Thaytr, Raymond Fm Norman L. Eart O., Harold H„ Chorlea E. and Bruc* O. Jarvlt; alao (urvivad by M grandchlldran and mro* great-grandcblldran. Funaral aarvtca will b* hald Friday, Fabruary 17 at 3 p.m. at th# Sharp* - Goyatto Funaral Horn*, Clarkfton with Rav. Jack Giguer* of Ih* Flral Methodlit Church, Clarkslon, ^Iclbtlng. Intarmant In Laktview .Camatary, Clarkiton. Mr. JorvI* will II* In itata attar 7 p.m. thli avaning at Ih* Sharp*-, (toyatta Funaial Hem*._____________ T, FEBI . MAE, >rd Twp.. . Virgil R. ( aMar 'of Thamst and Oa^Coami *Uo furvivad by on* grandchild. Funaral aarvic* will be Saturday, Fabruarv 20 at I p.m. at th* Coatt Funaral Home, Orayten Plains with Paator Mltol Stln* ‘•ffWating. Intarmant In Whit* Chaptl Csmo-tary, Troy. Mr*. Parratt will II* In Itata at th* Coats Funeral PRQOELL, FEBRUARY 1A 17«, IDA, IMbt Rooilnl, Detroit, Mkfil-gan; ago 17) daar mothar of Mrt. Mario Swinyar, Mrt. John (Myrtle) Ptimor. Mri. Edna Dark, Mri. ------ ---- . -roj and Waltar Esgl* )hR Edward Ellnar) alio survived by 30 grandchlldron end 43 groat - grandchlldron. Funaral larvice will b* held Friday, February 17 at 1 p.m. at th* Coals Ihiy wUf n rscHstlon sf th* Rosary at I p-m. Frtdsy. Prayar tsrvio* will b* Saturday, Fabruary N at II ;M a.m. at ih* Chapal. Funaral t*r-vlc* will b* Saturday, Fabruarv 30 at 11 naan from Sts. Potor and Paul Church, Saginaw wNh Magr. John J. SonstoM ofHclatlng. Intor- ROC, FEBRUARY 1A ITiS, THOM- _ ____________________jf LRIIan lTrMI Will TSRiS^Mrii. DonaH J. MIHor and Irving E. Rea; daar brolhar of Mrs. Iisbal GoMblatl, Mn. Mary Ballon and Mr*. Ellon .RiM plan survivad by tta arand-cMWren. RacRatlon of fh* Roaary win b* TTiuraday at O s.m. at lb* Elton Btoek Funaral Horn*, 1333 Oman Lak* Road. Funaral aarvto* wib h. haw FrMsy, Fabruary l* . af St. Fsfrlck't CaNieNc APIECE COMBO Not rock and roll. Available for club fworfc, / rocoptlont, weddings, partlai ate. FE 4-0H7 attar 4 pjn.__________ DAINTY MAID SUPPLIES 717 Manomlnaa PE 3-7I0 f'^IRL OR WOMAN NEEDING 3100 REWARD - NO QUESTIONS atkad. Lott, on* Mack and tan Garmon long.halrad Pokitor In rt Of Family Horn* LOST -A3III. 77 Douglat. FE a lat^. Stobdy, yaar--around k. in oxcoN of S130 tor ton ASPHALT SHINGLERS NEEDED Ic* manager at Homer HMt, II S. Woihlngten, Oxford. OA B3S30. AUTOAAATIC MEN TO SET l)P and oporal* RA Vt. Conot davon- ailto omployor. I o, 301 Mill Avo., So AUTO SALESMAN 1 p*y^^plon,^^wt1h Miimg m* raatoat moving cart g»tY»i*f, piy- Dodg*. J Midi. ^FTER 6 P.M. t bav* 3 man to work 3 houn ho ivonlng. Earnlngt of SN wook. Must b* noat appoor- AUTO P A I N T E R, bUAL GM doalor. Lefs of work, many bone-Prottt ibaring progrtm. Shtl- BENCH HANDS • DIE REPAIR MEN GRINDER HANDS Exporltncod on progrtttiv* modorn stamping plant. U3 Atopte, Troy. JO A4S20. BOdY BUMPER. MUST BE F OLDER AAAN FOR SWEEPING, ••• A0330, Ext. Ng 3. BARBER, MASTER. VERN't BAR-bor shop. NO Jeilyn. 33S-3133. CLERK, EXPERIENCED OR WILL- Cooks And Dish Machine Operators PiMtant vurklng konaiiioni, good WSgOl, VOCOtlOnS, Iniuranc* plan plus many otbar banaflti. Awly In parion only. HOWARD JOHNSON RESTAURANT Telegraph of Maple Rd. WITH )ttlng vinyl and vt (futhlon Co., DISGUSTED WITH WHAT YOU are doing? W* hava an oponing tar thro* aggraulv* man. 42L 0731. _________ DRAFTSMAN $4,800-$5,600 Young man, blobtcbool graduate, tor ganeral drafting dutlat. Work Includes mat making and drawings of sanitary work prolocts and water prolocts. Knowladgt of machanical drawtng principlat and practic* required. Amly Poraom n*l Division, Oakland C^ty Court - Haul*,-1300 If. Totogfop^ P^l^ In Ibollr work, apply at 177S Or-Chord Lake Rd. near Totograph. DRAFTSMEN OR DETAILERS For manufacloring plant, steady W. Mapto, Troy, JO — DIE SETTER For progrtuiv* diet. Soma axparl-anc* raquired. Vk. I MU* and Talagrapb. Call 442-S040. EXPERIENCED BRIDGEPORT AND LATHE OPERATORS SMady year round work, ovtr- paid holldayi, Clyde Englnaarlng Division Tru-Tork Inc., 1700 VIL Maplo. Troy, 446-0333. EXPERiENCEO BaIRY PLANf jar_____________________ Electrical Inspector CITY OF TROY tS.400 TO U.400 city Manooar't ONka, 40 W. Wat-tloi Rd., Trey, Mich. MU 7-1155. Experienced mechanic, ap-ply In person. Economy Uted Cor Lot, 2335 Dixie Hwy. Ask tor Fran- lop .wages, vacation, fully ^— lift and hospital insuranca, paid holldayt. ClyM Englnaarlng '-IC., 1700 W. LOST; BLACK, TAN AND WHITE puppy, to vicinity of WItnar School. Answers to tha noma of Sonny. Coll FE 5-3433. LOST: FEMALE DACHSHUND AMD pup. BImJi pnd tan* vtekilty o( Halchory Road - Atorslon. Raward. 471-7713._____________________ LOST: large GERMAif SHEP-btrd. Mai*. Friendly. "Barron." EM 33514. L()ST: McCOULOUGH CHAIN SAW, LOST; GERMAN SHERHERO C( lit. black toco and nwiRlM O dron't pat. Reward. OrtobT or REWARD FOR CONTENTS Wx tUM ------- •oalft#>to*A laaMtmU ICtt X 2 MEN Hiring Part Timf Now factory brandi It toktog applications tar Unmtdlato tvantog work, must bo 11 to 4S yaort J ags and have a steady full ttoi* day Mb. Hours 4:10 to 10:10. Guar-antosd totary nlut dwr* of pratlfs, aara MO to OIM weakly. Can after EXPERIENCED DAY TIME TRUCK mechanic and axparTancad night crane operator. 3goi42.__ Cutting tools V R/Wesson 1277 Rkkatt Brighton, Michigan E NC E D ASSISTANT axportoncad. Also dtllvory man. Ekcaltont working eendHtonh poM vacatkns. Appiy af 77« Cattoy MACHINISTS GENERAL MACHINE SHOP WORK, ALL MACHINES. LONG PROGRAAL II HOUR WEEK, FRINGE BEMSPITS. APPLY IN PERSON. 730 W. MAPLE ROAD TROY, MICMIOAN iTANmrr~FOR~5iie5uiFr hMfihjnd^yufy woo, jfiii w- M^to^ie. ’coh"mSs Smhti, Parsonnol, 1 to 5 Monday through Friday. r‘ MAN FOR SAt every w ‘ itoady OL 4-1371 after 7 p._________ MEN WANTED Marriad. mechanically Incllnad tor poaltlon. Salas nptri- NEED BRICK LAYERS. COMMER-clal. Btrron Const. Co.. FE 2-5140. NIGHT PORTER, APPLY IN PER-*****■"’*"*' NIGHT janitor. APPLY IN PER- it manoaor. I k, 153 S. Rochc... ■■ IT mechanic. Experi . Coll FE 30143. OFFICE AND CREDIT MANAGERS. Firastono has opaningt for a man at each ol tho two locations to Pontiac. Young man 21 to 35 with school dtgraa. Mutt hava Ing. On the training poW v cations, paw Insuranca, raflromoi plan. Inquire In parson dally a.m. to 5 p.m. Firastono store 140 N. Saginaw and 140 W. Hum An squat opportunity amployar. Opening In Acivertising Department We have an excellent opportunity for an ambitious young man, must be at least 21, who has had some ex- —perience in odVertising,— to learn retail advertls-i n g and promotional work. Please send complete resume to Pontiac Press Box 34. Permanent Part-Time WouM S50 weakly closo lha gap Mlwaen income and outgoT A fjaxibit 10 hours wookly. Phono OR 30545 to brrongo Intorvlow. SALESMEN WANTEOI For full-time amploymant in Rtal Estate. Exparltncad prefarrad. but will train. Tom Reagan Rtal Ei-........ (^k* Rd. Ca.l FE 13154 0 FE 23157. SERVICE STATION ATTENDANTS —2 exparltncad man, good pay also Blue Cross. Apply In parson, 347 S. Huntar, Birmingham, Ml 43454.________________________ -----SHORT 4MU>SR3:OOKr MUST HAVE breakfast axparienca, appy at Big Boy Drivo-ln, Talograph and Hur- Salesmen BUILDING MATERIAL Two FURNITURE One With the expanding growth of the Pontiac oreo, our volume of business requires we odd TWO experienced building material salesmen an(l ONE furniture salesman to our sales staff. These ore fulltime, permanent positions, Good compensation, mony company henEfitr.- pgr- sonnel department ^ tween 9:30 o.m. and 9:00 p.m. daily. Montgomery Ward 3 GENERAL OPFKS BfOXkKRB, soma typing, shorthand, btikboip tog and payreH oxaarlanca. (tom traniportafton. Aw^ 1331 1M Track Orivt, Woof. No phono cano ptoaa*. ________________________ 73 PER TTEEK FOR NOUSEKBEto-ar-oeak, abteivtoly aiiinfill: ral-araneai. awn tranreirtatlw, naw-amokar and drinkar, vary miaH faimfl^ na children tr do^ If Iri- krteTdatatoflarX* fSI|^PrSm- iABY iitTBi AND HtNlSlKllP: *r, Itv* to, 1 chiwran, 5 day amak. light houtekaaptog. Call 331^11 ■IAmingham downtown. plEas- Itog counter. Dry citaning onarl-oncad prafarrod. Bab White Ctoiin-ors, 415 E.. Mapto Rd. Ml 437Z1. BAEV'siTTERt MATURE, LIVE Ilf, BAiV SITTER LIGHT HOUSE-kaaplnp — Atonday thru FiMay, days only - ratoranca, BloamftaW Mills. 447-5143 after 4 p.m. ________ BABY SITTER, 5 IMYt, b4:37 p.m., own traniportitlan, Drayton COUNTER GIRC FULL TlMg. — train, qutlify dry ctoontop I, Douglas Ctoanors, SH S. CORSETTieii - FULL TIME. 4X- CHURCH ORGANIST COUNTER GIRL FOR DRY CLKAN- «»e art taking oppUcationt for 3 new talesman. Contact Tom Bateman or’L. H. Grimas. FE t-7141. SERVICE station HELR , WANT- opporhinlty- MA 4-7317. 4571 fate- graph;___________________________ DRUG CLERK. BVETflMOS. n6 fountain, tarn* ataartano*. Franb-lln Drugs. MMMbaR a» 34 MN*. MA 4-358T__________________ DANCE TEACHERS. FB 44M4. lB a.m. to II noon and 1 to 4 p.m. EASTON CLEANERS WOULD LiXt tody to team finlihtog and dry claontag butinots, oimlonco nol ExperiencEd Stcritary EXPE R mMidger Box 74. EXPERIENCEO DESK CLERK -Sao Mr. Jtooba. Rooatvolt Hotel FE 3S134.__________________ Loko Rd., 7 to II o.m . FARM HELP WANTED. FAMILIAR with horses. OA 7-M31._________ FIRST CLASS BUMPER FOR COL IMon shop, no drinkori, FE 3-3075. GAS station AftENbANT. eX-pertoneod, mochanIcaHy Ineltoad. Local ref Full or pait-tima. CuH. Totogriph and Maplo.___________ I pumpto- good pay. . >^j|iaYy.J2uty Mfchonk (Tranpmltslon work) notdod ol onct td comptoto our Servico Ospt. (Apply to parson). JEROME OMp Cadillac sib S. Saginaw Stroot. HIGH SCHOOL (Graduate, good af mathamatlc for Ihlpplng and ra-calvlng. Future to baaltW 4)37 Highland Rd. IN^CT'W^ avarag* Ineoma. bast suitodte ntirad paapto. Write Easantial Rq-^ ports Ik. 11BB7 W. McMchota, Oo-troR, 4- ----------------- UNION carpenters MEMBERS wonted. 3344744. WANTED; YOUNG MAN FOR fTtogo bontfltt. Exponso a WANTED .Truck mechanic, Diesel and ?|os. Liberal pay, insurance urnished. Retirement and full benefits. See Mr. Coe, 8 a.m. tc S p.m. Monday through Friday only. GMC experienced SECRETARY. Must bo oxcotlont olactrlc typo-writer, shorthand, dictaphono. Law offic*. Reply with ratoranca* to Pontiac Press, Box 45.____ GIRL FOR ACCOUNTS PAYABLE tiac Frost Bax S3. housekeeper, live in, 5 daVs, 5 nl^ BN—--------------- Call Doholt C HAIR DRESSER, EXPERIENCED, Mr Thomas' Hair Fashions, FE housekeepeI to care for eUarly cauplo, nonamokort, own fransportotloh, T days * waak or dally. Troy CO 4-311* or UHca LADY OR ^pUPLE WITH CHIL-iSOY FOi REPAIRING AN6 LADY TO CARE FOR 2 GIRLS. 1 child occoptod, more lor Kama than wages, 4tB51M mornings or 3S50 Shady Beach, Orchard uiko. MATURE LADY FOR HOUSEKEEP-Ing tor ^ •“ 33053. MOTHER WISHES HELP WITH 3 pre-school cMIdreni ptao Rght housawork. 7:37 to 3:31 a.m. Mutt have own transportollon. CoN Ml 74371. MANUFACTURER FIRM, NEW payroll and ganeral affleo. sisnd reply to Pnntlac Prats Box Ig. MIOOLE-AGED lady, 1 CHILD moo. Roply Pontiac Pratt Box 44 MIDDLE aged woman WANTED to livt In homo with InvolW and Grandson. LigM hooM work yid Pontiac Mall GEN. OFRa GIRL RECORD SALESGIRL Grinnell's PERSONNEL CONSULTANT. SX-portancad. Salary, eammanaareto with txp. Neat, atoatanl. Oaad opportunity tor lipht parson tor new modorn ofttco. Ptoatani wark- 447444*.________ J|ECORD_ DEPARTMENT NB^ Snm' w^CpMndltlwMsndiitow ‘ I , ll J EiLiABLE "UhV tiTLiOl m. Jl. THE FO^TlAC PRESa TTORSDAY. PEBRtrARY nicholie suauRiAN e»-\ Sids Nmnm HHTER ANNETT ptM. Cwlwc g*rag>. Cgnml •nd but Hnt. down, plutcloili 4-Bedroom Brick Nttr •ttr'i. Wi ■d bttary horn ilwrt ■*d''tcKoSt 10 ptr cMt rooming houM or i tlil^^efflce. tIUOO, r Stminolo Hills Brick month Tormt. FE 8-0466 DORRIS WHAT MORE COULD YOU WANT? -Tk Ihtt — — *— - I brick dream home eor retirement CALL B. C. HIITER, RttlMr, On eunbtlh Lakt Rd. M Mill tfltr I b.m„ MA O'NEL MODEL OPEN DAILY 2 to 6 6808 Bluegross STYLE-QUALITY-TOP VALUE IN PEAUTY RITE HOMES Jut* right tor Coming" oxoci bright futurou > flimt or conttructlon. toi-^rlnB 0 boautllul, ptiMlod Lolturo Room and a formal roOT, at wall. Cn ttMSOi fiSlJlf^rouSr tho Vlll^ of Clarkilon, turn IW on Bhiogratt, tho tlrool bofort ontranca to Exprtu- TRADING IS TERRIFIC. TW't J^KES CUSTOM RANCH SSgh'iJIi trythlng r flrtplaeo, finlihod to porfoctlon and PLEASANT LAKE For you who want tha I______ vaar around panoramic taka finch hyta hat to oftor. Pricad only. WftL TR*0¥. ; . east side c toting u * *— IWt lovt- ^uflW^rJ d calllM and ft Ihi. Alfachad | DORRIS B SON, REALTORS UM Dhila Hwy. OR MK MULTIPLE LISTtNO ItRVICE GILES DRAYTON PLAINS tid- GILES REALTY CO. IE MttS ai Baldwin Am multiple LIITINO SERVICE RAY O'NEIL. Reoltor I j;n« fpNTIAC LK. RO. OPEN n. •! MLS FE I-73M 'iKAMPSEN Gl Terms £f" bo orrangad on thii clean thraa-bodroom home, located at Pika ’shaISt."Bncioaad'*f'JIlif m ^^^StSSSS*-XS,^!: malaly SUO.M to handW. TOO-Acre Form . Cmual^ Townthlp. lOacra taka and teur^wdroom modam honw, ■ ?*«* .'"Tf l-n in Holly Racraallon araa. Only MdO.01 par acre. Tarma. Angelus Golfview Estates ^r^jodroom, m^lavol. Sunken living room, Vk bamt. taaM glatt windowa, marbia tlllt. for-ajal dlntog room, plaafarod ga-rige, oullt-lna, largo family n^. Cuatom datalling Ihrough- WHY WAITS You gorer havr tr tell vour pratanf homo to buy homo. Kamptan Realty CLARK ..-‘^ns.'^^Sarns’lSl living room, aluminum atorma and tcraont, I lala with l» that road frontaga, quiat atroot, carpating and drapta In living raom. Sligol jjm can. doom plua — CITY CONVENIENCES - Clote to but,-ttoraa, on watt tida of toam. Wabator School dtatiict. Good S-bodroom homo with tmall tawing batamonf, attachad. garaga, fanoad W. No down paymant to 0.1. or W plut coata on FHA 1— CALL us for your bulkNng lot. .... CLARK RIaL estate *’®' *T. PE 3-71 Open *.* and Sundaya l-S Multipit LStlng Sofvlea GAYLORD HERE near I Pariah. plumbli.. __ ,,, coma. Call MY Min gr PE BOM. OXFORD 4 bodrooma, garage, — Thit It - I. Call N WANT A NEW HOMES - too. MY BMtl pr FE MOW. LAWRENCE W. GAYLORD BATEMAN .tSE ton, fim toka prlvUagaa. Abodroom , low. Largo family kitchen, batement and I-car garage, waii-to-wall carpeting and tottaner In-clvdad. Only SM,t5B. wHh low down payment. SEE IT TODAY. FAMILY HOME NICELY reconditioned home tor a family, 3 bodrooma, 3 batha with one bedroom and bath down. Full baaament, gat FA heat, at-, uminum aiding and 3-car garage. Clota to tchoelt and good family living. Owner hat |ob In Florida LAZENBY tent, garaM. Sit Jl avlth ton of t- _ . 10 per cant dagm will move you Ir ROY LAZENBY, Realtor 4303 Dhrle Hwy. OR 4-SlS . MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE PRICE REDUCED ON THIS SEMINOLE HILLS PROPERTY SHARP ALUMINUM SIDED 7- decorbiod IntIde. counter topt In kit:............. It with extra lavatory, gat- --------*2lo$e***to **SCHOOL^ C”y.5CHES, AND SHOPPING CENTER. BEAUTIFUL BrnTRANoT PERRY ACRES b*dmbmi“^ramk'"?llt* ttofhT ™*" »"*' *«•»«" brick fireplace. Dining room, I3T' Full fc : Water aoftaner. Recreation _ attached garage. TH^T^ Is’^ BEAUTIFUL HOME-SEE IT TC Smith 6c Wi deman DRAYTON PLAINS REAL NICE 3-bedraem ra wWi acroanad brtaievwy and attachad garage. Clota to « and ahopptng and aafety to children In the compicttly I yard. Gat FA heat, carpatini iffld''''‘Ttra!c;tC !S like and the price you can a .Only Sn.OM. wim SI3M plua cotiv BIG BEAUTIFUL TREES BLACKTOP STREETS and a derful north auburban area tatting of thia tpaciout almot brick rancher. 3 bedrooma other axtrat, natural "Xr*cS Nraplaco and Bear attached — rage. Nicely landtcapad and tho Bateman Way SALESMEN WANTED; due to mandoua Increato in bualnett, are taking applicallont for S aaletman. Contact Tom Bate or L.H. Crimea. By Kat« OMnn 1 TO 50 .land CONTRACTS vrBcntl|r^wanted, too va belara WAftREN STOUT, Realtor MS# N. Opdyka Rd.,, FE Sditf . ..-aa VKXfti 6lO. BALANCE djMt ----------- la OxtorM OA S-3417. WEEte^ CoEtractoMti. 60-A 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRAaS „ Urgently wantod. See ua baton WARREN STOUT. Reoltor $550 Down Eaty FHA tarma on balance, large Fbadror- •------- Center araa,________________ gat heat. Bear garage, tncloaed front porch. Carpeting Includr' at only tiejOS. WARREN STOUT, Realtor W3H4; Opdyke Rd. Ph. FE BfIB 0^ Evea. Till S p.m. Multiple listing service RHODES YVEST-ELOOMPtELO, beautiful room homo. 4 largo-tlit badreon 3 batha, large recreetlon raoi femlly room, 3-car aflachad i rage. An Meat home for tho exi uflve. S44.M0. Tormt. LAKE ORION. LARGE Broom bri ■ bodrooma, 3Vi batha. f . land. S30.000. Tarma: NICE 3-BEDROOM HOME. ~ •S5 par month land contract. COMMERCIAL BUILDING, I________ Hwy., north of 1-75, 34'x4d’. Moot locatton, St7,SM. S4,000 down. Bal-once land contract. ALBERT J. RHODES, Broker FE S-3S#i 3M W. Walton FE S47I3 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE SCHRAM Loke Neva Front catad In LakmM ____ lomlly ------ ..._____ bodriyn and Brtory, 3-ctr KENT TIMES WHY fJGHI tT? „ Why tiruggto In a cramped, ol data kitchen? Lot thia he makora draam chaoga your of life. Thia charming ranch haa 3 good bodrooma, lomlly r and attached Bear garage. homo with 3. Walk-In S3 Acre Form with otroam and tpring. Homa and bam ara old but ctmtortabla, 3393 par acra. Total prita, SISJOO. 20 Acre Form israwM's.j!!. C. PANGUS. Reoltor "“’^..c-toctNAMSir^"* Its ptrtainina to . Ropiks hM fn Tt DOES VOUR FUTURtf h6lO yout Standard Oil woOK"""-ittcun wtRi you the atfvi owning your ewn bwsinesi SSrcinSTliSSSrallTO cW aatlnanoa. For further Intor-matlon caN Bab hhi. Ddyttma Ml 4-|3l1 ar Evaa., 4SB3SI1. Sede Um4 Coafracta AaiON CalM5r.*t«ito^' FirteiTt 2 Februory Closeouts 3 Rooms New Fumitur* 21 Pa- $279 -»Wk. lEW S-FIECI FRSIZE LIVING ROOMS wmi 3 teMtt WI4 tMW •II lor I111.0M. NEW 4-RieCi BEDROOM with 3 pIF lews end lenipi eH lor |7f .03. SAVE PLENTY — PeBnwry (leer- ------ ^ISepn ranges end re> HSmmon eifte. wmH. laf^^ta^'^ LOTS OF USED FURNITURE AND FACTORY SECONDS, SWVtS. fb-'--------------— lyiu^lng. bargain prioat. QUICK CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS dark ROM Ettato, FE 3-7ia Rat. FE B4S13. Mr. Clark. BASONED LAND CONTRACTS wantad. Gat our daal bttora you toll. CAPITOL SAVINGS S, LOAN ASSN. 75 W. Huron. PE 44541. FINANCIAL WORRIES Let Us Holp You! BORROW UP TO $1,000 credit Ma"inwronco^ollabM BUCKNER LOANS -------roATry---------- 335 to Sljm Intwod Poymoni Plan BAXTER I. LIVINGSTONE Financa Co. 401 Pontiac Stole Bonk Building FE 4-1S38-9 LOANS TO $1,000 Ituolly on Ural vlalt. Quic rMndly, helpful. FE 2;9206 It Iho nutnbar to calL OAKLAND LOAN CO. 302 PonllK Stito Bank Bldg. 9:MtoS:30- Sol. 9:30 to 1 LOANS TO $1,000 ----billa Into or _ . Quick tarvice a To contolldate billa Credit lito Inauranea ovallabM Stop in or phono FE M131. "HOME & AUTO LOAN CO. Saip Neasoliolfl Saads 6S CLOTHES DRYER, mi AUTO-Wtotlc woRior, 04B SIBdMy. SOFA BED, irwiN MAPLE BEb and vmity, bitty bid and buptY, ti9iaN dtW, bid oomptoie, beak- ........._L §4 BY MIL ^TftA0t-HU5 mu SPEED guHN I^W. 6MB dlnottot, Hvkig roomt ol boigok LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE .... „ wallon PE 34043 Ic light touth of I-7S _____of ffoa parking Ooan Evtningt 'HI 9, Sat. 'til i OVAL RUGS. BOY'S VOUYM BS6: cupboard daoro, mMoallanBBOo Itama. FE 3-4034 attar 4 pTRI iiOwU rticTioHAC: craam vinyl chair, radkrphono-graim combination, or* CHI 45igm BPIECE DINING ROOM SET, MA-"--gny, S40. EM 3-3I0S. • HH GOODS 4S , ^ PLASTIC WALL Bargain pricoo wWM Hioy loaf, Tormt ovillobM. HAMPTON'S ELECTRIC 5 W. Huron FE 4-3535 Optn till 9-7 p.m. dally MOQM OUTFITS BRAND NEW FURNITURE $288 $3.00 WEEKLY NEW,LIVING ROOM BARGAINS 7-pleci (brand now) Uving room: davenport and chair, loam cuah-Mna, 3 atep-tabMa, matching coffre tabM, 3 decorator lam— mottM, 3 vtXSy SI39. S1J0 weakly. Vlalt our trada-ln department tor more bargoina. PEARSON'S FURNITURE -PIECE MAHOGANY D I N 11 ----- S150, 3 mofchlna tab 330, chair and couch S3S, : PE 0-1047 otter 3 p.m. 1964 Singer Sole diweboM koodb M E.