The Weather U.S. Burem Porccatl Wanner, Showers (Dttaito an Psg* j) VOL. 124 — NO. 241 -V ^ THE PONTIAib^RESS Home Edition ★ ★ ★ ^ONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1966AGES Gemini Astronauts Splash Downii Atlantic U.S. Cargo Jet Crashes in Red Territory; 3 Die Plane Flying Mail to W. Berlin Goes Down in East Germany BERLIN (i1 — A Pan American cargo jet flying mail to West Berlin crashed in Communist territory outside West Berlin in predawn darkness today and the East Ger--man news agency ADN reported its three crewmen were killed. The crash was reported to U.S. officials here by Soviet authorities. The original report gave no account of the plane’s pilot, copilot and navigator. The three-jet Boeing 727, flying from Frankfurt through the East German air corridors, came down about eight miles from its destination in this Communist-surrounded city. A Berlin postal official said it carried 7.1 tons of mail in unsealed bags. The terse ADN dispatch from East Berlin said: “The commission investigating the crash reported that the crew of the crashed plane was killed. Three bodies were recovered.” Pan American in Berlin said it was withholding identification (d the airmen pending notification of next of kin. A U.S. spokesman said that at the time the plane lost contact with West Berlin, a light snow was falling in the area, the ceiling was 500 feet and that visibility was three-eighths of a mile. The plane was headed for Tegel Field in the French sector of West Berlin. A spokesman at Tegel said the weather conditions at Tegel were “above the 'established minimums” for that airport. The crash was the first of a Western commercial plane in East Germany on a regular flight through the air corridors. .A U.S. Air Force crash crew was standing by in West Berlin awaiting further instructions. The jets were brought into West Berlin service by Pan American only this year, replacing four-engine propeller An air of mystery surrounded the crash,after a U.S. Air Force spokesman first confirmed that the plane was missing and believed down in East Germany just short of its West Berlin destination. The Pan Am jets were using Tegel in^ead of their normal field at Tempelhof because of runway repairs begun yesterday at the midcity terminus "4 In Today's Press Waterford Plastic tubing for water lines approved — PAGE B-2. Reuther Reportedly boycotting AFL-Cip foreign policy talks that he urged — PAGE B-3. , Lie Detedors Pentagon cuts back. on use of tests—Page C-12. Area News ...... A-3 Astrology ........B-10 Bridge ...B-10 Crossword Puzzle ... .C-11 Comics .......... B-10 Editorials .......A-4 High School ......B-1 Markets .......... C4 Obituaries ......C-5«. Sports ?.. C-l-C-3 Theaters . .. .......B-11 TV-Radio Programs C-11 Wilson, Earl . .. C-11 Women’s Pfges B-4—B-7 READY AND WAITING — Sam Aydelotte of Edwin Aldrin from the Atlantic Ocean after their Huntsville, Tex., pilot oUhe prime recovery heli- splash-down this afternoon, inspects his craft today copter which will lift astronauts James Lovell and aboard the USS Wasn. Computerized Car Prototype Is Unveiled COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)-Re-searchers at Ohio State University have taken the wraps off an experimental automobile Which utilizes a dashboard - mounted control stick for steering, accelerating, and braking. They call the auto the first step in development of a fully automatic computer - controlled vehicle. t>ETROIT (af) — The U.S. auto industry set another record yesterday when it builit the two-millionth car of the 1967 model run, four days earlier than the old record set Nov. 18 last year. Industry spokesmen said the rapid building of its ’67 models was a good por- tent for the entire model year. Dr. Robert {ixCosgriff, director of Ohio State’s communications and cwtrol systems laboratory, developed the stick which controls the vehicle when moved forward, backward or sideways. He and other engineers have been testing the auto on a. four-mile strip of rural highway near Ashville, Ohio. Built into the trunk of the 1955 automobile is a small digital computer which will be programmed to control acceleration and deceleration. CONTROLLED BY STICK Cosgriff said researchers now control movements with the stick. However, in future tests the computer will start the car off and stop it at its command.. The nine-millionth vehicle of calendar 1966 also was doe to be built this week, either today or tomwrow. This would be about three weeks behind the date the nine-million mark was reached last year. Auto production was expected to perk up this week following settlement of a strike at General Motors South Gate, Calif., plant Sunday. The strike which began Nov. 1 had cost GM about 650 cars a day from its planned production schedules. LBJ to Enter the Hospital Late Today The OSU researchers said their work is aimed at future freeways which will permit high density traffic to operate at speeds in the plus 100 miles per hour range. The industry made liberal use of overtime work last Saturday with 14 plants on premium pay operations, one more than was used in the previous weekend. GM had six plants on overtime. Ford had five and Chrysler used three. American Motors worked a five-day week. WASHINGTON (AP) - President Johnson, at times an impatient patient, enters Bethesda Naval Hospital today to prepare for the dual operation'he faces tomorrow morning. If past performance is any guide, Johnson may be on the move until the last minute. Johnson said he will enter the skyscraper hospital in the Maryland suburbs late today, and undergo throat and abdominal surgery early in the morning. For the calendar year to date, car assemblies reached 7,383,334 as of last weekend, compared with 7,998,941 for the like period of 1965. The industry still had its sights on a 900,000 auto output for November and indications^ were that it would come close to that mark. It was Johnson’s second date with the surgeons in little ^more than a year. On Oct. 8, 19K, he underwent 2 hours and 15 minutes of surgery for removal of his gallbladder and a kidney stone. One of his current^ problems — an incision hernia on the right side of his abdomen — stems from that operation. DUAL OPERATAION News Flash “When I get older, I’m going to have a paper route, if my Father will buy my Mother a second car.” MESA, Arizj TAP) - An allmale coroner’s jury, acting swiftly, ruled today that four women and an infant girl died “as the result of gunshot wounds inflicted by Robert Benjamin Smith.” See earlier story Page C4. Ward's Addition Begins Waterford Township and Pontiac civic leaders joined S. D. Ward, district general manager «of Montgomery Ward and Co., and other company officials yesterday when ground was broken for the store’s 60,000-square-foot Pontiac Mall additioh. Also participating in the ceremony were William Gershenson, Eugene Arnfeld and James Wineman, owners of the Mall. .store will be the firm’s largest facility in Michigan. Ward also announced the firm’s expanded automotive center will open Thursday. WELL-EQUIPPED The automotive center is equipped to provide motor tune-ups, brake service, front-end alignment, lubrication, rebuilt motor service and general aub-motive maintenance. Construction of the large additioh, estimated to cost $600,000, began immediately. General cpntractorg, Bundy Construction, (nc., of Pontiac expect the pfbject to be completed by late next summer. The addition will be built on the front (facing Telegraph) of the existing building. It will give Ward’s complete department store facilities. Company officials said when the expansion program is completed, Ward’s Pontiac Mall Enlarged modern-design fashion departments will offer New York’s and Europe’s finqst style and imports for girl* and women. Ward sai^. CAPE KENNEDY (AP) -America’s two record-setting astronauts splashed down in the Atlantic approximately 700 miles southeast of here today marking an end to their four-day mission and the Gemini space flight program. CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) —Munching dry ft>od and wrestling with spaceship problems, the Gemini 12 astronauts headed today toward an afternoon landing in the Atlantic and a blazing climax to America’s Gemini program. Navy Capt. James A. Lovell Jr., and Air Force Maj. Edwin E. Aldrin Jr. planned to trigger their braking rockets above the Pacific at 1:47 p.m. EST to start a fiery dive back through the atmosphere. Gemini 12 is to parachute into the Atlantic 707 miles " southeast of Cape Kennedy at 2:22 p.m. after circling the globe 59 times in four days and traveling more than 1.6 million miles. • Ships, planes and helicopters, headed by the aircraft carrier Wasp, were stationed in the planned landing area, where weather conditions were reported satisfactory. 'ftie final few hours were busy ones for Lovell and Aldrin, who are bringing at least four new space records home with them. TOO RUSHED At times they told ground controllers that they were too rushed to do everything they were being told to do. They monitored a number of problems, none serious, which plagued the record-shattering mission. The difficulties involved four ’16 maneuvering thrusters apd wer-producing fuel cells, whichSequired frequent purges of hydrogsq^and oxygen to prevent pressurbsbuildup. The voltage in thfeselectrical system also dipped arw^the astronauts were told to tui^off certain equipment. WATER GUN FAILS Another problem croj^d up , at breakfast today with the failure of a water gun used to moisten dehydrated food. “We get water out of there, but it comes out very slowly,” I^vell reported. “So it’s strictly dry food and drinking water.” Even so, the astronauts had trouble eating because of their duties. Auto Industry Sets Record for 1967 Model Production Romney, Ike Confer but Not About 1968 2 Men Found Shot to Death GETTYSBURG, Pa. (AP) -r-Michigan’s Gov. Romney after a closed-door meeting with former President Dwight D. Eisenhower yesterday, said they discussed Democrats and Republicans but nothing about 1968. Romney came to historic Gettysburg to pay what he termed a “periodic social visit” on Eisenhower. The Republican governor, mentioned high in the speculation over potential GOP presidential candidates for 1968, spent about two hours chatting with Eisenhower in a closed door meeting at the former President's Gettysburg office. After the talk, Romney met alone with newsmen. Sisen-hower remained In his office. Asked if Viet Nam had entered the talks, Romney said: “We talked of Viet Nam in a limited way.” He did not elaborate. However, he added that he has not taken a specifip position on Viet Nam and has made no specific proposals. Gangland Slayings Occur in S. Boston Shower Possibilily Seen for Tomorrow BOSTON (AP) — Two more men were killed by gangland bullets in Boston today, their bodies left in a parked sedan on a South Boston street. Detective Edward Walsh said police believe the victims were Arthur C. Bratsos 32, of Med-'3M,i ---- ford, and Thomas de Prisco Jr., 24, of Boston. “We speYit a lot of time discussing things in Michigan and.. .the election last Tuesday,” Romney said. “I have found it helpful to sit down and talk things over with Gen. Eisenhower periodically,” Today’s sunshine will usher in warmer temperatures tonight with a low of 28 to 34. The weatherman predicts’ the high will move into the 40s again tomorrow and there’s a chance of brief showers late tomorrow. Showers may dampen the area Thursday with temperatures continuing mild. He said the visit had been arranged before the election, and possible 1968 GOP presidential candidates were not discussed. ‘GOOD EXCHANGE’ “We did not talk about 1968,” Romney said. “We discussed the abundance of leadership in the Republican party and the meaning of some of the problems facing the nation. We had a good exchange.” He did not specify any names or problems. Variable morning winds at 8 to 15 miles per hour will become south to southeasterly at 6 to 12 miles tonight. A crisp 27 was the low prior to 8 a m. today in downtown Pontiac. The 2 p.m. reading was 43. Suspect Arrested BISHOPS STORTFORD, England (AP)—Harry Maurice Roberts, last of the three men wanted for the slaying of three London policemen, was a today. The bodies were found in the blood spattered back seat of Bratsos’ 1964 gray Cadillac sedan. Both had been shot in the head, police said. They were the 34th' and 35th men cut down in gangland slayings in greater Boston over the past two and one-half years. A truck driver found the bodies shortly before 7:30 a.m. near 27 A Street. Police said the men apparently had been shot elsewhere and the car driven there. Bratsos was one of four men arrested at gunpoint in downtown Boston Oct. 4 and later indicted on charges of illegal possession of firearms. Arrested with Bratsos at that time were Joseph Baron, 34, of Swampscott, also known as Joseph Barboza;: Nicholas V. Fe-mia, 27, of Boston and Patrick F. Fabiano, 24, also of Boston. At the request of Dist Atty. Garrett H. Byrne, Superior Court Chief Justice G. Joseph Tauro set bail for Baron and Femia at $100,000 double surety. Surgeons will correct that condition and remove a growth from his throat, near his right vocal cord. Johnson has termed the operations minor, and said they should take less than an houf. “Within an hour, we will be out , from under the influence of the anesthetic,” he said Sunday. While Johnson is on the operating table. Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey will be acting president. Men’s and boys’ new styles and innovations also will be available at the expanded store, according to Ward. Furniture display^ will be complete, contends Ward, witlif modem, Danish, contemporary, French and Italian styling. Bedding, household, paints, radio, television and other departments will be expanded to offef this area’s most complete department store facilities, said Ward. Outside lighting will illuminate the entire shopping.center, according to Ward, who said a beauty salon and a buffeteria also are included in the plans. “The new Montgomery Ward department store, coupled with (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) WARD’S GROUND-BREAKING - Breafing ground for Montgomery Ward and Co.’s new Pontiac Mall addition yesterday are (from left) store manager Charles Alford; S. D. Ward, district gen- eral manager of the firm; and James Wineman and William Gershenson, two of the owners at the Mall. Completion of the 60,000-square-fobt additkm is earmarked for late next summer. A—2 tHE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 15,. 1966 Romania Says No Soviets Back Unity Confab SOFIA, Bulgaria (AP)-nie Soviet Union thr?w its weight today behind a move to read Red Qiina out d the world Communist movement, but Romania objected. mier Todor Zhivkov or Brezh-, Brezhnev said today that “iti their dissident activities within nev. The Romanian returtied | is not by accident that a number to the stiff line that, had been of fraternal parties have lately absent recently in the Soviet | been voicing the opinion that bloc, presumably because the ^conditions are gettin^ver more bloc was seeking to arrange ripe for a conference.” Soviet. Communist leader peace in Viet Nam. Leonid 1. Brezhnev endorsed a| Employing some of the strong-Bulgarian pr^xKal for a meehiest terms he has yet used ing .of the world’s Communist against Peking’s leaders, Brezh-parties to establish unity along|nev accused them of following pro-Soviet lines. But Secretary-:“narrow nationalistic aims” General Nicolae Ceau^u of and ignoring the interests of the Romanian Commtinist party| world communism, urged that nothing be done thatj Opening the congress yester-‘‘could deepen disagreementjday, Zhivkov said he ‘‘believerf and increase the danger of aithat condition^ are ripe” for a split” Iworld Comhiunict conference. Ceausescu also made a harsh-j’lTiis was the first direct call er attack on U.S. actions in Viet from a major Communist party Nam than either Bulgarian Pre-lfor a meeting. Bond Is Set in Gun Death of City Girl A Pontiac man is held at the Oakland County Jail in $30,000 bond following his arraignment in the shooting death of a city girl last weekend. ★ A ★ Paul A. (Tony) Gonzales, 21, ! 441^ Seneca was scheduled bjrNMunicipal Judge Cecil B. McCaUbm lor preliminary' ex-aminatiwrKw. 23 on a charge of manslaugm Victim of the khMting was Barbara A. Noeil, niyear-old daughter of Mr. Jose|A Noell of 205 His careful phrasing that con-tions are getting ripe indicated some Soviet caution about chances of organizing a conference. It would force Communist parties to be counted for or against Peking, and the parties in North Viet Nam, North Korea, Romania and others have been unwilling to be forced into this position. Brezhnev attacked the Chinese refusal to cooperate on aid to North Viet Nam. UNITY OF ACTION ‘ By rejecting violently the very idea of unity of action, by striving to foment in the Chinese people a feeling of hatred for Socialist countries and by continuing stubbornly the international Conununist movement, the leaders of tte Chinese People’s Republic have ever more been subjecting their party and state policy to narrow nationalistic aims, ignoring the common interests of the ^ial-ist community and of the whole revolutionary movement,’ Brezhnev said. This distinction between the current leadership in China the people indicated to observers that Brezhnev was leaving room for the Soviet Union to do business with any new leaders who might emerge from the current turmoil in China. ★ ★ ★ His speech did not contain the abuse of the United States which used to be standard. There has been a recent moderation in remarks by Soviet leaders which has encouraged speculation that they are more interested in a negotiated settlement in Viet Nam. Dr. Sam's Trial Over; Jury Is Deliberating CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) —| Defense attorney F. Lee Bail-Common Pleas Judge Francis ey argued of the state’s case J. Talty turned down a renewed!against the 42-year-old defend- motion for a directed verdict of innocent in Samuel H. Shep-I pard’s second-degree murder trial today, and ordered the case to go to a jury of seven men and five women. Detective Robert A. Emery ^ said Gonzales surrendered to ^ Pmtiac police Saturday afternoon about 1, some 30 minutes after the Noell girl was shot once with a 22-caliber rifle. ★ ★ * Emery said Gonzales told investigators he was “fooling around” with the loaded gun before a planned deer-hunting trip with two brothers^in-law. HOLDING GUN WltiKsses said Gonzales, holding the gun, had his back to the girl in the living room at the Seneca address when she jokingly told him, “I hope you shoot yourself.” Gonzales ttien span around, Emery said, and the rifle went L ,n ,, off, striking the girl in the left l/ . ^ ' , . shmider. ^ urgmg of a brother- I in-law, police were called and she ^t up from a chair where j the girl was taken to Pontiac she^^ sittmg, staggered;General Hospital, where she toward Gonzales, and feU on was dead on arrival, some stairs. | ^ autopsy showed the rifle (Slug struck the victim in the Pontiac Airport Future Studied A closed-door meeting yester-^day of Oakland County officials Shying the possible acquisition of Pontiac Municipal Airport provolcetl^speculation that th ei county’s piWious offer for the airport may mupgraded. The special cwB^ttee of the County Board ot^gupervisors ended a series of stiil^meet-ings on the airport acquisition 14 months ago with a decis to offer the City of Pontiac $1^ for the airport facility. A private audit ordered by the committee indicated fliat the airport would operate at a deficit of $172,000 in the next five years if j^esent facilities are not improved. The token offer was Gonzales, on parole for ajleft shoulder, deflected down-!*‘"‘* *‘was. ant that “the overwhelming weight of the evidence is entirely inconsistent with guilt.” * ★ A "There is no case against the defendant,” Bailey argued, citing a minority opinion in 1956 when the Ohio State Supreme C^t refused Sheppard a new trial. Sheppard later w(m a retrial from the U.S. Supreme Court. “The court believes,” Judge Talty told Bailey in overruling his motion, “that this is not the Sheppard case of 1954; this is! the Sheppard case of 1966, a' new case.” MOTIONS DENIED Talty also turned down three motions by Bailey to strike state testimony from the record of the retrial. ★ * * The defense asked that mention of Susan Hayes as “the mystery woman or paramour or .^hat-have-you” be erased from record. She testified at the firsi^al of an illicit love affair with SfiBOTard which the state cited at tlmitime as a motive in the July 4, WSA slaying of the defendsmt’s wif^Marilyn. A A Also turned down \^as a defense motion to erase tesliniony that Dr. Richard BIRMINGHAM — To insure against the city’s future development progressing in a hodgepodge fashiffli, the City Commission last night hired an Ann Arbw cwisulting firm to oare-late all planning proposals. ROBERT STEVENSON State Chairman of Fund Named Robert Stevenson, executive vice president of Ford Motor Co., has been appointed Michigan chairman of the Radio Free Europe Fund, it was announced today. Stevenson, who lives at 740 Kennebec Court, Bloomfield Hills, will serve a two-year term. With Ford since 1934, Stevenson is also a member of the Society of Automotive Engineers and the Engineering Society of Detroit. Radio Free Europe Fund is the fund-raising arm of Radio Free Europe, a private organization based in Munich, Germany which broadcasts to the Communist-ruled people of ~ Europe. The '531 hours of programs broadcast weekly are to assist the East European people to achieve personal freedom and national independence by peaceful means. Birmingham Area News Firm Will Correlate Planning The firm, Johnson, Johnson tc Roy, Inc., will serve, as urban designers, assisting the commission in defining objectives and definite design concepts for the entire dty. ’These would serve as basis Santa Gets an Assist i From Christmas Clubs i burglmy convictiwi, thai “wentjward off a rib and crazy,” witnesses said, urging] through her chest. The Weather rejected by the city. A A' A ^Yesterday’s session reportedly was called by conunittee chairman David Levinson to review the previous offer and consider further action on the airport acquisition. ANSWER UNKNOWN A long unanswered question Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Mostiy sunny and cool today.!js\,j,ether the countv will buv Highs « to 48. Partly cloudy and not so cool tonight. Lows dSn uL crlrT^ to 34. Variable cloudiness and warmer Wednesday wifli chanceLeion the Allen Aimrt^ (Irion of brief showers late Wednesday. Variable winds 8 to 15 maes So^Z wlSitS ™ May becoming sooth to southeasterly 6 to 12 miles tonight. Outlook for niursday: chance of showers. Precipitation prob-lSf abilities in per cent: Today and tonight less than 5, Wednes- ' day 10. brother of the defendant, aski _ Samuel Sheppard if he had anything to do with his wife’s murder, and got a negative reply. Bailey cited this an inference to the jury that his brother thought Sam Shepjjard capable of the slaying. Dem's Gain Not Enough in Waterford Waterford Township Treasurer James F. Schell gained 100 votes in the board of canvassers’ official tally in his Nov. 8 election race against Republican Mrs. L. Catherine Wolters. But it’s of small consolation to the 40-year-old Democrat who, despite the boost, still fell 948 votes shy of the total amassed by victorious Mrs. Wolters. Mrs. Wolters, 45, of 4248 Woodstock, who will take over the |8,000-a-year treasurer’s post April 10, polled 8,056 votes compared with Schell’s 7,118 total. The error resulted when the Santa’s generous impulses will be backed this year by some $1,392,537 coming from 13,629 Christmas Club checks. The last mailing of this year’: checks from Pontiac’s three ma jor financial institutions should have reached club members by today. Pontiac State Bank mailed out 5,200 CTiristmas Club checks totaling $521,000; Community National Bank 7,374 checks totaling $749,606; and First Federal Savings of Oakland 1,055 checks totaling $121,931.50. Christmas Clubs are nonihter-est bearing savings programs of weekly or biweekly deposits of a minimum 50 cents. The entire account is sent to the depositor about six weeks before Christ- Split Ticket Big Factor in U.S. Vote WASHINGTON (AP) - So many voters split tickets in the Nov. 8 election that it’s impossible to categorize them strictly as Democratic or Republican. In 10 of the 22 states which elected both a governor and a senator last week, a Republican won one race and a Democrat the other. The 10 were Alaska, unless a recount retains the democratic governor; Arkansas, Maine, Minnesota, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee and Texas. In Nevada, a Republican was elected governor while the state’s tone House member, a Democrat, was returned to office by a 2-1 ratio. BOTH REELECTED In Rhode Island, for example. Gov. John H. Chafee, a Republican, and Sen. Claiborne Pell, a Democrat, each won reelection The other defense motion overruled was to strike Cleveland detective Robert Schottke’ accusation on the afternoon of the murder that, he considered Sheppard guilty. Testimony concluded Monday, without Sheppard testifying. Sun sets Tuesday at 5;12 p.m. Sun rises Wednesday at 7:25 a.m. Moon sets Tuesday at 7:32 p.m. Dewntewn Tamparaluret Hlphesf temperature ................ 54 Lowest temperature ................. 28 Mean temperature 41 Weather: Day, cloudy; night, .1 Inch ______________________ Monday's Temperature Chart Alpena 40 25 Jacksonville S3 4» Escanaba 34 28 Kansas City 47 51 „ Gr. Rapids 49 28 Los Angeles 70 56 Houghton 30 21 Miami Beach 79 56 „ Lansing ,44 21 Milwaukee 37 29 jj Marquette 37 27 New Orleans 71 53 Albuquerque 67 3d Phoenix [Atlanta 62 44 Pittsburgh 55 24 ........................ 44 Bismarck 34 13 St. Lou ' est temperature ................ 36 Boston 45 37 .Tampa ,, j,, n temperature ....................40 Chicago 43 39 Salt Lake C. 65 46 i iather: Sonny iCincInnatt 55 33 S. Francisco 45 59i . . — _ Denver 60 40 S. S. Marie 36 20' I Detroit 47 24 Seattle 48 45 38 25 Washington ‘ - n 1928 a Fort V R was thfcs.only change made by the board oP<^vassers from the original counNyhich saw all five Democratic incutubents proposed fire deparhijent 1-mill levy defeated. OTHER RACES In the race for supervisor, Elmer Johnson defeated Dorothy Olson, 8,677 to 6,702. Glerk Elmer Fangboner was ousted, 8,378 to 6,943, by Arthur Salley. Victorious GOP tnutee-elects Ted McCullough Jr. and Herbert Cooley outpolled incumbents William Dean Jr. and Rudy Mansfield. McCullough led with 8,722 votes, folowed by Cooley, 8,369; Dean, 6,733; and Mansfield, 6,443. The fire department millage question went down to defeat, 6,260 to 4,780. NATIONAL WEATHER — Rain is forecast for the northern and central'Pacific Coast tonight with snowo and snow flurries falling in the northern Great Lahes region and the northern Rockies. It will be warmer in the midsection of the country, cooler in New England, middle and southern Atlantic Coast regions. Youth Confesses to Rifle Slaying of 3 in Family WINDSOR, N.C. (UPI) - It may not have been a classic case, but Sheriff Ed Daniels was “pretty satisfied” it was murder and suicide. He had a witness — 14-year-old Rogert Bernard Lee — who told of seeing his father wrestle a rifle from his mother, shoot her several times and then fire at him as he fled the house. Shwtly after the May 28 shooting, authorities found the bodies of Willie McCoy Lee, 51; his wife Essie Mae, 41, and their daughter, Carolyn' Ann, 4, Marvin Lee, 1, lay in his crib with a hip wound. GRIM COUPLE - Samuel H. Sheppard and his second Lee *’Ihe°*^offtotoL raftog'^S Wife, Anane,: are.^hown leaving the courthouse in Cleveland murder and suicide, yesterday after the last witnesses were heard in his second- But Sunday, Roger BOTwrd degree murder trial which began Oct. 24. AttMueys make Lee tearfully ronf^ed that he closing arguments today and the jury is expected to get the killed his' father, his mother case tonight or tomorrow morning, the judge said. and his sister. recorded Schell I by slightly-hnder and rfightly V 225 votes in Precinct 18 more than 2-to-l respectively. d of his actual 325 total. This means at least 105,000, or 32 per cent, of the 323,000 persons who voted tbeir ticiet. The minimum crossover was less than 10 per cent in Minnesota, but that was more than enough to split the results. “CSiristmas Clubs not only supply people with money for their gift purchases, but they are also a substantial shot-in-the-arm for area merchants,” commented Edward E. Barker Jr., president of Pontiac State Bank. Head Start Plans for '66 Being Drafted Pontiac school administrators and representatives of the Oakland County Commission on Economic Opportunity (OCCEO) yesterday began drafting plans to provide a Head Start program in the district yet this year. AAA “We reviewed in considerable detail the problems that have b e e n a source of our difficulties,” Schools Supt. Dr. Dana P. Whitmer said. “We’re now in the process of following through on those plans.” The two main complaints leveled by the (XXIEO against Pontiac’s proposed $248,832 winter Head Start program were that classes would not be racially integrated and that no p a r e n t s’ advisory councii was included. . . The board of education has igreed to bus pupils in order to integrate each class. A A A Whitmer said plans for a permanent parents’ council are being formulated and that a temporary group will be organized this year. TO GET REACTIONS “We’re going to call together group of the parents whose children will be in the program and review, the program with them to get their reactions and suggestions before it is resubmitted,” Whitmer said. AAA Before this can be done, there are several administrative problems to be ironed out. “For example, we don’t have enough busing equipment. We’re trying to line it up on a lease basis now,” Wlfltmer said. “Also, because of our large enrollment increase this year, we don’t have enough rooms and I, )ve’re trying to find space.’ for controls and regulations to guide architects as they design specific buildings. The urban designers also will, review all proposed improvements for public areas—walks, streets, parking lots, open spaces and parks — so to^t they play a proper and effective role in the total design concept. AAA The firm is under contract with the city in designing a new surface treatment f o r Shain Park and the adjacent civic center area. ADMENDMENT The commission, in other business, directed the administration to prepare an amendment to the rules and regulations of garbage and rubbish collection that would permit the use of plastic or paper bags f o r trash. The change will allow either type of bag to be used in addition to the regulation containers. Ihe bags can be purchased at local hardware stores, according to ’Thomas C. Brien, superintendent of public works. Brien, in recommending the revision, said that the use of the bags reduce the cost of collection to the city by about 20 per cent when tiiey are used exclusively. He noM, however, that the use of paper bags by all residents would increase their costs by about $100,000, and that’plas-tic bags would cost about $50,-000. Two-hour parking restrictions Vine wood, between Woodward and Woodlawn, will remain in force though a number of residents requested a return to all-day parking. A motion to lift the restrictions foiled on a 3-3 vote of commissioners. New Judges Must Wait for Seat in Courthouse By JIM LONG Oakland County’s three new Circuit (tourt Judges will take office Jan. 1, but it may be another two years before they join up with the six other members of the bench. o A A A That’s how long some county officials believe it vrill take bfr fore new courtroom facilities will be available in the courthouse. Daring that time courts will be set up in downtown Pontiac in the county’s old office building at 1 Lafayette. No decision has yet been made on where the county’s new third probate judge will be housed when he takes office the first of the year. The four judges were elected Iq last Tuesday’s election. NEWJURIStS The new circuit judges are William R. Beasley, a Ferndale attorney; /^Farrell E. Roberts, presently serving as state senator from the 14th EHstrict; and Robert L: Templin, a former senior assistant prosecuting attorney. Birmingham attorney Eugene A. Moore was elected probate judge. The problem of inadequate space at the courthouse will be eased with the completion of a new wing,, now under construction, and the remodeling of the first flow* of the tower section to accommodate the three new cuit judges. The entire project may take ^ to 24 months to complete. A A The first floor is now used by the probate division, which will be transferred into the new wing, where the three probate courts will be located. TENTATIVE PLANS C. Richard Smith, circuit court administrator, said tentative plans make use of the third___ fourth floor at 1 Lafayette for courts. One court will be on the third floor in facilities now used by Judge Philip Pratt in conducting his one-man grand jury. It’s not known if Pratt will have completed his investigation by Jan. 1, w where he will be relocated if it isn’t completed by that time. The other two courts will be on the fourth floor, one of them in offices now serving Pratt, the other in the former supervisor’s auditorium. A The yet undetermined winner of a short term on the circuit bench wiU probably use Judge Pratt’s dourt in the courthouse Ward'sMall Addition Stalls (Continued From Page One) the brand new automotive service center, will be a dominant factor in the Pontiac Mall shopping center, offering the buying public of this large area complete department store facilities,” said Ward. NEW CONCEPTS for this new addition to the present two-story building include new concepts in custom mer-flow from department to department with wider main aisles which will create an at-home atmosphere,” he added. “The entire Pontiac Mall shopping center will be, with the Montgomery Ward expansion, a completely new American dream (rf future service geared to serve the new, young America,” Ward concluded. When the new addition is completed, the store will consist of more than ’200,000 square feet of floor space. Reds Down ThreeCopters; 80 Cong Slain SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — Communist gunners shot down three U.S. Army heli-cc^ters in Tay Ninh Province today a few hours after B52 bombers pounded the hideout stronghold there of the Viet Ctong 9th Division. A U.S. military spokesman said he had no reports yet of casualties nor any word whether new ground action had erupted in the Communist C Zone vliere the largest U.S. ground force of the war is pursuing the Viet Cong. Earlier: only light contact had been reported. The helicopter losses in Tay Ninh brought the reported toll of such aircraft in South Viet Nam to at least 223. South Vietnamese headquarters claimed 80 Viet Cong killed in a clash between a company of militiamen and a company of Viet Oong 40 miles werf of Saigon. Moderate government casualties were reported. ACTION LULL Elsewhere across South Viet Nam, ground action continued in a lull, and bad weather over , North Viet Nam reduced American air strikes sharply Monday for the fourth straight day. Today was the sixth straight day nti*c A. SIENKIEWICZ 117 Putnam, Pontiac STEPHEN A. TURNER 1471 Oiddlngtb Pontiac ARCHIE WARDEN m W. Chicago, Pontiac CYNTHIA KELSON MRS. MARIE FULTZ S427 Bondolou, Rochntor L J. ENOS 7337 Macoday Uko, wataiiord OREN B. RAMSEY 73 Lull SI., Pontiac CLEATUS GARNER 1S« W. Ann Arbor, Pontlao DANNY HANNING TODAY'S WINNERS DRAWN BY MR. STEVE SULKANEN-466 Ooklond-Pontiae Hurry to SIMMS-Still 30 Turkeys to Be Given Away . , . and no purohato necMMarV. just aak for fr«o turkey Hefcet «nywli«r« In Simint. Drawing! bald daily 'HI 50 turkays given SIMMSil. THE PONTIAC PRESS « West Huron Street V TUESDAY, NOVEMBfilR 15, 1966 Rich*«p M. FnpociiAii Treasurer and FIna Officer Pontiac, Michigan 48056 Kindness Softens Children’s Grief Even the darkest cloud has a silver lining, as two Troy children joyfully discovered over the week-snd. , Broken-hearted over the bestial skilling of their pet pony, Timber, by Halloween hoodlums, the spirits of the JuRKiEwicz children soared when a pony, Frisky by name, provided through the generosity of the J. L. Hudson Co. Westland store, arrived at the nearby Ayers home-pony boardinghouiK. ★ ★ ★ Not only that, but another pony, this one called Cooney, appeared unexpectedly at the same address to be the compan- ion of the Ayers children. Cooney, from Meadow Brook Farm stable, bore the figurative brand of Mrs. Alfred G. Wilson’s compassion. Although the hurt caused the young owners by the wanton cruelty to their pet has been alleviated by the solicitude shown, the jsav-agery of the fiends who killed the defenseless animal has in no degree been expunged. An aroused community has posted a reward of over $800 for the apprehension of those who committed the inhuman crime, and will not rest content until they are brOugpt to justice. Nature’s Phenomena Points Eyes Skyward A multitude of Brazilians and Peruvians swelled by scientists from many nations—300 Americans alone —witnessed the total eclipse of the sun last Saturday. And by way of icing on nature’s celestial cake, the Leonid meteors made their annual' appearance last night—an appearance expected to extend through Thursday. A total solar eclipse is one of the rarest of astronomical phenomena. The sun is totally obscured by the moon for an average of only four hours and 50 minutes each century. Moreover, the best viewing points may happen to be in mid-ocean or on a rugged mountain top. ★ ★ ★ Scientists consider the benefits of eclipse-watching well worth the trouble involved. Photographs made by a National Geographic Society research team durir g a 1952 solar eclipse confirmed the theotyHhat starlight can be bent by gravity. The Leonid meteors make their appearance every year in the middle of November. The meteor shower of Nov. 12, 1833, was unusually spectacular. According to National Geographic, “Inhabitants of the Americas cringed as the sky lighted up with thousands of shooting stars. Sinners fell to their knees, repenting. Prayers were said. Bells tolled. Trembling in terror, men and women awaited the end of the world." ★ ★ ★ The Leonids reappeared in 1866 With the same intensity. B e f ore their next rendezvous with earth, however, both Jupiter and Saturn interfered with the meteors’ orbit, with the result that our planet now passes through only the fringes of the Leonid swarm. Still, astron^ omers expect this year’s shower to be heavier than most. Experience Proves IWedicare ‘Fears’ Unfounded The introduction of Medicare has not resulted in serious overcrowding of hospitals, as many foresaw. Nationwide, general hospital occupancy ranged from 70 to 90 per cent during the first month after Medicare went into effect. Local hospitals report that the Federal hospitalization plan has presented no occupancy problem of consequence. That overcrowding has not occurred is largely due to the coopera- tve efforts of the medical profession hid government that began many years ago with the passage of the Hill-Burton Act enacted following World War II to stimulate state planning and construction of hospitals with Federal assistance. The America.n Medical Associate endorsed the legislation. ^ ★ That was more than 20 years ago. Since then, the program has done much to stimulate the construction of hospital facilities. As of March, 1966, U. S. Public Health Service reports showed that a total of 8,139 projects providing over 346,000 beds had been approved under the Hill-Burton law. Since its inception, the program has been broadened to include grants for nursing homes, chronic disease hospitals, diagnostic and treatment centers, rehabilitation facilities, modernization and replacement of obsolete hospitals and other health centers.