The Weather VQt, 128 NO. 186 THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition * * * * PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1965-80 PAGES UNITED miss inti a national . State GOP ConfaS^ovors j3^/o/-/?ote /ncome Tax MACKINAC ISLAND (AP) -Michigan Republicans came out in favor of a flat-rate income tax today. * * *' ' - " The declaration was the major point in 32 pages of party principles, programs and goals presented to about 750 Republicans at a Mackinac Island conference. It almost exactly paralleled the tax program drafted by Repablkan Gov. George Romney and a bipartisan group of^ “If Michigan ii to avoid a.re-tum to the fiscal crisis of the . last decade," said the report, "it must put its fiscal house In “This will require new reve- nue from new dr increased taxes. CORNERSTONE “The cornerstone of any program of tax reform is the adop- j tion of a broad-based, flat rate, personal and corporate income tax." The report also asked for tpx relief for low income fam- ilies, easing ef property tax aad repeal of the business activities tax. The ' Republican gathering lacked the status to take any official action ait the report, but ft will be circulated to local party units for discussion in the {Doming months. More than 300 GOP leaders and workers drafted the task force report. * They presented a long, list of claimed Republican achieve^ ments — including some measures passed this year by the first Democratic-con trolled leg- . islature in three decades. The reports asked action hi numerous other areas ranging from civil rights to education. Surrounding the task force reports today' were scheduled speeches by U. S. house minority leader Gerald Ford, R-Mich., Romney, and Rhode Island Gov. John Chaffee. Colocmjo Gov. John Love Is scheduled to address the- three-day meeting Sunday, and Republican Nation- al Finance Chairman Gait. Lucius Clay met with state money raisers Friday. . In his prepared remarks, „ ^Romney- said Republicans would '"^e'engaged in an* exercise in - futility as lon$ as they “coif tinue to seek public battlegrounds among themselves over internal ideological differences." Boat Armada Rescues Hurricane Victims Claim Pakistan Army Shoved Indians Back RAWALPINDI, Pakistan (#1—A spokesman said Indian fmapi lannchod n Griffis of ffflintfrnttarln on the northern front today but were beaten back with heavy losses in men and tanks. “Steady progress by the Pakistani army is reported from all sectors,” he declared. “During the last 48 hours there has been a significant change in the situation for the Indian army, which after the failure of Its offensive on the Lahore front and. elsewhere is»now fighting a wholly defensive battle.” The spokesman did not try to square the reference to a defensive battle with his report of Indian counterattacks. He is a ranking air force officer. Southeast of Lahore, oa the north era front, Pakistani forces wer^“quite a few P bo said. TW Pakistani drive was reported to Astronauts Set 6-NatiorWTour Will Start Tuesday After Visit in D.C. Koran, two miles inside India. WASHINGTON (AP) - Astronauts L. Gordon Cooper Jr. and Charles Conrad Jr. will visit RESIDENTS STRANDED—A rescue operation Is under way in New Orleans, La., tor thousands of residents stranded in homes, on rooftops and in trees by the flood left by Hum- an mwn cine Betsy. The water wak 8 to 10 feet deep in a 300-square-block area. Over 30,000 Said Saved by Ragtag Fleet LBJ Declares Southern Louisiana a Disaster Area After Tour NEW ORLEANS UP) — An anriada of tiny boats —“anything that’ll float” —plowed the floodwaters of Hurricane Betsy today MACKINAC ISLAND (AP)- . . , ____. Gov. George Romney dropped a in a mission of mercy sma|] hint today that he will bringing out people run for a third term as gover-trapped by the sudden nor swamping of the iowland, The ragtag flee churned she h not mcming Romney in through toe murky waters, again her ^ about lble GOp and again, throughout the night. _ Police estimated that more than *£rT * 30,000 people were taken to safe- Related Stories, Page 2 ty — and perhaps another 10,000 ------—------:-y~- still awaited rescue. nominees for the U.S. Senate GOV. ROMNEY ^ Third Term Bid Hinted by Romney the other race Romney says 1 has been considering. Khem Karan is 20 miles north Washington next Tuesdayand of the Indian city of Ferosepore. ** "*» ** *?' visits to the dries, the White House today. and Conrad win Visit House at 11 a.m. !y. Their Washington Related Story, Page 2 . which is 10 miles inside India. _ India said Friday Pakistani KbediUe also includes a visit to shells fell on Ferozepore, but ^/National Academy of the Pakistani spokesman men- *?*$***• to r*Por*_. on “*eir tioned no advance on the city. He conceded Indian troops M-day Gemini flight. J They will leave the same (Hay for Athens, Greece, first > stop on their good-will tour. TWv Will he 7thZ‘l ZZ «*«* early today. Police are epidemiology, spoke yesterday ZJZilZL wST "ptare “ ",My southern Louisiana a major dis- left open "!!‘ m S' bototog a 16-year-old youth to to doctors at PonUac General ***** - “** tofluenxa,viruses, for as many types of influenza aster area. th. a™*™™-h™ i»« a™ e«. «£«££ »«l P0«l»c SttoHot- _« " vy"*'’ "w Pr-.D.^ personal inspection Hasting Martin of 459 High- PItal- ^ The President flew from Wash- he will go for the third state Thev will U»«VP Aih»n« th» ^ W,B tound dead at 2:57 The United Stotos Is slated In his talk to doctors at Pon- * PrePared ington to make a personal to- house term, or for the U.S. Sen- fknwSL >rfaiw >0 rTur am- °n the roadway to front of for another outbreak of toflu- tlac General, Dr. Davenport do- spection of New Orleans, the ate seat now held by Democral TUrkov® and foltowiM dav 387Br*D<*- -----------------ensa or La Grippe, but no oae tailed the history of influenza A director of the Commlssioii sector hardest hit by the hurri- Patrick McNamara. The choice will go’to Adi^Abbaba Ethto- Lutber Curry of 317 Hughes ft* ^Mbow serious or how He said the flu bug dates back * “■■■• {*** F®r e*K cane which may have brought could affect Romney’s 1968 pres-- - *-i in the custody of QaHa«H widespread the oat break as far as 1515. Epidemiological Board, Dr. this carnival city its severest idential possibilities. there. still held six positions inside Pakistan territory — three of. them to southwest Kasbmi where a Pakistani lnvtsloL touched off the fighting last week. The others were two on ' the Slalkot front 60 miles north of'Lahore, and on a sector South of Lahore.__ ALL CONTAINED The gpnkasman said in all Pi®, where they will stay Sept, these sectors the Indians wei% 20-21 • being contained near the border. _ * * * _ * _ They will leave the EtWo- •P®k*,“i“ «■** plan capital the morning of additional details: Sept. 20 for the Malagasy Re- , T ,trrtrTjTTi ^ H| In the air war, Pfktfti n PoMfc where they will remain waa fired from a a^liber auto- break 18 to launched an attack on an Indian mitil the morning of Sept. 24 pjstoi Martin was tfrad . - * * * air base at Bagbdogra, to West when they win go to Nairobi, on arrival at Pontiac General While clinically the. same -Bengal to eastern India Friday. » spend twq days. They Hospital. chilli, fever, aches in joints and Pakistani planes destroyed a Wffl ^I^®rijKeno, Nige- M|mvw ITMirMftWM headaches, the influenza virus Is different each year, accord- IMIMP19 fnr Hamm Ska Mlaflnii Thn mAHua faa 4ka aU»l«w * city Mon 62 flu Bug Due lo Return This Winter FatolJySbot; Teen Held A 25-year-old Pontiac man Fred M. Davenport, pro-was shot and killed on a city fessor of internal medicine and to a speech prepared for delivery today, Romney declared “the quality of state government has improved notably to the last two and a half years, and we \ ' “We’re using anything that’ll float — pirogues, Coast Guard boats, any Mad of dvlliau boat,’’ said the Coast Guard. A pirogue Is a canoe-like boat used in the Louisiana bayous. The Coast - Guard had six helicopters “flying every min- . ^ , ______________ ute” lifting people out of the prove it more to tho next two By L. GARY THORNE The last pandemic or world World War I. A similar out- flooded areas — with top jjji- and a half years.’’ The same bug that bit'you in epidemic was to 1957 with Aslan break occurred in 1890. ority going to expectant mothers The last two and a half year; 1962 Is due to bite you again flu, which first broke out to ** * ★ and the ill. referred to the time stock he this winter, according to a Uni- Hong Kong. The flu attack rate is highest President Johnson saw the took office, vanity of Michigan professor. * • * * in childhood, the professor said 1100(1 *0®°® yasterday in a two- The next two and a half would changed to keep pace with the —*—■ —-----------------— County Juvenile antberities after be was apprehended at his might be, according to Dr. Davenport. Davenport has studied the flu natural disaster. 26 MILLION DIED ^ around the world. He has homo .hn-H,,...... .u. th* oMivif,, A Pyemic in 1916-19 caused studies underway at Pontiac b«. diMI, tt. AM. ^^^^■^IlKde.ttaofSlmlllta.poion., Slat* Hospital taMrta, 350 p.-in its first lour weeks wui oe- more than al] J^, b Uenta tog. Police believe the fatal shot termine how extensive the out- rmmmmui maiica ucouuycu a Will Visit LigOS and Keno, Nige-____________ number of installations IT the jjf* Sept-*5 and will leave MOTIVE UNKNOWN | __ ^ Nigeria for home the following The motive for the slaying is his to the professor day. _¥ f If* . -undetermined. , The White House said Cooper, However, offleera fotmd-a TYPES , . an Air Force lieutenant colonel, starter pistol, the type used to Inf,ueoia caam “ different and Conrad, a Navy command- fire blank cartridge^ to start *yPes ^ suMyP®8- It has a __its L._____‘ -1. J «... ai l T tiAMi Kkaa/1 enflnAsilA AAmnnai. In Toda/s Press Ousted General Names Dominican Reds tor shoving him out — PAGE 9. Sealab Aquanauts set to emerge after two weeks — PAGE 21. Changing Schools New method devised to teach writing — PAGE 6- if;',. II ..... 29 Church News 11-13 Crossword Pqszle .... 19 Comies ..i..4*..M ...r . 15-17 ...a Obituaries .......22 Sperto ....... M-ll lbfutors ..........* TV * Radio Pregrans 59 ji 9 Ford Will Deliver Key Talk at Picnic “This state will build its way out of this sorrow, and the national government wiO be beside you every step of the way,” Johnson said before flying back to the capital. Mrs. Peterson told newsmen last night there is no fruru-runner for the Republican Senate nomination. “Are you including the gover nor to your thinking?” . , - . "I’m not,” she replied. She As communications were re^ left no doubt she would prefer paired and floodwaters ebbed, to see him seek a third term the death toll of the storm rose and said that “most people wanl to 34 in Louisiana, Arkansas, him to run for governor.. .h< Mississippi and Florida. hap greater popularity now that * * ★ he had to November.” The Kansas City Weather Bu- MSU PRESIDENT reau said weakening Betsy, now „ _ 1 - i Congressman Gerald Ford, Michigan Republican ® tropical storm instead of a . ra- Petereon s{ud “®* Mich dr, will be accompanied by their races, ^ to ttertSm’s 1^ W bro®d compost- Congressman Gerald Ford, Michigan Republican a tropical storm instead of a wives. Cooper’s daughters, Jan-1 ’An autopsy was scheduledfor tton- AnU«en8 ®rea protein sub- and House minority leader, will deliver a major for- hu"ic“e* was movin8 across ji 4ta. is. nnH r.amnia it oi=n .or stance that cause* the nroduc- 3________________v _________, A,, , west Tennessee into Kentucky ^ John Hannah is the only ®i«n£0?y ??ech„Sepi- “at the “Bual 0aU*,"i Permit Is Issued for $2.4-Million Moll Exnansion Martbl Wto the"bodyU*C" County Republican Ox Roast, once to the chest. gug^ ^ Ford joins Gov. George Romney and Congressman B-type flu would prevail to the William Broomfield as bey speakers at the event, ex-.. g| - 5,000 people to the Ivory Farms gftgfcjMUgg- ’to*.#1" *cted to attract .tost visited to 1962 and uppears e Frisco Quake Minor SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) 'J A *° fe!tow aMyear cycto* sharp earthquake jolted the laftaeosa outbreaks gener-Bay area yesterday, but appar* >9y, follow a H-year cycle, ently one broken window to kitting in epidemic proper-A building nerltiH ha% been Is- afarby Concord was the extent tkms every 2M6 years, be sued by Wato^fprd Township tor 01 ^ damage. said, construction totaling 92.4-milllon to the J. L. Hudson Co.-Pontiac Mall expansion program announced last December. No grotmd-breaklng date has been announced, according to Ruds on omdalk at the main ■tore in Detroit. n * ' A' The expanded Hudson store wilt add 285,(MO square feet of floor space to the present 64,600 square feet and wfll provide for • full line department store at the Mall. > S In addition, 10 fashion stons change in temperature Is to> win be constructed, accortltog4o morrow’s torecsst. There’s • Mall officials. dunes of aktmmw again Mon- only _ serious- Hirmrwr wfkino ly raentlon€d tor the senate itibHEST WINDS nomination. The other possibili- Highest winds were from 30 ties are mostly party organiza- to 40 m.p.h. The storm’s rains "-------------- were setting up some possible flood threats. Fall Steps on Summer's Heel near Union Lake. “Foreign and domestic issues will be thoroughly covered by the three,” said Dale A. Feet, Oakland County Republican chainftan. Broomfield, from Michigan’s 18th district, is the raaldug Republics! on the House Foreign Affairs subcommittee oa the Fir East. Cooler temperatures arc gradually creeping into ths late summer season. .- V--Tbo weatherman predicts partly cloudy with lows to the mid^Os tonight. P ★ t -Mic; Mostly sunny • with ’ little The speeches are scheduled for 1 p.m. preceding the free ox roast. Bands, contests, games and rides are also on the after- day with temperatures a little warmer. - North to northeasterly winds at 16 to 16 miles par hour will aoon'agendu’ diminish tonight becoming I to * * * tSoastto nortbeastorty. Area citizens are invited to Forty-ntoe was the low rfpd- ^neet and talk with Republican tog to downowa Pontiac legislators and county officials prior to • s.m. By I p.m. at the event, under the dfrec-tbe mercury bad climbed to tloo of Douglas Uwrto, of Claw-65. son. Still to be counted was the loss to property and crops from Betsy’s winds and floods. Agriculture officials estimated the cost to the important cotton, rice and sugar cane crops atone at |36 to $46 million or more. i figures. She acknowledged she had not discussed the pooslbility who was a Republican delegate to the Stue Constitutional Convention. REP. GERALD FORD ■A; He is currently abroad. In addition to the major statewide rates, she said, prime GOP attention to 1966 will be given to marginal district! The vast offshore oil and gas where control of the State Sen-properties, unmanned ahead of ®tc and Michigan’s congress-on-the storm, remained to be in- ®1 delegation could be regained, spected for damage. SPECIAL TARGETS “Thor* tdii k. Tvu Republicans especially have bodi^L ,5L^. ^°re their eyes on the State Senate r r r ■*}4 Wflcer seats of Gerald Dunn, FkaUng Q.J.UBlanc Jr. of the city Carl O’Brien. PontiacVR^fi a? sz*- *«* Mississippi River. Ann Arbor; Bfilto Farnum “ 7“ A°«W by up to U Waterford Township; Paul a, feet of water when a levee broke Kalemisoo, and Raymond Ctov-(Continued on Page 2, OoL 8) enger, Sault Ste. Marie. hr ■ . TWO THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1963 Soviets Tell Both Nations Conflict Danger to World 1I0600W (UR) — The Soviet Union warned today the Indo-Pakistan bonier conflict could erupt into general war. The Russians said the fighting alto was dangerously close to Its border. Premier Alexei Kosygin ap-' pealed to both sides to “stop the tanks and silence the guns” in their dispute over divided Kashmir. The plea was contained in identical messages to I n d l a n Prime Minister Lai Bahadur Bhastrl and Pakistani President Mohammed Ayub Khan, As they did earlier in the 'Week, toe Soviets offered their “geod offices" to help end toe crisis. The appeal was issued at*a rare foreign ministry news conference summoned by Soviet Budget Airing Due Mon in Waterford A public hearing on the proposed record *1,047.267 budget for 1968 will highlight the Waterford Township Board meeting Monday night . Adoption of the budget — an increase of *153,704 over the current budget — is scheduled to climax the hearing to be conducted in the Waterford Town* ship High School cafeteria. The budget would require a tax increase of $2.23 per $1,666 assessed valuation if adopt- Approximately 49 per cent of the .*153,704 increase in estimated expenditures is earmarked for the police and fire departments. awe In 1966, property owners would pay a township tax of *8.21 per *1,000 assessed Valuation compared with *5.96 this year. In other business, the board will take final action on seven rezoning requests, including one for a shopping center on a 30-acre parcel of land at M59 and Crescent Lake Road. INSURANCE BIDS The board also will consider a request by the clerk concerning opening of bids for insurance coverage on all township vehicles. The present policy expires in October. AAA Also on the agneda is a re-. quest that all delinquent water and sewer bills, including interest, be reassessed on the 1965 tax rofir™ ;--------------J proas department chief Leonid Zamyatin. A A A . The Soviets called for an' immediate ceasefire in Kashmir and mutual withdrawal of Indian and Pakistani troops bell i n d flie 400-mile cease-fire Une drawn up in 1949 by the United Nations after a'similar border war. SUGGE8T TALKS “The sides should enter into negotiations to settle peacefully the differences that have arisen between them,” the Kosygin message said, “As for the UJ.S.R., both sides can fount on itg good cooperation or, as It is said, good offices in this. “We are'reajly for this if both sides would' consider this useful.” j _ The Soviets earlier this week .Offered their “good offices" to settle the conflict and were condemned by Communist China, which has sided with Pakistan in the crisis. HA& CONFIDENCE Kosygin expressed “profound confidence” that “any disputed issues, including the questions connected with Kashmir, can be solved most effectively only by peaceful means. —nr ~ up of military operation! by one tide brings Intensified operations by the other. k “As a result, there is an extension of the conflict and, who knows, perhaps, war, too,” it continued. A A Hie appeal to the two nations warned the Kashmir tension “is increasing, threatening to grow into a larger-scale military conflict.” ASIA TENSION Kosygin said the Indo-Pakis-tan conflict also was aggravating further the tense Southeast Asian situation he charged was ‘created by the aggression of American imperialism." U.S. Senate Confirms 5 LEU Appointments WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Senate yesterday confirmed five high - level appointments by President Johnson, including Postmaster General John A. Gronouski as ambassador to Poland. The other appointments were delegates to the United Nations who will serve under Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg. They are Charles W. Yost, James M. Nabrit Jr., Rep. James Roosevelt, D-Calif., and Mrs. Eugenie Anderson. The Weather Pull U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Variable cloudiness and cooler today with chance of light rain in toe southern portions this afternoon. Highs 64 to 79. Partly cloudy and cool tonight, low 59 to 57. Mostly sunny with little change in tempera tare on Sunday, highs 65 to 72. North to northeasterly winds 16 to 18 miles this morning, becoming east to northeasterly this afternoon and diminishing to 8 to IS miles tonight Outlook for Monday: scattered showers and warmer. • a.m.: Wind Vftoclty It tcMan: North*,|t in Mti Saturday at 4:51 p.m. m.rtaaa Sunday at 4:10 a.m. oon Mti Sunday at 7:St aJQ. n in. I.pjn.".. Friday In Paaliac T«a Data la_________ 1 1*11 j» in it Frtday*« Tamyaratura Chart ma 70 SO Duluth Si M SS Fori Worth N vr. kbpkh 75 45 Jack son villa it Houghton W M Kansas City 71 L#n,lng 75 41 Las Angolas 70 Marquatts II a Miami Beach S3 Muskegon 77 45 Milwaukee 70 Fellatan 6i a New Orleans SO Traverse C ll k New York *1 Albuquerque 14 SS Omaha 47 Atlanta SS 4* Phoenix 100 Bismarck A 41 Pittsburgh (4 Boston M A 5. Francisco 41 Chicago 71 A 5. 5u Marie 47 Cincinnati 56 70 Seattle 70 NATIONAL WEATHER—Rain will fail from the mid-Mississippi Valley to tf* Ohio Valley and lower Lakes tonight, Shaven are expected in portions of the mid and south Atv Untie states, eastern Gulf Coast region and from the northern Rsddes to the upper NUriata* Valley. It will be cooler from toe north AtUnfic states tQ toe mid-Mississippi Valley. if .. . .. TALKS TO REFUGEES—President Johnson interviewed victims of floods in the wake of Hurricane Betsy in New Orleans, La., yesterday. The President declared the storm-damaged section a disaster area. Kelley Gives Limits of Religion in School LANSING (AP) - Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley has advised Michigan schools to follow strictly the U.S. Supreme Court rulings on religious practices. AAA “The Supreme Court,” said Kelley, “has ruled the state may not prescribe any particular prayer for use in public schools even though the prayer is denominationally neutral and observance on the part of students is purely voluntary." AAA Said Kelley further: “The Supreme Court has ruled the state may hot require as a religious exercise either the reading of the Bible or the recitation of prayers in public schools even if the individual Bandits Strike Twice in City $2,095 Is Taken From 2 Stores by Gunmen Armed bandits struck twice in Pontiac last night in the span of 25 minutes and made off with *2,095. The first robbery occurred at about 9 p.m. at Barts Party Store, 332 S. East Blvd. Mattbew Barr, 41, ownerof the store, told police a man came into the store aad said he wanted to buy some soft drinks. Barr said when he turned around the customer pulled a gun and demanded money. After looting the cash register of *95, the gunman fled, Barr said. AAA Twenty-five minutes later two gunmen held up Dunseith Pharmacy, 552 N. Perry. A A A Owner William Dunseith said one bandit forced him to open a safe and a cash register, and then the pair fled with *2,000 in cash. Accord Ends AMC Strike KENOSHA, Wis. (AP) Weary negotiators reached a settlement at 9:38 a.m. today in the 20-day United Auto Workers strike at American Motors Corp. The agreement was hammered together in an all-night bargaining session as the negotiators, shunning sleep,' labored to prepare the terms in time to present them to a scheduled mid-morning membership meeting of UAW Local 72. AAA Announcement of the agreement was made by George Gul-len, American Motors vice president who headed the company’s negotiating team. A A A The strike, longest in the history of American Motors Operations here, began Aug. 23, halting all production of 1966 Rambler automobiles and idling more than 17.OQ0 workers at Milwaukee and Kenosha. I students may absent themselves on request NEITHER “Neither a school board nor a teacher has foe disCTefioo to conduct or sanction a voluntary program of prayers, Bible reeding or other devotional exercises in the public schools.” Kelley said “every school year, there arise questions on what can or cannot be used in connection with religious practices.” AAA “We have tried to put into simple language what decisions of the UA Supreme Court and the State Constitution require. When specific questions come up, school people must turn to the opinion for the answer," Kelfoy said. Kelley emphasized his statements are “legal conclusions” and not his personal views. RULED FURTHER The courts have ruled further, he said, that*. —Students are prohibited from conducting any religious exercise,, including the saying of prayers and Bible reading ou public school property during school hours. AAA —The board of education of a school district is authorized to make public buildings available during off-school hours for the purpose of holding religious instruction classes. —The federal and state constitutions forbid a . religious training program conducted^ public school property. Ex-Woferfprcf Resident to Get Arson Sentence A former Waterford Township resident will be sentenced Sept. 24 at Minneapolis after pleading guilty to charges he set seven fiYes in the Twin Cities area thatcaused more than *1 million damage. Joseph F. Neussendorfer, 22, who resided at 2432 Denby until summer of 1964, has been held under *50,000 bond since admitting the string of fires last winter. “I am ga 11 ty of this charge," he told Hennepin County District Court Judge Donald L. Barbeau yesterday. Neussendorfer said be set fire to one Minneapolis building after the idea “just came" to him while having coffee at the build ing. An Air Force veteran, Neussendorfer has been interviewed by psychologists and psychiatrists since his surrender last February. He has also admitted setting Ares in at least six other, cities, including Detroit. Tiny Bom Fracture Led to Actress's Death HOLLYWOOD (AP) A fracture of a tiny bone in her foot started the ailment from which actress Dorothy Daa-dridge died six days later, the coroner’s office said. Dr. Harold Kade, coroner’s pathologist, reported Friday that boot • marrow particles from the fracture entered her bloodstream flowing to her brain and lungs to cause death. Boats Rescue Flood Victims (Continued From Page One) shortly after the full force of the hurricane struck the city just before midnight Thursday. “We can’t possibly get to them at today," he said. “The trouble is that many of them have bo food and may jet too tired to hang on.” Rescue officials called for small boat owners to aid in the rescue. Hundreds responded as others had when an amateur flotilla saved the trapped British army in France in 1940. The military has supplied helicopters, amphibious ducks and Coast Guard cutters. AAA Cars pulling boat trailers unloaded at the edge of the muddy waters and moved off to the rescue. LIKE FISHING “It was like everyone was going fishing,” said Officer J, Crespo. Outboards towed strings’ of rowboats crowded with flood victims. One of them tipped RomneyStress on GQP Unity. . Aim Attacks at Dems, He Tells Gathering _ Birmingham Aifca News Village Players Season's Productions BIRMINGHAM '- Headed by a corps. of nef* officers, the Village Players are. making prepvatktoa for the coming season’sproduction. They’re so* enthusiastic about the first one that they’re keeping it a secret. ’ 'r *'1 “ \ Because it has jhst been re- use, the name of the play can-hot be announced until Oet. 1» they data. , The play, reportedly a well-known comedy, will be presented Oct 8. A A A v. Also on tills year’s calendar are “AayOiiog Goes,” opening Nov. 12; “Rhinoceros," Fib. 35; and a three-act drama or myt- selected, April CLOSING PLAY “Charley’s Aunt," the closing play, is scheduled to open April 39. The Village Players, la exts-istence for aver 45 year*, have Le Blanc said. An —confirmed man was missing la a mishap involving an amphibious vehicle. Buses, police care, even the police horse van were pressed into service, bringing the refugees to high schools and the municipal auditoriums in the dty. _________A A A_______________ There were 5,600 in the auditorium sleeping on cots, lining up for Red Cross emergency food, looking for members of their families. ON ROLE Lewis Benson last haw his fhmily yesterday afternoon/ When the water began rising, he and 21 neighbors, including 14 children, the youngest 7 months, chopped a hole in the roof and climbed on top. All they had was a cooler Af water. When Ike 115-mUe-an-hour wind drove rata ever them, they handed the ehO-drea back through the brie to nestle ia the rafters. “In the afternoon a duck and took the children and women off,” Benson said. Several hours later an outboard took the men from the reef. They had here there IS hours. “Fh>m now on whan any one says ’hurricane" I’m moving,” said Edward Cola, one of Benson’s roofmates. MACKINAC ISLAND (AP) .*■ Gov. George Roriiney today urged Michigan^ Republicans to direct their quarrels to tbq Democratic party — instead of each other. They already are started toward a 1966 victory following their 1964 defeat at the polls* be told. Some 750 party leaders and members are spending the weekend on this resort island, hopeful of leaving, with a renewed sense of unity and increased ammunition for 1986. In a speech prepared for delivery today, Romney'said: “Too many Republicans still are guilty of directing their time and efforts toward ideological dashes instead of joining to- jtory whlch has not ynt gather in our common purposes. BATTLE GROUNDS “As long as Republicans continue to seek public battle grounds'among themselves over internal ideological differences, we will be engaged in — exercise in futility," ne addi He admitted to party members that Michigan residents “do not hold our party in as high esteem as wa would want them to — far from it “But," he added,, “unlike three years ago, they do not think better of ’the Republican party in Michigan than they do of the party nationally.. .perhaps equally significant, they now hold the Democratic party in lower esteem than its counterpart nationally." Romney credited Republicans with preventing the Democratic-sponsored Workmen’s Compensation Law from placing “impossible burdens on our state’s job producers." - TASK FORCE The bill, which embodied many, of the recommendations of a Romney task force on workmen’s compensation, was revised in a last-minute compromise between Romney’s office and Democratic leaders. The governor said: “We differ generally with Democrats over some fundamental principles — principles that involve the future of Americanism and all it stands for at home, and abroad. But aa long as we attack each other instead of selling our areas of agreement—and until a majority of peopleagree with us—our efforts are relatively meaningless.” Republican disunity, he said, not only will give majority Democrats a free reign, it will “help pave the way to the very unlimited government that we ail dread....” tortaiameat at their Chestnat Street playhouse since 1116. Newly elected president of the group is Horton Alien, 512 W. Serving with him are Mrs. Andrew F. Butt, vice president; Eric Holmgren, secretary; and Morris Purdy, treasurer. BLOOMFIELD HILLS-Eric D. Freudlgman, formerly i dated with the Detroit Public School System, has been named to the newly created poet of music coordinator for three of the Cranbrook schools. Freudlgman will coordinate music programs for Cranbrook School, Brookside School Cranbrook and Kingswood School Cranbrook. Holding bachelor’s aad master’s degrees from Wayne State University, Freudlgman was boys’ vocal music teacher at Csooley High 8cbool for five yean. He also has been assistant conductor of the Kenneth Jewell Chorale, music director of Bath-soda Lutheran Church in De- troit, directs of the Nunes Glee Club at Henry Ford Hospital and treasurer of the In and About Detroit Music Educators’ Chib. Kent Mathewson, 2385 Hunt Club, has been appointed to the State Board of Libraries for a term expiring June 14,1170. Mathewson was ,named by Gov. George Romney tp succeed Mrs. Miry Duame' of Monft>e. Cong Unit HQ Hit by Planes 2,000 Rods May Be Trapped by Air Raids SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) - U.S. planes raided the headquarters of a Viet Cong regiment in the Mekong Delta today, U.S. military sources said. They estimated that between 1,006 and 2,000 Communists may be trapped by the air strikes. Associated Press photographer Horst Faas flew over the area in Chuong Thien Province 150 miles southwest of Saigon. He reported that escape routes leading from the headquarters appeared to be cut off. Faas said the bombings laid open wide arena of thick brash and jangle and disclosed Viet Cong bonkers. By nightfall, U.S. aircraft had made nearly 100 strikes against the position despite 30 mile-an-hour winds and low hanging clouds. It was believed the guerrillas suffered heavy losses. U.S. advisers said the regiment was believed to be composed of at least one hard core Viet Cong battalion which U.S. aircraft and government troops have been seeking for weeks. Earlier, UJS. Army helicopters assaulted 100 guerrillas believed part of the Viet Cong force, but government soldiers were not landed to engage the Commigilsta because of heavy rains. Blame Flier's Death on Icing in Engine The death of a Bloomfield Hills man in the crash of his light plane last March 3 has been attributed by the Civil Aeronautics Board to carburv etor icing in the plena’s engine. Killed in the accident was the pilot, Jerry L. Schweizer of 4350 Risdon Court. The plane crashed to the ground at Ann Arbor on a flight from Pontiac to Chicago. a a Witnesses said the plane’s engine faltered before the craft went into a steep dive. GAB officials said there was also evidence of king on the plane’s tail section. War,Welfare WiH Kill Tax Relief—ford MACKINAC ISLAND (API-Future federal tax cuts will “go down the drain” if tbs war in Viet Nam and federal welfare programs continue at their present pace, Rap. Gerald Ford, R-Mich., said today. The House minority loader charged the Johnson Administration with practicing deception in the financing of the Viet Nam war. In a news conference hare, Ford said the escalation In Viet Nam will coat the United States an estimated *10 billion 1 than was contemplated in President Johnson’s 1965-66 budget. Ford said the President has asked for *1.7 billion more, “saying he, will know boater next January what the costs are. ' “But Johnson is asking for full funding for welfare programs, because he knows that Congress would object to spending this much money in all thaae areas at once,’’ Ford said. ’Congress is sure w« ca re guns and butter on the scale that we now have," he Lake Orion Dealer Not Included In List Americas Motors Carp. 1911 Aiabaieader ttn «ffl pea sale Oct; 7 at ana dealers, 19 MM, Laka Orlsa, and Village Rambler, MS 1. Woodward, Birmingham. The two firm* wore not included la a list of dealers carried in the Preoo yesterday with the totrodaettoa atory of LAKE JEWELERS Birmingham -NOTICE- Because of our recent fire we request that all Inquiries regarding watch repair, jewelry repair and engraving be made by calling MI 4-6815 between 9:80 a. m. and 6:30 p. m. Monday thru Saturday. Please have your repair ticket number when you call. We can tell you where, the item may be picked up. Wo. are sorry to cause you this inconvenience and ask your patience at thii time. LAKE JEWELERS NOTICE! CITY OF PONTIAC COMMISSION MEETING The Pontiac City Commission meeting which would nQrmolly be held Tuesday, September 14, 196)5 has been rescheduled tp meet Monday, September 13, 1965. /SJTliilliij* scheduled for Tuesday, September 14,196S will be scheduled for Monday, September 13, 1965 starting at 8:00 P. M. in the Commission Chambers, City Hall, (signed) Olga Berkeley City Clerk fHE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1065 THREE Restalailnches tatin-Amerkan Event] It’s fiesta Jlme in Pontiac as memb«n of the Latin American* United on Political Action American Friendship Week; Launching the week-long festivities will be a Mexican fiesta to be held tomorrow from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. in the Social 'Buildlng of the Mexican Mutual Society, 2165 Pontiac, Pontiac Township. Open to the public, the affair will feature the crowning of Sharing honor* as IN Lilliputian king and qrtben will be MKD MGWU1Y WOHI ATLAS MIDWEST 1 TYPEWRITER MART RETAIL VALUE $12.85 * 7 - nnanmcuxau wmawnMNnatE CHOOSE FROM THREE MODELS STARTMI IT Frederic Mellado and Anita Compton, both 5. '• ★ w •• P ■ Frederic ia the aon of Mr. and Mrs. Cooper Mellado, 1291 Nancy wood, Waterford Township. Anita la the daughter of Mr. and Mr*. Richard Compton, ti9 Granada TO PRESENT FUG Wednesday, representatives of LA UP A, itntttiye costumes, will present Oakland County officials with* Mexican flag. Ending the celebration next Saturday is a public dance from 7 p.m. to 2 a.m. in the Social Building of the Alex I* can Mutual Society. Congressman Billie S. Far-num wilt deliver an American flag to the LAUPA organization during the program ceremonies. Climaxing the evening will be . the coronation-of Stella Maldonado as' queen of Mexican Independence Festivities. She i* the 17-yeir-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Manuet Maldonado of 314 Oakland. General chairman of Friendship Week is Tom Chavez of 122 W. Fairmont. complete, paragraph indentation, half spicing, carrying esse. UK I'l 4' FULL COLOR WMU MIP10 THE FIRST 29 PEOPLE WHO STOP II FOR I DEM9RSTMTI0I. MIDWEST TYPEWRITER MART II N. Saginaw (Next te Simon*) PE 4-S7II Open* Mon., Fri. 'til 9 P.M. t-K. H0$TfSS SfIVIW SET Cold Moot Park, Orevy Ladlo, Merced Serving Spoon, letter Knit*, Sugar Spoon, Oouorl Server. Special 16.03 lo OnoldocroTf Deluxe. Spatial $9.99 ia Ceomeelty. ssNuumn* mwuis C. Canlefe* 0. FreiMce* 1. PhI Inn* Manufacturing Jewelers It W. Huron *m *. Telegraph 141 N. WopOwirt 1 i>s mom ■ •' ■ 'w *m mo t-m oaoaPrf. au* opaa im mo * earn pm. Im Save At SIMMS Today Til 18: Monday Store Hours 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. SIMMS Sitimloy & Monday Mney Saver Specials Look balow for this waakandi tpaciala for Simmt customers. Something from nearly every department, all apodal priced for your eaving. Como in and tee the many unodvertitod item* too. Wo retorve the. right to limit quantitiei and all priest tubject to ttock on hand. SIMMS DISG0URT BASEMENT .DEATH CRASH WRECKAGE - Authorities examine the wreckage of a small plane which collided in flight with a DCS near Louisville, Ky., yesterday. Dr. Arthur L. Goodman, , 41, of Louisville was killed in the plane. The DC3 returned to Bowman Field with ao-ene-4»tured. NY Teachers OK Pact First Quality Men’s Pants American Made-Denim Men’s Dungarees |99 Wn.h ond war .lock. — bletid of cotton, zantrell Peppered Chartered fob Styled wiln no belt- loop. Heavy weight mokes them heavy duty zipper fly, lie id—packets:'Sizes” regulars of $^8. Births The following is, a list of recent Pontiac area births as recorded at the Oakland County Clerk’s Office (by name of father): ' Stanley W. Steward, 07 N. John .on George E. OeWItt, 21* C. Welton Herbert Hentke. 2221 UtuHne. Drayton Jimmy 0. Ptumort, 1473 Eston, Clerkston Robert W. leaver Jr.. 4124 Jemm Ivan J. Brown, 271 Whlttemore Richard C. Dayton, 401 North wood. NEW YOR K(AP) - There will be no strike this year by New York’s 90,000 public school teachers, who enthusiastically accepted Friday a new two-year contract that will cost the city $66 million. ♦ .A a The settlement was worked out by a city mediation team and quickly approved by leaders of the A?l£I0 United Federation of Teachers. Later, the federation’s membership air-proved it by a 5-1 margin. The union had threatened to strike Monday, the scheduled opening day of school, if contract agreement wasn’t ^reached * ★ * It was estimated the new comi i tract will give teachers an aver- | jij age raise of $800. Salaries now average $8,489 a year and range from $5,300 to $11,025. j Meat Market Robbed OAK PARK (AP) - Three gunmen wearing hoods robbed the meat concession of the Dexter Davison Market of $9,-009 Friday. 100% Cotton-Men’s Work Sox First Quality ‘Beacon’ Indian Blanket lnch Size 2" r Comfortable, absorbent 100% co work sox with elastic. Ankle o long length. White only. Sizes lOlo 12. $3 69. value,~ colorful Indian prints of red, brown r blue. Machine washable. 94% rayon and 6% Robert E. Peck, 44t Red Oek, Rochester Norman R. Kilmer, St Dwight Robert L. Noud, 2740 Hickory Ridge Jimmy L. Persons, 4514 Ctoverten, W » D. beam, 1475 Oakshode, Watted Harbor (Twine) Wright, 211 S. Paddock Edwards, 24 N. Shore, Orlc MAIN FLOOR SPECIALS SCHOOL SUPPLY Willard Pendergrass, 30 Lorraine ^ Norman D. bourns, 2050 Pearson, M George Mo|et, 51* Valencia, (Twins) Robert L. Taylor, 4055 Cambrook, W terford Richard E. Myers, 4S1 S. Squirrel, A bum Heights . Rochester llxta Hwy„ I George A. Thomas, 4372* Merrill, Utica I Arther R. White, 7SS Young i Patrick H. Armstrong, 25*1 Walnut _G*ry C. DaWoHa, 54* King Circle, Orion • / ..Thames a. B. Hawk*, 174 n. Clarkaton , 7, . > ^JMMA.. Knickerbocker, Toy Ranahaw. I Jerry S. Lae, IMS Edgaorge Jack T. Llghtcep, 441pim” , Cruca W. Pickard, 1155 Wanda, Walled Lake Bernard J. Ponlolowjkl, 1054 Okie-' i, Clark*-' Mandon, IjgjMsrick L. Tschlrhard, 502 5. Lapeer, 1 Orion amm, Ra ■kw55#ld*Hilh?°rrlWI' 57 V* Ctioice qf Assorted Jitter Home Movie Cartoons 50.Fl. Reels 11-Pc. Drafting Set rSst includes 4W compost with pen and-pencil h point, 4 Vi" divider, 3 Vi" side wheel ring head f bow pencil, 3Vi" side wheel ring head bow $ divider and 3W' side wheel ring head bow Take your choice of Popeye, Little Rascals, Laurel & Hardy or Charlie Chaplin cartoons. -Limit 10 reels. Don’t Discard Batteries, Battery Charger $5.95Value Recharges batteries up to 14 limps. Takes D reg. | e, C mod. size and penlile site also 9-volt transistor size. 2nd FLOOR SPECIALS Beesrsl Printing 8 Office Sepply 17 WEST LAWRENCE PONTIAC 100 Feet Plastic Jumbo Clothesline FE 2-0135 TgACN WEEK GAS HEATS ENOUGH water in America's homes TO F/AL OUR LARGEST MAN-MADE LAKE TWICE. ^[nADDITIONf INDUSTRY AND COMMERCE USE BILLIONS OF GALLONS OF GAS HEATED WATER DAILY. NATURAL GAS -Dote Su Much, Costs-So Littlo ■ tUOD, >DAY, NATURAL GAS SUPPLIES VITAL ENERGY M3 OUT OP4 HOMES, THOUSANDS OP INDUSTRIES AND MILLIONS OP COMMERCIAL BUSINESSES IN AMERICA. consumers Power Simms Price fOO feet of clothesline with'wire center, plos-| tic covered. Won't stretch and wipes dean.- 45-Pc. Prolon ‘Mtlmac’ Dinnerware Set $19.95 Value Ign White Enameled Toilet Seat |99 Hardwood seats covered with gleaming white ehamef. Easy- to attach. Limit 2. 10 oz. Wide Mouth Thermos iVacuum Bottle Simms Price _ ^Complete service for 8 Guaranteed for two years, safe gin your dishwasher. Choice of 3 patterns. While E they losti Boipbridge, Eastwood or Westchester. 1A leakproof bottle for .hot or cold liquids or foods. J Wide mouth for eosy filling, unbreakable cup and a stopper. Easy to wash. Limit 2. DRUG DEPT. DISCOUNTS jTube Prell Shampoo ^$1.39 Value 89* Vaseline Hair Tonic 43* 79c Value 4 ounces of Vaseline hair tonic to keep your hair, well groomed with-I'out that greasy look: Stripe Tooth Paste j Adult Tooth Brush 189c value made by Pepso- J dent, Stripe is the toothpaste I the children will enjoy using. ! j 89c value your choice of Pep-1 J sodent or Colgate! tooth' brush ® | With nylon brigle. Hard or i 3 medium. I 98 North Saginaw Street 41 SIMMS.!'* Bargains On ads THE PONTIAC PRESS The POWER of FAITH ty WOOD I ISHMAlL •mtUT and AdTcrttolnc Director Hiking Minimum Wage Could Cut Job Supply The House General Subcommittee on Labor has approved sweeping amendments to the Fair Labor Standards Act. It calls for a minimum hourly wage of $1-75, to be reached in several steps through July 1, 1968. In addition, it would cover large numbers of retail organizations'of comparatively small size, which are now exempt. Authorities on retailing stress that the burden of wage and hour standards on the small retailers would be very heavy. And they also stress the fact that the complex technicalities of compliance with regulations which would be issued would be an even heavier burden. ★ ★ ★ If this measure becomes law, two developments may be expected. Retailers will pare to the V limit the employment of marginal and unskilled workers. Their productivity would simply not * match the wage demanded by law. tfibs, these workers would in manV cases be denied the op-port unity\to learn skills that would lead tq more responsible and better paid work. Second, the. laWx would give ^another upward push\to prices,. It would be an instrumenvnf renewed inflation — at a time wheh, largely because of continued deficit financing by government, this has again became a looming problem. It is\a matter of record that every past ln\ crease In the minimum wage has resulted in jumps in all other wage brackets. ★ ★ ★ This, it seems sure, is a measure which would hit hardest at the low-income groups — the very groups the government is supposed to be helping. Public Buying Idea of ‘Wholesale’ Travel It's not your imagination. There ARE more buses on the highways. They are carrying passengers on scheduled trips, as usual. But you ■ meet more and more 6f them headed for some mystic place call e d “Chartered.” Wherever this Shangri-la may be, It's Utopia tor the bus companies, which are happily reporting big gains in tour charter revenues. ★ ★ ★ The chartered bus boom began with trips by high school senior classes to historic spots. Now, people of all ages — too young or too old to drive and in-between folks who simply prefer to “leave the driving to us” — are taking chartered tours of from one day to several weeks, from a few miles to across the Country. Business firms bus their employes to company outings. Clubs, lodges, churches, women’s organizations, circles of friends and neighbors hire a bus and enjoy a fun fling. Some groups even set up a bar and card tables in the aisles, the rascdls. One thing these tension-free tourists have especially noted: When “us” is driving instead of “we,” it’s amazing how much better the other drivers behave. New Ingredient Added to Old Success Formula Here's an encouraging word for those who don’t like to work hard. (There are some like that, they say.) A career specialist says that go-getters who knock themselves out so the boss will promote them actually may be going nowhere. For one thing; they may do fat ; Pi : "« the job at hand so well they become indispensable and can’t be spared for a better job. ★ ★ ★ For another thing, it's possible for an eager beaver to be a whiz at what he’s doing now and still not have what it takes to handle something higher up. The expert who pointed out these things wasn’t suggesting that aspiring young men goof off. But he did advise Young Men On the Way Up to train a subordinate who would be able to take over if the Y. M. ON T. W. U. did get the nod. ★ ★ ★ Here’s another word of advice to all young men—and young ladies, too: . A lot of successful business executives have found that a pretty good way to get ahead is to do your level best at whatever you’re doing and let nature take its course. It seems to work oat amazingly well. Heartache Ahead forDmeSetwoh By G. K. HODENFIELD AP Education Writer WASHINGTON — Bitterness and heart-irp for thousands of Negro pupils and Negro teachers in the South, even if full school integration should proceed without incident. The harsh fact if that years of segregated, inferior education have left them ill-prepared to cope with the higher standards they will find in previously all-white schools. Hundreds of Negro teachers already have lost their jobs as a direct result of dcsegregatfan- Where there is a surplus of teachers, the -Negro usually first to |0.\ In some cases this is outright racial discrimination, and redress may be available through the courts. The federal government is keeping a apse watch and is prepared to step in where discrimination can be proved. ■It ★ The National Education Association, too, is pledged to fight what it calls “illegal and capricious dismissals, intimidation, and punitive transfers,” NOT DISCRIMINATION But in a tragic number of cases, it isn’t discrimination. The Negro teacher just does not measure up. Dr. Dave Darland of the NEA said re-ceatiy: “Their education is traditionally bad. They are victims of inferior elementary schools, inferior secondary schools, and Inferior coBcfcs.