JliB Wertfhor UJ. WNItar Ptr Rain* Cooler THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAX. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 196«~4^TAGES UN)TEO*P^llsS ^1°TEBNMlONAl Home Edition voLi 123 NO.: ★ ★ ★ ★ Truce at Hand in Kashmir Conflict House Dems Kill Tax Plan LANSING iff) — House Democrats voted yesterday to kill a bipartisan fiscal reform plan, proposed for action this fall — but agreed to take steps of their own toward taxation changes. Speaker Joseph Kowalski, D-Detroit, said a 3V2-hour Democratic caucus __________ LONG WAIT — An unidentified boy sits on his motorbike, watching floodwaters recede slowly at Guthrie, Okla., today. Cottonwood Creek, which runs through town, reached a crest six feet above flood stage last night and slowly returned to its banks today. About 1,000 persons had been forced to evacuate homes and today they began the grim cleanup task. Hunt for Lard Called Unsafe Welfare Dept. Warns It Could Be Fatal Floods Ease in Soggy Four States By the Associated Press decided not to discuss the plan this fall. “We voted, however, to put the graduated income tax resolution on the agenda, and instructed the House Taxation Conunittee to develop a program as soon as possible that is fair and equitable to the people of Michigan," he added. The Senate already has approved the fiscal ^ reform plan — worked out by Gov. George Romney and a bipartisan group of legislators—as an agenda item to be discussed. The House Policy Committee was to meet to discuss the agenda resolution this morning, and, with majority Democrats control, was expected to follow of 'o/ding the gang which looted a Montreal bank in 1961, smashed an unbarred window on the seventh floor of the 10-Democrats were planning an- story Dade County jail and slid PTlicle, i„ t«.p™nd “'c », m, a Caning Kc t, bricks at lard dlstrlbniad I. p,„ ,h. nood«l area got Sos^TSSllcarlr, t. ravK,. welfare and low income fanu- gome respite from the heavy *he issue on the floor lies in Antrim County which rains, but the central Great 0“^• Flood threat? eased somewhat ' ^ . in Iowa, Kansas, Missouri and caucus recommendation. LANSING (UPl) - The State Oklahoma today, but the na- ANOTHER CAUCUS Diepartment of Social Welfare tion’s midsection remained sog-said today it has discovered could be fgtal if taken inter- Lakes region still took a soak-•nally. ing. Lynn Kellogg, deputy director of the department said the lard was part of a 28-ton shipment Intended for distribution to welfare recipients in Otsego, Craw‘s ford, Antrim, Leelanau and Kalkaska counties. He uid the lard was distributed this week only in Antrim County to a “very sabitantial number of peo-pk.” Romney, at Mackinac Island for the Midwest Governors Confereacce, blasted the Democrats for a “raactionary” stand, and warned them to bf ready to accept the responsibility for “whatever financial crisis develops In the next few years.” The bipartisan plan — aimed Residents of Smithviile, Mo., raising $150 million annually still were threatened with a sec- ^ _ ,, based on a ond flood in two months. How- 3 personal income tax own.. «ka 1 ittlA PlaHa Riv«r V . . The Weather Bureau forecast more rain for the troubled areas of Missouri snd Kansas by nightfall, but residents hoped the streams might he able to carry off excess water. U. N. Directive on Cease-Fire to Be Okayed Shastri, in Report, Claims Red China Is Bigger Menace NEW DELHI. India — The Kashmir war ebbed today toward a truce, with the armed forces of both India and Pakistan ordered to quit shooting before another sunrise. Red China’s threat of immediate action against India also eased, but Prime Minister Lai Bahadur Shastri told his Parliament that the Red nation presents "an even greater challenge” and the Indians must firmly resolve to meet it. Reflecting the challenge, a defense ministry spokesman said Indian police sighted a Red Chinese patrol of 50 to 60 men at noon yesterday, five miles deep in India’s Uttar Pradesh State, on the central front. He said bad weather prevented the police from determining whether the patrol stayed or pulled back. India protested to Peking and asked that China “return to the path of peace." Shastri and President Moham- The summer season will slip No solution has been offered for water pollution med Ayub Khan of Pakistan an-car was spotted speeding away amid scattered thunder- problems in the Pontiac area as a result of a high- nounced a cease-fire is to be-away to the north. It was only gbowers as autumn arrives in level conference in Lansing this week with the Michi- war *at*'time**trans*lat Bank Suspect 'Flies Away' Escapee Was in Jail on Tip by Satellite MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - Georges LeMay, who lived a life of luxury as a fugitive for -four years before the Early Bird satellite put him in a cell, is again at large. The dapper Canadian, PAKISTAN AGRplES - Pakistani Foreign Minister Zulfikar AU Bhutto (right) announced to the United Nations Security Council early this morning that his country would accept the ■council’s cease-fire order. Bhutto agreed to the cease-fire in the undeclared war between Pakistan and India after India earlier had agreed to acceptance. Beside Bhutto is S. M. Zafar, law minister of Pakistan. ' do if the ground last night. Waiting for him were three Rain, Cooler Forecast for Fall's Debut High-Level Confab Fails to Give Pollution Solution men in a new sedan. Minutes after jailers missed him. the second escape from the 4- . m. tomorrow. year-oM Jail on the edge of downtown Miami. How did LeMay get from his , c^ll on the fifth floor to the sev- The weatherman expects to enth? start the season with scattered “That," said a police lieuten- showers and thundershowers and lows of 56 to 64 during the her robes of red and gold at 1:03 gan Water Resources Commission. City Engineer Joseph E. Neipling said yesterday the problems were dis- ant, “is the $64 question.” CASH PLENTIFUL * Authorities were looking i ever, the Little Platte River ^ ^ pgi. levy on corpo- - receded today after rising into rgtjong financial institu- the possibility that LeMay, nev-“There have been no reports the lower part of the town, er short for money, had little of anyone becoming ill from the About 300 persons had been ' ^. help on the inside. . Health officials immediately As rivers rolled over their began calling back ail the lard banks yesterday in Iowa, Okla- yerterday. They pressed their homa, Missouri and Kansas, crrtit against property taxes, hunt for more of it today. thousands of persons were U also would modify some of “We’re making every effort driven from their homes and the Intangibles taxes and repeal to get the lard back now,” Kel- crops and property damage was the business activities tax. logg said. ' widespread. ■* ‘ ” ■ aid the lard was LEVEE BREAKS Miami Beach, for Friday. Police and the FBI haunted the hangouts of LeMay and his friends but if their dragnet any leads, they weren’t talking about them. LeMay is a skilled sailor and Kowalski proposed a plan of there are hundreds (rf secluded his own — similar to one pro- coves along the Florida Coast ® posed by state AFL-CIO Presi-* from which he could put to sea. cussed, but that no remedy was offered. Neipling felt, however, that the state commission might soon issue an order toward solving local pollution problems. Among those attending t h e meeting were Neipling, Arthur L. Thornton, of the County Drain Commissioner’s office; Cloudy and cool is the outlook Robert T. Coleman of the Oakland County Health Department, night. Occasional showers are forecast for tomorrow with cooler temperaturesysthe high 64to'». Cbrysler's Prices Hit by Reuther ing as 5 p.m. EST today. That to 3:30 SJo. Thnraday to India: 3 a.m. in Paklstan-15 hours beyond the deadline originally set by the U.N. Security Council. Shastri wept as he announced the development in Parliament. He said the two Asian neighbors must live in neighborly peace. ■hipped to the Boyne Valley a section of a levee gave way dSrAugur&holle -’'to'ra'i^ ” LeMa7wararmtedTast May A mild 66 was the low tern-Foods Locker storage plant about eight miles south of Quin- 155 miiiion to ggo million a year 6 aboard his fancy yacht in Fort perature at 6 a m. today. At 2 at Boyne Valley for distribu- cy. Ill , and water from the Mis- j„ tate Income (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) p.m , the mercury registered 79. tion to welfare and low in- sissippi River rolled over 200 come recipients In the five acres of land. The Mississippi reached “The lard is very dangerous flood stofe-H feet^t Qnincy and if taken internally could be today. A peak of 2I.S was pre-fatal,” Kellogg said. dieted. The river rote to MJ8 WWW last spring. SIMILAR WORDS Similarly, Ayub said in a broadcast from Karachi he had ordered the cease-fire in the interests of international peace DETROIT (Xt — President and he hoped it will lead India and Waterford Township Super- Walter Reuther of the Uhlted and Pakistan to an honorable visor James Seeterlin. Auto Workers calls Chrysler’s settlement of their 18-year-old Loring F. Oeming was the car price increase “profiteer- quarrel over Kashmir, at IS to 22 miles per hour will ranking representative of the ing” and says he’ll ask a Con- shift to west to northwest to- Water Resources Commission at gressional investigatioil if other the meeting. auto companies also increase Neipling said that it was de- prices. Reuther also suggests govem- Southwesterly morning winds west end drain stemmed from mental action to hold the line Robbers Score One Run. Many Errors the Huron Gardens area of Waterford Township. Several years ago individual households were permitted to connect to the storm drain. He said health officials dis- OAKLAND, Calif. ((PI - The ' 1 her poodle. Lucky. H e r Schrumpf car - for about 100 the situation. Little hope was offered that [jy of the property owners would initiate action to correct covered a metallic substonce robbeity went oK husband, AI Schrumpf, appeared feet. Then it stalled, covered the weak_sp^ that was being th* scene and rescued both Thev leaned o»i like fine steel wool particles in patched. Another weak spot was k n n d 11, wife and doa the lard. being watched in the Indian Tw gun-waving bandits wife and dog. A federal health inspector was Grave area north of Quincy. *tepped coply into a downtown >j|,a bandits roared off in the to check the 28-ton shipment (juincy itself is (m high ground I'welry store yesterday aftertoday. out of reach of the flood. ^ held the i^wner, Kellogg said the lard was re- The Little Platte River was Kagan, at gunpoint while celved from a “highly reliable expected to crest 10 feet over its ‘hey ^ped up cash a^gems source in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.” banks today. valued at more than |5,000. Rivers were unable to handle They then ran ouUlde to their the runoff from torrential rains waiting getaway car, an old con-in Missouri and Kansas. The vertible. It wouldn’t start. Grand River was out of its as the baadits desperately banks along iU enUre length in tried to start the motor, things northwestern Missouri. began to happen. Kagan called FAMIUES LEAVE police. Famlliea wre evacuated in i„ . camera store two doors They leaped out and separated. One of them tried to (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) In addition, 'residents in the car prieps such as President Kennedy did with Big Steel in 1962. Spokesmen for Chrysler were unavailable for comment immediately. Reuther denounced Chrysler in a statement yesterday, 24 boors after the company’s announcement of prices for its new 1968 model cars. The UAW chief called Chry- In this regard, Shastri said India has accepted the good offices offered by Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin. Kosygin bad suggested that Shastri and Ayub meet in Soviet territory to discuss their differences. Troops of both sides temporarily intend to stay put, (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Pakistan Chief Talks With LBJ In Today's Press Red Shake-Up New editor for Pravda mav mean crisis - PAGE A-». City Affairs Zoning hearing Mt for newly annexed land— PAGE B-11. Money Woes OOP needs campaign cash for two key rscei-PAGE A4. Area News ........A-4 Astrology ........D4 Bridge D-1 CrNsword Pnzxle D-11 Comics ...........D-1 Editorials ........A4 Markets W ..... D4 . C-lt-C-lt .....D-W TV, Radio Prorams D-11 Wilson. Earl......D-ll Women’s Pages . B-I*-B-l Mosby and Tracy, Mo. Plan Display of New Cars away, Donald L. Adams, a shipping clerk and amateur photographer, saw the men with guns get into the car and rushed out, camera in hand. “The beck window of the convertible was out, so I stuck the camera inside and snapped Plans are under way for a go„,e pictures," he Mid. special display of 1966 Pontiacs «* mkra and Tempests in the downtown camera ares. < Ofle of the bandits turned and The City Cotnmisslon last aimed his gun at Adams, night approved a r^uwl from » Adams said, the Downtown Pontiac Business “but I got eat of the way." Association to close Saginaw from Huron to Uwrence from bandits did, too. Tuesday, Oct. 9 to Sunday, Oct. J“P«^ fr®"* their car and headed toward a sports car Downtown merchants plan to being parM nearby. The driv-erect a large tent to display them coming and fled the new model cars as part of ^”th the k^s. a promotion for the downtown * * area. The- bandits then comman- The tent is to provide a carni- deered another car. The driver, val-type setting. Rhth Schrumpf, tried to get out section are in the retiree classi- s'®*-’* ®‘=tion a "profiteering as-„ . ... sault on the consumer and on ficahon and any project to cor- stability.” rect the problems would pose a Chrysler is the first of the financial hardship. American auto makers to an- wASHiNir'TnN <APi _ Pre^i- It was concluded also at the nounce 1966 prices. Ford, Gen- Johnson talked hv telemeeting that pollution of Osmun eral Motors and American «f“ ^ Lake in the city results from Motors have yet to make an- ‘«lay with President the combined storm and sani- nouncements, tary sewer overflow discharge STUDIED into the east end of the lake. Neipling said the only solution here would be to provide separate storm and sanitary sewers. Thus, storm water could be discharged Into the lake without the sewage. Pollution of Terry and Harris Lakes, also on the meeting’s agenda, appears to come from industrial waste somehow discharged into storm water flowing into the lakes. Mohammed Ayub Khan of Pakistan and promised that the United States would support fully The White House at Washing- with words and deeds efforts by ton said Chrysler’s increases the United Nations to achieve are being studied by the Com- final settlement of the Pakistan-merce Department and the India war. President’s Council of Econom- Johnson also read to Ayub a ic Advisers. statement, made public latec, in which Johnson said acceptance by Pakistan and India of a — . I fi cease-fire call from the U.N. / W/Sf©rS tilt Security Council “takes us a long step away from the terrible LI A A L II dangers which have threatened lyGOr /Viorsnoil the subcontinent of Asia.” The White Honse said Ayub initiated the call to Johnson late this morning and that the SUSPECT NABBED-Walter E. Bigelow, 31, a suspect in the robbery of an Oakland, Calif., Jewelry store yesterday, Is dlMi^med aiM| handcuffed by police. Bigelow, a recent parolee from Sdn Quentin Prison, was wrestled to the ground by a motorcycle officer after h« made the officer climb off the motorcycle at gunpoint. Neipling said an intensive in- M A R S H A L L (AP) - Two vestigation would be necessary small tornadoes reportedly to determine the origin of the struck shortly before noon today President took it alone in his waste. near this Calhoun County seat office. REQUIRE DIVERSION during the passage of a “very The public presidential stale- He said the eventual solution sharp ” cold front, toe U. S. ment, which Johnson read In would be to have the city re- Weather Bureau in Grand full to Ayub, concluded with quire that the sewage be divert- Rapids reported. these words: ed into a sanitary sewer. This One twister was reported to "We now hope that both na-ttould require a sizeable sum of have touched down south of tlons, In the spirit of the Securi-money, he added. Marshall along U. S. 27." Police ty Council resolution, will n»ve The water resources commis- reported some trees knocked forward to peaceful settlement Sion requested that the city down in a cemetery. of their outstanding differences, make a statement as to a cur- Another report Mid there was The job of the United NatloM rent projgram to solve the polki- “evidence of another small has just begun. We will fully tion problems. twister about 18 miles north of supp^ it every step of the way No program was offered. Marshall at Duck Lake. by oulr actions and our wordi.” i A~» the PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1965 Six Witnesses Called in Coed Death Case Hw prosecution called six witnesses tUs morning as the first-degree murder trial of Kenneth R. Oooke began in Oakland County Circuit Court before Judge PTederidc C. Ziem. Cooke is charged with the JuM 23 murder of 22-year-oId Barbara K. Hodges of 545 Second, Oxford Township. Mbt Hodges, a Central MkUgan University coed, was beaten and shot to death on a kaely road about two miles north of Oxford Village. Patrick Oliver, assistant Oakland County prosecutor, called Erward Barnes of 2200 W. Drah-ner, Oxford Township, as his first witness. Barnes, a self-employed pump service man, testified that he was flagged down on Dunlap road while returning from service call by a man who said there was a dead woman lying at the side of the road. Barnes said he called the Oxford police after seeing the body Kidney Patient 'Doing Weir An Avon Township mother may leave a Qeveland, Ohio, hospital this weekend with a new kidney and a new lease on life. Mrs. James Shontz, of 1895 Tamm, underwent a kidney transplant at the Cleveland Clinic last week. Her mother, Mrs. Norton Millerd, 315 Cherry, Troy, re-tomed from aeveland this Mrs. Millerd said the doctor toW her that her daughter, Patricia, is doing so well that she may be M>le to move into an apartment near the hospital this Mrs. HfiUerd said yesterday that she will go to Geveland Sunday to stay with her daughter for at least a week. “She is in excellent spirits," she said, “and things look real bri^.” Mrs. Shontz, whose remaining kidney was removed in an operation three weeks ago, received a healthy kidney from her father, Frank L. Farreil of St. Clair Shores Ust wedi. Both were reported in satisfactory condition. Her first kidney was damaged in a childhood fall and rennoved a few years later. • Her remaining kidney deteriorated after the birth of her son, James, two years ago. on the road and told them to send an ambulance. Besides Barnes, three Oakland County SherifPs Department Deputies and two members of the Oxford police department were calM to die stand to testify before the AIL the police witnesses testified on what they observed at the scene of the murder. Sheriff’s Deputy Roy Lewis testified that the defendant told him that Miss Hodges had let him out of her car and continued on Dunlap Road with an unidentified hitchhiker prior to the murder. RIVIERA COMES OUT - Buick Motor Division today unveiled the 1966 Riviera, marked chiefly by the elimination of window vents. Fresh air for the car is supplied by a grille in the hood, just in front of the windshield. by Osteopath HEARD SHOTS The defendant also said, according to Lewis, that he heard a shot moments after being let out of the car and that he trotted to the scene and found the body of Miss Hodges and her empty car. Barnes jotted down the license number of the car driven by the man who stopped^him and it later checked out to be the one owned by Miss Hodges, which the defe^ant drove to the Oxford police station. Barnes said the man in the car lodced like the defendant, but that he could not state positively that it was Cooke. Alony Errors Before 'Score' (Continued From Page One) commandeer another auto, but another roared off, leaving him the curb, gun in He was still standing there when policeman Robert Freder-ickson came up on his motorcycle. The bandit pointed the gun at Frederickson, a ' him off the cycle. Jbe ofker got off all right, but grabbed the guiiman and wrestled him to the ground. RECENT PAROLEE He was identified later as Walter E. Bigelow, 31, who was recently paroled from San (Juen-tin where he had been serving a sentence for robbery. At police headquarters, Bigelow was asked about the trouble with the getaway cars. His answer : “I’ve been in The Joint so long, I forgot how to drive." The second bandit? Oh yes ... he got away with the loot. The Weather FuU U. S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Considerable cloudiness with scattered showers and thundershowers today becomhig more numerous tonight. Not as warm today, highs 74 west to 82 east. Lows tonight 56 west to 64 southeast Thursday occasional rain and possible thundershowers and cooler, highs 64 to 72. Southwest winds 15 to 22 miles today shifting to west to northweit tonight Friday outlook: cloqdy and cool. LauMri Iwnparalvf* pr«c*dlng I (.m.: At S ijn.: Wind VMocIty IS n m riMi Thunday M S:n a.m. non Mtt Wadnaaday at l:« p,m. It Thurtday at 4:11 t-Wi. Tatiday'i Tamparaliirt Chart Alptna II 44 Jacktonvlllt It Etcanaba 4} 41 Kantat City 41 : Gr. RtpMi U 41 Lot AnotlH It < SS 47 Miami itach n 13 M Mllwaukto 74 : 41 0 Ntw Orlaant M 71 40 Ntw York M ! II N Omahd S7 . 4S 41 Photnix M 47 Pltltburoh 14 i 42 44 St. Lowll 7S i " " ------------ C. 57 ; SS S. Prancitco 47 i State Chief Says No Uniting Wanted The president of the Michigan Association of Osteopathic Physicians and Surgeons (MAOPS) today denied charges that a plan for a merger between MDs and DOs “is making steady progress." * Dr. Benjamin F. Dickinson further denied that “75 to 80 per cent of Michigan osteopaths t to amalgamate with the Michigan State Medical Society (MSMS).” The osteopathic physician reidied to comments made by Dr. John J. Conry of Port Huron before the Centennial session of the MSMS currently being held in Detroit. Dr. Coury had charge that creation of a proposed college of osteopathy, planned for a site at Auburn and Opdyke, would do “incalculable harm” to merger efforts. Buick Unveils Riviera for '66 The 1966 Riviera sport coupe, featuring fhe elimination of window vents, was introduced today by Buick Motor Division. The new Riviera has a 119-inch wheelbase, two inches longer than last year, and a four-inch wider tread. It also features a longer hood and fenders, a more sloping windshield and a modified fast-back roof and rear deck. The Riviera goes on sale at the following area dealers: Oliver Motor Sales, 210 Orchard Lake; A1 Hanoute Chevrolet - Buick, 209 N. Park, Lake Orion; Feigley Motor Sales, 506 N. Main, Milford; Fischer Buick, 515 S. Woodward, Birmingham; Shelton Pontiac-Buick, 355 S. Rochester, Rochester; and Homer Right, 160 S. Washington, Oxford. A new ventilation system Amalgamation is a dead issue i so far as the overwhelming ma- j jority of the state’s osteopaths j are concerned, said Dr. Dickin- POLinCAL ISSUE “The osteopathic profession not interested in relinquishing its principles and philosophy because of some political issue," he added. CMpg that the osteopaths fnmish health care to one out of three Michigan citizens. Dr. Dickinson said, “We must provide the educational facility for osteopathic physicians and to meet this growing The projected college would educate 100 physicians each year, providing a comprehensive education for osteopaths -75 per cent of whom, he said, would become family dans. Guns Are Quieting in Kashmir makes window vents unneces-ssary. INTERIOR TRIM Standard interior trim includes bench-type seats, front and rear, or bucket seats ’and console in front. AH gauges and instruments have been regrouped to a position directly in front of the driver. The speedometer is a drum-type cylinder which revolves verticaUy. Oil, temperature and generator gauges are equipped with pointers instead of warning lights. The 1966 Riviera headlamps are concealed in the radiator grille, beneath the hood. When the headlight switch is turned on, the lamps drop into position: FRONT SUSPENSION The Riviera’s front suspension system features new shock absorbers and improved handling characteristics with new steer- U.S.toCall Medical Men Too Few Volunteers for Health Services WASHINGTON (ffl - The Defense Department moved today to draft 1,979 doctors, dentists and veterinarians because of the armed forces buildup. The Pentagon ask^ the Selective Service to call 1,529 doctors, 350 dentists and 100 veterinarians for service in the Army, Navy and. Air Force starting in January. “The can .is necessary to provide the h^th services required for the increase in the active armed forces strength announced in July by the President,” the announcement said. President Johnson has approved a 340,000-man boost in the armed forces, to a new total of nearly three million. The Defense Department said the new doctor draft call stems in part from the fact that there have not been enough medical volunteers to meet the pilitary buildup required in coi^ with the Vietnamese war. Birmingham Area News School Board Members Hear Building Report SERVICES VARY Of the doctors, 949 will serve in the Army, 260 in the Navy and 320 in the Air Force. All the dentists and veterinarians are tabbed for the Army. ly for meat inspection. There are very few animals left In the military estabUshment although tim services do use dogs for sentry and otiier purposes. This is the second doctor draft call this year." BIRMINGHAM - The direc-of Birmingham School District’s building program-be-hind schedule and above cost nates —, were outlined to d of location members last night. Schools siipt. John B. Smitti warned that the board soon wiU be faced with the necessity of choosing projects to be cut from tile program. “Ultimately, there must be a determination on when the school community will be asked to supply additional funds far the projects postponed and, possiUy, for other building that wUl be required hi order to accommodate the continued increase in enroU-ment," he said. The $5,350,000 bond issue approved by property owners in June 1964 just isn’t going as far as planned. _ In addition, there have bwn delays in the buildings which are under construction. AFTER CHRISTMAS Evergreen Elementary School, originally planned for occupancy Sept. 1, apparently won’t be ready until after the Christmas holidays. Smith reported last night. The superintendent commented that the target date for completion may have been unrealistic because it allowed only 13 months for development and execution of plans. Complicating the matter were high construction coats which necessitated rebidding the contracts, a summer steel strike and labor shortages in specific The same elements have meant delays for the Valley Woods and Meadow’Lake elemmitary school additions, now expe^ to be completed by late October, Smith said. AWARDING DUE The school board wiU award contracts Oct. 19 on the science addition to Seaholm High School, carrying an estimated cost of $400,000. . . , .In January, the Pentagon mg Imkage and revised steer- selective Service to sup-mg geometiy. : ply 851 physicians in the sum- Upper and lower control aims I with speciaUy tuned rubber bushings at the inner pivots complete the front suspension. Tlie geometry of the rear suspension has been altered for 1966 to effect greater control over “squat” on acceleration and rear end lift during braking. City Police Seek-Highland Park Man Dr. Dickinson pointed out that 75 per cent of the MDs have become specialists. Tlius, he asked what institution would be responsible for the training of family physicians, if it is not the osteopathic college? The MAOPS p r e s i d e n 1 charged that the MDs seemed primarily concerned with amalgamation and stopping progress of the Michigan College of Osteopathic Medicine, (Continued From Page One) stretched along a truce line similar to the Kashnur ceasefire boundary established by the United Nations in 1949 to divide the largely Moslem Kashmir between Moslem Pakistan and India, which is predominantly Hindu. As Ayub explained it to his .the arrest of a Highland Park people: Our forces wil, how-j„3„ ^y Pontiac PoUce ever, smy in ^it.^ for the questioning in connection time being, until asked to move the fraudulent conversion and theft of more than $1,600 i’. CHINA’S MOVES from a service station at 420 Shastri, speaking of Commu-1 S. Saginaw nist China’s recent moves to Warrants have been issued for 2 Ships Collide in Frisco Bay SAN FRANCISCO UF)-A Norwegian freighter and a Liberian tanker were badly damaged and set afire at dawn today in a collision in San Francisco Bay. Two crew members of the 8,051-ton Norwegian motor vessel Berganger, one a blonde woman radio operator, were injured slightly as the freighter slammed into the tanker Intercontinent amidships. A helicopter flew seaman Paul Jensen and Miss KJellaag Nielsen, 27, to the Pnhiic Health Service Hospital in San Francisco. The middle-aged seaman was treated for minor lacerations and held for observation. Miss Nielsen was shaken up but otherwise uninjured. She said she was in her cabin when the ships collided. The Berganger carries four women in her crew. The fire aboard the Berganger, whdse starboard side was ripped open amidships, was extinguished quickly ^ the San Francisco fireboat Phoenix and fire fighters from Coast Guard cutters. NATIONAL WEATHER-Bcattered showers and thunder-riwwan an aipectad from the northern Rockies to the AUantic «aaat to^t, with light rain in parts of the northern Flaina mmI mum in the northern Rockies. It wiU be cooler Am Itacklaa te the upper Lakes area. STTLL AFIRE But the Intercontinent, which lost 15 feet of her bow, was still afire in the forward area. increase its military strength in Tibet along the Himalayan frontier opposite India and its buffer state protectorates, said: “We do not know what th^ CMiese will do next. The Indian leader denied a declaration by Rqdio Peking that Indians had met a primary Chinese requirement by tearing down controversial military posts on or near the border of Tibet and Sikkim, an Indian protectorate. He said the Indians pulled down none. "All this is a product of their imagination,” he said. In the Indian-Pakistani conflict, warplanes and ground Rimers carried on through the final hours. TWO AIR RAIDS The Indian government radio said Pakistan’s American-built planes staged two raids lasi light and two more today. It said a prison hospital in Jodhpur, an airbase city In southwest India, was one of the targets, and bombs kUied 39 inmates. In Kearchi, Pakistani author-itis said Pakistani bombers made a night raid on the Jodhpur airbase. 'Hiey gave no details of the damage, but told of these other operations: Pakistani antiaircraft batteries shot down an Indian jet fighter this morning in the Khein Karen sector south M • Indian ground, troops launched an offensive in the Rajasthan sector, but were beaten back. Thqy left behind two Jeeps, pne carrying an antitank • There was fighting also in le Fazilka and Sialkot sectors. India, which had told the United Nations it would stop firing if Pakistan did, asked for an extension of the deadline to permit orders to go out to field commanders. Tte council then moved the cease-fire forward to 6 p.m. (EDT) today. Named in the warrant is Mose McKnight, a former employe of the Gark Oil & Refining Corp. The fraudulent conversion of $1,448.07 ailegedlyf took place Sept. 1 according to police. In addition, an employe at the station told poUce McKnight took $209 in cash from the station last weekend. FEW VOLUNTEERS That call came because a sufficient number of 1964 medical school graduates had not volunteered for active duty immediately after their internship. In January 1964, a caU went out for 1,050 doctors, also because enough medical school graduates from the previous year had not signed up voluntarily. Ceremony Set at Mall Ground breakking ceremonies fw the $2.4 miUion Pontiac Mall expansion program will be conduct^ at 3 p.m. tomorrow. Joseph L. Hudson Jr., department store executive, is expected to attend the fete along with Waterford Township, Pontiac and Oakland County governmental officials. In addition to establishment of a full-line J. L. Hudson Co. department store, expansion will include construction of 10 fashion shops. Annual GOP Ox Roast Set for Saturday Listing problems connected with the new Covington Junior High School, Smith noted early indications were that the building would run $iM,IM above the $2.5-mUUon estimated cost. Revisions have been made to cut costs and speed construction. Recently, bids were received for the site development and the lowest bid was 90 per cent higher than the architMt’s estimate,” he reported. “This means that the site plans will have to be revised and a new bid taken. This, of course, causes a loss of time.” ADEQUATE BIDS If bids are received to fit the budget, the building could be ready by January of 1967, he said. Development of other projects awaits thp letting of contracts on the Seaholm and (fovington work. Family fun will be mixed with serious politics at the annual Oakland County Republicans 6x roast in White Lake Township Saturday. Games for aU ages, prizes and a basebaU game will mark the fon aspects of the day, with the serious side beghining at 1 p.m. with speeches by Gov. George Romney and Rep. Gerald Ford. The event wiH also feature appearances by Rep. WiHiam S. Broomfield and state and county officials. Sen. Robert Huber of Troy will be master of ceremonies for the event at the Ivory Farm. It will begin with a pancake breakfast at 9:30 a.m. These include an addition to G.^uves High School library, additions to a number of elementary school libraries, an administration building and ele-m e n t a r y classrooms in the western portion of the school district. Bank Suspect 'Flies Away' The free barbecue will start about 2 p.m. A baseball game between Oakland County Young Republicans and Lawrence Institute Young Republicans will Oakland County GOP chairman Dale A^ Feet issued an invitation to all county residents to attend the program at 9960 Cooley Lake Road. COMET BIGGER - With some models nearly eight inches longer than the last model year, the 1966 Comet was Introduced today by Ford Motor Co. More powerful engines are also part of the package-the Cyclone GT shown offers a 335-horsepower V8. Comet Has More Room, Bigger Engines A iharp Incrimse io size for premium models and more powerful engine optkms are the most notable changes in the 1966 Comet, introduced today by Ford Motor Co. Top-of-the-llne models fm* 1966 —Capri, Caliente and Cyclone-are longer by almoM eight inches then the biggest Comet offered in the last model year. Comet goes ou sale Oct. 1 at the following area dealers: Kaverley Mercury, 420 Main, fodisster; Lloyd Motors, 1250 Oakland; and Bob Borst, 880 8. Woodward, Binningham. The size changes were described by Paul F. Lorenz, vice preBiden^generaI manager Lin-coln-Mercury, as responding to “the public demand for premium automobiles in every segment of the market.’’^ BIGGER ENGINES Powering the bigger cars besides the standard 201kublc-lnch 1204iorsepower six are thrse V-8 options — a 28frcubic-lnch 300-horsepower engine, a SOOHwbic-Inch rated at 375 horsepower and with the Cydone GT, a 185-horespower model. Among the safety features made standard on the 1901 Comet are padded Instrument panel and padded visors, emergency flasher and front New Interior trim schemes continue wood-grain styling for Caliente and black camera-case finish for Cyclone. Comet wagons offer a third seat - for the first tlms - and a dual-action tailgate , which opens either up and down or sideways. ((Continued From Page One) Lauderdale. Before police lead him away, he paid his marina bill, peeling off notes from a fist-sized roll of $100 bills. Since then, he has languished in jail while fighting deportation to Canada. The Immigration Service is tiding to kick him out of the United States on the ground that he entered the country without a visa. LeMay had said he had na objection to deportation, he just didn’t want to go to Canada. UMay is charged wHh leading a crew tiiat tnaaeled under the Bank of Nova Scotia in 1961 and Masted open 177 safety deposit boxes. They escaped with between $500,000 and $4 million, but the exact amount was never established because of the reluctance of the box owners to talk The stocky, 5-footA UMay has been Canada’s most wanted person since then. . He was hunted all over . the world for four years but waanot discovered until the Royal Canadian Mounted P41ics flashed his picture on the first Early Bird satellite television program. WAS PUZZLED “I very seldom make mistakes,” UMay told officers when they arrested him abqard his yacht. “How did you do It?" ToM what had happened, May said, “Well, Isn’t that something: It took a utelflte to catch me." The sheriff said UMay had been allowed several visitors recently, including his tiflfo, Lisa Umieux, 28, an attractive brunette. They said dvfl vows r In French In a hurried-up egre-mony in the anteroom of an Immigration officer Just befon a hearing June I. It was over^be-fore officials knew it had started. STOPPED BEFORE Only the day before thpy iuul moved UMay from a cell with a window to prevent him from shouting the ceremony through bars. Although he Insisted.. had been married beforei In Mexico, officials suggested tpey wanted an American marrihgn license so she could not be called on to testify against ^ In case he were ever dqporteito Canada. ; THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 22, 196.5 A—8 tELLS OF DRAMA — Publisher-sportsman John P. Scripps talks with newsmen and police yesterday after more than two hours of being hostage of a young sailor aboard Scripps’ yacht. Scripps was released unhurt after officers fired a warning shot. The yacht was tied up at a San Diego Yacht Qub pier. Grenade-Toting Sailor Nabbed; Held 3 Hostage Aboard Yacht SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP) -“When he pulled the pin out of that hand grenade, and when I saw that fellow crouched and I was looking down a gun barrel, my heart was going pltty pat," said publisher-sportsman John P. Scripps. ‘ Scripps was describing,a two-hour drama Tuesday in* which he and two other men were held hostage by a young sailor aboard Scripp’s $800,000 yacht. WWW The youth, identified as Guy M.'Warinner, 19, was booked for Investigation of kidnaping and assault with a deadly weapon. ' Scripps, 53, is the grandson of the late publish E.W. Scripps and is publisher and chaimum of the board of seven newspapers in California and Washington. GIVES ACCOUNT He quoted Warinner as saying he was from Los Angeles, and gave this account of the drama in San Diego harbor: “He said he was making a run f6r it — that he was AWOL from ttie Navy and wanted us to take him down the coast a way and put him ashore in Mexico.” Scripps said Warinner apparently swam to the yacht Monday night. When Scripps and two crew members came aboard Tuesday morning, they found a pile of wet clothes and a gun. ♦ * Capt. Sam Davis, 56, went ashore to notify police. While he^ was gone, said Scripps, Warin-:ner returned, to tlie room, grabbed the pistol, and told Scripps to take him to Mexico. Scripps said he told Warinner the captain was ashore and no one else 00UI4 run the craft. But Davis returned and then, said Scripps, Warinner pulled a hand grenade and said: “No funny business. I’m not kidding." CALLS GUARDSMEN Davis, however, slipped into the radio room and told Coast Guard officials what was happening. Police surrounded the craft and boats were sent out by the harbor patrol. ★ ★ * Scripps said Warinner became excited, pulled the pin from the grenade and warned police: “Don’t throw any tear gas. ru blow us aH up." But officers, after repeatedly trying to sooth Warinner, fired a warning shot and Warinner surrendered, after putting the pin back in the grenade. Thalidomide Used in Leprosy Cases JERUSALEM, Israeli Sector (AP) — The drug thalidomide, convicted of deforming unborn babies, may win a reprieve as a treatment tat some of the reactions of leprosy. Israel has about 200 lepers. ★ ★ ★ Specialists at Hansen Hospital here started using the drug, a tranquilizer, to lessen the p^s of lepers and allow them to sleep. Doctors were surprised to find that some of the symptoms of leprosy, such as efflorescence of the skin and inflammation of the eyes, tended to disappear in a few hours. No serious side effects were America’s Finest HUNTING BCX5TS QMhSamos oil • tonnad, wotar • rapal-lant.laatharuppar, cushion crapa wadga sola, A A AM *swaat proof" flaxibla Chwi* Britain Is 'Cold' to Reported Spy Deal ) — Britain has cold shouldered a Communist attempt to win freedom for Morris and Lola Cohen, an American couple jailed here for spying for Russia, diplomatic sources said today. The (k)hens were sentenced to 20 years imprisonment each in 1961 as part of an elaborate spy ring gathering western sub-nuu'ine secrets for the Russians. They were tried under the names Peter and Helen Kroger, and identified themselves FBI agents later declared them to be former New Yorkers who had been contacts for Col. Rudolid) Abel, Soviet master spy sentenced to 30 years imprisonment in New Yoit in 1957. ★ ★ ★ Abel was exchanged in 1962 for Francis Gary. Powers, the American U2 pilot. SEEKS EXCHANGE Now, diplomatic sources report, the same East German Lawyer who bandied the Abel-Powers exchange has approached the British about the Cohens. The lawyer, Wolfgang Wo-gel, represents Arthur Wilbro-ham, a 27-year-oid Briton held in East Berlin on charges of aiding East Germans to escape. But diploiiutic sources said the main bait for an exchnage with , the Cohens is Gerald Brooke, a Briton held in Moscow. Brooke was sentenced to five years in jail on charges of acting for a Russian emigre organization. ★ w w Sources said Britain has reacted coldly toward any such exchange because, from the British viewpoint, it would be a bad bargain. PROFESSIONALS ’The Cohens were convicted as professional spies. Brooke was not accused of acting for British intelligence. Furthermore, the exchange last year —also masterminded by Wogel — of the Russian spy Gordon Lonsdale for Wynne, aroused criticism here. Lonsdale was the boss of the naval spy ring for which the Cohens worked. ★ ★ ★ Critics of the exchange said it would encourage the Russians to arrest innocent western na-tionals'whenever they wished to secure the release of top Soviet agents. Apart from Wilbraham and Brooke, the communists hold an Mott of Sheffield, Mass., for walking into the Soviet Union from Norway without a visa. He is held at Murmansk in the far north. Superstitious Drunk Finally Makes Court COVENTRY, England (UPI) —A defendant was fined $14 yesterday for not appearing in court a week ago Monday on a drunk and disorderly charge. “I couldn’t come here on September 13th because I’m superstitious,’’ he explained. EvtMiip ’W a:M Ht-1111 BUY, SELL. TRADE. USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS. THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1965 Kresge Unit Contributes to Hospital ROOiESTER — The Kresge Foundation today announced it is ’'contributing $100,000 toward the building fund of the new $6-million Crittenton General Hospital now under construction. The announcment was made by Donald L. Brown, manager of the Rochester store of S. S. Kresge, when he presented a check for half of the contribu-tiwi to hospital representatives Edward A. Wamica, first vice-president of the board of trustees, and A. Riley Allen, administrator. In presenting the check. Brown said, “We are happy to participate with this community in making possible a modem general hospital to serve the residents of this area.’’ / The six-story, 207-bed hospital will be located on Walton Boulevard just east of Livemois. It will be equipped to employ the latest in medical procedures and surgical techniques and will be the first major hospital in this.^ region to have a combined staff of medical and osteopathic physicians. At Wolverine Lake Hearing Talk Tangled by Technicalities WOLVERINE LAKE - A hearing to determine the course of imiHuvemehts for Wolverine Lake (^ned here yesterday, but was immediately snarled in a discussion of ahat {wocedures were to be foilowed. After a nearly two-hour exchange between residents and a three-man board of determination, the hearing was adjourned dience, did not permit such cross-examination. ASSESSMENT DISTRICT Valentino also quixzed County Drain Commissioner Daniel W. Barry m whether an assessment district had been created for the proposed improvement project and all property owners n^ied. Barry replied that such a district had been estaUished and 37S property owners < Board Chairman Annett, after listening to the discussion on procedures, said that the board had decided that sworn testimony would be taken and that a court reporter would take down the testimony. Anne tt also said that the boanl would retain legal counsel to advise it in conducting the (le-termination bearing. BOARD’S FUNCTION He said the board’s only function was to determine the necessity of the proposed imiwove-ments. Annett emphasized timt the three-man board did not know in advance what the hearing was about. KRESGE CONTRIBUTION - Donald L. Brown (left), 301 Gunn Road, Oakland Township, manager of the Rochester S. S. Kresge store, presents a check for $50,000 on behalf of the Kresge Foundation to Crittenton General Hospital representatives Edward A. Warnica of 1298 North Glenhurst, Rochester (center), first vice president of the board of trustees and A. Riley Allen of 096 South Field-stone, Avon Township, hospital administrator. In the background are foundation walls of the hospital. Construction, now under way, is expected to take about two years. Parents, School Officials Reach Agreeinenton Student Transfers UnCA — Plumbrook-Aubum- REV. ROY KENNY Missionary to Give Talks INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP — Rev. Roy Kenny, mis-sicmary to Brazil, wUl be the guest speaker at the Drayton Heights Free Methodist Church, Maybee and Winell, Friday through Sunday. Rev. Kenny, who has served as an educational evangelistic missionary in the South American country since 1955, will speak at 7:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday and at 11 a m. and 7 p.m. Sunday. He said the boundaries will remain as changed but that school officials are considering some kindergarten adjustments t o equalize the loads. TO TAKE SURVEY To help solve the kindergarten situation, a survey will be taken among the parents to determine if they want their children to In presenting his account of missions in Brazil, Mr. Kenny will use pictures and colored slides. The public is invited attend. Sashabaw PTA Fair Scheduled Saturday INDEPENDENCE T 0 W N-SHIP — The Sashabaw Elementary School PTA will hold a fair at the school Saturday afternoon from 2 to 5. Featured will be a bicycle rodeo, pony rides, a cakewalk and games. The school is located on Maybee Road. shire school transfer troubles have apparently been smoothed over. The only problem left to untangle is whether kindergarten children from the Plumbrook area will stay at Auburnshire or be returned to Plumbrook. Schools Supt. Phillip E. Runkel met with parents Monday night and said that “many positive things resulted from the meeting.’’ He said the boys and girls will attend Auburnshire “which is a modern, well-equipped building with an excellent educational program.’’ remain at Auburnshire or be returned to Plumbrook. The trouble began last week when abont 150 pnpUg in grades kindergarten through five were transferred from Plumbrook to Auburnshire to alleviate crowded conditions at Piumbrook. Parents, angered over the move, picketed the school bus stops and board of education offices and kept their children out of school Thursday and Friday. Thomas Breen of the school administration said that kindergarten children will be moved back to Plumbrook if the parents request it, because after the transfer was made there were more kindergartners at Au-bumshire than at Plumbrook. TRANSFERS TEMPORARY He said all the transfers are temporary until three new elementary schoob are built in the area involved. Vets to Meet and 'Gas' Water Deal Authorized in Keego KEEGO HARBOR -^^The City Council last night formalized its plans to bring Detroit water to Keego Harbor. By unanimous vote, council-men authorized the signing of a contract with the Oakland County Department of Public Works (DPW) to establish a municipal water system here. The resolution they adopted referred to “factual evidence’’ of the need for a community water system. It made note of the samples from local weUs indicating the water is not safe for drinking and the complaints of citizens unable to get sufficient quantities of water. The project carries an estimated cost of $700,300. Balloon Corps Party PROPERTY TAX The debt will be paid from a 4.87-mill property tax, connection fees and service charges. Connection to the system will be on a voluntary basis, according to Councilman Vernon Edward, who b in charge of the project. Those who do make use of the system will pay $150.45 to bring the water to their property lines and an $800 capital charge. With as many men as it can muster, the Army Balloon I Corps will descend on Detroit tomorrow. Some 200 members of the National Association of I American Balloon Corps Veterans and their wives will gather dt the Sheraton-Cadillac Hotel for the group’s 34th annual reunion. Hiere are an estimated 2,900 survivors of the Captive Balloon Corps Section of the World War I American Army, once 15,000 men tdmg. The last balloon company was dbbanded in 1924. All personnel records of the corps were destroyed in a fire at Scott Field, 111., in the early 20’s and as a result many veterans are unaware of the organization. The latter can be handled in paymenb spread across the 30-year life of the revenue bonds. SERVICE CHARGE The monthly service charge will run about $3.11, Vernon estimated. The possibility of obtaining federal funds to finance some of the work now Is being investigated by the DPW. The city had not expected to be in line for Detroit water un-U1 1970. However, extension of a main up to Square Lake and Middle Belt has made it possible for Keego Harbor to connect next year. to Sept. 29, at 7 p.m. in the Walled Lake High SchoqJ gym. Virtually the only item of business transacted was t h e selection of Pontiac realtor Bmce Annett as board chair- Other members of the panel are Monroe M. Osmun, Pontiac businessman and Pontiac School Board president, and Laurence H. Pate, civil engineer from Pate, Him and Bogue, Detroit consulting engineers. The board, called under pix>-visions of the state Inland Lake Improvement Act, is to determine the necessity, feasibility and practicaMlity of improvements to the 272-acre lake. TWO STUDIES Specifically, two engineering studies have been done on a proposal for a lake dredging project. The'studies conflict in cost and method. However, yesterday’s s e s-lion, which attracted an estimated 150 to 200 resklenU, ing should proceed. Paul Valentino, attorney im-the Wolverine Lake Rehabili-tathm Association, said that the Wolverine Lake hearing was only the second board of di' miratiem hearing ever convened in the state. Valentino sought the board’s approval to cross-examine witnesses. Suggested rules of procedure, handed out to the au- Decker PTA Sets WALLED LAKE-The Decker Elementary School PTA will open its year Monday with a program entitled “This Is Your PTA” The 8 p.m. meeting in the school’s multipurpose room is aimed at acquainting parents with the organization, the school curriculum, physical plant and teachers. Following the brief program, parents will visit their children’s new rooms and visit with teach- = FREE 5 LBS. COFFEE IF FRETTER CAN'T BEAT YOUR DEAL!!!! *199“ WRINfiER WASNEII , • Uffs* Tab Capntw • Bmrr Dutr Witaame • Tbna Vmm AglMar • SatoUr 0»0ff IwlMi O Ursa Un to nau Cl mnin um. i 8AU nia 78 ^ 1966 All Channel Pebble $0g Westlnghouse Demo Dish- $4 HQ washer IU5I 23” Admiral TV Table $^28 Save Up to 25% on Hoover Floor Model Vacuum Cleoners NO-DEFROnMe Dumx REFRIGERATOR FREEZER • 5SL““ **■ Xafrlaarator • IfaM SM-ih Vtoaiar to OM Rafrlfaratar Spoaa Hurry hi Fur Fiottar’s mmm FRETTER APPLIANCE COMPANY PONTIAC WAREHOUSE RLEORAPH RD. % MIL! S. ORCHARD UKIRO. IMiUNartkafMtnuUMIU " Opon Daily 10-9-Opm Sunday 11 -6 - FE 3-7051 no UMW mm-BF n M HMim TC MY Not even Canada has it so good! STear Old Whisky with Orabi Nautrul Spirtto ■WSIW«fM)0F4MSaMaaeunML.BIiaiTS40NTINENTAL0ISTIUINSG0lir.,rHIU Taame laal. human hair wigs . . . special at H5 Swim In the morning, shop |n the oftomoon - and still, go dancing ot night. Your coiffure li no problem -If you hove one of theM fine humon hair wigi ready and woltlng. Come chooM from our stock of wigs in oil colors. Eoslly •tylad qnd sheped for you alone. Use Your Credit Millinery Dept.... Third Floor THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1965 2NewM-TB jDrugs Tested Products Successful In Many Experiments By Science Service : iNEW YORK - Two of the IDost promising new drugs being tried against tuberculosis, raspedally when TB germs have bacome resistant to older drugs, ecapreomycin and ethambutol, a New York Academy of Science meeting was told here. .' ^ 20 major drug companies Uyited to send delegates to a fit||ieting on new antituberculous •^gs, only two had drugs in a jufficiently advanced state to 'termit discussion at an Acad-fShy conference. ^ Capreomycin, produced ei-rperimentaUy by EU LUly and .'Co., Indianapolis, and etham-batol, manufactured also experimentally by the Lederle Laboratories, Pearl River, JN.Y., have been tested on patients as well as anhnals '^ionly in , ^laboratories but by research-.: tn in this country and over-:'seas. In Tokyo, for example, the Japan Research Committee for Chemotherapy of Tuberculosis, has investigated capreomycin )n c(Hnparison with streptomy-ijtin as a treatment by injection. Ethambutol has been used for more than four years in more than 150 cases of advanced pulmonary tuberculosis. Dr. Mar-iorlo M. Pyle of the Chicago State Tuberculosis Sanatorium mported. BIG CONTRIBUTION The sanatorium considers it *‘a major contribution to the chemotherapy of tuberculosis.” • A combination of isoniazid, or |NH, and para-aminosalicylic i|K;id, called PAS for short, is usually considered one of the best treatments for TB, but patients sometimes cannot tolerate one or other of these (bugs, or the genns become ^ c(di Public ] Dr. Shirley H. Ferd>ee and c(dlaborators at the U. S. Health Service, for example, have shown that ethambutol as a substitute for PAS was equaUy effective. Dr. Fere-M worked with Drs. B. E. tloster and F. J. Murray. •Survival Still .Uses Si2i to : Distill Water By Sdeace Service ; WASHINGTON - A simple solar still that will yield mfQcient water to assure survival in the desert can be made by anyone from a sheet of plas^ about iix and a half feet square and a piece of aluminum foil. ■ A yield of one-and-a-half quarts a day of potable water was obtained from one such sur-yival still, two scientists reported here in the.journal Science. Ray D. Jackson and C. H. M. van Bavei of the UB. Department of Agri^ture’s Water Conservation Laboratory .is Tempo, Aris., developed the -simple device. * It uses the sun’s energy to distill water from the soil or bt>m plants, especially cactus, k The still is basically a- half glove, three feet in diameter and a foot and a half deep, icooped out of desert sand and jBovered with a sheet of plastic. ftELD IN PLACE k The plastic, held in place by I ring of soU around its edge, is |ept in a conical shape by a ftm in the center. ‘ The SOB’S hes :4he nnderside of the sheet, 'where it runs down to the cen-^ter of the cone and drips into ■ a container made of alnmi-aum foil or some other water-proof material. t ’The center of the hole should dug out an additional ai^t nlBT j or so to make room _.j container, whldi should hold bom two to four quarts. ' Cutup cactus or some vegeta-|lo matter can be placed ln the Itm to increase the moisturo available for condensation, r A piece of plastic tubing about 0vo feet long can bo used to pick the water from the con-isinw without disturbing the Mill. ^ This method of collecting wa-)ier using only natural materials pnd n pocket siied package ibould prevent the panic caused bjr thim that makas people pinilar to an almost oorteln death within hours whan itraiid-ed in the desert. J ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ----- British Teachers to Strike Against Homework—Their Own LONDON (AP) - More than 40,000 Brkish teachers have decided to ban homework—home-woik for themselves, not their pupils. Beginning Oct. 4, members of the National Association of School Masters will confine their work to classroom hours, 9 a.m. tO( 4 p.m. They will cmrrect no math papers in evening hours. They will take no compositions home with them at ni^t. They will coach no athletic teams at 4 p.m. ’The strike against homework will last two weeks. Said Townee Casey, 45, secretary of the associatkm: ‘‘This is a protest against a suggestion by our employers that teaching is practically a part-time occupation. OUTSIDE ACTIVITIES ‘‘All our outside activities win cease at 4 o’clock, and work not conqileted during the day will be left undone.” The association represoits about one in every seven of the country’s teachers. The mem- bers are angry over a recent award which increased their pay by an average of $5.60 to 8.40 a week. Rador Group Cited SAULT STE. MARIE (AP)-Maj. Gen. Thomas R. Ford, deputy chief of staff'of the Air Defense Command, presented an award Tuesday for the best maintenance record of any radar squadron to the 753rd Radar Squadron, located at Sault Ste. Marie. In making the award, there was a suggestion that the teaching profession allows a teacher to earn money in his or her spUre time. ★ ★ ; * The association wants the government to set up a commission to examine what the teachers claim are many deficiencies in the country’s educational structure. BIGGEST UNION The National Union of Teachers — the biggest teachers’ union — said a conunission had already examined the educational structure. It initimated it would not go along with the nohomework ban. The spokesman for the National Association of School-Masters said: “We want all the existing educational deficiencies, which have been concealed for too long, properly looked into even if it takes 10 years.” This association is made up solely of men teachers. More than half the members of the rival union of teachers are women. The Ministry of Education said it was difficult to state an average teacher’s pay because of the numerous classifications. ★ * * A spokesman said it might be about $2,520 a year. State Bank Robbed BELDING (AP) - A bandit escaped with an estimated $7,000-$8,000 from the First Security Bank of Belding Tuesday, Now Mooy Weor FALSE TEETH WItk UHlt Warry fct. Ulk. araiAw anMw without •Th W plei2i,JtpS»j^hii?no awASTMU FOR BEfTER SLEEP ef whylat, Bronehid A •mot. dut Int U^ACO. lAxei bronehlAl__, „„ ..._ . remoTe thick, choking phlegm. Thle ■ aniTbcli)* —t. dim eoaih- THE PONTIAC PRESS Hkw 8b«l Pontiac, XOdilgaa WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 22, 196S sasB^j^saas® SwratuT and AdmtUng C Warfare Shot Through With Dlogical Views One of the minor irrationalities arising from that ultimate irrationality called war is this Nation’s fear of ejcploring means of achieving the end of war while at the same time reducing its accustomed carnage. As long as we kill people in the age-old accepted ways — shooting them, burning them, pulverizing them — we seem to get only the usual praise of friends and sniping criticisms of enemies. ★ ★ ★ Bot let someone dare suggest the possibility of using weapons that do not kill or even wound but merely take people out of action temporarily and the bogeyman of world opinion screams in righteous outrage. This happened a few months ago when it was revealed that we were experimenting with Incapacitating gas in Viet Nam — the kind of riot-control gases used by police the world over. The United States bowed to the demmciations and ordered no further use of gas of any t3rpe in Viet Nam without explicit permission from the highest authority. “Chemical warfare has been engulfed in a haze of horror through propaganda and ignorance,” wrote Dr. Richabd L. Kenton in a recent issue of Chemical and Engineering News. ★ ★ ★ “Yet,” he continued, “it could likely mitigate dreadful aspects of what we read about in news stories from Viet Nam. In the midst of some of those reported actions, any of a number of military effective chemical agents would have been less atrocious.” The abolition of war is one of man’s most pressing goals. But where war exists, said Kmiyon— and it exists in Viet Nam—reason and knowledge ought to be used in any way possible to reduce its awfulness. But men are not reasonable. Otherwise they would never fight wars to begin with. Verbal Orchids to - «f DsvMwrg; flat birthday. Mrs. Mary rartws of IN Midiigan; Nth birthday. # I Security cards, clainUttg to vide the MtAy with a ** nent Social Scewity numlMr.** Needless to say, all digible Americans have a pcnuanent card to beghi with, and if loai it can easily 'ba..mlaced through the loo^ SociidSecnrity office. These and many more artifices will spring up like spring flowers to separate the unwary from tiheir augmented tncoihe. ★ ★ ★ But there is one form of protection against beli^ taken In by crooks — the same that guards against loss in all forms of racketeering. Enter into .ho financial arrangement wi& anyone with whom you are unacquainted or regarding which you have not sought the counsel of responsible community figures. Summer Missing Political Noise )f tremendous ac- I Social Security Boom a Mag:net for Gyppers Those of our senior citizens who Imye come to think of Uncle Sam as the embodiment of Santa Claus . may well find confirmation as $885 millitm in retroactive Social Security payments make happy 20 million beneficiaries. The windfall represents the 7 per cent across-the-board raise in Social Secarity benefits voted by Congress, effective Jul^. But trorSu a collective villain lurking behind the Christmas tree in the guise of con men and rack-^ eteers, ready and eager to prey on the gullibility of retirees. ★ ★ ★ A Social Security official warns against these pitfalls likely to appear almost concurrently with postal delivery of ttie checks: • The medfcal gypster who will try to peddle a broad range of phony cnrea — particularly for chronic and critical Illnesaes. • Home improvement twin-diera who will win confidence by offering free “inspection” of furnaces or other mechaniad equipment. • Offers to sell forged Social The Feeling Of Being Followed Cah manufacturers say the public isn’t willing to pay the cost of making safer cars. Tliis isn’t surprising; most people gladly pay the cost of pretti^g a car, though. It’s clear that the great majority prefer snaz-zlness to safety. David Lawrence Soys: Guild Strike Sign of Sickness By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON — It’s the n o 1 s e that’s missing. This has been a year of tremendous accomplishment in Congress but the Democrats so outnumbered the Republi- | cans, and President Johnson hovers over both so constantly and soothingly, there is little opoi con-nict. Washington, as a result, in this bot summer seemed underbeated. “As yaa see some- MARLOW one iirttatiBg you, Jast grin,” President Dwight D. Eisenhower said once, explaiWng Us phOoMphy o( getting . along with people. There were phnty of times, of course, when be didn’t look happy at all. ★ ★ ★ But this, and his avoidance of personal feuds, was the basis for his particolar era of go^ feelings when be was in the White House and, for most of that time, the pem-ocrats controlled Congress. VERY COOPERATIVE Luckily for him. they were very cooperative, which helped him looking pleasant. But then be didn’t have anyone on hislmck as President Harry S. Tnunan did. Sens. Robert A. Taft and Joseph R. McCarthy were always on him. He was always embattled but then no president in tS years has had to make inch momentoni decisions as Tmman. Johnson, and. President John F. Kennedy before him, followed the EUsenhower pattern rather than ’Thiman’s but with different results. ★ ★ ★ Kennedy had a tougher time than Johnson. In his years the Democrats’ margin over the Republicans in Congress was so slim that he never came close (p Johnson’s success in getting his program through. <«• FAR BETTER But Johnson is also a far better political technician than Kennedy and be works around the clock lining up votes for his legislation. And Johnson is luckier than Truman in one way. The Repnblicaa Senate leader, Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois, Is one of his best helpers. Any Republican opposition in the Senate hat been mostly WASHINGTON - Outwardly things are fine with the Johnson administration. It is spending a lot of money for social welfare, and it is playing a significant role in world affairs. But.^ there’s a cancer L eating into t h e| economic life Ul the country! which couU mean the even- LAWRENCE tual doom of a great nafiou. Will historians epe day write about "The Rise and Fall of the American Republic?” For the muscle and fiber of America today is being weakened by tbe unrestricted action of groups of citizens who feel they have a right to destroy tbe property of. other citizens and suffer no punishment. Thus a small group of unions has been depriving the people of the nation’s largest city of their newspapers and has strangled “Freedom of the Press.” ers who fail to discipline their brethrea is paralleled onl^ by the indifference of ndminlttm-tion after administmtion to the irresponsibility of trade onion leaders in their use ef the strike weapon. Is Congress today a subservient tool? The unions intervene in congressional elections with big sums of money, and then boast they helped elect a ma-j(Hity in both houses. But sriien tbe public wakes up to tbe gravity of adtat’S happening, there not be enough union money to stem the tide of votes that will demand a congressional majority aiid a president who are willing to limit the powers of labor, instead of— as the present Congress in on the verge of doing — endowing unions with tbe ri^ to force an unwilling citizen to join a union as the price of keqiing his job. Voice of the People: ■ '-^ Readers Express Views on Shortage of Nurses I read the Pontiac Press article about tbe ahorl^ge of nurses and ask why the Army corpsmen should go into the nursing profession? They probably were in a different line when they went into the Army. My son who was drafted in May had trained under the Manpower Act to be a LPN. After his bhne train-.ing the army is sending him to .be a radio repairman. What a waste of time, money and training, as he will go back to nursing when he gets out of the Amiy,| MR. GLENN AYER UNION LAKE What kind of care ar« the aged, the cte^caily HI *>d tsmvalcscent receiving In Oakland County? In som th^ are receiving inadequate care firwn untrained , people. The available registered nurses add licensed pracUcal nurses are concerned with the seriously ill. ★ ★ ★ This leaves a big field of nurring mpty. It filled partially by untrained people, worktag In heniea ■ nursing homes. Some claim to have been trainod flwir perfmmaiice leaves this opea to qnettioii, ★ ★ ★ Who sets the standards of who is trained and who la not? Some with organized training could be assets to this Add of nursing. Some of them are commanding wages of skilled nu^. ’Their employers are paying for skill not received. The cost of a long illness is made fantasticaUy high. Can we have a training and licensing program for nurses aides? ANON ‘Great Men lighted the Way for OthCTi’ So many of the gteat'hfbts of tbe world have been nutted out during the last few yews: Pope Jdm, John F. Kennedy, Churchm, Stevenson, Schweitzer, and recenUy one of tbe brightest has been fUckering alarmingly—Billy Graham. As eadi of these Bghts went out tbe world was left a little dwker, a UtQa more troubled. All osmr tbe world people have been praying that the last one mi^ continue to shine. ★ ★ ★ All those men had something in common—faith and love. But unlike the millions who claim to possess these attributes and are content to rely on them for their own salvation, they found contentment only in Hghting the path for others, serving God and mankind with every Ood-gtven talent th^ bad. SUZANNE BISHOP 8296COOUDGEHWY. White House Spreads Good News ^Exclusively* Bie Better Half There is, taid< today on the ri^ fe strike, which - as the Ifafi Street Journal pointed out m Monday in an editorial entitled “Sabotenn at Work” — can break down society. It uys: “The Newspaper Guild strike against tbe Nm York Times, entailing tbe dosing down of practically an the other local newspapers, is only one in a series of senselm acts of sabotage, w ★ ♦ “The beleaguered maritime industry is just puUing out of a long ordeal and last week was threatened with yet another walkout. In the midtt of tbe Viet Nam war the machinists union slashes out at a leading defense producer.**' * EFFECnwi$EAFOIt While conceding that a strike was often tbe only effeefive weapon in d«ya wbea wa^ were low and working oondltions poor, the Journal prints out that no such conditions exist today, and then adds: “That bdag seVk Is bird fe By MERRIMAN SMITH WASHINGTON (UPI) -Backstairs at file White House: Dat ole debbil “news management” is cropping up around the government again. Tbe Army wants military censorship of news coming out of ifiet Nam. ’ The White House in the name of security adds to restrictions, onfiiepkess. ■ ★ * A This is something leH than a new situation. Occarional cries of “foul” against the adminls-trafion give an impression ol newness, fiut this is not true. It is a matter of degree. It can be stated wlfii fear of centradietton by the White House (but it wos’t changu the truth) that last month President Jebason gavu a meeting of govenusest press officers qritu n runsisg scr- nual rate of $5SL5 bOUon In August, 6.S per cent over August 1W4. For mere details, tbe White House said, contact fiie Commerce Department * ★ ★ Reporters'did just that pldi:-ing up a much broader field ci economic statistics which showed that business activity slumped a bit during August as it usually does at fids time of Why had not tbe White House given out all tbe figures? Because, as one cynic printed out, “Bad eews is no news.” “Bert’s a real coanolssciir ... Be it a h or a bowl of chili, he knows exactly wl goes best with it” Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Johnson has had trouble with the Republican House leader, Gerald R. Ford of Michigan, who has been his most persistent critic in that body. But this is where Johnson’s political prriessionafism shows up. ★ ★ ★ Johnson pays cloee attention to public opinion polls. They show he has wide popular support, which to the opposite of what the 1964 elections showed for the Republicans. IJTTLE TO GAIN Therefore, Johnson apperently figures, he has little to gain by geit^ into a shouting match with Ford. He just takes fccastonal swipes at him. ★ ★ ★ ” Some of the legislation Congress approved this year to historic. But Johi^’g present coolness, his political efficiency, and the fact fiut the Republicans are hardly more than a platoon amid Democratic battrilons, have made this year look almost hum-drum. for a right te strike varriUm, over niggUag or eoeexisteBt issues or ss a means of inter-nniOB battitag. There to ae more iohereat r i f h.t to smA behavior, it seems to as, thee there Is a right to hleel fitom an employer or aayMto else. “As a dtopute^ettMqg vehicle in a com|dex, competMve modem economy, the strike, ezeeN in extreme dranmstancei. Is hopelessly He did not tell them to soft-pedal bad news, but tbe lezsoa was fairly clear; If given the ebrioe, accentuate tbe positive and let tbe Negative fall where it may, preferably into obscurity. MORE GLAD TID1N06 A long line of presidents have wanted it thus, but the technique of glad tidings from Uncle Sam has been developed progressively. And the Johnson people have brought it to tbe highest print in White House hlstorjf. White ttsase ProM Secretory Bin B. .MAyere efMwtos able of demonstrating a greater degree of maturity, it be necessary to conirider legal re-definiUon and limltafion of the right to strike. SAFETY MENfiCBD “Certainly no sode^r. li % quired to have Its intekeit.