Th0 W0afh0r VOL. 121 NO. 225 THE PONTIAC PR T^^JNECfllflL Edition ir if if if THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. OCTOBER 28, 1968 —94 PAGES xnttnD'^Su*SrS^■^w^L_ Despite Red Withdrawal Aiming at Moon CUCKS WITH PICKS - Mrs. William F. Nesbitt of 120 Whittemore is shown receiving The Press Football Contest award of a |500 U.S. Savings Bond from Howard HeMenbrand A Football Forecaster of the editorial department. In her first contest effort, the winner weathered six games and the competition of several thousand to gain her vict^. Woman Wins Contest The women aie back — back in control of the Press' Annual Football Contest, in case you’re wondering. Mrs. William F. Nesbitt, of 128 WhittenHM-e carried the pennant for her sex and emerged the winner after correctly calling the outcome of six games and eliminating several thousand contestants. The West Coast game Saturday between Washington and Oregon was the dtacher. The Huskies’ 28-19 triumph spellM cash for their Pontiac rooter and defeat for her kme opponent. Although it was Mrs. Nesbitt’s maiden venture into the yearly event, she had absorbed a lot eratk)n means that the United States is preparing to reduce its troop strength here. w w w ‘‘We have six division in Ger-nuiny,” Rusk Said. NO DOUBT “We have six divisions in Ger-divisions ha’s, as long as there is need fpr them-and under present cihnunstances there is no doubt that they will continue to be needed.” Rnsk also ifl^maticaOy toU the Enropeaas he didn’t thtak lhey„ were Uvtag np to thdr mBtory commUmeNs to (Centiiiued on Pago 2, Col. 4) JFK Waits for Bipartisan Rights Accord WASHINGTON (ifl - President Kennedy hopefully awaited today an agreement on civil rights legislation that could win bi|>artisan support in Congress. Democratic sponsors of the effort to work out a compromise shaft after a cable snapped. Fifty-fonr miners — fonr white and 59 Africans — were irescued shortly after noon from the upper cage which ha4 stopped at the lN9-fMt level. There were no casnai-ties in the group. The lower cage stopped at ttie 5,000-foot level. It was not known if any miners in Uie lower cage survived the accident. DEUCATE JOB Meanwhile, rescuers in Germany faced a ticklish job trying to sink a shaft through which rescue capsule can be lowered to the trapped trio. Engineers said the boring could break the air pocket and re-! the air pressure, engulfing die Uiree men in the water which fills the rest of the mine. Drilling was proceeding carefully through shields to prevent a loss of pressure. Two separate two-foot escape shafts were being drilled, but they wsnld have at least progress to re4 port at a White House meet; ing late this afternoon. They had set that schedule for themselves after a meeting with Kennedy last wedt — but it all depended on nuking headway bdore that time. NOT SCHEDULED Possibly indicating that (he going was tough. White House press secretary Pierre Salinger told newsmen a few li ahecd of the 4 p.m. hour tentatively picked for the meeting: “Hiere is no moeting scheduled at the i^esent time.” He did not, however, rule out the possibility that one might be set up later. The House Judiciary Committee is to vole tomorrow on a bill Kennedy fears is too e«-Iroversial to pass. Whether it can he htocked depawds on the saccess of an inteasivo sellfa« campaign by the administra- A either one would reach the miners before Wednesday. The three - Emil Pohlai, K, Fritz Leder, 38, and Gerhard Hanusch, 43, — were among 129 miners in the shaft Thursday night when 19 million gallons of sludge from an ore-washing process at the surface, spilled into Mathilde mine. James Robinson, a National Broadcasting Co. correspondent, said he was grabbed fay police while he was filming the suicide witli NBC cameraman Andrew Pearson. WRENCHED FREE Robinson wrenched free and hopped into a government limousine whi^h had just polled posite him. It carried him and another Western newsman safety. The seven U.N. investigators met yesterday with progovernment Buddhists at a pagoda about the time the monk made his sacrifice. Black Muslims Cancel Rally Flint Meeting Ends Over riff With Police FLINT (ill - Leaders of Black Muslims suddenly called off an assembly yesterday after they protested the presence of armed, plainclothed policemen. Some tjm persons in the audience marched quietly out of the IMA anditorinm at a signal from Elijah Mnham-med, reputed head of the Negro cult. “If they want to come in with guns, we’ll all go out,” Malcolm X, reputed No. 2 man of the Black Muslims, told the predominantly Negro audience. Three Flint police detectives btot.objected to orders of Mus-liin officials to surrender their guns or stay out of the auditorium. WMfEN LEAVE The audience, including several women members of the sect wearing white robes, filed out of the building after discussions between Muslim leaders and city officials. Glenn Sommers, Flint detective captain, said he told Mu-hammed he was aware that the Black Muslim’s religion was against carrying arms, but he still was reqtiired to attend the meeting and required to carry a gun. Romney Lifts UP Fire Ban LANSING (AP)-Gov. George Romney withdrew his ban on fires in the Upper Peninsula as of noon today as the result of an easing of drought conditions. The ban remains in effect in the Lower Peninsula where a severe fire hazard still exists, the executive office said. Lifting of the order in the north means hunters and others may build fires and smoke in forests, field and wild lands. EX-SENATOR DIES-For-mer senator, Tom Connally. D-Tex., M, died at his home Ui Washington, D.C., today. He was a former chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. AUTUMN FUN-ChiUren romping in fallen leonres to a anre sign that nrinter is Just around the oorner In spite of repent warm waaflwr. Delighting in the golden* foliage here are Renee Anderson, 3, and her 4-yeamld brother, RuaselL Ttm Ann Arbor youngsters were viaitinc their grandfather, RuaaeD Anderson of 9N W. Iroquois, during the weekend. Prisoners Striking at San Quentin SAN QUENTIN, Calif. IM San Quentin Prison's more than 4,000 inmates staged a sitdown strike today in Calif(Hiiia’s second prison strike within a week. One grenp set up a picket line. Others refused to go to work in prison shops. Prison officials said it was a quiet action, appareptly in sympathy with a stop-work strike last week at Fols^ Prison for more pay and shorter ternu. ★ * ★ “After breakfast at 7:30 a.m., a group of 30 to 50 convicts gathered at a gate and started booing inmates going to work.” Associate Warden Walter Achuff said: “In effect, this is setting up a picket line.” WOULDN’T CROSS “It had quite an effect on the inmates in the yard. They would not cross the line. It became a work stoppage.” Normally the men are locked out of their ceUs after breakfast. But today ceUs were unlocked after the strike started to permit convicts to retora to their cells if they wished. “There is no outward excitement, no violence,” Achuff said. “The intimation is that this is sort of a sympathetic action for the Fpisom group. “It is a senseless thing. We do not believe it represents the thinking of a majority of inmates. “But it is easy for a small group to get control.” Summer's Gone! Really! Cooler Weather Due The hatchet has fallen on Indian summer. It split the weekend into seasons with a high Satnrday of II and a high yesterday of IS. Today it wUl reach 81. e * e Now that Nature’s gotten tough with a flighty an-tuma, yon can expect cooler temperatures. During the next five days, they wiU average fluee or four degrees above the normal high of 55 and low of 39. Generally cool weather Is ,predictod exc^ for a slight moderatloa on Thursday end Friday- Little or no prcelplta-tioa Is expected. ★ * ★ In spite of threatened frost, the sn smUed and shoved the temperatnre np to 81 by 3 p. m- Low before I a. m. was 49. Russ Pullout Won't Slow Space Plans But Nikita's Movb May Be Used by Foes of Heavy Spending WASHINGTON — It’s full speed ahead for the U. S. program to land a man on the moon in this ‘decade. That’s the way American space officials greeted yesterday the news from Moscow that Soviet Premier Khrushchev apparently has pulled his count^ out of any moon race. Sen. Ginton P. Anderson, chairman of the Senate Space Committee, agreed. “First of all, I do not belike we should develop our space programs on the basis of the prem stater ments of Mr. Khru^hev,” the New Mexico Dentocrat told The Associated Press. However, there were signs elsewhere that the Soviet leader’s move may provide ammunition for American critics of heavy space spending. In aa Interview Saturday night la Moscew, Khrushchev declared: “At present, we are net planning manned meen flights. I have read a report to the effect that the Americans want to land a man on the mooi by 1979. Well, I wish them succais. And we shall watch how they fly there, how they come to earth, or rather come to moon, and, this is the main thing, how they take off and return home.”^ The reaction in Washington was varied. ★ * ★ James E. Webb, administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, uid Khrushchev’s statement “could have the effect of strengthening this country’s desire to go ahead with the moon program.” Dr. George E. Mueller, direc-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) Home Crises Turn Soviets Space Race Dropped to Save on Spending MOSCOW (UPI) - The So-Viet Union, now officially out of the race to the moon, turned today to the domestic problems that may have prompt^ its decision. Western observers believed tbc decision may have recogalttoa that the was more urgently aeeded on earth to solve iadnstrial and agricultural problems and to provide a better standard tt liviag. Premier Nikita Khrushchev made news on a number of fronts Saturday during an tater-view in which he announced the Soviet space withdrawal. MAJOR POINTS His major points included: — American wheat: Khrushchev balked at agreeing to ship the $350 million worth of Amer- ^ lean wheat he seeks to buy on , U.S. ships, which would cost the Russian^ as much as $13 a ton more than the world average. — The Soviet economy: Khrushchev said that on the whole it was going “very wen,” but bad wuaflier caused grain crop faihires and made TWO ariU m THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 28. 1968 Gas Firm Sets Alternate Lines Consumers Power Co. will spend some |7^ in alternate gas line installations to keep a portion of the central business district warm this winter. The altnuate lines were necessitated by the delay la coastmctlM oatheClinton River Drain project. Consumers has already invested an estimated $225,000 in relocating gas facilities in the downtown area due to urban renewal and perimeter road construction. It * ■(i “We had planned to feed a revamped gas system in central business district through a line to be installed in the proposed river culvert under the perimeter road north of East Huron,” said M, S. Blackman, assistant district manager. Pal Claims Miss Keeler Won't Pay LONDON (AP) - A codefendant’s claim that Christine Keeler reneged on paying money she promised him for his court testi-noony was heard today as the playgirl’s hearing on charges of perjury and conspiracy to obstruct justice resumed after a three-week adjournment. * * * The court heard a complaint attributed to Rudolph Fenton, 39, a West Indian, that Miss Keeler refused to pay him a promised $2,800 to support her story that she was beaten up last AjM-il by her ex-lover Jamaican jazz singer Aloysius Gordon. LARGE PROFITS The court was told Miss Keeler was reaping large profits by selling her story to the newspapers. The case against Miss Keeler is based on police charges that she framed charges against Gordon which resulted in his being sent to jail on accusations of beating her up. Gordon’s conviction was later reversed. Police investigated further and arrested Miss Keeler and three others on charges that might mean 28 years in prison. ★ ★ ♦ Miss Keeler became a world news figure when War Minister John D. Profumo resigned in June after admitting to Parliament that he had lied about his associations with her. The incident nearly caused the British government to fall; “Now that the permanent culvert isn’t going to be built before winter, we are taking an alternate route.” The originally planned feeder line in the culvert was estimated to cost about $4,080. It connects the central business district distribution system with a new $20,000 regulator station at Howard and Stockwell. The alternate lines on East Huron, Mill and Mount Clemens will cost about $11,565. * ★ ★ “When the permanent culvert is built, we’ll complete the line originally planned, but we still intend to nuke some use of the alternate lines so they won’t be entirely temporary,” Blackman noted. imUTY RELOCA’nON 'Die revamped system downtown was necessitated mostly by the relocation of utilites due to perimeter road construction. About $25,000 of the $225,000 was spent in the heart of the downtown business district. ★ ★ * The alternate lines will connect a $100,000 gas line installed in perimeter road right-of-way last June, but cut off on either side of the river crossing. Arrested Man's Home Incorrectly Recorded A Pontiac man arrested in a gambling raid Oct. 19 does not live at 77 E. New York, the address given to The Pontiac Press by the police department. * ★ * Police said a mistake had been made on the arrest card of Fred C. Frye, 34, and his last known address was 77 Lehigh. PARENTS DAY-Parents of Oakland University students get a sample of lecturing at the university’s first “Parents’ Day” Saturday. They’re listening to assistant professor of history Robert Howes lecture on communism. Some 200 parents attended the event, which opened with an address by Chancellor D. B. Varner. “Parents’ Day” was sponsored by the Friends of Oakland Committee, which is composed mostly of students’ parents seeking to fulfill some of the functions of an alumni organization. The school is too young to have such a group. Cigarette Linked to $3,000 Fire in Waterford Fire believed caused by a smouldering cigarette, butt caused an estimated $3,000 damage today to an apartment house at 39 N. Telegraph, Waterford Township. Reported at 4:36 a.m., the blaze damaged the living room of a street-level apartment occupied by Cicorge Finn and caused smoke damage to the two other apartment units in the building. The two-story frame building had been converted to an apartment house from a single residence. Heart Pump Keeps Man Alive 4 Days f LOS ANGELES (AP) -For four fateful days last July a man lived with a substitute plastic pump implanted in his heart. It coursed his blood through his body, driven by a pulsing air compressor lying beside him. * ★ ★ It marked the first historic step in a human, with partial success, toward the grand-goal of giving doomed heart patients a substitute mechan- The Weather F^ll U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY-Mostly fair through Tuesday. Cool today, high of 60. Cold tonight, low near 32 with scattered frost. Fair and continued cool Tuesday, high 58. Winds northwest to west, 5 to 15 miles per hour today, tonight, and Tuesday. SunOay’i Ttmpwtlun Chart I 4] Imllahapalli 1 M Jacksonville I M Kanut City _____ .. ,______ __________ «.5 Waalhar: Saturday mostly sunnyj Sun---y mostly haiy. LosMst lamparalura Gr. Rapids *S 35 L...........- - - ■jughton 5« 31 Los Angeles 12 65 61 25 Mpis. St. Paul S» 33 a 60 33 New Orleans 14 64 62 27 New York 12 51 n 05 57 Prrtland, Mf. S 57 3* St. Louis a as 5t S. Lake City S 63 44 San Antonio S S2 64 San Francisco 7 Das Molnas 65 ] NATIONAL WEATHER—Occasional rain is expected tonight id Washington, Oregon and northern California while scattered showers are forecast for the central Gulf Coast. It will be cotrier in the northeast, the Ohio, Tennessee and central Mississippi valieys and the central Plains. ical heart to restore health and life. Dr. Michael Debrakey, professor of surgery at Baylor University Medical School, described the human drama and its portent Sunday at closing scientific sessions of the American Heart Association. Only 42, the man had congestive heart failure and had lost 50 pounds during two weeks in the hospital. A faulty heart valve was re^-laced, but he grew worse. WEAKENED VENTRICLE His left ventricle, the heart chamber which pumps blood through the great artery or aorta to all parts of the body, was weakened. His lungs filled with fluid. His heart stopping. Repeatedly, massage of his chest or heart literally brought him back from dead. He was unconscious. It was apparent his brain had been damaged from over prolonged loss of oxygen when his heart had stopp^. Dr. Debakey and his associates made their decision. ★ ♦ ★ With dogs, they had successfully bypassed the left Ventricle. using a specially constructed plastic tubing sewn to the heart so it would receive the freshened blood coming from his lungs and then pulse it into the aorta. On July 19, they put the substitute plastic chamber in the man’s heart. Tlie compressor, through an air tube leading through the chest wall to the plastic chamber, restored a strong heart beat. LUNGS CLEARED His lungs cleared. Blood pressure and the electrical action of his heart returned to normal. He lived four days, then succumbed to past complications that couldn’t be, overcome, Dr. Debakey said. The portents? For temporary resting of a heart — fw days or weeks, far longer than can be done with external heart-lung machines — the bypass pumping chamber could very w^ see pa-^ tients past a crisis. The ^uipments now has been redesigned to make it more suitable for human applications, and will be tested in seriously ill heart patients, Ds. Debakey said. GALLUP, N.M. (UPI) - A migrant farm worker and seven of his 10 children were killed yesterday in a head-on collision of a car and truck on U.S. highway 666 about 36 miles north of Gallup, N.M. Five others were injur^. State police identified the victims as Luz B. Garza, 37, whose last permanent address was Route 1, Nyssa, Ore., the driver of the car, and the seven Garza children — Noelia, 16; OdeUa, 13; Irma, 11; Vi-vaao, 8; Lupe, 5; Mercedes, 4; and RojeUo, 1. The mother, Marie Garza, 40; the truckdciver, William Delbert Wakefield, 48, of Aztec, N.M.; and three other Garza children yvere the injured. All were expected to survive. State police said me family was on its way to Alamo, Tex., from the Idaho potato harvest. They planned to visit Mrs. Garza’s relatives at Alamo. WRONG LANE The truck driver told officers he saw the car approaching him across a narrow bridge in wrong lane. He locked h i s brakes, hoping to avoid the collision, skidded 50 feet and hit. The impact tore the cab In Head-On Collision Father, 7 Children Die Rusk Pledges Troops to Stay (Continued From Page One) the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. “It is a source of pride that the Utiited States has generally met or exceeded its goals, and a source of regret that certain others in the alliance have not,” he said. ■k it * Erhard, who recently succeeded Konrad Adenauer as chancellor, indicated he agreed with the U.S. position and called on his countrymen and Europeans generally to remember the debt they owe to the United States. SIMILAR HELP “Just as the Marshall Plan and the United States he^ us Europeans, so we today must do more to give similar h^ to the developing nations,” he said. Rusk also saU the most effective way of meeting any Soviet threat was a NATO nuclear fleet. The plan was first put forth by President Kennedy in meeting with former British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan at Nassau in the Bahamas last December. Britafa* has been cool to the plan and Franpe has rejected it. De Gaulle wants his own nuclear striking force. RUSSIAN CRinCXSM While Rusk’s speech pleased West Gennan officials, it drew expected criticism from the Soviet Union. The speech, said Tass, the official Soviet news agency, “contradicted greatly the s^it of the beginning re-of international ' from the tractor. ’The tractor and an empty butane trailer were flung into a 25-foot deep arroyo alongside the highway. The cab landed on the hi^ way, probably saving the driver’s life, officers said. State police attributed the accident to speed, driving on the wrong side bf the road and driver fatigue. ★ ★ ★ Dad Finds Son Dying After Crash CHINO, Calif. (AP)-Inside a shattered wreckage of, a car, two teen-age boys lay dead. Outside, tangled in the branches of trees, one boy was dead, another lay dying. For nearly 10 hours, they lay there, unseen by passing motorists. ★ * ★ At 10 a.m., a car stopped above. A man clambered down the embankment to the crash scene. “Hi,” he said. “Hi, Dad,” was the reply. SEARCH ENDS ’Thus ended John R. Walsh’s five-hour .search for his son, which began at 5 a.m. when his son failed to return home. An ambulance took his son, John M., 17, to a hospital, but it was too late. ★ ★ ★ The father had first searched all of the boy’s haunts with no luck. He was told by a youth that the boys may have taken Carbon Canyon Road. He searched there and found the wreckage. OTHER DEAD Also dead were Joseph G. Gurkweitz, 19, Ronald D. Harris, 17, and Richard E. Loomis, 18. The car was partly hidden from the road and could only have been found by someone looking for it. Morocco Near Algeria Town MARRAKECH, Morocco (AP) —11)0 Moroccan government announced today that its troops are seven miles from the Iron ore center of Tindouf in the Algerian-controlled Sahara. CAIRO (AP) - Egyptian newspapers published today reports from abroad that Egyptian troops and equipment were heading for Algeria but no confirmation of any troop movement was available here. The announcement by Information Minister Abdel Hadl Boutaleb indicated the Moroccan troops have penetrated deep into the territory contested by the two countries. According to nnost international maps, Tindouf is some 60 miles inside the Algerian Sahara. it ir it Morocco’s King Hassan II and Algerian President Ahmed Ben Bella are scheduled to meet Tuesday in Bamako in an effort to settle the border dispute. The leaders of the warring North African neighbors will be joined in the Mali capital by Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia and President Modi-ba Keita of Mali in the four-power conference to seek an end to the fighting. ’The attitudes of both.sides, however, left Uttle hope for a quick settlement. DEMANDS OF EACH Ben Bella was expect to demand unconditional withdrawal of the Moroccans from the disputed frontier. Moroccan officials said there would be no yielding of land the kingdom considers part of its national heritage. Moroccan infantry units on ^nday chased the renuiants of three Algerian battalions from Hassi Beida, a muddy water hole clustered by palm trees north of the ore-rich Tindouf Valley. Two American television teams at the front confirmed the Mmroccan victory. Lost Children Found Asleep A 13-hour search for two West Bloomfield Townriiip diildren ended happily this morning when they were found in a playhouse a few blocks from their Twenty efficers hrom five police departments took part tat the search fOr the children of Mr. and Mrs. William Me-InaOy - Marilyn I, and Donald, 16 - ef 247S IvniAee. The youngsters were reported missing about 1 p.m. yestmlay. Trooper WUIIam St^ of the Pontiac State Police Poet found the pair at 2:30 a.m., sleeping imder amattressinadoll; State Police CpI. Maitland London supervised the search. Police from the sheriff’s. West Bloomfield, Sylvan Lake and Orchard Lake departments as- Birmingham Area News Commission, Troy Eying 1st Step in Setting Border BIRMINGHAM - The dty commirakpns of Birmingham and Troy are expected to lay the groundwork tonight for the possible realignment of their mutual b<»xler. At stake are approximately 10 acres of property in the extreme southwest comer of Troy. The managers of both cities ire to be directed tonight to estimate the net worth of the property. - ★ ★ ★ Although the property is in Troy, it is divided from the rest of the city by the Grand Trunk, Western Railroad right of way. Mostly undeveloped, it lies between Maple and 14 Mile. ‘NOTECON(»aCAL’ lYoy officials maintain that it is not economical for them to provide city services to the property. ’The cost of such services alro would be prdiibitive to any prospective developer of the property, they claim. Birmingham, they say, can provide the services much more economically. Transfer of the property discussed at a j( of the two commissions last week. They met to determine future policy in the wake of a decision by the Birmingham Commission last week to furnish city services to a similar parcel. ★ ★ Birmingham has held to the line that it will not furnish city services to property outside the city limit. The commission a week ago agreed to supply water, sewer, fire, police and general municipal services for a piece of |HY>perty which Michigan Building Components, Inc., plans to develop. The 3V4 acres are at the east end of Cole, mostly in Troy. Birminghnm sdpniated in the agreement thnt Michi- ARRIVES IN COURT - St. Paul attorney T. Eugeme Thompson (right) arrives in a Minneapolis court with his lawyer, Hyam Segell. 'Thompson is charged with first-degree murder in the death of his wife, Carol, 34. She was insured for $1,060,000. Spectators Jam in Room as Ihompson Trial Starts MINNEAPOUS (AP) - Attorney T. Eugene Thompson went to trial today on a first-degree murder charge in an alleged plot of murder for hire and murder - for - i«x)fit in the slaying of his wife, insured for more than a million dollars. . The small Hennepin County District Courtroom was jammed with spectators and prospective jnrors as the trial opened with Jndge Rolf Fos-seen presiding. Only IS spectators at first found seats. A snuli knot of others wanting to hear the case stood in the Ten minutes before court opened at 9 a. m., Thompson slipped quietly into the courtroom via the judge’s chambers. He was discharged from a St. Paul hospital at 6)30 a. m. today after a week’s confinement bfr cause of a respiratory ailment. He looked grave, but gave fleeting smile of recognition now and then to newsmen. Thompson, 35-year-old St. Paul criminal attorney, onetime church elder and trustee, is charged with hiring a go-between to arrange the slaying of liis 34-year-old wife, Carol, the mother of four children. Shortly after Judge Fosseen named three triers to’ settle cases of bias in juror selections, court was recessed for a half-hour while he. huddled with defense and prosecution attorn^. Problems discusaS'^i^ not all necessary steps to annex the property to Birmingham. The transfer of the property from Troy to Birmingham would require a favorable vote of the electorate In both municipalities^ George H. Bosworth H George H. Bosworth II, 58, of 2841 Pembroke died Friday after a brief illness. His body is at the Manley Bailey Funeral Home. An employe of Central Treasure Office of General Motors Corp., Detroit, Mr. Bosworth was also a member of the Nashua, N. H., Lodge, F&AM. Surviving are his wife, C. Verne; a son, George H. lU of Southhampton, England; and three sisters. Richard Maddren Service for Richard Maddren. 81, of 2164 Deering will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Manley Bailey Funeral Home. Burial wUl follow in Pine Lake Cemetery. Mr. Maddren, a retired grocery store owner, died Saturday after a long illness. He was a life member of United Crafts Lodge No. 534, FtAM, and a member of (Chapter No. 477, Order of the Eastern Star. Surviving are two sons, William H. and Richard H., both of West Bloomfield Township; eight grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. U. S. Proceeds on Moon Shot (Continued From Page One) tor of NASA’s manned space-flight programs, said the American moon effort should continue independent of any action the Soviet Union might take. Edward C. Welsh, executive secretary of the National Aeronautics add Space Connell, said the Russians “have sensed some siaefcening of support for the moon program here and have made a strategic move to capitalize on this situation.” The council is a top administration advisory group. President Kennedy in 1961 set as a national goal the landing of a man on the moon in this decade, hopefully before the Soviets do. The cost has been estimated at $20 billion or more. * it k Getting Congress to see things his way has not been easy. * * * The administration asked $5.7 billion for NASA this fiscal year, most of the money to go into the manned spaceflight program. Congress authorized ^.35 billion. TIME HAS COME Now that the time has come to appropriate funds, the House has voted $5.1 billion—a figure NASA officials say is too low. The Senate Appr<^iations Committee has yet to be heard from. Senate Republican leader Everett M. Dirksen of Iliinois Mid he expected congresi-skmai advocates of reduced spending to step up their arguments on the basis of Khrushchev’s remarks. Drop Warning of Tornado in North of State CADILLAC (M warnings were lifted by eariy •noon for five “ ' r Michigan counties, but a forecast remained in effect until 3 p. m. later in the day: A fast-moving storm ripped eastward across the ktate from L^e Michigan where formed waterspouts, (uilashed thunder and li^tning displays, dropped golf baU-sized ball and brought dozens of reporta of funnel clouds. Areo Teen Gets Youth Governor Bid Top honors went to a Waterford Township Hi-Y club member at a preliminary Yough Legislature meeting held at Ann Arbor Saturday. Jan Appel, 17, of 76 S. Avery was Bomlnated as youth governor to represent the southeast district at the aaanal Youth Legislature to be held Dec. 1-7 at Lansing. He was a youth House representative last year and will compete against other boys and girls from three participating districts in Michigan. ★ * ★ Another Waterford Township High School Hi-Y member, Richard Miller was elected sttorney general at the Saturday meeting. Booming U.S. Economy Confounds Pessimists' THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. OCTOBER 28, 196^ THREE WASHINGTON (UPI) -U.S. economy is b TTie today at a pace that must confound some of the pessimists of a few weehs ago. If there Is a recession in the Immediate future, it seems to be wen hidden in the charts— Unes and long columns of numbers which ate pieced together by economists searching for chies to the future. Now Many Wear FALSE TEETH ■ with Mora Cpmlort rovtiurru. s oiMMuit awaline onmtnr*. lust iprlnait a lltUs rao-TBBl'H OD Tuui pittas No sumnijr, fousy. pasty lasu w tssilne. Cbsoks “nlatsjidor tdsDturt brsatb) Ost wuntWta at any dnia sounttr. Right now, just about every-ling seems to be coming up optimism. President Kennedy’s Oouncil of Economic Advisers keynoted the happy theme this week by estimating the Gross National Products (GNP)—the total estimated value of aU goods add serv-ic«8-at IS68.S biUion for the three-month period ended in September. It was the biggest quarterly jump in 21 months. PUMP VIGOR And there are reasons to feel that the forces that fashioned the healthy third quarter will continue pumping vigor into the economy for the remainder of the year and on into 19M. The recession talk that was prevalent as recently as two woeks ago is starting to fade CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY (END-OF-MESS SALE) NO MORE MESSY GARBAGE CAN! NO MORE MESSY TRASH BURNER! CALCINATOR GAS INCINERATOR BURNS GARBAGE AND TRASH WITHOUT SMOKE OR ODOR lOGSY-P-B Special Reduced Prkie for This Sale only$|24^S INSTALLED Installation offer applies only to residential gqs customers,of Consunners , Power Company and does not Include poyment of local permit fees. Through 0 special orrongement with" the Colcinotor foctory, we hove obtained some incir>erators with imperfect finishes. They're in top mechonicol order ond include ^11^.the usual eicdaSive Col- , clndtpr features . . . dt o big sovings. Cpme in and look them over ot your first opportunity. OFFER IS UNITED... BUY NOW AND SAVE! away. The administration still feels that President Kennedy’s Ill-billion ta cot It vitaUy needed, hot there is less emphasis on Its role as an uti^ecessieu device In IBM. The third quarter GNP rocket-ad to a new high mainly because (d spirited consumer and business spending. ★ A W Government studies indicate that continued rising incomes, will help maintain the consumer spending spree for the remainder of 1963. PAY RAISES Two important contributions also are expected from the re^ cently enacted military pay increase and the second stage of a federal civilian pay raiae. Actually, the civilian increase won’t go into effect until early next year. which the industry at that time felt was “tremendous ” The auto industry is one of the train arteries hi the economy. When it is in a robust state, some of its vitality is channeled off to all of the other business charge plates, credit cards and human aatare—will be spead-Jng tt in advance daring the Business s^-ending for new plants and equipment also show signs of staying up, on the basis industry plans outlined six months ago. It probably will not jump as high as the third quarter but it is expected to continue playfaig a vital role in propping up the economy. WWW What about next year? There are two favorable signs that are causing some of the limb-climbers to predict a healthy 19M. BOOM YEAR .The auto industry opened its new model year this monUi with sales repo^ that suggest boom year for car sellers. The first 10 days of the month exceeded the corresponding 1C days in October of last year SINUS Sufferers H..-. ^ Mwt l«r tm I Eackntvt mw STNA-CUM DwMfnUiH takMi to dfito iito »r«wrt •( cmiiUtoii. AHmt jca to biutk* •HHy —ito»t mtin fm i»m» mh. Yw cn toy SYNA-6.CAR al aU Oral Staiaa. ■Mtoa aaad lar a pfawipM. SaBitacitoa ■amtoadtomtor. TiyttodaYl Simim — 91 N. SmImw SiMMS 25 SOUTH Saeinaw Street STORE ^UseFREEUYAWAY X /For Now»d CHRISTMAS Gifts \ / Smart MR. & MRS, I Platform Rockers I Valiut to $59.95^LOOK ■ £. 34“ 38** Sit back, and really relax] I - in these deep, upholstered ^ rockers. Hardwood frame* ^ hogany finish. As shown. Small % deposit holds in free layaway small charge for delivery. DaHy YnSn^TmtTraabTrsiMMs HALLOWEEN C0S1UMES B CANDIES CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY 6.9c. S«t has hPhwIa; draaa, bwida, QAg \ ate. Goycolor. SliMStoS.... \ 5-Pe. S«t dr«a whh ktooda, J h«>d hand, etc Sin 8 only.■ ^OROUPNO^ . Sin small 4 to 6, awdium 8 to 10 ond lorg* 12 to 14. Red Bding Hoo4. / \down, Indion Chief, DeviL etc. V\ lOnd faatoner. GROUP NO. 3^ . Sin smotl 4 to 6, medium 8 to Ip, oi 4«large 12 to 14. Drum Mejorehe, AWonoi J^Sheleton, Cinderella, Devil. All with full . moik and fastener. \GR0UPNd.4 yChoic* of adult lizei or I6-y«ar- W ir sizes. Atsotlsd costumes A Buy Now for CHRISTMAS GIFTS! LIONEL Inventor Sets i Shop Tho Sloro Thai Ohm Tou Moro For TOOB Hard-Eamod BollanI lil PEN TMITE 11111111.111. TUESDAYSTJRMIO^^ m tONITE and TUESDAY ONLY SPECIALS HooroBoo-Bddt ’n Ends Solo QUTCNBURO - Printing Prost sot. Roplica of tho first printing pross. Compioto with bust of Gutofibwrg. EDISON - Tho Eloctrie Light. I IBP Bottbry oporatod roplica of tho lamp invontod by Edison. HERO - Tho Stoom Engino. Moko your own ttoom ongino in tho imago of Horot . and loom. — Tho Toloscepo. Asdomblo your own B-powor toloKopo just os Golliloo did. Compioto. BELL - Tho Tolophono. AAoko it yourtolf with this tot. In-ckidod it tho bust of himsolf. MORSC-Tho Tologioph. Bot-tory oporatod tologroph oot to oond and rocoivo moo- ^ M M. Saginaw -imd Floor Take naner Movies inaeors am I Technicolor 8mm Proeetsinc |9Jt Complete With Fwc^wt. $4.70 voluo - and ing. ASA 2S roting on SO loot reel. (Indoor film is alao available). Realtofie ‘Rambler’ -TRANSISTOR Pocket Radio Buy For CHRISTMAS GIFTS Now. Only Holds In FREE lAYAWAY -TONITE G TUESDAY ONLY SPECIALS CAMERA DEPARTMENT DISCOUNTS Guaranteed By ‘GENERAL ELECTRIC’ flashbulbs 12 $1.56 cation bulbs In press 5-AG1-M2 size. White bulbs by PE. Limit 10 pocks. ' Yalta Yatter Movies Indoors and DISCOUNTS on TRANSISTOR RADIOS 9-V Transidor Radio Battary! f lOor radios. Limit 8. meeaMmmmneoooooeaeaeoaoTeooaaoiO •0000*1 ^ Asiwmwios * Si. 98* MAKE-UP KITS Si. 25* r TRim • THEAT lAOl 3 Sturdy Paper. Kg 7 (Cloth . . ,23c) 9 aWLBNIII'S MASK SSovahM wNh footoaor Ail a PARTTHEBM - Eaoh NOME MAKERS Noise mokers 4|lt and blowOuta - eo. Ill Hffll ifpESwTsunonnSB# a Full lb. ^g. Orongei AAg r ond “block wrapped. fcW , JEUY BEARS Mf lb. bog oronge AflU land black beans. * lAV L ONOeOUTE RAM ^ FvUbagaf20 Aga .bars - 3<; size W NERSNEYamnTLU $1.20 box of 24 QUa candybors mriEs or oMhmt ^59t bog of 20 rnekm g^condy treats . ea anON TREATS Large bog of 160 7K* piacea for III 4 BEWN HUOK PINHI s/fuShogof 101 |Ma Holkmeea traots ENN RRAaHJILBARt . Mbexo(40 "Itja bora for y MlbogofTO 7K0 ^ HoWbiiiieen treats Iw , TRWE or TREATS 88c box of SO AQa' Brodia trick or traoll W ^ LEAF BHAlia ttmt 1 ,100's-opplez, tuckers, am||. bubblegum—eech. |9 ASSaRTEB OAROKS Pound bog Caromalt, 7^' $ouf Boil, Toffee-eo.lg CAROin $19.95 volue - No. 408 recorder Y*«h toke^tp reel. Power Sows 24: ‘SHETLAND’ SBS Rug Shampooing and Floor Polisher Payt for lUetf In One Rug Cleaning 'DOWEL' 7-INCH Compare to $49.95 SeUora As shown—10 amp 'General Electric' motor devMops 1% H.P., boll bearing slip clutch prevents kickbocks, has rip , guide, heavy gouge base plate,, side knob..Rugg^ construction, cool quiet , operation. Mirror finish. $1 holds in ' Simms free layaway. ALAR0Nnk2-TRACK RECORDER 1490 $24.95 volue - portoWe 2 frock, battery oparetod cottier In ielfgram loomed today as the legislature returned for the seventh week of the special tax session. The Repoblican Senate floor leader, Sea. William MUliken, R-Traverse City, saM major floor debate on the income tax centered reform program could take place by mid-week. Key to progress remained the 10-man * legislative committee set up last week to work out with the governor “minimum modifications” on the $306 million program. ★ ★ ★ TTie legislators, five leaders from each house, are supposed to negotiate a program that will develop “maximum Republican support.” KEY FACTS Romney has indicated such key facts as the income tax for individuals, corporations and financial institutions, r e p e a 1 of the business activities and intangibles taxes and exemption of groceries and prescriptions from the 4,per cent sales tax are not negotiable. Items that may be reworked are likely to be ia the property tax relief area, Republican leaders said. The governor’s proposal to provide a 20 per cent across the board property tax relief costing the state $93 million has provoked sharp criticism from Speaker of the House Allison Green, R-Kingston. Democrats have assailed his plans to give the elderly special THIRD IN NATION - Harvey Studt, Michigan's 1963 com combine champion, captured third place in the National Corn Picking Contest last Thursday in Monroe, Wis. Studt of 4710 . Sand Hill, Almont, was less than two points off the grand champion’s pace. He 'piloted his Massey->‘erguson 300 combine to a score of 97.296. Studt, 55, farms 600 acres of corn, oats, wheat and navy beans. He is shown here completing a run down one row of corn. Area Youngsters Will Hear Naturalist Lecture Series Thousands of youngsters will discover some of nature’s wonders this fall when naturalists of the Huron-Clinton Metropolitan Authority visit their schools. The authority will begin its annual five-month lecture series Friday. Some of the creatures the i boys and girls will be learning' about include the marsh bird called “The Least Bittern,” the great homed owl and the saucy • red squirrel. ★ * ♦ Through illustrated slides and film, they will also learn about forests, marshes, animals, birds, insects and rocks. LECTURERS READY j William F. Hopkins, chief naturalist, pointed out that Author-' ity naturalists are available to; give lectures on topics of natural ; science at schools in Livingston, ; Macomb, Oakland, Washtenaw and Wayne counties from Nov. 1 through March 31. Over 65,000 youngsters in the five-county area participated in the lecture program last year compared to over 41,000 in 1961-62, 39,000 in 1960-61, and 17,000 in 195940. This free service may be obtained by contacting the Huron-Clinton Metropolitan Authority, 1750 Guardian Building, Detroit ' (48226) and requesting an application form. ★ ♦ A I Appointments require several weeks advance, notice and each , school can be visited only one ; day each year and naturalists -•’prefer to talk to auditorium groups, but can provide up to • four lectures on a single day if Polio Clinic is Set at Dublin School a divided student body is necessary. Most lectures are designed for boys and girls in grade 3 through 12 and cover 45 minutes, but 30-minute programs are also available for youngsters in the kindergarten, first and second grades. Wildlife and Michigan natural resources are stressed and many photographs were taken at Kensington Metropolitan Park near Milford. Traveling the lecture trail this season are Huron-Clinton naturalists Richard A. Mortemore and Hopkins. Faulty Chute Is Blamed in Death of State Skydiver TECUMSEH (UPI) - The blame of the death of a veteran kydiver Oct. 20 was placed today on an improperly altered parachute. ♦ * ★ The accident claimed the life of Marion J. (Jack) Wallace Jr., 36, Ypsilanti. Robert McTaggart, Dearborn, area safety officer for the Parachute Club of America, said tests made at Meyers airport showed that Wallace’s chute had been improperly altered. Officials also said Wallace had traded chutes with Fred Miller, Wyandotte, before making the jump. # * ♦ Miller, recently discharged from the Marine Corps, said he purchased the parachute from another Marine at El Toro, Calif., Air Base. GAVE AWAY CHUTE i Wallace had volunteered to make the trade because Miller, a novice, nee|^ a chute that could be attached to a static line in the plane. Tests of the parachute were made Saturday. John Monney- ham, Manchester, president of the Jackson Parachute Chib and a ni aster rigger, said after watching a test jump, “The actual cause of Wallace’s death was due to the fault of an improper modification by a probable ‘bootleg rigger.’ ” He said a bootleg rigger was one that did not have federal approval for making modifications of parachutes for skydiving. State Weekend Road Toll 21 homestead tax relief through acceptance of a lien that would be paid off by their heirs. RESUME HEARINGS The Senate Appropriations Committee was due to resume hearings today on the income taxbUl. The measure was-sent to the l$-man appropriations c o m-mittee last week after Democrats and some Republicans balked at a bipartisan maneuver that had seen all 61 tax bills dumped on the chamber floor without amendment. Sen. Garland Lane, D-Flint, indicated over the weekend that a key question many of his party members will want answered befwe giving support to any tax program is how great a surplus will the state accrue in the current fiscal year. ★ * ★ ' When Romney was designing the tax program he said the surplus was expected to run about $13 million over the $550-milllon general fund budget. Now revenue department officials and State (Controller Glenn Allen claim it will be at least enough to wipe out the state’s remaining $22 million deficit. Zoning Battle in Rochester ROCHESTER -Xt least 20 people here don’t like Village (Council plans for rezoning Walnut for office use. They will say so —in writing — at tonight’s public hearing on a new zoning ordinance. A spokesman for the petition signers, all owners of property Walnut, today issued a plea to the people of Rochester to attend tonight’s session. . * ★ * lack in March, we submitted a petition like the one re’ll turn in tonight,” he said, and it has been ignored. What we’re after now is to get people out in force to express their opinion.” SET TONIGHT ■TTie public hearing, second reading and possible adoption of thtf'controversial new zoning ordinance is scheduled tonight. Although the meeting starts at 7:30 p.m., the spokesman urged interested persons to arrive at 7 p.m. to avoid being late. After more than a year’s study of the code and the revision of several portions of it, the council has kept the clause whldi calls for rezoning of Walnut for office use. It is presently zoned for business. * * * TTiroughout the lengthy consideration of the ordinance, Walnut residents have argued that the street should not be rezoned to the “highly restrictive category.” PLANNER CONTEND However Village Planner Vil-ican - Leman & Associates of Southfield contend the street as an office area will serve as a buffer between housing and the central business district. WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP-The first three polio clinics^ planned for this year at Dublin School will be held tomorrow. CMdren and adults can be immunized at the clinic, scheduled for noon-1 p.m. and 6-8 p.m. Booster shots also will be given. CTiildren must be accompanied by parents. Nominal fees will be paid at the clinic, sponsored l>y the Dublin PTA. Barn Flames Spread to Surrounding Woods WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP -A ifire which destroyed a bam here spread to the surrounding wooded area, keeping local firemen busy for almost three hours yesterday. * The bam, at 400 Bogie Lake, was owned by Roy Farreli of White Lake Road, Highland Township. Financial loss has not been estimated. [CW HALLOWEEN SALE NO PAYMENT TILL '64 QucHtf cannot bn toSind in. b miNl bn boik in. To bwU qnolily cnqwirni plonli, nqvipmonl ond obono oH o tnom of oxpnrimicnd and dndicaind crohHiwn. QwoUly a o 63-ynor«ld iradbioa at CUtTIS MATHES. CIMPME a *400” OB MORE • 23‘’->a3.OO0 VOLT NAND-WIIUD TV CHASSIS • GENUINE WALNUT CAIINET • AM-EM RADIO-9-TUOE • 4 MATCHED STEREO SPEAKERS • 4-SPEED STEREO CHANGER WITH SAPPHIRE STYLUS l-YEM WAMUNTT ALL PARn - N DAYS SERVICE FREE DELIVERY AND SET4IP WE DONT JUST DELIVER YOUR SET! Wf . . . cbndi not n«n-erated at a deficit in 26 of the last 32 years. "Movie Producer Praises Voorheis" **Finest Dry Cleaning and Finishing Anywhere* (Clothes were from: Custom Shop Shirtmokers, 5th Ave., N.Y.; Crips Importers and Cuzzemi, Fowntoinbleou, Miomi, Custom Casualoire, Los Vegas.) THAT'S WHY MOBE uti MOIE PEOPIE ACCLAIM tilt BETTEB pgAUTT of OUB_ laaiimiiiiJiMiiifmMiinii Voorheis Dry Cleaning plant is under •he supervision of a former instruct , and a graduate Dry Cleaner who has had \ years of professional experience. ^ FABRICS WEAR LONGER ^ LOOK BETTER LONGER . . so you Saife Money! CLEANED and FINISHED Plain Skirts and 49 VOORHEIS “1-Hour” Cleaners THE PROFESSIONAL DRY-CLEANERS Plant: 4160 W. Waken at Sailiahaw. Drayton Plaint LYNN JEWELERS IS GOING OUT OF BUSINESS! SAVE 50% and Even More! BIG REDUCTIONS on PORTABLE TVs TV WHh 8” Screen RtgMiar 12I.H $3588 Heiorola PsriaUt TVWtthlV’Seratn Refular 18I.M *129" toPwtaU. TV WNh 18” Screen R8|urar^1ll.fl $0088 Ztnith Poriabit TV With 19” Screen Rafular 1II.I8 SAMSONITE “Sentry” Luaiage UtOIES’... Tote Bac COO Regular 19.95■ Iv Train Cate ta'iM .. O’nita Cate Regular 19.95.. Wardrobe Regular 32.95 .. 26” Pirilman Regular 32.95.. $1500 2475 $2475 MEN'S . . . 21” Companion $| COO Regular 19.95... Ill TWo-Suiter $9^75 Regular 32.95... .