Tokyo Rains Don't Hinder Final Olympic Preparation
TOKYO (A — Drenching r*hn diction tor the colorful Oct 10 the foreign visitors. "Haft Ranking them by the number The Japanese Organising over the equator In the Pacific At the National Stadium, Thousands of blue And yellow haHed Tokyo and the sun opening ceremonies, to start in «B we e« de,” one aald. of Uckets left over, the least. Committee now feels it has already and has successfully workers Fridayset up 350 mi- cushions were tied to the hard
throuArfoJh FHHnv «!u *** afternooo» WM for cloudy Black msihet ticket prides tor popular events seemed to be, done everything possible and JX)unced ®?d fo*® crotdevision sets oo the preps wooden botches, giving a bright
st waZ. &rS s,tej3^r* ^ smss ts-rjzs
last minute preparationa and Hundreds of homewives ia had soared to $l,6N on last ft- "**’ ” cycMn«- T^iTxsJt?^ - *"* # ★ ★ plastic box to protect it from * * *
excitement far its M* date with white aprons armed with port. But ttefaq gales nynptos STOLL JUDO TICKETS ag joo. To CQver ^ Olympic Games rain- The TV sets will be con- The streets are lined wiih flag
the 18th Olympic Gardes. brooms were sweeping the reported that more than 80,000 Surprisingly, in this mecca of ®vo amazing television ^ foreign correspondents have nected 'to a closed circuit and poles-and strings .of small na-
* * ,* streets to contribute their bit tickets were left unsold tor judo, about 000 tickets Still telay satellite Syncom III is been accredited with.the organ- will show only the names of tional flags of participating
The weatherman’s latest pre- to give a good impression to soccer. awaited takers. hanging in ’ space somewhere izing committee. , participants and results. countries.
The Weather
OX WMtftar Bw*M Fnci.i
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THE PONTIAC PRESS
Home
Edition
VOL. 122 NO. 211
* ★ * dr
PONTIAC, MICHIGAN.' FRIDAY, OCTOBER, 9, 1964—48' PAGES uNtTiS^Vf^JVoNAL
Romney Ousts 3 in National Guard Scandal
Barry Raps Coexistence; Johnson: 'Won't Sell TV A'
WASHINGTON, (A-Sen. Barry Goidwater returned to California today, charging President Johnson was afraid to stand up to communism and was playing a “dangerous game of coexistence with Rutiua.”
Meanwhile, the President toured Tennessee promising he wouldn’t let Goidwater sell any part of the Tennessee Valley Authority. He planned to link up with his wife in New Orleans tonight as the Tint Lady ended a four-day whistle-stop tour of the South on the Lady Bird special.
Goidwater, in the state where Us primary victory last Jaae Bailed down the Republican nomination for president, lashed out at the President ia a speech prepared far the World Aflairs Connell ia Loo Angeles. He saM:
“In defense of freedom — and if ever the boundaries of. the free world are to be enlarged— there will always be riot.
“But I submit that the gruat-er risk in the face of tymmtK nist aggression, is to & nothing — still worse, fo submit — and worst of all, to soak new
and illusory accommodations with an antagonist that has never retreated an inch from a resolute purpose that contemplates the destruction of o u r world.
RISKS SECURITY “On all three scores,” Gold-water said, “the present administration is playing a dangerous game — filled with risks for American security, and for die hopes of free men everywhere for a just peace.”
Goidwater was scbednled to campaign today in Los Angeles, Culver City and San Fraa-eisco.
Johnson, in the third day of a six-day campaign trip through 11 states, began the day in Louisville, but made his cracks about the TVA in a speech prepared for Nashville, Tenn.
Goidwater, several weeks ago in Knoxville, Tenn., said ha still believed it would be desirable to sell portions of the TVA qot directly connected with flood control or hydroelectric power. l‘Tjm not going to sell TVA,” said Johnson. “Nt matter how much they offer—ho matter how much they want for it—no mat-
ter what names they call it— minever sell the TVA.
“In the first place, it doesn’t belong to me—It belongs to , the people of the upper Sooth,” Johnson said. “It belongs to the people at America.”
The President said TVA was in danger because “an unsympathetic president in the White House could starve the TVA, pack its board with people who would dismantle it, and undermine its purpose and its use-
US. Officer Is Kidnaped
V«ntzu«la Terrorists Gave Warning First
CARACAS, Venezuela (UPI)-Terrorists today kidnaped U.S. Air Force Lt.-Col. Michael Smolen from his borne at gun point after giving him M hours notice of their intentions.
* * *
Smolen, 48, of Chandler, Aria., is deputy chief of the U.8. Air Force mission in Venezuela. He lived in eastern Caracas with his wife and four children. The kidnapers were presumed to be terrorists supporting Cuba’s Fidel Castro.
With Smolen when be was kidnaped by two heavily armed youths was bis immediate superior, CeL Henry Lee Chaste, and a civilian driver
LYNDON KNOWS THE ROUTINE-It seems mandatory for a politician seeking high office to Idss and be kissed by as many babies as possible. It helps promote the “father image.” President Lyndon Johnson used the well-knoWn practice and grabbed a baby in Indianapolis, Ind., yesterday.
Choate said an anonymous caller jhoned the Air Force mission yesterday and said that Smolen would be kidnaped.
★ * *
The call at first was ignored, Choate tafal, because so many of a simillar nature have been received. This morning Choate had second thoughts about the call and went to Smoien’s house. MEN ARRIVED *
The two men started to get into Smoien’s car when two youths armed with submachine guns appeared on Smoien’s side of the car and ordered him to accompany them.
They sped off and two Mocks away picked up three other heavily armed youths apparently covering their escape.
Group Quotas of United Fund Are Revealed
Industrial Target Tops List With $546,500, Two-Thirds of Total
Major division quotas, which comprise the total 1994 United Fund goal of $815,000, were announced officially today by Bruce J. Annett, general campaign chairman.
“The top division quota of $546,500, set for the industrial division, amounts tok approximately two-thirds of the entire goal,” Annett pointed out.
Charles F. Brown, division manager of Consumer Power Company, is industrial division chairman.
Jack Brannack, secretory-treasurer of J. L. VanWagoner Agency, heading the commercial division, will be shooting at a quota Of $223,642.
Brannack’s group consists of educational, professional, chapter plans, small teams and government groups.
The women’s division, headed by Mrs. Merrill Petrie, will be responsible for meeting a quota of $31,IN through residential and small business calls in Pontiac, Waterford, Independence ami Orion Townships.
“Most industrial and commercial division solicitations are already under way,” Annett said. The Women’s group will be ready to begin their activities Oct. 13, the official kickoff date.
WWW
Annett added that in addition to major division goals, $13,669 remains to be met by township solicitations.
ADVANCE GIFT The advance gift division, under (he chairmanship of John A. RUey, advertising director of The Pontiac Press, solicits corporate and major gifts of $100 or more for industrial and commercial divisions totaling $102,-681.
Annettv announced that early returns of the advance gifts and commercial division units show a promising increase over last year.
“1 feel confident that this trend will continue and that we will be able to meet our goal oq schedule," he Said.
MAJ. GEN. MacDONALD
’BRIG. GEN. NEIFERT
Report Names Elly, Husband
Included in Farnum List of Land Owners
Involves Land, Money, Liquor
LANSING (£)—A land,' money and liquor scandal in the Michigan National Guard was bared today after uov^ Romney dismissed the state’s adjutant general and two top officers yesterday.
Romney ordered retirement of Maj. Gen. Ronald D. McDonafd, the adjutant general. He removed from active duty Brig. Gen. Carson R. NeifeVt, quartermaster general, and Lt. Col, Versel Case Jr., the quartermaster’s executive officer.
Acting on a report of 11 state law violations and 32 errors in auditing by the Guard, Romney called for a reorganization of the military establishment.
McDonald said he was shocked by his dismissal and asserted, “My conscience
Disclosure Is Climax of Long Probe
LT. COL. CASE
Football Weather Is Predicted for Next Few Days
Keep an extra blanket or two handy tonight. The weatherman Mys the mercury will drop to 29 to 34 degrees. There’s also chance of frost.
Tomorrow will be somewhat warmer. Fair skies with a high of SO to 57 is predicted, followed by partly cloudy skies and continued ’warmer temperatures Sunday. -
The fiVe-day weather forecast Mys temperatures in the urea wtil average about six or seven degrees below the normal high of 65 and low of 46. Cooler temperatures are expected to return Monday and Tuesday following the weekend warming trend.
The lowest temperature recorded downtown preceding 8 a.m. today was 39. At 2 p.m. the thermometer read 43.
Yesterday’s rainfall measured .15 of an inch.
Judge: We Know He's Guilty
Free After Admitting Murder
WASHINGTON (AP> — A 42- out sufficient evidence to send year-old former mailman who the case to the jury. > confessed three times to straw- feta.
cling his wife and led police to , „ .. . . ___
totaled bed, be. bintneih to dhtot c«f .tap
even though the Judge Mid, "We U* 215122?
charged were improper. Two other oral confessions also were baited. ^
“In this case,” Hart said,
know this man is guilty.”
BARRY'S LEARNING, FAST-You have to “$ght fire With fpfcT candidate Sen. Bfcrry Goidwater apparently feels, m be gets into the baby-kissing act in jBi Paso, Tax., yesterday.
“With a heavy heart” Judge George L. Hart Jr. said yesterday he was directing a U.S. DU- KMough’s wife disappeared on trict Court jury to acquit James Oct. 13, I960. Killough was W. KBWuigh of mfn»i«iight*r questioned by police, and after charges. He added, “... in fact, 37 hours led them to her body it almost makes me physically sod signed a confession.
RULED OUT
Tbs UJL Court of Appeals The first confession was ruled ruled all three epfeisleua ia- out on grounds that the method valM and Hart ip| this left of questioning him and the time the UJL attorney's offlee with- ha was held before be wit
new apprehensions about its .occasions voluntarily can-felted of foully killing Us Wife aad throwing her body on a dump Uke a piece of gariwge.
, safety,” he said.
“He led police there. Yet the U.S. Court of Appeals inlite wisdom has seen fit to throw the confessions oqt.
“We know the man is guilty,” the judge said, “bat we sit here, blind, deaf and dumb, and we/ can’t admit we koto.” /
LANSING (AP)-Col. W. Merritt Peterson, U; S. property and fiscal officer for Michigan, bis wife, Elly, Republican candidate for the U.S. Senate, and scores of officers and enlisted men in the Michigan National Guard found the property they bought within the limits of Camp Grayling was the center of a legal controversy today.
* * ★’
Peterson, a member of toe Army, *81x1' his wife were included in Ayd. Gen. Billie Far-num’s list of owners of toe controversial property on the north shore of Lake Margrethe.
The Petersens, the Ust showed, purchased 23 lots, approximately 25 by IN feet, for a total price ef’$4N.
The lots, many pf them several city blocks from water and some of them cut in half by new state highways, sold for prices ranging from $4.50 to $100 each.
* * it
The “sale” of the land, Farnum said,, was done under terms of the state law which added large tracts of land to the original Tlanson military reservation through tax sales in the 1930s.
LAND EXCHANGE The law authorized the State Military Board to exchange any land within the boundaries of the 139,000 • acre reservation for other lands wiffiin its boundaries.
As the land deal was set up, individuals would make a bid op the land with the quartermaster general. If acceptable, the prospective purchaser would make his check payable to Grayling attorney Charles E. Moore.
When a large enough fund was built up, the quartermaster general would present the matter to the board as an exchange of properties of relatively equal value..
- • " e ■ ★
With' the board’s approval of the “exchange,” the attorney would purchase land from toe second party. Then, in rapid succession, he would transfer the land now in dispute to the second party, the second party would sign the military land back to the attorney, and the attorney would transfer them to the original depositors.
* ’ ♦ ' ♦
“It may take an act of the legislature to clear title for the innocent purchasers.’ ” said Deputy Atty. Gen. Leon Cohan.
State Aud. Gen. Billie Farnum reported the irregularities to Romney after an investigation. GRAND RAPIDS (UPI) -
Farnum Mid thousands of dol-
tors were involved but it could Mkhi^n National
not yet be stated how much ofS* money, if any, the state had
loat o gations that at one time includ-
■ ■ * * * - ed the Federal Bureau of
“It does not aooear at this Inve8ti«ation- U.S. District „, . Attorney’s office of toe western tune that the three officers re- UWJli .
lieved of duty are guilty of crim- and consider-
ing actions,” Roniey said. ation by a federal grand jury, wn raws The probe eventually went
nu basis back for disposition by state ad-
Deputy Atty. Gen. Leon Co- ministrative channels after a ban Mid the attorney general’s u.S. grand jury failed to return office “has concluded there is an indictment Feb. 3, i963, in’a no basis for criminal action.” case involving an unnamed high Maj. Gen. Cecil l' Sim- ranking Michigan National moms, president of the State Guard officer who purportedly Military Board; said he doubt- used feder a 1 personnel and ed any courts-martial would property for pesonal profit, result from the probe. At toe time, Maj. Gen. Ron-
The irregularities disclosed by aid K McDonald, the adjutant Farnum extend back to the general, one of the three top 1950s, Romney told a news con- officers fired by the governor, ference. appeared b e f o r e the grand
★ * *” * jury as a witness.
Among the irregularities, he Although grand jury proceed-8aid: ings are secret and the U.S.
• About 2,832 state-owned attorney and his staff is prolots in the Camp Grayling hibited on commenting on grand area wprewkl for an average jury cases, McDonald publicly defended toe officer against the charges made by other national guard personnel.
price of $29.
• Land sale proceeds were illegally spent.
• Land transactions were recorded improperly or not at
The geiieral at the time the case was before the jury, did
• Armory maintenance acknowledge, that the of f icer funds were diverted Illegally had used federal property and for improvements at C a m p employes for work on projects Grayling, Htories, equipment in which he had an interest, purchases and even a gift for MAINTENANCE UNIT
8 linn ^ Tbe investigation centered
• Nearly $300,000 worth of around t h e operations of a Uquor was purchased for maintainance udT operated with Camp Grayling from January federal funds
i960 through October 1963 in
violation of restrictions limit- The shop’s job, according (Continued on Page 2, CM. 3) (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4)
In Today’s Press ,
. Campaign . 1
Lawrence Mys low grade of politicking ia downgrading I voters — PAGE A4.
Drought
Rains rescue farmers, bur? too late for summer crops — I PAGE ft-4.
Foreclosures
Houses purchased with FHA, VA mortgages are being lost | at record pace — PAGE B-3.
Area News B-4 - Martets 7TT.....C-I
Astrology ... . D»1 Obituaries ,..w
Bridge D-l Sports . C-l-C#
Comics D-l Theaters C-6-C-9
Editorials ......A-4 TV, Radio Programs D-ll
Farm * Garden C-16-C-11 Wllsoo, Ear! ......D4I
High School . .. ....... B-l Women’s Paget , B4-B-11
A—2
THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1064
pS.ActionCalled
Rid to Destr
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. <6-The Soviet Union accused, the United States today of attempt* ing to destroy the>United Na-■ tions by insisting upon a showdown' over Soviet refusal to pay for Uii. peacekeeping assessments.
Soviet delegate Nikolai T. Fed-erenko raised the issue at an otherwise routine meeting on the application of Malawi, for-mer British - ruled Nyasaland, for U.N. membership:
Ik said it is up to the United Nations to solve any problems confronting it, including who should be members and "also the question of whether the organisation should exist or not" He described as “a mockery of the principles of the U.N. Charter" a U.S. memorandum on the issue of paying peacekeeping assessments, presented yesterday. -MUST CENSURE Federenko added he could not fail ?to censure the attempt of the United States to destroy our organization.” -The presentation of the U.S. proposal prompted a suggestion by spine diplomats that the as-
sembly postpone its scheduled Nov. 10 opening.
U.S. Ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson gave notice to Secretary-General U Thant Thursday that when the assembly opens NoV. 10, the United States will demand that the Soviet Union and nine other delinquent nations pay up or lose their votes1 in the assembly.
* * ★
The Soviet Union has hinted it will quit the United Nations if it loses its vote.
The announcement of Stevenson’s memorandum to Thant generated talk of postponing the showdown in hopes that the United States and the Soviet Union would work out a compromise.
DECEMBER OPENING
One suggestion was for the assembly to open in December, then adjourn until January.
A diplomat said UJt. officials were considering a two-week postponement, but he expressed doubt there wpuld be one.
SteVensoh’s memorandum was made public after Secretary of State Dean Rusk said in
Say Viet Planes Strafed Many Gyilians; 30 Killed
SAIGON, Viet Nam UR — Well-informed military sources reported today that Vietnamese Ah* farce fighters accidentally grated a large group of civilians just smith of Saigon Sept. 27, killing 30 and wounding 20.
The attack was reported to Have resulted from intelligence that sampans moving on a river 20 miles southeast of here wene carrying Viet Cong troops. This intelligence proved false after an investigation of the casualties.
The report that civilians in-' stead of Yfet Cong had been billed came to light in a report from the local province chief. Informants said the Vietnamese Air Force was taking steps to avoid recurrence.
Communist Chinese and North Vietnam radio transmitters have broadcast in the last several days that up to 400 civilians were killed in the incident, which had not been reported in Saigon. Today’s report apparently was in answer to the Communist broadcasts.
* * ★
; Accidental strafing of civilians by air force planes happens frequently here, but the Sep-
tember incident resulted in unusually high casualties. Friendly troops also are occasionally hit by accident.
SAIGON, Viet Nam UR - Premier Nguyen Khanh said today his armed forces could bomb North Viet Nam or Red China; the only thing is you must-do it in the right place and the right time."
“This is an important decision that will involve complications on the international side and also on the national side," Khanh told a news conference. He said his planes could carry one-ton, two-ton
Asked by a Vietnamese newsman whether the war could be pressed against the Viet Cong without U.S. aid, Khanh said: “Let’s not forget that the United States itself received aid from other nations to gain its freedom and Pm sure the United States will continue to help us to preserve our freedom and independence.
- . * . h ♦
'Let us not forget that mure than 20 nations are now helping jus in our fight, not only the United States.’’
Foil U.S. Weather Bureau Report . PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Mostly cloudy and*cool today with" occasional light showers affecting about 50 per cent of the area probably ending by late this afternoon. Highs today 45 to 51. Clearing and cold tonight with frost or freezing temperatures. Lows 28 to 34. Tomorrow fair and slightly . warmer. Highs 51 to 57. Winds west to northwest at II to >0 miles per hour today, becoming northerly and diminishing to eight to 15 miles tonight. Sunday’s outlook is partly cloudy and warmer.
: JWInd Velocity 10 m.p.h
TMrtUmr ill Pootiec
Cloudy, r*in .IS
WMNMr: Sunny
DM III 72 Yun
Washington that the Soviet refusal to pay any of its $55 million debt affected the constitutional structure of the United
Although the Soviet Union has paid its assessments for regular operations of the U.N., its refusal to paf anything toward the peace.forces in the Congo or the Middle East has put it among 10 nations that are now two years behinc^in total U.N. dues. DEPRIVED OF VOTE
The UjS. memorandum noted that under Article 10 of the U.N. Charter, any member two years in arrears shall be deprived of its assembly vote.
The United States said [Tall-ure to apply the articleto a great power simply because it is a great power would undermine the constitutional integrity flof the United Nations.”
* * *
The Soviet Union contends that assessments ordered by the assembly for the .two peacekeeping operations are illegal because only the Security Council has the right to initiate and finance such operations.
The U.S. memorandum cited a 1982 opinion by the World Court that the assembly has the right to levy assessments for the peace operations.
Because some members have refused to pay those assessments, the United States said, ’the U.N. has a net deficit of 5134 million,” at which $117 million is owed to 29 countries for troops, supplies and services.
Hinting Quit the United States had the assembly votes to deprive the Soviet Union of its vote, the memo claimed “it is the overwhelming conviction of the U.N. membership” ttiat the Congo and Middle East assessments should be paid.
Of the 10 countries that are two years behind, Bolivia, Paraguay and Yemen are expected to pay enough to avoid penalty. Hungary can get ahead by paying its assessment for the regular budget assessments. But the Soviet Union and five of its allies—Byelorussia, the Ukraine, Czechoslovakia, Poland and Romania — are expected to be still behind when the assembly starts.
LUCKY PUP—This pup is in good hands. Eighteen-year-old Hollace Utgard, Oakland University freshman, has a special fondness for dogs. The feeling is mutual.
Oil's Queenly Coed Is in Beauty Co
Have you. checked lately? A dog’s life might npt be so bad after all.
The benefits of being a dog, at least around Oakland University, increased considerably this fall with the addition of Hollace Otgard to the OU campus.
Miss Otgard, 5-foot-3 with
sive blue-gray eyes, professes a special affection tor man’s proverbial best friend.
Die 18-year-old Oakland freshman hopes to be a veterinarian, a point in tavor of the canine life.
Right now, however, Miss Otgard admits to. “trying to become a more feminine female,” which she hopes will score points for her in the finals of the Miss York County (Pa.) beauty contest. , <*
The self-acknowledged onetime tomboy will' return to Pennsylvania to compete in the two-day finals Oct. 18-17, having already passed the preliminaries in the Miss America-type contest.
Hollace (the “Holly” was abandoned after she discovered three other Holly’s at OU) finds beauty - contesting nerve racking “but exciting.” She credits the contest with making her more aware Of the importance of manners and good grooming. The pert coed from Hellam, Pa., still likes outdoor sports and sloppy clothing.
Singing will be her talent contribute in the beauty contest, although die has had nine years of piano lessons besides four years of vocal training.
4 Buildings Destroyed in Oklahoma Blaze
BARTLESVILLE, Okla. (AP) — Four buildings were, d e strayed by fire in downtown Bartlesville early today. There were no injuries.
About 50 firemen from Bartlesville, Nowata, Pawhuska, Dewey and Caney, Kan., fought the blaze for about two hours before bringing it under control.'
Injuries Kill 2 in County
Hit-Run, Head-On Mishaps Prove Fatal
Injuries suffered in separate Oakland bounty traffic accidents resulted in the death of a Flint mdh yesterday and a Sault Ste. Marie
Webster, 56, of Flint died at 6:05 p.m. in Pontiac General Hospital -from injuries suffered in a head-on crash two hours earlier in Springfield Township.
r . - w W 9 :
Sheriff’s deputies said Out Webster’s northbound car and a southbound auto driven by Robert Walker, 19, of 1101 Berkley, collided in the northbound lane in front of 9406 Dixie.
Detectives are investigating circumstances of the accident. Walker, who suffered facial cuts and a broken leg, is hi fair condition at Pontiac General.
★ * *
The* Impact of the crash drove Webster’s car Off the.road onto the northbound shoulder.
Rollin J. Single, to, of Saalt Ste. Marie died at 9:95 a. m. at William Beaumont Hospital from injuries suffered in a hit-run accident Tuesday in Troy.
Single was found unconscious at 1:30 a. m. Tuesday by three Madison Heights boys on Stephenson Highway south of Maple. The boys covered the injured man ami summoned police.
★ it h
Admitted to the hospital in critical condition with a fractured skull and broken leg, Single never regained consciousness.
POLICE ALERTED
Troy police have alerted all area police departments to be on lookout for a car with front-end damage.
* *
Laboratory tests of light metallic-green paint samples found on Single’s clothing indicate that the car that struck him could be one of the following: A 1951 Buick, 1961 Chrysler Imperial, 1958-5880 Cadillac, 1959 DeSoto or 1959 Buick.
Romney Dismisses 3 in Guard Scandal
Thursday's Ttmpsraturs Chart
——- a _
Escanabs SI 32 JacfcsonvIDr 72 62
Ar. Rapids 57 S Kansas City 61 33
‘1 9 Los Angeles |7 63
■ ----nl Batch 64 74
Muskegon 60 36 Milwaukee'
Petition 51 3 New Orleans n «
Traverse C. M 37 New York Sf 47
Albu^ueraue 77 SO Qmeha 52 27
Bismarck ‘ aa 20 Pittsburgh 64 51
igston 52 47 SMI. taka C. H 44
Chicago 50 37 &. franclsco 67 56
Clncf- u ci r s “
Er
a 42
NATIONAL WEATHER—Showers are forecast tonight for ptota of tiie north Atlantic states and the northern Great Rapin; also snow showers in the northern Rockies. Warmer weather is prediotod from the southern Plain! to the upper Mississippi Valley and copier from the Lakes area to the Thtmmm Valley and also h (he northern Rockies.
(Continued From Page One) ing liquor sales to periods at field training.
• Liquor was sold and consumed in armories in violation of statute.
- • Individuals were overpaid and underpaid according to federal pay schedules.
• Improper travel expenses were claimed.
NAMES TWO
Romney named Col. Clarence Schnipke, presently assistant adjutant general, as acting adjutant general, and Col. Leo C. Whitaker, presently chief of staff, 46th Infantry Division, as acting quartermaster general.
He recalled Brig. Gen. Howard Arbury, a member of the military board, togactive duty for 30 days to head a military reorganization task force that will recommend reorganization and streamlining of the state’s military establishment Romney asked the military board to submit proposed legislation for the 1965 legislative and thd attorney general to recommend legislation designed to clear up problems relating tc the improper property sales.
1 a a
Romney reinstated with back pay Lt. Col. John P. Brown who had been fired by Gen. McDonald a year ago Thursday after Brown complained to the mili-v tary board of fiscal Irregular!-' ties and unsound practices. 'RENDERED SERVICE1 “Brown rendered a service in bringing tbis to the attention of the state,” Romney said. "“About 75 per cent of the things he alleged turned out to be true.”
F a r a a m said, however, Brown had nude fiscal errors and had purchased four of the lots in question.
Gen. Simmons, whose five-member military board unanimously recommended to Romney the throe dismissals,.did not recommend Brown's reinstatement. #
. Famum indicated the land transactions had been the moat difficult items to trace and wauld be the hardest to straighten out
V" #■
“The military has placed themselves in a legal entanglement which will have to be resolved by, the State Legislature and the attorney general-as to
Disclosure Culminates Long Probe
(Continued From Page One) to McDonald, who was responsible for Its operations, wns maintenance and repair of U.8. property charged to the State National Guard.
Stone of the projects McDonald admitted at the time that the officer initiated were:
• Construction of equipment i for a string of concessions sim-1 ilar to post exchanges operated
during National Guard summer encampments.
• Fabrication of- canvas covers for a truck and boat and construction of an ice fishing shanty.
1 * * '*
! • But McDonald said none of the acta was improper and the work on the PX equipment “was under the direction of the post exchange board and the commanding general and ft was for the use of the troops.’’ .
| SMALL REPAIR SHOP
The general likened the boat cover incident to a “little repair shop where a. man , comes ih and says, “Can I borrow your tools?” and the follow s.ays, “Wall, sure, Joe, come ahead.” “It’s jnst amazing they are making pack an bine of It,” McDonald said at tbe time.
Tip ice shanty, McDonald, said, was not made for any one individual bpt was used by a number of people and just happened to be stored at the officer’s place.
f « *
“It’s improper in the respect that It’s not * normal thing that should be dooo,” McDonald was quoted ns saying.
present ownership of all land sales and the surplus funds resulting therefrom,” Famum said in his 15-page report to the military board. “This may be very costly and time consuming,” he said.
Some 314 lota were deeded in lien of payment for work performed and services rendered, Farnum said.
Proceeds from the lota totaled <84.480, he added, of which 89,900.30 is still on deposit.
* * *
Gen; Simmons said he be* Ueved most purchasers pf the lota did not think anything was wrong with the deal, j PURCHASED NO LOTS
He said Gen. McDonald purchased none of the land. -Several of the lota went to Moore for his attorney services, Famum said.
The auditor general’s report said 54 unauthorized capital outlay projects at Camp Grayling cost at least $157,-795. ■
That money, he continued, came improperly from armory funds, federal sources and charges for salaries, wages, equipment and armory maintenance.
★ ★ 6
Romney also ordered State Controller Glenn Allen to recover excess wages from personnel paid pbove scale and to determine state liability to persons paid less than scale. PROPER PROCEDURES
He told the State Department of Administration to begin work immediately with the military to install proper accounting procedures and practices.
* * ★
The governor said “sortie of these irregularities were in practice before Gens. McQoo-ald and Neifert and Col. Caae assumed their top positions sev-J eral years ago, and some have begun since that time. They all have been continued for several years.
“The irregularities an serious enough to assure me that the public Interest demands they be relieved of their reipon-
BIRMINGHAM - Some 300 youngsters again will do their trick or treating for the United Nations Children’s Fund.
Plans have beat made to conduct the annual UNICEF drive from ’2 to 5 p.m. Oct. 25, the Sunday, before Halloween.
Young people participating in the event will meet at the First Methodist Church for a short briefing and moment of dedication. They then will canvass homes in assigned areas.
Churches working on the program are 'the First Baptist, First Methodist, Congregational, First Presbyterian, Franklin Community and St. Jamea Episcopal. Other groups interested in being assigned an area can contact Rev. William Cedi of the First Presbyterian Church.
Last year the young cfRvaas-ers collected' more than $1,000 for UNICEF. The sum provided 25,000 glasses of milk for hungry children 2nd 10,000 shots of penicillin for those'who were sick.
LARGEST AGENCY UNICEF is the world’s largest international agency working on behalf of children. It was established in 1946 as a postwar emergency project.
The organization later turned to long-range needs of children in programs of health, disease control, nutrition and social services. It currently is giving assistance to over 500 projects in 116 countries.
Not Legal to Sell Land at Grayling
LANSING (UPI) - In 1934 the legislature passed a law Out let the State Conservation Department turn over to the Mi gan National Guard the Hanson Military Reservation.
* >4i
Under terms of (be agreement, the military board was to supervise the land, now known as Camp Grayling, and it could, for the betterment of the guard, trade its properties within the reservation for lands also inside the boundaries that were privately owned.
But the lew did not authorize tbe National Guard to make any outright sale of the land.
Yet, since- 1958, an attorney general’s opinion to the contrary notwithstanding, the Michigan National Guard has sold land in large chunks and often at very favorable rates to members of the military establishment.
The sales were a key factor yesterday in Gov. Romney’* decision to dean up the situation by firing State Adjutant General Ronald McDonald, Quartermaster General Carson Neifert and Lt Col. Versel Case Jr., the quartermaster executive-officer. EXHAUSTIVE AUDIT According to Aud. Gen. Billie S- Farnuto, who said his department’s investigation of tbe case probably constituted the mod exhaustive audit ever undertaken in Michigan government, a total Of 2,832 state-owned lots woe sold and another 314 deeded away in lieu of payments for work and services rendered.
* ★ • *■ ■
Tbe average price of the sold lots was 929 but prices on the properties, which measured IS feet by 109 feet, ranged from $4.50 to $100.
Tbe policy was apparently begun after the legislature- discontinued appropriating funds to acquit* new land needed for military purposes.
Birmingham Area News
300 to 'Trick or Treat' for (J.N. Children's Fund
Chamber Chief Talks on Profit
Praises Positions of Both Barry, Johnson
Walter F. Carey, UJS. Chamber of Commerce president, said last night he considers the positions toward business profits of both candidates for president a “good omen.”
Carey, 6125 Middle Belt, West Bloomfield Township, expressed his opinion in a speech at the annual meeting of the Michigan State Chamber of Commerce.
He indicated be favored neither President Johnson nof Sea. Barry Gotdwater. He spake eu the importance of the profit motive in Ameri-
De- lance [iehNfta
Carey said every Washington administration since World War II has understood the lmpor-of business profit.
He said Johnson has shown this through the income tax cut and by “concern over the size of the federal budget and need for economy In tbe interests of still more tax reduction.” BARRY WASH! CUTS
Goldwater, he said, is “running oil a platform that calls for cuts to both taxes and spending, too;”
' * . *
“I take it to be a good omen,” Carey said, “that both candidates are aware of the old proverb—it takes oats to make tbe marr go. It takes profits to achieve meaningful prosperity.’
Four Birmingham-Bloomfield area schools have been named winners in the 30th annual Year-bode Critique and Contest sponsored by the Columbia Scholastic Press Association. \
The qaartet was among some 40 Michigan winners announced today.
Emeritus won first ptaee honors for Derby Junior High School in the printed yearbooks of junior high schools division.
■ V- h it • Seaholm High School’s Piper was a medalist in the offset yearbook category for high schools with 1,501 to 2,566 students.
PRIVATE SCHOOL WINNERS * Quest of Brother Rice High School was a medalist among offset yearbooks of boys’ private schools. Bloomfteid Country Day School’s Prelude placed second in the same category for girls’ private schools.
Mrs. JohnS. Sayder Service for Mrs. John S., (Catherine) Snyder, 80, of 2550 Covington, Bloomfield Township, was to be 4 p.m. today at tbe BeU Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co., B i r -mingham. Cremation will be at White Chapel Cemetery, Troy. Tbe ashes will be taken to Charlotte, N.C.
Mrs. Snyder died Wednesday. She was . a member of Christ Church Cranbrook and Phi Beta Kappa-
Surviving besides her husband are two sons, John G. -of Missorui and William H. of Minnesota.
Vote to Name New School After JFK
Students at the new Baldwin Junior High School have voted to name the school in honor of John F. Kennedy.
Tbe late president's name waa selected over that of Franklin D. Roosevelt, Andrew Jackson and President Lyndon B. Johnson.
The John F. Kennedy Junior High School, which opened this fall, will have cardinal rod and gold as the school colors.
The school is located at 1700 Baldwin.
Pontiac schools have followed the practice of naming Junior highs after presidents, high schools by location and elementary schools after literary fig-
City Firm Damaged in Morning Blaze
Fire at 10:56 a.m. today caused an estimated $1,000 damage to the Oak Construction Co. mobile office and contents at Auburn and Saginaw.
Tbe blase was caused by a defective circulating oil heater in the mobile unit, according to firemen. The office served as headquarters for the Wide Trade Drive construction project.
Damage was estimated at $300 on the (mice and $700 on equipment.
Reuther Expects Progress
Sees Thaw in GM Talks
DETROIT (AP) — A nationwide strike against General Motors entered its third week today as an optimistic note was sounded for a speedup in solving local |dant problems.
. * ■ ★ a,.
United Auto Workers President Walter P. Reuther told newsmen yesterday he expected “very substantial movement” this weekend in local negotiations.
“If takas a certain aassoat of time to bofld ap momentum at Ike lecal level,” Reuther •aid, “hat there Is scbm significant progress being made and I think that Ike weekend wig rangy ha rarybnpsr-taaL”
Despite Reutber’s prediction of a thaw in the negotiations freeze, more than 100 local UAW bargaining units hare failed to resolve their differ-
ences with individual pla management.
Latest reports showed th only 20 of 130 local units hi reached agreements.
GM and tbe. union agrw Monday on national contra terms, but striking workers w not return to their Jobs until tl bulk of the local demands ha' been resolved.
With Its assembly lines a lenced, GM fell behind to th
f»
The giant auto maker had turned out about 285,000 new Chevrolet!, Buicks, Pontiacs, Oldsmobifes and Cadillacs When the UAW ordered more tbin a
"V*. d
sfr&e Sept. 25. 1
i “ • ' ■ *0 :
THE PONTIAC PRESS; FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1964
Tshombe Leaves Cairo After Stealing Show
CAIRO (AP) — Congolese Premier Moire Tshombe left lor borne today after stealing the show from tiie conference of nonaligned nations he wasn’t allowed to attend.
★ (
The Congo’s 44-year-old premier took a commercial airliner • to Athens rend then Paris. In Paris be was to take a chartered plane back to Leopoldville..
★ ★ ★
-President Gamal Abdel Nasser, who had i held Tshombe wider house arrest since his arrival Tuesday, freed him
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after the premier lifted the blockade on the embassies of the United Arab Republic and Algeria in Leopoldville.
In Leopoldville, 24 Egyptians and four Algerians from the two embassies left the Congolese capital Thursday night and crossed the Congo River ' to Brazzaville, capital of the neighboring Congo Republic. CLOSES EMBASSY
U.A.R. Ambassador Mohammed Ibrahim Kamel said the hasty departure did not mean a break in diplomatic relations with the Congo but he had been instructed to close the embassy temporarily.
Tshombe had come to Cairo for the nonaligned conference despite a telegram that he would not be welcome. Cairo' airport refused his plane per-mission to land Monday and he flew on to Athens. When he returned early Tuesday, Nasser clapped him into Arubi^Palace on the outskirts of Cairo and the. conference voted not to admit him.
/*. * * .
Angered by Nasser’s action and Algerian President Ahmed Ben Bella’s outspoken opposition to Tshombe’s attendance at
the conference, the Congolese surrounded the Egyptian and Algerian Embassies in Leopoldville with police and let no one in or out.
The Congolese premier is hated by many African leaders for his collaboration with Europeans during his secessionist regime in Katanga Province, his part in the slaying of Congolese Premier Patrice Lumumba and his employment of tfhite mercenaries against Commu-
nist-backed rebels in the Congo.
At th conference Thursday Prime Minister Nirdom Kantol of Cambodia accused the. United States of imperialism in Southeast Asia, particularly in Viet Nam.
President Osvaldo Dorticos of Cuba charged American aggression against the Castro regime,
and Britain were “the main | menace’’ : to central Africa, props to the apartheid, structure Burundi’s capital, Bujumbura, is in South Africa.’’ the headquarters for the rebels
Prime Minister Andre Nay- in the eastern Congo and Com--loye of 'Burundi asserted that niunist China has an embassy the United States is “a great I there. ‘
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THE PPNTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER; 9.1964
Lady Bird's Tour to End at Orleans
TIME OUT TO STUDY — Liici Baines Johnson crams on denustry aboard the Lady Bird special somewhere in Geor gia, yesterday. The President’s daughter is helping out with talks to voters, but keeps up with her .studies at the same time.
Four Western Attaches Return to Moscow Despite Charges
lfOSCOW (UPI) - Four*western military attaches headed , bad to their Moscow posts today despite Soviet hints that they may be expelled pn espionage charges.
They were expected aboard a } p.m. (8 a.m. EST) flight from New Delhi.
■f The three Americans and one Briton have been accused of-taking notes and pictures of Soviet military installations during their trip across the country last month on toe Trans-Siberian Express.
They were forcibly searched < in « hotel at the end of the train trip, but allowed to con-. tinue to Tokyo.
* ■ -, * . * * •
The United States and Britain protested. And the Soviets re-! plied with' the espionage charges.
HINT WILL EXPEL The Soviet Foreign Office has
.hinted, they may be expelled. Informed sources said the United States may be planning to have its,three attaches make a brief, return for appearance’s sake and then send them home.
Bnt U. S. Embassy officials said as far as .was known, the officers would return to their jobs.
Moscow television last night hinted that if the attaches had not had .diplomatic . they would have been jailed.
# * ■ ★
The U. S. officers, Col. George Aubrey of Annapolis*, Md.; Lt. Col. Karl R. Liewer, of Osmond, Neb., and Mai- James F. Smith, of Meers, Okla., travel on diplomatic passports as part of the embassy staff,
'NOT DIPLOMATS’
“They are not d i p 1 o m a t s. j They are spies,” a television ’ commentator said. “If they did j not have diplomatic, status, they j would have found themselves in j a place where they could not j have gotten out so easily." i The television program, which i followed similar reports in the j official newspapers, showed cameras, photographs and notebooks said to have been taken ] from the attaches in the hotel j raid in the Siberian city of Khabarovsk.
WWW
Western observers believed the publicity campaign was in-tended as a counterattack; against tbe, U.S. and British pro-! tests over tbe forcible search. |
ABOARD THE LADY‘BIRD SPECIAL (ffMCutting across the Gulf Coast, Lgdy Bird Johnson’s whistle-stop train joins -cam-p&ign forces with the President for a double-barreled political windup in New Orleans tonight.
Johnson plans to be waiting at the station when his wife rounds the hist bend in her four-day, l,v 682-mile sentimental political journey.
WWW
Both of them are busy seeking Dixie yotes on separate routes^ today.'Johnson was flying into, Louisville, Ky., and NafiiVUle, Teno., making his way to a $100-a-plate Democratic dinner celebration in New Orleans.
Lady Bird gave her engineer orders to pull out of-.Tallahassee, Fla., at 5:35 a m. after a rousing Florida State College homecoming rally with about. 3,-000' studentorand an overnight rest stop./
ON PLATFORM
She had to be out on the i train’s observation platform to > greet folks at an engine switch-1 ing stop at Chattahoochee, Fla., an hour later.
“I’ve been working on the railroad,” Mrs. Johnson joking- j ly paraphrased the familiar | song. But it wasn’t really a joke. She had been putting in I long, hard days and had made 36 stops and 36 speeches in a span of 72 hours.
It was wearying, but reward-; ing. As Mrs. Johnson put it, I there were “bigger and bigger i stic crowds” all the | way from Washington , to Flori-da. According to her-generous | whistle-stop counters, a million people will have turned out to see the President’s wife by tbe time her train reaches New i Orleans.
Georgia’s Gov. Carl Sanders said toe Lady Bird Special started out as a train but seems to be “trying to wind up as a bandwagon."
TRAVELING SHOW
It was all like a traveling road show, with the whole Johnson family getting into the act. Hie latest to join up was daughter Luci, 17, who did everything from cheering Valdosta, Ga., with word she knew about their football team to lecturing young Goldwater hecklers, on 'respecting toe rights of others who have opposing views.
She just about s$ole the show at Fjorida State College Thursday night; with toe crowd shouting “We want Luci." To the delight of the big audience, Luci seemed taken by surprise when
I coeds crowned her with a huge [ red, white, and' blue feather 1 headdress and made her an honorary member of their 1964 hoihecoming court.
* * * - / f ■
She promptly rose to toe occasion, delivering a speech on toe responsibilities of her generation to prepare for the time whra they will be handed their country’s problems to solve.
As the Lady Bird Special set out across the Florida Panhandle, into southern Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana, Mrs. Johnson entered - rural and sparsely populated areas and some of the smallest towns on her schedule. These, she says, are the visits she likes best because she cpmes from the small town»of Karwack, Tex.,
and those- are the places where she feels more at home.
• * * . ★.
Democratic strategists think the areaS on today’s routes need some help in rallying support to the Johnson-Humphrey tjcket.
Retired Exec Dies
MORGANTON, N.C. (AP) -William J. Branstrom Sr., retired director of general counsel of the Gerber Products Go., died Thursday at the age of 78.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1064
A-jL
West Gets'Bad Guy Role at neutralist Confab
By WILLIAM RYAN' J AP Special Correspondent As helpless onlookers with the] deck stacked against them, the United States ahd its allies taka’
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a beating at meetings such as I the one in Cairo calling itself “The nonaiigned nations conference.”
The Cairo deliberations create an impression that a major
| perialism, and foreign bases. This automatically made th ' Communist side the “good guy” 'and relegated the West to the role of “bad guy.”. '. *
purpose was to decide whether Soviet or Chinese “anti-imperialism” should be considered superior. If the West had any 'role,. it was that of whipping boy.
Voices which might have been friendly to the West remained mostly silent while pro-Russians and proDhineae maneuvered in the background for advantage.
Both Russia and China probably regard the Cairo conference as little more than a curtain raiser for the real battle over the underdeveloped nations. SECOND MEET IN MARCH
The battleground will be provided next March when the second Atrican-Asian conference — in the style of Bandung in 1955 — is scheduled to open in Algeria.
The agenda silenced in advance those who might have wanted to penetrate the real meaning of cliches. Few Asian and African leaden would place themselves in the position of defending “imperialism and colonialism.” Red propaganda long has attributed imperialist aitd colonialist Intentions to U.S. i activities among .underdeveloped nations.
The rough handling of the Congo’s Moise Tshombe — pictured by dominant voices at the conference as a tool of “U.S. imperialism” — indicated what would happen to anyone who
attempted to define prefabricated cliches for
for what they are. MOSCOW FARES POORLY
domain. Fresh from a Moscow (was seen off by Soviet President, ty for “imperialists.” When visit and promises of Soviet [ Anastas I. Mikoyan, who called I Sukarno says “imperialists,” be “brotherly help” in his program fum “our beloved friend and means Britain and' the United to crtish Malaysia, Sukarno1 comrade.” - | Status. He blames them for the
hurled battle cries far to the left Evidently Sukarno was not creation of the Malaysian na-the Kremlin. j overly impressed. In Cairo he Boo.
* * * deplored “peaceful coexistence”! Tito had praised the limited
Leaving for Cairo, Sukarno I and called lor implacable enmi-l nuclear- test ban treaty which
the Red Chinese denounce. So-1 kamo scorned the treaty as! damaging to developing nations.
The battle surely will be carried to the African-Asian conference in March. If the Chinese have their way, the Russians will not be represented. The-Chinese deny the Soviet Union is j an Asian nation. The Russians, i despite their help to Sukarno,
I seemed to get nowhere in con-! I vincing him that he should sup-i port their claim. But the Rus-
sians have not given up the Tight to be represented.
The West will be on the outside looking in once agaiji in March, and once' again taking consolation from /the background battte between the two Communist philosophies.
The main hurricane months are August, September and DC; tober, although the storms-do occur at other times.
If there was any solace for the Vest, it
Those in charge of the Cairo agenda'decided the “non-l aligned” conference would discuss such things as peaceful 'coexistence, colonialism, im-
West, it was in watching the Chinese-Soviet battle for influence among such nations. Moscow seems to have fared poorly.
The Soviet banner was carried by “nonaiigned” Tito of Communist Yugoslavia, but his performance was not outstanding. The Chinese, however, must have been deeply satisfied with. President Sukarno of In-
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THE PONTIAC PRESS
41 West Huron Street
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1964
HAROLD A. FITZGERALD President und rubltohcr
John w. Fimniu ,
Vice Prutdaot and Editor
Pontiac, Michigan
Secretary and. ■ **
Advertising Director
O. MARiKALL JOIPAM
■P
The Vice Presidency No Longer Is Derided
Almost from the foundling days of the Republic, the office of Vice President was considered but a mandated appendage of the Federal establishment.
Successive holders of the office, though never exactly in the administration doghouse, were never (exactly in the White House either.
★ ★ ★
The post has often been regarded as a political graveyard, been subjected to contempt arid served as the butt of riiany a
----barbs.
Satirical treatment of the second highest office in the land undoubtedly reached the senith or nadir-*— depending on how you look at it— when a popular Broadway musical, circa 1931,* revolved around the fumbling fustiness df an imaginary vice president. t
★ ★4 ir
He ig'inade*to lament that-tlie only way he could get into the White House would be to join a guided tour.
Many of the vice presidents themselves looked down upon the office and treated it with unconcealed disdain. Theodors Roosevelt would have preferred to run again for governor of New York rather than as President-to-be William McKinley’s running mate. Franklin Roosevelt had to appeal to Harry ■* Truman’s wartime patriotism to induce him to lend his nanie to the
1944 Democratic ticket.--------•
Happily, during the past decade, the Vice Presidency has attained the prominence and esteem Clue the office. The death of President Roosevelt in office at a critical time in history did much to accentuate the tremendous importance of the second in command.
~ ★—-if ir----
Dwight Eisenhower was the first Chief Executive to give his vice president, the able Richard Nixon, geriuine executive status and responsibility. The wisdom qf this departure from presidential precedent was abundantly . proven when Nixon was prepared to assume the reins „of 4 government during the two illnesses of the President.
And, of course, the assassination of President Kennkdy and the smooth transition of power to then Vice President Johnson indicated to « horror-stricken country as nothing else could how vital to its well being is qualified incumbency of the vice presidency.
if ir ir
Of the considerations influencing voter preference for the presidency, a most significant one should be.the identity of the vice president who, as we have seen twice within 20 years,'might be destined to lead the Nation.
rounded by sides. Functional? Yes. Aesthetic? Ugh.
★ y But an inillovatlon is at hand iri the do-it-yourself disposal dept. Now for only $98.95 (plus express beyond 50 miles of manufacture) you can get an electric deluxe unit that wiH^hred into >4 *inch bite the paper waste slipped into it.
Fine—great, put me down for half a dozen, you say?
But wait. There is a defect — a glaring one—that doesn’t meet the eye. ,
How are you going to rummage frantically through a container of confetti for that important letter or mono that is missing off your desk and Intuition tells you was inadvert-entfy tossed into the Wastebasket?
MARLOW
Wastebasket’s Status
' . ‘ -4
Seen as Still Lowly
The decades have brought vast changes in the appurtenances of dally living. Unbelievable advances in science, engineering, styling have transformed the utensils of mankind from early primitive to modem fantastic.,
But there is one article of daily uw in home and office that has rssisted the trend and held fast to the original concept from which it sprang.
★ ★ ★
It is the wastebasket.
There is nothing remotely inspirational about today’s wastebasket. No songs have been composed, no odes written about wastebaskets.
All that could be said about a wastebasket is that it is a hole sur-
Verbal Orchids to-
Mr, and Mrs. F. J. Hoellmantel of 930 Lakeview; 57th wedding anniversary. Mr. ud Mn. Jesse J. Friday , of Clarkston; 57th wedding anniversary.
‘ Mrs. William S. Church of 191 Elm; 85th-birthday' .
Hair Shirt
Johnson Using Needle M
By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press' News Analyst WASHINGTON - After watching Sen. Barry Goldwater let himself be needled into using up a lot of his presidential campaign time defending himself, President Johnson has begun to use the needle technique on the Arizonan.
Democrats and Republicans (before Goldwater became the- party candidate) accused the senator of being impulsive and trigger-happy. Goldwater has worked hard at trying to erase such an image of him from the public mind.
Last Sept. 32, the 1 New York Timas and Washington Post both said as a fact that Gold water believes his reputation* for impulsiveness is his greatest barrier to the White House.
Again and again in this campaign, in speech after speech, he has assured his listeners that he is neither impulsive nor reckless and that he has only one “goal in mind. Peace.”
But members of Johnson's administration — Secretary of State Deian Rusk and Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara— have called' the senator “irresponsible.” And Johnson increasingly has sought to keep Goldwater similarly irritated.
LBJ COVERS UP WELL It’s a good guess that Goldwater, since Johnson is sensitive to criticism, is getting under the President’s skin. But, judging from Johnson’s reaction in public, the Texan seems determined not to let any irritation show.
When Goldwater began charging the Johnson administration with being “soft on communism” Johnson told reporters: “The .new and frightening voice of the Republican party is merely trying out this charge to toe If It works. My . advice to him would be to drop it.”
As he campaigned in earnest in the Midwest Wednesday; Johnson worked the needle technique overtime by referring to various previous Goldwater positions that the senator has sought to get away from.
★. it it
For instance, on Social Security. Before he lost the New Hampshire primary last March Goldwater had talked of putting Social Security oq a voluntary basis. It got a bad redaction and his campaign manager said it was a major goof.
WANTS IT STRENGTHENED Ever since, Goldwater has been insisting he wants to make Social Security stronger. Wednesday, Johnson chose, to ignore what Goldwater is saying now and referred to what he had said before the primary without mentioning him by name.
The President said there are these in the land whose policies wonld bankrupt the Soda! Security system. He said there are those “who want to make it voluntary."
In 1963 and before that, Goldwater was suggesting the United States get out of the United Nations. But now he is saying he wants to strengthen the U.N.
Again Johnson ignored what Goldwater had said more recently and told his listeners suggestions are madetfor withdrawing from the U.N.
Since this kind of thing can’t go on indefinitely without boring audiences with repetition — and the campaign still has 26 days to go—Johnson almost certainly will have to find new techniques to. irritate the senator.
David Lawrence Says:
Campaign Downgrades Voters
WASHINGTON - Each of the two presidential candidates evidently thinks that his opponent is running under false colors.
It is hard enough for t h e public to understand the confusing ’slogans and characterizations which are emerging on. the stumpl these days, butl it appears evenl more difficult™ for the candi- IAWRENCE iiates to uftderstand each other.
President Johnson, for example, said in Indiana he is not sure that “there is a real Republican candidate" running against him. Sen. Goldwater, on the same day in Texas, said he wishes the Democrats would re-, name themselves the “Socialist Party” as he argues that the Johnson administration favors big 'government controls that breed “socialism.”'
The tenth of the matter is that both die candidates are concentrating on a form of campaigning which is based on a fallacy — namely, that . the general public doesn’t understand issues and that these can be. misrepresented and votes gained just the same.
* * *
But what makes the whole thing so puzzling is that this is the assumption of well-educated mini, high up in political organizations, who are familiar with the trends of American thought but who have come to the conclusion that the bulk of the voters can be swayed by passions and prejudices as well as by epithets and sweeping denunciations.
* * .
Ail four nominees for the ' presidency and the vice presi-* dency on both tickets — are making the same kind of campaign. They rely on charges and countercharges. The speeches have a strange sameness about them, • irrespective of the side from which they come.r WHOLE STRATEGY Evidently the whole strategy-on both sides rests on the belief that the people can be influenced in their votes primarily by emotional appeals and that they do not cafe to delve into the pros end cons arid the basic facts of controversial questions. ' >
;* * *
Perhaps no campaign in the last half-century luis been full , «of such demagoguery as is manifest today.
The mystery is why the top men in the higher echelons in the camps of both Sep. Gold-water and President Johnson have allowed the candidates to become involved in this type of political battle.
* *
It can only be inferred that these strategists think, aa the late Vice President Curtis once said in a campaign speech, “The people are too damn dumb to understand,”
LITTLE DIFFERENCE - But «te&en tee campaign is
over, and the shouting has died down, and analyses are made of the election, a well-founded conclusion may emerge that, after all, the surface issues made little difference..
★ ★ ♦
Again and again, a political campaign against an incumbent
administration has raised the cry, “It’s time for a change.” But the public is. not always of the same opinion, unless the opposing candidate is able to make a convincing case that there is, in fact,- a .’’mess in Washington” and that the time has really come for a change.
■jstfxur*«***-
Bob Collidine Says:
Rose Kennedy Stumping Is Limited hut Dramatic
NEW YORK — Lady Bird’s whistle-stop tour in behalf of her husband’s political future has ail the trappings of the big rime: long, slide train, dozens of correspondents, radio and TV gear, researchers, hairdresser, literary spooks, lo udspeakers, good chef and swarms of Secret Service men, FBI, state and local police.
Mrs. Rose K e n nedy’s “‘whistle - stopping,” in behalf of her son Bob- OON81DINE by Is somewhat less positive political future in New York, is by comparison 'microscopic, and* limited. But more dramatic.
Last Sunday, the neat, energetic mother of the former attorney general opened her tour at Maahatianville College, Purchase, N. Y., where two of her . daughters and Bobby’s wife attended school.
She spoke for 10 minutes without recourse to the pad of lined yellow paper on which she had written her speech. Later in the day she* attended a party-rally in New Rochelle at the home of James A. Farley Jr., and repeated the speech she had memorized.
*. * *
Mrs. Kennedy is 72. She te stumping for her son in a station wagon, accompanied by two companions. There is no security.
NO SELF-PITY
Her Sunday audiences found her without an iota of self-pity, which is the way it has always been with the daughter of Honey Fit*.
Three of her children and a son-in-law mat violent deaths. Her husband is the victim of l paralytic stroke. A daughter is retarded. Her youngest sou hae a broken buck.
Her talk was not about any of that. It waa about Bobby; Uw fact that be “grew up” in New York, that he and aU the children had been raised to regard politics as a profession and a field in which they all must take interest.
★ te - A-
When it was over.she took her place in the reception line, patented by her in 1962 when she and the children campaigned for Jack.
Mrs. Kennedy te a remarkable campaigner, tireless, cheerful,
interested and with a delightful smidgeon of blarney. .
When she tackled the difficult job 6f convincing the people of Massachusetts that her son Teddy was senatorial timber, though barely 30, she would say to skeptical crowds, “I agree with those of you who are opposed to my son, or, at least, I can understand.
“Jack was ‘too young,’ as I recall. So was Bobby ‘too young,’ but they’re doing pretty well, aren’t they?
“Matter df fact, I wanted Teddy to go into 'tee Church. But the trouble was thgt lie wanted to start out as a bishop.”
Voice of .the People:
Discarded Commodities Are Found by Roadside
Surplui foods are. for needy .people. Recently we found bags of wheat flour, comnleal and bleached flour thrown beside a country road by some ungrateful ' person.
• ★ * * •
He didn’t throw away canned meat, cheese, butter, peanut butter or lard, These are ready to eat.
... ★ ★ ★
Jt isn’t steak, but it fills little tummies and keeps them from going to bed hungry. It just takes more time to prepare.
S. M. L.f.
More Comments on Bay of Pigs Invasion
There is a clear answer in September Reader’s Digest, by. Dr. Mario lanzo, regarding the Bay of Pigs invajsion.
The plans were drawn up under tee’s administration and tee invasion under the Kennedy administration. When the areal of invasion was (hanged and air support denied, tee results were disaster.
★ ★ if . .
These changes were made against the protests of the CIA' and the Joint Chiefs of Staff, although the CIA was later made the “whipping boy." ,
GOLDWATER VOP
Area Mother Warns of Child Molester
A warning to mothers who have children playing in the field between Sterling, East Boulevard and Granada^-my child was molested there test week. It was a frightening, unforgettable experience for a child. ^
Warn your, children. I had to learn the hard way.
A MOTHER *
Reader Disagrees With Staebler’s Aims
Neil Steebler, if elected, vows a better deal for migrant workers. The Governor should be primarily concerned with the needs of the residents of our state. They are property owners and their taxes keep tea state going. Action such as suggested by Steebler would hurt property owners.
Why would anyone want Steebler for Governor?
ROGER L. FEET
‘Reuther Leads Nation Toward Inflation’
Reuther states he got cake at Chrystai', icing at Fords and was going to get ice cream on top from GM. The majority of the Workers would rather keep right on working.
* if * •,
What are. Heather's desires and plans for the future — put all smaller firms aut of business, have the state take ever their plants, aad make the U. S. a socialistic state?
' * ■ it it it
Inflation comes first. Higher wages and fringe benefits mean cost added to everything along the line. He talks about human dignity. He rittuld show a little himself.
i A SMALL EMPLOYER
Medicare and Social Security Comments
Goldwater favors a strong Social Security system. By adding Medicare and increases to the plan, as the Johnson administration proposes to do, it win become insecure or add to taxes taken from workers’ pay. Many (dder-people get along well on the present plan.
it it «dfc
In some respects medicare is not as good as the Kerr-Mills plan already available. It covers only those upder Social Security and is not si good as many insurances employers give to employes. * -
Social Security was intended to be supplemental income.
Retired with s. s.
Reviewing Other Editorial Pages
Interruptions
The Washington (Mo.) Cttteen
Some trices resent U if their husbandsspeak while they’re interrupting.
Great Pioneer
The HiUedak News
In 1864, a peppery little man named Dr. William WerraQ Mayo moved to Rochester, Minn., and established his practice in an office graced by a. . bust of Abraham Lincoln. He was a doctor by virtue of four months of study at Indiana Medical College, that was common in those days. ' .
* * *
“w. W.” Mayo was not a common sort of man. He was interested in new medical developments, such aa Ustar’s antisepsis. He encouraged his boys, Win and Charlie, to read, study, travel, learn all they could. They became doctors.. and in due course, they took on other doctors to help out with their (towing practice. Eventually they began calling their tn-dertaking the Mayo Clinic.
Bote Dr. Win and Dr. Charlie became, U years spirt, presidents of tee American Medical Association. And they and their followers made such a success of the Mayo Clinic that now Rochester has become the world’s largest medical canto'.
,4
AU this is worthy of special note just now because Rochester is celebrating the Mayo Centennial and the 50th anniversary of tee Mayo Foundation, which the two brothers estab-
lished in the University of Minnesota Grade School in 1919.
-These celebrations are not of importance merely to Rochester, or Minnesota, or even the United States. They are of worldwide significance. For it was in Rochester that the sons developed the private group practice of mMficiqe. a patient-centered clinic that has become a pattern for many others. AU ef us owe the Mayos a great debt of gratitude.
$
Valuable Food
The Holland Evening Sentinel
Die controversy over artificial sweeteners such as saccharin and cyclamate may turn out to be lltUa more than a tempest in • sugar bowl. One good thing may come ef it, however. The batata may cause a tat ef people, doctors as well as laymen, to ask themselves whether tLs growing fad.for avoidance of sugar in the diet te wise.
• /"♦ H ,,
Ths current dispute was touched off by tea Medical Uttar, a publication that reports on drugs and is real mostly by doctors. “Except whore intake of sugar must be limited as in some diabetic patients,” this journal said, “the unrestricted use of artificial sweeteners makes little sense, especially rinoe their safety isn’t beyond question.’’ This drew reactions both from the Food and Drug Administration and from such commercial interests as drug and soft drink makers and food processors.
He FDA said that sKheugli the artificial swsetepars had .
hitherto ben considered safe, saw tests were being made because their ase Was growing so rapidly. That far it was noted, “the FDA has as avi-1 dence that there is esaae for alarm.” The commercial interests ware tats calm about the matter. Understandably ea, because demand for the sweeteners far ase in diet foods and taw-csterta drinks has swiftly expanded to recent years.
| * ★ " ■
It is a pertinent question whether, even if the artificial sweeteners are harmless, there is much point in using them unless'sugar intake must bo restricted for medical reasons. Sugar ia a valuable food. Parents would do fell to think about a remark by Dr. Louis C. Lasagna, a director of tee division of clinical pharmacology at John* Hopkins Hospital in Beltimore: ‘‘Peoria who have no need to avoid sugar are doing so. and some of t h o s e people, children especially, ah-solutely nded it."
17T
Middle,Age?
The Burteipton (Colo.) ttaeord
When to Mart middle age it a hard decision to make.
h Tnati
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; .7.7 m ;• . • i THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1964
30 Freed tor 'Hild 1 ifp fontpnrp Pentagon Gets ' •) ‘ -
> w - trany House of Detention pris-
■g** helped cRv workerg take precautions against
Hurricane HUda last weekend — were released from the dty prison yesterday. ■
Mayor VfotorH. Schiro requested the judges Of Municipal and Traffic Ceurts to grant 30 days credit on the sentences of the 80 prisoners who Voluntarily worked during Hilda’s .threat . ♦ * ; •
“These men rendered a service in a time of danger to the community and deserve some consideration for their nn«»|fish action,’’ said Municipal Judge Blair Lancaster.
The other 39 prisoners remain in the House of Detention, but they will be freed 30 days earlier than scheduled. /•
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CHARLESTON, S.C. <» - Joseph Francis Biyan Jr., 9k Rod exconvict and: former mortal patient, was sentenced to life imprisonment yesterday in tbe kidnaping of a 10-year-old South Carolina boy who was found dead in Florida.
The slender, brown-haired Audubon Park, N.J., man showed no emotion when he heard sentence passed by Federal Judge J. Robert Martin Jr. Bryan’s father and married sister were In the courtroom;''
Bryan pleaded guilty Wednesday to the kldnkping of Johnny Robison who disappeared Feb. O from Ms home in suburban Mount Pleasant, the boy’s body was found March 31 in a mangrove iwamp near Hallandale, Fla. Bryan also faces prosecution in New Jerapy, Florida and Ten-I nessee - in connection with the (kidnaping, of three other children, two Of ‘whom were also found dead.
| He is listed as a suspect in the deaths of David Wulff, 8, of IWillingboro, N.J., and Louis (Hackie) Wilson, 7, of St. Pe-Itersburg, Fla.,.
to Close Ft. Ord. I
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) - A demand by two Californii congressmen that ^t. Ord be quarantined because of a meningitis ^outbreak was referred to the Pentagon yesterday by Sixth Army commander Gen. F r e d-erick J. Brown.
The demand by Reps. J. Arthur Younger and Charles Gub- -ser, both Republicans, followed the deattf ot Patricia Arsenault, Millbrae, Calif. She died just 48 1 hours after a reunion with her fiance upon completion of 10 weeks basic training at the Army, training post near Monterey, Calif.
Her death was attributed to' the same strain of meningitis which has stricken 84 persons I and resulted in the deaths of 13 at Ft, Ord this year. ,
Brown, in a reply to the con- j gressmen, said he had referred the matter to the Department of Army because be did not have 1 foe authority to close the post.
Woodrow , Wilson Served as ’governor of New Jersey from 1911-13 before becoming President. . 1
NATIONAL PHAAMACYWCCK, Oct 4)0,1964
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YHE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1964
^A2t%2&*l Hare Issues Statement
tersof the world. —.. ■■i'< ■■ w «
os FALSE TEETH
Mock, Slid* or Slip?
Backs State Fee System
FAirracirm. aa unpm»«d powder to k» #rtiiu«d on upper or in««r ptatat. hoid» foioe teeth mure ttrmiv
rummy, cimn, i IU FASTEKTHte \ Duet out emu
I Secretary e£ State James M. | Hare has, released the following statement about the renumera-[ tion of branch secretary of ! state office employes:
Post Office Wants Thief to Repay Loo
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Many have read about the dispute between the Civil Service Commission_and the Secretary of State relative to the. conversion of 24 fee-type branch' offices info classified Civil Service branches.
On the basis of the Civil Service proposal of converting 24 fee branches into Civil Service offices, the system would cost $633,000 annually. On a fee basil, these same operations would 'cost less than 2500,000, a ..savings of over $133,000 yearly. To offset this additional coft, Civil Service suggested closing several key offices in- thickly-populated areas. This would curtail our service.
i 2 State Women Killed ^ in Kentucky Collision
yS&NGTON, Ky. TAP) -Two Michigan wagnen died Thursday night In the head-on collision of* two cars nine miles south of/Lexington on U.S. 25. MUNICH, Germany (APV — j Fayette County police identi-
The West German post office wants a best-selling novelist to. repay, more than $17,500 that he and others ftok in a holdup^lO years ago/
The writer is Henry Jaeger, 3f>, who spent eight years in prison for the 1954 raid with a dummy submachine. gun on a postal pension office in Frankfurt.
fied the dead as Mrs. Grace
Margaret Raymor,df Green- |qew Enrollment High ville, Mich., and.her mdther-in-law, Mrs. Ida R. Dean, 89, of Saranac, Mich. „ . .
vfformer President Dwight D.
Eisenhower commanded 6,000 men at the Tank Training Center in Gettysburg in 1918. He now makes him home in that students-over the fail enroll' Pennsylvania community. ' • ment a year
KALAMAZOO (AP)-A record enrollment of 19,779 students for the fall semester was announced here Thursday by Western Michigan University. It marked an increase of 1,756
More than a million peraoaa annually visit Sequoia National Park in California.
SANDERS , FOR RENT
TRAVIS
The third consideration is "service to the public.” This is where I feel our argument in favor of fee operations is most overwhelming.
Who produces the best results ... the person who waits in a place 8f business and has . a guaranteed salary no matter what the volume-of Bis business, or the salesman, getting a commission only on what he sells? The obvious answer is the sales-Iman.
MORE COMPLETE Fee offices provide more com- j plete service. They are often I open nights in keeping with the ' .Current trend of retail stores: Every year during the rush period, these branches take their operations into many of the state's smaller communities to offer residents personalized license service.
The fee offices provide better service more economically and more efficiently.
While in prison, Jaeger wrote a refugee novel “Die Festphg/ which has' been published” in various foreign epuntries. $ince his release Jaeger has written two more, books and has become an editor for a Frankfurt newspaper.
A spokesman for Jaeger’s publisher, said federal postal authorities have made a formal. demand on Jaeger for the entire,! sum stolen in the Frankfurt robbery.
‘‘Jaeger had several accomplices and he received only one I fourth of the money,” - the spokesman said. "He is ready to repay that fourth,, plus interest, | but he thinks that demanding it all from him is not fair.” 1
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THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, OCTOBER *, 1964
' Hart, Elly Spar Baker Votes
By Hie Asseciatod Press
Mrs. EBy Peterson •______|
Thursday . her Domocrgtic* opponent,for election to U.£ Sen-
——': i
U.S. Copier Pilot Killed by Viet Cong
SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) j-A U.S. Army, helicopter pilot was shot and killed by Viet Cong file today minifies after stepping out of his disabled machine 370 miles northeast of Saigon.
. • * ★ ■ a * ™ V 4
His death brought to Hi the number of U.S. servicemen killed in combat in Viet Nam' since 1981.
Hie helicopter had been supporting a Vietnamese ground action when it was forced down, either by mechanical trouble or enemy fire.
ate “has now voted five times to sweep the Bobby Baker case tinder the rtig " . ■■
;•. a
But, incumbent Sen. Philip A. «art, speaking in Muskegon, noted he voted twice before adjournment of Congress to teyor of investigating the case imaolv-tog alleged influence peddling to Washington.
