The Weather PMtIy Cloudy. Cooler i THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition VOL. 122 NO. 221 ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1964—.56 PAGES ASSOCtATEO PRESS UNITED PRESS INTERNAMQNAL City Income Tax Is Approvd by Commission JIA\A/ i/.i. I _/. r mi • # DAW Sets Vote by Loca/s; Could Bring GM Strike End DETROIT- (AP)-The United Auto Workers union today scheduled a membership vote Sunday that could signal the end of the national strike against tleneral MoWhs Corp. Walter P. Reuther, president of the United Auto Workers union, and Leonard Woodcock, chief of the UAW’s GM department, said today that the GM Council of the UAW will meet in Detroit Friday. It will recommend to the local anions either ratification or rejection of the UAW na-i^nal agreement. A telegram to all GM-UAW units said “all GM local unions and units are directed to, meet Sunday.” ' The units will vote on local agreements where they are completed, as well as on the national agreement. “If a majority...” the union executives said, “shjjl ratify the national agreemeiC all local unions and pnits will be notified and the national strike against GM shall be ended. If this should happen, local unions and units which have ratified local settlements shall Veturn to work immediately.” A Pontiac Motor Division spokesman said early this afternoon that approximately 2,560 skilled tradesmen would be recalled to work immediately. UAW Local 653 has announced it has slated ratification meetings for skilled and nonskilled workers at 10 a.m. ,and 3 p.m. Sunday at Pontiac Central High School. Fisher Body Local 596 scheduled its meeting for 2 p.m. Sunday at Lincoln Junior High School, while GMC Truck & Coach employes will vote at 2 p.m. at UAW Local 594 Hall. The union said local units lacking at-the-plant settlements will vote on whether to return to work or to stay out until an agreement is reached, The GM strike has disturbed the White House. NonresideQts Voice Protests By L. GARY THORNE Adoption of a city income tax for Pontiac climaxed a lengthy discussion last night before the City Commission. Nonresidents voiced most of the objectioris to the tax. which will impose a levy beginning in 1965 of 1 per cent on the income of residents and corporations and a half per cent on nonresidents. Pontiac residents working in another city where there is already an income tax will also pay the half per cent rate. Last night’s action came by a 6-0 vote. Commissioner Emmett Wellbaum was absent. The tax will become effective Jan. 1 unless residents petition' for a referendum ballot by Dec. II Million Seen as Net Gain 15. IN GOP HUDDLE - Sen. Barry Gold-water (right) talks things over with Sen. J. Glenn Beall of Maryland (left) and former Sen. John Marshall Butler at a GOP fundraising dinner m Pikesville, Md., last night. Beall is seeking his third term. ECONOMIC IMPACT Pointing out that it has idled more than 300,000, President Johnson said it now is beginning to have an impact on employment and production In other industries. ’ President Defends Policies No Scandal About Hoover, Notes Barry in Tribute Included in the group oppos- . ing the levy were residents of J^lion from Waterford and Independence pontiac's new income tax. townships and Rochester. ^his was the figure estimated Waterford Township Super- last night by City Manager Jo-visor James E. Seeterlin. among seph A. Warren prior to adop-those protesting the levy on non- tion of the income levy, residents, said, "Good neighbor Warren also pointed out that relations (between the city and the township) are about drop." the net effect on the average resident might not be equal to the full 1 per cent levied on his annual pay check. g I At • a.m.: Wind Velocity • Direction: Southerly Sun wtf Wednesday at 5:43 D.m. Sun rites Thursday at AAoon saiH r*---- Hleheit and Lewest Temperatures 5canaba — ..........- ^ Rapids 45 39 Kansas City 75 i 2 Houghton 31 32 Los Aiwiet fT i ! Marquette . 43 33 Miami Beach 14 < -4 ' Muskegon 48 35 MilwauKe* 4i < . 42 37 New Yor ) M 40 Omaha **5 Phoenix r Pittsburgh Lowest temperature Mean temperature tteather; Partly ctoudyj i I 35 Milwaukee “ ““u Orleans y York lAtTaplS”'^ 57 35 } j Bisci^rck 72 29 t 44l?hk ’48 46 P'pr^atlc^-" ■ 30 ClncirSwtl 54 42 1. 37 ! Denver 76 36 Seettle liphf I Detroit - ------ ^luth SAYS CLIENT CAPTURED — Attorney William P. Maloney (right) tells newsmen in New Yprk today how two gunmen grabbed his client, Josi^h (Joe Bananas) Bonanno. The lawyer said Bonanno was kidnaped in Ae Phot0)mmitr tee of State Security — the secret police — were sent from Moscow to get Khrushchev after he argued over the telephone against attending, the sources said. The informants gave this account: The meeting had been carefully arranged in advance. The charges were drawn up: bungling the Red China dispute, indnstrial and agricnl-tural failures, personal excesses and creation of a personality cult. Khrushchev, who personally chose many of the members of the party’s central committee, suddenly found himself opposed by his proteges and ousted. Leonid I. Brezhnev, the man Khrushchev had been believed to favor as his eventual successor, became the successor as the party’s first secretary with unexpected speed. Alexei N. Kosygin moved up from first deputy premier to take over Khrushchev’s premiership. ” ^ Since that time, a week ago today, Khrushchev has beei^un-der restrictions on his movements. He is believed to be in the Moscow area, although there is a conflict on exactiy where. One story is that he is in a four-room apartment with a view of the Kremlin. There was no confirmation. Khrushchev went on vacation in late September to his villa on the Black Sea at Gagr^ 875 miles south of Moscow. Members of the Central Committee began gathering in Moscow Sunday or Monday, Oct. 11 or 12. They had been summoned frotp as far away as New Delhi, where the Soviet ambassador is a cominittee member. ★ ★ ★ Someone — perhaps Brezhnev — telephoned Khrushchev to tell him to come back to Moscow for a meeting on policy matters. Khrushchev became angry. He replied that he was first secretary, he would decide upon meeting, he could not be ordered around. Almost immediately thereafter, the five officials turned up at Gagra. They told him he must go. So he went. 'The sources declined to use tile term “arrest.” But they ton-ceded the pressure approached that. Mafia Suspect 1s Kidnaped (Continued From Page One) was next, but as he approached the doorway he heard a voice say, “Come oft, Joe, the boss wants to see you.” It was raining, ftnd each of the gunmen wore raincoats and carried pistols. ★ ★ ★ Maloney saw them pulling Bonanno along the avenua toward 36th Street. He said he hollered, “Hey, where are you going? He’s my client.” GIVES WARNING “Get back and behTave yourself,” one gunman respond^. Malondy continued to follow them. “I told you to get out!” the gunman shouted, and fired once. Maloney ran to the comer and saw a late model car speeding off. it it it Maloney said later in an Interview in the apattment house lobby that Bonanno struggled with the two gunmen. They took him along the sidewalk to the corner, Maloney said, and as the car drove off Bonanno was stiU struggling. TWO CmES Bonanno, who divides his time between ’Tucson, Ariz., and New York, has been described by the FBI as one of the Mafia’s most feared chieftains. He was among the gangland hierarchy who police found at the Apalacbin, N. Y., underworld convention in 1957. He was one of 27 indicted on conspiracy charges as a result. A heart attack felled him in Brooklyn the day before the trial of 23 of the underworld delegates was to have opened on Oct. 26, 1959. ’Twenty were convicted. Appeals through the courts subsequently voided aH the convictions. * -k * Bonanno’s first arrest occurred in the 1920s when he was accused of transporting machine guns to the A1 Capone gang in Chicago. > *. * ★ In 1938 he left the United States and legally reentered from Canada. In 1945 he became a naturalized American citizen. He describes himself as being in the cheese business. Title Racks Up a Grand Slam for Candidate Michigan’s 'Auditor General Billie S. Famum has learned the hard way not to use his title as an introduction whtie campaigning door to door as Democratic nominee for the 19th District scat in Congress. “We sent the money in yes-, terday,” one Redford Township housewife said angrily. “Anyway, they got some nerve sending out the.auditor general just to collect a bill that isn’t even a month past due.’.’ The door slammed and Far-num could do nothing to get the housewife to open it again so he could explain his vote-seeking mission. Birmingham Ared N%ws City's Goblins to March, in Halloween Festivities ' BIRMINGHAM - Six abreast, the goblins, ghosts and other ghoulish creatures will march through Birmingham Oct. 31. There also Will he a smattering of pretty girls and fairy tale figures among the more than 7,500 ■youngsters participating in the 28th annual Halloween parade and parties. The* chambr- of commerce again is planning the event to keep mischief, property damage and minor violations of the law, at a minimum. Costumed boys and girls will 'gather at 7 p?m. in parking lot No. 5, beside the First Baptist Church. Nation in Mourning for Hoover » ( -7. (Continued From Page One) electorate turned him out i 1932 after only one term, politically discredited. But with grace and vigor. Hoover in private life regained the, esteem that circumstance had cost him. At his death he was a revered e 1 d e r ^statesman, respected ■even by the bitterest of his old political foes. Two hours and 15 minutes after Hoover’s death, his body was removed from his suite cm the 31st floor of the Waldorf-Astwia Towers. Beneath low, gray autumn clouds, it was taken to the Universal Funeral Chapel at 52nd Street and Lexington Avenue. • ★ ★ ★ During the night, jlie body was transferred to a catafalque on the marble, mosaic floor in the chancel of St. Bartholomew’s at 50th Street and Park Avenue — just across the street from the Waldorf Towers. WIFE’S FUNERAL Hoover was a Quaker. But it was at St. Bartholomew’s that the funeral srai held for hia wife, the former Lou Henry, who died 20 years ago of a heart attack. From 9 a. m. to 3 p. m. today and again tomorrow, the public was invited to pay its respects to Hoover, who at 90 years and two months lived I 0 n gye r than any President save John Adams, who died at the age of 90 years and 8 months. At 4:30 p. m. tomorrow there will be a brief memorial service at St. Bartholomew’s, including the Episcopal prayers for the dead. President Johnson plans to attend. * ★ * By request of the family, there will be no choir accompaniment. Organ music will^be played instead. .Admittance w& be by invitation only. ’TO WASHING’TON On Friday morning, Hoover’s body will travel by train to Wa^ington, there to lie in state in the. Capitol rotunda. ’The President plans to be at Union Station for the arrival. At ll/n a. m. Smiday, the casket/will Ito talieii to National Afaiiftrt for a fUight to Iowa City. From there a cortege will bear it 10 miles to West Branch, Iowa. On a grassy knoll, overlooking the two-room cabin where Hoover was born, graveside services are scheduled for 2:40 p.m. CST. A list of 365 friends, colleagues, government leaders and associates has been invited. Details were worked out more than a year ago. * k k . ■ Finally, surroundedt on three sides by evergreen trees, amid com fields seared by autumn, Hoover’s body will consigned to his native soil. From (California to lie beside him in eternity will come the body of his wife. ■* k . k.- American flags around Uk world have been at half-staff by'* direction of President Johnson since shortly after Hoover’s death. k k k A 3(klay period of mourning %as decr^ by Johnson, who declared; “We have lost a wise American, apd the world has lost a huma^tarian citizen of all mankind. He lived a fuU and uaaful Ufe, and we are jUl deq>ly in his debt.” ! New Threat of Rail Strike Negotiators Weigh 3^eor Pay Raise WASHINGTON (AP) - The nation’s fourth major threat of a railroad strike in six months hung in the balance today while negotiators considered a three-year pay raise of 27 cents an hour recommended by a presidential emergency board. PreUminary reaction to the recommendations indicated that negotiators representing 90 per cent of the U.S. railroad industry and .11 nonoperating unions seemed inclined to accept them. More than 400,000 workers are affected. k k k - ’There was no immediate formal comment from either side. They have 30 davs to accept the recommendation, or launch another nationwide strike scare. President Johnson, in creating the boaid Aug. 18, warned the dispute “threatens substantially” to disrupt the nation’s transportation system. ^ FRINGE BENEFITS The board ,with many acid comments about the “cumbersome” state of railroad labor negotiations, also recommended fringe benefits and measures to protect jobs in an industry that has seen drastic = employment cuts in recent years. The report of the board, headed by former Philadelphia Mayor Richardson Dilworth, was released by the White House shortly after being handed to Johnson Tuesday. ♦ ★ ★ The. board complained that railroad labor negotiations had grown in some 40 years under the Railway Lab6r Act to something resembling the ritual of “the Japanese Kabuchi theater” In a refharkably readable report for such tangled dispute, the boarejj urged drastic revisions in emergency board procedures to reduce industry irritations, relieve the “frustrations” of hoard membCTs and lead to better relations. “It need hardly be added that any improvements in the labor rqjations of this eritical industry would be decidedly in the public interest,” the board said. Units wjll begin their march at 7:15 p.m., moving south on Batos to Merrill, east on Merrill to W^ward and nortfi on Woodward back to the parking lot. REFRESHMENTS SERVED Refreshments then are to be served to everyone except parents. Prizes will be awarded for the best costumes. Each school will have its own committee of judges and the schools are to walk as units. Fourth, fifth and sixth graders will be shown a mo\ue at 8:15 p.m. in the gymnasium of Baldwin Elementary .School, Chester at Maple. BLOOMFIELD HILLS - Another series of programs in the exploration of science for fourth graders and up will begin Nov. 7 at Cranbrook Institute of Science. The programs will be held at 9 and 10:30 a.m. Nov. 7, 14, 21 and 28. ’The four sessions will deal with “Archeology,” “0 u r Changing Earth,” “Animals Useful to Man” and “Exploring Science.” ' ’The series is free to members of the Institute of Science. A nominal fee will be charged to nonmembers. Groups are to be accompanied by an adult. Further information can be obtained by contacting the institute. 3 Detroiters Sentenced in Break-Ins ’Three young Detroiters who sold a stolen $1,750 jeweled brooch for $3 wp-e sentenced yesterday in OakiLxi County Circuit Court for breaking and entering three Bloomfield area homes. Prison terms of 1-5 years at Jackson were ordered for Daniel Burr, 18, and James Morris, 17, by Judge Frederick C. Ziem, while Gerald Gatecliff, 23, was given 60 days in thi Oakland County Jail and placed on two years probation. ’The lighter tenteftce was given to Gatediff because he Bloomfield Hills Police Capt. Walter Sluiter said the brooch was among approximately $4,500 worth of goods stolen from the homes on July 25. The burglarized homes were those of Dr. Howard Barker, 490 Martell, where the brooch was taken, Minor Roll, 200 E. Hickory, both in Bloomfield Hills; and Joseph Bocci, 4250 S. Telegraph, Bloomfield Township. Much of the loot still remains unaccounted for, according to Sluiter, because it was sold by the trio for cash. The three were arrested Sept. 2 after police traced them through a bank check they had stolen from the Roll home. The three had pleaded guilty to the charges earlier this month. WRONQ-WAY STOWAWAY — A 14-year-old Brooklyn boy, Rafael ^ano (centar) leaves the airport at .Los Angeles last night in custody <>f police after arriving a$ a stowaway on i %ht he thou^ was taking him bom New York to Puerto Rico. Rafael, who intended to visit his grandmother in Puerto Rico, narrowly (hissed being ele((trocutad and kixKdung out the plane’s electronics system, according to airline officia])i. i I ;tHE PONTIAC lekESS. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 21, Reaction Awaited in Viet Nam Military Strong in'Constitution SAIGON, South Viet Nam (fl -Reaction from rival power groups to South Viet Nam’s new provisional constituUon was awaited today. Called a step toward civilian rule, the constitution continues a powerful military voice in the top Echelon of government. Some diplomats described the constitution as better than ex- 5 Brothers Able to See for 1st Time CALTANIESETTA. Sicily (UPI) — Five brothers blind since birth got their first dim glimpse of the world yesterday and cried with delight. Tlje Rotolo brothers were operated on for removal of congenital cataracts Oct. 8 Yesterday, surgeon Luigi Picardo carefully removed their bandages in a darkened room. Fonr - year old Calogero, the ywngest, was first. “The necktie,” he cried tugging at the surjgeon's tie. “I can gee.” The removal of the b a n d-ages from Giuseppe', 9, Gioacchino, 11, Carmelo, 13, and Paolo, 15, also was accompanied by shouts of joy. * * Picardo performed the operation for no fee after learning that villagers were taking up a collection for the boys. He said the boys must spend a few days in the darkened room, but soon will be able to go outside wearing dark glasses, and eventually need wear only g^dinary glasses. pected in view of weeks of political in-fighting that accompapied its drafting, but still short of what wa8 hoped for. ★ ★ ★ The constitution drafted by the 17-man High Naiional-Council and released Tuesday sets up a four-man security council of whom at least two will be military men. The council is given broad authority to handle the military affairs of this U S -backed nation beset by war witlf the Communist Viet Cong guerrillas. MARTIAL LAW Th^ council’s authority includes the power to establish martial law and “to proclaim cease-fires, or negotiate in the war situation.” , The council structure is a compromise between pressure, primarily from the Buddhists and students groups, for a strictly civilian regime and demands bv Maj. Gen. Nguyen Khanh, the caretaker premier, for an independent military establishment. * ★ ★ The council chairman will be ihe chief of slate. The premier will be deputy chairman, and the other two members will be the armed forces minister and the chief of staff Three military men could be among the four council members if the present chief of state, Maj. Gen. Duong Van Minh, is reappointed. ★ * * Informed sources said Khanh, who apparently will step down as premier before his^Oct. 27 deadline, is expected to be named armed forces minister. MAJOR QUESTION The major question is the reaction of the Buddhists, the ihilitant student groups, the minority Catholics, the armed forces and other grou^. ,| In a previous constitution Khanh gave himself dictatorial powers and gave every top government post to a military man. Violent student protests and I widespread Buddhist-Catholic rioting forced him to back off. The Catholics favor a strong military role in the government because of their fear of the Buddhist majority. ★ ★ ★ 'The constitution is provisional until a permanent constitution is drawn up next year by a national assembly that is still to be created. Until the assembly is set up, the High National Couii-cil will act as the legislative arni of the government. Lady Motorist Gets Lost Horselaugh AMSTERD.AM (UPI) -lady motorist^ yesterday handed a ten guilder note to a fhounted policemanto cover the 7.50 guilder fine for illegal parking. ★ ★ ★ But the horse beat him to it and ate the bill. The lawbreaker demanded, and got, her 2.50 guilders (70 cents) chgj^e. STATE OF MICHIGAN MICHIGAN EMPLOYMENT SECURITY COMMISSION 7310 Woodward Avenue Detroit, Michigan 48202 NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING TO ALL WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that pursuant to the provisions of Section 4 of the Michigan Employment Security Act, being Act. No. 1 of the Public Acts of the Extra Session of 1936, as amended, a public hearing will be held in the Commission Room at 514 Boulevard Building, 7310 Woodward Avenue, in the City of Detroit, County of Wayne, and State of Michigan, on Tue^ay, November 24, 1964, at 10:30 A. M., Eastern Standard Time, for the purpose of considering additions to, changes in, or rescissions of the present regulations of this Commission and all new proposals. Copies of the proposed revised regulations may be obtained upon request in advance of said hearing from the State Administrative Office of the Michigan Employment Security Commission at 7310 Woodward Avenue, Detroit, Michigan 48202. MICHIGAN EMPLOYMENT SECURITY COMMISSION DATED: October 23, 1964. APPLIANCE BUYERS I OUIE FRETTER SAYS OLLIE FREHER One of Michigan’I fhiginal Ditrtmnlrr$ I Special factory cloto-out prices, combined with our own terrific markdowns make every one of these lower than usual appliance prices possible on this 7-day price break sale. We've slashed prices again and again to reach these all time lows. Carloads of merchandise are arriving daily, and we must make room. Many items are in original factory cartons, all are brand new top brand name merchandise specially reduced for this great sale. P.S. Remember you get 5 lbs. of coffee FREE if I can't beat your best price and service*. WESTINGHOUSE^ ADMIRAL COLOR TV GAS DRYER SALE EASY REFRIGERATOR Oiled Walnut, KELVINATOR - ^ORGE SPIN-DRY WASHER Wood ContoU MAYTAG - HAMILTON, etc. Rebuilt $10300 Nidueed to ^379**** from *13000 Nov* Only *78” NEW LOW PRICE RCA Victor MwUstd COLOR TV e Alt-channel (VHP and UHF) tuning e RCA.High Fidelity Color Tube e Improved 25,000-volt (factory adjusted) chassis e Powerful New Vista Tuners . » e duo-cone speaker • Easy, accurate color toning Qur Price Only 399' |95 Budget Terms / FREHER’S APPLIANCE WAREHOUSE. NEW LOW PRICE nKn % Tht DELEUTE Strlu t-AB-l-M irtuba (mrall aiif.) 12$ tg. la. pictura 4 J RCA VICTOR PORTAE | | Newly - developed RCA Grid VHF Tuner ... 18,000 Volt Sportabout chassis (design average). . . Topfront "Golden Throat" sound . . . Built-in monopole antenha. Get Fretters 11488 Low,Uw llA PONTIAC WAREHOUSE TELEGRAPH RO. ii > SUNDRY Moin Floor Ironing Pad & Cover Set 69* $1.19 value —Silicone treated is Stqin and scorch -resijtont. Fits standard ironing boards- NYLON YARN $2.98 value —'Du-All' mop generotes static for fast, better pick-up of dust. Eosier to wosh -too. Dusting Mops |29 Famous Toothpastes 39* Extra lorge 69c tubes of Col-gote. Crest, _ Gleem, . Pepsodent, Stripe brands.. Limit 2 tubes. Roll-On Dbodprants 39* ^s.t, MndrI SUNBEAM SHAVER 16” 7-Pc. Serving Sets 66* $1.19 value —forge’ serving bowl ond 6 indivuduol bowls. Fbr sal ids, fruits, etc. Limit 1 set. CROSS DOOR 75c value — choice of ' 'Secret' — .'4rrid' brands. Limit 2 of yoiir choice. Gillette rc" Blades 59* Regulor 98c pock of 15 double edge Gillette Blue Blodes in handy dispenser coillainer. Uwril 2. Genuine 'OSTh;R' ELECTRIC DOG CLIPPER 21” New $ndp-pn rock for bothroom, bed' room. 'Closet doors. Fits’ 22 to 36 Inch doors. $1.49 volue.. UtHIty Racks 69* CAMERA DEPARTMENT Processing Included in Low Price 8mm Color Movie Film Noxzema Skin Cream 34* 60c jor of this world famous medi-coted skin creom for oil purpose skin needs. Limit 2. JEWELRY BOXES fit::: 2” -SUNMY Mjin $4.70 value—genuine Technicolor movie film with processing ond moiled direct to your home. SO-tt. roll lood doyl.gtil or Type A Indoor film. Limit 10 rolls |99 Choice 2 Sizes-Vinyl Grain Cover f lip-^Page’ nioto AJ^m $1 so volue-groined v, "" 98Nor«i Sagiiiaw StTMt 89* Still Pontiac’s No. 1 Discounter '\V A-4 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 21, 1964 ‘BERLIN WALL’ IN GRAND RAPIDS A “Checkpoint Charlie” was constructed overnight on a busy street in Grand Rapids by the South Kent Exchange Club yesterday as part of a “FYeedom” project bj' the club. The wall, ■three feet lhickri2 feet tall and topped with barbed wire, halts two lanes of traffic. Motorists are handed pamphlets emphasizing the “price of freedom.” Strikes Could Hurt British T rode Labor Government, Unions Clash Little Fallout Noted in U.S. From China Nuclear Test WASHINGTON .(API - No significant fallput was deposited on the United States as most of the radioactive ^loud from Red China’s nuclear test floated across the American mainland and out to sea, the Weather Bureau reports. It said Tuesday night that a lack of rainfall was helpful. Rain in the path of the cloud might have brought some of the radioactivity to earth. Even if predicted rain had not held off, except in northern New England, Atomic Energy Commission scientists said fallout fropi last FYiday’s "low yield” test had not been expected to cause any undue health hazard In the United States. Dr. Lester Machta, chief fallout specialist for the Weather Bureau, said some fallout debris I from the Chinese test would continue tp^ move across the United States for about another week at levels lower than" the 30,000 feet at which the major portion of the cloud traveled. Dr. Machta indicated the radioactivity at these lower levels is‘usually much less than at the high levels. He said that although some of it maj' be detected by ground stations, the amounts of fallout would be less than they would have been had the "hotter” cloud been washed down by rain. Antimissile Missile Said Costly Device SAN DIEGO, Calif. (JV-The ^ commander of the Army Air Defense Command says prelimi-mry studies for a new antimissile missile are encouraging, but thpt the missile would cost $15 billion to $20 billion to develop and install. X, would use a hi^ly complex radarjSystem that could distinguish'^ actual warhead from decoys the enemy might deploy to confuse the defense system. Lt. Gen. Charles B. Duff said the proposed missile, the Nike- Duff said current knowledge I is sufficient to solve the engi-I ne^ing problems involved in de-I velopment of the Nlke-X, but the i cost factor is the problem. Several hours before the 100 m.p.h. winds at 30,000 feet powered the radioactive doud out to sea. Dr. Machte said Tuesday: “Bas^ on our present' estimates, the leading edge of the (presumedf cloud from the tstems in metropolita% areas. ■V DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Offers PARKING furnished by o'oCxowh ‘ following merchants OSMUN't MIN'S WEAR SI N Sa«inow Si. TNE PONTUC PRESS 48 W Hui«« St. lANNETrS CLOTNCS SHOP ISON SoginowSl. FRED H. PAULI JEWELERS 38 W. Hy^ SI. PRMTIAC ENMASS JEWELRY CO. > as H. SoflMow St. lALURNER'S MUSIC SMOP SCARIXTTS RICTCLE aM NMMT SHOP WARD’S HOME OUTPITTIHR CO. « > 17 E. Hwran SI. 30 L Lowvmk* St. 17-19 S. So«iiMiw St. 16 N. Soemaw Si. CLOONAN DRUG CO. 73 N. Sl^ SHAW'S JEWELERS 34 N. 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That’s how long it takes to open an Osmun’s chaTge account. a part oi Pontiac since iSh SMUN’S STORES FOR MEN AND BOYS Use One oi O^mun's Individualized Charge Plans Free Perkieg • Dewntowe • Tel-Heree‘’’’S';'!S,'r* :V7. I'f:/ : ■ ' 7'. ' THE POITTIAQ PRESS, WEDNESDAVrQCTOBP:il : GOPs Taft Picked to Ovsf Young in Ohio Senate EDITORS — Here is third of fivp articles spotlighting key election contests for O.S. Senate. Future articles deal with Oklahoma and Pennsylvania. By PHIL GUNBY fcOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Astronaut John H. Glenn Jr. brought this year’s Ohio Senate contest to national attention. Injuries suffered by Glenn in a fall forced him from his bid to take the Democratic se^^itorial nomination from 75-year-old Sen. Stephen M. Young. ★ ★ ★ Now Young is fighting to his seat against the challenge of cong^sman - at - large Robert Taft Jr., who bears the state's most famous Republican family name. Young is a veteran democratic campaigner. Fresh out of law school, he won his way into Mother Faces Well-to-do Husband Died in Flaming Auto SAN BERNARDINO, Qalif. — A 34-year-old mother of three faces arraignment today in Superior Court in the fiery auto death of her well-to^o husband, a dentist. A 19-member county grand jury last night indicted Mrs. Lucille Miller on a charge of murder in the death last Oct. 8 of her husband. Dr. Gordon Miller, 39, Alta Loma. Calif. The jury took nearly five hours of hearing testimony and deliberating before returning the one-count murder indictment. ^ Mrs. Miller'Vas scheduled for arraignment before Judge John Knauf. ♦ * ★ . Attorney Edward P. Foley, head of a defense battery of nine attorneys, was expected to make another attempt later in the week to obtain freedom for Mrs. Miller, held without bail since her husband’s death. NEWSMEN BARRED Deputy bist. Atty. Donald Turner presented the case to the grand jury in a session at which newsmen and spectators were barred. Beforehand he said he intended to claim Miller was under the influence of barbiturates when he died in his flaming compact car. Foley claimed the dentist had been using barbiturates because he suffered from an ulcer. No details have been released on what led to the murder charge. ' ★ * w Mrs. Miller said her husband^ died accidentally when the caf^ burst into flames after something went wrong with it and she pulled to the side of the road while en route home from a trip to a grocery. WOULDNT OPEN rtmov* thick, conscatire mucua. Thli MuaUy ctMC breathint fact, allays eoueb--'*"*°‘*tea sounder slecn. Oot XnHtkAOO at drunlsu. Ut It holp yon. 'A^L^isementi PBMALE PROBLEM aUr, scanty, or palnfnl aicnscc dnt to fnnetlenal dlsordors by taking ■uunutBTS ••11--A sntla, Boo-taor- i »d4l bomaopatUa rtmady. At sB drag stassm Ho proaailpliaa aacdad. . NEWl . REDUCE EAT and LOSE Up fo 6 Lbs. o Week CAPSULES! 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A noteworthy value at our regular price, thofo outstanding Town-Clod suRt ore truly o Penney Days 'best buy* otgnly$49l 69.95 NOW Penney's famous 'Global' brand suits ore tailored from the very finest imported 2-ply worsteds. Xoo'll find the luxury look you wdnlf in these excellent 100% wool- worstods tailored to porfection in regular and yeor-oround weights. 1 57 separate operations go into every striking suit that bears the 'Globol' label -famous for quality. Come tee, you'll save at Pfnney's! PENNEY'S MIRACLE MILE-STORE HOURS; 9:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS Pontiac, Michigtn WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 21. 1964 Johnson Owes Country Jenkins Case Bepott We believe that if President Johnson Is to merit the confidence and supporf of the American public he owes it to the Nation to authorize a no-holds-barred investigation of the latest Washington scandal — the Walter Jenkins shocker. Moreover, the Investigation should be conducted and its findings publicized before the Nov. 3 election. • In the past,.*there have been sensational charges linking Johnson’s Texas background with the Billie Sol Estes case and his sponsorship of the nefarious Bobby Baker. * ★ ★ ★ If any guilt attached to Johnson, then senator from Texas, in the Estes unlawful wheeling and dealing, it has never come to light. But it cast disturbing doubts about an administration so lax that chicanery on so large a scale was possible. Again, Johnson has thus far escaped more than insinuations in the Bakeb maze of unethical financial transactions. But it was the President who slammed the lid on the investigation, a pretty sketchy one at that, despite efforts of Congressional leaders to give it a full airing. Now come the Jenkins revela- such liquors to a minor . . . shall be subject to the penalties of section 30-113." The act does not specify the SALE of liquor, as was presumably its intent; simply the supplying of it Moreover, it does not legally define “minor." In the context of liquor regulations, that differg from state to state. ★ ★ ★ Connecticut itself holds that a person must be 21 to legally patronize bars or liquor stores; the neighboring state of New York sets the age at 18. The hassle that has two-camped Darien’s 20,000 population is the outgrowth of parties given last June by adults for teen-agers at which liquor was served. As a result, intoxication'was held responsible for a motoring accident that killed a 17-year-old girl after one of the events. At issue, of course, is whether the section *of the law that was implicitly written to cover SALE of liquor to minors can be interpreted to cover SERVICE of it in private homes and those providing i^-the parents, in this case—held accountable. The case has attracted national interest and the outcome will be watched closely. A new legis? lalive precedent may be in the making. tions. ★ ★ ★ A longtime close ancf confidential associate of the Chief Executive is In disgrace charged with conduct “disorderly (with) Indecent gestures.” By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News Analyst But as repugnant as is this disclosure, it is overshadowed by an episode on Jan. 15, 1959 and the cover-up that attended it. Under that date the District of Columbia police blotter recorded: “. . . at 10:20 p. m. Walter Wilson Jenkins was picked up at the YMCA” as a suspected sex deviate. Red. Apart, liowever, from the conduct Itself, the disquieting element is that a man of Johnson’s astuteness and access to intelligence on all levels could have remained ignorant of it — or even more disquid^fing, why, if it were revealed to him, he failed for five years to take appropriate action. Of even greater cs Democrats 58.4, Republicj WARREN WON Republican^/ t out that in Dixie States Rank Earl Warren, now Chief Tustice of the United States, won his third term as governor by defeating Democrat James Roosevelt. The largest Democratic majority in the past 42 years was 1M2 — 60.2 per cent to 35.9 — and that year Warren, a Republican, won his first term as '1 governor, besting incumbent Democrat Culbert Olson. [ Tight Vdte Laws Cut Turnout The 1962 percentage favored the Democrats, 56.9 to 39.8. Republican presidential candidate Barry Goldwater has listed California, with its 40 electoral votes, as one of the four key states in his bid for the White House. The others are Texas, Illinois and Ohio. 1.55 MILUON ‘ In the 1960 presidential election, when Republican Richard M. Nixon carried California, the Democrats had a registration edge of 1.2 million. This year it is 1.55 million. By TTie Associated Press Come Nov. 3, it’s ek^cted that more than 70 million Americans/will cast their votes for president. If so, the hpmout would be a record high-but still far/lMlow the estimated 114 million potential voters. e will the remainder be? e 20 million m so will be registered to te/but for one reason or another — mostly >tlthy — they won’t take part in the election. Millions more will have failed to register. Witi^ this group will be two main types — those who could have registered but didn’t and those wdio wanted to register but couldn’t. STATE REQUIREMENTS An estimated 8 million will be blocked by state requirements that a person be a resident for a certain period before he can vote. In S states and the District of Colombia, the basic requirement is one year of residence. In 12 others it’s six months, and in Alabama, Mississippi and Sooth Carolina it is two years. Some states have taken steps to allow newcomers or recently departed residents to at least vote for president. , quirement compared with the 635,000 votes cast that year. ^ Residence isn’t the only requirement for voting. Nineteen states have some form of literacy test. And only within the past two years has the poll tax been knocked out as a requirement for voting federal elections. State laws regarding absentee voting vary widely, too, ranging from absolute prohibition to rules making it comparatively simple. The President’s commission on registration and voting noted in a 1963 report that those states which, in general, make it easiest to vote are the states with the biggest participation. IDAHO LED Thus Idaho, with a full battery of laws to make it relatively easy to vote led the nation^ in 1960 with 80.7 per cent of its potential voters easting baOpts. But Mississippi, with a poU tax, literary test, no absentee voting and a two-year residence requirement trailed the nation with only a 25Ji per cent of potential voters — incinding Negroes — turning out. ’The 11 southern states, in which Negroes have met varying degrees of opposition to registration, were among the 13 lowest states in participation. Democats see the registration as an indication of Goldwater’s defeat in the nation’s most populous state. Republicans shrug off the figures as just statistics. The state, Democratic chairman, Roger Kent, said the registration gains reflected a repudiation of Goldwater. John P. Vukasin Jr., an official of the Volunteer QUzens for Goldwater organization, said there was no connection between the registration total and the presidential race. LACK OP ENTHUSIASM Kent said, the' Democratic Sees Voice Conirol of Space Tactics MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (AP) — Astronauts someday may maneuver in space with backpack rockets controlled by their own voices. David N. Lovinger, an engineer in Honeywell, Inc.’s space and armaments section, said in' a recent technical paper that a vocabulary of 10 words could be programmed into an electroQics pack that would control tiny jets for travel between space vehicles. In time, Lovinger said, the system may be perfected so a housewife qan say “Open Sesame” to her refrigerator door. gains could' be credited to a “startling lack of enthusiasm for the Republican candidate and the Republican platform.” Kent said the swing toward the Democratic party is not a Slap at the GOP "but simply at their presidential candidate.” The registration gain, Kent said, also reflects a “serious effort by the Democrats and organized labor.” Kent predicted that 35 per cent of the Republican vote in Northern California would go to President Jcrfmson. Vukasin took a different view. “A large number of people coming into California,” he said, “are from areas where they traditionally register as Democrats. “1 caR see no adverse affects of the registration on the Gold-water campaign.” Viet's Highest Officer Dies in Saigon at 60 SAIGON, Viet Nam Ob-South Viet Nam’s highest ranking and oldest officer in the armed forces, Gen. Le Van Ty, died yesterday of lung cancer lat his home in Saigon. He was 60. - ’The general had been a military adviser to the Saigon government since last November. He was graduated from the French Military Academy at Frejus in 1930. ‘ In all, 18 states have some combination of laws on the subject. But the new laws are often cumbersome. TOOK ADVANTAGE In 1960 only 3,600 voters in Los Angeles County took advantage d the reduced residence re- Those states in which more than 75 per cent of the voting age population voted in 1960 are, in order, Idaho, Utah, Nfew Hampshire, North Dakota, South Dakota, West Virginia, Minnesota, Indiana, Connecticut, Iowa, Massachusetts, Illinois and Rhode Island. Bloomfield Miracle Mile Shopping Center - S. Telegraph -Pontiac Mi ” “ • - ■ - Tel-Huron Center, 3 S. Telegraph Birmingham, Maple at Woodwagl lall Shopping Center, N. Telegraph Rochester. 1451 f " K6UUR 3.00 SARDO Mn on ^ 02./ BOTTLE THIS WEEK'S WINNING NUMBERS 75 NEW WINNERS EVERY WEEK! 75 GRAND PRIZE WINNERS! plus $75.00 CASH DAIL^ BOX OF 24 LUDENS MEUO MINT OQ< patties O ^ TEEN-MATES TEEN-MATES Oer Famous Jumlw your CHOICE 6 ^ CHR1STM« COSMETIC TRAVEUR 1.69 In red, yellow, blue ond liloc checks. SPRAY CAN HIDE AWAY 88« REG. 1.00 Beautiful ginghom check patterns. 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Ganniogliam*s DRUG STORC?> 1- ' THE PONTIAC PRE^S, WEDNESDAY, OCTQBEfe 21,\1964 Blasts at K Said Halted by Europe Parties COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) — boimark’s Communist newspaper says the Soviet Union’s new leaders have halted their campaign to downgrade Nikita Khrushchev because of the adverse reaction from most European Communist parties. Peter Schaeffer, Moscow correspondent of the Danish party’s Land Og Folk, said meetings in Soviet plants, state institutions and other places attacking Khrushchev have been stopped. Commenting on the Communist criticism abroad, Schaeffer said: “To Soviet circles it has been a surprise that this critical attitude was expressed publicly ^coupled with Remands for an explanation of the background and the methods of the recent shift of leaders.’’ Stig Bringert, Moscow correspondent of Copenhagen’s liberal newspaper Politiken. reportedthat Khrushchev and his wife, Nina, have been installed under virtual house arrest in a fourroom apartment “from where he can see the Kremlin towers.’’ OTHERS IN HOUSE Bringert said the apartment building on the Moscow River also houses retired civil servants and noted scientists. ‘ “Khrushchev is said to have received a pension of 1,000 rubles a month — which is 300 rubles -more than he himself gave former Foreign Minister Molotov,’’ Bringert said. A ruble is valued at $1.11. Since the Soviet govemftient announced Friday that the 70-year- old premier had resigned because of age and poor health, there have been conflicting rumors as to his fate. -Before his sudden ecLpse, Khrushchev had been staying'at his vacation villa in the Criihea. | OPEN CRI’nClSM As Communist spokesmen outride the Soviet Union openly criticized the manner in which Khrushchev was dumped, the Kremlin i»ued an urgent call! for Communist unity. | '‘The unity and cohesion of the international Communist movement must be strengthened,’’ Mosc(j)v radio said. the fallen premier of “hair-braihed scheming, immature conclusions and actions divorced from reality, bragging, phrase-mongering, comman-dism and unwillingness to take into (account the achievements of science and practical experience.” In -the ^tellite sphere, the Polish, Hungarian and Czechoslovak parties openly praised Khrushchev. Comnyinist leaders in Europe and elsewhere reacted with dismay and re^ntmeut after Pravda loo^ a blast Saturday against f^rushchev without actually naming him. The Soviet party newspaper accused Vote Is 'Grave' Issue PORTADOWN, Northern Ireland (UPI) — Robert Anderson, 75, was fined $14 here yesterday for voting for both himself and his dead brother in the British general election. Massachusetts has an election law forbidding persons classified as'p^pers from voting. STILL LOOKING ON — Conununist East German Army workers building a wall dividing the bord|er village of Moed-laruth in Bavaria are watched over by a poster with the faces of ousted Russian leader Nikita Khrushchev and East German party boss Walter Ulbricht. ★ . ★ Say Nik Once Threatened to Quit Over China Poticy MOSCOW (UPI) - Nikita S. Khrushchev threatened to resign as long ago as last February because his Kremlin aides disagreed with his tactics against Communist China, Elast European sources said today. Ibc sources said that the men who ousted Khrushchev last week also are charging him with “squandering” foreign aid and pushing “irresponsible” farm programs. The new leaders are circulating a memorandum attacking Khmshchev to Communist party members, the sources Party theoretician Mikhail Su-slov made the attack in a speech to a dosed session of the cen-t r a I conunittee. Khrushchev wanted to rush it into print, but was opposed by his colleagues on the party Presidium, who wanted to give Peking another chance to cooperate. At the same time, they are making every effort to assure the West that there wilpbe no radical changes in policy with the leadership shift Diplomatic sources said Communist party chief Leonid I. Brezhnev and Premier Alexei N. Kosygin have personally assured U.S. Ambassador Foy D. Kohler and other Western ambassadors that the West can expect better relations with the Soviet Union. fJ5r SPELLED OUT The sources said they have not spelled out in detail just how - relations can be improved. The sources however made it clear (hat Khrushchev’s dismissal does not mean the end of the cold war thaw he promoted. Khrushchev’s threat to quit nifle months ago was brought about by a dispute over publication of an attack on Peking, the East European sources said. Spe^milmg Want to quickly step into a glarn-orous, well - paid secretarial p o s i-tion?Leam Speedwriting— the natural, easy shorthand that uses the familiar abc’s. Day or evening classes. Nationwide FREE Lifetime Placement Service. Visit, phone or write. NEW CLASS BEGINNING OCTOBER 26 Dof fcho«l •;J0 ojn. greoiag School (:M- pja. Tou Aro Inritmd To Attend rirtl SomIob ^ Aa An Ofcsonrw. PONTIAC business INSTITUTE 18 W. LawrwiCe St. FEderal 3-7028 The other Presidium members talked Khrushchev out or resigning and the publication of the attack was delayed, the., sources said. The sources said there were these other charges against Khrushchev in the memorandum presently being sent to Communist party members: • That he squandered foreign aid funds on unjustified projects. The reporttmentions a $200 million loan Khrushchev granted to the Unite^,. Arab Republic after his visit there last .summer. It charges that be did not bother to consult the Presidium before promising the loan and making it public. • That despite his reputa-taUon as a farm expert, he embarked on “irrespmisible and ill - considered” agriculture projwts, including the planting of com in areas not suited to its growth. • That he did favors' for relatives and close friends. The sources said the memo referred specifically to Alexei Adzhubei, who married Khrushchev’s daughter Rada. Adzhubei became editor of the government newspaper Izves-tia and a member of the party central committee and the SuiM-eme Soviet or parliament. The Communist Daily Worker of London yesterday quoted diplomats in Moscow as saying Khrushchev had proposed that Adzhubei be promoted to party secretary with special, responsibility for agriculture. It said this proposal was said to have led to Khrushchev’s dismissal. ^Entire Stock! 0URM3.95 SCOTCH GRAIN BROGUES wUhfuU lecuher linings 10.80 you save ^3.15 Save NOW on the identical shoes that are always a sellout success at regular prices! You get supreme walking ease thanks to supple top-grain uppers, split cowhide quart|r linings, flexible fiber insoles, Oak-bend leather out-soles. Hurry-and bring a friend! 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Dave is lighthouse keeper en Wood Islond - a small rocky shelf o half-mile off liddeford Point, Maine. The Winchesters and their children, one-year-old Robyn ond Rickie, 4, are quite happy on their island home. Although it is within shouting distonce of the mainland, they get only two doys ashore each month. Mrs. Winchester has to plan ahead and buy a month's supply of meals at o time. The weekly moil boot from the mainlond helps them keep in touch with'friends. Togetherness, of nKessity, it a woy ef life en the islond. The Winchesters' day begins at sunrise when the beacon must be turned off. The family has all its meals together ond Rickie usually accompanies his fother ot work around tho island. The lighthouse keeper's duties include rMording weother and barometer chonges, cleaning the light atop the 70-foot tower and performing mointenonce chores on the equipment and buildings. After the light is turned on at sundown, the evenings ore spent in family gomes, working on hobbies or studying for Dove's upcoming odvancement exoms. Despite its mony contributions to close fpmily living, lighthouse keeping is a vonishing vocation. Electronic navigation aids ore replacing the beocons and the ■ Winchesters' way of lifq moy soon be reploced by outomotion. ’ WOftl) ■ Lit: An upturned choir koopi eno-yoor-ofef Robyn out of mi$thiof Pat holpt Davo proparo for Coe$t Guard Moaman't oxam. Aftor thildron whilo Davo work* on Itland'a monthly woathor roports. aro in bod, Winchostort study, work on hobbiot or wotch tolovMon. dusts lonsos of giant Wood Island light. Its boom of light can bo soon from 13 milos away. This Wook't PICTURE SHOW by AP Staff Photographer Winiam C. Chepllt. THE PONTIAC PRESS, .WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 196i Attributes Became Known in Later Years Herbert Hoovers Humanitarianism Clouded by Depression (EdUt^i. Note: Thje ia the first of three articles devoted to Herbert Hoover’s long and active his many careers and his tneasvre as a man.) By HEM PRICE NEW YORK (AP) - Somehow it was hard to realize that the old gentleman with the hearing the black briar |ripe and the warm, gentle smile was the man many held responsible for the “Great Depression.’’ But tj^l was Herbert Clark Hoover, the 31st president of thb United States, as the public knew him la his later years. * * * During ttie bitter depression, with the economy faltering, breadlines and unemployed selling apples on street comers, millions, thooght the unsmiling president cold and unfeeling. Privately, however, his close associates are quick to s|ay, he was warm and humorous and had deep humanitarian instincts. These attributes came to be known publicly in later years. ELDER STATESMAN His gentleness, devotion to country and unswerving espousal of “American individualism” made him a respected elder statesman in the public mind. He was called to Washington repeatedhr by both Democratic and Republican administrations to undertake the enormous task of reorganizing the executive branch of the government via the much-publicized Hoover commissions. WWW When Hoover became president at 54, he already had a career seldom gained by most men. He had worked in 40 nations as a mining engineer. He had made' a fortune by the ti^e he was 28. He had directed the evacuation of thousands of Americans from Europe at the outbreak of World War I, freely lending his own money. He helped starving Belgians and French and at the war’s end came to the aid of the whole battered continent of Europe. IN HIS DAY In his day Hoover had grubbed in a mine for |8 a day, explored the interior oi China, Hireqted gold mining operations in Australia' and discovered an ancient mine in Egypt. As secr^ary of commerce under Presidents Warren G. Harding and Galvin CooUdge, he brought Industrial standardization to the United States and established the forerunner of the Federal Communications Commission. ★ * ★ Hoover, bom Aug. 10, 1874, in a tiny, still-standing white cottage at lyest Branch, Iowa, probably was the 20th century’s greatest exponent of what he balled “American individualism.’’ ♦ * w To Hoover “American individualism” was a political philosophy. It apparently was fashioned from the fact that he was an orphan at 8, was reared in the Quaker religion with emphasis on self-help and community responsibility and that he was a self-made man. His experiences abroad led to a strong distrust of Europe’s politics and politicians. BASIC DIFFERENCES In his travels Hoover saw the stratification of societies and concluded that the basic difference between America arid odier nations was that this country had “equality of opportunity.’’ , ★ ★ W Upon 'graduation from Stanford University in 1895, Hoover went to Nevada where he got a job as a miner at $2 a day. Later he returned to California and met' a mining engineer, Louis Janin, who gave him a job first as a typist and then as an engineer.. ★ ★ ★ Through Janin and though dnly 23, Hoover got a job in 1897 with the British firm of Bewick, Moreing and Co. He was sent to supervise gold mines in Australia and his salary rose from 1200 a month to $600. While in Australia his firm contracted with the Chinese government to handle' mineral exploration and as^gned Hoover the job. His salary jumped to 820,000 a year.’ ★ * ★ ^ En route to China he traveled via London and tlw United States where he married Lou Henry, a whimsical, blue-eyed girl who had been a geology student at Stanford. , ♦ ★ ★ In time he became a full partner in Bewick, Moreing and laid the foundation of his personal fortune although it was almost wiped out by the spwulations of a firm member. Hoover subscribed all his personal assets to pay off the cr^tors. BECAME CONSULTANT Hoover remained a partner until 1908 when he resigned to become an engineering consultant. In Mai4^ay in 1910 he struck' it rich. Overcoming almost impossible engineering difficulties, he drove the famous “Tiger Tunnel,” which turned out to be the richest lead-zinc-silver deposit ever discovered. He sold his interest in the mine in 1918. ^ Hoover was in London at the outbreak of World War 1. The American consul general called him, saying thousands of American tourists were besieging the embassy, that they were penniless because of credit stoppages caused'by the war and were clamoring to get home. Could he help? ★ ★ ★ Hoover could. Though he didn't realize it then, his private career was over and his public life had begpi. Hoover drew on "i»rsDnal funds to lend to the tourists. He organized other engineers into a sort of relief organization. In time he and his colleagues borrowed $1,500,000 on personal notes from British banks to help American tourists. All but $300 eventually was repaid. RELIEF COMMITTEE | The Germans had overrun | Belgium. On Sept. 25, 1914, a I Belgian engineer arrived in j London to buy food for starving ' Brussels. The Belgian Relief; Committee was born after he | saw Hoover. Hoover’s work brought him into headlines. I In 1917, President Wpodrow i 1 Wilson asked Hoover to return j ' to the United States to join his ' war team. Hoover accepted and set up the first U.S. Food Administration, mobfiizing the United States to give up food voluntarily to feed the troops and starving people overseas. ? A month before the war’s end, Hooyer initiated a worid food survey and Began the task of feeding a continent. Wilson called Hoover’s job second only to that of winning the war. STALL SHOWERS Haavy gaug* elwai, complata with faucatt, thiawarhaad, ittainar and curtain. 30x30 $69.50 Value .... $34.50 32x32 $79.90 Value .... $30.50 Miejiigan Fluorescent Light Co. 303 Orchard Lake Ave., Pontiac Humor, Irony, Brevity Were Characteristic BySAULPETT AP Sp^l Correspondent NEW YORK-His humor was gentle; his sense of irony, acute; his passion for brevity, intense. ♦ ♦ ★ In 1957, when he was 83 years old, already an ex-president 24 years and no longer charmed by the novelty, Herbert Hoover went t(f'-lndependence, Mo., to help dedicate the library of another ex-president, Harry S. Truman. He sat pn the platform in 91-degree weather, and, from his half closed eyes and pursing mouth, it was difficult to tell which he suffered from more, the heat or the oratory. * * * Later, the 31st president of the United States was invited to the home 0. A presidents to live until fiis The other was John Adams, the .second president, who was 90 years and 247 days old when he uis uwu in lOM ne „ , ^ -----' " iv revealed he had not personally Eisen^wer ad- retary of Cpmmerce. ,0,1, ,^0, h« aM nn« ■ mjnistratlon. Allen Henry went In the dablnet. Hoover oper- into private bnsiness. ntAH ™ ,hi. ^ ?*■ « Democrat or a or for any other federal duties. Sometimes, he sdid, he had Mrs. Hoover died in 1944. Hoover majored in mining e died on July 4, 1826. And no merely refused to accept his man, after leaving the White salary. And when he did accept House, matched Hdover’s per- f^’e money became a contri-formance of unstinting devotion to one of his favorite to puljlic service. projects. ^ ^ wilk “kT*"’*".!. lh*e 1929 depression that 90th bfalh^ the former ^3^^ Hoover’s years in thd ^,ef Exe^lve “0 □ r white House a time of pain and Amerwan fora of deep anxiety, While the depres- sion was caused by a wide va-cri^m, f r 0 m h 0 m e and complex faefors. Hoover aoroM. ^33 blamed fpr not taking “Altogether, the cr|tic8 say, stronger action to spur an eco-we seem to be iii a very, very nomic revival, bad way, and engaged in our biTTER STRESS decline and fail^ * Under the grim and bitter “CriUcism is no doubt good ®^ ‘!',® ^ for the soul b it we must beware depressj®" became synony-that It does not upset' our con-fidence In ouraelvw. So perhaps ^ '"“"y the time has come for Americans to take stock iuid to think *■»«• and calmer years, something about themselves.” most Americans realized that .«d on Ihi, errio: Ropnbllcn, h, pnAnbly . , , ^‘American business needs joking. Nor can it lie in some evanes- •>« bewme not cent, emotional, dramatic cm- ®"*y ® Republican president, but sade. intense advocate of the U-. -• k A ..1 ,k Drand Old Party’s traditional It lies, he said, in the 'philosophy, high pitch of economic life, in a He saw one of his most cherished beliefs — which he often referred to as Tagged individnalism” — as a fnnda-mental dogma of the Repnbli-can Party and at the 1962 GOP Convention he accused the Democratic administra: tidns of Roosevelt and ’Truman of whittling away at the freedoms of the founding fathers. Duri^ the 1960 presidential mtf»» mnerKans reanzen mai FAVORITE PASTIME — ,..... ^ u.. u__________________________________^ ■ FELT A LAG Hoover--to a great extent had Former President Herbert ®^ J®'"® P«rty Hoover *J® Bat be asserted, I cannot ^»f office. jport to relu from his offi- rior,” the late Gov. Alfred E. friend, forme? PtSdimr ’iS . Smlt^ of New Yeek, hi a cem- man." finer regard for the rights of others, a stronger devotion to the obligations of citizoiship that will assure an improved leadership in every community and nation. ■k * * ' / “It lies in ttie organization of the forces of our economic life so that they may produce happier individual lives, more secure ip employment and comfort, wider in ttie possibilities of enjoyment of nature, larger in campai^, Hoover’s attitude its Importunities of Intellectual was more subdued, but still life ” firmly partisan. GOT NOMINATION * In 1928, despite the owosition . ®*P®c‘ JFK HANDSHAKE - In 1161 the laje President Kennedy exchanged greetings with the elderiy ex-pi:^ident in his suite at the Waldorf Towers in New York. Kennedy was paying a courtesy qall on Hoover. -of office. bw His reputation restor^. Pres- eial duties. :V THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OOTOBER 21. 190# Seeks LBJ Meefffig as Soon as Rossible Wilson Anxious to Reaffirm U.S. Ties By K. C. THALER LONDOr< (UPI) - TTie new Laborite government is anxious to continue Britain’s traditional alignment with the United , States. Prime Minister Harold Wilson therefore plans a meeting with President Johnson, as soon as possible as his Hrst major move in the field of foreign affairs. He has atted the British am-l^assador in Washington, Lord Harlegh, a dose friend of the leaders of the outgoing Conservative government, to stay on at his post. The removal from supreme power in the Kremlin of Nikita Khrushchev is seen in London as necessitating speedy moves bn the part of the nujor West^ em powers, to ready for possible new developments in the international scene. The explosion of Red China’s first nuclear device has added to the urgency for firming up the Western alignment, in the view of the new Laborite government in Britain. But unlike its Conservative predecessor. Labor favors t h e abandonment of the British independent nudear deterrent and its merger with an over-a 11 interallied fon» with appropriate sharing of political controls. BUY YOUR TOYS NOW AT SPECIAL EARLY BIRD DISCOUNT PRICES! TRADE FAIR MERCHANDISING CORPORATION 1108 W. HURON ST. 332-9137 BUY NOW, PAY LATER WITH OUR CHRISTMAS LAYAWAY PLAN! And he is sending his foreign ----------------- n Walk- secretdry, Patrick Gordon er, to Washingtoh next wedc. At his projected meeting with the Preddent he will seek to reaffirm that the London-Washington team will not be upset by Laborite polides. SPEEDY MOVES Patrick Gordon Walker has described the alliance with the. United States as the “sheet anchor’’- of Britain’s foreign policy. Wilson, an advocate of sum-is expected to favor a speedy joint approach to t h e Kremlin to determine just where its new leadership is going and what the chances are for resuming the interrupted dialogue for new East-West tension-easing moves. 2 MAJOR PROBLEMS Two major laterallied problems will be high on the agenda of the projected Anglo -American policy realignment. This would require considerable revamping the sharing of Anglo-American nuclear infor-ma^n. IN FAVOR The U.,^, is basically in favor of Britain abandoning the independent deterrent. -Britain’s Labor government is opposed to the projected mixed Manned Nuclear Surface Force which the United States wants to set up by the end of the year. 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Retread Power-Pak, Silent Ride SNOW TIRES 6-AAonth written wurranty begins Deceni^er 1 st MOST BUCK- MOST WHITE- am ^88 PETERS 12-16-20 Ca. Linbtod Shot Slut SHOTGUN SHELLS Field 1 99 11 Loads I Box DEPARTMENTS! WATCH THE LIONS ON CHANNEL 6 TV ANTENNA BLACK and WHITE COLOR miNGE ■ECEmON COSCO FOLDING HiGHCHAIRi SHOTGUNS 12-GA. 28 MODIFIED PUMP GUN 59’^ 12-GA. 28 MODIFIED AUTOAAATIC 89^!. MSUUTEO UCE.UP iDSO HUNTING BOOTS 4 ” TRJVDE FAIR MERCHANDISING CORPORATION DISCOUNT CENTER-Phone 332-9137-1108 West Huron A-U THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 21. I96A Nobel Prize Brings Rare Joy to the King Home ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) - “I wish we could remain on this mountaintop forever,Mrs. Martin Luther King Jr. said of her reaction to her husband’s winning the 1964 Nobel Peace Prize. “For the past^lO years, we have lived with the threat of death always present,’’ she tqld the Associated Press in an interview. “I want Ay . children to grow up in a world full of compassion and concern,” she said. In 1947, Mrs. King — then CoretUt Scott — left Alabama and entered Antioch College in Yellow Springs, Ohio. She was intent on a singing career. A few years later, while studying voice in Boston, she met the young Baptist minister who was to become her husband. MUTUAL FRIEND “A mutual friend phoned and said she wanted me to meet a very promising young minister from Atlanta,” she recalled. THEY GET LETTERS — Mrs. Martin Luther King. Jr. looks over a pile of mail that arrived at her Atlanta, Gf■, home after her husband received the Nobel Peace Prize. Most of the mail consisted of letters and telegrams congratulating her husband. Dutch Seize Suspect Ship registered in Panama City, Panama. He said thp Joanne had been towed into Curacao last month because of an “engine breakdown.” Feel Vessel Used for Raids by Cuba Exiles Christian missionaries were expelled from Sudan in March of this year. NEW YORK (UPI) - X ship flying the Liberian flag has been seized by Dutch wthorities at the Caribbean island of Curacao on suspicion of being an armed raider, it was learned today. The ship was identified as the Joanne, of 596 gross topnage. It w« towed into Curacao Sept. 23 for repairs of unspecified damage, maritime sources said. The Cuban crew — presumably anti-Castro exiles — abandoned the ship in port and disappeared. Dutch andiorities found some automatic weapons, am-monition and gun parts aboard when they searched the ship. A Dutch official told UPI Jd Curacao, “Ihe Impnes-sion is the ship was used for military operations.” (On Sept. 13, the Spanish freighter Sierra de Aranzazu was attacked in C!uban waters by two unidentified armed boats apparently operating from a ‘‘mother ship.” There was no immediate indication, however, that the Joanne, taken into tow 10 days later, was connected with the attacks). Ownership of the Joanne was traced to a Liberian shipping firm, Kuestemvarsand. A. G., represented in the United States by the Bruan Shipping Corp., of Baltimore, Md. The Bruan firm has been in business for the past 12 years. CHARTERED SHIP B r u a n ’ s general manager, Lester Anderson, told UPI the ship had been chartered for the past year by “Maritima Bam, S. A.,” of Miami, Fla. f “I think this award will create a more favorable opinion for the civil rights movement.” Since 1954, when King began preaching nonviolence as a tactic in fighting segregation, he has' been jailed 15 times, stabbed once, threatened often, has seen his own peoples’ churches in ashes, and while a resident of Montgomery, Ala., was in his own home with his wife and their first child when it was rocked by a bomb blast. ENCOURAGEMENT “I think things will be better now,” said Mrs. King, a slender attractive woman with long hair. “There are so many peo->ple of good will: this award will I give them encouragement to accept what is the law of the land.” Teamster Aide Wins, Loses CHATTAN99GA (AP) -Tea^ters Union official Charies O’Brien of Detroit won a skirmish in Federal court Tuesday but lost his battle to throw out an indictment accusing him of jury-tampering.- The trial was postponed indefinitely by agreement of government and defense law-years. U. S. Dist. Judge Robert L. Taylor directed the government to give .O’Brien’s lawyers particulars of the offense alleg^ in the indictment — accusing O’Brien of offering a $25,000 bribe to a Negro woman juror who heard a jury-tampering case against Teamsters President James R. Hoffa. Wilson who stepped aside because he had heard the Hoffa trial. O’Brien is chdfged with indirectly offeri|ig $25,000'to Mrs. Callie Key, who served on the jury which convicted Hoffa here of jury tampering at an earlier trial in Nashvjlle. O’Brien, a close associate of Hoffa, has pleaded innocent. and added with a laugh: “I wasn’t interested in meeting a ^ung minister at that time.” Eighteen months later they were married. Since then, Mrs. King, a former voice instructor, has sung at concerts for numerous civil rights organizations and, when possible, has accompanied her husband on his trips in behalf of civil rights. Say Viet Planes Raid Village in Cambodia “With four children, this isn’t always easy to do,” she said. The children are Yolanda, 8: Mkrtln Luther III, 7; Dexter Scott, 3, and Bernice, 18 months. . The Kings’ red brick home with its barred windows is filled with mementos from admirers, many unknown. GANDHI PORTRAIT A portrait of Gandhi, given the Kings by the Gandhi Peace Foundation, hangs in the living ropm. King has said he shaped his passive resistance program from the teachings of the great Indian leader. Theire is also a bust of the late President Franklin D. Roosevelt and an abstract oil painting titled “Integration,” painted and given them by a great-great-granddaughter of John Brown, the 19th century abolitionist^ , help people and I think the children are beginning to under- "A wife needs to be as committed as her husband to his cause,” Mrs. King said. “But it has b^n hard on the children. I’ve tried to explain to th(^ that their father is trying to •^‘One day our daughter, Yolanda heard a newscast that her father had been arrested in Albany, Ga. I tried to wmfort I her but she kept , on sobbing. “Then to my delighted ^aze-' ment, Marty, who was then ohly about 3, came to my rescue. “‘Don’t cry, Yoki,’ Marty told her. ‘Daddy’s gone to help more people. He’s already helped some, but he has to help some more. When he finishes, he'll be back’.” NEED MONEY NOW? $1,200-$10,000 is yours fost! All Home Owners Eligible! SWEPT ASIDE Since her childhood days in Perry County, Ala., where she Otherwise, Judge Taylor was bom, Mrs. King said she ! swept aside arguments seeking has been determined to do dismissal of the indictment, something worthwhile in the The Knoxville jurist was hear-fight for civil rights. ing the case for Judge Frank PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (J) — Three South Vietnamese planes machine-gunned and bombed the village of Aniong Chrey in the Kompong Champ Province yesterday, well informed sources here said. liie reports said two men, two women and three children were killed and seven persons were injured. Six homes were reported destroyed. it CASH FOR ANY GOOD PURPOSE it CONSOLIDATE BILLS AND GET EXTRA CASH ★ CUT YOUR MONTHLY PAYMENTS IN HALF it NO HOME IMPROVEMENTS NECESSARY EXAMPLE: IF YOU NEED $1,200.00 P*y Only $ 8.60 Per $3 000.00 Pay Only $21.50 Per Mo. isioOO.OO P*y Only $35.83 Per Mo. 2nd Mortfife Slightly Higher CALL NOW 537-8760 DAY OR NIGHT PUBLIC MORTGAGE PORP. 17614 W. McNichols, Datroit 35, Michigan Serving AH ef Michigan — No OhIigaHon Anderson said that Barn’s president was a Cuban, Sixto Mesa of Coral Gables, Fla. Mesa, who has been identified as a close friend of Mdhuei Artime, head of the exile Revolutionary Recovery Movement (MRR), told UPI he “knew nothing” of any “military” use of the Joanne. He said the Bam enterprise had“given up” the Joanne some time ago. He said in the year Bam operated the Joanne, it was used to carry lumber and fresh meats in the Central American trade. ^ Mesa said the Bam enterprise was founded in 1959 and was KUHN IS THE MAN FOR U. S. CeMgFBu REPUBLICAN. for by tUkm for C«ir«« OCTOBER SALE SOFT COTTON FLANNEL . SPORT SHIRTS MEN'S Men's wosh and weor cotton flannel, assorted plaids. Sizes: small, / medium, large. Boys' sanforized cotton flannel, assorted plaids. Sizes 6 to 16. NEISNER * 42 NORTH SAGINAW - DOWNTOWN PONTIAC THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1904 Humphrey Turns Up the'Heat Scorches Goldwater CARBONDALE, Rl. (AP) -Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, turning up the h^t of tiis campaign, declared today that in no area To Let Bids Next Spring on Ludington Hospital LUDJNGTON (AP) - Construction bids will be let next spring on a new 74-bed hospital to be situated in the city’s northeast sector, the Mason County Hospital Association r^ ported Tuesday. T. L, Atkinson, association president, said completion of the new structure is scheduled for late 1966. A public drive raised $500,000 toward construction costs: • are Barry Goldwater’s views “more danger^s to the safety of all Americans then in foreign policy.’’ “The difference here is much, more than the usual party difference — it is the difference between life and death,’’ said Humphrey in remarks pfepared for delivery at a Southern Illinois University rally. -With the campaign! having entered its final two weeks he has sharpened his attack on Sen. Goldwater, the GOP standard-bearer. As he did Tuesday In Tulsa, central Illinois and Paducah, Ky., the Democratic vice presidential nominee . hammered today at this theme: That abrupt developments in lEhe world scene — new governments in Moscow and London, and Peking’s firing of a nuclear device — have dramatically underline the “one central issue in this campaign.’’ Hiat issue, is, he said, “which man is best equipped — intellec-tually, by experience and by Auto Pioneer Dies MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) -Leonard A. Young Sr., 87, founder and owner of the L.A. Young Spring and Wire Corp. of Detroit and a pioneer In the automotive industry, died Tuesday after a long illness. He was considered the developer of the automobile coil spring. training — to lead the free world during a time of constant danger.” The U.S. president, Humphrey added, “holds in his hand the power to maintain the peace ot the world or annihilate virtually all life on this planet.” Humphrey left no doubt that he thinlft President Johnson is the man to hold that power. Jdmson, he said, is “a leader we can trust to use this nation’s awesome power with reason and restraint.” EVERY STEP He said Goldwater every’step “made by responsible, wide statesmen h) secure world peace.” “What this amateur strate^ i does not yet realise is that such juvenile games of ‘nuclMr chicken’ could eventually result in the inciner^iion of all mankind,” said Humphrey. Noted Writer Dies NEW YORK (AP) - Sidney A. Eisenberg, 54, of Cleveland, Ohio, a lawyer, magazine writer and newspaper columnist, died IVesday of a heart attack. Eisenberg, v^ho collaborated with Dr. Benjamin Fine on a weekly newspaper column distributed by the Bell Syndicate, was author of many radio and television shows. For Fail Into Winter YIP INTERIOR LATEX VICT-O-LITE ENAMEL • HIGH GLOSS FINISH • EXCEUINT COLOR RETENTION • FOR WOOD. METAL, CONCRETE, AFPLIANCES. FURNITURE KRIL TONE INTERIOR LATEX ACRYLIC WALL PAINT • EXCELLENT HIDING AND COVERAGE • DRIES IN 30 MINUTES • UP TO 450 SQUARE FEET OF COVERAGE PER GALLON BASEMENT SEAL • FLAT, LOW SHEEN FINISH • DRIES IN 30 MINUTiS • FOR ALL INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR SURFACES mm for W 96 QUARTS 2^224 irsV?ii'r2“'«7« 10 STAR SEMI-GLOSS INTERIOR ENAMEL KRIL-TEX EXTERIOR UTEX 2 GALS. ONLY? 96 • WILL NOT SPOT FROM WATER. SOAP, OR DETERGENTS • STAIN AND CHIP RESISTANT • UP TO 450 SQUARE FUT OF COVERAGE PER (lALLON MARY CARTER ^ ROL-HIDE ^ GALS. 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RCA VLCTOR COMBINATION HOME THEATRE Beautiful conaole combines 21” Color TV, Stereo Hi-Fi, AM-FM radio,and FM- Stereo radio. 4ith| and aound . . . Dani^ Modrrn ilyling, parfarl thow. cate for iu rnleitainmant compoocnli LHF tnoA- . . . SoUd Siaia Stereo Hi. Fi. Solid State AM, FM and FM Stereo radio. Oxm la-Cat law price, pim THE PONTIAC PRESS ONE COLOR WEDNESDAY; OCTOBER 21. 1»64 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. Singers Can Apply for Opera Audition WOMEN'S SEGflOl Pontl«c PrMi Phol* '*Mrs. Eugene Bereznicki, South Paddock Street (left) and Mrs. . Orma Morales, Russell Street, are" getting their costumes ready for the Halloween masquerade party Oct. 31 at Fisher Body Local Union Hall on Baldwin Avenue. Mrs. Bereznicki is chairman of the party sponsored by the Ladies Auxiliary to the Gl Forum. The party which begins at 9 p.m. is open to the public. Prizes wdl be awarded for the best costumes. Woman’s Club Slates Lectures TTie junior goup of the Village Woman’s club is sponsoring a series of five informal lectures about the challenges tomodem women. The first will be held 10; 30 a.m, Friday in, the clubhouse lounge and is o^n to the public. Esther Middlewood, chief of the education section of the Michigan Department of Mental Health, will speak on “Rediscovery of Moral Values.’” “double standards” of modern living. On Nov. 20 Mrs. H. W. Schoeniein will discuss “How, to Make Christmas Decorations.” ■ Dr. D. k. McKinney will present a talk on the problems of youth today in a speech titl^ “Somewhere In Between” Jan. 22. the series. Assisting her are Mrs. Lee Bertling Jr., Mrs. William Hamilton, Mrs. David Andreae, Mrs. John C. Maddox Jr. and Mrs. David tong. Others helping are: Mrs. Robert L. Saffell, Mrs. Loren D. I^iley, Mrs. Etouglas. Colwell and Mrs. Jerrold Frost Jr. LAST TWO “Strengthening Marital Life 50 Year Partners ’The discussion will deal with the difference between parents’ “modest dishonesty” and the “absolute honesty” they expect from their children. Miss Middlewood will also discuss other in America” will be presented by Dr. Robert Janes Feb. ’The concludlhg lecture will be “’The Most for Your Money in Gardening” by Mrs. W. H. Burlingame April 30. Mrs. John B. Dixmi of Huntington Woods is chairman of Mr. and Mrs. William McGee, Iris Drive, will celebrate their golden wedding anniversary today with a small dinner party at Pine Knob Resort. The McGees have one daughter, Mrs. Jay Cox of Or-tonville. ’They were married Oct. 21,1914 in England. .’The scholarship committee of the Detroit Grand Opera Association has announced dates for a u d 1110 n for the Grinnell Foundation ot Music $2,500 opera scholarship and other awards given through the Metropolitan Opera National Council Regional Auditions program. All auditions will be held in the Masdhic Temple in Detroit. ’The preliminary audi-’ tibn' will be held Dec. 5. Singers selected will be asked to sing again in a semifinal audition Dec. 7. Final auditions are scheduled fw Feb. 11, 1965. Applicants must be in the following age bradkets: sopranos, 19 to 30; altgs, 19 to 32; tenors, 20 to 33, and bass, 20 to 35. ADVANCED S’TUDY ’The Grinnell Advanced Study opera schoiarshij] is for advanc^ study in voice and opera training under the supervision of the scholarship committee of the Detroit Grand Opera Association. The Metro^litan Opera National Council Regional Audi-tidns also offer many opportunities for young singers to qualify for: • a Metropolitan Opera Association contract anid $2,000 in the form of a scholarship given by Stuart and Irene Chambers, • a $2,000 Frederick K. Weyerhauser Scholarship, • a $2,000 Fisher Foundation .Scholarship, • a $l',o6o Euclid W. McBride Scholuarship, • and the scholarship of $1,000 given by Detroit’s own John S. Newberry. ADDITIONAL COURSES In addition to these several admissions to the Metropolitan Opera Studio, there -are additional courses with the Kathryn ’Turney Loni Opera School. Winner of the finals of the Great Lakes Regional auditions in Buffalo, N. Y., ••will receive a prize of $300 and a trip to New York City for further auditioning, expenses paid by the National Council. ’The second and third prize winners will receive $200 and $100 respectively. Can't Behave Properly Children Spoil Wedding Applications are now being accepted for the 1964-65 auditions. Completed forms must be returned before Dec.*!. Requests for applications may be made by writing Mrs. Sam B. Williams,’ Auditions Chairman, Detroit Grand Opera Association, Ford Auditorium, Detroit 26, Mich.^ Launder Linens Like Islanders Embroidering fine linens is the life work of many residents of the Madeira Islands, and these experts know as much about washing their handiwork as about creating' it. 'Their laundry method is to wash linens in cool water, sudsing it by hand on an old-fashioned corrugated metal washboard. After numerous rinisings, the wet linens are pressed—which means downward pressure on the fabric, inside of sliding the iron over it. The laundress goes over the linen constantly with a ball of very wet cloth. This wetting, plus pressure, creat’es a starched look without using starch. By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: You have said in your column that it is not proper to put “NO .CHILDREN, PLEASE” on a formal wedding invi-t^tion, but if ^ I had it to do over again, I would include it on mine. I was married in June, and there were 16 children under 12 yfiars old at my wedding, and ,I don’t mind telling you that they ruined it for me. At the reception they put their fingers in the punch bowl, threw food on the floor, and they were filthy from running, falling down and sliding all over the dance floor. One overgrown 8-year-old girl fell on the musician’s cello and broke it- to bits, and I was responsible. I don’t care if it IS improp- these, the dissenter deserves to”be congratulated. ■ DEAR ABBY; You have always held my highest esteem with your replies concerning I domestic problems, hut you lost the bid in the bridge department. When “Honest Abe” asked whether it was acceptable to peek at an opponent's cards,-* you said, “NO.” of his hand to an opponent,, he has only himself to blame if the opponent takes advantage of it.” “PEEKER” DEAR “PEEKER": True enough. The one who holds his cards carelessly, thereby giving his opponent the advantage, has only himself to blame. AB3Y As debate, I submit this quotation from Ely Culbertson: “If a player exposes any part But is the opponent "blame* less” for taking the ^advantage just because it is available? I think not. I am sorry I let my mother talk me out of making sure no children spoiled my wedding. SORRY Fer Marble Top If you have a marble-topped counter or table in your kitchen, be sure to wipe up spills as they occur — just as you would do with a wooden sur-y face. DEAR SORRY: When I am asked what is “proper,” I consult two authorities on etiquette and quote thgpi. But I have also said that there are “laws” ‘that transcend the laws of Emily and Amy, I mean the laws of consideration, convenience and ^common sense. And if the rules of etiquette are passed over in favor of CAROLE ANN HOYT How To 8E«r nsmiiPaK King Size Set Retire In Ooklnnd County For Only Are you getting oil the sleeping comfort you're entitled to? Maybe not. When you divide standard double bed between two sleepers, each gets about os much room os he o.r she woulpl in o baby's crib. An extra large size Posturepedic not only gives you extro luxury, but also the extto “no rrierning backache"* support you need. How does your bedding measure up? If it puts you in a squeeze see o King Size Posturepedic today. King Sizet (76"x80") ^Includes mattresg and 2-section jf^undation Plus You,fiet FREE Pacific Contour Bottom Shoot Pacific Flat Top Shoot Pacific Quiltod Mattrosi Pad jlotKitof PdtniomiS 1662 S. TELEGRAPH RD., PONTIAC Near Oixhord Lake Rood , PHONE ■3384400 Daily 9 to 6:30 Evenings Mon., Thurs., Fri. 'til 9 EXTENDED TERMS AVAILABLE ;• ■- B-k THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESD.AY, OCTOBER 2l, 1964 Storch Curtains Remove Tarnish Giver fiber glass curtains new body with starch. After washing, immerse them in an instant starch solution and let drip dry. You may be. able-to remove the stains or tarnish from that I pewter piece by rubbing with I a cloth dampened with salad I oil and dipped into whiting. WHEN YOU NEED A Special llVo^ TO SHOW YOUR FEELINGS OESUnif^ Has Installed Its Officers Coilples Now Honeymooning . Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd L. Lake Jr. of Rochester announce the engagement of their daughter, Linda Lo-uise to Raymond John Waite, son of the Kenneth Waites of Lake George Road, Oakland Township. A spring wedding is being planned. ''Areme Chapter No. 503. ^der of the Eastern Star installed officers in a Monday evening ceremony at Roosevelt Temple. Some 250 members and guests saw Mrs. Eugene Perkio,'' installing officer, induct Mrs. Thomas Cox as worthy matron and William Cox as worthy patron. Bride's Birthday Picked for Event Assisting Mrs. Perkio during the candlelight ceremony were; Mrs. Lester Oles, Mrs. Theron Taylor, Mrs. Harry Lunsford, Mrs. Harry Vernon, Mfs, Ruth Kimler, Mrs. LaVon F^den, Mrs'. Sidney Fellows and Mrs. William Pfahlert. TWO OAtlY DCLIVERIIS TO DETROIT AND .INTERMEDIATE POINTS m : / ' P"*^**'”®'*^* T™'" ^29.98 :•%:> ehudlb Tbe bride’s birthday was the day picked for the recent marriage of Charlotte Louise Tilt-man to Delmar Willard Dilley. The Children of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Tiltman of Daffodil Drive and the late Mr. and Mrs. WUlard DiUey were wed byTatrick K. Daly, justice of tbe peace,^ f ' i Op«n Thurf., Fri. 'til 9 Brown and Ann Streets - Birmingham Ml 7-1300 ^ The bride wore a street-length dress of white brocade and was attended by her sister, Susan Tiltman. Frank Nash was best man. ^ The evening reception was held in the home of tbe bride's parents. Mrs. Flarmon Howard was installed as associate matron: Robert Hulett, associate patron; Mrs. Edwin Carlson, secretary; Mrs. J. B. Wilder, treasurer: Mrs. Royal Clark, conductress and Mrs. Edward Moden, associate conductress. OTHER OFFICERS Other officers are: Mrs. Cecil Garrett, Mrs. William Harsch, Mrs. Grace, Redde-man, Mrs. Eugene Clines and Mrs. Elaine Springer. Completing the list are; Mrs: Charles Parlier, Mrs. Paul Baldwin,^ Mrs. Ernest Hendricks, Mrs. Frank Waring and Claude Scarrett. MRS. D. A. MOORE MRS. J. R. SCRIBNER MRS. M. D. POWELL MRS. P. J. BRIGHT Mrs. Leslie Dean and her committee will confer the Bible degree. Pages were Nicole Peterson, honored queen of Bethel 40, International Order of Job’s Daughters and Karen Howard. Reception In Avon Community Hall followed the recent marriage of Beverly Jean James to David Albert Moore of Sebewaing. Parents qf the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Freeman F. James of Caroline Street, Avon Township, and the James C. Moores of Troy. For the six o’clock vows repeated to Rev. Alger Lewis, the bride wore a floor length gown of white taffeta with lace bodice and a bouffant illusion veil. PINK AND WHire Pink sweetheart roses and white carnations covered her small white Bible. With honor maid. Fay Bar-ager, were bridesmaids, Brenda Stoops, Karen Lewis and flower girl. Sue Moore. Steven Russell carried t h e rings. Diane Louise Dolecek of West Huron Street exchanged vows and rings with James Robert Scribner, recently in the Holy Cross Lutheran Church, Oxford. DINNER, RECEPTION A dinner and reception in the CAI Building followed the .candle light ceremony performed Y)y Rev. Herbert May. Parents of the couple who left for a N^w Orleans honeymoon are the Albert J, Dole-ceks of Bellevue Island, Lake Orion, and the James M. Scribners of Birmingham. ... a Masterpiece In Dining Elegance for Years of Gracious Entertaining Sideboard BuHat, S4" widt $159.95 Hatch Cavinat, 48" wide $219.50 Roaiid fadastol Table $159.50 45"x45", extended te 81" Arm Choir in vinyl or fobric $ 49.95 Matching Side Choirs, each $ 4195 An entirety new contemporary design of classic simplicity that sets the pace for sophisticated dining. Exquisitely foshioned in a blend of solid walnut and walnut veneers in rich oil finish, distinguished by unique-disappearing rollback doors, sculptured moldings ond recessed bases. The round table is complemented by- gracefully tapered high back chairs that add a note of “color with their vibrant floral print backs and seats. Finest 'construction detail! assure life-long service and pleasure. ENJOY n NOW... OUR TERMS MAKE IT EASY Open Thursday, Friday, Monday Evenings [til 9 P. M.^ Interior Decorofing Consultation Budget Termr, of Course 1680 S. Just South Telegraph of Orchard Road —FE 2-8348' Lake Rd. — Park Free Cl On the esquire side were best man Jon Barrett, with ushers Roy Hamilton and Locke Bishop. The bridegroom was graduated frpm Lawrence Institute of Technology. The bride’s gown of white peau de soie with pearl applique swept into a cathedral-length train, complemented by a silk illusion veil and pearl tiara. • A white cattleya orchid centered her bouquet of white carnations. ATTEND BRIDE Honor attendant was Kay Johnson, with bridesmaids, Kathy Drettmann. Grosse Pointe; Anita Best and Sandra Huerth, Lake Orion, and Mrs. Eklward Salter. Area People Celebrating Dr, James Hruska was best man. Seating guests were Charles Scribner, John Dolecek, Richard Scribner, Troy and Paul Drettmann. A recent ceremony In the First Free Methodist Church marked the vows of Nancy Carol Bigger and Michael David Powell. After a reception in the Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Church social hall, the newlyweds left for Niagara Falls. Their parents are the Edward R. Biggers of West Yale Avertue and the Marvin Pbw-ells of Newport Street. SEQUINED LACE With her floor-length tiered gown of sequined Chantilly lace over taffeta; the bride wore an illusion veil and jeweled crown. The bridegroom’s gift necklace of cultured pearls and a bouquet of vdiite roses complemented her ensemble. Wift Theresa Shovels, honor maid, were bridesmaids Mrs. Earl Perry, Mrs. Robert Lawrence, Lawana and Dianna Bigger. Lori Bigger and Cathy Powell were flower girls. Barry Bigger carried the rings for the ceremony performed by Rev. Carl Koerner. With Edward N. Minton, best man, were Patrick Powell and Alexander Bigger III, groomsmen. Gary Tatu and Daniel Chamberlain seated guests, assisted by Stephen and Mark Powell, junior ushers. Off on a honeymoon in the Deep South are the Daniel Joe Britts (Elaine Maxine Mitchell) who were wed recently in St. Paul Methodist Church, Rochester. Rev. Douglas Parker performed the ceremony followed by reception in the American Legion Hall, Rochester. Hand-sewn pearl applique enhanced a gown and full chapel train of white peau de soie for the daughter of the, Mark J. Mitchells of Hatton Drive, Pontiac Township. DIOR BOW Silk roses on a flat Dior bow cradled the bride’s bouffant veil of imported illusion. She carried white Fuji chrysanthemums. With Lynn E. Anderson, honor maid, were bridesmaids Michal Bright and Mary Mitchell. The bridegroom, son of the Henry S. Brights of North Adams Road, Avon Township, had Kendall W. Smith for best man. George Morley;J[Jerald Mitchell, Lake Orion; Rodger Moak and Mark J. Mitchell Jr. were ushers. «, A daughter Susanne Kathleen, was born Oct. 18 to Mr. and Mrs. Leo H. Voelkle (Kathie Armstrong) of Glen Burnie, Md. Grandparents are the Corliss E. Armstrongs of Wenonah Drive. Returning to her home in Ann Arbor Sunday was Miss Blanche Avery, teacher and resident of Pontiac for many years. She was the house guests of Mrs. Edward Howlett of James K Boule vard. Local Women Host Gathering lly's Pointers Beginning Celebrated by Sorority Put Cups in Bowl By POLLY CRAMER •EAR POLLY - A friend of line has a wonderful way of itoring the cups to her good set of china. It is really a space Representatives from troit, Flint, Jackson and sing attended the Mich state council executive board meeting of Epsilon Sigma Alpha. The Pontiac city council hosted the Sunday affair in the Waldron Hotel. State president, Mrs. Lawrence Hartman of Clarkston, reported the sorority Home site is Newton Falls, Texas. The 1965 convention will be in Detroit April 30 through May 2. Use' a fairly large bowl and lay the cups in a circle inside the bowl, fitting the cups inside each other and with the handles to the outside. About 15 or 18 cu[>s can be stored in one big bowl—IVA. DEAR POLLY-I find small plastic bags very handy for pulling up poison ivy in the garden. Put your hand inside the bag and, after pulling the ivy, peel off the bag and drop in a waste can. This really protects the hand and arm.—.J. L. S. DEAR POLLY - Now I have seen everything. My mother has made a clothespin bag out of a bleach bottle. She cat off the top of a plastic bleach bottle just behnr the handle and then punched holes, about two inches aport, around the bottle. She then wove wire In the holes and made a handle that will freely hang on the glothes-line. This way, the wind will not blow it off.-STEVE DEAR POLLY - May I suggest that persons sending cards, flowers or Mass cards to the fainily who have lost a loved one please write, or better yet print, their full name and address on the card? We have just gone through n most tra^ loss and when m a 11 i n g out “Thank Yon” notes, this problem came up. Cards were signed with nicknames or first names only. „ We are a large family, scattered, and not familiar with many of the names. This small but important detail would be of great help. A return address on aU correspondence, Christmas cards especially, would be so appre-ciated.-MRS. J. E. S. Share your favorite homemaking ideas . . . send them to. Polly in care of 'The Pontiac Press. You’ll receive a bright, new silver dollar if Polly uses your idea in Polly's Pointers. Kappa Deltas of the South Oakland Alumnae Association will share hostess honors with three metropolitan Detroit alumnae groups when they celel»rate the sorority’s Founder's Day Monday. The event will be held at 8 p.m. in the Wayne State University Alumnae House and members of Gamma Omicron chapter from- the schodl will be special guests. Mrs. John M. Clark of Birmingham, province alumnae officer, and Mrs. Donald L. Weldon of Bloomfield Hills, Lambda province officer will, also be honored. GROUP CHARITY ^ The sorority was founded in., 1897 atLongwood(College, • Farmville, Va. and supports I six beds at the Crippled Oiil- ’ dren’s Hospital in Richmond, ; Va. The South Oakland group’s local philanthropy is the Oakland County Society for Crippled Children and Adults. This year they are sponsoring a fashion show Nov. 12 in thi' North Congregational Church in Southfield. Avoid Wet Floors With Wastebasket When your children come home with wet umbrellas, a ; wet floor< can be avoided by ■ placing a plastic waste paper! basket somewhere near the!! entrance of your home. •; Train the children to place;| the wet umbrellas in the!! basket. "illji iOAiiAC iUhSS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 21. 1964 B-3 Insurance Jargon Is Aid to Understanding Umbrellas grow shorter and more glamorous. At the left is the new shoulder-strap umbrella. The dog-leasfu strap is adjustable and detachable so that the umbrella can be worn in front or back. Comes in beige, red or ’black for abqut $7. Anoth'er Polan Katz designed cover-up is the new midget sized urhbrella (above). Just large enough to cover coiffure and shoulders, this black cocktail umbrella has rhinestone and beaded handle and rhinestone ferrule. Sells for about.J36. Both styles available locally. Rigottis Go to Europe After Recent Wedding The Fred C. Rigottis (Nan- I cy Lee Thomas) left for a honeymoon in Europe after { their wedding reception in Pine Knob Resort. Lyle Haverstick escorted his • niece at the recent ceremony performed by Rev. Galen E. Hershey in the First Presbyterian Church. A gown of white peau de soie for .the daughter of Mrs. Marion Howe of Spokane Drive featured a capelet trimmed with white mink. The detachable chapel train, fell from the waistline. Completing the bride’s ensemble were a deep pillbox of Alencon lace securing her illusion veil, and a spray bouquet of gardenias and Steph-anotis. Vivian Boughner of Milwaukee, a former Pontiac resident, was maid of honor. Robert Cotterman was best man for the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ferdinand F. Riggotti, also of Spokane Drive. * ★ * The bridegroom is an alumnus of Michigan State University. ''Hard Times" Party Is Held ^ Mehibers of Beta Chi chap-ter of Epsilon Sigma Alpha sorority gathered for a “Hard Times” party Monday in the home of Mrs. Rudy Mazza at Sylvan Lake. * * * Mrs. James Vincent, chairman was assisted by Mrs. Wil- By MARY FEELEY Consultant in Money Management Life is so complicated these days that the job of, managing the faipily’s money practically amounts to a full-time career. In fact, one of the new books just published on the subject weighs J five pounds! Yet the head of the house has to do his man-' aging in his spare time, dealing with income taxes, installment buying, social security, expense accounts, investments, property, pensions, banking, and insurance. Even if there isn't much money to manage, he can find himself involved with the whole lot. \ One of the most baffling of all, recording to the mail I get, is insurance. How much, how little, what kind and why? Many people are unfamiliar with insurance jargon — with the words or terms used in discussing over-all insurance planning. They don’t ask questions and they don’t always explain what they have in mind. When an insurance agent refers to a certain type of policy or clause, they’re often embarrassed to admit they don’t know what he’s talking about! This is too bad, since agents specified number of months,.— iisUfally six — the company will waive payment of the premium as long as you are disabled. If you 'are still disabled at age 65, some companies will pay you the face amount of the policy in lieu of further benefits. MONTHLY INCOME ' ’ Family Income Rider : Provides a monthly income, usually in addition to the face amount of the policy, for a certain number of years’starting from the date the policy was bought. Thus; if a man buys a 21-, year Family Income Rider and dies ten years later, his widow will get the income for ten years — not twenty. Mortgage Rider: Provides a decreasing amount of money — decreasing by the year. This is a form of decreasing term in- A good agent wants to sell you what you need — if he can only find out what it is. Since a lot' of readers confess they don’t even know what they bought, it occurs to me that a review of certain terms used, and what they can mean to you, might serve a purjwse. So here goes: Rider: This is a benefit for which an extra premium is liam Jacobson and Mrs. Carl chargeef, and which can be at-Rose as cochairman of re- ‘ached to a life insurance pol-, . , w , „ icy. Examples are premium freshments.Mrs.Ucey Schie- acddental death bene- fler designed the pum[dcin cen- I fit, family income rider, mort-terpiece for the supper table. | gage rider; * * * Premium Waiver: This sim- The occasion honored new ] ply means that in the event you members Mrs. Joseph Orosey, | are disabled for longer than a Mrs. Dorsey Underwood, ---------------------- Mrs. Jere Donaldson and Mrs. ..... Robert Bolt » { INVERTED/ Mrs. Andre D^Wilde of Sheryl Drive will be the soloist Friday for the annual October tea of the Waterffird Churchwomen. During the meeting at Sy Andrew’s Episcopal Church on Hatchery Road, Mrs. Janies Covert loill speak. Her subjec/at the 1:30 p.m. affair will be “The Power Line.” Any interested women may attend. There ynll be a nursery for small children. surance, which may also be bought as a separate policy. V But a rider is nearly always cheaper than a separate policy providing the same benefit. “Jumping Juvenile’^ This is a policy on the life of a child which jumps in value, generally at age 21, to five times its juvenile valub — a $1,000 policy jumps to $5,000. A more dignj-fied name for this type of policy is Juvenile Estate Builder. Family Policy or Family Agreement: This is a rider that provides a small amount of term insurance on the Wife to age 55 or 65 usually, and on each child to age 21 to *' with permanent insuranc^ the fati^er. (Policies vi specified ages.) It has three grea^vantages:^ these term benefits are relatively cheap; they^oteet the insurability of th^ildren since generally asyeach child turns 25, he can Wiy five times as much insur^e as the rider' insured /for, without proof of insur-a^lity; and the insurance on Ahe wife and children becomes paid up at the father’s death — or that on the children at the mother’s death. , ^ The one drawback: the term n ..r?nce can be converted to permanent insur'ce only at the ;n'’ .of the term, and that’s late :n life for the wife to convert. Dividends: The policy holder has a choice as to what he wants to do with the dividends from his insurance. The dividends paid on a mutual insurance company’s policies, and - on the partiql|Mting policies of a stock company, may he taken in cash, used to r^uce the premium, left to accumulate at interest, or used to buy Paid-Up Additions. Paid-Up Additions: This means additional permanent in-s.irance bought by each dividend as a sidgle, one-time premium. These Paid-Up Additions have cash values, and are increasing- ly popuiai^as people’realize th« interest earned by accumulated dividends is taxable as Income - and this generally leaves a net amount -less, than the cash value of the untaxed Paid-Up Additions. 