^ ★ ★ ★ In the words of the AMA News, expansion of hospitals and related facilities under Hill-Burton “has been a prime example of coordinated effort among agencies of Federal, state and local governments, working with medical and other professional organizations, voluntary health agencies, and hospitals.”. It takes a lot more than oratory and good intentions to maintain high medical standards and adequate health care for the American j^eople. Press Grid Contest in Crucial Stage Well, let’s see, where were we? Oh, yes —The Press’’^ual Football Contest that involves a wiper’s award of a $500 U.S. Savings Bond.^* Up for discussion, as if you didn’t know, are the back-toback games of last Friday night and Saturday afternoon. In the moOTlight exercise, Kettering’s Captains scuttled Waterford’s Skippers 20-6. 'ihey also scuttled 23 contestants, leav- ing the same number alive and breathing hvd for the Princeton-Yale meeting of minds and bodies the next day. Hibleen had cast their lot with Princeton, 10 ditto for Yale. But the Bulldogs of the latter were nosed out hy the Tigers of the former, 13-7. Also'*' nosed out were 10 more contestants. I ........ We turn now to the 12th and 13th games of the contest schedule, bracketed like the last two over a weekend. Friday evening, Pontiac’s two high schools stage their annu^ grid grapple, and Saturday sees UCLA’s Uclans working like Trojans against the l^ojans of Southern California. The vital statistics show eight pulling for the Chiefs of Pontiac Central to scalp Northern’s Huskies, four are hopeful that said Huskies will rout the Indians, while a lone entrant crystal-balled a tie. ' So much for No. 12. Let’s look at No. 13 —one th|J; will indp,bitably prove unlucky for some. If Northern High wins, its four supporters split three for the "Uclans and one for ^uthern Cal. The eight who camped with the Chiefs line up six for UCLA, two for the Trojans. ★ ★ ★ Since no tie is predicted, in the event of a standoff the game would be scrubbed, with the survivors left gnawing their nails until the following Thursday — when the Lions and the 49ers engage in a Thanksgiving Day tussle. Ibe day could well be one of thanksgiving for a lucky cimtestaiit. HSI! David Lowrence Says: Voters Opposed Rights Methods WASHINGTON - What impact will the recent elections have on the civil rights drive? This question is being discussed here not merely from the standpoint of politics b u t will not be f 0 u n d merely through legislation or protest demonstrations! Indeed, the wisest thing the Negro leaders could do would be to declare a moratorium on demonstrations of all kinds for at least a year or two, while community efforts to es- t a b 1 i s h better relations between whites and Negroes are given an opportunity to develop the kind of cooperation that will eventually break down the barriers of racial friction and substitute human understanding. Voice of the People: AppreciJatwnhExpressed for Press Feature on FBI Our Detroit Office has forwarded me a copy of the feature “The FBI Academy in Action,” which appeared in your newspaper recently. I did not want to let the opportunity pas^ without expressing my appreciation for your interest in bringing this phase of the FBI’s activities to |he attention of your readers. My associates apd I are deeply grateful for your support. J. EDGAR HOOVER WASHINGTON, D.C. \ ‘Sadistic Crime Should Not Go Unpunished’ I wonder what kind of sadist would deliberately shoot a defenseless pet pony? If the guilty persons are caught, I doubt they will get the sentence they deserve. Crimes like this should not go unpunished. A HORSE LOVER Worker Inconvenienced by Switching Train I feel the train at the crossing of Columbia and University should choose another time for changing cars Md backing up and going forward. I have to leave my house « 5:30 a.m. to beat the train and get to work on time. I start work at 6:00 a.m. and live only five blocks away. Sometimes this train blocks the crossing from 15 to 20 minutes. BERT LAURAIN 145 W. FAIRMOUNT ‘Dedication Need Not Include Deprivation’ It seems the dedicated police officer has gone the way of the dedicated schoolteacher and feels that being dedicated doesn’t necessarily include being deprived of the comforts afforded the most menial and illiterate shop worker. ★ ★ ★ If these public employes are so necessary that they cannot be allow^ to strike, they are entitled to a wage in keeping with their importance to the community. I am not related to anyone on the police force and don’t have even a close friend who is a police officer. FOR FAIR P(L)AY wi^ respect to the futurcg trend of the I whole move- [ ment dealing * with racial LAWRENCE discrimination in America. Perhaps one of the most sig- , nlficant statements on the subject has just been made by Dr. Sterling W. Brown, president of the National Conference of Christians and Jews. In a speech here this week he declared that the civil rights movement seems to be faltering because it has put its faith in naked power and has neglected “the techniques of brotherhood.’’ While many people will agree with Dr. Brown’s statement, there is no gainsaying the fact that the civil rights movement has been reflecting a deep feeling of resent;^ ment and, indeed, the agonizing sadness of those Negroes who, after having obtained a good education, believe that they have not been given fair -treatment in the business-or professional world. But in every public ques-' tion on which gfievances and injustices have accumulated over the years, there is always the more important issue — how corrective measures or remedies can be applied. The Negro leaders have taken it for> granted that demonstrations — even though some of them lead to violence — are worthwhile as a means of publicizing their inability to get equality of treatment. These same leaders, how-' ever, have not anticipated the reactions of an electorate which recognizes a good objective but sees a wrong way being used in trying to attain it. The recent election undoubtedly reflected a wave of protest by voters who didi not disapprove of the purposes of the civil rights movement but who seriously questioned the methods Used. Many Negroes themselves are unhappy about the demonstrations that have led to violence. As population in America grows, the problem of race relations will become even more pressing. But solutions Verba) Orchids Mr. and Mrs. Harry J. Woodley of Lake Orion; 52nd wedding anniversary. "Mrs. Elizabeth Bridson of South I^on; 95th birthday. Mrs. Bessie Harvey of Rochester; 83rd birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Hooper of Waterford Township; 58th wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. William H. Jones of Boca Raton, Fla., formerly of Pontiac; 51st wedding anniversary. Bob Considine Says: A Top Churchman Urges Race Relations Education Question and Answer How long has this country had a department for defense? Who was the first Defense Secretary? CIVICS STUDENT REPLY . The Defense Department, first called the National Military Establishment, was created Sept. 18, 1947. James V. Forrestal was the first secretary. The Better Half NEW YORK - One of our more enlightened men of God, Dr. Sterling W. Brown, president of the Charles Evans Hughes award. He spoke about education. He-was for it. He was for it in a field where it has been having heavy going. Dr. Brown leels it is high time that the NCCJ pitched in and did more about education in race relations. No one questions the strides the organization has made in 'bettering religious relations since it was set up by Hughes, Newton D. Baker, S. Parkes Cadman, Roger W. Straus, Charlton J. H. Hayes and other men of good heart nearly 40 years ago. But much has been left undone in the racial field. “All the attention has Been placed on laws, marches and demonstrations,” he said before taking off for Washington for the Eisenhower dinner. “We need more education to get the races together, as we still need more education to attain brotherhood and understanding among the religions. “The NCCJ must concern ourselves with this racial problem. We’re not barging in uninvited. We’re fnlfilling the basic destiny outlined for ns by our founding fathers. ‘"They set up this organization to develop friendship, amity and cooperation among Protestants, Catholics and Jews. “They hop^d we’d ‘ameliorate and finally eliminate all intergroi^ strife.’ What’s racial disorder exce|>t ‘inter-group strife?’ “We need education on both sides in the racial matter, education among the whites, education among the Negroes. “A lot of whites know only trouble-making Negroes. The most responsible Negroes in many communities in the nation are not knBwn. They need identification.’’ Dr. Brown believes the na-tion is in serious trouble with its peculiar kind of apartheid. But he saw a couple of lights at the end of the tunnel in the wake of the recent elections. “I think we saw two his- . torical breakthroughs in that election,’’ he said. “Edward W. Brooke, a Negro who had more support from Massachusetts whites than Negroes, was elected to the U.S. Senate—first Negro to make it since reconstruction days.” “Winthrop Rockefeller won in Arkansas over an opponent worse than almost any racist rabblerouser you could name. He split the rural hard-core vote and won, going away.” “Look, Lady—anytime you’re not satisfied with our service we’ll he happy to give you double your garbage back.” In'Washington; Romney, Nixon Top 1968 Bets By BRUCE BIOSSAT WASHINGTON (NEA) - A quick telephone check of a few key Republican leaders around the country indicates that, in the glowing aftermath of GOP victories, it is still Michigan’s Gov. George Romney and. Richard Nixon for the 1968 p r esidential nomination. The leaders BIOSSAT warmly welcome the addition of Charles Percy of Illinois, U. S. Senate winner, and Ronald Reagan, governor-elect in California, to the sweepstakes roster, but the feeling is they will serve ®nostly/to add zest to the race and give it g surface look of flexibility and openness. Romney would have been a serious 1968 prospect even if he had done no more than win big for himself, which he did this time by 570,000 votes, but he also met the conditions set partly by his detractors and partly by cold professionals. He helped pull in Sen. Robert Griffin and five congressmen. Nixon gets a healtlqr rub-off of credit fw the fact that the GOP picked up 47 U. S. House seats, since he cmcentrated his tam-paign efforts in many of the winners’ districts. He is still a strong southern favorite, and his stock was not hurt when President Johnson attacked him at the end as if he were Mr. Re-publican. Riding on a 400,000-vote margin, the attractive young Percy is seen by party figures as sure to be a steady attention-getter in Washington. But, with respect to 1968 presidential chances, one leader says: “That would be an improbable thing,” Another', in the Midwest, adds: “The way I understand it, even his own people On Illinois) are not quite ready for that yet.” Though the “not yet?’ sentiment seems widespread, one seasoned political organizer thinks Percy could crank up quickly even with what will be his limited experience in public office. Anti-Romney moderates — and there are some — surely will be drawn to him. ■Reagan, like Percy, is seen as a man who needs time in office to prove himself before going for the big job. Says the same veteran organizer: “If I were advising Reagan, I’d tell him to sit in Sacramento and learn how to be one hell of a topflight governor.” “ -iT ★ ★ Both Reagan and Percy swiftly indicated intent to serve out their full terms, but this may prove tougher, for Reagan, the new hero of his party’s strmg conservatives. • • ★ ★ ★ Professionals believe these ardent folks will be busily forming Reagan clubs from here on and that his disavowals of interest will be ignored. His hand could be forced. Nixon, for all his high status with many party regulars, suffers from the drain of the con- servative interest tbward Reagan. More hnd more, too, professionals are arguing that he must go the 1968 primary route to have any chance. Says one: “People are likely to say to Nbcon:‘‘Show us you’re a winner.’ ” Some of Nixon’s friends think the primaries could prove bloody and cosfly for him. Yet he has to lick the “loser’s image.” Romney likewise has his problems. The biggest is the nagging notion, expressed by one mid-western leader, that the govw-nor still has not proved his grasp of major foreign and domestic affairs. ★ ★ ★ Romney, moreover, is believed to be in serious need of more staff peoplb knowledgeable in national politics, who can get him and his, moderate suppcH*!-ers some early momentum before any opposition can crystallize as Goldwater forces did in 1964. Problems notwithstanding, Romney and Nixon nevertheless remain the big choices in a field made wider and more exciting by newcomers Reagan and Percy. Tlw AswdaM Fums Ii «ntltM txciutlvely to tiw uw tor npuba-eaflai of all local nataa prlnlad to toU iwwipaper aa waU at all AF Btwa dlsiMtchat. The Pontiac Praaa It delivtrad br earrlar tor SO cento a weak; whafa TOllad In Oakland. Ganesaa, LIv- year, eltawhere In Michigan and all other placet In the United Statet satto a year. All mail tcrirtiont payaMa In advanoa. Pottaga hat bean paid at Iha and clatt rate at Pontiac, Michigan. Member of ABC ' PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. XOVEMBER 15, 1966 Russian Infere^ in Telepathy Is Liked LONDON (UPD — Russia’s in-ino fn coo lu:_^ r . . A—5 LONDON (UPD — Russia’s intense interest in telepathy -the apparent transmission of thought from one mind to another is particularly^ gratifying to the Society for Psychical Research (SPR) whose members have been absorbed in the same stady for neariy 90 years. Like space scientists before the first Russian Sputnik went into orbit, the members of the SPR are accustomed to having their findings rather lightly regarded by tellow reshahchm. ’Those who did not scoff outright often wondered aloud what the SPR was trying to prove. The questiM now Is what are the Russians trying to prove? ★ ★ ★ And one answer is that they accept the existence of telepathy as j)roV«i and are experiment- ing to see whether this extraordinary faculty, whjch appears to anmhilate distance, can^be controlled and put to some practical use. RECENT EXPERIMENTS The most recent experiments . reported from Russia duplicate ' those pioneered by the SPR which coined the word “telepathy.” According to Komsomoska-ya Pravda, the organ of the Young Communist League, a scientist in Novosibirks guessed nearly 50 per cent of the-cards studied hy another scientist in Moscow, 2,000 miles away. He also “recognized” about 25 per cent of the objects placed before the Moscow scientist. The Society of Psychical Re- search, whose membership in eludes and has included many eminent scientists, conducted similar experiments for many years. NOT CONVINCED . Some (rf its members are still not convinced that-4be-4iUe#ed telepathic results might not have been the result (rf chance. Others believe the studies by SPR members have revealed t#patby to be a latent power of the human mind. In Russia (me of the leading researchers is Dr. L. L. Vasi-liev, author of “Experiments in Mental Suggestion.” He once had a subject in Se-vastapol put to sleep by a hypnotist in Leningrad, some 1,200 miles away. The work of the SPR in the pJunior Editors Quiz on field of extrasens(^ perception telepathic results'-! but that is purely scientific, NO SUGGESTION TTiere has never ban any suggestion that its wernk might lead to anything more than bet-. ter understanding pf the human I mind.-Btd--a ro^nt- studjL tte Rand Ciwp. suggested that a crash program might produce a technique of mind reading in Uie’ next century. Asked about this a member of the SPR, laughed and said: “If you mean someone in the Kremlin reading the mind of the President as he scans secret papers in the White House — I don’t think that will ever happen. been the case for decades and there’s no sign of any change, at least in Britain.” Flint Mayor Is a Negro FLINT (UPI) — For the first time in the city’s history, Flint residents have a Negro mayor. Floyd J. McCree was named to the post on a 5-4 vote by the Flint City Commission yesterday. - McCree, the only Negro on " " ^ the nine-man commission, is a “At the moment only rare and iproduction worker at an auto gifted persons achieve hopeful factory. QUESTION: Why do we laugh? ★ ★ ANSWER: Although scientists cannot tell us exactly why we laugh, they agree with the rest of us that laughter and smiles are the expression of happy or pleasurable feelings. Experts (rften sort out our emotions into two main groups The feelings of anger, fear anil bate speed up bodily processes. The heart beats faster, sending more blood into the veins, giving extra energy in case we have to take some extreme action. TTie other, more pleasant group is the one containing Joy, hastiness, love. Laughter is said to be connected with this group. If we are very happy, the bodily processes speed up too, but there is usuaUy not much physical activity which needs to be accomplished. It may be that we instinctively “work off” this extra energy by exercising our facial and other muscles with smiles or laughter or perhaps by waving our arms and jumping around, as the happy young folks are doing in our picture. Funny things also make us laugh. Jokes generally show familiar things in unexpected, ridiculous new situations, such as the rain coming from the clown’s umbrella (small picture). * it it . FOR YOU TD DO: Learn to laugh a lot! It will make you feel better. Presents the Finest in Listening Enjoyment! GENERAL® ELECTflIC 4 ccetd LIME Clock Radio Vue-Alarm, Snooz-Alarm®, lighted dial clock, dual speakers, ond solid state tuning. Toss out the old alarm and start the day. with a song. GE Clock Radio $](550 • Musical dial can be set for as little as ten minutes. Will then awaken you to the sound of delightful music. White dial face makes for easy reading. 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Mis-stitches will not affect wear. >► Heiitry-Hvdton’t tvdqtl Slorat- 1 47 iRREGlJLARS .. .Elene Cantrece nylon hose Cantrece®’ nylon; Rose-tone, Suntone and Taupe-tone. Stretch to to IH/2. Slight nustvHyes will not affect wear. S pr. 1.95. M pr. Hoticry—Hudion’i ludgef Stortt- 61' e 97 2 5 SECONOS . . . comfortable lined rubber gloves VI assorted jewelry 6? IRREGULARSf women’s warm quilted pajamas Quilted pajamas; easy-care nylon tricot. Assorted colors in sizes S. M, L. Slight mis-weaves, stitches. Dusters; nyioh tricot: S, M, L, 2.97. 5!eepweor~Hudson I Rudget Sterts— IRREGVLARS... bra by famous Playtex Soft-line contour bra by Playtex®'. Three section lacy-look cup, stretch band bottom. Keeps its shape even when machine washed. White in A, B, 32 to 36. Fowndotloni—Hudson « .budget Sfarti* 49 IMPERFECTS...flat heel winter boots Assorted styles of well-known maker boots. Leather, man-made materials in black or brown uppers. Slight imperfections will . not affect wear. Women • SKooi - Hudwn'i ludget Sior< 37 toddlers’ ^ro-style comfy warm knit sleepers SECONDS J44 Grow style with double row of fasteners lets sleeper? grow wi^ baby. Easy-(;are cotton knit in aqua, baby. Easy-care cotton knit in assorted pastels. Plastic soles prevent slipping. Sizes 1 to 4. Slight misweaves. SALE, boys’ warm cardigan^sweaters Our own dependable Cranbrook brand! Assorted solids and stripes; S, M, L, XL. Not every style in every size. Misknits won’t affect wear. 2 for S6. SALE, permanent press dress shirts Boys’ regular, tab, button down styles. Noiron polyester-cotton. White, maize; 8 to 18. Not all styles, colors in all sizes. Misweaves. Fui:nnhing>—Hu'*ion't SALE ... men’s long sleeve velour knit sport shirts Choose from v-neck or zip turtle neck styles. Soft, lustrous cotton velour knit for his leisure hours. Claret, blue, olive-tone, navy; ^es small, medium and lai-ge. Ndt evqijrly Style in levery size or color. Slight misknits won’t affect wear or neat appearance. ^ M«n'i Sporttwnr-Hvdwn'i Budgei Storu SALE, boys’ Orion-nylon crew hose Soft and long-wearing Orion® acrylic-stretch nylon stretches to fit sizes 6 to 8, 8 to 11. Assorted bright andi subtle sha(|es. Misknits won’t i affect wear. Boy>' Furniihinot. 20xB2-m. tubular braided ' oval ru^s IRREGULARS »88 2.2' Reversible to give you extra - long wear. Shades of brown and green. Very slight color irregularities. 26x45-tn. . .2 for U8 SALE, boys’ snug knit ski-pajamas Wanted for cozy winter sleeping comfort! , All cotton in assorted patterns and colors. Boys’ sizes 8 to 18. Misknits will hot affect wear. well-kuown, one, few-of-a-kind table lamps SAMPLES 896 China, metal and walnut wood combinations ... all with style coordinated shades. 36 to 42 - inches tall. BtOIC—PoBtiM «bU THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1966 A—7 On Sale ffedne^ay Ikou^h Saturday where quantities last SALE • •. men^s crew nech fashion knit skUpafamas Fancy patterned combed cotton will keep him warm this winter. Crew neck shirts, contrasting^ bottoms with clastic waist. Many colorful combinations; sizes .A, to D. Slight miskpits. women’s seamless Elene nylon support hose IRREGULARS. 1 47 pr. Here’s the comfortable leg beauty you’re looking for! Nylon-Lycra* spandex hosiery in Rosetone^^un-tone, Taupetone. Stretches to fit sizes 8 to 111/^ Only slight ffiissdtches. SAIE..men’s thermal, insulated underwear SALE . , warmly lined men’s outerwear SALE..no-iron sleeve length dress shirts A. Insulated: Nylon tricot with Dacron® polyester interlining, thermal cotton knit lining. Cream; S, M, L, XL. Misknits. B. Thermal: Raschel knit cotton. Long sleeve shirt, ankle length drawers. Ecru; S, M, L, XL. Misknits. Lined gloves: Seconds! Fur lined capes kin leather. Shades of brown, S, M, L. Flaws. SALE! DonTmiss this big selection! Styles: ranch coats, blouses, ski jackets, goal /coats! Fabrics: cottons, polyester-cottons, nylons! Linings: pile, quilted! Colors; tans, grays, blues, olives, blacks! Sizes: S, M, L, XL, 3^ jto 46. Better hurry, not every style in every color, fabric, lining, size, hjisweaves won’t affect wear! Men’s permanent press polyester-cotton stays wrinkle-free all day! Just toss ’em in the washer, whisk dry ... no-ironing needed! Regular, button-down and tab collar styles in white solids and stripes. Neck, sizes-14^^ to 17, sleeves 32 to 35. Not all styles, colors, fabrics. Slight miswcave^ won’t affect long wear or neat appearance. 1 ^ A—S THE PONTIAC PRESS TUESDAY. NOVEMBER U. 1966 Nortbeasf Thailand Is Ripe for Reds ONE COLOR After we cross tiic range}-the riee planis are shorter, the grains on the |riants fewer, the water scarcer than in Uie rich farmlands of the soudi. The poverty is evident. The ramshackle houses look as if they are tacked together (EDITOR’S NOTE: A Washington policy decision to limit V. S. military involvement m Thailand has focused fresh attention on the Communist-led insurgency m the northeast sector of the country. This is the first of turn dispatches on the situation.) By RAY CROMLEY Newspaper Enterprise Assn. NEAR NAKHON PHAnSm,^ NORTHEAST THAILAND —Iwith odds and rads, nie roofs (NEA) — Our car cannot move leak, the siding is broken in fast because the dirt road is inany dwe^Uings and walls are rutted and the wooden bridges Packed with holes, have twisted and missing There is a feeling of desola-, planks. jlloa and despair. Many people ★ ★ w imove slowly, a look of grim res- Several local militiamen at a ignation in their faces. But the checkpoint wave us on. My I real problem in northeast Thai-Thai friend says the^station’Sj land is not economic, militia chief is a local teacher.! FEELING OF ISOLATION Three Thais and this reporter are going into a part of the n(Htheast where the Communist underground has been e}q)anding and insurgency is rife. This trip through the craggy mountain ranges is not dangerous at midday. Night is another matter. TTie woods byjthe roadside don’t lo(* appreciably different from* the California woodlands I camped in as a bdy — but in these hills Communist guerrU-las hide. This 987-mile auto trip is the only way to undrastand the dif- ferences^ between Oie troubledlrat knowledge td Thai poUcefthem are residents i „ , ■■ ’T can’t believe it—replaced by a yoiin^ upstart who doesn’t even smoke! This incinerator fellow must not have any pride —he even consumes No self-respecting trash burner would attempt that! And who’s going to keep the neighbors in their place by blowing smoke and soot in their yard? You’ll see... replacing me with an automatic Gas Incinerator will make a big difference in their life!” You, too, can end trash and garbage problems by switching to a new, smokeless, odorless Gas Incinerator SAIE i Turn fo Thu Pagn Frklays THiE PONTIAC PRESS - r PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY. NO^EMBER 15, 1966~~ Are Your School's Activifies Now, Appearing in The Pr«a? B^l PCH to Perform Children's Play, Aladdin' Vocd Concert Nov. 19 at WK By JUDY FRANCIS Waterford Kettering’s v o c a music department will present “Ma|ic Moments" Saturday in WK’s gym from 8 to 10 p. m. Participating in the fall vocal concert will be the A Cappella Choir, Girls’ Chorus, Mixed Chorus, Gleemen, Girls’ Ensemble, Girls’ Sextet and the Prestels, a girls’ frio. WK’s Fntnre Teachers Club will have-a special program open to the public toni^t at 7:30 in RooiB'215 wlfli guest speakers, Lempi Church, Nancy Matulis and Dawn Davis. Seniors competing in Oakland University competitive scholarship testing program for Fall 1967 can take the examination Saturday at OU. Scholarships will be awarded on the basis of examination scorcf, high school academic record and financial need for the $4,000 scholarships and the tuition scholarships. ADMITTANCE NOT NECESSARY It is not necessary for a student to have been admitted to Oakland University to partici-„ pate in the testing program and students need not participate in this tes^g to be eligible for the University’s regular financial aid. ' * ★ * The play "Wonderful Town’ has been selected as this year’s faculty play. BASED ON HIT It is e musical based on the Broadway hit, “My Sister Journalism Meeting Uficons to Visit By SUE OWEN Utica High School’s newspaper staff will attend a workshop at Michigan State University Thursday. Sponsored by the journalism department at Michigan State, the meeUng will provide a place to exchange high school newspaper and yearbook ideas. Hiere will be a display of various school newspapers. Staff members who are attending are Donna Aberlich, James Beck, Janice Coldwell, Janice Day, Charlene Cates, Diane Hudgens, Marianne Lo»h < carski, James Longtine, Susan*’ Mt Holly. Equipment is available at the resort at a minimum fee. German Club Will hold its third meeting tonight in the UHS ifeteria at 7 p.m. Future Homemakers’ Association is sponsoring a bake sale in the cafeteria Friday. Dec. 15 the club will take a field trip to Consumers Power Co. The Chess Club meets Thursdays at 7 p.m. in Room 155. Sponsors this year are James Gossett and Florine Zanardelii. Owen, Michael Walsh, and the Arrow sponsor, Valerie Barnes. Spanish Club plans to hold a Christmas party, adopt a Spanish-speaking orphan, take a trip Spanish‘restaurant and see the "Ballet Folklorico” (Folk Dances). The Writers’ Club’s first meeting was held Wednesday. Officers chosen were Gay Chrostek, president; Mark Craft, treasurer; Karyn Shim-kns, vice president; Diane Birstol, secretary and Gail Phillips, editor. “Think &iow’’ is the motto for the UHS Ski Club. Its sponsors are Judith Isaacson, James Thomas, and James King. •k it ■4- Plans were discussed for a skiing weekend and the weekly meets at its first meeting held Wednesday. Last year the club, with 190 members, was the largest at UHS. The club will ski weekly at Officers are James Beck, presidept; Ronald Cooley, secretary; Thomas Bilich, treasurer, and Richard Sherba, publicity chairman. r Fencing Club will “duel” lainst Mt. Oemens this Friday. Sadie Hawkins Event Friday at Rochester By KARIN HEADLEE Rochester High School’s annual Sadie Hawkins Dance, sponsored by the Conservation Club, will be held Friday from 8:30 to 11:30 p.m. in the cafeteria. Entertainment will be furnished by the Whereabouts. A fine of 50 cents over the nominal admittance will be charged all people who don’t appear dressed in Dogpatch style. The Conservation Club, head-ed by Dr. Max Mallon and William Leonard, will use the funds earned to help pay for the club’s canoe trip in the spring. ★ ★ * Club officers for this year are Ed Kozlowski, president; Carol Haag, vice president; Linda King, secretary, and Kit Crowe, treasurer. Interested English students will accompany Miss Lovelia Wermuth of the faculty to tiie Bonstelle Theatre in Detroit on Thursday to see "The Birthday Party.” ‘ The Historymobile, a mobile museum which is operated by the Michigan Historical Commission, will be in Rochester today, tomorrow, and Thursday. Open from 8:30 a.m. to 8:3( p.m., this museum exhibits Michigan history in chronoiogi-cal order. ■k ' k k Senior high Honor Club members are serving as guides. Sq)homore class officers for the 1966-67 school year are Gary Sovey, president; Gail Monahan, vice president; Jane Johnson, secretary, and Sue Carlisle, treasurer. Seaholm Holds Mock Election By HOLLY ALFS Seaholm High School held a mock election last week. Every Republican candidate won by a large margin except George Washington. The proposal concerning lowering the voting age to 18 was opposed by about two-thirds of the faculty, while the students were divided, 916 fw and 860 igainst. Each year, months prior to the Christmas rush, Mrs. Joan Marks begins a 16-hour holiday training program for all students interested in jobs. Working with the Birmingham merchants, Mrs. Marks trains her students in five of six factors necessary for the jobs offered. k k k These range from operating a cash register and making out refunds, to greeting a customer. The annual Thanksgiving Dance, sponsored by American Field Service-Youth for Understanding is well under way. This year’s theme will be "The Open Heart,” with the cafeteria decorated to resemble the inside of a hunting lodge. Funds will go toward the expenses for next year’s exchange students. The final acts for Funs-A-Pop-pin’, Seaholm’s all-school variety show, have been chosen. In keeping with tradition, the school bond will open and close the show. A folk dance by all of the AFS-YFU foreign exchange students will add to the talent variety. The Public Is Invited Saturday Evening By CHRIS BLAKENEY j Girls’ Ensemble and Senior It's time for Eontiac Central’s Boys’ Ensemble performed Fri-annual childrdft’s play. |day at St. Frederick’s High This year under the direction of Central’s new dramatic * teacher, Arnold