•ZS” Regular Three-Suiter Regular 34.95 • BRASS 2-Ball ALARM CLOCK $1.88 • Travel Alarm $1.88 • 40-Hr. Alarm $1.88 RM aae FM soaRd. ZENITH CLOCK RADIO - Rsg. 29.95 • aECTRIG AURM CLOCK 80 JClfH/l JEWELERS ONE SOUTH SAGINAW ST. Open ToiOgAe *TU 9 NOW ONLY 18“ Shop Tonimitt. Thnraday. Friday and gatnrdwy Nights till 9 Open a Waite’s Charge Account-See How Easy Shopping Can Be! COAT SALE! OUR ENTIRE STOOt OF GIRLS’ SIZES 5-14 COATS ON SALE AT TONIGHT AND TUESDAY ONLY • Sizes 5 to 14, also coot sots in titat 2 to 4 a 100% wools, tuadat, wida wola corduroy, cotton poplin, Orion acrylic pilo o Somo hovo fur trims; quilt or pila tinad Charge Her$ at Waite’s . .. Second Floor AUTOAAATIC WEST BEND 12-30 CUP PARTY PERK Shop and com par* >944 Just pour In cold water, odd coffee and plug it ini A light glows when it:, done . . . and it keeps coffee serving hot . . . outomoticollyl Finger-tip pouring control. Note that low pricel Housouaret... Lower Level Phone FE 4-2S11 Several colors and patterns in VIRGIN WOOL PLAIDS > j-H ( Sheer Wool Jumpers Slim and gored skirt sheer wool flannel jumpers in black, cranberry or grey. All hove 0 taffeta lined bodice, style shown has "boffon hole" pockets. By Colby Classics in sizes 12 to 20, 12Vb to 22%. Daytime Dresses . • . Third Floor *11” 9 Colors in Imported Wool SHETUND CARDIGANS R.g. 5.W *5 Very nice 100% impprted wool cardigans with ribbonfaced buttonholes. Sizes 36 to 40 in white, beige, blue, red, grey, cornel, brown, green or black. Sportsteear •. • Third Floor Excitingl Fun For All Ages! RealisticI FAMOUS AAARX ROAD RACE SET You won't find this model anywhere but Waite's In Pontiac! A small depesit plocos in layaway Hera'i actlen-pack.d .xcHwnwe for all ogMUach cor ho. a Mporal. control end con b. himcM up to pOM, dowwt down to ovoid .pinning out on Ih. curvM. Two rwliPtc rood r«c. con, Irock, tTMti*. lop counlv. WaUo’sToyt.,,FifikFloor FhosmFE44Sn \ ' - ^ '■ X/. THE PONTIAC PRESS Pontiac, Michigan 48 West Huron Street MkBUiDi Bdltor MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1963 JOHN W. FmonAiB Vlct PreildcDt tod Editor JOHN A. RILIT Bccretarr ond AdvertUlnt Director It Seems to Me — Barry Leading Candidates for ’64 Presidential Primary With our national election just a shade over a year away and the nominating conventions much closer, the political pot is simmering merrily. The position of the front runner is not always an envious political spot, although sometimes it pays off handsomely. At the moment there is no question over the leader. It’s Barry Goldwater. ★ ★ ★ Gov. Rockefeller topped the parade for months, but the Westerner has “come on” rapidly and has passed the New Yorker in the picture today. Talks with publishers around the Nation disclose a rather general unanimity in regard to Goldwa-ter’s leadership. One of the best-known newspapermen in the South told me that if the vote were taken today, Goldwater would sweep Dixie. This means a Republican would be invading sacred precincts that never knew this strange master before. It seems incredible. ★ ★ ★ He bases his impression on the fact the Southern Democrats arc ready to repudiate John F. Kennedy and they ftfid Barry Goldwater as the most acceptable substitute. They prefer him to Rockefeller, whose philosophies are close to Kennedy’s. “Rocky” Is losing ground in the East. He is, still a likely candidate In those sections because of geography, but he isn’t meeting with as great favor among the very important neutral voters as he did. The handicap of his second marriage is lessening and may disappear by the time of the national convention, but it can always bob up to plague him at Inopportune moments. ★ ★ ★ One group of veteran Republicans says Goldwater is sound on domestic issues but too impulsive on foreign affairs. However, the Arizona Senator is steadily adding stature to his image. ★ ★ ★ Gov. Scranton of Pennsylvania never .quite disappears from the picture, but he is far from a contender. Our own George Romney possesses even greater popular acceptance. But the Michigander announced at the outset the governorship here could never be converted to a sound basis in a single two-year term. Happenings prove the truth. ★ ★ ★ Many of Romney’s best friends would rather see him available In 1668. If Kennedy is reelected, the Democratic party will have to produce a new man then, and re-election Is traditionally easier than making it the first time. ★ ★ ★ And always over there in the deepening shadows is the silent but formidable figure of Richard Nixon. As long as the tumult and the shouting fill the air, he >«’ill remain where he Is. But if the front runners collapse, or if they become hopelessly deadlocked, Mr. Nixon is probably available, and he remains a man of stature and achievement. And there you are — up to now. A comparable 19-inch model here sells for $170. Our engineers say it’s equipped with “captive chan-nel.s,” which means only the specific stations the Russian government controls can be received. ★ ★ ★ And this is from the home of the Khrushchev nincompoops who claim to be outdoing us in everything. Ahead of Us?.... The latest model 1963 Russian TV has Just been dissected by U.8. engineers. ★ ★ ★ It's about comparable with our modeta of 1953. The thing is 17 inchcn and nella for $360 (U. 8,). Inquiries.... Several people have written about the wheat situation. One asks: “Why don’t we convert the wheat to flour? ’This would avoid some of the subsidy and put a little more employment here at home.” Why don’t we? Well, it’s too sensible. ★ ★ ★ Another ''suggests our payments be made in gold and thus bolster our dwindling gold reserves. Otherwise the Soviet government will take credit for having “raised it.” The wheat question is a big one and can fall into avaricious or incompetent hands unless it is carefully guarded. Another terse letter says: “If the Reds can’t raise enough to feed themselves with all those acres, let ’em starve. They would us.” I challenge the first — but not the second. And in Conclusion.... Jottings from the well-thumbed notebook of your peripatetic reporter; By 1969, Pan American will be flying you 1,450 miles an hour, and within a short decade at 2,250 m.p.h. Even as it is, I left Germany after lunch and had dinner between New York and Detroit.........Ludwig Erhard, West Germany’s new chancellor, greeted the'Olympic group in Baden-Baden as his first official duty. Reputedly, he is a stout foe of communism.............Over- heard : “My new secretary is pretty wonderful, but she’s clockeyed.” ★ ★ ★ 1 can't prove it, but I’ll bet a sugar cookie you don’t know the all-time 500-mi|e speed record is held by a 1962 Pontiac and was set at 152.529 m. p. h. at Daytona.... ......................I hereby n o m inate our Jutta, Ger-m a n transla-; tor, as an especially attrac-Jutta tive young lady. She was our interpreter in Baden-Baden, and you’d be surprised how many times the (male) delegates needed her assistance...........When you get cigarettes from a machine at Columbia University, you also get a low-pressure sermon against smoking......... Twoi local residents complained of me junk mall. A good rule: If is isn’t important enough for the sender to pay first-class postage, it isn’t important enough to open. Authorities are alarmed at the tremendous leap in mall order flir-arms in Alabama. > Purchases have spurted all over the Nation. ...... Officials believe the biggest cause of traffic accidents is switching from one lane to another without u sing the flasher. Wlodzimorz Reczkk, Olympic delegate from Poland, and I rode 100 miles into Voice of the People: ‘Man Identified as Rupist Was Out of Jail op Bond’ The Season For It! David Lawrence Says: Russ Quit Moon in Penny Pinch WASHINGTON - Dollars and sense — with a capital “S” in that third word — applies as a slogan of national policy in the Soviet Union, too. For it’s the principal reason why Premier Khrushchev has called off thel race to thel moon. The Rus-| sians simply , haven’t got the LAWRENCE money for the contest and, it the Americans want to go broke on such an adventure, Moscow wishes them “success.” It should have been no surprise to official Washington to read that the Russians have taken themselves out of the moon race. The State Department had more than an inkling of it some time ago. * * * In fact, that’s why President Kennedy politely proposed a joint effort to go to the moon,, knowing full well that it would publicize American willingness to cooperate with the Soviets a#l would furnish a convenient setting for either side to wiggle out of or slow down the moon race. Intelligence sources available to our European allies, plus information gathered by diplomatic observers, several weeks ago prompted the conclusion that Premier Khrusk-cheV was up against i serkras dilemma in hit spending policies. He doesn’t have an opposition political party, nor does he have the' advice of any constructive critics, such as President Kennedy has in Sen. Harry Byrd. D-Va., chairman of the Senate Finance Committee. ECONOMIC PROBLEM But tt>e Soviet chieftain has been struggling for several months now with an economic problem that no censorship or technique of “managed news” has been able to hide from the outside world. As for internal poUtkal turbulence — dne to the economic distress of the Soviet people — the danger always is element in on the discontent and upset the men in the Kremlin. So caution and quick changes to satisfy public sentinwnt became urgent. ’The basic ingredients of depression in Russia are easy to recognize. ’The agricultural situation is bad. It has led to an ignominious maneuver—the decision to purchase |2S0 million worth of wheat from the United States. It’s a case of sense finally emerging at the top, whether it be in spending dollars or rubles. First things come first, and a trip to the moon isn’t in the cards for either country for many years in the future. Bob Considine Says: Age of Supersonic Flight Is Coming Quite Casuallu NEW YORK -One of these y^ars, almost before you know it, you’jl be accepting supersonic passenger planes as casually as you now step into 600-m.p.h. jets. ’Three American companies already have them on order: Pan Am, ’TWA and Continental. Nothing will stand in the way, including oost. At the time of Pearl Harbor, the standard carrier of that day, the D03, cost 8100,000. Today’s jets are tagged at 86 million. Tomorrow’s supersonic job will run about 815 million. Seems hard to believe that only a comparatively short time ago there were serious doubts expressed as to whether man would ever be able to fly faster than the speed of sound in a winged craft. One of the De Havilands, test-piloting a British jet designed to fly faster than mach 1, was incinerated with his aircraft as It reached the sound barrier. An observer on the ground far below likened the spectacle to a ‘ k i t c h e n match being scratched acrdss a hot stove lid. Sgt. Edison T. Blair of ’Die Airman, official journal of the Air Force, speaks of bursting from Los Angeles to New York in 2 hours and 56 seconds, refueled over the odean off New York, and flew back to L.A. in 2 hours, IS minutes and 40 seconds. The time for the round-trip transcontinental flight was 4 hours, 41 minutes and 11 seconds, inclnding nearly half an hour needed for the refuelings. A year earlier, another B-58 flew from New York to Paris in 3 hours and IS minutes on the S4th anniversary of Lindbergh’s crossing in 1827. ’That was 10 times faster than U.e Spirit of St. Louis’ time. We have a man in our community, who was out of jail on bond, that has been identified by two women as the party who assaulted and raped them. ★ ★ ★ It took police departments working as a team to catch him and yet in less than ten days our laws allowed him to roam the streets again. ★ ★ ★ No civilized American wants backyard justice, why is it necessary to protect our homes? Disgust^ Favors Legislation of Censorship Albert L. Hoover, U.S. Army, in his letter of Oct. 13 fem that censorship legislation might “deny our people one of the mfst^rdS righto: the right of free choice.” Actoally, no one has a^complete right of free choice. Under the our democracy” each individual must accept responsibility for the welfare of his community and country. ★ ★ ★ I was once in a country where pornographic pictures were displayed for sale in the windows of a store. Any i»rson had the “right ” to purchase them. This freedom, I hope, win always be censored by legislation in Pontiac. There are many individuals who are near the ^<>«on®[hne of becoming murderers, sadists or rapists. Films, TV and books have the power to shove them over the precipice. ★ ★ ★ I asked my pastor about the request of the pastors association to the City Commission. This was not printed verbatim m this newspaper. The tone and message of that carefully worded re-questhas been misunderstood. I personally approve of the leglsU-tion of morals in the criminal field, in civil righto, in business and in entertainment. » , u ______ George A. Luenberger 409 E. Tennyson ... (Editor’s Note: A policy of using verbatim reports is impossible due to the usual length of such stotements. Ministers we contacted were satisfied with the article.) Give Views on Waterford Incorporation Hie committee for Waterford’s incorporation has been giving one-sided facto. Letter writer “One Who Checked the Facto” to either misled or to without all the facto. ★ ★ ★ He states “aa a city, we will have an estimated budget of 8456,000 for the maintenance, building and repair of our roads, from gaaoline and weight tax.” The 8456,000 estimate to about right, but the amount of return from these taxes will be about $262,000. Is be planning to donate the remaining $184,000? He itetes that we wfll be just aubstitutfaig a mayw tor a supervisor and commtosionera for beard members. What about toe city manager, attorney, aaaitatiM department, new city hall wito courthouse facilities aad full-time police and fire departmeuto? A large portion of people in the township are young and stlU raisi^ families. ’iW lays claim to about 80 per cent of our taxes for schools and expaiwions. ’These taxes will continue and possibly ;|toe untiivthere Is kveling off of population and school demands. ★ ★ ★ Some day, Waterford will be a great city but at present we must ^ve priority to our neeessities. We can have another seven years of good low-cost township government before we should decide for city government. Liked to Be Called ‘Suburbanite’ ‘State Offers Good Hunting, Fishing’ Why to it that hunters and fishermen get their game in Canada and brag about it, but pever mention the expense involved? We have good hunting and -fishing in Michigan. Joe’s Lake to a good lake for pike/ bass, large perch and blue-gill that’s out of this world. Joe Spehart Waterford CONSIDINB Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Economizers Christian Science Monitor This latest space economy drive may be more a reactioh to recent developments than due to a careful weighing of longterm factors. Momentarily, the sense of space competition with the Soviets may have relaxed. In addition, NASA’s critictonns of defective equi|»nent have raised suspicions of waste, although they were more a call for exceptional standards than a charge of bungling. ■k ■k -k We sympathize with those who let. Any changes now made in these due to a budget slow down would be costly. He judges it would really be cheaper in toe long run to go ahead wHh the program as it stoadi. Granting NASA’s self-interest, such warnings nevertheless should be heeded. Peekh. ' . . the fund RlOSt CCrtalnlv to an Baden-Baden on the German autobahn at better than 90 miles an hour. Every driver that moved a single lane flashed his intentions. . .......... Here’s another nominee for the Dubious Drivers’ Division : the stupid oaf that started out Lawrence Street the wrong way and who was flagged down by a very courteous officer. The nincompoop? . . . . . Dept, of Cheers and Jeers; the C’s — that marvelous U.S. airlift; the J’s — treatment of Adlai Stevenson in Dallas. —Harold A. FTtzgerald . task akin to developing enough leg power to be able to run 100 yards in 10 seconds through hip-deepwater. DOZEN TYPES We’ve now produced about a dozen types of fighters that have no difficulty plunging through the sound barrio- and, beyond that, developing spe^s up to and a bit beyond twice the velocity of sound. Our one supersonic bomber, toe B-58 Hustler, which to no longer in produettou, contiu-ues to make news and beckon toe way to passenger flight toat wiir be as advMCOd over today’s stoadardt as toe enr-reat jet traasports ootdto-toaced the DC-Ti and the Caa-steilatioas. Some of the things the B-58 has done give an inUing to stoat the super^c airliner will dp. * ★ ★ On March 5. 1982, a fjew The Boscobel fWia.) Dial within sensible bounds. But Senators should think through the long-range consequences before jx, you pick up hitchhikers? agreeing to the cut made by the some people do, but one to al-House. ways taking a chance. la this, toe first year toat toe United States (toagress seems determined to cut toe space budget, foresight and cautkm are hi erder. ^The National Aeronautics and Space Administration had asked for about $5.7. billion for fiscal 1963-64. It to prepared 4o live with the lower amount that has been authortoed. A motorist traveling toward Prairie du Ghlen saw a little 14-year-okl boy hiking along the road and gave him a lift. The youngster had a loaded revolver and tried to seU it to the driver. Suspicious the car owner stopp^ at a filling station and called police, who took the youth into custody. It turned out that he was an escapee from Elgin, 111., state hospiUl. He But in the opjj^ of NASA^ had been sentenced jw hreak-Administrator James E. Webb, ing and entering and his record the further cut now voted by showed suicidal tendencies, the House would stretch out tlw lunar landing program by two to three years. Dr. Georgs E. Mueller^ NASA’s space fUgbt chief, also pointed out that 78 per omit of the lunar contraett have been But toe real shocker ec-corred after toe bey had been takea back to ItUaeis. Sheriff Harry Shedivy feand three head - crafted daggers the yeuto kad made and Uddeu away ia hb cell. They were the fund most certainly to an impressive demonstration of community spirit and teamwork. k k k The industrial development' fund to a well eonceived effort to expaad toe community’s economic future. ★ ★ ★ It was a great success. Let’s resolve that the United Fund campaign will be another success. It will be if each of us does htofair share. Th* AsMclaM Pm> It witltiw (x«lvilv(hr to tor rtmett c«li«it of all local nawt printod in ♦hh nawipapar at tnll at all AP ntwi diipatclita. Tht Pontiac Pratt It dallvered by carritr tor M ctntt a wtoki wliart malM In Oakland, Cantttt, Llv-tosahn. Macomto Lauar and -----------—, •MMt Oi.W a yaor. AH mall.tnb-oorto^ poyWito M advanot. Pttiiii ft tmm paid at Hia tod / THF POVTTAC PRESS. MONDAY. OCTOBER 28, 1963 SEVEN Dem Senators Hit Medicare Say Kerr-Mills Plan Doesn't Meet Needs WASHINGTON (DPO - Eight Democratic senators today attacked the Kor-Mills medical care program on its third anniversary as “ineffective” in . meeting the health needs (d the nation’s 18 million elder citizens’ The highly critical majority report issued by the Senate Health subcommittee on aging said less than 1 per cent of the country’s elderly persons received aid under the program and most recipients were subjected to “degrading” welfare tests to becoine The report was a frank effort to push President Kennedy’s long-stalled plan for health care for the aged financed through Social Security. This measure b in the House Ways and Means Committee with no chance for action this year. GOP CHAULENGES Three Republican members of the Senate subcommittee challenged the majesty report’s conclusions that the Kerr-MUls program represented an “ineffective and piecemeal” approach to the problem. They called the report a “premature Judgment based on inadequate evidence.” ’They also accused the Kennedy administration of deliberately failing to imfriement Kerr-Mills. The only explanatory material put out by the Health, Education and Welfare Department to help the states, the Republicans said, consisted of tlu-ee documents prepared during the Ei-senhowa- administration. ’The Kerr-Mills program enacted by Congress in October 1960 created for the first time a new category of public assistance — Medi(^ Assistance for the Aged. MATCHING FUNDS It provides matching federal grants to the states for health benefits for the “medically indigent,” or persons over 65 who are not on relief but are too poor to bear the burden of costly medical bills. Rje majority report said ohljr 28 of the SO states had joined the program, hence it was far from a national plan to help the aged. 8 Quakes Reported in California Area PASADENA, Calif. (AP)-Eight earthquakes — centered about 180 miles from Pasadena —were recorded at the Califw-nia Institute of Technology, and a seismologist says they were strong enough to cause damage in populated areas. Dr. Charles Richter, director of the Cai Tech Seismological Laboratmy said it was possible the quakes, which were recorded early Sunday, were jcentered off the coast qr in a remote Richter said there were at least 20 other smaller tremors. No damage was reported. Cultured pearls grow as big as marbles off the coast of Western Austrlaia. WHY THEY CMHT mrop YAWHuno m YOUHOBTOWH TlwyV* bored. So wooM rpw bo. TMob M bowea lo B«o (N yoo con bo happy you’re bi McMum. whore the tun end eheer doUoM of CASK WINES & CASK Here they are ... the party goers! 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Sizes 32 to ^ ^ 38B and 32 to 40C. eVERY FASHION NEEDS ITS OWN FOUNDATION ... fat our oxportly trained eortatiarai fH you tor the utmost in comfort and figuro flaltory. DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS EIGHT THIS. PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. OCTOBER 28. 1068 JFK Jr. in 1st Trip to Church MIDDLEBURG. Va. W -John F. Kennedy Jr. has passed his first church service with flying colors. He may be restless, but he doesn’t have to be sound-proofed. The Presideet's son, who will be I next month, was pul to the test Sunday at SI. Stephen the Martyr Roman Catholic Church. Dressed in a fuzzy white sweater, white blouse and pumpkin-colored trousers, he came, equipped with a couple of picture bwks. By JACK BELL AP PoUtieal Writer WASHINGTON Presidentr Kennedy reportedly sees a parallel between Sen. Barry Gold-water's political situation today and his own four years ago. Kennedy has told rece^ White House visitors he thipks Gold-water is In about the same position with regard to the Republican nomination as he himself was In relation to the 1960 Denk ocratic nomination before the" presidential primaries. The President was said to have compared the opposition he faced then in Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, D-Minn., with that Goldwater confronts today in New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller. At first John was on his mother’s right. Soon he was crawling across her knees. Once he talked out loud and got shushed. STOOD UP Once or twice he stood up in the pew. Several times he turned around for a good look at his neighbors. He talked to his mother in a wliisper. Two-thirds of the way through the 35-minute service, John got a little warm. His mother pulled off his sweater, then smoothed his hair. Although John’s sister Caroline, 6 next month, is a veteran of church services, the restless fever bit her too. NOTICI OP PUSLIC HEAUINO Noti» )t h*nw flvan of • Mhodi public hewing to be hoW by iho Pon Township zoning SoorO M the Town WM Opoyke good, Ahongov, all. vember m, iMl. ot 7N p.m. «o consider the following oppllcollon lor re-zoning: To Cheng* from U-l to C-I: Pen of NW V, bog of gl om I W 4M.03 It from Inlertsctlon of c- line of Mf. Clemens Rood ond Opdykr Roed; fh $ If 14' E 3*0 ft fo pi of beg. thSWM'ElWffSVl*' Ih S I' W 300 H, Ih W W W 150 ft, th N r J6' E 300 tt to beg. This property Is in beck of King's Motel. Persons Interested sre requested to be present. A copy of the zoning mop end the proposed chenge Is on III* In th* office of th* TosmshIp Clerk end moy CLAUDE ARNETT JR. GRETA V. BLOCK Clerk October 11 end M, 11*3 Tense Nerves Block Bowels ir docwn. ItemltT Odlowap roUevti eobotipoiion omniffat. You feel greet 1 Oct clioicetly-proTod COLQMAD today. IWrodKOorr ribo 41d Burial Insurance Sold by Mail Barry's Situation Like JFK's The President’s analysis was that Humphrey had no.^ real chance to get the nomination but was in a position to kill off Kennedy’s chances if he could win some important primaries. Similarly, he was quoted as saying that Rockefeller could damage Goldwater greatly. NO QUARREL Asked about these reports, Goldwater reminded that he is not an announced candidate, as Kennedy was in 1960. But the Arizonan said he had nq particular reason to quarrel with Kennedy’s purported analysis. "I have never discounted Gov. Rockefeller as a possible opponent," Goldwater said. "I think he will give a good account of himself if he enters the primar- Humphrey said in a separate Interview he agrees with tte President’s views as reported to him. think that’s probably right,” he said. "Rockefeller may not be able to get the nomination but he could do Goldwater a lot of damage.” Administration strategists do not take lightly the prospect of a Kennedy-Goldwater race. Most of them say privately that Goldwater would run more strongly In the already rebellious South than any other Republican. They think he would be tough in the border states, the Midwest and the Rocky Mountain states. les." ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Rocky Back Foe? Depends on Plank But they believe a Goldwater candidacy would solidiify labor and minority blocs behind the President. ’Ihey think they could win such an electioi contest in NEW YORK (AP)-Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller held out a big “If" when asked whether he would support Barry Goldwater if the Arizona senator was the 1964 Republican presidential nominee. Yes, said Rockefeller in a television interview Sunday, hi would support Goldwater if he ran on a Republican party platform like the om of 1960. That platform contained several liberal planka. Rockefeller, who says he will announce his oWn intentions toward the GOP standard-bearer role early next month, played a part in drafting the 1960 platform. Richard M. Nixon ran unsuccessfully for the presidency on that platform. And, Rockefeller said on the program Sunday, Nixon talks as if he is going to be a candidate again next year, despite the former vice president's denials. . . . You may be qualitied for 31.000 life insurance ... so you: will not burden your loved ones with funeral and other expenses. This NKW policy is especially helpful to those between 40 and 90. No medical examination necessary. OLD LINE LEGAL RESERVE LU'E INSURANCE. ... No agent will call on you. Free information, no obligation. Tear out this ad right now. . . . .Send your name, iiddresi and year of birth to: Central Security Life Insurance Co.. IJept. P-W58, 1418 West Rosedaie, Fort Worth 4, Texas. DIVORCE INFLUENCE? Moderator Howard K. Smith told Rockefeller that many people believe the governor’s remarriage to a divorced mother of four has been the main factor in reducing his standing “from way up on top of the opinion polls to down toward the bottom." “Yet now,’’ Smith said, “conservatives are saying, ‘Well, that’s not so, that hasn’t influenced much votes and much thought. What matters is that people never did like what Rockefeller stood for, they like Gold-water, and now for the first time they see a chance and they are going for Goldwater,’ What do you think of it?” Rockefeller answered: “Well, j I think it’s true of the ultracon- servatives, or what I call the radical ri^t group, I think they have fek that way and it has given them a go^ excuse to come out aggressively into the open” The governor did not elaborate. But he said he agreed with ^ Finish HIGH SCHOOL ^ AT HOME-IN YOUR SPARE TIME *600 AS LOW AS SEND FOR FREE BOOKLET PER MONTH AMKRICeX M IIIMM. FKIIIUeh* AU-« P«H>. Mlrhio.n Veil IB* veer FRF.l; 39-Pe*- lliel, lome • SIDniG • DOBMEBS • ATTICS • BEC. BOONS • ADDinOHS oGUmBS Hygrade's-Ball Park FBANKS*Sa« EXAMPLE SILLS RIMODfLtNG HOUSI SAL. $7,000 PEOPLE'S FOOD MARKETS FOOD TOWN SUPER MARKETS BOMAFIDE IMPaOVEMBNT S INVUTMXNT CO. | |__________________________ 15 W. Uwrenee Sf. Pontioe, Mich, t tiiMp I 4I8LPKEST. I TMMMHtr. | IN MNMIB LAKE MTI | ism aMdMi a*t. I I m wminiiiA I I MpguNOdn H <*e****^*»«»*H Q>*r*w»*w** H. owNSuwowtiei ^ ewiigdimwg H ohmiundaw H OPIWSOwoay THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. OCTOBER 28. 1968 NINE NfW Yort dty’i poital qrs-l Mak Uoni wdgb up to MO tern hudlM olrnort 10 per c«it pounds - alnmt twice M mu^ of the natkxi'i meU. | u their mates. Cut your ironing time in half WITH A NEW lronrne*^:SKfr Junior Editors Quli on- Fots to Honor JFK / Moxico Plant Roods Btfors Philly Rally PHILADELPHIA (AP)^ President Kennedy will' be the guest of honor et a cocktail party and reception Wednesday just before his appearance'at a •dieduled politics^ rally, Rep. William J. Green Jr., D-Pa., announced Sunday. ★ ★ ★ The President is scheduled to address a $10(Mlollar-a-pIate Democratic dinner in support of Mayor James H. J. Tate, who is seeking a full four-year term. About 5,000 persons are expect-! eti to attend. MEXICO CITY (AP) - Mexico will easily reach its goal of having M,17S mUes of all-weatb-er highways by the end of 1064, i the minister of n^c works predicted. He said this will in-chide 21,748 miles of paved highway. I I ITCHING Toituii StoppedliksMagic Htn’t biMnS itlM fMwi Mitoiw af Titiptl SS. iKttl h^, duliw. (ad KMM WHO an ifflanng new KitouSc l•cnlUI> ulltd LANACANE. Thil fiM-actinf, Hii» ItM OMdktitd cniM kilit ktfmtui hiCNrIi ■tmii while It MochM raw, Itrhaiad and toSam^ ritia tiMua, Siofa acraichina—le, waadiiiaaliiig, ppnltaSaataMhtrailnuta. ONUMSOra Hda^ MORE MONEY? NOW WE CAN LEND YOU UP TO »1000 See US to arrange o consolidation of your bills into one monthly payment of your choice. Get cosh to meet present needs or purchases. Arrangements nsoy be qukhly mode by a visit to our office or 0 phone coll to FE 2-9206. OAKLAND LOAN CO. in PmH.c IIM. laak aUf. FII«M Heurtt 9:30 to 5i30-Satuiday 9:30 to 1 tOO UYAWAY NOW FOR CHRISTMASI SMALL DEPOSIT WILL HOLD 2 Yean to Pay! • 90 Day» Same as Cash! M 121 N. SAGINAW—FE 5-«189 Your Appliance Specialists «l MOtWAY eed nUOAY NI6IITS UNTIL 9 PJL Street Paved With Money HOUSTON (AP) -Houston poUconen ^)ent hours early Sunday picking up money from the street-llOAOO worth of rare coins. , 'The money was scattered after a head-on automobile cle, 32, of Pasadena, Tex. When wreckers started to haul away Oole’s car, which had burned after the impact, the bottom fell out—and so did the thousands of coins. Six police units were assigned to retrieve them. Most of the earth’s land mass is north of the equator. | Just 4 Highlights from Peiiney's Spectaculor Foshion Fabrics Feoture for Penney Days! PENNEY’S—MIRACLE MILE Sioie Hours: 9:30 A.M. |o 9 P.M. TEN the PONTIAC PRESS MONDAY. OCTOBER 28, X968 #GTHEGOU)Beil WIN UP TO 100 BOOKS ____________ OF eOlD BEU STAMPS Save For FREE Christmas Cifts ROUND STEAKS SIRLOIN STEAKS U.DJL Choico CHUCK ROASTS Always tsaa, Always Frosh FRESH HAMBURGER 78 89! 39 lb. ITEM aoiolor Price DheemI I 20% 1 Solo Price ITEM 1 Reeeler I Price 1 OIcceeiit 1 2a% 1 Sele Price ROUND STEAKS 99J. 21* 78*^ BONELESS RUMP ROAST $1.09,0. 22* 87**. BONELESS TOP ROUND STEAKS $1.09». 22* 87‘m. HEEL OF ROUND, BONELESS 99!o. 21* 78*^ ROUND —SWISS STEAKS 99'u,. 21* 7«o. BONELESS SIRLOIN TIP ROAST $1.09,0. 22* 87‘m. SIRLOIN STEAKS cnt^ct. $1.19,,. 30* 89‘m^ BONELESS BEEF BRISKETS 99?o. 20* 79*0^ BONELESS SIRLOIN TIP STEAKS $1.23„. 25* 98*b. BONELESS BEEF BRISKETS 89!o. 18* 7T*. T-BONE STEAKS $1.45». 36* 1.09,0. STANDING RIB ROAST tSl SSL 85*„,. 17* 68*m^ CLUB STEAKS $1.45m. 36* 1.09,0. STANDING RIB ROAST 89!o. 18* 71*0. PORTERHOUSE STEAKS $1.49.0. 34* 1.15*. STANDING RIB ROAST ^ ,|fo 99!o. 20“ 79*0. FLANK STEAKS 99?o. 20* 79**^ BEEF SHORT RIBS 4:S.r 49lo. 10* 39*0 CHUCK STEAKS —Sir 14* 55*^ BEEF PLATE MEAT 29to. 06* 23*0^ CHUCK STEAKS »„S2r»u 79!o. 16* 63*m. BEEF SHANK, BONE IN 53!o. 11* 42*0^ BONELESS CUBE STEAKS $1.19,0. 24* 95*^ SOUP BONES 107o. 02* 08*0^ BONELESS DELMONICO STEAKSi^:^ $2.19,0. 44* l.75w. BONELESS BEEF STEW 85to. 17* 68 V TENDER RIB STEAKS 99?o. 20* 79*^ BEEF HEARTS 39Jo. 08" 31*0^^ BONELESS PATIO ROAST $1.09,0. 22* 87**^ BEEF KIDNEYS 33!o. 07* 26*0^ BEEF CHUCK ROAST k..£°^cuu 59?o. 20* 39!o BEEF LIVERS T«.Wm.1S**i1.« 595o. 12* 47*0. BEEF CHUCK ROAST 69;., 22* 47*^ OXTAILS FOR SOUP 49?o. 10* 39*0. BEEF CHUCK ROAST 79?o. 20* 59**^ BEEF TONGUES 49lo. 10* 39*0^ .BONELESS CHUCK ROAST 89to. 18* 71*0. FRESH GROUND HAMBURGER* 49^0. 10* 39*0. ENGLISH BEEF ROAST ^ 79to. 20* 59*^ FRESH GROUND BEEF CHUCK 79!o. 16* 63*0^ BONELESS ENGLISH BEEF ROAST 89?o. 18* 71*^ FRESH GROUND BEEF ROUND 89lo. 18* 71*0. C0FFEE299' Country Kitchen—Sava 9c COTTAGE CHEESE 1-k. Cortaa Hills BR05 VALUABLE WRIGLEY COUPON Hills Bros. — Rag. or Drip . COFFEE 2lb. AAc Sari Can yy 2w BxpIrM N«v. S J«» aiflir for CofvtBa . PDMPKMS,laige Solly, Pmli BeeWea HSBPEMm at*** GET RirvJER GIFTS FASTER WITH GOLD BELL GIFT STAIVI F>S THE PONTIAC PRES^. HOTOAY. OCTOBER 28, lg68 ELEVEy German Beauty's Friends Senate to Hear Scandal Story WASHINGTON (UPI) ^ A SeiBtd Investigator li expected to unfold at .a cloM bearing to-morro# a Prefumo-Uke etory of WomenPast21 WiTMILADOIRttMTATION AfUr II. MMmoii KMatr or Moeter Ir. ritotloao Mtoot Moo oo soar oroBOB aa m en aoa Bar maka ro« tmio aad aorroua from too Iroauant, buTBlu or ilobinB urination both dor and nltbt. BoaondarUr rou mar Iom olaap ai^ auftar troa Baad-acbaa. feMkaeba and foot aid. tlrod, do-proittd. Id ouch lirltatioB, OTSTEX usualtar brinta faat. rolaatu oomfort br curbiBf Irriutlu tonao In •Vont, aold urino and br OBalroalo pain rollof. Oot OYETEX at drunl^ fM bottor (aat a German beauty’s relations with prominent Washington fig- Sen, John J. Wllliami, R-^ Del., was reported ready to* give detaiU of the affair at a lesiloB of the Senate Rnlei Cmnmlttee called to laveatl-gate the oatside buelness ac-tlvitlei of Senate emidoyes. Williams would not discuss the case with reporters, but one published report faid the the woman, who has returned to Ger- NALLOWEEN SPECIAL! Spectaify Decorated VARIETY 6 foir 3S* 22N. Saginaw FES4977 ai7AJd.Tllt 6 a.M. many, had friends both la Congress and die administration. WWW The party girl was described as the 27-year-old brunette wife of a West German Army ser- Eint who had been, aasigiied to German military mission lere. RAVISHING BEAUTY’ The woman, called a “ravishing beauty’’ by an embassy spokesman, was whisked back to Germany with her husband on Aug. 21 at the urging of the FBI, which had investigated her behavior. She attract the attentioH of the FBI because of the ex- FONTIAC'S URGEST TILE CENTER Car Own Installation Work Dona By Exports OPEN MON.. THUaS., ftl. t« 9-00 P.M. FME PARKING la REAR [Tk Phono 33d-9Q57 If You Don't Buy Ffom U*;, We uoth Lose ^iloneyl TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! the high standard of IMag the In the country club section of nearby Arlington, Va. The woman also had a habit of dropping the names of prominent persons, according to reports. The Washington Post, which reported the woman’s measurements as 35-25-34, said that the case involved "a spicy tale of Mlltical intrigue and high-level ledroom antics.’’ WWW “The Importantly - placed politicos with whom ^ br alleged to have cavort^ in the more than two years she par-tied here were for the most part unaware she had a husband or, for that matter, a small child —back at the chic Arlington home which investigators said hardly could have been maintained on the pay of a German Army enlisted man,’’ the newspaper added. BEHIND WALL The Post said the woman was born and reared in East Germany and her relatives still were behind the Berlin Wall. She came to Washington in April INI when her husband was attached to the West German military logistics nait here. A German Embassy spokesnuui said her hasbaad RUMORED BOYFRIENI>-Bruce B. Baxter IH, 24, of Corpus Christ!, Tex., with newspaperwoman Doris Klein, is rumored to be the millionaire boyfriend of Le Thuy, IS-year-old daughter of South Viet Nam’s First Lady, Mme. Ngo Dlnh Nhu. Adlai to Heat Up Madame Nhu Spat Nixon Says No to '64 Bid NEW YORK (UPI) - Former Vice President Richard M. Nixon has issued a strong denial of reports that h« may be a dark horse candidate for the 19M Republican presidential nomina-ion. “I have noticed a rash of sUitemeata aboot my intentions,’’ Nixon said. “First, I am not a candidate and there will not be a draft. I am not supporting or opposing any of those who have indicated they are candidates. WWW ‘I will support any one of those who wins the nomination in San Franciaco (the site of the GOP convention). lags since their retarn to Ger-maay. Williams is scheduled to be the leadoff witness at tomorrow’s closed hearing, which was called to look into the activities of Robert Q. (Bobby) Baker, who resigned on Oct. 7 as Senate Democratic secretary following published reports of his business Baker also was secretary of a private Washington club, the Quorum Chib, which has been mentioned in some accounts of the German party girl’s activities. Tlie dub was said to have been patronized by lobbyists and some members of Congress. TOWN HOUSE Earlier it was disclosed that Baker also owned a $28,000 town house where his former m tary, Nancy Carole Tyler, lived with a girl friend. Miss Tyler quit her job after Baker resigned bis Senate post. Sen. B. Everett Jordan, D-N.C., chairman of the Senate Rules Committee, said the investigation would be limited to activities of Senate officials and employes. WWW However, some committee members want to broaden the “conflict of interest” inquiry to consider legislation that would require members of Congress, as well as top congressional staff employes and top officials of the executive branch to dls-dose their income, assets and transactions. The Atlantic City boardwalk was opened in 1870 and was A mile long and eight feet wide. 1 Complete AUTOMOBILE Insurance! *23®®* QUARTERLY Covers All • • •’THISR • • 4 LWCOST NATIONWIDE Hos[lital Insurance also Motor Club rremluni «• low M 89.10 per. mo. 22 Monejr SavSiigt Servi«M-JOIN! 4MU ‘gm * INSURAl " 104-4 J08I.YN, PONTIAC AGENCY t INSURAIYCE -k 1 1044 J08I.YN, PONTIAC, MICHIGAN Nixon nude the comments his return Saturday from a 10-day European trip. He also criticized the Kennedy administration. Scottish Lad Crowned for 'Insulf to British LONDON (UPI) - A sign reading “Stolen in 12M” was found yesterday on the Stone of Scone, the old coronation stone of Scotland which rests fat Lon don's Westminster Abbey. A Scottish youth was arrested later and charged with using insulting words and behavior. SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -United Nations Ambassador Ad-lal Stevenson was expectedf to heat up hU cold war with Mme. Ngo Dlnh Nhu today at a news c(^erence just a short distance from where the controversial first lady of South Viet Nam was scheduled to deliver an address. Stevenson and Mme. Nhn have leveled thinly veiled barbe el each other dnrlng the pest few days, althoogh their paths have never crossed directly during their visits tn Bw same cities. However, a spokesman for the ambassador said yesterday that Stevenson “now intends to nuke a major statement” at today’s news conference “in regard to the latest statements by Mme. Nhu.” WWW He said Stevenson would meet the press shortly after addressing a breakfast meeting of the Eleanor Roosevelt Memorial Foundation at the Fairmont Hotel. Mme. Nhu was scheduled to address the Commonwealth Club of California at noon (3 p.m. Pontiac time). MIGHT INDICATE Mme. Nhu said in Texas last weekoid that an attack on Stevenson in Dallas Thursday by anti-U.N. demonstrators might indicate that Texans “are fed up with people who are soft on communism.” Stevenson was struck with a picket sign and spat upon following an addreu in Dallas tiw day before Mme. Nbn arrived there on another stop in her tonr of the United States. The ambassador, who had flown to Loa Angeles from Tax-as to speak on the United Nations, “just smiled and was not particularly disturbed” when he^ was informed of Mme. Nhu’s comments, according to a friend. w w . w However, Mme. Nhu softoied her renurk about Stevenson lightly when she met with newsmen in Loe Angeles Friday, saying that “the people of Texas said to me that the incident in Dallas happened because he is believed to be soft oit communism.” CAME AFTER Her comment in Los Angeles cqme after Stevenson indicated to reporters there he felt Mme. Nhu was receiving too much news coverage during her present tour. Birds Royally Shot KING’S LYNN, England (UPD—A local abop today put on sale pheasants shot by Prince Philip at a nearby royal estate for 30 shillings a pair, or 14-20- CHURCH OF CHRIST 87 LAFAYETTE STREET. PONTIAC Bring You M. LYNWOOD SMITH of Wtiion, MittiisippI NOTED EVANGELIST and SONG Vl'RITER FRIDAY. OCT. 25 thru NOV. 3 NIGHTLY 7:30 P.M. Haor Soul Slinlhg MottopM from tha Word of God Friendly Welcome FES-1993 ____________ FE 2-5411 FLOOD STOPS TRUCK BUT NOT TELEPHONE REPAIRMAN While on a service call, Michigan BeU Repairman Clarence Fromm of Saginaw discovered the cause of a dead telephone. It wasr a small flooded area caused by the Saginaw River over- fkiwing its banks during heavy rains. Driving along the road to the house through two feet of water, he found he could go no farther. The water was coming up over the floorboards of his truck, tli^tening to flood the engine. But this didn’t su^) Clarence Fromm. He signaled the man whose phone was out of order and was soon being rowed to the marooned house in a boat. Fromm was able to raise the submerged telephone wires to a point well above the water, and quicUy restored the phone to normal service. The customer was understandably grateful for the repairman’s persistence. But what Clarence Fromm did is just another example of how Michigan Bell people always try to make sure you get the kind of service you want. They're about as friendly and cooperative as anyone you will ever meet. MICHIGAH BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY TWKLVE THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. OCTOBER 28. 1968 Area Craftsman Wins Award for Pitcher United Church Women Join ' ■ in World Community Day Pontiac area women are welcome to participate in the nationwide World Community Day Friday, Nov. 1, by attending the special program at the Orchard Lake Community Church, Presbyterian. Miner, Mrs, Robert C. Anderson, and Mrs. John Appleton. Mrs. Fred Haushalter, Mrs. Fred Priestly, Mrs. Floyd Salow, and Mrs. Harold Welch complete the list. . Mrs. Major Ernest Alder will be the main speaker, talking about experiences at the United Nations and her visit to the Holy Land last March. Others participating in the service are Mrs. Harry Pat-tison, Mrs. Fred Cockle, Mrs. James Fleming, and Mrs. M-ward Auchard. Also leading the service are: Mrs. E. George Widdifield, Mrs. L. R. World Community Day was founded by United Church Women in 1943 to speed the building of a lasting peace. One of the group’s projects for peace for this year is the assembling of friendship packets for needy children. These include personal items and occasionally a small toy. Purity of line and simplicity of shape characterize this graceful sterling pitcher, designed by Thomas R. Bambas of Birmingliam. Bambas, a student at Cranbrook Academy of Art, won honorable mention in the 1963 Sterling Today Student Design Competition, sponsored by the Sterling Silversmiths Guild of America: The pitcher, currently on display in New York City, will be exhibited in fnajor U. S. cities in 1964. Limits Add Length Dangerous Doors Safety limits are the bulwark between a child and the danger he faces, reports Mrs. Katherine B. Oettinger, chief of the U.S. Children’s Bu- Doctors, hospitals and glass dealers are reporting a sizable number of children injured by running into glass doors, the U.S. Children’s Bureau reports. bo smart-look smart Shampoo and Set ALL Permanents Complete With Cut and Set *395 Now . . . with new lanolin neutralizing. Give your hair new life, strength, and brilliance adds precious lanolin with the permanent that while it creates a soft lon^ lasting wave. HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY SHOP Op*m Momittgt mt 8'A’JI. 78 W. 8agfai«w Over Bazley BIkt. S33-9660 ’The offering received at this nationwide servicewlUbe used for an in-service training program for church women from this country and some of the newly independent countries. Based on the belief that trained leadership is a primary step toward peace, this program will take place during the summer of 1964 at the new church center for the United Nations in New York City. MONEY GOES FAR It will also help support the refugee work of the World Council of Churches, scholarships for training for women from the developing countries and will expand the work of the Church Center. Hospitality chairman is Mrs. Lewis Ball with Mrs. John Ashby and Mrs. Thomas Bert- Hold Gift Until Pair Christmas Mart Aids HasArrived Parenthood League By ’The Emily Post Instititte Q: Our son is going to be married in England to an English girl. After the wedding they plan to make their home here in the United States. We cannot go to the wedding. What is the proper thing to do in regard to sending a wedding present? Should I send our wedding gift to her home in England of wait until she arrives here. to give it to her? A: If you are giving a check, you would send it to her before the wedding, but if you are giving something for their home, it would make little sense to send it to England when they are coming here to live. Oakland County women are assisting with the Planned Parenthood League’s fifth annual Christmas mart Wednesday and ’Thursday in Veteran’s Memorial, Detroit. New this year is the preview dinner on Tuesday with selling hours from 5 to 9 p.m. Sales begin at 10 a.m. on dw other days. According to Mrs. Nelson Holland, chairman, eight new s h 0 p s will present uniquely different articles to the Mart. Back again will be 13 of the old favorites. Mrs. Fraser Pomeroy, Mrs. Clifford West, Mrs. John Albrecht, Mrs. Clark Matthews and Mrs. Morton Harris. Mrs. Franklin Rowland, Mrs. Morten GratiO, Mrs. Robert Bender, Mr. Eliot Robinson, Mrs. John Cole, Mrs. Jotm Stevenson, Mrs. William Bullock, Mrs. Robert Martin, Mrs. John Kerr and Mrs. William Bachman complete the Assembling friendship packets for children are (from left) Mrs. C. George Widdifield, Ottawa Drive; Mrs. Ernest Alder, Ogemaw Road; and Mrs. Robert C. Anderson, Silver side Drive. Distribution of these kits will follow the annual World Community Day Friday at Orchard Lake Community Church, Presbyterian. He's No Friend Confide in Your Parents When you write to your daughter-in-law-to-be, explain that you are waiting until she cornel here before giving her a wedding present so that she can decide what she would like for their house. Q: In a few weeks an organization to which I belong will have its annual dinner. We intend to invite two guest speakers. I would like to know if it is necessary to invite their wives to this dinner. Some of the members s.-y “yes” and others “no.” Will you please advise us concerning this matter? ★ ★ * A: ’The wives of the ^est speakers should be send invitations in courtesy. Whether or not they wish to come is up to them. SKI MODELS Ski enthusiasts Mrs. LeRoy W. Dahlberg, Mrs. Hugh Martin Jr., and Mrs. S. E. Gawne will model the latest wear for the slopes. ★ ★ A Recruited to work as saleswomen are Mrs. Dean Coffin, Mrs. Frederick Robinson, Mrs. Alfred Davock, Mrs. Martin L. Butzel, Mrs. Albert Powers, Mrs. Homer Sale, Mrs. Lance Minor, Mrs. Bruce Craig, Mrs. Walter Young, Mrs. Charles L. Wilson, Mrs. Asa Wilson, Mrs. PhiUp Moon, Mrs. Olin Carpenter. MANY WORK Others are Mrs. V e r n Hanq>ton, Mrl. David Burton, Mrs. James Carmel, Mrs. MarshaU Fredericks, Mrs. J. W. Sanders, Mrs. John Mc-Naughton, Mrs, Olson Wilson, Proceeds from the project will aid the 15 clinics which Planned Parenthood operates in the Wayne-Oakland area since the League receives no money from the United Foundation. In the first eight months of this year, the League clinics assisted nearly 9,000 women. By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: I am a junior in high school, but quite mature for my age. A good friend of the ' family, who is 40 and' married, has taken an interest in me. He said, “If there is any- Gold Clutch Bag Glows at Night thing you want to know about the facts of life or anything ^ou want to confide. would like to know more about. Should I confide in him? LOTS OF QUESTIONS DEAR LOTS: No. In my opinion this family friend is out of line. A- real friend would encourage a youung girl to confide in her^ents. The best thing you can develop betweeii this man and yourself is distance. because she got six letters from soldiers in his outfit. Yours truly, CASEYVILLE, ILLINOIS DEAR ABBY: Would vou kindly inform me as to nbw ABBY The latesl little gold clutch bags are designed to retain their glitter for countless gala evenings. A special Mylar coating — which has the gleam of gold — is non-tar-nishable and easy to sponge off with thick soap or detergent suds, followed by rinsewiping with a clean damp cloth. Area Group to Meet at Local Church About 900 area Methodist women are expected to attend Woman’s Society of Christian Service, Detroit Conference, (WSCS) at Central Methodist Church Tuesday. Jhfe fall assembly will honor Mrs. Marshall R. Reed, wife of the Michigan bishop who is soon to retire.