5TH OPTION Some policies provide a fifth dividend option: permitting part or all of each dividend to be used to buy one-year term insurance. * * * Like all term insurante, of course, it is of no value unless death oc^s during the term. ,Hence tKe popular name for term/Insurance: die-to-win in- (You can get Mary Feeley’s handy leaflet on Building Financial Stability by. writing to her in care of TTie Pontiac Press. Enclose a long, stamped, .self-addressed, envelope ) FALL TUNE-UP SPECIAL Bring your machine in and have it cleaned, oiled and tension ' adjusted. $050 Only .......... # In home $9 00. ALL WOHK GUARANTEED! NEW T-Ft. VACUUM CLEANER HOSE All Cloth, No Plastic RICKMAN BROS. SEWING CENTER Across From Pontiac Mall 465 Elizabeth Lake Rd. Phone; 335-9283 Busy Women Share Casserole Recipes By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Food Editor Today I want to give you two quick casserole recipes from women who are currently working on the United fWi drive. Either casserole would serve equally well for the main dish on a Sunday night buffet table. ★ ★ * liilrs. James O’Berry, chairman Waterford District 19, suggests a tuna casserole. CHOP STICK TUNA By Mrs. James O’Berry 1 cup condensed cream of mushroom soup Va cup water 1 cup cut celery IS-oz. can Chinese noodles 1 can tuna % cup cashew nuts Vi cup chopped onion Combine soup and water; add 1 cup noodles, tuna, celery, nuts and onions. Toss slightly. Place in ungreased 8x8x2 pan. Sprinkle remaining noodles on top and bake 15 minutes at 375 degrees. Makes 6 servings. Pontiac District-No. 18 chairman, Mrs. Ray R-^Jl Caughill uses dried |>e€i f bi her quick casserole. DRIED BEEF CASSEROLE By Mrs. Ray R. Caughill 1 pint milk 2 cans condensed mushroom soup 4 hard cooked eggs chopped fine 1 box elbow macaroni, cooked 1 onion chopped fine 8 ounces dried beef /cut fine y 8 ounces medium /harp cheese, cubed. Mix together and let stand 12 hours. Bake one hour in StlO-degree oven. Cover casserole while baking. Makes 6 servings. GRESHAM go^s a little bit lurthei! COMPLETE CUSTOM DRAPECY SERVICE Your oxponsivo draporios dosorvo tho most infinito car* of Profassional Diyclooning. At Groshom, monogomont corofully pro-moosoros oil draporios, supoivisos tho cloon-ing, chocks for ony.nocossoiy ropairs thon doublo-chocks to ossuro you porfoct sizo and shapo. Our custom sorvico also offors taking down and hanging drapos for a vory small odditionai fool Romombor ... it's th« littio things thot count ot Groshom. SAVE 10% OR CASH and CARRY CAKLAND AVEHUE fou Can Afford To Be in Style ai theta teonderful SAVINGS THRIFT DEPT. Permanent wave specials Salon Formula No. 9 j* 1^95* on Formula ^ $g95* ' Salon Formula No. 11 i* HAIR SHAPING J25* Jim TOUCH-UP 690. SHAMPOO 175. AND SET ^ *For theae aavinga ask for the Thrift-Dept ' Price* Slightly Higher On Friday and Satu^ay Open Late Tqeiday and Ihutaday Eveninp Pleaaa atk about our Styling Salon , Prices Open 9-9, Sat 9-6 V Prices Slishtly Higher Friday and Satarday donnell^s where but at You Can Count on Us . . . Fashion Costs No More at Sears Sears could you find such values! Charmode Right Position bras and popular Latex I- girdles.., now yours at Super Savings... Right Poaition bra of cotton and Dacron® polyester has inner bands of . Clingtex® elastic to give a smooth, snug fit — won’t ride up or slip! White in sizes 34-36A. 34-40B, C. Reg. $2.49 Latex panty ginlle has front “finger •panels” for firm tummy controL Softly lined in downy cotton fluff to give yon all day cqmfort Extra small to large. Reg. $5.95 tS.95 Pull-on girdle, aiuall to large 4.47 17.95 Zipper girdle, small to extra large 5.97 CHARGE IT on Sears Revolving Chargs Canetry Dept.,^eemitd Floor SHtiafaction Guonntced or Your Money Bock Shop at Sem Qr* A *n Q Downtown Pontiae and Save OLullXO Phone FE 5-4171 B-4 THR PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 21, 1964 Democratic Wives to Local Volunteers Mr. and jjfrs. Wood-row Long of Holly announce the engagement of fheir daughter, ffam to Rickard D. Black, son of the Kenneth Blacks of Unionville. Joyces Group Will Sponsor Benefit Sale The Waterford Township Jaycee Auxiliary will sponsor ^ benefit sale, Satuixlay, in the'sPontiac Knights of Columbus Hall. Assisting Mrs. Michael Patterson, chairman, will be Mrs. James Curd, Mrs. Ray Free-bury, Mrs. Ted McCullough, Mrs. John Radenbaugh, Mrs. Whitney Carnahan, Mrs. Richard Gilchrist, Mrs. Richard Schwab, and Mrs. Ralph Radford. ★ * * Proceeds will be used for community projects. Sale hours are 8:30 am. to 12:30 p.m. The Jaycettes helping t h e Jaycees with their Halloween party this Saturday evening, . are Mrs. McCullough, Mrs. Michael Patterson, Mrs. Gilchrist, Mrs. John Brown, Mrs. Tim Patterson and Mrs. Roy Linn. ★ ★ Mrs. Russell Bennett of Rochester, Jaycef Auxiliary district IX vice president, -visited the Waterford auxiliary at the Monday meeting In Mrs. Schwab’s home on vfaterloo Street. Mrs. Robert Wright and Mrs. Curd were cohos^ses. Locid guest was Mrs. Donald Piggott. By MIRIAM NEAL After attending the luncheon at Airway Lounge yesterday afternoon, one wonders how anyone, could be * elected if women didn't work on campaigns. Local Democ|atic women gathered to hear four prominent Denftocratic \^men from Washington, sent on "a cara-van-on-whefls" by the party's national committe. it w w The slate of speakers was completed by Burnette Stae-bler, wife of Rep. Neil Stae-bler, Democratic .candidate for governor; and Dorothy Olson, chairman of the event and candidate for reelection as treasurer of Waterford Township. The Washington women included Mrs. Samuel J. Lana-han, Mrs. Arthur Schlesinger Jr., Mrs. Eugene P. Carusi arid Mrs. F. Wistar Janney. MRS. STAEBLER Mrs. Staebler started the afternoon’s- program by discussing her husband's candidacy and'the relationship between state, local and national campaigns. She reminded the women that government is a team operation which is not c 0 n d u c t e d by one prima donna.” ★ * ★ She added: “Local government is the backbone of democracy and the c 1 e a r i n g house between citizens and their government.” Mrs. Staebler introduced the Washington women, each of MRS. NEIL STAEBLER whom spoke briefly on an aspect of the current political campaign. ★ ★ * All followed the basic theme of Democratic victory with Mrs. Schlesinger stressing international affairs. After their talks M|P- Staebler took the floor again to ask the audience for questions. LOCAL CAMPAIGNERS Among the local campaigners there were Mrs. Francis A. Crowley, wife of the 61st . district candidate for the state House of Representatives and I Mrs. Melvin Hampton, a volunteer. This is Mrs. Crowley’s first campaign and she enjoys it, especially the active support and help she gels from wom- Mrs. Hampton is a vdteran volunteer wno began working full-time after the primary. At the end of the program, she and Mrs. Carusi compared the national awards both had won from the party , for getting voters to register. Mrs. Hampton says she noW has her whole family. Including her two sons, working on politics. Both share problems, to a lesser degree, with the wife of the Democratic candidate for governor. UKES CAMPAlbNING Mrs. Staebler says she likes campaigning as much as when her husband was running for Ck)ngress, except that she hasn’t seen him for a week ' now and, “I don’t like that at all.” Among the wives of Waterford Township candidates present were Mrs. James E. Seeterlin, Mrs. Charles E. Evans, Mrs. Roger Johnson and Mrs. Gerald C. Carter. * After touring Michigan, the Washington womoi will visit Wisconsin, Minnesota and Dii-nois in a caravan that aids Oct. 30. SEW SIMPLE By Eunice Farmer pi PTA's Custom Mado Slip Covert Avcraco Chair $31.95 Averase'Svfa $52.95 Cemplvtt; Includina Fabric, Zippart tnO Labcr f FABRIC FAIR MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER twicE-A-vr"^ sale OF / ‘ CAREER GIRL”/ NY1.0NS • seamIess • SEAMLESS MICRO • WITH TINV S€AMS $1* 82 N. Saginaw St. TONIGHT William Beaumont: Eve- ning; teacheft are sponsoring an open house to explain grading system. THURSDAY Riverside Elementary: 7:30 p.m.; Charles Sitton, executive director of the Boys Club, and James Marchall, principal of the youth center of the children’s home will speak. SATURDAY | Carl Sandburg: 7 a.m. to noon; Oakland County .Market; bake sale. MONDAY William Beaumont: Eve- ning; teacher’s open house. T,ts:Uum(M MIRACLE MILE-FE 8-9639 A Cardigan Is Washable ’The latest Orion knit cardigans for men come laminated to foam backing.' This supplies the benefits of shape retention and “body,” as well as insulation for protection against chill during active sports. it ir it ’The foam is as washable as the ki^ itself, using warm soap or uetergent suds and rinse water. Follow Directions for Best Service To get best service and satisfaction from any washab' you buy, read and follow at- | tached directions. ’They were carefully worked out by experts to make you I an expert. «»* ’The following information is in answer to many of you who have written me concerning flattwlng styles for ovoweights. If you luiven’t taken off those extra pounds in time for your fall clothes, you ihust do more than “think thin.” Here are a few basic rules to remember when selecting yoiu* pattern add fabric that will visually slim you down. Accentuate vaticil lines. Coats should be % or full length; avoid contrasting short coats. Walklng.,suits will give you a. long line if skirt is narrow. | Contrasting bndd trim may be used down the front of Jackets and coats. Avoid bringing braid around lower edge of suits add hems of sleeves. ’The length of tihe sleeves shoiM not be the same length of the jacket. Avoid a two-toned effect at the waistline. Dresses are more flattering with suit jackets than skirts. If you prefer skirts, choose blouses in crepe or jasey of a matching color, preferably an ovablouse. Suits and coats should always single breasted. Use narrow, self-fabric covaed belts for dresses. Keep detail or trim near the neckline, never on the skirt. Slim-line skirts with a slight A-line are best for you. Avoid pleated or gathered skirts. Lastly, wear plain .colors, small checks and tweeds. Avoid thick bulky fabrics, large prints and plaids and shiny fabrics. Dear Eunice: Please expldin where I should use interfacing in suit or coat. My material is not loosely woven but I don’t want it to lose its shape. \ Mrs. C. C. M. ' ★ ★ ★ Dear Mrs. C. C. M.: Interfacing gives extra shaping and a professional look to your clothes. It should always be used for the front of your garments, collars, necklines of dresses, and often in the back of coats and suits. I prefer a woven type inta-facing (the weight would be determine by till style of the garment and the type of fabric). For ^ts and suits, an interfacing with hair woven in, often called hair Canvas, is the best because of its flexibility. The interfacing should be 1 inch wider than the facing at the lower edge of garment, and curve over to the side seam about 2 inches below the armhole. ’The back of your garment is interfaced at the shoulder section only, again beginning 2 inches below the arn^de and curving up slightly at the center back. j ’The under-collar is the part j of youi* collar that is interfaced. For a dress or blouse, use the neckline facing as your pattern. Mrs. Ralph W. Wqgner of Birmingham (right) and Mrs. Herbert F. O’Malley Jr., West Newland Drive, West Bloomfield Township model two of the outfits to be sold at Christ Church rummage sale next week. Oct. 29 is the date; 9 a. m. to 2 p. m. the hours. All proceeds go for charitable purposes. AAUW Discusses Book FABRIC MARKER A thin, worn-down sliver of soap is the easiest, quickest, most accurate way of “chalking” fabrics. (If the edges get thioK'from use, scrape gently with the blade of a knife.) Mrs. Wm. Hessey, Nonhbrook, 111., sent this suggestion and is being awarded a Tailor Trix pressing board this week. , MR. AND MRS. LOTT S. BOLDREY Mr. and Mrs. Lott S. Boldrey will observe their golden anniversary at open house, Sunday, from 1 to 5 .p. m. in their JWing Street home. Hosts will be their children, Mrs. Robert Hulett, .Beulah Echlin, Robert, Charles and James Boldrey, all of Bontiac; Mrs. Frank Coleman of Troy. Their son Joseph.E. Boldrey of Patterson, N.Y., will not be able to attend. The couple, wed Oct. 25 in Zalma, Mo., moved to Pontiac in 1937. They have 31 grandchildren and 8 great-grandchildren. -J’ Dear Eunice: I still get confused about what size pattern to buy: If the pattern fits part of me, it falls off the rest. Help! Mrs. R. F. ★ ★ ★ Dear Mrs. R. F.: There seems to be quite a bit of confusion about this; I can only tell you my experience in working with thousands of women personally. Take your bust measurement at the largest part, SUBTRACT 2 inches, and buy the pattern with the closest bust measurement. i ’nils doesn’t mean that it will fit you withont alterations, in fact, yon would be in the minority of about 1 per cent if it did. If your shoulders are broad, you must alter your pat- i tern. If your waist and hips are larger, this is a simple alter- I ation. The length of the bodice is eqtirely individual. | It is worjh the time to get a’'basic muslin pattern fitted correctly, ^ then you will have something to go by in changing patterns. ’There are many alterations that can and must be made to make a pattern fit you—but remember, don’t over fit. | If you have noticeable figure faults, don’t emphasize them by fitting too close. j It’s later than you think! Send today for my 25-cent “Quickie Christmas Gifts” l^klet of things to sew for your list of friends.; Send a self-addressed, stamped envelope and 25 cents to Sew Simple in care of ’The Pontiac Press with your request. Pontiac branch, American Association of University Women discussed-Betty Frie-dan’s book ‘”rhe Feminine Mystique” Monday in the Community Services Building. Mrs. John Borsvold, Mrs. William Moorhouse and Mrs. William Parker participated in the panel. Heading -n e w committees this year will be Mrs. Thomas Metzdorf, Mrs. Fred Ooss-man and Mrs. Francis McDowell. GIVES INFORMATION Laura Belz presented information delating to legislative action and activities. Assisting her were Mrs. E. C. Carlson, Mrs. Daniel Carmichael, Mrs. C 1 i f f 0 r d Cniristensbnr, Mrs. Crossman and Mrs. Donald McMillen. Assisting the social chairmen, was Mrs. Carroll Por-ritt, were Mrs. Rav Allen, Mrs. Arthur Lake, Mrs.' Arthur MacAdams, Mrs. Metzdorf, Mrs. S. E. Mlnard, Mrs. Olin Thomas, Mrs. R. V. Thurston and Mrs. Richard Tippen. ★ ★ * Hostesses for study groups meeting this Thursday are Arts and Crafts, Mrs. Carmichael; and Bridge, Mrs. Ervin Bartel. ’The Foreign Culture group will study Mexico Tuesday with Toni Keeney hostess. TO STUDY HAWAI^^ Hawaii will be the s t u d y topic for the Nov. 12 group peeling with Mrs. M a c-Adams, hostess. Mabel Double will be hostess for the Religions of the World study group Nov. 18. Topic will be "Coptic Chris; tian.” Visitors included Joan Rose-gart and Della Kelly from the Rochester branch, along with Mrs. Kenneth Brown, Faye Carmichael, Mrs. Peter Lu-pescu, Mrs. Frank McGinty, Mrs. Julius Middledorf and Mrs. Fred Zittel. WOMEN'S WEAR SPECIAL BUDGET $^50 WAVE ^ Callies’ as N. Perry St FE S-SSSl w ^ 'Tnat&onltL UU-tan. Surveys show DREW shoes are PRETTIEST and most COMFORTABLE Our imart, n«w Centinentali by Drew have the exclusive beauty rest metatarsal bar, to give your feel blissful walking pleasure. They're the high-style shoes ' with down to earth . comfort. IlyiwilikU IT’S HERE FORFAU... Coat and Dress Ensemble Wonderful coat and dress ensemble of new, practical rayon and acetate, sheath dress with white re-movabJ,e tucked dickey, coat with (told buttons and V front, and flap pockets. Sizes 6 to $2498 141 WEST AAAPIE-BIRMINGHAM Beloved by millions! Walking is pur* comfort on the cushioning wafer-thin platform of this fabulous tie I Though it’s incredibly light, soft and supple, it supports your foot firmly ... fits wMh the easy noturol Red Goss Shoe feeling you love. And its smart controst of textures just mokes it even more special. TUDOR TIE, 13.99 Black—-Antelope MU’S S 35 N. SAGINAW SO proudly worn... so proudly given Q OMEGA WHEN YOU give an Omega you say a thounnd unsaid things with gtJdcn eloquence. Few gifta ^ rentier such life long service or attract such universal admiration. Both inside and outside every Omega is meticulously crafted, for a lifetime of proud possession. REDMOND’S 81 N. Saginaw Si. J«**>«ler$-Optom*trUU FREE PARKINCinReereTSlete . .. ................. AmAofixt4 Attne, for Omega... tfca WoM’t Mott WmUti Wmeh THE PONTIAC PRESS. tVEDNESDAV. OCTORER 21. 19^ R 1 Well-built, all-metal cabinets for storafte in most any mom! Take your choice: kitchen base,' .%x30x20”; wardrobe,1tt336xl9”; and a kilchcti utility cabinet, 64x.Ttbii2". (diarice it/ A barsain for. outdoors-men! Heavyweishl ihrr-nial lined sweatshirts in Hooded parka oith sip Olenins- Full rut pants with taped seams, siis|ieiv-dei>, bib fninl. In olisr dralt. Charge it! Flaineless and fuiiie^ss! Runs up to 20 hours on Vhile gas or naptha. .Stea.lv heat.. 2,000 HTI Move for hunters ami i'am|.ers. Folds <-»ni|wrtly .\|>ollo's I'omfy unlinrd strap bu.ilie i< water repellent! Fasy-to-clean pigskin or black plove . ttpper. Soft 2” inside fiizry cuffs. Taperetl toe, ribbetl.riildier beeU. l-ljl, M. GLEN WOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD ■f (B—^ I’HE PONTIAC r»RESS, WEPyESDAY, 0(;T0BER 21. 1964 Urged by Walled Lake Residents Want City Plans 'Kept Alive' By PAT MrCARTY WALLED LAKE — City coun-rilnen last night tverp urged lo '■keep alive" proposals Wr sew-crj and a community master plan. During a spirited audience | ", participation session, residents checked on the progress of both these programs and on other government functions. Thomas Weisheit, chamber of commerce president, reported on work that organization is doing to attract industry to the area. He noted that factors affecting location of npw plants are the i availability of sewers and wa-1 ter, a labor market, a master plan, educational facilities and homes. ★ O'* “If we can’t have a master plan, we’re fighting a tougher battle,’’ he said. “We’ve already lost some plants because of sewers and water." PLANS STYMIED Mayor Wendel G. Kellogg Jr. commented that plans for the Walled Lake-Novi sewer system have been Stymied on financing. “It’s almost lo the point where we 'have lo go ahead with a vote or have the city go ahead ^d pay for it," Kellogg said. The mayor noted that the project, for which engineering I has been completed, would cost Walled Lake about |2 million. ★ ★. ★ I In a city that last year had § total tax revenue‘Of $83,00(t, the AREA NEWS sewer program would lake the levy up “two, three or four limes what it is now," he said. Wei.sheit, planning board chairman Gements Philipski and former, mayor Milton Parrish urged councilmen trf autho^ ize completion of the, city’s master plan. Planning consultants at Vil-ican-Leman and Associates of Southfield have finished the first half of their proposed two-year study. ‘ However, the council has hesitated at spending another $3,300 for its third* of the rest of the cost.'The other two thirds would he pai3 by the federal government. Continuation of the program, which requires at lea.st a 5-2 majority, was defeated by the New First Baptist Church On Hovey In Oxford Re places Burned Structure To Start on 1st Model in Community DRION township - Ground. wiD be broken Tuesday for Ahe first model of a $250-million residential community here. Four 'Days of Dedication' for Oxford Bapfisf Church (iXFORD After more than a year of waiting, the parishioners of the First Baptist Church are preparing to dedicate their new church. Four “Days of Dedication" begin tomorrow and end Sunday State, county and township of-! with special services at 7:30 ficlals will Join representatives i p.m. of Keating of Michigan, Inc.,| ^h? new structure, on a 10-Birmingham, to turn shovels of| acre site on Hovey Street, re- ^ places one on East Street that burned in April. 1963, after be- earth in the 11 a m. ceremony. The site of the first model is at the comer of Baldwin and Waidon roads. TJie first portion of the devcl ing struck by lightning. Five-year pledges by the congregation and insurance on the opment will cover 140 or more church made building of the acMs of the 3.200-acre parcel.' once the estate of the late Wil-1 liam E Scripps. ! Council Adds Traffic Signal EN’entually. Keatington, as it is called, will provide singler family homes, retiree and j apartment housing, as well as| recreation for more than 30.000; persons. INCLUDES TWO LAKES j The huge parcel includes Voorheis and Sixteen lakes. The i property also offers miles of ski; • slopes, rolling terrain and wood-' WALLED LAKE - The city land. , iis going to protect its \oung- Homes are expected to be I * «>" “'«'• «ay and from priced at about $20,000 and I has dwlined keep- t h e official opening of the ] them warm while they re ice c«nmunit> is slate* for late , j (all i . * * ! I Councilmen last night authnr-Participa^g in the ceremony ized the purchase of a traffic : will be Addison Township Su- light at the corner of Pontiac! pervisor John Lessiter. Bernard | Trail and Decker Road. j M. (Mike) Convoy, director of economic expansion for t h state of Michigan, and George N. Skrubb. director of the Oakland County Planning Commis- Ground was broken in September, 1963 for the structure; designed by Detroit architect Billy D. Stewart and built by Hein Associates of Birmingham. GUEST SPEAKER Dr. W. Wilbert Welch, president of the Gratia Rapids Bible College and Seminary, will be the guest speaker for the series of services each day. The young people of the church will host the Baptist Area Youth Rally Saturday, and the Chorlettes of Grand Rapids will provide special music for the evening service. Final dedication ceremonies will be held at 3 p.m. .Sunday, and 500 invitations have gone nut to members and friends of the church, merchants and industrial leaders in the area to attend. Carlton R, Johonn.son of Auburn will be the guest organist, . and the Chorlettes will again Rink Warming Shelter provide music. Scouts, Lions Join Drive for Goodwill council a month ago. However, reconsideration was proposexl and will remain tabled until all members are present. LOWER INTEREST Both Kellogg and Philipski expressed the opinion th'at a master pl'an^ could help the^city in obtaining lower interest rates on bonds by indicating th^ community is concerned about progress. Weisheit reiterated his comment on the attractiveness of master plans to industries. ' Harold Ackley, former councilman and present village manager of Novi, said developers and -engineers usually make their own plans and do not rely on the general one. "We've had a master plan' in Novi for four years and no one ' ' has ever askdd to look at it." he I said. Ackley also cqQimented , that the .sale of bonds is based on a community’s ability to pay, not on its plan. FEDERAL REQUIREMENT City Attorney Howard I. Bond noted that a master plan could not be ’used as a requisite for , federal programs. “The minute you set it up j it start* to become obsolete," . I he said. "It has to be kept up-I to-date and ylu have to accept ' it for what it is." Former Mayor Louis James also questioned the mayor, who became acting city manager after the resignation of Frank C.' LANSING (AP) Two cm-! the next fiscal year at a meet-Derby in Auguist. ploye 'organizations have a.sked ing in December. ’ James a.sked how long the the State Gvil Service Commis-j * *_ city would go on without a man-1 siori for generous pay hikes and ! ager. , added fringe benefits for .state] J*. f “indefinitely." Kellogg re-! workers ' 5.000 stale workers, a.sked for a pljgjj ★ ★ * '51-emt-an-hour, across-the- ’ The commission held a ses- P«y "'f asked for .special adjustments FOR CHRISTMAS UST - Decker Elementary School youngsters like first-grader Janie Schenker and second - grader Kurt Schnelz this week are checking over the more than 300 voiumesMn the PTA Book Fair to determine which ones they might like to get for Christmas. Their parents and other adults will mak^ their selections from 6-10:30 p.m. Monday at the school, 1655 Decker, Walled Lake. Pay Hikes, More Benefits Asked for State Employes ON THEIR OWN The mayor noted that each de-!s‘™.'^'’"'|8-'' on the proposals, partment head is managing his; own portion of city activities. Two Boy Scout groups andi two area Lions clubs will be| cooperating in a “Ciood Turn" j Goodwill collection of household i discards in nirfe townships Oct. 31 through Nov. 7. James also asked Kellogg why he rides in police patrol cart and the mayor said it aided him in filling two capacities. “I do nothing to interfere with and representatives of various sUte departments. The commission is expected to decide pay and benefit-ranges during for the lower-paid cia.s.ses of state workers and time and a half for overtime. $33 MILLION It was estimated the package Voters League lo Hold Meet-Candidates Nights Novi, South Lynn, Milford, Highland. White I-ake, Commerce. West Bloomfield wnd Waterford. The following .Saturday, the scouts, with the Lions' help, will return to pick up the filled bags. would cost some $33 million, if granted. TTie Michigan State Employes A.s.sociation, representing some 14,000 state workers, asked for-a 7 per cent general increage, an additional 10 cents an hdtir for workers in the lower brackets and a pay differential for afternoon and evening shifts. ★ ★ ★ It was e.stimated this proposal would cost some $18 million. Gvil service granted a 3.3 I per cent pay adjustment for state workers for the current fiscal year which cost $6.5 million. Representatives of several state departments said they were having difficulty in recruiting and keeping various classes of employes with special training and asked for added pay raises. CITED SCARCITY The State Mental Health Department cited a scarcity of employes such as professional social workers, nurses with de- their work, and this is one way ★ ★ ^ f to get to know city employes,” Joining forces for *^e Good-; Kellogg said, will Roundup” will be the Otta-| /‘Any councilman is free to wa District Boy Scouts, Clinton' nde with a patrolman if he has Valley Boy Scout Council and the permission of the chief and the Wixom and Walled Lake' the officer on duty.” _______ Linds. ' I The next council session was WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN- [ Republican Paul Chandler, On Oct 31 the Boy Scouts i scheduled for 8 p.m. Nov. 4 be- SHIP — The West Bloomfield running for the 14th State Sen-will distribute doeir-tLlffor in regular meeting falls; Township Uague of Women | District. In addition, the townships of Faritiington, i ‘he date of the general elec- voters will hold two meetings! d®*!" ‘*’1 ■"** ........ -- - tion. n, : i (R), vying for office as , _______________1 ^ sureessiye Friday nights to j representatives from the R^ees, accounting experts and r\ L 1 k i acquaint citizens with candi-1 |4y, Djjtrjct ^j|| ,|r I male attendant nurses. • K0Cn6Sl6r Mgsons I ' '’lews. The state Health Department i cal offices. _ - , „ _ .. , said there is a heavy turnover On (kt. 30 Township ^per- grnong health and sanitary engineers becau.se the federal government and private industry are offering higher wages. ★ ★ ★ DaVid Moss, secretary of tha State Board of Pharmacy, said a™ unfilled bemuse a degree of fo Confer Degrees The first .session this Friday '’'sor John C. Rehard, Demo-will feature talks by Billie S. ‘^•'at, and his Republican oppo-♦ * * i RnrtjPUTPR I Richard D. Kuhn. | ne"L J'»hn Doherty, will give Re,Idem, in ch, niW lo.n- |,,''®S^nl Si'»<■ ships should place their nond-1 R„,a| Arch degrees on a'class '■MP«;)i™lf. .'w U>« Will bags on their front porches j 21 candidates Saturday, between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. Nov. j mark degree will start at Loses i n w- I k, II ti 4 ■ su i ^ f'”'Ihe “roundup.’’ ij the group, to be WnlUri I nU f i g” ^ call^ed the “Harry Triiip Class." Walled Lake final dedication of the new sane- reconditioned merchandise, at 15' tuarv 19th Congressional District. Also on hand will be Democrat James McCarthy and At the same session incumbent trustees Emmett DeConick The new community will be located gbout 1 h miles north of' 1-75 and west of M24. Teacher to Describe Her Life in Russia A first-hand account of life biefaind the Iron Curtain will be given at Tomorrow's 8 p.m. mheting of the Avondale High Sdwol PTSA. Speaker will be Mrs. Joseph They had asked the Oakland County„Road f-ommissinn lo install the light at the .j^er-section near Decker Elementary School but their request was turned down on the basis of a traffic count. Noting that the intersection is the only unprotected one near a school in the city, councilmen la,st night authorized the $1.3.50 expenditure to buy a light and $2M a year for maintenance. *• * * However, a motion lo spend $475 for a warming shelter at the city’s new ice skating rink was defeated. I E, Pike in downtown Pontiac. Dem Banquet Monday ORION TOWNSHIP — Mr. and Mrs. Billie S. Farnum will head a group of Democratic notables slated to attend a meeting-banquet of the Orion Township Democratic Club Monday. Farnum, presently Auditor General of the State of Michigan and a candidate from the 19th Congressional District, will be the principal speaker for the 6:30 p.m. affair. The club will combine their regular meeting with the , banquet, to be held at Alban’s Country Cousin, 1430 Moon Road, Oxford Township. I A 6 p.m. dinner will honor I past high priest Harry Tripp, who became a member of Rochester Lodge No. 5, F&AM, in 1912 and served as worshipful master of the lodge in 1916-17. : He was also high priest of the Rochester Chapter, RAM in, j 1921, and has served the craft | I for more than 50 years. j ! Dinner reservations must be' ROCHESTER — The school I made by tonight and can be ob-1 board has just asked for bids ! lained by contacting Raymond j on additions fo the high school, I J. West^al, 525 First or the j but it’s not stopping there in its Masonic Temple, in care of; efforts to make room for grow- To Focus on Needs of Schools RAM, Rochester. Nature Series to Begin Nov. 2 Thousan^is of youngsters will get tips on how to discover nature's wonders when the 1964-65 school lecture series provided by naturalists of the Huron-Ginton Metropolitan Authority begins its annual five-month program Nov. 2. William F. Hopkins, chief uralist, pointed out' authority naturajists are available to give illustrated lectures on topics of ' ASKED DONA'nON The Jayc^s had asked the I city to donate that amount to-. ward cBnstniction of a 10- by 20-foot shelter. TTie group al-j ready has received contributions Ogvis of Pontiac a teacher at ^ materials and natural science at schools in M*iison Junior High School. Livmgston, Macomb, Oakland. A* * * Washtenaw and Wayne counties 4*^ n=vic u,iii .hr,, 4 h Couneflman Donald M. Post from Nov.’ 2 through March 31 It'S Davis will tell about her the vote which defeated the^ , ... egpenences at a Russian Uni- motion, stating he saw no need ® youngsters m the v|(#sify under the National De- for a rink when the lake could .I , P«rticlpated in f«$Se Education Act and her beclcaredforu.se. the Jecture program last year. aAsequent lour of the USSR. . ^* ★ * The school lecture series gives * * * I - An area for flooding has been : students an opportunity, through During the business meeting, i created on an acr^ of city prop-1 professionally trained park nat-• Committee selected toj erty at the pumping station be- uralists, to become acquainted produce the PTSA'a Variety hind (he Weat Maple shopping I with the woods, waters, soils »>ow scheduled for next month, J center. i and wildlife. The naturalists also emphasize the need of using life state’s natural resources wisely. 13 TOPICS Films or slides accompany the 13 .various topics available. Four of the motion ixictufes used were produced by Author-, ity naturalists. The most recent film entitled ‘Xife in a Lake” features close-up views of several common Michigan fish as well as native frogs, turtles and aquatic insects which inhabit local waters. This free servic'c may be obtained by writing or calling the Huron-C 1 i n 10 n Metropolitan Authority, 1750 Guardian Building, Detroit <48226j-to request an application form. * * . AppointnienU usually require I ing enrollments. ! In fact, the board is looking as far ahead as 1970. Two workshops, perhaps the first of a series, have been sinted for the study of futnre ! needs in the district for the next five yekjs.^....,, i Special meetings scheduled for Nov. 2 and Det. Z were cans, will share the spotlight : with their challengers, Demo-' crats John Marble and John I Nahabedian.. . ! OTHER CANDIDATES j All other candidates for clerk, ! treasurer, justice of the peace, constable and library board I have been invited to the second ' meeting. Both sessions will be held at 8 p. m. in the community room of the library, 5030 Orchard Lake. ★ ★ ★ « Short speeches by the candidates will be follow^ by a question and answer period and informal discussion. and John Warren, both Re^bU^itormacy is required and be- cause of the low pay level. several weeks advance notice. Schools can be visited only one 1 /!*'**.« workshops, ___ u 1 . "'Web will focus on enrollment, time each lecture season and | census, teacher-pupil ratios, expenditures, salary schedules and related areas of study. for one-half day only. 3 LECTURES To accoii^odate small auditorium groups as many as three consecutive lectures can be provided at one visit. Most lectures are designed for ....... boys and girls in grades 3 j in 1964^’ through 12 and cover 45 min-1 ic raciq utes; but 30-minute programs ■ " ^ are also available for youngsters in the kindergarten, first and second grades. The three area parks where ' Starting place for/the workshops will be the comparative report recently presented to the board, which covers these (actors for a 5-year period ending Man Burned in House Fire A Rose Township mart, who suffered serious bums in a house fire last night, is in satisfactory condition at Flint Hurley Hospital. /★ ★ ★ _ Michael Mm-gan, 2i, of 10925 Hensell was burned on the face, chest and hands when flames burst out of the fireplace in which he was lighting a fire at his home. ♦ ★ */ '■''Wg room of the house InforiMtion and tre^pelW suffered minor damage, Holly out in this report will be i^ | officials said, as a basis for the projeebrtn through 1970. / 4-H Barbecue Set Saturday Chicken Featured at All-County Event lectures can be scheduled are Kensington Metropolitan Park near Milford, Marshbank Metropolitan Park Orchard Lake and Stony CTeek lOletropolitan Park between Rochester and Romeo. SchMis Supt. Dr. William T. Early' said that the workshops may culminate in the establishment of a citizens aclvtsory committee and/or the use of expert consultanta to jnake a ftiil-scaic Turkey Dinner Slated ORION TOWNSHIP - St. Mary’s in the Hills Episcopal Church will be the setting to-moiTow for a Harvest Festival l)irkey Dinner. Serving will start at l:3Hp.m. Chicken, browned to a turn over an open charcoal fire, will be the main item on the menu at the All-County Barbecue Saturday evening. ★ ♦ All 4-H clubs in Oakland Cofin-ty have tickets available for the gala cookout slated for 5 to 8 ^ p.m. at the 4-H Fairgrounds. Mrs. Paysoa Halsey of the Flying Fingers Gub and Mrs. Alfred Smithling Sr. of the Grovelaod Go-Getters are working together on plans and prepamtioos for the event: ' Club ntembers and leaders are cooperating in supplying the balance of the meal — cabbago salad, potato chips, rolls, coffee or milk and pie or cake. ♦ ★ ★ Recipts from the barbecue will e used to, defray the 4-H leaders’ debt to the County Board of Supervisors for construction of the 4-H dormitory on the fairgrounds. COME EARLY Persons expecting to partake of the meal are urged to come early to watch the barbecuing operation at the “pit” A limited number of tkketo wUl be available at the fairgrounds. t TkE PONTIAC ^RESS, WEnXKSDAV, (K TOKKR 21. lPfl4 H 7 Not a Baby, Not a Teen Trucker In for Tea Nothing Worse Than Being 11 Y^rs Old [.was the first toy you lucked I ber cat without remembrance, ] said. ' toes acainst in your cradle but with affection, and put it in I * * * i ' a . prl^ p,rt .i her r«,m „ .j A.d .eein* Her-,her. Id .1-'1 Bunny N..™ bridge of love between genera-1 budding glory, a bloom g6ing 3 lions.' [away, J was desolat^ by*a driver crashed through a fence Tracy looketl at the little rub- ‘Til keep ihis for sure," she i feeling'‘of parental loneliness. ; into her garden. ' ^ere. Maybe your’ first child 1 might, want to touch it first. By' HAL BOYLE NEW YORK (AP) - As the father of a child approaching ^ her teens, I have nc^ing but sympathy for the parent of a teen-ager. ** I have a daughter named Tracy Ann, who is 11 years and a 1i 111 e k more. old. But room, which resounds with con-stanb rocking rhythm, and the chief reason she likfcs me is that she thinks my favorite Beatle is a drummer named Ritigo. Actually, mj favorite drum^ mer is a fellow called Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. Tracy is full now of constancies and inconstancies. She will tear up her room to put it in perfect order, then tear it apart to pdt it in less order. Recently with full consideration of the drama involved she threw away her childhood. She .picked the toys and dolls and clothes she wanted to give to a ! Catholic charity.. Her mother,! Frances,, and I restrained her when she started to throw in an ^ obscure rubber cat. / | “Why?” she asked. . ' “Because,” I told her, “that all shfe wants to be is a teenager. Everything in j our life used to J*fit her. Now nothing quite does. ’ The dresses we used to get BOYLE froiD older girls that suited her before, no longer quite suit her. She is growing into a pattern of herself that mu.st be original. Every week her shoe size seems to change. “Being 11 years old is a hard time,” she said not too long LADY BETTY FLUFF PRU.NE JUICE DELIGHT Habits seem to /all into just t\ . cale|ories . . . go^ and bad. And it's the good ones we all try for. A habit starts out like a cobweb, tenuous and easily broken, but eventually it's a strong steel cable. So it’s natural to start our children and families out with only good habits, especially where their health is concerned. Breakfast is one of our family's good habits, and by that, I mean that although we vary the style of eggs and the kind of cereal, 'we always have Lady Betty Prune Juice t^—•'--------------' *- Regular People stdy that way with “Up to 10 you are a baby at least everybody treats you that way. “But at 11 you aren’t a baby still, and yet you aren’t quite a teen-ager. You are Just nothing getting older. There is nothing worse than being 11.” „ IN OWN PREDICAMENT There is nothing worse than a human being caught in its own predicament. ^ ^ And do I do not.joke with my | tupping. easy to start because the flavor is so rich and delicious that we all love it. Of course, keeping a supply of Lady Betty Prune Juice in the refrigerator to drink for breakfast (and sometimes one of us likes another glass before bedtime) inspired to try a new recipe o using it. Considering how much we like the flavor, it seemed logical to use it in pS? cooking, too. We call 1“ this one l ady Betty h'lulT, and it’s either a salad ^ ..^ssert, depending on whether you ^an to serve i| on crisp lettuce with a tart dressing or garnished with whole cixtked prunes ant) whipped PRUNE JUICE daughter too much about her melancholy. To my mind there is very little difference between the paranoia of childhood, middle age and old age. All I try to do is to rescue my daughter from too much self-pity, a danger which 1 think most threatens anybody at any 2 cups Lady Belly Prune Juice i envelope plain unflavored gelatin I Tbsp. lemon juice I 3-oz. package cream cheese, Soften gelatin in V* cup of Lady Betsy Prune Juice. Heal IV4 cups of the Ijidy Betty Prune Juice and dissolved gelatin mix in it over very low heat. Add lemon juice‘s ana nkill till The wonderful health benefits of Shedd'i Lady Betty Prune Juice come from its essential minerals and quick energy natural- sugars. Just what your family needs to keep them a bunch of regular healthy people. age. “Oh, Trat^! Oh, Tracy!’’.! remon,slrale, and try to let her know that there are deeper' ordeals she must face along the way. j HARD TO UNDERSTAND Rut she is hard to figure out at this period of her life — and | mine. She has 23 pictures of the j Beatles on the two doors of her I ind chill till partially set. , » Whip cream cheese with '' remaining V* , cup of prune juice and gently fold into the mixture. Chill until set in mold or small If you'd like to add fruit to this, well-drained black cherries are especially good, and if you plan to u.se cooked prunes as a garnish, pit _. and stuff them with cream cheese Arst. STARLET GETS HER FIRST (the country’s most extravagant candy bar) New from NestlA's —the $100,000 candy bar. Light crunchy flavor nuggets irt a creamy caramel center; generously coated with the finest milk chocolate. TastBs so good it's almost illegal. Get it wherever candy bars are sold. $100,000 FOR ONE TI^IN DIME7FROM NESTLE’S B-« THK PONTIAC PRESS, WEnNKSPAY, OCTOREH 21. 1964 Pontiac City Affairs The District of Columbia encompasses 61 square miles. I Columbus first brought or-1 Indies, and by 15W they ww# I anges sHid grapefruit to the West I growing it^Florida.____________ Low Bid Accepted on Renewal Land . The Pontiac City Commission last night took a low bid instead . of the high bid for. a piece of land in the R20 urban renewal project. ularly. important in bidding for urban renewal land. $12,000 STUDY In other business, the City Comniis.sion okayed an agree- ment with Jones, Henry a n d i Williams, Consulting Engineers,, for a $12,000 study of Pontiac; storm sewers. week's diseussiun of p u b I i c i housing in the city, submitted ' a report on the Crystal Beach | Housing project. Commissioners passed a special resolution to reject the higher bid, explaining their ac- ' tions. Human Torso Found in Midtown New York Approved was the bid of Sheldon Goldman for property couth of Cottage and east «f Wide Track. The Royal Oak developer bid $18,300 for the NEW YORK (UPl) - A headless and limbless torstt was found today in the entrance to the cfellar of a midtown apartment building. City Engineer' Joseph E. Neipling said that the study, two-thirds financed from a 701 federal planning grant, would^ be for the purpose of draw'ing up a master plan for st«»rm drains. Warren repprted on a meeting with the owners of the project, discussing a proposed hike in rent at the project. He plans to erect two 2-story buildings to house 28 units of an apartment complex. The apartments will be on the west side of Wide Track, south of Whitte-more. Commissioners accepted Gold-man's proposal, but rejected one by developer Charles L. Langs, although the latter was some $850 higher. TURNED DOWN The Langs offer was turned down because his bid had been submitted after publicity had been given Goldman's offer. In addition, the resolution pointed out thaf Langs did not submit detailed plans as to the type of propos^ building or include a cash deposit. Commissioner Leslie H. Hudson pointed out that the appraisal of the property was for ^2,600 and even at the low bid the city received $18,300. Police said they could not tell whether the torso, its head, legs and arms cleanly severed, was that of a man or woman. Police said the person was “about 20 years of age” The torso was discovered chest down and was left in that position pending medical examination, police said. He said that it was similar to the master plan the city had madei for sanitary sewers. .| The city's share of the $12,000 contract will be $4,000. SA1.E OF LOT I City Commissioners last night j also approved the sale of a lofi on Cameron, south of Perry, to S. B. S. Builders of Detroit for City Manager Joseph A. ! Warren, following up last Tenants of the housing project had asked the commission to see what could be done to stop the rent increa.se from going into effect Dec. 1. .. SEVERAL PROBLEMS Warren said that the owners, who now have the project up for sale,’ have several problems with the project. However, the rent increase has been delayed a month and a meeting is planned with the tenants to discuss some of the problems. dock at the Jessie - Central intersection. on Oakland south of Sanderson and several on North Cass were improved. SLATED FOR '64 Programmed for 1964 were the crossings on Jackson, Wesson, Monlcalm, (west of Saginaw), South Boulevard at the Sanford intersection and Howard between Baldwin and Saginaw. The City Commission last night passed a special resolu-'tion commending the efforts of Pontiac's Olympic gold medal winner, Hayes Jones. | In still other business, the mayor proclaimed Oct. 27 as Navy Day in the city, honoring the U S. Navy an^j^ Marine Corps. To Be Sent to Humphrey City Engineer Neipling r e -ported on the reconstruction of railroad crossings in the city. He said a program had • been worked out with officials of Grand Trunk Railroad in 1961 Now Many Wear FALSE TEETH wall LlHIt Worry Usually, the city accepts the highest bid, but commissioners are authorized by the City C|iar-ter to consider other factors, such as the proposed use of the property.-Site plans are particu- Apology for Yale Hecklers t. talk, laucb or •naesa witAout of maecura falaa taatb droppiuts, ttUK or wobbllni PAbTKETH I platea Rrmar and ai<»ra oum- NEW HAVS?N,'Conn. LT)—Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, booed and heckled while speaking in the shadow of Yale University earlier this month, is about to get an apology. Nearly 700 Yale students signed an apology yesterday which read': to gradually reconstruct crossings. t During 1963, crossings on Pad- ideiilurr breath' Oet r Try tejoiMli 7 AAASTER BLENDS smoking tobacco 1. WINE-RUM CURED Hi^h.iroma-Hirh Houquet 2. MMAICA-RUM CURED h,ll-Ri>h-S»lhhinf Master Blends 3. ROSE-RUM CURED Mihl-ltrlirala-Cool 4. HONEY-RUM CURED .S’lnrel Mild Aroipia 5. WINE-VINTAGE BLEND Mild-Mtllow Bouquet 6. BURLEY BLEND ruro-Slom Burning 7. CAVENDISH BLEND Mild-Smooth Aroma THIS WEEK'S SPlCIAL~No. 5 i/j „ 1)0 —2..42* LEE DRUGS Fast Free Delivery 4390 DIXIE DRAVTON PLAINS • Quality • Convenience OR 4-0460 • Economy OR 4-0467 “We, the undersigned, while not necessarily supporting Senator Humphrey's political position, deplore the rude interruptions made by some of the opposition dur^ ing his speech at the Democratic rally Oct. 13. “We believe in the right of the opposition to express their disagreement, but we condemn their attempts to prevent Mr. Humphrey's own expression of opinion.” ★ ★ ★ David Spiegel, 18, a sophomore’from Great Neck, N.'Y.f drafted the apology. He said the 694 undergraduates who signed represented “12 times the numbei; of students who made the disturbance.” Why Pay You already pay taxes to support a generous federal-state medical program for those over 65 who need it. Why pay again for a plan that isn’t needed? Surprised? Chances are you never heard of the Kerr-Mills Law, passed by Congress in 1960. We call it...Health Opportunity Progranr for the Elderly. This program enables individual states, with federal assistance, to guarantee to every elderly person who needs it the health care he or she requires. Thousands of people every day are being helped by its broad benefits. giyc*Gni.fiiJB taste tfieg '^scpve ■ ...sugar! NATURE'S PERFECT SWEETENER There’s nothing artificial about the pure good- Yet, the supporters of the proposed Medicare Tax would have you believe that its passage is urgent.. .that persons over 65 are deprived of needed medical care because they canT pay for it. ^0 why pay twice? Find out about the health program you're already supporting. For information on health care for the ^derly in your area, ask your doctor * ness of sugar. Only soft drinks made with sugar provide quick energy, food value and ^ . I J flavor artificial sweeteners can never match. ^ BIGr So stick with the winners . . . Big Chief and ^ CHIEF Pioneer.. Remember* there’s no stibstitute for ^ IJW Rigar nature’s perfect sweetener ... Sugar. > P <;noi HEALTH OPPORTUNITY PROGRAM FOR THE ELDERLY ^I SUGAR rA ^ I MiQ'HlGAIV MADJe: PUUE SUGAR Oakland Cou|ily Medical Society THE gONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 21, 1964 Dorman-g OLD MM TAVJRN ! INTEKNAIIONAI mm FRIDAY, 5 to 9:30 P.M. DORMADTS Old Tavern OR 3-1907 Waterford, Michigan Nirtiae't nniUUI THUTER «Mk Iqra OmMmmm tl M. !• It leniayi HtMnutm It^Mk f» It p,m» NOW thro THURS. DEAMHUimN *SKSIH£HOII£SI ‘OUCSIlMOf TH£0»; "WiABceiij SMORing^ Bed Out-of-Staters Vie for Michigan Voters Attention By die Asmciated Pres^ With the Nov. 3 election just Into weeks away, a number of non^idents sought the attention (rf Michigan voters Tueth day. Stumping the^state were Barry Goldwater Jr.,' son of the R«> publican presidential candidate, entertainer Philip Crosby, and Minnesota Gov. Karl Rohraag. Another nonresident — Republican vice presidential nonodnee William Miller—planned to visit the state next Tuesday. The Economic Club of . Detroit said Rep. Miller plans an address that aight in Detroit’s Cobo Hall. ^ Young Goldwater toured the Upper Peninsula’s Copper Country—the f^yst visit by a mdinber of a national candidate’s immediate jamilsT in the memory of many residents —and contrasted his father’s “integrity and honesty” with President Lyndon Johnson’s “manipulations.” Crosby, son of crooner Bing Crosby, also urged Goldwater’s election. He told a Crystal Lake Audience some 30 Hollywood stars are “stumping” for the Arizona senator because of the “socialistic tendencies” of the Democratic administration. Crosby is in Michigan with the Goldwater Bandwagon, touring the state to solicit suppoif * for the GOP nationaL ticket. Rohraag was on hand in Reed City for a dinner honoring two Michigaii Democrats, U. S. Sen. Philip Hart and Rep. Neil Stae-berl, the party’s gubernatorial candidate. ' 'Staebler and his Republican opponent, incumbent George Romney, were busy Tuesday, too. OUTLINES VIEWS Romney outlined his views on health care for the aged in a Grand Rapids speech, promising to seek property tax relief for persons 65 and older. He said a tax deferral plan is the best way to do it. Earlier, Romney carried his re-election campaign to - Grand Haven, Fruitport and Muske-l^^ids. gon, with a round of handshaking tours at plant gates, shopping areas and campaign headquarters. f Staebler toured ^Saginaw and the Cadillac-Reed City area, meeting United' Auto Workers union officials, Mexican cit-ens and just plain voters. He told a coffee-hour audience of Mexicans he favors federal legislation to protect migratory farm laborers, granting to native American workers the same protections extended tol Mexicans. | Hart spent the day seeking! votas in seven northern lower Michigan counties, with appearances at Reed City, Big Rap-1, Baldwin and Cadillac. In a Reed City talk to Democrats from 13 counties, most of which have unemployment rates higher than the national average. Hart attacked Republicans in Congress for their re-fpsal to support such projects as the Accelerated Public; Workers Trogram and the Area Redevelopment Adimnistration. Hart’s Republican challenger, Mrs. Elly Peterson, was in Lake Orion Tuesday night for a sp^h at a Czechoslovak-American rally. She said present immigration laws discriminate against. the peoples of Eastern and Southern Europe, the Middle Elast and the Far East. She said she opposes “opening the floodgates of immigration” but favors “legislation , to eliminate this discriminatoi7 system and to make easier the reuniting of families.” Mrs. Peterson’s campaign organization also announced formation of a statewide committee of doctors to advance her candidacy. It listed 27 Michigan physicians as members of the group. Staebler’s schedule for today called for appearances in Detroit and Oakland County. Hart planned to spend the day in Washtenaw, Monroe and ' Oakland counties. Borge Discusses Long Romance With U.S. By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-Television Writer HOLLYWOOD - Victor Borge will soon be marking the 25th anniversary of a-dong-blooming romance between himself and the United States of America. It began back in 1940 when the Danish pi-a n 0 - humorist and Adolf Hitler decided to disagree. “And look what happened to him!” Borge Is fond of pointing out. THOMAS Borge recently was back in Hollywood to emcee a couple of Hollywood Palace shows and to pick up some handsome fees for local engagements with his oqe-man show. In between, hd paused to reflect in his Chateau Marmont penthouse suite about the changesyin his life during the past quarter-century. “I had been enemy No. 1 of the small but active Nazi party in Denmark,” he recalled. SPOKE MINn’ “They constantly attacked me on the front pages of their newspaper because 1 spoke my mind about Hitler. I knew the invasion was coming and I would be on the liquidation iist, so I took an engagement in Sweden.” The Germans did invade Denmark, and Borge’s return was demanded. He replied that he had contracts to fulfill, and he managed to have his wife join him. Because she was an American citizen, he managed to join her on the last transport ship leaving from northern Europe, w ★ * Borge is fond of recalling his equipment for conversation when he arrived in New York.' “My ElngUsh consisted of what I remembered from school 15 years before,” he said. “Mostly it was T am, you are, he is, etc.’,” LEARNS FAST But Borge is a fast study, and he soon learned the language — and the customs. He had his first engagement at a charity affair in Palm Beach, Fla., filling in when Hildegarde became ill. He was a hit from the start and played a date at » Palm Beach night club. He was wary, however, of appearances before small audiences. ir it ir He realized his material, such as phonetic punctuation and playing the “Blue Danube.” backwards, might easily be lifted by other entertainers. He wanted to establish it with a mass audience so it would be identified forever as his own. Borge decided to go to California, where living pight be cheaper and there was a chance of getting into the movies. GETS AUDITION ’Through Danish friends he got an audition before Rudy Vallee, who helped place him on Bing Crosby’s Kraft Music Hall. He was a guest star for a whole year, and his American career was launched. The Dane will be marking his silver anniversary by returning his one-man show to Broadway; he opens at the Golden Theater Nov. 9. There’s no telling how I York, I went in for a few weeks long he’ll stay. and stayed three years,” he ‘“rhe last tjme I played New I remarked. NOT RECOMMENDED FOR CALORIE WATCHERS OUR FAMOUS BUFFET ALL YOU CAN EAT EVERY THURSDAY 6 P. M. TO 10 P. M. Adults $2.76 Children $1.50 MOREY’S sK-ii CLUB 2280 Union Lnkt Rd. off Commerce Rd. Phono 363-0414 ^ZSiaKEECO ALL COLOR PROGRAM Liz May Get Involved in 'Cleopatra' Suit LOS AtfGELES (AP) - Actress Elizabeth Taylor must be made a party to a legal dispute between MCL Films and 20th Century Fox over receipts from the movie “Cleopatra.” ’This decision yesterday by a federal court means Miss Taylor might testify if the suit reaches trial. The suit was Hied by M(X, a Swiss corporation of which Miss Taylor and her for-mei'jjh u s bjB n d, singer Eddie Fisher, own 85 per cent. It demands an accounting of receipts from “aeopatra.” JOSHUj^S Eii^giii ...Puem fiOBERT BURL WAITER TOMOV MU'IVES MAH MNDT Plus: tnd Comady F.ature The incredible Mr. Limpet i^DON KNOTTS miim ANDREW DU66AN-JACK WESTON ...leil It to Herman Schwartz You say your daughter Is getting married, and she doesn’t want her reception in a cinder block citadel, and you can’t afford the country dub?... Or it’s your anniversary, and your wife is expecting a big party, and you’re so busy at the office you haven’t even got time to call for a cake, and it’s your Silver, and you’d like it to last to the Golden? ... Or you’ve been made chairman of your company’s annual banquet, and your committee raiv out and left you holdtng the guest list, and your boss is big on banquets... small on boners? Tell it to Herman Schwartz. He'll lend a sympathetic ear. An ear educated by years of experience of catering everything from St. Patrick's Day dinners to Bar Mitzvahs. Where to find this Confucius of catering? The Sheraton-Cadillac Hotel, of course. Here Herman combines his rare talents for organization with those of Chef Hagen for vending award-winning viduals. Together they give you the best-looking, best-tasting, best-organized banquet in town. The Sheraton offers you a phoice of 18 modern air-conditioned banquet rooms. Where our Schwartz-Hagen duo can seat and satiate from three to a thousand people with equal ease. If you’ve got a catering problem, why not pass Herman the buck?.., simply call Mr. Schwartz, WO 1-8000. Respectfully, the Sheraton-Cadillac, Detroit’s largest, most accommodating hotel. SHERATON-CADILLAC HOTEL llli WASHINSTON BOULEVARO, DETROIT II. MICHieAN OVERWEIGHT?? Gat in Shape the Noliday Health Club way!! Which Lady is a Noliday HeaHh MEMBER? Per Moirth For a Couno Individually Dotignod for Youl Why of couno it's tho lady on tho right. Hovo th# figuro you hovo olwaya doairod. Loso pounds and inchot, rogordlots of your ago, plut fool bottor and novo moro onorgy tho ooty Holiday Hoolth way. Call or como by today for yourfroo trial troot-mont. No obligation ovor. Stop putting it off. Cdl for your oppointmont today. OPEN DAILY 10-10. Call or Come By Today for Tour FREE TRIAL TREATMENT 1 N. Perry St. (Comer Plke a Perry) 334-0529 WoMm -Hotel/ PIKg and PERRY FOR RESERVATIONS ' CALL FE 5-6168 Breakfast $1.25 - Lunch $1.35 Dinner $1.75 - Sunday Dinner $1.95 CATERING TO: • BANQUETS e MEETINGS o RECEPTIONS HOME OF THE FAMOUS WALDRON BUFFET Food at it's Best. (Home Style) Buffet or Table Service — 3 Timet Daily TAP and TEMPEST ROOMS • cam|LY NIGHT Mon.-Sat. 4 P.M. to 6 P.M. • TMIVULI riiv;rni -Special Low Prices— | Every Friday Weekends THE NOJEABLES Mick.y Gannlax Entertainment DANCING 1 I Mon.—Thura. i DOTTY VIEAU B—10 THE PONtlAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 21. 