| WASHER. tu6 tSior; m. PE OtaT * spiibSuiiN irMAR. M''' EMctric I _ _____ SPECIAL k MONTH BUTS IRNITURS - -Cantlalaof: Formica 1 FURNITURE GO. 17 E. HURON FR 449S1 •1 W. PIKE___________FE S-3150 USE6 TVt “ . . SI9.H SwaaPt Radio B Appilonea Inc. 9 W. Huron 334-3477 SOFA-ifeb.------3 UPHOLSTERED UPRIGHT PIANO. S40t OININO room extont'on toMo, 4 chairt and china. 395; and tobtot. SI5; metric clelhca dryar, SSO; refrlgara-tor, S70; SSOt Honovla tun lainn lor S45. MMc. Itomt. OL M75B WESTInCxHOUSE REFRIGERATOk, 7 eu n., excolMnt 550. FE . wflAKSTRAtfi"---------^ WASHER, S35, ELECTRIC STOVE, 335. Dryer, 131 Rdfrigorator wHh top Iroaotr, f- — — S-Inch TV SL-. V. Horria. FE 5-3744. aixe gat ttevt .... „ alactric rang# ...... Guar. aMcIrlc wringtr w Automatic gaa d:— Guar, ataciric ra. EASY TERMS . Stt.tS . ssags . H4.9S . 349.93 SS9.95 E 4?ISM ANTIQUE ROLL TOP DESK. OA S-S457. ET US GET TO THE SEAT OP Bcpart painting, , tmalf uphoL Itla rtflnlahlng. ttaring, alto complala r Weaching a tpccltlly. Anuqwo ai 3343 Ettl Mapit, Birmingham — Ml 4-4941 or Ml 44909. ly or $71.54 cath balance. 5-yoor guaranlM. RIchman Brolhara Saw- Ing Contera, 3310383.__ 1041 FRIGIOAIRE FABRIC‘^sAST- ORGAN STOOL WITH BACK, amali 3 drawtr cheat, padeatal laMat, paparwolghtt. Y-Knol An-tlquaa. 10345 Oakhlll Rd^ Holly, ME 7-5ir HHLJ5LAI 1st and 2nd MORTGAGES 31,300 OR MORE 4i3W^«(\T''KfsS. 34 Hour Sorvico - 3344333 CASH - CASH FOR Home Owners WIDOWS, PENSIONERS CAN I ELIGIBLE. CHECK, LOWEST RATES A SINGER SEWING MACHINE Aulomotic zig-iagger, uted. Cob-.,1.1 jj, rnonogramt, :y datignt. T"-,. $195. Tofol pi It bolanco S39J0. Domoks Ir 19 INCH PORTABLE TV'a. SIAMA Brand Clearance. Uood TV's S19.0S In^LE JOBS BARGAIN HOUSE 1441 Baldwin Open Evoo. PE SdMI 31-INCH usio TV "777 Mm Walton TV FE 1-3IS7 Opan M ... _ —-“ n, cemof of Joolyn etCO 40 WATT STEREO AMPCI-Her, ataroo FM hmar, 3 oloctre-volco tpooktrt with cabbwt. Gar-—" A tum-loblo, 414-4433 A Singer 51.001 3 4.35 S13.W 3nd martgogca sllghtiy high _arrow ter ANY uaoful pt.,_ Consolldato Billa Now Cor Now Fumlturo Home repair and modemiutlon FE&2657 Mortgac^es Residential-Commercial First and Secand Cammitments 24 Hours 31,001 UP-FREE APPRAISAL FORD MORTGAGE CO. ____ ___ EQUIPMENT plua trade. Por77 MY 3-3193. -TOOTTSWENS CAbIn CRUISER, Sport 4-aPOcd floor 1.1,. -todel at tr>u> „> r piymontt. 334- Frlgidalrt outomatle Cutlom Inworiol Frigidairo electric di motchea woaher Philco 13 toot Mtoo automatic dofroat ........ aitt.oo " olictric range, new SI5S.OO Ivania ir- PortoMo TV, new, 1944 model with tiend ......... $139.95 the AKC trade POODLE PUP for sale OR to Mr round dlnlna mam tihlx cholra. 4740ai5. BLOND TV, 34" FOR ELECTRIC dryer. OR 3-3473. pump gun or rttle. Banka. FE 5-4S64. kLt tnr TRADE LAKE FRONT year-round homo, 10 mlnutea to Pontiac or FIther Body, wont houte near to Flint, Holly or Fen-ton, 493-4451. SWAP OR SELL 1934 FORD TRUCK motor 4, tour 930 Hroa, complato wrockor unit, D ton maxlniium, 5 yard dump box, FE B337I. WE BUY, SELL AND TRADE KB okatot, pklo, toboggont, tkl boola and gunt dally 1111 9. Bamao-Hargrava Hardware, 741 W. Huron, FE B910I. Open Sunday._______________ Salt Clfbii FULL LENGTH SHEATH WEO- saijT" medium weight. •tandard gray tharkakki. AAadium gray pWd------------- --------- alight ovar | Bluo-gray urn amltpii. O^MUL* menta of S4.S6 per mo coah price. 5-yoor -------------- RIchman Brothera Sewing Contort, 335-93S3._______________________ BLOND MAHOGANY DINING ROOM BEAUTIFUL PURPLE SOFA. F Tweed todlonbl. M 4-3907. BRONZE OR CHROME DINETTE tale, BRAND NEW. Largo tmall tile (round drop loaf tohgutor) tablet In 3, S i pc. acta. 334.95 md up. PEARSON'S PURNl'^RE BUNK BEDS Choke' of 15 alylet, Irundlt bedt, triplo trundle beds and bunk badt cemploto. 349.50 and un. Poor- £..^1*...,. fbsik e Abiir^ COLONIAL FURNITURE, LARGE tclecHon, everything tor your home “---------------------------------- ■=—■-hlnga, 3135 Floor Shop - 3355 Eltobelh Lake "Across From the Moll" - rxir LINOLEUM RUGS SIM EA(^H Ceiling H BBG Tile ALUMINUM COMBINATION ma and acroon windewt. Sin 5S. J. Leonard. OR S5M0. 30 PER CENT OFF ON ANY USEb desk, typewriter, addbkl nuchlni, mhTwograph, ere. Mfrtad wHfi r3 rag. Forbet, 4SOO Dbda HaryM next to PogHac State Bank, OR 3M47. FEBRUARY SPECIALS FULLY AUTOMATIC ZIG-ZAG tewing machine, UNUSED. Beat offer. FE 3M49. condition. $37.50. Michigan Fknrea- (ELVINATOR REFRK3SR-itor and olactrk ttovo, practically n^. ORsSk wathof, TV and KIRBY VACUUM . LIKE NEW BLONDE TWIN BEO- _______________ OB 3-501)4. (HOGANY DESK AND CREDI ---- ltd room tat, oak round ----- — Chelrv kfilddinedUe fS Owhjht. NICE NORGE automatic WASH- OHNAMENtAL IRON PORCH And atop ralHnga, oomora an poals. AVIS CABINETS I57S Opdyke FE 4-4310 PFAFF ZIG-ZAG SEWING PAIR| W MATCH I N 0 SWIVEL PORTABLE DTSHWASHIR. SOOOR refrigarator, Hvkta room, e"-'— kitchen labia dwl^ alhor I 434M37. ^ . i RCA AM-FM AND STEREO FM tltrae comb., 3 years oM. Walnut cabinet. 8)35. RCA Color TV, good condition, blond nblnol, SUS. -334-3937.________________________ SERVICE ON ALL MAKES AND "JOHNSON RADIO & TV 45 E. Walton FE 84569 USED TV'S FROM 349.91 BILL Potrwaha and Sent, TaMuran Snap- Water SoftBiwri BRUNO FULLY AUTOMATIC. ________ MA 4-7811___________ WATER SOFTENER RENTAL. UN- For Sab MbctHeiMaas 67 4x0xM Inch natural Birch ... 311.93 4xSxVk matonito .... S 1.71 la-inch prafinlahad Birch ... 3 4.95 M-inch prelinithtd Walnut .. 4 9.95 PONTIAC PLYWOOD ■' ‘ FE 3-354S PAIR DRAPEl A 40F3S41 PLACE SETTINGS OF CASTSl- mslatorind FE 4M57, 1075 W. I 1964 Necchi Dmw Portabla aelih ilg-zaggar tor bu9- ' tanholaa, etc! 35.00 per month ar paymants at 34.95 momn or cam prkt S5S.S0. With cabintf. Ooarantoad. Domaka. Inc. '6eef and pork-half an6 ouarteri. Oadyke MSI. FE ITM. SALE, Waahin^im, BlrmlnWiam, I 7449. BiffHROOM FlXTUREl OIL AND and gafvaMaod alaa St. Santry and Lowo Super Kam-Tana ^^IgHTS $UPPLV__ Bottle 60s installation •ssTsa'a.'^ COKL NnktERS Taytor-a m M CHEVROLET .! OIL lOhAtiY. Ml. Ciamowa Straaf. Wltk^KtR, ACjrrV. torchaa, tronawiiaHaR T^^ 1»4S«.' . ■ .1 . I COWKirt STOCK OF PtP« AMO nil>Hi SMiHc. oapr and guI bw Mr dralm.' HmNc. cippw •nd tMMHtnd tor «wMr. Steck tor dM. iMMlodIm SiMpto. U" MwCalm Fi Mltl. -------CAiH ANb dUllY...... I cstort, *>} »r»4talilwd inilM^n|| I CAK LIARN •0 RLAV fth fmHi >n 79 1 WAN SHtPHIRO PUP. THfi l>GNTlA«*. dSM Wd a fWR •» SSTimm N aeonaiMul < Lot* Modtl Cadillacs Costless _____ ,____ . OR 3-47M. f POODLE PUPPIES, STUD URV-I Ic^ flih, parakaata, canarlaa. Pal I aupptlaa. CRANE'S, UL SWOB PERMNALIZED POODLE CL ________I. OR >7134.___________ Rkhwoy Poodle Salon All bram pro«mlmlj|roomlng ni OAKLAND (naxt to Zlabarta) Opan dally B4_______PE s-asto SIAAAESE KITTENS pT>R SALE IIS - — Ml. Ck stoALL WHITE POODLE, n6 PA- SIAMESE Kl' 334W0S. kitYens ^^ahow room. (Wired WE CARRY THE COMPLETE LINE FRANKLINS-^CREES FANS-STREAMLINE TRAVEL TRAILERS —For Your PNaaura— heaJ^alwwr YSnBTTO la a. nunun Royal Oak Store —, - BETWEEN 13 bnd 14 MILE OPEN MON. - FRI. TILL » P.M FREE PARKING IF YOUR WANT TO SELL YOUR piano, cal Mr. Buyer at Grln-!wrr Pontiac Mbingow._ MUSIC CENTER 268 N. SAGINAW FE 4-4700 New Piano $495 Clau Organ laaiona alerting aadn JACK HAGAN MUSIC CENTER 4M ElNabalh Laka Road ______FE 7-aSOO TROPICAL FISH AllO ALL PeT —-MPlIea. Fraat Pat Shop, 401 New-n Oriva, Lake Orion. MY 3.1303. TROPICAL FISH AND~iUPPLIES, ---n Laka Food. 73IS CooMy Lk. Holly Travel Codcb IS3I0 Hally Rd. Holly ME 4-and Sundaya - II FOOT CRISCRAFT OUTBOARD cruller, Twin 23 HP anginal. " bunks, chemical haad, sink, I... IV OUTBOARD CRUISER MARINE WANTED: SmXll h6uSE POG lor a blind lady, tree, M* pat. UL 2-1304. tiew Si AUCTION SALE I MILE EAST ANO W mile south at Romeo at 60001 Powell Rd. an Sat., Feb. 30 at ll:X. A yan —" ^ stein Cattle i I but^ voednatad.' Travel Trailers FOR SALE CENTORt-TRAVELMASTER ____GA*WAY=SAfiL_ WE'VE GOT THEM IN STOCK ANO MORE COMINGI ^uy now ^ ime, taka Prices *ltort at ^295 TOM STACHIER AUTO S MOBILF SALFS j 30*1 W. Huron St._FE 3-4*31 54*-357A__________________ BOAT SHOW WALT MAZUREK-S LAKE AND SEA MARINA ON DISPLAY 13 Now Crylaera TOP IS - CALL FE MID SAM ALLEN A SONS, INC. JUNK CAR^HAg[tD AWAY WE'LL BUY THAT JUNKERI FE 2-3502 Used Aate-Troch Ports 102 1*37 CHEVY CONVERTIBLE BODY ily. $30. FE 4-*l73. 1*30 P^**^*;OP PARTS *"“fE 4-*307 for SALE: COMPLETE ENGINI 1004 tUNBEAM WITH i ^SSoS3I*%r' Come in ond Check 1 EXECUTIVE CARS AND LOW-'mILAOE used .CADILLACS from Itola TO JHto A ^ PRICED FROM SK2*3 TO $44*3. . SOME WITH AIR CONDITIONING ALL IN Factory Warronty Wilson 1-Year Worranty WILSON PONTIACCADlUaC ■"■^nuSHOHaM PATTERSON ROCHESTER WAY >5 Cholc* QugWy 1.-OwHor Naw ear trada^-___ Crodit checked on-ihpapot PATTERSON OUT ROCHESTER 1*63 CHEVY CONVERTIBLE, WHITE BOB BORST DAWSON'S SPECIALS -16' Carvar wood lap: about, convartibla top, pric* slashed SALE GUITARS . LAVATORIES COMPLETi valu* $I4.*3, aMo bathluba, h... ahowor stall*. Irregulars, terrific vskias. Michigan Fluoraacant, — _________ . . ACCORDIONS Loaners and laafons. FE S-S41S. USED BAND INSTRUMENTS trada-ins In good playing con lion. Comal from S3IL ctarina »r. Dearborn Com Picker, MaV-h hay and Grain Conveyor, ‘— « AAanura spreader, Ri Dairy Equipment an« kiki goBBL—Gbd:—: rmp., Paul Hillman and Clayton, auctloneera._ wyment. 0pm IS a lAobllo Park. 32* E :-23. _____________ .YELLOWSTONE, boa's. Our regular Ibias, Steury, RInker, Geneva, Cherokee boats, - Evmrod* molws, Pimee irtiran, Kayol B Geneva pontoons. Take MS* to W. HIghtand. RIgM on Hickory Ridge Road to Demodo . . TIPSICO s *-317*. Ford. Bcyllndor, guar-lood conditien. tl23. 6«- f'OR^ 3*3" or CHEVY FACTORY rebuin motors, SIM. Also 31P333., 406 or 301-337-40*. You or we In-Stoll, also super high parfarr motor; Terms. 537-1117. JUDSON SUPER-CHARGER FOR - CLEARANCE —BOATS LUMBER Rocklalh, 33 bundle . S . Across from TeFHuron FE 3-0367 UPR^GHTJ»I^NO UMIOHT PIANO. S40. CORNET. EVSKY SUNDAY Sporttog Good-Door Prizes E Wt Buy-Sell-Troc... Consignmonts V._____ BAB AUCTION day. Citizms Radio KN7 Ch-ll. J 1«7 RICHARDSON S3-FOOT HOUSE- 3013 oltor 3. 1*60 oEtr6iter._________ Rd. Gimviow Trollor Psrl -NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY- ’"^'p^NNYAN BOATS Wood-FIborglat—Alum. AAorcuiY Motor* 3.* to 100 H.P. cliff Dreyor's Gun ond Sports Center owntd by Iht Villago 6f Roch tor. JEROME-FERGUSON. I Rechostsr FORD ---- I W-TOH PICKUP, A-1 CONOI- I 1*37 INTERNATIONAL ' pickup, nSO. 635«471 I , Myoro-Owntr, Gory ^rry- im3 CHAMPION HOUSETRAILER, SMS .*CCOeD.ION,_GUITAR LE^*^ I DOUBLE TAYLOR SOFT ICE Burmeister's to Dtllvar EM 3-4171 awn 4 days a week-1 a.m. to I o.m. Sundays, 10 to 3 apeniRt gjinL NEW AUTOMATIC WATER SOFT-mer^^^o^^jw G. ONE DOUBLE KITCHEN SINK, ir'x33" ivllh mixing taueots, OlOt on* drat* form, brand now. ad-lustobl*, tIA Phono UL 3-103*. APACHE CAMPING TRAILERS AS tow as $445. Com* hi and ask about our S100 bonus. Evans Equlp-rr.w.1 633-1711. CAB OVER CAmKKT ‘ CLIFF DREYEfc?*OF H 0 L L V ' havt Iht maM oamptoto lln* el guns-plttolt, 13316 Holly Rd., Holly. GUNS: BUY-SELL-TRAOE Burr-Shell, 373 S. Tologroph POLARIS SNO-TRAVELERS noricas loading snow vahklot, aS sizes. Com* In, so* 'om, try ‘cm. P^BIS-AMO_JfiRVJCi- - - ' KING BROS. FE 4-0734 FE 4-1443 PanMo* Rood at Qpdyk* -' REMINGTON 33 RIFLE, SEMI-AU- S AUCTIONS byery yii- )»^furSahto,,. . ..... man, ouctlonoer. Conslgimwnts *c-ceptod Wod. through $w. 1-6 3D7 Lakovlll* Rd., Oxford OA AI360. SATURDAY FEBRUARY 30lh -13 NOON GEORGE ROBLEE FARM 4036 W. Hill, Swortz Creek Ford Machinery, Hey Relict, Furniture STAN PERKINS, AUCTIONEER OAKLAND USED CARS N. Opdyke ,FE S 1*66 CHEVY WTOM PICKUP, PUSH bum^, covttad bid. FE 3-4064. 1*40 FORD Vk TON PANEL. BLUE Unlsh, stick. S303. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1104 S. Wood ward Ave. Birmingham. Ml 4-3733. JUNE VAN, , KVUN- ne^lS!^^ ^iiJSSitol*5$Jfr«SKr“‘Sf _ ,... , time Saturday, no Sunday colls 31 Barrows Street, AAetemore, Mlchlgen. HORSES, BOUGHT, S^LD, AND bearded. 75^3fl07._____________ MOORS BROTHERS l-HORSE Itellei 73" nigh, like new. electric h^raulic brakes. Inquire at Ratter M Ranch, Rochester Rdw 73^3fl07. TWO-YEAR-OLO BAY MARE, WILL PORTABLE TYPEWRITER, SCRIP ‘ type, new S4..J0. Victor atoc. Ing machin*, S75, Friadm < Ufor, tlOO, Burroughs elec, ec machine-caah regtotor combtoM Huy-Gnrio-Fggd PLUMBING BARGAINS. FREE Standing t^, t1*.*S. IBgengn heater. 647.*St Jplaoe boRi eels $30.*3. Laundry trey, trim, SltAS; shower Hells with trim S34.*3i 34IOWI Hnk, S3.*3; Levsw $3.*S; . BILL MALE’S PIT. FILL. GRAVEU dozing, beck he* work, EM 34371 GOOD DRIVEWAY GRAVEL. 3 yards M delivered. FE 4-6300. LAKE DREDGING. BEACH SAND -revel ond nil. OR 3-3030. ymtol fonYia REFRIGERATOR. 33-CALIBER FIS-tol. ,3334714. ______ RCA whirlfool automatic washer In good condition, never used spore tire vrllh wheel tor Falcm ‘41 end aluminized peint oil lank (capacity of 173 gal.) Phono EM 34007 ottor 5:30 pjn. REGULATION SIZE, SLATE TOP.' ----grovtL 1 3-I334.______________________ SKIN DIVING EQUIPMENT. FE M17». WBBthCoaKBiu-Fvtl GOOD HORSE HAV-GRAIN 1 *d In truck load tots. tolO CtoltY Lbke Rd., Unim Lake 'EM 3-4171. HORSE HAY. MUOMR t,.,PIRST and aooond cutting olf Hrxw will dellvor. 4610 J ^iy. .~'bots. com, OA t-3331. LOOK WINTER SALES MARLETTE, GARDNER. YELLOW STONE TRAVEL TRAILERS ANO TRUCK CAMPERS. Alto mo-good used traitor*. OXFORD TRAILER SALES I milt south of Lake Orton on M3 MY 3-0731 .MRiom* Sal.- SpBciol Offer tagabend: IT WU* "Factory CotV' Auburn (M3*) at Oadyk* 1^) Porich urst T ra Ifer SoTes FINEST IN MOBILE LIVING IS TO «0 fttf. Etaturino ntw ---- i Buddy and Noi~^ . Located halfway Oxford m M„ .— .. Coumry Cousin. MY 3-4611. YOU SAVE $S$ 1*63 lir wktos. 1 btdrooms, S3*3 down, payments of $4* per month, including Intorost and Insurr— Dollversd ond set up. MoH haalod lor your showing to lone* - A good scloctton of -E and 3g! wMo* e* low at down. Terms to your sotlsfactlc BOB HUTCHINSON 1 to'^A* PAUL A. YOUNG, Inc. )30 Olxl* Hwy., Drayton Plolns (On Lorn Laka) pm *-4 Mondoy-Saturdoy OR 4-0411 ___Sundays 13 to 3 p.m. LOOK NO MORE! I Com* in ond so* over 30 new end , used boats and motors m display. All silU from I through 33 toot. PINTERS 370 Opdyke ' FE 44R34 (1-73 at Oakland Univ. exit) OPEN SUNDAY 12-4 P.M. _ FOR THE EARLY BIROS specials. Us* our lay-a-way, easy peymmts, kitorosl (re*. Largo talocttons at SEA-RAY BOATS, STARCRAFT and tha now quM MERCURY OUTBOARD. Birmingham Boot Center N. OF 14 MILE AT ADAMS RD. 1*63 CHEVY Vy-TON PICK-UP. LOW mitoogo, A-l oenditton. OR 3-3064 otter 4:M p.m. _____________ 1*63 F-130 FORD 4MIHEEL ORIVi with 7 n. Meyers snow ptow, S3 300. FE 3-3040._______^^________ 1*64 JEEP STATION WAGON, A- su'pe’rior rambleII 536 Oak land_________ FE 3-*43l 1*64 FORD F-3SD 16 TON, LONG box, custom squlpmmt Ihrou-* out! v$, 4-ap**d transmission, , dio, rod and whit* finish. Ilk* -now. $«vo;-7EROMf-FERGUSON, Inc.. Rochostor FORD OoaMr. OL stods. tobogg^ guns, toe,-- bosoball, FTChor. fWiing, hunting equipmmt. AAtreurv, Scott-McCuL loch motors, marln* accasserh •nd novtiiits.. BOATS-MOTORSr-TRAILERS CRUISE-OUT BOAT SALES E. Walton FE t-44C I PbmHty " PtE WILL SEAT ANY DEAL Kor's BootA ASetors, L*kb Ortei 1-A aged WOOD - S7 UP. ALSO slob - FE M735 or FE FfUt. IFOl BALES WHEAT STRAW, WILL -- - _______ 13 S. Shirley. SPOTS BEFORE YOUR EYES-ON your new cerpet—remove them with Bhi* Lustre. Rent electric ahenneoer SI. Hudsm's Herdwar*. 41 M Welton neer Baldwin, Phone: FE 44)343 ____________ SINGER AUTOAAATIC ZIG-SAG sewtng machine - MAPLE COH-SWj CABm^ m w mcxilh or $44 cash balance. GUAR-ANTEED. Univortol Ca, FE 4-0*03. SET OF DRAFTING TOOLS. INCL. : CANNEL COAL - THE IDEAL firaplac* tool, fireplac* wood, flr*-sMo colors. OAKLAND FUEL I PAINT. 43 Thomas St. FE S6I3*. DAN AND 'LAlfRY'ir-"6liY SLA* DRY SPLIT HARDWOOD, cord dollvorod. 107-5343. circle, and all InSIrummls. $1i> 633-3570.___________________ SPR ED-SATIN PAINTS, WARWICK Supply, 3671 Orchard L#k*. ¥0-'M STAINLESS STEEL DOUBLE SINKS Sl*.*3. G. A. Thompeen. 7003 SAS* AKC GERAAAN SHEPHiRI>r ITS.. Very good watchdog. OR 3-3114. AKC OACHSMUNO FUPPIES. ST'Ub dogs. ESTELHEIAAS. FT 3-OM*. AKC CHIHUAHUA PU^I^S. VERY IHUANUA P a. Ft 35374. AKC AAALIE springer SPANlir 437-1774 AKC P(X>OLE STUDS—CLIPPINGS, Orettord Grovo KonnoL MA 4-1111. USED 'Sm ANO OIL FURNACES. ‘ Chandler Hoatlng, OR »3*M. WEDDING ANNOUNCBMENff~AT discount prtots. Forbos. 4301 Dlii* y. OR 3*767, : “silver poo6le puppies. GRINNELL'S Annual PIANO FACTORY * SALE New Spinet Pianos - $399 Rebuilt* Pianos $199. ■ ALL PinCES ON' NiW ANO USED PIANOS HAVE BEEN REDUCED FOR THIS ONCE-A-YEAR EVENT. SALE ENDS FEB. 20 GRINNEU'S (Downtown) 27 S. Soginow AKC SPRINGER PUPS, CHAMPION sirtd, with ptdigro*. OL 1-0030. Akfc”PtEKiNGESlE PUPeilS, f6v. C«il Mtvuian • a m. attS A b en . Fg M4J0.________ CHtHUAMUA . _ . UKC Toy Fox Tomw- '““cfHFihuo and toy ----- _ - j frvtce. Fg »l#7.________ AKC BOXER PUPPIES, 3 NtALtHY malt* loeklnB tor goad homo*. FE 3-131*. GERMAN HAIR -BlAGLE HbuNb bOG. FE Aim. ----BEAI3LI hUPPY, S AND LAVINp HENS PARTS AND SERVICE KING EROS. FE 44)714 FE i eultlvitor S63S down. Mtonoopolis Moline MS tractor with 4 bottw plow and 4 row cuRIvolor 31113 down. MInnoapolit Ntolint UB 4..^ —x plow S373 down, 1 13 troctor Rgirt Trailer Space Aotg Acceeseriat 91 1*3* PONTIAC COMPLETE FRONT ond. Coll Mr. AAcIntyro, FE 61311. 1*3* MERCURY ENGINE automatic trmsmlnton. UL a*si4? Tiret-Aoto-Track 92 TWO 760X15 SNOW TIRES 660UNT-*d m Chevy rim. SlO. FE 673a. Aote Service 93 Massey Fergusm 13 tr< 4 bottom plow son e.-trodor with ptow ond Cut $3*3 cash. Also several a AC ANNOUNCING THE OPENING OF ' Oakland Chrystor-Flymouth's nr-bump shop. No lob too small too Mg to b* h^Md by us. insuranc* Work Fro* EHimotos OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 734 Oakland FE 3-*436 CRANKSHAFT GRINDING II " -w rtbullding and - Zuck Machin* Shop, a CORRECT CRAFT FIborglat Inboard spoodbea pricod tram $30*3. So* *^ bi Ihos* quality boats at OAKLAND MARINE 391 S. SAGINAW FE B4101 , 0pm Sundays 'till l p.m. ,0pm wook days **111 t p.m. TERRIFIC DISCOUNTS grinding. Zm Hoed, Phono USED MC CULLOCH CHAIN SAWS: 1 740 34 Inch, $1*3. 1 g.P. 1, 14 Inch, $130. T Mac a. » Inch, $110. 1 141, It Inch, $100. MetercyclBB •ARTS ANO SERVICE KING BROS. 3>X 6«a4 FE Alitt Fmtioc Rd. - fro* tor sprlnB. Oavli Machinory C*.. OrtomriHa. NA 7-31*3. Naw Idta aiul Hotnalllr ~ Oeare parti gatora._______________ Trayel TroilarB_________________U 14* COACHMAN - NEW 1*63 IN-troduetton only 1643. So* thlt bmuty today. Brand now ' Apacha camp Irallart at traitor pricot, whil* Rwy ------ ----. COLLER. Apacht factory ..---ppjl gi 1*64 HARLEY DAVIDSON 7L mil**. Full drot*. t1,351. OR 4-0114. 300X14 GOODYEAR WHITEWALL 111. Alta roar chain onctosur* tor dut-tlM*, ni: FE A734I._ BS A-NORTON-DUCATI WoiitBfl Cor^TracItt AVERILL'S Wt havt erdort for lie lot* medols 'Chock th* rest but got th* boH" AVERILL'S FE 3-5171 MW Dixie Ft 640*6 Californio Buyers 1*64 FORD PICKUP W TONTlONG box, 6-cyllnd*r onglno, biB t>*6toe tlA*3. OL l-*7ll. JEROME-FER GUSON, Inc., Romottor FORD Pooler, OL M7I1.. 