^f* well-being and ehen its safety constantly menaced by heedless wreckers.” BatthdrelitoM||erevl.B to the snbmiHiveaess aed eew-ardice el auay peiiUdMS te pebiic efilee. Ibe dtort sigbt- _________________ edaess ef aattoaal aatoa lead- ed at a seaaooally adjuatod ao- •geeey to a matter ef leaMmale pmHea tial iatoreSi Aad if It iatoiesto ss/ntmsEf, tt shoaM be aaaeeaeet Ibirt at the Then Moyers to more than wining fer the d^artment which originated the story to put out tbe details. A case in print: A e w Last week came this mimeographed atatenoent from Moyers’ office: e ♦ “The White House reported today that government esfimatos *—*—1 enjoyed “ Oft-Told Tale... The Tulsa Tribune We’ve suspected it tor years and have seen some stattofical . evidence from time to time that tt to ao. Now extensive research by ttw New York state department of motor vehidei citab-lUiea the fact firmly. * ★ ★ Young drivers are having at least three tUnes more one<ar accidents than their rider counterparts. A comprebenitve study shows that drivers between 18 and 20 years of age -8 per cent of the state’s drivers — are involved in IS per cent of tbe state’s one<ar fatal accidents. ★ w ★ The oft-told tale that young brains and muscles respond so ;; quirifiy In clutches that they avoid accidents, simply isn’t so. Pound Trade life Magatbie A high - powered American team lei by Treasury Secretary Henry Fowler to touring Europe to meet bankers and finance ministers and talk about monetary reform. This to a fNrrity good time to start talking — President Johnson’s atibhpt. to stem the outflow of uX ca|^ tal has begun to pay off, and the international monetary situation may need some Unkeitog If we income in August.” OVER LA8T YEAR payments and receipts. How-trtr, a much mora swioos threat to hovering ominously la the background. This iitheperi-iMS state of tba pound sterili«. Not to the dollar tba pouM is the world’s principal reserve currency. Forty percent of all international trade is transacted in pounds. America to particularly concerned because of Britain’s willingness to share tbe burden of Free Worid defense. Yet tbe British ecommiy has not been doing well enou^ to assure pound-holders abroad that the currency is sound. Alongside the crisis Britain has worn an air of Mitbe prosperity. Incomes up, credit plwitiftii^ unemployment minuscule — all the •igu of good times. But tbe oountry has long been living beyond her means. Britain permitted herself an extraordinary degree of Inefficiency in management, labor and technology that was bearable only so long AS she enjoyed a favored status in her overseas markets. When she did not succeed in getting Into the Comnum Market, when Commonweilth loyalties weakened, when strong competition from aggressive new continental exporters was felt, Britain was up against it ★ ★ WOssB has Irlei to eoNrol the demeslle laflatlM aad pet tome vigor in the economy. Bet a ferelga trade drive flopped. Importo stayed at a dangerously Ugh level. In laker lelattoas, despite hopes Ibat a Leber gevennieat Mtheedle Ike ontoas more JfitiScllvely dum the Tories eoUd, esndtttoBs appreaeked anarchy, h the first six ■jaths of 18H eearty twice the Butoher ef asea hears were lest te work stoppages as were lest ia the same period a year befsre. Wages drifted apwaid. No amsaat of chasttaemeal seemed able to ceaviBce Brit- abeat to tara lato a p WWW A new batch of austerity measures appears to be striking home. At toast the faitematkinal banfcera are hnprawed. The million oat of The pound wiU bo rcUevod. To do any long-term good the squeeze pUy must be carried through. This means no letoip in the drive tor more eqwrto, more effldenqr in production, lower costs, more risk-taUng and experimentation. Even with a shrinking parliamentary majority and a displeaaed electorate, Labor muat bravely encourage these thrusU. ^ Short Supply... The Memphis Commercial Appeal tody in PhtiodsIpNo was injured in on accident that in-volved three hU-andrm drivers. There just aren*t enough pedes-Mane these dope for each mo-Uniat to have one entireig to himself. Tiw erM It etotwve vr THK PONTIAC PRKSS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22. 1965 A—7 Michigan Briefs By Esther Vm WagOBcr Tufty i WASHINGTON — Forty-two Republican congressman, in- cluding William Broomfield, R-Royal Oahr, are backing Congress-‘ ~ ........................ ■ lefei...... man Thomas B. Curtis of Missouri who proposes 1 boost job-straining by American industry. His bill provides a 7 per cent tax credit to em|4^ers-for certain expenses incurred in training tlheir employes in new job skills. Sen. Philip Hart, D-Mich., has urged Gov. Romney “to take early advantage of a new federal program to enpourage the growth of industry and small business. The senator referred to the State Technical ^Services Act of which he was a cosponsor. The idea is for a business extension service, rather similar to the agricultural extension service which would keep local businessmen up to date on the latest technical developments. The National Association of Travel Organizations har^ its “top 20” list of special events to lure travelers during October the Red Flannel days in Cedar Springs over in Kent County on Oct. 16. Congressman Gerald Ford, R-Grand Rapids, says this is a great fun event, with football, a parade, festival events . . . and a Red Flannel Queen! CUBAN REFUGEES-Cuban men, women ;Snd children, numbering 67^ are pictured yesterday preparing to come ashore at Key West, Fla., after arriving on the U. S. Coast Guard cutter Cape Darby. A Panamanian fishing vessel picked them up Monday. They fled Cuba in two small boats. Sen. Hart, who is on the Deniocratic Policy Committee and therefore should be able to predict when Congress would adjourn, simply says, “not until 14B is voted on.” He expects this proposed repeal of the “right-to-work” amendment to pass, but he would not even guess about the possibility of a prolonged filibuster. Ice covering the Arctic Ocean I a bucket of water. The ocean, I crush and grind the surface ice can be 9 to 12 feet thifck. but it reaching depths of 12,000 feet, into fantastic ridges and forma-^ suggests a thin layer of dust on I unleashes gigantic forces that | tions. The Public Health Service reports that during the month, of July alone granU to Michigan totaled $1,344,405, which included $900,000 for construction and health-related facilities. »C E E S F^FEICES % ^ SLIPCOVERS! LONG-WEARING ANDWASHABLE Charming! Eorly Amcricon colonial print tlipcovors 5.88 The charm of Eorly Americo—the durability of washable cotton. Full box-pleated skirt, strong cord welt seams. Reversible cushion covers for twice the wear. Ivory, nutmeg. Sefe, hiSe-o-bed.....12.M Set. bed........*.M S-t-r-e-t-e-h to fit covers give an upholstered look Urethane foam laminated to rayon. Washable, no - ironing. Won't peel or crock. 3 colors. Stretch to fit snupness of "lycra" Spdndox, royon/cotton/wool blend. Rich, textured appearance goes in any decor. 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SEPTEMBER 22, 1965 A—» GQP Key State Races WASHINQTON (AP) - Republican challengen for two of the year’i talp pt^tical prizes are caaapaipilng op shoestring budgets that could become evep tighter u clecUoa time nears, party offidila said today. At stake; the aDverhorshipi of New Jersey aod Virginia, both held by Democrats: Those two races will be the first stat#lde political contests, since ^Pred-dent Johnson’s 1964 landslide victory over Barry Gkddwater. e I * w The Republican nominee. State Sen. Wayne Dumont Jr. in New Jersey and Roanoke attorney A. Unwood Holton of Virginia, both are cast as underdogs. Democratic Gov. Richard J. Hughes seeks reelection in New Jersey; Lt. Gov. Mills E. Godwin Jr. is out to succeed Gov. Albertis S. Harrison Jr. bf Vir* SHYOPTAJIGET Republican chairmen in the two states said they doubt cam-pfdgn fluids will approach their targets of 9500,^ in New Jersey and 9990,000 lit Virginia. CtcwchtTrafn Collision Results in'13 Deaths VIENNA (UPI) - A freight train rammed a pas^ger train in suburban Pr a glTe, Czechoslovakia yesterday, killing 13 pe^ sons, Radio Prague reported. The broadcast said investia-tions showed the driver Of the fr^?ht disregarded a hah signal. > Some campi^ projeetp al- I hefn ortaOed be-t of the financial situatton. The party Ifaders said It couM get worse 1^ in the raee. when ^egthensive ragio and television time becomes .a majpt cam-paigIU>e«»- ^ * A' -* ’ Republican National Chairman Ray C. Bliss said the national party is not sending financial sild to any no campaign cash has been sent to either gubernatorial contender. He said funds for state races traditionally are raised by state parties, with national help coming expert poUticarpersonnd and adviM. Democrats ,Jtt the two gubernatorial election states have not asked for national committee aid, the qwl^csman said. state financial assistance from the national party. “But they’ve got their problems, too,” he said. Both Republican candidates already have had campaign sists from former New (lersey GOP Chairman Webster H. Todd said. In an in- “Ute natf6nal committee Is not a cash dispensing organization,” said Fr^ Morrison, the party’s public relations director. I Bliss and Morrison said the party has no extra cash to dis-' pense anyhow. i NO CASH SENT As to the DemocratieiNatlonal Committee,' g spokesnian terview, he had hoped for some Senator Backs Envoy's Advice RACE AND WIN A fley X-IB FREE OFFICIAL I WARDS PARKING LOT RACE ENTRY BUNK i SAT., SEPT 25*10 A.M. 3 - 4-yr.-«lda • 5 - 6-yr.-olda Parent* mu*t accompany cbildiwn to vorify age FREE RACE • WR. SUPPLY THE X-15 I , Defends U. S. Moves in Dominican Crisis Republican money situation could become criUcpl. Corter said be believes Virginia Democrats will spend about $450,000 on the campaign, and the Republicana would like Dwight D. Eisenhower. ^ was to raise $250,000. in Richmond, Va., a we« ago, I * * * khd in Newark, N.J., Monday, | “We haven’t raised but a for fund raising appearances, i small fraction of that amount,’’ NEED Todd said it would take at least $500,000 to run “a real hangup campaign’’ in New Jersey. *T’d hate to guess at this point, but if we get half that amount, we’re doing well,” he said. “And the Democrats are talking about a million dollars.’’ The New Jersey chairman said his party already is $80,000 in debt, and will not go deeper to run the gubernatorial campaign. Todd said Dumont’s chances improving, and if that con- he said, adding the GOP proba bly Will fall short of’that goal. Nevertheless, in a traditionally Democratic state, he said l^publicans are doing better at gubernatorial fund raising than they ever have before. Corber said Virginia Republicans have not asked the national committee for money. He said the party is not in debt. Elderly Now AAoving Into Housing Project WASHINGTON <AP) Richard B. Russell says critics of the administration’s Dominican policies are committing.s grievous disservice by attacking ambassador W. Tapley Bennett Jr. The Georgia Democrat told the Senate Tuesday he vigorously and categorically disagrees i with Sen. J. W. Fulbrlght, D-l Ark., and others who have con-j tended that Tapley gave poor advice to President Johnson | before Johnson sent U. S. Marines to Santo Domingo. Since Johnson’s decision, Russell said, “fighting was brought to a halt and we do not have another Castroile dictatorship in the Caribbean isles. “It is a grievous disservice to a dedicated public servant,” Russell said of the criticism aimed at Bennett. The senator, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, recalled .that he served with Bennett’s I grandfather in the Georgia Lag-I islature. NEW YORK (AP) - Tenants tlnues, fund raising should be have begun moving into an ad-eaaier. dition to the city’s La Guardia , Todd and Virginia GOP Chair- housing project on the lower S***- man Robert J. Corber said they, East Side, a $2.8-million build-believe the Democratic candi-1 ing for aged men and women, dates will stage massive radio,' The addition contains 150 television and newspaper adver- apaftments. The addition is the tlsing campaigns in the days, fourth development built exclu-just before election. I sively for the elderly. Four oth CRITICAL PERIOD ] ers are under construction and At that point, Corber said, the' two are in the planning stage. FALL IS m THE AIR!! We Invite Your Inspection OF THE FINEST SELECTION OF MEN S CLOTHING WE HAVE EVER PRESENTED WHETHER IT’S READY-MADE OR CUSTOM-TAILORED — WHETHER ITS SUITS OR TOPCOATS SPORTCOATS OR PANTS W E RE SURE OF EXCITING YOUR INTEREST RANDOIPH Harut000 CLOTHIERS CUSTOM TAILORS UNIFORMS FORMAL WEAR RENTALS 908 W. Huron at Telegraph FE 2-2300 i RFD SCARE Some critics have contended that Bennett Overemphasized the extent of Communist influence among the revolutionaries during the Dominican crisis. Sen. Joseph S. Clark, D-Pa. Pontiac Mall who supported Fulbrii^t’s re-Mnhett, bent speech sttaflilng said his criticism of the ambassador was not personal but was directed at his judgment. HATHAWAY'S CAMMSai BROADCLOTH ADOS OFULEHCE TO TOUR yiwm SUITS Hothawoy's Cambridge broadcloth is 0 remorkobly opulent fobric. The longer you wear it, the silkier it looks. An^ feelt This luxurious shirting is superbly tailored ih o hond-turned regular collar model with French cuffs ... 0 style that is oH the roge in London this foil. In handsome new stripes and solids including whites, blue, ond English Cream. . a* Oer f ewNec MeU Stere Opee Every Iveniaf te f fM. Owr Rlmiiiifliiiii Stere Opea tkers. eeU PrI. te 9| Set. te StSO ' 'r'fr ■ ■ ■ -..'i■ '?5’'^ . - v PENNEYS MIRACLE MILE STORE HOURS: 9:30 A.M. to 9 P.M. A—W THE PONTIAC PRES», -WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22. 1965 QUESTION: What was meant by gold panning in gold rush daysJ ★ ★ ★ ANSWER: Gold is heavy. Many rock formations in the West were once eroded, or broken down, by the action of storms and running water. The heavy gold, sometimes in very small fragments and occasionally in larger nuggets, tend^ to work into the stream beds, where it became mixed with sand and gravel. Caaseqaently, many gold miners, in the gold rush days of IMI, went to work in the stream beds of California. The equipment needed was inexpensive; with Inch, one might make a fortune. The simplest method (top picture) was to use a flat pan, put a few handsful of gravel and sand into it and pour in water. Stirring this would make the gold grains settle to the bottom. Ihe pan was dipped in water and more of the top layers washed off by a swirling motion, leaving the gold grains uncovered. Larger amounts of gravel could be treated by using the rocker (lower drawing). Several shoveisfni of gravel were dumped on the perforated iron plate at the top and water poured on. Rocking the cradle back and forth made the finer material work through the holes to the bottom, where cross slats called riffles caught the heavier bits of gold. Later, elaborate machinery was used, and miners began to look for deposits of gold in rock and dig mines in order to read) them. ★ ★ ★ FOR YOU TO DO: Look up the fascinating story of the gold rush in an encyclopedia or reference book, and read of the wave of excitement which swept the east with the announcement of the discovery of gold in California, and what Area Births The fbUowing is a list of recent Pontiac area births as recorded at the Oakland County Clerk's Office (by name of father): SMv* Yank*, Union Like. William A. Soil Clirkslon. Alvin J. Uwee, 4W1 Lakewood Dr. Gerald N. Coopar, Rodiealor. Gary O. Corlae, Penllac. Patrick K. Daly. MU Irwindale Dr. Thomas D. Dodson, SM Granada. John C. Farris, Birmingham. Clittord E. Franch. N7 DeSola. Richard M. Holdaron, IJO W. Cornell. Donato Maoolo. Wallid Lake. Carl G. WHlIiims. 331 N. Cast. Mott Botnack, m W. Hopklnt. Jamts J. Yezbick. SI MaOionlc. Elmar L. Jefiort, 141 W. Rutgors. Frank T. Dlcaa, 41 Waldo. Jhnmy 0. Ettas. 740 Scottwood. yyilllam D. Ashcraft, Birmingham. UnnI* G. Compaou. 1173 ARil. • Edward P. Jurat, 40 Bloomfield Terr Robert J. Parker, 730 Hollister. Ronald N. Bourdon, 3M3 Baldwin. Gary U CampboH, Orchard Lake. WIHiam R. France, 120 E. Rundell. Dell A. Pom, llh Irwki. EUoworRi S. RutiilL Htahland. -----------10 Dixie thm pwSbtXlix' L NoNhor, 1173 BM I J. lhadleiaiky, 1701 Marlon D. Robartson. Oxford. MIHard H. Kalth, a____ Clarence B. Loowon, Utica. Orion L. Pima. *4 N. Sanford. Jotoph P. SmHh, Highland. Carl M. Vert, *41 Myrtle. Robert A. Watson, Highland. ^le 0. Borondl, M N. Saginaw. M. Bishop, Clarktion. Harbart Black. 141 Wall. Gerald A. Chamberlain, Lake Orion. Orlan K. Ervin. Utka. Harold E. Hobb. Koogo Harbor. Roger w. SemhorlandT 17 Seneca. Glenn D. WhlppM, Wall-" ' • Gllbart J. McCaVum, C Ga^ F. l! Shoppoll, , I. MalKTiall Kowalski, 73 Blooinflold Tor- M ONTGOMERY WARD Pin money price! MISSIS’ 'POOR BOr KNIT TOPS, PANTS IfVelSK Girit' r«g. 4.99 "Bootco"' flats Drnnm Stap9 spiR threat bootua with bM-tle hMl. KnH-fit Knod Ovarioy strop Rorod for ■uitR fH, volva-flax sola. MIobbi' liut 12 to 4. WeiMh's sixo* ta 10 in blodk prtvsl. Sov# 1.55' Snap 'em up today I Ribbed cotton knit tops have newsiest necklines; come in solids or stripes. Color-coordinated cot-ton-nylon denim knit pants stretch to smooth fit. 8 to 18. 3 days— save 3#09 MEN’S lOOX ORION* DOUBLEKNIT BLAZER J Doll 3 DAYS ONLY... YOUR GIRL GBTf TAMMY” WITH THESE MISS BRENT SCHOOL SHOES Worm Orion* acrylic sweater is doubleknit for extra body and shape retention. Machine wash-dryable. Handsome crest on pocket. Lt. blue, tan, bottle green, black. S-M-L-XL Fabulous buy! BABY’S COMFY TIRRY SLIlPIR Never before at this low, low price I Combed cotton torry sleepers hove snap front, tfotch, legs for easy drossing-White, maize or oquo. Two sizes fh 3 to 6,7 to 12 Mot. STORE MONDAY thru SATURDAY HOURS 9:30 to 9:00 P M Bo horo eoriy for this Word txcluslvo I Idoal's Tdmn^.. Is a typical teen... and a rooliy torrifle 1114-lndi doll your IHtio girt will lovo drossing up for dateii school cmd porHos.. For throo days only—ehe'l twri, absolutoly FREE, with every poir of Slisa oomfoitabla Mbs Brent sdwel shoes you buy. Wards own Mbs Brtnl oxfords fiovt blade nylon volvot uppers with colerful patches of shiny Potonlito* olefMc Combination lost assures your girl a bolter fit. Bouncy crepe soles fushion her every step. Sizes 8 Vi to 4 C, Di 10 to 4 lb r.- UH WJUUH CONVIMniT CHARG-AU CMMr PURm-WST «<CNAiM IT Pontiac Moll TfN-T.raph at Elizabeth Lake Rd. PHONE 682-4940 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1965 SAMjB • • todMmri^ pants A. Cotton knit IrMuirng panti with eUt' ticizcd wiistt for t inug fit White; toddlen' 2, 3, 4. I. Cotton knit soaktr pants with etas* tidzed waist for a snug fit /§Jf0 White; aizea 2, 3. 4. These pants are waterproof to prevent acddeoti. Elaitfched waist for a snug fit and stty^ip comfort Gear plastic in tots* sbae small, mcdhun, large and eatra-large.^ Hava semal. ,*save!^ 9ALE,.rsdUt0i diapers SICONDSI No folding these diapers . . . they’re prc-folded to uvc you time. Ftom well-known Chix with extra layers of cotton gauxe in the center for extra absorbency, a « a Slight misweaves. Dozen.'^**'® SAUE. •. sieeptap baps Our own dependable quality Dov-Lee brand. Acetate<otton-rayon . . . grow style, lust snip the threads and your baby gett extra-long wear. Cotton Mt wrists and neck. Aqua, pink a and maize; infants size. SAEX, pawns, kimanas Hudson’s Bodgst Stores' own Dov-Lee brand for dependable quality and long wear. Cotton knit for easy-care. Both A. gowns and I. kimonu come in nursery, rossbnd prints. One m size fitt all infants. oar own hlanhei sleepers B. Acetate-Acriian* acrylic; full zipper front, applique trim, plas- a a ticizcd soles. Aqua, maize, pink; S, M, L. XL fits 1-5 yean. SALE C. Cotton-nylon terry stretch with pom-pom trim. White, ' maize, aqua, pink; S (birth-9 fflos.); L (10-18 mos.). SALE colorful nursery prints A. Double row of fastenen at the waist lets these sleepers grow right along with baby! Hudson’s Budget Stores* own 'Stay-Warm* brand . . . made to our spedfications for long wear and depend-aUe cputlity. Easy-care cotton knit with plasticized soles that prevent slips and spills. Colorful nursery prints on white backgrounds; sizes 1, 2, 3, 4'. Have several pair at these big uvings! fh A—n SALE ,. , undershirts A. Slip-on shirts in smooth combed cotton knit. White; « a/w for 1.07 B. Snap-side shirts; white combed cotton; tize, 6 and « j 24 12 months. SALE,,, tots* blankets A. SECONDS! Thermal knit cotton erih blankets in white and gSgk* putel shadm. ®" B. Receivittg blankets; cotton flannelette. White, pastels with w ggm border stripes. 30x40-ioches. A. Print fitted crib sheets in Calico Cuddler, Animal Fair and gkySe Playmates prints. Cotton. B. White crib sheets; fitted, to baby can’t pull them off. Easy- O/SS care white cotton. SAUE • .. quilted pads Use them on your lap while holding your baby ... these pads are absorbent to keep you dry. Quilted cotton with bleached filling . . . waahabla for easy care. White; 17xl8-inch size. Have several and save. Tf-* 34^ SALE, towels, cloths A. Washcloths in cotton tartydoth; 2fr34^ B. Hooded towds in absorbent cotton terrycloth. White with g OyS print hood. r THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1965 Faiths Merge, \Sharp fighting Continues in Viet Nam Highlands, Delta Aim at Unity Missouri Is Home of Monastic Order WIEN, Mo. (AP) — members of three Christian faiths have formed an ecumenical monastery in a north central Missouri hamlet to promote Christian unity through prayer. Two Roman Catholics, an Episcopalian and a married Syrian Orthodox priest are the men of the new monastic order ttje Brothers of Christian Unity. The order is open to Roman Catholics, Orthodox and Protestants. SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — Viet Cong guerrillas launched wide-ranging attacks in the Mekong River delta south of Saigon today whHe U.S. forces exchanged shots with Communist units in the central highlands. The Viet Cong lobbed mortar shells at two towns in Dinh Tuong Province, 50 miles southwest of Saigon, killing ot wounding 26 civilians, a U.S. military spokesman said. The Communists overran an ou^st in the same province and inflicted heavy losses on the defenders. They attacked another, causing li^t casualties. Government troops later retook both posts, killing two guerrillas and capturing two. In the highlands, elements of the 1st Caval^ Division, Airmobile, exchaiiged fire for 10 minutes with a Viet Cong unit probing the. defense perimeter of the “Flying Hwsemen” at An Khe, 260 miles north of Saigon. SPORADIC FIRE The Army’s 101st Airborne Brigade in the same area also reported sporadic fire with the enemy, but no casualties were reported. In another action, a government truck filled wiUi troops bit a mine 65 miles southwest of Saigon. Heavy losses #sre re* ported and the vehicle was destroyed. Twenty-«ie U.S. soldiers were killed in acUon, 106 were wounded and two were listed as missing or captured in the week ending S^. 18, a spcdcesnuui snid. The casualties reflected tte bitt^ battle fou^t last weekend at An Khe by the “Screaming Eagles” of the 101st Airborne Brigade. The C(Mnmunists suffered 4^ killed and 196 captured. Viet Coag wounded are not recorded, as the guerrillas carry their wounded away. The spokesman said 65 government trm^ were killed, 285 wounded and 15 missing or captured. HEAVY FIRE tbhir 30th strike of the war today, pounding suspected Red targets in Binh Duong Province, a sp<dcesman said. U.S. inlots striking targets in NorUi Viet Nam reported heavy ground fire, but all planes were reported to have returned safely. Sixteen Navy planes frcun the U.S, 7th Fleet carrier Midway reported they destn^ed two boats and heavily damaged several bridges. U.S. B52 jet bombers staged Use of tear gas has been ruled out for U.S. notary forces here excqjt for its pos^le emptoy-ment as a riot contrcil agent. No assessment was made (rf the effectiveness of the raid 25 miles niMlh of Saigon by the Guam-based Strategic Air Command bombers. A request has been made by U,S. military authorities in Viet Nam for a re-$xamination of the policy against using nonlethal tear gas under certain conditions during military operations, it was learned today. forwarded to higher authoriUea about two weeks ago. It apparently now is under study in Washington. An incident earlier this wnth, however, aw>arently resulted in the request to Washington f(w a reexamination. Memba-s of a U.S. Marine Corps unit used tear gas Sept. 5 in an oration near Qui Nhcm to force Viet Cong out of tunnels, where they hiul taken refuge among civilian women and children. It was learned that the refer reexamination was Offender Finds Judge Wasn't Buddy After All „ KNOXVILLE, Tenn. » — A man appearing before Judge Charles Kelley on a drunkeness charge, looked up at him and said: “I wasn’t drunk, buddy.” The judge answered: “I’U take 810 fw a fine, buddy.” “We live under modified Benedictine rules,” said the Rev. Robert Bowman, the Episcopalian. “This e.ssentially means we do not have corporal puiush-ment. The life is one of poverty, chastity, obedience and pray- The Rev. Mr. Bowman will take his final vows as a member of the two-year-old order Thursday at Christ Church Cathedral in St. Louis. The Rt. Rev. George L. Cadigan, Episcopal bishop of Missouri, will conduct the ceremony. OTHER MEMBERS Other members of the order are the Rev. Joseph Starmann and former lay Brother Joseph Bona, both Roman Catholics, and the oblate, the Rev. Francis Forbes of the Syrian Orthodox Church. An oblate cannot become a full member because he is married and the pledge of chasUty prohibits him. Father Starmann and Brother Bona are full members. The Rev. Mr. Forbes lives at the monastery with his wife and three children. He handles the group’s publication and attempts to raise money. Father Starmann started the order. The Rev. Mr. Bowman helped in its reaHxation. The Most Rev. Joseph M. Marling, Roman Catholic Usbop of Jefferson City, allowed the group to use an oM Franciscan monastery at Wien, a farming town of 40 persons. The monastery was abandoned by the Franciscans in 1916. DIOCESAN PRIEST The bishop assigned Father Starmann as diocesan priest at the Church of St. Mary, adjacent to the 16-room, twMtory, red brick monastery, and the order had its first home. “Our life is one of prayer, study and witness for Christian unity,” said the Rev. Mr. Bowman. "We take a pledge of fidelity to the brotherhood.” The brothers wear gray tunics with a black panel in front and back. During prayers, they wear a white cowl. “We perform the common jwayers of the order and then do our individual faith prayers,” said the Rev. Mr. Bowman. Declaration by Vatican to Be Debated VATICAN CITY (AP) - The Vatican Ecumenical Council’s controversial declaration on modern world problems clearly headed today for several weeks of spirited debate between bishops of the conservative and progressive camps. The two groups are divided on whether the document goes too far or not far enough in trying to give answers on such press-iM modern issues as birth con-tm, world peace, nuclear warfare and social justice. Five cardinals and archbishops took the floor in St. Peter’s Basilica Tuesday when debate began on the I2^page text, longest of this fourth and final council session. All approved the idea of a document, unique in the history of Roman Catholicism’s 21 councils, that goes into such present-^y glotal problems. But some prelates said its 30, 000 words made it too Img, that it was needlessly repetitious in content, that its Latin was faulty. NOT UNDERSTOOD Augustin Cardinal Bea, German-born president of the Vatican’s Christian Unity Secretariat, said that despite 50 years of teaching in Latin he had to refer to the French text to understand some points. Yet Cardinal Bea praised the document for “the immense work that has been done.” MEN'S lUXURY SWEATERS 6WU SIZES 4 TO 14 REVERSIBLE SKI JACKETS CHIUHtEN’S AUTNENTIC COWBOY BOOTS Is»w» I—■sMho- H— tMriwwMMkOIM. NTS’SIZES 4 TO 12 FOOTBALL SWEATSHIRTS Hi9 aiiM ni-fmIiIm BARBIE DOLL BecMrvRd FIbergIstsE B SB|wr SaYlRgi! archery 11 1 SPRING set I i HORSE Mi nil ii9i hH Re0.7Jt iXfIQ EM UP B ||||||M ISiPWMd HI hmm 4MKbM IPlrUP H tmM, «.lMNW RMRK OBflmma mm 99999 OH WOM ffPMMs aibtsi THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEJ^IBER 22, 1965 A—13 New Editor for Provda May Be Hint at Shake-Up in Russia By WILUAM L RYAN AP Spedii CormpoBdMt Pravda hu « new editor, and despite Russian explanations of the change, this hints at some sort of j^cy crisis inside the Kremlin. It is difficult to sepa-,rate the development from the signs of tug and pull between conservative Communists who jresist all change and the re-furm-minded pi^ members. niere seems to be uncertainty at the top of the Soviet political ladder. Lady Bird Leads Own Campaign MILWAUKEE, Wta., (AP) -On a day’s journey promoting perks and beautification. Lady Bird Johnson gently mixes in the Peace Co^, school kids and home town folks. It seems like a political cam- But woricers in the beautification vineyard call the President’s wife the “leader of the crusade for a more beautiful Amoica.’’ “America’s No. 1 ambassador of beauty,’’ was the title bestowed 1^ Howard W. Gtegg, general manager of the Milwaukee Park Commission as he led Mrs. Johnson on a tour of his parks Tuesday. POWERFUL ALLY , “Our most powerful ally in Washington,’’ said Milwaukee Mayor Hemy W. Maier, appealing to Mrs. Johnson for a research program to conquer Dutch dm disease, which has played havoc with historic trees here. Mrs. Johnson had an appeal of her own. She urged the thousand members of the American Institute of Park Executives meeting here to instill in more young people a desire to preserve natural beauty. ★ ★ A The blessinp of progress “are in maqy cases engulfing ns,” said Mrs. Johnson. “No one wishes to turn back the clock of progress, but surely a civilization that can send a man to the moon can also find ways and means to maintain a clem and pleasant earth ” VARIED AGl^A After the speech, the First Lady visited some beauty spots of Ifllwaukee’s park system, foliowed by picture-taking tourists and so'enaded by a gathering of first and second graders. She brought along an 18-inch seedling from the White House grounds to plant in 800-acre Albert Boerner Botanical Gardens. When park experts proddeed the name tag “Aescu-lus hippocastanum’’ for her gift tree, Mrs. Johnson said with a smile: “I’ll settle for white horse chestnut.” The Soviet party opms an im-jrtant Central Conunittee meeting Monday. This is supposed to be concerned primarily with economic affairs, but in the U.S.S.R., these affairs tend to become enmeshed with foreign jmlicy, social and cultural prob-' ims. The retiring editor of Pravda, Alexei M. Rumyantsev, became, inv(dved in nuuiifestations of the liberal-conservative tug-of- war. He championed the. reformers. Informed sources now say Rumyantsev has been replaced as Pravda’s editor in chief by Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail Simyanin. They say Rumyantsev had a heart attack and will be shifted to an Academy of job. This still is an odd coincidence. Less than two weeks ago Rumyantsev published a long and prominently displayed article in Pravda defending the rights of the s(H:alled liberal writers to more freedom of expression. He chided other papers, including the government organ Izvestia. He called its attitude toward writers dictatorial, an outlook he said could “iHing no benefit” to the teviet leadership. . ■a ★ ★ The editorship is highly important since Pravda speaks for the ruling party. Often even the Foreign Offfee gets its line from Prav^ editori^. The experience of Soviet writers in the Khrushchev era has been that they enjoyed more freedom at times when the Kremlin was relaxed and confident, and crackdowns in times of strain at the top. For example, one literary thaw suddenly froze again when Khrushchev got into difnculties over his backdown in the Cuban missile crisis showdown in 1962. WRITING CYCLES Thaws and crackdowns seemed to occur almost in predictable cycles. Their relationship to problems at the top often could be connected with division of opinion in the party Presidium. In times of stress, the conservatives — and the en- trenched bureaucrats with their futures at stake —seemed to demand tighter reins on those wtio inflenced popular opinion. The Kremlin has been having its troubles. The dispute with Red China has deepened to the extent where Peking predicts the “ignominious fall” of the present regime, as it once predicted for Nikita Khrushchev. WWW The dangers inherent in Asian crises over Viet Nam and Kashmir have increased strains. The Kremlin feels pressure from the conservatives, and probably from the military whose leaders demand that the needs of the armed fwces take precedence over such things as consumer goods and standards of living. Uncertainy is reflected by lack of a new Communist party congress. The congress of'about 5,000 delegates representing the 12 million party members is supposed by statute to meet every four years. The deadline for calling a meeting on,.time has passed without any mention of it. ADOPTED RULES The last congress, the 22nd in 1961, adopted rules which now may play a part in new strains. These rules provide that at each congress, 25 per cent of all members in all party bodies, top to bottom, be replaced. Under the rules. Presidium memt:^rs may serve no mwe than three consecutive terms. Khrushchev left one qualification: members with “special abilities” could be retained. But ' even at that, application of the rule now would require a shake-up involving differences of opinion about who makes up the 25 per cent to be removed.______ Retrial Date Set for Alleged Killer of Rights Worker HAYNEVILLE, Ala. (AP) -Th« murder retrial of Collie Leroy Wilkins Jr. in the ambush ■laytag of civil rights worker Mrs. Viola Liuzxo of Detroit was set 'Riesday for Sept. 29. Wilkins, 21, a Ku Klux Klan member from Fairfield, Ala., was indicted for murder with two other Alabama Klansmen, Emne Thomas and William Eaton of the Birmingham area, w w ★ Mrs. Liuzzo, 39, mother of five children and wife of a Detroit Teamsters Union business agent was shot to death last March 2S following the cfvil rights march from Selma to Montgomery. VHlklns was tried last May but a mistrial was declared when the Jury was unable to agree on a verdict. Thomas and Eaton have yet to be tried. Joywalktr RslMStd From Court Sontenco L06 ANGELES, Calif. «i Municipal Judge Jerry Pacht refused to fine Thomas H. Carter when be was brought into court on a jaywalking charge. Noting ttuit (barter would soon be 100 years old, the judge said: “At tbs age of 98, yon are entitled to one fme joywalk from this court. The fine la Hie p3i reports that 4 J90,«S aerioos crimes were reported by MUglloe afmcioi In the U.8. SPARTAN f AMIlY [M PAR VMf NT T ORES SHOr SPUTSX 9:30 a.M. TO 10 P.M. DMLT ... SUSMT 12 SOOM TO 10 P.M. Corner of Dixie Highway and Teiegraph Road—IN PONTIAC ACRES OF FREE PARKING A—li THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 22, 1965 Drought Unveils Ex-Boom Town Relics WATER LEVELS DECLINE - This former railroad trestle is now almost completely out of water in Whitingham Lake at Wilmington, Vt., as water continues to recede from the prolonged drought. During high-water periods the trestle is under water. The lake was formed in 1924 to generate power for New England and part of New York State. WILMINGTON, Vt. (AP) -New relics of a small town that thrived in the 18th and early 19th centuries emerge each dey as water levels in Whitingham Lake decline from the prolonged drought. For nearby residents, who once lived in Whitingham on what is now the lake’s bottom, it is like the rise of a ghost. * w ★ The lake was formed in 1924 by New England Power Co. to generate power for New England and part of New York State. It is the first time in memory that water ievels have fallen low enough during the summer to reveal the flooded community. BLEACHED REMAINS Attracting the most attention are the water-soaked and bleached remains of what was orice the backbone industry for Wilmington, the Mountain Mills Paper & Pulp Co. The mill opened in the early 1800s and provided onployment for 200 men. Between 90 and 40 homes of employes grew up around it. it h it Also emerging are pieces of a former highway between Wilmington and Headsboro, ties and spikes from a narrow-gauge raUway, broken pottery and iroh kettles. The Hoosac Tunnel b mington Railroad, knowi) locally as the “Hoot, Toot and Whistle,” once ran through the abandoned town. EAR^N DAM Now it joins the Boston b Maine Railroad at Hoosac Tunnel and serves only Readsboro and Monroe Bridge. The earthen dam stretching across a valley in Whitingham and holding back 11 miles of the Deerfield River to a depth of 200 feet in some places was an engineering feat when com]4eted in 1924. ★ ★ ★ Most of the residents left after the start of the reservoir l»^)ject. Some stayed on until the water lapped at their doorstep. One (rf those was the late Mrs. Floyd Davis of Wilmington, Mrs. Cancro’s grandmother. AGREED TO LEAVE 'Grandma wouldn’t believe the water would reach her house,” Mrs. Cancro said. “When it got nearly to the doorstep, then she agreed to leave.” Today the lake is also a recreation center. But signs warn of low water hazards and boat launching has become difficult. * it it Harry L. Hurd of Shelburne Falls, power cwnpany superintendent, said there is enough water in the river for generating, “thanks to pond storages.” Mrs. Cancro continues digging in the sand for pottery that may be from the home her mother once lived in. ★ ★ ★ Everyone remembers a community long dead and wonders, “When will it rain?” SMITH’S TILE OUTLET PONTIAC PRESS. WgPNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1965 . i A—15 OPENDAitTlOTOlO SVNB^riZTOJ WED., THURS., FRI„ SAT. & SUN. PLENTY OF FREE PARKING Save! Nationally Famous! BURLINGTON PANTS, SHIRTS 4 2-5 2.77 Pant$f Our Reg. .. 3.67 Good looking and ready for work. Pants of ragged 8.5 OK. army twill and ahirts of stnrdy 6«x. army twilL Sanforized®. In mr choice of tan, grey, >lne or green. Pants ^^0. Shirts 14-17Vk. Limited quantity! Shop early! H ® BROcS'Ki"” Out reg. 3.68* 4 days only! Brocade - look crown on :::v cotton Tclvet brim. Tur-^ qnoise, wild cherry, cof-fee, black. Velveteen TOQUES Our Reg. 1.88.4 days only! Black, Baltic blue, red or moss green with soft veil trim. Adjustable. CASUAL HANDBAG Nnbby cloth or mined plastic in black, brown, ^ tan, green, 103^ blue orred. m Woman’s Gloves ... 1.ST INFANTS' SABOT STRAP DRESS PUMPS Charge iA ZJb Cobbler's tan dress pumps have medium toe and hard counter, crepe sole and heel with white mid> sole. Leadier uppers. 5^D. APOLLO INFANTS' BLUCHER OXFORDS Charge It 2J6 2-PIECE WATERPROOF RAIN SUITS FOR MEN Charge It 4Day»Only! Protective, olive^lrab rubber fabric backed for extra strength Hooded, parka-type jacket with full sipper front l^nts with bib front and taped, donble^dtched 2.99 SAVEI MEN'S ALL-RUBBER THERAAAL INSULATED BOOTS Charge It! 4 Days Only! Hipest quality imported boots! Fnll-lacTmodel with deep^ileated, non-slip soles and steel shank for extra walking comfort Open a convenient K mart charge account! In sporting goods department Infants* three-eyelet leather oxfords with stitched raised seam on vamp. Medium toe, hard counter. Black, ¥:::^ brown. 4-9D. APOLLO INFANTS' WHITE HIGH SHOES 2J97 Charge It For healthy happy feet! Infants* six-eyelet blucher high shoes with medium toe and hard counter. Leather uppers. 2>8D, 3-8EE. For your convenience^ open tiU 10 P.M. Mongol,; Sunday noon till 7 P.M. Save! Special K Days Price THE ARGUS 260 CAMERA or SLIDE PROJEaOR 4457 Argus 260 automatic .instant loading camera with completely automatic electric eye, full-focusing lens and built-in flash. Charge it! Argus 500 watt color slide projector features 80 slide capacity. Manual operation. Tremendous savings at K mart on camera equipment ALL ALUAAINUM VENT KIT FOR AUTOAAATIC DRYER Our Reg. 2.S6 4 Days Only! W FLEXIBLE NON-RUSTING ALUMINUM DRYER VENT KIT Our Reg. 5.39 4 Days Only! 2.79 8 inehas in diamstorl Vent kit eontains one vent hood, tbee 2-<t pipe*, two elbows. Designed for neat, effl-^ eient, rustproof snbanst venting. Vtiit Kit, 4 inohtt in diamtttr.......... 2.23 Easy to install, just shape it the way you want it Contains aluminum hood, 5-ft flameproof flexible duct and clamps. Never rnstsi S** dia. Fiaxibit van! kH, 4 inohaa in diamatar.... 2.9T GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD A^16 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPtEMBI^R 22, 1965 T#st$ Fail to Measure Creativity, Drive, Originality I.Q. Important but Other Types of Intelligence Valuable ^| t s By LESLIE J. NASON. Ed.D. Sdiool people talk a lot about I.Q.’g. which are computed by dividing a test score by the object’s age. The initiahi stand for Inteiligence Quotient. And perhaps f it does represent the mea-Isure of a limited ■ kind of intel-lligence. At ■ least, so far, it "is the best single measure that we have of probable success in school. However, it takes more than just a high I.Q. to bring sac-oeaa. And there are other kinds of inteiligence which are jnst as important as those aaeasnred by our present so-called intelligence tests. DR. NASm For instance, they do n o 11 tests become wise in the ways measure creativity, fluency, of tests. m'SSi.Si'S"’'' ‘"•'■'OOODCOUNCELINGTOOL i, i, I The I Q. test still is a good counseling tool. But we should Neither do they take into ac-cout a student’s previous experience or lack of it in taking tests. Youngsters who take Longshoremen Injuries Reach a New Low WASHINGTON (AP) -Secretary of Labor W. Willard Wirtz says deaths and injuries to longshoremen aboard ships reached a new low in the first six months of 1965. He said the injury frequency rate was 90.2 per million man-1 not let it be the only tool used in guidance. A student whoae I.Q. is high is capable of sncceediag la college - provided ttat he has also learned to organise h i s to follow directions and do the necessary work, and has acquired sufficient learning skiils. But a student with just an average I.Q. plus one special abfl-ity can succeed as well in college; in fact, he may come through with honors. ★ ★ w Such was the case with a hours worked — 11 per cent be-1 group of students selected as low the comparable 1964 period. ^ superior while in high school on the basis of either high I.Q.s or hi^ reading comprehension scores along with average I.Q.s succeeded both in high sch^ and college ps well as the others. There are so many skiils, attitudes sad abilities assod- Timber Cut in South J^aoches AlhTime High ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) - Timber cot from national forests in the South totaled more than 844 million board feet during the past fiscal year, the U.S. Forest Service has announced. ated with a student’s success that we shoaM be earefal net to dlsconrage him from setting high goals merely becanse be comes up with an average LQ. He may have the persistence to wrestle with Ideas; he may work well with Us hands; he The timber was valued at more than $17 million and represented an all-time high in the 11-state region. natf hi ability, or he may be creative. Edncationalists are embarrased that so many students whom they measure and label as having superior intel-dlgenoe still fail to succeed. These are the so<aIled unde^ achievers. Ik, -k -k The unsatisfactory behavior of these students cannot be explained through test results. The attitudes and skills which they lack do not lend themse^es to measurement through and paper tests. pencil erage I.Q. as well as under-adiievers are a dh file age. Three with avfrage I.Q.s^ Ibiist be encouraged to nmlte Bie nibst of their special skills and abl|r ities. Ladcing group testa ^Itbe discovery of those vary important aveicage student^i with special talents, counselors, sho^ strive to discover tiiem through careful study of each individual Heavy reliance on I.Q.s as the only measure of ability can only result in overlooking perhaps our greatest source of talent. (You can get “Help Your Child Succeedin Si^l,’’ by sending |1 to Help Your Child, Box 1277, General Post Office, New York, N.Y.) FREE- You Don't Bii’ COLOR TV SET-UP AND 90-DAY SERVICE POLICY FREE QUICK DELIVERY • FREE OUTDOOR ANTENNA On* year factory warranty on parts and picture tube. Buy U anywhere-—but buy it now! . . . StraaQe. but qfood odvleal B’s sitt|Ry ^ color TV sets to go around. The dmnond is krwmeudoim right now sufli|l|||r#! Monuiocturers cannot keep up. The indumry hm predicted ftera will be'law deakre slietvae kry ; November ... on top of Burt dealers hwm been advised of price WdSee on refMiKP'’^ We snw; all tbte.bappeidng ln cto '«y«^?|ci|:Wip«^^o^^ ot Highland. 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Oed* modem eyled eoMeet of geneln# wood UBosors end ooSd hoidooiSo. 23* ColorTV^ S^ M|.FbM>mFMolgrtPiodlp,agpookg,fc COME IN-QET OUR LOW PRICE WITH FREE “EXTRAS” ROA VICTOR OOMRINAtlON ■sai'MisrlVt______________ ^onNiiseiiigh^^ < COME IN-OETOUR LOW PRICE WITH FREE “EXTRAS” JUNK CARS WANTED USED WTO FMTS i I FOR SALE I I FE 2-0200 I laMBBBlHHBiBUBFdwTiACiCRAVBHlBB—MMMM r OMM fi80 1 AMeWICA’S CAft'OeST PAMIUV CL.OTHINO CHAIN sale GENUINE MINK on a beautiful luxurious PURE WOOL COAT regularly 42.95 For 3-days only, you save on this inspired design by Michel Daniel of Paris.. . the fabric is a luxurious rich wool by Wyandotte Mills... the lining, a lustrous rayon Mtltt...and the flattering, faee-fnuiiing circle collar is of selected pastel mink! Misses’ sizes. Few IWeW #w rawer «# wlgln «# lepwfW lew VOU SAVI ‘‘•'twf FM €ie4H ImabiI AT tOMRT HAU • Y»n rave bpcouM teg level USE OUR FREE LAYAWAY PLAN Belb Sfsres ^ Senday 11 Nssa Is « F JL PONTIACi 200 Nertli Segiaow Sf. Clarfcatsn-WaterfMd: On Dfsla Hwy, Just Nsftli ef Walsrfwd HHI WEDNESDAV, SEPTEMBER 22, 1965 THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC. MICHIGAN B-1 Mrs. Louis H. Schimmel of Woodbine Avenue (right) prepares her application for tickets to the Metropolitan Jaycee AuxiUary benefit, ’*Skyscraper.‘* From left, looking on are ttoo other auxiliary mem-ben Mrs. Earl Haupt of Princeton Avenue and Mrs. George J. Cassel of Maryknoll Street. The benefit, slated for Sept. 29 in the Fisher Theatre, will send proceeds to the ChUd Placement Fund of the Michigan Association for Emotionally Disturbed Children. / Food Editor Odell Meets „ ' ^Pleasant 'Purple People' BjriAkETODElJL rMEdto CHICAGO — Reroamber the song about the Purple People Eaters? We met the purple people on Tuesday at Gie Food Editors’ Conference. Nice folks they were, too, all members of the Welch Grape Juice Company. ★ Hr ♦ Nearly 100 years ago, a Dr. Welch succeed in pasteurizing and canning the flret grape Juice. Now at this time of year, growers are getting rea^ to harvest millions of tons of Concord Grapes for the new pack. NEW PRODUCTS New products from the company Include a twoixniiMl jar of grape jelly, apple-grape Jelly and frozen grape juice bars. Balloons were used as part of the decoration for this reception and this aftenraon tfiere were tour of them clinging to the high paneled celling of the Drake Hotel lobby. Someone had released them. UQUID COUNT “Let me count the ways.” No, that's by Elizabeth Barrett Browning. I mean, let me , count the different kinds of liquids I’ve had today: diam-pagne and orange juice eye-opener; prune julra, apple juiccC and egg instant breakfast, skim milk; grape Juice with ginger a]e; diet cola; and lots of ^ee. We’re not on a liquid diet by any means; Lots of solid food accompanied the drinks. ★ ★ ★ I didn’t have room ye^-day to tell you about the' flavored spreads made with the new Chiffon Margarine. On the breakfast table we had our choice of strawberry, orange, 'lemon, honey, ginger or herb spreads. Combing another bod with gnargarine makes • an interesting addition to the spread you use for toast or rolls. COhONOSOON Not yet in stores, but coming soon, is the new Kaiser Aluminum Rol-A-Pak. Each roh of foil comes in a box with knobs on both ends to roll the foil in and out. With this pack there is even less danger of cutting yourself on the serrated ed^. Farberware showed us their complete line of cooking utensils and table top api^iances at breakfast. With these, barbecue and spit cooking need not be confined to summer outdoor parties. FAREWELL A long time friend of the food editors bade us goodbye this noon during the Borden luncheon. Roy Wooster, chalr-num of the board, told us of his impending retirement. He’ll be missed at our annual get-together. WWW As usual, Borden has a host of new food products coming opt. We’ll just have to be patient until some of them get into national distribution. Auxiliary Sets Fall Breakfast • Mrs. GulioBeroero and Mrs. Rudy Fortlno were cohostesses at the Monday evening meeting of the Italian American Auxiliary. The meeting took place in the club haH on 111-den Street. Mrs. Joseph PotUtui, ja«-sentad tte flew calendar; Ivst on the agenda will be a breakfast on Oct. 5 in the club hall. In charge of the event will be Mrs. Carl Grassi, Mrs. Sam Calabrese, Mrs. Frank Soda and Mrs. Pdlina. Here are Just a few from the list: canned sterilized whipping cream; a refriger-a t e d com bread dough; canned bean salad; clam crisps for cocktail snacks; and instant coffee with non-dairy creamer already in it. PUZZLE SOLVED The borden home economist sitting next to me at luncheon answered a question that has long puzzled me. We happened to talk about marshmallows and I complained that today’s marshmallows don’t taste right or like the ones we used to get. ★ ★ ★ She explained that they are made differently, are extrude d, instead of being molded, and contain more air. However, the molded ones are still being made and Pm going to see if I can locate any in Pontiac stores. At the General Mills dinner we had a taste of the future. In the salad were what looked and tasted like bits of crumbled bacon. They were an exciting new food product made by soy protein. WWW It is this kind of new food that is the hope of the world where people go hungry to bed every night. Dr. Arthur Odell (no relation), a research scientist for General Mills, spoke to us about what is being done In the laboratory to solve the problem of food shortages. The Bac-O-Chips are but a beginning. ’ They are not synthetic foods any mbre than butter or cottage cheese prepared by processing milk are synthetic. It was a tantalizing glimpse into an almost unbelievable future. Planning an August wedding in 19i66 are Fredericka Eastman, daughter of the Fred Eastmans of North Perry Street and John. C. Crews, son of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil L. Crews of North Opdyke Road.. Mrs. Denison Hosts Chapter The Auburn Heights home of Mrs. C. F. Denison hosted the membership of Alpha chapter. Beta Theta Phi, at a dinner meeting Tuesday ew-nihg. The hostess was assisted by Mrs. John Klnzler. Committee chairmen were a^wlnted and plans were for a husbands’ party onOettt. Mrs. Leslie CktMs will host the Oct S meeting in her When You Visit in a Hospital By The Emily Post lastitate The number of private rooms in every hospital has | been grMtly decreased, partly because of the shorU^e of nurses, partly because they are too costly fpr most people and partly because there always seems to be a need for more hospital beds than exist. The vast majority of hospital p a t i e n t s nowadays find themselves in semiprivate rooms or larger wards. WWW It is important, therefore, for visitors to these rooms to show consideration not only for their own friends, but for the other patients as well. If smoking is allowed at all, it is essential to ask the others nearby if it will bother them if you smoke. (And please, cigarettes only! Cigars and pipe smoke can actually cause nausea in many people.) Your friend himself may not object to your smoking, but it may cause the man in the next bed to have a coughing attack which could be the worst thing for him. Voices must naturally be kept low, not only for privacy’s sake, but in order not to disturb the other sick people who badly need their rest. THOUGHTFUL GESTURE If you are going to the snack bar or restaurant to bring a dish of ice cream or a candy bar to your friend (if he is permitted to have it), it is only thoughtful to ask the other person in a semiprivate room if you can bring him anything at the same time. This would not be necessary in a larger ward, unless one of the patients actually requested you to do an errand for him. If there is a television set in the room -> and this applies between patients as well as visitor and patient — do not turn it on without asking the other’s permission and consulting him as to his choice of program. Unless he shows real enthusiasm, keep the volume very low. DRAW CURTAIN IF another pafimt in a room wishes to rest, draw the curtains between the beds, to give him as much privacy and quiet as possible. On the other hand, if he and your friend have become friendly, include him in the conversation and your visit will be doubly appreciated. Mrs. William Wright of Hammond Lake Drive, (at left) woman's campaign committee chairman for the United Fund, gets a preview of things to come as Mrs. Marvin Barnett of Peggy’s, Miracle Mile, shows off some fashions to be modeled at the campaign rally on Oct. 5. 'Hello, Dolly' Theme Set in UF Rally “Hello Dolly” is the themo of the United Fund campaign rally slated for Oct. S at 1:15 p.m. in the Elks Temple. Following the dessert period, women campaign workers from Pontiac, Waterford, Lake Angelus and Lake Orion will hear Arthur Brooks on ‘‘The Feminine Touch.” Brooks, man extraordinaire. TV personality and lecturer will speak on “What Makes a Woman Beautiful?” ■ ★ ★ * Preceeding Arthur Brooks will be Gunvor Ryden, local chanteuse who will greet a 11 United Fund dolls. Peggy’s BIoomfield-Miracle Mile will present the newest in fall and winter fashions with a commentary by Mrs. Mar-• vin Barnett. * ★ ★ Music will be provided by Jack Hagan at the organ. Love Nest Too Convenient Have This Bird Fly Coop ABBY leave By ABIGAH. VANBUREN DEAR ABBY: My husband and I rent our apartment by the year. We travel together quite a lot and therein lies our problem. We a r e i friendly with a married,.^ couple I’ll I call Henry “ and Brenda. M y husband I gives Henry the key to our apartment when town. Now Henry and whomever he entertains there don’t abuse our furniture in any way. They don’t drink our liquor or make a disturbance, but I don’t like the idea of a married man using our apartment for what I am sure he is using it for. My husband and I see Henry and Brenda socially and I can’t look her in the eye. My husband says I am silly to feel that way. Am I? GLADYS DEAR GLADYS: No. In lending your apartment, you become a party to whatever goes on there. Tell your husband that you refuse to provide a love nest for a married man. And if the friendship flies out the window, it’s okay with you. ♦ ★ w DEAR ABBY: My neighbor just noticed that my three-year-old son is left-handed. We’ve known it for a long time, but paid no attention to it because it didn’t seem to matter. My neighbor says we should break him of being lefthanded before it’s too late because he will find it a terrible handicap when he grows older. She says her husband is left-handed and it’s an awful nuisance. He has to sit at the end of the table when he eats because his arm is always hitting the person to his left. (If it’s a round table, he’s out of luck.) She says all the machines, tools and appliances are geared for right-handed Post Presidents Honored by Club Past presidents of the Pontiac Woman’s club were honored at a luncheon Monday in Greenfield’s Birmingham. Among those feted were Mrs. Henry Simpson, Mrs. Miriam Brown, Mrs. Retta Baldwin, Mrs. Hayden W. Henley and Mrs. Lula Myers. Mrs. Emil Kontz and Mrs. Etta Hibler were guests. people and it’s awkward for lefties. I have never heard of these drawbacks, but they make sense to me. Should we force our child to use his right hand? MRS. M. DEAR MRS. M.: The inconvenience of being a southpaw is slight compared with the emotional damage a child is apt to suffer should he be forced to change. For a more detailed explanation of left-handedness, the reasons for it, etc., talk to your pediatrician. ★ ★ ★ DEAR ABBY: Recently my daughter and her husband were separated and then divorced. I have a 16x20 picture of my daughter in her wedding gown in my living room. It gives me a lot of pleasure to look at it because I designed and made her wedding It was suggested that I take it down. The groom is not in the picture. What should I do? MEMORIES DEAR MEMORIES: Put the picture away. If it gives you pleasure to look at it, do so in private. For Abby’s booklet, “How to Have a Lovely Wedding,” send 50 cents to Abby, care of The Pontiac Press. A Benefit Sole Is Slated Soon by Jaycettei Mrs. Jeffery Cornish opened her Naneywood Court home to memb»s of the Waterford Jaycettes recently. Cohostesses were Mrs. John Radenbaugh and Mrs. David Zuehlke. A report by Mrs. Richard Gilchrist told of plans for the upcoming benefit sale on Oct. 30 at the VFW Hall. Mrs. Richard Schwab announced plans and progress for a Jaycee Auxiliary extension program for the Union Lake group. Mrs. Ted McCullogh was the speaker. * ★ ♦ Guests included Mrs. John Gray, Mrs. Harold Hague, Mrs. Michael Halfpenny, Mrs. Richard Shipman and Mrs. Norman Wood. Xi Beta Theta Unit Is Hosted Mrs. Robert Ryeson of Chippewa R o a d was hostess Monday evening to members of Xi Beta Theta chapter. Beta Sigma Phi sorority. Committee heads were appointed and Mrs. K. Wayne White gave a program of slides entitled "Montreal to Gaspe.” The next meeting will be held in the Highfield S t r e e t home of Mrs. Jack Pote. in Taste ... That Is! IFhat tablet Yoa get tim beaatifid 60C double dreua-and minor together with the other pieces pictured in any of the settings shown below. Crafted from carefully selected American IFalnut,.each piece is hand finished to a soft lustrous sheen. Come see these newly created decorator bedrooms for fascinating ideas for your home... plus substantial savingt. B-2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22. 1965 forget ivatch ninding forever... u-ilh a tell-tvinding I I OMEGA Powered by cravity, ibe Ladymatic winds iUel{ as you wear it. The fiilly-jeweled movement... intpech^ at 1497 manufartitring stages... is a miniature of the same high-precision Omega anlomalic that millions of men rely on for accurate timekeeping^ For a lifetime of proud possession and carefree timekeeping choosy an Omega Ladymatic. A -I4K whit* or vfllow |old. Milchina bncelet. $750 B-? spitklini; diamonds. 14K while (old.........$775 C-Wjter-resistant, stainless steel case .........$115 REDMOND^S Jewelrj’ — 81 N. Saginaw St. Oil Music Program Eyes Adult Students Oakland University’s association with the Detroit Symphony Orchestra is being extended into the continuing education course program for adults this fall. w ★ ★ Mischa Kottler, pianist and Nathan Gordon, first chair JtWELEO MOVEMENT MISCHA KOTTLER violinist, will teach courses in Piano Pedagogy and S t r i n g Techniques. * * ♦ Both courses are for advanced students and, along with an Opera Workshop directed by Dr. David DiChiera, offer an expansion of performing music opportunities for adults at Oakland. BEGINNERS For beginners, group instruction will be offer^ by other continuing education faculty members in piano, violin, viola and cello. Most courses start the week of September 27. Kottler will be teaching the first Mott Master Series course to be offered with the assistance of the Mott Center for CoiTununity Affairs’ grant. His Wednesday morning class will be limited to 15 advanced pianists and piano teachers who wilt deal with the problems of technique and interpretation of a group of important piano works. Additional students may join the class as auditors at reduced tuition. EARLY MUSIC CAREER Kottler had his early musical training in Russia, starting at the Imperial Conservatory of Kiev at the age of seven (he began playing the i piano at five.) # * * He made a concert tour of the major cities of the Ukraine when he was nine years old. He continued his studies in Paris and in Vienna under Emil Von Sauer who was one of the famous pupib of Liszt. Along with being pianist with the Detroit Symphony, he has been a musical director of a Detroit broadcasting station. ★ * ★ Gordon’s course in string techniques will assist students with technical problems of bowing, leh hand, vibrato and reading. He came to the Detroit Symphony Orchestra in 1958, following concertmas-ter Mischa Mischakoff. KEY MEN The two famous string players had been key men in Toscanini’s NBC Symphony. Gordon is also conductor of the Dearborn Symphony Orchestra imd the Women’s Symphony Orchestra. H i s class will meet Monday evenings from 7:30-9:30 p.m. * ★ A The Opera Workshop has been designed to give area singers an opportunity for the theatre experience of opera. In addition to DiChiera, the Workshop staff will be comprised of: musical director — Italo Taranta, director 6f the Chamber Opera Theatre of Detroit; theatre coaches — Celia Merryi Turner of the Will-O-Way Apprentice Theatre and Tom Aston, dramatic technician at Oakland University and formerly with Vanguard Theatre. ★ ★ ★ DiChiera is assistant dean of continuing education in the arts and producer-director of the Overture to Opera series which gave 17 performances in the area prior to last year’s Metropolitan Opera season. ★ * ♦ Catalogs describing music and other adult courses are available from the Division of Continuing Education, Oakland University. Rugged Cowboys Con Move Over HANNAGAN MEADOWS, Ariz. — Ranging in age from 31 to 67, a group of 21 women covered 55 miles of rugged mountain trails on horseback during the third annual three-day outing of the Cowbelle Trail Riders. * ★ ★ The horsewomen did all the work, including pitching tents, chopping wood, looking after their horses and driving trucks with trailers to campsites. In addition to some ranch women, this year’s riders included two school teachers, three business women and six housewives. An Old Dish Mop Oil an old dish mop slightly and use it to do an effective job of cleaning coiled bed springs. COBBIES a rad croBS shoe WHO CUSHIONED THE SIDEWALKS? Cobbles did I In fact, fhii smort new strop on the short stacked heel cushions the whole wide world for you I Wherever you wolk, its flexible *RIPPLE* Mini-Rib Sole odds impetus to your steps .., down-light ease to every footfoll. And oU wHh the fobulous Cobble fit you treosurel WORLD’S PAIR, 12.99 ANTELOPE - BLACK PAULI’S Family Shoe Store 35 N. Saginaw FE 2-3051 108 N. Saginaw FEdaral 3~7114 OjMit Thmrt., fridtiy anrf Monday Ai*A»» 'M 9 Perk Free In WKC's Let At Rear of Stere m Duchess of V^lndsor I^ltern The Duchess of Windsor is famous foi’ her great elegance and great fashion sense. She has designed this crisp young semi-ntted dress that has a marvelous illusion of slenderness. The oval shaped neckline fol-kws the line of the curved yoke which has short or % sleeves cut in one. Short sleeves like this are hot news. The body of the dress is cut with wide contoured front and back panels that are most becoming and slimming. The side panels feature long underarm darts and there is a center back zipper. The cut and design of this original has an nnnsnally feminine shape and will take to many fabrics such as woolens, silks, linens, and cottons. Spadea’s exclnsive ready-to-wear sizes produce a better fit. See chart for size best for yon. Ml$$t$ Bint Wairt HIpt •Lmfth 34 M 35 14'/7" 35 25 34 1444“ 36V4 24W 37'/i 17" Missea Size 12 requires/R^i yards of 42” fabric for with short sleeves. To/ order Duchess of Windsor state size and corre^ pattern number (49 Misses <^No. 56 Diminutive). . Send |LM for each pattern ordered. Pattern Book No. 28 is available for SO cents. Dnch- I ess of Windsor Pattern Book | with 55 designs is available for 81.00. Address SPADEA, Box 535, G. P.O. Dept. P-0 DW, New York City, N.y. 10001 Set These Above Tot Arm Stretch Here’s a new safety measure — literally. It comes from the Aerosol Division of the Chemical Specialties Manufacturers Association. Their suggestion: have small diil-dren in the household stand on tiptoe, stretch their arms as high as they can reach. Got a pencil? Pfict fimi Ciii TWO DAILY OfllVERIES TO DETROIT AND INTERMEDIATE POINTS (U)w Kitchen Remodding Everything under ONE CONTRACT NO MONEY DOWN FHA BANK TERMt UPT0TYRS.T0MY , „ . fmr fntt, SMlmalM S lyUmm fE 8-9251 828 N. Pnnr, PWTIAO MAVNA..’’.A WALKING MARVEL THAT COMBINES CLEVCR LITTLE TOUCHES OF OF-FRONT STYLING WITH A LOVELY LOW STACKED HEEL. Open Mondoy ond Friday Until 9 STAPP^S ... reminds parents... . . . baby shoe sizes are constantly changing . bring them in for this exceptional value in a Hi-White Shoe for The Full Size.Range at All Stores Molhsr, h«ra 1$ a r*olly quallly $ho« wilh built-in foolurM Vou utually find only in lh« moil •xpsntivt. But, Molhtr, thii ihoa i« budgol pricsdl Bring your toll In for ouV occurolt filling lorvica. l«t ut show you Ikt volu« thii thoa offtri . . . ir*. iMtIwr throughout, it's d«iign«d for comfort and lots of octiv* AT ALL 3 STORES $49 »5.' QT A PP^ ^ JUVENILE BOOTERIE I • ' I I O 28 E. Lowrsnco St» Downtom JUNIOR SHOES , 418 N. Main St. Roc hollar (Opon frl. to 9) Optn Mon. to 8i30' ond frl, to 9 JUNIOR SHOES 928 W. Huron St. •t Ttlagraph Rd. (Open PrI. to 9 and Sat. to 8:30) RENT, LEASE, SELL. BUY HOMES, PROPERTY, COTTAG^, CARS, GOLF CLUBS use Pontiac Press Claerified Ads. To place yours, call 322-8181. JX^umode ■ ■ , :/ ' TliK ro.VilAC’ Htl.SS, WEDNESUAy, SEPTEMliKR 22, 1965 B—3 SPECIAL BUDGET $^50 I WAVE ^ ! CaUies’ U«N. Perry St. PE t-6Ml j At one time in my career I was head of physical education in a laife Junior high school. I was in close contact with hundreds of girls this age, daily. Therefore I am keenly aware of what their B and (d what They certainly are not worried tfxNit growing old but they are extremely interested in their appearance and take their beauty problems seriously, in fact, often painfully. are very self-conscious about any defects in beauty they may have. This is all to the good IF they do something about these defects and do not allow any KENDALE . . • Photographen . _ Tlim. U I* tiM sjh. 45 W. Huron St. Phone for Appointment, FE 5*3260, PE 5*0322 THIS OFFER ENDS IN 15 DAYS OF THE WEEK! Marquise Diamond Ring . . . Center Diamond 1 Ct. , Complete for $2,000,00 they cannot change to affect their personalities. This is the time when young folks should stop and tdce stock of themselves because this is a rapidly changing transition period. You have aU the materials with which to build beautiful womanhood. Your spines and your minds are stili flexible and susceptible to change. The way you think now, your posture, the manner in which you care for your hair and complexion a^ health and your attitude toward others, will determine whether or not you will become the lovely charming happy YOU of your dreams or someone you never meant to be and didn’t have to be. Yes, this is a time for taking stock of yourself. You have been playing and studying and maturing so rapidly that you probably haven’t t^en a moment to decide what you want most from life. Most of your energy has been spent in just growing. Catch your breath and look to see where you are going. Do you like the goals you are headed toward? LIFE OVER? The way you carry yourself now dictates whether or not you will have a double chin at 25 or 35, and believe me, kids, life isn’t over at 30 or 40 or 50. Those ages will reflect your current daily routine. A swayback and a protruding abdomen will affect your health and your future Here is an exercise which is corrective to round shoulders and gives you a fine stretch over that tummy so many of you write to me about. Ask your mother or sister to help you with this one. Lie on a table on your abdomen. The lower half of your body (from waist to foes) is supported by the table. Bend down at the waist. Now raise your trunk upward and your arms side- raise your head. Ask your mother or sister to help you at first by placing her hands under your arms and helping with the lift. Later on she can hold your feet and you can lift alone. If you would like to have my leaflet “Popularity” send a stamped, self-addresMd envelope with your request for it to Josephine Lowman in care of The Pontiac Press. Come tee our new collection of the mut ^lar professional •hoe in Amerid. Try on your fovorite style snd discover why we sey Clinics i; sri "Dedicated to Style, Designed for Comfort.” Available in Sites to 10, Widths AAAA to D, $9 to $13 FloPsheim Shoes .0. Marlene Beale Weds Garrith W. Knaus MRS. G. W. KNAUS The newlywed Mr. and Mrs. Garrith Wayne Knaus (Marlene Kay Beale) left for a honeymoon in New York City after recent vows and reception in the First Methodist Church. Larry W. Beale escorted his sister, daughter of Mrs. William L. Beale of Green Street and the late Mr. Beale, at the rite performed by Rev. Clyde Smith. FRENCH LACE Miniature Stephanotls held her triple-tiered veil of nylon tulle, complementing a gown of white peau de sole and French lace. White phalaen-opsis orchids and Stephanotis rested on the bride’s small white Bible. ^ With Dolores A. Hake, her cousins honor maid, were bridesmaids, Mrs. Monty Tip-ton and Kristine Knaus. ★ ★ ★ Assisting the bridegroom were Timothy Courtney, best man; Gary McCoilum and Gary Page, groomsmen, and Pearson-Griffin Vows Said in MSU Chapel Merilee Griffin and Robert Gary Peatson, senior students at the Michigan State University, were wed recently in Alumni Memorial Chapel on campus. ★ ★ ★ ■ / A reception in Holiday hfo. East Lansing, and a/brief honeymoon followed file rite performed by Rw. Brandt Tefft. Parents of the couple are the Daniel C. Griffins, Pasadena, Calif, and the Harold W. Pearsons of Nelson Street. A-UNE GOWN The bride chose an A-line gown of white ottoman faille ^ Camaa WUccQa Curl-up, crochet and join triangles — then, curl-up and enjoy cozy luxury of this afghan. Puff-stitch triangles join to form hexagons. A grand way to use up odds and ends of knitting worsted. Pattern 651: crochet directions. Thirty-five cents in coins for each pattern — add 15 cents for each pattern for Ist-class mailing and special handling. Send to Laura Wheeler, in c«re of The Pontiac Press, 124 Nee-dlecraft Dept., Box 111, (Md Chelsea Station, New York N.Y. 1I611. Print Pattern number. Name, Address, Zip. Needlecraft Spectacular — over 200 designs, 3 free patterns in new 1966 Needle-craft catalog. Knit, crochet shifts, shells, jackets, hatsi Plus toys, embroidery, quilts, more! Send 25 cents. 