1964 Clinton River Drain Project Nears End By L. GARY THORNE The Clinton River tunnel is done! •k it it Subject of political debate and much hand-wringing, the tunnel is' a vital linlc in the Clinton oRiver Drain project^ which is now in its final phase. Weather is now the key to completion of the entire project. Heavy rains could seriously delay the tricky work that lies ahead for general contractor R. E. Dailey & Co. of Southfield. However, if the weatherman cooperates, the river project could be wrapped up in about 90 days. Tunnel work, except for minor cleanup operations currently under way, is complete. Constructed to carrf the river below the heart of downtown Pontiac, a pair of 10-foot-square conduits begin juk west of the Grand Trunk Western Railroad tracks near Orchard Lake Avenue and West Wide Track (Cass). The conduits extend east and north Ho Union, just north'^of East Huron. Prior to 10 a.m. today, the river was following the tunnel route by flowing into the south half of the twin conduits near their starting point. A hole had been punched in the side to permit the flow while the adjoining conduit was being completed. ★ ★ ★ Today, water entered the north conduit for the first time, signaling official completion of tunnel construction. JOINS RIVER Also today, water from Pontiac Creek flowed southerly along the old river bed west of West Wide Track toward Orchard Lake Avenue, joining the Clinton River at the mouth of the tunnel, south of Orchard Lake Avenue. Previously, the meandering Clinton formed a loop, flowing north from Orchard Lake Avenue along the west side of West Wide Track, curving easterly at Lawrence and then flowing south through the central business district back to Orchard Lake Avenue near South Saginaw. Pontiac Creek joined it at the tbp of the loop under West Lawrence. ★ ★ ★ ”■ The creek will now flow south through the channel along West Wide Track, deepened about three feet fronx. Lawrence to a point 200 feet south of Orchard Lake Avenue. CHANGED FLOW Thus, engineers have changed the • direction of flow in a portion of the Clinton River. In order to deepen the channel, which was done with bulldozers last week, the old river bed was allowed to dry up. Final operations in the Clinton River Drain project will consist of permanently damming up the easterly leg of this river loop, halting its winding flow through the downtown area and forcing Pontiac Creek into the old river channel to the west. Pontiac Proti PliOiot The Muddy Clinton Trickles Hesitantly Into A New Home The Clinton Cascades Through An Opening In A Giant Conduit. A permanent diversion chamber will be constructed at a point just east of West Wide Track on the south side of Lawrence. ^DIVERT CHANNEL The chamber will divert creek water down the deepened river^channel, carrying it south to the twin conduits which will direct it east and north to the Union street outlet via the tunnel. After the chamber is complete, a back-fill operation on the old river channel that winds through the downtown business district will complete the river project. Total cost of the project is estimated at $2.45 million. From a financial standpoint, the river work is a vital part of Pontiac’s urban renewal program. ★ ★ ★ Once the drain work is out of the way, redevelopment of urban renewal lands can proceed. FINAL PROJECTS Other construction, like the final leg of West Wide Track and the Auburn-Orchard Lake Avenue cross-Qver, will give the city a new face. The over-all aim of the Clinton River project is flood control. It primarily was undertaken to give the downtown business area better storm drainage. These Twin Conduits Will Carry The River Under Downtown Pontiac. A Wet Road? No, A Dry lllver Bed. ■ I The Orchard Lake Avenue Bridge Waits Patiently For Pontiac Creek Waters ; - - /i' ■ ■;' THE PONTIAC PR’ESS, WEDNESI^AY, OCTOBER 1904 B—n Americanisrh Is Creeping Info Mexico's Strong Nationalism Guadalajara, m e x 11: o (AP) — To the horror of ^ revoluticmariea, some gringo touches are creeping into Mexico’s impassioned nationalism.* This is more apparent in Mexico’s north, the part closest to the United States, but even in this lovely bastion of Mexican superpatriotism, some 1,000 miles from the border, you have the hamburger and hot dog, the Twist and Frug competing strongly with the taco, enchilada and ranchero music. The border towns, Juarez and Tijuana, are the liveliest sam- COMMON PART Americanisms are a common part of northern Spanish. How else will you order a bloody mary or com flakes? You hear “okay” as often as “sl.’'‘ The height of affirmative ^mphasis is embodied ip “Segu-ro que hell yes!” "SO UPSET BY CHANGE-OF-LIFE rSCREAMEO AT MY HUSBANOr Suffocatiac beat waTci alternating with nerroui. clammy feelinga-aeeompanied often by selinga- . ritability and' nervousness — are .well-known to women suffering the functionally-caused distress of middlslife‘‘cbange”! In doctor’s testa, Lydia E. Pinkham Tablets brought relief from such distress to woman after woman among eases • “ - • ■ i AbleU. tested. Get Pinkham t Sishssssl“keain*ts”l pies of the jazsed-up Mexico.-The Nogales bullring features “University of Arizona Days." Synchronized college-style cheering for the bull Is not uncommon in the Tijuana bullring when California students are ’The old-style cantina, or saloon, is bowing to bright, juke-boxed soda fountains offering impressive arrays of stateside-style sandwiches and soft drinks. Even the music is changing. ★ ♦ ★ Some startling changes are apparent even in the capital, city of cathedrals and kosher-style delicatessens. MAJOR INDUSTRY “Tourism is a major Mexican industry,” explains Mexico City hotelman Luis Davila. “We’re catering largely to American tastes, so it has to be that way.” Mexico picked up $357 million last year on tourism alone. The effects of being neighbors works both ways. The flow of Mexican * tourists^ toward the United States - 267,934 last year—is increasing.^ This is contributing to the preservation of Mexican customs and traditions on the U.S. sida- of the border from Cali- tle another thorny border problem, the salty content of Colorado River water Mexico gets under treaty. Mexican farmers claim the water is wrecking their crops. Sen. Clinton P. Anderson of New Mexico contends numerous fomla to Texas. Department stores in the bigger Southwest and California cities keep Spanish-speaking staff members dealing exclusively with Mexican shoppers. Televised Mexican bullfights are regular fare in Los Angeles. CORDIAL RELA’nONS The result has been tq bring \j.S.-Mexico relations to perhaps their most cordial level in history. There hasn’t been a serious rift between the two neighbors since the Mexican oil expropriation decree in 1938. Last month the two countries quietly settled a century-old dispute over 600 acres of disputed land lying between El Paso, Tex., and Juarez, Mexico. Efforts are under fray to set- irrigation areas in the United States use water with as high, and sometimes higher, saline content. PRODUCTION UP In spite of the salinity, production has been steadily increasing ia, the 437,500-acre Mexicali Valley below El Centro, Calif. A record 500,006-bale cotton crop is predicted for 1964-65. Wheat is up too. Rafael Martinez Retes, manager of the Mexicali Cotton Growers Association, says increased production is coming from nonaffected areas watered by deep wells. “Our problem is really not entirely salinity, but the shortage of water limited by treaty. That’s our problem of the future for us to solve,” he says. The salinity problem nemains among the more fertile issues for exploitation by Mexico’s far left to promote , antl-U.S. sentiment. Others include racial discrimination and the argument that low American prices for Mexican cohfimodlties can wipe out any Alliance for Progress aid. EXTREMISTS But extremists are finding a sympathetic ear only in the Federal district — Mexico City — and a few neighboring areas where less than 15 per cent of Mexico’s 40 millions live, A Czechoslovak cultural center shut down in Monterrey for lack of interest. ' A university student there, Jorge Pedraza, 23, said “It’s difficult to mislead the northern Mexican about a neighbor they see every day.” of 1,100 — 60 per cent of it Mexican nationals — testifies to Mexico’s importance to the United States. Says one U.S. diplomat: “It’s very important that we have a friendly Mexico and mol-e important that while Mexicans may not agree with us they fully understand our viewpoint.” While the Mexican government has a relatively soft policy toirard Cuba, Mexican authorities are rougher on left-wing extremists than many Latin-American countries that have broke relations with Cuba. The far left is permitted to hold public meetings in only one place in Mexico City, a burlesque theater. VERY IMPORTANT An American .diplomatic staff Cites Pr6ss Insults After JFK Killing LUBBOCK, Tex.TUPI) Texas Atty. Gen. Waggoner Carr said yesterday he w a s abused and insulted by reprn’t-ers in Washington because President Kennedy was assassinated in Texas. Carr said the a o u s 1 v e language came the day of President Kennedy’s funeral after he read a statement that Texas would conduct its own investigation into the assassination of the president. The attorney general said, “The press was so bitter and so hostile at making it appear Texans were involved in a conspiracy, that all the venom, all the poison, and all the feeling against the state poured out on me.” iCfi TRJilHLOHD Conned Goods Sole lGA.TROnCAL FBUH MIZ •• |m Fnitt CocldnQ.. 5 #303 oanf *1 Cil Green leans 6#303cans$P^ CotWnBeans 6 fsosoons^P^ IGA.TANGT iOATu«.i SSJiSS....7#»3».SI“ IGA_WHOLE KjA.TcnD£H e««A GreenBoans...S#303caiia$|N Sweet Flos...,I#303oasaH”" tGA^V^hotoKaoMlozCt Stria .... Golden C«n...8 #303 con. •gajioMestti£ Sion Sonerkrant.... 8# 303eaBs IGA-CHOPPED OR LEAF • v|. Conned Spinocli 7# 303coiu IGA-RSP .... Cherries ... 8 ^oscans IGA-RICHINlOMATOFLAVORci nn Teaoto Colnqp.. 6 i«os-btiA *1"” IGA-ROASTED mq, ... I7.0Z.JARS «9 TABLE KIN6 18-20 LB. AV6. WELL FED. PLUMP AND TENDER I IGA SECTIONS Grapefruit...... 4 e HOMESTTLE SI Oil IGA Moodies... 4 uok pkoii *1 IGA A|| Elbow Macaroni Znxpkga a9/ u89^ DofFeed. .121 IGA-ALL PURPOSE. Enriched Fleir... 25-ib.bag ” IGA—XABLERITB C1IIII IMiIk....8tane(m. ’r" Perk Chops 79 Thick Cantar Cut SPARE RIBS Country Style.. u.45 LEAN Pork Steak ....LB. 49< % Spare Ribs ... lb. 49* T.K. WHOLE-SHANK HALF Smoked Hams 49 ill T.K.HAMS I Semi Boneless 69ii| TABLE me PROZEN SUCED Strawberries 19^ TABLE KING -- Gardin Peat41” DAIRY FOOD SPEOALS FROM YOUR NA VeWeeta Cheese - Medium r awaw* A Doi. Eggs■■■■■■■ Parkay k,:; aii# Margarine.. 3.1^09 GINGELLVILLE IGA KEEGO GENERAL IGA KEEGO HARBOR AAICH. S ELECT BIG SAVlMGi AT Richman’s 85th Anniversary CELEBRATION LAST FEW DAYS 'a" FEATURE: Big Selection Worsted SUITS Excellent all-wool worsted fabrics you’ll sea elseijvhere at $15 to $20 morel Now in 2- and R-button models. Lustrous iridaacents and medium and dark shades. Great Valual ‘45 SPECIAL! Entire Stock of 16.95 JACKETS 1399 Ski jacketj,^ai8t length jackets, car coats and subur-i bans ... all with warm inter-linings. Wool, nylon, cotton corduroy, and imported suede fabrics. □rcbiHLS g All-Wool Worsted SLACKS 1 Ktg.n.9S NOW 9.97 Superb all-wool worsted fabrics, tailored to perfection. Full selection of styles, best new colors Choose now! SPECIAL! SPECIAL!; Entire Stock 3.95 Entire Stock 12.95 SPORT SWEATERS SHIRTS now9.99 NOW 2.69 Stripes, all over Jac- ' HorJ.SO quard patterns and Long-sleeve sport solids. Coat styles, shirts. Solids, stripes. pullovers. checks, plaids. Convertible, button-down collars. Richman BROTHERS BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER Open Daily 9:30 A. M. to 9 P. M. Charge Jt now... take up to 6 months to poyt •1M4 n. Iftclmt. IrSlnn C* '/il ■ -/',r B—If THE PONTIAC PRE§S, WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 21, 1964 flWE'CDLOR Unique U.S. Presidential Election Process Lasts for 18 Months By J. W. DAVIS WASHINGTON Hie unique American process of putting a president in the White House takes all of a year and a half. Things really get under way with the selection of the cities ariiere the national party con-.ventims will be held. It was hack in June 1963 that the Republicans chose San Francisco and the Democrats picked Atlantic City for their 1964 meetings. ARer the ccmvention cities are chosen, there ar|t rumbles about who’s going to run. Things begin to shape up more exactly in the spring of the presidiential election year with the presidential preference primaries. POWER or PRIMARY The power of the primary was abundantly demonstrated in 1960 by the late President J(*n F. Kennedy. A Roman Catholic, he had to prove to Democratic party leaders he conld win in a heavily Protestant state. He did just that in West Vlr-finia, against Sen. Hubert Humidirey of Minnesota—and the rest is history. In all states, during the first halflof the year, the Democrats and Republicans select delegates to their national conventions. DIFFERENT METHODS These delegates are chosen by primaries in some states, and by party conventims or state party cmnmittees in others. W parties have rather complicated formulas to decide how many delegates each state will have. The convention system, like the primary setup, is often criticized. “Political conventions represent more wasted energy, more futile fruitless endeavor, more useless eXpoiditure of noise, money and talent than any institution on earth,” comniepted writer Irvin S. Cobb. SAME OLD WAY But conventions keep going in the same old ajay, largely because they work fairly well and because no more' effective method has been found. They come np with candidates qnkkly in most instances, and quite often those chosen are good men by any The main business of a convention, aside from picking nomin^ for president and vice president, is to agree on a platform for the party. This can stir up great heat and oontroversy at the time, although few expect those most affected by particular planks can remember very long just what was in the platform.' CAMPAIGN LULL Once the candidates are , chosen and the platform printed, there is usually a quiet time of several weeks. But the fireworks generally •tar^oing off by early Sep- Special Parchase SALE 9-lb. Automatic Washer WHIRLPOOL REFRIGERATOR 12 Cu. Ft. 2 Door I2^J 'Zero Freezer GIBSON REFRIGERATOR 13 Cu. Ft. with Zero Freezer *218 TCRMS AVAILASLC speaking tours, TV and radio speech — maybe even debates—n^Wspaper stories and editorials by the many thoa-sands, magazine articles, billboard advollslng, sloganeering of aD sorts, charges and All this roars on until election day — the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November. That is the day when the in- dividual voter becomes master of those who would lead him. And yet, the «lectipn of the President is not by the voters at all, but by the presidential electors — another system often deplored but never changed. . Each state has as many electors as it has senators and representatives-in Congress. Hie electors are nominated for each party by the state party convention or the state central committeer The people choose between the rivals states of electors, but usually they don’t even know who the electors are—they Just vote Democratic or Republican. NOT BOUND The electors are not legally bound to vote for the party candidate, but they almost always do. ' They meet at the state capitals on the first IWonday after the .second Wednesday In December, vote and pass the word to Washington.. The party getting the highest popular vote in a state, even if it is. not a majority, gets all the state’s electoral votes. On next Jan. 6 Coi^ress will meet for the counting of the electooial votes. There arg 538 of them and it tgkes 270 to win. * ^ All this is largely focmality; the outcome of the election ia often known on election day, seldom very long after. Finally will come another great climax the hiaugratlon on Jan. 20. Ellis Remodeling Contractor Aluminum Specialist SIDING • WINDOWS • DOORS IN COLORS Ellis Remodeling Contractor 15 W. Lowrenee 332-2671 YOU CAN 'CHARGE IT AT YOUA NEARBY K-marf AUTO CENTER Open Daily 10 to 10 Sunday 12 to 7 I INK . TW^TTTVM Gi^ S90* FISK t|UALITV \T I A>TASTIt TRADE IN PRICES 3101 \Ti:il FKi:i:!! VO 3IOVFV limvv Yora cBoicm 190% NYLON EC0N091V TIRE Top Quality 100% Nylon Tubeless Tires 4-Ply 100% Nylon Tubeless Tires wHh tiMa WlthMU tnte TJOzU 8-88 1L95 iLltxU «Bb»«yps SM 1L95 FISK NO-LIMIT GUARANTEE New TnmA* Snow Tire wuakwan 9Tui» tn» Stas wtth traAc •*53? IMxU 8.88 UL95 MOxU 888 1185 TabeleM BlackwaUs ate Wteteda wteMS trade «M/ue XU 1885 TMxM 1A96 1785 uearu 18.71 1885 uexM 1448 1985 SWxU 1286 1785 uexu 18.71 1885 WNxU 1448 1985 10 46' 'sswa.'s?! p9i9mirmr JTabeleM Blackwalls SiM with trade witkovt , trade S.00X1S 12.64 15.95 LSOxU 14.87 17.95 780x14 16.93 20.95 1 S.e0xl4 17.87 22.95 1 880x14 19.42 24.95'* 6.70x15 16.93 20.95 7.10x15 17.87 22.95 780^15 19.42 24.95 S.00/880 xlS 20.83 27.95 EI2 64 blAcItwafft. bibataMk Save on These Fantastic Auto Aeeessorv Values Prestone Permanent Anti-Freeze ONE AMP BATTERY CHARGER J ! I t ■' t 1"' ' ■’ \ ■ ' l"' ' i-' ■ ■ ' PORK UVER Z9^ / HOT DOGS 29f. Cr«am Styl# hart corn . CHICKEN-BEEF-TURKEY BANWETDINNERS "•> r/Ol I Whit, or Chocolat. fy I frosting................ 0 I ^*XES.............. 1 I PORK & beans .... 10' V Oolicious ^ I FRANCO AMERICAN SPAGHETTI 11 c P mT7??wI I Ptiiciout Con I I CHEF'S DELIGHT CHEESE SPREAD 2 ti 39' I ■ Economical ^1 ajax CLEANSER. O.rby't 10 91 W.I-0-Cru«f v^i enriched bread . PRESTONE ra ANTI-FREEZE gallon can C4ilO 1^1 Olc.nK.g tiol WHOLE SWEET PICKIK Toll ^ ^ W3 1 1 C P*g. Six. 11' Toll Ni. 30C Con ■19'| |io%’ 20-OI. Loot 19' Lb. Bac 19' m Giant A6-OX. Con 25' Ot. 39'! Is : ft ii.*-. ‘7*. ' 'll o-i THE, PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1964. Fo6d-Is-A Bargain Game ■ - ■ ■ Tabu Trimmed — Naturally Tender Pr/eti ffftcfiv* thru Satvrrfay, Oef. 24, 1964. W« rtitnfi tht right to limit qvantitios. Morrell Pride Boneleu Canned FRESHLY GROUND — ALL BEEF Hambui^er HAMS (Ground right . . . tht Wrigley way from 1 OOQi^ rM arm lU 1 if\y i^aaf AI\A/a\/e Pp a rwi2ltr ‘ Si 3. $159 IUU70 pure C|Uaiiry Deer. Aiweys at m peai^ | of rich flavor and fresh within miriutes . of your shopping. We keep the quality in p|^^‘ $3.99 ^ mo to keep your family happy. 3-lb. PkB 43e lb. SWISS STEAKS U.S.D.A. Choke Swiss Steaks Canter Blade 79! Chuck Cuts lb. WRIGLEY ICr SALE fine Cone Tomatoes I , I Oxford Royal Piocoe fir Sfems 10* [1] Mushrooms No. 303 1 Can 2-ox. Can ia V . c Sov. 5c IOV2-OX. mfy Tomato Soup «« j can lU CWckan NoodI*, Rlea, Oilckw, Pototo ond B««f Noodl. rv. ,Q i,..,cN.,303 Stokely Pumpkin on 2 can 10' Wyler's Soup Mix Huof'i Tomato Sauce Cream Corn Elna 'c:; 10' Pork & Beans Save 7cNo. 303 |Qc 7 Can No. 300 Special Label Ajax Cleanser 10* 14-OX. vnc Can Rtg. or 1 Cal GIngtralo Vernors c.„ 10' 10* Elna Spaghetti No.^300 10. Pancake Flour ’Bot*' 10* Iodized or Free Runnino Colonial Salt Circle K Potted Meat ^S:ri0' Vo Can 10' Ciood N Ricb Pizza Mix Family Size FifozenFood SALE! Meodewdole • Orange Juke 4^99* Mix orxJ Comblr>otioo Palie Dinner 1r’ir39* StOdFfer Noodle Tuna Casserole T 'i^49* Stmzffer ^ H EscaHeped Chicken hT 05* ?6Vj-o«. ^Qc Pkg. Kleenex Napkins "Tz’’ llj:,*: 10' 10* Coral - Special Label Lifebuoy Soap Bath Siie^ 10* Grape Drink Bofden'i AAoolo Koolo Chocolate Drink ’'ca”'10‘ Mn. Grou Onion Soup Corn Muffin Jiffy Mix Mott's Tangy Applesauce Ctxxolate Beef Sf^w Nestles Cocoa uk 'cTn* 39* 8-ox. Jar Almond Windmilli, Mocaroon or Aieorted Treote Hershey Syrup Golden Cookies Pkp.^1^ Aqua Net f^t ^cII‘ 77* (Bakery Specials Mel-O-Crust Raisin Bread 216-oz. s Loaves MeMh-Cnne CiKKslato Cake 39- Brewn & Sene Rolls ’ir-29- For Dishe*^ Liquid Wisk Detergent • Extra Fluffy "all" Baggies—Plostie Sandwich Bags Detergent Palmolive Liquid Whitens Clothet - Ssscciol Label Fob Detergent Super Rinse "all" Blue Bonnet Margarine (Dairy \Jalues Kraft's P|ain or Pimento Vcivccta #9* HaH&Half seoit-t^- Li* Margarine Fi.*chmadn,s^«27' ilt.7* Honeradish "J.r29- Spun Honey ■Sr- 33- BisoiHs ?sw Corn Storch 25* Hekmdrt Pecan Sandies 'isT49‘ IndapetvJent Best-O-Bics '^T49‘ Speeldf Label Instdnt Pels Save King 7« Six# 07 AAMdowe Spray Starch Sovg 211^iM.O#%e lOe Can 4P7 Freeh Kaehar VIosic Spears Save 17e ^ 24^ $WOO mothers, and almost half the *963 babies were third oi subsequent births: Experts predict a sharp increase in new babies in the future as those children born in the postwar period will soon be marrying and starting families of their own. » Whether mother is new or-experienced* she will -find an av^ erage of US varieti^ and forms of prepared strained and junior foods for the new baby. This variety makes it easy to a c -quaint children with, and teach them to like, many differeqt nutritious foods. Thanks, in part, to today's sterile foods, babies have fewer digestive upsets. The main types of baby foods are: strained, junior, baby juices, and cereals and baked goods. Strained foods are for the very young baby who is unable to handle coarser t e x -tures. These are commonly packed in 4'^ to 4^4 ounce glass jars. Junior or chopped foods are usually a coarser texture than strained foods. They require some chewing and are u^ally packed in 7^ to 7^4 ounce jars. ^ All baby juices contain a standard amount of vitamin Ci — enough to meet baby’s daily requirements. '• Baby cereals are made of .wheat, oatmeal, corn, rice or barley enriched with vitamins I home. For instance, savings can and minerals to a greater ei- be as high as 50 per cent when tent than family type cereals, using prepared baby food beef Cookies and teething biscuits rather than scraping and coqk-have a firm consistency' for j ing fresh beef at home, baby’s chewing. ^ Some mothers have asked Mass production has m a d e i about the amount of protein in many prepare<^ baby foods cost! some of the “Main Dtsh” baby less than baby food strained at: foods. A comparison of the av- I erage protein content in die 444 ounce size indicates thdre are 9.5 "grams in “High Meat” dinners; 3 grams in soups and one-dish meals; 19 grams in strained pure (100 per cent meats); 25 grams in junior meats; and 9.5 grams in cottage cheese mixtures. r The original container is best for refrigerating nnserved portions M baby foods'. T^e food an^ inside surfaces of cans and jars are sterilized during processing. Keep containers covered during refrigeration to protect quality and reduce contamination. Much research is being done to devekq) better containers for baby foods. Perhaps one day soon, mother? will buy plasUc tubes of baby foods. Unscrew the cap, screw on a plastic spodh and baby feeding will be more convenient and sanitary than it now is. GINGER-PEACHY CRISP — Who could resist trying this eye-appealing dessert? The secret in^edients are doughnuts, cann^ sliced peaches, real New Orleans molasses and spices. Serve it with a cloud of whipped cream. Another time, try. a dapple of |iard sauce or dash of custard sauce. Doughnuts Are Star of New. Dessert During the time of the early Colonists, fancy desserts were few and far between. Doughnuts with molasses was a very special treat, immensely popular with grown-ups as well as children. Its tangy goodness is still in fashion, but today’s homemaker has so many conveniences at her fingertips that it’s simple to present this old-fashioned favorite in a luscious new way. And speedily! , Ginger-Peachy Crisp 3 or 4 plain doughnuts 2h cups canned sliced peaches teaspoon powdered ginger teaspoon allspice ' 4 cup real New Orleans molasses ^4 cup doughnut crumbs cup brown sugar, packed h cup sifted flour 1-3 cup butter or margarine Split the whole doughnuts and place around edge of 1 or IVi-qt. greased casserole or baking dish. Place peaches in bottom of, dish. Blend ginger, alfepice and real New Orleans molasses; pour over peaches. Blend doughnut crumbs, brown sugar, flour and butter or margarine till crumbly. Sprinkle over peaches. Bake in a moderate oven, 350 degrees for 35 minutes. Serve warm with whipped cream, hard sauce or a custard sauce Serves 4-6. Clams, Grapes for Appetizer "Tokay Gourmet Appetfzer’’ Is a delightful combination ' of minced clams, macaroni and. Tokay grape halves seasoned to a king’s taste. The richly colored Tokays provide a refreshing, tart flavor in this appetizer that fully deserves to be served at your next party. Tokay Gourmet Appetizer 1 cup Tokay grapes 1 can (7% oz.) minced clams 2 tablespoons butter or margarine 1 clove garlic, finely chopped 1 tablespoon flour V4 teaspoon salt V4 teaspoon marjoram Ml teaspoon pepper 1 cup cooked macaroni Iceberg lettuce Chopped parsley Halve and seed Tokays. Drain clams, saving liquid. Melt butter in ?aucepan. Add garlic; cook over moderate heat 1 minute. Stir in flour, salt,-marjoram and pepper. Mix in clam liquid; bring to boil, stirring constantlyi then simmer 1 to Z minutes. Stir in grapes and clams. Add macaroni. Chill. Serve on bed of lettuce; garnish with parsley. Dust with paprika if you wish. Makes 5 or 6 servings. Ever dress finely grated carrots with sugar and lemon juice to serve as a relish? 501 (Mwi neftiid 10,200 COMET RICE DIETS Only CQMET, tho Modern Rice, i» both Vitaflod and Enriched to protect your health while dieting. That may be one of the reasons hundreds of doctors have requested thousands of copies of the COMET RICE DIET for their patients. More than 90% of those who reported that they followed .the COMET RICE DIET faithfully state that they lost a pound a day, yet never were hungry. Weight reductions range from a few pounds to more than one hundred pounds, according to some users. Of course, some did cnot like the Diet. COMET makes no claims, no guarantees. See your doctor befom dieting. j If you would like to try the COMET J RICE DIET to see if ybu can lose weight I without being hungry, send a COMET I RICE Box. Top and your name and J address to: I COMET RICE • BOX 544 • DALLAS, TEXAS COMEt/RICE FARMS SAUSAGE guaranteed BEST or your money back! Try Bob Evans F^mna Sauatge tc64ay! Th|r»’B real fresh country flavOT in every bitn. Anyway you cook it... there ia no bet^ taatinf aau-aage. If you^don’t agree that iTa the fineat sausage you've ever taated, Bob Evam pecKm* ally will refund your moaey. Ha HAMS and ntlDERLOINS induiled in AU 7 STYLES! . ) \ V ''t 50 FIRST PRIZES EACH n,400 CASH equivalent to a year's supply of groceries for the average family. 684 SECOND PRIZES EACH M17 CASH equivalent to a month's supply of groceries for the average family. Nothine »• Buy . . . Nothini to Writo . . . Abiolutoly No OblifotionI Lean,T.na«' Sliced Bacon lotto. Rich LIVor Flovor Liver Sausage e Mickolborry, OM Fo^ieii, Knockwurit Jumbo Pranks • Plume, Tondtr, Wholo Fryer Legs. • • • Tender & Mooty. with Ribt Fryer Breasts • • Fhimp, Tedder, Fait Freion Carolina Roasters Mb. Pkg. Booth'! #omou. Fro.01. lO-Ot. Rftl Breaded Shrimp . '•‘b 97 So Froth, Froun, Fon>roady ^ ^ Froth, Grade A, 4-5 Lbi. Average Deep Sea Scallops O7 Ducklings • • • • So Froth, Froion, Fon-roody tO Oi Froihett Flavor, Michigan Credo l a Fish Sticks 0 o o Ring Bologna • • Booth'i Fomoui Ftwo Breaded Shrimp e 09* Richie-n Grade t Polish Sausage 0 United Dairies Rich Sour Cream . . cl 30 Lady Borden Delicious Ice Cream. . . »■' 40 Bordens Creamed Cottage Cheese 39^ ★ I Only 19' This Week at Nationain ★ Serve for Soled or Dessert. Orchard Freeh Fancy The Modern Detergent Rinso Blue Oaal Pock, Got Your Clotiwi Cloonor Surf Detergent e Get A Towal in [vary PatUoga Breese Detergent Btr 7™ All-Furpoio Heuiohold Cloonor Silver Dust . . uV BV Fro-Mooiurod Dotorgant Toblots aemia Vim Tablets . . . *2” Fruit Cocktail.. “2,750,000 SEE THE SAVINGS VOU GET ON KROGER REGUIAR KROGER REGULAR LOW PRICE P|.US TOP VALUE STAMPS , 14-OZ. BTl.-RICH TOMATO FLAVOR YOU SAVE Del Monte Catsup 2>m 29* DSi 20-OZ. BTL^rFAMILY SIZE — Heinz Ketchup..............31* 8-OZ. BTL-SHEDD'S^ EZY French Dressing._________23* QUART JAR-KRAFrS SAUD DRESSING Miracle Whip...............45* KROGER-FOR SALADS AND SANDWICHES Quart Mayonnaise . ». 39* GALLON BTL.-PAW PAW BRAND ^ White Vinegar............59* lES 24-OZ. BTL.-REAL MAPLE FLAVOR Log Cabin Syrup__________63* PINT BTL.-RED LABEL Karo Syrup .. .............31* ^#>AanwwwwrH ■ fw< Marshmallow Creme. 27* f AAAPRFI f W j 160Z. CAN-HERSHErS Chofihfe Syrap. 2 "•39' OB Tomato SOUP **" SAVE 12--PENNSYLVANIA DUTCHMAN PIECES & STEMS MUSHROOMS SAVE 8‘ 48-COUNT PKG.-LIPTON SAVE 0--COUNTRY CLUB CORNED BEEF....s39‘ Black tea Bags .... 59 8-OZ. CAN-INSTANT HOT OR COLD Hershey Cocoa_____________________29* ES l-LB. CAN-INSTANT CHC3COLATE MIX Nestles Qwik......................43* GRANULATED BEET Pioneer Sugar .. S'*51* FINEST VEGETABLE SHORTENING Crisco................3“^^" 75* 8-OZ. PKG.—PREMIUM SHREDDED ^ m ' Baker's Cocoanut ... 34* 14-OZ. CAN-FURNITURE POLISH - pimh Johnson's Pledge.... EES l-LB. PKG.-FOR HOUSEHOLD CLEANING ^ _ HFVn Spic & Span.......................29* ES 1-LB. CAN-RECIPE BRAND _ ^ Pink Salmon....................59* EES 614-OZ. CAN-BREAST O' CHICKEN Chunk Style Tuna 3»»79* 303 CAN-WITH VEG^BLES _ La Choy Chop Suey ^ 2‘"«49* 12-OZ. CAN-TASTY _ _ Swift's Prem...................39* EES 58 YOU CAN SAVE ON THE ITEMS ABOVE PLUS TOP VALUE STAMPS 41* KROGER REGULAR LOW PRICE PLUS TOP VALUE STAMPS ... ^ 18-COUNT PKG.-FOR POTS AND PANS S.O.S. Pods.............. 14-OZ. CAN-WASHES DIRT RIGHT DOWN THE DRAIN A|ax Cleanser.................14* 7-OZ. CAN-KILLS ALL BAD ODORS ^ Renuzit Room Deodorant 49* QUART BTL.-SPECIAL LABEL _ Rosenthal Cleaner.. . 49* KANDU BRAND-LIQUID Gallon Bleach_________________ 44* 11-OZ. PKG.-FOR A BRIGHTER WASH Action Bleach..... . 41* REGULAR SIZI-ASSORTED COLORS Sweetheart Soap. 4*»>29* 32-OZ. BTL.-LIQUID ^ a Gndy Detergent________________39* WASH DETERGENT ^ m Vim Tablets . . .....^2'^ QUART JITL.-COLO WATER - _ ^ Liquid All_____________ . . . 73* 28-OZ. BTL.-LIQUID CLEANER Mr. Clean ......................59 LARGE PKG.-FOR A CLEANER WASH Ajax Detergent.................31* GIANT PKG.;-THE WASHDAY MIRACLE Tide Detergent________________74* 125-PT. ROLL-HANDY Cut-Rite Wax Paper . 23* 25-FT. ROLL-STANDARD ALUMINUM Reynold's Wrap Foil. 27* 75-FT. ROLL-ECONOMY SIZE Reynold's Wrap................69* SPECIAL LABEL Delsey Toilet Tissue 400-COUNr PKG.-FACIAL TISSUE Swonee__________ ^PKGS. PACK OF 2 ROLLS-WHITE ^ Northern Towels.... 35* 303 CAN-KROGER QUALITY Applesauce...............7c...9| 16-OZ. CAN-TART RED KROGER Pie Cherries .... 3»»>49* 2h CAN—KROOiR BRAND Fruit Cocktail...........3»>«n YOU (AN SAVE ON THE ITEMS ABOVE PLUS TOP VALUE STAMPS YOU SAVE 68 SAVE 10--KROGER CRUSHED OR SMOOTH PEANUT BUnER SAVE 24 SPOTLEGHT COFFEE l-LB. BAG 65*-SAVE 8 KRAFT CXTRA SHARP CRACKER BARREL CHEESE.............io4>z. pko 59* MELLO CRACKER BARREL KRAFT CHEESE.......................o-or pko 49- fabric SOFTENER NU SOFT........................... ..............................PINT BTL 43- fabric SOFTENER , NU SOFT...................................QUART BTL 79- FOR DISHES AND FINE FABRICS LIQUID TREND...................;... . . 23-OZ. I .49- AAAAZINO NEW ALL-FABRIC FORMULA BEADS O' BLEACH ............... ... 11-oz. PKO. 49* RE(»ULAR SIZE—RICH LATHER PALMOLIVE SOAP.....................2 23* MORE VITAMIN C THAN FRESH ORANGE JUICE BIRDS EYE AWAKE........... ....... . 9-OZ. CAN ^9* SPEOAL UBEl SUBDUE SHAMPOO.....................aoz. btl 89- KROGER SPICE TRADE-IN OFFER! Gat your Spic# Trado-ln Bag at any Kroger check-out stands! ON ANY KROGER SPICE OR HERB WHEN YOU TRADE-IN ANY DEAND OP YOUE 010 ONES SpkM ■n4 ImHm Um riMir gtnntth. Nmv, y*u (an laka any Manrf af tiala taicat •aawreagMar anU gal 10* craCit an any Kiaw iiatli SpiM Ha«fc far avaiy tM a yau Mnf la. //. SAEA UEE AU BUHEE CHOCOLATE BROWNIES 14-OZ. PKG. 79* ■yWi.n'i.i-HH»i»ia»ffn4U!iiaMii I " WITH THIS COUPON AND ■ ... ...... ■i!P ■ WITH THIS COUPON AND ■ WITH THIS COUPON AND ■ re I $5 PURCHASE OR MORE I Is PURCHASE OR MORE 150 EXTRA Value STAMPS | 50 EXTRA VALUE STAMPS 125 EXTRA vaim STAMPS I ! CAMPeeu s ■ special usa !wmi nos coupon and plochau ■ tuk BIRDS EYE FROZEN CHOPPED SPINACH. SHARP CRACKER RARREL KRAFT CHEESE........ .......2 10-03. PKos. 43* ........ 10-OZ. PKO. 55- TOMATO SOUP SAVE I KINO SIZE RINSO I | I ^ ■ I 3 I0h4>z. CANS 25- I PKO 89- I tame creme RINSE | NALLOWEEN CANDY | SPOTIIMT IRSTARt COFFD I I CMPpMi •! Krwg«r In IWtrnIt nnrf ■ Ciipnn vM «t k Defiek nnW | «t Kpuftr In Dofiwlff • CoMptn vnM at Kmmtw In behelf ■ vaM at Kimm fai lutemu I ! lattani MkWgon Hint Sal., Oct. 34, * Mkh%an riMT Sat., Oct. 34, I RaHam MicMgan Hmi Salitr- WW | aad lattam Mlcfclgan Hint SatOk- A | MaTsactM MWAMTHin, * Q^4ay,OctHHc3rt*M. ©JJy. I THK ruiy gAC FKijiSh. WEDJ^JjyiSUAY, OCTUBER 21, im C—9 MILLIONiL SAVINGS GlUB VALUEf STAMPS _____ WITH COUPON ON FRONT PAGE PER TEAR PIUS THE EXTRA $AVIN6$ OF TOP VAIUE STAMPS WORTH >7,250,000 IN FREE SIFTS! EVERYDAY LOW PRICES...THE LOWEST IN YEARS! KROGCR REGULAR LOW PRICE YOU PLUS TOP VALUE STAMPS . . . SAVE 2Vi CAN-HAIVES OR SMCES AVONDALE ^ Yellow Cling Peache$4'="“99* 24 CAN-AAEUO-RIPE Pear Halves.................29* 24 CAN-MICHIGAN MAID ^ Peach Halves______________ 4“">” 24 CAN-AVONDALE a a Purple Plums ... 4»"99* 303 CAN-AVONDALE BRAND ^ Tomatoes.................. 303 CAN-PACKER LABEL A Tomatoes ...... 2'"“ 29* 303 CAN-DEL MONTE BLUE lAKE _ Cut Green Beans. 43* NO 303 CAN-KROGER QUALITY Yellow Corn.... 2“>"29* 17-02. CAN-TENDER Del Monte Peas.. 2»">39* 17 02 CAN-PACKER LABEL ' Sweet Peas_____________ 2‘=""27* 16-02. CAN-KROGER HEAT & SERVE ^ Pork & Beans....................10* QUART BTL.-OCEAN SPRAY - Cranberry Juice (oikioii.. 49* Ul 46-02. CAN-ASSORTED FUVORS _ _ Vn Ringo Drinks.... 4»»99*IQ Tang Drink . . . . . . ,79*001 46-02. CAN-ASSORTED FLAVORS Hl-C DRINKS.... 3 »«89* 46-02. CAN-PINEAPPLE-GRAPEFRUIT Del Monte Drink.. 3->89* 46-02. CAN-RED OR YEILOW ^ Hawaiian Punch... 3^"‘>^1 46-02, CAN-KROGER QUALITY JO MO Tomato Juice.... 4»»>99* 104-02. CAN-VEGETABLE VARIETIES Campbell's Soup. 6»'"79* 104-02. CAN-MEAT VARIETIES gkwm Campbell's Soup. 6»>»97* 7-02. PKG.-FOR SALADS & CASSEROLES , JWW Creamette Moforoni. 2”^®* 2/* 124-02. PKG.-APPIAN WAY _ Pizza Mix..............2«« 69* YOU CAN SAVE $4M34 ON THE ITEMS ABOVE ^ ^ PLUS TOP VALUE STAMPS KROGER REGULAR LOW PRICE PLUS TOP VALUE STAMPS . 14-QT. PKG.-KROGER DOUBLE LjMH.LIONS OF ---------^**K*STAJWPS' PUYTOPPirs — YOIE SAVE" CHRISTMAS TREE! YOU SAVE Instant Dry Milk 11-02. JAR-NEEDS NO REFRIGERATION Coffee-Mote... ALL-PURPOSE €NRICHED Kroger Flour ... REGULAR OR DRIP SAVE lO'-KROGER SLICED RAISIN BREAD . .,..0,19* SAVE 10*-BORDEN'S ELSIE CHOCOLATE MILK. %19* SAVE 2’-KRCXiER PIE PUMPKIN.... »JO* SAVE 20>-COUNTRY CLUB FR02EN MEAT PIESs7. ...6££’I COMPIETELY BAKEO-READY TO SERVE SARA LEE GERMAN CHOCOLATE CAKE W4-02. PKO 79c 99* 69* 79* Maxwell Reuse Coffee 2“' 94-02. PKG.-BUTTERMILK OR SOUTHERN STYLE _ _ Borden's Fluky BiscuHs... 17* 24- LB. PKG.-MULTI-PURPOSE _ _ Jiffy Biscuit Mix. . .. 35* 9-02. PKG.-ASSORTED VARIETY Jiffy Cake Mix............. . 10* 18-02. PKG.-BREAKFA5T OF CHAMPIONS _ _ Wheoties Cereal . . . . 39' 18-02. PKG.-KELLOGG'S CEREAL _ _ Corn Flakes......................34* 14-02. PKG.-HOT BREAKFAST TR‘EATI Creom of Wheat Cereal. 25* DCXiS GO FOR ^ A _ Purina Dog thow«a\.» ^2^’El FAMILY SI2E-TO PREVENT TOOTH DECAY Crest Toothpaste_____________67* 14-02. BTL.-ANTISEPTIC ^ ‘ ^ « Listerine............. 74* 25- COUNT BTL.^FOR FAST PAIN RELIEF * _ _ Alko Seltzer.................. 41* 4-02. CAN-SWIFT'S ^ Vienna Sausage •. * S ' I 1-LB. CAN-KROGER DRIP Vac Poe Coffee...............75* KRAFT'S DELICIOUS Velveeto Cheese 2 LB. PKG. w9 4 GALLON CTN.-KROGER HOMOGENI2ED _ _ Fresh Milk.......................37* B-02. PKG.-MORTON'S FR02EN CASSEROLE _ Macaroni and Cheese. 16-02. PKG.-BIRDS EYE FR02EN . Tiny Toters..................29* 12-02. PKG.-PATIO FR02EN Combination Dinners . 39* Instant Coffee............... YOU CAN SAVE SatuiOay, OctaUr 34. 1*64. Nana caU ta 4aalan Capyrighl 1964 Tka Ktagar Campany. I EMBASSY SAUB MESSING ■ KIOBIB GNACI CRAOEIS I KKOMB JELLY ROLL I u' ■ fCaapan «l Kiagac in Oatfak . - Caagan vaB4 crt Kiagat H OatiaH ■ Caagan a«B4 «t Kiagac In OatiaH ,, " |mi4 Bnetaw MhMggn Hnn Snia*- mi4 Intlani MkMgwt Una SMac-A I nnU Bartacn MkMgan Hwa Satan A IS*'?*" 2“ Octabac 34. 1*64. QSF| Hay, Octabar 34, 1*64. Octabac 3 Classic Avocado Toss Salad 1 small head crisp lettuce 1 medium-size tomato 3 green onions, chopped 1 cup croutons v 1 to 2 teaspoons chopped anchovy fillets J California avocado » ' Oil and vinegar OR French dressing In large salad bowl, tear let-■Ijtuce into bite-size pi«»s. Cut tomato into thin wedges,-* add to lettuce with onion, croutons and anchovlls. ' Cut avoo|do lengthwise Into halves; remove seed and skin, t)ice into salad; drizzle with .dressing and toss lightly. Makes 6 to 8 servings. Toasted Cheese Cubes Dress Up Bowl of Soup A well-flavored dish of soup is a bonus for any meal. Prepare canned condensed chicken noodle soup following the label | directions; stir in some rose-| mary for a bit of extra seasoning. Spread a couple slices of bread with softened butter; add a sprinkling of grated Parmesan cheese and toast under the broiler. Cut into cubes and serve on the hot soup. Coffee Flavored Dry instant .coffee mixed through canned apple sauce makes a nice flavor change from plain apple sauce. And so does cocoa. Serve with l^ht Dutch or English? In colonial times, a minor interpational feud grose over who owned toe delicious hard-shelled crabs of Manhattan—the Dutch or the English. The Dqtch claim was based on the blue and white claws of these crabs, toe same colors as the Prince of Orange flag. But the English pointed out that the crab de- sertedVPutch coldts because, when cooked, it turned red. Fruit With Pork When you bake ham or' smoked boned pork shoulder bdtt without a glaze, your family niight enjoy having the meat served with a fruit salad. For the salad, you might choose an apple and celery combination or pineapple slices with greens. Easy and Delicious Add raisins or currants to rich biscuit dough; roll out and cut^into squares; cut each square into a tpougle. Brush With cream, sprinkle with sugar and bake in a hot oven. CaU toesescones! Some good cooks like to cook frozen whole-kerifkl coni in milk rather than in water. Closed Sunday Am UmuoI "SUPER-RIGHT" QUALITY PORK SAUSAGE 29* Hot or Mild APPIAN WAY—Rcfular Pizza Mix . . . GREAT LAKES—PitcM fir S**mi Mushrooms 4» A&P SHREDDED CHEESE Mozarrella . . , PK 37* 89* 29* Clam Qiowder SNOW'S CAN White Onions 29* 35* Chop Suoy wiTiTiiK UN 53* Chili Sauce u~Hirr s '!<“ 29* Tomato Juice 3 gQ* Chion Hquid »» rtXc 59* Zest Soap . . . »» 20* Zest Soap • • • “u 14* Salvo Tablets '»‘0« ';|' 67* Cascade D^’mllGt^NT Vita’ 41* Dreft Detergent.. 33* Help Your Child in School with the illustrated Golden Book Dictionary 49< NO. 1 BOOK Only I BUY A BOOK A WEEK ALL OTHERS 79c EACH Complet* 6-Vofume Set for Lets Than $5.00 in 6 Short Weeks at All AAP Food Stores F),1V November Woman’s'Day now on sale 15< CHRISTMAS GIFTS FOR YOU TO MAKE WITH COMPLETE DIRECTIONS! by LouIh Dickinson Rich A TRADITIONAL THANKSGIVING FEAST America’s Loyal Patronage For IDS Years Makes A&P PORK LOINS Full 7-Rib Portion Loin End Portion '‘"SUPER-RIGHT" Country-Style Spare Ribs 39 Center Rib Cuts Center Loin Cute PORK ,Ac VAi CHOPS 69> 79! A&P Grade "A" Apple Sauce 3 ^ 89^ ,Sliced or Hoives VELVET Brand Iona Peaches Peanut Butter YELLOW CLING 2 “69‘ SULTANA PEANUT BUTTER 2 '•»' i« 67* RED RIPI SALAD Tomotoes 29 12-OZ. PKG. Buy Plenty at This Low Price! BANANAS to; )R JONATHAH Apples 6 49* FROZEN FOOD VALUESL Morton's Cream Pies Bonnano, Chocolate, Noopoliton, Lemon 14-OZ. or Strowborry PKG. FEATURE VALUE MICH., MclNTOSH OR JONATHAH 29 Pumpkin or Mince Pies MORTON'S FROZEN ;.il: 29' sizi ■■ 20c OFF OUR OWN TEA BAGS 29' U3' B-OZ PKG. ’«r-29< A PKG. 100 FT.«q. ROLLS Kluski Noodles Choc. Chip Cookies SUNSHINE Nabisco Bocon Thins . Waxed Paper kitchen C^ARM 3^ Controdino Tomato Poste 4 ca^^ 49< Round Tomatoes “'"taoina ^ Comet Rice long grain Brock Shampoo reg. oRr^IfoiLY /smi F?G 49' 53* DEL MONTE FAVORITES Light Chunk Tund . t.. Crushed Pineapple ... Sweet Green Peas .... Whole Kernel Corn .. Cream Style Corn ... Fruit Cocktail...... Cut Green Beans____ Tender Green Spinpoh 3‘?.^79* 2 35* 2 39* Cans 3“V.^o;..49‘ Cans ^ 3 49* ;99* i89* V35* Stokely's Tomoto Catsup..... 2 'iSi: 35« Stokely's Whole Green Beans ... 27« Stokely's Skellie Beans.....2 cans 39* Stokeley's Peas and Carrots .... 2 cans 39* Broadcast Corned Beef HoshT^tT35« Chicken Rice-o-Roni ..........*m“'35« Skedd's Italion Dressing .....Vtl' 31* Shedd's Eosy French Dressing..Vu! 23* FLEISCHMANN'^'ltEGUUR ^ Margarine 2 7 5* BALL Conning Lids Rinso Blue Crisco l-LB. CAN 35c 'Downey FABRIC CONDITIONER Uquid Thrill WASHDAY DETERGENT Spic and Span VACUUM SEAL .r REG. ^ rkGS. 9 4 C MOU . ^ OF 12^ I lOc OFF cue l-LB. 6-OZ. PKG. B-LN., fS-Ot.'dC,* V’Le.. nc Of# Sc Of# 3“75‘ !3I;' 77< SIZE m m or. SIZE isc OFF n a 70' No Coupons, No Gimmicks, No Limits •.. THE PONTIAC PRESS. \VEi)NliSDAY, OCTOBER 21, t964 New Potatoes Top With Her bed Crumbs New potatoes receive Ihe special treatment they deserve for “New Potatoes Polonaise." They are sprinkled with a piquant mixture of well seasoned buttered bread crumbs and r i p e olive wedges. Ripe olives enV hance an array of vegetables sudj as spinach, cauliflower and green beans. New Potatoes Pi^onaioo 2 lbs. tiny new potatoes ^ cup dry bread crpmbs % cUp melted butter or mar^ garine V4 teaspoon salt Vi teaspoon dry mustard I Vi teaspoon paprika I % teaspoon marjoram leaves, [ Leftover Ham^Goes Well With Sauerkraut L Vi cup ripe oUves Pare potatoes; sinuner in Iwil-ing salted water until just tender. Sldwly saute bread crumbs in butter until golden brown; add salt, mustard, paprika and marjoram. Cut olives into small wedges; add to crumb mixture. Remove fr 49* WITH RIRS ATTACHIO Fryer Breasts . . . ">^ 53* SRAM "A" 4 TO S-FOUND SIZU Roasting Chickens 39* LESS COOKING SHRINKAGE NO CENTER SLICES REMOVED ALL SKIN REMOVED NO EXCESS FAT FULLY COOKED . . . NOT JUST SMOKED Com in.. OetYout^are! w Whole or Half KING OF ROASTS I "Super-Right" Mature Corn-Fed Beef GET GUARANTEED eatllN THE -BUY 'SUPER RIGHT ”! Jone Porker Hearth Boked ANN PAGE QUALITY ANN PAGE ELBOW Rye Breads leaf Rye, Reeed Rye, Meek Ireed er Peaperwkkel KetchEEp Macaroni ar Spaghetti 2-49‘ JANE FARKEE l-U.I-OZ. 3-49‘ ANN FACE 2 35* MILD Pinconning Cheese 55* Cherry Pie Mayonnaise ^."49* A&P—OUR FINEST QUALITY ^ ^ Tomato Sauce 3 c ”>29* Standing Rib Roast 65L 69'" 75'" and 5th Ribs First 5 Ribs Pancake Mix HUNGRY JACK. DUNCAN HINES LB. •r AUNT JEMIMA PKG. Blended Syrup . . . 49* A*P Coffee as V* ii! 77* AM GRADS "A" _ ToiEiato Juice . . . 4<^i 99* SUNNYFIILD AU FURFOSI _ Family Flour . . . 5 ^ 39* Sweet Pickles .. . .*^Ar39* 10-X OR LIGHT OR DARK BROWN Jane Parker 13-Egg Recipe Howailon Punch . .. ..........3 Betty Crocker Brownie Mix o^f • 41* Hersheys Family Cocoa V . — 27* Hersheys Instant Cocoa Mix of? 35* Gay Bouquet Soop 6iH“Vie35* Bothrooffl Tissue......2 ,h*%S. 25* Angel Food Cake ^ 39* ^ CRESTMONT Orana*. Uin«, Ratpkvrry •» PlnMppI* Sherbet •. 49* CHOCOLATE COVERED ICE CREAM Cheerio Bars i49* Jack Frost Sugar • • • • 2 FEATURE VALUE! 10c OFF Hi i|g^ Nestle's Quik»-^«. • . 2 Jane Parker Quality Homestyle Bpnuts Sugared ^ FRESH SWEET Cider . • . 49* "SUPEK-RIOHT" 4-tNCH CUT Beef Rib Steaks .. lb. 79* Beef Short Ribs . . .lb. 35* All-Meat Bo'oana ■ .. Ik. 39* SHiLL-ON MBDIUM SIZi Shrimp 5-Lb. Box 3.39 .. lb. 69* Halibut Steaks .. lb. 49* HALLOWm CANDY FAVORITES Worthmore Suckers 85 fITg. 59* Candy Corn Hond-Outs .. 20 f7g. 69* Worthmore Jelly Beans o,»m 'Va°/29* Old Nick Candy Bars sPze Vgi" 69* Pol Bubble Gum %Vg"- 69* A&F VACUUM PACKED Peanuts . . >^-^49* Virginia Peanuts, 14-oz. can Oy«r 44 r4 Fruilt and Nirti—Am«ric«'i Faverita Jane Parker Fruit Cakes '■‘.■..r go.'-'iV” 3»» iM • att.r W W B.H.r LI»M I Puffin Biscuits ' CANS ^ rv. 10* Bonesse Xk. SHAMPOO 7 THE GREAT ATLANTIC 4 PAaFIC TEA COMPANY, INC. 5uper |i{arkets AMERICA’S DEPENDABLE FOOD MERCHANT SINCE 1859 Fricat ENecHve Hire Saturday, Oct/ 24th la all Eattam Mlchina ADF Saaar MaAatt SPECIAL TRIAL OFFER 8-oz. bottle p/d/s‘( ^ 4-oz. bottle FREE ( 05? * To int.*oduce this top quality shampoo — gat the 4-pz. size FREE with the purchase If not completely satis- of the G-bz. sizeT'lf not completely tied return 8-oz. bottle for FULL REFUND ORLEANS HORSEMRAT Dog Food tRIU'S Spanish Rke NESCAFE—I5c OFF InstoHt Coffw GERBER'S STRAINED MUT Baby Food MIM>. GENTLE Ivory Flakes Camay Soop Camay Soap Mr. Clean 2 »'%^45* 2'4ti43* ^S«/4-0Z.2^ Ac 4 ^ w 12%-OZ. FKG 3»"»44* a 10' Just Quality Merchandise at low Pricesli .1 / v;:,:' THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 21, 1964 Desseft Jusf Looks Complicated gql^en orange*’sauce and~crisp caramelized toasted com cereal crumbs will be a welcome treat for both guests and family. Naturally, you’ll bejoo smart to tell them you spent only 30 minutes from start to cleanup. Pumpkin Crunch Cake P4 cups (15-oz. can) pumpkin teaspoon nutmeg teaspoon cinnamon =^4 teaspoon mace '4 teaspoon ginger . 1(1 layer) yellow cake.mix 2 tablespoons butter or margarine hi cup brown sugar, firmly packed 2 cups bite size toasted com cereal crushed to 1 cup 2 packages (3 oz ), cream cheese \cup graulated sugar Combine pumpkin and spices. Prepare 9-inch cake according to directions on package, substituting V4 cup spiced pumpkin serve. Then serve the cate'arJd : pass the frosting and crumbs. Melt butter in skillet. Add The combination of fluffy brown sugar. Stir until melt- '' Now that' the first pumjAins have appeared on the roadside stands or in the markets^-pre; vide a little ^ autumn atmoST phere by serving a crunchy and spicy pumpkin cake. It won't take any- time. You can even let the guests frost their own cake. Make a layer from your favorite yellow cake mix but substitute ^ cup s e a s 0 n e d canned pumpkin for ’4 cup liquid. The cake will have the nicest kind, of mysterious flavor and a delightful golden color. While the cake is baking, candy crumbs of bite size toasted com cereal in melted butter and brown sugar. This will take just about five or ten minutes. In the meantime, mix the rest of the pumpkin with cream cheese and a little sugar. As soon as the cake is out of the oven, you can forget about dessert until time to ed. Add cereal crumbs. Stir over low heat S -10 minutes or until cmmbly and evenly coated. Cool. Combine cream cheese, granulated sugar and remaining, pumpkin until smooth. To serve, cut cake in wedges. Pass pumpkin topping and crumbs separately. Yield; 8 sendings. Don't Waste a Bit Send Stuffed Celeiy inthelunfhBoif Save the giblets, wine tips and nec^k from a chicken; cover with a couple of cups of water and a h a 1 f teaspoon of salt; add som. clerj., k»«es, a slice Jl Sealo«l-.U.(ted celery slick, onion and a lew sprigs 6i pars-- ley. Cover and simn^er until the Tuna Salad Stuffing For' Celery giblets are tender. Chop the j 7^^ caii chunk style tuna giblets and neck meat and use in a sandwich filling; strain ihe 1 tablespoon chopped .green , pepper V4> cup mayonnaise V4 teaspoon dill ^e^ Salt and pepper to taste 18-24 pieces celery,'3-inches each stock and use in a sauce. Drain tuna and flake; mix thoroughly with rest of ingredients except celery. Stuff celery ' 1 and chill until ready to serve. 1 V4 cup finely chopped celery . j Makes enough filling for 1)4-2 i 1 strip pimiento, chopped 1 dozen pieces celery. HAUWTED' ,S.0ld Kitchen? ff Kitchens Designed with you in mind! • Free Fnimnte* • Decorator Service • No Ohligation r „ PONTIAC KITCHEN SPECIALTIES Phono: 8I4-8829-111 Orchard Lake Ave.,2blksE.ofTel. SHOPPING HERE ! The Prices are lower... the quality is REASON: Hoffman’s fremendoi^s volume makes fhis Cut from Gov't. Inspected Grain Fed STEER BEEF ROUND)* STEAK (Swiss Cut) Center Cuts FOR FALL — Pumpkin Crunch Cake couldn’t be easier or tastier. It’s made of yellow cake mix and topped with pumpkin frosting and crumbs of bite size toasted corn cereal candied in brdwn sugar and butter. Sprinkle Bits of Fruit on Yeast Pancakes Pancakes were among the ; yeast for extra high-rising good-first foods prepared by man — i ness originally, a mixture of meal and water baked on a hot stone. Today, pancakes in one form or another are included in the cuisine of virtually every country. The French may prefer theft-paper-thin crepes, and the Mexicans their flat tortillas, but we Americans like oUr pancakes plump, these luscious fruit-filled pancake’s are made with Gourmet Dish Will Feed Six They’re bak^ on a -griddle just like other pancakes; diced fruits are sprinkled over the ‘ batter as it bakes. Yummy | Fruit Pancakes are equally suitable for breakfast or dessert. Enhancing the flavor of “Shrimp Pilaf Supreme” are two ingredients that always spell elegance in recipes —almonds and mushrooms. The almonds are toasted s M v e r e-d almonds, conveniently packed the^ days in cello bags and attractive tins. The mushrooms are canned. Shrimp Pilaf Supreme 1 can (4-oz.) sliced mushrooms ' 4 cup butter or margarine *4 cup uncooked rice 1 can (10)4-oz. I condensed ' chicken conaOnune or 3 chicken bouillon cubes dissolved in IV4 cups hot water >ii-lb. cleaned deveined shrimp I as"it is^us^ ’4 cup finely chopped onion V4 cup white dinner wine cup toasted slivered almonds Drain mushrooms, saving li-qtiid. Melt 2 tablespoons butter in large skillet. Add mushrooms and saute until lightly browned on both sides; remove mush-roonns to small boWL Add remaioing butter and rice to skillet; heat, stirring occasionally, until rice is browned. Mix in mnshrooms and reserved liquid and all remaining ingredients except almonds. Turn into l‘,4-qu8rt casserok; cover and bake in 380-degree (moderate) ov^n 40 minutes. Yummy Fruit Pancakes 1 cup milk, 2 tablespoons sugar ^4 teaspoon salt ’4 cup ()4 stick) margarine V4 cup warm water (105-115 degrees F.) 1 package or cake yeast, active dry or compressed 1 egg, beaten* 1 cup unsifted flour Crushed pineapple, drained Chopped apple Haisins Diced canned peaches, drained Scald milk; stir in sugar, salt' and margarine. Cool to luke-1 warm. Measure warm water j into large warm bowl. Sprinkle or crumble in yeast; stir until! ' dissolved. Stir in lukewarm milk ; mixture. Add egg and flour.. Beat until smooth, about 1 minute. Cover; let rise in warm pUce, free from draft, \ until doubled in bulk, about 50 ' minutes. Stir down batter. Plur 2 tablespogns batter on hot griddle. Sprinkle with one ‘ tablespoon of desired fruit. Turn when bubbles appear on surface. Makes 18 to 20 pancakes. Stir down batter occasionally Driving, WIN 10 HINDS OF BEEF [lind of Beef Ea. Week Nothing Very New About Hctlloween The jack - o - lanterns, which children carve from pumpkins for Halloween, are! an Irish tradition. There were no pumpkins in the old country, but out-sized rutabagas, potatoes or turnips were hollowed out, carved with grotesque faces and lighted with candles to serve as lanterns at Halloween gatherings. Fortune telling and divination has been part of this autumn f e 81 i V ai since early times. Uncover, stir in almonds and j Young people would peel an return to oven; bake 10 to 15 apple and throw the peeling over minutes longer. Makes 6 to 81 his shoulder, and from its shape. Come to Hoffman's and ask for a BUMPER STICKER. Place if on the bumper of your car. Representatives will pick A SAFE DRIVER THROUGHOUT OAKLAND COUNTY. H’t that Simple Folks! Your Choice • Tender Carrots pkg. • Green Onions bu. • Green Peppers ea. • Sweet Yams lb. • Red Radishes pkg. Sweet Delicious TOKAY GRAPES HOME FREEZER SPECIAL “/uet Say Charge I%F' No Deposit or Carrying Chargas -ONI WEEK ONLY- m FRONT FULL BEXT SIDES m HIND 4trs. m Cuf-Wrapped and DELIVERED FREE! servings. / I told the initial of a ^atheart. Protect Our School Kids DANK FtU IN REAR Hurry to Hoffman’s and get your Sticker Posted First. HOFFMAN’S PONTIAC FREEZER FOODS, Inc. •nmii CMvisaON •< oahlah* uachinc No Purchata Noeossary No Obligation QUALITY MEATS AND PRODUCE AT WHOUSALf PRICES 526 N. PERRY ST. wi tmi aiottr i WI RiSUVI THI RIGttT TO LIPflT QUANTITIES FI 2-1100 ! .1 : THE PONTIAC PRESS,, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1964 Story of Enriched Bread Good From Health Viewpoint Bread from tens of thousands i snacks. arC'85 per cent of these of bakers’ ovens is used by 98 families. per cent of the nation’s fannilies j Though enriched bread is the each week. Selecting enriched | preferred bread, recent surveys bread as the bread for break- have shown that this food, like fast, luncl\ and dinner, and for I so many of our country’s 'bless- ings, is taken for granted. Too few consumers know why enriched bread is the nation’s year-round “Best Buy” even though they buy a goldm crusted, attractively wrapped loaf practically every day. Here in que^on-and-answer form is the enrichment story. What is enriched bread? It is white bread to which has been added specified amounts of U^ee B vitamins — thiamiqe, niacine, riboflavin — and iron. Enrichment makes it possible for Americans to have the bread they like best of all, white bread, and have, as well, three of the more hard-to-come-by B vitamins and the elusive mineraf, iron. How does enriched bread compare nutritionally with # ' whole wheat? Leading nutritionists accept enriched bread as being on a par nutritionally with whole wheat bread in our food culture. In fact, recent research on the nutritional value of breads of the world, has shown that our enriched bread ranks next only to thet «f Finland’s, a semi-{ white bread made with-12 perl cent milk. | Is enriched bread higher in calories than on-enriched bread? Emphatically not. Enriching bread in no way changes its cal-1 orie count. The added vitamins and iron are free of calories. Are the three B-vitamins — . thiamine, niacin and riboflavin ' — the only vitamins in enriched Education: “Since enrichment j trition clinics.” 