.* a ★
The statements came during a day when a number of candidates, including Mrs. Peterson- appeared before the Michigan State Chamber of Commerce convention to Detroit.
Democratic candidate f^r lieutenant governor Robert Der-engoski told file C. of C. meeting the Democratic administration
in Washington, hot the, GOP administration in Lansing, is responsible for prosperity in Michigan.^
OFFICE HOURS
His Republican opponent, State Sen. William Milliken, told the audience he will hold office hours in each county courthouse, time permitting, if he is elected. - .
* Sr *.
Milliken is running on the ticket with Gov. George Romney who spoke to the Michigan Mental Health Association in Detroit Thursday night after a speech in Grand Rapids during the day.
* *» *
Derengoski shares the Democratic ticket with Neil Staebler
who planned a luncheon speech today to the Downriver Cham-, ber of Commerce at Wyandotte Yacht Club.
Also appearing Thursday ber fore the State C.. of C. session .were the two attorney general candidates, Democratic incumbent Frank J. Kelley and Republican Meyer Warshawsky, as well as Democratic Secretary of State-James M. Hare.
•- '* ■ * * #
Meanwhile, a “bus blitz’’ of Republican women candidates and wives of GOP m$n seeking office was on its final tour of a five-day swing through Michigan. 'Stops for rallies and I speeches were planned today at Albion, Jackson, Adrian, Ann | Arbor, Ypsilanti and Dearborn.
U. S.f Canada Ask Joint Group to Study Lakes
WASHINGTON (AP) - The United States and Canada j Thursday asked the Interna- J tional Joint. Commission to In-1 vestigate water-level conditions 1 in the Great Lakes.
The commission also was asked to study and report on pollution In' .Lake Erie, Lake Ontario and the international section of (he St. Lawrence River.
* * * *
The requests were transmitted to the commission, which has U.S. and Canadian members, by Assistant Secretary of State William R. Tyler. Us letters were released by the State Department
3* • * , .. r*
The aim of the water-level j study, Tyler’s letter said, is to see whether it would be desirable and practicable “to reduce the extremes of a t a g e | which have been experienced” i in the Great Lakes.
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Hubert Heads Info Jersey, Pennsylvania
WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey heads into New Jersey and Pennsylvania j today .for two days of campaign-1 had a crowded schedule today ing in states Democrats hope to carry by large margnis Nov. 3.1 .* ; e'' f
ep club meeting
which was held Tuesday hi the little theater. Vern Noga, president, explained the new system of membership to the students.
Buying a membership this year will enable the purchaser to be in pep dub throughout high school.
At the end of this year members will receive charms as well as pins for filling up their pep dub cards.
Other School Nows Throughout Week
WALLED LAKE
By VIVI METTALA Top new teachers have been added to the Walled Lake High School faculty this year.
They include Mrs. Barbara Campbell, English; Clark Char-netski, physics and physical science; Jasper E. Creech, history and English; Carol Latova, history and assistant wrestling coach; and Mrs. Karin Murray, English.
Others are Melissa Neal, French and^EagHsh; Mary Riemersma, shorthand and co-op office; Virginia Stoin-off, home economics; Norma Taylor, girls physical ednea-ttaa; and Mrs. Delta Trudgen,
FTA scholarship and visiting a | from South Africa, is West
college. Laura Sears will direct Bloomfield’s first homecoming
the activities with Terrie An- king. - ■
draws, rice president; Andres I
Sarto, secretary; and Cheryl ORION
Andrews, treasurer.
FRENCH CLUB By PAT WARD
Officers of this year’s French A spacemobile carrying acaie dub are John Ellenwood, presi-j model spacecraft and equipment dent; David Scullt, vice presi-l rolled up to Lake Orion High dent; F-witi)* Beaupre, secre- School Wednesday afternoon, tary; and Deborah Huber,1 A lecture demonstration was treasurer. presented to the student body
According to coach David by a professional science edu-Smith, John Campbell is this odor from the National Aero-week’s “most violent Viking.’’ , nautics and Space Administration.
W. BLOOMFIELD j Tomorrow clnM and classes
will begin work on the floats West Bloomfield High School r (or next Friday's homecom-students Bruce Johnson and j^g ptgtuit,
Janet Windiate are semifinalists
in the 1964-65 National Merit' Pep club .officers are Scholarship competition.
Lawrence Robinson, president; Bernard Bollard, rice president; Sue Shimman, secretary; and James Turner, treasurer.
* ♦ „w ■ e ■
The future teachers club program will include awarding a
Queen and court candidates will be elected next week.
Lucille Alix, Donna Grout, _ * . * . ..
Karole Hanes, Susan Penney . deJ*r“ “ se,1‘
and Susan Sanderson were ^>8 candy to raise funds for lected candidates for 1964 homecoming queen.
choir robes.
THESPIAN CLUB Thespian dub welcomed new Roy Licht,. exchange student members into the club Tuesday —-————-r-r- ,with skits end excerpts from j last year’s play, “Liliom.’’
'Pilldw Talk' Slated at Waterford High
EMMANUEL
LIPSTICK LINEMEN —'A first this year at Ciarkston High School is a powder puff football game, to be a. part of the homecoming activities. Junior and senior girls will *pit their talents against each other Wednesday. Shown here are team members Karen King (right), 6701 Laurelton, a senior; and Cindy Mosier; 7701 Eston, a junior.
At Ciarkston
By JEAN PERRY Waterford Township High School’s first play of the year, Pillow Talk.** wifi be held Nov. 30 and 21 In the school gym. >
Included in the cast will be Jan Morrow, played by Lynn Hamilton and Jonathan Foybes, played by Charles Wilson. These are the twi main characters.
Other students who passed try-eats are Dob Stranger as Brad Allen, Dorothy Graves
as Tray Watters,
Flowers as Marie, Charlene Carver as Eileea, Wiberg Sc boon as Yvette, and Mary Darrell as Miss Conrad.
Also in the cast of the production, sponsored by the dramatic chib, are Maureen Stratton, Ar-dyth Long, Ronald McAllister, Sue Enfield, Ruth Burrell, Catherine Bauguess, Michael Strickland, Sherrell McAkee, u s a n Hanril and Sandra Hughes, the prompter.
Membership in the dramatic club-numbers 50 this year. CHOOSE OFFICERS Choir officers have been chosen for the year. Priscilla Aldea is president. Others are Paul Thomas, vice president; Diane Eggleston, secretary, Pamela Clark, treasurer;
Girl Gridders
By TIM MAYER Emmanuel Christian High School’s Lancera will be holding a pep rally tonight at 7:30.
Cheerleading captain Cheryl. _ _ .
Jackson and her squad will i ** CATHY RICHARDSON i of these girls will reign as take charge of the affair and Homecoming excitement is j homecoming queen and another the bonfire. , building up for Ciarkston High jwil1 ** senior m"d-
The assembly ifill try. to j School students. Last year, | queen and her court will promote school spirit and en- I floats were introduced~tor the ! bs ^pped and begin their ^eign courage the football team to time | today at a tapping assembly,
their- third victory. Diere will I *, * *
be e weed gathering contest -mis year something totally i betweea the classes. unique has been brought into
, Refreshments wttt be served ,4he homecoming scene, tnerine Bauguess, historian; and by members of the junior class, Wednesday a oowdernuff
ry, robe chairmen. 9500 goal set by class president | with senior girls opposing jun-
v * * » Katherine White. j lor girls. Coaching the teams
Homecoming activities for * * * , ; m Ralph Kenyon, juniors;
WTHS this year will be Oct. A separate float, entirely for and william Mackson, sen-23 and 24. Friday wifi include | the queen and her court, being] ion. Both are football a pep assembly where toe built by the. student body offl- coaches, king aud queen will be an- cers and assisted by pep club _ , . . ,
Bounced. , members, is among fiVe being! SW ^ to victory
! WD1 be two complete squads of
Before the Pontiac Northern built f°r homecoming. 1 -
game Friday there will be a bon-
To Prepare for Program Next Month
ByKAYCOSMA Pontiac Central High School students Edie Payne and Roger Putnam-have been chosen as representatives for theyCitizens Committee for Youth.
Two representatives from each high school were, chosen to prepare for the salute to youth progranb scheduled >n No-' vember. The committee meets monthly at the Waldron Hotel.
These Pontiac teen-agers talk about and try to, bring out the good things Pontiac teen-agers have done.
Members of the Dolphins, the girls synchronized swim team, nave been chosen.
Centraiites Marja Bruin, Viki Leezel, Katherine and Ann De-vereaux, Toby Swindell and Son-ja Hutchinson will be on the j team. »
! Other members are Mary Jo I Myers, Sharbn Kincaid, Peggy I O’Brien, Judith Slade, Chris j Blackney, Molly Seilmen, Mari-j lyn Moore, Aleda Reid and Deb-« orah Dooley.
. Adviser for the team is faculty member Dorothy Worth-man.
• The senior girls ensemble at -Pontiac Central has selected officers for the 64-65 season. Edie Payne will be the new president. .
Assisting her to coordinate the groups activities' are Cindy Mitchell, vice president; and Kay Cosmo, secretary - treas-surer.
—Michael Dempsey directs tin ensemble-
fire, followed by halftime ac-1 tivities during the game.
* - # - *
Saturday from 8 to 11 pan. | the coronation ball will be held j the WTHS gym. Here tiiej
OUR LADY OF THE LAKES
By ANN LONGO “Autumn Mist,” the home-
sentatives will be honored.
Taming of the Shrew'
By ALICE TURNER Pontiac Northern High School’s drama group, the Northern Flayers, will present “The Timing of the Shrew” for their first play of the season. This Shakespearean comedy ill be presented ■ Nov. 11-14. Afternoon and evening shows will be presented at 3 and I
and 22 Nsrihen Players wfil be taktag part ta the praduc-tiea. %
“The Taming of the anew” is i story of an Italian wine merchant and his two daughters. The younger daughter, who is not only young but attractive, cannot marry until the older sister, Katherine thtt Shrew, is “married off."
* * *
The older sister has a fiery temper and everyone would just as soon get around meeting her if possible.
The Am begins with the attempts to “marry off” Katherine.
SWIMMING TRYOUTS Northern’s synchronissd girls swimming dab, the Cstafinas, are how* thair find tryouts Thursday for would-ee mem-
king, queen and class repre- coming dance at Our Lady of MMjl|iMffBAr | the Lakes High School is tonight
“ from 8 to 11:30 p.m. Music will ! be by the “El Colientes.”
★ A h
Homecoming representatives are Martha Dengate, freshman; j Donna Day, sophomore; and Francis Hungerford, junior.
Rev. Frederick J. Delaney, pastor, was honored by the students for his birthday at an as-Representatives from each-1 The Girls Recreation Associ-1sembly following the pep rally senior homeroom will be nar- ation (GRA) is holding its indti-! this afternoon. Father was prerowed down Thursday to a lation this week. I sen ted with a spiritual bouquet,
smaller group. ‘.’ I Northern’s Huskies play Wa-
From this group the next king j terford High School tomorrow and queen wifi be chosen. I night at the Waterford field.
Northern Preparing Comedy
MILFORD
bring held
censtatef eafythen end pstn.
STUDY SCRIPT ^-Exchange student Rob Jacksoji of 1160 Lake Angelus Shores and Chert Mason of 2319 Silver Lake study the script of “The Taming of the Shrew.” The Pontiac Northern High School drama group, the Northern Playact, will present the play Nov. 11-14.
,. Jv -
By BOB GORSUNE
Today marked the end of the first marking period for students st Milford High School Report cards will be issued Wednesday.
There will be no classes for students at MHS Thursday and Friday because of a teachers institute.
Seniors will hav$. their pic-tures taken Thursday, Friday and Saturday.
OXFORD
Diane Schalau, daughter of Mr. and Mi's. Frank Schalau of 2241 Baldwin Road, was named Oxford High School homecoming1 queen at recent ceremonies.
Her court included Cl A role Statwick, senior; Brenda Jones, sophomore; and Christy Coulter, freshman.
A total of 82,Ui.M was made by the senior etast on their magastae safe which eaded last week. ^
Highest salesmen were Julie Van Wagner with 8137-63 and Maxine Rader, Sheryl' Brewer and Sandra Coat, all selling over $100.
The choir, under the direction of Mrs. Lee Valentine, wfil be singing Tuesday for the South Easton Michigan Music Chib
cheerleaders, consisting of junior, and senior boys.
R is hoped that the powder puff game will become an annual homecoming event. It’s not often, you see football players with pigtails sticking out of their helmets or time outs called so somebody can fix her hair! ELECT QUEEN
A more serious part of homecoming is the election of ,a queen end her court. Four girls choeen from the freshmen class at a pretapping assembly were Constance Hawkins, Cheryl Mansifield, Catherine Moon, and, Laura Soncrant. One of these will be freshman maid.
Nominated for sophomore maid were Pamela Affolder, Caroline Giles, Linda McCracken add Shayla Smith.
Junior maid will be one of these four girls: Linda Bennett, Sue Peters, Jane Thrift or Catherine Verback.
* ' * it
Undd Brodkorb, Sue Hampshire, Cynthfe Humphrey and Constance Papi have been chosen from the senior class. One
Graduation Rings Arrive for St. Michael Seniors
By HERVEY LAVOIE The past week at St, Michael High School saw the school bell lose its monopoly on rings! For the senior class members, after weeks of waiting, have received their graduation rings from Sister Hilarine, girl’s homeroom counselor.
the ring blessing rite is scheduled to follow the 8:45 a.m Mass Sunday.
Under the direction of Sister Mary Gertrude Ann, the St. Michael chapterofthe Detroit Inner - Student Seminar.of Government in action (DISGA) has been organized. Purpose of the DISGA is (o acquaint Interested students with the functions of government at national, state and local levels.
* a ■.
Officers are James' Stickle, chairman; William Turner, vice chairman; Susan Greek, scribe; Rosemary Cecilia, business: manager; and Mary Finegan, [ secretary.
TAKE TRIP
‘ Taking part in the annual I DISGA trip to New York City this week are officers James! Stickle and William Turner.
This aftqrnoon the first stu-
dent assembly. Officers are Hervey Lavoie, president; Carol Haddad, teasnrer; Jean Loviska, secretary; and Gregory Glynn, sergeant - at • arms.
Selection of a new vice president was the main topic of discussion. •»
Culminating this weeks agenda will be the hotoecoiping festivities. The big weekend facilities - the coronation ball, tonight from 6:30 to 11:30 p. m. CROWN QUEEN At that time the queen will be crowned and she and her * court will begin their weekend reign. Candidates for the royal diadem are Sarah Raymond, Sue' Reynolds and Margaret Pierce.
Representatives from lo^er classes are Mary Cassation, junior; Diane Cambell, sophomore; and Debor,ah McDonough, freshman.
Thailand Sends Veera Thar a non to Avondale
, By LINDA TONG Students and, faculty at Avon-
'Tot's TroF Dance
To Fete St. Fred Frosh
By JAMS QUARLES The freshmen of St. Frederick High School will be in the limelight tonight. A dance is being held in their honor.
Seniors will present “Tot’s Trot” in which all freshmen will! be admitted to a penney. The freshmen will be identified by
baby bottle or rattle bearing future TEACHERS
General chairman is Michael Dean. Other committee members are Rath Lange, Mary Garland, / Marcia Sprague, Margaret Polmear, Vernon Rankle, Jaile Dougherty, Cheryl Beckwith, Richard Rodriguez, and Jenifer White.
Seri<|8 abo have chosen their
dent council meeting of the dale High School are getting ac-year was held before the sto- | quainted . with - ,
j IS - year - oldf Veera Thara-non, who has. come to this-country from* the village of;
Khonkaen Thailand.
Veera is American Fieidl .. I Service excap and gown colors. In gradua- change student THARANON ticn the girls will wear, white! and will make his home with and the hoys, navy blue. j the David Hackett family in Au-* * . * „ burn Heights.
A ci^y «ie is bei^ spm- ^ leMrniag ^
W his last year of schooling at Monday will receive a transistor] ^ a
French club officers recently _ , choosen are Jot Anderson, presi-
. Future teachers dub, under dent; Lynn Maketa, vice presi-the direction of Sister Noraleen, I dent; Sue Wiedeman, secretary; has appointed officers for this1 Linda Connors, treasurer; and W 1 James McLaughlin, historian.
President is Cariotta Roselli. | Future Teachers of America Others are Patrida Yamold, I will be under the leadership of* rice president; Carol Manion,j S ha r.o n )lobinson, president; secretary; Julie Valitar, trea- Sandra Gorang, rice president; suran.und Sandra Bailey,.his-{Sue, Wiedeman, secretary,cand * torian. . ' iMaryHackett,treasurer.
radio.
-. t.
New Road Leads to Barren Tragedy Site
$ THE} PONTIAC PitESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER Q, 1964 ‘
LONGARONE, Italy (AP)
The highway to Longarone has been rebuilt, but.it is a road that leads to nowhere.
This once-prosperous little industrial town that was wiped off the map a year ago today in the Vakmt Dam disaster is still only a gravel bed haunted by terrible memories.
“a * *
Not one of the town's 300 homes has.been rebuilt. Nor any of its dozen factories. There are not even names on 370 of the 1,-1 40Q graves which hold the only recovered bodies of 1,917 known" dead from, one of the worst
landslide-flood disasters in history. Tl?e actual toll' never will be known, but is believed to be more than 2,000.
WIDENED LATER The rebuilt, two-lane highway down the. Piave Valley will bfe widened later to a four-lane highway, but for the near future a two-lane road is more, than
A temporary bridge has been built across the- stream bed through Longarone where a 150-foot high flood wave swept everything away.
r A Junior Editors Quiz About-
ROCKETS
A little prefabricated chapel has been put up where die town church With its yard-thick stone walls on^ stood.
A foundation has been laid for a new schooihouse, but classes for the 40 surviving children are held in « temporary schoolroom up the hill.
PREFAB HOMES
In the distance there are' 30 prefab houses for the survivors, but they stand far uphill - or down the valley in partly destroyed suburbs.
All else is desolation. There are plans to start large-scale rebuilding of Longarone’s homes and factories, perhaps before the end of the year.' There has been no rush about it, Even the few surviving town officials wonder whether, or how soon, new famines may ever be persuaded to move here.
* w *
Longarone itself had 1,289 residents. Only 79 survived. Suburbs and surrounding villages under the Longarone commune had an additional 3,387 population.
Of these, 569 perished, as did 158 residents of the-little vil-
lages of Erto and Casso, on the edge of the great water power reservoir above Vatont Dam.' SIDE CRASHED
At 11:15 on the night of Oct 9, 1963, one whole side of 6,000-ft. Mt. foe crashed down Into the reservoir. The 873-foot high Vaiont Dam, third highest in the world, withstood the terrific sjiock. But most of the big lake was splashed over the top of the dam and surged dojm the valley over Longarone to a 150-foot flood wave.
In three minutes nothing was left but the gravel bed. w ★ dr*
The dam still stands, but the electric power system has been abandoned forever. Most of the reservoir is filled by the great landslide: Waters backing up behind it are channeled off.
Public officials say there is no danger now.
But Mt. Toe still trembles from time to time with minor earthsUdes.
Senator John Strom Thurmond received 39 electora^votes !• on the States Rights Democratic ! ticket to 1948. He polled 1,189,0211 popular votes.
QUESTION: Does a rocket’s weight decrease as it soars . into space?
■ ★ w -dr
ANSWER: Let’* answer this by "asking another question: what is weight? Sir Isaac Newton answered this when, in 1687, -be formulated his famous law of gravitation, which stated that all objects attract each other with a farce depending on their size and the distance between them.
Stoee we are all living m the surface of the earth, the very heavy mass of the earth attracts or pulls us toward its center — which is the reason we don’t just drift off faito space. The degree of pull on things of different size gives them their different weights.
A large thing hiss more weight than a small thing. Weight - [changes, however, when we get away from the force of gravity. A man weighing 150 pounds would weigh the same to ; any country on earth because he would always be the same distance from the earth’s center of gravity.
In the same way, a rocket would always have the same weight when standing on the launching pad of any rocket-launching station.
But the moment it shoots upward, the rocket’s motor thrust . is overcoming the gravity, and the rocket becomes lighter every moment it zooms up into space. / *
it ★ #. * /■ .
FOR YOU TO DO: If you were standing on the moon, would you weigh more or less than on earth ? See if you can figure this out, then look up the answer oc ask one of your teachers. - - ». , '
2 + 2 ... A Fistful or PONTIAC!
This thing you're chugging aroupd in right now ... dots it have 421 inches one 338 horsepower as standard equipment? Does it have on all-synchro 3-speed with Hurst flopr shifter?
Does it hove heavy duty springs and shocks as standard equipment?
Does it hayr bucket seats and full carpeting as* standard equipment?
Does it look even remotely like that 2+2 of ours up/tnere? -
k. Tsk. '
Isn't it about time you stopped playing automobile and started driving the real thing? Drop in anytime. See this lively beauty. And ask for Ken, Jim or Lee.
Russ Johnson Motor Sales
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1064
$—8
'1 1 A 1 A ' I I ■' .. mm ■ f Iborrower *bo to transferred ran equity of only 3 per cent? | nor prepare the property for
1# mm mmm #1 . LJ L it. ji fyy j,. j, -----------1- fl_______________ I _ from'the city or meets with This equity is not sufficient to sale, much less salvage any-
If f 'm l m^Jrm I I t Vm :M I ■ Ts-™ fit wC ptoancial reverses where he has | pay a real estate commission! thing" for the owner."
WASHINGTON (AP) - Foreclosures of homes financed with FHA-insured mortgages are running at an ail-time high. The same goes for house loans guar' anteed by the Veterans Admin istration.
But, the situation is not cause fct alarm, say spokesmen for both the VA and the Federal Housing Administration. They call it ah adjustment toward normalcy, from shortly .after World War n when realtors eagerly looked for houses to seB up to reeent years when supply more nearly met demand.
The VA spokesman put it this way: “A big factor is absence of price appreciation in the past few years. A few years ago a mistake in Judgment as to value of a house could be remedied by just holding on to it a year or two. That tiirte has passed."
FHA and VA officials agreed that foreclosures are up or down with the economic pulse of a community or area and the individuals affected. When a military base or an industry shuts down, foreclosures in that area ata tip.
LET HOUSE GO
When a man is out of a job, he may have to let his house go. The next leading reason, from the individuals’ standpoint, Is death of a husband or wife, divorce,* or costly Illness in the family. \ 4 .
The foreclosure trend ft not limited to mortgages insured or guaranteed by the government, but prevails, though to a lesser degree, throughout the house financing industry, according to an official of the Federal Home Loan Bank Board.
By far the biggest share of home financing now is throe so-called conventional loans those obtained from savings and loan associations, private companies add individ-
Data compiled by-the board, which insures savings deposited with savings and loan associations, shows that in 1963 conventional loans were used tufn per cent of all hohses bought on time, while the FHA'accounted for 15 per cent and the VA only 8 per cent.
OPERATIONS DECLINE Only World War n and Korean War veterans are eligible • the VA's house loan guaranty program, so its operations hi tills field are now declining.
Foreclosures, of conventional loans run at a lower rate, dais of both private and government financing circles agreed, because the buyer generally has had to pay out a larg-lown payment and, having more of his own money invested, is more determined to hold on to the property.
During the first half of this year there were 21,433 foreclosures among the 3,644,000 FHA-insured homes. This was up about one-tenth of 1 per cent over the 18,246 foreclosures out of 3,551,000 mortgages insured by the agency during the last half of 1963.
.The agency had approximately 50,000 houses on its hands in June, but sales slightly exceeded acquisitions.
EASING OF CREDIT
While the bousing supply and
Remand ratio was given as a basic reason, for the current rate of foreclosures — a rate which appeaft to have leveled off -- another mason cited at tee FHA and onCapitol Hill has been the easing or liberalizing of credit requirements to finance purchase of a home.
This was by action of Cot-gross in 1957, 1959 and in, 1961,1 intended to help the little fellow buy his own home.
At present a loan of up to flS,-
009 can be financed through the FHA with only a 4 per. cent down payment. On a 815,000 house a buyer would have to put up only 8450 of his Own money and could stretch payments out over 35 years.
A wanting in regard to the present situation was voiced here this week at a meeting of the Mortgage Bankers Association of America.
INADEQUATE EQUITY E, *A. Camp Jr., executive
vice president bf the Liberty |j National Life Insurance Co., a11 forum on housing and mortgage ■ lending, said: “I take the posi-1| tion that the cause of our trou- ■ ble . mainly revolves around j I inadequate equity and slow '1 amortization and that a large 11 part of these foreclosures would JI never have occurred if a res- I sonable equity had existed either | from an original down payment • or fropi accumulated hmortiza- I tion.
“What can we expect of ail
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9. 1964
Fall Planting Looks Good
Rain Eases Drought,but Too Late Summer Crops
CHICAGO (AP) — Plentiful rain and cool weather . have alleviated costly drought conditions throughout the nation and jjuoyed fanners’ hopes fot the fall planting season.
But, an Associated Press state-by-state survey showed today, for most of the ridi summer crops, the rains came too late.
.• Lack of moisture and parched boil caused an estimated 1300-million damage to the normally bountiful crops of torn, soybeans, sorghum and wheat. Jlecent rains have aided fruit growers but livestock and dairy farmers are bard hit by arid pastures and lack of livestock fodder for the winter.
* Some farmers are cutting corn for silage in an effort to alleviate the expected feed shortage.
FARMERS OPTIMISTIC
Despite low ground water supplies and lack of adequate subsoil moisture, most farmers are optimistic about the fall crops.
But in some scattered areas, rainfall still is desperately needed.
partmsot has declared U drought-stricken counties eligible for emergency loans. September. runoff in southern third of Lower Peninsula lowest since — 16.7 cubic feet per second-compared with 16.0 in 1941. Over-all picture of state not considered too serious.
Kentucky — Recent rains have aided drought conditiorts. Soil moisture condition most favorable since April, but precipitation needed in northern Kentucky.
Eastern Colorado is “a powder keg,” says Henry Christenson, state soil Conservation director. With the weather still balmy and no rain in sight, the newly planted wheat crop imperiled. Some wheat Already is lying in the dust, Christenson says.
SECTIONAL RUNDOWN Here’s a sectional rundown of conditions:
EAST
Virginia — Drought conditions have been relieved by rainfall, but it came too late to help crops. Water shortage has been relieved. Drought relief programs are in progress.
Connecticut — soil dampened 540 inches with rainfall Ending five-week dry spelL But effects of drought which began In April stiU prevail and more rain is nfieded. Drought worst since 1967 and second worst in this century.
New YorkTwo inches of rain last week In the mid-Hud-son Valley'’area eased threat of farestfires. But that sector it considered a disaster area because of the late summer drought and the damage to crops.
. Maryland — The crop reporting aervfce said soils have changed from too dry to too wet.
New Jersey — Drought was relieved by rains last week, but it came too late for vegetable growers. Farmers without irrigation have suffered. But the recent rains helped fruit grow-" ers.
Pennsylvania — The aoQ was moistened last week with a 14 ip rainfall, erasing a two-month threat of excessive forest tires. Ban on tires in state park, fireplaces lifted. But ratal came too late for most summer crops.
^CENTRAL
Minnesota — Drought broken several Weeks ago, now state needs dry, warmer weather for corn and soybean harvesting.
South Dakota — Twen^r-slx counties have been declared drought disaster areas. where Spying and grazing of soil bank acres ire allowed. Use of idle acres has alleviated a feed shortage, but some comities in the east central portion will probably face serious problems this winter after the 'current feed supply'll exhausted. Rain two Weeks ago helped moisture oonditions, but it came too late to help the crops.
' Michigan —Agriculture De-
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Missouri — Central and northern sections hit hardest by drought with no rain in July and August. Feed grain and soybean yields cut sharply. Fall pasture and farm ponds improved by rain two weeks ago. Fire hazard caused in some wooded areas. In contrast, wet fields have delayed cotton harvest in the bootheel.
Kansas —The state is dry( but has not reached the critical stage. September rains permitted planting of winter wheat in most sections. Very little moisture in the extreme west. More rain needed for wheat, farm
ponds and over-all crop situation.
Iowa— Soil moisture supplies are adequate for the most part. Some shortage Reported, however, and few areas report surplus moisture.
-Oklahoma — August and September rains ended drought. Unusually hot and dry weather hurt crops and pastures in all sections except the. northeast before the drains came,
South Carolina - — Recent rains helped relieve dryness in eastern section. Corn seriously stunted in some areas.' Smaller, apple crOp in the northeast because qf drought. Twelve counties in northeast and central sections getting federal assistance.
. Indiana — Rainfall 4.9 inches below normal in the east central section for the last 13 weeks. Corn and soybean crops reduced, but not -seriously. Pastures have been damaged most.
Ohio — Frost &nd freeze
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September rain helped, but still needs moisture to replenish ground water supply.
Texas —Drought appears over in most of the state, with pastures beginning to green and land in good condition for winter wheat planting. Subsoil moisture may be deficient in some places.
WEST
Colorado — Eastern Colorado described as a “powder keg” and if a daylong hard wind shoiild occur, newly planted wheat would blow out of the ground and damage would be heavy. Sokne blowing last week, but no major damage. Moisture
situation getting worse as warm days continue without ratal. Some newly planted wheat may die unless there is rain.
New Mexico — September rains came too late for. most dryland crops, but has helped winter range prospects and fall planting of wheat. Surface moisture adequate, but abort on subsoil moisture. Stunted results expected in the east’s dryland crop areas, where sorghum and corn grow.
California — The state has finished its driest year in nine years. The 'water year ended Sept. 30, but despite the deficiencies, general water conditions are far from critical.
The first commercial batch of steel in the U.S. was poured St Wyandotte, Mich., in September,
Soviet Economist Dies
MOSCOW (AP) - Eugene Varya, an often-censured econo-
mist who survived the wrath of Stalin, died Thursday at the age of 14. Tass said Varga (tied of • heart ailment.
Desirable Positions—
Prepare YourseU NOW
FBI Evening Division
The demand for stenographers, secretaries, typists and other trained office-help is great* er than the supply. Beginning salaries are larger than ever "before. There are good opportunities for advancement.
Classes Beginning Oct. 26
PONTIAC BUSINESS INSTITUTE ■
IS W. Lawrence, Pontiac, Michigan
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Slow down ond do businose the modem way You can writ# chocks at homo and pay bills by mail, saving th# time, expense and nuisance ofv Crowded busses or stop and go driving, parking, standing in lino or simply wasting time running ham and there . . . Your cancelled chocks am legal receipts for bills paid.
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Pleads Guilty , to Holdup Bid
A White Lake Township man has pleaded guilty to attempted unarmed robbery of a Farming-ton bank and is awaiting sentencing in U S. District Court in Detroit.
i No date has been scheduled lor the sentencing of Robert A. Prince, 81, of 2010 Kingston.
THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1964’
B—5
• He is accused of the unsuccessful holdup , of the National Bank of Detroit branch at 32900 Middle Belt on Sept. 21.
Originally Prince demanded ®n examination on the charge, hut oa Sept. 30 entered a plea Of guilty. He Was released on $2,009 bond. ,
• Man Plunges to Death From Eiffel Tower
PARIS (UPI) - Robert Camus, S3, plunged to his death from the 620-foot high second platform of the Eiffel Tower last night.
A tower employe who sought to stop him from leaping was left with a sleeve of Camus’ Jacket in his hands.
PAINT end WALLPAPER
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Search Cove Where Queen Is to Arrivp
Tight Security Enforced in Quebec
QUEBEC (AP): — Frogmen searched the cold waters of Wolfe’s Cove today and plain-clothesmen with police dogs patrolled the historic Plates of Abraham as Queen Elizabeth’s yacht steamed up "the St. Lawrence for the queen’s controversial vjsit to French Canada.
Despite some official denials, there were* many signs that security safeguards would surpass anything ever set up'in Canada for the visit of a head of State.
Checkpoints were in operation on all roads to make sure that no knpwn extremists la the French separatist movement entered the city. Occupants of all automobiles were required to show identification papers.
The queen, who arrived on Prince Edward Island Monday for an 8-day Canadian visit, is expected to disembark frbm the royal yacht Britannia at Wolfe’s Cove Saturday morning. She will remain in Quebec until Sunddy night, when she will fly j to Ottawa for the final stop of her visit.
DOCK AREA
. Frogmen have been exploring the dock area for several days. They will keep watch on the hull of the. Britannia while the queen is here. She and Prince Philip will live aboard, as they did in
Charlottetown earlier in the week.
’ Mon than 1,000 police will be bached by soldiers and fire brigades on standby. The royal routes through the city will be lined with soldiers. Buses are ready to move police about quickly.
Security authorities have clamped tight restrictions on demonstrations by the separatists.
Thqy also are concerned over a rash of threatening letters and telephone calls.
CALLED RALLY
Le Rassemblement Pour L’-Independence Nationale, a separatist organization, has called a rally tonight to voice i|s objections. Police granted a permit for the rally but made clear'
they would „ not tolerate any manifestations after the queen arrived.
Sudents at Lgval University-will parade in protest this afternoon, crown a queen and stage other mock ceremonies. The, Students Association of the South Bank has decided to boycott all events arranged far the queen’s visit.
The council of Sodal Science Students accused Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson and Provincial Premier Jean Lesage of insulting the people of Quebec by inviting the queen in the face of popular objections.
Republican presidential candidate Alfred Landon, who lost to Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1936, carried only Maine, and Vermont.
Flew Away to the Roost
The Nile' River,, more .than 4,000 miles long, id regarded as the lifeblood of the United Afab Republic. It is the majpr source of water for homes, farms and industry.
Farm Editor Dies
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - Dr. Clarence Poe, long-time editor of the Progressive Farmer arid a leader in the southern agricul-
tural. and educational field for more than half .a century, died Thursday at the age of 8^
Jhirteen governors have become Presidents..?
SEATTLE, Wash. (AP) - It was, said the Federal Bureau of Investigation, merely coincidence.
Jack (James) Peak, 49, was arrested on a warrant charging . unlawful flight to avoid, prosecution cm a charge of robbing a Pasco, Wash., pawn shop in December 1963.
liie arrest was made yester- . day at Peak’s place of employment, the Robbers Roost pool room.
St. Louis Doctor Dies
ST. LOUIS, Mo. (AP) - Dr Floyd {Stewart, a St. Louis phy siiian for 67 years and a sur geon-major during the Spanish American .War, died Tlfirsday He was 90.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIgAV, OCTOBER 9, 1964
Expect Rochester Council to Set Bond Election Date
ROCHESTER - The Village I Council .to expected to .set a! date for a $190,000 bond issue election at its regular ^meeting 1 Monday.
Dependent upon, the ejection, which will likely take place in -December, are fuiyis to cover the cost of clearing 30 acres of the. village and preparing Aor industrial development as an urban renewal project.
Also on the proposed ballot will be a request to amend the
village charter so as to exempt urban renewal projects from the limitations of a pro-
AREA NEWS
vision covering the sale of property by the village.
The-village wants to sell $12,-
1000 worth of land in the project area, which would excised the $2 per capita maximum speci-! fied in the chatter.
. * * '*! Three-fifths of the voters must approve of the bond issue before it can be sold.
I PUBLIC HEARING
A public hearing Sept. 28 on 1 the issue saw little opposition to the plan, and residents at the ' hearing were informed that there are two ways of paying
for the bond issue without raising taxes.
The area slated for renewal, termed a “blighted” section of the village along east Third Street, is now characterised by substandard dwellings. Improvements undef the project would include regrading of the area, extension of Second Street, relocation and straightening of Paint Creek, new utilities, a new bridge over the creek and a new railroad bridge on Baldwin Street;
, * * * ■
The village’s share of the I cost is now estimated at $177,-1000. The Urban Renewal Admin-jistration has set aside $535,928 j for the project to cover 75 per I cent of the cost.
; PREPARING! PLANS Urban renewal director Ernest Reschk^ is submitting final plans „to Washington, including requests fpr changes in some 'items of the budget.
★ # : W
The government has allowed lower percentages on their share of the cost for some items, i claiming that, these items will | be of less benefit to the overall I project, than the . village has [.allowed them.
, In some cases, the village will i go along With changes made by j the URA, according to Reschke, but in others will submit documentation supporting its requests for a greater federal j mare of the colts.'
Utica Parents Are Hosts for Education Workshop
PantiaC Preu Photo
TIRES OK — The first thing you need to do if. you’re going to be in a bicycle rodeo is ihake sure your bike is in good working order, Mike Earner learns here. Helping the 13-year-old youth, an eighth grader at St. William’s School, is Walled Lake Police Chief James Decker. The police department will direct the rodeo Sunday afternoon at the Walled Lake Shopping Center. t.
Area Bicycle Rodeo to Promote Safety
Massy t. The total village share was set ' at $190,000 to cover contingen-
'dP^ i dies, attorney, consulting and aM bonding expenses.
WALLS GOING UP?-A large crane lifts oement blocks to the second level vof a new building being constructed for the Rochester Ggurch of Christ at 127 E. Avon Road. -The structure, to be attached to the front of the . old one, will house church .offices, a 500-seat
.Pontiac Pres* Photo
auditorium, nursery and 20 classrooms. A unique, gull-wing roof will crown the $120,000 building, and will be put on sometime during' the next week. The congregation expects .to . be using the structure by Jan, 1.
May Be Done by End of '64
Church Adding New Facilities
Avon Church Slates Drive
Goal Set at $35,000 for Multipurpose Unit I
i WALLED LAKE — The rules | [of the road will be emphasized [to youngsters here Sunday during a bicycle safety rodeo. [ * , * *
While riding through an obstacle course, eating hot dogs and joking with a clown, par- * ticipants also will be picking up ! tips on how to handle their [ bikes.
The event will be held from 1 to 4 p.m. at the Walled Lake Shopping Center on W est Maple.
Parents are Urged to accompany the boys and girls to learn together the rules which may keep the cyclists alive.
AVON TOWNSHIP — If all j goes as planned, the growing congregation of the Rochester Church of Christ at 127 E. Avon Rokd will be using brand new office, auditorium and classroom facilities by the end of the year.
. A new building is being constructed in front of the old one | and attached to it. It will accommodate the diversified activities of a congregation which
numbers about 40 families and an average Sunday attendance of around 300 worshipers.
Once the new building is . completed, the church will have new offices, 20 Bible classrooms, “cry” rooms for babies and a nursery, as well as a 501-seat auditorium.
The high roof of the auditorium will merge with the roof of the two-story classroom and
Archaeology Workshop Will Be at OU Oct. 18
A statewide workshop on archaeology will be hosted- by thq Clinton Valley Chapter of the Michigan Archaeological So-cimy'Oct. 18 at Oakland University.
Any one interested in archaeology or the American Indian can
Talk on Laity Is Scheduled in Rochester
ROCHESTER - Df. Robert, Bgtchelder. associate director of 1 the Detroit Industrial mission, j will preach on Laity Sunday at ! the First Congregational Church next week.
'•wty: * * * I
A minister*' of the U n i t e d Chureh of Christ and author of [ “The Irreversible Decision;! . 1939-1950.’’ he wifi speak on! “Missions in a New Age” at the I 9 30 and U a m. services.
' * * *
The Detroit Industrial Mission is mn ecumenical agency of sev- j eral denominations which seeks I to'darify the meaning of Chris-1 nan taith for those working ini an Industrial society .
' fr. * ■ *
It is currently participating in, some 12 discussion groups of men in Detroit industry, in such t varied environments as execu- j : five offices, tabor union ha 1 Is] and On the Shop floor of plants during lunch heirs. /
attend the 10 a.m.-4 pm session.
Donald R. Hagge. M.D., of j Birmingham is president of the chapter.
President-elect of the Mich-■ igan Archaeological Society ! Leonard Griffin of Pontiac is chairman of the workshop.
* 5 . ★. *
Participants wifi include Dr. '"Olaf Prufer of Case-Institute of ! Technology, Drs. James Griffin and James Fitting of the Univer*
; sity of Michigan, and W D. Frankforter of the Grand Rap-i ids Public Mugeum.
★ .* *
Others wifi be Tony Spina, ] Detroit photographer; Richard Albyn, Rochester architect; mid other authorities in the field of archaeology.
NEWEST UNIT The newest unit in the. state society, the Clititon Valley Chapter was formed two years ago by a group of amateur archaeologists from the Oakland County area. -
I office section to give the whole building a two - floor appearance from the outside.
The sides of the roof will be higher than the middle, giving, a gull-wing effect.
WILL PLACE ROOF Continental Church Builders, Inc. of Nashville, Tenn., have put exterior and interior walls in place, and the roof will -be [put on sometime next week.
Cost of the structure is estimated at about $129,900.
i | Second floor classrooms will ! remain unfinished for the time [being, in order to stay within j this estimate.
[ A circular drive will encom-1 ; pass the old and new buildings',
[ | with entrance and exit on Avon !1 Road. Overhangs at the sides I of tiie new structure wifi afford protection from inclement! weather for those using side entranced. v
PARKING LOTS .
Parking lots will be laid out ’ between the old building and the minister’s house, built about two years ago at the back of the 4-acre lot, and also on the j “ east , side of the church structures.
' • * * *
I Bonds worth $150,000 were [ sold to cover construction of the building. They will be retired through the weekly contributions of the congregation.
AVON TOWPJJHIP - Elmwood Methodist Church will conduct a Building Fund Crusade ^ test8 wil, t* explained for two weeks beginning Surtdav fuj,y> before
to raise money for a $100,000 j,e Attempts the maneuvers, multipurpose building. There will be circle eights,
* * * straight lines, stops, oral tests
The crusade is emphasizing
the giving of weekly pledges j over a period of three years to meet a goal set at $35,000.
Daring the two weeks of the crusade, a mailing compaign [ will be undertaken to explain and promote the building program.
Climax will be reached on Loyalty Days Oct. 25-27 when all members and constituents will be urged to bring their pledges to the church at 3050 S^Grant.
Contract Awarded tor Work at Park
of road rules^and other safety factors.
SPONSORED BY VFW POST The program, sponsored by L. A. Sims VFW Post No. 3962, will be conducted by the Walled Lake Police Department with the cooperation of the Wailed Lake public school system. •, The groups emphasize that the bicycle riders of today are the automobile drivers of tomorrow — the same rales must be known and observed by both.
Many prizes are being offered in the contests Sunday and each participant wifi be given reflec-torized tape for his bike.
♦ *
A poster contest is being held among junior high school students in conjunction with the. rodeo. The youngsters who best depict bicycle safety will be prase n t e d with trophies between 13:30 and 4 p.m. Sunday.
Poster contest judges, are Mayor Wendel G. Kellogg Jr., Municipal Court Judge Gene I S0inelz„ Police Chief James i Decker and Mrs. James Lob-' dell, art teacher.
UTICA <*- The Utica Parents i Education Associates will be1 host to several hundred members of eastern and western Michigan units Oct. 15.
♦ * *
The occasion to a District Parents Education Associates workshop. ' w I.
It will be h.eld at the Knights of Columbus Hall on West Utiqa Road.
Miss Esther Middlewood, chief consultant in education for the Michigan Department of Mental Health, wifi be a morning speaker.
Dr. John G. Chantiny, leader for the family and society pro-! gram at the Merrill-Palmer In-1 [ stitute, Detroit, will be the afternoon speaker.
*. * *
I Utica area members can make reservations by contacting Mrs. Harvey Van Den! Brouck, 12575 Hall Road, Shelby ] Township. i
OFFICERS ELECTED | The local group held its first I I meeting of the year, recently, | i electing the following officers:
| Wallace F. Watt, education [ consultant for Michigan Department of Mental Health, instructor;’Mrs. Merelyn Marshall, vis-1 iting teacher, community repre-
Auto Killi Woman {
• EAST LANSING (AP -, Maude Beadle, 90, of Lansing, j was killed Thursday when she was struck by a car on Grand ' River in Ingham County. Sheriff’s deputies said the driver was not held.
sentative; Mrs. Angelina Ciara-mltaro, community chairman.
Others are Mn. Robert J. Johnson, cocommunity chairman; Mrs. Stephen Chigas, chairman of third-year group; and Mrs. Edie Kurz, chairman Of second-year group. *
UF Drive ■Under Way in Brandon
BRANDON TOWNSHIP-The 1964 United Fund campaign for the township began with a kickoff luncheon recently in the Roto-Ja/Hall, Ortonville.
Forty-five leaden and workers attended the luncheon, sponsored by the Genesee Merchants Bank.
Brace- J. Annett, genera! campaign chairman of the Pontiac Area United Fond, was the principal speaker. He discussed the importance of the United Fund to Brandon Township and the entire v area it serves.
Township campaign chairmen Mr. and Mrs. John Tear* announced the following chairmen forithe drive:
Mrs. Leary Wood,- Area I; Mrs. George Sutton, Area II; Mrs. Charles Carmean, Area ID; Mrs. Clark Miller, Area IV; Robert Harvey, school chairman; and Dr. and Mrs. Jaruga and Richard Watts, commercial chairmen.
The EAGLE. Another season and The Eagle etill proclaims Stetson style leadership! We have it in a choice of brim widths to compliment your face arid build exactly, A tiny antique gold eagle on the band accents this famous fashion hat a14»B
A Bloomfield Hills firm has been awarded a $21,994 contract for work at Stony Creek Metropolitan Park between Rochester and Romeo,
* * *
The C. A. Hull Co. will furnish and install 94.6 tons of steel
Solicitations members each will visit all other homes of the church con-
, . . .1 sheet piling at the park under a
‘TUIcontract awarded by the board of commissioners of the Huron-^me^'luring^thTLoyalty jCUnton Metropolitan Authority. Days period. * * *
* * * j The new piling wifi be at-
A successful financial cam- j footed H* sheeting installed paiign fltifi enable the church to [ when the . south dam was con-begin construction of the new Utructed and will extend an ad-building on a seven-acre site on! ditional 500 feet as added pro-Crooks, a half-mile north of tection for the dike which con-M59. | tains Stony Creek Lake.
Singers Give Yearly Dance
The Utica-Rochester Chapter of Sweet Adelines, Inc., wifi hold i its fourth annual square dance tomorrow night at Lahy’s Barn on 26 Mile, just west of Van Dyke.
* *' *
Chairman of the 8:9$ p.m.-l. a. m. affair is Mrs. Dean Evan-j son, 1187 Brewster, Avon Town-1 ship. Ed Parr of Detroit wifi he the caller.
Tickets can be purchased at ] the door.
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Russian Missionary to lecture in Avon
AVON TOWNSHIP - A Russian missionary, Peter Varonof, Will be guest lecturer at Elmwood Methodist Church. 3060 S. Grant, Sunday at 7, p.m.
* * *
The internationally known speaker will present a word picture of ‘living conditions in the Soviet Union.
.COMMERCE TOWNSHIP -Vocational opportunities for re- , tarded teen-agers will be explored at the first fall meeting [ of the Special Parents Unit for j Retarded Children (&UR) Tuesday.
* * * -
The program to scheduled for |8 p.m. in the library of Clifford |H. Smart Junior High School, 8400 Commerce.
* *; *
) Sanford Wallace, president of i-New Horizons, will be the speak-1 er. New Horizons is a nonprofit | organization which provides work opportunities, for mentally >
I retarded teen-agers and young ! adults, giving them vocational training in sheltered' employment. • - -j,; *
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THE PONTIAC PRESS.* FRIDAY; OCTOBER 9, 1964
Lack of Farm laborers Faces California Growers
LOS ANGELES (AP) - California agriculture is aorsiy beset in these waning days of the federal program for importation of Mexican farm laborers.
When tiie program lends Dec. 31, California will lose the many thousands of braceros.
* #>
A spokesman for the Califor-nia-Arizona Farm Labor Association told the California Chamber of Commerce this week that concentrated efforts by growers^ recruit domestic workers have failed.
But state officials reply that
California has a huge potential labor pool the state’s 400,000 unemployed.
CHIEF PROBLEM
The chief problem, they indicate, is getting the right numbers of people into- the right place at the right time.
A meeting of more than 100 farm labor and production experts in San Francisco earlier mis week, suggested that county, state and federal officials be responsible for recruiting a substitute work force among domestic workers. The Chamber of Commerce agreed.
But California Gov. Edmund G. Brawn took sharp exception Thursday, saying he “emphatically denies tts government’s obligation to find a substitute for the bracera farm labor program.’*
Brown’s position was buttressed by a report lby Dr. Paul O’Rourke, Brown’s coordinator between California and Washington for the administration's antipoverty program. * UNEMPLOYED In the report. O’Rourke told Brown that foreign farm labor
programs dovetail adversely with the war on poverty.
Continued import of foreign workers wbuld leave California’s presently unemployed — whom the war on poverty (s designed to, help •— precisely where they were before the war on poverty began — unemployed, O’Rourke’s report said.
But, says O’Rourke,* that American domestic workers “have American expectations for income and work conditions."
O’Rourke Says they prefer unemployment to the Haiti
working conditions and low wages they are normally offered. . - V
Sisters Hilda, Audrey Born During Hurricanes
BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) -Hilda Radcliffe, who received her name whet she was born at Morgan City, La., dining the recent Hurricane Hilda, has left a Baton Rouge Red Gross shelter to -return to Morgan City.
Her sister Audrey was- born in Morgan City during Hurricane Audrey in 1957- *
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When asked at the luncheon about her successful marriage to the late Moss Hart she said, “I always did everything Moss wanted me to do."
■ How did she keep her stunning and youthful appearance?
“Hard work."
As cocktails appeared, through the luncheon tables, she told the women she didn’t believe any woman over 40 should drink. It ruins her looks.
"With a small talent you can make a very good life," Kitty Carlisle had said about herself.
But in admitting what she considered to be her faults, she showed herself to be the
ir all the way, a lavish tuxedo of magnifi-dural Norwegian blue fox m the Balenci-nner on precious mohair woven in Paris. Arm total luxury coat, it comes in wild crystal blue and. is about $250 locally.
At the annual -membership tea for St. Joseph Mercy Hospital Auxiliary, Thursday, in the; Bloomfield Hills home of Mrs-. Joseph J. Churches (extreme right) are Mrs. E. Carl Justi, Bloomfield Village,
auxiliary president and Mrs-Frank- '• lin E. Lewis of Mount Clemens (center). The latter is president of the Southeastern District, Michigan Association of Hospital Auxiliaries, on her first visit here.
Produce and Population
Admiring pink rosebuds Jteside a Madon- -figurine at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital Auxiliary tea Thursday are Mrs. Joseph Spadafore. a: ' -diary vice president (at left) and Mrs. F,a ’ . Audette, Bloomfield Hills. president-e:ec‘.
Subject of Discussion mWomen's Section
By JANET ODELL Peatiac Press Feed Editor NEW YORK CITY, Thursday — Food production is pot keeping up with population increase, according to Charles L. Cottman, information liaison officer of the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).
a a * .
By the end pi this century, world population is expected to double and food supplies must treble, just to give everyone enough to eat. Can, they?
> Even if we were to give i away all our surplus to un-; derprivileged nations, it would
not provide adequate diejf* for
> the world’s hungry for more than two or three months.
a * a ■
Instead, FAO tried to help p e opie in underdeveloped countries help themselves produce more and better food.
Day or life
.“Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day,". said Coltman. “Teach him how to fish and you feed him for We.”
a * a
| FAO, UNICEF and other organizations that are trying to solve the world’s food problems are experimenting with audi products as soy milk, peanut, fish and cotton seed flour, said the experts from the United Nations who-spoke to the food editors under the auspices of R. T. French Company. ,
The emcee didn’t mention any of the company’s products, save to state that this is the -doth anniversary of its
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' If you want, to feel insignificant, stand on the 57th floor of a building and look out over a city like New_ York. This we did at breakfast time when we were entertained . atop the PAN AM building in the Sky Club. Nabisco Biscuit Company was the host organization.
OLD AND NEW
Their oldest and the newest products were part of the breakfast menu. Holland rusk, produced since 1875, was the base for eggs benedict. Team, a combination of rice, wheat, oats and corn, was the new cereal introduced.
Nabisco is now in the candy market with Welch candies and is introducing a line of frozen cakes and pastries. We -sampled the Danish pastry which is actually made and frozen in Denmark. You can look for tills new line within the next few months. Also on display were their aerosol cans of cheese spread. -
★ * * „
I can’t help but think when I see all these “squirt” cans ’ of food — like the big one of chocolate syrup -shown at the Pet Milk Company yesterday —what havoc an undisciplined youngster could wreak if he had a mind to. I’ll leave the rest to your imagination.
Roquefort cheese is not a new food. In fact, it is made exactly the way it was made in the Middle Ages, except that the milk is taken to the factories by jeep instead of by donkey. But marketing changes are befog made. RANDOM WEDGES . Roquefort is now cut in random wedges and sealed in clear plastic at a central plant in N&w York instead of fo individual stores.
And shown today for the first time anywhere and to anyone was active and. a half pound square of roque-fort. The traditional shape has always been round. “
* *, *
Frank 0. Fredericks, president of the Roquefort Astocia-
tion, explained that this shape is. still experimental, but that it should be in production in the future.
★ ★ *
Wednesday evening we attended a post-theater party in Philharmonic Hall at Lincoln Center. Thursday evening we had a reception and party at the' Whitney Museum. There is a charm about social occasions in such settings that is present nowhere else.
St. Joseph Auxiliary Has. Membership Tea
By MADELEINE DOEREN Mrs.. Joseph J. Churches opened her Bloomfield Hills home on Thursday for4he annual membership tea of St. Joseph Mercy Hospital Auxiliary.
The day ended with another skytop meal, this one dinners by candlelight on the 65th ' The present membership floor of foe RCA building. Our and active volunteers were hosts — Campbell Soup. honored, as well as potential
Calendar of Events
SATURDAY
Italian American chib, 8 p. m.; club hall, North Tilden Street; Columbus Day Dinner and dance.
Cuckoo Squares: CAI building; square dance;
** Wayne Wilcox, caller.
Westernaires: 8:30 p.m.; Donelson School; intermediate square dancing and rounds; Norm Hill, caller.
Pontiac Vasa Lodge No. Sllr Knights of Pythias hall; regular meeting and dance.'
MONDAY
Pontiac Federation of Women’s clubs: 1 p. m.; Walton Boulevard home of Mrs. Clark J. Adams; Pontiac Mayor William Taylor Jr. will speak.
Highland Estates Extension Study Group: Sutherland Street home of Mrs. Ray Gergovich; Mrs. L. D. Drewyor and Mrs. John Hanes will present a lesson on “Glamorous Package Wrappings" and “Toys for All Types.”
Mu Phi Epsilon,.Detroit Alumnae Chapter: 8 p. m.; Southfield home of Mrs. Timothy McDonough; Linda Newcomb, vocalist, and Mrs. Ron Bauer, accompanist, will perform.
TUESDAY
• Kappa Delta South Oakland Alumnae: Afternoon group: 12:30 p. m.; Birmingham home of'Mrs. Tunis F. Rice; luncheon with Mrs. James Kilgore of Oak Park and Mrs. Gordon H. Fowlie as cohostesses. Evening group: 8 p. m.; Birmingham home of Mrs. Paul ’ Pentecost; Mrs. William Lanphar and Mrs. Eldon Trueman of Royal Oak as cohostesses.
Alpha Omicroa Pi, North Suburban Alumqae Chapter: 8:15 p. m.; in the Birmingham home of Mrs, “Met-vin Allen; business meeting, making of cancer dressings; contact Mrs. Joseph Adamczyk, cohostess.
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volunteers who were guests of members.
#•. . .w
This group which has been serving the hospital for over 25 years now has volunteers in training for functional jobs to serve the hospital admin- * istration. Volunteers presently staff the lobby gift simp and the circulating gift cart.
The auxiliary gives a Christmas party each year for children of the Out - patient Qinic to which it has contributed since its inception. BOARD MEMBERS
Auxiliary board members alternated at the tea table during the afternoon.
Taking office at the September meeting were Mrs. E. Carl Justi, president; Mrs. Frank B. Audette, presidentelect; Mrs. J. R. Slavsky, second vice president; Mrs. Jose ph Spadafore, third vice president; Mrs. Gail Smith, secretary, and Mrs. Louis Hagopian, treasurer.
■ * ★ *
Board members this year dude Mrs. John A. Reid, Mrs. E. M. Estes. Mrs. Churches, Mrs. C. O. Wright, Mrs. Paul Toepp, Mrs. Robert Day, Mrs. H. Guentsche, Mrs. Henry Stack, director pf volunteers and Mrs. John S. Ma-hony, past president who was tea chairman.
Others are Mrs. John Geov-jian, gift shop director; Mrs. Robert Werlfog, gift cart volunteer chairman; Mrs. Glen Hicks, gift shop chairman, and Mrs. A. R. Stevenson who handles publicity and M r s. John Hannon, head of thd Gray Ladies,
OC Auxiliary Hears Talk at Luncheon
Mrs. Robert C. Nelson of Bum-ley Drive (from left); volunteer and member of St. Joseph Mercy Hos-. fital Auxiliary, visits with her chair-
man, Mrs. Henry Stacks Orchard Lake, and Mrs. John Geovjian of Birmingham, gift sndp chairman, Thursday, at the membership tea.
With Birmingham Town Hall
Kitty Carlisle Scores a Victory
By JEANMARlE ELKINS When you are-a wefi-lmown personage, there are always people who will walk up to you anywhere and try to talk you into doing something for them.
* * P
Kitty Carlisle handles this situation by telling them it’s a great idea and then says, “Write me a letter.”. "
“If you don’t,” die says, “They’ll sit down right there and try to convince you.”
- She appeared yesterday before a sell-out crowd at the Birmingham Town Hall because she had told someone to write her a letter. ~~-CAPTURES AUDIENCE She looked small somehow, standing there alone on the stage of the Birmingham Theater. But from her opening statements, Miss Carlisle had the audience by its heart-strings.
The story of her life, with a definite emphasis on the humorous side, kept Town Hallers smilfog.
KITTY CARLISLE
A kaleidoscope of human nr tore emerged and her moth; er and late 'husband Moss Hart were much in the limelight.
Miss Carlisle spent much of her childhood in Europe, with Paris as home base. “My mother wanted me to make a suitable marriage, and to her.
Mrs. Paul Rahsley of De-' troit spoke before the Oakland County Bar Association Auxiliary it a luncheon, Wednesday, fo the Orchard L a k e Conntif Chib.
She was foundress of the Lawyers’ Wives of Detroit and was named “Mrs. Michigan of 1983’’ in Florida. Her talk stressed the importance of being better homemakers.
7 * * *
Mrs! Clark Adams welcomed new members Mrs. William VanderKloot, Frank-, /lin Hills; Mrs. Me'Tice Merritt and Mik. Philip Satirnff, Royal Oak; Mrs. Rudolph Za-bel, Lathrup Village; Mrs.
| William Hampton, Binning-' ham; Mrs. John L. Giffels, Clawson; also Mrs. Marshall Smith. •
| Chairmen for the-day were Mrs. Richard Ondlt, hospital- . Uy, and Mrs. John Menikoff, house.
TTie annual Men’s Night will be a dinner-dance, Dec, 2, fo the Edgewood Country Club.
cent natural Norwegian ago manner on A-LilU rice or
that meant well above my station,”
Through friends, she spent a marvelous season being in-S troduOed at the Italian court, “with'* all the parties and things every girl dreams about.”
■ * # o
The- audience met Queen Elizabeth in spirit, listened as Miss Carlisle asked politely about, the health* of Princess Ann (who had just had her tonsils out) and winced as she then began to ask the Queen, “Have you ever had your
The Queen very graciously rescued Miss Carlisle by answering that yes she did remember having them out as a small child and coukjj still remember the mounds and mounds of ice cream.
Miss Carlisle was completely honest about her looks, personality and talent.
While she is no raving beauty, she is a striking woman. Her aingihg voice is not great, but it is pleasant to hear. It fo her personality which is outstanding. Open and honest, hfcre is a woman 1 who immediately makes you feel like a friend.
“Isn’t she delightful?"
“Her mother and mine are just alike.”
■ ** * , ft
These comments and many more were beard as the Town Hall audience left the Birmingham Theater, many #n their way to the Village Woman’s dub for the celebrity luncheon.
voman over 40 It ruins her
“People who work — that’s she said in a other query.
muy wonderful person that she is—Kitty Carlisle, someone Town Hall audleifoes will king remember. _
I
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAYr OCTOBER 9, 1004
Lives Jn /Their Shadow
Smothered by Brothers
By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN
DEAR ABBY: I am now • high school freshman and j have all new teachers, but I still have the same old problem.
Hie very first day of school, the English teacher took one look at my name and said, “Ob, you’re Marvin’s brother .... I am going i to aspect a lot ■from you!”
> All through I grantmar ■school the I teachers Called I me either Mar-Ivin pr Sidney ■because they ■had my two Aimv *oMer brothers, ABBY and they were both outstanding students.
I am not a bad student, but it is hard to live up to an older brother’s reputation.
I am ao sick of being known as Marvin’s brother, or Sidney’s brother, that!
SEASONTICKETS
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TRAVEL & ADVENTURE SERIES
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wish I could go a thousand miles away and have my own identity.
Why are teachers so stupid?
“MYSELF”
DEAR “MYSELF'’: Teachers are not go “stupid” as they are thoughtless.
Almost everyone who has had older sisters or brothers has had to walk the same path.
Perhaps you should be .grateful that you had two good acts to follow, instead of two bad actors.
DEAR ABBY: Thre^months ago I met a pretty nurse and we have been going together ever since.
She lived, with another man for the past two years in an intimate but unexciting (she claims) relationship.
She in now dividing her time between us. She says she loves me, but she continues to live with this. man..
She says it would be impractical for her to move out. I am very fond of her and want her to devote herself completely to me.
Would it be advisable for me to insist on her total loyalty and risk losing her?
KINNEY'S
Or should 1 knowingly share her and leave things as they are?
v Please ignore the question of morality and answW me frankly.
* IN DOUBT
DEAR IN DOUBT: One who is concerned with HUMAty relations cannot “ignore the question of morality.”
Since morality is what sets us apart from the beasts, and
City Firemen Bring Engine to School
Each year during Fire Prevention Week, Mrs. Herman Stenbuck, teacher St die Temple Beth Jacob Nursery School arranges for two city firemen to bring a fire engine to the school.
Before the visit Children are told about fire prevention week and make paper firerriep hats and rad paper fJiV hatchets.
By the time the firemen arrive the three and four-year-dlds are almost experts. Hits year the truck made two visits: today and Thursday.
Hie • c b o o 1 is located on Elizabeth Lake Road and is I and nonsectarian in |
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JN DOUBT
CONFIDENTIAL TO BENNY X: There ia only one way to break a bad habit. Drop it! i*..
Problem? Write to abby, in care of The Pontiac Press. For a personal reply, enclpse a stamped self - addressed envelope.
Hate to write letters? Send one dollar to Abby, in care of The Pontiac Press, for Abby’s booklet,' “How To Write Letters For All Occasions.” /
Soft Soap
Junior Symphony Unit Gives Benefit, 'If I Had a Ball'
The John E. yGreers of Melrose Avenue announce the engagement of their daughter, Brenda Joyce to Frederick Gar chow Jr., son of the senior Gatchows of First Avenue. Her fiance is a junior at Eastern Michigan Unir1 versity.
By SIGNE KARLSTROM
The energetic Junior Association for die Detroit Symphony Orchestra If sponsoring I £i benefit performance of the 1 premiere Vlf I Had A Ball” starring Buddy Hackett and Richard Reilly at the Fisher Theatre, October 24.
Committee members' working in Gross* Point*, Dearborn, Birmintfiam and Bloomfield Hills under the chairmanship of Mrs. Robert K. Hill, are Mesdames Edgar H. Farrell, Donald F. Rack, Donald J. Buchanan, James E. Grissom, Marvin M. Gie-low, Charlgs H. Elliott find James E. Goldsmith.
Hckets are available from -any committee member or by calling the Detroit Symphony office.
PARTIES/
Supper parties prior to the performance have been planned by the Harry J. Ned-erlanders at the Bloomfield
v Wide eyes and fluttering hearts greeted the Pontiac Fire department’s “hook and ladder” when it visited Temple Beth Jacob fiursery School, Inc., Thursday and today. In the foreground from left are Scott Friedman of Middle Belt Road,
and Robin Margolis of Woodbank Avenue on the running board and Heidi Rosner of Pine Ridge Road and fireman Bill Barrette with the hose. The demonstration was a part of the school’s observation of Fire Prevention Week.
BED?
BEDDERH
Open Hunt Chib. The James F. Martins and foe Charles T. Grissoms. Mr. and Mrs, Andrew Part and Mr. and Mrs. Terrell E. Thomas will be entertaining in their homes.
Mrs. George W. McClellans (president of foe Jtmior Association) and Mr. McClellan, will have among their guests for dinner Mr.- and Mrs. Henry Whiting Jr,, Mr. and Mrs. George Stephens, foe Stan-leigh McDonalds, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Meurer and Mr. and Mrs. Fredrick C. Wise Jr.
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Mrs. Ctrl Moe entertained for luncheon a group of friends who for years have heed to- | gether. Among Jhe guests i were: Mesdames Carl Oxford, Ralph Crooks, Hans Fredrickson, B. Kasabian, and Herbert
Frogner of Northville.
Mr. and1 Mrs. Arnold Q, Pape who often travel to Purdue University to see their daughter Joan in g play have now received word that on October 16, 17, 22, 23 and Mth Joan Will portray actress Vera Charles in the comedy “Auntie Marne.” This is foe opening of" Purdue University Theatre season.
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TELEGRAPH at SQUARE LAKE RD. OPEN EVENINGS ’til 9
A Small Bundle From the Stork
The birth of a daughter, Susan Kay, Sept. 28, In University Hospital, Ann Arbor, is announced by Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Hoekman (Patricia KUne) of Ann Arbor, Grandparents are the W. 0. Klines of Rugby Circle and Dr. and Mrs. Aben Hoekman of Hamilton Drive.
Matching Shades
Want to match window shades to your draperies or slipcovers? Any fabric can be converted into a stiffened window shade by spraying with a new colorless plastic. ^
This plastic finish is said to be washable and one aerosol can of spray is sufficient to coat two average-size shades.
Protect Your Most Precious Possession
PONTIAC OPTICAL CENTER DOWNTOWN PONTIAC TWO DOCTORS OF OPTOMETRY TO SERVE YOU! .
DR. ARNOLD MILES
Optometrist
DR. HAROLD I. BUSSEY Optometrist
25 Yean Combined Opfomaby Practice in Downtown Pontiac
PONTIAC OPTICAL
Downtown 'Pontiac—a4, in Holiday Inn at 1:30 p.m. Beta Chi delegates will be Mrs. Allen and Mrs. Murphy with Mrs. Stone, alternate.
BETA MU
Beta Mu chapter, has selected a day care center for mentally retarded children as this year’s major project. ..
Mrs. Fred VoUrath, philanthropic chairman, spoke of the state - licensed, parent-operated center in Covert Methodist Church at Wednesday’s meeting in West Side Lanes.
Die. center, conducted by the North Oaklahd Association
for Retarded Children, Is the second such-center to be started to the Pontiac area. Mrs. Robert McClendon is to charge.
- Delegate to the state board meeting are Mrs, John Keller, president; Mrs. Lawrence Hartman, Ponna Burling and Mrs. David Witt.
An April wedding is being planned by Irene , Gloria Johnson and Robert Lee Scruggs, son of Mrs. Ola Scruggs of Orton Avjnue. The bride-elect is the daughter of Mrs. Ozzie Rhodes of Maple Street and the late EmtinueV Johrtson.
Sisterhood Learns Role
Rabbi Israel Goodman spoke on “The Woman’s Rote in Jewish Education" before the Sisterhood of Congregation B’nai Israel at the annual silver tea, Tuesday, in the Temple.
A skit titled “Talking Greeting Cards” was presented by members of B’nai Moshe Sisterhood, Detroit.
, Hostesses at the tea were past-presidents: Mrs. Moris Blumeno, Mrs. Jean Smith, Mrs, Milton Ressler, Mrs. Charles Eilender, Mrs. Daniel Foxman, Mrs. Sidney Czete-ter, Mrs. Morris Bletstein, Mrs. Irving Koper and Mrs. David Utley.
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TljE PONTIa/ PRESS, FRIUAY, OCTOBER 9, 1964
New Officers Set for OC Dental Society
The opening meeting of the Womeo’a Auxiliary of the Oakland County Dental So* ciety will hold a membership luncheon at Sylvan Glenn 2:30 p.m. Tuesday.