'Decorate with Needlecraft” fabulous book, 25 patterns for decorator accessories shown in 5 idea-filled rooms, 50 cents. Send for superb Quilt Book — 16 complete patterns. SO cents. styled with lace-appliqued Empire bodice. A matching pillbox held her full-length veil of silk illusion. She held a semi-colonial Wiquet of white pompoms. * * it Joan Richards was her cousin’s maid of honor. On the esquire side were Lawrence H. Stevens, best man, and the bridegroom’s cousin, Karl Pearson, who ushered with Thomas Moller. Doll House Renaissance Taking Place Have you ever thought of a 6% inch sofa? Well, there are such things. They come fully upholstered and in a choice of fabrics too ^ light green satin or gold rayon brocade. Also available are 5 inch-long buffets with red velvet covered doors and 6 inch-high g o i d brushed grandfather clocks, paneled with fine art reproductions. No, this isn’t a Lilliputian world. In fact, it isn’t even a make-believe world. That is not to little girls playing in their doll societies. Such perfectly scaled toy furniture as 3 inch-high dining chairs are a very real and vital part of the adult lives they pursue in miniature. Doll houses and doll furniture, once magnificent works of art, are making an aesthetic comeback after years of crudely cut plastics and roughly blocked woods; The new toy fumitur^ seems to have once again become refined and artistic, presenting to our little girls, a more tasteful way of doing up the tiny home. One toy corporation’s doll’s bedroom set, for example, comes with a tufted head-board, gold-braided bolsters, coverlets with pleated skirts, and lace-edged pillows. WOMEN'S WEAR MIAMI BAKE SHOPPE Open Evenings THE PONTIAC MALL ilM I WALTER DelicioiM Sausage Carry Outs-682-9811 O/tra Eveirinfi$ PONTIAC MALL NO PLASTIC **IP'o Srrrh-mAII Makrt and MudrU AU Work HuaraHlMutforOnr \rar" ncK-ue a DiuvisY-nu istimatu ushers James Beale and Robert Keglovitz. RECEPTION Hosts for the evening riw:ep-tion in the Oakland (bounty Boat Club Weie the bridegroom’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wilson L. Knaus of North Edith Street. Ski Resort Is Setting for Sorority Pine Knob Ski Lodge set the scene for the recent meeting of Xi chapter, Delta Kappa Gamma society. The group’s president, Mrs. John DeCou announced the theme of the year would be “The Nature and Nurture of Creativity.” ★ * ★ Program chairman, Mrs. Charles Smith outlined monthly meetings, one of which will be a theater party in November to see Kismet. Another announcement made was that of the new appointment of Dr. Ola B. Hiller as ambassador to the National Education Foundation of the society. COMMITTEES Committee heads were appointed at this meeting and hostesses for the gathering in-eluded Mrs. Maynard Stephens, Doris Haynes, Mrs. Everett Peterson and Mrs. Alfred Rothweiler. Thumbtack Saves Wall From Mark Walls can be saved from picture marks with the use of thumbtacks. ★ A A Just stick a thumbtack at each comer of the back of the frame, letting it extend about an eighth of an inch. This allows for circulation of air behind the frame and prevents picture marks. CLOCKS • KITCHEN •SUNSn • OCCASIONAL Neisnei'f Watek Itpaii 42 N. Saginaw PE 1-3593 ‘Tashion Wise” MINK EATS More and more fashion demands mink—To wear with your tailored suit or mink trimmed coat. Come see our selection. tromll" Millinery Salon —Second Floor Stacks nwasm up to the best! 335-9283 You can foil at a glance that the great new quality in Larks stcicb tips the comfort scale. Genuine leather stacked heels, new flexible outer soles, leather heel linings, leather insoles with under<ushioning and soft unlined leather uppets add up to quality. Now slip on the T-strap in baby beaver, the pump in Italian softie, . . . you'll be fast friends with Larks foreverl Size 5 to 10— Ai^toC V-' THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, |96g UARN ^IN Spuelt/ ^u/titefiuS smooi^ Definitely... when complete Nancy Taylor Charm and Finishing Training is part of your secretarial course. Thafs why our graduates get the best jobs... because they are tip-top-trained not only in shorthand, typing, English and other business skills, but also in proper-make-up, fashion, poise, appearance and manners. Yes, that’s why employers prefer girls with that “always-right" look of the Nancy Taylor secretary. WrAo or coif for full information. PONTIAC BUSINESS INSTITUTE IIW. Lawrence St. FE 3-T028 Just Arrived! A FABULOUS COLLECTION of LAMPS By Leading Manufacturers • STIFFEL • REMBR.\NDT • LIGHTHOUSE • BETTY LEE prices from n6^ n25 Beautify your homo with lamps of good tosto! Soo our groat soloction of tamps for ovory docor, ovory room, ovory purpose! 1680 S. Totogra ph FE 2-8348 Robert Janes Will Speak “Fight and Stay Married’’ will be the title of a talk by Robert Janes at the Tuesday meeting of the Episcopal Churchwomen of Christ Church Cranbrook when they meet at 10 a.m. Janes is the executive director of the Family Services of Oakland County, a graduate of University of Michigan, and holder of a masters degree from Columbia University School of Social Work. WWW During the morning segment of the meeting, a show entitled “What’s Our Line” written by Mrs. E. Franklin Hitch, will be seen. Mrs. Charles Mac-Mahon Jr., newly appointed program chairman will be in charge. RESERVA-nONS Reservations for the noon luncheon should be m a d e to the church office by noon M«i-day. ’The nursery will be open at 9:45 am. Turn Inside Out 'Turn dress gloves wrong side out before washing them. It saves possible snagging, especially if they are decorated with beads or buttons. Sarong Gal, Too Band Bash at Pine Lake Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Brink-man, chairmen, claim that all roads lead to Pine l>ake Country Club Friday for the “Big Band Bash.” Entertainment gets underway at promptly 9 p.m. The cabaret party will feature the music of well-known band leader, Billy May and his troop. ONLY A START But that’s just the beginning DOROTHY LAMOUR say committee members, the M. V. Frosts, Ronald Egners and the Edgar Ratlifb, idong with all this music will be the featured entertainer, Dan Belloc. DOTTIE HERSELF As if that wasn't enough, the Sarong Gal herself, Dorothy Lamour will be aniewing. WWW . Reservations should be made at the club office. She Remembers the 'Good Kids' ST. PAUL, Minn. (iO-“You hear so much about bad kids. It almost seems like die good kids are forgotten,” believes ' Mrs. James C. Tarbox, who has her own way of showing she remembers the good ones. WWW Mrs. Tarbox, who has no children of her own, gives an annual backyard party for all the kids in the neighborhood. Three dozen or so little guests enjoy hotdogs, fruit, chocolate milk, ice cream and cupcakes they help mix and frost themselves. Mrs. Reese Hosts Unft of AAUW A buffet dinner in the Bayou Drive home of Mrs. Tom T. Reese, was held for members of the Pontiac branch, American Association of Univarsity Women .(AAUW) on Monday Mrs. Gerald FredrickI, hostess, was assisted by Mrs. Thomas Hollis, Mrs. Dorothy Lawyer, Mrs. Kenneth OlUs and Mrs. Reese. SURVEY Mrs. Philip Lockhart, president, stated that the group would begin the second phase in the organization survey sponsored by the United Fund. WWW Mrs. Harold Hann was appointed to head the book sell slated for April. In connection with this, each member will bring a children’s book as admission to the October meeting. DENTIST SPEAKS Mrs. John Hsuen, a former dentist in China, was the speaker. She showed several articles from China. Guests at the gathering in-eluded Mrs. Jerry Conners and Mrs. John Ketvirtise. Hymn Told Him She Was His TULSA, Okla. W - Mr. and Mrs. Earl Calhoun celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary and told how he proposed and she accepted. WWW While attending church in Deepwater, Mo., Calhoun flipped through the pages of the songbook until he found one titled “Every Day I Need Thee More.” ae took the hymnal, turned a few pages and showed him her answer. ‘‘Take Me as I Am.” He did. The leading causes of accidental deaths among children between 1 and 4 years of age are fires and explosions of c bustible materials. Drownings rank second. An open house given by their children toUl mark the 50th wedding anniversary Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. George Perry of Lake Orion. ^ Guests will be welcomed from 2 to 5 p. m. in the Lake Orion Methodist Church. The couple who was married in Independence Township on Sept. 28, 1915, have five children, Mrs. Stanley Halt, Mrs. James Walter, Mrs. Larry Miller, George Jr. and John D. and 15 grandchildren, all of Lake Orion. Poll/s Pointers Organized Shelves DEAR POLLY — My canned goods storage shelves are deeper than they should be for real convenience. WWW The back part of the shelves became a conglomerate mixture of different foods in different sizes because I never reached into the dark recesses. There was such a hodgepodge that I longed more than every Bock From Coast Mrs. Don Cotterman of Rugby Circle has returned home after visiting her son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Brant Cotterman of Orange, Calif. While there she was able to 8 p e n d some time with grandchildren, Mark and (%eryl. Famous Stearns & Foster CORRECT COMFORT’ Mattress and Box Spring $ 79 50 each TWIN OR FllLL SIZE AAATTRESS or BOX SPRING Good health and a sense of well being depend on a good night’s sleep! That's why Stearns & Foster perfected the Correct Comfort mattress and box spring—to give you correct sleeping posture plus relaxing comfort and "the best night’s sleep in the world.” The Correct Comfort is an extra firm offset coll innerspring mattress, cushioned with finest white quilted felt, with elegant blue damask cover and matching heavy duty eight-way hand tied 80-coil box spring. Our store is sincerely convinced that Stearns & Foster, with its incomparable quality ' since 1846—satisfying five generations—is America’s finest mattress and box spring manufacturer. We’re proud to be the exclusive Stearns & Foster dealerin this area so we can offer you the best in sleeping comfort. SUPER SIZES Extra Long “SO" 79®® King Size 77 x 80 149®® Queen Size 60x80 99®® King Size Set 77x80 2 99®® ALL THESE EXCLUSIVE QUALITY FEATURES ARE FOUND ONLY IN STEARNS & FOSTER’S INNERSPRING MATTRESSES Weight Batoncede construction it specially designed to provide correct sleeping posture and proper body support 100% InnerQnilte means that 40 pounds of finest white felt up-hoistety is quoted througfieut This gi Intulo Spring Cushion*, a thick quoted felt and muslin insulating pad over innerspring unH, prevents coU feel. Ueked tOgoO inner nK keeps Hplielsteiy on edges snd tiseping gurfaee securtfy locked In place. construction of speetoUy designed heavy edge colls end Loched Edge inner rol permHe eitting on edge of bed without causing mattress sag. Humldgnard* processed keeps mattress and box sprWf fMi it new. mildew proof, • nd doodorizie against musty rooms and humidity. Open Thursday, Friday Monday Evenings Hit 9 P.M. Interior Decorating Consultation 1680 S. T«l«graph Just S. of Ofchord Lolw Rd. Cenvwniant Budget Termg FE 2-8348 for pull-out shelves so I could see vriiat I had and keep thinga organized. I created my own pull-out shelves from strong cardboard grocery cartons the same siza as the width of the shelves. I cut them down so that all that was left was the bottom and from two to four Inches around the sides. WWW This little edge keeps cans from filling when the box is pulled out Each box contains specific Kerns — vegetables, soups, fruit etc., and each box front is labeled accordingly. When I reach for a can of tuna I know I am going to get tuna. I merely pull out the sliding box to see my entire stock of a particular Item, am able to use irider ones from the rear, rotate the contents effortlessly and save myself time and unnecessary frustration.—MRS. bl^ POLLY-We had threa small nip made to match our new living room mg and placed them over places that receiva the most wear. The comers soon began to curt up, so we came up with what we feel is the perfect solution. We cut a strip ot plastic bottle, about one inch Iqr eight inches, one for each comer. They were attached to the rug with iraiHin patches about one and a half inches bigger in each directiao than the plastic strips. * It * Plastic has a alight natural curl and should be jdacad to curve down toward the floor. More or less curl can be obtained by heating an tam (over the patch, of course) and bending the plastic with flngcn.-EDITH DEAR POU.Y - llhea the top SB year efcain aad tables becsB* Issse, add a smaU amoBBt af iawdpt la the glue and ft win bsU better and longer.-E08E DEAR POLLY—Writing time is often limited but I need to get a note off to a family or friends so I Write on a W>y4-inch Index file card. I writs my message, fold the card in half and staple it together at the bottom. With the card fblded and stapled I have morf privacy for the message. Also, tUg wfll go for four cents postj«e.-iCAR(Xi girls - Carol’s hint was written as she described and came through to me In good shape. However, my postmairtar advised me that the folder card should not exceed the size of a standard government post card if a four-cent stamp is uiad.-POLLY * w w Sh^ your favorite homonak-14^ ■ ■ send them to PoBy in care of The Pontiac Press. You’ll receive a dollar U PoUy uses your idea in Polly’s Pointers. Swing Into Fall With a New PERMANENT and HAIR STYLE Tinting—Bldieliinf * % CaUiaf lHPERULlSi:i? 1S8 Anbifn A>a. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1965 ONE COLOR B—5 send Businessmen now find that OIFT-O-FRUIT strikes just the correct note to express appreciation and gratitude to associates, valued customers and key employees—any time of the year. GIpT-O-FRUITIs^ always in good taste.* And it’s so convenient-just order by phone. Delivered orchard-fresh, naturally. (OIFT-O-FRUITcan now be sent by wire to many cities.) JACOBSEN’S FLOWERS 101 N.SaginowSt. Pentkie Phone FE 3-7165 Oreenhouso, Garden Store and Nursery Lake Orion Phone’MY 2-2681 Food Budget Should Indude Large Dog Clothing Care ByMARYFEELEY Now. as for the other children, the five-year-<dd can ac-in Money Management I count for anywhere between Dear Miss Fedey: | ^ M and $5.20 a week — de- How much money should 11 PomUng on whether you live on | ments for swH every week on grocery officially called the Low would be from $3.40 CARE OF CLOTHES: Before putting clothes away in plan (the Department of Agri-iYou’U also havtSto be a good ' culture’s estimates). The three- cook and a good menu-planner, year-old rates about the same' portion of the budget. Food allot-1 vniinoixr two ^**7 Foeley’s new book- - „ - MW to M 40' “Make Every Dollar Count,” When putting on a hat, hold Ul ^.W < r\^ilAM D/wvle Sn KwitY\ ff/vnf onH hg/>lr urith spray interior with a good repellent, concentrating on cracks and comers. This will help save the shape of hat. RENT, LEASE, SELL. BUY HOMES, PROPERTY, C01TAGES, CARS, GOLF aUBS . use Pontiac Press Classified Ads. To place yours, call 33M181. shopping? We are a family of six, plus a German Shepherd four months old. When.Idomy I food shopping, I go once and I that’s it I don’t run to the store in between for anything else. I am 27 and am expecting a baby in November. My husband i is 29, our two boys are ages three and five and a half. The girls are one and two years old. I need your advice on how much. I should spend every week for! food. Mrs. J.F., St. Petersburg, Fla. Dear Mrs. F.: You picked the favorite subject of millions of families. How much for food! And you’re smart to figure the dog in, along with the children. A German Shepherd pup. of four months, for instance, can easily eat |3 to $3.50 worth-of groceries a week — including his vitamins. Of course, it depends on what you have to pay for his meat. He requires a pound of meat a day at this age. Cost plan or the Moderate Cost each per week. You and your husband could manage on $13.10-$17.40 per week. These estimates apply to the sonthem region of the country, in your own area. Food prices, like a lot of other things, vary in different parts of the conn- ' try. So figure about $36 a week for your family, including the pup. The actual amount would be about $40 — but statistics show that you can deduct 10 per cent when there are more than four in the family. The cost per person — and dog — goes down when there are more than four at the table. Or, skimp a few dollars until you get down to about $28. And that’s as low as you ought to go, in order to provide adequate nutrition. send SI to Dollar Book in care the brim front and back with of The Pontiac I*ress ) fingers close to the crown. CUSTOM AAADE SUP COVERS Av*i««»ClMlr$31.9S Avtrafl* Sofa $52.95 Zis|Mi* wnI Labor FABRIC FAIR The Franklin J. Smiths of Claivson announce the betrothal of their daughter, Karen Joyce to Kenneth Hoad-ley, son of the Clarence Hoadleys of Mechanic Street. Her fiance attends Latvrence Institute of Technology. June vows are planned. Of course, considering the No-1 vember baby, you’ll have to re- ■/ vise your budget. Allow another! $3 to $4 a week from then on This isn’t providing you much margin for “extras,” but the woman who makes one trip to >:; the supermarket h week and l : doesn’t run back for “after- >:i thoughts” is much more apt to' keep to her budget. I >: Be firm and you’ll make it. Knit Dress by Start with Windsor knit . . . the textured Double Knit fabric with a fine French accent. It's shape-keeping, wrinkle-shedding, perfect for packing. V-necked, twin buckled at the elasticized waist ... in 55% wool worsted, 45% imported Fibranne rayon. Grey, camel, red, black. Sizes 10-20. ! I Mgre iKTichigan follcs ■walceupto Itoasty-Links thBatiQ alarm clocks 3-Piece Knit Cardigan Suit by KAir WXJNTDBOXC Go overseas or across the way in a three-piece cardigan suit with side button panels. In Windsor Knit of 55% wool worsted, 45% Fibranne imported rayon .. . a shape - keeping texture that's always impeccable, easily packable. Red, Sizes 10-20. Comfort Casual When it's a Naturalizer . . . you know it's comfortable. Proof is a little heel for walking, a cushioned innersole, and an elasticized insert at the throat. *14 In Block or truffle Sizes 516 to 10 AAA to C widths Use A Lion Charge with ■■ THE PONTIAC PRgSS, WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 22,1965 Dope Smuggler Lucien Rivard Faces 40 Years WEieNT:.170 lbs.! FieURE: . . . eONE SPIRITS: ... LOW OMlfbii I discoforad HOUDAY HEALTH CLUB TODAY IS SEPT. 22nd Ladies: • N VM an tk« n, 9M OM ba ■ pwfMt tin 14 fer.nav. 22M • V VN m lln Mb |M MR b« a pwfMt sin 14 by nwr. 22MI • If yaa an tka 11^ yaa saa ba a psrfset itaa 14 by Hav. 22r4 a If yn an to Ilk yaa aaa ba a yailset Stas U by nav. 22ai I lost 6 inches from my I Waist and inches from I jmy Hiisin just 9 weeks] I at Holiday Health Ciubj iTMKT OPEN 10 Ul. to 10 P.M. ResohwNowtoLook and fwl better in 1965 leeanllessofyouraee FINAL WEEK OF EXPANSION RATES HURRYS’1- Call 334-0629 Now! COURSE INCLUDES: • Mechanical Matsafa • Sun Rooms • Spot Rodueinf • Slondorizing • WoifM Gaining • Individual Suporvision • Sauna Baths STUDIOS COASTTO COAST AND WORLD WIDE For your FREE and Privcite Figure Analysis Coll or come by your PHYSICAL FITNESS CENTER Located at I N. Peny St. 334-0529 rS*p«p«S*JVfMh/brirm'’ OPEMIItal LAREDO, Tex. (AP) - Lucien Rivard, who managed smile even though a jury had just found him guilty of directing an international narcotics smuggling ring, faced a maximum of 40 years in prismi today. The 50-year-old Frendh Cana-ilian, whose can caused political turmoil in Canada, was convicted Tuesday of two counts of federal narcotics law violatirms — of conspiring to smuggle heroin into the United States and of actually causing heroin to be smuggled. A ★ ★ Each count' carries a maximum of 20 years in prison. U.S. Dist. Judge Ben C. Connally said, however, sentencing would be delayed for 90 to 40 days uRtj^taet men in the northeastern he had time to study the case. Three other Montreal, Canada, men, Jullen Gagnon, 16, Charlee Emile Groleau, 50, and Joseph Raymond Jones, 30, also drew guilty verdicts on the conspiracy charge as Rivard’s associates. IXmG INVESTIGATICm The verdict, reached by an all-male jury in about three hours at the end of the sevmith day of the trial, culminated years of investigattou by U.S. and Canadian authorities. Testimony revaled that Rivard masterminded the ring that got its heroin from Eniope and Mexico and distributed it to United states. ★ 1 Prosecution attoneys pictured Gtrdeau, a gray-halred man who had an almost fatal heart attack in 1969, as Rivard’s chief assistant, and Gagnon and huge cargoes of heroin Crran Europe to Canada. As the jury, brought In Us verdict, Rivard, who had been diatting with his sttomcy, wrinkled Us brow and stared at the jury. A few sec(»d8 later, be smiled as he talked with Ua attorney. THREW A KISS Led from the courtroom by federal marshals, Rivard, dressed in a gray business suit, gestured a klu to his attractive, red-haired wife. She broke into tears. Ri\u^ has been held in Webb County jaU in Ueu of $660,000 bond. Bond for Gagnon, Jones and Groleau waa 1100,000 each. A poUtical erupted in Canada as UA. ol^ dais sought to have Rivard extradited to the UUted States for prosecution. Rivard claimed he was a political | Pierre Lamontagne, an attorney representing the United States, said he was offered a 120,000 bribe not to (^>pose bail for Rivard. Raymond Denis, a former officer of the Canadian immigratfon Ministry, was charged with attempt^ bribery. KEY WITNESSES Key government evidence in Rivard’s trial came frcnn Joseph Mldiel Caron, a conricted smuggler serving 10 years in prison, and Roger Beaucbemin, a fwmer waiter at the Canadian resort Rivard once ov Beaucbemin wrs granted immunity from proeecution. Caron and Beaucbemin testified that at Rivard’s direction they transported more than $150 miUion worth of heroin from Mexico'and Canada to Bridgeport, Conn., and Flint, Mich., in 1969. Caron’s arrest at the International Bridge here Oct. 10, 1969, prompted the 1 L UJ. rver pounds of heroin, vahiad at ba-tween $99 million and $56 mU-lion, in Us car. Frank Cm»Ua U BrUgqxNt, Conn., is free on $100J)00 bond awaiting a separata trial on the • je. No date for Us trial has bean set ForeMu 11-Month School Year Inovitoblo PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) -Education Commlssioaer William P. Robinson Jr. says an 11-month schoU year Is Jnevltable. “The nation can’t affcari to have students spending 30 years getting an education,” he says. WRONG PARKING SPOT — This convertible, owned by Mrs. Lamar Waddell of Kansas City, Kan., was parked in the wrong spot during a windstorm, Monday. It was standing next to a brick wall which toppled on the vehicle. (mOREN OUTGROWN THE WAGON? SELL IT WITH A U>W OOBT PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD . . . EASY TO USB . JUST PBDNE 3IM181. THE PONTIAC PEE$S, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1965 TURN THE PAGE FOR THE BIGGEST FOOD BUYS IN YEARS! B—• E! THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNEBD^Y, SEPTEMBER 22, 1965 THOUSANDS OF SHOPPERS ARE SWITCHING Big V PRICES % , Bultwnnilk!’ DmI AJAX Detergent 3-Lb. 1-Oz. SAVE ALL WEEK LONG AT BIG 'D'l Check & Compore! EVERYDAY LOW PRICE flavor com! iArf' ISi! Fresh ""^1 From The Farm! Michigan Made Granuloted Beet Granuloted Beet m Sugar 49 5-LB. BAG 19 lOfEM YOUR I ffR coutonI AT UO 'ml CHECK & COMPARE BIG Compb>l*B Rkh noverful ■■ ^ Tomato Soup • • •'okH*' m® liptMi, McioiM Fameut Hinrer Too Bags ..... ..a Awiled PlevMg bi Ne D«|mbH, Ne Refwm lettlM Top Ti”oot Pop. Git-RHe Keeps he* Fiedw Wax Paper ... . s; lipht «r Oeili Irawn CenfecHefien ■■ ■ Powdered Svgar m. IS hmlwioe NepUm aW * Regular Kotex. *1 Toilet Tissue .. 2 ^19” Paper Napkins. .’Sf 21 ^^JlSJ^olds Wrap. 25* ■ettyCieciMr Sweet erBwHermlk Biscuits.......................7 TenHk leuMlfy Whitener Roman Cleanser^ 2P Gets Immdfy ReoRy Cleon m. Trend Soap • o o o l-o£ Jw loey Life Hondy Soft W Wi « Facial Tissue 15 FRESHLIKE CANNED FOOD SALE! I RfSHUKf FRRNCH CUT OR *tC«teroon Beans .. 'iSS^ 20* Whole Kernel Corn . 19* Cream Style Corn . 19* Sreehllke Peae.... 1401. lOC > CAN IW PPick of the Crop'!..Down-Dew Fresb Rrst of the Seaton, Michigon Juicy Jonathon 4 RED ^OEUCKXIS O JONATHAN o MclNTOSH APPLES Porfoct for Thoso Hearty School AppotifosI CALIFORNIA JUKY LUSCIOUS RtK STRAWBERRIES ROYAL NAWANAN DRANO PINEAPPLES.... WHILE THEY USTI . QT. FRESH ROASTED PEANUTS Top Tient Plein or Snited PIAMMTS...... . .’5^39*, FRESH ROASTED PEANUTS. .Sf 7h4h.u§ I TROPICANA JUICES Tiepkole, Tiepfcene ORANGE DRINK FRUIT PUNCH OB GRAPE DRINK THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 22, 1963 B—9 TO BIG 'D' FOODS EVERYDAY BECAUSE. AreDOWN! DOWN! 9 EVERYDAY LOW PRICES! Won^ofM Pbor Was ^11 1 9 Aero Wax.._______________*1” Main w lodiiod Pro* nawing ^1^ g Top Taste Salt ... '^ 8 Ai«K MakM Windows SporkU M g Afax Cleaner ... ^ IV Goto toh A Pont Cloanor Pastor m Brillo Pads..............38* Assortod Flavors Doliciout Royal Gelatin...’ For Tostior Biscuits ] ^ Bisqwick Flour . Top Trout Assortod Flavors Cake Mixes Hunt's Tasty Flavorful Tomato Sauce .. Doos Just lovo Ooinos Gainesburgers o Dol Monto CaUf. SRcos in Syrup or Peach Halves o o 14“ Assortod Flavors in Cons O O O O CAN Frosh Crisp Tasty A.B.C. Crackers IV Franco-Amotican in Tomato Sauco IH H g Spaghetti__________11 Vlosk Fomousflavar gRrMB g Polish Dills__________2 55* Goidan Frosli HaaMiful AP81 Tomato Juice • t4^ dHihP "Pick of the Crop"..Down-Dew Garden Fresh Cello Packoge or Bunch Red RADISHESlO FRBSH FROM THI FARM YOUNO TINDIR CRISF £ I Delight the Family ^ • With a Delicious Fresh Vegetable SAUD C ^eH2|nneH[onitel GREEN ONIONS... ./..lO FRISH FROM TNI FARM TRNDf R > BRUSSELS SPROUTS.29 IXCRLLiNT dUAUTY ZUCCHINI ^ YoHow Squash . 19’ FUVORFUl NUTRITIOUS Mvshrooiiis...^49 FOR A DELIGHTFUL SALAD' ESCAROLE, ROMAINE ENDIVE ■ . i9‘ jfcJL '(i THE PONTIAG PMiSa. WliyffEatjUiy^ «EPT»MBEB M, 19M ■• * X • ■- ^ i*, i- if ' 'r . '■■,'•?■ J -/.u Lean Tender Corn-Country PORK LOIN, noASt iC Th« StoiM With ^ P^pl* n«osin' S«rvk»l Tenderloin Portion LB. Lean Corn-Country PORK CHOPS 69 I Leon Tender Center Rib Cuts Udii!] YOU GET A CHOICE AT BIG D Value-Way Trimmed Shoulder Cut SWISS STEAK IU.S.D.A {Choice Lb. Ml CQ*' I Economy |U ^ HiUsid* Hickory Smoked Snced Bacwr:?frT79‘ \ Mkh. Grad* 1, Tatty _ ^ --- franks.......49* Taoty wMi Saano ar KrauH HeeA Hillside franks. 59* SmalMd ar Ptaoh aiAA Liver Sausage . 59* Fresh lean Extra Fancy Ground Beef Chock . 59 Fresh loon Ground ^Hamburger. Lb.' SmaNar Anfiawnlt. . . Lb. 43* Quoiity-Rite Fuily Coekad Siess HAMS I ^691 ^PolishSausage .69^ Hygracb^t BrisUt Point Ci^ j ih: lmpiaotalnbaar^-%, ^ -11^' Form-Fresh Gov't. Inspected form Fresh Gov't. Inspected Whole 3-Legged fryers., 3« Form-Fresh Gov't. Inspected Double Breasted Fryers. A FUllY CUT-UP FRYER WITH AN EXTRA BREAST WITH RIB ^ A . , P *' THE POXTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 22, 1965 Proposal Opposed Zone Hearing Set tor Annexed land Initial steps wen taken laiti night to set zoning «»l«Hfif(l-tions for 212 acns of land n-cently purphased and .pnnexad along ttie city’s norlhenr ‘ «ry- aty Conmiissionen received a report from the City Planning Cominission and set Oct. 12 as the date for a-public hearing on the matted. aty planners proposed tm types «MT mannfactmiBg xon. ing for the land located south of Lake Angelas Rood aad north of Collier. The proposed zoning has been opposed by eome Pontiac Township residents and officials. In separate action, a resolution jecting to the intended use of the land was received from the township board. Meantime, Townsnip Supervisor Leonard Terry and two township residents have challenged the city’s annexation of the land in Oakland County Circuit Court. PROPOSED ZONING ^ Heavy manufacturing (M-3) and light manufacturing (M-1) are the two proposed zoning classifications. The M-3 zoning would be applied to about 35 acres that may be sokl as a site for a scrap yard. The balance of the 212 acres is to be used by the city as a sanitary land-flu site. In other business last night, the commission received a written report from City Manager Joseph A. Warren on a petition to the Michigan PubUc Service Commission on problems at the Wessen - Jackson railroad crossing. w * ★ The commission had directed Warren to petition the state agency for a hearing. Problems have developed in the use of gates at the crossing. CROSSING HAZARD In the petition, Warren pointed out ttuit the crossing is a hazard since motorists ignore the gates because of needless long waits when no train crossing are being made. Meantime, Assistant City Manager John F. Reineck read a telegram last night from the railroad that states that special eq«i|mient was ordered for the crossing. In other business. City Engineer Joseph E. NeipUng submitted a progress report on plans for construction of three pedestrian overpasses in the city. Site plans have been completed on two of the walkways: one slated for West Huron in front of Webster School and the second over East Wide ’Track in front of St. Frederick School. Negotiations for a third over-; pass over the Grand Trunk Rail-1 road support yard at Carlisle I hdve been held with railroad officials. Site plans for the latter overpass are being updated from a 1N7 agroMihat wtdi the railroad to provide fw such a wakway. Bids are to be taken next month on the two other overpasses, according to Nelidhig. He said that t^ walkways s h 0 u 1 d be under construction this year with the first two perhaps being conqxleted Within the calendar year. The commission also received an offer from the Ann Arbor Construction Co. to give the dty a 2.3-acre parcel in the aiiha of the Grand T^ Western RaUroad tracks. Orchard Lake Avenue and the Clinton River. A request by Roy 0. Louis for a new SDM license — Baer ★ ★ ★ and wine carryout - at STS S. Paddock was a^noved by the commission. paving of Bennett, Howard to Baldwin, and Madtsoa, Emer-eea to Kettering. A sfanOar hearing wns held on grade aad gravel for the aUey east of Joslyn, Wesbreok to LeBaren. A resolution was also passed for the vacating of the alley paraUel to Montcalm, between Wing and Portland. Requests for an alley vacating on the north side of Montcalm and rezoning for lot 120 of Dixieland subdivision were both r^ ferred to the City Planning Comh mission. Paving for s portion of Riker was referred to the dty engineer. ★ ★ ★ Meeting on Industrial Park A 14-HMd Advisory jianel, headed by Bruce J. Annett, Will meet tonight at 7 at City Hall. The advisory group was appointed by the City Commission to aid in the establishment of a projected industrial park in the southeast comer of Pontiac. Annett of Annett, Inc., Realtors, was named to head the group to be known as the Industrial Park Devek^ment Committee. The industrial park development became a dty project after the city took over the interests of a private group, the Greater Pontiac Industrial Carp., that encountered difficulties in develq>-ing the park project. Let BIG BEAR Craftsmen EASE-THE-SQUEEZE At Your House! FREE ESTIMATES All Work Guaranteed J BIG BEAR I GONSTRUCnM CO. i 739 North Parry ■ FE 3-7833 * •'■i ' ■ B—IS THE PONTIAC PRBSS/WEDyESmY, SEPTEMBER 2S. 1965 Safety Needed in Auto Line? U-M Official Se«ks Design Improvement DETROIT (UPI) - A University of Michigan pathohiciBt charged yesterday that features of cars now on the market “show complete disregard for the roost fundamental principles of safe design'’ and called on doctors to join the chorus demanding safer automobiles. The plea was made by Dr. Paul W. Gikas. U-M Medical School pathologist, in a talk to the annual meeting of the Michigan State Medical Society. He said the doctors could start out by wearing their own seat belts. Gikas and Donald F. Hnel-ke, a U-M anatomy teacher, have investigated abont IM traffic fatalities in and aronnd Ann Arbor in the past three years. TTiey have been called to the scene even before the bodies and wreckage have been moved. * ★ ★ Their effort to determine the cause of death and how to prevent them is sponsored by a grant from the U.S. Public Health Service. SEAT BELT USE “About 40 per cent of those deaths could have been prevented if tjie victims had been wearing seat belts,” Gikas said. "The percentage would be even higher if the interiors of the cars had been safely designed.” And, he added, “many features of can on the market now show complete disregard for the most fundamental principles of safe design.” The major cause of death, he said, is being thrown from the car. Use of seat belts would eliminate this major cause. ★ ★ ★ And better interior design would “reduce the perils of the secondary ctdlision, that of the driver or passenger with some handle or knob or the dashboard.” •PAM)EDTANK’ Gikas emphasized Hiat he-was not asking for a “|>added army tank.” “Plenty can be done to the inside of present can to make themjader,” he said. His suggestions included; Well-padded dashboards, vison and headen, the steel joint between the roof and the windshield. The current padding “is far from adequate.” * ★ ★ Either push-button automatic transmissions or ball handles on standard shifts — anything “to get rid of that dagger-like shift lever.” KNOBS, HANDLES Knobs and handles recessed in wells “big enough to get your hands in but not big enough for your head.” Padding along the back edge of the front seat to protect rear seat passengers who would be thrown forward in an accident. In some cases, Gikas said, auto companies spend money “to add a positively imsafe feature.” * ♦ A As an example, he pointed to the shiny metal decorative strip across the back of the front seat in some luxury cars. He said the strip could inflict serious injury to a rear seat occupant in a front collision. Conservatives win LANSINti (AP) - TH- coo-servadva “|n” group tion Its first major skirmish with insurgent moderates Tue but final control of the Republican Women’s Federation remained a tossHip. An afternoon of parliamentary maneuvering, mixed with shoqt-ing and confusion at the gro«9% state convention, ended with ajx disputed delegations being refused seats. * A A Election of officers by secret ballot began late Tuesday and was to continue through Wednesday morning before a decision would be announced. The group’s present board is backing the official slate of .nominees headed by Mrs. Bernice Zilly of Grouse Pointe Farms, p^tical ally of Richard Dm«nt, GOP 14th district cbalr-raan and sometimes-thwn in the side of Gw. George Ronuiey. CHAIRMAN’S CHOICE >^State GOP Chairman Mrs. EUy^J*eterson is backing the floor-nominated slate headed by P Women's Confab Mn. RuOi Hobbe of Aim Arbor, former state vice-chairman. The conventioo, thrown a hatf-day off scheAde Mr ngtstrathn confushM, apenf aboiit two houn wrangling over whether to seat three women’s clubs from Wap County and one each from Bay, Ionia and Uvingston counties. AAA The federation board had withheld seating the clubs because they did not meet board requirements when they .Mgiliad earlier in the year. Opponents of thp,board de- tbat either the itz chiba abnild --------- ’ No Special Session CHARLESTON, W. Va, (AP) Gov. Hulett C. 8o^ smAa Will not calf a spSidal session to consider the state’s constitutional convention issue. He said he will include the matter |n h|s call for the 1966 Icgistative^ sessfoe starting Jan. be seated or other okr fedw-sealed. DAILY UST ’ Backers of die sig otuba Were generally regarded aa suppinrt-ers of Mrs. Hobbs. They woo a preUminary test of strength on ft standing yoM.biit lost out when the president, Mrs. Dorothy Benton of Battle Creek, ruled U would be Olegal even to consider seating the six clubs. Mre. Benton then refused to racpgnize any delegate challen- ging her dsdskm. As to the National GOP Convention last summer, she voted for Sen. Bany Goldwater while most of the MWiigpw <foi#!geHnp supported Romney ps * vorite son, bfrs. Hobbs said, however, she believed she still could win without vi^ from the six rejected chibs. Mrs. Zilly said there was “no question” that her slate would win. First televising of a Cabinet session occurred 0|^. 25,1964. Dorrmi RW«inD( DHTafOVOk Buses Arrive in Cuba MIAMI, Fla. lAP) - The Cuban radio says 43 British buses have arrived at Havana aboard an East German freighter. Britain has contracted to supply the Fidel Castro government with 950 buses for |24 jtiillion, plus $1.2 million worth of spare parts. Weeks Of Back Pain Now RelieYed “After wMkt •fjtdB in agr iMck and hipe, I tried DcWin i Pills-eiM won-derM ntef," uwkta.IL Gwdiwr. People write ie eeuy dey preUni the femerkaUe rcM they get with DeWiu’i Pau. c phyticai diMrut. If paii per- _____ eae yow doctor. DeWW'i POl* often eeceeed where others fail- Md paiM. too. I To every mah possibly use anothdr. Dress Shirts:. S3.90 ea. 3 for 111 2 Ms Suits; $65.90 Reg $75 to 185 shirt, Sweater, jacket. All-Wnther Zip-lined Coots: $2290 Roi^|35 suit, pair of aii-weather coat: or Come t^ Osmun's^great 34th Annfyersary Saie Now is when the man who has everything caii get more of it... and the man who doesn’t, can get everything froin a couple of ohirti"-to a complete winter wardrobe, and theyll both g«t ib|paietidng ^ else they can use. Savings. Real savings. a part 0/ Poatfac since 1931 . Q ■ , _ ."If Naturally, you’ll find our great lineup of brand natnee as Just ask one of the soft-spoken people of Osmun*B to ehoer you what we mean. And, of course, use yoim indivvij|*^i**** But hufty. gftt'fe Difthm’li rii^ myv ^ thing like this 34th Anniversary Ss^ befdiw Clo^st we ever came was last year;iwhen rm had our 33rd. PANINS at ALU STORES ■ OoeMpwn Op«iMftaisn.Wft ■ Tf r Mi A Phcuwe, To Shop and Save At THE PONTIAC PRESS, WBDKESBAY. SEPTEMBER 22. I96J \ TWO COLORS C—l SUPER MARKETS I TIM HifMintf ftei« 1 1200 laMwin Av«..IIZT5CoaltyUkaM.I iMisni..*.-*..< I 1 I OHN SUNDAYS J , (OMN SUNdItS, | OfCN SUNDAYS ^ ^ PEOPLE'S FOOD MARKETS 2f3AUIURN I MS E. PIKE ST. I 7W AUBURN ST. I Ml ORCHARB UKE AIL Optn A £a|W « Wt.k ■ 0pm » A.M. lil t r.«A ■ , „ ■ Optn 9 AM:‘hi» f.M. 9AM.‘»f9M. I AOtifi.Wttk I ♦ ll'“ ■ ADAYSAWttK aoStOSUNCAYS ■ OPtN SUNDAY ■ OPEN SU.S'DAY I OftNSUNCAY 1 FRESH, YOUNG, PLUMP, TENDER SIUSHTS WEDNESDAY thru SUNDAY, SEPT. 22,23, 24, 25 and 26,1665 DOUBLE STAMPS #MNE60RET0MATDES ^DMHUEa’SroRK ami BEANS ic F»m-AilEBI6AN SM6IIETTI ★ WATEH MAID FANCY RICE ★ DEUCICttS NAVY BEANS < "> YOUR eaoicE I"Mwh( V 4w DEL MONTE-1 Qt. 14-oz. Can PINEAPPLE-GRAPEFRUIT DRINK 0 it 'k it it it it it ^ COUNTRY KITCHEN BISCUITS J ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ ^ RICHS WHTCARTDM ★ ★★★★★★★★★★★★★ SPRUCE Mb. 4-oz. Can SLICED I Ac PINEAPPLE...... I9 it it if ★★★★★★★★★★★ AJAX UUNDRV DETERGEHT 1-lb. 1-OZ. pkg. ★ ^ it it it it it CHEF'S DELIGHT l-®«l CHEESE Mfkc SPREAD....... 49 APPIANWAY OOC PIZU MK.... 49». COFFEE RICH POT PIES -w • CHICKEN •TURKEY • BEEF '4i C~1 ■ 1 ■ -. '■ ^ ' ' ■' '■ 1' THg PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1995 1966 Pillsbury Bake Off Will Put Emphasis on R^ipes That Reflect BaSy Times Ite Bri»oa, «Uch been its fnrs afo as “PUUnry^ Grand Natkmal Redpe Hunt and Baking Contest," and developed in adolescence into “Tbe Grand National BakeOff’ will have a new look, a new name and a new location in celdbration of its ITtfa birthday. priaoa ainoa its beginning in The Busy Lady BaiwOff will be held Jnuary M, ,1966, and for the first time it win be In San Francisco — at the new San Frandsco Hilton Hotel. The 191 finaUsts wfll bdw OB the aewed aid BMSt ined- "Busy Lady BakeOS" is the new name for the qiectacular event which has attracted many millions of entries and paid out some two million doUars in —aU featariag aatamatte self- The Bake-Off floor itself will have a completely new look, especially designed so fiiat the awards telecast on Tuesday, January 25, can be made directly from the floor of the Bak^Off rather than at an awards luncheon as in previous years. Officials of The Pillsbury Company and General Elective, in announcing the Busy Lady Bake-Off, said the name and format reflect the changing pace of American life and the new fold styles which have resulted from it. Contest entries this year will be accepted from now until the entry deadUne of Oc- tober n, 1161. FinaUsts wiB be anaonaced ki early December, in time to aO 116 to get tho new GE Range toy win delivered to their homes hi ^me for Christmas. Recipes will be Judged this year on the basis of flavor appeal, convenience of ingredients, cost, ease and simplteity of preparation, superior eating quality and appearance. Shortcuts, streamlined methods, convenience (d Ingredieots and the use of few utensils will eonat And, to the first time, rec-!{>es which include a new shortcut method or a new use of convenient ingredients, will be eligible to three special 1500 "Brightidea" bonuses. There will be new emphads on streamlining recipes, on shortcutting and up-to4ating by use of modern convenience products as part of the fliud baked dish. / "The Busy Lady Bake-W is designed to seardi o& those recipes which pro^be delicious results ea^y apd quickly," ac- cording to Pfflsbiliy-/ A mere Hvto; more ated-em contest is ttqtectad to re* salt from to hll^ now rafes, and tevehtlve cooks with ods are expected ta score w^ jA the Mg eveat with the new Utchen in tbe Ssh Frandsco Hilton oh January li And, in addition to the 000 Grand Prize and the $5,009 sec^ end Grand Prize, tore wfll be $1,000 prizes to each of the special categories. One of the things which will ranain tbe same in the 17th Bake-Off will be the aroma of fresh baked breads, cakes, pies and desserts, main dishes, cookies and snadn coming from the oven at the world’s biggest Marinated Beets Deflghtful and diftoent salad; marinate cooked beet slices in an oil and vinegar dressing. Sm^e the marinated beets on salad greens and garnish with lots of drained capers. -r* /• KING OF ROASTS! "Super-Right" Mature, Corn-Fed Reef -sufia-aiiHr'SKiMLitt , ,, AH-Maot Franb. 49- V.f 93* "suna-aiuHr' . Counfry-Styl# Sport Ribs 49 “supsa-aiuHr' bonsuos m •• Drimeniee StMb............. ■** swim PtlMIUM , Ague Slietd IkKon............. , • • ri(i‘ o9 CAFN JOHN'S m wa Breaded Shrimp.............2 r% CAP'N JOHN'S—Nawt. IO-M. a aAA BraodMl Fish Sticks ..3 1*^ RIBROAST FIRST RIBS S5> FIRST RIBS 89! SthandSthRtos 79 lb "SUPER-RIGHT" 6-INCH CUT Beef Rib Steaks 89< "SUPER-RIGHT" Beef Short Ribs 43’ No Coupons, No Gimmicks, No Limits • • • EVERYDAY LOW PRICES SUIONINB A A ^ Krispy Cimckcrs . . 28 DOU —NIT WT. liMi-OZ. ^ m M.. Pineapplie Tidbits 2 47 Boaonrs instant —4c om ubil am m.. Dutch Oracdute . . 34 AVVIAN WAY — 3c OVP LARIL to ^ « Pina Mix 34 NIT WT. 12-OZ. m ^ JH Peanut Butter 43* DiODOtANT — NIT WT. 4-OZ. ■Fto« Arrid Spray . . . . 79* DU. MONTI m Cut Green Beans 4 89 SAVi AT ACrt> miea Aero Wax .... . 1” SUNNYBROOK ALASKA Red Salmon a 89‘ DKL MONTE Wholt Komol or Groom Golden Corn 4=* 69- YOUR CHOICE— AKN PAGE Preserves 29*» Peach, Pineopple or Apricot CALIFORNIA RED FUME Tokay Grapes • • 2"XT* MICHIGAN U3. NO. 1 GRADE jm Mdntosh Apples 6 "49 NET WT. 4W-OZ. to toe Accent.................. ^97 SAVi AT AOr SAVi AT AOr m Dash Dog FomI 99 riLLsauar m m « Pancake Flour . . 41 NABISCO ciauL m m « Team Flakes . . . 41 poa THi SATHROOM amau.. Oiarmin Tissue . . «^32 JANI PARKIR BAKI 'N' SltVB Twin Rolls . . .' JANI PABKIR CHOCOLaTI tCED |.|j 25* 49* Jelly Donuts . . 35* Crescent Cookies 79 Square Cake ‘wwJT »•*« JAN. PARKER VANILU ICED BITTY BAKIR -B m Pitted Dates . . . 55 GIANT SIZE — DcTERGINT }.|.| m M Cheer......................... 's74 CHERRY PIE •3 39* SAVE 6c —JANE PARKER 100% # Whole Wheat Bread-2T SAVE 16c —JANE PARKER 8-INCH Here are 5 good reasons , for not buying toie Plariter White Bread: 1 JANE PARKER’S L Whole Wheal 3. Rala/n 2.Rya 4. Cracked Wheat 5. Pump»rnlck$l GIANT SIZE—lOc OPP LABIL Afax Detergent . . vi 64* isi. 46* % UqUID DITIRUtNT— 12c Uff LAIIL Palmolive.............. AJAX ALL PURPOM — lie Off UiU > . Uquid Cleaner . . V7i 46* POWiMtSO —4c OPP LA...I. .•a — ^ Action BlMch . . . 59* PLOOa 0 WALL — 4c OPP UBIL ^ ^ Ainx Cleaner. . . 23* CHILOaiN'S aUBBLI BATH — ^ Sonhy Uqiiid . . . ''i^ 59* 2c Off LABIL — NIT WT. 14-OZ. ^ ^ 4fK OMosar . . 2»h.25; 4n AdP Exclusive! The Ineyelepadic GuMa la tha Unitad aur ceunfiy to tlia Teong atudanr, gtedea Mva Hiiaiifh Iwalva. Thauiandt ol plato-graplia . •. ktnirwda at mOiM. START NQWI buy A BOOK A WiEKI ^ Vole 2 Now oi Solo ' Val.Hd» l AiaoAvailohle Actually, there are 20 or more. The variety of delicious Jane Parker Breada la greater, than anyone else offers. G^aricle DoMOfte 4'in29^ I ( . THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 22. 1965 C—8 Honey Will Give Foods an Interesting Sweet Flavor “Dew distilled from the stars 4uid the rainbow," that’s bow Ihe ancient Greek phUoeopher Aristotle referred to honey. Today, honey dtas all the Cucumber Sauce Delightful sauce for fish; coaiwly grated pared cucumber added to cream sauce. If you like, you can color the sauce with a suspicion of green food coloring. same fine qualities which made it such an idolised sweetener in Choose, for example, from the wide variety of flavors, aromas and colors honey on the market. These characteristics vary with the kind of flowers from which the nectar was gathered. As a role, the lightest eol- explains the U. S. Department of Agricnltnre’s Comber and Marketing Service. Blends of flavors are numerous. Distinctively flavored honeys from citrus trees, wild sage. Try Smoked Fish You can make a delicious spread for crackers or bread by mixing smoked fish (flaked or diced) with a little mayonnaise, lemon Juice and minced sweet buckwheat and other blossoms also are available. Buckwheat is considered probably the darkest table variety. Try honey to accent or enhance the flavor of many other foods. Remember to nse miM-flavored honey for bland dishes; stronger, darker honey for more highly flavored dishes. Honey FrencV Dressing 1 lOVi ounce can tomato soup Vi cup honey Vi cup vinegar V« cup water 2 cups salad oil 1 teaspoon salt Holds Up Better A souffle baked in a pen of hot water in a slow oven usually holds up longer (when it is brou^t to the table) than one that is baked without the hot water bath at a higher temperature. 1 teaspoon dry mustard Vi teaspoon black pepper Vi teaspoon paprika Thoroughly combine ingredients in order given, using an electric mixer, or a blender. * ★ ★ Refrigerate and allow flavors to blend at least 24 hours before serving. Keep refrigerated! ★ w ★ Excellent as a topper for head lettuce, halves of avocado, raw and cooked salad vegetables. (Tasty with blue dieese crumbles added.) Makes 1 quart. Honey Cubes Vi cup honey 2 cups hot water 2 tablespoons lemon juice Pour hot water into honey, stirring to blend. Add lemon juice. Pour into ice cube trays, and allow to cool slightly before placing in the freezer. Serve, in cube form or crushed, by adding to chilled tea or fruit punch. "Super-RighT QuaHly PORK LOINS Cuf-Up "Supor-RIght" Quality, Gevommont Impoctod Fresh Fryers lb LOIN END PORTION Whole Fryers PORK CHOPS! 89* oFQUAurr. "Super-Right" Quality U.S.DJk. Grade "A" YOUNG TURKEYS 10 to 12 POUND SIZES jg lb Just Quality Mercbondise at Low Prices! ANN PAGE QUALITY Blended Syrup 49< l-PT. t-OZ. •TL SWANSDOWN LAYER Cuke Mixes 3^79‘ A&P GRADE "A" Tomato Juice 4'^99 EVERY DAY LOW PRICES SAVI AT A fr P SUNNYFIELD _ — Pancake Flour5'"At «loxo—AOrg PURE VEGETABLE ^ Shortening... 3*^69 Beef Hash » 3^89 Facial Tissue 3-49 IONA SWEET 29 39 22* 39 IONA IRAND aiEHO BUS 12^ 4Y Cut Wax Beans . AOr GRADC "A" Cream Style Corn GRADI "A" A&P Sauer Kraut Checefate Covered fee Creem NEW LOW PRICE! , J Eight O'Dock Coffee |9.'c.Locifl ,.Li. lAG m A. W lb. KRAPT'S MIRACLI1. 2< OPP LAIIL A M C CMICKIH OP-THl-UA Mcn^ine ctn. 34 % Tuna a.^i Heinz Soup 6‘»«95 OIL MONTI ITIWW PILLSRURY’S HUNGRY JACK Poncho Mix.... PKo. mli Hawaiian u%89* nneaj^ Juice OIL MONTI—I^PI Oa. KE* i- TUII III* Temerto Ccftsup 3*^ 55 Puffin Bbeuits... opiolU MiM Cheililar Choose wikonm, *..... a 59* Golden Rise Cookies * * * 3 Aiii: » THE QREAT ATLANTIC I. PACIFIC TEA COMPANY, INC. AMERICA’S DEPENDABLE FOOD MERCHANT SINCE 1859 69 3 1 99 ' y , '■ ■■ ' Ann Page Soups N«t Wt. 10<A-0>. » Ajnc Mushroom .....q cans 39 NW Wt. lOVS-Oa. Tomato Soup 77* 10* CHAMPION , ,, SALTINES .. ^>cG ZZ NOW ON SALE —15c Oct. Woman's Day Peoturing 45 Wonderful Reclpea In Exciting Ceweiole Conk Bo^f Soron Wrap . . . SILVER SKILLET Sloppy Joes .... QUICK COOKING Mothers Oats . . . STA-FLO Liquid Starch . . . HABIiANT _ _ _ Pea Soup . . . . 4 um 49* HABITANT _ _ Vegetahle Soup 4 49* Beef Stew ..... »h 47 Spaghetti....................39* LIBBY'S—H«t Wi. 12-Oa. V 0% Corned Beef ...»>' 53* COFFEE 4c OFF LABEL iW JK Chase and Sanhorn ca^m’ #9* FLEISCHMANNS IN QUARTERS _ ^ Margarine..............42* JET SPRAV —Nat Wt. 14-Oi. I Oc Off Lab.l _ Bon Ami.................“x 49* Maxwell House Coffee BAGGIES A ^ Sandwich Bags . . 29* Food Wrap Bags . 39* LARGE SIZE ^ 0% W Ivoi/ Soap . . . 2»«»37* PERSONAL SIZc « OK Ivory Soap . . . 4««»33* Oxydol................ ’rts 79* Save Ml- A&P , Li. Spic & Span .... o2 G • rKG. I Lo onm Ivory Snow .... 81* WASHJh. .....^zgint Joy Liquid..............*£ 80* GIAN. SIZE %-iM.m Mm Tide ...... 74 THE POKTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1966 PORK TENDERLOINS — Fruit is an ideal accompaniment to pork. Here, tenderloins are simmered in an orange sauce and served on tender white rice. Attractive, nutritious and good eating. Rice Is a Good Base for Fruited Pork The people of Sweden are particularly fond of combining fruit with meat as in an attractive entree of Pork Tenderloins with Orange Sauce. Perhaps because the sunny goodness of the fruit offsets the effects of the chill climate — part of Sweden lies above the Arctic Circle — or possibly because it steps up ao well the mildness of the meat; or both. In any case the dish reflects the best in Scandinavian cuisine that is delicious in any climate, any season. 11)6 ideal base for the fruited meat is, naturally, tender cooked rice. Why? The attractive white grains show off the rich odors of pcxk and sauce without absorb^ or “drowning” in the liquid; and their mild flavor blends with, dhiem’t overpower or change, the more pronounced ones of meat and fruit. The arrowroot ased to thik-en the sauce, of this dish, Is a delicate stSRh much used throa^Hwt E ■ r o p e for gravies, sauces and padding mls-tures. Like rice, it is easily digestible. If none is on hand, an eqnal amount cornstarch may be snhstttnted. Pork Tenderioias with Orange Sauce Saute tenderloins in butter until golden. Remove from pan and set aside. Cook oniim, ^t, and pepper in butter until onion is tender. Return meat to pan. Pour wine and juice from two oranges over meat. Add sugar, bay leaf and parsley. Cover and simmer for about 45 minutes, or until meat is tender. Peel remaining orange and section. Cat peel in very thin of water until tender. Remove meat from pan. Mix arrow-root with a tablespoon of water and add to broth, stirring until thickened and smooth. Cut tenderloin in thick slices; place on platter of cooked rice. Pour sauce over meat. Garnish with orange slices and cooked peel. Makes 6 servings. Check Content of Baby's Food Feeding baby a nutritionally adequate diet requires some knowledge of the content of the baby foods on the market reminds the District Extension Agent, Mrs. Josephine Lawyo'. Some baby foods have considerably higher protein content than others. Chopped meats are about 18 per cent protein by weight; strained meats, 14 per cent. However, dinners—usixtures of cereal, meat and vegetables are only two to four per cent protein. High meat dinners offer more nutrition with six to eight per cent protein, depending upon the kind of meat. Egg yolks have tea per cent protein and cottage cheese mfadures, seven per cent. Upon the doctor’s recommendation, babies can eat some of the same foods the family eats with little added work and sometimes a money savings. Baby apple juice, for example is considerably more expensive than the family-size canned apple juice. An ounce of the baby juice costs slightly more than 2'ri cents, according to a price survey in one metropolitan supermarket. Apple juice in quart bottles costs less than one cent per ounce. In this instance, buying the baby juice costs about two and one-half times more than the family-size counterpart. Asparagus Contest Open for Recipes Details of the sixth annual asparagus recipe contest have been announced by Rene Gos-siaux Jr., manager of the New Jersey Asparagus Industry Council. First prize will be a $100 U.S. Savings Bond; second and third prizes will be a $50 and $25 bond respectively. Twenty-five honorable award winners will receive an attractive 8-cup coffee mak- “An inqwrtant part of the Council’s merchandising work is done through recipes,” Mr. Gos-siaux stated, “and our annual contest helps us find favorite ways to prq)are asparagus that B pays to know the baby food are sometimes new and differ-1 content and to make price com-ent, but always delicious. i parisons in order to assure your “New Jersey’s pack of both canned and frozerasparagus diet at rea.sonable cost, this season is predominantly in cuts and tips. As a consequence, we’re particnlariy interested in recipes which call for cut, rather than whole, spears. “An Important consideration for the homemaker is that, at the average price (rf 25 cents per ISoz. can, asparagus cuts and ■ps compare very favorably with practically all other processed vegetables. There’s nothing to buy, no labels are necessary and recipes will be accepted on any kind of paper if legible. Up to three entries per family will be accepted and aU entries should be addressed to Asparagus Recipe Contest, Box M, Millville, New St be postmarked before mkinigbt, October 11, Grill Fresh Tomatoes and Serve With Ham Cut medium-sized tomatoes into quarters. For each serving, place a quartered tomato on a square of double thickness of heavy-duty aluminum foil. Add tablespoon French dressing and V« teaspoon dill weed. Sprinkle with salt and pepper. Wrap foil securely. Cook on briquettes about 10 minutes w on grill about 15 minutes, turning once. Serve with hot or cold sliced smoked picnic shoulder. Add Some Shrimp Add diced cooked shrimp to the filling for deviled eggs and serve as a first course. Garnish with watercress and pimiento. 5 Conference Provides Recipes By JANET ODELL Pwtiac Press Food Editor This is midway in the food editors conference. It’s time to ijive you a few of the new ree-pes food manufacturers are anxious for you to have. Both this week and next. I’ll concentrate on recipes we’ve gotten from participants in the Chicago conference. Today, we’re leaning rather heavily m desserts. Many of you may have already tried the new soft-type margarine. Packaged in a small plastic tub, it spreads readily even when very cold. It is easy to measure for baking. Gingerbread Gems are like muffins, bnt they’re so good that they can donMe as dessert. Serve with Lemon Spread. , Gingerbread Gems y« cup soft-type margarine Vt cup sugar % cup unsulphured molasses 1 egg IVi cups sifted all-purpose flour lA teaspoon salt M teaspoon baking powder M teaspoon cinnamon Vt teaspoon ginger V* teaspoon ground cloves % cup hot water Blend together soft-type margarine and sugar. Ble^ in molasses. Add egg; beat until well blended. Sift together floor, salt, baking powder, baking soda and spices; add to mixture alternately with hot water. Coat inside of 3 dozen 1^-inch muffin pans with soft-type margarine. Spoon batter into pans (pans should be ^ full). Bake in 375-degree oven 12 to 15 minutes. Turn out of pans and serve hot with Lemon Spread. Yield: 3 dozen. Lemon Spread: Blend together cup soft-type margarine and % cup omfectioners’ sugar. Stir in 1 teaspoon grated lemon rind and 2 tablespoons lemon juice. Yield: % cup. Another coovenieBce food is Instant Mending floor. In tU$ recipe for a pie yon make the oust with yoor mixer. ’Try this method with an open mjpd. Who knows? It might be-conse yom* favorite pin crust recipe. Toffee Fluff Pie Vt cup cold water Vt cup shortening m cups instant blending flour % teaspooB salt < 6 (%-ounce) chocolate covered toffee bars, crushed (reserve 2 tablespooiisV In small mixer bowl, combine water, shortening, flour and aalt Mix at lowest speed of mixer, scraping sides of bowl, until dough be^ns to form, about 30 seconds. Shape into a firm ball. Flatten; smooth edge. over bottom M crust Cool. Spoon filling into bdced pastry shell. Garnish with reserved toffee bar. Chill until serving time. Toffee Filling 1 cup heavy cream 1 cup marshmallow creme ’ 1 teaspoon vanilla extract Whip cream until stiff. Fold in marshmallow creme and vanilla extract Now if you’re really in a hurry far dessert and don’t have time to bake, here’s a qnidde rec^ for the last one. Using Danish coffee cake that Bierty Meringues Ifroaen Gherry DaniA Coffee Cake, thawed 2 egg whites H teaspoon cream of tartar % cup sugar ' ^ cup chopped pecans Preheat oven to 450 degrees. Cut cake in six to eight servings. Beat egg whites with cream M tartar until foamy. Gradually add sugar, conUnuinff to beat until stiff but not dry peaks form. Fold in nits, reserving one tablespoon for decoration. Spread meringue over top and sides of each piece of Danish you buy from the frozen food | Coffee Cake; sprinkle with resection of your grocery, whip' served nuts. Place in oven for up a meringue covered creation 5 to 10 minutes or until meringue that will have everywie guess- is browned. Serve warm or cool ing. ' 1 Six to eight luncheon Dish Is Lihe Souffle and cora together hurrjHip Friday dish and a delightful, easy choice for lunchem or Sunday supper. ★ V w Drzdn and rinse 1 can (VA ounces) of shrimp and combine vrith 4 can (1 p^, 1 ounce) ot cream style com, 1 cq» ef milk, 3 eggs, rotary-beaten, 4k teaspoon salt, 4k teaspoon of cearse-ground pepper. Pour mixture into a buttered 14k-quart casserole and sprinkle with 4k cup of coarse buttered bread drumbs. Preheat oven to 325 Badce about 30 minutes. Makes 4 servings. Crushed Potato Chips Given Zippy Flavor for New uses The mark of a good co<* fo c r u m b k, c>e^^ the abUity to make everyday “ “ main dishes have a magic taste and flavor. Here are a few tricks used by some of the nation’s best diefs in which potato chip crumbs are the secret ingredient Ftovored Potato Chip Crumbs 1 cup fine potato chips 1 tablespoons onion flakes 2 tablespoons rose paprika 2 tablesixxms dried parsley 4k teaspoon Italian peipers 2 tablespoons grated Romano Cheese 1 teaspoon ddiydrated lemon rind Mix weU and crush together in wax paper. • This simple mix of peteto used as a coatfaif lor ddcken, veal chops, fish, pork chops, and in loaf. Here’s how you use them on meat loaf, all time famUy favorites: Magic Meat Loaf 14k Ihs. chuck or round steak grcHUid 4k cups flavored potato chip crumbs Mix in 4k cup flavored potato chip crumbs with meat Butter loaf pan well, press 4k cup flavored potato chip crumbs on bottom, {dace meat mixture (»i top, place in 350 degree oven for 45 to 60 minutes. Turn upside down on platter, decorate with vegetaUes. Refloat to W-inch thickaess on weDdloved sir-face. Trim to a drde 14k inches larger than inverted k-inch pie pan. Fh into pan. Flute edge as desired. Prick generously with fork. Bake at 451 degrees for 1# to 12 minutes or until golden brown. Sprinkle crushed toffee bars Food Pesticides Not a Factor in Human Ills Not a single case of illness Is known to have resulted from pesticide residues on food, reports the District Extension Agent, Mrs. Josephine Lawyer. Use of pesticides is governed by laws administered by the U. S. Department of Agriculture, but act^ upon jointly with the Food and Drug Administration and the U. S. Department of the Interior. Before a pesticide is accepted for use, it first must be demonstrated that any residue that may exist following application to the crop will be well below the safe level of intake. 'These levels are called tolerances. A tolerance is a minute quantity of a pesticide permitted M or in a raw agricultural commodity from application made before harvest. Usually the safety factor between tbe tolerance (the amount permitted) and safe level is about one hundredfold. Tolerances are established on the food as it is shipped to market, not as we generally eat It. With normal trimming, peeling, washing, and cooking the unt of pesticide actually consumed is reduced substantially and is "^considerably lower even than one per cent of the safe legal tolerance level. PARK FRII IN REAR HOFFMAN’S PONTIAC FREEZER FOODS, Inc. SITAIl (MVtWON ml OAiUoNa ' QUALITY MEATS AND PRODUCE AT WHOLESALE PRICES 526 N. PERRY ST. wi Bistavi tmi «!Omt to ll^'n M'L!;iifxs'f'n«nn:iJ:i:TO ^1: THB PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1965 ONECOLOIl C- Kroger^Piked means Lower-Priced PLUS TOP VALUE STAMPS! HOME GROWN FRESH CAUIIFLOWER 6 SIZE'SWEET N* JUICY HONEYPEW MELON GLENDALE RING BOLOGNA, OR POLISH SAUSAGE. . ..» 59* LEAN SLICED PREMIUM SWIFT'S BACON__________89* HICKORY SMOKED LEAN SLAB BACON WHOLE OR HALE . i* 59* skinless premium SWIFT'S WIENERS . . 49* GORDON'S BULK LINK PORK SAUSAGE..................79* 18-OZ. PLUMP SUCCULENT CORNISH GAME HENS .«.69* FRES SHORE FROZEN OCEAN PERCH FILLETS . . 2</2.S> 99* 4 TURN PAGE FOR KROGER SPECTACULAR LOW GROCERY PRICES 4 4 MIDKIIM lARlVoTINMR STOKELY'S PEAS 2 i'AB. 1-01 CANS 41*^ C|IACKER BARREL CHEESE 10^. WT PKo S3* ALLSWEET MARGARINE .. 4 i4b. cartons $f SWIFT'S CHICKEN STEW. . t-u i-oi. can 59’ WITH SUCiO BIIF OR PORK-MORTON HOUSI " CHUNK STYLE WNa' AGIO JUST RIOHT-RRAFT'S SHARP SMCXJTH SPREADING SO EASY TO SERVE , AH-OI. WT. CANS w LUNCHEON TREATI PEAS ft POTATOES.........wi wt pkg 29‘ BROVVN GRAVY............ia%.or wt can 39* SWIFT'S PREM........... imi. wt can 43* BROADCAST BRAND>-TASTY SPKIAL UBEL-AU PURPOSE CRINKLE CUT POTATOES.. 2t«LWTPKos 29* CORNED BEEF HASH......................................................................................................................................................................... lu can 44* SWIFT'NING SHORTENING ...j.ucan69* I i? i THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER i8, 196g South Vietnamese Firing Squad Executes fhr^ Incused W Sympathizers of Cong DA NANG, VM Nam (II - tary ofOoen said a fovcnimeiit fir^ aqoad executed three Vietnamese accused of being Viet Cong sympathizers tonight The officers said the three were diot by a firing squad at a soccer stadium. The ezecatloa, originally schedaled for daylight, had bees podpoaed at the last A South Vietnamese military spokesman said the execution was orighially postponed because news photogriqibers refused to obey ordera not to take pictures until after die last sbot is fired. ★ A A Vietnamese officer, Lt Col. Tran Huu Tu, said the headlights of three Jeeps illuminated the stadium for the unusual night-time execution. A handful of people gathered outsHJe the stadium, but'they about JOO perwms In downtown Informed sources said the tested levying of rlqa tKes^ were not permitted to enter. No Da Nang. They were sentenced demonstrators nrotested heavy the goveroment, an eariy we- newsmeo or photographers were to deafii by a military tribunal artillery fire and air sbikes Iqr nlng f****^,,®®^ , ^ believed to have seen the shoot- on charges of inciting the dem- u.S. forces. The demonstrators presmice of U.S. troops in me tog. onstratto. were reported to halve com- Da Nang area. A ★ ★ * it it plained that their crops were --------------- 1tethneinniin«an. belogiMiroired. arrested Moo^y during an anti- ering was inspired by fte Viet Informants also said that proximate^ . f some of the demonstrators pro- per cent of the land is arable. govermnent demonstraticm by Cong. Tou clili REAI playing PUSTKTWBT-TIEl PROTEIfiS lllE J CAMPBBU^ SOUPS L_ THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL KROGER OR BORDEN'S •M. ua CAN TOMATO IS COTTAGE CHEESE IVKY WMOHT<«irATCHirS PAVOHTI K>l SAIAM ANO SNAOCt VEGETABLE VARKTIEI IS MB. aN. SAVE UO TO 10* ■so. sin CAN MEAT VARIETIES OREEN GIANT PEAS 5^*1 GRiiN BEANS...............5^*1 ^EEN GIANT CORN 6 NIBLETS CORN.............. SAVE TO 21«-KRdGEt fRfeNCH, AA«ASSADOR OR ITALIAN HQU® SALAD DRESSING.... 2 » 39‘ HALVES OR SLICED DEL MONTE peaches .^2S< SAVE 10>-VANILLA; NEAPOLITAN OR VANILLA-PUDOE BORDEN'S ICE MILK ..^«^39‘ KROGO SHORTENING Why wrestle with brwDd wrappeiSt With thw nww ploeHc twist-tie, oil thw o¥tt freshness and Hover of Kroger's Adel-O-Soft Bread is soaled into each loaf—te the lost slice. Just o twist ef the plastic strip opens or closes the wrapper for yeui Try Mei-O-Soft made by tha new bread baking formula for satin smeeth texture with ne big heles. . 3 & 69* SPECIAL lABEl-SPOTLIGHT INSTANT COFFEE ......«» 69* NNT, S4)L AOC • SOTTU HO SAVE IG'EMBASSY tUnER FLAVORED PANCAKE STRUP. SAVE P-MUSHROOM CHUN KING tiviBiR MCE • • e iiSi 79* SAVE 8>-KEF OR CHICKEN CHUN KINO .. ..iSi 89* KROGER TART PITTED RED PIE CHERRIES ... 2 29* FOR HOUSIHOlO CUANINO AQUA HANDY ANDY . .. lit. la-oz. STL 59* WMTI OR CORAL UFEBUOY SOAF ....... 2 rsouar so-sars 27« KMO TO YOUR HANDS DOVE UQUID................m.s L RTL 58* MEL-O-SOFT FRESH SLICED WHITE BREAD FAIRIC SOFTNIit FINAL TOUCH......................... iGT i.ox.in. 77* GETS CLOTHES CtlANei.JUMeO SIZE ACTIVE "AU" ,............*.a. imF«G.»2.15 VIM TABLETS. . m sot. FRO. 57* 2°° 25 CANNON KITCMM TOWM MSIDI GIANT SILVER DUST.. . . X4R. S4C. FRG. 79* MAXWEU HOUSE COFFEE... can $2.44 ■■Am TOP VA'UI mm KJP VAlUf A MM tOPVAltJf R? TOP VAlUf 50 stampslSO stampsu25 stampsL|25 stamps AMY 1 PKOl -'^1 ^ 4 ■ 140. PKO. OB MOFNOO | I liBAMf MArABANI i Veld Hmt lalwdw. SaplMbwM,ie«, mUiMiR fmm$% \ mow MAURMiii THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 19fi5 Jndia, Pakistan Expected to Press for Resumption of U.S. Aid By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER AP Special Correspondent WASHINGTON - With a cease-fir^ agreement finally achieved in their war over Ksshmir, both India and Pakistan are expected to press the United States to reatore stp- pended aid programs. 4he loss of military aid by both countries, coupled with a freeze on prated new aid commitments, was evidently a major source of pressure on both nations to find a way to end the fighting. y.S. officials felt the ceasefire came because both counties had come to recognize they faced a potentially long and devastating conflict which might lead to general wir in Asia — depending on what Communist China did. Cliinese harassment of India with a war of nerves, wldph was intensified within the past week, was designed probably for the kuunadiate -purpose of assisting Platan by creatit& ;l diversion on India"s China border. If the Chinese had encountered wedpiess in India’s or in the readiness of the Western powers — perhaps even the Soviet Union — to support India, they might have pressed on into an acUve border campaign against India. Among Western diplomats, therefore, the belief is that stem warnings from the United States and Britain and the Soviet Union’s continued supply of military assistance to India helped keep the Chinese threat limited. U.S. officials apparently fell the United States followed a successful strategy in its diplomatic search for a way to end the South Asian crisis short of a larger Asian conflict and at a minimum cost in relations with both Pakistan and India. The heart of the U S. strategy was to establish and stick with a completely neutral position as between India and Pakistan. Another major elenwnt was to concentrate all U.S. diplomatic activity — or at least all that was conducted publicly — in the United Nations Security Council. "MAKE MONEY" WINNERS <SOO WINNERS MRS. M. FEDORUK MRS. SHARON HAYES 1220 CADIEUX RD. 3920 MACKINAW ST. GROSSE POINTE. MICH. SAGINAW, MICH *100 WINNERS MRS. ALVINA CASEY, 8085 BUSCH, CENTERLINE MR. GEORGE A. KALAGIAN, 1912 WHITE, LINCOLN PARK MRS. NORMAN WILSON, 26800 TWELVE MILE, SOUTHFIELD MRS. C. O. VILLERS, 18819 HANNA, MELVINDALE MARY LOU SYLVESTER, 20440 SANTA ROSA, DETROIT 4Aii 1 n|| ] H I AT I'vroqei' KROGER REGULAR OR DRIP GRIND \ WC MC COFFEE RICH, DifF-RAVORID AND OfUCiOUS. A MAN'S KINO OF COFFEE! C0FFE|‘ 1-LB. CAN net WT. 1 LB I AND POT < WITH COUPON AND $5 PURCHASE EASY TO PREPARE JIFFY BISCUIT MIX.... 1^33^ AVONDALE WHOLE UNPEELEO APRICOTS........... S199‘ COUNTRY CLUB LUNCHEON 39* KANDU BRAND GALLON BLEACH 39* SAVE 19«-BORDEN'S ELSIE FUDGEES OR TWIN POPS. .12-39* SAVE 6*«ASSORTED FLAVORS BORDENSHERBET cT 19^ HOMESTEAD GOLDEN r.lARGARINE... 6 -97* WITH THIS COUPON AND $5 FUKCHASE OK MORE | I KtooEt tEOuu* oa oam caiNO a I VAC PAC COFFEi \ - I 1-ia. CAN 49* I Valid at Krogar lliru Saturday. Sapl. 7S. I ^965. limit o«a caupan par (amilyj SPECIAL LABEL*'‘’'^<> , ALL PURPOSE $.BEsr,u PILLSBURY FLOUR BLf ACHED ENRICHED FLOUR FOR BREAD, BISCUITS, MES AND CAKES B39 WITH COUPON & $5 PURCHASE > SAVE- 14* PIUSBURY FLOUR S la lAc 39* SAVE UP TO 14- Valid at Krogar thru Saturday. Scat. I 1465. limit art# caupan po* tami MRO tasty FRANKENMUTH CHEESE n 59* FAMItV SIZE COLGATE, GtEEM OR CREST TOOTHPASTE 69* fVEKEADV BRAND APRICOT NECTAR. 39* MORTON FROZEN PASTRIES . SUN GOID SALTINE CRACKERS TWO ? ROU PACKS LADY SCOTTUSS. . . everyday LOW PRICE! SUPER iQSfflAEH MODESS ^ REGULAR OR SUPER INVENTED BY A DOCTOR-SAFE, SOFT AND ABSORBENTI SCOTT CUT-RITI FUSTIC SANDWICH BAGS.................’. pko 29* ASSORTED COIORS-CONVSNIINT SCOTT FAMILY PLACEMATS ... Z4.a pko 39* UOY SCOTT-ASSORTIO COIORS FACIAL TISSUE.......... .... 2 loo-a. PKo«. 49* SOFT-UKB OOTH -*• SCOTT FAMILY NAPKINS ... 2 ae-a pkoi 29* ASSORTED COIORS-BIO ROU SCOT TOWELS.........................io»t29* V BRUCE CUANINO WAX OR FLOOR CLEANER.....................ot can 84* NABISCO SHORTBRMO COOKIES LORNA DOONE............ . . . . toir-oi WT PKO 39* FROZEN WITH CREAM SAUCf BIRDS EYE PEAS.. . ... .. .. a-or wt pkd 29* RARt, AOED COFFII BRANS YUBAN INSTANT COFFEE ... wt wt iar 89* FfNK-OENTtE ' PRINCESS DIA^ SOAP. *. 