---- “They started out behind, they stayed behind, and it would take a superman to catchup.” In Florida, all teachers must now pass the National Teacher Examination as a requirement for certification. Two hundred Negro teachers have lost their jobs there because, of low test scores. Throughout the South this year, there were special summer institutes for teachers of disadvantaged children. The institutes were sponsored by the U. S. Office of Education. Within a week after they started, it was apparent that the problem wasn’t only disadvantaged children, hot disadvantaged teachers as well. The directer of one such institute, herself a Negro, said in an interview: “We had 40 Negro teachers here from four Southern states. Some of them had advanced degrees from Negro colleger ‘Only one or two could write a coherent paragraph. The level of spoken English was just as bad. “It is heart-breaking to think of these teachers going back to the classroom and inflicting their ignorance on hundreds of little children.” And what of those children? The road ahead will be rocky indeed as desegregation spreads. Verbal Orchids to - Hay Allen of 1226 W. Silverbell; 86th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Leonard S. Tackabury of Union Lake; 59th wedding anniversary. ^.George W. Murthum of Oxford; 84th birthday. Mrs. Clara Preston of 2100 Woodward; 90th birthday. Mrs. Retta Walla of Davisburg; 82nd birthday. Mrs. E. Maxfield of 258 Orchard Lake Ave.; 97th birthday. Richard tyiaals of 1225 W Silverbell; Slat birthday. Mrs. CUatea Hal of 100 Auburn; OOtb birthday. Father Gilbert Stack is the founder of Bethlehem, S.D., where, in a crystal cave, he and a handful of other Benedictine Monks have built the Shrine of the Nativity, a replica of one in the Holy Land. Father Gilbert recalls that Christ was -born in a stable in a cave, and that St. Benedict, founder of his order, the iwtruqaaint^f cave explorers, lived in a cave for three years. Approximately 10,000 people a year visit the shrine. There are two services each morning during the summer and on_special religious days during the year. There is no admission charge nor are (here offering boxes of any kind. Father Gilbert adds, “But we do ask everyone who visits us to say a prayer for peace.” ,, To support themselves as their order decrees, Father Gilbert has become a printer, and prints occasional cards for Christmas and birthdays. During the Christmas season he gets thousands of orders for Christmas cards requesting they be postmarked from Bethlehem. Days of All Faiths: Commemoration of the Stigmata By DR. HOWARD V. HARPER In August of 1224 the great Francis of Assisi withdrew for a month to La Verna, a mountain in the Appenines, for prayer and meditation. Five or six of his monks, including a Brother Leo, were permitted to go along with him, but only up to a point. From then on Francis went into a hut alone; Brother Leo alone was allowed to come near him, and only to bring him an occasional meal. For many days nothing happened and the stillness irf the-hut was unbroken, but on or about the Nth of September a vision came. St. Francis saw a seraph with six wings bearing down on him from the highest reaches of Heaven. Hovering over him, the seraph spread out his wings and revealed the figure of Jesus crucified. Such an enormous apparition filled the saint with mixed feelings — joy at the near presence of his Lord and grief at the sorrowful sight of the The Almanac - By United Press International Today is Saturday, Sept. 11, the 254th day of 1965 with 111 to follow. The moon is approaching its last quarter. The morning stars are Jupiter and Saturn. The evening stars are Venus, Mars and Saturn. * * ★ American short story writerf O. Henry (William S. Porter)' was born on this day in 1882. * * * On this day in history : In 1777, Gen. George Washington’s troops were badly defeated by the British at the Battle of Brandywine. crucifixion. Each emotion was of almost unbearable intensity- How long the vision lasted not even Francis could say. At the end there was a time of excruciating pain, and when it was over the sidnt found on his own body a duplication of the crucifixion marks he had seen on the Lord's — nail marks on hands and feet and a spear wound in his tide. Blood issued from the spear Wound, and continued to do so at Intervals during the rest of Francis’ life. Sr . A—/-b.—*—..... ■ Friday is observed in the Ro- an attack on the Roman Emperor. Far example, the “great Babylon” ia Revelation is Rome. ___ * . - ■*., ■' Domitian apparently had not -one single redeeming point. He was cruel, avaricious, cowardly, and'false. He was the first Roman Emperor to deity himself — others had been ’declared divine after they died. Domitian assumed to himself the title “Lord and God.” .. -The people, including Domi-tian’s wife, could stand just so much. After many plots and just as many failures, the Em- man Catholic Church and some Pre*« Anally succeeded In hav- In 1841, all members of President John Tyler’s cabinet resigned, except Secretary of State Daniel Webeter, hi pretest ever the veto eftbe banking bill. In 1940, Buckingham Palace in London was dama|ed by German planes. „ .. , * * - * In 1945, former Japanese Premier Tojo tried to commit sui-*cMe to eacape prosecution as a war criminal. other churches in commemoration of the Stigmata (as the marks are called) of St. Francis, which were received on or about September 17. Whether St. Francis was the first Christian ever to receive ’ the Stigmata is pot known, bat certainly Ms case is the most famous and was, until recent years, the best authenticated. Since his time there have been hundreds of cases, and some 50 or N of them have been vouched for by trustworthy witnesses. fr - * * The church, however, wisely refuses to accept those that can be explained in any natural way. This makes the number of valid instances very rare, but still there are on record qertain persons whom Christ has evidently chosen to share Hit physical suffering and bear His physical marks. 1** •. • THE EMPEROR DOMITIAN September 18 is by np means a festival day in commemoration of the Roman Emperor, Domitian, one of Christianity's earliest and wickedest enemies. It is simply the day on which that evil man died at the hands oTassassins engaged by his wife in the year 96. It was a day that brought great relief to the young Christian Church. * * * Domitian came to the throne in 81, and udder the virtuous pretense of reforming religion and public morals began to nar-rass the Christians with persecution and, in many cases, death. It was daring Domltian’s reign that the Boefc af Revela-tioe, also called the Apocalypse, was written, with It* language intentionally made obscure so to only the Ini-i as" Voice of the People: to Protect Home Owners’ . f > '#1 •• &|| V; :-X:. ■■ Approximately every twenty years or so there is a war. Theie wars must be fought to protect'America, and' especially property owners from invasion, destruction and perhaps annihBatibn. . V ' . A " ★ ★ I$a few short weeks my son will go to Viet' ^ Naas. In six months another son will go into the Army, If the war becomes a world war and lasts for several years as othera have, 111 be giving two more sons to protect American homes. iSk dr W ★ 'h w,,.' Some landlords don’t think very dearly about this when they say "no children." I don’t feel very good about giving my sons because I sit today without a home for myself and four children. . f ' A DISILLUSIONED AMERICAN ' MOTPHEft ' % ■ * £ ' . . • ‘Republicans Have Responsibility to Nation’ I believe in politics as an instrument to preserve democracy. At the present time the Republican party is in its weakest position in its history. Our democracy is shaken because we ap a nation are growing one-sided. We need a strong competitive party as a check on the party in power to keep the nation from becoming imperialistic in characterise Republican party has a great responsibility to the nation. It should come forward with the heat it has to offer, lay personal interest aside, put up a strong man like Nixon, and stay back of Mm until victory comes. LeROY DEAN HIGHLAND Disagree With Report of Township Meeting Whoever gave the Information for the recent article In thp Area News section of The Pontiac Press and headed “High Iiv terest Shown in White Lake Township Water,” did not give ft correctly.. ty? W if There was MgifMCTmf shown but the people were in-— terested In finding out WHY, not WHEN. Why de they want us to pay for aewors and water piped la when oar present setup is more than satisfactory to ns? ★ ik ★ As for the statement “Seven indicated they were opposed to the idea,” we know that statement is incorrect because about one-third or more of the people at the meeting were opposed. We know of more in our neighborhood alone who couldn’t go to the meeting but were opposed, and they certainly out-number seven. We feel that if a public opinion poll were taken or if- this were put to a vote we would find '70 or 80 per cent of the people in WhiteLake Township do riot want city water and aewer systems. MR. AND MRS. GLENN W. COLBY II MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM I. STILES MR. AND MRS. OLAF SESVOLD MR. AND MRS. GEORGE R. DAVIS M. AND MRS. NICK ORYSZCZAK MR. AND MRS. J. L. LaPEARL MR. AND MRS. FRANK WUERGESS (Editor’s Note: We stand on our reporter’s coverage of this meeting as factual and comet.) The Better Half ing him murdered. His death came when he was hi the 45th year of his life and the 15th year of his reign. (Copyright, 1965) Washington Notebook: My problem to Oat have this warm, friendly feeUag for Nation Caught Up to ‘Firebrand’ (By WASHINGTON STAFF WASHINGTON (NEA)-Vice President Hubert Humphrey used to be thoutfit of as a liberal firebrand; but he thinks the country may now caught up him. bl years past, He tells the story of how a nrominent labor leader came to from Minnesota, he introduced a care bin anmiaDy. he says,: “My modest little ol’ bill doesn’t come dose to matching what Congress finally enacted this year in Medicare.” When be was mayor of Minneapolis to IMS, Hamphrey setoed the aattooa) stage at tbo Democratic aitional convention with a fiery civil rights speech which caued a soutb- tbe way. Finally, Johnson gave the man’s plan a last cotnpli-mentary pat and then said: "New, in connection with these Ideas, I’d like you to do a few things forme,’?-;— j Thereupon, he enumerated a substantial list, and sent his new “recruR” off on presidential er-rands. Commenting on'the labor leader, Humphrey says: Th» awscmm Prm k «imM wciiwiwty s im im hr mat OMM m M tool MM arMi iii *>'• IW*W»PM m two m M AT “Heaven knows who’s runniag his union-. J’. ♦ * * White House press secretary Bill Moyers was explaining to newsmen new regulations governing honors far astronauts. Things got a little confusing. Astronauts who complete their first successful orbitig flight win hereafter automatically be promoted one grade, and then get a NASA medal. After a second flight, they gel cluaforo an the medal but to further promotion. A newsman growled: “Isn’t there anything else? 6r did they decide you can’t put clusters on a promotion?” < v—«r—t—w.TT-■ -Veteran Rop- Pul Jones, D-.Mo., recently received this handwritten post card : “Yea, I think that it to a good thing.” A bit puzzled at first, Janet is now elated. . "Ill just save it until I span-tor something my constituency if# MW Bif THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 11, 1905 FIVE Our Changing Schools-5 New Method Devised to Teach Writing EM-soB':meMweg^:MvsneewZt&£, ... - - - * - *—> — — - (EDITOR'S NOTE: Nellie Thomas 1$ a teacher who decided to do something about children’s inability to write English. So she devised a new system, the following, the last of fibe articles on the revolution in the SRs in U.S. schools, tells what Mrs. Thomas’ system is about and of other developments in readin’ and writin’,) ' By G. K. HOLDENFIELD « AP Education Writer ROCKFORD, HI. - So what is it with youngsters and the English language? “They, can’t read it, they can’t write it, they can’t spell it, they can’t use it,’’ says English teacher Nellie Thomas. ★ ★ . Most of all, Mrs. Thomas says, they can’t write it: “The monsyllabic grunts so many high-schoolers communicate with are transcribed with heart-breaking fidelity to the scribbled page.’’ NOT PUPILS FAULT But, she added in an article in the journal “I 111 no i s Education," “it wasn’t the pupils’ fault LOW COST CAR LOANS! •MB that they were lacy, Inarticulate and illiterate. It was the fault ■oHhe' methods we ware using In the first four grades." The thing to do, Mrs. Thomas decided, was to develop a new method of teaching children how to write. So she did — a method that has children writing original, legible, coherent sentences with properly spelled words, as early as the end of the first grade. ★ ity •'9r And that’s writing she teaches, cursive writing, not printing. Mrs. Thomas started putting her theories to work back in 1961 in the westview Elementary School here. Basic to all was her conviction that, traditional methods don’t work because the children don’t get enough writing practice. “Children learn to write by writing,’’ she said, “and once they learn to write, they like to write. I wanted a system where they'would have a writing assignment every day. HAD TO GO “And I knew the old practice of the teacher taking papers home to correct at night —KornrcARFer CLEANING Quick, Courteous Sorvico! FREE PIpKUP •ltd DELIVERY n*Jj 37 YEARS IN PONTIAC do-it-yourself learning technique with the pupils responsible for finding their own mistakes and correcting thorn. it * * Hare’s how it works: When the pupils hand in their dally written assignments, Mrs. Thomas glances over themXlf she finds mistakes, she doesn’t mark them — she merely hands the paper bade to the child. Then she-goes to the board and writes 8 or 10 sentences, full of the mistakes she has noted In the papers. And she asks the class to find the mistakes. DISCUSSES MISTAKES “I'll discuss the mistakes with them,” she said. “I’ll explain why you use one verb form instead of another, or the difference between to, too, and two. But I never make file corrections on the board — the sentences stay there just as they are. “Then I ask the. youngsters to Write the sentences properly. They have to go through them all, find the mistakes and correct them. If I made the corrections, the children would just copy them, and they wouldn't (earn a thing.” ' ★ ★. . ★ On the papers handed back, the pupils also are expected to find and correct their mistakes. “I don’t expect them to find I every single one,” Mrs. Thomas What evolved was a sort of said. “I don’t demand perfec-- tion, only improvement. Besides, ~ | what they don’t catch today, [ they’ll probably catch tomorrow.” ‘ '— ------r—-_____■ i j TEACHES PENMANSHIP Mrs. Thomas spends only a few days teaching penmanship. | She teaches the proper form for each letter and insists file pu- drawing For the first few weeks, the writing is almost painfully slow. Then the pupils begin to speed up, but their penmanship remains good — at least it had better. while the children watch television — had to go. No teacher has the time to do a good job of correcting 100 to 160 papers, so she cuts down on the writing assignments." FE 2-7132 RUQ and CARPET CLEANING GO. ing sentences dictated by the teacher. By the 20th, they are working with three- and four-sentence stories. In most classes, by the end of the first semester, the childran have learned all the letter sounds and blends; they know the alphabet; they’re taking increasingly difficult dictation from the teacher and they are printing their own original sentences and stories. 1ST GRADERS RE AD Y And, in twb of the eight first-grade classes last year, the chil- Bus Patronage Up for August Passengers increased last month on Pontiac Transit Corp. buses over July, but revenue registered a drop, according to bus company officials. There were 52,388 riders in August, while there were 50,283 in July. ~ In August a year ago, there were 48,484 riders, according to figures released then. Revenue last month was $12,-798, compared to $14,825 in July and $11,859 in August 1964. ★ ★ * ' Total patronage this year is 509,978, compared to 533,849 for the same period last year. Revenue is $129,054 this year, while last yearit was $121,436 for the first eight months. pits write each one as carefully 1 Ctnrlmni AAnv I as if it were a drawing lesson. || #V,°X I Gejf All A's if | He Eats a Lot If an emergency should arige away fromr home, call us collect . You will find us helpful and understanding. 'Warm arid personal consideration as well as efficient handling of all details, characterises the ftjRSLEY way of making arrarigements. (]. Byron Gilbert, Director 2b. Pursfaf FUNERAL HOME FE 4-1211 151 Orchard Lake Ave. “Whenever they get careless or sloppy,” Mrs. Thomas said, “I limply refuse to accept their work. They have to do it over. They soon get the idea.” Mrs. Thomas also used a phonetic system of teaching reading and insists that each child have a dictionary from the second grade on. Misspelled word? Look it up. METHODS ADOPTED * j Last fall, her revolutionary methods, a distillation of years of trial and error and reriiion, were adopted in the three-school Lincoln Park District, just outside Rockford. At the same time, the district adopted the O p e n Court reading program with a strong phonetic approach. “Reading and writing must go hand in hand,” Mrs. Thomas said. “One reinforces the other. Yon need a strong phonetic program to get children Interested in reading. HOW can yon stir their interest with those stupid ‘Oh, oh, oh; Look, lode, look’ books? And if Children can’t read, they can’t write either.” 9r ‘ ★ ♦ In the Open Court program, the children start learning letter sounds and printing on their very first day in first grade. By the eighth lesson they are print- TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - Whit-mer High School is using data processing this year to set up schedules for students. Harvey Davis, assistant superintendent, concedes there are a few bugs to Iron out. For example, one student discovered Thursday he had been assigned to seven straight lunch periods during one school day. “Tile matter has been corrected,” Davis said. dren were ready far Nellie Thomas’ method of learning cursive, or longhand, writing. The other six classes will start with it on the first day of the second grade. It’s obvious to the classroom visitor that the youngsters enjoy moving up from printing to1 writing. Ironically, they even seem I to enjoy finding the mistakes on their own papers. ★ * ★ -“These youngsters aren’t pressured or pushed, they jump at it,” said Mrs. Tiromas. “They like to learn. They like to ex-| press themselves. They’re the most wonderfully creative things on God’s earth — when we give them a chance.” TEACHERS SOLD The teachers, too, are sold on the idea. Said Mary Kamp, a first-grade teacher: ‘The children are always asking to write stories. Some of j them don’t even want to go out [ at recess. I’ve never seen first-1 graders write original stories be fore. It’s wonderful, just wonderful.”— Said Frances Shelton, a third-grade teacher: “I’m getting better work from my third-graders I here than I got from my fifth-' graders at the school white I taught last year. They’fefoing better because they like It so much more.” it it * Like most educational innovators, Mrs. Thomas believes (hat American children are being grossly underestimated. ______ “In one state—and l^oiftv name it because they may have | changed the law in the last couple of years—there was a law that you couldn’t teach cursive writing, until the second semester of the third grade. 'Now, isn’t that the silliest blasted thing you ever heard of? DRAYTON PLAINS STORE ONLY OPEN SUNDAYS N00N"6RM SUN.ONLY SPECIALS Shipping Firm Strike Settled in Cleveland CLEVELAND (AP) - An agreement was signed Friday ending a 10-day strike by the Marine Engineers’ Beneficial Association against the Cleve-land-Cliffs Iron Co. which had tied up nine Great Lakes ships. Terms of the agreement were not disclosed. 'Man in the Trunk' .Is Given 13 Years JERUSALEM, Israel (UPI) -A district court yesterday sentenced Mordecai Luk — “The man in the trunk” — to 13 years in prison on charges of spying for the United Arab Republic. There was no indication whether Luk, whom the Egyptian! tried to smuggle by plane from Rome to Cairo last November, would appeal to the Israeli Supreme Court. ★, * * The 31-year-old Moroccan-born Israeli was convicted Thursday of all charges brought against him by the three-man panel. I J6INYIUI CHAMBER OF COMMERCE PONTIAC AREA CHAMBER 4F COMMERCE 33 W. HURON ST. 336-8148 PRODUCTS DESIGNERS CONTROL DATA CORPORATION A leading manufacturer of computers and peripheral equipment is now interviewing experienced mechanical design* ers to staff a new facility In Rochester, Michigan. Employ* ment offers excellent salary and growfh opportunity combined with a progressive fringe benefit program: Call or write ... STAN BUS HOLLEY COMPUTER CO. A sukddlary el Centre! D SUNDAY ONLY Twin or full fitted sheets 1.00 SUNDAY ONLY Smart nylon knit sleeveless shells 2.22 SUNDAY ONLY Warm, flannel gay print gowns 1.69 „ CHARGE IT 100% cotton fitted sheets moke bed making easier, sleep more comfortable. Now at a real low prlcol CHARGI IT Antron®, Bucaroni orlon jewel neck or mock turtle in white, black, cranberry," navy, pink, It. blue. 34-40. CHARGI IT Cotton flannelette gowns, scoop or V-neck with flouncy borders. Buy for winter nights. 5-M-l-Xl. SUNDAY ONLY Men's reg. 5.00 gabardine shirts 2.88 CHARGI IT ' Imported rayon gabardine long sleeve sport shirts in colors. But not every size in every color. Sizes S-M-L. SUNDAY ONLY Men's Waldorf white dress shirts 288 CHARGE IT Reg. 5.001 long sleeve, reg. or snap-tab collar. Wash-wear Dacron® poly-ester/cofton. 14-17,32-35. SUNDAY ONLY Ad justabl*'steel ironing table 3.67 CHARGI IT Sit down or stand to ironl Perforated top speeds your work. Sturdy all steel construction. Folds flat to store. SUNDAY ONLY Boys' 3.99-4.99 slacks for school 2.19 CHARGI IT For school, dress, playl Ivy or continental in black, olive, blue, grey. Some washable. Sizes 6 to 16. SUNDAY ONLY Spring tension pole organizer 5.84 CHARGB IT Fits securely* from floor to celling._Chrqme poles support throe' handy'ploitic shelves and 2 towel rings. SUNDAY ONLY Lady Caroline stretch nylons 491 CHARGE IT $1 a pair if perfect! Sheer seamless stretch nylon* perfectly- -proportioned.-Fall shades. Short, av., tall. WkCs 108 NORTH SAGlNAW MONDAY ONLY SPECIAL ON SALE 9:30 A.M. to 9 P.M. SPEED QUEEN BUY THIS DEPENDABLE SPEED QUEEN WRINGER WASHER FOR ONLY NO MONEY DOWN $2«> NIWK. OR BUY THIS COMPLETE SPEED QUEEN LAUNDRY OF WASHER AND DRYER FOR ONLY NO MONEY DOWN IlglUnI Control p#ll#| NIK mins WKC’S LOT AT REAR OF STORE - OPEN MONOAY UNTIL 1)00 P.M. ■ V jsl THS FONTIACr PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1965 at mm Large Selection to choose from All Models All Colon HASKINS CHEV.-OLDS 6751 Dixie Hwy. MAS-5071 SUNDAY ONLY A Thick cr Thin HICKORY SMOKEO C ________Ih. Mr. Pitt* Luncheon Meats bfcSUOU 0A ^BACOR 09 sheen Meats Grade 1 Sliced IPa BOLOGNA 40* Mr. Hits Brads 1 FANCY SKINLESS HOT DOGS ______________3 i »1n t DRAYTON PUINS STORE ONLY XZZTtl CASH f BAXLEY MARKET 4341 Dixit Highway - Drayton Naina and a complete linn of oensot nnndit Art E234-Washabla Colors COATS and CLARK’S RED HEART KNITTING WORSTED 100% Vlr.i.Y.o.1-Mothproof-Tangle £ gM 1 A Proof—Ready to Knit u | I 9 -PvR Oat Skein ■ IMPS .V VARIETY STORE 1475 Baldwin Ave. at WaReir~ "PE 4-3348 Open Daily 9 A.M. to 9 P.M., Sunday 10 AJIA. to 6 P.M. mart LUMBER DEPARTMENT GLENWOOD PLAZA-North Pony Struct at Olonwood A MAJESTIC SOTTING —yio __ CREATED WITH MRoyaloote WOOD GRAIN PANELS oJnji OF WOOD GRAINED PANELS 4'x3' Size. . . . . . $198 4'x4'Size...... $248 OTHER PANELING AT SIMjLAR SAVINGS | -^^^Charge /if.......,. “A REAP 0’ CLEARING FOB A WEE BIT •’ MONET” ite*rd»aa«e. r * iqarrfi I MONDAY - TUESDAY - WEDNESDAY I I COUPON I COUPON I * Brn’t Pant* •59- 99*: HUBt» AND SHIRT LAUNDRY WEST HURON ST. Open Daily T,ii.m.to S p.w., tat.^S «.w.to 0 p.m. Clip THIS COUPON. IT IS WORTH 50 APniTtftMAL TV STAMPS VALUABLE COUPON 50 EXTRA TV STAMPS > 1 WITH THE PURCHASE OF CLARK'S 1 I SUPER 100 GASOLINE AMOUNTING I I TO $2.00 OR MORE AT CLARK'S ■ ! SERVICE STATION, 325 ft CASS, . 1 CORNER JOHNSON. COUPON EXPIRES FRIDAY, SEPT. IT, ISOS J DOUBLE STAMPS OH FILL-UP ANYTIME SERVICE STATION Now Under Raw Manateiaent. VIS Smothers, Dealer 325 North Cass At Johnson Double Stamps Eveiy Tuesday] CLARK OPEN 24 HOURS A DAY1 niHtti SPECIAL SALE ON RHODES, GE 2-Pl.c. Ey.- 4EO00\ Level Electric....... m99 ^ GE Eye-Level OQQ58 Double Oven-Electric ....... W5 J GE 1964Self-Cleaning OOQ51 J| 30" Ovon Electric... AWT JGK* Whirlpool 30" lljiR |, | doe Range (Pont). ;~TTTT.. . Tappen 30" 1DQI0> 5 Burner Electric. I™. ^ Norge 30" 1RQ50 < , x Stainless Stool, Electric ..... 1-519 GE 30" 1964 $1Q50 Used, Electric ...... 119 HAMPTON ELECTRIC CO. § 825 W. HURON Opon ’til I—Sat. til T FE 4*2121 W ‘CULT AT KEEOO HOWE. NO. 1 KEW Variable SPEED 3/8” DRILL '\r M (Squeeze Your Speed) 0 R.P.M. to 1,000 R.P.M. gp Model Ai V22S Deluxe \l YOU CONTROL ^ THE POWER 88 ALSO 14- AVAILABLE AT SLIQHTLY LOWER COST > KEEGO HDWE. NO. 1 3041 Orchard Lake Rd. PH. 332-3000 GLENWOOD PLAZA SERVICE SPECIALS DAYS ORLY MONDAY-TUESDAY-WEDNESDAY WHEEL ALIGNMENT 4»7 (pecialiitt. AlrCemdUtened Car, t.00 Mors Xsil tne-ln 4. set toe-out 6. Inspect steerinf i TASTY M & m GOOD I c SWISS STEAK 391 We Reserve Right to Limit Quantities HOFFMAN'S MON. & HIES. ONLY MgMb FISK DELUXE BATTERIES ■^1 12 MONTHS GUARANTEE ■S FOR MOST 19S4T0 1943 CARS ■ • Ch.Yf.let, . .. 12 VOLT • Chrytlera * R.ahlwi GROUP 249 • Plymouth*• Pontl... _ • M*m •MeMUun HQ/) BcwaT installed Fwsei pS£* EQUIPMENT ihstaueo FREE! ru__*---*- MAPAC-AI 0 99 MUFFLERS PONTIAC FREEZER FOODS >3* N. Perry FE 2-1100 ____....«.(( 1 _____. ’unt.. .....a# omttzret...........teas THERE IS A REASON No matter what kind of paint you. need.. . Hudson's hat It! No matter what color you wish, Hudson can mix It for you I No matter what you need In the line of painting heeds, Hudson's hovelrt^ And, at Lower Price* . . . That's why Hudson's sells so much more paint... May We Serve Yeul DuPONT LUCITE INTERIOR Ceiling White Only HANNA'S SATIN SHEEN FLAT WALL PAINT SPECIALS GOOD THRU SATURDAY) SIPTtMRER ID, SUPER KEM-TONE CEILING WHITE 41 IMT Wi------, nasM JUST (AST OP- BALDWIN AVI. FI 4434X Opee Friday 9 AAl to 9 PAL All Other Weekday. 9 AAL te* PAL *-|en 19 AAL.teB PM FACTORY CLOSEOUT SALE! (Sale end* Sat, Sept, 18) SROOM OUTFIT *31 room • din p may he irately) • living room • bod room • dinette (All Merchandise may he * purchased separately) sjA. % -—Zt Mmm :7S.e—ni kSBii j 0 Beautiful 2 pc. living room suite fine wearing nylon covers in your choice of colors. • 2 Large table lamps in decorator colors. • Leiy. DowM. Drawer '• Sox Serfngt end Mattr... • |ei»e Miller e Che* • 2 Beautiful Budok Lamp, e Funnke Tee Dinette Table xt QF»w MotehinoChelii PLUS BIO BONUS e Beautiful 9x12 Living Roam Rug e 9x12 Linoleum Rug If 0 32 Pc. Set ef Dlthe. I THIS WICK ONLYI f BARGAIN BASEMENT TRACE-INI REFRIGERATOR . KL*: *49 GOOD KITCHEN $0Q RANGE £9 LITTLe Jgrs BARGAIN HOUSE 1461 BALDWIN AT WALTON PHONE FE 2-6842 •jtsn svfnlngs In 0 pm, Ret. HR I THE PQyftAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1965 ONE COLOR SEVEW HOUSE PAINTS White $#49 / maids Tulie Collins, Tina Pechinis and junior maids Allison and Georgiann Mitchell. Toni Mitchell and Billy Pat-terson were flower-girl and ring-bearer. John Rendziperis was his brother’s best man. Ushers were George and Peter Couvall, Arthur Rendziperis and crown bearer George Verros. U-M GRADUATE The couple will be at home in Rochester after Sept. $8. He is a graduate of the University of Michigan School of Medicine. Shnrman-Galligan; On a motor trip to Montreal and Quebec City are Robert Martin Sherman of Ortonville and his bride, the former Beverly Louise Galllgan. ■k it * . A reception today in the First Methodist Church, Clark-ston, followed their afternoon vows repeated to Rev. Lewis Sutton. Parents of the newlyweds -are-4he-Reger L. Galligans, Cherrylawn Street, Independence Township, and the E.A. Shermans of Goodrich. WHITE COTTON White cotton ottoman fashioned the bride’s chapel-length gown worn with illusion veil and pillbox of starched fishnet. White roses, glamellias and Stephanotis covered her small white Bible. * * * Cheryl Cinader was honor maid, with bridesmaids Martha Madison, Patricia Sherman and Joan Cross. With Clark E. Johnson, best man were David, Dennis, -Frank and Patrick Galligdn ushering at their, sister’s wedding. W8U GRADUATE The bridegroom Is a graduate of Wayne State Univarsity. The couple will live In Ortonville. Cook-Nelson Unit Members of the Cook-Nelson unit of the American Legion Auxiliary will meet at 8 p.m. Monday at the Legion , Home. FACTS ABOUT PHARMACY * HOWARD L DELL Your Neighborhood Pharmacist Atkinson-Harf The Michael George Atkin* sons (Judith Lynne,Hart) left for a northern honeymoon and their future home in Carbon-dale, 111. after Friday vowi in Our Lady of the Lakes Catholic Church. * *r * -Reception in Devon Gables followed the evening rite perform^ by Rev. Lawrence Kaiser. .a ★ ★ Their parents are the Richard F. Harts of Dorothy Lane, formerly of Pontiac and Mr. and Mrs. George N. Atkinson Jr. of Detroit and Waterford. BELGIAN LACE Belgian Ira1 bordered the sleeves ancThemline of the bride’s Empire gown of white peau satin, styled with flow-back panels. ★ ★ ★ A pearl circlet held her illusion veil and Ivy tendrils accented her all-white bouquet of roses, carnations and Stephanotis. it k k Mrs. Philip Hagel was matron of honor and Penny Atkinson, bridesmaid, tor their future sister-in-law. k k k With best man, Philip Hagel were the ushers Dan-’ let Rooks, George Hicks and Craig Knudsen. CONTINUE STUDIES The couple was graduated from Ferris State College. He will continue his studies at the University of Southern Illinois. MRS. N. RENDZIPERIS nw FINiST DRUG IS UStUU WHIN... w»—f*Nls>ls»y—-medielyties ys» msdSlT# ------“*-->}r^TrwU kml* _ .wwMeW.. Baldwin Pharmacy tSt 219 Baldwin ss? - -ftit isSSSm [7it 9 f > i9• rrr ti iwa i »iii f,LONG LAKE ROAD IS.CLOSED/// Ut i It m iitfinnififllA -OPEN SUNDAY 2 to 5 P-.M. Wedding Photography GEORGE TUSON Mgr. sf Carpet Dept. ELLIOTT’S Furniture Co. I Dixie Bay. SYLVAN LAKE FRONT I 75 foe* frontage, landscaped lot. Nearly new trWevef, large llv rootn, ledgeracfc fireplace, dining "L", model kitchen, 2 bedrooms, I 2 Vi baths, family room with fireplace and kitchen. Gas heat. 2 car I attached garage. $32,500, terms. Directions, #933 James K. Boole- r vord. Turn off Telegraph, sooth of Voorheis Rood. OTHER LAKE fRONTJjOMESj^JfYEJVViUr^RAPt- ANNETTTNC REALTORS • 21 E. HURON ST. Pi 8-0464 Offlco Open Evanhtgi and Sundays 1*4 Long Known forthe FINEST IN DINING totUib - Lnckeom - linen Buffet SaL Evening pins our Regular Menu -Buffet" Sunday 1 to 7iSO P.M, Aleo Serving our Regular Menu THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER II, 1965 NINE Ruby Verdict Not Set Aside Judg* Wonts Status of Caw 'Undisturbed' DALLAS, Tax. (AP)-Distrlct Judge Louie T. Holland, laying be did not want to “disturb the present status of the case," refused Friday to set aside the murder convfction of Jack Ruby. WWW Holland made the ruling at the dose at a two-day habeas corpus hearing in which Ruby’s lawyers tried to have District Judge Joe B. Bro fled. It was before Brown Ruby was tried and sentenced to die for MUng' presidential assassin Lee Harvey Oswald. The defense argued that Brown has a monetary interest In the case because he is writing a book about the Ruby trial. ONLY TRIAL The state contended that the book will cover only the trial, and therefore can hi no way affect the eventual outcome of the case. Ruby, a former Dallas night-dub operator, was convicted March 14, 1944. His case now is '' before the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals but first there will be a sanity trial, set for Oct. 18. * * * Brown voluntarily removed himself from the case last June 21. Holland, fobih Montague, Tex., was appointed to replace him. The habeas corpus hearing was marked by emotional outpouring from Ruby and by clashes between Brown and defense lawyer Phil Burleson of Dallas. NEITHER Holland said he “neither condoned nor condemned" Brown’s writing the book. Ruby’s conviction would have been set aside If Holland had disqualified Brown, necessitating a new trial. * * * Brown was on the witness stand more than five hours. He said that if he made any mistake during the Ruby murder trial, it was .in letting live radio and television cover the verdict NOT CONNECTED Brown denied that any decision he made during the trial or after was connected in any way with Ms book writing. The Judge said he decided to write a book about the trial in the summer of 1944, foui monllis aflir IBeffiaT # * * Ruby talked to newsmen twice Thursday, charging that people in "high places” had suppressed information about Oswald and about Ruby himself. He did not elaborate. MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - Brig. Gen. Elias Wessin y Wessin, shunted by the Dominican Republic’s provisional government to a* diplomatic post, has charged that Communists were responsible for his ouster. ter and appointed consul general in Miami. He told newsmen upon his atrioal Friday night aboard a U.8. Air Fores plane from the Panama Canal Zone that .his removal wta ?*» victory tor file Communiate.’* “I will serve (as consul general) but in the meantime we are not finished with the Communists in the Dominican Republic, so I can’t be happy." ' W w W The removal of Wessin y Wes- Provisional President Hector Garda-Oodoy. WA8 ACCUSED Wessin y Wessin, commanded the army during last April’s revolution, and insurgent lead-ers had accused hlm of ordering sin had denied the charge, saying that only military targets were bombed. WWW. Hie insurgents demanded the general’s ouster as part of their price for a peace aettlement- was stripped of his command of the armed forces training cen- But, he added, "They haven’t knocked me out yet" sin, who led the 1963 military coup that overthrew President Juan Bosch, was ordered by civilians in the rebel sector of Santo Domingo. Wessin y Wes- "with the provisional goYbrn-ment. They said they would not undertake to disarm their fol- Ousted Dominican Gen. WessinBlames Communists for Shoving Him Out lowers until he left the country. Wessin y Wessin’s departure brought rumblings of discontent from his troops and Dominican conservatives, who view the general as the country’s most militant anti-Communist. salve the feelings of Wessin y Wessin’s followers, Garcia-Go- doy announced there would be no more changes in the armed forces’ top command. Rebel leaders have demanded a top-to-bottom shakeup. The general’* flight to Miami* was the last leg of an abrupt his home in Santo Domingo. NCA Makes 1-a-Day Mark Last Month The ooe-paseenger-per-d a y mark was achieved last month by North Central Airlines (NCA) flights at Pontiac Municipal Airport. *' * ' It was only the second time this year that 'NCA flights boarded one-passenger-per-day or better. A total of 81 passengers were boarded in August, compared to 18 in July and 31 in August 1944. Inbound flights had SI pas- te SI la July and W In August 1944. Total patronage for the year is 189 outbound and 191 inbound, which io slightly behind patronage of 199 an SOI respectively for the same eight months of last year. , -----— ; ar ,■■■+—;+ .Sfo ^ Departing NCA flights carted 1,087 pounds of air mall last month, up from July’s 949 pounds. Inbound flights hauled 765 pounds, compared to«758 pounds lit July. OtrrBOUNp EXPRESS UR Outbound sir express totaled 912 pounds to 1,119 pounds in July; while inbound expressed was 16 pounds to scfo In July. nca mm UPH . 3,365 pounds of air freight last month, up from July’s 1,961 pounds. Inbound freight totaled 6,3(B poinxfo, up -lmm 5J25 pounds in July. BIBLE RpBINpJNG. „ CHRISTIAN _ LITERATURE SALES 55 Oakland Avs. ft 4-0501 SPARTANOPEN SUNDAY TIL 10 P.M. _ PARTAN FAMILY DEPARTMENT STORES SHOP SPARTAN 9:30 A.M. TO 10 P.U. DAILY... SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 10 P.M. Corner of Dixie Highway and Telegraph Road — IN PONTIAC I ACRES OF FREE PARKING V K THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER II. 1»M TEW A METHOD OF PATINO YOUR MLU RASED ON YOUR ABILITY TO MY! OWE PLACE TO PAY! UshigiN Credit C—sailors 702 PMrttac State Ink Rldg. Meet FE 0-0454 Our 11th Year ---•saw C jSTSu hZm, OMcHr . . .Tm3» Own* mt Qhmni I IT’S TINE FOR INDOOR UVIN0! Add Zest to Your Home We Upholster and BuHd Fine Custom Furniture to your design or specifications. We carry in slock 0 complete line of all the new fall Fabrics and Colors. All our craftsmanship , guaranteed. Call or see us todayl I CRAFT UPHOLSTERING I 1 STB Orchard Lake Rd. (Just Watt of Ttltgraph) SM-M1l| YANKEES Biz Slue Buys! FAMOUS BB WALKER iSSillSIMTED WMKBK Automation in Ravorsot Man Back on Job ORLANDO, Fla. (A?) Slight Sign Altoration Creates LBJ Park * HATTIESBURG, Miss. UN - Motorists were surprised to see ON SALE 9:30 A.M. to 9 P.M. With TEFLOIIDuPont Non-Stick Finish .., Now you can cook mote foods and cook thorn hotter. You can fry, bake, stew, roqst, braiso, casserole. Cook a 9 pound Mast. Baka cakos without hooting up the kitchon. Proparo casserole dishea without using your oven. Raduco cooking times. Cook complete metals in ana appliance. Of course, Sunbeam Multi-Cooker Frypan also lets you fry eggs, bacon, pancakes, chops, steaks better—with mere flavor—and COMPLETES PROGRAM - Alfred L. Pavlish, 24-year-old physics teacher at Waterford Township High School, completed a sumer-long orientation program recently at GMC Trade ft Coach Division, designed to acquaint educator! with the needs and alma of industry. Pavlish was assigned to a GMC Track engineering section. 108 NORTH SAGINAW JUST SAY “CHARGE IT’ WITH SECURITY CHARGE PLAN WEARWELL HOUSE PAINT and smoothly EASY TO ASSEMBLE Full 1" pro-hung doors openings. Install it yoursolf in minutos—complotO with oil MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER I PERRY AT MONTCALM, FREE I EASY FABKIHfl PLAYS SUNDAY - Edgar P. Billups, organist and choir* master at All Saints Episcopal Church, rehearses selections h8 will play at the 10 a m. service tomorrow. This wfil 1st his lart.&mday'al All Saints. Beginning Wednesday he wHl THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 196ft ELEVEN Church Youth Worship,Play, Pray at Weekend Retreats PACKING PROBLEMS—“Oh, no!” says Cathy Prayer (center) of 3885 Breaker, Waterford Township as her clothes fall out of the bag. The youth are off to a weekend retreat at Camp Mahn-Go-Tah-See, a YfaCA camp near Hale on Loon Lake. Other members of the Congregational Church Youth Group with Cathy are Gall Caughill of 2405 Middle Belt, West Bloomfield Township, and Bruce Bigler of 386 W. Iroquois, president of the Youth Group. Some 60 young people of First Congregational Church are on the annual retreat at Camp Mahn-Go-Tah-See near H a Pi. Each year youth of the church wiui jrUIOr IDO MTS. mUCOun K. Burton and other leaders travel north to spend a week-among the hikes, hills and trees of this camp. ;fj > , ★ Here members outline programs for the coming year, appoint committees and elect,, new officers. They eat, play and pray together.. Meals are served ia the camp dining room with each young person helping with the serving or cleaning up of one meal during flic stay. . There is an opportunity to participate in swimming, boating, ball games, hiking and a| traditional Saturday ni($t party, highlighted by skits. The evening usually closes with a song-fest around the campfire. VESPER AT SUNDOWN Important parts of the program are the sundown vesper j service and Sunday morning 'worship prepared by members of the group. Members include boys and girls from 7th grade through high school. Post High Youth serve as junior counselors. WWW The group meets each Thursday in the churoii^all from 6 to 9 p.m. For those who sing in the Youth Choir the evening starts -sat 5:15 p.m. with choir rehearsal. Dinner is at 6 p.m. Singing, business session and a program follow. This period consists of films, lectures, discussion groups, sports, hobbies, field trips and basketball or ptogpong. RAISE MONEY In addition to the regular meetings, the group usually plans one or two parties a year, a picnic, money raising and work projects. Last year the group earned over $388 which they gave to the benevolence fund of the church. Mothers and fathers are in vited to the annual Parent's Night uaually held in May wit! members providing the talent program. Bruce Bigler is president ol the group; Connie Vanderting vice president; Vickie Edwards, secretary; and Ron Edwards treasurer; Mrs. James Cheal and Jack Moore serve as ad visors. ★ * . * Dr. Alfred D. Grey, formei pastor of Pine Hill Congrega tional Church, West Bloomfield Township and now retired, wil preach at 10:30 morning wor ship tomorrow. CENTRAL CHRISTIAN . Fifty-three young people am counselors of Central Christiai Church are on their fourth an nual weekend retreat to Har mony Valley near Milford. Arriving about 7:15 last nigh the opening period was a ge acquainted hour with games refreshments and prayer circle time. people with a car wash and other programs. Officers of Central Christian young people include J am es Brown, president; John Mrash, secretary. Youth director Paul Brown and leaders Eugene Bailey and Reese Joyce are it the retreat. Mrs. Helen Hyatt and the Ralph treasurer; and Loreno Brownr Fleetwoods are also enjoying the retreat, weekend. DR. WILLIAM H. MARBACH SILVERCREST Lane Morris and Rhonda Mer-win will sing a duet at the evening service tomorrow in Silver-crest Baptist Church. Pastor John Hunter will preach on “The Seven Golden Candlesticks.” Edgar Billups Accepts Call Edgar P. Billups has accepted the nil to the position of organ-ist-choirmaster at Christ Church, Grasse Pointe, effective Wednesday. Mr. Billups has just completed his fifth year in a similar capacity at AD Saints Episcopal Church, Williams at Pike where he presented a series of organ recitals and choral programs in addition to regular church services. ★ * * . ' During this time he served as director of the Cranbrook Music Conference, and terms on both the music commission of the Episcopal Diocese of Michigan and executive board of the American Guild of Organists, Detroit Chapter. Mr. and Mrs. Billups will be honored at 1 reception in Stevens Hall immediately fol-* lowing the 18 a. m. service tomorrow. At Christ Church Mr. BiUups j will train a choir of girls to sing with the men at 9:30 a. m. Men and boys will provide music at the 11:15 a. m. service. Mrs. David Brien will be ist at the morning worship hour, and the pastor will speak “The Worker’s Cry.” PROVIDENCE The September Group of Providence Missionary Church will sponsor a te 4 to 6 tomorrow the home of Rev. E 464 Montana. h W . , The Sunday School will present a tali church at : ard Reese, intendent, m cnargi ALDERSGATE Rev. Wallace Zin Dryden will be guest special meetings through Thursday at Methodist Church. “C All” will be his theme „ 9:45 n.m. worship. The Norberg Girls will vide musicale numbers. NEW JERUSALEM Rev. Eddie A McDonald, sociate minister of Friendship Mission Baptist Church, will speak at the 11:3P morning service tomorrow in New Jerusalem Baptist Church. The youth department is sponsoring the morning worship speaker and the program at 3:3D p.m. when Patricia Keel Macedonia Baptist Church offers musical numbers. CHURCH OF ATONEMENT Sunday evening youth meetings will begin at 7 p.m. tomor-row for those in grades 9' through U. Sessions to be held every other week will consist of study, recreation and refreshments. REHEARSE — Practicing for a sing at th Congregational Church youth .group retres this weekend are Connie Venderlind of 231 Chapel services were scheduled for this morning, afternoon and again tonight. These will be led by a visiting Bible College team from Cincinnati Bible Seminary. Dan Pence, a senior student, will preach at the worship periods* , Four'young women of the seminary Win direct singing, present chalk art, and assist lo-cal counselors. CAMPFIRE TONIGHT A Galilean service will take place at the camp fire tonight. This will be followed by a candle light walk on the lake front. Sunday School and worship will be held tomorrow morning. Che noon dinner, the pack up and leave Presbyterians Welcome Former Pastor to Pulpit Church. WWW Harmony Valley is the name the youth group have used to this favorite youth 1 the year. The name mp is Worrell’s Christian Bible Camp near General Motors Proving Grounds, Milford. Funds for the weekend project were earned by the young Lake, Bloomfield Township and f 163 Ogemaw. Members of the are 7th to 12m graders. Youth For Christ Rally Tonighf Ministers Announce Activities j Oakland Youth for Christ will -present the Kaiamahoo: Teen Team at the September Rally in Pontiac Northern High School ai 7:30 tonight. w ■ ★ * -The team will offer a musical numbers with a trumpet trio, and vocal selections. The trumpet trio placed first in a state instrumental contest. Terry Walker will be a guest and Norman Clothier, dub director, will speak of Youth for Christ dubs he visited in Europe during the summer. AUBURN HEIGHTS Teen-age young people of the United Presbyterian Church in Auburn Heights are invited to spend the 8ept. 17 weekend at Sleeper State Park near Case-ville. » Rev. F. William Palmer and aeveral adults of the congrega^ tion will be counselors foe the annual retreat sponsored jointly by the Auburn Heights congregation and the Jpflyn Avenue Unit-ed Presbyterian Church. * Robert Read will present an organ recital at 8 pjn. Monday in the sanctuary. “When God Seems Deaf” will be the pastor’s sermon theme at 11 a.m, tomorrow. A mixed quartet will sing. ,c TRUE CHURCH HOUSE OF PRAYER Sunday School will begin at 10 a.m. tomorrow at the Trim Church House of Prayer to All Notions, 138 W. Pike. • Morning worship Will follow at noon. Youth meeting is set for 6 p.m. with evening worship at 7:30. Elder I. H. Davis is pastor MARIMONT Marimont Baptist Church will feature an evening M mufjc at 7:30 tomorrow., the theme,, centering around the Lite & Christ. Musical groups taking part include The Ladies’ Chorus, Men’s Chorus, Senior Choir, Youth Choir and combined groups. The program is under the direction of Philip W. Somers Jr. Matt Smith will be leader for the junior high youth service at 6:38 a.m. Barbara Cowley will be in charge of the senior high group. | The trumpet trio consisting of j Robert Crichton, David Somers I and Matt wfil play a special number for the senior highs. . The Christian Service Brigade for Boys will start Monday at 71 p.m. Pioneer Girls will begin at j 7 p.m. Tuesday. ' .. Unitarian Church Names Services Rev. Robert Marshall, minis-of the Unitarian Church, Pine and Woodward, announces services will be at a new time beginning tomorrow, 9:30 and. 11 a.m. “Where the Action Is” will be his sermon topic. . ★ ★ ★ There will be a complete church school and nursery during the second service and church school through the sixth grade during the early Jiour. A cooperative supper and program are scheduled in the social hail Friday. The program featuring the award winning film, “Children Without,” will be shown at 8 p.m. The picture was filmed at a Detroit school in the inner city project for the National Education Association. It explores the problems fac-ing children in depressed area schools and problems confronting the schools. One of Pontiac’s most beloved; pastors, Dr. William H. Mar-, bach, pastor emeritus of First Presbyterian Church and minister of the church for 30 years, will preach'-at the 10 a.m. service tomorrow. Following the worship service Dr. and Mrs. Marbach will be honored at a reception celebrating their Golden Wedding Anniversary by the Women’s Association of the church. It was m the first Sunday In February, ltft-tb a t Dr. Marbach preached his first sermon as pastor of First Presbyterian Church. During his ministry Dr. Marbach took part in community affairs and helped organize The Presbytery of Detroit. He was also instrumental in establishing the University Presbyterian Church -near Rochester. In the Presbytery of Detroit he served as Moderator. SERVES IN SUMMER His 38 years of vacation ministry to tiie Omena Church on Grand Traverse Bay, and his long service as leader and officer of the University of Michigan Presbyterian Corporation in charge of student work, stand out especially In the Synod of Michigan. In the work of the General Assembly of the United Presbyterian Church in the USA, Dr. Marbach served three terms for period of nine years on the Board of Foreign Missions. He received his theological training at McCormick Theological Seminary, then did graduate work at Northwestern University and the University of Chica- . His first pastorate was at Marshall, Mo. where he also assisted in Bible teaching at Missouri Valley College. During World War I, he served as chaplain with the V, s. Army. In the fall of 1926 Dr. Marbach was Installed as pastor of River Forest Presbyterian Church near Chicago where he served until his call to Pontiac First Church. During this period he was honored with the degree of doctor of divinity by Ms alma mater, Lake Forest College. Dr. and Mrs. Marbach moved to Bensenville, Dl. after his retirement where they, are near their family. Sons Robert and William, wives and five grandchildren entertained for the Mar bach’s 50th wedding anniversary last Sunday in Elmhurst, ID. REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST ■ of Loner Doy Saints, 19 Front St. 11 A.M. - Claw 7 P.M. - Elder Dale fuhwild Guy Kramer, Pastor 855-2574 Spiritualist Church of the Good Samaritan 4780 Hillcrest Or. Waterford, Mich. Service 7i00 P.M. — ‘Harold Denmark of Pontiac pR 3-2974 FE 2-9824 For James' Idea of Religion, Read Jamee let Chapter 19,27 AUBURN, HEIGHTS FREE METHODIST MOVED TO NEW. LOCATION BETHANY CHURCH of GOD 2439 Keith ltd., Just off Willow SUNDAY SCHOOL........ 9 A M. MORNING WORSHIP______IQ A.M. RINGSPHfATION ■ —■ r . 5i3p PM. g Teller. DON CSABTItH for Troniponol.on Coll A73OS0A MARIMONT BAPTIST CHURCH 68 W. Walton FE 2-7239 Morning Services 8:30 and 11 A.M. •"PLEASING THE FATHER" Sunday School for All Ages — 9«45 A.M. Youth Services —» 6:30 P.M» _______ t Evening Services — 7:30 KM. ‘ALL MUSICAL NIGHT Pastor Somart spooking ot each service. CHURCH OF CHRIST Established A.D. We Are Christ's Church In Faith and Practice . Jesus invites you to become a member of His Body,' “The Church" WORSHIP SERVICES 10i30 — Lord') Doy Morning 7:00 P.M. — Lord's D|ay 7<00 PiM. — Wed. Evening Phene 462-5736 or FE 8-2071 J I71AWITTE ST)--------- I Block West of Sears REVIVAL FIRST. GENERAL BAPTIST CHURCH 249 Baldwin Ave. SUNDAY, Sept. 12 thru 19 7 p.m. each Evening Evangelist Rev. Donald Clark From Malden, Missouri If you like old-time Gospel preaching you will want to attend. $ Rev. T. W. Bland, Pastor, 673-0209 TWELVE THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 'll, 1963 I LUTHERAN I CHURCHES 1 MISSOURI SYNOD I (joss of Ovist \ | 1100 Lorn Pine et Telegraph t 5 ----, <>—fcldUfc ______J •j: Sentcm of Wonhlp 84 ¥ Rea. D. H. Pmmling, Patter X Phone 644-6832 | , St. Stephen ;$ SaiKobow at Ken pf X DmIf Branson, P alter X Church Servicej . . 8:00 AM 6 Sunday School .... 