11 ♦ * *
Officers for the coming year are Mrs. Ronald Jenkins, president; Mrs. Russell Jo-kela, president elect; Mrs. William Sheldon, recording secretary; Mrs. John Clark,, corresponding secretary; and Mrs. George Marin, treasurer. ** *
For reservations call Mrs. Calvin P. Taylor or Mrs. Dean S. Fields Jr.
g, bold plaid, the rage of Paris, is shown m this plaidfd French mohair in a Lilli Ann go-away coat to travel proudly ahy place on earth. Greg and asparagus green plaided on white. Available locally for about $110.
CARE OF YOUR HAIR is important ... from conditioning ... styling and .. . a good basic Permanent.
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Round Table Opens Year'
A' luncheon, Tuesday, in Air* way Lounge opened the fall season for the' Round Table Club.
Following discussion of the year’s agenda, Mrs. W. J. Baumgartner presented slides taken on trips through the west before 23 members and guests.
The November meeting will be in the Boys’ Club of Pom tiac.
Zeta Eta Unit Hears Program
Mrs. Clifford Wilcox gave a program on "Seif-Analysis” before the Zeta Eta chapter of Beta Sigma Phi sorority, Tuesday, in the home'of Mrs. William J. Yates on Lawrence Street. Mrs. Karl Dale was cohoktess. «
♦ ★ *
A pledge ritual was held for Mrs. Ferd Strohmeyer and plans were completed for the ritual of Jewels dinner, Oct. 20, in Morey’s Restaurant.
Small Income,Debts Put Family a Bind
Dear Miss Feeley: We got ourselves in debt ffte years ago, Wfaep we furnished our first apartment. It seems we’ve been In a Vicious circle ever since.
My husband Is a federal employe and has had small but steady raises. But our family and expenses have Increased, too. We have three children, ages 5,3, and MT months.
My husband’s take home pay is $160 every two weeks, and after taking out his necessary personal expenses, my net balance is 1138 every two weeks or $276 a month.
After paying rent, insurance,, and utilities, plus $74 a month on loans from a bank, a credit union, and $20 on a new washing machine, there’s $108.10 left each month for food, vitamins, shoes, gifts, t o n t r i b u -tions and anything else that comes along. ;
Our total debt; is now $1,800.
However, we have ten shares of a good stock.
This is now be-’ ing used as collateral on loan. We have always consid-
ered this stock our little hunk of security.
Can you see any possible solution to our problems?
P.C., Brooklyn S h ii
A possible solution, yes, but not a quick and easy one, Those Installment payments cut too deeply into the budget — in fact, they total 21.5 per cent of your income and that Just won’t work.
What an foe chances of refinancing one er both of foe loans, so yon .can stretch out repayments i nsmaller monthly amounts? If this can be arranged, yon can finish paying
off foe washing machine (which I’m sare yon need, with three'small children) and still manage to eat.
Even a |pw-coet food plan for a family your size figures about $105 a month.
* # ' *
You don’t .mention borrowing possibilities on your husband’s insurance — but with such young dependents you’d better not tie that up.
NO OTHER OUT
I hate to suggest selling your stock, but udless you can reduce the monthly loan payments I’m
afraid, you have no other out.
Getting one of the loans off your back would give you some relief. I realise you may never have another opportunity to buy that’particular stock under fa-vorablF*circumstances.
But I believe that continqing to live in your present state of { financial .desperation will prove a more costjy choice.
(You can get Mary Feeiey’s handy leaflet on Building Financial Stability by writing to her in can of The Pontiac Press. Enclose a long, stamped, self-addressed envelope.)
The federal pitot food stamp program assisted needy families in 43 antes in 22 states this
Eleventh Anniversary ; strands of History for City ABWA Unit
Special Specials
' The Greeting Card Association reports that special cards tor Christmas, 1984. include those for doctor, boas, madmen, milkman, nurse.
. The Paul Liscoms of Holly announce the engagement of their " daughter, Mary Margaret to Airman 3.C. Norman E. Olson, son of the Eugene Olsons of North Milford Road, Rose Township. Her fiance is stationed at Sheppard AFB in Texas.
Tipacon Charter Chapter, American Business Woifien’s Association, celebrating its 11th anniversary, gathered for buffet dinner, Wednesday, in the Waldron,Hotel.
♦ e + o
VoUy V. Yanuszeski, Bloomfield Township Fire' Chief, speaking before some 62 members, related the value of Fire Prevention Week and the correct reporting of a fire.
A ★ ★
“A good fire department with adequate fire - fighting equipment and water supply can save the taxpayer money" he said. “Many of the determining factors in setting up insurance rates for a com-I munlty are established on j standards set on a point sys-tern by a national board.” TALKS OF DUTIES ■ Mrs. Glam Nelsey gave a vocational talk on her duties as a dental assistant.
♦ ★ A
Tipacon voted to renew its it.embership to the Pontiac Symphony Orchestra. The group sponsored a used book booth during the Miracle Mile Festival Days.
, Maxine Davison was named chapter delegate to the nation- „ al convention of ABWA in-Minneapolis this month.
Guests were Mrs. Dwight E. Wilkinson, Mrs. Bert Weddle,
Mrs-. Jack Formaz, Mrs. Joseph Schack and Mrs. Yanuszeski.
CHICAGO (UPI> - Waving straight locks is an ancient do-* it yourself project.
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(EDITOR'S NOTS: This is the fifth and final dispatch of a series dealing with the rumors which followed the assassination of President John F. Kennedy and how the Warren Commission coped with them.) A By MERRIMAN SMITH WASHINGTON (UPI)-Short-
The FBI had no knowledge that Oswald was responsible for the attack aatU Marina Ootid (the assassin’s wife) re-
wald (U vAled . «c. 3,1
.3, 1963.”
This also disposed of the report that Ruby and Oswald were about to be arrested by Dallas |y , after the assassination of | authorities but that FBI agents President Kennedy, it developed intervened at, the request of that his killer, Lew Harvey Os- Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy wald, also had attempted to and asked the police to hold off shoot Maj. Geo. Edwin A. Walk- for reasons of state, er. He also had talked about kill-1 It is true that the FBI was faring former Vice President Rich- j vestigating Oswald at the time aid M. Nixon. /jot the Kennedy assassination.
When Oswald’* connection But this was because of the with the unsuccessful shooting j nearly three years he spent in of Walker became known, it led;Russia as a defector. The FBI] to widespread rumors that checkup had been in progress] there was tome link between Os- for months and was in no way wald and the general who left related to the violence in which1 the Army in a row over his ul- j Oswald indulged, traconaervative preachments to j planned ATTACK <, his troops in Europe. Walker lives in Dallas.
Some of the rumors investigated by the Warren Commis-'ataa involved aa alleged link ' among Oswald, Walker and Jack Roby, the nightclub operator who later killed Oswald in the basement of the Dallas city Jafl.
. After reviewing much evidence and talking to many witnesses, the commission came to fito firm conchuton that none of Oswald - Ruby - Walker rumors were true.
A few days after the Nov. 22,
1963, assassination of Kennedy, a German weekly newspaper — and then an American weekend • tabloid — published a report ' that Dallas police suspected Ruby and Osftald of being responsible for a mysterious rifle' . ... .. t J____.
jrp „ , *** j-»«
The Walker Incident differed from the Kennedy toooting In that Oswald planned Us attack on the general carefully for an estimated period of one to two months. 'V '
Oswald photographed the area around Walker’s home and studied the neighborhood well In advance of Us attack. Then on.the night of April II, using the same rifle with which be killed Kennedy, Oswald fired at the general through a window. He missed, fled immediately and hid the weapon under bushes nearby. He later retained and retrieved the rifle.
Walker reported the incident to police immediately, but until after the Kennedy assassination and Oswald’s subsequent slay-
FABRIC ATED REPORT “The commission has been reliably informed that the statement was fabricated by an editor -of the (German) newspaper,” the Warren report said.
“No evidence in support of •this statement has ever been advanced or uncovered. In their investigation of the attack on Gea. Walker, the Dallas police uncovered no suspects and planned m arrests.
no arrests in the Walker case. Furthermore, they were without clues.
Oswald’s motives in shooting i at Walker? Difficult to establish. Possibly Oswald reasoned that by destroying Walker, he could j raise his own stock with-ultra left-wing elements in this country and possibly the Soviet Union. At the time Oswald shot at Walker, he' was beginning to have thoughts of returning to Russia.
Marina Oswald told this commission her husband compared Walker with Adolf Hitler. She said Oswald spoke of Walker as “a very bad man, that he was a Fascist, that he was the leader of a Fascist organization, and when I said that even though all of that might be’true, just the same he had no right to take his life, he said if someone killed Hitler in time it would have saved many lives'.”
Ia any event, the Walker ambush was one of the more direct actions taken by Oswald during his troubled, twisted life. He planned It carefully. He left Ms wife detailed in-stractions on what to do if he was arrested or killed. Furthermore, he outlined his plans h| writing. ■
Investigators did not find evidence of such advance planning in the Kennedy assassination other than Oswald leaving/his ftallet and total cash assets of 2170 (except for $13 in his pock-] Ms) with his wife before he set out to.kill the President.
* ■* mi The commission noted:
“The Walker incident indicates that in spite of the belief among those who knew him (apparently including the FBI) that he was apparently not dangerous, Oswald did not lack- the de-termination and other traits required to harry out a carefully planned., killing of another human being and was willing to consummate such a purpose if j he thought there was sufficient reason to do so,” *
IMAGE OF HITLER In the case of Walker, this reason apparently was .hia equating the general with the image of Hitler.
One rumor was that Oswald and W>Uur probably were acquainted because Oswald’s notebook contained Walker’s name and telephone number. The Warren reportsaid:
“It is probable that this information was inserted at the time Oswald was planning his attack on Walker. Gen. Walker stated that he did not know of Oswald before the assassination.”
Walker, after issuance of the
Warren Commission report, called it a whitewash job and insisted there was conspiracy between Ruby and Oswald In. the Kennedy slaying.
REMAINS CONVINCED / Walker remains convinced that Ruby killed Oswald to keep him silent. The retired general said in Dallas this week;/ .
“There apparently was enough between Rubenstein (Ruby) und Oswald so that Rubenstein knew what he might pay. /
“If that’s not satisfactory for! a conspiracy, certainly Oswald1 was involved in an ideological, conspiracy with his membership | in the Fair Play for Cuba Committee ... as well as being in-1 voived in a conspiracy in his pwn mind and his own training, in which he had many common associates.”
A . a A
After Marina Oswald told her. story to the commission, ballistics experts compared the badly mutilated bullet recovered from [ the Walker home with test shots] from Oswald’8 6.5 Mannlicher-; Carcano Italian military rifle with which he killed Kennedy. | They came to the conclusion I that the same weapon probably was used in both shootings. KILLING MOOD Oswald remained in a killing mood and his next preselected target was Nixon, according to his wife. >
its of this phase of Os-! wald’s life are so jumbled, how-j ever, that there is reason to be- j lieve Oswald, or Marina, did not know, the difference between Niton, then out of office, and the then Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson.
According far Mrs. Oswald’s testimony before the commission, her husband, on April 24, IMS, dressed in what Marina called his “good suit” He pocketed his revolver which
had been purchased from -a1 California matt order house, and prepared to leave the
[ Mill* 4. . wicos' r
/ Marina said she wanted to know why he was dressed. He, told her, “Nixon is coming. I want to go and have a took.” ]
Actually, Nixon was not in Dallas, nor had there been any I news stories speculating or an-l nouncing his coming. Johnson J however,*'was in the Texas city on April 23, a fact .widely report-1 : ed in advance by Dallas papers. I MARINA ALARMED.
I Marina was alarmed. Shg said her husband told her he would usd the revolver if the oppor-' (unity presented itself. Increasingly apprehensive, the Russian ■ I woman called her husband into their bathroom. As she told the commission:.
“I dosed the door and I '
] wanted to prevent him and I ;
| started to dry. And I told him j that he shouldn’t do this ... I ! remember that I held him. We actually struggled for several ! minutes and then he quieted down.”'
Questioned closdy about the possibility-of confusion of names of Nixon and Johnson, Marina was positive about Oswald’s mention of Nixon. iBut later in her testimony, die said, “After all these questions, 1 wonder if I am right in my own mind.”
A A A
Oswald apparently succumbed to Marina’s pleas and did not leave the house with Ms revolver on April 24. He did not give -his wife the opportunity to argue the point when he went to kill Kennedy. He and Marina were living apart at the time.
Cardiovascular disease in 1962 caused 55 per cent of all the deaths in the U.S., according to the National Health Education Committee.
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THE PONTIAC PftEgg. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1964
% G-*rl
The dominant factor in Satur-l day night’s Pontiac Northanir Waterford Township annuat football game could very well be aa intangible—pride.
Af *% to- ' *., ,|
The two Inter-Luke# League rival* will be renewing a five-year battle for possession of the! Jimmy Dey Amvet Post No. It traveling trophy when they take I the Odd at 8 p.m. at Waterford. ]
Neither squad appears capable of stopping either Walled Lake or Farmington from claiming the I-L title. Both hayf not shown much offense in their three starts to date..
Waterford, however, has wen two of the three and would consider it a good sea-eon could it post victories over rivals PNH and Kettering.
Pontiac Northern has only one narrow triumph end two sound beatings in three tries. But continued domination of the Skippers and a victory over Pontiac € e n t r a 1 would considerably brighten ite season.
SEEK TROPHY Possession of the Amvet trophy would be visible proof of 1964 gridiron success. This par-
ticularly - applies to Waterford which baa had fop prise very little.'. . ;...7 The Skippers put the trophy in thefr case after a 13-7 win in the first year the two teams met. The following season’s 10-20 tie saw each school have possession fof six months.
Then began the Huskies’ upsurge. In INI they wo|B 20-13;
it was 18-TV PNH la 1962; j and last year Narthdra romped, 344.'
The contest two years ago was a bitter pill for Waterford. They led 11-12 and had a share of the loop title in their grasp when a PNH razzle-dazzle play resulted in the winning touchdown in the closing minutes of play.
Ibis season the home standing
Skippers are favored to reclaim i the trophy which will be pro-" sen ted by Amvet post command-1 er Larry Saxton immediately after Hie game.
* * *.
The Skippers.have shown a tough defensive line, as has Northern. But the Huskies have several key linemen nursing injuries and on the doubtful list.
PNH will haye a speed advan-
tage in its backfield, but Water-] ford’s passing attack may be [ stronger. The letter’s defensive secondary, though, is weak.
The Huskies mast overcome mistakes in ball handling and tackling. Fambles have been a problem. And the opposition has sprung loose fot. long gains at key moments.
Waterfoiti’s > backfield showed
spark'with No. 2 quarterbacl Dev* Roemensky at fiankei back. But It did not produce any prints against defensively tougt Walled Lake'.
* ★ *
A scoreless tie Saturday wiD not boost the pride of either team.
The other Inter-Lake tilt Walled Lake at Farmington, was on this afternoon’s slate.
■■ t 1 ■ , . , '
Yanks' Stottlemyre May Decide Series
Young Hurler Turns Tables on Sir Louis
3rd Game Scheduled for Yankee Stadium; Play Even at 1-1
NEW YORK (AP) - Tito World Series was all even at one victory each todav but the New^ York Yankees appeared to have a decided edge over the St. Lodto Cardinals because of a rookie pitcher named Mel Stottlemyre.
The young right-hander’s name was well known by every member of the Cardinals squad after be whipped them 8-3 with seven hits Thursday for the first Yankee triumph after five straight Series defeats.
“There’s nobody like him in the National League,” said Ken Boyer, the Cards’ captain and third baseman.
* to to
“He’s nothing but good," added Bob Gibson, the Cards’ ace right-hander who lost despite striking out nine Yankee*. “I would have had to he at my very best to beat him today.
“One ef our scouts reported that Btottlcmyre might be the best pHcherta their saff,” said Redbird- Manager Johnny Keane,, “but I never pictured him that good.”
HAPPY TO LEAVE
No wonder the Yankees left Busch Stadium in St. Louis in a . happy frame of mind. The next three games, following a day of rest today, will be played it Yankee Stadium. Stottlemyre is scheduled to pitch again Moo-day.
, This prospect left Keane more disturbed than he cared to ad* mit.
Even he would have to admit that the Yankees’ pitching picture looked much brighter than the Cards.
Keane is set for Saturday’s third game with southpaw Curt Simmons, 134, opposing righthander Jim Bouton, 13-11 of the Yankees. After that ha’s in trouble.
to to to
He will have to come baric with lefty Ray Sadecki and Gibaoo for the fourth and fifth games. Both were treated roughly by Yankee hitters in the first two games, although Sadecki wu credited with winning the'opener.
On the other hand, Yankee Manager Yogi Berra has Whltey Ford primed for the fourth game, with his usual three-days rest, to be followed by Stottlemyre.
to to to
Ford didn’t have it in the opener when he was beaten by Sadecki, but the veteran lefthander, winner of 10 World Series games, has been almost unbeatable in spacious Yankee Stadium.
The way Stottlemyre pitched Thursday, he’a unbeatable anywhere.
While the 22-year-old sinker ball specialist was containing the Cants with only two outfield flies aside from their seven safeties, the Yankees pounded Gibson and three reliven for a dozen hits, Including four doubles and a home run.
This gave the Yankees 24 hits lit two games, three more than they accumulated in the entire Series against he Los Angeles Dodgers last year.
to. ) to -..to,; -v
“They’re a good hitting dub,’* ooubadad-Keane. “Our pitchers are good but there is only one Sapdy Koufax. I regard Koufox as a super pitcher.”
Koufox defeated foe Yankees twice in foe Dodgers' foungame sweep last October, estahliehing a record with IS strikeouts in foe opener.
SERIES’ DEBATE — Catch; er Tim McCarver of foe St. Louis Cardinals yells at umpire Bill McKinley that a pitch to New York’s foe Pepitone hit foe Yankee’s bat instead of Us thigh. McKinley had the last word and Pepitone took first base. „
Boyers Co in Series' Batting
ST. LOUIS (AP) — Figuring The Series:
The Boyer brothers, Ken of the Cards and Gets of the Yanks, are even-steven in batting. Each has collected one Mt in sdVen tries for a .143 average. Defensively for the two games, Ken has bandied eight chances flawlessly while Clete has made one error in 10 chances.
Roger Craig’s appearance as a St. Louis reliever in foe ninth inning Thursday was his first in series competition since the fourth game of the I960 classic. He started that one for the Los. Angeles Dodgers, working seven iqninga in a 5-4 victory over the Chicago White Sox.
★ to to
The Yanks' Mel Stottlemyre, who yielded seven hits in defeating the Cards Thursday, broke into the majors on Aug. 12
Status for Pitcher
H?Y.tookie Was Unknown
StottUmyrto Began Season in Minors
with a seven-hit, complete game triumph over the Chicago White
PRELUDE TO A HOMER-Cardlnais Lou Brock (left) and Ken Boyer almost collide as they try for a/foul fly off the bat of New York’s Phil Linz in the ninth inning of yesterday’s second World Series game. Linz got life on the play and then crashed a homer. The Yankees won, 3-3.
Simmons Reddy
\
Cardinals 'Cranking Up'
ST. LOUIS (AP) - What kind of pitcher is Curt Simmons?
“He’s a stylist,” says his manager, Johnny Keane of foe St. Louis Cardinals. “He’s calm and he’s cool and — when hfe’s going right — his control’s hard to beat.”
Simmons, the southpaw with foe crank-up delivery, meets right-hander Jim Bouton of foe New Y«* Yankees in foe third jgam« of the World Series at Yankee Stadium Saturday.
★ * to
“One thing about Simmons," Keane said. "Weather doesn’t seem to bother him. He can pitch in hot, cool or cold weather.” ...
The Cardinal manager was talking before Thursday’s game here wen 34 by foe Yankees. The wind wee blowing steadily to right and foe temperatures were in foe low IQs. *,i;•
But Simmons was sweating.
"fro medea few jogsacroas
the outfield with the boys,” the barrel-chested left-hander said. “I’m going inside shortly because I’m sweating, and I want to be at my best Saturday.” m -to to .
Simmons, one of tha Cardinals’ big three pitchers, was a workhorse, up foe stretch in foe pennant drive. He ended foe season wifo an 134 record.
How does he fori about pitching in Yenkee Stadium, a park about twice foe ride of St. Louis’ Busch Stadium? J
“All pitchers like big HUl parks,” Simmanr grinned. 'Tm no differing. A big park gives foe pitcher aa edge. Here (in St. Louis), yoQ can get knocked out on a for bail — especially if foe wind carries It to foe roof.” Simmons has .given up his share Of home tuns this year. With S blasted off Ms lefty pitches, he trails ritfit-bander Bob Gfoeon by only two fa that department.
NEW YORK (AP) - Mel Stottlemyre was graduated from little Yakima, Wash., Junior-College in 1961 and looked for some way to employ -bis lanky right arm.
to* *
To his surprise, the most talented, richest and famous club in baseball — the New York Yankees — took an interest.
“I had no big reputation,” said the 22-year-old pitcher.
Stottlemyre had just given foe Yankees theta- first World Series victory after five straight defeats, and evened the 1134 classic against foe St, Louis Cardinals at one gape apiece.
* to to' to
“This wds the last thing that could have entered my mind last spring,” he grinned. “I< wasn’t evfi on foe Yankees’ roster when they assigned me to Richmond.1'
PENNANT HELP
Hie Yankees brought Mm up from Richmond Aug. 11 and be won nine games in five weeks to help pitch them to the pennant.
Mixing curves and sliders wifo Ms fine sinker, he stymied .foe Cardinals on seven hits for a 84 victory in St. Louis before the teams moved here for foe next three games.
* * *
“I just pitched my own game,” he. said. “I surprised myself because I wasn’t nerv- j ous, at least not after foe first pitch. I felt I had good stuff warming up. .1 thought I’d do all rin.” -».
Hie resident of Mabton, Wash., had Ms troubles in the late innings against the hardhitting Red Birds, but he came up with the right pitch at the rjght time.
to to. to .....
Trailing, 4-1, -foe Cardinals opened foe eighth wifo a stogie and double, but the Yankee pitching sensation got foe next two men to ground out. He walked Bill White and then faced Ken Boyer, foe National League’s runs batted fa leader:
Yankee Manager Yogi Berra said later tf Boyer had gotten on base he would have brought fa a rfetyef pitcher.
No one can say that Lou Brbck, the Cardinal left fielder, didn’t go all out to get the best of Stottlemyre. He hit back to the box Ms first three trips, foe third a smash 'that caught the right-hander on his wrist. The Yankee rookie got smart,
though and retired Brock (fa a grounder to shortstop Phil Linz in the eighth.
* * *
In a way, the Cards wound up even with , Stottlemyre. He fanned four St. Louis batters and Cardinal pitchers struck him out four times.
Somehow, Stottlemyre usually finishes on the long end of a 3-count. Before joining foe Yanks his record wifo Richmond of the International League was 13-3. He won - Ms first big league i game, 74. His season record ' with New York was 9-3. And Thursday’s score was 84.
Bobby Richardson’s four hits in 10 tries Jn the first two Series games has lifted his over-all average in the Series to .284 wtfo 31 hits in 169 at bats covering 31 games.
to to to
Saturday’s probable pitchers appear to be evenly matched. The Yanks’ Jim Bouton, during the regular season, had an 18-13 record, 11 complete games, four shutouts and an earned run average of 3.02. The Cards' Curt Simmons had an 10-0 mark, 12 complete games, three shutouts and a 3.43 ERA.
STARTED THIS WAY - Yankee batter Joe Pepitone starts to swing at a pitch.from Cardinals’ Bob Gibson in the sixth inning of \ yesterday’s World Series gamcL Pepitone checked his swing and plate Umpire Bill
McKinley said the ball hit the Yankee first baseman. The Cards said it hit his bat. Pepitone went to first and the Yankees brok,e a 1-1 tie in the inning.
Tick' Stirs Dqbate
in Series Contest
NEW YORK (AP) - Yogi Berra heard a “tick.” Was it the sound of a ball Mtting Joe Pepltone’s thigh — or his bat?
And Bob Gibson, who threw the pitch, heard a “noise.” Was it a curve ball smacking wood or flesh?
■ to; to to *
These hotly debated Dossibili-ties filled the air in both the New York Yankees’ and St. Louis Cardinals’ dressing rooms following the Yanks’ 8-3 victory over the Redbirds Thursday in
NHL All-Star Teams Make Lineup Changes
TORONTO (Al>) - Pre-season injuries to leading players are forcing coaches Punch Im-lach and Sid Abel to shuffle lineups for the National Hockey League’s 18th annual All-Star game ho* Saturday night: to to to
Imlach’s Toronto Maple Leafs, the Stanley Cup champions, meet an AllrStar side made up of players from the over - five NHL foams and coached by Abel, whose Detroit Red Wings were finalists last spring:
The Leafs will miss defense-man Allan Stanley, who has an Injured knee. Forward Red Kelly is in Tokyo,, as Canadian government representative at the Olympic Games.
MOORE DOUBIWUL , Left winger Dickie Moore, trying a come-back after a season’s
layoff and a knee operation, to a doubtful starter.
Imlach called up defenseman Larry Hillman from Rochester of the American Hockey League after a medical examination Thursday afternoon ruled Stanley out for Saturday.
Imlach said he will make a final decision on whether Moore to ready after a team workout this morning.
In Detroit, Abel said Thursday that two and possibly three of his original line-up are out for Saturday. But he expects left i rtnger Camille Henry of New York, previously considered a doubtful starter, will be on hand in Maple Leaf Qardens for foe All-Star effort.
TWO INJURIES
the second game of the 1964 World Series.
HIT BY PITCH
Whatever the answer, the left-handed-hitting Pepitone was awarded first base because plate umpire Bill McKiMey of the American League ruled he was hit on the thigh by a Gibson pitch ip the crucial sixth inning.
The soore was tied 1-1 at the time, with one out and one on, and the Yankees promptly went ahead 2-1 on Tom Tresh's single.
McKinley, who was embroiled in a bitter dispute over the call, Said there was no question about it.
“Pepitone took a sort of halfswing at the ball, but he didn’t Mt it,” McKinley said in the umpires’ dressing room. “He just sort'of half-stepped toward it and the curve ball just came In. and Mt him right there on the thigh.”
He pointed to his right leg. Pepitone had a red spot on his left leg, the place he said he was hit r
“That play was the turning point of foe bail game,” said Cardinal Manager Johnny Keane. “The game was tight 1-1. The pitch hit Pepitone's bat. It (foe ball),may have hit htan, but we heard it Mt his bat first.”
HEARD IT
. Yankee Manager Berra said he really couldn’t see what happened because his back was to the infield at the time.
we heard a ‘tick,’ ” Berra added, “and when-Peri-tone came back to the dugout, he said ‘It Mt me.’ ”
“Look,” countered Cardinal shortstop Dick Groat, “when a guy .gets hit by a ball he just
Gibson. “I know I heard a noise that sounded like a ball hitting a bat.”
. “The halt sliced off my thigh,” said Pepitone* “and I turned around to foe umpire and said ‘The ball hit me.’ He said ‘No swing — take your base. He would have sent me down to first whether I told him or not.”
“I was sure his bat hit it,” said Cardinal catcher Tim McCarver.
New York (A) AB R H BIO A
Linz ss 4 2 3 1 1 g
B.Rich’son ,2b 5 1 2 1 4 2
Maris cf 5 12 0 2 0
Mantle rf '4 2 1 2 0 0
Lopez rf 0 0 0 0 0 0
Howard c 4 2 1 0 0 1
Pepitone lb 4 0 2 1 14 1
Tresh If . 3 0 1 2 1 0
C.Boyer 3b 3 0 0 1 0 3
Stottlemyre p 5 0 0 0 1 3
Totals xi a 12 S 27 11
St. Louis (N) ABR HBIO A
Flood cf 4 0 0 1 2 0
Brock If 4 0 0 1 1 0
WMte lb 3 0 0 0 7 0
K. Boyer 3b 4.0 0 0 2 1
Groat ss 3 1 1 0 2 3
McCarver c 4 0 1 110 0
Shannon rf 4 11 8 X 0
Maxvill 2b' 2 3 1 0 1 3
Warwick 1 1 1 0 0 0
Schultz p 9 0 0 0 0 0
G. Rich’son p 0 0 0 0 0 0
Craig p 9 0 0 0 0 0
James 10 0 0 0 0
Gibson p 10 1 0 0 0
Skinner 1 0 1 8 0 0
Biichek 2b 0 0 0 0 0 0
Totals 32 S 7 227 7
Series Facts
• »t New
Third game, Saturday, Oct.
York.
Fourth pome. $und*y. Oct. It ot New York.
Fifth gome, Monday, Oct. 1* at Naw
SMh oama, Watowaday. Oct. 14 at St. UaHa M naoaaaary.
Sovanth gamo, Thuriday, Oct. IS at St. UWa, Fnacr--------
Mayan' chore—Sll0.0W.t4 Now York dutoa tfiara—tttoMl.M St. Loufe club'i chart—SI2.SI1.M Anarlcan Loagut't ahara-aiutun NaHsnal leaguo't Mara lllfalja aaffiC: '■ . Two Cana TfCaic Atcandonce —4141S '
Nat nacaigtt—M0t.an.i4 Commiesloner'c Sttoro-44eaM.fi Mayors' ahara-tMMltJI - ’$% -
Mow Van catoyiwn tn ivn.ac
The All-Stars lost the services doesn 4 stand ther« ^ Pepi-of center Henri Richard df Mon- tone did and wait for the umpire treal and defenseman Bill Gads-! to tell him to go to first. He by of Detroit. drops his bat and takes off. I
Richard suffered a,groin inju- think Pepitone would have done ryln an exhibition mime Thurs- ] just that if he'd been hit” day night arid Gadsby ^trained ' “What did he want me to do,” his baric Wednesday; ’ .Snapped Pepitone when he was * * * | told of Groat’s Statement. "Roll
Abel said Hiursdav he ha^ over fo pain?” asked for -right winger Claude; . “I thought I saw my curve Provost of Montreal to help j glance off his (Pepitone’s) bat,” round up his Une-up. Right I said Cardinal right-handed Bob] winger Kenny Wharram of CM-1 cago, who is recovering from a face injury, is a doubtful starter for the AU-Stari.Abel said.
Hie coach of foe All-Stars also corrected an earlier NHL announcement that left winger Dean Prentice of Boston will-be in tiie line-up Saturday. He said that fa addition to forwards P*ge C-3-Oiympics
Murray Oliver and Johnny PageC-3—Pro Football
Buyck, foe Boston contribution P«** C-4—Prep Football
to foe All-Stars will lactase Page C-F-Major Hoople
defenseman Leo Botvin, not Page C-5-Michigan-MSU
Prentice. I Page C4-B*wUag
Inside Today's Sports Pages
- a—Singled for Maxvill in 8th. b—Doubled for Gibson in 8th. c—Ran for SUnrier in 8th. d—Struck,out for Craig in 9th. New York (A) . , 383 111 234-4 St. Louis (N) 081 IN 311-3
E—None. DP—Linz, Rich-' arason and Pepitone. LOB— New York (A) 10, St. Louis (N) 5.
2B—B. Richardson, Howard, Pepitone. Skinner, Mantle. 3B— Groat. HR—Linz.. S—Gibson SF —C. Boyer.Tresh,
IP 'H ft ER Stottlemyre W 9 i 3 3
Gibson L - 8 8 4 4
Schultz. 14 2 2 2
G, Richardson 14 2 2 2
Craig .. 14 0 0 0
BB — Stottlemyre 2 (Groat,
WMte), Gibson 3, (Linz, Tresh, Mantle), G. Richardson 2 1 Howard, C- Boyer). SO — Stottlemyre 4 (Fkiod, WMte, K. Boyer, James)', Gibson * (B. Richardson, Marto; Mantle 2, Pepitone, Tresh, Stottlemyre 3), Craig 1 (Stottlemvrei HBP — By Gibson (Pepitone). WP -Gibson. PB—Howard. U—McKinley (A) plate, Burkhart (N). first base, Soar (A) second base, V. Smith (N) third base, A. Smith (A) left field, Secory (N) right field. T-4:2T A-40,806.
C—8
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Olympic Games Start on Saturday in Tokyo
1 Black Market
XVIII Olympiad
Athletes FuSs, Coach Calm
Sellout Assured for Firsf'Day
Wet Weather Limits Trackmen
TOKYO lift - For the first time in more than two years of training for the Olympics, George Young missed a morning workout. The American steeplechaser yielded to a third successive morning rain and stayed inside Friday.
"It was pretty tough, just laying in bed," said the 27-year-old' schoolteacher from Casa Grande, Arfe. “I had to fight it.” •' t ' However, the showers eased before noon and most* of the American track and'field athletes planned afternoon practices.
Few of the athletes fretted about the soggy conditions. And the team physician reported few sniffles.
"As we say Jn Hartford, Conn., .when it rains, it rains on everyone except those in California and Texas,” quipped Head Olympic Coach Bob Gie-gengack.
I “It’s created no real problem,” observed the Yale coach.
“We called off . three morning workouts for our sprinters. We couldn’t chance them slipping and injuring themselves. Our other runners just sloshed [^through the stuff twice daily. TAPERING OFF Ira Davis, three-time Olympian and a fourth-place finisher in the 1060 triple jump at Rome, viewed the rainS as perhaps a blessing.
“This should be our tapering off period. The hard work should be behind. The guys need to rest and the rains have kept us inside where we couldn’t do anything else.”
★ ★ ★
Ed Red, javelin throWer from Rice University, said be completed ail his heavy work before the bad weather.
I’ve been doing my condition* ing work — gymnastics, weight
lifting and running — inside the Tokyo University gym,” said Red. The engineering student could be a surprise in what is listed as a weak American event.
* * *
• He exceeded 270 feet several times in practice last week.
John Pennel, first pole vault-er to clear 17 feet, has been idle far two weeks by a pinched nirve in his back. He did gome jogging in the rain the past two days.
"I hope to vault for the first time tomorrow,” said the Northeast Louisiana State graduate.
Pennel is. concerned about how well the pole vault runway
will hold up. Hie runway is of rad clay as compared to rubber composition Americans are used to in their country.
★ W ■ ★
“We’ll h*ve to use
spikes. If th vaulters, the churned into day’s over.”
Two of the American runners, Jerry Siebert in the 800 meters and teen-ager Jim Ryun In the 1,500 meters, had their training set back by sore throats and rain.
★ * *
“I’ve missed five days o Conditioning work that I can’t make up,” grumbled Siebert.
DAWN FRASER
Rainy Weather Brings Order for Tissues
TOKYO ?AP) - So many athletes are fighting colds in the rainy Tokyo weather that the drugstore at the Olympic Village had to order extra tissue psper.
One of the biggest buyers is Australia’s world record swimmer Dawn Fraser, the only girl who did the 100-meter freestyle in less than a minute.
Dawn, her pert nose buried in a huge paper towel, rode back to bar bungalow on a village bus and sniffed:
“The moment I get out of the water, my nose starts dripping. I guess I better stay in the pool all the time.”
* *
Dawn’s cold cut her practice swimming down to a minimum ever since she caught a virus last weekend. But it doesn’t show on her performance. A few days ago she came within one second of her world mark of 51.9.
’VILLAGE’ CALL - Linda Cooper, the top U.S, woman’s platform diver, makes a call from her Olympic Village room in Tokyo to friends in Tachikawa, Japan. She is a •strong choice for a gold medal in tjM 10 meter competition. Her home is in San Bernadino, Calif.
Russians Join Games' Group
USSR Ends Training . at Remote Facility
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TOKYO (AP) - The 115-member Soviet Olympic track and field team emerged from seclusion and returned to Tokyo Friday and a spokesman pronounced every one of the athletes in tip-top condition and raring to go for 18th Olympiad.
The team, which includes some of tiie world’s long distance running and jumping giants, returned on the eve of the Games which start here Saturday. They wouldn’t have cut it any finer without missing tiie opening ceremonies.
* * ♦
They had been training under the tutelage of crack Coach Gabriel Korobkov in Utsunomi-ya, 75 traffic-clogged miles from Tokyo.
Choice of tiie remote site had aroused envy and displeasure among some other pational teams whose training facilities have been limited to toe stadium complex in Itokyo.
* *
Yuri Mashin, head of Ihe Soviet delegation, has refused to say whether the Russians requested the separate facilities or the Japanese Organizing initiated the invlta-
One Order for Parade
TOKYO (AP) - UJ. team officials put up toelr.srier of mardtoig in the epeaiag ceremony for the Olympic Games ‘ --------'’Wei "
orea and Indonesia have withdrawn, Ecuador won’t compete because of an internal dispute, , but the nearly 8,000 athletes and 95 nations remaining made these the biggest games of modem times.
* . * *
A single sentence by the Emperor of Japan proclaiming opening' of the Games wifi launch this vast. Internationa) sports events. Active competition starts Sunday, and ends Oct. 94.
No city has ever extended itself for the games as has Tokyo. Every civic improvement of the past few years — super highways, monorail from the airport to the heart of town, great modern arenas, the 115-miles per hour express from Tokyo to Osaka — all have tagged as Olympic, accounting for the 82 billion grand total. SEE RUSSIA WINNING
Although the Olympics are supposed to be contested entirely on an individual basis, national riva’ y is sure to assert itself.
By any scoring system, Russia is expected to win with a total of around 45 gold medals, followed by the United Statok with about 35, and Japan with IS.
* * *
The withdrawal of the 144-man North Korean team and the 134-man Indonesian team stemmed from a complicated dispute.
Irt 1982 Indonesia staged the fourth Asian Games in Jakarta but banned Israel and Nationalist China, boto Asian Games Federation members.
in toe ruckus tint followed, the International Olympic Com-mittee suspended Indonesia and the Indonesians retaliated by holding the first Games of toe New Emerging Forces (GANE-FO) last year.
The IOC later reinstated Indonesia but the International Swimming and Track Federations banned from the Tokyo Olympics those athletes who bad competed in GANEFO. » '* * . * ’
Although only a dozen or so on each team was affected, tiie entire squads were withdrawn. No athletes from either nation was expected to win much to the way of medals.
The fervor of Tokyo for the games is beyond western comprehension. The opening and closing ceremonies, and the swimming and track events are sellouts, with most other events dose to it.
U.S. Yacht Shows Wake
ENOSHIMA, Japaf IB - The U.S. 5.5 meter class yacht Bingo diced across the flnlah far ahead of 12 other entries to her class Friday to a team practice race held on these Olympic sailing waters 35 miles southwest of Tokyo.
The 84-foot American racer, with Don McNamara of Marblehead, Mass., at toe helm, was 3 minutes, 58 seconds ahead of the Italian Grifone, skippered by Agostino Strauhno, and 5 minutes, 29 secoods ahead of the Swedish RuA VII, sidpbered Ky Lars Thom, who won the gold medal to the 5.1 class at toe 1968 Melbourne Games.
First reports indicated a disqualification for tbs Americans with some observers believing toat they had croaaad the starting fine before the gun. PERFECT THONG However, official results indicated the 6.9 fooler from New England and Us crewmen Frank Sadly and Joe Batcheld-ha^ timed their start aa perfectly as they had sailed the rest of their race.
Pram m, toe Norwegian entry to fl» 14 was drib, but her bikama, Crown Princs 4 .•
Harald was not aboard. The prince was in Tokyo to meet Emperor Hirohlto.
He will also miss yachting practice Saturday when he carries toe Norwegian delegation flag to the Olympic opening ccgmony.
• * ■.* * •
In the star class, German ritipperjdax Meyer and crewman Bruno Stieth woe pruned on toe Brat down wind leg by the Japanese Mlta 11 and finished the raoe to seoood place 1 minutes and 9 seconds behind the host nation’s entry.
Portuguese sailors Manuel Duarte and Pinto Fernando were third. American sktppsr Dick Stearns with crewman Lynn Williams were fourth. Boto an from Northbrook, HL
Seaworthy Canoeist
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C—8
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1964
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Vikings Picked Over Lions
Colts Rated Slight Favorites
By The Associated Press The Colts, slender favorites in Monday night’s game with St. Louis oh the strength of their recent victories over the C h i-cago Bears and Los Angeles Rams, gain added support on being the home club.
“ * . * *
Johnny Unitas doesn’t have to throw all day.jww that the Colts have running help from Tony Lorick and f revived ;L e n n y Moore.
The Colts should eke out ah edge in a tight one that could be a preview'Of the NFL title game Dec, 37., \ :
All games are Sunday unless otherwise noted.
NFL
Cleveland 34, Pittsburg 14 -Saturday night— Steelers hurting with only three linebackers left aft§r Injury to B o b Schmidt. Browns should roll with Jimmy Brown having a big day. Cleveland beat Pittsburgh 43-7 in an exhibition that triggered a shake - up by Buddy Paiter.
Los Angeles 21, Chicago 14 — Bears'still battered without Mike Pyla, Joe Fortunato and Larry Morris. Rams.came out of, .Baltimore defeat in good shape physically. After George Halaa’ blast at officials, and three defeats In four games, Bears badly need a win in home opened
■ .6 * Hi
Minnesota 21, Detroit 20 — One of the real tough games of the week. Lions’ charging d e - j fensive line figures to haVe more! trouble catching scrambling Fran Tarkenton than a quarterback who stays on the passer. Despite absence of Tommy Mason, a club good enough to nip Green Bay s h o u 1 d take the Lions.
New York 20, Dallas 14 —
Let’s give Y. A. Tittle one more chance, He can’t go mi many more weeks without throwing a hatful of TD passes. Don Meredith still question mark although Cowboys say he’ll play. Giants must stop Don Perkins and generate a little offense of their own.
Philadelphia 21, Washington
Quebec Back Leading UFL
CLEVELAND (AP)^Joe Williams, Quebec’s 0-foot, 195-pound fullback who is averaging more than 90 yards a game, is well out in front*in the United Football League individual rushing statistics after six games.
Williams has carried 63 times for 543 yards and an average of 8.6 yards per carry.
* * *
He also leads in scoring with nine touchdowns—five on runs —and his 85-yard touchdown run against Indianapolis Sunday is the longest in the UFL this season.
Despite Williams’ performance, the Rifles went down to their fourth defeat Sunday, trounced 44-7 by Indianapolis, Eastern Division leader with a 5-1 record.’
WWW
Indianapolis • is at Toledo (34) Saturday night and Wheel-ing piaiys host to Joliet (68) Sunday night.
Charleston, leading the Western Division with a 5-1 record, goes to Canton (4-2) for a Sunday night game.
Quebec (2-4) is at Grand Rapids (1-5) Saturday night.
14 — Eagles should give Sonny Jurgensep another r o n g h day with Vince Promuto probably out of. the Redskin line. (Rile Matson, Earl Gros and Tim Brown are clicking and the Redskins still are fumbling.
Green Bay 31, San Francisco 21 — Vince Lombardi due to get Jim Taylor back although Herb Adderley has pulled leg muscle. 49ers not to be taken easily with John Brodie on the beam.
Baltimore 28, St. Louis 27 — Monday night — Colts have the balanced attack to give anybody trouble. Cards saihe type
of bail club. Give Jphnny Unitas the edge over Charley Johnson and say a field goal or a point can win it.
ALP
Boston 24, San Diego 21 Friday night — Patriots in high gear with four straight while Chargers stig-1 are regrouping after disastrous start. The Pats won on the . coast so why not in Boston?
New York 17, Oakland 14 --Saturday night — Jets could have beaten Chargers last week. Oakland still looking-for first ittn which is long overdue.
In a four-year scries With Detroit Catholic Central (1948-1961), Pontiac Central won three
Family Sticks Together 1 J*0* «y™P‘f Games - and
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TOKYO IB — Four brothers The are Enrique, Richardo, are on Peru’s basketball team I Luis and Raul Duarte.
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And keer the Urn* genet every Sunday.. • on WJR
THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, OCTOBER .9,* 1964
After Tonight> PCH Better Days
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‘easy’ part of the Saginaw Valley Conference schedule.
* > * *
The Chiefs dropped their first three SVC encounters to teams ranked among the top ten in the Gass A prep poll.
K)ne si the losses, came at the hands of the Ne.. 1 team —Bay Gty Centnd.
Tonight’s tilt should be easier. Flint Central is way down in the No. 4 spot in the rankings.
In order after Flint Central come Bay Gty Handy, Saginaw,
Flint Southwestern, Flint’ Northern and Pontiac Northern. NONE EASY -There are no soft touches in the group, but the competition could'‘be a little more to the Chiefs’ liking..
★ ‘w w The. series between PCH and Flint Centra! dates back to 1006. Since that opening game, the Indians have gained a 35-11 advantage with three tilts ending in a tie.
AO PCH hands ore in good
Prep Grid Card Heavy
Although the league season Is only one game old, Birmingham SeahoHh’s Maples find themselves fighting an uphill battle in their -bid for a Southeastern Michigsn Association football title.
★ ★ *
Hopes were high for the Maples as the squad opened the loop season against Hasel.Park last week, but the Parkers dampened the outlook with a -21-30 upset.
Now the Maples have to start over.
They play host to Southfield I tonight, In other SEMA games, Berkley has a date at Femdale I and Royal Oak Kimball entertains Hazel Park.
Seaholm <2-1) is expected to to get back on the winning trail against Southfield, a team which has one victory In three outings.
LEAGUE GAME A key tilt is on tap in the Tri-County League with Oxford (04) battling Lapeer (00-1). Kettering was slated to play Cranbrook this afternoon in a non-conference tilt and Romeo e Creuse at 1:30
also dot the yne-Oakland and Oakland A leagues.
a surprise 26-13 winner over Madison last week, has another rough home encounter with Fitzgerald (2-0) providing Hhe op-
agai
In other O-A games, Avondale (l»i) travels to Warren Cousino (02), Lake Orion iiw has a date at Clawson (0-2) and Madison (1-1) entertains Troy M).
physical shape for the game which will get under way at 6 p.m. at Winer Stadium.
In losing three games, t h Chiefs’ offense has been almost non-existent. Their lone touchdown came in a 26-7 losvto Saginaw'Arthur Hill.
.: ★ * " ★
On the other hand,, the defense, which, provided but token resistance in the first two ings, perked up against fifth-ranked Midland last week in an 8-0 setback.
TOUGH TEST The defensive unit shoul a rugged workout Indians. ©
The Flint squad lias taken two lopsided decisions — 54-0 over Bay Gty Ijnndy and 27-0 over Saginaw. ,
The Chiefs/biggest headache will probably be Tiny Lassiter, who gaimn All-State honors last year at/fne quarterback post.
coach Paul Dellerba is nfore of Lassiter’s ability.
/ “We’ll have to stop his run-, ning or passing on the rollouts,’’ Dellerba said, “He has a real good arm.’’
Hie Chiefs put a good defensive rush on Midland and the Indians may see some of it tonight. * ★ *
The interior of Flint’s interior line has been vulnerable to a strong rush, and the Chiefs could keep the game respectable if they keep Lassiter comer&i.
Lassiter, however, isn’t the Indians) only threat. They have speedy halfback George Moey, the scoring leader in the SVC With 24 points.
Wheels Turn in Grand Prix
Intornatio Sot at Rij
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RIVERSIDE, Calif. (AP) Wheels tapn to spin Friday in the seventh annual Grand Prix, impressive field .of to-kxially known drivers toward the big finale — the 200-mile road race for sports cars.
' ^
Nearly -80 drivers are on deck battling for the 40 places in the 77-lap windup race.
Cars and drivers went into speed trials for grid positions in the qualifying runs Saturday.
The setting is the 2.6-mile Riverside Raceway, a twisting test of skill and speed.
* * *
The Grand Prix, sponsored by the Los Angeles Times for its youth charities, is expected to attract 80,000 fans. r Foreign drivers entered include Jimmy Clark from Scotland, England’s Jade Brabham, Bruce McLaren and John Surtees and Innes Ireland from Wales.
W ♦
The American contingent -includes 1 A. J. Foyt, Roger Penske, Dan' Gurney, ParnelU Jones and Augie Pabet. -The lap record is 1:31.8, ed last year by Jim Hall of land, Tex. The mark has been bettered many ly during rece cently broken arm will keep Hall out of the race.
Egg and Bacon Shoot at Sporffmen's Club*
Trapshooters will be gunning for merchandise prizes when the Egg and Bacon Shoot gets under
way at Auburn Heights Sportsmen's Gub Sunday.
W it ^ W
Shooting will stmt at 16 a m. and continue until-dark. The club is located on Churchill Road one block off M59.
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HONOROED — John Van Sicklen, former All - Oakland County football player while attending Walled Lake High School, walks on the Iowa State University campus after being named Lineman of the Weak by the Associated Press. Hie 21-year-old senior tackle was cited for Ms outstanding play last Saturday against Nebraska.
PCH, Vikings, PNH Win
Harrier Records i
Two cross country unbeaten records remained unsoiled two wet meets yesterday.
Walled Lake upped its mark to 60 with a 26-39 Inter-Lakes
Hills'Teen Top Driver
A Bloomfield Hills teen-ager j will try to maintain his lead in 'the state midget racing car | standings in competition Sunday I at the Oakland Comity Sports-I men’s Club track in Waterford.
' ★ * * ' 7
| Leading the pack is Bobbie ! Schultz Jr., 16, followed by Dennis Foster of Grosse Poirite i Woods and Donald Bozak'of Wa-j terford.
- Competition is limited to drivers 16 years of age and under who drive one-quarter or one-half midget racing cars under sanction of the Michigan Midget Racing Association.
it ~ it '★
Racing will start Sunday at 3 pjn. Drivers will battle over a one-tenth-mile track at speeds ranging from 35 to 40 miles an hour.
Midget car drivers compete in four classes—novice, stock, modified stock and class AA.
victory over Farmington. Pontiac Central’s Bill Hollis wop his sixth dual meet in as many starts as the, Chiefs defeated Flint Northern 21-35 at Beau-dette Park in a Saginaw Valley meet.
Pontiac Northern swept past Waterford 18-44 in the other ^ meet
J«T Watson and John Cara-woski of Farmington placed 1-2, but the Vikings grabbed the next four spots to down the tough Falcons. Watson’s winning time was 10:31, a ’ new Walled Lake course record.
Mark Karell, Don Colpitis, Jim Lidler and Ge-turge Ciot place third through sixth, respectively, for Walled Lake.
. * * *
Hollis led PCH to its fourth in against two losses with a time of 10:31. Steve Narrin of Fjint Northern' was second followed by PCH’s Bob Wiggins, Martin Acosta and Walt Fraser.
Dave Kay of PNH missed the Waterford course record of 11:17 by two seconds. John Meyer of the Skippers was second. Then came, in order, Northern’s Bob BurtCh, Nick Ochoa, Tim Kaul and Dave Pruitt.
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THE PONTIAC PRKSS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER St, 1964
Major Hoople Gloats but Picks Oklahoma
Fearless forecaster
Egad, friends, your',congratu-latory messages overwhelm me!
Nearly two weeks have passed since the Hoople System correctly forecast that Keirtucky-a 20-point underdog *- would triumph over No. 1 rated Mississippi and Auburn, and still the laudatory letters ppur in.
Predicting this stunning upset was really Nothing unusual, as longtime followers of the Hoople Forecasts yell know.' I dare say no other forecaster had ' the intestinal fortitude to cast
Ken Still ' GmietsPar ■ in Camellia
. SUNSET CITY, Calif. (AP) ~ Ken Still fireofa four-under-par 07 to jump into the early lead Thursday in .the $25,000 Sunset-Camellia Open Golf Tournament.
The only pro who seemed to have a chance to overtake the 20-year-old Tacoma, Wash., leader was Lou Graham, 26, of NashviHe, Tenn., who carded a five-under-par 90 on the front nine, then blew himself out of contention with a 42 for 72 coming in.
PAR BREAKERS
Only 10 players were able to . better par over the v 6,450-yard, par-71 Sunset Oaks Country Club course. At the windup of first-round shooting the slender, blond Tacoman was still out front by two strokes.
Juan (Chi-Chi) Rodriguez,! sick in ted for jhe past five
his lot with the Kentucky Wildcats — Harrumph! *,
However, a Hoople is never one to rest on Ms levels, so I have prepared another surprising card for yonr reading pleasure.
This week we will again witness some amazing upsets.
The Oklahoma sooners, humiliated by Southern California, will rally their forces,to score an astonishing 24-14 victory over archenemy Texas. ! w ♦.
In Jacksonville, Fla., Georgia Tech will turn mi its favored guests from the U. S. Naval Academy. I predict a 23-22 triumph for Tech.
Now on with the forecast: Oregdn 41, Idaho 16 Illinois 21, Ohio State 20 Indiana 27, Iowa 19 Missouri 17, Kansas State 7 N. Carolina 6, LSU I Michigan A, Michigan St. 12 Minnesota 25, Northwestern 21 Mississippi St. 33, Tulane 12 Nebraska 35, S. Carolina 6 Oklahoma 24, Texas 14 Washington 27, Oregon St. 6 Purdue 17, Wisconsin 14 Stanford 13, Rice #
S. California 36, Texas A &
M0
Notre Dame 24, Air Force 12 Alabama 16, N. Carolina State 10
Arkansas 31, Baylor 0 Army 14, Penn State 8 Auburn 6; Chattanooga 0 Yale 21, Brown II California 40, Miami (Fla.) II Clemson 24, Georgia 12 Princeton 15, Dartmouth 8 Maryland 16, Duke 13 Keatucky 21, Florida St. 14 Mississippi 28, Florida 16 Villanova 20. Detroit 8 Georgia Tech 23, Navy 22 Syracuse 17, UCLA 14
U-M's Offense Challenged
I 'Senior Steve Parker, at 2401 the North Carolina State footpounds, is the biggest player on [ bail sqtfad. He's 6-foot-3. -
days with a strep throat, put on j NFL PICKS
extraordinary display of courage in scoring 33-39-72 over j a course he had never seen before.
i
Packers 30,49ers 7 Lions 28, Vikings 21 Rams 20, Bears 17 Colts 24, Cardinals 17 Dallas 17, Giants 17 Browns 35, Steelers 14 Redskins 27, Eagles 24
RaMy Gtovrr
Chuck Courtney
* Slkn .
1 ■ Canada vs. States
5—71
a1 in Handball Final
NIGHT RACING
NEW YORK (AP) - Jimmy | Jacobs of Chicago and Bernie | Prichard of Canada will meet ! Saturday night for the singles 1 title in the first World’s Four-j Wall Handball championships.
t In the doubles semifinals, the j j Chicago pair of Johnny Sloan and Phil Elbert scored over-j > Mexico’s Villerel and Ignacio ! Hernandez 21-13, 21-7. Milkey I Unroth and Henry Teperman of ! Canada beat AI Rivesi and Tony j Caplic of Australia 21-5, 21-14.
! Sloan and Elbert will pldy Un-j roth and Teperman in the final Saturday.
MSU Defense Rated Strong
Duffy Heaps Praise on Timberlake
ANN AfffcOR (API—Michigan expects its so-far .highly successful running game to meet its toughest challenge of the young season Saturday when it takes on Michigan State at East Lansing.^
The Wolverines, with four players over the century mark in yards gained, have rushed for 583 yards in their first two gairtes.
★ * *
Quarterback Bob Timberlake has gained an additional , 197 yards on passes. •
Sophomore Jim Detwiler is the top rusher with 149 yards jn carries. Timberlake, Carl Ward and Mel Anthony are the others who have already rushed for njore than 100 yards. SCORE UPSET
MSU, which scored one of the
iggest upsets of the season in downing Southern-California 17-7 last week, has teen outrushed in its first two games but has just about matched its opponents in yards ^gained through the air.
Though Michigan has,a wide edge in the history of the series —Saturday’s, game is the 57th renewal—the Wolverines halve since 1955. Their best efforts have been a 12-12 tie in 1958 and a 7*7' deadlock last year.
r ' *
put previous statistics and! past games won’t help anyone > In this one.
MSU Coach Duffy Daugherty feels that the Michigan attack presents a number of defensive problems. The major one, he says, is stopping or at least slowing down Timberlake.
“He is one of the finest quarterbacks I’ve seen in a long time for running, blocking and throwing," Daugherty said.
* * *
Michigan Coach Bump Elliott, meanwhile, is one of the Spartans’ biggest admirers.
‘‘I can’t understand how anyone could regard them so lightly Elliott has remarked in the past. “They had a real l defense last ycafr and are about as strong in that department this year.”
. Elliott was one of the few who said a week ago he wouldn’t be surprised if Daugherty’s team upset. Southern Cal.
# * *'
The Wolverines, who have yet to tighten their defensive second ay as natch as Elliott would like, will have to contend with the passing of quarterback Steve Juday
Juday has completed half of 28 attempts for 130 yards and one touchdown.'
Pull Big Ten Qrid Slate
Ohio State Tests Strong
CHICAGO (AP)-AU Big Ten-football teams jump into championship action Saturday with Ohio State's encounter at Illinois’ homecoming the major attraction.
Michigan is. at Michigan State, Iowa at Indiana, Northwestern at Minnesota and Wis-u consin at Purdue in other con-” ference engagements.,
it ir it
Each game in the first full league schedule appears to be closely contested. There are no clear-cut favorites. *
Defending champion Illinois, I with a Big Ten 17-6- decision foyer fftrthwestern,' is ranked No. '2 in the Associated Press poll.
ILLINI FAVORED TTie quarterbacking of Red Custardo, the running of sUcfy j backs as Sam Price, Jim Gra-’ bowski and Ron Acks, the pass-catching talent^)! Bob Trumpy and the solid defense anchored by linefepckers Dick BUtkus and Don Hansen leave the TlUni a seven point choice of the odds-makers.
* The game will mark the first capacity crowd of 72,000 in fourj years at Illinois’ Mb mortal Star
MIAA Powers Collide; Titans Play ai Villanova
By The Associated Press
AlbKm plays host to Kalamazoo Saturday in a cliffhanger between two unbeaten, untied teams battling for the MIAA .football title.
Eastern Michigan (1-0), which was idle last week, journeys to John Carroll for a Presidents Athletic Conference meeting, while Northwood (2-0) is at Ohio Northern.
Hope plays host to.Alma, and Adrian is at Olivet to round out the MIAA schedule.
Two of the headliners in the state Saturday find Bowling Green-at Western Michigan and Northern Michigan at Central Michigan.
OTHER GAMES
Qther games in Michigan have Western Reserve at Wayne State and ’Wisconsin State at Hillsdale.
Detroit is at Villanova, Ferris State at Findlay and Michigan Tech at St. Cloud in out of state clashes/ H
* * +
Kalamazoo and Albion have split in their last two meetings.
Kalamazoo- Won 19-12 on its way to a perfect season in 1963. Albion scored a 25-14 victory last year and eventually wound up in a three-way tie with Kalamazoo and Hope for the MIAA football championship.
★ - * *
Detroit, which allowed 267 yards on the ground in a 19-0 loss to Cincinnati last Friday night, can expect another rough game with Villanova.
The Wildcats have scored impressive triumphs in theiir first three games, whipping Toledo 22-6, Holy Cross 32-0 and VMI 27-7.
years ai uiiiiuis mcuiui^ai oia-
dium. Ohio State, ranked No. 4, has a Strong defense and | attack that so far has featured the passing of Don® Unver-feth — breaking coach - Wobdy l Hayes traditional meatgrinder mode of offense.
- * ★ . *.
The Buckeyes opened their conference campaign with a 17-0 triumph over Indiana lost week.
Northwestern, with- its fullback star, Steve Murphy, still doubtful with a sprained ankle, should find tough going at Minnesota, where quarterback John ■Hankinson is .developing into one of the league’s best.
The Gophers, who upset .California 26-20, will be making
their Big Ten start and are „al three-point underdog. V
Wisconsin, idle since losing 31-7 to Notre Dame, has had; time to regroup for invasion of Purdue. The Boilermakers, who! were pounded 34-15 by the Irish last week, are given a touchdown edge.
* * .*
Another close ’one is Iowa at Ridiana. The Hawkeyes, with Gary Snook passing for 441 j
yards in victories over Idaho
and Washington, could well be a sleeper in the Big Teh chase. |
Unbeaten Notre Dame takes I its horde of talent to Air Force. I Ranked sixth, the Irish are ; being boomed a 10-point favor- ; ite in the high altitude of Colorado. Springs. /
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T^HE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 0, 1964
Indonesia Now Out of Japanese Games
TOKYO W) — Indonesian Sport Minister R. Maladi announced Friday his entire 134-member Olympic team will boycott the s 18th Olympiad in Tokyo because 20 of its athletes had been ruled ineligible to compete.
He said the team would leave Tokyo “to the -nest few days."
Maladi also > said Indonesia's President Sukarno was expected to visit jlapan during the Olympic Games starting here Sat-* urday, apparently despite the ,team's decision to withdraw from the Games.
' Sukarno is coming here, Maladi said, “purely to promote goodwill between Indonesia and Japan."
School Soccer on "Recreation Schedule
Pontiac’s Olympic Sports Development Program M elementary and Junior high school boy s and girls will open Saturday at id a.m. at Wisher Stadium.
• ♦ . it . it
On the schedule will be modified and regular soccer competition for teams organized during physical education classes and coached by physical education teachers.
The prsgram, sponsored by the Board of Education, is an effort to promote soccer as an Olympic sport and make Wisner Stadium the area's “Soccer Center."
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Lee W. Haslinger, city director of physical education, said that all boys, aftd girls partief-1 pating in the program should1 be members of teams organized1 at school, v ’ „•
Wisner Stadium will be avail- ' able for use by " local schools plus schools outside the Pontiac School District, Haslinger said. .ADVANCE SCHEDULE All games must be scheduled! in advance through the Board of Education, 332-9231. ’*
Haslinger said the “Soccer Center” will' operate from t)ct. 10 until Nov. 14 with a supervisor on hand for all contests.
SATURDAY SOCCIR PROGRAM
ROBBIE ROBERTS
City Bowler 1st at Kbo
- Wilson vs. Frotr v
>0 rm.-ia - J
fibn; I a.m. ______
(t*rr HcunMoMn P_______ BR. _ .....
Frost vs. Madison (Girls) Fit id 2:U o.m. - Whitflaid ys^ McCtrroll
By JERE CRAIG
The road to the National All-Star ‘Bowling Tourna-’ iment in Philadelphia' for Pontiac bowlers, leads j through Flint’s Skyway Lanes, and it is a bumpy route j at best.
For George Chicovsty — perhaps the hottest bowler in the state presently — the ups and downs of the Eastern Michigan Elimination tournament highway
are currently, minor in-*-------—“*■—
conveniences.^ |
All survivied last weekend’s
‘Chico” has the lead after 24, . ■_______
cut to 18 and are seeking a spot division | ^ ^ 12 that Advance after
[{J;[ A Pontiac bowler, now a stu-- dept at Western Michigan Uni*
'}■ Iversity, recently won the $225, J .K_, m .
R) J first prize in-the Fall Singles g m the men j __________________
Tournament at*K a 1 m a z 6 o’s which will produce three All- tomorrow’s 12 games. Samard-I Sunset Lanes. Star qualifiers. He has 5074 pins. Uja currently, to fourth, Crake
Robbie Robert s finished 39 P°n^*c j ninth and Puertas tenth among
nearest com- " **‘1*‘J jl * *--***- *
petition in the handicap tourney,; ------ - —------------..... ..
aided by a 618 actual. Roberts Mrs. Pointer has 4466, j -Following tomorrow’s bowling, averaged 144 last season while tr*Htog Jeanette Robinson of the dozen leaders in both dibowling around Pontiac, , Flint by 107 pins. J visions will enter the head - to-
The 21-year-old rallied to win Also making a gallant effort | head finals to determine who the title. He started bis bowlingi to overcome jodrney obstacles W*N continue their drive to Phil-
A , Robbie Roberts finished 39' Ana oniriey romier oi ronuac | ninth and Puertas tenth among
Dap \U/immOrC P*ns ahead of his nearest com- jis to the battle for- two j the men. Mrs. Carter is eighth l\Ct JYVIN II MCI J petition in Ihe handicap tourney, | tlck*^ f° ^ ^51 ” U* women's list. ■■
May Register
Annupl Program Set Iwith 8 147 game, then went on! are Podhac’s Mike Samardzi- I*delphia and the January j to the 618 total, Some 283 ja, Jr., Larry Crake, Joe Puer- I tionalot
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OPEN IVORY NIGHT TO f Monday through Saturday •
for PCH, PNH Pools bowlers entered the competition, i tas and Peg Carter.
Registration is now under way for the annual city Parks and Recreation Department Fair swimming program at the Ponj tiac Central and Pontiac Northern high school pools.
Beginning and advanced
SPARE PINS
Peg Bender of the P p n 11 a c Women’s ^Bowling Association
presently has entry blanks for the state association's 39th (annual Women's Champion-J ship Tournament opening in Jan-| uary at L a n s 1 n g ’ s Holiday
, The two-point lead enjoyed by IF r 1 d a y House League. Roe- Lanes.'
classes, plus open swfmmtog I Heits’ Auto Supply will be in rink’s 245 also took game hon-j Th* rMArv.iim, a...
will be available starting Tups- I jeopardy tonight when action tors. Howe’s Bucks and Does ' ■ - - - 0
day night Oct. 20. , resumes in the Huron Bowl | Monday were led by Ken Wag-
At P e n 11 a c Central non- | Classic. ‘ bar's 212. Dotty Huntley had a
swimmers must be at least S9 ( The leaders took six points 120 triplicate,
inches tall, and at least 54 tost week to stay on top. Jerry Don Clark has found his inches (to. street shoes) at Pferna’s 269-234—678 led Felice’s groove at Auburn Lanes. He | Team captains are requested PNH. Advanced registration is |Market to a similar win; but;had 255—618 in the Monday .to contract Mrs. Bender as soon
required for all classes. ! high series honors went to Fran ' Night Lions loop and 248 in the' as possible to receive thejr entry
Bertram who had 234-234—684 (Tuesday Night Business Men's 1 forms in time.
League. Russ’ Sunoco has post- ( •* * *
ed 20 straight dinning points | Pontiac Travelling Classic
is Oct 24th, while all entries must be to by Nav. 1 for the stogies - doubles team event I competition.
Forms and fees (I!) should | . . ., ......
be turned to at the Parks and !or ,osing Lloyd Motors. Recreation Department in Pon- j The night’s only sweep was
ttoc City Hall.
Ihe classes will be given 6:30 p.m. (beginning) and 7:30 p.m. (advanced) Tuesday and
posted by Calbi Music as Ron
! Tuesday while losing none. : League president Larry Crake
Rothbart hit 247-870 against i Rob Uhan scored 245 and | **•* called an organizational ' Lanes. I Tom Bayliss 215-406 also to meeting for 2 p.m. Sunday at
s Our Ladv of the I Monday night action: while 300Bowi^
Wednesday at PCH, and Thurs- jiikegMixed League Sundav SaBday’s 7 P-™- Mixed AH area bowling estoblish-
day at Northern. Open swim-: had a 017 aeries by George Lea*u* bad * 185 aU-spare ments interested to having a
ming MU be 8l4p.mf. these same (Hopper (208-m). Margaret 8*me by Howie Roehm. (team in the league should be days, ad well as 7-8:30 p.m. | TroxeU recorded a 222. | The • o’clock mixed circuit jrepresented 8t ** meeUng.
1 First Nfighter’s action at Hu* *hat night was led by Bill Sher-ron saw Ida Wilson hit 204 and man Gloria Kuckenbergj
i crats 17-and-under, and^50 gonel! 546. | (203) and Larry Hopp (M0).
cents for older participants. The j r , m # a *
program will run through Dec. 227—241 was far ahead of the | Orchard Lanes reports Mari-17tn- pack Monday night' to .the West Sonke’s 256—617 in the
Side Lanes Classic. Teammate Wednesday Coffee and Donuts
Ed Jostock had the night’s high League as the top women’s . ,
game with 252. scores this season. This week I VMM®KA WATER, England!
cc-mumnn Helen McCoury had 211-519. (.APJ ~^rtl0,d P?,mer and|
■ j Dorothy Rununinger hit 2M! Nicklaus, arch-rivals of West Sides St. Michael dr- j„ Orchard's Monday East Overi““ American *0,f clrcurt, set cuit tost week had its second iLadfe! League,/and Ann Ryan^1 ldda>r a brand of fi0,fi 700 of the young season when reached-215 in the St Paul's 1 -v "ave almost forgotten Dwight Pugh put together a 711 j Methodist.