2 rbouur «a iah 29* WITH COUPON AND $5 PURCHASE WITH THIS COUPON AND $5 PURCHASE OR MORI RtOUUR OR SUPM MODiSS 4S.CT. PKO. 99* SAVf M- I VM at Kr^ thru taturdoy. U^. M. |IV6S. Umil ana coupon par hmt^J FOR FRYINO, CAKES AND PASTRY CRISCO SHORTENING !c 3“^"** 83* 'r-\- c—« THE PONTIAC FlUWS. WBOynaiUY, Sg^TEMBER 22, im6 Hurricane BefSy Was in Her Wild, Angry Rampdge (EdUor’i fiote—A hurricane | storm wheeted *nd ain»d sooth-it bom of tun and air and | west, right at Nassau, capital of forces stm beyond the knowl- the Bahamas. edge of man. But tohat it does is clearly visible in the rubble of destroyed homes, flooded lands—and numbers dead. Sid Moody who was there when Hurricane Betsy rampaged through Florida and Louisiana draws a profile of Betsy in the COMMUNICATIONS DOWN For 12 hours the storm was rooted just iKWth of Nassau. Communications went down, the islands were shut off from the world for two days. When contact was regained, Betsy had shown herself a de- foUowing AP Special Report.) that was merci- ----- ' ful of life. No deaths were re- By SID MOODY ! Fourteen people had NEW YORK (AP) - Day aft- been saved by a British frigate er day the fire of the tropical from two life boats after a smai^ sun scorches the empty and steamer had sunk. The fun windless sea. The air turns the sun City of Nassau heavy, moist, oppressive. frayed but still in 1 Baked by the sun, the air Sq was Betsy. A rises. Cooler airs from the cane now with 14 trades funnel in, are heated, and gales radiatii rise and more air moves in. The niiles, the stormyfilrode across process speeds. Spun by the r^ | the Gulf Streamr and struck in tation of the earth, the air the Florida K^s just after midmovement takes a counterclock-1 night, Tueatfey Miami shud-wise direction, and as the air i jered umjgt winds that reached spirals upwards, pressure at the 1105 m center of the funnel drops. The velocity of the rushing 1 winds rises. A passing ship notes the wind or low pressure | or a weather satellite photographs the circular patter clouds. The word is out; Hur/i- ;t the dark skyline by hurtiing curtains of •ed blue and gray rainbows front shorting transfwin-I ers. young boy „ . . r. j . cried in warning to a woman So It began on Friday, Aug. | down against the 27. A ship far at sea near the | couldn’t hear and vast stillness of the doldrums ^ ^^e. There was a between South America and Af- jg,, ggyg„ rica reported heavy ram, g^^g squalls. A Tiros weather satel- j rwvcw lite sent back a photograph of a j BARGE LOOSE rotary cloud pattern in the same j A barge broke looae i|) .th# area, the nurturing place of the; turmoil that was BIscayne Bay hurricane. and smashed a eaudCway,^ TTiere’s something out j breaking the only link to Key there,” said the Miami, Fla., Weather Bureau. Hurricane hunter planes from Puertor Rico tracked the storm, centered about 2,000 miles east-southeast of Miami. By Aug. 31 they reported the storm system was falling apart. MOIST AIR But the storm regenerated the next day, stoked by the moist air by which hurricanes are fueled. Hurricane Betsy, second tropical storm of the season, had been bom. A hurricane is a fickle thing, led in its short, violent life by many forces, some not clearly known. Betsy seemed headed ashore somei^ere in the Carolinas. Florida and the islands seemed safe. Biscayne, an islet of residential villas where several hundred were stranded in hip deep water. Down on the Keys, the center of the storm swept foaming tides completely over several of the low-slung sand-pits. Key West had up to five feet of water in the streets. Several boats sank in the harbor. By late Wednesday afternoon. Sept. 8, Betsy had passed into the Gulf of Mexico leaving behind torn homes, broken windows, downed power and phone lines, ruined crops and washed out roads that reached a cost estimated at 1119 million. ^t the storm was not yat done. Trapped in the Gulf like a steadier and rain had begun. The storm struck at midnight, as it had in Miami. The sight — and s hurricane loose in the stre^ of a great city Rain rattled against^ Thb gusta, ' ^ miles, struck vdOi a fierce “whump" thai^attered storefronts, bent double, jdfe off table-sized roofing and skimmed ■ i streets like lethal The wind cried its a'deep moan. Waiking ras Imposribler’llain struck the face like needles. Sirens whined all over the city. Church bells pealed in the din of crashing glass and debris flung through t h e streets. Sometime after midnight a levee on the ship canal to Lake Ponchartraln gave way. Police tried to warn residents of low-lying areas. But many of their patrol cars became flooded. Flat tires from broken glass stopped others. R^ents of the suburbs to the south of the city could fee the waters rising. HIT DOCKS Along the rivteiront she ocean-goin^ frei^iters blown free, crashing into dockti, tugs and each other in an aim-^ less, murderous ballet. Several barges, one loaded with 600 tons of deadly'’ eholorine, sank. Down the bayous, qeveral towns barely above sea level were ob-j^rated. But much of this would not be knodm for many hours after the storm moved n^ward Friday, Sept. 10. What phone service remained waa jammed. Poteer 80 per cent of the city was out. There was no communication at all with towns to the south. had been there I could saved them," said a father lost two sons. They were among the 68 dead in Louisiana.. Five others died in Mississippi and Arkansas. ATLANTA (UPD-The grand dragon of the Georgia Ku Klux 'Klan yesjterday canceled a sched^ rally in FuKbn Ooun-ty’s Duncan Park because of maddened bull in an arena, it would have one final rendezvous “The only consolation of a hurricane,” said forecaster Raymond Kraft, “is that when it gets level with your latitude, the chances are pretty slim it will turn back." But Betsy did just that. A high-pressure system that brought a cool, cloudless Labbr Day weekend to the northeast of the United States, stymied BeU sy’s northward course. The with land. On Thursday along the Gulf Coast from Pensacola, Fla., into Texas, red and black hurricane warning flags stiffened in the first gusts. Long slow swells that mark a storm’s approach broke against the low beachland. WIND PVFTS In New Orleans, La., wind puffs of warning itould blow, then died. The air wa^ muggy. harder. By dusk the wind was i On Saturday, President Johnson toured the city and declared southern LouisiaM a disaster area. Damage was put as high as a billion dollars .with another billion loss to the shipping industry between New Orleans and Baton Rouge. With power out, food spoiled in refrigerators and freezers. The demand made some su|n>li-es short in supermarkets. Residents in New Orleans had been warned to boil water because of a power failure in the purification plant. Many restaurants were closedf Radio stations broadcast lon'g lists of appeals from , people seeking won! frieiids or family they had been unable to reach. A Sunday closing law was relaxed to permit hardware stores to stay open so homeowners coiild b^ gin repairing roofs and Windows. STORM'S DEATH The hurricane, far away now from the moist air that nve it birth, died sometime raday. Sept. 10, in northern Louisiana. But its remains continued to bring wind and rain as far as the Ohio Valley into the weekend. TbJl Grdtt Cani 'G^gfaKtln "knee 1 IfDWth. *T have attended Klan meeb< ings in public parks and caw pastures all over tba^Unlted States,” said Calvin Craig, "and I’ve never seen a meettog place' in sud) awful condition.” MassachuMth Hat TMo-Fix' Ticktt Law poSTON (AP) - Massachu-s^.^as a new “no fix" traffic ticket law which provides that summonses issued by a police officer must receive court ac- tion, cannot be withdrawn by . Gov. Jort A, frtd "the bill, by attacking toe moat common area of improper political pressure at its source, strikel a Mow at privilege and sets the tone for a bigno- standard of morality in all aspects of public life." WKC 108 NORTH SAGINAW fMA r MERCURY PORTABLE PHONOGRAPH! OPERATES 3 MONTHS on 6 FLASHLIGHT BATTERIES! Ptays •voryWliar*..« on b^ch or paMo'.. In tho ctir! Vl^tiie portable phpno to odd to infoyment. your summer fun and enfo) Weighs only 4% lbs. yot ploys any siM, any spood record, monaural er ste.roo. It is pH tronsistorizod and has 4^ speakor, built-in 4S rpm spindio and Iwoak-rosistant COSO. Diamond neodio guoran-toed for 10 yoaiO.' SPECIAL LIAAltlb TIME BONUSI $35 WORTH OF MERCURY 45 rpm RECORDS AT NO EXTRA CHARGE! $25 Marguiy Retenis JUf Mereary Phono $4.81 VALUE NO MONEY DOWN-CREDIT ARRANGED TO MEET YOUR INDIVIDUAL NEEDS In Mississippi and Louisiana, National Guardsmen were, called out and issued live am-miadtion with orders to use it if neeVssary to stop looters. Street crews began sweeping up rubble and glass that sheated the streets. A steady flow of cars brought outboards and rowboats to the flooded section to help evacuate | 40,000 flpoded residents. The living came out first. The dead j Wot tied to trees to be brought bad! later. PRIVATE CARS Buses, trucks, volunteer private cars brought thousands of evacuees into the city. Five thousand alone were in the New Orleans Municipal Auditorium. Men walked from one group to another seeking lost members of their lamiUes. People tried to sleep on cots, caittied crying stood in line for soup, sat staring at the floor, told of th|ir hours in the black night of the storm. DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Offers REI PARKING L fumuthed by the following merchanU 40N,l«tliMwSt. 1MN.HaslMw St. HOHTTilMOP URSoflnawSt. MUAlmniNlWIMOF *171. Hama IF. OIMUN'I MEN’S WEAR 91 N. Sofllnow St. FRIO N. PAULI JIWELERI 2B W. Hvren St. FOUTIAO INGOAIS JEWELRY 00. 21 N. Saginaw St. THI PONTIAC PRESS 48 W. Huron St. OLOONAN ORUO 00. 72 N. Saginaw St. SHAW’S JEWELIRS 24 N. Saginaw It. WARD’S HOME OUTFITtiNO 00. 17.19 S. Saginaw St. U.S.Choice Steak Sale! FOOD FAIR STEAK AT ITS TENDER BEST! PMwWIwiwawHwWmW, tnJtrwUNtlwy—nw—r __fc«)r. Thaw art lha kind of itaakt you will alwayi find at Food Fair... tha kind your family can haidiy wait to link thair ' I.S. Cheka ataakt in your Food Fair Maat taath into. Gat your U Dapartmant today. FAMOUS FOOD FAIR U.S. Choice Round Steak JUICY, PLUMP, GRADE 1 Patera Skinless Wieners DELICIOUS, GRADE ), SLICED Peters Large Bologna SWEETMILK OR BUTTERMILK Tosty Pillsbury Biscuits ECONOMICAL, ALL PURPOSE Farm Maid Half & Half FARM MAID cartons Creamed Cottogc Cheese Mfirt Some KRAFT SALAD DRESSING or. ii iS Miracle Whip ^o' BREAST-O-CHICKEN au at m . Chunk Light Tuna 24 nci M/’MJTf YELLOWCU^ halves or 1 li., 1 Sliced Peaches RICH IN FLAVOR—TOWN PRIDE , „ a at m Paimit Batter "^“49* FIAVORPU, RICH FARM MAID - -ate , Evoporuted Milk FOR BRIGHTER WASHES »al M M Roman Bleach 44* Table Napkins '**■' 10* AJox Detergent Tkest [/oluohU T®<w3L "fir Sovuys wii>r6ii6v^r^66^^ A-srr—^ ^ viMTABLnouH If 3 -tST JBe |1| 415 JBe ■ ......... - BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER ;w: A^tlt roMiAC PHKSS. WEDNESDAY. SKPTEMBER 22, 1965 Higher Educaf/on—9 | '■Iff.,!. ■ ' ■' ■■ ' '*J_' M. . 1 AidlorStudentsAvailable rEdftof’* Note Thia 1# the loet tn o «wie - port iefte» designed for thote planning to attend college. The series is loritten by John C. Hoy, dean of admitsiont at Wesleyan UniversUy in Connecticut.) By JOHN C. HOY Written for NesHpaper Enterprise Afsa. -College li expensive. But one heed not give .t|p (tope of • college education for lack of money. Fortunately, where family resources do not measure up, scholarship assistance is available to the qualified student. But virtually all scholarships and other financial assistance are firmly anchored to the "need principle.” Parents of a ehiU seeking a scbdarsUp shoaM file a confldentlal financial statement with the College SChidarship Service. The organization serves as cleprini^iMse for thb sort el laformatioa for most American colleges and nniver- LEAVES COUNTRY-MicH^ Duclos, a French Canadfon convicted in a plot to blow lip several U.S. national shrines, left the U.S. Inst night rather than face a deimrtation ^ court order. Amish Considering New Proposal on Education CAMPEN (UPI) - Eight Amish families have asked for a week’s time to consider a four-point State Board of Education plan for the education of Amish children. However, the board, in an at-1 tempt to. reach a compromise I With the Amish, offered a new plan yesterday for the instruc-j tion of the children. School District at no additional expense to the Amish families and classes could be held in the building now being used by the Amish. Kloster said the proposals were I presented to the Amish at a meeting Tuesday. [ school Wng taught by their 18-year-oln inshructor. The Amish have resisted state attempts to allow a certified public school teachdr to instruct tbeir children. They have held fast to the belief that t h e 1 r children should be taught by a member of their own rel^ious com- The proposed plan would permit the Amish to provide reli- . gious instruction by their own' teacher after the regglpr school | day if they concede to allowing 1 a certified teacher to teach the' secular subjects. SAME EXPENSE ! The teacher would be p r o-jvided by the Camden-Frontier' The Amish have battied the schooi board over the right to have tbeir own teachers f o r more than two years. The Amish chiidren have been taught by an 18-.vear-oii Amish girl with only an eighth grade education. Acting Superintendent of Public Instruction Alexander J. He said the Amish asked for i a week’s time to consider the I proposals, i MOVED AWAY I Some Amish families have left the religious community near Hillsdale rather than permit their children to be taught by someone outside their community. Kloster said the children have to be enrolled in the Camden-Frontier School System by Oct. 1 to be eligibile for state school Before 1837, when the first patent for a baking powder was granted in England, baking soda and sour milk, plentiful because of lack of refrigeration, were a familiar The children currently are in' combination for home baking. Thus, one application filed at the service’s boadquarteri at Box 176, Princeton, NJ., win provide the personal financial Information needed to back up a scholarsh^) appUcatkbi for almost all institutions of higher learning in the country- " Applications are thoroughly processed by the service. In-fornution received is computerized and “tested” on the basis of the service’s long experience In appraising families in terms of the “need rplnciple.” HNANCIAL NEED The residtii^ evaluation of financial need is fdrwarded to every institution in which the prospective student is Interested. Each eeUe|e admissions office has a financial jhl specialist who will, if requested, review with parqpts the evahmton placed on t^lr confidential financial statement. The following table will provide a ruletof-thumb idea of how much parents are expected to contribute from their |ncome towards a son’s or daughter’s education; ^ Normal Expected Yearly Suppiwt for College Expenses From Family Incomes of Different Levels Family Income Nnmber of Dependent Children $4,600 1,000 i I 270 $ 210 14.00 16.00 1,420 ifin 2,560 3,200 * Ihis means that a family with an income of $4,000 a year and one dependent child is only expected to pay ^ toward a year of that child’s education. But the family vrhose income stands at $16,000 or higher is expected to contribute $3,730 a year. Actually the computations of the College Scholarship Service are somewhat more complicated. Other family assets besides income are weighed. And consideration is given to such extenuating circumstances as other educational expenses, insurance and retirement needs, debts, unusual or continuing illness and limitations upon the earning power of the parents. To repeat a mllege education is expensive — scholarship help notwithstanding. i How much fo the college taj>? The following typical bpdgets for two different kinds of schootf may help parents estimate costs more chwely.. 8uph information..is always available in a college ' ■ "r TuKhm Other Fees Room Board Books and Supplies Miscellaneous at an Eastern College $1,700 03,240 Expenses for a Reshtent* at a State UniversHy University Fee $ 150 Student Union Fee Student Ctovernment Fee Meak Books Miscellaneous 10 * 10 2SOAOO 100 25(M00 $1,020 *Nqn-Reikienta will usually pay an additional $^ to $500 : intuition. Atiention Focused on Ohio Election SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (AP) -Clarence 3. Brown Jr., political newcomer witlr a not|Ki Republican name, squared off today against a young prosecuting attorney in a nationally watched fall election for the congresslon-hl scat Brown’s fothc^ held 27 lous of the Vth District’s eight 'counties, easily defeated a lone p: Democratic opponent. Brown swamped six opponents for the QQP nomination in i a special primary Tuesday while Prosecutor Jafnes A. Berry of Clark Cpunty, most popu- Democrats promised a strong campaign with party help from, Washington in the western Ohio district which has elected onlyi^f two Democratic congressmen' since the turn of the century. More than 870,000 tourists iiiilii spent $130 million last year in Hong Kong. p: GULP KIST SHRIMP aV yofl! like '« tlEANEDtr 8UH CBIFLT UTS "BUCI” for PARAMOUNT’S TWIN-PACK n 20-OUNCES OF CHIPS 2-BAGS-IN-1 for FRESH FLAVOR -MORE CONVB'IENCE A10-OZ. BAG FOR NOW PLUS A10-OZ. BAG FOR LATER! MADE FRESH DRIY-THEY lASTE BEnR lULR AMOUNT POTATO CHIPS c- TIIK PONTIAC PRKSS. Wi6DNKST)AY> 22. 1965 Biscuits 3*^25* food Club Margarine Smokey Mountoin Link Cheese FIriychmonn'i Margarine 41-lb. $100 C»m. I 8c Sosciol Label - Shortening # SWIFTIW 3 ‘59 l»HEINZ KETCHUP Mt Wrigley't Supermarket offer expires Sat., Sept. 25 Jif Crunch or Creomy ^ 19 ^ ‘‘Od Club . Peanut Butter 2 Jam' 89 Fancy Rice ChoM & Sanborn bpeciol Lobrl </> Pannsylvonlo Dufeh Instant Coffee , Noodles i»»d nxY^wiTH I Condy Bors rkg,. 75‘ Nestles Quick or 8-ox. e*c Pkg. JL^ Rich Choralole Elna—Plump Food Club Assorted Elna Golden Elna—Green xina—riump ■ Gelatins 11 Creom Corn ■ I Sweet Peas 5 ■ Tomatoes ■ e. ■■ ■ 7»Moo ■■ — Hich Vegetable ■ ■ Elmi Soups ■ ■ ■6' i0V4-oi.aAc' Cant ■eir Red r.-i. c TEABAGS North Antericon Steok ^ojce or BROWN GRAVY CANNED MILK HANKl'pACK ' B:«t f... f 1 INSEa BOMB t Secure. SANITARY NAPPINS Rich Flovor Dog Feed GAINES6UR6ERS Rres! -.ie (. JSlont ' , • ANTI-FREEZE n^‘59‘ 10‘ _'^ci?89‘ 1 |_ 99‘ 4-lb, 8-oz. $159 Pk| , 1 , Ctn’r* ■ Raeulor or Orip Mtxwill House Coffw Birdseye Froien FRENCH FRE Enriched ROBIN HOOD FLOUR With Beons ^1 HORMELCHIll | WhMeni Clothes SNOWY BLEACH Comotion INSTANT MILK A^iufh PINCONMNG CHEESE Cop 'N Crunch ICE CREAM BARS 2’pi^35‘ 25-lb. $019 Bag Z 1 l-flb. 10-oz. 71 e On /I 'SJ89* 'p5:69‘ - f ■ 1 *1 V ^ 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1965 Plllibury Hungry Jock Pancake Mix Stolty't Spociol Lob«l WaHIo Syrup "biS 39* Oeeteft Toppino Dream Whipa^72‘ Stektly Slkod or Hahrot ■ P«ochM ■ ■ ■ Food Club Prune Juice Pineopplc-Gropefruit 3 Quart $100 Bottler I Aunt Jane No Qorlic or Kosher Dills FoodOub Sqlad Oil Rich In Flovor Elno Spaghetti 6 49* Topco Liquid b^I* 49* il"!.33‘ Dole Drink 3 *1*“ Laundry Detergent Applesauce I ■ FruH Cocktail 7&»i~ 11 — li ■■ Wrigley Brand 1 POTATO CHIPS 1-lb. #iMei S«v« lOe 1 •*. 39 ’a;?' g Limit one with this coupon oftor the pur-n choM of M.M or more. Coupon oxpirot a foturdey, toptombor U, INS. Limit one ^ coupon per cuttomor. Rich Coffoo H MAXWELL HOUSE | diu Con g Coupon « Limit one with thia coupon after the put^ B chaM of IS.M or more. Coupon axplroo R p taturday, Soptombar U, INS. LImM ono H g coupon per cuatemar. r - ^ i 1 Robin Hood or PilUbnry | GOLD MEDAL FLOUR I G Oi lb. eUUUw 8>vo lOe R 5 ••• 39^ 1 L Limit one with thit coupon after the pur B 1 choM of IS.W or more. Coupon expiroa K E iaturday, toptambar ». INI. Limit one tt 1 eovpoh per cuilomor. g w Aaaertod Bathroom Tiaiuo I I WALDORF 1 4.roll SU OB m Sava 6e 3 I 25 S Limit ono with thIa coupon after the per- 1 n chaaa of SI.M or more. Coupon ow4aeo 1 1 ^urday,^ l^omlmr U, INS. Limb v>M ^ SpKiol Lgbel SURF DETERGENT *■^^59- Finol Touch FABRIC SOFTENER Bottu / 7 ■9Vf9i99|i» asm Spaclal Label Detergent DOVE LIQUID Pt. 6.0Z. A fCt Bottlt 40 Speciol Label Both Size PRAISE SOAP Z Pack 00. Special Label SWAN PINK LIQUID Pt. 6-oz. A re Bottle 4D Blue Vim—Speciol Label DETERGENT TABLETS 2-lb. 6-oz. r-Te Box 0/ With Libby GobUt SILVER DUST BLUE 4-lb. l-oz. $129 Box 1 Both Size LUX SOAP 3b.™49* Heguler Slio LUX SOAP-4n.45‘ UquM Dkergent COIDWATER "AU" sr.79* Instant Chocdoto ROYAL PUDDINGS 39‘ Nabisco Baronet Creme SANDWICH COOKIES 'p2:49‘ Sunshine Hydrox SANDWICH COOKIES 'p5;49- Dares BESTOBICS 49- Mode from Furo Sweet Creom LAND 0 LAKES BUHER l-lb.Cta’7ie 1 InQuarterB / H C—11 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 22, IMS Chiefs Hope to Gain More Respect in Valley Play Midland in SVC Test Here Friday RECEIVES BAD NEWS — Cleveland Indian infielder Pedro Crf)nzalez (right) and club president Gabe Paul hold telegram from American League President Joe Cronin who suspended the ballplayer for the remainder of the season and fined him J500 Tuesday as an aftermath of Monday night’s attack with a baseball bat on Detroit pitcher Larry Sherry. But Minnesota Loses Ailing Twins Return By The Associated Press The Minnesota Twins have shut down their sick bay for lack of patients, but a couple of their convalescents seem to need some occupational therapy. ★ ★ ★ Harmon Killebrew, Tony Oliva and Camilo Pascual, exp^t-ed to be the Twins’’ slugging, hitting and pitching leaders this season, played together Tues- day for the first time since July 28. ★ ★ ★ Hieir combined efforts fell short, however, as Baltimore trimmed the Twins 6-4 in 10 innings and postponed their American League pennant-clinching celebration until at least Friday night. Of the three, only (Wva appeared ready to take on the National League winners in the Tigers" McLain Has a Score to Settle Denny Tames Chicago, 6-2 Pitcher After Match With Cieveland Ace DETROIT (fl — Denny McLain with anotho* victory over his “favorite team’’ under his belt, has his si^ts aimed at sett^ a personal feud with Cleveland’s Sam McDowell. Md^ain asked Manager Charlie Dressen to match him this weekend against the Indians’ fireballing lefthander. The request came minutes after McLdn scattered seven hits in the Tigers’ 6-2 victory over Chicago Tuesday ni^t. it it * Gates Brown provided all the runs McLain needed when he hit his first major league grand slam home run to cap a five-run third inning. The loss dn>n>ed the White Sox to third pl^, two and a half games ahead M the Tigers. “McDowell was a tut snotty in Cleveland Monday,’’ McLain explained. “He calls us his lambs and said a few words to me that you can’t print. 1 told him the day would come when I’d get my licks and H might come sooner than he thinks,” McLain added. EAGER TO COMPLY Dressen, eager to see his team finish in second and pleased by the personal challenge taken by McLain, promised to start him against McDowell if the Indians started him Saturday or Sunday. McLain's ’remark about the White Sox being his favorite team stems from the fact that he was drafted by the Tigers after the White Sox decided not to protect him. McLain, a native Chicagoan, j admitted he felt hurt but knows | things have turned out better for him. “I figure I’ve got two more starts coming, McLain said. “That means I can win 16. But I feel I already have 14 — three more than last year—and that should bring me a better salary next year.” Brown hit a 3-2 pitch off loser Joe Horlen who got into trouble by fumbling Ray Oyler’s sacrifice bunt. nRSTRUN Jerry Lumpe singled home the first run in the inning and Norm Cash walked just before Brown came through with his big hit. %?ao.T Wings Open Camp; Howe, Gadsby Back DETROIT (AP) - The Detroit Red Wings launched their 1965-66 National Hockey League season today with the opening of training camp. Gordie Howe and Bill Gadsby, returning for their 20th seasons in the league, were among 54 professional players and 16 amateurs invited to the training camp. * ★ * General Manager-Coach Sid Abel said full-scale workouts will begin Friday, following today’s schedule devoted largely to medical examinations and a preview for newsmoj. The Red Wings camp is designed to separate players into rosters for the NHL team, the Pittsburgh Hornets of the American Hockey League and the Memphis Wings of the Central Professional Hockey League. NEW FACES New arrivals include long-time NHL star Andy Bathgate and Billy Harris and Gary Jarett, obtained in the off-season trade with Toronto. Also due at Olympia Stadium were Ab McDonald and Bob McCord, received in a deal with Boston. Red Wings draft choice Don McKenney and Bryan Watson ere listed for the opening day. Abel planned to look carefully at the performance of Pat Buinn, defenseman who scored 35 points at Tulsa in the Central Professional league last fall. Also up for coaches’ scrutiny are Ncnm Beaudin, top scorer in 1965-66 for Memidiis with 41 goals, and Bob Wall, Memphis defenseman who notched 46 points. A training camp battle was expected for the Red Wings defensive position vacated when Marcel Pronovost was traded to Toronto. Gary Bergman, Detroit regular last season, is expected to vie with Watson, Quinn, McCord and Wall for the spot. - TODAY'S Pistons Toss Ball to Bunfin DETROIT (AP) - The Detroit Pistons let it be known Tuesday that the next move is up to Bill Buntin, former Michigan all-America, if he wants to play with the National Basketball Association club. Buntin and the Pistons have been at odds over the pay offered him in what would be his first professional cage engagement. The Pistons leave Thursday on their 15-game pre-season exhibition tour starting that night against the St. Louis Hawks at Springfield, 111. Baltlmort k MlraiMOta 4, 10 Innlngi If City 3 Dtirolt 0. CMcfOO 2 Washington 4. Kwtai CalHomla 4, Boston O Battlmora OMcilaflv^ 'Vi) at Minnasota (Kaat 10-10) Chicago (Buzhardt 11-7) at Datrolt kh 134)7 night Clavatand (Slahart 104) at Now York Tribe Official Raps Cronin Bat-Swinging Ruling a Mistake—Paul NEW YORK (AP) - Gabe Paul, president of the Geveland Indians, said today that Joe Citmin, presidant of the American Les^, had made a “very serious mistake” in fining Pedro Gonzalez without a hearing. Cronin, on Tuesday, fined Gonzalez, a Cleveland i^elder, $500 and suspended him for the remainder of the season “for engaging in a physical attack with a baseball bet” on Detroit pitcher Larry Sherry in Monday night’s game in Geveland. FIFTH INNING The incident occurred in the fifth inning after Sherry had thrown two close pitches to Gonzalez. A melee resulted when Gonzalez charged Sherry with the bat in his hand. Gonzalez was ejected after order was restored. “You have made a very serious mistake, particularly since you disregard^ a request for a hearing before rendering a decision,” Paul said in a telegram to Cronin’s office in Boston. “It is positively unjust to convict a man and impose such a heavy penalty without giving him an opportunity to state his case.” _ ............. ...14.10) ot Kansas CIW (Tompkins DO), nloM Boston (Morskaad 10-U and Lonborg *-17) at California IBruntt 0-11 and Santord S4) 7, twl-nlgtit San F Los a World Series without the aid of vitamin pills. INJURED KNEE Back from a five-day bout with an injured ri^t knee, Oliva nq^ped three hits, boosting his league-leading average to .320, seven points better than runner-up Carl Yastrzesmki of Boston. KUlebrew returned to the lineup after missing 48 games because of a dislocated left elbow suffered Aug. 2. ★ ★ ★ The team leader in homers and runs batted in when he was injured, Killebrew failed to get a hit his first four times at bat, leaving runners stranded at second two of the times. He was walked int^itionally on his last trip to the plate. Pascual started for the fourth time shice he recovered from arm surgery but lasted only four innings, allowing three runs and four hits. In 22 innings of work following his absence of nearly six weeks, the veteran right-hander, who won his first eight decisions this season, has been battered for 11 earned runs for an earned run average of 4.50. He has won one game while not figuring in the other three decisions. Killebrew was scheduled to continue his on-the-field therapy today as the Twins tried to cut their magic number firom three to one by beating the second-place Orioles. In other AL games Tuesday, New York whipped Cleveland 9-4, California defeated Boston 4-0 and Washington edged Kansas City 4-3. TIED SCORE Minnesota scored two runs in the eighth for a 2-2 tie, but Baltimore pulled it out with two runs in the 10th, the first coming on Luis Aparicio’s two-out single and the other on Mel Nelson’s bases-loaded walk to Boog Powell. The Yankees’ Horace Clarke recorded his first grand slam — it also was his first honwr in the majors — and helped Mel Stot-tlemyre gain his 19th victory against eight defeats. Clarke connected against Cleveland’s Floyd Weaver in the fourth. Fred Newman tossed a five-hitter at Boston, evening his record at 14-14. Dick Sisson highlighted California’s three-run first inning with a two-run single. Chicago 7, Philadelphia S Cincinnati 7, San Francisco 4 Lot Angeles 3, Milwaukee 1 St Lou's 3. Houston 0 Pittsburgh 6, New York S Phlldelphia (Bufmlng*!74l, at Chicago Paul S-51 New York (McGraw 34) at Pittsburgh = night t (Koulax 234) at Mllwau- "1SL Francisco (Marichal 22-11) at Cincinnati (Ellis 2041, nighi Houston (Roberts 90) at St. Louis (Jester '■'» Philadelphia at Chicago Spartans Work on Offense 2 Wolverines Sidelined From Our News Wires ANN ARBOR - The l)niver-sity of Michigan’s football team will be without the services of two regulars when the Wolverines open their home season Saturday against California. Coach Bump Elliott said there was little charice that either halfback Jim Detwiler or guard Barry Dehlin would see action this weekend. They were injured Saturday in SSSTc" ISlJ&ib*’ J's'phs’n c lop 4 Brown K Ward 3B 3 t 4 t Horton rf Hanson as 4 4 3 4 Wart 3b Skowron 1b 4 0 0 4 Fraahan c Voas rt 4 12 1 Oylar ss 3 Barry c( 4 0 10 McLain p 2B-«oblnion, Lwnpt. 3B-Voss. H«- M ‘ ‘ i f Hgton L. 11-13 .. 3 kL I McLain W, M4 4 T-t:S4. A-BMB. 1.1 NEW POWER PLANT - Walt Arfons of Akron, Ohio, introduced his rocket-powered “Wingfoot Express” yesterday in a test run at (he Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah. At the wheel in the test was Bob Tatroe of Grand AP Phaoatax Rapids, who used four and seven rockets in two separate runs. Arfons is after the world land speed record of 536.71 miles an hour set by his brother. Art, at the Fiats last October. 4^ . the victory over North Carolina. However, he said guard Paul Johnson, recovering from bruised ribs, would be able to play. EllioU plans to replace Det- Rkk Sygar and Dehlin with junior guard Kenneth Flanni-gan. Sophomore defensive end Tom Pulien will replace Roger Rose-ma who started last weekend. SCRIMMAGE ^ EAST LANSING - Michigan State staged an offensive scrimmage Tuesday to tiy and iron out some of the mistakes uncovered In the 13-3 win over UCLA in the season’s o|^r. A half an hour of head-knocking was ordered although rain showers wet down the players. A similar half hour of defensive scrimmage is on tap for Wednesday. * * ★ Coaches were cheered by the return to action of first string defensive ends Bubba Smith and Bob Vlney. Both had rested overnight in the hospital. Smith for a groin injury and Viney for art injured knee. The iNdr, mainstays of the Spartan defense, are expected to be ready for the game against Penn State this Saturday. LEAVES UTTLE DOUBT-The effective block of Twins’ catcher Earl Battey (10) is emphasized by the forceful call of umpire Larry Napp. Baltimore’s Jerry Adair is out on the second-inning play Tuesday in Minnesota. Drysdale Pitches, Bats Dodgers Past Braves By the Associated Press Don Drysdale — g^-hitting pitcher, or good-pitching hitter? Take your pick. He’s helping keep the Los Angeles Dodgers afire in the National League race with both his arm and his bat. * A ★ Drysdale’s versatile performance Tuesday night was typical. The tall ri^t-hander recorded his 21st pitching victory of the season with a siy-hitter, drove in the clinching run with a sinh gle, and helped build an insurance run with another single. Result: The Dodgers’ fifth straight victory, 3-1 over Milwaukee, and a notch upward in pennant scramble. THREE BEHIND Second-place Los Angeles now I three games back of the San Francisco Giants, who were trimmed 7-4 by Cincinnati after an error by first baseman Willie McCovey opened the way for four unearned runs. Drysdale’s two hits raised his batting average to .296, highest for the Dodgers, while his third straight victory raised his pitching record to 21-12. The lone Milwaukee run, in the-fourth inning after an error by Maury Wills, was unearned — giving the Dodger pitching staff the remarkable distinction of allowing just one earned run in 45 innings covering the club’s five-game winning string. ♦ ★ ♦ In other NL action—Jim Pag-liaroni’s two-run honner with two out in the last of the ninth lifted the Pittsburgh Pirates to their fifth straight victory, 6-5 over the New York Mets; Ron Santo rapped two homers and drove in six runs as the Chicago Cubs beat Philadelphia 7-5; and St. Louis blanked Houston 34). The Giants, who had won 17 of their last 18 games, went into the sixth inning at Cincinnati with a 4-1 lead — but came out of it trailing 7-4. ★ ★ ★ Two Red runs were in, two were out and bases were loaded when Tommy Harper sent a grounder to McCovey. The big first baseman hobbled it, enabling another run to score. Then Pete Rose’s single made it 5-4, and Vada pinson capped the rally with his second hit of the inning — a two-run single. STAY ALIVE Bill Mazeroski kept the Pirates alive against the Mets with a (»e-out single in the ninth. Then, after reliever Dave Eilers fanned Willie Stargell, Pagliaroni tagged bis game-wiiming Immer. Santo socked his 30th homer, with two aboard, in the first inning, singled across a run in the third, and broke a 5-5 tie in the eighth when he hit his 31st homer, with one on. Ernie Banks accounted for the other Cub run against Uie Phils with his 26th homer, in the first inning. Luck Fails Bowler in 300-Game Bid It would seem only a s h o r t time now before Howe’s Lanes has its first sanctioned 300 game. In fact, the time appeared eminent Tuesday night when Ben Sheppard, Drayton Plains struck with the first 11 deliveries of his third game in the Waterford Merchants l eague. But Lady Luck was fickle; he missed the pocket and left two pins to finish with a 296. Sheppard of the Head’s Barber Sh^ team, had 188 and 165 for his first two games and finished with 671, also the night’s top series. ist month, Howe’s bad its first perfect game ever, but it was during open bolwing and wasn’t a sanctioned effort. PmIIk PrtM mwi* TWO-WAY CHIEF - Tom Howard fills both offensive end and defensive halfback roles among the Pontiac Central starters. Hollis Paces PCH Hamers Past Skippers Pontiac Central handed Waterford Township its iecond straight Whitewashing in cross country yesterday at Beaudette Park. The Chiefs tortk the top five places to post a 15^6 vlctwy. Waterford was blairiced by West Bloomfield fa) its opener. ★ ★ 4r BiO HolUs led the Chiefs with a one second victory over Martin Acosta. Hollis was timed in 10:37. Harold Boone finished third with a time of 10:44. Joe Dickie was fourth and A1 e s t e r Johnson was fifth. Tom Orahl of the Skippers p I i c e d sixth and Terry Gil- Chemics Won 12-6 in Opener; PCH Has Backfield Depth Pontiac Cefttral’s Chiefs wasted no time in gaining respect among the voters on the Associated Press weekly Class A state PoU. After a resounding, seasonopening 33-7 win at Saginaw Arthur Hill, the PCH grldders were named the second beat high school team in the state. ★ ★ ★ Whether they’ll gain an equal amount of respect from their Saginaw Valley C(mference opponents probably will be known after the Chiefs home opener Friday night. Midland’s Chernies will provide the opposition at I p.m. under the Wisner Stadium lights. This cOLutd be a thorough test for PCH. A 12-6 winner over Saginaw last week. Midland could put pressure on Central where Arthur HiU didn’t. While both Chemic touchdowns against Saginaw came on running plays, the team’s strong point is expected to be passing. With the switch of last season’s quarterback Bill Anderson to halfback, two good passers are in the starting backfield. BROTHERS The Carter brothers, Steve and Denny, now fill the signal calling role. The loss of the team’s top running back Jack Lapelle with an injury and the availability of a four sets of pass catchers also underiines the team’s aerial offense. * * ★ Arthur Hill didn’t test PCH’s pass defense, which in previous campaigns hasn’t been too strong. Midland’s scouts undoubtedly have reported the untried defenses. One development in Central coach Paul Dellerba’s favor is the quick contribution made of-fenshrely by the second and third-string backs. Their running was very encouraging last Friday. Karl Williams, Art Wiggins and Ken Seay all are going both ways. Their past experience in the defensive secondary makes it imperative that they be avil-able for regular action there. GOOD SIZE Another Midland strong point will be the offensive line where five starters are back from last season. Several 200 pounds-plus linemen are around to test the PCH forward wall both offensively and defensively. An injured snkle, moreover, will likely cost the Chiefs the services of middle guard Ken VoUmer. Paul Roberts has been tabbed to fill the gap with bis 166 pounds. PCH completed both of its pass attempts last week (and had two intercepted but nullified by penalties) and may turn to the aerial game if its outslda sweeps are contained. * ★ ★ ‘ Last season. Midland took an 84) home field win, though that was the contest when Central’s football fortunes began to show an upswing. The second-rated Chiefs will be favored over 11th-ranked Midland this time. Oxford captured the top three laces in handing Rochester a 23-33 setback. L^ing the winners wah George Bovee with a time of 11:50. Jfan Slnicola was second and Dog Bass third. Grid Fans Flock to Top 10 Gaines NEW YORK (AP) - The top 10 college football games in attendance last week^ drew 534, 664 fans. It was the first time any 10 games of a season-(q)en-ing weekend attracted more than a combined total of a half million, the National Collegiate Athletic Association’s g^ico Bureau said Tuesday. The Bureau said the previous opening week high of 496,160 was set the weekend of Sept. 22, 1962, The top 10 a year ago lured 493,706. iouto Call(.-MlnnM4t4 .... ig Sr M4f^-........ ..... THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 22, 1965 C-*18 JStateColle^ tis Unbeaten Northarn Michigan Owns 2-0 Record By the Amieiated Preti Northern Michigan, with two victoriei under ite belt, ia one of seven undefeated teams as Midiigan colleges prepare for the second big wedc of the season. The state’s three major colleges, BOdilgan, Afichigan State Western Michigan, all were victorious in their season-openers, as were Michigan Tech, Olivet, and Hillsdale, or ILY WINNER (Mlvet was the only MIAA team of the five who saw action last weekend to win. Eastern Michigan, Kalamazoo and Wayne State each begins its Bob Benjamin of Northwood has scored four touchdowns in two'games to take the lead in the individual scoring race with 24 points. Pete Boroday of Albion hu 14 points and five other players each have 12. The over-all combined state record stands at 9-8. Norltwm M Hlllidal* . Mkhlgan Michigan II MIchIm Ti OHvaT... Parrlt Hogt . Cantral W L Pct.Pt(.OP ? 8 l:8o If ! 81:88 ; 8 ]:88 8! » 1 ?’i8 »a 8 ) :88 '8 S 8 1 ;888 8 a I itral MtaMnn .... Eaiiani l^lgiin, ym llalt Mva nal f. Sanlamln N‘lhw'4 I 4 0 I 14 Nta Boroday, AIMon .1 1 2 I 14 Jim Dalwllar. MM. .. 1 2 - • - BOB Lantiy, NMU ' ‘ Karl Wllaon, Ollvat . Braves Bid Adieu io Milwaukee Baseball Fans MILWAUKEE (UPI) - The schedule says it wiU be an important game in the tight Np-tlonal Uague race, but it wiU be more like a requiem for a baseball team. Only about 20,000 persons, at the most, are expected to halffill county stadium tonight to watch the Braves iday their last game as Milwaukee representatives. It will be the last out-of-court chapter in a story as strange as any in the histoi7 of The Braves will play next year in Atlanta, unless Milwaukee County or the state of Wisconsin are successful in their legal fights to keep them here. The Braves have filed a countersuit to the anti-trust charges against them, and it may be well into winter before it is determined whether tonight really will mark Milwaukee’s last stand as a major league city. Even if 2t,IM show up, it won’t be enough to push season attendance over die IN,-080 mark. But the crowds have been more than double what many had expected when the league last fall ordered the Braves to play one more season here, in accordance with their contract for use of the stadium. ^ ★ ★ Others point to the 280,000 the Braves drew in their last season in Boston in 1952, when there was no hint of a move to Milwaukee. ^ MIEWMILUONS Talk about attendance dealt in millions rather than tens of thousands during most of the Braves’ 13 seasons here. In their first one, 1.8 million fans, chests swollen with pride over their major league dty status, flocked to the stadium. Attendance exceeded 2 mil-Uon in each of the next four years, and from 1068 through 1058 the average single game atteadance was more than 20,-080. The love affair gave way to Uttemess last October when the team’s Chicago owners, who acquired the club largely on credit in 1982,‘announced they were movingfo Atlanta. The owners plan no special ceremonies to mark tonic’s oc- \ WE WILL OVERHAUL YOUR ENGINE Special Low Price! 6 Cyl.............’95” V-8's.............’115” Thio includ«8 . . . Ringo, Rod Boar-ingo, Main Boaring, Grind Valvos, Fit Pina, Doglaxo Cylindor Walla, (Dakota, Oil and Labor! STANDARD ENGINE REBUILDERS 695 AUBURN RD. • 338-9671-338-96T2 MOTOR EXCHAIVGE 40S S. foBinow St. PI |-74i2 1 it was unknown whether any of them would be here. They teve spent moet of the summer readying their Atlanta operation, ^ a skeletal front office crew has manned the Milwaukee front. and Fanning chalked it up to un- all but eliininated them. favorable weather plus the Braves’ sudden fall from pen- Jim Fanning, assistant general manager in charge of Milwaukee operations, had expected large turnouts for the Braves’ nant contention, last home stand, which began They were just 2V5 games out last Friday. ; two weeks ago, but the San But they haven’t materialized, | Francisco Giants’ hot streak has Fanning was hopeful that the presence of the still contending Los Angeles Dodgers, always a big draw here, and their star pitcher Sandy Koufax, would spur attendance. Ailing Redskin Back WASHINGTON (UH) — Pat Richter of the Washington Redskins, who has been sidelined with a ruptured kidney for two weeks, was released from Doctors Hospital ’Tuesday. He is expected to be back in uniform a week from next Sunday when the Redskins meet the Lions in Detroit in a National Football League game. Runner Gains NFL Stature With 49ers NEW YORK (AP) - Gary Lewis, an obscure minor league player at this time last year, is the rushing leader Of the National FootbaU League after the first week of action. In the years since Jim Brown came bursting into the league only five other men — Tom Wilson, Bobby Joe Conrad, Bobby Mitchell, the late Willie Gali-more and Bill Brown — have topped the league. ★ w ★ Lewis ground out 91 yards in seven carries for the San Francisco 49ers Sunday in their 82-24 romp over the Chicago B< Including a 69-yatd touchdown m. A year ago the 49ers cut Lewis, a product of Arizona State University, and be shu along to Joliet in the United Football League. When a wave of injuries hit the San Francisco running backs in late season, Lewis moved up to the big club and became the starting fullback in the last three games. ★ , w * As usual, Jim Brown was not far behind. The Qeveland full-badc was limited to 65 yards in 21 carries against Washington but that was good enough for third place, behind Lewis and Ernie Green, Qeveland halfback who had 89 yards. Liwli, SF OrMti. Cl* Brown. CM "'~"'l.iSDINb>AH RBCBII^Bt' KmM. Vth. TBI 8r»Sn.‘1!L... DowMr, OB Smith, tt.L Ptrfci, SF Cwr*d, St.L. 8?r7fc.r-..................- irw J fi fi 4 go, olw e»““ *— ' Blvtaii, Chi ftK'o'Jf'- ...................... ::::::: 8 5 ill ..............? 1 ? I! cWfA’-^ Soccer Unit in Finale DETROIT (UPI) — The Hapoel soccer team from Tel Aviv, Israel, will make its final pearance during its current seV-en-game tour of North America when it meets the Detroit Kickers at the University of Detroit Stadium Saturday night. MnWE^S NEWEST, MOST BEAUTIFUL GOLF COURSE LEAGUE .& OUnNG RESERVATIONS INVITED Holly Greens GoK Course Add tpociel enleyment to noxt year's leaguo gelfina by playing In spacious, beautiful sunoundings. Tho -yardage ranges from 5900 to 7100 depending on the play-si's cheico. fxceilent feed is available In fhe clubkeuae er graupe con enioy o catered picnic in the pinegreve. Just take 1-75 te the Holly Road Interchange - on easy half hour drive. Write or cell for a colorful brochure ond and full dotaile. WHEELS WITH THE PURCHASE OF EACH FISK RANCHER 100% NYLON FULL 4-PLY MUD AND SNOW TIRE SIZE One Fisk Mud & Snow Tiro Tubeless One Matching • Wheel You Pay Only 6.00/6.50x13 1388 400 1 7.50x14*7.75x14 6.70x15*7.75x15 IT*® 400 2188- 7.10x15*8.15x15 8.00x14*8.25x15 1388 400 22«r 7.60x15*8.45x15 1988 40© 23«8- Savings luii AiiInb yySBC SXP ________ ANTI-FREEZB FOBMI7I4A MDIATOB FLUSH 133 e«ii«M FAMOUS BRAND SPARK PLUGS ”^h40« ‘ UBVBRBEBATOB UNIX ~ F188 • NEW DESIONS • All NEW SOIID^ STATE cmcuiT«y VAI.IIAHM-: CODPON GUSS PACKED MUFFLER INSTALLED AT NO EXTRA COST For Most Ford, Chevrolet and Plymouth cars. 499 Thursday, Friday and Saturday With Coupon Only Soptombor 23,24 end 25,1965 CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD C—14 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNRSDA;^, SEPTEMBER 22, 1065 Major League Boxes |:.;1 s?* Hi! tST." ItttsHiia- S 1 3 0 T®v*r - 4 1 1 I KIndM m t 0 • 0 Again Favor Farmington in Running Farmington is a solid favorite to hang onto its cross country crown when the third annual Milford Invitational gets underway Saturday at 10 a m. in Kensington Park. * ★ ★ Eleven teams are entered in the Held, including a Pontiac Northern squad that finished in the runner-up position last year. Farmington has four of its top seven runners returning, and the Falcons are expected to get their strongest challenge from Bloomfield Hills, Milford and Howell. Among the runners bidding for individual honors are Bill Hollis of Pontiac Central, who placed fourth last yeair, Sterling Speim of Bloomfield Hills and Kim Hartman of Southfield. . Trailing Farmington (42) and PNH (70) in the scoring last year were Milford (93), Walled Lake (109) and Pontiac Central (141). Penn State Sending Rookie QB Against MSI) UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. (» — The 1965 football fortunes of the Penn State Nittany Lions ride today with a green quarterback named White. Given the nod by head coach Rip Engle is 6-1 junior Jack White, a transfer student from the University of Florida who has seen only limited action in the uniform of die blue and white. But this is typical of State where untested quarterbacks and the eastern college football championdiip are beginning to go haixl in h^. Three of the last four years, the Lions opened the season with virtnal “rookies” at the controls, then marched on to win the Lambert Trophy, emblematic of eastern college sn- problem plaguing Engle, who in 15 seasons at Penn State, has never had a losing record. ★ ★ ★ For one thing, you just don’t come up every day tidth a replacement for the likes of All-America ntiddle guard Glenn Cress-Cewfn^w MIKord. Pontiac Central, Pontiac Northern. SouthIMd, Bloomfield Hills, Walled Lake, Watarlord, Grend Blanc, H Ecorse, Farmlnslon. White, relagated to the role of understudy to Gary Wydman last year, faces his first big test Saturday against Michigan State which holds a 5-1-1 edge over the Lions in previous meetings. “White is a good runner, ball handler and field general, and showing much progress in his passing,” said Engle. OTHER PROBLEMS Quarterback isn’t the only Also gone through gradna-tioa are defensive end Bad Yost, tackle John Delbert, and linebacker Ed Stnckmth, “We have a long way to go in defense," Engle said, discussing the prospects for the 1965 season in wbich the Lions have been tabbed preseason favorites to repeat for the Lambert Trophy. Filling Kessler’s shoes will be a giant 6-6, 265-pound junior, Dave Rowe from Willingboro, Wins Explorer Tourney . Greg Stuk of Ottawa TToop 166 fired a net 72 Sunday at Clarkston Golf Club to win the annual Clinton Valley Council Explorer Golf Tournament. In the adult division, Glen Axelson of Ottawa Post 14 led the way with a net 74. N.J., described by Efogle as having the potential of “a real fine football player.” * * * Another pleasant preseason surprise has been the play of Bob Higgle, who after a junior year as Penn State’s third leading ground gainer with Q.2 yards a carry, has been shifted to defensive halfback to bolster the Lion secondary. Probable strong points in the Lions’ multiple-T offemdve at- B0WUN6 T06ETHEMESS IT lOCHESTEl LANES 430 Main St., Rochester, keeps a family hoppy, active and healthy. Children 18 years old and under, 25c a line. Adults 3 games $1.00. 4th garhe free. League openings available. OL 6-9341 FuUbadt Tom Nowatzk# of^ Detroit Lions holds the Bif ^ and NCAA fleUgoslre^;Jto a 55-yard effort against Ohio State in 1954. I MOTORCYCLES cusToa eoLOB I 23t W. Msatcaha, Pontiac tadc will be running and line I^y. The big question mark I sMms to be paaiing, although I in State’s final full-scale scrim- 1 mage. White hit on 15 of 21 for I more than ISO yards and one I touchdown. TIRE TALK A customer asked us a question the other day which deserves an answer here. He asked why we don’t advertise with the pack — 14 price tire sales, second tire for |1 or even “free”, etc. Fair question — and easy to answer. We happen to think this . . j. tyrc of advertising is Intentionally misleading, d<^ nw fa&ly describe the value, arid further, confuses an already badly misinformed consumer. To seU a second tire at W price -- .the first has to M of the past . to give a second tire “free” or for |1 ke ‘first tire at our “no-trade-in price will make such advertising a thing it’s already undergoing careful scrutiny in overpriced requires ginunicks like or at our “regular list price”, etc. We think soon the FTC will " other markets. For our part — we refuse to do it. When you buy a tire here — the first to is priced right and you don’t nave to buy two to get a aim vuw uuii 5 iiavc w um/ iww w •• —------j tire quality will be accurately and honestly you and the right tire for your needs sold you. And thirdly, the odds are ID to 1 you’ll save money to boot! ___ We mean it when we say: “We sell tires as thoagh year Carter Tire Co., 379 S. Saginaw St., Pontiac FE 54115 CLEARWATER, Fla. (AP)-St. Paul downed Lansing, Mich., 5-0 Tuesday in the annual World Amateur Softball Association Championship here. STARTS TOMORROW FOR 10 DAYS . . . TIRE VALUES AT THEIR BEST! nCKAmR..GETADEU 0N600DYEARHRES 1 0 0 0 il”f3!ont. DP-PWI««tjphl/*'l,**CI ? Ts."XL?’X'- I kT- ____CIHCIMMATI^ SCMKMM •» 1 • • 0 H McCi^ lb 4*00 Rm *b Mart a J ' * J *[Klw„«»-Wli«MMlh }l Jt Mm I OPfN DAIL^tU9^SAT. 64 I UNITED TIRE SERVICE 1N7 BoMwin Avo. MGONFUl OFSERV CES as EQ \y Join Today }U and Load tha Way I Awlo Club m«mb*r«hip oifort lb* woponful of | Mrvicat that you nood for modom molorinB. • aound-lho-<lock rood torvico • Brood poraonol occidonl inturoiKO • $5,000 boil bond proloction AUTOMOBILE CLUB OF MICHIGAN FAIRFIELD, Conn. (UPI) -Willie Reed, who suffered broken nose in a scrimmage earlier this week, will be available for the New York Knickerbockers first National Basketball League exhibition game with the Philadelphia 76ers Friday night. He hsid his nose set SERVIJSG OAKLAISI) COINTY OVER 35 YEARS goodAear NYLON ALL-WEATHERir • Safer 3-T Nylon Cord • Extra-milaataTufsyn rubber • Good dependable quality • Turnpike-proved Save even more on a set of 4— 4 for ^36 MOTRADE'IM HEEDED SIZE MAKE OF CAR tyf^ PRICE FOR 2* PRICE FOR4* S.70 X IS Chevrolet. EorA Plymouth. Dodge. Mem-hlor. Ne«h, HudBon. Stiidehefctr, WfIlyB. Tubo-lypo blockwBlI S36 7 50> 14 or 6.70 m IS Chevrelet. Oedf e. Ford. Plymouth, Mor-cury. Pontiec, Nem-bler. Sludebeker. WfHyft. Tubelett bloeAwaM »25 $48 • 00 m 14 Chrytler. DeSote. Pon-1i^ OlcHmebtle.^tr- TUbolew ^31 ^60 good/Vear NYLON AU-WEATHER • 18% more body strength and 8% more tread wear than All-Weather "42” • extra traction on wot ordry roads • Size to fit standard, compact and imported cars Stewd to wha* yoa Mr Bnt to d |wk« feted balaw. HITEWALLS only $2 MORE PER TIRE. RLACK TURELESS SIZE CAR 1st Tire PRICE* 2ndTba PRICE* S.OO X IS For model* of Chevy 11* Comet end Falcon. $7f7 S.SOX IS For Buich Sptelal. Olds FSS, Corvair, Ltnur. V.l-lant, fairl.na. $1725 $8<2 dill For ChavraM, Dadia, Fard, Flymaulh, Marcury.Pmtiae. R.mblar. Sludabaliar, WMIys. $20~ $|Q30 • 00k14 •,?5 X 14 7.10 m 15 •,15x 15 Far Chryalar. OaSala,OM.-mabila. Pantiac, Marcury, alM many Slatian Watant. $2330 $||BS S.50 X 14 S.5S X 14 r.MatS • 4Sxl5 Far Cdaal. OaSata. Chrytlar. Fenliac, Marcury. OMima- $25” M2" I.00/S.Z0 X IS • S5/S.00 X IS Far Buicti Ckclra. Cadillac. Oldtmablla. Packard. Chryt-lar, Lifwaln. *29“ $141$ NO Offtr Good on W TRADE-IN NEEDED NO MONEY DOWN FREE MOUNTING Lozelle Agency, Inc. ALL FORMS OF ' INSURANCE ^ 504 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG. 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SaL 'Dl 5 n i-0900 Cin TIRE 508 N. PBRRT - OpMi EiMAy'lU 9 R.W. V T.5'S . ivr THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 22, 1965 C—15 the Out^ew Tml with DON VOGEL Outdoor Editor, Pontiac Pros* LARGEST ELK ^ The largest elk taken 1,000 pounds, the elk i during the 1964 special seaaon in Michigan Loebrich of Sanford. 1 dwarfs museum artist John Hope of Michi- a spread of 38 inches i gan State University who prepared it for dis- more than 50 indies, piay. Estimated to have a live weight of Federation Proxy Hits Pollution Indians Show Up Civilized Man Pheasant Hunting Outlook Dims for Thumb 25 Per Cent Decline Noted in Brood Count Experts Study Causes After Good Hatching Report for Spring Pheasant kill in Michigan this fall may dip below last year’s total bag of slightly more than 837.000 birds. At least that’s the way things look now to jCjonservation Department game men after rural mail carriers took a recent reading on pheasant production throughout the birds’ major homeland in Lower Michigan. Too Hot in Marshes Teal Nimrods Playing It Cool Brood counts during the annual summer survey were down seven per cent from a year ago, with fewer sightings in ’The Thumb area accounting for the overall drop. In that part of the state, covering Bay, Huron, St. Oai|r, Sanilac, Saginaw and Toacela counties, this year’s phoaaaat crop appears to be 25 per cent below 1964. Elsewhere in southern Michigan, survey results indicate the birds have about held their own tinee a year ago. Substantial increases were noted b the western area of Allegan and Ottowa counties. * Fall prospects are lookbg up b the northern fringe area of the phemant range where rural mailmen recent a 30 per cent jump b the munber of broods aem. Highest brood counts were made b Gladwb {uid Mecosta Ducks and hunters have been playbg it cool since Michigan’s special teal season opened last week. Except for Thursday’s opening day when weather conditions were ideal. Mother Nature has seen fit to turn on the heat. "This has kept hunters cooling their heels near air conditioners and the ducks preening themselves on open water. * -k * Last weekend’s expected rush of hunters failed to materblize. Those who went to the St. Clair Fbts find Saginaw \Bay for ■ Oad early mombg shootbg^ad fair are pleased with the over-all hunt. “We expected to hear more grumblbg from hunters,” said Howard Greene, district game supervisor of the Pontiac Lake office who was at the Flats. Most of the hunters we checked were quite happy at the chance to get out early. It didn’t seem to matter whether they had no teal or a limit. “Usually, we hear com-pbbts from some hunters about the bek of ducks, the weather or anythbg else. But But fllghto declined as the temperature went up. The average per hunter from openbg day through Sunday was slightly over one teal at the Bay, Flab and Ppbt Mouille. About one-third of^the bag was green-wing teal, indicating that few flighb were down from >^ie north. ’The locally raised blue wmgs made up the remainder of the kill. CLOSES FRIDAY ’The fbal resulb will not be known, of course, until after the season closes Friday. But Conservation Department personnel LANSING (AP) ~ Court of Appeab Judge Louis f). McGregor sometimes wonders if the Indian should be called a savage and your average civilized man civilized. McGregor, of FUnt, currently b serving hb second term as president of the National Wildlife Federation — be world’s largest civilian conservation group with ib nun-e ban two million members. ■k k * “We were shooUng wild geese b a remote part of be Canadian Hudson Bay Country,” be recalled. “The bst bbg our Indian guide did before we left was to take all our tin cans and ober debrb and bury it carefully b the ground-despite the remoteness of the spot. “I might want to come back here some time,” be Indian McGregor constrasted thb wib a recent, typical experience b Michigan. EARLY CHECK He had been trout fishbg on one of Michigan’s better streams, emptying tato northern Lake Huron. Gettbg up in be early mombg to check be stream, his day was spoiled by the sight of five boys making a 2 Research Stations Closed to Fishing LANSING (M - Trout Fbh-ermen who used to catch record fbh b be FSigson River and Hunt Creek reiMMih stations have been told they can’t catch these tame trout any more. _ . The state Conservatioii J!, n mission Friday announced closing of a number of state-owned research waters ta ndrtli-era Mbhigan for the next five years, startbg Jan. 1. The reason for the shutdown, it was explained, was the fish expertaents had been clouded by the angling pressure. Hie' Ash experts, it wu said, need to watch beir trout and other tish without the public combg b to disturb be controls. . The Pigeon and Hunt Creek tavorlta targets for fish seekers b the early season. s out of tossbg b and breaking beer bottles left by some other careless fisherman. McGregor spends five days a week on the appeals court bench. His weekends, off-duty Oakland Lakes Open for Trout Special Season Set Through November Several Oakland County lakes and ponds remain open to taking rainbow and brown trout brough November. They are Davisburg, Bald Mountain and Fenton ponds; Alderman, Bridge, Cedar Island, Cemetery, Chamberlain, Commerce, Crescent, G r o t h e t. Deep, Deer, Dollar and Ellza-beb lakes. Also open are Graham, Green, Greens, Lotus, Maceday, Mohawk, Moss, Orchard, Oxbow, Proud, Reed, Schoolhouse, Shoe, Van Norman, Little Silver, Square, Stony, Sugden, Union and Wormer lakes. Davison Lake In Lapeer County is open. Hundreds of lakes and streams b Michigan will be open through Novbmbar. A list is available from the Conservation Department. The mab stream of the Au Sable River will be i. brough Oct. U from BurtoQ’A Landing to Wakeiy Biidfe. Ibe regular trout se and vacation time be spends crusadii^ for conservation and against water and air pollution and any ober despoiling of our natural resources. k k k McGregor, a trim, rugged -looking outdoor type at 65, also served two terms as president of the Mbhigan United Conservation Cbbs and holds memberships b the Wilderness Society, Natianal Audobon Society, Natkmal Rifle Aasodatbn and Izaak Walton League of America, among others. He is a membw of Gov. George Romney’s committee on water rights, poUution and control. In the field of conservation, he belbves Michigan b doing a top job among be states. “But a good job is not bebg done anywhere on pollution control,” he says flatly. “For b-stance. Lake Erie is all but a dead lake because city sewage b not bebg properly proc-Bd.” NA’TURAL AREAS McGregor feeb fast action must be taken to save some of the natural wildlife areas still remaining—and so approves be Sleepbg Bear Dunes proposal, wib iHoper protections. McGregor is strong for state control of huntbg and fishing regulations. His mab concern is the growing trend of pollution wib the growing population. Bom b Lbden, Genesee County, he fondly recalls be fine fi^ng bere on 27 lakes within five miles of his home for panflsh, pike and bass. GOOD HATCH Department game men are puzzled about the over-all decline b pheasant observations because southern Michigan’s spring breeding popubtion of these birds was up 25 per cent from last year. The birds’ failure to show a production gab from their higher breeding numbers points to below-average nestbg success early thb spring. Just why thb should be is be Ug myst^, since conditions thb summer seemed conducive for a good hatch of young birds. Solunar Tables The schedule of Solunar Pe-..ods, as printed below, has been taken from John Alden Knight’s Solunar Tables. Plan yoUr days so that you will be fishing b good territory or hunting in good cover during bese times. 2:25 f:30 2:50 Go To Orion For Your GTO and SAVE at... RUSS JOHNSON MOTOR SALES IIM-24, Lak* Orion III-I2II 3 The BEST In g TAMDERMY Quick Deer Season for This Nimrod FOREST GLEN, Calif. (UPI) Deer hunter B. H. Glvins, 72, lined up hb rifle for the first shot of be two-lMick limit t ^ I At a Retuonabh Pricel I • ANTELOK m ta Ml \ oMULIDlIRlIltaMI I 0 WHin TAIL DEER I INtaiSS I •RNEAtANTt ADUORtlll ] o f IIH lUI Nr Inob Spy blinds were operated by the department to see if hunters were shootbg at protected ducks. Some people — even a few experts — had predicted a wholesale slaughter of ducks other than teal because “hunters can’t tell one specie from another.” “We had only one incident that I know of at the Flats,” said Greene. “I’m sure a few mallards, baldpates and wood-dies were killed, but we only saw one hunter shoot at a mallard.” k k k Edward J. Mikub, the de- partment’s wetlands specialbt, who checked results at the Bay and Flab reported hunters to be “very conscientious about shooting at the right (teal) ducks.” The actual openbg day hunting pressures was light. The Bay had about 500 hunters and the St. Clair area dose to be same number. Only 7,000 hunters applied for the 15,000 available permits to hunt b the 10 designated areas. Teal Were notable for beir absence on be west side of be state and bunting pressure was extremely light. SMOTC Adds Class at Avondale A dog training class at Avon-1 field school in Pontiac and Sept, dale High School has been added 127 at Bloomfield Hills High to bose already announced by'School. All demonstrations start TUIIDAY'S PWHTB _____:hb! CulKn, Em 'mwlca, B.W.I., OMAHA, Ntb - ............... .... I, wid Btmto Black, 220, Chicago, draw, the Southern Michigan Obedience Training Club. The program will get under way wib a demonstration Sept. 30 at 8 p.m. Jim Reynold (693-6757) will have charge of the class. Demonstrations are planned tonight at the CAI building b Waterford, tomorrow at V^t- at 8 p.m. Walled Lake opened last night at the junior high, but registrations will continue to be accepted until regular training starb next Tuesday. SMOTC also has tentative plans for a series of classes in Romeo. Additional Information can be obtained from Mrs. Carol Wabwright (75^2431). “MUSKIE” FISHIHG Lake St.Clair 2T-Ft. Chris Ctal All Taekla Fumithtd WgvIcMMl Opwilng AvaUabU OallUtioaTIMm When he flr«l, his 1966 hun^ bg was over. Glvbi’ shot went brough be head of one buck and then killed anober standing next to it. HUFFMAN’S 3563 Mark Road TAXIDERMY FE 8-4455 .‘A‘ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDKgSDAY. SEPTEMBER 22, 196g ONE laiLOR Goldwafer Backer From California Making Good in Australia MELBOURNE, Auitrilia (AP) — Robert Ansett may be naembered in Califoniia as Ite yoong American idw took Ms family to Australia assert-edly because Barry Gold water tost the presidential election. hi Australia, Robert Ansett is known as a transport magnate'! aon who returned home to make «ood. ^ ^ ^ Ansett, SI; Ms wife, Karenf and tfwir Am children arrived last Aprfl and settled into a bouse in a Melbourne suburb. He bas become genial manager of one M Australia’s four big rent-a-car firms and is showing busiitess acumen as he struggles to improve his cmnpany’s position in a tough market. Ansett’s father, Reginald Myles Ansett, heads the huge Ansett Transp<^ Industries, including an airline. UA CITIZEN The younger Ansett hasn’t found it necessary to call on his , father’s resources. The son — by a previous marrige — lived in Melbourne until he was 10. He is an American citizen. “I knew nothing about the car rental business when I decided to leave San Diego and migrate bade to Australia," ha said. “I had not even thou^t of noaking a living from rentMg cars." WWW He has helped Uft the firm from a small one-dty outfit into a nationwide operatkn. “We had about 10 cars in Mel-bournie and that was it," he said. “Now we are approaching Drug Affects Just Neurotic Dogs By Science Service ATLANTIC CITY — The first moital drug to be found that relieves depression in neurotic animals but has no effect on healthy ones was reported here to the American Chemical Society meeting. Standard tranquilizers and antidepressants such as reserpine, chlorprwnazine and imipramine affected healthy dogs used as controls in the same way that they affected the neurotic animals, Dr. Allan P. Gray of Neisler Laboratories, DecStur, 111., explained. But not so the new drug, which has the shorthand name Cyproiidol. Chemically t h e drug is tran8-^(4-py^idyl)-a,a-diphenyl - cyciopropanemetha-nol. The researchers at Neisler picked out their experimental neurotic dogs from a stock of 1,000 animals. Very vicious or ovOTly withdrawn animals were considered abnormal and treated with Cyproiidol. The drug appeared to be more beneficial to the withdrawn animals, and therefwe was classed as an antidepressant. Dr. Gray said. CLINICAL STUDIES Clinical studies will determine how effective the new drug is for neurotic humans. The fact that Cyproiidol ap fects depressed but not healthy animals apparently depends on the three-dimensional geometry of its molecules, Dr. Gray decided. He is director of chemical research at Neisler, which is a subsidiary of the Union Carbide Corp. 400 vehicMs all told. The target is much, mudi hji^ier.’ ’ GETTING LATE Last year, the father warned Robert he was getting to an age when it might soon be too late for him to migrate successfully. “I made a now-or-never decision,” Ansett said. “But when some of our San Diego friends suggested that we were leaving because Barry Goldwater lost, we kidded along with Aem. ♦ ★ ★ • “Mind you. I’m still a Republican at heart and a Goldwater Republican. But I’ve also started thinking like an Australian which complicates it itaUttte^ lived lett^ Ansett has received supporting his migration, from'^ “equally upset Republicans.” His secretary has stenciled lus first impresMons of Australia for people who feel they would like to follow him Down Under He replies to every letter. T teU them tha truth," said Ansett. “I point out that I am delisted with this country but then, it is my birthplace. I don’t feel lost here, no nmtter how hard you have to battle at first. “I tell them I have come with contacts to ease roe into Australian social and business life. I warn them that they noay not find it so easy if they come here without such advantages." Ansett rates the cost of living in Australia on a par with that in jSan Diego. Home financing is much tougher — you cannot buy a house without at least a fourth of its value as a deposit. "Ifi harder to get mio debt. Peqrle Just aren’t prepared to lend you money without good aecurity," he said. LIVE WELL “Everyone seems to live pretty well here, nevertheless. They have their own houses and modern autos.’’ His mother, Grace Aleerman, lives in the San Diego suburb M Claremoit. About l.» billion ttooks are e]q)ected to be sold by U. S. book publishers this year — nearly 40 per cent over the 1058 figure. uIHimIL _ TOSLBS HWE^ ^ CAPSULES! 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U m OMiiri Fir Md) cmpm yM ■ftnt M tM pwdttM by i jet. M w«y«|yejnojJ*i 2# CMMNMr offtr; wiy othtr frlMl. C«WM MW iwt b* I VoM Nlibn praimlM by m ____Vii^________ AWWaiM! iMllcition by you coMtHutt* n«l|M4 or irMsforroJ by you. .....-I....... ^ obowhM your i orooooM tor purcbooo or oufficloirt om od I ifoek I .riMt snm • ••••••••••••#•••#««•••# OASN VALUE l/MOi oM CRNT••••••••••«• •••••••«•#••• TliK PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 22. 196.5 BREAKING GROUND — The first ground was turned over in Seneca Palis, N.Y., yesterday for the new Eisenhower College. Playing the key roles were (from left) New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, former President Dwight D. Eisenhower and Bob Hope. The $20-million college is scheduled to open with 300 students in September 1067. Ike at Ceremony Eisenhower College Blooms SENECA FALLS, N Y. (AP) — Former President Dwight D. Eisenhower turned the first spadeful of earth in starting coQstniction of a college named (or him, then heard cotnedian Bob Hope qoi|l: “Where elta ^it in America could a man Jn cb*vnand of our armies, taMler ^ our country and a tonk in the field of education wind in Seneca Falls shoveling dirt?" \ * w w Hope’s ronuulcs, and Eisenhower’s smiling reaction, came at groundbreaking ceremonies ’Tue^ay for Eisenhower (College, a liberal arts school scbedulpd to open in 1M7. A crowd of about 12,00$ attended. The institution will have up to about 1,S00 students and wifi fee. on a lOOwcre tract on the sfefere of Cayuga Lake. LIBERAL ARTS Eisenbowe/ Mayerson HiPAgain on Status arts college “is the key to the uixlerstanding and exercise of real dtizenship.’’ Referring to the name of the new college, he said, “This honor that is accorded me will be with me every day of my life.” Eisenhower, 74, predicted a bright future for small liberal arts colleges and said such institutions should seek their “natural habitat in the rural areas.” “Let the big universities go to the cities,” he said. LBJ telegram President Johnson sent a telegram of congratulations in which he prais^ officials who named the college in honor of ”a man who has spent his lifetime in educational endeavor.” Eisenhower had served for four years as president of Columbia Univeriity before he became LANSING (UPI) - State Rep. E. D. O’Brien, D-Detroit, yesterday called for the relrit tlon of State Insurance Commissioner AIIoi L Mayerson if he remains em|doyed by an insurance firm in the East. ★ ★ * On two occasions,’ newspaper accounts have hinted Mayerson was planning to resign from his positim to work for an insurance firm. Mayerson has said he Is a consnltant to an eastern firm but there was no conflict of interest because the Arm does not do business in Michigan. Mayerson could not be reached to reply to O’Brien’s request. ★ * A O’Brien said his objections also were centered around insurance decisions Mayerson will have to make in the near future, particularly on a request for a 5.75 per cent rate increase by Blue Cross. AVOID ACTION “If it is true that you are still employed by the insurance industry, then I respectfully request that you do not take any action on Blue Ooss-Blue Shield rates,” O’Brien said. “Farther, if your choice is to remain employed by the tn-^ I Expect Senate to OK Immigration Bill WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate leaders expected passage today of a bill to scrap immigration quotas based on national origins and to put a ceiling on Inunigration from the Western Hemisphere. . W A A Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., floor manager of the bill, said the only amendment he expects to be brought up is one designed to bar the deportation of Dominican Gen. Elias Wessin y Wessin. Wessin has protested that U.S. Army po-sonnel forced him to leave the Dominican Republic after rebel forces refus^ to surrender their weapons to a new provisional government unless he were removed. ★ ★ A He was taken to Miami, Fla., ostensibly to become the Dominican consul there, but he rejected the post after his arrival. ’The U.S. Immigration Service is now studying his status. The amendment, proposed by Sen. Strom Thurmond, RrS.C., is phrased in general terms. It would provide that “no person Involuntarily brought physically into the United States by the Seasons in Reverse LAUREL, Iowa - Rev. W. A. Spring is retiring as pastor of the Evangelical United Brethren church here. His successor is Rev. W. B. Winter. Unied States government or its agents shall subsequently be deported from the United States under any circumstances.” Kennedy predicted defeat of the amendment. A ★ ★ Republican Leader Everett M. Dlrksen, after a discussion of ’Thurmond’s proposal by the Senate GOP Policy Committee, said there is fear that Wessin might be assassinated if he is sent back to the Dominican Republic. But he said the amendment might cause difficulty in the future. Fm: example, he said, it might prevent deportation of someone who committed a felony. ’The average car is driven almost 11 years and over 100,000 miles before it is scrapped, compared with seven years and less than 50,000 miles in the 1930s, according to Equity Research. mediate rMignation,” he add-ed. ' O’Brien said If Mayerson severed his ties with the insurance industry, he would like to recommend a thorough study of Blue Cross-Blue Shield rates “to include complete review of practices and procedures on'the part of the doctors participating hi Blue Cross-Blue Shield programs.” . A A A He said Mayerson needed to assurq the piMc there “is no conflict 61 interest on any decision on his part as commis-’ T08 NORTH SAGINAW Repeated By Popular Demand' FESTIVAL FUNFARE FROLIC 30” GAS RANGE by BROWN Please Read These Exclusive Features • Safety-Lock Oven Racks e LHt-Out Oven Bottom o Four Giant Bonus Burners 0 Polished Burner Gaps 0 Four Range Levelers e Low B.T.U. Flash Tub Ignition e Beautiful blue-grey Porcelain finish disRiiguishesthe interior of all ranges by Brown, assuring rust-proof durability and effortless cleaning. Regular 119” NOW ONLY.. »98 During Festival of Values You SAVE $21.95 WKC PLEDGES to GIVE YOU the BESTVAUIES ALWAYS! FREE SERVICE iln Our Own Sorvic* I Dopartmant by foe-1 tory-trainedexperts. [ Wo Guarantee Satisfaction. CREDIT ARRANGED to meet your indi- I vidual needs, budgeted and tailored to I make it easier for| you. FREE DEUVERY I by our expert and I I courteous drivers to | assure you of prompt, careful delivery. FREE PARKING ILat our attendant park your car in WKCa private parking lot at rear of our store. Yes, it's free. Public Eying Car Cost The following are top prices ooveriog aales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by tbem in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Friday. Produce Apples, Delicious, Rea. bu. Apples. Greening, bu. Apples, Graham Spy, bu. Awles, McIntosh, parly, bu. Applet, Waalttiy, bu.......... .