9,15 AM, 5 S Church Services.1040 AM j I St. Trinity £ Auburn at Jessie :£ (fast Side) Ralph C. Cleat, Potior X Sunday School.... 9:45 AM. 'i ;$ first Service..&30AJA i X Second Service_VlrOO AM. \ I St. Paul X- ’ Joslyn at Third j :•:< (North Side) Ree, Maurice Shack-ell X Sunday School ^ . 9.05 AM i X Services ... 800 & 10,45 AM \ I mi WILLIAMS LAKE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE 2840 Airport Road Paul Coleman 10 AuM.—SUNDAY SCHOOL 11 AAL—WORSHIP HOUR 7 PAL—WORSHIP HOUR 1 GHURCHolGOD X East Pike at Anderson g PARSONAGE PHONE fE 2-8609 i jp|K IS..... 10 A.M. [ Wonhlp 11 A.M. Evening . 7 P.M. I Young People 7 PM. 1 Wednesday X * Rev. C. N. Collins .PEACE CHRISTIAN PSYCHIC SCIENCE CHURCH 12 WarrenSt. Speaker 7.30 P.M. Mr. H. Drake Silver Teq, Wednesday 7>30 PM FIRST FREE METHODIST CHURCH 1 501 Mt. Clemens Street SUNDAY SCHOOL 10 AM MORNING WORSHIP 11 A.M. - EVENING SERVH-E 7 PAL . Pastor C W. Koerner KIRK IN THE HILLS - Hie congregation of Kirk in the Hill* will dedicate its new Abbey with services of consecration at both morning worship hour's tomorrow. Church School students will attend classes at the same hours in the new Christian education facility. Guided tours of the new building will begin at 1 p.m. The main church and towers are at the right; the Kirk House In the center; and the new three-story Christian Education addition at the far left. X 5825 Highland X Richard H. feucht. Pastor ] X Sunday School . . . 9.00 AM : X Worship Servian... 10.30 AM ! Grace X Comer Genessee and Glendale X X (West Side) * X v: RlrkarJ C. Slarktaeyer, Paper X X Church Snrvlco . . t 9.00 AM 8 X Sunday School . . . 9.00 AM & Church Service . . 11.00 AM « X Sunday School . . 11.00 AM » "The Lutheran Hour" avnr |s X CKLW 12.30 PM Entry Sunday X BIRMINGHAM UNITARIAN CHURCH Woodward at lone Pint Bloomfield Hills - Ml 7-2380 Robert Marshall, Minister "WHERE THE ACTION IS" 9.30 and 11.00 Worship Services 9.30 Nursery through 4th Grade 11.00 Nurtory' through I2lh Grode Af Oakland U.P. Church Contestants Oiler Musical Selections ^ L» FIRST UNITED MISSIONARY CHURCH n jy 149 North East Blvd. FE 4-1811 ROV. Kenneth L Pennell 3609 Lorana Rd. 10:00 AAL Sunday School Trumpet Trio from Kalamazoo and Vocol Trio flCjll 1 . 11:00 A.M. Morning Worship "RESOURCES AND RESPQNSMITIES" 7:00 P.M. Evening Worship B . "IF JESUS CAME BACK TODAY" WESLEVaN METHODIST CHURCH 67 N. Lynn Sunday School....... 10.00 AAA. Morning Wonhlp ........... 11:00 A.M. Wesleyan Youth ............ 6.15 P.M^ | Evening Service...... 7.00 P.M. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE I | - - ’ Subject for Sundays •$ SUBSTANCE | Sunday Services and Sunday School .. 11:00 A. M. I Wednesday Evening Service...8:00 P. M.» Reading Room — 14 W. Huron. . Open Dally 11:00 A. M. to 5.00 P.M. Monday thru Saturday & FIRST CHURCH OF § CHRIST, SCIENTIST § Lawrence and Williams St. — Pontiac ?5 SUNDAY 9:45 A. M. § Radio Station CIO.W 800kc j First place winners in the j State Youth for Christ Talent Contest will present m u s 1 c a 11 numbers at the 10 a.m. worship service in Oakland Avenue |United Presbyterian Church tomorrow. Pastor Theodore R. Allebach will speak. The annual Camp and Conference Echoes program will be presented at the 7 p.m. service, { Mrs. Stephen Hubbell and the Teen-age Quartet will provide musical numbers. Brief reports will be given by those attending camps. A reception and food shower for the new missionary interns, Rev. and Mrs. William Keyes and two daughters will follow the evening service. The Keyes will leave for mis-sionary work in South America with the Overseas Crusades Mission at the end of the year. The Rev. Mr. Keyes, a graduate of Westmont College and Talbot Seminary, attended Los Angeles State University. Mrs. Keyes, a graduate of Ri-ola Bible College attended Los Angeles City College. The Christian workers’ Conference is scheduled for Friday through Sunday. Dr. Warren FUkln, professor of Christian education at Northern Baptist Theological Seminary, will speak at the 6:30 ban-1 quet Friday, workshop on Saturday and at both morning and evening service/ Sunday. t; ■ .7 Others participating is leaders of the workshops /are' Mrs. Allebach and Audrey Limke-man.® Dr. Kenneth Coffman, will come from Oakland University to head a group and the Rev. Norman Geisler win be here Rollins Family to Sing at Greater Mt. Calvary The Rollins Family will present musical selections at the 3:30 program tomorrow afternoon ait Greater Mt. Calvary Baptist Church, 306 Midi Mrs. Lula Alexander, general chairman, said refreshments wiU follow the program. Pastor Thomas H. Holt will preach on ”1116 Beatitudes” 11 ajn. Bruce Brede, Mrs. Theodore R. ‘ from Detroit Bible CoUege. Reservations for the confer-j ence may be made by calling the chord! office. MEMORIAL . The first meeting of the season far Senior Citizens Christian Fellowship is scheduled for 4 p.m. Thursday. Dinner will be served at 6 p.m. with devotions following. ROBERT READ St. Paul Methodist in New Sanctuary CHRIST LUTHERAN CHURCH Airport and Williams Lako Rds. Sunday School I 9.20 AM .j for all age* WORSHIP SERVICES 8.00 and 11.00 AAA. VISITORS WELCOME Wqw l Pstn ion. POOor George Bard, a lay preacher from Mount Clemens, will speak at tha 7 p.m. service.------—_ Pioneer Girls and Christian Boys Brigade will start the fall season at 7 p.m. Tuesday. Young people of the community are invited to join the groups. The Auditorium Claw wiU get together for the monthly snpper at 6 p.m. 9itif ^United (Pentecostal Chxxefi 178 GREEN STREET Thur jdoy Young People .. f E 5-7442 School 10.00 AM ........7.30 PM ....................7.30 PM ........X.,............7.30PM 4-6395 tov. H. G. Robert,. Aut. dSSSS^Sf^ j 3882 Highland Rd. MILTON H. BANK, Pastor |i| Morning Worship 9.00 AM and 10<45 AAA. Dr. Bank. Preaching Broadcast on WPON 1460 - 11:15 A.M. Church School 9,15-10*55 Svpentlied Nurierv Membership Classes to Start Tuesday Church membership classes will begin at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in St. Lutheran Church. For the convenience of adults who would like to learn the teachings of the Lutheran Church, classes will be held on Tuesday evenings, Wednesday mornings and on Sunday afternoons. WWW The 14-week course is designed to prepare people for membership and participation In the Sacrament ot Holy Communion. A few topics will be “The Nature of God,” ’The Ten Commandments,” “Lutheran Order of Worship” and “Forgiveness of Sins.” Young people will hold the first session of the season at 7 p.m. tomorrow. The service will start with Holy Communion. Rev. W. Leslie Williams, dis-, trict superintendent, will be the speaker at the opening service i of the new sanctuary of SL Paul Methodist Church, 165 E. Square Lake, Bloomfield Township tomorrow. The tinto to 10 a.m. * * * Both worship services and the Sunday School will combine for this occasion. A fellowship boor will fellow at 11:15 with Mrs. Charles Mrs. Chuck Tanner will serve as hostess for the open house from 2 to 4 p.m. At 7 p.m. Robert Read of Cincinnati, Ohio will present an organ recital. FIRST METHODIST $$ South Soginow at Jud*on - CLYDE E SMITH, Minister m MORNING WORSHIP 8:30 and 11 AM :X;i "In Paul's Footsteps" XX I -"Obedient to thu Heovunly Vision" * Clydu E. Smith, Preaching M CHURCH SCHOOL 9,45 AM. METHODIST YOUTH FELLOWSHIP 6.15 PM Mid-Weak BIBLE STUDY Wed., 7,30 PM iKfaix: ST. -PAUL METHODIST . 1 165 E. Square Lake Rd - Bloomfield Hill* - FE 2-2752 Opening of New Sanctuary 10 AM Open House 2 to 4 PAL - Organ Recital 7 PM mflm Parking — Rev. James A. McClung, Minister—Supervised Nursery . Sing Set for Sunday A hymn, sing is scheduled for 2 p.m. tomorrow at United Faith General Baptist Church, 81 E. Howard. Sunday School to at 10 a.m. and worship at 11 BETHEL TABERNACLE first Pentecostal Church ot Pontiac Sun. school 10 a.m. Worship 11 a.m EVANGELISTIC SERVICE Sun„Tues. and Thurs.—7.30 PM Rev. and Mrs. E. Crouch' 1348 Baldwin Ave. FE 5-8256 ELMWOOD METHODIST Grant ot Auburn Ave Sunday School I0e.ni, Worship 8.45- 11.15 o.m. Evening Worship 7 p.m. Prayer Wed. 7 am. ikWv — ^ ALDERSGATE METHODIST 1536 Baldwin FE 5-7797 Horace G. Murry, pastor Worship 9,45 o.m. Church School 1f o.m. Eye. Worship 7 p.m. Prayer Wed. 7,30 |>.m. REVIVAL SERVICES Sept. 8th to 19th REV. DONALD CRANE of DEXTER, MI5SOURI Will be the guest —speaker during our .. revival services. FIRST SPIRITUALIST CHURCH 576 Orchard Lake Ave. SERVICE 7,30 PAL Arthur Beesley, M5SAC President, speaker Wed, Sept. 15,7.30 PM Open Forum for Information Coll 334-3715’ Hie film entitled “No Vacant Chairs” will be shown following the evening worship Sept. It. This is the first of a series of films dealing with Sunday School work. * "Evangelical Holiness Church s. KengslMc h >Rjble Study (V 114)0 AM SERVICE?. Sunday School "Sasr 74)6 PM ly (Wed.), 7,00PM Church Phone 333-9896 The. First Church of God j —--Wo Have Moved-- i 1379 Mt. Clemens St. i X Sunday School 9*H> AAL X Morning Worship 1030 AM S Evening Service 7 PM X || for TraMpettaSon Col 334-1782 X 5 Reu. Ottis L Burgher, Pastor X ■—Wefcome---- Worship Sunday at EVANGELICAL MISSIONARY CHURCH 2800 Watkins Lako Rd. One Mile NW of the Mall -Sunday School 16 am. 11 a.m. and 7t30 p.m. CKLW SUN. 7t30 a.m. OLD FASHIONED REVIVAL EVANGELICAL HOLINESS CHURCH Pontiac. Auburn at Mariva St. Michigan EVANGELIST Rev. and Mrs. Richard J^CKSQN Of Elkhart, led The Jocksen'i are the American directors of The Holiness Pilgrim Church of HoW, LWust IndiSS. They have |wst re- SUNDAY SEPT. 12 THRU 26th SERVICES NIGHTLY 7t30 PAL REV. AND MRS. JACKSON SUNDAYS 11 AAL and 7t00 PM EVERYONE WELCOME J. W. BURGESS, PASTOR you are cordially invited ... to hear Mr. Robert Read (Me advertisement courtesy oft Internationally Famous BALDWIN ORGAN CONCERT ARTIST and featuring tho note BALDWIN Model 11 Church Organ Hear the exciting sounds of this new electronic musical mssterpiece in concert Tho Model 11 Contemporary 2 manual organ is of unique design possessing a fine classic ensemble of clarity and brightness as well os the warmth of beantifnl solo stop* end brood ensemble se important to an artist such as Mr. Robert Reed. New beer Mr. Reed in person; Sunday, September 12 — 7:00 FJ4. ST. PAUL METHODISt CHURCH 1W Rato Square Lake Road-Bloomfield Hills Monday, September 13 - 8:00 PAL AUBURN HEIGHTS UNITED PRESBYTERIAN 3456 Primary Auburn Heifhts ’ CALBI COMWNY 119 North Stgbinr FE 5-82221 NORTH EAST COMMUNITY, CHURCH raaMrtwbaui^ et^aeuu. Akc1 - “— %4| A.M. Church School HiOO A.M. Worship Service Rev. Rom M. Geiger, Minister FlfST PRESBYTERIAN, CHURCH HURON AT WAYNE Rev. Richard J. keynold«, A*1 Ptntor 9430 and 1160 a.m. Morning Wbnhlp 9.30 and 114)0 a.m. Church School, Infant Nursery through High School Ample parking near tha church. fsUsr Church Phone FE 5-8361 APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF CHRl] 458 CENTRAL Saturday Yeung People..7:30 PM. Senday School and Wonhlp IftOOAM. Sunday Evening Services ... 7:30 PM. Tuts, and Thurs. Sorriest... 7:30 PM \ sweep un reran, ' Potlor's Phone 852-2382 CQLUMBIA AVENUE BAPTIST CHURCH 64 W. Columbia Avo.-FE 5-9960 Sunday School......9:45 A.M. Morning Worship11:00 A.M. Training Union %, 6.30 PAL Evening Worship....... 7-.30 P.M. . Midweek Service (Wed.).. 7:45 P.M. Carroll Hubbs, Music Director AHitlolsd with the Soulktm SaplM Cenventien SILVERCREST BAPTIST CHURCH 2562 Dbda Highway 2 Hocks N. of Silver Lake M. Dr. John Huator. Pastor 945 AM. — Sunday School it am - "the wowaars concctn-7 PJjt - -SEVEN GOLDEN CANDLESTICKS* Everyone Welcome_______________ First Baptist Church4 Walnut at Fourth ROCHESTER SUNDAY SCHOOL '.Si.......................10.00 AAL MORNING WORSHIP................ 11.00 AAL *lhe Rock* EVENING SERVICE ... W. ..............-7i00PAL "Leseoee Of the Storm* PWtor Olson, spooking at both sendees WEDNESDAY PRAYER MBETING...................7t30 PAL Rev. Donald 1C Olsen, Pastor CENTRAL CHRtSTtAN CHURCH 347 N. Saginaw St. SPECIAL PROGRAM GOSPEL HOUS 7 PM EMMANUEL BAPTISr CHURCH 645 S. Telegraph (Near Orchard Lake Rd.) A Fundamental, Indnpnndont. Biblt Bditving Boplkl Oiurdi BIBLE SCHOOL 10 A.M. Departmentalized. Sunday School for All Agee . . wtth NO Uterature but the Bible. HEAR DR. TOM MALONE loach tho word of God verso by verm In tho largo Auditorium Blblo Class, broadcast on WPON 10,15-‘1045 AAL MORNING WORSHIP SERVICE 11:00 A.M. EVANGELISTIC SERVICE 7:00 P.M. Rov, Charles Whitfield preaching at Both Services BUS Transportation CALL FE 2-8328 DEAF CLASS and ’ Nursery at all servtoli S I U N D A A T y T w S N C D H A O N O C L E ■ Of. Tom Malone, Pastor PRAYER SEPT. 5 1125 1 . MEETING- joyceTSSmuSBsic WED., 7,30 PM MUSIC to BLESS the HEART 7100 P.M. ' GOSPEL FAVORITES AND REQUESTED FAVORITES CHOIR t PlreeHcw of Joyce Motone TSHg PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1965 United Presbyterian Churches AUBURN HEIGHTS 3456 Mmary Sire* * F. Wte. Palmer, PbKor MO AM - Sunday School - war—- • - ■ DRAYTON Drayton Plains Michigan W. J.'TeeuwtuM, Pwtor Dennli G. Dunk, Awt. Bible School.......9.43 AM. MorningWonhlp......,, lt AM. Youth Group* ...... 6.10 PM. Wodiwiday Prayer and Study Hour.......... 7.30 fM. OAKLAND AVENUE (404 Oakland at Cadillac FE 5-4246) Theodore R. Allebach, MlnlUer Panoaagoi 300Ottawa Dr. fE 2-1555 Audrey Umkeman, Youth Director First Sunday School... 900 AM. Momlng Wonhlp... .1000 AM. Second Sunday School 11 >20 AM. Youth Follmwhtpo....BUS AM. Evening Wonhlp......7,00 P.M. WedfceyerMlg,.......700 PM. WATERFORD Lakakmd 7325 Monday lab Rd. toy F. Lambert Foster Sunday School.....9,30 AM. Worship.....,.....1045 AM. Sunday School....... 1048 AM (2nd Session) Youth Mlemhlp........6 PM CHURCH OF ATONEMENT 3535 Cllntomdllo Rd. Watorford TWp. Church School 930 AM Hour of Worship 1045 AM Crea M Oarfc, Pastor • a Fwp»ir wsotep AWAITS YOtl AT Wt GOOD SHEPHERD ASSEMBLY OF GOD v 1092 Scott Lake Rd. 2 Machs N. of Pontiac Ik. Id. Waterford Township Slmday School. . 10.00 AM Mofnlng Worship ... I tiQCNAM fve. Evangel. Sotv. . . 7.30 PM Pastor Ronald Coopor _________________ ...not chance" The more deeply you understand the power and love of Qod, the less you believe in chance. There's a law of Spirit much greater than the law of averages, and those who discover it, and live by it, will help to light the world’s way out of chaos. Hear this public lecture titled ”God - Not Chance" by NORMAN B. HOLMES, C.S.B., member of the Board of Lectureship of The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Mass. arisOHSGiHceiecnit Monday, Sept. 13 8 f».M. Church Edifice • 239 W. Gates St. Romeo, Michigan tdmissiou Free • Everyone is wtfeotnt The SALVATION ARMY 29 W. LAWRENCE STREET Sunday School 9,45 A.M. —Young Peoples Legion 6 P.M. Morning Worship 11 A.M. — Evangelistic Moating 7:00 P.M. Tuesday Prayer and Praise Moating 7i00 P.M. -----Ma|or and Mrs. John Grlhdla Cood Miulc-Singing—Trno la the Word Wroaehlng God Moats With Us—You, Too, Are Invited CHURCH OF THE SPIRITUAL FELLOWSHIP Malta Temple , 2024 Ptontiac Road 7»30, Sept 12 — Charles and Bessie Youngs Sept. 19 — Rev. Agnes Hawkins — Sept. 23 — Stiver Tea — first General baptist CHURCH 4 . 249 Baldwin Ave. Sunday School 945 A.M. Worship I) o.m. Young People 6 p.m. Evening Service 7 pm, Rev. T. W. Bland, Pastor ■ 673-0309 THIRTEEN There A a Uttie plant called reverence in the corner of my soul’s garden, which I love to have watered once a week. — Oliver Wendell Holmes. Penrisc Press Phete WRITE INVITATIONS - Preparing invitations to new members of the youth group at Congregation B’nai Israel are (from left) Judy Fenberg of 50 Chippewa, Marsha Goldman of 041 Canterbury, Bloomfield Township, and Cathy Crane of 2568 Pine Ridge, West Bloomfield Township. Young people of the synagogue are Introducing the new members to others of the group'at a barbecue at the home of Karen Merkovitz, 2745 Pine Ridge tonight. • Welcome j: Worship Sunday at < I | CHURCH •:j 2800 Watkins Lake Rd. One Mile NW of the Moll Sunday School 10 a.m. HEAR THE FAMOUS | DAVE § VAN KOEVERING FAMILY of Middletown, Ohio Over 20 Musical on the Platform, one invented by Dave. ;j! • They will play and sing x at 10 and 11 A.M. and ;i|: at 7:3(0 P.M. All Seats Free—Cornel • Also the Rev. and Mrs. E. H. Ebarle of St. Petersburg | CKLW SUN. 7:30 a.m. Rev. A. J. Baughey, Pastor Senior Citizens Meet Friday Mission Institute at Joslyn Church Breakfast at $t. John A country breakfast will be served from 8 to 41 a.m. tomorrow at St. John Methodist Church, 443 Highland. Mrs. James Watkins is general chairman. The CHURCHES of CHRIST Salute you (Rom. 16*16} i i pontiac WMmmm 1180 N. Perry |H3E| 845 and 1MOAM. Pv^WJ Wonhlp 7.50 A M. HBMHH 9.55 AM 8. 6 P.M. HHUH Wed., *30 PM KSH PONTIAC 1 210 Hughesdt-, I Bible Study 945 AM. Wonhlp Feriodf 11 AM.cmd7P.MJ BibA Study Tuejday, 8 PM. i 1 Boyd Glover, Minister Rqosevelt Weill, Minister HEAR WALLED LAKE I 1367 N, HERALD OF TRUTH ftmtloe Troll, K|f WvmmfMjm Channel 9, Sunday, 11 A.M. ENROLL IN BIBLE CORRESPONDENCE Box 555-— Pontiac, Michigan/ Bible Study 1 10AM Wonhlp 11 AM end* PM Wed,?i15PM, Carson Splvay^ Minister "The Christian’s Calling” is the theme of the Mission Institute to be held Monday in Joslyn Avenue United Presbyterian Church. The annual workshop is sponsored by the United Church Women of Pontiac. According to Mrs. Lewis Ball, president, registration will begin at 9:30 a.m. Those attending are asked to bring a sack lunch. A film entitled "Almost Neighbors” win be shown. Speaker for the day will be Helen Desjardins, a retired Methodist missionary who has been active in Africa and the Orient. A book table will be provided displaying volumes pertaining to the study subject. Books used by United Church Women in individual study groups are “Babylon by Chance,” "Mission As Decision,” "Realms^of Our Calling” and "The Word With Power. Mrs. Wilbur Courter, of Four Towns Methodist Church, Waterford Township, chairman of Christian World Missions, is in Senior Citizens Fellowship of together at noon Friday for a luncheon and program. Glen Williams will lead the hymn sing and pastor Clyde E. Smith will conduct the devotional service. :cial music will be sacred selections by Bonnie Hartzman. Speaker for the occasion will be the Rev. Allen Rice, son of the late Dr. Merton S. Rice, pastor of Metropolitan Church, Detroit for many years. • Pastor Smite will begin his series of an eight-week course on the “Life of Apostle Paul” it 7:30 p.m. Wednesday. MISSIONARY ALLIANCE CHURCH N. Casa Lake Rd. at M~59 MONTH of MISSIONS Program for Sunday, Sept* 12th 9:45-11:00-7:00 R.M. MISSIONARY JACK SHEPHERD Former Missionary to the Philippines «t Wednesday, Sept, 15th, 7rl5 P.M. MRS. RUTH ELLENBERGER, From Guinea, Africa- MISSIONARY CONVENTION ■ September* 19 thru ; Homecoming at Bethany Traditional "Home coming Sunday” will be observed ad Bethany Baptist Ghurch tomorrow when tee church resumes the regular schedule of services with Church School at 9:45 and worship at 11 a.m. The service will include a dedication of Infanta and parents. ★ e w September is-Church Loyalty Month at Bethany. Pastor Emil Kontz said the aim is to provide fresh Insights Into the nature and mission of the church. Hie sermons tor (he month will include "The Church — People Who, Pray,” “Thediurch — People Who Believe,” “The Church — People Who Practice and “The Church — People Who Belong.” At 7:30 Wednesday evening Bell Ringers Offer Concert at 2 Services The David Van Koevering family, Swiss bell ringers of Middletown, Ohio, will be featured in a concert of gospel music at 11 a. m. and again at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at Evangelical Missionary Church, 2800 Watkins Lake, Waterford Township. The Van Koeverings play many novel and unique musical instruments. Musical rocks is one of such instruments. It was designed, tuned and built by Mr. Van Koevering. Hundreds of bells of various kinds are used to produce musical sounds. English - handbells are featured wherever they play. Cow bells, sleigh bells, saucer bells are a delight for young and old alike, Pastor A. J. Baughey said. The public is invited. Methodist Youth Fellowship will hold the first meeting of the season at 6:15 p.m. tomorrow. "In the Footsteps of Paul” will be the pastor’s sermon topic for the two morning worship services. COVERT Dressed in costume of earlier years, women of Covert Methodist Church, Waterford Township, will greet guests at the 6:30 family dinner Wednesday. The event is a part of the Woman’s, Society of Christian Service observance. *>. * * Pastor Elmer Snyder .t ill preach on "Life Worthy of the Gospel” at 9:30 a.m. tomorrow. It is only through laborYuid painful effort, by grim energy and resolute courage that we move on to better. things. — President Theodore Roosevelt. "AN AMERICAN BAPTIST CHURCH" Bethany Baptist Church West Huron at Mark 945 A.M. Church School for AH Ages 11:00 AM. Morning Worship Sermon: "THE CHURCH-PEOPLE WHO BELIEVE" Wednesday, 7:30 P.M. "Echoes of Summer" Ample Parking Space ---: Dr. Emit Kontz, Postor- CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN 46 N. Roselawn North of East Pike S.S. 10:00 A.M. Richard Durnbaugh ^upt. Worship 11 A.M. — "Church Membership" Worship-7 P.M. — "What Your Church Expects of You" Leonard W. Blackwell, Pastor______________________ 332-2412 tei First Congregational Church E. Huron and Mill St. Rev. Malcolm K. Burton, Minister 10:30 a.m. Morning Worship and Sunday School I Church 0/ the Hayfloutr Ht/rlut EVANGELICAL UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH 212 Baldwin Avo. phono 3324)728 SUNDAY SCHOOL 10:00 AM. MORNING WORSHIP 11:00 AM. EVENING SERVICE 7:00 PJA Reverend Dwight Reibling, Minister Musicale at Friendship Mrs. Bobbie White will be in. charge of the musical program at 7:39 p.m. tomorrow in Friendship B a p 11 6 t Church, 96 Wil-' liams. The Junior Choir of New Hope Baptist Church will participate. Pontiac Unity Center 8 N. GENESEE (Comer W. Heron) Sunday Worship .Sunday School ' 1 *0° A.M. Metaphysical Bible Study Class Wednesdays 8 PM. Everett A. Dali. Minister 335-2773 CHURCH SCHOOL 9:45 A.M. First loj Christian Church. DISCIPLES of CHRIST Rew. Jack ad Clark Pastor •56 W. Huron It. * Christ's Church of Light non-denominational Lotus Lake School, Waterford ‘ Cor. Percy King and Horpar St. Sunday School 9:45 A.M. Worship . . . , T1:00 A.M. Rev. Eleanor M. O'Dell, OR 3-4710 Rev. Gerald R. Monroe OR 3-7650 BLOOMFIELD HILLS BAPTIST CHURCH 3600 Telegraph Road 10 A.M. Sunday School 11 A.M. Morning Warship 6-P.M. Evening Service Wednesday, 7:30 P.M. Prayer Meeting ~ .- Church Phone: l. 647-3651 is: • FIRST SOCIAL BRETHREN CHURCH 316 Baldwin FE 4-7631 Sunday School... 10:00 A.M. Sunday Worship. 11:00 A.M. Sunday...........7:30 P.M. Wed. Prayer . . . 7:30 p.m. Saturday Service 7:30 P.M. Rev. Loy Barger, Pastor FE 4-6994 Baptiit CIjuaA • SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:30 am. • MORNING SERVICE 10:45 am • CKLW BROADCAST 11. 00 a m • CJSP BROADCAST • YOUTH FELLOWSHIP 4:00 p m 5:45 p m • EVENING SERVICE ! 7:00 p m • MID-WEEK PRAYER SERVICE - Wednesday 7:00 p m • WBFG-FM Saturday 6:15 p m OAKLAND and SAGINAW R«v. Robert Shelton e Pastor mar campi or conferences will report of their experiences. Several will show pictures of placet visited at home and abroad. All Saints Episcopal Church Williams St. at W. Pike St. THE REV. C. GEORGE WIDDIFIELD Rector 8f00 A.M.—HOLY COMMUNION 10 A.M.-MORNING PRAYER and SERVICE: by the Rector ~6rl5—P.M.—Epiieoppl—Young i Churchmen, Pontiac State Hospital FIRST NAZARENE 60 $i;ATE STREET * ;J. E. I Van ALLEN, PASTOR . H "BACK TO SCHOOL" SUNDAY SCHOOL RALLY 9:45 A.M. ; SPECIAL RALLY DAY FEATURED • PROMOTION DAY PROGRAM » INSTALLATION-OF OFFICERS . "TRUMPETS OfcTWUMPH"' FIRST ASSEMBLY of GOD 210 N. Perry at Widetrack Drive Announcing ... EVANGELIST "JIMMY LEE SWAGGART" A man with an unusual preaching and -musical ministry. "He has thrilled- thousands of young people for Christ." IB JIMMY LEE SWAGGART SERVICES NIGHTLY AT 7:30 P.M.. -TUESDAY THROUGH FRIDAY- GREAT OPENING SERVICE SUNDAY 7:00 PM HOMECOMING SUNDAY SCHOOL RALLY SUNDAY 9:45 A.M.-EVERY FAMILY WELCOME MORNING WORSHIP 11 AM. PASTOR ARNOLD Q. HASHMAN FE’4-6301 . FE 4-3282 FE 2-64601 ill FOURTEEN THE PONTIAC FEE S3, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER ll, im City Construction Cost Hits High Point for The estimated cost of new con- Commercial alterations and •traction in Pontiac readied its repairs, seven permits, woe highest point of the year last valued at $»,7«7. UPt,4S8. ^ ^ cu nwre were 26 permits issued SUNDAY ONLY i reported k July on 141 building resident gara 's and 59 permits for an estimated $64,122 for residential alterations and repairs. Permits were issued for two new commercial buildings valued at $32,500. There also was one permit issued for a church estimated to cost $200,000. •traction, according to Carl F. AM, city building inspector. Of the total, $163,000 came through 11 permits issued for family dwellings. Included in the total was a permit for one 16-unit apartment building. Construction Worker Killed on Sewer Job SAGINAW (AP) - Floyd Bill-meier, 19-year-old construction worker from Munger, was killed Friday in the cave-in of a sewer project in Saginaw township. SPECIAL PRICES FOR THIS SUNDAY"ONLY -NOON TO WHILE QUANTITIES LAST! The big jump in the estimated value of the construction build-ipg permits were issued for last month came on $1.3 million for an addition to an industrial plant. YEARS TOTAL There have been 1,008 building permits issued so far this year for construction worth an estimated $5.9 million, compared to 1,285 permits for $7.6 million worth for the same period last year. Police said Billmeier had jumped into the trench to help his father who had been caught in a landslide. A second wall of dirt collapsed and buried the I youth. His father was rescued. BOYS' DRESS SHIRTS IN A CHOICE OF COLLAR STYLES WOMEN'S "ON DUTY" SHOES WITH CREPE SOLES, HEELS Sunday Only! A' Charge It ..'Wjmmt Our Reg. 1.84 Sunday Only Boys’ shirts beautifully tailored in long-wear cotton fabrics. Spread, button-down and tab collar styles. White, striped patterns and assorted solid colors. Sizes8-18. Save! Woman’s unlined two-eyelet full gusset blucher oxfords with smooth leather uppers. Raised moc seam on vamp, arch cookie feature, wrap-around mudguard, round toe. Black, white or tan; 5-10. Belter Fit And Added Sitting Comfort! WOMEN'S NEAT STRETCH SLACK! 500-SHEET PACKAGE of 5 HOLE LOOSE LEAF FILLER Compare at 4.99! Sunday Onlyi Charge It 3-HOOK PLASTIC GARMENT BAG WITH Quilted Front Our Ref. 1.S9 Limit 2 To Customer Our Reg. 76c "'.'jPw 2 Day» Only ^ Save 19c j..package.. . . get a semester’s supply! High quality white, ruled filler paper fits both 2-and 3-ring binders. Sheets are 10V4x8” size. Charge back-to-school supplies at K mart! Move about easily ... stoop, bend, sit in comfort in stirrup style stretch slacks! Rayon and nylon blend in black, royal, loden, brown. Side sip styling. 8 to 16. These true-fit slacks are color-fast, - washable. Jumbo 1314x54” garmentbag with 3 hooks for balanced hanging. Plastic, with quilted front and top in print or solidpink, turquoise. 54” zipper closure. Shop and save at K mart! Limit 2 To Cwsfomor You can save at K mart on almost eve wsmw > fashion love: the imported i India £ madras y\ shirt ^ that (l) bleeds! ALL WEATHER PLASTIC 20-GALLON SIZE TRASH CAN 10 GILLETTE DOUBLE EDGE STAINLESS RAZOR BLADES Our Reg. 1.17 . A At Sunday Only vflv - Compare at 2.98 I OO Limit 2 To Customer geOO For indoor, outdoor me. It's 18%” In diameter, 26” high, made of weather-resistant Copolvmer® plastic. Rust-proof, sturdy, quift! Light to lull, Water-tight! Secure “lork^in” rnvar In iftr nnlv Double-edge stainless steel blades in hpndy dispenser . . . with used-blade compartment for safe HUpo—1, Yon save on shaving needs at K mart whets yon can always say ’‘Charge It”! 28x10x42” Handy 4rShelf STURDY ALL STEEL STORAGE UNIT TOFt' Hand woven 100$ cotton authentic India madras guaranteed to bleed and to flatter! You’ll love the rich colorings oi these blouses that get richer with each washing Carefully tailored with Bermuda collar, roll-up sleeves, tab front. A wingdinger with your skirts or slacks. Sizes 32 to 38. BOTTOM t The Tittle something” cotton plaid shirt is American-fabric that will bleed like India 'madras. Long sleeves, jewel neckline, full-length back zipper. Sizes 32 to 38. Our Reg. 3.47 Suntlay Only! BIG SAVINGS ON COLEMAN STOVE AND LANTERN FUEL Our Ref. 1.09 Ml Sunday Only! f*L Name-Brand REMANUFACTURED SPARK PLUGS AT SAVINGS at home . . . in tl workshop, garage! omnaayvniyi Each Famous Autolite, Champion and AC spark plugs at fantastic savings. Thay're remanufactured bat rally guaranteed far rare firing in any Mind of weather. Sold only in aots of eight. QT. CANNING JARS JELLY GLASSES . •, This fine fuel is specially blended for Coleman camp stovde and lanterns. It’s triple filtered to giro yon top performance and contains rust inhibitor for longer appliance life. Limit 1. t A iOiAAMi MAikXiJAjtiutl. SHOP SUNDAY GLENWOOD PLAZA VH i Hff WM 1 i u 3 : • V . . i • A THE PONTIAC PRESS SATURDAY, SEPTEMHBS h/feS’ rojmAc. Michigan Cherry Coffee Table Separates Matching Swivel Chairs In Living Room Window Grouping background for LIVING Werners Pallet Knife Technique Adds Depth To Oil Above Sofa Chair Needed, House Redone By JODY HEADLEE peated many times when he Home Editor, Ike Pontiac Press was out tramping in the For the want of a chair, a woods." house was redecorated. * *. * ‘It’s true,” Mrs. Backgrounds for both the Harold E. McGill of Kinross Uving and dining sections are Road, Beverly Hills. are the sofa, in a fruit and floral patters of gold, green and bittersweet oa ivory, a rocker in bittersweet wool sculptured palm-green carpeting-and bon-bon green draperies trimmed in deeper green and gold braid. LATE COLONIAL The McGills elected to follow the late-colonial style when refurbishing their home. With an assist from Wiggs Colony Shop, they selected cherry furniture pieces in a spiced fruitwood finish. Emphasizing the accent colors in the living room Framed Crewel Embroidery Pieces Matted In Antique-Gold Velvet Highlight Bedroom lows in green tones brighten the quilted white-silk spread. The king-size bed features a French Provincial headboard in white and gold-leaf with and gold. ‘‘My husband is a hunter,” said Mrs. McGill, "and he liked this picture because he said he’d -actually seen it rt- Bedslde tables and dresser are in fruitwood. % ' M/s. McGill Chats On Phone In Breakfast Room Wallpapered In A Swiss Chalet Mural Formal bitting Room Furnished lit Cherry, Queen Ann# Period Brick Ranch Home Of The Harold E. McGill Family Located On Kinross Road, Beverly Hitts SIXTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, IMS Protect Playthings With Fuel Paint Hie life of 'out-of-door toys can be lengthened substantially with a fresh coat of paint.' * * '* Remora all fust from metal toys with steel wool, then prime the bare metal with a rust-inhibiting primer. For a final coat use an exterior enamel. Wooden swing seats, toys, etc., can be restored to like-new condition by sanding rough spots and applying a coat of bright, shiny enamel. As an added precaution, use lead-free enamel. Personalized Homes By Palmer 4 Bedroom homes available for immediate possession. Built on your lot from . . . *15,900 For Sale by Builder FE 8-2209 or 338-1958 ANCHOR* FENCE protects children, pets and proparly iq«- • Small-weave Modemmesh® or standard chain amlnm link e Exclusive square corner, gate and and — poet designs • Anchor installed e Free estimate AS LOW AS ee-OO A MONTH (~2S») F| 5-7471 y No Down Faymmt • M Month. Is. Nr e M Peymmt October l STAINLESS STEEL KITCHEN SINKS $2295 Terrific Value While They Last ISchigan Fluorescent Light Co. Plumbing Dapt. 191 Orchard Lake Ave., Pontiac Softwood for Kitchen The best way to dress up a kitchen is to use a finely grained western softwood for walls nwl cflfrHto. ■ - Jr A . *.....~ The walls should be tongue-and-groove. * * ★ The cabinets will develop well because western woods are so easy to install and finish. DRAMATIC RANCH: The striking entrance to this three-bedroom ranch house, with Its front glased gable, continues past the front portico to a reception and in turn to a family/ room, riitt the entire i ceiling. How to Build, Buy or Sell Your Home full study plan information on this architect-designed House of the Week is included in a 50-cent baby blueprint With It in hand you can obtain a contractor’s estimate. You can order also, for $1, a booklet called YOtJR HOME—How to Build, Buy or Sell it. Included in It are small reproductions of 16 of the most popular House of the Week issues. Send orders to House Plans* The Pontiac Press, P. 0. Box 9, Pontiac, Michigan 48056 f................................— ............"I J Enclosed is 50 cents for baby blueprint on . B*DJ j Enclosed is $1 for YOUR HOME booklet pi J Name ......................................... J 1 I 2 Street ...................................... J | City ..........................State ........ J Median Income Up Median income of United States families in 1964 was about $6,600 — up 5 per cent from 1963 — according to the United States Census Bureau. Compared with 1954, median incomes had risen by 57 per cent. LOVELY S-P-A-C-I-0-U-S 4 BEDROOM HOME (Oakland Uni vanity Araa) Basamont, Roc ream. Twin Pore ho*, Garago, Forced Air lea pod, Law Tam*, Abundant Shad* Treat, Fruit Trooi, Ovor On* Acre of Land, Excellent Condition. *18^50 6.1. $406 DOWN 06 4-0306 jamas a. TAYLOR realtor^ Till Highland M. (MU) Linen Chest Will Assist Housewife Any average-sized closet without “wings” can be converted into a linen depository with provisions for a pull-out clothes hamper and other storage. A free plan was designed for a space 24” deep and a door opening 34” by 90”. If your space is larger or smaller, the plan dimensions can be altered to fit. L_ floor plan "Od/rSj a ....■ TSoPh m 1 . m FLOOR PLANS: It takes only a glance it these floor plans to note that architect finrqnoi Paul has come up with an unusual but effi- cient Zoom arrangement. Including placement of living room and dining room on either tide of the foyer. Cathedral Ceilings Give Ranch a Lift This la a home for those who like their livability combined with the kind of dramatic features that neighbors and visitors discuss with admiration. In designing the latest House of the Week, architect Samuel Paul catered to the needs of the family requiring a spacious three-bedroom home but also asking for something a little different. He obtained the desired result with a daringly asymmetrical front gable, fully glazed with large glass planes; picturesque cathedral ceilings; and a floor plan that is unusual yet efficient. Among other _ , . . „ items is a brick fireplace wall The plan shows; how to get » , which has one fireplace in the HT rpnt iinliTAnnn m Aooh .. . .. . An important feature are the numerous thin, pull-out drawers that enable the homemaker to classify her linens. She avoids Ugh stacks that make removal of Items difficult and cause wrinkling. Drawer bottoms are spUnter-free, grainless pressed wood, perforated panels give the hamper ventilation. ★ * ★ Designed by Masonite Cor-1 poration, the “space-saving lin-en closet” plan-provides a list | of materials and easy-to-follow directions for the conversion. mentioned gable. eye-catching front Nofe that the end of the brick fireplace wall in the living room is flanked by picture-style windows, one of which is part of that .room, the other part of the master bedrpom, a most unusual and effective design arrangement. Aeron the feytr from the living room is the dining loom, with large windows overlooking the froat of the boose. These three areas combine to | make a formal entertaining zone conversation distinctively separate from the informal sections to the rear. G-I STATISTICS Design Q-l has a living room, .dining room, long foyer, family room, kitchen, three bedrooms, two full baths and a lavatory, a service area, covered front portico, rear porch and two-car garage. Total habitable area of this ranch home is 1828 square feet. Over-all dimensions are 74’ 6” by 43’ 11”. Features include cathedral ceilings, t wo fireplaces and plenty of closet space. Hie plans include a basement. The family room is distinct enough to serve as a true second living room if desired. There is * provision for a decorative screen separating the family room from the bed- M070-M0WER "Hurricane Action” Self Propelled 21" Rotary I smooth, soft, evenly trimmed • 3 Hi*. 4-cycle engine with mooli starter • Adjust cutting height Instantly—Vi* to 2Vi' • Optional wind tunnel discharge and grass catcher tor m6*t efficient grass 124“ McMBB SAW SERVICE AAA Homes Presents The Expanda House *13,990 <.’16,990 Premiere Showing. . . Saturday and Sunday, 1 to 6 P.M. 3 bedroom*, 1 Vi both*, family room, firoplaco, built-in even and rang*. Wa build on your lot. The bedroom wing has three ] t wIUM, imis w.c usejnove ... i..c 1 bedrooms, two large baths and I per cent utilization of ctosete uvtnff room, another in the mas-1 The kitchen is what is general-, a profusion of closet space, in-sp«» hi an organizedsystem! t* bedroom. ly referred to as “country eluding a roomy walk-in In the mSr F„ar i * * * style” because it is spacious master bedroom. For a copy of freeplan! The distinctive exterior of and has a roomy eating area* And last, but not least, is the I aP°8tcarf *Jjf, this ranch house carries out its I within Itself. , brick fireplace in the master te^Sr1' !a*w«<-..™--;wUi«I» I**— Into the entrance. I „ a, b, nM ^ AMPLE STORAGE | Ample storage space Is In- Labor Cost Higher for Heavy Shingles It costs little more In labor to use heavyweight fire-resistant shingles than it does to use standard-weight ones when reroofing, according to roofing authorities. Aside from offeringt^sathr safety and protection, heavyweight shingles will generally last twice as long as standard-weight ones. SHELTERED PORTICO I the front foyer or the rear I It’s via a sheltered front por- service entrance without traf-tico which flows into the long ticking^ through any other reception foyer. | rooms. ' x _ all tholes striking fi There are three forge wfo- permits entry to foe garage, the kitchen dr foe stairway to The foyer, to turn, leads to the rear tonally room. One cathedral ceiling sweeps across comer ef foe kitchen, overspaces, producing a looking foe trefosed rear gar-front-to-rear pancra- den and porch. Features of the kitchen to-The living room, which ad-! elude a built-in freezer, a built-joins the foyer at front, is also' in oven and a dishwasher, In front of the bouse, roofed with a cathedral ceiling,! addition, tq a pass-through to' accounting for the previous!' | the family room. eluded in the two-car garage for toys, lawn equipment, etc. And behind the garage is • service-laundry area, with t A brick front and brick planters add to the cart? appeal of the Colonial CHARM Building and DdSign by RAYRAPAPOR In LAKE OAKLAND SHORES BeautlfiMy Furnished i i. Ceramic tile bath and extra half bath; vanity In main bath. Wood paneled family room. Natural firoplaco. Frigidair* range and oven, l-X-L kitchen cabinet*, fiber-gla* insulation. *20,950 p1u* ht YOU CAN TRADE Ranch or Xri-Levnl If You Prefer At *19,950 r,RlfMaaWatteawlatwMssi|n, * Mil to Models. , IfeDCHi DAIlV I P.M.T0 « P.M. 11 UrCIlS MTUMUY andlUNDJIY 2 to | FI 6-1111 ht BATEMAN i 0L14111 . . Ttlteuth . I Itoohosfer Read Wide overhangs and deeply-grooved channel topped vertical skiing create an interesting texture to the other aide. Inside or outside, Design G-l with 1128 square feet of habit-..able area, is • house to com- tuy ’am for a lOxIO-ff. PATIO for only $34.75 Complotod Pottos on Display; rotfer a. authior PATIO STONE CO. 11571 NglM M. • Mu Wist d Ptoias Alrpsrt EM 3-4825 Opon Doily 8 to 5 BUY, SELL,-TRADE. USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS. ■NOTICE* NO PAYMENT UNTIL 1966 At No Extra Chorgf GARAGEf SPECIAL Extra Large 2-Car 20x22 Hip or Oobi* Reef V-SL INCLUDES ■ wri«>M4.MtMn ■ * J iMIeiMm wAfiJET'*.. WmMdm ANY OOOf All SUSUKIS AS SHOWN bWMNaMr S8, ISSH. »Jm?Terto* *MI, Ov**en* Alio BRICK-BLOCK AND ALUMINUM I I I COMSUTI KOMI IMTOOVIMIMTS ’ * Mo* *4 eAlem.lt. oonsolidatk your BILL! in A ONE MONTHLY PAYMENT, LOW BANK RATIII flS WMPt—1 TRIIYIAN9TB PAY Fid# tstiaetes, Ne OMiptlen OPIN DAILY M, SAT., SUN. 94 MICHIGAN GARAGE BLDRS. Dlv. of ATLAS CONST. CO. 1 • ZSSOS W. T MMM.Q St»W l«* ef TelepeeM ' PONTIAC ARIA ^ FE 4-T400 4 •r THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER ll, 1965 SEVENTEEN LOT OWNERS/Custom Built FINISHED 3BIBI0MI H0ME«6»«’42"MONTH $7,990 • MAHOOANY FLUSH O • SltCN KITCHIM CAUNITS • OAS FUMtACf ___,___ _ e COFFH FUIMMNO ■ • fOUMICA SINK counter • i op amp «ucnnc mvta • iMOotasi insulation TRI-LSVSI. 4 FACE • WE MAKE IT • WI INSTALL IT • 100% QUARANTEE wn mn t/miFin cuitomcm CAN BE APPLIED TO • FRAME • SHINGLE • BLOCK No Money Down KLINGELHUT ERICK CO. 4162 W. Walton, Crayton Plaint PkORB (13-7501 C.mpUt. np.rmlifnfmm rimr pi,. .. In.,Mm,ion DIXIE GARAGES WE GUARANTEE TO SAVE YOU MONEY! GET 2 BIDS r mmm and than BALL US!" • Mack •Frame • Aluminum •Brick • Attacked Garages FRBE ESTIMATES NO PAYMENT 'TIL 1966 AIL TYPES OF MODERNIZATION! CONSTRUCTION COMPANY DIXIE GAUGE 1144 HIGHLAND ROAD (M-CI) EAST OF AIRPORT RD. CALL OR 4-0371 Home Value Rests Neighborhood AO things being equal, a home’s long-term value rests primarily on the quality of its neighborhood or subdivision. * - *-v A That’s ibow mortgage-lenders view a home is a long-term investment, and to get the most for your housing dollars, it’s how you should approach the selection and purchase of a home. Relating the quality of a sub- including location, street patters, variety in dwellings or the lack of it, and the pattern i* which lots are laid out. AO these factors are treated in detail in the Land Planning section of a massive Constrnc-tlon Lending Guide prepared by the United States Savings and Loan League. Savings associations, the nation's biggest mortgage-lenders, account for 45 per cent of the home mortgage volume in the U.8. And while the Guide was written to help loan officers at these institutions judge the value of) the homes on which they advance funds the principles spelled out in the volume can also be put to good use by families seeking a home. * ★ ★ Judging the subdivision is essential because, as the League Create Space in Basement MODEL OPEN $10 050 !MI Pontiac Tr.il 1 On Your Lot or Plus Your Lot OPTIONAL • Largo Lot • laris LS. KHahao a Bio. Bah KM. • TilaC Bath a Saggar numbing FaatorOs aggSraWa WatSsaa- • trick BaarS Hast, Sat • Full Socmant u FtarMaSaam F.HJt. and CONVENTIONAL MORTGAGES PHONE 363-7000 Frank Marotta & 3195 UNION LARI RD.________________UNION LARI You can get a lot of mileage from a basement “rec room” if it’s properly compartmentalized. The idea is to build in storage tor every need, but in such a way that use areas are created and defined by built-ins. For example, there might be a wall of cabinets and exposed shelving, for n book-and-music corner., There might be a work table with additional cabinets to form a hobby center. KITCHEN CORNER A refreshment counter and auxiliary kitchen can be built into one comer of the room; clothes closets and perhaps a closet for a Murphy bed could go into another corner to make guest sleeping quarters. All bullt-lns can be matched decoratively with ponderosa pile louver doors. The kitchen corner and full-size closets in the sleeping nook can be the same louver doors, but of a folding style that are suspended on a ceiling track. it -it it Paint the built-ins a clear, light shade to bring sunshine into the basement, and use an area rug on the floor in a strong, warm color. notes, "the Individual house is essentially no better than its neighborhood. The enduring qpidity add value of the single property depends as much on its surroundings as on its ‘ sign and cqpstnicUoh.” PROPER PLANNING Good subdivision avoids future trouble and expense for ail concerned. Overcrowding, inadequate sewers and water facilities, and other problems besetting many suburban communities are, the League adds, "essentially the result of little or no land planning in the first place, and of inadequate planning controls as new subdivisions have mushroomed.” How can you tell if a subdivision has the quality to insure long-term success, and more lasting value for the homes in H? “Hit-or-miss subdividing of residential tracts,” the League declares, “with little or no relation to the pattern of city growth or to the city’s master plan, is on the way out. ■ * * “Modem subdividing is being more widely understood for what^ really is — community building, or planned unit development, in which an integrated community instead of the vidua! lot has become a unit for planning; “The properly conceived subdivision is either a self-contained ‘neighborhood’ in itself -pr n part of such an entity. Its plan balances and integrates the needs of the people housed in one area so that the end result is a community of homes, schools, churches, shops and other necessary facilities.” Good subdivision planning, the League said, calls for placement of recreation areas and: schools tn a protected interior section of the neighborhood. Li-' braries and churches can occu-1 py easily accessible locations near main thoroughfares, and are considered good buffers between shopping and residential i areas. between homes and nonresiden-tiai uses either within or adjacent to the subdivision. The subdivision’s location is crucial, since poor location is one of the most common causes -of subdivision failure. The League recommends ! that homes in low- or medium- | cost subdivisions be no more ; than 46 minutes from the | homeowner’s place of employ- ' meat. The homan should be I within four mliw of a major shopping center, IV* miles of ( churches, 2% miles of a high school, aiid within walking distance of a grade school and local shopping center. Also important is the use of adjacent land. “Environmental factors,” the League warns, “count Jeavily. “The she tbould av4d railroad tracks, adjoining jerry-built subdivisions, run-down commercial or industrial ones, smoke and odor nuisances, fire hazards and cemeteries. Land within two miles of airports, or at even greater distances under their approach zones, has often boon found to lose value for residential uses.” Finally,, the subdivision’s lo- j I cation should have good natural 11 drainage. Sites that slope moderately are; I considered better than steep I land or flat, table land. Lake Lob! Lake Angela* LAKEVIEW ESTATES FE 4-0921 KAMPSEN Realty A Building Just a few sites left in Beautiful CLARKSTON GARDENS Directiois from Pontiac Dixie Hwy. (US-10) to M-15, turn right 1 mile to Waldoh Rd., right 1 mile to models or 1-75 , thru Clarkston. Left at Waldon Rd. off Main St. WALDON ROAD AT ALMOND LANE A variety of dwellings and building types is very desirable, but if the subdivision includes apartments, these should be grouped, not scattered among single-family units. Apartment buildings, moreover, should be related directly to major travel arteries and near shopping, i school, library and playground | facilities, serving as a buffet I 5 MODEL HOMES F rum bn Avt., Drayttn Plain Arthur C. Compton and SONS Sherwin-Williams Co. PAINTS — WALLPAPEB 71 W. Huron The Pontiac Mall 1,350 SQ. FT. of Living Area MINIMUM DOWN Payment 3890 We Trade Homes — Will Build on Your Property! Built & Sold by ARISTOCRAT BUILDING CO. Designed for Living Features! ir Spacious Family Room With Fireplace* if Large Kitchen and Dining Area ir 1 and % Baths ir 2-Car Attached Brick Garage ★ Full Basement ★ Gas Heat ir Lots 115x150 ★ Community Water WALDON RD. at ALMOND LANftg Open Daily 12 lo 7, Sunday & ■t 11 A.M. - Phone 625-2882 $ Pre-Season Prices on YEAR-ROVED ENCLOSURES SAVE 100 “ •r MORE on Malntvnancf PRIE •ALCOA • KAISER •REYNOLDS ALUMINUM ★ SIDING (Wd cmr mrytklaf. is palitiif for« lifstlxas of thi homa) ★ AWNINGS (All types) for Windowi ★ STORM WINDOWS ui DOOM ★ SLIDING GOODWILLS — Prim* at Storm NO MONEY DOWN 5 YEARS TO PAY Murty Hautluk. ew By _ Asquint me at ' GLASS AND SOREEN REPAIRS ALL AWNING: »» ORCHARD UKl>V». — WNTIAC RENT, LEASE, SELL. BUY HOMES, PROPERTY, COTTAGES, f CARS, GOLF CLUBS use Pontiac Pros Classified Ada. To plAea yours, call 3324181. ., ...y. ....•'* Shortening Can for Paint Storage Don’t discard those empty coffee end shortening cans. They make Ideal trinket cans for children’s rooms when painted with bright, shiny enamel. * it it They’re also handy paint buckets. Clean can thoroughly before using or painting. Bloomfield Townhouse Apartments $33 PER MONTH Models at 16 DOUGLAS ST. Pontiac, Mich. PLEASANT LAKE SHORES (AU Mew Subdivision) • 1,100'Private Batch • Msny Csnal Lots • Psved Straot • Public Wstor MtM Oasn I* Is 7 p.m. Daily (except Thun.) Outu tat. S Ian. $21,500 to $22,900 | TO "BUILDERS . el Mustier Lakt. MAR cm. FE 8-9251 328 N. Perry, PONTIAC SEPTEMBER IS HOME MONTH There Is a New HOME Just Right for YOU HAND PICK the House of Your Dreams •.. Then See Oakland County's LARGEST MORTGAGE LENDING INSTITUTION 761 W. HURON-PONTIAC 16 E. Lawrence St.-Pontiac 407 Main Street—Rochester 1102 W. Maple Rd.