1*64 CHEVY FiCJfUF, AND TwO- ■p. Superior / M 3-*43 L foosomoor -ambtor. SsTook- -CHEVROLET PICKUPS body. Lett of i BIRMINGHAM G.M.C. Foctory Bronch New ond Used Trucks PE 5-*4l3______473 Oakland AVAILABLE ,-grand Now- 1965 GMC W-Tm FIfkup s r box, hootor, do '**^10 MaogMBhB 5«r REPOSSESSION IMl FORD VS 1m pickup, na manoy down, call Mr. Johnson. MA 3Q6M Ooalcr, (WIN Bring Cor to Your hometown dealer, 1 &RS0N*skK'4"SERVi(:E 1643 S. Tetogrbgh_Ft MIB* YAMAHAS All Now 1*63 Modal: K B W CYCLE WSTON TERRIER IW YEBRt OLD heusobrok*. FE 4BHI. J CSLLjFJjTMliS CHAMPlbSSHIF"CAT SHOW -Ftf ruary 'lt ond 11, If OJn. to It gm^JEmbossy Hotel In Downtown COLLIE FUkS. AKC. SABLE~S~ANO lASTER asT' female canarieI"------- . thw. « WIBIoms: FE A64M. GOLDEN ll-FOOT TAWAS - SELF CON-tolnod, GOOOELL, 2300 S. Roch-ester Rd. UL 3-4330._____ ARE YOU FLORIDA BOUND? Get yeur travel trailer now. AVALAIRS. CBEES, HOLLYS, TAWAV ^WMtor*Hwm o^toMr^ ELLSWORTH AUTO ond TRAILER SALES 6377 Olxlo Hwy. MA *-14ig Beott—Acceetories . Gutrmtotd lor •a* mwn and get a demcnwi tton at Warner Traitor tale*, a WANT ADS ARE , FAMOUS FOR "ACTION" Fhone3^4TIT Did You Know? VIIUGE RAMBLER ■ mereJW^kNY^iM 66* S. Weedwerd /Ml * MANSFIELD AUTO SALES We'rt buying dwrp, let* m cars ... NOWI St* ut Mdbyl 1104 Baldwin Avb. FE 5-5900 SPECIAL PRICE PAID FOR ItSS-mS CARS VAN'S AUTO SALES 4S40 Olxl* Hwy. OR $-1333 "TOP DOLLAR PAID" FOR "CLEAN" USED CARS GLENN'S WANTdb: i»3S-i«& Dowof steering and bjkw. - Luggag* rock and only *1.3*3-HURON MOTOR SAL»S FE 3-2641 *62 iUICK SKYLARK ,346^' hardtop. At. 14,#ll mil**. Ft r»«“tUIClTTELlCfRA 333, CON- __ ts. EM 6314*. CHEVROLETS Out Birmingham Way i*3* CHEVROtETS Nomad stotlm wagm. Whli*. 1*60 CHEVROLETS Impala emvtiTIbto*. 1 to chaot* trom. On# cappor, on* rod, Vlt, Pewargftd**. Shorpotl oiwa^ ^to :r';?2n«'T"tNr^: power stoorlng 3 IfS IMl CHEVROLET* wood 6p*tt*nger ttatton wa Fawn bole*. VI, FoumlM r sttortng fi.T TftTCHEVROLETS , .01 Air 3-door s^. Solg. with REPOSSESSION rod krtirlor. Pewor-. J>$1 chevy hardtop, no i em power steering. * k | y call Mr. Jehntan, AAA ; 1*63 CHEVROLETS Impel* canvortibto. WMto w Mack im*^, VI ongln*. Pew; glhte S1,< Impola sport coup*. Elut, VI i gin*, stick shift 01.1 Impala cmvartlMr. Wlvor flnlM, VI onglno, stick shltl. nic* *1,7*3 Bet Air 6p*S**ne*f sMtton AcyHndor, rod and wMto, glide. Spoclal *1 ......... 1*11 CHEVROLET CONVERTIBLE, rail nict, tyll prlc* miy 11*7. WE FINANCE Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM FE 8-4071 / 1*3* CORvkfff^fteOlRr D 1*^. New car werrmty. 11,4*3. VAN CAMP CHEVY MILFORD MU 61131 r*64 CHEVY IMFALA, P 0 W IK AAARVEL 331 0A1OAH0- AVET »5* corvette, sharp, red and whRt, 6«peed. Ii7«t SI7H __ » boklpfid FE 6*631 INI COkVAlit 3 SPEBD. S4*S. - Ft 6734S - 1*46 CHEVY IMPALA, 3^CibOR. herdtop. V-0. standard, radto. 1960 IMPAU Convertlbto, radto. haeter, auto-rnme, S-cyHhdtr, pawer ttotring, -Tjomer Hic^ht REPOSSESSION l»tl CHEVY l-door Impala I No money dawn, call Mr. j AAA 63604, Dealer, (Will 1964 CHEVROLET L CAMINO, 6cylind*r. tlanHerd entmlttton, radio, healer, whlNn walls. Lew mitoagt. Mu* tbilsh. For only tl.**3. Crissman Chtvroigt (On Tea at Soath Him , RfJCHeSTER Tcorva Bring l»ti tHEVY BEL AIR A(JfOi^fiC, power steerlnB, brakes, tow mlle-txceltonl conditton. Call 1*6 1*60 CORVAIR 6DOOR AUTOMAT-Ic, ctoen, full prlc* miy *3*7. WE FINANCE Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM FE M071 1*40 CORVETTd, «W iNGlkt. 6 system, radio. Exc. conditton. Mutt sscrltlc*, S3JW0 cosh. 6163*73. *61 CHEVY CbNVERTIBLBTT&iJ OAKLAND USED CARS JRVAIR aaonZa, BlUI. $7st _________ Ml 63*34__________ ' IMl CHEVROLdT STATION WAG-ON, RADIO. HEATER, AUTOMA TIC TRANSMISSION. WHITE-WALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO AtONEY DOWN. Takt outr pay- ----- - -i5.e5 ^ CALL 1*64 CHeVROLOTS ■ssTiSar! REPOSSESSION i 1*61 CHEVY canvortibto, no money d^, call Mr. Johiuon, MA 63604, booltr, (WIH Bring Cor to Teur KSifSlIgi' Mu* Wtortor, VI, :snr. Impala t Indor, Pe kw, Poworglld*, Raal tow mllat CORVAIRS >A63Bf4. ____________ At HUNTM 1 Corvair 4-Door 25 MONTHS CHEVROLET OK WARRANTY PATTIISON CHEVROLET CO. " X Wtadward Avo. Ml 6im BIRMINGHAM 61 62710. t**2 CHeVY”l,'6CYdlll6t*, 'iXc. candRIon, $1030. ME 7-4*11. 1M3 CHEVY II - ---------V. A___________ I Bring Car to Your ___________ aAala, irdtog, 6, stick, ono-ownor. zo,-Jl rnttM, A-1 ctnditlan. oismia 1*63 CHBVY 6, io66R. AUtOMAT-'*'* ***' Hti tHEvV BieeiiYirt-i-AutA, ,.4.. ilR. 6O0OR MONZa: ---- "twr-TIHIMei. RWir— Itcrillct. 6661227. 1*63 ChBvY SUPtR'ikbkT, TAKI ----biytHOnt*. FE 65636__ Come - To Lloyd's 1963 Chrysler Convertible ThU Hr* ongbw rad drsambost I* In mint condttton. II has ill Ih* pewor canvmtonctt, power itotr-Ing and brtkot, automatic of hix* Ihreugttout. Nthirti matching r> Initrtort finish *H thlt botuty. Corns In and tost driv* this ana tedey.^ullUI*|hnM prk* Inclod- 1963 Chevrolet Bel Air *uton5&*^**^*1lw^idll S htattr, whHowoll Hr**'and VI an-gin*. The cater 4* meteWe brem* age cor. *Foil*diM»#r*d pricr Im chiding tixot and Hems*. $1862 1960 Pc^tioG Ventura This snow Whitt 6deor hardtop l| r*^ to go. It hat pewtr ttoarlni and brakts, automatic trontmlb-tton, whitowtn tiros and tow mlC a»*. This car It txctpllanol In, sM* and out. Orlv* thlt on* oiii *‘"*^$1243 1962 Pontiac Cafolina This Dahl mist blu* 3-doer hard-tm leaks and drivtt Ilk* now.dt tomoSfc**^IrmtinlttiarL ^whtiowaN tIrM and beautiful malchInB In- wtsaxvjsa and Hcont*. $1695 1959 Mercury Colony Pork This Moutwui stiltm wogen It to oxcaptlonal A-1 cohdltton. If M ml^, pawtr ttotring and •mazing buy. Thlt cor was pra yiwfjv 'MW *t **23. How Ih# price Including tax** .3715.-:............ Come to * 'LLOYD'S lincoln-mircury NEW LOCATION 1250 OAKLAND AVI. FE 3-7863 .............I Lucky Auto 193 or 254 S. Soginow Ff 4.2214 or FE 3-7853 ____ JH owl IHOWKOOMI '65 Vo|ionl-'65 Rombltr KISSLER’S cammion, BOB BORST QALAgTgTKAf5T5P: MAHVeu^l OAKUM?D AVe. ' Wf MNAHCt Lucky Auto 193 or 254 S. Saginaw FE 4-2214 or FE 3-7853 JHUNPimilDTv ™. K K , >r«m M p.m. g*3y*- H. RIggtn*, >*«, ^fON wAossrisefL- >«'• condltlcn. M»5. OR ^MW. ^POSSESSION ■ ~ I*« FORD Sfprllnpf hardtop. No do«m, coll Mr. Johnwn, /MA ..... »rln* CRT *0 Ntw MljMl IMR FORD. KXUI.LENT CONOF MMid. Vdry ciMR. Mr i«i4 f6M. Rood condRton. Mflinda ^Ht. Mt4 mM0>r% Woe ReewSw^ oM Aoeu fWFSiB” Storllnor ].dooe RprdMR wU Bonkor's OutUt WW EIIIOMRI Loto R»< ________FE 8-71F V^,>AL<55ff-jr6dbl/ HaBiO, !ga iKi«a TrlSg; AR^UTELY m MONEY DOWN * * vtr Mymtntt .... •t H^roM Tui "tir»>ix$.isyE Mwor otaorWR and brakaa. radio. r. Radii a low FORD HARDTOP. NO MONEY paymanh Of M.M £2* ip«f hodto. I Jotwion. MA t-iwN. Dnalar. FALCON AOOOR CUStSm ....Ian wagon, whin malic. M>5. Ft mil. TmI ford COUNTRY StbAN, Rw - HtooMngor, VI ongki automatic, radio, anhr IIJIA ji noM-PERouiON SShm FORDDoalor.OLljnlL- M FALCON WAOON. NO W **wn,^^ymonl^ r*---- 1963 ElECTRA "225" Hardtop Hway pawor, banutitm Mua tWM 1964 ElECTRA "225" Hardtop A now car trada-ln. low mllaa«a 196J^^£L^RA^‘225." «>orp| 1963 BUICK USabri 44)oor Ppwar, fawn IHiWi, low mlNaga 1961 IMPAIA Convirtibit V-l. automatic, doubla powar (havi : W1 CHEVY Bot^Atr 4«oor, Kylindar, autamallc, blua 1964 JEEP a-5. Sharp! CanvarilWa top. maw plow 1963 RENAULT Douphini d-Ooar, }.ipaad (} In itock) .1962 VW 2-Ooor Sedan 1961 PONTIAC Catalina «obf Hardlop. doubla powar 1964 OPEL Wagon p $2695 $3295 -..'$1795 $2195 $1395 $ 995 $2395 $ 995 $1095 md $]695„ $1295 $1395 196-210 Orchard Lake Phone 332-9165 1501 Baldwin I Woclti north at Waltoii I Ford Country Squlro, V4, itaartng. brakaa. aaala and ditloning. tl,MS. HURON MOTOR SALES THE PONTIAC PKES& fjtfiJRSDAY, FEBRUARY 18. 1965 TtL WAOON. ^ AUfOMAT- r P^ Oaalar. OL m Newj^ WH ealaala SM 1N3 Slanat WtfLAMna Canud •*" “lonnavllla Canvamuia l-Yaar G.W.JWarranty ti,ats PaMrson 6Mvrolet Co. '**^WITN*^ADIO^^D^ HEAw!! sr.^r'^a- /iS'Vn*t" xi SUME CAR PAYMENTS OF AVE, eilRMlNOHAAA, Ml A3W0. 1*0 FORD CONVERTigue GAL-axla 500 XL. 3N angina. Automatic on conaala. Pawor Aarbia, r eiua with wMti lop. condition. PE MTM. HdTA FAl! TIRES, dLcELLENT PMoKn', MSUME^CAR^F woodward ave., eirmi m CO ihiw, rMio, naaiar. whltawal,.. ! wote whaata. Mack lap, mat-black laathar Mtarior, T-lIrd —. angina wl*^ •*-- - *•— Ffl5ll!? Wg^HUK^BIRD, HARDTOP. REPOSSESSION ltd] FALCON Meir. no M a "—1, can Mr. Jdhnoon, MA S dr, (Will Erlng Car to laovi FALCON SPRINT 1-DOOR • eyllndpr -•..-i™ •r’SHX ^ Con 1M W4 T4IRD, LAN Du WITH FUU jhdili{rA^ ;E*suWt«^so5,‘f.3;r: D-^ IMd GALAXIB XL SIA LOW MILE B5h.‘^a . M». »OOR with MM I d .KHtO-OALAXIE SM Ika SM VI angina. ------ atoarlno, LoM t. Only lUaS. I^ikimIe^eeou^' ^ Chaatar FORD Oaalar, 0 — angina, ............. radle. low mnaagal SLIM. JER OME-FEROUSON. Ii^^ Raciinta UM FORD CUSTOM S-OOOR, V4 --Agkie. ALAAdLAr d_iranamlaalan, powar ataaring, brakn. custom packaga 1^ mltoM. Ifta new Sl,-IM. JEROME-FERGUSON Inc. Rochaatar FORD Oaalar, OL 1-1711. MUSTANG tiaS HARfttO^, P6t>PV r«d. ttamtord BMPtr 4 cytTndtrp UlOOr Ml 4-1444. J MUSTANG. 1 PLUS I' FAST-lack, auto., private, law mllct, tar uHdataia. PE ^gsH. IT» MUSTAND IDOOR HAltDTOP, at Bngina. 4-apaod. radio, whlta-walh, Rka now oondlllon throughout! Saval JEROME-PERGUSON Inc. Rochaatar FORD Oaalar, OL WHEEL >RIVB JEEP, WITH Nmr «M Wto4 Cm 146 Its? LINCOLN ^OOOR NAROTOP. ■m par cant first a DAYS BOB BORST a atneara daalra la awn a utad car, pltlM call PE ‘—I S:a p.m. ta IT p.m. ----h PrWay. Saaclal raltaM tor __eirmingha«rEtoem^ Tradta Sa t. Wbedward EirmlnghadR 1HI LINCOLN ..... IMS Lincoln ttM Comat wagon . ord^Patrtonr- wiii tkianct > WHITE'S USED CARS • BE MFE IN A QUAI EO CAR WHERI MONEY WILL BUY THE MOST AND YOU'LL EE - OF WINTER STARTING PROBLEMS AT Autobahn 1*04 Ttmpesl Custom coupa, MatalMc bronta wlHi Cordovan top.' Now top ..............tuts ItSl Chavroltt. Matilllc aoua. matic trantmlsaton. radio, t w h II a w a 11 a. Bxcapttenal —. -EUIoil........... i TtS 1tS3 VW Sunraol. Whita wit custom Intartor. Radio. -.....-walls IL»5 Autobahn Motors Inc. AUTHORI2ED VW DEALER V| mlla north at MIracIa MIM 17SS $. Talagraph PE SHSSI When We Say DEAL-It's for FiEAL— Itai CONTINENTAL CONVERT. Ibto. baauNtuI powdar blua finith, SulL taatarv agulptntnt. aacaWanl canditton, pricad la sail. I-YEAR guarantee IM par cant FIRST 3S DAYS BOB BORST LIncaln-Marcurv •Irmkigham-BtoomttoM Tradaa VdSSS ^ Mew t«4 Cjpw Continental 1961-1964 BaautWul laltctlsn at eators, mot art aguippad wllh tactary air car dNtonIng. Pricad to sad. NYEAR GUARANTEE IN par cant PIRST It DAYS BOB BORST DON'S SMALL AD-BIG LOT jg-CARg TO^NOOSE PROIW siivor awa. snarp. ltd! Cntvy Pickup, custom alick d. radio, haatar, w walla. Ibng box. I7MS • U.1 Ford Pickup . . ItSS Ford Pickup ltdt Chavy t-paaaangar wagan ltdO Chevy gal Air auto, d ltdl Pontiac gdbar IN4 Menu Convarttbla Pontiac d.door Star Chtot 677 S.- LAPEER RD. Lake Orton MY 2-2041 JOHN AAcAULiFFE ^.annual SEE THE MAN IN THE WHITE HAT FOR YOUR WHITE SALE DEAL '261 NEW '65 FORDS ENTER OUR BIG AVAILABLE FOR THIS SALE MUSTANG CONTEST WHITE SALE PRICED A-1 USED CARS 1963 Chevy IMPALA S-OOOR HARDTOP -wHh V4 angkM. itlck thHt, beau-fitui lira angina rag linlah. Only- $1895 1960 Simea AOOOR SEDAN - with 4-SPEEO TRANSMISttON, radtoi haatar. dramara. Yaura tar aMy- $595 1962 Chevy IMPALA 4-DOOR SEDAN - $1695 1964 Pontiac 4-DOOR tONNEVILLi - Vlala, gl5y?*^leiaor Hardtop with $1895 / 1963 Valiant CONVERTIELE - With Acytkidar tnglht._ stick shift, radio and white Dnlah with Mack topi $1495 1962 Pontiac eoNNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE -and brakes, radio and haatar. $1895 1962 Rambler CLASSIC 4-OOOR - with the angina rad fkilah, radio, haatar. Inclining teats, tconomy. $975 1962 Pontiac STAR CHIEF ADOOR VISTA -—s^ powar atoarlM an , power wkidewt. Only- $1695 $985 I960 Ford OALAXIE AOOOR - with automatic powar ataaring, radio, haatar, and whltawalla. Only- $695 1961 Tempest WAGON - with radio, haatar, wathtra. Idtal ascend car or avan make a first. Only— $795 1963 Rambler I stats. A real il395 1962 Cadillac brakaa. la.OOO r $2795 I960VW US - with ASPEEO TRANS-IISSION, axtra sharp throughout! la rust anyplacall $995 1963 Pontiac lONNEVILLE ADOOR VISTA -dth automatic powar atoarbig nd brakaa. A rati sharp utittl $2495 1963 FALCON 2-DOOR engktt rtd ftnith with trim. Economy $1256 1962 FAIRLANE 500 nth daap chaatnut llnith, va, automatic. I family car. $1423 1963 FORD ' CONVERTIBLE $1891 1964 FORD fAlCON 1965 PONTIAC Bonneville $1,000 ■vary tcettaory and option avalltblel Qlieounl 1965 RAMBLER "770'' $ 800 +RUSS JOHNSON Pontiac - Rambler on M24 in Lake Orion MY 3-6266 / ' 1963 RAMBLER 4-OOOR IT angina and stands $1177 1963 FALCON FUTURA CONVERTIBLE I engine, 4-speed transmiuion, radio. It. WMte with rad Intariarl Only- $1696 1962 FORD GALAXIE "500" HARDTOP l-Door with va engine, automatic tranamlatton, whitA i$i4gr 1962 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE ww ^etrirv, brakaa, automatic I $1893 1963-T-BIRD LANDAU XL HARDTOP With the beauHul viking blue itniah wH burtel Mtc Crulae-OaMfIc power tWing "Confidence Is Our Most Important Product." Here is a Partial List of Our Select Guaranteed Used Gars— 1963 DODGE ”440" Deer, eulematic. radle an laitr. FuU prka- $1,397 Jet Mack, axtra $595 1964 FORD WAGON k APatimger Country Sedan with rad fin J'-ni-g mtarior, Va englna, power ateanng a $2797 1964 FORD CUSTOM 2-OOOR vinyl bilarior, whltmralla, rac $1888 '$2393U 1963 OLDS HOLIDAY p with snow Whita finish, auta ir steering end brakes. Wen $1988 1956 FORD STATION WAGON $19.95 SERVED SATURDAY A.M. SPECIALS 1958 DeSOTO 2-DOOR HARDTOP $29.95 1954 FORD 4-DOOR $9.95 ALL OF THESE CARS CARRY JOHN McAULIFFE'S WRITTEN PERSONAL GUARANTEE JOHN AAcAULiFFE FORD 630 Oakland Ave. FE5-4101 $797 I960 CHEVY BEL AIR Door, a-evlindar, I mar ttiKiiio. -FuU $697 ANY OF THESE CARS CAN BE PURCHASED WITH NO $$ DOWN 'andTow MONTHIY PAYMENTS. CALL ANY TIME FOR CREDIT APPLICATION OR WE WILL BRING CAR TO YOUR HOMEI CALL 3384528 Spartan Dodge 855, Oakland W MILE NORTH OF CASS AVE. PHONE 338-4528 Mansfield Auto Sales FE 5-5900 . FE 8-8825 JHtt.CsiM *vme F>P. SBW Wtt f-m cmiMi Convwilbt*. rXJTr^-c^l^ ammirf that OM hM Tlw orMnal tm» w« •muINi^ biKk Witt) — mtar^. On* IMITMfy. M)l* m« Bomwvlil* 4-Ooer Hardtop. tartar, CM warranty. m* La Mans Station Wyn.^^ arjj^ powor, IMS Catalina Station Waaon. *■ ms Tampast LaMans 1-Oosr Hardtop. Automatic, bladt, bhn Intartar, itiSrp, CM warranty, tats Catalina .S4>oor Hardtop, ms Catalina 4-Door Hardtop. Pwwi^dew protta, low mil**, tats Bonnavllta Con)r*rtlbl*. laas Bonnavlll* S4Joor Hardtop. BlacS. powar, VM» mil**, on* ssi"Hiwr"* 2! wxtr ijs-ss CM warranty. tats Impala 4-Ooor Hardtop. Powar, V-», tats impata, V-t, stick. I ia«S impala Sopar Sp^ ^ SScat'iaolLdna'ownw^ V4. mi Impala AOoor Hardtop. Pg«Mr, V4j^jjutomatlc, vary mi Impala a-P*i*awa*r Station Wagon, va, automatic, poarar, •aa mlil groan. laaa BalAIr station Wagon. «• ia«S Menu S-Ooor. 4-tp**d, Ai- BUICKS 1*44 Skylark l^loor Hardtop. V-S, automatic, powar, 14 Tarnpod 4-Ooor. V4, auto-illc, aquamarine, poarar, seat Its. 10,000 mil**, CM warranty. Chovy Impala, V4, stick, and lust Ilka new. ___Bormevni* Station Wagon. Tha dolor Is marimba rad, pow- mltaaga, CM warranty. 1*43 Pontiac Catalina 4-Ooor Sa-dan. Dacor group, nocturne blue, raal sharp. 1*41 Bonnavlll* 3-Ooor Hardtop. Whlta and black with vinyl top, powar. on* ownar. 1*40 VW Sunroof. Radio, haatar. 1*40 Chavy Impala 4-Door Sa- mi Chavy Impala 4-Ooor Hard-artlti a rad and whlta Interior. On* oamar. 1*43 Falcon rOoor. 4er Week $8.05 Per Week Evan tliougn you hav* bean gamishaad, had rapop- I TO THE **»ion*, been bankrupt, or Jiorf^Wm* on th* lab, I PUBLIC , you can buy . ^KXI used car tram us._| ESTAtE STORAGE 109 East Blvd. S. at Auburn FE 3-7161 FE 3-7162 Nmv ml Used Cm 1tl a* lew- as 14.14 par wtSk. PvB S I® to Yiur PLYMOUTH WAG6h, ONt ownar. Gleaming let Mack. Nto* body and sharp Intarlor. Stick shift. A v*i ----------- price 0130. Marvel Metors-MI Oakland Avenue nm PLYiW)l^,^^^14)OOR AUTO. TeMIuron Auto 3131 W. Huron_______FE 04*73 )*4« VALIANT 4-DOOR AUTOMATIC, lull prica only 0307. WE FINANCE Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM FE 84071 TySt^ao loO par cant FIRS BOBBORST LlncehvMarory ^ 0 *s7*v!toodwi5f*"**** B _________Ml 4-4330 ______ 1044 PONtlAC CATALINA WAGON. ----- brak*4 and staaring. OR 1*43 VALIANT 3-OOOR WITH DIO AMO HEATER, Wl WALL TIRES, REAL NIC^ — FINANCE 100 PER CENT, At SUME CAR PAYMENTS OF AVE., BIRMINGHAAA. W .................... 1*43 PLYM6UTH 4-DOOR. REPOS-sassad. Payments of |u*l $11.07 weakly, no < down wUi bring car to your homo. Call 3344311. Mr. Darrell tor phone application. Es-taMIsh bank credit with 1*44 PLYMOUTH "SPORT FURY Convartlbto" that It a b ' Sparkling htrquols* matallc ning V nisMxi, ____ _ WARRANTY TO NEW CAR ............MILES. Aa- . you "TOP QUALITY" worry oJ^'^w*cXsf%'K!**cJSi *11 S. Woodward SPECIAL -FEBRUARY ONLY- 1965 VALIANT Heoter, seat btlte, wosherv wheel cops, elec, wipers, dual visors, oil filter! $1677 Plus 4 ptr cunt StuM Suits Tux PATTERSON OUT ROCHESTER last PONTIAC, S143J0. iaS7 PONTIAC STATION WAGON, pomr, full price only 41*7. WE FINANCE Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM FE 84071 1*57 PONTIAC, 1-DOOR, CALIFOR-nl* ear. Vary clean, new liras, 4430. FE 4-1*31. _________ 1*30 PONTIAC, 4400R HARDTOP, dean, low mllaag*, 3034134._ 1*30 PONTIAC 400bC POWE*, $400. 4tl-5a0.__________ 1*5f BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLd $730. FE 1-7434. REPOSSESSIONS: TeU-Huren Auto PONTIAC 1*3* BonwavMe Mordtop, hm full and haatar and It bi raal nio* oonditlan. VILLAGE RAMBLER 666 S. Woodward mi PONTIAC CATALIN^ 13,000 mil**,^ aWaring and brakps. 40MM*; 1*11 PONTIAC ‘‘CATALINA* door tadan with origtoM » Gold factory fInIA w[«V • - i!2]22l'i£®~TOF QU all power, r ftorltag or c weakly, no 0 down will bring ear FONTIACS ■rTtotar^’ *top. power staarlng, Indows. radio, haat-bucket stats *1,4*3 ____________ l-daor hardtop. Hydramatlc power staarlng thSTaiJ! New mi UjedCw^ tool TEMPEST WAWN, 1 Vlnaweqd.^^^ ^ Far a Or*«* » On your or utad P« *'*^e1go*pontiac ‘*'’6824W0'“ CATALINA yiOOR It* aldawalU hyJ. lio. haatar, window wtshm PKk up light*. * Mrtsld* raar v^ mirtar* |Tj*5. fhon* PE l-*335 I™"* and 0^- condition. 41.173. 4P-31*T-- REPOSSESSION 1*43 PONTIAC, WHITE WITHJ^ loathor InhKtor pwwr staarmw brafco* and PB S44« aftorll* tqui^ Including bVR HAROTOP. Rapostastad. Paymants of lust 310.11 weakly will bring car to your homo. Call 330-4SM to astab- HILLTOP UChmNrH ■41 Ttmpeal '43 Ranaulf, Auto., radio ■3* ThundarMrd, powor, sharp -LOT SPECIAL-1956 Corvette red convertible, completely rebuilt, 4-speed transmission. $1095 962 Oakland FE 8-9291 i}^isU£ Beautiful Cars Beautiful Buys . OVER 75 BIRMINGHAM TRADES 100% Written! Guarantee onto*. Taka ih* guats) buying Uaad CarsI 1964 BUICK Skylark Coupe, with^ bucket ....... seots, V-8, stick shift. Only $2295 1963 PONTIAC Bonneville, automatic, bucket seots, power steering, brakes. Only . $2395 1964 OLDS "98 “ Hordtop. full power, 30 doy unconditional warranty ................... $2995 1962 OLDS 2-doors, 4-doors, Hardtops. Wogons, Convertibles, full power ...............$ove $$ 1963 BUICK Skylark coupe, outomotic, rodio, heater, power steering, whitewalls ..n..$2095 1962 CHEVY 9-possenger Wogon, V-8 outo. Power steering, brokes .....................$1795 1964 PONTIAC Catalina, 4-door, power steering and brakes, auto., radio, whitewalls $2395 < 1964 OLDS Cutlass Coupe, auto., radio, whitewalls, power, 30-day unconditionol warranty... $2395 1963 OLDS Starfire Coupe, full power, sharp Birmingham trode! Yours for ................$2595 1963 OLDS Cutlass Coupe, V-8 outomotic with console, power steering, brokes ........... $2095 1964 PONTIAC Bonneville 4-door hardtop. Full power, the one you‘ve been looking for $2795 2-YEAR WARRANTY 635 S. Woodweprd Ave. Birmingham 647-5111 GLENN'S 1964 6T0 Almost Brand New 1963 Catalina 2-door hardtop, bucket seats. 1962 Bonneville 2-door hardtop. 1961 Bonneville 4-door hardtop. 1’961 Bonneville Convertible. 1962 Buick Electro 225, 4-door hardtop, full pow-•r. ^ 1961 Buick Electro 225, 4-door hardtop, full power. 1961 Chevy Impala 2‘-door hardtop. 1962 Thunderbird, block with red interior. 1962, Buick Special 2-door, ' red. 1960 Ford Sunliner 2-door hardtop. 1962 Ford 4-door sedan. 1962 Tempest wagon. 196Q Bonneville 4-door hardtop, full power. 1960 Ventura 2-door hord-.. 1960 Buick Invicto 2-door hardtop, red with interior and bucket seats. Ask For L. C Williams, Solesmon 952 W. Huron FE 4-7371 FE 4-1797 HOW'S THE WINTER TREATING YOU? WHY FIGHT IT? COME TRY ONE OF OURS. 1*43 COMET 1-Oaar. Sfaitaavd. 3m*‘is3**uam*r*i!!!^^ A*r**l 1*43 BUICK LaSABRE ^Ooer Hardtop. Power staarlng and brakes, Dynaflow, radio, haatar. 1*41 PONTIAC t-Passangar Wag-sn. Powar staarlng and brakat, Hydramatlc radta, haatar, lahlt*^ walls. 31.0M actual mltoa 31*03 1043 ECONOLINE Vi guarantaad actual r U00.00I uaas. Dot ^ jISJm mi COMET l-Ooor. IMI FONgTIAC gONNEVILLE Caup*. Pofibr staarlng and brakat, Hydramatlc radio, haatar, whlta- ...aiu* AM.AMIMA, IWKIte Mrith rmA 1*43 PONTIAC CATALINA < vartlM*. Powar brakat and st Ing, Hydramatlc radta, h*i Maroon finish 1*43 PONTIAC STAR CHIEF Hardtop. Fowdr atoning an* brakts. Hydramatlc, radio, haaF - -------1. ftOa* actual llnlsh with new car warranty 130*3 1*43 PONTIAC BONNEVILLk 1*43 PONTIAC CATALINA OOeor. Power staarlng and brakat. My-ic, radio. ,i ^ ‘ 1*41 PONTIAC CATALINA SDaor Hardtop. Power staarlng and brakts, Hydramatlc. Maroon tta- 1*43 PONTIAC eOUNEVILLE Coup*. Power staarlm powar brakat. Hydramatlc radta, haatar. FIv* brand ntw tires, stoond sat. ms TEMPEIT LaMANt Convari-IbMl I ipaad Irantmlitton an th* floor, V4 tngin*. Ytt, IMt on* It rad hot, aava-aavt .... WPS lt*4 GRAND PRIX. Powar itatr-IM and brakaa, radta, hagitr and wMttwMIt. 1l,m adual mil** 1*44 PONTIAC 1------ Hardtop. Power tiaaring, br and vrtndowt. Hydramatlc ri 1*44 F45 CUTLASS Hardtop wHh LapaOd Iranttmtiilon and consol* Maroon tlnish with white laathar bucket stats. A rail last baauty. ........................... 021*3 1*41 PONTIAC VENTURA Hard- 1*4B CHEVROLET NOAMO Wag-an. Power tittring and brakat, automatic V-t, rtdk, haatar and whitaamlls. Extra nica ang raady 1*42 CHEVROLET IMPALA WAO-ON. ftmm staarlng and brakat. V4, automatic rtdic haatar and whltawallt. 15,000 actual milt*. 1-b«m*r and a raal b— 1*03 TEMPEST 3 Door Sholton't. Block bMMht h : «Ah l*« OU31 -m-Faeton, *ir condHIonad and all to* other geadlat. 33AN actual ""•m ...................01003 1*03 PONTIAC STARCHIEF Hard- 1*10 PONTIAC ITAR CHIEF.- Pew-w t^lng and Makes, automatic. WendortuT tranattortatlon tor vary m3 PONTIAC y-Pattangar nJdriSX wMIs ^ rack an tog: L^^ nk* a Mg car PONTIAC-BUICK OL 1-8133 ISS DOCHESTER ROAO ROCHESTEI ■If r Mw» Bw IMT iMo rAmbleIi i66oR. Aadio and haaMr, dama, Hkd rbn, war- XAMBLER ataarii» radio and ItowaN n^ Notiaace. This cpnehision wax made today by two Manned Spacecraft Center scientists. Dr. Rufus R. Hessberg and Dr. Lawrence F. Dietlein after examining results from 16 aeparate hed rest studies:-------------- It was called “Operation Sacktime” and the space agency paid the volunteers, who in ino^ cases wdiere medica! students, to go to bed for periods up to 30 days. ^ Some were whirled on a University of Southern California centr^ge to duplicate a jarring ride an astronaut feels in the (damped space capsule plunging back through the atmos- New Sean Seeks Movie Fame By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-Televishm Writer .¥WOOD>-llaa(^ foc~ancjh I other film star named Sdkn? This* one is sumamed Garrison, and out at Uni- by Mervyn Leroy. The new Sean I Sean returned to New York, possesses a simple ambition: “I * little, starved a lot. THOMAS The West I n d i a n seal was days and has not been se«» at aU since 1912. commodity. His candor is refreshing after the wave of method actors who- parrot such claims as, “I want only to give good peiformancet; I don’t want to he a ‘movie star.’ ” In nsost cases, the pnhlic obliges them. Sean Garrison is a diHerent type. He hopes to adiieve the h^ts in Hollywood, with all the power and glory that go with being a star. Such ambition is only natural in a fellow who was earning his own living on the sidewalks of New York at the age of 9. SEAN GARRISON OPEN TO THE PUBUC MODERATE PRICES-FINE SERVICE EXCELLENT FOOD SEAFCX^D SMORGASBORD FRIDAY 6-9 P,M._______ SUNDAY BRUNCH 1^^ BUFFET STYLE 11 A.M.-3 P.M. JACK C. AAAJOR Evenings at the Piano Bar 160) S. T«l«graph FE 8-9623 120 iaautitul Rooms Gimbel’s. He started to click in plays and was discovered in the road company of "Camelot” by tract, but meanwhile lost his marriage. “We had such a rou^ time surviving, there was nothing left for us,’’ he said sorrowfully. State legislature Commends Singer Test Proves Exercise Important in Space Malaria, considered tht world’s mnjor health gtrikes 290 million and kUla 2 milUon persons a ye«- klcking one leg at a time, rotating the neck and bead, bending at the waist. An elaatic stretch belt, whidi can be pulled apart with each hand, warv Mg aU. Hessberg said. “We riao found aft InflataMa cuff, placed around the tbigiu, calves and forearms, and inflated at certain times only, was an as NUTIM TBMl-tOOni o( heated IN SUITS In the U.S. Public Health Service hospital at Stat«i Island, N.Y., others were taken from their beds, placed in space suits, heated to 103 degrees and then rotated on a tilt table. Orbiting astronauts perspire and in most cases suffers. Thel r~g JUfC—TU— Tdfiui^e¥15^Ik^^ TnCau6 ed these conditions. The studies were made to see what part immobilization plays in the postfligfat dizziness experienced by two UB. astronauts, Maj. L. Gordon Cooper and Cmdr. Walter M. Schirra Jr., and some of the Soviet cosmonauts. “We saw nothing startling in the results,” Hessberg said. “We have not been able to define or identify any problem that would keep us from committing a man to an indefinite time of weightlessness in space. “Man adapts to a weightless environment and suffers ne problem that can’t be handled exercise in flight.” 1{^Straigh§iis Leaning Structure MOSCOW (UPI) - The Rus- minaret of Samarkand yesterday. And, they said, they might be able to help Italians straighten the Leaning Tower of Pisa. The hv of the 15th century, 970-ton tower in the ancimt city of Asiatic Russia has leaned by 'five feet for the past 30 years and has been supported by cables. The Soviet news agency Tass said the lofty tower was jacked i^right today at the end of a twomonth operation. inunenae help,’’ be continued. •In fact, the cuff and exer- be^ results than either done ahme.**...’.................. TO WEAR CUFFS The coHi will be worn by Cooper and Navy Cnxhr. Charles Conrad Jr. for the first time on the sevoKlay space mission later this year. “We are kceDiiut astronauts. (Air Force Majors) James A.' McDivltt and Edward White II, who wUl pilot the four-day Gemini mission this summer, for a test group,” Hessberg said. We will compare their reactions without aldsr«g«4B9t reactions of the astronauts who will exercise and use the cuffs,” Dl-etiein said. /ZZaKEEGO MABNIE ^HCMMICOUOa -njlSiJ6RRY LEWIS M iwicmMwr PIZZA AT ITS BEST! 20 VARiniES SPAGHETTI WM Mm» S«HC«, IQQ V FRIED CHICKEN FreMh fri«t. % ^ RICKY'S Coll 333-9782 or 335-7164 Acrets Frew St. Jeteph's I CARRY OUT So he drifted south, to the Caribbean and all over, taking jobs at everything from bowling phvboy to sponge fisherman. By 1955 he h^ landed in Californ^ and was working in a fumitoe and tile factory. I A friend suggested he try for : a job in television. He did-^and ! ended up as film librarian at j ABC. But he later landed a con-j tract at Warner Brothers and for a year galloped from one I television Western to another. LANSING (AP) - The Michigan Legislature gave singer * * * Marian Anderson a birthday Sean figures he received his present Wednesday, performing skiU from his ★ ★ ★ The exercises are simple, mother-“She was from the old Miss Anderson, the first raising arms over the head, I country (Ireland) and she could Negro singer to join the Metro- ^ spin a great story.” His father politan Opera, received a corn-died when the toy was 5, and' resdiulidn hi a joint Sean soon became the man of session of both Michigan houses, the family. The joint resolution lauded SHOESHINE BOY the contralto, who is making uo o I ber fairwell tour of the United “By 91 had my own ^hine as a great artist, human- box,’ he recalled. “Business was pretty compeUUve among aU that la best to shoeshine boys in Manhattan, so'***' 1 had to discover some way to build a better trade. I found it one day when a man asked me to sing a song while I gave him a shine. I sang ‘Home on the! Range’ and he gave me 51.20.”! Sean knew a good thing { when be saw tt, and soon be | built an entire repertoire of songs, even combining with a “I did my best business on holidays,” said Sean. .“I had songs for each of them —‘My Buddy’ for Memorial Day,| ‘Mother Machree’ for Mother’s! Day, and so forth. I’d go from • bar to bar singing them.” He gave up his sidewalk op-! eratics after a few years ««•) ■■mw worked on a dairy farm in up- IDHIIIII11■^1 per New York Slate. At 15 he i WlWIlUilllU ^ cut out, figuring high school was < not for him. DREAMS “I was filled with dreams from books I had read by Richard Halliburton .and Jack London,” he said. “I figured that was the way to live.” Wont ods moke it eosy... Picture the hours of pleasure the "engineers" in your family will derive from on electric train all set to roll. This happy trio is fascinated wjth the completeness of their layout which become possible when they purchased It the eogy way — through a Pontiac Press Wont Ad. Hoppy, too, is th« family now enjoying o pool table in their basement rec room. They were oble to sell the no-longer used train set for cosh the easy way— with 0 low cost Pontioc Press Wont Ad. PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS PMim 332-8181 B« Surt to Ordtr Hid Thrifty 6-Tim# Rott THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 18, 19W jP-Ji I “^Television Progran?s-r ■ PiDflramt f^shad by ttatlMS littad Iq this column aro tubioct to chongo without noHco. THURSDAY EVENING •:N (2) (4) News, Weather, Sports (7) Movie: r) “Chief Crazy Horse” (In Progress) ^ (t) Hucldeberry Hound - JS9) Higb School Jasl(afc4 ban mey.__________________________ ACROSS I V^aie-ofdored salad — 12 Gold—/ 13 Body of water 14 Martian (comh. form) 15 Bud’s sil^ 16 Roee-colored lily 18 Riddles 20 VigUant 21 Driving command 22 Makes mistakes 24 Scottish alder trees 36Eskers 27 Marble 30 Combed wool (SjS) Reading for Living 8:99 (2) Perry Mason ~ Art lecturer £ 0 n c 0 C t s scheme to run away with model and his be^dden wife’s inheritance. (7) Donna Reed Jeff finds things amiss at gift shop. (9) 87th Precinct (50) Wrestling (56) Intertel 8:39 (4) Dr. KUdare (See TV Features) (9) Across Canada 19:3r(361ScieneeIsFuo 19:59 (56) Spanish Lesson 19:55 (4) News 11:99 (2) Andy GrifHth (4) Ckmcentration (7) Girl Talk (9) Friendly Giant 11:15 (9) Chez Helene 11:29 (56) What’s New? 11:39 (2) McCoys (4) (Color) Jeopardy (7) Price Is Right (9) Butternut Square 11:59 (9) Nows When Chip’s illness forces Steve to skip a Hawaii vacation, family tries to bring Hawaii to him. 9:99 (2) Password Eydie G 0 r m e, Fraidc Sinatra Jr. are guest celabriUes. (7)Rewitched (Repeat) (9) Flashbadc 9:39 (2) Baileys of Balboa Sam and Buck have entered antique car race. (4) (Color) Hazel Hazel’s boss blames ham radio operator for bis wow with his television set, but she pinpoints the real trouble. (7) Peyton Place Leilie Harrington reveals astonishing plans to his son. (9) Serial . "The Hductant- AgenC’ (Part 4) (60) CoU<«e Basketball Baldwin-Wallaee vs. Detroit 19:99 (2) Defenders (See TV Features) (4) (Color) Suspense Theater fSee TV FeaturesJ (7) Jimmy Dem Songstress Vidci Carr, comedian Henny Young-man are guests. (9) Wrestling 11:99 (2) (4) (7) (9) News, Weather, Sports (50) Ski Report ll:li(7) Les Crane 11:39 (2) Movie: “The People Against O’Hara” (1951) Spencer Tracy, Pat O'Brien, Diana Lynn (4) (Color) Johnny C^-son (9) Bingo 12:99 (9) Movie: “Night Ambus h" (1956) Dick Bo^ garde, Marius Goring 1:99 (4) Lawman (Repeat) (7) After Hours 1:39 (2) Highway Patrol (Repeat) (4) (7) News, Weather 34 Chant 35 Marshy moon 36 "Raven” author 37 Melody 39 Faladioods 40 Amber color 41 Permit 42 Mexican courtesy title 45 Attock zealously 49 Giver ^ 51 Poetic contraction 52 French stream 53 Comfort 54 Sea bird 55 Makes lace 56 Crafts 57 English river . DOWN 1 Hueoflieatlh 2 “Emerald Isle” 3 Characterize 4 Censure 5 Tibetan monk 6 OffidiQ decrees 7 Ever (contr.) 8 Formal dances 9 Shie^ bearing 10 Fish trap WyominjO^^^ for:'Woter Pip Doming (ap) - cortr^en totaUng nearly 81 ihiUion tor ^ epBstriAcUon. pMsas tb ig ter pipeline hax||)|M by the City contract for 8359,9^0 age tanks an^, eansWuction efk lakmtH ing statioQ at a nduiAlifa^ «f ^ 1698,099. * ' , V? Estonion I lansiNg| ^ 4t5rw. George Romney has predainip ed Fek. 34 aa BMpoMp Indt-pendcaoe Day 1Pcbl|j— l9 recognition of tk freedm BgM of the country taken over by the Soriet UnioD. ‘4f KITCHEN CABINETS WOOOFIEID raCTOri, H; Tt'j SPtClAL 11 Misplaced 17 Eurasian herb 19 Plaster of Paris - 23 Elevate 24 Expectantly 25 Nevada city 26 Greek theater 27 Told 28 Arrow poison 29 Feminine nickname 31 AU 33 River valleys 38 Drink of the gods 40 Fails to win 41 Entices 42 Blemish 43 Assam silkworm 44 Arboreal home 46 Pause 47 Dreadful 48 Anglo-Saxon theow ^ Educational group (ab.) Answer to Previous Paitle Red Buttons Pops Buttons (1966) FRU)AY MORNING 6:16 (2) On the Farm Front 6:15 (2) News 6:M (2) Sunrise Semester 6:31 (4) Classroom (7) Funews 6:56 (2) News 7:66 (2) Happyland (4)Tbday HighlighU comic Charlie Manna; repnl on 20th anniversary of battle of Iwo Jinoa (7) Johnny Ginger 8:M (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Big Theater g;36(7) Movie: “My Sister Eileen” (1955) Janet . Ldah. Betty Garrett, Jade Lemmou 1:49 (56) Great Books 1:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Gq-Round 9:99 (2) Mike Douglas (4) Living (9) Jloipper Room 9:19 (511 Reading 9:38 (58) Numbers tTi*r(4)'Wiwf’ ^ (58) Spanish Lesson 19:M (4) Make Room for Daddy (!) Canada Schools 19il9 (M) SdentMic World M:I8 (1) I Love Lucy (4) (Color) Wbat’e lUs Song? AFTERNOON 12:M (2) Love of Life (4) (Color) Say When (7) Donna Reed (9) Bingo 12:25 (2) News 12:39 (2) Search for Tomorrow J4) (Ck)lor) Truth w Consequences m Father Knows Best 12:35 (56) Spanish Lesson 12;4S (2) Guiding Li^t 12:56 (56) Reading 1:66 (2) Jack Benny (4) News (7) Ernie Ford (9) Movie: “Huk’ George Montgomery, Mona Freeman 1:19 (4) EUot’s Almanac (56) -Srifniy 1:15 U) Tq>icd for Today 1:25 (56) World History iMmAAthaWbrldltena^ (4) (Color) Let’s Make a Deal (7) Bachelor Fatber 1:56 (4) News (56) Adventures in Science 2:66 (2) Password (4) Moment of Truth ----(71 Flame In the Wind 2:25 ( 56) Numbers 2:36 (2) Playhouse 2 (4) Doctors (7) Day In Court 2:56 (56) Spanish Lesson 2:55 (7) News 3:M (2) To TiU the Truth (4) Another World (7) General Hospital 1:15 (9) News t 3:25 (2) News 2:39 (3) Ed^ of Night (4) (Color) You Don’t Say (7) Young Marrieds (9) Take 30 (50) Jade La Lanne 4:91 (2) Secret Storm (4) Match Game (7) Trallmaster (9) Razzle Dazzle (50) Movie 4:25 (4) News 4:30 (2) Mofvie: “Black Patdi” (1957) George Montgomery, Sebastian Cabot (4) Mickey Mouse Club 5:99 (4) (Color) George Pierrot (7) Movie: “Attadc of the Moors” (1963) Chelo Alonso, Rik BatagUa (50) Uttk Rascals (56) Exploring th’e Uni- WDLSON By EARL WILSON NEW YORK-'Tm having my best year—I’ve been very lucky!” exclaimed Red Buttons, who’s not a braggart, but was just feeling happy. He was leaving for Holfywood to play the actor’s agent in “Harlow” ... he has two pictures waiting, fw release: “Up From the Beach,” made by Darryl Zanuck in France, and “Your Cheatin’ Heart,” the Hank Williams story. “And I did a ‘Ben Casey’ .TV show, called ‘Jwmaey’S End nnd Lover’s Meeting’ —that’s a quotation from ‘Twelfth Night’— that diey’ve moved np to March on the •chednle so h can qualify for an Emmy,” ______ Red said with even more enthusiasm. ‘I play a teacher whose wife gets a brain tumor and there’i a mercy killing* R’s the most pdgnant thing I’ve ever done.” But Red Is stUl primarily a comedian. We were at a party at Saul Brown’s. There was table talk about the boom in Interfaith friendship betweai Catholics and Jews. “It gives ifie an idea for a comedy routine,” Red said, jottipg notes. “Now that Catholics and Jews get along fine, we should now promoto. friendship between Protestants and other _Protttfrito^ CathoDcs wd 6therCaih<5ll«, 1^^ and uUiei Jews. ThaflT be the day!” . , ★ fr ★ The Jet Age: Sammy Davis filet to Pnerto Rice next Sim-day-hls day off from “Golden Boy”-4o do a dinner and supper show at Club Tropicana at Hotel El Saa Juan. The charge to^'see him at dinner is 127.56, with drinks extra. As the jets get swifter, we’ll probably see onr stars wingtag to London and Tokyo fora Sunday night show. (And they used to think the Catskills was a long trip!). ★ ★ ★ THE MibNIGHT EARL ... Marcello Mastroiannl took Mrs. A1 Strelsin and other friet^ to Trude Heller’s where several women unabashedly aAed hiiA to dance with them. He shyly declined, saying in his limited English that he’d dance with G»se he came with. Charlton Heston gave a private dinner party at Luchows for “The Greatest Story Ever Told” entourage. He popped into a phone booth and remained interminably. Comedian Jack Cmtar noticing his 1^ stay in the booth, said, “He’s probably detained there painting the ceiling.” (Referring to “The Agony and the Ecstasy” in which Heston-as Mkhelangelo-painted the CeiUng of Sistine Chapel). . , , , ., Star reports Merriman Smith, recovering nicely from his illness, leaves the hospital shortly . . . Benay Vennta’s romancing with Alan Silverback, VP of TV at 20th Century-Fox . . . Johnny Johnston, a singer far ahead of his time with the gittar, returns to the sijoons soon, opening at the Living Room. ★ ★ ★ remembered QUOTE: “If you have a half hour to spare, don’l spend it wltfr someone who ha8n’t.”-Anon. EARL’S PEARLS; A Hollywood actor complained that he has terrible back trouble: “Back taxes, back alimony, etc.” Singer Dick Roman overheard this In a doctor s office: My wife tells me I talk in my sleep. What should I do?” . . . “Nothing you shouldn’t.” . . . Tliat’s earl, brother. ^ ^ iTM mn iiK.1 Collision Is Fatal MOUNT CLEMENS (AP) - I Robert Kalisz, 33, of Harrison j Township, Macomb (^nty, was Itfltea^Wiaff^ay' RTa"l«aff® T ~ crash on the Metropolitan Beach f Parkway in nearby Clinton | Township. 5:36 (9) Rocky and Friends (50) Uttle Rascals (56) Wliat’s New? 5:45 (9) Bags Bunny 5:55 (2) Sports (4) Carol DuvaU Admissions Director Named at Interlechen INTERLOCHEN (AP) -John ni relations for both the E. Dudd, instructor and administrative assistant at University of Mid^an School of Music, named admissions di-oL iBterlochen Arts PLUMBING DISCOUNTS 5 Ft. Kitchen ^ COMPUU I 7-Ft. Kitchen coMPint WOODFIELD CONSTRUCTION AmthmriMmd BCA'ZENITH COLOR TV SAUS WE SERVICE WHAT WE SaU t'W Us'lfOR^.’ rYOUe UHF CONVWTthS m2 , ANTCNNAS for NIW CHANNIL SO and 56. ,] [ PRIi TfCHNICAL ADVICI . . . 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CALL DAY OR NIGHT ★ADOmONSSr UDMnroM $101X6 BEC. BOOHS ROOFING—SIDIM6 STONE PORCHES WOODFIELD CONSTRUCTION WINTER PRICE NOW IN EFFECT TO APRIL 1965 KITCHENS REMODELED FOUNDATIONS ATTIC BOOMS BATHBOOMS, WAUS [Twill come to YOU WITH FREE ESTIMATE AND PLANS-NO CHARGE ONE CONTRACTOR FOR EVERYTHING academy a Camp. He succeeds George U(orden, who haa left for a posA with the Dallas, Tex.*, County AFCO< Compete Comfort System includes and secretary of alum-1 United Fund, Inc. ’—Rad’to Programs— WJW760) WXYZd 270) CKLW(tOO) WWJ(950) WCABd 130) WPOWd 440) WJWtn SOU) itW-yjR, ___ _____ Cvtnitw Concart Muaic $c^ *:aa-WHFi, Now*. Morrh »t»-WP0N. Thi Bob’Ofoma Wja, Nrwt. KaiaMoKaiM WXYZ, iWart Avary 1:$a-WJR. Fumaaa, Lucy, eillal •iCwja. Mualc HaH Ltut In Thm Atphmbet-Finf In Snrvicm __________ JALES* SERVICI* HEATINQ • Ml CONOmONINO • RESIDCNTIAL COMMERCIAL • OAS • OIL • CONVERSIOll S82-1210 m l^E PQyyMC PRESS, THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 18, 1965 China's Africa Tactics Will Backfire, Says Nationalist Expert By JOHN RODERICK TAIPEI. Formosa (AP) “In a year or ao,” said Yang Hsi-bing, “what the Chinese Communists are doing in Africa will boomerang. They underestimate thi Intelligence of the Africans.” Yang, a handsome graying man, ^cked up an African wood carviM, peer^ at it then con- *r rmtrX productjon almfist_M.] incy iMWfc cjiuuuij that the Africans can either be do not believe that human beings am capable of gran- swarms of locusts, we seeded, irrigated and applied fertilizers. Sometimes we didn’t sleep for as long as two days and nights." M VARIETIES Now, Yang says, 86 varieties of rice are being tested in the Libyan desert. In Liberia, the original Chinese team increased rice The Chinese grew ^te where it bad never been grown before, saving Dahomey half a million dollars a year in imports. On Formosa, 168 young Africans from 24 countries have attended sminars lasting five to nine months. Part of the time is spent in the classroom, losing through microscopes and hearing 1m-tures in Frendi and English the rest in the fields, side by side with young Chinese farmers. “We have offered very little,” says Yang. “But we have helped the African to stand on his own feet, to show him that be does not have to live on a dole from anyone. He have given him, in a word, a sense of human dignity, something the Communists have overio^ed.” Yang, 54, a native of Kiangsu Province, graduated from Pek* ing University and went on to Columbia University Graduate School where he shxiied international affairs. He was in New York during World War II and becanaa an asriatant to the Chinese U.N. r^msentative, later serving as an alternate reiHwsentative to the Trusteeship Council where he became acquainted with-.African-pwbr lems. . JUNK CARS and trucks WANTED -HIGHEST PRICES PAID- We Pick Vp FE 2-0200 You Can Count on Us ... Quality Costs INo Moi-t‘ at St>ai- SHUT lllilll'S: Yang, Nationalist China’s vice minister of foreign affairs, is Chiang Kai-ehd(’s top expert on Africa. In his own way he is fighting the Chinese Commune there. Though on the surface the two Chinas seem poorly matched, the small Nationalist program has achieved success- o- Conununist China has expended enormous effort to make the emerging Africans see things their tough revolutionary way. It pours aid into friendly countries and ritips guns and techniques to rebels leading subver-apd^ govmmments they despise, such as^t of the Congo- SELECTED LIST Publicly acknowledged Communist aid to a selected list of African countries totals more than $130 million, much of it arnmgod by Pdiing’s suave traveling salesman. Premier Chou En-lai, in his long African tour a year ago. * ★ ★ The Nationalist Chinese approach to Africa aims at over-throwhig none of its governments, Yang says, does not peddle a political philosophy of any kind and instead of aiming for the top Teaches down to the grass roots. Its core is technical help to the farmers, fishermen and small industrialists. ★ ★ ★— ---------f Its yearly -cost: Around $2 HUlliOB. - The Nationalist entry into Africa in 1960 appeared then to be an exercise in futility. A mission made up en ’til 9! SPECL4L 3-DAY PRICE! Kenmore Dryers Have 3-Cycles Plus 5 Heats >119 ^ears Low Price . . . Big Load Capacity Inst, on Det. Edison Lines—Venting Extra Dries normal, delicate and wash ’n wear clothes safe* ly. Special “Air” setting for flufHng. Top-mounted lint screen; handy load-a-door with safety switch. Buy now, save! 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''Sali?faflioii giiaranlecd or your inoiicx haclv' SEARS ouiilnwM INuiliar IMioiir T I, | | 7 I •5 The Weather U4. WNtHw •itrww PmuM OoWrr Tontgkt, Warmer Tomorrow (OMaHt Pao* 1) V'0L. 123 NO. 10 ★ ★ ★ ★ # THE PONTIAC PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 18. ^9«.5 —32 PAGES , uN.T«o**iyi{y%KSyT,oNl|ML |*| || | ly New Viet Air Strike Polky? WASHINGTON ur>- The Unit ed States evidently has decided to strike military targets in North Viet Nam without waiting for specific attacks by Communist forces in South Viet Nam to retaliate against. a reference to the U.8. contention that the Copimnnist guerrillas are directed by North Viet Nam. 'N-Roid Could Cost 149 Million Lives' WASHINGTON — Defense Secretary Robert ^ McNamara said today, that a massive Russian nuclear against"North'Vieta infil- continuing actions will be those attack on the United States could take 149 million tration targets. which are jusUfied and tho^ .... , L . .j f that are made necessary by the American lives. , Johnson told a conference aggression of others. McNamara told Congress it is unlikely that a Soviet ®'. These actions will be measured P'® Na*n are and f.tUng and adequate." under attack “That is This is understood to be the meaning of President Johnson’s . , * * statement yesterday on Viet- .'^He said: "We must all under-namese war policy, a week after .stand that we will persist in the the first series of air strikes defense »of freedom, and oiir strikes at bases in North Viet Nam is to convince the Communist leaders that they cannot win the war in South Viet Nam The President also spoke of except at the risk of destruc-“continuing aggression” by the tion of their own country. Cmnmunists ahd-‘‘continuing ac-tions” by the United States. BLAST-OFF — The Atlas-Agena rocket is shown lifting away from its Cape Kennedy launch pad yesterday in an attempt to boost the Ranger 8 spacecraft on its trip to the moon to take pictures In the area of the Sea of Tranquillity. U.J5. scientists expect the mission to reap more than 4,000 photos. US, Moon Shot Steered to Path nuclear attack would spare American cities at the ____________________ start and hit only military targets. The defense chief thus discarded the no - cities theory which some U.S. strategists have entertained, hopefully, in predicting the form of any general war. In his annual military posture statement, prepared as the foundation for bis testimony before the House Armed Services Committee. McNamara did not name Red China as an immediate menace to American targets, despite her detonation of a nuclear test device and a U.S. prediction that another may be forthcoming in the near future. But he did not rule out the long-range menace of the Chi- New Approach to Home Rule Dem Bill Contains Population Formula trolled and that is directed from outside their country,” CONVINCE REDS The U.S. strategic objective'in pected to be discussed here by hope in official quarters here and in other allied capitals that at some point negotiations for settlement will become possible on terms which would put an end to the Communist drive against South Viet Nam and would secure that country’s independence. The question of such a possible peaceful settlement was foremost among the topics ex- A county home rule bill, radically different from a Wayne County bill being supported by Oakland County, was introduced yesterday by Sen. Terry L. Troutt, D-Romulus. ’ Backed by 14 Senate Democrats, the bill provides that any county legislative body must bq _ elected from districts appor- nese Commumst^powej-. tioned on a strict population basis. It does not require each city PASADENA, Calif. (A^Ranger 8 streaked on to- or township to have a repreward the moon today after what scientists say was an apparehUy su^esstul maneuver designed to send it ^ m«iiom-r.„ge crashing onto the lunar surface early Saturday morn- Oakland County Board of Super- even long-range ballistic missile ing, ' visors, declined comment on the Scientists at Jet Propulsion Laboratory said pre- * * * the hostility the regime has liminary indications are that the camera-carrying -we’ve made our position (on ^ "’“f disturbing spacecraft will land on or near its target, a broad county home rule) clear,” Ham- long terni prospect. ” “Although results may be slow in coming,” he said after discussing China’s economic and industrial difficulties, "there is no reason to suppose that the Chinese cannot in time HEUCOPTER BURNS - An overturned U.^. Army helicopter burns after it was shot down by Viet Cong ground Jire about 35 miles AS from Saigon during a recent troop assault. One crewman was killed and three injured in the crash. and dusty plain called mare Tranquillatitis, the Sea of Tranquillity. It will be 3 p.m. however, before they can calculate Ranger’s new path precisely. With-: out the correction the spacecraft would have missed the trailing edge of the nToon by 1,136 miles. The maneuver at 5 a.m. came as Ranger 8 was 99.000 miles out on its 234,000-mile journey. TThe maneuver involved a long scries of commands to’ make the spacecraft twist around in space and fire a direction-changing rocket for 59 seconds, enough to change the spacecraft’s course by more than 1,600 miles. ♦ * * In a 13-minute-40-second period before crash-landing on the moon’s east central portion. Ranger 8's six television cameras are to snap more than 4,000 pictures of the surface. BETTER PHOTOS The photos are expected to be better than those obtained last July by Ranger 7. A towering Atlas-Agena rocket propelled the insect-shaped craft into space from Cape Kennedy, Fla., at 12:05 p.m. Wednesday. lin said. "It’s up to the legis- CALCULATED CASUALTIES lature to come up with a sat- McNamara calculated U.S. Isfactory solution to the prob- casualties as proportional to the ’ ” force, and the time to use it, ready for response to a Soviet To 'Carry Ball' for Income Levy JOAN MERRIAM SMITH Aviatrix Dies in Plane Crash Citizens Tax Group Organizes “It appears we have a fight citizens from the seven com- committee members notified in on our hands," Mayor Pro Tern mission districts and repre- the next week. Leslie H. Hudson told 71 mem- “ntatives of three city em- INFORMAL MEETING hers of the newly appointed Cit- organizations. VanTassel and Benson izens Committee for Tax Re- Joe G. Benson, 43, of 46 Chip- are slated to meet with the corn-form last night. pewa will head the new com- mission at its next informal The widely representative cit- mittee, while Miss JoAnne Van- meeting Wednesday, izens group met at city hall to Tassel 51 E. Iroquois, was des- ^ organize tQ carry the “pro” side ignated secretary. that t h e McNamara said there was ho of fhe campaign for a proposed a ★ ★ object of the tax reform com- Fentagon program ”\4ithin this city income tax. Benson, a certified public ac- mittee was to coordinate the the general range of expenditures Organized by the City Com- countant, said a campaign income tax campaign, which would reduce fatality to fission, the group included would be mapped out and the a level much belpw 80 million lem.” WAYNE COUNTY BILL Oakland County, through its legislative program, is supporting a Wayne County bill almost identical to one that died in House committee last year after passing the Senate. 1.ess opposition to county home rule is expected this year, however. The apportionment of the Kent County Board of Supervisors was ruled unconstitutional last September under the one-man, one-vote interpretation of 14th Amendment. If the ruling is upheld by the unless the enemy delayed his Michigan Supreme Court, as attack on our cities long enough most observers believe ii will for our missile forces to play a be, it will become necessdry to major damage limiting role” reorganize the entire county gov- by destroying enemy missiles at ernment setup in Michigan. their source. SEEMS LOGICAL * He looked also at the other Hamlin said recently that “if a U.S. first strike. If Soviet nuclear fire fell on American urban areas simultaneously with fire on U.S. missile and air bases and other strategic retaliatory systems, up to 149 million would be killed; if city attack were delhyed until after the blasting of military bases, the fatalities might be held to a top of 122 million. Hawaiian Tour Attracts Many Small Craft Carried the legislature is forced to act retaliatory blow would do to on reapportionment, it seems Russia .He said that, based on logical to combine it with home g projection of the threat into rule legislation.” the early 1970’s: The home rule-reappoction- “Our calculations -show that 2ncT^oman to Death introduced yesterday even after absorbing a first by Sen. Troutt was cosigned by strike, our already authorized will be $895 per person. Sen. Raymond Dzendzel, D-De- strategic missile force, if it were ★ ★ ★ troit and Sen. John Bowman, D- directed against the aggressor’s f For additional information or reservations, call the Pontjac ({^ntinued on Page 2, Col. 1) Press — Hawaiian Tour Dept. Initial response to the proposed Pontiac Press Hawaiian Tour has been excellent. It has encouraged The Press to proceed with plans and complete arrangements for the tour. Current plans call for at least 40 persons to participate. The Hawaiian tour will leave the morning of April 3 and return April 17. Approximate cost for the trip, including transportation, hotel, most meals, island hopping by plane, and many other extras, BIG PINES, Calif. (UPI Aviatrix Joan Merriam Smith, Roseville, who conquered the same around-the-world course that claimed the life of Amelia Ear-hart, was killed yesterday along with a companion when their borrowed plane slammed into a mountain and burned. Officials Hit Land-Fill Plans The blonde, 28-year-old pilot and Trfxie Anne Schubert, 42, a writer and flyer herself, were found in the charred, mangled wreckage of their Cessna 180. The pair was on a short hop from the coastal city of Long (The jollotoing statement from five Oxford Township ofmu concern plans f^ a "and’residenUaTgVowth' giant sanitary ftU site in their ® and Michigan’s highway development. induhrial expansion. He pointed out to the group that taxpapers would not have to pay three assessments — federal, state and city income levies if’ the state were to also pass an income tax. ★ ★ * Hudson said city income taxes would probably- be voided by any new state levy. DETAILS PROGRESS City Manager Joseph A. Warren detailed j)rogress in the city and cited Pontiac’s “face lifting" in recent yeare. Warren said the city’s ojf-erating fund has fallen behind. . He added that operating monies are hobbled by the 10-miil tax limitation in the city charter. Explaining why the City Commission decided on the income levy, Warren said a hike in the property tax inillage was rejected last April. French Foreign Minister Mau- . rice Coove de MurvUle in talks with President Johnson, Secre* tary of State Dean Rusk, and Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara. AAA The. French dipbmat arrived last .night and was scheduled to meet with Rusk today and with Johnson and McNamara U>-morrow. MAIN PURPOSE The main purpose of his visit — in response to an Invitation from Rusk — is to continue discussion of U.S.-French differ- ' ences on a whole range of major is.sues, including the reorganization of the Atlantic alliance, the United Nations, the future development of Europe, intema-tlonal monetary iwUcy and the war in Southeast Asia. French President Charles de Gaulle has voiced his belief (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1; Businessmen to Hear LBJ Seeks Voluntary Cut in Foreign Spending WASHINGTON ()PV-President Johnson summoned some 370 top-level businessmen to hear a plea today that they help curb the. gold-dollar drain by volunteering to slash investments and lending in Europe, Even as Johnson called leading industrialists and bankers to the White House, he wa» holding in reserve a threat to require the investment-lending cuts through legislation. If only b^ ceincideace, .lohnsoii’t new effort to bring the balance of payments problem under contTpl had some, earmarks of a \ carrot-and-stick jppproach. ' Only yesterday, the President announced plains to cut business taxes by more than $700 million this year through administrative) change* in tax write-off rules. A A A This disclosure, at a meeting of the National Industrial Conference Board, failed to spark applause although the size of the cut went well beyond earlier expectations. APPLAUSE UGHT The NICB memters interrupted Johnson’s address with , applause but once, and then lightly, when he explained he was 15 minutes late because he had been discussing the gold-dollar problem at lunch^ with former President Dwiglit D. Eisenhower. When Johnson declared ' that “the Great Society is not a welfare—not a spending state," one businessman in the luncheon audience cried out, “Ha!” The aim of today's 'Whito House conference was to try to persuade big industrialists and bankers “to exercise voluntary restraint in lending money or making investments abroad in the developed countries." . AAA- Most of these nations are in Europe but the rest also include Canada and Japan. produce plastic double wall recreational areas for the counfood and beverage containers, ty. “A diversificatioq of one of , the gravel interests built the 1® ®"®‘her “ area of grave concern to our tages to senior citizens - pniinft/ rPciHpnlc Tho hioK other points mentioned by Warren include8: There are definite advan- ,, , I ■ t -lu' f c oica ui giavc lu uui -“e>-‘s to senior citizens most - - The proposed land-fill would manufecturingfacilUes for Sea kinds of income are ex- A review of the facts tifakes seriously affect the estimated Ray wats on reclaimed gravel entire empt and they would benefit it very apparent that it is un- fO to 50 years- of future mining a a a ^'‘®® *® Oxford. Many of the from the promised 3-mill prop- wise to allow the Detroit Metro- and its irreplaceable benefit to Beach to the mountain resort wise to allow the Detroit Metro- and its irreplaceable benefit to T . streams and c r e e k s flowing ertytaxcut. of Wrightwood when their politan Area Regional Planning the county. , J"'®. y®®*^®,. ,®^ down through Oakland County •The income tax is really plane crashed on the slopes of Commission to transport mil- AFFETTiNfi trowth ^ . thou- facilities as the prod- feeding its lakes have their tax reform because the city is a San Gabriel Mountain range iio„s of tons of garble Tnd ^® distribution, ^ nt about the 6,501.100. level. ref through^OaLd**County gar^eTCe'oxford^^t ‘ CLOSETGSURFACE The crash site was about two already beginning to affect its ^ miles from this recreation ,area ^®®'^ ^^® Oxford. and some 45 miles from. Los “Oakland County cannot af- growth. The ... Angeles. About IW acres of ford to halt its economic ty’s most important tax base brush were blhckened by the growth in its most potential ensuing fire. area. ’This region now con- A A A tains its richest natoral ■q figured sooner or later she « is known as the would go like this," said Mrs. P-«vel capital of the world. Smith’s mother, Mrs. Anne “It has been, and in the future ________„__________________» - Merriain, who heard the dismal should be, most important in cilMiw, began construction of news in Miami Beach, Fla. ’ the growth of Oakland County a 60,IN square foot plant to industrial and residential developed prime residenUal surface and the porous na-• - future of the Coun- and surrounding beautiful Ox- j^,g improvement is being severely hampered. “Before this becaiqe known, Bopp-Decker InC., having outgrown its Royal Oak and Birmingham manafactaring fa- possibility of pollution. “The Los Angeles land-fill plan that the Detroit group is pushing as a model has very different conditions than exist here. They are using canyons approximately 3M feet deep ‘AH of this and much more was done as part of their - planned rehabilitation of land as the gravel supply .is ex-haufted. ' “It seems the -sanitary landfill group would rather tuni Wfaieh have Uttle other eco-these projects into ifonta*able (Continued on Page 2, Col, 3) gaming a major new source revenue. • • Taxes are levied on equalized valuation and incrirosing does not change the equalized value. • General Motors will pay a good deal more In city taxes under the income tax method. • Any state, income tax would have to recognize city income taxes. 'J' Mercury Will Drop, Then Bounce Back Don’t be discouraged by tonight’s low temperatures, for the niercury will be peppier tonoor-row, says the weatherman. A low of. 18 to 25 is-predicted for this eveqing, to be followed by a high tomorrow of 32 to 38. Tonight’s mostly cloudy skies will become partly cloudy to-morrow. The outlook for ^tur-day is fair and a little warmer. , * * * Today in the area, winds are northwesterly at 10 to 20 mile* an hour. Twenty-four was the low mercury reaching (Receding I a.m. At 1 p.m. t^thennomqter registered 31 in downtown Pontiac.. •f /r THE PONTIAC PRESS. THyRSDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1^65 'Many Would Die in N-Raid' (Continued From Page One) urban areas, could cause moi;e than 100 million fatalities and destroy about 80 . per cent of his industrial capacity. FOLLOW-UP ATTACK | “If our manned bombers were then to mount a follow-on attack against the urban area, fatali-. ties would be increased by 10 to 15 million and industrial pro-ducti(» by another per cent or *two. McNamara also detailed the war in South Viet Nam for the congressmen. He said the United States cannot pull out. “The present situation in South Viet Nam is grave but by no means hopeless,’’ he .skid, •* * McNamara stressed that the outcome in South Viet Nam the key to stemming Communist expansion throughout strategic Southeast Asia and other emerging areas of the world, GREAT STAKES “Considering the great stakes involved in this struggle,’’ he declared, “1 see no other alternative for the United States ’ than continuing to support Soutli Viet Nam against the Red guerrilla onslaught. ' He discussed the war, and its wide implications, in a 207-page statement. There was no mention of such developments as Communist mortar and bomb attacks on U.S. installations in South Viet Nam. nor American retaliatory air strikes against North Viet Nam. Pontiac Crime Up 12 Per Cent Crime in Pontiac rose by nearly 12 per cent in 1964, but the number of offenses clear^ by arrests also’rose by 6 per cent during the year. These • figures were reyealed Recreation Director to Leave City ii) the year-end crime report released recently by the Pontiac Police Department. Increases were noted in five, of the seven ipajor classifications of crimes—«c rl ni i n a 1 homicide, forcible rape, ag- ’ gravated assault, larceny and , auto theft. The number of robberies and burglaries, were dowp during ' 1964 when compared with 1963. ■ . * -k- The police recorded 3,925 ma-: jor crimes during 1964. In 1963, ; 3.500 were listed. Looking at i each classification: . Students Enter Site Squabble Hills Pupils Protest Mayor's School iStand , „ . CLASSIFICATION Leonard T. Buzz, recreation . , . , , u j supervisor for the City of Ron- ^ 15 homicides oc- tiac for the past 13 years, !" S’ T' resigning March 12, to become j ^ 15, nme recreational general supervisor !“r "°n-negligent for the city of Davton. Ohio: manslaughter. The remaining Buzz of 417 Kuhn is a native manslaughter of Chicago, III. He attended col- i negligence, lege and worked in various recreational activities in that city before coming to Pontiac. During his years with the City of Pontiac, Buzz has seen the department double its activities. He has been instrumental in adding clubs and has increased adult activities and youth programs. Robberies' propped from 174 in 1963 to 166 in 1964. Aggravated assaults increased 22 from 144 in 1963 (b 166 in 1964. LESS BURGLARIES Burglaries, including breaking and entering, d e c r e a s e d by Buzz has worked closely with | nearly 100 from 873 in 1963 to the Pontiac Board of Education 784 in J964. ' Seven forcible rapes occurred in 1964. Five were recorded in 1963. Students' at Bloomfield Hills 'Junior High School have entered tht battle over the site of a new high school for their district. ★ ★ ★ 'Mayor Louis J. Colombo Jr., one of 10 property owners objecting to the site chosen by the s c h p 01 board, yesterday received from the, sdiool’s student council a letter of protest. He replied in form today. Colombo, a Detroit attorney,, and his wife are among five couples who live on Lahser Road and do not want to see the district’s second high school built there. i Birmingham Area „News Contracts Awarded hr New Hills School BLOOMFIELD HILLS - Contracts totaling $541,936 have been awarded for construction of the Bloomfield Hills district’s eighth .elementary school. The total exce^ the $533,750 estimated cost but mdy be pared by yet-tp-be investigated variables. E. E. Powell General Contracting Co. of Pontiac will' construct the Elisabeth Taylor Traub Elementary School bn Square Lake Road between Eastways and Squirrel. The. firm’s $3^,072 Md was the lowest of six. ★ * ★ Mechanical contractor will be the Edward McDonald Plumbing and Heating Co. of Betroit, which'submitted a $133,308 bid that was the lowest of nine. ELECTRICAL BIDDERS . " ■ " " . . : Electrical Maintenance Serv- They have takCT their ^jec-1 Orchard. Uke was the bons to Oakland County Circuit! j, electrical bidders Court where the case was posU| 3 ^on- poned until March 2, thus hold-| ^^3e| ing up the board of education’s j construction schedule. » 1 awarded was a $1C,692 contract to Gold Star Prod-CANT BE BUILT IN TIME ; „cts 3, Detroit for food serv-“If your oppoation to 0 u r j ice equipment. School board members were uncertain about whether this sum woulif come from the construction funds or those reserved for equipment. $625,000 bond issue for construction of physical education facilities. , The school board has awarded a $55,609 contract for a portion of this work jto Lind Asphalt' Paving, Troy.’ The firm, which submitted the lowest of five bids, will con- struct five tennis courts and a track at each of the district s two junior high schools and add one' court to the present four at the high school. . , in advancing participation recreational activities. Under his supervision and guidance, the Hayes Jones Recreational Center was opened last year. STEP UP The number of larcenies rose from 2,113 in 1963 to 2,552 during 1964. Auto thefts jumped from' 176 in 1963 to 231 in 1964. McNamara's public statement | I aras sorry ‘to was a censored version of a . much longer secret report' he made to the committee. ' ♦ * ★ It covered his estimate of the world situation in general, and his proposals for strengthening | U.S. military power under a $49-bijlion defense budget. New U.S: Policy on Viet Air Strikes? ^ many friends 1 have made in Pontiac. The new job, however,' offers more opportunities ahd is a step up the ladder for me.” Buzz said. Buzz, 39, is married and has three children. U. S. Consulate Is Police reported that property with a valile of $242,667.19 was taken during 1963, while property valued at only $225,101.61 was i^olen in 1964. school continues, it means that our school cannot be.built on time, and that consequently the education of over 1,500 students' will be damaged,” the student council wrote to Colombo. ‘The school is needed no later than Sept. 1. 1966 . . . The present senior high school cannot possibly handle the entire .student load during the 196647 school year. . This will be determined when ' Schools Supt. Eugene Johnson returns from a convention of the National Association of School Administrators in Atlantic City. “Therefore 400 to 500 students CONTINGENCY FUND would have to be shunted into a makeshift high school in some other building.' The value of properly re ported stolen during 196^ dropped nearly $20,000 in 1964. VALUE DOWN ' In. his reply, the mayor, assured the youngsters he-is interested in the educational needs of his neighbors’ children. But he also is concerned, he said, with their safety. In 196;i goods with a value of - LANE INADEQUATE ; ki^LU J if 1 I *23,28191 was recovered. Last; The 14-foot-wide lane, he said. ; Mobbed at Sumatra' ’■*“ , ''■‘*™''e'-<^’^"^"<^®s®®f2perj^jfhtheopening'ofthesd^^ ' JAKARTA, Indonesia (APf ' (Continued From Page One) that the United States cannot attain its objective in Southeast Asia by military means and that it should negotiate a settlement as soon as possible. Johnson, in his statement yesterday emphasized that he does not intend to settle for less than an agreement that would assure South Viet Nam's.independence. Some 700 Communist-led demonstrators stormed the U.S. Consulate in Medan, Sumatrarj today and tried, to seize the American library on the ground ‘ floor. The mob tore down the American flag in the consulate yard, raised the "Indonesian flag and pulled down the U.S. shield over the front door. , U.S. Consul Theodore Hea\-ner reported that he called the j police as soon as the demonstra- Officials Rap Land-FillPlans School buses, fire trucks and police cars could not pass each other, he said. They also would be unable to negotiate turns at the Lahser and Long Lake intersection, he added. Money to make iip the difference also is available in a 4 cent contingency fund. The school, to be completed this summer, was designed by O’Dell, Hewlett and Luck-enbach Associates of Birmingham. Financing for the ^building was approved by district property owners last June as part of a $7,045,000 bond issue. Also approved then was a U. S. policymakers say privately conditions for such an agreement apparently do not' with some difficulty exist yet. I (gee Story, Page B-5i tors appeared and the police! "‘‘''""8 depths of less arrived 45 minutes later. He I said the police evicted all the; ‘‘®***y-demonstrators from the library “In Oxford the areas are not near as deep, and they are being The mayor offered to givej an on-the-spot demonstration of; (Continued From Page One) | problems if the youngsters want | nomic value. Low land costs j I® visit the road. | are important and they feel i ysE AS BRANCH He also.noted the school board decided to build its third junior j high school a year early for use | as a branch high school. j However, Colombo and the The Weather . Full U. S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Partly cloudy and colder today. Highs 26 to 33. Mostly cloudy and colder tonight. Lows 18 to 25, Partly cloudy and warmer again tomorrow. Highs K to 38. .Northwesterly winds 10 to 20 miles an hour today, diminishing to light and variable tonight, and becoming northerly at eight to 15 miles an hour tomorrow. Outlook for Saturday, fair and a little warmer. filled as a result ol continuous XeSTe, the" 'potJnhaTvSe | " I and tax base is much greater, j “e I “It is important to note that ; with the completion of 1-75 the • Oxford area will be just 40 min-' utes from downtown Detroit. COUNTY REFUSE i As many of us know, much | of Oakland County's refuse dis-1 ‘ po.sal is being taken care of by | existing authorities. •'We caniyit afford to take . , part in the high eos1 of this CHARLES F. GOSSER New Curator at Cranbrook Charles F .Gosser has been The president of the Bloom- : ..... - for the Cranbrook Institute of Clears Air Surrounding Teen Smoker field Hills BoOrd of Elducation Dnmtpwn TtmptralurM W«)nM<«y in Pontiac Weather: H»9hest «nd L ^ ‘5 Kansas Ciry 57 i 76 Los Angeles '7< ? 21 Miami Beach 77 * ^ Ometii D IS Pitlibi is Dale in »1 Years enture and the resulting future loss of important taxable i wants to clear the air about I : He joimi the staff to coordi, "i “Many have visited the area. I ' * . * | nate and develop the museum’s ^ toured the vast gravel opera-1 In a statement issued yester- j educational programs for chil-tions, observed reclamation and | day, Richard H. McGraw said j dren, youth and adults. In addi-3, the beginnings oi industrial and i he is in complete? agreement! tion, he will have supervision of « .residential development. .with the action of Schools Supt. 'the geological and paleontologist ★ , ★ ★ . Eugene Johnson', who Friday j cal collections of the institute. “If further information or a | ' With bachelor and master’s i visit to the area desired ^ degrees from Wayne State ll, plea.se call the township office- “ l ^ Biret Johansson. 17-year-«ld daughter of Detroit’s Swedish council, was suspended for 28 days under provisions of a school rule. Science, Bloomfield Hills. [ Towriship of Oxford [ Oakland County . Harold T. Campbell Supervisor Nina H. Chamberlain Luelisr Francis Herfather.Edward 'johans- Trtasurer ^ s®" of 6345 Sherington. Bloom-Harold Albertson Township, protested to Trustee [Johnson. William C. Ofler j * A ♦ ^ Trustee i The counsel noted Americans ^ --------:— lare given special privileges in Former State Woman ' countries and requested University, the geologist has done advanced graduate work at both jWayne State and Indiana universities. Before coming to the institute Gosser had been .an instructor at Port Huron Junior College for four years. ' He -served as a member of the'advisory board for the tablishm'eht of the Macomb County Community College and was chairman of the Blue Wa- Js Mayor in Florida ^ LighjI snow is forecast tonight rii the I^s area, the noftherri Rdekies and parts of xLyW NATIONAL WEATHER - Rain is expected In the westifn Gulf area and tlie Carolinas.' it will bfe colder from the Ohio Valley to New England and warmer from the soiRhern JPlains to the central Rockies.. reque«ea I . a . „ V . - ‘that “diplomatic considera-1 Science Fau- in 1962 and tions” be applied in his daugh-1 ter's case Gosser, 20, lives in Mount , LAKEj-ANI), Fla lAP) - „K-rni,Mirn noi with his wife and two ! Mrs. Lois Searl, a former Lan- *^*^^**^® ^’^®®^TI0N I children. i sing, Mich., resident, was-in-j Biret was returned to school j -----------— ' stalled Wednesday as Lake-1 ' i ki u j b ‘ ' land’s first woman mayor. Mrs. i * , ^ * j Newsman Had Expose Searl, who was a' student at; - In less than a week, she was!' AUGSBURG Geitnanv (UP1I-- •Mich^an-Slate Univer,fity; Ijad suspended again Friday when IA 23-.yearSd Sal jJuSst •syv^ as mayor pro tern since Johnson lekmed both Bjret and ' was fln^ IM marks ($37 50) ; ^Aoledt 1 “hibiUng in pub- lR..West up wlten Mayor James | citizens and that Johansson’s ,lie a girl wearing a topless bsth-rjesigned. . j title is an hortofary one. ] ing suit. The girl went free. • ling s 41 f^nly Here At SIMMS -BrandNew Arrivals In ^ Lucky SuirriseBuys ^eaaf fhtchase's To Brins Voti Special Saj/insfs We’ve Got a Lovely Bunch of First Quality 'Beacon’ Blankets ' In Lovely Pink Only Heovy 3V5i-pound rayon and oci^lic blend blanket is fully washable, hos a lovely 6" satin binding in stripes. Perfect for your own use or os gifts to the bride, Mother's Doy Gift, Binhdoys, c^c. Large 72x90 inch size Ameri-,can mode by Beacon. Fabulous Gift Buy! 'CANNON' 16-Pc. 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Cut Pile Viscose Ryg 24x45" - bonds of color... 3.99 3.99 4.99 2.49 Colors, pafterns, designs ond, shapes too numerous to mention —• these you hove to seel Brilliant selections in our besf-ever buy in rugs. Small deposit will hold yours in free layaway SIAASm 1', THE P0NTI5VC PRESS. 'THURSDAY. *FEBRlTARY 18, 1965 Lake Orion Scrap Brewing Over Sewerage, Write-Ins LAKE ORION - The weeks between now and the March 8 general election here are shaping up as a battle royal between two political faction^ over two issues that are Inextricably bound together. . One of them is the proposed $1.3d«iillion sewer system for the east half of the village, Oakland County’s answer to a state court order to eliminate pollution of Paint Creek. The other is the recent endorsement by the Lake Orion Chamber of Commerce Independence Township, was cited for his outstanding work as a trooper as well as his many contributions to the betterment of the community in being named outstanding young man of the year. ★ ★ ★ Known throughout southeastern Michigan .primarily as the handler of Hans, the jet black tracking dog, Chartier became a trooper five years ago. He is married and has four children. \ BOSS OF YEAR Judge Barnard of 5945 Liver-nois, Troy, was nominated for the boss of the year award by Award Will Highlight CC Fete ROCHESTER-The outstanding citizen during the past year in this community wi|J be honored as the culmination of Saturday’s annual Rochester Chamber of Commerce dinner-dance. ★ * Ci Presentation of the award to the outstanding citizen, whose identity is now a closely-kept secret, jfdll come following dinner at the Stephenson Club, 24930 Stephenson at 10 Mile and 1-75 in Hazel Park. Toastmaster Jack Taylor, vice president of the National Bank of Detroit in charge of the Rochester office, will present the award. Taylor also will preside over the installation of new chamber officers, including Robert Shuel-ler, president; Neil Hartwig, vice president; Don Foss, treasurer; and Mrs. ^ohn C. Le^^ick, secretary. . it * -k Outgoing president William W. Toussaint also will ba recognized for his successful year hi office. ' ♦ w The affair will start with cocktails at 6:30, followed by dinner at 8. . ^ Jaycee Robert E. Brumback, youth counselor at Camp Oakland. A University of Detroit Law School graduate. Judge Barnard has been active in many civic programs. Presently he is a volunteer fireman in Troy, a PTA member and serves as chairman of the high school scholarship fund. Among his other activities are associations with the 4-H program since boyhood and the Boy Scouts of America. Speaker at the program was Brigadier Robert McMahon, manager of the Eventide Home in Detroit. ADDED YEARS The Salvation Army officer, whose philosophy Is that laughter erases tensions and prolongs life, added years to the audience’s life span with his series of humorous tales. Jaycee President Lew Wint delivered the opening and closing remarks and Ralph (Doc) Thayer served as toastmaster. Director Kelly Burnette presented the award to Judge Barnard and Keith-Hallman, chairman of- the judging, awarded the outstanding young man plaque to Trooper Chartier. ♦ ★ * Rev'. Paul ^ „Johns, pastor of Calvary Lutheran Church, gave the -invocation and Rich Johnston, a director, reviewed the highlighUof 1964. Chamber President William O’Brien, himself a candidate for. trustee on the Village party ticket, said the chamber’s action was “not delving into politics." ★ ★ * “We have no axe to grind,” he said. “Our only aim is to get more good people interested in village government.” ‘OUTSIDERS’ To a Citizens party charge that the chamber members voting for the endorsement were in some degTM “outsiders” who do not pay taxes here, O’Brien said he thought they were “the biggest group of taxpayers in the village." ★ ★ ♦ O’Brien said he did not know bow many chamber members actually voted to endorse the candidates, but that only one expressed a dissenting opinion at a general meeting on the is * # ★ Mrs. Robbins, who is a sticker candidate for trustee, said the "News” will be published again next Wednesday, and that 8,000 or 9,000 copies would be printed and distributed to village and Orion Township residents alike. Introduces Bill on Escapees AREA NPWS 4-H'ersWill Put Talents on Display Song and danc6, speech and drama — all will be found at Pontiac’s Crofoot Element^ School Saturday night during 'the 15th annual Oakland (bounty 4-H Talent Show. * * '★ Nearly 30 acts from 4-H clubs all over the county will compete for plaque awards in the “Share the Fun” program, beginning at 7 p.m. The annual show is sponsored by the County 4-H Service Club. Winners, will compete In the district talent show at Pontiac Northern’s Little ’Theatre June 30. • District victors have the opportunity to perform at state 4-H functions such as Farmers Week at Michigan State University. - ■ SPEAKING CONTEST A public speaking contest)' will also be held in conjunction with the general talent show portion of the program. All winners will be determined by a panel of three judges, including A. P. Johnson, d i r e c 10 r of Pontiac’s Hayes Jones Recreation Center; Mrs. Helen Glenn, of the Waterford Schools music department; and John Witherup, Oakland County director of personnel. A committee made up of members from three county 4-H clubs has been working on the “Share the Fun” show. ★ ★ ★ Members and their clubs are Joyce Canfield, Busy Fingers; Robert Davis, Bloomfield; and Pam Mirakian and William Rathburg, East Orion. The show will be open to the public without charge. - FARMINGTON - The Ubrary board has decided it can get along with three-quarters of a mill to expand its physical fa-eflities in the township and city. It has altered its original request for one mill to build a new library in the township and improve the city facility. The request to leVy three-quarters of a mill for II years joins a proposal to extend the present half - mill operating levy for 20 years on the April To Ask Less for Library B(pansion general fund has been extended twice in the last six years, aw* It provides about $60,000 ih the district, which has a population of 45,000. 