Bernstein, the students will do seven performances of “Aladdin and the Wonderful Lamp.” Aladdin, an Arabian youth who gains possession of a magic lamp, falls in love with th Empepr’s daughter. Princess Adora, and triumphs over the evil magician. Portraying lead roles are Pete Variety Show Friday atNFHS By KATHY KOURTJIAN The ■ All-School Variety Show will be the highlight of the week Miller (Aladdin), Diane NichollT^®" presented at North (Adora) and Victor Adams (thei*^^'’™"^^^" ^^^h School Friday Matinee performances began ' ^ last Friday at 3 p.m. in the au-' ditorium, and will continue through this Friday. PRE-SCHOOLERS INVITED Tickets are being sold at the various elementary schools and, for preschoolers, at the door. The public is invited to the evening performance on Saturday at 8. Tickets for this performance will be on sale at the door. evening at 8. Of the many selections which were considered, the number has been narrowed down to 10 finalists. Four bands performing include the Corsairs, the Little by Littles, the Moques, and the Radicals. The Countrymen, a folks singing group, wil add its talent. * * ★ Solo pianists are Nancy Gfeen, Laura Kahn and Don Peterson. TWO TO SING Mary Kay Burr and Kathy Kublt will display their voices in vocai numbers. CHILDREN’S PLAY—Rehearsing for Pontiac Central High School’s annual children’s presentation are (from left) James White of 1490 Rosedale, Sylvan Lake; Diane Nicholi of 1925 Long Pointe, Bloomfield Township; and Pete Miller of The' student body judged PCH teachers Wednesday in .the Future Teachers’ student election. PonllK Presi Photo HONORED TEACHERS 3 N. Ardmore. Matinee The honored teachers were ALMOST; NOT QUITE - Sandy Garriott of 629 Rewold, Rochester, just misses as she grabs for her •Victim,” John Cassel of 389 TTenken, Avon Township, for Friday night’s Sadie Hawkins dance. The annual girl-take-boy event is sponsored by the Conservation Ciub. The 'Whereabouts will provide the music and entertainment. Brother Rice Seniors Hear Debate Teams By GARRY MILLER During the second period yesterday seniors of Brother Wee High School heard a debate between the debate teams of Pennsylvania State University and the University of Illinois. This was held in conjunction with the Detroit Debate Day Program sponsored by Oakland University. The ttq)ic was “Resolved: That the United States Should Substantially Reduce Foreign Policy Commitments.” The debate centered around the United States’ involvement in the Union of South Africa. Pennsylvania State took the affirniative and the University of Illinois took the negative. Before the debate started, polls of "opinion baliots were passed it. Students were asked to givq their opinion on the topic. After the discussion, they were asked about their opinion again. Most had a definite shift Of opinion. St. Lawrence’ Student Council Discusses Plans By JAMES PAKLEDINAZ The Student Council at Utica’s St. Lawrence High School is having en meetings on Monday and Friday of this week. To be d i s c u s s e d are the Thanksgiving dance and the idea )f a foreign-exchange student. There'-will be parent-teacher I m e e 11 n g » on Tuesday and Thursday of this week. The i^nderclassmen are hav-| ing their individual pictures taken on Monday and Wednesday. On T h u r s d a y, the photo-^apher for the yearbook wiil be here. He is going to be taking candid photographs for this year’s Jewel. „ The actors and actresses of the senior play are polishing their parts in nervous anticipation of the opening cuflain. The play, "Best Foot Forward,” will be presented on Nov. 20 and 21 at 8:15 in the evening. For groups of more than 20 people, the price will be reduced. Profits from the show go to the junior class, earmarked for college scholarships. The annual Open House was held last Wednesday. It was a program to familiarize parents , , -, ..................... „ . , , with the school, its pblicies, and performances of “Aladdin and the Wonder- Connie Willman, female pupil’s students’ daily routine, ful Lamp” will continue daily through, Fri- pet; Douglas Treais,- male pu-day at 3 p.m. An evening performance is piTs pet; Max Hess, toughest scheduled for Saturday at 8. teacher; Joseph Blank, wittiest teacher; and Jerry Beckner, teacher with personality plus. IVd students from Mexico City came to Central last week to spend their two-month summer vacation with American families. The girls are here with the Youth for Understanding Pro- Kingswood Student Panel Promotes Religious Life By ONDY GRISSOM Next week the Student Cabinet at Kingswood School will be busy providing opportunities for reflection and service. The Cabinet, composed of six girls and six Cranbrook boys, promotes the religious life of the schools and provides opportunities for service. The first special event will be held Friday through Sunday when several junior and senior girls and a faculty ad-iser will go to the Aurora Inn in Aurora, Ohio, to attend the Lake Erie Religious Conference. This meeting of students to discuss pertinent religious and moral issues is nondenomina-It has been held previously at Oberlin, Ohio. k k 'k The topic will be “Christianity and Conformity.” The speaker will be the chaplain of Smith College, the Rev. Ben Anderson. The second event is the annual Chapel Pledge Drive. Kingswood raises money through these pledges and through other^ {wojects for charity. . * Among these charities is the support of three foster children. Another is the aid to Children’s Hospital in Detroit. k k k this year, a new project was started. Under the Peace Corps program we will build a school for an underdeveloped area. Last year students from both schools tutored elementary pupils from Detroit Inner City at Cranbrook. This year the volunteers are ready, but so far no bus can be found, to transport the children. Kingswood members of this active committee are Candy Angel, Ann Brand, Margaret Christiansen, Patricia Dwyer, Mary Duryea, and Billy Piv-nick. Susana Jimenez is Staying with Cathy Crew, junior, and Lupe Etienne is staying with Mary Fell, senior. STUDENTS PERFORM The A Cappella CTioir, Senior Response by the i higher than in previous years. LOtMUNG AHEAD Looking ahead on the calendar, the Student Council Exchange Day has been scheduled with Oak Park High. Our council members will visit there tomorrow and their members will be at NFHS next Thursday. Yearbooks have gone 6n sale this week. k k k Students may have their name engraved in gold on their yearbook for a smali additional fee. Orders will be taken until early December. South Lyon Hosts U. of M. Gymnasts By JIM LAMOTTE Newt Loken of the University of Michigan gymnastics team was at South Lyon High School Thursday. He and U.of M. gymnasts exhibited gymnastic feats and ex- The program was sponsored by the Student Council.' DIFFERENCE OF OPINION - Maureen Savage of 211 Puritan, Birmingham, stands to argue her point during a practice session for Marion High School’s Model United Nations meeting as (from left) Deborah Uetz Pontiac Praia Photo of 954 Hickory Heights, Bloomfield Township, and Kathleen Andries of 18115 Cornell, Southfield, listen. The annual two-day meeting will convene Saturday. Model U.N. Will Convene By PATRICIA POLMEAR Marian High School’s Model United Nations (MUN) will convene Saturday in the school gym- Initiated five years ago, 43 Marian and seven Brother Rice delegations will participate in the annual two-day sessiori. In September, a second general meeting was held to acquaint* the students with the procedure, which will follow the exact method used in the United Nations in New York. Western, Eastern, and neutral bloc heads have called caucus meetings in an effort to incorporate solutions satisfactory to ail countries involved into their prcqwsals. Committee chairman for the question of Viet Nam is senior Maureen Savage. Nuclear Disarmament Committee head is Kathryn Koiasa, senior. The third problem, “How to cope with the unprecedented growth of population,” is headed by Mary Beth Snyder, senior. Members of the Secretariat, which is the presiding body of the U. N. induces President Deborah Uetz, SecretaryrGen-eral Maureen Savage, and Silent Secretary Susan Slavin. Faculty moderator is Sister Verpnita, history department chairman. Each deieption will have at least one member each day of the session in a costume depicting its country. On the first day, deiegates will receive country fact sheets drawn up by a member of the delegation, stating i basic facts "i ■ u : ■ concerning populatipn, land area, occupations, and foreign policy. Displays made by flie participating students will be exhibited throughout the school. A film, “The Hat,” with a discussion following, is scheduled for Saturday. ' / Traditionally, the "white paper” presentation will be determined by the Secretariat. • 'The white paper is a problem given to each delegation without previous announcement. During the time allotted, each delegation or bloc attempts to find some solution. Awards wfll be presents, to the top delegation and ten iest individual Speakers. « Freshmen history students, under the direction of Sr. Kenneth Marik social studies teach- « er, will actN^s U. N. pages. B~^2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESHAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1966 Pldstic Tubing I NewTrialGICdi H/g/i Court Crosses Threshold on Rights Protests / ,, inCorvairSuit IS Approved for LOS ANGELES WD - . itoeys for General Motors yes^^jj,, is subject' ■ A# . m m m a if® to interjlretatio^^ Q^Q f LIHG LJSG ®“nJL- Black says the court has not. WASHINGTON (API - The|ple may go anyplace and in.'=;t| Monday, it was Douglas’ turn!announced, he - like Black, a! “We now have set into the Supreme Court has crossed”! on staying in that place to e .er-j to dissent vigorously and issue a free speech advocate — said record a great and wonderful jthreshold in civil rights pi'otestjcise their right to talk.-warnii^. After the decision was]from the bench; jpolice state doctrine." casgs. i resulting from an accident involving GM’s rear-engine Cor-^ , 'vair. i SuJ^ior Judge Laurence J. An amendment to the Water-| Copper piping also is morelRittenband, in a 15-page writ*-ford Township water supply sys- scarce, according to Squiers,^ iten opinion, granted’a new trial tern ordinance, allowing the use! ,, , , , ... oh grounds of insufficient evi- of polyethylene plastic tubing! . P®*y®thylene |(jence presented at the trial by for connections from wa- *“*”"6 *" commumties was iypjtnesses in behalf of the piain-ter mains to households and Pven the green 1‘ght 1 a s t buildings, was adopted by the ^>y Township Board last night. Introduced at the board’s Sept. 26 meeting, the amend-1 ment won 6-0 approval at last night’Ameeting. ] Hitnerto, copper piping has ^ been !sed to hook up buildings to water mains. / , J , , , u partment and the state plumb-One of the main advantages j j„g board, in using plastic tubing is that iti . ^ is considerably less expensive than copper "'•B use 15,000 to 20,000 feet m TT.-,-,- ». of plastic tubing next year. Tovmhip UtiUU^ Manager ^ Kenneth Squiers estimates thatLy^ plastic tubing can be purchased! y^^^ng date for for about one-third less than^y^ 1967 y t- ! ment budget. (Advertisement) Take a dip in the Fountain of Youth Fluflr douds Against a sapphire-blue sky...tiny rosebuds opening into beautiful blossoms... a crystal-clear pond reflecting delicately scented flowers ... your skin radiating the loveliness provided by 2nd Debut Only 2nd Debut creates such loveliness . . . softer glowing skin that is all yours... not an illusion ... 2nd Debut contains an element caUed C-E-F 600 (OE-F 1200 for double potency). When spread over the skin's surface... C-]^F—Cellular Expansion Factor-encourages the skin to absorb ipolecules of pure water that expand the cells to plump up and fill in facial lines on the surface to make them less visible. Get 2nd Debut, r^pilar or double potency at your drug or department store today. ARRIVALS ITD- CHICACMX WATER REVENUE The department’s ahticipated revenue next year is $453,805, including $275,000 from the metered sale of water. Estimated expenditures total $294,789. The balance of $159,015 would be available for debt retirement in 1968 to defray revenue bond costs for the township water supply system. Proposed in the budget is the Enjoy Higher Quality Heating Imperial GAS FURNACE Automatic Quiet Durable Unique costiron systems carry a lifetime ports exchange warranty (for the life of the furnace) ogoinst manufacturing defects entitling the originol purchaseCj to 0 new comparable furnace. GOODWILL AUTOMATIC HEATING CO. 3401 W. Huron, FE t-0484 Just West of Elizabeth Lk. Rd. hiring of tliree men, classified jsaid in view of the “unintel-L.aborer II, to compensate for an increased work load. Also, a repairman would be hired to fill vacancy due to a retirement next March. “The-iiepartiBefl4’s-FeveH«€-fer -the current year is estimated at! $344,400. TRAFFIC STUDY A request for traffic regulation.? at Oakland Community College’s Highland" Lakes Campus district was tabled until fui t h e r information is received. A Superior Court jury had ruled 9-3 on Sept. 2 in favor of Mrs. Rosemary Cantos of Tor-rflnee, Calif., and her daughter, Loann, who were injured in an accident in San Fernando, Calif, in September of 1960. Justice William 0. Douglas says it has. But however little or much the court may have veered, Monday’s 5-4 ruling in a Tallahassee, Fla., case enhances state power to declare certain kinds of government property off limits for even i^aceful protest. Specifically oft limits because they were at issue in the Tallahassee case are the driveways and premises of jail houses. NOT FORBroDEN Black, in writing the court’s decision, did-not give other instances of government property The accident occurred. as Joe, which could be declared off lim-Cantos, her husband, was driv-jhg gyj he, and the court majoring a new Cktrvair from a Chev- undoubtedly mean to en- In the Pontiac Areo, who's the Jn Crowd talking to? Buick dealers, mostly. OLIVER MOTOR SALES, INC. - 210 Orchard Loke Ave. rolet dealer in San Fernando to his dealer-employer in Bakersfield, Calif. ★ * * The jury, which started hearing the case July 28, granted Mrs. Cantos $65,000 and her daughter, $1,(K)0. ONLY SETBACK According to a GM spokesman, it was the only setback in a series of lawsuits involving the design of the Corvair. However, one case involved a $1 settlement. Judge Rittenband chastised the testimony of witnesses for Mrs. Cantos as "perhaps the most incomprehensive gibberish that this court has ever heard. ‘The jury clearly should have reached a contrary verdict,” he testimony’’ that was ‘singularly deficient in any familiarity with many Of the scientific principles applicable in automotive engineering." Zoning Pleas Before City Commission $93400 Grant WASHINGTON (AP) - The Economic Development Administration has announced a $93,500 grant to Escanaba, Mich., expansion of sewerage and water facilities. The city is matching the grant. The project, designed to serve expanding industry, includes plans for development of a 60-acre city-owned tract into an industrial park. Several planning commi.ssion recommendations are to be considered tonight by the City Commission at its regular weekly meeting. ^ Among the reedmmendations is a parking district rezoning proposed Tor 541 Cameron. City planners favored the proposal. ★ A second rezoning recommendation — this one for denial — involves requested rezoning for a gas station on the northeast corner of Telegraph and Hazel. The City Commission meets at 8 in the commission chambers on the second floor of the City i Hall. Elected to Post compass more than just county jail houses^ for he concluded with this general statement: “The United States Constitution does not forbid a state to control the use of its own property for its own lawful non-discriminatory purpose.’’ ★ ★ ★ Aiid he likened government authority in this field to the right of a private person to guard his back yard against trespassing, for he also said: ”11)0 state, no less than a private owner of property, has power to preserve the property under its control for the use to which it is lawfully dedicated, NOT VERY SURPRISING The decision was not very surprising. In several recent cases various members of the court have demonstrated increasing impatiehce with civil rights protests. Jiist last February, when the court reversed the conviction of ^eHbottisiana-Negrees who re-fused to leave a public library. Black thunderecl from the “It is time to sit up and take notice and think where we are going.,’’ Dissenting from that 5-4 decision, Black, an avid defender of free speech, said that while “the right of protest should be kept sacred, I shall never agree to any opinion or holding that peo- Scout Campaign KALAMAZOO (AP)-A 1,206 acre camp site in the Manistee National Forest and a service center here are the goals of a $600!000 fund raisingi drive to begin next week by the Fruit Belt Area Council of the Boy Scouts of America. Deer Kill High MACKINAW CITY (AP) -| Mackinac Bridge officials said! Monday that 951 deer were cat^ ried across the bridge by hunters by 3 p.m., two days after the DETROIT (AP)—Dr. Herbert Upper Feninsulp hunting season H. Metz has bben elected vice-opened. This is more than 100 president of the American Acad-above the total reported at the|emy of Maxillofacial Prosthet-same time last year. 268 W. Maple, Birmingham STOREWIDE REORGANIZATION SALE MASTER TAILORED VESTED SUITS REG. TO ’85 IJIIO Exclusively Ours Choice imported and domestic suitings in handsome patterns featuring textures ond solids. Stripes, pin-checks, herringbones, more. Richly tailored vests included. World Famous, Hand Tailored 1D0% Cashmere DUTERCDATS 4 'IS" The most luxurious coats of all , . . tailored with exacting core to bring out their fine, natura) beauty. Available at this remarkable saving only because of our drastic mark-downs for this sale. Reg. 3^.50 Zipirned $9 4 80 RAINCOATS NOW £H Reg. 49.50 Men's < $0440 SPORTCOATS NOW OH Similar Drastic Reduefiofts on.fntire Stock . Nothing Held Back 268 W. MAPLE, BIRMINGHAM, MICH. Put ypursdf iathis picture How? It’s simple! Just call ^52-9191^^1 wickes trained remodeling itoff will be ot your service in the privacy of your own home. At no obligation to you, a complete accurate estimate of your remodeling project; ROOM ADDITION —, KITCHEN — RECREATION ROOM — ATTIC — DORMER — PORCH — BATHROOM — GARAGE — SIDIN&— ROOFING — HEATING. No “Guesfimates" or hidden costs, you know in advance every detail and cost. Your satisfaction assured by America's largest modernization contractor. _ PLANNING«CONSTRUCTION«FINANCING home improvemeht service East Side of Route 5J 2 Miles South of Cdl Today - Collect 752-9191 ROMEO HOURS: Monday Thru Friday 8 A.M. to 5 P.M. Saturday - 8 A.M. to 1 P.M. THE POXTIAC PRESS. TLESDAV, XOVEmEEK ]J, N, y. Officials on Offense in Topless War NEW YORK (AP) - City and state authorities have begun a crackdown on topless waitresses in an apparent effort to keep the West Coast craze from gaining a foothold in New York. Police arrested two topless waitresses on a charge of indecent exposure Monday night, and took them into custody for the first time since they began working last Week at an P ' Side Manhattan supper club. * ★ * As the waitresses, Ruby Diamond, 28, and Florence R. Mayer, 27, left the Crystal Room supper club fully clothed, several patrons cheered. Others booed. Also arrested was the club’s manager, Chester Von Savage, 51, charged with permitting indecent exposure. MADE DEBUT with ribbed “Poor Boy’’ top in stripes of pink, orange and plum complemented another painting, “Quebec Farm.” Texture played its part too with dimension, both in fabric and art. t * * The event; which runs through Saturday, will feature the art work on display from 9 a.m. until 9 p.m. and fashion shows daily at 4 and 7 p.m. Another “first” at The Pontiac Mall took place Monday as the Merchants Association and area artists combined talent’s to produce “Artistry in Colot.” Coordinated fashions took the spotlight next to paintings whose color tones matched or contrasted.,Above is Judi March of dearborn (left) in a vivid Kelly green pants suit. Hen outfit is linked with the “Spanish Girl” oil done 'by artist, Jo Griff ing of kivoniaj at the right. i- Those questioned who liked the traditional dress cited its symbolism of religious dedication, for its inspiring of respect, and for the security it suggested because of its far lulari^, ★ *■ ' ★ In negative or undecided replies, those questioned mentioned lack of comfort, the “medieval” look, and the unhygienic aspects of long skirts. It is interesting that religious affiliation influenced likes or dislikes. More than one half the Catholic laymen liked present religious dress, but less than one fourth of the Protestants did. ★ ★ ★ The 1965 directive prescribed that “the religious habit, an outward mark of consecreation to God, should be simple and modest, poor and at the same time becoming. In addition, it must meet the requirements of health and be suited to the circumstances of time and place and to the needs of the ministry Involved ...” SOME COMMENTS Some comments of the sisters to the questionnaire: “Yes, the religious habit should be in keeping with the needs of the times . . . Habits that lack simplicity often repel father than attract others to their ideas.’^ ★ ★ * Comments of lay persons Included, “Yes, the sister’s work in many orders is far removed from a cloistered convent life. The traditional long, full-skirted habit and long veil appear confining and even dangerous in some jobs.” ★ ★ ★ Or, “No, they would be just another civilian if out of their present clothing.’’ Many of the lay respondents were concerned about “the fringe benefits of personal respect that they felt a sister derived from the religious symbolism of her traditional dress,” Sister' Mary Claudelle found. She wrote that “change cannot be made abruptly, especially in the saqred areas of society.” ★ ★ ★ But whatever the ultimate change, she added, “it seems evident . . that the religious symbolism of the traditional garb is so deeply ingrained in the consciousness 6f people who identify religious persons with their special clothing tliat during the transition period a modem adaptation ... which will still convey the sense of a consecrated religious woman will be necessary.” BPW Meets 'The Waterford-Clarkston Busin essand Professkmal Women's Club met recently ' for dinner at the Howes Lanes in Clarkston. Mrs. John Landon showed slides to the group of her trip to iJurope this past summer. THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, ^66 B—5 I think that we all have to check on our mental and emotional outlook periodically, to sM whether we are tak- Over half You do if you can feel, the ihoulder straps. If your bra gaps out at the cleavage. If the back hikes up. If your bra is too tight or too loose. M.m Jeel it at ali-i* jhe wrong bra. That's why we ask you to spend five minutes in our fitting room with one of our expert fitters and several Ball bras, five minutes in our fitting room will give you a better figure for life! GRADIHTI CORSEnERES To Help You Bobette Shop 16 N. SAGINAW CHARGE ACCOUNTS PARK FREE FE 2-6921 ing a dim view of life or a vibrant one. Our approach to living is much more important that what happens to us. Miat one person may clur $19.00 $34.30 $55.90 I., rrlimrllinK anfl r«lilcm. ((;r«Hi|m rxlra). e. R. HASKILL STUDIO ONE MT. CLEMENS ST. CALL TODAY - 334.0553 PONTIAC ■ TBim wpaetoranti iMlp aw selva eonisstton • Contains no nareetlea or anO- DISSOLVE (S> THAf’ M dwtoaooldwith CheracolDf "'1 OUR SALE PRICE 39 MM 5 GREAT STORES Charge .account service—Pay all utility bills _________at any Perry Pharmacy hiii‘riAC-689 East Blvd. at Peny FE 3-7152 PONTIAC-1251 Baldwin Near Columbia FE 3-7057 BiRMINGHAM-597 S. Adams Next to A&P Ml 7-4470 WATERFORD-3417 Eliz. Lk. Rd. at MBS FE 8-9248 TB0Yfc287B W. Maple-Sonteriat Plaxa Ml 7-7010 Untrimmed Dress Coats.... ^55.0 TO The coat to make your wardrobe complete. It's the dress coat iTT single oV double breasted styles. Black and colors. Elegant Lizard Always in style, this luxurious shoe will take you smartly anywhere, anytime. Brown, Black Or Beige. In high or mid heel. Sizes 5 tp 10, AAA to B widths. $29 Matching Bag Avoilabla . HURON at TELEGRAPH B^6 'lllK 1U>A .iAC l>HKhS. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1966 • your * ♦ Christmas portable typewriter Headquarters! iiOfflnSIzi Keyboard-Pra-Set Tabalatar mi may Other fuHsiz§ features in the taDiw; ^^SMUTH-CORONdC - Corsair lOWp um jPHICE $4995 LAY-AWAY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS! **S8 Yeari In the Downtoum Pontiac Area** l23N«HiSi(|iniwSl fX>FE248l Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Boyd of Lake Orion, an-nouncfe the engagement of their daughter, Patricia if ay, to Donald Bfuce Ford, son of Mrs. Fred Edwards of Moreland Avenue. May vows in 1967 are planned. Latest Mark HUTCHINSON, Kan. W) -Ernestine Gilliland, librarian at the Hutchinson Public Library, has a new entry for the list of things found in books which have been returned. In one book recently, returned by a reader, she found a barbecued rib stuck within the pages. Pick Table Accessories for the holiday Season Ahead—For Gifts, Wiggs GoUeetions Is Onfp of the Largest Around! Spode's "Blue Bird”, a decorative pattern in yellows & blues. 3 pc. setting; dinnerplate, salad, btead/butter & cup & saucer. ..$17.25 Salad bowls in walnut, monkey pod, pottery &. crystal abound at Wiggs. This set in burl walnut has 1 large bowl, 4 individual bowls and servers..... .$22.90 Selections In.Milk Glass for Your Table—A Gift! Wiggs large collection includes reproductions of famous old pieces, plus some in more contemporary styling of today. A lovely gift for mother, bride, for Christmas or an anniversary. A. Flower Baskets, from............................... 82.75 B. Paneled Grape goblets and sherbets, each.............. 82.25 C. Old Fashioned Honey Dish ............................84-.00 PONTIAC 24 Weft Huron Street /n Daimtmim Ponliao Ftl4-nU DoarnussoPM. BI.OOMFIBLD HILLS 4080 Telegraph Rd. At iMUgLakti Hd. " WIflQ Lace Gown Is Worn by the Bride Mary Louise Coronado wore a floor length lace gown train when she became the bride of Michael Morrison on Saturday. The evening ceremony took place in Auburn Heights United Presbyterian Church. She is the foster daughter of Mrs. Flora H. Byers of Auburn Avenue, Pontiac Township. Her husband’s parents are the Merritt Morrisons of Orchard Lake. The bride’s shoulder length veil fell from a pearl tiara. She carried feather chrysanthemums and rosebuds. Karen Norberg >vas maid of honor with Donna Patrick of Auburn Heights, bridesmaid, and Debbie Morrison, junior maid. Best man was Daniel Dep-zinski. John Barnhart and David Oliver were groomsmen; Neil Ashley and Donald LaBarge ushered. A reception was held in the church parlors. Wearing of Fur Returns to Men Without a report from “Gen-tlemens Quarterly,” we’d never know this: in medieval times, the wearing of fur was largely restricted to the male. A man’s social importance or office often was designated by the fur he was permitted to wear. Judges, for example, wore ermine. In this century, fur coats mainly are a woman’s wrap, but males are taking bold steps. First they put fur linings incoats. And now, for daring males. Gentlemen’s Quarterly shows a double-breasted coat of silver hair seal; a brown pony skin coat; a leather-piped coat that looks like astrakhan but actually is anorlon adaptation. Plaques and wall accessories like those shown in the corner setting • above are now available in kit form. All mnterial and supplies are included. Finished primitives are also available in individual gift boxes. Combining modern furnishings with Early Amefican artistry, Paul Krauss, AID, creates a sophisticated setting. A white pedestal chair with bright blue cushion serves the wall hung desk and shelves. Kits are sold in leading department stores. PTAs in Action Pontiac I THURSDAY I Bethune, 6:30 p.ni., House. Open Conf(ratuianons .. • to Our Anniversary Mrs. F. H. McGuire - golli* Henry Gertrude Overton Mr». Hou Alma "Waterman r». Hollia Henry RANDALL’S SHOPrii theCourtHonjeLol Urofoot, 7:30 p.m.. Business meeting 8:00 p.m. Open House. I Emerson, 2:00 p.m., William Wright guest speaker, meet in Multi-purpose room. Frost, 7:30 p.m.. Open House. Malkim, 7 p.m., Charles Hazel, speaker on ‘‘How to Help Your Child With Homework.” Baby sitting service will be provided. Twain, *7:30 p.m., Open House. Wever, 7:30 p.m., Lt. Tessier and dog Thor are guests from Oakland County Sheriff’s Department. Waterford ARE YOU AN EXPERIENCED INSURANCE SECRETARY? You May Be Missing an Excellent Opportunity HERE IS WHAT WE OFFER: 1. Hours to meet your needs 2. Wages according to experience 3. Education encouraged and paid for by employer 4. Opportunity to become manager of . complete office staff All Replies Confidential ADDRESS RESUME TO: The Pontiac Press, Box 17 48 West Huron, Pontiac, Mich. 48053 ClubHelps Big Families THURSDAY Beaumont, 7:30 p.m., A Euro- pean travelog will be presented by Mrs. Ruth Burman, Jan Pa-pay and Mrs. Dorothy Smith. Four Towns, 7:30 p.m. Waterford Township J.C. Auxiliary will program ‘‘Accidental Poisoning” program. Manley, 7:30 p.m.. Guest speakers, Mrs. Iva O’Dell and Ron Arnold. She's Engaged Mr. and Mrs. Wayne D. Beckley of Wixom announce the e n g a g e m e n t of their daughter, Evelyn Janett, to Pierre Tremblay, son of the Albert Tremblays of Dearborn. Dec. 31 vows are being planned. FREE MOVIE C.A.I. BUILDING FASHION SHOW LOCATED WILLIAMS LAKE RD. NEAR DIXIE HWY. DRAYTON PLAINS SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 3 P.M. PRIZES HART MANY OTHER PRIZES NEW YORK (UPn., - Large Families of America (LFA) has over 3,000 member families in the U. S. Founded in 1964, the organization is made up of families with five or more children, whether minors, or adults, adopted or accumulated through remarriage. It is devoted to the common interest of responsible parents to raise “quality citizens, with God’s help, from large families.” There are more than three million families in America today with more than five children, the organization reports. Rod Is Spared More Often HUNTINGTON, W. Va.W-Although corporal punishment may still be necessary in many cases, a local educator believes it should be used only as a last resort to get children to understand the matter of discipline. Cabell County Supt. Glin C. Nutter attributes the decline in spanking to the better qualified teachers in the classroom. “The teachers aren’t psychologists,” he explains, “but they are better trained. And, too, pidance counseling is the coming thing to bridge the gap Bfetween the parent and the teacher.” Swob Spatters Touch-up paint jobs are easy and neat with cotton swabs. After a paint job, remove small spatters with a turpentine-dipped swab. Lov^ey Sfeikt Organ You play piMstng maledlat riglit from tht atarti Baginnara. chlldran, adult*—anyona ca right away—tt'a to taay on Lowray,. .and to aaty to ewni Tha Siariet brings you Lowray'o play many txclUng and txclutiva effacti. •tWt *HMto • VIbnU tor nluUu •HMto • Soto tabt oatoiil voloto^ roiin«otoptaaiboo»a. . USE OUR LAYAWAY PLAN POR CHRISTMAS DELIVERY REAL BARGAINS IN ORGANS 6 Used ORGANS from $495 S Vied PIANOS from $350 NEW PIANOS Con$ole$ and Grands, Chickering, Fischer, iMwery, Kimball and many others Gallagher MUSIC CO. Open Nights 'til 9 1710 S. Telegraph Fr«e Parking, FE 4-0566 YOU Wlpp AWAY CRACKS FOttEVER lUfFHlIE Cutes Crackt Saves Window Sills Waterproofs Joints StODS Paint Problems SAVES TIMEI SAVES ItONEXI CLEAN AND EAST TO USEl Don't nil craeki—bridge twem with a thin, strong patch ol Tuff-Koto and glass tabric. iRvlaible when painted. 'Pot -HotJiAe- of CoW 3139 W. Huron St. Pf 8-0427 THE POyTlAC PRESS, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1966 B-7 Vi. i • A- .. i 1 ■*' a#®’'.-'" 1 ‘ •'.-’.J Individual bouquets at each place setting are nestled in fancy-fold napkins kept 'crisp by starch. The festive formal table takes its Baroque theme from Syracuse China's “Sonata’ pattern. Thanksgiving dinner next week calls for your prettiest table setting. Rushees Go to a Party A preferential cocktail party for Epsilon Sigma Alpha sorority njshe^ of Alpha Alpha chapter was held Sunday evening in the home of Mrs. Bert Anselmi of Deer Run Road, White Lake Township. ★ ★ ★ Rushees honored were Mrs. Ernest Mallery, Mrs. Lawrence Chapman and Mrs. Robert Kraud. Reports on a recent candy and benefit sale was made by Mrs. William Kav. ★ ★ ' ★ Mrs. Richard Falls, philanthropic chairman, announced ajieedy family and an orphanage in South Viet Nam that will receive support from this year’s money project. Rushees were familiarized with a brief h i s |.o r y of the chapter given by Mrs. Ali-thony Grand. I . * * * 1 Assisting the hostess were I Mrs. A. J/liaib^a and Mrs. I RichardXalls. 77( 2 pairs $1.50- 82 N. Saginaw St. Special PERMANENTS *1050 Polly's Pointers Tuck Under Pillow DEAR POLLY — Each home- They may be sent singly and maker usually has certain after a few birthdays and Christ-sheets and pillowcases she uses mases she will have a good start for guest beds. I wrap these on a collection, for a more fresh “ensembles” in plastic and impressive gift a spoon rack place them undelmeath the pil-'might be included. 1 find girls lows of the bed they are to be love this type of gift which they used on. This practice relieves i treasure all their lives. — MRS. overcrowded storage closets, W.K. aids other members of the fam- DEAR GIRLS - Please for-ily if I happen to be away when give me if you have written a the beds arb made up. personal letter asking'for ad- it also suppUes the right linens vice by direct mail or the refer the guests Who might want peat of a Pointer previously to help. Polly’s Pointers are a printed and have received no ‘ must for me. Good. luck tb answer. I am sorry that it' is you- EDITH'--------- ' --I-----—---------—^ PAWrSALE eLOS^•UTUMtHtt IN Nnk »$988 •I, houe ^gal. paints, vinyl swimming poni mints. CLOSEOUT WALLPAPER BARGAINS Over 2 JSOO Pattern* inStdek rp-Paltad . . 89e s.r. up Room Lott (avorage room) Choice Patterns 2^8 ACME Qualify Points L Saginaw ^f| 2-3308 Open Friday *til 9 Faiding napkins into fancy shapes, has long been done by hostesses for formal dinners. The technique is easy if you follow the diagrams above. For a guide to more fancy folding and important information about care of table linens, send for a free booklet. Write to Home Service Department, Best Foods Division, Corn Products Co.. 10 East 56th Street, New York City 10022 and ask for “Guide to Laundering Table Linens.” suggest that Elizabeth put some | quest would take little time, but sort of cream on her feet and i multiply that by hundreds and ’ BUY, SELL, TRADE - - - USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! New Popularity for Sectionals Sectionals are b e c o m i n g popular once again. Actually, the sectional is one of the best ways to seat a large number of people. Conversation is easier than on a very long, straight sofa because people can look at one another. ’ ★ ★ ★ Often the new sectionals gre two - toned. They will have solid color latex foam seat cushions, and loose back cushions covered in a different color printed or woven fabric. Need Not Iron If you’re in the habit of ironing bras, stop. Now you can get a perma press bra and, says Patricia Peterman, of the-£hemstrand fashion office, same is finding good consumer response. The daily consumption of water in the U.S. exceeds 380,000 million gallons. DEAR POLLY - ’ ’ ...—---------------------J o ivAji.udri iimi, I want to2S?% rh Robert Cavenaugh and Robert 1 warn 10 requests. Perhaps your one re- j^gcKenzie Miss Thi Bride of T. G. Haven Margaret Ann Thill, daugh-(er of the JoJm Henry Thills of Lakeside^-ferfVe, and Timothy Gley Haven/son of the ArthuryG. of Jeanna femie, both White Lake Township, exchanged recent vows in St. Patrick’s Catholic Church. An A 1 e n c 0 n lace bodice topped a white crepe sheath gown for the bride. She completed her ensemble with an elbow length veil of illusion falling .from a satin and seed pearl headpiece. She carried a colonial bouquet of white Sweetheart roses. * * * Mrs. John Sitko was her sister’s matron of honor and two older sisters, Mrs. Michael Somervell and Theresa Thill were bridesmaids with Mrs. Michael Thill. James Haven stood as best man for his b r o t h e r, along ,Hdlh.ush.fi,r s Michael Thill, ankles before putting on her support hose. I find this ipakes the hose stick firmly. — BARBARA DEAR POLLY - I keep a clean cellulose sponge in the vegetable bin of my refrigerator to absorb excess moisture. We use broken pieces of hollow tile as a bed in our outdoor grill. Hhe unevenness of the tile pieces leaves air space for a good draft and they are easier and simpler to handle when cleahing the grill than are other things.-MILDRED DEAR POLLY - Spoons make a different, yet inexpensive, gift for a daughter, niece or favorite young friend. They can often be ordered from advertisements and can cost as little or as much as you want depending on whether or not they are plated, sterling or the novelty type. you see why this is impossible. No one regrets this more than as I would so like to have time to write each and every one of you dear friends. — POLLY. Anyone submitting a Polly’s Problem, a solution to a problem or a favorite homemaking idea will receive a dollar if Polly uses the item in Polly’s Point- The couple left for a northern honeymoon after reception in the Middle Straits Community Association build- Use Silver Often By using silver regularly, you not only enjoy it moret but you can keep it clean without a lot of special effort. LEARN A PROFESSIONAL SERVICE! Paramount Beauty School MODERN NEW FACILITIES 26 W. HURON Phone: FE 4-2352 li^mnER A PRODUCT OF LONGINES-WITTNAUnt Mu Mlnwl A-Fnhlan braolM, S45.fS Riahi; MlnBM T-Foihtm hnnlM, I45.9S C«ntar: Harfmny DD-Hnftd (ryiMl. / li Pioc* M mm our Present Perfect Wont to dolighl hor with a jtruiy spliciai k • Witinauor 'round hoi, wriW. Chooto f •poelol gift coilociion of oiogantly eroftod lodiot' wolchot in a vorioty of intpirod dttignt. loeh contains Wittnauor't prociiion-provod Shock-guard movomoniforon-tho-dotdtpondabiiity. ' Use Security Charge or Michigan Bankard FREE ENGRAVING Check Ik for Quality piamoadt Bloamrield Miracle Mile Near Cunninghain'o Bluomrield Plaza Telegraph and W. IV^pIe FfOhchlicd Jowlar far Unglfiai A Wlllnoaar Wolchjii BobEvansFanusOld-Fashioned Sausage Stuffing Recipe Now the traditional turkey comes in a broad breasted small bird, why not make two and stuff each with a different stuffing. Baking time is cut in half and the whole family can choose which stuffing they prefer and also there will be twice as many drumsticks. Bob Evans Farms Sausage is becoming a tradition for tasty, delicious meals any time of the day. Here is a delicious recipe for stuffing. Old-Fashioned Sausage Stuffing 1 lb bag of Bob Evans 8 cups (dried or toasted) Farms Sausage bread cubes (or 4 large tart apples prepared seasoned *4 cup chopped celery mix) 2 teaspoons salt 1 small minced onion Yi cup milk (optional) ^ Brown sausage bits in a skillet until it is cooked. (Lightly browned.) Core and chop apples into Yz inch pieces. Combine all the ingredients (including sausage drippings) and mix together to blend thoroughly. Stuff fowl loosely. Variations: Prepared seasoned stuffing mix may be used in place of bread cubes: use amount according to package and size of bird — adding browned sausage and other ingredients. Or Use 4 cups cooked rice in place of bread cubes. (Be sure rice is not overcooked.) Add Yz cup finely chopped pecans and Yi cup finely chopped mushrooms. Please reinember: there is a big difference in sausage — in the way it is made and how it tastes! Only by using Bob Evans Farms Sausage can you be-sureef all theeld-faBhienedceuatrygQedBesa because. all styles include hams and tenderloins. DRAMATIC, CONTEMPORARY ANEW design for today OIMEIPACHAFT* DELUXE STAINLESS A deifm of sophisticated simplicity. Carefree and beautiful. Never needs poI< Uhing. Always fresh and lovely. See th« exciting Wlntersong pattern, today. ________________ i«aN.WM*Mrf KM1»1 MIMSft ' O^E«wlii0.«|O OpMhMqrbMilio* CHILDREN OUTGROWN SKIS, SLEDS, TOBOGGANS? SELL THEM WITH A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED lADS. TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 3324I18L •* B—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 15. 1966 One of Michigan’s Leaders in Real Estate MAX BROOCKJnc Gets The Action! OUCHARO lAK*- Tjovefflbet The Gentlemen-. j„ the«ohder£» Octohex.2 paperI ■ . . cue aspley «« ‘’1; “ **" « .nd «ortl»hUe Shown ttiat ^ew an . nf luclc to yoa addit^®® v« r Thank You, Mr. Broock... We are pleased as punch that we "delivered" for you. To those whose business is real estate; Shouldn't you put your advertising where the action is created ... the Saturday Real Estate Section of The Pontiac Press! •.IJh Our 72 PONTIAC PRESS For^ Dial 332-8181 THE PONTIAC PBESS. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1966 B-9 KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) I thi^ik the weapons imja^ssed us more than anything else,” said Darold D. Holmes, foreman of a federal eourt jury whieh Monday convicted Robert B. De-Pugh and two other members of the Minutemen of violating the National FlrearBis Act. The jurors had seen tiie prose- AP WIraphoto HEARS VERDICT — Navy Capt. Archie Kuntze (right) was found guilty yesterday of three charges of misconduct while he headed a $60-million supply depot in Saigon. Capt. Kuntze is shown in the hearing room right after the verdict with his defense counsel, Capt. Dan Flynn, (left) and Lt. Cmdr. Tom Flynn. The Flynns are not related. The court-martial board of three admirals and sjx captains cleared the 46-year-old naval veteran of 15 other specific charges. Navy Captain to Retire as Result of Court-Martial TREASURE ISLAND, Calif. (AP) — Capt. Archie Kuntze plans to retire from the Navy following his conviction by a court-martial on three counts of miscondifct involving a young Chinese beauty in Viet Nam. The board that found him guilty Monday cleared him of three other gene/al and 15 specific charges. He headed the $60-million Saigon supply depot before (he Army took it over last May. The board sentenced Kuntze to a reprimand and a loss IflO ■ numbem file -promotldir priority list for captains. He could have received 32 months hard labor, dismissal from the service and loss of pay and allowances. PLANS TO RETIRE A decorated veteran of 24 years service, Kuntze said at a news conference that he will retire before the end of the year after surge^ for an old leg injury. He is eligible for a $700 monthly pension. The board of tln-ee admirals and six captains found him guilty of a general charge of conduct unbecoming an officer and 3 Minutemen Guilty of Gun Violations More journeys are madte oh British Rail than on any other railroad system. cufion display a 50-caliber machine gun and four smaller machine guns which had been hidden underground. DePu^, 43, founder of the secret organization, and Walter Peyson, 24, both of Norborne, Mo., could be sentenced to 15 years Imprisonment. TOe other defendant, TriJy Houghton, '33, San Diego, Calif., could get five years. They were given 30 days in which to file for a new l^ial. All remained free under bond. SENreNt^ IN 3 WEEKS Judge Elmb B. Hunter said he expected to sentence the men in about three weeks. DePugh, who urged Minute-len tq take guerrilla training to resist communism, left the specific charges that he lived with Jannie Suen, 26,.in his official quarters, allowed her to use a government vehicle and imported 250 yards of cloth by government plane for personal use. She has vanished. The board dismissed three charges against the Naval Academy graduate of violating an official order) intentional deception and false testimony to naval board of investigation. The prosecutor, Capt. Joseph R. Ross, did not make a recommendation of sentence. Kuntze-said, ‘‘I would rather go through another bombing in Saigon than through this again,” but de(^ined specific comment on the outcome. ‘‘This case was tried in the cblrtroom and that's where it should stay,” he said. Key topics Face Action by Prelates WASHINGTON (APj - The question of meat on Friday for the nation’s Roman Catholics comes up today at an extraordinary conference of bishops. Tha. 219 American prelates turn their attention to this issue after; it it * Accusing the Johnson administration of coercing the poor to practice birth control. — Using a computing machine to conduct the first election in their history. Archbishop John F. Dearden of Detroit was chosen president of the episcopal conference, granted new 'ers by Pope Paul VI and tli imenical Council at Rome. OTHER PENANCE? One of , the issues up. to the bishops, archbishops and cardinals is whether American Catholics must continue to abstain from meat on Friday, or whether some other form of penance, such as prayer and good works, may be substituted. An influential body of opinion in file American hierarchy has argued for virtual abolition of the no meat-on-Friday rule, as obsolete, It already has been abandoned in some countries, including Canada, Italy and rrahce. The ears of the composer Mozart had, openings twice the size of normal ears. Service for Exec BERKLEY m — Service will be held tomorrow for William McPherson, a Temstedt Division of General Motors exiecu-tive. The 53-year-old Toronto native, who died Sunday, had been with GM for 36 years. The London Turtle conies to town: it's a dandy of a sweater with its high and wide turtleneck styling in o skinny poor boy ribbed pure wool. Long sleeves end tapered sides, in ndvy, wedge-wood blue, golden marl, and honey green. Sizes S,M,L,XL ... $10. MAIL AND PHONE ORDERS — 682-2200 Add 4% Mich. Sales Tax In Our Men’s Sportswear Department. At All HHS Stores Impossible? Army Does It BATTLE CREEK (UPI)-Re-serve Lieutenant R i c-h a r d T. Schofield will have a new serial number soon—because the Amjy discovered Richard T. Schofield, Reserve Major, has the same one. it it ir The Army admitted yesterday thp impossible — two men with the«> same serial number had occurred. Both men are curreutty undergoing training at the Federal Center here, and the mix-up came to light when Sgt; Major Raymond "F. Bel-don in file Finance and Accounting Department noted the identical names and identical serial numbers. Lieutenant Schofield, a salesman in civilian life, said thd Army has promised him a separate serial number. it * * “There was no mix-up in reserve duty checks or mail and it was an amazing coincidence that both of us were assigned to duty at the Federal Center in Battle Creek where the duplication was discovered,” Lieutenant Schofield said. LOST NUMBER I was a 1st lieutenant in the regular Army in Germany when I returned in 1964 1 gave up my regular commission and serial number after I resigned and went into the reserves." day trial was nothing more than an $8()0 tax case on the weap- "TS. Russell Millin, U.S, attorney, told the jurors, “Freedom is what this case is a|I about. Freedom doesn’t come cheap and it carries respormibilities with it. Freedom is not to cry fire in the theater and cause a stampede.” courtroom with a big smile. “I have been told by my attorney to make no statement and I will make none,” he said. Members of the jury said there never was any question in their minds about the defendants’ guilt after deliberations started. * ★ “I think everyone was in-flitenced by the testimony given by Mr. Husted,” said. Holmes, Raithby Roosevelt Husted, 23-year-old ex-Marine, testified that he helped Peyson bury the 50-caliber machine gun under a Missouri farmhouse, and bury the other machine guns and ammunition near a cemetery. He later led FBI agents to the caches. DePugh and Peyson were convicted of having automatic weapons or silencers without registering them and of not paying the $200 transfer fee on each weapon. All three defendants were convicted Of conspiracy. TAX CISE’ A defense attorney, William J. Gilwee, told the jury in his closing argument that the six- recently were rounded up in New York, along with a huge supply of ammunition and weapons. Nat H. Hentel, Queens County district attorney, said the raids were linked with DePugh and DePugh would be asked to appear before Queens County pand jury. I After his trial, DePugh said I he wasn’t going to New York, j and'that the 19 men were not I Nmeteen alleged Minutemen!dues-paying Minutemen. CoodFood ) • BUDQIT Pfueb • NCW-MOOEBN • FASTStHVICE 'Coraed A Specinlty .... The Birch Rebm * N. S«^ntw-^»lrM...FE t4»Ky Probe Delayed on Border Issue Capifol Post DETROIT (AP) - John W. Hushen, 31, former Detroit News reporter Monday was named press secretary of U.S. Sen. Robert P. Griffin’s Washington staff. Hushen, who served as Griffin^s aide during the senator’s successful election campaign, is a paduate of Wayne State University. He worked briefly at the Flint Journal before spending eight years on the News staff. WASHINGTON,(AP) - An off-and-on effort to mend splintered U.S. - Cambodian relations is off again, at least temporarily, as the Viet Nam war! lashes at Cambodia’s jungle border. Cambodia has asked that a four-man . Senate delegation postpone until next year a long delayed fact-finding trip to the Southeast Asian country of Prince' Norodom Sihanouk, sources said today. Early this year Cambodia’s National Assembly issued the invitation for a delegation of senators to see for themselves whether there was any basis for charges Cambodia was serving as a refuge for Viet Cong and North Vietnamese troops. It was considered an icebreaking overture from the Cambodians who had severed relations with the United States after leaning toward Peking. How much is legal advice worth?—it's worth the value you place on your freedom, your property and your family security. □ Those who have consulted a lawyer know his fee is reasonable. □ Do your business rights need protection? How much do you value your peace of mind? □ A talk with your lawyer may well be the best investment you can make. There's a lavvyer in your life—Depending on the nature of your problem you consult your clergyman, your lawyer or your doctor. If you don't have a lawyer, call your local bar association or contact the— State Bar of Michigan, Lansing 48914. CANADIAN WHISKY,A BLEND,BO PROOF, IMPORTED AND BOniED BY THE WINDSOR DISTILLERYC0.,NEWYORK,N.Y. What's ypur usual? Rye? Bourbon? Canadian? Next time/ call for this elegant new import and yonll never settle for less or pay more. i Pour two drinksl-highballs or over ice-one with your "usual," one With Windsor Canada House. You'll be amazed at Windsor's smoothness. For only Windsor is custom-distilled from hardy Canadian grains and pure glacial water—and aged in the high, dry Canadian mountain air. Priced right in line with leading domestic whiskies. Because we import Windsor Canada HouW, ,and th^n bottle it here, you save on duties and other charges. So you always get this elegant import at an "everyday" price. Compare the price and the smoothness of Windsor Canada House. Thousands of Americans already have, and now make the Elegant Canadian their favorite wWsky: Why not join them tonight? WllVBSOR €AJVADA HOUSE B—10 THE POXTIAC PKKSS TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, Jacoby on NOETH *754 V AQ3 ♦ AJ983 *73 EAST *Qioes ¥4 ♦ KIOS * 1098 65 * AKJ9« ¥ 7652 ♦ Q762 *Void ¥KJ1098 “ ♦ 4 *AKQJ42 East>West vulnerable Wert North East South 1* Pass 1* 1* 2¥ 2* 3¥ 3* 4¥ 4 * Pass ^ss 5 ¥ pass Pass OpoiinE lead—* 3 By OSWALD i and JAMES JACOBY j In their own special heaven,! declarers will never be set.! Finesses will always work and suits will always break. In this mundane sphere it pays to take out insurance just in c a s e there may be bad breaks. North had quite a problem at his second turn to bid. He hated to raise his partner's f second suit with only three [trumps but he didn’t like to rebid his five^rd diamond suit; he could not bid no-trump with no spade stopper and he felt tiiat he was too strong to pass. Sp, he wound up giving that three-trump raise. South carried on to five hearts after East and West pushed him. Spades were opened and continued. South ruffed the second spade and rather wished that he had gone to a slam. Then he looked around to see what problems he could have at five and noted that only a 5-0 break in clubs or hearts could hurt him. A trump to dummy’s ace disclosed the fact that trumps weren’t 5-0. ' Then South took out the best insurance he could against a 5-0 club break. He led a club from ‘dummy. East made his best play, which was to discard a^ spade. , South won and led a second | high club. East ruffed and | forced South with another >pade but it did him no good. | Ruth’s insurance had paid off. | He ruffed that spade, ruffed a ! low club with dummy’s queen of trumps, drew trumps and ran off Ue rest ot his clubs. TTiis series of plays would not have worked if East had held all the clubs and West the four trumps but no line of play would have succeeded against that combination of cards. ■ Q_Tlie blfirffing lias TSeeni West North East South 3 * Dble Pass 4* Pass ? You, South, hold: *43 VKJ76 9Q9875 *J2 What do you do now? A-r-Bid six diamonds. Your partner ha# forced you to bid and then cue bid your opponents’ suit. He must have a tremendous hand and you should than a minimum. TODAY’S QIESTION Your partner continues to six liearts. What do you do now? Answer Tomorrow Exec Reelected . BOSTON (AP) - Thomas R. Reid, Ford Motor Co. director of v civic and governmental affairs, h was reelected regional vice pres- h ident of the National Municipal a League at its annual meeting in 1( Boston. BERRY’S WORLD Request Denied for Warrant in Rep: Diggs Case DETROIT (AP) — Assistant Wayne County Prosecutor William J. Hathaway Monday denied a request for a warrant charging U. S. Rep. Charles Diggs, D-Mieh., with illegal entry of an apartment building. The warrant was requested by Russell y. Harrison, 46? owner of an apartment on Detroit’s West Side. Harrison charged that Diggs broke a lock to a utility room in the basement of the building and that electricity and- gas were turned on against his orlers. Harrison said he had turned i off the utilities in the building! while attempting to evict ten-i ants so he could undertake' remodeling. THE WILDETS By Walt WeRcrberg Astrolo^ cal Forecast * M IVDMIT (MMWa geitions, coi^tintt. K«y h COMMUNICATION. AppHn •m*ci«lly In KMlins .........n ■Vflwrtty. Don't l#1 prWti y ot, prosTtn . . . f' I necessary, guidance. CAPRICORN (Dec. M - Jen. 19); High | cycle encourages creative endeavors, sio-1 niticant changes. Circumstances f direct action. Make knc tires. Check with expert concerning proper procedures advisable. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 - Feb. 18): ou seek might be in your own srd. It Is not necessary tr " _____It balance. GEMINI (May 21 - June 20): I perceptive you save and earn. Nes partners, associates express Interest ii your Ideas. Highlight cooperation. An plies especially to special groups, or oanizatioDi- . . .... CANCER (June 21 - July 22): Ability to withstand certain amount ot pressure . Is necessary. You could find yourself p In somewhat of a spotlight. When your product or talent is tested ... be ready iV -and POISED, LEO (July 23 - Aug. 22): Work, healtt ability to comprehend compliceted sltiH tion now emphasized. You can finis prolect . . . couid also receive VALU ABLE PUBLICITY. Don't be afraid t exploit your own talents. VIRGO (Aug. 23 - Sept. 22): Creativ forces accented. Give of yourself, brea out ot rut. It you ting your own praises, success Indicated. Artistic endeavors favored. Keep promise made to younger 'TiBRA (Sept. 23 - Oct. 22): Follow through on hunch. You gain most by sharing knowledge. Learn by teaching. Stress maturity. It petty, you invite loss. Fine time for fixing things around the SCORPIO (Oct. 23 - Nov. 21): Talkative friend could irritate you. Brit forth sense of humor ... be a got listener. You thus learn something value. Journey indicated because message. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 - Dec. 21): Details of financial deal come to light. . for visit with Individual | no might be ill. i PISCES (Feb. 19 - Mar. 20); Perfect| , get support of one familiar with ( The following is a list of recent Pontiac area births as recorded at the Oakland County Clerk’s Officr^by name,of father); Richard J. U Robert M. Boo g, 31.......... James A. terrigan, S14 Emerson . Arthur P. DcWult, Welled Lake Jack B. Hull, Union Lake Joseph P. Morpahelli, Mlltord Jim R. Pieter, 473 West Sheffield Daniel H. Plerc*, Birmingham Ralph L. Cochell, 390 Maxwell Russell G. Downhour, 3225 Lapr-Robert L. McGlashen, 9143 S oppersmith, 1016 Holbrook James k. nugnes. Union Lake (twins) Charles E. Uhnavy, 5984 Stratjidon Way Alan D. Wiley, 49 t Jack H. C. Clark, T Eugene L. Flury, L Herbert A. Lease, ( Daniel V. Nadeau,—.......... Walter C. Simons, Davisburg Martin C. M. Zernick, Keego H John W. Evans, 79 Clovese Duane Krlsh, ISl'/b North Johns, Raymond L. Latham, Lake Orion James D. Momingstar, WIxom Curtis H. Rossow, 1375 Lorraine James P. Sasser, Lapeer Kent W. Cook, Drayton Plains Joseph F. Couture, Waterford Bobby D. Dockery, 1394 Taylor Lawrence G. Flood, 100 Marlva Robert J. Pence, 3705 Galnesborough Beniamin F. Ward, 2568 McDonald Jemes M. White, 8941 Pontiac Lake Bobby J. DavS, 711 DeSota Troy A. Fltihugh, 1862 Elsmere Sidney G. HewFey, Lake Orion Richard R. Lee, 229 East Walton Frederick J. Oates, 252 West Rutgers David A. Campbell, Ortonvllle David C. Osgood, Davisburg Roger T. Alien, Rochester Gary G. Gross, 4284 Bald Mountain William M^Moncrieff, Birmingham » R. Doyle, Bloomfield H Arthur R. Greene, 22 East Cornell Frank A. Butler, 1003'/> Boston Samuel B. Combs, 5780 Graves LaVern R. Feeney, 2339 Oaknoll Freeman Gulley, 202 Rockwell Leon G. Smith, Walled Lake Robert A. Martin, Bloomfield H (twins) Ronald G. Allen, Rivard Nicholas A. Bodor, 824 WImbleton John P. Knable, Birmingham Morgan L. Poole, Clarkston ' Buddy G. Dunn, Lake Orion Cary M. c|rant, 3B38 GtaftOn John P. Leonowlcil 27 North Roselawn Garry V. Tody, Lake,OTIon Albert C. Parlpotf, Walled Lake Paul R. PIttentunf, Waterford Richard A. Rider, Union Lake C. Sloas, 329 East Pike ________ .52 West Tennyson ____ j. Sanders, Clarkston Larry W. Perry, 1025 Mount Clemens Albert L. Schaflar, Clarkston Wendall Lovalaca, 91 Calvert Ronald G. Potter, 56 Michigan DougLis A. Roblnaon, Oxford John C. LaPard, 9470 Pontiac Lake Jerry .0. Oamison, 112 Oak Hill , Frederick Suihmers Jr., 806 Orlendd Jemes F.^ndarpool, n Baldwin William D. Schaeffer, A49 South Wind- ’"^olt D. e Thomas L. McNelva, 5 Oliver E, Prbdhomm^ Gordon L. Reaves, M,„„,. Jamas E. Thomatson, 47 Whlftlald Daniel C. Arndt, Drayton Rlalhi Joseph Cptaman, $6 Orton Kenneth ,F, Horton, Oxford Edward i. Janoschka, Rochaslar Ronald L. Nichols, Cake Orion EASY ACCESS — Youngsters outside a storage area for U S. aid goods check to see what the truck is carrying. The incident serves to mustrate easy access to aid goods by anyone in Viet Nam. Officials estimate up to 25 per cent of the aid matmal never readies the people, but is siphoned off by pilferage, graft and the Viet Cong. NOTHING TO IT - The hole is ilf a wall surrounding an area used for storing U.S. aid goods and material destined for PX outlets p Viet Nam. The youngsters sneak through, run out and dash down a road with Al* WirtAhetot their loot, which this time amounts to only four cans of beer. However, the take is usuaUy greater, and most of it winds up on South Viet Nam’s lucrative black market. MAIN STREET GOODS — A neatly organized stand that could be anywhere in the U.S. by the looks of the goods oi. sale is actually a black market stall in Viet Nam. The goods, siphoned out of the U.S. aid stream in any one of several ways, are for sale to anyone with enough .piastres to purchase them. B-^11 The largest amphibian in nah tore is the giant salamander of Japan, attaining a length of five IMOKEECQ htUah^thTayUtr . | CAT ON A HOT TIN ItOOF I BUniRFIELD 8 Starts WEDNESDAY! vWinnerofB Academy Awards including Best Picture. i ^ The Case of the Disappearing Aid—2 Crackdown on Black Marketers Temporary at Best I By HUGH A. MULLIGAN SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — On a recent muggy morning. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge took a short stroll around the comer from his U.S. Embassy down a narrow, stall-lined street with . the quaint name of “PX Alley.” What he saw caused him to blow his considerable diplomatic cool Post Exchange luxury items I gay profusion glittered on every stand and shelf — ^dntage champagnes, scotch and bonded bourbon, transistor radios and tape recorders, expensive cam- FRETTER TAKES THE WORRY OUT OF DISCOUNT BUYING! NEXT 3 DAYS ONLY! Today, Wednesday and Thursday Tremendous Bargains In Eveiy Denartment! Come Sm anil Sav» Tnriavi eras and other photographic wares; a full line of GI shirts, socks anS underwear, and enough cans of ham and lima beans — the C-ration item that GIs most detest — to cater a ummer of picnics. The ambassador got the Navy on the phone and demanded that something be done. The Navy called the Vietnamese Economic Ministry and suggested that something be done. The ministry called the police and ordered a crackdown. HNES PAID The sirens wailed; the contraband was confiscated. Culprits sullenly paid their fines, which amounted to 100 per cent of the value of the goods — and then arranged for the appropriate under-the-table payoff to get the oods back in circulation. Next day the bteek marketeers were in business again, bored as Mississippi bootleggm with this tiresMne, token exercise of power. Everything was the same except the prices, which had risen to meet the new emergency. Actually, the ambassador’s stroll had taken him to only one of Saigon’s four black markets. The main one, which deals exclusively in military wares-ponchos, knapsacks, comba boots and similar governmeni issue items ranging in size J Deluxe EMERSON portable I stereo, 4-speed, extended I speakers... now reduced to a 30» TAPPAN elec. Range. I Chrome Oven, fully auto. I oven with clock and timer. I Coppertone. Repo model. 1424 Hiker BM). DRIAIR TROUBLES? IND THiSf ntOtUMS CooferafoK AUTOAAATIC HUMIDIFIER Modnaz iainato IiouMm caused by hanh,/dry, bokad-out winter air. This new Coolaro- Consumers Power Cl Teiephone 333-7»i2 7495 $ Yet! li i WeSive II Sold Bell HIP, ,.1 Gift Stamps If No One Looking Past Notre Dame T^E PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 19 C-1 Duffy's Worries Diminish for Michigan State Football Finale EAST LANSING (AP) - For the game of the year, Michigan State Coach Duffy Daugherty came up with the Tinderstate-ment of the year: “At least this week we dwi’t have thd danger of losing by ' one game. “And we don’t have the problem t)f anyone saying, “How much are you going to beat them by?” the coach of the na- tion’s No. 2 ranked team said Monday five days before MSU plays ttie nation’s No. 1 team— Notre Dame. » assume we’ll b^lhe underdog,” he added. He called the game a great opportunity. “I can’t remember once in the history of the polls that the No. 1 and 2 teams met in the final game of the season,” he said. Daugherty was worried about stopping Notre Dame’s running because, he noted, they can always pass. And he* was worried about the Irish passing because, he added, they disguise their pass plays by faking runs. Michigan State should *be in good health for the battle for the i national championship, Daugh-j erty said. j Fullback Bob Apisa, who] Inoissed two games with a knee | sprain, is expected to be ready j to play, even if he doesn’t start. Defensive linemen Phil Hoagj arfd Nick Jordan are expected to recover from minor injuries suffered Saturday in MSU’s 37-19 victory over Indiana. * * ★ Duffy isn’t too worried about the squad’s mental condition either. “I don’t think there are anyithov can possibly plav. All we limits to desire and exub-jpan do is hope that’s good enouglc” SPACt: FILLED Daug|ierty indicated his squad i East Lansing may not be the probably wtwld goi behind closed j perfect place for concentration, jgates for the serious part of iMSU's press box chiefs say a erance,” he said. “I don’t think *,, you run out of tlhs." their daily workouts. “I want to have concentration,” he said. "I want them prepared to iplay the best game record 211 spdrts writers have signed up for space, and large numbers of writers already were arriving Monday. Cassius Clay Says lerrell Is Next Has this game received the biggest build-up ever? “People have been asking me about it since last- year,” Daugherty said. But, concentrating on the Big Ten race, he. refused to comment about it before Saturday. A light plane was circling the campus three days before the season started, lowing a banner saying: Go Irish, Beat State. Papa Halas Scoffs of Retirement Talk Champ Doesn't Need 3 Rounds With Williams 'Big Cat' Floored Four Times; Referee Ends Bout in Third HOUSTON (AP) - After battering Cleveland Williams from a big cat into a puny mouse in a little more than two rounds, heavyweight champion Cassius Clay turned to Erhie Terrell and shouted, “You’re next.” * ‘ ★ -ik- “I’m ready,” said Terrell the 6-foot-6, 27-year-old Chicagoan who is recognized as champion by the World Boxing Association. They are expected to meet on Feb. 6, at Houston, Chicago, New York, Las Vegas or Toronto. HOUSTON HAS EDGE Houston has the edge i^w after drawing an indoor record crowd of 35,460 to the magnificent Astrodome. The gross gate was $461,290. The undefeated, 24-year-old Clay floored the 33-year-old Big Cat from Houston three times in the second round and once more in the third round before referee Harry Kessler of St. Louis ended the slaughter with the blood-smeared Williams wobbling on rubbery legs. The time was announced at 1:08 of the third. ★ A ★ “Terrell is next,” shouted Clay in his dressing room. “He says he’s a fighter and a singer. I’m a better singer as well as a better fighter. My main objective was to hit and not be hit. I was able to do that. I think they could have stopped the fight earlier. At the time, Daugherty said only: “1 can see overlctoking one opponent, but eight?” After Indiana’s Frank Stav-roff set a Big Ten record by passing for 316 yards against MSU Saturday, the talk turned to the Spartans’ pass defense. Daugherty pointed out that first .stringers were out of the game for much of the second half, when Stavroff picked up two-thirds of his passing yardage. The slippery field favored the pass receivers, he said, and also was a dangerous field for injuries. So he pulled standout linebackers George Webster and Charles Thornhill out of the lineup for the last 20 minutes and ■'they mean a great deal to our pass dcfen.se.” “There was nothing wrong with our pass-defense in the first half” Daugherty said. “And you’d have to say our CHICAGO i/P! — George Halas, players. They are human. -But 71. in his 47th .season as owner if an official hears no com-and 39th as coach of the Chicago ments or caijstic remarks he Bears, was asked Monday if he thinks he is doing all right had retirement plans. and may become complacent. “When 1 can't see I’m doing , ncc lu oay uui idarn good. I’ll Ix' the first to " modest way, I tryjpgssing game was more effec- know it," he said with a laugh. ° quality ol their workjtjve than Stavroff’s,” he added. Halas was main speaker at;®"^ prevent them from becom-j Spartan quarterback Jimmy the Chicago’s American Quar--. jRaye completed seven .Of nine terback Club, He commerited on| Bears have the where-|passes for 171 yards and three various topics: withal to lose games on their touchdowns. Officiating: “Officials are merit without help from! “Our pass receivers were ................. nffiPiulc ' . . - - . .-i prone to mistakes just like the “I made one big mistake,” said Williams, a 5-1 Imderdog. “I dropped my left hand and he nailed me. I don’t know why I did it.” Clay, strong and fast at 212Y« ' pounds, shot his right hand over and decked the 210%-pound challenger for the first time in the second round. Williams was up at two and took the mandatory eight count. BARflAGE A barrage of blows uifleashed by Clay with the speed of ma-chinegun fire, felled the dazed challenger again for two. The third knockdown came on another flashing volley and Williams went flat on his back. The bell sounded at five and saved Williams from a knockout. In New York, some other states and in some other parts of . the world the count is continued when a round ends. Williams also was saved by the waiving of the three-knockdowns in one round and youre out rule. knockouts. i Williams did not use a mouthpiece and suffered cuts inside and outside of his mouth. His mouth was bruised and bleeding. “My plan for the fight was to punch .— and you saw it,” saidj Clay, obviously determined toi show up to critics who say he! can’t punch. ★ * His punching didn’t impress Terrell. | ‘Hf that had been me in the ring you would have seen Clay on the floor instead of Williams,” he said. “You were looking at a Williams 34 or 35 years old, a Wan who was wounded and once weighed 159 pounds. t * * “It is not the same Williams that I fought. A man is stupid if he thinks he can come back after what he went through.” RIGHT ON THE ‘BUTTON’ - Heavyweight champion Cassius clay smashes a right to the head of Cleveland Williams, snapping back the challenger’s head (top) and sending him to the canvas (left) for the third time in the second round of their title bout last night at the Astrodome in Houston. Williams was down (lower left) when the bell ended at the count of five. Clay knocked him down again in the following round and a technical knockout verdict was awarded the champion. ‘ ^ ^ ’ > Karl Sweetan Gets Corset' Rookie quarterback K a r lie o r s e t to protect his injured 1 Sweetan of the Detroit Lions will be ready to play when the Lions itake aim at the league-leading Baltimore Colts at Tiger Stadium Sunday, a team physician said Monday. ribs, “We took several X rays Monday and they showed Sweetan had suffered severe bruises but no fractures,” said Thompson. : sometimes open by 10 yards,’’ Quarterback Rudy,^Bukich who i Daugherty said, has .said he will retire'?'