*S5S'rr'tof^,r'crf Grapes, Concorn, pk Reaches, Elberta. t Reaches, Kal Haver Raachet, Redskin, b Rears, Bartlett, bu Rlums, Stanley, bu. ...... Watermelon, bu. VEOETAILES Beans, green, bu. Beans, Kentucky Wonder, bu. Stock Mart Advances Again NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market took off on another advance early this afternoon as the pace of trading quickened. After a spell of profit taking and consolidation in the morning when volume was somewhat lighter than yesterday, dealings became faster. A number of stocks weathered profit taking and were taking up where they left off on their individual rallies. Some, such as SCM Corp., which have had large percentage rises over several sessions, fell by the wayside under heavy selling. ' PATTERN IMPROVED The pattern improved considerably for a number of blue chips in various groups. Motors, chemicals, oils apd metals showed selective strength. Airlines embarked on another vigorous rally. Many stocks throughout the list showed small changes. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks rose .3 to 341.5 with industrials up 1.0, rails unchanged and utilities off .2. The Dow Jones industrial av- erage at noon, was up f.M at 928.50. Prices were higher in moderate trading on the American Stock Exchange. Up about 2 were National Video “A” and Brown-Forman “A". Up a point or so were Technical Gyrations, Eleo, Aurora Plastics and Rowland Products. Fractional gainers included Syntex, Philips Electronics, Northrast Airlines, Muntz TV and American Safety Elquipment. Corporate and U. S. Treasury bonds were mostly unchanged in light trading. Service Award Plan Enlarged Fisher Body's New Program Is Launched The New York Stock Exchange HMi L«w UK Chg 3JVj 3H4 3J'/4 + '/I - 3IH 34W - V% I4W I4'A - W One of the largest programs in industry for recognizing the length of service of employes will begin next week at Fisher Body plants across the nation, it was announced today by Robert H. Gathman, vice pre^dent of General Motors and general manager of Fisher Body Division. Gathman stated that the new program will affect approximately 70,000 of Flsber’s 95,-000 employes in the division’s 35 plants located in 27 American cities. He pointed out that the total length of service of all employestobe honored is 825,8M years. Gathman said, “The purpose of expanding our service award program is not only to recognize our people for their loyal service, but to let them know in a permanent way that management is appreciative their day-to-day performance in our plants and offices. ■A * ★ "Length of service of employes has always been an earmark of Fisher Body, and has been an important factor in mak ing its coach emblem significant with the motoring public.” BEGIN MONDAY Beginning Monday, awards for every five years of service .will be presented to about 64,500 men and 5,500 women Fisher em‘ ployes. Women will receive bracelets and men tie-tacs, with each piece of Jewelry containing the Fisher Body Coach emblem. Each will also contain either diamonds, emeralds sapphires or ruhies, depending on the length of service of the employe. The 25-year service award, the presentation of a watch or clock will continue as in the past. The distribution of the awards will be done simultaneously in all Fisher Body plants. Recognition of employes with 30, 35, 40 and 45 or more years of service will be given next week; 20-year service awards during the week of Oct. i; 15-year awards during the weeks of Oct. 11 and 18; 10 years during Oct. 25 and Nov. 1; and 5 years Nov. 8 and 15. American Stocks NEW YORK (AP) - Feltowing li • Hit o» Mtoctod ktock trwsactlont on nw 'a 'a 'ais ArkLtOoi 1.M 4 «M ^ - W Asomoro 10 1W I'A I'A . Awd OIIBG 11 5Vb 3 5 - tb AtlOi Cp wf 4 kb 1J-14 H +M4 Broz Trot .40 44 7 7 7 .... Brif Rot .J2g 4 7 7-14 7 7-14 7 7-14 -► W Broom Co .40 14 1M IS ISM CompB Chib 7 4 7-14 4 7-14 4 7-14 +1-14 Con So Rot IS S S .—1-14 Cdn Javelin 7 lOVb 10 lOW + M Cinerama 13 SVb 3 31* + W CIrywIde Rl .304 13 J'A 3Vb 3?* Croolo P 2.40a 11 41W 41 411* + 1* Oolo Cent ♦ 17M 171* 17M + 1* EquItyCo .13f 4 JW 31* 314 + V* Forgo Oil> 7 S'* S 7-14 S 7-14 +1-14 Foimt Oil .130 3 t t 0 Fly Tigor 44 SOM 30<* SM Si- sS ’fit :: S’uit“v, rr ?? r-'* ----- Mfn 10 ISM 131* 131*.......... ----- Ind 4 OH OM OH + V* Ma^ Air 31 IM OH VA . AtaCrery wt 13 3 4H 4H ...... “ Td John .40 13 1»H 10M 1»M . h Sugar .lOg 1 4<* 4<* 4H ..... “*dwi 7 37M 37M 37» + M --- Rk Mng 4 4<A 4<A 4M ..... Pancot Ret 34 1H 1'* 1H . RIC Group 1 S'* SH 3H .. Seurre Rain 3 14M 14H 14H - H Sbd W Air S3 OH tVb OH ------II A 1o S3 37H 37H ST** + H ----- Cp 30e 34 101H lOOM 100H + H Tethnicol .73 17 17H 17 17 . Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AP)-Tha coih p of Iha Trer- ----- — ipondhg dal 4,143,a44,00S.M 0 44404144S1.44 — Ftocal Yar Uuly «- »M.Saru$ s I DAWSON By SAM DAWSON AP Business Newt Analyst NEW YORK - Next to higher food prices a hike in the price tag on new cars is most likely to spell a rising cost of living to n people. A costlier can means more to many auhxon-scious Ameri-| cans than evenj dearer clothing or higher rents. [ With all ofl these tending upward this year, it’s a good thing that incomes also are expected to rise for a lot of people — but not all. Food prices soared in the spring and early summer. And now the public is watching the debuts of the 1966 car models both for their new styling and their price tags. SAFETY DEVICES Many would-be buyers have expected higher pfices this fall ever since the wage increases in the auto industry. But Chrysler, in announcing that most of its models this fall will cost more than last, says the increases don’t reflect higher production costs. Mainly, says the auto maker, they result from inclusion in the standard price of a number of safety (le-vices previously found in the list of extras which the buyer has b^me accustomed to take into account. + ★ ★ As the new models — and the new price lists — are unveiled, I leaders in the auto industry are ! exfuressing conviction that the I American public is still in a ! buying mood. They expect still another reccad sales year. General Motors predicts car sales will rise by another two million units in the new model year. Counting in the sales of imported cars, this would mean that in the next 12 months Americans are expected" to buy nine million new cars — and innumerable used ones. MADE TO STICK With this confidence in Ameri- can spending Intentions, the car maker# may feel that higher prices can be made to stick. People will doubtless grumble about the rising cost of living. They are more or less u»«l to -Its gidng up gradually month after month, and react — moat-ly convwsatlonally rather than in purse string tightening — only when the spurt hits everyone at once, as in the case of rising food prices. a . ★ ★ In a few days the government will issue another of its monthly reports on the cost of consumer prices. And most expect the index to rise again. Higher prices on new cars won’t show up in the index until later and they then a bountiful harvest may have held food prices in check. The prospects for larger incomes to meet either a sizable or a gradual rise in living costs spring from these factors: Employment ia at a record hiidx ^to good chances of even more people finding Jobe and this means a higher totafef personal income. For individuals, there are higher niage scales in many labor contracts Ihls year, with some providhig further increases next year also. ★ * Social Security payments have been increased, bringing a bit nacre each month to those over 65. Next July medicare will cut the health care bills for many people and thus substitute for a rise in spendable income. Dividend payments have riden this year for noany stockholders, profits have increased for many who are self employed or run small business firms and the general expectation of a still more prosperous economy holds promise of still more jobs, still more take-home pay, still larger profits in the months ahead. Picketing Halts Mines in 3 States POWHATAN POINT, Ohio (AP) — A surge of picketing today put a damper on what started out to be a retum-to-work move in a wildcat strike affecting thousands of miners in a three-state area. At least 16 mines in District 6 of the United Mineworkers in eastern Ohio and northern West Virginia wefe shut down by the strike, and other miners wen out in western Pennsylvania. Approximately 16,666 miners were out in sympalhy with six West Virginia miners fired because of an earlier nnanthor- SS.44fc*3«a47.7B X-Tot«l*?^|l- 3iyj»,3SSaS3J4 314.437.341,315.34 13457,747,333.71 13,443410,37541 (-IncliKta 5251034441.74 <M>7 nel tub-“* to itnut^ IlmH. BONO AVBRAOBS 11)6 return-to-work move started yesterday with some union locals voting to return providing the miners did not have to cross picket lines. The pickets ap peared, however, and the local members remained out. ★ ♦ ★ In West Virginia’s Morgantown and Fairmont areas roving pi c k e t activity increased overnight. Of four Christopher Coal Co. mines in the Morgantown area where locals had voted to return to work, only the Osage mine was working today. HITS GRANT TOWN In. the Fairmont area. Grant Town mine of Eastern Associated Coal Ckirp., ' employing about 400 and not previously affected, shut down when miners observed picket lines. Loveridge mine of Mountaineer Coal Co., subsidiary of fStjccesstuMnvesttm l A- -O'-H 4 % *»'0' r •*' By ROCERE. SPEAR 9> “My age is 39. Our children are young and I am well iasnred. The mortpge on our 940,666 home is 922,666; it has 15 years to run. We have cash or the equivalent of 916,-566 and 96,756 in stocks, hi-clnding Wisconsin Southern Gas, Texaco, Binks Manufacturing and Chicago Musical Instruments. Should we convert cash and stocks to pay off mortgage, take from savings and increase investments, or start an insurance fund for the children’s education?” J. W. A) I would not pay off the mortgage by converting your stocks and cash. Your debt — because of probably increasing inflation — is likely to be settled with cheaper dollars some years hence. I would take some cash assets and buy moderate amounts of Northern Illinois Gas and Sears, Roebuck. An insurance plan for your children would supplement your stock program and I recommend it. Q) “I am years-old. I have been unem-pleyed for two years because of ParUasoB’s disease. I have oMy 91,666 la savings, no ta- disabOity benefhs. Could you advise me as to buying some stocks la order to make money? Hwre is an operation I could take for my disease, but ft would cost 92A66. Any advice wili be appreciated.” J. W. A) I bannot advise you to put your savings into stocks, which have only one thing in common Senate Likely to Debate 14B had returned to work Tuesday, shut down again. Fana-iagtoa mine of Monatalneer Coal also shat down today. An these mines are la two West Virginia conntles ~ Monoa-gaiia (Morgantown) and Mar- Ri )gi STocief^s AveuAoni s 13 UtllB timated 2,366 men are idle. Officials estimate that the strike is causing a lose of 9270,-000 a day. in District 6 alone In wages and royalties, some of which go into the miner’s welfare fund. In Ohio, a mine of the Peabody Coal Co. was shut down today for the first time bscauie of]^eting. WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield of Montana said today he probably will call for Senate debate next week on legislation to knock out state laws banning the union shop. Against a backdrop of speculation that the controversial proposal might be tabled until early next year because of the threat of a filibuster, Mansfield was asked What his plans were: “K is my present iateation,” he naid, “to call up 14B very likely sometime next week.” Sections 14B of the Taft-Hart-ley Labor Relations Act says the states may bar union shops. The pending bill, which has passed the House, would eliminate this section. In a union shop, all employes covered by a labor contract are required to join the union. Nineteen s t a t e s now have laws against such contracts. Mansfield talked to reportera at the White House after President Johnson’s weekly breakfast meeting with Democratic congressional leaders. Asked when Congress likely would adjourn, Mansfield said, “someUme after the first of October.” —namely, fluctuation. You need some cash reserves and these should be kept intact. You are now — by virtue of your 93,000 savings -- ineligible for Welfare disability payments, and you are too young to apply for Kerr-Mills Act benefits. I believe it would be wise for you to have your operation and then apply to your local welfare office and discuss eligibility re-quirements\ ^ To order yonr copy of Roger Spear’s new 4S-page OnMe to Successful Investing, clip this notice and send 91.66 with your name and address to Roger E. Spear, in care of The Pontiac Press, Box 1618, Grand Central Station, N.Y.C., N.Y. 16617. Copyright, 1665) News in Brief A tachometer valued at $46 was reported stolen yesterday from an automobile owned by Randy Golden, 1300 Ifoqdtal. according to Waterfcnrl Township Police. Pontiac Police are investigating the reported theft of an estimated 9735 in clothing taken from the Flora-Mae Shop, 706 W. Huron. MOM’S Rummage: Thwsday, 9-12. Indianwood and Baldwin. —adv. Rummage Sale: Friday, Sept. 24, 9 to 5. St. Paul’s Methodist Church, 620 Romeo St., Rochester. —adv. Rummage Sale, C.A.I. Building on Williams Uke Rd., Sept 24, 9 to 3. Waterford Garden Cluh. adv. Rummage, First Christtan, 858 West Huron, Friday, 9-5. adv. Smorgasbord, St Luke’s Methodist Church, 3960 Walton Blvd., Fri., Sept. 24, 541 p.m. adv. Rummage Sale, Friday, Sept 24 and Sat., Sept. 25, 6 till 3. 1101 Dudley, off Featherstone Rd. adv.' Ehlers’ Business Servlees, 236 Voorheis Rd. FE 5-2244. Mimeographing, IVping. adv. Rummage Sale September 22 and 23 at 570 Oakland at 9:30 Family Ham Supper, Friday, Sept. 24, 5-7 p.m.. First Church of Brethren, 46 N. Roselawn. All Welcome. adv. Business Notes Philip M. Hampton of Johnson & Andenon, Inc., consuitag ■ engineers, has been ntntod acting sac^ tary • treasurer of the toehnidia division of the National Water WsU Associa-Uon at the 17th annua 1. NWWA exposl-HAMPTON tion being held through tomorrow in Houston, Tex, Hampton of 5116 Stevens, Waterford Township, is public relations director foy the WUtorfprd Tonmnshlp firm. The NWWA, with a menabertilp of nearly 2,999, represMtiiU facets of the water well inddstry. i THE PONTIAC PRESjS, WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 22, 1965 Jacoby on Bridge (») » 4Kt VAKQJIO 4 Nona *KQ108T4 BAST 4A1SS4 A7BSS ♦ TNona ♦ QW«8 S98SS ♦ Nom 4S6BS8 BOOTH AQJ8 Visa ♦ AKJ74 #AJ PMi IS IV pu« as 84 Pan 44 _ 4 4 Pm 6N.T. Put 8N.T. Pin Pm Pm nii^ty bard for the oppoeition to get anywhere.” Oswald: “We did have a good partnership. The first time we played together was in 1935 or 1936 when our team won the SpingoM. That was his first national win.” Jim: “Do you remember any hands from that event?” Oswald: “No. Bat here is a beanty that helped as win the 19tt Men's Pairs. I sat South and after West won the first trkk with the ace of spades > I claimed the balance. Jim: “You did reach the top spot.” Q—The Mddlns hu boon: Mh Woot North Boi 1* 8M.T. You, South, h:?:!: 4K187 4A> SKQ8 4AQS4 What do yen do? - ---^ 0 10-tnnns.Toir i yen hovo oono- ______ la hoorti ond ou so OB 40 four hoisii tf ho nat olaad BO>tnMS at aU. TODATS QUBSnON Tour partner oontinuos to lour dubo. .What do you do now? Killer-Type Daisy Flowers on Island By Sdeace Service LONDON - “Piease don’t eat the daisies” takes on a new meaning in New Guinea, where insecticide extracts of a newly cultivated daisy-like flower promise to help make up i market shortage. Pyrethrum, extracted from dried flowers of the chrysanthemum family in which daisies belong, has an instant killing effect not present in synthetic insecticides. D-8 3y Robin Moor* BERRY’S WORI,D By JACOBY AND SON Jim starts off today’s discussion by remarking: “It was sure fun to play on the same team with Charley Goren recently. I know that while ^ou and he did not play togetb-JK very often in the old days' Vou were very! good friends* and when you Sr lYDNBY OMASa "TIM «<M . . . AUrUfi Allis (AMr. » to Apr. .... ------------ ‘ ‘ ‘ng «rtrtiiM cIMncM, undut ipKult- _____ Stick le ntiot It Iwnllitr. Includn tltuatloni AND PERSONS. Complctt , proltcit. FInlili wtMt you tlirl. TAURUS (Apr. SS to May M): Navtr overlook valua of Individvol r^-ratponpt. Maant grau It n tarlly grttnar "tofnewtipra alM lha mop of wlwt you poaiai light maturity, moderation. GEMINI (May II to Juha Ml; cantrata an lacurlty, homa attain, gaing ovortoard wtMra expandituri concamad. Utlllaa Intultlva im Know tlMl many aro walNnatnln may ba mitintarmad. CANCER (Jinw 21 ta July IS): Avoid attamptlng to torca Ittutt. Ona r"* mrat you favor may ba tardy. Real human natura It oxpratting Ittalf. Str vartatlllly, good hunMr. Ntighbort « **Il!iO fluly » to Aug. SS): Analplm monay tliuatltii It wita courta. Chock -budgat, ipadal papart. Frtttura Im dicalad trom ouMdart. DanT pa^ prida 10 load you Into unhaalthy pr -. . . THINK SSFORE ACTINOI VIROO (Aug. » tr —* **'-on avan tmolional k high. But ntany who tdvitt you ara axtravagant. Obtain hint from LM mataaga. Haad your own countal. Stand **1!!bRA (Sapt. SS to Oct. SS): Homa tlhiatton important. KtV t ha— Unwita to torca Itauaa. Appllat « ly whart authorltlat ara cor gaint nidT Sharp ratorto kor to OOLDEN RULE. SCORPrO (Oct. 2S to Nw^): SAGITTARIUS (Nov. SS to Dac. «): Attond to butinata pHaln. srssjsrsu toot. Not tlwayt boat to -and frlandthlp. CAPRICORN (Oac. SS I Kaap "In touch" wHh ' rior. Going on your t...------- , - harmonloot ralallont. KEEP C()NFI-I^ENTIAL INFORMATION CONPIOIM- AQUARIUS (Jan. » to Fob. IS): Kay It baHig diteraat. TMIt« IMa tr"— all you know. Do planly of P-*' obtarvlng. Appllat Iractt, nnanclal t ’“plSCiS (Ptb, If to Mar. JO): Go with tha ttda. Ac— ---------- haalthy challangat. ---- athart think, la contldyato of n -partnar. COORDINATE EFFORTS. Marriage Licenses jyaajtSsrVk&rt ,SSSXiJX.JSLXSI.“ ^AJtssxnJt- " «asB.ws».‘'aaa“ 1,’- *** i' ‘feartT*"^**** * <^ald: “It really was the top 4pot. If you look the hand over darefully you will see that a spade lead and heart return will beat su clubs while a club lead beats six hearts.” Jim: “Your bidding really was excellent.” Oswald: “I would put it differently. Charley’s bidding was excellent. He started by bidding one dab only. It seldom pays to open a donbr two bid when yon have a two-suited hand. Later the bidding is self-explanatory up to my five no-tminp whicb was a request to Charley to place the slam.” Jim: “He sure answered the request magnificently. He put it in the safest spot and I doubt if many players made that brilliant bid.” P—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS^ WKDNKSDAY, SEPtEMBER 29, 1965 School Board to Eye Skiing Sport Rocomtnended by Waterford Official Tht Waterford Township Board of Education will consider several Items tomorrow night including a recommendation to eatabliah interacholastic skiing. Sqpt Dr. Don 0. Tatroe’s rec-ominendation for initiation of a high school skiing program stems from a nationwide resur-gence for individual sports wMdi have a longer participation span than team sports. The board also will discuss possibilities for using the vacated lunchroom at Pontiac Mnnlcipal Airport as a train-ing ground for food service Another of Dr. Tatroe’s recommendations to be considered «t| by the board calls for a thorough study of the system's transportation facilities by the bus drivers themselves. ★ ★ ★ In other business, the board will consider further negotia-' tions on purchase of two ele-; mentary school sites near Eagle ' Lake and Pleasant Lake. NO AGREEMENT Thus far, school officials and owners of the privately owned land have failed to reach agreement on a price. The board also will discuss possibilities for apeement with Camp Oakland officials for use of camping facilities during the school year. Also, Dr. Burton Thom will submit a report on the dropout student development program, and the board will set a date for Mason Junior High School dedication ceremonies. Area Man, Shot in Hand, 'Satisfactory' A 24-year-old Farmington man shot in a flght is reported in satisfactory condition after surgeons at Pontiac General Hospital performed an em^gency operation early this morning to skve his left hand. ★ ★ ★ Arthur Schuetzler, 24, 33717 Glenview, was wounded last night by a shot from a 44-caliber pistol. Oakland County ShertfPs officers said David D«le, 22, 3M33 Minglewood, Farming-ton was arrested following the shooting and held for investigation of ' ' Officers said the two men were involved in a scuffle at the home of Schuetzler’s wife, Gloria, at 3875 Sleeth, Commerce Township. - Schuetzler told officers he and his wife were separated. PROMO TED — Lt. Cel. James K. Sutton (right* of Flint pins captain’s bars on newly promoted Capt. James A. Stephens (left) of Berkley and Capt. Ronald R. Leist, 1938 Graefield, Birmingham. All three men serve with Pontiac’s 70th Division Army Reserve unit at 40 Walnut. In terms of average wages, a I factory worker today earns the price of a quart of milk in six minutes, compared to nearly. 10 minutes 20 years ago and 26 in 1890. CD Course to Be Offered Medical emergency training will be offered begiiuiing Sept 30 by the Pontiac office of Civil Defense in cooperation with the County Civil Defense Division. John F. Reineck, city director of civil defense, said the 12-week training prepares an individual to act intelligently in any emergency — tornado, flood, explosion, accident or family illness. ^ it * it The training classes will be held.from 8-10 p.m. in the County Civil Defense office at 1 Lafayette. The course, taught by doctors and nurses, is free. Ex-Store Owner From Pontiac Dies Roy T. Connolly of Maitland, Fla., retired proprietor of the former Roy T. Connolly Jewelry Store of Pontiac, died Monday in Florida. Service was to be at 10 a.m. today from the Cox-Parkdr Funeral Home, Winter Park, Fla., with burial in Augusta, Ga. A graduate of the University of Michigan school df engineering, Mr. Connolly was a charter member of Pontiac Yacht Club and served as commodore iq 1940. He had also been active in Pontiac Rotary Club. ★ * Surviving besides his wife, Deaths in Pontiac, Neighboring Areas Mr. Gamble, a member of the Baptist Church and Pontiac Lodge No. 21, died yesterday after an illness of several months. He was a retired employe of GMC Truck & Coach Di-, vision. WILLIE J. BROWN | Surviving are his wife, Edna, Service for Willie J. Brown,' a brother and two sisters. 70, 569 Franklin, will be 11 MRS. GRACE L. AZELTON Mrs. Grace L. Azelton, 62, of 6360 Harriet, Waterford Township, died this morning. Her body is at the Coats Funeral Home, Waterford Township. tomorrow at the William F. Davis Funeral Home. Mr. Brown died Sunday after a one-year illness. He has no known survivors. MRS. CYRIL B. BURLING Service for Mrs. Cyril B. (Helen D.) Burling, 55, of 932 Myrtle, Waterford Township, will be 11 a.m. Friday at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home Belding Bank Held Up BELDING (AP) - A lone gunman escaped with approximately $3,000 Tuesday in a holdup at the Belding branch of the First Security Bank of Ionia. Marie, are a wn Hugh of Au- burial in Crescent Hills gu^, SIX grandchUdren; and a cemetery, Waterford Township. I A Moose Memorial Service will be conducted at 7:30 p.m. today in the funeral home. At 7 p.m. tomorrow the Eagles Lodge will conduct a memorial service in the funeral home. Mrs. Burling died yesterday after a long illness. Funeral Service Held for Marshall Field CHICAGO (UPI) - Marshall Field, editor and publisher of the Chicago Daily News and Chicago Sun-Times, was buried yesterday following a simple Presbyterian funeral service. * w ★ Field was found dead Saturday in his apartment from congestive heart failure. He was CLAUDE GAMBLE Service for former Waterford Township resident Claude Gamble, 72, of Brighton will be 1:30 p.m. Saturday at the Sparks-Griffin Chapel with graveside service conducted by Pontiac Lodge No. 21 in Oak Hill Cemetery. MRS. HERBERT W. KLAES Requiem Mass for former Pontiac resident Mrs. Herbert W. (Mary E.) Klaes, 67, of Fort Pierce, Fla., wiU be offered Saturday morning in Our Lady of Mercy Church, Port Chester, N. Y. With burial in St. Mary’s Cemei^, Rye, N. Y. Her body will be taken from the Donelaon - Johns Funef-al Home to the Russell J. Shaw Funeral Home in Port Chester tomorrow morning. Mrs. Klaes, a member of St. Helen’s Catholic Church, Vero Beach, Fla., died yesterday after an illness of several weeks. Surviving are her husband; five daughters, Mrs. Ruth Lyons of Hialeah, Fla., Mrs. Elizabeth Ziccardo of Bronx, N.Y., Mrs. Barbara Fischang of Port Caster, and Mrs. Trudy Mattoon and Mrs. Dorothy Timoff, both of Pontiac. Also surviving are 15 grandchildren; two sisters; and a brother. Also surviving are three brothers, Ralph Stephens of Pontiac and Ralston Stephens and Obie Stephens, both of Detroit; and two grandchildren. WILLiE THOMAS Service for Willie Thomas, 42, 469 N. East Blvd., wiU be 10 a.m. Friday at Church of Clvist with burial at Oak Hill Cemetery by Frank Carruthers Funeral Home. Mr. T h 0 m a s, a former employe of Pontiac Motor Division, died Sunday after a two-year illness. Surviving are his wife, Mary at home; his mother, Mrs. Sallie Park of Lake Providence, La.; a son, three daughters and one step-daughter, all of Pontiac. Also suriviving are a brother, George Penny of Pontiac, three sisters, Mrs. Janie Cooper of Pontiac, Mrs. Viola Watter of Saginaw and Mrs. Oliver Willis of Lake Providence, La.; and one step-sister. MRS. JAMES BROOKS ADDISON TOWNSmP-Serv-ice for Mrs. James (Ida) Brooks, 80, of 4925 Noble wUl be 2 p.m. Friday at Bossardet Funeral Home, Oxford. Burial will be in North Oxford Cemetery. Mrs. Brooks died Monday after a short illness. She was a F it AM, and the Stone Baptist Church. Surviving are his wife, Shirley; two daughters, Colleen and j Lynne and two sons, William and Brian, all at hmne; three sisters, Mrs. Janice Grant, Vickie and Shannon, and a brother, Sigle Reed Jr., all of Avon Township; and his father, Sigle of Avon Township. ANGELA MARIE REYES OXFORD — Service for Angela Marie Reyes, four-day-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rubeh M. Reyes, 624 Mechanic, was to be 11 a.m. today at Allen’s Funeral Home, Lake Orion. Burial will be in Eastlawn Cemetery, Lake Orion. The baby died Monday. Surviving besides her parents is her grandfather, Ano H. Olson of Orion Township. MARVIN SCHOUR HOLLY — Service for Man^ Scholar, 62, of 4289 S. Cogshall will be 1:30 p.m. Friday at Don-elson-Johns Funeral Home, Pontiac. Burial will be in white Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Cknnmerce Lodge 121 F & AM will conduct a memorial aerv-ice at 8 tonight at the funeral Canadian Writer Dies OTTAWA (AP) - Madge Macbeth, K, the first woman president of the Canadian Authors Association, died Monday. Mrs. Macbeth was the author of 20 books. Including novels, biog-raphiesi two autobiographies and travel books. She also wrote magazine and newspaper aifl-cles about her world travels. She was bom in Philadelphia. NOTICE OF ON BSTASLISHINO NO«»WL HBIOHT AND LEVEL OF WATSR IN WILLIAMS LAKE WATBEFOND TOWNSHIF OAKLAND county, MICHIGAN To Whom It May Concam, PAKTICULARLY abutting o iMight to tho ^ , cireuH Court lor Iha C^ al OBwana, ownan of proparty £;wllijl a"-* OaKlapd County Caiart No^ ig or having ^oa to. right! M Mor* Tl*«yh Ewa. IM 3 ^urt an that say at 9 «of? Jamaa.S. Thg^. and malntalpad Hi of said Mo p of Act m of tho S"wMXd T^oMt, Oakland County. Mlehlgan. You Aro Horaby NotlfM that tho (M-land County Board of •"9*r’^» ^ cauMd to te IIM «i* plaint praying for tha aol^NNnont by thij Court. rt_tha to of Ing on tho manor will bo NId In ^ Circuit Court for tha County of Oaklw at tho Oakland County Court Houi - ............ ;xr,~ By:,ROBERT F. ............X Corporation Counml HAYWARD WHITLOCK and CHARLES J. LONG AaoT Corp. Countol for Oakland County, Michigan By: ROBERT A ALLEN — t. 0, 15, a and a, IM5 2T .*-■ !E LMt— L*. , hltg^ar ” You Aro Horaby Hottflod that, tha Oakland County Board of SuparvMra ly fh*»"’cSirt W t • norifiM » lovoi oi •■••••■ -~<0' **m. Itt: - You Aro Furthor Nallflad that m aaW data n» Complainant Intanda to M Ihli Court to ootaldlih tha normal halsht ^rS of oald^laho at m.JB M abovo MO mvol and H you dwliw M ttio aotabilihmont of Iha kwat at WdJO foot abovo ooa lovol m ohouM thon and thora appoar and ihow cauoa. If any you havo, vihy: (b) VI If ai to tha Court oaamo fttting Id propor mould not ba grantad a Complainant. JEROME S. BRONSON FroaaculliiB Attamoy Oakland County; Michigan By: ROBERT F. ALLEN HAYWARD WHITLOCK and CHARLES J. LONO AM't Corp. Counoal for Oakland County, AMchlgan By; ROBERT P. ALLEN • 1, IS, » and 19, IMS and Octabar «, it;^ ;, Michigan J1S-47SI AND LEVEL OF WAI ...VORMAN L/“ INCE and ' TOWNSHIF OAKLAND COUNTY. To Whom It May Concam, PARTICULARLY ITER IN Kf IN W^ERFC Phono: 330-4751 NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE Townihlp of Sprln^l •inglo gllald. gan Corporation. AAortgagoa, dati 14th day of Saptambar,, IM3, m cordad In tho oNIca of (ho Ragli .. . Daadt, for tha County of Oakland and Stata of Michigan on tha llth i'----‘ Saptambar, 1903 In LRwr 4479 of gagn. on paga 790 (now aulp Camral|^StaM^^lto^ Corngwy ^ Nlh dayof FabraarT 1904 and ri—^ In tha oflica of tho Raglafor of_____ lor tho County of Oakland and SlaN of Michigan on tho nth day of Marct In LIbar 4540, on poga-n) whic mortgaga It clalmad to ba dua, data of tMo not lea, lor prIncIpL. .... InNratt, tha turn of FIFTEEN THOUSAND EIGHT HUNDRED SIXTY-NINE and N/IOO Oollaro wHh Intoratt to d ‘-' ' Mdingt at law mttftutad to .. b||r^iald -........... Ing whara tha Circuit Court ... County of Oakland la hold), of tha prom- INVESTMENT CLASSES (OFFERED WITHOUT CHARGE) Comprehensive six week course conducted by qualified brokerage specialists from Watling, Lerchen & Co. OCT. 6 Origin and Type of Securities OCT. 13 Mechanics of the New York Stock Exchange and Investment Objectives. OCT. 20 Information Investors Should Get Before Investing-Reading a Financial Page. OCT. 27 Reading and Interpreting Financial Reports. NOV. 3 Economic Indicators, Methods of Investing and Selection of Securities. NOV.IO Investing Theories and Techniques-Review. WHEN Wednesday, Oct, 6, — 7 to 9 P.M. WHERE Pontiac Public Library, 60 East Pike Street SPONSORED BY PONTIAC PUBLIC LIBRARY eo EAST PIKE STREET. PONTIAC • FB 4-9921 ENROLL NOWB For reservations, mail coupon today to; sAP! (F») ptr^biuiurh ind a KiwwT iiiniuM SM wan a yesterday l |pw,''«id alw •ny"7umiT^im”itww b* er a snort 11^. jjj^ '»!!“hSS:: member of the Oxford Free ® !re"dw^“ JAMES H, RUSSELL Methodist (Thurch. KAREN LOUISE SMITH j “^1!" pikp ServU» for James H Russell Surviving are a daughter, INDEPENDENCE T0 W N - S?«w'r>gridir'ifl*thrcolSifi*w 0!^ 64, of 2701 ChrysS, WaSd Mrs. Dorotha Schellenberg of SHIP - Service for Karen Lou- Township, will be 3 p.m. Monday in Enterprise, Ala., at the John Chapel Cemetery. His body will be taken there tomorrow night by the Fraiik Carruthers PonUac: abrother, JossmanAr-||,e Smith, 20, of 6035 Wakkm noW of Oxf(»d; three grandchil-1 t p.m. Friday at the dren; and three great-grand- sashabaw United Presbyt^an children. Church. Burial will be in Saaha- baw Plains Cemetery by the Mr. Russell, a member of the St. Beulah Baptist Church in Enterprise, died Monday after a four-year illness. He was a fireman. Surviving are five daughters, Mrs. Elizabeth Hudson and Mrs. ; Helen (Toles, both of Clarkston, j Mrs. Mesey Jordon, Mrs. Ann Carlise and Claudia Mathews, all of Pontiac; and three sons, i James F„ Arthur L. and Jdin I L., all of Detroit. Also surviving are 25 grand-: children; and a sister. MRS. J. T. SEAY I Services for Mrs. J. T. (Anna I Wilson) Seay, 57, 388 Highland, i will be 2 p.m tomorrow at the i New Hope Baptist Church with : burial at Oak Hill Cemetery at Gary, Ind. Arrangements are by the William F, Davis Funeral Home. Mrs. Seay died Monday after an illness of one year. A member of New Hope Baptist Church, she is survived by her husband, Jirfm, and her parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Higgins. PONTIAC PUBLIC LIBRARY. 60 EAST PIKE STREET, PONTIAC, MICHIGAN OR CALL: WATLING, LERCHEN & CO. FE 2-9274 F)ww rugiiMr mu m yout fn* $ix-' NAME...................... ..lOHt.............STATE... HENRY E. DRILLEN SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP-Service for Henry E. Drlllen, 63, of 6178 milsboro will be 11 a.m. Friday at St. Andrews Efriscopal Church, Waterford Township. Burial will be in Lakeview Cemetery by Lewis E. Wint Funeral Home, Garkston. Mr. Drillen died yesterday. He was an engineer on the Grand Trunk Western Railroad. Surviving are his wife, Pattie; two daughters, Mrs. Hugh E. Grieve and Mrs. Robert C. Tripp, both of Plymouth; a sister; a brother; and three grand- WILUAM T. MOTLEY JR. MILFORD-Servlce for former resident William T. Motley Jr. of Chicago will be 1 p.m. Friday at Richardson-Bird Funeral Home. Burial will be in Oakgrove Cemetery. Mr. Motley died Sunday after a short Illness. He installed air conditioners. Surviving are three daughter Mrs. Barbara Dean of Walled Lake, Patricia and Kathy, both of Union Lake; three aona, David, Michael and James, all of Union Lake; his mother, Mrs. Survinia Motl^ of Milford; two sisters, Mrs. Alice Moreil of Milford and Mrs. Jessie Stap-er of Buffalo, N.Y.; two broth-Richard ot Milford and Robert of Highland; and three grandehiidren. Sharpe-Goyette Funeral Home, Clarkston. Miss Smith died yesterday after a long illness. Ste was a dental assistant and a member of the Sashabaw United Presbyterian Church. Surviving are her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Melvin H. Smith Sr., with whom she made her home; two brothers, Melvin Jr. in the USAF at Oscoda and Richard R-at home; and a grandmother, Mrs. Milfred Miller of Union Lake. WESLEY V. SUDOMIER AVON TOWNSHIP-Requlem mass for Wesley V. Sudomier, 68, of 371 HUl will be 10 a.m. Friday at St. Andrew’s Catholic Church. Burial wiU be in Mt. Avon Cemetery. Rosary will be 8:30 p.m. tomorrow at the William R. Potere Funeral Hc^. Mr. Sudomier died yesterday after a long illness. A retired Detroit Free Press artist, was a member of St. Andrew’s Catholic Church. Survivliig are his wife, Edna; two sons, William at home and John of Royal Oak; one daughter, Mrs. Mary Discont of Fresno, Calif.; his mother, Mrs. Anna Sud(»nier of Detroit; two. brothers; five sister?; and five grandchildren. Sat* Vk .... ....L nr- ■ Oakland County, SV. ■■ & T4N,~NlCjyiyjt^ In ttia oanMrIlna of ---- ---- —Id, laid point baing W 51' 30" W 219.70 ft. and S 32* X W 453J0 ft. from ttw Nortli % comar of tald Sac. 23; tti I X X W tUSl ft; th N «5* 07' 21" W 440 ft. k> tha SW comar of Parcal 1; th N 33* X ■ 203J2 ft; th 5 45* 07' 31" e 440 ft. to Iha pomi of bag, contabilno 3J8 Aeraa, and tublacf fo Iha right of way of racord for BrWga HUTTBR and LONGSON Attomayt at Law 2701 e. ---------- E. Michigan Avi Mg, A^lgan By; CONWAY LOI Mottaagaa ONGION HANFORD 0. STEPHENS Service for Hanford 0, Stephens, 53, 4010 Arcadia Park, _____________ ________________ Waterford Township, will be 11 ers, Richard d Milford and IL-Yl® F. Z18LER a m. Friday at the C. J. God- Robert of Highland; and three ORCHARD LAKE - Service hardt Funeral Home with burial grandehiidren. for former resident Mrs. Lyle F. at Roseland Park Ometery. (Sonia) Zisler, SI, of Fort My- Mr. Stephens died yesterday WILLIAM J. REED erg, Fla., will be 11 a.m. tomor-after a short iUness. PONTIAC TOWNSHIP - Wil- row at Bell Chapel of the Wil- He was formerly a machinist Ham J. Reed, 33, of 85 Oakmont liam R. Hamilton Co., Binning-foi-Artco Inc., Fraser. _ died today after a long lAneas. j ham. Burial will be in Acacia Surviving are his wife Ethel M.; a son Robert 0. of Waterford Township; and two daughters, Markm J., of Waterford Tovmship and Mrs. Dale W. Bor ry of Orchard Lake. His bo^ is at the Harold R. i Pkrk, Southfield. Davis Funeral Home, Auburn Mrs. Zisler died Sunday after Heighta. An employe of Pontiac Fisher Body Plant, be was a mamber of Pontiac Lodge No. 21, Shelley, and a son, Gary, both at home, II ntd 25, 1945 md Icptambcr LI, 15, 32 and 39, I9W and OdnbPr I Mid II, I94f RBCISTRATION NOTICE FOR CITY Stil* Of Michlgon. droBy olyin tfi "MIchtaMt Ik mod cBrk, « Mid City not olroody roglitorod u tiiMf opply to mo poroonolly lor u roglifrotlon. Provided, howovor, thot 0 Intorvoning bolwoon tl Netico It horoby given thot I will bo ot IV WIco Monday, October 4, 1045 -XLt**' ’’’• Uoy procodlng Hid rtoctlon, 01 provMtd by Section 4f| Act >. .*<♦» «9 1954, from I 'dock i-M. ufini I o'clock PM. on ^ fSL'Si P«Wo of rovlowing 10 roglitrollon and raglitarino luch a w quallfltd tiaefort In mM CHy at IMII proparly apply fharafor. i!S“S Si.^'^Mibewlored ROSALIND WILDOSN Saptambar 31 anr33,^1Mf No. 17,111 ITATi OF MICHIOAN-Tho Freboto for the County af Oakland ' *11.,Court- 11, Panfloc, MtcMoM a hearing bo of all eraditoro ot mM oitoto rogul^ to pneva thair efaUtit and m U*!!'*ui.y^.JT'iiJL Mih Court, and oerva- a copy upon’ Soall '•!!!.' ■ 3SM ppulh (QiflSlS! J Drive, Rachpofar, MStlim. Publlcollon and oprvicp thaiTbl made M pwldod by SfdfulP itid Cduit R^ 0 W le^tMoHan HI You Am Horoby Neflflod 9Im9 ffia Oakland County Board ot Suparvltort hot cauiad to bo filed bi Ihli Court a Cam-plaint praying far tha aatabllalunani by IMt Court of tho normal halgtit and Icval of Van Norman Lako, aaM lakt ._ 31 and 33 of Circuit Court for tho County af Oakland, at tha Oakland County Court Hpum Towar, 11N North Toltarapli Road, Pontiac, Mkhlpan, an PrMay, tba IRh day ot Odebor, AJ3., Itil, at Mw apan-Ing of Court on Wipl doy at 9 tjn., bolero Iha Hon— Circuit Judge, m B. TharBum, You Ara Furthor NelMod Itiat on told — Complainant mtondo to oak ’ to Bdgw wiSrs ‘"^iCw*aIo5#**'!r 944.71 toot abaya oaa lovoi wl not ba tho laual fiMd at normal height and lovoi ot 0 SmStinmi* ^ sranlad JIROMI S. RRONBON Oakland County. NUcMaan By; ROBIRT A. ALUMI HAYWARD WHITLOCK and CHARLIB J. LONG AaoT Carp. Caunael Mr Oakland Gaunly, MIcMaan By: ROBSRT A ALLII4 • * It, 33 and 39, H4S Offica Addrtii; CorporMon CaunttI 1309 N. Talagriph Rd. Pontiac, MIchiM Phono: 339-47ir SWVr.d.Tfa.-i a 1H4, Bukk, LtSaBrt Conv. baartng ^lal nwn^ 4KI0Sn5«, will Ba hold! Datad; lopitmbtr 17, im Sank af DalraR S* AMn St. Ntar, NUcMbwi platont CPoblar 31 and 33,1945 iovSRTISSMINT FOR BIDB Ponfl^Hnian RIvar Oralii No. 3 > Oakland Cowtfy, MMilaan pontiac-o*h!toh rTviTorain"no! 3 and appurtinm work In Mia City of a..r«o.TCsfscs'ojr»* Barry, Drain Commletlanaf. Oakland Cou^, Michigan, m S. TWeg^ Raad, fwJ'AC' Michigan, unttll* pjn. j£-»T.) m Mo mil day ot OdoBar, of ralntarcad canerota chan-oth^gwrlenanf worlb^S*NMS!a City It etficH I Oadga M»7 bo abN tha 0^ d Jenoo, Hanry a C^mna MPfimn. 30N Waal Control ywyw.of nit lata tuan flvo (l») Kif?" J* JPbwM •* Btopwl. rjAnoTb^'i^^ 5X*Nh5Iw2v ' t dMlar vaRimo and R.’MsrrATsur 5* rIoM W raoirvad by tha Dwnar M •oMBt any proBMil, M rajact any ar an pro^aau and M WaMonrrOBularmdt DONALDS, A^ tnbor i%'d^ s Fight Hotel Bbzo; 'Lody Bird It Guest MILWAUKEE, Wis. (AP) -Finmeo fought a blaze early today in the downtown hotel where Mn. Lyndon B. Johnson was an ovemif^t guest. A discarded cigarette in a ^plastic waste basket started the fire in a cocktail lounge on the second floor. No guests were evacuated. ‘ Funny-Face Juniors Get Luci Laughing WASHINGTON (UPI) ^ Luci Baines Johnson entered her third day of college life today, already caught up in good-na-'tured hazing from upperdasS' men at George Washington Uni> v^ty. * First, Luci got a nickname as do all freshmen. Her’s is “How-atd Johnson.” The Juniors tried to make the freshmen laugh by making funny faces. Luci did and h^ ‘‘{wnishment” was 25 pushupis. THE PONTIAC PRE$tS, WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 22, 1965 The loganberry originated in the garden of Ju^e J. H. Logan at Santa Cruz, Calif., in 1881. The Judge was trying to cross a wild blackberry with a cultivated rariety, when some insect apparently played a trick Oh hun: it pollinate a native blacabery plant with red raspberry poilen. Death Notices AZeLTON. SEPTEMBER XL INS, 6RME U .«S0 Harr^.^v^r It tCnw,'f>ray BROWN, SEPTEMBER It, INS, WILLIE, StS Pranklln Roadi aga n. Punaral tirvica wHI to told Thuriday, Sapl. 2S, at 11 a^n. at Ito WIHIam P. Davit Punaral Hohm. Intarmant In local eama-tary. Mr. Brown will lla In tfata kROWN, SEPTEMBER ALLIE ALVIRA, 1054 ________ Oriva, Pontiac Townthipi aga daar mottiar ot Mrt. MIMrad I Mon, Mrt. Vara Atetliawt, •urvivad by 14 grandchlMran and as Braat,grandctilldrtn. Funeral tarvica will to haM Thursday, Sapl. aa, f* -------------- ---------- Punaral Noma. BURLINO, SEPTEMBER 11, INS, HELEN D„ taa Myrtia, WaMrtord TowntMpi aga SSi tolovad wWa oi Cyril B. BurRiiBi daar maltor ot Mrt. WaMar Mallay, Mrt. Edward LarkM, Mrt. Wayna Prancitca, and Edward B. and Billy Joa Burttnai daar tMar at Mrt. ClH-lard Haia. r — ■ - Maa mtnwrial ttrvloa i diJTwrwy awidRj^at^ Noma. PunarC haw Friday, S a.m. at tto i naral Home. |r turvivad to thraa hours 3 to S ptn. and t to f p.m. bLbvl,“tfiWfiBBiir“li," Ttoi NELLIE M., tormarty at MS H" dala. Royal Oaki aga 01; d< moihar ot Mrt. Oract M. Broa a turvivad to two grandchlMi 0 tiva graattoranddilldran. I ral tarvTca wTlI to haM Prhh » ptn.) ORILLEN, SEPfEMBER II, latS, HENRY E., 5170 HllUmoro, Sprlng-tlald Towndilpl •9» 51; balovad huttond of Paltia (Ruthmara) Orlllani daar tathar at Mrs. Hugh E. Orlova and Mrt. Robart C. Tripp; daar bralhar of Mrt. Prod Drayton Plaint, with Palhar Ed- GAMBLI, SdPTEMifeR II, INS, CLAUDE, OWI Donna Lou Drive, Brighton, Mkhlgw, tormarly ot Pontiac; ago 71; balovad husband ot Edna Gambia; daar bralhar ot Roy Oambtok Mrt. IMay Crouch- --- -- “—« Crawtoy; The toga No. n will mant In woodnwra Camatory, Da-trolt. Mrt. Glova will lla In ttata at the Sullivan Punaral Homa, . Kb^l,' TKptembbr 11, iNS, AAARY E., Roula #1 Cyprati Road, Port Plarca, PlorMa; aga 57; tolavad wHt ot Harbart W. Klaat; daar molhar at R^ Lyons, Mrs. Elliabalh ZIcm^, Mrt. Trudy Mattoon, Mrt. Dorothy Tbnolt and ASrt. Barbara PItchang; daar tMar of Mrt. Rota Ahaam and Mrt. Margaret ^yfh; alto turvivad to ona naphaw, Thomas P. Ahaam and II grandehlldran. Mrt. Klaat will to takan from lha DanaltonOehna Punaral Homa to tlM Ruttall J. Shaw Punaral Homa at Port Chaator, Now York, Thurtday morning. Punaral tarvica wNI to hold Saturday from In St. Mary's Camatory at Rvt, Now York. Arrangamanto by to* Danalaon-Uehnt Punaral Homa. ' jUc^AfcLAt^ii: wwtiiwrrM;- im » PRANCES B. (NBLLB), MN BuP tola. Union Laka; aga 77; daar s> mothar « Mrt. T. C. (Ruth) > Slngar, Mrt. Edward A. (Man Laa) Bovan, Jamat E., John E. -- —-iwa ciaiar, Mao turvlvad d IS arkat- atdey avanT* I,' kawa . narai tarvica will ba told Thurt-.„,.,.day. fagtambar IS at IB .am. at I'?St. PaIrM't Catholic Church, Unton Laiw. Intarmant In Mount a, Nona Camaiary. Mrt. McParltna . Ito In Jala at tha C. J. ,Oomi# Punaral Homa, Kaago Htobor. (Suggatlad vithlnf hours ‘ . 3 to I p.m. and 7 to a pm.) inWLiV, SBPTkMBik If, 175*, WILLIAM T. JR„ tlB7 N. Haittoad . Chtoaga, iiiinala, tori^v ? Mlltord; aga 44; bt'—" — f iurvlnla Matlav; d4 I Mra. Barbara (tton MANAGER Soma parts aaparltnca datiri axMlant salary, unusually i fringa banafllt. Car himlihad. ^ ply to Mr. RaynoMt. « BIRMINGHAM Chrytlar-PI Attention Auto Solesmon avaraga 11,000 par mor SPARFAN DOGGE m S. Saginaw FE Sam AUTO OEALIr F___________ •arvica datMrtmant, gtod working oonditlont. Apply PORTER FOR SCREW MACHINE Brown and Sharoai thlfft. S3.5S UP to with OVWtIma. Ah inturancu ana unitormt fumlihad. Writt Pontiac Pratt Bax W. AUTO MECHANIC, WE PAY 70 par cant plus other benofltt. Bird Chrytlar - Plymoulh, Mlltord, too Mr. Bird. 4I4-3W1. AUTOMOBILE BODY SHOP Assistant managtr, ntw shop, volume dealer, excellent opportunity for tn axperlancad man. See or call Mr. Wally Sudia John McAullffe Ford, 430 Oakland Ave._____________ ASSISTANT MANAGER FOR large growing rntaurant chain. Opporfunitlat wide open. Reply Pontiac Preat Box 104.___________ Automobile Mechanic ^ train *1^t *lnd'lvWuil!*'*Planty*ot work avallabto tor unllmitod aam-Ingt. Houghton S Son, OMt, Rambler, GMC Trucks, sn N. Main BANK MESSENGER Excellent opportunity for young high school graduate It years or oMtr with own car, to tdvanct In the banking prolaulon. Apply In person at BIrmIngham-B Bank, 1040 E. Maple Rd., BARTENDER Part time. Waakandt and Phene EM 341511 attar 11 a salary, liberal benMItt. AMlIctnt would to contldarad If olIgTbla tor llconM within 5 months. Contact Ptrtonnal Dtpl., St. Jotapb Morey BUMP AND PAINT - EXPERI-ancad man for naw-uted car cn«-collltlon work. Real i -------, at new (hop. * — roltf, Ortonvllla. 517-15 BUS BOYS WANTED. FULL TIME. Apply at Big Boy Restaurant. Tal-agriph and Huron. lJo_^pm. CARPENTERS, NEEDED IN ROCH-etter area. Journeymen, rougherv end^a^renllcet, cell after 5 p.m. CARPENTERS AND HELPERS. AF-ter 5:3d. 331-M79. CAR WASHERS, FULL AND PART time.. 14t W. Huron____________ COMPETENT SHOE MAN Womon't and chHdron't boNor grodo. Mutt be exporloncod and amMtlout. Apply Jullard't, Maplt and Totogroph. MA 5-1555.______ CLERK FOR GENERAL RETAIL hardware — full or port time, Romeo oreo, PL 1-lSH.________ CARPENTERS, ROUGH AND PIN ith, year around work, mutt be union. 331-9111.______________ CLEAN UP, BARTENDERS, BUS bays, dithwaiheri. Apply Pino Knob Ski Retort, 7777 Pine Knob Rood, Clorktton.____________ COOK-GRIDDLE AAAN. HIGHEST pay for axporloncod man. Benofltt. Vtcatlon. Stoy week. BIft't, Tole-groph at Mopit (IS Mile). CONSTRUCTION WORICERS, MUST be In good health, no oxpr-'--- nocottory, wo need hM graduatot with their mlITtor II W. Lowrtnee, “poniltoc^ DELIVERY BOY, II OR OVER, Chicken Delight, 1301 DESIGNERS AND DETAIL ERS tpaclal machinet. Stockwell E n-glnoerlng Co., 3S07 Elizabeth Lk. Rd., Ponttoc, Mich.__ DESIGNERS For toolt and tpoelol machinet Top Ratet LOCKHART DESIGNERS DETAILERS We need you tor divirtitlod work It lots GoH Drive, near Orchard Ltko Rd. end Ttitgrtph. DO YOU WANT TO WORK? JOB opening at Michigan Christian Cot-toga, custodian work — hours 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. or 11 t.m. to I p.m. Pay will depend on experience efficiency. Cell Mr. Ed Prld-ley, 5S1-5111.________■ DRAFTSMEN tome experience wim ina |iriin.lplat tnd prtcllcat ot drafting. Position Involves Ink iHxi. iniaraaiaa appiicamv an apply Immadlaltly to the Par nel Division, Oakland County C Houtt, 1100 N. Ttitortph Pontiac, Room w-140. ____ DRIVER, STOCKBOY FOR LADIES wtor, S4S to itort -------------- nocottory. Apply DRIVER 25-35 years of oge Good driving record, mutt knot city and area wan. Apply In parto m||j. Abova tvaraga aarnlngt, n “ "*Cooi#y Sotl watar Co. 114 W, Wallen, Pontiac DRIVER AND MAN TO WORK II lumber yard. Apply to40 Cooie ''*"DRIVIERrSAL*ESMAN 5 DAY WEEK notltt paid. Apt Btktry, 1M ' ENGINEER AMltlMit Chlot Engtowor. Protor-tblv oxparionetd In heutoheld op-pllancat or dorngille hooting tnd ilr-oenditloning piaduct dtvalep-tnent and production. Excellant opportunity tor tdvtnconMnl. Salary oBkn. Call Mr. Belton 4S4-I415. iNBROkTl^ 54AN TO SELL ELEC-Irk opplloncst tnd wator toftonort. Plonty ot floor time tnd ISadt. Expartoncad prtftrrtd. Ago IS and evar. Mutt have own car. Apply only II you art Intorattad In working. Call FE A3S73 tor appolntipont tor 0 portonal Inlarvlaw. ExFiRIBNCI --------4CBD DRAOLINB OPER- ■tor. 437-4101. EXPERlbNCib' feNOINk LAtHE yO.» IIW jW ROtd off Ww M5t. IXPlhlENCEb WOOL PRBSSt'R. Driver salib-... ----hod lott drink KiPERItNCBO LANDSCAPE HELP ■XPbRIBNCW LANDSCAPE m8n, —— EXPERIENCED TRU( Field Representative NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY Wa oNar a---------------- lining program that nagarlal duNas and *“ high school Invttl a graat amount ot time and money to da-valoo you Into o valuobla, key am-ployaa tor our company. Work from a large national lima (alat llnanca oHka. Our comp^ hat Inlarv Canada. ' ' iflta inciuoing prom mar-hospitalization. Call tor Groan LI 7-5400, Aaaoclata OI count Cerp._____________ FILING CLERK AND ELUE^INT FLIGHT LINE PERSONNEL AND mwhank halpar, paid vacoHont, good Inturonco pton. and company banofiti with fast growing Arm. Apply In person. Commander Aviation, comer of Airport Rd., and M», Pontiac Airport,__________ FRONT END AND ^ BRAKE MECHANIC Exporltncod John Bean front tnd, mutflar, brake, 44W-hour weak, union, no nights. Appty In parson, Cartar Tire Co., 370 S. Saginaw. FULL TIME CUSTODIAN. SEND resume stating age, experience, ret. to the Community United Pres-b^ian Church. Box 135, Drayton FULL TIME APPLE ^K'EM, Diehl's Orchard and Cider Mill, 1471 Ranch Rd., 5 miles south ot Holly, lust oW Mlltord Rd. 537-4001. FULL OR PART-TIME, LINOTYPE operator. Apply Division Printing, im Syhrerfla, off M», Pontiac. , In Theotro after 1 pjn. ._L TIME REAL ESTATE SALES-msn. Phone tor appl. OR 4-Hll. Ray O'Neil Realtor 3510 Pontiac Ld. Rd. Furnace Installer Identlel and small comnrwrclal must make up oil duct. , Exp. Service Mon For gas and olh Call M. A. Benson Furniture Solesmon >ue to our expansion program, we ■ed an experienced furniture ilesman and a "trainee sales-■•fi" Thaya are career oppor-1 liberal compensation FURNITURE UPHOLSTERER AND FINiSHER, PERMANENT. LIBERAa PAY. PH. FE 3-7114. son. 137 W Clarkston Rd., Lake Orion.______________ _ GAS STATION ATTENDANT, MUST be experienced In minor repairs. Local references, full or pert time, Sunoco, Telegraph at Maple Rd. GAS STATION ATTENDANT, EX. perlenced, mechanically Inclined, GOOD CLEAN-UP MAN t for used car lot, full tit pay, must quality. BILL SMITH USED cars FE 4-4241 Day and evening shifts. Also part time weekend work. Top wages, tree meals, hospitalization, llle Insurance, paid vacation. Apply In Person between 1 and S p.m. et the Big Boy Orlvo-ln, Telegraph and Huron or Dixie Highway and Sliver Lake Rd. G R 0 W I N G company, RECOG- —----- J original propose! wo to grow and become pert of team. Mutt hava creotiva and la denblp ability. CLYDE ENGINEERING DIV. 1700 W. Maple, Troy, Mich. _____________444-8333___________ h social security ai complete resume ot oducttlonal Pontiac Preat Box t07. IBM, EXPERIENCE IN OPERA-tkm of 407, 404, and 000 machlnos. Ability to work with minimum supervision mandatary roquirement. Please phono tor appolntmont tor personal Interview to Personnel Insurance Inspector Man needed for Oakland County area, full or part time, prefer experience but will train. Write 0. 0. Box 711, Pontiac, Mlchlpen. IRRIGATION CONTRACTOR NEEDS reliable men to work kmg term program. Good pay tor right men. Call 474-1305, 0 p.m.-IO p.m. JANITORS -lies 31.05 t Hospital har ^ltiol?ifxl W. Huron.________ JANITORIAL SERVICE, FROM Ptrsonnol Oopt., LICENSED PLUMBER FOR PART-tlme omploymant. Contract with the City of Pontiac. Contact Joeoph R. Nelpllng, City Englnoor. FE 3-7131. MACHINE OPERATORS EXPERIENCED ON ALL MACHINES. STEADY EMPLOYMENT - HAWK TOOL AND ENOINEER-ING, CLARKSTON, MICH. ____ MACHINISTS " Manufacturer located In Walled Lake hat opaningt tor young men to do the toUowTng operations; MILLING SURFACE GRINDING wo^ and frinSa'bSnSlfs*'**' Apply at VALENITE METALS 31t5 Haggerty Rd. Equal opportunity emptoytr AUN TO LEARN AVIATION BUSI AAAN TO HELP IN NEW TRAILER ^rk, ago n-* ------ AAAN FOR ploni, porf-1 Lake Rd./ A MAN TO SERVICE •bllshed house to houM counts, S5S 0 weak end can • - -E 3-1^ tor pei Sion. Phono FE 3 4 DAIRY FARM. AAASONS FOR MODERNIZATION, person to Personnel Dept, c ------ agency's expanding Date Processing Division. Exportoneo in programming a necettlly. Salary -----lent on exporlonce and back- I — Includet liberal fringe WANTED FOR FULL-TIME Horf course maintenance at private ^b.^A^ 5310 Inkster Rd. Call MANAGER TRAINEE A Young married man, mechonlcal-<7 iv Inclined for ratall aewlng marine concern, tolea txperltnct halptul. butjibrd t---"----■- plus dm..— AMN FOR LAWN MAINTENANCE, man for pruning trooa. AL G. BROWN .. 010 Purdy $t. BIrmlnohom Ml ASOIS AAAN POE ttlLP IN KITCHEN - MATERIAL HANDLERS TO WC In shipping and receiving d Choke ot ablfts. Apply 115 A St., Rechoator, Mkh._______ MECHANIC FOR DETACHED U MECHANICALLY INCLINED MAN to train at aatlatant to plant an-ginaar, ataady work, day shift, excellent opportunity, tor right man. Apply to Mr. HthI, Pontiac Laundry, 540 S. Takgr^. MEN FOR LANDSCAPING, OVER MEN FOR STATIONARY AND PA-trol route, nood gim permit, 4415 Barker, Drayton PItIna. 4735343. MEN FOR INSIDE WORK, OVER to, alto tor Iron railing and concrete step Installation. Concr'<te Stop Co., Highland Road, ■cross tram Pontiac Airport. OR 37715. MIDDLE - AGED AAAN TO DO church lenltorlal work. 30-hr. wk. Apply Box 341, Mlltord, Mich. MILL HAND Must be able to set up and operate. Experience on eircratt parts end precision tolerances preferred. NEED $150 WEEKLY Interviewing married men over with good work record but II opportunity to earn $7500 to $10 Bucelo, 434-«74S to arrange per-sonel Interview. NEED $11S-$150 tor 40 hour week or $30450 tor ■ flexible 15 to 10 hour week, cell OR 35545 to see It you_queHty torjslfhe^opponunlly. NEW OR USED CAR SALESAAAN, for full or pert time sales, contact Howard DIetzel, Seles Men- eger, 401-3400._______________ OPENING NOW AVAILABLE TO loin eggreulve estobllsbed reel estate office. Member Pontlec Multiple Listing Service. Inquire Warren Stout, Realtor, 1450 N. Op^ke Rd., Pontlec. FE S-IOOL______________ partTmanager experience tor dealer new bulldino, Milford 4 PART TIME BUTCHER, 7 A PerrvJ=E 5-7IM._________ PINSETTERS, 14 YEARS AND OLD-, transportetlon furnished, Pon- tlec, Auburn Heights e PORTER, MOTEL WORK ROOFERS ONLY, SHINGLERS AND hot roofers, expartoncad. Top pay ^ the aquaro only. 051.1450._____ SALESAAAN, TIRES AND APPLI-ances, aga 10-30, experience help- company bonettta. V opportunity company, i 140 N. Saginaw, Pontlec. SERVICE STATION ATTENDANT, salary based on exparlenca, day shift end weekends. FE 3-7107. SHIPPING AND RECEIVING. APPLY IN PERSON AT ROCHESTER AEROSOL CORP., 407 WOODWARD, ROCHESTER MICH. SHORT ORDER COOKS, DAYS AND nights, experienced. Apply 3017 N. ----^ - Roy,| o,x.___________ r Chet Drive-In, 511 North SINCERE good referencet to ba nis own business. No ___________ Potential ot 34,000 to $10,000 this year. Many extras, premiums, bonuset. Aiiply 1377 Elliebeth Lake Roed.J to ll_____ SURFACE GRINDERS, ~S H A P E R hands and milling machina operators. OAy and night shift. Expe- —1 trainees. Fringe I---- Future p-— —________North Ro Clawson. JU 0-1040. STICKER MAN CABINET MAKERS MICHIGAN WOODWORK and SPECIALTIES CO. BOX 175 Battle Creek, Mich. WO 2-7561 TAM O'SHANTER COUNTRY CLUB naads caddies, MA 4-1574, ask tor Bob Runyon.__ TELEVISION Technicians RCA ___________ benatits Including t and alght holidays, paid sick leave, tree hospitallietlon end surgical Insurance tor you and your dependents and free life Insurance and e moderate retirement plan. RCA oHers a planned edvencement program. Company provided trucks, tools, educational tultlonel plan and a fraa training program. Including color Talavislon. For personal Inlarvlaw between 11 a.m. -I p.m. call at 1711 Elizabeth Lake Rood, or phone for an appointment, FE 54II8. (An Equal Opportunity Employer) Tire Changers -—^ — * -eded. Union Ished. Insur-plan lly I ______________________ontle_____ TOOL MAKERS Cepabla tool maker, full or part time, "iftamopns", phone 887-4171. TRAINEES • Manufacturer located Lake hat a TREE TRIMMERS, EXPERIENCED $3 oar hr., young man willing to I, M per hr., apply e.m., 5097 W. Mepit. equal opportunity em- UlNcSb TRUCK DRIVER, _ on leml, at laait 5‘ .. .. ba willing to work In factory w not driving. 4734111, Mr, Branq. TRUCK MECHANIC S3U:'» TV obrviceMAn; Fua 6k part time, read and kanch work. IMA aoTtOw Help WeirtedI Mule______________A TRAINEE - GRILL IMAN. tO-15, neat, willing, apply In parson. Eilat Bros. Big Bay Drivt Ins. N 5. TalagraiX and 1470 Dixit. WANTED: REAL ESTATE SALES-man with llcanta lor new building program. Schra- IfCOOKS. Mapto 'or Ml*'^7t37. Maple _ Pancake_Housa^_ _ WANTED REAL ESTATE SALES- Warden Reel^. WASH ROOM HELPER, PONTIAC Leu^ry, 540 S^Telegraph. WELDERS structural steel. Pontlec area tebricetor, overtime, 334-1551 ^_ I, FE 4-3431. ___ _____________ YOUNG MAN FOR GENERAL work ,1 lurniture (fore. Steady employment tor someone eager to - learn. Reply Pontlec Press Box 3. YOUNG MAN, 1$ OR OVER, TO learn siding work Must be able to climb and work off scatlold. Cell after 7 p.m. 343-7451. _ _ _ YOUNG MEN 14-14. NOW TAKING APPLICATIONS FOR PART TIME AFTER SCHOOL AND FULL-TIME WORK. EXCELLENT EARNINGS WITH VERY good CHANCE FOR ADVANCEMENT. INQUIRE 150 N PERRY. ____ YOUNG MEN FOR RESTAURANT No e n counter men, ( Tejegreph at Maple (IS Mllel. Help Wonted Female . Bill's. V. Maple. Ml 7-0411. lion Frocks ' easy, run. Convenient housewte FVr*"'FREE”kiT write' "Feshlon , Dept. _Ohlo^45115. Alterations Lady Wool Presser Apply Drayton Martlnlzlng, 4714 JMallon Blvd., Drayton Plains. A MATURE WOMAN FOR MOTH-erless home, honest end reliable, _pleesant surroundings, 335-3100. APPLICATIONS NOW BEING TAK en lor box office cesbiers and refreshment stand cashier. Apply Miracle Mile Drive-ln Theatre, ett- er 1 p.m. ____________________ APPLICATIONS NOW BETng Accepted tor counter girls, lull- and part-time. Apply at the Donut Center, 17 N. Saginaw at Law- llve In. Children welcome. 414-1771. A HOUSEKEEPER-BABY SITTER, Rochester area, own transportation, non-smoker. Hours adlusteble. OL 1-1454._ AUTOMATIC SEWING MACHINE operators, seat bell assemblers, ullllly girl. Choice of shilts. No Malr^St., Roche$ter,_M]ch. BABY SITTER, la OR OVER, LIVE *" ■ Call FE 4-4317 be- mlddle-age. FE 54)$71. 1. MY 31450, etfer 4 p.m. r SITTER AND LIGHT girls. High school 45 South Telegra ^l-'l‘’p!m' Friday, Sept. 14 AWERY B^^ES INC. BEAUTY OPERATOR WANTED, 50 per cent commission. 33M571._ BEAUTICIAN, HIGH STYLISt AND thrift operator. DONNELL'S — ence necessary. 343-7111 between t-5 p.m. CASHIER<LERK, FULL AND PART time. Exc. pay, uniforms turn., cosmetic experience helpful. noM Drugs, 1540 N. Wr ^ Bloomfield Hills. 330-7171. CHECK ROOM GIRLS Neet middle aged woman c COOK, GENERAL HOUSEWORK, ; days, 11 a.m. throutfi dinner good references, only. Ml 4-3710. CASHIER, FOR NIGHT SHIFT, wombn 30 years or older, apply at Big Boy Rastaurant, Ttlegraph and Huron Street.___________________ COUNTER GIRL AND INSPECTOR who can do minor sewing, quality dry cleaning plant, Douglas Clean-'• ~. Woodward, BIrm' ' COUNTER GIRL, PERMANENT Position, no experience necessary, will train, must be over 15 years old. Birmingham Cleaners, 1153 S. Woedwerd. Ml 4-4410.____________ Dining Room Waitresses Ted's ot Pontiac Mall has Immediate openings, lor dining room waitresses. 5 days par week, split shift, no Sundays or holidays. Insurance benellts, paid vacations, food allowance. Apply In person. TED'S ____PONTIAC MALL DRUG AND COSMETIC CLERK, lull or part time. Ruu's Country Drugs, 4500 Elizabeth Laka Road. DRUG CLERK, pretan ‘ {on c EXPERIENCED ~ rtf., lull or Lake Drug, EX CAREER GIRLS Money tor Christmas — Immediate Assignments — Part-Time Office Work - All Types Work Open CALL MANPOWER. FE 3to04 EXPERIENCED WOOL PRV experienced sales oIrl and cashier, tor high faxhtan haa aaH hose departnrwnt. BXPERIBNCBD WAITRESl tBEIK- ] D— rcu^5k^Ail!iy In perion. Rael'i Drlvp-In. EXPERIENCED WAITRESS, I sbltt, ll-S. Jack's Drlv»ln, 11 n. ASontcalm. EXPERIENCED WAITRESS __________OL 33751 ._________ GAL FRIDAY Clerk-typist with shorthand ebil-Ity, age 15-35, good salary, fringe benellts. Apply at Blrmlngham-—''-'d Bank. 1040 E. Maple. r IN, 14-45. NO king. 1 child, 414- GENERAL OFFICE WORK. Bbok- trtln. Write details to Pontiac Press, Box 17. _______ GIRLS 10-40 FOR WAITRESS WORK, nights, p atfer 4, L AND counter wait-1, must ba over II. >^ly I Hamburgers, 331 5. Tela- HOUSEHOLO HELP. 1 DAY PER week. Union Lake area, mutt have transportetlon, 401-5540 evenings. "lUSEKEEPER, OVER 11, LIVE . Own room, second door, new, ‘ • ■ • d. South- »3 I747 di HOUSEKEEPER, LIVE IN, 5Vi days, other help, no pre-school children, tine living quarters, top wages, call Bloomfield Hills, Ml 4-4714 tor appointment.__ INTERESTING WORK FOR MA-lure clerk. 401-0411. Finger's Pontiac Mall.___ _______ employment Interviews, minimum salary 1314 per month. 40-hour week, time-and-a-half tor overtime. Attractive fringe benefits. Includes paid pension end life Insurance plan. 50 per cent paid hospllellze-tlon. Sick benefit program provides tor payment ot unused sick lime ennuilly. SubntttI training and KITCHEN HELPER, NIGHTS 311, elderly women, good wages, Harvey's Colonial House. 5474 Dixie _ Hwy„ Waterford. _ ____J____ LADFeS, MILLIONS ARE VIEWING "Avon Celling" on TV. Show end you will selll We'll train you to earn the amount ot money you need. Cell nowl FE 4-4500 or write Drayton Plains, P. 0. Box 71. _ LADY WISHING TO BROADEN her life with challenging, creative work. Will train. Ktndaki's, 45 W. Huron. LAUNDRY HELP, EXPERIENCE not necessary. Pontiac Laundry, 540 South Telegraph. ________ LITTLE DUTCH TREAT RESTAU-rant, opening soon, needs waitress, cook and porter. Good wages. Apply In person. 3195 Orchard Lake Rd^^K^ Harbor. ________________ MEDICAL OFFICE AS'sTsTANT, Experienced desirable, Drayton Plains , OR 4-1100 MIDOLE AljED WOMAN, B live In preferred. Clarki MOTHERS TOY CHEST AAAKES IT EASY >h needed for samples. choice yo Pontiac. 682-1 M3 _____________ NEAT, RELIABLE SH6RT-(|RDER wages, excel ton Top Orive-ln, St., FE t-4431. NEED WAITRESS FOR FOOD AND bar. Apply In peraon. Walertord Hill Country Club, Dixie Hwy., S. at M-IS. NURSES AIDE, RELIEF WORK _____________OR 341001_____________ NURSES' AIDES, SOME EXPERI-ence necessary, Rochsstar area. 444-2430 or 451-4377. NURSES, AIDE AND HOUSEKEEP-er, apply In person. Rose Lane Convalescent Home, 041 Auburn, Cell 335-4247.__________________ PART-TIME! k I T CHEN HELP SALESLADY FOR JEWELRY Odpt., In SImma Oapt. Stora. See Mrt. Bllllngt, SImma, 70 N. Sag- SALESLADIES SPORTSWEAR READY-TO-WEAR " -r Part-Time to 45 years at age. Salary pi commission. Liberal empkiye bar Ills. Apply In parson, esk tor Ml Bee. Alteration Woman Part-time position now open. Mi be experlencMi. 20-M veers of e| Apply In person, ask tor Miss Bi ALBERT'S hours per day. Janat Davli Dry M7-*3007*' *"’• SALESWOMEN, SOME ' fXPERI-ence, lull time and part time, apply Youngland Children's Shops, 2141 S. Telegraph, Miracle Mile Shopping Center. SECRETARIAL HELP NEEDED^— Permanent position In Inturance and real eslate attics. Experience preferred. Reply Pontiac Press, SHEET MUSIC SALES revlous knowledge of mutle he 3l In assisting taachers and c )mers to select praaar mu nethods. Ideal working conditkx WlMt.________________________ SUBSTITUTE MOTHER WHILE mother In hospital, 2 wks. Live In or out, own transportetlon, 3 er-tive children, a— ....... I, agat IV 473-0471. URGENTLY NEEDED RELIABLE SITTER FE 2-2042 WAITRESSES 4 BAStEMltllS Apply In paraen. 300 Launoe. WAITRESS <3^fiT“*pT)(IWri- days er ^ time, lOlf W. Huron or call 3340^ ,__ WAITRESSES' wantod tor Bbrnlngtiam rttlturaM, meals and unitormalumishtd, traa hoipltallzatien and paid vtcalloPt. O^toM't Rattavraiil. 71S Nwtor wXrtiitoEi. "bilEAt)' Ofi hM.)', KygiiffiTsaA’w; k ST! V IPF"' D—« THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1968 «MMT»gUrWy<T^UI<OW BOWL WOMAN KM KITCMKN. AMLY DrWt In. MM Dbiln ^irOMAN PON PULL-TIMe B A • Y nittinfc W «n How. ttS-MIS. IIMMkAN 1* bit OLDER TO WORK WOMAN FOK LIGHT HdUSEWORM •nt Bhm nniiniInQ. Exchan— lor tovoly t40om oMrlinont. SmMI cMrgo tar ulllitlot, ptai totero 4 pjn. FB S-5tq.__________ WOMAN FOR LIGHT HOUSEWORK and cart ol IIVyaar-oM chlW YOUNG LADY WANTED WITH E> partatici on cuh rtgiiMr and gar oral offlea. Apg.Y 7M0 Cootay Lak «d- Union Lake,_________________________ IMp WmM M. or F. t ALLY HIMSELF WILL TEACH YOU roal oatata. S7MNI1._______ APPLICATIONS ARE BEING AC-ewNad tar aortailfural prooram clack. Apply In parson, Oakland ASC County offlea. tt Oakland Avo.. Pontiac BANK TELLERS tdlata opanlcm tar „.-,.a In Blrcnltiflham — ... Apply In parain at Blrmlnoham-BlM^ld Bank, I04S E. ^la BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED RH Positiva RH Nog. VM, S1ILN - SI2.M DETROIT BLOOD SERVICE In Ppntlac FE 4M47 U S. Casa Mon. thni Frl., I ajn.-4 p.«n. ________Wad. I pjn.-7 p.nr>.___ Pl.SHWi^HER. WAITRESS, EXPER- WH< WLm h FOUNTAIN SALESPEOPLE FOR PERMANENT PART-TIME WORK APPLY IN PERSON t a.m. • 11 a.m. or I p.m. - 3 p.m. SSH Talagrapli at Mapio ir Hamlltan In BlrmhiBhani FRED SANDERS IMMEDIATE OPENINGS IN CLIN-Ical taboratary. ASCP, AMT or ottiar quallflad tachnldant. Days and aflamoon ahlfts. Maximum starting salary SS47 par month plus overtlma at tima and a halt. Awhc month. Work ai LABORATORY TECHNOLOGIST ....—lata opanings tor ASCP Technologists, Hamalolgy and Chemistry background pratarrsd. APPLY PERSONNEL DEPT., PONTIAC general HOSPITAL. MAN OR WOMAN WITH LATE --■- g| scribars homas. t — r. Circulation _ Prass, Pontiac, Michigan. MAN OR WOMAN An Ideal sales position In excsilant traNIc location. Sail Stainway, Stack, Kna^ and Grinnell planosi alio Magna-vox and Flshar staraos and others. A wonderful opportunity tar lha rl^t parson. Ap- GRINNELL'S PONTIAC MALL Att. Store V ___ ;lerk, pi sales experlanca. I WiBtEd M. ET F. I Surgical Tochnicion aduoMiv 7*yaaiy\Iq*«SIl>el?"!l! reuttna pdllam carp and wadtlc training In surgical taehnlgua — experlanca, Blrmbighaffi Nino-s. ifl-ssn.____________ ^^1^^ HBljpf^^lMljBEE*F^aiEEiB B~A THE STEREO AND MUSIC Division of Readers Dlgaal Salas and Sarvicas Inc. has a carsar appor-tunlty tar lha rIgM mani Curraid and ouaHflad i—' '• YOU have the EARN $180 A WEEK AND UP As a trained haavy aquipm operator or mechanic. Racognli protasslonal field training on ... Diesel aqulpmanf now used In Industry qualifies you lor Immadlala amployinant. NOT CORRESPOND- wlda placamant. VA-STATE PROVED. Terms oro avallab Gal true facts. Sond name, dress, age, phono number, I home to Natimal School of h Equipment. P.O. Box 70, \ Work WaNttd Mali CARPENTER WORK ________FE t-aitt________ CARPENTER WORK. 10 YUaRS Id except aolling. FE 4-MI7. CLEANING AND WALL WASHING. Busimss Sonrico ELECTRIC MOTOR SERVICE-RE-palring and rewlr-‘“ Phone FE AlWI. E. Pika, TESNER tree SERVICE. COM- ProssiiMiKiin * Tailorint 17 l-A ALUMINUM SIDING-STORMS FE S-W45. Joe vallaly. OL 1-«an GUARANTEED ALUMINUM sfarma from SMI. Daol direct, call Marty Mason, 334-3001. HOUSE PLANS DRAWN SIS. ASPHALT PAVING Tag Asphalt Poving la Contractors, Inc. FE MtM DRIVEWAY SPECIALIST, FE VINO Ffoo Estimataa. DURNEN ASPHALT PAVING 1 coating. OR 3-W57 or FE »-7in. WALT SEIBBR ASPHALT-PAVING FE yno or FE S-Mtl BLOCK LAYING AND CEMENT ’ BEAUTIFUL WALTERS r block laying-------- ' malarlals. SYLVAN f NMUr 1-STOP BUILDING SERVICE. FREE pImlnB, slala Ikensad, mambar ltan|toc Chamber of Commerce. ICAR garages. M7S. CE-dosen. We _______ Free estl- llald BuUdlng Co., 2-CAR GARAGE, SSIt 1-CAR GARAGES. lO'XlO', SS7S. WE build any size. Camant work -Froa astimatas. Pady-Bultt Garage COm or 3-MII.________________ CARPENTRY AND REPAIR VtORK JOHN TAYLOR, FLOOR LAYING. Sanding and finishing. IS years experlanca. 332-W71.___________ BRYAN F. FENCH CO. mates treaty given. FE S-ttT} Janitorial Sonrico SOD, PEATMOSS TOP SOIL dirt, crushed limestone, gravel, Idozlng. Tall Timbers Nursar-S S. Telegraph Rd. 333-S44S, A-l MERION SOD, LAID OR DE-llvared. Saadlng or rodressing old lawns. Free astimatas. No monm down. Braoca LandacapInB. FE ■I COMPLETE LANDKAPING, sodding, saadlng, discing, plow- SSi OS: ---------------- TONY'S COMPLETE LANDSCAP-kig, Marlon biua or Kantuck laid or dallvarad, top soli, till. sa3d7ie.__________________ TALBOTT LUMBER Glass Installed In doors anc dows. Complete building sarvka. I02i Oakland Ava.______« ■ CREATE A BEAUTIFUL FAMILY room with aim sM^. doors on your axlallng porch. Custom kHchora a spaclallly. FHA f-- FE 4^4U.____________________ EXPERT REMODELING AND AD dltlons by Craftsman. OL I-37N. HOUSE RAISING Ai«6 MOVH^ comant work, R. McCalum. FE INTERIOR FINISH, KITCHENS, FE*i"!%5 ^ axparlenca - REMODELING AND FINISiTWbRK -__________MY 3-71H___________ MBS GUTTER COMPANY Moviag aod Storaga SMITH MOVING CO. Painting uni Decorating •A PAINTING - INTERIOR - EX- I INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR niing, f irantaad. AAA PAINTING AND DECORATING Interior and extarlor, free mates. UL 2-3557 or UL 2-I3W._ INTERIOR, EXTERIOR REOECO rating. FE i-3ta. Ask tor Wayne. interlakes painting and dec orating. Al^work. OR 4-MtL PAINTING. PAPERING, CAULK Ing, raas. rates. Tom. 3ild6M or Roy, Novi, 34M122.__________ Piaao Tvaiag A-l TUNING AND REPAIRING car^^ldt__________FE 3-1217 WIEGAND PIANO TUNING?