- Working on the luncheon conunittee are cochairmen Mrs. James Hon, Mrs. WiUiam Bullock and Mrs. Harold Sibley. Other chairmen include Mrs. Donald Porritt, Jr., Mrs. Junior Olson, Mrs. Donald Porritt Sr. and Mrs. Uoyd Huntley. Mrs. C. D. Steeber, president of WSCS at Central Methodist, will give the welcome. Mrs. W. Henry Sink will provide the music. come to me because you wouldn’t want to go to your parents witlr things like that, would you?” He’s right. There are some things I wouldn’t go to my parents with. He said when he was my age, he developed a close friendship with a woman teacher and he learned a lot. Hi thinks every young person should develop a close friendsMp with someone older of the opposite sex. There are a few things I DEAR ABBY: My son Is in Germany and has been there for five months. He got a “Dfear John letter” from this \girl in otir home town who had pr(»nised him she’d wait “forever.” We, being in the same town, knew she was writing our son this letter and we worried for fear he would take it very hard. We worried in vain. soon a bride is expected to get her thank-you notes out for her wedding gifts? I was married three months ago. Over 700 people attended our wedding. it a it We went on a two-week honeymoon, but the day after we returned I started back to work again. I have a five-room apartment to take care of, so you know I am nbt just sitting around doing nothing. My mother-in-law t(rid my husband that if I didn’t hurry up and get those thank-you notes out, she would offer to do it for me. We heard that he put her picture up on the bulletin board with her name and address under it, and across the top he printed AVAILABLE. Now she is mad at all of us Church Group Slated to Hear Project Report Forests Ubiquitous ’The Woman’s Division of Ou-istian Service of the Al-dersgate Methodist Church has scheduled a special program to follow a 12 o’clock luncheon Wednesday in the church. ^ Mrs. Melvin Norberg, Mrs. Alfred ToUison, Mn. Horace Murry and Mrs. Herbert Blom are planning the project If all of the national foests were combined into one huge forest, the area would equal all of New England, New York, Pennsylvania and the Atlantic coastline states down through the upper half of South Carolina. I’d like your opinion on how guilty of negligence you think 1 am. VERY, VERY BUSY it it it DEAR BUSY: Very! You should have started writing your thank-you notes the day after you returned from your wedding trip — if you had to bum the midnight oil while doing it. What’s on your mind? For a personal reply, send a *elf-addressed, stamped envelope to Abby, care of The Pontiac Press. Urban League Guild to Hear Music On the national level, t h e group is assisting with expansion and improvement of urban and community center' programs; remodeling Campbell House, Gary, Ind., Wesley Genununity House, Fort Worth, Tex. and the Susannah Wesley Center in Honolulu. Foreign projects include aid to m e d i c a 1 colleges a li d nurses’ training schools also the Christian literature programs in India. The WSCS will sponsor the annual family style turkey dinner from S to 7 p.m. on Saturday. Dr. Donald Gibson of Wayne State University will speak at the first fall meeting of the Urban League Guild, Nov. 7 in the Community Services Building. The business meeting p.m. wlH be followed open meeting at 8:30. at 7:30 by the His subject will be “The Meaning of the Past: Negro Folk Music." He will accompany himself on the guitar in his interpretations of examples folk musk. MEET to EAT RIKER FOUNTAIN in the lobby of lb« Kikor Building ^ j 15 w. r Indian Oscars are lined up, waiting to be presented to victorious tvomen chairmen in this year's Pontiac Area United Fund Drive. Mrs. Charles Gers-ton. North Berkshire Road, Area III chairman, examines one of. the statuettes to be presented at the womens luncheon Wednesday. . The women have achieved 91 per cent.cjf their quota at the present time. Prevent Accidents Prevent falls at home by keeping stairways and passages clear, iHoviding good lighting in halls and on stairs, wiping up q>ills at once, fas-tening rugs securely and Dr. Gibson holds badtelor and master’s degrees in English from the University of Kansas City. He earned his Ph.D. degree at Brown University for his dissertation on Stephen Crane. A new course in Contempo- rary Negro Literature for English department was also outlined by Dr. Gib- DR. GIBSON THE PONTIAC PRESS^ MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1968 THIRTEEN Tui^day Morning 9:30 at the Pontiac Mall ' ’ Community Room ... '^man^s World" Program Harold Abrams CMMwItant Svp^ter, SpMlol M., Oakland ScliooU WUl Pn$ent "HOW TO COPE WITH CHILDREN'S BEHAVIOR PROBLEMS" 9:30-10:00 AM. -CoN*» Thna 10:00-11:00 AM..^Formal Praaram 11:00-12KH) AM.-lnfpnnal Quattion and Aniwara Tka fro# tickato ora ovaHoUa dvrino rogular Moll houn at oMior Tha Cvi-liaan looWt or Tho Notlonwida BooHi in Hm Mali 0 " •ndatflor MoWA MuAifi/ 34 South Telegraph PUmtr ofFrmm PmrkiMg AeroM Fram Tel-Huron FE 24)567 Dinner l^o/lows Heald Wedding Vows USAF Capt. and Mri. Stephen Thomas Heald (Bonnie Jean Urqu|iart) exchanged nuptial vowa Friday evening M the Ordiard Lake Ck>mmu-hity Church, Presbyterian. The dinner-reception in the Orchard Lake home of the bride's parents, the Charles D. Urquharfs, f<^wed the informal ceremony perfbrmed by Rev. Edward D. Auchard. With her gown of ivory silk brocade styled with three-quarter length sleeves, the bride wore a princess-length veil held by a silk circlet. She held a nosegay of white roses. Carol Swanson of Chicago, who was maid of honor, wore teal blue satin and carried yellow roses. USAF John Heald of Ann Arbor and Capt. James Heald of Amsterdam, The Netherlands, assisted their brother as best man and usher. They are die sons of the Alvah A. Healds of Ann Arbor. Also seating guests was Carlton Bey Jr. of Des Moines, Iowa. The couple win honeymoon in New York City before leaving for Ismlr, Turkey,, where he is stationed with tlie Army Dental Corps. The new Mrs. Heald attended Albion Coilege and is a senior at University of Michigan where her husband received his degree from the College of Dentistry. Saturday Ceremony Marks Marriage Perry Park Baptist Church was Uie setting for the marriage on Saturday of Carol Sue Armstrong to USN Hospital Apprentice Robert Kane. Ralph Pardee performed the evening ceremony. The Owen Amvkrongs of Broadway Avenue are parents of the bride who ms^ her own wedding-gown of winter white faille. The long-sleeved fltted bodice extended into a skirt of impressed pleats and ROSEBUD CENTER A handmade pillbox held her tapered veil of lace-edged tulle. Red rosebuds centered her bouquet of white carnations. Honor matron, Mrs. Dale Luettke and the bridesmaids Pamela Adams and the bride’s sister Linda carried white carnations tipped to match their royal blue brocade dresses. The bridegroom, son of Mrs. Harold Ogles of Bigham Ave- Club Holds Party The Golden Age Club will gather for a Halloween costume party at 7:30 p. m., Wednesday, in the CAI on Williams Lake Rood. Refreshments will be served following an evening of games and dancing. a 31 Rtfrigentors • 12 Freezers 14 Automatic Washers 11 Bectilc Ranges • 12 Gas Ranges 11 Dryers • 22 Television Sets 8 Stereo Hi-Fi’s FAMOUS AMEBICAH UBAHD HAMES I Uotllr One-rf-a-Kind HURRY... •V MDAYS SAME AS CASH n Monday and Friday Evenings 'til 9 P.M. ^ Some Last of Modol Soriot Some Slightly Morrod in Shipment Every Item Guaranteed in Writing! at ear lowy low prieos this morohandlso won’t last long... and it will ho many months before another sale of this kind! •0^ FREE DELIVERY - FREE SERVICE ^ (iOOD HOUiEKEEPINti 51 West Huron FE 4-1555 nue and Robert Kane of Som-merville. Mass., had Dale Luettke for best man. Seaman Appren. William Midkiff of Jackmville, Fla. ushered with Theodore Santala and Daniel Kane. After a reception in Avon Township Hall, the couple left for a northern Michigan honeymoon. He is stationed at tlte great Lakes Naval Training Station, Great Lakes, 111. Luncheon Club An afternoon of cards for members of the Maple Leaf Luncheon Gub followed the Friday meeting in the Waldron Hotel Board Room. Hostesses for the day were Mrs. Lawrence Taylor and Mrs. Erwin Rogge. Corsages were presented to Mrs. Stuart Townsend honoring her 40th wedding anniversary and to Mrs. Mark Coon-ley vrtw was married recently. Guests were Mrs. Kenneth Strine, Mrs. John Woodcock and Mrs. Esther Johnson. RUS NEW PPUANGES 3-Pc. Bedroom Double Dresser, Mirror Bookcase Bed All 3 Pcs, $279 Chest $129 Nite Stand $45 T'wo-score etzica. ten •wond-erfu-l pieoes for liTring, diniiig anci toedropms DECLARATION by Drexel * The Look Is Contemporary ... the inspiration, Early American. This is our Declaration collection, with exciting new pieces. Here ore unique designs ond clever functional touches. Here, too, the worm beauty of rich-groined natural walnut . . . the charming accent notes of inlold rosewood, porcelain or walnut and brass drawer pulls, milk gloss china shelves. If impressive decorating is on your mind, see Declaration ot Thomas Furniture. It's Drexel's brilliant solution to your decorating problems. rurmture End Table $33 Cocktail Table $64 Corner Table $59 Nest of Tables $69 IMS ozacziB *wr. Open Men.. Thurt.f Fri. til IPJH. AMBLE FREE BARKINa FOURTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. OCTOBER 28, 1903 Styling—Quality by BEAVTE' RAYE Evtaingt by Appointimnt Call 332-2837 *I» Anbarn Ave. P«rk Free Meredith Willsons to Appear The creator of ‘76 Trombones’ will herald the fifth anniversary of Pontiac-Oak-land Town Hall Nov. 8 at 8 p.m. at Pontiac Northern High School. Meredith Willson and his wife Rini, concert singer, BLOOMFIELD SHOPPING PLA2i I MAPLE AT TELEGRAPH L MAfair 6-2566 For the offer 5 occosion, fabrics ore the material-difference. Our new Regal Pump with gently snipped toe IS available in black or navy peou de sole, high heel 01* black demi-heel, also in tintables. ^ ^ Jt’t So Pleasant Shopping In Bloomfield! will appear in a bonus program. This ‘first’ for the series offers tickets on sale for the general public, unlike th? regularly scheduled morning programs for which season tickets are sold. The Willsons will present a ‘musicalecture’ entitled “A Meredith WUlson Social with Rini.” Humor and music will be featured. Though known mainly as the creator of the musicales "The Music Man” and ‘‘The Unsinkable Molly Brow n,” Willson has had a long and varied career. He has played the flute for John Philip Sousa and the New York Philharmonic Orchestra. He has starred in and directed radio programs and conducted symphony or-diestras. From his pen has come popularfsongs, serious symphonies and two books. Testing Broadway now is Willson’s third musicale, ‘‘Here’s Love,” based op the movie; “Miracle on 34th Street.” Tickets ipay be obtained t from Mrs. Paul Gorman, North Genesee Avenue. REDUCE EAT and LOSE DP TO 6 us. a WEEK CAPSULESI EASIER TO TAKE ANO MORE EFFECTIVE THAN THE POWDERED AND LIQUID FOOD SUPPLEM04T, AND COSTS'LESS IN-aUDINO CAESULES SUITED TO YOU INDI-VIDUAUY BY UC PHYSICIAN, M.D. NO OASTRITIS OR KREGUIARITY WfEH MH>IC-WAY CAPl DONT DIET-JOST EATI AS THOUSANDS HAVE DONE, YOU CAN LOSE 5,50 OR 100 LBS. AND KEEP IT OFFI MEDIC-WAY 335-9205 ’This week I am bringing you my TYick AND Treat Diet which gives you a loss of around five pounds in seven days. ’This diet not only gives you well-seasoned food but can be used as a skeleton diet for the rest of your family. You can simply give the other members of the gang larger helpings and second servings if they wish. TTiey can drink whole milk instead of skim milk and eat more butter and bread and desserts and sugar than your diet calls for. Here are the menus for Tuesday. s JO Am MORRIS Mr. and Mrs. Hart D. Morris of Billingsgate Court announce the engagement of their daughter Jo Ann to Donald Howard Shaw of Flint. He is the son of Mrs. Howard I. Shaw of Delaware Drive and the late Mr. Shaw. The Dec ember bride-elect attended Michigan State University and her fiance was graduated from Tri-State College, Angola, Ind. Husband "too tired” for good times? Tf yourhusband keeps coming home too "beat” to be gay and stimulating, too worn ovi to take you out, remember—the hectic ‘‘rat race” of today’s business requires men to perform like human dgnamot day after day, which builds up ehuming tensions that rob literally millions of husbands of energy and rigor they might otherwise enjoy! • What cao you do to help counteract this tension-caused loss of vitality? • Many doctors recommend augmenting the daily diet with nature’s remarkable "bounce-back” food, famous Kretschmer Whest Germ. Made from the germinating heart of the l^mel, wheat germ has been established by official U. S.. Dept, of Agriculture studies to be tkc most healthful food • Kretschmer W’heat Germ actually supplies’a whopping 30 nutrieiUs important to good health, vigor and stamina! KRETSCHMER • Serve husband this remarkable food every day and see how much more pep and vitality he has! Use these delicious, tiny toasted flakes as a cereal, on cereal, or add to pancakes, waflies, scrambled eggs, etc. • ’Thrifty, tasty Kretschmer Wheat Germ is great for the entire family, 80 be sure to get some. Look lor it in vacuum-sealed glass jwrs in the cereal section of your food store. Choose either regular or Sugar ’N Honey. s Gl'ARANTEE-(i) kmucSm Wb«*t Gwmi M.tlw moat H—Nhful food known; {2) Your famiiv wiU Uko iu out- WHEAT GERM - BREAKFAST Six ounces orange juies,-One poached egg on toast (one tablespoonful of chili sauce on eg^ or sprinkling of grated cheese) Coffee with one teaspoonful of sugar LUNCHEON Toasted cheese sandwich (two thin slices of bread and a thin slice of American cheese — the equivalent of two heaping tablespoons of the same) One eight ounce glass skim milk One-half cup cole slaw DINNER One cup consomme (canned) Four ounces of lean beef (broiled) Sliced tomato One baked potato seasoned with onion salt and parsley Two small pieces of hard candy If you would like to have my complete Trick AND Treat Diet in a small booklet send ten cents and a stamped, self-addressed envelope with your request for it to Josephine Low-man in care of ’The Pontiac Press. ToMorrow: 'Trick And Treat Diet Lets You FIgM Bulges At Table." idOlO (Uuo .yfeumode lUNlESS NYLONS Miss Jackson Has Parties Kathleen Rae Jackson who will wed F. Gary Failla, Saturday, in the First Christian Church, was honored at a recent shower in the Herbell Drive home of Mrs. Raymond Crawford. Among the guests were Mrs. 0. L. King of Illinois Avenue and Mrs. Helen Walker of Clarkston, mother and grandmother of the bride-elect, also Mrs. Fred A. Failla of St. Joseph Road, mother of the future bridegroom. Some 25 guests attended a r^nt shower given by Barbara Graybiel of Oneida Road and Carol Graham. 77* with reinforced heeb and loe« ionentral and hi|^ fashion ahadeo Beautiful sheer seamless nylons with the new lock stitch which inspres the longest wear known in sheer nylons. On sale this week to introduce this remarkable stocking to a wider andi* enee of smart Women. EVERY PAIR CHECK-MEASURED TO YOUR PERSONAL LENGTH REQUIfffiMENTS FREE GIFT VRAPnNG ALWAYS NEUMODE Hosiery Juvenile N. Saginaw St. THERE ARE BIG SAVINGS ON QUALITY FURNITURE! END-O-MONTH SALE! FLOOR SAMPLES - AAARRED PIECES-ODD PIECES AT DISCOUNT! Sot of Italian Provincial Tdbles . $179.50 ..was I21I.N Authontic Hitchcock bedroom Suit*..................................$169.50 Full »ii« haadboord, drejiar In whila dacorotadi....f.............Wtf IllfMI Bluo-groen Contomporary Chair, Barrel type..................$ 69.50 :foom cuililoni, looia saal and walnut lags.................••• 61 !•••• Curved Front Contemporary Sofa in Powder Blue... $288.00 Docron^down cuthiou, walnut lagA only one.......................••• 63I6.SS Largo, Oval Surfboard Cocktail Table............................$ 99.50 Conlampofatydatignlnrieli.worml(oiawood................ .... Wa«|1ISJS 5 Piece Walnut Contemporary Bedroom Suite .... $299.00 Drasiar, mifror, bad, chest ond night slond..................Wif 3III.M Colonial Swivel Wing Chair...................... i....... $119.50 Gold twaad upholstery, solid mopla frame.......... ..........WatDIlMI High Back Early American Wing Chair .........................$ -69.50 Nad & Stock check lobr ic wHh distrasiad fpdpn lea*..........WaS $12MI Contemporary Swivel Arm Chair.............................$ 84.50 Molded walnut and upholstered in sturdy Nougohyda.. ......*■» 666.N* Two Cushion Quilted Sofa..................... Foam, kick pleat in boige floral—aoilly coordinolad .. .....$249.00 Inlaid, Square Comer-cocktail Table. «aof okind.TS---■ ............ $ 26.80 ..watSlSAS Lamps forany room in the house for any purpose, Tall ones, short ones, traditional & colonial from .. $ 9.95 Floor Sample, Danish Styled Sofa . ................ - • weave fabric in Rovol Blue...............watS2IS.H Walnut and Aluminum Console, Contemporary . .,. $99.95 Use anywhere, double doors for easy storage.. .. . ■watlllS.N Combination Bar and Storage Unit...................$149.50 • —■ .......................wat|2S2.M Oriental Curio Cabinets, Glass doors..........................$ 34.75 Block Of while, gloss shelves with mirror b^..................waiHIJS Heritage Barrell Lounge Chair....................$ 79.60 Traditional Chair on Casters, Foam 'T" Cushion .. $149.50 Black Lacquer and ^Id Decorator Chest.. .....$ 79.50 >UI oak lining, 3 drawer^ tiViy a quolHy^lece................. Wat IMSJI Stereo Cabinet Designed by Paul McCobb................$140.50 ........... ' watSNlNJB; Genuine Black Leather Lounge Chair... ........ $199.00 Sah foom cethion, fruHwood lege — one only.. . ...waiS2SS.N RUGS & C Laa't 591 Nylon carpal Broidtd oval rugs . .,. ARPETING yd. $ 7.98 • •••......iHaHOff «aila$IMI Bothroom plush cbrpat 4 ab’ sle . Fraa Corpat Ettimi 8.96 wmtllJI stat In Your Hema OFFICE FURNITURE 37"x76* Curved Walnut Datk. Two Pott. Sattaa, idaol for Waiting Rm. $179,59 Ur)wl««mkul«kW«AAAKW~i.k<.w........^.......weiOIAN High Bock Exacutive |{wivel Choir..........$129.59 MORE REDUCTIONS NOT ADVERTISEDl W IrM t NMgakye. wUK>1mry... •IKAW IT. ATOICMASe LAKI AVI. HS-SIT4 . PONTIAC OPEN FRIDAY EVENINGS UNTIL 9 J 1 ,iJi M. I',' .c THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. OCTOBER 28. 1963 FIFTEEN j Use Salt, Lemon First sprinkle salt on a nut mark on fabric. Then squeeze J on lemon Juice. Spread the ‘ garment in the sun to dry. Hflift Siyits by m Formetty ofCe*-on$ • 1672 S. TELEGRAPH 334-9926 Wash Baskets Before Using Before putting bread, fruit, or other table foods into new baskets, swish these through warm soap or detergent suds and rinses. This is a sanitary precaution because most su^ baskets are made by hand — mainly in foreign countries Wt K—P rinm robHct looking Th»lt Fathionablm ImI PONTUC UDMDRT M t. etntlK SS Mill list W. Hwwi, Wi«wt«r« PS l-Ttll m t. Hmtttr BM., smn. Ml LIMITED TIME! TONIGHT Thru Wed^ Oct. 30 On Our MainFloor 1 BIG 5X7 IN. Yeqr Cfiotea •— First Print ...... 99e Sacend Peso ...................... 3.49 Third Pesa . ..................... 2.29 ^ CHOKI OP SEVERAL POSES ■k LIMIT 2 CHILDREN PER PAMBY A AOI UMITi 5 YEARS AND UNDER it TWO CHILDREN POSED TOGETHER ......... 2.49 "UTISPACnON OUARANTIID OR YOUR MONIY BACK* Downtown Pontiac Ph.FE 5-4171 MRS. R. G. ELLIXSON Couple Will Make Home in Clarkston .. A new home in Clarkston awaits the Robert Gene Ellix-sons (Sharon Louise Dion) who left for a northern honeymoon following morning vows Saturday, in St. Benedict Church. Joining the couple at the reception in the '300 Lounge’ were their parents, the Ernest E. Dions of Orchid Street, and the Audrey G. Ellixsons of Lacota Road. ★ ★ ★ With her gown of white Chantilly, lace over satin, styled with bell skirt and satin cummerbund, the bride wore a bouffant veil of illusion secured by a pearl tiara. GIFT PEARLS The bridegroom’s cultured pearl gift pendant and £ cascade of white carnations with orchids, completed her ensemble. Honor matrm, Mrs. Gregory G. Stieber of Warren, and Mrs. David BeU of Royal Oak, who was bridesmaid, carried cascading white carnations tipped to match their dresses,, of royal blue silk organza. * * * On the esquire side were best man James Wert with ushers Gene Heline and the bride’s brother Ronald Dton. The bridegroom is attending Lawrence Institute of Technology in Detroit. Lodge Hosts State VIPs Grand ofHcers of Michigan conferred the degree at the Friday meeting of Esther Court No. 13, Order of Amaranth at RooRevelt Temple. Mrs. Ernestine Pearson and Mrs. Pierre Shaver were in charge of refreshments. Decorations were handled by Mrs. Bert Weddel and Catherine McCrindle. for the active woman... "S^SARONG’CRISS-CROSS 3RAS AND GIRDLES SSARONG CRISS-CROSS BRAS give Mtural freedom of movement Sarong Criaa-Croas bras let you stretch...reach... bend with natural comfort, natural support Sides move separately...you move naturally. Bra adjusts with every breath—will not ride up...will not bind... shapes you naturally with a figure-flattering silhouette. Ittustntpd: New style 436 lace cup cotton bra. Luxurious lace cups, fully lined with cool, comfortable cotton. *3®® Sizes: A 82-S6, B 82-40, C 32-42 Other Saronff Crist^rou brae avaOahle from $2.50—bandeau, midriff, longUne. 8ARONQ CRISS-CROSS GIRDLES let you move... keep you smooth Sarong Criss-Cross girdles shape, slim and control you... with a glorious no-girdled feding. Exclusive Criss-Cross double front panels lift and support— flatten tummy. , Girdle dips lower on sides to smooth thighs... i with fre^om to walk, sit or bend in complete comfort. I nhntoted: Style 448 kmg-Ieg pull-on girdle. Long-wearing, machine-washable I Stretch-Eve/spandexelaatlc. ♦lO®* f Sizes: P-S-ll-Ii-XL Sarong Crin-Cron dmign alto arallablo from S6S5 In pull-on girdles, panir girdles; zipper girdles. 'BOBETTE SHOP 16 N. SAGINAW CHARGE ACCOUNTS. PAHK FREE ^m!oeri5!e* Nancy Messier Busy With Showers ’The arrival of 20 guests Friday at the Watkins Lake home of Mrs. Herbert Howerth climaxed a round of pre-nuptial entertaining for November bride-elect, Nancy Jean Messier. Mrs. Paul Gorman was Mrs. William Sonnenberg of Sylvan Lake opened her home for a recent shower honoring her granddaughter. Sharing hostess honors were Nancy’s aunts, Mrs. Fred Beedle, Mrs. Jack Beedle, Mrs. Kenneth Black and Mrs. Robert Woodard. brll^ Collaborating In a neighborhood shower were Mrs. Ray Doan, Mrs. Howard Mudge and Mrs. Carl Woods in the latter’s home at Cass Lake. PERSONAL GIFTS Personal gifts for the elect were opened recently In Mrs. Floyd ShotwelTs home at Sylvan Lake, with Mrs. Joseph Chlrcop, shower cohost- Miss Messier’s parents are the Leon Messiers of Cass Lake. Her fiance, John Marquis Hood of Voorhels Road is the son of the senior John Hoods of Speedway, Ind. ’There are 1,200 sawmills operating in Minnesota. Swob Cleans Stem To clean the hard-to-reach stem of a percolator, use a cotton swab. The swab will slide easily into the stem and do a thorough job of collecting coffee residue. Latest in Frame Stylet .. . -a? I LOOK YOUR , LOVELY BEST , With a Magic Permanent by Margie , • of the Waldron PricM tiatl « $6.50 mBnlcnre. Not always oMNwaary to make an appolntinent. MARGIE’S “Waldron” BEAUTY SALON The Waldron Hotel FE 2-3044 51»I'aTtTiTrrmTnnnrk i irmnnnnnf uinnos/ 17.W^ PMawi «t Tli.1.1 Jwwiry Cg IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC • osmuem or < C®*!™ N®**® FURNISHINGS • 3i SAGIIIllW STr • Provincial • Colonial • Traditional • Modern - All by Amerka'f Leading Manufacturers! WUD-W4Y BUDGET PLAN o No Carrying Chorgo o Moko Poymonta At OurStoro Open Tonight Till 9 P.M. free delivery CHAIR SALE Many Other Chairs Not Illustrated Also Sale Priced YOUR CHOICE $1 WEEKLY Reg. $59.95 Slipper choir with quilted cover and tufted bock. Fruitwood frame. Reg. $49.95 Swivel rocker with diamond-tufted back. 100% foam seat, arms and bock. Expanded vinyl cover in choice of colors. YOUR CHOICE NO AAONEY DOWN Months to Pay YOUR CHOICE Reg. $69.95 Early American swivel rocker. Maple finish wings and arm stumps. Colonial tweed cover with box pleated skirt. Choice of colors. Reg. $69.95 Early American foam cushioned lounge choir. Colonial tweed cover with box pleated skirt. Choice of beautiful Colors. Budget Terms LAYAWAY NOW FOR Ctoiiwi Traditionol foam cushioned lounge chair. Decorator covers and colors to choose from. ^•g. $79.95 Early American foam cushioned swivel rocker. Mople wing and arm trim. Luxurious foam bock colonial print or tweed covers with bipx pleated skirt. EUvator Sarvice to All Floors What an opportunity to save ... with no restriction of choice! Here are chairs in every style ... Traditional, Early American, Provincial, Modern ... at a range of prices to fit any budget. Every one is a hand-picked value, designed for comfort and beauty, with luxurious covers in a wide choice of colors. Reg. $59.95 -Popular goose-neck arm rocker with 6-inch solid foam seat and back. In imported tapestry with choice of colors. Reg. $59.95 100% foam TV recliner with soft expanded vinyl cover in a choice of colors. Unusually large for stretch-out comfort. Reg. $79.95 Extra la^e TV recliner with 3" foam 3^t and diamond-tufted foam back. Wide color choice In soft expanded vinyl covers. OPEN MON., THURS., FRIDAY TIL 9 P.M. ‘VoK must he mtisfied-llm tve^uarantep’^ Phone FE 2-4231 vt- ^ 17-19 $. Saginaw IN DOWNTOWN l>ONTIAC V SLXTKEN THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1903 Dr. Wayne G. Brandstadt Says: Mosf Scars Slowly Fade if Left Alone Q— Why is it that sometimes when I cut or scrape my 'skin I heal and there is no scar and other times there is a permanent scar? ★ * * A —Your skin is constantly replacing itself from the deeper layers outward. When It Is injured the reparative process is speeded up. If the scraping is superficial and only the regenerative layers are involved, you will heal without a scar but. if the cut or scrape is deeper, a scar will form, the scar will be red at first but will slowly fade. Many skin lesions, notably those of acne, chickenpox, eczema and mosquito bites would leave no scar if left alone, but picking at them or scratching may carry the damage to tl» deeper layers and scarring will result. This is especially true if the scratching introduces infection into the wound. Q — I recently had a major operation and have been home from the hospital five weeks. I am able to do light housework, but I still have terrific gas pains. Is there anything 1 can do to help this? * * * A — Gas pains are common following an operation, but usually clear up in five or six days, especially when the patient is allowed to be out of bed. Since you still have them after five weeks they are probably not related to the operation. The commonest cause Is air swallowing and this is aggravated by eating too fast, by trying to force a belch and by drinking carbonated drinks. Other causes are intestinal fer- Red Chinese Need Time Before Testing N Bomb mentation and the transfer of nitrogen from the blood to the intestines. Recent studies indicate that dexpanthenol (Ilopancholine), obtainable only a doctor’s prescription, or methyl polysiloxane (Mylicon) give fairly prompt relief to most persons who have this trouble. Q — My doctor says I have melanosis. Is'there any cure for this condition? Will a suntan lotion aggravate it? ★ ★ ★ M elanosisisa broad twm that covers an increase of dark pigment in the skin or mucous membranes. It may occur as freckles or dark brown moles or it may be evenly distributed over the entire body. It may be due to a variety of causes including pellagra (a vitamin deficiency), arsenic poisoning or overexposure b ■rays. It may occur in pregnancy or in persons with a disease of the thyroid, pituitary or adrenal glands. If your doctor has ruled out any serious disease as the cause, no treatment is necessary. If the pigmented spots are patchy and occur ^Mmefics may help to make the spots less conspicuous. Suntan lotion will not affect the underlying cause but if you have a generalized melanosis you don’t need such a lotion. HARD OF HEARING? This Coupon is Valuable it will bring you FREE INFORMATION about the amazing new CONSUL Behind the Ear Aid for thow who demand natural tound clarity TOKYO (AP 1-Red Chinas Foreign Minister Chen Yi was quoted today as saying it, will be several years before his TOuntry can test an atomic bomb. Kyodo News Service said the Chinese vice premier made this statement in Peking to visiting Japanese newsmen. WWW Chen reportedly said that the delay in testing was due to the backward state of China’s industrial base and that it will be some time before it can mass produce atomic weapons. But he emphasized the Chinese Communist government has every intention of acquiring nuclear power, because without ' it China would remain a second-or third on Sunday morning.” Royalty to Pay Visit TOKYO (AP) - Belgium’s King Baudouln and Queen Fa-biola will pay an official visit to Japan in January, the Japanese Foreign Office announced. NOTtCB OF PUBLIC HBAaiHO Nolle* I* h*f*byjlvin IM • piS lM*rlng hat b**n lehMlwM tr / Mac CHy Commlaalan la k* kaW Tw*f day, Novambar It 1«tl al I e'eloei P.J. E.S.T. m Ni* Cammlialan-----‘" Hall, 3S I. Par** Sfraal. — - - , POM af amanSbiff tk* Zaninp AMp a« M, S7, n. y ardar of th* CNy Commltaion *Md Oelabar CHy Claffc eaffitaf OarsW Ta LaMania I lawVlJia Stala. am Ika* •*« rtlW I IM nam* a« III* a pan, yaw *** Marina an * I Ih* Ceart I lam Cauofy larlle* C*M*r, l» ^ It MMp myadleal to mak* mraanal tarvic* hataS, Hil* •ommoni *m tic* mail b* aarvm by publlcMlan at Ing in' Prlfttid WSW vyfMvamaMi* "• m—— VIHnan, IM HanorabI* Norman It •cIT9 i! )i day at Oelabar A.D. IPtl. (Saal) MOHMAN P. BARNAPp, (A tni* oapy) JudP* «• DILPHA A. BOUOINE, Oelabar It mi PUBLIC SALE HM OMaimbll*, Sarlal No. dBMMMt wnt b* aald at Publle Aueflan for I* hUMal blddar. Car may b* In- ipactod at aboa* addraa*. _____________ Oelabar » am ». W« I blddar. Car may b* bnpaelad •“'^.bar » am ». m3 NOTICE OP DISPOSITION OF URBAN RENEWAL LANDS CHy at Panllac Oltle* of Plamlnp am Urban RanawaL CHy Mali. 35 t Park* «!, Pantlae. Mletilgan. ..Ottlm Houn, I a.m. la S pjiu, Monday Ibroogh Friday. I at a t of praparty bi Urban Ranawal Prolael Mletilgan R-» lacalad Btwyally Jn an ara* SouHi at Pika Straal, Baal at Sag- day ot Novambar, 1M3. m* city ol Pontiac, Ottleo* at doaoraT In Hi* form preicrlbad W **" Housing am Mom* Fhianea Admlnltlr*-lor. Saw ilalamani discloaei Hi* tract ol l*m -Involvod transaction, am datalls as to Hi* pro-posad uM ot Hia, PWrty, ““ statamani In lull *m Hi* otfleas ot PlannWg am Urban R«naw^ OLGA BARKELEY, m NOTICE OP PUBLIC ,P*mHk CHy CommlMlan IP b* ' TuaiSm, Wauambar It ml al I d p.m; B.S.T. In tba CafnmItNati t .. .. - - — y' Hall, SI t Park* Straat. for ' AAap Omwane* No. M4 known ^assLir.'iirTSLa': - ut n - Plot No. I3S. OLGA BARKELEY, CHy Clark Oelabar M. m3 PUBLIC SALE i»W l"o?*NV ivT sarfai Oelabar II am 9, IN3 SAVE WITH THESE A&P EARLY-WEEK VALUES GROUND BEEF HIGHLINER BRAND FROZEN COD nUETS 5LB.BOX %AC fjb “29' OcaoB Perch Ffliets hmhunh u. 39c Medhim Shrimp Sm 3*89 u- 79c 3 LBS. OR MORE Lesser Quantities Lb. 41c FRYER PARTS Cut from Tondor, Young Fryort Legs.......“ 49‘ Breasts... -55' Ball Pork Franb . . 59c "Supor-Righf* Quolity SPARE 39- LB. ^Supor-Right'' Quality PORK CHOPS •s79‘ LB. ''Suptr-Riglit" SkJnlon ALL MEAT nuuiKS 2^79- 43* 1-lB. PKO. *3upor>Riglit" Skinlots 10 to 12 Pmind Fully Cooked SEMI-BONELESS HAMS Mfholoor Hoif “ No Contor Slicoi Romorod SPECIAL COFFEE SALE! Ground at tht store to give you COFFH MIU FLAVOR MILD AND MEUOW Red Circle. . . . 3 ■& 1 i ICE CREAM APPLE PIE MAKVEL BRAND M Af ck.ic.w 5 n.«r. ^ M SAVE16C JANEFARKIR ^ WW EA. SfMCiol Voluo 4# M Michigan McIntosh or Jonathon APPLES U. S. No. 1 GRADE A’c‘40' WHin BREAD T9- A&P Brand Our Finest Light, Chunk Style Tuna Fish 5 99* ROYAL GEM Tender, Cut Green Beans f.00 No. 303 CANS 2c OFF LABEL Puff s Tissues c 5 BOXES OF 400 ^ ^ KMEAL FOR DKHiS I e B 0 B OT. ■TL Gipri Liquid SULTANA BRAND — Tomatoes. .4 99 Pineapple. .4 99 SLICED ENRICHED l-LB. 4-OZ. LOAF SAVI FKO. •c OP 12 SWm, PRISH Cider OXFORD ROYAL—PtICIS AND STEMS Mushrooms OAL JUO B e No Deposit 79* 4!mz QQc CANS BLIACHiS AND DOINPfCTS Roman Cleanser «» 49* 7c OFF LAIIL dexola Oil ... 39' - CHEER 5-Lb. II-Oz. 20c OFF HAUOWEEH CANDY FAVO^TES EXCEL Soo Comploto Diggloy ot the Stoio lAlY RUTH, BUTTUmN^, FOWMHOUSI Suited Cohdy Bars & * •• dm 89c ASSORTiD Peanuts Candy Handouts * • 69c 16-Os. Pkg. OfeANOI AND MACK Jelly Deans 33c 39* MILKY WAYS, 34MltKITIIRS, CLARK BARS, ZAONUTt Candy Bars &’*••%. 59c SUNNYFiaD FINE QUALITY FAMILY FLOUR 10-59 JANE PARKER FRESH* CRISP _ Potato Chips'ii»49*^ All prices jhi Ihb ed effective thru Tuee.. Oct. 29th ^ ^ _ hi endhUeiw Mkhleen AIF Super Merheto 'THI (MAT ATUNTK S FACMC TIA CaMFANV, BK. rAp'^uper Markets tMlRKS} ClPIkDiBU tOOO YIRCHftNI JINCl 1859 m i ! /I I “ Eighteen THE PON.TTAC PRESS. MONDAY. OCTOBER 28. 190.3 Science Today Best Method to Cope With Bursitis By DELOS SMITH UPI Science Editor NEW YORK (UPl)-It will be a comfort, although a small one* to the occasional but innumei^ able victims of bursitis, to know medical science is far from being of one mind on how to deal with it. Dr. J. Dremian Lowell, a teacher of orthopedic surgery at Harvard Medical School, listed a dozen possible ways including “manipulation” which means flinging the affected arm (or leg) about no matter how much it hurts. Dr. Lowell was asked by the New England Journal of Medicine to instruct its readers on the best way to cope with it and make it go away as quickly as possible. • He puts the tender arms into slings and their owqers into beds, in a sitting or a semi-sitting position. He gives them a pain-lessening drug and an anti-inflammatory drug, phenylbutazone, four times a day and otherwise doesn’t touch them. DRAMA'nC RESPONSE ‘”nie response in most cases HAIR CHECK Hair Consaltaat Here Tomorrow; To Explain Hair Problems Decide today to give proper care ;o that prized personal appear-ince asart—a good head of htkir. Mr. F. I. Brodie, will be in Pontiac, Michigan at the Hotel Waldron, on Tuesday, October 29, 1963. Hours I P. M. to 8:00 P. M. Come in and talk with the Lesley Consultant regarding your hair and scalp problems. Learn how you can treat yourself right in the privacy of your own home. Regular checkups in your city by a Lesley OHisultant assure success in the minimum period of time. FREE CONSULTATION If you h.*ive dandruff, excessive hair fall, thinning, hair, ex-c-essive oiliness or dryness, itchy scalp, or if your scalp is still creating hair you should lake positive action at once. A little time spent now may save a great deal of regret later. You incur absolutely no charge or obligation by coming in for the consultation. We will tell you frankly and sincerely whether or not we believe you can be helped, how long it will take and how much it will cost. WRITTEN GUARANTEE Lesley Consultants have estab-llsliwl a very high reputation in the field for refusing any case that docs not fall under the scope of its Work. If you are accepted for tieat-menl, you will be given a written guarantee for the length of time treatment is required, on prorated basis. Nearly hall c our clients are women. Male patti caute of a groat maiority of caMa of kaldneii and cxcauivo hair lou, for which ntifhor tho Laslay troat-mont nor any other troatmont la offactivo. is draiiiatic and occurs within 48 to 72 hours, and occasionally as early as 24 hours,” he said. ‘‘There is a rapid loss of pain and concomitant increase in available motion. - “Durtiig this period the arm is taken out of the sling for increasing periods and gentle exercises are started, first, swinging the arm as a pendn-lum, later, using the apposite arm to auifit in bringing the affected one overhead or behind the back.” Almost never is it necessary to “manipulate” the arm, with consequent torment to its owner, in order to help the inflamed bursa, he said, and only rarely is it necessary to get to the bursa surgically to remove a calcium deposit. ★ ★ ★ He also rejected treatments with vitamin A, penicillin, traction, diathermy and ultrasound. UPSURGE OF BURSITIS Although there is no statistical evidence, medical authori-there has been a great upsurge of bursas in the last few years. They can’t really explain it, but many of the victims are weekend golfers, woodchop-pers, do-it-yourselfers, and other males who think a Saturday and a Sunday of strenn-otts physical activity will make up for their physical sloth during the other five days of the week. For those who are unsure, a bursa is a sac in bony prominences over which muscles and tendons move. It contains fluid which looks like the white of an egg; and when a bursa gets inflamed, oh brother! ’There’s no pain quite as persistent and as excruciating. ★ ★ ★ In the current rash of bursitis victims, the bursa usually afflicted is the one where an upper arm merges with the shoulder. There is no comfort for them whether standing, sitting or lying down and even the slightest arm movement comes an ordeal. Ex-U2 Pilot Gary Powers Weds Again POUND, Va. (UPI) - Francis Gary Powers, the former hpy pilot whose high-flying U2 was brou^t do#n deep in Russia in 1960, planned to bring his bride .of two days to this mountain village today for a visit with his parents. The former Central Intelligence Agency pilot who became a central figure in a major cold war crisis, was married in Catlett, Va., Saturday to Mrs. Claudie Edwards Downey, 28, who also worked for the QA. It was the second marriage for both. Their aarflar ra«i1age ended in divorce. ★ ★ ★ Powers’ parents didn’t attend he small ceremony Saturday. His father, Olicer Powers, said they were not invited, but then added: ‘‘It was too far for me to drive.” “I’ve met the girl,” the elder Powers said. “She’s real nice and I’m very glad.” uNUOLOl^ Plastics Chief Dies LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP)-Carl B. McLaughlin, S3, president of ’Tube Turns Plastics, Inc., died yesterday after a short illness. McLaughlin, a metallurgist and sales engineer, joined the firm 1943. He was bom in Jacksonville, III. 48 Million French PARIS (AP)—There are now 48 million Frenchmen, the National Institute of Statistics reports. The institute says the French population has been growing at an average of 60,000 persons a month in recent Washington was the last of the states which received railroad service. Light Rain Dampens Areas in Parched Eastern U.S CHICAGO (AP)-yght rain, the first measurable amounts in weeks, dampened parched areas in eastern drought sections today but afforded only minor relief from the prolonged dry speH. Unseasonably mild weather covered broad areas in eastern and southern parts of the nation Sunday. Temperatures soared to the 80s and upper 70s, setting record high marks for Oct. 27. The U.S. Weather Bureau said that the spotty rainfall Sunday from the Ozarks northeastward to the northern Appalachians and in parts of New York State did little to relieve the severe drought conditions. The only substwtial ridns, the bureau said, splashed along the Ohio River in Indiana and Kentucky, with up to about one inch. UGHTRAIN Light rain sprinkled areas in western and central Pennsylvania but 27 new fires flared across the state’s woodlands, 8 more than ^ere reported Saturday. One fire swept through abwt 700 acres at the foot of Big Pocono Mountain in the resort area near Stroudsburg. Heaviest rainfall in the state was .45 inches in Erie. The fire danger in New York State’s forest lands continued. with 21 new blazes Sunday and a total of 62 burning. The .02 inches of rain In Albany ended 23 days of rainless weather, the longest recorded dry spell in the city. The first measurable rainfall in 16 days, .10 inches, was reported in Rochester and Buffalo. ♦ it- In Ohio, which needs heavy, steady rains to break the drought, light rain fell in Cleveland, Cincinnati and Zanesville. The .19 Inches of precipitation in the Cleveland area broke a 27-day dry spell. * ★ * Washington, D.C., has had 29 rainless days but there is a possibility of widely scattered showers Tuesday. Sunday’^ reading of 83 was a record for the date. New Jersey, without any rain for 24 days, reported temperatures of 81 in Newark, a record for Oct. 27. EMERGENCY PIPEUNF Most of the 1,100 residents of Mt. Orab, in southeast Ohio, joined over the weekend in building 3.5 miles of emergency water pipeline to the town’s reservoir from Lake Grant. The reservoir, nearly dry, is expected to be full by W^nesday. In the Midwest, fires burned over a three-square mile area of underbrush and woods south- west of Detroit. In Iowa, nearly I Sioux City burned before the 50 acres of pasture land near | fire was brought under control. WEEK ONLY'‘*‘~“‘~‘*' Gd flcquainted SALE "“'""Porio-PedsHo., SAVE UP TO You won't regret U! • MANY STYLES • SPEOALLY PRKEDI IV I try 'em! Famous Brand Shoe Store (Cancellations) 37 N. SAGINAW — DOWNTOWN PONTIAC POPiTIAC STATE BANK main office, Saginaw at Lawrence Auburn Heights Baldwin at Yale Drayton Plains MwW, tmmmm Miracle Mile M-59 Plaza 9 to 6,4 E. Lawrence 970 W. Long Lake Rtf. Pontiac State Bank Mon., Tues., Thun. 10-3 Wed. 10-12 Fri.10-6 Sot. 9-12 THE PONTIAC PRESS MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1968 PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. NINETEEN Decision Day Is Nov. 5 Township or Cityhood for Waterford By JOE MULLEN dtyhood move say this is not AREA OP EXCEPnON8-Like aU original townships, Waterford once was an area of 36 square miles. It now contains a net of about 34.5 square miles due to infHngements on its eastern boundary and the acquisitiab of a small parcel of property from West Bloomfield Township. This map shows the five alr^y incorporated areas excluded in the proposed incorporation plan. Exceptions No. 1 and 3 are Lake Angehis Village. Two exceptions are made because the village overlaps a section line. Exception No. 3 is the County Service Center, and Exception No. 4 is Pioneer Highlands, both part of Pontiac. The fifth exception is the City of Sylvan Lake. The rectangular area at the bottom of the map is the former West Bloomfield property deeded to Waterford. Nov. 5 will be the day of decision in Waterford Towi^p. Veters r/ill cast ballots on a proposal to tacorporate. the charter towashtp as a city. ^ The electorate also will select nine charter commissioners to draft a proposed dty charter if the cityhood issue carries, w w * If the. issue passes, charter oommissMners win convene within 10 days of the election to begin their work. PRESENT CHARTER Their goal will be to present, a charter acceptable to. the people in a subs^uent election. Incorporation will take place only when the charter is appiwved at the polls. Commissioners wlU have two years to present a maximum of three pr^x»ed charters to the electorate. ♦ ★ ♦ During this period, the township would be immune from any annexation or from internal incorporation. IF ISSUE FAILS If the dtyhood issue fails Nov. 5, there would be no purpose for the charter commission to exist and it would be voided. Three bask issues have evolved in dlscnssioas on the election. They are: taxes, fragmentation Opponents of incorporation cont^ that taxes wiU rise because it is the nature of dty res-idoits to expect and donand greater services. ♦ ★ * V Those who adv<*2ate incwpor-ation stress that taxes will remain the same if services remain the same. They concede' that a demand for niore services would result in greater taxes. CITE DANGER Proponents of incorporation dte the danger of fragmenta-it is, annexation of township area from without or incorporation d land from within. They point oat thnt faihire to v a t e affirmatively Nov. 5 would leave the township open to fragmentation into nnmer- Altematives, they say, are remaining a township or becoming a part of the Greater Pontiac area. They feel that with its present growth and future growth potential, Waterford is ready to stand alone as a dty. w ★ ★ Opponents of incorporation fed that the present charter townsl# fonn of government offers sufOdent flexibility. BORROWING FUNDS atyhood boosters maintain that Waterford as a dty would be able to borrow money for Improvements at a better interest rate. Opponents to the necessarily true. Bonding experts agree that, geacrally, cities can borrow better, bat not always. The individual case most be considered, they say. The initial move toward an incorporation vote came in August 1962 when Waterford Township was threatened with the loss of land to the proposed dty of Union Lake. * * it This planned city never materialize, but Waterford began exploring the feasibility of incorporation. STUDY COMMITTEE On the recommendation of the township’s planning commission, the Township Berd appointed an incorporation study committee Aug. 13, 1962. While the study was stfll in progreu, a petition calling for ah incorporation vote was filed Dee. 4 last year to pre-vent fragmentation pending compktion of the study report. The study committee, comprised of 19 dvic leaders, finish its 15-page comparison of the township and city forms of government Jan. 21, 1963. ★ * ★ . Budget structures of a dty and township would be essentially the same except for road income and expenses, according to the report. BUDGET REQUIREMENT Assuming services were dmi-lar, the report stated that Waterford as a dty would have required n budget of |1,013A94 in 1962. Itd .