“His an-. cwmoho ® nouncement may be a bit pre-|^’^^^*' SEYMOUR mature. I am an expert on re-! Notre Dame’s star receiver, 6-tirement, having done so twice 205-pound Jim Seymour, myself as coach.” ;is an outstanding player, Daugh- Evaluation of Bears: “Weiei'ty said, haven’t played 'as well as we| “He has height and such lioped or as some people pre-i^aick moves, the same sure dieted, but we haven’t played as!as (MSU end) A1 Bren-badly as some people think, outstanding speed,” he Nothing has happened to,®®'*^' ^ * * I cause me not to think we have ' ^ , . , , the nucleus of a fine team. And , Daugherty said there wouldn t ..we have able replacements for ^ f ^ defensive plan some veterans who may move Seymour, along ” You can t change your pass Quarterback L a r'r y Rake-ping into the 10th straw, former Georgia star who p™®-’ he said. “We’ll just is in his third year on the eyerythmg better.” Bears’ taxi squad: “He is com- Daugherty gave the scouting ing along verv nicely and \ ^otre Dame to his think .he will be in the gameif^^ * day, and the players did some running, but no heavy work. Assistant coaches Ed Rutherford and A1 Dorow scouted the Irish for MSU. “Both were very impressed,” Daugherty said.’’They said this is a team that has everything — size, speed, g«)d coaching and a happy blend of running and passing. “One of their greatest strengths ijs their defense, he added, “and they have broken games open with their punt returns, kickoff returns and blocked punts.” Last year, when MSU was ranked No. 1 and Notre Dame No. 4, the Spartans scored a 12-3 victory and held the Irish to minus 12 yards rushing and just 25 yards passing. But Notre Dame is better this year, said Daugherty, because later in the season,” Rough Ranger Boosts Points NEW YORK (AP) - Rugged Reg Fleming is throwing his weight arpund the National Hockey League again and his I New York Ranger teammates are muscling their way into the individual scoring race. Fleming, the NHL’s penalty king last season, was tagged with 37 penalty minutes last week for a league-leading total of 47, according to weekly figures released today. Between brawls, however, Fleming scored three goals and added four assists to jump from 3 77th plsoe tie in scoring to 3 share of 16th place. Big Payday for 'Cat' in Short Fight By Associated Press I T 3T- Ford Denies Report of Ptessure to Sell DETROIT (UPI)-Detroit Lion owner William Clay iP’ord has vehemently denied a rer l^t he has come under family pressure to sell tiie club. Roger Stanton, publisher of the weekly Football News, said in the issue 'published Monday that Ford bad been urged to sell the’^team because of the bad publicity it has received this season. ★ ★ ★ Ford denied the reports, however, and said he enjoys the club and has no intention of selling it. ★ ★ * A Lions spokesman said tiie article was wrong and that all current Lions players are under signed contracts. Stanton had said some Lions j veterans reportedly i^had not I renewed their contracts for J this season and were playing I out their options, > _ J . .T.U J Sweetan guided the Lions to a . Dr. »rd TtompMd S««lai. “"did pay Sunday.,,,^,. With a specially built fiberglass * * *I : He said he had injured h'isj ribs a week earlier in the game | ; with the Chicago Bears and that j he had reinjured them Sunday when he was tackled in the first wirtphoto WINNER — Cassius Clay, AWAIT COLTS winner and still champion, “If Sweetan is ready, we’ll moves triumphantly to his beat the Colts Sunday,” said corner after vanquishing an-Cleveland Cat’ Williams the Aldo Forte, chief scout of the' other challenger for his heavyring-scarred veteran of 16-years Lions. weight crown last night at of pro fighting had the consola- “Baltimore is ripe to be tak-! Houston. The “Louisville Lip” tion of a payday of about $250,- -phey're ready for a fall.”! stopped Cleveland Williams in OCO. Clay’s share of jhe gate porte watched Baltimore beat' three rounds, receipts and the closed circuit ^^tianta 19-7 last Sunday. i television radio, films and oth- ★ ★ ★ I iiitir kick off the Michigan Kidney | I The crowd, paying from $5 10^°“"^“ f,*" P ^ !$50, topped the mark of 23,306 :P’edg>ng himself as the firstj lured by Henry Armstrong » “w a Ik i n g kidney Fritzie Zivic at Madison Square, ,, 1,- Garden. Jan. 17, 1941 althoughi the announcement of his the gross receipts were not a ^^‘niuries however, the foun-, CHARLOTTE, N.C. - Horace record. , i^^on selected Lion kicker Garo McKinney, former ! ♦ * * , YeP/em>an. who Signed the first I The indoor live gate record ofi^*^^ ^ coach, has admitted conferring $511,010_was racked up for weekend with officials of Pistons to San Again Fall Francisco 'Them Bones' May Stir Anew between Floyd Patterson and Ingemar Johansson at Miami 11*^ Beach’s Convention Hall March! 13, 1961. Vvdb 1 dLKcU UU lUI llic; • A* J » «U WccKcIIU WHil UlllCldib Ul third heavyweight title fight“P®" jthe Baltimore Bullets of the Na- AOendancp—35,4M. Gross g*le recelp*$-t«1,29C ajj;.^sh.r. 0, llv. Williams'' share of live gi Duffy Cites Growth ! (I7Vj I Radio recelpts-t100,000. Closed circuit receipts—uneviilable. i Clay gets 50 per cent tt ancillary | EAST LANSING -, Michigan State football Coadv^ Diiffy Daugherty reports 283-pound left end Bubtjp Smith was once an 89-pound weakling—“when he was three years old ” tional Basketball Association. McKinney told The Charlotte News he might possibly return ' to coaching in the NBA, but in-jdicated the job at Baltimore had ! not definitely. been offered to ' him? n Baltimore, last in the league ywith 13 losses in 18 games, re-jceptly fired Coach Mike Farmer : and replaced him with Buddy i Jeannette who..also serves-as I Bullet general manager. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — ,of ‘,he game and were seriously Rick Barry’s sophomore jinx challenged only once more. The seems only to have hexed the | Pistons moved to 85-81 three other clubs in the National Bas-i minutes into the fourth quarter, ketball Association. But Barry scored six and TTie slender blond forward i Thurmond smasht'd through a was the NBA Rookie-of-the-Year|dunk shot for eight points with-last season for the San Francis- out an answer as th°e Warriors rolled to their sixth without a . loss this seqson at home. DETROIT SAN FRANCISCO G F T G F T DeB'c'» J 5-2 17 Ba^ry 17 10-10 it CO Warriors. This season, the Miami graduate is the leading scorer in the league. His 44 points Monday night helped both his average and the Warriors, who defeated the Detroit Pistons 115-104 for their fifth straight victory in the oply NBA game of the night. o#rr’o'»' Barry hit 17 of 30 from floor and all 10 of his free throw 'ouii-D«»7oit i?, san Fran attempts. He also took 11 re- Atiendanc* 2,433. bounds and led both teams with six assists. On Sunday, he hit 19 of 26 from the field and seven of eight from the line against Detroit. What Barry hasn’t done this campaigns.to get the Warriors into fiM place in th^Wesiem Divison, center Nate 'Thurmolfd has. Thurmond scored 20 points and pulled down "30 rebwnds. More importantly, he kejjt the PMons outside by blocking iSirf their close-in sliots. CMU Harriers Finish Thifd j NORMAL, HI. (AP) - Centml Michigan University placed third as Western Illinois Utiver-sity won the Interstate Into-col-legiate Athletic Conference ctom country champimtship Monday. Western Illinois had 28 pointti^ Eastern Illinois had 37, and CcaK trhl 70, Individual boiiorsi wnit to Dennis Bohleir for tbt{ Ihird ’Die^ Warriors mnvj'd_ahead to conseriitivF ypnr Hk jstay after the first five minutes time was 19:44,1. C—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 15, 1966 Victor's Untouchable Coach Killed . 1 TORONTO ifi - jf^athy Kusner GRAND L E D G E, (UPI) -oT Arlington, Va. riding Un- ^ Gorman, 36; Grand; « won opnn pers fault arrf out competition' two-car intersection accident in -at the Royal Winter Fair Horse the city. Show Mo^ay night. Danny Lo-, Gorman also coached thej pez of Glen Head, N.Y., was baseball and wrestling teams at second on Australis. the school. -T Season's Been Rough on Buckeyes' Co^ch CLOSEOUT SPECIALS 0^ TIRES! NYLONCordlir^ CMMANDIB Whitewalts slightly higher NO MONEY DOWN 8.00k14 BLACK $1295 Tubeless Plus 2.09 Fed. Tax The Straight-Talk Tire People 111 North Perry PONTIAC FE 2-0121 Junior Paces Record Race by Villa nova NEW YORK m - CharUe j Messenger, a ^year-old junior;' I from Baltimore, set a meet rec-| lord in the IC4A Cross countryjj !championship Monday and led]! |Villanova to the team title with j ! a record point h)tal. j Messenger, the runner-up toJ Georgetown's Eaman O’Reilleyi last year, raced overthe five-i mile Van Cortland Park course iin 24:15.6, breaking the record, set at 24:24.2 last year by O’-1 Reilley. j Messenger won by 50 yards, over Richard Sharkey of Michi-|gan State taking the lead at ] Cemetery Hill with one mile to go and pulling away from the Spartan. I Tom Donnelly of Villanova I was third in 24:30.0, followed by teammate Frank Murphy in 25:00.0. POINTING TO BIG GAME - Ara Par-seghian, Notre Dame football coach, had no cause to worry in his 64-0 rout of Duke last weekend but this week the No. 1 rated Irish AP Wiriphete must point to their biggest game of the year '^gainst No. 2 rated Michigan State Saturday at East Lansing. Bing Devine in Met Post George Weiss Retires in New York The Election is over-but everybody Votes for a Shelton Shelton offers great bargains on ’67 Pontiacs and Buicks Get the Wide-Track winner of the low price field-TEMPEST! We have all models, for immediate deiivery! BUICK TREMENDOUS SAVINGS ON BRAND NEW ’66 PONTIACS and BUICKS Save the ’67 price increase plus a substantial discount BIG-BIG SAVINGS ON ’66 DEMOS SHELTON POmiACmK., 651.5500 855 S. Rochester Rd., Rochester Open Monday, Tuesday, Thursday Until 9 NEW YORK (AP) - Bing Devine took over as president of the New York Mets Monday, but as he graciously said: “This is George’s day. ★ ★ -k For standing next to Dftvine was George Weiss, who had just ended one of the most successful executive careers in baseball history. ★ ★ ★ , Weiss served as general manager of the New York Yankees from 1948 through J960, winning 10 pennants. He started Casey Stengel on his successful career as a manager by hiring him to manage the Yankees iri 1949. ★ ★ ir ' ‘ And Weiss struggled for five years with the New York Mets, who completed their best season in 1968, finishing ninth and drawing 1,932,693 spectators, a New York National League record. Oakland Community College’s Highland Lakes and Auburn Hills campuses don’t begin their regular basketball schedules until after Thanksgiving but they will have a “preview showing” this week. Both are entered in the first Schoolcraft Community College Invitational Tournament at the Northville Community Center Thursday, Friday and Saturday. “This culminates a lifetime of the happiest kind of work I could ever indulge in,” Weiss ©een' said. Oakland CC Quinfefi to Debut in Tourney The six-team tourney will have a doubleheader the opening night, a tripleheader Friday and conclude with another twinbill. Tipping off the competition with Auburn and Western Ontario Tech at 7 p. m. Their game will be followed by the 8:30 p. m. Monroe-Schoolcraft encounter. The two Thursday losers will clash at 6:30 p.m. Friday. LA DodgersDrop 3rd Game in Row NAGOYA, Japan (AP) - The Los Angeles Dodgers, lacking the power and color that helped them win the. 1966 National League pennant, suffered their third straight setback by losing to the YOmiuri Glants-Chunichi Dragons All-Stars 4-1 Tuesday. loss also was the Dodgers’ seventh against nine wins and one tie in their 18-game goodwill tour of Japan, .the most suffered by an American major league team against the Japa- Lorain (Ohio) CC will meet the Auburn-Western Ontario winner in the 8 p. m. Friday semifinal, Hi^land Lakes wHl engage the Monroe - Schoolcraft survivor i4 the 9:30 p. m. nightcap. . The third-place consolation will be 7 p. m. Saturday and the have lost to North Carolina, championship game will follow at 8:30 p. tn, The Northville Community Center is located in the former high school building in downtown Northville. This is the first season of collegiate athletic competition for the Oakland campuses. Each entered a team last winter in the Pontiac recreation department’s men’s program. LosfAngeles . . Takahashi (5), <^ll*Stars/ 6h« Seutsugu. Bend, shovel, lift, throw Bend, shoveJ, lift, throw Bend, shovel, lift, throw Bend, shovel, lift, throw Bend, shovel, lift» throw Bend, shovel, lift, throw Esiid, SliZV BaV SXrgeV"rr:'5L|SSr-. creek and ^ I The Arrows ended the season We Is had a two-year contract| Sunday by taking a 30-12 defeat i with the Football Company. The at the hands of the talented MFL^ contract expires December Ist^All-Stars at Wisner. Lone blem-and there has been a reported ish, in regular season was the disagreement as to its renewal. 6-6 tie with Flint. The coach operated a fran- ★ ★ * chise in Mount Clemens for sev- Team awards went to Tony eral years in the league. When Odncal. back and end as the the MFL was reorganized in Mo.sl Valuable Player’ on of-1964 with Flint and Pontiac be- fense and to Don Quinn defencoming member cities, the Pon- sive end, as the MVP on defense. The league MVP award went to Day ton’s Pistol Pete Mikola-1 jewski, who this week has en-| tered the camp of the Detroit' Lions as reserve quarterback behind former Arrows Karl' Sweetan and Tommy Myers. GO KING EDWARD /Imef/ca's Largest Selling Cigar WHEN if^ff INSURANCE <‘ ' COUNTS 01 Special Protection for NON-DRINKERS Call This ManToday! Dondero Finishes Fifth - itiac Football Company contracted Wells as coach and general manager of the Pontiac entry. Poll Championships Settled By The Associated Press jschool football championships injpoll of spdrts writers and sports-j climbed to 12th in the final poll, Battle Creek Central Saginawjthe final Associated Press poll.lcasters across the State. Central,[once-tied Kettering finished 16th Buena Vista and Galesburg-Au-| Mighty Battle Creek Centrali®"®' ^’eld down first place*'— one place ahead of twice-gusta won mythical state high took top spot in Class A jp the beaten Birmingham Brother Saginaw Buena Vista grabbed Bice. Land Spe^d Try by Art Arfons Likely Today Kenneth G. HEMPSTEAD 1 medicar: [LECTRONIULIY MIUYZES YOUR CAR’S THOUBI.eS *M£DI-CAR(A trade name of Method Master Corp./ I is a specialist in ' BRAKE REPAIRS WHEEL BALANCING SHOCK ABSORBERS the top position in Class B by a Shrine added luster to the narrow margin over Franken-Royal Oak grid picture by plac-muth. Both undefeated teams jng 12th in‘ B’’, climbed after Buchanan, long-j * ★ * time leader, lost to Dowagiac 14-! Battle Creek Central crushed 7 Friday. I Battle Creek Lakeview 21-7 Fri- * * * day to complete its undefeated Galesbur|*Augusta nipped De- Saginaw Buena Vista troit St. Ambrose for the mythi- hnished the year with a 40-0 kal e 1 a ss C-D championship teshing of Tawas Area, Gales-Middleville fell out Of the top po- burg-Augusta had finished its sition with a 31-7 loss to x* ' stock Park. BOARD MEETING Paul Parks, president of the Football Company, who is expected to be reelected to the position by the -12-member board s sau- kXATs, soon as possible lo discuss the “f ykis*., contract.” successful testi “TWo,.« ! u- cuns on the salt flats of western .mJnf K a "”"1 Utah yesterday and announced' whe her the^F^thall Company speed record later today, would meet his demands. IHSURANCE 185 Elizabeth Lake Road Conur Murphy $1., ( Blocki I. of Pontito Mall Rh, fE 4-8284 ; HEAVY-DUTY NEW TREAD FRONT END ALIGNMENT MEDI-CAR'S tow, LOW PRICE WILL DELI6HT YOU AND WE filVE YOU A LIFETIME GUARANTEE (SEASONAL GUARANTEES ON TUNE-UPS) PHONE TELEGRAPH at JAMES K. 7:30 Til 7:80 335-0302_ (Just North of Orchard Lake Rd.) MON. thru SAT. Among the Oakland County Class A schools. Royal Oak j Dondero tumbled to fifth place 11 after tying arch-rival RO Kim-1 ball (who was 30th) last Fri-I day. Warrior, 76er Dominate NBA Meanwhile, Parks noted that ‘‘The style of football of the Midwest Football League has generated tremendous enthusiasm among Pontiac area fans indicated by the fact that many people have already ordered season tickets fcr next.year.’’, “We will have a Christmas gift certificate available for I those who wish to give season tickets as gifts," said Parks, I Arfons said the weather was: ideal and his jet auto. ‘”010’ Green Monster,” handled '“likej a dream.” He said he would try to go through the measured mile! twice at about 610 miles per! houc - just enough to break, the record of 600.601 held by Graig Breedlove of Los Angeles. Breedlove set the record one year ago Tuesday. ARC MIG MICRO Unbeaten Bloomfield Hi CLASS A WELDERS When in Doubt See Hanoute and Ask for Bob Johnson^ Al Hanoute's genial General Manager. With the exception of four years in the U.S. Navy in the Korean war, Bob has been selling Chevrolets and Buicks here for 11 years. His brood experience includes 2 years at the General Motors Institute. Al Hanoute’s Chevrolet-Buick, Inc. 209 N. Park Blvd., Lake Orion 9. Jackson Parkside '(9-0* 10. tia Bay City Central (7-2) NEW YORK (API - Rick, "ui Barry of San Francisco and! Philadelphia's Wilt Chamber-! “ lain continue to dominate Na-« lional Basketball statistics, « beiqg among the first 10 in four 5*“ of the five major categories. ^ HOW WOULD YOU LIKE TO EARN $260.75 PER WEEK Barry is the scoring leader. BROTHER RICE, / Detroit Redford, , Roseviii^jage in games through Nov. 13; rSwIsl^n.^eS second in free throw percent-oi«“''‘G"and''Hl«n'' Dettoit’'ca“h*ilfc'with ,874; tied for 10th in 0a"r'''’''sho'?eT^Lake°v^ew ’^RocHESThR''percentage, with .490 hint Southwestern, East Lansing, Dd^! and 10th in reboUnds, lith 161. ____ i Chamberlain leads in field ream. Record ® Pol, pts percentage, with .623; sec-2' F^®aHkenr5uttr"(8^d)'* ‘’'®’ rebounds, with 291; sev- i wiM'"" M enth in scoring, with 279 points i. scdth*Haven (t'lV 39 f^r 3 23.3 average and eighth 7 Reed*"c[ty **(7-0) assists. With 66. ' 10. Dundee (6-0-1) ' 17 Others, in order: Dowaglec, ROYAL OAK SHRINE, Detroit Cathedral, Elkton-Pigeon-Blayport, Dearborn Sacred Heart, Calumet, Corunna, Marysville, Redford St. ...... ....... Benedictine, Negaunee, t Divir Child, St. Johns, . Ishpemlnj, Detrc Team, Record 1. (Salesburg-Au^usta ' 3: Flint St. Matthew' Player, Team g FG FT Pts. Aye 1. Barry, S.F......... 15 20 174 574 38 2. Robertson, CIn. .12 126 13) 383 31. . Onsted (7-0-1) . St. Ignace (8-1 . Clinton Boysvil 9-. Saginaw Ss. Peter & Paul (H) 1 10, (fie) Armada (8-1) 1 Alpena Catholic Central (8-1) 1 Youth Ftostels to Start Series Tomorrow Night others, in o(der’: L'Anse. Newayg'o* The annual American Youth y^mV,*^ L^k^ Li„dCT,''6.Tour! en%i^^^^ ^‘*"1 scries wclcomlng r*'st joh“Tl°nn°cI,uni5'r®^^^ skiing season will be-| Mig and Micro (torting wage $3.50 plui fringe benefit!. Presently working 11 houri per shift, six days per week. Overtime dt time and one-half. Apply in person between 8:30 A.M. and 5:00 P.M. ANDERSON TAHK AND MANUFACTURING CO. 2702 North Oort Highway -- Flint cen^?i,^7r«eJie aty siJgin at 8:20 p. m. Wednesday at' Detroit's Ford Auditorium with a personal appearance by Dick Barrymore. Complete Modemization Serviee ★ REG ROOMS . . from ’799 ★ ROOM iMmONS.. from $999 ★ KITCiiEIIS . from Barrymore, probably the best known ski film maker, will nar-' Irate his new.color film “A Cool I Breath of Fresh Air ,” much of I which was taken at the 28th [world championships in Chile [last summer. 'The Hostels’ Adventures Skiing series will feature an-j other well-known “ski photographer, Warren Miller, who will show his “Ski on the Wild Side” movie Nov. 23 at Ford Auditorium. Tickefinformation is .available at the hostels’ office, 273-8560. ■ With At Long At ■ 8 Ytart To Rtpa) I g Your prosont homo oguity I can moan instant pooco H of mind to you. No mgro !| throotoning lottors, on-I ( noying phono colls or ■ bill celloctors. Through Surgery Slated for MVP Oriole B our loan program ttii ■ oro no closing costs, ■ application loos o ■ application foos and • your loon it complotoly ■ protoctod by lifo intur-: B onco at no odditionol FREE ESTIMATES FE4-4507 CALL ANY TIME - DAY OR NIGHT DETROIT CALL 538-8300 CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRIES 19115 W. 7 Mile Rd. BAL’nMORE (iP) - Frank Robinson the American League’s Most Valuable Player, in 1966 is to undergo surger>' on the cartilege in his right knee. A spokesman for the Baltimore Orioles sai3 the 31-year-i old outfielder would undergo the jsurgery at an undetermined date in either Baltimore or Los 1 Angeles. : B onco at no odditionol I • cost... whot moro could g you ask? FOR 100% GUARANT;EED OFFICE SERVICE 1^1 |\| KELLY GIRL DIVISION IvLLJ phone 338-0338 SERVICES 125 N. SAGINAW, PONTIAC ■ Now You Can Pay Off ■ All Those Bills! 2 Our Convaniant ■ HOMEOWNER’S LOAN PUN Offart Up To j *5.000 S Photse In -Your ■ Application Today! i FMIILr ACCEFTMCE • ■ CORPORATION ■ ^ r*WI|T MUlWN**"* FE 8*4022 j| MOTOR MART T" THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1966 Markets, '66 Mart Byword MARKETS Caution Over LBJ Surgery ^ Two-Sided Selectivity The following top pwces coverlrig «al«s of loeally grown; produce by grower! and sold by them in wbolesgje^cKage lots Quotations ^reliurnished by Uie Steels Help Mart Cut Losses Bodies of Five to Be Viewed NEW YORK (AP) early tors daftipening the list, Produce By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK - The word I “selective” got a strenuous [workout in Wall Street this year. !lt was the all-’ around catcall. Inquest in Arizona's The word was borrowed from i Mass Slayings Set another part of market-j FRUITS Applies, Cortlind, bu . Apples, Crab, bu. Apples, Delicious, bu. Appies, Delicious, Rijd, bt „ p 1 a c e, having MESA, Ariz. (AP) y, popular Apples, McIntosh. I Base Opens Ahead of Time Cabbage, Curly, bu. Cabbage. Red, bu. Cabbage Sprouts, bu. Cabbage, Standard, i. Cello Pk., carrots, top Cauliftewer, Celerv, Pasc_., elerj, ^tf dl.'^' Kohlrabi, di. **bch. Thelhouse Electric were other fac-of M stocks at noon was down larly tors daftipening the list, ana- 1.2 at 297.1 with industrials off this afternoon as steels ad-lysts said. o a „;i « o j * i *- « vanced. Republic Steel raised Losses of key stocks ranged-^, ’ ^ ° ^ utilities off its dividend. Trading was mod- mojly from fractions to more'- , , ^ , . , . . . t FT er on the American Stcik Ex- male coroner’s jury convenes["”"“farc“om- 11 erage at *»r4roff sliwed Uifling d«lS ‘l>' »l "'■‘'•'i 11 HSSal^?aSu,T;r. oVTM/1laurh.e;rby‘"'i‘S:lrtk d 3M over all market oontinn ^ _ conwiMr De-!laughing 18-year-old gunman as lective” price ■ 11^ to decline as Wall Str^tjSTEADIER SHOWING [vices. Computer Sciences, Eck-|they lay,on a beauty shop floor.[increases with across-the-board (AP)-This $50-million U.S. Air ^ cauuuncuy wuiu, as ii M shoved renewed caution in thei A steadier showing was made erd Drug,.Flying Tiger, GCAl While Robert Benjamin,types that had fallen into dis- Force base began combat oper-ij. appear' It has been 3wfaced of President Johnson Si by electronics, aerospace issues ^Corp., Jervis Corp., O’Okiep Smith, a Mesa High School sen-favor. attons today 45 days aheadofysej^j^encouragetradingrath- 3'oo surgery scheduled for tomorrow, and airlines as the session con-Copper and Supermarket Gen-ior, lounged alone in a four-man, * * ★ schedule. g,. jfigp discourage it, for r?Li,n!FlT£fJFi! , eral. Syntex fell more than 2 Jail cell, an inquest into Satur- Its usage on Wall Street grew Gen. Hunter Harris, com-'ggn,n,issions are made on 2TO combing deficit in the U.S. bal-| Electrical equipments werejooints. Off a point were Louisi-jday’s slayings of which he is- - - — mander of the U.S. Air Force hi'trades r,{ payments and the|soft. jana Land, National Video and charged was scheduled for |the Pacific, said the new basei -k * -k this year as stock prices deteriorated. Superficially, it meant that greater care was to be exereised in stock j^hases. But adviser anj buyer'often interpreted it differently. A tyjfical use was this: “With prices declining, selectivity is the key to successful investing in this year’s stock market.” The sentence suits its purpose. It cannot be challenged. But who mild be anything but a selective buyer? TUY HOA, South Viet Nam THE OBVIOUS , Analyzed, any encouragement to be selective is merely to advise someone about the obvious — to select only good buys. An investor must, of necessity, seek , good buys for he cannot buy the whole market. Spnve of the mystery surrounding the word arises from its intent. It is a sales word more than a cautionary word, as {^"spreading strike at Westing-^' The Associated Press average Simmonds Precision. Mesa Justice Court. Peppers, Sweet, p Potatoes, ») lbs. Potato«, 20 lbs. Radishes, white, ( The New York Stock Exchange —NEW YORK (API-Following h W selected stock transactions on t York Stock Exchange with noon —A— 'Huge Troop Force Needed 1-50 Alleg Cp .10# '■SO AllegLud 2.20 '■lOiAlliedStr 1.32 2« 26 r 22H • Ga Pacifit LETTUCE AND GREENS En-tive, bleached Escarole, bleached, I Lettuce. Bibb, p. bsk Lettuce, head, dz. ,,-iAmBosch .60 IJJiAmBdcst 1.60 3.Jfl|Am Can 2.20 AmCrySug 1 ' TSiAmCyan 1.2S SOOlAEIPw 1.44b-1.25]AmEnli nphenol .70 32 1994 I lacon 3.2Se 33 8094 7 46 S994 59 4 26'/J 26'4 ~H---------- Rohr Cp .80 RoyCCofa ... RoyDut 1.79© RyderSys .60 ■ R'od W(X)d, the lawyer who 1 -'4^3® arranged psychiatric treat- 1 389b + ment for young Smith, said Mr. ! i/1 and Mrs. Robert L. Smith “ex- I I tend their heart-felt sympathy ; ’TvJ-’^lto relatives and friends of the . Victims. 53Vi 53'/j - g ^ “They are interested in con- 19 26^ 25'/. 25’/e - va fcrring with authorities in the ? 3^ 3»4 + w near future in an effort to, help 60 52^ sf"'’ 5ivT - ''X the world over to detect 16. 291A .29 . 29'^ 541 such latent mental illness in a S 2! and thus, if possible, to: ■■ - ......... prevent any more of these m-^nayisis (IDAi will permit quicker air strikes! ,pi,g th,s year were in support of ground operations against realizing any short-term in the midsection of South Viet through selectivity. The h^®ni. decline was one of the-worst ,, .t .. since the great depression. It Lt. Gen. William M Momycr. broad. It took chief of the 7ih Air Force, said 25 per cent* of paper val-Tuy Hwa will 'play a rote m ou*" «es increased flexibility m cloee ^ jrop of this size has been support of ground ffirc- ’ ■ exceeded only three times in " modei'n market history — in uafdmt ^j,en jt fgU 89 per cent; in 1937, when 42 per cent of the ;! LANDING WITNESSED market disappeared; and in other Air *^hen the decline was 26 war in as little as five years. | ^nd Vietnanwsc officials ‘^nt. According to Sevmour j [witnessed the landing of^ t^ LIST DECLINES Bonita Sue Harris, 18, the only adult survivor of the shooting, remained r under treatment in Southside District Hospital, The student beautician suffered i \A/’ \ki / head and arm wounds and was! /Q Vv 111 Vr Of expected to be hospitalized several more days. EXPRESS GRIEF ’ w 52H-^'b| Smith’s parents issued a,fgj.e research director belives fighting in the war '4 1517X-I-94i through their attor-ijt eoyjj take “anywhere from i;,4 72;.-94jney expressing grief over “the|haif a million to two million”, « 47.4-94[terrible tragedy wrought uponju g troops to win the Viet Nam I Harris, Momyer [mankind by their disturbed' --------- • iw Jew iboy. WASHINGTON (UPI) - The 2iyd‘and 3rd Corp* Pentagon’s new guerrilla war-have seen some of Dietchman, casulaties wouldi^**^®^ Super Sabre Jet fight-| Nearly all mutual funds, pen-compare with those in the!®*'on the 3,470-foot gj^g funds and institutional in-Korean war, during which 33,629 *‘*‘'*'^^y- ... vestors reported declines this A 10,000-foot runway—capable of handling the nation’s heaviest bombers—will be completed by May along With the rest of the I 399. nepSt 3 9'/t 1 46'.t -f —, .... 38 29W 29W 29'A — 9S(;k 1.20 4 409.4 4094 4094*;, “■ • 35 32 317,4 32 . ,2 5294 '5294 5294 + 55 281/4 2774 28V4 + 8 8794 871/4 87'/4 .. M 32-33; Browns Grade A large 47-48; 1. CHICAGO BUTTER, EGGS CHICAGO (AP) — Chicago ---- Ekchange — Butter — 0 Cp i .20 25 2194 2194 2194 - n B 66'/4; 89 C 65. Balt GE ■ ------- "■ -..... Beaunil CHICAGO POULTRY * 1 Beckman CHICAGO (AP)-(USDA)—Llve^ultr^ I Wholesale buying prices unchanged lower; roasters 23-25W; special, fed -B— 4 34% 34H 34% ,. 14 12% 12% 12% .. 19 43% 43 43V» - Bell How' .50 137 i siBenguet .05© e BethSti 1.50a Bigelows .80 Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (APl-(USDA)-Cattle 450;!buc scattered —^------------ BorgWar 2.20 Briggs Str 2f 23 33W 33 33Vj -t s 23.00-23 ... .....3 24.7ii choice 24 25-24.75; dividual choice I 21.50-23 00. Hogs 200; a fi 2 200-230 lb, barre mixed 1, 2 and 3----------- U.S. 1, 2 and 3 300-400 Vealers 150; not enough to 950-1200'Budd Co .60 Bulova ,60b 12 36 36 - 21-3#'^ 38 49 57% 57 16 2BVa 28 39 42 41% burg .60 irmsii .80 l-w.... SherwInWrri 2 Sinclair 2.40 Sm^erCo 2.20 SoPRSug .50© American servicemen were killed. From Jan. 1, 1961, through last Nov. 5, a total of 5,823 U.S. servicemen have been killed. At present there are about 350,000 U.S. troops of all services in Viet Nam. Dietchman, a staff member of|Viet Nam for seven months. Defense I |i t li;iiJSSS,Ti. News in Brief 12 1594 15',4 15W -• remote areas conflict in the ‘ 35 syT’s IfA ^'J WAITED FOR ARR1VAI,.S Pentagini’s advanced icseaidi Waterford Township police 6 6»s 65'i-t iji Police said young Smith told projects agency, gre investigating a burglary at them he waited for student hair-1 * ♦ * . .. iCarroll’s Drive-In, 4145 Cass- Leading Jiis squadron in was Lt. Col. Alan Wockerfuss of Webster, S.D. He has been in year, even though all were selective. Gains, of course, still may and will be made over a longer term. Asked what his opinion of the stock market was, J. P. Morgan once replied: “It’ll fluctuate.” This was a safe forecast. The market always had fluctuated. And in the firture, if it didn’t fluctuate it wouldn’t be a market. SouNGas 1. SouthPac 1. South Ry 2. IllCenInd 2,40 Imp Cp Am IngerRand 2 Inland StI 2 . D 60 S ...'''istd'Brand l',30 /, Std Kolls .50 + i,4!stOII Cal 2.50 35 3^' dressers of the Rose-Mar Col-| IDA is a private organization!Elizabeth, in which cigarettes, V 2974 2994 + Bcauty to arrive for,working primarily for , the;cigars, gum and candy, total 47 29v! 29' 29'4 jwork, then forced the first ar-| Defense Department Whilej value of $48, were taken. 16 '374 nJS nS’'' '‘ rivals to lie in a circle and [there, the 43-veawild Dietch-1 ^*21 levj Tr* killed them to “geY known. . .get man did studies on countering I W^row May of 6210 As- 12 19'^ ?8v ?9^ ,myself a name.” jinsursenev warfare such as that!cension. Independence Town- 31 64vJ 64'J 64'.. - '/. Dead are Mary Margaret 01-[in Viet Nam. ship, reported to Oakland Coun- w mi 68H 68^1^4 sen, 18, Glenda Carter, 18, and ivimpu ®^’®*'*ff’s deputies yesterday ?? + '''’Carol Farmer, 19, ail students; ... ..................the theft from his home of a Selectivity I9 similgr. .Bqyers; mqst always be selective. They cannot be anything less than that. Inti Packers Ikjstudebak ,2Se x22 |974 399 5^ 5^4 ^ ^ Joyce Sellers, 27, the only cus-! I** >*'« **®'" 'i’t + S tomer in the shop, and Mrs. |*^®®®arch on such wars, includ- ‘ : llilif? c 'T 3”^ IIZ . I Sellers’ 3-year-old' daughter, | i**S “communications mobility iJ 2”^’ IS T ''4 Debra. systems analysis and behavioral power saw and polisher, valued at $150. JohnlWan 2.20 JohnsnJ 1.40a JonLogan .80 4 170'/4 170'/. — '/jj Tampa El /J 44'/4 44',', -I- '/.I Teledyne I 4 471/4 4794,-I- '/.‘Tenneco 1. lots o( U.S. 1 and .. and gilts 21 00-21.25, 220-240 lbs. 20.25-21.00; I Cal F Sheep 500; a couple lots ch prime 90-110 lb. wooled lambs 22 cull to good slaughter ewes 4.00- CHICAGO LIVESTOCK r CHICAGO (AP)-(USDA)-Hogs 4,000; mostly 1-2 200-220 lb. butchers 212S-|f 21.75; 225-240 lbs. 20.00-20.75 ; 240-260 It > 66 . 6694 -F > H'/l 12'/, - Slaughter ste » lbs 24.1 * CelaneseC,p 2 steers 25.00-25.50; Cent S lilCerro 1.60b e '850-1,000'lE Yiaughter “ '‘’‘■ Champ s 2 20 Sheep 300; choice and prime 90-105 'b.'Cb« Oh 4 lambs 22.00-22.50; choice 80-105 lbs. 21.00- Oh'""' 9tP i 32 37'/, 37'/| 37'/, + I 53,'4 5294 53 - '4 Bloomfield Twp. Exec Will Head WSU Fund Board 39 28%- 28% 28% - Lear Sieg .70 LehPCem .60 Leh Vel Ind Lehmab 1.97© LOFGIs 2.80a LockhdA 2.20 x29 ( 4% 4% 4% - »; ; Chi P I 31% 30''7 31% + Chi Rl Pac (Chris American Stock Exch. NOON AMERICAN yORK (AP) — Following Is elected stock transactions on tl I Stock Exchange ijith no< Chrysler ,CIT Fin 1. CiliesSvc 1 ClevEIIII t. CocaCola 1 Colg Pal .9 ’CollinRad .1 l.lOt 32 26'/, 26'4 26'/, 66 479'. 4794 4794 3 40 39"s 40 17 2994 - 29 29'-i 16 3094 30'/s 3094 + —M— 23 32'4 3194 3194-x9 21'/« 2194 21'/4 + 9 2294 22'/. 2294 + 27 37 3694 37 + —V— 11 14','. IST-s 14'/s . I 4894 49'/4 + 31 ; , 2694 2 18 57V. 57 16 3894 3774 j/'/t 4 56 459/. 56 45 51'4 509/. 51 45 78 77'/. 7794 15 894 8'/. 894 470 289/. 27'/, 28 Robert W. Hague of 58 Manor, Bloomfield Township has been named president of the Wayne State Fund Board of Directors. A 1949 Wayne State University gr^uate, Hague is comptroller'" for the Federal-Mogul Corp. of Southfield. studies. He set forth h>‘s ploomy, if realistic, view of the war in an article — “Impossible Choices in Asia” — for the Washington Post last May. He told a reporter today he had no reason to charge his conclusions now. Another gigantic dish and rummage sale; Wed., Nov. 16, ' m.. At C.A.I. Bldg., Williams Lk. Rd. —Adv. I 25'4 USPlywd 1.40 US Rub 1.20 US Smelt le US Steel 2.40 Unit Whelan 'CBS 1.40b ' 3994 39'4 3994 + >n Edis 1.80 122 3 Data Cont Equity Cp .18t Fargo 0"‘ V.', i li’’ 1 Cooper Ind 1 ■16 2 7-16-1-16 ,Corn Pd 1.60 t CorngGWk 2a 2'/. 274- '4 coxBdeas .40 If . CrouseHd .80 I,,..- .. CrowCol 1.871, Fly Tiger 1,24f 23 3 306 12% 12% 12% + % 7 17% 17%. 17% — % —D— 15 23 23 23 — % . 1 27% 27% 27% -f 4 Day PL 1.32 7 7 28% 28% 28% + Vz [ 35% 35%- 3.*!% — ilwarnLamb f "j Westn AlrL 1 M6nsan 1.60b Mont out 1.52 MontPow 1.56 MontWard 1 ■ 33% — %lwoolworth 23Vs — % Worth!— ' Among other area residents 4 named to offices on the board 4 were Mrs. Olga G. Dworkin, 2 I'4 31401 W. Stonewood, Farming-/! + '4^011 Township, first vice presi-7 + ,'*|dent, and David A. Goldman, 28682 Millbrook, Farmington ^ +■'4 Township, a general vice presi-4 + ^. dent. ^ ’’; Others elected to six-year , + '. terms as directors are Raymond E. Hayes, 1160 S. Lake Angelus Shores, Lake Angelus; Leonard I'J Zi!,J Holston, 27561 California, Lath-4 “ rup Village; and Calvin D. Bo- X + iX gart, 17580 Dorset, Southfield. Two of his main conclusions dealt with the alternatives of continuing the war at the intensity ' prevailing when he wrote his article or greatly expanding the U.S. troop commitments. The latter seems to be the course the government has followed. 1.20 —X—Y—Z— Xerox Corp i 55 181 178 1 YngstShf 1.8 Zenith Red Copyrighted Sales figures Captured at the Wire 20-YEAR WAR Dietchman felt that the war could last for 20 years, with American casualties on the Korean war scale, if it were fought at levels prevailing last spring. At that time there were 235,000 U.S. troops and 75, ' Communists. Stocks of Local Interest Figures after decimal points are eighths OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Quotations from the NASD are repre entative Inter-dealer prices of approxi nafely 11 a.m. ■ • • ■ hahge throughout Inter-dealer markets AMT Corp. Associated Truck ’21.0 21 12 0 12 12.5 13 / Services awk Rubber C roe Auto Eqt; Air Firm's Runs Increased; Add Sunday Flights standard Airways, Inc., has virtually doubled its weekday schedule and begun a Sunday setup from Pontiac City Airport to Metropolitan Airport and back. President Allen Tucker announced today. Weekday flights leaving Poi> tiac will depart at 6:30, 7 and 8[30 a. m.; 1, 2:27 and 4 p. m. Weekday flights returning to Pontiac leave Metropolitan at 8 and 10 a.m.; 12:30,1:30, 4:30 and 8:30 p. m. Sunday flights leave Pontiac at 1:30 and 3:25 p. m. They leave Metropolitan at 3 and 5 |p. m. Alternatively, he said that ani American commitment greatly [1 increased over that level would] bring rpauirements that w e “virtually open-ended.” AftlllBted Fund Chemical Fund . 