-Walled Lake 5799 Ortonville Rd. Cor. M-15—darkaton 851 N. Main-Milford 4416 I)i*ln Highway—Druytou Plains 471 S. Broadway - Lake Often * L * A EIGHTEEN who has previously played in the World Series. Player and Arnold Palmer finished in a tie, four strokes behind Nicklaus in the 1962 series inaugural. Although golf purses continue the Athletics claimed Clinton after the 72-hour deadline had passed. In reality, Cronin said, he belonged to Cleveland. So off to Cleveland he went. nine, he was a scrawyn, anemic, knock-kneed kid swinging a racket that looked as big as he THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER II, 19M Activities Golf Series T to Collect $50,000 AKRON, Ohio (AP) - Hie chase for the top prize of $50,-000, folTa biggest financial jackpot, began today at the World Series of Golf. Masters champion Jack Nicklaus, U.S. Open titlist Gary Player, PGA champion Dave Marr and British Open winner Peter Thomson comprise the field in the twvMiay, 96-hole JACK NICKLAUS Masters Golf Champion playoff at the Firestone Country Chib. Even the man who finishes last will art off a pretty good paycheck out of the $77,500 purse. < Second place is worth $15,000, third, $7,500 and fourth, $5,000. The event was to be televised nationally today and Sunday from 5-6:30 p.m., EST over NBC-TV, with the last six holes being shown each day. In the event of a first-place tie, a sudden-death playoff will be held beginning on the 15th hole. SOLID FAVORITE Despite the fact he has not played well, Nicklaus, who won the first two World Series but did not qualify last year when he faUed to capture a major tournament, is a solid favorite, Since his second-place tie in the PGA, Nicklaus finished 38th in the Carling World Open and followed that with a 53rd finish in the American Golf Classic, also played on the same Firestone layout which measures 7,-180 yards and favors the big hitters. Player is the No. 2 choice followed by Marr and then Thomson. Player has been resting for three weeks but was satisfied with his game in Friday’s practice round when he shot a respective one-over par 35-36— 71. Thomson tied Player with a 36-35, while Nicklaus took a 37-36-79 and Marr had a 36-39-75. Mainly because of a triple bogey 8 on No. 16 when he hit his third shot into the water. ONCE BEFORE Aside from Nicklaus, Player is the only man in the foursome in DAVE MARK National PGA Champion to grow in size, all four of the contestants consider the $50,000 prise as fantastic. “It’s astonishing.” said Australian Thomson. “Nothing like it anywhere in the world.” Nicklaus, the leading money maker in the PGA tour this year with official earnings of $127,-445, would like to tack the $50,-000 to his unofficial earnings. “I agree that purses are going up all the time, said Nicklaus, “but no first prize tops this thing. And remember, in this case there are only four guys going for the first prize while in other tournaments you’re battling a hundred other guys.” All the players agree that Nicklaus is the man to beat, but the big blaster from nearby Columbus merely shrugs his shoulders and says, “It’s anybody’s show. Anyone who has a hot hand can pick up all the chips.” Newest Indian Helps Bengals to 2-0 Victory Lou Clinton 'Victim' as Mickey(s) Lolich, Stanley Pace Tigers Maybe the Indians would like to give Lou Clinton bade. Clinton, playing with his third American League team in five days, made his debut with Cleveland Friday night and helped the Indians drop a 2-0 decision to Detroit. * ' * . *- ...... That gave the outfielder the distinction of haring the only three-team, four-game losing streak in the majors. His fifthinning miscue enabled him to extend the streak. Clinton arrived in the Indians’ camp from the California Angels in an unusual manner — by way of Kansas City. It all started when the Angels placed 'the 27-year-old Oklahoman on waivers. Kansas City claimed him, and he arrived there in time for Wednesday night’s game against the Angels. NO CHANCES He started in right field but left after three innings, making room for . Bert Campaneris, who was in the process of playing all nine positions. While he was hi the game, though, Clinton didn’ have a chance to catch — o miss — any fly balls. Then, before he could get into the Athletics’ line-up again, it was discovered he never should have gone to Kansas City at all but instead should have gone directly to the Indians. * ♦ * AL President Joe Cronin ruled GARY PLAYER HA Open Champion ^[British PETER THOMSON Open Champion Report Bout Okay by Clay, Patterson NEW YORK (UPI) - Cassius Clay has agreed to defend his heavyweight championship against former two-time champion Floyd Patterson in mid-November, it has been learned by the United Press International. The bout will be held on either Nov. 16 or Noy. 22 and is expected to be staged in Las Vegas. A clause, jrritten into the contract which was agreed upon two days ago, specifies that the bout cannot be held in either New York or Chicago. Promoter A1 Bolan said Friday night that he expected an announcement about the bout will be made early next week r- probably on Tuesday. No sooner had he arrived there than he was inserted into the starting line-up in left field, w ★ * In the fourth inning, with one on and one out, Norm Cash lofted a fly to short left. Clinton came in, grabbed the ball — but then dropped it. The Tigers didn’t score, but Clinton gave them another chance in the fifth. WINNING RUNS With Bill Freehan at first and one out, Ray Oyler hit a fly to left. Clinton lost the ball somehow, and the Tigers had runners at second third. Micky Lolich strode out for what would have been the final out, but rookie Mickey Stanley followed with a single that drove in the runs. Lolich stymied the Indians the rest of the way, pitching a four-hitter and bringing his record to 124. “It’s been a long drouth,” the Tiger southpaw said between swallows of a soft drink. “I felt good at the aid ... not tired at all." WWW DETROIT CLEVELAND WrlH akrll Stanely c» 4 0 3 3 Brawn M 4 0 0 Lump* lb 3 0 0 0 AM* lb 4 0 0 Ml lb 4 010 Hinton cf 401 Kama rf 4 0 0 0 Colavlto rf 3 00 W*rt lb 4(00 Davallllo pr 0 0 0 Horton If 1 0 0 0 WMHtaM lb 400 Northrup It 1 0 0 0 Clinton If 100 Prtattan c Jiff Oonuln a> a o i pytor •< illo Akim c 301 Lolich P WOO Sc'nbl'm pr 0 0 ( . Salmon pr 00 0 Sl«b*rt p ill Howwr ph 0 0 0 ItMf C 000 T«0*lb 31 3 * 3 Total* 30 0 4 Stugis Gridders Visiting Arrows Heavily Favored Here Tonight Tlie Pontiac Arrows are three touchdown favorites to make Sturgis their second victim of the season this evening at Wis- Kickoff is $ o’clock, and a crowd of aome 3,000 is expected for the nohcanference- contest. Hto Acrews opened the Mid- a 6-1, 196-pounder who sparkled in the signal-calling post last week. w w w Sweetan, who came to the Arrows following his release by the Lions, completed nine of 13 passes and ran for 43 yards in playing a little more than half a game. TOSSING AGAIN And the 22-year-old quarterback is expected to be tossing the ball again tonight. The Arrows will actually be tuning up for the gum with Dayton next Saturday at Wie- ner, a game that should boost the winner into the MFL lead. Dayton (1-0) is playing host to Milan (M) tonight, and a victory for the home squad would push It ahead of Pontiac (14). Pontiac came out of last week’s game in good physical condition and all hands are expected to be ready fair, the Sturgis Wildcats. The Arrows defense held Flint i a minus eight yards for the game last week, and the defense may got a boost U defensive end Ron Berger is able to play. .. f pMMWmmmrn Arthur Ashe Winner, Now Meets Santana FOREST HILLS, N.Y. (AP) — When Arthur Ashe, Jr., start-of was. ^ Today this same Ashe, son of a Richmond cop, is the biggest name in the game, winner over the world’s No. 1 player, Roy Emerson of Australia, 13-11,6-4, 10-12, 6-2, in the quarter-finals of the National Championships. The 22-year-old UCLA senior gets another major test today when be faces Manuel promising players of his race. Johnson aided Althea Gibson, the former U.S. and Wimbledon The first Negro member of the U.S. Davis Cup team, he beat both Osuna and Palafox of Mexico in the Davis Cup interzone finals at Dallas. He was held out of the matches in Spain and thus failed to get a shot at Santana, his foe today. Ashe, with a year to go at UCLA, is anxious to play big time tennis and, if possible, develop into the world’s beat CHAMP AND CHALLENGER TUMBLE - The Forest Hills, N.Y., West Side Tennis Chib grass courts were covered with the falling bodies of two losers yesterday during the National Tennis Championships. Defending men’s champion Roy Emerson (top photo) took a spill while losing to Arthur Ashe, Jr., 12-11, 6-4, 10-12, 64. Carole Graebner (above) also went down during her defeat by defending women’s champion Maria Bueno, $4, 1-4, 9-7. of Spain, the international veteran who recently almost single-handedly wrecked U.S. Davis Cup hopes. If he can get by Santana and j then beat the winner of the match between Rafael Osuna of j Mexico and Cliff Drysdale of South Africa — a big order but unlikely — he will become the first U.S. player in 10 years to win the American championship. Tony Trabert was the last in 1955. POSSIBLE FIRST He also will become the first Negro champion. Santana beat Antonio Palafox of Mexico 04, 9-7, 0*1. Osuna and Drysdale advanced Thursday. * * * In the women’s division, Wimbledon champion Margaret Smith of Australia faces Nancy Richey of Dallas and Maria Buepo of Brazil opposes Billie Jean Moffitt of Long Beach, Calif. Miss Smith won easily Friday, beating Franchise Durr of France, 0-1, 04 But Miss Bueno, ailing and off form, had to fight off one match point to win over Carole Graebner of Beech wood, Ohio, 04, 14, 0-7. LONG MATCH Miss Richey beat Norma Bay-Ion of Argentina 04, 7-5 and Miss Moffitt outlasted England’s Ann Haydon Jones 10-14, 0-2. With Chuck McKinley in semi-retirement and Dennis Ralston considering curtailment of his schedule, Ashe has emerged as the new hope of the long-suffering American tennis legions. In beating Emerson, he displayed a brilliant all-round game, characterized by a rocket service, excellent ground strokes and ability to rise to the occasion. -----|rtw up on the streets of Richmond and attracted the attention of Dr. Walter Johnson, the Lynchburg physician who has long bean a benefactor of Beats Boston 5th Time Twins' Perry Repeafs Itawt Phillies, Braves CINCINNATI (UPI) -1 An important National League game between the Philadelphia Phillies and Milwaukee Braves which was rained out two days ago has basn rescheduled for Isondey, Sept. 20 in County Sts-dlum, Milwaukee, league Preaidant Warren Giles announced Friday. By United Prese International Jim Parry, who may be part of a sibling rivalry next month, has a “cousin” right in his own league. Perry, the surprise of the Minnesota Twins pitching staff over the second half of the season, could be pitted against his brother, Gaylord, in the World Series if the San Francisco Giants wind up on top in the National League. * * * 1 The “if’ in Minnesota’s case became somewhat smaller Friday night when the Twins best Boston 84 for their 15th win in 16 games with the Red Sox this year and reduced their magic number for .a pennant party to 12. Perry- vs. Perry on the mound in the series would be reminiscent of the Boyer-Boyer (Ken and Clete) matchup at third base in last year’s Cardi-nal-Yankee series. LENGTHEN lead The Twins lengthened their lead to eight games when Chicago lost to New York, i-l, and Baltimore split with Kansas City, winning 5-2 and dropping the nightcap, 184, to edge past the White Sox into second piece by one percentage point In other American League action Washington downed California, 4-1. Perry’s victory ever the Red Sex was no masterpiece as he lasted only | fari*p and aliewed five runs, three of which were earned. Bat the via hept his recard against Half of hit 10 victories ere over the Beantownon (he has net lost to then) and his earned run average is a nifty 1.10, Not bid for a Styearald righthander who buried onto Wfc innings over the first six weeks of tbs campaign and was clone to being a member’ of a Minnesota farm tram A "it it The Twins’ potent beta amid not reach the seat* at Fenway PridfcF but they slugged nfcg doubles and presented Perry with eight runs before he exited in the sixth inning. Z0B0 VersaUes knocked Ip three runs with a bases-filled double fat the second inning. The Twhto added two man hi the third and three more in the sixth. Jim Merritt relieved Perry la the sixth and fanned eight batters in 8% innings. Boston’s Tony Conigliaro assumed the Major Ltigum AMERICAN LBAOUE WM L*sl Ed. ■*«•* Minnesota . 30 (4 421 — Bjllmor* . If Jl .17* I D*troJf . .. .. . . . 5* 44 jjl JM PlwtoMl .. 77 44 344 11V* N*w York . 70 7J Mt 30V* f iTSiir 'flTJj’ U-t«lb8n IAwT* T*-* 3 a tan* earn* mm* ■ ■ psitrn jjfoofi&r Sr ill, >*rrv, Martin(4) and Oattayi Marik*. Ham* rw "gaff* BBS* 11 •STWTxftn.....iS 1 Mlwaoatt yfSBtJrtS at a 0-10) at Washlnftan JlloonM 10-7) at Clivatau ..Hava T(rtv, iffrt 144). at CMcaeo Oatiwn at c* STV.SV w league leadership in home runs when be socked his 28th with two mates oo in the sixth. * * ★ Mel Stottlemyre scattered eight Chicago hits and drove in a run himself as the Yankees handed the White Sox their fourth straight loss. Tom Trash’s 24th roundtripper of the year and seventh off Sox pitching iced the game for the Yanks. •1.1 Hall of Fama G ama in Cahfon; to Honor Ex-NFL Greats By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press CANTON, Ohio - Among foe many activities planned in tills Ohio city, there is supposedto be a football game between the Detroit Lions and Washington Redskins Sunday afternoon. It’s Hall of Fame week hqro where the NFL Shrine to located and the activltiee scheduled from morning to nightfall almost hide the time that says 2 p.m.(EDT) Kickoff. * ' * ■ *_____ The activities started Friday and continue through Sunday with banquets, parties, parades, a Coronation Ball, enshrinement ceremonies of seven ex-NFL greats and then — the bail game. A crowd of 17,NO to expected to watch the Liens and Redskins tangle in the final exhibition game to Fawcett Stadium, located adjacent to the HaO of Fame building. The Redskins, who haven’t had a winning season since 1955 when they won I and teat I, are expected to offer their strongest challenge in the Eastern Division since their 1945 championship loss to the Rams. A t * They have been above the .500 mark only three times since 1945, finishing tost year with a 84 mark for a third place tie. THREE LOSSES This wUl be the sixth exhibition game for the Skins, having whipped the Eagle*, 37-0 and Cardinals 12-7. The three losses were by dose margins to tbs Bears, Vikings and Colts. The Lions stand 14, having won over the Giants, 25-21 last week. It will be Milt Plum going agaiast Dick Shiner, i Played for regular Soaay Ju gensen, due to JargeaseP kg injury. Both Jurgenaen and Shir have outstanding percents^ for pre-season play. Jurgens had hit on 43 of 76 passes j 56 percent and 4M yards wh Shiner has hit on 31 of 50 I 479 yards and four touebdow] It will be somewhat of a bon coming for coaches on bo teams. Lions’ coach Harry C tear ones played for the Sk$ Washington assistant Georr Wilson proceeded Gilmer a had the job in Detroit for eii The Skins have always kugh for the Lions, holdln $-2 advantage in tbs ail-regular Mason series bet the two teams. L«»t year in the opening hibition game of the seasc Charlotte, N.C., the Lions feated the Skins, $847 on a eecond pass from Plum to 1 Barr. Softball Action in 2nd Round A Pontiac squad lost am Waterford nine posted an, e victory in the opening round the Waterford Township Inv tional Softball Tournament night. ' A * -if. Hint Top Hat handed I tfec’s Spencer Floor a 4-2 back in the opening game, w! Day’s Sanitary Service of 1 terford blanked Jameson Ini ance of Fenton far the nlghti 84. In the middle game, Enu Utoee of Port Huron trimm Rokoss of Midtoad, f J. Brown Darby of Midland < Swartz Creek were slated open today's action at 1 p.m the two-game knockdut toon A ★ u j*..„ . Spencer floor wsi paired i Rokosz at 2:10, and Jams was scheduled to taka on loser of the 1 p.m. game 4 p.m. Top Hat and Emery w paired in a 0:30 tilt, and Di Sanitary was listed to ba the l p,m. winner at 7 p.BL THE PONTIAC PRESS; SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER ll, 1965 NINETEEN Major League Averages Boston ... Mlnneaota CLUB BATTUM ..4741 591 1214 14U348 JM ..4590 570 120$ 110517 33 . .4741 SIS 1142' 155 478 3». How York ......4904 590 1W8 WM® Woihlngton . 4749 529 1IN 124 499 .224 INDIVIDUAL lAftiltB Yoirnkl Bin 411 49 141 17 44 J34 8 g ■ iilil ...j47 nil S.'S . 457 50 134 5 39 4& 92 111 It 59 49f :::iu 8 IS ® » « WhttfMd Clo .195 Bottw M Devefalo « ij ft ■ Skowron Peanon Col 332 27 93 SS&ttiiS 3 jS 8 S £ .fRJ If Hi SSJ£! J I»s S RSTcSVS s IS a s s Couiey KC .. .459 4f 18 1 5 ® EVmJI Hinton Clo ..m » 127 it s m ■si SB 37 Si w _ 44 .341 • m ii 3* Si l NY 244 21 59 4 Y ....Si 42 114 14 hy m i » ,5 t«5S?S!! iS S 2 i . 510 worn CM ......429 Romano CM Cardinal Col Horrodon Y Adcock Cal Popltona NY Caih Dot .... RJohnaon Bal Bryan KC .... Maliona Bm Landlt KC ... Ilowoor Clo .: PowaH Bal .. Howard NY . ’ Azcwo CIO .... Kirkland woo Atilaon Min .. Orion KC .. 94 .253 # M 4 __ .451 47 IB 17 • • 344 49 91 B 44 . 245 34 44 9 B 4 97 14 99 J49 n i 40 jft 44 14 B J37 SS 8 2 *2 2 1 S S3 ft » jj jfi 3 14 37 £20 Freehan Dot .172 29 ISTtST/. g | ; Barry CM ....4» £ Kubak NY ... SB 39 Lira NY ....271 24 3rrfSbsTBWMt mu - ctoo*' TiinW t «»* ! IB H B B t 4 m wNMM cm :::m » * 8 • 1 T^SEr Bal 159 2 B 94 10 7 2.M Mcoowoti 05 m llif _ _.inif ■ 145124 99 117 I ..JrSr KJL"*: SMtlemyre NY »7 229 BIS 17 I &*rw"“fsl§21 CSSTCol .. .84 IIS BIB 14 13 *“ Horton CM .195119 SIB}*'* BuxMrdt CHI ..IS 1£ 8 jU J 44 139 14 14 I 90 IS .. . - -- J 34 49 4 9 2J5 Nawman Cal ..334 84 M 941214 lit n-JailflliS ^c«un «jjj}• » » Antrim Dot ...191145 fl IB ft 15 3J1 S3SLW ::SS SiSijij *S STk?'..:::?? «15] May cal .IB 157 74 ft * *“ Raton CM Downing NY Tarry Clo. H171 »J7 111 Tans kc ....mm Bis - .. —. Mon'quette Ban 204 214 Iff 111 .93 wnaon Ban . . .Swi 711# ll 12 444 Wlek'aham Dot 174 IS 14 94 * “ | S NATIONAL IBAOMB. ■ CLflfc lAftMH t, • § SSL. aSX’ghii ■■liisi York »» 449 974 94 414 .224 IND^IDtiAL BMTINO (1M ar moro at feata) • r CM . AB i H HR RBI Ret. into Pgh 521 51 171 I « M Coiama^Cin ! 291 ’8 91 13 59 3 Slj::: ! !8 18 ft 8 § Clondanon Pali 3 8»» .& Tom Mil ....aoa Alto Mj. ...114 HoS"1 Brock 5IL ....3S2 101 i40 » 43 J99 S ’8 8 93 142 19 T » JI0 94 J0t 37 .304 S 3 S3 es 3 8 3 92 J91 90 .291 m iff n jS S 97 m 21 _ „ If* 92 154 SIR ■ IH » I__I n-s « « Cirdonof. Bn .497 ^ l8 “ i40 79 is S 499 iji Mota pgi; S 2 I 4 S3 Fairly LA ....511 57 142 f 49 jn McCorvar StL 170 44 IS 11 S3 fj i 4 35 .274 InSl SiEw'i I !fi 9 1 ^ kLv - 'S “ is riS Sta B i « 3 11 495 | 129 24 . m£s% MMJ KSffli :::« 8 3 8 8 3 ?r,«h, ::3 ” 18‘2 8 3 •alloy Pah ....541 79 l2 fT Si jfOOt *«.... 534 » 139 9 91 W Johnoon. LA .. 393 S Iff n 49 9 |p|| ....339 37 97 11 fi JV All« Pgh .....439 41 112 3 40 JB Mothowa Mil 477 47 121 B 2 St s a 4 srw*.| S ,8 ,! «aar.I s is i HolKr (P T.;® a 8 12 m 59 yM t ’ll i •A :» S f S 8 __ S3 41 Mj 2J49 .244 Jonair Mltwaukaaj**2oefiL Ian. FranclacoiMcCarwor, It. Lou la, ana 131 15 1 2.41 MiSHft 92 295 17 7 2.44 . _ St 227 14 I Ml in ii§W rd’ack I In Tr s-ltW CL. Bunnlna Phi SpB MB . Glbaon StL . Moon L Dryadolo^ Farrall Htn . . 195 197 32 IM . __ Short Phi . . .239 214 » 159 14 » 3.24 ;li 1141 ^ WaMr Phi -« » n « i ' Nvxhall CM itt-JR9PH --1 Mil ljf iaa 194 111 14 9 3.43 Mil . 213 199 44 IM IS 9 3.91 LAw,i3S’3,5: J IlilH plorkor Htn .124114 34 51 7 7 3.79 Horbol SF 140 143 41 41 19 7-3.79 ■fioworth CM Ml Ml 51 111 13 14 M ^ ML 11} 119 24 45 9 M 3J1 127 194 19 47 7 9 LB . 54 147 47 74 7 9 U7 jkhdii ym . 224 249 40 M# If U **■ Rlahor NY ..mm SIM 130 Ibnmana StL .1*7 m M 91 9 14 Parry IF . .199 114 42 114 9 12 BsHhchun RM 99 M 39 72 I 7 ffiOi. ...1M 154 34 54 7 (IV OlvafI Htn .llfill 35 » 7 I 4.19 Mann IF ...179 191 B 93 4 14 4.17 MCCoOl Cln ... 95 71 M *9 9 9 4.14 jadtaon NY .. IMIS 11112 711 AM Joy Cln ...147 IS 41 fl 4 7 49 Claco NY ..IM 111 49 H 4 | 4.29 iir fh ......IM 230 B Blili AM Nottobart Htn .199 IS fl 74 4 14 ZB ....J v I i 11 a 91 IM 17 It 1 10 ™ IM 130 43 17 4 9 Kaanci cm Gibbon Pah . firm* NY . Ttltourlt CM Rwkay I OToola C 3|S8ijt •11 i 141»' ...154 IS 40 B I * A49 ' OL* BATCH, NATCH — TTie newest major leaguer to wear the Kansas City, green and gold uniform is Leroy (Satchel) Paige (right) who was signed by Athletics’ general manager Hank Peters, yesterday. The ageless wonder of the mound needs only a few weeks playing time to qualify for his baseball players’ pension. Paige, who only admits he is a “shade over SO’’ (since the middle of the 1950’s), probably will become the first player to collect his pension and salary checks at the same time. As Putting Satchel Paige Sack on Pitching Mound KANSAS CITY (AP) - Leroy (Satchel) PaigO, who many old timers call .the greatest pitcher of all time and now certainly the oktaf, has signed with Charles O. Finley’s Kansas City Athletics for the remainder of the 1905 season. How great Satchel was always will be debatable because Negro, players were not aliened In the major i*°g"— when he wee in his heyday, carving out a fabu- Tennis House Has Program by Top Stars Bloomfield Tennis House, new four-court indoor tennis dub on East Maple Road In Troy, will have a week-k tends program with some of the top stars of the country appearing in exhibitions and clinics. Dennis Ralston No. 1 ranked UJ5. amateur wffl lead the tennis program, beginning tomorrow through Friday. Along with Ralston wffl be Arifcar Ashe, the Ni.! ranked Rebscfl and Clark Graetaer, aO members of the U.S. Davie Cup team. Mrs. Carole Graebner, holder of the national women’s doubles and ‘Peaches’ Bartkowlcz from Hamtramck also wffl appear. Sunday’s program is limited to press and dub guests. Monday’s program: w * ★. 3:00 pjn.-wwiwrt Forahand Cl Me 4:90 Rjw, CMhwift tMMhihd CWnM ^ 4:90 9MR» M0RVff9MhMl4 Clinic 9:M p.m^-Rxhlbmorw Maturing RgL AFL Kicking Off '65 Campaign Rookie Backs to See Action NEW YORK (AP)—San Diego and Boiton wffl unveil rookie ••running bade combinations, 1 more out of necessity than by design, as the American Football League opera Its sixth season with two-game programs tonight and 8unday afternoon. ♦ ★ * While the rival National League runs through its last weak of exhibitions, the AFL gets a ongjseok jump at regular season action when Buffalo opera at Boston and Denver at San Diego Saturday night. Sunday’s program shows Kansas City at OeSdend and New York at Houston. The New York-Houston game wffl be Nationally televised by NBC at 1:00 p. m.. EST. The MIL’S final exhibition schedule has just one game, unbeaten Minnesota vs. the New York Giants at Omaha, Nib., scheduled this afternoon. The to use an all-rookie running back duo if1 Paul Lowe’s knee keeps him out of action along with Keith Lincoln, who already been placed on the injured list because of a similar Injury. ' ^' * * * Gene Foster, a Moot-11, 900-pound breakaway threat from Arisona State, will take over Lowe’s spot, if neceosary with Jim Allison, a Uth round draft choice from Son Diego State, tapped for Lincoln’s fullback spot. 1 * ' * * Denver, meanwhile, wffl have an all-veteran beckfleld but they’ll be new feces just file e. Cookie Gilchrist, esquired from Buffalo,, wffl atari at fullback while Abner Haynes, acquired from Kansas City, likely wffl get the call at halfbeck. * ★ * ‘ at Harstwy. Pa., fit. Louts is at Orem Bay, Clsvolsnd takes on Pittsburgh at Akron, Ohio and CMcafiti'plays'Mies at Tulsa, OUaTtoawK Sunday, 8an Francisco Is at Los Anfidss. ROOKIE BACKS---------- the Chargers may bo forced beating out returnee Ron Bur-and Joe Bellino, Navy’s former All-America, among others. w ★ * The Bids alio wffl have a trade acquisition in the back-field—Billy Joe, acquired from Denver in the Gilchrist trade. Joe and center Dave Behrman, who take* over for the retired Dave Cudzik, represent the only changes made by the Bills on their staffing offensive and de- Jim Nance of Syracuse at beck and Effle Johnson South-tiwjMBi «ft halfback tandoffs ft beck Mbs Fnrilli. FULLBACK ROLE Nance fills the fullback hole crib tail whan Larry Gerroa broke his collarbone. Johraon, the Piffiaii^ fourth draft choice, has won a birth at At Houston, the Jets wffl put their NO. 1 quarterback on display-hut It won’t be Joe (INO,-000) Nemeth. Mike Taliaferro, second-year man from Hllnoto, will run the off eras, and might wind up In a passing d • nether second-year signal-caller, Don Trull of Baylor. * * * j Trull was impressive fat the Cfflsn’ pro season games and Is egpectad to see action but 16-yaar pro veteran George Blands wffl get the starting rail, w *' + ■ The Chiefs and Raldars will go with veteran bechflalde, quarterback Loony Dawson calling tfat shots fair Kansas City and stthsr Tom Flows «r Gotten caning for Oakland. Drysdale Swings a Big Bat By The Associated Press If there’s one pitcher Sandy Koufax can’t match, it’s teammate Don Drysdale. In home runs. jj--:---- W w--------------- Drysdale followed Koufax’ record-breaking fourth no-hitter with a record-tying feat of his own , Friday night, hitting his seventh homer of the season in the Los Angeles Dodgers’ 5-2 victory over Houston. Drysdale gave the Dodgers a 2-0 lead in the third inning when he tagged a Robin Roberts pitch over the left field pavilion in Dodger Stadium, tying the National League record for most homers by a pitcher in (Hie sea- lous reputation in Negro loops barnstorming, sometimes pitching every day. When Bill Veeck, then president of the Cleveland Indians, signed Satchel in the heat of the 1948 pennant race, the pitcher was at least 43 years old. Many insisted 50 would be nearer his correct age. Baseball men said it was a shame he had got his chance in the big time too late. They said Veeck, a super-showman, had signed Paige simply as a gate attraction — that he was too old to make it in the Mg time. WON SIX t Satch made a real contribution, winning six games and losing only once as the Indiana went on to win the American League pennant. He, too, was a showman but he also was a pitcher and a good one. Paige remained with Cleveland another year, was out of the qaajoro in 1950 and returned to play throe more yean when Veeck moved on to take over the Inept St Louis Browns. Satchel won 20 and lost 31 in the majors, including his three-year ■tint with the'cellar dwelling Brownies. Then it was back to the minors and barnstorming. “Old Satch has a lot of stuff left and we wffl be interested in signing him for 1966,’’ said Finley, who completed the deal Friday via telephone from Chicago to Satchel’s Kansas (Sty borne. Finley also announced that a Saturday afternoon game on Sept. .25 against Boston had reset aa a “Salute to Satchel Paige’’ night game. Dora- Satchel think he can help the club win? "Yes,” the still slender righthander replied. “I got my fast ball and my hesitation pitch. It’s legal. My arm and legs are in food shape hut I get a If winded once in a while. I need throe or four days to really sharpened up.”-NOT KIDDING But Paige acknowledged he was the most surprised man in town to find himself in the big leagues again. “I thought they/were kidding when they said Mr. Finley wanted me to play for him,’ said, Satchel. General Manager Bank Peters said Paige would join the Athletics in Minnesota Tuesday. Ha wouldn’t say how much Satchel would pitch before his big night Sept. 25. Drysdale, who hit seven homers in 1958 and shares the record with the Dodgers’ Don Newcombe, also closed in on 20-victory season by gaining h 19th triumph. That -leaves him only three victories behind Koufax. But then he’s seven homers ahead. ANOTHER RECORD Meanwhile, San Frandsco’i Willie Mays became the first player in NL history to score 100 runs for 12 consecutive seasons When he came home in the sixth inning of the league-leading Giants’ 5-2 victory over the Chicago Cubs. Mays scored run No. 100 pinch-hit grand slam homer by Willie McCovey that snapped a f 1 tie and protected the Giants’ one-half game lead over, the second-place Dodgers. ★ ★ ★ Cincinnati dropped into third place, 1% back, after a 7-0 ' to Pittsburgh and fourth-place Milwaukee remained 214 behind by downing the New York Mets 3-1. Philadelphia edged St. Louis 5-4 in 12 innings. Drysdale, who has hit 27 homers during his career, was tagged for fourth inning homers by Walt Bond and Jim Wynn that wiped out toe lead he had provided. But he was available again with a key hit in the fifth when the Dodgers broke the 2-2 tie. ★ ★ ★ John Roseboro started the fifth inning rally with a single, raced around to third on a single by Drysdale and scored on the play when Wynn, in center field, fumbled the ball. Drysdale lasted one mare inning, then gave way to Ron Perranoski, who finished up. • Rookie Don Young gave the Cubs a 1-0 lead inthefifthln-ning with a homer, his first ma-jor league hit. But the Giants struck back in the sixth after loading the bases against Dick Ellsworth on a single by Hto Fuentes and walks to Jesus Alou and Mays, file last intentionally! CLINCHING BLOW Tito Abernathy replaced Ellsworth, yielded a run on Jim Hart’s infield single and then was tagged for the clincher by McCovey. The homer was Mc-Covey’s 34th. Ellswroth, 13-14, took the loss, with Ron Herbel, 10-7, getting credit for the victory- Bob Veale, the Pirates’ ace left-hander, brought his record to 16-10 by scattering nine Cincinnati hits while Pittsburgh made the most of Joey Jay’s wildness. ♦ ★ ★ The Pirates rode three walks to a first inning run, then put file game out of reach in the sixth inning with a four-run Injured Motor City Hydro Racer Home DETROIT (AP) — Wild Bill Cantrell returned by plane to Detroit Friday but not behind the wheef of a fast car or powerboat. The 57-year-old veteran race driver was transferred from a Madison, Ind., hospital to Detroit’s Henry Ford Hospital to undergo treatment for Injuries suffered in an unlimited hydroplane rude Sunday. Ha wsa thrown from Mis. Smirnoff in the Governor’s Cup race and suffered three broken ribs and • partial paralysis of hie left aide. It wee only Cantrell’s second plane ride. He flew from Seattle to Detroit in INS following • case of seme burns he suf-ferod when Such Chat IV Mew up fat the Gold Cup race. uprising capped by Willie Star-gen’s three-run homer. That was all for Jay, 0-7. Felipe Alou got the job done for the Braves with a two-run homer in the seventh Inning that snapped a 1-1 tie and made the Mets’ Jack Fisher the first 20-game loser in the majors this season. ★ ★ ★ Three Milwaukee pitchers — Wade Biasingame, Billy O’Dell and Phil Niekro — held the Mets to me hit. That was Jim Hickman’s two-out homer off Biasingame in the fourth Inning. The Phillies won it in the 12th after Pat Corrales stroked two-out double. John Herrnstein •went in as a pinch runner, proceeded to third on a wild pitch by Hal Woodeshick and scored, after a walk to Tony Taylor, on Cookie Rojas’ single up the middle. Cager Harding Fined 12,0(10 Center Gets Orders to 'Shape Up' 11 White hit a homer for the Cards and Dick Stuart connected tor toe Phillies. ACCOUNTANT— CONTROL DATA CORPORATION A loading manufacturer of computer and peripheral equipment, is now interviewing college graduates with five years plus experience in general accounting with strong emphasis on cost analysis. Will bo responsible—for—preparation—of financial statement and establishing of standard cost systems and budgetry procedure. Cell or write . . . STAN ELLIS HOLLEY COMPUTER CO. 3329S Hoover Rd.—Warren, Mith. Phono 7953119 Canadian in many Example! NOOTH 'Bump' Elliott Watching QB's/ in Last Test / ANN ARBOR (AP)/- Today was a day of dedsfon at Mich-' igan Stadium. The Wolverines take the gtadhina turf for the last football scrimmage before •next Saturday’s opener with North CaroUna. Coach Bump Elliott Friday had not decided which quarterback wffl start with the first offence team. Wally Gabler, senior from Royal Oak, and sophomore Dick Vidner of GTeensburg, Pa., are battling for the spot. ’Vidner still holds a slight d,” Elliott said. Wings to Fete Lindsay DETROIT (AP) - The Detroit Red Wings will honor veteran Ted Lindsay at Olympia Oct. 12 when the Wings make their first National Hockey League home appearance against the Montreal Canadiens. DETROIT (AP) - Seven -foot center Reggie Harding was bombed with an “irrevocable/7 $2,000 fine and an ultimatum to shape up or ship out by /toe Detroit Pistons Friday. The/flne, highest in history of professional basketball, followed7 Harding’s recent public misbehavior. * ★. 7 The Pistons and National Basketball Assodatic/ Commissioner J. Walter Kennedy accepted an apology later from a contrite Harding. / The fine/followed a meeting among Dnroit Pistons owner Fred Zollner, General Manager Don Wattrick and player-coach Dave/peBusschere. • * * * apologize for my recent luct,” said toe 23-year-old larding. “In the future I intend to conduct myself as a good citizen on and off the court.” OUT OF PAY Wattrick said toe fine would come out of Harding’s 1965-66 salary, believed to be about $15,000. He called the fine “to revocable.” Any further misconduct'will bring automatic suspension, Wattrick raid. ★ ★ ★ Harding was convicted Wednesday in Detroit Recorder’s (police) Court on a charge of assaulting a police officer. The incident, last Aug. 6, developed when Harding protested a parking ticket. His sentence was suspended. Harding joined the Pistods in January of 1963 after the (earn received permission from the then Commissioner Maurice Po-doloff to sign him. Harding had had several minor brushes with the law. Harding was a star high school player In betroit. ' * ★ ★ Considered a starter by De-Busschere, Harding baa averaged 11 points and 11 rebounds a game in his brief NBA career. ways. SKY ITASTES *6“ BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER’S WINNER 0F M-50 MOTORCYCLE LARRY MASSEY 1571 ROTSEL, PONTIAC Go lito Business for Yourself Haro's a real opportunity for on ambitious man in the Pontiac area, Baldwin at 1-75. •You Buy Inventory Only (Minimum Invast man! Approximately $3,000) YOU HAVK COMPUTE CONTROL OF YOUR INVESTMENT *No lxpariance Necessary You uttond three weeks training program. Wo pay you while you -loam before taking over the station.) For Further Information Call or Write: MR. E. D. ELLIS SHELL OIL CO. Coll Collect 644-5744 18601 W. 8 Milo, Detroit. Mich. 545-5636 Amtrioa’s Largest Selling Camping Trailer Price* Start As Law Aa Take a peek^j | Come In and See the I Beautiful New “66” | GLASTRON BOATS I Thera's still time for you tool | have your now Glastron Boat g on the lake this year! Pontiao’s Only Moroury-NoroOniiEor Doalqrt Cruise-Out, Inc. •S E. Walton Open Daily I to • 711-4482 TWENTY Aquanauts Set to Emerge After 'Voyage' in Sealab THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY; SEPTEMBER 11, 1065 CASEY NOETK (D) 11 «JLJl*78 TJ» e 851 *986 WEST ■AST AQ«a A 54 ! ¥84 I ♦ AQ 10 eJ84 3 PQ J 107 3 *AK542. ; SOUTH ♦ A62 W AKQ10652 ♦ K7« A Nooe East and West vulnerable North East Smrth West Pan Pass 1V Pam IP Pass 4? Pass Paaa Pan Opening lead—A Q. By JACOBY & SON The best players don’t get the best results with every hand. Sometimes they make the best mistakes. No one is immune to that. Other times they stop at a low contract and a fortunate break of the cards wards overbidden who have gone higher and sometimes the best play does not gather in the maximum number of tricks. h * ★ V Thus in the recent Brooklyn tournament most declarers arrived at four hearts although at a few tables South played at one heart only. The better players made five odd because they all played the hand so ns to guarantee their contracts. T h i s safety play consisted of raffing the tint club; cashing one high heart and entering dummy with a second heart. Then the jack of spades was led and allowed to ride. West would win with his queen and either take hit ace of diamonds right away or wait until later. That made no difference. Those players who overlooked the safety play managed to six. They ran off several rounds of trumps^ and then successfully against West’s queen of spades. So as to forestall argument with many readers we refuse to comment on whether or not the South hand is worth a forcing two bid opening. Personally we have an open mind on that subject and have no criticism of either a one bid or two bid opening with this particular hand. 1¥ 7 You, South, hold: AAhimJIMS 4K2+S5 What do you do now? A—Tom. Maybe your opponent! will set into trouble later. TODAY’S QUESTION You peas. West pomes and your partner doublet. East passes. What do you do now? LA JOLLA, Calif. (AP) -Nine aquanauts made final preparations today for what might qualify as one of history’s longest trips over a short distance. The nine men are participants in the Navy’s Sealab 2 underwater living project. They are scheduled to surface Sunday after spending two weeks 205 feet beneath the surface of the Pacific Ocean. —*—-♦ ■ ★—— But their rise to fresh air will make a snail’s pace look like a rocket in comparison. Doctors say a swift rise to the surface would probably be fatal. So the aquanauts will enter a special personnel transfer capsule that will take them to the "surface where they will enter a decompression chamber on the mother ship’s deck. fa-" ★ * From the time they enter the capsule until they emerge into fresh air at sea level, doctors say 36 hours will have elapsed. Watching the whole process • from his vantage point 205 feet below — will be astronaut-aquanaut M. Scott Carpenter. Car- penter, a Navy commander, will stay down another 15 days for a total pf 30 days beneath the sur- face. .______ ;' - —J Carpenter will be joined Sunday by another group of nine divers, including a hospital corpsman who will make physiological studies of the divers, including blood tests to determine the amount of helium in their bloodstreams. Friday the personnel transfer capsule was brought to the surface so divers could clean < school of anchovies that had latched onto the steel chamber several days ago. Flying Club to Take Mackinqc Island Trip Twenty-five persons are scheduled to depart from Pontiac Municipal Airport tomorrow morning in seven planes for a one-day outing to Mackinac Island sponsored by the Flying Chib. The trip will take just under two hours each way, with the return scheduled before sundown. BERRY’S WORLD By SYDNEY OMARR "m wtos mm «5!!b to t ‘ariuT'ImSt.,»l » ABrTw): You can bansflt through Natamanto. •— at Other,. Goto huuHbi. Roto attend lecture,. Important to taka mental notos. Bo vital, alert. Opportunity I* knocking I ___ TAURUS (tor- M to May SO): Ba aware at **flnar point,. Maane afr-aerve. Read between the llna tomptotjocTto WkTXtt art,'."'Thorough Tgemini (May 'll ta June *): Pari feature, mental stimulation. Idea, abou Cheoaa the boat. Obtain hint from TA BUS maeaago Member at oppoalte u._ can pfWMa Implretlon. KEEP MINO CANCER (Jana B to July B): Jtong with family member, prove, I---- Clear away drtaMe. Emotloni due tar airing. Frank tocuaatoi Loved one, require apacW atN LEO (July » to Aug. »): In farm el vMta and vWtmg likely. Later, aettle down. SuHIdant real Important. Stick doae to home beee. Taka note,! Make' plant. _ _ VIRGO lAug. a lo Sept. B): Problem LIBRA (Sept. a to Oct. J»: Natural you taSraah *tatemanti. Head your own beat annual. Be creative, original. °'saGITTArIu|'’(Nov^’a'to Dec. 11): VMta tram friend, are likely. You may need mom regem anl. Tendency la to brood ovor lade t( "action" Bo pattanti WCAp{!cORN (Dae. B to Jan. j»>: Be aware of community reeponelbume*. Many tend to look to you a* anampto. 3SS- sss-rrsa, ,:r. nSusa.'sKrTt». — reive program in P- e- o potential Tear d TRAVEL. *|P SUNDA* ,»WYOlR BIRTHDAY . . . you are an Innovator, highly cir~ tive ... you mpond warmly to prali encouragement. Greater freedom thought due. GENERAL, TENDENCIES: J anamination. Welcome variety o Ktvertlsln ialng. C in hint f AQUARIUS mwsaga. IP MONDA^ IS*YOUR BIRTHDAY OENERAL TENDENCIES: Cycle hi tor SCORPIO, SAGITTARIUS. Spec ward to GEMINI: rallow wprlwra ft da. Pay compll-d Feet urea carp.) “I know there’s no water around here for miles—I suffer from hay fever!” BOARDING HOUSE -______________: Cyxle hiflp tor LIBRA? SCORPIO, SAOITTARNJS. SpadPI word to TAURUS: Ba aapaclally caurtaaua to ana who portorm teak In your behalf. Per Mendey ARIES (Mar. Zl to Apr. 1*)| Financial trenoaetton, likely. Yau can gain a greeter Mating at wcurlty. Be aware of minor point,, detail,. Check thor-oughly. Friend who la knpadiant may create annoyence. TAURUS (Apr. JO to May M): Keep pace with eowcletei, current condition,. Important to bo aware of NEW DEVELOPMENTS. Pay ipodol hood to ceil,, meaaagev written material. CONCENTRATE! _ : , ,, GEMINI (May Jl to June JO: Cultivate thorn who help you to help your-■el!. Moon, be aware at practical approach', mothodk Time to pay hood to health raoulromontt. Pact youraalf. Kay la MODERATION. CANCER (Jma n to July B)^ Camant what you require. Strata an change, creativity. ShSpup due where awTuund-Ing. ere concerned CHOOSE ADVENTURE. Be caafldanti LEO (July B to Aug. B): Gather needed Information . . . apply » to currant prolect. Plant aaada for futurt. Be aware Of puMkJty, feeling, of other, Bultd on talld foundation. Bd euro of you atari. LEO mntoge contain, valu-abia hint. Odnaroua friend may antar picture. Outline daalraa. protect. THBN ACTl LIBRA (Sapt. B to Oct. B): Excellent flaw tor ptagraaa. Valid bargain, even-agfa M yau are aftrt. perceptive. Take Initiative. Lead rathat than tallow. Straw Indwindwiri, grlplnallty. SCORPIO (Oct. » to Nov. «): I"; tuition (pas ball of accuracy. Heed Inner Mies. Adhsrs to Mghatd princi-ptos. Cycto td». lidormaNan ean^b* » Dec. S1)t AM warn aptpnaa isurca la poaalWa. Mafk udttdn Bmawor* of rvlea, limit, ttona. No tuna to ba unarfhadeu. Gam cmftomoa of Baw who am leader*. Volume for the week totaled 26,130,630 shares compared with 27,984,081 last week which.was full, five-day trading week. Labor Day cut the past trading week to four days. ~ ~wt of the big gains were made in such stocks as Fair-child Camera, up 5%; KLM Airlines, up 3%; Eastern Air Lines, up 214; Magnavox, up %%, and Raytheon, up 1%. • * * * The five most active issues this week on the New York Stock Exchange were: Pan American Sulphur, up 1% at 19c on 445,700 shares; Sperry Rand, up % at 14; American Telephone, up 144 at 6844; Commonwealth CHI, up % at 1244; and Radio Corp., up 1% at 3944. year ago. However, the average cost was estimated at $22.70, compared with $23.69 a week earlier and $17.43 a year ago. Slaughter steers and heifers sold steady to 50 cents a hundredweight higher at the major livestock terminals. Chicago was thet exception with prices steady to 50 cents lower. Receipts at the 12 terminal markets in the holiday shortened week were 185,200 compared witjti 201,800 the previous week and 179,200 a year ago. * m ★ Compared with the previous week, spring slaughter lambs were mostly 75 cents a hundred- • weight higher and shorn slaughter ewes fully steady. Dems Delay Tax Decision LANSING UP*—Majority Democrats decided Friday to wait until next Tuesday to decide whether the politically explosive issue of tax: reform should be taken up in the legislature’s fall session. Meanwhile, separate House and Senate Democratic cau-agreed on several items All Grain Futures Decline, Ending 2-Week Trend CHICAGO Ml — All grain andi.. - . soybean futures contracts de. they want the session to consid-clined on the Board of Trade er'1L*ade»'8 said they didn’t ex-this week, ending a two-week »*** the sewion to be prolonged, upward, trend. _ „ , , .. .. ., The touble between India and I ‘^fmancing of the Macldnac Pakistan was the biggest roar- ?"d«e and ‘ow1?r n« ket influence, causing a sharp J>»s was on the list decided upon break in wheat futures Wednes- & ‘he House caucus but not on d | the Senate list. . ’ * * * Consideration of any topic at Local traders were fearful the 4 le«isi^ive se8si,on startin« that the fighting could result in a ^‘.Tuesday requires agree- Today’s Britain has about 38 million women and girls, which exceeds b ymore than 1.5 million the number of men and hoys in. that nation.-- cutoff of United States aid to both countries. India is the biggest buyer of U.S. wheat,, and Pakistan also relies heavily on surplus U.S. wheat. Thetfe fears were alleviated somewhat when the House approved the foreign aid bill without imposing any restrictions. WHEAT LOWER At the end of the week, wheat was 144-1% cents a bushel lower than a week earlier, September $1.5444-44; corn was 144-244 lower, September $1.2244-44; oats 44 IS 44 lower, September 6744 cents; rye 244 to 244 lower, September $1.16 and soybeims 1 to ment by a majority of the members of each house. ★ * * Senate majority leader Raymond Dzendzel, D-Detroit, said tax reform wasn’t taken up in Friday’s two-hour caucus because it "could lead to hours of discussion.” Motorized Problem BERKELEY, Calif. HI - In pointing out to the Oty Council why it needs more officers, the Berkeley police departmanC cited such new problems as the . - recentjhefU of two motorized 7 TWENTY-TWO TIIR PONTIAC pfflSSSfc SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1965 David Livingstone, a Protestant missionary, was foal by Henry llarten Stanley, whose real name was James Howland, oe Nov. 1«, 1S71, in Ujtfc Tanganyika. PRECISION MECHANICAL INSPECTOR— CONTROL DATA CORPORATION i required with • education or Trade School and three to five years experience in precision mechanical 'inspection. Must have knowledge of layout methods and techniques. Liberal fringe benefits and pleasant working conditions. Call or write ... STAN ELLIS HOLLEY COMPUTER CO. Police Wonder Why Man Hurt Norwood Carr Jr. of Ml South Blvd. was found lying tmconscioiis on Prospect near Jessie early today by Pontiac Police said the man had bruises on his head and was bleeding. There was no sign that a scuffle occured, or that Carr had been hit by an auto. At the time he was found, Carr had no identification on his person and it was not until he regained consciousness at about 8 a.m. this morning at. Pontiac General Hospital that his identy was known. Officers were planning to question Carr in an attempt to find out what had happened to him. Hospital officials said he was in satisfactory condition. MAGIC Sapemitnral power* are not gbass to kaauta being*. Hint may appear u magic to the retail of question*, doubt, wonder. Oar a ace* tor* wondered about comet*, eclip*# and hurricane* them they were lupcrnataral manifeatation*. Wo Two little girb play bouse. They are dreseet____________ their another** clothes* sit at a Uay table with tiny J.L.VOORHEES ------’-------and magic comes alive. Their i—baa created a world of their own. (hero will be magic on this earth. A* Ion* ■> adults trickery. Someday when enough q naked, enough doubt generated this phenomi---- will toll lalo the category of the A B C of oar ooounoa knowledge. Every scientific achievement, including the Wonder Dings, came a* a result of doubt, years of hard work, magic was far removed from their calc alatioas. It’e fun to wafeh a triekatar on a stage bat it b foolish to become emotionally VOORHEES-SIPLE FUNERAL HOME 268 North Perry Street Phone FE 2-8378 Sparks-Griffin FUNERAL HOME “Thoughtful Service** tf Williams SL Phone FE 8 928* Deaths in Pontiac, Neighboring Areas JAMES COLLIE Word has been received of the death, of former Pontiac resident James Collls in Lor gas, Greece. Service and burial were in Greece. Mr. ColUs, a retired employe of Grand Trunk Western Railroad, died Aug. 14. He was a member of St. George Greek Orthodox Church. Surviving is his wife, Anne. DAVID W. CUTCHER . Service foT David W. Cutch-er, 63, of 44 Seneca will be 11 a. m. Monday at Voorbees-Siple Chapel, with a graveside service at 1:90 p.m. at East Her IP Township Cemetery, Capac. A Moose Memorial service will be held at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. Mr. Cutcher died yesterday after a prolonged illness. He was a retired employe of the Pontiac Motor Division and a member of Loyal Order of Moose No. 182. .. He is survived by five sons, Larry E. and David M. of Pontiac, Bruce W. of Auburn Heights, John W. of Flint and Palmer L. of Galesburg, 111., and two daughters,. Mrs. Lillian Cease and Mrs. Carolyn J. Cuthrell, both Of Pontiac. Also surviving are a brother, a sister, 32 grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. WALLACE G. MEADE Service for former resident Wallace G; Meade, 76, of James-ville, Ohio, will be 1 p.m. Monday at the Huntoon Funeral Home, with burial in Oxford Cemetery. He died Thursday. Surviving are his mother, Mrs. Guy Meade of Royal Oak, sons Morgan and Jack and a daughter, Mrs. Nick Rodi, all of Ohio, and brothers and sisters Warren of Keego Harbor, Ivan of Royal Oak, Eulon of Detroit, Mrs. Swan Hammett of Detroit and Mrs'. Doretha Hawkins, of Farmington. # WILLIE SMITH Service for Willie smith, 81, of 575 Highland will be 2 p.m. Tuesday at the Macedonia Baptist Church, with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery by the William F. Davis Funeral Home. He died yesterday. Mr. Smith was employed at General Rotors Carp. Truck & Coach. Division and was a member of Miracle Deliverance Church of God in Christ. Surviving besides his wife, Susie, are children Frederick, Herbert, Lester, Mrs. Erma R. Thomas, Mrs. Phyllis J. Hayes and Mrs. Zenola M. Seay, all of Pontiac, Williandes of Inkster and Floyd of Detroit. Also surviving are brothers Kenneth and Toby and sisters Mrs. Josephine Quince and Mrs. Annie Mae Armstrong, all of Pontiac, and Mrs. Beathetta Sheppeard of Quitman, Ga.' CLIFFORD E. STEFFEY Clifford E. Steffey, 69, of 2860 Woodbine, Waterford Township, died this morning. His body is at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Mr. Steffey, a retired chief accountant of the Oakland County Road Commission, was a member of American Legion, Cook Nelson Post, and Knights Templar. Surviving are his wife, Arlene; two daughters, Mrs. Charlotte Hamilton of Manhattan Beach, Calif., and Mrs. Elizabeth Smith of Washington; four grandchildren; and a brother. MRS. JOHN ALT OAKLAND TOWNSHIP— Service for Mrs. John Alt, 80, of 1800 Buhl will be 2 p. m. Tuesday at Pixley Memorial Chanel with interment at Mount Avon Cemetery, r Mrs. Alt died this morning after a long illness.