^ 30 years In Pontiac FE 2-W24 PioEtBriBi SanricB RETAIL PLUMBING AND HEATING SUPPLY ------------------ BROWNIES HARDWARE FLOOR SANDERS - POLISHERS WALL PAPER STEAMERS RUG CLEANER — POWER SAWS WALLPAPER STEAMER Rood MaiirtBMRCB SUBDIVISION CLARKSTON ROOFING COMPANY, Insurance and own, S7>dlt7. NEW ROOFS, REPAIRS, INSURED —----------- - — Tom, tU4ia. ROOFING AND SIDING, OLD, NEW ROOFING AND REPAIR. SEA ROOFING. COMPLETELY BLACK DIRT, SAND AND GRAVEL ^JTriN TrioMiiag Saniica A-l TREE EXPERTS. TREE WORK BI.L TREE TRIMMING, REMOVAL ig and removal. SsadON. t1 BEAUTIFULLY PURNISHBO, tanttan to diets, iwrsa»s cam, sonabla. FB M371. itoNiVcAOFT NO'AiiM iW>«n MBEkn and TrocMi « % ESTIMAiii** MPKIHS ■ EM 3-1 LIGHT HAULING aWYTIMI _________FE s-im________ *~'d>sap ^k!n?FE*^*!hL^'*^* truckinoT unwantiu tauled tree. M 3-ISM. PICK UP >REd I el valua tor Church Rr~ UL M1P or OR X13S. Poii^iijp * A-l FAINTING DONE NOWI IS years exp. Work oiisr. Rasldsn-tlal and cemmarclaL«7«dt71. A LADY INTERIOR DECORATOR, PaparInB. FE KI343. INTERIOR - EXTERIOR OECOAaT PAINTING AND PAPERING. YOU are next, Orval Oldcumb, I7>B«M. TramportotlBa IF YOU'RE GOING TO CALIFOR-nia, deliver a lata modal cor ter MSM Motara, aso Dixie Hwy„ OR MEMBER OF FROMINfcTiT F6il- I Florida, the or. FE sim HOMEOWNERS INSU„------------- Scilos. FE 3-5011 or FE 4d«03. Waotad ChiMrai to Board 28 LICENSED RELIABLE C H WILL BUY ANTIQUES. FURNl- tura and atlalaa. Blu“ ' -------- OR 3-5113, ME 7-3123. Wantid MisctllaMoas CASH PAID FOR YOUR USED FUR-nitura and appllancat. FE 4-1M4. Days only, osk tor Mr. ■“—‘ Wyman FumHure._________________ DESKS, FILES, OFFICE FURNI- tablas, ate. Forbet. OR M7(7. Wa WANTED: PORTER jCABLE ELEC- WANTED - DIRT LOADER. CON- 1- OR 3-BEDROOM HOUSB OR OR 3-BEDROOM HOUSE OR ■ tent, Wolartard Twp., t- , Hava rots. OR »«B1. 2 RESPONSIBLE COLLEGE STU- aoartmant, SIM par mum. MS-TTBL PROFESSIONAL WOMEN WANT tumishad houta Hi Ponttoc area. Write Pontiac Praea Bex M. APARTMENT OR SASALL HOUSE WANTED TO RENT 1-BBDR60M Shoff Uviin Qfcilys WOMAN OR COUPLE TO S YOUNG LADY WISHES TO SHARE 1 TO 50 . AND LAND CONTRACTS MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ALL CASH FHA AND Gl EQUITY Roy's Tree Service trimmino, plonllnp end ramc traatmant for Dutch Elm DIsai 20 yrs. axparlanco. 3S3MM. TRUCKING. Iraah, 334-im. HAULING AND RUBBISH. NAME Light Tn^lr^ o^ i LIGHT MOVING, TRASH HAULED Raaionabla. FE 4-1353. LIGHT TRUCKING AND HAULING LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING, rubbish, fill dirt, grading and tn* al and Iront-and loading. FE 3-OML LIGHT HAULING, GARAGES AND Trucks to Rent W-Ton pKkypt IVS-Ton Staka TRUCKS - TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks - Semi-Trailers Pontioc Form ond Industrial Tractor Co. I2S S. WOODWARD E AOM1 FE A14S2 Open Dally Including Sunday ---Cash ImmadL alaly. DETROIT <R 3<M0._ ANNETt NEEDS LISTINGS BOntOIID REALTY BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS acraage, tor quiefc aalaa. MULTIPLE LISTING BERVlCB V 3-JUt________OR S41( CASH 48 HOURS LAND CONTRACTI-HOMES WRIGHT We need llstinga an hoftwi, aparlmants and lolt. A. JOHNSON & SON REAL ESTATE aid INMIRANCI FROM OWNER - SMALL I- Oi i HAVE BUYERS FOR ANY HELP-HELP-HELPI WARDEN REALTY 333-7157 Clorkston Reol Estate SIM J. Main MA Mi ELL. TRAI (MALE lURON - VACANT LOTS WANTED In PonItBC sm pay more. ImmodL m claoliw, REAL VALUE REAL- 1 ROOM, BASEMENT, BACHELOR, privata bath and entrance. Ml a mqnth, cM attar A FB 4-I5M. 3 ROOM, IathI UTILITIES Aouita. MB Canter It, MY 3-2135, S-ROOM GkbUND FL06r, MS PER mo. SIS dap. tumlih — -------- o, cesipta. UL MW. 3 ROOMS AND BATH, dHILD ROOMS AND BATH WitH TWO •—-------child ssalooma, SIS par I1N dapoalt. inoylra at In Ava., call 33MWI. BEDROOM. HEAT FURNISHBI SHED, t. a*- [ 3-ROOM APARTMENTS, vale bath, all—* ---- quire 133$ DU.. .. Used Cora. ITMUS, ROOMS AND a Hat and aema I InquRo a 173* ^uttHtlla^FE MesT' *** S Rod^S. CALL BETWEdN 10 lEW APARTMENTS ON PONTIAC Lake, 1 and 2 badrooma, 1110 and Ills par month. Couples. EM WEST SIDE, ^BEDROOM APART-mant, garage, gas heat, adults. FE M7M.________________ aswr""' 39 WEEK, SE- changa tor I Call batara 10 LAKE ORION. WHITE LAKi, 3 BE6ROOMS, IW Baat Hbesbb, UafamiiliBd 40 BBEOROOM. NEAR MALU GAS heat, garage, owner, «W-17lT. 3 - BEDROOM H 0 Ot t, ^ LmW autoraltr'^ hT *• -- - - iHt r ---- .J4 Rutw-._ . WMwe after s p.m. LUBURN AND AbAMS, IIW ---- ■ ■ xtslt. 1 ■ ‘ MMt, Contact ^tsldea yjwgtr iLARKSTON-IN THE COUNTRY. HOME IN THE COUNTRY. VERY tetnk. Clarkston area. I roomt and bath, 1-mr oyy, garden DEER HUNTERS: 40 ACRES PRI-vata land. Bast dear country. Large cabin. Heat and llghti turn.. BUSINESSMAN. SHOWER. WEST ilda. FE 1-3S17.____ CARPETED ATTRACTIVE ROdM — TV, tor I or 1 woitian. KItch- CLEAN SLEEPING ROOM, LAbldi, _ N. Saginaw. FE 1-«7W. PRIVATE ENTRANCE AN6 BATH Call attar 4:30. FE MW. ROOM AND OR BOARD. 13SW OAK- Id Ava. FE 4-1454. elcaa-ln, M weak,_________________ ROOM IN PRIVAt-E HOME, HOME --------- near Northam High, ratarancat, FE S-TWA gmiarnon, i M4 Scotwood ROOM WITH KITCHEN USE FOR SLEEPING ROOM FOR MAN _________m±m___________ SLEEPING ROOM NEAR GENERAL 45 WAITING FOR THAT NRW HOME? Enloy lha wall, kltchan and apart-mtnls on tafa, snady beach. Pontiac Uka Molal, $130 Highland Rd., (MSI) 2 ml. watt of Pontiac Airport. Real Stores 20'x40' OR 40'x40', NEW ter toaae, 4I0S Orchard $044412. 1 STORE Laka Rd. Reat Offici Space 47 PART^^ RENT-FREE OFFICES tionad. Madam. FE l-diit. Bairt Bailaew Pragei^ 4M • miiSta offK"and'm)5h^ ^ FOR REN! Imall fBctery In Oxford arte. U mHf. on Nrat floor, i.iaMi on ---s. ---- a. OMTSf C A. WtSSTES, RMHor MV MMI OA tVlf WANT ADS ARE FAMOUS FOR ' "ACTIC»I" 1 rduiiLivwni boaomont, let lie'xllS' an Mode tog, iiaada aoma work. M,iw «Wi tC- --------tar'werKsKep^" etilS' tfSrlnoAan TOwrahIp. ^I«ad W. H. BASS "Mmlalbliia In Tradai" REALTOR M »nie BUILDER 3-BBDR(^ eijCK ^OngoSBu ties!. Phone ------ S-BiOROOM BRICK, FULL BASE- BE0R004 COLONIAL BRICK, I tamkiola Hills, 'Iraplace, batamai ------------------ PE 4-1707. I ROOMS AND BATH, BASEMENT, gas heat, M4M. Und ear*—' In Pontioc. Ml-7661.__ 4-Bedroom Colonial bl^! SMJOO.' , AL PAULY, Realtor 4SU DIXIE, REAR ------ Eves. FB 3-7444 ROOMS, ENCLOSED CAR PORT, near tchoelt, Pontiac Molar, but line and tlMopInd. Complataly rr daceratad. rt 44I1S4.__________ 141 WESf YPSILANTI STREET $9990 •Ml SSlemaiil^***^ FULLY INSULATED, Del-Mar f Ithad caMnata. No money down. YOUNG-BILT HOMES BY OWNER, 3-BEDROOM BRICK, CLARKSTON ...... .... coramlc bolhi. Bear attachod goraae. Large landscaped lol. Truly a booutltal homo tar 122,100. Clarkston Real Estote s-sm Elm Street Brewer Real Estate FHA Repossession WATERFORD AREA 331 Lorbarta 1014 Holbrook 43S1 Hotchory NORTH POINT‘realty SUM S. MAN Clarktt GAYLORD II MY BWI or FE UWRENCE W. GAYLORD Broadway and FHiil SI. Call MY 1-ini or FE nm HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty Ol special N,300 buys Ihli home at 437 N. Parry, having large badroomi up, living room, dinino room and kitchon down, 1W bathe. Bear garage, no down pmmont to yoto. LARGE FAMILY HOME In Kooita Harbor on Coat Lako Ava., nMv used as a Btamlly, 4 rocma up, 3 roomt down, 1W »,400,________________ Everett Cummings, Realtor m UNION LAKE KOA|^ HIGHLAND AREA _____ otactric ....... ttovt, waihor and dryer Ooraga, ftncod, paved roa«, pu,«n but by door, Immadlala peaatMlon. Low down poymonl. Prkad to aolll HIITER NEAR CRESCENT LAKE, 34M*O0m •nd bolh, acroonod-ln porch, olum-litam tiding, 1-car garage, la^ NEAR WOODHULL LAKE, Ihls 3-btdrom homo with largo living room, loko privllagai. Owntr wlli trad# 'tor land. S4,7S0, tarma. CALL B. C. HIITER, REALTOR, 1711 Ellzabelh Lake Rd., FE B«171, attar I p.m„ MA 4-3115. ------ OVER, ALLY PRIVATE, HdMB A Brekar. 47H701. Independence Township l-badrpom home, locatad an lol liO’xifi' and bargain prietd at only SI,lSD. Thli S-room hgino and l-car garage It located near acho ‘ and ja^a good buy. So hurty i GIROUX real estate 4511 HlghUnd Rd. (MSI) 473-71: IN OXFORD “IhIUMPHRIES REALTY Oxford________________OA F2417 iHVBlTBR'l iPIClAu OWlV Just Far Enough Awoy HAGSTROM REALTOR »M W. HURON ______qVBNINOI 4SB«4a LUCKY YOU! BoawtItuI BIW '""room to roami Sde jhioiai LOOK AT THISI I conditta - charmlM n homo to nico aroo o^ likiL Full baaamant, Plata woTli, firtplaco. moc^ and balh. Leeatad on nM ‘^BaaTiSnly'^lAO# dov GIROUX 11 Hlghlo!tf*R*d.*tMSl)* 473-7B Mixed Area INLY SS4 I S ROOMS AND BATH, baiomtnt, got hoot, ototar wttonor, tancod yard. S1G3W tormi. CALL B. C. HIlflR. REALTOR, PE B0171, ottar • pJh. MA tains. .__________________ MODEL OPEN DAILY IBt tWTN!taTt'or**on^'l^ L%’1SriIrXd'?IJ.'"Md^ to Wllltomt Lake Road, tom, ^ ana mile to Cattrham, Ihtn left GIROUX REAL ESTATE 1511 HWllond Rd~ (MSI) 473-7137 Mixed Neighborhood MODEL OPEN AFTERNOONS 1-S AND SUNDAY WESTOWN REALTY StS Btoomflald Near Luther FE tal743 aftarnoom. LI B4477 Evoa. FIRST IN VALUE MOVE IN. S17S DDWN. S104 MONTH. Taka Orchard Lake Rd. to Com-ori <•!,• cammorco to S. im right at Glan-»t., ion 10 uea Arbolet AMERICANA HOMES NEAR CENTRAL HIGH NEW taBibROOM HOMfe lonlal otavatton, lam Bear g rage, comer lot. Only $24,500 Tarma. Silver Lake Const. Co. we TRADE fW Shownaa Lana_________473-1S11 NO MONEY DOWNI TUCKER REALTY FE talStS IMMEDIATE CASH FOR HOUSES. FARMS ACREAGE, LAND CONTRACTS, EQUITIES. WRIGHT REALTY in Oakland Ava. FE B1141 Evaa. ottar I FE talSlI OFF W. WALTON bi good nalghbarhood. _____ I brldicrata rancher, ca plad nvbig ----- ^ " - ttoon, gat 1 IS'iSS t I landicapiMt Id yard. Thlt CLARENCE C. RIDGEWAY REALTOR BASEMENT, 2 BATHS RSR"aME»8s N’Siia: n-noe sylvan tis-iist _______It ne ana. 334<H1_ PONTIAC KNOOLS-3 BEDROOMS, OTHER HOMES TO CHOOSE FROM LEWIS REALTY FE O-Mld AFTER 4 PM. CALL FB 5-1001 ROCHESTER AREA-WILL T^ RORABAUGH coil ottar 3, t0BS074. WHY WAIT? rm4"^l?i,*lbXpm city Nertlilfida. toll bt_ isro.f’crsnr’-k.’'® tMrldlM dteor, SIB700. Abovt $U$. Now, WM monlh piua toxoa and inturanco. HAGSTROM REALTOR, 4100 W. HURON, OR taOSSO, RVE-NiNGS, m-cai. WEAVER 4T DOOIESTEfl d WEAVER INC., REALTOR — of Roehoator ________y__________4514141 WEST SUBURBAN Mod room hamo on large i... _ tonead, now wall, new ill toriwm. HAYDEN 3 Bedroom Tri-Level $12,900 Attached Oarage FaijUto^ “---- the ECON-O-TRI Bddmomt Let Inctoda AT $11,000 OPPiCB OPENS to fill J. C HAYDEN, RMitor FIRST IN VALQR RENTING $59 Mo. $10 Deposit WITH APPLICATION 3-BIDRMM^IMAAE LARGE DININO AREA as isai'.sv'- WIDOWS OR DIVORCEES. For Immediate Action Call FE 5-3676 626-9575 ..iwtfflwgatv TAYLOR MODEL OPEN DAILY 6 to 9 SAT. and SUN. 1 to 6 Any lima by appointment 7929 HIGHLAND RD. At Elliabath Lake Rood PRICES START AT $11,700 LOON LAKE PRIVILEGES Only 1 yaar old, MutItuI r«Kk face brick ranch, 3 badroomi, m bathL bullf-ln*, music ayttom, da- WATERFORD TOWNSHIP Beautiful 4-bad room tri-tavol, m bathi, bullt-ln ovan and range with hood. Load a of bullf-ln cloteti. large living room and dining room. Excallant condition. Oarage. Itax-ISiy fancad and landacaped lot. $11,150. EAST PONTIAC 2 badroonu, large atlle for mare. Living room anil dl i. tn.io a IVtacar ga- EAST AUBURN HEIGHTS 3 badrooma and. a to d y, dioing room, country kltchan, walk-out ^ Tiant, haatad garage, Uk acrea CEDAR ISLAND LAKE Lovily all brick, 3 bedrooms, IVt baths, nka kltchan, toads ol cabL nals, slalnltss steal sink, range, washer and dryer In utility, 2<ar fzIlSo' *'^***** itops. TRADES ACCEPTED tala. Fine landtcaaing. Great valua. Mott caewnandlng views. $35,500. WEIR, MANltf^ SNYDER & RANKE so S. Wbedward, Birmingham ----to PHONES ________34tal323 RHODES CLARKSTON. NIca S-room r hydronic Iwat, larga tol, blacktop afraat, near tchaoli. Only 512,000, LAKE ORION. Good Sroom homt. I, bardari the Flat River, axcallanl community tor lly, larga Iota raaaanat Call tottoy tar details. ALBERT J. RHODES, Broker FE 0-1304 ISO W. WaNen FE 54711 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE_ NICHOLIE '"J NORTH SUBURBAN Three - bedroom bungalow. LMng room and dining area. Kltchan. Utility room. Dll HA heat. Vacant. Large tol. About 1300 movat you SOUTH SIDE Ining area e HA heat MBwi MW movtt you In. Ill MR. ALTON, FB 4-S134 "BUD' Why Pay Rent IlnKSin' SoiellatolM LAZENBY COMMERCE TOWNSHIP Almost now tri-laval, 3 baWaawta axcallant kltchan wllh bamM o«m tath with airtrallaT batto axcap-ttoniliy nka panaiad family room ROY LAZENBY, Realtor ” «rN.pyaitotototZ*** KENT WEST SUBURBAN -^Doobjetaf Wim DRAYTON - Idaal ter handyman. RASlirjsn&'sr WILLIA lLijMmlake ^MWT^ I, glattad-to I. Now at 111 ; ss; Floyd Kant inc., Rlhitor 3100 Dixto Hwy. al Totovoph PE Mill er FE SCHRAM Now Doing Custom Building on Availabla Building SitesI Your Plans or Ours age. A lot In Roehaitar araa (IIS' X 100') and axptnsiva vtr Laka. Lolt In lha dly $800 Down d living morn II." Medm Ing "all." with bullt-bl aww. rvii B— mant, gaa haot Md Iwl w tar. Fancad yard, ^pavt driva and straat. Only h blocks to pirn Sdioai. Lai tow prka at tply $11,750. 3-Bedroom Brick WHY MOT LET Ivon W. Schram BE YOUR REAL ESTATE *WN 111 Jaalyn Ava. FE 54471 DORRIS. I enough tor 4... --------, — and sliding glata rtaoUng Hw baagtffully ck yard add k IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY In this j-btdroom bungalow In gMd East Side tocatton, vary pMaaant camar location tor Ihia rtaaenabla home, irxl7’ living ream, handy bHchtn with datbig spacs ond «i hddt. ft,700, laka ovsr txIiliiB FHA mortgaga tor 01JOO. DORRIS Ol SON, REALTORS 2514 DIxIa 4744124 MULTIPLE LUTIMO SERVICE STOUTS Best Buys Texiay log Loka Front Cutiom datlpnad madam lake homo with apactaut Hvbig roam, natural firspiaNN, 1 bakany bad-roomt. isrM kltchan and dinbig area, gas llrad hot woltr hast, attachsd 1-csr gar ago, IT on toka^ Only WM wMi aeay Bloomfield Twp. u*^t»iy**Ihi7t/7taii4?*lrt *" Faaturaa taparala dtobig tM. gaa hast, tersansd psi^ rrjminsijr£ss. and balh, hasamant, new gat tor-noca, glaaasd trant p^ anta car garsga, convantam to Oan-tral Hasdai. Yours lor aMy n.lOO with saay torms. Worren Stouf Realtor Vocont Corner Zoned Commercial APFroxImstaly ly-sera cornar It cotton on main psvsd hlghwa In Watartord Townihip, nnad to ' nmmtrcisl uaa. Only 0140 down, balancs on land cantrad "Bud" Nicholie, Realtor 4t Ml. Clamant tt. FE 5-1201 AFTER 6 P.M. FE 2-3370 GLES room ond tflntna n •ntranco ctMg <... ...... bST»al5i'. PrUtaonto 112450. *** ' etoiJ'to^«%^X balh, gaa iwaLfuli batan^l atomli^ Nerrm and aersant. PIVi ACRES. All farm bulldinot ge. fbadroem hOM, aluminum tW-tota now oil tonwea, brkk Hrs-plam, Sw oarage. Piua taraom GILES REALTY CO. ^*M*oL^i usTma*s86vici**' ARRO WE eUlLD-WI TRAD! XCLUSIVR AREA. New tabudragm brkk and aluminum wtotSal, ri*T5nSdi8snsi.*^ ctoaata. buHt-lns bi canuantont kltchan, tnack bota and itotollt. Vp5Ew*n1 ig«am".the Wackkw a togat. ^ IFACIOUI LOT FLUO. JsSlii*'; off dlnkM -115,1« waH-to-wMI carpNIng to living room, m balha, Sm vgnHy bi toll both, watar mihim, got ssrstK?; *!S.ssrvw; biacfctop tirggi, data to tehoel aW^thyplng. Ih^ bv a^nf. wali.itawaii eorgallnf, gao luta naet, aluminum storm and ISO. tarma. PHONE 682-2211 Ted McCullough Sr., Mur|g. THE PONjriAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22. 1965 D—7 WEST SUBURBAN g2WSsayss»<w » W;£2r.j^ satire xTii "Jss 160 ACRES NORTHEAST OF LAPEER g.-?u*r'.w_______ te?o5TWLt!'‘''' SMITH 6c WIDEMAN REALTORS KINZLER NEW BRICK COLONIAL istarT,.‘tiss&.'ii ir&STiii'tjnTSP. rang* ___T Witarford. 1 tadraomt and ^ daiwn and 1 badrooms up. Nawly pahiM axlirtor and naw *■ i>di wall, H-acra M - i>^, LOTUs'lAKE PRIVILEGES n twigak^to "x%aaiar*^-'‘-abia' h^' W'IMM ^ami.” JOHN KINZLER, Reoltor an* Dbda Hm. 474-I2L. impgTlihng lafvka Opan M TIMES CLARKSTON ^badroom, . firtd walls, .... ____ sttachad garaga, on larga tot. This Iwmalt Inunaculata mraugiv. out, naw caipaniA basamant parclally finishod off, awnar ba- Ing tranal- --- ------ only iir.ysi WALTERS LAKE ANNETT W«st Huron foMonal iarvks. Approxl-maMjMb^acra with tronti— Sominolo Hills —lal with b> tMng. IM Ml «Hth f and uttramodarn kitchan. > €*r attachad garaga. Lot has undarground aprtnklhia ays. Sylvon Loko Front attachad Scar garaga with alachlc door. Includat V..WI Bvanings ang wmoays l-« FE 8-0466 KAMPSEN autrthad twecar attachad ga-raga, iaiiilly roam with Qaorala marbia tiraplaca. aUr^- "'*tol|l'bM<Snant^*«!r2 SSSSi taalad glata windows, all i bto sills and many laera out It will ba worth your tlma to this homo. Lot us show you Split Lovol You must aaa Ms tovaly s,— toval giraa Mdraatn h«na, naa-tiad among Iha traas. Ixtra A Waterford SILVER LAKE AREA ------ Jian*«%h TStt-lr.. var Laka. Pricad to sail at- Tarms or trada. WEST SUBURBAN Largo family hama, 2 and room tar 2 mora, fai an, aaparata dining roar way and attachM Scar garaga. tulf basamant. Privily an cml^L^. Only tlMOwllh t1,A NORTHERN HIGH AREA iSJSpSn^ spacious kitchan, oak floors. 0 MSS down on FM or t1,7S0 c la axtslino eontrad. taa H today 10-ACRE SITES Wa haya a taw chaica ISacra building sitaa ayallabla, tocatad cloaa In, prlcad to sail al Stor -acra. Can tar Information. WATERFORD REALTY t, Plaa-t. Scar shada traas, back yard fancad, fruit traas, small aut-bulMIng, don't wait too tong an this ana. listing. It won't last long, tll.alL farms, knmadlata LITTLE GEM Iroom, laka privllagas, TO'xISC' tot, only I--------- - and all furnitura Includad I. Now listing. In prlca. b Wf HAVl SE#fRAL NEW LIITINOS IN THE ACRE-AOE — FARM CATEOORY, CALL AND LET ONE OF OUR COURTEOUS SALES PEOPLE HELP YOU. RE-MEMOER TIME TO SELL, TIME TO BUY, TIASE TO SEE TIMES. Times Realty .SIW'............. Frushour Struble ELIZABETH LAKE IF YOU'RE LOOKING for laka-front proparty - STOP - Hara Is ana that will fill Iha bill wir 2 badrooms, larga 2T nawly cai patad living roam with naturi stono tiraplaca and formal dinin room plus 2car garaga and baas, tlfully landsc^ tot and nico sandy baach. M this for S2S,SOO. Hurry on this ana — Lot's ' " tradsi CUSTOM-BUILT TRI-LEVEL Ss"' WMt SidE For ttia larga family wa hava IMS ccmtoflabto four-bad room hama yoa hava boon tookln~ FaalHfing tour largo badr----- llvina room, dhiing all, full basa-mai7 and a larga tot. PRICE REDUCED to S14SN with S1,S00 down plus coats. Brandtl Lok# Front ranchar faatyrjng a IT living sliding glaaa^dear span patia an Tha laka sWa. T«ve mams haws hunHn torch c______ Mealy carpaSad » Includai dra-„.jr haat, attachad tor garaga. Prlcad at S~ “* S2,7W dawn plus coals. MLLER ELIXAERTH UKB ESTATBS - S-badraam. spattoss hama. Nawly car-natod Hvlng ream, oaramk cauntars to kllchan, dining roam, caramic Md**Aiaiisf *Vi!»?r** liT'^ atsi£m!*' EK income naw praductog avar ’Tr'aTto'Ty'^feis;: MEDROOM family hama wllh ail ktojto^affjwlanth^^ d|nlnj| SSady torsnf artoS’ In. tiSs ^^ an land contract. SILVER LAKE ESTATES. >bad---- brlcfc ranch.jFamfty roam wllh larga brick wall fbaptoca. ^amlc main bath. Puil baaamsid, gas haat in' Imt^JKaiapBOM^ an easy tarm AARON BAUGHEY, Rooltor FE 2-0262 tn W. HURON OPEN S TO t Val-U-Way GovEmmont REprESEntotivE f radacaratod I badrosm to. otoamlnf aak floors. _____ badraam. Now callings. . Ovar%TiM8UTO'« Lilt HEfE-Ali Cosh for Your Homot R. J. (Wck) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 rrwnt. m b...._____ •™ 51 *“"“T IW'' ^ lot and attachad Hraga. «&4S0. Trada In your pramnf homo. WARDS ORCHARD IS THE POPULAR LOCATION of this S^aam, IW-story hama. 2!BA*WMS”JKS: Sailing far SIOJOS. It won't last. TrM In your prssant housa or JACK FRUSHOUR REALTORS*'^® «L, -^LAND RD. (W.^HURON^ Brown ESTABLISHED SINCE Ifsa DR^ON WOODS SPECIAL Prlcad at only tlAfW and you cr casts. Truly, a raal should sail quick. FOR THE GARDEN MINDED — Ovar W aCra witb this clasn and wall built two badraam bungalow. IV^r garaga. Oil lumaca. Full bath. Aluminum storms. Bxcallant canditton In and out. Prlcad at only aWM. Can sceapt housa trall-ar, car, land oontrset or good vacant tot as down paymant. LIST WITH US - wa naad good homos. Ovar 27 yrs. of dspandabla raal astato sarvka. Multipto Listing Ssrvlca. Ofwn M. L. H. BROWN, Rsaltor mt Ellubath Laka Ra-'< Ph. FE a35«4 or FE 2- BATEMAN GuorantEsd TradE-h) Plan 1-AcrE EstotE NEARLY NEW S-badraom tri-tovol, ------------------and ana of ttia sndT|uto'?2 mbtl > suit. A.. _____________ praelalsd. CALL NOW. ^SEDROOM RANCHER, vary da-slrabto city araa and bum In 1M4. Gas haat, full basamant, alum, storms and scraans and Scar garaga. Amaiing vakw at ftsJw wTth raassnabto tarms. Dofirr WAIT. COUNTRY KITCHEf 2Tas»n^^ Sir'c!^ living you will lava and can afloro. Cloaa to ski arcs and oM coursa. KSTtoVgffL-ToSr •to. SI ContEmporory Ranchsr IN THE CITY ini In axcallant condition. S badraoms, 2 baths, tola of MIMna Including dimwaahar, carpaltog and rac. roam. Full dawn plua asenw and laka ovar FHA motia. No mattoaga coats. DON'T WJaIT. MODEL HOMES MAKING MONEY lALBIAUN Intarsstad In makliiE a^nfmant. Dus to apanbig m ncb In iTschsstar, wa hava a opantogi Hyauquamy. IITE« i-aiu CLARK 25idraem*henw w8i toinli*'**" 2ares,“isiK rSS ara axcapitonslly larga, - •esped lOf. rtVM iirttf WEST kUBU^M ACRE - ^ AhinTlnuRi rtocn with ovtr tsTw squara tsat of living araa. SF car-patod IhrliM roam with ladgarsck tlraplaaa Carat UWian and din- rxia.aasnri.'s S1I,S00 with HMOB d FOR THE SUCCEUFUL MAN Luxury ranchar with all Iha ax-tras. Sunkan living room, family room, flraplaca, kitehsn wilt ' Ina and %hwaahar, 2 full ________ -------------- ---------^ ^raat It. Btoom- CLARK REAL ESTATE 3101 W. HURON ST. FE S7IM or FE ssan Multipto Llating Sarvica IRWIN LAKE FRONT Attriellva a-fsom brlcfc randier i ntssi.^t;ss;a.'‘Vjs:!.; rooms, living ream wllh llrapla dining room, kitchan with bulit-li ------------- It you would Ilka a laka Ira... ... can't afford what you hava seen — clean and In g^ condition, Sbadraoms, living room and ^ an. Icraanad porch, oil haat. t 110,230. Imhwdlata occupancy. rooms, nssr Oakland Univsrsity. John K. Irwin AND St REALTi Fhona FE Hf4U O'NEIL TRADE 4-BEDROOM West side at Pontiac, ctosa a^ hotels. Wfall conatruL... ... SSf;«to"rmr' INCOME Downtown location — , ...... jwing apartmsnts. On# acaom, four 2-room, plus csratakars reor-Ahvsyi rsntsd. Prlcad at S11,73D. LAKE FRONT LOWER STRAITS Jraom, living room wHh atona brooms, tot 75x200. I1f,00h tormt. CLARKSTON AREA A Sbsdroom full t.......... .... ----- tot 100x150. Oat haat, I priba 01 Don't b :S IN DRAYTON WOODS MODELS OpEn Daily 1 to 9 WestridgE of Watorford 'OLLOW THE CROWD TO WE5T-OIDOB to MS the -- tl7,f00 tor t ihraMbadroom ranch 5 tor the spacious cetonisl. madsm Spanish stylo rand Irst at Its kind to ba In In the Pontiac area, a plaiMnt tmat In stora highway to ^ambrook^Lam! Wt .. £S7at'K:*ul:rchu-'r“c?. RAY O'NEIL, REoltor _ RAY O'NEIL REALTOR S2* '-K. RO.^N f to f OR f-2222 MLS ^ 1to575 mWiN" '^rg,.".25"Wrup-wi;“IK nlea opts, dawn and walkout an-trances to good beach. Bach apt. ^ priyata antranca and balh, ftoUStii'i.'cr'iito ioSmSM to^^ carpeting, ihIra"k!t^Xl firapitca, beautiful bath and ti-ta^ garw. The yard It ftncsd Mto th# Isks front haa a ftoatlpg dock tito two boata. Idar' *- - SKSSU.'S LAKE PRIVILEGES - 2-ww.<»n ranch typo bungalow nicely locah ad near Iha laka. Hat attachad garaga, larga utility room, hardwood i^t and a larga lot. Can to bought with 20 par cant dawn to now martaaga. Homo Is In rx-callsnt, condition IntMa and out First tims on tha market. Kd.«nliu"t'S!s.is.:.?ii tondeoSred" ftoaoiwbla on Custom bum kliig-tixad rooms. I- ssnssvvm'KifU ini’, SUNNY —iltui Wsh 2 tsndy >ONTIAC 21 liniNUTpi FrTVatB $AVE DOLLARS WotErford Lk. Front Ranch tor randtot or ... ---- Rd. to iatan Rd., 3 blocka npdh to N55 Mohawk Drlvt. -----‘YiVAM «»'»“ S1-A On rhmr. Bast at vtow. Hunting, KfdSS.Wmjr-J!® attar «._______ RBkoitT nEar au muble rivi St 5 channsi dam. Madam hon Ri^”?3^|^^tr 0 Sttogjlih araa, »t doim < month. Bloch Broa. OR 3-W5. STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE 105 acraa — Onaway arts, 2 mik from Black Laka, 3-btdream, story. Wool for hunting camp, m *•' alactrlclly^. A ataal i irma. 33S«00._____________ LEtB—AcrEogs lagao. Cash foi WRIGHT REALTY 17 ACRES Vi wooded. Tto tsclud___... ... hava baan looking tor. FuD prlca $11,000 with farms. Clarkston ReoI EstatE ____________MA 5-5I21_________ 40 SCIBNIC ACRES - 13 ACRES WITH OVER 400' ago on Bcolt Laka tordarlng Dominican Sbtars. Only $1X500, $X100 2W WOODED ACRES ON CORNER U,$50. LOTS, 100'X200' an pavtd And___ villa Rd. In Clarkston School District. tXSOO. Tarms. WACRE WOODED - Clsrkston schools. S2J0X tsrms. 55 ACRES — SOME WOODS borders laka — scsnic, wast PonHac. $25,00$, 15 down. 20 ACRES NORTH OP HOLLY A... FENTON, near axprattwayt. M.500 UndErwood Rsal btatE 1x150' LOT, WATERFORD TWP. GL 3-2355. 9d vilitga. $0'x175' I, 1st 1X500 cash. CANAL LOTS Chalet building sltas — 1 ~ acted with Sylvan Uka. JACK LOVELAND 3110 Coat Laka Rd. 3- and S-scra paresis, 04,500 SASHABAW ROAD ^ and 3-acra parcalt, raasonable --------- 574-1740 COUNTRY ESTATES CLOSE-IN Largo bulWIng sitat tocatad In an hint on winding paved streets. Ex-caltont drabisga. Northeast Pr-tlsc, closa to 1-75. Law as 0X4 with 03SO down. LADD'S, INC. M »*»1 ^ OR *3-l»f‘attar 7 Open Dally lOE Sunday I DEVELOPMENT PARCEL 10 Mila Rd., mar Haggtrty R 35Vb ratling acraa ript nr devak.. mant. Area of medium prlcad homat. Priead at only " “ - ^ 106 ACRES Rd. naar U frantaga. Ideal irao. Fi1e«l tor oat far aalc _. —, boat or tormt. FINE BUILDING SITES Franklin Oaks Sub., trass, stream, 17,000 Lwga^tot on qutot psvsd st -anch home sita, 135 ft. tram S3.300 ^^^Mtogas, Upper Long L Doharty Eatataa, ovartooks —raa, aewar, $7,100. BROOCK LOT, looxm ROCHESTER AREA. FE 4<270. Call batwaan 0-3 pjn. ,OT. BY OWNER -Hatghto. FE 4-44M. IWACEDAY LAKE CANAL FRONT, tS'x2M'. 24'xl4' garaga, and full walk-out baatmtnt, all nkaly land-icapad. S7,000. FE Mf72. NEAR EXPRESSWAY 30 acraa only m mitoi nor .. I-7S and 3 mitot mrth at Pontiac. Owner nnxiout to tall. 80 ACRES-METAMORA Seanic railing land, data to Detroit Boy Scout Camp. 5-room modarn- tarms. AnnEtt Inc. REaltors I E. Huron St. FE I4M45 Opan EvanlitM and Sundays NO CROWDS H»E Just pleasant ro 10 ACRES, partly weedsd and to atato land, naar Ortanvllli toe. down. ) ACRES, hilly, partoct tor tr 3 mllaa watt at M24, naar 0 S4,7S<X $100 down. 00 ACRES, 1,320 tool at road fi C. PANGUS, Realtor 530 MU Ortanvilto Call Celtoct NA 7-M15 '"dUiSfAailm’ ^ isS lTqdStw^d. WOLVERINE liKl A nica lake front bungalow that to prasaift land contract. NErlhEfE Piigp^ -----------ACRE LOTI ON WatoHhlltMliuto. Planning to Build? Check ihEfE Lots I ROLFE H. SMITH, Realtor 144 I. Tatograph »E s-ygag bvss. fe s-tioi WATERFdRD HILL MANOR Juat partoct tor your «"*>tra hen — naw lactton now aban. Lott tram SPSe DON WHITE, INC. 101 oixto Mwv_________OR »g404 TIZZY By Kate Oaano “I’ve just listened to 10,000 words of complaint about the 500-word theme she has to write!" 100 ACRES Approxlmataly 12 miles northwasi of Pontiac. lOraom nxxtorn h- 2 good roads. Excallant Invastmant. K.'^TEMPLETON, Realtor 2339 Orchard Uka Rd. ------- HORSE-FARM ter haat and larga 24'x30' garaga. and ovar Vi mile of road tron ago. luarter nflla track. $55,500. Terms. C. PANGUS, Realtor 30 MIS Ortonville Csll Collect NA 7-3015 12-UNIT CITY WEST SIDE—OVER 111,000 oroM Income par year— merclal property. BATEMAN O^ 9 FE $.» ISC' ON U.S. 10 ABOUT 1 Ml north of 1-75 — 20'x32' build sultabto for any small business $2,500 custsrd machina goas w tala. 07400, tXSOO dawn. LARGE, ATTRACTIVE BUILDING an U.S. 10 - hat baan used tor restaurant. Lots at parking. Sea It at 9354 Dixie. Make eftor. Will COMMERCIAL CORNER LOT w AIrpert and Lindsay. S0'x120'. S10, 000, 02,000 dawn. Underwood Real Estate I astato. Elmar E. Straa*. AvallaWa Ocf. Front, rear parking. FE <-5073. Going Cantor. lUSihiEss Corner, at pike and Front Straats, n Commercial Building INVESTORS Vacant 300’x354' only larga ( EM 3-3140. Evas. BesinEM OpgErteEitiEt___59 5-FAMILY APARTMENT HOUSE ACE AUTO PARTS, 701 OAKLAND __________FE 2-9400 ' ANYONE INTERESTED IN BEING Ina b F E 2- Class "C" Liquor Bar I, 1 a ■uma, Mich. S1X50Q. t—-PAUL JONES REALTY S32 W. Huron________________fe «5S0 DESIRABLE SERVICE STATION location In Rochattor araa. Invastmant. Paid training and financial awlstanca to those who qualify- OL 1-0177. After 7 p.m.. INVESTMENT-PLUM Cats Lskt front with 04,000 annual Income plus 5 roomo ownara Iving quarters, comptotoly furnished. Rented year round, vrlll taka small house at down payment. Income will handle paymants on balance. NATIONAL BUSINESS LIKE TO COOK? Put your skill to work making monsy In this up to data downtown grill, high traffic count going by waiting tor you to..tarva them. Ilka naw wipmwt. •» t«t to open “hagst^m REALTOR too W. HURON New Horizons In Real Estate MEETING THE CHALLENGE OF TOMORROW "Rtal Estate Electronically'' Partridge Raal Estato ' d Kaaltort k tranicljfly----- -------- ------. maaa piarkatlng should ba vary axeltkig to tha awnar daslrbig to MBS# MM In# DUyVT WtIO W#ntl to buy or exchange for property or butinata In a naw lecatton at mSm‘ OFFICES thruouT michTgan' INTERNATIONAL TRADERS CLUE COAST-TOCOAST TRADES 1050 W. Hu4q. Fanttac EE 44S01 dMil at lhair llto. Af»S9-JSC- Bushin^Opportunities 59 INVESTORS Now avallsbia a home service franchise, S2.500. Completa I mant. unlimited potential, lent profits. Writs or call - 1514 W y ______Grand Rapids. party store Sail or laasa. Madam building 30x 50, Baer, Wine, Groceries r— meat. Present gross ovar $50,( Ideal man and wife operatl Priced to sail, trada or lease. / for Mr. Hoyt. DIXIE HIGHWAY nant or Rest Hama. Ask tor A 'John KINZLER, Realtor 9 Diyal Hwy. 574-2235 Across from Packart Stora Multiple Listing Sarvica Open 9-5 Annett Inc. Realtors 20 E. Huron St. FE S4> Opan Evenings and Sundays 1-4 SERVICE STATION AND______________ logs, all ranted. $45,000. Webster Realty. Oxford 420-2515. Orton 492- --------1 and of Pontiac. 40,000 gal. potantlal with axcallant back------- and ralatad talas. Wa attar ,------- guarantaad Income and^ld traln- _____________...iytS-3u'- STORE, 52'x54'> 3-BEDROOM HOMt prices. Go to door, a d Import. Lqi customers i Woodworking Company CaMnat and kitchan thop ma... facturer. Establlahad over 15 years. Window Cleaning Service Complata equipment Including true — Opportunity of a lltotlma -What a deal I MICHIGAN Business Sales, Inc. Sale Land CentrECti 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently naoded. Sea us bel you deal. Warren Stout, Realtor 450 N. Opdyk^ Rd. FE 50155 Sole HeusEheld Geodi 6! 1 BIG PRICE SMASH Factory Closeouts BRAND NEW 3 ROOM OUTFITS Look Whot You Get for: $317.00 $2.88 WKLY. NO MONEY DOWN Largo double drtsser, chest, bed, and larga mirror, lavtiy box spring and mattress. 2 basutllul boudoir lamps In choice of colors, a fine 2-placa living room suits. In tong-wcsrlng nylon (nice salactlon), 2 largo table lamps In dscorator colors, and nice Formica-top table wllh four chairs. INCLUDED FREE THIS WEEK Baautlful 9'xl2‘ living room rug. SeIe HeeiEliEii Beedi DEEP SLEEP SOFA BED, esr WFA mmu, wa/ fkwolwew tquIpmMit# md *** “• 5349X DEVONSHIRE CARPETING, WHITE satin, 100% wool, rubber padding, 45 sq. yds. 334-5517, 12 noon la 5 ELECTRIC RANGE, ELECTRIC STOVE WITH D E f P 10 CM. ft. ratrigaralor. 547.55Q0._ FRIOIDAIRE ELECTRIC StoVE, 3Pinch oven, 050 Myars pump, t2S. 353-2003.___________ FRIOIDAIRE ELECTRIC RANGE. Kanmora suds aaver, chroma tabto, 4 chairs, tiraplaca Kraen and Irons, FE 0-37(0.________________ GE ELECTRIC RANGE, 035, TWO step tebles, 010, 5-year crib, 115, all In good condlllen. AAA 51233. SBOALLON^O^ BARML AbbifM a^chinE, Uii AJMIM-jonpmTabto typaunltor. og Un- Faymattor dMat* wrSaxJBEf ^ 7750 Auburn iWr^Ullea. EU iWUflKT UOWW_Fm >7471 iABY CLOTHtsTiBffuBriuS airtsriiKnr^a&l,?^ and Sat., t-i p..... barto to Manitoba.'_________ BATHROOM FIXTURES. OIL gaa turnacas or-* water h—'— trical SI black tni galvai tinge. Sentry a_________ _____ paint. Super Kam-Tena Ruatc*"— HOME FREEZER KELVINATOR REFRIGERATOR — _g<^ condition. FE 0-0270. KELVINATOR REFRiOERATOR, $25. Whirlpool wathar, 020, both In _jooi condition. FE X5902 attar I 0424 batwaan 4-7 p.m. _____KIRBY OF ROCHESTER LOVE SEAT, LIKE NEW, 5PIECE sactlonal with rubbar cushions, mangle. FE 2-9350.____________ AAATTRESS AND BOX SPRINO. lull alia, nearly n PHILCO WASHER NORGE ELECTRIC DRYER, _________OR 55100____ RCA WHIRLPOOL AAOBILE OISH- Can ba purchased t< REFRIGERATOR, 025. DRYER, S35. Gas stove, 035. Refrigerator with top fraaiar, 049. 31-Inch TV, 525. Washer, 025. Electric stove, 035. V. Harris, FE 52755. • 55042 1 MORE TIME BRAND NEW FURNITURE 3-ROOM OUTFITS $278 (Good) $2.50 Weekly $378 (Better) $3.00 Weekly $478 (Best) $4.00 W;ekly NEW LIVING ROOM BARGAINS i,Pa«a (brand naw) living roori 3-pleca living rqpm suite, two sti matching coffee table, tw._ -------------Ml tor $109. Only chaat, box spring and bmariprlng mattrau, two vanity lampt. AH (or S129. SI 40 weakly. range, S1S.00; rafrigarator wl larg^mar, S47.00t wringer w« ar, $29.00; madam bedroom au (HIM now) jMlh box spring a -mattrau, $119.00; add dreaaart, chests, beds, living rooms, chairs and lamps, evarylhing at bargain prlcu. LITTLE JOE'S TRADE-IN DEPT^ 1450 Baldwin at Walton, opan Evw. FE 2-5042.__________________ 5PIBCE LIVING ROOM SUITE, 4-YEAR BABY CRIB AND AAAT- 5YEAR-OLO CRIB, CHEST OF 9x12 Linoleum Rugs . $3.89 Celling tito 7Wc ft. Vinyl Aibastot tile ...... 7c aa. ■ilald tile 9xT' 5c aa. Ftoar Shop - 2255 Blinbath Laka "Across From the Mall'' 12' 3"X13'5" WOOL RUG, 5PIECB nair*Mll'‘ eft, S5.1I0, will handle, 0 Wauled Ceiitraets^lltg. 60-A 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently wantad. Sea us before you 35" GAS RANGE, TOP GRIDDLE, CASH For your equity or Don't lOM that home, . imainsi possible dlscaunta. Call 5051130. 5143 Cass-Blliabath Laka______ NEED LAND CONTRACTS. SMALL discounts. Earl Oarreli. EM 52511, EMpIra 54M5. AIR CONDITIONER SALE Drastic reduction on all air conditlonari In stock SOS and up 02 down S3 par weak FRETTBR'S WAREHOUSE OUTLET 1550 $. Tatograph FE 57051 ANTIQUE davenport, CONSOLE tabto, kitchan lat, FE 55050. (PARTMENT SIZE REFRIOERA-lort, top fraazars, 019.95 up. Apt. slio electric stova, $14.95 up. 30" gaa range. Factory ralact and ta-blas, naw, $3.95. 40" sawing loom. Bargains gatora at Stonay's Used Bargain S^a. 103 N. r- * waakdays 1 p.m. Sat. 10 SEASONED L A wantad. Gat out __ _____ ,„ Mil. CAPITOL SAVINGS S. LOAN ASSN., 75 W. Huron. FE 57127. Meney to Le«r 61 (Licensed Money Lander) LOANS Finance Co. 401 Pontiac State Bank Build FE 4-1538-9 LOANS TO $1,000 Jaually an first vhlt. Quick, frtan ly, halPtul. FE 2-9026 Is Iha number to call. OAKLAND LOAN CO. 302 Pontiac Stato Bank BMg. 9:30 to 5:30 - Sat. »;30 tol. LOANS TO $1,000 courtaoua axparlancad oounulori. Credit Ufa hwuranca avallabto — Stop In or phana FE 5S121. HOME & AUTO LOAN CO. LOANS sas TO 11,000 COMMUNITY LOAN CO. I E. LAWRENCE_FE 5043 NEED CASH "back-to-sch6(5l" expenses AND BILL CONSOLIOATION7 BORROW UP TO $1,000 30 mentha to pay BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY OFFICES NEAR Y1|U TV SET, I2S, REFRIGERATOR, S3X gas stove, S3S, atoctrlc stova, S35, bunk badi, mlac. FE 52755. UNITEb HAR living r bad. FE 55473.________________ PHILCO TV, GOOD CONOI-- tlOO. MA 52709 attar 5. - GAS STOVE, APARTMENT size atac. ttovt, rafrigarator, badt, living room chairs, misc. OR 59544. A SINGER chase. 5yaar ouart------------------ of SS.00 monthly or t2»43 cath. Call credit mmagar - Rlr"— Brea. Sawing Cantor. 335qaS3. AUTOMATIC ZIG ZAG SEWING AAACHINE REPOSSESSED ........— In ir guarantaa. Universal Co. FE BRONZE OR CHROME DINETTE Mia, BRAND NEW. Largo and small aiza (round, drop-leaf, rec-tongular) tabtoa In 3, 5 and 7 pc. sM. 134.95 and UP. .PE_ARSON'S FURNIT^r" 5 E; Pika FE. 57IS1 ________ _________ .... Catacomb's to maks room for naw tall Itomt. Antlquaa, lamps, pldurtt, tumitura at below ground prlcu. By tha way, wa'ra practically giving away ^ fabric wa hava in hand. Sato Thursday through Saturday, opan avanbigt. Park In tsar tot, uu towar Rival antranca. Roberto Roberts Interiors 4010 Wast Mapla (East at Tatograph)________ ;l6SINO ESTATE: ALL HOUSB-hold goedt. Including antique dlihM and ana 14' Lana Star alum, boat. Opan attomeaq and avanlnga. 0120 Mario, 1 block off Union Lake Renewed Appliances Bottle Gas Installation Two Ktopound cylindart and aquip-mant, SI2. Grast Plaint Ou Co., FE 5-0072._________________________ BUFFET, LARGE MIRROR, DIN-Ing tabto, Irontr, bait vibrator, hu- ‘ mwHIar^ 0 mm mevla pralaetor. Evu. 'til 8 O'clock DRAYTON PLYWOOD W. Walton________OR 50912 CLEARANCE OP USED OFFICE -nlluro and macMnu, Forbes,' I Dixit Hwy. OR 5*757. Wa CENTAUR TRACTOR WITH MOW- COMPLETE STOCK OP FIFE AND fittings. Custom threading, immadl-ala sarvica. Montcalm Supply, 155 W. Monlealm. FE 54712._________________ FURNACE, 15.000 BTU DOUBLE BARREL I5GAU6E SHOT- ENlFrCL .. CLOPEDtA, 1955. COST tlOO, must sacrltlcf S45. 5453515. EVEROREENS, WESTER BLUB Cl- For the Finest in Top-Quality Merchandise Shop MDNTGDMERY WARD PONTIAC MALL sttllad. :....... .............. IE automatic washar, 3-cycln, stalled, dativarad ............t Easy spinners, like naw ....... t Refrigerators, all sizes .......t Speed Queen wringers .......... I Frlgldilre electric dryer ......I ALL GUARANTEED GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP OF PONTIAC W. Huron SL______FE 51555 FOR DUSTY CONCRETE FLOORS Use Liquid Floor Hardanar . . S'^lPf. Inaxpsoslva Application Bolce Builders Supply fb 50104 FULLY EQUIPPED'gO - KART BoJ'm”'’ “'*■ FURNACES AT DISCOONfPRiCES SIMMONS HIDE-A-BED SIX ROLL- Singer Dial-A-Matic ZIG ZAO SEWING A5ACHINE Embroiders, appllquu, buttonho._ ate. — lata modal, school trada-ln —new machina guarantu. Terms of S5 par month " *“ —*■ SPECIAL S20 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OF FURNITURE - Contltlt of: 5placa living room suite wllh ttbim, 1 cocktail tabla and 2 9'x13' rug Includad. All tor I3H. WYAAAN FURNITURE CD. 7 E. HURON FE 5490) t W. PIKE __________^...... SINGER DIAL-A-STITCH ■Unat, used. Built-In zig-zag all your tewing. New pay-t only 05.25 niormily or S54.I8 5-yaar guarantu. Rlchmin *- ‘-g Cantc^ "■*— WYMAN'S USED BARGAIN STORE At Our II W. Pika Stora Only Knu Hale Datk ..............019.9! 3-pc. living roam aulta ....039.9! Apt. size gu ttov* .........S34.9! aloe, range ...........139.9! dryer .................S39.9! Guar. Elec, rafrigarator .. SS9.9! ' r. alac. wathar S59.9! ..r Credit la (Sood at Wyman'i EASY TERMS ______________FB 3-315( LAVATORIES"'COMPLBTB 134 value lUfX alw bathtuba, Oollati. shower stalls. Irregulars, tomtlo valiMs. Michigan Fluoraicant. 393 Orchard Laka. LISJ_ YOUR tRAbe 6A MILLIONS OF RUGS HAVE BEEN OLD WEATHERVANE, ROSEWOOD ---dian, roller organ. All axcaL Y-Knot Antiquu, 10345 Oak-Holly. ME 7-5190. Opan 7 days. Hifl^J^RodlES_____ PORTABLE MOTOROLA V Stind. FE 59*2*. COLOR TV, 0140; 23" BLACK-and-whlto, 045. Privato. FE 2-4257. W.95 I" STEREO, RADIO, AAA-FM COM-blnatlan, S150. 21" colored RCA, Ilka naw, $350. Call FE 50019.____ M" CONSOLE. GOOD CONDITION, *"■ 103 Nertoq attar s.____________ COLOk TV'S FROM Sl50. ( racalvar. FE 54090.___________ FISHER X302 AMPLIFIER, FISHER FM-50 Tuner, Garrand Typa-A turn tabla, 3 Whartdala WOO spaakars. OR 52343._______________ PRECISION TUBE TESTER, LIKE naw, rut. UL 51171 aft. 4. RECORD PLAYER NEEDLES AND CARTRIDGES. 90 PER CENT IN USED TVs S19.9S Swsat's Radio B Appliance Inc. I W. Huron________________33555n For Sale MisceliaiMEES 67 A - WANT TO FISH, GOLF OR hava fun thli yaarT Inatall aluminum siding now and forgot a summer of painting. Sava money now, too. First payment in 40 dayt. In- TT'xJV' mirror, 2 Formica eul unHt. 335*27*.____________ 2-CAR METAL OARAGE OOOh, 040. 2 atoctrlc^p^M 0)0 and tU. CaU Ing. Fi Salm ( GARAGE DDDRS Slul one place, sactlonal, wood flbarglit. Factory rolacts In ' Gsrags front ramodol- FE 24203 or Ml 51035. garage sale, MEN'S, WOMEN^S clothing, furnitura, dlshn. pots and pans, odds snd snd5 1540 Wood-jnerd Avt. FE 54375. Walled Laks.______________ garage SALErFRIDAY. SATUR-P«^-A4:rlb, chll- All day._______________________ OAR^E' SALE: LAWN SEAT, Electrolux iweapar, a tow antiques, snd mitc. Itoms. On 33rd, 24)h, 9-4 p.m. X Cooley St._____ WATER HEATERS, S45J0. Ol HAGGERTY HAS ITI 'x4"xr Mlactad aoonomy fir, only >c each, cash and carry. HAGGERTY LUMBER 2015 Haggarty Hwy. MA 54551 HU(3E OARAGE SALE: HOUSl!-trsjsuras, good clothing Sept. 2524. *-5 p.m. All walcama to 5U5 JIM'S DUTLET Airport KENMORE OIL HfeATEk, tically naw, oil ------- or VI 15913. OR 519S5'.” NEW BATHTUB, COLORED, IR-70^5 m'w W ^ IXofV**"' NORGE OIL FURNACE, PLEHEAA, ONE OF THE BEST BASEBOARD " ■ ■ n. Hat water basa- wlth anclosura and . . , par ft. G- A. ThamD. 7005M-59 W. i|L TANK, 350 GALLON, BRYANT burner, fittings good condition 030, vacuum rtJjJMr 000, twin PLYWOOD I‘x7' Mahogany panallng $354 I'xO' Mahogany paneling S 354 I"x12' root hoards WP .. S99JO M AAssonIts pagbosrd .S 3.90 3351b. shingles, sq. In lift . S 4.95 Bathtub anclosura ....S 19.9* IID"* ** 2'0"x5'8" Mahogany doors ...S545 -4"x4'l" Mshogany dura . . SX45 ' plats glsu sliding door, W" S7*.*5 'Vb" plate glau sliding door S7*.*5 ^lum. Comb. preJwng door S 17JI Deluxe,Alum, camblnatton daer S11.*5 No. I common nails, 50 lbs. S 4.»J Basamant lack posts ...i 5.tj iV"- 'IK"" Burmeister's siwww sttiit with tftfn llliMi ^bowl sink# HM/ tubi# $10 Md up. I*|M ^ and f THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1965 "xjsssn^ 85S ^BOn LUMBER*^ t»iilALVATION ArMY Sio SHIELD STORE 111 W. LAWRENCE ST. Ewtrylhlng to macl your naadt Cimilna. Pumfiura, ARpHancai tVREWRITER, SIS; OIL SPACE •wator, SirjOi rnknaoBraph, S2Si «afa Rad, sat. FB Altos.___ USED 6A$ AND OIL FURNACES. Chaadlaf Haattou, OR S-iSM. Unclaimed Lay-Awoy Take Over Payments Comptoto houaafull of fumltura. room ouWt,_ mirror, double %rmka*top*’dto5Sr wmf 4 ^alr WASHING MACHINES CONVEN-tlonal automatic pump, tmJO ■ I m.95. Scraldiad, r TIRED DP SHOFFINO FOR ORGANS? GALLAGHER'$_^ WHY NOT COME TO GALLAGHER'S S1,1S0 — $l,4?5. tIAIS — 12,115 -- S3,»S. See Ut Before You Decide GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. II E. Huron FE 4-OSM BUY NOW AND SAVE GUITAR LESSONS DRUM LESSONS Pontiac Percuulon Center ghnwn and Ellubatb Lake .... 335-113C Office Eqaipment 72 dlacounl prices. Forbes, 4500 Dixie Information call 33I40U i I BASS ACCOR DlAN, REASON- IM BASS ACCORDION, 5100. OR BALDWIN ORGAN, EXCELLENT B-FLAT BLESSING CORNET, COA5- pleta with " -------------■— ■Acase, $49.50. n, 550, UL ^5^93, after 4. CORNET-WINDSOR, WITH CASE, EXPERT PIANO MOVING PIANOS WANTED Yi Van Servlea EM 3-7 Large stock of all types of guitars *™"*^RRIS MUSIC 5. Tetegraph Rd. n TeFHuron FE »4)5«7 MUSIC CENTER PIANO'S 10 PER CENT OVER COST IMS UNION LAKE RD. -------- PIANO, WALNUT SPINET, LIKE now, pay small dallvary chai^ pick up payment t» par mo. Cm be seen te^. Call CradK Man- RENT A TRUMPET. CORNET, CLARINET. FLUTE, TROMBONE, VIOLIN OR SNARE DRUM KIT Store Equipment 73 BEAUTY SHOP EQUIPMENT. IS rack, asa-mei. Sales, ?4 Michigan Ave. FE 5.4264. PUPS, tl MOTHER FART REGISTEksb FEMALE POSSCl', white, apricet. FE SfSIt REGISTERED ENGLISH SETTER REGtSTERkD ENGLISH POINTERS shots and wormed, OA mos. REGISTERED CHIHUAHUA AN Toy Fox terriers pupplae. CliltoM hue and toy Fo« torrlar stu service. FE M#7._________ SIAMESE KITTENS, 515. 1M LIN- 5-1045._______________ SPRINGER SPANIEL PUPS, AKC. 7 wks. Champ, stock. 70M173. TOY POODLE AND YORKSHIRi stud service. Popples. I WEIMARANER PUPS, EXCELLENT dog for children and hunting. Con-flrmallon line one of the finest Pet Supplies—Service 79-A POODLE GROOMING AND TRIM-mlng In my hotne. Alto dork apricot toy stud. 1349 E. Lokt Dr., Walled Lake. MA 4-2715. closa-out prices. APACHE FACTORY HOMETOWN DEALER, BILL COLLIER 1 milt east otl» poor on AA3I. Avetion Soles SO CAMPERS TRAILERS Winnebago WInnabogo Phoenix Phoanlx AUCTION SALE TO SETTLE THE estate of the late AAorle Werde-man on tha premises. I block south and 7 blocks west of tha main stoplight In Romeo ot 1*7 Lo-feyette 5t. on Friday night. Sent. Wolverino Also uaad trailers and campers. Pickup covars. Wa sMI and Inatall Reesa and Draw-tlto hltchtt. HOWLAND SALES and RENTALS 3343 Dbito Hwy. OR 3-1456 Opan 9 a.m. 'til * pjn. 34 at 4:30. Complete homo of furniture. Mrs. Lloyd Congdon. Exk. Paul Hillman, auctlonear. CViCOV CDirkAV f.M DAi BOOTH CAMPER Aluminum covars and campars for any pIciaiD. 4267 LaForttI, Walar- ■ CLOSE-OUT SPECIAL Iver Buffalos, Including _____ nk. Ice box, dinette, oversize Sales A Service, < Guns—Guns-Guns REMINGTON WINCHESTER-COLT PISTOLS —Try befort you buy— WE DO ALL OUR OWN RIFLE RANGE-TRAP FIELD open to the Public CLIFF DREYER'S SCUBA OUTFIT, TANK, REGULA-tor and accessories, 1100, also complete set of registered Speulding WE ARE NOW ACCEPTING GUNS, ammunition and sporting goods on ---,-----. ggf. I Wednesday. . ____ ______ t?«. HALL'S AUCTION SALES. 70S W. Clarks-ton Rd., Laka Orion. MY 3-1171, MY 30141._____________________ Sand - Gravel -1 76 Only $5 RENT FOR AS LONO AS YOU WISH. UNLIMITED RETURN PRIVILEGES. IF YOU BUY, " ' RENTAL PAYMENTS WILL PLY. GRINNELL'S Thomas spinal. Ilka naw, 44 not keyboard, tS?5. Gulbrenien full slu organ, 51.795. ALSO SAVINGS ON FLOOR MODELS AND OTHER TRADE-IN Jack Hagan Music Center FE s-woo PLAYER PIANOS lt^r{c. ^ SwS"®' *‘‘morri?music 34 S. Telegraph Rd. from TeFHuron F •f«r: Trade-In Pianos FROM Grinnell's Anniversary Sale CHOICE BLACK DIRT. 6 YARDS *14 ^1 re , for 5H, del. FE 4.^. FALL SPECIAL C PONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS SU>- ^^Sand, gravel, fiirdirt.'OR SAND GRAVEL, FILL AND TOP SAND, GRAVEL, vettog. OR 3-SS50.' TOP SOIL, BLACK DIRT, AND grading, reasonable. OR 4-1945. top f Weed^ed-Ceke-Feel Pett-Huirtluq Dey 79 2 SMALL REGISTERED BLACK poodles, tnalt and tomele. 33MO?l. DACHSHUND PUPS, TERMS. Stud dogs. JAHEIMS. FE t-253i. -1 POODLE TRIMMINO-SHAM-POOING. S3 AND UP. 52S-2S7S. AKC MALE ENGLISH BULU FINE old. 337-99«0. AKC CHIHUAHUA PUPPY, MALE. Large Selections to Choose From Uprights $49 Grands From $199 RESTYLED and RECONDITIONED Pianos From $199 Low, Easy Terms Grinnell's AKC REGISTERED BEAGLES, EM AKC BRITTANY PUPS, I WEEKS. chsmpton stock, $40. OA S-7737._ AKC BRITTANY PUPS, 525 - 530. r laaie. 551-3445. AKC GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS. Labrestraum blood line, 5100. 22 Leteyette, Oxford. OA t-194«. AKC REGISTERED DA£hSHUN5 pups. 353-3500._____________ AKC DACHSHUND PUPPIES, STUD dogs. ESTELHEIMS, FE 2-0009. ---- PET SHOP. „ FE 4-6433. Hemsttfs and supplies. BRITTANY PUP, 4 MONTHS OLC AKC, cell MA *-7547. CANINE COUNTRY CLUB E- S- Boule- EVERY SATURDAY ...... 7:30 EVERY SUNDAY ........ 2:00 Sporting Goods—All Types Door Prizes Every Audkxi We Buy-Sell—Trade. Retell 7 d Consignments Weteome BlB AUCTION 5009 Dixie Hwy.______OR 3-2717 NO SALE THIS WEEK ST OKFORD " ■■ ■ rtlon. We h-jy es- I brui and noval piaeat. A II hand tools and lawn aqt t. Honta has baan sold. d.3 blocks north of tha st NOW ACCEPTING GUNS tion and conslonment or IT will buy tor ou on on Wadnnday, i 13, 1965. HALLi AUCTION SALES, 70S V Plants-Trees-Shrubs II-A NURSERY CLEARANCE: EVfS- Klg your 6674 Dixie Mwy Phone 675-5536. 2 BEAUTIFUL BLACK SHETLAND ponies. Beth tor $150. OA 0-M17. o. 5-YEAR-OLD PALOMINO axperlencsd rtder noodtd, OL V0272 S-YEAR-OLD BUCKSKIN GELDING 674-263?, after S. 91 CARNIVAL "a-SK'WwT'*''' HPZSFSSSC w.'ia'atK: ^ "SoODELL TRaIlERS I) S. Rochestor Rd. UL i SInea 1932. Guarantoad Mr Saa tham tian at Wi W. Huron Wally Uyi Warnar frail "yam*?"ixcftlng MravansL AMERICA'S LARGEST SELLING CAMPING TRAILERS NIMROD NOW ON DISPLAY IMMEDIATE DELIVERY CRUISE OUT, INC. ■ ■ “ “ ■ APACHE CAMP TRAILERS All modala of naw 196 ------^ usad tl Close-Out Streamline for 1965 24', 26' Models Holly Travel Coach Inc. 15310 Holly Rd„ Holly ME -Opy Dally tnd Sundays- ELtSWORTH AUTO & TRAILER SALES Open Sundays at 1 p.m. Sir. H^^and 6577 DIxto Hxyy,_______MA 5-1600 FOR RENT: . ______irina lOtt. campars ‘65 CMC pickups. 0100 waak a up plua mllaam. SCOTT RENTAL SERVICE 196 W. Walton HUNTER'S SPECIAL 1965 Volkswagan Campar-Biis Plata and daluxa with doubN ers. compass, 110-volt axtra, . . stova, ate., all Ilka naw. FE 2-d244. PIONEER CAMPER SALES campars by Traval Qusan, Id, O'vanca, CancarC Playmate Jr. OUR-BUDGET MODEL "YOU SHOULD SEE IT TO BELIEVE IT" JOHNSON'S 517 W. W FE 4-5053 NOW ON DISPLAY FROLIC - YUKON DELTA-BEE LINE-TROTWOOD SCAMPER Now Is tha tims to rasarva r MIDDLETON'S ORCHARDS plums, tnd potateas. oaan a 4, Monday through Friday and day Saturday and Sunday. Prsdmora Rd., Laka Oricn. 2-1961. BOB & BILL'S PRODUCE SPECIALS CANNING and FREEZING PEACHES, $2.99 BU. ALL ONE PRICE. NEW MICH. POTATOES 50 LB„ $1.89 99c; 3 W-gal. squash, 2 tor 2 t1.2t. Bob and Highland Rd., 1 the bushel. Dixie Hwy MecINTOSH ____ Oakland Orchards, 2 Commerce Rd., I ml. caet i lord, dally 5 ‘ TOMATOES, BRING CONTAINtk. __________HE 2 -^________ STANLEY PLUMS, TREE RIPENED 15 USED CHAIN SAWS, Your McCulloch Chain S Rocheeter. Clean, comfortable, convenient, bathing, groont-Ing, boarding, pickup end C" - ____dally. 152-4740^ CHIMPANZEE, VERY OENTLETi4 Mutt tell, 5150. : BASSETT HOUND, FEMALE CALICO ANGORA AND kittens. 674-1645 after 3J6. - SIAMESE KITTEN, GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPs7~AKC, DOWNTOWN 27 S. Soginow FE 5<II1 after MINIATURE COLLfES, LOVELY Ajee Jemp. »hots. wormed. KING BROS. M1734 FE 4-1662 PorrtItK Rd. atjjpt^ HAMMERMILL, MOTORIZED WITH 4<yl. Wisconsin engine, .. " ‘ V-belt drive. M trensndstkm, 'exc.' kTckincToff oulF SE LF UNLOAOrNO DECKER WAO- PERSONALIZEO POODLE CLIP-pbip. Ok POODLE'CUPPiNo' ANO~GROOM Ing, any style. 662-4590 POODLE PUPPIES, WHITE MALE, 7 weeks OM, AKC ragltferad pedl- P* .WJ.*''*" “Sf •AO aot ------ AKC, BLACK, «»■ ‘ WOOL«S, 2 LWBLY BLACiTpUM AKC. S7I. Alse Stud. “* '■*' 'IBS. MIXED, I_______ ------- heme, FE 5-3416. THE LARGEST "REAL" FARM service store In Michigan. John Deagi and Naw Idaa parta ga- WANTED; IXB-3 HERCULES ENGINE FOR BULL DOZER. MUST BE IN GOOD CONDITION. CALL 626-2621 EVE-NINGS, 7-9 P,M. S-FOOT CABOVER TRUCK CAMP- fall vacation. JACOBSON TRAILER SALES t RENTALS 5690 Williams Laka Rd. PICK-UP CAMPERS, S34S AND UP TIiR CAMPER MFG. CO. ctoaa-out pricas. REDTAG SALE ALL PRiaS SLASHED FOR END OF SEASON Out They Go CENTURY-SAGE GARWAY - TRAVELMASTER pricaf. So hurry, | Opan A6on. through FrI., 9 to I TOM STACHLER AUTO & MOBILE SALES »l W. Huron St. FE 2-492S TRUCK CAMPER CLOSE-OUT SALE CREES 10>A'x7'. marina stool, NOW $2,050. SCULLY TOVk'xTVk' slda dtnatta, gas KULLY IOVkx7'4" slda dbiatta, tor 1966. 12-volt prasaura _ all aaH-csntaiiwdl Waa 13,395 CAMPING SITES Swlmmlnfb tato baach. Fishing. hjcFaafylkasort, 1140 MIS, OrtoS rRUCK CAMPBRS FROkTiOtr Travw trallari from 509$ --‘IS campar. Tol- We Proudly li for the Pint Time in This Areo BOLES AERO A Most Luxurious Travel Troiler Aircraft Construction BOLES AERO For PeoplB Who Love Corovaning-Want Luxury DISPLAYED NOW AT JACOBSON BylHck 'Tonier HELP! Wa naad SOO Man CadlHact, F tiacs. Olds and Bukks tor out stato markal. Top dollar ppM. MANSFIELD AUTO SALES AVERILL'S lab^at (ILL'S It gal th__ AVERILL'S 2020 PIxIa . _ SPEtlAL PRICES FkM tor I---- VAN'S AUTO SALES 14540 PIxIa Hs»y._____OR S-1255 GLENN'S It’s a Mickey Mouse watch h-om Dad! He says: ‘Here’s that set of wheels you’re been pestering me for as a birthday gift.’ ” WE NEED CARSI TOP DOLLAR FOR GOOD CLEAN CARS 34'W PONTIAC CHIEF, EXCEL- 6sS^athiry 1954 STEWART, 1x41, 2 BEDROOMS. 1956 MOBILE CRUISER, rX51', 3-badroom. FE 5GS97. 1960 DETROITER, rX36', EXCEL- 1. Walton Tratlar Park, 1964 MARLETTE, 50x10 Miadrm HURRYI Vm monay you sava will ba your own. DETROITERS Sugar Savings Spraa now at Bob tfutchlnson^s. YES. w YES, w YES, w YES, w YE^^hava 1-, 2- or 34iadi fw"prod«Jts rr rigid Blua Bi laatlng, plumb meat systams. You na You always an|oy tha i sataty, comfort and YES, you'll sava hundreds dollars during our sale. 0 Dally until 9. Sat. and Sun. l.... 6. Bob Hutchinson Salas, 4301 Dixia Hwy., Drayton Plains._______ Porkhurst Trailer Soles FINEST IN MOBILE LIVING 15 60 ft. Faaturlng Naw Moon Bud^ tnd Nomads, ocatsd half way batwaan Orton and Oxtord on —* *- *■"- Country Cousin. Ml OPEN 7 DAYS-9 to 9 SEE THE NEW 1966 MODELS A»to^n Low down ptymant ----------------- PARKING SPACE. Larga salactlon of 12' wldas. HOLLY PARK, CHAMPION PARK WOOD AND PARK ESTATES Law ovtrhaad — sava raal monay MIDLAND TRAILER SALES 2257 Dbila Haty. 33S0772 ena block north ot Talagraph Oxford Trailer Sales 1966 MODELS, 15 to 60 ft., l-10-1^20 wWa—tnd 3 story. ASarlettss, Staw-arts, Balvadtrt —" '----- to good trallar i_____ --- _____ -- ........Icks. Juit 15 yatrs of good marchandisr i600 satlsflad customars. Opan 9-0, clostd Sunda Mila south of Laka Orton _____________MY 20721 Reut Treilw Syce 90 NEW SPACES WITH NATURAL CAS Used TruckTires All Sizes Budget terms available. FI^STONE STORE I HARLEY, 74 FLH EXTRAS 1964 TRIUMPH TR-6, GOOD CON- Beots—Accesseriet 97 IS' DELTA, TRAILER, TARPAULIN, iStar f' 16* LAKE AND SEA OUTBOARD, WE NEED 1965 TEMPESTS condition. 452-0533. Averin Auto Sales 2020 Dixie Highway FE 29071 " 24-FOOT DAY CRUISER, 155 NOR-berg angina tnd controls, 2 to 1 reduction gear, head, $1,795 dellvart to any lake In Oakland County. Ask for ---------------- 1964 14' PIBERGLAS BOAT, i Mercury, motor. Alloy tralk cossorlos, 51,300. OR 3-61ir 1964 SPICO SKI BOAT, NEW 3S9 Trl-power Pontiac comptoto ““ trallar and custom boat c-------- Many extras. EM S43S3 or VE 5-34ia. ______________________ 1965 CENTURY RESORTER, IS', WE BUY Late Model Cars . 52,750. Call 662- top PftICES CASH WAITING BIG I BIG! SAVINGS! UP TO 30*/o OFF ON 1965 MODELS NOW IN STOCK! PONTIAC'S ONLY MERCURY MERCRUISER DEALER FOX SNOWMOBILES NIMROD CAMP TRAILERS CLEARANCE SALE 20 par cont on all Johnson motors, and boots. TONY'S MARINE Keego Harbor Boots _____ __________ ---n?n53[in?so*pply 396 Orchard ' ' CLOSE-OUT SALE OF 1965s LONE STARS-GLASSTONS and MFG BOATS Cliff Dreyer —I ind Sports Confer 15210 Holly Rd., H^ ME A6771 DON'T TAKE CHANCES We Don't 1 Store your boot with o quallfl Inside-STORAGE-Outside -.......7K?U1pr.no HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS ■'Your Evlnruda “ Toloeriph Rd. 1965 160 HONDA, 4 MONTHS OLD, 1945 TRIUMPH Tl K & W CYCLE YAMAHA SUZUKI OMEGA ond WHITE BIG BAD BULTACO LIL' INDIAN MINI BIKES CUSTOM COLOR 236 W. MONTCALM SUZUKI YEAR.12JI00 MILE WARRANTY. TUKO SALES INC. E. AUBURN ROCHESTER UL ^534^ You Meet the Nicest People On A HONDA WORLD'S LARGEST SELLER 6«OTORC>^Es"lN STOCK PRICES START AT $215, F.O.B. LOW DOWN PAYMENT FV'fRia glrg.'l ■Mts-Accenerlet FREE WINTER STORAGE trom mm*untH**Sprl^ S*oS prlC6s on '45 boats, Johnson tors and ^(Nmoo. Doubo AA i» repair rotino. Boat ropolrs one finishing. Phono FE 409U. PINTER'S (175 ond Ookliiid Univosll 'HARO TO FIND, inivasity Klxit) eOt iASV t6 r, Stoury, Choro- M59 to W. Highland, right on Hickory RIdgo Road to Domeda Road, loft and follow signs to DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE. Phono MAIn 9-2179.___________________ INSIDE STORAGE OWENS CRUISERS Models on Display 24' to 42' TRADE NOW FALL DISCOUNTS WALT MAZUREK'S LAKE & SEA MARINA Woodward at t. Btod. FE 4-9317 Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 JiEk Cart-Tracks 101-A ALWAYS BUYING JUNK CARt-FREE TOWS TOP S6S-CALL FE 54143 SAM ALLEN A SONS, INC. Used Aoto-Track Psrtt 1^ 1959 PONTIAC MOTOR, BONNE-ylllo, bast oWor. EM 3-223S. 9 raar-ond, t3S, or toko all for 151 PONTIAC, COMPLETE FRONT tnd. 4734193._____________ CHEVY V4 ENGINE, COMPLETE-ly rebuilt, SIOO. WhIM Lk. IT-5449. CHdVY - FORD-COMET-FALCON ' - . - rstwlll motors. S99 lew priced. 537-1117. New Eod Used Trecb 103 277 WEST MONTCALM (ono bkick E. of Oakland) 1965 1964 FORD^ECO LUCKY AUTO *FB 3-7154 AVAILABLi -Brand Now- 1966 GMC $1845 —Prtcoa Ara “ -And RaM .. . OLDS^RAMBLEI ROCHESTER GMC 1940 Vk-TON PANEL. BLUE FINISH, V-6, outomotlc. Only 5595. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., HIM S. woodward, Birmingham. Ml 4-2735.______________________ GMC 104 AUTO INSURANCE TERMS AVAILABLE STOP IN TODAY Anderson & Associates FE 4-3535 1044 Joslyn HAVE YOUR RATES BEEN IN-CREASED TOO MUCH FOR YOUR GOOD DRIVING RECORD? ASK USIl BRUMMETT AGENCY Mirada Mila_____FE 6d5W Fereiga Cert 105 )?5I VW CONVERTIB,B 195? MORRIS MINOR CONVERTI- 1960 MOA, BLACK CONVERTIBLE, 1960 ENGLISH FORD ANOLIA, NO monay down, til par month. OAKLAND CHRYSLBR-PLYMOUTH 724 Oakland Ava._____3324)50 1960 VW I Wagon with side < itor, has drop-loaf tat w curtains, AM-FM r FE 84071 Capitol Auto 1961 VW, EXCELLENT MECHANI-cal conditlen, naw tires Inctodine snow tlrss, 6734429 after 7 p.m. Sedan that It a raal gas saving auto- maKIU Ummm U cl* ___ Is lust the economy BILL SMITH USED CARS 462 N. Perry FE 44241 Fereiga Cart yjri',64. okiili.ikfcAM'jXqt- New eod Used Cars _T0* Attentionl 1 Our Credit Mnogor, Mr. PflP,„i* would Ilka 0 good used cor. w# foaturo spot dsllvory. FE 3-7863 CWIIUCS “"ssr Pontioc-Codillac 1 btooksouthof MMIto nhom _______ Ml 4-19W NEED A CAR? cintiv bocouss ofg^ If you hovt I sto^ lob o^ s^ money wo win dallvor on the spot. We do our own financing: Coll Mr. FE 84071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM Just East of Oakland Avo. 1930 BUICK 4-DOOR, (KWDiHAPi, 550. 1905. f 1955 BUICK CENTURY, GOO b I960 BUICK HARDTOP No Money Down We Finance FULL PRICE $797 Tel-A-Huron AUTO SALES 60 S. Telegraph FE 6-9661 REPO$SESSION-194I BUICK CON vertibto, no monty down, paymonto of 09.07 wotkiy. Coll Mr. Mean at I condition. Call attar 5 p.m. Repossession BUICK Invidt hardtop, |i — for public tala. No * EttoNrih bonk credit wBh n rsqulrsmonts. i 330-4525. Spartan. $1297 Spartan Dodge 1942 VW CONVERTIBLE 1963 VW SUNRCiOF, RADIO, WHITE- 1964 VOLKSWAGEN. Mociel Truck Close-Out Save $400 to $500 on All Remaining Roncheros-Econo-Vons Aik for Truck Dopt. (One block E. of Oakland Ava.) 1950 CHEVY PtdKUP, RUNS GOOD, 1954 GMC SUBURBAN, 5150, 219 Wiit Longfellow batert 2 p.m. 1955 CHEVY PICKUP. NEBOI LEFT fronf fandar. 1125. Good tirai. OR 3-2044.__________ 1957 FORD PlCt^, .............. .. Vfin' its* INTERNATipNAL TANDEM Call 474-2342 1963 FORD F-600 DUMP, 2 to 5 YD. ^ra_el^V CUSON DfOltr, 01 build up tar campor, axtra ----1 JiROMB4'ERGUlpN Inc. Rechastor FORD Daalar. OL l47lT. 163 PICKUP W^TM_^PER,IU?i LOOKI Ford Bconellna. 1695 [■ROiLIM. We"fInS51c¥\ 1963 Ford pica, SS PROBLEM LUCKY AUTO ,1*40 W, ^ Trocji^ FB 44214 “Tail IPWTb-WN L6N6 ---9 ISSIr'oCTfrii: I, LAWBAKl WitH cAlhair. Wooted Cii-Tracfcs i-owNen 05F>iLier>Ai6 m cai ^ ft Californio Buyers V&WdRSALES OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 724 OakIWld Avo. 2124150 SPECIAL SALE on All New OPEL KADETTS Wagon $1690 30 M.P.G. PLUS $54.07 Monthly OLIVER BUICK 196410 Orchard Laka SPORTS CARS R $ FM radio . 11095 II Iran*............11395 » “f.^lea* ttartlna from Alio 1966 models In flOck. Solos, lorvico tnd Ports to ““ ---------lOihV, lun- 1964 LeSABRE FISCHER BUICK . ENGINE, AUTOMATIC wniiE •rUTLCil AUTOMOBILE, ^ULL PRICE ItM EUCTU COKVERTIBIE FISCHER BUICK t. Woodward ’*SL CADILLAC FLlirwOOO, Repossession dtw ''III# ^ I wookiy; boom. Jaguar, Flat, /Morgan Grimaldi Imported Car Co. Volkswagen Center I. Ruby rod finlih, *, axcollont condH„.. 11095 Autobahn Motors, Inc. MA*6t0|5. ^»”.cMBvp;ifrMAe66ii, tviiin; iMH/ 4<yllrKltf. An •xcnilsnt trnn*> IXan ifft g^WY cllRt"^ 5s?»'f'p.r "wromr THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 22, 1965 «MT Nd On 106 D—9 . ^Nt 6f THE BETTER BUYS AT .LLOYD'S 1960 CHEVY $795 Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 I960 CHEVY r har^ with nin bltdi *1 with nd bitarlw, )-«i •dlo Mid iwMar, It'i only BILL SMITH U»D CARS 462 North Perry FE 4-4241 I960 CHEVY CONVCRTIRLE No Money Down We Finance FULL PRICE $597 Tel-A-Huron AUTO SALES 60 S. Telegraph FE 8-9661 LOOKI IMI Cfrvo... _ •hm. kn lull priu, ^ __ CRiOlT NO PROBLEM, WE FINANCE BANK RATES. LUCKY AUTO IMS W. WIdo Trock FE 4-aM Of FE 3-’«54 N6 MONEY DOWN, IMI CHEVY . Eol Air, |u(t paymontt. Call MS- IN) CORVAIR MONZA, 4 itartlng cotiw. SSMOOS. ONE OF THE BETTER BUYS AT LLOYD'S 1961 CHEVY Impato eanvartlbla. Whitt with Mack tap and matchlno vinyl Interior. Automattc tranamlialon, pow- Tr MmiSalSf $57 DOWN $36 Per Month Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 lOM CORVAIR MONZA WITH AUTOMATIC TRANS-MIUION, RADIO AND HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO AMNEV down. Payments only U.n per weak. CALL CREDIT MOR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD INS CORVETTE AN^OR HU c6kyA%[j^^ cenditlen, SIMieS, ------- mi CHEVROLET BISCAYNE ^ dear, atandaid atiHt, S<yllndar, ra-dle, haatar, 1-awnar, aharp. Only ISM wtth S145 doeni. WUNTER OOOOE,------------ ------- Is car la almoet like new, wli ly UMB actual miles. A an mar beOuty. BILL SMITH USED CARS 462 N. Perry FE 4-4241___________ k ]-DbOR, Its) CbkVAIR, M. RAblO, STICK, SIN. SSWN attar 8 p.m.____ CORVine INI. CONVERTIBLE-1 taps, 300 H.P. 44peed Exc. ass-mt s pjii._____ 1963 CHEVY II CONVERTIBLE ” FISCHER BUICK SS4 S. woodward Autobahn Stattan wagon. Aruo V-S IrKleMlIa I7N i. Taiaifa^ ~ FE »4i3i INI ChEVY SUPEd SPORT CON-vartlMa 337. Stick. Sharp red. II.-»I.1m 34373. ^ ^ ... Am 6otvair s-c^r, 3-speed, gfca-eia'&tg"” ItM IMPAU CONVERTIBLE V4 auN„ double power, power ''’’^^anTp’chevy MH^P iRepi lepossession 1N4 CHEVY II Nova SI Hardtop, ^tS?;S.i"r'Sa; i9i4 Chevelle ElCanilna, radio and heater, rad, whltMoils, 10,000 actual miles, al-mae Homer Hight OA MMO OxTord, Mtoilgan ^hlVY, M IMPAU, l-OOOl «Mti aMawalis, radio, haatar, ii,- 1964 MONZA -FISCHER " BUICK r wM Ueed Cin 106 NS eiONlA rSSb «^Em Fjcr Repossession INS CORVAIR Corsa Convartible, , spaed. 140 HP. Ralaasad tar salal No money down, call MA S4M4. Autobahn AUTHORIZED VW DEALER -.....-th' pt Miracle Mils FE S-4531 17*3 S. Taiaoraph ONE OF THE BETTER BUYS AT LLOYD'S 1965 CORVAIR Full price $2195 Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 INS CHEVY IMPAU WAOiON, *-pa...,^V4 wllh an extras. Milford. INS CHEVY SU^ER SPORT, POW-or stearlng and brakaa, auto., 5.N0 miles. SS3n. FE 4313». leU CHRYSLER IMPERIAL 4-OOOR HARDTOP WITH FULL POWER, AIR-CONDI-TIONINS, RADIO, HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY - DOWN. ~ sr^Rr................ OLD TURNER FORD, 4-7S00. MONKEY CAL^ ,yHAR^ ivex l.nKTOLBK JUU , X-LIUUK, hardtop, aharp, tlOO down, tM.N OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH One of a Kind 1N2 CHRYSLER hardtop. In famous "300" with parformi to match, 413 V4 with "chr $1295 Spartan Dodge PATTERSON ROCHESTER Chrysler-Plymouih Imperial-Valiant 1964 CHRYSLER e luxurv and prestige at a modest price. Glowing equamarlne factory warranty,'for $1997 Full Price Cell 3314531 Spartan Dodge SEE US LAST For A Oreat Deal On your new ar used F or other fine car. KEEGO PONTIAC SALES t SERVICE 682-3400 Unbelievable until you see Itl J9U Dodge hardtop with only 32400 mllot, glletan-Ing Mack finith, wllh Artic while topi V4 automatic. Power steering and abaoluttly new In Is^ juaran Spartan Dodge HI OOOOE STATION WAOON, ^ passangar, power, goad oanditlen IMS, n MNL ______________________ INI DODOE 440 SrAflbH wAOON. VI, autamallc, tall pawar, airtra nice. Only £1401 wllh SIM dawn. HUNTER DODOE, --------------- Ml 7-OOS5._________ Repossession 1N2 DODOE wagon, lust ralttsa tar public sale. No S naadec Call Mr. Cash at S3t-453S. Ha wl bring car to your hortta. Spartai >03' DODOE LAMER OT 3-OOON hardtop, bu^ aaata. A real eha-car. Only Hm wllh S14S dow HUNTER OOOOE, Blrmlnghai Ml 740S5.________ KESSLER'S DODGE CARS AND TRUCKS Sales end Service iM3 OODoTl>ARt OT, BUCKET seels, extre nice. 113*$, IS* down. HUNTER DODOE. Ilrmlngham. 1*« DODOE Uo 4-bbOR. STAND-ard thin, Scylirfder. Ideal family car. Only S)>S with SIN down. HUNTER DODOE, Blrmtagham. ij!.’ — Repossessed Cars OR 3-1221 ASK FOR BRUCI 1*43 bdboE moHA66, fULl pow-ar, lust Ilka new. Balance of y year warranhL i3,S*S with IN down. HUNTER DODOE, Blrmbig- haitL Ml 7-N33.______ f*54 T'BIRO 313' ENOINi, 3-SPEED std. trammisslon, — good. Call 3434*4*._____________ 1*57 T'BiRb, t14ti.HxCBLLEHt EM 3-7)31____________ )*St ^6kb. RAbid, HEATER, W tomatic IrantmlMlan, goad tires, runs good, SDS, PE 44344 tIrM, M.N - weak. Wa I tlnandng. "WlORD ardlap with S«yllndar , lomafic transmission, haatar, wh)l^ll tl dmm and M4I par handle and arrange ai Call Mr, Dan at: FE 8-4071 s Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM •IimI tttf Of Ooklomf Its* ^dRb~0A4.A)(iB ■fw63568 Kar’assz.'"^ aateJs-Bfcr*^ mSr^6l ' SSI ogi Now Eni IM Cm 106 LOOKI 1*N THUNDBEEIRO, t OWNER 8]!town. cSim iff probCenl WE PINANCE BANK RATM. LU/CKY AUTO / 1*40 W. WMa Track FE /4-33I4 or FE 3-7IS4 )t40 FORD ^PAStENOER STATION ------------------------- Repossession )*N T'BIrd, most ba sold to setisfy balance. Payments of lust M.*7 weakly, with no t down. Call " Cash, at 3314531. Spartan. JNS FORD COUNTRY SEDAN 4 - PASSENOER STATION WAQON, VI ENGINE, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO, HEATER, POWER BRAKES AND POWER STEERING, A VERY CLEAN '40 FOR ONLY *3*5. VILLAGE rambler, <44 S. WOODWARD AVE., 8IR-MINGHAAA, Ml 4-3*00. 1*40 FORD RA^CH WAOON. STICK, —TlrKtar, r*aiA h****,- vsec 34133. 1*40 FALCON 4-DOOR, AUTOMATIC, 1961 FALCON >or with radio, heater, n, sparkling silver finish. $397 NOW OPEN 855 Oakland Ave. (Outdoor Shoroom) ust (4 mile north of Cats Ave.) Spartan Dodge 1*41 FALCON 3-DOOR SEDAN WITH STICK SHIFT TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Payments only t5.*5 par weak. CALL CREDIT MGR Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD. Ml 4-7500. 1*41 FORD, ^CYLINDER, AUTO-matlc, good condition. I5N. OR 3-5514.__________________________ 1*41 FORD, BAD MOTOR, SHARP body. $335, 1*N Ford, bad motor, good body, $75. OA S-3354, Pat CREDIT 1*43 Ford Galaxia automatic transmit------ haatar, power steering, plus 135 tto stored et: STATE WIDE AUTO due of S74443 1*43 F 0 R 0^ COUNTRY POWER, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HEATER wmitc. WALL TIRES, . - — •—NEY __ J ER f'oRD, 1*43 FALCON 4000R 4<YLINDBR, 1*43 FALCI3N 3-060R, 4CYLINDER, 1*43 THUNDBRBIRD, OOOOR SE- - - - ’ Muo. M4I--- —' ^ EM 34M. weekly. WMI bring car to yi— homail Cali Mr. Murphy at 3 1963 Ford Goloxie 4-Door $1395 BEATTIE )N DIXIE HWY. IN WATBRFQRC 'Your FORD DEALER SInca 1*30" "Honia et Service attar the Sale" OR 3-1291 WALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Pay- KCl? ?i{1koVf”NBIi.,'T: ^rkt at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-75M. 1963 Ford $1695 BEATTIE ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD ■’Your ford DEALER SInca 1*30" Hama of Sarvka attar the tala" OR 3-1291 1964 T-BIRD I hardtop with tall powor, Inalda and out. Excellent whNit and It It almost $13* or oW car down, pay-ts only Slf.f5 par weak. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. S. WOODWARD A “wiU^ ACCEPT GUNS, BOATS, MOTORS Sunshine from a Bianary ■ ----ibaat whistle AS PART DOWN PAYMENT ON ANY NEW or USED CARI BILL SPENCE 6673 Dixit Hwy. Chryaiy-Plymotjlti-VallaBt CURKSTON MA S-343S New IlMd.Cm 1MMARMADUKE NEED TRANSPORTATK " fri!5!^»'tarouBh’ priced tram $47. W« have - — •-tit your noods. — small weakly range ail financing. Call Mr Dan at; FE 84071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM Just East et Oakland 1964 FORD SI0.T9 per ween. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 4*4 $. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM__MI 4-7S00 Miirl bisposi 6f i**i MumNO. No Money bewn, $13.17 weekly. Will bring car to your homel I Call Mr. Murphy at 335-4101. Mc- ‘it’s HIS garbage, New and Used Cars 106 1*5* OLDS *1 HARDTOP, FULL I power, black. $435. LI *-4032. . REPOSSESSION-I**d OLDS 2-DOOR hardtop, no money down, payments I of $a.i7 weekly. Call Mr. Mason | ■ FE 54101. McAullffa, 1*43 OLDS STARFIRE CONVERTI-ble. Pull power. Sharp. $1.$*S or best otter. 434-4*35._ Pretty Ponies 1965 Mustangs 7 USED MUSTANGS TO CHOOSE FROM CONVERTIBLES HARDTOPS 2 PLUS 2's FULL EQUIPMENT As Low As $79 Down HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM__Ml 4.750S f*54 LINCOLN, 3-DOOR HARDTOP, black, full price only $3*5. $1597 NOW OPEN 855 Oakland Ave. (Outdoor Shoroom) (Just 'A mllo north of Cess Av... Spartan Dodge 1*43 OLDS *1 SPORT COUPE, FULL power, alr-conditloning, extras, $1,- 1*5. Lt *-4033. ___________ *43 olds F-45, 4-OOOR, STATION wagon, *-pasianger, VI taring. Special at $**S. CLAND CHRYSLER-PLI *5* LINCOLN Private. '333-4347. CONTINENTAL 1*41 MERCURY CLUB COUPE WITH FULL POWER, AUTOMATIC TRANS-MtislON, RADIO AND HEATER, WHItr........ IS OLDS, DYNAMIC, M HOLIDAY, l-door, hardtop, auto., tranti, pow-tr steering and brakes, radio. FE t-4017___________ ___________ 1*57 PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE 2-door hardtop with VI anglne, automatic transmission, radio and heater, a Callfornie car, $3*5. Can financa. NORTHWOOD AUTO SALES FE $.*23* only $7.14 ear wi CREDIT MGR. I AT: HAROLD FORD, Ml 4-7S0I. TEWALL _LY NO Paymantt 1961 MERCURY HARDTOP No Money Down We Finance FULL PRICE $797 Tel-A-Huron AUTO SALES 60 S. Telegraph FE 8-9661 "iss'irawtssr.. SSIhlS DODOE, Birmingham, Ml 7-WSS. 1*4) COMET MXMR, GOOD TIR17, ------oa 3.31S0, $197 SPECIALS )3 to choota from, axcollant transportation, your choka tar r money down, weakly payman' only $3.47. Wa handle and a range all financing, cell Mr. Da FE 84071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM It east of Oakland 1*43 Cl Inder, COMET 3-DOOR, $33 4-CYL- 3 Peeler. OL l-TTII. I can't match anywhere 1*42 MERCURY CO h black Cherry finish, ■ wring, brakas, l $897 855 Ooklond Ave. (OuMaor Showroom) If V4 mile north of Cass Ava.) Spartan Dodge MUST DISPOSE OF 1*43 MERCURY to Money Down, $ll,S7 weekly, :all end wa will bring car to tour tiomall Call Mr. Muri' It 335-4101. McAulllte.___ ONE OF THE BETTER LLOYD'S 1963 MERCURY AAontarey »door hardtop. Breaza-way window, power etaarlng and brMwt, automatic transmission, radio, Mater. Full price $1495 Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 siEWFiliT BOB BORST MI 64538 DON'S U$BD UR$ SMALL AD-BIG LOT N CARS TO CHOOSE PROM M Tampast 4daar, stick $, raWa, haatar, -whltawalla, tinted glass. U Impala 3-door hardtop, stick $. .. --- hardiop. stick $. )la, stld( $. )*43 impals 1*41 Pontiac______ 1*41 CMvy wagon 1*44 Bonnovllla 4doi dMiblt powor. 1*42 Pontiac wagon, 4-door, stick $. 1*43 Comat 3deer, auto., $. 1*41 ^avy Bal Air 4dMT. iHt Ponilac Sdaar, auw., douWa 677 S. LAPEER RD. Laka Orion MY 2-2041 _ ^^ Anderson and Leeming Nbw and Uitd Cart 106 Ntw aiid Ustd Cart 106 New omI Used Cm 186 1962 OLDS I ely "*S" sport sedan In glowed and white finish, matching and vinyl Intarlor, tall pow-1 I course and all the luxury I et vou'd exoect In a fin#' let him keep it!” New and Used Cars 106 1959 PONTIAC HARDTOP No Money Down We Finance FULL PRICE $497 Tel-A-Huron AUTO SALES 60 S. Telegraph FE 8-9661 )M2 PONTIAC 4-OOOR UTALINA, . power steering, brekes, blue. Very clean, $1430. FE »*587. Meiurek. e only $7.73 per we L CREDIT MGR.. I I at HAROLD TURN1 FORD, Ml 4-7500. STORAGE SALE NO CASH REQUIRED Just assume f* weekly payments on 1*43 Pontiac sedan with V-i on-pine, automatic transmission, power steering. Will ba sold tor balance due of $*44.04 plus $25 storage charge. Car stored at: STATE WIDE AUTO 3400 Elizabeth Lake Road Just east of Cast Laks Road EXCEPTIONAL IMS PONTIAC CAT-sport coupe, (' Ti,3*5. 343-7414. 1*43 PONTIAC, GRAND PRIX, blue, power steering, brakes, auto.. $1,450. After 5 p.m„ OR 3-04*3. )**3 PONTIAC CATALINA 2-DOOR hardtop, $1,050. 402-2*13. ONE OF THE BETTER BUYS AT LLOYD'S 1962 BONNEVILLE 2-door hardtop. Baby blue with matching all vinyl Interior. Power steering end brakes, automatic transmission, radio, heeler. $57 DOWN Up to 36 Months to Pay Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 1*43 CATALINA CONVERTIBLE, $200 down take over payments. 482-410*. __ 1942 PONTIAC CATALINA, 2-b66R hardtop. Power steering and _brak«, Ce'l before 4. FE 5-2583. COV 'N AND TEST DRIVE THE 'HOT" 4-4-2 JEROME OLOS-CADILLAC 1*43 BONNEVILLE VISTA, poUBtl power, dean, DWS, <73-7*11. 1963 PONTIAC HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-7S80 t*44 PONTIAC HAROTOPriPORT coupe with power. A4A 5-7474. 1*45 PONTIAC 3 PLUS 1U 1»iS CATALINA OTO CONVERTIBLE. 3 -1. trI-power. $100 doem ppymentt. FE »*S23, )*4S PONtlAC CA $3,750. <$3-3778. 