|etual budget as a township wed 1582,849. Slate, rekaane for rood im- thc differeace in the two badges sli^ elites receive a of gas and weight taxes Waterford received a token 11,000 as a township in 1962 in state highway funds. - Here's Text of Nov. 5 City Issues Issues in the Nov. 5 election wili be presented to the voters as follows: 1. Shall the following described territory located within the County of Oakland, State of Michigan (proposed to be known as the City of Waterford) be incorporated as a Home Rule City pursuant to the provisions of Act No. 279 of the Public Acts of 1909 as amended? For City Incorporation. Yes Q For City Incorporation. No □ G^ote: The proposal includes a description of the proposed city area and lists exceptions. See map on this page.) 2. Candidates for Members of Charter Commission. (Vote for not more than nine). Loren Anderson Walter L. Barningham John S. Coleman Robert J. Cook Patrick K. Daly Elmer R. Pangboner David Foran Donald W, Fraser William H. Healy Ben T. Lowell John E. McGrath Dorothy Olson Larry B. Payne E. Frank Richardson Lewis B. Ruelle Shirley J. Ryden Arthur J. Salley Dean A. Salley Charles W. Sayre James E. Seeterlin James L. Smith III t As a city, it would have been granted $456,945, which was also the estimated expenditure figure. As a township, $26,300 was earmarked for highway expenditure. INCREASE FACTOR The increase of a net $430,645 in road expenditures as a city, is due to the fact that cities are responsible for construction and maintenance of their roads. Township roads are the responsibility of counties. Aside from the budget, there are many differences in the township and city forms of The Charter Township Act limits elections to an at-large and partisan basis. The charter commission of a home rule city has the responsibility to propose, and the voters the power to adopt, one of several forms of government: mayor-council, mayor-commis- sion, council-city manager or oUiera. City voters have the option to choom between poiiiaan nnd nonpartisan and by district or aMarge elections in the ndoptkn of a charter. Townships, charter or ordinary, are allowed only one representative on the county board of supervisors. If Waterford teere a city, its 50,000 plus population would allow it to have five superviam. Under the township system of government, justice is administered in Waterford by two Justice of the peace courts, each with a $300 dvil jurisdiction limit. COURT CHOICE As a city, Waterford could either retain its jusUce courts wiUi a $500 civil jurisdicUon limit or establish a municipal court with a $1,000 ceiling in civil cases, A Glance al Ihe Issues on Cilyhood Two issues face Waterford Township voters in the Nov. 5 special election. ★ ★ ★ • Whether the present charter township should be incorporated as a city. • The election of nine charter commissioners from a field of 21 candidates. Passage of the cityhood proposal will npt necessarily mean that Waterford will become a city. It merely authorizes the charter conunission to draft a proposed city charter for presentation to the voters in another election. IF APPROVED If the charter is approved in the second election, then Waterford will be incorporated as a city. A defeat of the cityhood proposal in the Nov. 5 election automatically would void the charter commission because there would be no need for its existence. r-il. W-.» Only a licenRed attorney who luu been a resident for a minimum of five years could be elected a judge. The justice courts are doomed to die in five years anyway, as decreed by the new state con- FINANCE POWER In the area of finance, a charter township has greater power than an ordinary township. The Township Board may spread np to five mills ($1 per $1,666 of equalized valuation) and, by approvnl nt the polls, an additional 5 mills. A city may levy up to 20 mills, and more with approval of the voters for certain specified purposes. But, Uie millage limitation is spelled out in the charteh SCHOOL DISTRICTS Incorporation would have lit- ' tie effect on the existing school district. State revenue would be essentially the same. Problems now facing Waterford Township and other the establishment of adequate sewer and water facilities, would exist whether Uie area renulns a township or becomes a city. A recenUy formed organization calied the Waterford CiU-zens Action Committee for Incorporation has strongly endorsed tbe incorporation proposal. Also on record as favoring cityhood is the Greater Water-fold Community Council and the township’s Junior Chamber of Commerce. A group known as the Save Waterford Township Committee formed recently to oppose incorporation. Opposing Leaders State Views on Waterford Cityhood Issue Pro Dr. John F. Naz, chairman of the Waterford Citizen’s Action Committee for Incorporation (WCAC), issued the following itfttfment advocating an affirmative vote on incorporation: Waterford Township, nearly 36 square miles, is the center of Oakland County. Location and lakes (over 30) make it a very desirable place to live. k 1634, there has been growth ia activity and population. The Indian powwow was the first method of government. Early Whesi pgpulatioa became too great for simple methods, qr-gsniyjiH government began. ’The first township board met in 1835. DEMANDS UP Progressively, demands for services and for si^tions to local problems increased. ) rural fovernmeiH dtahcofhelp.no sewage disposal, industry, fragmentation, etc. In view of increasing needs, the Wateiford Community Study Committee arose in 1966 from the local Business and Professional Women chapter and Jay-cees. ★ Or ★ This group researched the problem in detail, bringing in speakers such as Paul Reid (Detroit Regional Planning Commission) and Dr. Louis Friedland (Wayne State University). LISTS POINTS The latter pointed out that a rural township could go-to a chartered township or to a city; that the duulered township is not a home rule dty but a midpoint between towndiip and dty; and that it had a 10-mill tax rate to better finance gov-eminent services. He emphasised that a char- vent fragmentatfon of its desirable areas, and that tt OH the County Board of visors (Cities according to population). Lastly, he said, no community can exist on resident taxes akme. ★ w * The net result of the community study proved the inadequacy of rurai government. The voters confirmed this Sq>tem-ber 12,1961, when Waterford became a charter township. ANNEXATION This government looked as though it would serve the community weU. However, annexation came to threaten us. A move was made to incorporate four square miles of Waterford into the dty of Union Lake. This failed. On July 16, 1662, the Wa- recemmended that the Town- study incorporation. The board appotetod In Novembv 1962, the Water-i ford Community (founcil, antki-patlng annexation problems, pe-tUioned for dlybood. it It it Id 1163, the Jaycees reviewed the incorporatloo study and voted to inform our citizens. They found: THE FINDINGS (1) No disadvantage to cityhood. (2) Temporary protection against annexation. ^ (3) Personnel comparatively the same. (4) Increased reiH-esentation on the county board of supervisors. (5) Gas and weight taxes for roads an advantage. (6) More beneficial judiciary (7) More favoraMe bonding (8) More adequate services. (9) More flexibility for future (ievelopment. ★ ♦ ♦ It is an advantage to become a city. The Waterford Citizen’s Action Committee eodorste a yes vote on Nov. 5. Con Fred Morningstar, a certified puUic accountant and chafrman of tbe Save Waterfortl Township Committee (SWTC), has issued the following statement outlining his group’s position on the Nov. 5 sp^l election: The committee believes that supporters of a proposal to cause any major chimge in our local government should show the people that tbe change ia needed, particuiarly if the change involves a tax increase. The main argument put forth in snpport ef Incorpora-tlsn is the danger of fragmentation and anaexatien. Dr. Lsnis Friedland, professor at Wayne State University and a noted authortty in the Odd of local government, has stat- Absentee Deadline Waterford Township voters may apply for absentee ballots for tbe Nov. 5 election up until 2 p. m. Saturday. Applications are taken at the clerk's office in tbe township hall. be the only real issue” facing the peopk on the question of incorporatian. Royal Oak Township has been cited as an example of tbe dangers of fragmentation. Thi township was broken into 14 separate govoiunnt units. But what caused this situation? Fragmentatfon occurs when industry develops heavily in one or more sections of an area, or there is a wide range in residential values. Royal Oak ’Township had these problems. NO PROBLEMS We do not have either of these situations in Waterford. Since there is no motivating factor, tbe danger of fragmentatfon is almost nonexistent. We are abe told that if we do aot iaeorpqrate, Pontiac tfon as a dty does not pre- In either case, die owner of the MaU would have to ask for annexation. The focal tax rate in Water-fold is lam than |S per $1,660 of assessed vahiatfon; it is over sixteen dollars in Pontiac. It seems unlikely that a businessman would want to increase his local property tax ’ 500 per cent. Even if the I were to be annexeu, loss to Waterford residents would total only $1 per year per tax-payer. THERE IS NO NEED An has been shown, the main argument for incorporation does not demonstrate a need to become a dty at this time. Ideally, a eemmuaity’i tax base should be between 36 per cent and SS per cent indns- Incerperatlen as a city. Waterford only has about 15 per cent commercial and indus-' ‘ so we have a long way to go before dtyhood is foasi-ble. it it it The number of people in a town^p is not the deciding factor in becoming a city. Red-ford Township has over 70,000 people but, since they do not have a broad industrial base, incorporation is not feasible for them. PERHAPSLATER The committee believes that inoarpDration may be necessary at some time. But we do not believe that this is the answer to Waterford’s problem now. We can observe the experience ef other communities where tbe tax Increases upon incorporation as a city. Dr. ' We believe that since we have been a charter township for only two years, we should give it a chance. Tl)ere ia very little that we can do as a city that we cannot do as a charter town-•hiP- . After all, die dty of Warren was a charter township for seven years bdore becoming a city. Hopefuls Speak All 21 charter commis- invited to speak Wednesday at a public meeting stated for 6 p.m. at Waterford ’Town^ip High Following the series of three minute talks, residents will have an oppor-tenity to speak with can- TWENTY THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 88, 1968 New Scores in Lead After 2nd Bowlerama Qualifying Round ■■ Iff ■ Women Join Top Scorers at 4 Places ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ONE UONS' PASS-Halfback Tom Franckhauser (4) of the Minnesota Vikings and Gail Cogdill of the Lions battle for possession of the ball in the second period of the game yesterday. Cogdill got possessioi) for a key first down in the second period of the game won by Detroit, 28-10. Pass Interference Call Helps Packers Triumph BALTIMORE (AP)-Max McGee, Grees Bay Packer end, wasn’t sure Lenny Lyles of the Baltimore Colts interefered with him on a pass Sunday, but said “I sure was happy to see it called about that time.” That was putting it mildly. ★ ★ ★ The penalty gave the Packers a golden opportunity to beat the Colts 34-20 when It looked like the result would be a 20-20 tk. The penalty was good for 23 yards and a first down on the Colt 34 with less than four minutes to play. Before the Colt defense could settle down, Elijah Pitts swept around left end all the way for a touchdown. “I think there was interference along the way although it Tittle Has Big Day Giants Slow Brown(s), 33-6 Cleveland (ap) - New York Coach AUie Sherman had a plan to defeat the previously unbeaten Cleveland Browns — control the ball, move it in short bursts and smother the league’s best offense. It was a tall order. But the Giants, in a do-or-die game for them, did it all and more Sunday before 84,213 stunned fans en route to a 33-6 National Footr ball League victory. Y. A. Tittle hit on 21 of 31 passes for 214 yards and two touchdowns, Alex Webster ran over for another score and Don Chandler booted field goals from the 29, 34, 33 and 4^yard lines and kicked three conversions for a toUd of 15 points. How well the Giants controlled the ball can be seen in the statistics. ’They ran off 78 plays, or 40 more than Cleveland, which now has a 8-1 record compared with 5-2 marks for New York and St. Ixxiis in the NFL Eastern Conference. NO OFFENSE Jim Brown was held to 40 yards on nine carries and Frank Ryan completed only one of nine passes—and that for a minus six yards to Ernie Green, who was injured on the play. “It was as good a game as the Giants ever played,’’ said a happy, cigar-smoking German, relishing revenge for a 35-24 loss two weeks ago in New York. Sherman said the Giants were disciplined to play the game according to plan. A Cleveland fumble and a pass interception led to 10 points for New York before the game was three minutes old. “We didn’t know we could move that fast,” said Sherman. “Our plan was to chunk it out a little at a time, just keep going nose to nose with them. We had to stop their offense. We just didn’t let ’em get going. “This is the first game that we put everything together,” Sherman said. Tempers got out of control 52 seconds before the final gun when Brown and Giants’ line- backer Tom Scott traded punches and both were ejected. “I’ve got no comment about it,” said Brown, who was a pass blocker. “It was just one of those things that happen in a game.’’ Scott said he was blitzing when he ran into Brown. “We just tangled and started swinging. That’s all there was to it.’’ Botii Sherman and Cleveland Coach Blanton Collier were willing to drop the matter. “It was (Contliiaed en Page 21. CoL 5) ★ ★ ★ OMNTt SROWNS was not too severe,” admitted 532 fans, Gabriel led Los McGee. “There was some' Jost- \ Angeles back to its second ling. I think he must’ve been straight victory, tapping me on the back along | ★ ★ ★« the way.” | The last time the Rams, won | NO COMMENT j two in row was in 1961 when Coach Don Shula refused to' defeated Minnesota and the speak out. He said he had been misquoted once before on a call STAYED CLOSE by an official and besides “I; The'40ers, who upset the Chi-nmr want to use them as an cago Bears last week, were completely dominated for most of the first half but trailed by only 14-7 at the intermission. Veteran quarterback Lamar McHan and the 49ers could get nowhere on the ground against the Ram defense. ’Riey took to the air and almost saw the aerial fireworks pay off. Morrall Wins First Full Assigrtmeni, 28-JO Lions Regain Victory Touch Over Vikings Detroit's Make-Shift ' Defense Puts Stopper on Minnesota QB By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press After four years in the “bull-pen,’’ Earl Morrall started and finished his first game for the Detroit Lions yesterday, chalking up a 28-10 victory over the hapless Minnesota Vikings. Of course, playing an outstanding game against the Vikings is nothing new for Morrall, except that he started this time and didn’t go back to the bullpen once. Over the past two years, Morrall has come into the games against Minnesota as f second half reliefer and received credit for vktorles. Milt Plum did get into the game yesterday but In the role of place kicker. He booted four extra points and handled the kickoffs as Wayne Walker, re-, covering from a leg injury devoted all- of his playing timo to the linebacker slot. VIKING STOPPED ’The Vikings, with Fran Tat-kenton, one of the leading passers in the league, and Tommy Mason, one of the better runners in the circuit, getting riiackled by a make-shift Lions’ defense, managed only 86 yards running and 84 passing. Tar-kenton hit on only 5 of 25. After taking a 7-8 lead on a 35-yard pass play from Morrall to Terry Barr the first time the Lions’ had the ball, it almost appeared as if another second half downfall was in the making. Minnesota received an early break after recovering a fumble on the Detroit 46. Five plays latet Fred Cox booted a 38-yard field goal. ’The Lions managed a touchdown per period, the second one coming after only two minutes of the 2nd quarter. With Tom Watkins enjoying his best running day of the year, along with Nick Pietrosante, the Lions moved from their own 26 to the Vikings’ three from where Pietrosante smashed over for the TT). INTERCEPTION Another threat for Detroit ended when MorraU’s pass was' intercepted by Tom Franckhauser on the Minnesota four yard line, thus the half ended 14-3. Another fumble in the third quarter gave Minnesota the ball on the Detroit 14-yard line and on the first play Bill Brown literally hit a stone wall, but rolled off the mass of players and scooted the comer in complete daylight for the touchdown. Cox made it 14-10. There were only 36 seconds left in the third quarter when Barr made a dazzling run of a 37-yard pass play from Morrall to make the score read 21-11 with Plum’s conversion. The big play in this 73-yard march was a spectacular catch of a pass by GaU Cogdill pinched between two Vikings. It covered 36 yards for a first down on the Viking 37, from where Morrall threw to Biarr. After stopping Minnesota on the Detroit 28, the Lions went (Contlnned on Page 22, Col. 8| a INAL TtAM STATISTICS Total First Downs * **j! First Downs Rushing 11 I First Downs Passing . s 4 First Downs by Panalty 1 1 Total Yaris Galnad (Nat) 41* Yd*, (rolnad Rustling (Nat) 114 14 Yds. CakMd Passing (Nat) 109 14 Faaaas Atistn^ 14 » DON KRAUSE His best series ever . PassH latar«*Ftad IMl 1 MM IT * It »-» The pass interference was the second penalty called against the Colts in the last quarter when they came ,on with 10 points to tie the score. The first forced the Colts to settle for a field goal instead of going for a touchdown. With third down on the Packer 12, quarterback John Unitas ducked a couple of would-be tacklers, ran to the line of scrimmage and let the ball fly toward a receiver in the enid zone. It sailed away off its mark. Tlie Officials ruled he had intentionally got rid of the ball and put the Colts back on the 27. CHICAGO — ’The Bears retained a share of first place in the Western Division by clipping the Eagles, 16-7. Roger Leclerc booted a 45-yard field goal and Joe Marconi took a 23-yard pass from Billy Wade for a touchdown in the first quarter to give the home team all the points it needed. A King HlO-to-Tonuny McDonald five-yant scoring pass In the second quarter cut the halftime margte to 18-7. The two Bear touchdowns canw on 67 and 80-yard drives featuring the passes of Wade. LOS ANGELES (AP)-Quar-terback Roman Gabriel fired a 51-yard touchdown pass to Car-roll Dale fw one touchdown and ran 12 for Another as the Los Angeles Rams scored twice in the final quarter Sunday in a come from behind performance defeat the San Franciaco 49ers 28-21. ★ w ★ In a battle to escape the cellar of the Western Division of the National FootbaU League, the Rams saw a 14-7 lead vanish as the 49ers rallied with a pair of touchdowns in the third quarter. Then, to the delight of the 45.-★ MARVEL SZOT Breaks slump with bang!!! Moore's 683 Actual High at Huron Bovrl Saturday Both the total entries and the scores went up as the second weekend of the seventh annual Pontiac Press Bowlerama was completed yesterday. Almost 200 bowlers attempted to qualify Saturday and Sunday at 10 of the 12 participating county keg establishments. Featuring the action were the scores of two men who bowled their best series, another who was in normal form and a woman who broke a slump at the right tinw.- Don Ib-aase posted the top Bowlerama score to date for this year’s competition when he roUed a 731 total on his second try at Howe’s Lanes. Another 700 series Sunday was at North Hill Lanes where Harold Allen rapped the pins at a 654 clip, plus 48 pins handicap for a 702 total. For both Krause (who had 671 actual) and Allen the series were their best actual efforts ever. Krause hod started with a 466 actual his first attenqit yesterday. Knowing he could do better, he entered die next squad and hit 244-247 games. BREAKS SLUMP Also at Howe’s yesterday Marvel Szot had a 633 actual for her best effort 6f the year, snapping a season-long slump. ^Adding a 52-pin spot to her ’score gave her a 685 total. She is a fmmer women’s division Bowlerama champion, having won the top prize in 1959 when women keglers had their own division of the Bowlerama. ’This year they are competing equally with the A familiar i on the KOflS SY OUASTtai y 7 y y-n 1 • r *_i# PARIS (AP) - The United States, with Jack Nkklaus chalking up a fantastic run of bb^, won the Canada Cup Golf Tournament for the fourth straight year today as play in the final round was delayed by fog and then finally cut to nine a OmI: Cw (» Y*ra*>. BASKETBALL PITCH-CJuarterbaqk Eari Morrall of the Detroit Lkms holds the ball until he was about to be tackled by Paul Dickson (78) and then tooses a short basket- ball flip to Tom Watkins (23) for a 14-yat4 gain. Morrall played the entire game at quarterback for the Lions and Detroit won, 28-10, over the Vikings. « 7 14 •-{! ... ................7 7 *14-11 LA-WII*on I run ■ LA-0*l* 4 FM* iMNvi kletr {F-*mMi 1 run (Onvl* kick) 41 RM« finm LUm (0«H« kick) SF-VoiMnwMcr t nm (Dm)* kkk) LA-D*l* SI PM fr«m 0«MI (vm*. nu*v* kIdO LA—OaPrM It ran (VUtanum* kkk) TIMELY FrmMG-Peg Carter (right) had s(»ne adjustments made last week on the span of her bowling ball by Press Bowlerama Mixed Doubles Actuals partner Monroe Moore. The refitting proved very Jtimely for she bowled 576 actual yestm'day to combine with Mooore’s 683 actual Saturday. This gave the duo a 1259 and the early lead in the newest phase of the Bowlerama. U.S. Golf Team Wins (Canada Cup Tournament The only possibility that the American victory would not stand up was the weather. Fred Corcoran, tounuunent director, ruled before the start ol today’s play that all teams must finish the shortened round. Nlcklaus birdied six of the nine holes and also won the individual tiUe with a 63-hole total of 237 after being tied with South Africa’s Gary Player at the end of 54 hiries. Arnold Palmer, a member of two of the three previous U. S. championship teams, had a 245 to give the U. S. a oanbined score (rf 482. Palmer had a 34 for tile final nine holes. HEAVY FOG the flnal round originally was scheduled for Sunday but was pos^ioned because of a heavy fog. Fog blanketed the par 72 Saint-ndm-la-Brete^ links today but, after a long delay, lifted enough to permit the players from 33 countries to tee (^. * * -* Oircoran, tournament direc- r, ruled, however, that the round be reduced to nine holes because of weather conditions the fact a number of the local bowling scene, Monroe Moore, also was in the pocket consistentiy during his first qnaUiying attempt this year. ”Mo” rolled a 683 actual Saturday at Huron Bowl for the fag) actual total to date in the tournament. Moore returned from the professional bowling circuit only last week and was takinig his first crack at the Huron Bowl lanes since arriving when he posted his fine ef-f(Hl MncRD DOUBLES Moore’s score and that of Mixed Doubles Actuals partner Peg Carter totaled 1259 to give them the lead in the liewest division of the\ Bowlerama. Mrs. Carter hit 576 actual on her first qualifying attempt yesterday at 300 Bowl. Another former champion, E. C. Richards, bowled 647 to lead all entrants’ efforts Sunday at the “3()0” lanes. Richards won last year’s handicap singles players have commitments in Australia Wednesday. _________ _______ ^ Spain, tied with Nic^ and portion of the tournament. Palmer at 416 for the team championship going into the final round, ended up with 485. Sebastian Miguel had a 33 for a 63-hole total of 242 and Ramon Sota a 36 for a 243. Player finished with a 37, giving torn a 63-hole total of 242 and a tie with Miguel. With a number of players still on the course it looked Tike 242 would bo good enough for second place in the battle for the individual crown won last year by Argentina’s Roberto de Vicoizo. Rudolph Wins by 3; Bone Ends at 304 FRESNO, Calif. IB >- Rudolph broke a four-year drought Sunday ahen he coasted home on a one-under-par 71 and locked up the 825,000 Fresno ()pen with a 275 score and tiffee-stroke margin. Mason birdied one hole Sunday, the 575-yard third at the 7,181-yard, par 3836-72 San Joaquin Coiintry (jlub course. He played the other 17 in par in finishing off his 6887-71-71-275 effort. Pontiac’s Bone finished with a 76 and a 304 total yesterday and failed to get a share of the prise list The top soH-ing one-eighth of the total entries at each qualifying establishment will reach the finals. ’There are two Saturdays and four Sundays remaining to attempt to (]ualify. 144-1M-147 46 7)4 Verge W*«t t Chert** LeBing* Heye* (mlth *y Teyler Jerry Pern* tlM))-1(4 lOS 72) 14MM-)4S M 417 )»W**-1I2 7i 471 ------------- 1)4-211-124 2 47) Mery A. CMeWf 1I2-1*M7* (4 M 110-»Mn 4i 7*1 )e*-)**-2)S 4* *71 1i)-1*M*l 4* 4D i**-i2Mii n m IIB-114-14) ISI 4*1 >•*•170-221 77 *77 141-222 )04 72 441 1IM0M21 M 444 Menree Moor* 247-1*1-21) 0 *■) Rkherd Bmnn'ter 177-I*)-)** n 471 John a. Nelaon 174-2D-1I7 It 447 . Peui a. Lyiyh 14l-2l4-l*S (4 44) 20*-lf)-)t4 M 4*1 1*M))-10* 21 474 1*l-14)-)l* 44 474 1)M74-101 m m 1l1.|f»«2 S4 447 171-17*-17* 10) 4)4 l*UUrU)- 4( 42) 174-147-1)) SI 474 Bemrllng Center l*l-)ll-)*1 )7 441 UB-m-i*! u m 1**-)0)-12l 0 4)4 mm Lene* )7*-))J-224 44 44* 17)-It)-I7l m 441 •------------ 47 4M S) 4a 1IM7M14 114-)f7-1M THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 28. 1963 twe'nty-one Wings Lose, 6^4, but Fans Cheer Howe's Record Goal Large Olympia Crowd Gives Gordie Ovation DETROIT UPi—Gordie Howe, the Detroit Red Wing’s golden boy for 18 years, now owns a share in the National Hockey League all-time scoring record with ’ Maurice (Rocket) Richard. . ; The Canadiens beat D e tr o i t 6-4, but that made no difference to the Detroit fans, who have long held Howe as their darling. Howe, as pandemonium broke out in Detroit Olympia Stadium’s stands, drove home goal No. 544 Sunday night to draw even with Richard’s 18-year record set with the Montreal Canadiens. TTie crowd of 14,749, Detroit’s largest ol the year, shook the rafters with a roaring ovation that lasted five minutes. The fans showered the ice with printed programs and other throwable items. “I’m glad I got it," Howe said, giving credit to his teammates. He added "this should help the club. They’ve been out there looking out for me.” Coach Toe Blake of Montreal was among those congratulating Howe. “T wish I could have played center for you,” Blake TIES SCORING MARK—Gordie Howe of the Detroit Red Wings holds the 544th puck he has fired Into an opponent’s net during his 18 seasons in the National Hockey League. The goal against Montreal last night tied Maurice Richard’s career record. The Canadiens won, 6-4. Howe gets his first chance for No 545 Tuesday night when the Red Wings play the Chicago Black Hawks at Chicago. Gordie’s big one came on a power play at 11:04 of the third period. He slashed in a short shot past goalie Gump Worsley after taking a pass from the boards from Bruce MacGregor. “Then five guys hit me,” Howe said. Bill Gadsby also was in on the play. It was the 400th assist for Gadsby in his own 18 NHL years. ★ ★ Howe made his 544 goals in 1,126 games. Richard made his in 978 games in 18 seasons from 1942 to 1960, when he retired. When Richard began his accumulation the NHL schedule was 50 games a season. Since then it has been 70 games. Howe also holds the records for the most total points, 1,216, and the most assists, 673. WINGS BEHIND The Red Wings were trailing 5-3 when Howe got the goal. It was his second goal attempt of the game. Montreal, with the big line of Jean Beliveau, Bemie Geoffrion and Jdm Ferguson in top form, commanded most of the action. The line fired in diree of the six goals, Beliveau shooting two within 70 seconds in the second period. la other NHL actioa, winning goals in the last minnte of the first period sent the Chicago Black Hawks fbdng, 4-1, over the New York rangers. The Hawks now have an unbeaten string of four victories and two ties. Ab McDonald and Bobl^ Hull scored the vita points within 37 minutes of each other, topping the Rangers’ kme tally by Don Marshall from 85 feet out. McDonald and Jack McKenzie fired insurance goals in the last period in the game 15,616 watched in New York. * * * Meanwhile, a six-game streak of a different kind than the Hawks’ was snapped when the Boston Bruins beat the Toronto Maple Leafs 24). Goalie Ed Johnston shut out the Stanley Cup champions for the Bruins’ first season victory after six losses. Forbes Kennedy and Murrary Oliver scored for Boston in the home game. ★ ★ ★ NHL Standings flilrmn TorwK Clilcag* 1, Twvile.fc ....list . .... S J 1 7 ...14 0* .... 1*1 1 SATOtOAY'l BWUI.TS -, MonIrMi 1, II* 'ttmOA^ t»ULTI Mrolt ol Chlcies Micnwaa cocLSsa ocoastosao MUMMota *, MlcW*« • SpTiEa-x KthSmlnoe 4 Ollyo* It Aiiithmr (PA) a, woyno wwt^n Ex-NFL Coach leaching Oakland How to Score By The Associated Press Sid Gillman, the ol’ professor the American Football League, has taught his pupils well. Too well for Coach Sid Gillman. Two of Gillman’s able assistants have become head coaches in the AFL—Jack Faulkner at Denver and A1 Davis at Oakland. Faulkner’s Broncos have beaten San Diego three times without a loss. Gillman matched wits with Davis for the first time Sunday. He’s 0-4 against his pupils now. Cotton Davidson’s nine-yard touchdown pass to Glenn Shaw, reactivated from the deferred injury list just before the game, carried the Raiders from behind to a stunning 34-33 upset of the Western Division leading Chargers. The vict(»y pulled the Raidm to within games of the frontr runners. San Diego is 5-2, Oakland 4-4. FIRST PLACE Houston took over the top spot in the East as George Blanda passed for three second half touchdowns in the Oilers’ 28-7 triumph over Kansas City. Houston leads with a 5-3 record. Boston dropped to a tie for second At 4-4 after a 28-21 loss to Buffalo Saturday night while New York remained in conten-Uon at 34-1 after a .35-35 tie with Denver before a record AFL turnout in New York of 20,-377. The four-game program attracted 106,133, the season’s high. In the National League, New York overwhelmed Cleveland 33-6, Green Bay walloped Baltimore 34-20, St. Louis defeated Washington 21-7, Chicago downed Philadelphia 16-7, Pittsburgh edged Dallas 87-21, De-roit whipped Minnesota 28-10 and Los Angeles defeated San Francisco 28-21. The Chargers led 23-14 in the third quarter when Davidson took over for Tom Flores, who threw a pair of touchdown passes before being forced out with a head injury. Where Flores was good, Davidson was better. He hit for three TD passes—39 yards to Dobie CYaig, 46 to Art Powoll and the clincher to Shaw. NFL Standings eASTSRN coMS^atnica W L T Pd. P«1 «i«nd ....... * I 0 J57 ni ....J York .... 5 * 0 .714 IM S». Loull ..... S 2 0 .714 IN PttMiurah ..... 4 2 I M/ IN PhIMtIpMo ..... 2 4 1 Mi 134 -----gton ..... 2 5 0 JM 144 1 * 0 .142 IN waiTESN coNPaaaNCB Croon Boy ..... 4 1 4 .tS7 200 CMcooo ......... * 1 « JS7 147 Detr^.......... 3 4 0 .420 143 Boltimoro ..... 3 4 0 .420 134 Minnosota ..... 2 i 0 .2M 1« Lo* Angolos ... 7 S 0 .2U 101 San Francisco 1 4 0 .143 03 SUNDAY'S aaSULTS Plttsburoh 27, Dallas 21 Croon Bay 34, Baltimora 20 Detroit 20, Mhnosola 10 Now York 33, Ctovoland 4 Chicago 14, Phlladolphia 7 r* UmiIs 21, Washinglon 7 Angolas N, San Francisco 21 SUnDAY'S SAMaS Chicago at Baltimora Clovolaiid at PhlladaIgMa Detroit at San Francisco Los Angelos at Minnesota New York at St. Louis Pmsbutdi vs. Croon Ba Washingiwi at Dallas AFL Standings lAsraaN division W L T Pet. Pts. op on .... . 3 3 0 .423 177 133 n ......... 4 4 0 .3N IN 133 York ...... 3 3 1 .SH IN 104 to 3 4 I .420 143 in wasraiN division „.. Jlego ..... 3 2 0 .714 114 134 Oakland ........ 4 4 0 .3W 177 131 Kansas City ... 2 4 1 .333 174 144 Denver .........2 4 1 .333 143 231 MTUaDAY*S aaSULTS Denver 33, Now York 33, tie, night Buffalo n, Boston 21, night SUNDAY'S aaSULTS Oakland 34, San DIago 33 Houston 2S, Kansas City 7 PBIOAY'S OAMa Houston at Boston, ntaM UTUNOAYH OAMN San Dtogo St Now Y^ s City a Michigan Tech 11 Wins Championship By The Asiociated Press Michigan Tech has grabbed the first glory in the state’s small college football action. The Huskies reign as champions of the Northern Intercol-lq;iate Conference by virtue of their 23-14 victory over Moorhead (Minn.) State on Saturday. In other small college games, Omaha defeated Northern Michigan 28-17, Allegheny (Pa.) edged Wayne State 22-21, Central Michigan outscored Illinois Sta^ 24-22, Ferris State took the meliisure of Geneva (Pa.) 8-6, Hillsdale overcame Northwood Institute 27-20, Hope rolled over Albion 21-6, and Kalamazoo steamrollered Olivet 40-14. Western Michigan whipp^ Toledo 18-7 and Detooit playU to a 14-14 tie with Dayton. Junior quarterback Troy Allen and fullback George Archer were the big guns in Western Michigan’s come-from-behind 18-7 Mid-American conference victory over Toledo. Allen trying to sneak two yards for a first down early in the second half, went 21 yards for a touchdown, then pas^ to George Diler for the extra points in the fourth quarter. Archer cracked over from the three after setting up the score on a 32-yard gallop. Detroit was leading 14-6 and was headed for victory with less than a minute left when Dayton tied it up on fullback Jim Overman’s one-yard plunge and Gary Hussion’s two-point conversion pass to Tom Titus. The Titans scored on Gary Wilkie’s nine-yard dash in the second quartet'and Fred Beier’s one-yard plunge in the third period. U-D and Dayton each are 1-4-1 for the season. SHARED HONORS Fullback Paul Butkovich and quarterback Ralph Abata shared the honors in Michigan ’Tech’s championship victor yover Moorhead State. Butkovich scored two touchdowns on short plunges and Abata got the other Tech TD on a 10-yard run. The victory was the Huskies’ fourth In five games. Kalamazoo’s homecoming victory over winless Olivet starred senior halfback Ed Lauermann. He accounted for 32 points on four touchdowns—two on runs of 10 and 9 yards each and two on passes from Jim Harkema. The Hornets now are tied with Hope and Albion for first place in the MIAA Conference standings. Each has a 3-1 league record, In the MIAA clash between Hope and Albion, sophomore quarterback Harlan Hyink passed for three touchdowns to hand the Brittons their first conference loss. Bill Shuple’s 34-yard touchdown run in the fourth period supplied the margin which brought Central Michigan its Interstate Conference victory over Illinois State. TRIES AGAIN-^immy Brown had his troubles against the Giants yesterday. He is stopped after a two-yard gain In the first quarter. TVo plays later the Cleveland fullback fumbled on his 30 to setup a New York field goal. Kettering Bombs L'Anse, 60-6 Huron Bowler Earns Trip to Dallas Mike Samardzija Jr. of Pontiac’s Huron Bowl qualified Sunday for a January trip to Texas by finishing eighth in the state bowling proprietor’s All -Star| Elimination toumamoit. Samardzija will be one of Michigan men eligible to bowl in the National All-Star Tournament at Dallas, Tex. Dick Preston of Detroit led all M1 c h 1 g a n qualifiers with 225.49 Peterson points. The total was compiled in two weekends of bowling at Grand Rapids and Southfield. Samardzija, who was 10th after the first weekend, moved up to eighth place with the aid of some strong bowling that put him 135 pins over a par-200 for 48 games. TTie other local competitor, Stan Kurzman, finished 9.12 Peterson points behind the final ipdifiEr, BiU Stanfidd, who was I6th position. Kurzman was 21st. HELP FROM BEHIND-Offensive tackle Daryl Sanders (70) of the Detroit Lions, Uterally lifts back Tom Watkins (23) off his feet helping to shove him for a five yard gain. Watkins was the team’s leading ball carrier with 102 yards as the Lions defeated the Vikings, 28-10, yesterday In Detroit. Redskins, Cowboys Whipped Giants, (lards, Sleelers Post Wins (Continued from Page 20) a long day and tempers flare,’’ said the Sherman. WASHINGTON Uft - Charley Johnson pitched three touchdown passes and the St. Louis defense handcuffed fumbling Washington Sunday as the Cardinals whipped the Redskins 21-7. The Card quarterback connected on 18 of 30 passes for 284 yards, including touchdown tosses of 28 yards and 54 yards to Sonny Randle and 14 to Bobby joe Conrad. TirhatT tSree passes iptarcept-ed by Redskin defenders, but a ^stumbling Washington offense failed to cash in the scoring opportunities. By winning, St. Louis boosted its record to 5-2 and ramained in a tie with New York for second place in the National Football League's Eastern Division, one game behind Cleveland. The Giants whipped the Browns 33-6. PITTSBURGH (AP) - If quarterback Ed Brown of the Pittsburgh Steelers ever needs advise on play calling, he’d do well to ask the opinion of end Red Mack. CALLED PLAY Mack, a speedsta- L Dame, called the electrifying 85-yard touchdown play in the clos- LAST MINUTE SCUFFLE—Fullback Jim Brown of the aevelaad Browns (32-right) and New York defensive back Tim Scott (left, obscured, held down by referee) are both on the ground 52 seconds before the end of yesterday’s National Football League game in Cleveland after they engaged in fisticuffs. Both players were ejected from the game. Other players mill around as Andy Robustelli^ of the Giants (81) hn^ at Brown. Hie Giants wdn, 354. , Local Cyclists Take Laurels at Brighton Motorcycle drivers from the Pontiac area won seven of 12 trophies yesterday at the Meta-Cayuse Club races near Brigh-m, Taking first places in the amateur clasM were Bud Graham (d Pontiac in the heavyweight class and Roger White of Dray-toh Plains in the lightweight division. Dick McDonald and Howard Lovett in the lightweight class gave Pontiac runneiMip honor;, while Bud Haimbough was second in the Expert lightweight division. Bill Cox took a third in the amateur heavyweight races. Un-wthird in the expert lightweight ion Lake’s Mike Northrup was third in the expert lightweight class. There were 51 racers from the state competing at the ^mrent which was witnessed by approximately 1,500 fans. ing minutes of the National Football League game Sunday that helped the Steelers pull out a thrilling 27-21 victory over Dallas. With less than four minutes left in the game and Dallas leading 21-20, Brown, standing on his own eight-yard line, threw a long pass to Mack who grabbed the ball over his shoulders on the Dallas 30 and out-race two Cowboy defenders into the end zone. “I knew I could beat both of those buys (Mike Gaechter and Jerry Overton),” Mack said in llir victory. “So I told Ed. He thought it would be best if I went to the outside but I knew I could to it by playing tight and going straight down the field. That’s what I did and he hit my perfectly. It was a helluva throw, for if it had been any longer or any shorter it would have been no good.” COWBOYS STiaLHS Tri-County Grid Race Ends in Tie Waterford Kettering made short work of Mount Clemens L’Anse Creuse’s hopes for a ; share of the Tri-County League football crown Saturday with ! a convincing 60-6 victory. I The win permitted the Captains to tie Oxford for the title with a 3-1 mark. Kettering whipped Oxford, 34-0, during the campaign, but stubbed its toes last week against Lapeer. The visitors jumped into a 134) first quarter lead and made it 27-0 at halftime. Coach Jim Larkin inserted his reserves into the contest all during the final half but the deluge continued. Three third quarter touchdowns foUowed the intermission and two more ii\ the last quarter produced the school grid scoring mark of 60 points. ★ ★ ★ Mel Patterson went over twice on duns of one and five yards.i Reserve halfback Pat Nutter also took the ball across the final stripe twice on runs of 65 and 42 yards. Earl Hook caught a four-yard pass from Patterson, Jim Haviland ran four yards and brother Chuck Haviland ran 48 yards to paydirt with a pass Interception. One yard runs by Mike Ship-man and Phil Ragatz accounted for the other two scores. Hook kicked five points after touchdowns and Steve McCallum caught a pass from Patterson for a sixth. Kettering is now 5-2 overall. ; eiTT-oi«l n gtw frim Brswi ( NITT—DM n gsN Iran Onwi (Truey —I). -4>W 14 ggM irgm Bigm rrrgcy .1). PITT-Mack « ... * 7 7 7 .................... 0 117 SH.-C«Arad 14 pm from JglWNn (I ton kick) StL/-aandl* M pm from JoNnton (Sto- Wggh aidiNr S4 pm from In (Khoyot Harrier Teams in 'A' Finals The regional cross country showdowns Saturday found Birmingham Seaholm edging Milford, 50-51 in the competition at Redford Union and Royal Oak Kimball qualifying witti a second place at River Rouge. Hie three county teams advanced to the Class A finals next weekend at Ypsilanti along with individuals Girmay Pedia of Rochester and Bob Richards of Bloomfield Hills. Richards finished first at Red-ford Union with a 10:01.5 timing. Pedia is an Ethiopian exchange student who is participating in cross country for the first time in his life. He qualified for a trip to Ypsilanti by finishing sixth at Rouge Park Saturday. ★ ★ ★ Oxford just missed the Class B finals by finishing fourth at Cass-Fenton Park. Hie Wildcats had 138 points, four behind the last qualifier. Dick Evans finished 12th to lead the Oxford team. WaBKBNO PWNTS SYDNEY, N.S.-Tyrm Gprantr SydMy RIvur, N.S. ktaaBud Maro tfron, 13A OiMtoc. 4 TWENTY-TWO THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. OCTOBER 28, 1963 MIXICO CITY-4 )M. Mnlce Ctty. Mr )M. Mwloo Cftr. ' BULLETIN PLAY OUR 9 HOLE PAR 3 |C 50< FOR ONLY AND THIS AD Wit*rior4 Mil CovHtry Cl«b MA 5-2A09 OL St. A4ory Gains Win From St. Fred Orchard Lake St. Mary’s “gridiron machine didn’t coliect any dust during its short vacation from the football wars. ’The Eaglet eleven, back in action after a one-game break in the schedule, ran its Northwest Parochial rfcord to 4-2 with an you oan borrow UP TO ^l^OOO BUOKNER FINANCE SIM Gerry’s BIKE _______^________ Hobby Shop\ Mno •nO % a brand ntw aalactlon ot batm, part* 1 and acca*iori**l 1 Coma ki and lan our bobblai for 1 all *0*1. jnof Caanat Wa Rapair AN Bkat al All Mafca* 1380 Boldwin FE 2-3175 s < K WALKERn A fine TRUE Bourbon at a welcome price TEN HIGH—Your Best Bourbon Buy U and 100 PROOF • HIRAM WALKER S SONS INC., PEORIA, ILL easy 26-0 decision over St. Frederick Saturday evening at Wis-ner Stadium. BIG HALF OL's starting unit ran iip a 20-0 halftime lead and watched the closing half from ihe sidelines as coach Fr. John Rakoezy turned the chores over to the reserves. It was a disappointing homecoming for Rams’ followers, who watched their injury-plagued squad wilt before the crushing Eaglet attack. The Rams only threat of the game came in the dying moments of the game when they passed their way to the Eag 25-yard line. ★ ★ ★ Slashing off-tackle runs by halfback Bernard Stec and Frank Rompel put the Rams in a hole early in the contest. Rompei, a 145-pound senior, set up a first-period score when he dashed 26 yards with a punt to the Ram 3»-yard line. Quarterback Conrad Krogn-leckl moved the club over the SI yards in seven plays with Rompel slanting off right tackle for the final six yards. The Eaglets upped their lead early in the second period when Rompel shot through the left side of the Ram defense on a 2S-yard scoring sprint. 2^YARD STRIKE Stec closed the first-half assault with 1:40 remaining when he tip-toed behind the Ram secondary and hauled in a 22-yard scoring strike from Krogu-lecki. Fullback Fred Bieniasz ended the Eaglet scoring on a four; yard burst through the middle that capped a 57-yard drive midway in the third stanza. The Rams, as expected, relied heavily on their passing attack with Gordon Doyra and John Shearer sharing the pitching dudes. The two completed five of 16 tosses for 58 yards with most of the yardage coming late the final quarter. POOTbALL STATISTICf OLtM SI. Frad 12 First Downs RusMng ....... 4 « First Downs Passing ....... 2 2 First Downs Ptnsltles .... I 14 Total First Downs ........ 7 240 Yards Gained Rushing .... 5* M Yards Gained Passing ..... SI 301 Total Net Yard* Gained .... 114 15 Passes Attempted ......... U 1 Passes Completed .......... 5 2 Passe* Intercepted by .... 2 1—39 Punt* and Average Yards »-29.l 3 Fumbles ................... 3 2 Fumbles Lost 0 1—15 Penalties and Yds. Penalised 4—40 SCORING PLAYS OLSM-Rompel *-yerd run (Stec run) OLSM—Rompel 23-yard run (run tailed) OLSM—Stec 20-yerd pass from Krogu-leckl (Stec run) OLSM-Blenlasz 4-yard run (Run failed) SCORi SY QUARTERS OLSM ................ 7 13 5 (5-26 St. Fred ............0 0 0 (5-0 TAKE YOUR PICK FOR SHAVING COMFORT! Norelco with rotary blades... the third way to shave! FIRST CAME THE RAZOR BLADE. THEN CAME BACK-AND-FORTH ELECTRIC SHAVERS. NOW TRY NORELCO WITH ROTARY BLADES. CORDLESS! Ndw NorbFce CordiMS Spbbdshavdr 20C. Shivdt bnywhdrb on four tiny battdrid*. No bulky tdchargdr. Rotary bladts. Flip top' claaning, Mir-rortd zippar Uavcl case. SELF-ADJUSTING! Naw Neralco ‘floatbig-haad' Spaadshavar 30. Haadt swivel to hug face. Rotery blade*. Fast 'flip-opan' claaning. Adapts to world wid* usa— 110/220 volts (AC/DC). Traval cas*. POPULAR PRICE! Naw Norako YbR^op' Speedshawai* 20. Nawast modal of «yorfd'l largaat tolling shaver. Rotary bledes Economical prica. 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Including GEE POCAHONTAS and "LinU JOE" The Ail Purpota STOKER COAL SEl PontiaeMi eldest and largest Locally owned and operated Haw MoMIheat Bistribuf r! TWENTY rOL K THE PONTIAC PllESS, MONDAY. OCTOBER 88. 1968 A School Argument - I BEN CASEY How Should Children Be Taught to Read? By LESUE J. NASON, Ed. D. How shall reading be taught? A discussion of that point is jne of the quickest ways to produce an argument nowadays among educators — or among parents either, for that matter. Although tests indicate that students read better now than they did years ago, it is true also that school dropouts and delinquency are too often associated with a lack of reading skill. Heading is a fundamental matter, whether you are talking about an informed public, the rejection of draftees, the retraining of workers displaced by machines, or the production of more scientists. So there Is no argument about the need for a better job of teaching reading. The argument centers around n^ethod. THREE WAYS Specifically, should pupik b$: gin to learn through: • Recognition of words by appearance or shape' — Look-Say? • The letters -themselves — the alphabet? • Syllables and sounds — phonetics? The hottest arguments center around the Look-Say, or Look-See approach, which is an outgrowth of progressive education and has its stronghold in New York and California. Advocates of this sytem point out that the reader ultimately recognizes words but does not “say” them. He just “knows” the meaining. An efficient reader grasps An keys to recegaMon of words are important — letters which make np the words, sounds of the letters, how the word Is divided into syflaMes. Later the same wUl be of word roots, prefixes and suffixes. The acquisition of all of this infornuition aids in word recognition mren though we do not go through the process of thinking about all of it as we read. Jacoby on Brieve; NOKTH 1 AKJIOS W 104 0 AJ1083 «6S WIST (D) BAST 4874 48 WAQ9SI WKJ8T 48 4S4S 4KJ8S 4AQ1054 BdCTH 4AQ88S , ¥8.8 S OKQ76 \497 East and West vulnerable West North\Bast SmU Pass Pass Vasa 14 Pass 4 4 Pass Pass Pass Openlnc lead—4 8 Every bid in bridge is in the nature of a bet. In my newest book, ‘“Oswald Jacoby on Gambling,” the bridge chapter discusses the odds for and against various bids. in dlscus9ine fourth hand bids it points 0 u t that any. time you think I you have thel best hand at" table it is good bet to open the bidding in fourth position. Yoft won't win every one of these bets, but you will win more than you lose. When you have a doubtful fourth hand opening a most frequent consideration is the spade suit. If you have spades you - have the top suit and it is going to be hard for your opponents to compete successfully. Thus, South's fourth hand opening is a good bet because he has spades. North’s Jump to four spades is not a good bid as the cards lie. East and West can take the first four tricks, but West has to make Astrological Forocosf M ay SVDNIV OMARR ARIIS SMar. 11 to Aw. SM» an ixcUing day. Vat ............ errattve chaitongat. Accept Inti, ad^ respenatbimto.. Cvel# higa. Yoor abillto to cama througa 'Mn plncti" l> enhanced. TAURUS (Apr. » to May Ml: -------- derful ter making new Irlendv Ing anociatad wKn varlou. culture can learn by Making *"GBSuNi (May 11 ti appear, a dHtIcultv , fav^ Tdke. lust a II... constructive outlet, tor You will *■— ”cir?C?R (June H to July 11 presu/re due. But you can nx... ---- Imge. easily when you ORGANIZE. Gal (acfv (Iguret In order. And don't negled loved one. Yow will flAd wermth, st* fection from foltMul Irtfodt. LEO (July a fo Ao« 21): Cycle VIRGO (Ai LIBRA (Seot ! It tri/thful, •II fdcH • w ---- SCORPIO rds precbely, the rest winner «futile. _ __ Progress toward proficiency KEYS IMPORTANT in all types of reading does not RecognitiVn of words through' come ea^, but it b one of the shape or c(mformation b too: things that is worth working for. general for beginners. Words' like “bag,” “beg” and “bog” cannot be differentiated by shape. Look-Say beginners thus can lead to guessing. Guessing curtails one’s ability to read and comprehend. motM tovo. romoiKO, txcltomml trool pdlvKtot. EtrllOf, you murt ottr—' petollt. Chpck mouren. Ctoor **Ca!^iCOR^?*'i1>c. a to Jon. W): & «mon many oltoiuty. OOtov IntoRvIng'money to ourvoy tntlro Utuotlon oelon- •I Rocl.lon. You hoW "koy" cord. PISCES IPob. a to *•' ■twad! Cycto —'---- cemlM dud I MlvidMl cdi Jac?*tpaSJan«. IP ■njESoA I^YO^R RIRTMOAY , . . you ara kilultlva----------- ing Ralwaan Ria Knot flna toaaiar or oltom... , . GENERAL ftN(^NClfs: Day gaepto took laa aaotolnt laorda ~ the PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1968 TWENTY-FIVE County GOP Chief May Stay On By Jm DYGERT As soms Republicans predicted be would, Oakland County GOP Chairman Charles L. Lyle is duuiglng,hls mlnd about resigning before tbe end of the year. “It’s possible I may revise my thinking and stay <»i through 1964,“ Lyle said yesterday. “Some filings have happened to change tbe situation.’’ However, be said he definitely would not be a candidate for re-election to the top party post after tbe 1964 elections. A Ww state law has changed the time for a party’s publicans by winning the governorship after 14 years of Democratic control. ★ w ★ . Lyle survived an ouster move last year when accused of too- frem j^t after the Angnst primary to wHhia a meath after Last April, Lyle gave personal and business reasons for his intention to step down. Now he says his “business situation is pretty well ironed out’’ He is a sales representative for tbe Electroloy Co. of Bridgeport Conn., with an office in Birmingham. MORE VOLUNTEERS / Lyle also cited changes for the better in tbe GOP organisation. “Because of tbe large influx of new and willing volunteers, the job of dudrman may not require so much time.’’ He said he phaaed te make a defiaMe ^ledslea ea staylag independent acUon by some i fice nominees, along with mem-, providing that execuUve coin-GOP members. bers appointed one each by the mittee meihbers formerly ap- He was re-elected by the coun- nominees. pointed by the nominees will be ty GOP execuUve committee, * ♦ ♦ elected by precinct delegates to which consists of the party’s A new law has changed this give the rank and file a voice in state legislaUve and county of-1 procedure sli^tly for next year, | the selecUon of party officers. Sicilian Chapel Fire Damages Art Works PALERMO, SicUy (AP)-Fire broke out Sunday in a wing of the Norman Palace, seat of Sic ily’s regional parliament, and damaged one of the most fam ous chapels in Italy. The blase, attributed short circuit, destroyed paintings and damaged mosaics in the Palatine Chapel, built in 1132. The palace dates from the medieval conquest of Sicily by the Normans. The dally high temperature in .Saigon, capital of South Viet Nam, averages from 87 to 96 degrees the year round. OhI Thos« Labels JlONDON ton - ’The Middlesex County Council said its three-year study of food labeling and advertising turned up a “Boston cream pie” cake mix from America which was not a pie, contained no cream and did not come from Boston. six Is eight weeks. County GOP chairman since Arthur G. Elliott left in 1961, Lyle attrfouted the iqisurge in volunteers and citiaen interest in the GOP to Gov. George Romney’s “Immense popularity’’ and the Encouragement he gave RE- Ginny Moves East in Ocean /k>Moy From Coast, but Still Dangorous CAPE HATTERA8, N. C. (UP1>—Hurricane Ginny completed iU frightening circle arxMBd the South Atlantic and moved eastward across the open sea today, still a “dangerous hurricaiie’’ but well out of reach of land areas. ■praag up la fiw Caribbeaa dariag the weekend aad ■hewed signs sf growiag to harrkaae proportioas, degenerated into little more than sqnalls. Ginny still padrad the 96-mile-an-hour winds which kept residents of the eastern ^naboard edgy all last week and ^occed removal of about 4,000 pera^ from I But its remote position made tt a fiirest only to shipping. lOWARD BERMUDA It passed yesterday near the spot off the North Carolina coast where it was born eight days ago and headed in fiie direction of Bermuda. The Btana was last reported ahsat m miles west sf Bermada sn a line between the British bland aad Charles-tan, 8. C. B eras meviag eari-ward at 11 m.pJ. Helena was located about 60 . mile eastHMrtheast of Antigua in the Leesrard Islands. Its highest erinds were 40 m.pJi. The storm, described by the weather bureau as “dT and poorly definted with no string winds near the center,’’ was moving to the nentheast at aobut 7 m.pJt mUtAlTC'SWING Glnny’s erratic swing along the coastlines of Florida, Georgia and the CaroUnas sent gale winds and high tides crashing into shore in some areas, but damage was minor. Coast &urd ships and planes are searching ftw a possible vi(> tim of the storm. The tug Me-itowax had been, missing for ei^t days with a crew of four persons aboard. _____________ Stop Corn -|lnfast! O' Scholls lino pods ^er FREi 49‘ VAaONWARE BOWL THIS WEiK WITH MAILED BOOKLET COUPON f PLUS 850 EXTRA vSSSiSTAMPS WITH COUPONS IN THIS AD AND YOUR MAILED BOOKLET COUPONS (49* VALUE) 12-OZ BOWL Thrifty Beef Sale ioum.riii STEAK 69’ SIRLOIN STEAK.'^79' T-BONE STEAK.'^89' CHUCK STEAK.>‘59‘ PORTERHOUSE STEAK . . ‘^99' BOILING BEEF ....... SMOKED HMI VACRONWARE • SMART • MODERN 9 FRACTICAL S»yl*a Hk« • b*lrit ■ml imWMkaW* Iw ■ liiiR yew. R kMft tmit mmi M m nM Unfweiid If «nn'f (WMl SAVE MONTI . ^______ FRUIT COCICTAIL.. .4% 89‘ SAVI 18*-TASTY _ _ Del Monte CATSUP6.%99* SAVE 18«-WHOLE KERNEL OR CREAM STYLE Del Monte CORN...6^99* SAVE S'-YELLOW CLING SLICED OR HALVES l>el Monte peaches .3's^'89* SAVE 9*-CHUNK. CRUSHED, TIDBITS OR SLICED DOLE PINEAPPLE..4^89* rMhfut wl» Ik »l ml !■ Um* Nlm... TweimIm, FM, « VilMr. BE SURE TO REDEEM THE FOLLOWING COUPONS FROM YOUR MAILED COUPON BOOKLITl . CMPM WWTE at* M w*w He cwnpltte tMl «f • FRN VACMN- 1 wARi 13-ouNa aowi. « M IXIR* T6P vaui na«P$wWi puicIwM «l TWO H40MC8 MWU 2 al 4W IAO«. J NUTtA T9P VAIM STAMPS with pwdwM •! S POUND BAD OP - S6 BXTIA TDP VAIN STAMPS wMh pwdwM« k VARMTY MIAD, linfl 30-m. Swn^ WhlH •FTWOIOAVNK S6 UTRA TDP f ALUS STAMPS wMi pvidwM •! 8 IM. OD MORI CENTER CUT RIB PORK CHOPS................... ‘69* lUMMIATY SPARE RIBS....................‘ 39* TASTY SLICED BOLOGNA.................•‘39* FIAVORFUL FRESH BEEF LIVER...............'^49* VALUABLE COUPON ...j Vac Pde C \ WITH THIS COUPON-KROGER-SPECIAl LABEL 2^88 Coupon vend et Kiegei In Detroit end Imtem Michigan thru I Twetdey, October 29, 1963. limit otm coupon per fomily. | SAVE 26* VALUABLE COUPON SAVE 20«-COUNTRY CLUB BEEF, CHICKEN OR TURKEY FROZEN MEAT PIES 6->*1 MVf 9*-VVHITE OR ASSORTED COLORS BATHROOM TISSUE WHITE CLOUD TISSUE .. 8»u.99 SAVE gf-WHITE OR ASSORTED COLORS FAGAl TISSUE PUFFS FACIAL TISSUE .. U.S. NO. 1-THUNDER BAY MICHIGAN POfATOES SAVE 7<-KE06ER FRESH DONUTS FUOAE 0 PLAIN 0 COAABINAriON ______lC ooz. WITH THIS COUPON-KROGO SHORTENING 3^49 Coupon voHd at Kroger In Detroit end loetom Michigan thru Tuoiday, October 29, 1963. limit one coupon per family. SAVE 10* VALUABLE COUPON 5 WITH THIS COUPON-^HUNK STYLE SPECIAL LAI ■ StarKist LB. 2SU.IAU S9* I LI. I K *1.9S MARSH SEEDLESS GRAPEFRUIT SAVE 8* KROGER TOMATO JUICE PLAIN OR PIMENTO VELVEETA 2-79' W. rcMfv. Hm rifllit to limH Euantifiot. Pika, ana itam. affoctivo at Krofar in Pantlac, Union Laka, Dniyton Piaina thiu Taaiday, Octabar 2t, J963, V c S SAVE ■ 31* R Couponuolld at Kroger In Detroit and loetom Michigan thni * Tueodoy, October 29, 1963. limit one coupon per family. ■ !4|^‘£;£88 S"' ______________________ m WITH THIS COUPON-BORDEN'S SHERBET OR AO* ’SJ? BOTH FOR I SECOND 88‘ Vk GAL. 50 EXTRA TOP VALUE STAMPS WITH THIS COUPON AND $5 PURCHASE OR MORE hiu lue\(loy Odobt i VALUABLE COUPON H GAL 59* Coupon valid at Kroger in Detroit and Eailorn Michigan thru Tuoiday, October 29, 1963. Umit one coupon pir fomily. I MEAT PRICES k ITEMS p ^ j ^ ^ j WH THH com AMO PURCHAH | WITH ^ I ”“o?lOOa ^ | OP TWO FieS. COOHTtY OVDt ■ Z MO nanc H -------------------------- CHOCOLATI COORIIS I ILACK MFFIH | RR08IR TEA lAUS I OHLY THHU TUES., OCT. C ^ m I &iSnl'te * 0 ^003 B lMWwiiMldi.lhmTu.a,0«t.Sf, IHS. ■ RmHwiiMWi. Him Tim, Od. 8*. 1H8. J iartant Mkh. Him Titai., 0«t. 3f, IfM. ^ OH* EFFECTIVE AT KROGER IN FONTIAC, DRAYTON UNION UKE FREEIi I ONI JAR STRAINID ■ HEINZ BABY FOOD I —^—---------------- I • • ^ WITH COUPON AND I 50 IXTKA STAMFS | SO ULTRA y/Sui STARFS I SO ULTRA vSui STAMFS | 100 EXTRA vmSi STAMFS I purchase op lo jars | ‘srjsstr* 1 "“o?y?s i iiM«8f I JIUT or LIMOH ROU I HALLOWEIH URiT I RtvMt CgNoug CbtMt I SpsUfkl iRtlGHl CdHs# ■ cap«. m kwew h. | ---- a ewMM vdU or Know hi OatNk and I Cwp* ve8d el Kmgw In Odw* ond I Cwipee mM m Kieser In RdwW end | Baalem AAkhlsw thro Tveedny, Ort^ | \ |^£2rMkh.H-.^Od.8t.l*a8. Mkh.Hm.Tom,On. It. THIJ 3t. ItM. UnUi ww mtpm pwjin^. J ' • ,.C .. \V TWENTY-SIX THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. OCTOBER 28, lft63_________ Instead of Materials MARKETS The following are top ivloes covering nit's of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wh l^nle package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau bf Markets as of noon Friday. Produce NEW YORK (AP) - Selected blue chips continued strong today as the stock market moved further into new high ground. Trading was heavy. l.M .. J.75 .. 175 Appm, McIntosh, bu......... Apptos, Northern Spy, bu. . Applev cWer, cese .......... ~---- SoK, bu.............. ■Ian. bu............ vsorrASLBS Beans, areen, rouiM Beans, Ulnia ............... Beets, Bai. bch..... Wbch. ............ -------m, curly, beh. Cabbage, red, bu. ......... Xabbaga, sprouts, bu........ ^bbaga. standard, bu........ CiNrpts, dot. bch.......... CarH^ cello pak. I doz. Carr^ topped Caullflouier, doi.......... Celery, Pascal, crate Celery, white Dill ...................... Eggplant .................. Gourds, bskt......................... Horseradish, pk. bskt................ Ag kohlrabi ............. Leeks, bch. Onions dry, 5S lb. ... Onions preen, bch. Onions, pickling, lb................... Parsley, curly, bch.................. do Parsley, root, bch. ................1-Jt Parsnips, cello pak, doz. ......... Pepperv caysnne, pk. ............... Peppers, hot, bu. _ ............. Peppers, red, sweet, bu............. Peppers, sweet ..................... - ir.^ 15-lb. bag ................. Potatoes, new, SO-lb. bag Pumpkins, bu........................ Radishes, black Radishes, red Radishes, whlta .................... l-g Squash, Acorn, bu...................].» Squash, Buttercup, bu. Squash, iutternut. bu. . Squash. Delicious, bu. General Motors, American Telephone and IBM all touched new peaks. A number of other high quality issues also were substantially higher. At the same time, there was profit taking in an assortment of recent gainers. Among these was Chrysler, down 2 points. AbbottL 7M AlcoProd .40 AllagCp .llg 3 10 t's tW - I Allag Lud 1 5 40VS 40Vy 40Vs - I Alliad $tr ..J :: LOO AlumLtd M 17 MW M'A MW - :: i» Turnips, »0PI»« „5'i_ Spinach, bu.......... Swiss Chard, bu. ^“HlfTTUCl AND SALAD ORiBNS^ Endive, bleached 7 ■ Ar Poultry and Eggs DITROIT POULTRY DETROIT (AP)-Prlces paid per pout at Detroit lor No. 1 quality live poulln Heavy type hens 10-1*; t; broilers and fryers 3-4 lbs. wh^ W »; turl^ heavy type young toms 1 13'b. ^ DETROIT EOOS DETROIT (AP)-Egg prices paid bk dozen at Detroit by first racalvars (m-cludlng U. S.' -4IV5; large 3*Vb-3tl n Z*',; small »14. . Browns grade A large 3^37; I 3*-37; small JO'/t-n'T; cheeks M. CMiCAOO BorraR amo mm CHlCAMIAPI^Ica^Mare-^ »3 score AA STM; ft A » unchanged; .. -j *0 B 54M. ^Eggs ' r*’gr«le"A wtTlt^ w'i dium M; dirties 3 CHICAOO POULTRY CHICAOO (AP)-Llve poultry: sale buying prices T lower to Vs roasters B-34, special ted Whitt Iryers lS-30. Livestock Cows In moderate supply. Opening tr halters mo 22.50-33! 75. MosI choice heifers 32.7543.50, a load hM choice heifers upM a.”' - to low choice heifers 11.00-11.75. ,s 14,00-15.00; canner and — flood I Utility Market Further Up Blue Chips Continue Strong The market was very similar to Friday’s, a mixture of profit taking and heavy buying in the favored issues. Some of the aerospace issues wilted because of the reported decision of Russia not to race the Uil. to the moon. North American Aviation, prime contractor for the Apollo moon shot program, and Lockheed were down about a point each. business news and stock market opinion was encouraging. GM added 3 points on top of Its 5%-polnt leap of Friday. AT&T advanced a couple of points following its rise of 3% Friday. The general background of Prices on the American Stock Exchange were irregularly higher in moderately active trading. Syntex jumped more than 3. Corporate and U. S. Government bonds were mixed. The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK (API-Following li ( .1 Miectod stock tronsactlons gn the York Slock Exchongo w“ ’---------- —A— Low UR Cbg. ? '!tl* 'll,*’ll'* ABCViO ,50b 44 14'* 13)4 14V« 7 45V3 441s *5Vl -I- 8 M'* M . •I 56VS 55'/5 55'* + V3 5 31* 3'* 31v 4 13M nvi -t- w 3 10 f'* fH - W FortmO — FostWh .3^ Foxboro .70 Fr«m FranfcSIr .40 'rMDtS l.M ruabf 1.30t ABosch .504 :yan 1.00 .. jfPw 1.00 AExport .759 AmTIiT 3.40 AmpSoro .M Anacon 1.50g ArtkanCh .40 ArmcoSf 3 11 7m 73'* 73'* -I- M 306 M 2f’* 29'* -I- M 12 14'* 16V* 14'* + V* 3 52'* S2V* 52'* II 37'* 34'* 34H + M 34 44. 43'* 43'* - H )• 54V* 54 54H . 149 37 34H 34',* - H 10 29V* 19 39V*-H 34 444* 44 44H -flV* 17 2044 20'* 2044 37 14 174. 17'* -I- V* 13 37'* 37 37 -F Vi 01 214. 214* 21'* . 9 4344 431* 431* — 1* 2 74'* 76'* 74'* — 44 40 9'* 9V. 9'* — 4* 7 17 04V* 17 ... 13 17'* 14'* 17 — '* 135 1344* 1334* 13444 -1-144 40 30 29H 2944 -t- V 2 224* 22'* 22'* — V 4^'/. 30V4 30'* — 4 10lW5i 204* 21 -1-4 9 231* 23V* 234* — V 31 49'* 49'* 4944 -f V 10 17'* 17 17 - V 9 44'* 44'* 44'* - 4 0 4H* 4)1* 41’* — V 2 107 107 107 -1-2 2 Ml* Ml* M'*-1* 2 494* 414* 49H — V* O ACClpI 1 Gon Clg 1.1 GConlF .lOp G Oynam Gm Mol 1* 322 I ____jy .M GPubUt l.M G«) Slg l.M GT*IS^ .M I 524* 521* S2H -f I I4H 144* 144* — V* 29 IV* 34* 34* 15 134* 134* 134* -f- 41 nw 231* 234* . >5 ISVi 15V. 151i -I- V* BtechAIr M 14 MH 21 MH ^ 24 72V. 71V* 72 - 1* 3 131* 13 131* ...... 12 M4* 24H 2644 -I- V* 3 49H 49'* 491* 29 34H 34V* 341* - • 54* 54* 54* luckoyqPL lucyEr .3 110 11'* 111* 11V* b 31H 3I>* - H 2 144* 144* 144* 21 141* 134* 1 20 394* 391* 39'* + 5 5V* 54* 54* - 5 144* 14 14H + 4k and sows Opwiing 25 cwrts low ol US ontt 217 pound* 14.25; 1^ i---■ mixed ontt »nd Iwot 190 to 15.05 to 14.00; Iwot ond thrrot 110 M 240 I pounds 15.25 to 15 75; US I. * " ' Can Dry 1 CdnPac 1.SB Carriar 1.40 Cartar Pd 1 Caaa Jl CatarTr l.M 14 7W* 71'* 71'* -I- M 454* 44'* 454* -H4* I IdO X34 521* 50'* CntSW 1.11 x15 43 j thratt 400 to 400 pound a t ITS; tiaady. Cheka and pi *29 to 37.00; tiandon I 411* 411* 411* 5 ,M'* 34H MV* -I- I 111* 111* 21'* — V* to primr 20 I )t.« to 20 25 3 3JV* 33'* 33'* - ' Tunday't etllm*!*: Cattle 100S. calves actlv*. bulchars and tow* 25 to 50 Cor-taad .40 CrssnaAirc 1 Champs 1.10 ChmpTm l.M Check Mot Ch« Oh 4 Ch'l MStP P ChlPnau 1.40 CRI Pacif I ChrlKft 4lt Chrytkr I CIT FlnJ.JS_ miaav 2.40 CWvEIJII l.M CocaCot l.M CalgPal l.M CatilnsR .lOg Calo P Ir CBS 1.40b xa w. x.-i xj Cal Gat l.M j If M's 294* 29’* ColPict f ”1^ M 7S; Choke 90IM.300 lbs 23 25-24 00; a tew laadi choke l,lOO-t,175 tb* 22.75-23.25; lead high chaka and prime 1,440 Rm H75; a tew loads cftaica 1,5f*'1*00 Rn M 50*1.25; mostly gaad fOg-USO^Ibt 2M023 H; standard ~ 2L0D; dialoe OOOI,'-22 SO-23JS; * lew ally gaad 9M — d anTtow goad R — ■** slauWiter hat Shna 900*50 lbs 23.50; meatly good 21.00 .25; utiniy and commercial coin 14.00 merciai bulls 14.0OM.00. small Ms choke and prime 90105 lb wooled tiaughler lamba 19 SO20M; good and chek* lOlOO Iba U 5019.50; utility and good 15 001100, cull 12 0CM5.00; Cull 12 45'* „ „ . . 4 324x 32** 32Vt - ' 4 105 1044. 105 + ' fi r ConEdIt 3.M 14 MV* 1 11 51'* 5 7 OS's • 5 34'J 3 4 45 4 Coni Oil 1 Control Data Copper R CamPd 1.40 CrompI I.M Crow C .001 . 414* 4IH 414* -I- . 157 lOH 101 Mil* -f-IV* 1 244* 244* 344* -F V* 37 5*1* 574* MW hdf.) Nigh Law Ust Cbg. 19 314* 304* 304* -F Vb 39 344* 34'* 34'* 10 21H 21'* 214*-'* 44 43'* 43 43'* -F V* I 244* 24'* 244* - V* 25 30’/i 30'* 304* + IS M4* M4* M4* -F —G^— 5 304* lOH 30H -F IS 554* S5M 551* -F W 4 1044 114* 1IH -F M 10 MV* 374* 374*-H 01 MOk M4* 2444 40 0144 SOH 01V* -F1V* 2 M M 20 . IS aua 054* 04V. 394* 394* b 15V* I b -FlV* Os Psc 1b (SettyOII .log GMIstts 1.10a GlanAM .50 Goodrch LM Goodystr I -------Co lb 1 11 21V* 11 10 354* 35'* 351* 4 4 5’* S'* U 31H 32V* 121* 2 274* 274* 174* 94 M'* M M M 244* 24'* 24H - V* 2 354* 154* 354* -F ■ 12 54 534* 54 -F 20 21 20* M'*- 22 334* 334* 334* -F GrsnCS 1.40 GtAAP 1.20s GtNoRy 3 —■ Fin .051 9 4IH 4 1 41 -I 4 424* 424* 424* -F Gull SU 1.12 Hsillbur 2.40 Haveg ,4Si HsrcPdr ., 3 35'* 35 35 -F V —H— ■ 12 50 49V* 49'* - * 1 M'* 34 34V* -F V 17 37V* MV. 144* - V 11 47H 44V* 44V*-1 7 37'* ; b 37'* 4 21 , 1 49V* 49V* -F ' 2 47V* 47'* 47V* +1V* HookCh 1.10b 24 37V* 37 371* -F V* -----;Lt U4 19 33H 13 Pa RR .25* M 20V* M PtpCola 1.40 I 54'* 54H s 0 33'* 334* 33V* 3 774* 77V* 77V* -F PItPlat* 1.40 Pubikin ,34f 25 59H 59'* 59'* + VA 0 12 im 114* ■' S3 14544 141V* 1439* 11 Ml* 79V* 714* s 73'* 71 nv* Raythn .I7f Rending Co RekhCh .lOd 2 11V* 114* 11'*- 4 11V* II 11V* -F Vb IsynAAff .50 lOyTob 1.00 59 IIV* 33V* nv* -F ---------------------J + ' 14 144* 14V* MV* -F < 4 4544 454* 45H -f 1 RoyDut 1.73g Royal McB Ryder Sytl SafewSt 1.M StJosLaad 1b SILSanF la SIRegP 1.40b SanDIm 4. 22'* 224* 224* 10 414* 409* 411*-F V* " — •• -F V* SenbAL 1.40 4 119* 119* 119* 10 30V* 374* 30 + 1 394* 394* 39H - Fish Smoking Won't Resume Firm to Stay Shut at FDA Continues Probe GRAND HAVEN «)------H. .J. Dombros & Bros, fisheries her* decided against resuming its fish smoking operations today in the light of weekend action by the Federal Food and Drug Administration in Washington. By JACK LEFLER AP Business News Writer NEW YORK (AP) - A new of plant location — has taken hold In American industry. Early this century, industry was primarily concentrated in the urban areas, espedelly in the Northeastern section of the country. Plant General Manager David Price said the Arm, which voluntarily closed down its operations Oct. 7 after a botulism eutbreak, would remain shut until FDA officials “get to the bottom of this matter.” Price last Wednesday announced that Dornbos planned to resume smoking today with the operation, depending upon customer deqiand. FDA Commissioner George P. Larrick urged homemakers Friday night, however, to destroy any smoked fish products they had under refrigeration if the fish were caught in the Greak Lakes area or processed in Great Lakes plants. It followed word earlier in the day that federal and Midiigan officials had seised stocks of two processing plants where samples reportedly disclosed the presence of Clostridium botulin-um organisms. Samples had been taken from stocks of St. Joseph Fisheries in St. Joseph and Royal Snack Food, Inc., at Detroit. ShellOII l.M ShellTr* 5lg Slnclxlr 2 Singer 1.70 Smith AO 1 SmIthK 1.20a Sooony 2.40 SoPRS 2.tSd SouCalE 1.05 I TV* TV* TV* -F V* 3 23H 23H 134* . The development was the latest in a chain linked to five recent deaths in Tennessee and Alabama, which Larridc said were attributed to one lot,, of smoked chub^ The product was shipped to a Nashville, Tenn., grocery chain warehouse late last month by the Dornbos firm. • 324* 31’* 32'* -F '* SouNxIG 2.20 Brand 2.M _ 414* 41 .. 10 42 41V* 414* -FI , ............. '• +'*:Sunr_ Swill SMKoll*_____ SMOIICal 2b SMOIIInd 2b StOilNJ 2.40 StOilOh 2.40b Stand Pkg SfanWar 1.20 SlauftCh IJO SMrlDrug •" Stevens 1.50 12 41' 9 14'/4 14'* 14V 29 34'* 33V* 34 Studebaker 4 454* 45'* 45'* - '* 3 75V* 75 75 - ’* 144 17 144* 14V* -F H 31 454* 449* 449* -F V* XI4 44V* 434* 44'* + '* 57 72 71'* 72 -F 4* 2 49’* 494* 49’* - '* 15 13’* 134* 13'* 5 24H 24'* 24V* '* 4 359* 154* 35’*-V* 39 IIV* 31V* 31V* F 4* II 33 314* 114* - V* 44 7 49* 49* - V* 14 37V* 34’* 37 F V* I Tenn Gas Id —T— JbnLoOfln .70 Jonts&L ISO KaIsflrAI .00 11 10 17^ 17^ + Vt 21 03^ 62^ *3W*+ H 3 27Vt 269W 27 ~ W —K— I 349* 34V* TexGSul 40 41 1794 179* 179* - V* Thiokol l.nt KImbClarfc 1 . 23V* 23V* nv* M 77V* 77V* 77H - V* 5 44V* 44V* 44M-9* 10 34 15H 34 F V* 7 704* 70V* 70V* -F V* 2 22 119* 119*- 9* Trans W Air ( 27V* 27V* 17V* M -IV* a 294* 299* 19M-H 5>* 5'* 54* LoMSCam 1 57 2IH 2IH 21'* • 234* 234* 234. 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US I 75 S4V* 519* S344 -F V* 14 79* 79* 794 + V* 14 149* 144* 14H 12 33V* 1144 324* F V* I 144* 14'* 144* -t VendoCo .40 ) 17'* 144* MH - Va Caro Ch I 71V* 7794 1 3 5H 5H 5H - H WnAIrL 1.40 Wn Banqi 1 WUnTal L40 WstgAB 1.40 WestgEI LM Whiricp 1.40 47 M9* M'* 24'* F 3 42'*42H42H-M 34H M ^ F 94 3IH M MV* F ) 5IH 50 5IH FI :ud*by Pk :ut1 Pub * F H H F V* Kwi Tax 2 3V* 3V* IV* - Mohaaco .50 13 104* IMonlDU 1.40 191* 194* I AAantWard I ■■ ti ~ I Ntorrell .lOb —U— ^ I Motorola I I 16'i 16 U-A • • VJ* ?1“ !’.** 1^ u.. 1 MH MV* 3lW M MV* 34H MH-11 25H MV* ISH F .9 7»H 719* 719* F —N— 10 111* IIH IIH - H American Stock Exch. NEW YORK (AP) - Aimrktn Slack Oan RGW I OetEdis l.M Oal Staal .40 Olsitay .40b I Dll Sa* I.M DomeMln .10 a»b^'4e OrMt 1)0 OuPont 4.S0D Om Lt lH I + 11 57H 57^ 57M + 141 Zanifh 0 » 14H 14H 14«k - 0 74H 74 7444 4 30V4 30 U —X— SI U4Vt 34014 34T4 +444 —Y— If 33% 33 3314 1 124^ 124% T3494 +144 —z— m 00 7f14 7f« I 32% ^ Sales figures art Cofit AuABa Kaiser DOW-iMKI AVBKAOKS ITOCKf 5 14 IIH 134* - V* , ' 7 44H 44'* 44'* F u- NatFual 1 S3V* S3H S3H F 1 4Mb )Mb + -.. ,------- ~ H NatFual I.M Vo I NalGan .411 ___________.. . . 4* NatGypt M 34 13H MV* •—' 14 40 MH 40 F WI , 1? 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I—Pay- abla In Rock durbiB 1941, atllmaltd ctRi valu* on ax-dtvldand or t*-OIRrlbuHon dM*. B-Oacitrtd or paid to Itr ttilt yoar. V-Ooclorod or poU otlar ilock dIvMong or---------- - ------------------ dividondo ki Oman, p—PoM ..... _________ —... ^ ^1^ ( during MOL ox-dlviJand or No Regrets After Term in Red Jail SEPULVEDA, Calif. (AP)-A Firms Gear to Market A move to the suburbs, whidi began just before World War II to achieve ftraight-line production and expansion, was accelerated in the 1940s by decentral-lution (rf defense Industries. Now industry is setting up production units close to regional markets instead of shipping manufactured goods to consumers from plants traditionally located near sources of supply. CHANGE EMPHASIS Leonard Yaseen, senior part-tr of Fantus Co-, international plant locatkn consultants, says the emphasis has been placed on markets rather than raw materials. “'Changes in market patterns across the country are forcing manufacturers to serve population concentrations from new facilities geared to the needs of each specifle region,” be says. Oklahoma, opened hew glass -making facilities In North Bergen, NJ., and AtlanU, Ga. Ito natural gas and glass sand aoui^ are mainly in Ohio and Oklahoma. NEW LOCATIONS The American Can Co. of New Yoric has constructed a plastics container manufacturing unit at Shelbyville, Tenn., and the A.H. Wirz Co. of Chester, Pa., manufacturer of toothpaste tubes, erected a plant at Carrollton, Ky. Yaseen says the trend to regionalization must be sound when the nation’s largest industry — automobiles — now has assembfy plants in every major U.S. region to meet the Breweries, he says, also point up the trend with almost every ing regional fadllties. Yaseen adds that almost ev-In the East - Central states Is major beer company establlsh-ery new industrial Job created now counterbalanced by the hl^ Ing of another production worker in the West or South, Since 1948 the number of persons employed by motor vehicle and equipment maoufao turers In California bu grown to »,821 from 119,965. In Georgia the figure climbed from 4J169 to 9,363 and in Texu from 3,047 to 6,662. Perils of the Purple; Crowning Bungled Here are some examples: Tbe Hershey Chocolate Co. which hu idways manufactured its products in Hershey, Pa., is breaking ground for a plant 3,000. miles west in Oakland, Calif. Hershey wu faced with high transportation costs in reaching the important Western market from Pennsylvania. A few months ago, Owens-Illinois Glass Co., which had operated out of plants in Ohio and LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) - How does a girl fed when she has been told she Is homecoming queen but a nervous master of ceremonies announces and crowns the wrong coed? “It m a d e me feel foolish and qilte embarrused,” pret' ty Vhiu Shipley said, ‘'especially with aU those people Two Injured in Car Crash; Hospifalized An Ortonville nuin and his stepson were hospitalized yesterday following a tw-T1i» CMh poRHon OoM atstta ........ I MM1S.WUBLW •liKhiBN mUMAIUI RM Ml mS- |*cl to Rqtotory limn. The big mil-up happened before 30,000 fans at the Kentucky > Georgia football game Saturday because red • faced Walter Duvall only glanced at the election results quickly, he said, and wu under tte im-preuion that Julie Ritdiey, a senior from Richmond, wu the University of Kentucky queen. mysdf to let Hdap ge u thqr “It just wouldn’t have looked very graceful for them to take the crown off Julie and give it to me,” the shapely Erlanger girl added. But, graceful or not, that’s just what those in charge of the ceremonies did — without a> nouncing to the crowd what wu going on. ‘REAL CLOD* “I felt like a real dod," Miu Shipley said. “S(»neone bad taken the crown off Julie and placed it on my head before we ever got to the sidelines,” she said. Min Shipley said die tears she shed were not for herself but for Julie, “who wu in a What mlide ^tte^ so bad more onbarraadng situ-wu that Vivian, Julie and the ®don than I. other attendants knew before- hand Vivian had won. ND,NO’ “When Walter made the announcement, we all just gasped ‘No, no,’ but there wasn’t much we could do about It,” Vivian sai(L- ‘Right there, I Just told Bentley Eyes Race in '64 News in Brief A hearing aid worth |2M was stolen from a car parked in a garage at 117 C!oIgate, Verlyn Brown, 55, reported to Pontiac police Saturday. Alfred Swansey, 2364 Marstoa, Waterford TownsMp, told police yesterday that a tire and wheel valued at |3S were stolen from the trunk of his car parked in his unlocked garage. Rnmniage Sale; Christ Church Cranbrook. Thurs., Oct. 31, 9 a.m. - 2 p.m. Lone Pine Rd. at Cranbrook Rd., Bloomfield Hills. —adv. Pontiac Kiwanit Club Annual Rummage Sale at Pontiac Armory, 57 Water St., Oct. 31, Nov. 1 and 2, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. * -adv. NEW YORK (AR) - Th* . _ Rrtto utolghtoil *RieNfaN prtM —— “.s:Sss‘S£SJrsL..« HIWl .... M2.77 M4.M MB.M HBJi L*v ..... 157.51 )M.M MATS '9M.N 09M xvxrig* iquR* 1M) STOCK AVRRAORt MR By TB* AlwctoWR Pr Rr*y. D*y ......... 4n.9 143J V4*-7 M1.7 WMk AS* ........... 401.4 144.1 14BJ MIJ Main AS* ..........M9A 14AB 141.7 374.1 Y**r AM ...........M4R 1*1.1 ItlA «A1 1943 HWl 40L9 M».» 951.1 ]M.7 wS lAw...............M1.1 11IJ 9S4.1 Sit Nil MMI ...........M7.1 1173 941*------------- 1*41 Lru ..........Mil 173 1IBJ OWOSSO (UPD—Former Republican congressman Alvin Bentley will make a decision in January on whether to. try again for el«y:tion to the House of Representatives. faig the weekead be k serioas-ly consMerkg the OOP primary tor the new 7th Csa-gressional District. The district consists of Genesee (Flint), Lapeer and Shiawassee counties and no incumbent congressman livu in it. Bentley hu been ^ the Wuh-ington scene since> 1960 when he unsuccessfully challenged incumbent Democrat Patrick V. McNamara for his U.S. Senate seat. The Qwosao R^blican wu first elected to Coiiigress in 1952, bolding the 8th District seat now occupied by Republican James Harvey of Saginaw. SOHO AVERAMS CmigiNR ky m* a<•**«**« M M It turn IliR. URL Pg*. L. YR It Chkngi —.1 Noon Mon. M3 101.7 BI.1 ft.1 *1.4 Prav. D*y (1.4 101.7 M.1 *t.t *3.4 WkRiAgs M3 101.4 M* **3 *1.4 Monlll^ M3 1013 H.I N3 *3.4 Y**r Ag* 773 **.0 M3 17.1 *33 1*43 High il.1 lia.( M3 *1.0 *5.1 1*43 Low 7*.7 **.S 17.7 M.4 *3.3 1*41 High 77.7 MB3 19.1 M.5 *4.4 1*41 Low 74.1 **.7 15.7 U.* *13 Stocks of Local Interest Figum *(Mr Riclm*l point* tn Mghtht m*to trkding r*ng* ol 11 By ROGER E. SPEAR Q. “I am 15, married -four chOdrea — aad 1 have ample savkgi. I caa pot $2,-•99 a year k soand gnWih stocks for the chOdren’t ed-■catkB. The foOewkg have beea suggested: St Regis Paper; Dr. Pepper, Preetor & Gamble; Montgomery Ward. I wDold like shares k the lower price raage bat don’t waat k go wroag k Jast kekkg at the mnaber ol shares 1 caa bay. What da A. I should first like to congratulate you on your good common sense, u wen u on your sound financial position. The price at which shares sell should never be the leading determinant in buying. Of yom suggested purchases, I like only Dr. Pepper and Proctor & Gam- The former hu developed s considerable growth curve since 1957 and Proctor & Gamble hu shown an unbroken rise in earnings for the past ten years. Montgomery Ward is not yet in the growth categ^iry, md St. Regis hu been going downhill for years. In their place, I suggest Long Island Lighting and Sean, Roebuck. Q. “Are there aay UJ. Gev-ernmeat bonds free from Federal kcome taxu? If se, caa they be cashed as aeeded?” R.R. A. I am sorry to tell you that there are no govenuneot bonds now outstand^ which are not subject to Fedaral income taxes Ibe nearest issues I know which come close to a Federal tax-exempt security are bonds issued by various communitieB under a first pledge of annual contributions uncondithmally payable by the Public Housing Administration under an Annual Contributions Contract. It h a a been ruled by an Attorney Geo-eral of the United States that a contract to pay Annual Contributions entered into by the PHA k valid and bindbig upon the United SUtos. If you need tnx-eaiempk,~l suggest Newark (NJ.) HA. 2%’s of 1999 to yield 145 per cent, or Dalks (Tex.) H.A. ?94’a of 1973 on a 2.75 basis. These are tr^A bonds, and are readily marketable. W. Spw camot answer all mafTpenonally but will answer k his J- ) 1. THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 28. 1963 TWENTY-SEVyy Ground bas been broken for a new Mormon chapel In Berlin, seven blocks from the wall di-vkUng the East and Weal sectors of the city.. IKS ConiEBiow^ IbURlIoni \Cirli!0s!Cins! Correspondence Lost Nothing in Translotion BIRMINGHAM, England (nPD — Barbara Carpenter, B, an English girl who reads Italian, and Esk) Screti, 2S, an Italian who reads no English, wre married yesterday. This followed a two-year postal courtship involving 700 letters — every one of which had to be read by translators. Paper Exec Expires (HNCINNATr, Ohio (UPB — Frederick W. Gieeel, 70, business manager of the Cincinnati Post and 'nroes-Star, died yesterday at Christ Hospital. HURON In Uemployment Office Actress Starts Painting Career HEMYFOIIDIlHIlUieiriim itn»i »RG/>.NAU£S Mewl "Ciptifat SiiAei" Hi "Sevafe fa»s“ By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-Televishw Writer HOLLYWOOD (AP)-Another first for the art world — Mae Clarke is having a onefroman show in her unemployment insurance office. You remember Mae. Anyway, you remember the grapefruit Jimmy Cagney pushed in face in “Public Enemy.” It set a whole new style In male-female quette and did wonders for Ihe citrus industry. THOMAS^ Mae is also noted as the ^1 who almost got the guy in the original “Frankenstein." ★ ★ w Such accompUshments may now fade in the glow of Mae’s latest career as an artist. If you mam Bssd OM Diyt MoHn«0 TUES--Adehf 30c ler Mae. Anyway, i PacOae’t Popular T--- ' niwMn II ajn. •• II SANDIUIDEE PETER FONDA “THE OBOWDED Sirr GOOD OLD DAYS MATINEE TUESDAY—ADULTS 30e 10;45 A.M. to IKK) P.M. WiHi This Coupon are near the North Hollywood office of the state unemployment insurance department, you might drop in and see her show —well, two canvases, anyway. How did she happen to choose the unique gallery? BETWEEN JOBS WqU. I took up painting a year ago just to see if I could do it,” she explained. “It was something to do between acting jobs, and I got interested. People began telling me my work was g^, and I wanted some exposure. No sense in hiding my talent on my apartment wall. "Ihe Weal thing would be to have an exhibit at Raynmnd Burr’s gallery, but he only has Picasso and people like that. Or I’d have a big party and let Vincent Price introduce me. I can’t afford it. ★ A A Mae is a longtime member of a nonexclusive club of Hollywood names who collect their weekly unemployment checks at the stote offices. Any day you can find recognisable f sumding in line as they wait to pick up their checks “between engagements." “It’s not a dole,” said Mae. “We do it without shame. It was the dapper Menjou who attracted attention to the prac-. tice by arriving at the stae office in his chauffeured ' Rolls Royce, standing in line for his check, then driving back to his Beverly Hills mansion. WWW “Ihe fact that we can get checks shows that we have been working,” Mae remarked. Under California law, unemployment insurance funds are deducted from work checks. Tammy aid the DOCTOR ht/unuuiCOLOH _ * UWVIIItM PICTWM ■ DANA ANDRtWS III HEAVENS ABOVE! Taeiiht 7M /]M\"Siniply A 9:1S /I|m\glorious.’’ 12 N. Saginaw n 9-6211 l|t> f ms sillirs [ GENERAL ^ ELEQRIC HAteSWEENW Marathon ife30 a.Hi. Mon. SALEM p.m. Thurs. We Will Be Open Finn Monday OcL 28 thni TInrs. Oct 31st We will be open 24 Hears A Pay Fer This SAIL WASHER • FILTER FLO a GIANT 12lb.Capocity • GC Lead Sclaetor • 3 Wash Temp. • 2 Rinse Temp. DRYER • Four Heat Selection a Fluff Cycle a Poscelain Drum and Top 6ENERAL ELECTRIC STEREO Four front mounted speakers. Dual channel stereo amplifier. All wood cob-inetry. Record s age '4-speed oi matic changer. With AM-FM Stereo Tuner DIA 19 O All CT eONVENIENCEi BIG lueZ vUe r le ■!» CAPACITY! 118 VALUE! REFRIGERATOR- pounds. Door shelf for Vh E||Kr7r H k**- ice cream cartons. 2 I IICEXLIl mini-cube ice tnqo under wire tack cover for easy tray removal. e Automatic defrosting refrigerator section, e 4 cabinet shelves. One ^ slide-out. ^ e Butter compertment e Door storage. Bottom shelf holds Vi gat milk containers, tall bottles. DuHng Our BQHour AAarathon Salal Fabeloat 6E Color Television Open Monday at S:30 o.m. we will not dose until Thursday at 5:00 Marathon Salel *248 fXCHANO, aCNClUL ElECmC OUALin UP TO 36 MOS. TO MY EASY TEEMS free: Coffee and Oonuts will ba served 24 hours a day during This Sale! Firee! Free! 24 Pc.Set Glassware lOODYEAR SERVICE STORE Open AU Day Saturday Mt.om FI M1H. Open a new account or reactivate an old one with purchase of $28.95 more and got this sat Troops Rotate From Germany FRANKFURT, Germiny WPD -The United States shipped home 1,500 combat troops on return flights of OperaUon Big Lift planes but kept the movement secret to avoid arousing Europeans’ concern, it was learned today. Big UN, which brenght more than lk,H8 eembnt treeps from hnses in Texas te Germany for nnneavcrs, cansed fears here (hat the umber ef U.S. treeps per-muenUy statleMd in Ewepe would be cnt. | The 1,500-inan battle group was being returned to the United Stotes in a normal rotation move and its withdrawal had nothing to do with reducing strength of six U.S. divistons ' here. A ★ But Washington officials, cur-renUy seeking to countwact suspicion in Europe that U. S. I combat power here may be re- ^ duced, were reported to have feared the rotation move would be misunderstood. ★ A * Strenuous efforts were made to divert attention from the Kansas outflt’s return after six months’ temporary duty and no announcement was allowed. * NOWvSnOWlMG * WINNER OF J. 7ACADEMYW lAWIRDSlI a liSVRENCE OFABABK JACK HAWKINS JOSE FERRER-ALEC GUINNESS ANTHONY OUINN ANTHONYQUAYIE-CLAUDERAINS-AWTMUWtUNNEDV- i—OMAa SMAWF«-Alf reiER OTOOLE .-uwreNer- iwe3it Sou SSmS^ .iMMMM.YICrMCQtOir. SUKRMNAvnON7(H ^ YiN - tU. ■ Sw. t MS liM 6.M WLYt IJI. tkmni «< ★ NEW ★HILLS THEATRE ROCHESTER - OL 1-831T __ CMIlORIM-KUndcr^ 11^ ' The Pontiac Press October 28,1963 HIIIIMIIIM YOUR NEWS QUIZ PART I - NATIONAL AND INHRNATIONAL Give yourself 10 points for each correct 1 A major Issue in the..... 1-day school boycott by half the total poblio school enrollment was a that School ftiperlntendent Benjamin C. Willis be replaced. a-St Louis b-Chlcago o*Los Angeles 2 Tbs Stste Department aeid that fkure aid to the Vietnamese qmolal troops, vdilcn were used against Buddhists, depends on their..... a-beiiy under U.S. command b-being removed from royal command c-getting field duty against communists 3 Eight big...companies have been called before a New York Grand Jury fdr price Investigations. a-steel b-chemical c-drug 4 One major goal for Britain’s Prime Minister Hmne now is a-become familiar with foreign affairs b-get elected to the House of Commons c-obtaln approval from the Cburoh of England 5 There is growing oonillct between the U.S. and Canada concerning.... a-natlonal boundaries b-pas^x>rt requirements c-wheat prices and shipping unions____________ PART II - WORDS IN THE NEWS Take 4 poinU for each word that you can match with Its correct meenlng. l-ovexture a-pernon offered for of- a-bolster 8-candidate c-a plot, secret plan * d-support, reinforce e-follower____________ PART III - NAMES IN THE NEWS Take 6 points for names that you can eorrectly match with the clues. 1- Ludwig Erhard 2- LeTbuy 8-Haile Selassie 4- Douglas Dillon 5- Luther Hodges a-Treasury Secretary favors tax cut bill h-West German Chan-csnor c-Commerce Secretary • eeea success in Soviet wheat sale d-mediates Algeria-Moroccan dispiAe e-Madame Nhu’s daughter Match word chiee with their corresponding pictures or symbols. 10 points for each correct answer. a .....new uniforms .. this year b....warns of forest lire danger c.....meroy airlift i shipooenttoFor- ji mosa's typhoon i victims d....UN again says “No” to membership ...wants end of Western eoo- 8 nomlo blockade OPRATION DEEP FREEZE GINNY promised U. S. friendship g....named a new Ihrlme Minister h .....stormy sister of Flora • 1 ,..«“r>blln8** ool* loot for UNICEF ]....1964 A'ntarctio program begins ® VEC, Inc., Madiion 1, Wisconsii| Ssve This Pnctice Examlnstlon! STUDENTS Valuable Reference Material For Bci HCW DOYOURATET (SoM beh Me ef ^ SagantaV) yitoNOgelnhoTOPSCORE! eito WpekUt-bnllMl. Tito 90 pallet-Good. 61 to 70 goMt - Fsla 60arUAbr?77-H'iiM! iMi Quis It port of Hw UueaHoral ftogna wMeh TMt Nowipapar tomW«wtoSehaeltln(ltitM*a to SHowtoto totaraS In National and Wbrid Affalit at an aid to DevelapNl Onad CltlnMklgi. ito. ANSWERS ON REVERSE PAGE TWEXTV-EIGIIT THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1963 British Teen-Age Fad Stars Reveal If You're Sexy LONDON (AP) - Brash British teen • agers have started wearing stars — a new system for advertising just how far they’ll go in their sex life. A one-star girl or boy wori’t even neck. A five-star wearer will stop at nothing. Star - wearing broke Out two weeks ago' at the big railroad e^giimring town of Sindon, It's reported to be spreading. PhiUips, 19: Said three - star Jane FIANT MGR. AVAILABLE . PI*M. “It’s a good idea. Boys who wear three stars like I do seem to get on well with me. 1 don’t feel let down when I date a three-star boy.” ★ ♦ ★ Commented four - star Graham Tanner, 20: “I don't date girls with more or less stars that 1 HAVE. Courting is now a real pleasure. Both(j)|e girl I date and I knbw exactly where we stand. You don’t hart anybody’s feelings this way.” Said two-star Mary Hicks, 18: “1 draw the line at two stars, and 1 like to know in advance what the boys I go out with are like.” Tony Briggs, four stars: “By the stars a boy and a ’/ Oy. 3i. Johns . Again^ We Ask You A n.u V.... Ill Knowledge of the facilities we '='|||| provide for our community Is most A desirable. Ours is a most necessary IT service — and your hour of need A may.be closer than you think. T So visit the Donelson-)ohns Fu-neral Home at your leisure. We will welcome you, will guide you through our complete facilities, and will supply you with full information about our profession and services. iHdfM ^ ,, federal 4-45^^ On Ossr ^nmisefs llf 855 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC ^o<)»o0i»o^=>o^3-c0o«4>>e0o«^^ girl can tell at once what to expect. I like the siystem." A social worker who spends much time with yonn^ people — and who asked not to be identified by name — said: “They’re wearing these stars all right. But I’ve found nobody yet modest enough to wear one star, or promiscuous enough to wear five.” The teen-agers have even composed a verse (o explain the system: One star — must ask ma. Two star — ah ah, ah. Three’star — Ha, ha, ha. Four star — Not too far. Five star — Stop the car. HOMEMADE STARS The star badges are made from metal, or paper clips bent in the shape of stars. > A commentator in London’s Daily Sketch wrote: “Their self-imposed star system may sound crude, but is it not exactly what most parents demand of their children when they ask them questions?” CounlY Treasurer Resting at Home County Treasurer Charles A. Sparks was resting at his home today after being released from Pontiac General Hospital Saturday. Sparks, 71, was rushed by ambulance to the hospital Thursday when he appeared to be suffering a heart attack five minutes after arriving at his office in the County Service Center. Medical tests later discounted the heart attack theory, although he had suffered om about three years ago. His present ailment was believed to have resulted from circulatory cutoff in the stomach region. Fire Covers Grass Acreage More than 100 acres were burned in Holly and Groveland townships Saturday when h s fire raced out of control for six hours. State police said the fire started Friday near 1-75 between Grange Hall and Holly roads, but at that time is was believed to have been put out. It flared again at 11 a. m. Saturday. Holly and Springfield township fire departments, conservation officers, state police and about 75 volunteers battled the fire until 5 p. m. Several homes were in danger from the fire, but none were damaged, according to state police. Service Scheduled for Ex-City Man Service for former Pontiac resident Frederick W. Fawcett, 39, of Simsbury, Conn., will be 3 p.m. Wedne^ay at White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Burial will follow. Mr. Fawcett died Saturday. His body will be at Sparks-Griffln Funeral Home. He was a systems supervisor at Hamilton Standard Division of United Aircraft and a member of Simsbury Methodist Church. A Pontiac resident until four years ago, fie was a member of Pontiac Lodge 21, F&AM. Surviving are his wife, Lor-aine; parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Fawcett of Pontiac; and two sons, Lee and Robert, and a daughter Barbara, all at home. Taylor to See Indio NEW DELHI, India (UPI) -Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staffs, will visit India next month, it was announced here today. find/ week of our nnnuul FALL SALE! save 25% lo 40% on fine quality KEUPHOLSTERINC; Let us make your worn ' furniture I "brond new" again —now, while savings are greatest . . , and ahead of the holiday rushi Remember, Thanksgiving is just one month away I Furniluro anil I ifhohirrert 270 Orchard l ake • FE 4-0.T.T8 “V Srrring Oaklanti V.’oimfv Oror .’12 l>i Now You Can have musical fun! Lowrey QsAfictorgan Free Lessons With Each Purchase - Liberal Trade-In Allowance On Your Prosont Piano or Prgan ... Up to 4 Years To Pay - 90 Days Same As Cash. “irfcere •.Wu*ir It Our Buoinett" 18 E. Huron FE 4-0566 Open Mon. thru Friday ’til 9 P.M. - Saturday ’til 5:30 P.M. ANSWERS TO TODAY’S NEWS QUU PART 1: 1-h; 2-c; .T-a; 4-b 5-c. PART II: 1-h; 2-«l’.T-a; 4- ; 5-c. PART III: 1-1*; 2-e; 3-iI; 4-a; 5-c. SYMBOI. MHZ: 1-f; 2-i; 3-a; 4-h; 5-g; 6-e; 7-c; 8-j; 9-d; lO-b. HH.fMITHfWKIDf Be sure your heating plant is 'ready for Winter. . . If you bum Shell fuel oil from Smith, you, too, con enjoy Smith's furnace service. To get the best out of your furnace, put the best in . . . just try one tankful of Shell furnace oil and enjoy the difference. H.H. SMITH Al THENTIC COLLEGE AND HIGH SCHOOL CLASS RINGS ORDER NOW FOR CHRISTMAS STERU.\0 SILVER .........S 8.80 14K GoM .... ...... from *1.50 (Itobli . . . tckMi CMmit, It *•* Tto T«ckt frwN ....... $8.80 Pontiac't Oa/jr Hagitlarnd /twaJari Amarican Gam Soeiafy “ 1 locations to Slave YOU: Deaths itr Pontiac, Neighboring Areas STEVE BALOGH Service tot Steve Balogh, 75, of 981 Voorheis, will be 10 a.m. Wednesday at St. Benedict Church. Burial will follow in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. TTie Rosary will be recited at 8 p.m. tomorrow at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Mr. Balogh died yesterday following a month’s illness. ’ He was a retired employe of Wilson Foundry. Surviving are his wife Julia, a son, Andrew Poach of Pontiac, and three grandchildren. ALVAH J. COLBVIN Service for Alvah J. Colbvin, 71, of 44 New York, will be 10 a.m. Wednesday at Flumerfelt Funeral Home, Oxford. Burial will follow in Whipple Cemetery, Big Rapids. Mr. Colbvin died yesterday after a one-year illness. He was employed at Dietzen Blue Print Co., Detroit. Surviving are his wife, Martha; a daughter, Mrs. Mable Garcia of Deti'oit; a stepdaughter, Mrs. Mary Babcock of Waterford Township; a stepson, Wayne Elliott of Lake Orion; three grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren. MRS. HARLEY B. FERREE Mrs. Harley B. (Pearl) Fer-ree, 4748 Meigs, Waterford Townahip, died this morning. Her body is at Coats Funeral Home. JOHN A. FRERICKS .Service tor John A. Frericks, 69, of 52 Fairgrove, will be held at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Huntoon Funeral Home, with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. He died Saturday following an auto accident. A member , of the First Baptist Church of I’ontiac, be was a carpenter and building contractor. Surviving are his wife, Anna, sons Donald and Gerald, brothers George and Albert, ail of Pontiac, and two sisters. The family has requested memorial tributes be made to the Missionary fund of the Fellowship class of the First Baptist Church. MRS. SAMUEL M. GOROU Service for Mrs. Samuel M. (Ora Mae) Goroli, 75, of 48 W. New York, will be 3:30 p.m. Wednesday at Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Burial will follow in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mrs. Goroli died yesterday. She was a longtime employe of Mays Credit Clothing. Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. Russell Pope and Mrs. Edwin .Bruce both of Pontiac, and Mirs. Bert Block of Kansas; a son, Vem of Pontiac; sixV grandchildren; and five sreat-grandchildren. THOMAS J. HANRAHAN Thomas J. Hanrahan, 68, of 34 Murphy St., died today. His body is at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Mr. Hanrahan was a retired inspector at General Motors Truck & Coach Division. Surviving is his wife, Mildred. Ore Carrier Grounded During Fog Near Soo SAULT STE. MARIE (UPI)-The 600-foot ore carrier Charles M. White went aground during tog this morning in the St. Mary’s River below the Soo locks. The Republic Steel ship was reported taking water from a small hole on the starboard side near the bow. But the damage was not believed serious and pumps were handling the water. MRS. FRANK> L. TIBBALS Mrs. Frank L. (Clara) Tlb-bals, 61, of 346 Ascot, Waterford Township, died today. Her body is at the Donelson-Johils Funeral Home. Surwing is her husband. MRS. JAMES E. TOWNSEND Service for former Pontiac resident Mrs. James E. (Florence) Townsend, 66, will be 3 p.m. Wednesday at Huntoon Funeral Home. Burial will follow White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mrs. Townsend died yesterday after a long illness. A former employe of Pontiac State Hospital, she was a member of Eastern Star and Rebec-1. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Norman Miller of Clarkston, and a son, Thomas of Pontiac. MRS. ROLLA L. BROWN ROSE TOWNSHIP - Service for Mrs. Rolla L. (Dora C.) Brown, 77, of 1820 Rose Center will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at the Dryer Funeral Home, Holly. Burial will follow in Rose Center Cemetery. Mrs. Brown died yesterday after a long illness. Survving are three sistefs; Mrs. Mary Brown of Holly, Mrs. Lillie Gamsey of Otisville and Mrs. Bessie Gibbs of Millington; and a brother. JAMES A. DORSEY TROY — Service for James A. Dorsey, 64, of 500 Eckford will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Price Funeral Home. Burial wiU follow in White Chaliel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Dorsey died Saturday after an illness of several months. A retired employe of the Dodge Main Plant, Hamtramck, Mr. Dorsey was also a member of the Foreman Association of America and UAW-CIO Local No, 3, Hamtramck. Surviving are his wife, Della; a daughter, Mrs. Donald Kenk nedy of Clawson; two sons, James A. and Edward S., both of Troy; two sisters; a brother; and eight grandchildren. ' MERRITT GUILDS AVON TOWNSHIP - Service tor Merritt Guilds, 63, of 2351 Relgle WiU be 1:30 p.m Wednesday at the Sparks-Griffin Chapel Pontiac. Burial will foUow in Oak Hill Cemetery, Pontiac. Mr. Guilds died Saturday after a brief illness. He was a retired foreman for the Pontiac Department of Pub-Uc Works and a member of the Christian Temple Church. Surviving are his wife, Edna; three sons, Donald and Glenn, both of Pontiac, and Duane of California; five daughters, Mrs. Nellie Williams, Mrs. Jean Leggett and Mrs. Charlotte Summers, all of Pontiac, Mrs. Marie Rifenbark of Birmingham and Mrs. Carol Bader of Owos-so« Also surviving are four brothers, Jay, Del and CecU Guilds of Pontiac and Dewey of Obro; five sisters, Mrs. Maggie Brock, Mrs. Irene Lloyd and Mrs. Goldie Jones, aU of Pontiac, Mrs. LaclUe Hendrick of CaUfornia and Mrs. Shirley Tibbits of Drayton Plains; and 20 grandchildren. LEWIS F. RENSHAW TROY — Service tor Lewis F. Renshaw, 59, of 6090 Niles wUl be 2 p.m. Wednesday at Pixley Memorial Chapel, Rochester. Burial wUl be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Renshaw died early yesterday in (Charlotte foUowing a heart attack. He was purchasing agent for the Oakland County Road Commissioner. Surviving are his wife, Isa- i and )f Bir- bell; two sons, Lewli F. Jr. of Troy and Robert D. of Royal Oak; a daughter Mrs. Ha Mae Stevens of New York; ni"“ brothers, William, George Lyle, all of Troy, Eddie of mingham, Norman of Auburn Heights, Harold of Armada, Herbert of Madison Heights, Gerald of Utica and Melvin of Almont; a sister; and five grandchildren. His mother, Mrs. Fred ^n-shaw of (jlawson, also survives. EARL 0. POPPENHAGER HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP-Service tor Earl 0. Poppen-hager, 53, of 1355 Lakeview will be 1 p. m. tomorrow at .the Richardson-Bird I Funeral Home, Milford. Burial will follow in Milford Memorial Cemetery. Mr. Poppenhager died Saturday after an illness of six weeks. He was a machinist at Nu-matics, Inc., Milford, and a member of Royal Neighbors. Surviving are his wife, Effie; his father, Charles of Astoria, lU.; two daughters, Mrs. Mary Lou Martin of Pontiac and Carolyn Jane, at home; three brothers; and a granddaughter Biggest Share to Pontiac County School Aid Split The release of $4,645,072 In state aid to Oakland County school districts was announced today by the county treasurer’s office. Ihe Pontiac Schoel Dtotriet is receiving the largest share, totaling $472,194. Waterford schools are getting the third largest share, $434,-090, below Royal Oak, $470,278. * ★ ★ The money derived from the state sales tax is apportioned according to how many pupils were enrolled in each district during the last census. OTHER DISTRICTS Other apportionmaits are: Birmingham, $284,192; Oxford (one school), $166; Walled Lake, $192,580; Lalnphere, $124,168; Clawson, $104,2^. Rochester, $14$,089; Oak Park, $59,760; South Lyon, $59,766; Lake Orion, $106^64; Huron Valley, $127,922; HoUy Area, $66,516; Farmington, $347,166; darkstoa, $125,456. Brandon, $42,826; White Lake, $20,56f; West Bloomfield, $46,-970; Troy, $107,070; Madison Heights, $140,270; Hazel Park, $217,128; Oxford Area, $55,942; Novi, $19,754; Clarenceville, $98,936. Bloomfield Hills, $85,075; Avondate, $88,976; Southfield. $203,184'; Berkley, $234,890; Ferndale, $194,552. The Oakland County School District is receiving $7,434, plus $12,762 for its special education AUGUST U^EGER IMLAY CITY — Service for August Upleger, 74, of 570 N. Almont will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at St. Paul Lutheran Church. Burial will follow In Imlay Townahip Cemetery. Mr. Upleger a member of Port No. 2492, Veterans of Foreign Wars, died Saturday after a long illness. His body will be at the Muir Brothers Funeral Home until noon tomorrow. Surviving are a steinlaughter, Mrs. Helen Simpson of Berkley; two brothers, Louis of Berkley and John of Imlay City; and -granddaughter. MRS. ALBERT RICHARDS METAMORA ^Service for Mrs. Albert (Frances E.) Richards, 80, of 131 W. High, will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Muir Brothers Funeral Home, Lapeer. Burial will follow in Oak Hill Cemetery, Pontiac. Mrs. Richards died Saturday after a long illness. Surviving are a daughter, Miss Ruth Richards of Meta-mora; two sisters, Mrs.' Stella Hardy of Metamora and Mrs Minnie Deevey of Clarkston; and two brothers, Clifford Steele of Detroit and William F. Steele of Pontiac. Death Notices „ Moulton, $t#« 0^ *loelSr D^goivjphni Funfl Momt. C6LBVIN, omilR a. XC- . s-ass-r. omclnm. ' InttrmM In wSbpto Big Bopldt, MleWotoi. Mr. Colbvin will llo In «l»fo ot mo Flumortolt Funorrt He^, ^ ^FREDIRICK W., Stoobury, Con-l^icut, termofly o* Pwti«; W J»j BolevM huibond o* Lproln* . Fowsftti bolovod »on eS R(*^ W. and Augusta Fawcott, dear talbar ot Laa F., and Robert 0., ^ Barbara Fawcett. Oravatida Mrvlot wtll be bald Wadna^ Octobar N at 3 p.m. at tha Whit# ChaptI Camattry. Mr. Fawcett WIN lit Hi state at tha Sparks-Orlffln Funeral Hama, attar 3 FUhRke, PiARL, 4/W Ma I gs, Drayton Plaint. Beloved srlfa o« tha lata Harley B. Farraa. Fmtorfl arrangatnants are pending at tha Cdbts Funeral Home, Drayton frericks, octObSr it, i»S JOHN A., » Falrgrava; age *»; beloved husband of Anna Frericks, dear father of Donald and Gerald Frarkka. dear brother ot Mrs. Hum Nagel, Mrs. Gusta Llppart, George w^^bart Frarkks. Fu- day, I •Hot ^klatlng. a Choeat Cama-wlllla ft) ■ • atjta H« btrttani be'mM to iha Mlssimry Fund ot tha Fallowtl)ip BIMa Clast ot tha First Baptist Church. GUILDS, OCtdBhll 36, lajj, Mrtt-RITT, 13SI Ralgla Drive; age S3; beloved husbaiM of Edna GulMs, dear father ot Mrs. NalHa Wll-llami, Mr*. AAarla Rifenbark, Mrs. Jean Laggatt, Mrt. Charlotle Summen, Mrs. Carol Bador, Donald, Duano and Glenn GulMs, doer brolhtr aL Un. Mtgglt-Brack, Mr*. Irena Lloyd, Mrs. GoMio Janos, Mrs. LuclHo Hond-rkk, Mrs. SMrlsy Tlbbltts. Oastoy, Jay. Dot and Cadi Gulkte. Alto tunrluod by 31 grandchlMran. Fu-notkl lorvica wir ——— day, Octobar 311 Spatkpnrlffln C Laland Lloyd otfl______________ bi Oak Hill Cttnatoty. Mr. GuIMt still Hi Ih ftata at the Spark*-Grlfftn Funeral Home. POPPENHAGER, OCTOBER Si, 1M3, EAR.L 0., I3SS Lakavlaw 'Drivo, Highland Townahip; age S3! balovtd huibmd of Effla Fop-eonhoger, baloued ton of Chtrlet Poppenhager, dear father of Mrt. —— • “I Martin and Carolyn ----. —J H-rvivad by one, granddaugniar, Ann Banfill. Fu-narel torvka vrill Da Tuesday. Octobar If at I p.m. at Iha Rkh-ordtonnird Funtral Home wHh O. T. Anderson ottkiating. Intar-mtnt bi MIHard Mamorlal Ceina-tory. Mr. Poppanhagtr will lie bi itato at lha^khardaon.Blrd Fu-naral Hama, Milford. Death Notices (Dorothy) Butlw, Jos^ barf Raynar; also survived, by eljt grandchlMran and II »I***jr,*!l Church with RjW. C. Gwrge Wld-difield otflcl«tlhO. Of.'f .11"'. n^'vrSSTv bakvad « Funeral ar,»„ii,-—— —w at tha Donalton-Johns Funarat 3 GET OUT OF DEBT ON A PLAN you can aftord.^^^ MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS 703 Pontiac Slate Bank Bldg. FE IHMM " Pontiac's oldost and larpast budgat aulttaiKt company,_________ GET OUT OF DEBT wHh paymantt at low as {10.00 BUDGET SERVICE II W Huron_________FE ASWI Pay Off Your Bills - without a Man -Paymantt 'ow at 110 wk. Protect your lob and credit Home or Ottka Appobitmants City Adjustment Service 714 W. Huron_______FE SdlSI HAY RIDE PARTIES, «TCHEN torvko or outdoor grill. jRhka your rea^afMw^now. Mombiga call t«V DIADAX TABLETS (IfoRAS. arly Dax-A-Olat) Haw nama, aamt formula, only fftc. Sbnmt Broa. Drugs._________J___________ PAY OFF YOUR BILLS AND REMODEL YOUR HOME Any homa ownar, wMow, ratiraa or ovtn tboso with cradh ditfkul-ties, can bt allglblt provMIng Ibalr homa Is half or mort paid lor. EXAMPLE BILLS I3JM0 MODERNIZATION .... ItOOO HOUSE BAL. 33,000 Total Owod ......... tim MAIL COUPON OR CALL FROM ANY PLACE IN MICHIGAN FE 8-2657 BONAFIDE IMPROVEMENT & INVESTMENT CO. 15 W. Lawrsnet Pnntldc Michigan NAME ..................... ADORER ................... Naora^*piiery............. COATS FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS >-77y iilTL , Keogo Htrbor. Ph. M3- b. E. Pursley FUNERAL HOME Invalid Car Sarvka _________FE4-1111 DONELSON-JOHN^ FUNERAL HOME "Dnlgnod for Funarals" HUNTOON FUNERAL HOME Sarving Pontiac tor N Yotrt 70 Ooklon? Avt.__FE 3MIW VOORHEES-SIPLE funeral home FE H37I Estobllthod Over 40 Years SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME Thoughtful SarvW‘ FE ^3S41 Oakland 'hills 4 sections. IF ANY WITNESSES SAW A CHEV-rotot hit a graon Chrysler Itn convartlMa, Friday Oct. 3S, W:M “ . ----------- Lakeland b— ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING a friendly adviser, phone FE 3-5J» hator* 5 i * Cl" " DAINTY MAID SUPPLIES. 710 Manomlnaa. FE S-7105.__________ TAKE SOIL AWAY THE BLUE Lustre way fr—--------- — hoistary. Rant ----- — SI. McCondlatt Carpets. L6iT; 1 kItgwN N0HTiW(TaiAT. White Lake Rd. OR 4-lSM. LOST, — OAKWOOO VICIIIITV, IwOT HoMabi halftr. Oxford. OA LOST: BLACK AND WHITE fellld. Ilth Sattar. Near M-15 and StaM LOST; MALE BRITTANY SPAN-lat. vkinitv ot Auburn and Pad-docK, reward. FE ^^I23. lost: 17 F06t, green AND whit# canoe, OM Town, taken from iMor';jrv.ror4 -BOXREPUES-At 16 E. m. today \ tho-e were replies at The Press office in the I foUowing boxes: 6, U, 13. 14, 25, 26, 39, ! 61, «2,JfLYI^72. $2. l5, ! 87, 91, 112. A ParhTime Job '* Naodad at anca, 3 man far auat. work, guaranteed salary. For bi-tormatlOT, can Mr. Pace, OR 4-044* S to 7 p.m. mar axporknead In Driva-bi rat- ^ ATTENTION start immediately MECHANICALLY-INCLINED THE FUNTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. OCTdBER 28. 1968 TWENTY-NINE AUTOMOIILB.MLISMIN, I HIGH quality automoblH uHaman to round out a tlx-man naw car aalat torca Mlling I ol tlw tmait qual-Hy ear* on tho marlc^. Aaply In oaraan Tuaa. Oct. it or wad. Ob. N batwaaq Itw houn of 2 — » p.m. only. Tha araat Automate Straw Mochine Sat up and oparata 2H In. RB-3 and iVy RA4. National Acmaa, iJn W.. 11 Mila Rd., Oak Park, batwaan CooHdoa ana Oraantlald. gAKERY DRIVER SALESMAN Guarantaad aalary, fraa panalon, Jraa Inauranca, fraa hoapltalliatlon, contact Jack Ralph, 194 W. Howard, 9 ajn. aad 4 p.m. Monday through ■ HAND klAOERS, JOUR- I only, I ty. IS A ' CoolidM a DC. Ml M20 Blood Donors U SOUTH CASS CITY OP PONTIAC PIRB FIGHTERS Ulary t4,9S3-W,««9. halght 67<.y l>,5iga 21- , ________ . ,-lcal condl- h achool praduata or gqul-u^lta. Must hava baan a raaldant of tha CHy ol Pontiac t 31 yoara, axa tion, hlA ach valant Cradlta. pmcadlng tha ap-^aannal, 35 S _________ fumod to Paraonnal by T Novambar S, 1M3, by 5 p.m. Rd.. Laka Orion DIE AND FIXTURE DESIGNERS ' DETAILERS TOP RATES dS-HOUR WEEK Anderson Design 1071 ORCHARD LAKE RD. gAUmkElt. fiou^tC ibegR. h a a V y aqulpm^, axporlancai Stata aga, quallMcatlon and exper anca. Rapfy PontlK Praaa Boa 70. EXPERIENCED CAR WASHER, I4» Immediate Opening PontlK araa tor dapandabla man riad man undar 4S with good car and homa phona. Our SO man avar-aga Ills ynaakly. SITS guaraqlaad during training. 1 part flma opan-Ingi at S3 hourly. OR saSdS. SBRVICe STATION ATTINI . . .MARRIID MAN IntarMtIng poiltlon ter machanic-ally incllnad high achaol graduate, abia to drlva, Ineonw ooportvnity from m to sisi par waak. Good ciaan outitoa Par parion In- tarviaa call FB AdllS._________ AdAN ^OR SERvic¥11rAYi6«; IX-—,—^ prafarrad but not ra-Standard Sarvka at AAapla Help Wmted Fe«Bh AAAN WANTED-RETiRBD MAN TO work around plant. Apply ln_par-aon, no phona calla. SarviaofI Dlvl-ilon, Coolay Soft Water Co., 2" MECHANIC MiDDLE-ACdD AAAN FOR ODD joba and chords. Mora ter "— than wagat. FE 4-422S. Needed: Part-Time Sales Help 3 houri par avaning, guarantea pay. For Information call Mr OPPSSTONiTVbP A LIFE Tijilt lor Iho right man I Supply cua-lomort In part of Oakland County or Dlit. In PontlK with Rawloigh Product!. AAany daalara aamlng S100 woakly. Saa or write Garald Roaa, 444 Fourth, Ponttec or write Dapt. MCJ-dMFd3, Fraa- OPENING FOR YOUNG APPREN-tica to loam printing trbdo. Aniy Dlvlikm Printing, 1179 Sylv^li oft of AA-S9, PontlK. No phono call!._________ PRACTICAL NURj rts: ............. ar fringa banafita. Contact Paraon-nal Oa^. In parson. PontlK Gan- REAl ESTATE SALESMAN Exparlancad Raal Estate Salasman naadad by ntabllahad Raal Ea-tete Firm. Call FE 50444 - Day Call FE 5-4dto - NIgM ' sekirice STATiWiALESAAAN 9 a.m • 4 p.m. FURNACE INSTALLER, EXPERI ancad wNb ducts, abla to do aerv-ka, top wagas. 4*3-1747 after 5 p.m. _________ A. SHIFT, l.'¥ila! Bros. ’‘Sto 973 SERISOFT DIVISION—Coolay Soft Water Co., 214 W. Walton naada route and service man, aga 2540. highest caliber, neat appaarInA married, and abla to handle l» lb. exchange _ tanka._ Our r^al ... ____ ______ 10-11 SH0F~UtLESt......... ......._ Evas, and Sat. Exparlanoa pra- atw waltraaa, 4 a.m. - shift. No Sundays, araa ------- tatlon providsd, call attar 4 p.m. Ml 4-to10, AAalaatIc Dinar, Tote-graph at Square Laka Rd.__________ ARE YdU anergatic. abll^to Willing to prove your th g^ oppe^ For Intervim* that could lead to a paaltlon with 40-yaar-old company, a subsidiary gMSrl^-M^a^^wrlte Mr. „A^, City, Mlaaourl._______________ babysitter, 4 evbninAs A waak, vicinity of Mt. Clamana Call batora 5. FE 40*93.___ babysitter, ttPEFERjrO LI' 3 chlldran, 2 pra-acheolara, 5 waak. 335-34M after 4 p - ________.'...... Jh « S-day weak. 473-24S2. .. « -rn mu A BABY SITTER TO SHARE_^Mfc \ »|rkh^l mother, SSS par BABY SITTING AND HOUiEWdRK, over la liva-ki, mora tor homa than wagas. FE 40337. BABY SiVtER, preferred TO live In, 2 chlldran, 5day waak. Cr" FE 5yO after 4 p.m. tencad, on latest hair 'slylaa, C 5*900 after 7:30 p.m. 473-7144. BEAUTY OPERATOR Ifa 402<420 Tha Mall CLEANING WOAAAN 25-40^ DAY svork S dayc must hava oswi trana. App^ mornings only. Andaraon bKh^I 14 Mlla< Birmlng- CLERK FOR PART TIME w6Ak, 1 to 7 p.m. and Saturdays, 9te axparlanca naadad. Ponttec Lassn-dry, S40 S. Talagraph. :OOK FOR S NIMTS. IF NOT EX-partencad, will teach. Also, part tima waltraaa. OR 3<233.__ DINING ROOM WAITRESS ply Watdron t4otel,*yyyiL. DOCTOR'S OFFICE EXPERIENCED DOMESTIC, EXPERIENCED GIRL live In WKkanda. gaMral Itausa-wark, and child cars, 2 adults and 3 small chlWran. must drlva, and have own ear, SIS a day, rafar- ancaa. Ml 4-9744._________ EXPERIENCED. WAITRESS. MUkt FULL OR PART TIME WEEKLY -----—,. Important lob nd matliar. Call batwaan ■ to 7 p.m. CAB DRIYERS WANTED, MkN OR woman wM geiad dnvlng racarda. /^ly to Parlor B. WaWran Hs4al, tothlaf Cab Co._______________ ELDERLY COUPLE FOR CHORES Ptonty of floor thna and nroapacta! Call/. A. Taylor, OR 4<204. . Mali or feaaale hair drbSs- irantpoirfattoh, viebsity of Ponttec ^ Cm* L^ Rdb. 334^.^ giving time. Avon Cosmatk* ap-paals to avary mambar of tha family. Show ttioM quality prod-ucte and cash in on Ihla great demand. Contact FE 54544 or write Drayton Ptelna P.O. Bex *1. GREEN PAi^ROT TAKING APPLICATIONS FOR waltraasM. Apply In parson only at 1450 N. Parry.____________ HARVEY'S COLONIAL HOUSE HAS ■----— opaninm tor attractivo --------50M Plxte Hwy. LADY TO LIVE IN, CARR FOE 2 Call bat. * a.m. and 4 3457527. lEaDiEg ClMCYIty MXi VB- 4 light 5:30 p. p.m. Drayton Plains, 1ATURE WOMAN. CREKENT Laka araa, stay night* with 15 yaar-oW bey. SS500S4.______________ Management Position Due to opening of naw storo ts man are naadad to team business. Exparlanc* '--------- " ‘ lul. Salary NURSES PONTIAC OSTEOPATHIC HOSPITAL PONTIAC, MICHIGAN IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR REGISTERED NURSES STAFF, S3**.4*-*45S.24 HEAD NURSES. 447t.4MS42.S2 LICENSED PRACTICAL NURSES SII7A5-0403.75 **^IRECTOR OF NURSES PONTIAC OSTEOPATHIC HOSPITAL 50 N. PERRY PONTIAC. MICHIGAN OPENINGS-WAjTRESSES. CURB SMing brettEMiUlig, Tdleriiii ■ ALTERATIONS ALL TYPES, KNIT Wallpaper Steamer Floor aandara, —— ' aandars, tumaoa —------- Oakland Fuel 4 Paint, 434 Or-chard Lake Ava. FE 5415*. Hudson's We Are Interested in Contingent Saleswomen for CHRISTMAS SEASON APPIY NOW 41 EMPLOYMENT OFFICE Hudson's PONTIAC BUDGET STORE 269 N. Telegraph Pontiac Moll DfetEwMi t Tdlertei 17 EbOM AND epARD FOR ELj^PT V b*tlgiL_|telv*to hoitte, btat ol ar, SO par emt all i •SSSTi mIcTole-aoeo couplb to keep houM. Must hftw good rsfewicw. Smlttiq if to 4 p.m. «514574v i^PicE Cleaning, i oay weak. Pontiac Praaa Box 44. Bob's Von Service MOVINO AND STORAGE REASONABLE RATES Paddlni^il Yaars ExpKlanca ROBERT tOMPklNS OR 51512 REAL ESTATE SALE! MEN OA WOMEN. OPPORTUNITY ' POR SALES manager ' POSITION. WILL TRAIN INTERESTED PEOPLE CALL OR 51273 FOR IN-TERVIBW.___________ representative TO PlIlltlRI A DECETEtlEI 23 sstala position In Water-I. part time contMerSd. -.. Phona FB 50454 mom-- avaninga tor appeintmante. ■I DECOI...... ..........- plaaterlng - papering, Fraa aal.. dlaceunta tor cosh. aOMilOi IXPERt WIMtin*, 6ie, The PontlK Praaa.______ SALESUDIES SEMI-OIESBL. TRUCK % VEN training achool. WrHa TRUCK, 14(33 Llvamolk Dalroh. ------- OININO ROOM TEaV tarvlca,n^lor*te Mbsg Room, 4313 *11'laaSlii ^ ” him, atmT booking ~*x^tonea, ^ho’far^rrP%'^ 447, Ponttec, Mich. Give ago, mar-ttaf status and dtpandanos, aduc5 tton, pravloua aaoMrltncp If any, ^ talaphona ------- It moving lo . ^tlHy and prk» cannot no baattn. "Is jfs^.. ................. WOMAN LOOKING FOR GOOD hofito, llva to, tefca ovtr houtawork asid car* af } ctsIMran. CaN attar wOM;S'V6^Ri6oR 6l6erl9 ALL NUkKES OF FOUNTAIN PEN* daiwral PrUitlns A Ol Ce., 1? W. Lawranca St. ELECTRIC MOTOR. SERViqrgi-palrkig and rawbidint. til E. PBt*. Pdlrkig and rawk Rsm FE 5M1. lUNG WOM n PontlK EM 52942 K BUY-SELL-TRADE Wt can gel all caah tor your ly or trade It tor what you want. Fait ACTION guarantaad. Ask Jht folks wno hava triad us. WARDEN REALTY 434 W. Huron, Ponttec 2357157 "GEARED FOR ACTION" fith our enlarged aatea atatt an aw attlea iKlilttes, wa cwi gua mtaa "QUICK ACTION" .en »t w5ttSTtor''‘ir Warren Staot, Realtor 145* N. opdyfca Rd., PontlK PE 541*5 - Oiliy till I p.m. MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE JOHNSON SAYSi 17*4 FE NEEDED All typN of Rtal EsttI havd proparty to aall a halJ In dltpoabig et It. ^’kRGB R. IRWIN, REALTOR .7$ W. Walton FE 57P yyA»tTE6: *. i Atib * E66 42|alt Hoaeet RbOMi, CLEAN, CLOSE IN wEsT J SMa. Adulte only. 1*5 mo. UtHIttoa * tom. M Norton. Ft 4-4410. ---... . E 51414._____________ r Ro6nL private entrance and '• bath, vicinity St. iot'a^HoapHal. Call attar 2 p.nn. FE 2-5I4S. Sleeping room for rent RibEfiDM, HtAT- tor.i. Phona 4*5*341. aE6 EaTh, tLEAH: iill FE 513*2. E66mL pW; 2*x**-0000 FOR RESTAURANT or hsrdwara. Near Fishers, park-Ing. FE 57941 or OR 59122. lad. iiwlra 299 El RO. FE 5M91._____________ ROOMS, BATH, REFRIPERATOR, atov*, heat. fE 2-7425. Humphries FE 2-9236 l,n.“JSi»'F"lt5*22 03 N. Talagrapn Road Multiple Listing and tosuranca. Vacant l-#loor bun gatow, dlnlag roam, open tnnt porch, gu avtomqtle tumaoa, a9t Oakland. Only 57m *M pay* all coato. Clark Raal Eatato, FE 57944; R*tW*nca, FE 54113. norYhern SCHOOL biitEi6T, i-room frame, nica comar tot. Ctoab to storaa. *1,4** down m teRd cm-trKt. EM 547*1. HACKETT REALr . BEDROOM HOME, . ADULTS A. C. Compton & Sons 49** W. Huron OR 57414 Evas. OR 54551 FI------ i-BCDROOM BRICK, CARPORT, n6 BEDROOM, 5CAR CARAPE, *M a month, Harrington HIII5 FE 5OT5. _ _ _________ EfebROOMt, W. H. BASS REALTOR FE 57214 BUILDER "^lallilng In Tr^t" 5BEOROOA4, GAS HEAT, ALU- 3-orr 5BEDROOM BRICK, GOOD LOCAL-l^.~ atat et Cl Adults only' FB~5»ir TIL-HUI ----TtU__________ UNION lake. 5BBDROOM RANCH ON 4 WOOD-sd lotk Oakland Lakt prlvltogas. Largo living room, attached g5 rage, axcallant condition. Tan— Al Pauly, Reoltor 451* Dixie, Rear ■* Bva5 FE 57444 55^ " -----B6ulIVA» HII6HTI - l-Badnwm Unit — S75 Par Month Contact RMidant Manager 544 last Blvd. dt Vatoncte ________FE 57*33________ CLEaN 3 ROOMS ANOTaTH, GA-rage. Inqulra 1444 Opdyka Rd. HERRINGTON HILLS Moore. 3-badroom brick ___ full baaamant. Vacant. **9.5*. BR BH AREA IN sbi^ hemt, gas heat, low, low rant. Ask tor Mr. RIchords. A REAL VALUE HOME. 42M57S. inwnd tek. . oil furnaco, sal* I r mo. OR 59542. .... NEIGHBORHOOD duptox, 455. FE 554*4. MODERN LAKESIDE 5BEOROOM. P*n*l*d living room, firaptoca, naw --------------------fhomappla. „.Ti' i66tEN YW6-Bi6R6dM write P 0. Box 4123. Auburn Halghla, Mich.______ NEW BRICK RANCH h6mE, g6o6 m W. Yale at . .. RENT WTION $59.66 MONTH xchsdlng taxaa and Insuram Hnant, pavad atraat, modal 1 dally and Sunday OUR TRADE DEALS ARE TERRIFIC MICHAEL'S REALTY RENT WITH OPTION, LARGI hovM* comtf Iditt) and Ratbum. Inqulra 2335 Olxit. rOchIsYEr t:R6dM h6uSI, oXl WANT TO SELL? CALL GEORGE * ' r. No obUgalton. BLAIR RE^ ESTATE rogo, yard, *71. OL 5*451. SMALL HOUSE ON OAKLAND. tS* par month. Sava Auto., PE 5227*. vitiNiVV 6^ ST. joiiEH'HS*: pltal. 3-badraom. toll baaamant. BUILDER Naada tola In Pmttec immadteta ettar, na oammlaalan, Mr. Oavla. Raal Valua Realty. Vi NII6 l-lfTINGS ON-J(tL prica homed and bualnaea ■repir ly. Also sat buy and aaH tend contracts. Call us today. K. L Templeton, Realtor 42 Where Buyer and Seller Meet Pontiac Press Want Ads Just Dial FE 2-8181 Nothing Down 47M SUNOALB. 5badrtam, brick, . Large tol. Btecktap straal awl fc par can! inaaatt. _____ aad abouT UN tor ctoalae coal. Total prica I1*.t*l SI w. Comall - You'll Hkt Ittto naat 5badroom bvneatow wtttt fuN baaammt, oak fleers, tilt •“•n Good tocalton. Only IlidN. Cl bEdROOM HOME. SYLVAN VIL- };*a3r* iSsr' ilatlon. Nertham High tio.- 5*545. 141 W. Brooklyn. Oww. —----------Si... :-hrmrrm ftoOMl, JiULL“lAil«iNT, - On canvanlant Mrnu. REAGAN REAL ESTATE 2551 N. Opdyka Rd. PE 5*15* F i ROOMS, oarage. 2 Bli No btttmtni. mo do* **.9**. Naar PonllK Mall. - _ ROOMS. 3 BATHS, NORTHERN High, 1500 down - *71 par - HILLTOP REALTY_____4n-5234 5500 DOWN. 1 BEDROOM, I C garage. Aubum-Opdyka araa. Associate NO MONEY DOWN Mixed Neighborhoods Land Contract, VA, FHA ASSOCIATE BROKERS 14* Franklin Blvd. - an Lawit__ FE 52* BY OWNiR 1“ I houM. Sr ttuma lew m CHEAPER THAN RENT NORTH "PONTIAC $69 Down NEW 5BEOROOM HOME $55 Month "Excluding taxaa ^ ■varyona qualltlaf: vorgjte^arP^'PafaoBi FEATURING ^•mnanant Iwt watar Pumitura flnithad cabbwti $400 DOWN 3-Bedroom, Neoriy New IMMBDIATR POSSESSION Everyone Quolifies SPOTLITI BUILOINO CO. FRANKLIN-SOUTH BLVD. AREA CITY OF PONTIAC WHY RENT? $47.50 DOWN NO OfHER COSTS New 5b*dri)om^^smaj^J^ igjnth. cesM?'^^*llven'*p^ wllh credit probtemt. Caipating kicludad. Call anytime, any day. Ask tor Mr. RIeharda, t2M571. FIRESIDE WEATHrt Soon hart. Light togs In tiraplac*. throw In Ihot* rani racalptt. Relax In pine panalad family roam and watch them bum. 5badroom, large living room, tunlit kitchen, uttllty, 1V5car garage. White Laka rights. Comar lot, *W» $3*0 now, 151.91 mo. plui tax and Int. HAGSTROM REALTOR •«" w. Huron OR 5fnsa Evaninaa call OR >4119 Iha VJk. 4 b*draomt, larg* living room, aaparat* dkikig room, largo r—— ---- —■ bath. $ fumacat and matori. 1 oar gp-rag* plua work Pull prim only 112.5** If you hava gtiad cradit and qualify tor a VX horn*, bring In yaur dtecharga papara and hurry en Ihla an*. RAY O'NEIL, Reoltor NO DOWN PAYMENT NO AAORTOAOl COST NO PAYMENT FIRST MONTH tocalad In all parte at I family room, brS I at 4te KInnay mar an I to 5 dally and kllchan ; from, ms Btein*. Simday. BELAIRE HOME BUILDERS PE 52742 AFTERNOON EVENINGS AFTER 7, LI 57317 CUSTOM HOMES llty built - Prietd rlgh I direct wllh Bulldar. Ccirrigan Cons't EASY TO BUY If you want on* you can mev* rigM Into, no mortgag* quMIfylnto no ctoting coat and no dalayt, thla 1$ It. For |h* imall lamlly, Rilt cute 5b*droom with altachad g*-rag* and baaytitui item flraalac* I* avaltebi* right naw. Th* larg* camar lot la csimtetely tencad and It attars privnagat on Williams Laka, right across ttw atraat. Total jsrlc* Is only OOMO, call Frad SL Sauvar now, saa ft tonight and move In ihls aiaakand. REALTOR PARTRIDGE Is the Bird to See MO W. HURON_________Pe 53*51 Erie Drive Rancher This baautlful horn* an a large wall-shadad tot toatoraa a,ita21 tt. living room, 4 tovaly badreema, panalad dan and me. roam, 2 lira-placaa, hl-fl wiring throughout, 5 car attKhad gaiag*. Many nsor* toatoraa to makt Ihla a hSm* cam-plato. If you am In th* market tor a tinar homa, you iheuld check this on* out. Terms arranged. WARDEN REALTY 3357157 OUR TRADE DIALS ARE TERRIFIC NEW 5 AND 5BEDR0DM HDMES 107 W. Yal* at Stanlay "0" Down-$59.66 Mo. Excluding Taxaa and Inauranca Quick Pot**t|ton, Pavad Straat Full Baaamant Modal Opin Dally and Sunday MICHAEL'S REATLY LAKE ORION BY OWNER 1-STORY 3-BEDROOM OLDER HOME, LARGE DOUBLE CL05 ETS, SEPARATE DINING ROOM WITH BUILT-IN CORNER CUPBOARDS, DEN, CALIFORNIA ROOM, ENCLOSED GLASSED-IN PORCH, FULL BASEMENT WITH LAROB STORAGE ROOM, OAl HEAT, WELL INSULATED FULLY CARPETED UPSTAIRS AND DOWN. DRAPES. 2-CAR O^ARAOE WITH LOTS OP STORAGE AREA IN REAR, m SHADED LOTS WITH FRUIT TREES. COMPLETELY FENCED REAR YARD. S3,*** DOWN 75 Olanworth, off M MY 51725 attar 4 p. CHAPEL HILLS Sharp 3-badroom brick ranch with family room, carpaUn* haauth tol kitchen with bultt-ln oven ^ range, 5e*r saraga, yard 15*xl^ oaay tormt. Quiat atmot^ nMto to the axprassway. Pham OL PRAtR’ SHEPARD REALTOR IMMCOIAte PW$6S?T6JT modal horn**, apan 9 5m. to 7 .m. Booth Bulldara HILLTOP REALTY 475BS4 1141 AIRPORT RO. DRAYTON PLAINS MODEL NOW FOR SAJ.E Irqnct In bqlht4 qvtn t E. J. DUNLAP FE i-itie THIRTV THE PONTIAC TRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBKR 28, 1968 S«lt Nmms ROCHESTER AREA N«wtng^«m B—ltof Mixed Neighborhood Fir$t month frot N AFTERNOONS l-S Payments MODELS OPEN _ AND SUNDAY WESTCWN REALTY 4M Irwin off Eait Blyd FE ti77U aftamooni U J-4*^_Evns. NEW FHA APPROVED 3 Bedrooms Foce Brick Homes $150 . .. DOWN .. . GAS HEAT _ PAVED STREETS LARGE ROLLING LOTS MODEL OPEN DAILY IJ to S brick wlttl I'S I Leslie R. Tripp, Realtor 75 WMf Huron S)re»f __FE 5-SU1 (Evoningt FE 4-437I) n tin* h X U5x qu«llty built. Also has }-car ga-rw and twbby room. Priced SIJ. 500, only lO'i down on mortgage basis. 5 BEDROOMS Home on paved road near village, has plastered walls, oak tioors, flying room, dining room, basoment, I tumace, garage. Priced tor -sle, n,7S0 '.......... ■ quick SI EMBREE AND GREGG 1S05 UNION LAKE RD. UNION LAKE OPEN SUNDAY 11-4 P.M. PHONE EM 3-4J»3 ■ SOLD TO SETTLE ES Call ME 4-*071._ POiCKEt change d your smutty In present t II buy this 7-year-otd ranch ...... f and parte rights on Crescent JACK LOVELAND 3100 Cats Lake- Rd. A-1 BUYS ,________ _ lly ------------ .valk-out basement. CarpotliM drapes. Back yard tanced. Be _ _ and bar- 3-car garage. Driva out and this lovery. home. A real ilth only S3.000 down. patural tireplace. Serrate d $50 PER MONTH A home in the country — Coiy 3-bedroom bungalow. Breezeway and I'l-car garage Neat and clean -■ Call now. Only S400 down. HIITER , chicken coop. . Terms. More li WEST SUB. 4. roor kitchen batem •ivlleges, only OAKLAND LAKE Pr terms. _________ -..KE Privileges - excellent 3 - bedroom, path, new Ks turnace, 113x300 tt. lot. UJOO. w down payment. Call B. C HIITER Realty 3BM Elizabeth Lake Road. FE 3-OITt or FE 4 3e«0 or FE l-eS74. OPEN SUN DAY 3-5 pm. NEW HOMES Full Bosements $00 DOWN $68 per mo. Excluding taxM ai Kannett. 3 blocks OPEN 10-8 DAILY Ask about our tra< ka. 2 o. ____ . z plenty of rec space, available. Payments US mo. Tnci! evarything: HAGSTROM REALTOR 4900 W. Huron. OR 4-0351. eves. call OR 3-0229. _________________ I SAU^bERS B WYATt REALTY | Rochester I VILLAGE 4 b 74 auburn FE 3 Y HOUSE, s'bedroom. I, large 0 with Snow-White Home 3<*r garage workshop. Spick-and-span. Bi last. Lovely view of lake across stratt. Definite bargain, $7,900, II.- HAYDEN 3 Bedroom Tri Level $9,995 $1,000 DOWN t'y-CAR OARAGE 13' LOT FAMILY ROOM GAS HEAT OPEN DAILY 9 TO e P M. SUNDAY 2 TO 5 P.M. WILL DUPLICATE ON YOUR LOT J. C. HAYDEN, Reoltor EM 36604 107S1 Highland Rd. (AA59) Rochester 651-1143_ NICHOLIE edroom bungalow. L Ining area, kitchen a 1, attached garage. C ■ • • out $350 mov I. Vacant. Abou t S3 kttchen room, carport Dll HA decorated. Vacant. About CRARY JR HIGH AREA ee - bedroom brick bungalow, jeted living room, tamlly klKh- 1, tenced rear yard. I 1 lummar porch. Sea Eve Call MR. ALTDN. FE 4-5334 NICHDLIE HARGER CO. I'Y W. Huron St FE 54143 GAYLORD TAYLOR! 'LAKE FRONT very fine t INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP-$250 I tiraplace. garage. » ! and ter"-- j 2 2821. } BRAND NEW Ci 2 baths Extra I a pave< 110,500. WE HM LECTI Only - ’’e proud to show the model immediate possession on mo - Call FE 8-9693 ( k^E AN EXCELLENT SE- ' in small down pay- j monthly ^payments, j TAYLOR -■ I WY 2 2*21 Lawrence W. Gaylord FE 8-9693 or MY 2 2831 1 (M59) USE FAST acting O'NEIL MODEL 0P£N 5 to 8 . . . EVERLASTING, ALWAYS IN STYLE. 2»15 SHAWNEE LANE COLONIAL, tna kind ol that win »tiH" be In vogue lor many generations to tollow. Oeligni fully authentic, combining Cedar Shakes. Aluminum and Brick in Its construction. Saaled glass Colonial windows. Entering through the lover and up tha open stairway, guarded by * curved oak hand rail. Built-in china cabinet In dining room; gorgeous Early American light tamtiy room that features an Early Amarican fireplace. ng. 3'-i TRADING IS TERRIFIC OUR LADY Of the LAKES AREA attached parage 4 rooms all on ona floor. Prica reduced to 4I4.M4. Mt» doem plus closing . Almott 1 acre w Iran — pricad at only 415,544. OVERLOOKING GOLF COURSE Clarkston School Area. 3-badroom 100x400 Pricad to tell fast i SI3.S00. TALK ABOUT YOUR DOll HOUSES-Wail hero's a sweet ' ‘ ^ dKfcdd on«. Extri Urft living room ond dining oil. won-to-wofl corpHcd Two nIcA bodrooms, Ioms of I. eor ond • holt gorogo ptus • big covorod carport, loads of ftowars and fortc-W Prica is right $10,508 and RAY O'NEIL REALTOR 2bi S. Teleflroph Op*n 9 to 9 FE 3-7103 363-7961 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE Sal* Hmm* G. FLATTLEY, BLDR. $7,500 Buys almost now 4-room bungalow that's naat and clean. MMIa Straits Laka privllegat. Vatarans. par month, or low bank tarn WHY RENT. J. L. DAILY REALTY EM 3-7114 BATEMAN Guoranteed Home Trade-In PLAN Action On this extra nica 3-badroom brick rancher will be big at this reduced price of $16,300. Only 5 yrt. old, fdll basement* 2-car attached garage and Loon Lake privileges. jCarpeting, gas liKinerator and Athar plus features. It's a« ntr* you could find. Owner sell; just take o . $2,158 d It mortg. ^rtg. .costs. Call today. Commerce Lake PRIVILEGES just across street. and Llncoln-Mercury plant at Wix-om. Real nice 3-bedrm. ' rancher with basement only 8 yrs. old. Large shaded lot 119x151 ft. Just $11,500, lust $1,150 dn. plus costs.' Foreclosuro Sole NKORTGAGE CO. says sell. Vacant and immediate possession. Good city west side iKatlon, 4-bedrm. JuM^ric. Union Lake Area Ask About Our Trode-ln Plon DORRIS It enharKed by towering shade wonderful basenrtent m on South Marshall, a 1 tha North Side, oems that 'irst floor, irge dormitory bedroom up, II basement, a bargain. WONDERFUL BUY - $10,950; h ^arKf formica counters, a wall-to-wall carpeting, you ( enjoy the coiy charm of ' ------------- ------------ .... brick manile car gara a short St. Mike's and LARGE FAMILY HOME. A comfort- wonderful cortdition inside an< out. A house your children wll be proud to ----------------- > beautiful aluminum s, $7,900. ; NEED LISTINGS BUYERS WAITING GILES $750 DOWN, 5 r is. Call now. 1650 DOWN, WATERFORD TERING AREA ranch home. Full basement, rac. room, v i Only $8,900 full price. GILES REALTY CO. MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE TRADE tumoc*. Ill ___________________j40 dosm, no uelitylno, no moiipogt costs, wetter see this on* toMy. Selling below merket, St.SOO. looking Oropes end an reg*. Selling fi Frushour Struble 3930 ElUabeth Li KENT 2-badrm. horn# with nnodem kitch- ^---- --4. ---- stTreir eluding toxn and :iTY - North, n ft. carpatad IN. rm. 1 bedrm. dn. 3 on second floor Full bamt., braazeway lo attached 3 baths, walk-out basement. 14xS0-toot building lor bern or garage. Don't delay, sae It today. PRICE REDUCED front home with 3 to-wall carpeting and 3 bedrooms, coaos o boards in spacious kitchen, out basement, oas heat. 1____________ beautiful With auto, on near, ixomeu aivv. ST 1-4332 eves. 4-4 p.m. ____| 7$ ACRES BETWEEN ROCHE5TER1 ‘ Utlc«, frontpge “ **'*'‘' ^ ■ and tel I, wall- MILTDN WEAVER, INC. REAL-TDR. 118 W. University, Rochev! ‘ r, 651-8143. Realty - TAYLOR __________ 12 Highland Rd. (M-59) OR 4-0306 2ii >«ime“^re oil service sta- tIon for laase in Laka nrum For information on f-'- - ■ business opportunity c -------on at 643-3344. .nr-4/--.rc« "i cuci l asih STORE ROOM AVAIL- 2 large bams, granary, t n house and .............. wn TRiangla 1-5444 or IX 44, Millington. ________ yard. 'WIN t. NEAT 3-BEOROOM RANCH, paling and drapes In living n gas heat, storms and screans, rag*. Patio, partly fenced i Only 410.400. 3 UP; 3 DOWN — Front and porchei. plastored walls, basen . . Mrag*. Storms and screens. Cloee to school end bus. Quick ,----- PHONE 682-2211 »43 Cssi^Enzabeth Road MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 'SMITH" Off Boldwin Sterter home or retirement home 3 bedroomv paved drive, iVi-cei Kreans, oil heat and etoctrk wa- Near Clarkston On pavtd road. 1-bedreom hgina wilt) large living room, pleasant kitchen, encloiad breoiway to garage. LMe-tlnw ahitnlnum atwtbiga. LAe privltoget. Sn,JSB, lertnt. Rolfe H. Smith, Realtor 344 S. Tetegraph FE 3-7B44_________ MA SA43 Val-U-Way and bam. S-acra REALTOR PARTRIDGE 1$ the Bird to See 1050 W. Huron______FE A3S4I Bring Your Sow-Hammer And grab this 7-1^-* '' tha country. 54,450, C. PANGUS, Realtor ORTONVILLE 23 Mill St.___________NA 7 ACRE, JUST OFF US. Clarktton. 3 - bedroom, ’ " home. Pull basement, 14,140 with 47S0 down. 5 acres, 1 miles north of Clerks--— -n pavement, 5,room home. 10 acres. $-room rett^led farm home. Molly area. 3.bams, trees, 424,000. IS acres. 1 homes, 40x40 berm 11 roof. Clerkiton schools. 414,000. .........contract “• We have a good selection of v cant or with buildings In all sizi and prkes. Tell us what you hai In mind. UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE 4445 Dixie Highway, ClerksWi —FOR futUrB Security BUY NOW Here ere 2 sptonr- ■ prke, 34.440, FHA Termv $60 Per Month Fayt everything tar thli rbem home. Large f ell furnace, utlWy root High Area., 447S dawn. R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 345 OAKLAND AVE. OPEN t-7 Dorothy Snyder Lavender 7001 Highland Road EM 3-3301 FE S-4400 Evtj. M7-43I7 WANT TO BUY A NURSERY? Manage Your Own Business operated dispensers to be loceted In this area, through ,well-estab-lished corporation. Excellent — portunity to be handled full .. pert time. Must have reliable transportation, 4 or more spare hours per week. 4400 to 43,400 cash capital for Investment. Write giving name, address enC ‘— No. I3SS. 13-Unlt Motel with PbeW room home. AU modem on It acres. Fully equlppad. 440JI00 replacement cost. Owner sayi ‘ Stats Wide-Laks .Orion OA 0-1400 AFTER S OL l-gi--RESTAURANT FOR LEAS-T. MUST mat? SUBURBAN HARDWARE Good parking. Tremendous do-IF yourseH volume. 40500 net by tak. Term- Michigan Businsss Sales, Inc. ...-IN LANDMESSER, BROKER 1573 Teltgraph______FE 4-1103 Porty Store igniy profltobto bustnaes I uperala. Vary low optrating Kis. Good bulldina and aqulp-I. Larga parking tot at ona of lac's busy kitoraacttoos. SI5,- Pontlac' BreWer Real Estate Fe 4-Sltl - Eves. 444-S104 WANTEDtl A GOING BUSINESS._l^_^bltgra t 45,010 to JthaTliava yt, WARDEN REALTY 20% DISCOUNT ACTION n' your land contract, large oi malL Call Mr. Hlltor, M Land Contracts reasonabto offer. FE 3-75W. ABSOLUTELY THE FASTEST AC-on your land contract. Caih irs waiting. Call Raaltor Par-le. FE l-fiil. 1050 W. Huron. Land Contracts CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS -H. J. Van well, 4540 Dixie Hwy., OR 3-1355. CASH For your land contract or aquit Lowest possible discount. Don't toi thit home. Call 402-1130, Ask f( Ted McCullough Sr.____________ Manty te (Lkeni .kensed 61 TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 202 N. MAIN ROCHESTER ROMEO 214 E. ST. CLAIR LOANS S2S TO 11,000 LIVESTOCK HOUSEHOLD GOODS OL 4-7011 OL 1-4741 PL 3-1SI4 PL 2-1S10 "Friendly Service"_______ BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY WHERE YOU CAN BORROW UP TO $1,000 . OFFICES IN Ponllec—Drayton Plains—Utka Welled Lake—Birmingham CASH TO $1,000 QUICK, FRIENDLY $ERVICE NO RED TAPE INSURED PAYMENT PLAN AVAILABLE Baxter & Livingstone LOANS MONEY TO LOAN When you need $25 to $1,000 We will be glad to help you. STATE FINANCE CO. GOOD NEWS! $1,000-Thot Is the Amount We Con Now Lend You account with only o meet each month. Our sarvke Is area. Stop In today or phone FE XUl ter arrangemants. Home & Auto Loan Co. ' N. Perry St. FE Mill Hours: 4 to 5 dally; Set. 4 to I CASH Loans to $3,000 balance at NO EXTRA COST. Repay over a convenient term. Phone or Apply In Person Fomily Acceptance Corp. 317 Nationel BMg. 10 W. Huron Telephone FE 4-4033 42 CUT YOUR PAYMENTS ONE-HALF by qukk cash home loan up to 53.504 from Voss and Buckner, 10 W Huron St., Room 204. Phono FE 4-4734. HOME OWNERS CASH UNLIMITED Exeksive plan. Remodel your Construction Co. 1 MORTGAGE ON ONE ACRE UP. ‘"“IJSGtoot trontoGf. No appraisal B._0, Charley lijuitable Farm CASH Lexjns to $3,000 Telaphona FE 4-4033' II X 10 WALL TENT, TRADE FOR smaller tent or tell. FE M474. 3434 Silver Valley Dr, Off Jotlyn. hunters, 300 case end 2< Y rifle with peep sight, boxes shells tor To" BROWNING GUNS V. “Y* Node guns. EI^CTRIC TY^RITER, ZBNIYh tv, dishwasher, wizard - riding Nit double barrel or door wonkino iwkitlng tor? fe 4-3341. WILL SELL OR TRADE FOR gtms, tools, money, or ?? Now, SIS. FE 4P43S. SolBOtlhtas ILACK PERSIAN LAMB COAT Fi-WINTB* clotM COAT h fur collar, tlta 14, 440.^1- / THE PONTIAC PRESS. I^IONDAY, OCTOBER 28. lOfiT THIRTY-ONE Sck Houi^tM Oydi Aj ) WALL MURPHY BEO, TV, Ol^lSs-Mr, 1 ru«^ conurwrcltl Mwln« ttiKhln# aM SIngtr ciblntt chliw^, platform rockar, i__________ couch, wlnp davanport, marbla ' ch, lanwi nlic. « 1. wim davar wr, tablaa, plant anilqua fumitu LOVitY SINOm SLANT-NieOLE ■■ fn • moniht at <7.JS par - »57 cam balar" "■ Companjf, PE Ami. 2 BARGAIN HOUSES Grand Opening Specials New Beroain Houm et }m Baltin at Walton _____ tabita and 2 lan>pt. Choica of colors. All for $97 large <-PIECE bad room aata. Naw Crib *Aattrai $59 tx12 LInolaumi Utad cat md Elac. Stovai tit Rabullt Waahari, Maytag, ale. I» up Uiad Glnlng Room Suna ........t3t Baby Crib ..............• $1' Big Pktura TV'i Mf ui Bargalni on Naw Factory Saconda And AH Oaad Furnitura ___________________a FE 2-W2 rciRCULATINO COAL AND haatar, »4.50. Ga. and alactric atovaa 110 up. Duncan Phyla bul-tat, laWa and 4 chalrt, lunlor il» tize ISt. M»hoo»nv comer chine . ••nipi. l^lnat tsa.SO^elrlgaralora ilt up. OE alactrft Ironar MAM.------ Sale HouteheM Geedt AS HAND LAVyN IMOWER, tl-INCH ■ -lood oondHIon. I7.J0. HS-7041 I a.m. Friday. Univarul moving baby fan 047 IW7. ■ AIR CONDITIONERS, Ja^ard, in6; FE KELVINATOR REFRrOERATOR,”- ~... Wa apaclallia In Ing and-------- * - Salat, „. r.v„v. far, paat John R. I PAV CASH FOR YOUR FURNl-lura jmh a Consolidation Loan up to U,000-Convanlanl paymanti and Ilia Iniuranca at No EXTRA COST. Pl^ or Apply In Parion . Fomily Acceptance Corp. 117 National Bldg. 10 W. Huron —FE F40a LON PER HOUR RECOVERY. Gas Fired AUTOMATIC CONTROL, MODEL NUMBER aS-SIgl. ‘ Glass Lined FOR FURTHER INFORMATION WRITE PONTIAC PRESS BOX II HOT WATER BASEBOARD SPECIAL - IT par ft. Thompaon, 700S, MSf REFRIGERATOR, S15) ELECTRIC tire dryar, SM; waahar! till gas itova, »5. FE 5,7744. V.'Harris. Singer consol^ zig-sag tit.so. l.orga salactlon. OR 4-1101. Curt' AppT. ______________________ NGER AUTOMATIC ZIGZAG -Pay balanca S«4.S0, no attachmants naadad. Curt's Appllanea. OR 4.1101 build It lor down payma my lot or yours. MY j-lWl. KOT6m-'- THE " ■ SPECIAL S20 A MONTH BUYS 1 ROOMS OF ^ FURH''r““' ........ d. 6si MM._ +IOT watctheater, id-gallon gas, Contumars approvad, Mf.fS coditall tabla « placa badroom tulta drassar, chast, full t LADY'S BLACK AND RED PLAID hunimg suil, alia 14. Excallant con-dHlon. $11. FE 5-iaai aftar 4 p.m. lavatories, complete, U4.M valua, llt.as, ■ - I 1 vanity 1.50. Larga 14.50. Ey- ---Jica top labia, 1 bookcata, 1 txll rug Includad. AM for Sift. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. 17 E. HURON FE 4-4M1 U W. PIKE FE 1-1150 1 ROOMS IMS OF B », living n la — all ft I BRAND NEW FUR-I room, badroom and J1 for IMS. Sl.OO waak-,, Furniture, 110 East Pika. FE 4-7M1.__________________ 4-BURNER gas stove with brollar, $40. t74-iaoi.___________ 4 Y^AR CRIBS IBRAND NEWI lu.as up. Trakilno chalra, Sl.fS. Paaraon'a Furnitura, lir LINCOLUM BUGS [. bike. wether t69., ___________ fraaier, $51.50, many other ancas reasonable. Mich. AppliaiKa $49.75 ___ ____________ - J5 fl.w J4" iiaciric range PLASTIC TILE 1 FOR Icfl-place sectional sola TILE, CEMENT, TRIM FOR ; Guar, alactric rafrlgai BATHTUB AREA ............ $9.95, HIda-a-bad ----- ASPHALT tile 4e aa.1l W. Pika Easy Terms FE 4-1944 «.x 222%nan TEN YEAR "501" NYLON - 1155 ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD | with rubber pad. 54.95 9'xTi RUGS, IBRAND tiEW) «=^5aM A t Carpet_______________ M4.M. Aximnsta? heavy rug ph%: p?ar's^ A^iya'«°'^EM *4114. ws Furniture. "iioTpiita- "'"j WEEKEND SPECIALS iT" TV, $1^. OIL BURNER, $15.1 easy Spinners, In crates Rafrlgarator with lop tr«««r, $49.! RabulH modal ............. Chast, $5. Automatic washer, $15. Hamhton Dryer, naw Davenport and chair, $M. V. Har., Rabullt dryar ris, FE 5-1744. iMaWag 7 ------ ll-INCH USED TV. $35 WALTON, ^Rahuljt Walton. Corner of I Automatic 1 ,, -----pill models RCA Whirlpool wrin M N. telborapm.'miscEllan- ous houshold Itams.^_________i Sf'Piitlac 40 INCH ELECTRIC STOVE, GOOD 51 W. Huron FE 4-1555 condition, $M.^ Ijhall mahogany j STOVE, All dallvi rna GOOD HOUSEKEEPINg^S^P, bookcase MY H459. I axe. condition: ? W H I R L P 0 O L on naw contract and guar------- Michigan Nacchl • E Ina^F E F4511. AUTOMATIC WASHEAs " $49 95 TV's .................. $19.95 up MUSIC BOX, SWISS. ROLLS, COM- . Year IM4. »" $711 PurHan, Detroit. ABOUT ANYTHINO YOU WANT Hi-Fi, TV t Radies FOR THE HOME CAN BE--------------------------- hut a ^TEAR:qLD SILVERTON^^ Stfor V"' RCA TV, EXCELLENT CONDI raa, bargains. ^ Wa buy, sail or trade. Corns parking. Phone FE 5-9141. Ofiim AAon. to Sat. 9-4; I 4 lit tree For usad staraos a I axchanga warranty. lo Sat. 9-4; FrI. 9-9 !SYLVAN STEREO-TV M59. UL 1-3300. "Special offer LIMIT TIME ONLY-FREE every TV purchased, — and table, upholstarcd chair, p BUNK BEDS (BRAND NEWI connplale, W.95 u..............- die and trw trunc son's Furnitura, 110 start at $ are. Prices . . GOODRICH StAe 111 N. Parry___________FE 1-0111 USED TVs, IN GOOD WORKING I, 27"_ —^^Blond, mahog-FE 17141 BRAND NEW SOFA BEO A N I lull sin Hollywood bad. Bas prica offered. IM^ altar 4 p it r, naw picture tuba, $2.50 par weak. GOODYEAR STORE M $. CASS ____________PE S'S^M Fer Sale MiMellaaeeas 47 HAVE V6UR BLECTAiC RAZOR clMMd »r>d adlufftd on our »e-ciol Ultroionk AAochlno ONLY $75 idEBOXis, DEEP panel truck, utad truck 2-7147. IfiJiRt 1 tires. FE WILL SUPPLY LUMBER FOR S- CARNIVAL By Dick Turner terrific values. Michigan cant, 191 Orchard Laka. — i LIKE NEW "hOMART STOKiR, MEDICINE CABINCtS, LARGE M' »r, slightly a salactlon t PUPPIES, NO MONEY DOWN, Hi “Okay! So you can’t judge a book by its cover . but you can tell if you want it messing up the bookcase! ” Pets-Nentiai De^ TV I Travel Trollen ITTENS FREE TO GOOD H I rp^Dlar priced OXFORD TRAILER SALES mil# south of Lake Orion on M24 MY 241721 ____ r. Poodi^GSi DKtfihund, S breeds. Hunt's Pet Shoo contoined. Also Fleet Wing t Towas Brave self contained trait ELLSWORTH AUTO PART SPRINGER AND LABRADOR, Ond TRAILER SALES .. A------- -!,K ^ ... .. _________ mala, 4 n— chlldran, ihould maKa g MY l-tTM attar 4 p.m 1964 CENTURIES ARE HERE ^Custom built. 30 years of duality. RED STAR DOO HOUSES# BIRD | lifetime guar_____ ... ._______ feoders, etc, 743 Orchard Lake Ave [ Travelcades. All self contained. rU«TLE..60VE^_ALL pet-shop, ; ^HECK THE REST - THEN COMPARE CENTURY Avetien Selti BAB AUCTION SALES i EVERY FRIDAY -------r -----y SAtTiRDAY 7;M P. M. i fion and car wiring. DEMO 19-ft. Century, fully s« now $2,59$. —------TOM SIACHUER AUTO AND MOBILE SALES n W. Huron Sl^ 332-49M Beatt-AcceMeriee 12-FOOT FIBERGLASS, EVINRUDE " Fall Clerance Sole! AM boats mutt go. Including T Winter Inside Storaae l«asDnabta r»lM. Conipct MICHIGAN TURBO-CRAFT SALES, OR I, 1517 Dixie H; FREE Engine Storage On Class A Tu Ud. Reserve Boat Storage No« Hot Ones" - '4A Johnsons PINTER'S BOlTLAND 1178 N. Opdyka ON DISPLAY '64 OWENS FEW 'S3 MODELS AT TERRIFIC SAVINGS Lake and Sea Marina S^lMW al_^ Blvd. FE A9547 SACrFfTce -"spRITB SAILBOAT^ V this sell lor $ s 1700. « I 14 toot motor less *^'nab^7 needs floor boards ejrt_$eats, tiaLJ4M404^-iEA ray deluxe 19-foot, 7$ Sporting Goods—All Types Jh.ii..9reilLir« Door Prlies Every Auction /HeUSefrOIIBrS Buy-Sell-Trade, elail 7 D.iy* '' ' ' ' sijFjnwnI, Welcotne^ ^ _ yy^Y LOOK AROUND? 89 Wanted Cars-trecki 101 Pereifn Core tes OLIVER RENAULT e you looking tor a car that will m on above cars. low low payments . OLIVER RENAULT . 40 E. Pika FE 4-I5D1. DKW W59, S-DOOR. HAEDTOP, |]<- _____ condition, S40S. Also 1 DKW anginas, two I90SL anginaf and lU h.p, Tempest angina. OR >4144. 1954 VW SUNROOF, BLUE, WHITE-wells. A-1 motor newly overhauled. new exhaust. 13^5007.____________ 1957 MOA, G^D CONDITION. ------- 438 MBtROSE LOW mileage, good ________ 1550. If Intarattad call 401-1145. ---- ..Jlcome 5089 Olxia Hwy.___________OR 3-2717 AUCTIONEErT FREE INFORMA tlon. 9. N .Hackett, EM 1-4703. PRIOR'S auction, "consign- m«nt« accaptwj. Wed. thru Sun., 12-S, OA 1-1260. 3637 Lakevilie Rd., You Can Find It at Bob Hutchinson's DOWN PAYMENT STOPPING YOU? Plants-Trees-Shrubs 81-A ^BUYS -1964 Models- i, fir, yews, arborvit GUITAR, $25. n W. CORNELL. FE 0-BB41 TENNOR SAXAPHdNE AND ALL Sporting Goads 74 WHEEL TEAR-DROP CAMPING RENT 12 GAUGE ITHICA PUMP, - • $70. FE S-7095. -rs AVAGE,. MODEL l*ONTIAC PLYWOOD Salihaln___________FE 1-1S41 PHILGAi TANK, SOO«ALLON WITH tr tubing. Gc e 45l-m4. toilet, 111.951 ------ ^.95; 3-piece S59.f5. Laundry tray, tri —- —‘if'i'.'r’ FREE. RHieMon ifh sets. I. 119.95. S3»5. ..........- ------ -..... $2.95; tubs, $10 a^_u|L Pipe cut and STOCK REDUCTION nslstor pbrftble car radios reoveed to $19.95, Hmitid supply. GOODYEAR STORE 30 5. Catt_________FE 54111 SUMP PUMPS SOLD, RENTED, RE- palrad Cone't Ranttl. FE 44441. SEWER PIPE CHANNEL PIPE - PERF. PIPE WALL CC---- --------- COMPLETE $t8cK OF FITTINGS 4 " DRAIN TILE-lOC EA.-PICEUP BLAYLOCK COAL A SUPPLY CO II Orchard Laka Avt. ------- SPECIALS PIANO CLEARANCE SALE 1 new floor madtls. Save Baldwin, Acrosonic, Beautiful Cable Spinat. a good buy 1 utad uprightt, real bargains NEW ORGANS Priced from $495 You'll Do Ratfar Af Rafferly's LEW BETTERLY MUSIC CO. Al 40000 Free Parking In, Rear (Acrosi from Birmingham Theater) SALE GUITARS . . . ACCORDIONS ---------—■ PE ' PRbFtSSiONAL LUDWIG 6ruM FE 1-7101 Pra-FInlshad M HARDBOARfe 4x1 SL09 Pre-FInIshad Birch 4x8 S4.9S DRAYTON PLYWOOD 1411 Dixie Hwy. OR lOfll STROLLER. CAR SEAT, PLAY TA- SMALL GRAND PIANO, REFIN- bla, car bad; drauing taMa, girl' 14 in. bike; boy's racer bike, girl', dresses and lumpers, siia ig-lli —,—u.. ----- skates, size IS New rolls Lowray Organ SURPLUS Bolts-Nuts-Washars-Etc. 10c It 100,000 mlK. new, usad and surplus Items, at the Whoopee Bowl. 9500 Dixie Hwy. AAA 54)ia.______________ CARPETING 31 SQUARE YARDS,,, iai.„n_„™, never used, S79.S0; 9x11 rug, $29. Fof SOM MilCeliniieeal FE 41144. CEILING TILE 4c FT. UP c Wall Tile ....... 1c Ea. -Doring 49c Sq. Yd. 9 FE--------- •" “---- E 4-9957, 1075 W. Huron n RafrIgtraTor. h Elacfric Ran; ____I Frtgldalra__ CRUMP ELECTRIC 1445 Auburn Read FE 41571 ExTInSION TABLE AND 4 CHAlIlS Ifghf oak. axe. candltkin. UL M404 lifer-—^ ELECTRIC STOVE, COLDSPOT RE-frlwaior. G.E. aulomafic washer. ELECTRIC RANGE, FRICIOAIRE, n, 4741115. "FIRST TIME IN MICHIGAN" -FREE HOME DELIVERY-WHOLESALE MEATS AND GROCERIES AM nttlonaMv advertised brands. Savings up to 40 par cent. Soap, sugar, coffee, flour, butler, cake mix, cereal, soup, vagafaWes, fruit luicas, Klaanax, pat milk. YES! UP TO 40 PER CENT ' trM catalog and Intormatkin yt47-'l577, GAS RANGES Gat ranges usad by uhoi ----------------^ clfssas BATHROOM FIXTURES, OIL AND gas tumacas. Hot water and ttftm EoUar, Aufomattc wafer haatar. —--..--1, eioc. supplies, crock and I flttin«. Lowe Brothers upar Kamlona and Rus- GAS. STOVE 41-INCH WITH BROIL-FE MI17.“*" *“■ GIBSON REFRIGERATOR, EXCEL- BEEF^ 5.794? lent conditloo, $00. FE 1-4017; HOLkYWOOD BEDSTEAD AND vanity dresser with round mirror. OR 3-1689. LARGE (MAHOGANY LIQUIDATING Entire stack of bpx spring mattresiaa, living room and room sets. Most be moved out. R4 modeling t-iwtawi f — nett. El BEDRO 4741 Dixie i!m OUTFITTING CO. Drayton Plah OR >4714__________ To Buy, Rent, Sell or Trade Use Pontiac Press WANT .ADS Office Hourti 8 o.m. to 5 p.m. Cancellation Deadline 9 o.m. Day Follawing First Insertioa ....... fh«n on the maritef. WILL buy si trip to to t this bMullful t USED OIL FURNACE - EXCEL-lent condition^ MA 5-1S01 or MA 5-2537.__________________________ USED COVERED SNACK BOOTHS, Rochester, cor. Elm HIM, 'A ml. N. of Northill Shopping Center; also Alum. sidinB, storms, awn- 0^'VALLELY CO. FE S9545 ____No money down OL 1-4411 100.000 B'fu GAS FORCED-AIR il for ...... .■■urant. OR 41444, VANITY AND HAND BASIN SEt 1T9\95^iaT aulomatic'watar haatan, S4s. Thompson's 7005 MSf svest. WOOD EkfENTNQN LADDERS. (21 upholstered CHAIRS; DRESS- CHRISTMAS TREES WHOLESALE, ----- 1 mile south of Halo and • Excavating. GUARANTEED SINGER WITH lig sag accassorles for buttonholes, appHgua, designs, etc. Cabinet model. Full price S34.00 or "“tract payments of $3.40 Michigan Nacchl-E I n a lonthly. ; E I-4S1I. pipe a Paint, ters. Opdyka N CABINETS Stack or custom. Call us first. Day TONtIaC ?n?HEN SPECIALTIES 917 Orchard Laka Rd. COMPLETE STOCK OF PIPE AND fittings. Custom -"-la service. A------- W. Montcalm. FE $-4712. COUNTER-FLOW GAS UNIT, iObCe BTU, S50. 45411B1.._____________ D & J CABlNEt SHOP For better built custom .eabktej — our cabinets on display. UK Huron. 3340914. After 4 p.n EXTRA HEAT #OR THAT COLD --- gas fired basabeaiR fits Mows, S11B. Thompaons. FORCED AIR OIL FURNACE, alactric water haatar. 44 oat. — Cheap. 47H114. Magic Chet clothes dryer ‘Phillips F 'Avthyl FREE lamp tree with the a new Tappan range, GAS SPACE HEATERS, ALL SIZES al bargains. Thompso*'- ““ west. GARAGE rOmASAGE ______ SALp, 2714 Auburn batwaan LIvarnoli. UL H4S7. GROUP YOUR MISCELLANEOUS ---“*■ - '—isolldation Loan up tiant MVmants and n6 extra COST. Family AcceptatKe Corp. 117 National Bldg. lO W. Huro Tatophona PE e4« . S4S. Call OL 1-19 THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE 1M, WE^ W^ONJT. ^ Vumitura. Evarvthli Clothing. CbristMot Trees Phone RA S-194S. DELTA DRILL PRESS Al man 10" table saw i series. 8100. 331-7445. For Rent: To School Band and Orchestra Students: Flutes, D Trombones, Coronets, SS.M CONSOLE CHORD ORGAN, UN-paM balanca $44. Curt's 4«pllinca. DR 41101._____________________ bEAGAN 3VT OCTAVE XYLOPHONE f Parcuulon Canter. FE FULL SET WFL "SUPER CLASSIC' .Wunri, In rnH pMrj CMPS and lllO Includins all axtras. Ilan cymbals ii $500. OR 1-1491 RENT A NEW GRINNELL PIANO Musk lasaona bidudad ' Chooso your styla and finith AM paymanta apply It you buy $2.00 A Trumpet, Cornet, Trombone, Flute, Clarinet, Violin or Snore Drum Kit NEW 21 AUTOMATIC WITH SCOPE, CUSTOM-MADE CAMPER, Irk lights, gas M|*ts, ci Mounted on 1941 Chevy Save over 81.000. 