1 health as the compulsory pas- has become effective, vitamin B | "In fact, some medical scien- teurization of milk and the cor- • deficiencies have virtually dis- tists consider Ihe enrichment of ,rection 'of unsafe water sup-appeared am^g patients in nu- foods as important to the public i plies.” SAFFLOWER MARGARINE FO# WHITE SAUCE Everyone has at some time in life known a really superb cook. If you know more than one, you * ' deed fortunate; and it just n _ that are one of these people yourself; Cooks perform their magic with the simplest of ingredients and ‘ plenty of imag- Mix Asparagus Into Meatballs ELECTION COOKIES - Hop on the bandwagon with Election Cookies made with rolled '* oats—your party will be the winning ticket. To sidetrack “hamburgers , again?” complaints from the family that nevertheless loves hamburgers, try this recipe. Asparagus Meatballs Vk cups cooked asparagus cuts and tips 1 small onion ' 2 teaspoons butter 1 egg, beaten 1 tablespoon milk Salt Crisp Oatmeal Cooky Joins Election Party Voters, attention! Hop on thei bandwagon and use your right, to vote. Get all your friends out ’ to vote for the candidate of their choice. Have a pre-election party to present candidates and round up workers. To promote i your party, serve Election Cookies — gay elephants and donkeys competing for victory in' November. Election Cookies will be a 'real hit at your Bandwagon Party. Made with rolled oats and spiced up with cinnamon, and allspice, they are crunchy I delicious! You can buy the { elephant and donkey cooky cut-1 ^ters in the store or make your own patterns out of cardbo^d. | special to cookies . , . flavor and cmnchinets are particularly enhanced. These cookies are so good; they are sure to appear on the ballot again as Christmas trees or bells or Santa Clauses. Once elected at a prize-winning cooky. Election Cookies will fnlfUl all promises of flavor and goodness. Election Cookies ening, eggs and vanilla; beat I about 2 minutes. Stir in bats. | i Dough will be very stiff. Chill! ^ dough. Roll out on lightly floured board or canvas to %-lnch I thickness. Cut urith floured I elephant and donkey cutters. ‘ Bake on ungreas^ cooky ; sheets in preheated moderate i oven (350 degrees) 8 to 10 minutes. Cool. Peppej; Pinch ground cloves 1 Zwieback (crushed fine) 1 lb. chopped beef Chop onion and brown in butter. Empty into bowl and add all ingredients except beef. Mix well and add beef, working into a smooth mixture. Make meatballs size you prefer and fry in lightly greased pan over medium heat until done. Serve hot with baked beans. Serves 4. I Frost with chocolate confec- ; tionerS’ sugar frosting. Outline: Keep that cheddar cheese in each cooky with white butter | the refrigerator; freezer-storage I cream frosting. ^ is likely to make it crunibly- i No. Enriched bread also gon-i tains substantial quantities of several other members of the I B-vitemin family, particularly, ! pantothenic acid, choline and j folic acid. Who was responsible for en-I riching bread? } The medical profession, pub-' lie health officials, and the Food ; and Nutrition Board of the National Research Council. These authorities knew, in the late 193d’s, that the public- needed , more B vitamins and iron. (And, the need is greater today for people are eating less pork, a good source of thiamine, than they were in the 1930’s.) Bread was selected as the means of getting these nutrients into diets because bread is the most universally eaten food. It is economical, and the additional nutrients were made available without the extremely difficult and slow educational process of changing food habits. EnricHMent formally started in 1941 — 23 years ago — although some bakers had been adding vitamins and minerals to breads since 1921. How valuable has enrichment been for the health of Americans' (nation. Ititchen magician I ItiiOw says she starts off with a white sauce and continues from there. A good basic white sauce car go on to be cream soup or a ba.se for the casserole. It flibn be gravy oi the difference between plain green beans .and Green Beans Parisienne. Let’s start with the white ....the choice of ingredients. use Shedd's Safflower Margarine a spread and use it for baking. Make the white sauce with Shedd's Safflower Margarine, too! Melt Va cup Shedd's Safflower Margarine in saucepan ov low heat Blend in Va cup flour Gradually add 2 cups milk Always use low heat or make the sauce in a double boiler to keep the delicate flavor. Use a large spoon for blending the flour and keep stirring as you add the milk. When thickened, keep the sauce hot over boiling water. Ad( . .. as needed, of course. 2 cups cooked, diced potatoes, I tbsp. chopped chives and a little more milk makes potato soup. Slice up some sharp ’t the d pepper efiTERFora better tasting, too \ From a puMcaiionW the IT.S. Department of Agriculture, Bread . . . Facts for Consumer sauce and pour over cooked macaroni for a casserole. For gravy, simply add the basic sauce to the pan drippings after the roast has been removed. Put a little curry powder in the sauce and serve on left-over lamb curry. Those beans? The 4 white sauce, plus Vi cup chopped onion and a small can of drained mushrooms with cooked green beans. The white sauce must be smooth which means stirring constantly and you must start with the best ingredients, which simply means Shedd’s Safflower Margarine. ■ Now you con get even the fussiest menrbers of your family to eat all those vitamin packed vegetables. Use Shedd's Safflower Margarine to add fine flavor to everything you cook and bake. And Shedd's Safflower Margarine is GUARANTEED lower in saturated fats than any margarine available in grocery stores. Another Fine Product ot American Can Comoan/ , 2 cups sifted all-purpose Hour 1 teaspoon baking powder 4 teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon cinnamon Vz teaspoon allspice 44 cup firmly-packed brown sugar Vt cup shortening, soft Frost the cookies with chocolate frosting, then decorate them with white butter cream frosting. Just use a pastry tube or a cone of waxed paper; it’s fun. Rolled oats add something 1 teaspoon vanilla a 1 cup rolled oats (quicK or old fashioned, uncooked) Sift . together flour, baking powder, salt, cinnamon and allspice. Add brown sugar, short- AMtfrri What tastes better than any fruit you ever tasted? The blend of t^ fruits in eaclj jar of MOTT'S Fruit Treats. A^ORA is a new, two-ply tissue. Two colors—in a single roll—the outside is lavender and the inside is white. ffuK Treats are delicious so many ways—as a dessert, a snack, a dessert topping or side dish. Five varieties to choose from: ChufMqr apples and strawberries—or raspberries, or apricots, or pineapple, or cherries. Try them alll And serve Mott's Fruit Treats •ome way every day. yisn’t that nice? And it’s packaged so thoughtfully—one roll is ready, the other neatly wrapped to stay fr«h till you need it. Buy some, wonder how we ever made it so soft. AURDRA • two layers of softness... and one is purest white. C—14, Markets ‘■5 - *! s^ttess arid Finance Heme' Building Dedines See Rolling Recession MARKETS The following are top prices covering sales of locally gr iwn produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lota., Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Tuesday. Produce Progress Upward Difficult Market Scores Narrow Gains Eye Advance of School Aid NEW YORK (API The stock market scored a narrow gain in moderately active trading early this afternoon. Fractional gains were the rule for most key stocks but many „: were unchanged and there was so I a scattering bf fractional losers. Ape V u.jpv. bo. Apples, Snow, bu ^lei, Clper. tflol. BMC, bu. MS; Gains by the averages pushed-3;“! them further into record high JI ground. Follo.wing yesterday’s rally, upward progress was be-*3 501 coming more^nifficult. j:xj Spreading impact of the 27-? “ day-old strike against General > »« 'Motors was reported in a vari-ris ety of industries as well as the • 2;JJ I railroads. News that the United Auto Workers GM council Had scheduled a meeting Friday to decide on whether to recommend ratification of a contract came as reassurance. TRENDING HIGHER A slightly higher trend prevailed among autos, steels, electrical equipments, airlines, non-ferrops metals, rails and drugs. The Associated Press average of 60 stgcks at noon was up .7 at 332.2 with industrials up .8 rails up .6 and utilities up ,2. ^ Both averages were moving above the historic closing highs set yesterday. Fractional gains by Ford and By SAM DAWSON AP Easiness News Analyst NEW YORK-Are the rolling recessions the 19S0s still a strong possibility for a come-b a c k in the 1960s? Some see in to Reduce Borrowing the current downturn in LANSING (AP)-Michigan’s s°Jj.tioS^ Tn'd , ew $57-million surplus may f Prices rose in-active trading^ allow the state to save local gQntj„ue for on the American Sfock Ex- school districts more than $1 “ m n n ♦ h = ' million in interest charges by S,™d an ex Chrysler helped give the auto group a higher trfend. GM was unchanged, Studebaker a shade | higher and American Motors easy. ' 1 AMERICAN EXCHANGE Would Use ’Surplus change. New Process gained 3, Insur- advancing state aid before they ance Co. of North America and have to borrow much money. ainple of just DAWSON Paddington “A” more than a State officials are studying such a rolling recession-*-al- point. Old Town slipped more I whether they can advance the than 2, APL Corp. more than a state aid without crippling the though admittedly minor com- pared with its predecessors, population explosion should start another boom in home building, | probably in the final years of this decade. The demand for new mortgages has eased. This has freed investment funds for other j fields where money and credit demand is rising. HOLD DOWN PRESSURE This tends to hold down any pressure for higher interest rates on long-term loans for j business spending on new plants and equipment, and for bank loans for expanded business activities in a growing economy. The figures on current home building are far from alarming. The Census Bureau says that in September the seasonally ad- point, Salem-Brosius a fraction Corporate bonds were irregularly higher. U.S. Government bonds were stea^iy in moderately active dealings. general fund. j This was the term used to describe the doldrums in some industries while others con- Cllery, PMcal, di. Celery, Pescel, crt. Celery, Rool,^^J. i The New- York Stock Exchange Superintendent of Public In- . struction Lynn Bartlett sug-. . . ^ ... Ig»led tte ad,.n« Payments , Tuesday at the State Adminis- stalwarts f trative Board meeting. I if there is money resting in the 33'? 33 33'y + '2 i vent them from having to bor-1 me T?!" wii i row so much” during the dif- . 27 d7H 47H 47'!? -I- '? ficult July l-Jou. 1 pcriod. DO SOMETHING Controller Glenn Allen said “I am certain we can do something.” A committee is studying whether the state could pay the districts a sizable advance and still be able to meet its other commitments. It will report at the next administrative board meeting, Nov. 5. The result was to keep the over-, all state of business from the When the latter stalwarts faltered in turn, the previously de- He said most districts have to I borrow because, while their fis-, 1^““^ j cal year starts July 1, they us-i ually don’t receive much in , . , revenues from local property alarming stage. LMt ch? DEPRESSED ENOUGH 4*4 a month after tax bills are sent Those directly affected were '33 -!■'/» depressed enough. But their « +'-■ NORMAL PAYMENTS plight wasn’t made worse by K State aid payments normally general downturn that would are made every two months, *’®''e fed on itself, with each district receiving one-1 * * sixth of its year’s allotment ! Housing now is one of the few Each one-sixth payment by the sectors of the economy that Isn’t state totals about $59 million. | still risinlg:, or at least holding Bartlett suggested giving dis-; its own. Industrial output, busi-tricts .,the bulk of their year’s ness expansion plans, retail allotment during the iuly 1- sales, all point toward new Jan. 1 period to prevent them highs, from having to borrow as much APARTMENTS WEAKEST —and pay as much in interest charges. Weakest today is apartment building which was booming in o *V -I- " u" J - Permits lor single family „ Q 0 figures. “ “1^ “I? + ^ districts have received istate ; H ^mis«on to torrow more than {„r the young mar- million. Total borrowings j,. crop of youngsters about sm 5i’>i ii'-s - ! were ^.8 million. , their marriageable years 7, .,','4 .4'. ,4w + vj ^ Bartlett said under his pro- _ -W|posal. districts would "ot ge ^ confident cry . any more m the long run. But jhe housing industry. mnnpv rp«tin0 in thp . ” . . The needs of this oncoming Manager Quits Oxford Post To Leave the Village for Private Industry Allen pointed out that of the Oxford Village Manager Mi-t I 50*4 51 * $57-million surplus, a relatively chael M. Kilgore has turned in ’ M m2 » -1^ »• small part is in money owed his resignation after more than I’— ^ ^ the state and in inventory. In 20-months in the position. 'm'‘ 'VvX ' - i? addition, he ibid, money com- ★ ♦ ★ " , - T T SS ^ In a l®tt®>- to Village President r 5 g, s g? 7 s zz *■ Uni". Kite- that he will terminate his tenure as manager effective Nov. 27, and move to a position in pri- justed annual rate of construction starts on private dwellings of all types was 1,484,000 units. But just the year before the rate was 1,747,000 units. I Many builders hold that the decline this year has probably leveled off now. Conditions may vary shaiply between regions of the nation. Some are reporting a surplus of I vacancies just now, especially in recently built apartment houses. Other regions are growing fast, and still can fill new housing units. ^ j The over-all economy is much too strong for the slowdown in lany one sector to have more I than a rolling effect. !!-#•'% H # 'w %'t r SuctessfuNnvesting i fs H i H ¥> i * H *» ■* By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “I am a widowed school teacher with come. I have $9,000 in a savings account, hoping to educate my 13-year-old daughter. A friend suggested patting some of this money into stocks. Do you think it wise for me to do this and if so,” what stocks?” R.C. A) I have the deepest sympathy for anyone in your position. Your njpney in the savings account is secure as to principal, but it is also fixed in the sense that it cannot grow except through the addition of compound interest. Stocks fluctuate in price, sometimes widely,- but over a long period of years their general trend has been upward. If you -can take a long-term view and refuse to get panicky during periods of decline, I think you would do well to invest $5,000 in stocks which, over a period of years, might well increase your capital. 1 suggest Texaco. Winn-Dixie Stores and Pacific Gas & Electric. 'been guaranteed extension by the Government after maturity. When you have quit work, your income bracket will be much lower than it is now. By deferring tax payments on your E bonds, you can probably redeem some bonds each year on a low or possibly tax-free basis. Many of our older citizens buy E bonds to mature after retirement. They expect to tedeem these in their years of lowest Income plus double exemption from Federal income taxes — while enjoying stability and V* I per cent accruals to maturity. Mr. Spear cannot answer all I mgll personally but will answer all questions possible in his column. (Copyright 1964) 70 Toronto Q) “Withfai 5 months, my mutual fund ten-year plan will be paid in full. I am in the habit of saving $40 every month and will continue to do so. Would you advise series E bonds or another mutual fund? I am saving money for my retirement in 11 years.” /bosons to , Visit in City s. A. A) I believe that you would be well-advised to put your $40 a month into series E bonds as a stable reserve. These have Seventy members of Kilwinning Lodge 565 of Toronto, Ont., will arrive in Pontiac Saturday to continue a visitation series which began 12 years ago. The visitors ^11 be guests of Pontiac Lodge 21, F4AM. Included in the group will be a dozen or more bagpipers and durmmers in their colorful Scottish kilts. even sales tax collections vary from month to month. He estimated school districts pay $2 million to $3 million a year in Interest. Gallery-Gift Shop Is Opened in Area vate industry. Kilgore this morning declined to give further details. “It’s just a move that I’ve contemplated for some time,” he said. In his letter to Unger, he said that ‘‘both my wife and I feel that we will be happier pursuing _ -. A new gallery and gift sh^, ^ +) Rooks, has opened at 2159 Or-1 future in private industry. + ^ chard Lake, West Bloomfield Grain Futures Hold at Steady to Firm j Highlight of the two day ilay I will be a dinner Saturday evening at the new Birmingham Masonic Temple. CHICAGO (AP) - The grain futures market was steady to firm early today in quiet dealings. About an hour after the opening soybeans were Vs to H cents a bushel higher, November $2.72V^; wheat unchanged to % higher, December new grade $1.51^4; com Vi higher to % lower, December $1.21%;' oats unchanged to % higher, December 68 cents arid rye % to 1 cent higher, December $1.27%. Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. will officially welcome the Canadians and present them with the key to the city. The evenings activities will end with a reception for the guests at the Iraq Grotto Hall, 1536 N. Telegraph, according to Harold E. Curtis, 44 Delaware, general chairman of the visits-tidh. News in Brief _ 4 Township. . „„ , ^5? r j The realization of a long-time | Kilgor®, M, formCT assi^nt + ^ ambition of Arthur Rooks Jr.,'manager of Santa Cruz, Calif., ^ ‘ i owner, the gallery will feature 1 was hired In February 1963, sue- -'4 ____t _ . „ 1 ® ' noAHincf Poluirt W .Qmflltov '• fTM = 2 I works’by local arUsts in fields ®®«llng Robert W. Smalley. X— ................... , of paintings, lithographs, block j prints, cloisonnes, and even ^ hooked rugs. j American Stocks The idea of adding gifts to the of divi- 8®II®ry was to relieve the eco-•nnuoi I nomic strain which has closed 'si^»7*^M-j many galleries. Rooks is planning a series of^ «5S) nm one- and two-man shows in Ihe^ a .15 1 ^ NEW YORK (AP) - Pollowlnfl It list of Mloclod stock tronooctlont on th Amoricwi Stock ExchanRo with noo plus »t^oivwS4i. w IS also being a(Wed, .^au4 mii« , f-Futrt in stock Jurlng 1 --------;--------;--- ' |r»i Trpc BrH Pot ,32r Treasury Position 434 ' «k 4W V iivi* V4 „ I Creole P 2.40e M 14 l«4< ' oBt Oel. 14, IMI Fly Tiger 4 2 11-14 2W 2%>1-14 . S,M,234,337.01 ■ When Oit- 3Ulf,Z3l,2H.1S GoldfleU Gt B 37,M4,431,t77.n GuH ■I i/eoi— Hyco 315m4»2,m74 3f7.118,443,444.21 |i^ I 14H 144A~ 14 13 3 22k 3 14,443,234,207.23 14,313.804,024.71 Krhtter .lOb )-lncKidet l340,077y«47S4 doM not Livings Oil .74 ict 40 stetutory llirttt. Meckey Air McCrorv wt A4ead John 41 Mich Sugar ' 41W 511* 41W+ 4* 114 l<4 1144 Vh 17*- ,?** i?**? !? 444 4H 4V- .. . 14IJ M4.0 331.S 10 Higher grade rai ISfl m m iS-i io' SSTitliL.'*' 341.1 121.1 134.1 142.7110 Industflals 224.1440.74 RIC Ordup 3.2St 154.74+O.r -------------- 314.4240A. _____ .. „.. i SlgnalOII A 1 12.47-0.01 I Sperry R wt Mutual Fund to Be Aired An opportunity to leam firsthand of the workings of the $29-billion mutual fund industry-will be offered area residents on Oct.' 28. it was announced today by John K. Martin, manager of the Birmingham office of doodbody & Co., national firm of securities brokers. Police are investigating t h e theft of an oil heater, three socket-wrench sets and other tools valued at $298 from 484 S. Saginaw. * Police are investlgatiug the theft of $145 in goods from Auto Discount, 6|0 Mt. Clemens Rummage Sale: October 22, 9-12. St. Andrew’s Church, Hatchery Road, —adv. Rummage Sale: Lutheran Church of the Redeemer, 1800 W. Map'le, Birmingham, ’Thurs., Oct. 22, 8-5; Fri., Oct. 23. 9-2 . pm. Adv. A mutual fund forum will be sponsored by Gopdbody & Co. The meeting is open to the public and will be held in the Birmingham, Community House at 7:30 p.m. The meeting will be conducted by Patrick Maher of New York, head of Goodbody & Co.’s mutual fund department. Two other speakers from New York, both vice presidents in one of the largest and best-known mutual fund management companies, will discuss the varied uses of mutual funds. Reservations for seats can be made by calling Goodbody & Co. Mom’s Rummage: Thursday, 9 to 12. Indianwood and Baldwin. Adv. Garage Sale Thorsday and Friday, Oct. 22 and 23. 21890 Hampton, Birmingham, Cor. Lasher bet. 13 anef 14 Mile. Furniture-quMity clothing, overcoats, etc. —Adv. Rummage: Thursday, 94 201 Grandview off Hatchery. —A* wttmfy't m mvWMWf opcipras .25 0 11-13 1M Hand painted china, Thor Fri. 5111 Elizabeth Lake Rd. . -Ad' Rummage sale, Kingsbui School, 28 N. Washington, 0 ford, Thursday, Oct. 22, 9 to p.m. Friday, Oct. 23, 9 to ! Saturday, Oct. 24, 9 to noon. -Adi Rummage Sale Holy Nan School, 880 Harmon, Birmini ham, Fri., Oct. 23, 9-5. -^Arfi ;v " T'S THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 21, 1964 C—15 Few Accept Age, Health Explanation Indicate Domestic Failure, China Policy Toppled K (Editor's Note—This is the last of three ditches by UPl's chief diplomatic correspondent in Europe, summing up and assessing-the 11 Khrushchev years pi the Kremlin.) By K. G. THALER LONDON (UPI) - On aU the evidence, it was the failure of his domestic economic policies and his handling of the dispute with Red China that were the main immediate causes of Nikita Khrushchev’s downfall. Until it is proved otherwise, not many are willing to accept the explanation of old age and health deterioration. Farther in the background, the 1962 Cuba crisis when Khrushchev was forced to give way to American determination, probably was a factor. Many believe it was the turning point for the 70-year-old man now so suddenly dump^ from world leadership. Certainly, it was the act that publicized China’s hatred of his ways. ★ * ♦ “Cowardice" and “sellout” were two of the milder epithets the Chinese flung at Khrushchev over the Cuba settlement. MOST SERIOUS The Sino-Soviet dispute is without question the most serious proUem facing the Communist world. It has the Communists divided in two camps, with no repair in sight. It has shaken Russia’s natural allies, emboldened such reluctant ones as Albania, and sent millions of Communists in Asia, Africa and elsewhere into Red China’s arms. Ip the aftermath of Khrushchev's “retirement,” the news from Moscow is that his successor will continue his policy toward China and continue to plan for a Moscow meeting of world Communist parties in December to deal with the problems of the dispute. ★ ★ ★ Most experts are agreed that the quarrel with Khrushchev among his colleagues was so much against his aim of peaceful coexistence with the West which the Chinese reject as un-Marxist, or his insistence that Russia, not China, must lead the Red World. NO ROOM It was, rather, with his methods. Khrushchev in his many bombastic exchanges with Pekuffe, his withdrawal of defense or other help, left no room for maneuver or compromise. His “do it my way—or else” approach to Peking apparently was considered both dangerous and self-defeating. There are reasons for the new men in the Kremlin to worry. Under Khrushchev, Soviet Russia lost its strongest ally, a nation of 700 million people with enormous influence over the Asian continent. * GRIP LOOSENED And under Khrushchev, the Kremlin’s grip on the Eur(^?ean satellites was considerably loosened, a threat ili itself not only to Soviet power but to the Russian economy and its prestige. Khrushdiev’s liberalization pro^ gram is blamed for having brought this about. ’Trouble with the satellites began early in the Khrushchev era. In October 19S6, Hungarians revolted against their Communist leaders and might, except for the crushing intervention of Soviet tanks, have succeeded in liberating themselves. Poland rebelled against the tight restrictions, and Khrushchev was forced to give the Poles a freer hand in their own destinies. * ★ ★ Romania, one of the key eastern European satellites, is openly resisting Russian dominatim today and has chosen neutrality in the Sino-Soviet feud. ALBANIA WITH CHINA Albania has gone solidly into-the Chinese camp. All east Europe is in some degree of agitation against taking Moscow’s orders, economically or otherwise. Ten years ago they would not have dared. Although the Sino-Soviet difference is polemic and, publicly, over dogma, it is at base a pure power struggle. Red China wants world power status and at least coequal lea{j-ership of the Communist world, if not outright leadership. The Russians have shown signs of fearing too strong an “ally’ which might turn on her some day. ♦ ★ ★ In 1957, at a time when to all appearances the Soviet Union and {^ina were the warmest of friends and collaborators, Khrushchev promised the Chinese to share with them some of Russia’s nuclear knowhow, and a sample atom bomb. SECOND THOUGHTS A year later, he had second thou^ts and broke the pact. Experts now think that marked the begiiming of the end (tf Sino-Soviet friendship under Khrushchev. Since then, the word battle has waged fiercer and fiercer and the Communist world has been busily choosing up sides. Peking called outrightly for Khrushchev’s removal. When the December Communist con-, ference was announced by Khrushchev a C h i n e s e party statement said, “The day you open the conference, you (Khrushchev) walk into your grave.” ★ ★ ★ Thus ends the Khrushchev -Junior Editors Quix on- ART MANY PEOPLe I HAVE. ENJOYED RAMOUS PAINTINOS UKE THESE I4i''A(3|RL With ■ ^ A BPtOO/W" by RsmVrandt "TOILERS •fib* SCA* tv Albert PinVtfiam %d«r ...iRRY NI3HT" QUESTION: What makes a painting famous? ★ ★ ★ ANSWER: We consulted a well known artist about this. "There are many different famous painters who have completely different styles,” he said, “but you will find that most famous paintings are so because they touch the emotions and feelings of a great many different people strongly in some way. “In Rembrandt’s great portraite, we feel the humanity of the sitters, seem to share their Joys, and sorrows. But many other paintings are famous simply because diey are so beantifnl. Van Gogh’s pictures excite us -with their swiri-ing rhythms ^ they make us feel gay, we almost want to dance to them. “Ryder’s pictures have a fascinating pattern. Paintings may be famous for the sense of mystery, sudi as the baffling smile of -DaVinci’s Mona Lisa. The beauty of color and light nukes Claude Monet’s pictures famous. “Many modem paintings have become famous because they arc so strange — they make us wonder and use our imaginations to try to find out what it is they are saying. Summing it up: “I think paintings become famous because of their power to enrich our lives, to see things of great interest and beauty we would not have seen without them, and so jstimulate our imagination.” ★ it it FOR YOU TO DO: You will find many books about art in your public library, with beautiful reproductions of pictures. Find one with some Rembrandt paintings and look at them to ^ see if you can detect the sense sympathy with people which have made his pictures so famous. with the Soviet Union at odds with the biggest and second most powerful Communist nation in the world, with major d 0 m e s ti q. problems including how to feed its oWn people with Its own agriculture, unsolved, and with its satellites in disarray. leaping forward It also ends with the Soviet Union leaping forward into space, a freer and more satisfied nation under conununism than ever before, a nation trying through peaceful competition to match the capitalist giants. The neutral observer can see an imposing array of pluses for Khrushchev and his Kremlin years. If the Soviets themselves think he did anything good, they have not said so. The only words of assessment of the Khrushchev era have come obliquely from Pravda, the official Soviet government newspaper, the published voice of the Kremlin. Last Saturday, 48 hours after It was announced Khrushchev as out, Pravda had this to say: “The construction of conunu-_ nism is a live, creative undertaking and it d(Jes not tolerate armchair methods, personal decisions and disregard for the practical experience of th:fe “The Leninist party is an enemy of subjecUvism and drifting in Communist construction, hare-brained scheming, immature conclusions anc( hasty decisions and actions divorced from reality. “Bragging and phrase-mongering, commandism and unwillingness to take into account the achievements of sciencwand practical experience are alien to it.” Hare-brain^ ... immature .. . scheming .. . bragging. So much, after 11 years, for comrade Nikita Sergeyeyitch. Official in County JReelecfed Planner R. J. Alexander, director of the Oakland County Department of Public Works, has been reelected to his third one-year term as chairman of the Detroit Metropolitan A[ea Regional Planning Commission. AAA Alexander was chosen by the 16-member executive committee, which is elected at-large by the 74rmember commission. Also on the executive committee is Frank F. Webber of Addison Township, chairman pro tern of. the Oakland County Board of Supervisors. For Administrative Facilities County Unit Gets Building Plan Report A preliminary repgrt on a 20-year budding program for Oakland County admlnTstration facilities was presented to the buildings and grounds committee yesterday by the engineering ^Vision of the board of auditors. Compiled in cooperation with the county planning conuqission, it was tabled by the con^ttee for further study. Quite general in nature, the 16-page report listed the purpose of a building program as “a planning procedure involving careful definition, analysis and projection of present and future needs in the development of the total county physical plant, which includes buildings, grounds, roads and utilities.” Although the county hardly has ceased expansion of its administrative and service facilities since 1960, the building program of recent years has fallen behind in the race with Oakland’s expanding population. AAA According to the report, the total county population increased some 75 per cent from 1950 to 1960, with an Urban increase of 112.3 per cent. EMPLOYES INCREASE During a similar period, from 1952 to 1962, the report says, the number of countv employes was increased by 103.2 per cent, with the result that 976 additional employes needed work space within county buildings. The county’s multi-million-dollar court tower and west administrative wing, completed only last yea^are already “packed to the rafters” with administrative people and equipment nec^sary to operate a metropolitan county government. Two additional wings, included in the original plans for the ^urt tower, undoubtedly will be included. In the long-, range county building program now being considered. Addition of these facilities will permit central location of several governmental functions which now are widely scattered. ON LAFAYETTE These include the cooperative extension service, planning commission, department of v e t-erans’ affairs and civil defense office, now located at 1 Lafayette, and the drain commission and department of public works offices, now located at 550 S. Telegraph. Also high on the building priority list will be additional medical care facilities, which have been taeeded for several years, the second phase of Children’s Village, the f i r s t half of which now is under construction. As oytlin^ in yesterday’s report, the long - range building program will be developed in three phases. Each will be supervised by the planning commission, engineering and the board of auditors. ** The planning commission will handle phase No. 1, which will include gathering, compiling andsevaluating the data necessary to arrive at the anticipated building needs. PHASE NO. 2 Phase Kfo‘. 2 will make use of the county’s engineers in developing detailed plans for buildings, land use, utility systems, road networks, parking facilities and landscaping. The board of auditors will handle Phase No. 3, development of a financial program which will support the entire plan. The long - range proposal comes as no sun^rise to county officials, who have anticipated it for several years. But the impending need for it has arisen sooner than anyone could have suspected 10 years 70 Choices Left if Sartre Rejects the Nobel Prize STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP)-The Swedish Academy of Letters has more than 70 nominees to choose from if it abides’by Jean-Paul Sartre’s reported advance rejgption of the 1964 Nobel Prize mr Literature. Foremost among the other reported candidates are the Irish-French “Playwright of the Ab- County Credit Union Gets New Site OK Relocation of the Oakland County Employes Credit Union office was given the green .light yesterday by the buildings and grounds committee of the Board of Supervisors. A A A * Presently located on the first floor of the West Administrative Wing at the . County Service Center, the credit uniop has outgrown its allocated space. Operated as a private enterprise, it serves some 2,000 county employes. The management has re-^ quested permission to lease a building site somewhere in the Service Center area, where the credit union will construct suitable office facilities at its own expense. AAA Board of Auditors Engineer Joseph Joachim recommended two possible sites, one near the Oakland County Market and the other near the Crippled (Children’s Society building on the west side of Telegraph. AAA After some discussion of the proposal, the committee recom- able to the credit union, pending a review of final con--struction plans. OTHER ACTION In other action the 6uildin^s and grounds committAe concurred in the recent recommendation of the ways and means committee that the Oakland County. Tuberculosis Sanatorium be sold. A resolution was passed authorizing the Board of Auditors to hire two independent real estate appraisers to set a price on the hospital, nurses’ home and po^er plant and the 80^ acres on which the facilities are located. The two appraisals, which are required by the county bylaws, are expected to require about 30 days for completion. surd” Samuel Beckett. 58, and mended that land be made avail- British - American poet W. H. ——---------------------------- Auden, 57. The 1964 winner will be announced tomorrow. • Sartre, 59-year-old French author - philosopher, is generally considered the leading c a n d i-date. But he is said to refuse all literary awards on principle and to have written to the Swedish Nobel authorities asking that his ?Iame not be considered for the $53,123 prize. « , .. Conscience Won Out ^ DENVER, Colo. (AP)-Mayor Tom Currigan, a staunch Democrat, feels he has withstood a test of political statesmanship. When a group of Cub Scouth visited the mayor’s office yesterday a 9-year-old asked: “Is it true that if Sen. Gold-water is elected, we’ll have to get up at 6 in the morning to go to school, and have to go to school on Saturdays?” Currigan paused a minute. Then he said no. Deaths in Pontiac, Neighboring Areas SANAE T. BARKER with her husband, died Monday Word has been received of the death of Sanae T. Barker, infant daughter of former Pontiac residents Lt. Col. and Mrs. James R. Barker of Waimanalo, Hawaii. Service and burial were in Waimanalo. The baby died six hours after birth Monday. Surviving besides the parents are grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Landry of Pontiac and Mr. and Mrs. Burrell Lotz of Union Lake and great-grandmothers, Mrs. Mary McMillin and Mrs. Louise Rochon, both of Pontiac. VERNE L. HASKIN Service for Verne L. Haskln, retired teacher of manual arts at Keego Harbor Schools, will be at 1:30 p.m. Friday at Don-elson-Johns Funeral Home with burial in White CTiapel Memorial Cemetery, ’Troy. Mr. Haskin, 72, of 4741 Sher-well, Waterford 'Township, died this moriiing after an eight-year illness. A member of the Union Lake ^.j^timist (Hub, Mr. Haskin bad ^also taught in the rehabilitation department at the Oakland County Tuberculosis Sanatorium. Surviving are his wife, Kath-rine; four daughters, Mrs. Barbara Maynard of Union Lake, Mrs. Loma,Heath of Clarkston, Mrs. Patricia C&wdry and Mrs. Beverly Fair, both of Pontiac. Also surviving are two sons, Robert of Roseville and vniliam of Pontiac; 18 granddiildren; a grrat-gnindchild; and . a sister. The family suggests any memorials be made to the Michigan Heart Fund. Ceremony Is Slated in Waterford A comerstonrlaying ceremony at the site of the Waterford Township water department administration building and garage is slated for 10 a m. tomorrow. AAA The new buildings at Tubbs and Crescent liJce Roads are scheduled for completion Dec. 18. Cost of the project, including^ the site, buildings and equipment, is $330,000. Township Supervisor James E. Seeterlin will preside at the brief ceremony. Clertt Ebner Fangboner, Treasurer Mrs. Dorothy Olson and Kenneth Sqniers, superintendent of the township’s water department, will he present Also in attendance will be officials of the Oakland County Department of Public Works and Johnson and Anderson, Inc. AAA The DPW is a partner with the town^ip in the township- ___ wide water system. Johnson and MRS. CHARLES LEWIS .......... _ ^ Anderson, the township’s con- Service for former Pontiac Motor do., Detroit Mr, Itolota marider orthe”^ite mlting engineeirs, designed the resident Mrs. Charles (Gertrude died Monday following a heart Veterans of Foreign Wdrs; and system. E.) Lewis, 66, of Atlanta will, attack. a past commander of the Olden- Th e administration building be at 2 p.m. Friday in the D. | The Rosary will be recited at burg American Legion P<^ No. will contain 7,100 square feet E. Pursley Funeral Home with 19 p.m today at the funeral home. 216, Milford. after a 10-day illness. Surviving are her husband; two sons, Virgil and Lloyd, both of Pontiac: and three daughters, Mrs. Maxine Speer of Pontiac, Mrs. Anna Baker of Rochester and Mrs. Dorothy Evans in California. ' Also surviving are a brother and three sisters. OWEN B. MIDDLEBROOK Service for Owen B. Middle-brook, 86, of 241 Starr will be at 3 p.m. Friday in the Donel-son-Johns Funeral Home with burial in Roseland Park Cemetery. Mr. Middlebrook, a retired pattern-maker at Ford Motor Co., died this morning after a five-week illness. Surviving are a son, Owen B. Jr. of Farmington; a daughter, Mrs. Charles G. Uligian, with whom he made his home; eight grandchildren; and a greatgrandchild. LEO R. (JACK) HOPKINS " ROSE TOWNSHIP - Service for Leo R. (Jack) Hopkins, 75, of 6779 Big Trail will be 11 a.m. tomorrow (St Dryer Funeral Home, Holly. Burial will follow in Lakqside Cemetery, Holly. A retired engineer at Grinnell Brothers Piano Co., Holly, Mr. Hopkins died Monday following a heart attack. Surviving are his wife, Laura; a stepdaughter, Mrs. Lila Fraker of Sherwood; a brother; a sister; and a grandchild. ALEXHOLOTA LAPEER — Service for Alex Holote, 69, of 648 DeMiOe wUl be 1 p.m. tomorrow at Muir Brothers Funeral Home. Burial will follow in Stiles Cemetery. Peggy Asks GQP Group: Vote for Barry HUNTINGTON, N.Y. (AP) -“Now I want you to do something for me on Nov. 3,”, Peggy Goldwater told 2,000 Republican' women Tuesday. “Vote for my husband. His name is Barry.” AAA Campaigning on Long Island in behalf of her husband, the Republican presidential nominee, Mrs. Goldwater appeared With her daughter, Mrs. Richard A. Holt, at a luncheon of the Republiacn Women of Hunting-ton Township. AAA It took Mrs. Goldwater the better part of an hour to greet the luncheon guests on a reception line. After lunch she said: “I don’t mind how long I stand or how many hands I shake, I just want you to know how glad I am that you came.” AAA One of the woman guests arrived carrying a large placard, reading: “Welcome Peggy, bring us Barry. In our heart We know he’s right.” Mrs. Freda Sawchuk of Lapeer; and Mrs. Anna Kinnerv of Allen' Goldwater and her parly paid a quick visit to Oyster Bay, Long Island, and the Sagamore Hills home of the late President Bar's Patron 'Complains' After Drinks SANTA FE, N.M. (AP» -Howard Babcock walked up to the bar at the Four Hills Country Club in Albuquerque and purchased three liqbor drinks, he said.. This, he alleged, occurred Sept. 22. AAA Babcock signed an administrative complaint Tuesday against'the country club,.chwg-ing it with selling liquor to a non-member, which Is forbld4en by state law. Babcock is state liquor direc- VISIT YOUR NEAREST MICHIGAN BANK OFFICE ■ Maple and Lahsar Road • Square Lake at Telegraph Park; and four grandchildren. ELMER HUNGER INDEPENDENCE TOWN-"SHIP — Service for Elmer-Hun-ger, 93, of 4953 Clintonville will be 3 p.m. tomorrow at the Sawyer Funeral Home, Berkley. Burial will follow in Forest Lawn Cemetery, Detroit. Mr. Hunger, died yesterday after a one-year illness. Surviving are two sons, Harvey of Bellaire and Ernest of Hazel Park, and three grandchildren. MRS. JOHN NICHOL Addison township - Me- morial_^ervice for Mrs. John (Verna B.) Nichol, 76, of 687 Gerst vHll be 2 p.m. Friday at the BossaVdet Funeral Home, Oxford. Mrs. Nichol died unexpectedly Sunday following a heart attack. She was a member of Oxford Church of Christ Scientist, Michigan Audubon Society, the National Audubon Society, and Macomb Nature Association. Surviving are a d a u g h t e r, Mrs. Elizabeth Cook of Santa Barbara, Calif.; a sister;, and four grandchildren. FRANK F. SNYDER HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP-Service for Frank F. Snyder, 68, of 2715 Golfers will be 1 p.m. Friday at RichardsomBird Funeral Ifome, Milford. Burial will follow in Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens, Novi. A retired machinist at the. General Motors Proving Grounds, Mr. Snyder died yesterday after an illness of six; months. He was . a member of the Odd Theodore Roosevelt. 'Then she caught a plane for Denver, Colo. MANUFACTURERS REPRESENTATIVE To rcprcient 30-man dia shop. Prefer one who kai contacts in applipnco and aircraft industries and somo automobile. Send resume to Pontiac Press, Box 10. A retired machinist at Ford pellows. Milford; a past com- and the garage is an 8,800-Bquare-foot structure. Ground was brokoi for the new fadli-ties last May 16.. burial in Ottawa Park Cteme- Surviving are his wife, Gara; tery. Independence Township. Vson, Alexander of Lapeer; a Mrs. Le^, who operated the atqtson, Edward Krizuk of Pine Grove Cabins In Atlanta | Devbom; two stepdaughters,, Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Robert Oxford of Highland Township, pnd a son, Ro^ of Pontiac. Cash and finances are not a matter of concern to some ... to others they are. We have a complete range of services and extended payments are available, if necessary. Thoughtful Service me Outstanding in Pontiac for Service, Facilities 46 Williams Street ‘ FE 2-5841 PLANT FOOD REPRESENTATIVE Notional company exponding soles Force. Bosic producer and marketing orgonisotion Auis opening for key soles representatives. College degree or form background end soles experience required. Position it salaried. Cor, expenses and mony other benefits provided. Plooso send o short resume. All replies confidentiwi. Reply to Box 49, Pontiac Press. C—18 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 21. 1964 Ring the Salad Ring bologna makes an at-^actjve circle for a hot bacon and potato salad. Heat the ring bologna in Yalcr, then cut gashes along the top., about, an Inch apart, for a decorative look. Serve the salad in the mid- dle. "^For Saturday Night Ever ask your friends to a Saturday night ham and bean supper? With this combination, serve squares of corn bread as a cha"nge from the usual steamed brown bread. Fruit, cookies and perhaps candy will make an easy dessert. Lunch Consultant Is Busy , By JANET ODELL Pontiac Presf Food Editor If you’re worried about planning" meals 365 days of the year — that’s 1085 meals, if you never eat out — what would you do if you were responsible for the .serving of 60,000 lunches an- nually? Vera Jehnsen, Oakland County’s new school lunch consultant, has this gigantic job. She succeeds Mgry Slater Kern who retired during the summer. Miss Jehnsen is no newcomer to the Detroit area. A Wayne State University graduate, she worked for the Detroit board of education in their school food service. For about a year and a half, she supervisisd promotional lunches with the “Luncheon Is Served’’ program. Oakland County children are among the fortunate ones. One hundred and 87 kitchens operate,, to keep them^well fed at noon.'" Children whose parents are unable to pay the small price of the lunich are given it free or at a reduced rate. Twice a, year the schooLlunch consultant and managers from all the schools have what they call a “can cutting." , At this time they look at and test samples of many canned foods they will be using. When they decide which brand will best suit their needs, a c(»n-bined order is sent bi. This not only insures quality, but saves money. Such a “can cutting’’ was held last week. It was Vera Jehnsen’s first in her new position. DON’T BUY THIS WHITE TUNA UNLESS YOU WANT FRESHER, NATURAL FLAVOR AND 1/2 THE CALORIES OF OIL-PACKED TUNA LOOKS'PRETTY GOOD-Vera Jehnsen (right), new school lunch consultant for Oakland Couflty, checks some of the canned meat used in school lunchrooms. With her is Mrs. Cloyd Houts, South Eastway Drive, manager of the cafeteria at Pontiac Northern High School. another fine product of MITSUI a company The years 1 to 12 are your child's ‘'Wonder Years” -the formative years. Make the most of these “Wonder Years" with WONDER ENRICHED BREAD Make the most of the yean when they grow to 90% of their adult height! You can help by serving nutritious Wonde^ Enriched Bread. Wonder helps build strong ^todies 12 ways. Catofully enriched with food elements for body and mind. Wonder Bread tastes 80 good and fresh .. . and it is so good for the growing child, for active adults. Each slice supplies, protein for muscle, heart and tiskies, minerals for bones, blood and teeth, carbohydrates for bulk and enilrgy, vitamins for nerves, skin, glands, senses ... all vital elements for growing minds and bodies. So to help make the moi^ of your children’s “Wonder Years’’—theirgrouackers with Biker, captain Joe Sdunldt d formerly Cart Brettsdinei-r extended the nickname with e front four and were touted the “Magnificent Seven.” Sophomtues Dennis Gaubotz d Ernie Clart have alternated Brettschneider’s old spot. Now, the secondary hackfield licfa is one of the leading in-i ceptioo '"ti* in the NFL this ar, along with the linebackers name of “The Vindicators” the defensive eleveiL Banfamweighf Champion Set hr Tifie Bout SAN ANTONIO (AP) - Eder ^ofre, the world’s bantamweight champion who never has lost a fight, puts Jus title on the line here Oct. 28 against a man who got to meet him because the Texas Boxing (Commission 'snubbed the Califomia conunis-skm. Jesus Pimentel, who has a record almost as good as Jofre, was suspended by the California Boxing Commission earlier this year after he turned up ill for a fight with Fighting Harada of Japan. ★ ★ * California and Texas are not members of the World Boxing Association but Texas ordinarily reflects xledaions handed out by Califomia. But in order to have the title fi^t in San Antonio, Texas Boxiiig Commissioner Alton Eridmon said his office So Jofre and Pimentel will meet over the ISround route at Joe Freeman Coliseum and Los Angeles promoter George Parnassus, who is working with local promoter Tony Padilla, said hO was pleased with ticket sales to date. Jim Lemon Will Coach MINNEAPOLISBT. -PAUL (AP) - Tito Kilnneaota Twins signed their fonncr outfidder, Jim Lmnoa, as| a coach ’Tuea-day. ' _ * . , • Games tiian their tightly controlled women’s quarters. “Why not relax,” said a young lady athlete from France, smelling oh-so-very Parisienne. “I have trained almost four years for this. And now I’m thropgh trying to be an athlete. Now I want to be a woman.” It was obvious from the group of young men around her — togged in training gear from three different countries, none of which was France — that she wasn’t going to have to try very hard. Women athletes of Soviet bloc nations have not gone in for the short shorts. But they seem to be wearing their younger sisters’ sweaters and shirts. “You ain’t seen nothing yet,” offered the perceptive veteran U.S. athlete as he |i^c-ticed a little girl watching from a deck seat near the athletes’ dining halls. GETTING OUT “The Village is becoming quiet “every night,” said the trackman. “As more athletes finish, their training’s over and they’re getting out — together, in many cases — to find out what Tokyo’s really like. Most of them don’t see the city until after their events been run off.” • * A , * The American girls have toed the line pretty well, maintaining dress procedures laid down by Brenda de Mor He was transferred to Temple University Hospital a week‘ago after three weeks of treatment in San Francisco. Detroit hasn’t won in two starts and San Francisco has an identical record. ’The Pistons, who finished last in the Western Division last season, were favored over the Warriors, defending divisional champs, who without Chamberlain are as effective f(s the Lions would be with Roger Brown at quarterback. ’The Warriors have used 6-foot-11 Nate Thurmond at center. Thurmond was sought by the Pistons two years ago when he graduated from Bowling Green, but they lost him ' collegiate draft because t h e Warriors had first choice. LARGE ORDER TO FILL - The Associated Press’ Back of the Week Jerry Rhome (left) of Tulsa poses with his coach Glenn Dobbs, Jr., before .a blackboard listing the national seqSon records Rhome has a chance to break. Rhome was honored after completing seven touchdown passed, a new Rhome Voted Back of Week national collegiate passing mark, against Louisville^Satur-day. Dobbs also was honored, this week by being named to the National Football Hall of Fame. He was an aeriaLartist at Tulsa in the 1940’s. Berkley Cadet Earns Starting Assignment WEST POINT, N Y. (AP) -John Seymour, senior tailback frona Berkeley, Mich., was given the starting assignment Monday for Army against Duke in Saturday’s game here. Seymour suffered a shoulder separation in pre-season drills and missed the first three games. He saw limited duty against Virginia last week and performed well enough t6 regain the No. 1 tailback spot. He also handles Army’s punting duties. - Pre-season break on NEW Goodyear winter tires! 