- . She is survived by a son, Raymond F. Alt of Lake Orion, and two brothers. MRS. GARFIELD E. DAHL HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP -Service for Mrs. Garfield E. Earn A % % CURRENT RATES by mail (Shirley Am) Dahl, 26, of 4031 HHlcrest Will be U a m. Tuesday at the Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Milford. She died yesterday. ■. ; V* Survtriqg are her Husband, her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Alton of Green Lake, and children James, Michael, Terri Lynn and Gordon, all at home. Also 'surviving are a brother Jay, U.S. Navy and a sister, Mrs. Charles Irwin of Waterford Township. PORTER S. FRANCIS WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Service for Porter S. Francis, 75, of 8710 Orchard Lake will be 1:30 p. m. Monday at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home, with burial at Ridgelawn Cemetery at Oxford. Mr. Francis died yesterday after a lengthy illness. He was retired after owning and operating a lumber company hearing his name since 1922. He was a member of Kirk in the Hills Church. Surviving are his wife, Cora L.; a son, Webster S. Francis of West Bloomfield Township, and one granddaughter. Also surviving is a sister, Mrs. Leah Lee of Pontiac. MATTHEW GEELHOOD UNION LAKE — Service for Matthew Geelbold, 86, a summer resident, will be 2:30 p.m. Monday at the Harvey A. Neely Funeral Home, Detroit, with burial in Roseland Park Cemetery. Mr. GeelhoId died yesterday. He was a retired photoengraver. Surviving are sons and daughters, Mrs. Virginia King, Leslie Geelhood, Erving Geelhood, Donald Geelhood and Mrs. J. C. Corley, all of Detroit. Also surviving are a brother, 13 grandchildren and four greatgrandchildren. ARTHUR B. KOCH WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP -Service for Arthur B. Koch, 77, of 1250 Union Lake will be 2 p.m. Monday at the Elton Black Funeral Home, with burial in Oakland Hills Memorial Cemetery, Novi. He died yesterday. Mr. Koch was a retired farmer. Surviving are Ms wife, Elizabeth, sons Roy of Detroit and Lester of Brown City, a daughter, Mrs. LeRoy Robison of Union Lake, two staters, two grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren. JAMESP. LYMAN METAMORA — Service for James P. Lyman, 79, of 2445 Hunters Creek will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Baird-Newton Funeral Home in Lapeer, with burial in Hunters Creek Cemetery. Mr. Lyman died yesterday. He was a retired tool and die man, and a member of the Deerfield Church of Christ. Surviving are two sons, John of Pontiac and Maynard Grand-staff of Fayette, Ohio, and four daughters, Mrs. Arthur Clark of with Capitol Savings and Loan Association Now Capitol Savings & Loan Association offers you a more convsnisnt way to toko advantage of our HIGHER RATE OF RETURN on savings—4%%, which is compounded quarterly. We have never missed paying a dividend —since 1890 we have paid 151 consecutive semi-annual dividends! You might also want to inquire about our loans on homes. CAPITOL | SEND IN FOR FREE SAVE4Y-MAII ENVELOPES NOW! SAVINGS & LOAN . Yes, 1 would like to receive a FREE Save-by-Mail envelope in order ■ to take advantage of your 4Vi% return on my savings. Pleas# send to: ■ ASSOCIATlbN 1 1 • NAME *. 1 Member Federal Home Loan Bank System 1 ^ ’ , 75 W, HURON ST., PONTIAC TILIPHONE 338-7127 1 ADDRESS 1 27211 SOUTHFIELD RD„ LATHRUP VILLAGE TKLSPHONi EL 6-7770 j CITY. t Lapeer, Mrs. Donald Joyce of Jackson and Mrs. Harvey Parker and Mrs. Virginia Krause, both of Ponttao Alio surviving are 12 grandchildren and 42 great-grandchildren. MARK LEE MASSINGILL BRANDON T OWNS HI P-Service for Mark Lee Massin-gill, 17 days, wUl be 10 a.m. Monday at Pixley Memorial Chapel, with burial at White Chapel Cemetery. He died this morning. He is survived by hta parents, Mr. and Mrs. Vem Massingill of 47 Granger, and grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Paul Massingill of Oxford and Mr. and Mrs. Bertis Barnes of Farwell, Mifch. WALTER MARKLINE COMMERCE TOWNSHIP -Walter Markline, 62, of 5928 Pickbourne died yesterday. His body is at the Elton Blaick Funeral Home. SHELDON E. THORNTON HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP—Service for Sheldon E. Thornton, 79, of 905 W. Livingston will be ' p.m. Monday at the Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Milford, with burial in Highland Cemetery. He died yesterday. A farmer, Mr. Thornton was a member of the Highland Methodist Church, the Highland Farm Bureau, and the Highland Men’s Club. Surviving are hta wife, Elsie; sens Wilbur of Highland Township and Aden E. of Pontiac; six grandchildren; four great-grandchildren; a brother; and a stater. Increase Probe by Grand Jury The grand jury investigation of alleged crime and corruption in Royal Oak Township has been stepped up with the. appointment of two more assistant prosecutors to work on the case. Circuit Judge. Philip’ Pratt made the announcement yesterday. He ta hearing testimony as a one-man grand jury. Assigned to the investigation by Prosecutor 8. Jerome Bronson on a part-time baoia were Thomas Plunkett and Patrick Oliver. “When the grand jury convened three months ago,” said Pratt, “I had an understanding with Bronson that when- it was needed he would provide additional manpower.” * ★ ★ Assistant Prosecutor James Roberts, a resident of the township, has devoted full time to the investigation since it got underway nearly three months ago. Details of the proceedings were not made public under state law. ASK SIGNIFICANCE Asked if the two new appointments indicated anything, Pratt said, “It signiflea that I will be putting more time in then T have in the peat.” Testimony hae beea taken from 19 or mere persons to date, eecordtaf to Pratt. Ha would not comment on whether be intends to issue any indictments. - Bronson petitioned for the ' jury on complaints made ICi Cycle Mishap Injures Man • Robert Haack, 23, of 2070 Harrow <3rele, Birmingham, to listed hi serious condition today at SL Joseph Hospital from injuries le&ived in a car-motorcycle ac» cident. ★ ★ * Bloomfield Township police said Haack was injured on Woodward just south of Square Lake Road last night when his motorcycle collided with a car driven by Mrs. Charles L. Riggins, 41, of 465 Nebraska. ★ ★ ’ Police said Mrs. Riggins was crossing Woodward. ORDINANCE NO. *44-14 Adopted September 1. IMS Effect tv* September 17, IMS AN ORDINANCS TO AMINO THE BUILDING ZONK MAN OF ORDINANCB NO. *44, KNOWN AS -THE BUILDING ZONE ORDINANCE" The City of Pontiac Ordain*: 1: I forth b* ctaaaNlad Fart a* Lot | ----------------.... tt". City of Pontiac Oakland County, Michigan, daacrlbad a* beginning at a point In aald Lot I which I* located N. S7* V* SI" I. along aauMwrly Him of aald Lot 1, a dWanca a* S7SJ4 Mat and N. S4- ST SO" W. 45.04 Mat from Ih* SW comer of moat southerly corner of aald lot A tinned N. 34-5T 20" W. parallel to Waatarly lln* of aald Lot X a distance Of 312.00 toati thence S4* 34* 40” E. S41.10 fact to waatarly right-of-way fane* - of Grand Trank Railway, thence an a curve to the right along aald westerly right-of-way tone* (r»dlu*=14,2M40 feet tong chord Daara S. so- 10- 20" E. 372.14 toot) a distance at 372.14 toot, thane* S. IT- 2** 40" West parallel to southerly lln* a* aald LoT 3 and 45 fact distant therefrom a distance of *1*47 teat to the point of baginning, containing 4,774 scree. n Liber 44, Pag* 11. Oakland County ________ No. **" part . .—.h KM at (action 4, TJN, City a* Pontiac Oakland portion ______ ______I ___________ Pontiac Development Company, a Michigan Corporation to Detroit, Grand Haven A Milwaukee Railway Company, a Michigan Corporation by daad Salad March 1, 1*2*, recorded July 24, 1*2*, In Llbar 454. Pag* 175, Dead*, Oak- Sectlon It Th* Chang* In Ih* Building Zona Map i the abova area to Raaldantlal 3 1* of th* City Plan Cemmlaalon and aald Commission It haraby appointed to make a final report upon this amendment to tMa Commlar'" img— (Bn hearing to I ment Is ado sat passepe \ a given In adaflon In ih newspaper of general c city; that ouch public nwrin* by fixed at September 7, INI. Section 4: This ordinance shell take effect Ian (10) day* tram and attar th* date at Hi passage by th* CHy Commission el th* CHy of Pontiac. Made and patsad by th# CHy Commission of tha City at Pontiac, Ms TT* day of Saptambar, A.D. IMS. WILLIAM H. TAYLOR, Jr. OLOA BARKELEY°r CHy Clark ■*r It — BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP NOTICE OP PUBLIC HEARINO Notice la haraby gtoin, that a public hearing will hahatoby th* Ptownlng Commission of the TOWMtlp of Otopm-ftald, Oakland County, Michigan, on Man-day, October 4. IMS, at ltfig'«to*k p.m., at Ih* Township Hall, 420# Telegraph Road, In aald tewnsnlp for tha purpoa* of considering th* fallowing changes to Ordinance No. 47 being thg Zoning Ordinance: To raiane from R,t, On* family Residential District to R-M, Multiple Family Rteidaotisl District, me following daacrlbad grmartyi Lot 4, except mat part in Big Beaver Road, and Lot 12 ft Sugar-visor's Plat No. (. faction 25, Btoom-flaM Township, located East at Woodward Avanua, between Big Beaver and Manor Read* Th* text at aald propeaid amandi ompenylng maps le Inspection at attic* Of tha Townehlg Clark during rsgo- 'irr«5 Hearing wRI ba hald by th* PlamMg Cammtaaton of tha Township at Bloomfield, Oakland Caanty, Michigan, an Man-day, OctaBir 4, IMA at 4:00 o'clock ML. tt Township HalL /lif Tito. East at Woodward Avtou* Th* text at aald pnopotgd t... r change and iccamganymd m nullable for mMIc Inspection _ ____ of th* TamwMp C lark durina Dial 332-8181 Pontiac Press Wont Ads FOR PAST ACTION Norai'TO ADVERTISERS ADS RBCIIVRD'BY S PM. WILL BR PUBLISHED THE FOLLOWINO DAY. All drrer* should be reported 1---- B “ War Death Notices CAMPBELL, SEPTEMBER *, IMA CHKSTER W„ 8474 Uptonj Dflyai •ga O; BdtoWd hwaatid c4 Amy Campbell; dear tether of Mrs. Dannl* OViaill, and C. Donald and Michael G. Campbell; dear brother at William E. Campbell; also survived by 11 grandchildren. —Lg —----------------K b* httd Man- ia (My Saputchra c Campbell will Ik t 41; dear father at Mrs. Liman Ctas*. Mrs. Carolyn J. Cuthrell, Palmar L,. John w„ true* W„ Larry I. and David Cutcher; dear brother at Chart** Cutcher and Mrs. Laura Bufka; also survived by 8 grandchildren and tot* great-grandchildren. Moose mamenal asrvlca will b* haw Sunday, Saptambar 1A at S p.m. at tha Vaarhaa* Slpt* Funeral Ham*. Punaral service will R*y. Rabort Gamer _____________ Graves Ida sank* at IlSO pm. at th* East Berlin Township Cemetery. Capac, Mich. Mr. Cutcher will lla In Nate at th* Vac rhea* beloved wife of Gartleld I. Dahl; belovad daughter at Mr. and Mr*. Gordon Alton; dear mother of Jam**, Michael, Tarrl Lynn and Gordon Dahl; dear alitor at Jay gw Chart** / lr*HRI deer gr*f at Walter f RIchardson-BIrd Fixiardf noma, MHtord, p6wLl*,"'ifPTiMBiR I, 1*45, HENRY D., 223 S. Anderson Street; eg* 47; beloved husband of Alton Payne, Paarlln* Burrast, Fowler. Punaral sarvlca will b* haw Monday, Sapt, 13 at 2 pm. at th* Church Of Christ, 11M N. Parry, wNh IMar V Intarmant In Oak P. Devi* Punaral obblh6o6. tikTEMBdk h, \hI. MATHEW, wjs totiiliuii, DaRoH, tarmarty at Union Lake; aga Ml kaigvad husband at Rum M. Gaol-hood; dear father of Mrs. Virginia .King, (Mr*. J. C. Cettey, Latila, Erving and Donald Geelhood; dear brother of Abraham Oaalhood; ■lie survlvgd by IS grandchild ran and tour great-grandchlktran. Funeral service will b* hald. Monday, Saptambar 1A at S:30 pm. at th* Harvey A, Naoloy Funeral Horn*, 14540 Mayers Read, Detroit. Inter. ment In Rowland Park Cemetery. THUR B„ 1250 Union Lake Road, WhH* Lake Township; aga 77; bo-lovad husband at llliabam Koch; daar father of Mr*. Lefty Robl- brother of Mr*. Illubath Malnk* {jjjjjjy j! survived by two. grandchildren and —gt-granwdldrin. Funeral win b* hold Monday, s*p-, at 2 am. N tha IHgn iwrai Hama, 128 Union id. with R*v. Everett a Me mo r I LVMlNrilWIhtaRR 'H, m JAMES Pu S445 Hunter* Crsak RMd, Met amor*; age 7»; d*er saA'tts1'anS Mr*. Arthur Clark, ABA .Iiiraay Parker and Mr*. Vlrflito Kraus*; Nee aurvtvad by II graadcMMran and 12 great grandahUdran. Funeral lervlce will b* hold Sunday, UpwmBar 12, a» 2 pm. at ma ■alrd • Newton - Punaral Hama, Lapeer, with Rav. Eugene Tharp* Nficistlng. interment In Hunters Craak Cam story. mia6e, SiA7*Milk~»r"l« Wallace DVY, Zaiwavllla, onto; ag# 74; bawvad son of Mrs, Guy Mtitda; dear father at Marian and Jack Maada jM MW, Nick I Marian* Joan) Radii war brother of Lagan, Warran, Ivan and Kuton Mead*, Mrs. Swan Hammafl and Mrs. Thar*id Hawkins; alia ear-~7tnRowdrm 'and Wldran. Funeral Nd Monday, Sap- Ok jXm nSb* Death Notices PRICK, SKFTEMj.tR » IMA CATHERINE, 148 Edgeorga, We-tortord; sat 4»» Mewed Wto at Joto) C. Prleet JWovad drnjMw , sss.'rflsr^s KTSLA.'ArS.VS Hansen. Punaral sarvlca «NI be hald Sunday, l«gi*miar IA at i:J0 - pm. at th* Danaiaanjahna Funeral Horn*. Mwi0M Mendsy. September 1A at 1 pm. N th* Hart Camatary, Hart Price wWI Ito bi NaS* C Hi* SMITH, SEPTEMBER 1A IMS, WILLIE, STS Highland; SBI 4»; belovad husband N Annt* smith; belovad son at Mrs. Sotch Smith; . daar MMr of WUlaM**, Frederick C, Floyd Cl Harbert L„ and Lastor M. Smith, Irma R. Thomas, Phyllis J. Hay** and Zanoia M. Seay; daar brother at Kannath C. and Toby Stidth, Jsaaphlna Quince, Annie Ma* ArmNrong and Raathafta Sheppeard. Punaral service will be hold Tuesday, Saptambar 14, at 2 am. at th* Maoa-donla Baptist Church WWf Kidjir A. M. Millar officiating. |NMMg< In Oak Hill .CSMilMA Mr. Imlfh win 'la to Nat* at th* William F. > Punaral Ham* attar 3:30 MARION MARIE, 418 Carroll Lake Road; ag* 8; belovad wit* of Earl Splant daar mafhar at Jacquelyn, Chary), Patricia, Jana, tambar IA at li am. d th* RHen Black Punaral Hama, 128 Union Lake Road, Union Late with Rav. Bob Stewart officiating. In- SHELDON E., MS ... mKKHt RoM, Highland Township; aga 79; balovM husband of EM* H. Thornton; daar father at Wilbur H. and Aden E. Thornton; daar brother of Herbert Thornton and Mrs. i survived graat-grandchlldran. Punaral sar-vica will bY t*M Monday, Saptambar 13, at 1 pm. N Ida Rich- id neighbors lor dnass during my ih of my husband. tog word* at Rav. Barscho and Donalagn-Jotins Funarat Hem* tor thalr kind halptolnass. Mrs. Myrtle Womack. tHE SMJTit #AMILY WISHES TO thank thalr many friends ter thalr sympathy and klndnass during thg death of thalr father, Mr. Edward LOVING MEMORY OF MRS. IN LOVING MEMORY OP MARIAN C. Martin, jriw passM away S Hl^wnlllng0 wayarM pleasant face, Ara a pleesur* to recall; Ha hM a kindly ward tor aach. And dted beiovod by all; Serna day, w* haps to maN him. » part again. ptwaM pyi P I..J Virginia, PHI —... -i Wat, Cartel Randy and Roxaand, Robyn and Ray, IN LOVINO MEMORY OF AAARlE Giroux, wtto patted away one year ago, Sapt. l«h.______________ "AVON CALLING"—FOR SERVICE In your homt, PE 4-480S. GET OUT OF DEBT ON A PLAN Pontiac's oldest and torgaN budget assistance company._______________ LOSE WEIGHT SAFELY WITH Dax-A-Dtot Tablet*. Only N cant. at Sbnm* Brea. Drum.________________ BOX REPLIES At 16 a.m. today there were replies at The Press Office ia the following boxes: 18, 26, 48, 49, il, H, 72, 98. DRAYTON PLAINS 47 C. J OOOHARDT FUNERAL H KteBO Harbor, Fh. tW-OMO UNfON LAKE OTto Huntoon . PUNERAL HOME »oimsrCTHrui D. E. Pursley Voorhees-Siple PERRY MOUNT PARK, SPLOT WHITE CHAMIl, 4-ORAVS CBmT-tary let*. LI 44774. WHifl ■■ eMAHC MMITI»V, 4 lot* rmVPK 444W. _______ 2 ADULTS, SHARE EXPENSES TO South Texts. Return ON, IS. OR IS* % T- THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1965 h^%w^my5lf!r*Lly»ll JPCIovarlawn, Pontiac, Mich. PLEASE DAUGHTER iMAkVuM IMBfC TOUMD^ PAWN CHIHUAHUA/ CAUL :®3E1HSES£ asjRjr Ifii gi«'Bii.8raik"»^“ ‘ssyssraaFEgs . Ulllt luS WaiOrli MtK«»W|- Una reward. MO Wnh- LOST: BLACK. MINI-LQNO TAILED Eg* M-nS vleln"» * p#rrv m^Dmt Lake in Ctarkston. 42$ LOTT: IB EAGLES, SOUTH iLvft.-Wj. Blvd. area. Rewsrd. PI THE 1M4 CIVIL RIGHTS LAW PROHISITS. WITH CIRTAIN EXCEPTIONS, DISCRIMINATION BECAUSE OP SIX. SINCE : SOME OCCUPATIONS ARE CONSIDERED MORI ATTRACTIVE TO PERSONS Of ONI SEX THAN THE j other, aVvkrtisjC MINTS ARE PLACID UNDIR TNI MALE OR J PEMALI COLUMNS FOR 1 CONVENIENCE OF READ- | IRS. SUCH LISTINGS ARE NOT. INTENDED TO |£ CLUDE PERSONS OP EITHER SEX. I MEN FOR CONSTRUCTION HELP Day's Sanitary Sarvlca, 2580 Dixla “**“ Pontiac,. i MRVICI STATION ATTENDANTS IWp Wants* Mats Pontiac Salat, Kaaao Hartar. BUM* AND MINT MAN NEEDED to warn onr now and utad cars. Mu/*- “ ~ ‘' H & Howel!* Sta?TRo»pi?al.y£!ary7an $4,364 la $5,095 annually, taa, n I nor ovar 40. All Mlch- SawSnl lea Commission Oft leas, Lansing, Mkhlgarij^totlX “* “--- CHECKER DRAFTSMEN CLEAN UP, BARTENDERS, BUS boys, dishwashers. Apply MM Knob Ski resort. 777 Pino Knob Rd. Clarkston. blLIVfeRV SOY, llOft OVER, ■ pail or full timt. Bloomfield flour-met Ship, ltol W. Long Lake Rd. mp m si_ Apply In parson, 847 S. Hunter, *— ‘II 44*14. 4 MEN 19 to 36 itrikaa. Stesdy year ™ PMi ..J layoffs, tm per "°on Mwvtoy, 5 Men—Part-Time • Designers Detailers Par press room equipment. Overtime, etc. SAHLIN ENG. CO. 78> W. Maple, Troy ____________.... 2170 East Walton Boulevard, Pontiac. blSHW ASHER AND GENERAL klkiisn halp. day). Apply Ricky's Pizza House, Sit Woodward, Pontiac. ■ ________ DISHWASHERS 1ST. -’*•* MA _____ HOWARD JOHNSON'S Telegraph at Maple Rds. M over 21" have a nnnri Birmingham be able to work 3 hours DRIVEWAY SALESMAN, EXPERI-CaH SSI4424 between S j •nc*d ,»•_*!* l|0Mmechonlci. ► 15 BOYS our mailing room DRIVER Plek-up and dstlvery. Zmackus bar 16, from IS non i.. 4:30 p.m. Must be 1* to IS years or aas. Please apaw in parson, Monday or Tuesday, ' ~ BERT PALKNER THE PONTIAC PRESS Circulation Depertment $6,000 Job Opportunity Assistant Shot Manager a'men* who c2n*pro^hseles "ex* perlence unnecaoeary In shoos but soma typo of sailing raqulrod. This lob offers excellent growth poton-«al Saa Mr. Maakar, Shoe Dept., Yankee Store. 7WN7Perry. DRAFTSMEN FOR TOOL rmlngham. ■ SOL ANO N Co., 400 w. Maple Rd« Troy. EXPERIENCED ROOFERS ONLY. EXPERIENCED SEMI-TRUCK driver tor work In scrap yard. 3359147__ EXPERIENCED PAINTERS/ IN-side and outside work. 3639660 or ALL SALESMEN ATTENTION! too? We have an opening in our sales force tor ONE man, aps 2S to 45 to S-E-l-l the fabulous Ford. Mustang and ThunderMrd. , SEE PRANK SCHUCK AT ' JOHN McAULIFFE EXPERIENCED CABINETMAKER, 671-1 Iff. expErTencId sErvTcI sta-tlon attendant. Sylvan Cantor Shell, ENEROETIC MAN To SELL ELEC-trtc appliances and water softeners. Plenty ef floer time and toads. Experienced preferred, Aji 25 and over. Must have own car. Apply only If you are Intoroatod In werk-CM PI in1------------------ — tor a personal Interview. equipment kmm Manager. boys' school gymnasium. Cran-brook. 644-1600. $1.30. 2:SG6:00, EVENING DISHWASHER PERMANENT POSITION MEALS—VACATION—INSURANCE CAR NECESSARY APPLY TM PERSON HOWARD JOHNSON'S Woodward at is Mlto.Rd. , OR i-flff FORD _________ 610 Oakland Ava. , Pontiac EXPtRIRNCID MEN'S COLTHINO salesmen tor part “—- any Sat._ work. A .Bhjgg „ . e—I— —’£■ EXPERIENCED AUTO MECHANICS guorantood steady — BMP •S' Attention PONTIAC AREA •ANBL TRUCK DRIVRR TO PICI UP AND DELIVER ORDER. FROM OUR REGULAR CUSTOM- can handle. Apply Superior Ram-Mar, 550 Oakland Avg., Pi M42I. EXPERIENCED MAN FOR lAO%-pedent food store, no ovmlngs or Sundays. Call Mr. Cotoman, Exptriancsd-Auto Biller One of the. host paying position sirdfim BRS, PANEL TRUC ‘■'*”“0 WHICH YOU Kkcr mi . PREFER At NEAT AF-. NO MARRIED MAN, NO AGE LIMIT. SEE MR. DWYER *? *“"**' ‘"TTEi.,120 L TEL-rriAC. TUESDAY, l to talk to rt Spjf- AT SAVOY MOT I fORAPH, PONTI... SEPT, 14, 44 P,M, HIGH SCHOOL AND COLI students — saverol openings weal company will m ava soon tor high school end c .... Dodge 155 Oakland JNPW Hat EL, 120 $. TEL- EXPERIENCED MECHANIC WANT-ad to work tor Mobil Oil Co. Train. - Ing station, 2nd shift. Good starling salary plus bonus. Call lob Ctobi st Ml 6-7727 for appointment. EXPERIENCED wTiWOW CLEAN- fOLLEGE ........., ...» ..... ..... .wSns Irso starting at 11:20 p.m. Must M is mTsg. ---------------------- ff,VTbe'Vontl afternoon — 6 S reply to Box XtttUuS"-" WEW''l|HtwAL director wanted by the Village of RgSMtor, wni reaumo of qualifications, txpor tones and rsfsrsncss to, Vlllog------fc a ir ATTENTION! Progressive new company, needs qualiflsd machine operators, ID-OD grinders, turrsttlsthos • mill ___0B4QM. Nil Auburn Rd. FRAME AND WHEEL ALIGNMENT men, tog wooes, bsnoflts, tots of work. EM SfibB. FULLTIME PORTER WANTED FOR ONE OF BIRM-. INGHAM'S FINEST JjlfOMEN'S APPAREL STORES. NONY COMPANY BENE PITS AND GOOD STARTING SALARY TO APPLICANTS OF EXPERIENCE. PHONf MR. CARSRLL AT Ml 7-1000 FOR PERSONAL INTERVIEW,_____ •ULL TImB RBAL iSTATI SALti man. Phorw tor aapl. OR 4-2M2. Ray O'Nall Realtor 3520 Pontiac Ld. Rd. or 4-aff work. Pontiac Bushing l! KtaB Co., 5320 Highland Rd. 674-IMI. Attention Auto Salesmon M average 11,000 par m SPARTAN DODGE ui.1 mechanically Claw rawrahcarTuYFor parf-iimo'. . OuH, Tatograph at Maple, 6aI‘mtlON A+tfSBanT, MOOT be oxpartoncod In minor rapalrs. Local rafarancas, full or part time. —| afiiL contd' Houf^ton A&ToMbf IVi MAN t6 TRAiH #dN "sesreViiriBg MANOY MAN FOR GEN I outside work on construction of eoH course. Apply SOP R. Drnhnar, Mtiman Lake Orton and Oxford, jSwwivr------------ AlWH OVER tO FOR RECEIVING and (tors maintenance. Must bo gbsd driver. Secure position tor right parson. Oamww Town and Country, Tel-Huron Cantor, Pontiac. MAN PART-TIME F 6 R LAWN work, 644-1670 between 6:M and 0 Man to wash cars and pump gas in service station. Must be experienced, with local refs. Shell, Woodward & Long Lake Rd., Bloomfield Hills. MAN willing ir6 learn 6k ex-perlencod at lanltor and window cleaning sarvlca. Good wages for a steady, MACHINE OPERATORS loncod an all machlnae, steady iloymant. Hawk Tael and En-toniMLP- Manager trainee — restau- — ------—■---------- ~r Will M SI, caw. Burger Perry. Chef Orive-ln, 511 MEAT CUTtER FOR SERVICE moot market, mutt bo oxpationcad, good salary, atoady. 11537 Michigan, Dearborn. LU 1461* ask for Mr. Carroll. Maintenance Electricians Hydro Manufacturing Co. 10701 ----1, Oofiaif. FO 6401* mechanic, Days, full time, Apply at, Eton Shall Service. 14 Mile and Eton, Birmingham. MAN FOR ORCHARD AND <5EN-iral farm work. Must bo 11 years >ld end have transp. MA 6-20S0. ASONS FOR MODERNliAtlON Men to work in service sta-tion, expejienced only. Local refs. $1.75 hourly to start. Shell, Woodward and Long Lake Rd., Bloomfield Hills. I REPAIR OF AIR- MUSIC STORE SALES OPPORTI 1 of music hoL... try. Apply Orln-K MOTSl CLfeRk, YEAR AROUND lob, experience nc to Pontiac Press, eox eo. MARRIED? OVER 30? Good work record but no chance for StSDO up? ' ilHelp Wnntad FormU out hem fumto"— SALESMAN _ anl lppjrlunity. 2 years • Of MlN bockorourid b mm pgjwiC Wmtnm ^.r jusoLiaLira COUNTER WOMAN. ' STRONG HEALTHY MAN AS COM-Mnation porter-lanltor and gtnr ' laborer tor mtg. plant locatod Lake Orion, tHiady |ob for if men: 6934211. Mr. Brand. Salesmen SEWING MACHINE-VACUUM FURNITURE TV-STEREO APPLIANCES ' MEN'S CLOTH I NO PLUMBINO-HEATINO Montgomery t Ward PONTIAC MALL ou may arrai IntaraaHnn wl mant oftfee by calling S4149M or visit our ameloyment office at S4 E. Huron. Pontloc. MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE CO. An dhuai opportunity omptoyor l DAYS' > NIGHT. W7*' *24' **■" yrJ " '*<>■ 1-3»-DENTAL ASSISTANT, MUST BE Mot and pprtonoblo. Pontloc area. Box No, 41, Pontloc Press._ DENTAL ASSISTANT-RECEPTION- Pust live In E. Pontiac, ^WMNt Rochester ore*. Write Stating ogo, quellflcatlons and phone no. to Pontloc Frost Box 91. DENTAL RECfePTIONIST, OVER if, iT^'iWnicgK with resume to Pontloc Press Box DBNTAL SECRETARY-RECEPTION-iit, mature person with buslneos experience, write work experience, ago, marital status, refs., salary requirements to Pontloc Press TRAINEE T GRILL MAN. 1G-SS. ~spt, willing, apply In para— !Das Bret. Big Boy Drl9t I os. Tatograph and 1490 Ob TREE TRIMMERS, EXPERIENCED — young man willing ** , S2 pgr hr., *| - tm w. Mopis. TREE TRIMMERS, EXPERIENCED M par hr., young man wll"— ** loom trade, S2 per hr.. Tire Changers unHormo furnished, Insur-nd retirement plan. Apply on 9-5 pm. dolly Plrattono ____J46 W. Huron, Pontloc Mich. TV TECHNICIAN. EXPERIENCED, top salary tor right-men, 5VS days. “ ““*■ ,"'--,-ig paid holidays y Condon's Ra- EXPERIENCED WOMAN FOR cleaning, 2 days a week, own transportation. 62641S2. iXPERIENCED GROCERY CASH-tor for super ms rkst, Saturday and Sunday, St.65 per hour, must have CajVto arrange Interview call Ml Press, Bax No. 102. WOOL PRESSRR, PULL OR PART-♦*™. Collins Cleaners, 650 Wood-Nward St» Rochester, QL *7711. WANTED: ..REAL ESTATE SALtS- WANTED: STOCK D6V. Id-VIUk--rapjutr;PuM time. Steady L top ahatto cMl. Barnett's i, ISO N. Saginaw.___ WAliTiD GAS ATTENbANT AMD asr washer. Raails a Standard Servlet, 1071 Jotlyn. MAN FOR FULL-TIME general machine shop and sssem-bly work. Good future for ambl-ftout Individual. Ml 4422A ext. 3, YOUNG MAN,~AOE Is TO Ji IHJ US* dri!U“AC2Si VJT'Vi wrjwQi vsswx ttoc. Frtnga benefits, advancement. YoTnTmN FOR PARypr gLJg J EXPERIENCED OIRL FOR TELE-Phone solicitation to work In our IllKLBS* mmmlttlon and YOUNG MAN, IS OR OVER, OUT of school, -far' Pizza trainee, 41 hour week, night dim. Apply In peraon, 64 pm.. The Cracker Barrel Drive-In, SHI union Lake Rd. ** of Commence Rd.) YOUNG MEN FOR RESTAURANT toem a good buslneos. Biff's, Ti graph sfMapla OS Mila). lalp Woota# F 1-GIRL OFFICE, Ity?' accurate with' flgurti ' tgi open, sstory open. Avollablllty per-tonnsl. Coll tor appointment, 54S- AMBITIOUS GIRL SAVING collage, to live with doctor') __ lly in BlrmitiEliam area. Private pptto Kth, TWgf hay r— . Nice doctor's family seeks a nice lady for ganoral r work. 4to days-3 nlgmt. Own i Good yogas. ^ gh^Yjyo chli AMBITIOUS YOUNG GIRL TO AS- miNf “ --—1 light •JOIViMMiim, weekends off. solos and h Rochester, APPLICATIONS ARE BEING TAK-“ full time employment In ' ‘ounteln. S. S. Kresget, Michigan. Auto New Car Biller High pay-fringe i McAullfto Ford, 6 P E 54103. s'Ford, 6S0 Oakland Aye. BABY SITTRR, NO HOUSEWORK, ir ever, 4 pre-school children, m Lake and Cooley Lk. Rds. lar la have own transportation Xl:raB4&6"KWMrV BABY SITTER 4 DAYS, AUBURI Haights area, UL *2165 atlsr 5. BABYSITTIR, 5 DAYS, FRANKLIN BABY SITTER, bWft TIWNSPORfA lion, 5-doy weak, ironing.'W70Q6. BABYSITTRR, I DAY! A WBlK, own trsniportatton. OR 14163. Baby sitter NEBbCb, morning i3Jb.fK#6.2«rpo0 ■ TKUTiqiiJI' j^LL TiMI BILLING CLERK FOR OFFICE. Apply bPtWPOli 10 and A Pontloc Laundrvand Dry Ctoonort, 540 S. . BOOKKEEPER dASHilk, P b h ’ WltWT LInBiNG SEdtiTARIAL P5^ Boy,.Rost eursnt, riEXu inspection H#lp WorM Fwwto ttMSr ■* ird Lotus Rd., CAMPUS TO CAREER^ DOMESTIC, 1 OR 2 OAVS A Wk DRUG STORE NEEDS WOMAN tor drugs and tobacco dept. Gallagher Drugs, 7544 Highland Rd., Pontloc. Earn $40-1120 Week RECRUIT AND TRAIN SALESWOMEN OR VVORK BY TELEPHONE, FLEXIBLE HOURS, CAR NEC., CALL BEFORE 12 NOON. *”1. Experienced Housekeeper Bloomfield Hlht home, private room, bath, T.V., Set., sun. c" J. adult, no chlldron, live SALES LADIES Full or part time. Apply Arden Draperies, Pontiac Mall. rEAMTRESS. EXPERIENCED, full time. Apply Berg Cleaners, 6700 Dixie Hwy., Clarktion. SECRETARY FOR 1-GIRL OFFICE. | Salary. Apply In person at 4678 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains. SALESLADY 40-hour week, paid vacation end company Benefits. Kresget, <620, Telegraph, Birmingham._ SELL TUPPERWARE Help with Christmas business. Com-1 missions. $45475 per week. Pert time. Free training. No Investment necessary. For Interview, phone1 852-4300 or write Tupperwere at j 3129 Auburn Rd., Auburn Heights, Michigan.'* H I AT WASHER OR PACKAGER 1 for quality shirt laundry. Experienced or will train. Douglas Clean-ers. 514 S. Woodward, Birmingham. SHEET MUSIC SALES GIRL. KNOW- mmts preferred. Hours 12 to 9. Apply Grlnnoll't. Pontloc Moll. STENOGRAPHER, EXPERIENCED. EXPERIENCED SEAMSTRESS •fieri time. Apply Mr. I -j 540 S. Telegraph. BxFERIENCBd STENOS AND TYP- WAITRESS, EXPERIENCED ... food and bar. 5 nights. SI .25 per hour. Excellent working conditions. Duffy's Cooley Lake Inn, 343-9459, Experienced-Auto Biller WAITRESS, FULL TIME EVENING work. Romo's, S171 Dixie — Drsyton Plaint. Apply avenlry WAITRESSES, GENERAL KITCHEN If Chief, FE 2-4851. GENERAL HOUSEWORK, GOOD with children. Weekends off. trances. Csll after 5, 514-4318. GIRL FQR TELEPHONE SURVEY work in our office. SI per hr., plus commission. Port or full time work —Apply In porton 9 a.m. - 11 am. 443 s** Heating and CoolHig Co., GIRLS 1M0F6R WAITRESS WORK, nights, part lima. Apply In person otter 6, Dolls Inn, 3481 Elizabeth HOSTESS Do you onlay mooting tho pub Tods of tho Pontloc Mkll hot Imr—---- attractive woman ti dining room hosts: working hours, no ’: Insurance benefits, p Excellent vacations, ... m parson. Ws PONTIAC MALL _____ HOUSEKEEPER, IMMACULATE, E--------- — FE 8-4280. HOUSEKEEPER AND COMPANION for elderly lady, live In. FE 2-9002. HOUSEKEEPER TO LIVE IN OP stay through dinner hour, must bi KITCHEN HELP OL 24751___________ LADY FOR \ DIVERSIFIED GEN- LADY FOR BABY SITTING. IDEAL ----— good w6gtt. Must Baga portotlon. 5 dpys. WAITRESSES NEED AP-i, axpartones not necessary, li train. CaU attar 6 p.m. BEL MEDICAL bpkltif ASSISTAtn. e: ■ par law cad preferred. I Irm Ingham area. Cell alter * P.~ *“ In 6 darn • weak, ktuRE WOMAN TO DO^EI^ _ tWwaiaf iraa. 6464QS er 6S14377, NUWSBt AIDES -. SOME BXPERI- n,15-* -• _ja a. **u° OFFICE CLERK WIRTFIRESTONE Tiro and Rubber Company, lu“ Jim* and good benefits, call fror IDIweS*- s®*pSE?*a5^S tary. Rafail buelneM. Ml 4-3044. "PlrtAl Mark Twain KhoeT. nt-iaoi. IQ^AIrport Rd. c , OVER 25 FOR ft $ INTERVIEWERS, ■ XP E R IENCE batora S. Mary Sudlt, 271-1410. experience. Short hours’. Money -*o oblect. Apply Pontloc Prats LABORATORY TECHNOLOGIST IMy WHM M.erF.1 TMl^logists,__Hematology MALE OR FEMALE Management Trainees Immodleto openings with a rapidly NAME TAKERS TO HELP GATHER Intocmoflon tor now Birmingham City Of rectory. Na axaairliaca necessary. WEI call on Business' and residence. No sotting. Approximately 9 weeks. Apply In parson, 117 South woodward. Ream SS7, Sir. NEEDED. MAINTENANCE MAN Part-Time Opening TWENTY -THREE IdllrElHEEE -IdbEtli , It ACT NOW TO GET THAT JOB I DIESEL TRUCK. ORIVERS Train an oil now dtotef IrocSort DIESEL ENGINE AMCHANICS Fuel Infection-Engine Overhaul J CRANES Drtgllne-Beck Hoe Operate Specialized Equtomenf "Wor Id's LargM Tredl School'' GREER TE^CPinjIffiiiEil Werh WreM Mtlt A-1 CARPENTER, WANTS WORK of ell kinds. OR 4-1074, BRICK AND BLOCk W04k, FRED, IB4996 SALESLADIES bettor ready-to-weor ern wear, full time or port-Bloomfield Fashion Shop. ------- hard-line and soft-line merchandisers, fousewaro and Hardware, drugs and cosmetics, toys and sporting goods, man's and boys' wear, todies' ready-to-wear, children's wear, domestics end warehouse. Ul male applicants must have com-■ their military commitments. a Dept., Ysnkse Store, LIGHT HAULING, H, _ k I and town work. PE 4-7346. :, bl6ck, ektcK, Apply ot SPARTAN DEPT. STORE 2045 Dixie Hwy. Pontiac, We have openings In stores through-1 out Michigan and Ohio.__________ MAN OR WOMAN WITH LATI! ------ — Interested Jn delivering WOOL PRESSER Apply Liberty Cleaner). Ask tor i Mr. Mltcttali. Ml 4-0222. I CL £ AN IN WATKINS DEALERS NEEOEO. j Coll Mr. Leggett, FE 1-1#“ * 1 -------- SeIbs Help, MEh-FttEEh B A I EXPERIENCED CLOTHING SALES- — liisSlir man. Excellent chanct for ad- IRONING vancamant. Apply to Mrs. M. Goar-1 Public Welfare Worker OUTSTANDING OPPORTUNITIES Immediate Vacancies in Oakland County Area benefits. Including sn outstanding state contributory Insurance program, excellent retirement plan, Reader's Digest Sales & p Services, Inc. Stereo-Music IRONINGS WANTED In 1 PRACTICAL NURSE AVAILABLE LFonttoTstiii ____________turn._____________ > Mr manna*. - WEEKLY FAMILY IRONINGS. ONE iy service. FE 2-4996. ________ * ciemens, Down-1 ® men ere assigned ' weekly plus have ELECTRIC MOTOR SERVICE-RE-sstory, paid Vocations, company In- pairing and rewinding. 21S E. Pike, surance end the greatest opportunity Phono FE 4-H8I._________ _____ ______lo world! Dressmaking & Tailoring 17 lew cell Mr. Cremen of 834-9405 DRESSMAKING. TAILORING AND i Detroit; 9-12 ony_dey, or Mr.] alterations. Mrs. Bodsli FE 4-9051 s^omiftontlaT' ' i S® AND ALTERATldh’S POSSESS A Bl GREE FROM 4..... COLLEGE.- Call 318-4701 for I ACCREDITED . McDonnell at 482-4920 li ‘1C Offlcol SALESMAN f speelslty.or Intanplbli background 8150 « .: Landscaping 1B-A ,! FALL SPECIAL ON BLACK DIRT WAITRESSES COUNTER GIRLS at wt train. Apply In parson call MA 6-1800. HOWARD JOHNSON'S Telegraph at Maple Rdt. Birmingham WAITRESS FOR SMALL RESTAU- WAITRESSES CAR HOPS WAITRESSES, CLEAN UP HELP, 7AKX WAITRESS, EXPERIENCED, GOOD araph, at Dixla. WAITRESS WANTED. FULL-TIME amptoymant. Good pay, tipi and Insurance benefits. Apply In person only, Frank's Restaurant, Keego Harbor. WAITRESSES Days, also evenings. Dining room or cocktail room. Steady, also part-time. Morey's Golf ond Country Club, 2280 Uokm Lake Rd. off Commerce ltd. ________ WAITRESS, NEAT, STEADY JOB. or Holidays - need I part-time. Encore -----...------— split shift. Apply In person. Town A Country Inn, 1727 South Telegraph. WILL GIVE i(66m AND' b6aro month In exchange k. Expectant mother 7-1545 or EL 69711. WOMAN FOR KITCHEN. APPLY — — Drive In, 2490 Dlxto OOH2-5 p.m. WOMAN OR GIRL TO CARE FOR ^mamUagal|^. wages. FE on drlvowoys and ' asphalt HR coating. OR 3-1957 or FE *7171. WALT SEIBER AiPHALT-PAVING — *7543 or FE 5-8481 DTS AT BEAUTIFUL WALTERS Lake tor block loying or carpentry, 482-2300 SYLVAN 625-1886 Building Modernization 2-CAR OARAGES: 22'x20', SS7S. CE- ---1 work. No money down. We rough In houses, i Fro# esti-is. Sprlngfltld Building Co., 5-2128. C*b 2-CAR GARAGE, 8899 ADDITIONS Also Alum, windows, doors, skiing. GRAVES CONTRACTING Free Estimates_______OR 4-1511 OARAGES. lt'XlO', $875. WE WOMAN AOE 25 TO 50 TO LIVE In, general housework, core of 1 child, references, UL 2-2611. WOMAN FOR KITCHEN HELP. CARPENTER WORK, GENERAL i exper IY 2-619: r rrlanced barmaid-1193. Villa Inn, Lake WOMAN TO STAY DAYS WITH II YOUNG LADY, 19-30 FOR PER-manent non-routine office work. Must bo good typist and possess ability to moot public. 5 day work week. Rapid advancement for right girl. Phono FE 2-9249, 9 a.m. to S p.m. or apply In parson, 10 N. Saginaw Street._____ YOUNG LADY WANTED WlfH feX-parlance on cesh regie*— Mto -si office. Apply 7940 _Rd.,_ ) Cooley L Help Wanted M- or F, 8 HIMSELF WILL TEACH YOU ■Citato/ 6739701 ■ ATTENTION COLLEOE AND Hl6H * ' ‘ nts: Summer employ-laklng appltoaflon*. all Departments. Part- time ■ i, Biles Bros. Big “ ‘ rsph ana jaw BARTBNDIR $7 300 BOWL, U#1. Cass Lake Rd., 662-6300.__ BLOOMFIELD HILLS SCHOOLS —w hiring cafeteria workers, coll 1-4253. bLooddonors URGENTLY NEEDED S7.00, 510.00 - .*12.00 DETROIT BLOOD tfRVICi ’ontloc FE 69947 16 S. Cm sn. thru Prl„ 9 s.m.-4 p.m. Wtd. I p.m.-7 p.m. DRIVERS WANTED, FE HISS or FB 29141 EXPERIENCED SALfS ClIIKI ’ manager lor office supply - .Forbes Printing and Office Jy, 4100 Dixie Hwy. OR H767. PULL TIME MALE OR FMMXCi vlnTng room bus help, send do-tails to Fontiac Prooa Box No. 6. ULL OR FART-TIMI SALES Co. II . n R. L PUU.TIM* iflAl. IlYAtl SALBS-.porloncod prtrarrea — used homes. Top com-^.^.MO.WIdgWh Aluminum Bldg. Hems 1-A ALUMINUM SIDING-STORMS FE $9545. Joe Vallely, OL 1-6623 GUARANTEED ALUMINUM KAISER ALCOA ALUMINUM SID-JNO, ~ GUTTERS, STORM WIN-DOWS - DOORS, CEILINGS, AWNINGS. SUPERIOR. FE 4-1177. Architectural Drawing _ Asphalt Pairing ASPHALT PAVING Tag Asphalt Paving Residential l Commercial DRIVEWAY SPECIALIST, PE S99S0 Free Estlmotos. bRAYTON FENCE CO. 1749531 5932 Dixie Hwy. BaMment Waterproofing Block Laying CARPENTRY OL%2S3 REPAIR WORK CREATE A BEAUTIFUL -FAMILY room with gloss sliding doors on your existing POrOh. Custom kitchens a speciality. FHA farms. FE 4946S. ENCLOSURES, PATIOS, ADD-ONS. BuUdlng ot all kinds. MA 6-2114. Craftsmen. OL 1-3796. Building Servict-Snpplies WILL FINANCI COMPLETE DO-IT-YOURSELF horn#. No money down. Lot and reasonable good credit and know-how required. BIG BEAR CONSTRUCTION CO. PE 3-7833. ______________ CARPENTRY, NEW AND REPAIR FreeesHmatoi.3334981. INTERIOR pInIIh, KITCHENS, —tllng, 40 yoors experience — Eavestroughing experience. 332-6975. Landscaping SOD, PEATMOSS TOP SOIL ill dirt, crushad limestone, srovol, ulldozina. Tall timbars Nursery, MS S. Tatograph .Rd. 3329441, if ------>r MA Q-iatS. A-1 MERION SOD, LAID OR DE-llvsrod. Seeding or redressing old towns. Free estimates. No mangy down. Broece Landscaping. PE 29141 or FE 5-3302. -I COMPLETE LANDSCAPING, sodding, seeding, discing, plowing, grading, back hoe and front ond loading, retaining walls. Broken 4-lnch sidewalk, sold by load. Free estlmotos. FB 49371, Top i TONY'S COMPLETE LANDSCAPE Ing, Merlon blue or Kentucky aod, told or delivered, tap solL pool, till. 633-4710._________ TALBOTT LUMBER Glass Installed In doors and dows. Complete building sot 1025 Oakland Are._____FE i Moving and Storage Painting and Decorating 1 INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR Heating Supplies BROWNIES HARDWARE FLOOR SANDERS - POLISHERS _ WALL PAPER STEAMERS RUG CLEANER - POWER SAWS '** Joslyn Open Sun. -FB 4-41 OS WALLPAPER STEAMER Floor senders, polishers, bond sandors, turnaca vacuum cleaners. Oakland Fuel S, Paint 436 Orchord Lk. Avo. FE HIM Bead Meinttauuce RIJ/ATi ond SUBDIVISION NEW ROOFS, REPAIRS, INSURED ond fluorentotd. Call Tom, 6SS9S61 ROOFING AND SIDINft. ALL WOftk guaranteed, Insured. 20 yrs. experI-onct. FE 5-4691. Saud-GraveHHrt Black dirt, sand and oravel Tiia Trimming Service i-l TREE EXPERTS. TREE WORK ol any kind. 6629619.______ B6»L TREE TRIMMING, REMOVAL Froa estimate. FE $4449, 6749510, EXPERT TREE SERVICE, TRIM- Ray's Tree Service k| tenting ( I r Dutch Tracking Light Trucklf^^gd Hauling LIGHT MOVING, TRASH HAULED LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING, jfiUlt f»* dirt, grading and grev-front-end loading. FE 296W. RUCK HAULING, LAWN, __ Track Rental Trucks to Rent IV-FOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 19fl$ SI iwteBm SOTS VAN SERVICE MOVING ANO STORAGE FREE ESTIMATES tRT TOMPKINS EM 27M8 HAULING ANYTIMi It PECEfttlRg FAINTING DONE A-l PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING THOMPSON FE 4-8364 A LAbY INTERIOR DECORATOR. MparBtt. FI MSP-INTERIOR - EXTERIOR DECORAT. - maintenance of any kind — -------------- PE MOM. quiet. On |Rta. OR 23744. ) ROOMS AND BATM. 6.HIWJ welcome, SSI por woafc with ajUS deposit. Inquire it 273 Baldwin. AjMNtRMRtvjURfarHishw 38 1 3-ROOM APARTMENTS, PRU vale bath, almost downtown. Inquire S3SS Dixie H»fy. Economy d Cars. 6734425. 4 ROOMS PARTIALLY FURNISHED. 39259 Orchard Lake._____ 5 REDECORATED ROOMS OVER- A, patio, * mJm. ' ed, large S BEDROOMS, FAMILY ROOM, .«£} baths, fireplace, basement, MIN and Oequlndro area, frag Realty, 508-4400. 7-ROOM HOME ON 1 ACRE NEAR Pontiac Lake, oil heat. I car ga-. rage, tool shed. SIMM. Call PE 545*1 or FE 2-5127 after S p.m. jlll Hogm ^^R^ PRIVATE, HONfcYMOONERS Sharp 1-faar with lull Ii fenced .yard, ctry water IIS,too. SHEPARD'S 651-8503 M ACRES IN THUMB dear a with 7-room home, pines, e and vacant land. Tractor and Included. Full price 49,500, ter SOUTH OF MAYVILLE, 74-acre farm with 6 rooms, bath, and oil toi- Attached garage, good pole 115,000 full price. Terms. SO ACRES vacant land, only OR 27354- PA RTLY FURNISHED , APART- 47 MURRAY. CLEAN 2-STORY 2- evdcbv DiiuTiMA fiproRATiNG 1 men! for retired couple, nursing J bedroom, basement, excellent con-EXPERT . painting.. QfctuK« lime care avaMab|a Wrlla Pant[ac Press d It ion. Sell or rent with option to 47. __________________ buy. Immediate occupancy. Mixed ’ SYLVAN 425-1104 MR, _______> PAPERING. YOU | — i next. Orvel Gldcumb, 473-0496. painting, papering Tupper. OR 5-7041 Rent Houses, lurRiskedJf* tM”°° FIRST, EM 54222. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION. BLOOM-fieid schools, country MjcMn and family room with fireplace, I becue. Island sink and all built..... Recreation room, fireplace wtth bar and all bullt-lra. Lovely raar view of woods and lake. 4 bedrooms, 3 ss PAINTING AND WALL WASHING ' 2 BEDROOMS, UNTIL reasonable rates. 334-2445.___' “ I -‘~ — 3-room house. a6ulTs only. tin._________________________I 6752421 Transportation 22 DOWN — WATERFORD TWP. land contract JCall 3454703. 3 BATH, UTILITIES, 8:30 and 2. OR 3-2702. CLARKSTON. HOUSE IN COUNTRY. ! Furnished. 3 bedrooms, library. Available Oct.-May. SI35 per month PR 2-9443, eve.____________ j LANE ORION, 3-BEDROOM HOME ______ on lake, available from Sept., till 26 June, Security deposit S150. S40 a __________" week Includes utilities. 7314206. • GS ARE POS- LEASE, LOVELY RANCH, FURN-■oollcles ln Ished. Adults, S250 per month. De-1 SCpteT mutual companfee. ^here | posit. Roche,terjSl-IMl. _ i are excellent dependable companies { TWO-BEDROOM, BASEMENT, GA- who make prompt loss settlements. L rage. Call FE M104.______________| ' | ‘ I FE 4-0284 for a quota- UNION LAKE, 1 BEDROOM. S801 S1.500 down, CooleY Lake fr bedrooms, stone fireplace, garage, f— Insurance r FE ‘ ■ FE_________ Wanted Children to A-l CARE______________ . by day or week. OR 34327. 5 5-8742. WHITE LAKE, 3 BEDROOMS. 1>9 9R baths, decorated, until July 1, 1*44, _______________no garage, S125 per mo. 8874532. LICENSED HOME, | ^^8^*08 nSZ 13 heat. MY 3-1016 after 10 a.m. care, CIom to khooi. Ft **340. l _ . . ... -pa Wanted Hoasahold 6iid."29 We'll auction tt___ B & B Auction 5089 Dixie ’OR 3-2717 WILL BUY ANTIQUES. FURNI- Wanted MiweHaneous DESKS. FILES, OFFICE FURNI-tuna, portable and off let typewriters, adding machines, drafting tables, etc. Forbes, OR 3-4747. We Wanted^ tt Beat 32 l-CAR GARAGE WITH ELECTRIC-Ity, prefer dose to Wlsner Stadium. Call eIter 3 p.m. FE 4-5487. 2 SINGLE WORKING MEN DESIRE APT. PREFERABLY FURNISHED, BIRMINGHAM, RDYAL OAK. HAZEL PARK AREA. EL 4-17S2 AFTER 5:18 PJ*. A N ROOM, PRIVATE . EN-ce, no drlnken. FE 4fflt DORMITORY FOR BUSINESS WOM-‘n beautiful Franklin Blvd. resl-:e (former location of YWCA). COUPLE AND S CHILDREN Urgently need Place to live due to destruction of home by fire. 673- L CLERGYMAN DE- WORKING LADY DESIRES 3-ROOM 2 CHILDREN DE- buy. MA 4-14)6. come. OR 4-1343. Wanttd RBol Estota_____36 1 T O 50 HOMES, LOTS, ACREAGE PARCELS, FARMS, BUSINESS PROPERTIES, AND LAND CONTRACTS Urgently need for Immediate Selel ALL CASH FHA AND Gl EQUITY Mi homes anywhere, even If t Kind In payments. No listing, "4 tape, no delay* f«* i«™»w (■DETROIT 8 BOULEVARD HEIGHTS Applications now being accepted Contact Resident Manager *•• - > nivd. at Valencia $6,850 wil™82-carV garage, nSJ roo aluminum siding, oak floori heat. Wall located In the----- and. 43,500 will handle, no cloalng Oakland Lake Privileges Lovely 3 bed room rancher, tom.., and attached garage, blacktop drive, large lot with fruit tree and berries, nicely land sea pel 43,000 down. No closing costs. CLARENCE -C. RIDGEWAY REALTOR 21 W. Walton 330-401 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE $8950 s Sears and Federal C stores. You'll find I RAM i, 2-story home, full eted living room, sas $16,400 f home on Lake Orion. lady, Clarkston area. 625-1111- SLEEPING ROOM FOR A L E E P I N G ROOM, DRAYTON Plains area. Attar 7 p.m. OR 4-1SP7. LOVELY HOME. WAITING FOR THAT NEW HOME? $9990 Rancher on your lot. Lovely 3 bedrooms, full basement, oak floors, FULLY INSULATED, D*l-M»r finished cabinets. No money down. YOUNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER-BILT RUSSELL YOUNG. 53V5 W. HURON FE 4-1830 BIRMINGHAM, BY OWNER. iOED- ---------h, full finished basement, 2-car garage, walk to 2194 Livernois, S IT MAKES SENSE WES+ BLOOMFIELDI Home, 5-room Brick, tuft ! mint, breezeway. Bear garaa 1.3* acres In area being bulft flrw^ homes. 423,400. MA 4-ton. WEST BLOOMFIELD QUAD-LEVEL, Pina Lake privileges, spacious If rooms, SMS sq. ft. pwi basement. M ME Dl A T E POSSESSION, rooms, basement, neat and am throughout. S7.9S> on land contra 445,008 15-acre exclusive ham_________ terms. Call far Oltwrs. B. F. Wblfe, 1520 Rochaator Rd., Lakeville, <12- carport, fenced yard. 814,300. < MODEL LIQUIDATION SALE Completely alr-condltloned 4-1 room home with family room, .-B basement, and double attached garage. Ideal tor professional, or residential. Located near North Saginaw exit oft Interstate 75, Grand Blanc. Call 313 S4243P. Mixed Neighborhood No down payment First month free ' Payments Ilka rent MODEL OPEN AFTERNOONS 1-5 AND SUNOAY WEST0WN REALTY 545 Bloomfield Near Luther FE 227*3 afternoons. LI 24477 Eves. FIRST IN VALUE MOVE IN. 1175 DOWN. 5104 MONTH. Taka Orchard Lake Rd. to “ meres Rd., taka Commarce ■ _ Commerce Rd.. tom rigid at Gton-gary SL, left to Los A moles Rood. AMERICANA HOMES NOTHING DOWN dosing coats moves you In. Cash tor homes — trade-ins ac WRIGHT REALTY H? fttfrlrwf _____________ FE 2-f141 Evti. •ntf i Fi BELAIRE HOME BUILDERS 545 Bloomfield Near Luther FB 8-2743 1:30 TO S P-M- EVENINGS. LI 27327 TUCKER REALTY FE 4-1345. NEAR OAKLAND AVE. Lovely 3-bedroom home, nice L.._. an. living, fully carpeted Including bath, toll basement, gas priced to sail quick. 3-BEDROOM 2-story home, lust romodi.. kitchen, new gas furnace, n tral High, divorce cate, n~». Immediately FHA or Gl farms. PAUL JONES, Reolty ■ — HURON SOUTH EAST SIDE t8^o!&1m* EAST SIDE i bungalow. rtthlMS dawi Coll MRS. SPEARS FE HN3 NICHOLIE HARGER CO. I*> W. Huron f B341M TOWNSHIP OF OXFORD On 1 acre of land, beautiful ABatf-room brick ranch. Built Hi 19*2. 1JM ag.fi. pha BearjMjraga^toll OFF BALDWIN On West Calgata Wik modem home with gas heat. 51,250 more* MbbL 870 par momth. * J. J. JOLL REALTY ■ fe wtB mi mn Open Sunday 2-5 p.m. 6490 Manson VACANT: Quick poeaesilon an thh. —ityoiy 44wm raa .homa, t bedrooms, sopprato dining room decorated. Lot 100x140. Will com •War your proasnt home In trade. FUU .FiyCE 415,M0 with ^ terms. BIRMINGHAM i ¥km w«Br a |oy to show. lASaOOO. WEIR, MANIttl, SNYDER & RANKE SUoo^ftlNE. ,lfWai!Sffi HANDSOME CUSTOM « level mmh.mIm ______ m Meidew Lake Farms. DMn. room atm sating parch. Lower-lev-eTfamily mam with ouQHhBar. Andersen windows. Fine vhim — ttmdtve WHY WAIT? WO make If to easy to become home owners, 2-Bedroom ranch, city narth side, full basement, dining all oft living room, gleaming pale floors,. comfy oil hoat, sparkling doopr. 410,500-4350 now tsTo* mo. phis tax and Ins. HAQSTRQM REALTOR, 4550 W. HURON, OR 4-0330, EVENINGS 4SM43S. Waterford Hill OPEN • SATURDAY AND SUNDAY M BALMORAL TERRACE -NEW 1965 MODEL 2400 square feet; tour-level heme. rlgM to 4490 Manta Salts lady Mrs. Snyder Repreaonttni Clam Re OPEN 3 MODELS I E-M. DAILY TRt^BVEL-^ANCH—COLONIAL Priced from 413,9*0 plus lot AL PAULY, Raaltor 4514 DIXIE, REAR OR 3-3000 amt. FE 3-7444 FIRiT IN VALUE Cats* RENTING $59 Mo. Excluding taxes and IMurance ONLY $10 Deposit WITH APPLICATION LARGE DINING AREA' OKAY WITH US. For Immediate Action Call FE S-3676 626-9575 OPEN DAlLr AND SAT. AND SUI OR COME TO SM KENNETT NEAR BALDWIN REAL VALUE REALTY OPEN _ BUN. 1 TO I WEST BLOOMFIELD SCHOOLS. _ BEDROOM BRICK RANCH. De-*■“---BuHMne. Family HAYDEN 3 Bedroom Tri-Level NEW 3-BEDROOM ALUMINUM SID-- - — —i Pleasant Lake canal, gat heat, r2.300. 4U- store building. Over 14F paved road frontage. Suitable tor many business purposes. 410,900, terms. HeoI OWka SaacB 47 FOR LEASE - 1,000 SQ. FT. AtR- parklng^Moo ----’ broker 334^5500 f roffi for, Insurai B0TSF0RD REALTY hSh. 011^444^000 • 234-5500 from •creagtr for quick Mlet. MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE EM 3-4848____________GR 64500 CASH 41 HOURS LAND CONTRACTS—HOMES EQUITIES WRIGHT ocapad lot, fenced. Sy EE only. 673-2402. 2004 Oakdale. CEDAR ISLAND LAKE, INCOME, -------- -------4 *■“ CE, SLE _______ _______ HOUSE, . ... ISHED BASEMENT, 1 WELLS, GARAGE WITH FIREPLACE, BY ....— 9444 MANDON RD., UN- ptottor, 2-zona hat water h fanlal elevation, lame »£-■ , rage, comer tot. Only 524400 Silver LakB Const. Co. WE TRADE ___________ 2909 Shawnee Lane SIM Over 1,350 sq. ft. of Living Arm THE ECON-O-TRI “""""at iujooS1 'K'u* Family Room Attached Oarage Will duplicate an your lot MODEL OPEN: 47, Sat. Sun. 2-4 OFFICE OPEN • to J:30 J. C HAYDEN, Realtor OWNER, J ION LAKE CHEROKEE HILLS Owner. 3-bed room, m stories, attached garage, basement, flra- pwca. 417J40. FE M34S-______ CLARKSTON MODEL FARM HOMI Cuatom built 1 br"-- •" hatei attached garage. r, 474-17 id corral. Eulld- DRAYT0N PLAINS 3452 PAULINE DRIVE ' ' vbuiit m loss, m eted family Iced at S1S.N0. J ATTRACTIVE EARLY AMERICAN 1 office building,. IIreplace, I—I I scaping, parking. FE M4f3. KEEGO HARBOR, PRIME LOCA-tlon, 430 monthly rant, call 682-2810, after 6 a.m. | NEW Ara^ONOITIONED OFFICES. 3-0331 Of 243-7476, | Rant Business Property 47-A Elm Street 2 bedroom home, 5000 down a only 555 a month. Brewer Real Estate Mr.vGregory 04 E. Huron =E 4-5151 ‘ ‘" W. H. BASS REALTOR FE S-7210 BUILDER HAVE BUYERS FOR ANY KIND of property for quick sale. Call: Paul Jonas Realty - FE 4-0330 HIGHLAND ESTATES Hava buyer lor 3-bedroom home In this area. 516,000 to 410,500 price ran ga. Mr. William*, OL 1-6740 Or OR 4-2222. Rby O'Neil Realtor 3520 Pontiac Lake Rd. OR 4-2222 or OL 1-4740 NOTICE! If'YOU have acreage parcels^Jor the buyers, call us todayl Clarkston Real Estate 5014 8. Main_________MA 5-582) NEED 200 LISTING*-Saunders 8. Wyatt FE 3-7061 VACANT LOTS WANTED In Pontiac w* pay mar*, immadl-at* closing, REAL VALUE REAL- Apartmenfs, rurnisited 37 2 ROOMS, SIDE ENTRANCE, UTIL- ROOMS AND BATH, PARTLY p|| utHltiet paid, ateor- r atdarty lady preferred. tarred, quiet. See WiitiBteWR. ________________ i IoomL......1/ftUTiBs, PSivAti pnfranqd, mlddieaeed ------- — drinkers. Pj tdTft. on>£ DipotIL' FiS lecetlon on Dixie Hwy. 135-3350. EXECUTIVE HOME 491 Bt.