4741159. $5.00 A MONTH Rent for m tong os you wish, •ti moneys apply If you buy. UNLIMITED RENTAL PRIVILEGES Grinnell's FE 3-7161 612-0422 - 2 msnusi, 13 pad-tone $670. now $570. Lowrey organ — 2 manual $1375, Lowrey with built-in ala< $10U, now $925. kny many others, puy ix Up tc “ ^ - 0 60 months to pay, 1 Gallagher Music Ca. 10 East Huron Open Monday thur Friday 'tH t Sat., i-.M pum. FE 4-0566 SHOP AT Grinnell's DOWNTOWN For Barc^iains SPINETS FROM $308 GRAND PIANOS FROM $149 PRACTICE PIANOS $50 UP GRINNELL'S DOWNTOWN STORE A 17 S. Sagkiaw____FE S714I f’HCMAl ORGAN AND BENCH „...,___, -,..„.d with chimeo. 15 ptdals and all accessaries. A bargain at 51500. Wato- tor eur organ concert. Oct. 15 at Washington Jr. High School. Tkkats camplimanis of Wetg-and'. at our store. Wiegand Music Co. WURLITZER-THOAAAS DEALER Pontiac's Sheet music haadouarters WANTED—PIANOS. CASH FOR UP-rlght, sptaaH, gr^. M40IOI. IF YOU WANT TO SELL Your Piano CALL MR. STEFFENS AT Grinnell's Office E^uipaieat r effloa $M«m. Forbes,' 4500 Drayton Plaint, OR Appllati BURROUGHS ELECTRIC ITEM-Izlng cash ragittarlng machln~ new, style lOflMOS. SP3. Ml 4 Grinnell's PRACTICE PIANOS SIIS up. Cleaned, adlustad, tuned and dallv- MORRIS MUSIC 14 t. Tatagraph Rd. FE MS57 (Acraaa from Tal-Hurtn) _________________ Can be taan .. Top Valua Ra«ta>tiplion Store, Miracle^ Mf- ■—------ - 74 EACH WANTED—10 OR 12 GAUGE Magnum double, 20 or 14 gA. dou-bla, II ga. Magnum Browning au-tamatk, rifle and pistol reloadino tools - WIM pay car" - ---- FOR SALE-Mod, M .M. Two (21 AAod. 0 autos., .35 REM. and Two (21 ------- and 2$-3$y Mad. 760C R^. 5av. Two...................... fancy Mai Mod. 79 MAGNUMS (.264, itna handguns, shotguns, rlf"-.100 and .375 H. t, H.l Alto oi binoculars, tbOBes, mounts AMMUNITION far most guns, vata ownOr ^ call tor dalalli tradH aoeagtaG-wUI buy guns amma — sritaf have yeuT Call i ____ .. 4nd case, Mka naw, 175. Winchailar model 12, 14 gaug# and cate, vary goad. S4S. Slavant bolt action n rapaatar FE 5-1451. lan Sleetlv, 3 miles west of Com- -Over K, new models on displa merce Vlllege. Dally. 4440415. MOUSE PLANTS, CHINESE ROSE —USED BARGAINS— **®^*'* I and It wide*. 1. 2 and 3 bed roof over 23 to select fr k 1304 h s St. DEER HUNTER SPECIAL 27' Palace, only many more exc. boys. 1795 I OR 100 JUNK CARS AND Iruckt wente^ 473-1459. ____ 1 TD 10 JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS wanted. OR J^ltM._____ 1 to lOl" JUNK CARS - TRUdifS, Call F E^2644, days or evenings. 525 MORE For that high grade used car, tee us, belore you tell. H. J Van Welt, 4540 Dixie Highway. Phone 0^yi55:_______________________ 1955 to 1959 iVtON PICK UP. G006 condition. FE S-2830 ' Mansfield Uvettock S3 --------—----------------- gp(j Hutchinson 1 BLACK A4ARE WALKING MORSE. MOBILE HOMES 1 Chestnut Gelding. OL 1-0214. Dixie HlghWiy OR 3-1101 CHEVIOT RAM, 3 YEARS Drayton Plains MAple 5-1125 iOpen 9 lo 9 Daily EVENING AtfD SATURDAY AUTO SALES 1501 Baldwin Ave. 335-5900 S50. FE 1-7195. I have heard about. CAMPER a ____ _ . _ FIBERGLAS BOAT Combined - Has ka box ond twin bad. ONLY S495. Free-Free We will give you S50 oft sporting equipment, wh( buy a NOMAD Camper. Remodeling Sale 1 time for hunters dpai^ to 25% OFF on all sporting equipment Including Clothing) that's right >x and ^ .y \jtoi Vt^ NOR! Zi- rHa II the We Have The most complete o thorized dealer lor I We alto ere authorized dealer for ell BROWNING. WINCHESTER, REMINGTON, ITHACA, WEATH-ERBY Guns on display el all 1943 HOUSE-CAR, CUSTOM AAADE. $4,100. OL 14437.^;________ PONlfi^V^WS^iaRTN, ^ expert «^IR 7(0 yrs Old. MY 3-1451.__ , B Boat Motor Storage rF CRUISEOUT BOAT SALES U E. Walton__9 to 4_FE P44B1 NEW 1944 JOHNSONS ARE HERE. Owens Marine Supplies 194 Orchard Laka PE MOM CLEAR THE DECKS! Everything Musi Go! Up to 25% Discount! EVINRUDE MOTORS Inside-Outside Storage BOAT REPAIRS AND REFINISHING ___ _______Dealer" Harrington Boot Wortes ! S. Talagraph Rd. JH-4g "EVINRUDE MOT6r , Boats and Accassorles Wood, Aluminum, Fibergles "HARO TO FIND " DAWSON'S ULES Tlptke Lake MA 9-1179 -------(HRBjNf at/Wny'" 438 Oakland Ava. FE 54101 1958" CHEVROLET IVb-TON STAKE, 4-tyllna-- --------------- - * er. OL 1-9711. Better Used Trucks GMC Factory Bronch OAKLAND AT CASS FE 5948S 1961 Chevy Fleetslde Pkkup, V8 engin#, 8 ft. box, dark ----.—laculile condition, only groan ii $1,195. Crissmon Chevrolet Co. ROCHESTER Aute laswronce 104 SI 0-20. AUTO INSURANCE FOR SAFE DRIVERS $23.50 QUARTERLY COVERS ALL THIS 000 tlabimy, SS.OOO property mege tl.noo medical, 11,000 Sion comprehensive end Service. FRANK ANDERSON AGENCY 1044 Jotlyp Ave. _______FE. 4-1535 AETNA Casualty tis.ooa llebllliy. SI,118 medical, tj, “ - - --------- -'“DOO iMir- — oris, coverage. $11 QUARTERLY - 2 cars $17.L- BRUMMETT AGENCY racle Mile FE 48S89 Next lo Pentlec Stele tank herdlop, full price only 1297 w. S5 down end S5 per week. LIQUIDATION LOT, 150 S. Saginaw SI., FE 8-4071.__________________ 1957 CHEVROLET 1660R, 4-6ytln- strelght stick. Rons vtry g no money down. LUCKY AUTO SALES "Pontiac's OlKOunt Lot" 193 S. seginew FE 4-1114 ..1958 CHEVROLET WAGON 8 cylindtr, lutomatk. Shirn and ---^ —^.. •---„,i„ Spartan Doedge 111 S. Saginaw_______FE 8-4S4I i9sTcHivtoLET~i1555R"$16AN7 V8. Automatic. Power brakes and staei Iqg. Best reasonable otter. FE 44152. iTsiThevy, good conditi6n, no rust, $550. 1150 Bangor. 1951 CHEVROLET STATION WAG- * LUCKY AUTO SALES "Ponllac'i Discount Lot" 193 S. Seginew____________FE 4-M14 1959 CHEVROLET BEL AIR MIOOR sedan. V-l engine. Poweralide, power steering, saddle ten tmlth. Extra clean. Only 1995. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO.. 1800 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRM- Inghem. Ml 4-1735._______________ 1941s fHRU taSH Any, nv ‘ You plcb It You call or have your dealer call FE 40944. It's easy COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANX - CHEVROLET 4D00H! RAOiO, HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES, AUTO TRANSMISSION. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Payments of $19.75 per mo. See Mr. Parks at Harold Turner Ford. JAI 4T500 1959 CHEVROLET BEL AIR 1-D66r adon. VI angina. Pewargllda, Pew-r steer log, saddle tan flnWL is- MINCHAM. Ml Atm. THIRTV-TWO Ntw M»»«l Cora 106 I ^ew and Used Cor*^_________________106 )»SI CHfVY DEL RAY, «S» CHEVROLET IMPALA ADOOR Sfd*n. Lpw mile»oe. Good tiros. Air condilioror. Fully poworod 674-0471.. ___________ 1»5t CHEVROLET WAGON, 4-DOOR Kyttndor, stondord tronsmisslon, oncollonl condition. Solo pricod. poymonts os low os 130.50 por TIIF4 PONTIAC PRESS. ^rOXDAY. OCTOBER 28. 1003 1959 CHEVROLET WAGON^ , *''^OnIlYIWS FULL PRICE J-Yoor Guorontood Worronty Spartan Dodc^e ytS74________ _________________ r96>'lMPALA CONVERTIftLE. VI pngine, Powerghdf. power steer ing and brakes. Autumn gotd finish - Only i).m Easy Terms. PAT TER«>N CHEVROLET CO., tOOO S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRWUNG- .HAM. MI 4-2735._________________ 1W2 CHEVY IMPALA, SS CONVER* tible, d-speed transmission, radio, heater, v^itewalls. 363-2261. 1662 CORVAIR 700 4-DOOR' SEDAN. CO., 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE. With V 4 2H5__ 195f CHEVROLET BEL AIR, RUNS . Uta new, ver^ sharp. Pvh pricr only S695. SURPLUS MOTORS 171 S Saflinow SI. ________ gR g-4«3a_____________ l»6C CHEVY BROOKWOOD STATION wapon, i-door, t. Powerglida, radio s»a tylTs. Clean, 1 owner. IIW OL_7-a4v5 ____ ___ _ ieeO CHEVRT3LET 9-PASSENGER wagon. V8, automatic transmission, radio, lormalion call our credit manager j Mr. O'HaTA BIRMINGHAM RAM- -BJJR^^_S._Woodwerd^ MI_A3900 ! ' l'9M CHEVY STATtON WAGON RA- i . Ing, low mileage one owner. 12195 , PATTERSON Chrysier-Plymouth 1001 N. Main Street _ ROCHESTEt^L M559_ 1962 CHEVROLET IMPALA CON-vertible. V8 engine, Powerglide. power steering and brakes. Auturnn gold tmish. Only $2,095. PATTER SON CHEVROLET CO., 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM 4-2731____ _____________ f962 CORVAIR MONZA. RAOia heater, whitewalls, 4-speed transmission. 102 , engine. Positraction. Private.647-2398^_______________ r962’ CHEVROLET, IMPALA 2“d66R conditioning, radio, heater, whtie-wails $2,195. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1000 S WOODWARD AVE., BIRMING- > CONVERTIBLE, 'm P'A l‘a 4-door . sedan Radio, heat-ering. padded d#sh. , . Phone 682-3250 at- t 1963 CHEV’N , radio. V ranty. Pric 1941 CHEVROLET IMPALA ,CON-vertible. VI engine, Powerglide, heetei whitewalls Only $T,695, Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEV ROLET CO., tOOO S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM._MI 4-2735. 1961 Chevrolet 2-Door I cylinder,- popular Bel^ Air^ model transmssion. wff finance with small monthly payments. $1295 2 Year Guaranteed Warranty ^ Spartan Dodge' 211Saginaw _ __F£ 1-^1 1961 CHEVROLET BISCAYNE 4 door sedan, 6-cyllnder en(j|ne, | waiTTires.’ Adobe beige’ finish. ' Only 11,295. Easy terms PATTER- ■ SON CHEVROLET CO„ 1000 S. | WOODWARD AVE , BIRMINGHAM ! _,-M£4-J735, ______I LAST CALL !, ON 1963 FORDS 12 New i Cars 17 Demos 1 These Cars Will Be Sold at Unheard-of Prices! EXAMPLES '63 Galaxie 500 2-Door Hardtop in glHipiing white with V8 engine. cruisamAtic power steering and the e*tras. NOW ONLY - $2495 1963 Galaxie $1995 '63 Galaxie 500 4-Door Sedon ■ engtr>e, power steering, beautiful blue finish. REDUCED TO- ■ $2545 John McAuliffe FORD 630 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 332-2825, aner o p m. _ _ „ 1963 CORVAIR' CONVERTIBLE. Automatic, i02 h p Superb condition, 3,000 mi.J2,f95. MA 6^6311._ 1963 Chevrolet impala Super sport, solid while, red trim, low mileage, well equipped. 12645 Von Comp Chevrolet Millord _____MU 4-1M5 1943 CORVETTE STING RAY, 4-speed transmission, power steering and brakes, saddle tan finish. Only kew and Used tan 106 SACRIFICE 1983 CORVAIR MONZA, metallic brown with saddle Interior, 102 engine, 4 speed. Unfed glass, seat belts, radio, whitewalls. OR 3 1890 alter 6 p m._____________ t957IMERIAL 4-door, pow, —' 1955 DeSOTO HARDTOP, POWER steering, power brakes. 105. EM 3J8I4 a«er 4 ___ ___________ iOM DODGE 4DOOR SEDAN, RA-dio and heater, automatic transmission, power brakes end power steeiino. whitewdll tires, full — rized liquidation price 1497. 1961 DODGE LANCER. 21,000 mM.ike new. M75. MAyfalr ^1455^ 1963 DODGE 9 PASSENGER ^STA-lion wagon. Ayto Ivory with red .interior. Rack. Radio. 12,a()0. 451- 1963 DODGE CUSTOM “880" Only 6.000 miles. Demonstrator, beautiful Alpine White. Has everything conceivable extra including tullpower^VE Full factory 50.000 mile 5-year warranty Spartan Dodge 1957 FORD FAIRLANE 500 BY OWNER; 1958 FORD FAIRLANE 500, 2-door, hardtop. 8R FORD 630 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101_ HOMER RIGHT ' Motors Inc. BIRMINGHAM TRADES Every used car offered for retoil to the public is o bonafide 1-owner, low mile-oge, sharp car. 1-year parts and labor worronty. 1*43 RIVIERA, Air Conditioning 138^5 1*43 RIVIERA, 4 Way Power 134*5 1*43 ELECTRA. Air Condlllon. 133*5 1*43 LeSABRE Hardtop 128*5 1*43 BUICK 4DoOr Sedan , 127*5 HAUPT PONTIAC - Thir car 1962 ,OLDS Super I Steerirq and brake top. Price t to sell! rartio like new inside and out! Yojr '54. '55 or '56 will make down payffient. I960 PONTIAC 4-door hardtop, black LET'S DEAL TOOAYI Haupt Pontiac )ne Mile North of U.S. 10 on M15 . Open Monday, Tuesday and Thin|sday until * p.m. m 5-5566 COME VISIT RUSS JOHNSON'S Used Car Strip 1960 PONTIAC 2-door hardtop $2295 1961 OLDS 4-door sedan ... $1895 1961 RAMBLER 4-door sedan . $1095 1963 MONZA 4-speed . $2095 1958 CHEVY wagon, stick ... $595 1962 1NVICTA bucket seats ... $2495 1960 ELECTRA Convertible .. $1595 1963 LeSabre convertibla . $3095 OLIVER BUICK 1*4-210 Drchtrd Lake 106 New end Uted Cori 1*tt 4-DOOR TEMFEST,- GOLD. Automatic ----- ----- ---- »7827. HASKINS 1963 Chevrolet 4 daor wagon, ut-savlng 4-cy like new turquolie finish. HASKINS Chev - Olds_, U.S. 10 et MlW Cla^5ton______________MA_ 55071 f*43 PONTIAC CATALfNA 4-OOOR. - • itlck ihitt, radio, heater. 1*42 PONTIAC 4-OOOR SAFARI itetlon wagon, full powe^ ei^ metic, like new condition throughout. DON'S USED CARS, 477 ■ ----------1„ ORION. MY 2-2041. er brakes Municipal car. price 11,8*5, no money down. LUCKY AUTO SALES 'Fontlac't Dlicount Lot" 1*3 S. Soginaw___________FE 4-2214 1*82 TEMPEST, V-^ AUTOMATIC! 1*5* PONTIAC, GOOD CONDITION. Good tirei. t**5. OR 3-4801. PONTIAC, 1*5*. CLEAN, 4-OOOR, power, 3*3 W. Iroquolt. HASKINS 1962 Chevrolet Impale 2-door luper sport 2-door hardtop V8, Powerglide. beautiful maroon finish. HASKINS Chev - Olds i- - -- ■ Clarkiton U.S. 10 et MIS 1*82 PONTIAC 4-DOOR CATALINA. Clean 13,000 mllat. One oiwner. Cell ■ 1 Long, FE M405. Birmingham Trade 1*50 IMPERIAL 4 door hord^, outomotlc transmission, radio, heater, full power, low mlleeee, one owner, lull price 111*5. BOB BORST Llncoln-Mercury 520 S. Woodward Ave. ■ ' minghom New owd Uttd Cart 106 *5* RAMBLER 4-OOOR SED^. Sale price 84*5. You Mine the paymenti. For further Informetipn »fl our credit meneger, Mr. O'Hare. BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER, 488 S. Woodward. Ml 8-5*00 1*43 TEMPEST, 4, LeMANS CON- _____ ____ring on.. - Hydramatic very cloan, 12,5*5. FE 4-1054. 1*43 GRAND PRIX, BLACK, AAANV extras, low mileaoe. 13,300. OR 3*271. _____________________ 1*43 TEMPEST COUPE, V-8, 3-speed, many other extras. Ph. FE 4-4340 otter 5:30 p.m._______ HASKINS 1963 Rombler 2-DOOR, lots of gas mlleoM, r dio, showroom new, blue and whi U.S. 10 at MIS RAMBLER AMBAStADORi ' door Classic sedan. R«d, poMr staermg, 270 angina, whitewelli, 1*S down. Paypwnfi 8s tew at •39.96 per month. For further In- 4-3*00. 1*82 RAMBLER AMERICAN 1-door sedan, radto, heater, ai^ matic ____ at tow at ir-- month. For ly paymenti i inM ..KHith. For tyi...-call our c r 0 d 11 I - Mr. *42 RAMBLER 4-DOOR STATION wagon, cuitom. Radio, heator, tu-ton” 1*5 down. Poymwti ai tew at 151.14 per month. For furmer SIformellon; call wi .£5^'* "“J!: aoer Mr. O'Hara, BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER, 444 S. Woodward, Ml 4-3*00. i rambler ^ER'WN WS- n 4aloor wagon. Blo^ po^F wring ond broke*. .Jf-W vl bucket leeli with cloth In- at 13*15 1 )or oponingi, I, poymonft i Call I .................O’”*"*;.®'? mingham Rah^ler. *«* *• Wex^ward. Ml 6-3900. 1*43 USED CAR CLEAN-OUT '57 Desoto ............... » S '57 Ford ...-i............. ''‘’"‘•'SKToS^sTSiTORs,. KEEGO PONTIAC SALES PAY CASH FOR Phone or Apply In Person Family Acceptance Corp. 317 Notional Bldg. 10 W. Huro Telephone FE 0-4023. SPECIAL SPECIAL 1959 CHEVROLET Parkwood Wagon Motthews-Hargreaves 431 OAKLAND AVE. FE 44547 Romblers-Ramblers Under the ' Flashing SATELLITE We're In Orbit Over The Beautiful '44 Hardtops New '43't Below Cost Used Cars at Wholesale ROSE RAMBLER I14S Commerce, Union Lake EM 34155 SIMMONS SUPER SPECIALS 1*42 T-BIRD; This one has I steering, end brakes, brighi finish 121*5. 1*41 CHEVY Impale 4 door hoi '■ V8 0 otic, whitewalls. Radio, JAGUAR, 3.4 • Transportation Specials From SSL Up Several to choose 'romi FORL WHERE BETTER SERVICE KEEPS YOU SOLD Catalina convertibla . '62 Pontiac hardtop . '63 Grand Prix ... '63 Pontiac Catalina . '62 Rambler American '62 Pontiac 4 door '63 Bonne. Vista . '61 Corvair 4-door '62 Mercury Comet '61 Corvair Monza . '62 Corvair Monza . '62 Tempest coupe . $1595 . $995 . $1395, . 1995 $3195 . $1395 $1595 RUSS lOHNSON 1962 BUlCK'w2 1962 BUICK 4____ _____ 1H2 BUICK 4 Door Sedan 1962 BUICK Skyle^ 1962 SPECIAL 4 Door 1H1 BUICK 4Door Sedan ‘ 1961 BUICK 4-Door Sedan-1960 BUICK 4 Do9f Hardtop 1959 MERCURY, Like New FISCHER BUICK KING AUTO SALES DELIVERS WHEN OTHERS CANNOT EVEN IF Yau Are New in Michigan EVEN IF You Had a Repossession EVEN IF You Have No Credit EVEN IF You Have Been Bankrupt AS LOW AS $5 Down DELIVERY AT ONCE! NO RED TAPE - NO SIDE NOTES NO SALARY NOTES NO CREDIT NEEDED NO CO-SIGNERS NEEDED - BECAUSE Wo Handle Our Own Financing '57 PONTIAC Wo^. radio •57 mercury Hardtop, rod '58 CHEVY TODAY'S BARGAINS: '57 PLYMOUTH Hardtop, nice '58 MERCURY Hprdtop. powe '57 LINCOLN '57 CHEVY Radio, heater, 2-Ooor '40 INTERNATIONAL Carryell, ——'—' *3*7 Many Try to Duplicete This Offer > One (We Think I Can Meet or Beal Our Pricts and Call or Sec Our Credit Manager, Mr. Cook KING AUTO SALES ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY; DOWN SPOT DELIVERY JUST MAKE PAYMENTS Full Price Pay Wkly. 1957 Chevrolet ...$297 $1.60 1959 Ford 9-Pass. ...... $497 1957 Ford........$197 1957 Dodge Hardtop_____$197 1958 Pontiac 2-door Hardtop_____$397 1958 Chevrolet ...$397 $3.62 $1£0 $1.60 $3.05 $3.05 PLUS MANY OTHERS NO CREDIT PROBLEMS Application Either in Person or by Phone LIQUIDATION LOT 60 S. Telegraph FE 69661 Across Frwn Tel-Nuron-Shopping Center 1*57 STUDEBAKER SltVER HA\^, real sport cor. *300. Savt Auto., FE 5-3270. ; Vo,000 . Stock Reduction ;i All Must O' 1*43 PONTIAC Bonnoyllto 4-Door Hardtop, power iteerino end 1 brakes, window*, automatic, ro-dio ond hoator, whltewalli. Yei, folk*, left go tint clan, we have , 2 more like this beauty to choose , from, you can save a bundle 1*42 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE Hardtop. Power steering and brakes, Hydremetlc, radio, heater, whitewalls. Beoutllul rod finish with matching trim. Yes, the color is right and In* iper* has never been used 825*5 *30*5 mi PONTIAC VENTURA 4-door hardtop, power iteering and 1 brakes, Hydramatic, radio, hoot-' 1 or, whhewollt, whit# finlih, with blue leetber trim. New car trade-In 8IW5 1*43 PONTIAC CATALINA 3door hardtop. Got all the goodies, power steering and brakes. Hydre-matic, radio, heeler and white-walls. Bucket sects. Aqu* finish, with white too, ond leothor trim, to match. Reel Sporty. . 8tt*S ) 1*41 RAMBLER Cuitom 4-door ttatlon wagon, itandard tranimii-ilon, 4 cylinder engine, white tin-,, Ish with rid trim. Vrictly a lem-lly wagon, really extra nice. 112*5 1*43 BUICK LeSABRE Convertible. Has all the goodies: power steering and brakes, Oynaflow, radio, heator, whitewalls. Blu* finish with Whitt too ond matching leether trim. You con always save a bundle on a one-yaar-okt car 830*5 L 1*5* PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 4-1 Door Hardtop. Power ileering, ^ broket end windows. Hydramatic, i 1 radio, heater, whitewelli. Ifi a 'i southern car, yei, folki, li never been mowed on, whteh ^ 1 meant no salt and like new. *13*5 1*43 CHEVROLET impala ^ Door Hardtop. Power brakes, eutomatic, v-t. radio, heater, whitewalls, end beeutitjl whit* llnish with blu* trim. This on* you can't go wrong on, the new cer warranty 1s transfer^le V' , t«43 PONTIAC Bonneville Conyer-' tible. Power iteering end brekei. ' Hydramatic, radio, heater end whitewelli. Eiiy-Eye and other *'! :^*j'ii?wAte'ir'vU,'".!e thii cer Is itlH brend new. $30*5 1*43 BUICK Electr* "225." Yes sir, this one Is loeded. All power and reedy to go. Nocturne blue finish end light Mu* trim. A cer listed out for 84.435. This Is a company official's car. 1*5* PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 1*41 PONTIAC Bonnevll!# 2-Dpor Hardtop. Power iteering, brekei and wKdowt. Hydremsfle, radio, 1 heater, whltewefli. Remote con-1 trol outilde mirror and ottwr oc-: cewortei. ©“•f*"'**'.J,';?!® *S Hardtop. Power ItMring and brake*. Hydramatic, radio, heat-*r, whitewalls. Beautiful white finish with saddle trim. 1-owner new car trade-in. Drive out like new 813*5 i tual mitei. Beeutllul Bel-Mer red ! finish with matching leether trim. . 51111 hei origlhel spare. V«, ’ folks. It's like new 821*5 1*43 TEMPEST LeMans. Vg, automatic, radio, heater, whitewalls. *,000 guaranteed actual miles. Dark aqua finish with whit* leather bucket seats. Yes, folks, lust like buying a new on*. 82WS 1*58 OLDS SUPER C^«rt-iW*. Power steering and brakes, Hydremetlc, radio, heater, while-walls. Blue with a new wdilte i top end blue leather trim . 18*5 1*43 PONTIAC CATALINA Convertible. Power steering and brekei, Hydramatic, radio, heater, whitewalls. Aqua with a whn* top. This is a company official's cer. Com* In end save a bundle. 1*54 FORD TRUCK. V-8. Runs out extra nice. Will * an honest day's work for .13*5 1*43 PONTIAC CATALINA ^Door 1*42 PONTIAC CATALINA 2-Door Hardtop. Power steering and brakes. Hydramatic, radio, hoot-' er, whitewalls. White with aqu* trim. Locally ownsd and traded^ In on new cer. Spare tire never . been down 822*5 Sedan. Slenderd frenimlsslon, weshen, duel speed wipers, outside mirror. Yes sir, 1 said standard transmission, not many of theso around. Better hurry. Guaranteed 8.000 miles with a new car warranty *23*5 1*40 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE hardtop. Power steering end brakes. Hydremetlc radio, heater, whitewallt. Yei, Sir, ahe'i new Inside and out. There's nothing like going first clau. 814*5 1*43 PONTIAC 2-Door Sedon with power steering and brakes, Hy-1 dramatic, radio, heater, white-walls. This on* Is lust Ilk* buy-1 ing a new one. Has new cer * warranty 124*5 ' 1*42 FORD XL 2-Door Hardtop. 1*42 PONTIAC CATALINA Convertible. Power steering, power brakes, Hydramatic, radio, heater, whitewalls. Red with a whit* top. Spare never been down. This Is a Birmingham car 823*5 1*42 BUICK ELECTRA "225" Convertible. All power. Dynettew, radio, heater, whitewalls. Let's go tint class for only $2^ 1*41 BUICK ELECTRA "225" Convertible. All power, Dynaftow, radio, h^r, whltowalls. White finish with rod trim. Locally owned and traded In on a new car 121*5 1 Power steering and brakes, 4-! way seat, automatic, V-O, radio, heater, whitewelli. Guaranteed 12,000 actual miles. You have a one year warranty. Remember this Is the top in the Ford line *20*5 1*43 PONTIAC CATALINA ^Door Hardtop. Power steering end brakes, Hydramatic, radio, heater and whitewelli. Tu-too* paint. , Hottest car on the road. . .$20*5 1*41 BUICK LeSABRE 4-Door 1 Hardtop. Got oil the gooditt: 1 power steering and brakes, Dyne-[ flow, radio, healer, whitewelli. 1 Red and whit* finish with grey 1 trim. A onepwner end traded in 1*43 MONZA *00 2 Door. 4-speed transmlMlon. Radio. hooter, whitewalls, wire wheels end guaranteed actual miles. It's * reel sporty boat |2t*5 1*42 TEMPEST LeMANS. Automatic, r^lo, heifer, whitewalls. Blue with the matching leather bucket seats. This Is the top of the Tempest line Yli*5 1*43 PONTIAC CATALINA 2-Ooor H*r^. Power steering and brakes. Hydramatic, radio, heater, whitewalls. Black finish with the red interior. WOW! Strictly it'8n) 128*5 1*41 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 4-and'" riamet **'*’'"® *"daiSy ."’.120*5 mi BUICK LeSABRE ^Door Hardtop. Power steering end brekei, Dynettew, redlo, heater, whitewelli. Solid whit* with red trim. There It nothing Ilk* that Buick rid* 820*5 1 1*42 CHEVROLET 4-Door Sedan. hooter, »Sit*w*Ml'*'’l5«ij guaranty actual miles. Marooh with leether matching trim. Strictly •n eye Ml *21*5 1»42..PONTI|^C CATALINA 2-door cedio, heater, whitewalls. Solid white with rrt trim. Low mlleogt and was locally owned mn 1 Automatic trenimitsion, 4 cylinder 1 engine, redlo, heater, whitewalls. 1 8,m guaranteed actuel mitei. 1 Spar* never used. Honest, Just : Mn buying * new on* tf**S 1*41 CHEVROLET 2-door sedan, ^^raat beautiful and economical Jim BimowsS^MenllJ.^ohn'ctenleSlIlGot* ^ GaterdI FOUR-DAY MONEY BACK GUARANTEE Get More-Pay Less ,SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK Rochester OL I-8I33 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. OCTOBER 28, 1968 THIRTY-THREE —Today's Television Programis— Programs fumlshod by stations llstod in this column or* subject to changa without notko TONIGHT l;M (2) (4) News. Weather, ^rts (7) Movie; “Thunder Over Hawaii/’ (In Progress) (9) Oapt. Jolly and Pop-eye (54) New Biology 1:25 (7) Weather. News, Sports 5:30 (2) (4) National News (9) 87th Precinct (§8) Self-Encounter 7:99 (2) Highway Patrol (4) Town Meeting (7) (Color) Adventures (56) Faces of Asia 7:35 (2) To TeU the Truth (4) Movie: “Good Morning, Miss Dove.” (1955) Jennifer Jones, Robert Stack, Chuck Connors (7) (Alter Limits (9) Movie: “The Young Stranger.” (1967) James MacArthur, James Daly, Kim Hunter 1:51 (2) I’ve Got a Secret (56) Great Books 1:15 (2) Lucy Show (7) (Orior) Wagon Train 5:55 (2) Dsnny Thomas V (9) Piaydate 9:19 (2) Andy Griffitu (4) Hollywood and the Stars 19:55 (2) East Side/West Side (4) Sing Along witii Mitch (7) Breaking Point , (9) Inquiry 15:89 (9) Provincial Affairs 15:45 (9) Mary 11:59(2) (4) (7) Morgan (7) (9) News 11:25 (9) Lucky Scores 11:25 (7) Movie: “Flesh and the Spiur.” (1956) John Agar 11:89 (2) Steve AUen (4) ((}okir) Johnny Carson (9) Movie: “CToudburst.” (1951) Robert Preston, Elizabeth Sellars 1:99 (2) Peter Gunn (4) Best of Groncho 1:35 (7) After Hours (4) Great Music TUESDAY MORNING 5:15 (2) Meditations 5:25 (2) On the Farm Front 5:25 (2) News 5:39 (2) Sunrise Semester U) Classroom (7) Funews 7:C9 (2) News (4) Today (7) Johnny Ginger 7:05 (2) Fun Parade 7:45 (2) King and Odie 8:99 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Big Show (56) French for Teachers 5:89 (7) Movie: “Holy Matri- TV Features Jolson's Life Viewed Ay United Press International OUTER LIMITS, 7:30 p.m. (7) Mutated earth man of year 2148 returns to present day to try to change course of history. .PLAYDATE, 9:00 p.m. (9) In nightmare, teacher becomes persecutor of Evariste Gaiois, 19th century mathematical genius who died at 20 in Paris. HOLLYWOOD AND THE STARS, 9:30 p.m. (4) Life of A1 Jolson is retraced through news clips and his movies. EAST SIDE/WEST SIDE, 10:00 p.m. (2) Theodore Bikel is father of retarded boy who is suspected of molesting girl in park. BREAKING POINT, 10:00 p.m. (7) Kim Hunter plays wife of candidate for U.S. Senate wlw can’t differentiate between her husband and his political image. mony.” (1943) Monty Wool-ley, Grade PieUa (56) Industry on Parade 8:45 (56) English V 8:55 0) Warm-Up 8:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go Round 9:55 (2) Movie: “Wilson," (1946) Alexander Knox (4) Living (9) Kiddy Korner Kar-toons 9:19 (56) Let’s Read 9:39 (9) Jack La Lanne 9:35 (56) Numbers and Numerals 19:99 (4) Say When (9) National Sduwls (56) Spanish Lesson 19:15 (7) News (56) Our Scientific World 19:25 (4) News 19:39 (2) I Love Lucy (4) (Color) Word for Word (T) Girl Talk (9) Chez Helene 19:45 (56) French Lesson 19:45 (9) Nursery* SdMol Time 19:55 (56) Spanish Lesson 11:99 (2) McCoys (4) Concentration (7) Price Is Right (9) Romper Room 11:19 (56) Ut’s Read 11:25 ( 56) Self-Encounter 11:30 (2) Pete and Gl^s (4) ((Ailor) Missing Links (7) Seven Keys 1:55 (56) Reading for Teachers TUESDAY AFTERNOON 12:99 (2) Love of Life (4) (Color) Your First Impression (7) Ernie Ford (9) Take 30 12:25 (2) News 12:39 (2)- Search for Tomorrow (4) (Color) Truth or Con- 1" r T" r- r- B IT IT 12 12 14 IS IB 17 Ift & Si 2T 28 29 3ft SI J ii jr r 3/ i - What do you think of that?” Miller told the Texas Federation of Republican Women’s (Unbs the GOP never has been stronger “from the grassroots np" than it is today, “It will not be long before the RepubUcans wUl contest every congressional race in the South,” MiUer said. Miller said the GOP has ‘more issues than we know what to do with” for the 1964 campaign. ♦ ★ w He charged the administration “has flo^ied in (Aiba three times.” He said there were foreign policy failures in Viet Nam, Pakistan, India, France, the Philippines and ‘‘We have lost eigbt countries is South America.” Pastor Now Heads Lutheran Ohio District COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Dr. Paul MoeUer, pastor of Hope Lutheran Church, Dayton, was elected Saturday to succeed Dr. Kenneth Priebe as president of the five-state Ohio District of the American Lutheran Church. Dr. Moeller, 58, has pulpits in WatervUle and Haskins, Ohio, and Alpena, Mich., before moving to Daytim in 19U. Man in Space Astronauts Get More Control By ALVIN B. WEBB JR. CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI) -On future U S. manned flights Into space, astronauts are going to have more control over their own destinies. This Intent has placed another heavy burden on the shoulders of Engineers. Theirs is the tas\ of now determining where human capabilities leave off and superhuman demands begin. And stUl paramount is the utmost demand for safety that characterized the Mercury man-in-space program and the “follow-on” projects Gemini and man-to-the-moon Apollo. * * * StrUcing a happy medium be-tween.tho roles of men and machines on space flights is not proving easy. THE BEST BETS U.S. Astronaut Frank Borman, coMidered one of the best bets for an early fli^t aboard the two-noan Gemini spaceships, offers a general ruleKif-thumb for deciding what man can do and what he cannot be permitted to attend to on hazardous space journeys: “The pilot win have to be able to prove that he offers some nnique capability that wfll help to insure mission In other words, the astronaut is not to be given a task simply in order that he will have something to do. He first has to iwove that. In some way, he offers an advantage over the machine. \ ★ ★ ★ Project Mercury, which sent Unfestiva Adornment. BASILDON, England (UPI)-Ihe Rev. William Winfield, rector of St. Martin’s Anglican Church, complained today that police ticketed the cars of wedding guests at his churdt. Calls Hungarians Retarded^ Unaware of Jan Murray By EARL WILSON BUDAPEST-“The Hungarians,” remarked comedian Buddy Hackett—as we were having breakfast in a botei overkxridng the Danube-“are very advanced except for one thing . . . they never heard of Jan Murray.” -> The plumply bewhiskered Brooklynite-turned-Jerseyite you’ seen so often on TV is making friends here while filming “Milly” for Cinerama-by mixing with the people and learning their language. “I fought,” said Buddy, who lapses into such talk from time to time, “dat I could do sumpin’ for duh the country—America—by coming over here. “I fou^t you’d see nuttin’ but Russian soldiers and hear drums inna streets. I didn’t know you could buddy up fduh chef and he’d fix eggs like yuh want ’em.” wnanN Baddy and the chef at the Hotel Dona had their arms around each other discussing breakfast. “Dey got two kinds of salami here, summer and winter salami,” Buddy said to me. “Pork is a great prestige meat here in Hungary.” Buddy wagged his whiskers. “How dey got carried away on this kick I’ll never know.” An actor can be either a recluse or a mixer and the 39-yeai^ old Buddy, who can make 325,000^a-week in Las Vegas, prefers clowning. “Bat how come,” asked Buddy, faUag Ignorance for comedk purposes, “all of a sadden I’m a foreigner?. I was never a foreigner in Brooklyn.” Peter Lawford wandered into the “Password” TV taping, and was rushed into two shows . . . Paris papers say Tony Perkins missed his first day’s rehearsals with BBardot, so she got sore and stormed out . ; . The Yankee’s Dan Topping was named a general in the Marine Bifcerve . . . Singer Dinah Washington’s quitting her Harlem home to move to Detroit, near her eighth husband, footbaUer Dick (Night Train) Une . . . Some of Hume Cronyn’s “Qeopatra” salary went for cocoanuts, plant on his Bahainas island. Does Bridie Fisher know another singer was crooning Italian love songs to his Renata Boecke at the Little CSub? . . . Actor Nick Adams tripled his California real estate values in six months, sold ’em for 250Gs ... a fanoous entertainer fired his aide—his brother—who’d been collecting a |75-a-week salary Steve Lawrence started dancing lessons for his lead role in “What Makes Sammy Run?” . . . Paddy Chayefsky, who has one play set to open on Broadway shortly, has begim an “outline” for his next. EARL’S PEARLS: Marriage entities women to the protection of a stalwart man who will steady the stepladder for them while they paint the kitchen ceiling. Shelley Berman told a ringside heddo-; “Sir, If you were a telephone I’d rfo you off the wall!” . . . Thafs earl, brether. (TIM MM tyiMMIl, lac.) six astronauts • into space on ions of varying' lengths, was an acid test. “As a result of the Mercury experience,” said Borman, “the pilot in both the Gemini and Apollo missions will have a more demanding role.” VIVID EXAMPLE Borman cited a vivid example — the decision to let astronauts monitor the blast-off and powered flight and, if necessary, select a means of “aborting” a Gemini shot in an enwrgency. In Project Mercury, most of this delicate task was handled from the ground. Giving astronauts more say-so in the matter, said Borman, was based on one simple fact: “The pilot provided the most reliable, lightest method of selecting and initiating the proper one of Gemini’s three different abort modes (methods).” On the other hand, there have been suggestions that human pilots pre-empt autonutic guidance systems and actually fly the entire rocket and space capsule into orbit. The idea was nixed, at l^t for Gemini. * ★ * Again, there was a simple engineering answer, said Borman, ‘‘In the Gemini, it was considered simpler and more reliable to mechanize auto-pilot guidance for the restrictive ‘down the groove’ type guidance problem encountered.” MORE COMPLEX The youijg astronaut cited the Apollo manned hmar landing ~’~~k>n as an example of a still more complex relationship between man and machine, especially in the area of “aborting” th%Hight in case something goes wrong. “In examining the Apollo abort problems,’’ Borman said, “we found that there were certain maifnnetioag which required superhuman reaction times to permit safe abort. The reaction tbnes actually vary with the time of flight.” The answer in this case was to leave the decision to the pilot’s own judgment — whether to trust his own reactions to —^Today's RatJio Programs— WJR(760) WXYK1270) CKLVU(800) WWJ(990) WCARd 130) WPONQ 460) WJtkd 500) WHH-FM(94.7) vrwj, rm WXYZ, M CKLW, M WJBK. Mwt, Rebsrt I. •rt I. Lm iacarSlli tilS-OCLW. !>•«• SMtar WJR. terli WWJ.mwW liW-WXYZ, AIM DrMr WWJ, BwiMW BMiMn WHFi, Mutic for Mod*nt «:»-WXYZ,'B«0 CMWWIM WWJ, Thrw-SMr Extr* WJIt LmmII TBomM 7i)S-WXYZ, LM aim CKLW. FuUon LMfU WJR, Sport* TiM-WJR, DkiwntlM CKLW, Tom Clay SilS-WJR, avMlns Conqprf SilS-WWJ, Miwlc SOSM tiW-WJR, Icanomiei CM M;IS-WJR. I WWJ, Worl tliW-WWJ, Now* WJR, Now*. Sport* CKLW, Jo* GoWH* WCAR, Mum, sSmTi Ii:i*-waui, MMie B*r«lei I1;lt-CKLW. Tom Cl*y llrll^CAR, U^ CarwWo IIIW-WJR, Miwle h ll:»-WJR, Musk WWJ. OmmlMe CKLW, Worts Twwrrwr TUUSDAY MORNIM Sitt-WJR, Vole* at AsrIC WXYZ, Fr»d Woll WWJ, Farm Now* _ CKLW, Farm, Cy* Opanar ___at Iti* SIraat WCAR, Naw*. Martyn lilS-WJR, MwalC H*H WHFI, Haws McLaaS tilS-WJR, Naw*. Mrrl* CKLW. Mary Mor«M fiSS-WJR, Lm Murray n:t*-WJR, Nawb Karl Hoai WWJ, Naw*. Adc NalgiWar WXYZ. Sraakt**! CM CKLW. Jm Van Hh»!lckLwrKM^ CaHIns niil^JR!*NawwA%^ OaO- WXYZ. WMar -CKLW. Tkiw Is CHat WJBK, Naw*. Avary WPON, Naw*. Ariz. waaim IliW-CKLV^ JM Vm W. Naw*. 9rm» IR, Naw*, PUTM .. .FI, New*. Burdick llllS-WJR, Bud OuaW CKLW, Jm Vdn l:IS-WJR, Naw*. Art I lattar l:S*-WJR. Oarry Maor* tiSS-WJR, Naw*. Waod WWJ, Naw*. HultmM WI^Z, S*t>a«ttM WJBK, Naw*, ^ WFON, Naw*. ioO U, 1:3S-CKLW, sumbraak cISSl OaviM lilS^JR, Mm *wwjf nI^ B the tricky task, or to turn them over to an automatic system. WWW Equfoment is being built into the Apollo space capsule for both contingencies. NO OBJECTION Borman, for one, has no objection to leaving the-blast-off and re-entry jobs in the hands of computers, guidance systems and other machines. The piloU will have plenty of time to prove their own unique value and importance along the rest of the space trip. “Too often,” he said, “undiK emphasis is placed on tte pilot’s role during boost and re-entry. ’These phaM of flight are transition phases for a true spacecraft. WWW “We could hardly justify plac- ing a crew aboard if their sole mission was to accomplish the transition phase successfully.” What this means, in general, is that astronauts are working toward more and more control over flints into space — but that It probably will be a long time yet before they match thpir aircraft brethren in flying their ships every minute, from takeoff to 1* ■■ Red Blows Top Over Surplus . in Bottle Caps MIAMI, Fla. (Ai-In Cuba today, there are many bottle caps^t tew bottles. Havana radio reports that the industries minister, Ernesto Guevara, complained loudly about this at a meeting Saturday. Four months, Guevara said, one plant has been busily turning out caps for bottles that no longer were in production. As a result, there are far more caps than there are bottles. Things like this happen, he said, because there is much talk and not much work around Communist Cuba these days. 'Problems' Separate Carolyn Jones, Spouse HOLLYWOOD (AP)-Actress C!arolyn Jones and her husband, producer Aaron Spelling, say they have separated “to work out some problems.” Miss Jones, 30, and Spelling, 37, have been married 10 years. TTiey have no children. Today in Washington: Javits Raps Soviet Bias WASHINGTON (AP) - In the news from Washington: ANTI-SEMinSM; Sen. Jacob K. Javits has called for a “great wave of indignation” around the world to protest the Soviet Union’s “anti-Jewish persecution.” “The Kremlin must not be permitted to believe that the world will tsJee at face value Its claim of having prohibited anti-Semltiam by law,” the New York Republican said Sunday ni^t at the annual convention of Hadassah, a Jewish women's organization. MILITARY HOUSING: The Civil Rights Commission has charged the Pentagon with failing to provide the leadership necessary to “meet the challenge of equal opportunjty in housing for all military personnel.” ★ ★ ★ ‘The services are without any policy or guidance from the partment of Defense and generally have taken no corrective action,” the commission said in staff study released Saturday. Negro servicemen are forced I choose between living under slum conditions near their bases or enduring family separations, the commission said. SE(X)ND FIRST: ’The Democratic convention next year may switch things around 1^ selecting the vice-presidential nominee first. WWW In making this known Sunday night, Sam Brightman, public relations chief of the Democratic National (fonunittae, said the decision Isn’t final. Brii^tman had no doubt, however, that whatever the lelSc-tion procedure the result would be renominatkm of President Kennedy and Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson. “In 1968, when we will have some competition again, we probably will go back to the other schedule,” he said. OVERSEAS OUTPUT: U.S. controlled manufacturing firms abroad produced a reo^ |28 billion worth of goods In an Increase of $2.5 billion over 1961. WWW The figure for last year is almost $10 billion more than in 1957, when the (fonunerce Department began collecting such data. GE COMPACT CONSOLE STEREO AM-FM RAOlO MAPLE ’175” mm TIRMI AVAILAUI.I MMaayuM aECTRIC 125 W. Huron COMPANY FE 4-2525 Bacom* Bob) Nm W* (onalbl* wav Arronga IM * Kkodul* o( povnanti >olIo»*d «a Oi your incom* MICHieiW (kedit Counsellors jSA'VE S S 9 Hove Youf FURIVACE CLEANED Before Winter! gn OUR SPECIAL PRKE MICHIGAN HEATING COLOR TV SERVICE ANTENNAS INSTALLED AND REPAIRED SWEET'S RADIO SaZW.Haraa 334-5677 While They Last... ... First Come ... First Served! WCHI6M HEATIN6 Recently Appointed Distributor for TIMKEN Wnii OeoRcratien of the Faetery It Able to Sell TWENTY 100JIOO R.T.U. Rrand New TIMKEN ISAS FURNACES At The Giveaway $1 CR Bm Price of Only | DU CaU MICHIOAN HEAHNO Todtjr FI2-I2M PEI-<(21 FEI-mi THIRTY-FOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 28. 1963 Newspaperman Dies “''"'“I ,?!.’' ^ ~ I York City newspapers while he OGDEN$BURG, N. Y. (AP)-1 still was a student at New York Arthur S. Draper, 81, former assistant editor of the New York Herald Tribune and once editor of the now defunct Literary Digest, died Friday. He began University. The Shady Valley ■ area of Johnson county, Tennessee has mined manganese continuously his newspaper career as a cor | since 1883. New 7-Foot Vacuum Cloanor Nose Braided Cloth, All Rubber $495 RtguIarrsO Plastic Hoses.. Com* In or Froo Dolivoi Ports and REPAIR SERVI on ALL CLEANERS 3.96 Disposal Boos-Hosot-lratlMS-Bolts-Attachinonts-Etc. * radios, and appliances. Many more not advertised. Don't, miss this sole! mmm \ ^pPLIMtCECO^ _^ MWmHn.nrr xtOtore-widS^ TOO MUCH TV! TOO MUCH STEREO TOO MANY APPLIANCES RCA WHIRLPOOL AUTOMATIC WASHER 2-cycla Wly oirto- €4 A|| matic. 7 rinsos. Lint 1 jCII filtar. Praviout Yft I V V modal. WESTINGHOUSE 19’’ PORTABLE TV Buih-in antenna and hondlo. Deluxe tea- ||J| lUU ADMIRAL 10 CU. FT. REFRIGERATORS Big top treoxor chest, $d| <4 A tiMier drawer. Pro- ▼ 1 1 II vious years model. 1 1 14 RCA VICTOR COLOR TV Big 21" color picture. Beautiful cabinet. j^41 AA Provieus years model. ▼ jKitol ■ #213F115 Iflflf EMERSON STEREO COMBINATION With FM-Storao radio, AM-FM radio. 4-. A || tpaod auto, chanoor. 1 JKII Wo6d cabinat. 1 W RCA WHIRLPOOL AUTOMATIC DRYER 2-cycle. Deluxe fao-turai. Clearance sale 4.4141 priced. Praviout yrt ^Ull floor model. «4V WESTINGHOUSE PORTABLE HI-FI Automatic 4-apoad chongor. Lightoraight tone arm. Sound out $A A front. Luggage-type ▼ carry cose. 1414 PHILCO PORTABLE TV Lightweight. Com-platawithfoH-oround $< AA stand. Previous years ▼ | | H | model. 1 W GENERAL ELECTRIC VACUUM CLEANERS Swival-top. With ad- $11 £ juktobla floor claan- ^ V*1 ing unit, attach- miw mants. MAGIC CHEF 30” GAS RANGES Oven control. Spo- cioui ovon. Full war- $ AC ronty. Clearance ADMIRAL STEREO COMBINATION With AM-FM and FM-starao radio. 4 0,4 AA speeds. Wood cobi- ▼ I <11 net. Prev. yr's model. 1 1414 nationally Adv. 13 Cu. Ft. 2-Door REFRIGERATORS No-dofiest refrigerator^ Freexer holds 105 tbs. Twin crispars. A A Wd.elves.Newin gQ RCA VICTOR STEREO COMB. 4-ipaad auto, chong-or. With AM-FM radio. 4-$poakar syt- M41 tarn. Boautiful wo^ ^ 1 Al 1 cabinat. 1 ^rw NORGE 15 CU. FT. CHEST FREEZERS Holdt enermout guantHy Froxen food. ^ ^ A A Cloorance pricoi. 1 Mil Prav. yr's model. 1 W ADMIRAL DELUXE CLOCK-RADIO Wake to music alarm. Sweep toeond hand. $< 4 Attractive cabinat. ^ | | Just ISO to go. 1 I ZENITH 19” PORTABLE TV Built-in hondla and ^ ^ A A antenna. Daluxo. ▼ | ^|l Previous years model. 1 Alf HOOVER UPRIGHT VACUUM CLEANERS Convortibla atylo. Do- $ M A luxa foolura*. Solo priced. Huriyl A GENERAL ELECTRIC COLOR TV 21" tcreen. Deluxe. $ACA Previoui yeori floor ▼ modeli. A ataal at WV HOTPOINT PORTABLE DISHWASHERS Fully automatic. Big load service. Portable rall-around. $< <4 41 Previous years floor ▼ I III model. 1 Ilf PHILCO 23” TV CONSOLES Weed cabinets. These will move fast. ^ ^ A A Pievieut years floor ▼ 1 wjpunMCE CO. .:-t • •ViaidtPoar tw J. L Muciiwn The Weafher VOL. 121 NO. 225 -OKcm THE PONTIAC PRE««f flllTfl . . * m-rm a ^ ▼:« o o %;ty-v%.TTx 4«r T* .wi -.rw.#,.* j I? t» A8IOC1ATBD PRESS - ★ ★ ★ ★ A THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1963 —34 PAGES Full Speed Ahead' on Moon Shot In Germany, Africa Work to Free Miners From Our New$ Wire* Miners in Germany and South Africa waited today while rescuers worked to free them from their underground prisons. In Peine, Germany, three brave men played cards In an air pocket beneath the earth while rescuers worked to free them from the flooded iron mine where they have been trapped four days. The three miners reported jubilantly last night that rising flood waters, which earlier threatened them wiUi slow death, were receding. In' a gold mine in Carleton, I U.N.Team in Viet Nam Discards Diem Itinerary SAIGON, South Viet Nam OP) — The U. N. mission to South Viet Nam discarded its restricted government itinerary today in an attempt to counter the Diem regime’s efforts to keep opposition Buddhists from the fact-finders. The U.N. teamjmnounced it would decide for itself —^--------------------Hvho it will see in its in- vestigation of Buddhist JFK to Get Decision on charges of government persecution. Since its arrival last Thursday, the U.N. mission has been briefed by President Ngo Dinh Pi/^Afc mil Diem and. his powerful brother. fKiyillO Dill Ngo Dinh Nhu, and progovern- i ment Buddhist leaders. The gov-WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi- ernment schedule has given the dent Kennedy gets the answer °P- M. 1 P0«^'«‘y to *alk Wjth opposition today to his request for biparU-, Rmy^ists or any opposition po-san agreement on a civil rights utical group. The dipiomaU decided to South Africa, rescue teams were lowered down a badly damaged shaft today in an effort to reach 20 men who were trapped inside an elevator. CABLE SNAPPED The elevator was one of two which plunged deep into the shaft after a cable snapped. Fifty-four miners — four white and SO Africans — were rescued shortly after noon from the upper cage which had stopped at the IJN-foot level. Tliere were no casualties in the group. The lower cage stopped at the S.OOO-foot level. It was not known if any miners in the lower cage survived the accident. DraJCATE JOB Meanwhile, rescuers in Germany faced a ticklish job trying to sink a shaft thropgh which a rescue capsule can be tow-, ered to the trapped trio. Engineers said the boring could break the air pocket and release the air pressure, engulfing the three men in the water which fills the rest of Uie mine. Drilling was pn^ceeding carefully through shields to CUCKS WITH PICES - Mrs. William F. Nesbitt of 120 Whittemore is shown receiving The Press Football Content award of a 1500 U.S. Savings Bond from Howard Heldenbrand Football for Femmes of the editorial department. In her first contest effort, Uie winner weathered six games and the competition of several thousand to gaig her victory. Woman Wins Press Contest The House Judiciary Committee is to vote taiuorrow on a bill Keauedy fears ia too coo-troversial to Msa. Whedher tt can be biockei dapeuds pa the success of aaiiutoeetot selling campaign by the admiaistra- break from the tonr-likc sched-nie arranged by the goven-ment just as another Buddhist monk burned himself to death in front of the Roman Catholic cathedral yesterday. It was the seventh Buddhist „ I suicide by fire since June, and cnicU commilU* vote, the Jm-1 “« chersee durin* the tice Department has been neg>'visit by the U.N. team, tiating with House Republican i w *. ★ leaders to see how strong a bill j Catching government poUce they will «xepL ^ guard, the monk arrived by I motorcycle, poured gasoline on A busy round of weekend meetings with Rep. William M. McCulloch, R-Ohio, ranking Republican on the judiciary committee, who kept in close touch by telephone with .Minority Leader Chaiies A. HaDeck d Indiana, led to cautious hopes an agreement might be possible. WILL MEET' Democratic leaders were^to meet with Kennedy late today to find out what the GOP position is and decide whether they can join in it. ♦' ★ w The bill to whidi Kennedy objects is a 10-part omnibus measure a Judiciary subconunittee superimposed on the administration’s original seven-part package. In Today's :i V - Jr Townidiip? and xmns am Waierfffd tosue. Dneiskm llg.. himself and lit a match. A crowd of about 100 persons gathered around the flaming figure. RECITED PRAYERS Some prostrated themselves and recited Buddhist prayers. Others blocked police trying to extinguish the flwes. As the fire enveloped him, the monk bowed and raised his arms in prayer. He was dead in three minutes. Buddhist source predicted mbiiad«lphia. 60 SS n 65 57 Pcrfipnd,* ^ Saturday mostly sunny; Sun- i Out YMr Ava in Panllac Vathindton 13 56 NATIONAL WEA’THER-Occasional rain is expected tonight in Washington, Oregon and northern California while scattered showers are forecast for the central Gulf Coast Itjvill be cooler in the northeast, the Ohio, Tennessee and central Mississippi valleys and the central Plains. With dogs, they had successfully bypassed the left ventricle, using a specially constructed plastic tubing sewn to the heart so it wopld receive the freshened blood coming from his lungs and then pulse it into the aorta. On July 19, they put the substitute plastic chamber in the man’s heart. ”rhe compressor, through an air tube leading through the chest wall to the plastic chamber,- restored a strong heart beat. LUNGS CLEARED His lungs cleared. Blood pressure and the electrical action of his heart returned to normal. He lived four days, then succumbed to past complica- tions that coul^’t be oyer-»key said. "" come. Dr. D^ak^ The portents? For temporary resting of a heart — for days or weeks, far longer than can be done with external heart-lung machines — the bypass pumping chamber could very well sm patients past a crisis. The equipmente now has been redesigned to make it more suitable for human applications. and will be tested in seriously ill heart patients, Ds.’ Debakey said. In Head-On Collision Falb, 7 Children Die GALLUP, N.M. (UPI) - A migrant farm worker and seven of his 10 children were killed yesterday in a head-on collision of a car and truck on U.S. highway 666 about 36 miles north of Gallup, N.M. Five others were injur^. State police identified the victims as Luz B. Garza, 87, whose last permanent address was Roate 1,'Nyssa, Ore., the driver of the car, and the seven Garza children — Noelia, 18; Odelia, 13; Inna, 11; VI-vano, 8; Lnpe, 5; Mercedes, 4; and Rojelio, 1. The mother, Marie Garza, 40; the truckdriver, William Delbert Wakefield, 48, of Aztec, N.M.; and three other Garzk children were the injured. All were expected to su^ve. State police said \he family was on its way to Alamo, Tex., from the Idaho potato harvest, ’They planned to visit Mrs. Garza’s relatives at Alamo. from the tractor. ”1116 tractor and an empty butane trailer were flung into a 25-foot deep arroyo alongside the highway. The cab landed on the highway, probably saving the driver’s life, offlcers said. State police attributed the accident to speed, driving on the wrong side of the road and driver fatigue. ★ ★ ★ U. S. Proceeds on Moon Shot (Continued From Page One) cil is a top administration advisory group. President Kennedy in 1961 set as a national goal the landing of a man on the moon in this decade, hopefully before the Soviets do. 'The c^ has been estimated at $20 billion or more. Getting Congress to see things his way has not been easy. The administration asked $5.7 billion for NASA this fiscal year, most of the money to go into the manned spacefli^t program. Congress authorized IS.35 billion. ’TIME HAS COME Now that the time has come to appropriate funds, the House has voted $5.1 billion—a figure NASA officials say is too low. ”1110 Senate Appropriations Committee has yet to be heard from. Senate Rcpublicaa leader .Everett M. Dirksen ef Illinois said he expected congress-skmal advocates of reduced spending to step up their arguments on the basis 'at Khrushchev’s remarks. He added that the space committees of both chambers should re-examine the whole U.S. program in the light of the Soviet provision. But Anderson, who heads the Senate committee, said: “Our moon program is valid even If we never go there. Our astronauts will put, in 2,000 hours cT flying time in earth orbits that will have both scientific and military yalues. Hence, I believe we will pay little attention to Mr. Khrushchev’s statement.” A similar view was taken by Rep. George P. Miller, D-Calif., chairman of the.House S|Mce Committee. Dad Finds Son Dying After Crash CHINO, Calif. (AP)-Inside a shattered wreckage of a car, two teen-age boys lay dead. (Xit-side, .tangled in the branches of trees, one boy was dead, another lay dying. For nearly 10 hours, they lay there, unseen by passing motor- At 10 a.m., a car stopped above. A man clambered down the embankment to the crash scene. Hi,” he said. Hi, Dad,” was the reply. SEARCH ENDS Thus ended John R. Walsh’s five-hour search for his son, which began at 5 a.m. when his m failed to return home. An ambulance took his son, John M., 17, to a hospital, but it was too late. The father had first searched all of the boy’s haunts with no luck. He was told by a youth boys may have taken Carbon Canyon Road. He searched there and found the wreckage. OTHER DEAD Also-dead were Joseph G. Gurkweitz, 19, Ronald D. Harris, 17, and Richard E. Loomis, 18. The car was partly hidden from the road and could only have been found by someone looking for it. Lost Children Found Asleep A 13-hour search for two ^est Bloomfield Township children ended happily this morning when they were found in a playhouse a few blockO from their Twenty officers from five la the search for the children •f Mr. and Mrs. William Me-lahUy - Marilya $.aadDM-ald.ll>«f247SIvaahoe. The youngsters were reported mising about 1 pi m. yesterday. Trooper William Stark of the Pontiac State Police Post found tbe pair at 8:80 a.m., dasping under amattresslaadeO State P 01 i c e Cpl. Maitland Landon supervised the search. Police from the sheriff’s. West Bloomfield, Sylvan Lake and Orchard Lake departments as- Morocco Near Algeria Town Peace Meeting Set in Mali Tomorrow MARRAKECH, Morocco (AP) —The Moroccan government announced today that its trbops are seven miles from the iron ore center of Tindouf in the Algerian-controlled Sahara. Hie announcement by Information Minister Abdel Hadi Boutaleb indicated the Moroccan troops have penetrated deep into the territory contested by the two countries. According to most international maps, Tindouf is some 60 miles inside ' Algerian Sahara. BIRMINGHAM - The city commissions of Birmingham and Troy are expected to lay the groundwork tonight for the possible realignment of their mutual border. Morocco’s King Hassan II and Algerian President Ahmed Ben Bella are scheduled Tuesday in Bamako in an effort to settie the border dispute. The leaders of the warring North African neighbors will be joined in the Mali capital by Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia and President Modi-ba Keita of Mali in the four-power conference to seek an end to the fighting. The attitudes of both sides, however, left little hope for a quick settlement. DEMANDS OF EACH Ben Bella was expected mand unconditional withdf-awal of the Moroccans from the disputed frontier. Morc^an officials said there would be no yielding of land the kingdom considers part of its national heritage. Moroccan infantry unite on Sunday chased the remnants of three Aigerian battalions from Hassi Beida, a muddy water hole cluster^ by palm trees north of the ore-rich Tindouf Valley. Two American television teams at the front confirmed the Moroccan victory. ent.^ d to Moroccan headquarters said 60 Algerians were killed and 76 captured. The Moroccans claimed they captured 95 weapons, mostly of Soviet and Czech origin. Birmingham Area News -1- Commission, Troy Eying IstStep in Laying Border At stake are approximately 19 acres of property in the extreme southwest corner of Troy. The managers of both cities are to be directed tonight to estimate the net worth of the prop-rty. Although the property is in Troy, it is divided from the rest of the city by the Grand Trunk Western Railroad right of way. Mostly undeveloped, it lies between Maple and 14 Mile. ‘NOT ECONOMICAL’ Troy officials maintain that it is not economical for them to provide city services to the property. The cost of such services also would be prohiUtive to any prospective developer of the property, they claim Birmingham can provide the services much more economicaly. Transfer ef the property was discnssed at a j^t meeting of the two commlssioiis last They met to determine future policy in the wake of a decision by the Birmingham Commission last week to furnish city services to a similar parcel. Birmingham has held to the line that it will not furnish city services to property outBide the city limit. The commission a week ago agreed to supply water, wwer, fire, police and general munici-services for a piece of property which Michigan Building Components, Inc., plans to develop. ’The 8V« acres are at the east end of Cole, mostly in UNCROWNED WINNER-Vivian Shiple^, who should have been crowned homecoming queen at the University of Kentucky, is consoled by her escort, Earl Bryant, after a mix-up led to the crowning of Julie Ritchey, who should have been first attendant, in halftime ceremonies at the Kentucky-Georgia game Saturday. Wrong Co-Ed Named Queen LEXINGTOlf, Ky. (AP) — How does a girl fed when she has been told she Is homecoming queen but a nervous master of ceremonies announces and crowns the wron^ coed? It made me feel foolish 'No, no,’ but there wasn’t much yk could do about it,” Vivian said. Viviaa Shipley said, “Es-li an those people looking on.” The big mix-up happened before 80,000 fans at the Ken-tudty • Georgia football game Saturday bpcause red - faced Walter Duvall only glanced at the election results ^ckly, he said, and was under the impression that Julie Rltdiey, a senior from Richmond, was the University of Kmtucky quean. “It just wouldn’t have looked very graceful for them to take the crown off Julie and give it to me,” the shapely Erlanger gladded. lat made matters so bad that Vivian, Julie and the other attendants knew beforehand >^vian had won. ‘N0,N0\ “When Wlater made the announcement, we all just gasped “Right there, I just told myself to let things go as they had been announced. But, graceful or not, that’s just what those in charge of the cerononies . Bouneing to the crowd what was ‘Real CLOD’ “I felt like a real clod,” Miss Shipley said. “Someone bad t^ii^ the crown off Julie and placed it on my head before we ever got to tbe sidelines,” she said. Miss Shipley said the tears she shed were not for herself but for Julie, “who was in a much more embarrassing situation than I” Troy. Birmingham stipnlated in the agreement that Michigan Building Components take all necessary ste|M to annex the property to Birmingham. ' The transfer of the property from Troy to Birmingham would require a favorable vote of the electorate in both ihunicipalities. George H. BOSWORTH H .George H. Bosworth II, 56, of 2841 Pembroke died Friday aft-, er a brief illness. His body is at the Manley Bailey Funeral Home. An employe of Central IVeas-ure Offjce of General Motors (Torp., Detroit, Mr. Bosworth was also a member of the Nashua. N. H., Lodge. F&AM. Surviving are his wife, C. Verne; a son, George H. Ill of Southhampton, England; and three sisters. Richard Maddren Service fpr Richard Maddren. 61, of 2164 Deering will be 2 p.ni. tomorrow at .the Manley Bailey Funeral Home. Burial will fallow in Pine Lake (Cemetery. Mr. Maddren, a retired grocery store owner, died Saturday after a long illness. He was a life member of United Crafts Lodge No. 534, F&AM, and a member of Chapter No. 477, Order of the Eastern Star. Surviving are two sons, William H. and Richard H., both of West Bloomfield Towndtip; and eight grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. Rusk Pledges Troops to Stay ((Continued From Page One) urged the creation of on independent Europe acting as a third force in world politksk Rusk arrived,in Germany at the end of last week’s Exercise Big Lift in which an entire armored division was flown here from Texas in less than three days. Speculation has arisen that successful completion of the operation means thirt the United States is preparing to reduce its troop stren^ here. “We have six division in Germany,” Rusk said. NO DOUBT “We intend to maintain these divisions here as long as there is need for them—and under present circumstances there is no doubt that they will continue to be needed.” Ruk also diplomatkaUy told the Europeans be didn’t think thev were living up . to riytr mintary commitments to the North Atlantic Treaty Or- “It is a source of pride that the United States has generally met or exceeded its goals, and a source of regret that certain othersln the alliance have not,” he said. Erhard, who recently succeeded Konrad Adenauer as chancellor, indicated he agreed with the U.H. position and called on his countrymen and Europeans generally to remember the debt they owe to the United States. SIMILAR HELP ‘Just as the Marshall Plan and the United States helped us Europeans, so we today must do more to-give similar help to the developing nations,” he said. -Rusk also-said the most effective way of meetfaig any Soviet threat was a NATO nuclear fleefe Tbe plan was first put forth by Prinident Kennedy in a meeting with former British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan at Nassau in the Bahamas last December. It calls for a fleet of surface.ships, manned by crews of mixed nationality and equipped with U.S. missiles. Britain has been cool tolhe plan and France has rejected it. Dn Gaulle wants his own nuclear striking force. RUSSIAN CRITIC3SM While Rusk’s speech pleased West German officials, it drew expected criticism from the Soviet Union. The speech, said Tass, the official &viet nOws agency, “contradicted greatly the spirit of tbe beginning re-laxatkm of international tension.” \ « 83A0 im THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAV. OCTOBER 2S, 196.3 Area Craftsman-Wins// Award for Pitcjher Purity of line and simplicity of shape character-^ ize this graceful sterling piti:her, designed by Thomas • R. Bambas of Birmingham. Bambas, a student at Cranbrook Academy of Art, toon honorable mention in the 1963 Sterling Today Student Design Competition, sponsored by the Sterling Silversmiths Guild of America. The pitcher, currently on display in New York City, will be exhibited in major U.S. cities in 1964. Limits Add Length Dangerous Doors , Safety Umita are the bul- Doctme, hospitals and glass wark between a child and the dealers are reporting a sis-danger he faces, reports Mrs. able number Floyd Salow, and Mrs. Harold Welch complete the list. i TWO DECADES World Community Day was founded by United Church Women in 1943 to speed the building of a lasting peace. One of the group’s projects for peace for this year is the assembling of frifn^ip packets for needy children. These include personal items and occasionally a small toy. WWW The offering received at this nationwide service will be used for an in-service training program for church women from this country and some of the newly independent countries. Based on the belief that trained leadership is a primary step toward peace, this program will take place during the summer of 1964 at the new church center for the United Nations in. New York City. MONEY GOES FAR It will also help support the refugee work of the World Council of Churchw, scholarships for training for women from the developing countries and will expand the work of the Church Crater. WWW Hospitality chairman is Mrs. Lewis Ball with Mrs. John Ashby and Mrs. Thomas Bertrand as hostesses'. Hold Gift Until Pair Aids Christmas Mart HasArrived Parenthood League By The EmUy Pott Institute Q: Our son is going to be married in England to an English girl. After the wedding they plan to make their home here in the United States. We cannot go to the wedding. What is the proper thing to do in regard to sending a wedding present? Should I wnd our wedding gift to her home in England of wait until she arrives liere to give it to her? * * * A: If you are giving a check, you would send it to her before the wedding, but if you are giving something for their hooM, it would make little sense to send It to England when tb^ are coming here to live. WWW ^When you write to your uughter-in-law-to-be, explain that you are waiting until she comes here before giving her a wedding present so that she can decide what she wouid like for their house. Q: In a few weeks an organization to which I belong will have its annual dinner. We intend to invite two guest speakers. I would like to know if it is necessary to invite their wives' to this ^tinner. Some of the members sry “yes” and others “no.” Will you please advise us concerning this nutter? WWW A: The wives of the guest speakers should be send invitations in couitesy. Whether or not they wish to come is up to them. \ Area Group to Meet at Local Church About 900 area Methodist women are expected to attend Woman’s Society of Christian Service, Detroit Conference, (WSCS) at Central Methodist Church Tuesday. The fall assembly will honor Mrs. Marshall R. Reed, wife of the Michigan hishop who is soon to retire. Working on the luncheon committee are cochairmen Mrs. James Hon, Mrs. WiUiam Bullock and Mrs. Harold Sibley. Other chairmen include Mrs. Dohald PorrRt, Jr., Mrs. Junior Olson, Mrs^ Donald Porritt Sr. and Mrs. Lloyd Huntley. WWW Mrs. C. D. Steeber, president of WSCS at Central Methodist, wiU give the welcome. Mrs. W. Henry Sink will provide die music. Oakland County .women are assisting with the Planned Parenthood League’s fifth annual Christmas mart Wednesday and Thursday in Veteran’s Memorial, Detroit. New this year is the preview dinner on Tuesday with selling hours fnom $ lo 9 p.m. Stiles begin at 10 a.m. on the other days. According to Mrs. Nelson Holland, chairman, eight new s h 0 p s will present uniquely different articles to the Mart. Back again will be 13 of the old favorites. SKI MODELS Ski enthusiasts Mrs. LeRoy W. Dahlberg, Mrs. Hugh Martin Jr., and Mrs. S. E. Gawne. wiU nxxlel the latest wear for the slopes. w w w Recruited to work as saleswomen are Mrs. Dean Coffin, Mrs. Frederick Robinson, Mrs. Alfred Davock, Mrs. Martin L. Butzel, Mrs. Albert Powers, Mrs. Homer Sale, Mrs. Lance Minor, Mrs. Bruce Craig, Mrs. Walter Young, Mrs. Charles L. Wilson, Mrs*. Asa Wilson, Mrs. Philip Moon, Mrs. Olin Carpenter. MANY WORK Others are Mrs. V e r n Hampton, Mrs. David Burton, Mrs. James Carmel, Mrs. Marshall Fredericks, M rs. J. W. Sanders, Mrs. John Mc-Naugbton, Mn. Olson Wilson, MEET to EAT BIKER FOUNTAIN in th« lobby of the ‘ Riker Buikfing ^ IS W. H«rwi S». Indian Oscars are lined -up, waiting to be presented to victorious women chairmen in this year's Pontiac Area United Fund Drive. Mrs. Charles Gers-ton. North Berkshire Road, Area'll! chairman, examines one of the statuettes to be presented at the women's luncheon Wednesday. The wpmen have achieved 91 per cent of their quota at die present time. Mts. Fraser Pomeroy, Mrs. Clifford West, Mrs. John Albrecht, Mrs. Clark Matthews and Mrs. Morton Harris. Mrs. Franklin Rowland, Mrs. Morten Gratis, Mrs. Robert Bender, Mr. Eliot Robinson, Mrs. John Cole,’ Mrs. John Stevenson, Mrs. William Bullock, Mrs. Robert Martin, Mrs. John Kerr and Mrs. William Bachman complete the list. * ♦ Proceeds from the project will aid the 15 clinics which Planned Parenthood operates in the Wkyne-Oakland area since the League receives no money from tte United Foundation. In the first eight months of this year, the League clinics assisted nearly 9,000 women. Gold Clutch Bag Glows at Night The latest little gold clutch bags are designed to retain their glitter for countless gala evenings. A special Mylar coating — which has the gleam of gold ^ is non-tar-nishable and easy to sponge off with thick soap or detergent suds, followed by rinsewiping with a clean damp cloth. Assembling friendship packets for children: are (from left) Mrs. C. George Widdifield, Ottawa Drive; Mrs. Ernest Alder, Ogemaw Road; and Mrs. Robert C. Anderson, %ilverside Drive. He's No Friend Distribution of these kits will follow the annual World (Community Day Friday at Orchard Lake Community Church, Presbyterian. Confide in Your Parents By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: I am a junior in high school, but quite mature for my age. A good friend of the family, who is 40 and married, has taken an inter- j est in me. He said, “If there is any-thing jou want to know about the aBBY facts of life or anything you want to confide, come to me because you wouldn’t want to go to your parents with things like that, would you?” He’s right. Tliere are some things I wouldn’t go to my parents with. He said when he was my age, he developed a close friendship with a woman teacher and he learned a lot. He thinks every young person should develop a close friendship with someone older of the opposite sex. There are a few things I Church Group Slated to Hear Project Report The Woman’s Division of Christian Service of the Al-dersgate Methodist Church has scheduled a special program to follow a 12 o’clock luncheon Wednesday in the church. Mrs. Melvin Norberg, Mrs. Alfred Tollison, Mrs. Horace Murry and Mrs. Herbert Blom are planning thC project stud)^ On the national lev^l, the group is assisting with expansion and improvement of urban and .community center programs; remodeling Campbell Houte, Gary, Ind., Wesley Community House, Fort Word),' Tex. and the Susannah Wesley Center in Honolulu. Foreign projects include aid to medical colleges and nurses’ training schools also the Christian literature pro- , grains in India . The WSCS will sponsor tlje annual family style turkey dinner from 5 to 7 p.m. on Saturday. would like to know more about. Should I confide in him? LOTS OF QUESTIONS DEAR LOTS; No. In my opinion this family friend is out of line. A real friend would encourage a youung girl to confide in her parents. The best thing you can d^ velop between this man and yourself is distance. DEAR ABBY: My son is in Germany and has been there for five months. Ife got a “Dear John letter” from this girl in our home town who had promised him she’d wait “forever.” We, being in the same town, knew she was writing our son this letter and we worried for fear he would take it very hard. We worried in vain. * ★ ★ We heard that he put her picture up on the bulletin board with her name and address under it, and across the top he printed AVAILABLE. Now she is mad at all of uS Forests Ubiquitous If all of the national forests were combined into one huge forest, the area would equal all of New England, New York, Pennsylvania and the Atlantic coastline states dovm through the ul>per half of South Carolina. Urban League because she got six letters from soldiers in his outfit, fii^urs tculy, ‘ CASEYVILLE, ILLINOIS DEAR ABBY: Would vou kindly inform me as to now soon a bride is expected to get her thank-you notes out for her wedding ^fts? I was married three months ago. Over 7O0 people attended our wedding. * ★ * We went on a two-week honeymoon, but the day after we returned 1 started back to work again. I have a five-room apartment to take care of, so you know 1 am not just ' sitting around doing nothing. My mother-in-law told my husband that if 1 didn’t hurry up and get those thaidt-you notes out, she would offer to do it for me. ♦ ★ ♦ I’d like your opinion on how guilty of negligence you think I am. VERY, VERY BUSY ♦ w ★ DEAR BUSY; Very! You should have started writing your thank-you notes the day after you returned from your wedding trip — if you had to burn the midnight oil while doing it. What’s on your mind? For a personal reply, send a self-addressed, stamped envelope to Abby, care of The Pontjac Press. Prevent Accidents Prevent falls at home by keeping stairways and passages clear, providing good lighting in halls^nd on stairs, wiping up spills at once, fas-tenlng rugs securely and ; s-a-f-e-t-y. Guild to Hear Music. Dr. Donald Gibson of Wayne The business meeting at 7:30 State University will speak at , p.m. will be followed by the the first fall meeting, of the open meeting at 8; 30. Urban League Guild, Nov. 7 in the Community Services Building. His subject wilT be “The Meaning of the Past: Negro Folk Music.” He will accompany himself on the guitar in h i s interpretations of e x -amples of folk music. ★ * ♦ Dr. Gibson holds bachelor and master’s degrees in English from the University of Kansas City. He earned his Ph.D. degree at Brown University for his dissertation on Stephen Crane. * * * A new course in Contemporary Ne^o Literature for the English department at WSU was also outlined by Dr. Gib- DR. GIBSON ■V V THE PONTIAC PRESS, kONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1963 FIFTEEN Use Sait-, Lemon « Pint qxlhkle salt on a rust t mark oa ftbric. Then squeeze ^ on lemon Juke. Spread the In the sun to dry. HiiiR Siyifs axd\ Formerly of Ge*-ons 1672 S.' TEkEGRAPH 334-9926__________ Wash Baskets Before Using Before putting bread, fruit, or other table foods into new baskets, swish these through warm soap or detergent suds and rinses. This is a sanitary precaution because most such baskets are made by hand — mainly in foreign countries PONTUC UmiDRT Ml t. TtlafraMi. PmIIk FI Ml«1 ii» w. hvtm, waiwitrt FI s-nn »n S. HMrtM- Hvc, lirm. Ml t-;ui £oioji TUruues LIMITED TIME! TONIGHT Wed., Oct. 30 On Our Main Floor BIG 5X7 IN. Yew Choice — First Print.........99e Second Pose ..................... 2.49 Third Pose ....................... 2.29 ^ CHOICE OF SEVERAL POSES it LIMIT 2 CHILDREN PER FAMILY it AGE LIMIT: 5 YEARS AND UNDER it TWO CHILDREN POSED TOGETHER .......... 2.49 "SATISFACTION GUARANTEED OR YOUR MONEY BACK" Downtown Pontiac Ph. FE 5-4171 MRS. R. G. ELLIXSON Couple Will Make Home in Clarkston A hew home in Clarkston' awaits the Robert Gene Ellix-sons (Sharon Louise Dion) who left for a northern honeymoon following morning vows Saturday, in St. Benedict CThurch. Joining the couple at the reception in the ’300 Lounge’ were their parents, the Ernest E. Dions of Orchid Street, and the Audrey G. Ellixsons of Lacota Road. With her gown of white Chantilly, lace over satin, styled with bell skirt and satin cummerbund, the bride wore a bouffant veil of illusion secured by a pearl tiara. GIFT PEARLS TTie bridegroom’s cultured pearl gift pendant and a cascade of whit^ carnations with orchids, completed her ensemble. Honor matron, Mrs. Gregory G. Stieber of Warren, and Mrs. David Bell of Royal Oak, who was bridesmaid, carried cascading white carnations tipped to match^thelr dresses, of royal blue silk organza. On the esquire side were best man James Wert with ushers Gene Heline and the bride’s brother Ronald Dion. ’Die bridegroom is attending Lawrence Institute of Technology in Detroit. Lodge Hosts State VIPs Grand officers of Michigan conferred the degree at the Friday meeting of Esther Court No. 13, Order of Amaranth at Roosevelt Temple. Mrs. Ernestine Pearson and Mrs. Pierre Shaver were in charge of refreshments. 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PERSONAL GIFTS Personal gifts for the bride-elect were opened recently in Mrs. Floyd Shotwell’s home at Sylvan Lake, with Mrs. Joseph Chircop, shower cohostess. Miss Messier’s parents are the Leon Messiers of Cass Lake. Her filnce, John Marquis Hood of Voorheis Road is the son of the senior John Hoods of Speedway, Ind. There are 1,200 sawmills operating in Minnesota. stem of a percolator, use a cotton swab. The swab will slide easily into the stem and do a thorough job of collecting coffee residue. Latest in Frame-Styles . OfSeJiCe I 86Vk N. Saginaw, Pontiac Safety Glataee • FE 8-4331 LOVELY BEST With a Magic Permanent by MArgle of the Waldron wT.""'" *6^ Alio hair cuttlag. nutnlcnre. Not always nnccMary to mike an app^tmeot. MARGIE’S “Waldron” ^ BEAUTY SAL6N The Waldron Hotel FE 2-S044 HO- »I mnrmnrmnnnni iTiTTrmTrrmrrnnnnnnnnrT 17-19 S. SAGINAW ST. PMiloii tl TIiwbi Jwnolry Co. IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC 4 COMPLETE FLOORS of HOME FURNISHINGS • Provincial • Colonial • Traditional • Modern - All by America'} Leading Manufocturersl WARD-WtT BUDGET PLAN a No Intorost a No Carrying Charge a AAaka Poymont* At Ovr Store Open Tonight Till 9 P.M. \ free , delivery Elevator Service to All Floors CHAIR SALE ^ What an opportunity to save... with no restriction of choice! Here are chairs in every style ... Traditional, Early American, Provincial, Modern ... at a range of prices to fit any budget. Every one is a hand-picked value, designed for comfort, and iseauty, with luxurious covers in a wide choice of colors. Many Other Chairs Not Illustrated Also Sale Priced YOUR CHOICE it $1 WEEKLY Rag. 659.95 Slipper chair with quilted cover and tufted back. Fruilwood frame. Rag. $49.95 Swivel rocker with diamond-tufted bock. 100% foam seat, arms and bock. Expended vinyl cover In choice of colors. YOUR CHOICE NO MONEY DOWN Months to Pay "Rag. $69.95 Early American swivel rocker. Mople^finlkh wings and arm stumps. Colonial tweed cover with box pleated skirt. Choice-of colors. Rag. $69.95 Early American foam cushioned, lounge chair. Colonial tweed cover with box pleated skirt.^ Choice 6f beautiful colors. YOUR CHOICE Budget Terms LAYAWAY NOW FOR . $79.95 Traditional fobm cushioned lounge chair. Decorator covers and colors to choose from. Tag. $79.95 Early American foam cushioned swivel rocker. MofHe wing and arm trim- Luxurious foam back cbloniol print or twe^ covers with box |)leated skirt. Rag. 559.95 * Popular goose-neck arm rocker with 6-inch solid foam seat and back. In imported tapestry with choice of colors. Rag. $59.95 100% foam TV recliner with soft expanded vinyl cover In a choice of colors. Unusually large for stretch-out comfort. Rag. $79.95 Extra large TV recliner with 3” foam seat and diamond-tufted foom bock. Wide, color choice in soft expanded vinyl covers. OPEN MON., THURS., FRIDAY 7IL 9 P.M. “roM must he satisfied^this tee suaraniee^ Phone FE 2-4231 ^ 17-19 S. Saginaw 4N DOWNTOWN PONTIAC r i t i t li 11111II At n 11 m t ut I g h jAtuutii 111 M,i 111 ui.um i m.t t,i ut uu«itt 11 tjmjuutmjuu / TWENTY-SIX : /!■: ','Xl m nm THE PONTIAC PRES.^. MONDAY, OCTOBER 2^1963__________ M Tnstea^f Materials inanCe ♦' Firms Gear to Market MARKETS The following are top pricM covering salM of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wh'l^sale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of noon Wednesday. Produce ApplM, OellcIwA bu. Apptot, GrMnb« bu. ApplM, Jonathon, bu. ApplM, AAcInloah, bu. Trading Is Heavy Fish Smoking Stock Market Zooms Higher h/Von't Resume NEW YORK (AP)-The stock market moved further into new high ground early today fai heavy trading. General Motors, up 2 points, touched anothw historic peak. American Telephwie advanced nearly a point. Chrysler, however, still underwent profit taking and The market pattern was siini- in GM, AT&T and other blue chips boosted averages to all-time highs. The decision of the Russians to withdraw from the race to the moon was accon^Muiied by a drop^of more than a point in North Amodcan Aviation, prime contractor for. the Apollo moon-shot project. OTHERS STEADY , Other aerospace stocks, however, remained steady to hi^)^. Leaders of the U. S. lar to Friday’s when strength moon project said the program s. Anpt.'T meu Sroeifis pade tJ M, smell W-Z CHKAM SUTTRIl AND MM prlcM unchanoedi fJ score AA Snki t ehotesale buylnggriy dium »i dIrtiM »i eheeks ZM. CHKAM POULT^ _ fryers 1Mb. Livetfodc tss-stTssm Wijgs S over 70 gor cent of the fu^plri 1-t M Mm I1.2S-ROO; 2-3 S 'Mtle AbSOi calvM isnSer'rs2d’“d over 1JOO lbs; slai—^ to 2S tower; cows 25 tower; closed W 55 S5fb $5 4- 05 2 315 3V5 3W I 2305 Z305 ZSOh -I- 15 1 *05 *05 *05 - 15 2 4015 4*15 4015-15 jg I* 1*05 1505 1505 4- W -TX *• MAS,. .1. u, 1 5*15 4*<5 5*15 2 7305 7315 73V5 +1 24 30 2*05 2*05 + e 22 5405 54 5405 +115 10 3715 . 37 3715 + 05 ■ 25 2105 2115 2115 7 4315 4315 4305 - 15 2 7515 1*15 75V5-05 U *15 *05 *05 - 15 1 1515 0505 1505 -H 5 1715 1715 1715 — 15 41 13305 12315 M305 + T 35 30 2*05 2*05 + < 1 22« 2205 2205-) 4 3015 3015 30'A - i S3 2005 2005 W5 + ' 3 2305 2305 »05 ... Oynam n else 2 in Foods 3 Mills 1.20 51 Mot 2a ..lubOv Jta GPubUt Ui GTalAEI JO GanTIre JO Go Pac 1b OsttyOII .100 Glltott* 1.10a GtonAM JO Goedrch ISO Goodyear 1 Grace Co 1b GrandU JOb GranCS 1.40 GtAbP 1.20a Gtttolly 3 GW Fin J5f - 'Id 1.30b n 1.50 .... MM 2 GIfOil 1J0 13 4*15 J*15 4*15 . 4 1715 1715 1715 . 1 54*5 54*5 *405 + 1 15 5115 4105 — 05 NT W +2 15 2015 201* - 15 I S215 S215 5215 + 15 22 315 305 305 : 1J2 1 J4 JO M I31 JawLogt .1 JonasAL 2.1 W PM CallahM . asTj.” CaterTr 1.2t Ceiansss IJI Cetotex Cencolnst 3 U/S-IjPT'fc SSOOMW steers.J5.00JI *.l in xed hM choica end prime 1^1.» CanSW 1.10 lbs 24.0034.75; choice OOO-UOO lU 2^ JS? aSTvim!!nS®*SUh? Car-teed JO 1'25't'S **?_ ^iS CessnaAIre 1 1JOO-IJSO Iba 2t0(^.^ .JlK Champs 1.0H $^»iv«nhm^dwtoe IChl MStP P 2id*-§tSi gs.‘toc''ir*jil 23.4A»J0; bulk choke 1MIM to* 1 OT^ 1 ners and cotter* 11.00-14jbi shelly c^ : ners 10.00-11.00; utility anci commercial CMaCol I bulls 17J0-17.S0, few ».». ^ ’ Sheep 400; ratherstow, weotod stough- — K.rw» sag JSar-JS as sv-' S^.1% ^ gipSr,.».' 1S.00-10.IOi cull 12.00-1S.00; c^ to good comICre 1JO woolad slaughter owm 4.<»5J0. CemlM — Siocks of Local Inhrest FIgurM Mfler dodmel point* er* elgMhs OVRR THI COUNTRd STOCKS The teltowing quotations do not nseob mate tredlng rwwe M 1b. Bin-Dinter ’ ;!!:;!;;;'.!!;‘.;‘.i'.*sj 2rto**yrU-:::::::::-8j S IS15 1515 1505 —B— 54 S4 — 15 13 + 45 2 2745 1515 1*45 — 15 —K— 4 3445 1415 3415 - 15 4 7745 7715 77V5 — 45 I 5*15 5*15 4515 — 45 1 1545 3545 1555 - 15 4 7045 7015 7045 + 45 3 41>5 4315 4115 + V5 5 3*4* 3*15 1*4* + 15 3 2715 2715 2715 O 1145 2*45 1*45 - 45 2 5415 5415 5415 — 15 1 I5H 1545 1SH ..... ^ 3445 7415 744* ..... 1 545 5H ^545 1 1545 1545 5545 + 15 34 3515 3*45 2545 — 45 3 17 1*45 17 . SquarcO 1.20 StdKolli JOI StdOIICal 2b StdOIIInd 2b SIOllNJ 1*0 OtOIIOli l*(b •tend Pkp Stanwar T.10 StauffOi IJO SterlDrvg JS Sunny 1.40 Swift 1.40 Tenn Gm Id Texac o3 TexOPd JO* TexGSul .40 Texintt JO IS 5S<5 *445 5515 . - x7 54V5 *4'5 *415 + 45 32 7145 71'5 7145 + 15 4 3545 3545 1545 - 15 21 31V5 3115 3115 + 15 2 33 . 3345 3345 - 15 35 7 Vh 1 . 1* 3715 37'5 17H + V5 1 4045 4045 4045 + 15 ^T— 11 30*5 20 20 l.llt 105 24 TimkRB 140 Trent W Air Tranam .lOb UCarbM 3J0 UnlonElec I UnOilCal 2a UnPac 1.*0 UAIrLIn .50b ■■ ■■ Aire 2 Cp .150 _... ,ult .*0a UGasCp 1.*0 UnItM&M 1 USBorx .10 USFrM 1.20a ••"iyp la __InduW US Rub 110 US Smalt 2 US Steal 2 LanglriLt Lorfllard 1 WamPk JO Cent Air .10 Cont Can 2 Cantina 120 Cant Met .40 Cent on 2 Controi Data ComPd 1.40 Crempt IJO Crew C JOf Cnxan Cork Cruc Stt JO Curt Pub Maredel Products .......... Mohawk Rubber Co. ......... . Mkh. Seomteat Tube Co. . Pioneer Finance ........... Safran Printing ........... Sant* F* Drilling ......... .Veraor'a Ginger Ale ....... MUTUAL FUNDS , CWRglMyritoAltotoSlM^ Nw^Frl. .....40U ift Net dim ...+. +J +J +J +J Pre. qw ISi “• :::::: 51.1 I5i IS.1 M 15:5 SH I Sup 1* 2 1745 ROW 1 I 30*5 * 15 15 15-15 1 1*1* 214* 1*1*..... 5 11*5 1215 1245 . 121 *9 *545 MH-I 1 4015 401* 401* 5 5515 *5 5515 + 45 1 10445 10445 10445 + 15 5 431* 4115 41V5 + 15 13 2745 3515 1745 + 45 V m MM m—'45 * 1*45 1*45 1*45 — 15 1 2415 1445 2445 + 15 1 4115 4115 4145 - 45 4 1045 1145 HH + 45 4 5145 5115 5145 — 45 2 OSH 1545 0545 . 3 2545 3615 3545 + 45 1 5445 5445 5445 + 15 2 4415 4415 4415 — 45 27 14 1315 14 + 15 4 4115 4145 4315 + 45 1 5745 5745 5715 + 45 1 1115 1115 1115 “ 2 41H 51H *145 V 10145 10115 10115 12 5015 51 SI45 I 2* I* 2* 1 2115 M 2115 14 3145 1*15 3345 + 45 5 2145 1145 2145 + 45 4 545 545 445 + “ I 1*45 1*45 1*45 . . —D—— 1 1515 1*45 1*45 . . 5 2145 1145 2145 + 45 21 7445 7445 7445 +11* 3 211* 0115 211* 2 27*5 2745 2745 +15 1 30*5 1015 3015 M XM 1245 3145 —to 2 14 14 14 + to 2 4445 4415 4415 + 15 1 5315 5115 5115 + to 10 3315 2145 2315 -I- to 1 40 5*15 40 + to 7 2515 2545 2645 15 253 25145 253 +145 I 1145 3145 1145 1 1145 1145 11« —E— 5 5145 »45 21 + 45 * 7145 71 71 —W 5 HIM 11145 11315 * 1545 3545 3SH + 15 4 2115 »H lOVk + to 15 *115 5115 5145 +145 21 1145 10 1045 + 45 It 1515 3515 3545 “ -- —I M + MayDSt L20 McOenAIr 1b mOM 1 Matram Mpl Hon 3 MlraiMM .*0 -Mo Ka nTex Mehaico JO Na» Arlln NatBIsc 1.50 NatCan .40b NCeihR 1.30 NDalry 2J0 NalDItt 1.10 NatCenJIf NatGyp* tb MLeed 2JSg N Steel 1.40 NEngEI 1.15 NYCent J2* NtooNlf'^ t NertoikW Sa NoPac 2.20a NStaPw 1.15 Northrp 1 Nwtt AIri 1 Norton 1.20 Narwkfi la 1.»0 t 3045 20^ 10)5 + to I SO 4 4345 4315 4145 + 45 5 55 55 '^'SS 10 3.145 3445 3445 — 4* 3 1l« 11H 1145 + 45 7 1045 1145 1045 a 70 70 70 + 45 * 5345 5145 SIH - 45 I 10145 107H 10045 +145 10 1245 12 1245 + 1 S 11 1045 3045 30 3745 ri5 3714 + 1 4 Sto 2115 2215 + 1 5 11044 11114 13044 +1 21 4*45 4015 5*45 +145 1 115 345 315 — 45 4 *15 *15 *15 . 10 5715 5745 5745 — 45 5745 5745 5745 — 45 1445 1445 1445 — 45 0114 014* 02 —- Pac G&E 1 Pac Petrol PacTAT IJO PanAAIr JO ParamPkt 2 ParkaD I PtabCoal .70 Penney l.lOo PaPwU 1.25 Pa RR JS# PtpCola 1.40 Pfber JOo PhOa* KM ii PhllaRdg 1b. PhlUMer 3J0 PhitllpsPel 2 PHnSow JO PRPIats L40 PatoroW JO ProclAO iJO PSvEG 1.40 PubMdn J4f PuHman IJO Ratihn J7f RepubAv 1 Rapub S*l 1 Revlon 1J» Rexall JOb RaynhOat JO ReyTob 1.00 Rhtem Mta RIdifOll IJO RebirtCanI 1 Raht Catp 1 ,5»lr«JP» UJO 11 2515 25 2515 5 1115 1115 1115 ..... 1 47*5 4715 47*5 + 45 * 7315 731* 731* — 45 2 4*14 4* 4*14 + • 2 10*5 in5 ma + 1 21 21 21 1 1114 1114 1114-45 10 5345 5145 5145 + H 15 114 114 114 15 4* 4114 4114 -114 3 52 51 52 ’ 14 4515 4515 4615 + 7 3415 3415 3415 + 2 1*45 1*45 1*45 11 53H *H5> 4345 + 14 I 44'4 4414 4444 1 3545 3545 1545 112 1115 3114 1114 —15 IS 1115 1115 1115 4 3145' 31H 3145 S5 51*5 5215 nV5-15 11 2515 1515 2514- 1 *0 40 51 1 2645 15W 2545 + 5 51H 5145 51H + 5 27V5 2715 2715 - 36 3755 3515 3715 +1V5 5 1445 14H 14H 5 3315 1244 3214 + 15 » SO “ " —V— ' 1 31H 3245 3245 + Vi 1 1415 14l5 1415 16 2145 2115 2145 + 2 1715 1715 17V5- 2 70 771* 78 + 1 4245 42H 4245 - 10 2645 2515 2545 + 15 Xl 5*H 5*H 5*45 1 42*5 42*5 42*5 10 34<5 3445 34l5 3 28*5 20*5 W5 - V5 47 3845 3815 38V ■ - 14 504* SO SOV . 17 32'5 3215 32'5 + 15 8 3815 3015 3815 ■ 2 3045 30H 3845 3 7414 74 74 Plant General Manager David Price said the firm, which . . ^ , u- volontarUy closed down its |al markets mste^ of shipping operations Oct. 7 alter a botn- ! manufactur^ goods to cor^um-Ibm outbreak, would remain ers from plants tradi tonally lo-shnt nntU FDA officials “get ,cated near sources of supply, to the bottom of this matter.” CHANGE EMPHASIS Price last Wednesday an-| Leonard Yaseen, senior part-nounced that Dombos planned to ner of Fantus Co., international resume smoking today with the plant location consultants, says operation, depending upon cus- the emphasis has been placed tomer demand. on nulrkets rather than raw ma- ★ w ★ 'terials. FDA Commissioner George P. j ‘“Changes in market patterns Larrick urged homemakers Fri- across the country are forcing Thompson Murcter Trial Starts Today in Minnesota MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (AP) bond. Thompsok^ted bail and ________^ _T. Eugene Thompson, a dap- was freed after ^i* days in a night,"however, to destroy! manufacturers to serve popula- per St. Paul attorney, goes on cell. \ any smoked fish products they tion concentrations from new trial today for first-degree mur- The first break nj the caw had under refrigeration if the facilities geared to the needs of der in what the state claims was came from one ^ hand-ihe Greak each specific region,” he says, the “killing-for-hire” death of fashioned grips of th^pistol fish wet-e caught i Lakes area or processed in Great Lakes plants. SEIZED STOCKS It followed word earlier in the i his wife. used to bludgeon Mrs. ^omp- Here are some examples: | w * w | son. In a lengthy mmUW The Hershey Chomate Co., j nie case got its start the linked It to a Minneap^ which has always manufactured morning of March 6 when Carol burglary ^ the o^er of the da'rrrSeTaT^i^rScLak^ - ThompLi, 84. battered and weapon identified it \ ^ huH BAivori oifwlto^ of breaking ground for a plant slashed, stumbled through snow i * * * * * \ jSi nroJpin^lan^herl 3-000 miles west in Oakland, to a neighbor’s home for help.' The weapon was trac^to ilmnlM^rtlilv^disclosed the hershey was faced with she had been bludgeoned re- dei^n who was ^®^t^ at a I r^nrvin-^triHiiuTi hotulin- high transportation costs in peatedly with a gun butt and m^el in Phwnix, Anz. Randall um^anisms [reaching the important Western stashed with a knife taken from said that A^rstm ^Ses had teen talmn from T teVZaK'SenwH ' ' oAiru of St TocAnti Fishprips A few months, ago, Owen%H-. stocks of St. Joseph Fisheries in St. Joseph and Royal Snack Food, Inc., at Detroit. +. ★ ★ 1116 development was the latest in a chain linked to five recent deaths in Tennessee and Alabama, which Larrick said were attributed to one lat of smoked chubs. The product was shipped to a Nashville, Tenn., grocery chain warehouse late last month by the Dornbos firm. Area Teen Gets Youth Governor Bid linols Glass Co., which had operated out of plants in Ohio and No Regrets After Term in Red Jail SEPULVEDA, Calif. (AP)-A I killing. ’Thompson was arrested ‘MAN DID IT’ I June 21, just 90 minutes after The wounded mother of four officera said Anderson bad com-was able to say only, “A man pieted his story, did it-^” then lapsed into un-| since then, there , has been a consciousness. She died four continuing series of legal hours later in a hospital. I maneuvers. The state charges that Thompson entered into a conspiracy with two others to effect the Si* death of his wife for the million ^ w ''P " ^' |j^ dollars in insurance that was ^ Cw J carried on her. % OUCCBSSfUI % WilUam RandaU, Ramsey' ‘f ifWBBttflQ * County attorney, said that ^be, m ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ state would seek to prove that W w « young university ’student, who Thompson contacted Norman spent 21 months as an inmate in Mastrian, 39, former Minneapo-East German prisons, is home, boxer, as the payoff man for today, and says he wouldn’t recommend anyone getting arrested in East Berlin. Robert F. Mann, 20, was released last Wednesday from prison in East Germany, and rejoined his family Sunday at Los Angeles International Airport. His mother, Mrs. Charles W. Mann, had q fresh apple pie waiting for him at home. “My conscience doesn’t bother me. I don’t feel that I’ve done anything wrong. I don’t regret it at all. I said this in court and during my interrogations,” Top honors went to a Water-* ford Township Hi-Y club member at a preliminary Yough Legislature meeting held at Ann Arbor Saturday. Jan Appd, 17, of 7§ S. Ava7 was nominated as yoath governor to represent the southeast district at the annual Youth Legislature to be held Dec. S-7 at Lansing. He was a youth House representative Isist year and will Mann said, compete against other boys and helped STUDENTS girls from three participating i»iS w districts in Michigan. ' arre.sted Jan. 22, the money — reputedly $2,500 that Dick W. C. Anderson, 35, onetime Minneapolis salesman, received for the actual killing. PAIR JAILED Both Mastrian and Anderson are jailed in Ueu of $100,000 Bentley Eyes Race in '64 —X— t 340V5 34815’34eV5 +3 _Y— 11 3114 H 3314 + V 3 12444 12414 13414 +1 ZenlHi R la 52 88 7*45 7*4* + 45, Sato* figura* are unofficial. Unto** otharwlie notqd, rata* of dividend* In the foregoing table are annual dl*bur*ementt baiad on the la*t quarterly or aeml-annual declaration. Special or extra dividend* or paymantjjiot designated a* regular are MentHled to the toHowIng foolnotos. a-AI*o extra or extra*. b-Aimual rat* _________________________________ able to stock during 1*51, estimated cash value on ex.dlvldend or ox-dlstrltxrtlon delr. g-Oeclarad er paid so far this yaar. ,h—Ooclorod or paid after stock dividend or apUt up. k—Declared or paid this yaar, an accumulative Issue wHh dividends to arrears. p-Pald this year, dlvWand omitted, dbferred or no action taken at last dividend meeting. r-De-clared or paid In 1*52 plus stock dividend. t I—Paid In stock during 1*52, estimated cash value, on ox-dIvIdend or ex distribution data. z-Satos In full. cld-Caltod. K—Ex dividand, y-Ex Olvl-d*nd and sales to full. x-dls-Ex distribution. xr—Ex lights. “ ' —•- wsv-Wth warn trIbuMd. wl—Whan Issued. nd-Next day delivery. v|—In bankruptcy or rtceivtrship or being raorganisad under the Bankruptcy Act, er securltiet assumed by such companies. fn—Foreign issue sublect to pro-petad totorast equalization lax. 2 56*5 55*5 55*5 + 15 21 53*5 ^ t ?* I 40H 5845 50H -t- 15 1 3315 3315 3115 ... I 3745 3715 3715 I 7745 7745 774* + W 5,51 12 4* * 15 5*15 S 155 -115 8815 +115 72 +15 I 544 0X5 *45 3 2I« 2845 30H-iq *4H *415 *415 + .15 38H 3815 2845 - 15 3345 3315 3315 + 15 1145 1145- 1145 — 15 II 11 11 ... 14*5 14*5 14*5 . 41*5 41H 41*5 + 15 43 41*5 43*5 + H 13 41*5 4115 41*5 + 45 W in* 1115 3I1« " - 42*5 42*5 -I- 1515 1545 + Sa- . M 55 — _ f 1215 121* ... 1 jl45 4*4* 11454-15 Rl^A Every year, Hi-Y members' off*® send repr4entaUves to the State victed on a charge that he tried 1962, and sentenced on July 14 BeriUey will make a dwision in . / __ * . qgyl5A9KAk5 Aa kmr acfoin Capitol to elect their own legislators. Later they actually participate in government activities in the positions to whi3 they have been elected. INDIVIDUAL BILLS They present individual bills that have been created by their own Hi-Y members. These are passed on to the real legislators who welcome the youths’ thinking on government matters. ★ ★ ’ •a Another Waterford Township High School Hl-Y member. Rich-tod Miller was elected attorney general at the Saturday meeting. Workers Go On Strike at Cadillac Iron Firm CADILLAC (AP) -Pickets appeared before dawn today to help an East German student escape into West Berlin. ★ ★ ★ Mann was then a student at the Stuttgart campus of Stanford University. He said he had gone to Berlin to improve his German speakir^ and had met some West Berlin students who were trying to help East Berlin students cross the border. “I thought it was a worthwhile thing to do,” Mann said, “so I offered my services.” News in Brief Albin Wiesbauer, 62, of 75 Clark reported to Pontiac police yesterday morning that a thief entered the house while they were sleeping and stole a purseg containing $69. A hearing aid worth $280 was' at entrances to the Malleable j stolen from a car parked in a Iron Co. here where United'garage at 117 Colgate, Verlyn Brown, 5b, reported to Pontiac police Saturday. Alfred Swansey, 2304 Marston, Waterford Town^p, told police Piedmont NG gf 1J75 *—CO Ine .18 RaaH* Co JS Auto Workers Local 48 went on strike in* a new contract dispute. Local President Gerald Rick- tod said wme ^ workers we; yesterday that a tire and wheel 114 lii* Bivolved. He said 116 of 125 lo- valued at $35 were stolen from Itir y«*‘«»f“y the trunk of his car parked in isu iMi By ballot to strike in sap^rt of j,jg unlocked garage. 11I2 iM® demands for a new contract. American Stock Exch. FlgurOs attar decimal point* art aloMtt* ftew YORK (AP) - Aip$ilem Stock faufflkw . . . . 2015 Kolsar Indus I Croola Pal .... 4045 Mead Jobn 2215 Fly TIgar .... *45 Musk P R .1*15 Ford Can ...s.172l5 NJ ZMc ...2545 Imp Oitm .V*»/15 SMr WM ... 1415 ifng.,011 ....2*45 Tocimka ...10 IM N Am .... *7 Grain Price! 1.74<5 IMoy 1.7IW Juli| ..J.,..jlV 47(5 ........ 1.15*5' Doc. .......... ,.......'14115 M#r............ ....i32V5 Jlul. .1......... WASHINGTON (AP)-Th* CMh position Rummage Sale: Christ Church -------- Cranbrook. Thurs., Oct. 81, 9 , - 2 p.m. Lone Puie Rd. at! d^oi^s usmI yitar Cranbrook Rd., Bloomfield Hills. wimdrtlMis tiacaTy —.adv. ‘ T'«i5i .............................. Gold assats .. Poktiac Kiwanls Club Annual Runmage Sale at Pontiac Armory, 57 Wafer St, Oct. 31, . 1 and 2,9 a.m. to 9 p.m. By ROGER E. SPEAR Q. “I am 35, manied — four children — apH I have ample savings. I can put $2,-000 a. year in sound growth stocks for the children’s ed-ncation. The following have been suggested: St. Regis Paper; Dr. Pepper, Proctor & Gamble; Montgomery Ward. I wonM like shares in the lower price range but don’t want to go wrong in just liking at the number of shares I can boy. What do yon advise?” A. I should first like to congratulate you on your good common sense, as well as on your sound financial position. OWOSSO (UPI)-Former Ife- The price at which shares sell publican (»ngr^man Alvin should nevdr be the leading de-M. 1 J—i_ jj, buying. Of your suggested purchases, I like only Dr. Pepper and Proctor & Gamble. The former has developed a considerable growth curve since 1957 and Proctor & Gamble has shown an unbroken rise in earnings for the past ten years: Montgomery Ward is not yet in the growth category, and St. Regis has been going downhill for years. In their place, I suggest Long Island Lighting and Sears, Roebuck. ★ ★ w Q. “Are there aay UJS. Government bonds free from Fed^ eral income taxes? If so, can they be cashed as deeded?’^ R.R. A. I am sorry to tell you that there are no government bonds now outstanding vriiicb are not subject to Federal income taxes The nearest issues I know which come close to a Federal tax-exempt security are bonds issued by various communities under a first pledge of annual contributions unconditionally payable by the Public Housing Administration under an Aqnual Contributions Contract. It has been ruled by an Attorney General of the United .States that a contract to pay Annual Contributions entered into by the PHA is Valid and binding upon the United States.-If you need tax-exempts, I suggest Newark (N.J.) H.A. 246’s of 1969 to yield L45 per cent, oT Dallas (Tex.) HX. 2%’s of 1972 on a 2.75 basis. These are triple-A bonds, and are readily martetable. Mr. §pear cannot answer all mail personally tut wiU answW all questions possUde in kis January on whether to try again for election to the House of Representatives. Bentley acknowledged during the weekend he h seriously considering the GOP primary for the new 7th Con-, gressional District. The district consists of Got-e.see (Flint), Lapeer and Shiawassee counties and no irtcum-bent congressman lives in it. + ★ ★ Bentley has been off the Washington scene since 1960 when he unsuccessfully challenged incumbent Democrat Patrick V. McNamara for his U.S. Senate seat. The Owosso Republican was first elected to Congress in 1952, holding the 8th District seat now occupied by Republican James Harvey of Saginaw. bond averages ComplM by TKt AiMclaltd Pratt 10 It 1* It Rallt In*. Util. Pga. L.YO W^Vrl"* iCl 101.7 812 *0.2 *2.1 ■ev. Day 81.4 101.7 88.2 *0.2 *1.S 1*53 High 82.1 102.8 8*.S *1:8 *5.1 1*51 Lew 711.7 »J 17.7 81.4 1*42 High 7>.7 102.2 0*J |RS Treasury Position I 47*4.S7Z357.*0 8 1*,788,810------- •8105.8*!,*23.153.11 8 11.17*,157,511.73 DtoMlta III I I15SJ21MJI latulery liintt. L1I5.538.** ------I,221,1U.» 8 15451.715.4^