1964 Pontiac Catalina Hardtop $1995 ^ Beattie' 3N DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD Your FORD DEALER Since - "Home of Service after the S OR 3-1291 1*44 PONTIAC CATALINA CON- v«rtlble. Cheep. FE 3-3S57. ____ 1*44 GTO 2-OOOR HARDTOP, 4-spted, positractlon, vibrasonic ra- Autobahn AUTHORIZED VW DEALER milt north of Miracle Mile 1765 S. Telegraph FE I A3 1964 TEMPEST t. U9M or old car <fc Ma$on at FE 5 4101. McAullffr^ I960 PONTIAC /entura 4Kloor hardtop wllh V-4 engina, automatic transmission, radio and heater, power brakes and power steering. Gray and wh". Ilnlsh. i^v^k s^foday. USED CARS 462 North Perry FE 4-4241 280 S. Saglnat^St FE 3-TO1 TJ IK T> Autobahn ;HAhULU TURNER 1 Pontiac 2-door Ventura AUTHORIZED VW DEALER 40 PONTIAC VENTURA 4-DOOR hardtop, power brakes and steering, radio and heater. In excel- 1*43 SPORTS FURY CONVERTIBLE, radio and heater, VI, power steering, 87*5 full price. OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 734 Oakland Ave.______333-9150 PLYMOUTH, 1*43 FURY 4^XX>R, hardtop, off white, radio, tall or, auto., white wall*, 30,04 tual mllet, exceptloMlly LOOK' 11,1*5 I price, $5 down. CREDIT NO PROBLEM, WE FINANCE ....... RATES. LUCKY AUTO 1*40 W. WIdt Track FE 4-3214 or FE >7S54 1*44 PLYMOUTH 424, 3SOO MILE warranty. 5751 Clinton Dr. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM .. 5 VALIANT- STATION WAGON, 4- >L YMOUTH BELVEDERE 'dtolp, automatic, 330 h.p. k, sharp, low monthly pay- OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH Oakland Ave. 332-9150 BARRACUDA V-S ENOItiE, 4,- 1958 PONTIAC STATION WAGON No Money Down We Finance FULL PRICE $197 Tel-A-Huron AUTO SALES 60 S. Telegraph FE 8-9661 1*5* PONTIaC, UTALINA, RADIO, GO!! HAUPT PONTIAC 1*43 CHEVY Bel Air 2-door, 4<yl„ 1*44 CATALINA a )t*4 PONTIAC 7 tarn, automatic. I CATALINA 9-passangar v SHELTON 855 Rxhester Road 5 PONTIAC CATALINA, 4-DOOR ardtop, power brakes-steering, line unning car, good rubber, red, 700. a*-3743 days, 338-4774 nights. JEROME-FERGUSON Inc.. Rot ester FORO Dealer. OL )-*21>■ _ 1*43 PONTIAC GRAND PR coupe, tuxedo black with matchl trim, Hydramatlc, i Autobahn low mileage, automatic transmission.' excellent tires $1095 AUTHORIZED VW DEALER • 7 mile north of Miracle Mile 1765 S. Telegrai' ------ FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM_____Ml 4-7500 1964 Tempest LeMans Hardtop $2095 BEATTIE <3Ha73. 1*45 OTO NO MONEY DOWN - WE FINANCE CREDIT AUTO SALES I2S Oaklend at WMatrack . ________FE $*314 1*45 LEMANS CONVERtiBLB - AMERICAN RAMBLER, 1*40, ORI- 1*42 RAMBLER AMERICAN s.r»x>R WITH WHITE FIN-BRAND NEW PAINT ____■ *4*5. VILLAGE RAMBLER, 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM, Ml 4-3*00. 1963 RAMBLER 4-door sedan. "440" model. > matte trantmiulon, only $1 Ask for Pets Peters at— FISCHER BUICK 554 S. Woodward *47 ir program. Buy NOW ROSE RAMBLER STORAGE SALE NO CASH REQUIRED lust atsuma $7 waekly paymi 1*40 Pontiac convertibla angina, autamar- *— powtr itaerlng. balance due of k><».v# i>ius «. storage charge. Car stored at: STATE WIDE AUTO 3400 Elizabeth Lake Road Just east ot Cass Lake Road BY OWNER. 1*40 4-DOOR CAT llna hardtop, $435. OR 3-5121. 1*41 TEMPEST, GOOD TIRES -------see to appreciate. $53-3754. INI RED PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 4-<toor hardtop, real good condition, ^oc^ttras. Tl,0S0. 341 W. Long- 1963 Pontiac Convertible Stalina v8 engine, automatic, pow-sfeering and brakes, tilt steer-g wheei! Only — $1895 1961 Comet 2-Door Ith a 4-cyl. engine, radio, healer, tid whitewalls, dark blue finish, niy - $695 ROCHESTER 1*44 TEMPEST LE MANS COUPE. Maroon finish with black Interior. VI angina, 4-ipeed transmission, radio, heater, whitewalls, $).**5 — PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO.. 1104 S. Woodward Ave., Blrming- 1964 Pontiac Bonneville Hardtop GINE, RADIO AND HEAT- tomatic transmission, r heater, whitewall tiras, new cer warranty, $49.00 or old car down, payments only $14.95 par waek. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM_Ml 4-ISM 1*43 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE. Sliver finish, blac' - * - Power aouIPPatt w Brand new whits______ ______ PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1104 S. Woodward, Birmingham 1*43 PONTIAC CATALINA, DOUBLE power, good f * -j.*.— Radio, h a a t I, WE FINANCE BANK LUCKY AUTO 1*41 PONTIAC, 2-DOOR, HARDTOP, Ventura, beautiful 3-tona finish, STICK V-l, axcallant running condition, no money down, W.95 s week. Call Mr. Brown. ESTATE STORAGE Repossession COME TO THE PONTIAC RETAIL STORE WHERE YOU EXPECT MORE ... AND GET IT! 100 Top quality. One-owner, new car trodes to choose from 65 Mt. Clemens at WIdt Track FE 3-7954 1963 LeMANS Coupe. Automatic transmission, power statrlng. Full price only $1,588. Ask for>ele Peters at- FISCHER BUICK 1*43 TEMPEST ^DOOR WITH 3-transmiulon, radio, heater extra clean. JEROME-FER- ___t Inc., r------------- —~ tier, OL I-9711. REPOSSESSION-1943 PONTIAC 3-door hardtop, no money down, pay-- Tf* of S11.S7 weakly. Call Mr. on at FE V4I01. McAullHe. RUSS JOHNSON Pontioc-Rambler USED CAR STRIP 1*40 FORD 4moor 1*44 PONTIAC Hardtop CHEVY 3-door ......... PONTIAC Catalina 4-do 1*44 RENAULT 4dr. sadan EEP Pickup .......... 1*43 PONTIAC Hardtop 1*43 PONTIAC Hardtop 1*43 FORD Galaxia 2-door 5 1*43 FORD Galaxia 3-door . 1*43 FORD Falrlana 500 . 1*43 Bonneville Vista 1*42 RAMBLER 4-door . . 1*43 PONTIAC Catalina .. r, whitewalls, only— $2095 BEATTIE Transportation Specials 1*5* Rambler 1*57 Mercury . 1*H Chevy 1*S Ford 1*5*,Chevy 3-do PRICE PYMT. $4dn U.00 07dn $7.00 E TO CHOOSE FROM Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM S2f395 I 795 r %7,49S . S1r095 . $1*295 $2*395 OUT THEY GO! 100 Used Cars AT THE Pontiac Retail Store EVERYTHING In our entire stock must be sold during our "MAKE ROOM" program for the new models. We have a choice selection of all makes and models. 65 Mt. Clemens St. AT WIDE TRACK FE 3-7954 RUSS JOHNSON IF YOU ARE HAVING TROUBLE GETTING YOUR CREDIT RE-ESTABLISHED - NOW YOU CAN TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE ALL YOU NEED IS A STEADY JOB. $5.00 DOWN PAYMENT AND A DESIRE TO HELP YOURSELF CALL MR. WHITE: FE 8-4088 IE3M Mm SMMS END OF MODEL - SPECIALS - 100% Written Guarantee Every car lUtad carriaa this guarantee. Take tha guaaawork out of buying Usad CartI Credit No Probitml 1961 OLDS Starfire Convertible, Full Power, Bucket Seats, Only ........................$1495 1963 PONTIAC Catalina Coupe, Automatic, Power Steering, Brakes, a Real Buy...............$1695 1964 CHRYSLER New Yorker Sedan, All Power, Transferoble Warranty ......................$2445 1964 OLDS “98" Hardtop, Full Power, a Real Speciol at Only ........................... $2695 1964 BUICK Electro 225 Convertible, Full Power, Sharp Birmingham Trade .....................$2595 1962 OLDS “88"s, "98"$, Hardtops, Sedans, Star- fires, From ................................$1495 1963 COMET Custom Sedan, Automatic, Rodio, Heater and Whitewalls ......................$1295 1963 PONTIAC Grand Prix, Power Steering, Brakes, Sharp One-Owner ....................$2095 1963 OLDS "98" Hardtops and Sedans, Full Power, From ...................................$2088 1964 OLDS "88" 2-Door Hardtop, Automotic, Power Steering, Brakes .....................$2295 ORIGINATOR OF 2-YEAR WARRANTY 635 S. Woodward Ave. Birmingham 647-5111 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22. 1965 / fPeop/e in the News! By The Associated Press Comedienne Lucille Ball must remain Mrs. Lucille Gol-daper unless she asks to become Mrs. Lucille Morton. > That was the gist of a ruling yesterday by Superior Court Commissioner James P. Natoli, who approved a request by comedian Gary Morton. Miss Ball’s husband, to change his name from Goldaper to Morton. Morton, 48, asked that Miss Ball’s legal married name also be changed but Natoli said she must fiie her own petition. MISS BALL' Tito on State Visit to Bulgaria President Tito of Yugoslavia is on a six-day state visit to Bulgaria. Tito left Belgrade yesterday by train for the visit aimed at strengthening relations between the Communist Balkan neighbors. U" '■'M BATHTUB SCENE - This is what television viewers will not see when they watch actress Suzanne Pleshette take a bath in a forthcoming 'Bob Hope Theatre” segment. Starts TOWTE HURON AF PMtMax .....lai iiiiiiBi (wWiT n) w» Receding soap suds disclose she’s wearing a bathing suit. The bubbly stuff will effectively hide that fact when she appears on the TV screens. Kaye Has 3 Big Interests: Television, Flying Dodgers AP Movie-Television Writer HOLLYWOOD - Conditions presaged trouble when I entered Danny Kaye’s penthouse apartment a t CBS’ Television City. 'Ihe comedian was glowering at the other end of the sumptu-, suite, and Ii quickly learned why. In his lap was a portable radio pouring forth news of THOMAS another disaster for Kaye’s beloved Los Angeles Dodgers. * * * “Well, see you later,” I said, aware that a Kaye interview under the best of circumstances can be touch-and-go. “Don’t leave,” he said, shutting off the radio sadly. Although the Cubs were whipping the Dodgers 7-3, he emphasized that his action did not concede -nmnday SP8C FEATURE AU YOU CAN EAT Fried Chicken defeat. Nor has he given up on tJie pennant race. NEVER GIVE UP “I never give up until the last pitch of the last inning,” he remarked steadfastly. Kaye has two other major interests in his life: flying and television, not necessarily in that order. While his fellow television stars were out mining mints at state fairs and in summer theaters and night clubs, Danny “never worked harder in my life.” At what? Taking examinations for more advanced pilot ratings. He spoke glowingly of piloting a private jet to Portland in an hour and 40 minutes, “the same time it takes me to fly to San Francisco in my own plane.” Don’t get the notion that Danny is any less interested in other ratings, say of television shows. At the start of his third season, he remains as avid as a Cat^lls comic, which he once was. REVERSES INTERVIEW He blunted the reporter’s questions by reversing the interview, a familiar Kaye ploy. “How do you feel about TV, now that you’re starting your third season?” he asked. “Is it different to be shooting in color this year?” That out of the way. he settled down to some observations on his life in television. ★ ★ ★ . “People said I was a nut, a perfectionist who would last six weeks in television and then go quietly mad because of the way you have to work in TV. But I’m not a perfectionist. Anyone who says that he is a perfectionist is claiming that what he tries to do is perfect work. Perfect in whose eyes? His own? The public’s? “All I try to do is the best I can. When you put together a complete show in five days — the equivalent of two-thirds of a movie — you can’t expect everything to be polished. ADDED QUALITY “Things can go wrong, but you can capitalize on them in TV, and that gives an added quality. Like last week when Harry Belafonte had a punch line Uiat he couldn’t get out. His difficulty was much funnier than the line would have been. “We’ve had some great shows; last week’s with Harry was one, I believe. We’ve had some good shows. Yes, we’ve' had some poor shows, too. * * ★ “That was my biggest adjust- i ment to TV: how to accept the poor shows. How did I do it? Merely by moving on to the next show and trying to profit by the bad one.” Most critics and a large segment of the audience seem to agree that his batting average is high. Now if the Dodgers could only do as well. at 7:00 and 11:18 STRIPPED OF EVERYTHING-THEY LIVED AND LOVED AND FOUGHT AS IF THERE WERE NO TOMORROW... Stolen Car Found; Bill Owner for Storage BOSTON (AP) - Theresa Fancy’s car, stolen July 8 from in front of her suburban Somerville home, has been found parked in the Boston Common underground garage. And Mrs. Fancy acquired a new headache. The garage wants Mrs. Fancy to pay $182.50 storage fees on the car — $2.50 for each (rf the 73 days since the car was left there July 9. M/WK \m JOYINlTli: MokninO Sr/MEYHOUWIf • BUM»S HEKOnH • FUH^ SUM PICKENS -JAMES MITCHUM • 6E0IGE KENNEDY- BRUCE CABOT- BARBARA BOUCHETj f wildest guys and gals in m whole _ _ .^BiiBRfl * ®“A MOVIE THAT YOU SHOULD \j|“’;iNOT MISS!’ *-JUDITH CRIST-on NBC-TV •70DAY" s/k)w1 Exclusive 1st BEGINS TONIGHT -EVERYTHING YOU HOPE FOR BUT RARELY FIND IN A FlLM\"-N»wYorkH»nldTrlbun9 •IRRESidTiBLEr —Time Magazine TONiOHT AT TUB •t28 ibtufi s Countmi Inn 1727 SOUTH TELEQRIPII—^ 1727 SOUTH TELEGRAPH^ PreaenU JAM C. lUUOR At The Piano Bar TUEMAY THRU SATURDAY FOR A RETURR EMaAOEMEHT • Your Favirita Savaraca • FuMMaaa -DEVASTATING! BLISTERING! SLASHING !- —New York Tlnrn "wiaupenceiTO'DiiKBOGafDe juoecHnsne “■arihRU” •pmaarMaMIMO Mllaa plctani...MitOrRii EXTRA: "Whara Hava ah TIm Flawars Oaaa» She Is young and innocent.|^ She Is abducted by a winner! young man who is not ^ so Innocent. icoLM iwDeujw BUBAILn-JAIIBDUlWJIMMONEINANOEZ-A^ ' r-aCASBO yOMTALSAH -SUtAH tTSAtSESS JtHia TAHST-ai WALUM, AUVTWUDLMNmXMCTiON - TOM MON HARVEPRESi^ELL SENTA BERGER «.M1CHAELANDERS0N,JR. •Marta H* cotwkyKunE 814-1600 Vfeteiford 3S20 AIRPORT iBEHNin J FMIBB fi BBBIIOGl I .. .two men are one mar\ on I tt • I lIWUK THETHlQPIMaf THE PONTIAC PKKSS. WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 22, 1965 D—11 fcT ^Tefevision Programs-^^ VMgrafntfimilalMcl by sfafiMulIttad (nthitcphimnara«ub)MltociMuig«yvithowt ^ ' qw»mH,2-WJ>K-TV.4-WWJ.TV.7-WXYZ.TV.»-CKLW.TV.S0-WKID-TV.S^-WiVI WEDNESDAY NICJHT f:N (2) (4) News, Weather. Sporta (7) Movie: “The Aflfnr B^1>laner (In t*rogreu) (9) Bat Masterson (50) Movie: “Journey Into Light" (1991) Sterling Hayden, Viceca Lindfors (56) Mythology l:» (7) Sports 6:39 (2) (4) Network News (7) News (9) Marshal DiUon (56) (Special) (Changing World 11:49 (7) Network News 7:99 (2) (Color) Stingray (4) Juvenile Court (7) Shlvaree (9) Movie: “UFO” (1996) Ibm Powers ;7:39 (2) Lost in Space • (4) (Color) Virginian ! (7) (Color) Ozzie and Har- riet (50) Colorful World (56) American Memoirs 6:09 (7) Patty Duke (50) CJiampionship Wrestling (56) Great Books 6:30 (2) (Color) Beverly Hillbillies . (7) (Color) Gidget (56) Conversations 9:10 (2) (Color) Green Acres (4) (Color) Bob Hope (7) Big Valley (9) Musical Showcase (50) Desilu Playhouse 9:39 (2) Dick Van Dyke (9) FesUval 19:19 (2) Danny Kaye (4) (Color) I Spy (7) Amos Burke (50) Merv Griffin 11:10(2) (4) (7) (9) News, ' Weather, Sports ll:39 (2) (Color) Movie: “The Z Giant of Metropolis” : (1962) Gordon Mitchell (4) Johnny Carson (7) Nightlife ' (9) Man of the World (50) News, Weather, Sports 12:49 (9) Film Feature 1:99 (4) TUn Man (7) After Hours 1:69 (2) (4) News. Weather THURSDAY MORNING 1:19 (2) On the Farm Scene 1:20 (2) News 0:29 (2) Operation Alphabet 6:30 (4) Classroom 6:99 (2) News 7:99 (4) Today (7) John^ Ginger 7:20 (2) Happyland 6:90 (2) Cs^pfartn Kangaroo (7) Big Theater 6:19 (7) Movie: “Grounds. for. Marrlaie” (1950) Van Johnson, Kathryn Grayson 6:49 (56) English V 6:» (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go- TV Features 'The Face of Russia' By United Press latematioiial CHANGING WORLD, 6:30 p.m. (56) “The Face of Russia” examines living conditions, includes rare film of life in Siberia. PATTY DUKE, 6:00 p. m. (7) Patty’s reluctant to have her tonsils out until she meets handsome doctor (Tr(^ Donahue). GIDGET, 8:30 p. m. (7) Brother-in-law escorts Gidget to class party in order to do research Iot psychological paper on teens. BOB HOPE, 9:00 p.m. (4) In “The Crime,” public prosecutor (Jack Lord) uses murder trial to get revenge on socially prominent family; with Pat O’Brien, Sheree North, Dana Wynter. 9:90 (2) Andy Griffith (4) Living (9) Romper Room 9:19 (56) Come Let’s Read 9:39 (2) Dick Van Dyke (56) American History 9:SS (4) News (56) Spanish Lesson 19:90 (2) I Love Lucy (4) (Cdor) Truth or Ck>n- (9) Vacation Time 19:19 (56) Our Scientific World 19:39 (2) McCoys (4) (Color) What’s This Song? (7) Girl Talk 10:39 (56) French Lesson 19:59 (56) Spanish Lesson 10:55 (4) News U:99 (2) Divorce Court (4) Concentration (7) Young Set (9) Film Feature 11:29 (56) What’s New 11:39 (4) (Color) Jeopardy (9) Across Canada 11:99 (56) Arithmetic for Teach- THUR8DAY AFTERNOON 12:99 (2) Love of Life (4) Call My Bluff (7) Donna Reed (9) Forest Rangers (50) DickoryDoc 12:29 (2) News 12:69 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) (Color) rU Bet (7) Father Knows Best (9)Thke36 12:39 (56) Spanish Lesson 12:a (2) Guiding Light 12:99 (96) Coom; Let’s Read 12:59 (4) News 1:99 (2) Scene 2 (4) Match Game (7) Rebus (9) Movie: “The Locket" ALL THAT’S LEFT—A crumbling foundation of a power plant that cost $60,000 in 1915 is about the only reminder of what was to have been a model Michigan prison for women at Okemos. Neariy $135,000 was spent on the project, which was never finished. Persons objected at the time <d the prmdmity to Michigan State University. (1946) Laraine Day. Brian Aheme (50) Movie: “Journey Into Light” 1:19 (56) ArithmeUc 1:29 (4) News (56) Geography 1:99 (2) As the World Turns (4) (Color) Let’s Make a Deal (7) One Step Beyond 1:99 (4) News (56) American History 2:99 (2) Password (4) Moment of Troth (7) Where the Action Is 2:29 (56) Safety Circle 2:25 (56) Mathematics for You 2:39 (2) House Party (4) Doctors (7) A -nme for Us (50) Love That Bob 2:59 (56) Spanish Lesson 2:55 (7) News .. 3:99 (2) ToTellthe%ith (4) Another World (7) General Hospital (50) Topper 3:29 (56) Memo to Teachers 3:29 (2) News 3:69 (2) Edge of Night (4) (Color) You Don’t Say (7) Young Marrieds (9) Swingin’ Tlnte (50) Captain Detroit 4:99 (2) Secret Storm (4) (Color) Bozo (7) TVailmaster 1:69 (2) Mike Douglas (9) Fun House 4:99 Eliot’s Almanac 9:99 f4) (Color) George Pierrot (7) (Color) Blovie: “The Mysterious Swordsman” (1962) Frtmk Uttimore (SO) Uoyd Thazton (56) Of Poets and Poetry 5:39 (56) What’s New 5:55 (4) Here’s Carol Duvall Finding Owner Put Them Out of Their Skull CHAMPAIGN, in. (AP) - A ‘show and teU” session at a Champaign grade school was enlivened when Terry Clark Jr., 9, showed up with a human skull and Ilttie to tell about it. He said a friend, Mlke^ White, had given it to him. Solon Asking Support for War on Crime LANSING (AP)-Senate majority leader Raymond Dzend-sd, D-Detroit, said Tuesday he will seek support for a iegisla-dve war on crime during the 1906 session. Dzendzel said he has been consulting with county prosecuting attorneys and other state law enforcement officials seeking suggestions for leg^lation in the area of law enforcement. Dzendzel cited the 1964 State Police crime report, which showed that crime is increasing at a rate two or three times greater than the rate of population growth and that three-fourths of those arrested for major offenses were under 21. “There is unanimous agreement that the time of discussion and theory has passed, and that now there must be some action,” he said. “The Legislature is in a position to initiate that action with positive legislation.” AMONG ITEMS Items discussed with law enforcement officials, he said, included: Substantially improving police salaries and other benefits. Establishing more rigid penalties for certain crimes. Increasing the dollar amount of parential liability for damage caused by teen-agers. Providing to stricter penalties for assaulting policemen. Lynx Leaps; Loses Life; Lights Fire ACROSS 6 Body of water 10 Italian painter—^Fillnx) 11 Wild oxen of Celebes 13 Most recent ^ 14 Small tower 16 Egyptian god (var.) 17 Three-toed sloths 18 Gibbon 19 Meadow 20 Othello’s ensign 22 Apteryx 23 City in Florida 25 Ashsin area 26 Five-dollar bill 27 Funereal song 28 Paces 30 Chemical suffix 31 Commence 32 Locks of hair 36 Goddess of discord 37 Gardener of a sort 38 Individual 39 Number 40 Gained victory 41 Cogitate 42 Chapeau maker 44 Warning (archaic) 46 Repasts 47 Waltz, for instance 48 Gift of charity 4^ Rapidity 1 r 8 r r r r r r lA 11 ir u 5 Jl Hr r 21 23 28 28 31 33 3T 3T r ■ u i r 4T 47 43 4o B DOWN 1 Accuser 2 Code of ceremonies 3 Unclosed 4 Goddess of harvest 5 Small violin 6 Courtyard 7 Burden 8 (Correlative of neither 9 Beloved 12 Oceanic traffic lane 13 Powdered baobab leaves 15 Adwn 17 Past 20 Unsuitable 21 Fruit drinks 22 Joints 24 Affirms 25 Tree 27 “Emerald Isle” 28 (Course of water 29 Stained 31 Abel’s brother (Bib.) 32 Weight unit 33 River-- 34’ Followed after 35 Appear 37 Sea----- 40 Fountain 41 Long hair 43 Philippine peasant 44 Paid notices 45 Race course circuit Answer to Previous Puzzle Pope's Jaunt to U. S. Still One-Day Affair VATICAN CITY (AP) - An official in the Vatican Secretariat of State said today the trip of Pope Paul VI to New York has been definitely fixed as a one day visit with no plans to extend it. MOUNTAIN CITY, Nev. It took a bit of sleuthing, but the power company officials finally figured out how a lynx put out the lights, turned off the hpat, caused a fire and got electrocuted in the process. It seems the wildcat jumped a chain-link fence at the power company subetation, leaped to a transformer and touched two wires at the same time, causing a massive short circuit. The official was commenting on new reports that the Roman Catholic pontiff had extended his New York stay to two days. That was the end of the lynx and the start of the fire which nearly destroyed the tr^orm-er and blew out two 46,000-volt Bus, Train Collide in Fog in England ANMERING, England (UPD-An electric train and a double-decker bus collided in fog here today. Police said three persons were killed and six injured, two of them seriously. The bus was tossed 100 yards by the impact. It landed on its side and burst into flames. Blase Columnist Visions Spin of Fortune's Wheel Police questioning Mike White Tvesday, were toW that another friend, Mike Severns, had given it to him. This Mike’s mother, Mrs. B.' G. Severns, told police that Mike’s grandfather had given the boy the skull, explaining it had been the property of an aunt, now dead, rrs A MYSTERY Just what the aunt was doing with the skull, Mrs. Severns said, is a mystery. A hospital pathologist examined the skull and said it was very old. It was returned to the Severns family. By EARL WOSON NEW YORK — I’ve been a full-time reporter for 40 years, and you’d have thought that in that time I’d have learned something. But no. I’m still a believer in Cinderella and other miracles. The twists of life that, make stars of ordinary people never fail to enchant me.' Bob Goldstein, discoverer of Tony Curtis, Buddy Hackett and others, toM me an inside story about be and Hal Wallis happening to see “Pajama Game” the night that Shirley MacLaine stepped in to substitute for Carol Haney ... and thus got ____ herself a movie career. WILSON “After Hal signed her to a contract, Shirley told us her own story. “Shirley was in the chorus, and was Carol Haney’s understudy. Janis Paige and Carol Haney were getting all the attention. "As Shirley was taking the subway to the theater that night, she was discouraged and despondent. She decided to quit the showi She wrote out her notice to the management that she was leaving. She was even a little late in getting to the theater. Her written noUce that she was leaving the show, which she of course never turned in, was still in her purse when she signed her movie contract. ★ ★ ★ “The twist is that we had gone to the theater not to see Shirley MacLaine whose name wasn’t even known ... but probably, as we remember now, to see Carol Haney, who is ★ ★ ★ / —Radio Programs— ^JUtrstn hprmi aro) Ckiwisoo) wwj(»so> wcaxi 130) wponu aeo) wjikq soo) wMn-9M(94.y) .WXYZ. Ntwt »WJSK, N«W(, OM. TolM aWCAH, Mwi, M .«»eON. Ntwt, SfWft* ^ ••WHfl, NSWf, MmIC cut- OiII-CKlT' Fulrtn L wiii Jr. ..... |<KLW, Twn WWJ, nwM OpMIgn SilS-WHSI, Nm, MMttatt ti» WWJ. Sport* I In* WJR. N«m, lltSS WCAK. NJWI, SporU WWJ, Nmm AlfiPl llilS-WCAK. MPSICPI Journal lliSS V'*....... Itiis-wwj, Sports LlM CKLW, MvilC 'til OMM WJ«, mmIc r------- 4ilS-,CKLW, lyo Optntr SlIS'gKLW, Naww Suo ■ud Davloo WHfl, NatM. Almanac WJS, Nawt. Music Hall StaS-W^IJ, Hawa. 0. OU.H WJBK, Nows, nan. Siis-WISK, Sap laa til|-WJR, Haws, open Hauaa WCAS. Jadi Sandart iiiia-wjl, Nows, p WJBK, riatM; isr ItitS-WJR, PoCUS tias-wjll. Haws, LInkialtar THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . . Barbra Streisand was ready to offer Producer Ray Stark $8,000 to close “Funny Girl” for one night, Oct. 9, so she could attend the opening of husband Elliol Gould’s musical, “Drat! The Cat!” But the premiere had to be delayed one day, to a Sunday, when “Funny Girl” is/closed—so Barbra can see the show, and pocket the 8Gs . . . Hollywood Buzz; Eddie Fisher and ex-Qoera Soraya are due to meet later this month. Jackie Gleason’s next album, his 31st, will have a vocalist the first time: Dick Roman ... The Paul Gilberts spotted a restaurant In Puerto Rico offering bagelito complete — bagel with lox and cream cheese . . . Actor lOchael Tolan’s up for a film, “Uke Love,” to be shot in Chicago ... Duo: Jim (Gomer Pyle) Nabors and MoHy Bee at TYacton’s, L.A.... Ray Millaad’s contract to a Broadway show, “Ho^e Witness,” includes membership In a local golf club. ir ir ir WISH I’D SAID THAT: Soupy Sales suggests a title for Ringo Starr’s infant son: “The Hair Apparent.” REMEMBERED <)UOTE: “You grow up the day you have your first real laugh^t yourself.”—Ethel Barrymore. EARL’S PEARLS: Stella Stevens (now in “The Secret of My Succeia”) discussed her home town. Hot Coffee, Ark.: “There are more people just sitting around on park benches in New York than we bad In the whole town.” The voices of several stars (who will not appear) will be h^ In “The Oscar,” and producer Joe Levine “Thw will be billed in ttie order of their noihappearance.” enw wps iypeitpip, im.i Court Action Seen on Governor May Act to Qualify Negroes Return Trip Saves a Life Romney Seeks Pollution Fund Will Use Money for Water Task Force LANSING (AP) - Gov. George Romney, in a special message to the legislature, Tuesday asked for f245,000 for an inunediate two-step program to aid the state’s fight against water pollution. Romney again asked for a $125,000 appropriation, once rejected, for his task force on water rights, use and pollution control. "Such a study is of priority nature,” Romney said, "but it has suffered from a lack of adequate financial support. And the longer this effort is deferred, the more complex and difficult this ultimate accomplishments will be.” The state appropriation, Romney said, would be matched by federal funds. MORE FUNDS Romney further asked for an additional appropriation of $120,-000 to the State Water Resources (temmission for the balance of the current fiscal year. The governor said the money is needed to follow through on recommendations by two federal water pollution control enforcement conferences making specific and detailed assignments to the commission for corrective action in the Detroit River, Lake Erie and Lake Erie interstate waters. PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Pennsylvania Gov. William W. Scranton has indicated the state is ready to go to court to try and break the will of Colonial financier Stephen Girard and force the admission of Negroes into all-white Girard College. Scranton indicated Tuesday his announcement of plans may come when he is in Philadelphia on another matter. “I have no immediate comment,” the governor said Tuesday when informed that Girard College trustees had turned down two proposals to break the will, “but we’ll have plenty of comment tomorrow.” One of the plans had been put forth by the governor. The trustees said they would fight court action to ch^e the prewnt policy.' They said in a letter to state and city officials that they are bound by Girard’s will which limits admission to poor, white orphan boys. Giranf left the money to found the school, which provides education only through 12th grade. WRITES LETTERS John A. Dienund, president of the Board of Trustees, wrote in a letter to the governor: “The board cannot admit that under the claim of civil rights, discrimination or segregation, anyone, white or nonwhite, is entitled to share in a private benefaction given for the benefit of others.” In another development after the trustees’ letter was made public, Cecil B. Moore, president of the Philadelphia chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, termed the decision “a. slap in the face to all Americans.” Since May, civil rights groups have been picketing the school and Moore promised to extend picketing within the The funds, Romney said, will DENVER, Colo. (AP) -Offi-1 ; . dais at National Jewish Hospi- , “Laboratory services end en-tal say that a diabetic patient’s foment personnel to support visit to friends at the hospitaiH administration of pol- saved his life. IRiver-Lake Erie area. Ralph Velez, 56, San Francisco, left the hospital Monday after 14 months of treatment. He was given an insulin prescription that officiais said includ^ faulty instructions that would have proved fatal. Velez left no forwarding address, and efforts to find him, including a police search, failed. But he returned to visit friends Tuesday and received a new set of instructions. BIG SAVINGS! $QQ9S Conditioners SWEET'S SiiJgEP extra SRACE? ■■■ s'S few days to business firms with which individual Girard trustees are affiliated. Citing a 1958 Pennsylvania Supreme Court decision upholding the right of trustees to bar Negroes, Diemand said the trustees could not try to break Gir-' ard’s will. The governor’s proposal would have had the trustees initiate court action themselves. The other proposal, from the city, would have Girard provide institutional care for 50 boys who are wards of the city. The boys would be chosen without' regard to race and the city would pay for their care. Counterfeiter Provet Failure as an Artist OAKLAND, Calif. (UPI)-Not only was engraver William Myles, 55, a failure as a counterfeiter, the Secret Service said yesterday, he was also a high-priced artist. Agent Tom H. Hanson said the $90,000 Myles wanted to $9, $10 and $10 plates was ridiculous because “Micbelangelo would have made them for less.” C“ WEEDONS I 1032 West Huron FE 4-2597 | —Enlargement of staff capabilities to cope with pollution problems throughout Michigan outside the Detroit Metropolitan D~12 THE PONTIAC PRESS,,WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, I96f ^on Can C^oiiiit on U*?* . . . Qniilii > Co^ts INo Mono at reduced ... 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Th» Weather UJU WwlMr liinM p* lUlfl, Cooler VOL. 128 NO. 195 THE PONTIAC PRESM OVIR ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1965—56 PAGES unitid’fwIu^imter^tional Truce Silencing Guns in Kashmir War ★ ★ ★ House Dems Nix Tax Plan Flooding Hits By the Asieciat^ Press Rivers h)lled over tl»|r banks in Iowa, Missouri, Kai Oklahoma today, driving sands of persons from th^ir homes and damaging crops property. Snow and cold stung the West and a new storm h^ed into the area which was snowed under last week. Fio^waters poured through Smithville in northwestern Missouri and, for the second time in two months, the 3M residents fled their homes. Ciasses were canceied in SmHhville and the school The Little Platte River was expected to crest 10 feet over its banks today. Rivers were unable to handle the runoff from torrential rains in Missouri and Kansas. The Grand River wall out of its banks along its entire lengtkln northwestern Missouri. FAMILIES LEAVE Families were evacuated in Mosby and Tracy, Mo. The Republican River was slightly above flood stage in CliV Center, Kan., and the Gnmd*IUver rose mere than U fhet hi Chiliicothe, Mo. Flooding also struck southwestern Iowa and southeastern Nebraska. Twenty families were evacuated when the Stranger Creek overflowed in Leavenworth County, Kan. The Blue Riyer was out of its banks in the Kansas City area and in East Independence, Mo. SWOLLEN WATERS^ The swollen waters from the Little Grand River and other tributaries caused the Missouri River to overflow in St. Joseph, Mo., and Leavenworth, Kan. Torrential rainstorms yesterday swelled the damage. High winds and tornadoes accompanied rainstorms in Iowa City and Sigourney, Iowa, dam-agtaig homes and farm buildings. A 3Vt-inch downpour sent water rushing into SO homes hi Wyoming, Iowa. Police and National Guardsmen iwlped remove 3S persons stranded In their homes in the Ottumwa, Iowa, area.' The downpours caused harvesting problems in the northern Iowa beet fields. In Oklahoma, National Guard troops were dispatched to Guthrie and Kingfisher north of Oklahoma City yesterday to evacuate 1,200 persons. AP PhatMix SUSPECT NABB the robbery of an is disarmed and parolee from San Quentin I by a motorcycle officer i the motorcycle at gunpoint. Iter £. Bigelow, 31, a suspect in Cdin^Jewelry store yesterday, ■ r piHice. Bigelow, a recent I, wap wrestled to the ground |de the officer climb off Robbery S^recard 1 Run, Many brrors Fiscal Reform Action Delayed Decide to Venture Toward Own Ideas LANSING liPl - House Democrats voted yesterday to kill a bipartisan fiscal reform plan, proposed for action this fall — but agreed to take steps of their own toward taxation changes. Speaker Joseph Kowalski, D-Detroit, said a 31k-hour Democratic caucus decided not to d»so”«s the ol«n this fall. “We voted, however, to put the graduated income tax resolution on the agenda, and instructed the House Taxation Committee to develop a program as soon as possible that is fair and equitable to the people of Michigan,’’ he added. The Senate already has approved the fiscal reform plan-worked out by Gov. George Romney and a bipartisan group of legislators — as an agenda item to be discussed. it -k * No solution has been offered Neipling said that it was de- section are in ^he retiree classi- The House Policy Committee for water pollution problems in cided that pollution of the city’s fication and any project to cor-was to meet to discuss the agen- the PontiaE^ area as a result of west end drain stemmed from problems would pose a da resolution this morning, and, a high-level conference in Lan- the Huron Gardens area of Wa- , Uardshin with majority Democrats in sing this week with the Michi- terford Township. ________, control, was expected to follow gan Water Resources Commis-the caucus recommendation. ANOTHER CAUCUS PAKISTAN AGREES - Pakistani Foreign Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto (right) announced to the United Nations Security Council early this morning that his country would accei^ the council’s cease-fire order. High-Level Confab Held Af PiMitlaii Bhutto agreed to the cease-fire in the undeclared war between Pakistan and India after India earlier hqd agreed to acceptance. Beside Bhutto is S. M. Zafar, law minister of Pakistan. Offer No Solution to Pollution It was concluded also at the India, Pakistan toObeyU.N. on Cease-Fire Shastri Warns Nation Red China Remains 'Greater Challenge' NEW DELHI, India UPi — The Kashmir war ebbed today toward a truce, with the armed forces of both India and Pakistan ordered to quit shooting before another sunrise. Red China’s threat of immediate action against India also eased, but Prime Minister Lai Bahadur Shastri told his Parliament that the Red nation presents “an even greater challenge’’ and the Indians must firmly resolve to meet it. Shastri and President Mohammed Aynb Khan of Pakistan announced a cease-fire is to become effective in their three-wcek-old war at time translating as S p.m. EST today. That is 3:30 a.m. Thursday in India; 3 a.m. in Pakistan—15 hours beyond the deadline originally set by the U.N. Security Council. ★ ★ ★ Shastri wept as he announced the development in Parliament. He said the two Asian neighbors must live in neighborly peace. SIMILAR WORDS j *E»,! “m,. a,.* «id». \ Am,ni« uiuun “ “* *’*’• Ule oomhlnri Mnn uid «ni- J" “ r\ATrr an mu uu \ a m -au Democrats were planning an- {1 “ di«niss^ but that Little hope was offered that t*ry sewer overflow discharge "venw me cenewe m me OAKLAND, Calif. — The robbery WMt off with- caucus today—reportedly „ remedy was offered any of the property owners into the east end of the lake. out a hitch-well, almost. \ to determine what to do If ^ ' ■ «nd Hp honerf it .ill lead India Two gun-waving bandits stepped coolly downtown jewelry store yesterday afternoo"i^ and held the co-owner, Harry Kagan, at gunpoint ^hile they scooped up cash and ____ \ gems valued at more than $5,000. They then ran outside to their wiating getaway car, an old convertible. It wouldn’t start. As the bandits desperately tried to start the motor, things began to happen. Kagan called Rain to Mark FaO's Debut to determine what n 10 a House Republicans try to revive the issue on the floor. Romney, at Mackinac Island for the Midwest Governors Conferehcce, blasted the Democrats for a “reactionary” stand, and warned them to be ready to accept the responsi- Neipllng felt, however, that the state commission might soon issue an order toward solving local pollution prob- Among those attending the meeting were Neipling, Arthur L. Thornton, of the County hlllty for “whatever financial ^develops in the next few and Waterford Township Super- yehrs.” Th^bipartisan plan - aimed visor James Seeterlin. at raisfpg $150 million annually Loring F. Oemlng was the ng,,., „ „ in new revenue - is based on a ranking representative of t h e The summer season will slip 3 per centxpersonal income tax water Resources Commission at In a camera store two doors away amid scattered thunder- and a 4 peI^ cent levy on corpo- the meeting.^ away, Donald L. Adams, a ship- showers as autumn arrives in '‘abons and\ financial institu-ping clerk and amateur photog- . . « j j ,. ,, tions. ------------ faiSer, saw the men with guns her robes of red and gold at 1:03 ^ ^ ^ get into the car and rushed out, *> t^orrow. jj igvy a3-cent-per-pack camera in hand. ♦ tax on cigarettes, grant a $15- TlU/l UlSpiOY * * * The weatherman expects to per-person credit op the sales , and he hoped it will lead India Neipling said the only solu- Pakistan to an honorable tion here would be to provide settlement of their l^year-old separate itorm and sanitary quarrel over Kashmir, sewers. Thus, storm water . ^ could be discharged Into the Shastri said lake without the sewage. has accepted the ^ . offices offered by Soviet Pre-Pollution of Terry and Harris ^,***1 N. Kosygin. Ko-Lakes, also on the meeting’s gygin had suggested that Shas-agenda, appears to come from and Ayub meet in Soviet industrial waste somehow dis- territory to discuss their dlf-charged into storm water flow- ferences. ing into the lakes. _ , u lu u * A- ★ ★ Troops of both sides tempn- Neipling said an intensive in- ‘"tend stay fut. Jail vestigation would be necessary (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) to determine the origin of the ________________ on Tip by Satellite waste. REQUIRE DIVERSION MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - Georges “e said [he eventaal solution LeMay, who lived a Ufe of luxu- would be to have the city re-ry as a fugitive for four years quire that the sewage bp.div^r^- would initiate action to correct the situation. ★ ★ * In addition, residents in the Bank Suspect 'Flies Away' Escapee Was i ^fore the Early ‘"to a sanitary sewer. This vertibk out, so I stuck tte showers and thundershowers c^lt against property^^xes. INCTW o r j- '"^e^’waterresourcescommis- lows Of 56 to 64 during the MODIFY TAXES \ p,3„3 ^^e under way for a cuIL'of Sng the g2ng which «on requested that the city It also would modify some of special display of 1966 Pontiacs looted a Montreal bank in 1961, * statement as to a cur- ____»!_• A___ I A________I * . — . . .. ■ A______ ... rkrncnrom cnlVA thA nnllll- -------------------- — pci’pciouil K.1CUU VM UlC 001170 # k » “The back window of the con- start the season with scattered and use tax and a lt5 per cent q* Ng\A^ OOfS :, so I stuck the thundershowers credit against property ^xes. some pictures,” he uid. SPOTCAMEkA One of the bfqidits turned and aimed bis gun at Adams. “It weo diek,** Adams said, “but I gat $«t of the wi$y.’' showeri are forecast for tomorrow with Okn6 of Spck;iai uiopiojf ui a«ww * luuicu a muiiucoi uaim 111 ifui, 4 u * *k the intangibles taxes and r^a! and Tempests in the downtown smashed an unbarred window propam to solve the poiiu-.........................1 -------- the business activities tax.. on the seventh floor of the 10- Uon problems. Kidney Patient 'Doing Weir Avon Mother May Leave Hospital Soon cooler temperatures, tae high 64 to 72. In Today's Press KmI ShakA-Up New editor for Pravda may mean crisis — PAGE A-ll. CHy Affairs Zoning hearing set for newly annexed land'-PAGE B-11. Money Woes GOP needs campaign cash tor two key rac8s-~ PAGE A4. Area News .......A-4 ......D-l A.....W lie . . D41 ......M ......A4 Markets .........D-l ObKnariss ........D4 Sports .....C-lB-C-ll Iteetsri ........D-M TV, Radis Pregrans D-11 Wilsoa,EarI......D-11 WPmaa’i ftgas..B-1-M Kowalski proposed a plan ^f The C11 y Commission last story Dade County jail and slid his own — similar to one pro\ night approved a request from 90 feet down a cleaning hose to ^ posed by state AFLrCIO Presi- \the Downtown Pontiac Business the ground last night. . ... ... cool B the outlook de„t August Scholle — to raise Association to close Saginaw ^ bamilto did, for Friday. 155 niillion to $60 million a year from Huron to Lawrence from car ■ WWW in new state income. Tuesday, Oct. 5 to Sunday, Oct. ^ headM toiSard a sports car Southwesterly morning winds It would replace the business 10. being parked nearby. The drl^ at 15 to 22 miles per hour will activities tax with a profits tax Downtown mercnants plan to c«™ng and fled gjju northwest to- of 5 to 5% per cent, lower the erect a large tent to display with the k^s. |jy m mUiion the new model cars as part of ^ WWW and call for a referendum on a promotion for the downtown The bandits then comman- A mild 66 was the low tarn- eliminating the constitutional area, dsered another oar. The driver, perature at 6 a.m. today. At 1 prohibition against the graduat- The tent is to provide a caml- Ruth Schrumpf, tried to get out p.m„ the mercury registered 70. ed state Income tax. val-type setting. her poodle, Lucky. Her husbapd, A1 Schrumpf, appeared on the scene and rescued both wife and dog. VEHICLE STALLS The bandits roared off in the Schrumpf car — for about 100 feet. Then it stalled. Waiting for him were three men in a new sedan. Minutes after jailers missed him, the car was spotted speeding away to the north. It was only the second escape from the 4-year-old jail on the edge of downtown Miami. How did LeMay get from his cell on the fifth floor to the seventh? No program was offered. Reuther Raps Chrysler's Price Hike An Avon Township mother may leave a Cleveland, Ohio, hospital this weekend with 'V new kidney and a new lease on life. Mrs. James Shontz, of 1895 Tamm, underwent a kidney transplant at the Clevehmd Clinic last week. Her mother, Mrs. Nortoa Millerd, 315 Cherry, Troy, returned from Cleveland this week. Mrs. Millerd said the doctor DETROIT (41 - President Walter Reuther of the United WWW Auto Workers calls Chrysler’s . ,. . .... . .. „ ant, “is the $64 question.” ^ may be able to move Into an CASH PLENTIFUL Authorities were looking feto prices. weexena. ^ ^ ^ Oakland County’, proposed Irom the enie oMhe TB Sane- been drained tram the bnlM- ll» pe»iklMy 1^1 UM^. nw- Ri^r ebo eesgesls^rn. •US-mllto mmrtiKora win, torinm, Ihe Cmmt, Boned <J hg hml I. nrael enhw-ra- menial 1. heldjhe line J ““ ' W»/l »nwm asmHmafaal a M nnlrammaada laa «lam IBM kaaalram* ™'P me mSlUe. on Car DTlCeS SUCh SS President ,___. __“ .___, Courthouse Wing Over Another Hurdle help t Police and the FBI haunted They leaped out and lepa- mglV.r'’ Auditors estimated a $2.8 mil- qniremcBts In the IMI budget, ramd. 0« a, tlw. W« m SlJ'S.'Srh!?^‘*c/;:Jry »» >»“"« ^»» SW. boudm, and grtlds morgue were shelved indefln- w w w committee rejected a request Itely. This would have been suffl- ^ construct a county morgue The building and grounds com- dent for the wing at the orlgl- agreed to reconsider the the^eren’i talk^ nlttae of the County Board of nal cost estimate and for the sometime in the future. ctimmitZ TpLiATu ^ hangouts of LeMay and committee rejected a request ^ the driver - another woman — roarhd off, leaving him staudiiig at the enrb, gun in - > - . Iigng, mlttae of the County Bom^ of nal cost estimate and for the Supervisors recommended con- South Oakland Health Center to was still Btandlngttme gfrucUon bf the east wing to for which the county has com- Reason for the rejection of LeMay is a skilled sailor and poUceman Ro^ Fr^- ,^4 projected space needs of mltted |5M,0W. the estimated $30,000 to $85,000 there are hundreds of secluded IckSOT ca^upw^motorcy- government by 1075. BASEMENT AREA building adjoining the Oakland coves along the Florida Coast bmidlt pointad the gun w W w n ♦ ^ nmyk County Sanatorium was a lack from which he could put to sea. 211 ll»n ralaraaJ tha matlar to 2 »■” al lunda. ' ‘ ‘ on car prices such as President 3 ^ Kennedy did with Big Steel In ^ ‘***^ 1962. Spokesmen for Chlysler^ were unavailable for comment IN EXCELLENT SPIRITS immeefla^y. “She is in excellent spirits,’' Reuther denounced Chrysler *he said, “and things look raal in a statemcat yesterday, 24 bright.” hoars after the compaiiy’a an- Mra. Shoati, whoM remaltp ■ouBcement of prices tor its ing kklaey was removed hi OB new lOM model ears. •A. ■' Thaoficer got off all right, but ^nsT^^tL «Wch" f^ ''•""‘•••big of the grabbad the gunman and flSn^^T ' wrestled him to the ground. S! ^ fees and site work h me project. y,, eatlmate to Whea the aew wing was first proposed la May, coot estimates were |l-8 milHoH. Inclddlng nearly |1 mlllioii * ^ The UAW chief called Chry-» w » sler’g action a “profiteering as- Prasently the county has a UMay was arrested last May sault 00 the consumer ana c RECENT PAROLEE to woa idontifled latar ap Walter B. Bigalow, II, who ra-(Continuad on Pago 2, Col. S) i < ■ celvcd a healthy kidaay fraoi her father, Frank L. Fbmll of St. aatr Shores laat week. Both were reported in satia-factory condition. Chryaler la the first of the tor first kidney was damaged . . American auto makers to aft- in • chikDwod toll and removed man, County Health Depart- fist-sized roll of $100 bills. nouace 1908 prices. Ford, Gen- a few yean lator. nMnt director, felt a county- Since then, he has languished wal Moton and Amaricaai Mo- Her remaining kMnay dalart-owned morgue wuold be mexw In jail while fighting deportation tore have yat to nuke announce- orated after the birth el he aen, ------ Jamaa,twoyaareago. . a agreement with area 0 aboard his fancy yacht in Fort national price stability.” lor morgue and au- Lauderdale. Before police lead , „ **'“ topsy aarvioe. him away, he paid his marina ^1.26 mil- Bowever, Dr. Bernard Ber- Wll, peeling off notes from a Further taak of the wtjn committee is that dealrabie. " (Continued on Pi^ 2,' Col. 8) ments. /t* I, inAB3)WIH THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 196g Lethal Lard to Welfare Families LANSING (Un) - nte State Departmeat of Social Welfare aald today it has discovered metallic particles bi two-pound bricks of lard distributed to weKare and low income fami-f lies in Antrim County which could be fatal if Udcen internally. L:^ Kellogg, deputy direchH* of the department said the lard Merger Denied by Osteopath State Chief Says No Uniting Wanted The president of the Michigan Association of Osteopathic Physicians and Surgeons (MAOPS) today denied charges that a plan for a merger between Mds and DOs “is making steady progress.” Benjamin F. Dickinson further denied that “75 to 80 per cent of Michigan osteopaths want to amalgamate with the Michigan State Medical Society (MSMS).” The osteopathic physician replied to comments made by Dr. John J. Coory of Port Hnnai before the Centennial session of the MSMS being held in Detroit. Dr. Coury had charged that creation of a proposed college of osteopathy, planned for a site at Auburn and Opdyke, would do “incalculable harm” to merger efforts. * w ★ Amalgamation is a dead issue so far as the overwhelming majority of the state’s osteopaths are concerned, said Dr. Dickinson. POUnCAL ISSUE “The osteopathic profession is not interested in relinquishing its principles and philoscphy because of some political issue,” he added. CUtag that the astespaths af Diddnasa said, vide the ' sargeoas to meet this growing The projected college would educate 100 physicians each year, providing a comprehensive education for osteopaths — 75 per cent of vdiom, he said, would become family physicians. ♦ * ♦ Dr. Didunson pointed out that 75 per cent of the MDs have become specialists. was part of a 28-ton shipment intended for distribution to welfare recipients in Otsego, Crawford, Antrim, Leelanau and Kalkaska counties. He said the lard was distributed diis week only in Antrim Connty to a “very substantial number of people.” “There have been no reports of anyone becoming ill from rte lard,” Kellogg said. ★ * ♦ Health officials immediately began calling back all the lard yesterday. They pressed their hunt for more of it today. “We’re making every effort to get the lard back now,” Kellogg said. He said the lard was shipped to the Boyne Valley Foods Locker storage plant at Boyne Valley for distrlba- come recipients in the five “The lard is very dangerous and if taken internally could be .fatal,” Kellogg said. ★ * ★ He said health officials discovered a metallic substance like fine steel wool particles in the lard. A federal health inspector was to check the 28-ton shipment today. Kellogg^ said the lard was received from a “highly reliable source in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.” City Police Seek Highland Park Man Warrants have been issued for the arrest of a Highland Park man wanted by Pontiac Police for questioning in connection with the frau^lent conversion and theft of more than $1,1 from a service station at 420 S. Saginaw. ★ * * Named in the warrant is Mose McKnight, a former employe of the Clark Oil & Refining Corp. w ★ ★ The fraudulent converision of M,44l.07 allegedly took place S^. 1 according to police. In addition, an employe at the station told police McKnight ~ 1 in cash fmn the station last weekend. Easy Street Politics NEWARK, Ohio (AP) - Newark’s City Hall may be on Easy Street — but only temporarily. City officials have proposed putting a new water department building on Easy Street and using that for a city hall until a new one can be built on Main Street. The Weather RIVIERA COMES OUT - Buick Motor Division today unveiled the 1966 Riviera, marked chiefly by the elimination of window vents. Fresh air for the car is supplied by a grille in the hood, just in front of Uie windshield. in Frisco Bay 1 Afire, 1 in Mud; 2 Men Are Injured SAN FRANCTSCO (AP)-The Norwegian motor vessel Ber-ganger and the Liberian tainker Intercontinent collided today in San Francisco Bay. The Bergan-ger was reported <hi Are and the Intercontinent trapped o mudftat. ’The Coast Guard said two men were injured and wer ing rescued by helicopter. The men were being flown to the Public Health Hospital in San Francisco. It was uncertain how serious or widespread the fire was on the Berganger. The scene was at the west side of the Richmond-San R a f a e bridge. Near San Quentin Prison. Seven Coast Guard vessels and a Coast Guard helicopter were dispatched. WWW The San Francisco Fire Department sent the fire boat Phoenix with a rescue squad aboard. DESTINATIONS The 484-foot,Berganger., sailing for the Westfal-Larsen' line, was coniing down channel from Stockton, Calif. The tanker, owned by Texaco Oil, was leaving Richmond, Calif. The Coast Guard said they lacked any indication of the cause of the collision. The bridge attendant reported somefOg. The Coast Guard said the Berganger was en route from San Francisco to Stockton 75 miles northeast of the Sacramento River. The Intercontinent was heading from Richmond for the sea, believed headed for L o n g each, Calif. A spokesman said the two ii jured were seriously hurt. One man was “considered an ambu-lat(H7 case and the other is a stretcher case,” the Coast Guard said. Full U. S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Con with scattered showers and thundershowers today becoming more ndmeroos tonight. Not as warm today, highs 74 west to 82 east. Lows tonight 56 west to 64 southeast Thursday occasional rain and possible thundershowers and cooler, highs 64 to 72. Southwest srinds 15 to 22 miles today shifting to west to northwest tonight Friday outlook: cloudy and cool. NA110NAL WEAlHERr-ficattered showers and thunder-Aowurs am expactad from tha northern Rockies to the A Malic ooaat tooiftat, with light rain In parts of the northern Haiaa mi mm is the noctbem RacUes. tt wiM be cooler Iraa M» Baehiae to the upper Lakes area. Storm Rocks Ship; 60 Hurt PARIS (UPI) — The luxury liner France rolled over on her side so far during an Atlantic storm Saturday night that 60 passengers suffered minor injuries, passengers report^ today on their arrival in Paris. The 1,035 - foot liner, the world’s longest, was en route from New York to the French port of Le Havre u^n she slowly tilted to the right “like an airplane going into a steep bank,” sending chairs, tables, passengers, drinks and ash trays tumbling into a jumbled heap. Maritime sources said most of the injuries aboard the 66,666-Ion liner were minor but Philip Ross, a 26-year-old journalist from New York City, said he saw “three or four persons In casts” after the Incident. Maritime sources in Le Havre said the most badly hurt was a man who seriously injured his eye as the ship heeled over. * w w Maritime sources in Le Havre said the ship heeled over because of a heavy storm in the Atlantic. Hurricane Betsy whipped across the Atlantic, partly spent after wreaking havoc in Florida and Louisiana and doubling back across the central United States. Big Flap About Map EUPORA, Miss. (AP) - Eu-pora is on the map but where’s the map? The mayor and Board of Aldermen has posted a 1750 ird for the original town whick h from Cify Hall. Buick Unveils Riviera for '66 The 1966 Riviera sport coupe, featuring the elimination of window vents, was introduced today by Buidc Motor Division. The new Riviera has a 119-inch wheelbase, two inches longer than last year, and a four-inch wider tread. It also features a longbr hood and fenders, a more sloping windshield and a modified fast-back roof and tear deck. ’The Riviera goes on sale at the following area dealers: OHver Motor Sales, 210 Orchard Lake; A1 Hanoute Chevrolet^ Buick, 209 N. Park, Lake Orion; Feigley Motor Sales, 508 Guns Are Quieting in Kashmir (Continued From Page One) stretched along a truce line similar to the Kashmir ceasefire boundary established by the United Nations in 1949 to divide the largely Moslem Kashmir between Moslem Pakistan and India, which is predominantly Hindu. * * ★ As Ayub explained it to people: “Our forces will, however, stay in position for the time being, until asked to move out.” CHINA’S MOVES Shastri, speaking of Communist China’s recent moves to increase its military strength in Tibet along the Hirmlayan frontier opposite India and its buffer state protectorates, said: “We do not know what the Chinese will do next.” The Indian leader denied a declaration by Radio Peking that Indians had met a primary Chinese requirement by tearing down controversial military posts on or near the border of Tibet and Sikkim, N. Main, Milford; Fischer Buick, 515 S. Woodward, Birmingham; Shelton Pontiac-Buick, 355 S. Rochester, Rochester; and Homer Hight, 160 S. Washington, Oxford. A new ventilation system makes window vents unneces-ssary. INTERIOR TRIM Standard interior trim includes bench-type seats, front and rear, or bucket seats and console in front. All gauges and Instruments have been regrouped to a position directly in front M the driver. The speed^eter is a drum-type cylinder which revolves vertically. Oil, temperature and generator gauges are equipped with pointers instead of warning lights. ’The 1966 Riviera headlamps are concealed in the radiator grille, beneath the hood. When the headlight switch is turned on, the lamps drop into, position. FRONT SUSPENSION The Riviera’s front suspension system features new shwk absorbers and improved handling j characteristics with new steering linkage and revised steering geometry. ★ ♦ ★ Upper and lower control arms with specially tuned rubber bushings at the inner pivots complete tim front suspension. The gemnetry of the rear sulk pension has been altered for 1966 to effect greater control over “squat” on acceleration and rear end lift during braking. He said the Indians pulled down none. “All this is a product of their imagination,” he said, w ★ ★ In the Indian-Pakistani conflict, warplanes and ground gunners carried on through the final hours. TWO AIR RAIDS The Indian government radio said Pakistan’s Amerkan-built planes staged two raids last night and two more today. It said a prison hospital in Jodhpur, an airbase cHy In southwest India, was one of the targets, and hombs killed 36 inmates. In Kearchi, Pakistani author-itis said Pakistani bombers made a night raid on the Jodhpur airbase. 'Tiey gave no details of the damage, but told of these other operations: • Pakistani antiaircraft batteries shot down an Indian jet fighter this morning in the Khem Karen sector south of Lahore. • Indian ground troops launched an offensive in the Rajasthan sector, but were beaten back. They left behind two Jeeps, one carrying an antitank gun. There was fighting also in the Fazilka and Sialkot sectors. Pakistan’s Foreign Minister Zulfikar All Bhutto informed the U.N. Secnrity Conndl in New York af his government’s acceptanee of Hs cease-fire order at a predawn meeting. India, which had told the United Nations it would stop firing if Pakistan did, asked for extension of the deadline to permit orders to go out to field commanders. The council then moved the cease-fire 6 p.m. (EDT) today. U.StoCall Medical Men Too Few Volunteers ^ for Health Services WASHING’TON (Jf) - The Defense Department moved today to draft 1,979 doctors, dentists and veterinarians because of the armed forces buildup. 1116 Pentagon asked the Selective Service to call 1,529 doctors, 350 dentists and 100 veterinarians for service in the Army, Navy and Air Force starting in January. “The call is necessary to provide the health services required for the increase in the active armed forces strength announced in July by the President,” the announcement said. President Johnson has approved a 340,000-num boost in the armed forces, to a new total of nearly three million. ♦ w ★ ’The Defense Department said the new doctor draft call stems in part from the fact that there have not been enough medical volunteers to meet the military bqildup required in connection With the Vietnamese war. I^RVICES VARY Of the doctors, 949 will serve in the Army, 260 in the Navy and 320 in the Air Force. All the dSntlsts and veterinarians are tabbed for the Army. Veterinarians are used chiefly for meat inspection. There are very few animals left in the military estahUshment al-thongh the services do nse dogs for sentry and other purposes. This is the second doctor draft call this year. w ★ ★ In January, the Pentagon asked Selective Service to supply 851 physicians in the summer of 1965. FEW VOLUNTEERS ’That call came because a sufficient number of 1964 medical school graduates had not volunteered for active duty immediately after their internship. In January 1964, a call went out for 1,050 doctors, also because enough medical school graduates from the previous year had not signed up voluntarily. BIRMINGilAM - The directions ol Birmingham School District’s building program—behind schedule and above cost estimates — were outlined bodrd of Many Errors Before 'Score' (C^ontinued From Page One) centiy paroled from San (Quentin where he had been serving a sentence for robbery. At police headquarters, Bigelow was asked about the trouble with the getaway cars. His answer: “I’ve been in The Joint so long, I forgot how to drive.” The second bandit? Oh yes ... he got away with the loot. Ground Breaking at Mall Tomorrow Ground breakking ceremonies for the $2.4 million Pontiac Mall expansion program will be conducted at 3 p.m. tomorrow. Joseph L. Hudmn Jr., department store executive, is expected to attend the fete along with Waterford Township, Pontiac and Oakland (bounty governmental (rfficials. In addition to establishment of a full-line J. L. Hudson Co. department store, expansion will include construction of 10 fashion shops. Birmingham Area News School Board Members Hear Building Reporf education members last night. W A ★ Schools Supt. John B. Sinith warned that the board soon will be faced with the necessity of choosing projects, to be cut from the program. “Ultimately, there must be a determination on when the school community will he asked to supply additional funds for the projects postponed and, possibly, for other hnilding that will be required in order to accomliiodate the continued Increase in enrollment,” he said. The $5,350,000 bond issue approved by property owners in June 1964 ju«t isn’t going as far as planned. ★ w w addition, there have been delays in the buildings which are under construction. AFTER CHRISTMAS Evergreen Elementary School, originally planned for occupancy Sept. 1, apparently won’t be ready until after the C3iristmas holidays. Smith reported last night. The superintendent commented that the target date for completion may have been Annual GOP Ox Roast Set for Saturday Family fun will be mixed with serious politics at the annual Oakland County Republicans ox roast in White Lake Township Saturday. , * ★ dr Games for all ages, prizes and a baseball game will mark the fun aqiects of the day, with the serious side beginning at 1 p.m. with speeches by Gov. George Romney and Rep. Gerald Ford. The event will also feature appearances by Rep. William S. Broomfield and state and, county officials. Sen. Robert Huber of Troy will be master of ceremonies for the event at the Ivory Farm. It will begin with a pancake breakfast at 9:30 a.m. w w • The free barbecue will start about 2 p.m. A baseball game between Oakland County Young Republicans and Lawrence Institute Young Republicans will follow. EX’TENDS INVITATION Oakland County (KIP chairman Dale A. Feet issued an invitation to all county residents to attend the program at 9960 Ckwley Lake Road. only U months for development and mcecntion of plans. Complicating the mattm' were high construction costs which necessitated rebidding the contracts, a summer steel strike and labor shortages in specific areas. ★ ♦ The same elements have meant delayk for the Valley Woods and Meadow Lake elementary school additions, now expected to be completed by late October., Smith said. AWARDING DUE The school board will award contracts Oct. 19 on the science addition to Seaholm High School, carrying an estimated cost of $400,000. Listing problems connected with the new Covington Junior High School, Smith noted early Indications were that the building would run $500,006 above the $2.5-million estimated cost. Revisions have been made to cut costs and speed construction. ★ ★ ★ “Recently, bids were received for the site develojxnent and the lowest bid was 90 per cent higher than the architect’s estimate,” he reported. “This means (hat the site plans will have to be revised and a new bid taken. This, of course, causes a loss of time.” ADEQUATE BIDS If bids are received to./it the budget, the building could be ready. by January of 1967, he said. Development of other projects awaits the letting of confracts on the Seaholm and (Covington work. w * ★ These include an addition to Groves High School library, additions to a number of elementary school libraries, an administration building and ele-mentary classrooms in the western portion of the school district. COMET BIGGER - With some models nearly eight inches longer than the last model year, the 1966 Comet was introduced today by Ford Motor Co. More powerful engines are also part of the package-the Cyclone GT shown offers a 335-horsepower V8. Comet Has More Room, Bigger Engines A sharp increase in size for premium models and more powerful riigine options are the most notable changes In the 1966 Ck>met, introduced today by Ford Motor Co. Topof-the-line models tor 1966 -Capri, Caliento and Cyclonfr-are longer by ahnoat eight inches than the Uggeet Comet offered in the last model year. (tomet gees en sale Oct. 1 at the foUewiiif area dealers: Kaverley Mercury, 420 Main, Rochester; Lloyd Motors, 1250 Oakland; and Bob Borst, 520 S. Woodward, Bb^ingham. The size changes were described by Paul F. Lorenz, vice president-general managm- Un-coln-Mercury, as responding to “the public demand' for premium automobiles In every aeg-ment of the nsarkat.” BIGGER ENGINU Powering the bigger cars besides the standard 200-cubtc-incfa 120-horaepower six ore three V4 options — a 280-cublc-lnch 200-boieepowar engine, ■ 390<ubic-inch rated at 275 horaepower and with the (^clotM QT, a 05-horsepower model. Among the safety featmes made staadard on the 1866 Comet are podded Instrument panel and padded visors. and rear seat belts. continue wood-grain styling for Caliente and black cemera-caae finish for Cyclone. ★ #■' Ck>met tragons offer a third seat - for the first time — and a dual-action tailgate which up and down or Bank Suspject 'Flies Away' (Continued From Page One) to Canada. The Immigration Service is trying to kick him out of the United States on the ground that he entered the country without a visa. LeMay had said he had no objection to deportation, he just di^’t want to go to Canada. LeMay is charged with leading a crew that tunneled under the Bank of Nova Scotia In 1861 and blasted open 377 safety deposit boxes. They escaped with between $500,000 and $4 million, but the exact amount was never established because of the reluctance of the box owners to talk. ♦ * * The stocky, 5-foot-8 LeMay has been Canada’s most wanted person since then. He was hunted all over the world for four years but was not discovered until the Royal Canadian Mounted Police flashed his picture on the first Early Bird satellite television program. WAS PUZZLED “I very seldom make mistakes,” LeMay told officers when they arrested him aboard ^ his yacht. “How did you do it?” Told what had happened, LeMay said, “WeU, isn’t that something: It took a satellite to catch me.” The sheriff said LeMay had been allowed several visitors recently, including his wife, Lisa Lemieuz, 28, an attractive brunette. ^ ♦ w ★ They said civil vows in Trench in a hurried-up ceremony in the anteroom of an im-ngigration officer just before a hearing June 1. It was over before officials knew it had stOrt-•d. STOPPED BEFORE Only the day before they bad moved LeMay from a cell with a window to prevent him from shouting the ceremony throi^ bars. Although he insisted they had been married befoae In Mexico, officials suggested they wanted an American montage license so she could not be called on to testify against him in case he wore ever deported to THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 22, 196.5 TELLS OF DRAMA — Publisher-sportsman John P. Scripps talks wj[th newsmen aqd police yesterday after more than two hours of being hostage of a young sailor aboard Scripps’ yacht. Scripps was released unhurt after officers fired a warning shot. The yacht was tied up at a San Diego Yacht Qub pier. Grenade-Toting Sailor Nabbed; Held 3 Hostage Aboard Yacht SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP) -“When he pulled the pin out of that hand grenade, and when I saw that fellow crouched and I was looking down a gun barrel, my heart was going pitty pat,” said publisher-sportsman John P. Scripps. Scripps was describing a two-hour drama Tuesday in which he and two other men were held hostage by a young sailor aboard Scripp’s $800,000 yacht. The youth, identified as Guy M. Warinner, 19, was booked for investigation of kidnaping and assault with a deadly weapon. Scripps, 53, is the grandson of the late publisher E.W. Scripps and is publisher and chairman of the board of seven newspapers in California and Washing- GIVES ACCOUNT He quoted Warinner as saying he was from Los Angeles, and gave this account of the drama in San Diego harbor: “He said he was making a run for it — that he was AWOL from the Navy and wanted us to take him down the coast a way and put him ashore in Mexico.” Scripps said Warinner apparently swam to the yacht Monday night. When Tripps and two crew members came aboard Tuesday morning, they found a pile of wet clothes and a gun. Capt. Sam Davis, 56, went ashore to notify police. While he was gone, said Scripps, Warinner returned to the room, grabbed the pistol, and told Scripps to take him to Mexico^ S(^pps said he told Warinner the captain was ashore and no one else could run the craft. But Davis returned and then, said Scripps, Warinner pulled a hand grenade and said: “No funny business. I’m not kidding.” CALLS GUARDSMEN Davis, however, slipped into the radio room and told Coast Guard officials what was happening. Police surrounded the craft and boats were sent out by the harbor patrol. Scripps said Warinner became excited, puiled the pin from the grenade and warned police: “Don’t throw any gas. I’ll blow us all up.” But officers, after repea^ly trying to sooth Warinner, fired a warning shot and Warinner surrendered, after putting the pin back in the grenade. Thalidomide Used in Leprosy Cases JERUSALEM, Israeli Sector (AP) — The drug thalidomide, convicted of deforming unborn babies, may win a reprieve as a^ treatment for some of the re-actionk of leprosy. Israel has about 200 lepers. Specialists at Hansen Hospital here started using the drug, a tranquilizer, to lessen the pains of lepers and allow them to sleep. Doctors were surprised to find that some of the symptoms of leprosy, such as efflorescence of the skin and inflammation of the eyes, tended to disappear in few hours. No serious side effects were Britain Is Cold' to Reported Spy 0 nv fj^nf pomtiaciiiall UY OPnCAL CENTER LONDON m — Britain has cold shouldered a Conununist attempt to win freedom for Morris and Lola Cohen, an American couple jailed here for spying for Russia, diplomatic soums said today. The Cohens were sentenced to 20 years imprisonment each in 1961 as part of an elaborate spy ring gathering western sulh marine secrets for the Russians. ’They were tried under the names Peter and Helen Kroger, and identified themselves as Canadian. FBI agents later declared them to be former New Yorkers who had been contacts for Col. Rudolph Abel, Soviet master spy sentenced to 30 years imprisonment in New York in 1957. Atel was exchanged in 1962 for Francis Gary Powers, the American U2 pilot. SEEKS EXCHANGE Now, diplomatic sources report, the same East Gqrman Lawyer who handled the Abel-Powers exchange has approached the British about the Cohens. The lawyer, Wolfgang Wo-gel, represents Arthur Wilbro-ham, a 27-year-old Briton held in East Berlin on charges of aiding East Germans to escape. Blit diplomatic sources said the main baitjfor an exchnage with the Cbhens is Gerald Brooke, at Briton held in Moscow. Brooke was sentenced to five years ii\ jail on cl)wges of acting for a Russian emigre organization. Sources said Britain has reacted coldly toward any such exchange because, from the British viewpoint, it would be a bad bargain. PROFESSIONALS The Cohens were convicted as professional spies. Brooke was not actrused of acting for British intelligence. . Furthermore, the exchange last year —also masterminded by Wogel — of the Russian spy Gordon Lonsdale for Wynne, aroused criticism here. Lonsdale was the boss of the naval spy ring for which the Cohens worked. Critics of the exchange said it would encourage the Russians to arrest innocent western nationals whenever they wished to secure the release of top Soviet agents. Apart from Wilbraham and Brooke, the communists hold an Mott of Sheffield, Mass., for walking into the Soviet Union from Norway without a visa. He is held at Murmansk in the far north. Superstitious Drunk Finally Makes Court COVENTRY, England (UPI) —A defendant was fined $14 yesterday for not appealing in court a week ago Monday on a drunk and disorderly charge. “I couldn’t come here on September 13th because I’m superstitious.” he explained. BUY, SELL. TRADE. USE PON’nAC PRESS WANT ADS. SIMMS Is Open Thursday 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. Thursday One Day Look bolow to find Simms Thursday specials for this week. Some new merchandise, some summer close-outs and some everyday needs. All special prices for this one day special. We reserve the right to limit quantities and all prices subject to stock on hand. Simms Money-Back Guarantee Famous Brand Hair Sprays You Get It For Less At Simms Your Choice Famous <Pyrex’ Bake Ware 95 Ea. Box 48 Reg. or Super m 2 Irons In One i Hi \ Kotex Sanitary Napkins 1 Steam-Dry Iron A W ' i 413 \ Value 1 ■ ■*, Simnm iV fi Discount m Genuine 'Kotex' sanitary napkins in regular or super for feminine hygiene. — Mom Floor the flip of a button it chonges from 0 steam iron to dry iron. Hondy fabric dial, lightweight, eusy to fill. —2nd Floor 4 I THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22. 