7.W 8.50), . 15.74 17.21 1 Dreyfus ..12.15 13l26 Keystone Growth K-2 ., . .. 6.10 6.61 ' Ma-Jg. 7nvestors^ Trust"* , 15.87 1,7.34 , TelTvI^on'^EIertrottics !, ' L30 ^!o5 ] W?“Funr 16.26 17.67' liiiiiili Reservations for the 20-minute flight can be made at the Pon-Jltiac City Airport or t h r o u g h either the American Airlines [counter or Gate 19 in the South [Terminal at Metropolitan. Fare “The company will confirrh so he can walk off our plane and right onto another.” Tucker said. Successfuhinvesting re^ ! I 2394— >4 DenRGW 1 1 3'',-f '4 DetEdls 1 4 , 457'4— '/.i Det S , had passed 75 feet of stolen cop-1 Unress otherwiM^^ of divi-|per Cable through a fence when 20 110% 110% nov^ 18V4 18’/4 18% 33%| 33% 33J/7 28% 27% 28 m the la y I police intervened. The cable was ^valued at $1.45 per foot. 107 67% 63% i 45 57 56V4 56% - • plus stock dividend. 4 —194 I N EngEI . - 94 NY (Tent '4 + '4 Nla^ MP n slock d Technicol .40 32 Up Control 20 329 Copyrighted b^ 1 2 .13'4 33's : 25 26'4 26' . ; 20 105'/9 IOS'4 3. 45'/. 45'4 ' l-Dectared or paid in 196? plus slock dividend, e—Declared or ' " r.|so far this year, f—Payable ' It Ing 1965, estimated cash vali /. degd or ex-distributlon .date, e I year, h—Declared or ^aid aft I year, an accurhulative issu Treasury Position Disqualification Petition Denied in Bank Case the stock for itsf good, dependable income. If product prices can*be raised and if efforts to tighten cost controls are effective, profits — and ultimately share prices—should improve. DETROIT (UPD - Wayne » a omitted, deterred 6i ---- ■ • dividend meeting *’*^'®*''*X®®1, > 1W6 plus Stock, 49.939,031,385.a lock during 1966, ; 25 12374 123'4 12394 - Net change Noon Tues. Prev. Day Week ago Month Ago Year Ago . 1966 High 1?65 FUgh 196S Low EG&G .20 6 213.9 IToif 3«;>,|'hvlC«;;P .......130.2 --------c-.n.P't 388.0 143,9 130.2 .0 13 197/4 19'4 19'4 -F 40 18'4 17'4 17H -F —. OhIoEdli 1.20 Otis Elev 2 Outb Mar .80 Owenslll 1.35 OxtrdPap .80 . x-Ex dividend. v-Ex dlvi-|'^®'‘^ n*959'o22 314 jo lea In full. x-dls-Ex distribu- .... .. ; rights, xw—Without war-jj^ 15 mi 19'4 ^ —P— 19 3494 34'/. 3494 - I Act, or securities assumed by sud^om->!|»anles, tn-jForeIgn Issue aublect te in- 'I 1st Dividends Declared Pe- StK. el Pt Rate riad Record a STOCK jShattuck, FG; (w) 2nc tr.oa i ! (vy)-ln lieu ol t( Prev. Day week Ago Month Ago Year Ago I 1966 High „ Feddera .70a L, Yd FedDStr 1.70 25 60% 60'/. 60'/j -l'4|Panh EP 1.60 x5 29'4 29'A 2994 + ’/4 j ParkeDav 1a 5 42'4 4294 42H , Peab (Zoal 1 25 48V. 48'4 48'/} IPennDlide .60 DOW-JONES AVERAGES I 5594 -h .94 65 Stocks I- '/«I PepsiCo 1.60 11 ,72',., 72 PtizerC 1,20a 114 71 70 - ■'ijPhelp 0 3.40a XI7 6574 aS'i BONDS: . 40 Bonds -.10 Higher 1 Universal Cigar . 3pc .. 81Creole Petrol *'’^.7(^‘’. INCHEiSED 127.15—0.18,True Temper .25 •« 286.48-HI.l6, ^ REGULAR ____ 1 Am Cyanam’id .3125 0 80.81—0.031 Calumet 8. Hecia .30 0 /|.5»-0.05jCrtole Petrol . .65 0 61U-l-0.03|Mellon -Nat 8&T ' ,70 Q 82.50—0.:05iMohasco Indust , 0 *7.0iJJJlM«co-6he«MeaF— By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “Since I’m retired and ' receive Social Security, I am [ undecided about hplding 100 Interstate Bakeries purchased ' at 35., Do you think it will re- ' coVCT later?” G. L. ! * * I Q) ‘Tm saving money to go A) So m a n y varying factors] into business sometime but it’s affect the future action of a bak-| slow. A friend advised me to County Circuit Court Judge >hg company stock that I cannot :*>”y Cenco Instruments for ^ [Nathan J. Kaufman yesterday [give a specific answer. Com- ‘l**jck profit. I bought a block 45 denied a petition to disqualify[panies like Interstate are hurt[ 8*’“'f went down. Wonld you J, Circuit Jud^e Benjamin Burdick by rising wholesale prices of ^ from presiding over hearings in|flour, tnilk, shortening and bthen A) It is very hard for me td ^ the controversial Public Baidc'ingredients. Added to these [impress on my readers thd fa^t merger case. problems are greater expenses'that, the stock market, except “ Burtflek voluntarily withdrew in packaging and in meeting[underroaringbullmarketcondi-81, from % case last week, because higher wage scales. - tions, is a difficult place to jnake' of personal ties with some of Even though sales for Inter-a fast dollar. In many instances, the individuals in the merger, stale Bakeries may reach an- otherwise sensible people put y. I * k * ' [other new peak this year, earn-into stock s substantial sums >re| Kaufman, however, ruled thpt,lings may only approximate thelwhich they woul0 dream of in-ti-28 I-I2 under Court laws, a judge cAn-results for 1965; ’The reasons vesting in any other form <4 ;r cast^yi-jnot withdraw from a case. [are twofold: rising costs and the [property without tiiorough and 121 T2-29] He said the presidingjudge of jsqueeze inflicted by competitive painstaking investigation. I think ii'28 12-9 [the court could reassign the case pacing. A look at the com-you’ve been fortunate. Alftough 11-25 i2-T5!'to another circuit judge andjpany’s earnings back to 1956 rather volatile,. Cenco is a sound 1 1 i2-23:^*?*'**®*1 question of Bur-lshov^s an irregulai* pattern but istock. I woqld keep my shares 11- 28 removal request to pre-; one that has always covered the [and count myself lucky this 12 2" Judge ’Thomas Murphyidividend adequately. time. 12- 39 lilo for a foraial hearing. 1 In your-pe^iehrl-would lK)ld| - (Copyright, 1986) Ponfiac Police Quiz Juvenile on Breajc-lns Apprehension yesterday b y Pontiac police of a 14-year-old juvenile quickly solved one burglary and may clear seversl others, investigators believe. "A ★, ★ Patrolmen Richard L. Adams and ,Eldon B. Mudge 'took the youth into custody after tracing to him possessiMi of a stolen shotgun. rte gun, valued at $100, had been reported missing from the home of James Bruce, 44 Bellevue, along with a clock radio worth $25 and a tele-vision set worth $100. The clock radio and television were recovered by police from the juvenile, who admitted entering the Bruce home and also several other residences. ★ ★ ★ Other juveniles may be volved, police said. THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDA-j^ XOVEMBER 15, 1966 Demand Ban Lifting ~ ■ '■ ■■ - ''N M' Sfudenis Rap Ruling C—5 ANN AraOR (AP)-'nie student government council voted' today to break it:e uciiiocrai coaiiHon School May Reopen on Wednesday Waterford Township school officials are hopeful classes will resume tomorrow a t Lambert School, 3576 Cass-Eliza-beth, which has been closed the past two days because of a malfunctioning water pump. According to school officials, workers lack a part to repair the pump and restore the school’s water supply. j Fred Miller I Service for former Pontiac ! resident F r e d Miller, 78, of !L a n s i n g will be 11:30 a.m. ; Thursday at Estes-Leadley Funeral Home, Lansing with burial in White Chapel Memorial a I a u Toylor I Mr. Miller, died yesterday. He: ;had been employed at Oldsmo-] HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP I vnw tfvwxtcuto c • I workable niajority, and a So-LYON TOWNSHIP - Service cialist-Fr?>e Democrat coalition 63343 Eight Mile will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Phillips Funeral Home, South Lyon. Burial’ will be in Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens, Novi. Mr. Spencer, a construction worker, died ^Sunday after a long illness. He was a member of Calvary Baptist Church. Surviving are his wife, Lau-dia; his parents, Mra. and Mrs. Melvin Spencer of South Lyon; two daughters, Mrs. Glenn Etherton of Whitmore Lake and Mrs. John Steele of Flint; a son, Melvin, at home; three grandchildren; three sisters; and a brother. Detroit Detective i DETROIT (AP) - Police De-] tective Anthony P. Callow, 41, ★ ★ ★ reniained in critical condition to-' The disorder began late day at Detroit General Hospital, f last week at the school He suffered a gunshot wound in which has an enrollment the stomach while breaking up] a holdup at a North Side drive-j in restaurant Sunday. The al-i leged bandit, Thomas Kelof, 22.1 of East Detroit, was wounded ! bile Motor Division, Lansing, for 35 years when he retired in 1954. || Surviving are his wife, Edith I E.; a stepdaughter, Mrs. Ora ] Miller of Dimondale; three sis-ters, Mrs. Ada Meyer of Pon-:tiac, Mrs. Anne Branscombe in I Maine and Mrs. Mayme Tre-varrow in Greenland; and two grandchildren. twice in the gun battle with Gal-f morrow low. He was listed in serious' condition at the same hospital. If of 229 pupils. School officials said they probably won’t know until late today whether the school will be open to- Planning a Holiday Parly? Call Mabl« G<^wu at Bedell’s for reservations on your Holiday Party. Soundproof rooms to acconmodate small or lai^e groups and to assnre ^yon of complete privacy. Service for Clinton E. Taylor, 56, of 210 Meribah will be 2 p.m. | Thursday at the Allen Funeral! Home, Fenton. Burial will be in] Oakwood Cemetery, Fentoh. ] IVif. Taylor died Sunday after a lengthy illness. Surviving is his wife, Olive; 12 children; 10 grandchildren; four brothers; and three sisters. Larry Sullivan Larry Sullivan, 71, of 60 Ni-j agara died yesterday after a Hong illness. Prayer services will jbe 7:30 p.m. today and tomor-jrow at the D. E. Pursley Fu-ineral Home. I Mr. Sullivan was a memberjwood Cemeterythere.Localar-j of St. George Romanian Church rangements are by Manley land a retired foundry m o 1 d Bailey Funeral Home. : *^3ker. j Trott died yesterday. She ! I L ^ CL ij ^ member of St. James I Episcopal Church and of the I ORION TOWNSHIP - Jacob Red Cedar Chapter OES, East I Lansing. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Leonard Montgomery of Royal Oak and Mrs. Ralph Schwartze of Birmingham; and a son, James of Lansing. form than a ^cialist-Christian Democrat alliance. However on Saturday the U.S. Embassy, speaking for the British and French as well, said the position had not changed since 1949 — the Western allies are still masters in West Berlin and its Bundestag delegates have no vote. Washington wants no trouble with Moscow over Berlin when it is trying to get Soviet help to end the war in Viet Nam and to write a treaty to halt the spread of nuclear weapons. Brandt in reply warned allied spokesmen against interfering in German politics. He said the ban on the Berliners’ voting had eased over the years and the allies should he above the suspicion of party prejudice. Slides Claim Lives in Ceylon COLOMBO, Ceylon (AP) -Men, women and children have been buried in a series of landslides in tea-growing mountain districts about 120 miles from Ceylon. Rescue teams have recovered the bodies of nine victims so far. More are expected to be found, if k if At Beragala, a British tea plantation, an earthslide following a heavy monsoon rain buried a group of workers* homes. Twenty miles from Beragala another slide buried a grocery store with all who were in it. Weather experts alerted the central hill country population that more landslides could be expected because heavy rains were continuing. The earliest recorded windmills are those used for grinding corn in Persia in the 7th century A. D. Mrs. Lee H. Trott BIRMINGHAM - Service for Mrs. Lee H. (Edna) Trott, 91, of 1898 Webster will be in St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, Mus-ikegon. Burial will be in Oak- Dinmg at its best charactei^ our varied menu and delightful cocktaHs Yotir guests will be delighted that you planned your party here. 2395 Woodward at Sq. Lk. Rd. 3344561 Paul E. Urscjialitz I BLOOMFIELD HILLS-Serv-lice for Paul E. Urschalitz, 59, of l801 W. Long Lake will be 10 a. m. Thurs^ at St. Hugo of the Hills. Banal will be in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery, Southfield. Rosary will be 8 p. m. tomorrow at^ell qhapel of the William R. Hamilton Co., Birmingham. Mr. Urschalitz died Sunday after a ?hort illness. An account, representative with the J. Walter- Thompson Co., he was a retired commander with the U.S. Navy, a member of Theta Tau fraternity, Knights of Columbus, Pontiac Council No. Society of Automotive En gineers. Engineering Society of Detroit and the Retired Officers Assojciation. i> Surviving are his wife, Kathryn; tW'O sons, Reed J. of Portsmouth, Va , and Paul E, Jr., at home; a grandchild; his mother, Mrs. Edward Urschalitz of Find- ^ lay, Ohio; three sisters; and one'V brbther. Experts on Art i Going to Italy NEW YORK (AP) — Nineteen art experts, left Kennedy Inter-' national Airport Monday night for Florence, Italy, to see what they can do to help save that city’s art treasures which vvere damaged by floods. The group was headed by Lawrence J. Majewski, associated professor of fine arts at New York University. Nearly $300 Taken From Restaurant Nearly $300 in cash was reported missing from a Commerce Township restaurant yesterday following an apparent break-in. Eric Cooper, proprietor of The Little Brown Jug, 2325 Union Lake, told Oakland County sheriff’s deputies he discovered the money missing yesterday morning. * ★ ★ Cooper said $200 was ,taljen from a jukebox and another $91 from a cash box. Method of entry to the building was not immediately determmed, deputies said. Bloodmobile Coming | Red Cross bloodmo- ^ bile will be at the Bethany Baptist Church. 558 W. Huron, between 2 and 8 p.m. Monday. Contact the Red Cross, 118 Franklin, , for an appointment. Death Notices mship; I. _ . __________ _______ Robert V. Hamletti dear mother of Robert W. Hamlett and Mrs. Kent Stone;-dear sister ot Mrs. Henry White, Mrs. Leonard Schafer and Clarence D. Fullmer; also survived by seven grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Thursday, November 17, at 1 p.m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Interment In Ottawa Park Cemetery. Mrs. Hamlett will lie in state at the funeral home after 3 p.m. today. (Suggested visitirv hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m.) JANKOWSKE, NOVEMBER 11, 1944, LOUIS, EtMonte, California, formerly of Genesee County; age'74; beloved husband of Mary Jankow-ske; dear brother of Mrs. Lily Taft, Mrs. Clarence Redmond, Mrs. Lottie Smith, Fred R. and Charles Jankowske. Funeral service was held today at 1:30 p.m. at the Lewis E. Wint Funeral Home, Clarkston, with Rev. Robert D. WInne officiating. Interment In Evergreen Cemetery, Grand Blanc. JOKTES, NOVEMBER 1371944, ELIZABETH L., , 1555 Tanfield, Union Lake; age 72; dear mother ot Fred W. dopes, Mrs. James W. Howard and Mrs. George E. Andrews; dear sister of Mrs. Matilda Scott and Mrs. Mina Hays; also survived by 12 grandchildren and 10 great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, November 14, at 1 p.m. at the Cedar Crest Lutheran Church. Interment In Glen Eden Cemetery. '-----------------'n state at the KELLOGG, NOVEMBER 14, 1944, LEROY (ROY), 1088 Dover; age 47; beloved Jiusband of Lila Kellogg; dear father of Howard Kellogg and Mrs. Norma Dryden; dear brother of M. G. Kellogg, Mrs. Lynn Allen, Mrs. Lou Conroy and Mrs. John Noyes; also survived by three grandchildren. Funeral arrangements are pending at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral home where Mr. Kellogg will lie In state. KRUEGER, NOVEMBER 1966p * IRENE A.e 11642 Maxfieid Boule-vard, Milford; age 51; beloved wife of, Arthur W. Krueger; beloved daughter 6f 'Mr. 'W.jl L. Moore; dear mother of Mrs. Diana Sweeten, Mrs. Sandra Ann Pound, Chris, Walter, Richard, Dennis and Larry Christensen; dear sister of Mrs. Rita Baginsk’i, Vincent P. . and Master Sgt. Atrldge Moot’d; also suauived by 27 grandchildren. Memorial service will be conducted by Blue Star Mothers, at 8 p.m. Wednesday at the Thayer Funeral Jfpme, Funeral service will be held Thursday, November 17, at 11 arm. at the funeral home, 33403 Grand River, Farmington. Interment In Glen Eden AAemorial Park Cemetery, Livonia. Mrs. KrtMger wril He In “* -------- home. (Sugg d visiting t 0 p.m.) NEEDHAM, NOVEMBER )?, 1944, WILLIAM, 245 E................. Street, Highland; a. - husband of Mary ti Baker; d,ear brother of Charles and Richard Needham. Funeral Richardson-Bird Funeral Heme, Milford. Interment In Highland Cemetery. Mr. Needham will II in shsie at the n C—6 THR PONTUC PRESS, TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 15. 1966 Death Notices ‘ Rotwrt, , Paul, Joseph, Clifford, Michael, Richard, _______ lane, Helen Noel I and Mrs, ^rol (Rodney) Westri. Funeral service LOVING MEMORY OF D AFTER THIS DATE, N ■ Piyce, I debts contracted by any than myself. Robert D. 1681 Hopefleld, Pontiac. A YOUNG FAA/IILY MAN But for thought i loorte with Dr. John iciating. Interment ' It Park Cemetery. Sadly missed b^ 2 son: ters, 1 daughter-in-law, nd 1» grandchlldr___________ I LOVI.NG MEMORY OF O U • —"”r, Sophia Omelian, who ________ ^(Suggested visiting hoursjAnd a^Sr^'Vom” pain *and*ha7m/ hOBY, NOVEMBER 13, l«M, FRED-1the Bles”d Savtour's arm5'^°'"'°'^': RICK 0., 2555 Hallman, Water-i Sadly missed by loving daughters, ford Township; age TV; beloved! Nurenberg and Elitabelh husband of Miriam M. Ruby; dear! father of Mrs. Charlotte Stricklin,!IN LOVING MEMORY OF PHEBEi Mrs. Maxine Sanders, Mrs. Grace! Henderscn Tinson, who was so Zucker, Mrs. Helen Harrington! needlessly killed in a car crash, and WIHIam Ruby; dear brother oti Russell Roby and Mrs. Edna ”2®" ,!” • i Beatty. Funeral service will be ■ am, held Wednesday. November 16. at;i°^”*7 Ichtno hearts dSo^^' J:30 p.m. at the’ bonelson-inhA. - , ... p_.— . Furteral Home. Interment in Chapel ■ AND AFTER THIS DATE, November IS, 1W6, I will not responsible tor.any debts ON AND AFTER THIS 0 Senior chigan. SLEIGH IllbES ARE UNMATCHED FOR WINTER TIME excitement. UPLAND HILLS FARM with its new faculties can tak care of your party, large or smal Call now for reservation. 62»-Un. Hidp Wanted Mole Mr. Teylor, *74-2233, PHOTOGRAPHY lal Color. Free broct M-»079 anytime. He ii state a (Suggested and 7 to 9 p.m.; iPENCER, NOVEMBER uTlfM, CLYDE DALE, 63343 Eight Mile Road, South Lyon; age 59; beloved husband of Laudia Spencer, be- Spencer; dear father of Mrs, Glenn (Alicel Etherfon, Mrs, John (Gladys) Steele end Melvin Spencer; dear brother of Mrs. Duke (Gladys) Goniollas, Mrs. Murl (Beulafi) funeral home AnnOUtlcemsntS $50 CASH . Lost and Found iO REWARD FOR RECOVERY OF! E. Sheffield, FE 8-8728 after 6 p.m. d FAMJLY“vERY CONCERNED OVER I- lost black cocker, vicinity High- King, Mrs. V inita) Y Call 8-10 a.m. 332-3053 or 332-1835. ADVANCE TICKET SALE. GRAND OLD OPERA SHOW DECEMBER 3, 1966 Phillip's Funeral Spencer will lie In state at tie Iren. Fu-i Water :.raV hs old. Child's Rewarc - u.vv - o.vv H "- . I rc A8887. ' Township High School qRANGE AND WHITE CA1 '-■‘-r with'bell attach^, answer PONTIAC PRESS BOX NO S2 .ee Thursday's paper tor detai ANNOUNCING ANOTHf DEBT AID INC. ottice. 7V Building, branch of Detroii e Rd. OR 4-1837. On Riker lost - UNCUT BLACK A well I tiir. rwwiie, ans. to name of . E. Tennyson-Joslyn Area. SPIVAK, NOVEMBER 13, 1J6 GOLDY KABANA, 4186 Woodmor,,. Known uebi Aid, inc. to serve thei Drayton Plains; age 74; belovediPontiac Community. FE 5-1091 wife of Sieve Spivak; dear mother GET OUT OF DEBT - AVOID incT. ./iriMiTv'Ag'Ars.tle' nrs of John A. Kabana; also survived GARNISHMENTS, BANKRUPTCY rchTh.i.'hf.^ by one brother and, five grandchil- REPOSSESSIONS, BAD CREDIT! ^ dren. Recitation of the RosarylAND HARASSMENT. iino-Reward: uL 2^2962. will be held today at 7 p.m. at; We have helped an< the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. s*h0s of people with Funeral service will be held consollda Wednesday. November 16, at 9 “.'fL,?*'''’'!'’' a.m. at Our Lady of the LakesI Catholic Church. Interment in;,hf, , ra Lakeview Cemetery, Clei (Suggested visiting hours 3 and 7 to 9 p.m.) LuLLIVAN, NOVEMBER "■(YOURSELF OUT 0 Howard. Reward. 335-3241, LOST - Union lake area, elnify of Round Lake. Small male all white West Highland Terrier, LARRY,' 60 Niagara Street; age 71. Prayer service tonight and Wednesday night will be held at 7:30 p.m.'at the D. E. Pursley Funeral Home. Funeral service will be held Thursday, November 17, Bt St. George Romanian Church. Interment In Oak Hill Cemetery, Mr. Sullivan will lie In state at the funeral home. (Suggested vlslt-Ing hours 9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m.) YaYLOR, NOVEMBER U iw, CLINTON E., 210 AAeribalt, Highland Township; agl ’ 56; I ' husband of Olive Taylor; father of )2 children; also st • by four brothers, three sisters, and TO grandcliildren. Funeral service will be held Thursday, November 17, at 2 p.m. at the Allen Funeral Home, 500 Main Street, Fenton, Michigan. Interment In Oakwood Cemetery, Fenton. Mr. Taylor w ' He In stale at the funeral home. Dial 332-8181 Pontiac Press Want Ads POk FAST ACTION NOTICK TO ADVERTISERS ADC RECEIVED BY S PJW. WILL BE PUBLISHED THE FOLLOWIN(3 DAY. An additional d)arga of 50 cents will ba made for use cl Pontiac Prasa Box numbers. The Pontiac Press PROM S AM. TO 5 PM. (BONDED AND LICENSED) Morning and afternoon se:________ Mon., Wed., FrJ. Bethany Baptist Weekday Nursery School. Phone: FE 3-7881 or FE 4-0773. GIFTS. VARIETY. HANDMADE -Mon, through FrI. 1333 Gene" " LOSE WEIGHT SAFELY Dex-A-Dlet Tablets. Only 98 at Simms Btoy, Drugs. _________ DRAYTON PLAINS Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME, FE 2-8378 Established Ove-rso Years Cemetery Lots Card of Thanks I WOULD LIKE TO THANK ALL the voters who elected me as their constable: of Independence Twp, Earl R. King THE FAMILY, mank everyone for _ _ gift given to us during our recent WE WISH fS EXPRESS OUR ■ Black Funeral Home, VFW-Oxbow Post, and Oakland County Sheriffs Dept, tor their kindness and sym- our son — brother, and grandson. BOX REPLIES At 10 a.m. today there ! were' replies at The IS Office in the fol-j lowing boxes: y 7, 13,' 24, 28, 31, 37, 46, I 49, 52, 60, 61, 62, 65, 80, ! 8.)i ii» tnc Funeral Directors DONELSON-JOHNS Huntoon 'Thoughtful Service" GRAVES, PERRY MOUNT. WILL DIVIDE. SAVE 40 PER CENT. 335-6343 GET OUT OF DEBT ON A PLANNED BUDGET PROGRAM YOU CAN AFFORD TAILORED TO YOUR INCOME ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING a friendly adviser, phone FE 2-5122 before 5 p.m., or if no ar----------- cay FE 2-6734, Confidential. DAINTY MAID SUPPLIES 128 E. Hammond FE 5-7B05 ETHEL CHAPDELAINE’S CHATEAU Beauty Salon. Permanents, $10 Styles,. $2.50. Cuts, $2. 674-3349. .N'S WALLET, BLACK, ■OST: NOVEMBER 9. GERMAN SHORT HAIRED POINTER. Male 4 months old. Vicinity ot Lahser Rd.*^etween Long Lake — Lone Pine Rd. All brown head, mottled tan leather collar. Answc Major, Reward. ML4-3235. :::;THe 1944 civil rights LAW PROHIBITS, WITH (v llv CERTAIN EXCEPTIONS. (v.OISCRIMINATION BE-!•:•; CAUSE OF SEX. SINCE v: some occupations are CONSIDERED more AT-tractive to persons OF one sex than the ;■;■ I-:.; OTHER, a D V E R T1 s E-W M E N T $ ARE PLACED f-. UNDER THE MALE OR FEMALE COLUMNS FOR v: CONVENIENCE OF READ- I;); ERS. SUCH listings are ;■;■ X; NOT INTENDED TO EX- ;X CLUDE PERSONS OF y! Help Wanted ^ole^ 2 YOUNG' MEN, WELOIR Apprentice, high school grad — ferred. Apply In person lb ” "' Walton Blvd. 2 YEARS COLLEGE Training programs In alt fie__ Industry. 21-30, minimum (alary $6,000. Mr. Moreen. International Personnel 1880 S. Woodward Birmingham 642-8268 WELL DRESSED MEN TO DE-liver advertising material. $15 per evening. Car pecessary. 363-9529. I OPENING FOR EXPERIENCED 'eal estate salesmen, extra bene- ..........I person. All Inquiries —itact Warren Stout, Rd., Pontiac, Mich-Multiple. Listing in 21 to 49 for collecting and •vicing insurance debit, training lary, outstanding fringe benefits, yr. old CO. FE 2-0219 or FE Building Maintenance Engineer Our building ex-pansion has created on excellent coreer oppor-t u n i t f for a mature man experienced in building maintenance. Must be capable of handling men and working flexible hours. Salary commensurate with experience. Many company benefits. Apply Personnel Department daily between 9:30 a.m. and 9:00 p.m. or send complete resume ,to Personnel Manager at: Montgomery Ward GAS STATION ATTENDANTS, FULL or part time, days or afternoons, local references, Sunoco station. Telegraph and Maple Rd. GLASS MAN, EXPERIENCED AND energetic worker. $3 per hr. fc ^tart. ^363-4129 ^venings 624-2091. . MECHANICAL DETAILER, HIGH School graduate with minimum l year experience with drafting. Corripleft and fully paid benefits program provided, Higbie Manufacturing Co. 4th and Water St. Rochester, 651 -5300.____ ATTENTION Opening for distributor, nationaliy known beverage, estabiished rc '*-Pontiac area. Exp. not necess must be young and aggres: Call collect, 5M-0274, Mr. Co 9 a.m. to 5 p.m._____________ BARTENDER, EXCELLENT S.._ — steady employment. Sundays holidays off Tow- ■ ------ 1727 S. Telegraph. BRIDGEPORT MILL HAND. TOP rates, all the fringe benefits. 58-hour workweek. Apply M * “ Bending Engineering Inc., John R„ Troy, Michigan. dell's Restaurai BICYCLE MESSENGER, Bus Boy ' Ted's of Pontiac Mall has It mediate openings for full time b boys. No Sunday work. Apply person only. TED'S PONTIAC I CAB DRIVERS, FULL OR I —7, FE 2----- CARPENTERS, RESIDENTIAL UN- Ion. 682-1465.______^____________ ARPENTER CREWS WANT-ed, lots of work. Call Erwin at FE 3-7833 or 731-3927._____ COLLISION MAN CAPABLE OF writing estimates and handling body shop. Good working condl-*'— EM 3-4155. CONSTRUCTION LABOR. HAVE ---- knowledge of block laying rement work. Builders prolect. Homes, 628-1436. CARPENTERS-ROUGH North, South, East and West. Fore-men, crews. Individual" only. 647-4294 after 6 p.n forms, benefits.' Biff't It Maple (15 Mile) VER - MAN TO DRIVE SEMI I — willing to work In len not driving — good ' d benefits. Lake Orion are Advertising Salesman For young, progressive, dally nev paper In Macomb County. . Newspaper selling experience helpful pot necessary. Good Salary, bo and many fringe benefits. Replies will be held In strict confidetiee. Write P.O. Box 129, Utica, MIeh. HOUSE HUNTING? - CALL YOUR O'Neil Realty Company representative. He will save you time and money too. You'll get accurate ' You'lj get skilled professional c___ ne“^s and' |SIcSok'^a*7d'you wMI ARE YOU GETTING THE ADVER: receive help In all financial details. Ray O'Neil, Realtor 520 Pontiac Lake Rd. IN MEMORY OF MICHAEL Elkins, killed Nov. 15, 1965. Sadly missed by fathc- 'HOUSE OF WIGS" HAS MOVED TO THE ARCADE AT MIRACLE ™.r ,.FE andiKITTIE CALL GLORIA CONCERN-*— doll collection. 628-1261. tising support you need? Why not sell for Pontiac's fas|est growing company^ who sup-ismen with billboards, 'c”l** m't?” Corby" Join the Leader in the .Medium Priced Field of the Auto* Industry APPLY NOW FOR: Production Work (No Experiences Nectary) ALSO: QUAIIFIED JOURNEYMEN , FOR TOOL & DIE WORK OR MAINTENANCE JOBS IN PLANT ENGINEERING DEPARTMENTS All of the GM employe benefit programs will accrue as you enjoy top earnings with a winnmg team. MAKE APPLICATION AT OUR EMPLOYMENT OFFICE Pontiac Llotor Division GENERAL MOTORS CORPORATION . Pontioc” Michigan - AL MOTO \ ■r: A PART-TIME JOB hours per evening. Call 674^1^3 ’ p.m. $200 PER MONTH EkcELLEltT OPPORTUNITY DESIGNERS DETAILERS CHECKERS PROPOSAL ENGINEER Itelp Wautoil Mala ------ milling, OD and ID grinding. Day or afternoon ihitt. Steady work, overtime and fringe be**^'*-...........- ,Co. 1165 PART TIME EVENINGS -needed at once, must bt steadily employtd and S2IXI a month to start. Bernstein. 332-8670. Call 4 ' EXP'O FULL-TIME STOCK HELP 6 to take complat t. Such as: quotint and hiring. State FULL OR PART TIME PURCHASING FOLLOW-UP Young man experienced In foil up or buying, read prints, i have mechanical ability. >me CTlIege preterrisd. Many fringe benefits, steady ( ploymenf and overtime. An equal opportunity employer GRILL MAN Day shift. Night shift. Part tli Good wages and all benefits. Boy Restaurant, Telegraph GAS STATION ATTENDANT, Experienced, mechanically inclined. Telegraph arid Maple.'^' ROUTE salesman! ESTABLISHED HOUSING AIDE CITY OF PONTIAC salary $5642-$6708. Bachelors degree or equivalent w 'M LOOKING FOR has management _____ able to supervise women. Who wishes a potential of $1,500 per — .........appointment. 332-4314. Immediate Assign- ments DAILY PAY All types of temporary work available. Free insurance. Register in person at rear entrance to 125 N. Saginaw, 6:30 a.m.-lO a.m. KELLY LABOR SERVICE GRINDER. WITH PRO- SALES EMPLOYMENT COUNSEL-have the ability and de-jrk with people (la 11 Don 334-2471. Snelling and SALESMAN ABLE TO QUALIFY ' manager of fast moving truck dealership. Give li_ln first letter. Reply must be bondable. Apply in person. JACOBSON'S *......... Birmingham Service Center openings for .... , time driveway salesmen, gasoline attendants and mechanics. Days or afternoons. Starling pay *— per mo. Plus fringe benefits. LOCAL VENDING C0MPAN¥"T(AS openings tor route service men. (Jood pay and working conditions, paid hospitalization and life Insurance. Uniforms furnished. Call Ml 7-2050 for appointment or apply at MILL OPERATOR, EXPERIENCED. GEMCO ELECTRIC CO. *' CROOKS RD, MACHINE HANDS LATHE, MILL, HAND SCREW MACHINE AND BULLARD OPS. ALSO, MACHINE REPAIR AND HYLRAULIC MAN ALL BENEFITS AND LONG PROGRAM HAWK TOOL 8. ENGINEERING CLARKSTON, MICHIGAN MAN TO WORK IN MARKET, steady work, apply In person. People's Fish and Poultry Market, 377 S. Saginaw._______________________ MAN PROFICIENT 7 graduate. Send complete resume with pay Information Press Box 57, MECHANICS FOg IN-SHOP ANC field service repa'Irot constructior equipment, must be fully experl enced In all phases of repair young growing equipment dealer MACHINISTS EXPERIMENTAL MAINTENANCE MEN — CARPEN-. We can use 2 or 3 retired on W-day basis. Inslde^work. ly Connolly's Jewelers. I* W. DIE SETUP MEN DIE REPAIRMEN SHIPPING CLERK OVERTIME-PROFIT SHARING PROGRESSIVE STAMPING CO. 2725 NAKOTA, ROYAL OAK ........ — Coolldge- EXPERIENCED Automobile Salesman biles? We offer BUICK CHEVROLET ■ PONTIAC a our showroom. Fringe bene fits. Apply In person only t Homer Hlyht Inc. On AA24 I Electro-Mechanical Technician Trainee Detroit Metropolitan Area SALARY- OPEN Major ottice equipment company needs several trainees. Expenses paid while in training. COMPANY CAR PLAN TUlTr0N^H>-f(^ COA/tMISSiOFT PENSION PLAN PAID VACATION GROUP LIFE AND MEDICAL INSURANCE PHONE 567-2^5 MR. GRANET OR MR. EtLIS An Equal Opportunity Employer MECHANIC—LAWN MOWER RE-pairs. Steady employment, top position for good man. Apply — W. F. Miller Co. 1953 S. Woodward, Birmingham 647-7700 and ask for NEEDED FOR CHRISTMAS SEA- lEW CAR PREPARATION AND clean up man for new car dealership In Birmingham. Good pay, fringe benefits, ideal working conditions. Bob Borst Lincoln Mercury. 520 S. Woodward, BIrmIng- PONTIAC MOTOR DIVISION Has Immediate openings for CLERKS 8ust be High School graduates be able to type 25 WPM. Apply or send resume to SALARIED PERSONNEL DEPT. Glenwood Ave. at Kennett Rd. Pontiac, Michigan (An equal opportunity amploytr) PATROLMEN Applicants tor police patrolm' salary range $6420. to S7704. P mium over time pay. Liberal be: tits, including longevity bonus a retirement. Must .be between to 31, High school graduate, S 4' 4" at least 160 lbs, 20-20 vis... without correction, pass Wriftar examination, agility test ar' ---" acter Investigation. Contact Chief of Police — M In City of Birmingham — 151 St. TT- Birmingham, Mich. Ing conditions, plenty of tenefits. See Service Manager, Shelton Pontlee-Buick, Rochester, Michigan. 6 Help Wanted Femal^ EARN WHILE OUR, FREE JOBS with DAILY PAY! Report between 6 A.M. and 6 P.M EMPLOYERS TEMPORARY SERVICE 54 Henry St„ DETROIT 8561 South Main, CENTER LINE 65 South Main, CLAWSON 1320 WIton Rd., FERNDALE 27320 Grand River, REDFO— ........... _ . - ,5 YEARS Old for Bowling Lanes located In Mid-Michigan City, Must have howling and bar operation background. Please give complete resume', Include height,' weight, and salary expected. (For 72-hour week — nights.) Reply to Bowllhg Lane Management, 3117 Clio Road, Flint, Mlch^an. GIRL FOR COUNTER AND Assembly work, full or part time. Collins Cleaners, 640 Woodward st. Rochesler. 651-7525. GENERAL HOUSEWORK, 1 PRINTERS WANTED MALE EXPERIENCED OR TRAINEES To learn a printing trade ... . modern air conditioned Business Forms Plant. Blue Cross, Health and Accident; Life Insuranc cations. Holidays and PensL,. ... peld by Employer. (STEADY YEAR AROUND EMPLOYMENT. APPLY IN PERSON TO PERRY PRINTING CO.~ ........ REGISTERED (ShARMACIST Expanding 193 bed hospital immedidte opening , for Registered WANTED BODY : Ave. See Mr. Love graph and Long Li SALES AND SERVICE Young man to learn sewing .... chine business, over 2), salary and commission, company — company benefits. On the lob Ing. Apply or call for Interview 9-5 p.m. daily. Singer Co. Pont' — Mall Shopping center 682-0350. Help Wonted Female STREET INVESTMENT FIRM PART-TIME GENEROUS COMMISSIONS 3 NIGHTS A WEEK 4:30 p.m. to 10 p.m. BABY SITTER WANTED. DA' 7-5:30. Own transportation, mo Ings. Call after 6 p.m. 625-3415. BEAUTICIAN WANTED. FULL C part time. Exc. opportunity to I crease clientele. Good location. 31 0711 or 334-9786. New owner, Mr Stephens. 1 devote three specific week from 6:30 call weekdays, 10 SALESME|J IF YOU ARE INTERESTED IN A CAREER POSITION WITH TOP BENEFITS Hudsons PONTIAC MALL STATION ATTENDANT, $U. „ plus comrrtlssion, Standard on, corner Orchard Lake and FABRICATOR, STANDARD OIL SERVICE CENTER has openings tor driveway serviceman. Sunday, holidays and evenings ott. Paid vacation. Earn $500 mo. and up. Phone .................. or 357-4763. TRUCK DRIVERS Construction Workers For fuel oil deliverjes on hourly rate. Overtime hours, P'aid .vecatlon at season. This job should summer seasonal workers. Writi Pontiac Press Box 31 for Interview. regular liter 40 end , of Interest hours, no exp. necessary. V yau as television represe in hospital. Call between SWEET'S APPLIANCE SHOP PARKING LOT ATTENDANTS. DA'V and night. Apply In person. The Rotunda Country Inn. 3230 Pine TURRET LATHE OPERATORS Hand and automatic VA^IlOUS MACHINE OPERATORS.. - WANTED, GROOMS FOR THOR--iiMtvbrad braeding and racing farm. Call collect, area code 313, UL 2-2611. Mrs. Wallace, Bachelor WORK TOMORROW^ Warehouse, landscaping, unloading and handy man |obs walling - Apply ready to work at 7 MANPOWER - 1338 W WAREHOUSE CLERK WANTED ton pick-up trucks who would be inferest.ed In delivering bundles ot papers to corners for newspaper- (, Own Trans. Birmingham, / ot general Pontiac Pr Press Box 105 stating a HOUSEKEEPER, EXPERIENCED, references, 5 days. N^^laundry, HOUSEKEEPER, LIVE II WANT TO CHANGE JOBS? servicing, heating and air-_______ tioning equipment. Year around employment. Apply In person Kast Heating and Cooling Co In city. Apartment with a HOUSEWIVES IF YOU ARE AVAILABLE TO SELL DURING CHRISTMAS SEASON Hudsons PONTIAC MALL HELP! NEED BABY SITTER I fflediafely. Afternoon shift. L --------out. 334-8295. mechanically inclined and abl supply references. C«ll FE 4 tor Interview- YOUNG MEN IMMEDIATE OPENING FOR APPRENTICE TO LEARN TRADE AS AN AUTO. SCREW MACHINE OPERATOR. NOW STARTING OUR NEW INCENTIVE BONUS, INSURANCE AND RETIREMENT PLAN. CALL MR. MENZIES “ CLAWSON JU 8-1341 FOR AN POINTMENT, INDIAN VILLAGE HOME NEEDS gentle, refined womdn as Substitute Mother 5 days weekly, 8 to 6, whlfd mPlher works. Duties Include care and feeding ot 4 children ages 12, 9, 2- and 7 mo., light housekeeping, and preparation of children's evening meal. Own transportation and ’ ' TIME, OVER Attention Yoy.fig Women it you are Interested In full-time employment and have any office skills, we can place you. Call Mrs. Piland. International Personnel 880 S. Woodward Birmingham BABY SITTER FROM 4 P.M. I til midnight, weekdays, Must h own transportation. Pontiac . BARMAIDS WAITRESSES COUNTER GIRLS MATURED LADY FOR BABY SIT-ting, live In and wage. FE 2-0502 between 7 p.m. and 9 p:m._ ^^RE WOAAAN FOR KITCHEN MATURE WOMAN OR GIRL FOR gOOKKEEPER-TYPIST, \ teresting position in spo to work. $275. Call J 334-2471. Snelling and S BABY SITTER - ORCHARD LAKE and Telegraph area; tor a S'T^year-old girl, 4 hours a day. FE 4-6757. BUSINES'S ASSISTANT — DENTAL, 21 or over, 40 hours of Variety, accurate typist. Intelligent, neat. Drayton Area. MA 6-39tS. BUS GIRL, DAYS, APPLY It son. Four Comers Restaurai Walton and Perry.______________ CASHIER FOR t -Good salary. Full t _______Woodward, Ml 4-4620. COUNTER~?IRL FOR FULL-TIME jigjnjrs, exper ' CAPABLE WOMAN FOR GENERAL and Ironing, no white shirt; sheets. 2 or 3 days, steady, transportafion, 626-1022.__________ type of clerical w________ Ing tor top temporary employment, apply today. High hourly , KELLY SERVICES KELLY GIRL DIVISION 125 N. Saginaw 338-0338 D KITCHEN GIRLS, WAIT- CLERK TYPIST FOR I GIRL GEN-eral Insurance office. FE 4-5272. Eve. 673-3545.____________________ — Paid hospitalization, Insurai—, vacation and pension plan. Apply Elias^ Bros. Big Boy, 20 S. T '" COCKTAirW^T^^S" Over 21. Experience preferred, not necessary. Will train. Ni, shift. Full and part time. Apply In person after 6. Airway ' 4825 Highland Rd. FOR NIGHT SHIF' iiiuxi, PC IO. Apply In person ont Blue Star Drive-ln, corner Pontii and Opdyke r' uemTAL ASSISTANT, BIR/VUNG-iham area. Apply Pontiac DINING ROOM - SUPERVISOR Excellent benefits plus pension ! experience. De- — -- .jsponsit'- ----- r Bros., Telegraph EXPERIENCED WAITRESS. EXPERIENCED WAITRESS WANT-ed, Apply In person. Gavel' —•" 875 Baldwin.________„ EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY a barmaid In a small Inti... cocktail lounge. In West Bloomfield. Cell 682-0600 Tor H0T€L MAID EXPERIENCE NOT NECESSARY See Mr. Jacobs, Roosevelt Hotel I'M LOOKING FOR Women who are Interested In earning $200 or more. Part time, also full-time positions available. Unlimited opportunities and exc. training for qualified persons. For per-■ • ■ • call FE 8-1023. • given t aiy. $120 per ........ 8264 tor appointment. . Pref- KITCHEN HELP SHORT ORDER COOK Day and night shifts. Apply Big Boy Restaurant. Telegraph II between 6:30-9 p. _______ _ lern conveniences ir cooking and light housekeeping, et. required. Write Pontiac Press MARRIED WOMAN, 25 YEARS OLD or older for counter work, weekend nights, inqqire Little Caesars, MATURE LADY. LIGHT HOUSE-ling, 3 In school, live in. 12 I, Southfield, 353-5050 aft. NURSES' AIDES NEEDED. APBLY 532 Orchard Lake Avenue ^ " day, Wednesday and Thui 9:30 through 11:00 a.m.___ Box 91, Drayton j PART TIME, EVENINGS, SALES, over 21, experienced or will train. Apply Ar&en Shop, Pontiac, Mall. rnTEOiTrEREDllURSES FULL TIME AFTERNOCIN-NIGHT DUTY STAFF NURSES; $6219.20-$7945.60 lus differential for afternoon and night tours of doty. Excellent personnel policies and ben- FE B-^m-Ext. 238 __, RESPONSIBLE WOMAN TO CARE ■ " 2 school-age children In my e. 5 days, ml;st h—- -------' ir General Hospital. Call RECEPTIONIST FOR MEDICAlI group, mature woman, good typ-; Ing required, cheerfulness desired. household duties. Adult ti Center Hospital, 55 E. SUBURBAN SECRETARY mingham office. Because of our change In location, we are looking tor a secretary who has better fhafi average sljllls ln\ typing, shorthand, and general office administration. Ideal working conditions, good starling salary, and company benefits. Send short resume of ex-to Pontiac Press, Box 66. SECRETARIES CITY OF PONTIAC SALARY S5239 High School graduate, 5 yr. retarlal experience, shorthand 100 WPM. Excellent fringe benefits, Apply City Hall 450 Wide Track typist-general office - PRE- ----- wanted fiiOR F U L L time employment, vacation with pay. Apply In person only. Frank's Restaurant, Keego Harbor. WANTED - EXECUTIVE SECRE-tary tor dental office. Must have experience working with people. Salary open. Write to Pontiac Press P.O. Box No. 28 — stating marital stalls, education and experience. w A N T FAST R E 5 U L T S ? USE PRESS W A N T A D S 3^2 8 1 8 1 Kitl? WoRtMi Female WAITRESS WANTED JOE'S CONEY Iclaewi. Utl « mVOQ ^ Help WagteJ Female 7 ««ANTE0 - PREPARATliw^iiRU " ^*^''' **• THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 15, WAITRESS. tUS AN HOUR. b6b~S Restaurant. Keega. U3.9SS7 he-(ore 5. S3S01W affer 5.T "RaITRESSES. ti OR OVERTlfp-ply 575 S. Hunter Blvd.. Birwlng- WAITRESS TO Work in dining ’’“T.' i m.-a -- l‘» Drive-ln. OR 3-7W.______ W'ANTED a refined LADy TO do light house siiorfc and act as cotnpanlon to a widow lady A Venice home. Royal Oak.' LI Waitresses BE MORE - BE A ,1 JOHNSON GIRL ' We can train you to become an ettlclent waitress with above-average earnings. Fine clientele, pleasant working conditions, plus many other benefits. II this sounds Interesting to you stop by for an Interview today. HOWARD JOHNSON'S Telegraph at Maple Rds. BIRMINGHAM WAITRESSfS Full time, part time and weekends. Excellent ibeneflts. paid meals, hospitalization, pension plan and paid Apply In person Elias Bros. Big Boy Telegraph at Huron Dixie Hwy. at Sliver Lake Rd WOMAN TO CARE FORTiVAm N T E D, GINO'S I Woodward, 331- 3 Girls WANTED 1 '^.1? for personal Inler-338-3211. MUST BE ABLE TO START WORK IMMEDIATELY women For beauty coun- selors skin care and make-up.y-f1 S^SOT**'^ BARMAID AND COOk FOR Lounge. 679-OOU or 87»-t832. ^>YS AND wreaths. Call after GIRLS NEEDED, *- handle, Christmas *"*■ ' P.M. FE Soles Help, Male-Female 8-A Soles Help, IMole-Female B-A DO WANT A GOOD PART-TIME JOB TO MAKE the EXTRA MONEY WE ALL HAVE NEED FOR ^’ME? we ARE training NOW FOR SALES AND CATALOG CLERKS, COFFEE SHOJ3 ^CLERKS AND OTHERS, MOST 1)F THE OPENINGS REQUIRE EVENING AND WEEKEND HOURS OF EMPLOYMENT IMMEDIATE employe DISCOUNT APPLY NOW PERSONNEL DEPT MONTGOMERY WARD ' THE PONTIAC MALL Help Wamej M. or f. BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED RH Positive $7JO RH Neg. with positive (actors - -S'N?i.^ AB ngg. DETROIT blood SERVICI In Pontiac FE 1342 Wide Track Dr., w. teles Maje-tem^a CREDIT INTERVIEWERS For the Christmas season. Fi and part time. Previous credit e perience helpful. Apply in perso 357 N. Telegraph. PontlaC Ma ROSE JEWELERS Wanted Real Estate 36 {Apartments, Unfurnished 38 client WISHES TO BUY A NICEICOZY LAkIfrONT, 4 ROOMS, 3 or 4 bedroom suburban home.; bath and utility room. Carpeted, and Must be In Pontiac School dis- drapes, no children or pets, $100 trict, pay ^ to $32,000. Dorris per mo. $100 dep. 20 min. from , 074-0324. I Pontiac Motors. Available Dec s --------------------MA 5-4294. ________' EMBASSY APaRtmENTS '-Rlight salesman Ft anagemegt training. Must . If-starter, able to handle peop nlimited potential. Press Box 48 InstracHaos-SdiacIs tiac. Full t. „. over; experience r all assignments. CARPENTRY, PAINTIN'G, HOh repairs, any size jobs. 332-413$. janitorial work from 5 P Work Wanted Female______12 RONING, 1-DAY SERVICE, EXPERIENCED ONLY ELK cleaners WOOL PRESSER S. TELEGRAPH RD. EXPERIENCED ONLY ELK CLEANERS DRY CLEANER AND SPOTTER 220 S. TELEGRAPH RD, BABY SITTING IN MY HOME^ one child. $11 per wk. 332-8222. 5’ CHILD CARE AND LIGHT HOUSE-juork, days. Call 682-2472. . HOUSEKEEPER AND CHlIirCATE '■ •■our home. FE 8-^. mission paid. Phone Mr. Wideman for personal Interview. FE 4-4526. t" Piper Restaurant, 4370 WASHINGS AND IRONtNGS'.'TICK "" and dMIvered. FE 8;W4;________ TAK^ CARE OF ELDERLY home. 625-3030 Bundjng^rvices-Sujtplies 13 .. .T OR FULL TIME FOR REAL ESTATE SALES Morning or afternoon floor time. Will train I not experienced. Top commissions C«H Clark Real €statey FE-%b88 1362 W. Huron St. Ask for^Mr or Mrs. Stein. PRESS OPERATORS — EXPERI-enced — top rates. Overtime avall-able. Phone John. 442-5838. X-RAY TECHNOLOGIST (Registered) Immediate openings In modern hospital, Metropoii*— area, minimum starting salary 1_ ^r month. Send resume to Pontiac HAVE $3500 TO WORK V and need a 3 bedroom I Waterford - Kettering H >' •••-a. Please c“' — ■ School a Now Renting J. C. Hoyden Realtor j We need listings, equities bought I PONTIAC MOTOR EMPLOYEE icreage around Bald Mountain area ~ $16e000>$20,000. Call Don Reich. Roy O'Neil, Realtor 3520 Pontiac Lake Rd. OR 4-2222 or FE 4-8576 IRONING DONE LAKE OAKLAND MANOR APTS. 3610 W. Walton Blvd. Oi^n 5 to 6 p.m. Monday th Friday. Of»n 2 to 4 p.m. Saturday and uNI^N LAKE AREA, LAKE FRONT —new 2 bedroom, to------- — ‘ vate park privileges, _ Sec, deposit and ret. 682- SPOT CASH FOR YOUR EQUtTY, .......................... .......... OR OTHER. FOR QUICK ACTION'D.„t Hniius Fisrnin.^~ CALL NOW. HAGsfROM REAL- Houses, l■urnl$bea TOR, OR 4-0358 OR EVENINGS - 682-043S. 4-Bedroom Rancn NEW HOME hwasher — Garbage disi 49 Sale Holder HOUSES! C— 49 ALL NEW BEDROOM RANCHES TRI-LEVELS BEDROOM RANCHES, COLONIALS SUBURBAN LIVING too FOOT LOTS VILLA HOMES, INC, --------■ ILLAGE NO. 1 tween Lake Or d. Alban's Coun RED WRIGHT REALTY iZ..&a.klona Aye._FE 2:9U11 BEAUTIFUL WATER FRONT LOTI -----looking Upper Straits Lake.l CLARKSTON AREA 3 bedroom ranch. Face brick, I ing room, 14'x27'. 3 blocks schools. Paved road. City wa $13,500. Reas., down or trade. IBUILDER'S MODEL $31,995. LADD'S OF PONTIAC I ^ QUALITY HOMES 1 "’Tbedroom TRI-LIVEL $29,400 ‘ . Including lot. , - Distinctive Homes By ;! ROSS LAKELAND ESTATES ,{'4 mile north of Walton Blvd. -1 • off Dixie Highway) •OR 3-0021 _______ , . NORTHERN HIGH AREA ^ Completely redecorated 3 bedroom ^REE BEDROOM HOME NEED-i 13 ROOMS, DEPOSIT REQUIRED, W Need Listings Buyers Galore J. A. TAYLOR AGENCY Real Estate—Insurance—Building 7732 Highland Rd. (MS9) OR 4-0306 Evenings Call EM 3-9937 ~ . I Rent Houses, Unfurnished 40 1 BEDROOM HOUSE, LAKE ORION SCHUETT OR 3-7102 CLARKSTON. 3 BEDROOM BRICK' ranch. Den. IVj baths. Carpeted.] Attached^garage. Car^e lot. Close] ferj^. 625-3364.__I CRESCENT LAKE-HIG-HLAND j LAKE ESTATES I Two 2'bedroom bungalows, modern tl3,S0O Ci Crestbrook HAYDEN I ;a~31«-yal-U-Way - WE HAVE SEVERAL GOOD, PERSONALIZED HOMES - qualified purchasers for houses FE 8-1958' SEMINOLE HILLS ' -------------------- FOR LEA’SE. ELIZABETH' LAKE Estates. 2 bedrooms, basement, I liv-'iMODEL OPEN Credit check and ref. 682-5951 ti j!'c."haydTn Realtor M___10735 Highlj_ " IS YOURS A LITTLE FAMILY? 345 OAKLAND A _ d; Pontiac's FHA Appointed ' ; Property Managepient and Sales Broker ---^ - Com( SPECIALIZED IN HOUSE RAISING, e leveling, cement wofk and laces. Also block laying. 797- ,LL TYPES WELDING. 24 service. . Portable service. Welding Industries. 2274 S ------ — 334.4013, QUALITY WATKINS PRODUCTS. ellvery to your door 335h)641.___ WANT HOME WITH ACREAGE, . suitable tor horses. In Oxford, Or-lon or Rochester area, 879-6227.; C(3TTAGE Apor^e^n, ^nished_________37 i KITCHENETTE, 0TTAWA1*^9^5E FOR RENT _ SECURi'TY 01 IAWA deoos t — FF 5-RSZS , n complete facilities, tiled basement. Rent Lake Cottages 41 .KE ORION, ^dit Advisors DEBT AID, INC., _ 16;A RIKE9 BLDG. Convolescent-Nming 21 PRIVATE REST HOME — GOOD Moving and Trucking 22 - * AA MOVING Careful, enclosed vans. Insured, low rates, free estimates, UL 2-3999 or 628-3518._________ Painting and Decorating 23 A LADY INTERIOR DECORATOR, Papering. FE 8-6214. Awnings,_____ _______ , FE 5-9545 J(3E VAk'LELY OL 1-6623 ALUMIMUM-VINYr-SIDING.'OOORS,l windows. A. 8/H. Sales. 625-''ni i 6?-5-?537 " ALUMINUM SiOING~ INSTALLED by "Superior" - your ......... Kaiser dealer, FE 4-3177, Architectural Drawing ANY KIND OF DESIGN AND Asphalt Povlng DRIVEWAYS Landscaping ^ Free Estimates ASPHALT DRIVEWAY SPECIALIST Guaranteed no waiting. Call now. Free estimate. FE i mates. FE 5-7459. GENERAL Ing, (ftzint 673-2932. Brick & Block Service BLOCK CREW AVAILABLE. FOOT-ings — basements — commercial buildings. OR 3-2237 or FE 5-6846. _BulldliiigJ8^^ 2-CAR GARAGES, 20'X20', $875. WE are local builders and build any size. Cement work. Free estimates. PedyrBullt Garage Co. OR 3-5619. ___R GARAGE.... ADDITIONS I Alum, windows! doors, siding. GRAVES CONTRACTING All Types of Remodeling Kitchen cupboards, additions, attic ----- recreation---- ------- aTumiiium siding, roMing. I^ree 'ei No down payment. G & M Construction Co. 86 N. Saginaw FE 2-1211 ANY TYPE OF REMODELING Large or small lobs. Local work. Fair prices. 27 years experience. All work guaranteed In writing. BIG BEAR CONSTRUCTION FE 3-7833 739 BUILDING MODERNIZATION ADDITIONS-REMODELING NEED MORE ROOM? ill us for the answer to your probi ANDERSON-GILFORD, INC. FE 8-8116 Eves. FE 4-5884 COMPLETE MODERNIZATION, AD-ditlons, etc. Earl Kline, Bldr. OR 3-1926 Days. OR 3-3182- GEORGE HOME IMPROVEMENTS, 2105 Union Lake Rd. EM 3-03-Aluminum siding. — Insulation storm windows — roofing — i A-l Interior and exterior el CARPENTRY, REC ROOMS, KITCH-ens, tree estimates. Phil Eavestroughing AAA ALUMINUM GUTTERS M8.S GUTTER CO. COMPLETE CONDRA'S /LUMBING—HEATING j - DEPENDABLE RIDES TO AIR ■ 7s, Tues, Through Sat, Electrical Services Residential Commercial Industrial Excavating LIGHT EXCAVATING, PERCOLA-tests and Install septic -s. Holmes Excavating, F or FE 2-1326.___________ Hastering Service RErtviRS J^umbing 8. SONS _________ OR 3-1430 >■■4 PAINTING, FREE ESTIMATE, 1 work guaranteed, 682-4037, I PAINTING AND PAPERING. YOu' I are next. Orvel Glbcumb, 673-0496. I QUALITY WORK ASSURED. PAItif- C .™. ----- „j5(,|ng. 473. Private bath. Adults. 78 N AND 2 BED'^ROQM APAR merits. Available now. SecuritV d Adults™nly,'^FE 8-2221.° .. COTTAGE 4 ?ngX!ifnU BASEMENT APARTMENT, UTILI-ties furnished. 674-3383. 1 balcony. Beautiful view. 1. Completely carpeted Air-v.un >ned. All Kitchen appliances h garbage disposal. Own *'''“ [CA'BIN' for -rent, EAST TAWAS CLEAN ROOM FOR 1 GENTLE 2 ROOM BASEMENT APARTMENT, Side, single or couple only, 'eek with $50 deposit. FE after ■ 2 ROOMS AND BATH, CHILD WEL- come. $25 per week with a $75 deposit. Inquire at 273 Baldwin Ave. Call 338-4054. _______ 3 'tft5dMS~XND BATH, PRI'VATE entrance, 4 large closets. West SI Close In. FE 5-l606> 3 ROOM, ' SHARE BATH, $30 CLEAN SLEEPING ROOMS Clean room, Rochester 5J0. _ - ELIZABETH LAKE -ESTATES, GEN-lan, refrigerator privilege. FE to Crestbrook street and model. " : GIROUX ! REAL ESTATE iSn Highland Road (M5^_ 67^7837' DAILY 7 ROOMS ; ZERO DOWN VETERANS — Just small closing ®home with 2 baths, carpeting and! ‘’"'"'Tl. daily CO. I ________EM_^114 _ ___ CLARKSTON BY OWNER: 3-bed-' ---Vick ranch, iVj baths, fire-,| in living room, dining ell, family room, 2-car at-garage, all wet plastered,! stove, 3 schools within 3' _i797._ I,’ 335- FE 59571. i RdOMS. DAY WORKERS, ADULTS, no drinking, no pets. 401 N, Pad- KENT BUILT 1^4 1965 - 3 bedroom on paved street, corner lot. room and hallway carpeted. YOUNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER-BUILT Russell Yoing 334-3830 53V_W_Huron_ - " _ R^OCHESTER - ATTRACTIVE 3 rage°°LargUlot.'^*Sui^k' possession. - $17,900. Nix Realty. OL 1-0221, ;_JJL 2-5375, 2-4874. _ _______ j" SPECIAL OF THE WEEK I This sharp two bedroom, aluml-I ha^rdwood floors^ Easy financing to YORK VE BUY WE TRADE 4713 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains TUCKER REALTY CO. 903 P^tiac State Bank 334-1545 _ TAYLOR "Nice I ' ’ "'"l Mixed Area Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor ^^°FE%2^r FET-im"'’'' 'rom $200 sown. I home. Some! Transpaiidtion Restauranti 952 Joslyn Open ;un. FE 4-6105 k-1 NEW, REROOF -Call Jack. Sava the OR 3-9590. SPECIALIZE IN HOT TAR ROOF- ROOM FOR GENTLEMAN, f drinkers, refs., dost In. FE 2-8i _or FEJ:7?9I _________ ROriM AND OR BOARD, 135W ____Oakland Ave. FE 4-1654_ r'e'SiPONSIBLE WORKING WOMEN IVTe SCHUETT FE 3-7088 ROOM. CLEAN. PRIVATE BATH. -i-f-IrtiMr-giiSM man nkit y" ! , 5'280 Dixie Hwy. N. o( Walton , wrnttemnT"' ONLY ] FiR"st"'lN VALUE----- rniiprFisLEEPING“RbOM7'OA'Y"'wORKER,| i uuri h I ,,, , 334-6840 c. Milford Rds. 685-1766 alt. 4 30' LA-DY^WANTS^TRANSPORTATION I — —• work at 7 a.m., on Pon-I, Rd. Call FE 4-3198 after ROOMS AND I only, no drinker! dep. 49 Clark St , $50, gentleman,_$12_ SAGAMORE MOTEL, "sINOL'E tv'! telephone. 789 South tlBc Lk.iRd. 5:30 p.m,^ HOMEOWNERS, POLICES / Ings up to 15 per cent, deadb^^soclates, FE 4-8 Deer Processing 4 ROOMS AND welcome, $37.50 $100 deposit. Inqi Ave. Call 338-4054. 8aTk BAB' Mr wk. With . t 273 Baldwin Hemp-1 BACHELOR APARTMENT, FURN-B4 105 ished. Air-conditioned. IP' “ I Includes utilities. 636-7571. 27 Fencing Floor Sanding Septic Tank Cleaning LANG'S SANITARY SERVICE SEPTIC TANK CLEANING ELECTRIC SEWER CLEANING StNKS, DRAINS, TOILETS NO EXTRA CHARGE FOR emergency 24 HR. SERVICE 476-7244____Marvin Lang, Owner Floor Tiling CERAMIC, VINYL, ASPHALT, stalled. Yours or mio. aii w guaranteed. 673-8496. CUSTOM FLOOR COVERING, noleum, formica, tile. 741 N. Pei DAVE'S TREE SERVICE Removal, trimming, cabling, tilling, walling, land clear-----------,— design. 682- Hand Mode Articles Janitorial Services JANITOR SERVICE by day-week-month R & L MAINTENANCE CO. 682-2094 — Free'Estimate Landscaping :OMPLETE LANDSCAPING, allzlng In broken concrete re-ig walls or concrete so'' FE M314. J. H .Wal TALBOTT LUMBER Glass service, wood or alum--- -^S^aenS"^ Hardware ^aupgng. I and Storage CARPENTRY, NEW AND REPAIR. Free estimates. 335-9981. INTERIOR FINISH, KITCHENS, paneling, 40 years experience — FE 2-1235. ' ALL TYPES OF dEMltN-f WORK) block work. OR 4-3»7. Cement and Block Work Guinn's Construction Co. FE 4-7677 Eves. FE 59122 P DRIVEWAYS, 0] _____________ Ceramic. Tiling CERAMIC Tile installed', free Est. A8.H Sales. OR 3-0363. “* 51501. Pointing and Decerating 1-1 INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR painting, free estlmefes, work gusranMed. Reasonable rstei. 6(2-0620.________________ - PLASTERING. FREE ESTIMATES ^^vK^lowIng “umltue® Cal?‘lfaM'5 A^ulto, ptoS ' *ND 2 BEDROOM APARTMENTS. MY M871 or MY 3-6141. Available now. Security deposit re- Tree Trimming Service Lakes Tree Co., Trimming stump and Tree Removals Fireplace Wood — Plantings 73-2130_________________6253801 WANTED, ANTIQUES AND OUAL-ity furniture. Call Holly 637-5193. M, H. Ballow. ________________________ Tracking k-l TRUCKING, LIGHT OR HEAVY, also gravel, flit dirt, fill sand, grading, front end loading, tree removals. FE 57S34,____ Id front-end loading. FE 2-0603. Track Rental Trucks to Rent \4-Ton PIdtupt lV5Ton Stake TRUCKS - TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks — Seml-Trslleri Pontiac Form onu Industrial Tractor Co. 025 S. WOODWARD 4-0461 FE 51442 Open Dally Including Sunday Wail Cleoneri BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS. Walls cleaned. Reas. Satistactlgn guaranteed. Inaured. FE 2-1631. Invttntiont Alr-conditloned. $125 utilities^36-7571 EXTRA NICE High Schc ir Central :, adults 01 e Mgr ipartment '. 7 Pr'all t Realty. Si RENTING $78 Mo. Rooms With Board ERN 3 ROOMS AND BATH, pie only, no teens. 75 Bellevue, ;e Orion. MY 3-4031. APARTMENT, $100 A sec. deposit. 135 Draper, of Telegraph. Apartments, Unfurnished 3d _45 SINGLE OCCUPANCY, TV, RADIO, trvlce, private bath. $35 , Pontiac Lake Motel, 8230 Highland Rd. (M59)^_ Rent Stores wanted TO RENT 0. 6252001, 5254680. Wante^o»ehold Goods 29 HOUSEHOLDS - SPOT CASH 1 IS utilities. 636-7571. AND 2 BEDROOM NEW, NEAR FE 58585 or 682-2610. t^^^RICE BEFORE YOU ir appliances and what h....... We'M auction it or buy It. | _ .B & b Auction ’ OR 3-2717] Wanted Mis^ianeous 30 c; BRASS; RADIA-s and generators, 75c 1, OR 55849. D R 0 0 M, ADULTS ONLY, - refrigerator, utilities turn, sec. deposit required. 575 2 BEDROOM APARTMENT. 2 CER-emic baths. Complete formica kitchen. AM-FM Intercom. Carpeted. Washer, dryer, dishwasher and air-conditioned. $200 a mo. plus checks and security deposits rental In the Pontiac area — terford and Drayton Plains area Sislock & Kent, Inc. 1309 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. 330-9294_________ 3359W5 BEAUTIFUL ROOMS. EXCELLENT meals. Lunches packed. FE 5-7959. GENTLEMEN, DAY SHIFT, HOME me^. 84 ^Pl^____________ MEN ONLY, N E "A R MALL; lunches packed. FE 8-9005._ warm" AND NICELY FURNISHED. Excluding taxes and Insurance $10 Deposit lUlldIng w H APPLICATION LARGE DINING AREA WILL ACCEPT ALL APPL TIONS FROM ANY WORKI WIDOWS OR DIVORCEES. PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PR _ LEMS AND RETIREES ARE OKAY WITH US. OPEN DAILY AND SAT. AND SUN. OR COME TO 290 KENNETT NEAR BALDWIN REAL VALUE REALTY For Immediate Action Cali FE 5-3676 626-9575 LAKEVIEW ESTATES LAKE ANGEiUS Immediate Occupancy 4 new homes that ore the finest homes in the area. We invite you to see them any day, 1 to 7 p.m. See the home you desire, be it Contemporary, Colonial Ranch, French Provincial or New Englander. We hove all 4 and ore ready to sell. Save on these homes and move in now. Beauty Rite Homes 673-1717 Rent Office Space 800 SQUARE SUITABLE FOR business, distribu; ,fHA ! ' Repo'ssessions LOW MONTHLY PAYMENT. MOVE 'lefore "turkey day." A sharp edroom home for a starting YORK LOON LAKE 2 small houses; lultlpde Hvle'H Reduced $1,000 for quick sole Pontiac Northern $12,900, FHA c s. Call OR 4-0306. J. A. TAYLOR AGENCY Real. E$tate-r.l nsuranca^Bulldlog '32 Highland Rd. (M59) OR 5004 Evenings call EM 3-9937 THE INDOOR SEASON IS HERE. When the North wind blows you eppreclate the comfort of your own warm cozy home. Let us show you this comfy 3-bedroom " ■ ' "■ Its famlty rtxmi, (Jreplactf,^ 1 lust $ Wateriord^way. $19,800, 0. plus tax HAGSTROM, Realtor MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE • >00 W. Huron OR 4-0358 OR 35229________ VON 2'/2 ACRES Rambling 3-bedroom ranch near Walled Lake. A car attached ga« rage. You gardeners should really call on this one — Only $16/5001 LAKE FRONT Large brick home with attached garage on White Lake. Upstiars could be finished for 2 or 3 additional bedrooms. Nicely landscaped. "" von’Tealty WATERFORD AREA 3-bedroom, auto, gas heat, 135'x400' lot, choice location. Only $8,500 on land contract. REAGAN , REAL ESTATE 12251 Opdyke______ 332-0156 WE ARE' OFFERING OUR SERV- 5 ROOM LOWER BRICK DUPLEX. Garage. Basement. 4 blocks from "Waites." Nice and clean. Middle-aged couple. No pets. Vacant Nov. 15. OR 57924._____ _ ______ i()9b VOORHEIS ...... . _ Buiit.in kitchen, Ir conditioning, heat, e, shopping. Adults. 6 Telegraph. NEW BlilLDING 345 Oakland ave. . _ 2 OFFICES - furnished and unfur-; PontlOC'S FHA Appointed j ‘ .Bareman^*FE'’8-'7i6K*'^^ °'^ Property Management and s Rent Business Property 47-A j___________Sales Broker___________| i . , , - , ' FIRSTTn'vALUEXJF FINE h6MES]83 10,- Evenings after 7:30 LI 2-7327 1 “ WESTOWN REALTY ) * -:_______FE S-2763 afternoons__i 48 FURNISHED, 2224 DAVIST^ DUCK - ! Lake, Highland, Mich. EM ‘ * GARAGE FOR STORAGE NEAR ' Tel-Huron. OR 3-3150 or FE 5-9722. Carpeted I! . ------ kitchen -h with matching sto... WEAVER rochester-utiCa area Sale Houses carpeting. FAMLIY WITH SCHOOL-AC dren desperately needs two- or three-bedroom home, i Immediately. Homeniwner care. 3655278.________ SIrare Living Chiorters 33 l^te^^eoljstate toGo homes, lots, acreage PARCELS, FARMS, BUSINESS PROPERTIES, AND LAND CONTRACTS WARREN STOUT, Realtor ISO N. Opdyke Rd. FE 58165 Urgently need for Immediate Sale! ' ' Pontiac Daily 'til I SPI-TIPLE LISTING SERVICE ' CLEAN 3 ROOMS, STOVE, RE-'-igerator fo? couple. No drinkf— EJ-44«.__________ PREVIEW SHOWING BEAUTIFUL NEW CORAL RIDGE APARTMENTS Rochester, Michigan If eves. 402-0940 ALL CASH to MINUTES an If behind In payments or ij »■ ABtnf. H7-6400. »'H^*UR LAND CONTRACTS - HOMES , EQUITIES WRIGHT 302 Oakland Ave. . FE 2-9141 DO YOU WANT IT SOLD OR JUST listed? Tired of waiting and ho Ing? Wa need more property for rtason. wo are out end wo a out for a reason. Wo sell It. F action In your transaction ci YORK WE TRADE OR 50363 o Hwy., Drayton Plains TO WILCOX. INCLUDED IN LOW MONTHLY RENTAL; I- AND 2-BEDROOM COMPLETELY CARPETED CUSTOM DRAPES HOTPOINT AIR-CONDITIONING HOTPOINT REFRIGERATOR HOTPOINT OVEN RANGE. GARBAGE DISPOSAL EATING AREA IN KITCHEN . CARPETED HALLWAY LARGE CLOSETS LAUNDRY AND STORAGE SPACE HEAT INCLUDED SWIMMING POOL PLENTY OF PARKING MASTER TV ANTENNA $125 Open dally and Sunday 12 noon-7 pm. PHONE 451-0042 CORAL RIDGE APARTMENTS AVON APARTMENTS, NE 5, BAS E' e. 6935329.°’ GAYLORD TWO BEDROOM HOME on 1 acre parcel In Hadley area. Aluminum siding with aluminum storms and screens, basement, heated porch ...... ' ' only $9,- CLARKSTON AREA. Ranch t . e with two bedrooms situ'eted arge 200x300 lot. Bi....... Clarkston School C 692-2821 or FE 0-9693 2, 3 OR 4 BEDROOMS. SOME WITH ■“*'on to buy. Ask about o -n^yment^lan. Pick up l. 5350333 or 245^l'o8^_ lieges, Upper Straits Lake. By owner. 4394 Pine Tree Drive, Or- chard Lake, 682-1207.____________ 3 BEDROOM RANCH. FULL BASE-................. --'-I lofi. BEDROOM HOME. NEAR KEN-*’*'*^' Brokers. 4-H REAL ESTATE INDEPENDENCE TWP. -Sharp 5bedroom brick ranct large kitchen, utility room gas furnace, extra large lo ping, newly decorated. Vi cant. Excellent nelghborhooc A-A-A BETTER BUY REPOSSESSED ' FHA AND VA HOMES LARGE FAMILY SHORT OF BEDROOMS? LINE-UP FOR BATHS? Then you should see this 4-bedroom brick ranch with Its 3 baths, 14'x22' living room with fireplace, large family room, attached 2'/(i-car garage, full basement, West Side pres-more”''*' HAGSTROM, Realtor MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE >00 W. Huron OR 4-0358 OR 3-6229 le Village at 651-8141 WHITE LAKE Three-bedrnom lake-front homo with cathedral celling. Brick and frame. Spacious living room with fireplace. Built-In kitchens. Large family room with fireplace, walkout to lake. Two ceramic baths.' 2'/; car garage. New dock. $35,000. LH 3041. G.I. Special ful family room with fireplace, attractive living room and kitchen, over-size 2-car garage, paved drive; well landscaped and cared Warden Realty V. Hpron, Pontiac ROOMS,. LAND CONTRACT, NO CLOSINfi COSTS. qaH E. - hackett realty ________ YOUR EQUITY. SELL OR TRADE HIITER QUICK POSSESSION — 4 bedr . brick rancher with large living room, 2 fireplaces, walkout basement with rec room, 2 full baths, attached 2W car garage. Over ' acre lot. Call today. NORTH SIDE - 5 rooms and bat new carpet, full basement, 2 a garage. $12,500, terms. VE BUILD - 3 bedroom ranker oak floors, vanity In bath, (t basements. $11,550 on your k To see the model call B. HIITER, REALTOR, ■ 3792 Ell Lake Rd. FE 2-0179, after 3 p.t 482-4653. f LAZENBY Town & Country, Inc. Highland branch office ,Ph: 3156851585 SHADE TREES AND, FRUIT TREES, plus almost an acre of ground goes with this 2 bedroom bungalow In Independence ^Twp. Clarkston schools, close Waterford HURON GARDENS^- This 4 b^ home. May be purchased on land contract with no mortgage cost. May we show you it today. ROY LAZENBY, REALTOR 4624 W- WALTON — OR 4-0301 (1 block E. of Dixie Hwy.) Multiple Listing Service area. Walking distance to stores, schools, and churches. This comfortable home features carpeting throughout, full basement, garage. Gl — Low taxes. Comfortable family home In Lake Orion. With 3 bed- LET'S TALK TURKEY! WE HAVE an owner who wants to talk business. He wants to sell ‘a sharp four bedroom home, large living room with natural fireplace, a forma^ dining room, full basement, at- Vj bath down. Stable older neighborhood. WATERFORD REALTY 4540 Dixie Hwy. 673-1273 Multiple Listing Service‘s one acre of lartd. Easy^’ternw! ^ Call us now (or appointment. YORK WE BUY WE TRADE OR 4-0343 OR 50343 4713-Dixle Hwy., Drayton Plains Brown. Realtors 8, Builders Since 1939 $16,488 FUL> PRICE for this well-kept 5b6drciom brick rench home — This Is the home you've been MIXED AREA Super sharp 3 bedroom brick rancher, gas heat, studio type celling, spacious kitchen with bullt-ln oven ‘ and range, large utility room, fenced yard. $55(| moves .you It's vacant and we’ have the key Val-U-Way 345 OAKLAND AVE. FE 53531 dining area, nice kitchen, extra large utility room, aluminum stormy and screens,-good-size lot with nice landscaping and patio, excellent neighborhood. Gl teriW available. SYLVAN LAKE AREA, Nice 2-bedroom home. Ideal (or newlyweds or retired couple. All nl^slzf rooms, ges heat, new tiundnuni siding. Pleasant yard with patio. Lake privileges on 3 lakes. $13,-908. 1 Pontiac's FHA Appoiriteti Property Management and 1 Sales Broker Les Brown, Realtor 589 ElUabeth Leke Rd-(Across from the Mall) FE 2-4818 or FE 4-3564 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, Times Realty i . Hifsr .r... "'si:;r IkmS?8^E.HUR0’NTT' R. J. (DICK) ,y_ALUET f\ALL KCALIUK rh 4-3S8 I For S«l« i7 ) A ALUMIMUM-VINYt: SIDING Awnings, Storm Windows, :r\«T"%«rpRic^ Buy dlrecf from Joe Vallely curttmw rriLT-A GARAGE DOORS; COi plete, reoaon^lo. MA 5-MU. jplECE COLORED BATH'seT" . aTl bronze sump pomps, sold, repilFtd, dxc^n^, rented. 71 W, Sheffield_______FE S.Q647 ANCHOR FENCES NO MONEY DOWN ' FE S-7471 approximately 70 1 yards of used carpetir.., condition. Also used 21'« Console ChristmasJ5lfh_ 67-B 76 ®s"n™r'i' graveL never W(^ sS 16 ™ 2 ”»*'! . dirt. Delivered. 693-6727. »t. never 'worn, slit 16, M «^i‘^'**STAL TRUCKING - SAND 1W6. . ** gravel, black dirt, delivered. 674- 36' SEMI STORAGE VAN, A-1. MSP Blvd.'il'S.r »^'^^.“bU-E fill soil pit for lease on Baldwin at I-7S. FE 2-2144. GOOD RICH TOPSOIL AND BLACK dirt. Del. FE 4.6588. , PONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS “SUP-pljf^Sand, gravel, till dirt. OR air LOMPRESSDE, 1 HORSE, _good for-car paintino, 6744B33. Press,7^toth$, many misc. tools. SAND, GRAVEL FILL DIRT DE-livered. Excavating. FE 2-7567. SAND, GRAVEL, FILL DIRT. Builders Supplies. Trucking and dozing. OR 3-5850. DEERE 440 DO'ZER and Bart Hoe combination. 1956 Ford F-750 dump. Like new Tl-^ Une, Tandem Trailer, $4500 ^plete or sell separately. Ken Boadway—625-4446. TOP SOIL, DOZING AND BACK-hoe work, speclatlting ffi smatlisr ll.S?; •"'1'tozlng. Clarks- Musical Goods 71 1-YEAR.QLD HAMMOND ORGAN with draw bar. 363-4551. i Wood^Coo^ka-Fbek 77 DRY OAK SLAB WOOD, 2 CORDS delivered, $18. Howland Lumber, 625-^10. 6 USED ORGANS REAL BARGAINS IN ORGANS $250-$495-$695 AND UP SAVE MANY DOLLARS GALLAGHER'S MUSIC 1710 S. Telegraph— S. of Orchard Lake Rd. Saturday^'fll 5:30 p.m. Pets-Huntlng Dogs 79! I-A POODLE TRIM, SHAMPOOS, reasonable. 625-2875. 1-AKC DACHSHUND PUPS. STUDS Estelhelm's — FE 2-0889. 1A POODLE CLH^ING, $3up. 860 Sarasota. FE 8-8569. Hotpoint, Westinghouse. SW u[ lO- PICKUP TRUCK CAMPER Used, In excellent condition wl vented gas heater SMS, New 10 «b hjgh^^pickup ^truck cove display at closeouf prices. Savei $542 pn new IWS Sky Lounge i model complete Rrice $1445; New 14' Coachman travel trailers SSM while they last. Our loss is your gain. Come and get them. Open' daily 8 a.m. to i p.m„ Sun-, davs & evenings by appointment. ! 684-2822, Apache Factory] .... COL.' LER, M-21._____________________ as' Trailer, ideal for dee -untlng cabin $600. 67M659._ airstrEam lightweight TRAVEL TRAILERS nee 1932. Guaranteed tor lit * at*WarnS frailer Satos!”M FORD Ideal for hunting, E |, insulated, cabinets COMPLI Us, tow r ^EAUTIFUL RESTYLEi! PlANa * .weeks, SSO. 674-33MT : ] 12 male beagles, 1 3-YEAR-OLD, I, ■ '-year-old. UL2-3764.______ j’ BALDWIN'S best ACROSONIc" CONSOLE PIANO Tone comiiarable to grand. LIke-new condition — Italian Provincial design In light vyatnut — an exceptionally 5 1772 tx I — FE O SAX, GOOD CON- BASEMENT RUMMAGE SALE -some antiques; glassware; round top trunk; furniture; loads and loads of misc. Items, 97 Popular, . CHRISTMAS GUITAR SPECIAL (THIS WEEK ONLY) Harmoney Stella Guitar Standard Size Reinforced Steel Neck With Book $21.95 rormed. 628-3015. ADORABLE COLLIE PUPPIES AKC BRITTANIES, 3 MONTHS. Hs. iKC REGISTERED POODLES, weeks old. 673-8056. EVERETTE SPINET PIANO Like new. Save LEW 6ETTERLY r pup, 3 months o ‘^complete S250 Can ^ seen at I EXPERT prANO MOVING i* Ra^d after 5.‘ k-. v WANTED [ ^uCBRAN\0N'‘'rRAN5IST0R” 0R-|' SILVER POODLE PUPPY, !, excellent condition, t Autobahn ^65 S. Tejeg^a^__FE 8-453T '65 TRAVEL TRAILER, 21', Sleeps 6, Fwlly equipped, $2250. 6«-&W._________________ 1965 CREE TRAILER, 13' _______ 363-4551 _______ ANGEL CAMPER Pickup campers made to order. 3802 Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 4-0031. Announcing The All New Lifetime Premier Motor Home See supreme luxury with a Ford Pw tires. 11050. 199 Norton after ^ AIR CONDITIONED, I 9 PASSENGER V nylon top, «t' Parts For All Foreign and Sports Rambler JeepI ' NEW AND USED AUTHORIZED DEALER jMG—Triumph—Austin Heoley . Sunbeom—Fiat—Morgan Grimaldi Imported Car VW CENTER 60 To Choo$e From -All Mo(Jels--All Colors--All Reconditioned— Autobahn 1964 Cadillac Coupe, with turqupise, with a whita tpp, 3-way power, real tpw mll*-ag^lmust be seen to be appreci- Save ASK FOR NORM DANIELSON WILSON Caidillac “What’s so bad about Jimmy being a nuisance, Dad? How else do you think he gets his father’s car four times a week?” 19S4 Cadillac WILSON Caidillac 0. Call 69 L PET SH0^55 WILLIAMS. FE: '■ ITS NOW OR NEVER ELECTRIC LIGHT FIXTURES FOR Real Bargains In Orgi .11 10XX „.II X- payment will put rs. Bedroom ‘ , samples. BRITTANY SP/fNiEL PUPS. FROM AKC registered field trial cham-amaii i P'on stock. 625-3185. _ layaway.'COLLIE PUPS, AKC,' 5HOTS7~VEt ricate. i checked, chartipion bloodline, beau-* ! tiful sables and mahf>nanv« PRICED FROM $6575 Sal., 9 al bargain. loganys. Ford econoline, camper, $4So. Rock tumbler, 20" slide rule and . precision tools. 682-1974. ____ FOR DUSTY concrete FLOORS Use Liquid Floor Hardener Simple Inexpensive Application Boice Builders Supply FE 5-8186 -furnaces — SOLVE YOUR HEAT-ing problems. 625-1501, 682-7812. FREE HAY OR STRAW F •DACHSHUND PUPPIES, in our teaching studios oJC' JM?- «5. 222 ounts. Buy now and s - n>-o«'>n 1 DOGS AND PETS Three year old Boxer, GALLAGHER'S MUSiC 1710 S. Telegraph-5. of Orchard Lake Rd. Saturday 'til 5:30 p.m. __ FE 8-0566 ,____ LOWREY SPINET ORGAN Walnut, 8ltnpsl like new A°. homes, KIT- E SMALL grand' id Mazelaine breeding. Male d very gentle and affectlo-e. Must sell because tie" esn't get along with my 10 ar old male. Write Pontiac ess Box 72, Pontiac, Mich- TOM STACHLER ----, AUTO AND MOBILE SALES .weeks |3^vy. Highland Rd. M59 FE 2-4«8 ATTENfrON HUNTERS! See the NE^ rounded corner Viso carrying Holly and Corsair King size values are In waiting] for you. You get more home In a Detroiter mobile home, 12 wldes.i ■ bedrooms as little as S58.12i ! selection ofi Alum. hu^e selection ■ of ( a cottages at 68 S Bob Hutchinson Mobile Homes A DAMAGED BARGAIN DEMO SALE Come in and see! ' ?ed ’ PINTER'S GET THE LATEST MDDEL. 1966 GARAGE SALE — CHILDREN'! men's, women's, maternity, clothing, otfier Items. Nov. IG19. 5686 Everest, Clarkston bet. Sashabaw and Mary Sue._______ , „ _ GARAGE SALE, RECORD PLAY-er, clothing, misc. Nov. 17, 18. 