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PERRY FE 6-0900 Open Friday 'til 9 ; Open Friday 'HI 9 Quarterback Credits ’Help ’TULSA, Okla. (AP) — “I had a lot of help in that. . . Coach Dobbs, the receivers, the other boys — even the defense” That was Jerry Rhome’s comment today about the record seven touchdown passes he threw for Tulsa University last Saturday to win him Associated Press Back of the Week honors. ★ ★ ★ If Rhome keeps getting help like that, he’ll write his name in national collegiate football record books three more times before 1964 is over. Rhome said* Coaijh Glenn Dobbs set up plays to give him a chance to break the 23-year^ old record for most touchdown tosses in One game. His receivers grabbed 32 of the 44 passes he launched “and even the defense helped by trying to get the ball back.” LATEST VICTIM The Rhome-led onslaught has topped 50 points in each 6l the last two games, with Louisville the latest victim 58-0. Rhome, who led the Southwest Conference in passing as a sophomore at Southern Methodist, now has good shots at two season and one career record. With six games left, he needs only nine touchdown tosses to break the collegiate mark of 23. He has 86 completions this season — out^of 131^ attempts — toward the season standard of 174. * * ★ ' And he needs only 59 more completions to set a career record. Rhome gives a lot of credit for his success to Tulsa’s big corps of talented receivers, led by ^foot41 Howard Twilley, who ranks among the leaders in receiving. But he doesn’t have a favorite target;^ and says his receivers are so good “all I try to do is hit them with the ball." If he gets it there, he says, they’ll catch it. Rhome also credits fleet Bob 'Talk Is Premature' Irish Coach Mum on Bowl Bid CHICAGO (AP) — He has lost none of his loquaciousness. William Shakespeare probably would have called Ara Par-seghian a noble speaker. Entrusted with Notre Dame’s football fortunes, Parseghian is as quick-witted as ever. However, probably because he holds ' the biggest college football I coaching job in the country, he now weighs his answers. I ★ ★ * On the question of Notre ; Dame taking a bowl bid, Par-, seghian frowns and says, “I am not in the position to make any I commitment. Bowls are an, j administrative problem. Such I talk is premature. My first accomplishment is to produce a I winning team.” I So far, so good. Notre Dame ' has played four games under Parseghian and won them all. The Irish, who once made the SKIERS Iw Alpln* Ski Shm hn mgvM Ifirt* locks South tu 4702 North WooMorB . . eno block South of M Milo RooB I Royal Oak. “A bit at Bavarii" hot lamlly onB Franconia Stratch Pants from $14.95 Ski Pnrkos from $8.95 Complata Adult Ski Outfit from $49.95 Childrtii'i Ski Pocktga from $19.95 Todditrs' Ski PockufG from $5.95 CampM* bki ronai' *kon and football world tremble at the mere menion of their name, are ranked second nationally, behind Ohio State. NEW LINES ’The 41-year-old Armenian appears a bit gaunt. There are new lines in his face. Yet, he has lost none of his confidence, drive or energy. Has he instilled some of this spirit into the Fighting Irish? ★ ★ ★ “The Notre Dame spirit was never dead,” Parseghian emphasizes. “It’s like that of Uie service academies. It’s a spirit which never can be achieved at co^ucational institutions.” While speaking, Parseghian gestures with his left hand and sticks the right hand into his Bloomfield Squad Takes invitational Bloomfield Hills defeated nine othy schools yesterday to win the ’ Clarenceville Invitational Class A Cross Country meet. Bloomfield Hills soored 63 points. Others in order: ★ ★ ★ Thurston, 80; Redford Union, 95; Livonia Franklin, 104; North Farmington, 127; Wayne, 137; Garden City, 161; Plymouth, 180; Bentley, 219; and Clarkston, 246. Riverview wpn in Class B. The individual winner was Tom Kearney of Bloomfield with a 10:36. Gerry Tilton of the Barons was sixth and John Benicki was eighth. , pocket. He takes his early success cautiously. “Remember, at Northwestern there were a couple of seasons when we won our first five and six games only to get smashed the rest of the way.” SAFETY MEASURES He’s working against such a catastrophe happening at Notre Dame. "Our first teams on offense and defense are good,” he says. “With a big lead against UCLA, I sent in the alternate units. I wasn’t satisfied. They made mistakes. We must develop depth. The only way to get it is to play the alternates and have them succeed. So far, it hasn’t worked." ★ . * ★ In addition to a great defense, much of Noire Dame’s success has hinged upon the pas|jng combination of John Huarte to Jack Snow. “Huarte always could pass. Now he has developed into an excellent ball handler. He has gained confidence. He has gained the° confidence of his teammates. ★ * w “Snow has great ability and t^nt. He’s listed as 215 pounds. He's down to 207. Most of our players are down. This ^has helped us develop some team speed.” Parseghian Is not only a builder ^ strong bodies; he also develops morale. His players receive gold stars on their helmets for e«ch interception. “I’ve made a five-star general out of Tony Carey,” he says. Parseghian’s philosophy? “There is no substitute for success, and the worst thing in life is failure.” OVERHAULING GUARANTEED TUNE-UPS LOW PRICES EASY TERMS i 47(U North WoodwarJ Royal Osh, Michifan I black SauHi a) l« MHo Raaa Fhooo 549-7474 / I / AUTOMATIC 1 TRANSMISSIONS OUR SPECIALTY f Daugherty and fullback Bill Goods with improving Tulsa’s running gafne so defenses can’t worry exclusively about his passing. “I raiely call a definito running play for myself," JUiome says, but he does enough scampering to make. defenses worry about him on rollout patterns. LIKES ’TO RUN “I get a big kick out of running,” he adds, “especially when I get a good gain,” * * * The 185-pound Dallas product, who played for his coaching father in high school, left SMU “because it was no longer any fun to play there.” He liked Tulsa’s pro-type offense but did not become the cellar quarterback until the middle of last season. That, he says, gave him added confidence. ★ ★ ★ He feeb he’k helped this year, too, by a much stronger line. Rhome leads national ’statistics in both total offense and passing — and Tulsa is the team leader in both those departments -T- but he says he’s not running any statistical race with anybody. Rhomo, Tulia TOTAL OFFENSI 0 Pl^ J 6. Morton, Calllomlo J S. Bodor, Indiana 4 4. Torok, Arlono $1. 4 7. Zeno, UCLA J --------- Miami, O. S RUSHING OPPBNtI 1. Handloy, Stanford .5 ^ 2. Piccolo, Wako Foraot 5 113 3. Coffoy, Wo»hlnglon 5 *7 *. Bird, Kontucky ...... 5 M < 10. Corrtit. Sd.' Col. S 1M PORWARO PASSING G Com. Pet. Yi 1. Rhome, Tulto 4 M .037 1,1 2. Morton, Colltomio 3 II ,0« 1 3. Lofr'boloo, L-vllto 3 72 .343 I 4. Snook, Iowa 4 OO .511 1 3. B#rry, Ortgon ....... 3 04 J33 I 0. Btdir, Indiana i « 04 i 7, Smith, Richmond . I. Woalherly; Miss. 3 S( .317 3 34 ,3« 3 34 .331 Virginian Captures AP Football Award NEW YORK (AP) - Virginia never had beaten Army befora and there was no reason to lieve the Cavaliers,were going' to change that pattern when tha two teams met last Saturdayj But Virginia middle guard Jim. Winget heard a rumor and after he got through spreading th* word, the Cadets wound up on the short end of a 35-14 score. * ★ ★ Winget, who made 11 unas-sbted tackles aiid helped out on 10 others, was named today aa IHe Associated Press Lineman of the Week for hb part in tha upset victory. ^ MOTOR i^XCHAIVGE 405 S. Saginaw $1. Ft 3.7431 ■ -V . ■ Go To Orion For Yoar GTO and SAVE at... RUSS JONNSOR MOTOR SALES 19 M-24, Laka Orion • 99942N "THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 21, 1964 D—3 Jimmy Brown Again Leading NFL Rushers Unitas Top Passer; LkSns' Lory, LeBeau Bidding for Honors NEW YORK (AP) - Jim Brown of Cleveland has regained the National Football League rushing lead from Don Perkins of Dallas as the result of a head-to-head duel Sunday at Dallas. Brown bulled for 188 yards in 26 cafTies and Perkins, despite his injuries, gained 96 in 21 attempts. The season totals show the Cleveland fullback with 608 and Perkins with 554 yards. Lennie Moore of the Baltimore Colts has taken over the scoring lead with 10 touchdowns and 60 points after scoring twice in the victory over Green Bay. LEADING PASSER Johnny Unitas of the Colts continues to show the way among the passers with only one interception and 61 completions in 116 attempts^'Although Unitas does not throw as many passes as he did before the Colts had a ground game, he has connected for 11 touchdown passes. Fran Tarkenton of Minnesota also has hit with 11 TD passes and Y. A. Tittle of New York, last in the quarterback standings based on completions, TD passes, interceptions and yardage, has thrown only two scoring passes. ★ ★ ★ Jerry Richardson, the Los Angeles rookie who intercepted three San Francisco passes of the seven grabbed by the Rams last Sunday, moved into a tie in that department with Pat Fischer of St. Louis and Dick LeBeau of Detroit. Each has five interceptions. Johnny Morris of Chicago is the leading pass r^ver with 4r4 for 567 yards. Tommy Davis of San Francisco and Yale liiry of Detroit share the punting lead, rookie Walt Roberta of Cleveland tops the kickoff return nien and Brady Keys of Pittsburgh is the punt return leader. LfADINa OROUND OAtNRRS LMt Alt. YRi Oala Am. J. Brown, CM. .. 1U Ml 71 4.1 Pirklnt, Dal... Ill iU W JotHiMn, Pin. « 44* 45 Taylor. O.B. V 44] 30 W.Brown, Minn. M 314 35 Taylor, WaM. 13 3M » CtilWreia. SI.L. ... TD PAT PO TP LlADINe PASS RRCRtVIRS Rahlad, Piili. Brown, Minn. Taylor, wa«^. AMDonaM, Dal. Ca-wy, S.F. Barr, Balt. J7I LBADIttO PASSBRS Alt. Cam. YBa. TBa Oali Unitat, Ban l« *1 1,111 11 I.I2 Tarkenton, MMn 1» 75 1,1M 11 I.M ilarr, O.B. 1M 7* 1,'“ - * “ Oe, Chi 1M 105 1, '< t'.n urgantan. Wash 157 W U7 1,314 7J7 SrcoiST s.F ■ ■ i'77 03 1,354 7 7.0$ Morrall, Dot. . 01 50 5« 4 4.40 Svi'ils Maramth, Dali 1M » » » «-31 Munion, L A. 130 57 7£ 5 4.p Plum, Dal • 2 ?! fij J • TlttM, N.Y. 133 03 730 a 5.33 Scout Named President of Pro Baseball Group -WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (AP) — Red Hayworth, scout for the Washington Senators, was elected pri^ident Tuesday night of the Professional Baseball Representatives Association. The group is holding a twO-day meeting here. Wes Livengood, scout for the Philadelphia Phillies, was named rice president and Jimmy Gruzdis, scout for the Cleveland Indians, was re-elected secretary and treasurer. Northwood Back Leads Albion Tops State 11s IMPOSSIBLE? NO! — Horsemen say it’s impossible and geneticists say it’s nearly so, but running on the right is a white throughbred. With Val Mischel in the saddie, the^ filly is training for the races next April. With her is a half brother, who is registered as a roan, but is red, white and blue. Both are owned by Herman Goodpaster and were bom , in Kentucky. ' Proof on Hoof Quiefs Unbelievers By the Associated Press Albidn, which has scored an average of more than 25 points a gatm, is the state’s only unbeaten, untied football team. Michigan, which lost by a poipt to Purdue, was the latest team to drop from the ranks of those with unblemished records.. U-M joined Kalamazoo and Northwood, each with a 3-1 record. * * * “ Of the state’s 18 colleges which field football teams, eight are playing better than .500 ball. Nine are below the break even point. Northern Michigan has split its six games and is at .500. Adrian Jhecame the last team LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) -“Who you trying to kid? There ain’t notsuch thing as a white thorou^bred,’’ the veteran horseman said. But there is. Her name is White Beauty. ★ w * The horseman, like most people in the thoroughbred industry, was dead sure no thoroughbred race horse coqld be white. Scientists say the odds against it are millions, perhaps billions, to one. Fortunately for the horseman’s sanity, no one mentioned that the white filly has a half brother who is red, white and blue. FAMILY TREE The facts are these; The filly, by ,Ky. Colonel out Loop Leader ' Nips Bandits Orchard Lanes moved a giant step forward in its bid for the city’s Adult Touch Football title last night by defeating the defending champion Motor Mart Bandits, 12-6. ^ Johnny Lucadam hit Bob Poe with a five-yard scoring pass with three minutes remaining to stay Unbeaten and move witlUn two wins of the championship. Lucadam hit Fred Davis with a 30-yard pass to set up the score. Earlier, Earl McKee had caught a deflected pass for a 30-yard touchdown that tied the score after Motor Mart had gone 60 yards on the game’s opening scrimmage play. First reports from state police listed no gunshot fatalities though several minor accidents were reported. Police said Edmund Popie-I lek, 40, of Detroit, died of heart attack near St. Clair Tuesday morning shortly after he started hunting. The weather was cool and there was some moisture and a steady wind to help especially the hunters looking for pheasants with dogs. Moist ground conditions also helped hunters work their way ^ through fields and woods without giving their position away by the crackling of dry leaves. Dr. Charles Black, biologist in charge 6f the Rose Lake Under this short experimental Wildlife Experiment Station season, the Conservation Depart-near East\4-ansing, said the j ment will get itk first chance in morning turnout there at the kart of shootin^t 10 a.m. was the largest on recbrd. ★ ★ Ns, Hunters found more corn standing than last year and the rmgnecks had more co^ in the cornfields for hiding plades. Budget Increase by Department The Department of Conservation is recommending that its policy-making commission adopt a $32,091,162 total budget for fiscal 1965^. The figure is $11,728,364 more than the $20,362,798 that t h e level, while suggested capital outlay is up by $8,2 million. About $8.5 million of the total capital outlay money sought would go toward further expansion of the state park systein, where public demand for added ^ Ugislature appropriated for the department f6r the current fis- department’s ability to pro-* * * [ vide them. Conunission action is expected OTHER ITEMS i at the November meeting in The remaining $1.2 million of I Lansing. The budget then will the capital request includes, ^ go to the governor’s office. among other items: Two weeks ago the depart-: $375,000 to start the state lakes ment’s director. Dr. Ralph A. j program; $155,000 for headquar-MacMullan, bad estimated the; ters buildings at Cadillac and budget at $33 million. The re-' Pontiac Lake; $65,000 for muskie duction to about $32.J million re- rearing ponds; $125,000 for game fleets trimming during final area and water access site lands, and $100,Q00 for state forest campground development. UNSAFE PASSAGE-These two hunters show one method of crossing a fence and a good way of getting shot in the process. This picture is posed, but the scene takes place daily during the state’s hunting season and hunters have been seriously wounded—sometinies fatally. preparation. - The proposed spending total includes $^.4 million for department operations and $9.7 milliorv for capital outlay. The operating request is $3.5 million above the current-year Ponitac PrM< Phot* when he opened the pheasant season near Sebawaing. Duke, a weimaraner, looks just as pleased. Special Quail Hunt to Test How Birds Survive Pressure Decline Seen for Muskrats Trapper Count Down Again This Year It won’t stir the fanfare of the pheasant season by a Icmg shot, but another hunt is coming up in southern Michigan which could help redeem a longiost sport in this part of the state. From Nov. 2 through Nov. 6, a small number of hunters are going to put quail to the test on state-owned lands at the Rose Lake wildlife experiment station near East Lansing. more than 50 years to see how the birds’ populations react to gun pressure,. Quail hunting, a thing of the past in Michigan since 1911, will be closely cpntrolled at the 3,100-acre station under a permit system and bag limit of two birds per day. ' During each of the test season’s five days, up to 50 quail shooting permits will be issued at one time. These free permits will be handed out at the station on a Moving to Summit Rare Cranes Ski Club Plans Switch I Kandahar Ski Qub — long-. jtime'Hpveloper of the Pontiac Depicted in PAC : Lake R^eation Area ski fatsu-~ ties — has, announced moving Film Program Mcinto^ ciub pubucuy 1 director, has revdqled the organ-Three films; including one that ization is taking kops to pur-showed the rare whooping chase Summit Ski Axm which crane, were presented before ^ is located five miles wmth of ; members of the Pontiac Audu-1 Fenton. \ . bon Club last week at All Saints | ” ★ ★ ★ \ Episcopal church. “We feel that with the coi^ Mr. and Mrs Paul Hoffman of' pletion of the purchase we will Wakeshaw, Wise., made the! provide more and better skiing presentaition of “A Bird Visit j for our members.,An up-to and Roy Wojtysiak (8th). furbearers, mink, and raccoons Oct. 25 in the Upper Peninsula and next month in the Lower Peninsula. ★ ♦ ★ Although continued low waters have cut into this year’s muskrat crop. Conservation Department game men again expect these animals to be underharvested because of light trapping pressure. Even with fur prices taking a marked turn upward, trapper numbers remained on the decline last year as only 5,280 sportsmen set their lines for muskrats. Their take totaled about 209.000 *01(8 as against almost 261.000 the year Tiefore. This season, receding water levels may cause trapping interest and success to slip further. Prospects for trapping irilnk shape up about the same as in 1963 when 14,690 were taken. Raccoon populations remain generally high, at least as good as last year when nearly 10,000 were trapped. * ★ ★ As in recent years, i!luskrat and mink trapping seasons will be Oct. 25 - Dec. 31 in the Upper Peninsula; Nov. 10-Jan. 15 in the northern Lower Peninsula. Raccoon trapping will again open concurrently with the other seasons, closing Dec.' 15 in the Upper and northern Lower Peninsulas and Dec. 31 in the southern third of the state. TTie proposed operating budget would permit the department to add 230 employes, most of them in the field. It would make a start toward putting all field employes in uniform and providing conservation officers with state cars. MajcH* suggested increases in operations relate to outdoor recreation. They include $1,667,000 more to maintain and operate new or expanded state parks, forest campgrounds, water access sites and game areas. Not shown as an increase but included in the budget is the shift of half the administration costs, now underwritten entirely by the game and fish fund, to the general fund. This would free about $70O,0OQ of license money for programs benefiting license-buyers. * ★ * The proposed budget does not show any income from the new land and water conservation furid recently enacted by Con-, gress. Michigan expects to receive $3 million or more annually from this source starting in 1965. Part of that sum will be reallocated to local go^mments. The department’s share, whatever it turns out to be, must be n-iatched with state money on a 50-50 basis. Detroit Ski Fair Nears Detroit, the oldest Slop on the equipment, a ski-car exhibit by International Ski Fair circuit, I Chrysler, a ski safety exhibit^ will have its annual preview for I professional clinics, Tyrolean winter slalom-and-spill enthu-j Brauhaus lor refreshment and siasts Oct,.30-Nov. 1 at the Light entertainment, and numerous Guard Armory. ' other exhibits. The hours will be 6 p.m.-mid-night Friday, 1 p.m.-midnight Saturday and 1 p.m.-lO p.fti. Sunday. The (air is produced locally by the Metropolitan Detroit Ski Council and proceeds benefit the United States Ski Team fund. Admission will be $li6 for adults and 56 cents for children. Among the attractions will be skiing on an Indoor slope, fashion shows of new skiwear and Solunar Tables The schedule of Solunar Periods, as printed below, has been taken from John Alden Knight’s Solunar Tables. Plan your days so that you will be fishing in good territory or hunting in good cover during these times, if you wish to find the best sport toat each day has to offer. The Ski Fair is touring New York, Buffalor Chicago, Qeve-land, Boston and Philadelphia in addition to Detroit This is the ninth annual one for tba Motor City. * -k * The .Armory is on East Eight Mile. Seniors Open Match Round PINEHURST, N.C. (AP) Medalist Howard (hWl of Colorado Springs, Colo., met Robert Bell 'of Wortington, Ohio, today as the first round'of match play in the North-South Seniors Invitational Golf Championship got under way at Fmehurst Country dub. * ★ * Creel led the way in the two-d^, 36-hole qualifying with 147, shooting 76 Tuesday to go with his medal-winning one under par 71 Monday. Knox Young Jr., of Pittsburgh, Pa., was runner-up for the medal with 149 and faced William Taylsu- of Westmount, (Jue., in |nother key match in the championship flight. If Ydu Are Pressed By Bills or Other ; eS -NOW You Can Got Up TO S ’5000 CASH: On 2nd Mortgages ■ and Land Contracts ■ If you have an immediate 81 emergency,'perhaps eur ■ Momeewntr't Loan Plan ■ it the answer te 5 B , for In^rmation FE 8-4022 : : FAMILY MCEPTANCECORPOMnON i 317 lialiAnel Rillw- 1A llimon' ^ 10 West Huron j BUYING A’65p PROTECT IT WITH MICHIGAN’S LEADING CAR INSURANCE New model car time is here again. Just aa you uae your good judgment in pic^ng out a car you do the same in selecting the ri^t insu^ce protection. This is why more Michigan motorists insure their dara through ^ the Auto (3ub. TTiey are assured of the oui-•tanding, unsurpasaed protection and aele-ioe of Michigan’s leading car ini^i«nfif Stop by your nearest Auto Club office today! H, I. HIUMANN.'' ' L ' • / 16 WIIUmmi St. FI 5-4151 THE PONh’IAC PRESf WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 21. I9fi4 Adults Con Find Time for New Learning By LESUE J. NASON, Ed. D. Any adult can find .lime for new learning by using a ii** Pass 3 ¥ Pass 3 A Pass 6 N.T. Pass Pass Opanini lead—¥ J will be the most needed — and the most necssary. Where find that hour-a-day required fof study? Examine these suggestions and you’ll probably find that one or more will apply in your Do you spend a half hour or tnore each day before dinner telling your loved ones what a “hard day” you had at the office? Try skipping that day-end grousing, which can be pretty tiresome and is probably exaggerated anyway. Instead, go out on the patio or to a quiet corner of the .iiving room and study in as relaxed a manner as possi-le. You have an hour for lunch. No one actually spends 60 minutes eating a midday meal. U.se 30 minutes in which.to tat and 30 minutes in which to study. Better still, take your text to lunch, find a place4o cat which isn’t crowded with your friends associates and. if possible, There's nothing improper about taking your lunch from home and eating quietly in some out-of-the-way corner An interesting aspect of this practice is a very successful, venture by the University of. Southern California, Civic Center Division. This downtown branch of USC, which offers a wide variety of courses in the area^ of public and business administration, recently instituted! what it calls its “Brownfogger Special.” This is a course in public relations offered during the hour to business people in the do'wntown area. contract and South had no trouble making it. He simply went ________ ___________ after spades and conceded one' ^|,ile you s^u^. spade trick. Strangely enough, if South had rERKY’S WORLD bid seven no-trump he would have made that contract also.J When the spades failed to break he would attack diamonds. Then he would have cashed the 13th | d i a m.o n d and his remaining! ' hearts. Ea^t* would have to drop** ! one club on the .last diamond, i and another on the last heart, in {order to protect his jack of spades, and South would‘have made three club tricks in addition to three spades, three hearts and four diamonds. | By OSWALD JACOBY - South's jump to two no^trump ; showed 18 or 19 points and a | no-trump pattern. With. 15 points | In his own hand Q—The bidding has been: North Bait South West 1 * Pasa 1 ♦ Pass 1* Paas IN.T. Fata 2 4 Pam ? ■you. South, hold: AM ¥KJ7S 4KJ75 A9S2 W’hat do you do? A—Paaa. Tou don’t partien-tarljr llhc thia eon tract but yon have mn ont of blda. JACOBY "South’s three - heart bid Aowed a heart control and con-wmed the fact that his two no-irump bid was sound. He had 19 points, including three aces. North had another chance to : „ go to six no-trump, but chose j to temporize once more with | three spades. South raises to I four. For all he knew North might hold a spade-diamond two-suiter. At this point North jumped to aix no-trump. South wanted fo | seven, but could not find any | ggcess values to justify that bid.! *Six no-trump was the ideal ' ^ it ’ xh Skstrological »^ forBcosf tv lYONIV OMAOn "Tlw WIM mai CMliite h,i ' istniiay pKcti Hw way." ARIES (March 21-40 April ------------- where you are going—and why. Oacepllon poitlWa If you ara not ebiorvant. Avoid mixing buunou wl— — CAPR!cO?IN’T[>OC»n It): Study foch nr»t S, SStr.'&ST^ICS.- _ i"AQ^|US (J.anuaiy M »o OMitsaamS ’!? io'^r;sr.riu^ 3SXn^?i.r ss forlf In now dlryfloni. Ktynofo la dO- -r D—« Nov. 5 is’fawkes Day Fawkes Day Is cele-bcated Nov. 5 in Great Britain Fawkes was implicated in the gunpowder plot in 180S designed to blow up Parliabient bud King James, I. "Remember, remember the 5th of November" is the slogan of the holiday. SIttr S«nK Ns. M7 HEIGHT OF CONDITIOW OF Pontiac State Rank p of J^fchltwn^ vv ?n» D»o«rtm»nt Durjudnt Diol 332-SI ei Pontioc Press Wont Ads eOR FMT ACTION ADI RCCIIVID lY I e.M. WILL ai eUlLIINID THB POLLOWIND----- Death^Note Lewis. ocTosen If. 1M4. oe*. TRUOE e.. Ailrnl*. Mlchl9*n; CB* M: brieved wiin oi Charm Ltwia. > daar moihar ra Mm Maxint Snatr. | Mr». Anna BaKar. Mrx. Dorelhy daA '»lsttr*'ol *vS s *'MVrtla'*Uhl'. | H;‘M?^J’r.':“n3’‘S.r'c«rSSf.- "p'J: ntral sarvica will ha hald Friday., Octobar 23 at 2 e m. al tlfa D. E. PuPtlf»y pim»r«i Nome. Int^rmonl In OftdWi Pick Compferv. (Viiitlng hours^ 9;30 t.m. ni »;30 p.m. mTd^E B RIOOK; 'OC TOB E R 1*W. 23^8t 3 o m Oonplson R^ose*and^P»% ^Ceme^erv.^ B^erkley^ SCHULTZ, OCTOBER 19, 1964, FREp- THE PONTIAC PRES,S. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBI^R 21, 1964 f WMtad Mala CITY oe ai luiwiitf Inibidli NO *AN$h7aT1N Help Waatad Male a sllDE OPERATO* « $S25nvidNTH~GUm Vnung man JJ-3J. marrlad. car. im arnployed. rtadv lo ^art. KKVyaar DESIGN LEADER OR PRESS ROOM AUTOMATION. PERMANENT POSITION. • SAHLIN ENGINEERING CO. me peraaaiIint positions IN DETeoiT AREA. MUST HAVE IACKGROUNO in STRENGTH OF ......................I " Jif,’ * erRMnioHAM. f COIL f ING, COIL PROCESSING OR Rl LATID EOU---------------- SEND COMl P.O. BOX MICHIGAN. ing new ntfica in northwest area. 0ISHWASH¥R FOR THl NUShT Complete program leading to man^ >hilt. All Iringa bantllts. U to 50. agprrwnt. Company benefits. Rapidi Apply In parson Ellas tros. Big advancamani. No seniority system. i Boy. Telegraph A Huron. .., ibuct-WALLEAs-Al^^ MANAGEMENT .TRAINEE CREW OF ROUGH , fARPlN- layout man. Top wAgat rs.aX.^ .. .. . tars Call MA 5-1641. ------------ ACCOUNTANT plus 8 respon6lble^ Posi-V extr8s fringe benefits. ‘ offprs e very brl^t fu-; Thursdev. October 22 8l lerel Home, Alfred Edd) day *ob, ^Ttours* ^30^'^to^ 10;^ - proms" earn^%5o'^ to** $100* weekly. _ Call OL 1 3011 Mr. Murrey or 363* 2365. Mr. Rounds after 4 p.m. ly of- APARTMENT HOUSE MANAGER.' Istian Apartment and salary for full Heating. FE 2-2 DESIGNERS i DETAILERS CHECKERS SPECIAL MACHINES PRESS WELD JIGS AND FIXTURES 51 HOURS THE HMS. CO. 30 N. Main. Clawson,_5U-1440 DETAILER FOfe’“PROGRESSIVE dias. Slaady amploymant, fringe benefits, Hydro-Cam Engineering R.) Troy. ^ EXPERIENCED TORCH MAN Call FE 5-0142 Hele Wantd Jamal* 7 LAROB PROTiSTANT CHURCH —■ lima axRarpocad cook. Ml IASI CALI s regular pm* ad FE 44610. - “ToviTvibNivy ^ love jewiLRY? ST' lining program. For • ___ pay, Inauranca Highatl commlaalona, no Invest- 5 paM holidays. Ap- mants, no eollaeling or 11 typas of'fumaca ■ - -....M.A. Bansen Co.________ ________ ______- _______ - *. w'lLL TRAIN 3 MEN FOR INSUR- Cass Lakt Rd., Friday, Octobar anca caraar. 1425 par month guar-........... antaad. FE 2- It I Orion^ age 64; dear lather •65.l16.f2 Bajsl^ina Barnowsky; daa THEO aqa f2 survivrd and naohaw.s am Funeral sarvl., d Thursday, Octobar 22 _. 1 at the Don*lson-Jehns Funar rinma Interment in Camalary. (Su^gaslad i « <#i,. ^nliac. I EARN money while'going to I collage or high Khool, lor ip-a > pointmani caji «3^3I^ >■ EXPERIENCED FLAME HAROEN-• ar, straighlanlsl.s and hardener I Slaady amploymant and *a')vi Auto Mechanic! Engineering Draftsmen Engineering Checker For detail drawings ol small i cixloo airaralt and missile ci p n n a n I s Davrrsiliad. Inlarast checks, aic. Total daoositi $47,;i4.33i.l2 {al Total da- • mend dtoosits S34.f04.370.63 Cole, Mrs. Edmund (Kathryn)] Lewis. Mrs. Ray (Angelina) Tay-. lor, Mrs. Alfred (Marla) Dalpiar, ‘ Joseph, Mathias. August. Edward, i Anthony and Gaorga IHenryl Bar ] nowskv. Recitation of tha Parish . ^ Rosary will be nald this avaning at 01 -- —-- -"-rs Funaral Home, y call Mr Bill Boodan, al S Dodge, FE 0-4541. „_________,k._______________________ 0 AUTO SALESMAN Tb WORK OU ' Chevrolet . Excallant LAKE ORION Openings =;;NOW AT LTV Michigan MILLING MACHINE Machinists (Hydrotfl Exparianc* Nacassary) known compony. $500 par montha| salary and commissions whita in tralnino with futurt possibMitias of $12,000 a yaar and up. Sat Mr. Anthon at Waldron Hotel from 6-7:» pjn. Thurs. Octobar 22._ YARD MAN WANTED For lumbar yard, exparianca nacas-unlw ?k'a YOUNG MAN~FbR~CLiiK iN Drug Store. Sand Rasuma slafing age, exp, to Pontiac Prau Boxl3. Help Winted Femols 7 A BEAUTY OPERATOR. DON-j nall-s. The Mall, 6124420.__ aTl around grill and WAIT- rass work In cottaa sh«“ Cetfaa Shop, 7360 Orel NURSE - MATURE WOMAN WHO can type lor doctor's oHicf. Give parsonal data and nursing axpari-ance, also axpactad salary. Sand rasuma and picture to Pontiac Press Box 52. 0^TUNmIS~ for Alert Women office Oan be_________ special sales background •10.000 or tnora yaai’ly. earnings plus commls- ___ _snuses. Call Mr. Andar- on at FE 0-0641 for a personal onlldantlal Inlarvlaw. YOUNG MAN 1 Mhooi 0 sal«lk»r On wfh 'tonus tor niaOwith a litlura In a gro organization. Vacation, group ................J lob _ you will earn lull pay while you learn. Apply Monday through Friday between 0:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. at 54 E. Huron, P,ontiac. Michigan Ball Talaphona. "AN EQUAL ^^LOYER"_ Quality Cook-Some Cleoning Employrtient AfencieB 9 EVELYN EDWARDS BURROUGHS 400 .. $101 Retail exparianca f04 Rikar Building Tj^PHONE FE A-W84 ^ 70B ■ HUNTING TRY International personnel service Chav t. Otds. 1 Rediscounts and other llabil- ' rr$< : mas for borrowed money 1.000.000.00, .arinur n Other iiabilitias 1.092.059.21 nciarina Inlermint Total Llabllltla, GRE wTy,' O^ . CAPITAL ACCOUNTS ^^.?ar,^d'T'fwnjhTJ! I Dotty, (io,ooo.no! O'Jibwav and Donald Gr vivad by Iwo^jirf - ‘ >? Octobar 22 al Tl a7ni, irhaes-SlDla Chapal will bur R. Schutza otficlallr 174,455 3f 'core' Ma^ay; ATbarl (Joyce) But lid Gregory; also or •andchirdran. Fu- na SCREW MACHINE EXPERIENCED. REFRIGERATION sax-up ana oparata. 2H Ilf. RA 6.] SERVICE MAN, QUALIFIED TO Must be completely quallllad^or REPAIR AND SERVICE ALL need not apply. S3.25 par Hfcjr.l TYPES, Of COMMERCIAL ,RE-50 hour weak or longar. Paid In- FRIGERaTiON. REPLY TO PON-suranca and holidays, steady work.' TIAC PRESS BOX OS STATING Royal Oak area. Write Pontiac QUALIFICATIONS. 'Press Box 37. ___________EXPERIENCED CRANE OPERA- ^ ^A STEADY J_0B^ EXPERIENCED SALESMAN Daddy, I ol operation I r BbYS 17-22 FULL TIME RESTAU- unity pital Accounts S57.fffl.l72" MEMORANDA , GET OUT l r dIbt C ^^^s%'!m.‘AnhouncBmtnti • hasKIN. OCTOBER 21, IfM. VERNE I , 47a1 Sharwall, Waterford Tor -sHlp; aqa 72; tolovto hustond Michigan' credit COUNSELORS 3" PLAN 4rs Barbara Maynard. Mrs Lm n Heath. Mrs. Patricia Cowdrax 7rs Bevarfy F4tr, Robert an UiMiim. Haskio, daar brother r *rs. F, C Read, alio survive. V to grandchildren and one graal randchild Funaral strvica wii a held Friday. (Tdobar 23 at ' ' 702 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG. ; FE 04456 ^ Pontiac'S oldest and largest bflSgat Daoosirs o« tha Mich.gan (Inclua posits of State! liiical subdivliloi I, Evar«t K. G. and Cashier of II a Prasidani ^Ichloan I (Suooastad KJlVx to*n a rrirw lose weIGH'^ Sfbly miv suo i rie. A O.ei Tablets Only i 5e to the I ‘I Simms "Toirpy Drugr BOS BOtS Pontiac Man has I TED'S Inas ol staraos, telavisions. and organs. Famous brand such,as Magnavox, Slain-ind ^ Hammond, lor Michi', adtouate' ^roduc^ .™.a.v., essential Guar- anteed salary against commission. Apply Grinnell Brothers, an eouel opportunity amployar, Pontiac Mail. 602-0422 EXPERIENCE) TREE TRIMMERS. A TOY CHEST TOY PARTY. , months guarantee on toys. 6li ATTENTION WOMEN WITHOUT any exparianca you can I shoppiiw by sailing Avon cosmetics i I and tdllalrias in wxur vicinity. Write PO Box ft, Drayton Plains I or phone. FE A4500. f BABY SITTER, 5Vi DAYS, STAY OR ge. $20. Call attar 6. 63S-IOOI BABY SITTER. LIVE IN. $30 FOR 6 days. OL 1-0326. ,BEAUfY OPERATOR. EXPERI-' X* cant commission. 12 Mila, LI 2-0t20. t^. rataTancas to Pontiac Press Box j ' rTf iNED “uko y~f6r house- way, iS'you V Engine Lathe Mcichinists Template Makers Tool and Die Makers Assembler-Fobricotors (Sheet Metal Experience) Must be Journeymen and fiLEGR^HTii-ifTfEXT. w Hove U. S. Citizenship baby stfrER 5 days « «irr *?M^*le HousEkEEPiR REGISTERED NURSE $5,000-55,600 irmananl position ^ for raglsli Prater xtoman between ages ^r2-5 ........... ..... this retort of JERSTArfJ. 0 Itkin Is true and correct, to tha bast M.. 66$S \ y knowledge and ballet. inrdi mam , EVERETT K. GARRISON ”''^’*MILO J. CROSS_ FRANK A. merger JOHN C. COWE t Of October, 1f64, and MILDRED H. TAYLOR « held Thursday, Octobar 22 at 1 — tha Coats Funaral home, I Plains with Rev. pannis olficlalinq. Interment in w Camairry, Clarkston. »T*5«---------------- D?i'va’‘i.tSr* i BOX REPLIES |: M™^o Highland Rd. ^E $4741._______1 ^^t drll?i°my®??M^ PIZZA bToy, MUST BE )$ OR' sami-invalld, husband ind 'lliV I - "r. Apply In parson. Da Lisa's. Must live In. MA AI353 ?r'?i?.m'**'*' ®.*NTAL ASSISTANT: NO"ivENTNO' PIZZA (WAKER, MUST HAVE $1 Pontiac Press Box 103 stating age , experience, call aner 4. r-asquaw and axpariance. ^taurant, Lajia Oriof^MY 3 1421 DOMESTIC: $-DAYTTvE IN, BIRM-. PROGRESSIVE DIE LEADERS, U?''*™ ••••- e«m room wim TV.' ! surface grinders and machine 7*«lu'i Warren, Michigan. -------------------------------Phone SL 2-3420. __________ SANDERS NEEDS TBM TRAINING SALESLADIES I i^r*;rtio:“*:;«,'‘irriiir'io.rf.!:: puirr programming. Mich. State FOR OUR MARKET | Board of ^Education approved. Free OUTLETS IN: j Complala financing - No*mo^ Union Lake SYSTEMS INSTITUTE Nor-West Tool & Machine Co. '•"Y for . household duties. No Itondry, roi f. Pontiac Press Box 46. giving r phone**' 4'Pacted i exPERTENCED' DRUG Waterford Township Work Wanted Mala REAL ESTATE CLERK' SANDERS ke Drugs STORE 33 $ TELEGRAPH PONTIAC Light housework a. iSriinSTEt: 7h.*S_^* M" '^! pro- Cemetery Lots ^ 5 AND 6 It's quick, simple and ductive. Just look around your home, goroge bosement and list the many c^^h__________________________ ! . WHITE CHAPEL-(JaKLAND HILLS.' Choice graves. $50 up. TYIar 44040. i r items thot you no longer a GRAVE LOTS - $400 Perry Mount Park Cemetery and ^p.m. WHITE CHAPEL C~E M E T E $ — Garden of the Messiah, 4 k • -- 4-1519 or 636-21 Designers Detailers ............ Checkers i For tody lixiure. Apply now Sev- tirxt personnel. Opportunities lor ]—|(T\/0 advancement. Overtime, Fringe 3.5-4 V CT . • . benefits, long programs. Contact Mr. Brown.^Mr.^Furr, *4r. Koltanbar; Eng. (Do. | ROUTE M/kN' to SERVICi WA- **PATNtiNG. txefT- ----«rk. FE 2-5S06._ _ . LIOHrHAOLIMO EXPERIENCEb'wAITRBSS, APPLY , _ Injarsoo 1765 N. RES $ EXPERIENCEOTATiSlADY ' ; S FO* DAY ANDi rwi ir*oy mna cusrom mad# drao-I i mirmmmlmT Walla^nc^'’' **"«•!WAITRESS WANtlO “filGHTs; ----------------- i?il..‘FE*!U!’2!)*"'’' SalesmanL S.'suw kUClItrOiiiCll'i GENERAL CLEAN Wtrk Wanttd Ftmal* 12 a, . , - . BABY SITTING WOMAN 33. WANTS llve-ln, days. " ----- 33$452i I use. Hundreds of readers 4-piEce combo 7 77 ore searching The Press's, TOTAL ASSETS $i47,t2i,3B5.47 clossified columns doily for'__^ liabilities” . . „ , r*" ^ D*^and rf^oovifi of iodivid lust such orticles. Perhops i>e-aT>eo5 t 50.30*,9dC 63 wsnxx.snr WOuld bring more than the change I ,101.000 03 thot it holds! Try if! j GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDINg! ?,6f!j$55 46 21,2«S.3S3 30 YOU'LL BE I LEARN TO DANCE, swing or Fox Tret. Lata dances. Classes or priv P^a 33^?2”* ^ *” i>-ATTOR industrial accident Offset Pressmen Immediate /rt->s 1 I Mr. Rwiids ol' Openings At, LTV Michigan desk for 2 experienced reol estate salesmen. In a 5-man office. Must enlarge stoff ot once to take care of de-' monds. If* you are interested in making money, | this is your opportunity.! Bonus system in effect, j Call.... i Don Edmonds MA 4-48111 HIRING >ART-TIME Ntw factory branch It taking an-; plicationt for immadiatt avening and hava a ttaady ^ll-tima day Building Materials Plumbing and Heating We need experienced salesmen who x)*ed to earn good money on o full-time yeor-oroond basis. M®ny company benefits. Paid voco-tions, many opportunities for odvoiicement. Apply personnel de- . Baply Ptollac WANTiO: TRAINED LABORATOSy iclan, lull fima work I otiica, soma citrical ‘ ■■ raa. Wrila I Slating axp FOR CARPENTER 1iNSTAClAT|6n MAN WANfiO, i portment between 9:30 0. m. and 9:00 p. m. doily. Montgomery Ward Housewives We ore taking applications for port time ond Christmas help. If you con work 5 to 9 in the evenings and all day Soturdoy, we will train you for soles work. Apply personnel deport-m e n t between 9:30 o.m. and 9:00 p.m. doily. Montgomery Ward ySunc woman. cleaning and wall WASHIMar. _______ 602-6453 or 402-5536______ GENERAL CLEANING, 1 bAYS, lit ena night . ‘3473),’*" WOMAN TO LIVE ONE DAY IRONING ' _ ____lyMcCbW^_ FE S-1421 N, CENERALiWASHING, IRONING IN HD/ME. AL-e chlldran and; so baby tifting. FE B<36. _ o» piawam. Call 626-7662. I _ „----- wAiTREssEs'wANTED, FULL AND B*iMing S«rvici-SHpaliet 13 part tima for bar wndar —— — — „ --- mantetmanf, call 673-70M i TRU-BILT BUILDING PRODUCTS CO. BUILDERS SUPPLIES AND STRUCTURAL STEEL A GOOD PERAAANENT BOOK-1 inatkawaa t..—" l| kaaping potltlan tvalloMa naar TT?"*** *®™** •» Patoskay. Michigan (In tha mlddla varsao on all phasai of gt bookkoaping. Woman prafa Stala aga, taltry axpoctad, „... axpariance and rafarancas. Reply Pontiac Prats Box )00._ BLOOD DONORS urgenTlY needed Breiiiiiiiklwi t Tdlorfan 17 ORESSASAKINO, tailorino and --------- Mrt. Bedell. FE 44tSl IRH DETife n t $12.0 HOUSEKEEPER, FULL“CHAif6l TOTAL LIABILITIES CAPITAL ACCOUNTS Common atociy^ Ho- $ h • r • outha “61500___ 3,625,OOt — 3,625,000.00 ----64 01; 332-8I8I FOR IMMEDIATE CLASSIFIED SERVICE Pontiac Press WANT AOS Lost and Fowisd^ L 5 ATTENTION PRIMROSE SOWi-StS gray Brunswick bag, r a d | Nnbla ball, totufday tha Iflfh.. 673444) totwatn 0 and ard. “ 335-4007. LOST, strayed SLACK MALt mlniatur# poodle. LIcania Np.,l5266.i Long Lake-Square Loka-Adams TIMEX WRIST WATCH. I •in bus stop Walton Trallei; A kaaptakf. Reward. Can 6244SSI. Help Wonted Malt , 6 I SERVICE station attendants with nmhanical ax^lanca, I for; kkasfam Sunoco. Must atoly ki. lANITORS We need men who can work from 5:30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m., 5 days a week. Paid votations and many company benefits. Apply personnel department between 9:30 o.m. and 9:00 p.m. daily. Montgomery Ward 3 p. m. ot LTV Missile l6an and 'Ft'iiANCE~€6MPANv SERVICE STATION a^ttInoaRT. must be 25 ar oldar and machani- >e «*art. 646-5$,, Rd ''wjrSli3!?- Andarsonvlllt HOUSEKEEPER, REUAiLT pairing and rtwIndbiB. SI Phont FE 4-3HI. TONY'S CUSTOM LAWN WORK - any wharf. ........ 3344724. Immediate openings available for Chief 24 OHset Pressmen. Must hove minimum of 2 years experience and be able to do own set-u^s' and make-ready. Stripping experience helpful but not required. Day shift only. U. 5. CITIZENSHIP REQUIRED Apply in person, Monday through Friday, 8 a. m. to SHOE SALESMAN Expariancad flflar, parmanant goad position, HanMl and Cratal Shop Birmingham.___________ SALESMEN $75^$I5B par wakk Calling on all itrvica a For nM|er Oil Company Can deubla Incoma Within 3 months For apppkilfnanf call Rabaiis,.......— for Janitorial sarvlca, evas. Sa __________ ______ rasuma to Pontiac Prats Bex 106 5 days w wtak ICAB DRIVERS WASriO, AGE 25 n s —. ....... V,... ... — ------ -W..a-a$, # WWK. . IMMEDIATE O P E N I I Mena FE l-TSSI^ in SALESMAN DrayOen Flakii: Eacckri. KiT^fk SERVERS DISHWASHERS AFFLV IN FERSON, 0:JI4;3I ROBERT HALL CLOTHES 6460 DIXIE HIGHWAY, CLARKSTON T-Ri~e rtv ---------------- ^oletmt4lartia| ^ CHRIS|TIAN| HOME FOR ELDERLY CAN^kTllNe FATiUnT, VAOt bftW Cai^ ass Phila Hty. Jtolyn ffom I j'p jn. carat afcof of 24 Y, F*B wr IMbB Injho vicinity of ilrmlnetiam Mtpggfgd in Mlv-arlm ntwipgpgrt Ig tomf in fltg eirmlMBgm Araa. Car -' pfui cammlotMi. ^IfT'ft^TSrFW FONTIAC. MICHIGAN STONEYCROFT NURSING hAmC WeeiiH eM Tradiiiii" AA MOVING Bob's Von Servics ^®*A:?E*;8rTis* ROBERT TOMFXINs"**!^R 4-ISIl A BeceraHm $$ Plont, North Gote, Von. Dyke neor 16 Mile Road. -LTV ! Ling-Temco-Vought, Inc. Ity. Exparianca t I willing-! » .> rrmtn ,miv irrqivrtanl SM ! Huftan, 202 Pontiac Sfala Bank ] ig. Fhena FE 24206. ! I' willinc 'to bo $6 iS£.'i ----—"■* 'HIm kdn Wtte-fVMk t-Ai -J. i eUILD AH EMPIRE IN SALES | ........ ^ OySMTS**'^ "'0*ALE HAlSLi^g f...!'. 'L* CAREER OPPORTUNITY' aTad3________________ I Pkgrtlng. FE S4»tt_____ -. -..y .EXPERT FaTntTng;'™ ------ “H^EL^iRYT-FULL-j 5^'fSt15I|»T'^ T fIma. MMi PharffiacT, AMt" Bulldiag, ISI Martin Sfrdat, fir-M. I imnatiam. Mlctifgan. .. lawian invettfnant nacnaary, good i __________ P'w many alamorout b«m g ‘ .e®****®? Cal) Salty, *AA a-isw. PRESS WANT AOS ARE LIKE HAVING YOUR OWN "MONEY TREE" and paM he I f;M a.m A-1 PAINTING AND. ____________ THOMPSON^'" 44a.a CAREER-OPPORTUNITY ' *:^D^N-^-Tiicb'a^ __ ____ ______________________________3-73S4. ______ ______ lira In'Flint fi ' collagt and akpaiianct in 1-..- . , ..----------- salat ar martiatifit halptul. Car, j e»lntlng ai aiptntat, and aN eompany bana-j PAInTu._ Mlariar, axtartar, raaaanablt ratal. Frm gotlmalgo. MS4i6B. PtiiitiH 23 PAINTING AND^fCONATINO OUAUTV WORK ASSUiTi^D. PAINT- Tyl«vMli-»rtto StrvIcG 24 HAVe YOUR « RADIO AND TELEVISION REPAIR WORK DONE WHILE Quality Automobile Risk insurance BRUMMETT AGENCY FE «-0SSf 27 'X THK roxtiAr i’i{f:ss, (■k Howstt 49) Sak Houiti 49 "SMITH" InICHOLIE^ COUNTRY ESTATE WKnXKSDAV, OCTORKR 21. 1064 - ■ ■ ■ ' ,, ' " J ' THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 5 Om* «5 ««P^OAVBMPOHT ML L, t«t» M. Hwiiyis. Fl >-3»— liNOl* *a4 _ MAuuSDff. UvMy. n>M> Mbkwt. Button (■WNITUR* - CMitllti tST ______c wi. 20M Beverly, SSS2143. LUMBER Burmeister's — Deliver EM 3-4i; Open 4 dayt a week—• a.m. to I p.n LUXAIRE OIL FURNACE, m2T*^ tortgaSrat USitb BUILDING MA- NECCHI b^LUXE SOWING AAA-chlnt, ZIg-Zaggar — walnut cabi-nat — pay oft account In t months at SS.H per month or S53 castT --------- Unlvertalr Co. FE 40S05. ONE ROUND SWIMMING POOL, IS'xas' and accataorles, like new. 1130 value tor 140. Call OR 41234. ORNAMENTAL IRON PORCH nd step railings, corners and posts. AVIS CABINETS ISTOOpdyke ____________FE 44310 PHILCO television, 4GGALLON escant bulba M tor fS. 2S»«atton oil tank, S10. CaH FE 5^1. #?T~jro^^AiCr"c5MPLi SINCH HIGH FIBERGLAiS dOV art tor plclt up trucks. --- Camper Sales. FE SOW. ^xl2 LINOLEUM RUGS 13.43 EACH Plastic wall tito ..... Ic la. 'elllna tlla ■ wall paneling, c- AG Tile. FE 440S7 lOfi W. I aO-GALLON FISH AQUARIUM AN6 stand. Fish and i" eluded. EM a-2144. 1400 gall6n fuIl tank used tor Phllgas. All contrelt and values, perfset condHton, M2t. MA 5-1344. 1404 GALLON diL TANK 135. _______ MY 344M foolM SfU Oiki Fblilb-At A SINGER DIal-a-ttItch sewing machina and cabinet, used. Built-In .. Brothers Sawing Canter. 2354243. CASH PRICE $58.80 ANCHOR FiNtES used, Monograms, makat button-hotot, ovarcasts. datlgnt, no ah tachmants nsadad. FuH prtca S4444 itonT^R GdiM IaRGAINS - NEW^UkAIRE GAS a and hollars, automatic water neatars. tardwaro and trkal tuppllas. Crock, tell, par, black and galvanlied pipa and mtlngt. Santnr and Lowa Brolhars paint. Supar Xatn-Tf“ Ruttotoum.. HEIGHTS SUPPLY IT Rd FE 45431 msnt, 412. Graat Plains Gat Co. FE 50472. ________________ CSmplete'TYocx of pipe anG tmings. Custom thraadiM, Immediate tarvlca. Montcalm Supply. 154 W. Montcalm. FE 54712. Carload Prafinishid RST QI^ITY FINISHES r A Nm^XoANY MANY^OTHERs’oto^'lSPLAY 14M,.ia!7'^^'-^F°E 2-254, CLEARANCE OF USED OFFICE and tanE/'sn. Complato or make Mbp WlU/PUNi^ It. GtoaLi ____„._r—- -------N VquR nSTrapId''^'^ RwTtleg^ 0. & J. CABINET SH0t> Custom cablnela. Formica topb _ ...________________I S10I. FE 4-1104. iNbAbiMlWT' aW6 W8b6iMG iNCYeLb^tbiAi W-ffbTffoTr. ar-ov'w-sa 3K sf SSrg}r,^is%:sr,i ^ UTTle co^t. BIG results WITH PRESS WANT AOSI shower stalls wHh trim, t32i*5; 2-bowl sink, M.0SJ Lavs., 41»5i tubs. 410 and up. Pipe cut and thraadad. SAVE PLUMBNG CO. _____Orchard RAILROAD TIES, GOOD SUPPLY, cheap. FE 04071.___________ REFRIGERATOR. LIQUOR CABI-net, bl—" 04M4. FINE VIOLIN, SM. REPAIR AND GULBRANSEN MODEL B TRA • • r organ, r ‘ 4734741 GRINNELL'S Downtown Store Only F100R*'SAMPLE SPINET Piano Sale SAVE UP TO $200 $399 $449 $499 Low.'^sy Terms GRINNELL'S DOWNTOWN ' 27 S. SAGINAW LOWERY HERITAGE SPINET OR- , 41,300. OR 34371 ORGANS CONN ORGANS FULL Lll • • CONN Caprice — Walnut PIANOS SOHMER CONN AMERICA'S HOME PIANOS LEW BETTERLY MUSIC CO. Across from Birmingham Theati. Free Parking _______Ml 4-4002 PIANOS TO RENT WITH OPTION cXtrA^ER'S^MUSIC . Huron_________Fg 44)566 PIANO SPECIALS Floor Samples Reduced Up to $185 SPINETS Priced as Low as $388 USED UPRIGHTS FROM $48 low. lASf TESMS GRINNELLS PONTIAC MALL OPEN DAILY 7:30 TO 7 P.M. 682-0422 RENTAL PROGRAM AVAILABLE — clarinets by Leblanc. Dtum ultars and amps. Pontiac. ------ ------ N. Johnson. 333-4103. iALE GUITARS ROOFING Approximately 22 squares of .... asbastos shlngtot In original crates. Cost: 414J0 per square - Will sMMsr 44. 71 Brush street. FE RUMMAGE SALE, CLOTHING, MIS-cellaneout. Thursday and Friday, 10 to 3. 31010 Bingham Read and 13 MIM Rd. Betwaan Lahser and Tetograph. SIGNATURE, ADDING AAACHINE ----- Electric 7 ------- - ' Mlchl^n Fluorescent 373 Orchard Itouffer posture rest and k, 415) muHlgraph, 435. 477-4077. DRAYTON PLYWOOD stainless steel'DoublE S...... 427.75. G. A'. Thompson. 7005 M57 TALBOTT LUMBER Paint closeeut Sale. Interior Laytex, anamal and Plastra Tana, 41 to S3.50 gallon. 1025 Oakland Ava._____« SERVICE TO MATCH THIS. weoblNG ANNOUNCEMENTS AT ALL FURNACE, HEATS BOTH ways. 35,000 BTU output. Lika new. mo. Call 442-4575, attar 3 p.ip. OUTH BED; CHIFFEROBVi has tree; l2Vta1l green twaad rpet; Royal water softanar. t ctothas. Itt aha IfUj ^I's CkristEHU Treei low IS THE TIME TO START THINKING OF CHRISTMAS’ — 7-FT. ALUMINUM TREE WITH STAND AND ALL ORNAMENTS, IN RED, FOR 425. THIS TREE PURCHASED AT J. L. HUDSON FOR 440. WITHOUT TRIM. PA 15140. WHOLESALE: FIRST QUALITY " -- . - - Local • t«ery~ HOME LJGHT_ WRTA^E^ GE to like-nEw wood lathE, c6m- »l«tt wtm fcnIvM, STS. InquIrt 7('“ Clinfonvillq Kd. Ceewrei • Senfke AT GALLAGHER'S Brand new Lowrey Organs as tow as S«1 Brand new Spinel Planet as tow at 4377. No meitey down, no paymants till January. We attar Hie moat tor the toast. Shop us batera you buy. GALLAGHER'S MUSIC 66nn minuet with lbslIe - "nets. Sustata and pa--------- onstrators. "MORRirMUSiC SAAALL PREMIER GRAND PIANS, 4375 OR BEST OFFER. FE 2-1444. THOMAS ORGANS FOR 1965, one of America's greatest values. Full spinet organ, starting at $495. WIEGAND MUSIC C0-, 469 Elizobeth Lake Rood. Piano tuning ond orgon refoir. 71A ACCORDION, GUITAR LESSONS. Salet-Service PulaneckI, OR 5.«»4. Store Eqaipment 4-OOOR REACH-IN COOLER AND miscellaneous restaurant equipment, 4-tt. Norge end 3-wheel trailer. FE 4-2775.__________________ REMINGTON MODEL 740, 300 caliber. Williams mounted. Weaver K4 scope, cate and shells, 4100. .Cell FE 4-4750 4 a.m. to 5 14-FOOT FIBERGLAS CANOE, rods, ammunition, i 13 GAUGE BROWNING AUTOMA- 14 GAUGE MODEL 54 REMING-ton automatic, hat Cuffs compensator and recoil pad, S75. OL 1-421A »» MARLIN CARBINE RIFLEd c*m M thelit, ISO. 4674 * bourne off Cast-Elltabeth Rd. 35 CALIBEk REMINGTON WOOD-------- ------ *. I value. STm. Michigan Ave. ’ *^e”54244 BIO SELECTION, USED SHOT ----- “1 rifles. Free cate with GUNS-BUY-SELL-TRADE iting and tci . Telegraph. iTHiCA 10 GAUGE SHOTGuN, S40, -mchestar 30-30, f..... special. 455. SOO-7 NEW to GAUGE SHOtCUN ONLY 477.75 GUHS-GUNS-GUNSI We carry the complete line of BROWNING-WEATHERBY REMINGTON WINCHESTER-COLT PISTOLS —Try them before you buy^ WE DO ALL OUR OWN Scope Mounttng-Cun Smithing RIFLE RANGE-TRAP FIELD Open to the Public CLIFF DREYER'S Gun and Sport Canter 15110 Holly Rd.. Holly _ ME 4S771 PICKUP CAMPER - SPECIALS, 2-usad 1743 Apache pickup camp-art 1175. Choica McDonald pickup campart SI77. up. A tow Factonr IJomefown Dea'k COLLER, I mile east ol MRIcT^tlKLCLAYl^^ . _ . seU. 4 yards S12. Dallvertd. FE^ GOOD CLEAN BLACK DIRT, DE-llvarad. 410 per toad. OR 4-1744. i»bNTlAC minimum of 15 horse siBDies. wo will haul aH manure out. Call 731-2243 or 731-4515. Eves 731-1175. TOP SdlL, SAND, GRAVEL. FE 0-14H ______________ WoGd-COGl-CGkB-FEBT A-1 FIREPLACE WOOD .wr STACK WOOD DELIVBitro FE SdSOO fireplace wood, JOLID AND FIREPLACE WOOD, oAk AND hickory. Afl OR SALE: _____ bo6y woob fireplace. 3357577 ,_________ klLN DRIED FIREPLACE WOOD, Pits-HEiitifig DBgi ^ 79 3 MONTHS OLD AKt BRITTANY puppies. OR 3-5104.______> " MINIATutffe brown, s 264-5711 a.., -. 1-1 DACHSHUND PUPS, AKC DACHSHUND PUPPIES, STUD dogs. ESTELHEIMS, FE 2-0007. AKC REGISTERED DACHSHUND pups. S50. 473-2202. . POODLE STYLING , jomlng. 473-5404. HING Al BOARDING-CLIPS, WALLED LAKEl Orchard Grove Kennels. MA 4-1113. CHAMPION (POODLE), FIELD-■ e a m Buccaneer's grandson. COLLIE AND SHELTIE PUPPI^, DACHSHUND, MINIATURE, AKC, H POINTS I old, aire* NGLISH SETTER. MALE, . years old. Good pheasant dog, reg-i (stored. MA 4-1274._________ 5. AKC. 731-2214. FROZEN BRINE SHRIMP, ALl Pet Shop. 55 Williams, FE A4433. KITTENS FREE TO GOOD HOMd. longhaired dachshund ___________ puppitt Champion tired, AKC rag* literedrOL T-&25 or 7H-1976. MALI GERMAN SHEPHERD black and tan, good with children, good watchdog, 440. FE * MINIATURE SILVER POODI ties, 7 weeks AKC, little be reasonable. Terms. 752-1742. PARAKEET, BABY MALES, 44.75. 305 First, Rochester, OL 1-4372. PERSONALIZED e. OR 3- POODLES, ALL COLORS, WIDE choice, 450 up. C------ Stanley Kennels, SIAMESE KITTENS CALL SPECIAL 10 PER CENT OFF POO-dles, birds, fish. Crane. UL 3-220C THOROUGHBRED P000LE4,AFRI tOY MANCHESTER PUPPIES, 435 er trade. OR 3-1170.________ Tropical fish and supplies. --- V, wvw, ,.iMn furniture, several good antiques, 3 marble topped tabtos, 1 hanging lamps, several good antiqua chests, good assortment of dishes and electrical equipment. Attorn^ Edward J. Felton, Prop. Plant vTrBBt-Shrabs 81>A d of Commerce OR SAlG: blue SPRUCE, >4 feet, S3J0 per foot. Blue FItzer Juniper, 30-34 Inches, 43S0 each. Evergreens, shade trees, shrubs. About 75 varieties. Landscape size. Dig your own. McNeil's Nursery, iDIxle Hwy. at Maybee Road, MARMADIJKE By Anderson & Leoming HONDA AND TRIUMPH ANDERSON SALES 4, SERVICE 230 E. Pike____________FE 2-4307 Boats - AccBsseritt 97 ? FOOT CENTURY, TRAILER, and boat hoist: FE 4-7344. r F(X)T OUTBOARD CRUISER: 40 h.p. elec.; trailer, very clean. 41,175. MAZUREK'S LAKE 4. SEA MARINA, 245 S. Blvd. E. FE 4-7547. ____________ 16-FOOT STAR CRAFT HOLIDAY with SO hp motor and trallar. Many accessories. 442-0340. »S/ “Anyone seen my other shoe?" APPLE LAND The crop Is almost In. Come er toy Michigan's finest apples. I varieties, many sizes. 41.47 bushi and up. Ask for free apple core Unpasturized pure apple cMe and sllcer with each bushel. APPLE LAND CIDER PRESS made dally. 4771 Highland Road (M57) West of Airport. APPLES-PEARS Bargains ' beautiful fruit. DODDS ORCHARDS 2330 Clarkston Rd., east of Baldwin. Cider, Dellclout, Spy, Snows, Jonathan apples. STRAW. CARL DOBAT. 2440 DUf- saw. Evans Equipment. 425-171 Fit biAMOND key , tanoSm tractor, 230 Cummings', 10-speed Road Ranger, OR 3-^ between Priced as low as 4134.75. PARTSANDSERVICE KING BROS. ONE USED I.H.C. TRACTOR MOD-al N* 440 with Henrv loader and backhoe. A-1 shape. 43,995. Credit KING BROS. FE 4-0734 FE 4-144 PontlBc Road Bt Opdyhe OUR LINE OF HOMELITI 1 tawi. D6vis Machinery Co A 7-3273. Spacialiit to SEE US FIRST AND SAVE. JOHN DEERE. HAi^TLAND AREA Hardware. Phone 432-7141.___ USED FRAZER ROTOTILLERS, PARTS AND SERVICE. AIRSTREAM LIGHTWEIGHT TRAVEL TRAILERS Since 1932. Guaranteed for II See them and get a demonsti tion at Warner Trailer Sales, 3( Frolic, Trotwood, Garway, none, Comanche, Driftwood, Tour a-Homa and Bee Line. Truck camp ers and usad trailers. Storage JACOBSON TRAILER SALES ANC RENTAL, 5490 Williams Laka Rd. Plain^OR----------------- ALL NEW 1964 Avalairs, Hollys, Tawas, Cree Travel Trailers 14 to 24 ft., self-contained Order now and have It for vacation ELLSWORTH AUTO ond TRAILER SALES 4577 Dixie Hwy. ~ MA 5-1400 A-WA TRUCK CAMP 1 factory dlstrlb- sale^'aiK, trailer. *” ” " Winter Storage Available TOM STACHLER _ . ------- -\L_. 332^ AUTO 4, MOBILE SALES It's Time for Fall Clearance I Undum, wti BIT OF A DEA40N. MICHIGAN 1743 English Pony Reserve champion, 1744 Open English Pleasure, Saddle Seat Equitation champion. 14-2. Blue-Black gelding. Excellent conformation. Compleloly sound. 7 years old. Owner Is moving, must QUARTER TYPE THOROUGHBRED mere, rogistorod bey, 4 years old. IS hands, rides western and Ei For experienced rhtor. •' after I:" REGISTERED STANDARG BRED mart, 5 years OR 50407. NICE 14-FOOT ALUMINUM TRAIL- gas, also olsctrlc W.D. RIDING RANOf will have horseback rides-und the llghtohey rides any evening PkLL OR >4417. 4710 CLINTQI VILLE " , ifIGTGUNS AND DEER RIFLES FE 2-4339 Hay-Brda-NGd M USED HAND GUflt Al66 iH6t oimt. Opdykt H«rdwar6. FE 6^ HAY AND STRAW FOR SALE Maple >1541 PooHry t5 200 ONE-YEAR-OLD KIMBER LEG horn hens, 40c each. ^1523. USED GUNS IN GOOD CONDITION 1630 Parkway, Sylvan 1-A TOF SOIU BLACK DIRT, FILU ----1, gravel, delivered reasonable. I Feigxieon; OR >4227._______ A-1 BLACK FARM SOIU bELIV- gravaL sand, pedL ale. SlltoSTS. eHbldl kp'^LAdK blkt, I yards tor SW dMivarud. Ft 44M pheasants, guineas, TURKEYl paaooeks, 10413 OakhlN, I'... CEYS. r, MB Holly Trovel Coach, Inc. 5210 Hally Rd., Holly ME 4-47) —Qpon Dally and Sundays- Colonial '^MOBILE HOME SALES. INC. 'HUNTER SPECIAL' Two S'xlO' trevol triltoro, usad, reasonable. 333-14S7. Open dally 7 to 4, Thurs. Frl. 'til 7 Sonday 13 to 4 CORNER OF OPDYKE (AA24) and _______AUBURN (M571_______ lights. ( FE S-31 PHOENIX TI^UCK CAMPERS 4-10-10.4, front and side modeld — ------- * • FE >3747. SMALL CAMP TRAILER, NEEDS repair, 47S. FE 2-7S21.