%r r^3 ^BEDROOM UNFRUSHED IDROOM, BASEMENT, CAR-fed ilvina room and 1 bedroom, Irlve, completely fenced, automatic oil heat. 24 C drapys, black too fenced, automr"' c^f ^Elizabeth down. 402-4024 Rop. f 3-BEDROOM-BASEMENT Canal frdnt, new furnace, nk shady lot, 312,000 with terms. 2-BEDROOM HOME Nice shaded lot 100'xl25', 2-car 0 rag*, lak* privileges, good bead 410,600—10 per cent town. FLATTLEY REALTY 120 COMMERCE_____ 343-491 — Cash to contract or mortoagi blocks off Dlxla Hwy. PAUL JONES, Realty 1-febROOM RANCH HOME, ALU-mlnum storms and scraana, carpeting, forced air hast. 3 big lets, call 047-4570. large trees and >ln*«, Paint Croak kotoart back *1 property, privacy and comfort, 439,4*0. Reasonable 331 Lorberta 1024 Holbrook 4351 Hatchery end others, 1 par cent down NORTH POINT REALTY 5904 5. MAjn Clarkston MA 5-2341 ^ MA 5-1M2 HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty EXECUTIVE TASTE ~xgellent stylo and reel ( 2 fireplaces OPEN high tot. II4450. Hor^ on Sasha-Saw to 44M or call E. C. HI ITER, REALTOR. PE 20179. pin! Lake privileges 27S1 PINE HEIGHTS DRIVE 2BEDR00M BRICK, S acres. List with u* today. ALBERT J. RHODES, Broker OPEN SUNDAY 1 to 6 2465 MIDDLE BELT RD. bullt-ln features Including dlsh- 2-FAMILY INCOME Grossing 430* a month — Upj..... apartment consists d 2 bsdrooms, living room, kitchen and toll bath. Downstairs apartmant has 1 bedroom, Ilvina room, kltchon rJ half-bath. Shower to baaamttit Oak floors, (SMtorod walls, oil c_ vgrtoon haw. Full basement, recreation are*. Glasood-to front porch — Large comar lit, WmW *-Homt to excellent condltlaa. PULL PRICE, 11*990. A HOME OF DISTINCTION I* this lovely lakadrpnt brick and in°mf*y1273 4540 Dlxla Hwy.— Van Watt bidg. ROY LAZENBY, Realtor . 193 Dixie Hwy. . OR 4-0301 Multtoto Uotlng Sorvico ■■ •»■■ ARRO: WE bUILD—WE TRADE CK FR< living n snt, oil I DOLL HOUSE. Meat 2-bedroom a mlnum sided bungalow, oi floors and plasterM walls, 1 car garsgs, paved street, clc to school and shopplng. A sti EXCLUSIVE AREA, brick ranch with i “'living r— carpet In ranis' tn* fi-batn, t ceramic baths» All copper Plumbing. Push-matle electrical. Hot" water ell basa-v board heat, plastered walls, loads ot extras. .Call tor appointment' SPACIOUS, LOT PLUS, aluminum ranch, cs. . living robtn. dining room and hatl; Taakwopd paneled wall to living room. famlly room with, brick wall andytlreplace, puIL dawn stairs Ip IwOFJlUjS' attschsd garage, cuyarad petto off dining room. Blacktop slraol • -*15,900, Isrms. \ 673-247T Ted McCullough Sr., Realtor 5143 C*ss-iH»b*th Road > I MULTIPLE LISTING SBRV4C* KAMI OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 P.M. 11S7 ORCHID PONTIAC-WATKINS ESTATES Coll It Charm or Comfort Draptecdt cloead-tn roar perch, twwcar.Mlaritad price reduced. Wl I right on Orcnld, MM _____________________ garage. All brick, TRADE. DIRECTIONS: Pontiac Lake Road IS to proparty. Your hostess Louis* Bredtoy. 19 EAST IROQUOIS CAPE COD west ski* do not cost >25,000. Wo havo this com-wm homo tor a lot to**. Paotortoe * two-car garage, tell basement and1 large lot. Price reduced 414,950 with 41,5(0 down plus ousts. Wo trade. DIRECTIONS: West Huron to Ottawa left to Iroquois, Istt to property. Your host will b* Emery Sutler. 7359 BISCAYNE LAKEWOOD VILUGE SUB. Brendel Lake Front With eighty teat at good sandy beech, tore* bedroom brick rancher featuring a 20-ft. living roam with laogarock flrsplaca, sliding glass door open to a pail* on too lak* aid*. Two bedrooms have bullt-ln torch chest*. AH wood floors, nlcaiy carpatod throughout, alto Includes draper)**, hit water heat, attached twpjar garage. Priced at 034,500 with 02.730 dawn plus costs. DIRECTION*: to .Bogto Lak* Road, toft to Slscayna, MN to haus*. Your hostess will b* Rachel LOVOly, 6871 HATCHERY WILLIAMS LAKE PRIVILEGES Towering Trees surround this charmln. . carpeted 22ft. flytog room with flrepMco. Lovoty kltchon wHhototof space. Lara* utility, attadtod 1V*car garage, gas heat. "•POTLESS CLEAN." AH-fsnesd yard. Pricod at 111,M0. Easy farm*. DtREC-tions: M-59 to Airport road to Hatchary, left to haw*. Your had Will b* Frsd Rosavaar. 2930 ST. JUDE JAYN0 HEIGHTS Lake Privileges on Loon Lako All brick ranchor faduring a largo vatftbul* entrance with ctoaat. Twenty-tool living room with natural tog-burning tirapMca, formal dining room, sliding gigs* door wall to sCr**Md porch. Nip* kltchsn with buHt-ln*. Thro* tovsty bedrooms, two ctntnld tile baths, toad* of cited*, tftachsd *car garage. Priced dl 0SM00. lady terms. DIRECTIONS: Olxto Hlghwsy to tflvor Lak* Read, right an Walton, toft to Shawn**, toft on tt. judo. Follow dgna. Your had*** Lad Karr, 3654 DAVID K.' HOUSE BEAUTIFUL True Voluo This is what you wlH racahw In Ihlg throe roam rancher. Located to an area at tin* homes, some *1 it* tuUUnmg ttateWO art two-car garage, ftnea* yard, tell kasamiM with tiMO fleer, dd_dyi* - country MtchM wflh roam tor aH/pw* mors, Priced at flMOO with 11,900 dawn pite cads or we wlR trad*. DIReCTIONOi williams Lak* Road pad the Wotortord Drivo-ln Tlwator te strait, tern right. Your hod will b* Date Bradley. 2434 GARLAND SYLVAN VILUGE Loads of Extra outstanding feature* tod twe-car attached _________ — Lake, bullt-ln steNy shwadwr, family roam, scroonad roar perch, flrtetote, appointment to saa the root. Make us jn afters 01- mumm SUNDAY 2-5 P.M. overlooking Lake braomar. Vary scenic to*” P*,, nicely landscaped lot dd .Matetop drad. Carpdad Ij fireplace, family room withjteWnJnd_Mrf extras. Why wait to build? This T* n OPEN-1190 FULLER TRI-LEVEL only 5 years oi garagt and doubia-tlzsd lot. OPEN-2769 CHADWICK DONELSON PAEK. Tri-teval —..........- - - _ . bedrooms. 2W baths, beautiful family room wfllt flraptoca and kitchan with all th# bultt-ln*. Wonderful location, close to St. large t i. WIN kitchan dMrS>’i priced a Cdraln Or., toft to Chadwick, OPEN-2060 WATKINS LAKE ROAD CONTEMPORARY LAKI FRONT RANCHER to IlklMiaw eondl and Immadlda possets Ion upon doting. Spacious living room reman brick fireplace, 3 bedrooms, 1 ceramic til* hatha, batar and ovtrtlz* heated 2-car garagt. An outstanding lak* front I convenient, close-in location and valut-packad all th* way, Rai ably priced and reasonable farms te qualified buyer. Dlxla 9 to Watkins Lak* Rp.< toft to property. it basamtnt, 2-car < OPEN-5771 CRESCENT DRIVE SPACi-A-PLENTY an 4 nlcaiy « " toga*. Extra nlc# 2badroom,. ~ ptus tore* recreation .room I plus fatten* you have draamao aooui. in* amir* lamiiy win i*n In tore with It. Th* price I* rigid and approximately UM0 takas erer present mortgag* with NO MORTGAGE COSTS. Ellzabdh Lak* Rd. to Crescent, toft to preparty. OPEN-53033 AULGUR ROCHESTER AND UTICA AREA. Extra sharp 3-b*dreom brick rancher with 2Kar attachdd garagt. 155 ceramic til* baths, Florid* room, fireplace, bullt-ln* and many txfret. Beautifully landscsptd Id. Cyclone fenced and area of fin* homes. *E*«y driving distance to whtrtvsr you work. Owner hat purchased lak* front hem* and priced to SELL. All reatonablt otters will te considered with quick pes-sestlon. Auburn Rd. to DeQuIndre, left to Aren Rd^ rigid to St Mil# Rd., right to Aulgur, Follow Open signs. plus beautiful carpeting i NEW MODELS YOUR CHOICE OP I modal hemes. Ranch, Colonial and Tri-I*v«lt to 1 different location* from IU.300 to 8SM5I plus Id. On* to fit ovary pocket book and plenty of modediy priced tots In most LAKE OBION HIGHLANDS Open SAT. and SUN. 24 p.m. M-S4 to Ljjke Orton, right on Flint, n„ right on Orion Rd. apprexlmatdy ULTRA HOMES SUB. Open SAT. and SUN. 24 p.m. M-59 It Whittier, opposite City Airport. LAKE OAKLAND SHORES Open Dally 44 p.m., SAT. and SUN, " right to Walton, right to bite TRADING IS OUR BUSINESS #97 PICTURESQUE SBTTINO and wonderful location dost to Osnoral Hospital. 3-bedroom brick rancher, IVb carafnlc tlto baths, farg* living room with dining dl, roomy kflehen with loads of cupboards and anting spac*. Plastered wails, beautifully carpatod throughout and tell basement. Nlcaiy landscaped and aa llttla .as $2,CM down to handle. See this today— DON'T W/UTI HIGH SCENIC VIEW OVERLOOKING LOON LAKI to Jayte Haights. A wendarful setting Mr this 7-ream brick ranchar with 2 full baths, ground tore! family mom wtth tlrepMCA biiufttedy csrpotsd throughout plus all kitchan bullt-ln*. Lska prlvltows park with sand batch only one block away. EnERS? M00 DOWN CITY ARIA at all MW ham*# FHA torm* and ctoaa to schools. 2b*droom Brick ranchar NHIisMI basement, rear patio and privacy tone*. Gas heat, aluminum atoms and lerten* aid a rest vdu* at I1L9N. Just *400 dawn plus torm* it y*u quality. CAN YOU IMAGINE? ONLY. HJ50 far tMa "ddl haute" with awning* and siding, (tons' front and higsiy. tondaeapod. Csrprilng, drapes and kHchm rang! “ •— Gate elfy north and tocatton. Don't baR REALTOR ROCHESTER M.L.S. 01 I^Stl 730 S. Rotheiter M ltd* ate. CALL NOW. PONTIAC FE 1-7161 * 177 S. Telerooh_____ THE PON^AC PUKES. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1965 TWENTY-FIVE Brown acre m mi. itbcar garaga. Aluminum (tomt. OH furnace. Full jftV 11Jya«5 old! fxmltorrt' T*rn5t!rd*""®' Prk* only w',5°- MBims E&»<2pBt£ petod. Attached ovtr size twocer fvM. Dining room. Kitchen at modem m tomefraw and IHa tlma torn let cupboard*. Vary attracihm L H. BROWN, Realtor 509 Elizabeth Lake Road Ph. FE 4-3564 or FE 2-4810 SMITH CLARKSTON MILL POND A BrKloui largo alder home l the type Clarluton la famous lor I iroua to mention, lalth force* them It con 3 your*. village. Hilt homo hat featurat tea numeroua The owners' IN health to show you 1— — Preimlty in an tha tMtlVPMNP. __ vale apartment uootaln. The larger family could havo uo to 7 bedroom* hart If *o desired. Don't be too lata. Only a limited number of ROLFE H. SMITH, Reoltor Val-U-Way Government Representative KENNEDY JR. HIGH IMMEDIATE POSSESSION groom brick terrace, plastered wells, hardwood floor*, CM** living at Hi* lew, tow price of lust arm groom place on Merritt Lake Lapeer County, SB ft. frontage on Hi* lake and look at this price - WE TRADE EQUITIES Over tUOMW told so for In'45 List Here—All cash for Your Homo I R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 U Oakland Ave. Open 9-7 After hours FE 4-51 a* or FEM410 OPEN SUNDAY 1 to 4 AMT Income Property •** St. Show* good Incor I'raam* furnace*. Only SIMM, t North Area Ranch Largt tot dtodtS on paved street. Llvtna room 1SK1I, large Mtdhtn with dlf I space. S bedroom* are ramie hath. wet nlaatar high basement with gat CTree recreation K--_ Pricereduced to Slim 1400 down ptw costs. Large West Side Home iwTbaftsa. futMm* 0M best. Hmr P«ru~.— . Ems.."t.T,Js * dn. Id* our dteeley ad an j Lake front horn*, open I t to I p.m„ an paga a. upon evening* ana iwwt> re FE 8-0466 IRWIN WILLIAMS LAKE ROAD Thro* bedroom ranch, living ream EAST SIDE r'f“ '"nvenlancM. Near fact Boul-telllng^on FHA. HM* phi* —INOIANW00D SUB. , ggtix'anirtc regm ttragtoC* in family ream. Thrka bedrooms toKnMHii floori, moafo kitchen wHh bulH-ln rang* and ovon. Pleasant, wall-lighted dining raom. Two ceramic tH* baths mid a Mg plastered S-cer garage, Gas hem, lovely landscaped kit. Price reduced to— $27,500. Loon Uk* era*. John K Irwin 4. SONS REALTORS - 111 West Hunan - Sine* 19» •hone: FE Mate ivenlng Call ___FE 5-4009 DORRIS OPEN INDIANWOOPS LUXURIOUS CANAL FRONT. FROM Hi* cozy comfort at till* H'xlTVT carpeted living room entoy the beautiful view at dear running water framed by numerous towering Mb Sraaa — t*k* th# boat OUt Of Ivote boat weH ami of Oakland County's ^^^^tdtoSbrfck daturas the spprsclsle. 82%* tnS. ptmty of f rulftrae!, £& plum, _ sfc. Serna, eat buildings. 2-FAMILY typshomsyga* hot wofar heat, wall-to-wall carpeting. «t a earner tot, S bedreoms for each apartment, features like a fireplace, large ream*, Oil par month tacama, oak Opera, pias-k»4 "“V«s this parcel LAKE PRIVILEGES Ctorkaton schools, S bod roams, SVh«er gang*, family room with flreplace, wall-to-wall carpeting, pasted arty*, tovmy hack yarn patio, toko acroa* m* road with excellent send beach. Only I1L-tJO. Terms. Times Realty S*fO Dixie HIGHWAY (Smith at Waterford Him k This homo he* many g executive will refrigerator baittMaar. w, k—wJ sapereto dining igam and spaclout attached gang*. Open Sunday 2 to 5. Drive west on Walton felvd. post Silver Lake Rd.. turn loft on Shewn#* Lane and School House end Wormer Lakes, follow opan sign* to 3377 Shawnee IRICK AND AUIMINUM COLONIAL, spacious family twin* located In tap-knotch weet suburban area with toko privileges, Mock-top stroota, sidewalk* and city water. Main ttoar completety carpeted In luxuries!* commardel grad* carpeting including the master bathroom. 2 large bedrooms with possibility of 2 other*, finished family room with extra halfbath, sliding glass doer* to Hi* beautifully lamp scaped backyard. !ll,fS0. Htecftr YOUNG COUPLES STARTER HOME — Smodroom rancher to handy cation near M.S.O.U. Roaeonal pat host and reeionebl* tom Nice tot, w*m. no,tjo. ----PORE I* 1 SON, REALTORS , Ki- *74-0324 SCHRAM Now Doing Custom Building On Available Building Sitosl XYour Plans or Ours CustonkBuildors STxdr wtth jjtomtoum elding, 1 bedroom*, both and* ham full DBMfnflmp rCir Qirigi. on *i3,fje an your h)k Bi-Level X •rick and aluminum Absdraam 2 full bottw, tear garaga, MO* tu!$oo on-your totljradaT ** captod. Oat our daal today. Vacant Land 45 acres, 1,350 • foot frontage an Pontiac Lake Rood. UOMoot front- homo on I M it, breezewey, ced to 115,500 h West Sid* fgjyt1. WHY NOT LET Ivon W. Scbram Joalyn Ays. f| SW O'NEIL TIMES Country livin' *B* toka, privilege* STOUTS ■Best Buys Today HAVE CASH CUSTOMER FOR bMV front horn# wtth good beech on union uk* at asdMomaot. Alee fait action on other listing*. CALL _ LEO ROGERT <*2-2%, REPRESENTING FRUSHOUR AND STRUbLE. num renener, 24'x50' plus attached JW-cer garage, basamant, lVk bethe, large dining area. Thermopen* windows, blacktop drive, many amor feature*. C~" 122,500 wHh tarmr Adams Rd. Area room, cut atone ft kitchen and dlnli ttoar family raj.., ___ recreation room fireplace, lO'xdO' ecroondTponj, .attached Sfrcar $10,500 Total price on this neat Stei„ ■“* ham* near Lotus $650 Down •bedroom converted cottage wtth Williams Lake privilege*, oil hoot XML*lecf" " *—‘— H Beer- SITE>-’ beeches!"decking. of substantial discount for cash. K. L. TEMPLETON, Realtor 223f Orchard Lake Rd. «R»-ggoo ■ WALTERS LAKE OFFERS Choice HIM tits* tor ranches a trl-levala. | lot*, tlf7S total >M frontage. Direct tons: Clerkstor. Orion Kd. to Eeton Rd., S block* north to NfJ Mohawk Drive. 4*3-2300 SYLVAN OS-11*4 “ — — 334-1323 5n W g^/SSy *1 WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyk* Rd. FE HIU MILLER MODELS Opan 1 to 6 Brick Ranch Modal « plus much mem. Only «7, 4-Bedroom Colonial Modal 2-story brick Now England atyl* Cc bnlal. Dining mom, Provtnclel Mtdi . to Walton tlvd. MODELS OPEN SUNDAY 1 to 9 WESTRIDGE OF WATERFORD FOR EVEN qnOATER CONVENIENCE TO .ALL OF VOU, VNoM UMity now hM four proftiolowolly jWWlpL fwntitnod jwiff Homo* to one grouping Namely the *'Eloaont». iour grac1 to* "Trie*!#," a charming and epactoua relied ranch, th* LagSt u^St "Mi areund en'open court yard and "OIL •* eoaumui." wxw mpnrey to CambrookLono, 1*0 to Celine Mara Lana. OPEN 2 to 6 3984 ANGELUS DRIVE STBRarIgEd oaif Courw adtotoing bodroom ranch lo dont Fnnclt Provlncl--. ,-- - swdwMaiiSii tomllyraam and tweergerago. Ajm „ - ■ma la aarOatoxa iaeuty RH* coleniai, featuring 4 .bodroom*. 2/» baths, famjty ream,. About, to matom'tr*** ar* an toto ***** OS!?!* i!! OPEN SUNDAY 2 to 5 OWNER MOVING TO FLORIDA i! pjtss SS' sjrjrVj.t Priced rtoMi Mr*. Oraan. mmC Ptoadlanai .Tato- r properly On*. This 2- •hopping area lust ftfto HOMB^rl! TRADE WltoS POINT-LAKE FRONT edy to moke an tovaalmant to FOR THE Y0UN0 EXECUTIVE thaaa wha mlw fun. ana ffSHF IMM^inakSe. Canfm? !d?^^Xdno, nawT nww .iw; Jssr* DOLL HOUSE ...... 5«.%rW.llW. an* waWlUaXif. RAY O'NEIL, Rooltor 3520 PONTIAC LAKE RD. SUNDAY 1 to 4 Saturday Evonino Aftar 6, Call 0114781 MLS. . OR 4-2222 SPECIAL LAKE-FRONT RANCH Ht oxcaH repair. Now Is Hw tlma to pick thT* bargsto. 2 bedroom*, lerga family kitchen with buin-lna, 1H befh*. AH newly decorated and only *17400. AARON BAUGHEY, Realtor FE 2-0262 470 W. HURON OPEN > TO Frushour Struble ELIZABETH LAKE IF YOU'RE LOOKING tor tako-front property - STOP - Her* niirwill fW the air ^ GOLF COURSE VIEW with ptcluraogiM editing and custom buTlt brkj: ranch PaWfiptr RgRjiHto wnMy gar&r-^ssi-easB: pMmiSn* 10 *radv‘ liw*>**lt* $900 DOWN ON FHA HfRB IS A REALJtUY.^II'l 2 hidmam b peted living ' IVVcar garst_______ Cmngter rf3.tS0. ^ r—_________ IPRI I basamant. ' I Wear garaga and Anchor fenced —. .—^ ‘“ RoNH** WARDS ORCHARD IS THI POPULAR ,LOCATION d in svasm, IVMtory ‘— there la aas heat, Anchor ___ iKn. Turrets: Trojj* to your proeant house “ JACK FRUSHOUR MILO STRUBLE REALTORS "BUD" CARNIVAL bedroom ranch'eiyto'henwT gTtomOTSJti baaamanf, rac. area, aluminum Not One, But Two ^tocoa^to^thlo lovely, toolom near W*Srto« t^lL^wllh tore* ------WBSTdK nj eerh with venlty, lot* •t and (tareg* me*, patio, 3-cer attached gt-rteed at 123.500, bo our* It. TODAYI Nicholio, Realtor ■ _ W Ml. Clemon* St. FE 5-1201 or FE 4-8773 Lakt Property t. Coll M. 51,500 down, lei Chuck. OR 3-12f5. er x in', xjklna beeutifi prlvltege*. 2 king, 11000, 111 SUNNY ‘ Wei-sandy Lots—Acroafk__________ 54 ACRES lS, NEAR MILFORD, 1EAU- *,. tote *1,995. 520 down, 520 n i*k* noor Row City. Gradual sandy beach. Ideal tor fishing, — ——— over TV* horaopower all ownerihlp In 200 acre* for hunting and camping goo* with It. S2J91 OR 4 HAGSTR0M REALTOR W. HURON EVENINGS 402-0435 PONTlXC IS MINUTES, PR Cleared or wooded toll. B Bros, oR 3-1295 or FE 4-450*. WHITE LAKE 5410 Jackson Rd., 15 miles w. of Pontiac off M5f. Year r— * toga. 1 bedroom*, largo poren, ell furnace, 55' frontage on toko. 55' more ovoilobto, 513,-500 term*. 1-017-54*2, I— “ | CABINS, MACKINAW COUNTY, ResortProperty 52 RILFOR 51,7*5,....--... michi6an taX UNO Wafer frontage cabin elf up. Sand 51 tor datcrlpH price* to 54 count let. Up*.. ... ineulo, Oakland. Mecomb, ft. Clair counties, ate. Michigan Tax knad Service, Cadillac, MIcMaan. Lets-Acreage 54 BUILDING SITES 1*00 .1 *100 52.000 Sylvan Sham* corner, HMilanda’*£ Vlllega, comm! ... I. Annett Inc. Reoltors « E. ^ron|n) CLARKSTON” ecr* paresis, *4J0e. SASHABAW RD. CANAL LOTS .... iKliffifiv^laho.1 JACK LOVELAND i Caw Loks Rd. IGIBI COLL IL .■■■■ M Acroa - Phone pi 14577 Hl-HlLL VlLlAGt Betel* Size Building Site* Winding Paved Street* Low W S22S0, with 5250 dowr Easy terms to purchase LADD'S, INC. raff WATERFORD TOWN-Porfc approved. *73- KENT By Dick Tnyner “Oh, Janie has her serious moments! Just go in a restaurant and hand her a menu!" Dearborn, G.M. ________„ school*, churches and Easy term*. Owner PI 1- NOW I Tim* to gi ownership, building sit* be 313' —Croswell RANCH H0MESITES ACRES, Springfield, 330'xMO' -Fork tost - 52,500 - 1250 down. 1* ACRES noor Clarkoton end 1-75— •wutmil. slightly rolling ------- 54,955. 15 pbr cent down. TO 10 ACRES, Saihobow Downs— block loom soil — Larger parcels Ideal for hones. 53,150 end up, 15 per cent down. 40 ACRES off M15, productive form land — farm house end born. A buy of 5400 par ecr*. Terms. 40 ACRES, paved road, all wooded, high land — Idwl for camp or orgonlzotlon. M ACRES, long paved rood front-age — form house and born, rip* for development. 5400 an acre, term*. JOHN KINZLER, Realtor Sllf Dixie Hwy. 674-2235 Across from Pecktrs Store Service Open o-s HUNTERS-RETIREMENT FARM 20 scree, good for boot or dairy cattle. Buildings In good condition. Spring-fod fist* pond. Write: Box 170, Route i, Bruce Crossing, Mich. FE 0-0079,_____. STATEWIDE REAt' ESTATf 54?000 Salt Clcthrng 64J Salt HienMM 8—6e 41 kelvinatorref^^erator. MATERNITY UNIFORMS AN( ibeel weer, *lze* 12-14. 452-4446. M(N'S DRESS SUIT'S. SIZE 4 long, good condition. OR 3-194S, perking. 4.000-squoro-foot bulldln* Omto^wto! pypr *110.000. Youi NORTHERN BAR This busy bar and restaurant nil Ih* owner 014,000 a year, plus Ih Ing quarters and mooli. WII take your homo, business, or rti Ollele In trade. 525.QIIO down , makes It your*. PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE -------HURON, FE 4-JM1 ! Salt H—BGhgfcl 8«ft 65 j 1 BIG PRICE SMASH J Factory Closaouts BRAND NEW ! 3 ROOM OUTFITS •i Look What You Gat fori— $317.00 $2.88 WKLY. NO MONEY DOWN Lerg* double dresser, chest, bed. end largo mirror, lovely box spring KENMORE VWt«R,ANO yVifc. * 3 piece' blond Wdtout bQOlitPW bedroom eutftl, 575. MA 4GB. KENMORE wSlNOER WASHBR: -------xt-B*adi mlxor wllhalt*^ 2 tobio lamp*. S52-333S. MAYTAG WRINGER WASHER, 540. ironrite li oner. FB sewt. ANTIQUES, JUNK. M^INC plants, toys,'three! "household goods, rugs. 024 Wimbleton between Hunt-er end Ademo N. -4 Eoet MWt*. NECCHI AUTOMATIC TOP OIL COMPANY Needs Dealer-Merchants NO EXPERIENCE REQUIRED financial assis-fence ere avaiiooie to the right men. Cell qr writ* for detells lo-day. 1451 ORCHARD LK’RB, service station. Excellent location. Financing end paid Irelnlna ere available to qualified applicants. PHONE FE 4-1311._______________________ of Shelby Rd., email machine shop, plui living quarters on large lot. ltO'xSIO' with frontage on 2 street*, PAUL F. WILKE. REALTOR wearing nylon (nice selection), 2 large table lamps In decorator colors, and nice Formica-top table wlfh four, choirs. INCLUDED FREE THIS WEEK Beautiful 9'xl2' Nice O'xlS' kitchen rug. iood kitchen ring* —*rr 539.01 r LITTLE JOE’5 BARGAIN HOUSE 441 Baldwin at Walton, FE 3-454! First traffic light south of 1-75 Acres of Frw Parking ___Open Eves, 'til t—Set, 'til 4 NICE S-FiEtfiTblNETTE, Slt.fS; good . gat range, 534.00; electric —frlgeretor ,’*29.00' ”” used. Zlg-teg equipped for button-holos, hems, end fancy stitches. New psymenfs ef *5.21 monlfity or 553.01 cash. New machine ouererv-tea and lessons Call credit manager, 335-9253. Rickman .Bros. Sewing Confer, this area's ONLY au-thorlzed Nacchl Dealer. Necchi Deluxe Zig Zog sewing Machine - automatic CABINET MODEL EmbroMOrs, blind hems, button- i., FE 4- h balance. Unit Sale lend Contracts 60 ditlen. Beeutlful ________.__________ Shown by appointment. $45,000 — 00,000 down, balance on tend contract. William H. Zemke Real Estate, Datord, Michigan. Fhone 517-072-2944. CONTRACT, GOOO EQUITY. SMALL SaIb BesIbbss Property 57 •Y OWNER DRAYTON PLAINS store building, suitable nr me business purposes. Everything I *’•*** *----■ OR S-1331. Wonted Contracts-Mtg. 60-A ««- chest, box spring . end Innersprlng | 1 mattress, two vanity lamps. All i tor *129. Si .50 weekly. GARAGE AND GAS STATION (2 pump) Price Includes equipment end Inventory (exclude gas pumps owned by ell company). equipment. 200 ft. frontage heavily traveled paved road. Land alone worth asking price. ST**** POPULAR CORNER. SMALL STORl building. Can be used tor any kind of commercial, 1 extra let. Raas. Taka ever land contract. Ll 5-0303 Busings* Opportunities 59 Upptr Long Lake WATERFORD HILL MANOR Just perfect tor your ‘"•■•r# honk — new section now open. Lots from 53750 WEAVER AT ROCHESTER siding, part,basamant, 010,000. Reasonable farms. I acres having over MOT Of frontage, older Wtory home, 4 bedrooms plus 1den, 2 bams, part basamant, 2 oldar bems. Terms. MILTON WEAVER INC.. REALTOR In to* village ef Rochaetor HI W. University 451-1*41 sfartsr, wag* COUNTRY HOMES NEW 3-BEDROOM HOME on S railing acre*, a pleasant country setting where horses and healthy children llv* together, m bathe, 2-car garaga, full basamant. SIM 230x440. *21.m. SECLUDED WOODEDACRES|Wtlh mint, 2-car garaga, bam, private storm cellar. 123,MO. Term*. C. PANGUS, Realtor 30 MIS Orto Call Collect NA 7-3*15 EXCHANGE ir will Mil for 119. ESTABLISHED IN 10 ACRES NEAR VANDERBILT grjj Terms. 51 ACRES WIm, plus id frontage gift thop. 30'x34' iBte 112,500 - BATEMAN COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT 359 S. Telegraph ’Specialists to tox-fro* Exchanges' sekdays Aftar 5:1 Open 94 Sat. A Su FARMS GENTLEMAN'S » ACRE ESTATE an edge of Hotly — flowing stream — very attractive custom built ranch — flreplac* — hasted ga-raga — scanIc views (ramjgrjw windows. You'll lava It. U2JW, REALTORS air KINZLER W. SUBURBAN LAKE FRONT 9-raom brick hem* In *MehNlv* neighborhood, Mffi Nvlng room with panaratnla view, wBBto wall jatdtaa .wtui built-in*,. wm>ml RrSaca,' adtolntna extrebedrwxn •mT hath, compieto batnB ahaitor, lot lirxiso', attaohed Saar garage. Call fir turfhar datali*. 1 MACEDAYUK! You can get to I taka* tmm Ihle 5-baataam hung*tow wtht canal frantaga. Lgresliiw JMRt ream wHh waIMfrwall carpaling toia el cupbearaa'ln madam kite An* char tonead yard. Icnoqi gito nearby tar Ctorkaton acMola. SMM, sl.iia dman an lindyanwact. LOTUSLAKEPRIVILEGES This naat bungalow Is m bane ramaealea ly ewnar. Ni.. furnfca and water haatar alraedy inetaiiad. Will mwa you * comfort. WMXltor Ktf Mat* Mm, 474-21U 40 ACRES NEAR 1-75 Uyal, aoqd soli, juNabl* for *1 Verm*or wMlv,^*‘ ,,4'50# ' Floyd Kant Inc,, Realtor —mmm te - ACRE PARCELS, nerth of Oxford, vary acapto, *4,716 l* par camdamv. .t , s. a-ACRB PARCELS. (1) available. eood read toimTl*, priced with torme. 10 BEAUTIFUL ACRES, H dawn. < ’ , , C PANGUS, Rooltor “IMCTrSm WTJTAJIAStJSSl 5,43 cjmSSRL haw. !sm.s ERR AND WINE i is*, r— REAGAN REAL ESTATE 2251 N. Opdyk*____333-0154 BY OWNER, DRAYTON PLAINS HOME BUSINESS AND LAKE Over 140’ commercial, paved roe 1 TO 50 LAND CONI, ACTS Urgently wanted. See us before v) with box spring end *119.00; odd dressers, ids, living rooms, chairs •>» ,«„ips. everything at Mr........ Prices. LITTLE JOE’S TRADI DEPT., 1440 Baldwin at Walton, open Eves FE 2-4*42. I SET BUNK BEDS, NEW., I MAT-tress. 535,^-FE 2-5573. 235 N. Cess. iol’lN Warren Stout, Realtor IS* N. Opdyk* Rd. FE Open Eves. Til 8 p.m, ACTION On your tend contract, la small, call Mr. Hitter, FE Broker. 3793 Elizabeth - 1 MORE TIME BRAND NEW FURNITURB 3-ROOM OUTFITS $278 (Good) $2.50 Weekly j4i*s i $378 (Better) $3.00 Weekly $478 (Best) $4.00 V.'.skly 7-piece (brand i 2-plec* living room tables, matching < decorator lamps, a OFF-WHITE CHEST AND DRES-ser, full size Stern and Foster mattress. Like new, 3134 Margaret, Auburn Heights.____ OPEN 0AILYu9~to 9^ ^ ConslBiwnenisV' accepted.*' W* *Vf*- "halL'S AUCTION SALES 70S W. Clerksfon Rd. BBG O ’ USED FURNITURE. Ije. 25S Qsmun Street. SINK, SIS. NEW’AND ________Michigan Appliance Co.. 3253 Dixie Hwy._______ RCA BLOND TV. S5*. EUREKA vacuum end ... attachments 520. Scoffs Spreader 55. Ml 4-9*76. REFRIGERATOR. 535. GAS STOVE $35. Inquire el 7M1 Jardine, Davis- burg.________- ________ REFRIGERATOR, GOOD CONDI j of drawers; twin size bed springs, kitchen table, 4 chairs. OR 4-153*. REFRIGERATOR, *35. DRYER, 535. Gss stove, 135. Refrigerator with tap Ireezer, (49. 21-Inch TV, 125. Washer. 525. Electric stove. 535. V. Harm, FE 5-2745._______ REFRIGERATOR, FREEZER, ALSO. pee refrigerator, UL S-37S2. • Repossessed Kirby WITH ALL ATTACHMENTS. ONE YEAR OLD, CALL AFTER 5. -4SHM14. September Specials 1 TO 50 tANB^ONTRACTS - Urgently wanted. See us before y Warren Stout, Reoltor 150 N. Opdyk* Rd. FE 541 Open Eve*, 'til 5 p.m. PEARSON'S FURNITURE 11 31* E. Pike FE 4-78*1 ! i Between Paddock and City Han Qpqn Mon, and Frl. 'Ill 9 p.m. For your equity or land contracts. T Don't Iom that home, smallest possible discounts. Call 612-1120. Ask tor Tad McCullough Sr. ARRO REALTY . ____ 5143 Cass-EllMbath Lake Road furniture, ISH FOR LAND CONTRACTS >373*_______________________ H. J. Van Walt. 4540 Dixit Hwy , 5-PIECE CHROME KITCHEN SET, . 1ECE BEDROOM SUITE, S45. Good condition. **24913, aft. 4._ 5-PIECE MODERN LIVING ROOM — - I tornlture, turquoise. ____________________________. .. 6-plece bedroom ________ NEED LAND CONTRACTS. SMALL goto lounge chair, 520, love —*- Garrets. EM 3-2511. 525, brass flreplac* set. *25, pi QUICK CASH FOR LANC -----CONTRACTS------- lark Real Estate. FE 3-7IM, FE 44113, Mr, Clark. EASONED LAND CONTRACTS chin*. *25. Maytag washtr, SIS, trombone. 545, FE 24047------ 8-PiECE DINETTE SET. COST $750, •itlce >250. FE 5-5442. $3.8 61 Inlaid tlto l„. _____ 1 Floor Shoo - 2255 Elliabath Lake , “Across From the Mall'' LOANS TO I $1,000 an first visit. Quick, frlend-lul FE 2-9026 SINGER In lovely walnut console, used. Zig-zag equipped tor fancy sewing, buttonholes, heme, ate. Guaranteed. Payments o! 54.62 monthly or 544.20 cash. Call credit manager. Rich-man Bros. Sawing Cantor, 335-92*3. SIMMONS BROWN TWEED HIDE-s-bed, axe, condition. UL 3-1*00. SINGER CONSOLE SEWING MA-chlne, zlg zag equipped, S29.S0. OR 4-11*1 CURTS APPLIANCE SOFA AND CHAIR, GOOD CONDI-tlon. 334-9705. _________________ Singer Dial-A-Matic ZIG ZAG SEWING AAACHINE I In modern walnut cabinet — makes designs, appliques, button- gas sto bunkto 34-INCH GAS RANGE, LIKE NEW. num and parmastone siding. Over 10*' lake frontage. Separata 20x20 *tor* building. - Ipttahto tor many buslnass purposes. Full prlc* *11,-90ft term*. OR S-1S31.__________ business. Total price, *5,900. I “"warden REALTY ________ _______ ____nihly, 540,172 yearly. Expensas including fuel, water, saleries, Insurance, maintenance, supplies, vacancy- *21,194.4* net Income — SI 7,22144. Over 57 per eim return annually on S30JN0 down. Price, *150,000, SUMS per month. Chartoo L. Lang*, FE 3-3233 er RO 34392. ACT NOW MICHIGAN Business Soles, Inc. BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY OFFICE* NEAR YOU WHEN YOU NEED $25 to $1,000 W* will b* glad to hate you. STATE FINANCE CO. SOI Pontiac State Bank Bldg. FE 4-1574 FURNISHED BARBER SHOP F a business, owner retiring. Small INVESTORS Now avail*M* a ham* aervlce franchlsa, 12400. Camp lata Invast- Orand Rapid*, Mich. A - OXFORD AREA — I — farm buildings. 555,- 30 ACRES NEAR Mil AND SKI RE-SORT — spotlasa country home— substantial barn. <51.000.. II ACRES—4 MILES SOUTHEAST Unfitrwood Real Estate TAYLOR 0RT0NVILLE Beautiful 10 aeroa, Hadley Road, alia an paved read. Priced right. 0RT0NVILLE colonial farm h*ma, 1 badn farm kNawn, partor, M l- heat, bam, n acre* square on paved qead. HOLLY-ROSE CENTER IIWWPM TAYLOR AGENCY 7732 Highland Rd. (Mil) OR 443*4 MAN OR COUPLE OPPORTUNITY UNLIMITED NO SELLING HIGH PROFITS SMALL INVESTMENT i wall established corporation V et up dletrlbutorahlp to this an Ih* world temeu* SYLVAN I A, O.l - Do-ll-Youreelt tub* toetare. Ex- %TttTT!2xjnnS ..iTtamn-TL-. you couw Ml raouireo to enter this Dusinei from 51445 up to SU*S. w/mra DIATBLY — NO SILLINO O SOLICITING. QUALIFICATIONSl Sutflclant aval references, and a linear* deal to be your own bats and enter mkrta z* unusual aaaertunfty, writ* to: fnf-AII jEy. of UNIVERSAL OAKLAND LOAN CO. 302 Pontiac State Bank Bldg, fils to S:SB — SatT 9:38 toT LOANS 490 LBS. KELVINATOR UPRIGHT freezer, salt ar trad* tor clothes dryer In flood condition. S43-73H. LOANS S2J to SI 400 Insured Paymant Plan BAXTER B LIVINGSTONE Finance Co. 401 Pontiac State Bank Build FE 4-1538-9 NEED CASH "BACK-TO-SCHMH." EXPENSES AND BILL CONSOLIDATION? BORROW UP TO $1,000 10 months f BEDROOM SET, DRESSER, CHIF-toreba, double bad, ~'to^Md|to record ^layr BENDIX AUTOMATIC WASHER, LOANS TO $1,000 Furniture, 210 E. Pike. __ COLDSPOT REFRIGERATOR, J1S. m—»— —iing condition. Tall Credit Ilf* Insurance available la 5 dally. Sat. * to 12 COMPLETE WALNUT DINING SET, IRLFOO —ar and dry tor, FE 4-5144. i, 42" rotor golf a mower, alr-condltloner, w and many others. FE 44 ltyXSt' MOBILE HOME t 217x50’ BUILDING, EXTRA LOT, Tradaaqult^ M • L I R AMBASSADOR, I960 MERCURY, SELL S2S0 OR 1175 1942 MERCURY, SWAP F6R 790 Ulrd, Lab* Orton. OT, 40 FOOT X 140 FOOT N Cats Lake, value M00, tok* . TRADE FOR PICKUP, NS* . BARGAIN BOX 445 S. Woodward — Birmingham (Just south of thabu* station) Also sterling Monday, September a w* will be acceptIna toll and winter consignments, must b* clean end In will rendition. day*, Monde I Thursday, 10 a. Una forward to welcoming ce. has si ______ . : Itobf an drag* space. 2 yrs. i n Lake. 34340W. clock end DINING ROOM TABLE, chairs. atomMmaMadMdtotommi dining r< 20012 Steal, Detroit 35, ♦ablas. 674-1545. USED FURNITURE, REFRIGERA-Mb 2 dinette sate, many other is, priced tor quick aato. 4444 lay Lake Road._____________ WE5TINOh6USB ^refrigerator NEW. Large at und, drop-leaf, r* *Tn 3, Tand 7 p Odd kltchan table . d bunk b P. Paarsc elec, refrlgeretor . type f------ . „r Credit .. EASY TERMS DINING ROOM }6t, bl61i6 6ak, Maple bookcata, l‘x4' wM — net, alat* doer*, very good condi-tlen. Call batera 9 p.m. 4H42W. DUNCAN PHYFE MAHOGANY DIN-Ing room sat, tabto, 4 chairs, buttot, good condition. *90. 4344734. FRIGIOaIrA RifihlOilRATOR - ar, $75; HamIRen sloe, dryer, I FURNITURE GARAGE SALE - GAS STOVE,M0. D WORKING REFRIGERATOR . Gat stove, <35. Washer, <25. 1 water haatar, *35. PR 5-2744. HEAVY DUTY, WASHBR, WR1NG-ar and Kanmar* dryer, to parlacl 4-4971 attar IT and BROWNIE . AND INTERMEDIATE Girl Scout uniforms, FALL iklRf* AND BLOUSES TO "Whf <*r*9Wj-Jood totaw* P«l condition. 335-3022- _______ LADIES 12-14, BOY'S 14-11. GIRL'S HOME FREEZER FRiTTiR^SWARIHOUSE OUTLl __________Maosw. ITALIAN PROVINCIAL BUhrwi, •xumslon tabto, cherry ftatoh. PR tabtos, I cocktail tabto and 1 tabi* lamps. -piece bedroom suit* with doubt# dresser, cheat, full sin bed with InnersprtoB- mattraas and Box spring to match wtth 2 vanity piece dinette, eat, 4 chroma chain, formica tap tabto, I bookcase. 1 t'xIT rug Included. All ter $3*9. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. Unearned Lay-Awoy Take Ovtr Payments je lamp, 1 9x12 rug, Aptoc* room outfit, mirror, daubl* an ear, cheat, bookcase bad. Stela tormaca tag dinette with 4 chel with ratrlgarater and rang*. F 54221, ask tor Mr. Hubbard. Wor wide Furnishings. WYMAN'S USED BARGAIN STORE IT !• W.^RIka Store °"^t1 1. MB 74I9S. Open 7 days. ORIGINAL GEORGE WASHINGTON “imp, 18---- ------ ---- — 1-2822. WANTED TO BUY; HI-FI, TV A Radios BRAUTIPUL SOLlb MAPLE HON- ..... RCA VIctor TV, colonial _____sole with dear*, (44. J75 .. Iroquois Rd. FE >7318. BLENDE 14" PHILCO TV, 120. ey flnli atyl* c COLOR TV'S PltOM tlJO. GOOD selection used black and white porteblee. Oalby TV. FR 4-9*02. > PLAYER NEEDLES AND tIDOIS. 90 PER CENT IN STEREO CQNSCiLl, AM - AM -fM ----- radio afto phonagragh. wei- odem, MOB, PE 4-M9I. Vlt.95 33A5477 AUTOMATIC WATIB SOFTENER, paid MM 1 year* aid, need* minor repair. Make after, FE >W4. CULLlOAN-^IKE NlW reyn6los AND SHAF^ik' IS w WTON PICK UP. U* (OAT. Ml<- caltonaoM* Item*. *38*. MBHH, 1 TIMKEN filLPURttACj, IThLE- jvyvkio'* * 5 ROOMS OF PLiRhiHiRll FOR ir .TWENTY-SIX THE PONTIAC PRESS; SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER ll. 19M hM ~j wp&jrsjf*us? wrSbT rSTtjwir ol Mg ALUMINUM AWN IN®. TV'x*', COR- &-s£sLtsb3."hS A^OMATtt_TWg .. — - Ft 27471 Ta rrVuR^URfcTRORfAB^ 47M8P. BABY SCALES. BOTTLES,. ROCK-ha met. Si tab. Child's wow wR, sin 3. Boots, ttoLBEM BATHROOM FIXTURES, ail furnace* end boiler*. Star heeler*, herdware . ^msssi^x *u,,"heiohts SUPPLY Bottle Gas Installation i lKHx it. ri ________..... or 99747. Ho buy. ' ______________ -------CASH AND CARRY «{?»!«?«!? X-52223 an 4*7 Mohogeny V-Orooved _ Open MON. tnd FRI Eves. Til 8 O'clock DRAYTON PLYWOOL 41« W. Wilton OR Wf»l clean up. sale, south on Woodnwrd, 1 Wk S. Of square 1 k-Rd. Turn rightd" 1 on Colonlil Tr. Belrol. o 2*64 Corner close-out on all outdoor Cl^iSGmanta. Lft«l Blll’. Out-POSt, 3265 Pixll Hwy, OR 99474. COMPLETE STOCK OF PIPE ANO rrt,ferp^co&r ilvmlnd tar » .„, —4. Montcalm Sin Monltllm, FE 6-4712. DINING TABLE, 4 CHAIRS, 2 IN-terior door* md mlsc. tomlture. FE 44050. DIRT CONVEYORS. ELECTRIC itwer cleaners. Homellte generators. Ford tractor, Cintary tractor with tnowor. CONE'S DRAFTING TABLES. - ELECTRIC STOVE. ENCYCLOPEDIA, 1965. COST *1*0, -----‘ MCTlflC* 848. SOWS. EVERGREENS. WESTER BLUE CE- For the Rnest in Top-Quality Merchandise Shop MONTGOMERY WARD PONTIAC MALL FOR DUSTY CONCRETE FLOORS GARAGE JKJORS ■MT size*. Giraot tro rae estimates. I GAS FURNACES. FLOOR MODELS at discount price*. Will Imtill. *~ Hooting, 674-Nil or 409-5574- GAS WATER HEAtOrS. S44J9. G. HAGGERTY HAS IT1 t redwood picnic table K.D. « I stde-benchet, S14J8; 4' chi picnic table with 1 benches, o plete In carton, 812J0. HAGGERTY LUMBER HOT WATER HEATER, SbOAlLLON OR 64811 LARGE QUANTITY OF USED IN- PLYWOOD 4'*8' Masonite pegboird ... 235-lb. sh Ingles, sq. In lift Bathtub mcloiwr* K-gutler, galvanized, IB* ... ... r glia Hiding H doors *127 JO 2'0"x4'S" Mahogany door* . 2,6"x4'»" Mahogtny dan ......_ *'W" ptata gla* Hiding door S79.9 Nr Ms I TIMES.<3et%m - SACRIFICE SPECIAL RCA IT TV. MAHOGANY CABINET ALONE tMDRTH MO RE THAN ASKING PRICE OF StL TV NOT WORKING BUT CAN BE ll-FAIRED OR USE CABINET ft STORAGE, AQUARIUM OR L QUOR CABINET. CALL AFTER 4 STEEL°euiiJbU40l W JHCL TIMKEN *8b*M B.T.U, FORCED — " see, controls, tank, fr-*^ *50. 363-8706, evening*. TREAT|RUQ* RtGHT. THEYTa. BE cleaned with B lu ______ _____ electric (RMwa*. *1. Hudson's Hantarera, 41 E. Wsl- USED GAS AND OIL FURNACES. pipes iM duct wo ... ______ house. Bought un stalled Dec. 1943 tor *540. * —1 complete tor S299. *4620t7. Cameras • Service MILLIMETER KEYSTONE moult camera, prolector, lira* Kroon. *un tamp, used very little. EM 9*817. PRE-INVENTORY CLEARANCE BiryHnsJIn new camera^: Exafcta cost. *179.50. Volgtittander Ultra-matlc with Skopar 2.1 and- com, *129.95, Frakttca FX-3 with auto. Westaner LI and case. *49.95, Ya*h-Ica Lynx MOO with 1J and com. *62.99, Exa with Meritor L9 end caw. *39.95, others from *29.50. Portable transistor tope racorder* from sijji. Automatic t MM le camera* tor *39.95. Sale ... . one week only—came early, many BEAUTIFUL RESTYLED. UP RICA'S PREFERRED DIS-mt musk center. Guitar*, SI7.95 Elec, guitars. OM5 up. Full BABY GRAND PIANO. BLOND Fit Hh, exc. condition. Ml 61345. CONN CLARINET. LIKE NEW. FE *4314 ALTO SAXAPHONE AND C UP HOLLOW BODY ir, with case. 1 vaar I, $140. OL 14290. ELECTRIC BASS GUITAR, EXCEL-lent condMen. *125, with css*. Ml 66305 I as* tor Bari). ELECTRIC CHORD ORGANl FOLK nultari alec. matronoma (timer) tor muric Hudantsz trwwiHui toga it* corder; small handy storage cabl-net. 652-4666. EXPERT PIANO MOVING FULL SIZE VIOLIN . \ GULBRANSEK PIANO. CONSOLE modaL like new. 1500. Comat, Com B flat. MORRIS MUSIC 34 S. Telegraph Rd. Acres* from TeFHuron FE 24567 HAMMOND ORGAN C-3, HAMMOND ----er*. percussion, axositonl r— . SI 400. 5371 Cooley Lake WURLITZER ELECTRIC PIANO DaRAE STUDIOS OF MUSIC VmRJNW for Ml musk Instruction. staff of is kislructors on all musket Instruments. 4130 Dlxlo. 6761700 or 4761701. GUITAR LESSONS DRUM LESSONS BOWS, ARROWS, SUPPLIES ' Gant's Anihtrv, 714 W.- BUSKEMO SPAULDINGS, BAG BOY Cart, alligator bag, 731-2953. BUY-SELL-TRADE GUNS Opdyfct Hintonr*__FE S-6646 CLOSE-OUT SPECIAL aSv-SVo haator. *925. it Sales A Service, _ way, Clartcston. Ph. 135-1711. Guns—Guns—Guns W'ha'gssx*"'* BW NING-WEATHht RB Y°* WIHCHE^^.srOL, jaMnwaar Seopa Mounting -Gun Smithing RIFLE RANGE—TRAP FIELD open to IhrfgMM--- CLIFF DREYER'S ... *F«rt Cantor “1# >1Plly'*d-' Holly ME 64771 -Open Dally and Sundays- FE 3-7774. _______ M ‘ VaWs law for Sale cheap, hum yds. of H“L Furvls, 4144491, Mien# iw • “ “ FREE CHICKEN FONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS »UP-pj^Mtd, gravel. All dirt. OR SAND HILL_FOR SALE. 5-YEAR lease. Possibly 1KL004 yds. SUM cash. M43 Judah Rg SAND GRAVEL. FILL AND TOP SAND. GRAVEL. Flu. Dljt, T6> SAND, GRAVEL, I TOP SOIL, BLACK DIRT, SOIL,. featJ SanD, clay WELL ROTTED COW MANURE, alsa baled straw. Cart Debet Son. ,34*0 Dutton Rd. - I NEW CONSOLE PIANO lalnut, 41" high, what a beauty. You have to saa to behave H. Priced at only *59*. Camparhbto to plane* costing much mor " months or longer to pay. GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. M f. Huron FI 44444 BUY NOW AND SAVE FLAYER PIANOS rtectrlc, no'pumplng, taShMOU->tk H stay 049 JO. MORRIS MUSIC Acn»»s tram Tat-Huron FE 34567 PRACTICE PIANO, *25. GrImHT*. Pontiac MaH, 4 Burmeister s LUXAIRE OIL BURNER. 249GAL-Jp9» lank, leg* and gauge; McCall Go-Kart, like new. ft vm> type) dining re ptek-up. S53-4791, MEDICINE CABINETS, LARGE 20" mirror, sltahtly marred. 13.95 — Large satachon of cabinet* with or without lights, sliding doers. Terrific buys. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard Lake, 14. NATION CASH REGISTER; OIL TANK*. 1000 GALLON AND J00 feyLtoenH,. Bargain. 4734551 or ON if OF THE BEST BASEBOARD USED^ORGANS » PROM HA MMUND, pVa^WURUTZEH, SILVER- PI (ICED FROM $250 GRI fNELL'S (Downtown) 37 8. Si atom* FE 27148 damper, S1JS par. tan, 7005 M49 W. PLAY FEN ANO STROLLER, GOOD Shawl sink, S2.95; Lav*., 02.95) M* MS and up. Pipe cut aw threaded. SAVE PLUMBING CO. li lWaOn. F»44ii4. tfiSsioH' m*TMir{>vH VS. 'SL.SL^S* .___________ad Boraga gaart 7*"x- F, National radiator hollar 10,700 Bj-U With attocr -gR burner, md R ras1^' Rummage sale, i*oi qakley Park Rd. tar Walled Lake High. BqpE.lTIV18. •. AH Usd* iHrassasrs STORE hours * :M am. 8p(:M p.m. dally Friday *IRI 9:M 9A LEW BITTERLY MUSIC CO. (Acres* tram B'ham Theater) ' — .Free Forking SELDOM USED TRADE-INS Thomas anln** SMS. Theme* spinet, less than ( Jock Hogan ^ /sic Center ih Lake Road \ USED PIANOS tOOSC FROM SPINETS, C ST UPRIGHTS, G RAN i0 Rebuilt pianos. 1 UPRIGHTS PRICED FROM $49 RENT A TRUMPET, CORNET, CLARINET, FLUTE, TROMBONE, Violin or snare DRUM K)7 RENTAL PAYMENTS will l Only $5 A MONTH GRINNELL'S SELT Fiwu* 79 ) KIDDLES, 1 PLATI-... -— miniature, l bto*" mM ’■ Vary nka. FE 54*95. ADORABLB POODLE PUPPY, iiU pad'ljray1'IdwtotlCM 9 p’Hudi’siLVER^SEQUEL^f MS JAFRAI, IT', SIM or Uttar c ‘ AXC CHIHUAHUA PUPPIES, STUO Sarvks. IMATOOO*S. 3M?1M. REGISTERED BEAGLES ANb Brittany*, my snttre stock, owner —‘king, all ages tor sola, 90S W, irfcHon Rd-.Xaka Orton. REGISTERED MALE COLLIE, SSO. PRINGER SPANIEL PUPPIES. AKC 4 wfce. Chasm. WMITS, TOY POODLE AND YORKSHIRE • J sarvka. Puppies. FE 607T3. POODLE. JET BLACK~AT TOY TERRIER. MOTHER AND pups. Weaned. MY 3-13W.__ WEIMARINER - MALE 3 YEARS YOUNG ENGLISH BULL SmIrb ANTIQUE AUCTION SATURDAY, Miction! 16853' DIx^Mtov- Quantity of furniture, lamas, i— —— sat, old wmM dock, wine set, Crenberry .... china, glass, hundreds of unlisted Items. Call M. Billow. 437-SIT prompt «ate» service.___ VERY FRIDAY ........ 7:34 •iVERY SATURDAY ;— 7:30 ------ EVERY SUNDAY ........ 2:00 PJM. Jgortt-- -—^ *“ EVERY SATURDAY i ——“w "UNDAY ......., .. Prlras^very^AucflSi bIb auction MM Dixie Nwy. “ *“ IB USED CHAIN SAWS, YOUR cheka from SM to 51S0. AH siza* and mMto*. Your McCulloch Chain Saw Dlstrlbu- Extra Special Auction Sun., Sapt. 12, 2*00 P.M. Truckload* of good mad tumltur and guarantaad appliances, sue as rarrigarators, slaves, waMwn and ether articles toe numarou. to mention. Everything must be KING BROS. FE 44394 ' _F* 4-1441 Pontiac Rd. at Oodyfce HONEY TANK, STAINLESS STEEL i SALE THIS WEEK AT OX- KICKINO OFF OUR 1944 STIHL M Iho saw. Rsautor jW#»®------ for Sndtod wna. Ivana S SATURDAY 6 P.M. HALL'S AUCTION SALES, 70S ... m------ km Lake Orion. Desk, THE LARGEST "REAL" FARM In Michigan. John MW Idea part* — **" ^“Toavls Consignments accepted W. Hall, owner and MY 9-IS71, MY >4141. TUESDAY, SEPT. 14. Scott* Antiques Llqukl -jtfMWMm. For complete list phono kins Sato Sarvka. Auction 313 4SS44M Swart* Craak dally. Jack auctioneer. sr^uowiTpME. nm, m \i SPECIAL AUCTION SALE SAT., SEPT. 11, 7.30 P.M. DON'T MISS THIS SALE I bankrupt, fire 1944 frfQQT CRfS,. sAlp-c' __ ....... I , »ktor ^ older OM 425-3991. PIorTs-T rtes-Shnibt 11-A AKC POODLE PUPPIES, MALE, i| weeM^Md) small mtnlatures, AKC BEAGLES, 4 MONTHS OLD. S-YEAR-OLD QUARTER HORSE, rErsSnH.i!4n‘,“ FE 69710 attar i. S-YEAR-OLD PALOMINO HORSE. Call after 4, 406021L FEEDER STEERS. 10 HOLSTEINS, 3 Angus, t Durnhsm. Ml 4-71801 MarE'aJMD FVIAI-OLb'WALi?- Inq stallion. 4763349.___ PERMANENT REGISTERED QUAR-tor her**, mar*. Must sail, vary re**. 447-9440, ____ REGISTERED QUARTER HORSE. AKC REGISTERED MALE GER man Shtphird. * weeks aid. 160 OL 1-5904. AKC MINI-FOOOLE PUPPIES, I AKC REAGLE, 9W MONTHS. FE 3495® uppj*«< M wfcs. old, OL AKC dachshUnD AuAAiIL IfUb doge. E5TELHSIM5, F« S4M9. ALL PET SHOP. 55 WILLIAMS. Pi 64431. Homotar*—' MONTHS, 3 ton, 479-1777. Iassett noOnD frOfrpiBi, akc registered, 7 weak* old. IM —1 Ml. each. 9198 Dartmouth, Whipple Lake Rd., Clerkstgn. BIRD DOG dUT OF SHApf LAST M4MM7 Special training and c wajsfsjfijtr pggajSTAxisoro BEAGLE HOUND. CANINE . • COUNTRY CLUB' * Protosslonel care. 525 f. 5. Boula-vwd, Rochester Clean, comfort-•We, convenient, bathing, araam- DOBBRMAN^PUPFrifc~Ai^ “ 65g-hou.«' insulated, all »(***• 748 Qrchani Lake Ave. PRES. FLUFFY KITTBN8 FREE KITTEN'S 1*0 ANY ONE FE 2-9478 “ «Sk" KrrtEfto TO^oodt) hOmI .... and Charbray bulls, raady far service. Cart Dobat S ton, 3460 APPLES - PICK YOUR OWN. wealthy, S3 bv. Early (Macs, 81.75 bu. At ldyt*4LWyto Orchard*, APPLiS, GRAPS8, Pi han Orchard, 418 I. W E. of Jaatyn. If- * - * BOB & BILL'S PRODUCE SPECIALS CANNING and FREEZING PEACHES, $2.99 BU. ALL ONI PRICE. NEW MICH. POTATOES 50 LB„ $1.89 Apple* pack baskal, 49cr lorn toot. 81.19 pack) home grown co 49c a dozen. Wonder bread I 8 99cr 9 W-gal. certens milk, 99 aqmdL 1 tor 35cr orangas. 1 dc 41.39. Bab and Bill's Produce, 74 HWiignd Rd„ 1 ml. wait of Ai DODD'S ORCHARD AND MARKET, Mclnteah apalss, pick your — ’4. FRESH FIL- miitoMMi .. Orchard * Ranch Rd t, taaf aft 4 ITALIAN MJIMS. PSARS AN pie*. 3350 Doviindait, off A------ MecINTOSH APf^l, BARTLETT poor*. 491 N„Savirral Rd. ORGANICALLY GRPW M VROS-«shies, large com 49 cents a On.. mss, ftidwi. :...- . PIERRE'S ORCHARI This Wsftks Spscials ptot, SMS v, bushel dr SMI a RB** By Kata \ tiwn^wchwMjjwiio slate, mat! ON- DISPLAY, SbutH W THE Parkhurst Trailsr Salts FINEST IN MOBILE LIVWG 11 to <0 .ft. Featuring New Moo- Country Cousin. MY 3^411, “He’s handing me the did line that his teachers don’t undertsand him!” taiT THE BENEDICTINE OR-chards. Appks, elder, paars. Located at tSa Gram Bam at laka Georoa Rd. and ttoney Craak Rd. 11 mHa* north at Pontiac. Apples ’ CREE. SELF CONTAINED— Like new. FE 5-1179. _____ SELF CONTAINED, TROTWOOD. 0L I-13M r In trad*. 51,795. AMERICA'S LARGEST SEUING CAMPING TRAILERS NIMROD NOW ON DISPLAY IMMEDIATE DELIVERY CRUISE OUT, INC. 4) E. Wilton Bjyd. PE S _______Oasn Dally 9-4__ APACHE CAMP TRAILERS AH medtos of naw 1944. camp trail- TORY)U, I^METOWN OEAlSeR, aju. coujj»|t • ' *- BOOTH CAMPER ...num covers and etmw Close-Out Streamline %x 1965 24', 26' Models NOW ON DISPLAY Holty Travsl Coach Inc. 1319 Holly Rd.. Holly MB 44771 -Pain Dally and Sundays CAMPINGSITES McFsaly^sw? | Do It YourieHer Sun. 11 noon to IS pm. Cal 481-33P. ELLSWORTH AUtO & TRAILER SALES Opsn Sundays at 1 p.m. KvKa-a? 4 roii RENt. 3 Wolvsrln* toft, comport on '45 0MC maos- 4180 wask and IcSn renTal service ON DISPLAY traitor^ltorWS* 'hunting mbm toll vacation. JACOBSON PIONEER CAMPfll SALES PICK UP CAMPERS OPEN 7 DAYS—9 to 9 SEE THEHSWjy MOOELS FREE DELTv4^-5W IBT-UP WE GUARANTEE A PARKING SPACE. Largo aatociton of 13* wktos. ___NOLL Y F ARK, CHAMPION . PARK WOOD AND PARKRSTATEs Low ovarhaad — tsv* real money - MIDLAND TRAILER SALES IB Dixie Hwy, 13007™ m Made north of Telegraph Playmate WANTED TO BUY, GOOD USED trallara. PE 54901 RMtTrdlsr Specs DON'T RENT, BUY, PONTIAC 20 min. dJ'xIM’ M, Mocktoppad, gas, osmntofa *•“ —“• Ir#0"-' JOHNSON'S SI7 E. Walton at Jealvn FE 65853 or FE 60410 TlfB-AEtfrTrvcfc _______fl 750x20 W FLY, MOUNTED ON RED TAG SALE ALL PRICES SLASHED FOR END OF SEASON Out They Go CENTURY-SAGE GARWAY • TRAVELMASTER 1945 ALL ttATE, 140. CALL AFTER Mslorcyclss 1954 HARLEY-DAVISON NO. 74. 1954 Cushman-Eagl*. 625-2733. 1964 SPRINT GOOD CONDITION, prices. So hurry, pick yours a 1945 YAMAHA, YDS-3, 2M CC, 0550. 052-3700, 1309 Melvin, Rochester. 1945 HONDA iCRAMBLER, 1500 rnlto*, *400. 0934173 Oftar ' Opsn Mon. ttireugh Frl., 9 to I TOM STACHLER AUTO & MOBILE SALES •I W. Huron St. FE 24931 1945 HARLEY DAVIDSON SPRINT, S40S. UL 34115. BSA 1941 SPITFiRE, ok CC, LIKE Travel traitors from M and crvbn, sink, built-in pleto, 5IJ9S. Pontiac A Parry etWaltan. Ft 6 Holly Travel Coach, Inc. BIO Holly Rd. Hollr Ml 44771 ^bwTIimmw TRAILER CLEARANCE JWtWaaJSL wwWS$.TrM-TTBy -ptiS5,LU^ XXGl d%B STBRa MM Olxto Hwy. «• • Open 9 ajn. ■M 34491. We Proudly Introduce for tho First Tims in This Area BOLES AERO A Most Luxurious' Travol Trailer Aircraft Construction BOLES AERO For People Who Love Caravaning-Want Luxury DISPLAYED MOW AT JACOBSON W NOMAD TRAILER - USED, S«od cen^ttoL lots ef wwdrabi cellent condition, . 1t« RlCH/WIDSCm MONTCLAIR, BIG MorlottN Stewarts Bahtodtre Gardners—2-Story LITTLE JOBS Winnebago and Yellowetona Travel Units USED JOBS Oxfor/trX* Sales BRUMMETT i BIGI BIG I SAVINGS! UP TO 80% OFF ON 1965 MODELS NOW IN STOCK! PONTIAC'S ONLY MERCURY MERCRUISER DEALER FOX SNOWMOBILES NIMROD CAMP TRAILERS Marina and Sporting Ooeds CRUISE OUT, INC. 43 E. WaRsn Dally 9-4 PE *4403 CLEARANCE SALE Wjor wd wi ail Johnson motors, TONY’S MARINE' Ksego Horbor land CMdract, or anything of equal value. Pi 54119.______________ CLOSEOUT ... , 140 month. OR m 4HARLEY DAVIDSON, 74 1945 CB 160 HONOA. 1945 TRIUMPH BONNRVILLE K & W CYCLE YAMAHA SUZUKI ROCHESTER UL 3-5349 SUZUKI OMEGA and WHITE BIG BAD BULTACO 1IL' INDIAN MINI BIKES CUSTOM COLOR jJBBW. MONTCALM YouMeet the Nicest People HONDA WORLD'S LARGEST SEILER --.oiSg Jit.-- MOTORCYCLS4 IN STOCK PRICES START AT $215, F.OJ. LOW DOWN PAYMENT EASY Tr-“* . 4DERSON SALI 1441 S. Telegraph. GOOD cheap UMO SIKES. — Seville, *" RECdNblTlbNitb Bl. 14" boys'r 30" Bins'. IKES, 2f S', OR 6 ISM ELGIN BOAT MASTERCRAFT traitor. Mercury TVli H.P. — CEi Bfliri BJB. 14* WOLVERINE, 25 HORSEPOWER fissaasbtg6a». lPPdof FIBSSOUi SKI BOAT. 74 horse powsr Ivlnrud* otoefrk f ifisOAAb. AFOOT DAY CRUI5SR, 154' N6li-berg engln* and control*, 3 to 1 ra-duolan osar, hsad, 51,799 dodvars Sill jy ch#IJ_ c^rr CBZM6, jpL CASS LAKE MARINI IBM BHMStfi riu _ 0 iwlkefltof USS UUCI MARINI M1- Wanted Cars-Tradn HI u.-f%sns&OLm E. Blvd. S, 7 IMN. Thun, Sapt. % T ttoMh - uyB, •* 1—1 aOSE-OUf SALE OF 1965s LONE STARS-GLASSTONS and MFG BOATS '44 Maregry O •ra on display now Cliff Dreyer Gun and Sparta Cantor BIO Holly ltd. Hotly Ml 44771 -Open Dally and Sundays-CORRECTCRAFT Hwaa quality boat* at OAKLAND MARINE ** ^DalC'lird. Sun. *t« 1 pli.*41*1 Century SALES AND SERVICE Cantury Ratortor IP intercsp-• 144 damo ... It99* 1945 cantury Ratortor it' ITI^liw ............. I 1943 Cantury Resorter, IP Interceptor "ISP' ...... t 1941 Chris Craft Sportsman, If_ VI ............... *249* 1957 Chris Craft 17* 95 h*. ... I 99 1943 Aaro Craft IP Johnson 711 19 952 Garwood IP Chrysler IS h» • 49 MANY OTHER USED BOATS TO CHOOSE FROM CASS LAKE MARINE :as*-Ellzabeth Rd. Call 4*2015 ________Opan 7 Pays_______ deMo sale able W ,p,a%a£mS& rRANUMIUION. R AO ID, h£atIr. assume fry. MENTS OF nn FOR MONTH. CALL CREDIT MOR, MU. PARK! AT HAROLD TURHRR FORD. Ml MR . WU QUICK. iRVUAn .QOUFO -Ermine whtfa. Mua trim, whlfa -ftpwM ■ now, *1,4*5. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 11#4_>. Woodward, Hftnlnaham. MI 44m. One Of the better :S>’ buys at i - LLOYD'S ;1962 BUICK ■lactra, "225." Radio, hagtor, paw ,. or BtaarbWL brakn, wlndawi and Mata. whitewalls. ; CORVKTTK ill Mxi-trac-- UL >3404. -45668T<5HiocAE HAROTOF, autMMMe, rod Mf.wMNnMa. Ml pnea or WK FINANCE King Auto tm W. Huron St, . FE $4088; its* (.rwvraiai, .its. 1050 Pontiac Station Wagon, 0275. MOO Fpr*#MNM wagon. 0141 mo Mardury. 0171. All aart '*t good ahapa. ____ IAVR AUTO, 407 HI CASS FE 5-3271 $4 D0WN-$4 WEEKLY St Chevrolet Sdear iadan with a tomatic tranamlMkit, radio at heater, whHawaN fltlh.i ra idea car, full prica only SM credit aa problem, Immadlata d Hvary, mitant cradtt, wa hand all financing amngamanta. STATE WDE AUTO S400 KNsabalh Laka Road I Mackaaatat caaalaka Rd. dHlVV/JLi shaM, T 'owNkft. Tel-Huron Auto ,„« W. Huron FK 04.73 REPOSSlOilON—IMP CHNVY-gQN- jsstasrwrasssra Ft BdtBI. McAullWO. Moor hard- matlc’lrane- STATE WDE AUTO MS Rlhtabeth Laka Road 1 Mack aaafot Caaa Laka Rd. 1*40 OtEVY STATION WAGON, b -----^,^'tgjjjj: ESTATE . STORAGE i6ii ajwrww 1868 TEMPEST 4-Door SSTy ' Crissmon Chsvroltt LUCKY AOTO Now Mi Used Cm ABSOLUTELY ... ■______ ttCWN, ASSUME MINTS OF OS.** FIR iWT 6 "Mom. of Servlet-- OR 3-1291 1962 C0RVAIR FE 84071 ‘Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM t KeN of Oakland i, vary dam 0. 542-1422. LOOK 1*41 Ctwvretot Impali SI #4*7 full price. Si dc NO PROBLEM, Wl BANK RATES. ONE OF THE BETTER BUYS AT LLOYD'S 1963 CORVETTE Convertible. Four apaad heater, rad with matching vinyl M«r1*r. FuH pries Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKUND 333-78 1*43 CHIVY IMFALA, FOWI irlag, auto. M0. 3354*40. CHEVROLETS 1958 CHEVROLETS 1959 CHEVROLETS Bat Air 44mt eadana. Mam and automatic tranamlaalene, 4 0 cyllnden. Prlcad from 03tS. 1961 CHEVROLETS Blecayna Adaar iadan. Whit* hh, ^cylinder with an avatdt 00*1. gi'jjpuarpJSTN 1962 CHEVROLETS Bleceyna Sdper aadan, Park I Bltcayne 44aer tadar B*l Air Itftkn wa whit* tMah, V 01,»s. Bel Air detton wt_. , „ elhrer blue, V4, Powergllde. iteerlng. 01405. impel, apart iadan. Mack rad Inkrkr, V4, Powergllde, er iteerlng, 114*57 Impale super mart hardtop, n*da cream, V4, Powergllde, er peering, oi.ees. 1963 CHEVROLHS Bel Air Moor aodan. Gold f V4, Powergllde. II401. Impele super n ague finish with i 2H« 1964 CHEVROLETS pkcayne Adoar aadan. Saddi* y-ty Fewergiid*, power eta* ^N^Eowsrol .Srpowor^Ske tiB"? 1965 CHEVROLETS I MO «t» convertible. Sierra With iMtcilkie trim and tap, onglng. Powergllde, powtr stee rt^Htg.^fc.hmmr.v fp anw ^ • 1 ; CORVAIRS ■ CHIVY II I«a52ra64*^ PATTERSON CHEVROLET . |6 Naw ERd Used Cm IN Now ml Used Cm 136 ss - JJItowalle, heater, pwn button ra- ®939r a* 1m FORD STATION WAGON, blua and whit*, m top mmapi-• eal shepa, an axealtont second car tor the family, lull prica only Sit*. MARVEL Si Oakland Ava. or 332-7441 eftw 4 p.m. "' -'I i 1960 FALCON Repossession t. 1 deer saden with automatic transmission, tuX price only *197. We Mr DdnSF* *'* **n*nc*n®- FE 84071 s DON'S . WMD CARI ... Cc^itor Auto: 312 W. MONTCALM Just east or Oakland ^ SMALL AD-BIG LOT g; 5* CARS TO CHOOSE FROM 194* FORD SEDAN, GOOD TRANS-portatton, prlvetsu *»5. 44205*7. greuahouL'^^Mlt1’ H. Riggins! s BSBa“sg?r““ FORD, 1*40. FFAUENOKR STA. tton wagon. Mg angkia, all aoeai sorles. 4440* mlles.1450. SM-1104. 1*40 FALCON 2-DOOR. RADIO ANb haatar, naw tires, S24I92. fu INS Ponttoc^Adeor, auto, 1 double 2 power, rtdla, heater, whitewalls, n* 1W Ford,_ wagon, auto., 1 power * 1*43 VaMan?* Adoor. 677 S. LAPEER RD. Lake Orton u MY 2-2041 . 1940 T - BIRD HAROTOF, FULL FQWER, RADIO AND HEATER, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, WHITE-wAu tires, ABSOLUTE-LY HO MONEY DOWN. ASSUME PAYMENTS OF *2745 PER MONTH, CALL OWINT MGR. MR. PARKS AT HA R O L D TURNER FORD. Ml 4-7M0. ” ' • 1964 CHEVROLET Convertible with V-t engine, auto-matto transmission, radio, heater, whitewall ttrae, M* or oW car down, assume payments of 114.15 Repossession 19*0 T-BIrd, must ba sold to satisfy balance. Payments at lust st.97 HAROLD ? TURNER FORD, INC. ;r .iRM.it Cash, at 33*-452*l Spartan! $5 D0WN-S5 WEEKLY 1959 Ford Oalaxto Iwrdtop with V4 raSlo iand heater, pci«ner>>*etearl car, full price only S395. credit no prabtam. Immadlata dallvary, liwtont credit, w* handle all financing arrangements. « Repossession 1M4 CHEVY Impale >door hardtop. VI automatic, released for sale. No money down, 3 years to payl Call MA 5-14*4, dealer. STATE WIDE 1(44 CHEVROLET IMPALA 2-DOOR hardtop Aepead, *14*5. OL 1-114*. INS CORVAIR CORSA, EXCELLENT condition, 4 an floor, bucket seats, whitewalls, radio, haatar, toss than (T. 450* ml, must be able to taka ir over payments. PE A3470. AUTO C6RVAIR, 1*45 MONZA, ASPEED, 7. 140 h.p. 343-4773. 3400 Elizabeth Laka Read T Mack east at Cass Lak* Rd. 1*45 CORVETTE CONVERTIBLE, ir w 000 mil**. *3450. 4024054 attar 5:30 n. p.m. 1940 iFALCON WAGON, *350. OP-dyk* Hardware. 1940 Opdyke Rd., FB’ 8-4484. 0. 1*45 CHEVY SUPER SPORT 300, - 4-speed, til black, tinted glass, 5.N0 miles. FE 0-1312. 1*41 Falcon 4-door, good con-dltlon, *575. Cell 4735251. 1*41 FORD WITH V-t ENGINE, Au- flW CH^VY BT5CAYNE .WAGON. 4 cyl. Powergllde, whitewalls, rack. *• 10,000 mil**. OL 1-1071. X 1(45 CHEVELLk MALIBU SPORTS Coup*, midnight Mua, V4 powar- tomatic transmission, radio: heater, excellent condition, full prica ***7, NORTHWOOD AUTO SALES FE 3923* . glide, steering, excellent condition. 3 13,075. 47A2444 mt Kalcon 2-door with ' 1*45 CORVETTE, NASSAU BLUE, Aspaad, 2 top*, 3354RS1. AUTOMATIC TRANSMIS-SION, RADIO AND HEATER, ^ 1965 CHEVELLE TWO-DOOR .4 Cyl, standard tranemlealen, drivers training car, lot mil**. 51450. < VAN CAMP CHEVY Milford mu aibu LUTBLY NO MONEY'DOWN. ASSUME PAYMENTS OF M4.nl PER MONTH. CALL CREDIT MGR. MR. PARKS AT .HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-75ML 1*45 CHEVY SUPER SPORT 1, Automatic, power steering, vinyl top. 45N actual miles. OR MWO aft. 4. 1*41 FALCOtl, BABY BLUE. NICE, atlck shlfl, radio and haatar, full price 13*5. MARVEL 251 Oakland Ava. w INI CHEVROLET IMPALA V-* 2 door hardtop, powergllde, power £ steering,^ power ^brskes^radlo and Onlv f~T p10\A7— gV OWNER, 1*41 CHRYSLER 3*1, . Kras, toss than 20,000 actual miles, 3 multy.and taka ever payments. ' 34342(7, before 2. After 1 343-3052. Will J \JL X UW DEMO'S 1 PATTERSON 5 ROCHESTER Chrysler—Plymouth 2 Imperial—Valiant INI N. MHT OL 1455* LEFT Choose From Five Mokes Chryslers-Plymoufhs Valiants—Ramblers^ Jeeps BILL SPENCE 66/3 Dixie Hwy. \ CHR YSLER-PLYMOUTH-VALIANT RAMBLER-JEEP CLARKSTON MA S-S434 1*44 CHRYSLER "SOAK" 2-DOOR hardtop, puekst seats, taniiw, " New car warranty to 50400 mltot. ' BIRMINGHAM 1*42 FALCON 4-DOOR ACYL. STICK shift, radio, haatar, extra clean, $7*5. JEROME-FERGUSON Inc. Rochestar FORD Daator, OL 1-9711 Chryalar-Plymouth n 914 s. Woodward Ava. Ml 7-3214 1941 FORD GALAX IE, ADOOR - 1*57 DeSOTO SPORTSMAN ADOOR HARDTOP WITH v V4 ENGINE, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO, HEATER, POWER BRAKES, NICE CONDITION, A GOOD DRIVER, SIN. VILLAGE RAMBLER, 444 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM, A Ml 4-1*00. Fat^,PCTcy'l.,*X*uto., 'axe!/' *400. Frlvato owner, must tall. FE •-21(2. 19*2 FORD FAIRLANE "500" Full power, *597 CREDIT Auto Sato* in uiiAjff " _ . If*On* Dial 125 Oakland at Wld* Track FE 2-9214 *< On your now er uaad Pontiac 5 * KEEGO"PONTIAC l SALES 1, SERVICE r 682-3400 1962 FALCON Sedan^ with' redlO" and haatar, auto- Only $7.00 down and payments at 17.00 par waek. W* handle and r« rt*7 DODGE CORNET, 4-DOOR, Bead body, reasonable. OR 34*41. VIST*? BenB' 1*57 DO DOE, AaIN¥ CONDITION, red end black, 2-door hardtop, deu-I Me power, muu be seen to be ep-w graclated. Full price only 0*5. MARVEL 251 Oakland Ave. FE 8-4071 Capitol Auto' 312 W. MONTCALM Ju*t Hit of Oakland *- 1*N DODGE f-DOOR HARD- TOP WITH V4 ENGINE, AUTO MATIC TRANSMIS-»■ SION. RADIO, HEATER, *• POWER BRAKES AND POWER STEERING, A GOOD TRANSPORTATION 1962 Falcon Future 2-Door Light blu* finish, blue bucket seats, radio, heater, whitewalls. Only — $995 CAR, S17S. VILLAGE RAMBLER, 444 t. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4- 7, 1*40 DODGE DART, 4-DOOR HARD-I. tip. «Uto^ gpwur, 404114 mart. w Repossession 1*4S DODGE wagon, lust ralaaaad BEATTIE tor *S naadadi l call W. Caah at SJMm. h* wik ir bring car to vuur home. Spartan. "Your FORD DEALER Since 1*30" "Horn* of Service after the Hie" OR 3-1291 1$62 DODGE Dart 2 deer, has stick shift tram-mlaamt, rbdto and haatar, sshlti- 1962 FORD XL hardtop with full power, bucket •aat^Mneinatlc, radio haatar. Of S7.N par wart. wTtSmK '■ FE 84071 ji Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM b Just east at Oakland dawn, waakly payments of **.*5. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. ' KESSLER'S t DODGE CARS AND TRUCKS ' . J’U> Sato* ani Service “ Oxford x OA 31400 •IRMiNGHAMK>0WA,,D A«U A75** 1963 Ford . Galaxie 500 Hardtop \ 2-door with 1h* 352 VS angina, black flnwb radio, hHler, Crulse-o-Matic, power stoarmg and whlta- $1695 ► » BEATTIE ON DIXIE NWY, IN WATERFORD "Your FORD DEALER Sine* 1*30" "Ttonw of jtorvlc* attar «i*a salt" OR 34291 * gi. hun^r COMIl/mrmlng- LOOK INI Ford 4-door, southern car, V4 efrawd ettok. men ntoa.Tu • tftrteKx wagon, 4 eyl^j^tahin!rtdl» 1LIICKY AUTO ms FORD STATION WAG-ON, RAOtO AND HRATER. WHITEWALL TIRES, ECON-‘ OMY ENGINE, JiVOLUTE-LY NO. MONfrV DOWN. iiAbAfP^MlNTf OF I27.M pi* /MONTH. CALL £BKRif JMOR..MR, PARKS Doim, TWENTY-SEVEN New e nI IM Cm 106 ONE OF THS^BETTBl BUYS AT LLOYD'S 1963 FORD . Statkh wagon. A reel sharp, one- I------‘---* W DOWN Up to 36 Months to .Pay Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKUND 333-7863 *V PfclVAfE OWNfR - ihTfJl. 1964 FORD Country eoden station wagon, i —tc transmission, r HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. ... 4fLS. WOODWARD AV(. BIRMINGHAM MIA7S00 EXCEL; VALIANT IM3 SIGNET CONVERTI-ble, whltl body* MbHt rmtusr 9am. Mg 4, eute., ex' ln^. whitewall.. HUNTER DODGE, tlrmlngham: 1*44 FALCON SPRINT, V-0 STAND. erd ehKt, 1-owner. FE 5-1214, 1*44 pALCON FUTURA 2-DOOR hardtop, VI angina, automatic, bucket seats, white exterior, flack VALIANT 1*44, WHITE CONVERT!- ly owned, 41,500. MA 4-5042. Ic transmission. FE 1965 MUSTANG Jbl* with V-0 angina, automat-transmission, radio, heater, ‘ewall tiros, 05* or old car n, weakly payments of 014.05. WE FINANCE - Chevies 1*57 to 1W1 01*5 up 1*40 and 1*57 Bulck wagons fits ea. 1*57 Plymouth, '54 Dodge, '54 Chevy 024 ea. . Pontlacs, 1*55 to 1*42 . 535 up Plant others, tew trucks. ECONOMY CARS 2335 Dixie Hwy. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM _Ml 4-7500 MUST DISPOSE OF 1*45 MUSTANG. Money Down, *13.07 weekly, bring car to your home 11 Mr. Murphy at 335-4101. Me- >1**5. Ml 4^075. $7 D0WN-S7 WEEKLY 1*M Pontiac Convertlbl* with 0AYMjHTt — FORD, Ml 4-7500. R O L 0 TURNER ONE OF THE KTTER BUYS AT LLOYD'S 1962 MERCURY S^kwr hardtop. Poster steering and brakes, automatic transmission, radio, heater, sshltawan*. $37 DOWN Up to 36 Months to Pay Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 l*4t COMET 2-DOOR. 122 frCYL. automatic, bucket seaie, radio, haat-er, extra clean, only 010*5. ROME-FERGUSON Inc., Roct FORD Dealer, OL T-P711. MUST DiSPOSf ‘ ii«r, ul 14711. 3SE OF 1*41 ME rAK MERCUbV S3 ONE OF THE BETTER BUYS AT LLOYD'S 1963 COMET $47- DOWN Up to- 36 Months to Pay Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 1863 COMtT Convertible with 1 HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 404 S, WOODWARD AVB. BIRMINGHAM _Ml 4-7SI 1*54 "OLD* 4-DOOR, POWl Oldsmobiles 1*1*1 — 1*45s Many Models on pHple SUBURBAN OLDS 410 S. wooditord 4174111 u WrfR~j1 InoIne. it FI 1-4101. McAtHNf*. Nbw End Usb4 Cm ml ow.LlSk^“.U^rtibie,Nf5i xskWr---------------- 9MF IN ANO TEST DRIVE THE “HOT" 4-4-1 JEROME M4 OLDS STARFIRE CONVERTI- K ffEMmh----------- 4*>104*. Repossession SEE US FIRST BOBBORST LINCOLN-MERCURY 0 S. woodward Blrmlnghai MI 6-4538 V*l/ automatic. BANK RATBS. LUCKY AUTO t»40 W. Wide Track ■ STATE WIDE AUTO 1*54 PONTIAC. GOOD condition. S15*. 473-5145. RUNNINO 1*57 FONTIAC~CAfALINA fssjnrssa* \ 45* 1*5* PONTIAC CATALINJ hardtop. East otter ovat FE 5-M07. I960 PONTIAC 4-DOOR C I S-OOOR • SPOOL - brakes. Extra clean. StM ■ing and f*£ — FE 1*41 PONTIAC HARDTOP S**J Tel-A-Huron AUTO SALES 60 S. Talagraph FE 8-9661 1*41 YELLOW PONTIAC CONVERT-Ible, St* et 323 Griggs, Rochester. Ml PONTIAC STAR CHIEF - $9 D0WN>$9 WEEKLY 42 Pontiac Catalina 4dlaor aadan with power equipment, radio,end heater, whitewall ttrae, an extra delivery. Instant cradlt. STATE WIDE AUTO Attentionl Our Cradlt Manager, Mr. I back. One* again *m find albla to help all who have had credit problem would Ilk* a good uaad ca feature spat dallvary. FE 3-7863 LLOYDS_____ 1250 Oaklet* GO!! HAUPT PONTIAC ond Chock Our Spociol Prlcn for Mondoy Only on All Usod Cart Haupt Pontiac 1962 PONTIAC Mia with Mkik in dream ear,, only *i,o*5. 1963 CHEVY pal* moor !>«"*«• eutomatk,i ly S14M. 1962 CHEVY II v* Moor hardtop with at ihltt, radio anij haalar, i end' *^!,%am*tol^ll{tol< et $1,915. BILL SMITH'S ' Usod Cora 462 N. Parry FE 4> Maw aad Uiaji Cm 1$6 tot TEMPEST 4-DOOR, LOW MILE-gm must see to appreciate, 152- 1*43 PONTIAC power iteerlnt dtaiy fisiip TEMPEST 2-DOOR, 4CYLIND-, 3-speed transmission, radio. 1*43 PONTIAC CATALINA, 1-POOR hardtop, auto., poster, all tin**'* Bias*, lew mileage, fb 5-33*7. 1*43 CATALINA AOOOR, POWER —■** Trine, low mileage. Very 1145*. PE 34055. 1*43 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE. Brend_______________ ...... ^ PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 11*4 S. Woodward, Birmingham REPOSSESSION—1*43 PONTIAC 2-‘ hardtop, no money down, pay* Is of tll.17 weekly. Call'Mr. m et FE 5-41*1, McAullfte. 1964 Pontiac tonnwille 2-Door Hardtop With a dark blur finish* radio, heater, whitewalls. Only — $2095 BEATTIE IN DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD 'Your FORD DEALER Since 1*30" "Home of Service after the sale" OR 3-1291 transmission, power iteerlng, power brakes, 3 to choosa from. $1,4*7 toll price, $5 down. CREDIT NO PROBLEM, WE FINANCE BANK RATES. LUCKY AUTO 1964 Pontiac Catalina 2-Door Hardtop With a maroon finish/ radio* haat--Only----------- $1995 BEATTIE I GRAND PRIX, 421 >r, 4 on the floor, I ower, FE S-34S1. r ml Usod Cm IM 1964 Tempest ’ Wagon BY OWNER $1900 SHELTON P0NTIAC-BUICK 155 Rochester Road ______451-**11 after A FB 5-3174. J MONEY DOWN — WE FINANCE CREDIT *45 OTO, RED, 4-SPEED. WALNUT steering, translatorlnd Ignition, rear detegger, $24*3. OL 1-3*3*. 1*45 TE'MPEST 2-DOOR CUSTOM sports coupe. Vinyl tap, 4-cyll ' white! AII04 eSer 1*45 PONTIAC WAGON, POWER brakes, steering,»54*0 miles, 1 month old, mint sell. PE 5-2432. 745 TEMPEST CUSTOM 2 DOOR i PONTIAC CATALINA HARD-g, power stowing, brakes, 4400 I., OR 3-3443.____________ l*45CA+ALINA FAST BACK, 2-daer, loeded, 4,0*0 ml, 442-5*51. 1*45 PONTIAC 2 PLUS 2 CONVERTI-HMlii "read, LVO posi-. PE BOIfS, 4-7 ble, 4-barrle, < r.5 CATALINA VENTURA 4-DOOR. Power steering, brakes) Verbera-tor. Cell before 5 p.m., PE 2-*4tO. brakes. FM radio, extras, S24S0. FE 4-1427 or 1010 B. Walton Blvd. 1*45 PONTIAC CATALINA, 2-000R, Cell 731-71M. 1964 Tempest LaMans 2-Door Hardtop With e turquoise finish, 324 VI er gins, 3-speed, radio, heater, whltt walls. Only - $2095 BEATTIE ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFOR— "Your FORD DEALER Sine* 1*10" "Ham* at Sarvie* attar th* sale" 1962 Ramblor American, 2-deor $595 Homer, Hight MOTORS, INC. PONTIAC-BUICK^HEVROLET )A t-252«---Oxford, Michigan COME TO . THE PONTIAC RETAIL STORE WHERE YpU EXPECT MQRE ... AND GET ITI 100 Top quality, One-owner, naw car tradas to choosa from 65 Mt. Clemens at Wld* Track FE 3-7954 1*42 CALIFORNIAN PONT IA Grand Prlx. Candy appla rad. It macutot* condition. 334-4352. Cl 1*43 BONNEVILLE, 1-OWNER, IM- ----ilato, low mileage, naw n nylon tlraa, SINS. Call KM 0, attar S p.m. ____________ LOOK 1*43 Grand Prlxa, 3 to choose tram, all automatic, doubt* power, no money down. CREDIT NO PROBLEM, WE FINANCE BANK RATES. LUCKY AUTO 1*44 TEMPEST CUH :.Ueg.°MFE,^4T Action Sale 1965 Modal Clearance OLDS-GMC RAMBLERS “Rock-Bottom Prices" - SEE US NOW - Houghton & Son GMC-Rambler-Olds ROCHESTERN‘ M*,n Wr,(?L 1-971 Beautiful Sky Blue finish. Priced to will ROSE RAMBLER 8145 Comment Road Union Lake ■M 3 4111 1 EM StoHi Repossessed Cars OR 3-1221 ASK FOR BRUCE OR BILL RUSS JOHNSON Pontiac-Ramblar USED CAR STRIP t*43 BUICK E lactra 22S . 1*42 CHEVY Wagon ....... INS FORD Adoor ......... pontiac H'tap LaMans 1*40 CHIVY Moor ........ 1*44 PONTIAC Catalina Adoor 1*4* CORVAIR Adoor ..... 1*44 RENAULT Adr. aadan .. <13*5 *1,0*5 * 1*5 113*5 •1,0*5 S1J*5 *2,3*5 *2,1*5 10 *1,5*5 . *4*.*5 . 11,2*5 1*43 PONTIAC H'tap . 1*41 PONTIAC 2-door H 1(44 CATALINA Wagon 1*43 FORD Gatoxl* 3-door 500 PACKARD Adoor ... 1*43 FORD Oalaxto 1-door 1*43 FORD Falrlana 100 .. INI Bonntovllle vista . *1,**5 RAMBLER Adoor . *1,0*5 PONTIAC Catalina _ *1,4(5 RUSS JOHNSON anttoeHambtor ...34 In Laka Orton MY 3-6266 ANNOUNCING SUPERIOR. RAMBLER HAS BEEN APPOINTED AS P0NTIACS ONLY AUTHORIZED JEEP DEALER WE WUC0ME YOUR PARTS AND SERVICE NEEDS WITH FACTORY-TRAINED PERSONNEL Tfr SERVE YOU 590 Oakkmd-39^9421 -4- TWENTY-RIGHT THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 19 K $ MANDFII* WAYS stwr ELIZABETH TAYLORl RICHARD BURTON EVA MARIE SAINT IN MARTIN RANSOHOFF'S PRODUCTION IfatMm racing story | JAMES DARREN PAMELA TIFFIN Tpplinirnlnr wt 1 Lady Bird Ends Western Visit WASHINGTON (AP) - After four days of promoting jnd enjoying natural beauty out West, Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson was | back at the White House today, i Daughter Lynda, II, was rig-j orously and gaily turning aside I rumors of a new romance with j a Wyoming medical student. | Conservationists were delight--j ed at the flowing effects of the . First Lady as their ba'cker. j A Salt Lake City Tribune edi-I torial referred to Mrs: Johnson I as a '‘quiet persuader” who is jcatching the public fancy. Gov. John A. Love of Colorado, a Republican*- listened to Mrs. Johnson dedicate a garden of flowing waters, shrubs and 1 flowers on the campus of the ; University of Denver Friday,! | announced he was sending a i Colorado blue spruce tree to j help beautify the capital. i He said Mrs. Johnson’s j i speeches were helping advance i his own state’s South Platte net-1 | ural beauty project. ; Mrs. Johnson was putting low j key presure on for beautifica- j 1 tion of American cities, j She told a Denver campus | audience of some 1,500 that “it | is going to take real planning j and real imagination and train-| ing” to cope with the fright-, ening growth of cities “or we ! shall find ourselves stifled by ! the uglification of a once splen- j did nation.” The First Lady quoted from I , British poet Abraham Cowley: | i “God the first garden made, 1 and the first city, Cain.” I HIS MASTER’S FINGERS-The dog, Wur-litzer, watches hjs master, Dick Carty of Los Angeles, as he tunes an old player piano. Carty says he tunes'the piano once, just be- fore he sells them. After that, the customers don’t seem to care. His reconditioned pianos sell for about $600. Adulation Surprises Vaughn U.N.CLE. Star Overwhelmed By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-Television Writer HOLLYWOOD—’Twixt 12 and “BRILLIANT AND HILARIOUS FILM!" — N. Y. Journal American iHeW/-Owu 2nd Week! COLOR MASTROIANNI USI CasOnoN 7° Features Weekdays at 7:20 - 9:30 Sunday at 3:10-5:10-7:20-9:30 Added: “CANINE CASANOVA” (Cartoon Riot) 20, the cry is “U.N.C.L.E.” and nobody is more surprised by it than Robert Vaughn. The actor plays Napoleon Solo, the man from the alphabetized under-cover organization, on the NBC series. The show appears to have been taken up THOMAS as a cause by teen-agers, along with stretch pants and folk sic. Both Vaughn, 32, and star David McCallum have beet? getting Beatle • like treatment wherever they go. “It’s something quite new to me,” observed Vaughn after stripping out of a skin-diving suit he had worn in an MGM lake. “Before, I was always playing villains. I received fan midi, but it was largely about acting. Now the mail comes in a flood and it concerns all kinds of personal matters. And the crowds!” RETURNED FROM DETROIT He had returned from a weekend appearance at a Detroit COMMERCE UNION LK. RD. AT HAGGERTY! EM 3-0661 NOW thru SUNDAY! From tha Writer and Director of "STRAIT-JACKET" THE i G m IK WO I BARBARA STANWYCK^5 § 1UMTH MIRtMTH BQCHHfR- i VWERU i SPECIAL i ravotf :......*pchnioolon- Bis SlEAK-nc* SHAWN Solons Invited to View Dunes LANSING (AP) - Gov. George Romney, hoping the U.S, House will follow the Senate in voting to establish a Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore, invited House committees Friday to visit the area. , He also urged the committees to add two amendments to the Senate - passed legislation — allowing for payments in lieu of taxes to the affected school districts, and guaranteeing the speedy acquisition of all lands authorized by the act. “This outstanding area, so unique from both a scenic and scientific point of view, is certainly deserving of dedication as part of our system of national parks and recreation areas,” Romney wrote. He sent letters to Rep. Wayne Aspinall, chairman of the subcommittee on national parks. amusement park, and he still seemed shaken by the experience. ■k ir ♦ “I’ve been in crowds before, but this was the first time I was really frightened,” be remarked. “I saw several thousand girls between the ages of 12 and 15 coming at me on a dead run, with only a dozen policemen with locked arms in front * of me. The girls grabbed at my coat, my tie—I thought I was going to lose a whole head of hair.” .N.CX.E. mania is like-ish in the coining NBC hasn’t out-itself with a schedule switch. The series has been earning a highly respectable rating in its Monday night spot —in fact, doing better on summer reruns than on the first time around. Starting Sept. 17, the show will appear in the east and west at 10 p.m. Friday. * * * “A lot of kids seem upset about it, and I must say it concerns me, too,” said Vaughn. “After all, Friday night is the traditional date night for teenagers and college kids, and 10 Is pretty late for the subteens as well. POOR FOR RATINGS “Friday doesn’t seem to be a very good night for ratings; only ‘Gomer Pyle’ seems to bo able to get Into the upper ranks. W ♦ it “But I’ll wait and see what happens. NBC was right about moving our time from Tuesday to Monday; maybe they’ll be right again.” four Fl££ PLAYGROUNDS-ciecus TBOIN SIDES AT AU. 00R.TUEATERS! Miracle M;le * Mm m mures seam uuuim at LAST FOUR PAY5 N $55$' Mmmwr. cattgpy Mission Dontiacl I >•» llllt NICMMV M 'nnrr JUkJLwL Wk MARLON BRANDO WJ0 wgStt* f .^BRIDGE y ON THE [RIVER KWAI mu Widow to Lead Divine's Sect Direct*! Movement j~ Husband PHILADELPHIA (AP) - The blonde, blue-eyed widow of Father Divine, Negro evangelist who founded a worldwide sect, promises that she will lead his religious movement. Divine, called “God” by his followers, died Friday of a heart ailment at his palatial mansion in nearby Gladwynef A legal adviser said Divine was about 100 years IBs 40-year-old widow, known as Mother Divine, has directed the movement the past few years. Her husband’s illness kept him bedridden. “She told me that no one would take his place,” said Austin Norris, Divine’s lawyer. NOT EMPTY “She said this place is not empty. She will carry on as she said she expects him (Divine) to carry on as he has been, although he won’t be physically present.” Divine’s last public appearance was in April 1963 —♦. the 17th anniversary of his mar-j riage to Mother Divine, the ‘ former Edna Rose Ritchings, a I native of Montreal. Known among sect leaders before the marriage as “Sweet Angel,” die towered six inches above her 5-foot-2 husband. Divine did not disclose their, marriage until three months! after it took place in Washing- j ton. He told guests at a banquet | in Philadelphia that he was married in name only. “God is not married,” he de- j dared- EAGLE PeaUaeU PdPUIAR tNUjVjW MM tlM. «•!!■* tails* BOB HOPE TUESDAY WELD 1 FRANKIE MON Ml ran t HERCULES, f SAMSON... ULYSSES B ADULTS Mites-Sun. t Holidays 1:M Children Under 12 Mo | A|fC WALLED LAKE UK 624-3980 ENDS TONIGHT ALL-NEW TECHNICOLOR- jpAlES NflW ; VAIR FORCE tha McHALE-S NAVY CREW PLUS I “THETBIfTHABOUTIPHINB” I SUNDAY-MONDAY IjohnVAvneI DeinMmttm -I*W1IIS Vii 4 LOOK WHAT’S UNDER THE ORANGE ROOF! Served Every Saturday, -Sunday, Monday and Tuesday COMPLETE DINNER INCLUDES 4 piecaa of Golden Fried, Juicy Tender Chicken French Fried Potato** ' Cole Slew Roll end Butter Coffee. Tea or Milk Choice of Howard Johnson s 28 Femoue Ice Creeme or 8herbete SERVED 11:30 AM TO CLOSING JJouiARDjounson? 3650 DIXIE HWY. Drayton Plaint HOME OF THE SPECIALS ___________________ CHILOSKN (Und-r 13).. 50c UT. I SUN. at 2:M - 6:47 - 10:31 THE SCREEN’S MOST EXCITIN6 CAST... IN THE YEAR’S MOST MAGNIFICENT MOVIE! HURON MM UK CL DBM scon SHHMIY MaclAINE The Firebrand I EVERYTHING HAPPENS IN... ijt^ytevee MiJ t—!i..v (w The Lady ART CARNEY-WALLY COX* JOYCE GRENFELL TNaOMale CUFROBERISON RED BUTTONS UP JPOM THE •terte et ftll-lifi-ail THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1^65 TWENTY-XmE |:90 (4) New« (9) Swingin’Time t (BO) Movie till (4) Weather f:SB (4) Sports fill (2) Littlest Hobo t (4) Lawman 2 (7) Gallant Men f:09 (2) ,Dea(h Valley Days j (4) At the Zoo l ,(9) Pro Football jiU (2) A1 Hlrt (4) Flipper t (7) King Family \ (SO) Cdorful World 8:00 (4) Kentucky Jones v (SO)' MOvle 8:30 (2) Gilligan’s Island x (4) Movie: “Battleground * (1949) Van Johnson, John Hodiak i (7) Lawrence Welk 9:00 (2) (Special) Billy Graham Crusade 0:30 (7) Hollywood Palace *4----(#) Movie: “Paths of Glory” (1987) Kirk Douglas, Adolphe Menjou 10:00 {2} (Special) Miss America Pageant (50) All-Star Golf 7 . 10:30 (7) World Adventure*, 0:01(4) (7) (9) (SO)NewsT Weather, Sports ft :tt (9) Around Town 0:11 (9) NightCap M'jtl (7) Movie: "The Best Things in Life Are Free” ^ V (1956) Dan Dailey, Sheree North; “T-Men" (1948) 11:19 (4) Johnny Carson 12:99 (2) News 12:1112) Weather 12:29 (2) Sports 12:29 (2) Movie: “The Big Operator” (1999) Mickey Rooney, Steve Cochran; “Women Without Names” (1940) Ellen Drew, Robert Paige 12:11 (9) Film Feature 1:90(4) Thin Man 1:19 (4) News, Weather 3:fc (7) All-Night Show 4:04 (2) News, Weather SUNDAY MORNING 1:91 (7) Some Heroical Spirits 7:99 (7) Rural Newsreel 7:19(2) News 7:11 (9) Accent 7:ft (4) News 7:94 (2) Gospel Time (4) Country Living (7) Water Wonderland 8:99 (2) Newsworthy (4) Industry on Parade (7) Insight 1:11 (2) Light Time (4) Davey and Goliath (9) Sacred Heart 8:99 (2) Temple Baptist Church (4) Frontiers of Faith (7) Understanding Our World (9) Film Feature 9:49 (2) Mass for Shut-Ins (4) Church at the Crossroads (7) Clutch Cargo (9) Oral Roberts 9:99 (2) With This Ring (4) Bozo the Clown (7) Showplace Homes (9) Cathedral of Tomorrow 9:41 (2) To Dwell Together 19:99 (2) This Is the Life (7) Wally, Lippy and Touche 19:99 (2) Faith for Today (7) Volage to Adventure (9) Herald of Truth 11:99 (2) Insight (4) House Detective (7) Beany and Cecil (9) Pinocchio 11:30 (2)"The Way (7) Bullwinkle (9) Movie: “Bright Eyes” (1934) Shirley Temple, Jane Withers SUNDAY AFTERNOON 12:99 (2) Voice of the Fans -(4) U of M 'Presents (7) Discovery ‘65 (SO) Profiles 12:11 (2) Tiger Warmup 12:99 (2) Baseball (4) International Zone (?) Issues and Answers (SO) NFL Pregame Show 12:41 (50) (Special) Pro Football 1:00 (4) Pro Football ,, (7) (Special) Tennis (9) Movie: “Wagonmaster (1950) Ben Johnson, Ward Bond Beauties, Beatles and Emmys TONIGHT I AL HIRT, 7:99 p.m. (2) Guests include' I satirist Allan Sherman, Woody Herman and 8 his band, rock ’n’ rollers Herman and the I Hermits, singer Karen Morrow, and the in-I strumental Jimmy Smith Trio. I MISS AMERICA PAGEANT, 10:00 p.m. 1 (2) The 45th annual pageant is telecast from j Atlantic City, N. J._ SUNDAY | WATER WONDERLAND, 7:30 a.m. (7) I Shown in color are highlights of the Au g Sable canoe race and the Sunfish-Sqilfish regatta at Metropolitan Beach. BASEBALL, 12:90 p m. (2) Detroit plays Cleveland. FOOTBALL, 12:45 p.m. (50) Washington Redskins meet Detroit Lions in third annual Hall of Fame game from Canton, Ohio. Before gamp, the hall will be toured, and" action films of this year’s inductees will be j shown. FOOTBALL^ 1:00 p.m. (4) New York Jets play Houston Oilers in colorcast of AFL season opener. TENNIS, 1:00 p.m. (7) National Tennis Championships are telecast from Forest | Hills. N. Y. WORLD SERIES OF GOLF, 4:00 p.m. | (4) Final round of $77,500 ’tournament in | Akron, Ohio, is colorcast. MEET THE PRESS, 5:30 p.m. (4) For- I mer Vice President Richard M. Nixon is,* scheduled to be interviewed. ATOM ANT/SECRET SQUIRREL, 6:30 | p.m. (4) Color preview of two new Saturday f morning cartoon heroes: Atom Ant, world’s 1 most powerful insect; and Secret Squirrel, the animal kingdom’s James Bond. HOI, HOI - U.S.A., 6:30 p.m. (7) Top ^ Japanese rock ’n’ roll artists perform. AMERICAN SYMPHONY, 7:30 p.m. (56) jj Leopold Stokowski conducts the American | Symphony Orchestra. ED SULLIVAN, 8:00 p.m. (2) The f Beatles, singer Cilia Black, comics Allen and j Rossi and Soupy Sales, and illusionist Fan- * task) help Ed inaugurate his 18th TV season^ EMMY AWARDS, 10:00 p.m. (4) Annual! awards for excellence in television are pre- ] sented in New York and Hollywood. ^-Weekend Radio Programs— WJRC760) VyXYZQ 270) CKtW(900) WWJ(93Q) WCARQ130) WPONQ 460) WJSKQ 500) WHFI-FM(94.7) TONIGHT AitO—WJR, Newt, Sportt JWWJ, Newt, Musk, MonII WJR. Points and Trtnds WCAR, Ron Root WRON, Nows, Johnnr ... WJR, NOWS, Sportt. Mut SiJO—WWi, Toscanini WJR. LtWWHri' Choke ItoW-WWJ, Nows, Musk WJR. MdWWjf WJR. Ask Pnetetsor ' Ilili WWJ, Newt. Musk WJR, Nows. Musk Stop win. warm Review CKLW, Album THUS, March at Faith WXYZ, Mossoae of Israel S,SO—WJR, Organ Sncoros WJBK, Heartbeat Theater WKYZ, Negro College Choir MM—CKLW' Album Time MUR. The Christophers MM—WJR, Newt. Mutk •WXYZ. Religious News CKLW. Christ Truth Crusade WJBK, Hour ot Crucified WCAR, Choir Loft WPON Lutheran Heur CKi w, Bauohev Tabernacle WJBK. Awe Moris Hour WPON, Sunday Serenade WCAR, TM Church Today Cico—wjr. Newt. ReMedkni wwJ. Nows, nhh||'« ;; WKYZ, Mom kg ChoraM CKLW. Your wartMe Hour WJBK, Musk with Words WCAR, Back to Oed Hour CKLW. Revival Hour WUR, Renfro VaHev WJBK, Radio Bible Claes WMF I, Rslla'out News PlM—WJR, News CKLW. Belhssds Temple WCAR, Musk tor Sunday WPON. Protestant Hour WWJ, Churdi CrptorooBs CKLW. Hob. dirlstlan WJBK, World Tomorrt WPON. Rsllgkn In Ns VlM—CKLW, Christian Scl- lllM-WJk, NOWS, Musk WWJ, Newt, Radio Pulpit CKLW, Radio MM Class WJBK, Protestant Hour WPON, The Christophers WXYZ, .Marc Avery; Muck. 10:15—WPON, Emmanuel Bop WJBK, Vofce of Prop WHPi. McLoodevllle, I ret- -WJR, News, Musk WWJ. W, Paul's Cathedral CKLW, Pontiac Baptist WJBK, News. Tatm HbR WJBK,' Vfm lht°Psoole SUNDAY APtBRNOON IliSS—WJR, News, (Berts WCAR, Musk tor Sunday WPON, Sunday Serenade WJBK, Njjw^a MMton WhVl' News. SundoyrBeet WXYZ, Music. Nows ltlM-WJR, Tiger Beat IliSS—WJR, Detroit, Cleveland CKLW, UBgMt MM WPON, Sunday Edlttoi IliSS—WPON Oakland ' Commerce CKLW. Tom Shannon, Maws ..NeBtili Mrum liCS-WPON, Sunday Seron-ade WWJ, Lkms Football liSS—WHPI, News. Sunday WXVL Dave Prince SUNDAY EVENING SiSS-WJR, News, Sports, M s. Science TiSS—WJR, News, Sports MMfJ, Nows. Monitor WXYZ. Music Sports CKLW, Church ol God WJBK. News. CKLW, Bbeneeier Baptist WJR, The Lone Ranger k WPON, Youth Forum CKLW, Voice ot Prophet WPON, Church at Week WJBK, YnOng America IHS-CKLW.'^The Quiet WJBK, Noma --------- WJR, Solo Showcase f:ie-CKLW, Grosso Polnte Baptist WPON, Johnny Irons JWi, nBc MusIc file—WJBK, Science. Adolescents WXYZ, Wayne State CKLW. Bible Study WJR, Pace the Nation ISiBB WWJ. Newt, Catholic Naur CKLW, Billy Graham WXYL ikiying, (U. el M.) WJBK, News, Concert WJR, News, Musk ISitS-WJR, Religion to Ac IliM-WJR. Newt, Sports ' WWJ, News, Written Word WXYZ, Hour ot Decision CKLW, Church of Christ WJBK, Musk toom Album Hits—WJR, All Night Show WWJ, Nows, Oood Musk CKLW, Church of Lord Josui MONDAY MORNING ties—WJR, Agriculture WWJ, Penn, Now* WXYZ, Prod Wolf, Mutk, CKLW, Perm Ndwa WJBK, Newe WCAR, Newt, Senders WPON, News, Arizona Wsst cakfMrr* WPON, News, Bob Laursncs tiOS-WHFi, Almanac WJR, Nows, Mutk Site—WJR, Nows. WJBK, Bob LOO Site—wjr. Musk Han Lib—WJR, News, open Hem# WCAR. Tom Kofltot I0:0e-WJR, News, Music ’ WWJ, Now*. Ask Neighbor WXYZ, Braokletl Club ' cklw, job Van m - now ■____ Bob Taiyne itS-WXYZ, More Avery Mutk, Newe WJR. News, Godfrey MONDAY AFJERNOON iiiee-wwJ, Newt, MareheH CKLW, Newt, grant WCAR, Newt, Dentil WHFI, News, Encore WJR, Nows, Farm IliM—WJBK. Newe, Reid WWJ Mutk lilt—WWJ, hlewt, Mutk CKLW, Nowa. Mutk > • wjr. Newt . ItJS—WJR, Quest filS—WPON, Newt, Ron KnMtt WXYZ, Dave Prince, Mutk • : Newt CKLW, Newt, Dave Shttor WJR, Newt, Elliot Pkld Gazette liSB—WcAR, Joe Bacaretle ACROSS / 1 U.S. coin with pmall value I Italian coin 4 . 9 "—money” 1}—-charged 19 Durden 14 Stock market bustle If Charivaris 1? Corded fabric ltUrao, 19 Phyaootigmine 21 Tenth of a doUar (U.S.) 29 Metal component of some . coins U Hamper (dlil.) 27 Coven 29 County In Florida 39 First game in baseball 39 Mountain crests 9t Settle question 3? Father or mother 39 Chair 39 Mix 4 Scottish stream 4 Low haunt 41 Fruit drinks 46 Noblewoman 4-----0f prices 4 Scottish alder tree 8jt Quoted price wrongly 86 Twitching 57 Athena 81 Was borne 4 MSrin*r’s direction 80 Money paid for road passage ft Mast DOWN J W-price I Always I Roman emperor I*—> of living costs African worm MONEY MATTERS r r r r r r r ft 9 10 TT 12 13 I*" IB 16 12 II 16 IT Lj 24 25 26 1 r 36 31 32 36 r tt 41 42 44 48 46 il 49 60 51 Si Sft B4 Sit B7 Bft w N 61 .JI 10 Arabian gulf 11 Opiate 19 Fastened with brads 20 Horseman 22 Sinks In mud 24 8ssd containers 25 Fencing weapon 29 Deterioration 28 Palatable 90 Low sand hill 31 Italian city 99 Chemical substance 351114081 unusual 40 Pendent ornament 43 Thread (cortb, form) 45 Cicatrices jr 46 Top of head •47 Ireland 48 Farm structure 50 Above 51 Mother of Helen of Troy (myth.) 52 Europon stream 56 East Indian timber tree Answer to Previous Puzzle 3:99 (7) Championship Bowling 3:29 (2) Baseball Scoreboard 3:30 (2) Amateur Hour (9) Moviq: “The System” (1955) Joan Weldon, Frank Lovejoy- 4:99 (2) Twentieth Century / (4) (Special) World Series of Golf (7) Club 1270 (50) Auto Classics 4:39 (2) Battle Line (50) Speedway International i:09 (2) Movie: “Revolt of the Barbarians” (1964) Roland Caray, Mario Feliciano (7) Movie: “The Mississippi Gambler” (1953) Tyrone Power, Piper Laurie (50) Movie 5:99 (4) Meet the Press SUNDAY EVENING 9:99 (4) News (9) Route 66 (56) On Hearing Music l:li (4) Weather 6:91 (4) Sports 6:39 (4) (Special) Atom Ant-Secret Squirrel (7) (Special) Hoi, Hoi U.S.A. (56) Mythology 7:99 (2) Lassie (7) (Special) Hercules (9) Movie: “The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit” (1956) Gregory Peck, Jennifer Jones (50) Movie (56) Astronomy for You 7:91 (2) My Favorite Martian (4) Walt Disney’s World (56) (8pecial) American Symphony 8:61 (2) Ed Sullivan (7) Movie: “Birdman of Alcatraz” (1962) Burt Lan caster, Karl Malden 8:31 (4) Branded (56) (Special) Roomful of Music 9:06 (2) Perry Mason (4) Bonanza (9) Let’s Sing Out (SO) Stock Car Racing____ 9:30 (9) Mary Morgan Presents 10:00 (2) Candid Camera (4) (Special) Television Emmy Awards (9) Pierre Berton 10:30 (2) What’s My Line? (9) Compass ’ (50) People Are Funny 11:99 (2) (7) (9) News, Weather, Sports 11:29 (9) Around Town 11:25 (2) Movie: “Cash McCall” (I960) James Garner, Natalie Wood (7) Movie: “Man Without a Star” (1955) Kirk Douglas, Richard Boone 11:39 (4) News (9) Movie: “Woman of Evil” (1953) Jeanne Moreau, HenH Genes 11:48 (4) Weather 11:11 (4) Sports 12:88 (4) Surfside Six 12:46 (9) Film Feature 1:89 (4) News, Weather 1:11 (2) With This Ring MONDAY MORNING fOi (2) TV Chapel 9:29 (2) News 9:96 (2) Operation Alphabet 9:99 (4) Classroom (D Funews 9:51 (2) Editorial, News 7:99 (4) (Color) Today (7) Johnny Ginger 7:96 (2) News 7:30 (2) Happyland ‘9:99 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Big Theater CUSTOM CONSTRUCTION BEAR CONSTRUCTION FE 3-7833 8:39 (7) Movie: “Come Live With Me” (1941) James Stewart, Hedy Lamarr. 8:49 (56) Great Books 8:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 9:98 (2) Andy Griffith 1 (4) Living'--- (9) Romper Room 9:10 (56) Understanding Numbers 9:30 (2) Dick Van Dyke (56) Occupational Planning 9:56 (4) News (59) Spanish Lesson 19:99 (2) I Love Lucy (4) (Color) Truth or Consequences (9) Vacation Time 19:19 (56) Rhyme Time 10:20 (56) Science Is Everywhere 19:39 (2) McCoys (4) (Color) What’s This Song? (7) Girl Talk 19:59 (56) Spanish Lesson 19:55 (4) News 11:99 (2) Divorce Court (4) Concentration (7) Young Set (9) Film Feature 11:29 (56) What’s New? 11:39 (4) (Color) Jeopardy (9) Across Canada MONDAY AFTERNOON 12:99 (2) Love of Life (4) (Color) Call My Bluff 77) Donna Reed (9) Forest Rangers (50) Dickory Doc 96 (2) News 39 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) (Color) I’U Bet (7) Father Knows Best (9) Hawkeye 36 (56) Spanish Lesson 49 (2) Guiding Light 50 (56) Understanding Numbers 65 (4) News 00 (2) Scene 2 (4) Match Game (7) Rebus (9) Movie: “Nocturne” (1946) George Raft, Lyrtn Bari (50) Movie: “Belle of the Yukon” (1944) Randolph Scott, Gypsy Rose Lee. 25 (4) News (56) World History 39 (2) As the World Turns (4) (Color) Let’s Make a Deal (7) One Step Beyond 55 (4) News (56) Adventures in Science 00 (2) Password (4) Moment of Truth (7) Where the Action Is ;25 (56) Occupational Planning 39 (2) House Party (4) Doctors —(7) A Time for Us (50) Love That Bob :59 ( 56) Spanish Lesson 55 (7) News :00 (2) To Tell the Truth (4)Another World (7) General Hospital (50) Topper 3:25 (2) News 3:30 (2) Edge j>f Night (4) (Color) You Don’t Say (7) Young Marrieds (9) Swingin' Time (50) Captain Detroit 4:90 (2) Secret Storm (4) (Color) Bozo the Clown (7) Trailmaster 4:39 (2) Mike Douglas ft) Fun House (50) Tales of Wells Fargo 4:55 (4) Eliot’s Almanac 5:09 (4) (Color) George Pierrot (7) Movie: “Invisible Man’s Revenge” (1944) Jon Hall, Alan Curtis. (59) Lloyd Thaxton (56) French Chef 5:30 (56) What’s New? 5:55 (4) Carol Duvall Chippewas Celebrate MOUNT PLEASANT (AP) -Isabella County’s Chippewa Indians celebrate , their annual harvest festival today on their reservation three miles east of here. The event, likened to the national Thanksgiving holiday, is attended by Indians from throughout Michigan. I Rosamond Williams] SMAICO. Pontiac Bunch I 29 E. Cornell Fi 2-1225 | i Services and Supplies far i ; All MEARBIA AIM ! S SAVES Special Prices ROUND OAK 100.000 BTU $179°0- ROUND OAK 130.000 BTU *209°° O’BRIEN HEATING 311 vooims is. FE 2-2919 Our Operator on Duty * Stera Hours ★ ADDITIONS* FAMILY BOOMS ALUMINUM SIDM6 BBC. ZOOMS BOOTING—SIDING WOODFIELO CONSTRUCTION I WILL COME TO YOU WITH FREE ESTIMATE AND PLANS-NO CHARGE CALL FE 4-4131 6 Months Bafoia-Firat Payment ONE CONTRACTOR FOR EVERYTHING DOOR HOOD FREE ESTIMATES |AVW^ AKJJiAmia *99 m/nrirr liuiue m/t. 1 •INCREASE LIVING SPACE* Any Size up to Ixll C.WEED0N | 1032 West Huron Street FE 4-2597 ,SSAmmmmm 919*2141 IM 9-2311 IWMtll > the pontiac ruttes. Saturday, September n, mss MONET Limited Quantities! no phone orders, O.D.’s or deliveries* ’except large item* _ Be Smart, Be Thrifty - Monday and Every Dayl You Can Be Sure of Extra Savings at Sears! For Men .. . White Cotton Knit Briefs or Tee-Shirts for tots* in sjses 3 to 6x, choice of blouse or pants Assorted Double Woven dove Sale 6V4 to 8 99cpr. SaleETwo Sizes in Warm Blanket Shells They’re woven as tiro blanket* of 81% Mon. Onlj rayon and 19% cotton with an inealating f| air layer between the two. Choose 62 or . k fords K Most with smooth A leather . uppers, H aises 3Vi to 6. mm Save! Sears Targetload Shotgun Ammunition 12-ga., *1 oq ■ Full-count hard ikM,JnnMMi powder. Clay Target.. . . $ 20 or 410-ga., Reg. 81.99 box......1.69 Sale! Men’s Cushion Sole White §ocks Reg. S pr. fww 81.49 3 pr* 99® Charge It Help, beat "tired feet." Cotton with 2% nylon reinforced heal* Heavy Room Darkening Window Shades Perfect for bedroom*, nnneries, or TV Reg. 82.69 room* when yon want to *hnt out light com- -a na pletely. White 6-gange vinyl cannot fray, I crack or pinhole. 3714x6-foot. v------ ■ ■■■ — Drapery end Shade Dept.—Sear. Mda Floor Ckwgeb ALLSTATE Supramatic Shock Absorbers Save Monday on Ass’td Household Mops AMortment include* mitMtyle, 100% nylon dnat Rag. $1.99 mop*; extra absorbent uring mop* and CePnlo** _ mop*... all deeigMd to make yenr warn eerier. WAS. Bny Monday! Split-Tip or Corn Broom.......1.44 “*"*** Kenmore Automatic CHI Heater Sale Reg.$149.95 1 1 Q88 With Blower JL JLjf Triple-Coil Mattress MAirgfrSlPtfl Reduced Over $30 Monday! Electrie igniting heaters tarn on and off automatically, saves yon money on fuel bills. Bailt-in thermostat, beked-on enamel fiaiah, U.L. listed. Save! $169.95 Gas Heater*... .119.$$ Appliance Dept. - Main Basement of coil* for never-Mf rapport. Polyfoam padded on top. Pro-built border*. Save 820 on each SAVE ♦90’* 15 Cu. Ft. Cole root Freezer Holds 525 Lbs. Craftsman 6% Bushel 25-Inch Lawn Sweep© Kenmofewashers wi 3 All-Fabric, Cycles Silvertone 82-Channel: Big Screen TV Consoles Monday Only Special! Gleaming White exterior NO MONEY DOWN oa Scare Easy Payment Plan Scan Cold*pot cheat freeaer held* 525 lb*, of your family’* favorite froaen food*. Ponelaiadlnieh Interior ia easy to keep clean. Counterhalsaeed lid far fingertip opening, doe- IflflL SsVP Manilairl 01i*u1Im* - S- — — MONDAY ONLY MONDAY ONLY MONDAY ONLY MONDAY ONLY MONDAY ONLY MoM) U u\M MO\im OMA—9 til 9 MOM) OMA SEARS | MOM)OMA- -9 til 9 | m 1 ill# The Weather II.*. WmDmt >urMu F(recall Sunny (DMalh a* Put« VOL. 128 NO. 186 THE 100 * * * * * yUWTIAC, MICHIGAN, (SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1965-30 PAGES unit.^^^^t.onal 10* State GOP Confab favors0 Flat-Rate Income Tax PRE$& ^fm MACKINAC ISLAND (AP) -Michigan Republicans came out in favor of a flat-rate income tax today. * * * The declaration was the major point in 32 pages of party principles, programs and goals presented to about 750 Republicans at a Mackinac Island* conference. It almost exactly paralleled the tax program drafted by/ Republican Gov. George Romney and n bipartisan group of taxmlnded legislators. 7 “If Michigan is to avoid a return to the fiscal crisis of the last decade,” said the report, “it must put its fiscal house in order-now. • “This will require new reve- nue from new or increased taxes. CORNERSTONE “The cornerstone of any program of tax reform is the adoption of a broad-based,..flat rate, personal and corporate income tax.” The report also asked for tax relief for low income fam- ilies, easing of property tax and repeal of the business activities tax. The Republican gathering lacked the status to take any official action on the report, but it will be circulated to local party units for discussion in the coming months. More than 300 GOP leaders and workers drafted the task force report. They presented a long list of claimed Republican achievements — including some measures passed this year by the first Democratic-controlled legislature in three decades. The reports asked action in numerous other area* • ang!n» from civil rights to education. Surrounding the task force reports today were scheduled speeches by U. S. house minority leader Gerald Ford, R-Mich., Romney, and Rhode Island Gov. John Chaffee. Colorado Gov. John Love is scheduled to address the three-day meeting Sunday, and Republican Nation- al Finance Chairman Gen. Lucius Clay met with state money raisers Friday. In his prepared remarks, Romney said Republicans would be engaged in an exercise in futility as long as they “continue to seek public battlegrounds among themselves over internal ideological differences.” Boat Fleet Rescuing Hurricane Victims India-Pakistan Fight May Spread to East NEW DELHI, India (A1 — Prime Minister Lai Bahadur Shastri said today countermeasures may have to be taken in Eastern India, where Pakistani air raids and parachutist landings were reported. In a message relayed to reporters after a meeting with top political aides, Shastri said Pakistani planes were raiding Assam and West Bengal State. Indian officials report strategic air- _________ Cong Unit HQ Hit by Planes 2,000 Reds May Be Trapped by Air Raids ports and supply routes have been hit and “other provocative acts continue.” There were three Pakistani air raids on the airport at- Gau-hati, a supply center for units Related Story, Page 2 guarding the frontier with Red China, the Indian radio said. Some of the paratroopers landed near Gauhati, an Indian Over 30,000 Said Saved by Ragtag Fleet GOV. ROMNEY LBJ Declares Southern . . Louisiana a Disaster / hi TCI I GTtTI Area After Tour Bid Hinted by Romney These blows threatened to spread the fighting from the borders of West Pakistan and India 1,000 miles eastward to East Pakistan. * * * India probably fears the Pakistani strikes in the east may be a prelude to Red Chinese incidents on the border. BRIDGE BOMBED Three unsuccessful Pakistani air raids also were reported on the vital bridge across the Brahmaputra River at Pandu, four miles west of Gauhati. This bridge is used to carry troops and supplies to the northeast frontier, where Chinese troops attacked in 1M2. Other Pakistani paratroopers dropped near Shillong, Assam’s capital south of Gauhati, and near the air base city of Bagh-dogra in West Bengal to the northwest, the sppkesman reported. ★ ★ * On the diplomatic front, U.N. Secretary • General U Thant ended his peace mission to Pakistan and headed for India. His talks with leaders of Pakistan apparently got nowhere. In Today's Press O usted General Blames Dominican Reds for shoving him out — PAGE I. Sealab /Aquanauts set to emerge after two weeks — PAGE 29. Changing Schools New method devised to teach writing — PAGE I. .....20 ..... to . U-It Crossword Puzzle .... tO Comics ..............to Editorials .......... 4 Heme Section .... II—17 Markets .............tl Obituaries ..... ...."» Sports ...... U—It Bridge . TV & Radio Programs to Women’s Page . ..... I SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — U.S. planes raided the headquarters of a Viet Cong regiment in the Mekong Delta today, U.S. military sources said. They estimated that between 1,000 and 2,000 Communists may be trapped by the air strikes. Associated Press photographer Horst Faas flew over the area in Chuong Thien Province 150 miles southwest of Saigon. He reported that escape routes leading from the headquarters appeared to be cut off. Faas said the bombings laid open wide areas of thick brash and jungle and disclosed Viet Cong bankers. By nightfall, U.S. aircraft had made nearly 100 strikes against the position despite 30 mile-an-hour winds and low hanging clouds. It was believed the guerrillas suffered heavy losses. U.S. advisers said the regiment was believed to be composed of at least one hard core Viet Cong battalion which U.8. aircraft and government troops have been seeking for weeks. ATTACK CONG Earlier,, U.8. Army helicopters assaulted 100 guerrillas believed part of the Viet Cong force, but government soldiers were not landed to engage the Communists because of heavy rains. In another-action, South Vietnamese troops killed 104 Communist guerrillas in a big operation this week involving several thousand troops in a coastal province, a U.S. military spokesman said. RESIDENTS STRANDED—A rescue operation is under way in New Orleans, La., for thousands of residents stranded in homes, on rooftops and in trees by the flood left by Hurri- AP Photofix cane Betsy. The water was 8 ti block area. 10 feet deep in a 300-square- NEW ORLEANS 1® — An armada of tiny boats —“anything that’ll float” —plowed the floodwaters of Hurricane Betsy today r”Acr“N“ISLAND , ■' Gov. George Romney dropped a m a mission of mercy small hint today that he will bringing out people run for a third term as gover-trapped by the sudden n<"*-swamping of the tewUnd?. The ragtag fleet churned sj,e js not including HOmney in through the murky waters, again her thinking about possible GOP and again, throughout the night. ^ _ . Police estimated that more than ^ ] . j - . ~ _ 30,000 people were taken to safe- Related Stones, Page 2 ty — and perhaps another 10,000 -——----------—----- still awaited rescue. nominees for the U.S. Senate — “We’re using anything that’ll °ther race Romney says he float - pirogues, Coast Guard has considering, boats, any kind of civilian In a speech prepared for city Man 'Q Flu Bug Due lo Return This Winter FatallyShot; Teen Held A 25-year-old Pontiac man was shot and killed on a city street early today, Police are holding a 18-year-old youth in connection with the slaying. Hasting Martin of 459 Highland was found dead at 2:57 a.m. on the roadway in front of 357 Branch. Luther Curry of 317 Hughes is to the custody of Oakland County Juvenile authorities after he was apprehended at Ms home shortly after the shooting. Police believe the fatal ahot was fired from a 25-caliber automatic pistol. Martin was dead on arrival at Pontiac General Hospital. MOTIVE UNKNOWN The motive for the slaying to undetermined. However, officers found a •tarter pistol, the type used to fire blank cartridges to start, races, next to the victim’s body. Permit Is Issued for $2.4-Million Mall Expansion A building permit has been to-sued by Waterford Township for construction totaling $2 million in the J. L. Hudson Co.