8y 196Q, there are expeetd to be some 80,000 persons living in the district. If property assessments increase accordingly, a half-nriiH could be expected to net upwards of $100,000. While not requiring an election in the ^ity, the levies would be matched by the unit if approved by township voters. ’The proposals were placed on the township ballot last month. CONSIDER ALTERNATIVES City councilmen then expressed concern over the amount of the expansion request and asked library trustees to consider alternatives — one of them being a one-half-mill levy for 20 years. Library board members reviewed their plans and trimmed a quarter-mill from the cost. Featured in the program would be construction of a new main Farmington ,City and Township District Library on the south side of 12 Mile east of Farmington Road. ’The facility would have 15,000 square feet of floor space, while the current one has 6,000 square feet, housing some 21,000 books. OLD POST OFFICE Present location of the library is the old post office on Farmington Road south of Grand River in the city. The library board plans expansion in the city during the latter part of the 10 years. It has indicated that this project could not'be undertaken lor at least two years. I 'hie half-mill now collated from township property owners and matched from the city’s Forum Plans Talk on Sfates Rights FARMINGTON - After gel, ting a healthy start early this year, the committee for the Farmington Community Forum is ready to present its second program. ' “States Rights” will be discussed Feb. 25 by a panel of persons having a wide range of views (^1 the subject. • The program is set for 8 p.m. at the Farmington Uni-versaiist Unitarian Chnrch, 23604 Warner. The total education bill for i the 191,924 public school chil-I dren in Oakland County was j $81,813,245 in the 1963-64 school LANSING (AP) - Local law] year, enforcement agencies would be j —- paid for bringing back escap^ | state prisoners under a bill introduced in the House by Rep.' Thomas Sharpe, R-Howell. Dog Vaccination Clinic ORTONVI^LE-A dog vaccination clinic will be held at the Brandon Township Fire Hall here from 1 to 4 p.m. Sunday. Dog licenses also may be obtained at the same time. ’ Service Theme: 'The Creation' HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP - A service entitled "‘The Creation in Song and Scenes” will be presented Sunday night at West Highland Baptist Church, 1116 Hickory Ridge. The church’s choir, directed by Mrs. Paul Boyes, will be featured in the 7:15 p.m. program along with the ladies' trio and male quartet. Other numbers will include a piano solo by Darlene Hoggard, a piano and organ duet by Mrs. Lloyd Hewitt and Mrs. Glenn Buck and a vocal solo by Darrell Burget. A picture of the universe, made of oil-painted pieces of wool felt, will be constructed during the s e r v i c e. Speciai lighting effects will be used. * -k -k A brief message, “Visiting Ehrth From Outer Space,” will be • delivered by the pastor. Rev. R. E. Derby. The public is invited. Two prominent Detroit attorneys wiir be among the panel members. One of the speakers is George Crockett, cochaimum for Legal Assistance in the South. Another wifl be Thomas L. Poindexter, leader of the Greater Detroit Homeowners Council and a member of the Detroit Common Council. OTHERS IN PANEL Others to appear are James Boggs, author of “The American Revolution,” and bis wife Grace Lee, former editor of “Correspondence.” Also on the rosier is Mrs. Virginia Crawford, a housewife and holder of a master’s degTM in nursing who is active in community affairs and a member of the John Bfa-ch Society. Representing the press on the panel will be Allen Rosenfeld, editor of the Farmington Observer. * ★ * Lee Peel, journalism teacher at Farmington High School, again will serve u moderator. INFORMAL TALK Format for the program will be an informal discussion by the panel members of the meaning and implications of the states rights question. This will be followed by questions and discussion from the fkxtf. * * * Tickets are available at the Book Comer, Inc., 33173 Grand River, and the Farmington Savings and Loan Association apposite the Farmington Shopping Plaza. Students can purchase tickets at half price. “Simply because'a state insti- j tution happens to. be located in | a given area is no reason why its residents should have to bear the cost of what is basically a i "Sstate function,” Sharpe said. ; ★ ★ ★ Sharpe proposed the state pay ; the local law enforcement agency for actual expenses, not to.i exceed $50 per prisoner. j * ★ ★ . - j In 1964, he said, there were j 60 such inmates, escaping from | sUite prisons, camps or penal i institutions. Detroit Board Selects Top Young Man of '64 ' DETROIT (AP) - Henry E.J Bodman II, 33, of Grosse Pointe' Farms was named “Outstanding Young Man of 1964” Wednes- i day by the Detroit Junior Board I ■of Commerce. Bodman, a part-; ner in an accounting firm, has servefl two terms as a Grosse | Point^ Farms councilman and; six terms on the Wayne Countjlj Boa^d of Supervisors. EUSSESIiH lillNEfllin trrEiuijuiK viHiiigd Car-Truck Crash Fatal MOUNT CLEMENS (AP) -Maryann Hotton, 32, of Sterling Township, was killed today when her car was struck broadside by a truck at a Macomb County intersection in nearby Clinton Township. LEGAL NOTICE TOWNSHIP OF BLOOMFIELD The Board of Review for the Township of Bloomfield will meet at the Township office, 4200 Telegraph Rood, on: MONDAY, MARCH 8, 1965 TUESDAY, MARCH 9, 1965 from 9 Q.m. to 12 noon, and from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. ond pn Thursday, March 1,1, 1965, ^tom 1, p.m. to 5 p.m., and from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m! for the purpose of reviewir^'the 1965 Tox Assessment Rolls for the • Township of Bloomfield. “ ^ HOMER CASE Your glasses will , '//'x beGustom-fittedto... YOU FACIAL CONTOUR YOUR COLORATION AND HAIR STYLE YOU rERSONAUTY EYES EXAMINED BY A REGISTERED OPTOMETRIST* DR. DANIEL FOXMAN. V Optometrist THE MODERN, SCIENi OPTICAL DBPT. AT M0NT6OMEIRY \^ARD SATISFACTION Guaranteed or Your "MONEY BACK telegraph at ELIZABETH UKE’RD. STORE HOURS-^MON. THRU SAT. 9:JO TO 9:00 CALL 682-4940 v ■■ ■ ^ ■■ ■ THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 18. 1965 B—9 U. of M. Area Engineers Named to Dean's List Mr. and Mrs. Glen E. Moors of Ortonville, an-. nouTKe the engagement of their daughter, Joyce Joanne to Spec. 4 James Chilton Pyle, son of the John C. Pyles also of Ortonville. Her fiance is itationed with the 15th Infantry in Germany. Miss Moors attended McAuley School of Practical Nursing. Some 182 students in The University of Michigan Coi-lege of Engineering made the Dean’s honor list for the fali From the Pontiac area are Thomas D. Jackson of James K Boulevard and Charl« G. Uligian of Starr Avenue; ter F. Lambeck, Floomfield Hills; John M. Brown, Curtis A. Harrison and James K. Posther, all of Birmingham.-Others are Donald W. Sweeney, Temea Drive; Norman C. Otto, Farmington; John E. Matulaitis and Robert E. Win-kel of Franklin; William G. MacBeth, Davisburg; Gary J, Powers, Highland; Ittchard D, Bawol and Charles R. Cornell, of Ortonville; and William'H. Pollock of Rochester. NURSES TRAVEL For the next 15 we^, seniors in the U. of M. School of Nursing will don blue uni-forms and jaunty overseas caps and travel to nearby cities to put in two demanding days as public health nurses. Bloomfield Township, and Margaret Chamberlain of Birmingham, who were assigned to the Dearborn City Health Department. ★ • ' This is one of five different ‘rotations’ to give on-the-job knowledge of major phases, of nursing including pediatric, medical - surgical, psj^cfaiatric and obstetric care. NEW PLEDGES Albion College Greek letter fraternities have welcomed 23 new members with the completion of fall pledging. Among these .is Lloyd Utter-back, sophomore, son of the Lester Utterbacks of Middle Belt Road, West Bloomfield Township. ■Commiffee Named for Next Year Mrs. I. J. Gouin, president of the ParliamentaiV Study Club, named a committee to prepare next year’s program at Wednesday’s meeting in the Pontiac Masonic Temple. Serving in this capacity will be Mrs. Merrill Petrie, Mrs. Forbes Hascall, Mrs. John McNeeley, Mrs. Maurice Baldwin and Mrs. Gedrge Watters. accepting reports, adoption of recwnmendations, executive board meetings and their rec-bnunendations. and her slate of officers. Mrs. Josei^ Panter, parliamentarian, conducted t h a question box. Maat Friends for IREAKFAST Mid LUNCH Whether in black faille for ening or worsted wool for lytime, this suit spells chic I the way. The set-in band under the isom gives a flavor of distinc-n without destroying the flatring lines of the easy silhou-te. The collar rolls high and inds away from the throat th just (enough room for your vorite beads. Spadea’s exsj,usive ready-to-! :ar sizes prodtrce a better fit. e chart for size best for you. <'or Jacket No. NS-266, size requires yards of 54 ” fab- New Seasons, New Ideas er heat, interesting new dbc-ative window shades will unteract that "bare” Jook. Once the curtains have been t away, colorful shades will rk up the room scheme. w ★ w [f the shades match the corns taken down, they main-n the color point most ef-livly till the window treat-!nt is completed again in ifall. w w * ’’or a special high-fashioned ist, you can store your win-window shades — and put others that are laminated match the slipcovers ex-ly! HLDREN'BSHOP MIRACLE MILK BHOPPING CENTKR THE mKTIAC PEBSS> THUB»DAY> FJ;BRU4BY 18, 1963 introducing the ARROW TRUMP CLUB It’s news when Arrow comes out with a new dress shirt. And the Trump Club is destined to be a sure winner. It’s tailored in the Arrow tradition, and the combed premium cotton broadcloth is “sanforized” for lasting fit. Featuring anchored buttons and Arrow’s special collar construction that assures extra wear. See it in Jong or short sleeved in the new Glen collar, a soft, short-point .with a narrow spread; in long sleeves in the snap-tab. $ 4 V ■ r-.ir---------------------—------------ ] PIMH mt the tallowing Arrow Trump Club ' •hlrtc •• I □ Ctwrgo t* my bceount □ Chock p coo • , a Mpnoy Order HUOHtt MATCHIR SUPFIRIN - PHONl Ml- I UN, IN N. TRLIORAPH, PONTIAC MICHIOAN j ADDRESS CITY , state’ . . . ml Ml V. ! yt' ' -*-7- OUR rONTUC MAIX STORfi IS OPEN EVERY EVENING TO 9 PJR. ■' ..-Sf ■ -.1 '• ' ■■ ;; THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1965 Ex-Detroit Prep Involved Two Cagers, Chicago Bar Owner Face Bribe Charges SEATTLE (fl—Two Seattle Univereity basketball stars and a Chicago tavern owner i*ere arrested Wednesday night on bribeo' conspiracy charges involving a game with the University (jf Idaho. Charlie Williams, captain of the Chieftains, a teammate, Peller Phillips, and Leo Casale, 24, of Chicago, were arrested in connection with the Jan. 22 game in Seattle. Casale was arrested in Chi- Seattle won the game 89-72. Williams and Phillips were arraigned Wednesday night, ^ U.S. Commissioner Walter Reseburg Jr. released them on $1,000 bund each. The two Seattle players asked for a preliminary hearing, which Reseburg set for 4:30 p.m. ESTMarch 1. Casale is to be arraigned today in Chicago, the Federal Bnrean of Investigation said. The charge against Casale and the two 21-year-old Seattle University seniors is “that they did conspire with each other to carry into effect a scheme or plan in commerce to influence a sporting contest by bribery.” The FBI said the maximum penalty is a $10,000 fine or five years in prison or both. Wiliiams is the son of a minister and is married and has one child. His major study is sociology, and he planned a career in social work after graduation. Seattle U. is a Jesuit institution, and Williams has been working part time as an assistant recreational director for the Catholic Youth Organi- FROM DETROIT Phillips also is marriM, and his major studies are physical education and history. He is a fast 5-foot-lO, 167-pound student from Detroit, by way of Coalinga Junior Coliege in California. Phillips was an AU-City League choice while at Detroit Northwestern. Williams, a 6-foot, 154-pounder, was born in Colorado Springs, Colo., and played at Stadium High School in Tacoma. He is Seattle’s high scorer, averaging 20 points per game and has been prominently mentioned as a contender for All-America honors. Williams’ highest number of points this season was 38 against -Duquesne in Pittsburgh, a game Seattle lost 80-74. In the Idaho game, he scored 16 points, and Phillips accounted for eight. Seattle has won its last 11 games and has an 18-7 season record. ■, The report of the game Carried by the Seattle Post-Intelli-gencer the morning after the game said; “SU, after being ahead.by 24 points at 65-41 in the second half, came apart and made numerous errors . “Idaho took advantage of SU turnovers, caused by lackadaisical play, and the Idaho Vandals cut the Chiefs’ lead to It points at 78^14 with 7:48 to play.” “Substitutes Elzie Johnson, Rick Mathews and Ralph Hey-(Continued Page I, Cd. 2) Goalie'Armful to Red Wings Charlie Hodge Blanks Detroit 2-0 Shutout Aided by Power Ploy Goals DETROIT (AP) - Goalie Charlie Hodge of Montreal has two arms like any other net-minder, but he uses them as if they were 10. The Detroit Red Wings can testify to that. Hodge turned back 33 Detroit assaults,on his goal Wednesday | night as the Canadiens defeated | the Red Wings 2-0 in National j Hockey League play at Montreal. WINNING BATHS — Pontiac Northern swimming coach Ed Danw (white pants) heads into the PNH pool as the happy Huskies celebrate their win over Fitzgerald last night 54-51. It was the first time Northern had ever beaten the Warren school. In the water to the right is assistant coach John Moreau who was given the first bath. Pontiac North-.ern is assured of its best season in history, now boasting a 12-2 record, with a meet against strong Birmingham Groves Friday night in the PNH pool. TTie victory moved the Canadiens into sole possession of second place in the league, two | points ahead of idle Toronto and i four up on Detroit. Chicago con-1 tinues to lead the league! ' CLIPPING THE WINGS-Montreal goalie Charlie Hodge makes a save against the Detroit Red Wings last night en route to a 2-0 victory over the Detroiters. At left are Jean Beliveau (4) of the Canadiens and Ted Lindsay of Detroit. THIRD SHUTOUT PCH in Home Finale Meets Port Huron PNH Has a 'Breather' Central Meets Southwestern in SVC Contest - Pontiac Northern’s basketball team plays one of the few “breathers” on its schedule tomorrow before getting down to work for the “Championship" game next week against East Detroit. TTie Huskies travel to Port Huron, a team that has a 1-12 record and finished Eastern vorite to add another loss to the Pontiac Central will conclude another fine basketball season Big Reds’ ledger. Port Huron on the. West Huron gymnasium has failed to come up with a Friday in a Saginaw Valley Con- consistant scorer. A pair of regulars. Bob | Wedge and Jim Herrick earned recognition in state football circles last fall. i-ferencg game with dangerous Flint Southwestern. The Chiefs — currently rated the sixth best Class A cage team I in the state by the As^iated Walled Lake hiUJhe road for j press — have only one more Michigan League play in last i ® champion | regular season contest after this ® or/ I r\A4rrtif U7Q$Ai^rvi»/4 ie fit r ^_I- ____1 n___:____ place. Elast Detroit. Waterford is at f week and ( ___ ____ is at Saginaw Northern will be a heavy fa-' RoMville and Farmington goes , Arthur Hill. ----- to Mt. Clemens. 1 ^ 'the SVC basketball champion- . . _ !, ship pretty well disappeared CniCOOO Star '^kes.holdsaZ-Omarkagamst ,ast Friday when Southwest-V.f//LUy U Of Uf EML teams. The Huskies downed em was not able to side-track Roseville and Mt. Clemens in! first pjace Saginaw. Injured in Win ‘he early going ' ONE WIN Over Rangers Port Huron’s lone victory was over Roseville early in January Bv United Press International ! Waterford’s hopes rest on how The Chicago Black Hawks ' , Leriieaux remay learn today just how much suffered they lost by beating the New ^^*"st Clarkston Tuesday. Hi* York Rangers. Chicago rallied for three goals factors in the Skippers’ offense. in the final period to nip the j The Waterford attack broke Rangers 5-4 Wednesday night, j down badly when Lemeanx but in the process Bobby Huili went out in the first quarter suffered another knee injury. * Tuesday. Hawks’’ £p l2t aJiiay afte? ’ in^^^h "ccorhS^^f missing four games with an in- J?