2573 Genes Dr., 'A ml. E. of! Walton and GpdyRe.. _ i CAS FIRED BOILER, CAST IRON, - SMILEY BROS. ' Ellsworth Trailer Sales ANGEL CAMPER ;1370 Opdyke 9-6 FE 4-0 ■_(1-75 at-Oakland University E^;m ; ““ MICHIGAN I TURB0C?AFT Modern Parks | _____,_SON—WINDSOR I W27 Dixie Hwy. - Pontiac LIBERTY—HAMPTON-HOMETTE 8TS-2442 — ' TOWN 8. COUNTRY 334-6694 While it Lasts._ AT COLONIAL Immediate Occupancy In Our new Modern Parks RICHARDSON-WINDSOR 11964 Chevy Vi Ton j pickup, 6-cyl. stick, cole : fleetside body. Only - ^ $ia95 ROCHESTER TunninB .xondition. - AKC BRADLEY^CAMPER, aluminum “ WINTER BOAT STORAGE, covers for anv Dlckuo 3259 See- ,.— iLorner of M-59 at Opdyke) Make reservations now. K -'- bX?Draytm Plains OR M528 i*^“ , ‘^^“10 Boats 8. Motors. Lake Orion, uoiui, urayion riains. UK jyoza. i •~-.|e_South_ol[Waterford) | 3-1600, Open weekends only. CLEARANCE^ BOOTH CAMPER ; Aluminum c-evers and campers tor-any pickup. 4267 LaForest, Water- t„, , fnrrt no V552X I he J «M1. 'COACHMEN AT JOHNSON'S i 'Snow Mobiles -1 condition. FE 5-2483. 1964 CHEVY Vj TON PICKUP, 8 box, $995. Lloyd Bridges Dodge 1010 Maple Rd., Walled Lake._ LONG HAIRED KITTENS. HOUSE Oroken. 2 mos. old. FE 8-6159. : F |mTn1atURE DACHSHUNDS. REG-‘ --------, ..r complete heating system except pipe and fittings, S425. G. A. Thompson. 7005 M59 W. GIFTS, JOKES, GAGS AND NOVEL-ties. Lay-a-way$. Liberal Bills, Dixie, OR 3-9474. HORSE, SADDLE, BRIDLE AND blanket. 2 pony colts. Fancy chickens. Rabbits. 1 Fox terrier pup, male 693-1606. ______________ Hospital bed. complete wTth INSTRUCTIONS AVAILABLE JACK HAGAN MUSIC (69 Elizabeth Lake Rd. 332-0500 8192 Cooley Lake Rd. 363-5500 SEVERAL UPRIGHT PIANOS. 1 .’ "MS-trombone. Smith Moving Co., 371 NEED STUD SERVICE FOR E. Pike. FE 44864.__________] Mexican Chihuahua. Must be SLINGERLAND SNARE DRUM, 845.1 ..... ■ ' Ebony Cljrlnet. SlS. 651-3750. Used Organs r 0 m Lowrey, Wurlltzer. I, Sllvertone, etc. Priced HUNTING-FISiHING SPECIALTIES, HOT WATER HEATER, 30 GAL, gas. Consumers approved $89.50 value, $39.95 and $49.95. Marred. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard LOW PRICED 5' BATHTUB ENCLO-sures — glass, $25. Designed $2 exlre. G. A. Thompson. MATCHING WEDDING RINGS. White gold with 3 diamonds In each, almost “new. Bought for "I sell for $125. 338-2325. "NEVER USED ANYTHING LIKE It." say users of Blue Lustre for cleaning carpet. Rent electric shampooer $1, Hudson's - NEW GREETING 'CARD STORE: ample parking. Greeting cards, personal stationery, wedding announcements, printed napkins, wrappings and gifts. Forbes Printing and Office Supplies, 4500 Dixie, Drayton, OR 3-9767. ________ ODD LOTS baseboard! HEATING te estimates. A. & H. Sales. $59.95. Laundry tray, trim, $19.95; shower stalls with trim $39.95, 2-bowl sink, $2.95; Lavs., S2.9S; tubs, $20 and up. Pipe cut and threaded. SAVE PLUMBING CO., 841 Baldwin. FE 4-1516._______ PERFECT CHRISTMAS GIFTS. 12 POOL TABLES Bel-A IoYal OAK WINDOW WALL X 6'11", costs $100. now $25. 4 p.m, 651-4S56.______________ IfevERAL GOOD USED FURNACES 'Wl. A. BENSON JEATING DIV., 333-7171 SLOT TRACK, FULLY EtJUIPPED ____ 673-7459___________ IpRED-SATIN paints. WARWICK Supply. 2678 Orchard Lake. 682- »NOW PLOW AND TRACTOR WITH 3 point hitch and hydraulic, condition. S650. 628-3344. . I N AND RACE SET, OUT- Cook-Dunn alum, roof paint, SSJO gel. Oil base Interior, 14.00 gr' Misc. latex paint, 50 cents a qf. THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE 118 W. LAWRENCE ST. Everything to m*»f vour needs Clothing, Furnlti _____ - . _______ FURNITURE, desks, chairs, filing tonalila. Pontiac F;____ — ... dustrlal Tractor Co. 825 $. Wood-ward. FE 4-~"~ ■ PERCENT DISCOUNT on useo and new typewriters, adding machines, office desk, chairs, files, tables, storage cabinets, eograph and oirf-set Forbes Printing 8i Otfl_. 4500 Dixie, Waterford. OR_______ WASHED WIPING RAftS, 19 CENT YOUR WELDWOOD HEADQUARTERS WEDGING ANNOUNCEMENTS ... dtecount pricas. Forbes Printing and Office Supplies, 4500 Hwy, OR >9676. S WOLVERINE lO- PICK UP' CAMP- Q>ristH|at Trees 67-A i' VACATidN TRAIL- '■ AKC $450 GRINNELL'S Downtown 27 S. Saginaw Home of the Pontiac Hammond ________Organ Society___ USED BAND INSTRUMENT?" _963 LaSalle St. or phone 332-2915'. PUREBRED BEAGLES, GOOD rabbit hounds. 693-6716._________ PART P L O T T COON H 0 U started, $35. AAA 5-3106.____________ P-£#bOLE BEAUTY SALON Clippings—AKC Pups—Stud Service Pet Supplies—682-6401 or 682-0927 PEKINGESE, 10 .MONTH male, very, good with cl ■ USED SPECIALS Spinet piano $300, 25 ped bransen organ $1“'' •- LAST CALL On All 1966 Models OWN 8. COUNTRY MOBILE JtOMES r rent, buy: aWxzbo'T mobile. 20 minutes Pont! mo. Bloch Bros. OR 3-12 EVINRUDE SKEE"ER IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Lake & Sea Marine 245 So. Blvd. E. FE 4-9587 ^ TONY'S MARINE FOR 'JOHNSON ^ motors, boals, and canoes, 6M-3M0.' ' 'WINTER MRAGE ' SERVICE LUCKY AUTO Dj OLD POODLES, CHOICE OF LITTER puppies. Tiny toys. All colors. Also, tiny toy stud service. All colors. I G I S T E R E D APRICOT-TOY 3dle puppies and toy fox ter-r puppies. Chihuahua, white toy and tov tnv tarricr .fiiH !. FE 2- SIAMESE KITTEN. $15 ’OY POODLE, 3 MONTHS OLD. Reasonable. FE 8-8609. Only 2 Left lOVi X 7'/2 Campmate Truck Camper Ready tor winter, 12 volt, 110 blov on one big furnace. 4' deomtic frigerator, all foam constructi Was $2,345 NOW — COMPLETE and delivered with turnbuckles and wiring and taxes, 2 tanks Open 9 to 9 — 7 days a week MIDLAND TRAILER SALES 2257 Dixie Hwy. 338-0772 ____1 block north of Telegraph MARLETfES 50'-60' long, 12>*o 20' wide. Early! American, -Traditional or modern; Space available In 4 Star Park, noj extra charge. Also see th# famous light weight Winnebago Trailer. OXFORD TRAILER SALES | OPEN 9-8, CLOSED SUNDAYS ! 1 mile south of Lake Orion on M24 HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS 1 "Your Evinrude Dealer" .. Telegraph______332-8033 99 LEARN TO FLY - MUSKETEER, ] Lessons financed. AOI-Pontlac Alr- I port. OR 4-0441 or WO 3-8614,_ ItRIPACER CLUB MEMBERSHIP, j Pilots preferred. OA 8-3177. d{ Airplanes Cab. SBQtless Red. .FinisfL .. Full price $1197, SPARTAN DODGE, 865 Oakland. FE 8-4528. SALE Station Wagons 1963 thru 1966 ALL MAKES AND MODELS 2^SorTie have air conditioning trade-ins. Your old car will easy terms on balance. $1295 $2795 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 65 Mt. Clemens St. (AT WIDE TRACK) FE 3-7954_ ' yau^'can^selecM of 1965 Plymouth'Furys starh mg at $1297. SPARTAN DODGE INC. 855 Oak- WILSON Caidillac Ml 4-1930 Now Is the Time to Save On a New Model Trade-In Matthews-Hargredves 631 OAKLAND AVE FE 4-4547 ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP «11 Finance at 1% Per Month ■’•11959 Buick Hardtop ........ 11959 Ford Hardtop 54] 2 1959 Ramblers, each..... |4 1954 Cadillacs, 1 '4 1957 Chevy, 2 an ; Wanted Cars - Trucks 101 ' STAKE, LIKE NEW. 1964 Small Rambler $695 1957 end 1958 Olds ........$ 45 tach 1965 VW and 1964 Pontiac. Other models — a few trucks. ECONOMY CARS 2335 DIXIE HWY. HELP! I need 300 sharp Cadillacs, Pon-, s, Olds and Buicks tor out-of-j le market. Top dollar paid. MANSFIELD | AUTO SALES j Fourth St. Drayton Plains, ' 1 WHITE TOY POODLES Very Reasonable, FE 81095 N T E D GOOD HOM“e”| $2100 between 1-3, ACCORDION, GUITAR LESSONS., -Service PulaneckI OR 3-55 — . Franklins ““Mackinaw; urtice Equipment AUCTION EVERY SATURDAY Watch Tljurs. paper. Consignments — accepted. Auctionland. OR 4-3567 72 EVERY FRIDAY 7:30 P.M j EVERY SATURDAY ... 7:30 P./U a. CreesI Fans Holly Travel Coach, Inc. 15210 Holly Rd. Holly ME 4-6711 —Open Dally—and Sundays— Store Equipment 73 ;lark radiant hamburger broiler. 1 grill hood and fan. 1 chop block top w<....... be J!en 535 Commerce Rd., Com-, merce, or call EM 3-6117 or 363-1 STAN PERKInSYaLES & SERVICE 11180 Aubur AUCTIONEER - 313-635-9400 '--------- 11314 Miller Rd. - Swartz Creek T8. R CAMPER MFG. CO. PIONEER CAMPER SALES Sporting Goods 4-7651. Reloadint three!DU,.67Y.>.. Ck«.k. gi,.A I BARTH TRAILEERS 8. CAMPERS .7“ Plants-lreei-Shrubs 8VA! travel dueen campers j MERIT FIBERGLASS COVERS I (8"-27"-35" covers) ____ ALSO OVERLAND 8. COLEMAN -i-i irees. . uu u.g, ruu. tools, 292213091 West Huron FE 2-3989 74 Sleeth, 3 ml. west of Commerce! ' Village. 684-0635._______________ Save Ruger 44 Mag. Special St ____________________________ Livestock H4R 30-30 single Barrel Convertible,]---------------------- PO-30) GU) (410 sbolgun;, s^oRGAN TYPE RID Rifle), gijQ partly broken t( selection of nursery stock. Alsoj Christmas trees, wholesale or re-j More than 20 units to choosa fi tail. No Sunday sale. 685-2974 ori Discounts on all units. X . I pljljyp covers. barrel) and ( s $76.50. DO Keese ana urawtne Mitenes #0 HOWLAND SALES AND RENTALS 13245 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-1456 G HORSE,! ‘ “ Irlu. Kent Trailer Space TRAILER SITE AVAILABLE beautiful new RIVER BANK BILE VILLAGE AT 395 S. Tl GRAPH overlooking the water. Tel-Huron and Pontiac Mall ! GUNS, GUNS GUNS - BROWN-Ing, Remington, Winchester, Weath-erby, Ithaca. Rifles and shotguns. Colt, Smith & Wesson pistols. Bear and Browning archery hunting and target equipment. Gun repairing, scopes, mounting. Browning hunting shoes for men and women. All sizes. Complete selection of sliells. We have a rifle range and trap field. Try befort you buy. Sno-Travelers, ^ ^ T^*t drive on wheels, don't wait till winter. Cliff Dreyera Sports Center, 5210 N. Holly Road, Holly, ME 4-6771. Open 7 days a week. 0.30 WINCHESTER,' LEVER Action, new. MA S-3106._________ DOUBLE D RANCH CONTINUING business as usual. 673-7657.___ OR SALE 1 SHETLAND PONY, 1 Welch pony. 887-5588 or 363-3610. GENTLE PALOMINO WALKING geMIng, 8250. UL 2-2024. EXTRA GODD HORSE AND COW DEER RIFLES WITH SCOPE, t OR 3-9514________ GOLF CARTS, $480 VALUE, 81 Blvd. Supply'^' '”*So**S. Blvd ■ ________FE 3-7081_________ GOOD USED SHOTGUNS AND Ben's Loan (Office, 15 N. ! ___ FE 4-5141. ^__________________ GOOD USED DEER RIFLES, mounting ant" 375 S. Telegra REMINGTON AUTOMATIC LOAO-er, 300 caliber. Ilka new, leather $95. FE " SPORTERIZED- (303L 6 POWER Weaver scope, Williams mounts. OR 3-6476.____^___________ ?KI-D00^SN|WM0BILE - $545;* Save '^’onJM6|l2 ; snowmobile VUl. we I got all 3 models of new Johnson Skee-Horse L COLLER, 1 mile east of VILLAGE GREEN MOBIL ESTATE, x,, c , new and different. 99H5 Rrfrwn!®'' '■ 4160 Foley, Waterford SMALL CAMPER, KT, ■ ideal for deer himtln 8-6230, II Hay-Groin—Feed 84 PRIME GRADE TURKEYS. RAISED on wire. Scientific fed. Large amounts of white meat. Fresh dressed. Ridgewood Farm, 969 Lakeville Rd., Oxford. OA 8-3670 SETTING HENS, ALSO SOME P pies. MY '3-5609.____________________ BOSC PEARS - APPLES isny varieties. Sweet Cider, Util- ^nd“'5SS. .......... ~ ‘ e to 6 daily.________________ WHOLESALE AKD RETAIL AP-ples, tI.S0 bu. North of Rochester out Rpehester Rd. 625 E. Buell Rd. 13 USED RIpING TRACTORS s dnd mower tachments. Priced I iSEE OUR HUGE LINE N oi 1-75 Intersection. Cfdsr L»n-, Christmas Tree Farm, 1970 Dixie] Hwy. 625-1922. si^oo'S GUNS-CAMPERS j and _________ CRUISE-OUT, INC. ; 63 Walton Dally 9-6 p.m. FE 8-4402] TRA’7EL WITH THESE QUALITY LINES- Luxury in a BOLES AERO, 20-35' FROLIC, 14-24'-BEE LINE, 13-26' YUKON DELTA, 17-24' "THE RED BARN" • Jacobson Trailer Sales 90 Williams Lake Rd. OR 3-59 TRUCK CAMPERS - —„..i. New and used, $395 I. Also rentals. Jacks, intercoms. —Lowry Camper Sdles, 1325 Hospital Road, Union ' * 3-3681. Spare '• YOUR APACHE DEALER EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 6507 Dixie Hwy., Clarkston xie Hwy., Cl 675-iHi STOP “We HoI(J The Key To Your Comfort" WINTER SPECIALS Now Being Offered Special Values, Special Prices. Don't miss them. Waterford Mobile Home Sales Display Offices Of All Types Available 6333 HIGHLAND RD., (M59 Opposite Pontiac Airport) Office - 673-3600 Residence 332-2915 )4 Baldv _FE 8-M25 EXTRA EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Car "Check the rest, then get the best" at Averill Grimaldi Jeep Authorized Jeep Dealer MORE MONEY Paid For Sharp Cars 1 need hundreds of sharp cars 1 GMC Factory Branch Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 NO CREDIT PROBLEM BUY HERE-PAY HERE 1959 CHEVY Wagon $ 79 1960 CHRYSLER^'Xlean . $497 1958 BUICK, 1-owner .. $347 1959 FORD, 2-ttoor $197 1959 PONTIAC, wagon . $127 1960 FORD, Wagon .... $397 1958 FORD, 2-door ... $147 1958 BUICK, 4-door ., $)97 1959 OLDS, Wagon .... $2»? 1960 CHEVY, 4Kloor ... $147 1958 PONTIAC, 4-door . $147 1960 FORD, 2-door . $297 NORTHWOOD AUTO SALES Repossession 1961 BUICK LeSaber 4 door hardtop, V8, automatic, radio, heater, silver finish, full power. Balance owing $442,56. Take on payments of $23.98 per month. Ask foi '■ Archer KING AUTO SALES merica's Largest Used Car Dealer M59 at Elizabeth Lake FE 8-4088 CALL COLLECT Heavy Duty One-Ton Pickups 4 speed, V6 and V8, heavy du' "'1960-1964 GMCs and FORDS From $695 up In Size. I, that l! H city b - . GALE McANNALLY'S j !' Auto Sales . 1304 Baldwin FE 8-4525! y Across trom Pontiac slate Bank j r NICE 1964 OR '65 STATION WAGON PAYMENTS TOO HIGH?'' s'uSED C Motorcycles HERE NOW 1967 HONDAS All models and colors Special announcement prices Easy Terms—Buy now and save. ANDERSON SALES 8. SERVICE 1645 S. Telegraph FE 3-7H SUKIKI CYCLES, 50CC-250CC. RUPP Minibikes as low as $139.95. Take M59 to W. Highland. Right on Hickory Ridge Rd. to Demode Rd. Lett and follow signs to DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE. Phone MAIn 9-2179. ________ SUZUKI X6 SCRAMBLER—THEY'RE HERE TUKO SALES INC. 872,E. AUBURN - ROCHESTER UL 2-5363 "Top Dollar" 1960‘thruT965 Immaculate CarsI Slop In-Sea Mr. Gilmer Spartan Dbcigel iO'XS2' PARKWOOD AND 12' X'6 Hillcrest tor sale or rent. Set u In park, lake privileges. 332-8027 c ^o^j-Accoftorlet 97 1966 MOBILE HOMES Display Clearonce * ' Al must go lIsw Down Payments 10'x52' 1400 down 12'x52' 8500 down , 12'x60' $600 down 3-bedroom models. For information ci MERCURY-MERCRUISER DEALER Cruise-Out, Inc. Dally t - 6 p.m. GLOSE-OUT On all '66 boats and motors. SEE THE NEW SKEE HORSES AND T-BIRD SNOWMOBILES PAUL A. YOllNG, INC. ______ Dixie Hwy. at Loon Lake BRAND I Drayton Plains . OR 4-041 '•'4X-I.X-1’ ' Open Dally 9 - “ •- x - ~ RICHARDSON, 2 BEDROOMS. . CHRlScrftfFT SPEED BOAT^S' i.l Riviera, excallant condltlq,n i-l throuohout.. iWill taka caf, boat or STOP HERE LAST 'a pay more for sharp, lata me cars. Corvettes needed. M(SM Easy Terms. ASK FOR TRUCK DEPT. FE 5-4101 John McAuliffe For(t 277 West Montcalm Ave. (1 block E. of Oakland Ave.) intTrnational SCOUT 1964, 4 WHEEL DRIVE peed transmission, A-1 condition king BRoi 4 1662 FE 4-073' Pontiac at Opdyke Rd. REPOSSESSION 1 1 WILD- 1961 CHEVY. 4-DOOR WAGON -Radio, auto, clean. 674-1372, after 6. 1961 CORVETTE 4 SPEED, EXCEL- -lent condition, $1295. Full Price. Autobahn Authorized VW Dealer ^ I Mile North of Miracle Mlir i. Telegraph_________FE B-4531 DODGE INC. SPARTAN DODGE. 855 Oato REPOSSESSION (1963 BUICK, 2-DOOR, STICK. Assume monthly payments of S38 per LUCKY AUTO 1962 CHEVROLET STATION WAG-automatlc "6'.', $595, Ml KB PIE (^HEVROLET, Blrmlng- 1963 BUICK SKYLARK SPORT - -se, blue with white fop, deluxe rior done in black with bucket s. This Is a low mileage car Is perfect In every respect, it see to appreciate. 533 Fifth 1963 CHEVY II 4 DOOR AUTO---‘Ic, radio, heater, $695. MIKE DIE CHEVROLET, Blrmlng- FISCHER BUICK 544 S. WOODWARD 647-5600 Jeep Dealer ji966'lEEp\x „ }1967 jeep) Ur 'i 1967 JFFp'vUan 1963 BUICK SKYLARK HARDTOP, coupe, power steering and braltes, automatic transmission, V8. Beat tiful midnight blue with white coi Universal V6 < ; Complete parts — equipment, .service !Grimaldi Cars Authorized Dealer ROCHESTER DODGE ways AHne selection of NEW Id USED~^ Trucks 651-6100 SPECIAL $1875 FULL PRICE New 1967 Jeep Universal ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP EM 3-4155 ___or EM 3-4156 “TOP DOLLAR PAID" GLENN'S WANTED 1961 FORD-PLYMOUTH-Good running condition. FE Junk Curi-Trucki 101-A ALWAYS BUYING JUNK CARS COPPER, _ starters and ____ DIxson, OR 3-5849. BI^ASS; RADIA- 7/- TRUCKS All Series In StocJc JEROME; FORD Rochester Ford Dealer OL 1-971: Auto Insurance Marine 104 AUTO INSURANCE TERMS AVAILABLE CALL TODAY Anderson & Associates 1044 JOSLYN QUALITY AUTO RISK INSURANCE installment plan Foreign Cart LLOYD $1195 $89 Down or Your Old Cor No Payitieflts Until Next Year Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 A TRUE PRESTIGE CAR IS this 1964 Buick Wildcat hardtop. Lovely bronze color Inside and out with black padded top. Extra smooth Buick transmission with power steering-and brakes and special Wildcat V8. Full Price SI697. SPARTAN DODGE INC. 855 Oakland Ave. FE 1965 BUICK ELECTRA i 4-obor Hardtop, Air Condition- HAROLD TURNER 1962 CORVAIR COUP spotless Ermine White fini 1963 CHEVROLET "8" AUTOMATIC, radio, 2 door, $995. MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham, Ml iditlon, best offer, must 1963 CHEVROLET 4 DOOR HARD-top. Automatic, power, $1195. MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Blrmlng- ham. Ml 4-2,735.________________ 1963 CHEVROLET 4 DOOR, AUTO-matic, radio, $845. MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET 1963 CHEVY BEL AIR, 6 CYLINDER automatic, radio) padded dash, low mileage, good condition. 673-7386 after 5.___________• 1963 CHEVROLET STATION WAG- 1963 CHEVROLET STATION WAG-on, automatic "8"f$1045. MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmlng-ham Ml 4-2735. ^ 1963 SPIDER CORVAIR CONVERTI-" wire wheels $895. OR 3-1163. speed, good condition, take over payments. OR 3-1598 after 5 p.m. 1964 CHEVROLET 2 DOOR, AUTO-matlc, "6" radio. $895. MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham Ml 4-2735. _____________ 4 D(30R, AUTO- matic "6" radio, 11095. MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham 1964 CHEVELLE, STANDARD SHIFT —six cyl., radio, carpeting, w.vy. tires, excellent condition. SBw, 674-1819.___________ . HAROLD TURNER 1 Birmingham' FOAD INC. S. Windward M G—10 N«w «imI Uwd Can W4 CHEVROLET STATION WAO-Of^AuTonullC. r»«lo, SI1T5-I MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Blr-i ---- ‘*1 3LET SI ------ ju1om»fic » MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Bil 104 Wtw gild Und Can IMPEftlAU to $14$. Svt A I CHElirY I AGON H Automatic transmission, RADIO, HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES, FULL PRICE $1066.00 PAYMENTS AS LOW AS I9S8. CALL CREDIT, manager, MR. PARKS, AT HAROLD TURNER FORD. Ml 4-7500. Kessler-Hahn OAKLAND COUNTY'S NEWEST CMRYSLER-PLYMOUTH Dealer On Dixie In Clarkston _____, MA 5-2635 1963 Imperiol Ui^ Can 104 BANKRUPT? CREDIT PROBLEMS? We Con Finance You— ^ ■•'^Call Mr. Murphy at , FE S-elOl ' THE PONTIAC PRESS. New and Used Cars 1M4 thunderbird' W I TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1966 104jMARiMADUKE DOOR HARDTOP. -■^RO-'i^ochei^JwT Pi f»S CHEVROLET 5Il Wm CHEVROLET CONVERTILBE, automatic "S ' radio $1295. MIKE MO t, SAVOIE CHEVROLET. Birmihs- mg ham Ml-4-2735. • _________ rest •A me CHEVROLET IMPA Oakknd Oakland , ^FACTORY OFFICIAL $2,995 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH NOVEMBER •/Transportation: / , Specials BUY HERE-PAY HERE i No Application Refused TAN DODGE. 855 Oakland Ave,. FE 8-4528. f965 CHEVROLET STATION WA'G-MtKE^SAVOiE CHE^OLET Bir- McComb CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH IMPERIAL FALCON 2 ( ___OLDS Hardt 7-3214 1958 PONTIAC H ------961 FORD V8. a Gel "A BETTER DEAL" et: John McAuliffe Ford 30 Oakland Ave._£E 5-4101 1965 Mustang , 2 plus 2 Fostbock Vfi. 4 speed, radio, heater, lur- i quoise finish, now only— i •$1795 BEATTIE f965 CHEVY IMPALA CONVERT!- r, $1650. 673-5649. YES BUT, AT S Dodge you can bui Ford Country Sedan, Full price., SP> dodge, 855''-OaklJ LLOYD 1965 CHEVROLET Impala Super Sport coupe. HauTai-Automatic, console, power. Extra $1989i $89 bowr, or Old Cor | Lloyd Motors ! ^°les^sP REBELLION 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 j “ SL^nS.^er^.5 • ■.I 15 Ml., Birmingham, 647-09S5. 1963 CHEVY Automatic $797 $7 9< 1959 PONTIAC Hardtop . $297 $3,0: 11959 DeSOTO Hardtop . $197 $2 2' 1960 CORVAIR Auto. $97 $1 2( NO DOWN PAYMENT SMALL WEEKLY PAYMENTS IMMEDIATE DELIVERY I MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM I WE HANDLE AND ARRANGE ALL FINANCING CALL MR, DAN AT FE 8-4071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM 1965 CHEVELLE 4 DOOR "6", AU-! ' tomatic, radio, healer, $1395. MIKE I SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmlng-| h'am. Ml 4-2735. I 1965 DELUXE CHEVY BISCAYNE:] 1»65 CHEVROLET, IMPALA 2-DOo1rI hardtop, can be seen at 1389:. S. Cass Lake Road.________ T965 ^HEVROLET CONVERTIBLE, MIKE SA*WIE’cHEVROLET,*'B'it' mingham. Ml 4-2735. I f»66 CHEVY II 6 CYLINDER AU-tomatic. radio, $1595. MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham Ml 4-2735.____ 1966 CHEVROLET 1964 DODGE 330 4 DR. SE-dan. Completely equipped including torqueflile, V-8, Power Steering and brakes. with matching nylon and vinyl interior. SPARTAN DODGE, 855 Oakland. FE DOOR HARD-L -.....M 4-2735: 1966 CHEVROLET CAPRICE, dpor, vinyl top, green and bli deluxe black interior, power bra.__ and steering, air conditioning, AM- 1965 DODGE MONACO 2-DOOR hardtop, vinyl lop, radio with reverb, power brakes and steering, buckets, 383 cu. in, engine, exc. IMPALA — Four-door hardtop mileage, power steering, t showroom, new Exceptional _ See this one and you wiii buy I The price is right, $2,195 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSIERtPLYMOUTH 860 $. Wbbdwara Ave..Ml 7-: 1965 DODGE 9 PASSENGER WAG-on, power window and steering, fattory Installed rack. Like new, 13 mos-old. 626-A008....... On Dixie in Watert *'’oVTl29f"*”'* S FORD CUSTOM 2-DOdRr'i N«w and Uted Cart 134 CONVERTIBLE, Rpppssession 1961 PONTIAC ranvertlBla VI, r steering, bral lie, red beauty, $ _____________OA 8-2528 1966 PONTIAC, YELLOW, GTO COtT 1966 Pontiac Tgmpest Custom 4 door ing, radio, healer, beautiful *'blue $2195 BEATTIE ‘ "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" On Dixie in Waterford at the double stoplight OR 3-1291 ^4-DOOR, jjWUST I ITM'ltAMBLER, 4-DOOd~Stlck~1, FALCON Cnnvertihle rariin : “ ' r “alls, 'sharp, "c^nly lucky AUTO On Main Street CLARKSTON - MA 5-5500___ 1965 LeMANS, BEAUTIFUL ( 1965 CATALINA 2 $2495 Autobahn MOTORS, INC. AUTHORIZED VW DEALER '/2 mile North, of Miracle Mile 1765 S. Telegraph_F E 8-4531 VILLAGE RAMBLER 666 S. Woodward Birminghom M\ 6-3900 5 PLYMOUTH AND JUST i)ODG*E Oakland CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 166 FORD FAIRLANE- 500 2 DOOR Hardtop, 8 cylinder with auto-mitic transmission, power steering JEROME FORD, Rochester's Fol Dealer, OL------- 1966 T-BIRD LANDAU, BEAUTIFUL condition. Call Tom A/Vyers, ' tween 9-5 p.m., Detroit Lion: 1966 FALCON FUTURA 4 DOOR. V8, automatic# power steering and power Factory Air Con- Ilk# new, (4) to choose from at JEROME FORD, Rochester's Ford I. 647-0096. MUSTANG, 2 PLUS 2 FAST-:k, has all the goodies and Is the open road, was !,295. NOW ONLY $1,-'3 Tuii price. $99 down, J59 month- "It only takes a minute" to Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford Oakland Ave. __ FE 5-4101 1966 RED GALAXIE 5i >1 335-3853. Repossession 1959 OLDS 2 door hardtop, V8 automatic, radio, heater, bronz! finish. Balance owing $182.16. Taki on payments of $9.81 per month Ask for Mr. Archer KING AUTO SALES America's Largest Used Car Dealer M59 ot Elizobeth Lake Rd, FE 8-4088 CALL COLLECT 1963 PONTIAC WAGON POWER, AUTOMATIC TRANS-MISSION, RADIO, HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES. FULL PRICE $1045. WITH PAYMENTS OF ONLY $9.72.' CALL CREDIT MGR. MR.. - PAHR&'A'T ■HARetB TuWlT- -ER FORD. Ml 4-7500. DON'S USED CARS SMALL AD - BIG LOT 70 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM 1964 BONNEVILLE THE NEW AUDETTE PONTIAC NOW SERVING Troy—Pontiac—Birmingham A 1850 Maple, across from Berz Ai 642-8600 TEMPEST 1966 Two-door. Like new. Only 6,000 ■'light blue, matching In- car financing. $1,995 I BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ' Woodward Ave. Ml 7-32141 1965 RAMBLER mbassador wagon air condit power equipped. Radio, I HAROLD TURNER FORD INC. 464 S. Woodward Birmingham Ml 4-7500 NEW 1967 AMERICAN Specially priced at $1839 ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP EM 3-4155 or EM 3-4156 1955 sfuOlBAKER COMMANDeX 2 ^oor V-8, MY 2-2942 after 4 1959 “ S ■f U D E B A K E R r“G065~R U N- 2-door leater, ' miles, tinted glass, while 1965 FORD Wagon, 4-door, auto., dou 1966 MUSTANG 677 S. LAPEER RD. ____ 191^^2041 ______ REPOSSESSION ' 963 OLDS CONVERTIBLE, LIGHT blue, hydramatic, double power, radio, must sell Immediately for estate^ highest bidder. 333-7931. 1956 PLYMOUTH, ALL POWER, $50. 1959 PLYMOUTH STATION WAGON, radio, heater, all power, auto,, 4- TRANSPORTATION CARS" 1960 PLYMOUTH 4-door, V8 gine, automatic transmission, ra-. dio, (leater, whitewall tires '" $1,795 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH AC CONVERTIBLE, “"LUCKY AUTO : ■ 1??^ '* Y Y^__y*54 964 PONtlAC VaTALINA 4 DOOR, automatic, $1345 MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham Ml 1959 BONNEVILLE 2 DOOR HARO"- top, $200. FE 8-3030.__________; 1960 PONTIAC CATALTna!' CON- vertlble, good condition, best of-ter, FE 5-2469. ■ 1964 PONTIAC CATALINA STATION wagon, 9 passenger, Hydramatic Power steering and brakes. Holly Wont To Buy A Cor At A Wholesale Price? $150,000 Inventory Liquidation Sole 1966 OLDS Toronodo Deluxe. All power. Factory air conditioning ..........................$3550 1966 OLDS 98 Luxury Sedan, full power, factory air. 3 to choose from ........................$3395 1965 OLDS 88 2-do6r Hardtop. Power steering and brakes ................................$2095 1966 OLDS Cutlass Convertible. 2 tp* choose from .....................$2595 1965 OLDS Luxury Sedan, full power. 2 to choose ■ from ..................................$2595 1965 PONTIAC Convertible ................$2295 2 YEAR WARRANTY 635 S! Woodward Ave. Birminc^ham 647-5111 WOULD YOU BELIEVE 1960 Pontiac Sports ^42M THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1966 Dem Loser to Push State Income Tax LANSING (UPI) — State Rep. terday he would push to get a meet Dec. 7-9 to wind up its il. James Starr, D-Lansing, de-'state income tax through the session, fcated in last week s Republi- legislature next month. Starr said that unless the can landslide election, said yes-i TTie legislature is scheduled to Democratically controlled Leg-' islature acts now on tax re- with I POWER FURNACE HUMIDIFIER family from roldt. ■ winirr protoet your fan dry tore throait and oh . _ _ TUr scientifically.de$igned ^V■AIR HVMIDI. will provide you with controlled hu” midity for jutt penniet a day in operating Naw SM-Through Dasign Gear plexigla» give* visual proof of its efficient operation. Installed on any horizontal wamrair duct of a forced ' air furnace, or with a plenum adapter, a NU-AIR HUMIDIFIER is automatically controlled with furnace c^ratidn. Your home will continnally maintain a comfortable and healthful level of 35% to 45% humidity. Save 15% On^fuel Bills . .With a NU-AIR HUMIDIFIER your home will feel comfortably warm at lower temperatures thereby reducing your winter fuel bill up to 15%. INTRODUCTORY CASH AND CARRY PRICE HU-Air HUMIDIFIER .. a. $ 69’’’’ BRYAN F. FRENCH 3SI North Paddock PONTIAC HEIGHT’S SUPPLY 2685 Lapeer Road PONTIAC Pentagon Cuts Use of Lie Defector Tests LOSE CHILDREN - I form. Republicans who took ! over the Senate and managed a 55-55 tie in the House would not pass badly needed fiscal reform legislation. “I'm going to try to get all I the forces to work. I believe that if it's a reasonable program, the governor will cooperate. If we I don’t get fiscal reform by Jan. 1, twe’re not going to get it,” Starr I said. I Gov. George Romney and I Democratic leaders in the state; have declared a new tax struc-j ;ture is necessary to protect the^ Barbara, 30, at a Chicago hos-i state against deficit spending by I pital yesterday after a flash |the next fiscal'year, July 1,1968. fire swept their'South Side New Senate Majority leader! home claiiping the lives of I Emil Lockwood. R-St. Louis, their three children. Found ;said last week that unless the; dead were Mark. 10 months, I state changes it's tax program, j his brother Shawn, 3, and Ros-Michigan could find itself $65 lyn, 2. I million in the red by the next --------------;--- ; fiscal year. . Democrats have previously S supported changing the state i Constitution and creating a graduated income tax program. Starr said he would try to combine the graduated income! tax theme with a . flat-rate in-' come tax plan proposed by Republicans. Starr said he would go to Gus , Scholle, Michigan president, and ask his support of, , ,, , the fiscal reform program. i go-ahead ’ Monday in his ap-! Starr also said he would meetiP^’ state ad- iwith House Speaker Joseph Ko-p^,!^/’*' goneral. walski, D-Detroit, in an attempt ^^^he high court granted Mc-|to get legislative action on his’^onald^le^ to appeal^ WASHINGTON (AP) — Tlie tigations Mily when the matter| The House committee wasn’t day use of polygraphs for pre-Pentagon, ^ten abused of-involves security clearance;completely satisfied with the employment screening — an higher than the ‘confidential’lway the Pentagon phrased its area which haldly can be char-level or if employment is clear- |directive. acterixsed as falling within the ly consistent with the interest of The Pentagon, the committeeIdefinition (rf ‘the most serious national security.” inoted, ‘still permits the every j national security cases.’” I being less than truthful about sorrie things, is cutting back on jthe use of lie detector tests. I And Congress, sometimes the ; accuser, is happy about it. j When a House Committee on 'Government Operations~said i federal agencies were too liber-I al in the use of polygraph — lie idetector — examinations, the ! Defense Department was the ! first to change its ways. The Pentagon went out with an oi^er regulating how polygraph tests vtcre to be conducted and stating how its ex-Willie aminers, now numbering over Edwards, 30, comforts his wife 400, were to be selected, trained and supervised. ‘‘The directive represented; the first step taken by any agen-j cy to curtail the widespread of the so-called lie detector j test,’’ the committee reported | just before adjournment of the! 89th Congress. Its report was! made public 9 few days ago. The committee said the Pen-i tagon conducted 14,978 ptrly-; graph tests in the year ending June 30, 1963, the year Congress first really began looking into lie detector usage by the government. Guardsman Can Appeal State Ouster _________ LANSING (API-The Mich- “ 0JQ igan Supreme Court gave Maj. ,fiGen. Ronald D. McDonald a proposal. .favorable Court of Appeals rul- Politieal Advertiti THANK TOU WATERFORD My aim is to merit the support you gave at the polls Tuesday, Nov. 8th Elmer R. Johnson I 16 U.S. Dead [in Viet War Are Identified In response to queries, the Pentagon said the number was lopped to less than half that — 6,294 — in fiscal 1966 which ended last June .30. Further, Defense Department figures, showed a decline in recent years in the number of lie detector exams. There were 14,-222 in 1964 and 11,634 in 1965. Slightly more than 800 have been given the past four; months, the first quarter of fis-i cal 1967. ! The Pentagon attributed - the; reduction to tighter controls placed on the use of polygraph exams by a directive issued in July 1965, three months after the House committee issued its first findings. Basically, Pentagon components can use lie detector tests Starr was defeated by Thomas challenge of Gov. i L. Brown of Lansing. ® ''■ght to dis- ; ________:___________ jmiss him from the state mili- tary post and the right of Maj. Gen.. Clarence Schnipke to serve in McDonald’s place. . ■ ■jt . ’ ★ ★ The jSupreme Court order was signed by Chief Justice Thom-1 Kavanagh, while Justice Theodore Souris disseiited and! 'Justices Paul Adams and John,j^^,p^,j WASHINGTON (AP) - The Dethmers did not ppriicipate. ® ’ Pentagon has identified 16 men McDonald, working for a Lan- mattersth‘e- killed in the Viet Nam war. sing lithograph firm, cnMtiimes,^ryj.j. states, “polygraphs’are to The.list included eight Army, as an unassigned maior gen-one Navy and seven Marines, eral m the Michigan National investigation is punisha-Action: Guard. imprison- His appeal requires .'iChmpke -to show by what right he now holds the adjutant general’s post and asks for a writ declaring the ousted officer ‘‘the lawful and right adjutant that AT THE DOCTOR'S COMMAND ) day. He spends li TODAY'S PRESCRIPTION IS THE BIGGEST BARGAIN IN HISTORY Pharma^ Plaza Pharmacy Jerry It Jdanne Dunsmore, RPH 3554 Pontiac Lk. Rd., Pontiac, Mich. Phone6T3-126T 24 HourtADarServirP FREEDELIVi^RY Money Orders Issued Here IT> feature Sanffm Candr Killed i CALIFORNIA — 1st Lt. Yates, San Bruno. I MASSACHUSETTS - 1st I Perrault, Needham. MICHIGAN — Spec. 4 Walker, Detroit. NORTH CAROLINA - Pfc. OREGON Sgt. Robert Grants Pass. PENNSYLVANIA ~ Spec. 1 thinking about improving your home? •Th«n shouldn't you see us soon? Loons ore available up to 36 months. Take advantage of our services — after all they're for you. CALL 335-i9493 CHIEF PONTIAC FEDERAL CREDIT UNION 790 Joslyn Avenue - Pontiac all respects entitled to hold and occupy that office.” It asks the court to find ' Schnipke's appointment ‘‘void and of no effect . . . and ousting and excluding the defendant Ifrom that office.” Schnipke was appointed to Pfc. David B. p«gg, fjn thg adjutant’s post July 22, - Pfc. Wellington M. 1965. Romney had removed pto'terry L. Fontaine, McDonald May 20, 1965, after a Lt Francis J ®3-hour hearing into reported ir-' regularities in the Michigan ince cpi, Billie j^jiitgry establishment, le^'iiichmond' After the hearing, Romney AIR FORCE found JVIcDonald guilty of mal- j capt. Vincent J, Connolly, home town fcasancc, mlsfeasancc and gross action®'''*"' **** ** '"'“'"® neglect of duty. The charges In- Listed as dead of other than volved land transactions at hostile causes were; Camp Grayling and the use of tocal armory funds. ALASKA - Pfc. Norman L. Lingley,; The Appeals Court Said the ‘^’’n"diana‘ - Pfc. Lawrence E. Fowler, i govcmor acted Within hls rights in removing McDonald. ^ent for one year or more.” “Polygraphs,” it says further, will be used in security inves- Give America’s lightest whiskey 6&W SEVEN STAR SCOTCH LIGHTNESS • CANADIAN QUALITY A Smooth American Blend Preferred By Millions For Its Taste BLENDED WHISKEY, 86 PROOF, 40% STRAIGHT WHISKEY-60% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS. GOODERHAM & WORTS LTD, PEORIA. ILL WASHINGTON - NEW YORK — 2nd Casey, Bronx. ,i»tNNSYLVANIA - I MASSACHUSETTS - PfC. Ted N. Toll- mu oa a o a-a a- a The State Constitution did not distinguish between military and-civilian appointed officers, the court said in answer to McDonald’s contention that as a military officer he should have been granted a military courtmartial. Listed as missing from causes * * * other than hostile action were: i A second suit, challenging army i Romney's findings and the Spec. 4 Paul c, Hamby Jr. and Pfc. Iconduct of the hearing is pcnd-^reHc*5 tere^^'liot"giTen.’’°"'* "'"'ling before tkc Appeals Court. MMd HOME OF FINEST BRAND NAMES 108 N. Saginaw, FE 3-7114 Music for Leisure Hours! SOLID STATE FM-AM CLOCK R4»10 9 TRANSISTOR FM-AM RADIO Th« Bpoce age design of solid state engin-' YOUR CHOICE •For the octivet who like to take their enter- eertng offers you beautiful tone quaiity orid __ toinment with them! Ploys on 4 penlite superb'reception. Turn it on tonight ond ' 1 » . botteries or hou*s current, AC or DC. Hoe tot it lull you to sleep. 1 5 dioctos, 3 step torse; switch. 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