-Pontiac Mall expansion program announced last December. No ground-breaking date has been announced-, according tp Hudson officials at the main store to Detroit. * * ' A Tbs expanded Hudson store will add 285,000 square feet of floor space to the present 84,008 square feet and will provide for a frill line department store at the Moll. in addition, 10 fashion stores* will be constructed, according to Mall officials. News Flash WASHINGTON (UP1) -Gemini 5 astronauts L. Gordon Gosper and Charles (Pete) Conrad Jr; will vied Washington Tuesday, then embark on a stx-uatipa goodwill tour to Europe and Africa, the White House announced today. By L. GARY THORNE The same bug that bit you in 1962 to due to bite you again this winter, according to a University of Michigan professor. Dr. Fred M. Davenport, professor of internal medicine and epidemiology, spoke yesterday to doctors at Pontiac General Hospital and Pontiac State Hospital. The United States is slated for another outbreak of influenza or La Grippe, but no one knows just how serious or bow widespread the outbreak might be, according to Dr. Davenport. He said the flu bug’s activity to its first four weeks will determine how extensive the outbreak to to be. ★ ★ * While clinically the same — chills, fever, aches in joints and headaches, the influenza virus to different each year, according to the professor. MANY TYPES Influenza comes in different types and subtypes. It has a very broad antigenic composition. Antigens are a protein substance that causes the production of antibodies when injected into the body. Dr. Davneport guessed that B-type flu would prevail to the outbreak this year. Thin virus last visited in 1962 and appears to follow a 3-5 year cycle. Influenza outbreaks generally follow a 2-3-year cycle, hitting to epidemic proportion* every 20-30 years, he The last pandemic or world epidemic was in 1957 with Asian flu, which first broke out in Hong Kong. more than all of those killed in break occurred in 1890. delivery today, Romney declared “the quality of state government has improved notably to the last two and a half yean, and we will improve it more to the next wo The various flu vaccines are changed to keep pace with the cycle of the influenza viruses. However, the type of flu outbreak is not always predictable. In his talk to doctors at Pontiac General, Dr. Davenport detailed the history of influenza He said the flu bug dates back as far as 1515. 20 MILLION DIED A pandemic in 1918-19 caused the deaths of 20 million persons, World War I. A similar out- The flu attack rate to highest in childhood, the professor said. The object of vaccines is to capture as many antibodies for as many types of influenza as possible, said Dr. Davenport He recommended any of the commercially - prepared vaccines. A director of the Commission on Influenza, Armed Forces Epidemiological Board, Dr. Davenport has studied the flu bug around the world. He has studies underway at P 0 n t i a c State Hospital involving 350 patients. said the Coast Guard. A pirogue is a canoe-Uke boat used in the Louisiana bayons. The Coast Guard had six helicopters “flying every minute” lifting people out of the .... flooded areas - with top pri- and a ha,f ority going to expectant mothers The last two and a half years and the ill. referred to the time since he President Johnson saw the took office, flood scene yesterday in a two- The next two and a half would hour tour of the harshly dam- carry a year beyond his present aged city. He then declared term, southern Louisiana a major dis- left OPEN The governor has left open for PERSONAL INSPECTION months the question of whether The President flew from Wash- he will go tor the third state ington to make a personal in- house term, or for the U.S. Sen-spec tion ot New Orleans, the ate seat now held by Democrat sector hardest hit by the hurri- Patrick McNamara. The choice cane which tnay have brought could affect Romney’s 1968 pres-this carnival city its severest idential possibilities. Fall Steps on Summer's Heel Cooler temperatures are gradually creeping into the late summer season. The weatherman predicts partly cloudy with lows in the mid-OOs tonight W yw t Mostly sunny with little change to temperature it tomorrow’s forecast. There’s a chance of showers again Mon- Ford Will Deliver Key Talk at Picnic Congressman Gerald Ford, Michigan Republican and House minority leader, will deliver a major foreign policy speech Sept. 25 at the annual Oakland County Republican Ox Roast. Ford joins Gov. George Romney and Congressman William Broomfield as key speakers at the event, expected to attract 5,000 people to the Ivory Farms near Union Lake. “Foreign and domestic issues will be thoroughly covered by the three," said Dale A. Feet, Oakland County Republican chairman. Broomfield, from Michigan’s 18th district, to the ranking Republican on the House Foreign Affairs subcommittee on the Far East. The speeches are scheduled natural disaster. “This state will build its way out of this sorrow, and the national government will be beside you every step of the way,” Johnson said before flying back to the capital. at 10 to If miles per hour will noon aBenrfa diminishtocightbecoming8to n0OTa«e™a- * * 15 east to northeasterly. Area citizens arc invited to , fWtynlne was the low road- meet and talk with Republican mg to downown Pontiac legislators and county officials prior to I a.m. By 1 p.ny Bt the event, under the direc-the mercury had climbed to tion of Douglas Lawrie, of Claw-68. son. Mrs. Peterson told newsmen last night there is no frontrunner for the Republican Senate nomination. “Are you including the governor in your thinking?” “I’m not,” she replied. She As communications were re- left no doubt she would prefer paired and floodwaters ebbed, to see him seek a third term the death toll of the storm rose and said that “most people want to 34 in Louisiana, Arkansas, him to run for governor.. .he Mississippi and Florida. has greater popularity now than * * * he had in November.” The Kansas City Weather Bu- mbit PRVanirNT reau said weakening Betsy, now „ a tropical storm instead of a . ^rs- Peterson said that Mich-hurricane, was moving across j?*n University president west Tennessee into Kentucky Dr John Hannah to the only and continuing to diminish generally known person serious-wr.mrcT wiunc ly mentioned for the senate HIGHEST WINDS nomination. The other possibili- Highest winds were from 30 ties are mostly party organiza-to 40 m.p.h. The storm’s rains tion figures, were setting up some possible flood threats. Still to be counted was the property and crops from Betsy’s winds and floods. Agriculture officials estimated the cost to the important She acknowledged she bad not discussed the possibility with Hannah, who was a Republican delegate to the Si ne Constitutional Convention. He to currently abroad. In addition to the major stale- as lion or more. GOP attention in 1966 will be given to marginal districts The vast offshore oil and gas where control of the State Sen-properties, unmanned ahead of ate and Michigan’s congresron-the storm, remained to be in- si delegation could be regained spec ted for damage. SPECIAL TARGETS v “Ito. ‘in *b. .* W more °i d®*. bushing; tut U Blanc dty Carl O’Brien, Ponttoc; lE n88 ^*"5? V Johnson,Marshall,andJanVAn-30-square mile area south of the dernloec North X cl? aoc uj.«« * Ib. Mississippi Rim-. ^ Arbor; Billie Farnura I was flooded hy up to 15 Waterford Townehip; PauJu! REP. GERALD FORD Jeet °*water when *levee bn*e Kalamazoo, and Raymond Ctov-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) enger, Sault St*. Maria, THE ZODIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER n, 1005 Tell Both Nations Conflict Danger lo World press department chief Leonid Zamyatin. * * * The Soviets called for an immediate cease-fire in Kashmir and mutual withdrawal of Indian and Pakistani troops bell ind the 400-mile cease-fire line drawn up in 1949 by the United Nations after a similar border war. MOSCOW (UPI) - The Soviet Union warned today the Indo-Pakistan border conflict could erupt into general war. The Russians said the fighting also was dangerously close to its border. Premier Alexei Kosygin appealed to both sides to “stop the tanks and silence the guns" in their dispute over divided Kashmir. The plea was contained in. identical messages to I n d i a n SUGGEST TALKS Prime Minister Lai Bahadur “The sides should enter into Shastri and Pakistani President negotiations to settle peacefully Mohammed Ayub Khan. the differences that have arisen As they did earlier in the l1**"*" “if1-” the week, the Soviets offered their ) messa8e sa'°-“good offices” to help end the “As for the U.S.S.R., both crisis. sides can count on its good Tlie appeal was inoed at a: ”1" 11 **“• rare foreign ministry news con- offlcei In tUs. ference summoned by Soviet I “We are ready for this if both ——-------------------—--------I sides would consider this use- ful.” Budget Airing Due Monday in Waterford A public hearing on the proposed record $1,047,267 budget for 1966 will highlight the Waterford Township Board meeting -Monday night. Adoption of the budget — an increase of $152,704 over the current budget — is scheduled to climax the hearing to be conducted in the Waterford Township High School cafeteria. The budget would require a tax increase of $212 per $1,160 assessed valuation if adopted as proposed. Approximately 49 per cent of the $152,704 increase in estimated expenditures is earmarked for the police and fire depart- In 1966, property owners would pay a township tax of $811 per $1100 assessed valuation compared with $5.96 this (year. In other business, the board will take final action on seven rezoning requests, including one for a shopping center on a 20-acre pared of land at M59 and Crescent Lake Road. INSURANCE BIDS The board also will consider a request by the clerk concerning opening of bids for insurance coverage on all township vehicles. The present policy expires in October. ★ ★ dr Also on the agneda is a request that all delinquent water and sewer bills, including interest, be reassessed on the 1965 tax roll. The Soviets earlier this week offered their “good offices” to settle the conflict and were condemned by Communist China, which has sided with Pakistan in the crisis. HAS CONFIDENCE Kosygin expressed “profound confidence” that “any disputed issues, including the questions connected with Kashmir, can be solved most effectively only by peaceful means.” The message said stepping up of military operations by one side brings Intensified operations by the other. “As a result, there is an extension of the conflict and, who knows, perhaps, war, too,” it continued. W it it The appeal to the two nations warned the Kashmir tension “is increasing, threatening to grow into a larger-scale military conflict.” ASIA TENSION Kosygin said the Indo-Pakis-tan conflict also was aggravating further the tense Southeast Asian situation he charged was “created by the aggression of American imperialism.” He said the Soviets “would not be frank if we did not say that the military conflict in Kashmir also arouses the anxiety of the Soviet government because it flared up in an area immediately adjacent to the frontiers of the Soviet Union.” * * H The messages to Shastri and Ayub Khan were identical. Frisco Quake Minor SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - A sharp earthquake jolted the Bay area yesterday, but apparently one broken window in nearby Concord was the extent of the damage. Full Uj5. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Variable cloudiness and cooler today with chance of light rain in the southern portions this afternoon. Highs 64 to 76. Partly cloudy and cool tonight, low 56 to 17. Mostly sunny with little change in temperature on Sunday, highs 65 to 72. North to northeasterly winds 19 to 18 miles this morning, becoming east to northeasterly this afternoon and diminishing to 8 to 15 miles tonight. Outlook for Monday: scattered showers and warmer. On* Ywr Ago I* Highest temperature Loweit temperature At I i.m.: Wind Velocity II Direction: Norttteoet Sun aeta Saturday at «:S1 p.m. tun rlaea Sunday at 0:10 a.m. tS In 1111 Frldar'a Temperature Chart 70 SO Duluth to 11 M Si hart Worth M 73 75 4S Jaekaonvllie 01 U “ M “-------- City 70 M -- 70 St Rdmney Stress on OOP Unify Aim Attract at Dems, He Tells fathering TALKS TO REFUGEES-President Jdhn-son interviewed victims of floods in the wake of Hurricane Betsy in New Orleans, La., yesterday. The President declared the storm-damaged section a disaster area. Kelley Gives Limits of Religion in School LANSING (AP) - A tty. Gen. Frank Kelley has advised Michigan schools to follow strictly the U.S. Supreme Court rulings on religious practices. it it * 'The Supreme Court,” said Kelley, “has ruled the state may not prescribe any particular prayer for use in public schools even though the prayer is denominationally neutral and observance on the part of students is purely voluntary.” ★ * ★ Said Kelley further: “The Supreme Court ruled tlie state may not require as a religious exercise either the reading of the Bible or the recitation of prayers in public schools even if tM individual them- students may absent selves on request. NEITHER “Neither a schbol board nor a teacher has the discretion to conduct or sanction a voluntary program of prayers, Bible reading or other devotional exercises in the public schools.” Kelley said “every school year, there arise questions on what can or cannot be used in connection with religious practices." it it it “We have tried to put into simple language what decisions of the U.S. Supreme Court and the State Constitution require. When specific questions come up, school people must turn to the opinion for the answer," Kelley said. Kelley emphasized his statements are “legal conclusions” and not his personal views. RULED FURTHER The courts have ruled further, he saki, that: —Students are pro hibited from conducting any religious exercise, Including the saying of prayers and Bible reading on public school property during school hours. h h * —The board of education of school district is authorized to Bandits Strike Twice in City $2,095 Is Taken From 2 Stores by Gunmen Armed bandits struck twice in Pontiac last night in the span | make public buildings available of 25 minutes and made off with! during off-school hours for the Boats Rescue Flood Victims purpose of holding religious instruction classes. —The federal and state constitutions forbid a religious training program conducted on public school property. —Courses in religion given as a part of the secular programs of education are not prohibited when presented objectively. The attempt to indoctrinate toward any particular belief or disbelief is prohibited. Kelley also said symbols of religious holidays may be permitted in schools “as a part of the over-all educational proc-Twenty-five minutes later two | •$•». w^en utilized to promote gunmen held up Dunseith Phar- understanding of their signifi-macy, 552 N. Perry. cance, but are prohibited when w' it ' it used as a focal point of religious Owner William Denseith said indoctrination, one bandit forced him to open j a safe and a cash register, and I then the pair fled with $2,000 in cash. $2,095. The first robbery occurred at about 9 p.m. at Barts Party Store, 882 S. East Blvd. Matthew Barr, 49, owner of the store, told police a man came into the store and said he wanted to buy some soft drinks. Barr said when he turned around the customer pulled a gun and demanded money. After looting the cash register the gunman fled, Barr said. Accord Ends Ex-Waterford Resident to Get Arson Sentence AP Phot»fa, NATIONAL WEATHER—Rain will fall from the mid-Miastsalppi Valley to the Ohio Valley and lower Lakes tonight. Sbomn aro expected in portions of the mid and south Atlantic states, eastern Gob Coast region and from the northern Rockies te Ha upper Mississippi Valley. It will be cooler from fee north Atlantic Mates to the mid-Mississippi Valley. I tf 1 j KENOSHA. Wis. (AP) -Weary negotiate^ reached settlement at 9:38 a.m. today in the 20-day United Auto Workers strike at American Motors Corp. The a g ree m e n t was hammered together in an all-night bargaining session as the ne-I gotiators, shunning sleep, labored to prepare the terms in time to present them to a scheduled mid-morning membership meeting of UAW Local 72. Announcement of the agreement was made by George Gul-len, American Motors vice president who headed the company’s negotiating team. * it it The strike, longest in the history of American Motors operations here, began Aug.il, halting all production of 1968 Rambler automobiles and Idling more than 17,000 workers at Milwaukee and Kenosha. h A former Waterford Township resident will be sentenced Sept. 24 at Minneapolis after pleading guilty to charges he set seven fires in the Twin Cities area that caused more than $1 million damage. Joseph F. Neussendorfer, 22, who resided at 2432 Denby until summer of 1964; has been held under 850,000 braid since admitting the string of fires last winter. “I am guilty 'of this charge,” he told Hennepin County District Court Judge Donald L. Bar bean yesterday. Neussendorfer said he set fire to one Minneapolis building after the idea “just came” to him ‘ “e having coffee at the build tag. * * * An Air Force veteran, Neussendorfer has been interviewed by psychologists and psychiatrists since his surrender last February. He has also admitted letting fires in at least six other cities, including Detroit. (Continued From Page One) shortly after the full force of the hurricane struck the city just before midnight Thursday. “We can’t possibly get to them an today,” he said. “The trouble is that many of them have no food and may get too tired to hang on.” Rescue officials called for small boat owners to aid in the rescue. Hundreds responded as others had when an amateur flotilla saved the trapped British army in France in 1940. The military has supplied helicopters, amphibious ducks and Coast Guard cutters. ★ it it Cars pulling boat trailers unloaded at the edge of the muddy waters and moved off to the rescue. LIKE FISHING “It was like everyone was going fishing,” said Officer J. Crespo. Outboards towed strings of rowboats crowded with flood victims. One of them tipped over, drowning two children, Le Blanc said. An unconfirmed report said a National Guardsman was missing In a mishap involving an amphibious vehicle. Buses, police cars, even the police horse van were pressed into service, bringing the refugees to high schools and the municipal auditoriums in the dty. * * # There were 5,000 in the auditorium sleeping on cots, lining up for Red Cross emergency food, looking for members of their families. ON ROLE Lewis Benson last saw his family yesterday afternoon. When the water began rising, he and 21 neighbors, including 14 children, the youngest 7 months, chopped a hole In the roof and climbed on top. All they had was a. cooler of water. When the 115-mile-an-hour wind drove rain over them, they handed the children back through the hole to nestle in the rafters. “In the afternoon a duck and took the children and women off,” Benson said. Several hours later an outboard took the men from the roof. They had been there 18 hours. “FYom now on when any one says ‘hurricane” l*m moving,” •aid Edward Cola, om of Benson’s roofmates. Japan Storm Kills 44; Damge Is High TOKYO NOTICE! CITY OF PONTIAC COMMISSION MEETING The Pontiac City Commission meeting which would normally be held Tuesday, September 14, 1965 has been rescheduled to meet Monday, September J 3, 1965. • All hearings scheduled for Tuesday, September 14,1965 will be scheduled for Monday, September 13, 1965 starting at 8:00 P. M. in the ~ Commission Chambers, City Hall. (signed) Olga Barkeley City Cldrk THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1905 ansactions on This Week's Markets IKLY NY STOCK! ’ (API—Following It • com-N tti« itockt Traded Wilt 1— York stock Exchange, N M M 93 36Vk 35% 3 ISO 17* 14* 1 175 9H 91* 9 32 W 1 Xl43 47* 45* 4 Allied Pd j Allied ftotl Allied |t d AlliedSup 1 AllltChal .1 I St 49 49 • 93 13* 13* 1 ! 64H+ 2* 1 47*+ 2* ■ + * iMi >d 1.20 X27 24* 1 1 SI* 4 + 2* - 1* i 20*+ * 119 40* ___ ■ ff*+ 1* sat" 12 ii* 30 30*+ ■“ n in*— 19*+ 331 $7 12 311. 537 49* 1202 W* iro 3 fr.S 3001 4 i Ml -jo it* 1 190 25* 1 17* 10*+ * >*i78 £ »1* ft* 40 II* 10 « „ 104 30* 37* 457 2S* 23* 99 07* M* 25* 23* 23*— 1* I x240 37* 34* 3 250 7* 7* i 23 25* 24* 3 I 50 33* 33* 3 20 31* 31* X91 20 25* I c:,rVT. a KkS p9 , ■o Tf' iBJBTi . Ml Me Cl r M. ryHato 1.20 9K ii nmvmck ■BBS m ft J* a?* xl50 47* 325 10 1 is* 210 22 y ft a 45*+ 2* r ,2 ill 49* 50*+ * ft* 47*+ X B8 H i fP tis a®;! 10* 10*— * ill* 10* WH+ 00 23* 24* :usm alum H .00 * •boron 2.40 aroyPn f.00 rtpun.il i£j 20 Most Active Stocks NEW YORK (API - Woek’i 1905 13* Pan Am Sul 15* 11* Sperry Rd . 70* 05* Am Tel A Te Magnavox Falrch Cam Oon Mol .... Am Photo . . M£ xl 33* : 554 19* I 147 17* 1 .8 S* 1 C IIILt Pf4.50 I CenlllPtv .92 Cent ffd 1.30 Canloya i.m Carre Cp 1.00 Cert-teed .70 Comma 1.20 ChliiNWett 3 ChiANW at 5 ChPneu 1.00a CMIIPoc ,25p . CltyProd 1.00 X City ftoret Clark Eq 1.00 ClevCIlt 2.20a CtoviUllMO 'toy Pit 3JO l levlte 1.00 Jluott Pea 2 Coatt St Oat CocaCola 1.70 CaeaftNY 1 Cotg Pal .90 8omr0f Dated U0 Dot Steel .1 OowCh 1.00b e BTOn/VU 4a«4aV IDondl l'.S m; EmerRad .40 Ind John ErleLack RR Evan,Pd 43d I 20* i . 20* 3 I 900b 99*+ t i 51* 52*+ 1 > 24* 20 + V 37* 37*+ ■ to*- n sain 47*+ 2' * ,ftft2 I I X01 23* i ) X137' 74* 7 07 02* I 1735 104* 1 304 - 34* i S\M I Me “oodrch 2.20 oodyr 1.25 raceCo 1.20 an itAAP 1.20a. yt Nor Rv 3 OtWSug' llota Qrtyhnd W Orumn A M i »°J cVdrBJ0g nLijTT Hon Electron 01* 41Jjj ... 20* 27*- 1* 30 30*+ * 12* 13*- * iCSE* ! 12* ifjt * I 39* 39*+ * IIRmSTU ’S 82 88 m,! InptrRtnd 1 lf4 47V. 44 47H+ 1« Lew Lett Chi. 42% 44to— »/» 7? 79 Vi— to jftto 36'/4+ H 59* 07* 09*+ r 10* 10*+ IntorlkSt InlButMch 0 209 500 IntHarv 1.50 x400 30* IntMlner 1.20 . 225 01* int Nick 2.00 120 19* Inti Packer, 72 10* intPapor ljt 003 31* ju Int TAT 1.20 400 50* 54* ITECktAr JO 42 41* 47* J JohntManv 2 327 54* 53 JonLooan .00 104 35* 34* JonatAL 2.50 207 00* 02* joy Mfg 2 99^02* 02 Kalter Al .90 329 40 KaytorRo .00 m 34* _ Kennecott 5 130 1M* 111* 111*+ * KernCLd 2.40 207 04* 02 03*+ 2* Karr Me 1J0 xl2i 19* 50* 59*+ i* KlmbClark 2 x2tl 54* 52* 54 + 1 Kopprt 2.40a x2t 03* 02* 03*+ 1* Korvetta 472 30* 30 5 - 1* Kretge 1 JO ISO 5. I let *8 I 38%— Vi UarSlM A0 LehPorCem 1 Leh Val Ind LlhfflM 1.710 LOFGIs 2.80 f 37% Mto 34%— i 991 19to 17H 1 i 17* 11*4- i “I 4*- 1 • 31 + i 53*- Hfa Living sO .709 LockhdAlrc 2 Loew, Thaat LoneS Cam 1 LoneSGa 1.12 Lang lol Lt 1 Loral Corp Lorlllard 2.50 CuckyStr 1.40 Luktnt Ml 2 I 34* 33* 34 - —M— 209 30* 31 121 SO* Si Marafhn 2.20 Mar Mid 1.2S Marquar .25g MartlnMar 1 MavDStr 1.50 McCall .40b McDonA .40b McKats 1.70 MoadCp i.r Mtrck la Cp 1.70 MtrStepfjOa 1420* so” 109 8* MRMRRPP 110 p* MlnnMM 1.10 402 5* ■ 12* 13*+ 1* I 18* 18*— Ml STto 57*— Ito i, 22* 23*-f 1 1 47* 47tof * s 43to r* 1 | 0 Pac A l Tax 084 1 A * 17 I 227 2 41* 42 4* 88 2W 35* 30 — 51* 51*+ .. 31 21*+ 1* 55 50*+ * 9* 10*+ * ""*“1 + 3* > 1** l 1 14*+ Note on .40b 125 27* i Net Bloc IJD 1 NetCan jr NCmBR 1 NotOairy jm Nat Diet 1.40 NOt Pwti 1.40 NatOypa Ob’ NLpad 2.25o Net Steel 2 Not Too JO Newberry JJ N EnpEI 1.20 Nj Zinc lo NYCent l.20a NlagMP L10 Norfolk W ta Avia 2.00 102 1 I 07* 00 00*— 1* I 31* M* 31*- * 1 35* 34* 340b— * I 39* 30* 3 i 53*— 1 193 72 254 54*________ 91 10* 10* 10*— 14 19* If* 19*+ v« X135 29* 29* 39*>- * 212 30* 35* 30*+ 2* 303 00* 50* 56*- 3* x139 27* 27 27*- * 95 127* 124* 124*- 3* x345 55* 54 54*+ * 1»_40 59* 60*+ * 4 JS 881 302 27* 1 I X301 95* 9 OccldentP OhloEdli 1 OlInMelh I OtliElev 1 Owen,III 1 OxfdPap 1 .10 291 15* 15* 1 116 i 159 10* 230 26* 3260 33* Hfem^let Oev la en n Coal 1 X542 37 MU Dixie l “* Penney 1.50a Tempo El J! Tenn Oat H Texaco 2J TexRattT .00 TexOtuI .40 Texailnitm 1 TexPLd JSg Textron 1.00 Thlokol .571 Tldewat Oil TlmkRB 1.00 Trent w Air Trtntam .80b Trantltron Trl Cent ,7Sf Twent C .606 Un Pac 1.M Un Tank V Un AlrL 1.505 Unit Alrcir? fell SM* UOetCp 1.70 Unit MM liO USBorex ,10a US Indult “ Uj l' (hd«.> Hi»h Lew Lett Chg. —T— 03 27* 27* 27*— * 470 24* 14 24 .. . 026 01* 70* 01*+ 2* 307 20* 19* tnb4- * 622 64* 61* 62 — 1* 256 164* 119 12?*— 1* 323 20* 17* 20*+ 2* x291 69* 65 60*+ 3* 713 16* 14* 15*+ * 35* IT*— 3* 41* 44*+ 1* 150 52* 50* rn 43* 41* 1 no 1* 6* 125 ‘ i It* i + 1* 721 24* 23* 23*- * X203 35* 35 35* 7S 27* 27* 27*+ * 50 32* 31* 31*+ * 220 70* 07* 09 — 1* 499 15* 14* 14*- * 110 35* 35 3J*+ * VaEIPw 1514 52 ion 29 4* eve *ve— JO 599 17* 15* 16*+ 1.20 x459 52* 51* 52 + 10 215 00* 67* 50 + “V— , la 153 25 ts. I JO 12 40* 39* 39*— .40 x215 26* 25* 26*+ -.20 125 47* 45* 47*+ 1* —W-X-Y-Z— Iworth Co 22 7* 7* 7*— * rnPld B — ..... MM R* 31*^- s’ Jl 30*+ 1. ■ . 43* 43*— 1* WUnTal 1.40 40^ 44* 42* 43 + " WettgEI 1.20 1554 55* 54* 55*+ .Wayarhr 1J0 M0 45* 44 45*+ Whirl Cp 1.20 125 39* 37* 39*+ WbltoM 1.40 m195 33* 33* 33*— WIlMn Co 2 51 45* 45 4S*+ • X49 40 MM — i 705 29 WlnnDix ............. 27* M*+ * Ingtn 1 450 33 31* 32*+ 1* ____ Cp .70 1024 1M 170* 171*+ 0* YngstSht 1.00 319 42* 40* 40*— 1* Zenith 1.40 552 93* 90* 91*+ 1* WEEKLY N Y STOCK SALES Total for week .............. 26,120,630 Weak ago .................... 27,904,001 WEEKLY INVeiTINO COMPANIES i Low Close Cfote 143 Sc I A Elect i Blue Ridge Mut 13.01 13.M 13.01 12.02 Bond,lock Corp 5.47 5.65 5J7 S.C Bo,ton Fund 10.51 10.45 10JI 10J Broad It Inv 15.51 15.35 15J1 15.2. Bullock Fund ,15.55 15.41 15.55 15.34 Can dwi Fd — — — Canadian Fund Capital Inc Cap Life In, Sh _______ Century Mire Tr 13.21 13.05 13.M 12.9 IJ7 1.25 5.57 13.51 13.57 12.51 13.5 2.15 3.13 2.15 2.1 13.52 13.55 13.63 13.5 2.34 2.22 2.24 Colonial Fund 11.35 Colonial GrlhABn 14.22 Com St Bd Mtgo 1.37 5.31 1.37 I.M Commw Tr CAD Compotile BAS Compotltt Fd Concord .Fund r AAB 1.69 1.47 1.59 1.67 E0n^V Fund 14.00 13.92 13.97 14.01 111 Hi 11.00 11.00 MS M 3.02 3.14 d 1.71 144 1.71 144 lliW 10.76 10.90 10.00 19.51 19.55 19.55 19.35 6.70 6.64 6.70 6.54 I 54.92 44.34 54.91 54.23 12.37 12.M 1247 12.28 13.90 13J4 13.09 1347 11.41 11J5 11.54 1145 9.11 9.71 9.11 9.59 13.M 13.14 13.14 13.14 14J5 14.27 14.32 14.M 24.51 14JI 24J1 26.05 2594 26.05 25.(2 10.il 10.75 10." >♦» IM 7.95 7.1 M 44* 4.41 4J JIS Mg M-JJ 15.6 14X_ Nellon-Wlde Sec 1S.1B llS 11.70 lln Nall invettora IM7 11.90 1|J9 Provident Fd Puritan Fund Putnam Geo tolnv Selected Amer Sharehl Tr Bos 4At 4.57 4.57 4.571 4.50 7.42 f JO 9.41 1U5 11.10 1U5 1.24 12.34 12.24 12.34 12.2 10.13 10.79 10.13 10.751 20.04 19.90 20.04 1941 4.93 14.04 14J0 14.871 13.69 13.61 13.49 13.57 9.23 9.11 9.23 9.09 13.70 13J4 13.70 13.52 13.10 13.07 13.10 13.00 5.49 541 5.49 5.30 5.71 5.44 5.71 5AS Accumulative 14.57 14,45 14J7 *14.40 0.94 8.84 8.93 8.80 Valut Lina Funds: Wall St Invatt 5.45 5.37 5.45 5.35 11.11 11.01 11.11 11.01 12.37 12.27 12.37 12.21 15.33 15.29 5.33 15.25 6.77 6.78 4.77 4A4 14.61 14.54 14.61 14J2 17.93 17J3 17.9) 17.71 STOCKS GAIN — For the third week in a row, the Associated Press average of 60 stocks moved higher, closing yesterday a} 338.3 from 33|6.6 a week ago. Led by livestock and grains, the commodity index declined for the fourth straight week, closing at 171.9 from 172.3. Pope's Leffer | Mart Up After Reaffirmation i ArkLaGa, A samara Aud OIIAG Alla, Cp wt Berne, Eng Can So Pi Cdn Java Cinerama Con Mng 1 JO 4 CtrywIdeR ,30d 244 Creole P 2.60* 79 Date Cont Equity Cp .157 Fargo Oil, 1 , low and closing price, mj.foom Iasi week', c (hds.) High Low Close Chg. ixd 95 33* 32* 32*+ * h .10r 13 11* It* H A .15 35 0* 6* 36 it 43* 4*XHPnP 104 1 7-16 1 5-16 1 7-14+3-15 270 5* 5* 5*+ H 59 15-16 13-16 11-16 192 22* 20 20*+ * 1952 7* 7* 7*+ g 135 7* 71-16 7 3-16+1-S3 13* 12* 12*-»1 4* 3*47-15+1-.. 1-16 2 11-16+1-16 793 10* 9* 10Vto+1 102 3* 3 3*— 1 41* 40* 41*+ * 3* 3* 3*... rx 40 30* 40 .. f 20* 18* 19*+ 1 1 3* 3* 3*+ 211-15 2*29-16 . Kaiser Ind Mackey All McCrory w w Pk Mng ncst Pet I C Group wurry Rain tbd W Air Signal Oil A 1. Sperry R wt Syntax Co ,30e 470 14* 10 14*+4* .55 21 20* 20* MY ‘ “ 12 50* 50 M 3 1* 1* IV 1039 9* I* I*— * 210 7* 7* 7*- * 503 5* 5 SW+ * id 447 20* M 20*+ * Og 74 4* 4* 4*+ * 135 39* 37* 37*—1* 251 4* 4* 4*- * 23 1* 1* 1*... . 47 2* 2* 2*- * 110 17* 16* 17*+ * 511 9* 9 9*- * I 233 27* 25* 26*— H 1041 5* 5* 5* . . 1418 103* 99 100*+! 354 10* 17* 15 + * ^ WEEKLY AMERICAN STOCK MLR! ffiU t-H.jOM .................299,545,950 IM4 to dote ..................247,434,300 WRRKLY AMERICAN BONDS SALES WHAT THE STOCK MARKET DID Thj* Prev. Veer years Hi W&W»MiW|,Bt25 Ml 419 522 719 ".1533 1549 lift lift untnangea Total Isiuee yeorly hi yoerly Ip ■EK IN STOCKS AND BONDS (Woo .the range of Dow-Jon ctotlng averages for week ended Sept l STOCK AVBRAOBS .'r.M ai/.» 210.10 316.21 -, 17.24 157.71 157.12*157.7! + * 3H.54 3M.05 311.54 319.99 + BONO AVHRABIS III kRi n.05 82*86 82 7? ft'ft ~ as, «•« MM Jl.*75 |?:i!: 5m. as as sis asi Treasury Bonds Sog Again, Due to Shy Investors NEW YORK (AP) - U. S. Treasury bond prices sagged again last week as investors continued to keep on the sidelines because of international tensions. Prices in other bond markets were mixed. Despite some purchasing by the Federal Reserve System, Treasury securities’ prices weakened substantially for the sixth consecutive week. So far this year commercial banks that are Federal Reserve members had liquidated some $4-7 billion in government securities, compared to a level of $2.8 billion ill the comparable period of last year. Of the 40 Treasury bond issues, 35 declined in prices during the week. Prices of five short-term issues were unchanged. Declines ranged as high as 4-32s. Yields stand at a four-year high. on Eucharist VATICAN CITY (AP) - Pope Paul -VI today reaffirmed Ro-! man Catholic teaching con- j ceming the Eucharist. He said | he was concerted at some the- market this week encountered I Critical Point Blue Chips Lead in 3rd Weekly Advance { NEW YORK (AP)—The stock Hope to Save Worker's Job County Agriculture, Agent Is Facing Cut • Several supporters went to bat yesterday for a 10-year employe' of the Oakland County extension, staff who faces the loss of his job due to statewide staff cutbacks. The appeal that Jay Poffen-' berger, agriculture agent, be re-, tained came at a meeting of’ members of the cooperative extension service committee of the Oakland County Board of Supervisor and officials of Michigan State University’s Cooperative Extension Service. Committee members were Joined in the appeal by five Oakland County fanners who cited the fine service Poffen-berger has provided. Noel P. • Ralston, director of the MSU Cooperative Extension Service, said at the end of t|*e meeting that he would review Poffenberger’s case. He would not speculate 20 whether Poffenberger’s positio» would be retained . CUT IN STATE Ralston, who attended the meeting' with his assistant, George Parsons, pointed out that the extension service plans to eliminate from 30 to 35 positions tills fall to meet its budget. Louis A. Demute, chairman of the county committee, told Ralston that committee) members are “very, very concerned'’ about Poffenberger’s position. ological writing on the subject. In the third encyclical letter of his reign, the pontiff reasserted the Roman Catholic teaching that the body and blood of Jesus Christ are truly and substantially present in the consecrated bread and wine of the Eucharist. His document, called “Mister-ium Fidel” — The Mystery of the Faith — was issued today a reply to recent theological discussion on the meaning of the Eucharist. A number of Roman Catholic theologians, especially in Holland, have been describing the bread and wine of the Eucharist as symbols. This view is similar to that held by some Protestants. SOME CONFUSION Pope Paul said in his encyclical letter he believed he had to speak out because there had been some confusion among the faithful. The encyclical was issued as Roman Catholic prelates from around the World flocked to Rome for the final session of the Vatican Ecumenical Council. WWW An encyclical is a letter from the Pope to his bishops and other persons for whom he intends his message. Tbday’s 6,500-word encyclical was addressed to all Roman Catholic bishops, priests and faithful. It was dated Sept. 3, but was published today in the Vatican Newspaper L’Osservatore Romano. the frequently critical post-Labor Day atmosphere and emerged with its third straight weekly advance. The market’s advance was due chiefly to selective strength among blue chips. General Motors gave the list powerful leadership by carving out a net gain of 4% points at 104%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average this week rose 1Q.96 to 918.95. The Associated Press Average of 60 stocks advanced 1.7 338.3. TRADE ISSUES Of 1,533 issues traded, 838 rose anid 531 fell. Volume for the week totaled 26,130,630 shares compared with 27,964,081 last week which was a full, five-day trading weak. Labor Day cut the past trading week to four days. Most of the big gains were made in such stocks as Fair-child Camera, up 5%; KLM Airlines, up 3%; Eastern Air Lines, up 2V4; Magnavox, up W*, and Raytheon, up 1%. The five most active issues lis week on the New York Stock Exchange were: Pan American Sulphur, up 1% at 19c on 445,700 shares; Sperry Rand, up % at 14; American ■Telephone, up 1% at 68%; Commonwealth. Oil, up % at 12Vi; and Radio Corp., up 1% at 39%. Prices Steady in Hog Mart After Break CHICAGO (AP)—Prices steadied in the butcher hog market this week after breaking sharply the preceding week. In Chicago, 40 head of bar-rows and gilts were sold at the week’s top price of $23.50 a hundredweight, compared with $25!-25 a week earlier and $18.25 ;a year ago. However, the average cost was estimated at $22.70, compared with $23.69 a week earlier and $17.43 a year ago. Slaughter steers and heifers >ld steady to 50 cents a hundredweight higher atthe major livestock terminals. Chicago was the exception with prices steady to 50 cents lower. Receipts at the 12 terminal markets in the hpliday shortened week were 185,200 compared with 201,800 the previous eek and 179,200 a year ago, ' ♦ ♦ ★ Compared with the previous week, spring slaughter lambs were mostly 75 cents-a hundredweight higher and shorn slaughter ewes fully steady. Dems Delay Tax Decision Business Notes Two Pontiac area insurance men will attend the National Association of Life Underwrit-Conference tomorrow through Friday at St. Louis, Mo. Representing the Pontiac Association of Life Underwriters at the conference will be President William V. Coulacos, 2306 St. Joseph, West Bloomfield Township and Vice President John H. Salow, 1616 Winthrop, Bloomfield Township. Martin T. Griffin, vice president of Morgan Guaranty Trust Co.,. New York City, will speak Sept. '23 at the first 1965-66 monthly meeting of the Oakland County Chapter of the National Association of Accountants. Griffin’s topic will be “Money in Motion — The Dynamics of Short Term Investments.” Area business executives are invited to the meeting, to be held at Devon Gables Inn, Telegraph and West Long Lake Roads. Today’s Britain has about 38 million women and girls, which exceeds b ymore than 1.5 million the number of men and boys in that nation. All Grain Futures I Decline, Ending 2-Week Trend CHICAGO (A) — All grain and j soybean futures contracts declined on the Board of Trade this week, ending a two-week' upward trend. < The touble between India and Pakistan was the biggest market influence, causing a sharp break in wheat futures Wednes-I day. Local traders were fearful 1 that the fighting could result in a cutoff of United States aid to both countries. India is the biggest buyer of U.S. wheat, and Pakistan also relies heavily on surplus U.S. wheat. These fears were alleviated somewhat when the House approved the foreign aid bill without imposing any restrictions. WHEAT LOWER At the end of the week, wheat was 1%-1% cents a bushel lower than a week earlier, September $1.54%-%; com was l%-2% lower, September $1.22%-%; oats V4 to % lower, September 67% cents; rye 2% to 2% lower, September $1.18 and soybeans 1 to 2 cents lower, September $2 53%. LANSING I4t—Majority Democrats decided Friday to wait until next Tuesday to decide whether the politically explosive issue of tax reform should be taken up in the legislature’s fall session. Meanwhile, separate House and Senate Democratic caucuses agreed on several items they want the session to consider. Leaders said they didn’t expect the session to be prolonged. ★ ★ * Refinancing of the Mackinac Bridge and lowering of bridge tolls was on the list decided upon by the House caucus but not on the Senate list. Consideration of any topic at? the legislative session starting next Tuesday requires agreement bySi majority of the members of each house. ★ + * Senate majority leader Raymond Dzendzel, D-Detroit, said tax reform wasn’t taken up id' Friday’s two-hour caucus because it “could lead to hours efu discussion.” Motorized Problem ‘ BERKELEY, Calif.- UD - In pointing out to the City Council why it needs more officers, the Berkeley police department cited such new problems as the recent thefts of two I skateboards. THE PONTIAC PRKSS. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 11,1963 found by Henry Morton Stanley, whose real name was James Rowland, on Nov. 10, 1871, in Ujtji, Tanganyika. PRECISION MECHANICAL INSPECTOR CONTROL DATA CORPORATION Young man required with a High School education or Trade School and three to five years experience in precision mechanical inspection. Must have knowledge of layout methods and techniques. Liberal fringe benefits and pleasant working conditions. Call er write ... STAN ELLIS HOLLEY COMPUTER CO. ISM Heaver Rd.-Werren, Mich. Phaae rss-iiM A subsidiary et Centre! Data Corpo- Why Man Hurt Norwood Carr Jr. of 181 South Blvd. was found lying unconscious on Prospect near Jessie early today by Pontiac police. Police said the man had bruises on his head and was bleeding. There was no sign that a scuffle occured, or that Carr had been hit by an auto. At the time he was found, Carr had no identification bn his person and it was not until he regained consciousness at about 8 a.m. this morning at Pontiac General Hospital that his identy was known. , Officers were planning to question Carr in an attempt to find out what had happened to him. Hospital officials said he was in satisfactory condition. MAGIC Supernatural power* are not given to Humai beings. What may appear aa magic is the retail ol question*, doubt, wonder. Our ancr-*—- kllOW WIMVaeiBM/* . I gpwwr — -------------- realm of reality - until we tee childish alchemy. Two little girls play botue. They ar^drewed In ....---------- their mother’s clothe., ait at a liny table wilhUay J. L. VOORHEES and magic cornea alive. Their imagination has created a world of their own. Aa long aa children stretch their Imaginations there will be magic on this earth. A» Iona a. adult* stretch their imagination. Have faith, there will be communication between them and the infinite. Extra sensory perception isn't magic. It is. not trickery. Someday when enough question* are asked, enough doubt generated this phenomena will hill into the category of tho A B C of our common knowledge. Every scientific achievement, including the Wonder Drugs, came a* a result of doubt, years of hard work, magic was far removed from their calculations. It’s fan to watch a trickster on a M. F..S1P1.F. U fooU,h lo become VOORHEES-SIPLE FUNERAL HOME 268 North Perry Street Phone FE 2-8378 denn H. Griffin Sparks-Griffin FUNERAL HOME “Thoughtful Service** M William* SI. Phone FE 8-M8S Deaths in Pontiac, Neighboring Areas JAMES COLLIS Word has been received of the death of former Pontiac resident James Collis in Lorgas, Greece. Service and burial were in Greece. Mr. Collis, a retired employe of Grand Trunk Western Railroad, died Aug. 14. He was a member of St. George Greek Orthodox Church. Surviving is his wife, Anne. DAVID W. CUTCHER Service far David W. Cutch-er, 63, of 44 Seneca will be 11 a. m. Monday at Voorhees-Siple Chapel, with a graveside serv-*ce at 1:30 p.m. at East Berlin Township Cemetery. A Moose Memorial service will be held at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. Mr. Cutcher died yesterday after a prolonged illness. He was a retired employe of the Pontiac Motor Division and a member of Loyal Order of Moose No. 182. He is survived by five sons, Larry E. and David M. of Pontiac, Bruce W. of Auburn Heights, John W. of Flint and Palmer L. of Galesburg, 111., and two daughters, Mrs. Lillian Cease and Mrs. Carolyn J. Cuthrell, both of Pontiac. Also surviving are a brother, a sister, 32 grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. WALLACE G. MEADE Service for former resident Wallace G. Meade, 76, of Janesville, Ohio, will be 1 p.m. Monday at the Hun toon Funeral Home, with burial in Oxford Cemetery. He died Thursday. Surviving are his mother, Mrs. Guy Meade of Royal Oak, sons Morgan and Jack and a daughter, Mrs. Nick Rodi, all of Ohio, and brothers and sisters Warren of Keego Harbor, Ivan of Royal Oak, Eulon of Detroit, Mrs. Swan Hammett of Detroit and Mrs. Doretha Hawkins, of Farmington. WILLIE SMITH Service for Willie Smith, 69, of 575 Highland will be 2 p.m. Tuesday at the Macedonia Baptist Church, with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery by the William F. Davis Funeral Home. Re died yesterday. Mr. Smith was employed at General Motors Coip. Truck & Coach Division and was a member of Miracle Deliverance Church of God in Christ. Surviving besides his wife, Susie, are children Frederick, Herbert, Lester, Mrs. Erma R. Thomas, Mrs. Phyllis J. Hayes and Mrs. Zenola M. Seay, all of Pontiac, Williandes of Inkster and Floyd of Detroit. Also surviving are brothers Kenneth and Toby , and sisters Mrs. Josephine Quince and Mrs. Annie Mae Armstrong, all of Pontiac, and Mrs. Beathetta Sheppeard of Quitman, Ga. CLIFFORD E. STEFFEY Clifford E. *Steffey, 69, of 2860 Woodbine, Waterford Township; died this morning/His body is at the Sparks-Griffin FUneral Home. Mr. Steffey, a retired .chief accountant of the Oakland County Road Commission, was a member of American Legion, Cook Nelson Post, and Knights Templar. Surviving are his wife, Arlene; two daughters, Mrs. Charlotte Hamilton of Manhattan Beach, Calif., and Mrs. Elizabeth Smith of Washington; four grandchildren; and a brother. MRS. JOHN ALT OAKLAND TOWNSHIP— Service for Mrs. John Alt, 80, of 1800 Buhl will be 2 p. m. Tuesday at Pixley Memorial Chapel with interment at Mount Avon Cemetery. Mrs. Alt died this morning after a long illness. She is survived by a son, Raymond F. Alt of Lake Orion, and two brothers. MRS. GARFIELD E. DAHL HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP -Service for Mrs. Garfield Earn 4 % % CURRENT RATES by mail (Shirley Ann) Dahl, 28, of 4031 Hillcrest will be 11 a.m. Tuesday at the Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Milford. She died yesterday. Surviving are her husband, her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Alton of Green Lake, and children James, Michael, Terri Lynn and Gordon, all at home. Also surviving are a brother Jay, U.S. Navy and a sister, Mrs. Charles Irwin of Waterford Township. PORTER S. FRANCIS WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Service for Porter S. Francis, 75, of 3710 Orchard Lake will be 1:30 p. m. Monday at Donefson-Johns Funeral Home, with burial at Ridgelawn Cemetery at Oxford. Mr. Frapcis died yesterday after a lengthy illness. He was retired after owning and operating a lumber company bearing his name since 1922. He was .a member of Kirk in the Hills Church. Surviving are a son, Webster S. Francis of West Bloomfield Township, and one granddaughter. Also surviving is a sister, Mrs. Leah Lee of Pontiac. MATTHEW GEELHOOD UNION LAKE - Service for Matthew Geelhold, 86, a summer resident, will be 2:30 p.m. Monday at the Harvey A. Neely Funeral Home, Detroit, with burial in Roseland Park Cemetery. Mr. Geelhold died yesterday. He was a retired photoengraver. Surviving are his wife, Ruth, and sons and daughters, Mrs. Virginia King, Leslie Geelhood, Erving Geelhood, Donald Geelhood and Mrs. J. C. Corley,-all of Detroit. Also surviving are a brother, 13 grandchildren and four greatgrandchildren. ARTHUR B. KOCH WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP -Service for Arthur B. Koch, 77, of 1250 Union Lake will be 2 p.m. Monday at the Elton Black Funeral Home, with burial in Oakland Hills Memorial Cemetery, Novi. He died yesterday. Mr. Koch was a retired farmer. Surviving are his wife, Elizabeth, sons Roy of Detroit and Lester of Brown City, a daughter, Mrs. LeRoy Robison of Union Lake, two sisters, two grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren. JAMESP. LYMAN METAMORA - Service for James P. Lyman, 79, erf 2445 Hunters Creek will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Baird-Newton Funeral Home in Lapeer, with burial in Hunters Creek Cemetery. Mr. Lyman died yesterday. He was a retired tool and die man, and a member of the Deerfield Church of Christ. Surviving are two sons, John of Pontiac and Maynard Grand-staff of Fayette, Ohio, and four daughters, Mrs. Arthur Clark of Lapeer, Mrs. Donald Joyce of Jackson and Mrs. HaJrvey Parker and Mrs. Virginia Krause, both of Pontiac. Also surviving art 12 grandchildren and 12 great-grandchildren. MARK LEE MASSINGILL BRANDON TOWNSHIP-Service for Mark Lee Massin-gill, 17 days, will be 10 a.m. Monday at Pixley Memorial Chapel, with burial at White Chapel Cemetery. He died this morning. He is survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Vera Massingill of 47 Granger, and grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Paul Massin-of Oxford and Mr. and Mrs. Bertis Barnes of Farwell, Mich. WALTER MARKLINE COMMERCE TOWNSHIP -Walter Markline, 62, of 5928 Pickbourne died yesterday. His body is at the Elton Black Funeral Home. SHELDON E. THORNTON HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP-Ser-vice for Sheldon E. Thornton, 79, of 905 W. Livingston will be 1 p.m. Monday at the Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Milford, burial In Highland Cemetery. He died yesterday. A farmer, Mr. Thornton was a member of the Highland Methodist Church, the Highland Farm Bureau, and the Highland Men’s Club. Surviving are his wife, Elsie; sons Wilbur H. of Highland Township and Aden E. of Pontiac; six grandchildren; four great-grandchildren; a brother; and a sister. with Capitol Savings and Loan Association Now Capitol Savings & Loan Association offers you a more convenient way to take advantage of our HIGHER RATE OF RETURN on savings—4%%, which it compounded quarterly. We have never missed paying a dividend —since 1890 wo have paid 151 consecutive semi-annual dividendsl You might also want to inquire about our loans on homes. CAPITOL SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION mbtr Federal Home Loan Bank System SEND IN FOR FREE SAVi-BY-MAIL ENVELOPES NOW! Yes, I would like to receive a FREE Save-by-Mail envelope in order lo take advantage of your 4Va% return on my saving*. Please send tos Increase Probe by Grand Jury The grand jury investigation of alleged crime and corruption Royal Oak Township has been stepped up with the pointment of two more assistant prosecutors to work on the case. Circuit Judge Philip Pratt made the announcement yesterday. He is hearing test!-’ mony as a one-man grand jury. Assigned to the investigation by Prosecutor S. Jerome Bronson on a part-time basis were Thomas Plankett and Patrick Oliver. "When the grand jury convened three months ago," said Pratt, "I had an understanding with Bronson that when it was needed he would provide additional manpower." * * * Assistant Prosecutor' James Roberts, a resident of the township, has devoted full time to the investigation since it got underway nearly three months ago. Details of the proceedings were not made public under state law. ASK SIGNIFICANCE Asked if the two new appointments indicated anything, Pratt said, "It signifies that I will be putting more time in than I have in the past." Testimony has ben taken from 19 or more person* to date, according to Pratt. He would not comment on whether be intends to Issue any indictments. Bronson petitioned for the grand jury on complaints made by the Michigan State Police. Cycle Mishap Injures Man Robert Haack, 23, of 2070 Harrow Circle, Birmingham, is listed in serious condition today at St. Joseph Hospital from injuries received in a car-motorcycle accident. *