Golfs Arch-Rivals Team at Piccadilly
German Ring i Champ Dies j
BERLIN (AP> - Walter Neu-1
Florida? California? World’s Fair?
RENT A DODGE MOTOR HOME RENTAL RESERVATIONS NOW BEING ACCEPTED FOR FALL AND WINTER MONTHS
It’* • rolling home -that llccpt 4, M M mH-cmU)m4 M any hama can 5«. Easy ta 4Hva. aaty ta park, carriat a panangar car license. Anyane can drive Hie Da4ga Molor Hama wherever she reads ami Hails Iaa4. Nap, caak, eat, play aa yen rail slang at passenger car apae4s. lath ream, running hat ar ceM water, refrigerator, talevisian, air conditioning and ether appliancae are felly operative at yen travel" And the minute you atop, you’re heme — living in relaxed comfort in your spacious bam# ea wheels. Bring the pup!
Patterson Motor Home Rentals
OF ROCHESTER 1001 N. MAIN
Authorised Chrysler, Plymouth, Imperial and Dodge Truck Dealer »
Det. 755-4360 ' Local 651-1551
match play tournament with a first prize of 814.000.
Palmer last competed in a match play tournament 10 years I ago. Nicklaus hasn’t done it! since his amateur days in 1961.1 The same applied to the other
in the 1930s, held the German j week reported a* 613 for Shirley | The Friday morning Pontiac i8i* world stars who lined up
fill* fswtn 1099 4a 1QAA Ua ea. __,ah« 1 __e____tt____a _ ana aa. hara fne 4ka Dl/saadlll.. WaaU I
sel, former German heavy- i aided by a 246. weight boxing champion, died to ; There was a 620 Sunday in the West Berlin Thursday of a heart; Airway Lanes Outlaw Mixed attack. He was 56. > League by Ed Board who had a
Neusel, who rose to boxing < 257 game in the effort. The Air-: fame along with Max Schmeling ,way Ladies Major' Classic last
Saturday’s Ins A Outers Mixed League loop saw a 213- j 225—415 by Marie Reyaalds on the 300 Bowl tones, and Bill i Palmer had 254.
title from 1938 to 1940. He re- Pointer (201-231
gained the title for.,a short time ’............... _
in 1942 | Tuesday’s Airway Queens
Neusel ended a 20-year fig- w"* P*** hting career in 1950 after being j®5'' knocked out by Conny Rux. He | and tb*
had won 68 of 90 professional' J® handicaptotal) of Helen Winter, a 117 average
Neusel's son, Peter, is a b#***r’ member of the' German Olym- i • There was a big 891 by John pic rowing team Dow in Tokyo. ! Roerink in the Howe’s Lanes
Motor loop listed a 224-641 for i •»«*« tor the Piccadilly World Alvie Long, and Everette Laf-! Match Play Tournament over jnerhad229. !the 6,936-vard Wentworth West]
Montcalm Bowling Center rec-1 course — known to British golf- (
| orded a 236 for Floyd Bartley ers as the Old Burma Road.
[of the' Marimont Baptist The others shooting for .tWI Church League arid a 286 for bi* prize are Americans Tony E. A. Lundeen. Mary Hill con-1 D*ra« aad Ken Venturi, South I verted the 6-7-16. (Africa’s Gary Player, Bruce,
* -it * I Devlin of Australia, and. two!
). Saturday's Junior League at British Bvder Cuppers, Nell! j Primrose Lanes had a 223-555 Cotos and Peter Butler. ",
I performance by 12-year-old Lar- , T‘- 1 —*
ry Seurynck. j Anothtr Hull Signnd
A 5 pa re in the first frame was
a deceiving beginning li*t Fri- BT. CATHERINES, Ont. (A _ day at East Highland Rec- - ^ Chicago Black Hawks 1 J reation Larry Mitchell-then pro-1 announced Thursday the sign-! ceeded to strike out for a 298! ** of I?*nni*, HaJ • 19 * year i I and 604 total. °|d Ch‘c,*° “Per'
The Friday Mixed League also sttr8obby Hu,1„ „ . . . , .
therines Black Hawks of the | *
NOWS THE 71/HETO\
PI
a
PAV-WAY
ComplBtB Modtrnization Licensed - Insurtd
• Garages
• Bathrooms
• Cement Work
• Family Rooms
• Ream Additions
• PVreh Enclosures
• Recreation Rooms
o Kitchen Remodeling FIEE ESTIMATES aa4 OniMIMI all uaaa aa4 materials suaraiitmb
CONSTRUCTION COMPANY
CALL 673-8503
BOWL!
ENJOY an EVENING OUT
Ot the all now
Montcalm Bowling Centre OPEN BOWLING
W«d., Thurs. and $un. Evenings AMF 92-70 Automatic Fin Spotter* with Spa remaker.
MONTCALM BOWLING CENTRE
30 E. Montcalm (Comar Baldwin) FE S-ittl
)
THE PONTTA*C: PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER fl..
mance
The following are top price* covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by . them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Thursday.
Product J
•sum *:
Apple,, Golotn Dalictoui, bu.
Apples. Red Delldou,. bu.
Applm. Gf««wlna-bu. ........
Apples. Jonathan. Bu.........
Apples. McIntosh^ bu. ........
App v N. Spy, ..........
Apple- WPS River, bu. ........
Applet. Cider, 4-pal. case ...
Grapes. Concord, pk. btkt.....
Peaches. Barletl. bu. ........
!, Prune, bu. sil:”"-"".^ VEGETABLES
Carrots. Cello Pak.
Celery. White, ert......
earn, sweet, be* Cucumbers, sheers, bu. .
b dry, »lb. bap b trim, dt. bcht. I. tack ling. lb. .
Peppers. Red. sweet, t
Pumpkins, bu.
Celery. Cabbage, bu. indwt, bu. 1 Endive, bleached, bu. E icerole, bu. Etcerdlt. Reached. I
Lettuce, I
Rails Aim for. Record Peaks
NEW YORK (AP) - RaiU moved toward record peaks today in an irregularly higher stock market. Trading was fairly active.
* * *
New Yorit Central, up more than a point, and Pennylyanla Railroag.. fractionally higher, made hew highs of their own in heavy trading.
Other carriers showed, a mil’d-er uptrend, but enough to push the rail average past the record closing high of last July 14/
* ★ *# i.
Ibis added, to the bullish atmosphere in Wall Street. Airlines, oils, electrical equipments, aerospace Issues and nonferrou* metals moved gen-
erally higher, but it was far from a runaway market. MINOR GAINS
Steels, motors, utilities and elecfronics showed mipor gains' and losses.
General Motors was about unchanged as the strike against GM dragged on.
‘ * ★
The Associated Press average of (0 stocks at noon was up .8 to* 329.2, topping Thursday’s record closing - Mgh. Industrial)) were up 1.1, rails 1.5. and utilities .1.
Chrysler gained i and Ford was off i
fraction
fraction.
Very slight changes occurred among leading steels.
DROP POINTS
IBM gained 3 and U. S. Smelting more than 4, Xerox dropped a couple of points.
Fotochrome stock and " convertible bonds Went wild on the American Stock Exchange and trading was halted in both pending an, inquiry and possible announcements by the company and the -Securities & Exchange Commission. The stock, which sqjd at 3% before its run up began a few weeks
up 114 at 17%. The bonds were 475 Arthur.
Three Guilty, of Burgl?
Pontiac Mon-Broke Into Motorcycle Firm
Three Pontiac men were convicted yesterday by an Oakland County Circuit Court jury of burglarizing the Hatley Davidson Motorcycle Co., 372 S. Saginaw, on July 26, 1963.
*
Circuit Judge Frederick C. Ziem Scheduled Nov. 10 for the sentencing of the trio. They are Arzo Carson, 23; of 496 Arthur; A. J. Simpson, 31, of 256 S. Sanford; and William Griffin, 25, of
Executives Touchy ^ on Profit Criticism
DAWSON
up 10 at 131%.
Among other issues, was moderate.
The New York Stock Exchange
(AP)—Following I, a list
----------..„k tronsactlons on tbt New •
York Stock Cntiongo with noon prlcM: | Fedd Cora I
ACF ind JJO
tutjrJ
Alltfl Corp Allfrflh Lud 1 A Hog Pw 1 "UMOl l.M Htd Str» ) .JjQM .50
Alum ltd 40 Alcoa 1.10
{Ml
I 30% 3 i 24% ]
! \ PfSerCho, ^ Phelps Dod )
a + ** mtetito j.4b /, - to Pita Bow M
% — % Polaroid
fl lf%
•3 43% 4m «m S 24* j 26% 24‘ j
u u
69% 69%
B 1114
r
... .... H IK) , it 4344 45to 4544 H
14 In IB- PI
54 33H 23
44 *244 *t*. I 3344 15V,
I 47V. ,
I 1244 +
"« I G Accept I *, ! Gen Clg 1.20 44 I Cen Dynem f V, Gen Elec t.M *, Gen Food, J Vk GenMIlU l.M
M 424k 42to 4244
104 in M1*4 II
i* us Optteot AmPnoto .33
II 4144 *Sto 4t us m mM 4*4, 41
14 — V* | Gillette 1.104 + V4 OMANI .50*
72 2IW 2144 2144 14 3*4* 554k MW 14 274k 274b 41 M44 Mto 22 1444 14V4
t T*b IdS 134 J
8 5*44 M 12 24 2244
la lift Bib
+ 44 GracoCo 1.10
- V4 GrandU .Mb + to GrtnilCS 1.40
... GtAIIP 1.20* .... I wltar Rv 3
- to low Fin .171 + to Greyhnd .10
.... . V, RlchfOII 1.00
TO + 44 Rohr Corp 1
2044 — V4 RoyOutCh 1r „ - 1444 He 44 i Royal McBOO 1240 SO •+ 44 Ryder Syit b 411* 47V4 -44
K 2 t y* I SofowySt 1.00
I S MV4 + V4 SUM Load 2
! tP* fL. T’.. |L SanF 1.40
> OS OSVb -1- 4k StitagP 1.40b
: iia teas i**
The jury returned the guilty trading verdict after deliberating ror one day following the .week-long trial.
The three surrendered toPoii-j tiac police following a chase during which time several shots were reportedly fired at patrolman Robert Burns.
. Originally all were accused of X a■ssecond count of assault with 2 intent t<
charges were dismissed because w of insufficient evidence.
£ SMASH HOLE
. H ,.™+’w Police said that an attempt 34 Ik??* 1044a 107% +i4b was being made to smash a i«2 0144 s*44 *044 + 44 hole through a double wait be-” “ . ■* ’/‘ j tv/een the motorcycle shop ana
t To'', wvk Sw + 4k I Ike adjoining Carter Tire On. p_____ when the three were frightened
222 24 334k 3144... 'off.
When police located the men I hiding behind treesnear 304 Dis-I ton, they also found two pistols, a two-way radio and clothing | nearby on the ground, j The three were released on j continued $5,000 bond each pend-! ing sentencing.
i M L .
20 7244 714k Wu +
12 3*4* 344* 3444 +
30 2044 354b MV4 +
1 7944 7*44 7*44 +
M 55V* UN 55 +
1 Sjt 0»V4
i RepubAv .SOp 10 13V, 1344 1344 -
RepubSteel 2 44 **4b 42V4 49V, _
Revlon 1.10b 14 3*44 3844 384, +
i ReynMol .50 30 3444 34 34 +
1 RoyTob 1.00 . N 44Vk 44 44 -
By SAM DAWSON . -r • AP Business News Analyst
NEW YORK - Profit time is here again. And as many corporations start to release figures showing increased earnings in the past three months — most of the nation's banks already have — some busthesS executives are getting more touchy about public and ‘government reaction to the record highs.
The administration has suggested that industries with mounting profits might ‘shave prices a little for the Consumer’s benefit. So far very few have. And when prices are lowered it’s usually because, of competitive pressures.
Union leaders have pointed, to improved earnings as a talking point for higher wage scales and fringe benefits, claiming a larger share of the earnings for labor.
But business spokesmen are stressing that profits still aren’t high enough, that the record highs are deceptive, and that industry must have still larger, returns if it is to expand, and create mope jobs.
WANT PRICES RAISED
Some go on from there — as several steel executives have — to contend that prices must be raised, especially if wage scales can't be held dowif.
The argument that the record earnings mislead the public goes this way:
* ★ ★
Rising profits reflect to a large extent the. growing volumes of production and sales. And these have been boosted by gains in employment and thus in total personal incomes arid by
the general spread of prosperity throughout the economy. Hie business leaders argue that everything else has climbed to a record, and profits are merely following suit.
* They go further and say that actdally in relation to sales and capita) investment, profits are lagging.
UNDER 6 PER CENT For alt U S. corporations the after-tax* return an net .worth is estimated at under 6 per cent,' or about what it has been fpr the last four years, although over-ail business activity has increased notably. „
The ratio of profits to, shies,
I called the profit margin, has I firmed up this year. But businessmen. insist it is still much | too low compared with the early postwar years when business' I'was making a larger return and using that for expansion.
* ★ * *
Citing the st^el .industry as ah I example1; Roger M. Blough, chairman of U.S. Steel, skid this week that the industry’s profits, as expressed in dollars, rose 16 per cent in the first half of this year over the 1947-49 period, and employment costs climbed
156 per cent. But profits as per;
I centage of sales came to.,6.1 this year, compared wjfh 7 per cent | in the 1947-49 period.’
L One thing that many business -! executives and many labor | leaders have in common is thin,: dislike for. the government’s guidelines on wages and prices. The administration wants, in* . creases in wages and prices ’ held within the bounds of. increases in productivity—unit output per man. hour of labor. Neither management nor labor shows much affection for the government’s stepping in as a third party, in their wage-pries decisions.
PROFITS ARE INCENTIVE As'ror profits, business leaders contend that the chance to earn profits is the jntost effective incentive, for increased prbdqetWfty and Efficiency. If profits aire to be given a bad name, or even controlled by . government, much of the, incentive to produce better and ..more goes a-glimmering.
And the business contention is that profits earned by such incentive-sparked efficency are ■the real hope for greater economic growth.
Diplomatic Moves Indicative
China A-Blast Campaign
Poultry and Eggs
BnRWM i
{Armour i.m
sar ii
AHRet I.M
2* 2* I* + >/4 KGutt 011,1
1744 1m 17W - 4* Gull SO 1.
23 224* M + 4, I
S444 544% 5444
1M*.,
173 J74k 3*44 1*44
' y* Sctierg 1.4 - JJ Igtek^ Scott P ep J
3 73'/. 73V,
10 )fH 39 3
27 J3H 33VB 3
Hallibur 1.30 HamPip 1.30 Hmai Co It
3 UH 14H 14H 7 * 37% 37% 37% -33 HU HU + 10 45% 45 VE 45% + 31 1HV0 113% 124% +
Soybeans, Grams Steady on Board
WASHINGTON UR - Commu-, [ nist China apparently has begun I | a diplomatic campaign to pre-I pare the way for early explosion j,of a nuclear test bomb and assure maximum political impact
in Africa and Asia. .
-Diplomatic officials -say that Indonesian authorities who are I close to the Chinese Communists, have been told that the first Red Chinese atomic device will be exploded sometime after
brbilort and fryort A Bar rod HOC* 32-13.
B 19-20;
oor
I
OSTROIT IMI DETROIT (AP)—Egg arlet dowi tar lirtl rtcoivofk (including __
wbHtt brail A mM targe 3*-«i lerg*
■1*-Mi medium 2932V,; smoll 17-M; Browne Orod* A targe 37-3*1 medium 2» 2*. (man IM74b; chocks ism*.
TTStABI Chlcego
------_____________' gtagAr t_________
buying price, unchanged; *3 scar* AA *0 S 5*4k, I* C 17441 cars W • M; M C JUk.
Eggs steady; wholeuHe buying prices unchanged to 1 lower; 7* par cant or belter Arad* A whiles ]7V4; mind 2744; mediums 27; standard, 3044; dirties un-quoied; checks Tlik.
Livestock
BobcocKWII 1 BeWLime .41
Sin qi 133
H 214k 114* 2144 -
114 1J4* 144k 15 +
—B—
13 M44 154* 3544 —
* 144k 1*4* 1444 —
>' ] 3* 354. 334k -
7* *1 *8ta 4*6
21 *744 (74* *74*
•15 (74k (7<4 (74k -
7* *4* 14* (4* +
11 M W J*
14 1(1* MM 144*
* 2*4k 2*44 Jfta -
34 1744 174* 1744 -
21 33*4 55 » +
11 2(4k 2*44 2*44 +
—c—
• HorcPdr j
IllCent ind 2 InaarRend 2 Ihtandtll I.M
InlsusMch* 51 IntIHerv 2.10 lntMln*r*ls 2 InlNIck 2.30* InlPpck .SOp
srw is
IT! Ckl .20*
CaltahM .201 1M 1244 1244 1244 +
MH *0 7 1144 3144 2144 +
CamaRL 43* 1 1744 114* 17*4 — -
Z ip 10 x!7 1*44 3344 3*44 + 44
cSrOry 1 I* 3(4k 3*44 2*4* + 44
CHICAGO LIVaiTOCK
CHICAGO (AP)-(USOA)-h5(* I. _
butcher, 50 to 73 tower; mostly 1-2 200 rJ« JI
Wgy*. ! CeierTrac .20
h**d *7 14,75; mlxod 1*3 too*220 lb* 12.7^. PMonas* 1 M 14.25; 720-2*0 lb* 15.25*15.73; 2-3 23G270 cIr»COl^st 5 lb* 15.00-15.23; mbMi 1-2 300-230 ft SOWS rZusw IM 14 0014.75 ; 350-400 lb, 13.50-14.00. cJTroCp 1M
[ Cer-loed M
•prim c,
i wgn fi
a
I **44 M>4. -
' *4 (344 (2*4 +
I 1*44 1(W l«4k —
Sheep MO; wMftd staugirter tomb. --, sleugbtor ewes steady; choke and prim* 90-100 lb wootod slaughter tombs 22.f-
Stoeks of Local Interest
wring
me Builder, . DM Class A -
AMT Corp.
Associetod Truck BimOKlfir Broun Ing moor Champion Horn.
Citizen, UtlltttoS Diamond Crystal Ethyl CdM.
, Mohawk Rubbar Co.
Michigan (aamtoss Tuba Co.
Pioneer Flnancg .............
.. salran Prtaling ............
Vernor*a Gtabdr Ato .........
Vesohr Cn. .TM,iv.
wohr Carp. ........
ftps ...............
R ........
JirfltSh*11
(id Ask ad
u
ill
13.7 Ml
III
nSS^S&icpi ''v:yySi oU
MUTUAL FUNDS
Aifiilatad Fund ....
Chemkpi Fund . II CommapwgMta Itata .. Kevstang Tncain* k-i . Key»lona Grggrth k-1 Mau. Inveitors Growth Mas*. imMstolJ Trust PulnanS ftrcrwlh Television Eleclronjc, Wellinatpn Fund
11.(0*10.41
10.73
’SI
,5fi 17
m
STOCKS - X Indus 20 RMft
. BOND AVERAOCS
&M Ind. UW. W. L. Yi
{Tsl 'a! i; -Si A-SJ« e: K Ml n t ft SI Jr! M SI!«; w! S:! ifflM
. ......—.... i imgnanti i
■ \ ; ,»« .' End John
NOON AVERAGES CrteLock RR
' FvansPd .Mr
S ....... (77,24+2.3* i EmerRod .40
‘ Mf ivinMw .n
CtampOln 120 « ff* ii .
Checker Mol « 1 19 M44 1* +
Che, Oh * I XW 2*44 ;7»4* ChIMIIStPI U JIM m f
ChPneu 1.40* 1 J*'A JgJ 2*4* 4
ChiRklsPac 1 -17 * 24 334k 334k +
QwiCrti m » 14V* u4k 1*4* ,
Chryjler 1 172 «1ta *14k *14* +
Siew’# m y, M4* u i
-MtoeSv 1(0 *0 7744 M4k »• +
iMOWpVq
Coca Col* 3 CoIgPtl 1.20
Cbilmibn 40
gglndm.
Col Gat 1.22 ColFId 1.021 Smm i so ComSolv 1.10 CSmwEd I.M Comtal Corp nwUll 3.30
Bjitwcipd i
CnNGot 3.30 ComPw 1.70 CWMblnpr I Copt Air ,M Com Can I
Corn 'pd^LM CoxBrdc .IM Crow C .731 Crawn Cork Sgwn Zell 2 SbriSaoT m
Cudahy Pk Curtls^Pub
DenRiver .80 Dayes Corp Ooy FL 1.1*
_-.iHud .90*
IblBiF Til
OenRioGW 1
to im rita 124k +
to *144 4244 41H +
II 1*44 2*'/. 19*4 +
32 3144 Sto m + I 3*44 Jta 3*44 -
I 37W 3*44 3*44 +
DomeMln M DougAir 1.411 Opw Ch l.M DrtSMr 1.20b
- 4*
* 244* 1*9* 2*4* + 4k
ii 2* pk oft
11 3044 M 3044 + 44
iSssSts
IS fft fW 1 IM — 4b 17* IL 1144 1144 — 4k I* 1744 124k I7M — 44
D— ■
3 114k 124k 114k — 4* « 2044 2044 204k + to T B44 M4k 224* J.,4k
12 434k Wk 4344 - 44
13 37 2Mb 37 + 4*
7 *344 M4* (14k
7 Pi 7244 2244 -
7 »». 214* 1544 + '*
4 1*44 1(4* 1444 + 44
1* »*4 ifik «4k *M 41 32(4 3144 3Tk + 44 31 7* 7344 7* + 4*1
DynamCp'?M
___,..r LN)
EailKo l.M*
■ jrD*
IpnLogan . tonoML 1.:
4 46 4344 454k
J* 12* 12744 121 +
!!* 321k SI to 52 +
15 434k 434* 4344 — V
1 M4k 434k 49'k . :
1 30V* 3044 SM* ....
34 *311* 4294k 4301* +2 14 1*44 I* 2*4*
4 7244 721* 72*4 + 41
9 5*44 334* SSI*
4 24*4 244* 34*4 +
* 1444 1244 1*4* +
KlmbClark 2 Kopptr, Co 1 Korvolt*
I M *244 (1 +
i Hi* |i mw +
9 174* 374* 3744 +
23 1* 134* 1344 - 1
II 1*44 1*4* 1*44 - 1 29 3044 3044 304,.+ '
I Cora III, 1.9*1
LoneS Cem 1 LoneS G*t ' LonglsILI 9i
I 1544 1244 - 1
i *44 444
........j iff* rm —'
H 271* 274* 27W+ 1
, 1544 1544 1344 — 1
2 2144 214* ij*k + 1
4 35U 2544 25V. ...
«l 33V. 324k 324k - 4
12 |4k 14* 144
17 *34* 434* 434* - 1
i Singpr Co 2 i Smith K 1.20* i SoconyM 3 *0
S10IINJ 2.13* StdOilOh 1.(0 21 Packaging StauHCh 1.20 SterlOrug .70
> TfxGSut .*0
Texlrgn 1.*0 1 ! Thiokol 1.121, ' Tldewat Oil
UnilMAM. 1 USBorax J0a USGVpsum 3
7 4J4 4V„ 4J, T to I CHICAGO- (AP) - Soybean 1 199 sf* 5H» fr +V*! and grein futures were steady !* 8=4 S'* S'! -1** 'to mostly higher in moderately a? 5!to Sto S'! I,.to ori*ve market today on the
37 *$to as1* *5*4 + to1 Board of Trade.
| if S 4ito o ' + to} About an hour after the open-13 14,4 Hi/. ?!,* + j ing soybeans itjere V* to % cents i ™ «” *m *i4* Z 4* Ia bushel higher, November I l, 32’. 32’/. ii'/. _ 14! $2.78%; wheat was % to 1 cent | 57 am km *74*+.a bushel- higher, December I » Irn 'Ii* + $1.50; corn unchanged to % j
1 Im Sto Sto 1 to1 hightfr, December $1.22%; oats:
*$ 43to St* - 4*!1/4 ^ higher, December 67% J
«s Mto 2744 m + ^ • cent and rye was V* Id % I 20 +44 V? *4* *■ 44 j December $1.28.
41 35 3«* 34*4 + v. I
2 5244 534* 3244
—T— A
38 224*' 21*4 22
70 04to 0344 (44k
*34k I
5|
N-Blcfst
Set Off in Nevada
'Peaceful'
McckTrk l.M
MartlnMar 1 MavOr- •* McCall
Miner Ch .80
5 43to 4244 4244 >.
42 224* 3144 22. . + 4k
31 IN (Ni *544
10 37 3*44 IF + to
21 MR* 1144 1*4* - to
17 5* 5344 M4k + *k
* 244k 3444 t*4k -44
5 3*44 Mto 3*4*
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2 494k Mto 404k
41 *24* 174k 2* f 1*
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3 39 to 39'T *»to + to
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7 274* 2744 274* + 4*
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272 5*4k 3544 5*4* +14
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+ to WASHINGTON (AP) - An-[other test biaat hr ttie effort to 1 £ develop peaceful uses for nu-+ cl«r energy -was set off todpy _ H]pt the Atomic Energy Commis-+ kon’s, Nevada test site.
+1* The AEC said the blast was n Sik. S5 Jm t 51 of low intermediate yield, iff iSk iSk iSk i. to meaning it had a force equiva->9 MV* Si* Sto + to lent «» from 20 to 200 kilotons j w 3* 39 — 4* j of TNT. It was the fourth test m S’4 'm *94* / H l this year in Project Plowshare, ’! "to Si* + 4* for development of p e a c e f u 1 2* i*lH in'* iS" +44? uses of atomic energy.
I 35to i 18% +
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9 43% 43 43% -
■ if ■ m% » i
14 40% 39% 40% -
579 40% 39% 40 «
23 49% 48% 69% -
1 38% 33 33
37 29% 21 5 47% 43
—X—
131 131% 11
—Y—
21 S2% SI
Zfrblth 1.20a I 09% 48%
Salat figures 4f» unofficial. Unless ttfianwlit nofad, ran dahdt In IfW foregoing t»hi* .t dfsburtamfntt based on 1
i Hillsdale to Expand
j HILLSDALE (AP)-Hiilsdale to I College will break ground Sat-! £ | urday for construction of a $1.7 mUlion building to be known*, as u I Strosacker Science Center.
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M lar IM* yaor. I -Paid In stack during 1963, 4«Hmg»*il cash valug-jn n-givWmS or MiUjiirftgilM (tot*. g-PiM tail year, h DtclorM or paid iftor tlock dlvktond m " Nfl b-^taclarOjl' or p*M IM,
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American Slocks
NOON AMiKKAN
NEW YORK (AP) - Following Is * lid of solictod (tack troniocttoni on the Amor Icon (lock Exchong* with/noon price,:
(hdi.) High Low LaN Chg.
Aud Oil B O AttojCp wl BonwtEng
Brl* Pol Campb Chib Con lo Per Cdn Javelin -
cW Ciitad. x—Cx dividend, y—Bu I
4w ..1~ In W+, 4-4|h—EX dldl
xw-Without . i
Oraper l.M 45 +*’■ 43to
, Equity Cp .Ilf 7 3 3
Forgo Oita TO 2to 24k
FlyTIgor 1 I 0
Gen Dtvef 4 41* 44*
Giant Ygl Mo 7 124k llto ■iiWllig 24 14* lto
Qt BN Pot .-* i 244
GuE Am Ld 1$ Ito 2
M 34* 3to 344 -
H 15’/, 154* lift
2 544 5*> 544 +
'MmW? 27to • +
Molybden
NtwPkMng .]• ... . n, j— ,t. t Panes! Prf 143 fit Sto 2to +
NIC Group 3.2313 Ito 344 34* -
_________________________ Jcurfie Boln . » 1*1* ISto M -
rrnww. wt—When tatitod. n* NOkt dey 3*d W Air 0 7 (ft (ft
(pUvgry. . - ■ , ¥:'■ /. HBnN)W A 4 O M ,«4k 30 +
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batag fataaonlMd undo, the Bankruptcy i Syntax Cp iog w Mto # Mto +
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pen to*, ta—Portion Iset ferOd (quemdtlen lex.
5 . - *
c Successful *
*Investing *
* o * 1
By ROGER E. SPEAR Q: “My husband is baying I stocks like crazy. I know he : cannot afford to do this since I our income is low and he has made no provision for the fu-! ture of our 8-year-old son. I ! can never find his stocks listed anywhere. Please comment i on the list enclosed. I guess | I’ll have to get him to join Gamblers Anonymous.” J.S.
A: It is very hard for many men to resist the lure of the low-priced stock or to cease regarding the market as a glorified roulette wheel. - ■
- Your husband's shares — with one exception — are not listed anywhere because most of them have very little value. The one exception is Strategic Materials,. which is sometimes found in over-the-counter stock list-.They are 4 bid and I believe they' should be soldi
C-Through Products is 3% bid, and perhaps you can persuade your- husband to sell this one, too. United Utilities of Florida is 3T» bid. On the balance there' is either no market or a bid measured in pennies.
Your husband has embarked on a dangerous and, I believe, hopeless quest for easy money. You have my deepest- sympathy but I can do no more for you.
* * - w
Q: “Could you please tell me what has happened to Campbell Soup stock? Please j answer, for I need help and cannot .afford losses.” I.M..
A: There is Nothing the matter with Campbell Soup ahares. The stock split was over-discounted and brought a runup on price which was unwarranted. Earnings in the first six months : of 1964 showed a gain, but were j .somewhat less than bed been anticipate^.
You own a fine growth issue ] which has lifted earnings in j every year of the past decade ; and has doubled -dividend* dur- j ing that period.
If you truly cannot pfford losses, you' should never buy | stocks, if you wiU forgive my saying so. I believe, however, that the decline here is tern- j porary, and I definitely advise , you to hold your riiares.
, Mr. Spear cannot answer ail. 'mail personally blit will answer all questions possible in hi s column. j
(COPYRIGHT 1884) . , j
| the end of October.
The implication of this and
atomic installations on the Chinese mainland.
’ ★ * * -The United States also is understood to have had evidence -that the Chinese were in the final Stage of preparation for testing. *
EASY DETECTION U. S, officials believe the first Chinese explosion will be an atmospheric shot easily detectable by American devices which re-, cprd earth shocks, sound waves, -and the level of radioactive fallout in the air at great distances from a test site.
. Speculation is. that the test will be held in China's remote Sinkiang Province.
News in-Brief
Marvin Miller, 3141 Lake Drive, Highland Township, told sheriff's deputies yesterday that his 10 • foot aluminum boat j valued-at $80 was stolen from its docking place on White Dike.
| Robert Taylor, 270 N. Rochester, Oxford Township, reported ' the theft of a saddle valued at $304 yesterday. •
Theft of $46 in cash and 170 canceled checks was reported yesterday in a break-in at Manpower, Inc., 14-S. Cass. Entry was gained by smashing a plate glass window in the front of die building.
Rummage Sale: Clothing-household, Oct, 11, 12, 13; Sun/ 2-8-p.m:, Mon.,-Tues., 10-8 p m. Temple Beth Jacob, at rear, of 79 Elizabeth Lake Rd. Adv.
Rummage Sale: 7 storms and screens, electric stove, 2 oak doors. Clothing and misc. items. 4882 Elizabeth Lake Rd., Fri., Sat. Adv.
Rummage Sale: St. Vincents Hall, Sat. 8-12. St. Joseph Guild.
Adv.
Coin show-auction, 13530 Le-sure-Grand River, 1 block W. of Schaefer. Sun.,-Oct 11,12, 10 to 6 p.m. Adv,
First Congregational Church Rummage Sale, Sat., Oct. 10, 8:30 till 12. E. Huron St. Adv.
Rummage Sale: 9 a.m.-6 p.tn., -------- 1628 N. Perry. • — adv.
DafSISam i Rumn,*ge Sale: 848 Friar,
I OSITIOn Milford, Oct. 9th-10th, 9-5 p.m:
— adv.
t—Tito cash position
np*rw, with corr*.j Household Sale: Avon Pavil-ii***0 oct. (/mil ion, Ludlow St., Rochester, Sat,,
MM.949.S59.M 0 9,099,55*.2M,1I' Oft 10, 10 8.01-5 p.m. . AdV.
tmiV ■■ijflffiffiflT1’"****'* White Lake-Commerce Re-
Geki aim^'1"'*" *7 (publicans invites every one td ,
is.463.079,582.61 is.I*3.2(7.(6(.37 visit their HDQ^s. Union Lake
fc^iu^J’ 30 Oow ,w, j Village. 363-9450. Adv.
other reports which have been ! j published in Paris is that the | I Chinese Communist officials are now in effect, confirming.! Secretary of State Dean Husk’s recent forecast of an ] early Communist Chinese nu-> clear detonation.
I Rusk said Sept. 29 that “Such an explosion might occur in the near future.” His statement is1 | known to have been based on late intelligence information, including high altitude, photo-j graphs, which showed construe- j I tion of large and advanced
Cancer Study Project Said Gamble by Sabin
MONTREAL (AP).-^ Dr. Albert Sabin, developer of the oral vaccine, says* his new project, cancer. reseaiyh, “is a gamble — I can’t say where we dill end up.”
“We must obtain the basic knowledge of how cancer works before we can develop a cure,” Sabin told a news^rfuiference at Montreal, where he spoke at fund - raising dinner of the Jewish appeal. Sabin does hi? work at Hie University of Cincinnati.
Crane in Pain Flew Mainly to the Plain
VANCOUVER B.C. (AP) -Note to hunters on the plain: If you spot a big, pale grey bird with a red head and wings six feet wide, don’t shoot!
.It may be Cecil, the crane, who escaped his Vancouver Zoo domain because, Curator Larry Lesage figures, ,he got a pain from constantly watching a nearby miniature train,
Treasury’
stock averagm Chicken Barbecue: Saturday,
CwigUM »» Tb*^A,t*ttotai^Pr*M j Oct. 18, 4:30-7, p.m,, St. Paul Ram urn. si#,*, Methodist, 165 Square Lake Rd.
Cltong*
I 104.7 i«3:2 3214
___ Rummage Sale: Furniture,
Sol Jill !Sj SI dishes, clothes 26630 Captains
Si } IS Si & Lane. Franklin Village 626-3063.
34U 1210 )H9 2417 Oct. 10. AdV.
FDjctojM^ i Patio Rummage Sale: -.1*32 d Record SSo 1 Beechmont off 'Orchard Lake > 4 (MN obtoj jy KeegA Harbor. Monday U r iGto *J»f4p-m. , i... Adv, ’
;-r
Professor Gets Posf CHICAGO (AP)-Dr. Norman F. Miller, jof Ann Arbor, was elected second vice president of the American College .of -Surgeons here Thursday. Miller is a professor of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Michigan, ", .,
A TASTY TREAT
(3
'HIDAY. OCTOHKR 9. 1964
YOUTHFUL CAMPAIGNERS-The sons and daughters of Sen. Barry Goldwater, Republican presidential candidate, and his running mate, Rep. William Miller, have'beeil pitching in
to heJp their parents and the GOP ticket. They are (from left) Barry Jr., 26, and Michael, 24, sons of Goldwater; and Mary Karen, 17, and Elizabeth, 20,. daughters of Mijler.
Young Corps i GOP Battle
WOODWARD AVE. and 1414 Mile BIRMINGHAM Ml 4*2 7? 7
PINE
KNOB
GOES
DIXIE
LAND
THE FIVE DIXIE \ DUKES AT PINE KNOB ON FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS
WASHINGTON (AP) - Libby Miller, 20,, attractive and photo* genic, thought she might , make some weekend appearances with her mother and dad this fall in the election campaign.
But. now she’s out making speeches on her own, an enthusiastic . campaigner for the Republican ticket of Barry Goldwater for president and her father, William E. Milter, for vice president.
* * A
So is her younger and equally attractive sister„ Mary Karen, 17.
They're the feminine half of a young quartet out on the campaign road for the Republicans, Hie others are the two sons of Goldwater, Barry Jr., 26, and Michael, 24.
The Democrats have barbecues for young citizens, which President Johnson’s daughters, Lynda and Luci, attend.
The fqur Republican sons and daughters have launched the “Go Goldwater Jamborees, ' aimed strictly at the young voters.
* * ★
At the GOP jamborees,, the fare is ‘Barry burgers,” Polish potato salad made from Mrs. Miller’s recjpe and soft drinks called gojd water.
Libby (real name Elizabeth i Anne) admitted in an interview today that she hasn’t had a chance yet to try Barry burgers," “but’ I know they’re good.”
NOT THE SAME.
She’s not saying how different
'Help' Is Helpless; Pair Cries Help
NEWCASTLE ON TYNE, I (.England >/P — Allan Morgan J and his wife advertised for a young housekeeper-hurse to help out around their home I and look after their three | young childrep.
CLARKSTON, MICH.
CALL 625-2641 I Mrs- Cecily Hill applied
★
Fine Food and Liquors for Over 125 Years Music by
The Do-Mi-Sol Trio Russ Stump J i ni ..Moore Harry Jones
Dancing Fri. and Sat. Nights
THE
WHITE HORSE INN
from London and “We thought I our dreams had been answered,” safiMorgan. They I agreed to take her on trial j and sent her the money for a ( one-way train ticket.
At the station they found Mrs. Hill In a wheelchair.* She’s 77 and lives in a home for the aged.
' “We were shocked,”' said
Morgan.
> He told he*" she ’wouldn’t be I suitable for the job and bought her a return ticket. She didn't like the idea.
* ★ *
Morgan said she insisted1’ on ordering double whiskies " at t the station bar. Finally he | called the police. I.
Mrs. Hill 4as adamant, i FAVORITE SPOT
“I like it here,” she said | ”, from her wheelchair. “I spent I I my honeymoon here many j 1 years ago.”
:i Mrs. HiU is a widow.
Newcastle’s welfare com- j I raittee talked Mrs. HiU into
returning to the old folks home in London, but only after she spent three days in Newcastle* at the city's expense.
“I was arrtdzed,” she said j on her return, “They didn’t even , give me a trial. They just said they couldn't use me.
★ * ★
“I could have looked’ after j their home, and I love, chil- 1 dren. They should have let me try.
WWW
“Yes, 1 didn't mention my age. You see,* I was born in Ireland and-still have a little toych of the blarney." * .
| they are from plain old hamburgers.
j As for the potatd salad — I “I’ve had that for 20 years add I it’s good.” „ ■
w .< w w
The jamboree series opened 1 with a rally on the University of ! Pittsburgh/campus last Satur-I day, with a crowd of about 4,-Looo.
I I will continue this Saturday in Chicago. There will be a third rally in Austin, Tex., Saturday, Oct. 17, and a fourth and last rally the following weekend in California at a place still to be decided.
ON WEEKENDS -Of necessity, the jamborees are on weekends because of school, Libby is a senior, majoring in modern language^, at Sacred Heart at NewtonCbllege outside Boston? Mary Karen goes to high school there.
Barry Jr. took leave from his stockbroker job in Los Angeles and Michael left his trainee post in a Phoenix bank earlier-this year to campaign for their father.
W' w w
Libby attends Young Republican meetings in New England, near her college,, when she caii during the week,
She writes her own speeches.
, “I didn't know whom to ask to I •help me, and (hen I decided I’d really ljjce to express my own thoughts,” she said.
NOT POLITICAL She doesn't, discuss political j issues —-“I feel I don't know enbugh about0that."
“I talk about the role of youth ■ and what we can do in the eiec-i tion,” she said. “I’ve found so I much enthusiasm on the part of young people. They want to do. ['something.’ ’
WWW
[ Libby said she was a little scared at first with the press conferences and interviews, “but you do become used to it — if you just think of people like ordinary people.”
As for campaigning — “I enjoy it very much,”, she said. “I just love to meet people and see all the different parts of the country.’’ •
JAMBOREE SPONSORS The jamborees are sponsored by Young* Americans for Gold- j water-Milier, headed by Reps. J John M. Ashbfook, R-Ohio, and Albert.W. Watson, D-S.C. The organizations include Young Republicans, Youth for Go|d-water-Milier, Young Americans for Freedom, and Young Demo-i crats" and Independents for GoldwaterrMiller.
Stress on Aid to Disturbed
Romney lists Gpals in Mental Health -
DETROIT* (AP) -Gov. George Romney, says Michigan in the next two years will pay special attention to providing services “for the alarming num-| her .of disturbed children and ! adolescents" needing treatment.” j . "’Speaking to the Michigan! Mental Health Assembly, Rom-1 ney listed thtf among several major objectives for the state’s mental health program.
w * w w #i ! ]-' Another,'he said, is continued] pr6motion of the expansion ofj j mental health services on, the I community levels | In addition, he said, “we will]
! continue to support, and en-1 courage research in the pre- j j vention and treatment of men-!
(tal illness and retardation.” j j SAYS BEST YEAR #
! Reviewing what he called “the exceptional gains which, have been realized in the last twq years,”. Romney said 1963 probably would be remembered best as the* year in which the community mental health services act was passed.
©The law permits a comity or group of counties to form a local mental health board to-study local needs and submit a comprehensive program plan to the state.
W W' ' w •
If the State Department of Mental ’Health approves, the state splits the .costs with the local board.
ANNOUNCING .
UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT
THE DRAYTON INI
»gigs Dixie Hwy. OR 3-9391 Drayton Plnins
CONTINUING LIVE ENTERTAINMENT and DANCING . . . FEATURING
THE ELDOKADOS •
with MACK VICKERY—Vocalist I Wednesday thre Sunday 9:00 P.M. tu 2«00 A.M.
JAM SESSION SUNDAY 4:00 ML
^■presents
1 Tie • „
"fimliujiiuj EMoroHoj .
Every
TL’ES., WEI)., FRI. & SAT. NlTE
4769 Dixie Hwy.. OR 4-0022
(•tortie Slovens, Your Hoti - *
SQUARE and R0UKD
DANCING
CAMPUS BALLROOM • New Larger Orchestra -Watties, Fextrtts, Rcmhas, Cha-Chat — Ms Square B.ncln. eh Saturday Nites
Garden Cantor Ballroom
2957 Woodward, Dotroit
Thurt.. Sat.. Sim.
PUS BALLROOM
House of
Seafoods
Now Live Maine LOBSTERS
* FROG LEGS Roadhouse Style
★ French Fried GuH SHRIMP it Golden Fried
Maryland SCALLOPS it Broiled LOBSTER TAILS , it Broiled WHITEFISH shipped direct from Mackinaw City
LOBSTER Newburg Choice of , Homemade
try Our Special Steak Dinner $2.95
Also selections from our regulor menu l
MOREY’S XM, CLUB
An American toad kept in captivity ate 9,936 different in*. sects in a three - month period, according to the Encyclopaedia J Britannica.
Dinner at
BLOOMFIELD MILLS PONTIAC MALL
imwaiCflireflavitodiagaEBiigi
e Sky ism
VE - IN M ?*** '
THE SCREEN COMMITS THE PERFECT COMEDY!
ashJ2Iinthe”
Ha-g."!iDARK
THIS ISIHE BIG ONE!
DANNY ZELLA and His ZELTONES
Far your Dancing and Listening pleasure. Every Toes., Wed., Fri., Sat. and Sun.NigMs.
PETER
SELLERS I The story of what ELKE four men did too
MB*
: Dell’s Inn
Center of Elizabeth ] Labe and Com Lake I Roods , I I Shari Mark We»t <
The bullet! Of a very high calibre 36-26-36!
5 Call Far HoBarvations FE 2-2981 JI(iMHMMMMjiMMMAIM«allMMMMMHiMliiaMMMf,-
ROBERTTAYIDR DEBORAH KERR leogenn-petousiwov
Her money will | corrupt a town to
C—9
Do Yoti Need Protection?
Uniformed Armed Quards and , Patrolmen, Plein Clothesmen FOR ALL OCCASIONS!
. .* ft”?"*1. » «*»« Hw«f. • Imoll factwh*
> • "MM Strni • Ants OmIwi • VkMh H«mk
______ • *wk £««»»• Hwvy Iquipnwnl Tr.Wc licort
NIOHTLY OAR PATHOLS 14 HR. SERVlOE . . . CONSTANT COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL PATROLS
' • Money Policy • Drlva-ln'i
[' MODERN RADIO DISPATCHED CRUISERS P “KNIGHT” PATROL
Call 338-3511
HEIRESS. WINS ANNULMENT—Typewriter heiress Gamble Benedict, 23, (left) was granted an annulment 61 her four-year marriage to ex-chaffeur Andre Porumbeanu in a New York court yesterday. With her are
AP Phalofox
. Porumbeanu’s first wife, Helma (right) and Helma's 15-year-old daughter, Georgette. The first Mrs. Porumbeanu testified her husband had been “a lecher, a leech and a drunk.” Porumbeanu did not contest the annulment.
Shirley Temple Considers New Career in TV Series
M-59 NOW OPEN
WOODY MARTENS
Playing 7 Night* Weekly!
liuiBOfsmeii's Hot Bvffet Luncheons Served Daily 1! A.M. to 2 P.M. AIRWAY LOUNGE
AT
4825 W. Huron (M-59)
Aintgif Xane4
Phone 674-0424
Now Appearing FRI. and SAT. Nights
Tim BLUE ANGELS
FEATURING OWEN O'BERRY On VOCAL
On* of the He oof 5-piece group* in the
OPEN 7 DAYS WEEKLY! Luncheon$ and Dinner$ Served Daily
SPECIAL SALAD TABLE for LUNCH and DINNER
' By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-TV Writer
HOLLYWOOD—Another career for Shirley Temple? ft could happen.
In the 1930s Shirley became the most successful child sttur in the history of the movies. Later she made the transition to young-lady roles in films like “The Bachelor THOMAS and The Bobby Soxer” and “Since You Went Away.”
* * a
After the failure of her marriage to John Agar, Shirley retired to become Mrs. Charlff Mack; wife of a business executive. Four years ago she returned to acting with'her own television show, on which she introduced and occasionally starred in fairy tales.
Now ABC and 20th Century-Fox are trying to induce her to return for a weekly series. She was in Hollywood a month ago for talks at Fox, which she kept solvent in the depression years. NO SCRIPT
. . Via telephone from her home at Woodside, south of San Fran-cisco, she commented: “We've been talking about a series .since last March, but so far 1. haven’t seen a script. So I can’t! really decide until I do.
.,« TONITE fEESZSk • •
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ih a fWiP Hbmdh iamlH
JKKUMMMRonwSCMm
DSbtiwPWWWt’MICHAEL CONNORS twiMlwimaouswMamauws
EdmntG. Robinson
IADULTS
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Shorts 1iM > till • I:1U • Mil FEATURE lltt- 4(11 - 7:01 • MS
“But I think I would enjoy doing a series. My family liked it wheh I’m away. At .least Charlie says I’m easier to live with when I’m working. And my children are always interested when I’m doing some acting. So I've got some fans rooting for me, anyway.”
, ★ ★ ★
Shirley, now 35, said she wouldn’t mind the travel. Los Angeles is only 50 minutes away by jet, sfie pointed out, and she got used to the 400-mile commuting during her two-year run with her previous series. She was awarded a 100,000-mile plaque by one air -line, and she traveled others as well.
“I understand they don’t shoot movie on Saturday any more,” she added. “That would give me a long weekend to be at home.” DIDN’T MIND WORK Until recent years, studios maintained a six-day work week. “But I didn’t mind working on Saturdays when, I was young,” RmMey said .“In fact, I liked it because I didn’t have to go to school.”
Even without the acting, Shir-
Patrolman Will Fill Waterford Post
Appointment of Patrolman Alton Dbud to fill a detective vacancy on a tempo/hry basis was announced today by Waterford Township Police Chief William Stokes.
Doud, 30, of 1319 Jeffwood will begin his new duties Monday. He has .been a member of the Waterford force for nearly five/
Doud replaces Det. Jack Hart who resigned this week after 10 I years with the department.
KSZKEEGO
ley keeps busy, as sher-Tias Ml her life. She has been working in educational television in San Francisco. She serves regularly in a children’s day clinic. And she was recently made an honorary governor of the San Francisco chapter of the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences.
* * * *
“All my activities are in the morning,” she explained. “I'm home by 2 when the children start to come home.”
The children 'are Susan, 16 and a high school senior; Charlie, 12; and Lori, 10. None displays any yen to follow their mother’s profession, although Susan is devoted to ballet. /
Hunt Escapee From Asylum
SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP) — Another search-was on today for LesJje Douglas Ashley, a onetime female impersonator who drew the death penalty tor kill-big a Houston man in 1961 but later was adjudged insane.
, His disappearance from a state mental hospital here was disclosed Thursday. Officers said a woman attendant on leave from the hospital apparently wont with him and they probably headed for Arkansas of Missouri. 1 ,
It Was slightly more than 3% years ago that FBI agents arrested Ashley, now 26, and a girlfriend in a New* York City apartment. He and Carolyn Ann Lima were take back to Houston and convicted of shooting Fred Tones, 44, during a sex party in Tones’ real, estate office. The partly burned body of Tonies was dumped in a ditch.
Both were sentenced to die but won new trials on the ground that Diet. Atty. Frank Briscoe of "Houston had suppressed evidence. Miss Lima, now 21, is serving a five-year term on her second conviction.
IN PONTIAC IT’S
STEAK HOUSE
Serving Fine Food and Liquor SATURDAY QUARTERBACK CLUB BUFFET LUNCH TIL 5-S1.50 “Dedicated to Your Dining Pleasure"
15 N. CASS AVENUE - FE 4-4732
WoJbbtm -Hotel/
PIKE and PERRY
FOR RESERVATIONS CALL FI 5-6168
CATERING TQ:
• BANQUETS • MEETINGS
HOME OF THE FAMOUS WALDRON BUFFET Food at It's Boat. (Home Style) Buffet, or Table Service — 3 Timet Daily
TAP and TEMPEST ROOMS/
Mon.-Sat. 4 P.M. to 6 P.M. / /-—Special Low Prices— /
NTT E R T A I N/M E N T NIGHTLY
FAMILY NIGHT Every Friday
DANCING NIGHTLY ’
NOW!!!
M!around the Wnr^
7^ uumefS
SATURDAY
With This Coepea
isife __________
MISSION OFTHEiS
no!1
K '“ C—10
THE-PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, IQ64
• PROBLEM LOT — Gathering flowers from her tiered back- garden is Mrs. Vera E. Norwall of 827 Provihcetown, Once a problem site, the corner lot is now a neighborhood showplace. Railroad ties prevent the higher
TRAILER YARD - Mrs. Dial Shepherd of lot A-5, Pontiac Mobile Home Park, 229 E. -Walton Blvd., displays the engraved placque won by the Shepherds in the management’s annual “attractive yard” ‘contest. Grinning her approval at the judges’ selection is 4-year-old Lisa Shepherd. Included in the
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fr Heavy Duty Cast Iron KOHLER ENGINE .* LATEST 1M4 MODEL!
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FINAL CLOSE-OUT
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CLOSE-OUT
BIG 10-H.P. Springfield HIDING TRACTOR
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Hero's Your Chance to Get a Quality Year 'Round Tractor _______AT TERRIFIC SAVlNGSI
TOM’S HARDWARE
Open Daily’til 6 p.m., Friday ’til 9 p.m., Sun. 9 to 2
905 Orchard lake Aw. FE 5-242
Oak Wilt Plagues Trees in Nation
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pi. UH —Under a renewed ,grabt of $12,000 from thb Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture, research on oak wilt, a disease that has felled thousands of trees throughout the nation in recent years, will continue at Pennsylvania State University.
fungus can be transmitted between healthy ees, or by insects it up in open wounds of trees and transferring \WNTIAC
Keego Hardware No. I Tom’s Hardware 3041 Orchard Lake Rd. 905 Orchard Lake Avp. 602-2660 I FE 5-2424
OPEN SUNDAY TIL 2 P.N.
OUT TOUR HUNTINQ LICENSE NOW
SMALL GAME and DEER
INSULATED
UNDERWEAR
for those “ALASKAN" wind* •now and cold weather a Dacron Insulation
e Full Zippor Front
COMPLETE SUIT VQfl Rag. 12.75 f
Others to 19.88 ■.Sox.
INSULATED JACKETS
(SURCOATS)
Poplin
Jackets
Too!
Reg.
14.95
INSULATED SKI JACKETS
Reg
17.95
$1 Holds Any Osnusnt in Layaway TH Hov. 1st! HUMIDIFIER
Nop to th. tim. to Mart thinking about your tor-nac*. Thit humidifi.r bat N.opr.n. diaphragm chroma-platod valv., and •ncloi.d valv. soat. EnNra unit fit. inti I
"KLEENSWEEP'
PARKER
25” Lawn Sweeper
VES and DEBRIS MIR gtWM-
2188
SWEEPS LEAVES and DEBRIS OFF YOUR LAWN
Reg. $
29.96 w
BOOTS
GUTTER GUARD
th* modi. 6"x25" roll. K..p«1.ov.> and bird, out of th. futt.r. (45)
*“ $2.99
STOP AIK FILTERS
3-*1"
or 49c each
36” ALUMINUM
THRESHOLD
* $| 59
CimplM. wlotoiSvilui
CAULKING CARTRIDGE WHITE 4-*!00
MASKING TAPE %”*180” 63c
SHOP BIG 4 for BIB VALUES
POTTED
EVERGREEN5
Charge It Sib. bu HORTICULTURAL potting •oil; 3-lb. African Violat aoiL
Charge It Fine aoil conditioner to top-dress'lawn* and enrich garden*.
FINE QUALITY ‘K-BRANDf 10-6-4 LAWN FERTILIZER
Garden Discount Solo
Gordon
Discount Sale t
Rich-growing, beautiful-blooming African violet plant* in attractive 3" plastic pot*. Another K-mart Gordon Discount yon won’t want to mist!
Kount'e “K-Brand” 1044 formula fertiliser, tested, proven reliable in enriching your lawn, producing h—tihtpe gad more productive gardens.
K-Marf Saving^ On
K-Mart Savings On
20-Gallon 1 GARBAGE r GAN
Charge It
Galvanised; perforated all-metal fooled trash burner.. Maximum air circulation for faster, more efficient burning. Tight-fit lid for safety.
Strong, pre-galvanised, rust-resittant garbage ean wlth cover. Big 20-gallon siaC. Animal* proof proteetiea for trash and garbage. Save!
AFRICAN VIOLET POT
27t
Charge It
4” diameter plastic tub-and-saucer planter. As* sorted colors. .
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1964
C—ll
NEW YORK (UP!) - There’s no need for your green to turn brown wtth the first Croat.
With proper fluorescent light, tag the home gardener can enjoy summer’s green right through Winter.
Your florist and garden start can advise on the best arrangement of lights. /
The bast arrangement usually is a combination of b* candescent bulbs and fluorescent tabes in the ratio of one 40 watt fluorescent to sae IS watt incandescent, said the
But cool white fluoroscents can be used alone with good results.
Incandescents alone, however, may not always have foe proper balance of red and blue light wave lengths.
Short day ^plants — chrysanthemums, gardenias, Christmas begonias add poinsettias — need M to 13 hours of light per day J^o flower. The rest of the day in darkness gives the plants time to assimilate food.
Long day plants need 14 to U hours of light to bloom. Included are China asters, dahlias, nasturtiums, and fuchsia. HOURS OP LIGHT Indeterminate plants will blossom in varying degrees of abundance with anything from 12 to 18 hours of. light.
His group includes most bouse plants — African violets, gloxinias, begonias, go-
WORK WELL
Light fixtures and accessories
»-asatar ■srA'SMSa
St JSM 3£5
Protection Sought for Plant Life
Garden tods stay safe and snug In this tool house which can. be incorporated into a beck yard fence. Structure is framed in Douglas fir 2x4s and has shingled shed roof. Vertical tongue-and-groove fir siding blends with any vertical fence pattern, may be allowed to weather for easy upkeep.
Fully Ripe Squash Will Keep Better
while the blue regulate
plntoryqnfemolFluli ■ , o« ^ ^ . „
The duration of light also expensive automatic timer t
If you are planning to store winter squash and pumpkins, leave them on the vines until they are thoroughly ripe.
They will Keep better if they art fully ripe before harvesting. Select the storage place for its moderately warm temperature.
A fatty add sprayed oh plants is being tested as a protection against frost and drought.
The the treatment with a dilute solution of decenylsuodnic add, an unaaturstod fatty substance, was reported by Dr. Pte-tar J. C. Kuiper of the Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station. He found that this preparation' sprayed on peach, apple and --pear blossoms protected most of the flowers at temperatures as low as M degrees.
la greenhouse experiments with bean plants, the station reported that the acid treat* meat helped resist drying out as well as eoU.
During a severe drought last June, Dr. Kuiper reported, young hemlock seedlingss dipped in the solution for M'houn before planting became well established, while untreated seed-
recently through plant jj protection would be a boor to ■the backyard grower of/foma* Succeas of the experiment taitoes add tender plants, as well
as to foe commercial horticul-
■ Dr. Kuiper is on leave from the staff of the Agricultural Ud versity at Wagentagen, The
The smallest earthquake releases about a thousand times more energy then an atomic bomb. The largest releases energy equivalent to about 100,000 atomic bombs..
lings farad poorly,
jSmt
is critical. Plants are (reaped j turn foe lights on and intertills.
I short day, laag day, aad required ini
Rotenone dust Is an^excellent control tor foe Mexican bean beetle.
The station said the practical value of fois breakthrough in knowledge ^ water relations of plants.— an area under in ten siv^ study at this experimental plant laboratory, remains to be demonstrated.
Frost and drought are ofil enemies of gardeners. Thus far, protection against loss of crops and plants from these foes has been mechanical —
OPEN DAILY 10-l O,. SUNDAY, 12-7
SAT., SUN., MON
, TUES
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hot water you want, when you want it, you get all your money back, including any you may have spent on installation. And it doesn’t matter where you bought your electric water heater. The Edison guarantee still applies. No strings attached. Fair enough?
EDISON
If you buy an electric water beater during October, we’ll see that you get a free GE double-bed-size electric blanket. (As if you really needed the extra push.)
This offer is good at participating appliance dealers, department stores, or plumbing contractors. Just look for our free offer display.
CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD
C—18
THE, PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDA V,OCTQBEB9, 1804
Tokyo, with a population ofjered the largest city in thel The admiftistration of Presi-1 ered aeven sessions of Congress I more than I million, is coosid- ] World. [dent Franklin D. Rooseveitcov-.|—the 73rd through the 7fth. [
WKC
108 N. SAGINAW
IRS Unveils Simplified Tax form 1040
STUNNING DIAMOND SPLENDOR!
Newest diamond fashions tfiat bring dew sparkle, new beauty, new gloittour in matching 14K white or natural gold ensembles.
MATCHING DIAMOND BRIDAL DUO
*189
WASHINGTON (UPI)-Cheer up, taxpayers. The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) says it is going to tie easier to figure out how big an income tax bill you owe the government.
IRS officials yesterday un-eiled a new and simplified version'of the form 1040 which many persons use to compute their income tax. It will go dut to taxpayers about Jan. 1 for returns on income earned this year.
The new form refle'cts changes made by the Revenue Act of 1M4, which reduced in- | come taxes $11.5 billion and | made 40 other changes in the tax law.
Officials also said the _. form will be easier to fill out, I enabling about 22 million taxpayers to use only a single shett to figure their tax. They said an additional .22 million were expected to use the card
form.....
A total of 63 million returns is expected to be filed before fixe
$160 for each exemption.
The instructions will -contalh extra tables to help taxpayers make a choice between'the new minimum standard deduction and fiw regular standard deduction. Taxpayers still will be able to itemize deductions if they-
Under the new deduction, a taxpayer may claim a minimum of ISM plus $1N for each exemption.
For married couples ■ filing separate returns, the minimum standard deduction is |1M plus
HAtD
OF
HEARING?
VI$«T
MONTGOMERY WARD \ Gall $82-4940 for AppointmMt
April IS deadline next year,
the IR8 said.
It said the face-lifting of the 1040 form was the biggest it has undergone in the last 10 years.
The major changes are:
• Taxpayers will list their exemptions -pn* the front of the sheet instead of page two. Children will not have to be listed i byname.
• Single line summaries wtll| replace some of the detailed ac-T counting now required on the I faee of the return.
• The taxpayer will sign his name .op page one. The IRS j said that many persons forgot to
when the space was on the amkiucA1® lar®est pamilV cuoThIn® Chaim second page."
a The form has been revised , for the new minimum standard deduction provided in the 1064
ur
Saturday only!
PILE-LINED COATS, PLAID-LINED CAR COATS AT TERRIFIC SAVINQSI
14.88
Monday they go b to I9.PJ
... one of • group in muted plaids and solid colon... pile lined, quilt-lined sleeves... misses and petite sizes.
PLAID-UNSD CAR COAT ... new version of the loden , cmt... piped And ttftoiwd .tewJ*e...wooU)rfo*Ac^
4>kdd lining... mine* sfoss.
Him WHY . W. Mn f„
YOU (AVI t JStZf *ergm
'__ * We Uw — tnSi Uoa.1
lOailT HAU. * Tee a*e b*cavM ■» level
• UTICA: Vu Dyke Rd. I«st North of 12 Mile Id.
• PONTIAC: 200 North Saginaw Street i
• ClADISTOM-WATEDF01D: or Dixit Hiykway
Jwt North of Waterford Bill
m
VTHB PONTIAC! PRESS. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1964
D—1
Df. Wayne C. Brandstadt Says:
Some Bothered by Blood Drug
Q-6hotM J worry about poe-
sible side effects from Eutonyl. .My doctor preicribed it for high blood pressure.
A—Eutocyl is
ly believed ty be free of serf-ous side effects,
*it has recently, been shown that in some persons it causes BRANDSTADT
an increase rather than a decrease in Mood pressure.
* * *• * Anyone who is.taking this new drug should have periodic blood counts, urinalyses and liver function tests. Persons who take it should also avoid cheese, all alcoholic beverages, cold remedies, sinus decongestants and weight-reducing pins.
SLEEP ATTACK . Q—Is it possible for a person with mild epileptic attacks ,t ohave at attack during sleep?
NORTH «
*QJ10«4
VKI79S
♦ None 4IT1
WEST EAST
*A A 02
¥04 ¥914 .
♦ Q762 OAJ843
♦ KQJ105S + AS84
SOUTH (D) AK87SS ¥ AQ62
♦ K10S8 A Non*
Eagt and Wggt vulnerable
Sentlt Wugt Nerth Baal
141*4 14 14
4 A • Page 4 4 Paw
4 V Pan Pag* ' Pam 14 Tata
A cue bid in diamonds seemed appropriate.
By this time Phil was roll-Bag deag in high gear. What could be mere logical than a heart cue bid? Nothing at aU! Phil bid four hearts.
A1 saw no reason to fool around any more. He merely bid two spades to start with. Now his brother had cue bid both Clubs and hearts. A1 jumped to six spades.
Phil studied a white, but after reviewing the bidding and noting that ATs first bid had«aly been two spades, be passetPand settled for the small slam. It was just as well. Seven te unmakable without the ace of trumps.
or svouev omam Hr MMh
"TM MM MM MM M . . . AMrolasy NWI Mm way ARIM (Mar. II (a Apr. through newspaper, library.
Lite \
A—Epileptic seizures during sleep are probably more common than those during waking hours.
- w * w Following anch an attack the viotim usually falls into a deop sleep from which ho cannot be immediately aroused. On waking later, he may discover that he has bitten his tongue or wet the bed. if convulsions wer^ severe, his muscles may be sore.
1 W ★
Q—IiSs any progress been made toward finding a real cure for epilepsy? I know ihete are many drugs to control this sickness.
CURE UNLIKELY A—I agree with you that a cure 1s desirable. But in the case of epilepsy, as with sp many diseases, the discovery of a cure in the strictest sense of
the Word is unlike^-
Cure always implies removing the caase, and when the cane b some developmental defect, inheritance of predisposing genes — or simply not
KERRY’S WORLD
wo have to settle for
known -control.
We are lucky to have found some very effective vjpys to con-: trol epileptic seizyrds in so many victims.
0—I am taking Dlanabol for osteoporosis. What are the side ^effects? % ■'a' -BUILDUP
A—Methandrostenolone (Dian-: abol) is given chiefly to build! up the body in persons who pin j underweight, convalescing from. a chronic debilitating disease, j arthritic or who have /osteopo-1 rosis.' * j/
It should not be taken J>y persons with liver disease or > men with prostatic cancer. j Persons whs take it regularly ; should have periodic liver function tests and should discontinue | the drag at the first sign of; jaundice.
/ * * *
/Large doses in women may | cause acne, excessive growth of hair on the face, waterlogging, or menstrtial irregularity. These dear up when the drug is dis- : continued.
By Jim Berry
By OSWALD JACOBY Chariton Wallace's article in ’ Bridle Writers’ Choice 1M4” shows a rubber bridge hand, bid by Phillip and Albert Steiner o f Cincinnati.
The Steiner brothers, with Charles: Rail and Richardl Wildberg, also | of Ckmfa won Rto team chaagftonship of StaM in IBM and promptly abandoned duplicate in favor of rubber bridge.
Chariton patois ori hew they nee cm bidding to reach a toy dewa spade 'atom with only If high card points to their combined hands.
Phil’s, opening spade bid was norms! and, after West’s two dub overcall, A1 chose to hid two spades only. He felt sure that the bidding was not going to die at two spades.
East bid throe dulp and Phil deckled he would lose nothing by cue bidding dibs.
West passed and Al’s six high card points began to look up.
Q—The bidding has been:
Weal North Bast Bantu
1 ¥ Dble. Paas a ¥
'Pass 3 A Pass 3 ♦
Past 14 Pass ? •
You, South, hold:
4X411 ¥S4 4AK953 +AZ What do you do?
A MS Bvo spades. Ton wont your partner to go to a atom if ha has aeeand round heart central.
TODAY’S QUESTION Your partper opens the bidding with one club. You, South,
"I'm not worried about a job, 'cause at the rate we’re goin’, the odda are 111 be war kin’ for the government.”
BOARDING HOUSE
f PERENNIAL FLOUR HEREBY AWARDS the OWLS CUM TMC *150 PRVZe FOR .CONSTRUCTING THE \ WORLD'S LARGEST PEPPERON1
[ Pizza -**mo feet in diameter/
> IRE NEXT LARGEST ENTRY WAS A FOUR-ROOT, ONE-PIECE 30B BAKED BY A VAGRANT ON A ‘ HOT MANHOLE COVER,UNDER, UNSANITARY CONDITIONS L
nmoiii
X Accept in '-O cool it,
BEHALF OF MY \ M A3pR /
, colleagues/A cool it/tu'
) 1 HAVE HERE A U LAST SPEECH BRIEF ADDRESS A YOU MADE X THOUGHT t£\ TURNED A SUITABLE FQRli CLUB OUT-jTHtfll MOMENTOUS A IN6 INTO A SLUMBER j TzQTZ?' l PARTY/J
tWm
KMP
•Metric
-fJWSuS (Aar. flLto Mm »; l fineness organized. Family immhr SP
SfiS. "ft- w*£ To'^n^as’I
PROFITS. Tonight- —--—-
. • lHu IMS
GEMINI XmvIPVPHIPPSI watchful tv, on public rsUitkona.
•war* of Imago you MM, On* 4 formerly waa an Mautlpta- . . riB) I
■oread rumors. Bo forthright. Prtctlea concaoft of OoMan Rule. ,
CANCER (Mm I * July S "good" to youraalf. Avoid axf Oofiln aytfklant ml. gatosa I
nwlm the crowd. Oon't bo ng winded aaaoclatoa. Par anfuy your aurroundlnga.
LEO Ow S to Ang. H): Pint_ I
••pact highlight! romanca, ttw «iclta-mant of OISCpveRY. Obtain hint from today's CANCER message. Oa aolocfivo, DISCRIMINATING. You can oet the beat
-ABItBVi.w.w. i—
You have much to oftor — ottwra hava much te give.
LIBRA (taut. 23 to Oct. 22): Ba forceful. direct. Your craotlv* powera coma •urging to tomtom. VW «fij| “ five . . . Intuition aarves at unni
HFk!7£F!3£tfUI
ITY. Don't permit associates to limit (Na»..a to,.Nov, «):
srs
You M/MMtordm motives, thought •f ottwrarCaohallM on aura of aacrocy, ^ glamor. Don't ravaal aU Mu know. Ra-
SHrfeSsx
. you tan mla*
rnwr5-' ■ -■M . .* .* • *' iP satubo*v to yoyn emtHflAv,
♦. -. mt.wt • l.