*** jury to his right knee, suffered «N>y has been a stretched ligament to his left; n . knee when he was checked by! Detroit, a tall quintet New York’s Arnie Brown. ' has done very weli this The winning goal for the f"- he seeking to rebound Hawks was scored by Stan Mi-: ‘‘s .Tuesday loss to Kim- kita, enabling him to pass Hull jhall- Reports on the game in-in the individual scoring race | ^^*®3te that neither East Detroit with 68 'T)oints, one more than, K™baU played up to par. his ailing tesunmate. | ----------——‘ •The' Rangers had scored four gMis in t^ second period to | puffy Sets Practice take a 4-2 lead, but third-period ■ scores by DoUg Mohns, Fred. EAST LANSING. (UPI) — Stanfield and Mikita epabled ; Spring football drills at Mkb-the Hawks JtQ maintain a four-1 igan State University will run point advantage over the Mon- j from April 5 to May 8, Coach treal Canadkns in the -National Duffy Daugherty) aniutiinced Hockey League standings. . | today. The Colts are tied for fourth place in the SVC; and neither Flint Central nor Midland, both lower, seem potent enough to upset Saginaw’s Trojans in the final two tilts. Hodge, who returned to the nets over the weekend, turned ‘in his third shutout of the season and got all ^he support he needed from two power play goals by linemates Henri Richard and Claude Provost. Richard beat Detroit goalie Roger Crozier, who made a total of 26 saves, late in the first period with Detroit defenseman Marcel Pronovost serving a penalty. Richard’s 16th goal of the year came on passes from Dave Balon and Jean Bliveau. In the second period, the Red Wings had just about finished killing , a T^ Lindsay penalty when Provost scored, beating Crozier on passes from John Ferguson and Noel Picard just as Lindsay yas returning to the ice. It was Provost’s 21st goal this season. Sweet-Revenge Win for Huskies' Swimmers CLINCHER — Carl Hiller’s touch (front lane) in the final 300 freestyle relay event was the deciding factor in Pontiac Northern's 54-51 triumph over Fitzgerald last night. It was a close meet and Northern won both team relay events. All eyes watched the thrilling finale. Pontiac Northern’s swimming j won their 12th meet in 14 starts team is getting even with teams | by defeating strong. Warren which in past years did every- j Fitzgerald, a team they had thing but drown the Huskies. ' never beaten, 54-51. Last night in assuring them- * * ♦ selves the best record in Friday night in the PNH pool, school’s history, the Huskies: the Huskies meet Birmin^am ----- ’ ~ ~ Groves, another team which . they have never beaten. Decisions in both team relay events, and especially in the thrilling 2M free-tiyie re-_ _ r* I I finale, netted PNH the big Ton^ Pro FiPti' lUpj I lU IIV/IU| Carl Hiller, who set a varsity recorll with a second place in Dave Soutar First; the individual medley with a time of 2:14 behind Fitzgerald’s Detroit Kegler i 'Mo' Moore Rallies For Post-Game Remarks WICHITA, Kan. (AP) - Daw Soutar of Detroit held a SfiB-^stantial lead in a 96-man field j after two rounds today in the I Professional Bowlers Assoda-I tion $30,000 Thunderbird Open Tournament. Hoosier Raps U.-of-M.'s Shack BLOOMINGTON, Ind. iJfi -Branch McCracken, Indiana basketball coach, said Wednesday that Coach Dave S t r a c k of nationally top-ranked Michigan showed poor judgment in an altercation after dieir game Monday night and should have been thankful for victory. McCracken said he s h o o k hands with Strack in the hall after the game and said, “Dave, we sure gave you McCracken said Strack, in- Coach Fred Zittel of PCH, while admitting his title hopes were very slim, refused to look beyond the final two league games to state tournament play. “We’re playing them one at a time,” he said yesterday. Last season the Chiefs also finished second in the SVC and went on to reach the state Class semifinals at East Lansing before dropping out of the postseason action. NEW LINEUP Zittel did admit Central would have a different starting lineup for the second straight game. Jessie Evans, a 6-2 junior forward, will move to guard ‘and 6-3 senior John Hooper wili move back into the first five against Southwestern. .^Thisr wijl give PCH a toller defensive lineup in anticipation of the Colts staling laiiky Rick Yoifle-in the backcourt, also normally a forward. ^?iminutive Jjm McClendon will drop from the starting five. 8ASKET8AU scons Detroit Norttramtern Detroit Cooley 5». ^,nr" — Detroit S^ttiWeetem n. Henry Ford Detroit Rod Ford », Mackenilc « Detroit Perehino 74, Con Tech M t" FtorloST'a 74, Hamtran Redioemer 70, Servlte M i, Southgate Jl Wadneedoy'i CoHage ■a light type hent 54; roatert over 5 Ibt. .23-Mi oroilart and fryert 3-4 Ibt. Whilet ll-Ni Duckllngt 31; light duck, 20. ORTROIT Root DETROIT (API - Egg prlcei paid per doidn by lirtt raceivert (Including U S.l; Whitei Grade A lumbo 30-35; Mtre large 20-34; large 20-32; medium 34-21; tmell 1^20l Brewni Grade A large 20; merium M; tmell 10; ctieckt 10-20. CHICAGO BUTTER, ROOS _CMICAGO_ (API — Chicago Mercantile ......00 B 5444; 00 C 54; 00 B 57>,i 10 C 52. Eggiu^en; wholetale buying pricet unchanged to I higher better Grade A whitei 27V,j n _____ _ 24V»i din . ur price,; —A— Ml.) HMl Law 1 14% 14% I 15Vk I5W I5V4 - W 7 57H 57W 57 AlleflPw 1.06 AMIsChcl ‘.SO 15 S4W S4W 4 -!-■}% -5 W ms, V Cy»n 7 ;iPw u Enka 7 2 15^ 15^ 15k6 3 57»/i 57VS $7Vj \ 13 42H 42H 1 S 76H 76H 76M -f I 4$'/| 45»^ 4SV1 - r 5 + • t Cl 1.^ 31 41^ Livestock ileeOy; tew itandarg tiaari t2.0l).|0.n; ... -“wp 14-14.50; cannar and cottar \f otherwlM not anoughTtr makt U. S. 200-225 and glltt I7J5-I0.00; mixad t 4 lb I7AO-17.75; U. $. I. 2 4 iwi 14.25-15.35; 2 4 3 4( 13.35-14.25. CNK400 LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP)-(OIDA)- MM, butcher, mo,tly 35 lowar; 13 140-Z It 5417.75; 2-3 250-200 — ”^ 225 lb, ... .„. ________J 75; 1-3 14.25-1100; 2-3 504400 htgh choice end prime tJO-1,025 1b sleuohler hfifert TS.fS-n.SO; choice 000-MoTlbs. ».00>0.3S; good ity end commerciei cows 12.SO>U.00; cutter to commercial built ld.00>19.00. Sheog 300; wooled tlaughier Iambi steady; choice aod prime .IJ-IOS »■ wooled lambt 34.SO-25.60; cull to good American Stocks ih Law Lad Cbg. 25L. 25% - % Barnej Eng Brat Trac Bril Pat .30r Brown Co 40 Campb Chib 3 Can te Pet CinerVna Con Mng t.40. Craolt P 2.40a Data Cont ,ldX^..5t Fargo Oil, Feimt Pet .I5e 13% 13 15-14 3 15 2tl 2ti 2H 17 2% 2% 2% -1-14 2 4H 4% 4H U 22 I2H 12% 12% -Tb OIM^ (mph Bord 1 knacon 2,Me ^nken Ch .12 trmcoSt 3 ■ 72 llVk 11 II - \ ArmstCk 1.10 Aihl on 1.60 AttdOG 160 Atchitod 1.60 AtiCLine 2a AttRef 3.60 Atlat Cp Auto Cant .60 Avee Corp 1 Avntt 40b AvonProd .10 Bell How .40 Bendlv 2.40 Benguet .OSo Betfwall .fSr Gen Foods 2 GenMills 1.40 OenMot .750 GonPrtc l.io GPubSve ,44g G PutUt 1.34 GenTeiliEl 1 GenTiro .60 GaPKific 1b Kll .lOg 1.10a GionAld JOo Goo^r 1.15 GracaCo 1.10 GrandU .60b Granites 1.40 GtAAP 1.20a Gulf M40 2a Soitt (hdt.).... 24 83* f4 87H 87W f7H - 23 30H 30Vk — ■ 6Vk 6Vk - 32 .. 36% 4- Utt Chg. 52«>^ 52’^ 52'/i 27Vt f7H 30^ 30H 5 - 36% 20% 20% 2..,: SiS 12Vk 12\k 12Mi .. 40W - % x5 2 43% 43% 43% 56% 57 -, 2% 2% - ^ , 25% . 54% 54% , , x3 41% 41% 40%,-24 55% 55% 55% 26 25% 25% 25% — % I 51% 41% 2 33% 33Vs 3 23 42% 42 4 3 36% M% 3 1 24% 24% 2 IntorlkSt 1.60 I 3 I 15% 1 I 33% 33 33% + I 46% 46% 46% + 1 1% 1% 1% + I 40% 40% 40% . t 35% 35% 35% - S«"i.’ Bulova .60b Burl Ind l.f Burroughi 1 CalPock .lOb CaiiahM .20t Calum H .60 CampRt .454 7 52H 52V, 52V, H 7 40'., 40V, 40'/, 0 73'r, 73V, 73V, -1 13S 10H 10'b 10'b - 3 4314 43H 43*4 -I I 20(4 20 20Vk -f ChIMII SIP I ChPneu l.aOa ChlRkKPac I ChriaCrtt .40t Chryder 1b CIT Fin 1.40 Citie, 5v 2.00 ClevEIIII 1.30 Coca Cola 3 Coca Cola wl Colt indint CBS 1.20b Col Gat 1.30 Cal Piet .541 ComICra 1.00 ComSolv 1.20 ComwEd t oo a 21 zl 21 2 18% 18% 18% - 26 42% 42% 42% . 15 72% 72% 72% + 2 32 32 32 . 11 50% 50 50% + 4 32 32 32 + 3 17% 17% 17% + 6 71% 71% 71% - 7 2T 26% 27 5 38% 38% 30% + 8 28% 21% 20% IS 16% 14% 16% 4 148% 140% 140% .. 1 74% 74% 74% w- II 15% 1S% 15% .. 36 '46% 46% 46% + 16 33% 33 33% + ^ 2i 23 23 . 37% 37% + Mead John .40 20 1W4 I}*, 1«<. Mich Sugar .lOg 1 5 . 5 5 Molybden 103 37'b 34H 34", + NewPk Mng 13 Stt 5', St, -t- 'liJ X ’ Syntei Cp .304 01 74<4 7 Technicol .74 » JM4 1 Un Control .20 53 45, WebbAKnopp 143 t, Treasury Position I date a yea 5, IMS Fab. 17, 1044 4,450,033.734.42 M,'»S,070,471.04 Withdrawal, FlKal Vaar— 70,574,242477.72 7t,04b01A342.02 X-Tolal Debl- ' 310407440,017 JO 310,025.441.704 55 Gold AtHta— 14,034,073,514.01 11442,417,552.40 X-Includa, 0205,415.520.00 debt hot -..(tct to dalutory limit. Net Change . Noon Wed. . Prev. Day .. Year Ago . 104445 High . STOCK AVRRAOH Otlad by Tlw AtiKlalad Prou 4 (An. . 470.0 174.7 1712 334.0 422.1 155.3 150.3 204.0 iii:l 2%5 BOND AVERAGES ComplM by Tbt AitoclaMd Mott It 10 10 10 10 Roih lad. Util. Rgn. L vd KS'S’ S! II SI si «! Week Ago S.O 101.5 00.7 . 03.0 04,3 !?:J Zi S;! K:S «:i & S;] Zil {?;? K:? isjrr T4 a:l 8:1 10 M% a 6 M% t 32 61% ( 10 25‘/4 1 30% ■+ 56 I 61% I'd ... Bite 1.00 Natcan .40b NCaahR 1.20 ■ lilry 2.40 -. Dl,t 1.40 Net Fuel 1.40 Cont Con 2 Cont In, 2.40 Cont Mot .40 Control Data Com Pd 1.50 CrowColl .001 Crown Cork Crown Zell 2 Del Steel DIom Aik Didtey .40 DomeMn .1 East Air Lin EadGF 2.471 EedXo 2.40a Eaton Mto 2 ElBondS 1.40 .El Atooc .54f EIPotoNG ) Emertonti I EmorRad .40 EvaniPd lid FoIrCom .50t Fan,tool Met F^isSsSrfsi Fed Mog 1.80 FerroCorp 1 32 74% 74% 74% - 6 57Vj 57% 57% + : 1 28% 29% 29% - 19 26% 26% 26% 4- 8 51% 51% 51% - ' 11 63% 63% 63% + ' 1 10% 10% 1(P/i + ' 12 56% 56% S6% ^ < 'I 29% IT* InS ^ 32 37% 37% 37% -f < 12 54% 53% 54 4 23% 23% 23% - < 4 10% 10% 10% + ' 2 10% 10% 10% - I 11 19% 19% 19% "7 2^ gw gtt- . 1 36% 36% 36% - 1 7 49% 49% 49% ~ ’ 1 3^ 36% 36% . 7 n% 73% 73% -f < 3 Sw 3^ 3tVh + < ,? ind ins ins t: I 52 52 52 * . 4 37tb 27H 37H + t 14 340k 34M -t- 1 II 30Vk 3IM 3044 — 14 24044 240 24044 4- 1 0 3SVr 35 32H . 3244 1 4 I2'A 12'A 12'A 3 114k lO’A 104i -1 3 74', 74V, 741/, I 424k 4244 414* '.. FoodFoIr TO Ford Mot 2 '----n D 40 GAccapI i.lO GanE)a^.ll. 20 204k 20<4 20'A - 4, 25 430k 4344 034k - 44 It 104* 1044 1044 27 5344 53'4 S3!A ,, 5 1344 I3H 134* !• ., I 40 4044 4044 - t* 10^** 31^ in* - ^ i 104* M4^ 84*'“'* irr X 8 xd JS15K"2:: 23 3344 334k 33'.k + 4, 13 47'/i 47V, 4744 — '4 I 404k 404* 404* . . —R— 30 30 5*4 30 -I- ' /, 12 10O'/> lflb'4 100'* -I'/l Korvette Kresg* 1.4 Kroger 1.2 Slg I Corp iln l.lTt )tO 7M LOFGI, Lib McK . LiggettAM Lionel f— Llltonin Living . .. LockhdAIre 2 Loew, Theal LonaS Cam I LontSGa 1.12 LongIdLt .02 i^f.50 _ .50 Lucky Str 1e • Sfl 2 Trucks ____ d 1.400 Megnevox i Marathon 2 SiS II McO^lr .40 Merck la MerChap 20g MGM UO 3’/. 1 02'/, 12', --• 3'4 -t- ..... ... ... -I-H4 10 I3'4 134k 13'/k -f <4 20 42'4 42 42 - '4 12 144k 144, 14H 11 21'* 21'A 21'A -4 7 274k 27H 274, + 2 37 34'A 34V, - 3 l*t 14k IH + StRegP 1.40b SanDV Scheoley i ■ Scherng l.tOa Schick ScottPap .00 Scab AL 1.40 SearlGD 1.30 SaartR l.lOa SeartRoeb wl Saoburg .40 Sarvel Shell Oil 1.50 Shell Tri .Ur SherWm 1.7* Sinclair 2 SingerCo 3.30 Socony 2.00 SouCalE 1.20 SouthnCo 1.00 SouNatG 3.30 SouPac 1.40 South Ry 2.10 Sperry Rond Is.) Ntgli Law Last C 1 33% 33% 33% - 4 32% 32% 32% + 2 7% 7% 7% + 44 26% 25% 26 - 7 61% 61H 61% - 2 7% 7% 7% 17 35% 3M 35% 4 11 45% 44% 44% ^ 50 61^ 61 61 -f 17 127% 127 127% 4 17 64% 64% 64% 4 . 21 27 26% 27 - % 2 4% 4% 4% ... 3 59H 59% 99% + % 6'20% 20% 20% 16 56% 56 56 15 54 53% 54 14 82% 81% 12% 13 84% 84 84% 15 39Vo 39 39% 4 70 70 70 . , 4 72% 72% 72% - % ..JMCal 2.20 22 7 StOilInd 1.50a 5 4 StdOilKJ .75g 77 I StdOilOh 1.80 4 4 Sf Packaging 5 1 •‘ War 1.20 ‘ 32 12% 12% 12% + StanWar . StauffCh SterlDrug .75 Stevens 1.50b Studebaker Sunray 1.40 7 42% 42% 42% -f f 32% ; i 32% - Tampa El .52 Tann Gas 1b Ttxaco 2.20a TaxEastT .90 TaxGSui .40 TexasInstM T Thiokol .57t Tidewat Oil TimkRB 3.60 Transam .80 M 31% 31% 31% . 6 61% 61% '61% + —T— 3 27% 27% 27% -9 24% 24% 24% + ,.3 I 65% 4 I 98% 9 I 55% 3 » 65% + I 98% + t 55% I Un Cart Un Elec ...a Un Oil Cal 1 Un Pac 1.80 Un Tank 1.00 Un AirL 1.50 Unit Aircft 2' Unit Cp 35t Unit Fruit U^ltMAM 7 USBorax .80a USGypsm 3a U SIndutf mis 17 50% 50% 50% —u— 14 ]31% 13T T31Vj 34 16% 16% 1 42% 43 —M— 5 35Vo 35% 35'// 5 20% 20% 20% 9 36% 36% 36% -f % . . I W I 58% 51' 10% 10% 10'4 7 35 18 18 2 38% 31% 3 1 53% 53% Lhs -10 28% 28% 28% . 17 60% 60 60 - 4 n* 7H 7H . IS 14H I4H I4H . • 1 05H I5H l5'/4 -10 3IH 3IH -I-4 31H 31H 31H __N— Nat Tea .10 ::'m r NYCem 1.30a NIooM Pw 3 Norfolk W 40 NA Avia 3.00 Occident ,35d OhIoEdI, 3.13 OlInMolh 1.40 OlitElev 1.00 Outb Mar .40 Owendll 3.70 PacTAT 1.30 Pan Am .40 Ponh EP 3.40 PeromPIct 3 PerkoOav la Paab Coe' ' »enn Oi, Penn RR lo Peimioll 1.40 Pe^la 1.40 PffierCha lo IptO 3.40 a El 1.3* Rdgl I.S moHiM Phil Rdgl I.M -----.10 ProctAG 1.SS PuWklnd .341 Pullman 3a PuroOII 1.40 1 .Mt ilonPur RayeTtt .41 layonlar 1.40 |.®.» ‘ »l 2 M J2 3 lOH 10H 10H 13 41 40H 40'A - 3 7I'4 70 70 - 4 53'4 53'A 53'A -I- 3 17H I7H I7H 13 30H 3SH 3IH . 3 34H 34H 34H - 34 50 40H 50 -I- 3 S5H S5H 55H -F 3 I33H 133H lUH + 3 S3'A 53V4 P'a - 3 37H 37H .37'4 1 43H 43H 43H 0 4]H 43H 43H 13 47H 47H 47H II 14', It', 1414 50 lOt'A 104 lOt'A 3 3IH 3SH 3SH —1»— 15 35H 33', 35V, 5 lOH lOH lOH 16 30H 30H 30H 314 33'4 31H 33V, + H 1 UV. I5'A 05'A - H 17 S1H 5114 51<4 II 33H 33H 33H 3 30H 30H 30H 37 40H 4M 40H -I- ' 33 S3', 53'A S3'/i -f ' 13 70 4M* tot* -I- ' 0 53H 53H 53H'- ' 10 71 71 71 0 37'A 37'A 37'A - ' rs'" r-t 13 54 S5H 54 -f < 5 73V, 711* 73V, + 1 IS 14', 14'A 14W 41 54H 5SH S4H 10 75H 75V, 75H + t RoyCCola .41 RoyOuf 1J3r Royal McRaa 43 ill, 31'A 31V, + \ 1 3514 351, 35V, -F 1 11 401* 4t 40,'65 Voliont>-'65 Rombltr '65 Jiips W3 DteH. ClUaton, MA 5-NM lt,W5 •l.TtJ KESSLER'S DODGE CARS AND TRUCKS Sam and Sarwib OA UK 1M7 FORD OR l»57 CHEVY -tns etch, 763 Manlicello. FE AIMS. Mow aa4 ■aM Can lM ItSI FORD 2-OOOR HAROTOF, . auto., V-t paawr itoarlna, brakat radio. Utica 7S1-OH7.___________ ItW FORD GALAXIE FDOOR BOB BORST Its* THUNDERRIRD, ALMOST Ilka naar, SS down. WE FINANCE « Lucky Auto 193 or 254 S. Soginow FE 4-2214 or FE 3-7853 Broken. FE____ !♦» THUNDERBIRO C ON V E R T-tbto. Alabama car, no ruti, A-l cdkditlort, saw will accept trade. 3Sa-H71 trom M p,m. lfS» FORD «. 1-OOOR, VER'I’ NICE. Bor|jaln, FE J-7S4*. H. Rlgplnf. FALCON WAGON, EXCEL- REPOSSESSION I FORD Storllnar hardtop. N nney down, call Mr. Johnion, M U04. Dooler, (Will Bring Car I 1964 ELECTRA “225" Hordtop A new car trade-in, low mileage 196J ElECTRA “225." Sharp! 1963 BUICK LeSobre 4:Door 1961 CHEVY Bol-Air 1963 RENAULT Douphine 4-Door, 3-speed (S In stock) 1962 VW 2-Door Sedan 1964 OPEL Wagon $2695 $3295 $1795 $2195 $1395 $ 995 $2395 $ 995 $1095 $i695 $1295 $1395 196-210 Orcharci Lake Phone 332-9165 HEATER, STANDARD TRANS- MISSION, WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN - Take ovar paymants ot Slt.*S Mr. Parks at HaraW Tumar Ford. lOaMFORDH^OT^F,JIO MONEY Will 'bring car to your' Johnaon, MA S-MtL INI FALCON MOOR CUSTOM station wagon, whlh—*"*-matic. says. FE 5-IO». foA6 count*y sibANr i- sawr — Ipaitangor. Vt anWna, automatic radic only SI,OTS. JE-ROMEFEROUSiON inc ~ ' FORD Oeolor, OL I-»7I1 II FALCON WA< Qw INI FALCON WAGON, AUTOMATIC radio, paatar roar wladaw, aklia TIRES, ECONOMY ENGINE. ABSOLUTELY NO money down. Taka avar pavsnanto af SS7.M par mo. CALL CREDIT MGEm Mr. THUNDERBIRDS I^l hardtop, Btiroundy bolgo taatbar Intorler, ^awor atoi ' Patterson Chevrolet Co. DM S. Woodward Ava. Ml FIT: BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER, 666 S........- AVEm BIRMINGHAM, Ml F3Wie. U FORD CONVERTIBLE GAL-axle SOO XL. 3N engine. Automatic on consola. Fewer stoaring, brakes. Blue with whito top. Bool aood condition. PE MIOA INJVi FALCON FUTURA WITH T-Blrd root, all vinyl buckets, radio, hoator, windstilald waohar, spet-Jess. Iroubla froa. FarfocI tor work, school or second car,- 14 miles par gal., SIOM. Sea it now Ml 4-tiys. Mew Mi lhii Cm If^FORO FAmLANE^M^ I FALCON WitH IS- EXC Y, a^mme’^g F tllAt PER MENTS OF tll,4________ V^LAGE RAMBLER. «U : wobowAR- •— ------ fARO AVE., BIRMNIG- riAm, Ml F3MN. ------^—Af HONfIk--------------- l«U Oalaxia SM ............. SIAN INI Signal ..................iiaN 1*41 LaMans Convartlble ..SI.IM IN4 BonnovHIo ConvortlMo SINS l-Yoar G.w. Warranty Huntar Dodge 4W S. Humor Blrmtogham Ml 7-WSS iNl POkO l-OOOR HARPtOp: RE- f6RD ins OAUOdE SM CON-uortlblc, radio, liaalar. wtiHawalli, wire spoka whaaM, MM top. uot-tou Mack lealhar kitorlor, T-SIrd 3N angina wlth^Fopaod stick. IlfTS. FE*SMIt yattarTl!i FtoW.'****' INI THUNDERBIRO, HAROTOFT REPOSSESSION IN3 FALCON Moor, no money down, call Mr. Johnson, MA S-StOA Daolor, (Will Erlng Car to Your M3W FALCON SPRINT 1-DOOR I cylindor, I spaed, pewor staerlng exceptional condNIon. >1actory warranty, SMPS. aiFlMI. «4 T-BIRD. LANDU WITH FULL frtmT'wIro wheetomfcl miles. Ford sHIclal car. SSSavoM, JEROME - FERGUSON, RochOF tar Paid Doator, OL 1-WH. 1N4 OALAXIE XL SOB, LOW MILE ago, radio, haalar, plus extras. 3&W7S bstwoon 4 ands p.m. 1N4 FAIRLANE, SW, SOOOR HARD- .m4 FORD GALJOCIE SN "F AST-back" with lha IN V-a unglna. automatic pawor steering, I.0M miles, now condition. Only SLWS. JEROM-EFEROUSON Inc., Rf chaotar FORD Baator, OL l-fTD. TN4 PALOW FDOOR. WITH SM anabw. r----- ------- radlob tow m__ OMEFBROUSON, Inc, FORD Daalar, OL l-fTlI. IN4 FORD CUifOM rTooor, "VF d transmlsaton. power siaoratg, brakes, custom package low mlleogo, IRw now Sir IN. JEROMEFEROUSON lnc„ Rochastor FORD Daalar, OL 1F7D. MUSTANdTNI HjkfcbfdF, WWy tf«S mustang, 1 PLUS 1 FAST- INS MUStAMlii l-6d6R HARbTOP: IW Engine, 4-spaad, radio, whito-walb. nka now condition through-oull Saval JEROMEFEROUSON Inc Radiastor FORD Dealer, OL l-FTII. __________________ 4 WHEEL DRIVE JEEgT~WITH SSSl. ^ I condition. EM WJ7 LINCOLN FDOOR HARDTOP, lull powar, 3tMt actual mltos, a>-meol Ilka new. Just old car down. 1-YEAR ,GUARANTEE IN par cant FIRST N DAYS BOB BORST Lincoln Mercury BbtnlngbanMIloainftold SM S. Woodward anyone who has PREVIOUiLY Is It or older, has a stoady (ob and I sincaro dasirt to own o tkio lisod car, ptooos xoll FE S-3SM from t:30 pjn. to It p.m„ Monday through Friday. Spoclol bonk plan financing ovalloblo for 0 Ihnltod time enhf. Coll today. INI LINCOLN .........-n...... HSI Lincoln ................. INO Comet wagon ...........>. ISM Ford Folrlona ........... ISM Froloct ................. Will fkianca WHITE'S USED CARS ISM continental CONVEiT- BOB BORST LIncetoMoroinf I sTwoodword Elrmlngham Continental 196M964 BOB BORST Uneoln-AAorcury DON'S USED CARS SMALL AD-BIG LOT sllvor bhio. Sharp. Itil Chevy Flekua, c stick 6, radio, hoator. wans, tong box, ITjm i /nllat. oxcollont e . with wMlo tap. INI Ford Pickup-ton CnnI PlrkuB*^ ISM Chevy Bal Al 1S43 (tonfloc 4door Itfl AAonif ConvorllbW t^ Pontiac Adeer Star Chief 677 5. LAPEER RD. Lake Orion MY 2-2041 BE E IN A GUAI CAR WHERE MONEY WILL BUY THE A40ST AND YOU'LL BE AHEAD OF WINTER STARTING PROBLEMS AT Autobahn frtnsmitslorw r }H4 Tempest Custom o heeter. S1.199 Interior. l^iOr Autobahn Motors Inc. AUTHORIZED VW DEALER '/I mile north of Miracle Mile 176S S. Telegraph FE S-4S3 When We Say DEAL-It's for REAL- 1963 Chevy IMPALA I-OOOR HARDTOP 1963 Ford GALAXIE 3 000R SEDAN - with 1960 Pontiac CATALINA 4-Ooor Hordtop with titui fire engine red (imsh. Only- $1895 Sharp throughout! $1395 steering end brakes, radio, e one-owner, end Is VOW'S tor'ignly— $985 1960 Simea 4-OOOR SEDAN - with 4-SPEED TRANSMISSION, radio, heeter, 1963 Ford G/aAXIE 2-OOOR HARDTOP - I960 Ford GALAXIE 4-DOOR - with auto- wwShers. Yours tor only— $595 MoA 'fin'isto’^wick'^tortor.’’ **' $1875 matic power tteering, radio, hooter, and whltewolls. Only— $695 1962 Chevy 1963 Chevy 1961 Tempest IMPALA 4-DOOR SEDAN -outomotic, power steering eno brakes, ooe-owner, red boHom end <»hlH tap with metchihg interior IMPALA I-DOOR HARDTOP -V-l, radio, wnitewolls. brown finish, nwtehing toterlor. WAGON - with radio, heater, wothert. Ideal taeend car or even moke o first. Only- Only- $1695 $1895 $795 1964 Pontiac 1963 Valiant • CONVERTIBLE - With 4