________ 1743 ST. CLAIR, 15-FOOT TRAVEL trallar, aluminum. Stoap> 4. muiI sail. 41,110. EL 7-1424. WINNEBAGO kPPLES: YOU PICK OR WE PICK. Marvin MMdtolon, Sr. ISIS Prad-mort Rd.. Laka Orton. Mkh. (afton 4 p.m.) Saturday and Sunday afl WHATEVER YOU WANT TO DO, USE A PRESS WANT AD TO UO m „ WOLVERINE TRUCK CAMPERS and slatpars. New and used S37S up. Jsdto. toteftoms, telescoping bumpers, ladders, rackx. LOWRY OLMPER SALES. EM 3-244). 10'xS4 FOOT COLONIAL. LIVED IN ' 'Tianlha. Take over payments. FE Housetraiiari 89 1743 ALMA KT X 53' EXPANDO Redwood front porch, carpeting, drapes. Will sell equity el reasonable price. No. 1 Stftiare Lake Trailer Perk, 335-4304 alter 4 p.m. ANOTHER FIRST 35'xS' wide. With living room expansion. Bob Hutchinson 4301 Dlxi# Highway OR >1202 Drayton Plalr OD»n • to 9 Oaity Sunday 12-5 24 FOOT OWENS 1W4 CABIN CRUtS- fico.'* MAZUREK'S Take t *sVa MARINA. 74S S. Blvd. E. FE 4-7547. 1742 1) 1747 CHEVY DUMP TRUCK, ME-chenkally |)OOd, ^Hoct holet and repair. 1250. UL >1472. iTsI FORD Tandem dump 41,006 excellent condition. Cell Milford, MU >2117 evenings. -----------------------Tt5n, __ _________ _...j Roed. II FE 2 75*4. FORD F-400 VS ENGINE, 2^ rnd axle, 425 tires, 13 ft. body, an truck I 1550. JEROME-FER- Ngw bbB IMJCori_1M CAOILUC, 1963 4-wlndow iadan< DoVtito In iharp metallic gray and matching Interior. All (todlllac power accee-aories. Only $395 DOWN WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC 1753 CHEVY VS TON PICKUP, RUNS GOOD. GOOD RUBBER. DON'T MISS THIS ONE. Ills. PEOPLES AUTO SALES : 40 Oakland ___________«2-2351 I 1954 in^'^rnatIonal ¥andem dump tVick, good working con- i r^llt motor, HO >7955. IVER5AL >WHEEL I JEEP I _________ JONVERTIBL-. cellent condHIon. OR X447 ottof 4. 1947 CHEVY BEL ^R r, 662-4525. . Exc. ] _____ _____ . VAN» V-6 , #f)glna4^4-*peed. heater, 6-ply dual whaals, extr- —' JEROME-FERGUw^......... - ester FORD Dealer, OL 1-9711. 959 GMC 1-TON WRECKER, Pi. Cooper B Lincoln, Li Elmer Rice, O >2324. 1943 STaAcRAFT, IFFOOf, 1964* i Evinrude Lark 4, 40 h.p. electric shift. Convertible top. Cover. Little Dude-ti........... *■ 492-0802. ALL 1945 MODELS AVAILABLE AT FALL PRICES MICHIGAN TURBOCRAFT SALES 2527 Dixie Hwy.____OR >0304 ALWAYS A BETTER DEAL~ BOAK-MOTORS MERCURY-SCOTT McCULLOUOH Trallers-Merine Accessories CRUISE-OUT BOAT -SALE -------- - • ■ FE 9 4402 BOATS A Glastroi DETROITER rides, 2 bedrooms tc lellvered and set-up. n display for your $150. Mercury Motors 3.9 to 100 h. STILL THE BEST DEALS AT CLIFF DREYER'S Gun and Spurt Center ■ 115210 Holly Rd., Holly ME 4-47 —Open Dally and Sunday— I CLOSE OUT ON 1964 I JOHNSON MOTORS Boats Canoes Tralle wi OWENS MARINE SUPPLY w 396 Orchard Lake_______FE 2-80 [| EVINRUDE MOTORS is Boats and Accessories I- Wood, Aluminum, FIberglas |"IJard to find t----- ------ 1960 F6RD C-400 3-speed'exle, V4 engine, 425 t 30,000 miles. Ford Co. trucki ROME-FERGUSON Inc., RocN FORD Dealeq OL 1-^ 0 FORD PICKUP* • r. Call after 4 f i¥41 C D R 404U. RAA^IDE Ready to * :RSON CHEV 1962 Ford FtIOO ’/2-Ton Pickup This one has heater, washers, signals, only 51,345. ■BEATTIE Your FORD DEALER slncs 1930" 3N DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD Home ol SERVICE alter the Sale OR 3:1291 .... CHEVY 3 Auto. FE >3274.__________________ 1934 CHEVROLET FDOOR, RADIO, and haator, 4-cvHnder engine, ax-r cellenlly well-kept. 45 dovm end 24 months on balance. Ask about VILLAGE RAMBLER Bob Hutchinson I ' DAWSON'S SALES 4301 Dixie Highway OR >1203 TIpsIco Lake MA Open 9 to°9*"D."lto*'"’ Set. 9-4I FREE LAY-A-WAY SUNDAY 12-5 EXPERT MOBILE HOME REPAI e estlmetoi. Also s Hwy., Drayton Plains, OR STORAGE-REPAIRS PINTER'S-FE 4-0924 1370 Opdyke. Tues.-Thurs. t( OB -------- ... Clemens Rd. F""' FALL clearance PARKWOOO AND CRANBROOK Mobile hontes In sizes up to Il'xOC Inside-Outside Storage Boot Repoirs^afinishing HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS "Your Evinrude Dealer" 1899 S. Telegraph Rd.__332-8033 1^63 CHEVROLET Wfon pickup, FiMtilde, (ong I excellent condition. $1,445. i . VAN CAMP CHEVY MILFORD________________MU 4- I ma-CHEVY CORVAN 95, OWNER I driven, under warranty, like new . throughout, private, $1,275, Mi 7-3491.________________ 1963 FORD ECONOLINE BUS, 101 ' VILLAGE RAMBLER TROY, mTchTgAN JU 8-0536 1939 CHEVY WAGON WITH I FRENCH PROVINCIAL -MERCURY OUTBOATRDS-Cranbrook ll* wide $4,495 Starcralt—Sea-Ray — Cruisers Ir ■ ........ ............... -BOATS- WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD BIRMINGHAM Rochester FORD Dealer, G.M.C. Factory Brunch I New and Used Trucks I FE 5-9485________475 Oeklend Bankers Outlet* 3400 Elizabeth Late Rd. FE >7137*^ CHEVY IMPALA, 2 - boo# KESSLER'S I TON UTILITY ____________________________ SHELL LAKE Parkhurst Trailer Sales '^shwd^'foo* M?rfurv*^“/vto FINEST IN MOBILE LIVNG 15 TO tery, '6-gallon g6t tank M feet. Featuring New Moon-1 steering controls. Cost: Colonial MOBILE HOME SALES IN( ll- wMcs end SO and 40 tooteri HEADQUARTERS College Heights Mobllepark One of Michigan's n e w e s-t ai finest Mobile Home Parks. (I units.) Reservations now being a. cepted, executive sections for fam- -8:30 — Closed Sunday Oxford-Trailer Sales trailer? PR 1-0822 or JD TO BU trailers. FE S-9902. TONY'S MARINE FOR JOHNSON MOTORS IE WILL BEAT ANY OEAL WINTER STORAGE INSIDE OR OUT Michigan Turbocratt Sales 7 Dixie Hwy.________OR_ Wanted Cars-Trucks 101 ALWAYS BUYING AND PAYING MORE FOR GOOD CLEAN CARS ASK FOR BERNIE AT— BIR.AINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH, INC. 912 S. Woodward____Ml 7-3214 AVERILL'S California Buyers Did You Know? VILLAGE RAMBLER WANJED TO BUY-GOOD USEDtor A»!a*sel ■—ivov S. Woodward Ml 4-3900 90 HURON MOTOR SALES IS PAYING *■“ I for good ' 'I, 2 blxks Rent Trallar Space SALE: 97x120 FT. LOT IN MOBILE HOME SUB , all modern lacllltias. 4282 S. Cogshall, Holly.___________ WHY renY? buy for less per month. Mobile home lots, 40x120, S2,49S, S25 down $25 per month. Blacktopped. Gas, baach, fish. Bloch Bros. FE 4-4509, OR 3-1295. really ^Avto AccessoHes •14'* MT MAG. WHEELS. 8.50-14 G :s north of Walton M(SM MOTOR SALES I DODGE I wagon, 9,000 tires,, automatic t. 485-1934.' NO DUES OR FEES. AUTO INSURANCE FOR CANCELLED AND REFUSED DRIVERS EARS EXPERIE NG PEOPLE SO .S PROBLEM. Stop in Today! ANDERSON AGENCY ! 4-3535________1044 Jo: Salts and Service OA 1-1400 1959 CHEVY STICK>V-6, 346, $345i 195$ Pontiec, all Dewer, tVS: 1956 Chevy V-6 stlck8^$22S; 1957 Ford ^door auto. $125. 3935 Baldwin Rd. 1959 CHEVY V-8, BEL AIR 2 DO(3R Visit Our New and Used CAR Outdoor Showroom At 855 OAKLAND AVE. SPARTAN DODGE I960 CHEVY 2-DOOR, RADIO, HEATER. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Take over payments of ..... CALL CREDIT Foreign Cars 35 NEW SPORT CARS Ford. Ml >7500 p. Parks at Harold Turner L MODELS II TRIUMPH sunbeam AAO MORGAN FIAT JAGUAR AUSTIN HEALEY SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 Oakland Ave. FE 5-9421 MGA ROADSTER,. NEEDS S425. FE >80»2. NEW TOP, ENGINE _____uled. '$450. 427-4475. 1959 VOLKSWAGEN TRANSPORTeft Excellent Condition. 4575. 451-3f'“ Renault ‘ "Authorized Deetor" OLIVER . BUICK and JEEP Corner of Piko and Ceu FE >1501 1942 VOLKSWAGEN. ORIGINAL Tires-Auto-Trvck ^ Truck Tire Specials 125x30-10 ply, highway $4 $25x20-12 ply, highway . . $5 “'120—10 ply, mud end _iow nylon ..... S4 900x20-10 gto. mud and 10x22.5—10 ply mud end ---- nylon . 44 Ask for spoclel deal on sets of four FREE .MOUNTING MANSFIELD AUTO SALES t ^^''0 sharp, lata i * 1104 Baldwin Ava. FE 5-590C Auto " 93 CRANKSHAFT GRINDING IN THE FALL Specials ; MOTOR TRANSMISSION AND BRAKE Overhauls . AND Minor Repairs ON Any Make Terii^ OAKLAND . SPECIAL PRICE PAID FOR 195>1943 CARS VAN'S AUTO SALES PR >1355 Autobahn Motors, Inc. AUTHORIZED VW DEALER 54 mile north of Miracle Mile 745 S. Telegraph_FE >453 New and Used Core 106 GLENN'S WANTED: 195M943 CARS Ellsworth WE NEED CARS I TOP DOLLAR FOR GOOD CLEAN CARS Motthews-Hargreaves 431 OAKLAND AVE. FE >4547 Jank Cars-Trvekt 101-A WANTED. Free tow. OR > ALWAYS BUYING 84JUNK CARS-FREE TOWSS; TOP 4$ CALL FE >8142 SAM ALLEN 8, SONS. INC. S HAULED AWAY Ustd Auto-Track Parts 102 SHiTfed’ FORO 292 OR CHEVERLOT FAC- GMC EMPLOYEE'S HAVE THAT 1957 BUICK >DOOR HARDTOP, RA-dlo and heater, automatic transmission, power, 4245 full price, 45 down, can finance, ask about our money beck guarantee. VILLAGE RAMBLER 47 E. Maple TROY, MICHIGAN '___ JU 8-0536 1959 BUICK-1 OWNER 4495 end BUICK 1940 ELECTRA 225 CON- II power, . FE >' >5549 waakdayt 1942 BUICK INVICTA COMVERTI- LOT, 1104 $. WOODWARD AVE.. BIRMINGHAM. Ml >2735.______ 1943 BUICK LeSABRE >OOOR Hard-Exceltonf condition, double 1944 BUtCK RIVIERA, FULL POW-er, exceltont condition, EM M444, 1944 BUICK ELECTRA HARDTOP sports coupe, full poxxer. low mile-age 44>5515. After ...) CHEVROLET V-4, AIR CON-difloned 9-passangar wagon, a 11 powar> raal nica. $975. 651-1776. I960 CHEVROLETS Brookwood >door station wagon. Gray exterior end gray Interior. V-8, stick shift. 4995 Bel Air 4-door sedan. Sparkling copper with capper trim. V-l. Pow-ergllde............... 4991 Patterson Chevrolet Go. 104 S. Woodward Ava. Ml 4-273S BIRMINGHAM 1961 Chevy Impalo 2-door hardtop, with V-4 engl automatic transmission, heator. dio, whitawalisl Boautiful fi mist finish I 41,495. Crissmon Chevrolet $. Rochester Road . ROCHESTER *' '61 CHEVY finish with al . Excqllent x 100 down, fiqence ... $1249 Easy Bank Financing STARK-HICKEY FORD 14 Mile Road E. of Woodward 1961 CHEVROLETS Bel Air xtoor sedan. Beige fInIsN a >pessengar etetloh wagon. BIscayne 2-door sedan. Bright red, grey Interior, >cyllndor. Poxeer-glide; power steering .... $1095 r steering. $1,311 Patterson Chevrolet Co. 1104 5. Woodward Ave. Ml >2731 BIRMINGHAM Credit or Budget PROBLEMS? We Con Finonc;e Youl 100 Cars to Select From I Call Mr. Dale FE 3-7865 _______mOYDS . 1941 X> 1952 445 UP 4)95 up ----------------- .— 175 up. 4 Buicks, 1954 to 1955 445 up. 1959 AAercury, 1954 Padierd Olsets. 4 Plymouths, 19Srio 1954 Cheap 3 Practically new Rambton Dlscti Lpto modela and transportefton 435 T^'nOMY cars 2S15 Dixie H CHEVROLET, 1 vertlple. . ...J IMPALA CON-Exceptionally clean. 4, ----- -II 7-04W. 1943 CADILLAC, PRIVATE OWNER, xxhtte 2-door coupe) like hew, 4X-■“ 447-34B4, Birmingham. LIKE NEW, 1944 CADILLAC CON-vertltfle, full poxxer. >way leaf, spare never on ground. 50 others to choose from. I .SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 ()ak|and , FW421 lEROME OLDS and CADILLAC New Car Sovi.igs—Today CALL FE 3-7021 1942 CHEVROLtT BEL^IR >000*' D-lO THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, New aedJM106 iitw and U«^ Cwi T06 1962 CHEVROLETS I LtoM BIsctyn* l-door i turqolw, fvrqubii *-cyUnd*r, itkk FORD CONVBRTIBLB, radio and Koattr, automatic ------iltilon.' Ills tuH prica. IS 14 months of balanct. Ask II .Its BiKayna Adoorjkdan. Cascada O'w wlllt sraan Intorlor, l-cylindtr, PowarglkSa 11,1 Kylkidor, Poworgllda BIscayno ^daor aadan, A VILLAGE RAMBLER Inwala luper Sport hardtop. Embar rod, rod Intorlor. v.| Poworgllda, powor atoorlng TROY, MICHIGAN JU 8-0536 hw ^ Uitd Cart 106 Credit or Financing Problems? We Can FInanco Youl Call Mr. Yale 651-8558 75 Cholco-Uiod Patterson Chevrolet (jo. 1)04 S. Woodward Avo. Ml 4-1 BIRMINGHAM ItM CHEVY IMPALA SUPER Sport Coupe, rod with white too. buj|cot aoatt, console, soat P.m. 303-7107.____________________ tMl CHEVY BEL-AIRE STATION wagon, Vd, 11,000 miles,----- condition, FE M7t«. BIRMINGHAM TRADES . Every used car offered for retail to the public is 0| bonafide 1 - o w n e r, low mileage, sharp cdr. 1-year ports and labor worronty. ertt^i^ brakes,j r»ilt44eUICK Riviera, Power, _ 1t«) FORD TBIRD HARDTC with radio, haater, power steerli . brakes, windows, all leather tri tu-tone paint. Only S1,9t4. Call t JOHN McAULIFFE e$2195 1963 CHEVROLETS Powtrolldt. power steering $2,095 Ml Air A^sseoger on. Ermine wtilte ' OlMe. I $lrS95 Potterson Chevrolet Co, 1104 S. Woodward Ave, Ml 4.271S BIRMINGHAM IMS CHEVROLET $S, 317 ENGINE, all power. S),0t$. FE S-TOM. Or, FE l-47t0. 1941 CHEVY WAGON, HURON 1964 BUiCK 9 p«s$enger 19M*%UICK Wagon, 7,000 430 Oakland_______ REPOSSESSION-1941 FORD FAIR-lane. Will bring car to 5.1404. Deal- 941 FORD GALAXIE 4-DOOR, VI, automatic, pc---- ^ brakes, 30.000 XVar-: a.rrwj. newi 11495. JEROME. FERGUSON Inc., Rochester FORD Dealer, QL 1-9711. 1941 FORD 9-PASSENGER WAGON, 144 BUICK HARDTOP ........ 143 BUICK Electra Convertible ...... 1943 BUICK Hardtop 1943 FORD XL Convertlblt 1941 BUICK Electro 1941 BUICK 4-door Hardtop .. Sl,4t 1941 CADILLAC S .... BUICK 4^l6or Sedan 1940 BUICK Hardtop . •*" "’.enajill Automatic . FISCHER BUICK 957 FORD station WAGON, possanger, real on<»t »>« s* Auto. FE 5-3170. McAULIFFE 1957 T-BIRD, EXCELLENT CON-dltlon, full power, radio, 1 tops, 51,100 409-1099. _______ FORD FAIRLANE Autobahn Motors, Inc. Authorized vw dealer Motor Soles 1 blocks north , of FE 1-1441 1943 CHEVY II CONVERTIBLE, RA- year grantee, this one-own< Trade Is reconditioned end read to go. 195 down onC *'---------“ on bolonce. Ask oboe 17«S S. Telegraph FE 0-4531 1951 FORD STATION WAGON. V-S, I Good condition S150. Call after 4 I p.m. OR 3-3341,___________________ 1950 FORD FAIRLANE CONVERTI-ble. Power steering. Whitewalls. Automatic. Will accept reasonable offer. Call after 4 p.m. UN 3-7149. . FAIRLANE 500, AUTCF good transportation. MA NEW Ramblers SAVE $1,000 1964 Rambler Classic radio, heater, automatic VILLAGE RAMBLER 666 S. Woo36-6693. 1963 Ford Convertible. Galaxle, with power steering, brakes, VS engine, automatic transmission, only $1,9451 FORD STATION WAGON COUN-' an, 4 d ... - Radio, cyl, Ford-0-whltewa" r. 474-0334. Hcmer«Hight Motors, Inc. , 353 engine padded d JEROME-FERGUSON, I l-TX)OR; steering, brakes, si e newl S1495. JEROME-F E R $495. JEROME FERGUSON, Inc. Rochester FORD Dealer, OL 1-9711. 1959 FORD 2-OOOR, RADIO, HEAT- ER, FORD-O-MATIC. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Take - -Payments of $18.90 ““ . CREDIT MGR.r A/ T Ford Ml 4-7500. 1964 PONTIACS and TEMPESTS Demonstrators Mileage Cars Trade-Ins WIDE SELECTION AT TERRIFIC SAVINGS DON'T BUY UNTILL YOU SEE US FIRST 17 Salesmen To Serve You ‘ :. canditian. 5 BUY YOUR NEXT OLDS OR RAMBLER FROM HOUGHTEN & SON ROCHESTER Performs li a soft sat bi^nza toi lor la tai vinyl. It easy har mission. PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 1963 Ford BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER ON DIXIE HWY. IN W, "Home of SERVICE after OR 3-1291 WATERFORD We're wheeling and dealing the all-new 1965 Ram|>lers. See them how! Used cors are being sold at wholesale to make room for the new car trades. ROSE rambler I FORD CONVERTIBLE, WITH n. power steering, V-9 engine, itewallt, red finish, white top, I HP engine, 52,295. Call Mr. McAULIFFE FORD XL CONVERTIBLE, .... V-8 engine, autonrretic trant- mission, radio, heater, whitewalls. 65 Mt. Clemens St. FE 3-7954 beautiful light blue finish, blue topi It's yours 52.592. Call today and take a ride In this beauty. 1959 FORD 4-D tic. power sti matic, tu-ton extra clean! 1 GUSON Inc. McAULIFFE steering fori natic trans-[ ' The ideal j JJifS' 530 Dakland^Av^.^^'_______ FE 5-4101 595^ROME FEr! FORD XI 1-OOOR HARDTOPi Rochester FORD ^ engine, automatic, radio, and ... I verbasonic, power steering and brakes, almost like new! JEROME car for a large ti lent value, at oi only $1,495. ______________________________ _ BIRMINGHAM >*« t-bird convertible, rec-i DmmirtunA(¥\., ! ord player, ylbrasonic, good con-1 „ Ch^rysler-Plymouth i ,j|,|on. Must sell, best otter. Cah 912 S. Woodward Ml 7-3114 w-Oinj.3135 E. Highland, MS9. 1 DODGE, 19», POWER STEERING, i»M FAlCon WAGON, FORO-O-1 FORD FAIRLANE 8. AUTO- _____i__________ Hr >775. Call 673-4589.____ 11958 JEEP STATION WAGON, 4- ■ ■ ' miles, original S79S. Good canditian. :r brakes, p le Royals. S295. A 1942 DODGE LANCER FE S-399t .____ 1943 DODGE DART CONVER'TIBLE, ^angli^rtli^, excellent’condl- ELY NO MONEY DOWN. Take, gvi. payments at $14.07 per month. CALL CREDIT M*R. Mr. Parks, at Hbrold Turner Ford. Ml 4-7500. Outdoor Showroom At 855 OAKLAND AVE. SPARTAN DODGE 1964 Dodge Dart - Chrysler ------ With automatic tr rias baianca of na« EROME'FE If FORD D> LLOYDS Lincoln-AAercury-Comet New Location 1250 Oakland Ave. Public Notice % The new Wide Trci’ck i. now open to our new lot 1960 Ford Wagon, 6-Possenger l/lth 42,325. OR 3-m>. 1957 PLYMOUTH, GOOD TRANS- pertetlen. FE MOn._____' PLYMOUTH 1959 STATION WACON, 959 PLYMOUTH 1-OOOR HARD-top, radio, automatic trontmlttion Kfaw; SMr'Sfe-eTir*' Visit .Our , 4 NOW ond Used CAR Outdoor Showroom At 855 OAKLAND AVE. SPARTAN DODGE New aiid.Uied Can 106 1959 PLY540UTM, POWER STEBR-Imi aivt h>alr*t, autOmaflC, H95. Brekori, Pwry at Walton. FE 4-1900. 0 PLYMOUTH, BELVEDERE, 4, ooltr, good tlrn, bne-ownor. R5. FE M175._______ t VALIANT 4 - DOOR, RADIO, ----- ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY. DOWN. Toko e _____ ol SM.07 per month.’C CREDIT MGR.. Mr. Parkt, at I ■ - Ford. Ml 4-7500. I PLYMOUTH "SPORT FURY' ■rdtqp that Is a front lino stand ,t. Original metallic finish pot Ivaly tparklei. The bucket seal a" . . latic --------- This low mileago beauty « 911 5. Woodward HAUPT PONTIAC 1943 TEMPEST LoMANS Convtrtlbla, rod with a wh^o^ walls, vary sharpl tl ^ ”‘Ji matic, whltewal^l 1941 TEMPEST LaMANS Sports coupe, radio, heater, wl walls, beiga In color, and < $99 down! HAgPT PONTIAC CLARKSTON___________MA 5-5544 1955 PONTIAC, TRI-POWER, door hardtop, good coor"*'“ or best otter. OR 3-1045. 1959 PONTIAC star CHIEF POW. er brakes, steering. FE 5-7543. 1959 PONTIAC 4-DOOR HARDTOP. New tires and brakes, Hydromatic, Mansfield. 335- Outdoor Showroom At 855 OAKLAND AVE. SPARTAN DODGE . ready 1 iheM with j Only M.I7 > s trouble ekiy with t\\, Credit NOW OPEN Additional Location 855 Oakland Ave. Spartan Dodge 1964 Rambler Classic $1695 $95 Down VILLAGE RAMBLER I 4-3900_________ AC CONVERTIBLE ig end brakes, radio, '. 5715. Ml »e415. with white top. 100 per cent $ delivery duaranteed. Full Price $1,299 STARK-HICKEY FORD 14 Mile Road E HAVE YOU RECENTLY BEEN denied the privilege of buying a car because of previous credit problems or bankruptcy? If so, ond you w have a steady job, and os little as a $5 bill to put down, then I con get you a car and get your credit reestablished. Call Mr. Cook at FE 8-4088. King A,uto. 1961 Tempast LLOYDS LIncoln-Mercury-Comel New Location 1250 Oakland Ave. FE 3-7043 New End Ute8 Can 106 TEMPEST, 1*n SPORT COUPE. Robert Pleyd. --------- - - - p.m. MU 4-Tia Leaves Are Falling « prkM ■on convor_______ thorp \HZ Pontloc Goto- Credit C»ordl- NOW OPEN Additipnol Location 8.55 Oakland Ave. (Outdoor Showroom) ---- „.|j north of Ctu Avo.) Spartan Dodge OVERSTOCKED! On Our "Select" Used Cars Mostly 1-owner new cSr trade CHOOSE FROM 50 Others No loir otior-doal ratusod -Easy Financing — Bank rales SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 Oakland FE 5-9421 1962 Pootiac Catalina $1595 RUSS JOHNSON PONTIAC-RAMBLER 4SX my »>a88 Kids Are Wonderful in your family car. Solve your problem In a oaautiful way. This 1943 PONTIAC Ppassenger Cata- rack aiM brand new nykm wells. Buy today with ar car down, and low monthl; mants. Call Mr. Darrell, Credit NOW OPEN Additional Location 855 Oakland Ave. (Outdoor Showroom) (Just milt north of Cou Avo.) Spartan Dodge )943 TEMPEST LeMANS, BLACK with black Interior, 4-speed, tinted windows, many axtras, St,300. MA 1 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE, BY " lower, FM ‘*‘- I mileage. 1961 Convertible. Tuxedo black with black Interior, block lop. fuel inlactlon. 4-sp^ 52,4! Patterson Chevrolet Co. IM S- Woodward Ave. Ml 4-1735 BIRMINGHAM 1963 Pontibc group buy it Id low . Dorrtll, credit NOW OPEN Additional Location 855 Ookland Ave. Spartan Dodge 1944 PONTIAC CATALINA CON- vertlblo, ---------- ------------- steering wheels, k---- 81,450. OL t-0149. PONTIAC LEMANS CONVER-_le,"bloe ■ '*" whit«w«ll»s 644-A481 after 5:30. 1964 Borny I sparkling bronze hardtop, that' ,111 ploose the most discriminating ■. Ease of driving li r your protection. NOW OPEN Additional Location 855- Oakland Ave. Spartan Dodge 1944 TEMPEST 4. AOOOR, AUTO-matk. Low mIleaK. Lots of tx-tros. $1.000 OR 3-S&.__ 1964 Pontiac Grand Prix Coupe, wHh power steering, brakes, tomatic transmission, only l4Xno 11 tl,99S. BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD "Homo of SERVICE after the sale" OR 3-1291 Credit or Budget PROBLEMS? We Can Finance You! Call Mr. Darrell FE 8-4528 New tikl Us#8 Cm 186 Visit Our New ml Ueed Cm 186. ' 1959 »AMB_LiR_Ci>SSIC STATION Outdoor Showroom At 855 OAKLAND AVE. SPARTAN DODGE 1959 RAMBLER 4-DOOR CLAb^i. Station wagons, savaral to choOW tram, 15 down and M per week. Ask about our money beck guar- ^ VILLAGE RAMBLER 47 E. Maple 1 TROY, MICHIGAN JU 8-0536 ' Credit or Budget PROBLEMS? We Can Finance You! 100 Cors to Select Froml Call Mr. Dale FE 3-8765 LLOYDS Hunter Dodge Where the Hunt EndsI A Fine Selection of Uead Cara-1943 Olds Vdoor hardtop JIMS 1944 PONTIAC, 1 PLUS 1 C*TA-jlne, power steering, braKps, ra-Hla, heater. 4■^3^a0. 1944 PONTIAC STAR CHIEF, $6-dan. Fewer sMerlhg, brakes, auto-metk. Sharp, many extrai. S1.4S0. FE S-9334. 1941GT Dart 1941 Dodge Dart S »95 IK1?^f» 5» , . .. »* 1 1942 Mge Lsneer'**'^ S '»5 1959 Plymouie simost Ilka now S 395 1951 Chavy * 25 * 1942 Plymoulh Fury ♦door ... 51,295 19U Dodge.Dart SI,1*5 1942 Dodge Dart Wigan 51,»5 1960 Plymouth Baivtdara S S9S Home of Trophy Buys Hunter Dodgg 499 5. Hunter Birmingham MI 7-0955 OLIVER BUICK 1959 PLYMOUTH *-pass. Wgn 1 495 I9S7 BUICK Super Hardtop t 495 1943 MERCURY Custom Adoor SttfS 1941 BUICK WlWcef ■ 12,195 1M4 PONTIAC ConvertIblN . $3,895 1959 NASH W1ETROPOLITAN, VERY good condition. 343-7732 attar 3. 1984 STAR CHIEF 4- tool Standard transmission 1 > $1495 j RUSS JOHNSON ‘ PONTIAC-RAMBLER On M24 In Orlan MY 3-4244. 198-210 Orchard FE 2.9165 1*43 RAMBLER 770 SERIES, 4 dear sedan, radio and heater, automatic, St,495 futr price. Sll* 1959 RAMBLER 4 - DOOR SEDAN, sever»l to choose tram, priced as low ^s $195. Ask about our money beck guarantee. VILLAGE RAMBLER 47 E. Maple down end bank refes. 1-yeer ' guarantee. Ask sbout our money beck guarantee. VILLAQE RjS^BLER' 444 5. Woodward, Birmingham Ml 4-3*00 TROY. MICHIGAN JU 8-0536 1*54 STUDEBAKER CHAMPIONT 1 new rubber t125. Save Auto. FE i - SUBURBAN OLDS BIRMINGHAM TRADES ' 100% • ^ WRITTEN j Guarantee Every car listed carries this guaror.tee. Take the guesswork out of buying. Used corsi Credit No Problem! ALL CARS FUI 1944 ^K^ LARK Herdtop. 7,000 1943 OLDS Super Wagon $2495 1943 OLDS "W" Coupe Buckets $3495 1944 OLDS Stertire Coupe .. $2995 1943 "M" Dynemk Coupe $2295 1941 BUICK LeSabre, Power $1795 1944 CUTLASS Hardtop $1495 1941 "91" AOoor Hardtop . $1195 .LY EQUIPPED 1*41 TEMPEST Coupe 5 995 1941 OLDS Hardtop 11795 1944 OLDS "90" Canvertibla Sava 1944 OLDS ^Door Hardtop S2795 1943 ,"9t" ADoor Hardtop Air 51795 1983 STARFIRE Coupte 8a000 Mlltf Uvt 1H4 JETSTAR "IT' « CohvertibN . * 83895 JUST ARRIVED FRESH STOCK-1965 TRADES ALL MAKES, ALL MODELS-50 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM 2 YEAR WARRANTY r7DTr*U* Parmanant anti-frecu whan vod’ buy .a usad car from i niLIli S!to*!Ir*V^^ *** *n tha month of SEE STUB STUBBLEFIeId, BOB MARTIN 565 S. Woofdwarci Ave. BIRMINGHAM MI 4-4485 | '59'Plymputh out swivel front seats, 4 f a c t« r y equipment, FURY VI engine, ill Ihl; PATTERSON CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH valiant-dodge trucks It N. Ma^ St. ROCHESTER OL I-B55I -ABSOLUTELY- NO MONEY DOWN WE HANDLE FINANCINO-36 MONTHS TO PAY CAR PRICE WEEK CA* PRICE WEEK ' ;S6 CADILUC . Hardtop . $195 $1.63 '59 PONTIAC .. Hardtop .. $295 $2.35 '58, CADILLAC . Hardtop $495 $4.72 '60 PLYMOUTH Sat III ." $395 $3.14 '59 CHEVY .. . $395 $3.14 '61 FALCON .... $595 $5.14 Wagon Coma On Ini '57 OLDS Nka Car $297 $2.35 '58 PONTIAC .. ■ Full Power . $595 $5.14 '59 CHEVY . . . Hardtop - V-0 $595 $5.15 '60 VALIANT $395 $3,14 WALK IN-Drive OUT WALK IN-Drive OUT there is really ONLY ONE 60 S. TELEGRAPH FE 8-9661 MI 4-7500 turner FORD '63 T-BIRD HardJ[op $2488 '62 FORD Station Wagon $1288 '63 FORD Convertible $1892 '60 FORD Convertible $592 '63 PONTIAC Hardtop $2088 '64 Fords 18 to Choose From ,|ps Low as $1398 '64 FORD $1472 '60 OLDS Hardtop $944 '61 FC«D Club Sedan $798 '64 CHEVY Hardtop '63 PONTIAC Conveiiible < -$209'2 TURNER FORD 464 S. Woodword Birmingham MI 4-7500 . 1 ■ ' THE PONTIAC PkESS. VVEURE^DAY, OCTOBER 21, 1964 -Television Programs- Programs fumishod by stations littsd in this column or* subjoct to chongo without noti^o. ChonwsI 2-WJBK-TV Chonn»l 4-WWJ-TV Chonnal y-WXYZ-TV Chonn«t »-CiaW»TV nifitnt* 56-WTVS MTEDNESDAY EVENING 6:00 (2) (4) News, Weather, Sports (7) Movie.: (Color) “Attack of the Normfins” (In Progress) (9) Yogi Bear (S6) (Special) Intertel “Crisis in Canada” examines Quebec’s quiet revolution in which French Canadians are demanding political and economic autonomy. 6:30 (2) (4) National News (7) (Color) News, Sports (9) Bat Masterson Huge bearded man attacks Bat on way to mine. (Repeat) (56) Local Issue / 7:00 (2) TV? Reports (4) Opinion (7) Have Gun-WUl Travel Trail boss challenges Paladin to fight. (Repeat) * (9) Movie: “Titanic” (1953) Clifton Webb, Barbara Stanwyck, Robert Wagner, Thelma Ritter, (56) Topic. “The Ultimate Weapon” Analysis of examinations of U.S. soldiers released from Communist prispns in Korea. 7:36 (2) CBS Reports (See TV Features) (4) (Color) Virginian Newspaperwoman (B a r-bara Eden) brings outlaw back to life in her dispatches. (7) Ozzie and Harriet (See TV Features) (56) Past Imperfect 6:00 (7) Patty Duke Competition over “The Boy Next Door” turns into all-out warfare. (56) Great Books 8:30 (2) Beverly Hillbillies When Jed is given honorary doctorate in return for $l-million donation, Granny is incensed because she does the doctorin’ in the family. (7) Shindig Jackie Wilson and Righteous Brothers head guest list. (56) Conversations Topic: “Contemporary Music: Melody or Madness?” 1:00 (2) Dick Van Dyke (See TV Features) (4) Movie: (Color) “Beau James” (1957) Bob Hope, Vera Miles, Paul Douglas, Alexis Smith. .(7) Mickey Rooney When Ling bags a huge Chinese wedding reception for the resort, ^things begin to look up. (9) Red River Jamboree 1:30 (2) Cara WilUams Cara stumbles onto hidden room where she finds elderly woman mistakenly listed as an office machine in the files. (7) GOP Talk. Goldwater will answer Johnson’s Sunday address. (9) Festival After three years in London, girl is appalled by actions of her family. 16:00 (2) Danny Kaye Angela Lansbury is vis- itor. (7) To Be Announced 10:30 (7) News Special (See TV Features) 10:55 (2) PoliUcal Talk 11:00.(2) (4) (7) (9) News, Weaker, Sports 11:30 (2) Steve Allen Cliff Arquette makes another appearance. (4) (Ck)lor) Johnny (Jar^n (7) Movie: “Mr. Belvedere Rings the Bell” (1951) Clifton Webb, Joanne Dni (9) Biingo 12:00 (9) S u m m e r Olympics (See TV Features) 12:30 (9) Movie: “Paris Ex- press” (1953) Claude Rains, Marta Toren 1:00 (2) Peter Gunn (Repeat) TV Features Keating vs. Kennedy By United Press International CBS REPORTS, 7:30 p.m. (2) A Ipok at the New York I senatorial race between incumbent Republican Kenneth Keating and challenger Robert Kennedy. OZZIE AND HARRIET, 7:30 p'.m. (7) When Kris *joins Rick at college so they can be together more of the time, I their “togetherness” becomes a nuisance. DICK VAN DYKE, 9:00 p.m. (2) Magazine for men-about-town wants Rob as consultant, and Laura is vybrried. NEWS SPECIAL, 10:30 p.m. (7) Examination of Iowa * county that has remarkable record of choosing winners in | presidential elections. i ' SUMMER OLYMPICS, 12 midnight (9) Scheduled events include finals In 1,500-meter run. (4 Lawman (Repeat) 1:15 (7) Akier nours 1:30 (2) (4) News, Weather THURSDAY JHORNING 6:10 (2) On the Farm Front 6:15 (2) News 6:20 (2) Sunrise Semester 6:30 (4) Classroom (7) Funews 6:50 (2) News 7:00 (2) Happyland (4) Today Look at University of Chicago. (7) Johnny Ginger 7:10 (2) Happyland 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Big Theater 8:30 (7) Movie:‘ “The Clock’ (1945) Judy Garland, Robert Walker, James Glea- 8:45 ( 56) English Lesson 8:55 (4) PoliUcal Talk (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 9:00 (2) Movie: “China Sky” (1945) Randolph Scott, Ruth Warrick (4) Living (9) Romper Room 9:10 (56) Let’s Read 9:30 (56) American History 1:50 (56) Spanish Lesson 10:00 (4) Make Room for Daddy (Repeat) (7) Girl Talk (9) National Schools 10:10 (56) Scientific World 10:30 (2) I Love Lucy (Repeat) f. (4) (Color) Word for Word (7) Price Is Right (9) National. Magazine 10:35 ( 56) French Lesson 10:50 (56) Spanish Lesson 10:55 (4) News 11:00 (2) Andy Griffith (4) Concentration (7) Get the Message (9) Friendly Giant 11:15 (9) Chez Helene 11:20 (56) What’s New 11:30 (2) McCoys (Repeat) (4) (Color) Jeopudy (7) Missing Links iO) Butternut Square 11:50 (9) News (56) Memo to Teachers 11:55 (4) PoliUcal Talk AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) Love of Life (4) (Color) Say When (7) Father Knows Best (Repeat) ‘ ^ (9) Bingo 12:20 (56) At the Fair 12:25 (2) News 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) (Color) Truth or Consequences 12:35 (56) Spanish Lesson 12:45 (2) Guidinf' '' ' Guiding Light 12:50 (56) Let’s Read 1:00 (2) Jack Benny (Repeat) (4) News (7) Movie: “They Met in Bombay” (1941) Clark Gable, Rosalind Russell, (9) Movie: “Girl From Jones Beach” (1949) Ronald Reagan, Virginia O' Mayo. 1:10 (4) Eliot’s Almanac (56) Sets and Symbols :15 (4) Topics for Today :25 (56) Geography :30 (2) As the World Turns (4) (Color) Let’s Make a .Deal 1:55 (4) News (56) American History 2:00 (2) Password (4) Loretta Young 2:20 (7) News (56) Safety Circle 2:25 (56) Mathematics 2:30 (2) Hennesey (Repeat) (4) Doctors (7) Day in Court 2:50 (56) Spanish Lesson 2:55 (7) News 3:00 (2) To TeU the Truth (4) Another World (7) General Hospital 3:15 (9) News 3:25 (2) News 3:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) (Color) You Don’t Say j (7) Young Marrieds (9) Take 30 3:55 (4) PoliUcal Talk 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Match Game (7) ’Trailmaster (Repeat) (9) (Special) Summer Olympics 4:25(4) News 4:30 (2) (Ck)lor) Movie: “The TaU T” (1957) Randolph Scott, Maureen O’Sullivan, Rich^ Boone. (4) Mickey Mouse Club (Repeat) (9) Popeye 5:00 (4) (Color) George Pierrot Film tour through rural England. (7) Movie: “First Spaceship on Venus” (1962) JKoka Tani, Ignacy Ma-chowski, Oldrick Lukes 5:15 (56) Industry on Parade 5:30 (9) Rocky and Friends (56) What’s New 5^ (9) Bugs Bunny 5:55 (2) Weather (4) PoliUcal Talk Funds Given to Tippifs Are Distributed DALLAS, Tex. (AP) - Money donated to the family of Patrolman J. D. Tippit, killed Nov. 22 while trying to arrest Lee Harvey Oswald, was distributed Tuesday by Dist. (Jourt Clerk Bill Shaw. Marie Tippit, widow of the slain police officer, received a check for $312,916.62. In addi-Uon, $330,946.46'was given Mrs. Tippit and J. Donald Squibb, trust officer for Republic National Banks' to be held in trust for the three ’Tippit children — Charles Allen, Brenda Kay and Cuiftis Glenn — and $3,716.16 went to the city police and firemen’s welfare fimd. Distfibution of the money was authorized by Dist. Judge Dee Brown Walker last week. Radio Programs- WJR(760) wxwn 910) CKUMSOO) WWJ(950) WCARQ VjO) WPON(1460) WJBKd 500) WHW-PM(94.7) «it»-CKLW, Ntw* WJR, N«W( WWJ, Newt WXYZ, NMt WJBK, Niwi. Robert E. LM WCAR, Nowt, Jo* EocortIMl WPON, Nowt. Comnwntorv, ti«s-WJR, uwoll Thomat WXYl, moor *— TtW-WXYZ, WXYl. Nowt, . 7tW-WXYZ, M Memn WRON, Nowt. aob Oniono W-Newt, imbbath WCAR, ta^ Caraniar WJR, Noob, iRortt 7:J»-WJR. V bt tnnouncad. liW-WJBK, Jack Iba Bai^ CKLW, Tarry XniBM l;)5-WXYZ, Run KniBbt ■:ia—WWJ. Muilc Scana. WJR. Evaning Cebcart f:0a-WJR. Nawt. Laamln titl-bNJR, Muilc a;U-WPON. Tba World Tadai ia;aa-^WRON, Bob Oraana WJR. Nawt, Kalaidoacapa Iliia-WCAR, Nawv Spam WJR. Naws. Sportt CKLW, WorM Tortorrow Iliia-WCAR, Book! Ili»-WCAR. Bova Caranda Him WWJ, Mutk icana CKLW, Mutk ‘til Dawb WJR, Mutk hr'-- —'—- INIIN WCAR, Newt, tbaridan W^, Newt Country N Tk. . vilrMMIc'M ^'‘ibew 7taa-CKLW, Nawt, Taby bavM WHFI,' Larry Payne, Nawt 7IM-CKLW. Nawt. Oavw WPON, Mutual Sportt SiM-WJR, Mutk Hail til^WJR, Na«w!*Qa!Tlt t-Sir^WJW^Jeavy ‘nWiTiL^ar WXYZ, B----- McNl THURSDAY APTIRNOON lliM-WJR, Nawt, Farm WWJ, Newt, Mutk CKLW, AutHn Grant WPON, Nawt, BKAR, Nawt.------ WHFb Payne. News, Syr- Miller to Fly to Hoover Rite Abandons Plan for Pennsylvania Swing SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Rep. William E. Miller canceled two days of campaign appearances and decided to fly to New York City today to be on^^hand for Tbui^ay’s funeral service for Herbert Hoover. The Republican nominee for vice president abandoned plans for a swing through Pennsylvania- to attend the service for the former president. Miller’s campaign schedule also was disrupted by a hurry-up television filming session and, as a result, he canceled engagements in Ohio and Kentucky. The New York congressman was about to leave Oakland ’Tuesday, en route to Cleveland, .Ohio, when he received the call from naUonar GOP oampaign headquarter asking him to make the film inunediately, a spokesman said. PRIVATE SESSION Arrangements were made for a private filming session at a San Francisco sUidio ’Tuesday night, and Miller then stayed overnight in a San Francisco hotel. Assistant press secretary Harold Dunham would say only that the material was part of a program to be shown on naUon-wide television and that the film had to be flown to Washington, D.C., by this'moming. Miller had planned to start off from Cleveland this morning and campaign also in Cincinnati, Springfield and Dayton, Ohio, with a brief side trip to Covington, Ky. Because of the length of the air flight to Ohio, plus a time zone loss of three hours. Miller would not be able to fulfill today’s engagements, Dunham said. The Pennsylvania trip was to have taken him into Lancaster, Williamsport and Altoona. Sweden’s constitution specifies that the king must be a member of the Lutheran Church. WORLD RIVERS r" r~ r" 6 5 6 7 8 9 ifl TT 12 13 14 15 6 ir pA 21 24 5T 30 5T 35 I37 33 40 43 45 4« 47 48 50 51 52 54 57 58 59 60 SI 62 63 21 ACROSS 1 “Beautiful — Waltz” 5 Cornin’ Through the —” 8 River in land of pyramids 12 Crust 13 Above (contr.) 14 Correct 15 Creek that named a battle 17 Fish sauce 18 Basin ' 19 Anew 21 Wrong (prefix) 23 Concerning 24 Expression of sorrow 27 River of Grand Canyon Natural state 34 Harem room Mr. Wolfert 36 Hawaiian pepper 37 River between Texas and Oklahoma 38 Period 39 Colored in stripes 42 Dibbles 43 Greek letter 44 English river 46 Gasoline rating 50 Expunge 54 King of Judah (Bib.) 55 River crossed by Alexander the Great 58 Card game 59 Eternity 60 Lial-s 61 Large bird 62 Soak flax 63 Gaelic DOWN 1 Early English coins 2 Intimation 3 Preposition 4 Hatreds 5 decay 6 Affirmative vote 7 Feminine name 8 Closer 9 Useless 10 Prevaricates 11 Produce designs on metal 16 Roqf finial 20 Back 22 Reckoning 24 Desert dweller 25 Molten rock 26 From a place 28 European river 29 Put on cargo 30 Verdi character 31 Let fall 32 Horse food 40 Brazilian river 41 Demand payment -42 Mock 45 Even (contr.) 46 Trees 47 Masticate 48 Lake with Blue Nile outlet 49 Elbe River tributary 51 Maple genus 52 Solar bodies 33 Essential being 56 Fish eggs 57 Social insect Myopk Night Club Comic Sees Film Script His Way By EARL WILSON PARIS.- Little Woody Allen, the myopic night club comedian from Brooklyn, is rhaking himself a motion picture star through . I wish I’d a device so shabby, so unethical, so monstrous have thought of it firsL Sneaky, wily Woody didn’t tel! Producer Charles Peldman, when he sold him a movie script called “What’s New, Pussycat?” (about a sex-crazed psychiatrist) that Woody Allen would act in it . . . and steal the picture. “But that was my dirty scheme from the first,” leered Woody through his heer-hottle thick glasses when I saw him here . . . “and gness who gets the girl? Woody Allen!” Peter O’Toole, Peter Sellers, Romy Schneider, Capucine and Paula Prentiss are also in it reading the script as it comes smoking from Woody’s typewriter looking for the gems they’re supposed to utter. Instead,” I’m told by a friend,, “there are only hilarious lines for Woody Allen.” Producer Feldman finally screamed at writer Woody Allen that actor Woody Allen had the best stuff... and please Improve the script. Woody labored over it for days. Feldman read the revision and howled with pain. “You’ve only improved your own part—by fattening it!” protested Feldman. “What about O’Toole and Sellers?” And Woody Allen comes off marvelously in the tests and may be the new Peter Sellers. Also, Woody now is becoming a Don Juan. He’s short, spindly, polysyllabic, a fellow you could spot immediately as having four drip-dry suits and his own library card. ★ ★ ★ Yet, standing in front of the George V here, wolfy Woody so entranced one well-projected French gal that she circled the block and came back to try to inwiggle him into her clutches.,^^ ★ ★ ★ THE MIDNIGHT EARL IN NEW YORK ... Audrey Hepburn, due here from Rome with husband Mel Ferrer, cabled Warner Bros: “Have limousine and wheelchair at airport” (for Ferrer, who broke an ankle) . . . Marty Allen said at the LBJ rally at Madison Sq. Garden: “In honor of the President’s visit, Mayw Wagner had 14 more streets ripped up.” Diosa Costello, starring at Liborio, called producer Gewge Abbott from the audience and cracked, “Let’s do an Abbott and Costello act”; they samba’d . . . Sammy Davis reports Dean Martin hasn’t seen “Golden Boy” yet, “but he sent his bartender to find out how we’re doing.” ★ ★ ★ REMEMBERED QUOTE: “The reason a dBllar won’t do as much fbr people as it once did is that people won’t do as much for a dollar as they once did.”—Anon. EARL’S PEARLS: Actor Edmond O’Brien, discu^ii^ Walt Disney, said, “He has so much money that every time he makes a deposit, the bank just puts up a building around it.” Sbecky Green, very fuimy at Basin St. E., explains Cali-fornia's community property law: “Everything you have is divided 50-59—ymir wife gets half and her. lawyer gets the other half.” . . nut's earl, brather. (TM HM SvMIcaM, iRi^) Answer to Previous Puzzle BIG SAVINGS! 964 Models Mutt Go RANGES • WASHERS REFRIGERATORS p-l9, SWEET'S IBJ Far Ahead in ‘PppcoriyPoir iriyKo Tpnn A NASHVILLE, Tenn.^(AP) -The “popcorn poll” shows President Johnpqn leading Sen. Barry Goldwater in 43 states, with 77 per cent of the popular vote. Popcorn distributor Jim Blevins said today that almost ioo.-000 persons had voted in the poll by mailing in coupons distributed in theaters and supermark- ets. UNLIMITED SOFT WATER UO PER W MONTH Wu Service All Makes WATER KING SOFT WATER CO. Division of Mich. Htoting, Inc. •8 Nowb«rry $♦. FI 8-6631 TONIGHT! for the twenty-first year the welcome mat’s out at the Nelson home! Drop in and share THE ADVENTURES OF OEZjE & HARRIET 7:30 P.M. on Channel 1 Co-$pon»ored by CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY • ADDITIONS a ATTIC ROOMS -a KITCHENS • PORCHES • BATHRMS. REMOD.* • GUTTERS • WATERPROOFED BASEMENTS ADDITIONS ALUMINUM SIDING REC. 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(AP) The student council at Caldwell High School adopted a new code of conduct which includes this provision: ★ Jr ^ ’■Students will refrain from their affections for one another while in the student area, as this is neither the time or place to associate pn intimate terms.” 7dNHTY2 REPORTS A WJBK-TV production «M« 7:30>CB$ REPORTS >DICK VAN DYKE ab la offwad •nt for • r 9:30-CARA WILLIAMS lOdM-DANNYKAYE U3S-LEISIKPKR0 LM Shapham. TV2*a "----- - -|tro BiaQon-al 11 Humidify with an in £ W AUTOMATIC HUMtoiFIlR CALL: FI 5-9259 ' ' KAST HEATING COMrANT 461 $. Safinaw .... FontMC on TVZ.^ WJBK-TV { I 1' D—12 THE PON 11 AC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 21- 1964 • Speakers to Highlight Meeting on Retarded Stanley Wallace, president of the Oakland County Council for retarded children, and Charles Nelson, director of New Horizons, will be guest Speakers at the regular meeting of the North Oakland Association for Retarded Childrm, tonight at 8 in the Community S er vices Building, 132 Franklin'Blvd. Progress on the sheltered workshop and vocational training for retarded young adults will be discussed. Parents and friends of retarded children are welcome to attend. ^ Auto ^xec to Keynote MEA Institute in State GRAND RAPIDS (AP)-A. R. Gale, president of Studebaker International at South Bend, Ind., is keynote speaker here Thursday for the annual fall institute. of Michigan Education Association Regions 9 and 13. Nearly 8,000 public schoolteachers from" 13 counties are expect^ at the institute which offers about 100 special interest sections and workshops. Charles E. Duryea built the first practical automobile in tbe United States in 1892. Philanthropist Dies SYDNEY, Australia...(AP) Sir Adplph Basser, n, Sydney ipillionairo businessman and philanthropist, died Tuesday. Basser, who gave away,<^ore than $1,350,000, was knighted in 1962 in recognition of his many gifts >On C n n ('oi 1 nl on I O ,.. (..^nalilN C osts .No Mort' at St'ar^ You Can Count on Us •••Quality Costs No More at Sears Sears Days SALEi * modem - beautiful... converts to a bed! decorator Sofa-Sleeper NOW OPEN at Sears REDUCED •22.95! 177 R^uced *31 Now ... recliner sale Regularly at $119.95 *88 NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan Regularly at $199.95 744ncli sofa-eleeper covered in new feather-touch vinyl— anpw soft and comfortable. Smart modern biscuit tufted back, Serofoam reversible cushions. Opens easily to a Inxnrions luIlver chicane onto another track. Ei^teen-volt power pack. Fun for the whole family. 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S.99 iilown IN>iilia<‘ IMiom* M, .1-11 7 ^ I—-, The Weather M.*. WMOwr IMPM* Pmvcm PMtIy Ooudy. Cooler THE PONTIAC PK r;-rn VOL. 122 NO. 22} PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 21,. 1964—56 PAGES uN.TiS‘?S'E'sVfN‘Vflfl!Bio Commission OKs City Income Tax (JAW Sets Vote by Locals; Could Bring GA4 Strike End DETROIT (AP)-H»e United Auto .Workers union today scheduled a membership vote Sunday that could signal the end of the national strike against General Motors G)rp. Walter P. Reuther, president of the United Auto Workers union, and Leonard Woodcock, chief of the UAW’s GM department, said today that the GM Cwncil of the UAW will meet - in Detroit Friday. It will recommend to the lo- cal onions either ratification or rejection of the UAW na-ifamal agreement. A telegram to aU GM-UAW units said all GM local unions and units are directed to meet Sunday.” The units will^ote on local agreements where they are completed, as well as on the national agreement. NEED MAJORITY “If a majority..." the union executives said, “shall ratify the national agreement, all local unions and units will be notified and the national strike against GM shall be ended. If this should happen, local unions and units which have ratified local settlements shall return to work immediately.” The union said local units lacking at-the-plant settle-' ments will vote on whether to return to work or to stay out until an agreement is reached. Earlier, a rash of new trouble appeared to be subsiding on the auto labor front as the GM strike went into its 28th day. Nonresidents Voice Protests By L. GARY THORNE Adoption of a city income tax for Pontiac climaxed a lengthy discussion last night before the City Commission. Nonresidents voiced most of the objections to the tax, which will impose a levy beginning in 1965 of 1 per cent on the income of residents and corporations and a half per cent on nonresidents. Pontiac xesidents working m another city where there is already an income ta^will also pajiithe half pfer cent rate. Last night’s The GM strike has disturbed the White House. ECONOMIC IMPACT Pointing out that it has idled action came by a 6-0 vote. Commissioner Emmett Wellbaum was absent. The tax will become effective Jan. 1 unless residents petition for a referendum ballot by t>ec. 15. (1 Million Seen as Net Gain more than 300,000, President Johnson said it now is beginning to have an impact on employment and production in other industries. IN GOP HUDDLE - Sen. Barry Gold-water (right) talks things over with Sen. J. Glenn Beall of Maryland (left), and former Sen. John Nfarshall Butler at a''GOP fundraising dinner in Pikesville, Md., last night. Beall is seeking his third term. New trouble broke out yesterday at American Motors Corp. plants in Milwaukee and Kenosha, Wis. There were wildcat walkouts in both cities, despite verbal agreement on a new national-level, profit-sharing contract. Scarcely 24 hours before the Wisconsin walkouts, AMC and the UAW had announced in Detroit a^eement in principle on a new three-year contract covering automotive division operations that wrapped up both national and local level differences. LBJ Heads for Talks in 3 States Barry in Pennsylvania; f Scranton to Introduce Him Included in the group opposing the levy were resWents of Waterford and Independence townships and Rochester. Waterford Township Super- visor James E. Serterlin, among those protesting th^ levy on nonresidents, said, “Good neighbor relations (betweed the city and the township) are about to drop.” City officials expect a net revenue gain of $1 million from Pontiac’s new income tax. Iliis was the figure estimated last night by City Manager Joseph A. Warren prior to adoption of the income levy. Manager Quits Oxford Post LOWERED IN GRIEF — A poUceman lowers the American flag over the Old Sedate office building in Washington yesterday after President Johnson ordered a 38day period of mourning fw former President Herbert Hoover. To Leave the Village for Private Industry WASHINGTON (AP) - President Johnson headed into the Midwest today on a three-state campaign swing that , calls for three pditical speeches, three motorcades and a visit to former President Harry S. Tn>* man. He took off from Washington «t 9:24 a. m. EST, with his first stop scheduled at the Akron-Canton, Ohio, airport. Johnson was II minutes late in getting away from the White House because of a meeting with his panel of consultants on international affairs. Scenes Are Cut Nation Is in Mourning for Ex-President Hoover NEW YORK (AP) — The detpl from all the armed nation, its proud flag at half- fo^-staff, bowed in mourning for the 1^ tribute will be repeated ffiird time hi less than a fear Friday and Saturday in today, as it bade solemn, sad Washlagton in the Capitoi ro-farewell to its 31st President, *?«*•*“*'« assassinated Herbert Clark Hoover. President Jpta F. kennedy At 9 a.m. EOT. the doors of >t November. St. Bartholomew’s Episcopal ----------------------------- Church on Park Avenue swung See Stories, Pictures, open and public homage to ah a 10 Hoover begins His body will lie rages A-l I, A-U. in state for 48 hours amid the Byzantine Romanesque gran- *“d where bi April tribute was deur of the nearly half-century/^W to Gen. Douglas Mac-old edifice, guard^ by an hmer Arthur, the great wi once served as Oxford Village Manager Michael M. Kilgore has turned in his resignation after more than 18 months in the position. ★ ★ Wj A, In a letter to Village President EMrhund A. Unger, Kilgore said that he wiil terminate his tenure as manager effective Nov. 27, fmd move to a position in private industry. Kilgore this morning declined to five further details. Gov. John Connally of Texas, an old personal and political friend left the White House with Johnson and planned to make the trip with him. “It’s just a move that I’ve contemplated for some time," he said. Johnson had planned a speech in Akron for today, and late last night added Speeches in East St. Louis, 111., St. Louis,'Mo., and a visit to Truman in a hospital in Kansas City. Johnson told newsmen a few weeks ago he wanted to drop in on Truman one afternoon, but that was before the former president suffered two fractured ribs and cuts fai a faU. In Today's n Army chief of staff. On Sunday, Hoover will be Press Khrushchev Say European criticism halted denunciations~ PAGEA-i. State Politics Out - of - staters compete for Michigan voters’, attention—PAGE B4. Viet Nam Await reaction to new constitution containing strong.military voices PAGE A-8. Area News ...........B4 Astrology ..........D-C Bridge......4.......D-i Conks ............. D4 Editorials ......... A4 Markets ...........C-14 ObHuaries ..........C-U Spobts :.........D-1-D4 tv, Radie Prograsu D-11 WilsoB, Earl .. D-U Wonna’s Pu Hr buried in his native Iowa, quiet and simple dipity. In his letter to Unger, he said that “both my wife and I feel that we will be happier pursuing our future in private industry. WARM AND FRIENDLY “Oxford has been very warm and friendly to both of us and we wish to thank you (Unger), the council and ouc,iriends for their sincerity.” Hoover, died at 11:35 a.m. yesterday at the age of 90. His gallant old heart gave out beneath the burden of a final Illness that began Saturday with a massive internal hemophage. He passed away peacefully and painlessly in a deep coma. ' ^ FIRST FROM WEST Bum in obscurity, the first American president from west of toe Mississippi was a mining engineer and a self-made millionaire when he turned to public service. It fell his lot to be in toe White House at the onset of the Great Depression and the electorate tamed him out in 1932 after only one term, politically tosoredlted. Although Kilgore declined to say today whether he plans to move away from Oxford, he said in the letter that “it is with sincere regret that I leave the Village of Oxfmd.’’ Kilgore, 29, former assistant manager of Santa Cruz, Calif., was hired'in February 1963, succeeding Robert W. Smalley. The President had planned to go to St. Louis later in the week. The White House said he had revised his schedule to pay respects to former President Herbert Hoover, who died yesterdby in New Y«rk. Johnson also eliminated political appearances scheduled tomorrow in Memphis, Tenn., and Baltimore. SERVICE FOR HOOVER Instead, on that day, he plans to attend a family service for Hoover at New York’s St. Bartholomew’s Protestant Episcopal Church. Friday afternoon the President will be at Washington’s Union Station when the late president’s body arrives in the capital from New York. WASHINGTON — Sen. Barry Goldwater swings into Pennsylvania today for his second campaign trip in the Philadelphia area and a meeting with Gov. William \V. Scranton. Scranton, who opposed Goldwater for the presidential ‘nomination at the Republican National Convention, will introduce the Arizonan at a rally tonight in Philadelphia, fc Goldwater also has speeches Film fr\r scheduled at West Chester and rrOiTI rlim TOT Upper Darby and plans a mo- _ _ . torcade through South Philadel- DOrry Campaign-phia. At 9:36 p.m. (Pontiac time) WASHINGTON (AP) - A girl he will speak to the nation via in a topless bathing suit and the ABC-TV .network on re- other footage have been cut Cent international develop- from a film a Goldwater cam-meata- .paign group hopes to flash After the networks and the across American television Federal Communications (tom- screens tomorrow to hammer mission turned down (K^df home its claim that the country mands for free time to n^n is beset by “moral decay.” the time given President John- Russell Walton, public rela-son Sunday night, the Republi- tions director for the Citizens cans bought time on ABC. (or Goldwater-Miller. acknowl- Goldwater spoke briefly on g^ged the changes last night foreign policy last night in an ^gid that NBC officials, in off-the-cuff spe^ to Republi- t„rn, had agreed to use the film can campaign workers in a Bal- >^3 scheduled, at 2 p.m. EOT, (1 timore hotel. time). He said that with the ouster of Soviet Premie/ Khrushchev the I" New York, network offi-United States faces a tougher clals said a final decision wiU Communist bloc which is likely not be reached untU today, to behave more like the bellig- j^e object Of the film, said erent Red Ctoinese ||>e late walton, is “to depict the moral Soviet dictator Josef Stalin jj^cay which has occurred in He demanded the Unit^ country.” He placed its c<^ Stat^ take a tourer line m ito ^ ^ ^ ", ”»i »».