JSJStyWTSrSRr DanwaftTctagi „
' made mla yggr provaa ianaHcfal. |
*\l/\ |
NEW I
D16PENSER1___
\4> READV=
BEN CASEY
THE BERRYS
MUCH YOU D TO BUY IE THINGS
By Cgrl Grubert
HOW can" I TELL WHAT *
I WANT.....UNLESS I KNOW HOW MUCH I HA/E TO SPEND?
DRIFT MARLO
OUT OCR WAY
By Or.- I. M. Levitt. Tom Cooke and Phil 1
By V.-T Hamlin
CAPTAIN EASY
DUH-N-UMOHI pa
RUG PBK5ATWP POOR, POP1. AN'JUST UNDER PA WATER IS SUMPIN TIEO ROPKIJ
By Leslie Vurner
MORTY MEEKLE
mbbzwbotubz
toywH»/naLDvaj
t WAS PG&ZADeHrOF THE FttaCGHP CLUB...
By Dick Cavnili
AND IAekED NQU/FYPUD i UltETO JOIN... REMEMBER7
NCAH,r RQAEMBBR.
By Ernie Bushmiller
WE'RE GOING TO THE MOVIES
( LOOKS PRETTY ^ Vp- CROWDED -J fSHir SORRY— ^ V ONLY ^ ^ \ ONE YH S**? jp
m -jOrv/iP ffrriTn 11 — (^OKAY MS
By Charles Kahn
I h oetting broken /.
DONALD DUCK
My Walt Disney
t'.T
THE PONTIAC PKKSS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 0, 1964
Deaths in Pohtiac, Neighboring Areas
GARY L. BAILEY*
Gary L. Baifey, 23, of 7091 Pickering, Waterford Twonahip, died yesterday. His body will be brbutfit'to the Coats Funeral Home, Waterford Township.
Mr. Bpitey, an employe of Fisher Body Division, leaves his write, Carol; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John D. Moor of Lansing; and two«, sons, John L. and Thoinas L.’both at home.
A sister, Mrs. Richard Penny of Waterford, also survives.
RICHARD D. BROMM Service for Richard D. Bromm, 26, of 1069 Edgeorge, Waterford Toymship, will be at 2 p.m. Monday at -the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor. His body- will be. at ’file funeral home at noon Saturday. *
* Mr. Brotam, an employe of Fisher Body Division, died yesterday after a six-day illness. He was a member of Eagles Lodge Aerie NO. 2887, Oxbow Lake. .
Surviving are his wife, Eunice; his mother, Mrs. Colin Batchelor of Union Lake; and several sisters and brothers, Donald V? of Walled Lake, Mrs. Mrs. Rimer A. Klee of Waterford Township,. Mrs. Theodore W. Grant, Mrs. Mary Pontx, Lewis G. Bromm, Cary M. Grant, Vivian M. Grant, Leonard F. and Theodore W. Grant Jr., all of Pontiac.
RICHARD F.LOVSE Prayers for Richard F. Lovse, three-month-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Lovse of 2948 Silver-stone, Waterford Township, wQl be offered at 2:30 p.m. tomorrow in Sparks-Griffin Chapel With burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy.
The baby died yesterday after an illness of several days.
Surviving besides the parents are grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Fred Lovse, and Mrs. Ruth Anderson, all of Pontiac; and. a sister, Tammy Lee, at home.
GERTRUDE M. NETHERCOTT Service for Miss Gertrude M. Nethercott, retired teacher of Waterford Township School System, will be at 140 p.m. Monday in Sparks-Griffin Chapel with burial ' in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy.
Miss Nethercott, 78, of 64 Oneida died this morning after a long illness. She was a member of First Presbyteriam Church and Pontiac White Shrine No. 22.
Surviving are two brothers and three sisters, Mrs. Lucille
October I Mid 6, 1
Serial t dale, that*
ucrooer a era y, iy,
PUBLIC SALS
At on October 1*44
1*40 Chevrolet 6, 1647 Convertible. Strli Number 0U47F171600. will be sold I oublic tale at 1401 E. 11 Mile Rd„ Roy; Oak. that address being where tty vohlc
. At 6:66 a.m. on October IS, 161 1641 Ford 6 F/L SOI 2-Door, Serial t ber 1F3IVMS707, will bo Mid at pi tale at 22560 Woodward. FerndaM, addrest being whore the vehicle lt.il
WPMMMgnnHN Kline of Pontiac,. Mrs. Duncan McDonald of Ashley and Miss, Blanche Nethercott of Detroit.
MRS. ROBERT CAMERON LAPEER TOWNSHIP -'Service for Mrs. Robert (Nellie) Cameron, 90, of 1176 S. Lapeer will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at Muir Brothers Funerpl Home, Lapeer, Burial will be in Meta-mora Cemetery. ' «
Mrs. Cameron died yesterday after a long illness.
Surviving are a sister, Mrs. Mabel Wilson of Romeo, a grandson and four jpeat-grand-children.
ELMER E. CONKLIN SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP-Service for Elmer E. Conklin, 72, of 8460 Holcomb, will be 2 p.m. Sunday at Sharpe - Goyette Funeral Home, Clbrkston.''Burial will be in Ortonville Cemetery. . p
A former, Mr. Conklin dd e d Wednesday after a heart attack.
Invite Public to Execution
SAIGON, Virt Nam (UPI) -The Communist who tried to set a bomb trap for U.S- Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara last May will' be executed in public shortly despite opposition of the American Embassy.
A high-level spokesman told reporters last night the embassy is "opposed” to the execution being carried out in public.
Air Commodore Nguyen Cao Ky announced the execution plans. He did not specify the mode. Executions in Viet Nam are usually by the guillotine, one of the legacies of French rale.
- The condemned man is Nguyen Van Troi, 24. Government security men bad caught him wiring p bomb under the Cong Ly Street bridge over which McNamara’s car was expected to pass last May.
Police said Troi confessed that he had intended to explode the bomb at the moment the McNamara party was crossing. SPECIAL COURT He was tried and convicted by a special military court add condemned to death Aug. 10.
Commodore Ky said the government would “publicly execute” Troi “perhaps this weekend or some time next week.”
He said this would be an “example" to other would-be terrorists.
Ky said two other men are exported to be executed at the same time although they have not yet been tried. He said there was no doubt they would be convicted.
These . two are Vietnamese Army soldiers who were caught immediately after grenading a market place last week, killing four persons and wounding 27. J
He was-a member of the Farm Bureau. * .
Surviving are his .wife,. Florence; three daughters, Mrs. Laurel McDonald, Mrs. Arnold Nelson and Mrs. Lyman Emery, all of Clarkston; a son, Donald A. of Holly; 12 grandchildren; and 11 great-grandchfMren.
GEORGE A. MARSHALL
TROY — Service for former resident George A. Marshall, 68, of Rbyal Oak will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at Price Funeral Home. Burial will follow*1n Union Corners Cemetery.
Mr. Marshall died yesterday after an illness of several months.
A former automotive machinist ah the Michigan Tool Go;, Hazel Park, he was a member of the Church of Christ of Independence, Mo.
Surviving are a son, John D., with whom hd made his homer two brothers; and two grandsons.
RICHARD C. STEELE
HIGHLAND - Service for Richqrd C. Steele, 58, of 224 N. Center will be 3 p.m. Sunday at Rkhardson-Bird Funeral Home, Milford. Burial will fok low in Highland Cemetery.
Mr. Steele,, a realtor, died today»after an illness of six weeks.
Surviving are his wife, Nellie; two daughters) Mrs. Ellen Burkhart and* Mrs. Jeanine Sutton, both of Highland; a son, Richard L. at home; two brothers, Sher-wood and Wendell, both of White Lake Township; five grandchil-drpn; and one great-grandchild.
LOYSON G. VAUGHN
UNION LAKE Service for Loyson G. Vaughn, 60, of 9215 Southeastern will be 1:90 p!m. tomorrow at C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor. Burial will follow in Lakeview Cemetery, Clarkston.
Mr. Vaughn, a retired metal finisher at GMC Truck & Coach Division, died Wednesday after a long illness.
Masonic Memorial services will be at 8 tonight at the funeral home, under the auspices of Austin L6dge No. 48, F&AM, of Davisburg. * ’
FRANK E. WEINBURGER
NEW HUDSON - Requiem Mass for Frank E. Welnburger, 78, of 29953 Milford will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at St. Joseph’s Church, South Lyon. Burial will follow in St. Mary’s Cemetery, Milford.
Mr. Weinburger, a retired fanner, died unexpectedly yesterday.
He was a member of the Maccabees of New Hudson.
The Rosary will be recited at. 8 tonight at Phillips Funeral Home, South Lyon.
Surviving are his wife, Nelle; two daughters, Mrs. William .Thorne and Mrs.. Vane Cheno-weth, both of South Lyon; five $Qns, Francis, vince^t and Ralph, all of South Lyon,-Joseph of Livonia and Albert of Texas; two sisters; 22 grandchildren; and five great-grandchildren.
Automation Out; R to People
»LOS ANGELES (AP) - So many companies were turning to automation, that people began to wonder where it would all end.
Well, it already has ended at the clothing firm of Phelps-Ter-kel, which operated six stores, in, the Los Angeles area. The company decided that Its punch-card accounting system had too many, holes in it and that automation ought’to. go.
, * * ★
So, with their latest monthly statements, Phelps-Ter)tei customers received a machine card with this message on/the back;
Please fold, bend, mutilate and staple.” \
And, on the front;--"You are holding the last/punched card you’ll ever receive from Phelps-Terkel. We’ve tried to make our peace with automation. But it hasn’t worked. Ours Is just not a machine ‘ ‘
FORMER METHODS “Consequently, we are reverting to/our slightly archaic yet highly personalized accounting methods. We think you’ll like our/ new-old billing method bet-.‘ ter. We know we will."—* ~ Dave Phelps, firm "president, said this bold step backward was applauded by customers. One wrote: “Thank God for people?”
# -* ' *
"We automated a little less than a year ago,” Phelps said. “Sohte people closed their accounts because they didn’t feel a business like ours should.’* And, Phelps said, there were technical problems.
JANITOR GETS $5,066 “One time,” he said, “a janitor got a check for $5,000 for two weeks’ work.
“The question was whether a small company like ours would be getting enough out of it to make it worth while.”
* # e •
When the decision -was made, the store’s advertising firm was called on to compose the notice to customers.
“We saw this as an opportunity to appeal to humanness," said Tom Faust, an advertising man.
WANT EXTRA COPIES -. “After the cards went out we got a lot of calls from customers. Some wanted extra copies to pass around their offices.
“People just -don’t like to feel they’re in the hands of machines, particularly when they’re dealing with a service organization.”
to Present Candidates
VSS3'&.*
|nXr.^*V^^COTmltlM,T el tha foraoo na r#SC
Candidates for governor, the U.S. Senate and Congress will present their views and answer questions at.the Oakland Citizens League’s second aNnual Political Forum on Oct. 21 at Oakland University.
Seventeen organftatibhs are joining the League in sponsoring the 7 to 10 p.m. event in the Gold Room. Last year it attracted 500 persons.
Tickets for Fonun are available at the Birmingham Com-munitty House at $1.10, which covers the cost of refreshments during an intermission.
Members of high school or university civic classes may obtain tickets for 75 cents each.
Organizations again participating as sponsors are Oakland University; Birmingham Citi-Action Committee; Civic Searchlight;, Jaycees of Birmingham, Lake Orion and Detroit; Forum for Detroit Area Metropolitan ’Goals; Michigan Education Association, Region
Oakland County Medical Society and United Church Women of Birmingham, Farmington and South Oakland.
Added to the sponsors’ list this year are the Pontiac. Rotary Club, Oakland County Republican Committee, Oakland County
Democratic Committee, Pontiac Civitan -Club and the Jaycees Auxiliary of Birmingham. ADVISERS VESTED
Forum chairman is George J, Fulkerson, of 9160 Middlebury, Birmingham. Acting as advisors are former governor Murray D. VanWagoner, Oakland University Chancellor Durward Varner and former county prosecutor George F. Taylor.
Appearing at the ^orum will be Republican Gov/ George Romney; his Democratic opponent, Congressman-at-large Neil Sfoebler; Democratic Sen. Philip A. Hart; APd the Republican nominee for the U.S. Senate, Mrs. Elly Peterson.
Congressional candidates scheduled to be there are Congressman William S. Broomfield, 18th District Republican, and jus opponent, .Democrat Frank Sierwaski, along with Republican Richard D. Kuhn and Democrat Billie S. Famum, 19th District nominees.
0 JMwN of Hit Bull*
CLUTHEREHEACOCK, huohTi*allerton Jr.
EDWARD CHEYZ DUANE HURSFALL J. WESLEY DUNCAN -
KSiYsSs, „ uyssy-’SBS ■»"
iffictontHwEftlvTmjfti. hi giwfi tht ft8oMton w®8 sobpwdi
MlK. 4M ^
«^OFACR.AOf Suo< To ttx Oakland County Board of lup*
WHEREAS sold pareal hot from la tlma been advartlMdJor public Mb with no attar* racalvad, and WHEREAS to* Oakland Pork Method-lit Church of Pontiac, Michigan, ■— igreed to purchdtt tha soma tor CM i prlca of Stmt* par aera,wKlch |
WHEREAS tho city of Clawion has. BY. rasshrtba dated February 16. 1664 formally petitioned «ha county drain con»-rnlsskxwrtd relinquish lurladlctlon of tha BfaSttM IMh, a county drain, and WHEREAS th* alsnmantowtod Broader* DraBl Hal antlraly within Rip terrl-
WfaS.T&SWSSBIk..,
that purauant to th* tfrtriatons d« section
- - »ln commlstkx
a City of Claw*aiTw"lha"otore-ainonoa. Broodocrt Drain and Bit, ilnago district tharofor. nr. Chairman, an MhaV of tha Drab mnUltoa. l mova ths adoption af tha
agoing rssolufbn. _,
DRAIN COMMITTEE . ^RTISPCTTBR.
Chairman
HOWARD O. POWERS WILUAM K. SMITH LEONARD TERRY id by Pottor suppsrtad ta elution bo adopted, ufflclent majority hav
■I .............. I of Section M,
TIN, RIPE, City ot Pontly^Mtehlyon.
thence S 67* 57' JO" W 444.31 ft.,’ EMM* *
NOW^HEREF^RE BE IT RESOLVED ■WrafrlHlB Rwerto and th* -sale of bald properlyto too Oakland Park, /Aetoodtot Church tor too sum of LVED toot
Pork Methodist 61A66.06 par acre,
mrFuiiyw
Dies in Clinton Twp,
MOUNT CLEMENS (AP) — Fred Kuse, 79, of. Mount Clemens, was struck and killed by a ‘car Thursday on a residential street in Clinton Township.
Supervisors' Proceedings
Delos Hamlin.
ham, J. WPWHHW_________
Durbin, Edward*. Forbes, Fwta, Oobd-speed. Hagstrom, Hall, H*fMhw HaacadL Hudson, HurafalL InBTSham. Julian, Kan-nedy. Kephart, Knowles, Laurla, Lasaltor, Levin, Levinson, Llnley, Malar. fBartMl, McAvoy, McCartney, McOovem. Met-chert, Mercer, Mkhrtaa, Miller, MhchelL Moore, O'Donoghue, Oldenburg, Osgood, Pstn MSI. Perlnoff, Potter, Potooff, Power!, Rehard, Remer, Rhlnovoult, Isstor tin. Simoon, Slovens, Smith,. Jolley, Stephenson, Tapp; Terry, Tlley, Tlnsman, Travis, Turner, Volf, Webber, Wood, woods, Yofkw. (78)
ABSENT: Brkkntr, Edward, Ewart,
. m
tor this
______ _____ _________________ mrs' an
June 6, 1644. Said raqusat was ordered filed with to* Clerk. A true cony of to* Mine appears In to* not Ice of meeting hereafter set forth.
The Clerk preMntod to* nolle* of this meeting together with his afMautt' M to th* mailing ot Mid nolle*, which nolle* and affidavit an* as toftows:
NOTICE OF RBBULAR MEETING Ta the Members .ol the Board of Su-pervlsors ot too County at Oakland, St**e ot Michigan
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that 0 regular meeting of the' Beard at Supervisors of toe County of Oakland, Stole of Michigan, will be held at toe time and place stated to toe following request which has been filed with -me, toertt:
"A regular meeting of too Board of Supervisors of toe County of Oakland, State of Michigan Is hereby called to be hold on Monday, too and day at
resolution and have authorized the County Clark to affix tha Saal ot tha County ol Oakland thereto end to praMnt a cartt-of this roMhitlon to R. Clara
* BUILDINGS^fSl^GROUHDS COMMITTEE LUTTIBR HEACOCK, H^hS/ALLIRTON Jr. ■OWARD. CHBYZ
Moved by Haaoock supported ~by Al ton th* resohftian be adpptod.
A sufficient malorlty hav tog yet toemtar, fr- -—................
RE: i ULE X\
.HW ,
DAVID LEVINSON
^The resolution wm unanimously adopt-Mlsc. 4317 By Mr. Hoacock
IN Rt: annual REPORT op buildings AND GROUNDS COMMITTEE To Mir Oakland County Board of Sapor-vlaors
Mr. Chairman. Lad Its and OanNaman-„ In accordance with Section 4 of Rett XII of too By-Laws, your Buildings and *■*----------------- toiigB
0 too Oakland County I
■KaagWar iMy at tot or by written not I days preceding too e
WHEREAS on June IS, 1644. written Pic* of amendment to By-Laws. Rule XVIII, and Chongs* In the >*SchlMjto *f
RVM_______changes to 1
Dotes tor Ton Procadui., thereby, was maltog to *U aasmhari at tots Beard by your By-Laws Committee,
By-Lews Committee
V satisfactory condition.
Tha interior* In gonoral lent condition and to* con malar ranavaHwio at pis _________________
Sanatorium and MacHcal' Car* Facility
by to* Grounds Division of tha Matoh
■ " ~ ----1 aspadalty to tot di
Sorvlc* Cantor arts I
batlan of tldMPIPIII only in baauty and agpaaranca am in lasMnod matotonanc* cost. This It a part of a tend range over-ell plan of development milch will be taking place over
5.Tons—Mot a Scratch
SUTTON, England (UPI) -Royal Air Force Senior Alt-craftwoman Shirley Fulford, 20, was lying on a highway unhurl; right after a motorcylce accident yesterday when a five-ton truck roared'oyer her. All wheels missed her and Miss Fulford got up and returned to her! base. •
DELOS HAMLIN,
Chairman Beard el Super i vlMrs"
This li the first matting ot tot June Session of to* Oakland County Board ot Isort. Th* previous meeting was
l cell W 1
adloumec Chair.
Signed: t
DAVID R. CALHOUN,
Oakland County Clerk-Register of Carat Dated: June 10,1944 STATE OF MICHIGAN COUNTY OF OAKLAND STATE SEAL
. PROOF OF MAILING
David R. Calhoun, being first duly, sworn, deposes end says that he Is tot County Clerk and Register af Deads otJ Oakland County tad CMrt of the loard -* *■---■1— *“ Oakland County, and
Michigan by onctootog to* t
■Hit of Itma shruibiry and ogwgmant. Letters af appreciation have baan forwarded to toes* parson*.
Th* Inspection of your Committee tote par vividly dbclotod to* acute need tor to# County to aravlda additional quarters for tot various deportments and Inst Huttons af tot County Md ttw tael our presort building program la net keeping pec* with thee* needs. Th* Basis of
Lafeyetto Straef tor____■________
Vote ions, Cooperatlv* Extension Planning Departments. It will be necae-tary for other departments to tot lew suit
app&raf aTfli*
■I Jf lap --------------"
tot raaaan* a*L torto M
of smondmort. a copy af which to tacted hereto;
- NOW THEREFORE EE IT RESOLVED toot Rule XVljl be amended to delete present Suhmcftone (d). (*> and (f) substitute therefor new Sub-sections and (*) to road a* toftows:
(d) PUBLIC HEARING AND MEET-IMG TO APPiWi BUOGBT _ AND PASS APPROPRIATE RESOLUTIONS Th* a airman tf to* Beard " —
toll hearing to* Board shall eon* and art upon «* budget and pats gragnig resolutions. Tht Auditors Ways and Meant Commute# shall _ toast on* weak prior to tola mMm, transmit to to* member* of Hw Bated
U(*)ImhEaring ON REPORT OP
COMMITTEE ON LOOU. TAXES SPREADING TAXES Thar* shall bo a regular matting of tots Board on to* first Mend— —
of tot Co mm mat an Lecaf Tax. —. authorizing th* spradd of too taxes covered by toa report.
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that to* "Schedule af Data* tor Tax Pra-cadurei" be ggsanpad to delete present Hems 30. 21 and » and substitute new Hems 31 and 21 to read at to Haws:
3L THIRD MONDAY IN MPTBM-BER—First masting af to* October * slan of toe Board of Suparvlsqrt. I date tor filing tot Drain Commission
certification of Drain Relit and am.________
to bo spread aMarg* on th* County, Township* and cities with tot Beard <" Supervloors. (To b* fixed by raobhrtla af to* Braffl Jf Sbporvloors.)
31. FIRST MONDAY IN OCTOSER-Board of laparvlsora to approve p
(MTL J7, 1
a during to*
envenlenea to deoertmentel apere-ond In Increased renovation and
October Session of to* Board.,
BE IT FURTHER RBS6LVBD toot Itamt 31 toroupt 36 to th* ’IdMMi of Data* tor Tax Procedure*" *• renumbered aa Bams S3 taratHp &
Mr. Chairman, an behsH of
RECREATION ROOMS - ATTICS
00RMERS-EXTENSI0NSKITCHENS-C0NVERSI0NS
BI6
WINTER
SALE
STARTS
NOW!
NO MONEY D0WN-N0 PAYMENTS HI JANUARY
TAKE UP TO 7 YEARS TO PAY!
SAVE OP TO
WINTER PRICES NOW IN EFFECT
25
%
BIG BEAR
iom aay or. jun* ires Signed: JtH» Meddock,
Oakland County, Michigan ■ gta commission expires November IL
lerk road cards of thanks Iteny to* —lilies of Floyd Cramer, Den R. MacDonald, Ransford , Bromley and Oeorpe Burt. (Pieced an file)
Clerk read tetter from to* Jacks** County yrtaroni Otfk* relative tofli of Floyd Cramer. (Placed on «*)
. ..K-County Committee reletly* „ ____
Refuse Disposal Plan tor to* Detroit 1 Region. (Referred to Mltctllaraous Committee)
Health Committee In regard to approval of-a Static tank ptrrhk In Bloomfield Township. (Placed on flto)
Mlsc. 43U
By Mr. J. W. Duncan ,
IN RE: RESOLUTION HONORING R. CLARE CUMMINGS
To too Oakland County Board of Supor,
i Board In April of ? ■■PE years as on Ponfiec representatives County Board Of S-— pointed In 1617, and
. WHEREAS during .....__________________
his conduct In pubic Nto and pteyato Ufa has baan most exemplary r
of a good and faltoful public___________
dedicated to tot welfare of th* community as wan as to Me Iwaw min, and WHEREAS E. Ctora Cummings «. Chairman af ttw Board of visors af Oakland..Caurty In tec. teas, WM a member of too Ways and Moans Committee from 1626 to 1644; Planning Commission ham 1646, often
AtSItority
rts
CONST. CO. 739 N. PERRY
Call Now for a Free Estimate 24-Hour Phone Service
FE 3-7833
i a
Warn 1645 to tot Planning CommHtet train a member of tha spactef i Committee from t*fr te_
Juvenile Affairs and
I WHCTEAS R. Ctora _________WM,
tam Hi toa nearby VIHegt of Trenklln - and a lifelong resldmt of Oakland Caun-ty. was graduated Tram too tlrmtn*fwm HIW< School In I60L bacam* a totlar In the Citizens. Bank r —
to too C*y of Peril;
I into to* itauranap. b
cia; orgonizensni * . , . , X
NOW THEREFORE BE IT REIOLVBD By Bm Gdktend Caaidy faard af Staar-visors, at a ragafar session ra tana film. IBM a Certificate of MarB ta awerdad to R. Clare Cummings, farmer Pontiac CRy Supervisor, for hte taw gears tf dteftogute^td sorvlc* to Oakland
BEIT PURTMBE RESOLVED toil. In grateful recegnHIon tf Mi ssram to th* Cgwrty and -Me endeevers In the putolc Interest, and In order tort he might re-
eHw* the hansrs dw Mix six |to ewta tears af to* Daktend Cmrtv Beard *f Supervisors, hive this 33nd dev of June
________ectton of toll Beard
presartty anganad In Rw rtfwvi_ -
toe Tuberculosis Sanatorium and Mddtadl Cara PMNtoyfMSwransf.aMyiiifo aralza toaaa two urtla but still go I
nwntare!TbidlnCounty
RgaMar af Oaada $me* to Statadanc* wlto Ih* By-Laws af Ita
RMOCVED fl* toaMjnrman and^Cteriyrf^to* JMrd of
n ®
VANCE C. POUTS EARL B. RHINEVAULT
{fe’ssar*
-ax casr-*
fitt10 M* Wmb 5
'Tht'
tatata'tatad 4 W- -Rto tatoiatlin
3
having uatod a adapted.
To to*' oikiand County Board af Sugar-Mr. .C3s*lrTnan,_Lte(3tan at
AoMoT"I6sii at
drainage' district upon' which — outstanding iwdeatadnese 0
_ ™_ IRB .BfotaMf Jw _ malorlty of toe members elect af to* caurty beard tf supary tsars and by fho resolution of to* governing body af to* township, city or village In which such drain Is bcatad", and WHEREAS to* City af Clasnen haa, by raaototlen dated February IX 1644 formally patHlonad to* county drain commissioner to rellnqulffi lurtodlcftan of “w John M Drain, a county drain, * rent to all *Ur ftare-ilted Slates Congress Slate Association of dr Gaorge Romney, ta gl Conservation.
Michigan Department (
‘rnrsCjwmI ^ | _
i KSS'YtotoaT-^S
ftx'Ma & *
----to* Drain
th* adapt ton af na
by Davids
INe(RE: OXBOW LAKE LEVEL PROJ-TataaOaktond County Beard of Super-Mr. Chairmen, Ltdtes end Gentleman: WHEREAS Ms Beard, by MtotaBaa*. eus Resolution NX 3673 *-*— ‘— “ m3 directed tot Drain Co
CUETOPOTTER,
JOSEPH FORBES^ HOWARD O. POWERS WILLIAM K. SMITH LMNARDTERRt
Mlsc. till
oraobUth top level if CMaw Lake ac-cordln#A» to* provisions ofAef. Nx 144 af^tha Public Acts af mi, as amandad,
WHEREAS toa circuit Court at Oate tond _ Caprty, open rsoommandulton of
thT'^yjamwlsSw)^
a*
whereas all rightsafway naragia'ry
0* .too County ot Oakland,
|I^Th'e R BFOl E B. IT EE.
t Th«f to* spectef Asaitemant Dtartef
piraST
russa’Axvtnns
is£surrsrr9a.9:
> ra~|ra>*Blla Acts af 16SX a*
ware
reerira construction bM* ter Rto *ub|*ct
ta<58SS55r«
tad stoxf hto ludgmant, to
WS^r* »
^ VThtd tta
>- 4
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY; OCTOBER 8, -1964 J
LOST: LARGE WHITE FRENCH ' Poodle. vicinity g( N. HID Eto-mantsry School In Rachaator. Ra-word. MS-7153.
LOST-OACHSHUNO, BROWN AND
— I
LOST: IRISH SETTER. FEMALE, tag No. 11IM. chlldi pot. Howard. FE l-EMl; _________' ;_____
or" unit (te Barry garage door In Oroytan Plata*eras. >024(0.
LOST - ROCHESTER HIGH AND waiinn mud. men's brown Han-gata watch. Ro-
STRAYED oh STOLEN MALI fawn colorod box or, aovth of ME and Bagla Lk. Rd„ children's pot.
H»lp WlfE MM#
12 Men
HIRING PART TIME
Now factory branch la taking plications Nf Immediate eve work, must bo I1-4S years of and have a steady toll-ttm*
, 15 YEAR OLD
Profitable, wall established bask nose, will employ manager off salary and profit sharing basis. Writs Pantlac Press Box 57.
. AFTER 6 P.M.
PART TIME - 1200 Guaranteed MOO monthly tar oual-tf led man. 11-SO, neat
OCT
Call Mr. Dale for Information £7 p.m. OR »Q646.
APPLE PldKERS WANTED ME ASMS
ALL YEAR AROUND CONSTRUC-
appearing ar 1 Immediate
rr
to Clifford
______Architects,
Rd., Birmingham.
I ,___BILL BOODEN
SPARTAN DODGE
III I. Seglnew FE A4S41
AUTO RECONDITION MEN WANT-Od. Good JSages. year-round work. 334-OTft. T
AUTO SALESMAN. EXCELLENT opportunity tor right Individual. Sail tha loading makes, new and ■ usad. Experience NOT necessary. Teyor Chevroet, Wood Like. MA MW.
AUTOMATIC "lET-UP mEE.' SET up Mb Inch and SW Inch. RA-4*.
limed man. maim
AUTOMATION MACHINE BUILDERS
FOR PRESS ROOM EQUIPMENT, FRINGE BENEFITS, OVERTIME,
BARBER SHOP PORTER. GOOD «K|ne man with barber shoo experience. 250) W. Maple, Blrmlng-
BARBER LICENSED OR APPREN-
n opening tar an aggressive mOn Interested In a career
3s*
QUALIFICATIONS to is
produf*-roblo
fringe bei FEf4%41Pf
_ 41 for appointment.
BRICK LAYERS AND MASONS. Psrmansnt or part-time. OR 44034. EtefcOR >14(4._______________"
CIVIL ENGINEER jl
17000 TO SSS00
Graduate engineer. S years experl-
vSory TSSltty In design 'end**S»v struction. Contact City Manager’s
and bonus oxocuthw position. ------^—* hast tbr
o business end excellent
3OTPMain Mr
C0LLECTICN MAN
h administrative ability for I Mylng permanent office po on. Excellent Working cot* — ---------I position jn a
COLLEGE STUDENTS
Port time, to do telephone work from our branch off lea. .1 shuts, mornings and evenings. SI 50 per month. WIN arrange hours ta suit schedule. Write Box 1417, Detroit. Mich. 44231.
CONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENT MR chenlc, willing to stork wUh tools and obit to supervlss repair and sarvlco work. Good opportunity with growing John-Dear* construe Non equipment dealer. 4344*45 - Eves. FE BOM*._... „
construction LAYOUT ENGINEERS
NEEDED FOE DETROIT METROPOLITAN MCtL EXPERIENCED IN INDUSTRIAL. COMMERCIAL, ANO INSTITUTIONAL WORK. DARIN A ARMSTRONG. INC., SMI PBNKSL AVI., DRTROIT, MICH. AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER.
CliRB AND clEan-up b6y. super Chief, Telegraph at Dixie.
Designers
Detailers
Checkers
Par body fixture. Apply now. Several openings available tar qsalt-flad personnel. Opportunttlas tar
ram*. Contort:
KrT Furr, ^.'"DIMercurloT 1 HsRan *r Mr. Handers.
Koltanbar Eng. Co.
PM MAPLE AND IMS MAPLE
Designers
Detailers
Machine fixtures Heavy walding fixtures Ouagss '
Overtime
Spartan Design Inc.
14** N. Woodward MJEMfNM i, Sb,
644-0610
Ei&PiSPiSyS
RiTteu. -■ •• i ; _. •,, draftsman, residential Ex-------------
rsap«
NebW—hi Mole * DRIVER-SALESMAN
Par yaar around poaltlan. Intarast-*d In groan plant business. De-
---- —• —siban. Exteltant ,
3432W1. Thpmp- '
DUfif INSTALLlhS AND BENCH layout man. Tan wages. 0 mechanic, I
rat*. M.M i steady »
laranteed
_______MOiiklan. . _
EXPERIENCED AUTO SALESMAN to sail haw Ramblers and sports cars. Inquire st 530 Oakland Av«. EXPERIENCED FULL TIME salesman between 15 and IS.
THE GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP SI W. Hurdn St. P« 41S51
EXPERIENCED CAR WASHER
Box 34.
IXPRRlEl-IPPP helpers wanted.
Lake Read.
EXPERIENCED APPLIANtE RE-palrman Including rafrlgsratlon — Phone FE >3**1.
EXPERIENCED SERVICE S+AtlON man. Top wages and storking condition*. Maple end Cranbreok, Birmingham. Ml 747(0.
’ ' EXPERIENCED SALESMAN
Excellent opportunity for experienced selesman, capable of aitllng
or Mlchi-t rsfteller.
finest lines <
names such as Msgnsvc way, and Hammond, ft gan's outstanding MU
If yOU know hOW n, Mill, w* win
. tram you stlth adequate product knowledge. Musical background helpful, but not essential. Guaranteed salary against commission. Apply Grinnell Brothers, an equal opportunity - employer, Pontiac moil «dt-04a.__________■
EXTRA •
4 INCOME
IQ hours — weekly pay 125, A groat part-time |ob. Call OR 34505, FULL-TIME SEXTON WITH JANlr torlal experience for largo church. Ml 4-2040.
PARMER — GOOD STEADY JOE for morrlsd man with small family on boat term. General Bald stork. Good wagas, paid vocation, other extras Including modern house on farm. Write references and qualifications. Box 15, Pontiac
CONrtRUCriON, O.____
DIATE OPPORTUNITIES TO JOURNEYMEN IN THE FOLLOWING SKILLS:
- PATTERNMAKERS PATTERN REPAIRMEN ELECTRICIANS MACHINE REPAIRMEN .. MILLWRIGHTS
SEND COMPLETE RESUME TO:
' CHRYSLER CORPORATION PERSONNEL OFFICE
P. O. BOX Hit, DETROIT, MICHIGAN 45231
GAS STATION ATTENDANT, COM-merce area, mechanical ability desirable but hot necessary. Call Mr. Sandora. EM >4711 or EM A 3-4J 07.
STATION ATTENDANT, ME-
Chanically inclined, SR time. Prefer someone n big, but dissatisfied. She
Station o Road
oEnEral MECHANIC FI
________ APfftEH-
ts, epertmonl work In Pontiac II attar 4 p.m„ 1-LI 1-53W.
LdNG program
BEACH ENGINEERING
tam W. MAPLE . WAU-ED LAKE
Machine; Designers
Layout
Draftsmen
W* btvtta yea 1* axptere tha *n-glnaartng growth opportunllln offered by Use leading company In the Special machinery field. Ap-
Kr'teclntatb ‘ V* Me*' xlnga?
.'The
Cress
Company
1 LARGE todb-up. of tools.
Apply Temples Restaurant. 14m Livarnols, Detroit.
HANDY MAN, 0GG CLEANERS. 374 E. Plk*.
HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATE, PRE-ferably over 15, aptey f a.m. to 5 p.m. Rochastar Paper Co., MIN St. Rochester,. Michigan.
IBM MACHINE OPERATOR
Experience an 407, 401, 514 and 015. Able to Mr* tends. Apply In parson. Personnel fifties. Poo-
rer mrerview appoimmem. INVESTMENT 115. OPifeATi VOUR own solo* and service routes with Watkins Quality Product*. Train-
JOB
HUNTING
TRY
' International
PERSONNEL SERVICE We idpratant an unUmltad number of local and national firms seeking qualified applicants hi all Bains of omPkiyindK Martino salaries (or lb as a paelttans rang* from I3J00 ta mJm. It you are Interested In bwastlg sting these opportunities call u* ar walk In ta your naaraot IPS aMae.
BIRMINGHAM
m B. MAPLE Ml 44rtl
JOB WITH GOOD PUTUIJE FOR
m^wantj* to work with
MARRIED Man for 6airV and
, ganaral farm, modem homo and goad wages. David Plaid, loll Ormond, Oavlsburg. Call 0*11*04 -Holly. ME 4-3423.
Man to W6>k in Auto^parts
“ auto parts clerk. Hollerback Auto Parts, ITS Baldwin Ate. Call 3M-4151.
man 041# With SAL>5 ot sOii--------wnenr* ^
of old sslsb-
c7 e. r-
• rs Iscats. ____ — --
7447 Grand River, Detroit.
1 SHlPPINd/felCElVlBG. sghend, Pontiac Part Offlc* HeMMPHm «R*0fflHH , education,
..... WITH EXPERIENCE WITH agrleuiturdl .or bidastrlal machinery. Capable of taking ever parts and service deportments.
Utica area. 731-5353.
**sflarT5, eE^vd Mattrawi, tUX Parry.
meatcutting, MBat appren-
fice wanted. Auburn-Orchard Mar-kat. 7314100, ____________
MECHANIC
Local manutacturlng cofhpany has opening for a good highway tractor • mechanic. Our Hoot Consists of about 15 trucks and tha man hired will te expected to hind la ail phases of mechanical work on these trucks. This will to a year
HI
‘ 1386. Mr. Johnston.
4 CONSTRUCTION
fringo b >11 OR 3-
W id. M Bom $170 •
MEN NEEDED I
Industry. Sot ol.__ _____ _
wsskM under Instruction — Schools : Noj*
MEN
HEAD SALES DEPART-menr excellent Income. 473-3551. MUNICIPAL ENGINEER WANTED by Village of Rochiatpr. Export-encad In handling design, survey work, drafting, and supervising , construction ta tha 7lold of murtT clpal onglnssring. Salary open. Sand rasum* to Vltlaga Manager, P. O. Sox 10, RorttastarT MIchigsn. NEEDED AT ONCE 2 GOOD SODV . man, rust axparisnea. Apply 3450 Walton, Drayton Plains. OR 34345.
NO EXPEDIENCE NECESSARY
Assured S100 par weak with effort, SISt gar weak
la trayaltag (absolutely) ■Bsbta%ril»— ■- —’ High Incanx >r tawrvlsw at
Dependable firm (largest In nation)
with all control* Including dally operating control. Top salary, bonus, group*' Insurance, Blue Cross and praltt sharing plan. All new facilities. Sand raauma, nil raphes confidential, to Pantlac Pros*. Bax 111
OIL FURNACE SERVlfik AND RE-
Tam KlgsrStamr Service Co. Standard -Oil. 41 W. Plk* SI. FE 415S4.
OPENINGS FOR CURB BOYS NfiW replacing summer help, s toady •mploymant. Must oa or over Ellas Bras. Bis Bey, Taiagrsph and Huron, 1440 Dixl* Hwy. Apply
l. Personal tatorvtaw m
PIZZA BOY, MUST BE 10 OR over. Apply ta parson. Do Lias’s. (400 N. Rochester Rd., Rochastar, attar 10 ojil •
“ PHARMACIST
Registered or Intam, com* let* fringe tenants. Call Jack Robinson. FE 3-7152 or EL 3-3305. Parry Pharmacy, Pontiac and Blrmlng-ham. ...
Pharmaceutical Sales
Opening tor experienced salesman In Oakland ana surrounding counties catering territory for notional growth tulT lln* pharmaceutical manufacturer. Sotos ora direct to doctors, drugstores, hospitals and veterinarians. Training program. Tap salary. Incentive commissions,
veterinarians. Contact
ct Mr. Beyer of S. J. Tutag l, st Hoi Way Inn, Pantlac, lay, October lb from 4 ta A
Restaurant, Lake Orion. <
drivers. Apply parking lot across tram Consumers Power.
PARTS MAN TO OPERATE PART department , of young, grassing John Doere Industrial aqulpman dealer. Good opportunity for eg gresslve parson. Phono 4344445 days- EteS., FE (4B44, ___
PROGRESSIVE DIE LEADERS, surf sc* grinders and machine
Machine hands must know dto work, tool work and experimental machining.
Air must te top man for tap pay.
***** Nor-Wtst Tool
RESTAURANT MANAGER WANTiD tor Mat growing chain. Good starting pay. Call Tor appointment after 5:30, PE-2-5890.
rSTaIl - iAlfes tkpEBIfeMdfe.
Huston Hardware Co. M5 N. Wood-
SALESMAN
Part-time men’s doth tag experience preferred. Apply ta ppraon 4:14 ta *30^ ROBERT HALL CLOTHES,
* FOREMAN.NJOUTSTANOII?G OPPORTUNITY WITH ALL FRINGE BENEFITS. REPLY IN WRmNi TO PONTIAC PRESS ROX NO. IK.
SHOE SALESMAN, EXPERIENCtD Full or part nma, Read chance - tor advancamant, aa* no barrier, apply ta parson, Mr. Wrtnar, 14 a.m. ta 4 pjn. Sibley's FloShalm Shoos, iFE 84700, 2144 S. T4ta-graph, Mlrscta MIta Center.
> Orton. MY 3-1741 ■
SUN OIL COMPANY NEEDS EX-psrlsncsd service station personnel.
STRUCTURAL EtlGINEERS. PER-manent staff positions, tor a cfeble long-rango program. Diversified prolects, relttlvaly Independent
responsibility, sxgsnanca and registration desired but not essential.
Arm, salary open. ‘ Call Mr. I. JO 45147 or Ml 4550*
Tired of Shop
Lay-Offs * lob Insecurity?
High volums Sonic* Station an UOt Bite for rant. .Good back . item. Exoallant Income opportunity. Medium tavaahnant. Call Jim Graam* or Stow Hslstram, .Sun Oft C*. Ml 44474, eves, call 4H-
dl.
fool Room Grindtr Production Grinder Hardhtgo Operator Hong and tap Operator
VENDING
Servicemen
High idtabl i
tr aun* ta Mr. R. S. Taranat.
TNI PROPHtT CO.
wood Sand A Gravel, 4141 LapUST ’ Rd.. Pantlac.
WANTEb, ixMkiiMlb ma n
ultdlng malarial, par-, must b* ready to risibility. 33(4057. ask tor Mrs. v> rootage.
WANTED IMMEDIATELY
men, lots of work, roofing and ald-Ing. Apply I a-ltL, S4 S. Csss Lake
WANTED
Exporioncod used cor porter for
hilltop
Auto Solo*
962 Oakland No Phono Colh Wood Pattommakors
wood potter Journeymen.
In Qroy Ira
lead to pottarn de-i. These ore salaried positions with very liberal fringe benefits. Piss* call, apply, or
SPiffi—
"gjy~ Uptown cisanarp, 45437 Van 'working MANAGER for dry-
cleaning ptant, ■ -■■‘•‘•■x call FE >7404 t
■ ssry, apply-7(40 Cooley Lake Rd.
Small
svenad Lab* an gradual*, typing i lent opportunities. — handwriting to Pantlac
sly ta e Frets t
Help WtU Nwit 7
1 EXPERIENCED COOKS, NIoArS and spilt shut. Apply. Town A Country. 1717 ETdlNffl^.
$40 Guarontetd Salary
Work (tot p.m„ 1 evenings o weak. Car nacaaaary. Call Ml 4-
MH, Sarv* Elegance C*.______ .
A~BE All tVoF e r ATo r, trained OR EXFERIRNCED. Dannall’s.
. Tha MpIL SS2-0420. _______
Administrativa (lark Treasurer's Office
52M0 TO S34S0
Typing, filling, sfflc* equipment operation, sacratarlal skills. Frtab* tenants, civil service. Confect City Manager's Office, (t W. Wattles
Rd,, Troy___________
ALL-AROUND COUNTER GIRL. Apply 7 to t SliiT.* Fours Ctotn-
, t-\ui 4 pjMpm Mr. Flntay.___
■ARY SlftER TO LIVE IN, CAfct
o4 S ChlWraiL FE 84407.______
BABY SITTER, NIGHTS, 4 DAYS.
1 children. HO, 343-0443 before 4. BABYSITTER AND HfiuSEKEEF-er ta Hve In. 33B4SS5.
BABYSITTER WANTiD tO LiVt In, cars of 2 children, no obtaction to 1 child. OL 1-11M or ifil-lrttL BAKERY SALESWOMAN BITWEEN 3540, full ttaiu. no even tats or r " - *---- —y, 134 W
BEAUTY OPERATOR WITH #OL-lowing, Koogo Harter aran, good working conditions. CsH Mias Juno. 4B3-14IS- __________
Bench-Machine Operators
Tap rata* with frtag* tenants. Steady employment.
M. C. MFG. CO.
Ill indienwood Rd. Lake Orton Equal Opportunity Employer BUSY BIRMINGHAM HOUSEHOLD . needs help. Lite ta ar stay S nights. 5 days. On bus lln*. S40.
COM 4444374. ________»
CASHIERS AFfi-Y MANAGER'S offlc*. Pontiac Drive In. DM*
. CLERKS-TYPIStS
Savant attractive apantags (ar campatant typists (M worn). Largs afftte.. Northwest Detroit. Intar-vlews (-11. 12730 Wart 7 Mil* Read. UN 4413*.
5-3108, 7 p.m. to (
DRUGSTORES EVENINGS, 61 *L 6k wornuM, some txpurluncu prufurrad ar darira to Mam, Frank da Drugs, 14 MM* and Middle Belt MA 4nW,
EXPERIENCED shirt ofera+or. Apply Mitchell Claanars, Orchard Lake and Mlddta Balt, FE HPi. EXPERIENCED ilLK FINISHER. Apply MBehall Claanars, Orchard Lake and Middle Belt. FE 04571,
Experienced woUan to car! tjrmfmtf
EXPERIENCED NUEEEH AIDE.
p, ,-
Ball Road.
LADY TO LIVE IN. I DAYL CHILD can and Hght housakaaajng. M4-
LADY OVEE 30. EXPERlfeNdeil. ta dirtrt JL kttaten, neat and ctaanTcall FE MWO.
LAW OFFICE NEEDS RECEPTION-ht. plaasa stata am and axparknea. Reply Fonttae
^ ||jHH
L taETln or own transp- OR
MANICURIST, ICO FER, CENT COfA-mlsskxt, lull tlm*. Must te sxpjrl-encsd, good man (curing shop- MA
4-2270 or MA 42M7.
Manicurist, new busy Salon,
MATURE^SALfciLADIES - 4»hour
MbTttlEli 6>*W6* *!»,
oral and taktai ear* rt.saml-ta-valld woman. Own car, (-5 P-m.
4 davs. FE 54431 batwaan 1-7 P.m. PARTTIME SALES OIRL CWER 25 -
Apply mornings D a n I s h Pastry Shoo 2223 W. Mapls, Birmingham.
farTtIMI ixTKlBHcib WAi.r-te oyer IS, lor luncheons and.
drsns, rs*dy-to-w**r sr StW^Msf^Tirmlteli*
SALESLADY
Fart-tlmo ladles' raady-tauater si CLOTHES, 25» N- S~ “
ESSIES
well. Prefersne* given to *xpsrl: “n this typo rt work, r—“
working can fits. Aon*
TELEPHONE WORK
tar era*, no sxpsrlonc. ..—
(l.OO hour N§start, call attar S
p.m. 4514434.^ _______
TEMPORARY WORK FOR
EXPERIENCED
TuOiSta, Stanat, Demonstrstors, I Businas* MachIna operators.
Manpower Inc,
14 $. CASS
WAitRtts wanted. KHXPFI
Prtnflir, Rachsstar._
WAITRESi - MUST BE EXEErI-
UTAT^fttssEs for day and night shifl, part tints and full
^r^'^WaW^
Hwy, end Silver Lake Road.
Vlf All AliV, NIGHT SHIFT. IN‘ qulra Chief Pantlac Bar. 71 Baldwin._______ ■
WAITRESS with GRILL COOKING * experience. No Sunday ar holiday work. Min It Lunch, f E. Pfc* St. WAITRESS WANTED FOR FULL
EXPERIENCED TElEPHONI CAN vaster to do light talsphsns wdrk and flnlthar tor now operation. Must te sbta to da tap quality
ta aur office Salary and commission. PE S4407. . wart. Idlnpn raqulrad. Apply 4716 Walton Bite, or CaM «(A>l64t
Apply Jn ptrton Dmyi MptM jSlULs GHTlr 11 IMWlSy/irbMHIHai WE utH-art and rafraahmani stand. Apply rt Miracle Mil* Drlvt-ln Theater
aitL' WiK demiral eLmnw on Thursdays, awn trsnsp., dapan- ' dabto with chBdrswx tejgfdRdte. Bloomfield and. 647 4262. i chora* an wm, iter* (ar ham* thaw waaito. MA nw. 6smUns (S ACCENTING aaale
biAl 6YEA si po* inspection
______ _______walcama. MA AMS
Must te rtfSiwt typist and wan
hc^sekeiaii" me vewn-
lass ham*. » dilldran ta schapl part time, nlc* homa savarst miles tram Pontiac rafaranc* rapulrad. Writ* stating eg*, nationality, ate-cation, salary £M*eM to fanttoc
HqUSEKEBFtR^yliL OR WOMAN
KITCHW HtLl*
WAITRESSES WANTED. APPLY ta parson altar I p.m. Huron Bawl Raatourant, ISIS Eltubath Laka Road.
WAITRESS, NEAT AND DEFEND-abta. Apply Rncwp Restaurant, Mirada Mil* Shopping Cantor, w A i T A t i s WZAfltT'IXH*-
Drugs Pei Northland
Pancake Bar. C49 Hudsons
WantBd Lounge Waitrsss
Experience not nooetsary, goad wages and working conditions. For appointment call 471 (Ol ar 474
WOMAN TO fAKE OVA m6tHEA-less hams, 2 school eg* girls. Would accept woman and child.
LI 1-741# or DR 34474.___
WOMAN J^BABY SIT 5 DAYS A
Woman *for*li6ht housEwoEkT
:OR DAYS A wsttrsss wo
dark. Pantlac Laundhr. 54d s. TdF
agraph Rd._____________;_________
YOUNG ENERGETIC PERSON FOR hill tlm* pasItlan. ta th* display advartlstag dsat., of tha Birmingham Eccentric. Deliver proofs, fils, must typo, have car. Excellent chance to lasrn advertising sals*
YOUNG WOMAN
mlnlstratlv* rtfln rt Th* Pantlac -Frets. Excel lent opportunity. Pleas* . apply In parson to Mrs. Allan for
Job w—u*rt tipiBhBirtB.1|IBWE(*0>. llEW ;
■j ? fOfr'-pxm Ar**,'Ear jE . tamtam plus commission. Ap-
mK««i to:
FONTlACj MICHIOAN
Malt ffU> M-
Sx«
swttrtibnsid and NuCJU good m-pdrpnw^ yt m barrlsr, Pantlac
ME Nab, MUbFiehEi B-A
BUILD AN EMPIRE H4|ALES Full'or^Part Tlm* 80*53
^tortuFoiW 4*» Otol* Hwys RESPONSIBLE DRlVBA^TIB,
' S/UES tAftKk
Good salary plus commission tar txecutlva type, msrrtod man, ao*
YOUNG MAN
High school gradual* tail an our satetloor. training pragram.* W* tar man with a tutor* ... I P organization. Vacation, group
On th* lab ate looking
only,, Firsstona Store 1 ran st.
An equal opportunity employer
EVELYN EDWARDS
Gsntrat office _•_<•••, ***• Typing 50. Figure aptitude.
*04 Rlksr Building
TELEPHONE FE 4-05B4 iBStrECHBES-ScfcBEb Tl
A Better Income
by Ltarning
IBM Machines
LEARN IBM KEY PUNCH, MACHINE OPERATION AMD WIRING, COMPUTER PROGRAMMING. 4WEEK COURSES, FREE PLACEMENT SERVICE, NO MONEY DOWN.
-ATTENTION MEN LEARN TO 6PERATE
largest equipment edisel. Bulldozers. graders, drag lln**, back teas and scraper*. Earn tap wages, w* will train you. Call (35-1(0* or writ* to:
ASSOCIATED
HEAVY EQUIPMENT SCHOOLS 15M( W. McNICHOLS, DETROIT
IttenYiOn
BE WORKING—LEARN NOW
AUTO MECHANICS Auto Body Collision
BLDtNT
WOLVERINE SCHOOL
Approved by
Stale Beard rt EteCrttM .
31 years, asm* location 1400 W. Fart, Detroit FINISH HlfiH SCHOOL AT HOME, Diploma atyardad. Writ* ar phone tar FREE booklet. Netlane School of Hem* Study, 27741 Mound Read, Dipt. PP. Warren, Ml chip**.
IBM TRAINING
Laarn IBM, Keypunch, machine operation and wiring, 1401 computer programming. Mich. State Board of Education approved. Free placement service. Fra* perking. Compute financing — No money
'systems Institute
FE 44300 5474201
lARNliTO A WfEK ANO UJ
qualify tor tatmodMaTftoid''*r%n-Ing as o heavy aqutomanf operator, ar mechanic In highway and construction, one of America's fattest growing Industries. No prsyteus experience or easclel education needed. Man ta this flaw ar* aamlna exceptional ssaakly wage*. Yea win
graders, and self arepallad tcrap-,, art. Comalets HO hour raurta, National School of Heavy Equip- , man! la NOT a otrretaandtnca school. It it government sea raved end budget farms are available. Free tab advisory same* wan graduation. Gat toll datolta now. Send name, address, sot, phone number, hours home, to P. O, Box 70, Vicksburg, Mich.
Work W—tod Mde 11
•RICK, BLOCK ANO CHIMNEY flrsplaca work dens. FE 447S4. fiARFINTER WORK.
330-21St,
ikNtlo Jaintino. I
mrk, FE >5506._______
LIGHT HAULING
_______ SHIM________________
MAN WITH PickUF WANTS fibo lobs. FE 4423*.
MARRIED MAN WANTS STEADY ssork. OR >1404. ___
3
1-DAY IRONING SERVICE, MRS. AAcCowan, references. FI >1471.
Baby sitting in my home.
references. 67M140.
Cleaning an6 wall washing.
60S44I3 ar IIMH5
DAY WORK 6R COMPANION fcY day, Pantlac area. FE Hitt IRONINGS TN MY HOME
FE2-321S__________
IRONING IN MY HOME.
PR 4-t00(. •'
loHiil tGCVkB-tfpBBB 11
ER, BLOCKS, USEI
----i. Malt aall. Sun. 1L
way rt ralitead. Oiterd.
trU#ilt -,
BUILDING PRODUCTS CO.
Builders suppliis
AND STRUCTURAL STEEL CINDER AND CONCRETE BLOCK TRANSIT MIX CONCRETE 1*12 PONTIAC DRIVE, PONTIAC ------- PE 44531
ELECTRIC MOTOR SERVICE-RE-
PfestwHikin * TbUbHi
DRESSMAKING, tailoring and altarattana. Mrs. Bedell. FE 4*053. REMODBLINO, TAILORItj^ ^AND
1S-A
LAWN SERVICE
DAN’j LANDSCAPE 36XB
TONY'S CUS1
A LOVELY NURSING HOME FOR woman patients, OR SBiSL tTONEYCROFT NURSINQ h6M1
wmovino service, riason-
abta rates. PE AXS/PE xiill
" AA MOVING
CaratoL. snclosad vans. Insurad.
UL 3-3t*t qr 63S-351S.
Bob's Van jkirvicj
MOVING AND STORAGE REASONABLE RATU
ROBERT TOMPKINSMr>n%R 41511
wn * OBstfEii^ n
THOjySQN FE 44S64
A DkcoiAfoc
bXPERT PAINTING, bSCORATING WfNBdr rsntegi.olt HiL,
fjg t JAikrag fBrwwa
PP* »w*y. Tree cutting: phis
iMn mmeU III a.HHd T
fjfafrf * hrtwrty u
PAINTING PAPERING. W-A L U
’^^BPSSnt
Television-Radio Servlet 24
. _ HAVE YOUR -RADIO AND TELEVISION REPAIR WORK DONE WHILE Trained service man, reason i. Fret Tuot luting.
^ • ft*l*C
THE I^OXTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1964
Automobile ' Risk insurance BRUMMETT AGENCY
Mlrttle Milt FE X5X
Wonted Children to Board 28
WANTED, PRE-SCHOOL CHILDREN, oomJ licensed •“*“ * **»—
it «4-1 m.
Waited Heaeeheld Geeds~29
AUCTION SALE EVERY RATUR-E*» M ™ Eire Auction. We'll
^HziuJz?" an5~aF.
PeerSn't. r£ >7M1* ** hou^*>u1, CASH FOR YOUR FURNITURE °r ltt us Mil It tor you on con-
GOOD uslb latE MODEL DOU-bit door refrigerator and freezer n. OL 34**l.
AUCTION. 67X523. WANTED: GAS ANC STOVES. Highest i
1*50 D JEFFERSON NICKEL, PINE to very fine. Other tobis also wanted Call 6*2-3176 after 4 p.m. Price must be reasonable. No deel-
•WlWlEE»» H
PRIVATE PARTY WANTS TO GUY antique dlthea—band painted china and glass. Mutt be reasonable. MS-1176 after 4 p.m.
Weited te hast ^ ~
10.000 TO SMM SQUARE FEET CF
COUPLE DESIRE HOUSE EAST OF
Auburn. Can tPFMSl.
couple with t {WIlDr**
no fEE Rental service
Have ttlected clients wMIIm to
Any su^U^'toce^^.^^skl
436-*575. -
ston or Orton area, STS per month!
Ft Aim.
SWe Uvii QiBrterB 11
ELDERLY dfOlMAN TO SHARE homo with same tor campon tenth l|>. FE mm. •_________
*JlbV WILL SHARE HOME WITH -----
RESPECTABLE YOUNG WORKING
HOMES, LOTS, ACREAGE, PAR-
Urgently need for bnmpAata Ratal
WARREN STOUT, Realtor
430 N. Opdyke Rd. FE *4145
• Delty/HI t
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE
CASH
48 HOURS
LAND CONTR^£!~HOMES
WRJGHT '
01 Oakland 6A FE 1-»141
getTjesults
WE NEED Itotlogo- Call ut today ter quick tala and lop market value, it NY reel aetata, we can awifi
DON WHITE, INC
SMI Dixie Hwy.
Phono 67A06M
Wonted Real Estate 26
TkWtyffiBI«27
BEHIND IN PAYMENTS. DETROITER >*445. ____
Homes-Farms-AcrEogs
CLARENCE RIDGEWAY
listing* Needed
......ntrt welting. Wait Side of
Pontiac, only
Hockett Reolty EM 3-6703
Clarkston Real Estate
S»S6 S. Mote - MA .54131 PARTY WITH MIS
wo to bw equtty In I i. Detroit 171-0441, _________
WANT TO SEflJ
GIVE US A TRY PROSPECTS GAEDRI
JAMES A. TAYLOR, Realtor
Box 1417, Detroit. Mich.
WAN+BO TO SUV -r LaRqE 6-room, 1-floor, beetmont, oil h*M, large Mt er small acreage, in
if Pontiac, FE 3-1
WE NEED LISTINGS!
LET US LIST AND SELL YOUR HOME. WE HAVE BUYERS WAITING!
AyErtEOBEts, Fir Nished 17 Rent Office Spice • 47
B ROOMS AND OATH. RECENTLY . rsdecoratad. 117 par W*e£. OR mm. BUT LOCATIoif ttl KEEGO Harter, rant reaeenabto. Phone **>2110.
MIDROOM APARTMENT NEAR downtown Panttac ter working glrle. Need teat*. OR >76*5. raR-TEL CEHtER. 100 SQUARE teat, ea* hex, air cendUtenlnu.
Rent BBsinass PlGfirty 47-A
1 Ctonlrsl HaqSlaL 38X70 BUILDING, PULL BA5E-ment. Fontsineblaau Plan, MM Pontiac Uka Ron*. Fl >71*3. /
1 ROOMS AND BATH, UPPER. PE >5143 * i Dooms, ARiVAtB, near Vmca. 335-6421 attar 4
BUILDING 1400 SOuAR# fOOY, suitable ter aarvtee building w/any Mid. i Corner Orchard Lake-Ttte-graph. PE >15#: -
3 JpOMS.^CLEAN, ADULTS ONLY. * ^ AM utilities turn. X* mo. FE 44751 ■ after 4 p.m.
FOR RlNT OR SALfc. CAR LOT and gar apt, 250 Oakland Ave. Inquire PMM pr 111 Edison. *150 par . jT-■ •
MALTA-TEMPLf Church, Mats 114 teags rooms, builnasi meetings,' social events Catering/ 4*2-6652 or 673-5202.
3 ROOMS^AND^ BATH
3 ROOMS AND 1BATH. M AOULTS. 147V. W. Lawrence. FB *4434 after 4 p.mjj
TRADE OP SELL IYLVAN VILLAOE BRICK Treat year gr““*'**— — —|
Tgl. ERCEHEni LEM rriYtirvr*, ttwuev
/Total price HI,000. Worth leaking V gth
WARDEN REALTY ■
_ ROOms EVERVthIHo ZuC-1 , nished. Private entrance end bath. |
IV* N.-Paddock. ■ LBinilnnu bbai
»«@rxBmiNfr#iinrol: rtw, 35* »r-
FE2-X20. _____ Watkins ILai
AOULTS ONLY, J AQOMS. BAtH Ml 4-1*8
BABY WELCOME, EXTRA CLEAN, 3-room, modem. SIS. FE >7753. BASEMENT APAllTMENT FE I-0S47
LAKE FRONT — PINE PAnUlIo.
Lady. Attar 4 p.m. cell 6*2-0737. LAKE dfclON UPPER DUPLEX, 3
MIXED-2 ROOMS AND BATH, S ier week with S2S deposit. Inqul it 173 etldwlq Call 334-4054,
I-BEDROOM PURNISHED.
----- ----A — RB-------------
Rd. No children
ttOOM A par weak i rooms p MS per wi
PE S-fSM VALLELY ~~CH- 1460 KAISER ALCOA ALUMlNUM_ tl6-ING. AWNINGS, OUT TEEL STORM WINOOWS—DOORS, PATIOS. ROOFING. SUPERIOR FE
ArcMtodETEl Drawing
DESIGNER CONSULTANT. SAM WifWtiitl II. 442-2120. 651-tm.
NEW HOUSE AND REMODELING
_______Y SPECIALIST
PRES ESTIMATES FE 5-4(tfl
KAR-LIFE BATTERY CO. Generefors-Reguletors—Starters
Batteries $5.95 Exchange
FE 5-1*14 3M Aubun
Keck laying
•LOCK LAYING AND CEMENT work, FB44B31. ■ ,
BRICK, block And cement w*r».MV>11». -
ivlldln, Modernization
PAUL. GRAVES CONTRACTING Free Estimates OR 4-1SI1
' ALL tYFES OF CONSTRUCTION Pease Builders. Fl Htti CUSTOM* RtMOOELINO AND AP-d it ions, quellly work at reasonable price. Deal direct with contractor, yf re* estimate* ^_fHA Tertm OR 5 5565 after * 335-2151
HOUSE RAISING' AND MOVING, level floore, general cement work., R. McCollum, FB 5-6543.
1 CONTRACTOR > d E ‘ t.Vl|V-1 thing. Elite Lumber G Modernize- j —■* insured to I end com-1 I building.
Garages, rooting ana ewtn. siding, p roe designing end esllmetlng Best rets. Eisy terms. FE 2-3*71.
MOTOR EXCHANGE CO.
ENGINE REBUILDING—
ALL CARS AND TRUCKS EXPERT TUNE-UPS 3 S. SAGINAW FE 3-7432
ExceveHei
DREDGING. TRENCHING, BULL
m estimates. IsS-Mil I. Excevajjlng Co.
Wreglici Wood
CARL L. BILLS SR., FLOOR SAND-
Ing, FE 2-17X, ________________
JOHN TAYLOR. FLOOR LAYING, sending end finishing, 25 years txderteaco. 3334*75.___________
HOUSES FOR:SALE TO BE MOVEO — All modem, delivered to your tel, D'hondt Wrecking Company,
Home Improvements
torch**, additions, slsps, gem smedsllng and cimist wi iuinn construction Co.
FE 5-9122
C FEISTAMMEL ENGINEERING Co. Roofing, sheet metal Senlf—-OA 6-3155. *2 s. Washington.
WlfbMAk CONSTRUCTION, COM-Plete service. Free estimates. FE watt, dav er ntoht.________
Piono Tuning
PLASTERING. FREE ESTIMATES O. Meyers EM 14141
PLAiTflklNd, Nftw ANb REPAIR
______FE M4M.
ONE BEDROOM, MODERN, Fenttec Lake. EM s JVt or
ment. OR 34)941.
Apartments, Unfurnished IB
1 BEDROOM UNFURNISHED, 111!
3 ROOMS, UTILl+ils FURNISHED
couple only. OR 3-1*31.__
iMOOM BASEMENT, CLOSE IN, edulte only, no drinkers. FE 54721.
7 -ROOM APARTMENT.
*73-2547___________
i • PlbkOOM APART-Rochester Arms. RtlflG grtiiir and stove, alr-cendldtoning ’ cell Nina Martin, OL >4761. JEFFERSON STREET. 5 RbOMS end bath, automatic get furnace, garage, 3 children permitted.
fBsoe. Farmington 1-ok 4-IM3.
BEDROOMS. 3 FULL BATHS, large enclosed patio, hot water heal, large 2M-car garage, >ake privileges. OR 34)452 after
4 BEDROOMS Drayton Plains
A reel bargain at only S12JOO. Located naar shopping center. Be-lleve H or not this home hat 4 badrapnw. living room- dlnlna ream, kitchen, braekfi many c1—*| 1
at Mt
DON WHITE, INC.
3GP1 Dixie Hwy. OR 444t4
OPEN DAILY TO I PJH.
$-r0om m6oRrn. near auburn
Hstehts.MS-1344.
nm renen noma on «yu,u*,,Tioic,y ---i---
« acre at* tend, private paved .^l3-read, 4 bedrooms, ext— “—1—to lly room. 1W baths.
tins carpeted, lent___________
other features. SSI.NO. On Ervet Lens, 3/io mile weal of Telegmph.
South ot 1) Mile Idu Or cell VE
teetureL*Whe^*hevf Wk la tredaT CLARK REAL ESTATE,
*4*
Rochester Country Horn*
Thls pre-cMI war home net only
•ting Ol. ut 1750 d<
HIGHLAND
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION 3 bod rooms, lares living ream, large kitchen. 3Wear garage, etorme and scraane. Large lot.
modem kitchen, fireplace JWFiiRte. This country h_n. ~ nestled emeng irtaR iked* tree*, end yew wlir find it In excel lent condition. Ill,Ml. Terms.
PE >711*, 'Residence, FE VILTON WEAVER INC, REALTOR ____________ i 1 III W. University gtvd.
WATfRFORD Rochester.---------
3-tsdroam brick ranch, '3 wumuRy r-JP?--i
wltn picture
window erST flrtpl_M
beards and bullt-lnt, attach* 'car garage. SIMOG *4.000 dowi
PONTIAC LAKE
3 • bedroom year e round b Large living room with na tire*tecs. Picture window a' Making Pontiac Bay. Knalty kitchen utility room, ate I completely furnished, 111200
KEEGO HARBOR
New , Models'
Opsn Daily 12-8
PRINCESS
, I Brick end aluminum I
a month including taxes end
HILLTOP' REALTY__________ 473-1
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION ~ NEAR TWIN LAKES TrMovol. 3 Sm-----mj| —
""fenced beck lot. *10' 5. Full price only S4.S50.
JACK LOVELAND
Hit Cats Lake Rd , 412-1255
m baths, large 3-car ga-S15.TT0 Including
REAL INVESTMENT — FOR THE handy min. Large 7-room Rteitm heme an wen (Me 'liter Pontiac High. Needs pelting end cleaning. Reel large 245'xWxter Sd. Paved strset^Prlcsd et only 17 250
ROCHESTER SPECIAL — Only 3l,ftS end r*el easy, terms. Modem two bedroom bungalow in excellent . condition. Fun basement. Oil AC furnace. Carpeting, Dish-master end water softener. A good deal tor igmeone. j* .,
OXPORD AREA - Situated on almost on acre of tend end only block from good lake. Two bed latow plus finished
h fireplace i
ld-r?er.*7
I street.
Waterford-Clorkston
m'ebaThs,' NO DOWN PAYMENT
____ _____ees heet. sets on f NO CLOSJNG COST_____
acre, nicely Tandacapad. Can b* 3 bed room ranch newly decorated,
had furnished or unfumtehad. carport, lergs ■-* ------- -*—
Price of lust the horn*. $22,500. vacant. Price HILLTOP REALTY 473-5334 ~
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION .
WATERFORD HIGH I
3 bedrooms. 1 baths, baeamant, -JEHS gas beet. 2W-cer garage, ienosd. FE >5053
Price SI4,fM> 10 par cam down
hKlVoP REALTY__________473-5234
;• VIRGINIAN
This exceptional colonial features I large country kitchen with built-Ini, paneled family room, 1 bed-.
iRORABAUGH
■t Square Like Rood
f ROOMS VACANT. S6.375. terms, Itf Oefchlll. er ptsoiWFE 5-3571.
49 E. BEVERLY
Walking distance to Fisher Body. 1-bed room modem ranch,, full basement, gas heat. Immediate possession. S5f0 down, sat ear month
IN AUBURN HEIGHTS
1 bedrooms, gas beet, storms end scrams, full Mssment, let 32x145.! Only If,000 with $2,000 dawn.
H. C. NEWINGHAM
UL >3310 _____!
Mixed . j. Neighborhood I
No down payment No mortgage cost First month free Psymmls^like rent
I commercial o
UTICA
it selection of hi
state-size tots, blacktop driveways end sliding door-walls to petlo. -----— - *— ---- tyaceday
Drive out Reed, turn
*! L. H. BROWN, Realtor
• I S0f Elizabeth Lake Road Ph: FE 4-3564 er FE 3-43ig
Woods Subdivision streots and city wa ms* to Williams Li
is and
... lfl'xITO’.
In tht heart list of extras,
4 sites I
•of contemporary on i ■ _ _______
2BP«-A-1 BUYS
DON WHITE, INC.
21*1 Dixie Hwy.- OR
OPEN DAILY TO i PA*.
t. $10,500.
ere eg* with rel_______
Sterling Tpwnshlp 14,500 per acre.
comer on Van Dyke. Mile Road. 150'xlSS'
! MODELS O
AND SUNDAY
HkATib
Villagt Apartm«flts
SOS ROMEO ROAD ROCHESTER, MICHIGAN 1- AND 2-BEDROOM AP*imWNT|
Fully carpeted Air edHHlenad. heated •CKwehene 313B uf
cell WM. B. MITCHELL.
WILLIS M. BREWER REAL ESTATE
* e- H“ro"__PI *'iltl_0f yy*1 WEST0WN REALTY
t* ORTON NEEDS MAJOR REPAIR. I , |rw|n 0ff East Blvd
SB ST —*** — FE >3763 eftemeons. LI >4477 Eves.
Detroit 137-4414.
IOOxwOO
Wonderful gardening, custom bul >bedroom Brick ranch, slsfe ce ter entrance, large living roe plus fireplace, country kitchen wl bullt-lns, 1V5 baths, IW-csr i teched garage. S13.N0. Call Utli 731-3233 er CO >2523 and ask fi
$9,990
Rancher on your tel. Lovely > bedroom ranch - type home, full basement, birch cupboards, oak floors, PULLY INSULATED. Designed for better living. No money
PAUL F.. WILKE, Broker
AFTERNOON* 1-5 H1W Hell Rd. tMJH 731-7480 WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP 3 acres, wooded, Cepe Cod brick, 3 bedrooms. 1W baths, redwood paneling In living room, pine paneled dinette end braeztwoy. Basement, >car attached garage. E. W. Korth Realtor, Ml 4-7476.
WINTEft BXRGAIN
Lake Oakland Heights
—lovly r?om Jrtck i
Near Waterford High
—Watkins Lake privileges. 3-bed-room bride ranch, full basement.
----------- -----------|£
Need a Home?
Mm full basement, gas heat and water. Everyone qualifies. Even credit problems. ONLY (50
Model at 61 Court St.
. N. of Mt. Clemens Call FE 4-6683
Bloomfield Township
»ov,$lBo %
TRI - LEVEL, BABEMENT, s, ceramic bath, tjnrjgrige,
N6 60WH FAYMBNf NO PAYMENT FIRST MONTH
Full besimfnt, kitchen end fa front. Nwtels. i
i. Thle
o“tur° WATERFORD REALTY
ted near d. Bryson, Rmltor Van, Wtlt Bldg, home is 4540 Dixie Hwy.___OR >1273
with 1800 down, less $300 for dec-, orating. *
OVERLOOKING GOLF-COURSE Spacious 7-room brick with 2Wear heated garage. 3 bod rooms, large family’ room plus ■ lergs don or fourth bedroom. Fireplace, petto/ 10x175-foot landscaped tot with lake! -■...— * "— Hteintaeted
to Dr. n
t. Free estimates, resldenttei. Full lion guaranteed. 34 hour 442-440*.
Radiator Strvka
DIXIE RADIATOR SERVICE. S
BROWNIE? HARDWARE FLOOR SANDERS - POLISHERS WALL PAPER STEAMIM DRILLS — POWER SAWS - ---- PE >4103
WE TRADE
ImK^SWte?" I YOUNG-tILT HOMES
JWIUIII REALLY MEANS BETTER-BILT
WEST BIDE. » .nOOg* AWOlBATH, j RUSSELL YOUNG, ^S3W W. HURON
HARQLD R. FRANKS, Realty
~* daily1 35*1 UNION LAKE ROAD
ana aunaar. EM >33*1 343-7U1
BELAIRE HOME BUILDERS ........................
FE >2743, 1:30 to * a n,
EVENINGS AFTER ;
Rant Houses, Furnished 39
1 BEDROOM NEAT, CLEAN, COU-pte only, no pate. 4B>3477.
2 - BEDROOM UNION LAKE AREA
gas heat, *70 month until June EM >4322.__________________
3 R66M3, Aut6MAtid "HlAf,T car garage. 3*5. EM >7113.
ORlOtFbXFORD AREA. PWi
165'x250' IN THE HEART OF OX-ford, 2 bedrooms down; 1 bedroom up; 2 baths, ges Iwet, new 3-car garage, amt shrubs, flowers and fruits. 32,000 down. 3a* Ml* real beauty at 37 Farit »t.
t. garage, f
NORTH PONTIAC AREA
YEAR AROUNO HOME, JltW J t^hed. Commerci
I. C*ll 437-2K
Rent Houses, UnfaniiiriHMl 40
2 BEDROOMS
423-4367.___________
2 FAMILY - 3 ROOMS EACH, GAS
heat, adults. FE >7435._______
3 SeDROOM, GAS HEAT, 3*3 A
- *30 dSPOSlt. 674-0742. 1
Wallpaper Steamer
Floor' tendtrt, polishers, hand senders, tumecs vacuum cleaners Oakland Fuel 4 Feint, 434 Or
l-BEOROOM SINGLE ttOME
---- Pontiac ere*. VI
BLOOMFIELD ORCHARDS
California ranch, 3-bedrOom brick,
1W baths, 'erg* recreation------
with fireplace, built-in, car—— drapes. For the discriminating
Buyer.------‘teto' ' .
TU 4-
REPAIRS, PUT, STEEP, SHINGLE hot raeWne. S53I4I0. 34 hours. ROOFS: NEW, REPAIR General Mslntenencs_________4*2-6448
types of taste :l#l rsmodellng is, roofing i . Free Best references. Easy
num siding. Free eaHRMlM, | tewa.Pi
i, 33MW1-_______-
A P I n 11 tC KitCHBNi,
g, 40 ypers expertenc*. -
A Crxent Wsrk_____
CEMENT WORK ------ PATIOB
Cement Work
FE vtm
cdMlNT w6*k, R*Ai6NAiyi7 Fra* gsHtnete*. OR >*460 stter 4. COifCREVt. ERtCRT BLOCK. Ri-
p«lr Work. FE >1*3*._
■ EUlAHl* CONSTRUCTION CO. General contracting. Poured walls, besemsnls. FE >3»l. m / F^tt Ahb feRlVtWAVi W6»t*. or >en>.
cmm
dressing aid town*, patios. Free estlmetes. Brecce Landscaping, FB M141 er Ft mm.
A-l MEdlON OR KENTUCKY S06. laid er deHvertd. leading er re-dresslng old town*. Petto*. Fra. ^^ry^gndMapte,
i-1 LANbtCAPING, TRUCKiNO — Broken etoywak ter retaining walls - by toad ar installed. Old caw manure. FE 4-3371.
SAStTS BULLDOZING Al d iraabia. Reasonable. Fr Imetas. OR >WM.___________-
SODDING, walls. patt_
FE 44W.__________________
SODDING-SEED^NGjGRADING
.. _____ 412-1224
YhI tdNkHJTfc iMV£I—
man
TALBOTT LUMBER
Gte# Instalted In steers'and wk dows. Complete building service.
1025 Oakland Ave.
MoH Igx^H
..... _LEO 7' longl*.
COAST WIM VAN LINES IITH MOVING Ft *4
I INTERIOR O EXTERIOR
TBlEVitlGE, RecUe Eld
HDH Strvic*
REBUILT AND GUARANTEED TV' ti*.*S up. Obel TV end Radio.
3410 Illzobtih Led* Fl >4*45
Tree TriitmiRy Sentica |
A.B. OALBY TREE BEEVICB !
Tree, stump removal, trim, -frene-: ptenWng. Fi SGML FB 5KB. MONTROS* TRIE SBRvICI ! Traeramevet-trlmmlng. 333-2»3B
Vttsner True Strvice
Newly decorated. 535 per Inquire K. G. Hempstead,
...__r, 1M EUzobath Lake Road.
FE >02*4.
BOULEVARD heights ->i*draom Unit- .
575 Par EteMR Contact Rj*MtM Manager 5*4 East Blvd. at Vatenela PE >7133
USf' BLVD. IN ibuYH PONTIAC
■alii____________
REAL VALUE REALTY 43M575 HOOsS AT MACEDAY LAKE. FOf
Intermetlen cell LU 1-0*50._
NEW MIDROOM IN PONTIAC.
BY OWNER
Authentic Cap* Cod In Fexcroft ~ ^eom. aaaaF^ '
am with Hi
I dining i. 2 'full
3Y OWNER, Cetonlat >roc. Park, nicely I
gee heat, flrepl____
312400. FE 44*12.
partitioned besement. enclosed
l*.5BEb-
ALL APPLICATIONS ACCEPTED IMMEDIATELY
FEATURING
CHOICE LOCATIONS GAS HEAT
SEPARATE DINING AREA CALL ANYTIME DAILY, SATURDAY ANO SUNDAY REAL VALUE REALTY 626-*575 NORTH SUBURBAN, >BEDROOM, large carpeted living ‘
HIITER . I
ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES—Ex-! >b*droom home, large llv-room with flreptece, plastered I, recreation room with bar fireplace, screened-ln patio, ijmMugMItng with brick trim. .*00.
FOR INVESTORS -1,000
Sweet Heart Homes
W« Have 4 New Lots at
Judah .
Lake
‘ Estates!
"SMITH"
garage, natural fireplace
p * f l n g. Beautifully l___
. ^roimds with rustic tenclng. $22,500
WATERFORD SCHOOLS
Nkaly planned 2-bedroom hem* with lake privileges on Crescent Lake. Good size flying room, dining room end paneled kitchen with built-in oven end rang*. Full basement with new oil furnace. 313,100, mortgage terms.
R0LFE H. SMITH, Realtor
FE >7*4* 144 *■ US9St> FB >73lt
JOHNSON
4 BEDROOMS. A lovely home ter someone, large living ream, dining room end kitchen with bullt-lns. 4 nice size bedrooms, ‘
WEST SIDE. 6-raom, i
SILVER LAKE AREA, room brick ranch home prlvUgget, large dining fireplace. Kitchen end < with eW bullt-lns. 3 ' '
. end family room. ...... „ ____
carpeting and drape* Included. 3
acre*, ell fenced and ---
2vy-car attached garage.
AFTER a CALL CARROLL BRAID FE >33*6
A. JOHNSON & SONS FE 4-2533
KENT
aluminum s
overlooking nnciuai
md. within 7i D Loroh
FHA Financing Only $295 Down , Only $81 Month
ir large family. One . Full basement, gas rear entrance. Large
2 ACRES — large
bath, fireplace, full _____
recreation room, breezewat teched garage. —-1144*0, terms
IORIVI-I*
RESTAURANT — ALL Good tocatton. Year BIN. Term, to
REAGAN|
REAL ESTATE I
3551 N. Opdyke Reed 1
yixE-EAST blvd. area
CITY OF PONTIAC Mixed Area WHY RENT?
suit. EM >4703.
5500 DOWN — 2-BEDROOM. Part basement. Full poreh. Whit* Lake privileges. EM >7700.
5 OR 10 ACRES - $450 PER ACRE. 20 per cent down. Land contract. 343-4703 or (57-4141.
LOTS — 5150 DOWN. Large and reedy for building. (750 full price on land contract. M7-4361. 343-4703.
>BEDROOM - 2 fireplaces, 2 bettp.
Dan Edmonds j
325 Pontiac Tra|
OPEN
$47 DOWN
NO OTHER CASH HEEDED NEW >BEDROOM HOME
ALL WORKERS ACCEPTED
AND PEOPLE ON SOCIAL SECURITY AND PENSIONS
WINDOWS. DIVORCEES. EVEN pbqKe with credit PROBLEMS ARE O.K. WITH US
. SEPARATE PINING AREA
. CALL ANY TIME DAILY ^ SATURDAY OR SUNDAY . REAL VALUE REALTY 43X575 -
tract. 837-4351. EM >7700.
DRAYTON AREA—3-bedroom ran tiled beth, full besement. oil he recreation room, outside grill, fenced. $11,000 terms.
WEST SUBURBAN - Attractive bedroom home in excellent cor tign, 21-ft. carpeted living re with ston* flrtplac*. 2 tiled ba with vanities. Finished recreel room with built-in bar, tiled flc large screened petlo. 2-car attscl heated garage. Fully lendscep See this lovely home at 521.500.
Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor
pl*1(_ Hwy^et Telegraph FE 3-0113 Open Eves. MA5-1I
RHODES
bathe, terms. EM 34701.
2. POSSIBLY 3 BEDROOMS. Ga-
location. Call tor details.
NICE 6-ROOM HOME. >bedreom, lovaly living room and dining-room with wall-to-wall carpet, brick fireplace.--modern kitchen, knotty pin* breakfast nook, full basement, oil heat, 3-car garage, N toot lot. Only^ 311350. $400 down/” FHA
* flood >room frame
hgm*, 3 bedraomi, full besement.
. Oil heat. $11,350, 53.450 down.
LARGE ^COMMERCIAL BUILDING, second floor. Ideal^tocaHon.^Good
*0.500 FULL PRICE-LAKE FRONT I I
room house. Utility fiem. p Wells, oak floors. Aluminum New gas furnace, breeze way. 1
BY OWNER: 3-BEDROOM HOME,
t. S3>
BdMOaHerT pjw.
ATTENTION DEER HUNTERS
You can stay at the white Cloud Hunting Ledge ter only 050 per week Including, meets. For reser-
HAULING AND RUBBISH, NAME your price. Any time. FE M0»5 LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING ruoblsh, fill dirt, trading and grav el and front and loading. FE 25*03
Light haulin6. garages And
basements cleaned. 47>1343.
LiDHt Trucking, anV kino,
REASONABLE. FE MIN 1
LIGHT HAULINOTCLARKSTON WA teriord era*. 4BH0W. _______
twwfc ~
Trucks to Rent
VS-Ton pickups lVk-Ton Stakes
TRUCKI - TSACTQRS J AND EQUIPMENT Dump Tracks - Seml-Trsllers
Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co.
125 5. (WOODWARD
FB *4441 PE >1443
; Open Daily including SWliw
37>2S2I. Hulbert.
OBER HUNTERS- RESERVE NOW!
----Tl cabins. "Oetd-N-provs
Van Ettan Lake, 0> LHliWHNI/
1 LARGE FRONT BOOM. F I 0 floor, a* Stats, FE 2-0544.
NICE ROOM ON LAKE, Island Pk. Dr., I mite out se
ROOM AND OR BOARfi 13SW Oakland Ave. FE >1454. .EEPING ROOM, *1* PER WEEK with *31 deposit, inquire VJ Baldwin Ave. Call 33M056. ___
I ROOM FOR Mlbbtl-i, dewidewn area, private
BARGAIN
$5,000 IS THE FULL PRICE — SMALL HOUSE - GARAGE -MACEDAY LAKE PRIVILEGES.
BARGAIN
35,(30 CUTE AND COZY — 2-BEDROOM HOME - ON LAND CONTRACT.
WRIGHT
3*2 Oaklntf Ave.
FE >4141
FB M*13
CHARMING RANCH
Commerce Lake area — >badroxn face brick with table spec* In kitchen and gfled dining area. 2 full bathe, knotty pki* family room, 12 'x 15* terrace, garage, »s x nr tat. sis,*oo.
GORDON WILLIAMSON
GALLERY OF HOMES 064 W. MAPLE 646 2535
BIRMINGHAM
CLARKSTON ^ IMMEDIATE POSSESSION 3 bedrooms, bath end a half, baea-ment, gas heat, carpeting, fenced
Upholstering
MEIER * OLSON UPHOLSTERING FE 5-2X2 Free Estlmetee FE >1*54
WeB Obeegts
A-t WALL WASHER FBSAI4
BLOOMFIElS WALL "CLEANERS Well* an* wtndsw*. Rae*. Satis-tedten auarsntead- FE >1431.
w_____ mm- *-------.4 i* 1 tax** 4M Insurance. » .
ROOEn wnB eaara ** hilltop realty 4734334
DELIGHTFUL 1-BEDROOM, 5% bath brick and redwood contam-porery ranch an to acre In W.
J'-wxix perch wax*
2KE FRONT.
Summer cottage end garage. On* — - SO-foot frontage. ITT
carpeting, drapes Screened porril c room. Wtak to Sa
vale In 3 minutes. __________ _
family- Immediate posseuten. t 000. Owner, 647-1765.___________
3 BEDROOMS TRI-LEVELS ' RANCHES
BMW I'^-Car Garage t34 Lot Included ,MW- Family Room Gas Hid NOTHING
TBr■ ' from $10,500
-------------------------- 10 PER CENT DOWN
OP? JOSLYN - i ILOCK TO MODEL AVAILABLE FOR
Northern High, 2 bedrooms, large! IMMEDIATE POSSESSION
**—•“•* — breezeway and
ird and petlo. WILL BUILD ON YOUR LOI OR OURS
Open Men. thru. Set. M- Sun. >5
J. C HAYDEN, Realtor
________________^_________EM MOW 10751 Hlpltond Rd. (MSP
SE±S!L Jayno Heights
(OFFICE)
2909 SHAWNEE LANE
!Ox“FroK5*~«
NORTH OF CLARKSTON - 5-room home, 3 bedrooms, full basement. » ' f»«*v oarage, 2 acris. $14,400. Terms.
ALBERT J. RHODES, Broker
PE >3304 250 W, Wsttan FE >4713
CLARK
OWNER
OWNER LEAVING TOWN-FORCED 7544
LAZENBY
I MUST SELL
I This lovely >b*droom hem* with lVKar garage (attached). Only
DRAYTON PLAINS DANDY
earn bungalow, full besement! frame extorter, la detached garage, separatei »*J>»r*t* dining n I room, also lunroom off kitchen, built-in s
*-------* In living rr-- l|y— —*“
ies hut. 5
FOR CARPENTER IN cHAlktlAN home. Write Pontiac Press Bex X. GENTLInUN, CLEAN ROOM WITH
H6 MinkIrs, near i u i teRChss packsd. PE HEj._
at lyteitai*t!ll*p*
Lex Am at Huron, Phone l«mm R/Tripo. Reetter, FE S4141. STORE SB* KJ*t ACROSS FROM new’ pest oftlct. Inquire >14 W.
Rge> Office Spate# 47
POUR ADJACENT O F F I C Rwidahad, aE Utilities, ample a2 tea. In Mt* Sylvan Shopping C > ter. aa per off ice.
m-tm sylvan bm
livoHia BUILOIN6 M.H.
id fenced yard. Pi ltd sewers. Pontiac u.
•rport, toad* ot Storage ana me drat ter Mf S17,*tl. Owner a
66n old duos
Clean up and tava SOS. 3_
ranch apt north. Ite baths, large utHtty room. Beauty Queen caM-nats in WmUy tdtdtan. Ml heat,
KhE xKhjZi
STROMAhEALTOR? 4*0?*!.' Huam!
OR 44Mi.llvee- 4*5*435._
OUBLIN-ST. PATRICK SCHOOL AREA
ROCHESTER AREA
eoms and bath - spacious v * tot. Gxaga. $7,500. Terms.
reams and bath — attach, age. Fenced yard. IIIJU -
Call OUve >0371
ROCHESTER, BY OWNER, 3-EED-roam brick /ranch, attached . screened breezeway end brick ge-| rag*, full baeamant, St7,3Mb 354 ™-------Ct. OL 1-1—
SYLVAN LAKE
3ENFRCW ; has 3-story,
house. ■■ Real pi ester. Lake prlvlleges. ''s3r*3o. “t^!
i *T ***
SQUARE LAKE ROAD AND WOOD Wert. 3 bedrooms, brick ranch with 2-car far,
SIS4SS. FE HQ
IN SILVER LAKE SUB.
4-bedraom colonial, 1st floor la dry, 3-car garage, split-rack i J In living room with off-cr--— place. Peerless kltchsn
family cam tort. Only $25,*00. WE TRADE AND TRADE
IN JAYNO HEIGHTS
Rightfully advanced living Is MHng ter you In this new Madid, eetontoL He* water hex, ■stared walla, StVcar garage, ■stored, tv, bathe. Thar* to axtaa In Mt heeutltul —
n washer, family room and ettrac-n five built-in bar with fireplace plus It Is situated on a large feneM-ln tot. CALL FOR APPOINTMENT. CLOSE IN
3-bedroom brick. Large kitchen with ample cabinets. Extra large v living room, 2-car attached garar* 411 «——— - lOOx (SO-foot j—■
r v im. a.
OPEN
SAT. and SUN. 12-5 BLOOMFIELD HILL TOP COLONIAL
lust S blocks south X Square Lake Read an Tategraph Road. This magnificent cotonlal an extra large beautifully
I > Mgh'cMUng )
- tm OFFICE SPACE f 4ACRE FENCED YARD >CAR R.R. StDING ATTRACTIVE RENTAL
PAUL JONES REALTY
PEASSM
West S<
ar with Basement
E* rW «•}. ■
boards in largejiltchen. Back yard fenced. Alum, norms and screens. Jrac? **k* ov*r l*n7W WE BUY, SELL, ANO TRADE Mutttpte Llstlno Service
KAMPSEN
. Your NeMteer Traded Why Don't You?
House Sense
all brick rooms* ful root* gun .mm. SlrSSO down and cost*, trtdt.
Huron Gardens
teched <
* large play areas ed base
_____I____ _____ anvtobtei
Priced X $37,500. PtolM vs Saturday ar Sunday.tram
car garage, ceriigltng ncluded. basement, gas 140' tot.'Only $10,500
How to Buy a House Without Really Trying
Just walk Insidt this dandy ranch house and yaw will be torn. Three bedrooms. Fireplace In Uvlto ream and dining ream. It has a family room, two-car attached garage.
. You apH lust .have: to 'BrTK " Only m, *50 — or w* WIN trad*. / .
THINKING OF SELLING? Went
. — try. Cell -Fred Ro*> w, L*o Kampeqn, Floyd Mm-ra, Dave Bradley, Byron Rog-. Hilda Stewart, L*t Kerr tor
REALTOR PARTRIDGE
"IS THE BIRO TO SEE" I_______
1. Huron ; Ft 44SM I AFTER B PAR- CALL
D—4J
.*HK
fruN i iMj PKiiifcS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1904
n6rth perry
MMl, gas heel, . . ■
TW*I gne* *7.160. SEE IT,
. SYLVAN MANOR
Very attractive brick renc ••tow, ] big bedroom i, beth. get Met, carport, r -tot. About 11400 should m<
Ml H|»eu •* _ _ jHiMJImnim
BIRMINGHAM
NEAR *^911
Beamed family room, plan. 109-toot lot. Apple addreta. 00,000.' ~
WOODED SETTING yard. F— -gag
brick ra
SK.fi}
O'NEIL
SCHRAM
- iNlOHOLIEi I
Brand New
SEE OUR FINISHED model Beautiful 3-bedroom ranch he with Id'xir living room deslg tor family comfort, lOW »l
llW recreation area of relaxed enloyment. I $11,000 plus crating cost
duplicate on your lot or e
Big T
» Mammoth 3-bedroor . with long-lasting I
tnrtlty gat heat. Price 011,050 plus closing ebsi
Off Joslyn
• 3 bedroom*, c Itrot dininj bum-ln ovei
for outdoors
Northern Hlw_______ _______ R
- $13,500. T«rms con be arranged.
Duplex
3 bedrooms with 10* x 13 living
kitchen with 'separate basements and heating, 3-car garage. And within walking distance to downtown, $15,000. Terms con bo arranged.
IVAN W. SCHRAM REALTOR . FE 5-9471
*« JOSLYN COR. MANSFIELD MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE OPEN EVENINGS AND SUNDAY
WEIR, MANUEL, |
SNYDER & RANKt
29* S. Woodward, Birmingham _
4446J0O PHONES 546-2323 nim _____________________
and waiting teg i ■"•'■I .aqcept your amoinr •ado I Clerkston Meadows . eached by driving through
Ejtr suburban. . | .Cwt^ton.knd t&t
Three-bedroom tangelow. Carpeted Mrs. BelhToR ItesT' te-living room. Kitchen-and dining mrs, Bern or 3-2021.
.area. Full basement. Oil HA heal. .... ; , _ .
Alumlnum^rijfing, storms and 3156 AngelUS Drive
IORTH EAST $lt>E » j 3-bedroom^ ranch^ J Vk_baths,^ living
Three-bedroom bungalow,, Living flM ‘-•—~
and dining area.’Kitchen. Full basement. Oil HA heal, vacant.
About S300 moves you In. ment. XM M pa'iritod.&aa h
■act cmc cotmtHHilfy water, beautiful w<
TVw-bSPQam two- story older h2 W? » 1
home. Ful| basement. Oil HA .heat. „?!* Take west waiton nlUii Garage. Corner Tot. Good condl- £*■w - . Btvd.
ton/FHA TERMS.
I, Ilk b mrfy roc
TERMS., THREE-BEDROOM" BRICK Living
,ot Pon-
. Full basement.' V^acenl*' Newly ___
decorated. About SJ00 moves you j superlative
Elsele FE 3170*.
TRADING IS TERRIFIC
I. call MR. ALTON, FE 4
OUR LADY OF LAKES PARISH. ^gggMM||taterB*avty Rile" split m end aluminum construc-m full size rooms to In-tabu loous 19x11 kitchem
Sole Houses
269 CLAYBURN
J91 CARNIVAL
Bv OMt Turner ilcts-Acree|e
trill In living' rooi k. space. . oil he yard, 8HL450. 10 p trade equity, —
... -Jtht, - basement • rec. room area. $15,750 on new mtge. or trade equity.. '
HAGSTROM
. REALTOR
fOO W. Huron Oft 4-0358
Evening* call 6820435
ARRO
. CASH
FOR EQUITY-LAND CONTRACT
WE BUILD-WE TRADE j
SPOTLESS 3-BEDROOM RANCH! With carpeting In living room, din-1 Ing room, hall and I bedroom. Loads of closet space, Cheery kitchen. Pulldown stairs to attic. Covered patio gnd garage. Large .lot. Trade your smell home on thiy one.
BEAUTIFULLY WOODED LOTi Withy ““•n aluminum sided bungalow, toms, large healed glassed-ch, gas heat, wall-to-wall
STOUTS
Best Buys , Today
Growing Pains?
Stretch out In this large temlh ' ‘ village of Orion. Spa
ly, t of which li dock. Gas Hof wi an appointment n
Vi I A STEAL ON g-1 Carpeting In in | i bedroom, fr le breezeway «
THIS St^MfP - HOME.
Waterford Hill Manor.
' Ws en ene- ot Oek-HiUimH tub-SI 750.
!n7*County's______
■■ -Ions. Frlced from $3,750.
DON WHITt, INC. dpet ~ “ "1 *" **
—1 Mxto
OPEN DAILY TO I P.M.
l»ACREJ)|Tgj^^^R^ JN^ THE
' SYLVAN
tw-nse ■■ or . «I5-I«*4
IN ACRE MUCK FARM, IIMl. private lake. Ortonvllla art*. 825,-WA tarmaTFR 3044._____________
W0 ACRE* OF GOOD tlLLABLE land with large home and seven1 outbuildings. Has modarn milk par lor, larga bam tor hay, 'Erato and tod” storage. With large 71x7*
Business OppGftwWes Sf
HIQH VOLUME HOTEL LOCATED In Oakland County. Boautllul llq-uor lounge, package liquor takeout license. A Proven money mak-Sr/reasonabto down Includes mat estate. Revpnue tmm rpoms will ■
, business Brokers
F| 3*7841
Lease Available
__ „ ..mad SiM
fram^ort?'*. "EstawWedTn M CIS.-------------- gram
Office open Sunday. 1 to I MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE » GEORGE IRWIN,'REALTOR NS W. Walton FE 3-7SS3
' Forms—Acreage
IN ACRES—Larga farm home i bldgs. All In excellent conditi 1 mile road frontage, over mile stream frontage, located ...
ton, - Holly and Grand Blanc, on# of the tew remaining bloct~
home, complete'
SMI ---------- I_____lings In a vary
attractive rural salting, fertile soil
horse raising
r,dS*w&<
Better hurry on this one.
completely fenced.
dining1?
a
size tot, fruit a
heat, 2-car garai
* ----- and bsrrk
schools a
JU^wsriB. aw rwpi veto* at Of S9.9S0 with farms.
Little Farm
' 3 spacious landscaped loft I eluded with this room homo. Alum!
I 18x34
IT PEELS LlkC HOME. — The ALMOST* 3 ACRES with this roi
fSBMSLj jSm
door of this j breezeway to lWcer garage
plastered walls, aluminum stc Inina room. F V^rr^r„Tn. KfL Kf*",,)!
I with built- I ••rd,B *0,,' *14
baths, large I ,erm*-
repface.' 2^ | PHONE 682-2211
?r5L50£5; SI43 Cass-^llzabeth Road
9lff2f r°nkf ' _MULTIPLE LIST! NO SERVICE
TIMES
SPACIOUS RANCH '
With picnic park, sand beach and ! dockage for your boat on beautiful I Lake Oakland. 70-foot ell brick 3-attached 2-car I i, range, —
I---- . —lion rooii
- Cyclone fenced lot, moving to Flint. OR 3-197*.
SYLVAN LAKE
With r magnificent view of this' water controlled lake. Real sharp 5-room bungalow- plus enclosed 22-foot living room with ful ledgerock fireplace, high basement with oil furnace, softener and extras. Garage,
—tly wooded lots, SIS.500 on Msy land contract farms. ■ i
MACEDAY LAKE
Bead) lust a short walk and all year-'round tun for the whole fam-lly. Newer 3-bedroom ranch home, with • 35-toot living room with fireplace,
- 1 18-foot model kitchen and patio.
“In a njanner of speaking, I'suppose you could say, Prentiss, that I walked to work this morning because of my,health! My wife wanted the chr!”
basamant, 3 piece bath on 1st floor anr* —*'■ .bath in basement oft tf recreation room, ivs-car garage. This home Is r
-clean and lt‘e located In Ol______ .
— to Pontiac.
511 Resort Property
$50 Down A‘“
3i a’cres 119 FT. ON BETSIE RIVER
... heat, 112,909 10 per a plus oasts.
TIMES REALTY
5219 Dixie Hwv. MLS OPEN * T~
Just released five acre tri 119 ft. frontage directly sparkling Same River i lending back to nr —-
Music Camp) and flows to Lake .......— Frankfort.The river Is
— 70 toft ------- —
WILDLIFE — Wq RIIPIXP many dear and partridge right on this land and In the ad kilning fores lands. -Fin# hunting at your doorstep. — In addition tt Is lust over 1 mile to the Now Crystal Mountain Ski Area which offers year gnwnd recreation dt
52
MORGAN I^AKE BALDWIN AND " “ syy 100x150, swim, fish, 10 minutes fo Pontiac.) ai.xra, .j0 down. $20 month. Bloch Brolhars. F E 4-4509, OR 3-1295. I iW COTTA
SLlTlvM?-.__________
lake. Fishing and boating. Deer end partridge hunting. Lc— US 27 0-75) Freeway at Harrl win Exit. At stop sign, .1PPUMM one Hadk to our office. NORTHERN DEVELOFMENT COi. MAR. RISON. open 7 days a week.! iBir'tr Chamber of cammerea) I
{ UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE
. 1665 Dixie, Clerkston
Bves^ *25-1613
JB8
i-Glad- 3*
Sale Business Preperty $7 Comm'l-West Huron St.
Clo** to Gtneral Hospital, let 61-toot frontage on Huron, 23S feet deep, 16Stoot rear with frontage on S. Johnson. Priced at lass than ILI0 par square toot.
Annttf Inc. Realtors
Huron St. PB 84444
Open Evenings end Sunday 1 - 4
COMMERCIAL CORNER
W. Walton near Dixie Hwy., 77VbW 300 zoned commercial. Good busl-
P0NTIAC REALTY
«io'”d^,~*7o~^m. BSih- Bros! 737 Baldwin _____FE 3*275
pq *650*, or 3-i»*.______| so6o L6qifiON, 44ei' yiWy|kf
Party month.
8*ijr —. —— •
and tocraadng every n down, equipment on tan
Groceries
SDD and SDM. Known grad* mbato. Grots o a year.' Excellent lake estate end business *56,000. CALL TODAY I
Vendors Storage
or gerago, with l-rqorh *jh_ above, i 13* on Olxlo. ftlofwai Drayton Plain*. *17,500. TERMS.
BATEMAN
COMMERCIAL. DEPARTMENT
r liL 3-3759
Mert|tU«.is
*2,000 .... SIM*
MON .. ...i.025.71
mortgogw slightly higbar sw tor ANY uaeRil purpoea at* Bills /Naw C
Car
FE. 8-2657
Ruth details *1 yi Nam* ........ .....
MORTOAGL ... __________
With 150-toot ftoMOgO. NO •I too- B. D. Chari— ■
iap»
WALLED LAKE
7070
_ _ from Detroit—WO 5
ATTRAtTIVi" COTTAGES ^iMdN^lmi. 3-bedroom,
fLets-AcreEge
MOTEL - FOOD — G4..
ON THE DIXIE . Illness tore** tale. Will consM land contract. Good value at fair price. Mr. Hums orMf, Ck ton. Ml 6-6500 or JR *9400.' _ GREATER BLOOMFIELD REAL ESTATE CO.
(May wo *«tl your property)
uYiCa
ON 1
1 ACRE SITES OR MORE IN THE [Church building end fellowship hell hill* overlooking Watters Lake. ■ an largo corner lot In excellent egOAR ISLAND LAKk WATER | Ata0 5 W*Sd'marfng*pulplt Add^to ItTeb 6*2-2300 or «3S-flul frBeH^*'
acres, on _RALpwiN~OA| PAUL F. WILKE, Broker (MW> ■—
*Rw Creek fi—I— ‘SK -----toj |
£3,; BATEMAN GILES
kitchen GUARANTEED ■LJ-'v1—
2-story colonial
E AREA Ol
Rent Beater
Make your rent dolton M more - us* them to bu*_* .location home. See^thiMctean neat j»>ejF Reasonsl
1 oay! 60
CITY WEST
ful Shaded ureti, m nearooms, *iu- -rT....ra».. we minum siding and in wonderful 110,508, farms.
condition. Snactous# comfortable „_____. . „ „
| I |n # moft ACtiAOf — Northwest of city lias
rim lots of plus foatvros.! • Edrcol of land^ Close
ly priced at 818*450 with m Plus costs. CALL TO-
> 175. Good gra< i. Call for appoii
icludev sept II -batomanl
). Termi
"Bud" Nicholie, Repltor
: 49 ML Clement St.
' FE 5-1201 After 6 P.M. FE 4-8773
ANNETT
Waterford Area
Neat ranch home with 2 bed-. - rooms, den or 3rd bedroom,
and btoh°nGas redi*ntPheet! IVk-cer plastered attached garage. Lake ^privileges. Si ,000
Seminole Hills
. I In the Trees
! LARGE SHADED SITE, with lake privileges on both Cass and Elizabeth Lakes. Ranctr type. 3 bedrooms, part, basement on 7 lots, built In 19*2. It* sharp end dean, brick well fireplace and large 3-car garage. A real buy at *12,950 with $1,300 down plus costs.
Cass Lake
CANAL FRONTAGE*
_ you pen Pack ynur
back door and only l„ ,___......
lake. Cozy and comfortable rancher
i and hall, full t
BALOWIN JR. HIGH — Nice location tor to* family is this 3-Carpeted living 'ull beth with doors, in tub., run oatemem, gas beat. Screened-in patio with sectional fence, tor privacy. Only 513-900.
GILES REALTY CO.
E 5-4175 911 Baldwin Ave.
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE
iVal-U-Wa:
NEWLY REDECORATED I.N’&hS&w0?
nance to Fisher Body. Or ir month including taxes a
'"9 Uto lake, SUBURBAN a n 01,950.; PROPERTY.
CRAWFORD AGENCY
W HM2 _MY 39571
CANAL LOT IN- LAKEWOOD-'VIL ii.Kan lag*. *0x176' with improvements,
kttenen ressoneble. Call l-GL 3-2365
CLABktTON and Pontiac SECTION
Ith option to purchase. Low Lake property. For appointment cell Detroit collect, «l(E
ho/STe SITES, SO’ X 10 Beech overlooking bee t*r». Lake privileges, docking. S750,
.... DIXIE, REAR •
OR 3-3100 EVENINGS FE 3-7664 1
lIving, PONfiArtnsiNil
lots 3795, SI0 down. SIO month ,
_______■ , PEN. fish, boat docks. FE 49509, !
construction,, OR 2-1295. Bloch Bros, boms, oax floors, plas- LAKE FRONT - 1 _
spacious kitchen (14'x-, walkout basement. 6*2-5146.
1 family foo**1 •*- -.vna.i a. j. ■ ..—
N* 114*975.
« of rolling U
and Commercial— -
•M or ouiio.
Dixie at Silver Lake Rood.
. front on. 90*800 aa. ft. < Stores
wbMUttflft________
off M44. Only Torms.
2 exceptionally nlc* wooded 10-*cr* Broker Ctoopl^Sat!1 WO 5-lhi or |usT*5 mlln reply Box No. IS. Fonttoc Pres*.
pressway. *5965 — ——-
Business OppertEEHIei 59
if deep to'bqautitiii'racraattonto $2,000 VOLUME
' ■ ■*!. weodt- *** LIQUOR BAR
r pant on tv 8450 oer month* 815.000 2’^i-acre parcels, required. Shown by epp't only.
MICHIGAN
' Business Sales, Inc.
TAVERN
H*. 4SU. A good operation ... ... pie. Best of equipment. Large walk-in. 2 large reach-Ins. Seats 1SS. 1% food. Dance weekends. Gras* of $53,000 per year tor only Mpil «dttiiMMiP*ii.
STATEWIDE-LAKE ORION
ao-oooo After s. or 3>ooo
TRAILER PARK
95 Hconead spaces with cRy sewer end water, payed streets- ONLY 3150.000 with 530,000 dew*. Easy
C. B. Chapin Associates
Sale Land Contracts 60
1 TO*5oT LAND CONTRACTS
urgently wanted. See us betor
WARREN STOUT, Realtor
1450 N. Opdyke Rd. PE 59145 Open Evdt. *011 0 Ml.
300 SAVAGE FOR X
r|dK In .GOOD kHAEI f 66
I. FE 37104 ettor i.____
AlXNf HUNTING vele firm In Low-Deer huntlM with
QM>u*flL «
L com tort ably fumlshod homo
OIL SPACE HEATiE WltH IcOw-btower. fI*|.|9»?C* l***>*f WHh ftMkSN 51L FuFHAZE, ’115.000 OTU'S, perfect condlHonl SON 0100 or awop tor tar, Mrd Nan, auto.
aRr«g
WE RUY SELL AND TRAbfi. SHOT-
. trade equity in mbd-
ACTION
on your land contract, large or small Call Mr. Hlltor, FE 29179 Broker, 1*40 Ellzeoeth Lake Road.
HOUtl WlYN 1 ACRE IN Waterford Township. Excoltont pay. —‘ record, iatonc* awing 19^ Your Cost *7,952.53.
WARDEN REALTY
ran
15192. Y
C. PANGUS, Realty
Call collect NA 7-2(15
M15 Ortohvllto JOHN LANDMESSER, BROKER ui___,.j r___•____ u._ is s
~2-ACRE~ H6MElitis. in a wTratogrogli mTo-ME, WEEtef CEWTEEtl Mtg. El-A
UNION LAKE-FRONT HOME. YEAR
i
i EM 2-375*.
ir garage, fenced y
id association tor your protection a home owner. This, is one of I t most popular homes built In
front. Paved streets end a beautiful lake privileges, park tor your exclusive use, *14,900;
JOSLYN AREA - Ideal location tar too working man within 2 blocks r of Pontiac Motor. This fcroom story-and-a-ha It bungalow is to.A-1 shape inside and out. 2 bedrooms
UNION LAKE
400 down buys Urge 5-room
CLARKSTON REAL ESTATE j tot
Ml 5. Main WON
MA 59101 1 Pilot
CORNER LOtS - CRESCENT tl>c Lake privileges. High 51,500 cash. FE S-6992
GOOD RESTAURANT DOING 'uslngss, very f *i« 'party. Inc
tached workroom! ioo Ion Lake privileges h
. large i
swimming, strictly private i Ilf Gladstone.
“ —"t^ieawim law
Small farm lift In i rwfrldi division. QlMlIfy i Jwllt tPd^. jrU prooeSy
Hi ______________ ■ ANCHOR 3AY BAR
LAkGI LOTS WITH MlkkOR J2S5* iltalllll* i2t2!L ond, roadway In, prl^<* hotal* liquor licansa* boat d
r> Pina Lake* nlotly \ til singly* KM 3-3300.
-------st*0of l6t.
1 TO 50 ’ f LAND CONTRACTS
Urg*nth| wanted. See us betor*
WARREN STOUT, Realtor
IIS N. Opdyke Rd, ' PE *9161 Qp«n Eve*. Tit t era.
MONDAY SEPTEMBER 14 10 AJM.
* desirable collection ol ll winter cloth Ing, Daily It a. n n. Tuesday 1-9 pjn. Setufdi
accepting fell
ments. Must be dean and to good condition. Consignment days Monday. Wednesday, Thursday"0 ».m.-
Putaam Ft 3)243.
to. Full price only $8_
j. L DAILY CO.
mortga
Small
CASH
I ointr ectSj' *j
UNION LAKE FRONT
*9tory, 2-bedroom, enclosed front porch, stone fireplace, full basement ana double garage. SI*,500
AUTO WASH la/SSTei
ARRO REALTY 51 CASS-ttU ZAEirH ROAD Lash FOR LAND CONTRACTl-
~ and corner lot.
I IDEAL. HOME FOR YOUNG AAA5 RlEDS—.Completely maintenanci
LAKE PRIVILEGES
DORRIS A SON, REA 2536 Dixie Hwy. . ...
( MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE^
to-tyee, bum in 1951 with Cass j t privileges close by. Excel-starter home at a price you afford. Priced to sell quickly 7.950 with lust 5795 down plus S. BETTER LOOK TODAY.
Orchard lake
- Brick ranch i )5‘x33' living Florida or fai
i, breakfast room, 3 ti
ClSto*fo sch
51.600 0
oar Lower Straits'
n front porch, ga- j f. Pull price only j i pn land contract. I
Walled Lake School District j
1 WrtlitRSL^E . i
— North shore, n**t 2-bedroom, Id block from lake, 57,TOD.
i 682-2300 SYLVAN 625-1886
|! WHY RENT. BUY FOR LESS PER | J rnordh. Mobil* borne tots 65x110,
. I *2,495. *25 down, (25 aor month., ! Bfoch Bros- FE 4-4509, OR 31295.
, Nertheri Preperty Sl-A
, /WATER FRONT LOTS, ON LAKE ‘ »l frontage each,' 3 , if CtabDjrjan, 52,500 !
acres with Mg
grweny »»■.. wid'lwi,,>2*1» L j ^ | 0R'3-I3«I_________________________
w*m RE*ALrP,m#wr ufet!,?39» HSySuSJTC toSSTfcwtX Yi^TOrm
1956 M15 at Bald Eagle L9I»W5D; totton* and Iratoing.- If you have discounts. Earl Garrets,
S^wss'^“K .,!^,»K^ctsas?«
$1,995, $20 down $20 month. Bloch gallon. Write Interstate Merchan-Brpi. FE 4-4509, OR 31295. j dlsers. Car wash department, RoSt-BLOOMFI^EL^H ILLS^ SCHOOLS «JW'. Minnesota tor focal inter-
BARBER SHOPS. WEST a SIDE Shoooino Center. 626-9494. ^
BROOKFIELD HIGHLANDS SUBDIVISION
145X2N FT.
Superb view, hlllsld* <■
sell. CAPITOL SAVINGS A LOAN ASSN., 75 W. Huron. FE 49561. IMMBOIATI CASH FOR YOUR land contracts or any good land —---------------satisfactory appraisal
L Spring Complete w
turesque homeslte. Custom *
BBttjRW mmm ■
—ui *.$*** to.southern Michigan, I
Ml 47422 i st)on< owner decea
EXCELLENT INCOME
-family In stall kepi mixed n*
- __ >trailer and lot near
Mlo, Mich, good deer hunting. | Price $1700. C4II 674-I494. - I
Shepard Real Estate
PE 09473
TS -
only S1A9S0
.......... costs. CALL TODAY.
. ittached'' garage Over OPEN
! SATURDAY
FURNISHED MOOELS can afford, starting
oven, dishwasher and garbage d posal, ceramic til* bath, rec re tion room, utility room. 2Vdcar * rag*, on largo V3ecra tot, pave street. Only *10,0“ -----—
A terms on fond
65 A. Country Estate
Overlooking 2 privet In Almont era*. Owner
______JteTtoT R. J. (Dick)-VA1.UET
HQ Hi many plain. BUILD1 REALTOR
FOR LESS WITH BATEMAN. M59 .opposite city airport. Torn toft on Whittier at Big Bateman slnr • A™r
5***HflH YOU CAN TRADE .
±o 'Si TD t A 7TM
brick terrace * • l|7l VV11N
Investment in Romeo
On* story 5-unif apartment building, consisting of three 2 bedrooms and Two 1 bedroom units, field stone exterior, o#r 4.0000 sq. ft., each ^jnlt' toeturts: refrigerator
centrally located utility area. Individual heating units, axcellant
160 Acres I
Beautiful hunting land, t mil* of, frontage on Tahquemonon ri—- ' Nice 3-room cabin. A steal 015,000 with lust *5,000 down, fast on this.
REALTOR PARTRIDGE -"IS THE BIRD TO SEE"
1050 W. Huron, FE 4-35*1
CANAL LOTS . _ .__________________
Choice building sites - 60x147. BUILDING PREVIOUSLY OCCU Connected^with Sylvan Late. pled tel.aperated as restaur'"*
tiding sit
■npuKVM _ JACK LOmAW^
2110 Cass Lake'Rd.
FE 4-3531
Optn f-7p . ■
- jtwwijw - - "M4io or fi 8-1384 Investment in Imlav Citv LIST YOUR HOME WITH US , D
swim, clubhouse. Btoch Bras. FE 4-45W, OB 31295. .
■eauimfuT
:hoice i-acrE lots
oiling eowitry f
BUY NOW—BUILD LATER P ' TROY REALTY
(1900. Beautiful I
filNI
retire, lures
tostallid. Very modern
pancete trausa, beauty or "clothing shop, or any lye* ol buatoass you desire. Located at an* ol Oakland Ctuntys busiest intersections, Telegraph at Dixie. Don't
Tab in iiTEs in a to tor hunting, fish Ing. I xtetlng and skiing. $55 , ——. ~ - mo. Write ITU Hamit- ' ton Dr. Pontiac tor pictures and
e tile baths, Peterson ]
1 with scenic View and I ly built - Ins throughout |. u ultramodern kitchen,
tto-car~ala«torad~auto. door heated gar age, Redwood com-. Mtottel heated workshop and I Implement building. Pole ham tor horses, - log cabin | *" private wke h
i bought right, -make
AUBURN HEIGHTS AREA — Lovely 2-bedroom ranch-type bungalow with aluminum sldtof, toll basement, IVb baths, - Glldamtttor doors to Year patio. Carpeting, re-frtgarator, ----— —■
OWNER SAYS "SELL THIS
ON FHA" , ________I___________
CITY EAST — Immaculate 29ed- Ciudad. Don't overlook room bungatow- Lara* bedroom,
I3'l0"x23', upstairs. 2 bedrooms, first Hoor. Vestibule with entrance ctoiet. Oak Hoars, plastered —
Full basement, oil. FA beat, new 2-car garage. CALL FOR AFP'T.
Ranch . MPVM. __........... ,
cated right on M9S (Van Dyke) information.'
ijs
o**. FESojas. T *^1.*
UWCiPSoRf LOTS’ near kaLkav ™
nk>- AOAAU REALT?*F^&*^ j -=» LOQK AHEaDII Acraac* — near Geydord
I
HI-HIll VILLAGE
WTKSlSSJMrS
fine homes Mth plenty of space between. BUY NOW end buHd your own. Ul* your W a* dawn pay-
“ • Ki ALL YOU CAN
Want a Business of Your Own ... Answer this Ad
LADD'S, INC
war Road Parry (MM 9291 or OR 31231 after 7:JS m dally 119, Sunday 129 I ID membErsHI# IN 'CRY “—1 hunting *— near. Ml
MAKE IS MONEY
franchtoe distributorship avallabl* ! in this territory tor Individual ready
to mev* into tfio MjjVntnay- if
W. H. BASS
RRALTOR
Write of F
Smith &
FE85T66
1 DRAYT.ON AREA - 3bedroo bungalow on large lot Wllh re . yard fenced. Has automatic t heat end electric hot water heats Can ta bought with tow dawn pa ment. Let's look!
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR 9* W. Walton - ffi 379*1
Real Estate
*4441 Van Dyte - Romeo.
752-9391
.53mLL/UUMAW' jjl ,
SI , Branch. Ca» after TkP. 43419231 •" Improve tP Pyndgt Avo,_______ftotn. HI.
--j WANTED TO RENT: CAHn~f6R -2. *"t*' 0R 3’MW- ----iMT. * - .
MA 6M >
I • PML— ' l6o 6lbin, i
ROOMS. HARI)-
----- PE 3721* ■ BUILDER
NORTH OF rocheSte*. tk aUIS •*r*e bam and Ms bar buildings. Partly wooded •d joining ( lake. Very deslr-f*rmk°r ** ' **
’36* Penobscot
Exclusive, eTatected territory Factory training and badilnf Minimum. tovewmant secured by
iBUCKNER
FINANCE COMPANY
WHERE YOU CAN
BORROW UP TO $1,000
OFFICES
man'i meoiuM diUV SUIT, SIZE
42 long, ne»ar warn, m£ UL 33*15 meN'1 and ladiT* SUin, 66AYI
end dresses, ra**on*Md. Pg 35*41 MEN'S lUiTS, LiKE NiW. iltl 4*.
SAki ORIGi«AiXT*«IEi SUIT
■.Eagacsr- **,y<
Mb HeemIieM 4ee4i 48
I DAVENPORT. CHAIR AMD 0T-Mjvsn, ll*xir cerpef, bunk bed*,
FE M927C#“£h' **“•
(Son*#, MOB CHI GE *t*c. dbyer, Hk* tew. -
ter "~'■*"**
Crump Electric
I Only-Repossessed
3R00M OUTFIT
$159.95 . $2.00
Includes rampWt* bedroc
pipe* sec i*mps,~]
Weekly
Uf'J:
RATORS A lerenfeed. I
Welled Lake—Birmingham
LOANS
COMMmiTY *lSSn CO. ---- PE Bd
2* E.~Iawranca
LOANS
SAVAGE
I AROUND RETREAT C
■ritul St* PR I—- ■ -
o Orton, Mn
home, .Hrgptow, IV* tette. *t-t ached garage. Cell MJ 39119.
vicinity
adults. 6^-^. yeaSSroonSI MODEIIN CABIN
urtRl" t acres. r~* *“ ^---------|j
couple. *25-29*2.
n ecra. xnpny uses. -
d required. For fur-m call Mobile Oil
mommy payment. Quick 'service* with Cpyrteeue experlenrad counsellors. Credit life Insurance avail-•Me. *toP In or'phono FE 59121.
homeI auto loan c6!
N. Parry «. v fe 59121 9 to I Daily. Bat. ♦ to 1
L 0 A’.i* S 7 ~“
*25 *a 11.000
_ insurad Paytriwl Plan BAXTER A LIVINGSTONE
, Finance Co.
4M Pontiac State Benk Bv11-1"
FE 4-1538-9 LOANS TO $1,00C
Usually an tint visit. Gulc friendly, helpful.
FE 2-9206
la the number to can.
0AKUND LOAN CO.
WHEN ?8U NEED $25 to $1,000
m-mrm
iTssr*"''
3 ROOMS
$3lTN,TUM®^
3pi*c* ddragm
BRAND NEW
$3.50 Weekly
tbdroom suit* with
------- USlni
beautl-
JUST ARRIVED BARGAIN BASEMENT
UTILE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE
■14AI BALOWIN AT WALTON
sst*asWla
ecrass front Atlas Super Merketn, rHEYw60D-i -----
PilA!fM'w,“......M
vinyl asbestos (Random) sc V* Sfe -TIL3 I
CERAMIC fiuf
1) 4C Ea.
tmU U----->--«■« \gm
3 ROOM OU TFITS
*—i*AM0 NBW f URNITURE
$288 $3.00 WMkly
.*»* WAREHOUSE BARGAIN* ' • P^J"PI Fmn nNil fonn cush-
.MMT A
SHE
SaiS,-“...........:|
:.m
;,. rn* * ^l*c&3eHMn5,l,m*m wit TIlt-BOckracItolng eh.tr. i'iJj
H£L: 15
2 bumor ■tfrWWMl. size gM r»n^ 2-Door bronn ton* refrigerator
....., ' tat.OO
30" iMfi MW Bet rww S109.00
30“ Metric WW 1130.00
3 step tables, 1 coffee taMo (Mt) .
reamon'* FuSWiTjm 310 0. FjSr _ PE 4-7001 Open Men. an. Frt. *tll o p. m.
kJt0.jPr/UM,6Wt Hllzllt
v&/
zhS^U
buttonhotoe.
CASH PRICE $76.56 A-l VALUED
lili IMmMmM Coodi ||
THB PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBERS 1064
>OR 13-FOoV REFRIOER-
\3?C® li-
ii 3-DOOI door, 13-toor, foot,
TERMS AVAILABLE
HAMPTON OECTRIC
<1 W. HURON , ' Ft 42S2*
GRATS 7
FURNITURE WAREHOUSE
DISTRESSED MERCHANDISE
dinette i
I place chroma Bunk bad sets. i traaa. $30.
3-placa living roam suites.
Denim Madam . Modern Colon let, aa tow as too ART American Solace Ing room suites with ..tags, Inctodao 4 ehelrs’l
Big 4-Plece bedroom au__| __
esaa heiitaord with huMdridiar Plua matching cheat. Priced to tall. lot. Hurry an (tua ana.
THIS WEEK ONLY:
LAMPS, Early American or ____
am. Taka your .£01.01 Coma
DEALS, NO JLANCY PIXTI LOW OVERHEAD.
Drive out a little and aaya II Daria Rd* Formerly Doris Rink, near comer of r
338-0851
OPEN DAILY
house sold; itlM* MuST~oa Including electric stove, apartment alto OE refrigerator, furniture,
MAHOGANY BUFFET S3S. BRI *-^ taM^i tr
$34.50 CASH PRICE
APARTAlkT itU RIMiD-
eretor, vary peed condition. $40. OR 4-1410. -
Hand. Reasonable. 402-0SI3.
MAPLE BEDROOM SUITE, COM-plete, $100. 35-4034.
MAYTAO WRINGER WASHtR; 30-loch Norge Ml range; 1944 models . like new. FI SOSIS.
1 M0VIN6-MUIT SELL AUTOMATIC er; Food-o-Rama refrigerator; gae |
no electric timer, medal MafS condition, used Imately 1 ytar. $373. Ml
>FAfMr MPTIAIR KINTAL
thitoarBlwt JCatw!"
For Salt Misctllaneous 67
1 — W X 34" ROUND Ron. ML00*CairoR*4-,23a l-A ALUMINUM SIDING, STORMS,
1-WttfCL UNCLOSED TRAILER. ---------
Practically now, OR 4-03S3,
8' PRAM, OARS, NEW. $50. 3 DEER I rlHat, ahalla. cheap. OR 4-ISU. fxtl LlWOLlUM RUGS $3.05 EACH
Calling tile BAG Tile. I
MTAYLOR G
II paneling, c -0057 1075 W. I
-, slightly a, 430 N. 0
* chair, 17.
l IxteWsiDn lad
t INCH, * FOOT LONG. 30c I «. IS Poet. FE 4*449.
screens, approx. oil tanks. Ml 4-5'zj/.
IO0J00 BTU 6AI PORCiDAIR furnace. Completely installed. 5 hots, 4 returns, ISIS. Act Heath* Co. OR 3-4554 or 402-5574.
hr Sab MbuRaawat/ 67) TIZZY
OIL -PAINT USED, APPROX IMATE-ly 300 gar., mwe offer. Good con dltlen: fcv"
tog/fiSSll-medal tor emtralilerlng. etc. Pi oft account in s months at I
Standing • toilet, $14,051 SBgaHan heater- $47.151 3-niece bath sets. $50.05 Laundcy tray, trim, SlO.OSi shower stall with trim, S32.P3> Shawl sink, $2.05; Levs., HOSIi tube, IIS and op. PUe cyt end threaded. SAME plumbng co.. Ml Baldwin, FE 4-1514.
RUMMAGE SALE: PEW ANTIQUES no* range, hat 111!*, fur stole and C* doming. 4bft. met41 exten-mlsc. * - — -
drawers, 17. Gu|ta'r, beginners, $10. Zlmgar Classical, $35. Stereo tape recorder, $70. Kenmore dryer, $40. Dll tank, til Friday or Satuotoy.
RUMMAGE sALtf, FRIDAY AND Sat. 1M, 3130 Warren Drive, Dray-
INO: ALUMINUM
tv-
Pgts—Hunting Oggs
______$25. Cell ____
RlO[iTJE»Iftk etflHUAHUA^AUR-
3-7742 after I p.m"
REGISTERED MALE BEAGLE, $30.
I 5" *™f 4 >-m. UL 3-5410. ________
SPRINGER SPANIELS. TMONTHS,
1 registered show add pet quality.
Excellent with children. 476-2511._
SIAMESE KITTENS FOR SALE -Tondl-Su Cattery, MA 5-1011. SIAMESE KITTENS. PUREBRED,
7 weeks aid, reasonable. FE 2-1737., TOY FOX TERRIERS FttR SALE I OR 3-2401
APPLES, RED-YELLOW DELI-clous, cider. 7054 Hatchery Rd. APPLES AtilD CIDER APPLES. 3M0 “regory Rd„ Otodafhtttto.
APPLES. MAHAN ORCHARDS. 410 E. Walton 1 black east ot Joalyn. • No Sunday sales.
APPLES — MANY VARIETIES.
’ Fancy, utility grad** •*“
n Creek Orcnar _.........
echester. m mllia Romeo or 32 M|to Rd. Open day Saturday, Sunday, week d< p7m. ONLY1
D—7
Housetrailers *;•!
19'XKK PAN ALUMINUM HOUSE, tt.ltor^. Self-contained, sleep*
50 ^OOf'BY'lO FOOT MOBIL HOME with r Open, 12'xl*' living- room, duality nylon carpeting Ala- :
mlnum awnings, conditioned, malty
FE 4- ,
ird, 7 miles ni
1*53 *4x37 STEWART. $1,308 or bert • of&r. $52-4354.
1*43 ALASA \V X 53- EXPANDO Redwood front ^ parch, carpeting
Auction Sales
3 Special Auctions
Saturday and Sunday Railroad Salvage Auction
CARROTS, sauerkraut, rellih, peach-
them y.T______
Road. 685-2037, -
“a- dodos Orchards 7~"' |
2330 Clarkston Rd.. east of Bald- . win. Cider. Cortland, dallctaus.,Spy, [ Snows, You ptckjNa pick. - 1
Fresh filterID cider, do- 1
nuts weekends, McIntosh apples, $1.25 buniel and up. Diehl's Or-,
, chards and Cider Mill, 1471 Rehch ;
Rd., 4 miles south* of Holly.__
pTCk YOUR OWN APPLES, $1.50
and Up. prmth rider 5241 Ctirknev
Rd., Clatki
SPRED-SATIN PAINTS
’ “What a fiasco! I went to the dance with Paul to make Herbie jealous, and then I discovered Paul was ^ taking me just to make MeUssia jealous!”.
MTC&c’S
Hoover UprfjM* IN
Hoevff ummn *
Easy NPkwierte am
Emerton W" urtlli TV I F.M
‘ TH^ ^“K^p^AC -J1 W. MPtlB St. . FE 4-1555 AUTOMATIC WASHER. A-l CON-dltlen. OR SWt
APPllAHCt SPECIALS
33" TV StorpbCamaa S34R00
m' PariaBto TV ........... STMS
. $1*5.00
L Dm* fancy mi aractt-ng by dliHiig. Payments yt »jv a month or Ml price, $42.00. Dometce, Inc. FE $-4531
BEDRO0M WHITTING MT 4470 DIXIE HWY. DroytonPloins 673-9441
ment of furniture, dishes, books, appliances, garden teato, piano, ate. Priced to tell. Call 3170 MW-dlebury Lena, near . Lasher and
Renges at $1.3* p*r weak aM up, gat and electric aryert at $1.3* par week and up.
SEE US POR TERRIFIC BUYS .
GOODYEAR STORE
3t S. COM FB 54123
NORGE ELECTRIC RANGE. GOOD condition. FE 4-3445.
ANCHOR FENCES
MONEY DOWN FE S-7471
APARTMENT SIZE GAS RANGES, I burner SS*ii value, $4*.*5, scratched. Several full size ranges In electric and gai at* terrific values. Ona year to pay. Michigan Fluorescent, 3*3aOrchard Lake -It.
APPROXIMATELY 35 (
OR 3-7S33, tilt tlmmant Drive.
aTbIautiful sinDer IN CaSi-
net, utad. Equipped to monogram, fancy designs, button ho las. ate. Paymarrfs.pl U.*5 a month or full price, $33.10. Domalco. Inc. PE
M5M.__________ - -
BARBERSHOP EQUIPMENT -Chair, ifarlllxar, electric clippers, goad condition. M7-433I.
BARGAINS — NEW LUXAIRE GAS furnace - goad mad 100,000 BTU Wllllamaon. ^Oti. Maple 5-1501 or MApla 5-3537, A h H Sale*. BATHROOM ’ FIXTURES. OIL AND gat furnace and boilers, automatic
•vr
TALBOTT LUMBER
tint doaaaut Sale. Interior Laytex, mama) and Piastre Tana, $1 to 13.50 gallon.
IS Oakland Ave, PE 4-45*5
Th£ SALVATION ARM?
Musicat Goods Lew
Conn Organs—Full L Used Baldwin Spinel /
Betterly
711 Sand-Gravel-Dirt
BLACK OUT. TOP SOIU I gravel, iflt dirt, sand. * 428-2038 or 33S-*573.
heads.1 FREE PARKING
ire, one Appliances. I > - -1 .. -1 ■
XELLENT CONOI-
CHOICE RICH. BLACK I
B &.B Auction
5089 DIXIE HWY.
FE 3-2717
T^miia". ............. F
AMERICAN STONE |
MA S-31A1
FOR SALE: 4 USED WHEEL horse tractors storting from $150 and up. Ivons Equlpmant. 625-1711 | H6Y BOYS LOOK: NOW YOU CAN | I defer, all interest and payments [
Fill-Dirt Available j
Auburn And East Blvd. Area.' Belaire, call 338-2763, evenings j
Jr 112 EVERY FRIDAY
___'EVERY SATURDAY
i T6P EVERY SUNDAY
- All Types Every Auction rv buy—Sell-Trade, Retail 7 days Consignments Welcome MB AUCTION
If Dixie Hwy. OR 3-2717
SATURDAY dCT. lfr -10 A.M.
MdCULLOUCH CHAIN SAWS Nt have the full line of 1M6 mod on display.
TRIPLE a bargains
Reconditioned TVs, SSI and uPMR and tt J] par-weak.
1 Norge wringer wi lent condition. $7t.*S. B Norgt rafrIterator r
quire 5* Edison.
»« M-47 Oakley . Perkins, A
, OLDS TRUMPET, ’l werth $250, $73 ci I Ml 4-*3l5.
’ SALE GUITARS . .
| MANURE -
LOAD, 4
horse Manure | ^ - -
MA 5-1538 Swartz Creak, 435-7400
PGR ANY il2C SATURDAY', OCTOBER ~ 10, .11
4-94*5.
Outstanding I
ACCORDIONS
t ind lessons. FE 5-542$,
PONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS SUP-ply. sand, gravel, fill dirt. - OR I 3-1534
SAND, GRAVEL BLACK DIRT AND
manure. 474-1144. | _____ _____________
TOP-soil, FILL DIRT, SAND AND Cotfheed Vaccinated, gravel delivered. Cal'a Trucking.
......._______.24.95.
PARTSANDSERVICE
KING BROS.
FE 4-0734 FE 4-144
■ Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke_____
Gne usfo i.H.e. trS£toiTmod-el No. 440 with Henrv leader and backhoa. A-l shape. $3.9*5. Credit
.COLONIAL
Mooilhome Sales & Service* Inc.
(M-59) at Opdyke (M-24) Hours, 9-6 Dally .
detr^PTeb
ALMA
PONTIAC CHIEP 10'-12'-20LWIDES and price for everyone, it today and laf us -show
Bob Hutchinson
4301 Dixie H lohwav OR 3-1203
Drayton Plains > 9 Dally v Sat. 9-4 SUNDAY 12-S_____* 9
expert mobile home repaiE
service, free estlmetes. Also part* and accessories. Bob Hutchinson, Mobile Home Solos, Inc,, 4301 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains, OR 3-1203.
FALL CLEARANCE
PARKWOOD AND CRAN8ROOK Mobile homes In sites jvp to 43‘xao'
j EARLY AMERICAN
CONTEMPORARY
FRENCH PROVINCIAL I Cranbrook 12' wide *4,4*J
I WE WiL'L NOT BE UNDERSOLD
1 Midland Trailer Sales
0-* 7 DAYS A WEEK
I 2257 DIXIE ___________33S-0771
AAARLETtII VAGABOND, GARD-ner, Skyline, General, 10-13 and - 20 wide. 40 floor plaAt.
| See Gem, Marlette, and Yellowstone
mile east to Rush Rd., then U mile north to 1300 Ruth Rd.. consisting ot 40 of well brad Holstei- with some registered and a larg
KING BROS.
0734 FE 4-1442
nount ■ Pontiac Read at Opdyke i nclude ROTARY CUTtER, 4-FOOT 3-POINT
TWO 7x» STEEL BERRY GARAGE
doer*. Phono PE 44343.____/ j
USED GAS AND OIL FURNACES, i Chandiar Heating, or 3-5433.
T5F1
Used Hooting Equipment
until November.
GALLAGHER'S
10 E. HURON FE 4-0344!
.spinet piano, Mahogany,
_ ____ LOADED
"■w _________trad. FB H*45.-
— no paymantt; jgp soil, SAliC
DELIV-
Wood-Coal-Coke-Fug!
GRAVEL, FILL.
>7
Holstein Heifers due from____________________
rough Nov.i Dairy equip- SEE OUR icludlng a Glrfon 400 gr‘ aheto — ik;. Pabtl “' —-
ormick No.
i 305' endless gut-surge 5 stall a offered by
FE 8-0500 eral aucti
Plan to attend. Metamoi Clerk — lunch Traitor —
Foglar, prop. Bud Hlekmott, gen-wa^Mfilaidato Oxford, QA 8-3l».
..._ _. .j/melite
Davit Machinery Co.,1 Ortonville, NA 7-32*3. Sa*ci|li$t for farm tractors and machinery,parts,. SEb F R A li R ROTGmLlRl, PARTS AND SERVICE.