1965 Oil Music Program Eyes Adult Students Po^^wd by smvity, the L«d>’n»tic itinds iUelf as you wear it The fully-jeweled morement... inspect^ at 1497 manufacturing stages... is a miniature of the same high-precision Omega automatic that millions of men rely on for accurate timekeeping. For a lifetime of proud possession and carefree timekeeping choose an Omega Ladymatir. Oakland University’s association with the Detroit Symphony Orchestra is being extended into the continuing education course program' for adults this fall. hfischa Kottler, pianist and Nathan Gordon, first chair pianist with the Detroit Symphony, he has been a musical director of a Detroit broadcasting station. Gordon’s course |n «tring techniques,will assist students with'technical problems of bowing, left hand, vibrato and reading. He came to the Detroit Symphony Orchestra in 1958, followittg Iconcertmas-ter Mischa Mischakoff. Duchess of Windsor Ritlern KEY MEN ' The two famous string players had been key tpen in Toscanini’s NBC Symphony. Gordon is also conductor of the Dearborn Symphony Orchestra and the Women’s Symphony Orchestra. His class will meet Monday evenings from 7:30-9:30 p.m. MISCHA KOTTLER REDMOND’S Jewelry — 81IV. Saginaw St. violinist, will teach courses in Piano Pedagogy and String Techniques. KWEIED MOVEMENT Both courses are for advanced students and, along with an Opera Workshop directed by Dr. David DiChieri, offer an expansion of performing music opportunities for adults at Oakland. BEGINNERS For beginners, group instruction will be offer^ by other continuing education faculty members in piano, violin, viola and cello. Most courses start the week of September 27. Kottler will be teaching the first Mott Master Series course to be offered with the assistance of the Mott Center for Community Affairs’ grant. His Wednesday morning class will be limited to 15 advanced pianists and piano teachers who will deal with the problems of technique and interpretation of a group of important piano works. Additional students may join the class as auditors at reduced tuition. EARLY MUSIC CAREER Kottler had his early musical training in Russia, starting at the Imperial Conservatory of Kiev at the age of seven (he began playing the piano at five.) The Opera Workshop has been designed to give area singers an opportunity for the theatre experience of opera. In addition to DiChiera, the Workshop staff will be comprised of: musical director — Italo Tdranta, director of the Chambef Opera Theatre of Detroit; theatre coaches — Celia Merrill Turner of the Will-O-Way Apprentice OTiea-tre and Tom Aston, dramatic technician at Oakland University and formerly with Vanguard Theatre. DiChiera is assistant dean of continuing education in the arts and producer-director of the Overture to Opera series which gave 17 performances in the area prior to last year’s Metropolitan.Opera season. Catalogs describing music and other adult courses are available from the Division of Continuing Education, Oakland University. Ruggeid Cowboys Con Move Over HANNAGAN MEADOWS, Ariz. - Ranging in age from 31 to 67, a group of 21 women covered 55 miles of rugged mountain trails on horseback during the third annual three-day ouUng of the Cowbelle Trail Riders. #56 DIMINUiiVE f #49 MISSIS The Duchess of Windsor is famous for her great elegance and great fashion sense. She has designed this crisp young semi-fitted dress that has a marvelous illusion of slenderness. The oval shaped neckline follows the line of the curved yoke which has short or Vt sleeves cut in one. Short sleeves like this are hot news. The body of th^^dress is cut with wide contoured front and back panels that are most becoming and slimming. The side panels feature long underarm darts and there is a center back zipper. The cut and design of this original has an nnnsnally feminine shape and will take to many fabrics snch as woolens, silks, linens, and cottons. Spadea’s exclusive ready-to-wear sizes produce a better fit. See chart for size best for you. Misses. ______ #S« OIMINUTIVe •From Nape of Nock to Walit Misses Size 12 requires yards of 42” fabric for dress with short sleeves. To order Duchess of Windsor Pattern, state size and correct pattern number (49 Misses or No. 56 Diminutive). Send $2.00 for each pattern ordered. Pattern Book No. 28 is available for 50 cents. Duchess of Windsor Patteni Book with 55 designs is available for $1.00. Address SPADEA, Box 535, G. P.O. Dept. P-6 DW, New York City, N.Y. 10001 Set These Above Tot Arm Stretch Here’s a new safety measure — literally. It comes from the Aerosol Division of the Chemical Specialties Manufacturers Association. Their suggestion: have small children in the household stand on tiptoe, stretch their arms as high as they can reach. Got a pencil? The horsewomen did all the work, including pitching tents, chopping wood, looking after their horses and driving trucks with trailers to campsites. In addition to some ranch women, this year’s riders included two school teachers, three business women and six housewives. He made a concert tour of the major cities of the Ukraine when he was nine years old. He continued his studies in Paris and in Vienna under Emil Von Sauer who was one of the famous pupils of Liszt. Along with being An OI<d Dish Mop Oil an old dish mop slightly and use it to do an effective job of cleaning coiled bed springs. COBBIES a red crose shoe WHO CUSHIONED THE 8IDEWALK87 Cobbles did I In fact, this tmort new strop on the short ttocked heel cuthiont the whole wide world for you I Wheriver you walk. Its flexible •RIPPLE* Mini-Rib Sole oddt impetu* to your step*... down-light ease to every footfall. And all with the fabulous Cobble fit you treasurel WORLD’S PAIR, 12.99 ANTELOPE — BLACK PAULI’S Family Shoe Store 35 N. Saginaw FE 2-3051 TWO DAILY DELIVERIES TO DETROIT AND INTERMEDIATE POINTS Utm Kitchen Remoddinq FE 8-9251 MAYNA...A WALKIN6 MARVEL THAT COMBINES CLEVEN LITTLE TOUCHES OP UP-PRONT STYLINO WITH A LOVELY LOW STACKED HEEL. Open Monday ond Friday Until 9 STAPP^S ... reminds parents ... , . . . baby shoe sizes are constantly changing . bring them in for this exce^ional value in a Hi-White Shoe for Full Size.Range at All Stores Mother, here Is a really quality shoe Sizes 3-6 I built-in I ‘ only In the most expensive. But, Mother, this shoe Is budget pricedi Bring your lols fti for our occurole fitting service. Let VI show you the value this shoe oHeri . . . H'l leother IhrBughout, H's Sizes *r qq designed for comfort and lots of active 6V4-8 O.W ploy. $499 ■ AT ALL 3 STORES CT A PP^ ^ JUVENILE BOOTERIE O I / \l I O 28 I. Lawrence St, Downlowi JUNIOR SHOES 418 N. Main St. St, Downtown . Open Mon. to 8<30 and Fit to 9 (6pen fri. to 9) RENT, LEASE, SELL. BUY HOMES, PROPERTY, COTTAGES, ’ CABS, GOLF aUBS uw» Pontiac Press Clasiifiad Adi. Jo flaea yotiTB. call ssMifl. 'jfi' THE PONTIAC PRKSS. WEDNESDAY, SEPAEMBEK 22. 1965 FMd Clii^ AMortt4 , llna QoMm ^ Etna—Grten ^ Elna—Plump men Gakrtfaif VI CrMin Cora5 I Sweet Peas I ■ Tomatoes II Elna 7‘ 7a»l“ ll 6ii*l~ ■■ 6 v.^^etabl« jJI no* “ lUd ftoM Ic Sal* TUM6S North Arntricon St*ak Soik* or BROWM GRAVY ^59 ia lirdMy* ^fotrn FREHCHFRES K 2?^ 35* V < THE POKTIAC PflESS, WEDNESDAY> SEPTEMBER 22. 1965 MARKETS The foQcfwing are top prices cohering sales of locally grown pndDce by growers and sold by tiKDi in wholesale package lots. Quotatkas are fiuiiisbed by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Friday. Produce FRUITS AVPIes. cr»b, bu, AwHm, Delicious. Red, bu. Awde, Greenho, bu. Apples, Grelwm Spy, bo. Mixed Prices Common Stock Mart Trading Slackens Pcecties, Elberta, b Peecbes, Kal Haver Peaches, Redskin, b Pears, Bartlett, bu. Plums, Prune NEW YORK (AP) - Stock market prices were mixed as trading slackened early today. Fractional gains and losses were the general rule. ★ R R Profit taking on some of the i recent high flyers continued, I but there was slight improve-I ment among motors, electrical I equipments and a scattering of j other key stocks. SCM Corp. sank IVe to 36 1 an opening blocl^ of 24,000 i shares as it encountered the first serious profit taking since big upsurge of the past several sessions. 11,( Control Data opened unchanged at 32^4 on 11,000 shares after losing 2^4 Tuesday. Big Three auto stocks edged to the upside. A Ford Motor Co. official called the automobile market “so fantastic that we in Detroit have to restrain our enthusiasm.” Steels were unchanged to a bit lower. Texas Gulf Sulphur climbed more than a point. Magnavox added a fraction after sinking 1% Tuesday. CLEANESE OFF Celanese was off IV* at 84^4 on a block of '4,000 shares. A secondary offering of 474,919 shares of the stock was completed. Tuesday, the Associated Press average of 60 stockb declined .8 to 341:2. Prices were mixed on the American Stock Exchange. Beets, topped, bu. Broccoli, dz. Csbboge, Curly, b Csbboge. red, bo. The New York Stock Exchange Service Award Plan Enlarged Fisher Body's New Program Is Launched Still in Buying Mood? Public Eying Car Cost r By SAM DAWSON I can spending IntentiODS, the car AP Business News Analyst makers may feel that higher NEW YORK — Next to prices can be made to stick, higher food prices a hike in the Peq>le will doubtless grumble price tag on new cars is most about the rising cost of living, likely to spell a Ttiey are more or less used to rising cost its gring up gradually moofll living to most after month, and react — nwet- people. ly conversationally rather than A costlier car in purse string tightening — means more to^^^^^B only ndien the spurt hits every-many auhnmn-one at once, as in the case of ‘ .............................. mi One of the largest programs in industry fw recognizing the length of service of employes will begin next week at Fisher Body plants across the nation, it was announced today by Robert H. Gathnum, vice president of General M 010 r s and general manager of Fisher Body Division. * ★ ★ Gathman stated that the new program will affect approximately 70,000 of Fisher’s 95,-000 emi^oyes in the division’s 35 plants located in 27 American cities. He pointed out that the total length of service of all employestobe honored is 825,820 years. Gathman said, “The purpose of expanding our service award program is not pnly to r our people for their loyal service, but to let them know in permanent way that management is appreciative of their day-to-day performance in our plants and offices. R R R “Length of service of employes has always been an earmark of Fisher Body, and has been an important factor in mak ing its coach emblem significant with the motoring public.” BEGIN MONDAY Beginning Monday, awards for every five years of service will be presented to about 64,500 men and 5,500 women Fisher employes. Women will receive bracelets and men tie-tacs, with each piece of Jewelry containing the FishCT Body Coach emblem. Each will also con- sapphires or mbies, depending on the length of service of the employe. Hie 25-year service award, the presentation of a watch or clock will continue as in the past. The distribution of the awards will be done simultaneously in all Fisher Body plants. R * R Recognition of employes with 30, 35, 40 and 45 or more years of service will be given next week; 20-year service awards during the week of Oct. 4; 15-year awards during the weeks of Oct. 11 and 18; 10 years during Oct. 25 and Nov. 1; and 5 years Nov. 8 and 15. DAWSON scious Ameri-| cans than evenj dearer clothing or higher rents. With all ofl these tending upward this year. It’s a good thing that incomes also are expected to rise for a lot of people - but not all. Food prices soared in the spring, and early summer. And now tlie public is watching the debuts of the 1966 car models both for their new styflng and their pripe tags. SAFETY DEVICES Many would-be buyers have expected higher prices this fall ever since the wage increases in the auto industry. But Chrysler, in ^innouncing that most of its models thb fall will cost more than last, Mys the Increases don’t reflect higher production costs. Mainly, says the auto maker, they result from inclusion in the standard price of a number of safety devices previously found in the list of extras which the buyer has become accustomed to take into account. R ■ * R As the new models — and the new price lists - are unveiled, leaders in the auto industry are exiN’essing conviction that the American public Is still In a buying mood. They expect still another reewd sales year. General Motors predicts car sales will rise by another two million units in the new model year. Counting in the sales of imported cars, this would mean that in the next 12 months Americans are expected to buy nine million new cars — and innumerable used ones. MADE TO STICK With this confidence in Ameri- rising food prices. R R In a few days the government will issue another of its monthly reports oh the cost (rf consumer prices. And most expect the index to rise again. Higher prices on new cars won’t show up in the index until later and they then a bountiful harvest may have held food prices In check. The prospects for larger in-comek to meet either a sizable or a gradual rise in living costs spring from these factors: Exam of Alleged Rackets Leader Is Postponed Preliminary U.S. District Court examinaflon of a West Bloomfield Township man, who federal authorities describe as the ringleader of a r racket, has been adjourned without date. The hearing for Louis Rug-girello, 32, of 5290 Doherty, and eight other Detroit area persons, ' been scheduled for yesterday. Hiey were aneug 17 arrested hi Detreit aad FUat Ang. II by lateraal Reveaoe Seniee ageats, .Detroit and State Police on raids at 20 alleged gambliBg sites. M Ruggirello was arrested at 10212 James Couzens, Detroit, the headquarters for the local operation, according to John Olszewski, chief of the intelligence division of the Internal Revenue Service. AH were arraigned on federal tax evasion charges. Picketing Halts Mines in 3 States Employment is at a record high with good riiances of ev)en more people finding Jobs apd this means a higher total of per-^al income. For individuals, theie are higher wage scales in maby labor contracts this year, with some providing further increases next year also. R R R Social Security payments have been increase, bringing a bit more each month to those over 65. Next July medicare will cut the health care bills for many pei^le and thus substitute for a rise in spendable income. Dividend payments have risen this year for many stockholders. FVofits have increased for many who are self employed or run small business firms and the general expectation of a still more prosperous economy holds promise of still more jobs, still m'ore take-home pay, still larger profits in the months ahead. xc^ssTuhtnv^Jng' By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “My age is 39. Onr children are young and I am weU insured. The mortpge on our $49,000 home is $22,000; it has IS years to mn. We have cash or the equivalent of $11,-500 and $0,750 in stocks, including Wisconsin Sonttern Gas, Texaco, Binks Manafac-tnri^ and Chicago Mnsical Instruments. Shonid we convert cash and stocks to pay off mortgage, take from |av- POWHATAN POINT, Ohio (AP) — A surge of picketing to-day put a damper on vdiat started out to be a retum-to-work move in a wildcat strike affecting thousands of miners in a three-state area. At least 10 mines in District 6 of the United Mineworkers in eastern Ohio and northern West Virginia were shut down by the strike, and other miners were out in western Pennsylvania. Approximately 10,000 miners were ont in sympathy with six West Virginia mlnert fired because of aa earlier unanthor- or start an insnrance fnnd for the children’s edneation?” J. W. A) I would not pay off the mortgage by converting your stocks and cash. Your debt because of probably increasing inflation — is likely to be settled with cheaper dollars some years hence. would take some cash assets and buy moderate amounts of Northern Illinois Gas and Sears, Roebuck. An insurance plan for your children would supplement your stock program and I recommend it. R R R Q) “I am a bachelor, 48-yeart-old. I have been naem-pleyed for two years becanse of ParkinsM’s disease. 1 have only HJH la savings, no in-mniBce, abd am ineligible for disability benefits. Could yon advise me as to buying some stocks in order to i^e money? There is aa operation I could take for my disease, but U would coot $3,100. Any advice wiU be appreciated.” J. W. A) I cannot advise you to put yoiir savings into stocks, which have only one thing hi common —namely, fluctuation. You need some cash reserves and these should be kept intact. You are now — by virtue of your $3,000 savings — ineligible for welfare disability payments, > and you are too young to apply for Kerr-Mills Act benefits.' J believe It would be wise for you to have your operation and then apply to your local welfare office and discuss eligibility requirements. To order your copy of Roger Spear’s new 41-page Gnide to Successful Investing, cUp this notice and send $1.00 with yottr name and address to Roger E. Spear, in care of The Pontiac Press, Box 1118, Grand Central Station, N.Y.C., N.Y. 10017. Copyright, 1065) Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AF)-Tht c«Ni pnHIon ot ih* TrtMury comparM ------ •pondlns dtft * VMr aoe: GoW AiMtt- atOW.2Jl.34l.10 11457.447,111.71 .. 1M<^^17»41 ____ ia» la BQg'p™ A* XW e ISIS ISM IJT-.T U It ig:? VA Vi m XrX 8? is W J;| ».1 The return-to-work move started yesterday with some union locals voting to return providing the miners did not have to cross picket lines. The pickets appeared, however, and the local members remained out. R R R In West Virginia’s Morgantown and Fairmont areas roving p i c k e t activity Increased overnight. Of four Christopher C!oal Co. mines in the MmiDUi-area where locals had voted to return to work, only the Osage mine was working today. HITS GRANT TOWN In the Fairmont area. Grant Town mine of Eastern Associated Coal Corp., employing about 400 and not previously affected, shut down when minsrs observed picket lines. Loveridge mine of Moui-taineer Coal Co., suboMiary of Consolldatkm, where Ml men hod returned to work Tnes-day, shut down again. Farm-iagton mine of Monntnineer Coal alio shut down today. All these mines aro la. two West Virglaia coaallw -galla (MstiaMawa) aad 1 ioa (FaimiMt), whsre aa ttmated 2,IN men are Idle. Officials esUmate that the strike is causing a loss of $270, 000 a day in District 8 alone In wages and royalties, some of which go into the r ‘ fare fund. In Ohio, a mine of the Peabody Coal Co. waa ihut down today for the flrat tlma becauaa SeTiate Likely to Debate 14B WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield of Montana said today he probablS wiU call for Senate debate next week on gislatkm to knock out state laws banning the union shop. Against a backdrop of speculation that the controversaii proposal might be tabled until early next year because of the threat of a filibuster, Mansfield was asked irimt Us plans ware: “It Js my present intention,” he said, “to call ap 14B very likely sometime next week.” Sections 14B of the Taft-Hart-ley Labor Relations Act says the states may bar union shopa. The pending bill, which has passed the House, would eliminate this •ection. In a union shop, all employes covered by a labor contract are required to join the unkm. Nineteen states now have laws against such contracts. Mansfield talked to reporters at the WUte Houaa after President Johnson’s weekly breakfast meeting with Democratic congressional laaders. Asked whan Congress like would adjourn, Mansfield sal “somatlnM after tha first of Oc- News in Brief Paatiac Police are investigating the reported theft of an ing from an automobile owned by Randy Golden, 1300 Hospital, according to Waterford Township Police. Pontiac Police are investigating the reported theft of an estimated $735 in clothing taken from the Flora-Mae Shop, 700 W. Huron. MOM’S Rummage: Thursday, 9-12. Indianwood and Baldwin. —adv. Rummage Sale: Friday, Sept. 24, 9 to 5. St. Paul’s Methodist Church, 620 Romeo St., Rochester. —adv. Rummage Sale, C. A. I. Building on Williams Lake Rd., Sept. 24, 9 to 3. Waterford Garden Club. adv. Rummage, First Christian, 858 West Huron, Friday, 9-5. adv. Smorgasbord, St. Luke’s Methodist Church, 3960 Walton Blvd., Fri., Sept. 24, 54 p.m: adv. Rummage Sale, Friday, Sept. 24 and Sat., Sept. 25, 9 Ull 3. 1101 Dudley, off Featherstone d. adv, Ehlers’ Business Services, 239 Voorheis Rd. FE 5-2244. Mimeographing, Typing. adv. Rnmmage Sale September 22 and 23 at 570 Oakland at 9:30 miSS : Family Ham Supper, Friday, Sept. 24, 5-7 p.m.. First Church of Brethren, 46 N. Roielawn. All Welcome. adv. Business Notes Philip M. Hampton of Johnson & Anderson, Inc., coniulting i- acting aecre-M tary • treasurer! ol tha technicall division of the! NaUonal Waterl Well tion 17Ui annual] NWWA tion bting held HAMPTON through tomorrow in Houston, ■Tex. Hampton of 5219 Stovena, Waterford Township, is pubUc relations director for the Waterford Townnship firm. Tbl NWWA, with a membership of nearly 1U4NIO, repraaants ail facets of the ^vftwwUlhduiiry. .. ( • :■( THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1965 Jacoby on Bridge Killer-Type Daisy Flowers on Island TALES OF THE GREEN BERETS By Robin MooTi (P) ta «K« VAKQJIO ♦ None «KQ10»74 Win BAtT AA1094 «7SSa V8764S PNcme >Qi»«8 Anesz ♦ Node «86SS> SOUTH OQJB ¥052 ♦ AKJ74 «AJ Both vulnerable Pasa !♦ PaM »4 Faas l¥ Paaa 4* Paaa 4¥ Paaa SN.T. Paaa 6N.T. Paaa Paaa Paaa Oi>eiiiiis lead-A A mighty hard for the opposition to get anywhere.” Oswald: “We did have a good partnership. The first time we played together was in 1935 or 1936 when our team won the Spingoid. That was his first national win.” Jim: “Do you remember, any hands from that event?” Oswald: “No. But here is a beauty diat helped ns win the 1919 Men’s Pairs. I sat Soudi and after West won the flrst trick with the ace of spades I claimed the balance. Jim: “You did reach the top spot.” By JACOBY AND SON Jim starts off today’s discussion by remarking: “It was sure fun to play on the same team with Charley Goren recently. I know that while you and he did not play together very often in the old days you were very good friends and when you JACOBY ^i#ore<!asf By SYDNBY OMARR Bor Thvndiy "TM wiM mail cant rail hit dai . . . AttraMty Baiata tha way." ARIES (AAar. 21 to Apr. W): Avoid tion. Stick to wtiat la familiar. Inc altuatlona AND PERSONS. Complata prolecta. Flnlati wtiat you itart. TAURUS (Apr. 20 to Mlay 20): I ovarlook valua ot Individual who raaponds. AAaana eraia la nol- f----------- aarlly eraoner "aomawhera alia." Maka tha moat of what you potsaai. Hlph-llpht maturity, modaratlon. GEMINI (May 21 to Juna Ml: Con-n aacurlty, homa attain. Avoid , a^lal papara. Praaauri ' -.v-..rJ from outaldara. Don't p prMa to laod you Into unhallthy pc . . . THINK BHFORE ACTINOI VIRGO (Aub. 23 to sapt. B): Kaap on avan amotlml kaal. Your cycia la MTrava^."'%aln hint'’from 'LM maaaaga. Hoad your own eounaal. Stand LIBRA (Sapt. 23 to Oct. 22): I Nluatlon Important. Kay a harmony. Unwiaa to forca laauaa. AppIlH aipacla)-ly whara authoritlaa ara concarnad. Tact oalna much. Sharp ratorta raault In loaa. Kay la GOLDEN RULE. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Noy. 21): Halp from friaiida Indicatad. AVold arguing fit 3ll(dit. Maona conttrucllva dlacua-alon Immlnant. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 lo Oac. 21): .—.-----afialri. Ramambar (Oly If you procaad „lf^loubt could aqual * alwaya baat to mix bualnaaa and friandahip. CAPRICORN (Oac. rlor. on your own cwio cr««i« harmonloua rafafkma. KEEP CONFIDENTIAL INFORASATION CONFIDEN- AOilARIUS (Jan. 20 to rabjl): Kay fracta, financial tranaactlona antar p ''’piSCES (Feb. » to Mar. 20): ( with Ita tide. Accept praaauraa healthy challangat. Ba awara "* cHhart think. Ba conaMarata c cthart tninK. pa oonaioaran oi , fwrtnar. COORDINATE EFFORTS. A W ♦ • IF THURSDAY IS YOUR BIRTHD^ GENERAL TENDENCIES: Partnarahip Marriage licenses Ranald E. Borka- m W. - Mary J. Andaraon, (Sak Park JSfcWSSar.fK^ST”-' Q—Tha hidcUnn has been: ^ South. hoM; AKJ97 ¥At AKQ2 AAQM Whst do you do? Ar-Mi three M-tran». Tenr fartner kaswB ytra bsYe aooae-«hh»r In hearts sad esn to en to fauB kaarla if hn eant atond ■a-tnwn «t nlL rODMn QUESTION Your partner continues to four dubs. Whnt do you do now? By Science Service LONDON - “Please don’t eat the daisies” takes on meaning in New Guinea, where insectickle extracts of a newly cultivated daisy-like flower promise to help make up a market shortage. Pyretbrum, extracted dried flowers of the chrysanthe-family in which daisies belong, has an instant killing effect not present in synthetic insecticides. Oswald: “It really was the top spot. If you look the hand over carefully you will see that a spade lead and heart return will beat six clubs while a club lead beats six hearts.” Jim: “Your bidding really was excellent.” Oswald: “I would put it differently. Charley’s bidding was excelleat. He starts by bidding one chib only. It seldom pays to open a doubtful two bid when yon have a two-suited hand. Later the bidding is self-explanatory np to my five no-trump which was a request to Charley to place the slam.” Jim: “He sure answered the request magnificently. He put it in The safest spot and I doubt if many players made that brilliant bid.” C THE KID’S \ (^T HEART 1 ) / THAT WA^ A \ VENICE CATCH HE ) ^JUST fMDE.I y / A VERYl. ^NICE CATCH! J ■ r A LITTLE SIDPPV ) T BUT NICE 1 V u \rw X.. jL f-xt pndTpKor M*1^^li!, ^----- wiglMarurM A^^NMn^Irmlnghim Y.-’STr'SjsJ».*-^“ , P|ul O. SParr*, Royil Oak and AAary K. OwMMNn, Birmingham a.5^lKr«5>*«a»«5‘ Rax q. Bufa, Wyandotia and Carla J. ..f ‘^v^f^prpW_______________ ''SSrjTTT'&m and Marian J. Palin, SoutMlald Richard L. Schwa A. Grata, Rachatlar xl D-4 aufl ww lol'^rd THE PONTIAC i-KESS. WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 22. 1965 Schod to Eye Skiing Sport Recommended by Waterford Official The Waterford Township Board of Education wili copsid-er several items tomoh^'w night including a recommendation to establish Interscholastic skiing. Supt. Dr. Don 0. Tatroe's recommendation for initiation of a hi^ school skiing ‘ program stems from a nationwide resur-gence for individual sports which have a longer participation span than team sports. The board also wUl discuss possibilities for using tbe vacated limchroom at Pontiac Mtmlcipai Airport as a training ground for food service Another of Dr. Tatroe’s recommendations to be considered by the board calls for a thorough study of the system’s transportation facilities by the bus drivers themselves. In other business, the board will consider further negotia-j tions on purchase of two elementary school sites near Eagle I Lake and Pleasant Lake. NO AGREEMENT Thus far, school officials and. .owners of the privately owned land have failed to reach agreement on a price. | The board also will discuss | possibilities for agreement with; Camp Oakland officials for use of camping facilities during the school year. Also, Dr. Burton Thom will submit a report on the dropout student development program, and the board will set a date for Mason Junior High School dedication ceremonies. Area Man, Shot in Hand, ! 'Satisfactory' Canadian Writer Dies OTTAWA (AP) - Madge Macbeth, 82, the first woman president of the Canadian Authors Association, died Monday. Mrs. Macbeth was the author of 20 books, including novels, biographies, two autobiographies A 24-year-old Farmington man ‘•'avel books. She also wrote ishot in a fight is reported in!newspaper arti-. .... , I cles about her world travels. I satisfactory condition after sur-, she was bom in Philadelphia, geons at Pontiac General Hos- ---------------------------- I NOTICE OF HEARING 1 pital performed an emergency . on establishing normal height I , ... r ■ and level of water in 'operation early this mornmg to save his left hand. particularly * * * I To Arthur Schuetzler, 24 , 33717 Glenview, was w o u n d e d last j night by a shot from a 44-caliber ''•''ino « pistol. i I"''?;, p* Odkiand County Sheriff’s of- *'*’■“* located li ..., _____ ... Sections 7. I, 17 and II rs » « I J r»oi- no Waterlord Township, Oakland County, itcers said David Dale, 22, Michigan. 30030 Minglewood, Farming- i Are Hereby Notified mat me oak-ton was arrested following I Mu'Uf"t^*^ (imd'’in‘’mis'’court’*a’com-the shooting and held for in- 7n;’'’4rm;:'’'h.th"‘an5 vestigation Oi felonious as- I level ot WlUlams Lake, said lake* being ^ ” I located In Section* 7, 8. 17 and i8 of SaUll. , Waterford Township, Oakland County, ! Michigan. Officers said the two men you Are Further Notified that a hear- were involved in a scuffle at | c'l?cu“!’coJrt^Sr me*coumy ToekieJ^^ the home of Schuetzler’s wife,' i°M'*"Norm°“"Tei Gloria, at 3875 Sleeth, Com- I Pontle'c, Michigan, on Fr merce Township. I f*/ ot °co*Sh''on*t?al ’da; 'at '7 7^':. Schuetzler told officers he and 'I;* ”"™7'>;VsMn*%Ser^ his wife were separated. NOTICE OF hearing ON ESTABLISHING NORMAL HEIGHT AND LEVEL OF WATER IN LESTER LAKE IN INDEPENDENCE AND WATERFORD TOWNSHIPS OAKLAND COUNTY, MICHIGAN To Whom It May Caneem, PARTICULARLY All ( abutting a a accats to rWm li rf mi, I g located In Section 31 Township. Oaklond County, MIchlgam You Are Hereby Notified that tho OM-lend County Board of Supervisors has caused to be filed In this Court a Cdm-plalnt preying lor the estabUshmont by this Court of the normal height and level ot Lester Lake, said toko being located In Section 33 of -------------- Township end Section 5 ot Township, Oakland County, i You Are Further Notified that a hearing on the matter will bo held In tho Circuit Court for the County of Oaklond, Oaklond County _______ ______ Tower. 1300 North Telegraph Road, Pontiac. Michigan, on Friday, the 13th day of October, A.D., 19«5, at the open-log ot Court on that day at ♦ a.m., before the Honorable James S. Tharbum, e Further Notified tl u Are F net as to the Court seems fitting and proper should not be granted the Complainant. JEROME S. BRONSON Prosecuting A PROMOTED — Lt. Col. James K. Sutton (right) of Flint pins captain’s bars on newly promoted Capt. James A. Stephens (left) of Berkley and Capt. Ronald R. Leist, 1938 Pentloc Press Photo Graefield, Birmingham. All three men serve with Pontiac’s 70th Division Army Reserve unit at 40 Walnut. In terms of average wages, a < factory worker today earns the |! price of a quart of milk in six ] minutes, compared to nearly.lO ' minutes 20 years ago and 26 ’ minutes in 1890. By: ROBERT P. ALLEN Corporation CounM HAYWARD WHITLOCK an (a) The normal height a said lake should not be (bl Why *6S.43 feet obov Ex-Sfore Owner From Pontiac Dies Corporation Counsel 1300 N. Telegraph Rd. iPontlac, Michigan Phpne: 33«-47SI Deaths in Pontiac, Neighboring Areas the ’ Complainant. JEROME S. BRONSON Prosacuting Attorney Oakland Coui.................. By: ROBERT P. ALLEN Corporation Counsel CD Course Roy T. Connolly of Maitland, Fla., retired proprietor of the former Roy T. Connolly Jewelry Store of Pontiac, died Monday in Florida. Service will be at 10 a.m. tomorrow from the Cox-Parker Funeral Home, Winter Park, Fla., with burial in Augusta, Ga. to Be Offered Medical emergency training will be offered beginning Sept. 30 by the Pontiac office of Civil Defense in cooperation with the County Civil Defense Division. John F. Reineck, city director of civil defense, said the l^week training prepares an individual to act intelligently in any emergency — tornado, flood, explosion, accident or family illness. Michig{in school of engineering, Mr. Connolly was a charter member of Pontiac Yacht Club MRS. GRACE L. AZELTON Mrs. Grace L. Azelton, 62, of 6360 Harriet, Waterford Township, died this morning. Her body is at the Coats Funeral Home, Waterford Township. WILLIE J. BROWN Service for Willie J. Brown, 70, Franklin, will be 11 a m. tom^ow at the William F. Davis Funeral Home. Mr. Brown died Sunday after a one-year illness. He has no known survivors. The training classes will be held from 8-10 p.m. in the County Civil Defense office at 1 Lafayette. 'The course, taught by doctors and nurses, is free. and served as commodore in 1940. He had also been active in Pontiac Rotary Qub. Surviving besides his w i f e, Marie, are a son, Hugh of Augusta, six grandchildren; and a sister. Funeral Service Held for Marshall Field Belding Bank Held jjp BELDING (AP) - A lone gunman escaped with approximately $3,000 Tuesday in a holdup at the Belding branch of the First Security Bank of Ionia. CHICAGO (UPl) - Marshall Field, editor and publisher of the Chicago Daily News and Chicago Sun-Times, was buried yesterday following a simple Presbyterian funeral service. MRS. CYRIL B. BURLING : for Mrs. Cyril E Servic (Helen D.) Burling, 55, of Myrtle, Waterford Township, will be-11 a.m. Friday at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home with burial in Crescent Hills Cemetery, Waterford Township. A Moose Memorial Service will be conducted at 7:30 p.m. today in the funeral home. At 7 p.m. tomorrow the Eagles Lodge will conduct a memorial service in the funeral home. Mrs. Burling died yesterday after a long illness. Field was found dead Saturday in his apartment from congestive heart failure. He was 49. CLAUDE GAMBLE Service for former Waterford Mr. Gamble, a member of the! Also surviving are t h r e e F & AM, and the Stone Baptist Baptist Church and Pontiac brothers, Ralph Stephens of'Church. Pontiac and Ralston Stephens! Surviving are his wife, Shir-and Obie Stephens, both of De-| ley; two daughters, Colleen and WAYWARD WHITLOCK a Lodge No. 21, died yesterday after an illness of several months. He was a retired employe of GMC Truck & Coach Division. * Surviving are his wife, Edna, a brother and two sisters. Oakland County, Michigan By: ROBERT P. ALLEN September I, i. IS, 33eand 33. IMS and October a. IMS CHARLES J ______ Am'» Corp. Couniel for Oakland County, Michigan -/: ROBERT P. ALLEN September I, I, IS, 32 and 23, 134 and Oclobcr.4, 134 NOTICE OF HEARING ON ESTABLISHING NORMAL HEIGHT AND LEVEL OF WATER IN. VAN NORMAN LAKE If townsMips OAKLAND COUNTY. MICHIGAN To Whom It May Coheern, PARTICULARLY ronting oi abutting or having a troit; and two grandchildreti. Township resident Claude Gamble, 72. of Brighton will be p.m. Saturday at the Sparks-Griffin CHiapel with graveside service conducted by Pontiac Lodge No. 21 in Oak Hill Cemetery. INVESTMENT CLASSES (OFFERED WITHOUT CHARGE) MHS. HERBERT W.KLAES Requiem Mass for former Pontiac resident Mrs. Herbert W. (Mary E.) Klaes, 67, of Fort Pierce, Fla., will be offered Saturday morning in Our Lady of Mercy Church, Port Chester, N. Y. With burial in St. Mary’s Cemetery, Rye, N. Y. Her body will be taken from the Donelson - Johns Funeral Home to the Russell J. Shaw Funeral Home in Port Chester tomorrow morning. Mrs. Klaes, a member of St. Helen’s Catholic Church, Vero Beach, Fla., died yesterday after an illness of several weeks. Surviving are her husband; five daughters, Mrs. Ruth Lyons „„„ iamf« rrhokc of Hialeah, Fla., Mrs. Elizabeth •’A'”*'® “ROOKS Ziccardo of Bronx, N.Y., Mrs.' ADDISON TOWNSHIP—Serv-Barbara Fischang of Port Chest- MfS- James (Ida) er, and Mrs. Trudy Mattoon and | Brooks, 80, of 4925 Noble will be Mrs. Dorothy Timoff both of 12 P m. Friday at Bossardet Fu- WILUE THOMAS Service for Willie Thomas, 42, 469 N. East Blvd., will be 10 a.m. Friday at Church of Christ with burial at Oak Hill Cemetery by Frank Carruthers Funeral Home. Mr. T h 0 m a s, a former employe of Pontiac Motor Division, died Sunday after a two-year illness. Surviving are his wife, Mary at home; his mother, Mrs. Sallie Park of Lake Providence, La.; a son, three daughters and one step<laughter, all of Pontiac. Also suriviving are a brother, George Penny of Pontiac, three sisters, Mrs. Janie Cooper of Pontiac, Mrs. Viola Walker of Saginaw and Mrs. Oliver Willis of Lake Providence, La.; and one step-sister. Lynne and two sons, William and Brian, all at home; three sisters, Mrs. Janice Grant, Vickie and Shannon, and a brother, Sigle Reed Jr., all of Avon Township; and his father, Sigle of Avon Township. Pontiac. Also surviving are 15 grandchildren; two sisters; and a brother. ANGELA MARIE REYES OXFORD — Seryice for Angela Marie Reyes, four-day-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ruben M. Reyes, 624 Mechanic, was to be 11 a.m. today at Allen’s Funeral Home, Lake Orion. Burial will be in Eastlawn Cemetery, Lake Orion, The baby died Monday. Surviving besides her parents is her grandfather, Ano H. Olson of Orion Township. MARVIN SCHOLAR HOLLY — Service for Marvin Scholar, 62, of 4289 S. Cogshall will be 1:30 p.m. Friday at Don-elson - Johns Funeral Home, ' Pontiac. Burial will be in white Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Commerce Lodge 121 F i AM will conduct a memorial service at 8 tonight at the funeral home. Mr. Scholar died yesterday after a long illness. KAREN LOUISE SMITH INDEPENDENCE TOWN Comprehensive six week course conducted by qualified brokerage specialists from Watling, Lerchen & Co. OCT. 6 OCT. 13 OCT. 20 OCT. 27 NOV. 3 Origin and Type of Securities Mechanics of the New York Stock Exchange and Investment Objectives. Information Investors Should Get Before Investing-Reading a Financial Page. Reading and Interpreting Financial Repons. Economic Indicators, Methods of Investing and Selection of Securities. NOV. 10 Investing Theories and Techniques-Review. WHEN Wednesday, Oct. 6, t- 7 to 9 P.M. WHERE Pontiac Public Library, 60 East Pike Street SPONSORED BY PONTIAC PUBLIC LIBRARY 60 KABT PIKK 8TB|(rT, PONTIAC . FE 4-8021 ENROLL NOWB For reservations, mail coupon today to; PONTIAC PUBLIC LIBRARY. 60 EAST PIKE STREET, PONTIAC, MICHIGAN OR CALL: WATLING, LERCHEN & CO. FE 2-9274 Mmm nthhr m» In four Int iIk- NAA48... I .J neral Home, Oxford. Burial will be in North Oxford Cemetery. Mrs. Brooks died Monday after a short illness. She was a member of the Oxford Free JAMES H. RUSSELL ! Methodist Church. Service for James H Russell Surviving are a daughter, ______________________ * ^ - 64, of 2701 Chrysler, Waterford J?";. Dorotha Schellenberg of SHIP - Service for Karen Lou-Townshlp, will be 3 p.m. Mon- r®"“®‘^= Ise Smith, 20, of 6035 Waldon day in Enterprise, Ala., at the ™ three grandchil- will be 2 p.m. Friday at the John Chapel Cemetery. His body I "r®"’ great-grand- Sashabaw United Presbyterian will be taken there tomorrow children. Church. Burial will be in Sasha- night by the Frank Carruthers | ug'mrv v nnii i ww Plains Cemetery by the ■ ■ " SPRZnELD^SiZ,P- Service for Henry E. Drillen, 63, of 6178 Hillsboro will be 11 a.m. Friday at St. Andrews Episcopal Church, Waterford Township. Burial will be in Lakeview Cemetery by Lewis E. Wint Funeral Home, Clarkston. Mr. Drillen died yesterday. He was an engineer on the Grand Trunk Western Railroad. Surviving are his wife, Pattie; two daughters, Mrs. Hugh E. Grieve and Mrs. Robert C. Tripp, both of Plymouth; a sister; a brother; and three grandchildren. CorporRilon Counsel 1300 N. Telegraph Ri Pontiac, Michigan I of the Phone: 330-4751 conditions of a certain mortgaga maae by Frank N. Prano. Jr., a single man, of ’the Township of Springfield. Oakland County, Michigan, Mortgagor, to Caddie Homes, Michigan, Inc. a Michigan Corporation, Mortgagee, dated 14th day of Saptembar, 1343. and corded In the office ot the Register Deeds, for the County of Oakland State of Michigan on the ISth day - - - - —- - Liber 4473 of -W mortgage li Central States Mortgage Company ot Philadelphia, Pennsylvania dated the 34th day of February, 1344 and recorded In the o«lce of the Register of Deeds lor the County of Oakland and Sfaf-Michigan on the llfh day of March, In I ih«r 4444, on pagt S3) which claimed to be due, at .... notice, for principal and ............. sum of FIFTEEN THOUSAND EIGHT HUNDRED SIXTY-NINE • S4/100 Dollars with Interest to nd no suit or proceedings at la equity having bean Instituted t er the debt secured by said mortgage any part thereof. Now, therefore, virtue of the power ot sale contained said mortgage, and pursuant ' “ lute ot the State ot Michigan li y given tl . 1345, I o'clock. Eastern mortgage will bi at public auction .. . _______ at the main entrance of the County Building In the City ot Pontiac, Oakland County, Michigan (that being the ing where the Circuit Court to County ot Oakland Is held), at the described In said mortgaga. paid by the undersigned, necessary to -* Its Interest In the premises. - -------------------- -- UeKrIbad as I said premises are U parcel of land situate In the Township Springfield, In the County of Oakland, d State ot Michigan and daKr" follows; to-wit: Funeral Home. Mr. Russell, a member of the t. Beulah Baptist Cliurch in Enterprise, died Monday after a four-year illness. He was a fireman. Surviving are five daughters, Mrs. Elizabeth Hudson and Mrs. Helen Coles, both of Clarkston, Mrs. Mesey Jordon, Mrs. Ann Carlise and Claudia Mathews, all of Pontiac; and three sons, James F., Arthur L. and John L., all of Detroit. Also surviving are 25 grandchildren; and a sister. MRS. J. T. SEAY Services for Mrs. J. T. (Anna Wilson) Seay, 57, 388 Highland, will be 2 p.m tomorrow at the New Hope Baptist Church with burial at Oak Hill Cemetery at .Gary, Ind. Arrangements are by the William F. Davis Funeral Home. Mrs. Seay died Monday after an Illness of one year. A member of New Hope Baptist (Church, she is survived by her husband, John, and her parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Higgins. RANFORD 0. STEPHENS Service for Hanford 0. Stephens, S3, 4010 Arcadia Park, Waterford Township, will be 11 a.m. Friday at the C. J. God-hardt Funeral Home with burial at Roseland Park Cemeteir. Mr. Stephens died yeirterday after a short Illness. He was formerly a machinist for Artco Inc., Fraser. Surviving are his wife Ethel M.; a son Robert 0. of Waterford Township; and two daughters, Marlon J., of Waterford Township and Mra. Dale W. Berry of Orchard Lake. WILLIAM T. MOTLEY JR. MILFORD—Service for former resident William T. Motley Jr. of Chicago wilt be 1 p.m. Friday at Rlchardson-Bird Funeral Home. Burial will be in Oakgrove Cemetery. Mr. Motley died Sunday after a short illness. He installed air conditioners. Surviving are three daughter Mrs. Barbara Dean of Walled Lake, Patricia and Kathy, both of Union Lake; three sons, David, Michael and James, ail of Union Lake; his mother, Mrs. Survinia Motley of Milford; two sisters, Mrs. Alice Morell of Milford and Mrs. Jessie Stap-er of Buffalo, N.Y.; two brothers, Richard of Milford and Robert of Highland; and three grandchildren. WILUAM J. REED PONTIAC TOWNSHIP - William J. Reed, 33, of 35 Oakmont died today after a long illness. His bo^ is at the Harold R. Davis Funeral Home, Auburn Miss Smith died yesterday after a long illness. She was a dental assistant and a member of the Sashabaw United Presbyterian Church. Surviving are her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Melvin H. Smith Sr., with whom she made her home; two brothers, Melvin Jr. in the USAF at Oscoda and Richard R. at home; and a grandmother, Mrs. Milfred Miller of Union Lake. East Vi of the NW14 of sec. 23, i4N, RSE, Springfield Twp., Oakland County, Mich, described as Daing located In Sections 33 Independence Township and and 5 of Waterlord Township, Sections - Oakland County, Michigan. Hereby Notified that the Oakland Count- — -■ - - • BoardL ot Supervisors has filed In this Court a Com-establishment by level of van Norman Lake, said lall; being located In Sections 32 and 33 ol Independence Township and Sections < 5 ol Waterford Townshl., :ounty, Michigan. You Are Further Notified that a hear-ng on the matter will be held In the Court lor (he County ot Oakland, day ot October, i Ing ol Court on that day at 3 a.m., ^tore the Honorabla Jamas S. Thorburn, Circuit J_____ _______________________ „ lunsel can be heard. You Are Further Notified lhaf on said ste the Complainant intends to ask this Court to astibllsh the normel height ■ ...............M4.70teet above the eslebltshment ol the normal h said lake; (c) Why such o f as the Court i e Complainant. JEROME S. BRONSON Prosecuting Attorney ROBERT P. ALLEN HAYWARD WHITLOCK and CHARLES J. LONG Aut Corp. Counsel tc Pontiac, Michigan Phone: 331-4731 • 07' 31" W 44 ir ot Parcel I ft; th S 45* 01 e point ot bet le rigid ot w ' record tor Bridge NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN by the [•"e'-slgned that on Friday, Saptentber I, 1345. at 10 o'cloek am. at Byers sell Service, 305 Main St., RKhester, Oakland County, Michigan, public sale of a 1344, Buick, LaSabrt Cony, bearing serial number 4KI0S03S4, will be held, tor cash at auction. Inspection thereof may be made at 305 IMaln Street, Rochester, Oakland County, Michigan, the place of storage. 17, 1345 National Bank ol Detroit 333 Mein St. Rochester, Michigan at Lansing, Michigan July 33, 1345 HUTTER and LONGSON Attorneys at Law 2704 E. Mkhlgan Ave. Lansing, Michigan CENTRAL STATES MORTGAGE COMPANY Mortgagee By: CONWAY LONGSON y. Assistant Cashier WESLEY V. SUDOMIER AVON TOWNSHIP-Requlem mass for Wesley V. Sudomier, 66, of 371 Hill will be 10 a.m. Friday at St. Andrew’s Catholic Church. Burial will be in Mt. Avon Cemetery. Rosary will be 8:30 p.m. tomorrow at the William R. Potere Funeral Home. Mr. Sudomier died yesterday after a long illness. A retired Detroit Free Prpss artist, he was a member of St. Andrew’s Catholic Church. Surviving are his wife, Edna; two sons, William at home and John of Royal Oak; one daughter, Mrs. Mary Discont of Fresno, Calif.; his mother, Mrs. Anna Sudomier of Detroit; two brothers; five sisters; and five grandchildren. MRS. LYLE F. ZISLER ORCHARD LAKE - Service for former resident Mrs. Lyle F. (Sonia) Zlsler, 53, of Fort Myers, Fla., will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at Beil Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co., Birmingham. Burial will be in Acacia Park, Southfield. Mrs. Zisler died Sunday after y 2S, 1345 ai and Sa^embi I 23, 13U an To the Quallllad Electors of the CITY OF SYLVAN LAKE, County ot Oakland, State ot Michigan. Notice It hereby given that In conformity with the "Michigan El • undersigned crark, i or primary election, recleve for registration the name ot any legal voter In said city not already ragltterod who may apply to me personally for such registration. Provided, howavtr, that I during the time Inter thirtieth day before < official primary a Notice It hereby given that I will be t my otICe Monday, October 4, 1345 -‘ day, the thirtieth day prKsdIng sal Ion, at provided by Section 431, Ac 114, Public Acts of I3S4, from ck A.M. until I o'clock P.M. o The name ot no parson but an actual ratidant ot the precinct at the time of registration, and antitlad under the Con-.. rijmjining resident, to >xt election, shall be entered ROSALIND WILDGEN city Clark n and 32, 1343 0. S7,I3I STATE OF MICHIOAN-Tha Probata Court for tho County of Oakland -* ' --- --------Folty alio Michigan a ha II creditors ol ti ' botoro such haarin Publication and ttrvice p Heights. a short illness. An employe of Pontiac Fisher i Surviving are a daughter. Body Plant, he was a member Shelley, and a son, Gary, both< of Pontiac Lodge No. 21, | at home. Oatid: August 30, t04S Basil 0. Polsy 3S3rSduth Chrlillan Hills DONALD B. ADAMS JUMo at Probata i, IS and 33, 1345 ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS Pontlac-CIInton River Drain No. 1 Oakland County, Michigan Sealed proposals tor construction ot PONTIAC<LINTON RIVER DRAIN NO. 3 and appurtenant work In the City ot Pontiac, Oakland County, Michigan, will Da recaivtd by the DRAINAGE BOARD for the PONTIAC-CLINTON RIVER DRAIN NO. 2 at the office of Daniel W. Barry, Drain Commissioner, Oekland County, Mlchlgin, SSO S. Telegraph Rood, Pontiac, Michigan, until 3:00 p.m. -------- the 15th day «' ---------------- without charge a W. Barry, SSO S. Tetograph Rood, Pontiac, Michigan or el the Detroit o'---- of Bull _ _________ Reports. Copies may be o _ ■' Henry t, Wllllaihs. Consulting I _ Avenue, Toledo, Ohio 43404, u^ deposit ol Twenty-tlvo Doltars (S2S.00), CHECK " lor each set of plant and contract -• The full amount of the de- (SIO.OO) will t >t plant and contract documanlt ich a bone tMe propooel It tub-Tan Dollars I be eccompanltd by olthtr a pro-il bond, with satlsfaclorv suroly. or a certlflod chock on a scNont bonk, tie amount ot not lets then Rva (5%) cent ot the amount of Hie propatal, retliw by the MIchiMn Stota Mdhway Doportmant lor a dollar velwM end, classlflcatlon of work Md, or othor and each bidder tl MwaTy raSSt Sr >da, ^ no shall wtthdraw hit _____________ •fif. riflM I* roiarvod by Ihe Owner la oygpt any pmywl, H er I propooelt and le w OAMIL * Soptombar If ( ( 1 THE PONTIAC PR1&SS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1965 me 6f the beher BUYS AT LLOYD'S 1«a0 OfEVY $795 Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 1^ CHEVY *9m kartflop wmi ma buck tin-M «Mi rM Intwior, 1-«wner, Md hMt*r, r> only $«*S. BILL SMITH USED CARS 462 North Perry FE 44241 NMvaMIbMiCm 106NM»«i6UM4Cm lOAlkwaadUtMlCm 106MARMADUKE NS MONZA COUPE, WITH ipwd trenmistlon, bucket tM rMie, wblN vinyt trim, UM mih Repossession INS CORVAIR Coru Convertible, 4-—Ml. 140 HP. Releaied for ulel' money down, call MA S-2604. LOOK! test THUNOERBIRD, t WNER new car trade4n. tW7 fu« price, $S down. CREDIT NO PROBLEM, WE FINANCE BANK RATES. LUCKY AUTO Autobahn IMS Chevrolet S Repossession Ca»h, at 338-4SM. Spartan. 1960 CHEVY CONVERTIBLE No Money Down* We Finance FULL PRICE $597 Tel-A-Huron AUTO SALES 60 S. Telegraph FE 8-9661 ONE OF^ THE BETTER BUYS AT LLOYD'S , whitewalls, $21951 I960 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN 6 - PASSENGER STATION WAGON, Vi ENGINE, AUTOMATIC T R A N S M I S-SION, RADIO, HEATER, POWER BRAKES AND POWER STEERING, A VERY CLEAN '60 FOR ONLY S395. VILLAGE RAMBLER, 666 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM, Ml 6-3900. : Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-78631, ^ 5 CHEVY IMPALA WAGON, 6-| 1961 FALCON •" **"■** S-Ooor With radio, heater, _______ ! trim. BRJirkllnn Bllw*r finiOt T, POW-I to., 5,900 1958 CHRYSLER IMPERIAL 4-door hardtop with $397 LOOK! tN1 Corvelr, automatic aien. ties tull price, CREOi'T NO PROBLEM NANCE BANK RATES WE FL '962 CHRYSLER "300'', J-DOOR, LUCKY AUTO , 1940 W. Wide Track FE 4^314 or FE 3-^854 NO MONEY DOWN, 1961 CHEVY Bel^ Air, just payments. Call 693- 1H1 BIBCAYNE OCYLINpER, WPR NOW OPEN 855 Oakland Ave. (Outdoor Shoroom) (Just V, mile north of Cass Av... Spartan Dodge 1961 FORD FAIRLANE 500 3-DOOR price Is S595, can finance. NORTHWOOD AUTO SALES ________FE H339_______ ONE OF THE BETTER BUYS AT LLOYD'S 1961 CHEVY Impala convertible. White with Hack top end metching vinyl Inte rler. Autometic transmissian, pow- goodies" end floor slick shift, . cbmplefly original classic In glistlng tuxedo black with red bucket saatj “$1295 NOW OPEN 855 Ookland Ave. (Outc^r Showrt^) ^ ^ TRANSMISSION, RADIO MONEY DOWN, Payments at HAROLD TURNER F $57 oowN i^artan Dodge Ti PATERSON Lloyd Motors ! of mOOkKlAMD* 333.7W| ROCHESTER TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Payments aniy M.93 per week. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD Ml 4-7500, _________..JS GTO. NA 7-9495 1961 CORVAIR, good RUNNING mdltlon, 333-3106, OR 3-5150 CHEVROLET BISCAYNE 3-w, standard shift, 6«yllnder, ra-g, haaltr, 1-owner, sharp. Only ----------- " - HUNTER M 7-095S. Chrysler—Plymou<h Imperial-Valiant N. Main_________QL 1-li 1964 CHRYSLER the luxury and prestige of a ■ car at a very modest price, wing aquamarine finish, toft lory warranty, for your protec- $1997 1961 FORD, 6^YLINDER, AUTO-matic, good condition. S5S0. OR 3-5514,____________ . OA 1-3354. Pat 1963 FORD FAIRLANE "500" Full power, S597 CREDIT 135 Oakland at Wide Track 1963 Ford Galaxia 3-door t automatic transmission, radio, heater, power steering, wll' -sold for balance due of 57 plus S35 s 10 r a g e charge, ‘’state WIDE AUTO 1962 CHEVY 11 sadOT^wIth steering, BILL SMITH USED CARS 462 N. Perry FE 44241 STmi. 13 MONZA. 6-SPEED, NEW TIRES, Spartan Dodge'i SEE US LAST For A Great Deal oTofhe^'linear *’ “’’'kEEGO* PONTIAC SALES t SERVICE _______M2-3400 Unbelievable !' I you see It! 1960 C with only 13,000 ml TION WAGON, WITH FULL POWER, AUTOA4ATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HEATER, WHITE-WALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Payments only t9.6l per tveek. CALL CREDIT tfeR. Mr. Parks at: HAROLD TURNER 1k>RD, Ml 4-7500. f963 FALCON 4-DOOR 6<YLINbER. stick ahitt, radio, heater, extra clean. t795. JEROME-FERGUSON Inc., Rochester FORD Dealtr. OL 1963 FALCON 3-DOOR, 6<YLINDER, stick, aitra citan. Only (995. JEROME-FERGUSON Inc. Rodieftar FORD Dealer, OL 1-9711. ImuST DISPOSE OF i963 FORD. CORVETTE 1963. CONVERTIBLE-1 lopt, 300 H.P. 4-ipced. Exc 6050414, 5 pjn. ___ 1963 CHEVY II CONVERTIBLE only tun. Aik f« FISCHER BUICK 554 S. Woodward 647-5600 1963 CHEVY II NOV A CON VE RT I Mt. O^lndar stick. Radio and haetar. E«c. canditlon. 363-3676. i16 COEVAIR CONVERTIBLE, i Mack. 314-77(3._______I Autobahn 1963 Chevy station wagon. Aqua V-i beauty with new goodyear tires. Full price «l,395 AUTHORIZED VW DEALER 1765 S. Telegraph _ FE i-CSJI 19(3 CHEVY SUPER SPORT CON vertlMa 337. Stick. Sharp red it. 595. EM 3-6373 _ CHEVY, 1963, 6. l-DOOR. GREEN and white, auto., save S300. Can arrange financing. Ml 4-0334. 1(64 CORVAIR ^DOOR, 3-SPEED, ; is guaranteM 100 per ( I! Quality Isn't cheap-Call 33(-4S3l NOW OPEN 855 Oakland Ave. , (Outdoor Showroom) ' .(Just W mile north of Cass Ave.i i Spartan Dodgej 1963 THUNOERBIRD, 1-DOOR SE- akly. Will bring car to your mall Call Mr. l^rphy at 335- 1963 Ford Golaxie 4-Door 161 DODGE STATION WAGON, 9-passetmr, power, good condition 1495. n 3-36(4. 161 DODGE 440 STATION WAGON. V(, automatic, tull power, extra nice. Only (1,095 with tISO down. Repossession Call Mr. Caih at 33(-4S3(. Ha will bring car to your home. Jpartan. j 1942 DODGE LANCER GT 1-00(>R| hardtop, bucket seats. A real sharp’ car. Only U9S with 1145 down. HUNTER DODGE. Birmingham. Ml 7-0955 KESSLER'S $1395 BEATTIE 1964 falcon FUTURA 1-0 OOR hardtop, vs angina, automatic bucket aaats, whilt exterior, block bitMo, extra doon tbroughr-" Save. JEROME-FERGUSON I Rodiaotar FORD Dealer, OL 1-» NEED TRANSPORTATION? 0 tranaportatlon cars to choot. from, 1957 through 1(63, priced small weakly paymanta, credit no problem, we handle and arrange all financing. Call Mr. Dan at: FE 84071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM Just Eait of Oakland 1964 FORD By Anderson and Leeming New aad Ihed T0>l P(Vnwn*» only 313.(5 per week. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM ' VIUS1 0 No M Will H extras. 646-33(3______________ 1945 MUSTANG V-( STANDARD, $3,100. 635-3041, 1965 MUSTANG, FROM CALIFOR- Pretty Ponies 1965 Mustangs 7 USED MUSTANGS TO CHOOSE FROM CONVERTIBLES HARDTOPS 2 PLUS 2's FULL EQUIPMENT As Low As $79 Down HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM__Ml 4-75Q0 1956 LINCOLN, 3-DOOR HARDTOP, I CONTINENTAL Private, 333-4267, 1941 MERCURY CLUB COUPE WITH FULL POWER, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Payments only $7.(4 per werii. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parka AT; HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. 1961 MERCURY HARDTOP No Money Down We Finance “It’s HIS garbage, so let him keep it!” New and Used Cars 106 malic, V-e, radio, h HARDTOP, FULL REPOSSESSION-1960 OLDS 3-DOOR hardtop, no money down, payments of l(J7 weekly. Call Mr. Mason at FE 5-4101, McAullffe._____ A lovely "98" sport sedan in | ing red and white finish, mat< nylon and vinyl Interior, full $1597 Full Price Call 33(-4S3S NOW OPEN 855 Oakland Ave. (Outdoor Shoroom) ust </t mi)e north ot Cass Avi Spartan Dodge 1963 OLDS 98 SPORT COUPE, FULL ----- alr-conditloning, extras, *' . - _ 9-4033.________ _________ 1943 OLDS F-(5, 4-DOOR, STATION -----1, 9-passenger •'* - ng. Special at 1 ... -----AND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 714 Oakland Ave.___________333-9150 1945 OLDS, DYNAMIC, (( HOLIDAY, ■ " -T, hardtop, auto., trans.. pow- 1957 PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE 2-door hardtop with V( engine, automatic transmission, — 1942 SPORTS FURY CONVERTIBLE, PLYMOUTH, 1963 FURY 4-OOOR, I heater, 379 down FULL PRICE $797--/T| Tel-A-Huron AUTO SALES 60 S. Telegraph FE 8-9661 1964 PLYMOUTH FURY STATION ■■■ automattc, full power, *. OnW (1,(95 with 3193 ITER DODGE, Blrmlng- LOOK! 1944 Plymouth, V-8, 4-door, , ---- transmission, 31,19' ' " • n CREDIT N( INANCE n. CREDIT NO PROB- 1961 COMET STATION WAGON - LUCKY AUTO Nm^nd UsedjCars _106 1959 PONTIAC HARDTOP No Money Down We Finance FULL PRICE $497 Tel-A-Huron AUTO SALES 60 S. Telegraph FE 8-9661 REPOSSESSION - I960 PONTIAC-convertible, no money ddwn. pa^ inents ot 38.87 weekly. Call Mr. Mason at FE 5 4101, McAulItte. entura 4-door hardtop with V-8 engint, automatic transmission, radio and heater, power brakes and power steering. Gray white, finish. Save lots today. BILL SMITH USED CARS 462 North Perry FE 4-4241 UULnNK W« ^TIAC 4<<»R^ OLTAMNA, (UsT^ <3(3(7. MMuff INI TCMPEST CLUa COUPE WITH AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO mantt only 37.73 gar waaii. FORD, Ml 4-7500. STORAGE SALE NO CASH REQUIRED lust assume 09 weekly paymantt an t(62 Pontiac Mdan with V-i an-g I n a, automatic transminlon, power sitaring. Will b( aoM tor balance due of 3(60.04 plus 315 storage charge. Car stored at; STATE WIDE AUTO 3400 Elizabeth Lake Rbad east ot Cass Lika Read EXCEPTIONAL 1M3 PONTIAC CAT-allna sogrt coupa. cloan, double pewar, (T,K5. 363-7616, Toil PONTIAC, GRAND PrTR, hardtop, 31,050. 6(3-3(13. ONE OF THE BETTER BUYS AT LLOYD'S 1962 BONNEVILLE 2-door hardtop. Baby Uua with matching all vinyl Iniarior. Power staeririg and brakes, automatic transmisilon, radio, heater. $57 DOWN Up to 36 Months to Pay Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 i(63 CATALINA CONVERTIBLE, 1962 PONTIAC CATALINA, 3-DOOR hardtop. Power steering and "----- — - FE 5-3503. COM*- N AND TEST DRIVE THE "HOT" 4U-3 UEROME 0LDS.CADILLAC 3(0 S. Saginaw St. FE 3-7031 Aiitobahn HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINOHAM_Ml 4-7500 1964 PONTIAC HARDTOP, SPORT 1964 Pontiac Catalina Hardtop $1995 BEATTIE 'Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" "Home of Sarvie# after — OR 3-1291 1964 PONTIAC CATALINA CON-vartlble. Cheap. FE 2-3IS7. 1964 GTO ^OOOR HARDTOP, 4- Autobahn AUTHORIZED VW DEALER Vi mile north of Miracle Mile 65 S. Telegraph___FE 0-4531 authorized VW DEALER '/> mile north ot Mirada Mile ; 1765 5. Telegraph FE 0-4531 I 1943 TEMPEST ^DOOR. S-CYLIND- JEROME-FERGUSON I 1960 PONTIAC VENTURA 4-DOOR t condition, 1-owner BIrm 1963 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX coupe, tuxedo black with matching trim, Hydramalic, power sfoer'— brakes and windows. Special .. 31,795. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1104 5. Woodward * “ —- mingham. *" ' SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK PONTIAC CATALINA, 4-OOOR rdtop, power brakes-steerlng, fine running car, good rubber, rad. "X. ao-3763 days, 331-6776 nights. ........... -Atalina, power all automatic. 053-2317._^ STORAGE SALE NO CASH REQUIRED Just assume 37 weakly payments ot I960 Pontiac convertible with V-t engine, automatic fransmisslor power steering. Will be sold to balance due of 3560.04 plus 33 storage charge. Car stored at; STATE WIDE AUTO 3400 Elizabeth Lake Road Just east of Cass Lake Road 940 pontiaT^i-door hardtop. SharpI 3750. 603-0366.__________ BY OWNER. 1960 4-D6oR CATA-■■ • P. $435. OR 3-5131. ond car, easy on gaa. Only 0(9 FE 4-33)4 _oi^ F^ 3-7054 '*** PLYMOUTH 424, 3500 MILE DODGE, Birmingham, Ml 7-0955. warranty. 5751 Clinton Dr. 1961 COMET 2-DOOR, GOOD TIRES,!------------*------------r _____ 10AA V/AIIAKIT 1961 RED PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 4"<K)or har($top4 raai good condltleny go^ tires. $1x050. M W. Long- $197 SPECIALS 12 to from, axcatlent 1963 FORD GALAXIE CLUB SEDAN WITH AUTOAAATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND H'EATER, WHITE-TIRES. ABSOLUTE- . Payments only 313.95 pet HAROLD TURNER FORDp INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BJRMIWHAM ____ _ Ml 4-7W IW5 VALIANT STATION WAGON. ’6-cylinder, autometic. %99 down. „ $63.$0 per month. ° OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH I Oakland Ave. 332-$150 -- ______ ......->i 1945 BARRACUDA HARDTOP, V-8 black Cherry finish, 352 V4, angina, automatic, rj^lo, heater, r steering, Wakes, Crulse-0- red vinyl trim. 65 miles, new car -----conditloni JEROME - FERGUSON, Rochester FORD Dealer. OL FE 84071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALAT Just east of Oakland _ 1963 COMET 3-DOOR, SM 4<YL inder, automatic, bucket seats, radio, heater, extra clean, only 31095. JEROME-FERGUSON Inc.. Rnch-ester FORD Dealar. OL 1 LOOK! 1941 Pontiac Catalina, 2-door hardtop, automatic transmission. 3797 tull price, 35 down. CREDIT NO PROBLEM, WE FINANCE BANK RATES. LUCKY AUTO STARFIRE CONVERTIBLE, 1361 PONTIAC, 3-DOOR, HARDTO^, ’Ventura, baautHul 3-tona finish, STICK V-8, excellent running condition, no money down, 13.95 • week. Call Mr. Brown. ESTATE STORAGE LY NO MONEY DOWN, Payments only 89,93 per week. CALL CREDIT MGR., Mr Parks at HAROLD TURNER $897 1965 PLYMOUT BELVEOER'E Repossession 1943 BONNEVILLE Hardtop, n leosad ter tala, no monty down. 3 years to pay. Call MA 5-3604, FORD. Ml 4-7508. 1963 Ford m UiS!‘ Goloxie 500 Hortltop Ixiord OA 8-1400 3-door with bUck finish, 353 V( m DODGE DArF of, bucket .................... seals, extra nice. 31395, 399 down.j HUNTER DODGE, Birmingham. wtndosw. Ilka new. 33.195 VAN CAMP CHEVY MtLPORO____ MU 4-1025 Repossession I9M CHEVY II Nov« $S Hgrdlop, rtlimd for mN. No money down. 3 ysrt to pay. Cali MA 5-2604, HUNTER DODGE. Bin lingham.i Repossessed Cars OR 3-1221 $1695 BEATTIE Call 338-4521 855 Oakland Ave. (Outdoor Showroom) I i (Just •/. mile north of Cass Ave.) | ; Spartan Dodgel*? AAUST DISPOSE OF 1.943 mIrSuRyI No Money Down, 311,87 weekly. Call ond we will bring car to hyl OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1714 Oakland Ave. ___^9150 11965 BARRACUDA V-8 ENGINE, 4,-000 miles, lots ot extras. Excellent condition. 1 $1795 Homer Hight MOTORS. INC. PONTIAC-BUICK-CHEVROLET OA (-nil ___ Oxford^ Michigan ChIvV, ^1944 IMPALA, 2-OOOR j (75. Owner. 36V4I88. 1(64 IMPALA 3-066R HARDTOP 4 Wt tii rim> rtat. Owner 1-374-3670. K FOR BRUCE 0^ BILL Buckner F Inance _ l; r965 DODGE MONACO,'FULL POW-i rr, lust Ilka new. Balance ot 5- dotn. HUNT^' DO’OGE, "^IrmlnJh ham Ml 7-W55. 1956 T BIRO 312 ENGINE, iSPEEO’ std Iransmistlon. hardtop, run-good. Call 343(949. 1957 T-BIRD, 31,375. EXCELLENT 1964 MONZA iOaor with automatic tram alin FuM price only SI,3S(. iw Norm OanMtan A— FISCHER BUICK HAROLD ;TURNER FORD, INC. .464 S. wool-- ■ BIRMINGHAM FE 84071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM WILL ACCEPT GUNS, BOATS, MOTORS Echo h an eutboard'h or, oknosl onythim AS PART DOWN PAYMENT ON ANY NEW or USED CAR! sriN.r^rt.nS?';,^;'^ BILL SPENCE iN9 Fot^'V9AGON, AUTo/wATici 6673 Dixi« Hwy. mm, dark blue and whItt, tulli Chryslar-Plyifiowth-Vallant prIen.BM- I - . MARVIL 251 Oaklg^ Avt.ll I Avt.lCLARKSTON at 335-4101. McAulltle ONE OF THE BETTER BUYS AT LLOYD'S 1963 MERCURY AAontaray 3-door hardtop. Breeze way window, power steering ano< brakes, automatic transmission, radio, htaier. Full price $1495, Lloyd Motors i”i 1250 OAKLAND 3^7863 SEE us FIRST BOBBORST LINCOLN'MERCURY 520 S. Woodward BIrmInghomi MI 6-4538 I, 7141 GJenburnIe, Clarkston. ~1958 PO’NflAc" STATION WAGON No Money Down We Finance FULL PRICE $197 Tel-A-Huron AUTO SALES 60 S. Telegraph FE 8-9661 DON'S USED CARS SMALL AD-BIG LOT S» CARS TO CHOOSE FROM 1964 Tatnpast 4^oar, itkk (, rsdto, hMlor, whIttwaIN, tintad glasa. 1941 impala 3-door hardtop, atlck 1941 Impala 1-door hardtop, stick 1943 impolo convortIbN, stlA S. 1941 Pontiac 1-door hardtop, stick 1941 Chevy wagon 4-door, stick 1964 Bonneville 4door hardtop, au IH3 Pontiac w^, auto.l deuWa 1964 Ford 3-door hordtoA stick 1964 Pontiac 4-door auto., dpubla \uSc9mtl 2-door, auto., (.''-'— 1961 Chevy Btl Air 4door. 1961 tylac l^oor, auto., douWa 677 S. LAPEER RD. Lake Orion MY 2-2041 GO!! HAUPT PONTIAC COME TO THE i PONTIAC ' RETAIL I STORE WHERE YOU EXPECT MORE ... AND GET IT! 100 Top quality. One-owner, new car trades to choose from 65 Mt. Clemens ot Widt TrKk FE 3-7954 Autobahn 1963 Tempest 4>door. Aqua finish, low mileage, automatic transmlasion, excellent fires .$*“' AUTHORISED VW DEALER >/3 mile north of Miracle Mile 1765 S. Telegraph_FE MS31 1963 Pontiac Convertible Catalina v( engine, automatic, power steering and brakes, tilt steer- *”**" %95 $695 Crissman Chevrolet (On Top of South HIM) ROCHESTER____________OL X731 1963 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO„ 1104 $. Woodward. Birmingham - MIJ-3735,_______________________ 963 PONTIAC CATALINA, DOUBLE power, good tiros, good condition. Radio, heater, whitawallt. — FE 3-3463. _____ 1963 LtMANS Coupe. Automatic transmission, power stooring. Full price only S1,5M. Ask tor>ete Rotors at- FISCHER BUICK 554 S. Woodward 647-5600 1(63 Tempest, 4-door, auto-matlc, sharp, 06(5. EM 3-7013. 1(63 TklMPEST 3-DOOR WITH 3-6P#(d transmitilon, radio, heator and is txtra clean. JEROMI-FBR. GUSON Inc., Rochaotor FORD Daalar, OL 1-(711.___________ REPOSSESSION^I(63 PONTIAC 3-door hardtop, no monov dbwn, pay-mints of (I1J7 tsnakly. Call Mr. Maien at PE MIOT «4cAullWe. RUSS lOHNSON PontiaC'Rambler USED CAR STRIP I960 FORD 4^r . 3 095 1964 PONTIAC Hardtop 32.395 1960 CHEVY 3-dOor I 795 1964 PONTIAC Catalina 4-door 13,495 1(64 RENAULT 4-dr. tddan 31X195 1955 JEEP Pickup . 31.395 1963 PONTIAC Hardtop 33,395 1963 PONTIAC Hardtop 33,195 1963 FORD Gtlaxle 2-door 500 31,595 1963 FORD Gtloxio 3-door . 01.295 1963 FORD Falrlane 500 . . 11,3(5 1(63 Bonnevllla Vista . (t,((5 1(62 RAMBLER 4Kloor SIJNS 1(61 PONTIAC C6tallna 11,6(5 RUSS lOHNSON 1963 CHEVY Btl A I960 CATALINA 3-door v 3 IMPALA 3-door h On 5. Main SIret STON IF YOU ARE HAVING TROUBLE GETTING YOUR CREDIT RE-ESTABLISHED - NOW YOU CAN TAKE ADVANTAGE -OF^THE lKm§ JPMW. mMMmsm ALL YOU NEED IS A STEADY JOB. $5.00 DOWN PAYMENT AND A DESIRE TO HELP YOURSELF. CALL MR. WHITE: FE 8-4088 nSKB SMW MMS INCORPORATED ------------1-------------- payments only 316.95 per waok. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM______Ml 4-75fl( 1964 Tempest LeMans Hardtop 3-door with a turquolie finish, 326, VS engine, 3-spetd transmission, scats,' only —" $2095 BEATTIE ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" "Homo of Service after the Sale" OR 3-1291 1944 TEMPEST CUSTOM, WITH EXJ tras, 31735. 33S-3554._ 1964 TEMPEST L^ /MANS COUPE. Maroon finish wttti black Intarlor. VI eMine, 4-ipaad transmission, radio, Iwater, whitewalls, 31,9(5 -PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO„ 11M S. woodward Ave., Blrmlng-ham. Ml 4-3735, _____ 1964 Pontiac Bonneville Hardtop radio, hodttr. whiftwolli. bucket er. whitdwalli. gnly— $2095 BEATTIE ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD "Your FpRD DEALER Since 1(30" "Homo ot Sorvico atter the sale" OR 3-1291 '*wlt7 axtrat! Klfok FrMOwf 1(65 TEMPEST, 4«OOR, i^YLIN-dar, ax cal lent, nm. 674-35M. 1(65 CATALINA HARDTOP, AUTO matk. power, very cloan, 13,475. 651-3364, __________ 1(45 TEMPEST COUPE. 5,000 mlUs, call OR 3-3(05._ Transportation V Specials CJ« PRICE PYMT, KSPRambler ....0 47 tIJO laatiuur.urv 0 (7 03.M I (7 $2.00 0 (7 83.00 01(7 83.25 31(7 33.35 3K7 13.75 1(40 Rcinblar . 0197- 03.75 1940 Pal^ .. 34dn $4.00 ------------ SOdn $6.00 07dn 17.00 ira !!<<" !! w MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM NOl/MOflEY DOWN SMALL Weekly payments ^F6 84071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM Nd, tri petaer. ir paynionti. ( WNtlAC CA RTIMwCp m± 4- (100^, NO MOHEY DOWN - WE FINANCE CREDIT 1965 GTO, 4-tpMd, (d. PE ), "doLb; C( '6^'^ 1965 BONNEVILLE M100R HARD- top. Pew brakn, titering, plui extras. (3J75. Coll 363-7573. AMERICAN RAMIILER, 1(60, ORI-glnal owner. FE 3-7030.____________________ 1(62 RAMBLER AMERICAN 2-DOOR WITH WHITE FINISH, BRAND NEW PAINT JOB, A REALLY NICE CAR WITH AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HEATER, FULL PRICE ONLY (4(5. VILLAGE RAMBLER, 666 $. WOODWARD AVE.. BIRMINGHAM, Ml 6-3(00. 1963 RAMBLER 4-door sedan. "660" modol. A^ --------------- only (LOM. FISCHER BUICK CLOSEOUT lew 1(65 Ramblers ready for our 1( I Killer program. I """"rose RAMBLER CLEAN AS A PIN, RUNS BEAUTIFULLY, FULL PRICE (1350. VILLAgE RAMBLER, 666 $. WMO-WARO AVE., BIRMING4WM, Ml 6-3900. 1965 RAMtST" tomatic transmission, radio ond haator, whitewall tirea, new car warranty, 349.00 or oM car down, paymanls only 314.95 par weak. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE._ BIRMINGHAM_Ml A750S OUT THEY GO! 100 Usecl Cars ’ AT' THE Pontiac Retail Store EVERYTHING In our entire stock must be sold during our "MAKE ROOM" program for thB new models. We have o choice selection of oil makes and models. 65 Mt. Clemens St. AT WIDE TRACK FE 3-7954 END OF MODEL - SPECIALS - 100% Written Guarantee guaranfoe. Taka fho ouf of buying Uitd Carol Credit No ProMomI 1961 OLDS Storfire Convertible, Full Power, Bucket Seots, Only ........................$1495 1963 PONTIAC Cotolino Coupe, Automatic, Power Steering, Brakes, o Reol Buy ..............$1695 1964 CHRYSLER New Yorker Sedan, All Power, Transferable Worronty .....................$2445 1964 OLDS "98" Hardtop, Full Power, o Real Special of Only ...........................$2695 1964 BUICK Electro 225 Convertible, Full Power, Sharp Birminghom Trade .................. $2595 1962 OLDS "88"i, "98"i, Hordtopi, Sedans, Stor- tlres. From .............................. $1495 1963 COMET Custom Sedan, Automotic, Rodio, Hooter and Whitewolls ......................$1295 1963 PONTIAC Grand Prix, Power Steering, Broku, Sharp OnO'Owner T...................$2095 1963 OLDS "9fl" Hordtops ond Sedans, Full Pow- er. From....... ............................$2088 1964 OLDS "BT' 2-Door Hordtop, Automotic, Power Steering, Brakes .....................$229S ORIOINATOR OF 2-YEAR WARRANTY 635 S. WocTciward Ave. Birmingham 647-5111 T