««>•i"*- Seeterlin estimated that 60 per cent of the township’s residents would contribute roughly |18 a year under the income tax levy. ‘NO BENEFIT’ ^ The supervisor said they would be Contributing “for no benefit that I can see.” If petitions are filed, an election would be called for some time between Feb. 1 and March 20, delaying the effective date of the tax until Jnly 1 In the event of a favorable vote. City Manager Joseph A. Warren estimated the city would net about $1,038,000 from the new levy, which takes into account a 3-mill reduction in the property taX levy. Total revenue from the^ the Johnson administration for what he called “the insane poli- ... . cy of strengthening an enemy Before the changes became who has vowed to bury us.” (Ctontinued on Page 2, Col, 3) the^n-iteo^at $2,138,000, with a property tax cut taking away $1.1 million. SEPARATE ACTION Although the City (tommission would have to take separate action, Mayor William H. Taylor Jr./said last night that the income tax^ould definitely be accompaniM^ a reduction in the property ta^. Taylor also cited the city’s need for the added revenue. He read a list of needs for which toe cost totaled $1,187,566. Nonresidents dominated last night’s discussion, although city residents present did ask several clarifying questions. Gerald Kehoe, 599 - Lenox, called the tax “a blanket deal (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) Haeared. The cab had pulled up in front of the Park Avenue apartment building of one of the attorneys, William P. Maloney. JOSEPH BONANNO FAMILY BOSS Valachi testified that Bonanno bossed one of the five Cosa Noq-tra families or gangs in nietro-pditan New Yuk. Reportedly IF members if his family are schednled to tes^ in the federal ^grand jm^s pv®b - Police and other sources at the scene gave this account: First Mt of the cab was attorney Joseph P. Allen, who walked Into the bniiding. Ma-loaey, Bonanno’s attorney, was next, but as he approached the doorway he heard a voice say, “Comb on, Joe, the boss wants to see It was raMhig and each oi ^ ((tontinuw oh Page!, Col. f) Warren also pointed out that net effect on the average resident might not be equal tofthe * full 1 per cent levied on his annual pay check. For example, the^average family of four with an^ annual—* income of $5,000 and a home with an equalized valuation of $6,000 would pay a net increase of $8, said Warren. These figures result, he cautioned, from a promised 3-tnill reduction in property taxes if the income levy goes into effect. PROPERTY TAX Explaining it further, Warren said toe property tax cut would drop this average home owner’s property tax by $18 per year, while the income tax with four exemptions taken into account would cost him $26 a year on a net income of $5,000. Warren emphasized the figures were used as an illustration and would vary for every household. Operated like toe federal income tax, Pontiac’s levy allows $600 per person exemption, said Warren. Thus, this average individual pays his tax on actually only $2,600 of his $5,000 income. ’The city expects an added revenue of $2,138,000 from the tax. The promised 3-mill cut In the property ta*. would take away $bl million of this revenue, giving-d**net new revenue of $1,038,000. ADMINISTRA'TIVE COSTS According to a study by the Citizens Research Council of Michigan, about 4 per cent or around $M,000 is to be toe cost of administration. Nonresidents would pay about $835,666, while corporations would contribute nearly $560,606. Appeals on tax cases will b« handled by an administrator and an independent three - man board of review, both of which would have to be appointed. Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. responded to questions on the need for toe tax by listing items totaling $1,187,500. LACK OF FUNDS ’There has been a lack of $385,000 in city funds to meet state requirements for work on the MS9 freeway program. Taylor said the cljy had already deferred payment of a $106,000 loan to the city pension fund to help keep the M59 project movingy However, changes in toe program by state officials has put the city in the positiw of needing $235,000 to do related work on the Clinton RiVer and $150,000 for sewer changes ogr Mount Clemens. In addition to M59, Taylor said the city needs eight more policemen at a total cost of $67,500 to meet national requirements for local police p^ec-tion. Also, ?ix more firemen are required at a; total cost of $45,000; 1,634 seww traps are needed at a cost of |37J)00; and it fiU cost $24,000 next )«ar to kei^ buses operatig in the dty. I THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 1964 to Advise on Problems WASHINGTON (UPI)-Presi-dent Johnson "today asked a blue-ribbon panel of consultants to provide him with views for dealing with the problems of relations with Communist countries, the Atlantic community ^ jCommission Adopts City Income Tax (Continued From Page Onef with, no (^tion.” He proposed that an impartial study be made to determine the need for the tax. • TE31MED EQUITABLE Most- Pontiac residents indicated they felt an income tax was an equitable way for the city to get revwue. Edward Souriall of 807 Pen-sacida said he thought it was fair and that a jproperty (ax cut would benefit people living on pensions. Joe Benson of 46 Chippewa complimented the ccHnmission for bringing up the income tax. He said he had paid the Detrqjt income tax since 1962. ★ * ★ Nonresidents claimed they would get no benefits from the tax and would still have to pay extra for use of city library facilities and Pontiac General Hospital. ' MUST DECIDE Gerald Smith of Independence Township asked if nonresidents could circulate referendum petitions. He was told that the . people of Pontiac must decide the tax question by the city attorney. After nearly two hours of discussion, the commission voted unanimously to adopt the tax ordinance. In addition, over an hour was taken to read the ordinance prior to its adoption. “We have to move forward In this city,” commented John A. Dugan, “and the choice was *\^a property tax increase or the ^Sncome tax.” ★ ★ * Commissioner Leslie H- Hudson said the commission pledged to present all the facts. He said a public vote on the question was expected. ' FINANCIAL CONDITION Stating that the city’s financial shape had been cited before, Hudson added that the step toward an income tax had been taken only after long, careful deliberations. and the need To limit thf sprejid of nuclear weapons. After meeting for nearly an hour with the biparlisan citizen’s panel, Johnson said in a statement that he expressed to them “my own strong sense of urgent purpose in all three of these areas...’’ He said that at today’s meeting a part of the discussion centered on the international events including the change in Soviet leadership and the explosion of the first Red Chinese atomic bomb. But he added his niain purpose “was to ask their help in thinking ahead to the great problems which this country will have to face after the coming election, whoever is chosen to Among those on the panel were Bet. Gen. Omar Bradley, Allen Dulles, former director of the Ontral Intelligence. Agency, and former Secretary of State Dean Acheson and others. ASKED ADVICE Johnson said he asked the consultants for advice on these three topics: “First: our relations with Communist countries. We must both defend freedom and advance the prospects of peace. “Second: the^ affdirs of the great Atlantic community. We intend to move on to greater achievements in a partnership which has gained so much in strength over the last 15 years. ★ ★ ★ “Third: the struggle to limit the spread of nuclear weapons.” LONG MEETING Johnson said yesterday after a long meeting with his Cabinet that 'he a^ his advisers had concluded no “sharp or serious changes” in U.S* policy were required to meet the new developments abroad. The President, calling for “continuity and stability,” promised that his administration would “pursue a course of reasonable and responsible watchfulness.” Johnson told newsmen that “It is necessary for the United States to continue to be prepared for the long pull.” He coupled his foreign policy observations with a promise to increase military strength and pursue domestic economic policies to bolster the home front. * ★ ★ U. S. officials were still uncertain whether Nikita Khru-schev’s successors in Russia would pursue indefinitely his policy, of “peaceful coexistence” with' the West, as they have pledged. SAYS CUENT CAPTURED - Attorney William P. Maloney (right) tells newsmen in New York today how two gunmen grabbed ^his client, Joseph (Joe Bananas) Bgnanno. 'The lawyer said Bonanno was kidnaped in front of the apartment house. Bonanno, allegedly a chieiftain in the Q>sa Njfstra, was supposed to appear before a federal grand jury today. Say Russia Sends Feelers on Red China Coexistence LONDON (UPl) - The new Soviet regime is putting out feelers for coexistence With Conununist China, according to diplomatic reports reaching London. Diplomatic sources said new Premier Alexei N. Kosygin and Communist l^arty Chief Leonid I. Brezhnev aim at a face-saving settlement with Peking, not a real solution of their dispute, which is too d^p for any immediate agreement. Brezhnev and Kosygin were believed opposed to the namecalling used by deposed Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev against the Chinese. There has been no hint of such polemics in their public statements to date. The sources said they are also prepared to modify their call for a showdown cmference with Peking. Khrushchev originally sought a world Conimunist summit meeting, next summer, with the apparent aim of expelling Cjiina from the Communist camp. The sources said the new leaders want a ,Afferent kind of Scenes Are Cut in Barry Film The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Mostly cloudy today with about 60 per cent of the area affected. Turning cooler during this afternoon with highs 4S*to 53. Partly cloudy and cooler tonight and ’Thursday. Lows tonight 30 to 34. Hi^s Thursday 40 to 48. Winds Southerly 15 to 25 miles shifting to west to northwest by or during this afternoon then diminishing slowly Thursday. Friday outlook fair and cool. Ont Vtar Ata in Pwitlac NATIONAL WEATHER —> Snow flurries are due tonight in parts of the upper Great Lakes aru and sbowo-s mixed irith mow flurr^ are expected from‘the lower Ohio Valley to the northerif Appalachian mountains. It will be colder ove& the northern Great J*ipfna,« Lalript area and tt» upper' and mkkflfe MisU^i Valley. ^ ^11 be wariQtf in the Gulf Ck>alt States. , / 1 (Continued From Page Onel known. Chairman John M. Bailey of the Democratic National Committee described it as “Uie sickest political program to be colTceived since television became a factor in American politics.” FILM APPEAL He said the film “i the prurient and the prejudiced in a fashion which makes a mockery of its pretention to speaking out for moral conduct” and that he had urged the Fair Campaign Practices Committee in New-York to appraise it. Walton, at a story conference with the film makers in Beverly Hills, Calif., Sept. 22 said “the purpose of the film then is to portray and remind the people of something they already know exists. We want to just make them mad, make their stomachs torn.” Yesterday, he described the film as “shocking — because we believe what is happening today in America is shocking.” * ♦ ★ The film, he said, “makes it clear that this is h6t a partisan matter, that President Kennedy tried to di^something about the moral climate of the country.” MAKES POINT But, he said, the film also tries to make the point that American voters will decide on election day ’“whether they want to continue under a situation where morality is at best lacking or tome up with strong leadership and support for our courts and police to stop riots and civil diswders, narcotics and pornography.” In addition to the topless bath-ihg suit scene, Walton said be agreed to delete a provocative b^ mver titled “Jats Me Ba|i)y”^and photogrtq>b^ ^ a man in leaf. ' meeting, a summit with Chinese participation. At these talks, the methods of coexistence between Moscow and Peking would be worked out. Since the removal of Khrushchev, Moscow’s chances of better relations with Peking have improved greatly — Khrush-diev’s dismissal was one of the Chinese demands. But great differences remain. Brezhnev and Kosygin have announced no changes in Khrushchev’s policy of peaceful coexistence with the West, one of the key elements in the dispute. Peking, which seeks to spread communism through war and revolution, considers coexistence “capitulation to the imperialists.” * * -k Another point of difference is the Soviet regime’s continued support for the nuclear test ban treaty, which China refused to sigh, and which it defied last week with the explosion of its first nuclear device. Peking has not backed down from its claims on vast areas of Soviet territory, which Khrushchev warned a few weeks ago could lead to war. Say Nikita Virtually Arrested for Return to Moscow Ouster Mafia Suspect Is Kidnaped (Continued From Page One) gunmen wore raincbats and carried pistols. * * *. Maloney saw^ them pulling Bonanno along the .avenue toward 36th Street. He said he hollered, “Hey, whke are you going? He’s my client.’.* GIVES WARNING ‘Get back and behave yourself,” one gunman responded. Maloney continued to follow hem. \ “I told you to get ont!” the gunman shouted, and fired once. Maloney ran to the comer and saw a late model car speeding off. ♦ ★ . ★ Maloney said later in an interview in the apartment house lobby that Bonanno struggled with the two gunmen. ’Diey took him along the sidewalk to the comer, Maloney said, and as the car drove off Bonanno was still struggling. ' TWO CmES Bonanno, who divides his time between ’Tucson, Ariz., and New York, has been described by the FBI as one of the Mafia’s most feared dueftains. He was among the gangland hierarchy who police found at the Apalachin, N.Y., underworld convention in 1957. He was one of 27 indicted on conspiracy charges as a result. A heart attack felled him in Brooklyn the day before the trial of 23 of the underworld delegates was to have opened on Oct 26, 1959. Twenty were convicted. Appeals through the courts subsiequently voided all the convictiq^. Bonanno’s first arrest occurred in the 192Qs when he was accused of trai^rting machine guns to the A1 Capone gang in Chicago. ★ ♦ ♦ In 1938 he Idt the United States and legally reentered from Canada. In 1945 he became a naturalized American citizen. He describes himself as being in the cheese business. MOSCOW » - Nikita Khrushchev was brought back from vacation virtually under arrest to face the Communist, party meeting th^t ousted him, reliable sources said today. Five officials of the Committee of State Security — the secret police — were sent from Moscow to get Khrushchev after he argued over the telephone against attending, the sources said. The informants gave this account: The meeting had been carefully arranged in advance. ' The charges were drawn up: bnngling the Red China. dispute, industrial and agricultural failures, personal ex-. cesses and creation of a personality cult. Khrushchev, who personally chose many of the members of the party’s Central committee, suddenly found himself opposed by his proteges and ousted. * ★ ★ .Leonid I. Brezhnev, the man Khrushchev had been believed to favor as his eventual successor, became the successor as the party’s first secretary with unexpected speed. Alexei N. Kosygin moved up from first deputy premier to take over Khrushchev’s premiership. Since that time, a week ago today, Khrushchev has been under restrictions on his movements. He is believed to be in the Moscow area, although thei;g is a conflict on exactly where. One story is that he is in a four-room apartment with a view of the Kremlin. j There was no confirmation.' Khrushchev went on vacation in late September to his villa on the Black Sea at Gagra, 875 miles south of Moscow. Members of the Central Committee began gathering in Moscow ^unday or Monday, Oct. 11 or 12. They had been sunnmoned from as far away as New Delhi, where the Soviet ambassador is a conmiittee member. BIRMINGHAM - Six abreast, the goblins, ghosts and other ghOulish creatures will march through ' Birmingham Oct. 31. 'Hiere also will be a smattering of pretty girls and fairy tale figures among the more than 7,500 youngsters {wrticipating in the 28th annual Hollqween parade and parties. . The chamber of commerce again is. planning thi'event to keep mischief, property damage and minor violations of the law at a minimum. Costumed boys and girls will gather at 7 p.m, in parking lot No. 5, beside the First Baptist Church. Title Racks Up | a Grand Slam for Candidate g Michigan’s Auditor "General Billie S. Famum has learned the hard way not to use his title as an introduction while campaigning door to -door as Democratic nominee for the 19th District seat in Congress. * ★ ★ “We sent the money in ye^ terday,” one Redford Town^ip housewife said angrily. “Anyway, they got some nerve sending out the auditor general just to collect a bill that iai’t even a month past due.” ★ ★ * The door slammed and Far-num could do nothing to get the housewife to open it again so he could explain his vote-seeking mission. Nation in Mourningjor Hoover (Continued From Page One) even by the bitterest of his old political foes. Two hours and 15 minutes after Hoover’s death, his body was removed from his suite on the 31st floor of the Waldorf-Astoria Towers. Beneath low, gray autumn clouds, it was takCn- to the Universal Funeral Chapel at 52nd Street and Lexington Avenue. ^ * * * During the night, the body was transferred to a catafalque on the marble, mosaic floor in the chancel M St. Bartholomew’s at SOth Street and Park Avenue — just across the street from the Waldorf Towers. WIFE’S FUNERAL Hoover was a Quaker. But it was at St. Bartholomew’s that the funeral was held for his wife, the former Lou Henry, who died 20 years ago of a heart attack. From 9 a. m. to 3 p. m. today and again tomerrow, the public was Invited M pay Iti respects to Hooker, wdw it 99 yw* i«i twe mpBths lived 1 o n g e r than any Presidtat at the age olf 90 years and 8 months. At 4:30 p. m. tomorrow there will be a brief memorial service at St. Bartholomew’s, including the Episcopal prayers for. the dead. President Johnson plans to attend. ★ ★ ★ By request of the family, there will be no choir accompaniment. Organ music will be played instead. Admittance will be by invitation only,.. TO W^HINGTON On Friday nnorning, Hooveij^s body will travel by trahi to Washington, there to lie in state in the Capitol rotunda. The President plans to be at Union Station for the arrival At 19:39 a. m. Sunday, the casket will be taken to National Airport for a flight to Iowa City. From there a cortege will bear it 19 miles to West Branch, Iowa. On a grassy knoll, ovm-looking the two-room cabm whm Hoover was bom, graveside services are scheduled tore 2:40 p.m. CST. A list of 395 friends, coil-^igueip, government leaders and ragueis, assbeiht ites has beeni Details ,were worked out more than a year ago. ★ ★ • ♦ Finally, surrounded on three sides by evergreen trees, amid com fields seared by autumn, Hoover’s body will be ebnsigned to his native soil From CaUfor-nia to lie beside him in eternity will come the body of his wife. Married in' 1899, the Hoovers had two sons, Herbert Jr., and ^Uan Henry Hoover, who were vfith their father when he died. 21-GUN SALUTES Beginning at noon Sunday, all military installations will fire 21-giW salutes to the former presiWnt. That evening, after flags come down, the guns will salute Hoover 50 times, once for each state in the Union. American flags around the world have been at half-staff 1^ direction of President Jedmson since shortly after Hoover’s death. A 3b^ DONDI GAME.........59‘ POTATO HEAD . . .. 59*^ PEG AND CHALKBOARD 59‘ CHINESE CHECKERS . . 59'^ IDEAL’S FUN-FILLED MOUSE TRAP GAME ^ MAHEL’S NEW “ANIMAL TALK” GAME WITH A ^33 TALKING BARN y 26400 W. Eight Mile CHRISTMAS WRAP PAPER, 3 Roll Pkg. n- q f 100 SGOUNTS IN OTHER PRE-SEASON SALE! Retread Power-Pak, Silent Ride SNOW TIRES 6-Month written-warranty b^ins Dacambar 1 st MOST BLACK- MOST WHITE-WALL SIZES WALL SIZES ^88 jta PETERS -16-20 Ga. Limitad Shot Sixes SHOTGUN SHELLS Field 1 GO Loads . I Box SHOTGUNS 12-GA. 28 MODIFIED m PUMP GUN 59’^ 12-GA. 28 MODIFIED AUTOAAATIC 89^^. MSUUTED UtCE-UP >140 HUHTIHO BOOTS 4 ” Not Exactly As Pictured TINY TEARS DOLL... SNE CRIES ... REAL TEARS! DEPARTMENTS! WATCH THE LIOHS OH CHANNEL ( TV ANTENNA BLACK and WHITE COLOR CUSCO FOLDING HIGH CHAIR« OPEN SUN. 10-6 P.M. I Pontiac I Downriver I East Side | Birniinghom • Southfield Doily 8-8 P.V, I EE, 5 9452 1 AV 5-3595 I PR 1-8810 | Royal Ook El. 7-2700 TRADE FAIR MERCHANDISING CORPORATION DISCOUNT CENTER-Phone 332-9137-1108 West Huron \ rilK rONTIAC 1‘HKSS. WKDNKSDAV. Orn^KKH 21. 1964 V B—S' || •^•n 11-11 Daily - Sun. 12-1 MMlIMt IH04I _^ HWK. ’ 'ii ^ ^ ! Pigskin Booties 390 Charge *l «ny room! Take your choirr: 3Ax30x2*0": wardrobe, 63x.16xl9";/|ind a kitchen utility cabinet, 64x3(lx I2'’^^!l^ge it/ Apollo’s comfy unlined atrap bootie is water repelle.nt! EaayHo-clean pigikin or black glove upper. Soft 2” inside fuaay cuffs. Tapered toe, ribbed rubber h^elt. 4-10, M. GLEN WOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD :l "ft" I ■=>: . ^ ^ f, > ■ f THE PQNTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCtpBER 21, 1904 ■■ss Win Up To ’1,400 fHalloxceen Candy Old Nick Candy Bars Assorted Candy Bars Bum Bums Good "M Plenty Bazooka Bubblo Gum center Bart O Henry »r Oaby Ruth Candy Bars Pop Corn Balls Mlnleturvi ^ Bit 0 Honoy 5c 24^. Bors . Pkf. » ^ X V: “T 79‘ X: 60- "C**" ’ir 3» Cf UD¥7 v.,,r:buT.i:;„i„y RC| WA Ha %#w Cl f||I||n^M!rb‘^;'°' C OQ KLEENEX^^19 AnllllAill AiA A V SALTINES- GET FINER GIFTS FASTER WITH GOU> BEU GIFT STAMPS i'/ THK PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 21. 1961 ' k 1 *-*iaiLu THE CHASE IS OVER — Britisher Bobby Brightwell’s (falling at left) pursuit of Detroiter Henry (right) on the final leg of the l,6(X>-meter relay at the Tokyo Olympics today comes to an abrupt halt just over the finish line. Brightwell has clinched sec- ond as the United States team wins m world record time of 3:00.7. Carr has already tossed his baton away. V7endell Motley (613) of Trinidad is third and George Kerr (375) of Jamaica fourth.^ Russian Edges Thomas in High Jump In Kerbawy-Zollner Suit Winter Trial Listed DETROIT (AP) - A Feb. 9 trial date was set Tuesday for hearing of a |S.5 million suit brought by former Detroit Pistons General' Manager Nicholas Kerbawy against Fred Zollner, owner of the National Basketball Association' club. Kerbawy of Bloomfield Hills is seeking damages in U.S. District (3ourt for alleged libel, slander, conspiracy and breach of contract in connectimi with his dismissal from the Pistons’ front office ih September, 19H. His contract, described as a 20-year pact, was lifted when Zollner accused him of participating in a proxy fight then being waged for control of the Detroit Lions of the National Football League. ' LEFT UONS Kerbawy ieft his post as general manager of the Lions when he signed the contract with Zollner and his Fort Wayne, Ind., Pistcm manufacturing corporation. Lions' Linebacker Strong Two-Way Player Wayne Walker Kicking Well ■nie suit charges that Ker-bawy’s “acceptance as » leading public figure in the field of professional sports” was damaged when Zollner made public a letter charging hiin with tak^ ing part in the stock fight. Fulfills Expectations of George Wilson By BRUNO L. KEARNS Spo^ Editor, Poptiac Press On defense, the ri^t linebacker’s post is his job. But offensively, Wayne Walker carries some pretty high stakes for the Detroit Lions with his field goal kicking and extra points. Thi;! year, the ^eteran from Idaho is having his finest season as linebacker and as kidcer. There was a day not too. far back when many people said it would be a long time before the Lions would get another kicking speciaUst like Jim Martin. Bat all along, coach George WiUon insisted that Walker would mpre than fill Martin’s shoes, and he was first to say ‘1 told you so,” in the opening game id the 1964 season when Walker set.a clnb record by booting fonr 3-pointers in one game against the 49ers." He also has his longest of his career this year, a 48-yarder, and to date he has connected on nine of 16 for the season. How accurate he has been can be noted from the fact that he has not missed from inside the 41-yard line. ’Three of those which failed to cross the bars were past the 50-yard line. The nine field goals in six games matches his career total of nine for 22 attempts he had last year. Of course last se and in 1962, leg injuries prevented him from kicking all of placements. Gal Athletes Begin Turning to 'Form' TOKYO (AP) - "Now,” said the veteran American Olympic athlete with the more practiced eye for such matters, “is when we begin to see whether they’re really women — or just soft boys.” Heavy, flappy sweat clodiing — the usual unifom for women athletes in training for the Games specialties — is giving way more each day to fashionable, lady-like dresses, sweater-and-skirt combinations, stretch pants — and shorts. ’The shortest of shorts are being worn by British girls. And the tightest sweaters appear to be worn by the women of Po- ’Ibe switch in attire generally comes the day after the girl’s appearance in hpr event. After that, it’s stand back, fellows, Dolly’s home again! MORE TIME Young ladies who would barely give boys the time of day in Olympic Village while concentrating on training now find there’s more to Tokyo and the Bantamweight Champion Set for Title Bout Walker takes deep pride in his kicking but he is first to point out that his first job on the team is being a* linebacker and his goal is to be one of the best linebackers in pro football. For the past six games, Walker has been one of the key figures in the vaunted Detroit de^ fensive unit which has ripped up opposing offensive units and scutti^ their rushing games. “He's been having a great season,” said coadi Wilson, “both as linebacker and kicker and has to be one of the best comer men in the league.” The Uont defensive team . has bem categorized very pft-en by their units, most popular of wMch 1^8 been the prising the front fonr of Alex Karras and RogCr Brown at tackles and Sam Williams and Darris McCord at the ends. The three linebackers with Walker, captain Joe Schmidt and formerly Carl Brettschnei-der extended the niduiame with the front four and were touted m the “Magnificent Seven.” Miphomores Dennis Gaubotz and Ehnie (TIarfc have alternated ia Brettsdineider’s old.spot. Now, the secondary backfieU wfaicfa is one of the leading in-tero^ition units in the NFL this year, along frith the linebackers d front four have brought ttie f of “Tbp Viniihitora” to SAN ANTONIO (AP) - Eder Jofre, the world’s bantamweight champion who never has lost a fight, puts his title on the line here (>ct. 28 against a man who got to meet him because the Texas Boxing Commission snubbed the California commission. . Jesus Pimentel, who has a' record almost as good as Jofre, was su^nded by the California Boxing (fommission earlier this year after he turned up ill for p fight with Fighting Harada of Japan. California Hk Texas are not members of the Wwld Boxing Association but Texas ordinarily resets decisions handed out by California. But in<'order to hwe the title fi^t in San Antonio, Texas Boxing Gimmission-er Alton Erickson said his office would sanction the bout. So Jofre and Pimentel will meet over the ISround route at Joe Freenfian Coliseum and Los Angeles promoter (Wrge Parnassus, who is workii^ with local promoter Tony Padilla, said he was pleased with ticket sales to date. Jim Lemon Will Coach MINNEAPOLIS45T. PAUL, (AP) — Minnesota Twins signed their former outfielder, Jim Lemon, «s coitoh Tues-dajy. ‘ )' Games than their tightly controlled women’s quarters. “Why not relax.” said a young lady athlete from France, smelling oh-so-very Parisi«me. “I have trained almost four years for this. And now I’m through trying to be an athlete. Now I waht to he a woman.” It was obvious from the group of young men around her. togged in training gear from three different countries, none of which was France — that she wasn’t going to have to try very hard., Women athletes of Soviet bloc nations have not gone in for the short shorts. But they seem to be wearing their younger sisters’ sweaters and shirts. “You ain’t seen nothing yet,” offered the perceptive veteran U.S. athlete as he practiced a little girl watching from a deck seat near the athletes' dining halls. GETTING OUT “The Village is becoming quiet “every night,” said the trackman. “As more athletes finish, their training’s over and they’re getting out — together, in many cases — to find out what Tokyo!s really like. Most of them don’t see the city uni after their events been run off, The American girls have toed the line pretty well, maintaining dress procedures laid doi^ by Brenda de Morelos, the former Brenda Helser, U.S. Olympic swimming great. The countess, married to a Spanish nobleman and residing in Meudon, France, serves as the U.S. team’s activities director. She also helps ride herd on the girls. _ “We haven’t had the slightest sign of revolt among the girls,” said the one-tiipe Olympic gold medalist. “No one’s worn shorts, and I think we’re going to finish up with the best group of girls in the Village. I’m very proud of them.” Yankee Mound Ace Hurt Out Hunting MABTON, Wash. '(AP) -Young Mel Stottlemyre, the rookie NeW Yprk Yankee pitcher who was thrown a curve on his first day of hunting, was reported resting comfortably with a bally sirained ankle Tuesday night. The 2^year-old ri^-hander, who had a 1-1 World Series record, sprained the imkle Tuesday morning when he tripped and fell into a ditch while he and his father were pheasant hunting. Mel’s wife Jean first repdrted her husband’s ri^t leg was put in a “walking cast,” but later his father, Vern Stottlemyre, said the ankle vjras fo a s^t bandige. 0 a pressure b •GH JUMP CHAMPION - Russia’s Valray Brumel clears 7 feet 1% inches today to win the high jump in the Olympics. The Russian defeated John Thomas of Uie United States. The proxy battle reportedly involved an attempt *by a group headed by former Lions President D. Lyle Fife to wrest control of the team from a group headed by General Manager Edwin J. Anderson. In the letter, Zollner put Kerbawy on a six-month leave of absence at full pay “so that you may devote full time to your other duties.” The suit called it a “false, scandalous, malicious and defamatory letter,” and sought $750,000 damages resulting from its publication. This Palmer Ace Lacking Prestige BOCA RATON, Fla. (AP) -A golfer from Short Hills, N.J. created quite a stir Tuesday when he scored a hole in one. The player’s name was Arnold Palmer. However, he was not the Arnold Palmer who has broken all records for earnings in professional golf. He was Arnold Palmer, a New Jersey business executive here for a vacation. Palmer’s ace on the 195-yard pw three, eighth hole was made with a five iron. It helped him complete the 18 with a 91 over the Boca Raton Hotel course. There's Always Boss If Day Can't DoiTheiiHder Can HARRISBURG, Pa^^ ^AP) — If it isn’t Day, it’s Elder and if it isn’t Elder, it’s Ross. That’s the trio keeping Canada on top in international jumping competition dt the 1964 Pennsylvania National Horse Show. Gail Ross of Edmonton, Ontario, riding Thunderbird, gave the Canadians their third straight blue ribbon Tuesday night, battling Neil Shapiro and Jacksorbetter of the United States to a draw in the international test of strength. Earlier in the day, Jim Elder and Jim Day, both of the Toronto area, finished ohe-two in the fault-and-out event aboard Clan-deboy and Mr. Dunahee. Both men turned in flawless rides on the rugged eight-jump obstacle course, but Elder and Clande-boy were four-tentbs of a second faster. CAUGHTHIM “I’ve been trying to catch that kid all year and I finally did,” beamed Elder. The day’s events left the C!anadians with a 28-point lead ova* the United States in the unofficial team standings. Canada went into the fourth day of competition with 54 points, followed by the U.S.A. with 26, Mexico with 10, Argentina with 6 and Brazil'wifii 0. Both Thunderbird and Jacksorbetter faltered at the 6-foot, 6-inch stone wall in'the fourth jump-off of the test of strength event. Miss Ross and Shapiro then decided that their horses were too tired to jump off again for first place. Third place also ended in a tie between Elder on Johnny Canuck and Lt. Carlos Marcelli of Argentina, aboard Estopin. ♦ w ■ ★ ★ Both had knockdowns in the third jump^rff with the stone wall at six feet, three inches and the triple bar at six feet. Brumel Takes Decision With Fewer Misses PROMOTION FOR RED — New St. Louis Cardinal manager Red Schoendienst answers questions during new$ conference yesterday. Meeting was held to announce his promotion from- coach to field boss. Cardinals Pull 'Popular' Play Schoendienst Named St. Louis Manager ST. LOUIS (UPI) - Freckled Red Schoendienst’s selection as manager of the Wwld Series champion St. Louis Cardinals was the “popular choice” today to end. dissension and further resignations and firings in the Natidbal League club. ‘We’re all going to work together,” said the 41-year-old Schoendienst, who said he got the surprise of his life when General Manager Bob Howsam telephoned him the news Tuesday. “I was getting snow tires on my car when the call came from Mr. Howsam — nobody has talked to me before now,” said Schoendienst. “i just about fell out of my seat.” Schoendienst succeeded Manager John Keane on the same day the World Series champion manager signed to manage the American League champion New York Yankees. Schoendienst, a close friend of Stan (The Man) Musial, was Keane’s ri^t-hand man for strategy in the dugout during the 1963 and 1964 seasons when Schoendienst put aside his bat and glove to take on the full job as coach. Schoendienst had 25 cents in his pocket when be came to Louis in 1942 to a Cardinal tryout camp. He storied fiiat year with Union City, Tenn., in the Kitty League, and except for ^ts with the New York Giants and Milwaukee Braves starting from 1947 through 1960, he has remained in the Cardinal organization. When he joined the Cantinals in 1945, Schoendienst was converted to the infield to help out for the injured Marion Kurow-ski: COSTLY PASS -^ Marilyn White (left) of the United Poland’^ Ewe Klobokowska (166) already has the lead. Hm States passes the bafon to EfUth McGuire in the final stage Anyricisfi girls had trouble completing the batoh pass and' of the froitaen’s 40IMnettf relay today at the Olympics. the'Poliilh team took the gold medal iir^ upset. "" '"r' -4 1. U.S. A^dal Harvest Rises as 2 Relay Teams Set Records TOKYO (AP) - Russia’s Valery Brumer once Jtyain triumphed over bitterly frustrated John ’Iliomas and won the Olympic high jump today in the gathering ^loom at Tokyo’s National Stadium. Both Thomas, - om^ the world’s premier jumper, and Brumel, the world re<^ holder, cleared at 7 feet, 1% inches on their first attempts. But they both missed an inch higher and the gold medal Thomas so desperately wanted was decided on fewer misses — misses at toe height of 7 feet, 1 inch. John Rambo of Long Beach, Calif., took toe bronze medal. MORE MEDALS The two high'^ump medals, along with a couple of gold by world xecord breaking men’s relay tauns, helped swell the United States’ haul for the day to 13 medals for a leading total of 85, including 34 gold. With a scattering of events yet to go for the day, Russia has 60 medals, including 18 gold. The high jump began shortly after the final day of track and field competition got underway. But toe eveit finished in the darkening shadows long after two U.S. men’s relay teams had set world recprds, Ethiopian palace guard Abebe Bikila had won the marathon for the second straight time in toe fastest time ever rOcorded^ Peter Snell had dashed Ameri^ hopes in the 1,500 meters and Poland had upset a heavily favwed U.S. women’s relay team. FIRST DRAMA The high jump was filled with draqia — the first drama, Thomas’ hope for a comeback against Robert Shavlakadze, the Russian who had won the gold medal Thomas had all but been conceded in 1960; toe second, another in . Thomas’ series against old tormentor, Brumel. The field was trimmed to five when the bar went to 7 feet V« ' inchra. They included niomas, Brumel, Rambo, Shavlakadze and toe bearded Swede, Stig Pettersson. Shavlakadze and Pettersson went out at that hei^. Thai, at 7-1, Brumel cleared on his first attempt, Thomas on his selxmd. That was the difference. Both cleared the next Yiei^t on their first attempts and Rambo went out. BrumeL jumping first at 7-24i, turned his back after missing toe third time and didn’t watch sriiile toe 6-foot-5 Thwnas made his final attempt, an attempt to*i wodW have vron him the gold medal' if he had made it. He didn’t. But he now has a silver medal to add to the bronze he won in 1960 when Shavlakadze won and Brumel finished second. Successful Home Debut for Oakland Harriers Oakland University made its home inter-collegiate athletic debut a successful one yesterday by downing Schoolcraft College in a cross-country match, 26-31. Louis Putnam of Oakland led toe way over the three-mde . course in a time of 15:46.4, a mark that goes into the bo^ as a record. Bob Geist of Schoolcraft placed second and Oakland’s Gary Cobb was third. The win gtves Oakland a 4-5 sea$bn mark. i THR PONTIACTRESS, WP^DNESDAYt OCTOBER it, T9fi4 IfBr i ]) II L8 -Television Programs— Programs fumishod by stations listed in this column or* subject to change without notice. Choimsl 2-WJBK-TV ChonnsI 4-WWJ-TV Chonnsl 7-wW-TV ghonn.l 9-CKLW-TV Chonnel 56-WTVS WEDNESDAY EVENING 1:00 (2) (4) News, Weather, Sports (7) Mbvie: (Color) “Attack of the Normans” (In Progress) (0) Yogi Bear. ^) (fecial) Intertel “Crisis in Canada” ex- amines Quebec’s quiet revolution in which French Canadians are demanding political and economic autonomy. 0:30 (2) (4) National News (7) (Color) News, Sports (9) Bat Masterson Huge bearded man attacks Bat on way to mine. (Repeat) (56) Local Issue 7:00 (2) TV2 Reports (4) Opinion (7) Have Gun-Will Travel Trail boss challenges Paladin to fight. (Repeat) (9) Movie: “Titanic” (1953) Clifton Webb, Barbara Stanwyck, Robert Wagner, Thelma Ritter. (56) Topic. "The Ultimate Weapoh” Analysis of examinations of U.S. soldiers released from Communist prisons in Korea. 7:30 (2) CBS Reports (See TV Features) (4) (Ck>lor) Virginian Newspaperwoman (Bar. bara Eden) brings outlaw back to life in her dispatches. (7) Ozzie and Harriet (See TV Features) (56) Past Imperfect 8:00 (7) Patty Duke Competition over Boy Next Door” turns into all-out warfare. (56) Great Books 8:30 (2) Beverly Hillbillies When Jed is given honorary doctorate in return for 81-miIllon donation, Granny is incensed because she does the doctorin’ in the family. ' (7) Shindig Jackie Wilson and Righteous Brothers head guest TV Features Keating vs. Kennedy By Unitdd Press International CBS REPORTS, 7:30 p.m. (2) A look at the New York senatorial race betweeip. incumbent Republican Kenneth Keating and challenger Robert Kennedy. OZZIE AND HARRIET, 7:30 p.m. (7) When Kris joins Rick at college so they can be together more of the time, their “togetherness” becomes a nuisance. DICK VAN DYKE, 9:00 p.m. (2) Magazine for men-about-town wants Rob as consultant, and Laura is worried. NEWS SPECIAL, 10:30 p.m. (7) Examination of Iowa county that has remarkable record of choosing winners in presidential elections. SUMMER OLYMPICS, 12 midnight (9) Scheduled events include finals in 1,500-meter run. Flies to Attend Hoover Servic^ Pennsylvania Swing C Abandoned by Miller SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Rep. William E. Miller canceled two days of'campaign appearances and decided to fly to New York City today to be on hand for ’Thursday’s funeral service lor neroert/Hoover. The Republican nominee for vice presUerft abandoned plans for a swing through Pennsylvania to attend the service for the former president. Miller’s campaign schedule also was disrupted by a hurry-up television filming session and, as a result, he canceled engagements in Ohio and Kentucky. (4 Lawman (Repeat) 1:15 (7) After Hours 1:30 (2) (4) Netra, Weather ' THURSDAY MORNING (56) (Conversations Topic: “(Contemporary Music: Melody or Mad- / 9:08 (2) Dick Van Dyke (See TV Features) (4) Movie: (Cokfr) “Beau Jamds” (1957) Bob Hope, Vera Miles, Paul Douglas, Alexis Smith. (7) Mickey Rooney When- Ling bags a huge (Chinese wedding reception for the resort, things begin to look up. «. - (9) Red River Jamboree 9:30 (2) Cara Williams Cara stumbles onto hidden room where she finds elderly woman mistakenly listed as an office machine in the files. (7) GOP Talk. Goldwater will answer Johnson’s Sunday address. ' (9) Festival After three years in London, girl is appalled by actions of her family. 10:09 (2) Danny Kaye Angela' Linsbury is vis- (7) To Be Anpounced 19:39 (7) News Special'(See TV Features) 10:55 (2) Political Talk 11:09(2) (4) (7) (9) News, Weather, Sports 11:30 (2) Steve Allen Cliff Arquette makes another appearance. (4) ((Color) Johnny Carson (7) Movie: “Mr. Belvedere kings the Bell” (1961) Clifton Webb, Joanne Dru (9) Bingo 12:99 (9) Summer (Nfinpics (See TV Features) 12:39 (9) Movie: “Paris Ex- press” (1953) Claude Rains, Marta Toren 1:99 (2) Peter Gkinn (Repeat) 6:10 (2) On the Farm Front 8:15 (2) News 6:20 (2) Sunrise Semester 6:39 (4) Classroom (7) Funews 6:50 (2) News 7:00 (2) Happyland (4) Today Look, at University of Chicago. (7) Johnny Ginger 7:10 (2) Happyland 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Big ’Theater 8:30 (7) Movie: “The Clock’’ (1945) Judy Garland, Robert Walker, James Glea- 8:45 (56) English Lesson 8:55 (4) Political Talk •(9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 9:09 (2) Movie: “China Sky’ (1945) Randolph Scott, * Ruth Warrick (4) Living (9) Romper Room 9:10 (56) Let’s Read 9:30 (56) American History 9:50 (56) Spanish LeSson 10:90 (4) Make Room for Daddy (Repeat) (7) Girl Talk, ' ' (9) National Schools 10:10 (56) Scientific World 10:30 (2) I Love Lucy (Repeat) . (4) (Color) Word for Word (.7) Price Is Right (9) National Magazine 10:35 ( 56) French Lesson 10:50 ( 56) Spanish Lesson 10:55 (4) News 11:00 (2) Andy Griffith (4) Conceptration (7) Get the Message (9) Friendly Giant 11:15 (9) Chez Helene 11:20 ( 56) What’s New -11:30 (2) McCoys (Repeat) (4)^XfrddT) Jeopardy (9)\Butrernut Square 11:50 (9) News (56) Memo to Teachers 11:55 (4) Political Talk AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) Love of Life (4) (Ck)lor) Say When (7) Father Knows Best (Repeat) (9) Bingo 12:29 (56) At the Fair 12:28 (2) News 12:39 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) (Ck)lor) Truth or Clon-sequences 12:35 ( 56) Spanish Lesson 12:45 (2) Guiding Light 12:50 (56) Let’s Read 1:00 (2) Jack Benny (Repeat) (4) News (7) Movie: “They Met in Bombay” (1941) Clark Gable, Itosalind Russell, (9) Movie: “Girl From Jones Beach” (1949) Ronald Reagan, Virginia Mayo. 1:10 (4) Eliot’s Aimanac (56) Sets and Symbols 1:15 (4) Topics for Today 1:25 (56) (Geography 1:30 (2) As the World ’Turns (4) (Color) Let’s Make Deal 1:55 (4) News" (56) American History 2:00 (2) Password , (4) Loretta Young 2:2()K7)News (56) Safety Circle 2:25 ( 56) Mathematics 2:30 (2) Hennesey (Repeat) (4) Doctors (7) Day in Court 2:50 (56) Spanish Lesson 2:55 (7) News 3:00 (2) To Tell the ’Truth (4) Another World (7) General Hospital 3:15 (9) News 3:25 (2) News 3:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) (Color) You Don’t Say (7) Young Marrieds (9) Take 30 3:55 (4) PoliUcql Talk 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Match Game (7) Trailmaster (Repeat) (9) (Special) Summer Olympics 4:25(4) News 4:30 (2) (Ctolor) Movie: “The Tall T” (1957) Randolph Scott, Maureen O’Sullivan, ’Richard Boone. (4) Mickey Mouse Qub (Repeat) (9) Popeye 5:00 (4) (Color) George Pier- rot Film tour through rural England. (7) Movie: “First Spaceship on Venus” (1962) Yoka Tani, Ignacy Ma-chowski, Oldriolc Lukes 5:15 (56) Industry on Parade 5:30 (9) Rocky and Friends (56) What’s New 5:45 (9) Bugs Bunny 5:55 (2) Weather (4) Political Talk Funds Given to Tippifs Are Distributed DALLAS, Tex. (AP) - Money donated to the family of Patrolman J. D. Tippit, killed Nov. 22 while trying to arrest Lee Harvey Oswald, was distributed ’Tuesday by Dist. (3ourt Clerk Bill Shaw. Marie Tippit, widow of the slain police officer, received a check for $312,916.62. In Iddi-tion, $330,946.46 was given Mrs. Tippit and J. Donald Squibb, trust officer for Republic National Bank, to be held in trust for die three ’Tippit children— Charles Allen, Brenda Kay and Curtis Glenn — and $3,716.16 went to the city police and firemen’s welfare fund. Distribution of the money was authorized by Dist. Judge'Bee Brown Walker last week. — Ra(dib Programs— WJKfyOO) WXYZd 270) CK).W(800) WWJ(950) WCAR(1130) WPON(1460) WJBKd 500) WHFI-FM(94.7) «iW-CKLW, N*W1 WJft, N«wi WWJ, Newt WXYZ, Newt WJBK, Ntwi, RoMrt e. Lw WCAR, Nmn. Jot Bacmil* WPON. Newt, Commentary. 7;3B-WJR, To be announced. l.-tB-WJBK, Jack the BoiRmv CKLW, Terry Knight l:1S-WXVZ, Rust Knight Mutk Scene, * Newt, Emphasis WJJt. Evening Concart f:SB-WJR, News, Learning tiM-WJR, Muek for Modemt * " VRON. The World Today VROfT, Bob Greene WJR, 1 ,..:«a-WCAR, News. Sports WWJ, Newt Final WJR, News. Sports WPON, Jerry Show tiW-CKLW, News, Toby bavid WRON, News, Whitman WHFI, Larry Payne, N( The New York congressman was about to leave Oakland Tuesday, en route to Cleveland, Ohio, when he received the call from national GOP campaign headquarters asking him to make the film immediately, a spokesman said. PRIVATE SESSION Arrangemehte Were made for a private filming session at a San Francisco studio Tuesday night, and Miller then stayed overnight in a San Francisco hotel. Assistant press secretary Harold Dunham would say only that the material was part Of a prograih to be shown on nationwide television and that the film had to be flown to Washington, D.C., by this'morning. Miller had planned to start off from Cleveland this morning and campaign also in Cincinnati, Springfield and Dayton, Ohio, with a brief side trip to, Covington, Ky. Because of the length of the r flight to Ohio, plus a time zone loss of three hours. Miller would not be able to fulfill today’s engagements, Dunham said. The Pennsylvania trip was to have taken him into Lancaster, Williamsport and Altoona. Sweden’s constitution specifies that the king must be a member of the Lutheran Church. . Crossword Puzzle WORLD RIVERS IBJ Far Ahead in 'Popcorn Poll' r- r” 4 5 6 7 8 9 iA 11 12 u 15 rr 19 r 26 ^1 ‘id 24 26 30( 3T 32^ 35'i 1 38 38 39 40 43 45 49 47 48 50 51 52 5T 54 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 2i NASHVILLE, Tenn. lAPi -The “popcorn poll ” shows President John.son leading Sen. Barry Goldwater in 43 states, with 77 per cent of the popular vote Popcorn distributor Jim Blevins said today that almost 100,-,000 persons had voted in the poll by mailing in coupons distribuf* ed in theaters and supermark- ets. “Entertainment” with a capital Wednesdays, WJBK-TV He said Johnson's percentage of the popular vote Ifad grown I from 65 in the first tally, but I that Goldwater was now ahedtf I in five states: Louisiana, Mis^ I sissippi, Maryland, New Mexico I and Utah. He said the candi-I dates were about even in Ore-' gon and Wisconsin Student Council Adopts 'Intimate Terms' Code 7:00—TY2 REPORTS ACROSS 1 “Beautiful -— Waltz” 5 Cornin’ Through the---” 8 River in land of pyramids 12 Crust 13 Above (contr.) 14 Correct 15 Creek that named a battle 17 Fish sauce 18 Basin 19 Anew 21 Wrong (prefix) 23 Concerning 24 Expression of sorrow 27 River of Grand Canyon 33 Natural state 34 Harem room 35 Mr. Wolfert 36 Hawaiian pepper 37 River between Texas and Oklahoma 38 Period 39 Colored in stripes 42 Dibbles 43 Greek letter 44 English river 46 Gasoline rating 50 Expunge 54 King of Judah (Bib.) 55 River crossed by Alexander the Great 58 (Dard game 59 Eternity 60 Liars 61 Large bird Soak flax Gaelic DOWN 1 Early English coins 2 Intimation 3 Preposition Myopic Night Club Comic Sees Film Script His Way By EARI, WILSON FaRIS — Little Woody Allen, the myopic night club comedian from Brooklyn,- is making himself a motion picture star through a device so shabby, so unethical, so monstrous have thought of it first. Sneaky, wily Woody didn’t tell Producer Charles Feldman, when he sold him a movie script called “What’s New,^ussycat?” (about sex-crazed psychiatrist) mat Woody Allen would act in it . . . and steal the picture. “But that was my dirty scheme from the first,” leered Woody through his beer-bottle thick glasses jvhen I saw 'him here . . . “and guess who gets the girl? Woody Allen!” Peter P’Toole, Peter Seilers, Romy Schneider, Capucine and Paula Prentiss are also in it readii^ the scfljJt as it comes smoking from Woody’s typewriter looking for the gems they’re supposed to utter. “Instead,’’ I’m told by a friend, “there are only hilarious lines for Wooidy Alleri.” . Producer Feldman finally screamed at writer Woody Allen that actor Woody Allen had the best stuff . . -. and please improve the script. Woody labored over it for days. Feldman read the revision qnd howled with pain. “You’ve only improved your own part—by fattening it!” protested Feldman. “What about O’Toole and Sellers?” , And Woody Allen comes off marvelously in the tests and may be the new Peter Sellers. Also, Woody now is becoming a tXm Juan. He’s short, spindly, polysyllabic, a fellow you couU-; spot immediately as having four drip-dry suits and' his own library card. \ -k ir it Yet, standing in- front of the George V here, wolfy Woody so entranced one well-projected French gal that she circled' the block and came back fo try to in wiggle him in^ her clutches. THE MIDKIGHT EARL IN NEW YORK . ' 4 Hatreds 5 decay 6 Affirmative vote 7 Feminine name 8 Closer 9 Useless 10 Prevaricates • 11 Produce designs on metal 16 Roof finial 20 Back 22 Reckoning 24 Deserbdweller 25 Molten rock„ 26 From^ place 28 European river 29 Put on cargo 30 Verdi character 31 Let fall 32 Horse food 40 Brazilian river 41 Demand payment 42 Mock 45 Even (contr.) 46 Trees 47 Masticate 48 Lake with Blue Nile outlet 49 Elbe River tributary 51 Maple genus 52 Solar bodies 53 Essential being 56 Fish eggs 57 Social insect ! CALDWELL, Kan, (APi The student council at Caldwell ' High School adopted a new code ‘ of conduct which includes this provision A WJBK. TV production di thg eommuni y probiems crises In the metropolis “Students will refrain from their affections for one anolS^ir while in the student area, as this is neither the time or place to associate on intimate terms.” UNLIMITED SOFT WATER PER W MONTH We Service All Makes WATER KING SOFT WATER CO. Division of Mich. Keqfing, Inc. 88 N«wb*rry St. FE 8-6621 Answer to Previous Puzzle BIG SAVINGS! —1964 Models Must Go-e RANGES e WASHERS » REFRIGERATORS TONIGHT! for the twenty-first year the' welcome mat’s out at the Nelson home! Drop in and share THE ADVENTURES OF OZZIE & HARRIET 7:30 P.M. on Channel 7 8:30>BEVERLY HILLBILLIES Jed Clampett receives an honorary doctorate and the family physician -is outrated at the new “Dgetor Clampett.'' 9.00-DICK VAN DYKE When Rob is offered a job as a humor consultant for a men'* magaainJ, Laura becomes wipiciou*. ^ FE 4-4138 Open Daily and Sun. i’k.k'ai'iiiiiLiaj » ADDITIONS » ATTIC ROOMS • KITCHENS i PORCHES B BATHRMS. REMOO. » GUTTERS B WATERPROOFED BASEMENTS ADDITIONS ALUMINUM SIDING REC. R06N[ F0UN0£T70NS ROOFING-SIDING STONE-PORCHES WOODFIELD CONSTRUCTION WILL COME TO YOU WITH FREE ESTIMATE AND PLAHS-NO CHARGE WINTER PRICE NOW IN EFFECT TO APRIL 1965 9:30-CARA WILLIAMS Cara finds an Incredible Ifttle lady In her filing aystemi Una Merkel guest i 10:00-DANNY KAYE f Actress Angela Lansbury and vocalist ■•ohn Qaiy guest starl Enji^y Danoy’B ONE CONTRACTOR FOR EVERYTHING Audrey Hepburn, due here from Rome with jiusband Mel Ferrer, cabled Warner Bros: “Have limousine and wheelchair at I airport" (for Ferrer, who broke an ankle) . . . Maily ARen said at the LBJ rally at Madison Sq. Garden :s“In honor of the President’s visit. Mayor Wagner had 14 more streets ripped up.” Diosa Costello, starring at Liborio, called producer George Abbott from the audience and cracked, “Let’s do an Abbott and Costello act”; they samba’d . . . Sammy Davis reports Dean Martin hasn’t seen “Golden Boy” y?t, “but he sent his bartender find out how we’re doing.” it it REMEMBERED QUOTE: “The reason a dollar won’t do as much for prople as it onfe (|id is that people won’t do as much for a dollar'^ they once did^”—Anon. * EARL’S PEARLS: Actor .EMmond O’Brien, discussing /Walt Disney, said, “He has so much motiey that every time he makes a.deposit, the bank just puts up a building around it.' Sbeqky Gredn, very funny i at Basin St. E., explains' Cati-foTnia’s community property law: “Everything you haiie is divid- .........ir gets the other half ” ,etf KWO-your wi7e gets half and her laager gets the ot^ half.’ . . . That’s earl, brother. " . ^ -tOO-ORV HOME? 1L25-UE SHEPHERD Leg Shepherd. TV2'* J-gIrt-nex|. door. " bring* yeu Detratt'x m*st complete iveether Informetion et H Humidify with an AUTOMATIC HUMtOIFIWR CALL: « 5-9259 KAST HEATING lU WJBK-TV t>2 tv.: