Business, Community Leaders Hail /MNtt Downtown business and community leaders generally applaud recent City Commission approval of the Taubman plan for downtown redevelopment. Opinion sometimes appeared divided, hut civic leaders are happiest with the thought of something going up on the aow-vacant urban renewal land south of Lawrence. Monroe M. Osman of ★ a * I On the ballot are a $9,- 1 150.000 bond issue to build 1 a high school and two 1 elementary schools; a 2 $550,000 proposition to add | a swimming pool to the 2 proposed high school; and | annexation of the Dublin § School District plus 387 | 'acres of ' the Waterford 11 Township district to § Walled Lake. *%* - * - - I Polls are open until 8 1 p.m, State Okays Bond Issue may Ctear for Keego Water System KEEGO HARBOR- The way was cleared yesterday to construction of a $738,000 water system when the State Municipal Finance Commission permitted toe Oakland County Department of Public Works to issue special bonds worth$4J8,500. At toe same time, the DPW yesterday awarded a contract for construction of the system to low Udder locabelli Contractors Inc., Warren, in toe amount of $577,111. It was awarded subject to toe sale of bonds. R. J. Alexander, DPW dimeter, said the bid was within flM of the estimated cost ofeontractioa. Th4 additional cost is being flnsw Uuuagh'W'federalhaa ing and urban development grant of $302,500. Construction of the water system is expected to begin Nov. 1, according to DPW engineer George Schutte, who is handling the project for the county. He said the water mates should be ready for service by June |, 1967. BOND RETIREMENT Schutte said the bonds will be retired in two ways. , Residents can either pay a $400 capital charge or $2 a month to be. collected quarterly along with the water bill. The city will alM pay $12,-000 a year for hydrate use. TUs will be collected through U 4.87-mifi tax levy paid by all property owners in toe city as part of their city tax bill. There will also be water consumption and meter service charges. ^ ft ft ft . The county will operate and maintain the system for the city. Presently, Keego Harbor residents get water from individual wells. Troy ftatricts Wiring TROY — Troy Monday voted to require underground wiring to all new subdivisions. Special assessment projects involving waiter and sewers for nine residential arm were initiated. DIRECTORS Louis H. Cole ' Investments David B. Eames President, tames and Brown, Inc. Robert R. Eidred Executive Vice President Community National Bank of Pontiac Harold A. Fitzgerald Publisher, The Pontiac Press Alfred C. Girard President and Chairman of the Board Community National Bank of Pontiac Alfred R. Glancy, Jr. President, A. R. Glancy, Inc. Alfred R. Glancy III Finance Department Michigan Consolidated Gas Co. ; Harold S. Goldberg President Thomas Jewelry Company, Inc Howard W. Huttenlocher President H. W. Huttenlocher Agency, Inc. Harry M. Pryale Consultant National l Bank MEMBEROF THE' FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION PONTIAC,’MICHIGAN as of dose of business September 30,1966 RESOURCES Cash and Due from Banks..........$14,183,568.35 United States Government Obligations 26,516,705.89 Other U.S. Government Agencies .... ^4JA9j53]L25 $ 44,849,805.49 State and Municipal Securities... 37,976,183.88 Other Securities................. 617,037.74 Loans and Discounts..............$36,367,418.74 Real Estate Loans............. 58,144,690.58 94,512,109.32 Accrued Interest....................................... 1,413,436.95 Bank Properties and Equipment.... 4,754,674.67 Other Assets.................... ——— TOTAL RESOURCES............. $184,260,997.81 LIABILITIES v Deposits........................ Demand......... ............$ 65,470,794.74 Savings and Time..... ....... 102,845.128.55 ;U. S. Government.... 1,699,284.54 TOTAL DEPOSITS................... ——— g170,015,207.83 Unearned Interest................ 2,211,934.40 Accrued Expenses and , ... ... Other Liabilities................, 1,053,313.12 Reserve for Loan Contingencies.. 1,243,038.29 Capital Stock, Common............$ 5,000,000.00 Surplus........................... 3,900,000.00 Undivided Profits..................... 628,596.05 General Reserve.................. TOTAL LIABILITIES ......... $184,260,997.81 United State* Government Securities in the amount of $7,000,287.83 Book Value, In the foreeoln* .tatement are plodgodto seenre Federal aad State Government Deposits including deposit* of *167,985.04 of the Treaa-nrer. Slat# of Michigan, and for other purposes required by lew. 20 OFFICES DOWNTOWN OFFICE FOURTEEN MILE-MOUND OFFICE/ LAKE OBION OFFICE Milford office ROMEO OFFICE WALLED LAKE [OFFICE CLARKSTON OFFICE BLOOMFIELD HILLS OFFICE HURON STREET OFFICE MALL OFFICE - PERRY STREET OFFICE UNION LAKE OFFICE WATERFORD OFFICE m COUNTY CENTER OFFICE KEEGO HARBOR OFFICE MAPLE-TELEGRAPH OFFICE ROCHESTER OFFICE UNIVERSITY OFFICE WOODWARD AVENUE OFFICE__ AUTO BANK - WEST WIDE TRACK Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation THR PONTIAC : l 5,1960 By Cuban Reds Youth Sought HAVANA (AP) - Criticizing lack of interest, Cuban Communist leaders are conducting an intensive recruiting campaign for more young people to perform what are called toe tasks ofthe revolution. Party bos s e s want more youths to join toe Young Communists Union, to volunteer for farm labor, to join the armed forces, become Pioneers short, to “produce.” Tjie movement is aimed at thosejged 7 to 17. Microbe May HelpSeparate Alike Metals By Science Service COLLEGE PARK, Md. - Microbes are being tested as agents for separating metals so alike they can be considered vir-tually dtemicaL.“twins,” a sck entist at toe U.S. Bureau of Mines reported here. ★ ★ it Br. Walter N. Ezekiel said mi-crobes successful in the job of separating chemically similar metals would be a low-cost labor force that can help reduce toe price of such important elements as zirconium and hafnium. A three-man team is explor-. ing this use for such micro organisms as bacterial yeasts and molds, Dr. Ezekiel told toe Society for Industrial Mi-crobilogy meeting here. Microbes requite very little in the way of working conditions, mainly toe right nutrients and environment. * ★ ★ Since specific microogranisms prefer definite minerals or metals in their diet, they appear promising for a low-cost separation process. As Prime Minister Fidel Castro puts it, want more of revolutionary spirit in our young people." Young Communists’ head Jaime Crombet has threatened mobilize every last-one of our youths who isn’t Studying or working." Mobilize means to send groups off to farm camps, or put them to work in factories and construction projects. Their direct participation in agriculture is considered a key factor in toe education of Cuba’s leaders of tomorrow, since 80 per cent of Cuba’s labor effort is henceforth to be dedicated to agriculture. Everyone that can the job — men, women and children. Castro has announced plans to mobilize 100,000 to 150,000 students — boys and girls — for six weeks of farm work during the present school year. The largely agricultural province of Camaguey will get about 50,000. The rest will scatte throughout the country, including the Isle of Pines. Robert Louis Stevenson’s “Treasure Island” has been unofficially renamed the Isle of Youto because of the large number of youngsters said to be transforming it into a hnge farm. Most people know toe island as the site of the country’s largest political prison. NECESSARY Castro holds that agricultural work is necessary in toe creation of a good Communist. And youthful effort is nece cause of toe demands upon toe country to feed its people in the face of toe “Yankee imperialist blockade,’' he says. Crombet, expressing faction with the work of the Young Communists Union, has outlined bold new plans to double its membership and assure a maximum drive in getting more “productive work” out of 'the 18-27 age group. APfWIraphota TOGETHER AGAIN — WO Franklin Delano Beggs is shown being reunited with his wife and children after his remarriage in Deeatur, Ala. Beggs and his wife were divorced so that he could get around an Army regulation and qualify for helicopter school. While he was married, he had too',many dependents to be eligible. Beggs left Ft. Dix, N. J., yesterday for Viet Nam. By SCIENCE SERVICE WASHINGTON - At least 86 Americans drowned while skin- or Seuba-diving in 1965. ★ ★ ★ All were above average in athletic and aquatic ability, Dan-nel P. Webster of toe Public Health Service’s Division of Accident Prevention says in Public Heath Reports. . Diving alone instead of la pairs, dnjjng under adverse weather or water conditions, and lacking tor faffing to use. emergency equipment were among tbe causes of death. In skin diving, the swimmer ises only toe ah; supply carried by his lungs of Obtained by an underwater breathing tube called a snorkel. -In scuba diving, a supplementary air supply tank )s used, AUTO CENTERS J Mm 1« mimAS H.W 121 •mm* 5 M W in 740/145*15 1M* 2.55 775/750*14 U.fi 2.21 175/000*14 H.W 2*4 SSSzK .MAT SiMIlAO tow ft »• «1» INSTANT CREDIT! NO MONEY DOWN! $1. Holds Snow-Tires UNTIL YOU HEED THEM! SHOP SPARTAN 9:30 AJVL TO 10 PJH. DAILY_SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 6 P.M. Comer el Dixie Highway and Telegraph Bead — IN PONTIAC from which the sport derives its name—self-contained underwater breathing apparatus. * ★ ★ Only, four women wfere among the 86, of whom 60 were scuba divers and 26 were skin divers. Popular Nevada Leader No Shoo-In for 3rd Term CARSON CITY, Nev. (UPT) • Gov. Grant Sawyer has piled Up more national honors for himself and Nevada than any other governor in the state’s 102 year history. During his sevenjrears in office, Nevada has enjoyed record growth and prosperity. State government has been free of major scandals. His Democratic party holds a better than 2-1 voter registration majority. And Nevada Republicans have not elected a DJS. senator, congressman or governor gluee 1958. Yet in this wide open gambling state, the odds are 6-5 and "pick 'em1 as == iwyer record third term against Republican challenger Lt. gov. Paul Laxalt. ★ ★ ★ Only two previous Nevada governors tried for a third terrrf and both lost. Sawyer, 47, hopes to change this record. He is campaigning on advances in industrial development, reorganization of state government and civil rights without major tax increases. And he has not invited national Democratic leaders into the state to help. “We feel* that nobody on toe national scene can help ns get votes," says one Sawyer aide. Laxalt, 44, toe oldest of six children of an immigrant Basque sheepherder, was an honor student and star athlete in high school here. After graduation from Denver University law school, he became a prosperous attorney lere. He was the only Republican elected to a state office in 1962 and in 1964 came within 84 votes of winning a seat in the U.S. Senate. He was an early Goldwater supporter, which some thought contributed to his Senate defeat. K Became several million peo-nle have used O • lih - Wn || Bitters with great success, I highly recommend that you try AMERICA’S NO. 1 HERB TONIC if you too would like to enjoy better health. Ask your druggist for O-Jib-Wa Bitters, DOWNTOWN PONTIAC SHOP DOWNTOWN FREE PARKING DOWNTOWN MERCHANTS me FREON. PAULI JEWELERS 48 N. Saginaw St. 28 W. Huron St. OSMUN’S MEN'S WEAR 51 N. Saginaw St. 16 N. Saginaw St. THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 W. Huron St. CLOONAN DRUG 00. GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP 72 N. Saginaw St. 51 W. Huron St. ft eimeuf ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY m more warmth per mile... pace-setting corduroys with Orion* pile lining! • Keep the girls warm outside-with these toasty-warm fashion jackets designed for that purpose! Plushy cotton corduroy is laminated for shapekeeping, then lined all "the way through to the hood with cotton-backed Orion* acrylicJPpilo. That's what we call weather-proofing! Girls love the classic styling, the nifty hood that goes up or down, the yummy colors: cranberry, brown, blue. Moms love toe Penney-wise prices! siz.s3loft.10.98 sizes 7 to 16,12 *98 ‘DuPont's registered trademark PENNEY’S MIRACLE MILE STORE HOURS 9:30 A.M. to 9 P.M. CHARGE IT A Division of lK« 5. S. Kresge Company:: JtRICK or rREAT HOLDS PLENTY of LOOT! GLOWS SOFTLY. MAKES YOUR TRICK or TREATER EASY to SEE AFTER DARK RICHARDSON 'Sf GLEN WOOD PLAZA . . . North Perry at Glen wood 'Dominam Mothers, Husbands' m 5i ™ ■ i | tfi®P0NT1A& OCTOBER 5, I960 By Science Service WASHINGTON—A cow dominant mother followed by a dominant husband emerged as the consistent p a tternin the lives of 69 alcoholic women of upper and, middle class status, two Philadelphia researchers have reported. All 69 women have applied voluntarily for treatment at the Lankenau Hospital in Philadelphia. : L. Duffy of foe Hospital’s al-c o h • 1 research cUnic, that group of “invisible” alcoholic women “who drink at home, live respectable lives and are a problem only to their families and themselves.” More than a third of the women had backgrounds of striking similarity, Dr. Wood and Duffy discovered in psychiatric interviews/ They represented, said Dr. Howard P. Wood and Edward The pattern included a, “cold domineering mother, a warmer but alcoholic father, a ‘miser- able self-image,’ a cold domineering husband, and a resort to alcohol patterned after the father’s drinking,” ALCOHOLICS Half foe patients had alcoholic fathers, reported the Philadelphia researchers, while more than three-fourths of them said their, mothers were dominant in foe family, describing them as “rigid, perfoctionistic, emotionally distant, and unable to give lows in the way the daughter needed it” 'Space-Saver Tire' HadeTor r67 Care AKRON, Ohio «» «[, *h»*Ini. difficult or coughing from recurring Bronchial Atthrac or Bronchi tl». aggra-vated by air contaminated by imoiaxur. ta/ ISE? b«»«>lng‘fit,lu.y,nS5S- promotlnf better sleep. Get MENDACO at druggists. Let It help you! Protect the kids this Halloween! Get your FREE JAUOWEEN SAFETY PAIL with each purchase of HALF GALS. ANY REGULAR PRICE FLAVOR RICHARDSON ICE CREAM HURRY! Offer ends Oct. 31st Get one TODAY! 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TROPICAL FISH OF MANY KINDS Start a fascinating new hobby... or add new fish to your aquarium. Choose from several varieties. Come in and select at vines! 5-GAL. SIZE DELTA GLASS AQUARIUM, KIT Steel frame aquarium with kit that contains: I bottom filter with carbon filter floss, airline tubing, vibrator air pump, fish food, booklet. 7350 HIGHLAND, M-59 PLAZA 3414 HURON at EUZ. LAKE 4342 DIXIE HWY., DRAYTON PLAINS 5838 M-15, CLARKSTON 2466 ORCHARD LK., SYLVAN LAKE i N&W STORES ASSOCIATED DEALERS BRIDGE’S PARTY STORE 1075 W. Maple, Walled Lake VILLAGE PARTY STORE Cooley Lake Road, Union Lake GEE’S PARTY STORE 2885 E. Highland Rd., Highland THOMPSON'S GARDEN LAND 6380 Highland Rd., Highland PRICE’S GROCERY 5390 Elisabeth Lk. Rd., Pontiac 4100 BALDWIN RD., PONTIAC FORMERLY ROWE’S FARM DAIRY 535 COMMERCE ROAD NEXT TO COMMERCE F1RR STATION WOVEN WICKER BEDS IN 4 SIZES FOR YOUR DOG OR CAT PET HAMSTERS FOR FUN, PROFIT BABYTURTLES SPECIALLY PRICED Discount Price Charge It For your dog or cat to curl up for a nap or use as a permanent bed. Imported oven wicker beds in 23”, 25*% 27” and 29” sizes. Save on ail your pet supplies at Kmart. Charge it. Pltid Cloth Cushions in 4 Sizes..1.24 1.36 8BL Our Reg. 1.11. There’s fun Our Reg. 48c ea. Delight and profit in raising ham- the youngsters at home with stem. Ideal as pets. 4 days! real, lively baby turtles. Hamster Cage.. 2.33 Plastic Turtle Bewl .. 47e THE PONTIAC PRESSt* WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1986 Moderate Trading Stocks Move Unevenly Higher Ptking Precondition Dims Peace Hopes sting blocks included: teric&n Telephone, un-jed at 51 on 8,500 shares; Rubber, off % at 38% on ter Chen Yi diminished hopes for a negotiated peace in Viet Nam today. He told a visiting African delegation there can be no peace The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by ■ them in wholesale package lots Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Tuesday. Produce FRUITS Apples, Cortland, bu... Apples, Crab, bu. ...... Apples, Delicious, bu. ... Apples, GraMm Spy, bu. ... Apples, Greoatng, bu.... Apples, Bluebei Grepes^Concora, PIl Peaches, Elberta, bi NEW YORK (AP)-Tbe stock market moved unevenly higher early today. Trading moderated after an active opening. Gains of fractions to a point or better outnumbered losers by abotit 2-to-l in early trading. TTiis was a reversal of Tuesday’s ratio which saw more losers than gainers even though advances by key stocks toed New York Central and Pennsylvania Railroad advanced about 1% each as their merger became more imminent. IBM and General Motors were up about a point each. Polaroid lost 2 and Xerox 1. TOP FOUR The top four steelmakers u„. fractionally. Leading motors very narrowly mixed aside from GM. Oils were a little balance, with, and TexSco among fractional gainers. Aerospace issues and .,.HL _____ electronics also gained a little. Ichange. mi mixed. r i ii 4,000, and 1 13*% on | ‘ Prices were generally higher on the American Stock Ex- Celery, Pascal, i Celery, Root, dz......... Celery, white, cii. • ... Corn, sweet, 5 dor. bag . Cucumber*, DIN, ft bu. . Cucumber, slicers, bu. .. Cucumber*, Pickles, bu. .. Dill, dz. bch............ Egg Plant, <4 bu........ Egg Plant, Long .type, pk. Gourds, pk. ............. Horseradish, pk. bsk...... —Kohlrabi, dz. Mu........— ... Leeks, dz. bch. .......... Onions, green, -dz. bch. .. Onions, piy, 50-lb. bag ........... --- Onion*, ncknng, n>................. .* The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK (API—Following I* a list l selected stock transactions on nit New ■ -PrilM^lflenDynam 1 . TGenElec 2.4C —A— Gen Fds 2.28 Sales I" Ntt GenMills 1.50 (hds.) High Lew Last Chg. OenMot 3.05e I 12 37 37 37 — ft GenPrec 1.20 > 6 'll 170b 17ft - VS1 GPubSyc ,49a ‘ I 27ft 27ft 27ft ...|GPubU1 1.40 Peppers, Hot, pk. bskt. Peppers. Pimento, pk. ... Poppers, Red Sweet, bo. .. Potatoes, 50 lbs. .......... CoHardf greens, bu. ..... .. Spinach, bu. . Swiss Chard, I Turnips, bu ... Etcareie, t LeNwos, Bil Halllburt. 1.71 Harris Int 1 Mere Inc -65« leclaMn .851 23ft 23ft 23ft —H— 5 35ft 35ft 35ft 2 27 24ft 26ft 34, 37 34ft 37; 3 42ft 42ft 42ft - ft!singerCo2. (hds.) High Law Last Chg. Rayonier 1.40 5 25ft' 25ft 25ft + ft Raytheon .10 Xl3t 50ft 48ft 49ft — 7' Reading Co 3 14ft 14ft 14ft ... Dpirhrh Ml 4 lift lift lift .... 37 31ft 31ft 31ft ... IS 35ft 35ft J5ft — 1 73 21ft 21ft 21ft — 1 RoenSel .350 Rohr Cp .80 RoyCCola .60 Roy Dut .89e Safeway St 1 RyderSys .40 StJosLd 2.40 SL SanFran 2 StRegP 1.40b Sanders JO Schenley 1.40 Schldc Schick SCM Cp .40b Scott Paper ' withdraws all its forces. “The people of the whole world are clear . . . that the U.S, aggressive forces must immediately withdraw from Viet Nam — lock, stock and barrel,” Chen Yi said: “A proposals and ideas which do not include withdrawal of U.S. armed forces are only a cover for continued U.S. imperialist reinforcements and expansion of the aggressive war in Viet Nam—no matter whether these are advanced through the United Nations or conferences of s e v e r a 1 coun- years after sending its first re- be unsucceSsful, and we’re Poultry and Eggs i fryers ivy type DETROIT (AP) - Egg prices paid per dozen by first receivers (including U.S.): Whites Grade A (umbo 47-55; extra large 46-59; large 4547; mediums 32-43; smalls Orewns Grade A himbo 4545ft) < >rn> 4344; imnlll 29-31. _____HM|V CompRL .450 Camp Soup 1 max; wnoiesaie ouy- gBER lower; 93 OCOTO AA M finil, aa r atu.. <~*reT H CHICAGO BUTTER, EGGS CHICAGO (AP) - Chicago Exchange — Bolter weak; wholesale buying prices 1ft to 2ft lower; 92-seore-Aft 7%; 92 A 71ft; 90 B 71ft) .11 C 49ft; cars 90 B 71ft) 09 C 71. Eggs about steady) wholesale buying prices unchanged) 70 per cent or better Grade A Whites 45,- mixed 45; mediums 43; standards 42; chocks 35. Livestock T LIVESTOCK — (UfOA): Cat! 950-liW lb. staeri .): Cattle 500; 25JO; Bob«rTii^nB:»-aiK50L,**r* Hogs 150; t taw sales 1 end 2 210-230 barrows and gilts 23.25-23J0; | ^ CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP) - (USDA) - Hi 4.500; 1-2 200-225 lb butchers 23JO-23______ mixed 1-3 190-250 lbs 22JO-23.00; mixed 1-3 350400 lb SOWS 20.25-21.00) 4045 155 ” 450-500 lbs 19.50-20.00; 550- 400 lbs 18.00-19.00; boars 16JO-17JO. , £•*"• 1400; calves none; choice — 1,200 lb slaughter steers 25.25-26.00; mixed Good and choice 24.75-25JO; few lots mixed high choice and prime 950-1,025 lb slaughter heifers 24JS-25.00; d S 000950 Tbs 23.75-24JO; mixed good choice 750950 lbs 22.75-23.75. Sheep 300; choice and prime 9 lb wooled slaughter lambs 23.50-2, '•“"e 05-105 Ibi 23.00-23JO; mixed g American Stock Exch. Can So Pet 10113-161-1 Cdn Javelii ..... Gout 70? Jz Ctrywide Rlty Creole P 2.40* Data Cant pyl — ^oc &8U imp on ijf .C Group It (ft 1ft 1 ScurryTfeln 45 lift lift l6ft+ ft fils. Ill % c* ■ JFSKa I it Stt Soj -^r-! it by The AOOOClQted Press 191 I 23ft 23ft 23ft 4 SoPRSug JOe SouCalE 1.25 South Co .96 SouNGos 1.30 SouthPac 1.50 South Ry 2.80 Spartan Ind Sperry Rand Square D .40 StdBrond 1.30 -SM Kolls .13a StOII Col 2.50 StOIIInd 1.70 StOIINJ 2.40* StdOilOh 2.40 St Padcaglng StanWar 1.50 StauffCh 1.40 StorlDrug JO StevensJP 2 Kennecott 2 KemCLd 2.60 Kerr Me 1.30 KtmbClark 2 Koppers 1.40 Kresge .80 Kroger 1 JO 2 3 3ft 3 4 ftjuM —D—— TO 22ft 22ft 22ft X4 19ft 19ft 19ft 4 26ft 26ft 24ft . . 28 54ft jJft 54ft -ft 78 92ft 91ft 92ft + ft 4 17 Ifa 11 3 79ft 3 35ft 3ft ?5ft . 'I BS T FI rest ne 1.30 FsIChrt 1.179 Flintkote 1 Fie PL 1.52 FMC Cp .75 PoodFalr .90 FordMot 2.40 Fore Dalr .50 Freopt Sul 1 FruehCp 1.70 Merquir .3 Martin Mar MayDStr 1 McDonn .41 5 15ft 15ft 15ft 50 44ft 43ft 44ft — 6 30ft 30ft 30ft — > 76 24ft 23ft 24 ... ‘ ‘ .?®S .22'A t ! . _______J 20ft-' —N— 27 65ft 64ft 45ft 41] 21 42ft 41ft 41ft — U i) 21ft 21ft WO* — Vfc 34 ilft 62ft 62ft-1ft 34 32ft 32ft 32T- 7 32 31ft », 1 27ft 27ft 27ft NCashR 1.20b NatDalry 1.40 Hat Fuel 140 4 27ft 27ft 27ft 4 ft solar this yeerT t—Payable 7nstock —#........1 M L N Lead 2.25a Natstael 2.50 Nevada P .04 ewbery .481 EngEI 1.28 ..Y Cent 3.12 NlagMP 1.10 Norm Wst 6a NA Avia 2.80 29 42ft NorNGas 2.20 3 44ft Nor Poc 2.40 X10 45 NSta Pw 1.52 5 30ft 27 j _ x* JT™ ST* IT* 4 6 16 15ft 16 — 23 23ft 23ft »ft — 49 59ft »ft 59ft 41ft 2? 21ft 21ft 21ft —ft 4 5 Bfe I..... 43 20 24ft 26ft 4 ft 6 34ft 34ft 36ft —-TV- 1? 24ft 24ft 24ft tM&M His remarks were made at a banquet in Peking last night for a visiting delegation from Tanzania and broadcast today by the NewCfcina News Agency. GIVES WARNING Meanwhile, Red China’s top scientific planner warned the men working on Peking’s . , missiles and atomic bombs to’l 0 0th project keep in step with the Commu- ttos week, Jias nist party and the army. jftt The warning by Vice Premier Nieh Jung-chen came in a speech before a national conference of key scientific personnel engaged in national defense projects-The conference was called to connection with Red China’s current “cultural revolution,” a wideranging purge which up urt-til now had not touched scientific personnel. News in Brief Waterford Twonship police are investigating a burglary at the Keg and Anchor, 4195 Dixie, yesterday in which $120 in change and two bottles of Scotch “We must obey toe work of whisky, valued at $12, were stol-Chairman Mao,” Nieh told toe ‘We must definitely give an excellent response to toe appeal of comrade Lin Piao (Red China’s defense minister) for studying tod thought of^JMab Tse-tung and we must study ifie thought of Mao Tse-tung -more and more dilligently. scientists, according to Peking Radio. PMNRHW ______Jift 25ft 25ft — I —X—Y—Z— Xerox Corp 1 212 104ft 140ft 140V, —< YngstSht 1.80 23 09ft 20ft 20ft 4 Zenith Rod 1 90 53ft 91ft 12ft ... Copyrighted by The Aesocleted Press 11 the foregoing _____ ... ________ lents based on the last quarterly „„-annual declaration. Special or dividends or payments not designs regular are Identified In the Ing footnotes. *•» extra or extras, b—Annual stock dividend, e—Liquidating l—Declared or paid In 1945 i-dlvi- year. h—Declared or paid after dend or »llt up. k—Declared oi year, an accumulative lime ' dends In arrears, ir — this year, dividend no action token at I r—Declared ■ dividend, t-_____ ... ............ estimated cash value op ex-dividend distribution date, z—Seles In full. cld—Called, x—Ex dividend, y- ... end and sales 'In full. x-dlt-Ex dlstribu-on. xr—Ex rights, xw—Without ____rifles assumed by i ^enles.^fn—Forelgn, Issue subli Treasury Positipn X-Totel Debt- ... 324,231,540478.84 318454,509,43344 Gold AS94rtS— 13,258471,772.04 13459 074,721. ... - Includes 8244,218,497.78 debt n subject to statutory limit. VICE — The , services and i autos. The re- English couple, Mr. and Mrs. James Mont- gomery, 1935 S. Milford, Milford Township. Montgomery serviced cars in Britain and is a former manager of Osborn Lee Cadillac Businessmen Sent Abroad ’ Paunch Corps a Hit By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK - Less than two Manhattan headquarters. “Wei into one floor of a narrow Fifth found out the idea works. We Ayenue building and a small 'are willing to. concede less than! annex across the street. 10 per cqnt of the projects will tries,” he said. tired American businessman ahead of m now „ ashore m a less m 1 - TOLERATES NAME The corps tolerates the nickname “Paunch Corps” for lack of another. Its initials, for example, produce the vocally unpalatable IESC. Its full name is the International Executive Service Corps. Heading the corps is France Pace Jr., former secretary of the Army and former chairman — of General Dynamics Corp. His 300 more jobs scheduled for this staff of 47 paid employes crowds year, and hopes eventually to handle 500 projects a year. developed land, Paunch Corps” lean and trim and working hard. The corps relati ideals to the Peace Corps, completed i t s Each job will be at the request of a foreign businessman —not his government—in a free-enterprise economy. All jobs will be to relatively underdeveloped lands. None will be to rope or the Soviet Union. “We proved our point,” said a spokesman in the jammed Indians Register All Their Arms CHANDIGARH, India (AP) -Punjab’s state government oded its arms act to include spears, a favorite weapon of the Sikhs. Officials said all spear ers would be required to obtain an arms license. Stocks of Local Interest Figures after decimal points ire eighths OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Quotations from the NASD are repre-sentatlve inter-dealer prices of approximately 11 e.m. Inter-dealer mart“*~ change throughout the day. Prlcee AMT Corp. ......................4.1 ... Associated Truck ...............9.4 10.0 Boyne Products ................14.7 15J Braun Engineering .............11.2 104 Citizens Utilities Class A .... .14.4 H.4 Monro* Auto Equipment .........12.3 124 Diamond Crystal ................124 W.T Kelly Services ................11.0 19.1 Mohawk Rubber Co................20.0 31.1 Detrex Chemical ................114 134 Safran Printing ...............13.2 14.1 Scripts ........................ 54 4.1 Frank's Nursery ................0J 9.1 North Central Airlines Units ... 4.1 tJ Wyandotte Chomlcol .............23.0 24.1 MUTUAL FUNDS I----- Bid Asked Affiliated Fund ...............7.75 SJt Chemical Fund ..............14.31 15.45 Ith Stock .........4.62 9.42 corns K-l ........ 0.34 9.13 Keyeton# Growth K-f ;....... 5.72 4J5 Mast. Investors Growth ......9.43 10Jl Matt. Investor* Trust ......14.45 15.79 Putnem Growth ............ 10.11 11.05 Television Electronics ...... Wellington Fund ....... ...... — ---------nd ................14.11 17.51 Ralll life. Util. Fgn. L. ____nJues! 72.5 09.4 V'.l 92.1 Prev. Doy 72J 094 ll.l 92.1 Ago 72.7 09.2 80.5 91.9 ______ Ago 724 90J 794 91.7 Yttlr Ago 01.1 102.2 07.0 92.7 .....Ilgh 794 101.4 (4.1 93.1 ■Km 72.5 ff.9 79.2 914 03.7 1945 High (3.7 103J 11.9 W.0 94J 1945 LOW 79 J 99.9. 144 “ 1 DOW-JONES AVERAGES STOCKS 30 Indus ................... 759.79+143 20 Relle .............. 109.31-0.57 15 Utils .................... 11144+049 boiIm** 10 Bonds .............00.42+0.02 10 Higher grade relit........ 7244 10 Sicond grodo relit...,..'... 8040+1...—------------- 10 Public utilities.:......... I2.03-0.03 r vnn Ofo .10 Industrials ■........... 04.37-0.ig Arynn 018. Rummage Sale: First Presbyterian Church, Birmingham. |H W. Maple. Thurs., Oct. 6; 9 a.m. - 8 p.m.; Fri., Oct. 7; 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. —Adv. MOM’s Rummage: Thursday 9 to 12. Indianwood and Baldwin. AdV. Rummage sale, Thursday, Oct. 6, St. Andrews Church, Hatchery Rd. 9 a.m-12. Adv. Rummage Sale — Grace Lutheran Church, S. Genesee, Thurs. 9 to 9. -Adv, Rummage Sale. Soroptimist Club of Birmihgham. Saturday, October 8, 8:00 a.m. at Miss HOtton’s Nursery School, 236 Elm, Birmingham, Mich. —Adv. Disabled American Veterans Auxiliary Chapter 16. Rummage sale Oct. 8 at 199 Auburn stating 8 a.m. Sat. —Adv. Rummage Sale: Amvets Auxiliary, 206 Auburn Ave., Sat., Oct. 8, 8-12. -Adv. Rummage Sale, Friday, Oct. 7,9a>m,to6pjm-CAIBuUd-ing, 5640 Wiliarps Lk. Rd., Waterloo!. Sponsored by Waterford Farm and Garden Club. —Adv. Rummage First' Church of God, 1379 Mt. Clemens. Oct. 6, 7, 8:30-1 p.m. —Adv. Rummage Sale: tional Church, 1315 ,N. Pine, Rochester. Fri., Oct. 7, 10-7 n.m., Sat., Oct. 8, 9-11 a.m. -Adv. Rummage. Hi 858%. Huron, 8:30-1 p.m., Oct. 7. —Adv. FaU Rummage Sale, St. Mary's Episcopal Church, corner of Joslyn and Greenshield, Lake Orion, Fri., Oct. 7,10 a.m. to 7 p.m. and Sat., Oct. 8, 10 a.m.-12. —Adv. Due to the death of Herbert Coleman, FayrBarker Hardware Will be closed Thursday, Oct. Rummage Sale. Saturday, October 8, 9 A.M. till 12 noon. St. Benedict’s Church. Huron and lLvnn Sts. i ' —Adv. Crime News Plan Criticized CINCINNATI, Ohio (AP)- A federal judge has lashed out against proposals by a committee of the American Bar Association that would restrict toe reporting of crime news. “Don’t' throw out the baby with the bath water. We can have fair trials, and a free press,” said Judge George Edwards of the 6to Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals. .* * ★ The proposed restrictions, Judge Edwards said Tuesday, “would prevent lawyers from talking about a case from the date of arrest, to the verdict, and beyond, to subsequent motions.” “It could go on for years,” he added. Judge Edwards said that he did not believe that restrictions in talking about case, once a defendant has been arrested and charged, should be put on “anybody—officers of the law, attorneys, or reporters,” until the trial date is announced. Judge Edwards noted he has a special interest in the matter, because he dissented from the majority opinion, when .a three-judge panel of toe Circuit Court upheld the murder conviction of Samuel Sheppard. Requests from foreign companies are processed here, men briefed and debriefed, searches go on constantly for men with specific skills. The foreign companies pay a management fee and round-trip transportation. The corps pays expenses, usually $20 to $40 a day. The corpsman gets no pay. More often than before, the man chdsen is not retired. Instead, he is a key man whose employer agrees to a leave of absence at company expense. Some on the availability roster are in their 30s. GOAL WAS SET At first, thexorps believed a, single project might take two • years, but a goal of six months was set. ‘Now we find three or four months is long enough to do the job,” the spokesman said. “Then they get out.” i ★ ★ Getting out is Important. A highly placed native management man, for example, might fear competition if toe American stayed around to kibitz. The growing number of requests for assistance is cited by IESC as proof of the need and acceptance from abroad. And toe growing nutfiber of available consultants is offered as proof that American businessmen will volunteer. PRAISE PUEM1FUL Completed projects include 19 in Iran, 14 in Thailand, and 11 each in Brazil and Panama. Adverse criticism has been restrained, praise plentiful. Tanyah Pocinwong, managing director of Bangkok Weaving Mills, Ltd., wrote this year about1 Sidney L. Buffington, 64, a textile consultant who retired to Dark Harbor, Maine: “During the three short months that Mr. Buffington was here, he had worked harder than any of us, transferred to us his 40 years of textile-mill experience, and moved us five years ahead of what we used to be three rnonths ago.” lS^0$fulfln\Mstfng By ROGER E. SPEAR (Q) “We own 100 Lytton Finance at 24. Should we boy more?” I. L. ‘Tve been ad-vised that money is not safe in savings and loan institutions and should be taken out,” A. C., W. R. (A) Sayings and loan companies handle money in several different ways. Basically, they attract savings accounts by offering higher interest rates than the commercial banks. They also sell shares in the open market to increase investment capital. They put these funds work mainly in real estate operations. The industry has slumped badly from its one-time peak of popularity because of high-cost money, saturated real estate markets, keener competition from commercial banks and public skepticism. Readers who have deposited cash savings in these institutions need not worry if their companies are protected by membership in the Federal S & L Insurance Corporation. But for holders of stock in these same companies, toe outlook is discouraging. I would not average down in Lytton, but I Would hold the shares for some recovery. Shrewd management plus new regulatory legislation now pending — Federal and state — should help Lytton and the industry toward a brighter future,. The California S & Ls hope to move into all types of installment financing if proposed legislation is passed early in 1967. A new Federal law, when ■Mi to expected to limit interest rates and set up a sliding scale related to the size of the deposit. ★ ★ fe- ta) “With $1,509 to invest, I’m looking for growth, but I want stability and definite dividend return. Walgreen Drag Stores has been recommended. I hesitated because retail firms are rarefy mentioned in financial publications” W.S. (A) Retail stores may have little glamor but their earnings reports are far from dull Wal-fits your triple requirement and is well regarded fra* its long-term growth potential Earnings are estimated around $3.25 a share for fiscal, ’66, aided Sept. 30, vs. $2.59 last year. There is a good chance for a dividend hike, which has been Walgreen’s policy each year; since 1959. (Copyright, I960) % l