U w. Avia
FE 4-43*0
HEIGHTS SUPPLY SPSS Lapeer Rd. FE 4-5431
BEDROOM LIGHT FlktbRRS. IR-BUT- Vary ( regulars
oilfurnace- and tanX, oobb
condition, FE 5-44*1.
FOiftlAC KITCHEN SPECIALTIES
______ SIS. Gnat Plaint Qm Co.,
FB 54X73.
BOY'S YARDMAN GO' CART, $45. 1 reflecting type 110 power telescope with tripod. Ilka new, ISO. Ft S4S5S after 4 p.m.__________________
* Infermotlan. 447-1177
0 Dixie
wedding ANNOUNCEMtNTs at and Groan reoa r.
discount price*. Forbes, 4500 ni»iJ ,CHU"-___________
USED GUITAR AND CASE, EXCEL-UMM— --------1. 434-5306.
___ _____ , WE STACK WOO!
1W0Mff srs -a 4i» fzrv&ssprm \ 5
‘ mm ’ 7iraSa-«5osrrnis-W GUNS ond NtW TOYS . Tn
well seasoned oak, maple, apple, watch Tuet. paper' for types, of I etc. FE 3-7701 ** . ] guns. Accepting guns for tale on
—— ---- ■---— ■ — consignments.
HALL'S AUCTION SALES
IMRPIMi_________...7 3-1*71 MY 3-6141
Call OR 3-9083 offer 4 p.m. 705 Wi Clarkston Rd._Lakd Orion
i wfr5irt
)pen dally M:30 — Closed Sunday
• Oxford Trailer Sales
mlla south of Lake Orion on M24 _________ MV 2-0721_______
Parkhurst Trailer Sales
FINEST IN MOBILE LIVNO* 15 TO 40 feat. Featuring New Moon-Buddy and Nomads.
Located halfway between Orion and Oxford on M34, next to Alban Country Cousin. MY 2-4411.
values. Full ’ spir.et organ, starting at $495. WIEGAND MUSIC CO., 469 Elizabeth Lake Road. Piano tuning
WANTED TO BUY-GOOD USEO I trailers. FE 5-9902.
JRent Trailer Space 90 >
WHILE THEY lAST
4 COLORS, 1 FINISHED MAHOGANY WALL PANELING 4'x7', *3.65
140* BALDWIN
WANTED USEO LESLIE SPEAKER. Call evenings. FE 5-4757.
wuAlitzcr spinet, walnut,
OAK ANO HICKORY FIREPLACE "MY 3-
Pets—Hunting Dogs
1 FEMALfe, 1 MALE
79 SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10. AT 1 Mi ltom* ,urnl*h|ng» and jgj
refrigerator; rsz verv nice Holly-liate; chest of draw-
ls,000 SCOTCH PINES. 5 to r.
Wholesale lots. OR 3-2352, 435-1036. 2J00 BEAUTIFUL SCOTCH PINE
N------- , |, sg g<( pruned,
Richman Brotl 335*313.
Ofl O
t Sawing Cantor
BUNK BEDS
Chalet at II Style*, trundle bods, triple trundle bad* and bunk bad* comgtoto. *45 Ji and up. Pear-eon's Furniture, lit E. FIke,
GhaiII, I UjFt LAMP*. anG Norgt washer and dryer. P“ ‘ ‘ CH«m« pKCeKAr
cages. SI. Child's card Cell M3-3773.
BROWNING SWEET' 14, LlXE NEW 1 I Springer Sgapgl~ hunter, OL 1-0374 j
CASH PRICE $62.40 I Cement blocks, 12 inch - to I
I cents each, second hand. FE 3-7403.
11 C ZIO-iAO I COM>LiWltOCIM5^n$I Pi“XND |
- - fittings. Custom threading. Imme-
dlate service. Montcalm Supply, -a ..............-E 5-4713. | H
. Dlal-AMatic, ii
■-------- year's cut.. Boat
lar and shape. Pruned, fei and sprayed each ^aai
John Hultnand Som Detroit. Call L
**; living
_________________davangari, _____ ,
PhRoa tv sal, 0*1 Underwood |
_________ ■ cash balance. Uat
vartal Pn. FE 4QW5. .
STOVE. WASHER AND MANGLE. JMIh
SPECIAL
Guitar Class
PRIVATE LESSONS FE 4-4700
| Btginning Organ Classes-Now Forming
. NO MUSICAL BACKGROUND REQUIRED COURSE INCLUDES:
I 10 group lessons
. Practice facilities All Instruction materials
I ONLY $10 COMPLETE
3 AKC FEMALE POODLES. I each. OR 3-7312. .
I 2 BRITTANY SPAtfllLS,
11 months old, 1-3 years old, no. i r^ hunters. PE 4-4021. , |
2 TREEING WALKERS. 17 MONTHS . old. I blue tick, all males. $30 each. 1103* Rhody Or., Utica. 1
ad, com^Wti ind living
d folding d
.... ..........J coal heater;
tlques include old clocks, 4-ft. ti . 2 large French docks; umbr<
' stand; several buggy seats; cult
lamps; walnut doubFa 1 Ota; nice assortment of mlsc. Several tools; air ; chain falls; plus 6-1 . rjny In foal, trained to? f drive. Sam Praulx, auc-at Oxford Community Auc-
1*44 LAYTON 22' SPECIAL FULLY
owner. Lot 31, Huron Mobile Court. >2^ Down^ Ct. Pontiac near Ttla-
AIRSTREAM LIGHTWEIGHT"
VusedAC eng!>nes' new an0
M & M MOTOR SALES
iS^DixlB Hwy.
/RAVIL TRAILERS Slnct 1932. Guaranteed for See them and get « lion at Warner Tralle. ______
' Tires Auto-Truck
Wally Byam* gM URO FLOW LIFETIME GUARAN-Trotwood. Garway, _..che, Driftwood, Tour-Bee Line. Truck --------------------
/v- Truck Tice Specials
-, 825x20—10 ply* highway $4
amp- 825x20-12 ply, highway $5
rage. 125x20-10 ply; mud and
! A-1 PACHSHUNO RUfS* TERMS*| i Stud dogli. JAHEIMS. FE 8-2538. !
AKC POODLE PUPPMf* TOYS $100 ~
Prayton Pit ini
R 3-5911/
SATURDAY 4 P.M.
It's Auction Salas, Oct. 10, 70S Clarkston Rd., Lake Orion. 5-
f AKC BEAGLES
drawers. Dressers.
, sal; Oxlt _______Lot
i. *7*. Coast
Geer WeLL-'FUMF Abo tANK, $15. PE 1*030.
DOG HOUSES INSULATED SI to $40 Bird feeders, etc. 748 Orchard
Centers, good condition. 1
■H______________ 1-6007.
call Harry J. Wood, AKC ENGLISH BULL 006. MALE |
3-7100, Orinnall'a. f 2 years old, can FE M1S4. ______
-------------------------- TOY POODLES, s INCH SIL-'
Males, 3 for SIM ,
dlntog H
Van Linos. 371 «■ Flko
chrGMe kitchen set, lift-
aunt
i-oni
Colonial furniture, l a R o ■ spiace dmotto sat.
f&rts*'teS#™
Dixie Hwy., cor. Telegraph.
compl*t* bIGrGom' ouitl, desks aSsSssoI*1"9*' ****** *"*
SGal cGAL pufcrtiffc,
oil heaters. 4M Mt. Clamant.
to I Stop-; -d I table
*xl2 rug EttHwww. mt wm w
WYMAN FURNITURE CO.
f. HURON FE 4 4W1
0. & J. CABINET SHOP
duhto cdstom cablnati, Formica tops, •"to talas at Formica, sinks, hoods and Box-1 faucets. .COMPARE OUR PRICES.
'•"»V *24 W. HURON - 55*0*14
Ha... EXCELjiG* 40-WATT GUITAR AM-° puller, 0125. New Sony C.B.-104
' made walkie-talkie, 5100. Fisher
ache chamber, 145. Used vegetable
lulc*f bjb-jy,|w-
14-Inch. _________________________
lead, cheap. Ml 4*230, Ext. 2, rK
tan’Gem tag-a-long trailer, s -.-.t • ' wrrrvr-
less tires, S200. 205 Wolfe Rd., »|M>rTlng bOOdS Orionyllla. '--------------------
excellent condition, BIOS, I
i sat. Chest of Roll-away bed, ich and chair, wringer I Type , washer, automatic washer, bicycles, refrigerators, TVs space oil lie*^' trailer, pipe and mlsc.. m equipment, r ...
antiques. Loft o., _____ _____ ______
Items. Consignments accepted dally '/ Jack W. Hall, auctioneer, my 3-1671 or MY'3-1441. / |
ALL NEWTy«4 Avalairs, Hollys, Tawas, Cree Travttr Trailers *.
L 14 to 25 ft.j/tolf-contained Order now and/nave It for vacation |
ELLSWORTH AUTU • and TRAILER SALES
2-wheel 4577 Dlxto Hwy. . MA 3-1400
FREE MOUNTING Budget terms evelleble
FIRESTONE
V. Huron 333-7*17
ICK TIRES, .,100x20, *00x20.
SPEED QUEEN WRINGER WASH-
ENGAGEMENT AND WfcDOING ring, matched sat, 3110. 333-707*. FURNITUkfc. 4*7 E. BEVERLY.
______FB *4470 attar 6 p.m.____
FURNACES, NEW AND USEO, GAS or all, tong terms. Immediate Service. FE 1*105. ioi OUSTY cGnCRETE FLOOR* Use Ltould Fleer Harddnar - Simple Inexpensive AppucaPOn
_____ BO'C* Builders Supply FE MIS*
°Cen GARAOB R.(j.MM*_OE SAL£.
mage at earn, wma vaneiy or and 11 at 422 oe
dRGIL I VlMWinAAT6i“ " $
DISASAtftLING 4-ltbRC furnishings, eppllana doors, plaik tabtos,
Interlaken, Sunday. 10 p.m. 40*1751.
giWTRi~m >y"HiriYAoi. china cebtoat, buffet, mm, 4 chairs, good condlllan, 07$. Call
Appliance Inc.
■ w. huiuh 334-5477
WAiHE*; S2S, ELECTRIC STOVl MTPryar, 0M Rtori**?*" •—
4 USED BARGAIN STORE ill At Our tl W. Pike Star* Only . Coffee Table . TU
tLWtRld kfOT WATER HEATER,
ntjasRSW” —•
HBM ttoVI MMM1IKT-tor and wothar. raaaanabla. MI-0744 FAMILY SlM KtLVlNATO12 miles north of Pontiac. V,* mile north of I-7J intersection. Cedar Lane Evergreen Farm, 8970 Dixie
I TON TRAILER
S3
SADDLE
DoDat. 2440 Dutton Rd„ Rochester, i
10 .MONTHS 14 GOOD LARGE EWES -AND 1
registered t buck. Mg -----
MAS-----
PHOENIX TRUCK CAMPERS $-10-10.6, front and tide models Pioneer Camper Sales. FI 2-3989.
PICK-UP CAMPtR
Custom built, special. 10-ft. Mn„ cabover, slaws 4, 75-lb. ice box, 3-bumer stove, gas heater, II and 110 light system. 41,2*5. Buy direct.
T & R (oniper Mfg. Co.
5320 Auburndale . Utica
731-1240
RED TAS-SALE '
demonstrators.
$2.1*0.00 Value
MORRIS MUSIC
S4 S. Telegraph
Across tram TehHuron FE 2*547
' HWb. w 6bL ■ '
138-2108
niNbiruSuAk 6iiitA6,’ #IH-
BOW HUNTERS
CHRISTMAS SHOP EARLY,, TOY: 9“*rl*r, | Terrier puppies, child's best pet. !»».»
685-1844. ___________
CUTE KITtENS FREE TO GOOD ! home, 2850 Otsego. FE 5-9355.
| CUSTOM POODLE TRIMMING. 54.
I CRANKSHAFT GRINDING IN THE car. Motor rebuilding end valva grinding. Zuck Machine Shop, 23 | Hood. Phone FE 2-2543.
FALL Specials
MOTOR
TRANSMISSION
AND
BRAKE
Overhauls .
AND \
Minor ^Repairs
ON
Any . Make
Terms
OAKLAND
best. 5 good saddle, bred*, 5 gaited ■
3 gaited walk trots and equitation horses. Several good quarter horses! . registered, and grad*. 1 green
rith thermo, large trunk $1495.
l' 1*44 FRANKLIN, sleep* 4. s Mitained, with stool ond c eater, large trunk, $1*00.
Rent OteetrlC shampooer, vance Floor Dacoratert. ,-,■> MOVING, GARAGE SALE, SATUR-
day, Oct, to, avarythtng goat. 11400 HmgamA IS Mile-Lahier
peeled high, oi 482-2234
MaAe offer. 3i-fe«t hi5/ —*** add**
_____i, *13; a_... JWXXP
aratorTll. 44A 4*1»I. . . ^
OE tTOVfc, A-l CONDITION. S50.
HAGGERTY MAS IT!
|X4 Doug- Fir A4Wc Lbk Ft.
d in. £sbc Lin. Ft.
, ________MA *40fl V
SEVERAL TO I New TENT, 2 CAMPiNG BE'Ol ‘ mattrass, 1 gas lantern, (42.
WallM TV FB 2-2257 Open 0* -----
III B. Watw ^Sear af Jaatyn gg S BSf-
GUAR-1 -----------^--------
M9Hv , ..XM
CHOOSB FROM.
JOHNBON'SRADIO & TV
41 B. WALTON FE $-454* 1 NEW AUTOMATIC WATER SOFT-
* T., ^ I >aaailM$]AAAiiSM*Ar slAU1 mml
Vi, M10.
ORNAMiNTAL IRON PORCfr*
PIANO
SPECIALS
Floor Somplss Reduced Up tb
$185
SPINETS
Priced ot Low as
$388
USED UPRIGHTS FROM
$48
LOW, EASf TERMS
GRINIrfELLS
PONTIAC MALL OPEN DAILY 9:3* TO 0 PM.
NEARLY NEW WINCHESTER. 8
DOGS TRAINED.
j EXCELLENT - TEAM FDR
NEW 10 GAUGE SHOTGUN - ONLY 4B3.lt- *
GUNS-GUNS-GUNS!
we carry toe camp let* line of BBOWNINO-WBATHIREY REMINGTON
WINCHESTERONYS Fl State, tropical jith-aupplies. alsoj UM977.
POR^LE f^tHY PUPWil ^
Brlttmy «"d Cocker, FE «-50«.| KmTW
0/ horjes boarded.
BLACK
Used Units.
141V Frolic, sleep* 5. real nk Water pressure, gas heat, a thermo, 12V and gas lights. $05
13'?' MONITOR, overhang, sleeps heater, lights, brakes. $950.
■ i 1—-----> —— ret snop. os wiiuams,
WCW 500 SAVAQE MOSEL **. $*5 GOLDEN RETRIEVER,
FE 2-70S7 SMALL BLA<
’ ■ 752-2070. ,
F«9?E.N_ , AbL TiS6 HtPlEFdRft i(
l. 5250 Fentlac Trail, S.
NEW AND USED BOWS. OR 3
F*f Shop. St Williams. FF *4433. j ’ ^|yesf?rfm°0u^ ^ w
Y^AR two-year-olo mare, green
-- swap -
dtLDiNG, sios., Molly Travel Coach; Inc.
iS-iun riJn 1HM Ho,,7 M. Helly ME 4-4T £ OAjTrf 1 -°pt" Delhi »hd Sundays-
1*41 TRIUMPH 450 CC, $550. FB
. 4*201. _________
1 1*43 250 CC. ALL STATE, EX-! ceptlonally gaocL OR 341SS.
: 1*4* Honda scrambler, 4
' months old. MA 4-Z3S4 alter 4.
1*44 NORTON ATLAS 7S0CC FINE | Street Cycle. FE 4214*.
HONDA AND TRIUMPH 1 ANDERSON SALES & SERVICE 730 6. Pike__________FE 2*30*
NORTON—BSA 5-SPIED DUCAT!
__ PONTAC CYCLE SALEHS ] 372 S. Saginaw • ___FE 4-958S ■
-tUMEt.
j GERMAN SHEPHdRt, AKC,
' male, l temsle, 5W months old. U_„ «»_t_ ,~T
Beauties. Must toll. 542 Collier, i Hiy—torOItt—rSEB
\Xm*
YAMAHAS
1*45 Models W CyCLT
Bicycles
1-A^rpF SOIL, black DIRT, FILL;
Judd J,r*v*1, de.Mv«;ed reasonable,
•1 Alack
R 3-422*. ARM iOlL, . ---4 407-3740.
shreddeB Alack
■RM______■■_______JWWPPWWWPXP^WCwiiPr.
gtoWl*, Burr-Shell, STS S. Tito- QERMAN SHtPHtRO pQpFlIlS, j WANTED -. .. . ________I chaea, no papers, 447-1WB. j _Awcond‘
u**p hand guns and shot | german ' ihEPHiRo puppies. Fowtry
suns. Opdyke Hardw..e. PE l^tdgeorge Dr. Pontiac.
SALES-RENT F.’E. HOWLAND
FEW GOOD USED SCHWINN
'RUCK CAMPERS ' ~ few and used S3*S
14 | GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS, REG.
,¥ : (pmAlpt tML mjsld»« MB 1I4AR4«
Boats - Accessories
TStBt,
1700 SCOtt _
riANb. GRAV-I. EM 2*372.
KITTEN2. FREE TO GOOO HOME, used to dogs- Ml 4-2351 PARAKEET, I
and Ease pears, prunes, sweat cider. Also pick your own —' *~^ihy*unQ orchard.
----- MALES, I4JS.!
Rechastar, OL f*373.‘
FART POODLE, PART:
am4 ™r ______________________
____ is®
trucking. WdCtLI CLlP
•ww nww mi but young orenero. --Oakland Orchards, 2205 E. C9m- 1* mere* Rd. between Bums Duck Lake Rd. l mil* '•*: RBftarTto - mm
89
( FOOT X 24 FOOT, 4 WHEELS. $900 474103*.
tl-FOOT GARROWAY HOUSE-trailer, sleeps 5. With, heater and w*ter_tank. OA 0-3104. .
c so* sxyliNe, complete' “ **— Beemar, self-contained. $1.9*5. OeCamp's Crees '
f - FOOT THOMPSON S A B t N cruiser, 75 Evtnruda. tandem trad-ft, FE 0-05*4, ■ \ ; ■
o' electric BvitaRuoi, ifEW
controls, and battery,. $325. also, tt 5 tt. flbergles aeat • with , steer ing. .Windshield and cevar $200. Both in fop shape. $500 or
PICK OR WE PICK. a itato Sr. tifl Pred-Rd.. Lake Orion, Mfch.\(aftor ! i.l Seturdey and SugAly a"
$3,795. t —sleeps _ .
5-tt. Dura, i__— ________________ ------------------3--------
Lafcto! k 1*40 skeecraFFCRUISE? WITH
tongh# Traitor Salas, M»7 and I ; haad, Tt hit. Evtnruda. and 19*1 Mite. I Pamca tandem ’ frailer fatty '
quippgd^excellent condition, *1,900.
D—8
illK PON g AC l'KKSS. FhlDAY, OCTOBER 8, IftW
— >mmri» $7 M*w and lhad Tracks 111
■ALL IMS MODELS AVAILABLE At IMS CHEVROLET 1W-T0N STAK PALL DISCOUNT PRICES. *-“*• "
^Tgmun m —
Foreign Can
IWI, VW STATION BUS I
105
beautiful r<
-gs?*r
_______ to In real
on throughout ^ *9*J.
rasiw-TO SAVTMON I .> .
Michigan Turbocraft Sates p^r^toN^ItkUP tk>l McAULIFFE
*327 bail* Hwy. '> Genella. Ponlldfc. FORD . - *
OR HW tan rtfivv ' Pirviip v-i' hEavv ** QMUtnd A»A_ FEWTO)
---------—CTXJ^,ton? V™ irW^UAAlTWSKTE -IfAfiON
ririwat Hrivtnun iitaui wabon. ud to 35 mllaa oar oal-
New and UMd. Cars 106 MARMADUKE
1954 CHEVY BEL AIR, V4 OR S-4439.
REPOSSESSION - 1959 CHtVV, Np
By Anderson & Leeming
• ALWAYS A BETTfeR DEAL ■ _______ MPM ....
> .WATS^MOTORS ^,^c«Z?e,jE«,S3lE.^!| MMCT^^.^r°^0H! giXV'fcW,*0Ch“,*r F0I,D / SUPERIOR RAMBLER
CRU ISE-OUT BOAT BALE
9 E.Walton * - ' *
FORD St-TON PICK-UI
—:.— ------ r i Miutor. good shape. 17" Mat
iSHW hTi, GREAT DISCOUNT— tires, 5475 637J032 alter-
550 Oaklqnd Ave. FE 5-94211
'7 auTy 11963 VOLKSWAGEN SUNROOF. AM- J FM_redlo.47t.im
Olastron. Lone Mere. MFG tyats. ChEVY W TON PICKUP. LONO ,, .rv uie .. ia ran ■■
•ohm vorv OOOd UMd rigs from snw Imn» mlteiM e.r tiro* AO INI BLACK VW, $1,350. CAN BE
5?I0* AaerSuryMot6rs3.t_tolOO h.p. $%*,*" **■ "'**• Set. MOS^rook. Road. Royal
tr'&MAetT j'«>N. veBy r^-F-,7ff7-v,-0D-D-.--«:B66R. Ml-
i CLIFF DRIVER'S ra6iU. SM2 X'A
Gunand Short Center ■ SHUF**] SUPERIOR RAMBLER
Sunday- ’»» 550 Ooklond Ave. FE 5-9421
^S?Ne«dwTORS r '•« r«»uvn,r'.ru.. tuoo JvWJMJVtt.JjlUST _SACRlkjC«.
Boats Canoes Tn
OWENS MARINE SUPPLY 396 Orchard Lake ■ FE !
DAWSON'S SPECIALS - BIQ SAV-
£39° *tVadffi*tnllaai also !tJ7 Ford. eyL-Jarpe ^^tni^TMli;. .. . "Florida, hart we cornel” 879-686).
”olrku£°Mi|AI£wl Silt. R£ftRSI3g IH4 VOLKSWAGEN KOMBI ST A .'SlfiiffJ ninrt tn^unrkl «*R wagon, Ilka new. very rea
IT’patterIo^ cheyfio- enable, or
---- — —M OPEL KADE
" steur> *
FORD V-8 PICKUP, CUSTOM
PoSIL"? c^rt'l Z>.V&.£Z: n*w h“vr <’utv
P.'^t^rs:! HMFORD RANC^ROPICKUP, Taka MS* to West Highland Right bIbomfcBPftiisSfc
on Hickory Ridge Rd to Demode clean. 61,95 JEROME-FERGUSON1 Rd. Lett and followTsigr»^toi DAW-j lnc» Rochester FORO Dealer, OLl
1*9 FORD ECONOLINE VAN. TOlf ’ i enaine. diuxe interior, excellent 0 after I p.m. MA
SdCbNiI
Lucky Auto
193 or 254 S. Saginaw FE 4-2214* or FE 3-7853
(Access open to tots while ■ under construction)
*» 'CHEVROLET HARDTt _
OIO. HEATER, AUTO. Tfi MISSION. ABSOLUTELY h'~
EY DOWN. Take over pat
“ T«irf^L^c3a.r
• Ml’ A7«b.
It59 Ct+EVY ve, BEL AIR J-DOOR very nice. FE 1-7542, H. RSgglns
1959 chEvEolMY iMEAla con-vertlble, A-l shape. MH. SS2-40S4
1959 CHEVY 9-FASMNOER' STA-tton wagon, very aherpl Radio, heater, beeutllul tu-lone finish. No < down! 53.71 weekly! Cell Mr. Brown, dealer. FE 1-4079.
1960 CHEVY BEL AIR 2-DOOR SE-—tic, radio, heater and
Full price only S495. Dowp. BUY HERE,
GM‘s tine It
1964 Opel
irrentyl Only
Expansion Sate
'stefewtt — Sea-Ray T~
Johnson Motors_______
INSIDE STORAGE Expanded storage space tor your convenience!
PINTER'S MARINE
Open Tuaa. end Thurs. Eves.
. . condition, I
Thompson | a-2390. '
weekly'with No t'Down, 'Catl A Dele, Credit Coordinator —
LLOYDS
Lincoln-Mercury-Comet
New Location ' .1250 Oakland Ave.
FE3-7SW
r^ss! Cooper
fine Used Cars I
4278 Dixie* OR 3-1213 -Drayton See Cooper before you buy REPOSSESSION,N I960 CHEVY. NO 5 down. Call Mr. Johnson, MA S-1606. Dealer.
1960 CHEVROLET IMPALA 2-DOOR
“249.. j 250 ... Motnfny, he hasn’t missed one time!"
Ihw, tmi tfc>4 On IN
1962 FORO % GALAXIE 2-DOOR, very clten, a real good car. But
"Teoplkauto sales
ee Oakland fe T23b
1962 FORD 9-PASSENGElt WAGON,
^w^l^SSimXtrSST
mission, v-4 engine tool SI jtt- Call Mr. Glenn. Ca^^et--
McAULIFFE
FORD
650 OeklendtAve. - FE S-41M tM2 FUTURA, 1-OWNER 0950
TarrJgf
Li^cky Auto
193 or 254 S. Saginaw FE 4-2214 or FE 3-7853
1962 FORD 9-PASSENGER WAGON, country sedan .model, dark blue
mission, v-o engine tool 11722 Call Mr. Glenn CoHwn at -d JOHN
McAULIFFE
Newmd fht4 Cmi ^ 106
Ml MERCURY FQOOR HARDTOP power brakes, power steering. 5345 • fuM prteo with tie money deem.
Lucky Auto
193 or 254 S. Saginaw FE 4-2214 or FE 3-7853
(AcceM^^w tototowhlto street
^1961 Mercury Hardtop -
2-door Monterey, V« engine, automatic, power steering, neater, radio, whitewalls, color of blue! Only SUN, : ”
CRIS5MAN CHEVROLET
S. Rochoster Rd. ROCHESTER
I Carp -> m
JLDr M, SAWO m
1958 Olds
power steering, only-
■ $495
BEATTIE'S
AT THE STOPLIGHT
OR 3-1291
OL- 2-9721 1959 OLDS . S-ODOR,
1961 Metrq
-door hardtop, this Wfc can to brought with no money down, yoi can forget about buying gas foi •hit baauty! Mllee and ROMA • Carefree driving ahead tor you I
PATTERSON
good condition. Make offer. 447-
Nbw and Used Cars 106 New and Used Cars 106
mikMge, terms . available. 0 FE
1959 EDSEL, GOOD CONDITION, $350. UL 2-2068 after 5 p.m.
1*57 FORD STATION WAGON. 9-passenger, real good. 5125. $ava Auto. FE 5-3278. * . ™
1957 FORD. AUTOMATIC. o60D
1963 FORD CONVERTIBLE, V-« with radio end heater, «iiemetlc transmission, beige finish. Power brakes end power steering, low down payments, 36 jnentft
S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMING-AM. Ml ABB! ?
1963 CORVETTE, CONVERTIBLE RED W)fH WHITE TOP.
M & M MOTOR SALES
2527 Dixie Hwy.
OR 4-0308____
1963 - CHEVROLET BISCAYNE 2-door sedan: Ermine while with red trim. 6-cllnder, standard transmission, rsldlo, heater. Only EKDUSTlf'ri*!®, ^STniv.E uuuvP 81,395. Easy terms. PATTERSON ECONOMY CARS 2335 DIXIE "WY. CHEVROLET CO. NOW AT OUR I 1959 FORD STATION WAGON COUN-
NEW LOT. 1104 S. WOODWARD — J“ ' Mi ----------- “ ' “
AVE., BIRMINGHAM, Ml 4-2735. 1
1943 CHEVROLET BISCAYNE,
VILLAGE
RAMBLER
666 $. Woodward, Birmingham
1957 FORD CONVKRTIBLE 1957 DeSotp 1960 FerB Moor I Cadillacs, 190 f-|
SIM 81M | '
radio.
588-5015.
H: GLENN'S
MM 1943 Chevy Impale 2-door hardtoi.. ,
'—— steering end
with 12.000
1959 FORD 4. ONE OWNER. 41,000 - brakes, no cust. Musi- tell, $495. 3354491.
1959 FOR6 AUTOMATIC, VS, RA- j
OUSON, Inc., Rochester FORD Dealer, OL 1-9711.
1963*4 FALCON FUTURA CONVER-tlble, metallic bslgs, Mack top, automatic, bucket seals, radio, whltowells, 51,500. KE 5-7439.
I FORD CONVERTIBLE, WITH ■—~i, hosier, automatic trensmis--ower steering, V-I engine, ills, red flnlsh, white tap, > engine, 52,295. Cali Mr.
2517 Dixie Hwy. OR «<30«
Insido-Outside Storag* Boat Rtpairs—Refinishing
HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS - "Your Evlnrude Dealer''
--- 3. Telegraph Rd. “
-B0ATS-
BIRMINGHAM
Boat Center
North et 14 Mile at Adams Rd. | ' :■ TONY'S MARINI FOR JOHNSON MOTORS WILL BEAT ANY DEAL Beals- Meters, Lake Orion
MONEY
MAKERS
• 1963 Ford
F-250 Pickup
Men box, VS, >ejw" n, green finish, he
Sitr- •/
' $1695 1962 Ford
, SUPERIOR RAMBLER , Ilon waoon . _ 550 Oakland Avb. FE 5-9421 SST,:
Renault
OLIVER BUICK and JEEP
Comar of Pika and Cast
flee -1741,
1944-*Pb R D XL CONVERTIBLE, with V-a. engine, automatic transmission/ radio, heater, whitewalls, beautiful tight blue flnieh. blue topi It’s yours *7,592. Cell today and take a ride liithls beauty. JOHN .
McAULIFFE
FORD
410 Oakland Ave.____FE 5-4101
1944 FAllCON FUTURA HARDTOP, v-o automatic, radio, low mileage. 2-year factory warranty) Musi see to appreciate! JEROME-FERGU-SON. Inc.. Rochester FORO Oaal-or. OL tY7H. 7
MUST SELL k6w» DRAFTED
TROY, MICHIGAN JU 8-0536
OAKLAND
Chrysler-Plymouth 1041 COMET, STICK SHIFT Station Wagon, NO MONEY DOWN
$895 '
7S4 Oakland____' FE >9430
wSh
1962 Mercury
wnxe custom Monlen With 2-way pewOr. a
c* ell vtoyl ft beige. Only
...It Coordinator.
LLOYDS ‘
Lincoln-Mercury-Cornel
New loedtion 1250 Odkland Ave. -
FE 3-7163
LIVE GLAMOROUSLY FOR ! IS Olds, oil power, extra * tires. 1055 4-door Holiday mo
1944 COUPE DELUXE. O L 6 S drive train 4 speed beefed hydro-metlc many extra*, over $1,100 Invested.'WIB consider trade, best offer over 5400. Ml 4-1242.
1*54 OLDS, liOOS MILES, SPORT COUPE, NEW CONDITION
M&M MOTOR SrLES
2527 Dixie Hwy. 1 *
Estate Storage Co.
Fewer, 9300. UL 2-3490.
1959 OLDS, RADIO, HEATER, AU-TOMATIC TRANSMISSION: AB-
SOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Take aver payments of 514.39 per month. CALL CREDIT MGR.. Mr. ParfcA at Hamid Turner Ford. MI47SOO.
power brakes^ powet^steerjng^fil
"Lucky Auto
193 or 2S4 S. Saginaw FE 4-2214 or FE 3-7853
l - -~— to loto while s*—*
conttructlon) .
OAKLAND
° Chrysler-Plymouth
1940 OLDS 2-DOOR I-cylinder (tick
$895 -
724 Oakland FE **438
1941 OLDS
F45 station wagon, luggage reck, automatic V-4 and power steering.
‘HURON
Motor Sales
9 blocks norm el FE 2-2441
1943 OLDS "98"
CONVERTIBLE e mast beeutllul
^________?.m:
eng performance. The l„_. Burgandy leather Interior It the... pernct contrast to the white exterior finish. While top end while-wall tires. Equipped with Hydra-
accessories. Tain drive th DAY.’!0*SPECIAL *
til ft. WoodWfd
Credit or Budget
PROBLEMS?-
. We Can rinanct. You)
100 Cars to Select From!
Call Mr. Dale . FE 3-8765
I960 Ford
factory equipment, andv-ready ti many carefree miles. Just 55. weekly, wlttr No 5 Down, Cell M Dele, Credit Coordinator —
LLOYDS
Llneeln-Mercury-Comet
New Location
1250 Oakland Ave. ■£"gSB B m4
lfy.^0f1^l»UWB ^CYI- I 1932 HUDSON StfcAIQHt S, 4«K)R
matching ! r Powerglidi dlo. heater,
« FORD iOOOR, VI STICKTSa; good condltten, 5395. Can ff-t. FE 3-7051.
oSiatlc
jtanals and Far ■tic transmission. Only —
$245
1954 Ford
1-Ton Stoke
BEATTIE ; FORD
"Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" ! ON DIXIE HWY IN WATERFORD i AT THE STOPLIGHT
OR 3-1291
_r NOW AVAILABLE
1965 GMC
-Brand New—
Vb-Ton Pickgp
Cascade .. —..................
trier, automatic transmission, ! CHEVROLET 2-OOOR, 1941. FROST rer steering and brakes, radio, > white, excellent corn)ill —,i. ............ i ‘ ansmisston, radio.
1940 FORD 4-DOOR STATION WAG-—F on with an axcallant 6-cylinder en-
57,495. _4_othen glne, automatic transmlstton, re-
PATTERSON dlo. heater end ether extras. Light NOWWAT OUR blue flnistr and blue interior trim
Standard ' AVE., BIRMINGHAM. A
1 very nice. A fine 4
Har'tland,*63i-_
CONTINENTAL MARK NO. 1 1956
nt condition. MA 6-3270.
1959 LINCOLN PREMIER, 4-DOOR, vents, teats, brakes, steering. New
it condition, V-8 Pi
l Of ! mi LINCOLN o CONTINENTAL,
■HURON
• Motor Sales
Baldwin, 2 blocks north of Walton FE 2-2441
REPOSSESSION. 1940 BUICK HARC i top. no 5 down, call Mr. Johnson | MA 5-1404. Dealer.
I Autobahn j
Motors, Inc. |
j AUTHORIZED VW DEALER I VI mile north of Miracle Mile 1745 S. Telegraph_FE F4531 |
■ 1940 FORD 2-DOOR, RAwiw, ncai-i o—,i—" '
* ' «n* ER’ AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION.! -Lgl*1*1- .
ER, XU IUNIAIIW I XXNlNIlMlvFl. — - ■ -- . ■ .... ■______L .
ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN i 1*59 MERCURY CONVERTIBLE, Take over payments of 510.90 per | new engine, new whitewalls, 012-
month. CALL CREDIT MGR., Mr. ”*7- _____________
■ Parks, at Harold Turner Ford. 1940 MERCURY PARK LANE, ALL Ml 4.7900 I nawer, A.t mnditinn. One Owner
1. EM 3-4093.
1 Welled Lake.
1961 Monza
Coupe,^ 4-speed, radio, heater.
BIRMINGHAM
Chryttor-Plymouth
j rig 9. woodward ____
1954 CHRYSLER, 4 GOOD TIRES,
] 4-cl. After 5, 4F3-4445. _______, - „ W________.
’ I 1*57 CHRYSLER, EXCELlENT I 1940 FALObR. AUTOMATIC. 5450.,
, | transportation, 090- FE 2-9003. — .. ------ --------- ------ :
. I960 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN V-S . mu . station wagon, axcallant condition, I
^ automatic transmission, power
i fegg^i —• rtatflML by 000^^ m. 1-404 or Ol
GLENN’S^ PAfferson
1962 BUICK PLECTRA 22*: 4-door 1 -Chrysler-Plymouth
L. C. Wiljiams, Salesman
952 W. Huron
Chrysler-Plymouth VelMnt-Oodge Trucks
100) N, Atom St. ____ROCHESTER 1
1961 CHEVROLET BEL AIR, AUTO- i metlc, radio, heater, new white- I walls, excellent condition. 5995. Ml 4-7205.
i, healer, defrest-
ROCHESTER
___. 521 N. w
REPOSSESSION—t up. paymenls of Mr. Johnson, MA
$1795
Houghton A Son
156 FORD PICK-’ 53.40 weekly. Call 5-1604. Peeler.__
FE* 4-7371
1942 BUICK INVICTA CONVERTI- j ble. Raven black finish with red interior and black top. Automatic, power steering, power brakes, ra-I -dlo heater, whitewalls. Luxury et only 51,995. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., NOW AT OUR NEW merors. v« wm _________________________ I
LOT, 1104 S WOODWARD AVE., 1942 CHEvV BEL AIR. EXCEL-1
1 BIRMINGHAM, Ml 4-2735. __ lent condition, UL 3-4577. !
19« BUICK WILDCAT. FAWN WITH 1942 CORVAIR 2-OOOR, RADIO deluxe trim, double power. 4-door -stock, solid red finish, sharp Only $1,095. JEROME FERGUSOI INC., Rochester FORD Dealer, Ol
alls. >1,295, FE 3-7583.
2 CORVETTE NAEDT0#n
1962 Chrysler
4-door* sedan, automatic Iransmls- ’ .
PATTERSON I
• CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH VALIANT»OOOGE TRUCKS Ml N. Main St. ROCHESTER * J
1963 Chrysler
PATTERSON j
OAKLAND
Chrysler-Plymouth 1961 T-BIRD
Beautiful pink color, new car
I FORD T-BIRD I
Credit or Financing
Problems?
Wt Can Flnanca You.
Call Mr. Yale 651-8550
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH VALIANT-DODGE TRUCKS | M ----- ■ ROCHESTER
NEW
HAUPT
PONTIAC
1H3 TEMPEST LeMANS
rY
1944 TEMPEST WAGON lh- radio, heater, power brake igage rack, Posltraction — at Njy to go - with y«ir eld c
1962 PONTIAC CATALINA
HAUPT PONTIAC
One Mile NORTH OF U.S. IS ON MIS CLARKSTON MA 5-5544
No. 1
Rambler Dealer
*y>F-OF-THB-LINB
1964
< AMBASSADORS
RADIO, NEATEN
TURN INDICATOR, OIL FILTEH. double ACTION IRAKEt. BACKUP LIGHTS, yiSlilLlYV c “ ANO OUTSIDE MIRROR.
$2283
S99 down, 24 months on balance
VILLAGE
RAMBLER
666 ft. Woodward* Birmingham
I WAGON. 9-PASSENr
MANSFIELD AUTO SALES
JUT!*.. XT *h*rp' **** mobel
1104 Baldwin Ave.
’ FE 5-5900 __________
RUSTED CARS- "j
Top 5 paid for rutted cars that runt. No |unk. FE 4-5034.
SPECIAL PRICE
PAID FOR 1955-1963 CARS
VAN'S AUTO SALES
4540 Dixie Hwy. ■■■ OR' 3-1355 hMrecie Mile
I FOR CLEAN CARS OR Foreign COTS
--------- , «n Plxla, ;-------------
AUTO INSURANCE . FOR CANCELLED AND ' REFUSED DRIVERS
OVER 15 YEARS EXPERIENCE IN HELPING PEOPLE SOLVE THIS PROBLEM.
Stop in Today! ANDERSON AGENCY
'.HURON
* Motor Sales
Baldwin, 2 blocks north of Walton FE 2-3641
i 1963 BUICK L|SABRE. EXCELLEN
transmission. Like VALIANT-DODGE TRUCKS
1943 BUICK LeSABRE 4-DOOR ; Hardtop. Silver blue wl— ilte vinyl r steerin
I GLENN'S '"OAKLAND"
1942 Chevy Super'sport with radio, | . Chrysler-Plymouth
heater, bucket seats, power steer- 1963 NEW YORKER 4-DOOR ing and brakes. Sedan, full power
L. C. Williams, Salesman i $2494
99 W. Huron i 724 Oakland
! FE 4-7371 . FE 4-1297 I — ,-T^ J
nbewails A I RER°SSESSIOt4, 1*9 SPIDER CON- I - J-W4„P9f.TIAf cXtALINA 1 I tnarp '<^'ww Trade” Onto 9.395. Johnsco' MA nSSr ““ * Is Public liability,.property damage\ PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO- x.'
Full coverage Comprehensive an . NOW AT OUR NEW LOT, 1104 S. I CHEVROLET BISCAYNE 4-I1M deductible collision $41 sad t WOODWARD AVEw BIRMINGHAM 1
1963 Chrysler
NO DUES OR FEES.
I BUICK ELECTRA 223 C O N-
13,000. 1066 Hi ster. OL rSlI,
’PATTERSON
McAuEiffe ! Ramblers
SAVE
$1,000 1964 Rambler-Classic
radio, heater, classics
VILLAGE RAMBLER
FORD
jvveeieno Ave. ■ r» a-eivi Ml FALCON 2 -DOOR, RADIO, HEATER. ABSOLUTELY ~ NO MONEY DOWN. Take aver payments of 527.64 per mo. CALL CREDIT MGR.. Mr. Parte, at Her-old Turner Ferd. Ml 4-7500.
mi Ford adoor country se-
dan, V-S, automatic, power staer-Ing, radio, lew mltoMa, $1,395 JE ROME-FE R6USON Ific- Rochester FORD Deafer, OL t-ertl. -Ml FALCON DELUXE COUPE, excellent condition. >725. EM 3-3368
tnidu. Bconcotny Cbre, 23
Tm”
DELUXE SUN ROOF BUS “
1957 V„ ________________________________
00. Good condition. 19ft) Deluxe,
14 BUICK SPECIAL* f
REPOSSESSION* 196: NjA$‘\6ni Oaator^
GLENN'S
USED JEEP IN GOOO RUNNING. JiJJf candltion, cell 636-WI*. T—.—:
WANTED: 1959-1443 CARS
Ellsworth
celtcnt condition. 51,600. MA 4-1270. f - lOiV Vwrlillwe----
199 VW CONVERTIBLE, GOOO - . '™T .
condition. 224-2141 after 4T *areto this "Nendard at _tt*
1959 VW MICRO STATION WAGON '.IS
bus. With sun C42J, kjpl « cA Im
Run* exceptionally! hardtop, with , power am
, , 1 factory air-conditioned will pleas
TRIUMPH TRJ, 1959, BLACK, EX-1 the most discriminating buyerl
________ .... LLOYDS
LlncotnMercury-Comat
coddltioa, $995. 44F2464. ~ ~~~'V I New Location
Y* ' 1256 Ooklond Ave.
5375. EM 3-7424. ' ~ _ , i P B 3t7843
OAKLAND
1940 DeSO.TO ADVENTURER. 2-. door. Power plus. Excellent condl-1 lion. Ml 64942. 99 Chester. Birmingham.
852 2573 after 5 p.
EXCELLENT|
AUTO SALES • jieee siivSi fooor harOtoA rZ-
7 Dixie Nety, . MA S-t46Di dio, heeler. * — 1
VOLKSWAGEN,
Lucky Auto
19$ or 254 S. Saginaw FE 4-2214 or FE 3-7853
(Access open to lets white street
under construction) _'
*46 ENGLISH FORD ANGLIA, K cetlent condition. *475. Less grl Call OR 34119.
tel VW, CLtAN, RAOIO. SAfB *~ QR »6>31, after 5
'FULL 1*9 CHEVY, STICK, $50.
ISAVE AUTO FE $-3276
I9S4 dtiVY,"STICK, 4-DOOR, RUNS line. SIS. Ml 7-ent.
199-CHEVROLET, CLEAN, ACYL-
- • — wan.
tmk Cm—Trajai K1-A
t or 10 Junk cars ano trucks free low anytime. PE 2-2444. J 1 TO 5 JUNK CARS - TRUCKS wwitod. Top dollar. OR 3-44S9. j f—10 JUNK ' CARS '
WANTED. Fret
, Jtitac CARS^^
Ihi nti’K? ftwh 'tot
(99 PONTIAC TRANSMISSION, 4 . spaad auto, and ■ ‘M Mack an . heads. OR F0473.
AMO 192 OR. CHEVERLOT FAC-TORV RttUILT MOTOR*, S100.
You or we install. Tarww. 97-M17.
|w7 nd 8-4 Trrata 1>3
*47 PODGE t*-TON PICKUP, unuwal car!^!^ ^eW*ban^alw laSpris'gvV tftiTmw warsnw • a.
Jgt4_ eenjm^ff W. Huran. __ j PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO | rmtiqlMi.
*' heeler, Rum paad, paad tire*.
Needs some body work. Price 0275. SOS-749. J
199 CORVETTE.
4944M.
$1495 v
I 724 Oakland FE 5*434
1*43 IMPALA, GOOO CONDITION. OR 441138. •
| 1 , 199 CHEVY
i Biscayne 2-door automatic V-S / 51,695
HURON
1957 DODGE 2-OOOR HARDTOP,
58,000 actual mliea, Y; power steering end brake*, radio, heater. 5250. FE 5-3060. -
1960 DODGE RAMINDUCTI0N.~T4 barrel*, special cam, 340 hp. power steering and brakes, 090. Call alter 5:30. FE tent.____
OAKLAND
Chrysler-Plymouth *
1*41 DODGE LANCER. AUTO.
OAKLAND
» Chrysler-Plymouth
1*41 FORO CONVERTIBLE Radio, healer, automatic and power. A Mack baauty
$1395
724 Oakland FE 5-9430
1901 FORO RANCH WAGON, VS Engine, * automatic, radio, tew mileage. clean, $995. JEROME-FER-GUSON INC- Rochester FORD - Dealer, ol t-wn.
1961 Ford
947 weekly, with No S Dawn, C Mr. Dale, Credit Coordinator
LLOYDS
Llncoln-Mtrcury-Comet
New Location 1250* Oakland Ave.
SUBURBAN OLDS
BIRMINGHAM TRADES
100%
WRITTEN
Guarantee
Evary car listed carries this guarantee. Take the guesswork out of buying. Get one of our Certified Used cqrsl Credit No Problem!
ALL CARS FULLY EQUIPPED
199 OLDS Sugar AOoor . 11695 1963 OLDS ”9” Convertible 52295 1*9 OLDS Super Wagon 52491
199 OLDS "*S" Coupe
bucket* 62695
1*44 OLDS Starflrt Coupe 9*95 1*9 "9” Dynamic Coupe 5229] t*9 BUICK LeSabrw Power SI791 1*44 CUTLASS Hardtop, 9495 1941 OLDS "91" Holiday. AlrS14*5
*1793
t»54 FORD 2-Door,
1*9 OLP| Hardtop
1944 OLDS W Convertible Sava
1944 OLDS 2-Door HerdtOD *2795
1*9 OLDS F9 4Door .. ! S179S 1*9 "*•" 4-Door Hardtop, Air 11*95
1*9 "9T’ 4-Door Hardtop
A* ■■•• ■ .... *2795
1*9 P4S Coupe . ... ..... 51795
441
REPOSSESSION, M9 CHfcVY WAG-on. No money dawn, call Mr. John-ton, MA 5-1466, Dealer.
PATTERSON
CHRYSL#R-PLYMOUTH
ranty dill good. 51,695. 335-0784.
H®. CHEVROLEt IMPALA -CpN-l VALIANT-DOOOE TRUCKS
vgrtfcte, V-* englnb, powerglide, J toil N. Main St. . ROCHESTER r*5uflttrtM*rlT Tne bOOQE LA*4CER, timiTE,4
ftlly S249L Emv
---J. PATTERSON CHEVROLET .
CO. ■ NOW AT - OUR NEW LOT j 1
>99 9oi5 TLVoN^^ GOOD, J2SP.,;
1955 CHEVY HALF-TON PICKUP 4' .
condl-
MG. FIRST CLASS'
199 CHEVROLET IMPALA, At)66R hardtop. Azure aqua, automatic trammlwten, power tfaarlng and badtat radio./ tinted wtodthleid lad whitewall lira*, all Rig Real tharp. *2.095. —
I DODGE "440~ STATION 1 t with VS anedna, auto., h •Htlon, power steering and Dr peer mar window, radio, hi ■4 whitewall tide*, ruby red h and vtnyt interior trim.
an encoRM* toy at mr ill prlca of aniy *1495.
BIRMINGHAM
Chrytlar Ftymaulh I. Woodward Ml 7
1*9 Chevy If, itMdftil ItWfc A cylinder, radio, heater, green with top. -
Corvalr Monza, auto., 6-cylln-
lie, 5. double power, ra-
_______ whttowak*. goM.
199 Pontiac starcMif tooor, aula.
w3|darintariar<* BOW*r' wt'it*
1944 Pontiac Catalina 2-door hard-
199 Impale 2._____
j—Into *
I*, while i
’ t«
-REPOSSESSIONS-
BANKRUPTCIES, STORAGE CARS, ETC •
TAKE OVER PAYMENTS
WITH ABSOLUTELY
NO MONEY . DOWN
'57 BUICK . '57 CHEVY
$397
. 2-Door - Stick
$297
Itek
$397
$3114
$2.35
$2.35
$3.14
Prlca
$197
'57 MORRIS MINOR '57 FORD ^ $197
'56 LINCOLN C#"V*rtW# $297
'58 CHEVY $297
$1-63
$1.63
$2.35
$2.35
CAPITOL AUTO SALES’. LIQUIDATION LOT Lcxxited i Block off Oakland . 312 W. Montccdm, FE- 8-4071
m
ppfjf)f\r ''v''' l
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1964
New Mi IM Cm 106
Rl^llEWIBH - toil fruarre
wlfrPM«trtMjfe ^ydrwnirti? Pouter (Marins. Power brake*. FM music. Wire wheel awTT ud
SO N Cl OUR N WARD .
4-ms.
Fall Clearance
^ SALE Sport Cars
Jaquor 1»S7, L4 Sedan $3*5 Jaguar 1*57 XK-140 coupe $3*3. Morris Minor 1*31 Convertible $150. A-Keely Sprit* 1»S* Convertible
eeley 1*57 Roadster IS Roadster $7*5 30 Roadster, $**5.
II Roadster, $1.0*5
l Sedan $S95. '
( INI Roadster $7*5.
1*5$ ilk* neat $1.0*5,
_____._ 1*5* Csnvertlbta $u.
Corvette 1*40 4-speed $1,f*5
HOLIDAY
Ntw Mi
Us«4 Cm 106
I 0$ 7-DOOR MAROTOP rater, roar window defrost-
0 radio, auto, trunk open-nore. By owner. •Slot over
1 price. Cafl Rags. ,301
m 6lM k ibflM HAI6T6F,
$173. FE 3-1503.
1959 Plymouth ars
wrly, <
family. ..._ _______
transmission, oxoallant liras. Fun
PATTERSON
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH VALIANT-DODGE TRUCKS *“ *1, Main it. rqHmtrr
OAKLAND
ChryeterPlymoWh . IMS PLYMOUTH
$895
774 Oakland_____ FE mat
1*31 PLYMOUTH STATION WaOoN, looks and drives Ilk* new, full price only $0*5. No Money Down. . BUY HERE, PAY HERE.
.Cooper
F
I Dlxl
Jki
Fine, Used Cars!
“Ixle OR 3-1203 Di ip Cooper before yr kMj
1*fl WHITE PLV/toUTH FURV, r door,, automatic, power steerlAi gtrfpct condltjon Inside t
ter 5 p.m.
II,ISO. MA 5-31*7 at-
I Cm m
1*31 PLYMOUTH “VT .STATION
are almost new. AHjM* outside ’ wltti a noet blue interior. A nice portariinlnp cor mat can b* yours today tor only $$*$. Tarms arranged to sun you. ■
BIRMINGHAM
Chrystor-Plymouth *12 S-toaodword ■ ^ - ^
■ $tW
2 Plymouth Pory. 4 sop. Color Is Mus wtl toriar. Has padded d
heater, caol air Newer, __M
dark Mu* carpal an flooring. Has 4 now Firestone whNewell Hr— Does not bum go* or Ml i runs very jgeod. Transmission a push button automatic. MUST SELL. CaU Bill Whits, FE Euf.lM.. -• s
1962 Plymouth
lasting ScyHndsr engine. Alt* of courses a standwd transmission No money down, t-Z tsrmsl
PATTERSON
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH *. VALIANT-DODGE TRUCKS Ml N. Mo In St. ROCHESTER
. con standard, 2-door, tl.doo. Will
KESSLER'S
DODGE .
CARS AND TRUCKS Solo* and Isrvie*
Oxford ____OA >1300
—1965 SHOWING-
RAMBLERS-PLYMOUTHS CHRYSLERS - VALIANTS - JEEPS - ;
-All In One Showroom For You-
' ALL MODELS ON DISPLAY
BILL SPENCE
• CHRYSLER—PLYMOUTH—VALIANT-RAMBLER—JEEP
6673 Dixie Highway
5-586^
MtEt Epi a>fi Cm 1G4
PLYMOUTH "PURY' VT*
M Sss: »vjr
“rtSTK^gsi;
Is obnsJ^SIlM ^uytow o nos to pot sno as beautiful es ft con be yaw* toddy tor only I
BIRMINGHAM
*12 S.
Chrysler-1 Woodward
ll 7G213
1964 Valiant
Chryster's "Best all around Com-posrin u lowing blue and syoor or SMOO mild warranty goes with oa «S Still has many miles to '$n.$7 weakly with no $ ill Mr. Opto, Credit Co-
LLOYDS
dsl Just down, C
New Location t 1250 Oakland Avt.
Ft 3-7033
OAKLAND
.. Chrysler-Ptymouth 1*34 VALIANT SIGNET 700 Hardtop, automatic
$1795
New Mi llati Cm
OAKLAND.
Chryslor Plymouth * PONTIAC ECMNEVILLE
1*5* PONTiAC CATALINA, NICE. $4*5. Pontiac AMI Broker*, Perry o* Walton. PE 4.1*0$.
OAKLAND,
Chrysler-Plymouth ' <*' 1*4* PONTIAC BONNEVILLE Convertible, white, good runninj condition, muaTRWvi
$1195
724. Oakland FE 54424
i*40~pontiaC caYaUNa, 4-DOOR sedan. Sherpl Extras. Power steer-tog. power breketTf Padded doth. New tiree. >1.000. 12$ Gtonwood.
1*40 CATALINA HARDTOP COUPE,
PONTIAC STARCHIEF, 4-
«ONTIAC, 1*43 GRAND PRIX, Automatic. ^tuM ^power, low mileage.
PONTNA^LeMiN* 1*43. DOuBlI
owner. >1435. ______
1*43 TEMPEST LaMANS *6661 matching Interior, h whit**
at model. MPPATtfiK* CO. HOW AT OUR NSW LOT. 1104 S. WOODWARD? AVI.* BIRMINGHAM, “*
4-2735.__________l________,
1M4 TIMPfcST CUSTOM* 314 .
mag.* wheels. $2*500. 682-
mkllc, radio, hooter, excellent 1 condition, $4*5. OR 3-13*1 “
474,1tlLDeMer. ___________
1*51 PONTIAC STARCHIER
i Ktnrick, Koogo
Harbor*
Full Price
$695
Easy Bank Financing
STARK-HICKEY FORD
, 14 Milo Rdad E. of Woodward
BCNYIAC W> catalTna coN-
"BIG JOHN"
' CAPITOL AUTO SALES 312 W. Montcalm
1*41 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE
Equippod “----------Mgndi
brakes.
Hilltop
Auto Salts, Inc.
Fall Clearance
Sports Cars and
Convertibles
harmonizing Interior trim ond ilte top. Fun price only $1,2*5.
» BIRMINGHAM
Chrysler - Plymouth *12 S. Woodward Ml 7-2214
1*41 TEMPEST STATION WAOStC 4-door, automatic transmission, ra-
ws* CHE'..
1*41 CATALINA 1*43 OLDS, Feu.
1*41 CORVETTE,
1*44 STING RAY, x mm
Lot Spatial
1*44 CHEVELL SUPER ** 4-ON-THE-PLOOR to
Lucky Auto
193 or 254 S. Saginaw FE 4-2214 or FE 3-7853
(Access open to lots while street under construction)
1*42 BONNEVILLE tONVBRfiBLE, extra amj M
...... $14*5
nr .... si**5 quads $23*5
952 Oakland
FE-4-9969
JEROME QPFn A l Q
OLDS - CADILLAC L\^l /\ L U
1963 - 1963 1962 "
PONTIAC BUICK OLDS
Catalina 2-Door 4-Door Beauty! . Starfir* Coupe
Tills on# Is sxtrs shorp and Is s With • rod and white finish, astro clean, ready to go tor Onty-r This one must be seen to be ep. predated. Pull power end Mr conditioning! Only-
~~$1995 $2395 $2595
1962 1963 1963
BUICK OLDS . OLDS
Electro "225" A beautiful Muo and white 4-door Cutlass Coupe This cor Is Immaculate Igoldo and Super "88" Hardtop
hardtop, fully equippod, Including air conditioning. Lew mltoago -almost like n*wl Hurry on this Out, automatic, pouter steering, bucket seats, console. Loaded with extras. Whiter finish with rad In- 4-Door, fully equipped, extra dean low mltoage carl Only—
sparkling beauty! $2395 • $1995, $2295
$1995
All Used Cars on Display at 675 S. Saginaw St.
1964 .
CADILLAC
* Convertible
carries remainder of new < warranty! Beautiful let Mock w red Interior, glr conditioning h
$4995
1961
CADILLAC
4-Door Sedan
his on# is fully equipped and It
We Are {Sorry for the Inconvenience to You During the Perimeter Road Construction Please Call for One of Our‘Courteous Salesmen to Stop at Your Door Tonight -iAfith the Car of Your Choice. .Or Stop in at 675 S. Saginaw - i Block N. of South Blvd.^All New 1965 OLDS and CADILLACS on Display There for Your Convenience During Road Construction.
We Still Have a Few* New 1964 OLDS and CAD1LACS
20% OFF S
FRIDAY - SATURDAY . A OCTOBER 9 AND 10* *1964 ' i
JEROME 1 / OLDS-CADILLAC
Now-qt 675 Saginaw Sf. i Block N. of S. Blvd.
DURING ROAD CONSTRUCTION
FE 3-7021 or FE 3-7027
Tm
cor trede-in. $1,0*5 full eric* wltl no money dawn.
Lucky Auto
193 ar 254 S. Saginaw FE 4<2214. or FE 3-7853
(Acceta operrto tola while atnof
GLENN'S
1*41. Pontiac , Bonneville 2-door
.. only 32jt00 actual
mltoi.
L/C. Williams, Salesman
1*44 CHEVROLET VY-TON S-FOOT
KMr 4-dr„ v-g, * stoorlng, *1,7*5.
'y-gTitoatorgltderILCfL ' e°“P*'
.1*62 Chavy II 4d00r, 4-cyL, standard,
*
TEL-A-HURON AUTO SALES
60 S. TELEGRAPH , tilA-hu8&'cV°nter ;
COME SEE.."GONE "COLOR ME GONE"
Winner of the National Hdt Rod "Association Summer Nationals Drag Races in' Indianapolis Will Be on Display at
HUNTER -DODGE
COME SEE DODGE FABULOUS '65 MONACO BEAUTIFUL *80 and P0LARA
DODGE IS COMING ON BIG FOR '651
/Also on Display at Great Savings are New 64's and Demos. 5 880's 2-Doors and 4-Do6rs 7 Polara 2-Doors and 4-Doors 15 Darts and GT's Plus Many Others!
A Fine Selection of Sharp Used Cars.
'63 Olds 2-Door Hardtop ..... $2395
'62 GT Dart ..................... $1295
*61 Valiant ....................$ 995
'61 Dodge Dart ,!..................$895
'61 Dodge Wagon ..................$1095
'60 Fairlane 500 .............. $ 795
'61 Olds 88 4-Door .*..........$1295
'62 Dodge, Nice Car ..........: $ 695,
'59 Plymouth, Almost Like New. .$ 395 '58 Chevy, See It ............. .$ 395
HUNTER DODGE
"WHERE THE HUNT ENDS"
499 S. HUNTER BIRMINGHAM MI 7-0955
-TEN
48-HOUR
1963 PONTIAC
CatbHna Sport Coupe
transmission
$2188
o sparkling sintor Wuo H
1964 CHEVY
Biscayne 2-Door
SEDAN model with thrifty 4-cyllnder engine
• $1988
1962 FORD
Galaxie Club Coupe
This little beauty hat a 4-cyllnd*r engine —■ ■ve tr-----— - *“■*
end standard el
$985
1954 CHEVY
Impolo Sport Coupe )
________ | ______ HR Powerglkte transmission, radio, heater, easy eye glass, whitewall tiros and • nice tu-tono beige and saddle tan
1961 CHEYY
Bel Air 4-Ooor
SEDAN model ,wtth money saving 4-cylinder engine and smooth‘Powerglide Iran—■ radio, heater and power steering. 1 1 —1 beautiful.
$1095
1963 CHEVY
Impale Convertible
Hot a powerful V-4 engine will Sparkling white lop .end beautiful
$1995
1964 CHEVY
Impola Super Sport
Powerglide transmission, V-l engine along
make Nile nice saddle ten automobile with bucket seats a dream.
$2485
1964 TEMPEST
LeMons Convertible ^
) seals, n
This sporty modal mafic transmission, steering, whitewall
$2195
1963 CHEVY , .
Bel Air 4-Door Sedan
Economy - minded 4-0411.
PONTIAC COUPB# 1*44. 9,000 CCR-
dltion. Full price $2,595.
Autobahn
Motors/ Inc.
SHELTON
PONTIAC-BUICK
155 Rochester Road OL 1-3133
Credit or Financing
Problems?
We Can Finance Youl r
Call Mr. Ycfle 661-8550
75 Cholca—Used Cai
Cadillac
Division
•WILSON
PONTIAC-CADILLAC
OFFERS THE FOLLOWING
1962 CADILLAC 6-Window Sodon
Power steering and brakes, radio,
$2995
» ONE white with Rad Interior
$4995
1W4 CADILLAC Convertible
•hlla tap with Marl ter. All powerSa
$4695
TM0 CADHUi Coup# DoVille
Apower accessories. Including^ 4-
$375 Down
1961 'CADILLAC Club Sedan
A nice gleaming white finish way seels, all Cadillac po a sharp buy at: j,
$2295 *
WILSON
PONTIAC-CADILLAC
1350 N. Woodward . Ml 4-1030 ----------- Michigan
Now and Used Cara lOt
1964 Torn pest Custom
7-door with V0 engine, standard fransmltslln, radio, -her*— ' ““ actual miles, all white Interior I Only 52,Its.
Now ood Used Con
"extras,'
lf5>_ RAMBLER CLASSIC WAOON,
Homer Hight
m6tors, inc. pontiamuTciuchIviiouit
Kford, MIchRn OA >-2S2i
sedah, radio and h
matte, several t
choose from, priced ISO* financing, *2 money back guaren-
, 34 months, on J
VILLAGE
RAMBLER
TROY, MICHIGAN JU 8-0536
1964
$1595'
$95 Down
VILLAGE
RAMBLER
OLIVER
BUICK
CATALINA Convert. Pow. 224*5, STARCHIEF 4door. Pow. 22.4*5 i LeSABRE A-door, power .. $2,695
1*41 Special wagon, auto...
1*00 FONT I AC Wagon. Auto. . $1,3*5 INI TEMPEST LeMara Moor $1,5*51 INI TEMPEST Adoor. Blue S 1*5 1*03 RIVERA hardtop, blue .. $3,1*5 1*42 VALIANT "200" Hardtop 01,3*51 IN2 RENAULT Moor, black « Y*s! 1*42 FAIRLANE "500" Bdvr .'IMPS
INI OLDS
T-BIRb Convert. Blue'0 9*5 SKYLARK Hardtop, Pow. $2,295 INI T-BIRD Hardtop, blue $1,995 1*42 BUICK Special 2-door .... $1,495 1959 KARAAANN GHIA 2-door S 995] INI RAMBLER Adoor, white S 0*5 RAMBLER 1-door, green 51,3*51 1962 LeSABRE 2-daor, red $1,695
OLIVER
BUICK
196-210 Orchard Lake
RUSS JOHNSON
PONTIAC? - RAMBLERS
$109^
1962 RAMBLER 4-Door Classic
economy 6-cvllnder engine, slick ■ iu at only—
Was 11295, special
1963 RAMBLER American
4-Door MW to warranty I Haatetv radio.
1963 CHEVY Impdla Hardtop,
automatic transmission, V-l
1961 CHEVY Injpala Hardtop
7-Door with an all. while finish, rad I automatic transmission, whitewalls and dto. Sharp! •
1963 CHEVY Biscdyno 2-Door
Sedan with automatic transmission.
196»4 CHEVY Impala Hardtop
Wtoor wHh automatic transmit l engine, radio, heater, beautiful I
1962 PONTIAC Cotalind.
2-Door s
1964 PONTIAC Bonneville Vista
4-Door Hardtop powered with a 3S* cu. ind trophy V-8 rated at 303 H P., automatk trwjsmisslon, ^oower ^ steering ^and. brake*
ful nocturne blue f
$1195
•$2195
•$.1495
$1596
$2495
$1595
$3195
lustrous cloth.
1964 PONTIAC Convertible Catalina
This one Is a low mileage beauty-with pow-hwrtw*%lt3towr"- **r***^t- 5S*.*?!
1964 PONTIAC Catalina Wagon
* “------- Station- Waijon
dltloning. This Is a
-1963 FORD Galaxi^.2-Door
With U4 Stick Shift; radio, heater.
*1 Mica Price. Was 117*5,
1963 FORD Galoxit 500
2-Door Hardtop with radio/ heater. V-S engine and beautiful let black finish • with black
1959 FORD 4-Door, Nice
This Is a
Yours tor only—
1962 FORD Foirlona 500
4-OoorwM** • Yjf angina, automatic leant-
$3195
$3395
$1691
$2195
$595
$1295
"BUSS JOHNSON
. PONTIAORAMBLER . LAKE ORION MY 36266
_ 47 E. Maple
TROY, MICHIGAN JU 8-0536
1 Now mi Used Cara 106 torn mi Bead Cara 186 New aod Pud Cm 11 New and Used Can 106 Now and U*ad Can 106
INI RAMBLER WAGON, RADIO, HEATER. ABSOLUTELY NO MON-EY DOWN. Take over payments •f S14.37 par month. CALL CRED-J IT MN, Mr. Parks, at'Harold E Tumor Ford. Ml 4-7500. BY OWNER, INt RAMBLER CLASSIC 4-door, Never wintered In Michigan. A-l shapa. FB 5-1120. ^ ^RAMBLER (L EXCBLLBNT RiFOUEtMON - 1*42 RAMBLER-No money down. Payments of 14.40 wooktoTcail Mr. JaKiaim. MA 5-1404, Dealer. HAVE YOU RECENTLY BEEN danitd the privilege, of buying a car because dr previous credit problems or il bankruptcy? If so, and you have a steady job, and at little as a $5 bill to put-down, then 1 can get you a cor and get your credit reestablished. - Call Mr. Xook at FE 8-4088. King Auto.*
1*40 RAMBLER classic super 4-door so sen, new tires and a - real sharp car. I|*5 full price, 55 dawn, 34 months an balance, aak about our money back guarantee. VILLAGE RAMBLER [ 444'2. WoodwartL^BIrmlngham Credit or Budget' ~ Problems? We Can Finance Yaul \ 100 Cars to $alact Froml Call-Mr. Daie FE 3-7^5 LLOYD*, 'l*U RAMBLER AMiAMADOR r door sedan, radio and heater, SA’JM.'SSSiflK VILLAGE RAMBLER 444 2. Woodward^BIrmlngham •
*" We're wheeling and dealing the all-new 1965 Ramblers See them nowl Used cars are being solici at wholesale to make room forth# new car trades. ROSE RAMBLER * 1145 Commerce, Union Lake ; EM 3-4155
BANK RELEASE!
HAS JUST RECEIVED ltX) CARS THAT MUST BE SOLD IMMEDIATELY, TO THE PUBLIC ONLY-NO DEALERS-
As of October 9th, 1964 These Automobiles Will Be Sold to the Public >. Regardless of cost. v . . , .
'57 Buick r Convertible/
Trades Accepted With or Without
$197 $297
Liens, Bring Your Ti{}e, Over 100 Cars to Choose From
Weekly Payment tl.48
int|1>
• • / /
'58 Imperial
Hardtop with/power, radio, h whitewalls. /mm#euljrtv.
Weekly Payment $2.48
/
W Chevy /wagon '
/ 4-Door with radio, hooter and >
Weekly Payment $2.48
'61 Renault
4-Door OoueMne with stick, radio, hooter
Weekly Payment $2.48
'59 Buick
ADoor LeSabra with Dynaflow, radio, hooter, power steering and brakes.
Weekly Payment $3.48
'59* Plymouth 2-Door
Weekly Payment $1.48
'60 Lincoln Premiere
2-Door .Hardtop i
Weekly Payment $9.48
'59 Pontiac
brakes, Hydrametlc. A rail nice car.
Weekly Payment,, $5.43
$297 $297 $379 I $197 $1097 $597
GM
STRIKERS;
PAYMENTS DON'T START UNTIL YOU GO BACK
TO WOftKI
NO
MONEY
DOWN.
.We
Finance
All
Our
Cars
'60 Fo/d Wagon
r steering, automatic
Weekly Payment $4.48
'58 Pontiac
Sugar Chief 4-Ooor with automatic, /adle, heater and aower stewing.
Weekly Paymant $1.48
'61 Corvair Coupe
Radio, heater, standard whitewalls. :
Weekly Payment $5.48
59 Chevy Bel Air
Wtekly Payment $3.48
'59 Pontiac 2-Door
Hardtop -with radio, heater, pew ted and whitewalls.
Weekly Paymant $4.48
'57 Olds : 2-Door
Weekly Payment $1.48
'61 Metropolitan
Moor Hardtop wllh stick, radio and whitewalls.
Weekly Payment $3.48
'58 Mercury 4-Door
f-Fsossngtr Wsgen trim automatic, radio heater and aowar steering and brakes.
Weekly Payment $4.48
$497
$197
$579
$397
$497
$197
$397
$497
EC A C0A7 PONTIAC'S NEWEST EC Q 710“7
r.L H-jy Dr LIQUIDATOR OF AUTOMOBILES • TL 0“ / I O /
3400 Elizabeth Lake Road
1 Block West of Huron St.
. (M-59) Y
• FTmy • $ /t'
T
!•]
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER «, lm
P-H
, To end the week a fabulous way, tune TVTsWJBK
—Television Programs-^
•; .y/ . ; ; . "
Programs fumishad by stations listod in this column are subject to change without notice.
FEMALE OF SPECIES
Channel 2-WJWt-TV Channel 4-WWJ-TV Channel 7-WXV2-TV Chennai t-CKt-W-IV Channel SO*-WTVS
6:15—LEE SHEPHERD
Lea Shephard. JV2‘* _____
door,” brings you Detroit's moat compieSe weather Information at 0
&30-C8S NEWS
you today’s complete pictare-story.
7:00—DOBIE GILLIS
7:30—RAWHIDE
Ed Begley le e beak robber with Ma eye on a ditch lob. And a la. Some' body hea alnip Sega tunnel under the bank ter hind
&30-THE ENTERTAINERS
A sparkling hour eftwiintf nwslcl Cowdaa Carol Bumatt and Bob Newhart alegar Caprine ValaMe tap Oe billing.
9:30—COMER PYLE-USMC
You'll give Gomer stripes for laughter after wit eacepeda of the Marinaaf funnieat rtcr u it, starring Jim Nabors.
FRIDAY EVENING ,
l:N (t) (41 News,'Weather, Sports
(7) Movie: “Lost Conti* <' nent” (In Progress)
(9) Peter Potamus (56) Big Picture 1:11 (2) (4) National News (7) (Color) News, Sports (9) Bat Masterson Bat gets into town Just in time to prevent shooting (Repeat)
(56) Story of Dr. Lister (Repeat)
6:41 (7) National News 7:66 (S) Dobie GilUa
Dobie’s mom and dad don't Show any signs erf remembering his birthday (Repeat)
(4) At the Zoo (7) Ensign O’Toole St. John is havingjrouble .getting souvenir, cannon out of Japan (Repeat)
(9) Movie: “The Big Sleep” (1946) Humphrey Biftgart, Lauren Bacall, Dorothy Malone - (56) Casals Master Class 7:19 (2) Rawhide
Ed Begley stars as ‘‘prospector’7 digging for dollars underneath bank (4) (Special) Michigan Story (See TV Features) (7) (Color) Jenny Quest Friend of Dr. Quest’s is taken prisoner in jungle (56) World Horizons 6:69 (7) Farmer’s Daughter Katy finds diary written by Glen’s late wife, Ann (56) Past Imperfect 6:19 (2) Entertainers
Carol Burnett appears in sketch as idol-worshiping college reporter interviewing Shakespearean actor; Brt Newhart delivers
(4) (Color) Bob Hope (See TV Features)
(7) Addams Family Gomez (John Astin) dabbles in politics, backing . town council candidate (56) For Doctors Only 9:69 (7) Valentine’s Day After getting permission to publish memoirs of three glamorous Swedish sisters, Val runs into complications
(9) Time of Your Life 9:19 (2) Gomer Pyle, USMC Gomer’s new buddy isn’t too popular with fellow Marines.
(4) Jack Benny Jack convinces guest Andy Williams to make appearance at meat market opening
(7) Paid Political Broadcast
Republicans have purchased half-hour of air time
(9) Telescope Interviews with copper prospectors who struck it rich near Timmins, Ont.
“ (56) Lenox Quartet
19:69 (2) Reporter
Raoketeer (Richard Conte) tries to escape retaliation by former hoodlum associates.
(4) (Color) Jack Paar Stave Lkwrence, Eydie Gorme, comic Bill Cosby are visitors (7) To Be Announced (9) Country Hoedown
16:36 (9) Mr. Fix-It J_______
16:46 (9) To Be Announced 11:69 (2) (4) (7) (9) News Weather, Sports 11:19 (2) Movie: 1. “The Mad Monster” (1942) Johnny Downs. 2. “The Sain Tfkes Over” (1940) George Sanders, Wendy
— Barrie........
(4) (Color) Johnny Carson (7) Movies: 1. “The Stratton Story" (1949) James Stewart, June Allyson, Frank Morgen, Agnes Moorehead (9) Movie: “The Bottom of the Bottle” (1969) Van Johnson, Joseph Gotten, Ruth Toman, Jade Canon 1:69X4) (Special) Summer Olympics (See TV ' Features)
TV Features
'64 Summer Olympics |
•...
By United Press International
MICHIGAN STORY, 7:30 pm. (4) Dm Kremer tours campuses of Michigan State. University, University of Michigan,. narrates historic football films,'- interviews coaches.
BOB HOPE, 6:60 p.m. (4) Janet Leigh stars as Wife who has furtive romance with young law student (Bobby Darin) who has been hired for part-time work in exchange for room and board. Whefa wife breaks off the romance, student turns to violence.
SUMMER OLYMPICS, 1:00 a.m. (4) Opening ceremonies of 1964 Summer Olympics are telecast live from Tokyo.
* SATURDAY
WORLD SERIES, 11:45 a m. (4) Third game of series between Cardinals, Yankees from New York.
2:10 (4) Groucho Marx (Repeat)
2:10 (4) News, Weather 1:69 (7) News, Weather
SATURDAY MORNING 0:10 <2} %w»
4:15 (2) Form Scene 0:19 (2) Sunrise Semester 9:46 (7) Americans at Work 1:51 (4) News 7:49 (2) Mister Mayor (4) Country Living (7) Images of America Factors of the Civil War discussed
7:99 (4) (Color) Bozo the Clown
(7) Junior Sports (See TV Features)
8:91 (2) Happyland
(7) Crusade for Christ 9:29 (7) House of Fashion 9:19 (2) Alvin • (9) (Special) Royal Visit Arrival of Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip in Quebec City
9:99 (2) Tennessee Tuxedo
• (4) (Color) Hector Heath-cote
(7) 'Buffalo B1U Jr.
. Young boy’s father ac-cuaed of murder 19:99 (2) Quick Draw McGraw (4) (Color) Underdog , (7) Shenanigans 19:11 (9) Film Feature 19:29 (2) Mighty Mouse (4) Fireball XL-5 (7) Annie Oakley (9) Hercules
11:99 (k) Linus thfXionhearted (4) Dennis the Menace (Repeat)
(7) Casper Cartoons 11:19 (2) Jetsons (Repeat)
(4) (Special: Color) World Series (See TV Features) (7) Beany and Cecil
AFTERNOON 12:99 (2) Sky King (7) Bugs Bunny (9) Country Calendar 12:39 (6) Sergeant Preston (Repeat)
(7) Hoppity Hooper • (9) French Lesson
1:99 (2) Lone Ranger
* (7) Allakazam
(8) Wrestling 1:19 (2) Seekers
(7) American Bandstand AU-Beatle program 2:99 (2) Detroit Speaks (9) Universe 2:19 (2) Decisions (7) Wrestling (9) (Special) Royal Visit 2:41 (2) Report From Washington . •
1:99 (2) Sea Hunt
(4) NCAA Program Show 2:11 (4) (Color) University of Oklahoma plays University of Texas 2:39 (2) Ripcord
(7) Movie: “Rocket to the Moon” (1964) Sonny Tufts, Marie Windsor, Victor Jory
(9) Politics 1964 4:16 (2) NFL Countdown Tom Hannon interviews c o a c h e s tar -tomorrow’s games
X9) Teen Town 5:61 (2) Steve Allen
Guests: comic Pete Bar-butti, folk singer Glenn Yarbrough
(7) Wide World of Sports Roller skating finals Grand Prix horse race from Paris
(9) Planet Patrol . Mysterious spaceship heads for Neptune 5:99 (9) Rocky and Friends
I Female member of Parliament
6 Thackery hussy
II Garlic bulbs
13 Sports’ fields
14 Carrie—, hatchet woman
15 Lucrezia -—f .
16 First Temptress (Bib.)
17 South American rodent
19 Canadian province (ah.)
20 Delegated
23 Bloody —r, English queen 66 Samson’s nemesis 30 Do not exist (contr.)
32 Half mask 63 Military outwork
35 U.S. coins
36 Browned bread
38 Wisp of hair (Scot.)
39 Of sound quality 42 Headpiece
45 Notion
State to Auction Off 44 Holstein Heifers -
LANSING (AP) - The Michigan Department of Agriculture win auction off 44 —.let?*” ' lifers from stat' herds at the Southern Michigan Prison Oct. 14, i.2 department said Thursday.
The animals come from hentt of the Ionia State Hospital, the Ionia Reformatory and the prison, the department said..
Noted Professor Dies
STANFORD, Calif. (AP) -William Irvine, an English professor 'at Stanford University and an authority on Shaw and Darwin, died Wednesday of cancer at the age of 5%
DoWah' kUp There, Mann |
What young people think are the top records of the Week as compiled by Gilbert Youth Research, Uq. .
1 Do W«h DkJdy Diddy.............Manfred Mann
2 Oh, Ptetty Woman ..... ........... Roy Orbison
3 Remember (Walkin’ in the Sand) ....Shanri-Las
4 Bread and Butter.... ............Newbeats
5 We’ll Sing Jn The Sunshine ......Gale Garnett
6 House Of The Rising Sun..............Animals
1L Dancing In The Street......Martha and Vandellas
8 When I Grow Up To Be A Man .. .... Bead: Boys
9 It Hurts To Be In Love .......... Gene Pithey
10 Funny..... ................. Joe Hinton
11 G.T.O. ...... ........... Ronnie and Daytonas
12 Save It For Me ...........Four Seasons
13 Baby, I Need Your Loving t Four Tops
14 Last Kiss .. J. Frank Wilson and Cavaliers
15 Haunted House ............... ... Gene Simons
19 Ghug-A-Lug ..................... Roger Milter
17 A Summer Song Chad Stuart and Jeremy Clyde'
18 Matchbox .... ........... Beatles
19 Where Did Our Love Go ... - Supremes
20 You Must Believe Me The Impressions
r- r" r" r r r r 5“ nr
IT r ir
14 16
16 17 11 • ■ 16
24 21 27 26 22
W
66
66
66 in
TT ■E w Vi V
IT n 62
sr f
5r 67*. 9
Israel, Syria Shooting
JERUSALEM, Israel (UPI)-Israel and Syria exchanged Artillery fire yesterday. The Syrians allegedly fired on a tractor working east of % Haon settlement, an Israeli Army spokesman announced.
BIG SAVIN&i
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Efficient, dependable, maintenance-free heme
humidlflcetlen ell winter tonal __
KAST
HEATING
and COOLING CO. 446 S. Saginaw
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hamldlflee the rtr wur furnace dries out... protect* furnishings, clothing, family health end comfort!
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Answer to Previous Puzzle
■Radio Programs-
WJAC76Q) WXYZ(1270) CKLWQOO) WWJfVSO) WCAAQ160LW9QNQ 4*0) WJSKd 500) WHft-FM(94.7)
WJBK-TV
9
«:IO-WJR, Newt, Sport! WWJ, Newt. Spent CKLW, Newt
WJSK, New, Robert B. Lee WOW, New*, Joe Recerell* WXYZ, Newt - • WPON, Newt, Bulkiest,
WJR, Sutinett WXYZ. Alex Drrier WHFI, Music of Moderfjl
wnri. n WPON, I I "t—WWj
I tor Brin N Themet
Ttto-WWJ, Newt. Re**. WJR, Newt, Mutlc WXYZ. SO Moreen CKLW, Terry kSbM
rue—wwj, moot Opinion Jill—WXYZ, Ruti Knight
WlW.jBww *5«*Se
liM—WWJ, Mutlc teen* tig WWJ, world Nm WPON, World Newt tilt—WPON, The World Td
MpUji Meric Scene
tfiti WWJ, A ItiM-WCAR.
WWJ, (tom pewt-WJR, New Sports CKLW, World Tomorrow ItilNKM. Rx, Heleth IlitS—WCAR, Cerender " to—WWJ, Mutlc Scene
CKLW, Meri
TOJa
top WWJ.
CKUV,
WXYZ, Don Zee. Meric
T:M—CKLW, Newt T»to Oevil • whfi. Newt, Mutlc ter Modem* 13 MxS; TiM-WPOn; Van PaMdl HMMK wbemeR ' tiM-WJt. Newt, Sonnyrid* WPON, Newt, Whitman . liit-WJR, Meric Nall • WCAR. Newi Conrad tito-WWj, Newt. Manner tiM-CKLW, Mcrean. Derid
WWJ, Newt. Aek Neighbor W*$N. Meat. Ron Krt**
WXYZ, Dave Prince, Muelc IHM
10:je—CKLW, Morgan, Verf tilt!—WWJ, World Serlet SATURDAY APTBRNOOh H.W-WJR, New*, Farm WWJ, NMto, MereheH WCAR. Nawe, Pure*
Whfi, New*. Larry Payne, Hank Burdick, Mutlc ll:lt-WJIl. HI-FI Monday
1:15—WJR, Mkfe-MMi Mate
1:^—WJR, Sat. Pan Mate ■ WXYZ, | Joe! Seberilen, Mu-
1:4S—WXYZ, Football, Notre
4:tt—WPON, M Man «iM-WPON, KlSgSr fttt-WJft. New*. HSPI
wwjJ Newt, tiritowe
NY Whites Plan Vigil , on Mayor
NEW YORK (AP) - A white parents group, protesting pupil transfers for school integration; plans a 24-hour vigil at the mayor’s official residence starting tonight.
The announcement by Jack-son Heights Parents and Tax payers came Thursday in the midst of these developments:
The school system, began truancy proceedings against parents whose children have been withdrawn from the public school system to protest transfers to a different school. The group organized private classes for them.
Police at P.S. 121 In South Ozone Park, Queens, a-school affected indirectly by the integration program, held back a rush at the school doors by 100 white parents who had been among 300 picketing the school. Two youngster's, transferred to another school, were refused admittance to P S. 121, their former school.
A phony bomb threat interrupted classes at P.S. 149, the school where violence broke out and 65 patents were - arrested Wednesday for trying to continue a pupil sit-in for the _ third day.
Bernard Kessler, lawyer for the Jackson Heights group, said ail chapters of toe Parents and Taxpayers Coordinating Council have been asked to join in the vigil at Mayor Robert F. Wagner’s official residence, Grade Mansion, in Manhattan.
He also said that if city buildings and fire inspectors find reason to close-the group’s private school in Jackson Heights, the parents will take their children and books to Grade Mansion for classes on Monday, even though it’s Columbus Day, j a school holiday.
Joan Addabbo, president of the group, called the inspection i of its private school “deliberate | harassment by Mayor Wagner."
About 90 pupils were withdrawn from public. schools by their parents to protest an integration measure that “pain” four largely white schools with four nearbiv schools that -were largdy Negro. Lower grades attend one school; upper grades the other.
46 Fema^ sheep
49 Wandering
52 Female warrior
54 Elbow room
55 Bird *
56 Grabbed
57 Measure
DOWN
1 Skin affliction
2 Czech, for instance
3 Carry (coll.)
4 Egg (comb, form)
5 Disclose again (poef)
6 Theater sign
7 Pronoun
8 Turmeric
9 Precipitation
10 Irish fuel
12 Fillip 1
13 Receded
18 Ruminant’s mouthful
20 Prince
21 Hypothetical electric unit
22 Fine cotton fabric'
23 Boy’s nickname
24 Mare (comb, form)
25 Female name
27 Bean type
28 Dill
29 Socks
31 Mr. Broz 34 Mildness 37 Father
40 Jump
41 Buddhist priests
42 Stop
43 Scope
44 Migration
46 Jewish prophet
47 Fleece
48 Grafted (her.)-
50 Adoration
51 female nickname
53 Joan of-----‘
Your Hearing Is One Of. Your Most PreciouS'Possessions . *. Don't Deny It The Be§t!
The Mall bearing Center
/ 682-1113
e ADDITIONS » ATTIC ROOMS a KITCHENS e PORCHES » BATHRMS.
REM00.
> GUTTERS e WATERPROOFED
BASEMENTS
ADDITIONS
ALUMINUM SIDING REG ROOM
FOUNDATIONS
R00FJNQ-SI0ING
STONE-PORCHES
list
ed
ela
die-
ted
\ir
in*
M.
Mi*
lief
;ue*
ght
ted
>ed
lay
lar
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WILL COME TO YOU WITH FREE ESTIMATE AND PLANS-NO CHARGE
WOODFIELD
CONSTRUCTION
WINTER PRICE NOW IN EFFECT TO APRIL 1965
ONE CONTRACTOR FOR EVERYTHING
—— ..s-
Pontiac "Chief?
Special T.V. Antenna
UNLIMITED SOFT WATER
RUST-FREE
PER
W MONTH
We lervlce AN Make*
WATER KING SOn WATER €0.
OMriee #4 MM. H*aN*e. toe
ft. RMM
GUARANTEED -. BLACK * miffi-- CUm
guaranteed toJmproye~J
I Raeeation on Channel 9 I
New Hue Anodized
ONLY S!4®5
THE NEW PONTIAC “CWEF* SPECIAL T.V. ANTENNA HAS KEN ESPECIALLY DESIGNED BY ANOI TO ASSUM EXCELLENT CHANNEL 9 WINDSOR, CANADA KECEPHON IN *AftEAS - THAT EXPERIENCE OVERLOAD MOSLEMS Dig THE STRONG CHANNEL 2- 4*7 DETROIT STATIONS. NO EXPENSIVE ANTENNA ROTATORS 'OR COUPLERS ARE NECESSARY AND ONLY ONE LEAD IN*WIRE 1$ .REQUIRED. GUARANTEED FOR IOTH COLOR OR (LACK AND WHITE RECEPTION.
YewTESAef OAKLAND COUNTY SERVICE DEALERS
Jeketoe ftarie-TY
CeeSea ReOe-TV PI 4-RTM
730 W. Hwon, Pentioc Briby Seri* R TV PI 4-tot*
SrafWi I 473Q Clod
leAlrien i Pf Mil* Tfedri-edL^ ^ ^ ^ ’ ■
34S0 EliiabeHi Into Rd . PmiHoc
Peer iMNence - 0 34114 ' Cetol TV Sento* BLt-SSI
SI4T Ceierie— BA, Uri— Lelri / 22S7 Ae^i Rd.. Peril*c
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER », 196*
Poll Shows Gains; Paper Supports Party
• You've seen it on the Danny Kaye Show CBS-TV '‘and in feeding magazines.
• Six-foot-wide roils for virtually seamless floor beauty.
• Nubbly textured surface ‘hides heel aKid scuff marks.
• Come In for free estimate.
LONDON (AP) - Harold Wilson's Labor party chalked up two major plus signs today as Britain’s election campaign got more boisterous.
With the voting only six days off, The Economist, a weekly much read in business boardrooms, plumped for Labor aj the better choice for the nation’s next government.
The Conservative Daily Mail’s national opinion poll reported a heavy swing to Labor in a key northern district and comment-
Its poll in Doncaster gave Labor 82.4 per cent, the Conservatives 43.5 per cent With 3.8 undecided, and 0.3 for an independent candidate.
| ed: “For the Tories the situation lifoks alarming.” A . In the 1950 campaign The Economist backed the Conservatives. The paper’s circulation is only 70,060„ but it is a top-drawer 70,000.
OPINION POLL The Daily Mail’s opinion poll was taken in Doncaster, one of 70 or so marginal, districts which the Laborites must win to get control of the 630-seat House of Commons.
The Mail's last nationwide poll put the Conservatives a slender 0.9 per cent ahead of the Laborites. The Daily Telegraph’s Gallup poll gave Labor a 4.5 per cent lead.
In Birmingham, Prime Minister DouglasPHome faced the roughest meeting of his political' career’. He was booed and Jeered for SO minutes ds he doggedly read a speech fto a' crowd of 10,000.
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Boy on Bike Aids in Arrest
Wilson had trouble at a meeting in Southampton. Police ejected two .longshoremen who tried to shout him. down Thereafter the meeting was
NEW YORK 4DPB—A butcher boy on a bicycle beat the city’s busy rush hour traffic yesterday and assisted in the arrest of a hit-run driver attempting a getaway in a ^1964, Cadillac.
Leopold Castillo, witnessed an accident in which , a 65-year-oW woman was run down and Wiled. The driver “sped” away, and Castillo gave chase on his bike.
* * w ★
Another motorist notified police and more than a half-mile later patrolman Samuel Baken, in a commandeered auto, and Castillo closed in on the suspect.
Arrested and charged with vehicular homicide was Wallace Holman, 31, a hotel bellboy.
FLOOR COVERING
ANOTHER ROUND—Britain’s Premier Sir Conservative rally from a boxing ring in Town Alec Douglas-Home fights another round of Hall at Watford, Hertfordshire. Voters go to his battle for reelection as he addresses a the polls Oct. 15.
DETROIT (AP)—The Polish- Romney for a second term in American Congress of "Michigan office, Romney headquarters has endorsed Th fl - — .
, “Ithere Beauty and Budget MeetV M—■ An. Th I tm SiSQ. fti S w 9, flt. a H »if
George announced Thursday.
INSTANT colors
Father Grieved Over Car Death of 'Son, 5
CHICAGO (UPD—A grieving father promised today to “make an example" of a hid1 school sophomore who admitted driving a stolen car that struck and killed the man’s 5-year-old son on the way home from school.
The high school youth, Gary Gately, 15, admitted the incident when he surrendered to Chicago police yesterday.
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«I don’t want anyone else to gp through what my wife and I tfe going through right now.”
struck down
- Salecker’s son. Gary Lee, was struck down in the street in front of his school Monday While on the way home from kindergarten. He w a s walking with his brother, Eugene, 7.
“Gene was hysterical,” Sal-said. “He even ran into h- tree on his way home and |* was brniSed and yelling and he came home screaming his brother had been hit and struck by s cnr."
Gately, who refused to talk with reporters, told police he was a member of a group of high school boys who stole cars. He said other members of foe group gave him $20 so he could I leave town. ,
* e ♦
The youth said be drove 4o O’Neil, Neb., where he telephoned a friend who adiqitted Stealing the car that strode foe Salecker child. The friend told Gately to caU bis father, and the elder Gately flew to Nebraska and brought his boy home.
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BUCHANAN (AP) — Private funeral service will be held Saturday for t-ny - Luke Hayden, 80, former publisher of the weekly Berrien County Record, who died Wednesday at his home here: Hayden published foe paper here from 1928 until 1954 when he retired and sold it 6s Caryl Herman, present operator.
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Tokyo Rains Don't Hinder Final OlympiltIWi&jiifrMBHh
TOKYO 1*1— Drenching rains halted over Tokyo and the sun was trying to jhake its way through clouds Friday as this 10 million plus city seethed with 'last' minute preparations and excitement for its big date with' the 18th Olympic Games.
* * * jV The weatherman’s latest pre-
Th& Weather
04. Weather Bureau Forecast
Clearing. Cold Tonight
(Details m Page 1)
diction for the colorful Oct. 10 opening ceremonies, to start in the afternoon, was for cloudy and occasionally fair sides., Hundreds of housewives la white aprons armed with brooms were sweeping the streets to contribute their bit to give a good impression to
the foreign visitors. “That’s all we can do,” one said.
Black market ticket prices for the opening ceremony at the 80,000 - seat National Stadium had soared to 81,000 on last report. But ticket sales agencies reported that more than 80,000 tickets were left unsold for soccer.
Ranking them by the number The Japanese Organizing of tickets left over, the least Committee now fetid it has popular events seemed to be, done everything possible and next to soccer, boxing, hockey, is sitting back awaiting judg-riding, and cycling. meat oa whether they have
STILL JUDO TICKETS done a good Job.
Surprisingly, in this mecca of Ev“ "““tog television Judo, about 800 tickets still relay satellite Syncom in is awaited takers. hanging in space somewhere
over the equator in the Pacific At the National Stadium, Thousands at blue and yellow already mid has successfully workers Friday set up 350 mi- cushions were tied to the hard hU^ge s from J^peTto tte ^vision aeto on the proas wooden benches, giving a bright United States. tables, each covered with a touch to the stadium.
* > • * plastic box to protect it from w ★ W
To cover-foe Olympic Games rftin. The TV sets will be con- The streets are lined with flag 927 foreign correspondents have hected to a closed circuit and poles and strings of small na-been accredited with the organ- will, show only the names of tiohal flags of participating izing committee. participants and results. countries.
THE PONTIAC PRESS
VOL. 122 NO. 211
♦ W ★ ♦ ★ '
PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1964 —48 PAGES
ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
Romney Ousts 3 in Guard Scandal
Barry Raps Coexistence; Group Quotas
Johnson: 'Won'tSellTV A' of United Fund
Are Revealed
WASHINGTON, WV-Sen. Barry Goldwater returned to California today, charging President Johnson was afraid to stand up to communism and was playing a “dangerous game of coexistence with Russia.
Meanwhile, the President toured Tennessee promising he wouldn’t let Goldwater sell any part of the Tennessee Valley Authority. He planned to link up with his wife in New Orleans tonight as the First Lady ended a four-day whistle-stop tour of the South on foe Lady Bird special.
Gtidwater, in the state where his primary victory last Jane nailed down the Republican nomination for president. Inshed oat nt the President in n . speech prepared for the World Affairs Council hi Los Angeles. He said:
“In defense of freedom — and if ever the boundaries of the free world are to be enlarged— there wilt always be risk.
• * * 'w
“But I submit that the greater risk in the face of Communist aggression, is to do noth-
ing — still worse, to subnut — and worst of all, to seek new and illusory accommodations with an antagonist that has never retreated an inch, from a resolute purpose that contemplates the destruction of our .world.
RISKS SECURITY .-i&D-Ap. Jhree scores,’’ Gold-water said, “the present administration is playing a dangerous game — filled with risks for American security, and for the hopes of free men everywhere for a just peace.’’
Goldwater was scheduled to campaign today in Los Angeles, Culver City and San Francisco.
Johnson, in the third da^ of a six-day campaign trip through 11 states, began the day in Louisville, but made his cracks about the TVA fat a speech prepared for Nashville, Tenn.
Goldwater, several weeks ago in Knoxville, Tenn., said he still believed it would be desirable to sell portions of the TVA not directly connected with flood control or hydroelectric power.
“I am not going to sell TVA,’* said Johnson. “No matter how
much they offer—no matter how much they want for it—no matter what names they call it— I’ll never sell the TVA.
“In Hie first place, it doesn’t belong to me—it belongs to the people of the npper South,” Johnson said. “It belongs to the people of America.”
The President said TVA was in danger because “an unsympathetic president in the White House could starve the TVA, pack ita board with people who would dismantle it, and undermine its purpose and its usefulness.”
See Optimism in GM Talks
LYNDON KNOWS THE ROUTINE—It seems mandatory for a, politician seeking high office to kiss and be kissed by as many .babies ns possible. It helps promote the “father image.” President Lyndon Johnson used the well-known practice and grabbed a baby in Indianapolis, Ind., yesterday. “
DETROIT (AP) — A nationwide strike against General Motors entered its third Week today as an optimistic note was sounded for a speedup in solving local plant problems.
United Auto Workers President Walter P. Reuther told newsmen yesterday he expected “very substantial movement” this weekend in local negotiations.
“It takes a certain amount of time to build up momentum at the local level,” Heather said, “bat there is some significant progress being made— and rthink that the weekend will really be very important.”
Despite Reuther’s prediction of a thaw in toe negotiations freeze, more than 100 local UAW bargaining units have failed . to resolve their differences with individual plant management.
★ A *
Latest reporis 'showed' that only 20 of 130 local units had reached agreements.
GM and the union agreed Monday on national contract terms, but striking workers will not return to tbeir Jobs until the bulk of the local demands have been resolved.
With its assembly lines silenced, GM fell behind in the 1905 car production race a week ago.
The giant automaker had turned out about 285,000 new Chevrolets, Buicks, Pontiacs, Oldsmobiles and Cadillacs when the UAW ordered more than a quarter-million workers to strike Sept. 25.
Industrial Target Tops ’ List With $546,500, Two-Thirds of Totql
Major division quotas, which comprise the total 1964 United Fund goal of $815,000, were announced officially today by Bruce J. Annett, general campaign chairman.
“The' top division quota' of $546,500, set for the industrial division, amounts to approximately two-thirdih-ef'ifie''entire goal," Annett pointed out.
Charles F. Brown, division manager of Consumer Power Company, is industrial division chairman.
Jack Brannack, secretary-treasurer of J. L. VanWagoner Agency, heading the commercial division, will be shooting at a quota of $223,642.
Bramack’s group consists of education!!, professional, chapter [dans, small teams and government groups.
The,women’s division, headed by Mrs. Merrill Petrie, will be responsible for meeting a quota of $31,689 through residential and small business calls In Pontiac, Waterford, Independence and Orion Townships.
“Most industrial and commercial division solicitations are already under way,” Annett said. The Women’s group will be ready to begin their activities Oct. 13, toe official kickoff date, w w’ ★
Annett added that in . addition to major division goals, $13,669 remains to be met by township solicitations.
ADVANCE GIFT The advance gift division, under the chairmanship oi John A. Riley, advertising director of Tbs Pontiac Press, solicits corporate and major gifts of $100 or more for industrial and commercial divisions totaling $102,-581.
Annett announced that early returns of the advance gifts and commercial division units. show a promising increase over last year.
“I feel confident that this trend will continue and that we will be able to meet our goal on schedule,” be skid-
MAJ. GEN. MCDONALD
, LT. COL. CASE
Football Weather Is Predicted for Next Few Days
Keep an extra blanket or two handy tonight. The weatherman says the mercury will drop to 30 to 36 degrees. There’s also chance of frost.
Tomorrow will be somewhat warmer. Fair skies with a high of .50 to 57 is predicted, followed by .partly cloudy skies and continued warmer temperatures Sunday.
The five-day weather forecast says temperatures in the area will average about .six or seven degrees below the normal high of 85 and low of 48. Cooler temperatures are expected to return Monday and Tuesday following the weekend warming trend. .
The lowest temperature recorded downtown preceding 8 a.m. today was 39. At 1 p.m. toe termometer read 47.
. Yesterday’s rainfall measured .15 of an inch.
Judge: We Know He's Guilty
Free After Admitting Murder
BARRY’8 LEARNING FAST-You have to “fight fire witl fire,” candidate San. Barry Goldwater apparently feels, & he gets into the baby-kissing act in El Paso; Tex., yesterday.
WASHINGTON (AP) — A 42-year-old former mailman who confessed three times to strangling his wife and led police to her buried body has been freed even though the judge said, “We know this man is guilty.” ,
“With a heavy heart.” Judge George L. Hart Jr! said yesterday be was directing a U.S. District Court jury to acquit James W. Killough of manslaughter charges. He added, ”... in fact, it almost makes me physically ffl”
The UJL Court of Appeals rated all three confessions invalid and Hart mid this left the UJL-attWuey’s office with-'
ont sufficient evidence to send the case to the jury.
“I think that tonight, felons in the district court can sleep better and the public must have new apprehensions about its safety," he said.
* * *
Killough’s wife disappeared on Oct. 13, 1960. Killough was questioned by police, and after 27 hours led !them to her body and signed a confession.
RULED OUT
The first confession was ruled dut on grounds that the method of questioning him and toe tithe he was held before he was
charged were improper. Two other oral confessions also were haired.. . .
. “la this case,” Hart said, “defendant on three separate occasions voluntarily confessed of foully killing his wife and throwing her body on a dump like a piece of garbage. “He led police (here. Yet the UJS. Court of Appeals in its wisdom has seen fit to throw the confessions out.. .”
A- * ' * '
“We know the man is guilty,” the Judge said, “but we sit here blind, deaf add dumb, and we oan^t admit we know.” '
Brig. gen. neifert
Report Names Elly's Husband
Include^ in Farnum List of Land Owners
LANSING/(AP)-Col. W. Merritt Peterson, U. S. property and fiscSl Officer for Michigan, his wife, My, Republican candidate for jtoe U.S. Senate, and scores of /officers and enlisted men in the Michigan National Guard found the property they bought within toe limits of Camp Grayling was the center of a legal controversy today..
W W -W--------1
Peterson, a member of the Army, and his wife were included in Aud. Gen. Billie Far-num’s list of owners of the controversial property-on the north shore of Lake Margretoe.
The Petersons, the list, showed, purchased 22 lots, approximately 25 by 166 feet, for a total price of $400.
.The lots, many of them several city blocks from water and some of them cut in half by new state highways, sold .for prices ranging, from $4.50 to $100 each.
w • * . *
The “sale” of toe land, Far-num said, was done under terms of the state law which added large tracts of land to the original Hanson military reservation through tax sales in the 1930s.
LAND EXCHANGE The law authorized the State Military Board to exchange any land within toe boundaries of the 139,000 • acre reservation for other lands within its boundaries.
As the land deal was set up, individuals would make a bid on the land with toe quartermaster general. If acceptable, toe prospective pnrehaser would make Ms check payable to Grayling attorney Charles E. Moore.
When a large enough fund was built up, the quartermaster general would present the matter to the board as an exchange pf properties of relatively equal value. f 4 2t
★ A *. -
With the board’s approval of the “exchange,” the attorney would purchase land, from the second party. Itoen, in rapid succession, he would transfer the land now in dispute to the second party, the second party would sign the military land bade to the attorney, and the attorney would transfer them, to the original depositors.
'A . A W
“It may take an act at the legislature to dear title for the ’innocent' purchasers.’” said Deputy Atty. Gen. Leon Cohan.
Involves ,
Money * Liquor
LANSING" (£k*A bnd^onev and liquor scandal in the Michigan National GuaA wls after
uov. Romney dismissed "the state’s adjutantgineral and two top officers yesterday.
Romney ordered retirement of Maj. Gen. Ronald D. McDonald, the adjutant genial. He removed from active duty Brig. Gen. Carson R. Neifert, quarteftnaster general, and Lt. Col. Versel Case Jr., the quartermaster’s executive officer.
Acting on a report of 11 state law violations and 32 errors in auditing by the Guard, Romney called for ■
a reorganization of the LsISClOSU F& military establishment.
McDonald said he was I-, ^flrn^v shocked by his dismissal and as- f O Vwl/lTlUX Ol serted, “My conscience is _
State And. Gen. Billie Far- Long Probe
num reported the irregular!- ^
ties to Rombey after an investigation. GRAND RAPIDS (UPI) -
Famum said thousands of dok JsL* °J2 "J- yJ,8 ,d5*££ lars were involved but it could ? Mlchig8" Natio™1
not yet be stated how much Guard officers yesterday cl i-money, if, any, toe state had m“ed « long series of tavestt-logt gations that at one time mclud-
.WWW * ed the Federal Bureau of In-on tK. vestigation, toe U S. District At-
.. ... j. toTney’s office of the western
[j*11® t^t. tiiree officers re- Michigan district, and consider-
S^.?R^CrUn‘
. The probe eventually went
NO BASIS back for disposition by state ad-
Deputy Atty. Gen. Leon Co- ministrative channels after a han said, the attorney general’s u.S. grand jury foiled to return office “has concluded there is an indictment Feb. 3,1963, in a case involving an unnamed high ranking Michigan National
no basis for criminal action. Maj. Gen. Cedi L. Sim-
Guard officer who purportedly used federal personnel and property for pesonal profit.
At the time, Maj. Gen. Ron-' aid D. McDonald, the adjutant • general, one of the three top
moljs, president of the State Military Board, said he doubted any courts-martial would result from the probe.
“ The irregularities disclosed by ‘
Farnum extend back to the 1950s, Romney told a news con- officers fired by the governor, ference. appeared b * f • r e the grand
WWW jury as a witness.
Among the irregularities , he Although grand jury proceed-sa^: ings are secret and the U.S.,
• About 2,832 state-owned attorney and his staff ir prolots in the Camp Grayling ---------~
area were sold for an average
price of $29.
• Land sale proceeds were illegally spent.
O- Land transactions were recorded improperly or not at' all.
• Armory maintenance funds were diverted illegally for improvements at Camp Grayling, salaries, equipment purchases and even a gift for a retiring general.
• Nearly $300,000 worth of liquor was purchased f o r Camp Grayling from January 1960 through October 1963 in violation of restrictions limit-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 3)
hibited on commenting on grand jury cases, McDonald publicly defended the officer against the charges made by other national guard personnel.
' W '★ w
The general at the time the case was before the. jury, did acknowledge that the off icer had used federal property and employes for work on projects in which he had an interest. MAINTENANCE UNIT The investigation centered arotind the operations of a maintainance unit operated with federal funds.
The shop’s job, according (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4)
In Today's Press
Campaign
Lawrence says low grade of politicking is downgrading voters — PAGE A-l.
Drought ’
Rains rescue farmers,^but fob late for summer crops — PAGE B-t.
Foreclosures
Houses purchased with FHA, VA mortgages are being lost at record pace — PAGE B-3.
I Area News .......B-6 Markets 07
I Astrology ....... D-l Obituaries D-2
[Bridge D-t Sports .......... C-l-C-6
| Comics D-l Theaters ,. . C-8—C-9
1 Editorials r A4 TV, Radio Programs D-U
I Farm A Garden Olt-Oll Wilson, Earl ... ......D-U
| High School .... B-i Women's Pages B-8—B-ll
jr
■ 4r 7
■4t $
MI
1
4SKK
«®w hjao mm
-£=±-
U.S. Memo Spurs
Talk of U N.
THE PONTIAC f RESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, J064
Delay
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) — Suggestions to postpone the opening of the UN. General Assembly were heard in UN. corridors today after die United States called, for a showdown over the Soviet Union's refusal to pay its peace-keeping assessments.
UN. Ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson gave notice to Secretary-General U Thant Thursday that when the assembly opens Nov. 10, the United States will Hamami that the Soviet Union and nine other delinquent, nations pay up or lose their votes in the assembly.
♦ ★ ★
The Soviet Union has hinted it will quit the United Nations if it loess its vote.
The announcement of Stevenson’s memorandum to Thant generated talk of postponing die showdown in hopes that die United States and the Soviet Union would work out a com-
DECEMBER OPENING One suggestion was for the assembly to open in December, then adjourn until January.
A diplomat said U.N. officials
were considering a two-week postponement, but he expressed doubt there would be one.
* ★ ★
Stevenson's memorandum wase made public after Secretary of State Dean Rusk said in Washington that die Soviet refusal to pay any of its $55 mil-debt affected the constitu-il structure of the United Nations.
Although the Soviet Union has paid its assessments for regular operations of the UN., its refusal to pay anything toward the peace forces in the Congo or the Middle East has put it among 10 nations that are now two years behind in total U.N. dues. DEPRIVED OF VOTE
The U.S. memorandum, noted that under Article 10 of the U.N. Charter, any member two years in arrears shall be deprived of Its assembly vote.
The United States said “failure to apply the article to a great power simply because it is a great power would undermine the constitutional integrity of the United Nations.”
★ * ★
The Soviet Union contends
Say Viet Planes Strafed Many Civilians; 30 Killed
SAIGON, Viet Nam (A - j- Well- tember incident resulted in un-
that assessments ordered by the assembly for die two peacekeeping operations are illegal because only the Security Council has the right to initiate and finance such operations.
The UN. memorandum cited 1962 opinion by the World Court that the assembly has the right to levy assessments for the peace operations.
Because some members have refused to pay those assessments, the United States said,
“die U.N. has a net deficit of $134 million,’’ of which $117 million is owed to 29 countries for troops, supplies and services.
Hinting that the United States had the assembly votes to deprive the Soviet Union of its vote, the memo claimed “it is the overwhelming conviction of the U.N. membership’’ that the Congo and Middle East assessments should be paid.
Of the 10 countries that are two years behind, Bolivia, Paraguay and Yemen are expected to pay enough to avoid penalty.
Hungary can get ahead by paying its assessment for the regular budget assessments. But the Soviet Union and five of its allies—Byelorussia, the Ukraine, Czechoslovakia, Poland and
Romania — are expected to be |___________
still behind when die assembly*f^fter all.'
informed military sources reported today that Vietnamese Air Force fighters accidentally strafed a large group of civilians just south of Saigon Sept. X7, killing 30 and wounding 30.
.The attack was reported to have resulted from intelligence that sampans moving on a river 30 miles southeast of here were carrying Viet Cong troops. This intelligence proved false **-------investigation of the
The report that civilians instead ef Viet Ceng had been killed came to light in a re-part from the lecel province chief. Informants said the Vietaaaseee Air Farce was takteg steps te avoid recurrence.
Communist Chinese and North Vietnam radio transmitters have broadcast in die last several days that up to 400 civilians were killed in the incident, which had not been reported in Saigon. Today’s report apparently was in answer to the Communist broadcasts.
h ★ it
Accidental strafing of civilians by air force planes happens frequently here, but the Sep-
usually high casualties. Friendly troops also are occasionally hit by accident.
SAIGON, Viet Nam (A - Premier Nguyen Khanh said today his armed forces could bomb North Viet Nam or Red China; “the only thing is you must do it in the right place and the right time.’'
“This is an important decision that will involve complications on the international side and also on the national side,” Khanh told a news conference. He said his planes coold carry one-ton, two-ton and three-ton bombs.
Asked by a Vietnamese newsman whether the war. could be pressed against the Viet Cong without UN. aid„Khanh said:
“Let’s not forget that the United States itself received aid from other nations to gain ita freedom and I’m sure the United States will continue to help us to preserve our freedom and independence.
* ★ **
“Let us not forget that more than 20 nations are now helping us in our fight, not only the United States.'* ’
starts.
(JSAF Colonel Said Kidnaped in Venezuela
CARACAS, Venezuela (AP)
A UN. Air Force colonel ap-parendy was kidnaped today by1 pro • Communist terrorists, a UN. Embassy spokesman said.
He was identified as Lt. Col. Michael Smolen, deputy chief of the UN. mission to the Venezuelan Air Force.
Smolen was whisked away by two men as he left his Chouse enroute to work this foaming.
Officials expressed fear-it was the work of the FALN (Armed Forces for the National, Liberation), the underground terrorist movement which last November kidnaped Lt. Col. James K. Chenault, deputy chief of the UN. Army mission.
Injuries Kill 2 in County
Hit-Run, Head-On Mishaps Prove Fatal
Birmingham Area News
300 to 'Trick or Treat' for U.N. Children's Fund
LUCKY PUP-This pup is in good hands. Eighteen-year-old Hollace Utgard, Oakland University freshman, has a special fondness for dogs. The feeling is mutual.
Oil Canine Cavorts With Queenly Coed
Have you checked lately? dog’s life might pot be so to
The benefits of being a dog, at least around Oakland University, increased considerably this fall‘with the addition of Hollace Otgard to the OU campus.
Miss Otgard, MoOt-3 with dark brown hair and impressive blue-gray eyes, professes a special affection for man’s proverbial best friend.
The 18-year-oki Oakland freshman hopes to be a veterinarian, a point in favor of the canine life.
Right now, however, bliss Otgard admits to “trytag to become a more feminine female,” which she hopes will score points" for her in the finals of
Under terms of the agreement, the military board was to Gen. Simmons said he be- supervise the land, now known lieved most purchasers of foe as Camp Grayling, and it could, lotf did not think anything was for the betterment of tbe guard, wrong with the deal. trade its properties within the
PURCHASED NO LOTS reservation for lands also inside
' the boundaries that were pri-
Not Legal to Sell Land at/Cray ling
Walter F. Carey, UN CMm- . . r* L I
ber of Commerce president, said iNQY/ OCflOOl last night he considers foe posi- • tions toward business profits of A lx. lEtf both candidates for president a /ATT©/* Jrl\
“good omen.”
niCarefl'i51T Mid5e Bett| Wc^l Students at the new Baldwin Bloomfield Township, expressed, Junior ^ haye voted
his opinion in a 8]^jLa‘.jh* to name the school in honor of annua! meeting ofthe Mkhiganj^ F Kennedy.
State Chamber of Commerce. The late president's name was He indicated he favored selected over, that of Franklin
neither President Johnson nor Sen. Barry GoWwater. He spoke on foe importance of the profit motive in American business.
D. Roosevelt, Andrew'Jackson and President Lyndon B. Johnson.
The John F. Kennedy Junior High School, which opened I Carey every Washington! this fall, win have cardinal administration since World War] red and gold as the school H has understood the impor>i colon, tance of business profit. The school is located at 1700
ins ” he said I / He said Johnson has shown Baldwin.
, I LANSING (UPI) — In 1034 this through tbe income tax cut * * *
Some 314 lots were deeded the/legislature passed a law that and by “concern over tbe size Pontiac schools have followed
in Ucn of payment for work * the State Conservation De- Lf thj federal budget and need1 tlw ta^STS foTr
performed and services ren- | partment turn over to the Michi- for economy in the interests of imT «»«• hi.h
dered, Farnum said. j gan National Guard the Hanson j still more tax reduction.’
Proceeds from the lots totaled Military Reservation.
He said Gen. McDonald purchased none of foe land. Several of the lots went to Moore for his attorney services, Farnum said. \ :
The auditor-general’s report said 54 unauthorised cap: ftal outlay projects at Camp Grayling cost at least $157,-785.
That money, he.continued, came improperly from armory funds, federal souros^ and charges for salaries, waves, equipment and armory maintenance. \
Romney also ordered State Controller Glenn Allen to recover excess wages from personnel paid above scale and to determine state liability to per-sons paid less than scale. PROPER PROCEDURES
He told the State Department of Administration to begin work immediately with the military to install proper accounting procedures and practices.
★ ★ *
The governor said “some off these irregularities were in practice before Gens. McDonald and Neifert and Col. Case assumed their top positions several years ago, and some have Begun since that time. They all have been continued for several years. -
“The irregularities are serious enough to assure me that tbe pubifo interest demands they be relieved of their respon-
vately owned.
Bat the law did not authorize tbe National Guard to make any outright sale of the land.
Yet, since 1958, an attorney general’s opinion to the contrary notwithstanding, foe Michigan National Guard has sold land in large chunks and often at very
schools by location and elemen-BABRY WANTS CUTS I tary schools after literary flg-
Goldwater, he said, is “nm-jure*-ning on a platform that calls | . A: 'gi":'
far cuts in both taxes and 2 Missing Collegians
spending, too.”
♦ * *
“I take it to be a good omen,” Carey said, “that both candidates are aware of the old proverb—it takes eats to make the mare go. It takes profits to achieve meaningful prosperity.”
'Haul'No'Problem
ATLANTA, Ga. Iff) — Burglars who stole a service station safe containing about $500 had no hauling problem. They also took
favorable rates to members of Nfo station’s pickup truck to
the military establishment.
* ** *
The sales woe a key factor yesterda/dn Gov. Romney’s decision to crean up the situation by firing State Adjutant General Rbnald McDonald, Quartermaster General Carson Neifert and LL Col. Verael Case Jr., the quartermaster executive officer. EXHAUSTIVE AUDJT According to Aud. Gen.- Billie S. Farnum, who said his department’s investigation, of the case probably constituted the most exhaustive audit ever undertaken in Michigan government, a total of 2,032 state-owned lots were sold and another $14 deeded away iof lieu of payments for work and service* rendered.
* a fr -A The average price of tbe sold lota was $29 but. prices on the properties, Which measured 25 feet by 100 feet, ranged from $4.50 to $100.
The policy was appareptiy begun after foe legislature discon- j tinued appropriating funds to acquire new land heeded for udtttary purposes. J . f, v;
carry the safe away.
Presumed Drowned
CHASSELL (AP)-Two Michigan Tech seniors pro missing and presumed drowned in the Sturgeon River off foe Upper Peninsula’s Portge Lake. They vanished Thursday- Their overturned boat was found late Friday.
The two are Gerald Kuriluk, 22, off Fair Haven, and Jack Billings, 21, of Niagara Falls, N.Y. Both were married and lived in foe Woodmar student housing areaUc Central (IMS-three
ROCHESTER — the Village Council is expected to set • date forva |190,000 bond, issue election at Its regulaf meeting Monday.
’ Dependent upon the' election, which will likely take place -in December, ere funds to cover the cost of clearing 90 acres of the village 'and preparing for industrial dttrdjresat as an ifrban renewal (inject.'
.’ Also on the proposed' ballot Will be a request to amend the
village charter so as to ex- 1000 worth of land in the project empi urban renewal projects (dreaf which would exceed the from ne limitations of a pro- 192 .per capita maximum speci-fled in die charter.
vision covering the sale of property by the village.
The village wants to sell $12,-
Three-fifths of the voters must approve of the bond issue be-' fore-lt can be sold.
PUBLIC HEWING A public hearing Sept. 28 mi the issue saw little opposition to' the plan, and residents at the, hearing were informed that; there are two ways of paying
for the bond issue without raising taxes. V';
. He area slated tor renewal, termed a “blighted” sectioa of the village along east Third Street, is now characterized by substandard dwellings, p Improvements under the proj-1 ect Would include regrading of the area, extension of Second Street, relocation and straightening of Paint Creek, new utilities, a new bridge over the! creek and a new ’railroad bridge i on Baldwin Street.
* * *
The village’s share of the! cost is now estimated at $177,- ’ 000. The Urban Renewal Admin-1 istration has set aside $535,928 i for the project to cover 75 per 1 cent of the cost. ,. , , j PREPARING PLANS Urban renewal director Ernest Reschke is submitting fina? plans to Washington, including requests for changes in some items of the budget.
\ rV J
The- government has allowed | | lower percentages mi their 1 share of .the cost for some items,
(claiming-that these items will I ! be of less benefit to the overall.
project .than the village has I I allowed them.
In some eases, the village will go along with changes made by the URA, according to Reschke, i \tM in others will submit docn- [ 'mentation supporting its requests for a g r e a t e r federal . share of the casts.
sm * iN ■ y*
Hie total village share was set at $190,000 to cover contingencies, attorney, consulting and bonding expenses.
Central won
Family Sticks Together
TOKYO un — Four brothers are on Peru’s basketball team
for the Olympic Games — and that’s just about a record.
Hie are Enrique, Richaftle, Luis and Raul Duiule.
shop.
It will.be hel
of Columbus
Road.
‘‘SaceThstoj
Jim Beam”
$2.86
Miss Esther Middle
chief consultant in educatim^L. _ __ JP
for the Michigan Department TwhUM^^cuMONT. sum. kimvcst. of Mental Health, will be a i. morning speaker.
Dr. John G. Chan tiny, leader j for the family aim society pro-
gram at the Merrill-Palmer HP-' 1964 astute, Detroit, will be the afternoon speaker-
TIRES OK — The first thing ypo need to do If you’re going , to. be to a bicycle rodeo is mgke sure your bike is in good working order, Mike-Earner learns here. Helping the 13-year, old youth, an eighth grader qt St. William’s School, is Walled Lake Police Chief James Decker. The? police, department will direct the rodeo Sunday afternoon at lie Wglled Lake Shopping . Center. gf'1 ,«
Area Bicycle Rodeo to Promote Safety
the towns off- lunche.
* * * j Roto-Jay Ha.
Utica ares members can! Forty-five le make reservations by contact- j ers attended the ing Mrs. Harvey Van Den wred by the Gene*
I Brouck, 12575 Hal! Road, Shelby j Bank, j Township.
OFFICERS ELECTED The local group held its first meeting of the year recently, electing the following officers:
Wallace F. Watt, education consultant for Michigan Depnrt-I ment of Mental Health, instruc-1 H serves.
| *£? ifr^Merelyn Manhall vis-1 Townshlp cUn ign chatn0en jittag teacher, community nfre- Mr - ^ ^ Joh£ Teare an.
nounced the following chairmen for the drive: V
Mrs. Leary Wood, Area I; EAST LANSING (AP —1 Mrs. George Sutton, Area II; Maude Beadle, 80, of i-ansing, (Mrs. Charles Carmean, Area was killed Thursday when sko IPs Mrs. Ciark Miller, Area IV;
Brace J. Annett, j, campaign chairman of Pontiac Area Untied Fnno, was the principal speaker. He discussed the importance of the Untied Fund to Brandon Township tad the entire area
WALLS GOING UP -A large craqe lifts eement blocks to. the second level of a new building being constructed tef the Rochester Church of Christ at 127 E. Avon Road. The structure, to be attached to the front of the old one, will bouse chuch offices, a 500-seat
auditorium, nursery and D classrooms. A unique, gull-wing roof Will crown the $12O;00O building, and will be put on sometime during the next week. The congregation expects to he using the structure by Jan. 4.
May Be Done by End of '64
Church Adding New Facilities
.AVON TOWNSHIP - If all goes as planned, the growing congregation of the Rochester Church of Christ at 127 E. Avon Road will be using brand new office, auditorium and classroom facilities by the end of the year.
A new building is being constructed in front of the old one and attached to it. It will, accommodate the diversified activities of a congregation which
numbers about 40 famalies and an average Sunday attendance of around 300 worshipers.
Once the new building is completed, the chnrch will have new offices,. 20 Bible classrooms, “ery” rooms for babies and a nursery, as well as a 511 seat anditorhun.
The high roof of the auditorium will merge with the roof Of tiie two-story classroom and
Archaeology Workshop Will Be at OU Oct. 18
• ! A statewide workshop' on Archaeology will be hosted by the Clinton VfcBey Chapter of the Michigan Archaeological Society Oct. 1$ at Oakland Uhiver-#ty
f Anyone interested in archaeology or the American Indian can
|Talk on, Laity Us Schooled tin Rochester
V ROCHESTER — Dr. R9bert Ratchelder, associate director of the Detroit Industrial mission, will preach on Laity Sunday at pie First Congr%atioiW Church «ext weexr
A * *
if A minister of the U n el Church of Christ -and author of *The Irreversible Decision: 1939-1950,” he will speak oA “Missions in a New Age” at the 1:30 and 11 a.m. services.
-g w ★ * .
The Detroit Industrial Mission Is an ecumenical agency’ofiev-eral denominations whkRj seeks to clarify the meaning of Christian faith for those working in •n industrial society.
★ w a
It is currently participating in Jome II discussion groups of inen in Detroit industry, In such varied environments as executive.,offices, labor umon halls find on the shop floor of plants ifalrlnglhneh hours. W4S*i
attend the 10 a.m.-4 p.m. session. f
Donald R, Hagge, Mi)., of Birmingham b president of the chapter.
President-elect of the Michigan Archaeological S o C i e t y Leonard Griffin of Pontiac b chairman Of the workshop.
■k it k ,
Participants will include Dr. Qlaf Prufer of Case Institute of Technology* Drs. James Griffin and Jhmfcs Fitting Of the University of Michigan,’ and W. ’Dl Frankforter of the Grand, Rap-ids Public Museum.
- k k k j. --Others will be Tony Spiqa, Detroit photographer; RidlXrd Albyn, Rochester architect and otbe# authorities in the fb)d of ardpeologym NEWEST UNfT
•’ Hie newest unit in the state1 society, the ClintaHt Valley Chapter was formed two years ago by a group of amateur archaeologists from the Qakftpd County arek. ‘
Russian Missionary fo Lecture Ih Avon *
AVON TOWNSHIP —■ A Russian missionary, Peter Varonof. will be guest lecturer at fttm-wood Methodist Church, 305$ S. Grant, Sunday at 7 p.m.
h i ^
Hie internationally known speaker will present a word picture of living conditions in the
office section to give the whole building a two - floor appearance from the outride.
The sides of the roof will be higher than the middle, giving a gull-wing effect.
WILL PLACE ROOF
Continental Church Builders, Inc. of Nashville, Tenn., have put exterior and interior walls in place, and the roof will be put on sometime next week.
Cost of the Structure is estimated at atxpt $120,000.
-Secondfloor classrooms will remain unfinished for Am time being, in order to stay within thb estimate.
* * *
A circular drive will encom-. pass the old and new buildings,. with entrance and exit On Avon Road. Overhangs at the sides of the new structure will afford protection from inclement weather for those using side entrance?. 'V
PARKING LOTS
Parking lob will be laid.oQt between the old building and the minister’s house, built about two yetira ago at the back of the 4-acre lot, andwlso on the east side of the church structures.
. k ' ★
Bonds worth $150,000 were sold tp,corar construction of the building. They will be retired through the weekly contributions of the congregation.
To Hear Talk
ort Retarded —-... sir /•
. COMMERCE TOWN8HIP •*. Vocational opportunities for retarded teen-agers will he explored at the first fall meeting of the Special Parents Unit for .Retarded Children (SPUR) Tuesday.
* * ★
The program b scheduled for 8 p.m. in file library of Clifford H- Stnart Junior High School, 8480 Commerce.
Vr ■■ . •• e k
Sanford Wallace, president of IforHOrimra, will be the speak-•^. JteW Ifoflzons b a nonprofit orgaMfcatlorf which provides wotc opportunities for mentally, retarded teen-agers and young adulta, giving them vocational training in sheltered employ-
Avon Church Slates Drive
Goal Set at $35,0 for Multipurpose Unit
. WALLED LAKE - The rules of the road will be emphasized to youngsters here Sunday during a bicycle safety rodeo. * ’
k ' k • k
White riding through’ an obstacle .’course, eaflhg hot dogs and joking 'with a clown, participants also will he picking up tips on how to handle their bikes.
The event will be held from 1 to 4 p.m. at the Walled Lake — i e * x Shopping Center on West
Goal Set at $35,0001 Ma^e.
Parents are urged to accompany the boya and girls to learn together tiie rule which
• AVON TOWNSHIP - Elmwood Methodist Church will conduct a Building Fund Crusade .for two weeks beginning Sunday to raise money for a $100, multipurpose buHding.
♦ . ★ *
The crusade b emphasizing the giving of weekly pledges ovef a period of thrde years to meet a goal set at $35,000.
Daring the two weeks of the ernsade, a mailing campaign will be undertaken to explain and promote the building program.
Climax Will be reached on Loyalty Days Oct. 25-27 when all members and constituents will bq urged to bring their pledges to the church nt 3050 S. Grant.
4r if it
Solicitations by teams of too members each will visit all other homes of the "church constituency during tile Loyalty Days period.
k >k . e
A successful financial campaign will enable the church to begin construction of the new building on a seven-acre rite on Crooks, a half-mile north of
may keep the cyclbts alive.
* * *
The tests will be explained fully to each participant before he attempts the maneuyers. Thlre will be circle straight lines, stops, oral
Contract Awarded for Work at Park
A Bloomfield Hitts firm has been awarded a $21,994 contract, for work at Stony Creek Metropolitan Park between Rochester and Romeo.
* ♦' , k 4
The (C. A. Hull Co. Will furniph and install 94.6 tons of steel sheet piling at the park under a contract awarded by the board of commissioners of the Hurotv Clinton Metropolitan Authority.
The new/piling will be attached to^he sheeting installed when the south dam was constructed and will extend an additional 500 feet as added-pro-tection for the dike which contains Stony Creek Lake. '
Auto Kills Woman
of road rule! and other safety. factors. /
SPONSORED BY VFW POST The program, sponsored by L. A. Sims VFW Pori No. 3952, will , be conducted by the Walled Lax# Police Department w i t h | the cooperation of the Welled Lake public school system.
The groups empaasize that the bicycle riders of today are the automobile drivers of tomorrow — the same rules 11 must be linown and observed -1 & by both. .*
Many prizes are being offered I :•:• in the contests Sunday and each | :•:• participant will lie given reflec- v‘ torized tape for his bike.
■k k k
A poster contest is being held among junior high school students in conjunction with the rodeo. The youngsters who. best let bicycle safety will be pre-d with trophies between 3:30 and 4 p.m. Sumlay.
Poster contest judges are Mayor Wendel G. Kellogg Jr., Municipal Court Judge Gene Schnelz, Police Chief James Decker and Mrs. James Lob-dell, art teacher.
Was struck by ,a car on Gran# River in tngharrv County. S|ei> iff’s deputies said the driver was not held.
.Robert Harvey, school chairman; and Dr. and Mrs. Jaruga and Richsrd Watts, commercial chairmen. ,
■VMm
Th^ EAGLE. Another season and The Eagle still proclaims Stetson style leadership! We have it rn a choice of brWv wldfog t© coinjpilfrnent your face and bclTId exactfy, A tiny antique gold eagle on the band accents this famous fashion hat *1495
TETSON
Singers Give Yearly Dance
The Utica-Rochester Chapter of Sweet Adelines, Inc., will hold its fourth annual square dance tomorrow night at Lahy’s Barn on 26 Mile, just west of Van Dyke.
Chairman of the 8:30 p.m.-l a. m. affair is Mrs. Dean Evan-son, 1167 Brewster, Avon Township. Ed Farr , of Detroit will be the caller. -
Tickets can be purchased at the door,
mdciltsnnXi
THE STYLE CORNER OF PONTIAC SAGINAW at LAWRENCE BIRMINGHAM - 272 W. MAPLE
Open Friday Night 'Ml 9 PM. ■
WKC
108 N. SAGINAW
TUNE IN ON 3 BIG SAVINGS !
PANASONIC RADIOS
PANASONIC Flf-AM CLOCK
95
troll, two- •».. ♦ *.jai • *•,. .-On the other hand, the defense, which provided but token resistance in the first two outings, parked up against fifth-ranked Midland last week In an 84 setback.
TOUGH TEST
The defensive unit should got rugged workout against the
Although the league season is only one game old, Birmingham Seaholm’s Maples find themselves fighting an uphill battle in their bid for i Southeastern Michigan Association football title.
* * *
Hopes were high tor the Maples as the squad opened the loop season against Hazel Park last week, hut tee Parkers dampened the outlook with a 21-20 upset. ^
Now the Maples have to start over.
They play host to Southfield tonight, -ia other 8EMA games, Berkley has a date at Femdale and Royal Oak Kimball entertains Hazel Park.
Seaholm (2-1) is expected to to get back on the winning trail against Southfield, a team which has one: victory in three outings.
LEAGUE GAME A key tilt is on tap in the Tri-County League vfith Oxford ((H)) battling Lapeer (04-1). Kettering was slated to play Cranbrook this afternoon in • non-conference tilt and Romeo plays at L’Anae Creuse at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow.
# ★ ♦ Important games also'dot the schedule in tee Wayne-Oakland and Oakland A leagues.
HoBy (1-1) kas a date at Northville
Competition is limited, to drivers 18 years of age and under who drive one-quarter or one-half midget racing cars under sanction of the Michigan Midget Racing Association.
*• * *
Racing wiD start Sunday at 3 pjn. Driven will battle over a one-tenth-mile track at spbeds ranging from 35 to 40 miles an hour. T
JMdget car drivers compete in. 'four classes—novice, stock, modified stock and cte» AA.
victory over Farmington, Pontiac Central’s Bill Hollis won his sixth dual meet in as many starts as the Chiefs defeated Flint Northern 2145 at Beau-dette Park to a Saginaw VaUey meet.
Pontiac Northern swept past Waterford 1844 to the other I-L meet
Joe Watson and John Cara-woski of Farmington placed 1-2, but the Vikings grabbed the next four spots to down the tough Falcons. Watson’s winning time ms 10:81, a new Walled Lake course record.
Mark KareD, Don Colpitis, Jim Lldler and George Ciot place third through sixth, respectively, for Waited Lake.
a ★ ♦ *
Hollis led PCH to its fourth win against two losses with a time of 10:3L Steve Narrin of Flint Northern was second followed by Pen’s Bob Wiggins, Martin Acosta and Walt Fraser.
Dave Kqy of PNH missed the Waterford course record of 11:17 by two seconds. John Meyer of the Skippers was second. Then came, in order, Northern’s Bob Burtch, Nick Ochoa, Tim Haul and Dave Pruitt.
M-MSU on Lansing TV
The Michigan Mate • Michigan gome, wiD he televised Saturday by Channel 18 to
teg tee Werid Scries telecast
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’ h ir fi
Shooting will fttait at 10 a-im and continue until dark. The flub is located on Churchill Road onp block off MfO.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAV, OCTOBER «. 1»—Hillsdale College will break ground Sat-j urday for construction of a $1.7 .million building to be known as Strosacker Science Center.
atomic installations on the-Chi? nese mainland, .
The United States also is understood to. hav^had evidence 'that the Chinese were in the final stage of preparation for testing.
EASY DETECTION
U. S. officials believe the first Chinese explosion will be an atmospheric shot easily detectable by American devices which record earth shocks, sound waves, and the level of radioactive fall* f out in the air at great distances from'a test site.
Speculation is that the test i will be held in China’s remote | Sinkiang- Province..
News in Brief
Marvin Miller, 3f41 Lake Drive. Highland Township, told sheriff's deputies yesterday that his 10 foot aluminum boat valued at $80 was stolen from its docking place on White Lake.
Robert Taylor, 279 N. Rochester, Oxford Township, reported the theft of a saddle valued at $304 yesterday.
Theft of $40 in cash and 176 canceled checks was reported yesterday in a break-in at Manpower, Inc., 14 S. Cass. Enyy was gained by smashing a plate glass window in the front of the building. ’
Rummage Sale: Clothing-household, Oct. 11, 12, 13: Sun.. 2-4 p.m., Mon..-Tues„ 10-8 p.m. Temple Beth Jacob, at rear of 79 Elizabeth Lake Rd, . Adv.
Rummage Sale: 7 storms and screens, electric'stove, 2 oak -doors. Clothing and misc. items. 4882 Elizabeth Lake Rd., Fri., Sat. Adv.
Rummage Sale: St. Vincents*-Hall, Sat. 8-12. St. Joseph Guild.
. Adv.
Coin show-auction. 13539 -Le-sure-Grand River, 1 block W. of Schaefer. Sun., Oct. Jl, 12, 10 to 6 p.m. Adv.
First Congregational Church Rummage Sale, Sat., Oct. 10,. 8:30 till 12: E. Huron St. Adv.
Rummage Sale: 9 a.m.-t p.m., 628 N. Perry. — adv.
Rummage Sale: 646 Frisr, Milford, Oct 9th-10th. 9-5 p.m. ,
Household Sale: Avon Pavilion, Ludlow St., Rochester. Sat., Oct 10,19 a.m.^5 p.m. Adv.
White Lake—Commerce Republicans invites every. one to • visit their HDQ's. Union Lake Village. 363-9459. Adv. .
Chicken Barbecue: Saturday. , Oct. 10, 4.39-7 p.m., St. Paul Methodist, 165 Square Lake Rd.
J| IT Adv.
Rummage Sale: Furniture, dishes, ’ clothes. 26630 {Captains Lane. Franklin Village 626-3083. Get. 16: Adv.
Patio Rummage Sale: 1652 Beechmont off Orchard Lake Rd. in Keego Harbor. Monday li a.m.-4 p.m. Adv,